North Georgia citizen. (Dalton, Ga.) 1868-1924, January 08, 1891, Image 1

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mm .. • r \ (S\ Citizen. DALTON, GA., THURSDAY, JANUARY 8, 1891. TERjVIS, $1.50 A YEAR. USELESS grinding OUT GEORGIA the yard. LAWS BY , Encumbered by the too SUt ° of Pn neceM»ry E»w.-Too ^ u »nd not Enough DeUbera- jfucb ■ tlOB. . writer m the Augusta Chronicle vTa key note when he says that t00 m uch legislation on the the general assembly of Geor- P* At the close of a session, partieu and acts are rushed through ; manner, and without larly, bills ^"consideration the importance demands. The writer 0 f law-making says: .,tn tie hurley-barley of ^e blose of , n„r, could be passed. Perhaps, if "Treated*> i0 “ * *"* 1 ““ft II you could pas. a bill to chop » fi 3 ' ’- y heads in the State. Every- no one is half the .... body iB anxious to get home attention to any bill except paying any ~ 9pecially interested in; ! maker is tanumertag and pound- Lid putting the questionat race the clerk taxo^tte Uills against time; fifty members are moving around the floor laughing and talking, and half a dozen others are bawling ‘Mr. Speaker 5 on all sorts of “uS-ter-be-titled-’Naet, mum— mum—mum,’ goes the clerk, nobody knowing what he is saying,, not even himself; not to speak of the fact that he sometimes cuts it short with ‘etc.’ ‘Many’s favor bill say aye,’ cries the speaker,‘’posed no; passed;’ and be fore he ends the clerk trots out another >Kact and so on and so on. The thing is a ferce on any idea of a deliberation. “And yet this is the making of laws. Crimes are created, great property ih- terestajvitally affected, the rights of the citizen legislated upon in a shamful bedlam. The clerks writejjthe things out and they are carried to the govern or and by him approved, it not being his business to legislate, but to approve such legislation as comes before him, provided it does not infringe the con stitution. “In saying this I do not animadvert ‘bn the members of the Legislature, ^hey want to do what is right, and are a fair-minded body as a body, but the system is vicious. The work is done in a slip-shod manner and without due care and deliberation. There is no .amrpiL cn.greitt and ffl.r-rpflpniri- 0 ' US—tu( law-making power, and a careless, un reflecting use of it can do more to re tard the prosperity of a State: than al most any one thing short of war orpes- fience. I “Let me take two’minor bills for in stance, before this last general assem bly and see what reflection they lead to. One is to make it a crime for a physi cian to get drunk. What a reflection this is on a most honorable, conserva tive and dignified profession! "What a wholesome stigma on those who, we may say. hold life and death in the hoi- we are doing.’ The bill was read and discussed, and tho discussion disclosed quite a lively cat ! in the meal tub, and that bill, I promise you, did not go through as it would have done but for this intrepid and sensible gentleman. “The last Legislature passed *1446 pages of laws, each page more than half a foot long, to be exact 6 1-2 in ches. String out these acts, one touch ing the other, they would be over one- seventh of a mile long! Does anybody think legislation by the yard receives proper consideration? “When a Legislature ceases to delib erate it ceases to be a Legislature.” AFTER .FORTY YEARS. A Woman Cornea from Ireland to Her Husband. William Gardner, a wealthy fanner, came to Olmstead county, Minn., from Ireland 40 years ago and was married three years after coming. He is now 70 years of age and his wife and seven children are living. Last spring the whole community, as well as Mrs. Gard ner No. 2, was surprisedby the appear ance of a woman with a son 40 years old, who had just come over from Ire land, claiming that she was the first and lawful wife of Mr. Gardner; that she was married to him in Ireland 43 years ago; that soon after their marriage Gardner came here, and she, not will ing to come with him, stayed in Ireland. She claimed his property. Gardner ad mitted that the woman was married to him.* He is a wealthy man for a farm er, worth $100,000, and the wife No. 1 was bent on getting him into trouble financially. The case excited the whole neighborhood and sympathy was gener ally with Gardner. It has just been tried by Judge Stark, who shut out the first woman from sharing his wealth on the ground that by refusing to come to her husband, when he had sent her the necessary money, and remaining silent for forty years, she had waived all rights. When the court released Gard ner he was moved to compassion and gave the woman from Ireland enough- to make her comfortable. A CONVERTED TERROR. Degporado Andy Johnson Goes to Preach ing in the Mountain!. A dispatch from Pineville, Ky., 1 says:—Andy Johnson, “the Pineville terror,” who became noted throughout the “dark and bloody ground” for the number of people he has killed, has be come converted and is now an exhorter, taking the pulpit at several large meet- ~IDI—me inning of the Hoskins brothers, whom Johnson claims he did not slay without sufficient provocation. C. Y. Hoskins knocked out one of Johnson’s eyes. Johnson lay in wait for revenge, and one day while the two Hoskinses and CHRONICLES OE GEORGIA. GLEANINGS AND WINNOWINGS FROM THE STATE PAPERS. Wlilppea for Cursing Davis—Bishop Beck- •witb and the Great Actor—Warning to Cigarette Smokers—Thought the Yan kees Were After Him. From the Savannah News. Parmer John Maund, of Talbot coun ty, the best known man in this section, and decidedly the most original aud witty, has an endless fund of stories, which he tells. A good feature in them is that they are all on himself. Once, during the war,- he came home on a fur- iough, where he was constantly hiding out, he said, to keep the Yankees off of him. During the day he hid in a swamp near his home and his meals were sent to him by a servant. Pearing that, the servant might be watched and followed, he made him take a circuitous route through the swamp, and Mr. Maund stood near the path, after the servant had gone along, to see that nobody fol lowed. One day at dinner, the servant having taken the route, and Mr. Maund was sitting down to his dinner in the swamp, he heard dogs barking. They got nearer and nearer, and seemed to be coming near him. He told the ser vant the Yankees were after them with hounds, and he made the negro run in one direction, and Maund started off in another. He ran pretty well in the out set, hoping that the dogs would take the servant’s tracks, but he had no such good luck. After running hard two miles, he stopped arid listened. The dogs were coming fast on his track. He stooped down and pulled off his shoes and started off again. He ran with good speed two more miles, and the dogs were right behind him. He pulled off hie coat and struck out afresh. "His wind was: gofie, though, and he realized that it Was time to practice strategy if he valued his life. He ran to a mill pOUd, and laying aside his- clothes, he jumped in and swam for dear life. The dogs came yelping over the hill, and he heard them ho more when they got to the pond. He imagined that they had plunged into the water and were over taking him. He realized that he Would meet a watery grave if they got hold of him in the water, and he “paddled and kicked” with all his might to beat them to the other side. As he pulled up on the bank, exhausted nearly, expecting the dogs to pounce upon him and eat hbh alive,- he looked across the pond ahd saw feur of his own hound puppies hia£lQthes CURRENT COMMENT. STORY OF A SKELETON. Sarcasm of the Chicago Sports. From the Chicago News. One of the most gratefully received I presents was a handsome nickel-plated | faro-bank deal-box given by the gam bling fraternity to the police of Chieago. THE MEANING OF SOME BLEACHING BONES AMONG THE MOUNTAINS. How the Bain, the Indians and the Battle- snake. all Three Combined, Had Killed a Man in a Dav and a Night. From the San Francisco Examiner. There is an old half-effaced trail among the rocky canyons of the Ari zona mountains; between Eagle Creek and Rio Prieto. It is a lonely place, with nothing but cactus and the cliff grass for verdure. There seems to be Fannie will Show Her Fine Form. | n0 126 anywhere among the tumbled From the Cincinnati Enquirer. crags. But pass along the trail, upset Sweetly and gently admitting the ge- a boulder, throw a rock into a clump nius of Bernhardt, in “Cleopatra” Miss of the cliff grass, and you will see some- Davenport quietly adds that, as for her- 1 thing alive. Coiled in*the dark places self, she does not need to hide herself are great diamond-backed rattlesnakes under the bedclothes in order to play I Disturb one of them and the whole dell Democrats Didn’t Treat Billy Bight, From the Chicago Tribune (Rep,) If the Democratic party of this coun try possessed even common, ordinary I gratitude, Maj. McKinley would have found both his stockings stuffed full of | messages of thanks Christmas morning. the role. The South and Her Exhibits at the Colum bian Exposition in 1893. From the Chicago News. That the South will send its best State and individual exhibits to the Columbian Exposition of 1893 does not admit of a doubt. The wonderful material pro gress of the old Southern States during the last decade is ripe for illustration to the world. The “new south” will take part in the Exposition in a way befitting the magnitude of the occasion and its great incentive to further development. Shonld Consult Their Constituents. From the Greensboro Herald-Journal. "While the members of the legislature are at home it would be a very good idea for them to consult their constitu ents as to a constitutional amendment which will st6p long sessions. In many sections of the State that point was made an issue in the legislative race. If some steps are not taken at the summer ses sion looking to that end, there will be a large number of present representatives who will stop at home next time. The people mean business on this line. DRUNK FOR THREE YEARS. A Vagrant Who Has Sworn Never to Draw a Sober Breath. will hnm with the music of the cas tanets. In the bed of the canyon, just above the wash line, are some bones, polished by the drift of the river, bleached by the fierce sun for years. As you pass from the middle of the heap of ribs comes the warning rattie of one of the deadly denizens of the glen. The re mains of a pack-saddle are there and what might once have been the pack. There is a fragment of blanket with U. S. on it. Near by is the rusted steel of a "Winchester rifle. Examine it-and yon will find that still sticking fast in the breech is a green and mouldy cartridge. That tells the story. Some time back when this glen, alive with rattlesnakes, was even lonelier and farther out of the world than it is now, some prospector, deserter or hun ter, came there driving his pack mule. Fifty miles away from the whitening bones behind that boulder that juts from the cliff some empty rifle shells are scattered. There are more of them concealed by that patch of greenwood, and still others among the rocks on the hillside. Did the traveler with the army blanket know that he was traveling on the hidden trail that only the Apaches knew that puzzling, round-about path that started north and turned back A strange piece of humanity was ar rested recently at Wichita, Kansas, as a vagrant, but was released as soon as .. 0 „ _ his history became known. He carries | south—the road by which the San | wa y and madness released him from his | flying before the fire, but after the rst skies they would have maimed his feet, and maybe his-hands. There would he no need of tying him. A shout from one of the Indians makes him try to look up. Some of them are coming toward him. They have a stick with a little noose on the end, and in the noose is one of- the rattlesnakes of the rocks. Now he knows how they are going to kill him. Throngh the skin and muscles of the snake close to the rattles they put two long, thin buckskin thongs. The ser pent squirms with the pain of it, bnt they hold his head fast in the loop. They tie the loose ends of the thongs around the snake and jump back. The snake is free from the noose, but bound fast by the cords through its tail. Directly before it is the face of the white man. In an instant the snake is in a half coil, his rattles going faster and faster. The prostrate man closed his eyes. Maybe he screamed, maybe he fainted, maybe he simply waited for the feel of the serpent’s fangs. Like a flash the flat head of the snake shoots out. The cord stood its spring. It falls two inches short of the white face. Two tiny, liquid drops come against his face and run down into his beard. It is the venom from the fangs that failed to reach. The Indians roar with laughter. But they" have wasted much time. The troops are after them. They pick their victim, they tease the snake and then leave him. All the hot afternoon he lies there, the snake’s head playing before his eyes, more of the venom being spat into his face. The sun went down and the clouds covered the heavens. The snake had learned that it cannot reach that face. It lies coiled at the foot of the stake watching. For a while longer it strikes whenever the man moves his head, but after awhile it does not move, but lies in its sullen coil. Oh, the strain of holding his head back, back, until the cords fairly crack! How long was it before his mind gave THE INDIAN SLAUGHTER. THE BLOODY BATTLE AT WOUNDED KNEE CREEK. Between tlie Troops and Big Foot.—Botli Fought Bike Devils.—The Attack and the Carnage. A correspondent at the camp on "Wounded Knee creek telegraphs as fol lows concerning the Indian battle on the 26th ultimo: In the morning, as soon as the ordi nary military work of the early day was done, Major Whiteside determined, upon disarming the Indians at once, and at 6 o’clock the camp of Big Foot was surrounded by the Seventh cavalry and Taylor’s scouts. The Indians were sitting in a half circle. Four Hotchkiss guns were placed upon a bill about 200 yards distant. Every preparation was made, not especially to fight, hut to show the Indians the futility of resistence. They seemed to recognize this fact, and when Major Whiteside ordered them to come, twenty at a time, and give up their arms, they came, but not with their guns in sight. Of the first twenty, but two or three displayed arms. These they gave up sullenly, and observing the futility of this method of pro ceeding, Major Whiteside ordered a detachment of the K. and A. troops, on foot, to search them. This work had hardly been entered upon, when 120 desperate Indians turned upon the soldiers, who were gathered very closely about. Immediately a storm of firing was pouring upon the military. It seems as though the order to search had been the signal. The latter, not anticipating any such action, had been gathered in very closely, and the first firing was terribly disastrous to them. The reply was immediate, however, aud in an instant it seemed that circle in which the Indians camp was set, was a sunken Vesuvius. The soldiers, mad dened at the sight of their falling com rades, hardly waited the command, and in a moment their whole front was a sheet of fire, above which the smoke rolled, obscuring the .central scene from view. Through this horrible curtain single Indians could be seen, at times, the story of the past few years of his I Carlos Indians found their way unmo- iife in bis pocket, and the well-thumb- I tested to the Mexican Sierra Madre, ed document tells a sad tale: “My though the soldiers were all around? name is Fred Travis,” reads the diary. “I am from Sedalia, Mo., am general ly denominated a tramp, and came to this city to spend Christmas with. sfrongm5nk* or- deadly terror? Now the rain begins to fall, and it is growing dark. The coolness revives the man, but still before him he seei -these coils and that flat bead., T. The story was written in what was left in the glen. The Indians saw^^^fl^-m-epar^-PrtiX come arorind theben . _ ^ ‘Sfk. TEesol with his discharge from the carbines of the troopers, there were few of them left. They fell on all sides like grain in the course of the scythe. The Indians and tufiwig bwiar-r Only rifle denominate double-distill _ a I q-w.ii bo. comes, past the grease I drank in secret at that time, and, the trail he drunk, locked wood patch in the Frtm' the SaVaamah News. A Louisville (Ky.) paper erence to the warm friendship that ex isted between the late Bishop Beckwith locJcea m y» e u > w UU u ^ ^ -r Alb Theirs, says the I whenever I got uru , His animals are hot and tired. About three years ago I fell ™ | the^poob^ n ^^ n(T like' a From the Sr^terwere riding alongthe road| £k there. in a three, killed a score of men. Ipl he~opened~fire mi UMiS I co«M I lore' teSTta* e. Besides these he lee probably |,lege togeflier- Qn ac- Lasted me, but noflnng moxe. I “St° of « was the general mistaken celebrated |^e r aa Sen W l£. Booth was there, fh^ never to Is it true that these men are so given I J^pray? The answer to both ques- I ™* seei Q^uLug that Bishop breathe a sober brea^^Seve^tim^ to drunkenness that a penal statute I tions wa8 ^ the negative. e p I wa s in the city Mr. Booth sent 11 have come ^ reagons but have must ho for their soecial re-1. +jr >iA*he class of students, r L n invitation to be present in a box at owing to aiwavs&o make both | him. one^^the performances. The ^ my way, and when accepted, and on the following Sun uj^ “L. Lf!.'p, rattled over the stones, as the quiet, crashing like sionaily to fire, but now evidently care- ing more for escape, than battle. Ms face into the dirttoclear, “^^devil, ground where they had fallen they con tinued to fire until their ammunition was gone, oruntil killed by the soldiers. Both sides forgot everything, excep.- ing only loading and discharging guns, and it was only in the early part of the affray that a hand to hand fight was Carbines were clubbed, sabres reached the bound man. He runs it of that horrible poison that is thick ening on it. , Still it rains; it is so dark that he cannot see the snake; only a rattle as that it still . He must have been unconscious, but thunderclap, comes the first shbt. Se he wakes up and feels thestrm tatuuu. ' . h thuude P, and his rifle flies to rope. Se gbeeuggB^hackon - ^ war elute, circled mAe ' ' u,.t now he feels a cam e down like thunderbolts But A Test of Idiocy. From the Nashville Christiao Advocate. A physician in a medical college g low of their hands; those who usher tile J ca jj e( t on to test the idiocy of a c » LflLo into the world and mitigate I asked these two questions. Does of the old man as he leaves it. | rec0 g U i ze the value of money. oes with was in JNew x or* ^ ( 1 1 J woman . i loved and | his last day on earthy | ^ | " _ ^ wns soin „ to die agonies ^He knows"what hashap- I ^th all his force, but now he ^ned and kno^ STunlcss his horse cou utcr-pull that seems to to. hrn can carry him hack through a storm t0 'vard the ruttlcsnuU uml dcu ^ hMletsle way he came he haa passed W-- end it, He S BMtte y suddeu shot has smrtled Lew he w“S»“S]*° H e nu A iitrhe h %Z:Zhe must die ofI — £e-h,“im tuning under | « the snake does not radium. But The this was only for a short time Indians could not stand that storm from the soldiers as they had hoped to. The remnant fled and the battle became a hunt. It was now that the artillery was called in requisition. Before the fighting was — - could not be trained without danger so close that the guns He knows The rain is wetting will drag must be passed for their special re ~ 1 c ian told the class — -- - , | nT i mvitation to uc inuo.— — i- ~ alwavs tomaue duui i mm. .traint and punishment? What a ffis- whom the examination was made that ^ pe a rforman c es . The bishop I managed and when I Then it is die game>oir*e.cow f d ' graceful position in which to place our I the absence of the appreciation o accepted, and on the following Sun ay I e n s mee . the stones, as The white man jer ca tches a The rope pulls harder, civilization before the worid. No doubt value of money , and of *e >actor was ^ ^ among medical men, there may he in-1 p ray ^ the one an intellectual | church to listen to his friend. „ | a mixture of beer and bad whisky. | twig has per ap g I shrinking it. It temperate men as there are in all other I otlier a moral quality, was s o g I services were over, so grea I — ” „ d bearings. t shoot his Two inches more is death. flllWlMlij fnlliiimliliniHl .ffll-im-US-. gamm. TUsis » SOSge8tlTe Se^tortaflmtottouforthe doquent They »ee that he I Two mchee m “"V swells aad But he canuot do it. Bis “ad bmm to uo ^ now with the In refuses to order the muscles to meet |« _ u, ey mig ht reach it and | him up. vo mcnes mihu He digs bis toes into the ground He pulls back until the rope sinks into his flesh. ' The rope is getting shorter. . The rain has wet the uc hold the snake. The stretches, while rain j thongs that decency and self-restraint. A fine, evi nce of Georgia civffizatibn to gbrnpon statute book, so that the World iflay te»3 f and reading,^woftdef’wtoatBoft of ®«gea live here, that actually- they ity the skeleton of Warning to G.garetto Smoner- .. ^ were t O the effect I Qr ^ co1 the sane ones are very few. In the At a convention of raiiroau .as a brouier-m-io" ~ Law- personal kingdom on earm. , . u at Washington on the 6th I and nephew of Gen. • • P . . , delegates, all the signs «S»live here, that I a,a ?r u a^oluttou was adopt ^ m Ly yeare Mr. ftmger^wae opmmu of Are drt^, tadIcated uuytheif bacchanalian orgiOkilflli’the I of Marc , ’ . ^ conventious of j smoker, and his taste in tha in Iforeo Saviour. The lemnlfi nf tiro xsviuf tnWW trt anr^ sftrtex-I ed providing f , _ „„ m miU,ee : I a ^ .. ■» i.. ?ti tfip. line of cigarettes. I speedy comi D p ar gel y attended and tha husi- j conventton winteresting It the hempen rope shrinks aur o . that hold the snake ar Down longer than they were when U. y Quarter of a mile stoink “ there are bones. A. skuii | e of the Most High toSnchatnex- I ed providing r I said commissioners, ana its face buried in the soil. _" Thos ® 1 ^ 1 ® | snake trie s to crawl away. - - ” ?a - back. them easier. The Gatling and Hotch kiss guns were trained, and then began the heavy firing which lasted half an hour with frequent heavy volleys of musketry and cannon. It was a war of extermination now with the troop ers. It was difficult to restrain the troops. Tacties were almost abandone . About the only tactics was to kill while it could be done. Wherever an Indian ;che s wnue , could be seen, down into the creek an Those cords up over the bare hills, t e > four inches lowed by artillery and m ™* ketry ® ’ and for several minutes the engag ment went on until not a living Indian was in sight. made the spine of the man who | ktt that a special statute has 1 -to be en- atedto meet the evil. If fiEuhkeffruf- fisas intrude upon religW*fs ' ServfceS ^ ere is already a law ample, for - these, 88 any other disturbers 6f divide wor- 8 %, and the bill is as useless ais it is was ness hours without one oftem m hm pr^ u^ add finally he smoked- them al until the dawning of Of j the new year. An Owl Kill* From the Providence Journal. ^ Main street window in “Whether such things will become kw it is hard to say. In the turmoil Ascribed almost anything Cdn go thro QgL. There is already a law on statuta book to make it a pediten- J in governor in the discharge of his official u ^6s, and when such ' a standing re action on our chief magistrates can be a committee . ~ articular i y in formed," of which Judge Cooley “ He was rarely to be seen chairman, to designate ^ ness d place for the next ^^^jgnat-i he was awake. C ° m Mareh S^next^ the time and the had been smoking from six to “2 f thu Interstate Commerce Com- , t ck3 0 f them per day. . In a ... f any State officere *****£**?%, man-.reppei into a eryon: reBidenU in that supervreton piayffig Hen. “ t ^ Jeff he called him, a good “cuss-1 tacke ^ the dog. catching it y | ■* The | The lumps made me ” 1 strin „ s in the flesh hold it was caught in the ambush. rtain^enrages it and it strikes. If you search close you wil 0 ut T The cayotes prowl about the spot, neat of the man-, frame .tretched out over it . there. . • It Th white skidl lies with its face Whatwaeoneearope^there. I in lace-like snake Paw-1 i. knotted ™ j '£££1, f#^ f against it. raw- road interests, are requested to A Sale Investment other end is , cared to scratch among those honesyou | would find some, small strips of hide, He died with his hands fast be- | ^utwhat is the lace-like line and framework of slender bone Advance in the Price of Cigars. Thirteen leading cigar manufacturers of the United States advanced the price of cigars on the 1st, and it is believed all other makers will speedily faU m line The fear that seemed .o beset the manuracturers, and which has so far prevented them from working sing ly and advancihg prices on the stren I — * -" is that the city The Year’s Failures. J of the MeKInleyJ^ j matter The business failures oceumngUhichUdre^ttestepm ^ ^ ^hout ‘^“^^edre B. SL7bS!however,does not gu into n-’rsr^-.? =r U.—«■ - 10,907 in number, Is one •When the Apaches closed in on their I ’ ater than in the year ' - - But how long I s - | — chrrw: . 11011011 our chief magistrates can be | gatisfactory resu»"’ rfoe> on this 0( ted there is little surprise at any blh- I a ‘’ca^uy from our j ? r law-making. I question if j pmggist a bottle of Dr. King s^ J sai ® m pother State the integrityof its covery every case, wheu and fresk °tenderloin steaks ^ but this becamem law and is a or Chest, such as C ^ nc hftis ABthma, IS as It lawnfiu I tnation of fLim^s, c O oup etCi itispleaas| a score? Which teBuayu.Wdmbr'g 'u’t a Wh ° “.“t ,hr “?‘' “^ victim he fought hard. *7 ^ tests — s U i rS I ~ w " * 1 stragg - — - — 80 entire year „ J f, Ml, being but twenty-five makers believe it is suic ’ ° The prices at present. 1889. liabilities, however, (MOOM increase over 1889,being ,$189,000,000, of During the year miles Pat Calboun. »”* M - U ” rl 75fMr. Tat Calhonn come, freeatS W still. “The great and tmrible .poWer of “^glaws, I repeat, and- say It over over again, cannot be too carefully e °- The curse of Georgia is that the 7® are not ‘ ^ isdom ail. The povyer is hot only | throughout 8 gteat power, but is a It is plea® 8 safe; .es Til® County Ongbt to Uc CaUed Slngletery. From tie Columbus Enquirer-®' 111 * county 'tightly that the cords cut „ acy foreed him ahead of them upthe deliver addresses in all parts of financial and econonucj They find a bush strong enough to S3.** amounted h> into them, 111 ^"t^n r^giSed^oters by It is stated will - (Georgia on since 1884, $225,000,000. Merit Wins. We desire to King’s | have been five years r hVve B %en selling^ 1890 nearly 5,800 of^abway"have been completed a country, an excels of nea^ seven hundred miles over ^ opera tions of the previous year. There ar TifiT 172 miles of railway in the tifstlles of which 36,912 miles United S^^^Mn the last there are The the other districts. wisest- man I saw-in- the Don jrdsnire pwhhm.— being im-1 . /l ® was a nudifie^a^ m«hber who J been forced to ^ay, thus j p ac kagei-^d° n ’ tl>ny a bottle deal of interest. t’t!—H a ae««c m-defaced “ & - Q15 - nn in a mutilated or defacea ivation Oil ^ _ at any price,-it n —seat and thundered above j p 0g3 ihle to obtain U umber be a dangerdv^a^^^^perfect, ^_«h, -Vc don’t tmjfleretand what is ^wing out of «*»*“££ when we can’t hear anything. Let 1"" 88 he managed to 7 | slack rope is between d ^ind he SfflSiStafSffsell as well, or that I was in poor ne health and losing flesh. •with me. asppgs** tz feet s ssss ^ . deal of interest. | force him to the ground | price, d tS remedies | “P™. 8 ,°d increased, my weight.-S. These and increased “ > ' m ' Dr Bull's Worm| thcre Destroyer, S^ iadie under «. hot j f he ir merits. s read Bo we can know what I the want of