The Bamberg herald. (Bamberg, S.C.) 1891-1972, January 07, 1904, Image 6
Igg:
7
| I Coughing j
I "I was given up to die with
8 quick consumption. I then began !
* ? A..??>e Phafrv P?r>tArol I
IU use nyci a uuvu; A WIV..
9 improved at once, and am now in
9 perfect health."?Chas. E. Hart9
man, Gibbstown, N. Y.
fe.' t t |
It's too risky, playing
with your cough.
!The first thing you j
know it will be down I
; deep in your lungs and
the play will be over. Be,
gin early with AyerV
Cherry Pectoral and stop
the cough. ^ 1 * Three
sixes: 2Sc^ 50c., SL All druggists.
Consult your doctor. If ho says take it,
then do as he says. If he tolls yon not
to take it, then don't take it. He knows.
Leave it with him. Wo are willing.
J. C. AYEB CO., LowoU, Mass. j ,
? Are "Crow Killers." <
111" 9 Nitro Club and Arrow ShellsBfe
9 are factory loaded with smokere&r.
B-.less powder and reduce the
ff amount of smoke, noise and' - i
SB CstaUpu Frtt.
Ejr 9 THE UNION METALLIC ]
w| 9 CARTRIDGE CO., bmdgmort, comm.
|^Xvr- 9 | _ Agency, 313 Broadway, N. Y.
{Avery& company
SUCCESSORS TO
avery & McMillan, 11
11-53 South Forsyth S^, Atlanta, Ga i ]
' -all kinds m
MACHINERY
I tollable Frlck Engines. Boilers, all |
' Sizes. Wheat Separators.
Large Engines and Boilers supplied t
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills, *
-Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs, i
Bteam Governors. Full line Engines & I 1
HUII Supplies. Send for free Catalogue.
ESAW MILLSHTscI
w|th Here's Universal Los: Bpams.Rectilin ear.
Simultaneous 3et Works and the Hea oock-Kinz
Variable Feed Works are ttnex oelled
for accuracy-, simplicity. ixtbabU/
rty and cask of operation. Write for full
dsseriptive circulars. Manufactured by. the
J8ALEM IRON WORKS.Wioet<-n-8alero.y.C. |
BAD BREATH
months (.toad trreat tmuble'with my stomach !
aaa used all kinds of med?<nes. My tongue has i
seea actuail;? as green as grass, my breath having
a toad odor. Two weeks ago & friend recommended ,
Caacsreti and after nsing them I can willingly and
ghserfully saj that tttey have entirely cureame. I
therefore let yoa know that 'I shall recommend
them to any one suffering from such troubles "
dttuaa. H. iialpun, 103 Kivington St.. New York, N.Y.
Pleasant. Pa7at?bte, Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, :
Eg*; ' " *?' Sicken, Weaken or Gripe. 10c. 25c.50c. Xever i
sold In bulk. The genninc tablet stamped CUC.
gjv uaarantccd to cure or your money back.
HfrjK'-v Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 556 !
??" mm SALE?Ta KILUM BOgS j
KlpansTabulesare !
the best dyspepsia !
medicine ever made, j
JcJa hundred millions |
0 them have beeD j
sold in the United i
l/J States in a single |
year. Every Illness !
" ; arising from a disordered stomach is
. relieved or cured by their use. So
common Is it that diseases originate
from the stomach it may be safely as- j
oerted there is no condition of ill :
health that will not be benefited or i
cured by the occasional use of Ripans j
Tabu lea. Physicians know them and !
opeak highly of them. All druggists j
cell them. The five-cent package is j
enough for an ordinary occasion, and ;
the Family Bottle, sixty cents, contains i
a household supply for a year. One j
generally gives relief within twenty
inntes. j
Horae Hair for Bows.
"There,,Is a vast amount of horse
hair annually used in the United
States for making and repairing violin,
violincello and bass viol bows,"
said a dealer in such materials to the
writer recently. "All of the hair
comes from Germany and Russia, in
which countries the tails of horses
are generally allowed to grow longer
than here. The foreign hair is also
coarser in texture, and tougher than,
that which grows on the American
horse, and these qualities make the
imported article more valuable than
the domestic nroduct is for the pur
pose.
"There are only two kinds of horse
hair suitable for making bows, and
they are of the white and black varieties.
The former is used for violin
bows, and the Matter, which is heavier*
and stronger is we best'material for
making bows' for 'cello and bassr viols,
because it bites the larger strings
better. The imported hair is put up
in hanjra thlfty-six inches long, which
is five or six inches longer than the
standard violin bow. A hank is sufficient
for one violin bow, while two
hanks are required to hair a 'cello or
bass viol bow. There are about one
and one-half ounces of hair in a hank,
which is worth from twenty to thirty
cents, according to the quality of the
hair.*
SICKLY LOT.
"George,'* said the little girl to her
brother as she looked up from .the paper
she was reading, "it says here
Kbat another octogenarian is dead.
SVhat is an octogenarian?"
"Well, I don't know what they are,
butt they must be sickly creatures
STou never hear of tfcem bat they aro
lying."?Youth.
SUPREME ABILITY.
Friend?Your new heavy villain
seems adapted to the role.
Theatrical Manager?Yea. He can
pronounce the word "revenge" with
fourteen r's and look it with thirty.?
Judge.
NOT IN HIS LINE.
"Do you keep burnt-leather goods?"
"No'm?you will find them down on
the next block; there's a fire sale
there."-?Leslie's Weekly.
FITSoermanautfv eme'f. "STo fits or nervous ?essTner
first day's nse of Dr. Wline's Oreat
s'ervell Astorer. rial bottle and traatisefrae
Dr.Ti.H. fai;rg,Ltd.. 931 ArcfrSt., Dhila., Pa.
Consider the wave o? the humble dray;
;t has a tongue, but it never gossips. ~
10,000 Plants'For 16c..
This is a romarkab'e offer the John A.
5alzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., makes,
rhey will send you their big plant and
seed catalog, together with enough seed
.{J ?TOW
1.000 fine, solid Cabases, 2.000
delicious Carrots,
2.000 Branching, nutty Celery,
2.000 rich, buttery Lettuce,
1,000 splendid Onions,
1.000 rare, luscious Tladishps,
1.000 glorious'v brilliant Flowerd.
This great offer is made in order to in*
}uce* you to try their warranted seeds?
ror when vou once plant them you will '
jrow no others, and
ATX FOR RUT 16C. rOSTAGE, .
providing yon will retnrn this notice, and
f vou will send them 20c. in postage, they
vill add to the above a package of the fanous
Berliner Cauliflower. [A.C.L.J
Some animai tamers carry in their left
land a second whip, which is never used,
[t represents to the wild beasts the terrors
>f the unknown.
Mrs Winslow's Soothing Syoio tor children
ething,soften the gams, reilaoeslnflam naion,allays
oaii.oaces wiad oollc. 2oc. a bottle
Pessimists are people who go around
ooking for thorns to sit on. ? - >. \
A SENSE OF THE ROMANTIC.
"So you think your prospective sonin-law
is a paragon?"
"Certainly "not," answered Mr.
Cumrox. "If we lack words to de- j
scribe him we certainly should ^ot'
think of going to prosy old geometry
for them."
completely restored.
Mrs. P. BrunzeC wife of P^Brunzel,
Jtock dealer, residence 31J1 Grand
\ve., Everett, Wash., says: "For fif*
teeu years i suffered ;
twith terrible pain in
my back. I did not '
know what it was to
enjoy a night's rest
and arose In the
morning feeling tired
and unrefreshed. My
suffering sometimes
was simply indescribable.
When i
finished the first box
of Doau's Kidney
Pills I felt like a
different woman. I
continued until I bad
tanen five boxes.
Doan's Kidney Pills act very effectively,
very promptly, relieve the aching
pains and all other annoying difficui
ties.'.'
Foster-Milburn Co., Enffalo, N. Y.
For sale by all druggists. Price 50
cents per box.
HIS IDEA OF IT.
Caller: So your pape and mamma
are going to take you to Europe vritb
them?
Willie: Yes'm.
Caller: Aren't you afraid to go on
the ocean?
Willie:' N'm. . I ain't afraid of nothin\
I'm been vaccirured.?Coast Seemen's
Journal.
CDCr STUART'S
rncc gin and buchu
To all who suffer, or to the friends of those
who s Ter with Kidney, Liver. Heart, Bladder
or Bio -d Disease, a sample lwttle of Stuart'*
Gin and Buehu, the ereat southern Kidney ar.i
Liver Medicine, will be sent absolutely free oJ
cost. Mention thi* paper. Address STUART
DKUG M'FG CO., 2b Wall St.. Atlanta. G?.
r ' - * -V-. r ' :'-v
? 4m ,-.V.- w J
( a million-dollar 1
i -cloIk. j
By 8. I. GE48E. I
fey-b=j-^LItO At the standpoint of
rr|- ~|jf uniqueness the Hawaiian
I I F war c*oaJl sll0Wn iQ acPLl
* j. companying illustration,
Wl which is valued at $1,000,w,,
is now on exhibition in the
V*> 4-i^vkri 1 Htifrtnm /ka? Vtn i*^1vr Ka atitt.
oatiUULai Auuocuui, uaiuij uc our
passed. It is certainly without a superior
in ethnologic interest and excellence
of workmanship. In 1839 this
remarkable object (technically..cahed
"Mamo") was in the possession of His
Majesty, Kanikeaouli, who inherited
it from his father, the celebrated Kamehameha,
in whose reign it was completed.
r(At
one tirptr it belonged to Kekua-skalani.
one of the highest chieftains of
the Sandwich Islands. After the abolition
of idolatry in 1819, he rebelled
against the King and attempted to reestablish
the ancient religions. In a
bloody battle the chieftain was slain
ana mis cioua, wuicu ire was,. uieu
1
? ?7 T ri" t y
HAWAIIAN W
wearing, fell into the bands of tbe conquerors
and thus passed into tbe posession
of King Kamebameba III. (The
Solitary or Lonely), by whom it was
presented to Captain J. H. Auliek, of
tbe United States Navy.
Some idea of the amount of work ex
pcnaea in making tnis war cioaic may
be gathered from the fact that the
time required for its manufacture extended
through the eight reigns preceding
that of King Kamehameha. It
is four feet long, and ha3 a spread of
eleven and a half feet. The ground
work is coarse neiting, made of olona,
a native hemp from the fibre of the
hau tree, and to this the feathers,
" "hich are exceedingly delicate and
very small, are skillfully attached,
overlapping each other and forming a
perfectly smooth surface. The feathers
around the border are reverted,
and the whole presents a bright and
beautiful appearance, as of a mantle oJ
gold. The upper and lateral borders
of the cloak, which are corded with a
string of the olona, are decorated with
alternate tufts of red, black and yellow
'feathers. The body is decorated
with alternate figures, generally crescent
shaped, composed of either red
or yellow feathers. The inner surface
Is wi'hout lining and shows the olona
network and the quill ends of the feathers.
The cord of thg upper margin is
prolonged to form a fastening at the
throat. * '
The yellow feathers are those of the
rare bird Oo, or Uho, Mohoa nobilis,
while the red feathers are taken from
the body and neck of the Drepnnis coccinea,
one of the most abundant birds
inhabiting these islands. It is the yellow
feathers, however, that are of
such great value. They were at one
time used by the natives in payment
of a poll tax to the King. Only two of
these yellow feathers are obtained
from under the wings of each bird, so
that the number of birds captured
PROFESSOR AND MADAME PIE
RADIUM, IN THEI
?From the I
It is reassuring to know that any one
who wishes to buy radium can now
procure it at a cost of $0000 per gram.
All radium of higher activity than
7000 has until recently been retailed
for the experiments of Professor and
Madame Carle and their associate*.
from w^Tcb sofficfeDt feat^ors could
b? obtained to make this cloak must
have h&en-%ry great, ** '
The. capfure of thesttrbir&s is effected
.with great care and toil-,, Lpng"pofes,
smeared with some adhesive substance
and well baited, are placed in the vicinity
of their haunts. The bird alights
on the pole, and, being ?*nnable to disengage
itself, is caught. The two so
much desired feathers are plucked,
and the bird is then set at liberty. At
one time three of these feathers were
worth seven and a half "francs, and it
is upon this basis that*tbe value of this
particular cloak has been estimated.l
Lntil recent years cloaks of this kind j
were counted among the most precious i
or tne royai treasures or me Kings or;
the Sandwich Islands, but since European
dress has been adopted, they are
now rarely or never seen.
The cloak which forms the subject
of this article has been deposited in
the United States National Museum
by Mr. Richmond Ogston Aulick. of
New York City, y
. -te"--; y ; ;
The Girl .and the Sweeter.
Indiana school \gflris may: wear
"sweaters" to school, provided they
tuck the garment inside the skirt, according
to a decision of the school trustees
-ofcoJeffersonville<- It is encouraging
to see this grave .educational 'problem
grappled and roped, and ti?d at
J ' I ' V
. y *?? * * f >
AR CLOAK OF FEATHERS. VALU
last The sweater has flaunted itself
too long in the face of intellectual
progress. No girl can master the mysteries
of quadratic equations or eluci- 1
date the biasness of the pons asinorum
when her mind is struggling with the
question of whether she shall wear her
I sweater habitbacked, or gathered at
the waist with two rows of pleats and
a shirr at the collar, or wherever they
put shirrs. If this ruling, that sweaters
shall be tucked into the skirt does
not at once result in a tremendous
advance in the intellectuality of Indiana
womanhood, the school authorities
should meet again and come to a
final conclusion as. to whether the
sweater shall go over the head or be
stepped into.?Chicago Tribune.
An Ice Locomotive^
8PJKT S IN THE LARGE WFEHO OTVE CHS
EN-ilNB A GBIP ON THE iOB.
?From; tiie World's Work.
The first Importation of live cattle
to England from America took place
{ in 1861, but the regular trade did not
begin until 1876.
RRE CURIE. THE DISCOVERERS OF
R GARDEN AT PARIS.
Lmerlcan Monthly Review of Reviews.
says a writer In Harper's Weekly, but
information has now been received
from Director Boulay, of the Societe
Centrale.-that they expect shortly to
put npon the market a preparation of
radium, chemically pure, or nearly so.
at the cost per gtam mentioned above, j
- - * - . :
ocooooooocooo obcooobcoooa
| How to Proted |
I the Bluebirds. |
o o
OOOOOOOOOOOO 0 COOOOGOOOCOQ
' A few years ago there was general
lamentation over what seemed to be
'
s
THE CATS CAN" NOT BEACH IT.
a total disappearance of our bluebird,
writes Julian Burroughs, in Country
Life in America. Since then they have
regained something like their former
numbers. But we do not have half
enough! It is impossible to have too
E $1,000,000.
many. From every point of view the
bluebird is most desirable. He has no
faults; he does not even take toll of
our fruit But he needs protection.
Nearly every nest is robbed. Not one
egg in four hatches and produces a
mature bluebird.
The way to protect bluebirds is to
provide a nesting place that is safe
from cats, mice and squirrels. The
red squirrel is the worst offender. In
May and June he scours every tree in
the woods, and even comes around the
houses. The bluebirds are hard pressed
to find any kind of nesting place at
all, and when they do the chances are
against them. The bird-house shown
here is perfectly safe, and within two
hours after I made it the bluebirds
were making their nest in it
It is a very simple matter. Get a
hollow limb or make a box of weatherbeaten
boards, close both ends, raintight,
and make a two-inch opening
near the top. The cavity inside should
be about three inches across and four
or five inches deep. Nail or wire the
box to a post set securely in the open
where no squirrel" or cat can jump
down op it trom above. Then stop
everything from coming up the post
by a sheet of tin or an old pan that
encircles the post This result is best
accomplished by cutting an "X" in the
tin and shoving the post through; then
nail down the flaps of the "X" to the
post.
Mondav Snlclde.
It is stated that there are more suisides
Monday than any other day, but
no attempt is made to give a reason
for this fact. Somebody points out that
Monday is usually wash -day, and it
should be added that a boiled dinner
usually goes with it. The clothes line
may, perhaps, suggest the fatal rope,
and the clothespin nasal asphyxiation.
There are blue Mondays, too. and It
may be possible that the suicides have
their own peculiar Ideas about starting
the week right.
Five Yards of Ttaln.
The Cray watershed, in Wales, which
gives Swansea its water, must come
very near to being tbe wettest spot on
the globe. Exactly 175.54 inches of
rain, or nearly five yards, were registered
there between January 1 last and
October 24. In October alone twentyseven
inches fell on tbe watershed.
BATTLE SHAKE HEAD, SHOWING IANQS
?From the Scientific America a.
i
' r~ r-p
if Aa @ji~WOi. *
"* 'v *'
i There is, unfortunately, no provf?
| ion in -.the law as^o the'eiact qatnxt . 4
1 of the'"parchment" on which a will > :$
\ should be written. It lias?.frequently.. v
i happened that property- worth large
sums of money has been distributed
in accordance with the wish of the
former owner as a result of directions
left in the most accidental manner.
Wills that have proven valid have been
found carved on the trunks of trees, ^
scratched' upon stones, .written on the *
soles of shoes.
One of the most remarkable of these- "if. \
freak wills was that scrawled on the
door of a miner's shanty in British -*
Columbia. The accompanying illustrat.:on
gives the entire will, which, .
with the signature, comprise only four- ^
teen words. Tim Merrick, who willed
his estate in this highly original manner,
was a miner living near the town .
of Golden. Since his coming to the
district, in 1863, he had worked stead- >
ily, and, it was supposed, with great
success. ' i?S|
One daj\ in 1886, he was found by
one of the mounted police lying dead
r. i i ii sji .i- ' , in acsag=?=aaag|f
I Cm'iik.\*?ri
:
in his little cabin. The place was
searched for papers, but none of any
special value were found. Merrick's .
will was discovered, however, written '-'J
with chalk on the inside of the door .
of the cottage. It read: "The State
may hare all they find. I've got no
heirs."
r
The authorities made a hasty invest!. /;
gation of the premises, but without ' gm
discovering anything, and. the search, v|
as far as they were concerned, was S.
abandoned.?Mirror-Farmer.
;}?
' i '
SEK&NO E PAYME
OF NEW YORK,
Leader of the Republican Majority. *<
' ? iMotor-Car
Service in the Tropics.
The motor car is playing an import
ant part in the development of Mada- , " :
! I gascar, where its advantages baveheen
! J ruily recognized by the Franch author* *
11 ities. Mr. Sauzier, the British Consul \
j at Tamatave, writes that thete is now
, a regular servi ? between that placs
and the capital?Antananarivo. Passengers
take the railway as far as
Foudrona (seven and a half miles), *
then embark on small steamers '
through the lakes to Mahatsara. TherO
they arrive the same night, and go on
by motor car to Antananarivo, wbere *
they are landed, four days later, at &' - /
1 much less cost, and with mnch Ies? - ?
fatijme than by the old system of pal- -t
anquin transport
^ ' ' T \ T T ^ ^ U *T T T T i 1 I j ^
OUAAX YT llilllAJiO,
OF MISSISSIPPI,
Leader of the Democratic Minority.
A Burglar's Tool. ,
A visitor at one of the hotels in Pekin
was awakened during the night by
the noise caused by the fall of a roll *
of paper. Getting out of bed, he saw
with astonishment a pole, to which was
attached' a fishing line, moving about
ihe room, collecting various objects
and removing them through the window.
Upon going downstairs he was
heard by the burglarious Chinaman
outside, to whom the rod belonged and
who escaped, leaving his fishing lint
behind him. ' ' ' J
i