Newspaper Page Text
"WATCH THE WHITE STAR BUGGY” THE ROLE OF HAMLET
MALAY PROAS.
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ATLANTA BUOGY COMPANY. - - Atlanta. Gaargla
The Way Thete Pecnllar Boat* Art
Built and Pitted Oat.
Great fleets of Malay vessels go Into
the sea south of Borneo each year to
fish for trepang, or seu slugs, which
are esteemed a great delicacy In Chi
na and other Asiatic countries. A
British government offlofail writes:
“The proas are peculiar looking con
cerns and present a most clumsy ap
pearance. The hull is of wood, and the
top, sides, deck, roof and yards are
made of bamboo, the snlls of matting
Even Sarah Slddons, probably the j and many of the ropes nnd hawsers of
greatest tragic actress of all time, wm plaited cane. They are steered by
a fnllure as Hamlet, lnrgely owing to ! two rudders, one on either side of the
the nondescript nature of her garments, j stern. Some of them carry Iron an-
whlch were neither masculine nor feml- | chors, others wooden ones, with heavy
nine and whicn made It almost Impos- stones lushed to them. Often when
MANY FAMOUS ACTRESSES ESSAYED
IT AND FAILED.
Bvca the Gifted Sarah Slddoaa and
the Brilliant Charlotte Caahniaa
Were Not Bqaal to the Taak-Aaaa
Dleklnaoa la the Part.
Although many of the cleverest ac
tresses the world has known have es
sayed the part, they have, with few
exceptions, failed In It.
slble to forget that her Hamlet was a
woman and not a man, says London
Tit-Bits.
Charlotte Cushman was perhaps the
i the anchor Is let go a man Is sent down
: to see that It Is properly fixed In good
' holding ground. The mast Is a pecul
iar concern, being formed of wood or
SOME ATTRACTIVE BARGAINS.
The old year is almost gone, a new one is upon us, and
everybody seems to be prosperous and happy. To thoso
who are looking for bargains in ready-to-wear apparel, we
make some attractive offerings. We call particular atten
tion to our specials in ladies’, misses’ and children’s cloaks.
NEWSPAPERS IN SCOTLAND.
HOTEL EMPLOYEES, j
It la Sometimes * Very Difficult Mat
ter to Buy One.
Tlie American custom of glancing
over the morning paper ns you sip your
coffee at breakfast goes with you
abroad, but It 1r no simple thing al-
ways to get a morning paper. On com
ing down to breakfast the first morning
In Edinburgh, I found there was no
paper to be had, but, thinking It was a
simple matter to buy a Scotsman on
the street, I went out ou Princes street
nnd wnlked three blocks without the
sight of a newsboy. “Where can I get
the morning Scotsman?" I said to a
policeman. Ho thought for a moment.
“Weel,” snld he, “there’s a great news
shop aboot three blocks up, and yc
might find one there." I followed the
direction and found myself lu a large
news distributing depot. There wore
'stacks and stacks of newspapers and
magazines all about. “I would like the
morning’s Scotsman,” I said. The man
9 In charge looked bewildered. “I’ll see,”
® he Bald, "If we have one." He fumbled
’ around a little while, and then went
back Into the rear of the store for fully
three minutes. At last he came back,
saying, “We haven't one." “Well," I
said, "this Is about the strangest thing
I have seen. Can’t get the morning pa
per hete In Edinburgh.” “No," he said,
“ye’ll find It dlffeecult" “What do
they publish papers here for, anyway?”
i rejoined. "Do they want to keep
them out of the hands of the people?
Don’t they want people to read them?
Do they print papers to keep the news
secret?” He bridled at once. “I want
ye to understand,” he said, “that the
Scotsman la not published for the
general publeek; It's published for the
subscreebers.”
The Scotsman, you know, probably
ranks next to the London Times.
"Well,” I said, “thl# Is all new to me.
In my country publishers want to have
their newspapers read. They want to
sell all they can. They don’t try to
keep them out of the hands of the ‘gen
eral publeek.' Can you tell me where
I can get one, for I want to see the
morning paper, though perhaps I shall
have to get a letter of Introduction to
buy oner “Weel,” he answered,
“there’s a woman about a hundred
yards from here that takes the Scots
man. She might sell you hers.” I took
the direction carefully, found the wo
man who took tho Scotsman—she kept
a thread and needle store—I bought her
copy, and reached the hotel a half bour
late for breakfast, which I had ordered
before going out on the difficult quest
of buying a morning paper In the great
City of Edinburgh.—Boston Watchman.
Wanes of Women Workers In ths
Blit Hen York Establishments.
Employees In tlic linen room receive
$'.>0 n month, with room and board, and
their hours arc well regulated, in most
of the large hotels. The parlor maid
or maids ervme next on tho salary list
with $18, room and board, ami the tips
often bring this sum up to $110 or oven
$50. The maid’s duties are to keep the
parlor swept nnd dusted and hcrsell'
tidy and ready to attend the women
guests who desire her services. The
chambermaids, bathroom girls, paint | “
cleaners nnd scrub women, of whom
most brilliant player of male parts of j bamboo, having two stays, so that In
i her or, Indeed, of any other generation, appearance it resembles a lengthy trl-
! She was equally brilliant and convluc- dent, the spaces between tho masts
! lug ns Borneo, Cardinal Wolsey or | and stays being fitted with wooden
, Claude Melnotte, but when she made steps, on which tin* snllors stand to
| the crucial experiment of playing tho hoist and roll up tho sail, which un-
melnncholy Dune even she proved rolls again by a simplo contrivance
unequal to the task. In fact, lier Ham
let was so badly received lu Dublin
tlint she there and then made up her
mind never to play It again.
And yet her Borneo was such a trl-
umpu of acting that James Sheridan
Knowles, the great dramatist and crit
ic, was completely carried away by It.
Of her acting of tho passage where Bo
rneo flings himself upon the ground,
taking the measure of an unmade
every hotel employs a small army, re- <It was a scene of top-
eelve $12 each. The work of the last two m08t P" 8 , 8 ™’
named Is distinctly different. A scrub ! no thing—real, palpably.real. The
woman would not think of cleaning | ".!!?;
paint, nnd n paint clcuucr would feel
that she was demeaning herself lu
scrubbing the floor. Throughout tho
house the question of soclul distinction
Is argued, the molds feeling above the
bathroom girls, the parlor maid above
the other maids and the linen room
girls above the parlor maid, nnd so on.
Human nature Is much the same the
world over. In tho parlance of hotel
employees, scrub women nre known us
“soubrettes,” the chambermaids ns "the
chorus,” while the parlor inulds are call
ed ‘‘show girls." The "soubrettes" be
gin their work at 1 o’clock In the morn
ing and do not finish until about 5.
They scrub tho floors and go through
out the house with soap and hot water.
In one big New York hotel the em
ployees are permitted to enter the help’s
dining hull at any time of the morning
or afternoon between regular meals
and have a cup of tea nnd a light lunch
—a system which has much to do with
tho contentment reigning among the
employees of this establishment. The
cost Is only a trifle, and, although the
plan has been In operation for some
time, those who enjoy Its advantages
do not abuse It.—Leslie’s Weekly.
HUMAN DISSECTION.
BUSINESS SENSE.
A
All things come to him who doesn’t
wait, but hustles.
Too many clerks and not enough
salesmen—that Is the cry.
The sheriff Is always making googoo
eyes at the store that doesn’t advertise.
Besolye not to worry so much about
your competitor. Take the lead for a
change.
Many succeed because they advertise
correctly and ever so many fall because
they don’t.
If you never do more than you are
paid for, you will never get paid for
more than you do.
If you have no confidence in your em
ployer, for heaven’s sake be honest and
go in and tell him so. Draw your pay
and quit.—Brains.
Inrgen’ and the Anatuiulut* In the
Olden Dnr»,
For n long time Alexandria was the
only mcdlcul center of the world, and
the physician Galen, born about 130
A. D., had to Journey from Borne to
the African city even to sec n skeleton,
He sent his students to tho German
battlefields to dissect the bodies of tho
antlonal enemies, while he himself used
apes as most resembling human beings.
Human dissection was revived In Bo-
lognn In the fourteenth century, where
Madonna Manzollna later was profess
or of anatomy, undoubtedly one of the
first women doctors, if not the very
first. Leonardo da Vinci, pulnter of
‘‘The Last Supper,” was a great anat
est fullness of fury, nnd I listened and
guzed nnd held my breath, while my
blood ran hot nnd cold. I am sure It
must have been tho case with every
one In tho house, hut I was all ab
sorbed In Romeo till a thunder of ap
plause recalled me to myself."
And of her assumption of the difficult
part of Claude Meluotte In “The Lady
of Lyons" Justin McCarthy says: "I
have seen Claude Melnotte played by
many great actors, from Maerendy to
Irving, but Miss Cuslimuti eclipsed
them all. She created for me the only
human, the only possible and the only
endurable Claude Melnotte I have ever
seen.”
Miss Julia Seaman, a once popular
actress, was so severely criticised when
she played Hamlet some years ago that
she turned round on her critics and as
sailed them In a very vigorous manner.
The late Miss Marriott, who had one of
the most beautiful voices ever heard on
any stage, was more fortunate, al
though It was one of her least success
ful assumptions, and In the fifties an
American actress, Miss Percy Knowles,
made such an unfortunate exhibition
of herself as the melancholy one that a
country manager actually Issued a no
tice warning his patrons against going
to see her.
Ellen Tree (Mrs. Charles Kean) was
the first to put on Hamlet's doublet
and hose; Mrs. Glover won Edmund
Kean’s approval by her playing of the
part, and Mme. Sarah Bernhardt gave
a picturesque nnd clever rendering of
Hamlet, although It was not to bo com
pared with many of her brilliant as
sumptions.
Churlotto Crnmpton was noted for
her clever acting of masculine parts,
which would have been even more con
vincing If she had not been such a tiny
woman. ‘‘There Is a woman," Mac-
ready once said, referring to her, "who
would startle the world If she were but
two Inches taller." She was such a
magnificent swordswoman that fow
men cared to try their skill against her
like a window blind.
“When you go on board a proa you
go over the bow, that being close to
(he water's edge, the stern being away
up In tho air. You then climb a beam
nnd step across an opening to tho
deck In front of the captain’s cabin,
which Is situated on one side of tho
how, a similar one being on the oppo
site side for the second In command.
The deck Is of split bamboo, worked
together with wire or fiber, and can be
rolled up at pleasure. The entranco
to the cabins Is about 2 foot by 2 feet
0 Inches. Of course to enter or lcavo
you must go on your hands nnd knees.
Inside there Is room for a man to sit
or lie down In. Tho stern, which Is
high up, has several small rooms, or
holes, ltko u great pigeon house, and
In these and on top of tho cargo the
crew lives, tho gnlley being a larg*
Iron pan with n quantity of sand In It
to light the Are on.
"Proas have a sort of bowsprit rig
ged out and sometimes curry two or
three headsnlls. On top of the houses
they carry plenty of spare bamboos
and rattans, which they got at the is
land of Klssa, near Timor, on the way
down.”
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
LADIE8 AND CHILDREN’S
NEW WINTER C0AT8
Ladies’ Empire coats made of
double twisted covert doth in
tan and castor, satin lined, reg
ular price #iB, at sale 8.98
Ladies’ Empire coats in heavy
broad cloth, satin lined, in gray,
tan, bine and castor, regular
price #12.50, sale price 7.98
Ladies’ long coats made in the lat
est styles, nicely trimmed, all
colors, including black*, bine,
tan, gray and castor, regular
price, #S and #J<), for . 4.98
Children’s and misses’ coats, ages
(! to 14, in cloths of all colors,
worth #4 and #5 2.50
One job misses’ and children’s Si I k caps with full niching
coats, values #2 to #4, at . .1.75, long tics, worth 50c, goat.
lish suiting, cut in the latest
styles, regular 5.00 skirts at 2.98
LINEN TABLECL0TH8
A remarkable sale of linen table
cloth.
Extra fine quality linen tablecloth,
72-inch worth 1.00 a yard, spe
cial sale price 69c
A line quality linen, a beautiful
design, 58-inch, wopth 75c, our
sale price 49c
UNDERWEAR
Ladies’ fleece lined vests and pants
worth 50c, our price 25c
INFANT8 SILK CAP8
and
25c
WHITE BED 8PREAD8 | PETTIC0AT8
Utond our great cut price sale of Mercerized petticoats with wide
accordion rutile, worth 1,50. 98c
white bed spreads
One case of white bed spreads,
Marseilles patterns, #2 to #4 val
ues, our sale at 1.69
B0Y8’ CLOTHING
Hoys’ all wool cashmere suits,
worth #5, at 2.98
Hoys’ all wool black and bluethib-
et suits, worth #2.50, at. . . .1.98
Hoys’ all wool suits in fancy mix
tures, 0 to 16, worth #2.50 1.50
Hoys’ all wool knee pants, sizes 4
to 16, 1.00 to 1.50 values 75c
0VERC0AT8
Hoys’ overcoats worth up to 6.00,
our special price 2.98
8H0E8
Men’s 4.00 shoes reduced to 3.50
Men’s 2.50 shoes reduced to 2.98
Ladies’ 2.00 shoes reduced to 2.50
Ladies’ 2.50 shoes reduced to 1.98
Ladies’ 2.00 shoes reduced to. 1.48
MEN’8 8HIRT8
Boys’knee pants sold everywhere imperial 1.00 shirt, cuff at
sir. wi l im sit. 7hr . . . . 7 . ~
The poorest thing you can offer a
friend Is an excuse.
Two things a man puts off—buying a
lot In a cemetery and making a will.
It Is not enough to admit that you
are a fool. You must try to get over it.
After a man fulls to rnako monoy his
wife loses all awe of his bunch of office
keya.
When a boy helps his mother with
the dishes, how do tho other boys find
It out?
There Is no greator fallacy In the
world than that sense comes with age
or experience.
When you think yourself over lu the
middle of tho night you give mighty
poor satisfaction.
It Is going to make a mighty poor
Jam for your crust In poverty to eat It
remembering what you spent on fool
ishness In youth.—Atchison Globe.
ttt 50c, will go at 25c
One job knee pants in fast colors
at a Maori lieu 17c
LADIE8’ AND MI88E8’ 8KIRT8
Ladies’ and misses’ skirts at cut
prices.
A choice assortment of ladies’
skirts in panamas, worsteds,
cheviots, serges and broadcloth,
a large variety of styles in all
colors,* grays, greens, blues,
browns, blacks, values up to
tt.00, for 4
One of our most popular lines of
skirts is made up of heavy Eng-
Thc Salt I* «h* IM.
Tho Pythngorouns held that tho sea
was salt by reason of tho tears shed by
Kronos, father of Zaus. According to
the old Hebraic tradition, the ocean
was originally a great body of frosh
water, but which was made salt by the
abundant tears of the fallen augela.
tachcd for 49c
Men’s white laundered shirts, up
to 1.50, we sacrifice at 88c
Men’s white laundered shirts,
worth l .00 and 75c 49c
HANDKERCHIEF8
Hemstitched handkerchiefs for la
dies and misses values up to 15o
choice 5c
MEN’8 FANCY VE8T8
Men’s fancy vests, beautiful de
signs, values up to #2.00, our
sale price 1.49
New York Bargain Store
First t'se «t Potatoes In Ireland.
In the garden adjoining bis bouse at
Youghal, Raleigh planted the first po
tatoes ever grown In Ireland. The veg
etable was brought to him from the
little colony which he entBAvored to
establish in Virginia. The colonists
started In April, 1585, and Thomas
Harriot, one of their number, wrote a
description of the country In 1587. He
describes a root which must have
been the potato:
‘‘Openank are a kind of roots of
round form, some of the blgnesse of
walnuts, some farre greater, which are
found in moist & marlsh grounds grow
ing many together one by another In
ropei as though they were fastened
wltMl»strlng. Being boiled they are
verj4H%l meat.”
ThKlpanlards first thought potatoes
to Europe, but Raleigh was undoubted
ly the first to Introduce the plant A
Ireland.
_ One sect of Buddhists believe that
omlRt, but dissection bad fallen into stage, and she was undoubtedly ! Lot’s wife—that Is to say, the ‘‘pillar of
disuse when Vesallus finally revived 1 R gen)uH j n i, er w(ly w | t j, a CO urage | suit” which was once tho wife of the
commensurate with her skill.
She was one of the finest personators
of Richard III. ever seen on tho stage,
her Sbylock was among the most bril
liant pieces of acting In her day, nnd
she was almost equally clever as Iago,
Romeo and Don Caesar de Bazan, and
yet when Charlotte Crumpton chal-
lt about the middle of the sixteenth
century.
Even in comparatively modern times
anatomists have been the object of at
tacks by the populace. In 1705 Dr.
John Shlppen of Philadelphia was mob
bed as a grave robber. Doctors’ riots
In New York occurred twenty-three
years later nnd were due to the belief leng0(1 criticism with Hamlet she fall-
humble gentleman named above—lies
1 at the bottom of the ocean In u certain
narrow strait and that once each year
the waters of all oceans flow through
that narrow channel. The Talmudic
writers say that It was never salt until
Moses wept repentance after breuklng
the tables of stone.
that the medical students robbed
graves continually. It was the lack of
opportunity to obtnin subjects regular
ly that led to the practice of grave rob
bing and originated what Dr. Keene
calls "a set of the lowest possible vil
lains—the resurrectionists.”—New York
World.
ed as signally as her rival, Charlotte
Cushman, had done.
Probnbly the most successful of all
lady Hamlets was Anna Dickinson,
who made considerable reputation ns
Macbeth and Claude Melnotte. “A
number of women have tried Hamlet,"
she snld. "None, I believe, with any
success. Yet, In my opinion, the char
acter of Hamlet Is eminently suited for
a woman’s capabilities. Hamlet was
very young—a mere college hoy, In
Besides, u fine actress Is more
A lilt of Translation.
The difficulty of avoiding "howlers”
when one Is translating from English
Into such a language as that, of tile
MIcmac Indians of Nova Scotia must
he very great, says the London News.
We hear from tho Bible society of a
curious case. In the first edition of
fit. Matthew In MIcmac tlie translator
found when he came to revise It that
In chapter xxlv, 7, Instead of “Nation
shall rise against nation,” lie had writ
ten, “A pair of suowsboes shall rise
H. W. CAMP, Pkkhidknt
H. ABNER CAMP, Oabhhsr
MORELAND BANKING CO.,
MORELAND, GA.
Capital - - $35,000.00
We solicit your patronage and promise you
service possible.
tlie best
Merry to the Lout.
It was the 21st of April, 1821. Dr. I.
P. Frank, the eminent governor of the
University hospital, Vienna, lay on his fnc .j
deathbed and was expected every mo- q^ely to bring out the wonderful wo- up against a pair of snowshoos.” And
rnent to pass away, Once more the muulike delicacy of Hamlet’s charac- yet there was only one letter misprint-
eight leading medical men of the cap- ter than a very young actor.” And she pd—naooktukumlksljlk (a nation), lmv-
ital gathered round his couch. All at supported her views by giving an at- ing been displaced by naooktakmnlksl-
onee the patient burst out laughing. tractive and clever rendering of the jik (a snowshoe).
“What Is It that tickles your fancy?” pa rt. j —— —
his friends inquired. j
“A story has just come into my ! crinoline,
mind,” was the reply. “On the battle- in the World of Fashion of 1830 Is
field of Wagram lay a French soldier a reference to “the new stuff called
and counted his wounds. ‘Sucre bleu'.’ crinoline.” Crinoline was partly thread,
Atlanta & West Point Railroad Co.
The Western Railway of Alabama.
Direct Lines Between North, East, South and Southwest. U. S. Fast
Mail Route. Through Palace Sleeping Cars. Dining
Cars. Tourist Sleepers to California.
HEAD DOWN
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT APR. 23. 1906.
he exclaimed. ‘It takes eight bullets to partly horsehair, Its name being com-
kill a French grenadier.’ Gentlemen, pounded of the French “crin,” horse-
there are eight of you too.” Thus he hair, and “lln,” flax. Hats, skirts and
spoke and expired in a fit of laughter. ! all sorts of things that were wanted to
possess a certain stiffness were made
A* It Was In the Beginning. ' of this material.
“I wonder, how graft originated?” : ——
m
Til* NSan Eater.’’
Lower California la the home of a
species of lizard which appears to be
at least a second cousin of the famed
"Gila monster.” It Is of a mottled yel
low and brown color and only about
fifteen Inches long. The natives of that
region have given It the terrible name
of "man eater,” because It has a habit
of attacking every human being It sees,
going at one open mouthed, but does
not appear to mind either wild or do
mestic animals. The man eater’s body
is almost as brittle as that of the myth- j jji cb ter.
leal "joint snake.”
said the studious man.
“Away back in the garden of Eden,”
answered Senator Sorghum, “man was
a grafter at the outset. Adam couldn’t
even let Eve enjoy an apple without
getting a rakeoff.”—Washington Star.
Spare Moment*.
Chancellor D’Aguesseuu, observing
that his wife always delayed ten or
twelve minutes before she came down
to dinner and reluctant to lose so much
time dally, began the composition of a
work which he prosecuted only while
thus kept waiting. At the end of fif
teen years a book In three quarto vol
umes was completed, which ran
through throe editions and was held in
high repute.
PclIhHCOlll.
Generous.
“Some men say,” remarked the beau
tiful heiress, “that I have no heart.”
Preferred Tenant*.
Servant—These rooms will be rented
to artists only. Applicant—And why
not to others? Servant—Because art
ists are less troublesome. They never
want their rooms put In order.—Chica
go Journal.
, to'No ill No swlNo :sh Leave
5ps iephv-—
1 JA|) 1A ion Lv~—
11 U6pj 12 lOp n 0&|iiLv.~.
: l ixip 6 oou5Lv Holloa....
Tm\Tm\Tm\ by Montgomery
2 rap - 'I2p 7 Win] Ar Llioli
H81p S 12p Ar AuIni
Ar
12 Slip
11 26ft
12 30p
The Awful LonellneH.
The Friend—What made yon clodd
“Oh, that doesn’t matter!” replied the your season so early ? The Actor—Hie
poor but willing youth. “I'll give you goiitude, my boy; night after night, the
mine.” appalling solitude.—Brooklyn Life.
Reasonable Request.
Judge—Have you anything to say
before I pass sentence upon you?
Bank Wrecker—Yes. Don’t tho rules
allow you to take out time from my
sentence equal to the length of that
miserable speech my lawyer model—
Cleveland Leader.
imp] srip
25p
««p «i»p
4 Slip 0 02p
12 Slip
I2 67p
2 OOp
2 I2p
8 (XI (,
3 20 p
(I 4 'ill
10 62a]
12 64 p
0 »p
4 77 p tl 80 p
3 OOpjJO 27p
tump;
7 06p
7 80p
0 30p
II I7|.
2 36p
6 13a
11 H5p 11 -tlltt
A r Columbus.
Ar .
Ar La Grange Ar
Ar Ncwnun Ar
Ar Kiilrtiurn Ar
Ar Bust Point Ar
Ar Atlanta
« 42h - Ar Washington Lv
7 52ul Ar Baltimore Lv
10 11a Ar - Philadelphia ...Lv 336a
I (sip! Ar New York Lv 1210a
What makes old age so sad Is not Every man has Just as much tanitg
that our Joys but our hopes mu.- u be w#nU „nderstandlng.-Pope.
Slmpls.
Bite—Miss Stlffy had always vowed
■be would never marry. How did she
happen to change her mind? He—
Why, some one proposed.—Detroit Free
Press.
A^ovctraln* daily. Connection* ut New Orleans for Texas, Mexico, California. At Chebaw
for Tuskegec, MUsteud for Tallahassee.
LaGrange accommodation leaves Atlanta dally, except Sunday at 5:30 p. m. Returning
leaves LaG range at 6:50 a. m. arrives Atlanta B:15 a. in.
| Trains 36 and 30 Pullman sleepers New York and New Orleans. Through coaches Washing-
on and New Orleans.
Trains 87 arid 33 Washington and Southwestern Limited. Pullman sleepers, compartment
cars, observation and dining cars. Complete service New York and New Orleans.
Train 07 United States fust mail. Through day coaches Atlanta and New Orleans.
i Write for maps, schedules and Information.
] Y. M. THOMPSON, J. P. BILLUPS,
T. P. A., Atlanta, Ga. G. P. A., Atlanta Qt.
OH AS. A. WICKER8HAM,
Pres, and Gen. Mgr., Atlanta, Ga