Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, May 31, 1886, Image 5

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WEEKLY I NQETREK - ^T'Y. f < LUMBfS. OT'.OVIIA TJONT AY MAY 51. 1SS6. from the Three States Told Brief Paragraphs. \ \(.»t "iiiririciil ll|,‘ration l’i rfurmt'il lij Hr. Mill- liu»n —JH»i> Wrl»lit'» MR Kml(ir) at M :irrintoii J'uJai* ibunt a >Vii>}iinirtoii Turtle mal u lurroll , irmil) Scuba-News I'rmii Aialiaiiiu anil Imrlilu. Tlie county treasurer of Pierce has *2111 jti hand. Buchanan's Sunday school will aggregate _ tr 135 students. ' Tpe Withlacooohee river is nearly clear- 1 had her arm badly broke ed out of Its fish. There are muny rattlesnakes crawling around in Greene county. Snored concerts are given at the parks, at Atlanta. Sunday afternoons. The watermelon men of Americus hope circumstance.""’ll a few evenings ...go. Tin. became demor alize:! arc, t'.ev, promi-luKiudy iigaiust buildings, and r. number became easy prey to ti.e missiles of boys. Deputy Collector Colquitt reports the seizure of two stills—one in Heard county, in this state, and one In Randolph county, Ala! n:na -and 3000 gallons of beer and mash captured, Deputy Collector Chis holm was with him. Ous Steel, ft negro of Lawreucevtlle. took a strange notion a few days ago, to run himself to death. He started, and after running rapidly for some time, dropped to the ground ami died. No cause can be given for his strange proceedings. While J. L. Speares and Miss Maggie Brobston, of Madfson county, were driving Sunday afternoon the horse ran away, throwing both out of the buggy. Spenris as severely bruised, and Miss Brob: The buggy wm smashed. At Macon a night Or two ago three per sons conatitutiu* one family dreamed about the same person and the sumo circum stance, though neither l.icmberof the fam ily bad thought or spoken •( the person ■ ir efficient attorney of tin Louisville ar.d N.mb'hie r.ii.road at Montgomery, cele brated the silver anniversary of his mar riage on tin 23d. .J. A. Jackson and Owen Allen, of Talla poosa county, disagreed i \ i.r the candi .v'10 to rtoo acre. Lula fronts an nuiri > aiuable and orange groves bring high prices in this sec tion of the country. Polk county is one of the best in the state; has six growing towns and its tux- dates for the police Judgeship and closed in able j roperty has doubled in the last eigh th e .wl'.i U] on each other with knives. 1 minutesa bloody slashing progress! Allen dropped dead froni a thrust in the abdomen. Jackson has live serious wounels, from which he may die. Work has begun on tile new Presbyte rian church at Anniston. The contract for the wood work has not been let yet, but will be next week. The se people will erect teen months. There are four weekly and one :-cmi-wcekly piqier published in the county, and they ore all excellent news papers. Bartow, like all the rest of smith Flor ida, is on u regular boom. Judge Hughes recently sold three-fourths of an acre on Main street for .fll.500. Oiie-i ightb* ofun acre on the same street sold f<.r four m’.t; A Li iLSton i . iie-ii i 11tier to f. el le furnish fruit by the 20th of June. There is a movement on foot in Coe ing le li for the erection of a ?20,000 hotel. The dwelling house of Frank A. Potts, >ear Newuan, was destroyed by fire oil Monday night. Mr. MeOinty lost 160.000 brick by the late rain. The brickyard is Hooded'with i.ater. judge Daniel Pittman dropped dead in Atlanta Sunday. His death was instant ami painless. The bell for the court house clock at Mil- ile Hcville has arrived. It weighs 2000 P -'ids. The ordinary of Madison county has re fused to issue any more licenses to sell v,-risky. Jack King, a farmer living near Law- iciceville, killed fifty pounds of rats in his e-.abie last week. ITie Cherokee manufacturing company, i-.icntly burned, will be rebuilt at once, v lih a capital of £20,000. The election in Oconee will not lie con- -ted. There was a rumor that it would be. Miss Laura Wilson, of Buford, Ga., is \ i.-iting Mr. L. T. oudderth and wife, in Suwannee. Mr. Bugoan and family, of Illinois, are i„ Dublin. He will engage in the lumber .business. Mr. Williams, cf Atlanta, and Miss Keen, of Dublin, were married in Dublin last Thursday. singular coinci dence. The heavy rains in April washed up on the river bunk at Rivertnwn wild potato forty-six inches in circumference ana seven or eight feet in length. A piece of it eighteen incites long, weighing seventy- five pounds, was shipped to the commis sioner of agriculture at Atlanta Monday. At a meeting of the library directors of Rome, Moses R, Wright was elected libra rian for the ensuing year. M. F. Gavan was elected treasurer and M. M. Pi pper ilireetor, to fill vacancies occasioned by resignations. The governor has refuscdtheapplieatii.il for u pardon made in behalf of R. L. Pascal, convicted in the McDuffie county court for selling liquor in violation of prohibition. The case has been fought through all the courts, and this was the final appeal. The old Bank of-Augusta has been pur chased, renovated and ham:- micly titled up by Fleming, Thomas & Go., and will be opened immediately us a new banking house. The firm will be composed of A. Fleming, Landon A. Thomas, jr., and Frank E. Fleming. Mr. Will J. Winn, of Cobb, has the largest herd of Jerseys in the county. His breed of Berkshire, Poland hogs will carry off the premium anywhere. He takes great pride in raising stock, and the animal that falls under his ownership is certain of the best care and attention. It Is said that the state lunatic asylum now contains a larger number of patients than at any other time within its history. The institution costs the state between The protracted services in the Methodist church at Livingston continues. The mem bers have been observing to-day in fasting preparatory t > tin e -lnmutiion which is to take plan next Sunday. Fariin a- in til n hii : -i t i-.-ir fa tremci.c enid wit that their spring the dry ue.itker. Neat Lai- Morgan, u tinu apparently as - o’clock. The next father weiil into tin he found liis son a cc as to tlie cause of hi next to the finest church in the city, at a j weeks ago, and the purchaser lues since cost of nearly $10,000. ' , been offend j.3500. So great is Hie local demand for lumber I in Jacksonville that the various m ills are ki j t running both nigl in order to fill it. and to get large order?! delivered v.imi the lumber is needed it is necessary in a great many instances to put A Southemized Yankee and Co n federate Soldier Tells What He Knows About It. IFOTTItTID .urge saw f.d wit last i nt th :il Mil toil i i -.on working i it< .lenlay night, Mr. Lee ! ion. L. 1. Morgan, re- veu ns ever, about 10 ! morning, when his 1 room to awake him, I rpse. There is no idea , death. A good p-roportion of the salesmen of j Birmingham have organized an early e!o.-:ng movement, and they say are going to push it vigorously. One' merchant having taken a stand iigaiust them, thty have obligated thiTiisekes to inch other to work the boycott on rum for all that it is vv< rth. There is a ease to lie carried to the I supreme court from this tirm of the Cham- I hers circuit court that lias been on the I Jg-T,, tin jh I ai mb.: thou the mi-rciiantili fishing in tin lak Arrangements old fashion i-un.p ilit :nl farmers are to regain t lie 1 of tile i ri ps, anil in most art in good condition, Business is very dull in lie. and clerks can enjoy s ue ir Madison, l'e being made to hold un Meeting at Silver .Spring docket for some time. It was revursei the supreme court last year, and the bill i i xcepth ns is being prepared to carry it u the second time, ii is the case of Heflin Phillips vs. Islay, and the action is trim jiw a horse worth not more tnnn *100. Ti tivi cl Of ! Satur, t guilt times lev amount iuvoivt i The jury returned a verb in t hainbtrs circuit court ing in tin- case of the State vs. Hue kali w. They were out on the case twenty-one hours. The only evidence that, connect..! Buckalew with the shooting was the testi mony of \V, L. Sams, who was impeached by a number of witnesses. Court adjourned Saturday at noon. The criminal docket was not finished, but several cases were continued to next term. A movement is on foot to organize a Park some time in July. A canvas tent, which will seat about 500 people has been 1 ordered, and Rev. C. A. Ful'vooii, Rev. I!. M. Tyditigs, Rev. '.V. M. l’ouge and other prominent ministers of the Methods! church Mill be invited to participate in the extrcisis. Friday K. J. Baker’s two turpentine stills at Georgia Sink, about eleven miles north east of Jasper, were destroyed by fire: also, I 11 barrels of rosin. ! barrels of spirits tur-I ntine, cooper shop, a large lot of barrel [ etc., were destroyed at the same j time. The total loss is about jviOOO I no insurance. The fire originated from | the rosing boiling over and catching fire. ] The (irange City Times says where rushes j Mere used or. the orange groves In tii.it section for tin past few years, t tie cold bad | nor the tried upon tin trees in such I groves, not i veil tie leaves dropped from j the apparently tender branches, it is sup- I posed that the ashes not only gives an ui- j ange tree vigor, hat cause a growth to de- J vefop hardy, tough and stout. We mean i the cotton seed meal ashes, or !. iril wood ashes. Eleven prominent citizens of Havana, Cuba, passed through Jacksonville Mon- day going north via the .Savannah, Florida , blIsiness vviUl j and « estern road, nun coining from Ha vana on the steamer Mascotte. This is the | ■ Genial, iiearty, honest, whole-souled Sum Dunlap! Why. every man, woman and child from tlie “Great Smoky'’ to the Gulf, and from the Tombigbee to the At lantic, will smile back a recognition to the pleasant countenance we picture. Born in Connecticut, while yet a young man, in liv>l, lie came south and located in this state, first at Fort Valley, and remov ing from there shortly afterward to Amer icas, where lie first developed his capacity for a commercial life. After some years residence here he associated himself in H. Oliver, at Albany, building a large store. At Albany he was first of this travel yet seen, as heretofore j unfortunate enough to lose his wife by n TAKE GOSSYPEDIA market. Titian ('olo^no. Fort Gaines has spent in ttie last five j ?14.000 and f 15,000 per month, or from ; ars about $100,000 on improvements. j £168,000 to $180,000 per annum, besides the ^ ! stroke of lightning, and shortly after re- The library building on the campus, in Athens, is receiving a coat of paint. There is a gum spring in Newton county in which half a dozen children have been drowned. Judge Pittman’s death makes the fourth large investment in buildings. On Sunday last Dr. Mulligan, of Wash ington, performed a neat surgical opera tion in taking the pistol ball from Will Cosby’s foot. It was feared at one time that' the ball Mas so deeply imbedded amongst the bones of the foot that it could member that the Atlanta bar has lost by ! not be reached. Dr. Mulligan used the death at this term of the court. • new remedy, cocaine, anil the operation Newton county claims that its present I was painless. I 'pulation would entitle it to tM’o mem-j Gus Brown, of Savannah, was committed •hers o. the legislature. to ja.il yesterday by the ordinary on a Mr. Homer Jones, of Norcross, robbed a | charge of lunacy. There are now five hie gum last week which gave a yield of ' lunatics in the Chatham county jail, and as seventy pounds of nice honey! I the asylum at Milledgeville will not receive Richard Townsend will be hung at Val- an ,V more from Chatham at present, they dosta Friday, July 16, for the murder of Contractor Cohen. The state fair opens at Macon Monday, October 25, and continues for two weeks. The premium list amounts to $10,000. The prohibitionists of Lowndes county have organized for the purpose of having a vote on the locai option issue in that county. Willie Miller has been convicted of mur der in Glynn superior court, and his pun ishment fixed at ninety-nine years in t he penitentiary. Lightning struck a negro cabin in Mon roe, severely shocking a negro woman. will all have to be confined, although the accommodations at the jail are very poor for insane inmates. The Jefferson county grand jury censure the sheriff for having failed to lay any book before the last three grand juries. There is *9408.25 on hand in the county treasury. The county school commissioner reports the schools for this year in pro gress for five months. The commissoner says the greatest difficulty in managing the school system is the want of a perma nent board who will serve. T. D. Swann died at. his home in Honey creek district, of Rockdale, last Tuesday night. He was well the evening before, somest buildings in town * ouuvaiiii, tivg.u iiuuiun. lllgXJL. UC »UU Lilt LHLTiUi^ UL1D1G, Far several hours she remained in an un- j and ate a heartv supper on Tuesday night, conscious state. • Next morning he was found dead on a pal- j Two hundred and fifty quarts of straw- | let in front of the fireplace. He had on •btrries were sold in Thomasville last Sat-j his shoes, and it is supposed that he had I onlay. Several families had strawberries i gotten up during the night and did not on Sunday. The gas company of Thomasville have untitled the public'that a reduction will shortly be made in the price of gas. A blind negro from Oglethorpe has been forging deeds to another man's land* and depositing the deeds with merchants in Athens for provisions M'ish to go back to bed, and just lay down in front of the fire. He was about 70 years of age and lived alone. Some little excitement has been caused , in Columbia county, not far from Augusta, ' among the negroes, by a report that a prominent farmer is making arrangements ' to engage a number of Chinese on his , r „ . .. , , , plantation and do away with negro labor At Fort \ alley Mrs. T. J. Gurr s kitchen entirelv — ' was burglarized one night this week of all the provisions it contained. The ioa sr.uul, and no clue to the thief. Hon. Wm. M. Nelson lias been commis si med ordinary of Henry county, vice A. A ijemon, deceased. The latter had held the office for many years. E’chard Townsend, the negro who killed eSi.t-riff Epperson, of Florida, in Lowndes county, last December, was found guilty Thursday and sentenced to be hung on July 16. A. F. Pickett, a jeweler of Atlanta, who failed owing $33,000. has affected a settle ment with his creditors at 35 cents on the di. 11a.?. tioi « i coundrel went into the stable of J -■ -in i W. Carter, in Munroe, and shot one of his finest mules. The mule was dead wnen found. No clue as to the guiltv party. During the storm in Wilkes county, lightning struck a tree just 20 feet from Da'id Rone's front door. It blazed the tree, tore the gate to pieces, and slightly shocked his wife. Joe Wilson will soon make a proposition to the Montezuma steamboat compauy to build a lock in the mouth of the creek for a certain amount, and he will furnish the balance of the money and do the work. Col. E. C. Eduards, who moved from The negroes have worked their .mnginations up into believing that Chinese will supplant them in the south oil the farms, and no little excitement exists among them. They fear thecoming ofthe Chinese, and believe eventually they will have to give up their homes and move out. Inquiries fail to verify or correct the re- p 'Hed Chinese movement. .tkilianm. A religious revival is in progress at Liv ingston and the interest manifested con- 1 Lillies to increase. About 75 members attend* d the press as sociation at Marion. The state convention will be held ta Montgomery tilt- Hth of June. The Baptist church at Livingston is to be repainted. Sam Thomas, the Pennsylvania iron man, advertises for men and material for his first furnace in Birmingham. Rev. D. C. Sioudlev, of Belcher. Barbour county, had ids leg broken in a a runaway accident Tuesdey afternoon. A Catholic church is to be built at Floi- euca. A lot has already been bought for t he purpose. The Fayette Journal calls the Marion County Herald, “the sheet published up in the moonshiner’s paradise.” D alton county last winter to Sand Moun- i . W- H. Davis, Esq., tax collector of Mad- taiu, Ala., has moved back, thoroughly, 1 ' 011 county, made a full settlement of ins disgusted. He savs every Georgian on account with the state auditor Saturday. Sunil Mountain is anxious to get back to This is the third settlement made. Georgia. I The Birmingham iron works is finishing There is a prospect of a new gas and 1 up a large Corliss engine, the first one ever water company being formed in Macon, made in the south, for the Wharton fiour- i to the agreement nave been obtained to ' insure the success of the movement, and correspondence will be entered into with the Montgomery grocers in order to obtain their plans, and the Selma union will prob ably be founded on the same basis as that , of Montgomery. The object of the union will be mutual protection in matters of debts, and wholesale firms doing retail business. A meeting will lie held Tuesday next at Pluenix engine house, ami a per manent organization effected. Mrs. A. Eoulware, of Selma, nee Miss Ella Goldsmith, died at her father's resi dence in Greenville Saturday, aged about 22. She leaves a husband and a wee babe. Manv friends here mourn her sad and un timely death. Our deepest sympathy goes out to Mr. J. B. Stanley, editor of the Greenville advo cate, in the loss of his wife. She died at her home in Greenville Monday, in her 33th year. She was a most estimable wo man. true in all the relations of life. Her deaili is untimely and her husband and children have the deepest sympathy of that community. J. C. Long, the county surveyor, was drunk in Birmingham Saturday night. Policeman Hagood was trying to make him go home when he pulled a pistol and open ed tire. He shot five times, and one or the balls hit, going through Hagood’s left forearm and breaking the small bone. Long M'as taken to the city prison. Mayor lame this morning fined him flOO and put | k.iw him under *1000 for the action of thegrand ! B.ity. L. jury. Bates, Hon C At the Episcopal convention in Anniston [ ar x-ueij ^mrs ’ statistics from the report of the committee 1 C5:irk." .i:N- M on the state of tne church shown during j coieinau. inr.i v the last diocesan year are as follows: Bap- ' 1 raivfor.i. D c tisms 161, an increase of 122; number of ; ,u - mri H confirmations 366, an increase of 92; mini- I her of Sunday school teachers 2S-1. an in- | jjanlet’ miss'V crease of 7(1; number of scholars 22fi1 < an Edgan'rt C increase of 2fri; amount contributed for | . n diocesan and domestic missions *2'X>!.r3: Evcn-ly-. inr- J other offerings *-3%.556.15, an increase of a* 1 ---A *26.525.58. The report says these figures i'. 1 ''! nu ':. l:i , r ' ’ plainly show that the state ofthe church of the diocese is one of steady growth, and looks towards a healthy and permanent maturity. Kloi'iiin. Aspirants for legislative honors are bud ding at Ocala. The enterprising young men have organ ized a club at Xui'cuossee turned to his first love, Americus, where anil north via boat tlie entire way, the quarantine arrangements being such as to 1 stop boats running to Tampa aiter the last ' the outbreak of the civil war found him. | M eek in April. ' He enlisted, serving first in the company of | John Twombly came to Orange City four ' his relative, Capt. I. R. Branham, of Com- - years ago from the frozen northwest, land- : 1)anv j> D f t j, mg there with only *7 in his pocket. He ] 1 •’ AI. I). HOOD cY CO., Manufacturing Prm'iOstn, Columbus, Georgia. INCREASING FAST, TOBACCOS stocked a peanut stand on Graves avenue the first thing. Within six months he added cigars to his business, and within a year tobacco, candies, cider and some gro ceries. Out of this busi several hundred dollars < in Maine, bought him M ACON VOLT NTH K1W, and afterward in the cavalry under Major Ii. G. Lockett. The close of the war found he has ]mid ; Mr. Dunlap stranded in Macon, but his in- < •1(1 debts back ( j 0 i n it a ble energy soon recuperated his for* ligible business ■ 1 1 lot centrally located on Graves avenue, j Lines, and the firm ol Dunlap Lsher, and has just erected on it out* ofthe hand- fancy goods dealers, was well and widely LIST Ol U ri F.IW. List of unclaimed letters rem:kiinT:g in the Co lumbus. (ta., post office for the iveek ending May 30th. If not called for within tuirty days will be sent to the Head Letter Office: McCartv. <' MeLe:id->n A Co., .) E Atkin*, hits 8 Anns; rich. ! Aude*. M I) Alim. A J Adam*. G H Brown miss G Brooks miss L B-»n. W W Black mun. B Bennttte, J Beil, B J iierrv. nir* M A Beer. A Beck. A Mar: M. Mi M.vkii Marie: t L •J II ;s 1C -r M .J t he run d L. anford t<» Ta - ke Eu.tli* rn:i the San fin’d a made in one hour. There are l‘v> names on the Ponce tie Leon hotel a The temperance people making stn nuous efforts !*Hic ijf litiuor. known until they burned out. After this, for a short time, he was in business at Rome, from where he entered into that for which lie was intended by nature—a sales man. In this capacity he has been con nected constantly with some of the best and MOST WIDELY KNOWN of the eastern manufacturing houses. In 1874 he removed with his family to Atlanta, and has lx*on a resident of this city since. Meeting him on the street during the wi ek, the reporter was greeted with a hearty handshake and earnest: “How arc you, my lad?” “Pretty well, Ham; how are you?” “Sound as a dollar, my boy; although if I had met you ten days ago I could not have said as much.” “Why, how was that—been sick?” “Well, you must know that for the past ten years I have been suffering with kidney disease, which every now and again would grow bad and give me serious trouble. About two months ago I began to have one of my bad spells, and for the past eight weeks I have been suffering some or most of the ‘TORT: RES OF DANTE’S INFERNO.’ “I have tried all the physicians and medi cine- that I could hear or read of, and their name, as you know, is legion, blit until a week since the dis< ase lues held undisputed sway. It is not a pleasant thing, my boy, to know that h disease which some of the mo-t note i physicians of tin- country have protinunc'-d as the most fatal to humanity, has a mortgage upon your vitals, I tell you. I is rapidly increasing, bringing the following J to your kind not ice I I). A. Andrews, I D. A. Anglin i Averett A Porter, It. .J. Anglin, J. Adams, <_’. Batastein, | R. Broda, : Bennett A: Co., j T. A. Cantrell, ! V. R. Cantrell & Co., ! It. S. Crane, F. Conti, M. K. Edwards, A. Simons, J. K. Gidd»?ns, I. R. AH. F. Garrett, c. E. Hechstrasser, L. H. Kaufman & Co., G. \V. Lewis, C. II. Markham, P. McAr.He, T. E. Middlebrooks, Martin A: Chalmers, Tobe Newman, W. R. Newsome, J. H. Ramsey. Rothse’hiids Bros., T. J. 8tone. of Klrhnmml, Virginia, Manufacturers of Fanny Edel and L. Road To bacc< is. K A nr<» our Solo Agents tor III 1m territory. my2 seC/in ALL FIRST-CLASS Storetfiep srs now iesp it for Sale TO l‘AUn\TS. to Ik-.u: h Ijll'-a—till' .. Au^iistini. Tmrq.a ill" ■rt i takus tht; ffooil liuiuoi' out of a si..i ro.\n n be fc SuTi-nto. vioiid crop of or-ii.qts are Jo, Ni-!.r at T. •ph Kobli nii-a. for i in paa-a: •»>' thej J WATT. K M It is understood that parties are ill the city negotiating for their establishment. There is a colored church in Newton county M'hose members have a mania for funeral sermons. One old fellow's funeral lias been preached six times at this church within the past eight mouths. A negro in Emariuel county, known as ng mills. Over a thousand people assembled at the City spring near Huntsville Sunday to u'it- ness tne annual baptising of the colored Primitive Baptist church. Twenty con verts were immersed. Captain S. T. Frazer was severely hurt at Union Springs Monday. He got his A g, id deal of i.'.nd is uirig along the line of tilt Jack-on’.die and St. Au gustine railway, mostly to Jacksonville parties. Last Saturday B. T. Kuhl, of Orlundo, sold 55 milk punches, 355 glasses of soda water and 175 disnes of ice cream. Jabez H. Sears is drawing plans for a Catholic e hard, to lie erected ii Tavares, representing an outlay of from *5000 to 'VfijlJi I. Within twelve miles of Titusville there M'iii soon i.-e -ix saw mtils, yet a large por tion of U" hunter comes by rail from points furti At Ci Bill Close, who was under the iuttuence of tangled in a rope which was tied to whisky and riding on Jesse Thompson A- horse, and was thrown violently t s's lumber train, fell off. The train nnss- 1 grou FAMILY FANCY GROCERIES, ii:!!lc\ VEcU\HLhlN >[\>iiY. to over his body and killed him inst nitty. Col. \V. I). Young of Talliilah, Mas in A'liens Thursday. He is now running a c am saw mill near Tulle' b- and tin.v timber for a large hole! t-■ lie lniiil next year on the place where his hotel M'a- I urned. lJuriiig the lieavy rain last W- cli esdey 1 ruing inrge bull li og Ceil in J. K. W.i.- e's.vard at Conyirs. Some of him ii dri • were standing near and saw it faii. Tlie “ Of '.'as so stunned that it t.iis .-ome time t'.Torc- it could move. Captain J. M, Smith, vvith out hundred and fifty hands, is finishing up (he grading <-• the Dublin and WrightsviUe railroad. 1 'it cars Mill soon be running up into Dublin, Professors. M. Bobo is now spending his vacation at home in Hartwell v, .th bis und Mrs. Nathan Sm day mornii r le iving a lirtii fliihirin to mom fa’i:i• v hut recently it i m. ali=s. ’i’ll .■ B’ uitit County croj, ,.IV,is of pi- u. la-onu-ing. uni In v .7- very opportune.'’ Judge Betts, of tin died nt Seln ■ 1 July eeli'liration at ' .- d- iu p,-.pit-from a!i-ur- Piv Ha us! is on t mil date. hr’- “And m'li.it miraculous dispensation has opird'd in your lie-half, Sain?” queried I in. rep' ,rter. “Nothing miraculous, i just had a glim- | uteri ng of com mon sense; |t hut'sail. About four ycurs a 150 I lmd a severe attack of rhcun..ttisjn, which completely disabled me for the time, and which developed into what is called ‘chronic,’ attacking me when least expected, and laying me up, entirely incapacitating me for any kind of business, and causing me as much suffering in a day a.s should be crowded into a life time. After one of my most severe attacks, and when 1 had just 401 able to hobble around. I met .J. M. Hunnicutt, an old friend, and he said he could make a remedy that WORLD fTKE ME, AND by gracious he d’d, •I t• >k two Lotties of Ilunnicutt’s •pared from roots and ever had a twinge of -in since. The medicine was not for sale at that time, but was ured by Mr. Hunnicutt for his About six .Months ago it was de- to phe c il upon the market, and a- < ./•</;• 1.\/.<(\ for that purpose, ks in the midst «.f my Mificr- « (i in one of their ad'.ertisx-ments s< iihvniTC. anai'7^<4 Hc-a Fo All rh<*n.i^tr4w r , f>>iirii* , rni it. II will Jiao-1:0 oil,ei lia v* f-iil'-l -.virii • oi»• pas'flers. ar** juhil.ir.t iwtS.-u ! am. liu.r. su\es tuhnr, saves •fpiale Al- •*ly pure, •aurants country. For sale*Ly all lii*st-ckw» Kr«»cvrs. GANTZ, JONES <r C'O., 17(i IhKitir S/., ,V. IV Rhi ui.mtif Cun iierbw. ami I inn .I A .M i: S }.\. OSH 0 It X E, Old i a ;i< 111»••< I Paint Shop. nag i it i-c-i and report:, the t.uii u 7-ntn lotion am. favr.ruiiit: than for home y> Saturday morning about McClurkin, a colored man ;; his lied at Ironaton. I n r-k Charles -und dead . Whitten a fine school in BoweravOle, Gh., since last ■ came to his aeath trorn pcraiysis ot tue November. * < iieart. A drove of quails alighted in Cedar town Captain J. F. Whitfield, the popular and ,.-i Meek. 'i --' gneriior appointed Dr: \ta f- - ' . ' at Baker’s mill near Jasp‘-r. ■ recover. Land at Sorrento that sold for *1.25 a few J. J. WOOD, V " V.) ingli j;,. j <• I»1U .Nil. It, 1,111 11 ' • lotice to lax Payers, ■j'HE Tax D.gevi for State and C.rfaxei 1? apt eodjl’via "j. hEKJJY,' a. T. ItAlL C. ! I HiXIv. MU' Ih the my di.-aLTe< aLii- symptoms had 11:ti*■*. v riisH|f]icarc*d. I have used two bot tle^ up to this time, and I have not felt a trace of my'disease for a week. I believe it has cured me completely. That is a ’>?»•*tv -tr«»ntr statement, but 1 make it hon- mrj Whmk fiy Hall- Bn-.'Ij -if par- it in anyimanuer.’ tr-h5-d&w6m Iantu. G me ariic.r* .n U -r-,r ; l. l *i.i pl< frefli UltONa“N l»2'rulv,moik