Newspaper Page Text
©he itrald and '^.drertiscc.
Newnan, Ga.. Friday, November 30, 1888.
HOMES OF THE JAPANESE.
THE FLYING MACHINE PROBLEM.
No Windows Nor Regular Doors—Walla
and Floors—Tho “Go Down.”
Japanese houses consist often of
only one story, and very seldom of
more than two. They do not, of
course, resemble one another exactly,
any more than English houses do; but
it may be said of them generally that
they nave no windows in our sense of
the word, and sometimes no regular
doors, but they are always provided
with a veranda before the lower story,
And, when they liave a second story,
•with a balcony.
As to solidity, it is a fact that the
.Japanese do not even aim at making
tbvir houses substantial, as English
houses are, or as, even when con
structed by a “jerry builder,” they
profess to be. The outer walls of an
English houses are always intended to
be fixtures, and so far durable that
when once put up they cannot be
pulled clown witiiout sending for
workmen; but among the Japanese
two or more of the sides are not per
manent walls, but are closed with sid
ing screens, which can be set up and
taken down) at the pleasure of the in
mates. On a hot, duy, or when thorough
ventilation is pc-qu fivul, the whole side
trf a room can be open^j iq the outer
aiV.
■n Qf course, people who arc not par
ticular Rbout having a permanent
wall between their rqorns and the out-
jpi.i- 1‘u.vft im-
worm, uo not care t>< .
movable partitions between one part
of tlie house and another. Although
in England rooms are occasionally
parted from one another by a curtain,
or by folding doors, yet. as a general
rule, they are separated by walls,
which, however flimsy their construc
tion may be, are fixtures, and cannot
bo taken away and replaced at will.
But in Japan one room is commonly
parted from tlie next merely by a
screen—a framework of wood covered
with paper, which runs in a shallow
groove on the floor and a deeper
groove on the ceiling, a plan which
gives the inhabitants the power of
adding to or decreasing the number'of
their apartments at their pleasure.
Baron Nordenskjold, the famous Artis
tic traveler, has recorded the surprise
with which he woke up one morning
at a Japanese in il ill ijuit'e a small
rooui, having goti© to bed over night
in a Very large one.
It has'been suggested, chat tlie reason
Vhy the Japanese do not build their
houses more, solidly is that, in a land
like theirs of continual earthquakes, it
is not worth while spending a long
time on rearing up a building which
may be tumbled down again at any
moment. But it is doubtful whether
this explanation is a true one, for
earthquakes violent enough to destroy
a really strong building do not happen
very often at any one place, and, be
sides, the Japanese, do erect durable
houses, which the English call “go
downs,” for the protection of their
property from loss or accident. Tlie
most common accident is by fire, to
which the inflammable Japanese
houses fall an easy prey, and by which
large parts of the towns are continu
ally being burnt down. On the ap
proach of a conflagration the prudent
mi panose, as far as possible, pulls his
house down and takes away not only
its contents, but large parts of itself,
to the “go clown,” which is a building
thickly coated with fireproof clay,very
strong and substantial, but very sel
dom used cs a home.
The floors of Japanese rooms are in
variably carpeted with rush mats of
very careful construction, some two or
three inches thick and about six feet
long by three broad. As these mats
are all of one pattern, the size of a
room can be determined by the num
ber of mats it contains, and it is de
scribed as a six mat or twelve mat
loom, as the ease may be. Since the
commonest rooms are either of six or
of eight mats, and since an eight mat
mat room is only about twelve feet by
twelve in extent, it will be seen tliat
the rooms of a Japanese Iiouso, like
the Japanese house itself, are generally
small. The Japanese fireplace is gen
erally a portable brazier, made of
bronze, porcelain or wood, lined with
clay, in which not coal, but charcoal
ashes are burned. Sometimes, how
ever, there is a clay lined hole in the
floor, containing a fire of tlie same
kind.—Cassell’s Family Magazine.
Tricks of Female Smugglers.
“Yes,” the inspector said, “I do
know something of smugglers’ tricks
—especially female smugglers, who, I
must say, carry on their nefarious
business with the most charming ef
frontery. Of course, there are smug
glers of both sexes, but for cunning,
boldness and determination the women
cannot be approached. Do you know
that women arc born cheats? Oil,
well, I mean in tills direction. A
woman’s dress affords her more facili
ties for hiding small but costly articles,
and it is far less easy to detect JLhc Pa
than men, and. as the elder Weller
would say, almost impossible to ‘cir
cumvent.’ It lakes an experienced
searcher to say whether a woman has
got anything concealed about her per
son. and, as we cannot search every
body, same of the clever ones manage
to girt through witiiout detection.”—
Brooklyn Eagle.
Lesson Taught by the Bird—Three Indis
putable Facts.
The reason of this wonderful effect
ivencss of the Animal machine is ob
vious. See how this machine has beer
gradually perfected throughout in
finite ages, especially in birds. During
the whole geological history of the
earth this machine has been steadily
improving in structure of skeleton,
energy of muscle and rapidity of com
bustion of fuel, by struggle for life and
survival of only the swiftest, the most
energetic and the hottest blooded, until
an almost incredible intensity is
reached in birds. Moreover, in them
everything is Bacrified to the supreme
necessity of flight. Viscera, skeleton,
legs, head, all are made as small and
light as possible to make room for the
great pectoral muscles working the
wings. Add to this the exquisite
structure of the wings and feathers,
adapting them for the greatest effect
iveness, and we must admit that a
bird is an incomparable model of a
flying machine.
No machine that we may hope to
devise, for the same weight of ma
chine, fuel and directing brain, is half
so effective. And yet this machine
thus perfected through infinite ages
by a ruthless process of natural selec
tion, reaches its limit of weight at
about fifty pounds I I said, “weight
of machine, fuel and directing brain. ”
Here is another prodigious advantage
of tlie natural over the artificial ma
chine. The flying animal is its own
engineer, the flying machine must
carry its engined- Tlie directing en
gineer in the former (toe,' prain^is P e T*
naps aii ouiiGe, in the latter i* ^ 15 , u
pounds. The limit of the flying ani
mal is fifty pounds. The smallest
possible weight of a flying hiacmhe,
with its necessary fuel and engineer,
even without freight or passengers,
could not be less than 800 or 400
pounds.
Now, to complete tire argument,^ put
these three indisputable facts together:
1. There is a low limit of weight, cer
tainly not( much beyond fifty pounds,
beyond whicli it js impossible for a£
animal to fly. Natiire cad tc&ehed this
limit, and with Ifer utmost effort has
failed to pass it. 2. The animal ma
chine is nir more effective than any
we may hope to make; therefore the
limit of tho Weight of a successful fly
ing machine cannot be more than
fifty pounds. 3. Tlie weight of any
machine constructed for flying, in
cluding fuel and engineer, can not he
less than three or four hundred
pounds. Is it not demonstrated that a
true flying machine, self raising, self
sustaining, self propelling, is physi
cally impossible?—Professor Joseph
Le Conte in Popular Science Monthly.
'"Bullet Playing” in Scotland.
The Scotch miner has many ways of
amusing himself. Quoits is a favorite
jrame of his, so is a game called
“rounders”,—a sort of bastard cricket—
and cricket itself is popular among the
younger men, but with them football
is the favorite pastime. Leaping, run
ning, throwing the hammer, and toss
ing the caber arc all practiced, and in
some parts a game called 1 ‘bullet play
ing” is in high favor. I have never
seen this played except in the Lothians
and Stirlingshire, and there it was at
one time the crack amusement. Rather
a peculiar amusement it is, too. It is
played in this manner: A certain dis
tance, say a mile out and a mile in, is
fixed upon as the ground to be covered
by the players, and the man who does
so in the fewest number of throws is
declared the winner. The bullet is a
polished ball of hard whinstone, and
weighs from ten to fourteen ounces,
and this ball the player takes into his
hand, and, running to a line drawn on
the roadway, ho swings his arm and
throws with all his might. This is
termed “launching the bullet,” and a
good player can cover the mile in five
or six throws.
The game is one mainly of strength,
but a good deal of skill can be shown
in it. Each player has a man in front
to show where the bullets should be
landed, and his business is to see tliat
if his directions are followed the bullet
of his player WnJ have the best P art of
the road to run on. The kC me ^ ^hvays
played on the best highway - in -
neighborhood, and [the authorities* Ob
ject to it as being jlangerOUs, although
I never have heard of aiiy accident
arising therefrom, A bullet match is
to the Scotch miner what a dog fight
is to his Northumbrian or Staffordshire
congener, or a prize fight to an East
Ena Londoner. The fact that it is for
bidden by law adds to its attractive
ness, and it affords ample opportunities
for betting. Bets are made on the
throw, on the distance out, and on the
complete match, and when two “dons”
are played the excitement runs high,
—Nineteenth Centurv.
Driving; Away 3Ialicious Spirits.
Whenever we are to ascend a dan
gerous rapid—and nearly all are so
considered by the native itinerary, and
probably are at certain seasons of the
year—a boatman brings out an old
rusty four barreled blunderbuss, rams
the'barrels full of powder, picks in
fuses and stations himself at the side
of the boat for the most serious busi
ness connected with the ascent. As
the boat strikes the first fierce break
ers, one barrel is discharged into the
water; the gun is then dropped upon
the deck, and the sailor tugs for a
while at the ropes; when we have
swung around and plowed and
plunged sufficiently with little prog
ress, he drops his work, whatever it
may be, fires another fuse and ex
olodes the half ounce of powder into
Ihe foam; the third and fourth cham
bers are likewise emptied if the busi
ness is continued long enough.
This may seem a curious and useless
custom to those unacquainted with the
Chinese ideas of demonology, but
once having mastered this branch of
their intricate religious system, it will
appear to be the most natural and
necessary proceeding. Malicious spir
its are in and around all dangerous
places, and ready to do all manner of
mischief. They can be frightened by
terrific sounds; ergo, in passing all
such spots the Chinaman naturally
yells, beats a gong, explodes fire
crackers or powder in any form. At i
worship, at weddings, funerals, in
times of severe sickness, the greater
the noise the more likely the demons
are to hide themselves. Tho water is
crowded with such demons, and they
are either frightened or propitiated by
the boatmen.—“Western China.”
IfiVt'niSSn of the Shot Towftr.
’re. Vyas cnee a mechanic at Bris
tol, Ehgland, who had a queer dream.
Watts was his name, and he was by
trade a shot maker. The making of
the little leaden pellets was then a
slow, laborious and, consequently,
costly process. Watts had to take
great bars of lead and pound them out
into sheets of a thickness about equal
to tho diameter of the shot he desired
to make. Then he cut the sheets into
little cubes, which he placed in a re
volving barrel or box and rolled until
the edges wore off from the constant
friction and the little cubes became
spheroids.
Watts had often racked his brain
trying to devise a better scheme, but
in-vain. Finally, after an evening
spent with some jolly companions at
the alehouse he went home and turned
into bed. He soon fell into a deep
slumber, but the liquor evidently did
not agree with him for he had a bad
dream. He thought he was out again
The Zinc Plate In Art.
The photo lithographers are looking
toward zincography as a refuge and
substitute for the Bavarian lithographic
stone and the wood cut, and experi
ments are being made in America,
Germany and England, where picto
rial periodicals and newspapers are
published to get the effects of the
lithographic pen. The difference be
tween the processes of lithography and
zincography, however, is so great that
judgment cannot be passed as yet. The
great ponderous soapstone reproduces
colors drawn on it with a greasy
pencil. The zinc can be etched with
nitric or muriatic acid, and, with the
aid of a powerful lens, photography
called into aid with marvelous effect.
The advantages of such a process may
be summarized under two heads—
economy and convenience—and for
daily newspaper pictorial w r ork, where
rapidity must be combined with a cer
tain amount of artistic excellence,
there can be no doubt of the zinc plate
superseding all other methods of re
producing pictures, and the wood cut
is gradually fading away.
In the weeklies and monthlies,
where the mezzo tint can be success
fully printed, the wood cut may en
dured for seme time, but even now
some of the photographic pen and" ink
line drawing is immeasurably better
than the black and white brush work on
wood. Tlie process of biting a plate
with acid is, of course, older than
Rembrandt, but it lias until the last
few years been an expensive and la
borious art. The hurry of the age de-
manotJ improvement, and soon it
will be possiw 6
pictures in a few riff
may be made with great
preserved for future use at ttu.
nal expense of the cast of th<>
plates and tlie necessary storage
—Baltimore Arrferican.
if Ycu
With Headache, Neuralgia, Rh uniat ism Dyspep
sia, Biliousness. Blood Humors, Kidney Disease,
Constipation, Female Troubles, Fever and Ague,
■ Sleeplessness, Partial Paralysis, or Nervous 1 ros-
tration, use Paine’s Celery Compound and be
cured. In each of these the e .use is mental o.
physical overwork, anxiety, exposure or malaria,
the effect of which is to weaken the nervous
tem, resulting in one of these diseases. Rcmov e
the cause with that great Nerve Tome, and the
result will disappear.
’s Celery Compooe
,7as. L. Bowen, Springfield, Mass., writes :—
“Paine’s Celery Compound cannot be excelled as
a Nerve "Tonic. In my case a single bottic
wrought a great change My nerv. usness entirety
disappeared, and with it the rc.-nli ing aLeetiqn
of the stomach, heart and liver, and the wlioic
tone of tho system was wonderfully mvigoratCG.
I tell my friends, if sick as 1 have been, Paine’s
Celery Compound
Cure Y@y!
Sold by druggists. SI; six for S'-. Prepared only
by Weli-s, Kici'AKDSoN A Co., Burlington, Yt.
For the Aged, Harvous, Debilitated.
Warranted to color more goods than any other
dyes over made, and to give more brilliant and
durable colors. Ask for the Diamond., and take
; no other. _
flection D/VSS Dyed j
A Coat Colored k
,,10
Garments Renewed ) cents.
A Child can use them l
lineouaffcd for all Fancy and Art Work.
At "d-uggists and Merchants. Dye Book free.
WELLS, BitHnRDSON & CO., Props., Burlington. Vt
THOMPSON BROS.
NEWNAN, GA.
FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE
-AT PRICES—
THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE.
to reproduce great
urs, and transfers
facility and
nouii-
A Dinner at Teheran.
There are tiny lambs roasted whole,
salmon which has boon brought packed
in ice upon the heads of Winners from
p distance of a. hundred miles, appetiz-
Uig kababs of lambs and venison,
fowls and partridges (in silver bowls),
stewed to Tags and served with strange
colored sauces of the richest kind;
great heaps of boiled rice in steaming
pyramids, white rice, green rice, col
ored by an artful admixture of herbs;
rice boiled with saffron of a ruddy
gold color; omelets and sweet dishes,
innumerable little china cutis of tooth
some pickles, small china bowls con
taining various thick soups^ but not a
single joint to be seen. Everybody >
eats away as if he had never tasted j ,
food before. There are no forks, no , U&y.
spoons, uo plates; but every man’s j
hand appears to be dipping at once j
into tlie, i nnum e ruble dishes. I
Occasionally our host, with his i
mouth half full, grunts out an en- j
treaty that we should taste some par
ticular delicacy,, and in twenty min
utes all is over. Iced rosewater is
poured upon the fingers of each guest
from a silver ewer, and he wipes them
upon a delicately embroidered napkin.
About a tenth of what lias been pro-
Big stock of Chambei suits in Walnut, Antique Oak, and
Cherry, and Imitation suites,
of the zmc. French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00,
Plush Parlor Suit?, upward.
Bed Lounges, $9.00 and upward.
Silk Plush Parlor Suits, $50.00.
Good Cane-seat Chairs at $4.50 per set.
Extension Tables, 75 cents per foot.
Hat Racks from 25 cents to $25.00.
Brass trimmed Curtain Poles at 50 cents-.
Dado Window Shades, on spring fixtures, very low.
Picture Frames on hand and made to order.
SPLENDID PARLOR ORGANS
Low, for cash or on the installment plan.
Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready at all times, night
or
THOMPSON BROS.,
NEWNAN, GA.
ATLANTA & WEST POINT RAILROAD,
—•<=—-? A N
WESTERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA.
with the “boys.” They were all try- t vided has been consumed by the party; j —-k-read duwn.-w——•«<>—3-TIME TABLE NO. ——->:REAd up.-
ing to. find their way home when it 1 ’ ' 1
began to rain shot. Beautiful glob
ules of lead, polished and shining fell
in a torrent and compelled liim and
his bibulous companions to draw their
heavy limbs to a place of shelter.
In the morning, when Watts arose,
the rest is removed and gobbled up
with surprising celerity by the great
tribe of hungry servants. Pipes are
brought once more, but there is little
or no conversation; the Persians say
that “to talk after a good meal is the
act of an ill bred man or a fool.” And
last, when he could rest no longer, he
carried a ladleful of the hot metal up
into the steeple of the church of St
Mary, of Redcliffe, and dropped it
into' the moat below. Descending, he
took from the bottom of the shallow
pool several handfuls of perfect shot,
far superior to any he had ever seen.
Watts’ fortune was made, for he had
conceived the idea of the shot tower,
room, and we know that our fellow
and gamble until an unholy hour in
the morning.—Good Words.
Von Moltke at Gravelottc.
The French artillery and mitrail
leuses responded vigorously to the
Krupps, and with deadly effect-, but as
as we could see the German left
Accom
moda
tion.
Local
Mail
(Da ilv)
No. 51.
Fast
Mail
(Daily)
No. 53.
In Effect September 8,1888.
>—-
STATIONS.
Local
Mail
(Daily)
No 50.
Fast
Mail
(Daily)
No. 52.
Accom
moda
tion.
10 35 a m
3 05 pin
Lv
Selina...
Ar.
9 70 pm
11 40 am
..
12 35 pin
1 20 am
Lv
Montgomery
Ar.
7 35 pm
6 75 a m
1 48 pm
2 *7 »rr,
Lv
Cheliaw....
Ar.
(i 25 om
5 10 am
*
Lv
Lv
Auburn
Columbus...
Ar.
Ar.
5 73 pm
7 10 pm
5 25 jnn
4 20 am
2 38 pm
3 20 am
Lv
.... Opelika ..
Ar.
4 00 am
7 am
322 pt
1 00 am
! j y
W est Point .
Ar.
4 45 pm
3 i‘2 am
7 (Hi pnr.
7 .1 am
Lv
Gabbettville..
Ar
2 52 am
0 <9 pm
7 oil am
3 78 pin
7 28 am
,v.
LaG range...
Ar.
-1 09 pm
2 30 am
ti 33 pm
8 25 am
7 10 pm
4 52 an
Lv
Tiogansvflle..
A r.
1 58 am
(i 11 pm
8 38 am
7 22 pm
5 (7 am
Lv
Grantvilie .
Ar.
3 19 pm
1 72 am
5 58 pm
8 53 am
4 3 > pm
o IS am
Lv
Puckett’s ..
A r.
1 28 a m
5 78 pm
9 (Hi am
7 7o pm
5 30 a in
[Lv
Ke« nan. ..
Ar
3 08 pm
1 ( 9 am
5 33 pm
9 32am
5 o-( jm-
5 oo an*
|Lv
Palmetto..
Ar.
12 35 am
5 09 pro
9 75 am
5 19 |»i'
ti 07 am
Lv
Fail-burn..
. ... Ar.
12 20 an
4 52 p m
Ii 30 an-.
Lv
Red Oak....
Ar.
12 03 an
4 37 pm
Id 10 am
5 70 pill
1 .V
.East Point...
Ar.
2 15 pm
11 50 pm
4 *25 pm
10 30 am
L
(i (>0 pm
0 50 am
v r.
Atlanta....
. Lv.
1 So pm
11 30 am
7 25 pm
CECIL GABBETT,
Gene-a! Manasrer.
CHAS. H. CROMWELL,
Gen’] 7’assenger A gen:.
. far as we could see
which has ever since been the only : continued its advance and staff officers TljTAT'T'EDT? ATTT7DV
means employed in the manufacture ( -ame up frequently to report that ail yy A L l L 1\ L, A V LA I
of the little missiles so much used in
war and sport.—Chicago Mail.
Importance of Recording: Deeds.
Due record of deeds is a matter of
vast importance in transfers, even
though a deed be “perfectly good with-
out record against the grantor himself i and explaining the situai
and his heirs,” and although “a deed | This done, the chief
not recorded is just as good as if it had
been recorded against any parties or the j
heirs of any parties who took the- land j
from -the grantor by a subsequent deed,
even for a full price, if they had at the i
time notice or knowledge of the prior j
and unrecorded deed.” Neglect of j
registration is a fruitful cause of ex- ;
Scenery in Central Africa.
Day after day you may wander
through these forests with nothing ex
cept the climate to remind you where
you are. The beasts, to be sure, arc-1 j:_ ore( j judgments, heirs unexpc
different, but unless you watch for ; ^ urn ;, 1 g U p_ mortgages whose satisfac-
them you will seldom see anj ; tnc j ^ on l ias not been recorded, rights of
birds are different, but \ ourarelj hem j ower «nd courtesy, both of which
them; and as forthc recks, thej are our , conveyancers would gludlv abolish in
OAyn familiar gneisses and granites, , on p ei . \ a facilitate transfers, are diiii-
with honest basalt uiaesbormg through | cu Jties in the way of undisputed title,
them, and leopard slon lichens stain-! Equit ^. ultimately decides in courts of
lay.’-who is entitled to posse|fcion, but
due precaution in search and record
was going on well at points hidden
from our view. These reports were
always made to the king first, and
whenever anybody arrived .with
tidings of the light we clustered
around to bear the news, Gen. Von
Moltke unfolding a map meanwhile
,tion.
of the staff,
while awaiting tlie next report, would
either return to a seat that had been
made for him with some knapsacks,
or would occupy the time walking
about, kicking clods of ’dirt or small
stones here and there, his hands
clasped behind liis back, his face pale
and thoughtful. He was then nearly
{Next Boor to Post Ojjlrc,)
—DEALER IN
RELIABLE WATCHES,
CLOCKS,
JEWELRY, MLVERWARE. SPECTAC
LES AND EYEGLASSES!
Xio-v Guiana Indians Count.
The Indians of Guiana have a on vi
ous system of nuniera;ion. They t ount
I y ilie hand and its four lingers.
Thus, when they reach five", ii
:e.
th
: nyi
tlie: tore ”•
seven ”n he:
is “two hunt
being
Forty is “tv."
on by tw.: :
as "two u: n
lead qf
i! it a hand, six is
and first finger,”
y ca
land
and second ib-p\
” but twenty, in:
hands.” a- n
men,” and thus t
1 oi lv-sk: :.- <.:.
:i hand am. . m. .
ing their weathered sides. Thousands
and thousands of miles, then, of vast
thin forest, shadeless, trackless, voice
less— forest in mountain and forest in
plain—this is cast central Africa.
Once a week you will see a palm;
once in three months the monkey will
cross your path: tlie flowers, on the
whole, are few; the trees are poor,
and, to be honest, though the endless
forest clad, mountains have a sublimity
of their own, and though there arc
tropical bits along some of the moun
tain streams of exquisite beauty, no
where is there anything in grace and
sweetness and strength to compare
with a Highland glen.—“Tropical
Airica.”
Tin- German Eaipercr’s CliilOliocd.
The Goman emperor was a biunp-
iid never
any game,
vii way he
: v and take
as ’: oval
, v allowed,
w ... sir: x
pensive worry and litigation. Regis- ; pp years old, but because of his cma-
cpeetealy c iaied figure, the deep wrinkles m his
face, and crow's feet about his eyc-s,
he looked even older, his appearance
being suggestive of the practice of
church asceticisms rather than of his
well known ardent devotion to too-
military profession.—Gen. Sheridan
in Scribner's Magazine.
would, in most instances, nullify the
i need of resort to it. All titles are
1 cleared by sale under judicial decree,
j —Richard Wheatley in Harpers I-iaga-
! zine
: _ rervmte, 1 Christmsis CaeG.'ii; sea on
peculiar features of Idaho ; women are °-N . - r QJ i y. rm<-k- . .iewcir> «n«i Sj.«-cta<-!e?
o fremicnt occn'-wrce of tlirouguom ihcir iioie Lm-S. r( . pa iresi in besr style, t nrinp.
,c rrequent occu.rena 0 ; tl , °, s ^ soon os they have readied u-»k..-s m«de to -m-. . Letter
diasms and channels of , mou.c.s ^ -wi ^ ^ 1 Mon<^r»tn i-au-iav'.iitr.
If You Have
. ^ .
nous and overbearing child,
endured being beaten in a
If he could net get
would first sulk, ami
mia m of his i c
aciv
did.
1 "a la:
Idaho Streams That Vanish.
One of the _
scenery is the
dark reeky clir
lava into which streams and rivers
plunge and are apparently forever lost.
Then- iiacures are supposed to be old
lava. Lads. Tho < ulside of the molten
mass ceded and formed a roof, tae
iiory stream below became exhaust-, h
loavir.g an empty chamber. A break
in this roof having occurred, an op.cn-
iug was formed into whk h Lie river
or stream now disappears, to leap;a or
oo "a mysterious Eke. Lasm or s^-mg
on .-.-me distant mountain -a ph a a
On the bank' a? the Snake r:v-; r me
cf these : ire: a ; reappears,
Peculiarities of the Ainus.
Inasmuch as there are no family
names, no village, tribal, or national
rights to bo respected, there is nothing
approximating to father rigut or
mother ritrht. Or perhaps it would lie
more exact to say tliat. inasmuch as
Useful aiul oraninerriil no'elti
sti.pl*- JiOoiis f**r W. il.:it >r. Hist]
\et if Gilts. FINE S’! AVI
1“ well as
at il Sou-
X LR1 ! Also
the proper age. the personality of tnc.
whole family is sunk in that of the
husband and father wane hoe In e-.».
When he dies he is at once and abso
lutely forgotten, ana euAi surviving |
member of his family j ursues an n-
tirely separate course, in no \
cerniiig liim.se.il about the e-.-.
a man cues and leaves a tamii,
fart children, tho ca:-' of t!
If
S<i iipnc-tifc, Indigestion, Flatnlenee,
Sit-ii lic-atiache. --a? I rtjii down,” ios«
ilcsb, you will find
Vi" .res upon
ilv.
the a:
:. 3 th
vli
a a;
t:
**Lk-.tm” '"U
‘‘■Hoodi'.r.a’’ cu-ne.- - h" •:
hudd!r-r. tr.< nine; u I- uf
“IjUiuiikt" from the Ckv
a word of similar import.
.-.an Lummler,
- ■ 1*1 - ui tnc ,
equality, ami Lie
O-.'dc 10 ClliOVCe :■
; .: ad iu;-an:c r, v !-.
t. I:-,; but V-. ; uh-:
"vtcf. It v.. s q .
k. a tee Id. uv ' a.
wd >Ve:
„\wvV h oiw Tribune.
0Ib=Ctme -J-TCcmcbics.
KNIGHT’S OLD ENGLISH
OINTMENT
is -Uflrantc-ed to cure insjrowinp toe nails,
wounds, cuts, bruises, sraihered fingers, fel
ons, lioils, gathered breasts, corns lia^d 01
son, earbimrles, bunions, an . when caused
by a wcumti ' ■ • -
jaw.
pplied in time, even lock-
Price
a Stick by Olail Prepaid.
Knigkt's Liver, Kidney and Malarial Pad
is invaluable in disi nets where malaria pre
vails. I twill cure, or better still, will prevent.
KNIGHT’S LADIES’ PAD
is a sovereign remedy
im-gtibiritiesj 1 iicorrhe
prepaid.
for female weakness,
a, etc. Price, .$1 each,
Knight’s London Toilet Specialtit
Indispensible to every lady’s toilet.
Si: vp I-'OK CIRCl-LAKS. i j -l D Y AIK NTS
" ANTKI) - L’an make^ to f 100 per month
KNIGHT’S REMEDIES.
-’ ls Go’.} stre**t. Philadelphia. P u .
Ev / Ei ; iALE MEDICSME
Dter-
WEfvn th '
corrects all irregnlariiip.
from whicli so hi ai iv iailiis ,, "°> ln :r troubles
Weiik. debilitated womanhe-ilM?!* S lv T the
m’lries cheerful tile d2sno ulenr d d tre " Sth ’ a,lfl
spirits. In eh tin-e of life,„V«‘-presseu it,
out 1 VD1 , X w KFAX rl 'Vbe w ,(b .
Ask your Druggist. 1 ° a Joand Un/i
V. .: -
la i.
not t-
V.
11 U IliCL
’e no true
i ■ l ■ -
'.rest male-
.0.1%
ted I
steed. Thcv teas np
aach snd build upthe
r^-ies. Scffcscrs from
:te r, c: . :- will ;"I -*>
am. te ietiy coated.
) y
■IP' V1
ii-.lf-n, X,
failing.
wnan, Gu.;
HVEICX'
L
iV “
water.—New York Hveuiag vY orid. j AioauDy.
_ ■■ _
. ....
f—Baker aiitui LuTsosLa, L
u* curt*. 1J v
nnont aeiay.
m
-SftOOKHs.
ttecox OC uo.,