The Conyers examiner. (Conyers, GA.) 1878-1???, April 06, 1878, Image 1

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VI. E. HARP, Publisher. )h. - • T II E ’lygRS Saturday, polished every By J W. E. HARP, W TWO POLLAKS PER ANNUM. rou advertising: €H t S will be inserted for ONE ip square, for the first insertion, i ikwr ];\TS square for each .r 1 'Y • per con U ' one month, or less, For a long knee, f,,r libera.1 discount will be made, riod, ^ h in length, or less, constitutes ••One ii jr jnarc. local column will be in k V y, nCeifts per line, each insertion. * K and deaths will be published a ' ,, obituaries will be charged U l>nt j ws, I g ra t en, J rates will he given to merchants w ba desire to advertise by the W. A. IIA UP. Business Manager. GEO. w. gleaton j fctoracy at Law, kVERS : : : GEORGIA, 1 pr'> ctic i in the Superior and Supreme k'tsol the Shatu. / dltiUion <JW n Ute collection of v<cm nmy3-iy f Ml A. G. S^eSALLA, [Homey at Law WYEPvS, : GEORGIA li 1 nmetice in Rockdale and adjoining coun v3-n!5-ly A lUPLIl FOSt THtB PBOl'LE. THE LOU1SVF LLE V-JO'ililNAL ^..rflst, Best a»<1 Cheapest Family Paper iu h United States. edited by INKY WATTEBSON. The Goutier-Journal is a combination (made qHfiS) of three ®ld Louisville papers, viz. : e Juiim , established iu 1830 ; the Courier, is|:l; and the Democrat iu 1844. Its rep Ittwn is JJftfional, as well as its circulation, spiciest, J jt i- pronounced one of the ablest, (tiutik. Klrongtsst ana beat Arranged papeis in e wi irlil; its matter being especially adapted the Merchant, the Farmer, Ladies and Cnil HI. ii!y edition, but a complete, able, spicy, fam t newspaper, c-irefully aud intelligently ed- 1 ! m e ver column and paragraph. TO AGENTS AND CLUBS lEii.’i'ortlinan imluccments in -the way of IsIumTi n’hi'um and valuable premiums are prt‘d to Agents and clubs. [choice the lea from ling Magazines 250 standard Books, Illustrated or any Peri- one I or Bic.ilaof the day furnished in combination Jiili t <; Weekly for a mere pittance in addi lo.i to the jn'ii c of the Courier-Journal alone. \ new edition of Prentice’s Poems, beauti plly printeU and bound and the ^Vetkly Cou P’Journal one year for §3.00. M I,UNDID MAP OF THE SOUTH [iii phed 1 2SJ and x :i2 lmiig inches, handisouiely rollers, retail colored, price,- var- $2; on pilnl free oi postage, and the \N eekly Couri t-Jouriwl, one year, for $2.25. TK'LMS, OI SUBSCRIPTION r'ily Courier-Journal, a yTax,........ .$12 00 liiuday Courier-Journal, a year,..... . 2 00 Pertly Courier-Journal, a year,..... . 2 00 0v in clubs of five at $4.70 : of ten at ift -GO; Nof twenty and over at if 1.50 eaeh. [Postage in all cases 2'repai^ by the Proprietors ] [ [iiu's, Specimen and descriptive copies, list circulars of Books sent and free Maga on [pplicatior. Letters should aeldressed be to W. N, HMD KM AN [rcBicl ont Courier -Journal Co.. Louisville, Ky. ATTRACTION! '• H, Almand, Son & Co JAVIXO- 1 purchased one of AXLEN’S PA TENT i Lsafes f 400 Gallons capacity, are now prepared to Andie oils from “HEADQUARTERS,” and 'ill sell such oils as IXSEFI), Lard, 4 RAIN and . prices . MACHINE, that defv competition. The Oil Safe 1 ' curiosity, within itself. jan5 ’78 tf n jlEVERY BEST Steel Turn and Scooter LOW 8, Clevises, Singletrees, Hames, Col- 118 an( i How Line*, at J II. ALMAND SON & CO'S . jan I 2 tf Knocked Down. ALMAND SON A CO. have Reduced tne Pj i CWl (this week) on Sugars, Syrups “Ed Fish. jan 5,’78tf H 0 RS?AND S5.U™, 0 U. Will euro or prevent Disease. HEAT. HO i>E who have to buy meat, either time 0r CM h. would do well to call c n P- H ALMAND SON & CO. have just received a car load. non Mi ; i 1 “ Error Ceases be Dangerous, to While Truth is Left F ree to Combat it,” CONYERS, GA.. SATURDAY, APRIL 6, 187S. VEUETINE Purifies the Blood, Renovates and Invigorates the Whole System. ITS MEDICAL PROPERTIES ARE Alterative, Tonic, Solvent, and Diuretic. Vf.getixe is made exclusively froni the juices of carefuUy-setecte.d barks, roots and herbs, and so strongly concentra ted that it will effectually eradicate from the system every taint of Scrofula, Scrofu¬ lous IluTucr, Tumors, Cancer, Cancerous Humor, Erys’.pelcs, Salt Rheum, Syplii l:tic Diseases, Canker, Faintness at the Stomach, And u .1 di3r*.H<>s that arise from impure blood. Sciatic n, Infla minatory and Chronic Rhctunaci!*-;.., Nc»:ra1^ia, Gout, and .Spinal Complaints, cun on:y be effectually cured through the blood. For doers and F.ruptivc Diseases of the Skin, Fus t . lee, Pimples, Blotches, Boils, Tetter, Kent ahead, and Ringworm, Vegetiue ha, never fa 1 »ii to effect a permanent cure. For Pai n in the Back, Kidney Com. plaints, Dropsy, Female Weakness, Leu. cotiltoci'., tri.ung from internal ulceration, and uterine diseases and General Debility, Veue Tine acts directly upon the causes of these com. plaints. It.invigorates aud strengthens tb* whole system, acts upon the secretive organs, allays inflam¬ mation, e rres ulceration and regulates the bowels. For Catnrrh, Dyspepsia, Habitual Cos tivencss, Palpitation ol I lie Heart, Head¬ ache, Piles, Nervousness, and General Prostration of the Nervous System, no medicine has ever given such perfect satisfaction aa the \ EGETINE. It purifies the blood, cleanses all of the organs, and pcseuses a controlling power over the nervous system. liie remarkable cures effected by Vegetixe have induced many physicians and apothecaries whom we know, to prescribe and use it in their own families. In fact, \ eoetine is the best remadyyet discov¬ ered lort e above diseases, and is the only reliable ll-LOOD P L IMF lERyet placed before the public. UNQUALIFIED APPRECIATION. H. R. Stevens, F.sq. Boston, Nov. 18,1875. liiur .Sic,— duruiK the past five .years I have had ample opportunity to judge ot (ho merit of Vegk •3 1 N I'- Aly mie has used it for complaints attending a lauy of delicate health, with more beneficial results than anyth mu else which she ever tiled. i have given itto my cluioren under almost evevy < ircum Btance attending a large lainiiy, and .uwavs with inarkea benefit. 1 have taken it myself with such gi eat benefit, that 1 cannot find words to express niy unqualified appreciation of its goudm ss. wane performing my duties as a Police Officer in this city, it hast been my lot to fall in with a fere oat deal oi sickness. 1 unhesitatingly recommend Veg- 11 INK, and i never knew of a case where it did not prove all that was claimed for it. Particularly in cases o! a debilitated or impoverished state 01 the Blood its effects are really wonderful; and for all complaints arising like from an impure stale ol the blood it appears to work a.charm, and J do not bene.ve theie are any circumstances under which Vegetine 1 an be used with injurious results, and it will always atfoi d me pleasure know to give any further information &b iu « iia t i about YEgetine. WM. B. HILL, Police Station 4. CANNOT BE EXCELLED. H. R. Stevens- Chaiilestown, Mass. Dear Sir,—This is to certify that. I have used your “ Biooil i'lejiiirutiun ’’ in my lamiiy for beverai years, and think Unit for Scrolula or Cankerous Humors or .puiiwtt it* »» l\ e«et ions it. ottinot be excolWd ; nml nu ;i b oott ptniii* r arid sprint medicine ii. : - the ue-i liiing 1 u:»ve ever used, find i have used almost everything. 1 can cLeemiiiy i coomme ud it to any one in need of buck a medicine Yours respectfully, i9 Mrs. A. A. JOINjaMORE, Russell Street. VEGETINE F c;i:ired l y II. XL STEA RNS, Boston,Mass. Vc^clino is Sold bv rl! Drug;/ Ms* GO TO B © Bj L4N0.F@aBUS FOR WINES, LIQUORS, CIDER, CHAMPAGNE, &c. Oysters, Sardines, Crackers, Soaps, Blacking. FINE CIGARS and TOBACCO. Pickles, Peanuts, Candies, &c., BOTTLED BEER OF TEE BEST ERASES, A Specialty. Kinds of FANCY DRINKS, at Short Notice. A FINE BILLIARD TABLE attached and Privalely arranged. House, Under the Whitehead Conyers, Ga. Feb. 16, 1878. JP. Sb £$r? 5 rr g 89, Whitehall St. Atlanta^ Ga. WHOLESALE A\D RETAIL DEALER IN’ Mery, Gliiiia, Glass aM Stone Wares, Lamps, Lanterns, SILVER-PLATED GOODS. Goods Carefully Repacked. Quick sales and Short Profits, for CASH. Established 1850. march 2, 1878. 6m. CLOTHING. J f H .-ALMAND SON & CO., are offering » their entire Stock of CLOTHING- at almost cost. j^ow is your time to buy. jan 12tf LOOK BEFORE YOU BUY WEAVER & SIllOBOX, DEALERS IN 8E¥ 6®B0S, NOTIONS, HATS, CAPS, BOOTS, SHOES, &c. Groceries OF ALL KINDS. Fine Tobacco and Cigars, Confectioneries and in fact, Everything Kept in a FIRST CLASS STORE. HONEST DEAUNi, IS OUR MOTTO, H^TTERMS CASH and Short Profits. Conyers Ga. Feb. 16, 1878. tf pokyhy. “ FIGHT IT OUT ” A story is told o' a daughter of a prominent person now in the lecture fie’d which is peculiarly interesting and sug¬ gestive of unconcious wisdom. A gen¬ tleman was invited to the lecturer's house to tea. Immediately after being sea’ed at the table the littie girl astonished the family ciicle and guest by the abrupt question : “Where is your wife ?” Now the gentlemen, having been re¬ cently separated from the partner of his life, was taken so completely by surprise that be starnered forth the truth : “I don’t know.’’ “Don’t know !” replied the enfant ter rible. “Why don’t you know ?” Finding that the child perssted in her interrogatories, despite the mild reproof of her parents, he concluded to make a clean breast of the matter and have it over at cnce. So he said with a caim> ness which was the result of inward ex¬ pletives ; “Well, we don't live together; we think as we can’t agreed, we’d better not.” He stifled a groan as the child began again, and darted an exasperated look at her parents. But the little torment would not be quieted, until she exclaim., ed : “C’mi’t agree ! Then why don’t you fight, it out, as pa and ma do ?’ “Vetigenee is mine,’ laughingly re¬ torted the visitor, after “pa” and “ma’’ exchanged looks of 1 oly horror, followed by the inevitable roar .—New Haven Register. She Didn’t Scare,— A boy was disap¬ pointed the other day in making a sale of tinware to woman on Park street, Detroit, soraelliimj which ex cited her indignation, and she gave a great big piece of her mind. In “j.nv itig back” he said : “Your husband ought to be arrested for working on Sunday !’ “Working on Sunday-come yon'prove here, bub ! Now. bub, if that my husband ever wefrked on Sunday, or any. other day in the week, I’il give you a dollar! I’ve lived with him for twenty yeais, and have always had to buy even his whiskey and tobacco, aud now if he’s gone to work I want to know it 1 ’ The boy backed oft without another word. A Curious Animal Incursions.— A cu¬ rious incursion on the sheep runs of two brothers in Australia is described by a correspondent : These gentlemen lived hundreds of miles r.pavt, and I under* stand the misfortunes here recounted ocn eurred within a short time of each other. One brother had an incursion of myriads of kangaroos, which came close around his house, so that a man could not make for it without actually jostling the brutes. One had only to step out at the iront door, blaze away at them, and knock them over ad libitum, or even club them. The other brother had an inclusion ot opossums, fierce, ravenous and in a mighty multitude, which swarmed round iiis house and terrified his servants so that they all left it. The doors and win¬ dows were constantly closed against the brutes. At night, poisoned milk would be p aced outside, and in the morning hundreds of dead opossums would fringe the puii. Yet the horde remained for a period of three months and were very destiuetive. A light-headed Parisian, who had been long suffering from an aching tooth, but feared going to a dentist, lately tied to his offending molar a long string, at th.e other end of which was a heavy stone. He leaned his head from a window, and let the stone drop. He succeeded in having the tooth drawn, but the shock was so vio'ent that a portion of the jaw tvas also wrenched away. His neck was so painfully jerked that he fainted, and on recovering for several hours he was found to have lost bis power of speech. Twenty thiee years old and the mur¬ derer of nine pearsons ; twenty years old the murder of three persons. They were brothers, Joseph and George Bras~> sel, and to their record of crime they confessed before being hanged, m Cook vilfe, Tennessee, on Thursday. The one that had killed nine persons advised young men not to follow his example. Then he called for whiskey, saying that as he hadn't long to live he was deters mined to get all the good possible out ot that beverage. r i his was in the presence of clergymen who were trying to pre¬ pare him for death. The young men had been literally the terror of the neigh borhood, and ten thousand persons sur¬ rounded the gibbet to see them die. AVOIDING THE RESPONSIBILITY. roller Noel was ‘sore troubled’ atthe scan. a. Brother Crump brought upon himse t by drinking too much, and es- pecially regretted the injury it. brought to the society at Sharon. So one mop. rung he stepped over to Brother Crump’s and found the old man in a doze iu the littie porch. W on \ou take ^ a dram V a>ked Biothei ? Crump, as soon as he was made aware of the presence of his neighbor. W by, yes. I m not agin a dram w hen a body wants it.’ Brother Crump got bis bottle, and he and his friend took a dram apiece. ‘Don’t, you think, Bvotfier Noel,’ said Crump, ‘that sperits is a blessing V ‘Yes,’ replied Noel, ‘spirits is \ bless¬ ing that some of us abuses.’ ‘Well, now, Brother Noel, who do you think abuses the blessing?’ ‘Well, it is hard to say—but people talk don t you drink a little too much, Brother Crump ?* ‘It is hard to say,’ relumed Crump, ‘sc im? times I have though I was drink¬ ing too much, and agin I’d think maybe not. YV hat is m m ? A weak won urn of the dust ! So I left it for the Lord to say whether I was goin’ too iur in sperits. I put the whole ’sponsibility on him ; I prayed et I was drinkiu’ too much lor him to take away my appetite for sperits. I’ve prayed that prayer three times, and he hain t done it. So I'm clear of the ‘sponsibility, any way.’ Without a Newspaper.—A n ex change says : Nothing presents a sadder commentary upon the present conditions of society than the large number of fam¬ ilies, both in town and country, but more especially in the latte:, that subscribe to no paper of any kind. Hundreds and growing T , * n#n,Br of * lwt 18 lrjM P ir ' ‘" s U,e worid aI0 "" d l^m-ignorant °V can "nghty tell the eveot. vast of amount the day. of injury But l 'iat is being.iiitiioted on tile Using gen cration-tliose who are to take our pi t. «« la the bony wo. 1,1 at no mam tiny -S™u mg up wtlhout any knowledge of 1 lG l tltSLll b any study ot the past, this too > ■*'"* imLuc '3 into them by the sanction ot thoce who chonld, and doubtless do, know better, did they on¬ ly think of the injurious effects of their insane course. Let the head of every family think of this, and place in the hands of those for whom he is responsic ble, the means of acquiring some knowl¬ edge of the moving panorama in which we act the different parts. The Russian Government officially es. timated its loss ot soldiery at over eighty thousand, but there has been, probably, quite as large a loss of Russian subjects, other than military, from maladies aris¬ ing out ot the war. At Alexandropol owing to the passage through the town, since the war began of seventy thousand sick and wounded, and the neglect of the sanitary authorities to take much disease that all who can have left the toivn ; the death rate has reached fifty-five in one thousand ; and at Tiflis all the doctors of the Red Cross Society are dead. In the Caucasus a plague is expected. The Turkish prisoners from Arrneria are all more or less infected with disease, and wherever they go epidemics follow in their train. A: Penza small-pox and raeasels ate so rife that public schools and institutions have been closed by government order The official report gives an invalid to every house. Near St. Petersburg the black small pox, a form ot the Persian plague, has broken out among the Tur¬ kish prisoners at Gatchina, and is caus¬ ing great alarm in the capital. A month ago ten thousand sick and wounded were at Sislova awaiting removal, so many of whom were suffering from typhus that it was proposed to have typhus specials to carry those so affiicted. For some w r eeks Mr. Pierce, who lives in Georgetown, has heard a peculiar noise at night, and discovered the grad¬ ual loss of chickens. He came to the conclusion that it must be made by rats. Friday night he and his wife were awak¬ ened by a sharp cry of distress from the crib adjoining their bed in which their two-year-old infant was Bleeping, Mr. Pierce immediately sprang out and din covered a weasel at his child’s throat, Catching the animal with his hand, he threw it to the floor, killing it at once. A few moments later the little one would certainly have been killed, as a deep gash was already made in its throat.— [ Wash¬ ington Star. The fat girl of Iowa is dead. She measured seven feel around the waist> and was never completely bugged iu her life, TWO DOLLARS Per Annum. The following are interesting statisties of the Empire State, Cut it out and paste it away for future reference: The population of Georgia in 1870 was J," 184,109 ; of these 638,926 were white and 595,192 were black, only 11,127 were foreign born. The number of fam dies in the State was 237,850, and the ave-age was five persons to a family. I he number of dwellings were about the same 38 families ; ol 236,436 persons in Georgia 48.9 per cent, are male and 51,1 per cent, females; 54 per cent, arc whites and 46 per ceut. negroes. Of militia, between 18 and 45 years of age, 9.1 per cent, are whites and 7.9 per cent, negroes. Of voters over 21,109 per cent, are white and 9.1 per cent, negroes. The centre of population of Georgia is in Monroe county, near the Oemulgee river about leu miles— a little northeast—from Forsyth, The centre of the white popu lation is on life border of Monroe and Butts counties (near Dublin, Butts coun ty), and about twelve oc thirteen miles northeast of Forsyth. The centre of population is about forty miles northwest of ’.he geographical centre. The centre of total population differs only about ten miles from the centre of white population. Of the people of Georgia six per cent. are engaged in manufacturing ; four per ceut in trade and commerce ; fifteen per cent, in professional and personal set vices, and seventy, five per cent, in agri¬ culture. And if a larger per cent, ox the population was engaged in this laudable avocation, the country would be in a much healthier condition, aud the people would be happier.’ CURE FOR POISON. Take a heaping teaspoonful of common salt and as much ground mustard, stir them in a cup of warm water and drink quickly. This preparation will have hardly reached the stomach before it re turns, bringing with it ihe cause of the trouD'e. Lest any remnant of the poison remain, Jet the white of an egg or a tea¬ cup of strong coffee be swallowed as soon as the stomach is quiet, because those very common at tides nullify a lar¬ ger number of virulent poisons than al¬ most any medicine. This conundrum is now in circulation ; “What is tne difference between a pota¬ to and a lemon ?’’ When the questioned party says he doesn’t know, the other 8 f ys: “Then I don’t want you to -buy any lemons for me,” aud then comes the “ha ! ha ! ha!” The State Geologist of Georgia reports that her agricultural, pastoral, and lum ber resources are equal, if not superior, to any State on the Pacific Slope, or in the North west. She lias water power far more valuable and more generously diffused than New England. In gold she is equal to California, in copper to Tennessee, in coal to Fencsvlvania in iron to the most productive country, iu lumber to Maine aud in climate she is better aud more unchangeable than any of them. A pious man has hired space in the El lenville(N. Y.) Journals advertising de partment, in which he published every week, in large type, a verse of scripture. Nuw York March 28. — Rumors are again current of the probable reconcilia¬ tion between Theodore Tilton and his wife. The Times this morning publishes the statement of prominent members o c ‘ the Plymouth Church, who sav that Til¬ ton has tried to effect a reconciliation with his wife, and that, as the result of a recent interview, they will soon be re¬ united as man and wife and go to Europe together. The Rev. Mason Chenowith stepped down from his Baptist pulpit iu Bangor. Me,, after preaching an eloquent sermon on ‘Purity of Character,’ and was inline diately surrounded, as usual, by admiring members of his congregation, who de¬ sired to shake his hands. A constable then entered and arrested him. He has since been sent to Ohio, w'here ' he has three living wives, to be tried for biga** my. There is also a charge of forgery against him. Snipkins refused to get his wife a new hat, and soon after his little girl came in and said ; ‘Mamma, won’t you buy me a raonkev to play with when you go down town r . No _ darling-wait till vou llre older , and Ulen nlllrry 0 „ i did,’ replied the griet’.stHckim wife, her tears bursting forth afresh, Having held a baby show and a cat carnival in its Music Hall the past winter Boston has now treated itself to the ch«. max of a dog show, where Trai', Blanche, and Sweatheart, with 800 other dogs of both sexes and all breeds, colors, ard siz es » aj 0 * -> bay, and wail m «! *•• >!* ^ ant conc-ord. Boston is nothing if not musical. i NO. 15. A man j u Haroiu, N. II., has sued the d latory lover of his daughter, for $300 for room rent, fuel and lights during four years of corntship. A family, consisting of man, wife, aud, seven children, live m the woods of south east Texas, with no other shelter than that afforded by the forest trees. They never labor or purchase food of any kind. subsisting wholly upon i acorns, nuts, herbs, rats, birds, fish, frogs, and what they can procure by foraging They have repeatedly refused offers of assis> tanee, and express the desire to live a wild life. Fifteen years ago a workman in Mars seilles, France, lost his only child,'a baby boy, and to have some relic of the little one left, he cut off the left hand of the corpse and preserved it in alcohol. Re¬ cently he was again made a father, and the infant is a healthy boy, but, singular¬ ly enough he lacks the left hand. There are one hundred and twenty eight custom houses in the United States, Of this number there are thirty-six the receipts from which during the last fis¬ cal year have not equaled, by nearly ninety tnousaud dollars, the expense of maintaining them. There are nine ports from which not a single dollar is collec ted for customs. There are ten others from which the total annual collections do not amount to one thousand The Perry Home Journal thinks it safe and reasonable for planters to exer eise great prudence in the cultivation of cotton. It says: ‘Cotton goods are cheaper than they ever were before, and and certainly the raw material cannot ad vance prices until manufacturers either learn to spin and weave at smaller cost# 01 some means succeed in advancing the .prices of their goods. Last year was said to be a very unseasonable one, and in December the receipts ot cotton at the ports were no less than fifty thou¬ sand bales st’ort, asj'compared with the corresponding date of the previous year. And yet prices were materially lower in the fatter year.' Several’churehes are being organized in Micigan, and others are likely to be, with this simple and brief creed as tlia only test of membership: ‘We believe Christianity is not a belief merely, but rather h file ; that the sayings of Christ are the plainest possible statement of ret* ligious truth, and constitute the only true theology ; and that any person who be¬ lieves and earnestly tries to live in accor* dance with those savings is entitled to church privileges,’ A Swedish gun has been invented which is claimed to be mueli superior to the Gathling gun, It is worked alter the manner of pianoforte playing, moves to and fro in a section of a circle, and sweeps all the ground that it covers in a most marvelous manner. It is something like sweeping a lawn with water from the jet of a garden hose moved right and left by the operator The Russian navy has this wonderful Swedish invention ready for use in their fleet. It can be carried up info the maintop for filing on the enemy’s deck and inside for fortifica¬ tions. In close quarters it would sweep the enemy’s decks of combatants. The French Government will not ex Libit itse'f, nor allow to be displayed, at the coming Exposition, any war material or inventions which it lias lately adopted, or which it thinks ol adopting, for the ar¬ my or navy. ‘What is your chief consolation in life ?’ asked a pastor of a young lady in a Bible class. The young lady blushed and hesitated, but said, ‘I don’t like to tell you his name, hut I have no objec¬ tion to telling you where he lives.’ The telephone possesses the powerful virtue of preserving the voice of a man’s first wife ; he can bottle il up and keep it tor years. There are such things as second marriages, and what awkward revelations the we 1 preserved yoice might make, Just About tub Truth— Mr. Keely of ‘motor’ fame h a helpless bankrupt,— Exchange. Keely absorbed about $ 100 , 000 Irom credulous people to develop his humbug machine, which was going to supersede steam, and dispense entirely with the use of fuel. He pretended that with a teaspoonful ol water he could run a train of cirs a hundred miles. For over three years he lived sumptuously, drove fine horses, woie diamonds, and drank champagne ft the expense of fhe stockholders in his motor company—one of whom, by the way, was a Cleveland editor. If Keely get s his deserts he will furnish motive I'owi Ur C U* i iU Luc pepiteisLary, f The best farmer is the farmer who pul vales himself.