The Brunswick news. (Brunswick, Ga.) 1901-1903, November 09, 1902, Image 6

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PE-EU-Hfl CURES CATARRH OF KBNETS EVERY TIME. \W jp? & WT jWfl Fl! —f'vrV,.... .loots cat,kw " T| *■•' fjr iis&iiiKjiw ’^iw/ •! 'rngsJfl/1 I jj*©W* dangerous kidney DISEASES CURED •■ vK||'! Ip l’c-rti-iia ('renting it National Sensation in the Cure ipiPl|ji m•; i bT-? of Chronic Ailments of the KiJnejs. -.-nfcu?l? 7 | Blip' Major T. 11. Mars, of the First Wis consin Cavalry Regiment, writes from 3420 Dunning street, Chicago, 111., the following letter: “For yearn 1 suffered with catarrh of the kidneys contracted In the army. Medicine did not help meant/ ■until a com rade who had beenhelped by Peru tin advised me to try It. J bought name at once, and soon found blessed relief. 1 kept talcing it four months, anti am now well and strong and/eel better than J have done /or the past twenty years, thanks to Peruna. ”—V, 11. Mars. Mr. John Vance, of Hartford City. Ind., gays: "Sly kidney trouble is mueli better. 1 have Improved so much that everybody wants to know what medi cine 1 am using. I recommend Peruna to everybody, and some have com menced to use It. The folks all say that If Dr. Hartman's medicine cures tne It must be great.”—John Vance. ilr, ,1. Itralce, of Petrolea, Ontario, Canada, writes: “Four years ago 1 had a severe attaok of ftrlyht’s dis ease. which brought me so low the doctor said nothing snore could he done for me. 1 began to take Peru no and Manulln, and In three months 1 was a well man, and have coit tinned so ever since. ’’—J. lira Ice. At the appes ranee of the llrst syrup m I POOH HUMAN NATURE. "Women dress very ridiculously," lie said, as he watched his wife finishing bar toilet. "It Is tha fashion, John,” she said, pleasantly. "Fashion be hanged!” said he. ”1 would be superior to fashion If I were a woman, and wear nothing not use ful.” Five minutes later he ashed her to sew a button on the back of Ills coat. Never decide hurriedly ns to the class of mediums you should go into hoar all the arguments first and decide afterward. —Ad v isor. Btj.tb ot Ohio, CittT or olßdo, t Locas Clocntt. f ' Fsjt* J. OnENKT,miko oath that ho Is tha senior partner of tho firm of F. J. Chunky ,t Cos., doing business In tho City of Toledo, County and Htato Aforesaid, and that said firm will pay tho sum of one uunurkd noi.- T.AB3 for oaeh and every oaso of cATABmt that cannot bo cured by tho use of Hji.i.'s Catjbhh Cub*. Fbank J. Ciiknkv. Sworn to before me and suhsoribod in my . . presence, this Gtli day of December, j brat,, tA. P., ISSG. A. W. Gleason. ' —v—-- I A'ot<Try Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, and •ota dirootly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Send for testimonials, free. F. ,T. Chknev A Cos., Toledo, O. Bold by Druggists,7oo. Hall’s Fnmily Pills are the best. An eagle can live twenty days without food, and a condor forty days. FITS permanently cured.No fits or norvous net,carter first day's use of l)r. Kline’s Great Nervenostoror.S’jtrlalbottloftnd trcatlsofroo Dr.R. H. Hunk. Ltd., 981 Aroh St., PhiU., Pa. Carp are said to live'hundreds of years, *nd inke arc also hardy old fellows. Mrs-Wlnslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething,soften tho gums, reduces Inflamma tion,allays pain. euros wind oolie. 25e . abottlo Some men with liberal views allow their liberality to end there. Putnam Fadeless I>ves produce the brightest and fastest colors. A rolling stone gathers no inoss, but neither docs a rolling mill. rlso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken ot * a cough cure.—J, IV. O'Hiuen, SJJ Third Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 0, IJJJ American potatoes are sold in Ireland. Blacksmiths"™ .-. n entire iiuoff C'ttr rln ** nil * l \V'anon Wagon Builders SiSir- HIGHTOWER & KIRKPATRICK, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. r Situations Secured fot graduates or tuition refunded. Write at once for catalogua and special oilers. Massey SSSSST Louisville. K. Montgornsq. Ala. Houston, lev. Columbus. Ga. Cchmond. Va. Birmingham. Ala. Jacksonville, Fla. HAMLItfS; WIZARD OIL "HEADACHE -ALL. . DEtUQQISTS taetX< .til' HN CU&S WHt-Rfc MR Best < oajfh byrup. Ta-ues GckxL Dm fj*l IM in time. Sold by dracgrlsta* g 4 the name of this paper when writing o ndvertlser** - (At. 4S ’o2' •iff M e iT2£Thompson'* Eye Water SUNDAY MORNING. lof kidney ‘SjSwcfi if j] Kl ;1 j trouble, t’e- l!| * it*, rnua should 1 P4AY he taken. 1 This remedy - i)o|S&p23p?j | strikes at I once the "2HB ‘‘-if S' \ very root of WBmpSf <y j the disease. _ 11 at once re- - - SHE ; I llevestheca- flB) \VJu j tarrhul Uhl- \ | neys of the ti. \\ stag n u n t blood pre vent 1 n g the escape of serum from the blood. I’eruha stimulates the kidneys to ex crete from the blood the accumulating poison, and thus prevents the convul sions which are sure to follow If the poisons are allowed to remain. It gives great vigor to the heart’s action and digestive system, both of which are apt to fail rapidly in this disease l’eruna cures catarrh of the kidney* simply because it cures catarrh wher ever located. If you do not derive prompt and sat isfactory results from the use of Be ruun, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving a full statement Of your case, and he will he pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus. Ohio. THERE ARE FOOLS AND FOOLS. Those Who Risk Death at Niagara and Tht,ae Who Ack Questions. “There are two distinct oets of fools In this country,” said tho proprietor ot a hotel at Niagara Falls, as one of his | guests took a scat In the lobby with | him, for the air outside was cold. “I thought the classification of fools was on a good deal broader lines than that,” said tho guest. “I always thought there were as many kinds of fools as there were persons.” “So there are,” was the answer: “hut I mean two species which have come under my special observation. For example, thero Is the fool who is forever trying to kill himself with out wanting to make a complete suc cess of it, and, then, the fool who is always asking how the first fool suc ceeded. “Every summer a half dozen per sons are advertised to shoot the rap ids, or walk over the whirlpool on a tightrope, or barrel them solved up ; and tumble over the falls. Some say they are going to do it, but, like a cheap sideshow, put all their employes to work blowing horns outside the tent, but when it conics to the real performance they point to only a ebrotno and a pair of mirrors, to ex hibit their Three headed cannibal.’ And then some are less foolish and go ahead and kill themselves outright. “Every mail brings me letters from the other class of fools, who, for ex ample. will ask such a question as: ” Will you please tell me how many persons have gone over the Falls alive?’ ”1 never answer those letters, of course. It would help the United States, 1 know, but I'd rather give the money to the Treasury Depart ment direct. If any one stopped me on the street and asked nus that ques tion, I used to say: “‘Not one! Every last fool of ’em is dead!' But I can’t say that now. I wish I could; for It's so much short er. But now I have to liem a.d haw and think hard and say: ” ‘Why. yes. there was a woman who went over, a —Mrs.- Taylor. File went in a barrel over the Horseshoe Foils and lived through it.' ” Here tho hotel proprietor paused a moment, and then added: But do you know what she got for it? Noth ing. She started out to lecture to crowded houses, and to tell how she i had met death face to face in a bar -5 rcl. but the people wouldn’t turn out.” ”1 suppose they didn't want to be ; lectured to by the barrel,” remarked I the guest, meditatively.—New York Tribune. THE RETORT CRUSHING. Lord Tuffnfftt—You have nothing to grumble at whatever: you were a rich American girl, I an Impoverished Eng lish nobleman, with a proud title. You bought mo with your wealth. I was what you would simply call in shop i ping, a bargain! Lady Tuffnutt—Pardon me! Not a bargain— a remnant. Opportunity’s Soft Knocks. Opportunity knocks at the door of most men so gently that they can't hear it if their ears are glued to the keyhole.—New York Press. THE BRUNSWICK DAILY NEWS. DRILLING SUBMARINE OIL WELLS AT SUMMERLAND.CAL Ty Dwight Kempton. 71 T Summcriand, Cal., there are / \ about one hundred submarine /V\ oil wells in successful opera (J tion, and as many more wells icatiered along the beach between the Jmits of the highest and lowest tides. I’he wells farthest from shore are in 'rom fifteen to twenty-live feet of wa ter at low tide. The drilling of sub marine oil wells, as performed at Surn aierland, primarily involves the con struction of a wharf from the shore to some point over the oil-producing strata, or across the region where the Dorings are contemplated. In strength )f structure these wharves have been built in considerable variety, from those consisting of a mere double vow 2" 3 STRING OT CASING f stc srnHScr CAS/NS ' CONDUCTOR imniihm ! .!■> 11l 111 1 i j rrjsiiJ"T)y ■ * i s&sssgs Imtmm - < v, j j ~'fA kxci^wAx'v.Vt' f 'i'vi/YjS JWP,i?: ~ fmamKXfc*. Vsr\ \sc K\ J M Y Cur Aj. 'S&Z ' oil:?3M e 6 •'•.Yrv • \ySAND ~, - 1 -Tc;'-' A m&ASmSNC-f l- r. J C:;: .Zir--. Ti'lS. iKCTIONAT, DI.USKAM SHOWING THE l’.E LATIOS OF THE CONDUCTOR TO THE BEST OF THE CASINO IN A SL’li- MAISINB OIL WELL. of piles with eight by eight cross beams and stringers and with a narrow walk from one to live feet wide as tile only means of access to the \\ Us situated upon them, to strong and com modious sit'liclures thoroughly plunked ami caimble of withstanding either the heaviest southe,asters which, visit that coast or bear any kind of traffic to which a wharf might lie subjected. Upon the completion of the wharf, or so much of it ns is ncees.-ar.v for the Immediate purpose, ihe drilling ma chinery is assembled at the.location for a well. In beginning tin* drilling op erations the first Important work io lie done is in putting down what is locally termed a “conductor.” The conductor Consists merely of oil-well casing of a size larger than tlmt with which the well would have been started were there no sen lo contend with. Often casing <if Inferior quality is used for tliis purpose, and it is sometimes put down without a shoe where the pre vious borings indicate that no cobble-1 stones will be met In passing through the sea sand. Usually nine five-eighth j casing is used, but for Hi * shallower wells seven live-eighth is sometimes i adopted. in starting tho conduetor in from - fifteen to twent.v-five feet of water. ! two joints of nine 11 v-.'-eighth easing are screwed together, making a length of from thirty to forty-five Dot, or of sufficient length so that when the shoe i or bottom end is resting on the sand j under ilic water, the top end will ex- | tend well up toward the top of Hie! roof in the derrick. In setting it. Hie; couductor is held suspended by the j sand line In an upright position with , tlie shoe about n foot above the sand, j It is then plumbed as marly as can be, and, watching a favorable oppor tunity when the wash of the water is least violent, it is suddenly dropped to the saiul. It Is then aecuralely plumbed while resting on the ground under the ocean, and is secured in its vertical position by means of boards ' ’ V‘ s .... ' ' k j sAjy*, jU jay lp’ : 'jMk &. i f'ig : sfcti 4 , GENERAL VIEW OF SUMMEKLA Nil, CAE. SUBMARINE OIL FIELDS. nails'll to the derrick floor in such a way that their edges boar against llte casing front four different directions. The drilling stem, wliieh has been pre viously fitted with a driving head and clamps, is then run into the conductor, and it is driven into the sand as far as it wiil safely go. Then the clamps are removed and the drill set to work, and b.v alternnte'drivincs and drillings the conductor is worked through the sand to the clay tx>neath, where is is discontinued. By the time the top of the conductor has been driven to the level of tlie derrick floor the bottom end has become so deeply embedded in the sand that the stays can be re rmi veil and the casing driven beneath the derrick to a point near the level of file water underneath. Should it then prove too short to penetrate the sand, other lengths are screwed on and the operations continue until that object is attained. When the conductor lias keen driven a few feet into the clay underlying the sea sand, the ocean is as effectually shut off from tlie well, for all practical purposes. 11s if it were held hack by a dike or sea wail. How ever. there is still danger of letting the ocean water into the well through the carelessness or incompetence of the djiller. It is quite essential to change Hie drilling hit to the next smaller size Immediately on stopping the con ductor or whenever it is decided to go no farther with any size of casing, and also to keep the casing following close ly after the drill. Otherwise, when drilling ahead of a conductor or easing that is permanently stopped, before reducing the size of tlie bit, there is danger of water breaking through from above into the new boring: and when drilling too far ahead of the casing flic tools are liable to gain more and more swing, cutting the hole larger and larger, especially In either day or shale strata, thus creating a cavity of much greater diameter than the casing will Hi! and which fre quently becomes a water-course out side of flip casing for the ruin not only of the well, but also of the adjacent oil territory. In other respects the drilling of submarine wells differs little from those put down on land.—Scien tific American. * SjM*rf h'l *• Making. It has been estimated that the prod uct of American optical goods manu facturers exceeds yearly ‘d.000.000 pairs of spectacles and eyeglass s, says the Jewelers’ Weekly. One company alone manufactures nearly 1,500,000 pairs annually, which Is probably ten times as many us were made in the entire United States during any one year previous to 1800. The question has often arisen as to where*they all go. The United States contains some 78,- OOti.OOO people, and about one out of every five should wear glasses; yet not all of our product is consumed by the American people. Owing to the high standard of uniformity, accuracy, durability and workmanship in general, the American products are now hiusr exported, with hut. few exceptions, to every civilized country on the globe. New York's Grand Old Man. . .v Ji ; ¥* ? v ' Cos I*l ri.-hl, jsej, by n. ,'kweod, NV\v Yoi:, EX-MATOB ABEAM S. HI.WITT. All Knew a Goad Tiling, The Ohio Deni tent i ary managers and Occnonds!.-:, says Hie Cincinnati En quirer, had Ikxmi wondering what to do with (lie oriels of bread that are left o'er every time the 1000 prisoners sit down to a meal. They finally decided to cut the crust off all bread and make the crust into bread pudding. Since tills information has worked iis way through the prison the piles of left over crusts are daily increasing. The Mir llani. Since IS9t> the great Nile dam at Assouan has given steady employment to from r.).iV!:> to 20.000 Italian and Egv ptian la borers. Apart from insane persons main tained at home, concerning whom no otiiclal returns are made. Scotland had last year 10.25S lunatics. AN ESQUIMAU WHO ® PROMISES TO BE A GREAT FOOTBALL PLAYER. Nekifer Scliouchuck, the Esquimau boy that plays 011 the Carlisle Indian School football eleven, is the only player of his race. Schouehuek is not SCIIOL'CIirCK, FI It ST ESQUIMAU TO I’LAY FOOTBALL. one of the dwarf Esquimaux who in habit the northern portion of Alaska, | but is of that tribe of Indians who I live several hundred miles south, i Seliouclntek plays heady, snappy foot ball now. but had never s eit a pigskin nor spoken a word of English until fourteen months ago. lie is nineteen years old, weighs Dio pounds, and is live feet seven inches in height. Ills face and hc.-al are extraordinarily large, and when lie j laughs Ids pair of almond-shaped eyes become almost closed. This unique • character was born in the Island of I Fogenauk, in tle> Aleutian Islands. | When quite young til* family removed |to the Island of Kadiak. His parents are dead, lint a brother and sister still live in Fogenauk. Prior to coming to Carlisle. Schouchnck received a few years' schooling in a Russian institu tion in Alaska and learned ihe Russian lniiguagu. " hi'n he was thirteen this famous centre was employed nv fur traders, ami the sturdy Jail traveled as far south as Seattle. Wash., and to Sitka and Juneau. At the Government school at Carlisle lie is learning carpentering. He is acquiring the different languages rematkably fast. His.muscles never seem to ti"e. and he is stronger than i most men who weigh 200 pounds. He plays like Lone Wolf, the greatest centre Carlisle ever had. Pleasures of English Travelinji. Anew terror has been added to rail way traveling. A friend of mine (writes a correspondent) was journey ing the other day with his wife from Lancashire by the Midland. Three men got into the same compartment, the one in the middle without his boots being apparently a prisoner. One of the guards, a young muscular man, watched every movement of the "pris* oner" intently, and not without cause, for in a short time Ids hands began to twitch, and the next minute he was struggling most violently with his at i lemlauts. The supposed prisonet I turned out to be a raving madman, and my friend, the only other male passenger iu the compartment, was | called upon to render help and prevent the commission of some terrible deed. Eventually the * maniac was forced down, and bis limbs were securely bound by the time tlie train reached Derby, where with the aid of a porter he was conveyed to a carriage In wait ing. It is obvious that Indies travel ing under such eireunlstauces must suffer a serious shock. A special com partment is quite as necessary for maniacs as for bicycles.—London Chronicle. J 53 - A i'Mm -4 BAGII AGAIN TO HARD STUDY. —From Harper s Weekly. ■fount Etna is found by I’rofessoi Kicco to have been lowered sixty-five (eet on the south side since 1808 and twice as much on the north. The tof is supposed to have been slowly blowr away by the wind. Recent experiments in England hav* demonstrated that furnace slag, satu rated with coal tar. makes a, superioi water aud dust proof road surface. NOVEMBER 9