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DR. JOHN BOLL’S
Smi’s Tonic $yn
FOR THS OUR* OF
FEVER and AGUE
Or CHILLS and FEVER,
AND ALL MALARIAL DISEASES.
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..tin VNtm end 5onU.ru e jnutry *obtir
him uitlaonr to tkt troth •( tin ui.rtlo.
that lo bo OH whatortr will It £»il to cor. 11
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pod order. Should tho poUooU'OT.TjVJ
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OR. JOHB BUIiL'R
SKITIfS TONIC SYRUP,
BULL'S SARSAPARILLA,
BULL'S WORM DESTROYER,
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CHATTAHOOCHEE RIVER
BRICK.
ACROSS THE WATER.
HAPPBNINOSOFTHB WB£K INTHB
OLD WORLD.
London, Hoy 10.—Mr. Olodotooo'o volco at
tho outrat of hi. tpeoch in advocacy of hlo
motion for o oecond reading of tho homo rule
bill wm indlatinct, boarro end feeble, hut It
cleared at ho proceeded. Be said he deal red
et the opening to make a atatemeot of hb per*
aoaal poaltlon, which he had eutinly refrain
ed from making when he introduced the bill.
He had never et any period deuired home role
in 1 reload no Incompatible. with imperial uni
ty. [trie, of “oh, ob!”J That woe exactly to.
[Cbeero.J The contradiction had coma from
tome membera who vlaltcd Midlothian,making
apeechca otuffed full of totally untrno and
worthlcaa exertion,. ["Oh, oh," and cheen.]
In IhTI ho had exproaaed peat oatbfactlon
with which be had heard the atatomenta of
eupportan of home rule, aa thoae atatomenta
contemplated nothing lending to a aoveranco
tiout alwayo presented
mind reprding homo rnlo, Firatly, it muat
be .hewn that it wm detlred by the greet
of populetionof Ireland. That condi
tion had never been ateolutely end unojuivo-
rally present until tho pacing^ of the repre-
■cnutlon of the people act [( 'beer*. I
Secondly. Wae homo rate competihle with
the nnlly of tho empire? That queotlon had
been an.wered by Mr. “ ------
l'arnell.t who had da
eland that what ha oougbt under name ef
home rale wm ell ' "
ome rule wm (imply theautonomy of Ireland,
The ipeeker had been charged with expert-
lentlng In politic, without xrave cauio. Bore
montlng In politic, without grave cauio.
thee had the gravert of cauMa, for they were
dealing with a people and n country whoee
radical aympathiM wen- against law, eapoclal-
criminal law, which had never obtained
i y«
the confidence or obedience of tho Irioh poo-
reform
pie. Tho alternative, coercive end
mean res, had been tried. They had equally
failed to conciliate. The medicine of coercion,
eepeeially had been e medicine continually
applied in increasing does, end with dimin
ishing results. [Parnellite cheers]
Hera the speaker reviewed the history of
Office 155Brad St, Atlanta, 6a.
W« are mared totem* Mofctatay
atpricastoiutithatfaea.
runs. on. rump tad a
A IPKIALTT.
bcssm
SEA FOAM
StmtepiHfleaftiB<
thorough measure which would be satisfeetbry |
to Ireland wm now favorable. A* regard* the
autonomy of Ireland being a menace to the
unity of the empire, he reminded the homo
that the same argument wm employed against
Canadian independence, when it wm deter*
mined to concede home rule to Canada. Cat*
ada wm in the precise temper attributed to
Ireland today. Canada did not get home rale
because the was loyal and friendly. She was
loyal and friendly became she had got home
rale. [Irish cheers)
lie Gladftoae nl 11 piriiament during
the whe-’.e Canadian oaetrorerey taking, as a
ycxrg man. an art: re nan in the diseases,
ahu was the nature of the ihaadian tow*
IVcueriittsh wm net parafcM to the
cane of Ire&wrjfi. V»T7octitm cheer*] Net
-a rmy ndiqakz. the hill rdScrei W Ire*
iwnC w Aiflerrart in -n.partaiit details f; aa the
aotf Vhvh duqitwod of thi sane nf Canada.
3iut alUirmgh iu»t pamioll their yMBtaon* are
uiikmiMiuk. What war tbr team it the rear at
(uimui,' (•nvernment from Iiuvniup asm it.
Ti»«m few words cnibrerr th» wfool* coutro-
v erry. A government Irani Iionnuf r.r«B
Bicaump uT rncm a government from Went-
nnimiui. IBean! Saarij
What wm the cry of thaw wht> rousted an-
louamy in Cuuaaa' it wu» a cry which turn
slept a lour time ar>iumng vigor from steep
ing. It was a cry that the unity of the «m-
nun- would be endangered, in his opinion of
the relation? of (Janad* am! Kogiamd than,
there wm vary great danger to the natty of
the empire inti it wm a rcoeij for mischief,
not the mischief itself, which wm recanted a*
dangerous. {Irish cheers. 1 In Uus respect
the cnee* of Ireland and Canada are precisely
parallel. There is danger to the unity of the
empirr in our present relation* with Ireland.
But the opponents of the bill have applied
theory of danger to the remedy iustead of the
existing mischief. |('boon ] In those days
the people of Canada were habitually do*
nonnoed in this house as rebels. [Prolonged
government and Parnellite cheers.] ftomo of
^mUed rebels were Protestants ef Eng*
Catholics of French extraction. Wm tho err
against them raised because they were French
extraction Catholics? No, sir. Tho EagUsh
in upper Canada did exactly tho asms
thing. Both rebelled. Ho (Gladstone) re*
membered O'Connell, In tho course of the de
bate on Canada, in referring to the French*
Canadian leader, raperinau, saying: “Thia
of Ireland, with this diff*
OJJfTz, joirxs a co„
170 Ihiane St., IT. T.
■unMui.m Awi.ui
DRUNKENNESS
Mmiimni Ihu i-nw. feM-wkjto,
ATLANTABRIDGE WORKS
GRANT WILKINS,
Bridges, Roofe and lorn Tables,
Iron Worit for Buildings, Jails, Etc.
■pocutty.
DR. RICE,
rmuuOwtriuHvi
coin la jolt tho cm,
moot: Th, Canadian agitator ha. au “O'
th, end of hi. nam, Inrtead of at th, begin-
nln.," [Laughter.] Th, Canadian rebel,
were rappramed; but at th, moment of mili
tary victory, political difficulty began and the
victor, won ramiuiahed. If wo were military
victors, tho Canadian, were vlctorlon, in tho
Held of mwon. [Cheat,.]
Hero Mr. Gladstone referred to tboilgnlll-
comeacroa
cant ripreealon of opinion that bad
the Atlantic approving the vital prindplM of
the bill. [Chcen and derisive cries.] Ho
asked the gentleman who appeared to think
that them monlfeetotlona of opinion of Anarl-
cn wore worthlrea [hear, hearj—lf they
would have considered them worthleee If the
manifeatatlone had condemned the bill.
[Chterv]
In conclusion, ha declared that tho main
object of tho bill wm to abollah, root and
branch, the discontent prevailing in Inland,
and to restore social order by the removal, not
merely of the •ymjitotu., but of tho eanne of
that dmoontent. If tho opponent! of tho bill
had an alternative policy, what wa, it, he
asked. If Cord Randolph Churchill should
undertake the task of tattling Ireland, what
did he mceu to do? Wu hie plan that pro-
• ~ - 1 last Novom-
might bo dar-
_o undertake
to reconrt.nct tho Irish government without
aia ne mean isoor nu ni. pier
ptwed by tbe loyalirt. In Bel feat li
her T The English nvernment mi
lug, but not eo daring a. to
to raconuroct the Iruh government without
touching the legislative dilflcultiae. If Cord
llartington had a plan, lot him declare it
Ha appealed to Lord llartington to eta to his
•olution of the Irish problem. They hod
reached a crisis in the history of tho nation.
The path of boMneaa wm the only path of
•afety. [Cheers] A11 men ought to know
their own mind and ought to toll It. Tho
fate of Ireland could not bo cast Into tho
lottery of politico. [ParnoUito’cheora) Ho
had been told that bo wm .tearing Ireland ts
certain rain. Let opponent, ahow the way to
—ipo. Lot Lord llartington, In moving tho
Is doomel to defeat unless crucial am#»J
meets he made. He opponent# calculate that
there will lie a majority of forty against th,
bill. Oliditone b„ men urged to
o day for tho diacoMion of the bill and
.miaed to reply on tho ,ab)oct
m prem
on Thunday.
Tbe St. James Gazette say. there ia no long
r any donbt that the “dlaraption tbtll" (Glad
:one'a home rale meoanro) baa collapsed.
•tone’a home rale meoanro) baa collapsed.
Lowooic, May 12.—A political meeting was
bald at the city residence of Jooaph Chamber
lain today. Sixty membera of the house of
common, were praaenL Mr. Chamberlain ex
plained tbe renewal of hlaactivity agalnat Glad
stone's heme rala MU by aoying that ho had
bean elaarly Informed not Saturday that tba
premier was prepared to expnoge from hla
measure tbe clanao excluding Irish represen
tatives from aitting at Westminster and thn.
maintain the unity of tho empire M desired
by tho radicals. Mr. Chamberlain declared
that now nothing abort of a withdrawal of the
homo rale Mil would reetoro unity among the
liberals.
Mr. Oalno, an able liberal member for
Barrow, In Fnmeaa, stated that 102 liberal
Barrow, in Fnmeaa, stated that 102 lib.
membera have premised to vote against
home rale bill, and that there are thirtyfiur
undecided as
other liberal membera who are
to what eonne to purane toward. It Mr. Trev
elyan maintained that homo rule wm unfeasible
I wm oppa-
upon the opponents of the
rent, ha Mid, that the liberal aaaocistion’a
support of Mr. Gladalone wm to bo attributed
to a sudden buret of generosity.
Michael Dmvltt, in an intarvlew,* declared
that ha wonld reduce the members of tho
national Hague in Ireland and America if
Gladstone yielded to Chamherlaln’o demand,
for a modification of tbe homo-rale bill. In
reference to the opposition of the people of
Viator to home rale, Davitt said acorn folly:
"Leave them alone to ua. Wo will make abort
work of thoae gentry. They ore not Irish
men, hnt only English and Scotchman, who
have settled among us. It would bo an ab
surdity to allow them to dictate to Irishmen
M to bow Ireland should bo governed. The
nationalists will wage war to tbe death against
Bradhnrno and many member, of tho bouse of
A• B. Forward, member for Lancashire, in*
Iroilnced a .cries of reaolution. to tbe effect
that th? meeting repreaented the
association of tho kingdom, end that It bad
confidence in Ibe ability of Lord SalUbory to
maintain Greet Britain and Ireland b om
united kingdom, and to guard the safety or
the union and tbe zreatnras of tho omp.ro.
OFFICIAL DRAWING
—OF THE—
LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY l
Number, Class “E,”
N0, m
the union and the freatrf?- ~ - - - . . _
Tbe resolutions were carried amid cheei.-
laord .Salisbury said that bia policy on the
burning question of the day wm the tradi
tional policy of tbe tory party to maintain
the union. Thl* wa* an unbroken tnditnn of
the torie*. He would timply try a* an bum
ble instrument to hand over tbe burning torch
to his auccessors. He denounced the abomina
ble insinuation that the conservatives conceal
ed their policy, There wm fair ground* for
hoping that today week the proposals of tbe
government wonld be a matter of history.
But the question would auivlve. The loyal
Single
Drawn at New Orleans, Louisians, on
Tuesday, Mar U, 1880*
—FULL PRIZES.—
party hM~a fight Wore it. It would take a
long time to
root ontthe poisonous weed be*
Jegcd to have been made hv Irish members
that they wonld accept this ~'* L “
bill with
ndment providing for Irii
tion in Westminster, the speaker Mid that the
ery attitude of the Parnellite* showed that
% statutory parliament at Dublin."
A dispatch from Coleraine to tho Dublin
rolling
agee of 18 and GO years; that the mon will bo
supplied with anna and be drilled by old army
numbers will bo augmented by
volunteers from England, Scotland and
Canada. The dispatch also says arrangement*
are being made to obtain arms and ammuni
tion.
The debate on Gladstone's Irish bill wm
ney general and at present
Bury, He criticised tho measure
He said he wm only inflnenoed by a desire
to arrive at a right and just conclusion con
cerning the best way to govern Ireland.
[Cries of “Hear! Hear.”] Tho premier's
me contained five conditions: unity of
empire, supremacy of imperial parliament,
safeguards for the rights of tbe Irish minority.
question. But the bill Offered no
security whatever for the fulfillment of the
oendiuou because whatever Irish bill Eug*
’ ar 4 m*xkt pass could be repealed the next
s*r Henry, continuing, mid, ‘The veto pro-
■risbm is Gtedscoae’s bill was inadequate to
protect the teyaiict minority, because the
\v£n» *x>2 pe&cw of Ireland vooH bo miuious
I of the suturin'. Tim minority shoold s>t bt?
timi fifqecBttd The speaker dll not
I tabrrt that lb* VJ3 vn’i pnr« a foil »«;•
tlcmcin uf the Irak tot did beliere
that Irishmen would ue it samp£y m a van-
tag* ground for vrarlart epoa Wa4. to ob
tain eventually total oryTMr^a." [Cries of no!
no' from PanteHjam]
RJn coudusum Sir Hoary mid, WoLlto ia-
deed now etna* to a paitiasjrf ZMria. As the
premier wjt each member mast make hla
choice. 2 have mafic mine. 1 btltere that the
Hill will load to po&fnsius and chaos. I hope
I .he bona* will maintain tho unbroken union
l «s it at preseut fxisu between tho three king-
said be Aid not belirre that
exhibit all the rices and none of tho virtu os
of tbe nation. The late govern
ment bad allowed things in I relaad to drift
nnul Ecgliob rate ia Ireland bad como to bo
fiospiaod. Ho t«lievodla majority of tho house
favored tbe cardinal principle of tho bill. If so
bo wovld ask what could bo more deplorable
• the logic*
than tbe failure of tho house to giro
Utiro effect to that principle. In ooocloaion
Banaormaa declared that tho goversment wm
quite ready to consider all suggestions for the
retention of the Irish rvprtoenutives at West
minster. (Laughter from opposition.]
Campbell Banner man. war secretary
In reply to llr. Hoaly, characterised.
m an abanrdity, tbe statement made by
William Johnston, loyalist member for Booth
Belfast, that General Wolseley bad declared
that if homo role were granted Ireland
and be were ordered to supresa an Ulster re
bellion bo would resign nod with 1.000 other
“ rebels. The
British officers join tbe Fluter
secretary added that General Wolseley author*
iced him to formally contradh tany statement
that he (General Wolseley) hsd ever alluded
tothoinbject in any speech he had over ut
tered.
K.G. Clarke, oonaervative, .rid that If tho
foiyotlea. This axpisMion of o,talon wm
greeted with significant Parn.llita cheers.
“ — Mid that
Mr, Dillon eoid that although ho recognised
the fact that tho measure wm defective tn
relccrion of the Mil, trace a vlaiMe or palpable
road threught the darkness [Chren.1
“The membera of the haoM have befi.ro
*»■*■> .». great opportunity to cIom
the rtrife of raven hundred non. age, and of
knitting, by bonds firmar and higher la char
acter than heretofore, the hoertaandaffactioaa
of tbe Irish people, and of cementing the
PRIVATE COUNSELOR
• 1SS=2SS5
noble fhbric of tho British nation." [toad and
prolonged cheers.]
Mr. Gladstone wm followed by Lord llart
ington. who oil rising wm greeted with chow*
He asked if Mr. Parnell had ever stopped
short of asking for the complete independence
and restoration of Ireland to her place among
the nations of tho world. He (llartington)
feared that the premier had settled tho matter
without mature consideration. With refer
ence to rubmittihg an alternative measure,
he failed to remember a single
instance in which Blr. Gladstone had taken
the ruuree hr new salted dioentienta to take,
who wore nnpre|tared to .uxgeit In what di
rection the mraMiro before tho hoora coaid bo
immediately revived. He believed th.t tho
conclusion made tonight would not meet tho
demand, of chamberlain. In conclusion, ho
moved that the hill be read six month, hence.
rame reepecte. he wm ready to accept it m a
settlement of tbe qnertlon and would eadoavor
honestly to aid In its enforcement in an ami
cable spirit u regard, both England and
Ulster. It wm imporalMe, he coutTnoed, that
membera abonld think that the nationalists
ware anxlona to ait at West
minster while effitin of Inland were
going to wreck and rain, llrlahcheon.il
E. A. Leathern, member for Hodderafiald, a
reformer, Mked whether Mr. Farad I wonld
aeeept tho bill m settlement of tho IrUhque.-
tion.
Mr. Parnell rose ia hla place and emphatic
ally replied, “Yes."
Mr. Loath am reported that he had bean un
able to gather that idea from Mr. 1'araoU'i
previous speech re.
Mr. Healy at this juncture sprang to kis
fhet, rad Uratn. to Mr. 1‘araoll, excitedly
' 'Tell him h.'e a liar!"
Ad uproar earned and Mr. Healy rammed
kis seat amid ahoata of ''order” from all parts
oftbahanaa.
•nnportera of Mr. Gladstone ha. crown rapidly
today. Tho number of adherents of Hortlug-
ton and Chamberlain baa rural from eighty-
‘ leal pa-
eight to 1M. En.liab and Scotch radl
hitherto aupportod Uladatoae,
adequate; that a joint enmmlaolae la pr
Urauy la.poa.ibla and that tba home rala I
oonwn, may i
an of lord llartington wm bold today for tho
purporaof cementing the whig and radical
opposition to the boms rule bill. Sixty-four
gentlemen attended, including Chamberlain,
Travelyaa and Caine. Lord llartington made
a twenty minuta apssch. in whleh ha explain
ed the reasons why tho liberal, should oppose
Mr. Gladstone's measure.
Ho declared that the pledges from tho liber
als to oppoao Gladstone's home rule bill were
■officiant in namber to make tho rejection of
the bill on its second readings certainty. The
defeat of tho bill, bo sold, would east a heavy
rrapanrtbility on him. which, however, ho wa.
quite prepared to accept.
Mr. Chamberlain mid if the government
abonld recompense tho landlords of Ireland,
they wonld establish a precedent
for the recompenra for imporn-
niooe tradesmen, workingmen and others.
I-aid Herrington's “whips” report that 110
libs rala ha vo pledged tbammlaMlo vote against
ike homo rale bill and that thirty are doubt
ful. Conservative leaders advise coniervativos
in the house of commons not to apeak daring
tho debate aa they wish to haatoa a division
on the aecraid reading. It ie rumored that
Mr. Gladstone iaronauitiogwith hi.colleague
upon tbe advisability of withdrawing tbe
home rale bill.
London, May 15.—A gnat meeting of tho
tonight, >niU Aahmeed-Bartlett pro.
riding. Th. i
rid, gmllrato, wen crowdwl with
tod mo. Tho hell wm profanely draped with
notional colon, and scrolls, hearing the names
of roorarrauvo leaden, port and pr.rant.
displayed. lairds Salisbury,George Hamilton,
Lantaham, Limerick, BaryAidaoutfc and
liament that wonld Involve
treatment of their Protertant countrymen,
rind that waa what they did not desire. After
criticizing Gladstone’s action toward Ireland
a inro the postage of the Iriah church bill,
Lord Salisbury Mid he did
not wish lib audienco to Infer that
Mr. Gladitono wm not an honest man, but he
said the premier could not bo trailed. Tho
speaker contended that Ireland wu not a na
tion. berauM it contained two different, deeply
divided races. It depended, ha raid, on the
abonld bo conferred npon them,
of the Irish were very bad. They had become
habituated to the ure of knives acd slugs.
The question of religion divided them. The
pecaliar influence of tho Catholic clergy
the manner in which that influence had
been need, must ha conridered before
the Iruh. There would bo no nocet-
slty for coercion if the Iriah abandoned their
hablta of mutilation, murder and robbery, and
of preventing men who wore attached to
England from earning a livelihood. Ireland
wanted firm, consistent policy, a firm govern,
ment. That wu tbe policy of tho tory party.
That waa tho j . ...
Lord Salisbury recommended that a portion
of tho money, with which it waa intended to
buy outlrleh landlord., bo ipont in helping
the Iriah to emigrate. This
ho raid, would be the boat
remedy for Ireland. Ho urged unity and
notion and raid that the time for n.lng both
was close at hand. It remained with the con
servatives to ray what would be tho result of
the present discussion.
Foreign News Motes.
Bklfast, May 11.—Belfast papers publish
today au advertisement inviting tender, of
20,000 .Snider rifles, and the umo number of
lasyonets, to bo delivered at Antrim on or be
fore Juno 1, next.
More firearms have boon sold in Londondory
during the put three months than were eola
daring the previous five years. Orders havo
just been given there for one thousand new
rifles.
Crowded meetings of orangemen were hold
today at Kewry and Monroe, at which pledges
were given not to submit to o Dublin parlia
ment, and not to pay taxes. All present en
rolled themselves aa volunteer, for military
rarrice. Canadian orangemen promise support.
The government has forwarded two million
rounds of ammunition to Dublin.
Paxts. May 14.—M. PlBot, an agent, of
Barqne de Kscompbe of this city, who raoently
fled after tncceufaUr altering a large amount
' forged paper, today nddonly appeared In
the private office of Baron Soubeynn, a di
rector of the bonk, and at the morale of _
loaded revolver compellod him to rign throe
checks for 130,000, with which Pillot thon
made good hie escape.
Odima, May U.—Agent, of an American
company have arrived at Taschkand with per-
mission from the Boasian government to in-
traduce cotton cultore in Turkestan whore the
climate and soil ia favonbio.
OUR KNOWLBDOB-BOX.
(In this department wa gtvo brief and pertinent
anawen to Rich questions u our readers may dr
sire to ark—provided the questions are of special a.
general Interest. Answers may be delayed foe ■
Hat*critor, Tavares, Fla.: Why la Friday
called America’! lucky day?
“Columbui sailed from Palo* on Friday, August
3,1493; the discovery of a new world waa made on
tbe tame day, October 12,1492; Friday, the4th day
of January, 1493, Columbus started on hla return
to Rpaln, to aauouncc to their Catholic majeitie*
th* glorious result of their expedition, and on Fri
day the 15th of March, 1493, he disembarked In
Andaluria. He diacorered tho American conti-
(9. A.)on Friday, tbe 13th of June, 1491 On Fri
day, March 5,1497, Henry III, of England gave to
John Cabot hi* deRpatch for tho voyage which re-
lulted In the discovery of the continent of North
America. On Friday, September 6, 1905, Me-
lendos founded fit. Auguatlne, tho oldcit
town In the United States. On Friday, No
vember 10,1620, tbe Mayflower flnt disembarked a
few emigrant* on American soil at Provlneetown,
and on Friday, December 22, 1(20, her passengers
Anally landed at Plymouth Rock. It wa* on Fri
day, February 22, 1732, that George Washington
w** born. The union of tbe colonies was made
on Friday, May 20,1773, It was on Friday, June
17.177S. that tbe battle of Bunker Bill wa* fonght,
and on Friday, October 17, 1777, that the surrender
nt resulted In
by Franoo, and
l Saratoga took place, which event
ur acknowledgement a* a nation by]
be ofler of material aid and eacourts
OTMHRifhboHHMMPHPVMMHi
Arnold waa discovered; the surrender of York-
^MtetobcrlO, 1781, was on an ever-memorable I
land on Friday, June 7, 1776, Richard
g-iiuBy, ffiiiu on rrraay, June j, u,u, luuuira
Henry Ue read the Declaration, of Independence
to tbe continental congress."
Subscriber. Anniston,Ala.: (I.) What is the
appearance of a diamond In the rough? (2.) Does
cut? (3.) }
very clcai
width, aud In thickness?
(1.) The feppearano* varies according to the
treatment the rtoae may have been subjected to
In its native bed. Usually they are crystals with
facets, and sometimes pinnacles. Not unite-
qucntly they are amorphous. The i
fotmof the crystals are octohedron anddodeca
hedrou. The facet* often exhibit the peculiarity
of bring convex or concave. Sometimes
they are in the form of pebbles, almost round, and
occasionally covered with an opaque crust. (2.)
Very rarely; only when found quite clear and held
in the sunlight do they display anything of the
brilliancy that characterises them after being cut.
(3>) That would depend on iu quality and shape,
it might be quite large and yet of such a shape as
not to admit of iu being cut without reducing It
probably four or five karats. It you have one ot
ihe else mentioned ia the query, the beat thing yon
can do Is to open negoUatiooa at ones with tha
British government for an exchange with the Koh-
A. J.T., Silct, N. C.: Why aw alcoholic
liquors called spirit*? . «
the chenltta applied the term oplrltt, to oil
Bald* obtained by distillation. In the course or
time custom applied It to! alcoholic liquor*. Jutt
why custom setesd upon thi. particular word It I*
Impassible to explain.
Bulger, Greenville, S. C-: What to the ori-
gin and meaning of the rhrase, Stirred to th*
cock In ol bis heart?"
An anonymous write* give* this answer to the
question: In Recbard’a Observations, publtahcd in
1671, Is to be found this sentence: "This contri
vance of his did inwardly rejoice the cockles of his
heart.” You will not find tn any earlier print this
exprration "rookie* of tbe heart." It aas never
been determined exactly what the word “cockles"
meant; the word •yorke” b a provincialism men
tioned In Palmer's Folk-Etymology a* meaning
••the core or heart of fhtit”—may be •‘cockle*" is
a corruption or a diminutive (oorcles) signifying
“little heart*" or "Uttle cores." In connection
with this, please note that the Latin word “©of-
cutnm" meant “a little heart." There was an
Anglo Baxoo word “oooeel." meaning at first a
warm epet, bot later (t easts to mean a warm spec
in tbe heare wherein the hops were kept; efoearse
this weed la now obsolete.
r
<312
Afiffiaerano
«-3$l
<110
< 123
<402.
<170
0491
raw......
fiflflj
< 916.
i8gfc
!<*»...... 50 83162
No. * Yf Prise
28132 &* !«' ‘#M!
33103
17625
17657
17691
) 18635...
) 19250
) 49270
) 19365
> 19117
1 19555
I 19589
) 19662
) 19676
) 19791
) 19797 .
) 49980
.J 50020
KM 50040 :ioo
60 50011 100
100 H
) 50059......
12648
12661
IMMomm.
134C0.....
18598
i:i702.
1T842.
13889
13916.. ....
13935
1418*
11342.
14429
14190
14662.
14892.. ....
16047
15105
15129.. ....
15328m,...
15383m....
15559.
1AA87...
16773m....
15828
15911
18006
18251
16267......
10291
18860.
18628
18698
16708mm..
16712m....
16749
16839m....
16968.
16991
17890.
17411m....
17440.
17489
17472.. ..m
17498mm..
17791.. ....
17874
18103..... 190 40666—«
20*9
209*5
28997
21213...
21282
21367
21525......
216fJra..ra
iVI.-t
:'XT9.
22061 mm.
«108m..h
22182
22279
100 52688......
100 52688
80 52091
50 52790...m.
100 52801
0 32966......
100 ?»M..
0 53007
60 53086
50 *31*1
60 53197......
100 50185......
50 53501
5053561
100 53670......
100 5
200
51031
.. 51207.—..
60 54399..
60 51539......
054560
0 54673
051760
5055523
60 56728....
50 56732
50 55820
60 55924.
60 55911
5050050
50 36081..
50 >6157
100 VWTrt....*
100 58149
100 MASS
50 56681
6056719—.
D 56752
. 0 '>7010
100 57018
60 57011....
60 57173
100 >7216
600 57276
60 57451
50 5829V....
60 58885
60 56*79
100
1100 2SS-"
10059227
60 59726
50 59370
100 61577 ...
50 61579
200 61643
100
ss
200 61674..
100 61809....
50 61917......
50 61977....
C 62009.-..
900 63101....
200 '13314
100 63617
60 *5014-...
80 65226...,
10C 65M1
50 Sam.:: *0D0
50 66796-.
M0£K
64 C7363.M.M
84 6744«.m~
50 67515—.
60 67816....
60 67979m....
104 68052
50 6*122—.
50 6*173...m.
100 66209m....
100 4&170
50 6W9
50 *8606.....
50 68543
60# 63752..
50 63756...
50 637*) ..
60 68*16--
60 43971..
200 439*3
10(h-19086...-.
100149231
80*9621 ..mo
50 u9^t3..M.
60 69926....
) M102
60 70117
APPItOXIMATION PRIZES.
500; 15931..
W63792.M...
,750 63793.M...
750 68791..m..
760 63797
760 6379*.,,.,.
750 6379Um..-
6,0 4.'
500 4!
500 459SC
500 45937
500 45933
600 45069......
50014599Q
1000 ntunbets ending with 44~being the two
last figures of the bomber drswing tho
capitalprim of $75,009..... J$2
CommUaloncr*.
Pxjixs Cashed nr Full Without Deduction.
No. 76244, draws capital prise, 975,000, sold la
LosArn.—
Dak. No. 45968 draws
whole sold In Vera
mu p*iWi v tv ,**V|
No. 64514, draws
MCdo.'aold in Detrqk. Mich.. Hartford. Conn.,
Butte City, Mont., Brlghtwood, Ind., and Hatoll,
DUIW LIIJ, Buufc, pn|mwwi| ***'*•• £i -.
Ky. No. 88808, draws 86000, sold in Memphis,
Tcnn., San Francisco and Eureka, Cal., Princetpa,
60 Ma, and Jacksonville. Fla. Nox 8653, 9714, 15587,
go. lp<l.
L.S.L.
Capital Prize $150,000.
person manage an<_
UmrawraTiufi Ui at lire ram, in ooeduMd rtffiB
Graft Sraera. and to rxxl ftlth toward rtl pra-
tlea and we anthorlra tbeoompanrtatiMtUaea-
Commissioners.
iQMNWm&lIrli
Nhieh bw be peraeutad rt «r cgm«a T>
Fra. Lonliim Mtioul Buk.
J. W. KILBBKTH,
Fra. State SaUuiu Buk.
A* BALDWIN,
Fra. Ntw Ori«u NaUonal Baafc^^
UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTIONS
Orar Halt* Million Dlatrlbuted.
Louisiana State Lottery Company.
vsss^ijsss^ss'^sss^
*sjansssss ssztissi asssas
will tok,
nlaoa monthly.
“ELzt 0 '*****- Loot “ ui * fouow '
ls( dlrtrtMtiM^ armn[1 raouthlj
-AUDI
m Extraordinary Quarterly Drawing
?* In tbe Academy of Haile, Kew Orleeua, Turadaff
Oau. O. *. MUinWH^rt leu. aud Gera'
JCltAL A. KAKLT. e( ,
.Capital Prize $150,000
One Dollarra
IMrtFrtoa
1 prlic olrartra
SUxfeprtreae,
4Untoprtaa,e(
ae Mat a*
20,000.....mm. ****
1000 M 80
AFFROXDfSTION F1UU:
lOOAppnntiinatioa prUeaof 200
_ )?W74—
50 .-04W
80)70197
50, :o*w—
200 m-
office of the Company in New C
10r 71
For farther Information write clearly,
POSTAL NOIKS, Exprcm kte
'■ In onliuari
K333
nsrr
22261 mm.
UUPHZX,
Oriaaoh Lfi*
“S rSSJ£
payable aa4 id*
rat rarawkrarra