Newspaper Page Text
\
I EASTMAN TIMES.
\ tJtRSDAY, JAN. 6 1587.
0 ^BRCU, ®itors ami Proprietors. K B. MILNER
J 23Ms UK SUBSCRIPTION;
* coptr one y car
,
peopy, six month*, - 1.0C
r 4c 7y, three montht,
jn (if tsu, each sub^-riber,
fch* o! five, each«ubsertber, 1.75
ICLIJ. .1 ...... . i .......■ u ijiwW
poui. OiiGAN of Dodge Cor ':;tv
•I
t:cul OaoAX of Tfi.faik Couxty.
i
RGaX xowk .
or •
■
rictAi. On,; an Town or Cuav• v
i I
f 9s for a Ivertiseiu r will be fnr
, •
nspo'^n.'ie . t-'i
'
a oriered paoi'es w m time, be taw: is
• om, when the not
1
k '?
us t*p-advertising tine up«n presen
Mrer the first insertion, but a
o' somaercial liberality wiii l>«
P'fcef towards regular patrons.
p. a I C3 fJ r up?, «•
pobnrsv c y E and healthful :
i'b'VN AAONU GEORGIA PiNTK.
rO^OIiES ANDJ.UMT- HR- —GATVI.i
•I'. . <S, FARMING AND FECIT
GROWING—THE TOUIUSl’s
| VON’PEE HAVEN.
ID su-, r T , "r 1, o;! 0 U l'J"
• I".; 1 ;;'! !’l
r' ‘T t’^ ". i l V v' 1 v !i. j
Cu ; Aae ® in ’f : iai > ? Oi y 10 iro f,! |
■ N X ; °T-°J rUe i t alU 1
'
|:tylM,:!ghefitpai’riW:i f] a i:r,t3lfm c ? f ,r ‘ V 1 ,V■ 1 1 ‘ | ;
'
,
j - bt>v “° tune r '’"V cit x 11 /X* 1
Iff ' 1 ' a wm oi i ow
a urge l.mdownei at mm
T houses, , one the .... d P°g tho
f I For miles «™nd it war, nn
■poj'tn pine iorest JNo mil.s, no
1 J '( *” a ‘ "rp. I". ' 1 ;
a tew acres, l-m aure.mn ;
t o»er.yr, soon o }>.•■•-•» j
% aiVl C!ty L °
jg \'l up at, u by was magic.- sfidc.cr.lv .iro
f..; ; .
f j. j-,7 •'
m "f n '• . 11,S 'p *" X : i
ijabneyworkersit j. *■'■•'■’’; hnr-udto ‘ |
is
|il!. die spirns extractei. from j
s>r**r other arbeios; •* the r™ iart.-r t ; vff '‘ tars i
roHouaml calks the decks of the
iping of tae world. ; ■
ot aiowNi-y-aalth drained from
a,p pore,, but m no country ■
a tree producing lumber, equal
£ r:b, durability and bnr. ity, I
l h:;as found to aarpasa G , -.rgia pine, j
cabin and emilcTi !■ ~e. t :
IU, fir.!
lr.ee to elegant and comfort- (
rre!,!»nso»,t!re.xooa,i]iasl>con (
xl >»>’ T- !
p rancor,navy rise of this to ,-rogresd™ traosf each;
iin tho
I ntiraciivo little city, It m j •
j[’ •co ’des t.vA f>qr«.rc ; j-arks
:t aside and amplepounds ;
Eyed for school and church pur- .
|. 1’lr. EiENiiiKti f-.u: i f dan
Beet I by the year, whose ser- j
were pm-n gratis to th -y " de- |
L
Rtenc-ilisheJ by all the modern ,
te ctural attractions. 1
, . .
V«:„nwns5*!>- V“ li five J y. .js !
A.,,.; , i+c F x ia •
$1,340. I h-T The ; tax . digest . ; shows n , 1 I
f
|i 1 of property, being in UteJO,
’ m
fom i» . satno source we learn ,
fcthe taxable property of Dodge
m K
improvements have been
. >
mntial and the inquiry n
prises, why this magic.growthi*
P lentim* '
frn and lumber district, as
by the following table of ex
*tk Lin, during tho past year:
& 10,000 barrels at $2.50
[rfte, barrel..............^'25,000
2,5G0 barrels, at ?16
Ur l-atwl .............. 40, :
8,500 bales, at 810
lev L. bale-.............349,000
N f 113 Drire’-ens c.d
wnieu wuu saieiy onng
L 4 'iuual exports to 81 .>• !.“ ’.
yoeea ma’teelous, Ifer moral an l
I-cioT interests have not been
T‘,‘' ' A ] sr „ e and commodi
i- ,
kirl which at present I'rof.
Efcier hss a large and flourish
IbchooJ in operation. Iu a>I«li-
- I I
k j
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'
a ‘
‘ .
i. a; r z E M" [I i .. f ‘1 x _ » , ~ .
* 3'; i” j’ W51. ;“ "Jr: "CA ‘ .. § , > , ‘ , ‘
_
._.,._}:J»« r ‘ 5 » ‘ ‘ a ‘3 ‘
L L“, 1- '4" ‘41.}sz x A» A >
...,.-. .. ..,,,4. w.“ —.3v>
A. . ‘
W
VOL XV
tion, tha county lias a splendid free
school.
Almost every denomination is
represented in the churches and
the buildings are handsomei, gdiin
posing. The late Win. E. Dodge,
N. . V :, r v-!.:,!ui ihecer.niv
court house to the county, contrib
uted liberally t Q church buildings
an{ j oa his visits preached
h,c & r: m >. N. t ov> drop of li, -
nor is sold in this county.'
Situated 553 feet above tide wa
tsr, surrounded bv a succession of
.. U : n h {n v To— e m *H,
miles around the far-famed yellow
pi-rc -CQ bnls>'ill wnft-'l Oil ev
ory breeze, has been of such inesti
inabla value in hording diseased
luiarn—-sv.-o’y here is every reqni
iod,™b.,7i,ly health f >d home Public
,.ph 1 gravitating
towards the conclusion that natives
of our extremely Northern Sl&ies,
afflicted with lung troubles, should
not go to the far South in search of
henltb, but rather reek a middle
ground^ far enough South to clear
tlie snow limit, but. not irafficiontly
to reach the malarial district.—
;t:i mis jt! t such ft point. No
sntuv, and ice rarely; no sudden
dropping of the thermometer; cold
enough to be bracing to kill the
walaHal j." germs; .’ far Irom the dump
| o£ coa t; flv0 fop >n a sue
cension of cloud v, dri/mly days; sun
ehine is almost perpetual, and
balmy breezes mnyigorate the
^ ^ j an y ail j bring color to tho
chevii. As if to invite one
fnrlb to eniov the sbtendid climate.
*,.
uudala
U(l) cover.: 1 with peren
ia j ,__ rara> reminds one of a beauti
ful gr.-:-a carpet decked with now
^ thea ft £ owor> No water or
9wam p g are neai:> Your slumbers
am undisturbed by the industrious
mosqnita
E ^;,., na Js Wf H supplied with
burn House is kept oi enduring the
entire year, and its proprietor, Mr.
Vvk N. Lioicli, uses ew-ry exertion
_
.
“
to 7 8 p B g* w <i f s :!j p ; i "g, ,l
was des>gmd anu 1 bunt to pkas
the mney as well as furnish every
comfort ior fme hoahh-aeckox «>:>d
h»urmt. D m three stones high,
surmomited by & cupola, broad ver
anuoa surround the building and
^PHoiows hallwsys divide the inte
rior space. Cue hundred bedrooms,
c ‘- - int i' - r ‘' IS > ry dining-ioom,
spea*ing-tuOv.s, HUM _ If, and l floors. in lac- c 8 «, iy
..
i«re-yuiiapreveMiit uid coovem
adJ ‘° a* co “‘ £ort * ,t0
gnosta.
II >» ‘f’f >» U«P>»3 . «“>
.to I-reporaens.
*teu oa a inoun i. fiom
the observatory a splendid view of
the surrounding country is obtain
e l. Th shuareis utprc.-A'ut nu'',-i
the management oi Mr. W. V.
Ashhurn, but on account of lao
’ 8 on his time from his
' n ’ val > 1 f-as cud vs
ried interests, the hotel will be sold
1 mad fanned to a competent
and reliabb hotel man. This is
superior opportunity ' for one wish
ip u ; •: , an viTt „
,
e, it would sa m, is . an outlet
C or 1
Sey aJeyaml g ^ ;
Adj d
1 T rrtee! h'- WU ouZ; l
secures .he ,ar ia and house. I
for : ou.o ; -
genera^ soil and gemal chmate
Your tr: rite iirmis .....
:
! after th o first year, it you are short
j of cash, meantime woi'x is always plant fruit to be trees, had.
| la tho
j have your pigs and chickens, sheep
j and cattle growing around. A fow
ear8 0 f toil, and, if you have
j To those who have capital to m
vest ia naval store industries, great
g ^.aOi. 1 ,' .a
ti0nS ’ iEaCien3e profitS 0311 be renI :
T ° th ?* ^ose mewls wiU
i a winters sojourn at ^The
! Uplands,” or the l i ; otde
-
, Eastman, Edward Bristang,
; Member of t of Mich
’g'" 13 &n ^ , otn-rs hu>e - done, i S no
*
, to Eastman- but to tllose of ntaited
means, whose health has been bro
ken by severe Northern winters or
EASTMAN. GEOl C?T HUliS))AYi JAN. (» t n
business strain, who desire a self
.
sustaining home with ft delightful
climate and fruitful soil, we say
Eastman is the place you are seek
ing.
The soil is a sandy loam, with a
clay sub- ; >11. red \. !i.! ■ re ponding
■eadily to manure retains its
for many succeeding years. It would
be dilucult to find a soil and eli
m
fruit-errowing and stock chicly raiding. -
The farm products are corn,
cotton, oats, rye, peanuts, potatoes,
sugar cane and rice.
Amon^ the fruits are peaches,
where in the State does the famed
LeCont pear do better. Grapes
could be made to cover the sm
rounding sunny hills equalling
! those of France. Figs of Italian
i flavor, strawberries, can be had al
i j most gm waterme.on M» entire year, can ami be the grown of
- prodigious size and of excellent 11a
j vegetables, vor. It is useless all to name here over be
j for can sue
| cessfully produced.
| Hon. "Walter T. McArthur is one
! of the most success'ul
men of this section and a reliable
real estate agent, l>o controls
bodies of finely timbered lauds,
splendid farming properties and
city residences.
He especially recommends some
fine lauds from which tho timber
has been taken and is ready forth*.'
plough. He will sell the iand
contract to make whatever
meats are desired at reasonable
prices, eo|t home can be prepared
ready for the occupation of the im
say, correspond
with W T. McArthur, at Eastman,
Oa.
a.mosKEAG company
is one of the largest in the State;
owns 60,000 acres of land, cuts GO,
000 foot of lumber daily; employs
250 men and has 15 miles of rail
road iu oporation.
Mr. W. 13 . .Stilhvell is Tivsidmit,
coL j.t.C oieoni, o««u
ger, and Dr. E. II. Bacon, Secre-:
tary and Treasurer. Parties desi
ring pitcli pine by the cargo shuold
corre ip0 nd with thorn.
a fevy of the suocEk'SFUl business'
OQIR ‘ .V . j> pigher" Newman dry goods-Dr.
H u uKmriotor of
j> as fo aau ( ] ru , T s t ore; Ifi D. Gantry,
j n9 m~ince; Hcrnnan & Herr- j
’ , ^ ’j an '. l J. 1). Horrmau gAn’eral M. I
’ ^ n ev ' oa & q g ’ te i
me rc mU( . 0>
fersox al mention.
r>..r »•:. i. OI) at^onmvs at
,^ r ^ Whiddon Mayor II, J. Sapp
d Ali)er a ]>. Eason, J. D.
Horrmau, li C. Milner an,l W. F.
Harrell Wo aotno*lodge | oonrte
si , )9 tl ,, Ja , ho MKS ood
j omTO ,. No Saji.
A LEGESD OF THE FLIGHT INTO
EG ITT.
“Arise, and take the child and
his m ■>' her into Egypt,” and they
fled through the i
0 £jj. ( , y \
The next day they came ir,on a
man corn> Some ^ y8 teri
influence attracted, him to the
tnveler il a V oler9 , ‘ } From wm f _ 3 countenance r (11 . * 1|innro
of e the i i mother, or from tho earnest
e yes of the child she bore in her
ing gleam of
te- He was
‘ “ to ^ auc J P enuit ’® d
them to cross his field, and
yet
f OTecl X Qlyi f
: :i *
h. >y were pursued by enemies,
>■yum it tney come this wav,
• the sweet, love voice, -and ask if
~
<>j s h a c=: gay you did not
this way, 2 was tho eager interrup
tion.
j -Nay,” said tho blessed-mother,
“y OQ must sjieak only’ the
g 3y . <They passed me while I was
sowing this corn.’”
j oarnoy< Tho ncit morning the
sower wa3 amazo d to find that his
n had sprung up and ripened
intheni ght VUiUehe wa- r
at ft in astonishment, Herod’s offi
cer3 ro(le up Rnd que Btioncd him.
j i.V°Sm. ], f »,
. -j _________ j
1 Tuen the officera moved on » fceI '
ing s ire that the persons seen by
r were no' tha Holv ^ fami- *'
tjr 8Uch fui8 . raust
n P® corn
have been sown months before,
InH 0 *Cxjnnob.
MARK TWAIN’S LOST IDEA.
Mark Twain says that the fun
iest thing he ever wrote came to an
untimely ent ^ ail< * was eutii« .j
to h' the dcni world. nhcn It was he in was his earl^ h u
uay,, -
porter on the Chronicle of Vir
ttiuia City, Nevada. In those days,
when the saloon was the social
opening of
each new one a matter of gen r.l
interest, if was the custom for the
proprietor of a new venture m
Inpud refreshments to send a bas
ket of hia choicest wares to the
to return tho compliment by giving
a glowing account of the opening,
One day a basket of unusually
choice wines from a saloon that
was to bo of an unusually aristo
cratic order inspired Mark with a
hnUknt idea He ™toa few
lines m sa.ught good Ln 0 lis , ..
the next began to be pretty badly
mixed, and as he represented one
bottle after another as having,beon
sampled, approved and emptied,
he drifted on in. o worso and woi so
until ho finally brought
up into an inextricable tangle of
incohoroncy, such ns might be sup
posed to possess the brain of n
nmn who had drank a basket
mixed wine. But when the paper
came out ha searched it over
over for liis cherished article. It
was not there. Bat he did find a
paragraph, setting forth in. the
most commonplace, conventional
way imaginable the fact that a
kofc of wines had been roc>-<ived
from Mr. -, that they wero
very fine, and that “we bespeak for
him the liberal patronage that he
deserves.” With lire in his eye
and profanity on his lips Mark
snarled oa an investigation, and
«on settled tho blame uixm tho
head of one of the printers.
“Why,” said the fellow, “I could
not make head nor tail out of the
ropy, and I concluded that Mr.
tah ...... when he wrote it I lic-.rd ^ tl.o
say last week tha: n ue
drunk again lied discuoig.i him,
and I thought if that stuff got in
i it.......lwrotetK! logo sure.
ton S
*** «>»•«» ra
place for him if I could.”
B-More this honest friend, whot;e
zeal for his welfare had not left a
piece of his prize article ns big as
a nickel, Mark could say no more.
But lie could not reproduce it. it
had been the swift and brilBaut in
spiration of the moment, aud
completely ovedhe gone. But he idonrm d
) oas toto of v, hat Ire
ways believed to ho hia most bid
pro.lacUon.-ritt»bargli
pM*.
1 GREAT DRAWBACK IN TilE
SOITII.
“A fall of snow like this would
be worth money down where I
live,” sail passenger from the
South, looking out of the car win
do’v upon tho wintered earth.
“How is that? ’
“Why, for tho chicken business.
in th * f.°. ult r/ ,ino myself
, ' ?£
» now Itke that would , stay on
ihQ 8«>and a month would save me
at Ieftgt 100 pulleta and a dozen or
, » .
.
, « •
, . .
1 ‘ '
,
'
I “You bot it is. There is nothing
a two . inch faII of finow if
p re ^ tbe poultry business in a
by colored people. The lack of
1 3UOW Ls one of the great
tho chicken business in
the South .’’-Chicago Herald
----
THIS IS A GOOH Sdl’OrilHC.
A sleeper _ is . one who a.cepn.
sleeper is that in which the sleeper
Bleeps, A sleeper is that on which
the sleeper which carries
j sleeper whilo ho sleeps
tL f sleeper tue sleeper cf ‘ r i ie «
tae fcloe Iicr over tuo bleeper
imtil the sleeper which
c f' n ^® 6le V‘ r y X l ‘ ; <s ‘ '■' i
BCC Pf r 0D<J i tho bIoc ‘f‘ r m
tbs sleeper by etukiug the . sleeper
nnAw tbe steeper, and there is
longer any sleeper sleeping in
! iperon the sleeper.—Son
Union.
j & bi loh ,,---- 9 v 19 wi, l J ou D(r{[
for , 9 , t, u hws j apjictiU*,
OB * l»« ® a « ot
bz i %
•;-■>• Price-10 sn 4 75 e'mt* : r
*♦»« Vo ■■ f B«r *
> mao.*
iilEElfl
*
Compelled by a limit'
llmig Forty
Dr. L. H. Greer, who resides on
Ik f arm a few miles from Aurora,
takes a great interest in cattle aud
has on hia place * choice Alderney
bnll that cost him *300. The doc
tdr Las been veiy proud of the ani
nuil, hut his affections were changed
a few days ago by the decided
fondness tha animal displayed for
him. Being down in Ins woods
pasture, looking niter his cattle,
the bull concluded to exhibit its
....... «■*»•*
teutous bellow, it lowered ite head
and rushed at the doctor, who bare
ly had time to avoid its rude horns
by climbing the nearest tree- His
escape seemed to enrage the mad
dmied animal tho more, and while
pawSoR up the tr„.e„ ground and
bellowing with fury, it charged
against the slender tree that held
d ue frightened man beyond the
j reach of horns and hoofs, and al
most shook him from Ins uncom
fortnble retreat. No measures
seemed to pacify the furious crea
tore, but every effort in that dims*
tion only added to its intense an
g er> and for four long hours it
guarded that tree with a determi
| u „tion that dismayed its almost
| frozen owner, who soon began to
realize that the cold, together with
j | |,is cramped position, would render
him unable to retain his place of
• refuge much longer. Finally the
j ( { ea entered his mind to gratify, in
js^aoe manner, the dogged bull's <Us
{.sirs for destruction, and, pulling
offhis coat he dropped it at the
f aat of bis dreaded Adversary. No
FOOner Did the brute behold the
! c out than its passions grew wilder
and it gored and pawed that coat
until its tattered remnants wore
scattered on the ground for many
yards. When not enough of tho
garment was left to vent its’rage
upon t ho bull became docile(once
8 hiverfna prisoner to descend
£ Pom t j lft tree and run to his homo,
1 and thaw out before a cheerful lire,
mm us a g 1 coat iim; l.ute m
} " ;l '"“ d ao L t J* R te,( “ b , ,!l ?‘
8 “ s “, ” 8
.
| '. brute, but a kneetior regard foe its
abilitte:, to ireo good game.- Ciu
t; innau Lntpim r .__^
the nearest STAR TO THE
EAUT1I.
Alpha Ceutaurii, io leading star
in the constellation of the Centaur,
is tho nearest on the earth, bo
fnr ng is Lnown. Its dietanoo is
usually placed at from 20,000,000.
OOIHjOO to 20,000,000,000,000 miles
1 .com tho earth. A star called
Sixty-one Cygni is classed as eec
ond in distance, being put at 54,-
780,900,000,000 miles distance from
our globe. Most of tho stars, liow
ever, are millions of times further
jaway from us than these. Light
.travels about 186,000 miles in
every second of time, and yet with
j tins inconceivably rapid velocity it
! would take light about twelve years
> to traverse the space sepaiating > 1.5
( from that star. From the greater
I***™* <>* tbfrataw light would b*
many centuries iu reaching us —
Globe-Democrat.
CHOOHING ORANGES.
The very sweetest and
oranges are the black or rush I
^ ^uit Pick out the dingiest
'oranges in the box, and you
^ lSi « **sl Another way
Wiect the best, ' 1 W< because F h6
are
the thickest skin and more
of joice. Thick-skinned
brao S M are to *’« dr p
either weigh less because oi having
m ma ch skin, or beceuae of the
poverty of the juice in these par
t specimens. A slight fre.cz
. or) tbf lw caa8ea this eon.il
j j Jon 1Q otherwise fine fruit.
De-lcc-ta-larc.
1 1 „ fcrinfc0t . i„ a short’lime tbe-e
. ril . eille< | p ar ticl«s become titled with
parasites, w
!.rient? M rii-V-’ < ’ '' ITriot it- 1 ' c!”XXZ
Remove all f.m.1 particles with
j a sad quh , or toolU.pick, with Dclectalave, w..b yourteeHi aud pm
gums
vent tin. icrmeutanon. For sale by
1
I
' Says an Eminent Physician.
‘I have used for 20 years the prep.
anuion known HrarifleW’n Female
Regulator. It is the best, com bin a
• !t known for finaledirsases. For
partteelars mite to Um Bradfleid
* Bwgulator Co., Atlanta, iia.
TfOri
a ci imii]
R8Was
In ?»»*■ 18jl
Genoa.' |B tke I
which was
post, to the present town j
*>• A. Wilbur, now a n of
T^thT U.uc Ono stormy
aflernoon in December, 18G8, Wil.
bur hitched aphis horse to carry
t.b© mail north over the line ol Ins
ZZTuTSSTJlSXt'Z
sluKlon ant i untimely disappearance
has been a mystery ever since. It
™ ,,‘ i Uni ‘ihS Sid thd?
Wftr liut on a time, had made
away wlUl Wilbur and his entire
outlit, but the recent communions
“w,g~ “Xu“Tt£°Sp'K
0 f tho Secret Service bus arrested a
saloon.keeper in Arkansas charged
with vt Mating the; Internal Revenue
“ 0 Knment ^SUmc
hig confinetIiont he has made a con
p-ssion to the killing of Wilbur and
tue robbing of the mail.
lie stated to the detective that
hunger and cold drove him to the
desperate deed. lie wry laid the ear
lier and knocked him in the head
with a hatchet. lie hauled the body
a number of miles until, coming to
a creek, lie cut a hole in the ice and
pushed it iu the stream, lie con¬
tinued southward on his journey,
stopping at farm houses, until he ar.
rived at Leavenworth, which was
then a small place. There he dis¬
posed of the horse and has since led
a wandering life. He finally settled
in I’roscoU, Ark., the scene of his re¬
cent arrest and imprisonment,
ERRORS that are human.
To yield to immaterial trifles.
To endeavor to mould all disposi
lions alike.
To look for perfection in our own
actions.
To look for judgment and experi¬
ence in youth.
To believe only what our Unite
minds can grasp.
'To expect uniiormity of opinion in
this world.
To expect tube able to understand
eve To rylhing. of
measure the enjoyment
others by our own.
Not to make allowances for the in
firinithgi of others
To consider everything impossible
tli'.G we eauuot perform.
To worry ouraei vis and others
with wliut can not he remcnied.
It is a great mistake to set up
your own standard of right and
wrong and judge people accordingly.
LIVES cm lEARS.
St. Louis, Doc. 19.—A letter from
Sassakawa, Seminole Nation, Indian
Territory, gives an account of the
death there on Dec. 5, of Mrs.
Susanna Warren, perhaps the oldest
person m the United States, if not in
the world. She was born in the old
town of St. Augustine, Fla., in 1750.
She was born a slave, and was the
property of Spanish mustcis until
1818, when she, with other Spanish Pensa¬
slaves, fled from the town of
cola when it was taken by General
Jackson. She lived in the Seminole
country from then until the second
j treaty of peace with the Hennrioles,
j when she was regarded and removed as their com¬ with
mon propeity Indian was Territoiy. She
them to the
leaves one daughter living who re.
sides in Austin, Tex., and is in her
97th year. She leaves many grand,
children here, some of them being
nearly 70 yearsold.
Iu a Western village a charming,
well*preserved widow bad boon
courted and won by a yhysician.
She had children; among them a
crippled boy, who had been petted,
, - f . , , i uh !I ( wot I
^ creak freedom in debate”
j | wt(ldi ^ ay Wtt8 appro aching,
a nd it was time the children should
^ weia t o have a new
fattier. Calling the Crippled boy,
B#ld; -Georgie, I am g.nng to
d( , ^ething before long that I
would hke talk about to you."
-Well, ma, what is it?”
intendina to marry Dr.
Jones *,/, iu a few day* ^ and—”
,. , f a j Does Dr.
, .
*
.. * ill h . ,.„ ath ' faiie(]
. articulate .. a response.
(’atarih Cured, health and swc&t
breath secured by Bhilob’u catarrh
remedy. Price 50 cents. Nasal in
jeeter free. For sale by Hcrnnan &
Henman.
“Nerve food” is advertised.
This is the kind of food tho man
eats who wants to occupy two neats
iu a crowded railroad car. .
That hacking cough can he quu k
ly cured by Shiloh’s Cure. We can
guarantee it. For tale by Herman
«fc Hermann
Shiloh’s Cough and Consumption
Cure is sold Gy us as a guarantee.*It
cnies Consumption. For sale by
yan I A Herrrnan.
. Wt-<
, . I C„r
BP If
sir 1
. .i i:::j; phy.
lias recovered his
Hi (laughter, whom lie had
* for 9 dead. He
years as
her a wild maiden of the for
llly tinkers in the ways of civ
Til.
HPTr recovery was accomplished iu
a wonderful way. A hunter, says a
correspondent of the Globe-Demo¬
crat, while wandering in ,the depths
of the Salmon River mountains, far
from the habitations of man, saw be¬
fore him a beautiful lake in the most
grand, widest natural settings—giant
cedars with pendant festoons of moss
and towering columns of granite.—
A fair girl, unadorned, unclothed,
except by a fle»cy wealth of golden
hair, stood waist deep in the water*.
She looked witli a nervous stare that
betrayed a wild nature, and sprang
from the- water ami disappeared in a
black, yawning cavern. There might
lie such a tiling as a mermaid, but
he did not believe in ghosts.
He hastened to the camp. It was
dark when tie found Ins comrades by
a log lire. They wore old hunters,
ami knew not fear. The story of a
lone girl in that gloomy' solitude was
related. The flickering flames east
shadows more wierd; when the owl
hooted and the echoes died away tho
stillness seeiuod oppressive. The
three nitnrods visited the lake next
morning. The sanio fair creature
was standing at the foot of the cliff
beyondl tho liter, ml was clotted in
the skins of wiki animals; iter hair
was blown by Lite light breeze into
fluffy ringlets about her shoulders.—
Tho fair girl was startled, looked for
a moment about her and fled.
They told their story In the valley,
and, witli the new.: paper man, started
vul again in search ot tho niuidcn.—
Alter hours of search and foil they
discovered an entrance to a sulitor
vam-an cave, near the lake. They
halloed; an echo answered as from a
well. A stir in tho passage, and a
frightful visage was seen, with tan¬
gled strings of gray red hair dangling, glar¬
with blinking, watery eyes
ing, as a ‘.'coble, trembling Indian tot¬
tered forward. Ills attitude was that
of defiance us ho placed himself in
the door of bis dungeon, hut the with
eiod form and palsied arm were a
raise rattle caricature of tho warrior of
11 fly years ago. lie was pushed to
one side, and the reckless men rushed
forward, guided by a torched, through
a winding tunnel, into a cave with
many angular recesses and uneven,
nof and walls. (Joiners and columns*
divided the vast interior into apart
m cuts. One of the divisions was the
girl’s bed room. Seated on a robe,
in convulsions ol fright, was a well
developed maiden of twelve years,—
Thu torch dazzle 1 her sight, and she
turned her lace from tho intruders
and bowed her head and sobbed bits
terly. They did not approach her,
and turned away and passed from
her presence, sympathy, filleij with which sorrow her aud in¬
moved with
tense emotions seemed to communis
cate to even these thoughtless men
of the plains. The withered old In.
ditin was found to he dumb. When
addressed in the Nez I’erco ludian
language he could understand, but
replied only by signs.
From the description given of tho
girl, only by certain marks upon her
body, Dr. Holbrook recognized her
as Ids daughter, and left for the
mountains to bring her to his home.
When he tried to embrace her ho was
hurled back as if he had tried to em¬
brace a tigress. 'ITie Indian was ad.
dressed in his native tongue by one
of the cowboys, and gave signs, after
some delay, that he understood the
situation, lie communicated to the
frightened girl by signs and grunce,
arid she settled down on the robe and
Stared witli wild eyes at those around.
As the girl can speak no language
but a sort of pantomime, the father
determined to bring the old Indian
with him to Colorado.
The story of the girl’s life is situs
pie. In 1»77 Joseph’s warriors raid*
ed the country iu the vicinity of >Saln
rnon l iver, and carried jaway Hol¬
brook's wife and child. The mother
was released, but the daughter kept
in captivity. The old Indian, who
had been condemned as a sorcerer
and liis tongue cut out, ran away
with the child one night, and kept
her with him until recovered in tho
manner narrated.
A lact farewell—A shoemaker
giving up his busuie-as.
Y'oked garments are much worn
— By oxen. They ure gored.
A trade union—A marriage be¬
tween business rivals to promote
trade.
Balioolujdrm to little Josis:
“Where is the North pole?” “At
the top of the map, mam.”
The tailors ami dressmakers are
the individuals who dwell moat oa
tho etomal fituess ot things.
For Lame Hack, side or chest, use
Shiloh's Porous Piaster. Price 25
cents. For sale by iienmuL <E Herr-,
uiun.
Croup, Whooping Cough ami Bron
chi'.as luiiiiediate. r relieved by Shi.
loh’s cure. For sale by litrmuu dt
Herman.