Charlton County herald. (Folkston, Ga.) 1898-current, September 10, 1908, Image 3
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A novel device recently patented by a West Virginia woman is the unique dustpan shown in the illustration. It was designed with one object in view —to overcome the objection of the ordinary dustpan. In the latter no provision is made for:preventing the dust and dirt from blowing off the pan after it has been gathered. In \ F = . 2 2~ il -7 FAL TR 1 /?? | WM v / ! T : /‘ | & I /,/; . ? { ///// i | ) | 7 i ¢ f{ g v this improved dustpan it is impossible for the dust and dirt to drop on the floor.. This dustpam, when closed, is in the form of a box, one of the sides of the box forming._the front edge of the dustpan when the- latter is opened. In the top of the hox are slots, through which extend the rods of the handle. These rods are pivoted. to the front edge of the box. After the dust and dirt have been brushed into the dustpan the box is lifted by the handle., . As the latter is drawn up the front of the dustpan is drawn up, throwing all the dust into the box, the lid ef fectually sealing the front and pre venting the accidental escape of the Qontents in any way.—Washington Star. Having a Good Time. A wholesale scorn of physical ills is a good thing, according to the philos ophy of a boy in the State School for Dependent Children, who wrote his father thus: “Dear Papa—We children are hav ing a good time here now. Mr. Sager broke his leg and can’t work. We went on a picnic and it rained and we all got wet. Many children here are sick with mumps. Mr. Higgins fell off the wagon and broke his rib, but he can work a littlee. The man that is digging the deep well whipped us boys with a buggy whip because we threw sand in his machine, and made black and blue marks on us. Ernest cut his finger badly. We are all very happy.”—The Delineator. 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The Russian patriot and author recently made public a most passion ate and severe indictment directed against the present system of “govern ment by execution” in Russia. ; Not Only Could, But Did. Sometimes there is a drop of re gret in the cup of joy served by fate to the husband of a brilliant talker. “I should think it would be a privil ege to sit at the table with your wife three timesg a day,” said one of Mrs. Grandon’s ardent feminine admirers. ~ “Only twice a day,” said Mr. Gran don, with asbow. “I do not go home ‘at noon.” ’ “Too bad!” said the admirer. “We could not get on without her at the fc‘lub, I'm sure. Why, I believe she could talk intelligently on a thousand topies!”’ ‘“‘She can — and does,” said Mr. Grandon, and with another bow he slipped out just as his wife appeared. —Youth’s Companion. ’ : Form That Fits All. Through the ingenuity of a New "York man, shopkeepers and dress | makers will be able to get along here | after with one kind of dress form. . Long waists and short waists all look 'alike on this body portion, which can | be adjusted to fit anything the human form can wear. The form is made |simllar to those now in use, except that the model can be moved up and |down on the upright rod that runs . through the centre- and affixed at any height over the line that may be desired. In the -old-style form a short waisted waist did not fit on a long waisted model, and vice versa, and both for window display and dressmaking a number of different forms were required each for a differ ent type of figure. Either for fitting ‘or display this invention is expected As§ . . % "* a 1 , - wy 2 ' BV o s \ '-:Sh\\ B\ o Y : : YR - R\ P ih‘\ ‘.: \‘.. .. ol \." | e A\ I\, M Ei«, ik : ey A , %fi \\‘\ ~!/ : N i . .'_,: . J é\"§: A . iad o, o oy P2O DT AN Can Be Changed at Will. to be of value, both in the saving of lmoney and time, for not only will one take the place of severa! of the old designs, but it will not be neces sary to scour about for the suitable | form for each occasion.—Philadel ' phia Record. FIND CHRISTIAN ”*5 INTEEY \ ub AT -\i“if&‘ CHURCHES IN BGYPT. Existed Two or Three Clflh\'fl After Death of Christ is Ofilfi% of Archaeclogists. = 7 ‘;1 News received from Dr. David Rans Ca.l Maclver's archaeological expedis | tion to Egypt has thrown scientifie cireles at the University of Pennsyl~ vania, Philadeiphia, into a flutter of excitement, for the director of the expedition, in the report just rececived, announces discoveries hardly less im rortant than those which he made at Anibeh early in January. e Whiie in the north of Egypt, early | in February, Dr. Maclver discovered several Christian churches of a datfi"; within two or three centuries after | the death of Christ. These ancient‘! sanctuaries of the earliest adherents of the then despised Christian sect were carefully cleared of the heaps | of desert sand which have covered them during the lapse of centuries. The members of the expedition then | made careful maps and photographs | of the shrines. It is thought at the } university that when these maps and pictures are published much will be ‘ added to the little amount of knowl edge antiguarians possess regarding the churches and the modes of wor ship of the earliest Christians out side of the city of Rome. As a rival to the famous Cleopatra vase discovered at Anibeh, which is now carefully boxed up in Cairo, awaiting shipment to the university museum, Dr. Maclver discovered, ini a little known locality near the see ond cataract of the Nile, a number of W mervellously carved capitals of col umns and a cornice sculptured with the heads of the Royal Draeus. This snake was the emblem of the ancient Egyptian monarchy. The columns and the cornice are similar to the sculptures of Philas, and are of the same period, but are said to be in perfect condition. Dr. Maclver be lieves that these newly discovered pieces of architecture represent the finest works of their class in exist ence, and for beauty of design and execution he says they rival some of the work on some of the most famous of the Grecian temples. % Dr. Maclver left Anibeh, the scene of his earlier discoveries, on January 15, leaving half of his party there to continue the excavations in charge of his assistant, Dr. Woolev. After mak ing a careful study of the Middle Empire forts and towns of Mirgeshich and Behn, near Wady Halfa, the party began working northward. Owing to the great success of the expedition, Dr. Maclver may stay in Egypt longer than was at first expected. In his latest report he expressed doubt as to whether he will bring his expedi .tion home before the early part of next year. - ASLEEP UNDER WATER. . e Tty One of the Funny Incidents Possible in a Diver's Life. = o As showing how much at home a man may be to-day under water, I may relate an amusing story. Some months ago, while the great battie. ship Dreadnought was at Malta, one of the seamen divers went down to clear her propeller from some ‘flot sam that had wecome entagled, and he failed to come up. It chanced that the rest of the battleship’s div ers were ashore, and grave concern was felt on the ironclad for the miss ing worker. Signalg by telephone and lifeline were sent below, without avail.” In the launch above the throb, throb of the air pump’s cylinders went on, but the attendants looked at one another in dismay, fearing some strange tragedy deep down in those heaving green seas. The worst was feared when some big brushes and other tools came fioating to the surface, and thereupon the navigating lieutenant sent ashore an urgent message for one of the other divers. The man came on board, dressed immediately, and went below, only to come up full of indig nation. “Why. that fellow’s been asleep all this time!” he said, wrathfully. It was true. The man had just had his lunch, and finding the work much less serious than he had thought, he finished it in a few minutes and then sat ‘comfortably on one of the gian{ blades of the Dreadnought’s propel ler and went to sleep, with inquisi tive fishes swarming around him, at tracted by the dazzling searchlight on his breast! The officers were o amused at the occurrence that no punishment was inflicted on the lazy one.—From ‘‘The Divers of a Navy and Their Adventures,” in St. Nichs olas. Proverbs For Printers. A busy tongue makes a dirty proof, : Neither the blacksmith nor his sec ond cousin should be on the printer’s pay-roll, “Let.your light so shine that others,” seeing your good work, may also take pattern therefrom, The slovenly workman is always in evidence, He can he traced by the careless manner in which his johs are put together, by the litter of odds and ends-—quads, leads, string, card board—which always distinguish his stand or the last place he worked, Killing time may be a fine art— but it does not require a great quan tity of brains.—*Brid,” in Practical Printer. : et et e e e e — The mole of the Western Pacific Railroad, at Oakland, Cal., is nearly completed. It is 8000 feet lone. and is ultimately to be a solid fil 1200 feet wide. b V@ L QS . Len ey ; < - ¢ g : o Sar W : ’ iP I t R o ‘ : o oy p vel N ; : AL Lige it | ; lr oS S ! ; A e 1S ” : oo . I‘ o ” y ; ‘f ovA i/ Y 4 ' e § £y & ‘ : £ ‘ Yoy L ) & A A\ Rk B 7 : & ‘e ’ ! . R S £/ © S ; .e .. .. bR o A e o = Bi NS o ARt RN 5 I'raining Shy Girls. - If your daughter is growing up too quiet and never seoms to have anything to say, exert yourself to araw her out. . Lead her into general conversa tion at every opportunity and let her feel that her thoughts and opinions are of some weight and importance. . Do not let her sink into that state of mind which is content to let oth er people take the burden of conver sation, while she sits by in apparent stupid silence. It is a habit which will grow upon her and prevent her being gracious and, attractive, and will become more deeply fixed if referred to in any way. Some day her chances of happiness ‘may be ruined by it. — New York Times. Remodeling Dresses, - Speaking of the remaking of old dresses, one of the best dressmakers in Paris is authority for the statement .that it does not pay. “Do not rip up your old gown; do not touch a scis sors to it,” says she, “but content yourself with retrimming it.” In these days a pointed guimpe of filet ‘and duchess lace can be set into an old blouse. This will give the new jumper effect. If the sleeves are short and too puffy at the shoulders, they can be made to look different by ;.by placing a flat piece of trimming _upon the shoulder seam. This makes the shoulder look lpnger without al tering the set of the sleeve. A long, . light lace undersleeve, coming to the ‘knuckles, makes the sleeve still more - modish. % Women Should Walk, Too. ;» I will say something to the ladies. ' The young men are not the only be .;;‘ings %1 America who need to walk for exercise. Our girls and women ‘need this recreation. American wom ‘én do not walk rearly as much as ~they ought to. ~ While in England Ifound the wom- J’.en over there much stronger and Our Cut-out Recipe i Paste in Your Scrap-Book. Lady Baltimore Cake: Recipe For the Famous South Carolina Delicacy.—“ Here is a South Carolina recipe for this cake, deservedly a favorite in all Southern dining rooms long before Mr. Owen Wister heaped drawing room honors upon it,” says the Woman’s Home Companion. “Two-thirds of a cupful of butter, five eggs, two cupfuls of sugar, four cupfuls of flour, one-half cupful of rich milk, two level teaspoonfuls of cream of tartar and one level tea spoonful of soda. Cream half the sugar with the butter, beat the remaining sugar into the yolks of the eggs, and sift ‘thee cream of tartar and the soda twice through the flour; beat ‘the eggs and sugar together with the butter and sugar, add ‘the milk slowly, and finally beat in the flour and stifly beaten whites of the eggs. Flavor half this mixture with rose, and into the other half heat one teaspoonful of powdered cinna mon, one teaspoonful of powdered cloves and one grated nut meg, and flavor with vanilla, lemon or almond; bake in four layer cake pans—two white layers and two spiced layers. “For the Filling: Cut fine one cupful of sedeed raisins, shred thin half a citron melon, grate one small coacoanut and blanch three-fourths a pound of almonds; make an ordinary boiled icing, and into it beat all these ingredients save the almonds. Put the mixture thickly between the layers, and finish the top layer—which should be a white one—with sprinkled powdered sugar and the almonds stuck in porcupine wise. The measuring cups are ordinary coffee cups and are filled just level. This is a successful recipe and one easily followed.” healthier than those in our country. I think this is due entirely to the fact that they spend so much time in walking. It is nothing for an Eng lish girl or woman to walk a distance of seven or eight milgs. Let the voung ladies of New York try this some afternoon, and they will not suffer from a lack of appetite for din ner. If the girls and women of New York should form a walking club I would be delighted to walk with them some afternoon and give what advice I could. I think the fad for high heel shoes in New York and Paris is responsible for so little walking among our wom en. They cannot walk far .in high heel shoes. Their ankles become twisted, and there is such a pressure upon the instep that the pain will prevent them from going any long distance. — Weston, in the Evening World. Playgrounds For the Pcor. " “I gee you are planning for the in troduction of playgrounds for poor children in New York on a rather elaborate plan,”” said Mrs, Clara B. Lemar, of Berlin, to a New' York Tel. egram reporter, '“I hope you will not follow the model of REuropean playgrounds which I have seen. It would be dif fieult to find a more demoralizing place for a child than the average playground as now run in England and on the Continent. ~ “The first requisite for a boy to get along in a public playground abroad i$ to be a ‘bluffer’ and a ‘bully.’ “The boy who cannost fight a gang and come out on top four or five times a day stands little show in one of our ideal public playgrounds. " “The moment he appears his toys ore taken away from him and he is tent home to get money for the ‘gang.’ His standing at the play ground after thatdepends either upon his ability to steal from his parents for the berefit of his playmates.or % ability as a fighter, ~ “The most modest and retiring lit ‘”gh-l will be comypietely trans formed by a week at one of these ‘public playgrourds {ato a rough, bois- | — terous, loud voiced child, with rough manners and shocking speech. “All of these places soon become so terribly crowded the children are compelled to yell at the tops of their voices, and they soon carry this cus tom home with them. It has also been found by many ‘parents abroad that these large playgrounds are the means of spreading children's dis« eases over whole neighborhoods.” Fashion’s Dictates. ‘‘Since semi-precious stones have become so extremely fashionable,” writes Grace Margaret Gould, the fashion editor, in the Woman's Home Companion, ‘‘women depend a great deal on jewelry as the finishing touch to their costume. Of course. we all know that an abundance of cheap Jewelry is in the worst possible taste, and no woman of refinement would $0 bedeck herself. But to wear a necklet of a fine gold or platinum chain, artistic and unusual, finished with a flower-shaped pendant made of baroque pearls and white or green metal, set with tiny diamonds, is in perfect taste if it is in harmony with the type of gown with which it is worn. “Bracelets can also give a very artistic finishing touch to a costume. Old-fashioned designs for bracelets are much sought, and a new cameo mounted on a gold band is one of the favored new ideas. An exquisite design for a bracelet shows a large pirk-and-white cameo having the effect of being held in place by buches of pearl grapes. “Flower pins studded with colored stones are much used at present, for this spring the artificial flower is worn with street costumes, and the pin to hold it has become quite a necessity.” ‘ Fashion Notes. Patent leather belts have waned in popularity. - Cardcases of cretones or linen are mmmmnw useful and prety with light dresses, land they are very easily made at home. The black satin coat has been much abused and consequently dis credited, If the chiffon be black hung over white silk the effect is satisfying to an artistic eye. There are hopes that the inartistic white glove may be doomed, at least !for England. ] A dainty lingerie hat is embroid ered in wallachian work, the flowers | done separately. “The exaggerated hat brim is in rather poor taste and not worn by those invariably well dressed. ' Wings with jet hatpins formed a i striking trimming when carried out 'in the fluffy white marabout neck boa. “Kimono,” to be pronounced cor rectly as the Japanese say it, should e accented not on the gecond, as we do, but on the firgt syllable, | Nothing is more out of keeping in "the realm of dress than a short walk [ing skirt and an elaborate big hat, #'e two should hardly meet in the istreet, to say nothing of appearing “in the same costume, I Even the woman with luxurious |locks patronizes the dealer in fine i hair goods: She is going to wear the Ilittle curls and puffs which are so 'fashionable and she isn’t going to suin her own hair with the hot iron. The high stock may be absolutely ,stralght and, like the Gibgon types, he of lace insertions, joined beneath biaged eatin and taffeta strips or of finely tucked net, self color, gatin edged and trimmed with tiny satin covered buttons, | Mustaches in Alaska. ! Mustaches are not worn by men “‘exposed to the geverity of an Alas {kan winter. They wear full beard: (to protect the throat and face, b keep the upper lip clean shaven. Th. 'molsture from the breath congeais 180 quickly that a mustache becomes imbedded In a solid cake of ice, an the face is frozen in a short time, Freeholders in France, Consul-General Robert P. Skinner, of Marseiiles, France, has made an interesting report on the subject of freeholders and real estate transac tions in that country, in which he says that there are 8,000,000 free holders in France, and outlines a sys tem whereby French workingmen own their little country homes. Mr. Skinner says in part: “There are upward of 8,000,000 separate freeholds in France, as com pared with about 300,000 in Great Britain, a fact which in itself speaks volumes. A Frenchman will part with anything rather than land. When the United States Immigration Commission visited a ecertain spot near Marseilles recently it was found impossible to ascertain ‘the average price of land’ in that locality, because no transactions ever took place, other than by inheritance. In ecities it is difficult for persons of modest means like workingmen, to own real estate, for obvious reasons. Nevertheless, and especially in Marseilles, where there is an excellent two-cent fare street car service, outlying property is Dbeing taken up by families in moderate circumstances. “There is alsc a local custom among poor men who feel that they must reside in the city of buying an outlying patch of ground and erect ing thereon a ‘cabanon’ of two or more rooms, where they spend Sun days and holidays. There are settle ments where hundreds of these toy houses are to be found, each with a - bit of a garden, deserted throughout the week and scenes of great anima tion on Sunday, the most intense rivalry existing to have the best gar-_ den or the most attractive ‘cabanon,’ the day terminating in a reunion, where poetical improvisations are listened to, songs sung and speches made. “The Government itself, which fos ters thrift by every means, encourages working people to abandon the wretched, crowded habitations of the cities and to become householders, by loaning out the money of the savings banks (‘ciasses d'epargne’) not to the individual, but to societies patronized by the State. These societies effect the transactions with the individual. Thus, the Societe des Habitations Salubres, 32 Rue Paradie, Marseilles, advances money for the construction of cottages at the rate of four and one-half per cent. As sasings banks pay depositors two and three-fourth per cent., the margin is close. “These dealings are regulated by the law of April 12, 1906. Loans are limited to 9500 francs ($1883.50) | in the city and to 7000 francs ($1351) in the environs. At present seventy five cottages have been constructed in Marseilles under this law, the occu | pants becoming owners, with a clear title, at the end of twenty years. Building plans have to be submitted to the architects of the soclety, and must conform to certain standard re quirements as to light, ventilation and sanitary arrangements.” There are also at work on some what parallelel lines several French building and loan associations, which differ from American associations in that they usually .:perate over more or less the whole of France, as do the great French banks., The attempt is made by the moving spirits in these associations to expand thelr utility beyond mere public service as money lending agencies. ’ While depositors in these building associations are permitted to build “according to their own plans, they are decidedly encouragea to adont standard designs, of which there are many suited to al) purses, It is really surprisiag to discover what comforta ble litile houses can bhe erected in this co.ntry for a very small amount, sometimes S2OO and S3OO. All houses are built of practically imperishable and fireproof materials, cheap frame constructions never being employed. Journalism's Bromidioms,” 7 (Being a few of the questions every newspaper man is asked every day.) “It must be terribly hard to get up something new and interesting every single day, isn't it?” “Can you get in free at all the theatreg?” “But most newspaper men are ter ribly dissipated, aren’t they?” “About what is the Star's circu lation?"” “Do you know Mr. Blank? He's in the Chimes’ advertising depart ment,” { “What are your ambitiong—a play, a novel or what?” “Do they blue-pencil much of your articles?” (Everything, to the Bro mide, that appears in a newspaper—— paragraph, story, verse, obituary-— is an *‘article.”) “Does So-and-go (the cartoonist) furnish his own ideag?" “Well, there are lots and lots of people that just look for Ella Wheel er Wilcox's things every day. They musgt be popular.” ; “Was Evelyn Thaw really so pretty?” “Why did your dramatic eritie roast that show? | thought it was quite good.” “Why don’t you get into magazine work? 'The magazines print some terrible stuff.” ; “You don’t write the headlines to your own articles, do you?” “Who writes all those funny steries? He's awfully clever.” "It gets you acquainted with lots of actresses, doesn’t it?" “That's all 1 buy that paper for.” 80 on ad lib., ad naug, and ad infin, ~— Frauklin P, Adams, Puck. s