vr4" 4' A Home Newspaper Published5 in "the" Interest of the People and for Honesty in. Governmental Affairs, Vol. V. No. 40. Salisbury, N. G Tuesday, September 2 1st, i909 Wm, h. Stewart, Editor. ; ' - - - ' 8o - .. V r - dV "' '. ' A . ' , "" t .". , ? .v -vl 1d '-T p K '' V" " (t ' - '- Carolina fee PL"' t - 3 THE ANCIENT CITY OF JOKTHEEL. At one Time the Strongest and Wealthiest CltV On Earth now a Field Of Ruins. Thefollowhw account of Jok- tense interfi9fc of ih atotv and the vfllne of . thn information Th ;a taken from The Union Bible Diet- lonary, published in Philadelphia in 1881 (2 Kings xiv. t.) rpi , . . . Ihe name given by Amaziahto Solah. or thA morlpm Pt.ra. Tt. was the capital of Idumea, and ,i i e , , i - one ot the most masninctei t of the ancient cities. It was situat- ed near the base of mount Hor, t j 1 1 j- , Jericho, and the same dietance . c- i ii cnrowii across it at a great height, from mount Sinai ; and must be LT7, ,. i.cigui. j j . i . i ,1 VVnetner this was the fragment of rftcrarHftd us t.lifi moafc siiirnlRr snot, I "Bduu w ..... . . . hi ail Arabia nernaps in the whnlAlCuRt rn world. Tt,9 remark- ahta o,harafit,fir and hist.orv. whin.h have beei but recently disclosed, d.. , . lfqf.losft fininificti )n wrtk nrn- h a. Jjl"1 UOlllll , U c LJ ti Li fit UVDi L Li U 11 t- i .v ,, ,u i artic:e than would otherwise be given to it. . mu- -i. i. t. i This city appears to have been coeval with the birth of com- j iU i i i i merce; and ther- is indubitable evidence that it was a .nourishing . . i f . t . for t.hft Christian ra. It wns tno . , . u ii ii. i. j e noint to which all the trade of i - - nnrtWn A-rohin nriaina-1, t. llfi. fid and whsro thfi first mftrrhants e 4.u . i 4. j a of the eart h stor-d the nreciona commodities of the East. With th-decline and fall of the Roman nower, in the East, the f ..i . ' from the pag of history. About t.ha norinri rf tha llrnfiRfipa. ih u ab held in such esteem bv thesultans I nt P.jrvnt. on amount ot its err a ft I strath. that-thv made it the depository of their choicest treas- ures; and, in the course of these roliriona warn, its nosBPSBion was I - i -j. - v u I Turks and Christians, who regard- ed it as the key that opened the . e -rj , . ui. u 4. 1 cfnt.PH of Halfistinft. Hrom that, I .. , i ses and narrow valleys branch out time it was known on'y as thel. .... J seat of a Latin bishop. Its ouce crowded marts ceased to be the emporium of nations. The ob scurity of nearly a thousand years covered its ruins The very place where it stood became a subject of controversy. The accounts of recent travol lers, who have discovered the ruins f f this great city, tell us of the utter desolation which now reigas over those once celebrated regioos described by an inspired pen as the fatness of the earth. It is scarcely possible, they say, to im agine how a wilderness so dreary and deac late couid ever have been adorned with walled cities, or in habited for ages by a powerful and opulent people. The aspect of the surrounding country is singularly wild and fantastic On one side stretches an immense des ert of shifting sands, whose sur face is covered with black flints, and broken by hillocks into in numerable undulations; on the other are rugged and iusulated precipices,' among which rises mount Hor, with its dark sum mits, and near it lies the ancient Petra, in a plain or hollow of un equal surface, (WadyMousa,) en closed on all sides with a vast am phitheatre of rocks. The entrance to this celebrated metropolis is from the east, through a deep ravine called El Qtlrl. oi-id !fc in link fiiisv t.n (nnc.pivfl f i - ui- the castle' or palace of Pharaoh, anv thing more awful or BublimeV F , . ' than such an approach. The width in general is not more than j - v- sufficient for the passage of two Ks horsemen abreast; and through - the bottom wiuds the stream that watered the city. As this rivulet C must have been of great impor S .' U tance "to the inhabitants, they : Beem to have bestowed much pains 1,-iu protecting and regulating its , course. The channel appears to -ifegve been covered by a stone pave- ment, vestiges of which still re s&ns ' 1 . - n - 1 ! 1 1 . 5 main; and in several places walls j bold Protection of the rough werflonstructed to give the cur- , as it is from be ow by the ;VVent proper direction and pre- smoothness of the polished sur ::M vau'Jjt from running to waste. ev he front of the mausoleum i':- . -. . , , , , ifaal rioQo in HAvaral ntorips to thfi 'Jf- Several grooves or neas orancnea , r'rtff latri liver dest-ended. in or - 4 -V-Vier to wnvey a supply to the gar- :lenft and nigner parts ot tne city, On either hand of the ravine lises a wall of perpendicular rocks varyiug from four hundred to eev e hundred feet in height, which often rhang to such a degree meetinS. e sky is intercepted soarcey leaving more ligtfb than 18 in f cavern' for a hndred yard together- T1e side of this roman cnasmi from which severa small streamlets issue, are clothed with the tamarisk, the wild fie ' 8 the oleander, and the caper plant which sometimes hang down from l uuo Villus AllU UIOVIUCB ILI UOIflilllLU f eB0U or.grow about the ith I mf h n 1 . n A. 1 i- ! i I, , I eutrance of the pass a bold arch is I . . Ian annedno.t. or narf. ot a. mar fnr . ' r merlv connecting the opposite cliffj the travellers had no oppor- tunit of examining; but its ap- i jcniauuo, as 6'jwv uaaotfu llLlUtr' i it., r ' J F 1 I heads between two ragged masses . I unnBronr. i7 inorKumiihU Wit-U- I juu uuaug me mucn us genera ai- . 5. .5 sm ""' UUiD "ui Pi I sents so many windings in its J B J cannot penetrate beyond a few pa- ces forward, and is often puzzled I ' r- " " I to distinguish in what direction I & I 4.U ill T7I i P8 will opeu. r or nearly I crease the height as the path des I 6 " .' utuiuu by tbe lncessaufe screaming of "UVVRD' ttUU XttVt,lja : l i i suunug aDove in consiaerauie " ' yvy iau u & & habitftti6n. At every step the C". n A 1 1 r l f HtanAtfni.fi -vrt nt . . 3 . w , . J wmarkable features; a stronger 1,8U,U UU8 i' Li i ; i. i tii i i i- - Boml re perspective, until at length J ,1 view cf the astohished travellfj in their full grandeur, shut in on every de by. barren, -craggy preci- piuea, uuin wuicn numerous rectus r ' in all directions. The entire face of the cliffs and sides of the mountains are cover ed with an endless variety of ex cavated tombs, private dwellings and public buildings; presenting altogether a spectacle to which nothing perhaps is analogous in any other part of the world. "It is impossible," says a traveler, "to give the reader an idea of the singular effects of rocks tinted with the most extraordinary hues, whose summits present nature in her most savage and romantic form ; whi'e their base are work ed out in all the symmetry and regularity of art, with colon nades and pediments and ranges of corridors adhering to the per pendicular surface. ' The inner and wider extremity of the circui tous defile by which the city is ap proached, is sculpture) and exca vated in a singular manner ; and these become more frequent on both Bides, until at last it has the appearance of a continued street of tombs . About half way through there is a single spot, abrupt and pre cipitous, where the area of this natural chaBm spreads a little and sweeps into an irregular circle. This had been chosen for the site of the most elaborate, if not thp most extensive, of all these archi tectural monuments. The natives gave it. the name of Kazr Faraoun, though it resembled more the se pulchre than the residence of a prince. On its summit is placed a large vase, once furnished ap parently with handles of metal, and supposed by the Arabs, to be filled with coins ; hence they de- ' nominated this mysterious urn the treasury of Pharaoh. Irs height and position have most probably ba filed every approach of avarice or curiosity from above it i3 rendered as inaccessible by the ! gh of slxty 01 seventy teet, ornamented with columns, rich inezes, pauiuicuoB uw uS- urea of horses and men. The in- terior consists cf a chamber six - teen naces sauare. and twentv-five feet high ; the walls and roof are quite smooth, and w:thout tha smallest decoration. The surpris ing effect of the whole is heighten ed by the situation and th,e strangeness of the approach Half seen at fifBt throrgh the dim and uawow opening, cohmns statutes and corniceB gradually appear as if fresh from the chisel, without tf:e tints or weather-stains of age, and executed in stone of a pale rose colour. This splendid architectural elevation has been so contrived that a statue, per haps of Victory, with expanded wings, just fills the centre of the aperture in front, which being closed below by the le -ges of the rocks folding over each other, gives to the figure the appearance of being suspended in the air at a considerable height ; the ruge;ed- ness ot the cliffs beneath setting off the sculpture to th ) great st advantage. Nojjait of this stu pendous temple is bui't, the wh 'e being hewn from the solid rock; and its minutest embellishments, wherever the hand of man has not purposely effaced them, are so pei feet that it may be doubted whether any work of the ancier.ts except perhaps some on the bunks of the Nile, has survived with so ittle injury from the lapse of time. 1 here is scarcely a build ing to bb found of forty years' standing so fresh and well preser ved in its architectural decora tions as the Kazr Faraoun. which Buckhardt represents as one of the most elegant remains of an tiquity he had found in Syriu. The ruiris of the city itseli' open on the view with singular effect, fter winding two or three milns through the dark ravine. Tombs present themselves not only in every avenue within it, and on every precipice that surrounds it, but even intermixed almost pro miscuously with its public and domestic edificef ; so that Petra has been truly denominated one vast necropolis, .or city of the dead. ft contains above two hundred and fifty sepulchres, which are occasionally excavated in tiers "one abovo the other; and in places where the side of the cliff is so perpendicular that it seems im possible to approach the upper most, no aceess whatever being visible. There a:e besides numer ous mausoleums of colossial di mensions, and in a state of won derful preservation. Near the west end of the wady are the re uiihiB of a stately adifice, the Kazr Be,nit Faraoun, or palace of Pharaoh's daughter of which on ly a part of the wail is left stand ing. Towards the middle of the valley, on the south side, are two large truuicaked pyramids, and a theatre, with complete rows of benches, capable of containing above 3000 spectators, all cut out of the solid rockl The ground is covered vdth heaps of hewn stone?, foundations of building, frag ments of pillars and vestiegs of paved streets. the sad memorials of departed greatness. On the left bank of the river is a rising ground, 'extending westward for about throe-quarters of a mile, en tirely strewn with sjmiliar relies. On the right bank, where the ground is more elevated, ruins of the same description are to be seen. In the eastern cliff th- re are upwards of fifty separate se pulchres, cioee to each other. There are also the remains of a palace and several temples; gro toes'iu vast numbers, not sepul ohral ; niches sometimes excavated to the height of thirty feet, with altar for votive offV rings, or with pyramids, columns and obelisks ; horizontal grooves, for the convey ance of water, cut along the face of the rock, and even across the architectural parts of some of the excavations; dwellings scooped out of large dimensions, in one of which is a single chamber sixty feet in length and of a proportion al breadth ; many other habita tions of inferior note, particularly numerous iu ona recess of the city, the steep sides of which contain a sort of excavated suburb, acces- ! Bible onlv bv fligbts'of. steps .chie- i 1 elled out r f the rock. In short, I the outer surface of the -strong girdle that encircles the plae is hollowed out iuto innumerable ar tificial chambers of different di mensions, whose entrances ar,e va riously, richly a:;d oten fanasic a!ly decorated with every order of architecture: showing hov tho pride and labour of art has Juried t j vie with the sublimity of na ture. The effect of the wtfch-fTis heightened by the sppearan.ee -f mount Hor, towering abov."'this city of sepulchres, and perforated almost to the top with natural caverns and excavations fcr the dead. The isnmense number of in sis e stupendous run s corroborates accounts gi en, both by ti and prof.-uie writers, of the kin- s of P;it.ra. their courtly grdfur and their ancient and 1 n -c ;. tinued royalty. Great mug-, buve been the opulence oi a e 'that cr.uld dedicate such jnoi.u-'! meats t-j the memory cf its ritlei f.. j Its mawnificieiice can only oe x j plained by a reference to tLe im-i mense trade of which it, was th- i immcn centre from the u&-.rn or i : ovmzation. i These magnificient remaii.te c;'.si now ho regnrded onlv as the era Id:ur.:i, in which its , rm-r wealth and .srdf-ndcur l'e int&rrfrl The state of dea 'ation into -iich it has long fallen is not Oi ly ) work of time, bat the fulfilling t- of prophecy, which faietottf t hit wisdom ai:d understflhdip.g a perish out of nv-niit F.dr Edom shouid be a wi'd ino o-; i cities a perp'-'tual wast--, to aht. of everv ui-olr-a:i i-eou-r (I? 1 i xxxiv. 5, 10, 17.) Io h-fe is there a more striking Mid visible aem.jnstrrati n . ot t he ;ron tnes-? divine predict .ous ta&a. am.'O-r r ip t 3.l;,.n serteri pal,-c-s of Petrn. The dw-'llors in the clefts of the rocks are brought low ; the prince-t of Edom are as nothing; its eighteen cities are swnpt away, or r-dnc d to empty chimbera and mskf.d walls; and the tt;rritory the descendants of Esau affords oe miraculous a pro. if of the inpir i tioii of Scripture history se the fate of the children of Israel. Fifteen Gents may be Fixed by Farmers' Union. The sentiu:entJLufche F Union meeting at Birmi rni 'i s :-ch UU Ala., is strongly against S urhem j farmers sr '. ir th :ieir cotton eariv. ! The belief is that thw short cr p j warrants fif .e-o c-nt? nod 'dej - leauers wa an larmers do item s -: cure that, j;rice by not i inrry is g the cri.p t-- !'.-:.-o -t.. Some f;vor fixing a minimum price of hfo en cents. The majority seem t fa vor leaving the fixing f the prir-e to the executive committee, which will probably make minimum to be adjusted act-out ing to conditions. The Union do-s not control enough ware houses to store the crop, u!, it -s urging the erecti n or rontr '1 of otberF, hoping ju a foW years to ranch thfit position. The big problem is "How to Prevent Early Selling." I" is re cognized that the twelve-cent price is tempting that many are in aebt, and the eh or Is of toe leaders are being directed toward ' much earlie selling. They 10- iive if the crop is held awhil eve r y b o d y wid get fifteen centf., but no fixed price is probable. Nigiit on Bald Gontain. On a lonely night Alex. B-mtou of Fort- Edward, N. Y,, cl mood Bald Mountain to the h. me of a neighbor, tortured by Asthma, bent on curing him with Dr. King's New Discovery, that had cured himself of asthma. Toi- wonderful medicine soon relieved j and quickly cured his neighbor. Later it cured his son's wife of s j severe lung trouble Millioi f be lieve its the greatest Throat and Lung cure on Earth. Coughb, Cold3. Group, Hemorrhages and 4Sore Lungs are surely cured by it. Best ror Hay Fever, Grip and Whooping Cough. 50c and $1.00 Trial bottle free. Guaranteed by All druggists. TBEOTATiON AT 8910 HILL. . be Sr,rmrr fjAf. j su i i- ,' m Hath Tsmporarify, If is Hop!, Mmc Editor Carolina WatciiMan : iour imniy readers -hare been surfeited . for the past m :n?;hs with the m ny jolt from thi-i comnnity by this c:i pondent. Of late I have not ; 11:2 n very much amoved by -the spirit- of driving the pencil, and the exists. r nap.peiiitig-, m and ar-a 1.18 : ot comm-onity ( Gold Hi!! Iv been such as to inspire m ono r. quenoy.of writing. Audaothrp-. int has become blunt and the 01- cii has lair inactive. But perl-.ans your readers are none the w-.'-se tor that. Swifi-ly borne on tirto'e v;pid e 'aii.' ewii't! ' n) months h ve fheyhavo giid d ft' ;no. away and wo were ha: coiiBcioiH o th-ir phasing. A l!Cw " the hat'Vost i prtt, (i summer ,s ooded v.irS ; or . -r ii O'O. ,os r a i't .0 !.- ;. rt. v as e 1 1 uv e; so o .i ;'! v-w'u !:u OiV. 1 ! ;.:0'O.i o?' T. nr. -trOd .0 Oidy mains io-r m?i. ceas:i to Oil c ,0 "istie of the i away i Vf i". .. hi h tome il- l a tvrtio ; ooro no y,oar3 & pr..sp But the times and ( ovironmOi ts .d we havo ch uo have chat);-: d and v ed with th'.'m, most beter-to-d-, :-..-otb have di d aod r t i;0 old ood otie-r voi.rg o:'.-"'whro r, I oiofo '00 va? v w oo s:i o- j . d. and the glory hos depart": ; ii i ii e yea Co 'o i - Wo.-Uh:; ouiiaingS oavo f:r-..-.-.0! d cur bills come aryoiai? f-.-r oat tt;.-d are r-;p:d'ty fading a Iut stiil while mauey wo bav a jood ?;: o . it- d n r un-d :o l..io:t!i nave g d ' !' intellige industrious, d t" ao . xrn tne po wo i, vay3 with us. There 'm much g iurmmg ao ux, iu tuis c v 7. nil to i irmiior o nosuu 0 1 their so; ;M d idiis id eM; ois ot won-: ;g been a year of geora prosperity, crops io-vo been -divt r- .- .0 o the mo m i. -. i j 1 - .. : I B.i-jjlS; CI opS ot thf ! i i lo- y o,:(i o; pretty mud. HiO; has bono n'eotrtut. :o.yOi;s have bo'eo iu t ; avorable. While we htv.- i&th-r pndonged J the eiij, ; -u the lutt o have sustaiiifxl no sovom except in the earUi-" pa-o vear the rainv soaeo-, w.o ; prolonged that f-omo oa.loo iantod corn in low r lands -vr.: i -liwned and nbae.doned, a no: id ';;o ;v matured' was can? f d (c r-i .- the shuck. The pun has b sh ung on the evii and th'"1 p;. ; tiip rain falling on the jo-th-- unjuai, und all namro :i . "o hfifi toon w r'c -.!:-t t.; ;.n t on an man and all living ere i And .tho latter rains, wh-k h i'';S:ii.ir will vorv mo; h ur. s. ,re no- supperment the yiokl of late ci o and potatoes, and otlur pr dnc & of-field and garden, und won poo the follow grounds in good c-nd -ti n f.--r pr--paration tor tbe com ing fsli seeding. J y Gcdd Hi).:. N. 6. fi-n'-iol. r :0-.p 1009. liirsy H; . hi ' ; U L Quick 1 Mr. Drus-gist Qui, 'A I A box of .BucUen'e Arnica's. i o Here's a quarter For. the Ur. e q" Moses, hurry! Eabv'g brror 1 nimeeir, trrrioiy Jobnie cut h toot with the ax r-iamie s seal ed Pa can't walk trom piks Billie has boks and my c( r; s ! fA ? got ai;d soon cur & ' i I l;:Zl:?u r,lr gr.,a 631 hea - ! or oarfK COJ t. n i . ( i "UiU Laii aruggigt i, Tiis Finest 'Horses In me Wcfll ! W - I t jc-etruy 4 Agr?cniture, "0ait- od fctaTes of Am9rica James mi- n, woo attended the B:;lh-F; ito Ill lW;H cnows, recently ivuu iti i irs pr:::se ot the perior- uiiu purr-icmany so oi the 'xcel Inn t exhibition given by thf i am 'us $25000 Ann . ur gra 4- i t-ne prize winning int- rut tl-. nal retfiro hfjojpi. -us. Among 6 ic w ii.: eon's comi) lment-jfv in u r j; vv p re L 1 o ' 1 o i n g : farmer and hie S IB mou1 d iu .- Ai urour xeam, tiiey large&t and most b.ainiful r. --. t U , A . Tfj?3 ill ne world. i i) --s-' pow-rfui gray,-' Percheron Goioi. -h-'o a -groat Rttrcction," This splendid and exceptio quino -xhib;tii.n has noiunhc; as it h r.ny ox her circus, and i or o- :ou niitrked- with j -ss abroad and aii d auco ".fit!:-. r.-, ". i-r n t no nior t ?... ; i a v -t o:i th' t has e er "ens. Geo- r.il 1 - - - '. i i i 1 O 1)1 - . nodidat-ed 8h ' roi.Kl the diiio, renur-bie citizen wb -re l-U'S 0! Lil ;w is oner! F 1 oj is not tbo: Ujzniv satisfied ! h i-.o oxcoi: -ot rxnitition given oy too Armoti gray under the retro d the exceptionally clever wi'p, WiTiiaai ('Bi!!y'') Ynf-u The 17 :-ov-- vviil ex hi; et r 1st. ',. p-, fo,1..- . r . . , , . ; - -' t . Tr - r..' Ji.V4.tJ It. 1 fe i f p f annual income vf a in. ;C0 0- y .$5;00fVX0 r $1.75 s. x m il by i be o acre, ite ! ;' f eie man a .led .UU! C - T" an o. e -iOj'"-.- The" France in t acR'tev 'V. ; i : ' -. . . 1 1 t i 3 n- of protective u- - ?;,.;- b t -rest-3 wh--re ii be-'in car? d Hi 1 WOT ; i. r 1.- f: Ot century about 2, mpiiS'" d in the De : i;-4jutii5 wero iii-iie U t sand dii-.os u: d partroont of : oh. di-"ose-breedin h now one of the richest jt productive and healthfal ;c: . tins change has b-en - a-'.iOiub; thf intlliueat iion of piii9 forest-e. Im-dre-d- now cover the ceun 3 san -a da .e? and marshes i:K dnco disappeared, tud chare- 1, turpenti e, o in :rdrod industri-3 htve. i-prity to the dep n t- '"" " ::. f -. o:er!y ihe 'U and miasmatic in d- cl-.mate h now mild o:u: a-- IX. eh o.;ge t the forests rt v ooiene; hi 3 il'.h i iOiiiibli 10. )mraen t 3.v wrh .it froni r, the on ml Ck mm oodor Peary sent .-v Battle Horbor, Labrad Rambarger Naohrichdn s 'd'heso h-u c- ,. -.-, -i o , ;rds v T r-t . i- or. - ot inioroesiou. and n :y win 5om- frieods to exeruplifh-d tdo aeoera! preps, c 'otro K ) J"; hic if the JNerUi G- rma; job, in the pioo onglv to (V"!r 3U).-rted by the Hacibi Ueo- rraphicai Society. -Life is Short. i61t. iong stories, hoi rhortati blMO V os ana long, prayers fit the s; who htve to do wdh them. Mom outs are precious 1. . . ;. oenHo, abridao aod in- m . in an - i -isure grows insipid a. d many in citable !:" "'- Prf'ta5;d boyood the h!:.:;tp -.-i r-asrn and covnonieuce. Lean, to bo short. Lop off branches; stick to tho main facts' in your ca?e. If you would re ceive and get thrnnoh if epeak tell your message and hold w --i1 J " uu i your Peaco Boil n two words i Into one. nd three into two. Al- i WayS learn to be hrif STATE NEWS. Up to the end of last week Dav idson College reported an enroll ment of 315 students, the A. and M". at Raleig 420. ".Jos. Black, of Frenoh Broad township, Buncombe county, iein jaii charged with mistreating his own daughter. t Jff Wentz, a weaver in the Girtson mill at Concord, who as saulted and seriously wounded Chalmers Propst, the timekeeper at the mill, last week, ia in jail. Propst is1 expected to recover. Zeb. Cathey, 14 years old, was found dead in a ditch partially fill ed with water, on his mother's farm in Haywood county, last week. The boy was subject to fitgj He was working in the ditch and it is supposed that he was seized with a fit. fell in the water and was drowned . At Lumperton Saturday Police man Ourrie went to arrest Niel Goodman, colored, who was drunk and disorderly, when the negro opened fire on the policeman. The officer returned the fire, in- fJic-dng wounds from which the negro died next day. The coron-; er s rarv decidad that f.ha im;nd as justified. President Taft's appointment of Prof. GlaSSOn. of t.hft nhnir n 1 www JX conomics at Trinity College, as censue supervisor in the fifth dis trict, has arouBed a bitter protest among the Republican oganiza- ... ..ii. After ia short conference the own era of the new, hotel, which is be ing erected at Marion, stated that the damaged to the unfinished building caused by the collapsing of the middle wall about two weeks ago will not amount to over $500. The middle wall will be reioforced with concrete which will make it strong enough to carry several times the weight which will be placed on it. The men injured by the accident some time ago are recovering. Work on the building will be rushed rapidly to completion. George Mebane, the big colored man afflicted with pellagra, died Monday at Durham and an. au topsy performed that night diclos ed the mysteriousness of the dis ease. Dr Dolly, of the State Uni versity Pathological Department, conducted the examination, and not a traoe of the disease could be found internally though Mebane died as crazy as a lunatic. The germ found in the recent exami nation was again located in the negro's blood, but an effort to in oculate the guinea pigs by infn siui of pellagrous blood failed. The pigs are as fat as ever. An Advertising Fable. In a certain barnyard there were two hens, one of which, .when she laid an egg, cackled, because she knew whan she had a good thing and wanted others to know it that hen believed in advertising. And many were the breakfasts her enterprise supplied. When the other hen laid eggs she disdained to cackle. "What's the use? ' she said. "Everybody knows 1 hay eggs." and she cackled not, die day the owner of the hens by accident discovered the nest of the Noiseless One, and it was full with eggs. But they weaetoo old to use. Aud immediately he cut off the head of the hen that had refused to be "modern" and ad vertise. Mr. Merchant, are your goods becoming "over ripe?" Try "cackling" advertise. The Road to Success has many obstructions, but none sn desperate as poor health. Suc cess to-day demands health, but Electric Bitters is the greatest health builder the world has over known. It compels perfect action of stomach, liver, kidnevs. hnwfll purifies and enriches the blood, and tones and invigorates the whole system. Vigorous body and keen brain follow their use. You can't afford to slight Electrio Bit. Iters if weak, run-down or sickly. voiy uw. vruarauteed by - all druggists, Ci? ..... -. w wwnr