Albany weekly herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1892-19??, December 03, 1892, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

M'' SfJ INDSTINCT PRINT P jtv. m ow tli. «So«a»pllo» 8l*M » J r«t«d eh. p*nkii or w«» The relationship between and beauty may seem rather at first, but after all the dep of beauty on this sweet isii People who have no fat show projections of their bones the muscles and skin. The t; ‘'Undo Sam” is'a rawboned, fellow, and in oorly days this was typical Yankee—that is, a p without fat Now, sugar is po^ed of 00.7 per ceut. of carl orates, or the material that goes give heat and vital force, and the stir- plus of this that gets into the body, above what is required for immedi ate use, is stored up as fat. In the olden time people ate little sugar; indeed they had little or no money to pay for it, and their fat V Sb* tss eharmiaa sod ■ Wl* lMr sylpblika .Imp. aba I i‘ Ab, her Rlanolns wu at And bawltcblnglr aanpblo had to come from tho meals that k, ad- thoy ato, possibly from salt pork, mitting that fat is stored up in the body as such; which is denied by good authorities. It can readily bo seen what the ef fect would be when a people began to increase their fat forming food he-’ yond the point of its combustion in the body. Sugar being a highly con centrated food of this character, it ijl capable of putting many pounds of fat on the animal body if eaten regu larly and not necessarily in large quantities, being eaten, as it is, in conjunction with tho starchy foods. Thu 23,000,000 of people in tho United States in 1851 ate 302,000,000 pounds of sugar, or 20 pounds apiece on the average. In 1884 the 05,000,000 of people ato nearly 8,000,000,000 pounds, or 04 pounds apioco on the average. The average per capita consump tion more than doubled within thir- ty-threo years, and in getting this average wo must include a very large portion of tho population that con sumes little more sugar per oapita than it over did on aocount of pover- TltE TRANSFORMATION I lit •H M ■' , Inberirao. And b.r Uce» * > Aiwafn tarriad Whan aba skipped and aba tripped jiu an angel In the transformation acana. In bar poses ’Mid the r 4gA antranofnfl was bar Realistic, Too, yet mystic. Fancy teasing and so pleasing Wm this seraph In the transformation *e*tt*. Bouquets splendid Nevcr.ended . In a shower for her dower, And liar triumphs vexed Ota premier^ envious •ptaan: 8ba waa lauded And applauded. And the oddest was loss modest Than tha angel In the transformation actual l-w ann and prepared to ascend. r , ‘ Half way up he dropped alii (ir.mi.r'.anvioti. parcel he held hi his 1 hand < ipedt iron chin Always smiling. Hearts beguiling. Youths qulto sappy thought her happy, Ao they gasod and gazed and deemed her life serene; There’s a story ty, infancy and otlior causes, so that the ) consumption among these people who aro left to account for the great increase in tho average must be much larger than n pound a week, which is now loss than than tho general av erage. When the water in a rivor is high, a -littlo addition to it makes a fresliot. So it is with tho sugar eat ers. Tho starch thoy oat makes necessary tho storing up of a consid ernhle portion of tho Bitgnr tlioy eat as fat. Tills is what rounds out tho body and tho features, and has made over tho old time lean Yankee into broader men and women physically. With this has come the koauty of , gracefully Utoi-ntion jit sharpness and angles. Squalor and wretch, ourvod linos and tho ob-. Iiedness do not go with well rounded bodies and fea tures of pleasing lines, because not enough food that makes fat after enough bos been burned as fuel is eaten. A great deni of the beauty of fair women is made up of fat, and to this sugar largoly contributes.— Good Housekeeping. Our Veneration for Ciolurabua. There was ft bigoted Now Yorker of Dutch descent and respected mem ory who used to say that the two holidays ho kept wero Christmas and tho anniversary of tho groat storm that blew ho Puritans off the const of New York and onto tho coast of Massachusetts. In our veneration for Columbus wo North Americans have been more . polito than tho brnsquo Knickerbocker, and liavo mndo lio suggestion of any possible debt that wo owo to thoso adventur ous birds whoso opportune flight lured the’Spanish caravels into a more southerly course, nnd left Vir ginia and Massachusetts to be first Bottled by tho English. But being tho people that we are, we may properly bo mindful of our double obligations to Columbus, in that haring found out tho way to the the American continont, he left the eottloment of this end of it to the sons of tlinso nations of northern Europe which, of all tho peoples of their day, had shown the most stren uous appreciation of personal liberty nnd tho grontest aptitude for popular government.— Harpor’s Bazar. To till* glory. f told It bightly 0b*fo*prJgbtly t w _~ r A> tb* angel in the traneformaMon seen*. In th* city— Oh, the pltyl Thar* i« sorrow every morrow That the patient, living *oul must ever *o**en. Past the glitter And the flitter There la harry, there la worry For th* ang*l in tho transformation scene. ’Mid the snowing And the blowing, By the sighing and tho dying. See a daughter o’er her pallid mother lean. Oh, the blessings M And caressingsl ’Mid no roses here she poses As th* angel In tho transformation scenel —M. H. Rostnfeld In New York Clipper. 15 ncisco a start Ene ilitl dip t from threh trains we Ihe doors were frith the cane ) deck, and _ , tucked his fait! low stair under! oped to pick it up. As he did i s iron ferrulo of his tof ftt his cane Struck society belle of Oakland, who was directly behind him. There was a feminine shriek and a momentary backward move ment of the crowd which caused the man with the cane to turn and look behind him, the cane traversing a semicircle about his rotund form as ht a well known r City directly he moved. It caui politician from the in the ear, administered a gentle tap on the cheek of a leading divine and captured ttr hat from the head .of an indignant woman, whose vocifer ous protest reached the ears of the unconscious offender, who, anxious to learn if the whole crowd had gone mod, made another turn. The cane took a downward course DVERNMENT CAT8. ORiniN OF TROUSER^*. ' , J j 1 RVEB IWm Handled of Th.M Animal* *n- , In Protmtlng Smrli. Three hundred and odd oats ore Ww Wee* Mm Warn kr WnM And Were SBelen kr CtelSak Man. Can Ten Find Ike 1 There is s 8-inch display advert! j tins week, wh meat in this paper, t this time, gently hut 1 Row Men of Oenln. Are Pealered. To his friends Tennyson’s door and heart wero alwnys wido open. Good testimony to this effoct is given by Theodore Watts, who says: “What has been oalled his exclusiveness is entirely mythical. Ho was tho most hospitable of men. It was very rare’ tor him to part from a friend at his hall door or at tho railway sta tion Without urging him to return as goon as possible, nnd generally with its iron point ly juat alcove the last vest button of a rising young at torney who had been just about to serve an injunction oh toe offending rod. Ins^ad he executed an invol untary obeisance, and the wand of subjection passing otter his head, de- thing a parabola that cut clean self tho words, ‘Come wlicnover you like.' ■’ml' The fact is, howovor, that for many what yoaiu too straugost notion seems to hhvQi got abroad as to toe claims of too public upon men of genitfli. There is to bo scarcely any one Who not look upon evory man who bas passed into toe purgatory of fame os his or her common proporty. “The unluoky victim is to. bo post ered by letters upon every tort of foolish subject, and to bo' hunted down in his walks and insulted by sonseless adulation. Tennyson ro- tbis, and so did Rossotti, and ought evory man who hue toadied through toe cloud of semilegal pro fanity that was beginning to import bluish tinge to the atmosphere, prodded the eye of one passonger, filliped playfully the nose of an other and finished up its work by catching in tho back hair of its origi nal victim. There is no knowing iloptnents might have fol lowed toe next turn had not a quick witted passenger reached and with his hand struck down the projecting point, with a forcible injunction.to the bearer to keep it down. It took toe battered passengors t whole time of too trip across to.tn account of the damages sustain; and when toe boat reached too wlu they were still debating whi they should pitch toe fool with cane overboard.—San Francisco ~ Anol.nt Beard.* « and,, i *_ genius. Neither faino’ndr is worth haring on such terms as those."—New York Tribune. i ow Arterial Blood Flow. Ono of tho most interesting of toe new psycho-physiological instru ments is too plotoysmograph, which indicates tho least flow of blood in too arteries of the aim. By means of it observers have found that when too sentence of tho judge is rend bo- foro a criminal there is a decrease in tho flow of blood in too aim, but tout the sight of u glues of wino in creases the flow. Again, whon it is requited to perform an arithmetical calculation, to multiply for example, nine times seventy-three, an increase of blood flow is the result.' The flow's little adopted in a bru tal murderer or born criminal when a pistol is shown to him, whereas iu the normal man tho pletliysmogrnpli indicates a decided effect. Tims in voluntary testimony is supplied as to tlio nervous nnd physical nature of tlio born instead of tho occidental criminal.—London Chronicle. to a man to pluck his heard, which may account in part for toe wonder ful state of preservation that tradi tion has connected wito tho beard of toe Old World male. It was a notion of the Mohammedans that,' though Noah reached his thousandth birth day, no hair of his blessed heard fell off or becamewhite; but too Moham medans had no more authority for that than for their belief that tho devil has hut ono solitary longhair for a heard. It was, ns somo say, in order to distinguish themselves from toe an cient Israelites that the followers of Mohammed cropped the hoard; hut Mohammed, as we knoiv, sanctioned the dyeing of tho beard and preferred ucauo color, because that was the traditional liuo of Abraham's board. Moro than that, liavo wo not tho common Mohammedan oath, “By the heaixl of tho prophet,” as well ns tho supplication, “By your hoard, or tho lifo of your heard!”—English Il lustrated Magazine. A 11017 I*nst Nl||ht. From Wednesday's Evening Herald. William Kimbrough, a Negro, went out to Odom’s Ark last night and got into a little fracas with Ids father-in- law, Jacob McGee. Kimbrough tired « shot which grazed McGee’s shin but didn’t do any damage. lie was landed in jail. When the shot was llred young Jake, a son of tlu> old man, jumped for the fence nnd carried oil’ about two hun dred feet of barb wire with him. It aeeins he wns tlio ono who got the worst of tho frnons. Wliy the Apple I. Healthful. Tlio ncids of tho npplo are of signal uso for luon of sedentary habits whoso lives aro sluggish in notion, those acids serving to eliminate from too body noxious mntters, which, if retained, would tnnko tho brain heavy and dull, or bring about jaun- dico or skin eruptions and other nl- lied troubles. Somo such ay experi ence must lmvo led to our custom of taking apple sauce with roast pork, rich gooso and like dishes.—Medical Age. Anil Ho IIo IVf. From the Tlimnnnville Tliuel-Kiuorpriiie. We cordially endorse tlie following from the Camilla Clarion : “Tlie lion. Jessie W. Walters is candidate for the District Attorney- ship. Col. Walters hns done a lion’s share of the work that wns needed in order to bring about Just snob a victo ry as wo linve won in the second dis trict nnd in Georgia, and certainly deserves some reward." Ice Preserved Meet. Ice hns been used for preserving for more than a quarter of a century with the greatest advantage in toe fishing fleet-, of which it hns entirely modified tlio work, but it was not till 1875 that it began to bo seriously employed for tho preservation of meat during its transport from Amer ica to Europe, nor till 1879 that the Boll, Coleman and Hnslam refriger ators, which linve rendered possible tlio trado iu frozon carcasses, wore introduced. American frozen fresh meat wns brought into onr markets in 1876, Australian in 1880 and New Zealand in 1882, and yet, though their commencements aro so near to us, tho three together now represent a third of nil tho inent sold in Lon don.—Blackwood’s Magazine. maintained by toe United States government, toe cost of their sup port being carried as a regular item on tlie accounts of toe postoffice department. They are distribqted among about fifty postoffices, and their duty is to keep rats and mice from eating postal matter and mail sacks. Their work is of toe utmost importance wherever large quanti ties of mail is collected—as, for ex ample, at toe New York postofflee, where from 2,000 to 3,000 bags of such material are commonly stowed away in the basement. Formerly great damage was often done by mischievous rodents, which chewed holes in toe sacks and thought nothing of boring clear through bags of letters in a night. Troubles of this sort no longer occur, now that the official pussies keep watch. Each postmaster is allowed from eight to forty dollars a year for the keep of his feline staff, send ing his estimate for “cat meat” to Washington at toe beginning of each quarter. Care is taken not to feed toe animals too “high,"in order that their appetite for live game may bo keen. It is laid down os a rule that no meat shall be given where there is a mouse or a rat to he caught. Cate Are kept in nil toe government buildings at Washington. In that of toe state, war and navy departments they are employed not only to pro tect toe priceless papers stored there, but .to guard against fire. Twice the war department has been set afire by rats gnawing mutches —on one of these occasions in toe office of the secretary of war in the middle of tlie night. A year ago tho treasury had nine cats, but they made themselves obnoxious and all were given away but two. Those are ns wild ns pos sible, getting a living by foraging for themselves. Mice aro notoriously fond of chewing up money, hut they have no chance to get at Uncle Sam’s paper cash, which is kept in rooms with iron walls that defy their teeth. Bats occupied the pension office in great numbers while it was in pro of building, taking up their resi dence in the walls and floors as fast as they were put up. Two years-ago four oats wero introduced there to guard the records of the old soldiers, and they have driven inoBt of tho vermin away. Tho host rat killer of toe quartet not long ago, being frightened at something, fell from toe second gallery, fifty feet, to the tiled floor and was killed. The White House has two cats, one a black and white-temale-kept in the kitchen, and toe other 9. black Tom kept in toe stable. Mrs.’Harrison had four handsome Maltese cats, hut they dis appeared. But toe Capitol is the greatest place in Washington for cats. The huge building) swarms with them, and at night thoy scamper about in troops. Nobody knows how many of them there are, hut toe watch men reckon them by scores. They aro all vagrants nnd wild ns hawks. In summer they are scattered ubout the, neighborhood to some extent, butin winter they gather .within the building. At about 10 o’clock every night thoy begin a mad racing through the empty corridors, which are mnde to resound with their cries. The acoustic effects produced are as tonishing; Let a single grimalkin lift up his voice in statuary hall, fa mous for its echoes, nnd the silence of the night is broken by a yell as loud as a locomotive whistle. A favorite place for cat concerts « the whispering gallery down below, known as the “crypt,” where the feeblest sound is magnified into a roar.—Washington Cor. New York World. By the patient archaeological re search carried on by one woman it-has been proven for the gratification of all women that the bifurcated nether gar ment supposed tb be specially distinct ive of the masculine toilet rightly be longs to the feminine dress. The women of Jmlnh, it seems, were the first wearers of the garment in bifur cated form, and man, perceiving the convenience and comfort of this arti cle of drees evolved by the superior intelligence of women, appropriated the same fur his own use and doomed his womankind to encumber their limbs with flowing robes, which ren der it impossible for them tocopc with man in the useful vocations. has no ^ two words alike except 01 . -----^ j,i word. The same is true of eaoh new one appearing eaoh week, from tin Dr. Harter MedlcIne Qo. This house places a “Crescent” on everythingthej make aud publish. Look for ft, send ■* -id they them tlie name of the word, an' will return you book. —The largest pyramid In Egypt is 438 feet high. t NIIERIFF'H hale. Where Benin Beat*. The tomb of Ary Scheffer, in which rests the remains of Ernest Renan, is situated in Palis, at the end of. the Avenue Montmorency, in the center of Moutmartre cemetery. It is a lit tlo chapel in tho Roman style of ar chitecture, built in 1858 to receive the body of Ary Scheffer, the paint er, who was an uncle by marriage of Ernest ReimiL Tho list of'dead who have been buried thero is already long. Here are carved the names of the two brothers Scheffer and of several members of their family. It was in this tomb that Daniel Manin reposed by the side of his wife and his daugh ter before Venice could reclaim the remains of her former dictator. Dan iel Manin was a great friend of Ary Scheffer, ard with his family sought refuge at Sheffer’s house after the capitulation of Venice in August, 1840. Tlie interior of SheiTor’s mauso leum is extremely simple. The little chapel, almost hare of decoration, is half hidden by a statue representing a woman reposing, her hands clasped. The walls of the chapel are covered with throe large frescoes, illustrating the execution of tho early Christians, of which the principal ono shows Christ breaking the chains of a cap tive. And there lies all that is mortal of Ernest Renan, unbeliever. — New York World. GEORGIA—DouohhSty County-*- - Will 1mj sold before tlio Court Hour* door, in gald county, within tho legal hoars of sale, on the ilrut Tuesday in December next, the fql. lowing property, to-wit: Lota of land 842, frac tional lot No.813,1 n the first district of Dougherty county. Lovicd on as tho property of the. estate of Mathew RrinBon, deceased, and Isaac Brin, son and J.B.Biinsnn.nnd sold to sntiBfy a mort- gage il fa from Dougherty Superior Court in favor of Arthur 1*. Bolchcr, administrator on. the estate of 8. Brinson, deceased, v*. Charlt J Wcssolowskv, administrator on tho esti^o J Mathew Brinson,deceased. TennntflJn poewjfl sion notified. * f.\ ■ l £(• i -/ Also, nt the sameqlm'e and place the following personal property, to-wit: Ono truetiononline and holler nnd fixtures, named Peerless Gcizer Manufacturing Company make, and saw mill and machinery complete. Levied on as the proporty of John Shiver, Shook Shiver, G. M. Green and Marshnll Shiver to satisfy a 1) fa from Dougherty Superior Court in favor of j, W. Sullivan, Jr* and Mrs. M. F. Wilder, admin istrators of tho estate of B. F. Wilder, deceased, ▼s. John Shiver, Shock Shiver, G. M. Green antt Marshall Shiver. F. G. EDWARDS, Sheriff. COftHMIMSIONKIIM* SALE FOB PAfe. TITIOM. ^ GEORGIA—DoranKRTY county. By rirtnro of prdors granted by tho Superior Cob it of saidconntvnt October Term, 1882, op et. the petitions for partition of Morris Mnycr, ill., vs. II. L, Long, executor et. al. and Mrs. M, M. Wight et. nl., vs. 11. L. Long, executor, ot. al, we will sell for cash, to tho highest bidder, be fore tho Court House door in said county, com- mencing at 11 o’clock, standard time, on the first Tuesday in December, 1892, all of city loti Nos. 25 and 27, on Flint street, Albany, Gn n the same being one-fourth of an aero e'ucli; said 1<^ will lie divided and sold in eight parcels 20?i feet each, moro or less, fronting on Wu^l ington street in snid city, and running bnck^B the west lino of snid lots, 105 feet moro orlort* This property is known as tho origitinl “Snmljy Bottom,” and is n fine location for busines*, isl rapidly enhancing in value, and one of the best chances for investment in Southwest Georgia. October 27th, 1892. F. Gjf Edwahds, John Mock, Wh. Lockett, Commissioners, Tho Tea Eating Caterpillar, An unexpected enemy, a common hairy caterpillar, lias turned its at tention to the tea gardens. This caterpillar was pVeviously known and disliked in otlior parts of India— for any person who imprudently laid hands on. it JEoued .too hairs sticking to his fingers and producing most irritating blisters. If a hair got into a man’s oye, it sot up an in flammation tluit sometimes ended in blindness. When a horde of theso hairy caterpillars - unexpectedly in vaded u tea garden in Assam one morning, tho effects were most dis astrous to the native laliorors, or coolies, whoso naked legs and feet came in contact with them. Tlie women and the children who are employed in plucking the shoots and leaves of tho tea plants soon found their hands and arms stinging with pain from the hairs of the cat erpillars that they had fearlessly hut imprudently handled. Before the morning’s work could be finished sixty of the men, women and chil dren wore obliged to go to tho medi cal officer for relief, with their hands or feet blistered and suppurating.— Chambers’ Journal. CITATION, 1 GEORGIA—Douoiierty count!'. To All Whom It Muy Concern: Win. S. Ileal having, In proper form, applied to mo for Loi ters of Administration on tlie estate of Miry Beul, Into of said county, dccenBod, notice is hereby given that this application will be hj «h£njy uflloe’on tho flrsfc Mmiduyjn Di uoxt. - Given under my hand and official signature Keeping an Engagement. Father—Come, young man, how long do you propose to keep my daughter waiting on your slow movements! If you don’t intend to marry her, leave her; if you think of marrying, marry her at onco and have no further nonsense about it. Young Man—But, my dear sir, I’m engaged to her. You wouldn’t have me break tho engagement. No! Well, if I leave her I break it, and I bx-eak it if I many her. You see tho dilemma I’m in.—Boston Tran script. A ..null u ml lliiiirrr. From WcdnoMnv’. Kvkmno IljutAUi. A little Negro girl reported to offi cer Barron last, night that she had been badly beaten by a couple of Ne- ®ro boys across the river. The officer swore out a warrant against the offenders, one of whom ■was the girl’s brother, tlie other her cousin, and they are both now in 'ja* 1 , •where they will abide until the next term of tlie County Court. They ought to be handled without gloves, and mnde an example of, for the prac tice that Negro men make of beating women is most barbarous one. Abonl the Pcirtioiis, From the riiilndelphin Record. During the last fifteen years the management of the pension business has practically fallen into the hands of the lobby. Speculators in pension and speculators in politics, who have hoped to debauch the soldier by pen sioning him, have fashionrd legisla tion as it suited them, As a result we have, with the assid uous labor of the Pension Bureau, nearly a million pensioners in sight, and as many as 000,000 yet to hear from. When the claim agents shall have finished their work the pension appropriation will mount up to nearly $300,000,000 a year., It cannot fail to reach $250,000,000 at the present rate of | through Tho Mormons' Dig Organ, Tho monster organ in tho old Mor mon church at Salt Lake City has 2,704 pipes, each thirty-two foot long and lai-go enough to admit tho body of a man of ordinary size. Be sides this two towers ai-iso at either side to a height of forty-two feet. It was built in the eax-ly days when all freight was hauled from Missouri river pointsacross the plains with ox teams. One man put in 1,014 days’ work on it and received provisions only for his labor. It hns been un dergoing improvement for the past thirty-five or forty years.—St. Louis Republic. Podnl Organs. It is interesting to know that organ pedals were invented by Bernhardt in 1490, for this gives a vnluable clue to Bernhardt’s present age. It is also well to know that a gi-eat oi-gan of five manuals contains within its case six complete organs, the pedal at tachment being n full instrument by itself, having sometimes 100 pipes of its own.—New York Times. A crooked smile shows that tixei-e is something wrong beliipd it, ’ just as a sarcastic or a cynical smile shows a warp in toe nature of toe person who wears it. But when the heart is right the smile will be of the right kind, and should be cultivated. —Only 2 per cent, of the Siberian runaways escape with their lives. SouTn Cakoli.na is hot on the trail of tlie Georgia Centr.il railroad. It is claimed that tile Central has hinder ed the development of Port Royal ns a competing port with Savannah , . , through its control of the Port Royal rorward movement by 1894. Even to a road. Efforts are being made to get nation aeeustomed to a rate of inflated I the Port Royal road froin the Central’s war expenditure, these figures are | control in order to build up the South stunning by reason of their bigpess. ! Carolina seaport. It seems that what people think is not going to have much force with Mr. Cleveland in shaping his adminis trative policy. There is no doubt but that he will be more independent and conservative than be was at the begin ning of his last term, as lie has had some experience In being President, and knows just as much, if not more about it than the rest of them. Much excitement lias been created in Franco of late by the action on the part of tlio French Chamber of Depu tie» in determining to Investigate the charges of fraud against the Panama canal commission. That there were fraudulent appropriations of tho Pan-' ama funds there can be no doubt, and the action of the Deputies hns pros trated the veteran Count Ferdinand De Lesseps, against whom some of the most serious charges have been made, It is generally believed, however, that the trial will end in a grand political fiasco. thin Slot day of October, 1892. SAM’L W. SMITIt, Or’dy i>. O. Gn.' CITATION. * 3 GEORGIA—Dougherty county. To Whom It May Concern: II. L. Long, cxi entor of Sarah A. Brinson, deceased, lias, in, ‘ form, applied to tlie undersigned lor leave sell tlie 1‘inds belonging to the estate of deceased, and said application will he heard di the first Monday in December next—5th dayif December, 1892. This Nov. 7th, 1892. SAM W. SMITH,: Ordinary Dougherty County,' Gcorgu RELIEVES all Btomach Dlstrcsa REMOVES Nausea, Bee so of Congestion, Pain. REVIVES Faiuno ENERGY. j RESTORES Normal Cironlatimi, and Warms to loa Tin. DR. HARTER MEDICINE GO., 81. Louis, Ha HARDWARE THE BEST AND CHEAPEST PLOW &N EARTH! W. S. BELili. A.’, £nB