Newspaper Page Text
News-Herald j
t Constitution, 1
3 12 2v£on.tl3.s —$1.25. |
THE GWINNETT HERALD, )
THE LAWRENCEVILLK NE WS, v CODSOIIddt6(I J 3.11. 1, 1898.
Erttithllaheri In 18‘.»3. j
COME THIS WAY!
Hereafter we will have a full line of choice
Family Groceries, also fresh Bread, Fancy
Crackers, Candies, fitc.
Goods delivered anywhere in the city.
Prompt Attention Given All Orders.
We want barter of all kinds.
Vose & Pentecost.
BUILDING MATERIAL.
DOORS —INSIDE AND OUTSIDE,
SASH,
SIDE LIGHTS,
BLINDS,
MANTLES,
FLOORING,
CEILING,
BASE BOARDS,
CORNER BOARDS,
DOOR AND WINDOW FRAMING,
MOULDINGS,
LATHS,
SHINGLES,
LOCKS,HINGES,WINDOW WEIGHTS, ETC.
All material complete for building a
house. Atlanta prices duplicated and
freight saved.
J. A. AMBROSE & CO.
Lawrenceville, Ga.
-t-SPRING SEASON 1900.4-
MEN’S SUITS
7 50, 1000, 12 00
15 00, IS, 20,
and $25.
BOY’S SUITS
\ 1,1, PRICES.
If you do not visit Atlanta often, send us your order by
mail. We make a specialty of mail orders, and guarantee
satisfaction in every instance. Your money back if you
wish it.
Eiseman Bros.
nmADDO ) Atlanta, 15-17 Whitehall street. 15-17 Whitehall Street,
o 1 OHtib ' Our Only Store in Atlanta.
WHY you should insure in the
“OLD RELIABLE”
MANHATTAN LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
of New York.
HENRY K. STOKES, President.
First —It Is An Old Company.
Other things being equal, an old eompanp is to be pre
ferred, as it has had a chance to prove itself and make a record
by which it can be judged. “The Old Manhattan” has made
its record, to which today it points with pride.
Second —It Is A Clean Company.
In the fifty years of its existence, no breach of scandal has
been directed towards it; no questionable practices have been
entered into by its management, and no examination of its
books or accounts lias shown cause for criticism.
Third— It Is A Just Company.
We judge a company as we do a man. What are its morals?
When other companies deserted the Southern Policy-holder,
and used both the money he had contributed towards their
success, and their influence to destroy him, the Manhattan
stayed firm as a rock—“ Justice” was their motto.
See what a distinguished statesman of Georgia says:
STATE OF GEORGIA,
Treasury Department. Atlanta Ga., May 12, 1891.
Why Mr. Hardeman had a policy in the Manhattan Life.
Mai Jos. H. Morgan, Special Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Sir: As agent of the Manhattan Life Insrance Company of
New York it affords me pleasure to say to you that my father was in
sured in your company, and by reason of the late war, he was unable
to reach your com) any and pay his premiums as they fell due; and
that after the cessation of hostilities, my father having died during
the war, your company has paid to my mother the amount of his
policy less the amount of premium unpaid.
* J Yours truly,
(Signed) R. U. Hardeman, State Treasurer,
AND THIS WAS NOT AN ISOLATED CASE BY ANY MEANS.
For further information address
W. F. BAKER, Agent,
Atlanta, Ga.
When you come to the city, call
on us; we will make your visit both
pleasant and profitable, ’ Our selec
tion of Spring Clothing, Hats and
Furnishings for men and boys this
season excels anything that has ever
been attempted in Atlanta.
Our Childrens’ Department
is brim full of novelties; there is
nothing that Boys wear that cannot
be found here; if we haven’t it in
stock, we make it upon short notice.
THE NEWS-HERALD.
THE FAMINE IN INDIA.
Kapurwadi Famine Belief Camp.
Ahmednagar, India,
Mav 19, 1900.
(Special Correspondence,)
On my way to India I supposed
I was traveling 10,000 miles to
watch 10,000,000 people starve to
death After repeated visits to
the great relief camps, however,
I find I have come 10,000 miles to
watch the Anglo-Saxon races iu
the act of saviug the lives of mil
lions of the “Aryan brown.”
Besides these particular ten
millions of famine suffereis whose
wants are immediate, there are
40,000.000 others who, in bands of
10,000 or more, may at any mo
ment cry out for food. But for
the present I can write only of the
10,000,000 who are absolutely de
pendent upon Government or pri
vate charity.
Of these, nearly 6,000,000 are
fed and clothed and kept alive at
the numerous Government relief
camps. As many as possible of
the remaing 4,000,000 are being
cared for by missionaries with
money supplied by foreign contri
butions, notably America.
There is no better thermometer
of the famine than a Government
relief camp. These camps, like a
thermometer, indicate the rise and
fall in the intensity of the famine,
and show the increase or decrease
in the number of sufferers, accord
ing to the number of people at
the relief works.
These Government relief camps
are of three kinds: First, petty
camps, in charge of a native, where
not more than 1,000 people are
fed; second,great camps, in charge
of an English engineer, where
from 10,000 to 15,000 people are
given work; third, moving camps,
iD charge of a native —camps of a
few hundred people who are em
ployed iu road making and who
change their base of operations
every few days, as the work prog
resses.
At a town called Kedgaon. 150
miles from Bombay, I had my
first glimpse of life at a relief
station. This was the petty sta
tion, called Warwand camp, where
800 people were employed in break
ing stone and in carrying the
broken stone to spots convenient
for the tepair of the highway.
This Warwand camp is in the
centre of the Deccan, in.ordinary
times fertile and productive, but
now in these famine times a great
desert plain in the centre of the
Bombay Presidency. Imagine a
vast desert of brown parched
earth, where never a green thing
rests the eye, where you breathe
hot air that well nigh suffocates
you, where not an insect sound is
heard, where only carrion birds
hover in the still and dreadful
air, where the sun looks like a
disc of brass pasted on the sky,
and you have the environment of
the setting of this Government
camp.
Then, in the midst of this desert
place, picture for yourself an hun
dred heaps of grey jagged rocks,
each heap swarming with human
beings, who, with chisel and ham
mer, are breaking the rocks into
stones. The sun cruel and relent
lessly beats down its scorching
rays upon uncovered heads, and
the hot air tries to absorb the
ripe moisture yet in their poor,
shrivelled, shrunken bodies. The
skin of these people looks like
tanned leather. Their bones pre
sent an outline as of a skeleton.
Never a song is heard —only the
click, click of the hammers. Never
a smile is seen —only a grin of
what may be called a glad despair,
when the sun settles low on the
horizon, when the hours of stone
breaking are nearly over, when
the two cents for the day’s work
is almost earned.
Two-thirds of these sad, silent
beings croaching on the rocks are
women. Here are nursing moth
ers with babe at breast; here are
women about to become mothers;
here are little girls, only eight
years old, bearing a red mark on
their foreheads, giving notice that
they are married; here are girls
only fourteen years of age, with
shaven heads, indicating that they
have even so soon reached widow
hood. All these, with the men
breaking stoues at two cents a
duy, in order to keep life in their
poor bodies.
The Government Famine Code
says that pregnant women and
nursing mothers shall be support
ed without having to work, but,
with every desire on the part of
the Government to carry out the
letter of the code, native olticials
frequently overlook certain clans-
LAWRENCEVILLE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JULY 5. 1900.
es.
The second camp I visited was
the big camp at Ahmednagar,
where 15,000 people are employed
building a great reservoir for the
storage of water for the city.
A tonga, or pony jaunting cart,
carried us from Ahmeduaga across
the parched country to this great
camp, called Kapurwadi. Again
two-thirds of the workers were
women; the scenes of the little
camp visited the day before were
here repeated oil a collossal scale
Here were five thousand women
carrying pans of mud and mortar
on their head, women reduced to
mere burden bearers. I saw neith
er sfiovelß nor picks, each woman
simply gathered up the earth iu
her hands, packed it into a sort
of dish pan with which she was
provided, carried the load on her
head to the great embankment,
then returned, in line with hun
dreds of her sisters, for another
load. Thus, with the hands of
women, a great hole is being dug,
and a great wall being built, these
two things, the hole and the wall,
forming a resorvoir in the heart
of the dreadful desert of India
Meanwhile, at more than a hun
dred stations, missionaries shelter
many thousand. Widows and
orphans, the aged and helpless,
little children, and famine suffer
ers generally, are given work are
fed, and clothed, and taught to
look up instead of down—all by
the wise expenditure of moneys
supplied chiefly by the American
people.
To return to the great relief
camp, where I am writing this,
the people work ail day, from sun
rise to sunset, in the scorching,
devitalizing heat, save during the
two hottest hours at midday. At
night they return to their tents of
matting, little abodes supplied by
the Government, and laid out like
a military camp. Each tent is
numbered, and four persons are
allotted to each tent The men
are at one end of the big encamp
ment, the women at the other.
Where whole families are employ
ed, every attempt is made to keep
these families together, a whole
field being set aside for tents big
enough to accommodate families
of four or more.
All religions are represented iu
each camp—Hindus, Mahomme
dans, Jains, Parsees, and Chris
tians In this work, in the group
ing of the people for purposes of
the necessary organization of labor
caste is largely lost sight of, and
frequently high and low must dig
mud and carry mud together.
So much for the dramatic and
picturesque side of the famine.
The tragic side is a sight that
brings tears. If one could de
scribe the awfulness of the tragic
scene, the pitiful sight of thous
ands of lives now ebbing away be
cause of the too great lack of food
before coming to this haven, if
one could unfold before the eyes
of the American nation the pano
rama of the famine-stricken por
tion of India, with its millions of
starving, naked people, the purses
of a whole nation would be opened
wide to give money to wipe such
misery off the surface of the earth.
The work of relief must be con
tinued for several months. Tens
of thousands of those who are
under the care of the missionaries
referred to in the above letter are
wholly dependent, for their daily
food, upon the India Famine Re
lief Work, whicli is conducted un
der the auspices of The Christian
Herald, 92 Bible House, New York
City. All fuuds received by it
are cabled directly to the mission
aries in India, through the Inter
denominational Committee. —The
Christian Herald.
LADIES, WHY DON’T YOU?
Editor News-Herald: Is there
anything at all that we can say or
do to convince ALL your lady
readers that we are actually giving
away to every married lady in the
United States who writes for it an
elegant sterling silver-plated sugar
shell like jewelers sell ut 75c each?
There is no “catch” about this
offer. There is nothing to pay,
nor any requirements to buy any
thing in order to secure this beau
tiful souvenir gift. It is our way
of advertising the merits of Quaker
Valley silverware. A copy of the
Home-Furnisher, ou* own publi
cation, will also be sent free. Sur
ely this beautiful sugar shell gift if
is worth asking for. Then it seems
:to us that we should hear from
[every married iady who reads vour
[paper. Quaker Valley Mfg., Co.,
Morgan and Harrison Sts.Chicago.
The One Day Cold Cure.
Kermott's Chocolatm I.axaliw quinine for
I cold in the head and aore throat. Children take
| them like candy.
THE JEW.
There is not a drop of Jewish
'blood in my veins. lam not con
nected with the Jews by the mar
riage of any near or distant kins
man. I owe no Jew a dollar and
no Jew owes me. Among all my
personal or intimate friends I can
not name one single Jew. I speak
from the vantage ground of abso
lute independence.
It is a splendid race—splendid
in their patience, in their love for
one another, in their endurance,in
their sagasity and temperate hab
its and splendid in their inflexible
adherence to their Mosiac ideals.
Do you want an aristocracy of
blood and birth ? The Jews are
the purest blooded and have the
best established decent in the
world. Not Mirabeau in the
French convention, nor Patrick
Henry in the house of Burgesses,
uor “Sam” Adams in colonial
al days ever said a more thriving
thing than Disrael said in the En
glish commons in reply to a charge
that he was a Jew. “Yes, lam a
Jew ! And when the ancestors of
the right honorable gentleman
were brutal savages iu an unknown
island, mine were priests in the
temple.”
Do you seek an aristocracy of
talent ? The great church histo
rian Neander was a Jew; Napole
on’s marshals, Soult and Massena,
were Jews; the brilliant and cynic
al Heine was a Jew; and —but the
world’s roll of great soldiers, au
thors, musicians, painters, poets,
philosophers and financiers, con
tain more Hebrew names than I
can recite in many hours.
Are you looking for an aristoc
racy of wealth ? The combined
financial power of the Jews in Eu
rope can prevent the floating cf
almost any national loan which
may be put upon the markets of
the world.
It is a spurious, false Christiani
ty that hates Jews. The mystery
of the incarnation found expres
tion in the flesh and blood of a
Jew. We get our Ten Command
ments—the very foundation of our
civilization—through the Jew. We
sing Jewish psalms, are uplifted
by the passion and poetry of Jew r
ish prophets, and rely on Jewish
biographies for the only history
we have of Christ. We get our
Pauline theology from a Jew, and
we catch our earliest glimpse of
the Dext world through the sub
lime apocalyptic vision of a Jew.
Then forsooth we Christians
turn about and sneer at Jews.
I have conversed with teachers
of philosophy who spoke slightly
of the Jews, and yet were teaching
with enthusiasm ideas which they
had absorbed from Maimonideo
and Spinoza, the two greatest phi
losophers, omitting Kant, since
Plato’s day—both of them Jews.
I have also heard musicians de
nounce Jews and then spend days
and nights trying to interpret the
beauties of Rossini, Meyerbeer and
Mendelsshon—all Jews. I talked
the other day with a gifted actress,
and heard both her and her hus
band sweepingly condemn, confi
dentially, of course, the whole race
of Jews, and yet that woman
would give half her remaining
part of life if she could only reach
the heights which the great queen
of tragedy, Rachel, trod with such
majesty and power—and Rachel
was a Jewess.
Here in Washington I have heard
aspiring politicians, when beyond
the reach of the reporter’s pencil,
sneer at Jews, and yet it was a
Jew that made England s Queen
Empress of Lidia, and it was a
Jew who was lor years the adroit
and sagacious chairman of the na
tional committee of one of our
great political parties. The brain
iest man in the Southern Confed
eracy was Juda P. Benjamins, a
Jew; and Chase, when managing
our national finances in i perilous
time, owed much ot bis success to
QUESTION ANSWERED.
Yes, August Flower still has the j
largest sale of any medicine in the j
civilized world. Your mothers
and grandmothers never thought j
of using anything else for Indiges- [
tion or Billiousness. Doctors were ;
scarce, and they seldsm heard of [
Appendecitis, Nervous Prostration j
or Heart Failure, etc. They used j
August Flower to clean out the
system and stop fermentation of
undigested food, regulate the ac
tion of the liver, stimulate the
nervous and organic action of the
system, and that is all they took
when feeling dull and bad with
headaches and other aches. You
only need a few doses of Green’s
August Flower, in liquid form, to
make you satisfied there is noth
ing serious the matter with you.
Sample bottles at Bagwell Drug
Store. Lawreuceville, R. O. Med
lock, Norcross, Smith & Harris,
Suwanoe.
the constant advice of a New York
Jew. That you never see a Jew
tramp or a Jew drunkard is a
proverb That you never see a
Jew beggar is a commonplace.
That it is a statistical fact that
there are relatively fewer inmates
of our hospitals, jails and work
houses furnished by Jews than any
other race contributes,
Converl the Jews! Yes, but
meanwhile let us convert many of
our church members to genuine
Christianity Suppress the Jews!
A score of Russian czars cannot do
it. Every people on earth have
tried and failed. They have out
lived the Tudors and the Plantage
uies, the Romanoffs, the tyranny
of Spain, the dynasties of Frauce,
Charlemagne, Constantiue, the
Caesars, the Babylonian king, and
the Egyptian Pharohs. It was
God’s own race for 4,000 years,
and the awful persecution it lias
survived for 2,000 more, stamps it
as a race still bearing some myste
rious relation to the plan of the
Eternal. The beauty and fidelity
of Jewish women command my
homage and among wealthy and
educated Jews the exquisite refine
ments of Jewesses, their culture
and high breeding, blended with a
sort of Oriental grace and dignity,
put them among the most charm
ing women of the world.
But the Jew is tricky! Is he ?
Were you nover taken in by a
Methodist classleader on a real es
tate trade ? Did you ever get in
to close quarters with a Presbyte
rian speculator ? Did you ever
buy mining stc ck on the represen
tation of an Episcopalian broker ?
Did yon ever take a man’s word
quicker because be was a Baptist
or Roman Catholic ? Did you
never see a Btone weighing twenty
pounds concealed iu a bale of cot
ton sold by a southerner ? Did
you never find lard in the butter
sold by a New England Puritan ?
The belief that the Jew is more
dishonest than the Gentile is one
half nonsense and the other half
prejudice and falsehood. The an
ti-Jewish feeling which now seems
to be rising again is unchristian,
inhuman and un-American. No
man can bhare it who believes in
the universal fatherhood of God
and the universal brotherhood of
man. He is born of the devil and
is detestable.— George R. Wend
ing, in People’s Tribune.
IS IT RIGHT
for an editor to recommend
PATENT MEDICINES ?
From Sylvan Valley News, Brevrad, N.C.
“It may be a question whether
the editor of a newspaper has the
right to publicly recommend any
of the various proprietary medi
cines which flood the market, yet
as a preventitive of suffering we
feel it a duty to say a good word
for Chainberiain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy. We have
known and used this medicine in
our family for twenty years and
have always found it reliable In
many cases a dose of this remedy
would save hours of suffering while
a physician is awaited. We do
not believe in depending implicit
ly on any medicine for a cure, but
we do believe that if a bottle of
Chamberlain’s Diarrhoea Remedy
was kept on hand and adminis
tered at the inception of an attack
much suffering might be avoided,
and in very many cases the pres
ence of a physician would not be
required. At least this has been
our experience during the past
twenty years. ” For sale by Bag
well Drug Co.
“If I were to give you an or
ange,” said a Kansas judge the oth
er day, “I would simply say: *1
give you the orange,’ but should
the transaction be entrusted to a
lawyer to put in writing, he would
adopt this form: ‘I hereby give,
grant and convey to you all my in
terest, right, title and advantage
of and in said orange, together
with its rind, skin, juice, pulp and
pits, and all right and advantage
therein, with full power to bite,
suck or otherwise to eat the same,
or give away with or without the
rind, skin, juice or pulp or pits,
anything hereinbefore or in any
other deed or deeds, instruments
of any nature or kind whatsoever
to the contrary in any wise not
withstanding.’ ”
Last fall I sprained my left hip
while handling some heavy boxes.
The doctor I called on said at first
it was a slight straiu and would
soon be well, but it grew worse
and the doctor then said 1 had
rheumatism. It continued to grow
worse and I could hardly get
around to work. I wont to a drug
| store and the druggist recommend
ed me to try Chamberlain’s Pain
lialm. i tried it and one-half of a
50-ceut bottle cured me entirely.
1 now recoimueud it to all my
tricnds. —F. A-Baboix k, Brie, Pa.
i It is for sale by Bagwell Drug Co.
Royal &
T Absolutely Ihire
Makes the food more delicious and wholesome
At BAXixq PQwDfW CO., HEW row*. ———
EDUCATIONAL.
HISTORY.
(Value 10.)
1. State at least throe purposes
the teacher of History should
have ?
2. Who wrote t lie Declaration
of Independence ? What was its
purpose ?
8. What is the chief difference
between the Constitution of the
United States and the Articles of
Confederation ?
4. State the method by which
the United States lias made each
acquisition of territory.
5. Name the chief difference be
tween Federalist and Anti-Feder
alist, Whig and Democrat, Demo
crat and Republican.
6. What were the leading issues
in the last Presidential campaign ?
Define each.
7. What condition led to the
colonization of Georgia ? Where,
when and by whom was the first
settlement made ?
8. Name ten placos in Georgia
made famous by a battle or some
important event; name also the
event.
9. Public opinion has demanded
the expulsion of what two mem
bers of the last Congress ? For
what ?
10. Tell for what these men are
noted; Agass z, Edison, Lanier,
Morse, Howe, Lowell, Crawford
Long, Cobb, Ben Hill, Banoroft,
Irving, Dr, W. T. Harris, David
Page, Graham Bell, Timrod. (Se
lect ten.)
1. To Stimulate patriotism.
Love of country is the citizen’s
first duty; by it is honorable his
tory made possible; it is the mo
tive power, the soul of national ex
istence. to develop:
To teach the onerous but im
perative duties of citizenship.
To develop worthy ideals. The
teacher must realize the value of
an ideal to a:i expanding charac
ter.
2. Jefferson; to explain to the
world the wrongs which prompted
independence.
8. The Constitution provides for
a stronger union, a more central
ized government.
4. Louisiana, Florida, Alaska,
and Second Mexican Cession all
by purchase; the first Mexioan ces
sion, the recent Spanish cession
by conquest and purchase; Haw
awii, by annexation.
5. Federalist and Anti-F'ederal
ist contended over State sovereign
ty, a contest continued by Whig
and Democrat, Republican and
Democrats. The former have stood
for internal improvements, Na
tional Banks, and Protective Tariff
measures, opposed by the latter;
the former have stood for the na
tion, the latter for the State. The
tendency of the former has been
toward paternalism and imperial
ism, the latter toward individual
ism and independence.
6. Free Silver and Protective
Tariff. “Free Silver” is the free
government coinage of silver at a
ratio of 16 to 1, the ratio to be
fixed by government fiat. “Pro
tective Tariff,” duties levied upon
imported goods to protect the
American manufacturer.
7. The pitiable condition of the
English poor, especially those im
prisoned for debt Savannah, 1788,
by Oglethorpe.
8. Answers may vary.
9. Senator Clark for bribery and
Representative Roberts for polyga
my-
-10. Agassiz, naturalist, teacher;
Edison, inventor; Lanier, poet;
Morse, inventor of telegraphy;
Howe,inventor of sewing machine;
Ren Hill, Statesman and orator;
Lowell, poet, writer; Tim rod, poet;
Cobb, orator, writer and general;
Bancroft, historian; Irving, hiato
riau, writer; Crawford 1/or.g dis
| covered use of chloroform in sur
igery; Harris, teacher, philoso
pher and l nitea States Commis
sioner of education; l’age, teach
er, apostle to young teachers;
1 Bell, inventor of telephone.
V OUST I ON’S ON MAM At.. J§t
(Valne 10.)
1. Give colloquy, using straws,
teaching the addition of 4 and 8.
2. Make a diagram reducing
News-Herald
jAN" Journal, weekly,
Only $1.25.
VOL. VII. NO 37
i halves to sixths.
8. Show why wo invert the di
visor in dividing by a fraction.
4. Find the interest on $l2O for
one year, seven mouths, fifteen
days at 8%. Teach this.
5. What number increased by
5% of itself becomes 252 ? Teach
this.
PROBLEMS.
1. To calculate interest at 8%,
multiply by the number of days
and divide by 45, pointing off two
places. Demonstrate this rule.
2. Forty-two hales (460 lbs) are
produced on a place costing SB,OOO.
If the cost of production and mar
keting is 6 cts., and the cotton
was sold for cts., what is the
interest, on the investment ?
8. A seedsman bought 26( bush
els of seed for $152.26. He sold
18j bushels at a profit of SI.OO
per bushel. For what price must
he sell the remainder so as to gain
S4O on the whole purchase ?
4. A, B, C, hired pastures for
$166. A puts iu 20 oxen months,
B 8 oxen and 28 sheep for 6
months, and C 50 sheep for 6£
months If two oxen eat as much
as 7 sheep how much should each
man pay ?
6. An estate is divided among
three heirs, A, B and C, so that
A has 5-12 of the whole, and B
has twice as much as C, It is
found that A has 56 acres more
than C, How large is the estate ?
COLLOQUY.
Teacher—How many splints in
my right hand? (Holding up 5
splints. )
Pupil—There are 5.
Teacher —How many in my left
hand? (Holding up 8.)
Pupil—There are 8.
Teacher —What did I do with
them ? (Putting them to tngethat)
Pupil—You put them together.
Teacher—How many are there
in all ?
Pupil—There are 8.
Teacher—Now tell me the whole
story
Pupil—You had 5 splints in
your right hand, and 8 in your
left. You put them together and
then you had 8.
Teacher—Why ?
Pupil—Because 5 X B—B.
This is the unit of work in ad
dition.
2. Can’t print diagram.
8.
Teacher—How many times is 1
contained in 1 ?
Pupil—4 times.
Teacher—How many times are
} contained in 1 ?
Pupil—i of 4or 4-8 times.
Teacher —How many times are }
contained in J ?
Pupil —i of | times, 8-9.
Teacher—What did you do with
the | ?
Pupil—Made it 4-8.
Teacher—That is, you inverted
it, and after this inversion what
was done ?
Pupil—The fractions were mul
tiplied.
Teacher—How then can you di
vide one fraction by another ?
Pupil—luvert the divisor and
proceed as in multiplication.
4. Can’t print. Aus. $15.60.
5. Can’t print. Ans. 240.
PROBLEMS.
1 8% —860 days. That is 8% per
annum is 1% of
the principal for
\% — 45 days, every 46 days.
Hence in every
case it will be as
many times the
principal (point
ing off) as 45 is
contained in the
number of days.
Heuce the rule,
2. 0945, or 9,45%.
8. $7 22-155.
4. Answer, A $55, B S4B, C $52.
6 . 252 acres.
“\\e have sold many different
cough remedies, hot none has
given better satisfaction than
Chamberlain’s.” says Mr. Charles
Hoizhaner, Druggist, N, wark N.
J. “It is perfectly safe ana can
be relied upon in all oases of
coughs, colds or hoarseness.’’
Sold by Bagwell Drug Co.