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About Upson enterprise. (Thomaston, Ga.) 1878-1879 | View Entire Issue (July 3, 1878)
THE NOBLEST MOTIVE INO F MEANS, Editor and Propriet JiC A I the VOI THEUPSON ENTERPRISE * ENPEGE PRISE. a stmiar disappointment. From thence, he traveled to Spain and plead his cause before the lordly Ferdinand and luis gr at an inded queen Isabella, i There he was amused with promiss of ships and then, for Secret YEATS: ARP. Mr. Edison, what next1 to TRUE MECROPHONE 1 M. 13 M.16 M.I1 i square. $1001 $250. $7 00 1 1000 I I19 00 500 | 10 00 1500 !3 00: 7 00 1 1500: I 2000 2000 t $1500 2500 Squats, I 4001 10 00 Squares, 500 12 00 000 ColuDID, | 10 00 20 00 2600 Patumn. 11 25 001 4000 80001 39001 Colum. 15 00 Columm.Ila 30 00 40 00 5000 8000 13000 Energy is power, acting with vig- during telif-lL 1 . or and caution ; rashness, blind and followed the twin he pereeveringly impulsive, never fails to lead its vo- journeying. At last tries to ultimate, ruin. Too often theire delays, but still have men mistaker rashness for ener- purpose, he prepared gy. Who does not know the story of and turns his footsteps the madman of France? How a poor Arrested of his journey by the per Corsican, owing nothing to the pat- suasions of an intelligent mehkhe ronage of the great, rose from one 171 its frequent wearied with post of honor to another, uirtil he L A II commanded one of the 0 a rmies the 1orld € ver saw: Valiant returned to the court of, Isabella, ob- tasned the long delayed means, and THOMAS TON, S 1 014 over the proudest capital how the |er been cleared b st rolled successively With what his! Drow of I band confident ( ornetice in the various will practis Office Sanorem the Ien House. State first and door mch12-ly W. X. BEALL (Horney avit Counsellor at 10, THOMASTON, GA. Dnetice in the various Courts of Will Dr of Georgia. ng Office in the (ourt-house—down stair mch5-1 y JULIUS E. F. MATTHEWS. .... pectationsdid theadventurous discoy walls of the eternal erer pass the boundaries of former , sars;—atd, moreover navigation! With what patient zeal box alone culprit dragged out the did he overcome the superstition end of his existe ice on a desert rock, |which made cowards of his mariners, in the midst of the ocean, round whose and the ignorant envy which nearly raveno funeral dirge was chanted converted them into mutineers! By tve that nadeby the svild, bettings the force of his own indomitable will alone, he soothed their fears, and held them to their duty, until he proudly anchored his vessels off the coast of the New World. And when the haughty flag of Spain flaunted in the breezes of the Western hemisphere, as the sign of its subjugation to the 01 to the of an angry sea against the rock bound shores of his island prison. The life of this Napoicon admirably ness—ihay man of te: ure ; nay. 1 powers a splendid fail- perhaps we had better say, farce! The means with CrOWI of Isabella, it chiefly proclaim ATTORNEY L AW Thomaston, Ga. Once up-sairs Cheney Building. whneh this denizen tipstart of France l ed the moral majesty might have redressed her grievances I querablo entry through wsicstne no aid secured her from invasion were ble-minded Columbus had singly de squandered in ram] about Eu J. A. COTTE rope, and sacrificed on the sterile plains of Africa, with an earnestness that seemed akin to demoniac fury. What has such energy as this to rec-| ommend it ? A T Thomaston Cr. Will practice in all courts in the State. Projapt attention given to all business en- truster to him. meN5,-1v A. 0 GREEN ATLA THOMASTON, GEORGIA Johnson’s JOHN F. REDDING. ATTORNEY L A V Bernesei Ga mch5. 3120 0nA YAn: HUNT & 141 Liv After lighting his experience as a Liriner at "thrashing" time, and ideas upon the value of money. Bill Arp, in a.fecent letter to the Constitution. pertinent that we make I think I understand "Oh," said Mr. Edison, with one of enjoy the fruits that his public spirit LRt ite go offer indulges in, "I’ve not got to the end tet." art extract, 1 whole let- these law makers purty well. Its to licir in- trust to make mony scarce. You see their on will buy 1 the one dollar is much frow as x iboiisand dollars Hitniant nature would stand for wer off such a hand as that. But we, the people, are sufferers, for if they don’t reduce salaiies they can’t redrice tax- es. We are just like them mules that pulled round the thrash—work, work and labor graph. Tele- ITS ME HANISM THE A CIDENT THAT DISCLOSED ITS WONDERS. HU PEBEICAN VIEW TRF FEZ A/ 8) INVEST 45NON. A 901 36 MAN MURPERS ES EROE HE ROEZ isf CH AT TON _Aspe The U tica (N. Y.) Republican, thetJonesbe voices the 6 ntiment of the majority . of the Republican Party it that State, as follows: Really, we suppose the Democrats do not want Hayes removed. They simply want to degrade him in the public estimation and throw so much| evidence of fraud About his title that everybody will be love hic: to be just what he practically declared hiffself to be when he acknowledged the va lidity of tire Democratic governments of Louisiafta and South Carolina—a all the day long at the crack of the creature of fraud, holding his position whip, but the wheat is all for the in defiance of the popular will. This white folks. I suppose we will git | is v hat the Potter committe e has set the Potter committee 1 to the Constitution from ays, on Monday the 24th of June, about one o’clock, five miles north of Jonesbor 11 vr M row’s Station, in Clayton county, Mr. John Lambert STABBED AND KILLI HIS BROTHER, Mr. Wm. P. Lambert. The follow- ing are rumored facts as definitely as they can be ascertained froni persons living ii the vicinity : About twelve or half past twelve o’clock yesterday Mr. W. P Lumbert came itp from the field, where he had been at work, to the house of his father, Mr. Hanip Lambert, and found his brother, Jon Lambert, there, and remarked to him that he (John Lan- A priper lately read before the Kov al Socic y announces the invention by Prof. Hughe of this astonishing in- strament or apparatus, which opens to our e: is a universe of sound hith- erto inaudible—just as ilE microscope tructuze unknow I be Like Mr Edison, Prof. Hughes was one day employing the telephone for vari0 acoustic experiments. He wished investigate the effect of sonorous vi- brations upon the electrical behavior of cond ctors, led to this idea by the way in which selenium is known to become electrically affected by light. and also E > the researches of Sir Wil- liam Thompson upcit the electrical conduct of strained wires. The Pro- a little of the straw. Times use to was when the people called a man from his retirement and asked him to serve them but nowadays a feller can hold on to an offis until he thinks !it belongs to him- lie don’t wait to be called, but he gits there first— out to show and what it will not fail what Ithis already been sworn to by witnesses as good as are likely to be obtained in q transaction of the kind, for truthful and honorable men ephone circuit, and though he talked and plucked at it, no effee followed until it broke. At that moment the telephone uttered a sort of "shh." %hich was very curious. Ife placed ahead of everybody and you can of that uncon- hear him mumbling, ‘i’min and I’ll which the no-tbe durned if I aint a goin’ to stay in. woull not engage in frauds on the ballot box. It remains simply for the public mind to determine the fied the most formidable obstacles, and revealed a hidden world to the wondering eyes of mankind. Are you, reader, an aspirant after you may go to the devil with your convention." You see they control the scalawags distinguished 7 suece Then, you by keepin’ ’em in off must diligently cultivate an untiring persisting, victorious energy, like that which gave Colufabus his re mix up hash together and and scala- and they all call it in- question as to whether these rascals lied at first of lie now . The chances are about even; while the partisan vote of the commission and the sub- sequent conduct of Hayes in recog- nizing Nicholls and Hampton are calculated to confirm the impression that their latter utter ances are true. This is the dilemma in which Hayes bert) T its the haziest than in Clayton county. John rejlied that he could |or would show him that he was the 1 ,A |best man in the county and made at |the broken cues together under a his brother (Win. P. Lambert) with weight and , obtained again . faint !fatal sounds which were improved when nipple, the wires were connected by irorniils |or a steel watchchain—the more piec- les and more diverse in su stance from the conductor seemingly the better. Experimenting still further with his broken circuit, especially in the direc- pocket knife wound just Belov |from which he. inflicting the left at 11 o’clock. It is said that the dependence. This hash party is a r . , growin’ bigger and bigger, and if notn. Is your lot I why, and your the people don’t mind bigger, and it sphere limited? Are your difficul- will absorb a heap more sorebacks A insurmountable? than Toombs. Bob never would Are you therefore to | work in a wagon with a driver be--forced to retire before the e nd Terrain Hind IC how,and I have thoughtmay |zation of an idea, as enables the indi- vidual to march unawed over the ties apparently most gigantic barriers, or to crush | What then ! :every opposing force that stands in write yourself a nothin the way of his triumph. Energy a cipher in society ? It will must rather bring an irresistible force butt it around like |knows not free ment. yields purpose Though it may perish beneath an av lanche of difficulty, vet it dies con action their an called 2 re accustomed to attribute fortunes to what is vulgarly ill luck." They who climb the ladder of ( and call them "the favorite of fortune luckymen adn cant fools! imagination. |ill fortune so much as an His truckling to the South is likely to prove fatal to him morally and politically: and even if not turned out of his office or biration of character to b in the rear and 1 goat and once or envy men nence children vain of life. Be supino in nothing! Never -despair of success in any judicious en- terprise! Resolve to accomplish whatever you undertake; and though . you may not discover a new world, like Columbus; nor introduce man- kind to the occult mysteries of nature, like Newton; nor attain the wealth !of Rothschild, or Astor; yet, you may climb to the summit of your profes- sion, attain to honorable distinction, and transmit to your posterity that twice in a while turn the not th a very great my opini Ik, one maif But some 3 a man —| —for in of its ternt, he will leave it in deeper disgrace than Tyler or Johnson.— Nobody, now, save the ku-klux and his brigade of dependents wants him where he is. His own folly has made the Potter investigation possible, and given it "all the moral force that it MENTION OF THE DIFFICULTY, |tion of this whisper from science about "more pieces, he found that or its cause, although he talked frec- metallic powder or fine mefalic filings ly about other matters to his friends, wonderfully augment the power of and said he would surely die of his transmitting sounds; while shot, ist wound. The slayer contend that he | a bright condition, platinum, carbon, did the deed in | and mercury, also gave good results, A PLAY OR TUSSEL,| particularly the last. Following up with his brother, but this obtains this elite. Prof: litghes hit upon a but little 0" no credit, and the entire | plan -t suspending finely divided comunity are much exercised over the mercury in a stick of charcoal, by the | heating the latter and plunging it into Mcquieksilver, whereupon the charcoal matter, attendin informed KOWTE tint th bysician. Dr.1 of the wives GRIEF OF THE FAMILIE two brothers (both and children), including the becomes inditrated with the mercury in minutest but continuous particles having 1 in his transmitter of this sort ,air absofittaly amazing to sound . . Well as pow- inactive mind that keeps thousands the in inglorious obscurity. The blun- 7 |dering student, who stammers ont an most valuable of all bequ you th 000 ATLAW untie 111 CABANISS & PEEPLES, A W Forsythe id Will praeti he Flint Circuit all the mch5,-ly ERNER & TURNER Attor At Law FORSY TH, GA. Will pr arms. time In allthe Courts, and give action to the collection of ferto Wm. H. Head, Banker a., Dumas & Alien, Cotton rsyth.Ga, mch5,-tf and gai indulge tlast throu umerit, ow ander a unrestrained, bearin unitary mental int ever shrunk from (1 triumphant much indebted to li 3 persevering ggy, as toghis native genius, fo Torable vi tory. He night, hac been equally supine, have beer -note. But 1 ir all other , ks of if him. while enervation breeds these ideas, let hii the history of EVE misfortune rider over hill and dale : destruction. Flashin ie, like a flaming nieteo the politi On9 is of Europe, stfik- heart of a startled ting again, descending with the fury of Alpine avalanche upon the fair plan ofold Italia—aimless and purposele Napoleon was RASIT Cohtmbu ,2 Hive but not hasty, determined but never, precipitate, accomplished for this world a greater good, perhaps, than has ever been the fortune of one firmation of fully stridy individual to reuder his in its: accomplishment, model of MNER Y incom cellence to that of ever SDOcle and furnished vritten an untarnished record upon subsequent navigator he walls of the Temple of Fame. I him view such minds in their pro- gress toward greatness. He will see single element of his y anterior or and, by this graving his name so deep upon cliff of glory that no vicissitude mitich greater than an other no how.- : The principle difference is in the qu- !ality of conceit andimpuednce. Time |was when modesty, was one of the ! ear marks of greatness, but that’s a lost art now Yours. res, I am agin it—for I’ve got a peek and a half bushel both sealed, and I can’t afford to throw em away and buy a set. Would’nt it do him thing about i Trumpet 3117 Brian Voice Hedrd 2wo A way % 1314 De A f Mr. Edison’s latest intention. It is imply a marvelous eartrumpet, upon he construction of which MP Edison possesses out le w If it ends in driving him few hacks will carry ners." fate, and a 1 the mour- "This," remarks the Albany Argus a leading Democratic organ of the North, is "shameful and lamentable Bit who but Haves himself is to aged father and mother, is simply indescribable: Both of the young men were well to do farmers, having married into quite respectable fami- lies: Wm. P. Lambert was consid- ered t quite clever, good natured man. John was indicted at our las! court for wife beating and escaped blame? shown to the and is looked upon them rising step by step, in the face of stubborn difficulties, which gave! way before them only because their courage would not be daunted, nor| |their energy wearied. He will find :no exception, in the history of man- kind. Supine, powerless souls have en- the can even efface it in the sweep of coming • always fainted before hostile circum- stances, and sank beneath theiroppor- tunities; while men of power have wrestled with sublime vigor against all opposing men and things, and ob- tained success because they would SPEER, & STEWART, ATTORNEYS AT LAW GRIFFIN, GEORGIA, not be defeated. We might illustrate - T these views from the biography of practice in all the Courts both State and Federal, June 22, 1878.-tf A Fetnarknble Story. The Atlanta Constitution says? "Sunday right, at 6 minutes after 11, a woman named Elizabeth Giles died in the room where we were. Before she died, she said she saw a a stairway from heaven coneright down to the T MARTIN & MILL MILLS, JR iny eminent man : let us select CHRIS ! corner of her bed. She showed it to another woman, who saw it plainly. There were at first three of these stairs, but one went away and the others remained. The woman was / buried Monday afternoon, but before T.1 she was taken to the cemetery some , , , He was the so one of the negroes looked out of the |of 21 obscure wool-comber, III indi- A A, X 2 , TT: window and saw. gent circumstances, at Genoa, His __ TOPHER COLUMBUS ed to our purpose as pecuHarly adapt- A T L AW cavil pmetice inf allthe State Courts and the United States Courts. Vince, front room, up-stairs. iuningham building, mch5.-6 01 DR. J. O. DR A K10, inemders the public his professional ser- ailcaind will give prompt attention to 8. L Office at his residence. DR.G W.T. HANNAH, |early education waslimited. Bred to the profession of seamanship, and |having a strong passion for geo- Igraphical studies, his thoughtful mind conceived, the idea that un- known empires existed west of the great Atlantic Tie dwelt upon this |thought until it became fixed in his mind with singular firmness. It fired in the sky. She called others, and sure enough there the flags were.— They were white, and seemed about |about as Li handkerchief case but at a great distance in the sky.- Soon all the negroes in the vicinity came and saw. the wouderous sight his with wohlo enthusiasm: it vation to his spirit: it clothed L with dignity and inspired There could be no doubt of it; were the flags, and a dozen there white people saw them plainly and came into the city to bear testimony to the Thus an- phenomenon THOMASTON illenners his services to the public and pleased to wait on his patrons. .W.Sn -: a S,N.D. A. MI. PATTERSON, M SUGGS & PATTERSON imated he resolved to realize the truth of his great conception. Now came the test of his character. The idea it- self was grand, and its conception be- spoke the possession of a towering and glorious intellect. But, to make that conception a reality, to prove himself a true son of Genius, and not a mere romantic dreamer, required the exercise of a measure of faith self- The wonder soon be . The flags not only appeared white, but took all colors and insignia, and blazoned the hear- |ens with the banners of the earth. One old negro, gifted with better vision, than the rest, saw an angel wavi g one of the flags, and then the er the public their profession mcho,-y L M. WARFIELD, Lion Commision Mchant Commissi E 6 X |amIssIon, 50c Per Bale, hero best banle ane es made on consignments followed rates. Instructions careful- bmand satisfaction guaranteed. Opposite Cotton Exchange Over 100 latest Novelties a WSo.Sugply Co.Nashville,Tenv dorm demanded of any man, even in the greatest of human enterprises. But Columbus felt equal to his work, and he set about it with a pur- pose to do it. How sublime does he appear in his conflict with poverty, ridicule, and ignorance! The an- nouncement of his beloved idea was greeted with forrents f derisive sar- casm, from prince and peasant, from learned sayans and stupid dunces. Powerless and moneyless himself, he required the patronage of thenower- ful. Hence, he placed himself at the foot of the Portugese throne, stated his views, and demanded ships to ex- plore the occan. Treated with fraud unworthy of a court, the intrepid man fled to Genoa, and importuned for aid in his imtive city. Inable to rouse the ambition ofhis countrymen. CELESTIAL PANORAMA to be seen through one pane of dirty the finest sorts of uniforms, marching and beating drains and having a sort of solemn parade. Following them were seen men with dogs and other beasts. Those who saw could stand no more. They rushed out and told the good news. Others came to see. The house was surrounded and be- sciged. Live hundred people, black and white, wante } to. the show and behold the wondrous vision. The poor earthly-minded negro tried to explain what he saw and was at Once hustled out as ai" unbeliefer" and a scoffer. ist, thirty of which have been discov- ered within the present century. Four hundred years ago but seven were known. s tisfaction of the public mind that he !got his place in the White House through fraud, who is going to resist his removal in a regular and decent way? His office and his country are disgraced, the land is full of the cry of corruption and fraud linked with Ir. Edison’s attentic 11 was attrote I to the subject by his ( wh deafness, is enabled to hear only wheir speaker enunciates in a loud tone. Edison is loth to describe the tele M volution "Befor had bett qucition now eis to fight hat Ilayes ourselves Is it to thrown way7 L cannot be to RAW VIAN SYTPAANN. We all need it; life would be a urden and man a mere machine without it. When the heart is made y with pain and how And Shone except generally, as it is not our joy is never complete till other upleted, and is to be patented.— efgre it with us. The implement is about five and a words and helpful little half feet long, and has an internal arrangement by wifich sound is con- centrated and made louder. A sound which to the unaided ear is inaudible becomes distinct by the use of the telescopophone. Concerning it Mr. "The telescopophone is assurely successful. I have demonstrated that by its use not only can those partly deaf hear, but persons cE1 talk while a mile or two apart." "But do not other sounds commin- gle—sounds intervening between the speakers and the hearer ?" "Certainly they do to a limited ex- tent, and more so if the instruments are not pointed straight." "How do you remedy that?" "Why you must poin ’em straight. The same objection could be made to a telescope. If you do not point it straight you see other objects than the one intended. But when the tel- escopophone is pointed directly at the distant speaker with telescopic exactness, the voice of the speaker is the chief thing heard." "Does it increase the volume of sound 1" “I have whispered in one of these things in a very low tone, and the sound in my car was so loud as to be absolutely painful." Mr. Edison expressed the fullest confidence that he would perfect the telescopophone sothat by its aid part- ly deaf persons may hear every whis- per on the stage of the largest th atre. A gentleman who heard experi- ments with the telescopophone said that Mr Edison heard distinctly the ticking of a telegraphic instrument a thousand feet away, and eve the noise of chewing and biting of grass by a cow nearly the thousand feet distant. although upon the whole he fair in the comity Both were ter Mason’s ial good standing stood Mas- . and members of the Methodist Church. BERET NATIONAL CAPITOL Mrs. John Adams, was the first 00 |upant of the White Ifotisc A.D 1809. Iler description of fe then city was anything but complimentary, de- er of conveying it with the utmost fi- delity, was displ yed by the apparat- us. A touch of the finger on the vi- brating, plate was conducted to the |speaking end in volume of vibration like the rustle of a forest; the strok- ing ofa camel’s hair brush on card was magnified into the sound of a |loud whisper, the beating of a pulse, For the tick of a watch was found to pass with perfect clearness through a space representing a 100 miles of space; and, when a fly happened to walk over the plate, t extramp of its feet was almost distinctly caught, like that of some six legged horse trot- ling and it was, moreover, heard to trumpet from its raised proboscislike |an tele plant in an Indian jungle. ISounds, in fact, totally inaudible be- fore to human ears were arrested and - reported by this simple and accident- scribing the condition: uncomfortable. OF Wolcott wrote in 1800. "The Capitol is situated on an emi- nence near the center of the immense |country here called the city. There is a good tavern about 54 rods from |the Capitol, and several other houses ! are built and erecting." John Cotton Smith, Congressman wrote—"The Pennsylvania Avenue trical circuit with a finely-divided conducting material. There is almost no doubt that the perfected, microphone will convey to us that hidden ripple of the sap rising in growing tree and plants, which Humboldt said might be a continu- ous melody in the auditory organs of earth’s smallest Telegraph. London c, was then rearle the whole distance a Smiles, tears, kind deep morse covered with elder acts are MI.A ECEG RABES BOY. "Did you ever know a man who If I could only help you bear this pain!" said one friend to anoth "1ou do help me more than I can tell, by being sorry for ine," was re- plied. Eve ate the forbidden fruit thorns have grown besides all fow- ors, tears have offset smiles, and darkness the light of day, and there| has been no pleasure without corres-: ponding pain. Sorrow goes band-in| |-hand with joy, and the brightest |morning may soon be clouded with| the densest shadows. And who is sufficient to bear his part alone in this |checkered world? Man is a social| !being, and so formed that his sor- rows are lessened and his joys in- creased by sympathy, and this fellow- feeling that prompts us to weep with those that weep, as Jesus wept at the grave of Lazarus, is one of the sweet- est flowers God ever planted in the In 1839, Geo. Combe, the British grew rich by fraud, continue success- traveler wrote of Washington,- The ful through life, aulleave a fortune town looks like a large straggling vil- |at death: 24 75. lage reared in a drained swamp." | This uestien was Dt to a gentle- At is fire the National (iibitol man who had been in business forty is about the grandest buicing in the world.: the entire length building is 751 feet 4 inches, breadth of from. 121 to 324 different portions. of the with a feet, in ears. After reflecting awhile, he re- lied: ‘Not one, I have seen many inen be- The whole edifice covers near 31 acres. The building is constructed is the purely classic style, with a center |come rich as if by magic, and win |golden opinions, when some little |thing led to an exposure of their fraud and two projecting wings of great extent. Is ornamented on the eastern• front with 68 Corinthian columns. From the main or central building spring a lofty iron dome, 1351 feet: in diameter at its base and contain- ing 8,009,200 potrids, or 3575 tons o: and they have f lea into d’sgi : ce and ruin. Arson, perjury, murder, and suicide are common crimes with those who make hast to be rich regardless of the means." Boys stick a pin here. You will soon be men, and begin to act with those who make money Write this good man’s testimonyin your mind, an l with it put this word of God; ‘e heart of man. And as sympathy | of the statue of Freedom, 285% feet, quietly and unobtrusively offered is cast and wrought iron. The apex of the dome is crowned , .. by a bronze statue of Freedom, the eye, and considereth not that poverty height of which is 19 feet. The to- shall come upon lim. tal height of the Capitol to the crest Let the words lead you to resolve to make last slowly, when you go in that haseneth to be rich hath an evil a balm to our wounded hearts, so let is never forget to bestow it in like manner, and in the fullest measure, upon others, for by it hearts are made TIH E SEVEN WISE MEN. Most people have heard of the Seven Wise Men of Greece," but! strong to suffer and endure. Rebuilding of the Wro very few know who they were or how they came to be called so. Here |is the story, and the moral of it is ER Blouse worth remembering if the names are Colonel W.T. Hollingsworth has not: The seven wise men of Greece received a long letter from Colon f are supposed to have lived in the fifth Eliphatel E: Brown, now in New century B. C. Their names are Pit a- York, the well known proprietor of cus. Bias, Soloir, Thales, Chilon, Cle- obulus and Perfander. The reason of their being called wise is given differ- the late Brown House, in this city, communicating the gratifying intel- ligence that a new and splendid hotel will be immediately constructed upon the ruins of the old one. Colonel Brown has settled his busi- ness with all the insurance compa- ently by various authors; but the most approved accounts state that a |some Coans fishing certain One of party then stood six: hun- nies and others in a satisfactory man- dred fest away, and his whisper was ner, and the marry friends of the ge- distinctly heard, although Mr. Bache- nial, popular and oldest landlord in lor, standing only fifteen feet from the State will be pleased to learn him, without the aid of the teleseopo- that, notwithstanding his losses by phone could not hear a word, the late conf gration, he will be cna- Then the party tried a more strik-ibled to erect a hotel with larger Meep- ing experiment. Two of them went ing roons; handsome furniture and at least a mile off, and talked to each other in an ordinary tone of voice. Even at that distance ordinary con- versation was distinctly heard with- out a speaking tube, without, any wire or electrical apparatus but sim- ly by the aid of the new car trumpet or telegeopophone. next experiment, which was at a dis- tance estimated at two miles. From that point, the ordinary tone of voice could not be heard, and shouting was necessary, yet the new ear trumpet did its work, and the hearing was other equipments ill in the most SU periof modern styl The building will be more ornamental, convenient and comfortable in every respect than the former one. As many of the old walls, and near 2.000,000, of the old brisk can be ad- vantageotsly utilize a, the building strangers from Melitus bought what- ever should be in the nets without seeing it. When the nets were brought in they were found to con- tain a golden tripod which Helen, as she sailed from Troy, is supposed to have thrown there. A dispute arose between the fishermen and the stra: - gers as to whom it belonged, and as they could dot agree they took it to the temple of Apollo and consulted the priestess as to what should be done withit. She said it 11 ust bc giv- en to the wisest man in Greece, and it was accordingly sent to Bias, w ho de- clared that Thales was wiser and sent it to him. Thales scud It to an- the 11 atter of making ANTI-FAT The GREAT REMEDY for of the I ew hotel will be commenced thro other one, and so on, untilit had pa hthe hands of all the men dis ALLAN’S ANTI-FAT is purely vegetable and perfectly harm ess. It acts upon the food in the stomach, preventing its being converted into fat. Taken in accordance with <1- reactions, it will reduce a fat person from two to five pounds per week. "Corpulence is not only a disease itself, but the harbinger of others." So wrote Hippocrates two thousand years ago, and what was true then is none" the less so to-day. Sold by druggists, or sent, by express, upon re- ceipt of $1.50. Quarter-dozen $1.00. Address, BOTANIC MEDICINE co.,- Propristor Buffalo, N. F in a week, and completed sufficiently tinguished afterwards as the Seven for the ve eption of girests bv the Wise Men, and as each one claimed opening of the State Fair in October that the other, was wiser than he, it next. was fin:TIy slfe the temple of Apol- We. with a host of others. congrat- lo, where it long remained to teach ulate Colonel Brow H upon his incom- the lesson that the wisest are the most itable and enterprise, and distrustful of their wisdoin. TRADE MARK 3100 re Barham’s infallible PILE CURE. Mantifactured by the , Barham Pile Care Qa, Durham, N. C.. Price List and bona lide testimonele furnished 02 application