The Savannah morning news. (Savannah, Ga.) 1900-current, December 23, 1900, Page 12, Image 12

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12 BOMBAY A CITY OF WOE. ________ • MX Hll*Tlo> HI A A STB Wm*M or R£ri3T or I'iiinK. IlnmtM* AtHMcU While lltrga •■*! KrMla Wfra led —Tlir ntr \\ mm Still Frevalfil hut raanr I• the • rr* t |eirn%rr %w—!>■ tlir I'aMlar tirlrkru ouMtry Ihairlrla h* People l'lurkr| fo Howkay, U hftf rißdlni \elther fowl >or kbclltv TkfF lord IB Ihr iimit. H e lief NtHMnrHi Inadeqnair llauda of Kniara, PUI) fttrwag. In(ra| (Kir Tkurniltilarr*. N*w York. leo 1 -The fo oartrg is *n riui<*i from ai private letter from at. dUstn<*tn travel'll* r. HomU) l nutter* t*.a mlwry, lodftcrlbiMi fJ*h are ofi art tthlaa, wheravar >ou go No dtie who has rot traveled la tha Orient ar. ave any ii-ot , h * i:j ai fV*ro i’.f " r- \;r re* *• gg suf €eruog. patience, like t* >- patlfiict of Mh* dead * larpty * *i ♦ 1 oowtraa a *vf great .• •'•}• WMI.X. The pi**** • • tU;i up> th* i * *ugbi It i* greatly id atd ditr g Upon t e Vkx>r pers in tr.\ny Quarter* on aeri oc ctiioM.iF tnr miriou or* **d flrurta of the peMiKet. e. fresh mark**! It a 1* tt ■rarvatioo that i so TANARUS" * § urea I send lore taken in tr# first . day# of my aaedtiiftfi about the city i- * • • •.{* ir, mu h that haa come before my #>•*; GROUP or BOMBAY BDGGATI& c-iX .■• to focus a camera on sued wretchedness. fumaoi Is th* ft>rt epidrmi; row To ti) fto-e- stricken fw>,- ulattor of the erty ars uUol lbs r*f -£•-git *m country dlatricia, rt!t ranks il>plftl tv the loos of those Who have fa.len out and died by tl w tvakle I never before imagined that bumju; creatures could be so fttatU) thir.. They look like gridiron* re. ieaa They sleet* tr the streets, and whin* at you fte fond as you pass At ntt; the streets -oak as if mar ad hot rear l and the ahead let: on the fle.d Thoae that don't et up m rhe morning are attended to by the burial corps is Iso t ilaifi easy to tell which are the , lire ones Last week I |M*sed near s ene SOT! of a priest stv* .tad been fcneollrg for a ice.g time on the sidewalk with his forehead araanst the wall After me-in fsjitx of lorwidti—came two r.a'.lve ■wen. who spoke to the priest and leu -sed I He ■ ■tlsisej in a heap 1 dnti*! know -w locitr he had barer, dead, but It j must have beg quite a Son* time. It was aurrstod. are everywhere There are ai- i waye plenty of beggar* in Bombay. they j tell rr-. but these- f-; owe are t*-mbly in ; eernes: beg* of thaan the profortonais 1 supjsoee. look plump enough. but there s a vary eonvlnom* show of rllas on the majority. I have sawn bands of So or so 1 of tbarer beggars. mostly bora and ohli- ■ dren. all clamor.ng w:h their hands out •trotefced The will take any thine In tbs way of food that 1* off ere.: But the peo ple who lie in the matters and irat. with kardiy enough etrrsvsrtn fa hold out thafr hands, are* the hetrdeet to pairs by There is no trtrkcry hers It Is ttfe an ml. with them, generally death. Va have mnsvey to one old woman mo was too wessk U> craw! a< roes the street and boy food with It bait she handed the money to a boy and e* it him for the food 1 only hat- - • cause back. • • • The authorities > tbetr hsat but It must I make (item feel hopeles* to see the scores tf star vine paopt* pouring into the city - from the gauntry d!rr-.-ts. every day The worst of It Is that there Is food here to feed ’ v*sar le if they would only use It 1 could (u out to-daj with a shot gun and box SaD terror ■ in the s* reels of the dty Why don't I do It? Hecauoe 1 don't want to be torr to bus by a mob Tha pbps otis are sacred bird* and are ten derly fed on *rain that mlht be caving human live*. It s the asm* way wtth the sacra*! gusts and hulls, they own the strswts in the native quarter. No native would think t>f k:lUn* !hpm for food or a raw helplnk btmaeif to their fodder He Would ratba-r die What a olty It to! • • One day. down on the river front. 1 ran serose a processor, of widows. There were about twenty of them and they were going to aaon tsttip# to mavurn for their bushanda who bad all died within the week, so 1 was told. Whathee they had starved or died of she pis rue 1 don't Itr*ow. both, very llkaiy The women wore lon* Mack head coverings that shrouded their faces, and they walked bent fsr over, and Si* sound of their cry ing was a thing 1 shan't forges. Mr L* took a picture of them; on# of whk%i 1 er.-loM. 1 want away up a aide street. I didr. t Ilka the sound That same day I wandered Into a part of the native quarter where tha plague had fallen heavily, dons of the door poets had ten or twelve circles on them, with the date of each case neatly Inscribed. The na v.>es seemed apathetic stem; It. They l: it a visitation of the laird and let It go as that. We found a crowd of children pad iiing In an open sewer that had ap- I <t*< ' Infected the whole street, for the r .ad numbers were thick, ml there had bean case* on tbs previous day; but no body interfered with the children There ssi probably no other pis. e for them to g where the danger of Infection wouldn't base been as great The fafr.:n* fund from America has fall* off greatly I suppose you have the **aoa disaster now to take up your Larttgbl* thoughts. But It Is hard to •evevs that anywhere else In the world ac. -ey wise.y used, cou.d be used to such ■■act for Ufa-saving as In this city. B*ih, warm, baaithy blood la given by its*,el s karaaparUia and thus roughs. ** and pneumonia are prevented. 1 aka h scar —tA, s Ako( T IMLU. \ Inlet Tye# Are Biyeaalre aad !Hf* k<*#l| to Hake. Tn# wng*. of r 4 > word doll is curious OBtum ago wnen M.nu name* were m* ft in vogue for eiufcirew. Bt Daro I hr A w aa the Bc#4 popular. and her iwm. tha beet awl luAi'et that vuki be given to a i. te g.rh The ii arene an Dei), or Doil. and from giving table* the molt* tenr, l was an euy gtep to pm>* I*. on to the Unit images of which the tatb;ce were no food. Te word dot! is not found tr r. u#e in >i*r language unt** the middle of t v eighteenth neiiury and a* far as ran le di* owred. first ir.an * for Septumher. 2751. in the foifcm rig •ever*! doN with different Ue**ee. made l* S- James afreet fca\e been sent lo the <'t*rtoa. to show the manner of dreir\f a: present in taahbon among Engt.ch lath*# Prearlou* to !■>.- the word used to de actlhe the favorite plaything of a I girl# in ail oountrif* and in all ages was baby. enivh t to be found together wi*h poppet,” or ‘'puppet '■ in ’hit sens* In the works of most of the earlier writer*. Tie u and ch ta doll originated In iha middle of the seventeenth century. There a ere no *adi*a' fashion pujer> are now and in order to show w .hat was le irar w*rr on the continent doll* mere twLH|fuly &:1 exyer.*t\ t n . ***v| and *ot to the various ■ rt ahd from ! e models orders e . k n Hie dkttlg to show off their costly garb must be made of more prectotr* *• wff than wood, so aaa aid t nira and vw ivory ot.tw were made. la Puppet lewd. Thuringia to th* land where moat dolls are bora—puppet land, aa It 1s called on I this account About taro hundred years , ago not! of tk* dolls were made in Flan ders and they were caked, not dolls, j hot Flanders' bable* There ue**l to be j r. old Eng Ugh couplet. which rah thus The children of Holland taka pleasure *n making What the children of England take peaa ure In breaking. At one Fluropean doll factory of the present dby KP.dP dolls are produced an. noaMv some Re mitt, woman and chd . dren *- L £ employed To make one talk ing duo require* the joint labor of *> men. I tolls' eyes are made In undei gTound rooms Into which the surds it rarely peep*, and vx-iet orbs are the most difficult to color. There 1* on* toevn in fie grossly where three-fourths of all ths dolls' a** in the world are made. Only ; tr. the ■-**' of the most expensive dolls is real human hair used. In a dirt, fa-lory an* woodrarvera. head maker* leg <w arm-makers, eye-makers. [ portrait artists, hair-dressers, doel sew*- ' .guLci gf COTE OF THE SACRED PIOKONB. era and doll stuffrr*. also ft small irmv of faeblntia ole dressmaker* an*) milli ner*. Tlw HJndu child I* probably th* only .kil-*ew child in th* unbrr**. The llt'b* Egyptians have thrlr woodtvi 'TSIXI ’ -Hid anm* tn atylo ss W year* ago These ware sometime* ma<l** of porcelain When child died lit dolls were hurt I with R, in the expectation that thrlr r,-lr It f*wrn would rtar and do serve • another world. The paradise of dolls I* Japan w they art* most elaborately an*l tore o attired affair*; ao are thr doll* of Ki —"genroku," a a thny r called. Th* arr often valuable wood carving*. enam eled In color*, or statuette* of treat ar twtlo merit. One of the most Interesting collections of doll* In thla pountry la that belonging to the Bureau of Ethnology, Washing ton. They are doltc of the ZunJ Indian* of Artxona. and are made from the root* or anbterr*near, branch** of th* cotton* wood tree, bet nr whittled our with krtv**; they are decorated bright red. yellow, green and represent th* god# of th# tribe —the god of the enow; the god that *:* up the rain cloud. Ibe Are god; the sun god and the corn goddeae. The 7.tint chil dren play with these dull* aa other ohll- THE MORKING NEWS: SUNDAY. DECEMBER 22. 1000. drew do. Any car who go** irto a Zowl h bit at ior is certain to see row of thee# doits suspended front the ceding—®Ot he* irtg to use they are hut g u*> until fit*l la Infer. :< la I* a A e# -a hs?ory. It Is mad# of clay and Is cunei larrd h* Its oomar a Me** an a!> -and tv hceg* of ocher people, to be a worker of tairg clew sol <]uantiUe of g 4 is are cons tartly being offered to w .% room in the houae of Its owr-.er I* h-i aside f r Its #t■*!ustve use. here II n lines In a canopied bed of sold sliver, ft ha* fer-vst; ful dreese# and rich Jewelry, raie-t a thousand* of h>i Am* t f *ts lair*t gifts is a magrdfl.'ent |ssr.* which Is played upon by thos* who ytatt the ,So! as a |Kirt of ths serv , if a*l * at. n ia*l . i MiiiflPitji im mmm \y U>rratea fltaeaaaee the Ind of (he teatary |aea(la With a 1 ona Shade ftoceate* Weil. Mercury, who crossed the sty* with Charon to- uy* M#r ury The usual set. tfters are no new characters in this age of t-he world. Yet there wis one old fellow mourning that he hudn t sen the *entusy out. as he express* ! It. for he would hive lr*ti Just one hundred year# old if he had lived rhrough the last day of the prea ent year 8 A fiteokmi reason M Ye*, but then another |Wj*.#engef said the Nurtreoib Century ioeed in f and w* were la the Twentieth al r.wd> 8 What ti t th*t controversy settlwl yet** Bring tl.- new- otnrrs to me. arsi ca*>ghoWil> figures whom he Jrtrodvs'ea) 8 Wk(HB to tb# of fth*4**. bm allow me. my founitr frigid, to m*k you a few quetkm* about the wuril you have left Young 8 hud** <>rtainly. Br'rates. 8 From what point of time *lo yi numUr the yer* of your <7hrl**ian era? let me queti n the old man oppoeiftit. iMtn*ury jroe* out ami rvtim with Y H From the birth of Ohrj*i, 8 Then, why <V*a not the y ear begin I‘er. IS? Y. 8. I don't know, hut I •r<'vf>t the fart that our year N-glna a week later 8 When <ll.l tha firm year of the first ctntury ••>4'’ Y. 8 When Chrirt wa* one year oM 8 What it that year called In his tory* Y 8. The year 1. 8 What begun tha next day? Y 8 The year i 8 How kw>* did that hurt? Y 8 Till Thrift see fully two years okl; J. e., through Dar. SI. for we have •greed to move- his birthday on a week 8. Then, did the year S of your era olncide with the third \*\*r of Christ's ar*. and did both come to their comple tion at midnight. Dec. 11? Y ft They dhl 8 Then l th* year lof your era the I*l h year of Christ * age? V. S Tee Bocratrs 8 If he had lived to the eeth year of your era. would that*hava bren the 3;h o( bte kite? Y A Ye*. givrtlM. 8 What would the n*xt year hare been* Y 8 The year SO. 8 If he bad lived |o th* 98!h year of t>r era. would that have been the Mth hie age? Y 8 TVs, ftocrates. 8 At the very end of that year .how id would he have been? Y 8 S® years complete. I 8 What would the next year have been* Y 8 The vear 10ft. 8 Wha. do you aay of hie age and of th# era at th# cloee of that year? T 8 You confute me. Socrates; lot have time to think. Old Shad*. Let me reply for th* young •ter. Cbrlat would have been a full hun dred r**ra old. and the century would have been complete. Go ou with your questions, Socrates FOYE & MSTEIN ON MONDAY GREAT SLAUGHTER SALE Of all HOLIDAY GOODS. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED. The Grand New Store. Broughton and Barnard Streets. FOYE & ECKSTEIN. 8 Then what? O. 8 At nntf. rht the second century would beg n. and tha >af would b 8 201 8 wnat ts the r; imherirdf of the first vear of the ftnat century? O. 8 1- 8 A r.d of tha firs: year of the second century? O 8 101 8 And of tha th!.-d eeoturyt O. 8 Sll .8 Arvd of the eighteenth? O 8 !?01 8 And of the nineteenth? O. 8. l%\ 8 And of tha twentieth? o. 8 im, 8 Are th* hundred* of any year al ways one |< w# than the number of the entury, as in thta case, for ejmmßie* George Washington wa* born tn ITU, whi r> free in t • *;ghteentn entury O. 8 They always are till the very *• yur, e g . m the flr-t cetMury ihe hundreds were one less than the number of the century TANARUS: .*t i* 1 was tha number of the century; subtract 1 and there re mains 0. s*> ne year* are 1. 2. X etc with no hundred*, through SC B*. W but the year which completed the first century was 100 ar>d this had ita century number. Tha ml* holds through all tha •enturlea 8. What remark of your Emerson* *{>*>:.e* to those who fancy tha: th# year i'll % y a^w—a—■— mmmmm — ■■■ and - OF FAMINE WIDOWS !!*•' , th* first of th* iwentieth cen tury? O. It Perhaps you have this In mind, go>iate* "our eye* are -olden that we cannot se* things mat wtare us In the foe, until the time arrives w hen the min i is ripened, then we orhold them, and the I,me sluti we saw them not is i.ke < dream " Y. 8, Socrates, thou reasonest wed. and when I nave thought over your line Of argument a while perhaps I shall find nr,} self of my fel.ow traveler's opinion. Maria L Owens. iu> mi hi liens. They Are lllrds That Kill A enomona Snakes In n Most Innenlona War. It wa* In New Mexico, on th* river tra.l between Socorro and Meatlla. Wltk Jim llaekell driving the buckboard teatn, that 1 Oral saw a ruad-runner. The bird had alarted from the rooilaide into the troll and was running with surprising spcoi in advance of our team—* saucy looking fellow, somewhat larger than a SO pc. with a strlight bin. lon* tall feath ers. short wings, of which he mala no apparent use. and long, muscular legs "There’* a bird that ought to bo encour aged by all right minded men, for ha kills rattleanake* •• Haskell remarked af ter telling me what It wa*. "If It were ■ad for shls trait and th* fact that a i>air of these birds came to my help once when I was in a bad way. my bones would be whitening in Hand ('anon to day. "It began with my being driven Into th* brush on* night by Indians In the Mag dalena tn- urtwins, where 1 ww* prospect ing for sliver. In *l." Haskell continued "I got away from ihctn wlih only the clothes 1 stood in. and I wa* pretty well but out before I came at noon next day to where I could see the Rio Urande Valley ahead. 1 was then In on>- of th vs* ■tf -1-walled little rwnons that you find In sarvdsb.vtt* forma ten*—a hot. narrow pisa* ag*. wtth fine sand underfoot that I shuf fled and slipped In as 1 walked. I could see the cannon's mouth When I came fo a place where the bottom dropped down sheer for about ten feet, and In trying to make the jump I slipped, landing any j way that happened on the sand below, and whan I had got some brsath back Into my body and l tried to rise to my fe*t I found that my right ankle had bees* thrown out of Joins "This wa# pfUr.g worse hick on had, but I did not loa* heart, for through th* rift ahead I could set*. acro*a th* j *ands. green holds and tree*, adobe houges | aud lbs bits* sparkls of Lb* river. J used *4 ad my eourag* Just than, besrg faint throtigb pain an*l hunker, an I isirctia*! with thin* R-wr *>ly h*l I :ar'- *-l on hand* and knase. to crawl out of th* canon whan I wtw *-im<-:hlnk thal caused tr.c to pa-ua* and 1 xk about m- a* If I war* hunting for w loa! Jumotil. Along th* bottom of th* canon in th* loos* wand aw* a mark such aa might h* mad* by a dragging rop*. an I It I from th* place wher* I had fallen tow <rd th* opening ahead. It was th* trail of a anak*. a big on*, and in New Mexico a rr.ak* *hat could mak* a track like this was almost sure to be a rattier Tii-r* was m> danger tn eight, and kerp.r.g a sharp lookout. I went on. "Two immerse rock column*, their faces cut and hollowed Into queer shape* by th* frewks of Mowing sand mad- a natural gateway to th* cwnor. and ,igi;i ■ th-ir latsea th* sand wets dr.'ld. leaving a nar row opening aeu.g th* center. I ha 1 worked along tht- opening until I wa* midway betw**n the columns, when i snake somewhere near me sprung h rat tle sharply If you ever have h-ard the swish of an angry nattier* tail In a <*oae ptor* such a* th* canon X wa- in. you know how th* sound mu!tlp .* n ;f seeming to c-m* from every ouart-r a: onre. Eor full ten minute* I linenad. wl'.h th* wrhol* air about me alive with th* buxztng. before I could locate th* sound as coming from directly ahead of me. Then 1 crept on slowly, holding myself ready to crawfish bsckwuyd on short no tice. With all my carefulness I was ii close to the snak* when 1 discovered him that 1 was startled all over. He was s I yefiow rattle snake, the Utggvwt and most i vicious poison snake of the Southwest ; and his color was so nearly that of the sand he lay on that If hi* rattle had not warned me l might hot have Seel) him then. He had dined not lung before, aa the lump In hi* body showed, ant row. comfortably colled In the sand, be was In no mind to be disturbed. >ll* t el m • lifted, and the rattle, rising from the cen ter of his colls, sung viciously. 'No thor oughfare.' to me aa I stopped to study the sttuatlon. "1 was too far away from th* snake for htm to strike me. and I stayed, war dering how 1 was to get past him A queer feeling came over me. everyihlng . else faded from my view, and 1 saw only hi* shining eyes, which seemed to spread ■ 111 they filled the space around. It was the pain of a sharp wrench of my In- ; lured ankle that broke the . barm that was overcoming me. and made me aware { that 1 had gfaftad forward directly to- j want the snake I shut my eyes, turned anil went back from the sight of the rep tile a* f' *• 1 co)i:.i "But 1 wis far from being out of my troubles from th# snake. The track In the sand showed that he h#.l come from under the ‘jufctp-ofT In the canon bottom where 1 had fallen, and if he took It Into hie head to return It was certain that be would m ike objection to my prefer.. * Being gorged and sleepy, he was not like ly to move soon unieas he was disturbed, but It. might be another thirty when the night came on and the air *r.d ground got cool outside Then the warmth of the canon, holding through the night the sun * hca: eg the day. wou and be apt to tempt him b*. k There wa* no way out for tn excepe along the narrow rift between the wand heap* and the canon er trance and it was at th# widening of this rift, beyond the sandstone columns, mat t.ie sn.ike wax lying To try to rreep round him. against the face of the sand heap, was too risky to be undertaken with my crippled Veg. and It wa* plain that ao Song as the snake stood guard at the passage there was nothing for me to do but stay where l was "In my schoolboy days I read about the old fellow th* Greek* used to tell about, called TaiMslua—you know who ! I mean I think t entered very fully Into hit feelings that afternoon as i looked from that stifling oven of a canon, across the grim sentinel barring me from the water and green shade that l could see In ih* distance- And the worst of to* THE HOLIDAY GIFT STORE IS HERE, Because we are selling at A Great Reduction Ol Util! II CM) M (I Kin. Everybody knows the stock we carry —the best that - * purchasable. Cut Glass, Whiting's Solid Silver, F.ne China Dinner and Tea Sets Lamps, Bric-a-Brac, and hosts of other things exactly adapted for gifts. You save big money, and buving su.:h goods at our present prices is like purchasing gold dollars at a dis count. GEO. W, ALLEN & CO., State and Barnard Streets. "McDONO UGH i BALL ANT Y fit V Iron Founders, Machinists, eljf Illnr L*ml Ih* ll tilt rnmkrr*. ms nllfa c urrrm of Station. rr% and I'nrinhlff I nginri, \ ertlml ami Top Ntitinlni; torn 'fills, -uamr >llll al ran* fll n k I'ullf t i r ic. TELEPHONE NO. 123. bi;*trve- ii. X ouii figure no way out of fy trout'.*. "The that any human heln* would come to T-at.-i <'anon wa* too re* mote to be * red. and there w .is r.othlng at and that I could ue a- a tn* iiuheHMt a not a atlck. wa* to b* foutkl only i ** x*itidst<N>e walls above end the firve fanil beneath tn* Worn out with fatigue, I fill a*e*p, ar,d when Ia w ok* ti> .<un was shlnir.g f: r4.gr. t ln:o the canon, l*y w h.. *h 1 knew ;ui it was in the west, an hour o* so above the mountains. From where I lay I could kk through th* <-.nor. entrance, and my eyes rested ujffxi the valley b**\ottd. and my ufljr Jailor, faithful to poet, cotleai asleep in the sun. But somethin* eihe that ! saw, tt struck me as strange t.iat I had not observed before; five or si* long of dry cactus on the s,*nd n*.r the snake that e*em<*.| *o have been care lessly Hun* down in auch a way as n - to surround h*m I was t.g> m.s erahle and list*ees to wonder much it anythin*, but my sirusfieti fect>!y over th* problem of how the cactus cam* to be there, until, with n ;att*r of quick (t*t and the rush* of somethin* dram* 1 soft> over the Hand, a bird cam* into my v!*-w, beyond the canon k’* w->- roadrunner. dragging abeur a cactui limb * loj> ts my arm H* cast a aharp glance into the cacon aa he approach***!, but aeelnc iK>th!nu to aarm him in tho morion less fiaure lying half nurted In wind, wet.r on and l.i.d the cactus dc%vn r ‘^* r ;>ng •*- *ke. A minute mor nd a second bird oppenred carrying a cactus limb, end the two then set briskly to work pulling all the pie es of < . tu* snout until they hewl ma lea complex Hna around th* snake This done they i both aMt ofr airaln to fetch more cactus! *ml th*y cm* r,l w* n , unl „ h „, m4* a ring of ca . tlls i lm!a , thr^,,„.J .Up.’ 1 " WIU,OUt • roji ‘ n hlm they had cactus enough for their port—. .1 .<1 i| of fftchltur mor*. thev be s.n o ro.. the outride pletw. t ic ring over upon the Inside. The circle r a-rowed fast, end the cactus fence g--w htkheri a. It drew . leer .!( , h * ‘ l * rr, c*d# was half a foot nigh around him * hen the snake maidenly lifted his 1 hl * rattle At this the nnd <* run around th* arcade. flapping their wings, sc naming ond making f,in,s of attacking tho snake, b ut taking eool car. to keep well klt of his reach. He would hats gone through fir# rather than try to crawl over dry cu tus. but iev era! time* h* struck at the birds, his K iuml h* <<l brlnflnf up v**ry ()m*> C-..U SI lb* thorny harric.td. Angered hv his failure to reach them and prl ke.l and tern by thorns, the snak. wlth , w , •iroke became more enraged. until, eager 10 strike at something which he could reach, ho turned back hts head after a particularly vicious lunge and si ruck his fangs Into his own body. This self-inflicted wound look the light quickly out of the snake H:s head drop ped upon Ms coll, ard |n a few minuted he lay motionless while the bird* hopped rojnd th# barricade ocreamotg and try [“• to provoke him :o strike. For a rvh'le lb# snake would lift bis head and sound Si ”e'md W nT aln mLT —*" * mk * • boeml fi*Ue cessed at las t • to move, and then, aa If sattsfled that th'ir work fw<l b**e thoroughly dor. thw birds start'd off together ar-d I is tv th*m no nvvr*. The sun bsd gone behind h roo-jr talnw ard r.lglu wa* failing. I crawl- 1 down past th>* .lead snik* in hia prison, wt"l shar'-ng my rours* for th* n*arew: Hitbt In th* valley, I kept mi r*ting ar. I • nr ping by turns, until af:*f about three hour* I <wm* to a traveled trail Toens (lar.-is, ctwnlng late from th* mountain! w,fh bis ox.-'am. brlrslng a lowd of w.wsi. foun.l me. arwl took me to hla hou*e !' tn* river. Her* he and hi* famil-' rnw-l* me a comfortabl* aa they could ;, ' r lh* nlKhi. and th* next day he car n. •! me ro So orro where I got prop* r *t:rcical rare for my wnkl* and th* mewr < for anew outfit when I was readv ac - v to take the trail." Oareetca Puller. ktifi.KVi uama r.uiiß. A Pleasant l.emrw Toni*. r-'ires k-.d'ge.-ior headache, malar’a ki-lney disease, fever, chllla. loa# of ap- P>iite. debility, nervous. pra*tratlon. heart failure and appendicitis by regulating ths Uver, Siomarii. Rowels and Kidneys. SIOZI.KV* I I.Huy Rl.ixiß. •Aired me of Indlgewtloa. I had suffered for ten years. I had tried almost *very medteine. but all failed Sine* taking I.eujon Elixir I can aat anything ! Ilks. W. A. tieiffltii, ReevcavlM*. 9. C. MOlLKl**# I:I I\ft. Cured me of Indigestion and heart <*s ease, after years of suffering whea all other remedies and doctors i.-i failed N. D. Coiem.i n. Beuiah. 8. C. HOZLBY'I I.l:tilth ELIXIR. 1 have been a great sufferer from dyep- p eia lor about fifteen year*, my trouble print my liver, aiomach and bowel*. WMh terrible Headache* I -cmee Elixir cur 1 me My appetlt* Is good, and I am .-.l l had taker a barrel of other ml. :. that done me no good. Charles Olbh*-d No. UIS Jefferson arrest. Iroulsvllle ivy kOllJCri I.HMOh t.I.IXIR fiVr*h me of eniarggp irver. never cut !n --dlgertlon and heart disease. I wse un able to walk up stairs or to do any kind of work 1 was treated by many physl t lasts, but got no newer until 1 ue—l Ircincet Elixir. 1 am now healthy and vigorous. c. H. Ba.dwm. No. M Alcxanrler etreet. Atlanta, via Roy. I All's i.Mliri IMST I Mini** Cure all Coughs. Col l*. Hoarsensas, j Bore Throat. UroncnlUs Hemorrhage and I all throat and lung diseases. Elewant. re liable. 23c at druggist*. Prepared only by Dr. H Moxley. Atlaniw. Ga -ad. kaflered S5 Yran. "Grayheard cured me of catarrh from / 111 No:-Jig on earth ao far aa 1 was aba to obtain gave me relief. Since taking Greybeard I am aa well aa ever I had catarrh of the head. Mr*. Rhode Dean, Ba lunger. Tex. Greybeard la mad* ostty by Respesd Drug Company, sole owners, ahd la aoig ■ l drugstores for fl a bottle.—ad.