Newspaper Page Text
1
Bainbridge Weekly Democrat.
Volume 2.^
BAINBRIDGE GA. AUGUST 21. 1873.
Number 47.
T HE WEEKLY DEMOCRAT
I« prBJJMfXB Bvkkt Thviaoat
By BEN. E RUSSELL, Proprietor.
A OVERTIMING RATES AND RULES
A,lTerti.«eroeiils%>swt*d W 4S per square
C r firai inaertiou/nnd $1 foe each enbse-
quent one.
\ „ )U »re i* eiijli* solid Rues of thia type.
I iVral term- made vithcontract advertisers
notices eight line? are Tl&.ger
nu.irter. or 370 per annum. Local notices
j ! ,,. ),«, than three months are subject to
transient rates.
Contract Advertisers who desire their ad
Terti-cnient* changed, must -give us two
notice.
( hanging advertisements, unless otherwise
nii.nlated in contract. will be charged 20
cents p« sq*A.
Marriage and obituary notices, tributes of
pi t. and oilier kindred notices,’charged
.slier advertisements. ■"
Advertisements must take the run of the
P ,,, ; p we do not contract to keep them in
„,v |iarticnlar place.
timottnceinenls for candidates are $10, if
i. i'v t >r one insertion.
. are due upon the Hppearflnce of the
li-rmcnt. and the money will he collect-
ticeiled by the Proprietors.,
shall adhere strictly .to the above rules,
ill depart from them under no eireum-
I’.il
i'.'l '
S3.0U
•J.tK)
1.00
10
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION
V r v num, in advance,
jy-.n months.'in ndvance.
J'n three months, in advance,
So-le copy, in advance,
LEGAL ADVERTISING.
Sheriffs sales, per le>y, sheriffs mort-
f,ge ssles, per levy, S’t; tax stiles, per levy,
citation for letters of administration. St;
,ittti,,n for letters of guardianship, 4; appli-
. nim for dismission from administration, 10;
application for dismission from guardianship,
application for leave to sell land (one
|. and each additional si|uare, ff;
ai.i.lii atioti'lbr homeatead, notice to deht-
u ,,.,iid creditors. 4; Innd sales (1st sipmre),
• Iin ,i ,. :1 cl, additional square, 8; stile of per-
i,!,.,1,1c |.roperty, per square, 2.50; estray
it.iticcs, sixty days, 7; notice to perfect serv
ice, 7; rules nisi to foreclose mortgage, per
, 1; rules to establish lost papers, per
arc. I: rules compelling titles, 4; rules
i„ |,crfect service in divorce cases, 10.
Sale- uf land. etc., by administrators, cx-
mimi-nr guar,linns, are required by law to
Is- licl'l un^lhe first Tuesday in the month,
tahw-rn the hours of U> in the forenoon and
< at the court house door
in theentiiilv in which the property is situ-
.... j y,ii,'e of these sales must he given
I- i t.tiMic I'li'/.etle 40 days previous to the
ii. es fur the sale of personal property
i„. .jivcii in like manner 10 days pre-
tii -.,le day.
- to ilie debtors anil creditors of an
• mil-1 also be published 40 days,
lice licit application "'ill be made to the
. f Ordinary for leave to sell land, &c., i
l„. tmlilisheil tor two months.
<■„- letters cf administration,
its,.: &c,. must be published 80
psu-ission from administration,
'v't- -nrec months—for dismission
V.il\tsW
Wished 0
tivAWbuii
\ k r?e m*'ii
,a. *1.1 sur
ii!v fur
roof mortgages musnnr
r four months—for cs
/■ . The Future of Farmers.
The liros of farmers are said to be
harder than those of any otfierVcJass of
producers. Agriculturists are sahl to
make less profit and loss advance than
any other set of men. Not to rehearse
the hackneyed oounterpleas about the
healthful ness, etc., of tbeir vocation,
commercial facts indicate that their po
sition is likely to improve. As their
products are mainly actual and absolute
necessities of life—and bence always in
demand—farmers are usually sure of a
market; and while they rarely realize
the large profits sometimes obtained in
otber occupations, they are commonly
exempt front the great risks and losses
often encountered, in those occupations.
Especially is this likely to be the case
nnder the now rapid development of
meteorological science and signalling,
which will often enable the farmer to
save part, or the whole, of crops that
have heretofore beeen wholly or partly
injured.
And when the development and path
of storms, the movement of masses of
hot and dry air, etc., come to be calcu
lated and predicted, as eclipses long have
been, fanning operations can be con
ducted with a / precision and foresight
that, will give the business a success as
yet unattained. Inventive genius, too,
is continually at work to cheapen the
commodities for which farthers exchange
their products. In the nature of things,
invention cannot do so much for agri
culture as for manufacture, mining or
commerce; hence, farm produce is like
ly to grow relatively more valuable.
There seems to be no limits to the pro
ductive power of the soil; at all events,
production therefrom does not increase
as readily or rapidly as production in
other branehes of industry, and a larger
return for the grain, hay, etc., which
the agriculturist raises is likely in fu
ture to reward his efforts. The difficul
ty of which the cultivators of the Mis
sissippi valley complain is but tempora
ry-
It grows from two causes, says the
Bulletin, which must in time eease to
operate. One is the distance from mar
kets ; this will be obviated by the de
velopment of other industries in the
a widirwtMl*Qtieei^"he fcegan a ilUT'l-r
of unbridled licentiousness.
• The worst characters were picked
^TTTOSP'JllWUHB'- Binrw
,r.er a'for the «F<*« of
1 titles from
Victoria s]
_ where bond bas j \ t J, eu - art and skill.
»lm!r.t*™t°n\ » W ^ spMe of j exhibit . ^ wftS an
r compelling titles
ers and cock-fighters
ex-1 e d to the halls ol State.
were introduc-
A New DaBy Paper in Xacoa.
It is reported on the streets of
that city that an effort has been and
i3 now making to induce Dr. Bai\;
to establish a daily paper in Macon.
He has been approached with the
following ultimatum: 1. Have you
at least $15,000? 2. If so, will you
be willing to leave your Radicalism
“to the rear’’ for the sake of, and
for the pecuniar}’ benefit of establish
ing a great and leading newspaper?
Would you, to this end, be willing to
offer jour capital and sink your in
dividuality in such an (enterprise,
upon the assurance that the publica
tion of a live newspaper, belonging
to no political party, and supporting
nothing not awwptttrte, to the intelli
gence of the South,would be preemi
nently successful?
We predict a failure for any such
enterprise. Macon already has one
good paper, sufficient for all purpos
es, and sad experience has' demon
strated that there is not room for
another. And if that want on the
Macon public for an independent,
live, intrepid paper, about which
new fledged editors like to prate,
really existed, we believe that Dr.
Bard would not be the man to fill the
bill. A daily newspaper needs ac
tive, pushing work to bolster it up
particularly if it has a strong rival
to combat, and a man of practical
business ideas and indefatigable en
ergy, is worth a score of editors in
such an enterprise. Newspaper
management now-a-days is a good
deal like sawing wood, so far as the
work is concerned, and any editor
who, after paying for bis material,
sets down in his sanctum on a soft
ljottomed chair and expects to write
his way to fame and fortune, will
find himself very near the poor house
before lie fairly appreciates the posi
tion lie has assumed.—Sav. Adv.
A Hen Chase in Danbu’-y.
Mr. Cobleigh, of Nelson street,
brought three liens Saturday night
and put them under a box until he
could build a coop. Sunday morn-
im> lie sti w. one ofJitemJLtUhe str
thatold Judge more than rr no
Nothing to Do.
Upon this text the Athens Watch
man preaches the following level-headed
sermon.
We base hoard hmntlmds complain
within the Iasttwelve; months, of har
ing “nothing to do.w-^&r- long »s ottr
corn, oats, bacon, hay, potatoes, onions,
fruits, clothing, faming end other im
plements. household comforts—nearly
everything we eat, wear or enjoy, is
brought from a distance, it appears to
ns there is much to do. We wanted a
wheelbarrow the otber day and could
not find one for 6ale, and yet we found
wagons here all the way from Michigan.
We wanted a broom—it was from Ohio
—and yet broom corn groins nr well in
Georgia as anywhere. We wanted a
bucket—that was from the ‘ big Nor-
rid,” or enterprising West. This coun
try is full of water power and excellent
timber, and numbers of"people complain
that they have “nothing to do.” These
same parties talk loudly about “develop
ing our resources,” but attempt to do it
by becoming agents for a life insurance
company, or something of the kind. If
they wish to develop our resources let
them locate a stern of a mule and be
tween substantial plow handles, or es
tablish shops or manufactories for the
production of the thousand and one ar
ticles we are forced to import from
abroad. So long as numbers of people
are idle and we import everything we
use, we cannot expect to prosper as we
should.
Oiling Harness.
monkey.—She told him that H they
alii. hilS4,''hSrA'f>tl9—^111,.
Harness should never be used over
six months without oiling. I take
my harness apart, or unbuckle it as
convenient,and put it into soap suds
of the last washing, giving it a good
soaking, then take it out upon a
bench of the proper height for con
venience, and remove all the dirt
and gummy substance with the as
sistance of a stiff brush and the soap
suds. I then find it just the time to
make necessary repairs By this time
the water has dried from the sur
face, and I then apply the oi] and a
little lampblack mixed, w^ith a cont-
HOW GUNPOWDER IS MADS.
A House Where Xen Never Laugh.
How do you tiling you would like to
livif fearing every moment to be blown
up. none daring to speak aloud to jar
anything, for fear of starting an explo
sion that would send you in an instant
to the other world ?
You don’t think it would be very
pleasant? Well, it isn’t, yet hundreds
of men live in just tha. state—wotk,
receive pay. and live year after year in
the very sight of death, as it were—all,
that the world might have gunpowder.
You can easily guess that these meu go
about quietly and never laugh.
You know that gunpowder is very
dangerous in a gun or near a fire, but
perhaps you don't know that it is equal
ly dangerous all through the process of
making. A powder mill is a fearful
place to visit, and strangers are very
seldom allowed to go into one. They
are built far from aay town, in the
woods, and each branch of the work is
done in a separate building. These
houses are quite a distance from each
other,, so that if one blows up it won’t
blow up the rest. Then the lower parts
of the building arc made very strong,
while the roofs are very lightly set on,
so that if it explodes only the roof will
suffer. But, in spite of every care,
sometimes a whole settlement of the
powder mills will go off almost in an
instant, and every vestige of the toil of
years will be swept away in a second.
But, though you feel like holding
your breath to look at it, it is really a
very interesting process to see. It is
made, perhaps you know, of charcoal,
saltpetre, and brimstone. Each of these
articles is prepared in a house by itself,
but the house where they are mixed is
the first terrible'one. In this building
was atf immense millstone, rolling round
and round in an iron bed, and under
the stone are put the three fearful in
gredients of gunpowder. There they
are thoroughly mixed and ground to
gether. This is a very dangerous oper
ation, because if the stone comes in
contact with its iron bed it is very apt
to strike fire, and the merest suspicion
of a spark would set off the whole. The
^tmTtrbelv vfitli the native
bcFfliilP corrupt*.
- 'i ire
Jcii’mnB ntnliflti
wears a sluug-
Tbcre to
Ail night
win* ordered.
YOUNG FIN A jfClERS.
The Freaks of Two Boys in
fitreet.
Wall
the
:;t dicing
gt ’iti ring
•hat he might find in
ts surroundings a
YilUies. Dn
‘.he voting man cs
Tta Sew York Smn
-I l'0» • office
York and entered a biOKei
.!«««.. «« roM , g ™ d ; h -"h
VI.el.Un.ilrecently.
VT the voung mo ns ainshncss,
•inws and watch; informed bun
. Wall street and
wider field lor
Vis abilities. On leaving the
-ailed upon a trteno,
i ’ ewisc a junior clerk, aged e.gh-
t . on T he two agreed they ehou.d
never work again for any RMng ®an.
but at once start an account, pvd
nut their sign, and allow heir
ix-rience to serve as cap ta.
Together they hired a. bacit r ^
J ? a dingy flight of ^ ^ whic h is
1 “die tin ?'g n P au ^ ’ ° e G f W.
nitHlestiy inscribed an bust ,
?. Hubbell & Co. The “b ^
>„'5 hy issuing a ctreutar ^ ^
■ow an investment, ot * . uts
MOJ to ?300 a inonthlby bnyi
an i calls the call contr A11
shares ot
ling, ami every night,
orgto in which the Shah amlbts suite
made themselves as tree and ca. y as
LngU I.--10VO were .bo tew « *
lan(i But this was bv no .mans all.
The King-of-Kings, not to be out-
bought hugo quantities J _ JJj
taking some
leaving beliind
» Tho nrcseiltiS
But what the
0 - ,
. 0 f it away with him amt
him many costly
.resents. The presents the jewcUirra
norain. But what the
with him they will
pi
Have got back again.
Shah took away with
oua it is even sam
some of the
never see any more.
ta
u-hich they were lodgeil.
W T^t ^ .fans ofl^jrne.^
^herethercissonincbUl^
must be some ti« t „ There
“served them right. Jh^
to say,
was never
a more absurd
mornWnx, thenuin
"“"’'"Twhich^ted.hismrU.v
"’"'’'"^nitea nBusslan Prints;
l hat he ’"r ute( , th€ Rome of an EDg-
that he htfoule ^ a gap .
lish Queen; that h ; ewe Uers
satusfide; but they based it on wj
britches, and dfinkm wh.sky and cdiaw-
in tebikker, and keepin a wife at home
and another sum where else She I-
dared that she had as much rite to
chuse her perlitikal
Southern niggers or the hethe
nees. That if the women could
there wouldent be a drunkard, nor
thief, nor a tbol on the bench ^ny
tc. cet than arsenik. An 01Q rc
s»S«d MB "ink'd on. WJ
her and hikkuped “tne h—h—helt y
gav - YTbeu the court adjourned the
eriwd .terod Snow, nd -»» ^
Vd pay the finn > another sed hd V
sedthe law dident say whether
britches must be word outside
and another sed hd rather risk ‘he
1 women to vote than a thousand of them
drunken furriners and.focis who elekted
Joint Morrissey.
So. Re necn *lSnM« * k f t ,Vj0 “
(hie rotin bisiness mjnelf an d niy °P|n‘
Gov. Jenlins » n
* . _ The first ti™ 6 b e run ^ or
SSTSrSli-
dWent thJ that every fool and every
.agabouWto^afiow^tovo^ e
^ ^nd the nielankolly -
Miscellaneous
YYlien a man’s necktie is untied how
untidy lie looks
Chemists say no matter is ever lost.
Printers deny it.
There is a law firm in Boston called
Steele and Gamble.
About fifty “Old Benders” have been
arrested in Kansas.
Editor—a poor wretch who empties
his brain to fill his stomach.
A man is going to lecture on “The
Geognosy of the Appalachians."
The bones of the late free pass sys
tem whiten the Western praries.
The umbrella which Washington
used to carry is to be seen in Boston.
The Pittsburg, Pa., Evening Ledger,
has a special of “Pen. Points.”
Lafayette, Ind., merchants forge each
other’s names to beer orders for fun.
A photographer requests that his
sign—“Taken from life”—should be his
epitaph.
Ladies traveling across thcplains car
ry their hair in their pockets to avoid
being scalped
Antimony impregnates the air of
every printing room. [Yet printers are
not anti-mony.]
Watertown. N. Y., has purchased a
second-hand hearse to convey prisoners
to the locM up.
A (’Whitman in San Francisco talks
Spanish. We have sometimes seen them
“walk .Spanish.”
Joaquin is not a free agent; he is by
his own confession a simple warbler in
the hands of Destiny.
An old Western gamester wants to
know if the vote of “no more passes”
applies to railroad enehre.
“What was the result of the trial of
that horse stealer ?” asked a Missourian
of his neighbor. “Oh, he was left in
suspense.” •
“Pinching the Eagle,” was the lead
ing headline of the report of the Fourth
of July celebration in the Minneapolis
Tribune. *
The overseers of the poor in a 'Ver
mont town set down in an annual re
port a charge »f $3 for “taking paupers
to the menagerie.”
“Oh, Ma,” said a little girl who had
been to the show. “I’T^^cn^ the ele-
The Toughest of Cuts.
There is a man on Franklin street
who has been engaged in the past two
months in a mighty effort to kill a cat.
In that time that unfortunate animal
has explored the bottom of every sheet
and stream of water within six miles o£
Danbury, has had au unintentional taste
of the several new varieties of powder,
and has got so it can tell in ..the dark,,
without looking around, the difference
between a half brick and a whole one.
The man himself hasn’t got a *hole
piece of clothing in his wardrobe, and
has almost entirely lost the use of one
leg from rheumatism contracted while
drowning the cat, and has more scratch
es on him than the survivor of four
wives. His Tny~ t **^ ~ ;l1
take a chair out- in tne yara dh a ‘pleqp;
ant afternoon, and will sit there for two
hours at a time and look at that cat and
wear.—Danbury jYcips.
lots of poor ones, party and clever, jest
waitin to take eboogar in them.
Now I don’t want tb he misnnder-
stood about this votin bto* *
in favor of women mixm up with t
skalawags and trash at the pol • J i
no means. I want the moral strengt
and influence of their votesbekaus they
are be,t«r and pare, anii honcster tbio
the men, but I would have em »
home .ud*let their husbans or thei
father* or their next £
“felnfofhS vote it wouldent exact
lv he the clean thing hut it wou
a family matter and nobody 8 1SD
It wouldent be the only thing that sum
men fool em about. Tberes strong
“S'S^.tM'^Telwgr.ph
has an enduring reputation ** **
agriculturist, «« well as au tdrtoi,
km, as well us an
and he is now engaged m pickuig
the worms oil his third ciop <
Wes He is also the inventor of a
subsoil rake of great power and uuh-
tv His net project is to connec
Jeor-ia With the West by means o
if scries of non-explosive water works
and narrow-gauge canal lock : ' I ‘
; -==riil ha'e and vigorous. Invested
ofbuJtfe aU baldric, his fighting-
weight is two hundred and ten
pounds, and he wears a number ten
r a j! e {' t, Aver?, Atlanta
Constitifiioni ,lie iny eulul of
spiral spring self-ajnsting garter He
was at one time a lawyer, but b} ap
But there wu bo
aopef&TKS"^"^' 11 *
mother. With bis characteristic ten
der heart, Capt. Bell offered his assist
ance in laying out the child on a seat
And there, while the train was speed
i„g to its destination, the mother sat
looking upon the lifeless form o er
little one, scarcely able to appreciate the
The latest performance in the line
of absent-mindedness is recorded in
the New Y'ork Tribune concerning
a country parson of that State who
has a habit of forgetting things dar
ing his sermons, anti, after seating
himself,suddenly rising to utter them
with the preliminary remark: “By
the way.” He had got halt way
through an eloquent prayer when lie
hesitated, forgot what he was doing,
and bestowed himself upon the cleri
cal sofa without closing. But in a
moment his memory returned, ho
jumped up, and pointing his finger
at his rather supprised congregation
solemnly observed, “Oil by the way
—Amen!”
A young man in New Orleans was
engaged to a wealthy young lady,
and upon his marriage with her was
destined to receive a handsome for
tune. A rival stepped in, however,
and published the young man as a
deceiver and a fraud, and in conse
quence of the placard the young lady
broke off the engagement. The re
jected suitor now sues the interloper
for damages to the amount of the
property which he would have ob
tained possession of, had he mar
ried the lady. Where is Lynch?
IHCT l rr i“
S&jgSMSiVttS*
nervous energiee.
pxic* 26ct». a Bom*,
r Sold by all druggUti.
..>»» *•*?«■*I !*!*2isL k S , S!!S: ®t5S 25
and in sucK cases
a weaK . . m -.ltfnr This lacL
I would let the long- j t, ^^ us ai '^. a | t0 young lawyers,
iwn the persimmon, what mav be done byeirer-
aarrica
est pule knot d><wn
The time used to was when m
„ ljnl „ data, h.* no 'O' 1 ® lu »“ h, °..
loBki" t» k J Sbe "’” W ,
exsc ” rfrif, had no sivil
o«o MJ proparty-she BIO
U'«sW[ 1 “ r '
, • ,i,p u«f recrurred a man to P
’ w B aba »otd«o,!tf"B k *
sSstafitss
world grows
It shows what may be cone by ener
tv andpluck. Col. Avery .wears a
rose a’his button-hole, and is tastidi-
0 h» * dress We see it stated m
ou? in u-s urera . . the
•Godey’a Lady’s Book that ‘he
Cohmel was among the fir.t to
iSruduce the
pjet's words:
.. 0 od moves In a mysterious way,
His wonders to perform.
And no doubt wondering why it u
that He gathers even the birds to his
household, while yet the ruae* are left
to bloom and fade away by alow <*e-
^Bat each are the inscrutable ways of
Providence.
ARRIVING in this CITf
at tbe usual hour, 1:45 P- M.,
train, Captain Bel! immediately paid all
attention to the corpse, helping to re-
niove it to one of the saloons m the car
shed, and immediately dispatched rome
one for ladies to come and dress it, and
then sent for the Mayor who came
down with CoMbel John Thomas, the
Marshal, to make arrangements for pro-
the necessary burial clothes and
These gentlemen made the
letten em'
older she keeps a stepp.n
Now she can own as much
DR. TUTTSIKIPBOVEB ff*IR DTE
glossy color.
Paicx Os* Doha* a Bom*.
S^tutts^
' SARSAPARILLA >'
J^ENS DEu'5lS3
LAASD^QCEESiS DnJOH T wwon^
.Uttof *bveean root*,
tbo Great PbyucAn lb tbeio nyg
fully developed coB«rt**»«! M B
far and wide by»«
divided iiuo ten
$11 ’25
The
Pari., including ^ l “ mis J s 0n a?s ured
proliabikties of uueces>, ' r „y, a ring
by the linn to the person
a full call on “Erie, t;) go are,
:-u»ck to fluctuate in less
on an investment of ’ Su€h a
than thirty daAS
surprisingly quick w*y « f *****
aone.v ha? caused their bu= ^ kars
L inquired to. Several brote^^
*bo examined the circular ^
ed it liuie less than a “savrdtot sww
die,” and expressed their del.
’-ioa to bring the matter “>ofb
president of the regular ^oard. wiuti
i view of putting a
-.•■.onsoftho.ejqvemlebrok^
woulil seem, w “ “ ct w q 0 . Bis
lblng ^ SL,or ""seox^enoKl;
personal bvh‘ ^ He did only
iU bred aD the moment W
jeestert, H e paid not the
1 " ^uldeut tal Whether Genera , and 9 ^ out
de d or alive, or who took
regular
after he yet sort of doctors for women
who took j
than three drinks a day a
Jackson was
thine or who chawed tohaker
thing. °r " , a meaner
had gone to , or helieved in
man than his d«ddy.or hodtdeBtputon
5,Ual, f a rsS^ caprice. Bin
except a5 re particularly bad. j
table mannei^ were r ^ bit e a
He would t*^e U P ^ rcc3a indcr j
bit of it, aQt woal< i sa ck a plum !
on the floor. He jrop the
of,touU>alf^^ tbectoth . to „u
pulpy ^^irtobetheKingof
and who dident
earn 50 cents
» clean shirt ^ ^ regpektabe l
A Voice for the Stump
The Hon. ttm: Allen, Democratic
candidate for Governor of Ohio, was
famous in his younger daja' fo ^
tremendous voice. Among the many
stories concerning his vocal po«™
is one that while s; eaking at Phife-
delphia from the deck of a Bteame
to a crowded assemblage on
wharf, the proprietor of a ma
creame- who was also a .political
r^^d^egrEphlnsnd ^ t0 ei ,ence him by
Mi ^ * p-rr.! ^ •*> — The ett “ m or -
mi ouiw-° -— •
of 10 she geu the chu-
| dun when tberes a
em are studym medism
Sum of
ake the
and for
half an hour old children
curing
necessary arrangements, and * hcn
mother left for her home tWelrt ®d«
below the city, on the Georgia
tak i„g her dead chiUl with her, she had
reason to bless the fate, even m her
affliction, that had thrown her in such
kind and sympathizing kand S . > J
this episode teaefa lesson not soon
be furg"t.—Atlanta 6'o^GWton.
Poverty of the Southern Btatel
irodneed.
wboM.
Ccuna, poi- ,
victim of Sypbilittc tUn^^^riee,
son re*6Widi its pTwit, ihty
unnumbered ulcer, of
each a tongue,
ffeiency
A correspondent of the New York
Tribune has collected from the censu.
of 1S70 an exhibit of the value
the Southern' States
reports <
can \ thA
\ man and never steal a sent I an screeched its loudest, but lDe rf property m roe
thaftmanandn ^ ”' v WteI! f ory g OC . that tbc orator net <» b ' TV^Iraarison with the values of i860
" 1 . to DO tne
Kings, wrapp^
-
Knvs.” said an old
•ABOOg * “L OOP ' W* “ d “
(nta, “I »'” r b “ taros i i,
‘ k TrTfrLoliieis* “J ttat ?*“
way to -est of upper
1 aralt and J^ther from tha-
U p toh 1 sfmerda«d^ toth#bok>
SEE?
^ than «0 degree*
, . n ,y er women’s letters
!bey f itv and they all- j
its only out ot curo« J, ^ ^
»<,vs seal em up again. -I ,
ways seal eu, y c time has
gether it seems to me h ^ to
mity nigh cum when ^ ^ ^ if
of
tha angle between was
he mig^t he W**”
for i
man-
He sed that >
spoke so loud as completely to drown
tte noise of the whistle bnt^as du-
Unctly heard in allpart^ thocij-
would bear wiwsssi
oMitbum. BlMcbM
gjlow Complexion. En>frti<ms“
T’sas."ietto
eiocs, Rbeumatie®, *U ?TOC*a iro
same cause, vi*: rrv-xi vaT.THY BIr
lMP C M»U»P«g 0 Sf EALTBT
I eryp*rtm sneeaeda debility
S**** “IS“ am. T-
’ M 'T’ > ‘ m Z^to‘total 1
rtqtmtmx* »» „^
ssr
lmv her vote with a dnnk.
ooujont tmy w* Bttt Arp-
The comparison
shown hv the census of that y ,
tn
uitti a little donbifal, the coming
camo&ign in Ohio will be a pretty
tZTZ if Mr. Alien takes the
stump.
make a tall man short, I
AWciteru pulpit orator defines
religion as “an insurance agaiuat
world, tor which hoc
fire in the next •
after m®,
if is thought, are caicuiaw^ f the .. me
into bad odor the workings who took ai
E'ard of Brokers
with a pole.
and Afrikitu
U-1
Si?; Sr..: a.- .ai ^ to.
A, rf ,ie "tele b J di “ i ^ S
uepaver'-eUweat lo
• - con&der that the burden of thm lo
and in*
curS.
wan. ib« un. jb'br Kattb**,
iom tl«*r pi» r l*a
and Bonkhu* 88 with
b^ltb. Itpgwv iort«»ae i* wwfht-
United Sut«. H- »-,!»>*
Prepared by
fallsnp>n the entire nJESSk.****
i quite into the cause of it- **