Newspaper Page Text
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A HEARTY LAUGH
Cl In n lllmnliiK. Tlil»’ It«• f!«• m of n ^im-
nliln> Ho til.
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tin Imiti ir wliii li p ii.iivi - . nil ro-
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iiwnliriis ymp.iili.i iin*l Hum" f4*i*l
Iiitr "I' 11 1 ti'lliii' - • 11 . ' in.-- In nirll
Illl lllllTilT*
• Hi. wli.il i - ii'lii - s liv in ii sunny soul:
AVImi ii lilcs ..I iii'iii. _s is ii sunn.i
fi"-i* t In In - :■ till* Iii Ilii ^ mil Miiislilii"
WlllTi'M'l - mil - I" III - Hill' - I'l HI 'll I
M l' II" sliiiil iw 1 "1 t" light n sorrow
Im Ii - ii In'ii t*i . in I in vi* power in Hi'iiil
i - ln i*r lulu i|esp . ii mg souls I lil - oii;;li II
Hiiuni mill i i.i'ii.iiii In - .nl! Ami if,
Imply, iln- liiTii.im - Is loinliinnl with
II HllpiTll III.1IIlIlT mill i' .IpliMill* pel
h> il I: i Illy, im nioliiw Wen Itli eilll e mu
pun - w illi il - VIItill*
'I’llIk lilt" hiiic is nut very illllli'llil of
ii< ipiislii in. im - ,i sunny lin e is Iml u
rellei I "ill ul :i w nil li' liiToim lieill'I.
The -ui " in - il". not uppeiir first
upon III! 1.11 e. I lll III the S'ltll. Tile
ghlli 'll I" Ill'll lll.il ' ■ I III* fuel* 1*1111111111
I lull II 2 "I I lie "Ill's sunshine
II.: .. . I • I • • 11 -in ■ M ngu/.illO.
UNIQUE FLATS.
Olid I * Ii > Kii.tl I ilrlit I Iml
lift , mill *| Im i'i* I mi l>«».
A Ul "Up "I Ii.' ' Iiii.. men w ere (II
ells -i 11U llti ii | III* leuls mill pliysienl
II ii U III.il pie here mill lllclc
1*1111 do
"I know ii i liu'u:: iuii," sulil one.
"wlm i "ii wlilsile i lime mid Iiiiiii its
lie* "Illl 11111 "l 11 ill llle .lue lillle lit*
wlusiiet. ilii.'i Ii u Him. nil through Urn
l is i in I rulin' liul", mill Iln* ili*c|i, liiil-ifiil
ii11 <>i11pni■ 11*11 nl together with Hie shrill
HWeetlie - nl Hie will-lie lllll lies II
llllgllt,V II 1 I I'.iel It I - I lliliu III llelll ."
"I knew il li.nlii'i," slllll die sceoliil
«1 I'l 111111 it* i. - 'wli" lllld ii nnliple W'liy of
('IIU'klllK lulls III* would phiec II nut
between I lie Inn - k of Ills lifilil mid ii
slum - or hrli'k wnll, mid then lie would
give himself II slllll P Clip oil Illl* fore
hem I with Ills il-1 The mils would
eruek open e\cry time."
"A Miiniiyuuk iiiiiii." suld iln* Hill'd,
"eiin give his heiid u Jerk Unit turns
buck his eyelids, lie tills to till'll them
down again with Ills lingers. This Is
iiii iiuly foul, mid I'm Kind II Is rum."
"I knew nl Hfliool," snid iln* fourth
drummer, "n hoy limned Mucky .Vil
nius win old piny limes by snapping
his llugei Tin* I h ll in Ii mid llrsl two
fingers of eiieh li.iud would wmk ii wily
busily, mid I'oi'lli would come the Hear
esl, sweetest, fulntest iniisle. I used to
sit with Mucky Adams, mill nimiy ii
Iedhms school session would he imike
shorler mid plnusmiler with this odd
Kill New York I’re-s
I'nri* llllli* Illl.
If olive oil collifeillu III freezing
wen tiler, II Is u slKH Hint II Is nduller-
n I ed will lnrd. Very few bottles of so
culled olive oil will stnnil Mils simple
tint-III fuel, we seldom K'*l llle pure
tiling, mill, If we did. Iln* rluinces nre
thut we could not cut il At lenst, Unit
wns Hie experience once upon n linn* of
one woiuuil who used n Kreilt deni of
uinyiinnnlsi* dressing upon her table
lllld hud supposed thut she doled on
olive oil Vn 11 ii Iln it friend bestowed
upon her n llnsk of the pcfullurly green
Hind I'o her surprise, not one of her
Inmlly. herself included, eoiiul hear its
taste Thero was u Iiiiik to It which
showed them that they hud never eaten
olive oil before uml that they never
w Milled to eat II ugnlii So they gave
the llnsk away New York Telegl'iini.
TlineUerii) - * IiuiIiiki.
Thiiekeray once wrote In a note to a
friend, nlhidlug in an Incident occn
sinned by one of lus articles in Punch
"I thought over the confounded mutter
In the railroad and w rote Instantly on
arriving here a letter of contrition and
apology to Henry Taylor for having
made what 1 see now was a tllppant
and olVensIve allusion to Mrs. Taylor. 1
am glad I have done It. 1 mu glad
that so many people whom 1 have been
thinking bigoted and unfair and un
just toward me have been right mid
that 1 have been wrong, and my mind
Is mi immense deal easier."
A <«r«*nt lilon.
"My new play is sure to make a hit,"
said tin* great actress. "It gives me nu
opportunity to display twenty now
gowns."
“Gracloua!" exclaimed her frleud.
•‘How many acts?"
“Only four, but In one of them the
scene'H at a dressmaker's."- Philadel
phia I'ress.
Talents.
As to flip great and commanding tal
ents, thoy are tin* gift of Providence
In some way unknown to us. They rise
where they are lenst expected. They
fail when everything seems disused to
produce them, or at least to call them
forth, Burke.
Ktol lit ton.
"There Is au old proverb that a man
becomes what lie eats."
“Then 1 suppose all the cannibals
will lie missionaries in time." -Cleve
land Leader.
CAMELS OUTDONE.
f renitiro* That (in For lOxtrndfd Pe-
rlniln Without Dr I n k I iik •
Ollier e, . "Hires than tin* camel are
nidi* to gci • ig for extended periods
withoul drinking. Sleep hi the south-
weslerti ib serts g i for forty to sixty
days in winter without drink, grazing
mi the given, succulent vegetation of
Hint him 111 I'eeearli*s ill llle desert of
Sonora live in little dry hills where
there I- no nn t urn I w ater for long peri
ods. They cannot possibly lllld water-
ill fact, for mouths at a time. Tin* only
in store they can obtain comes from
I > its and tile fruits of eaeti, bill tin*
must extraordlimry ease Is that of the
p'M'kei mouse, one "f the common ro
dents of tin* desert. Tills lit tie cron I lire,
by the v ay lias ii genuine fur lined
"pocket" on the outside of Its cheek.
W'lieii it I hungry il lakes food from
thin pocket with its paw, Just as a man
would pull a Iiiiiii sandwich from his
pick'd. line of these mice lias been
1 " pi lor dir' y ears with no other food
ilian Ha* mixed bird seed of commerce.
I luring Iiii I" "111 11 bail iml a taste of
citin'!* water or green food. Ollier ex
pei'iiiii’iilei s lia\i* found, In fact, Hint
I Iii" <• mice in captivity refuse such
treats, iml ■ coming to know that water
Is I to drink 'I In* bird seed put be
fore ibi*. mouse c. ui t ii Im *il not more
1 Iiii ii Hi per 11 ui of moisture, which Is
less than Is necessary for digestion.
SHUT so dry as tills cannot even be
HWallowisI until II is tnolstciied by
saliva. Yet ibis remarkable mouse
gave n idling bul Ills time In Hie Inter
esl ■ of sclell' o. lie slllll red llolllillg III
health or spirits during Ills captivity.—
Mrookly n I iaide
SYMPATHETIC LISTENERS
'the 11 •-11> lli'') May \IToril In Slow
anil I ml I It e r«*ti I Talkers.
At no I nn* luore than when a thought
i { t"ward nxpro ■ dot) thoultl
a friend l"ir with a friend's iiilirini
tic- \ dci: -yiupathy should In* pair
ed mil with lavish iii'ferHon ahoiit tIn*
one wlm is seriously striving to say
some leal thing. In Mils attnosplien* of
pallenl, sympathetic ililelligi'iice tin*
Inept word the crude phrase, tIn* wind
ly IIIH111 'I I tin 11 * expression will lie ell
aided lo do tlicir work, lllld the though!
transference will I the
I li< 'light will la* safely lodged in I lit*
11111111 of Iln* other, slightly bruised III
transit, hut Intact and Intelligible.
Willi an "I know what you mean,"
“Kxaci y," or "(So on; I understand,”
iiiucli help may la* reinlerisl, and at
In -1 when the thinker of iln* thought
has placed Ills friend In possession and
by reason of this elTort has entered in
lo fuller possession of It himself, the
conversation is in a way to begin.
Then lavish upon the elaboration of the
(bought all the beauties that can lie
w in en out of words precision, Iml
mice, music but let us, dear lovers of
laiiguage, remember to la* discreetly
gentle and listen with averted glance
while Hie thought is still in negligee.
Atlantic.
Tin- I cl turn of lliirilcunx.
Tile cobw ebs w ill seem lo an Impres
sionable visitor Hie noblest things In
the Bordeaux eellars. Some of them
look like thick pile curtains, somber in
lute, of course, but famously suggestive
of warmth. Vud with even only a
moderate Imaghmtloii one may go to
mid fro iimong tin* barrels fancying the
pendent shapes overhead are dusky
stalactites Instead of the utry next to
notliltig as they really are. If you hold
your caudle high enough you nmy
shrlvol a lew yards of the fabric. But
Ihul were truly a shocking deed of
vmidallsiii. for, though no layman can
understand why this dismal tapestry
Is reverenced as ii |s, his Ignorance will
hot be held sullh ieut excuse for his
crime, i'hmuliers' .lournal.
Mnrrlnuc n> I'riii).
lit Holland, says a Seofeh paper,
marriage by proxy Is allowed. This is
the so called "marriage by the glove"
mid Is usually put in practice by a
iMilcliutmi wlto is sojourning abroad
and, wanting a wife, is too poor or
too far oil' to return home for one. In
shell a ease lie writes home to a law
yer. who selects one conformable to the
rotpilremenl.s of Ills client. If the gen
tleman approves he next sends the law
yer a soiled left hand glove and a
power of attorney, which settles the
business. A friend marries the woman
by proxy, mid she Is thereafter prompt
ly shipped off to her new home.
ODORS IN THERAPEUTICS.
Perfumes unit Tlielr t Me In the Prnc-
4lre of yicillcfne.
Odors, whether* agreeable or dis
agreeable, are not causes of disease in
the sense gi in-rally taken. They tuny
d'sorder certain healthy functions I»y
linpnlrlng nervous energy, by diminish
ing wholesome respiration mid thus
creating a predisposition to attack by
disease
Severe faintness is sometimes observ
ed to overcome persons upon their en
trance Into a room in which tuberoses
arc kept. Headache is often produced
by the odors cuifliintiug from tin* hon
ey suckle, lily, rose of Sharon or carna
tion. 'I In* oilor of lietony In flower Is
said to have caused Intoxication hi
those who gather it. The making of
lin-eed deonci ions and tin* triturating of
roses, pinks, walnuts or eolocynth are
often accompanied by nttacks of s.vn-
eope.
Attempts have been made to utilize
odors In llicr."polities. The odors of
vanilla and In lioiropi* ore credited with
possessing a soothing influence over
persons -ubjecii'il to attacks of non
oil-mess. The use of toilet water 111
the form of a spray will often restore
those exhausted With the elites of busi
ness, social or domestic duties. In the
east the ii" - nf perfume is considered
a purifier, though we look upon II men*
ly as n luxury. Il Is asserted that those
who ployed In laboratories
where perfumes an* made or among
growing flowers are healthy to an ex-
lent exceeding those not .so employed.
.Medical Kccord
MUSIC’S MIGHTY REALM.
Iii II 'I lu*ri* Is Iml n SIiikIi* iiihI I u|.
\ i*r«i»I S|M*«*«'lii
"In the mighty realm of music there
i< Iml one sin-.-le speech." Music forms
Hut Universal language which, when all
other languages were colil'oiindud, the
confusion of I'.alii l left uncoil founded.
I lie while iiiiiii mid (lie black iiiiiii, die
red iiiiiii mid the yellow iiiiiii. can slug
together, however dlflleull they may
lllld II lo lie lo talk to each other. And
both sexes mid all ages may iluis ex
press I heir emotions sluiiiltmicoiisly,
for In virtue of the power of the ear lo
distinguish side by side those differing
Iml 'limit notes which make up
harmony there Is not only room, but
demand, lor nil the i|linlltles of voice
w lilcli childhood, adolescence, maturity
and old age supply. Thus a love of
music is much more freipient than a
love of palming or sculpture, mid you
will reach the hearts and touch the
feelings of the majority of mankind
umre ipilckly by singing them a song
than by showing them a picture. In
truth, the sensitiveness of the ear to
melody and to harmony Is so great that
we not only seek to gratify It when
bent upon reereatlon, hut even In the
midst of the hardest labor we gratify
It If we can. London Catholic Times.
W Im I •» “lliirrientir” la,
"Hurricane" Is the old Spanish name
for a West Indies cyclone, hut It Is
used by modern meteorologists to des
ignate a long continued wind of ex
treme violence. In Beaumont's scale
the different winds are classed ns
"light," "gentle," "fresh” and "strong"
lire»*zes. The next Is a "stiff” breeze,
then a "strong" wind and then we
strike the "gales.” The “gales” run
through throe or four classes, the last
merging Into the “hurricane.”
It Happened In Vluelaad.
"Shay, ofTsher," the luuu with the
liquid Imrden remarked to the police
man, "shoe all 'em houses mimin' by?”
“Sure," replied the policeman good
humoredly, “I see them."
"Well, when nutu'r slx-t went'tV enmesh
'long shtop It, caushe 'at's mine!" —
Philadelphia Ledger.
REGISTERED
TRADE MARK
The Fertilizer
for Big Crops
with
Less Acreage
Fewer acres, lighter labor, larger yields—a happy
combination secured with FARMERS’ BONE, the
fertilizer proved perfect by twenty-one years of great
crops from Southern soil. Farmers' Bone is richest in
balanced food for every stage of plant growth from planting
time till harvesting, and is suited to a great diversity of crops,
from cotton to corn, wheat to small truck.
IV1 ddc with Fish
2
Fish scrap is used in every ton of Farmers' Bone, insuring nourishment
under all crop conditions and making it famous as a crop saver. Look
for the Royster trade mark.
HERE'S TIIK SALES RECORD
THINK OF THE CROP RECORD
1085-250 TONS
1890-1,600 TONS
1895-12,000 TONS
1900 53,455 TONS
1905-130,091 TONS
Norfolk, Va.
Columbia, S. C.
F. S. ROYSTER GUANO GO.
Tarboro, N. C.
Macon, Ca.
Library Notes.
4Jii4*«*r I.Itlli* lllu ii tiers.
From an account of Iln* Iloncastcr
(Englandi Art Hub's uunuitl exhibition
in the Doncaster (lazetle; "Miss
also goes hi for part i'll I tun*. In hitting
off' her father’s head her Intentions are
good, but the execution lacks very much
In artistic linish.”
In tin* London Mail's description of a
parade In honor of the king of tin* Hel
lenes the reporter said: "The soldiers,
Had only hi tlielr seat let tunics, pre
sented an unpleasant contrast with the
warmly Had meinhers of the police
force.”
From tin* windows of a British tailor:
"We have cleared a Scotch merHiant’s
remains of high class overcoatings at a
big reduction.’’
Not a Horn Forurr.
The Indorsement of checks is a very
siniple thing, hut. as tin* following story
will show, it, too, lias Its difficulties:'
A woman went into a hank when*
she had several times presenied cheeks
drawn to Mrs. Lucy B. Smith. This
time the check was made to the order
of Mrs. M. .1. Smith M. ,1. were her
husband's Initials. She explained this
to tin* pitying teller and asked what she
should do.
“Oh, that Is all right," he said. "Just
indorse It as it Is written there."
She took the check and, after much
hesitation, said, "I don’t think I can
make an M like that."
The chililrcn’s section at tIi»•
Carnegie Library Ins been re
plenished with seventy volumes of
choice I t rature. It would he
gratifying if parents would call
and examine the new lot of bocks.
It would create a stronger desire
in the children to read, and would
encourage the Book Committee to
renewed energy in the careful se
lection of mental food for our hoys
and gills.
Mis, Hattie S. Smith favored
the Library with a bouquet of or
ange flowers—a fragrant reminder
of this gentle, cultured lady.
Stoddard's lectures in l.'t vol
umes have .just been catalogued.
The travels of this renowned au
thor and the marvelous interest
aroused by his work, are too well
known to the entire reading world
to require mention. To have read
Stoddard's lectures is to he abreast
with the best of modern produc
tions in the line of illustrated
travels.
Mrs. D. B. Woodroof,
Librarian.
Atlanta & West Point Hailroad Co.
The Western Railway of Alabama.
Uirect Lines Between North, East. South and Southwest. U. S. Fast
Mail Route. Through Palace Sleeping Cars. Dining
Cars. Tourist Sleepers to California.
UK All DOWN
SCHEDULE IN EFFECT APR. 23, 1905.
No 40
No bi
No 86|No :In Leave
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Ilnlr.
Animal hair differs in construction
from that grown on a human head. In
human hair the upper skin is smooth
and thin. The circular section Is com
paratively broad, forming the main
part of the lmlr shaft. It Is striped in
appearance atul carries the color mut
ter. The tubular part Is thin, extend
ing to about one-flfth and certainly not
more than to one-quarter of the entire
width of the hair. Animal hair also
consists of three parts, but these nre
differently constructed, the tube often
tilling the entire Imtr.
The Real Need.
"He suld he would lay the earth at
my feet," said the sentimental girl.
"Yes," auswered Miss Cayenne. "It
sounds good, but It Is not practical.
You already have the earth at your
feet. What you want Is a three or four
story house over your head.”—Wash
ington Star.
Welcome
(bast \Vui-k’s Letter. i
ltov. W. S. Quines tilled bis regular
appointment at Ml. Carmel Saturday
and Sunday.
Mrs llo|H* Jackson, from Corinth, is
visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. ,1. B.
Strong.
Misses Norma Jones and Mary Crow
der, from Handy, visited Miss Fannie
MeKoy Sunday.
Miss Florence Moore, of Madras, is
attending school at Mt. Carmel,
Mrs. Eddie Ball. Clmrlie Crain and
Ed Copeland are on the sick list.
Miss Tommie Lou Lester, after spend
ing a month with her sister, Mrs. A. B.
MoKoy, Inis returned to her home at
Grantville.
Our community lias been bereaved by
the deatli of “Uncle Jasper" Dickson,
who lived near Emory Oliai>et. He had
dropsy and had been in bnd health for u
long time. He died Sunday night and
liis remains were interred in the oeme-
etery at Emory on Tuesday. He leaves
a wife, three sisters, and many relatives
and friends. He was the third member
of Providence church to die within a
month’s time. Mr. Dickson's wife was
Miss Mary Scroggin. to whom lie was
married more than fifty years ago. He
xvas iff years of age.
•Meals
Above trains dully, fmilieel lons nt New Orleans fur Texas, Mexico, tCalifornia. At Chehltw
forTllskeyei - . Mllstead fnr'l'slliilmssei-
l.aUriiiiue a' l-oinnioiliitlon leaves Atlanta dally, except Sunday nt r,::to n. m. Returning
leaves l.iiOrungi - at a. in. arrives Atlanta 8:15 a. in.
Trains 115 nail :W l’lillninn sleepers New York and New Orleans. Through conches Washing
nu and New Orleans.
Trains »7 mid :m Wnshlimti n anil Southwestern Limited. Pullman sleepers, compartment
ears, observation and dining ears. Complete service New York and New Orleans.
'1 rain P7 f lilted Slates fust mall. Through day e.mrlies Atlanta and New Orleans.
Write for mu•>-*. schedules and laiurinalliiii.
K. M. THOMPSON. J. p. BILLUPS,
T. P. A., Atlanta, On. (j. P. A., Atlanta tin.
OH AS. A. WKKEUSHAM,
Pres, and Cbm. Mgr.. Atlanta. On
Philosophy does not regard pedigree.
t?he did not receive Plato as a noble,
but made him so Seneca.
Dntj.
Duty stands for tin* most part Hosp
at baud, unobacured. simple, immedi
ate. If un. - man has the will to hear
her voice, to him is stie willing to ou
ter and to he his ready guest.- Francis
Peabody.
The smallest bird cannot alight upon
Hie greatest tree without sending a
shock to its inmost rtber Every mind
is at times no less sensitive to the most
trifling words.
Why He I.«vc«l Her.
Minister — Bobby, do you love your
teacher? Bobby (six years old)—Yes.
sir. Minister—That's right. Now tell
me wliy you love licr. Bobby — Be
cause the Bililc says we must love our
enemies.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Whnt I1l»lln«nl«hi-, Man.
The difference between man and the
so called “lower animals" is that he
alone cooks his food and wears arti
ficial clothes. And these are the two
that Injure his health!—St. Lou Is Globe-
Democrat.
Warning!
All persons are hereby warned
not to hire or harbor one Jesse
1 Lambert, colored, who left his
home without cause, Thursday,
March 15th. He is 16 years of
age, about 5 feet tall and weighs
about 126 pounds. Any informa
tion of his whereabouts will lie ap
preciated by his father,
James Lambert,
51 Route 1, Turin, Ga.
can easily bo raised with
regular, even stan.N, alii
of tho very, best grade, for which tl*o
highest prices can be gotten nt your
warehouse, or from tnhnoco buyers It'
you will, a few weeks before planting,
liberally use
Virginia-Carolina Fertilizers.
Use them again as a top dressing, or
second application. Th se fertilizers
uro mixed by capnblo men. who haio
boen making fertilizers all their lives,
and contain phosphoric acid, pomsh
and nitrogen, or ammonin, in their
proper proportions to return toy. ur
soil the elements of ptnut-llfe that
have been taken from it by continual
cultivation. Accept no substitute.
Virginia-Carolina Chemical Co. (
Richmond. Va. Atlanta. Ga.
Norfolk. Va, Bavcnuoh.Ga.
Durham. N.C. Montgomery, Ala
Charleston. 8. C, Memphis, icon.
Baltimore, Md. Shreveport, La.
Tax Notice.
City tax receiver’s books will be
open at the Council Chamber
April i, 19 6. All owners of real
or personal property, are expected
to make their schedules in person
and to qualify to correctness of
the same. E. D FOUSE,
52 City Clerk.
Lemons as Medicine
Their Wonderful Effec
on the Liver, Stomach
Bowels, Sidneys
and Blood.
Lemons are largely used by The
Mozley Lemon Elixir Company, in
compounding their Lemon Elixir,
a pleasant Lemon Laxative ami
Tonic—a substitute for all Cathnrtic
and Liver Pills. Lemon Elixir posi
tively cures all Biliousness, Consti
pation, Indigestion or Dyspepsia.
Headache, Malaria, Kidney Disease,
Dizziness, Colds, Loss of Appeti e,
Fevers, Chills, Blotches, Pimples,
all Impurities of the Blood, Pain in
the Chest or Back, and allotherdis-
cases caused by a disordered live r
and kidneys, the first Great
Cause of all Fatal Diseases.
WOMEN, for all Female Irreg
ularities, will find Lemon Elixir
a pleasant and thoroughly reliable
remedy, without the least danger oi
possible harm to them in any condi
tion peculiar to themselves. 50c
and $1.00 per boi tie at —
ALL DRUG STOKE!
‘One Done Convinces.
Hides Wanted—Will pay best price for
green hides for next few weeks. G. O.
Carmichael, Newnan, Ga.