Newspaper Page Text
TOCCOA NEWS
E. SCHAEFER, Proprietor.
TAMES W. HARRIS ... Editor
B. F. BARFIELD,... Publisher.
TERMS-
One year in advance.... fsl.50
Six months............ 75
fOCCOA CITY GA. r : : : :MAY 6 , 1887
Wedding cakes have been import¬
ed from London for a marriage to
take place in New York next week.
---
The Ainericus Recorder says: Judge
Willis, of the Muscogee Circuit, is
not a man to be fooled with. On
Saturday morning the 30th ult., at
Buena Vista, he fined Lawyer Mc-
Corkle, of Amerieus, $200 and sent¬
enced him to twenty days in jail for
contempt of court.
The Atlanta Journal, says: The
members of the Georgia Press Asso¬
ciation have been tendered an excur¬
sion from Way cross to Fernandina,
Fla., on the Brunswick and Western
railroad, and the Brunswick and In¬
land Steamboat Company. The ex¬
cursion is proposed to take place di¬
rectly after the adjournment of the
Press Convention, which meets at
Valdosta on Wednesday next, the
11th of May.
The St. Louis Republican says, that
the great railway lines are pleading
with the Interstate Commission for
the privilege of carrying through
traffic at very low rates. Let the
Commission listen to their reasonable
request and grant it. And if the
Commission will not do this, then let
the lines take the matter in their own
bandsand carry through traffic at very
low rates any how, Commission or no
Commission. They have a right to
do it. The roads have a right to carry
through traffic across the continent
or around the world for nothing; nay,
they may offer a premium on it, if
their transporting complaisance ex¬
tends that far. But when they clam¬
or for the privilege of exacting very
high prices on short hauls, to recoup
the losses of very low charges or no
charges at all on long hauls—that is
a horse of another color.
--- 11 • --
THE ADVANCE OF CHOLERA.
The New Orleans Medical Journal
says: “Step by step the cholera is
creeping through America, gathering
force as it marches. Beginning at
Buenos Ayers, by the latter part of
December it will have crossed the
Argentine Republic and gained foot-
hold in Chili. A telegram from Puna-
ma, dated March 9th, tells us of its
ravages in that State, and we may
take a hint of the extent from the
fact that the “nation concede a pen-
sion to the families of all who may
die attending cholera patients.” The
same authority informs us that the
poople of the isthmus are growing
alarmed, and that \essels from Uru¬
guay, the Argentine Republic, Chili
and Peru are not allowed to enter the
ports of Nicaragua, Honduras or Pan-
ama. These arc serious signs, and
matters of import to other states
sideLouisiana. Forshouhl the plague
reach the isthmus and Mexico, there
wil! be small hope or this city escap-
ing, and the flood gates of New Or-
leans once passed, the Mississippi
valley, n atul indeed the whole , . country,
may b© inundated with disease before
there is time to realize the danger.”
WASHINGTON LETTER.
Washington, D. C., May 2, ’87.
jSditok News: Under the direc-
tion of Commissioner Coleman the
Department of Agriculture has , been
® n ff a ^» e I du.ing i .i the p.Lt f year in • a
“
careful study of the question relating
to . the manufacture of oleoiM^anne , •
ami other substitutes for l.utter, which
during the past industVv few years has become
an an important- important industry in m some .ome cpn. .ec
tions of the country. Chemical and
•
microscopical . have been
tests m pro-
gre.foraeve.-a, months The results
of the observations w.ll be of great
benefit to the consumers of butter,
and of interest _ to the general
reafler.
During the course of the investiga-
tions it has been ascertained that a
large majority of the oleomargarine
factories are run upon the strickly
business principle, of securing the
largest possible returns for the ct pi-
tal invested, and the question of pub¬
lic health, seems to have been entire¬
ly ignored. It has been common in
some of these establishments to util-
lze the carcasses of horses, dogs and
swine, and the manufacturers have
not been in the least particular as to
the age or condition of the meat, as
by the use of chemical preparations,
offensive smells are destroyed. The
Commissioner in his report says: “Too
much in condemnation of these prac¬
tices cannot be said, and so long as I
am Commissioner of Agriculture, just
so long will I raise my voice
against the continuance of the evil.
There is a great deal of capital in¬
vested in this enterprise, to be sure,
and particularly in the West, but that
does not justify its manufacture, in
my opinion, for it is aoainst the peo-
pie, and should lie frowned down.
Chem : cal and microscopical tests
have been in progress under the su¬
pervision of Profs. Wylie and Taylor,
of the Agricultural Department, for
several months, and the result of
their observations will be of great
benefit to the consummers of butter,
I trust they will be scattered broad-
cast, anti bear good fruit.”
During the administration of Pres¬
ident Grant a very beautifully de¬
signed card, having in its upper left
hand corner a finely excuted steel
plate engraving of the White House,
was adopted for general use in issu¬
ing invitations to dinners, and recep¬
tions at the Executive mansion. Sub-
quently a new design was adopted
and the stock of old cards was placed
in the room in which waste material
is stored. In looking about the apart¬
ment recently, the President chanced
to discover the cards and he at once
resolved to turn them to account, in
supplying the persistent and never
ceasing demand for his autograph.
The cards were removed to his private
office, and during the past week a
very large number of persons who
have written to the President for his
autograph have been surprised to re¬
ceive one of the beautiful cards with
the signature “Grover Cleveland-.”
The fashionable amusement of the
city now, is what is termed a “paper
hunt.” Almost every clear day there
is held a “meeting.” The hunt con¬
sists in appointing persons as hares
who are given a lead distributing
along their route scraps of paper,
The object being for the hounds,—
who are the main body of the party—
to follow the trail of the hares and if
possible overtake them before thev
reach the finish which is generally
about 5 miles distance and near some
residence where refreshment await
their arrival, and as the sport is one
calculated to sharpen the appete, due
justice is always done to the colla-
tion.
The Grant relics which have been
for several months safely guard©. 1 in
one of the private rooms of the Na¬
tional Museum, are now being placed
on public exhibition. To-day
handsome plused-liued cases filled
with articles from the collection were
placed in the north hall ot the Alnse-
urn, near the main entrance. They
contain the presentation swo.ds, goid-
headed canes, caskets, medallions,
any many other costly and elegant
articles presented by different people
at different times to Genl. Grant
many of these articles are souvernirs
or Ins trip around the world. There
is a splendid collection of Japanese
gold coins of huge size, heirur valued
at ¥O,000. There also . .
are invitation
cards, menu cards ami reminders of
entertainments given in his honor,
en .^ ravei * on gold plates. II.
I 1 1 ill ticn live at home, and make more
III; nev at work f r us, than at anv
f | 113 hmgelse in the woul. Capital not
” needed; you ase started fr.Both
■ ' 9exes ’ ali a ses - A,1 v one can d the
- -
work Large earn mgs sure from first start
rwiy out*andtem» ftee. ltener rot delay,
.iSum'if y.Yifr? Se ™ h°wi“ 5 o"^“a!
on e- H Hallett, & Co., Po t and, Maine
-
PAT ENTS* ^
?}??/. Cr ^ J/e?llle?'SO rr t ??.
.
P AT£KT ATTORNEY 4S0L’R
0FFWES> 925 F 81 REET>
P . 0 . Bo? 50 ._ Washington o. C.
formerly O’ the Eraming Corps, L . 8 . Patent
Practices befiire the Patent Office. U. S. Su
preme Court and thc Fc(lcrrtl Courts -
Information cheerfully and prompt’y fur-
„ , n . , ... .
WHAT fclLS THE NATION'I
The Arerage Length of Life De¬
creasing—Not Pestilence—
Not Famine—All our
own Fault,
Modeiiit Cooking atcd Motv
ESN Living have brought it
O
OTL It comes upon us una-
wares. The patients have
pains about the chest and sides,
and sometimes in the back.
They feel dull and sleepy; the
mouth hits a bad taste, especi¬
ally in the morning. A sort
of sticky slime collects about
the teeth. The appetite is poor.
There k a feeling like a heavy
load on tlle stoinach . go inet j me9
a faint, all-gone sensation at
the pit cf the stomach which
does Hot satisfy, The
eyes are sunken, tne hands
and feet become cold and feel
clammy. After a while &
cough ge ts in, at £rst dry, it'is but
after R f ew mo n t i 3 at-
tended 3 - Wltll . , gl’eemsh colored
a
expectoration. rnl J. fl© DatlCDt .
leels r -t tired 3 -n til© Wiilie, P.nd .
sleep does not seem to afford
any rest After a time he be-
comes nervous, irritable and
gloomy, and ha3 evil forebod¬
ings. There is a giddiness, a
sold of whirling eensatlon in
the head when rising np sud¬
denly. The bowels become
costive; the skin is dry and
hot at tunes; the blood become?
thick and stagnant; the white?
of the eyes become tinged with
veliow; the kidney secretion?
becomes scanty and high col¬
ored, depositing a sediment
after standing. There is fre¬
quently food, a spitting up of the
sometimes with, a sour
taste and sometimes with a
sweetish taste; this is fre¬
quently attended with palpi¬
tation of the heart and Asth¬
matic symptoms; the vision be¬
fore comes the impaired, with spots be¬
eyes; there is a feel¬
ing of great Ail prostration and
weakness. of these symn-
toms are in turn present. It
is thought that nearly one-half
of our population has this dis¬
ease in -ome of its varied forms,
fchaker Extract of Roots (Sei-
gel’s Syrup) changes the fer¬
ments of the Digestive organs so
as to convert the food we eat imo
a form that will give nourish¬
ment to the feeble body, aim
rood health is the consequence.
The effect cf th’13 remedy k
simply marvelous. Million f
upon millions of bottles hav.
been sold in this country, aiM
the testimonials in favor of ih
curative powers are ovei
whelming. called Hundreds of go
diseases under yano.
names are the result of inu
crestion, and when this one
nouble is removed the othei
Diseases Ysxtish, for they a rc
but symptoms of the real
malady. Testimonials
from thousand»
of people speasmec highly of
ite curative properties prove
^ a doubt Sold bv ^
dl’ufftfifita.
The Gr ^at Mexican Seed Corn,
“The earliest, heaviest, soundest and most
pro ific vari ty of corn ever _iown in Ameri-
C; .”
, 1 *b; T * 1 d f.’ s ‘Hue ’^ted mony of * we.y<‘ whom papers pnb-
m em m t -a, to we have
H ampie aekages 1 to tus‘i*:
>..rpasses ticma i ns, and ... is lust
,, ""it is^superVirfo^IIVother^ar
j i e w”—
ou na <• rn w teZ v v nl'tuml ‘Tt , v i i n
rftio . am
£.' rt^!Xr '’n/h'-x T “;
of Wars July *w and Mo rii ened before fvost nd'
“It D highly reo'mm d bv
ttio-»c wh-> have pied it,”—Ohio Ksixisi’orv
We have he rd thiscon high y s-okc n of bv
the Press — dverti-er, Moulton, Ala. “Tt
w iByi Id in our cliimnetwo crops a year.”—
‘
„
Z « K'SS l ce
from 50 tc 75 hnshels of
makes V rger, and corn-meal longer for <ar family and thinn r husk.'and
use sweeer and
better for feeding when cut green than other
varieties.
4t i. That it’will grow add produce a profit¬
able crop on ground where other corn would
not grow to mntur ty. It ripens early and is
not liable to be cut i y f' ost.
Our eorn has been selected with the greatest
t STs"lh'S'byt.l lvc ‘ T earbroken off
We Warrant Every Grain to Grow
The increase yield per acre over the okl va-
rietie- will pay fo the seed 20 times over; be-
sides, every farmer that plants tins year will
ha ve a large demand for seed a f good prices.
Teems: By mail, tost pair', one dohai
pound, pu 1 up in neat packages; 15 packages
for $ 8 ; 50 packages f«>r 815: 100 pa< kages §20.
Terms cash. Registered lexers at nr risk.
Address all < rders to
I.IXDSaY it ITAFL T R 1 N,
march 25—2ur Winfield. Kansas.
Avoirs the run::
To any ntw subscriber, or to any old sub¬
scriber who will pay all indebtedness, we will
make the following
Unparalleled OJJor:
Xo. 1.— Toccoa Xews..... . ... $1.50
Xo. 2.—The American Agriculturalist
(Engli’h or G< rma> ), 18^7 . ........... 1.50
No. 3—The A. A. New Poult y Book,
for uveryb dy. 256 p tee-. 100 Illus
tratious. Most complete work eve. pub¬
lished............................. 1.00
Xo 4.—Engrav’ngs, “Forres of our
Farmer Piesidents. 11x18, issued dur¬
ing 1867. E ch woith............... l.CO
No. 5.—The same issued during 1886,
f >rward d post-pui I, i 1 a lube prO[ ared
fer the purpose. Eachwo’lh.t .... 1.0C
Xo. 6 —A; t elesdescribii g theEngrav
idents,’’ ings of the “Homes of our Fanner . res¬
written express v for this p r-
pose by James Parton. DonaldG Mitch¬
ell (lk Marvel), p.inted on Gnu d p. per.
Co???pa?iion ro? i? alls .
No 7.—A magnificent portrait of Gen-
oral Grant from 1 is 1 st sitting. Gr. nd
Cabinet size, 18 by 24 inches and en-
graved at large expense, especially for
i subscribers to this combi nation, andsui>
plied to no other persi 11 s. Prie....... 1.00
[fOTulf JS&*bifc b r^« $,f.
1.00
VVe Will furnish . , nil .. the , above, . post- .
-paid for.......................... - - - - - *9 * ■ Of,
Send SIX cents to 751 Broadway NrW loll
for miiilin.tr yon spec men co; y of tlu Amer -
can *Aun<-ulturist, English or German, s: e i-
men proofs of the Engravings, and specime n
pages of Poultry Look.
p cp rifemont ^ ot c- >
J ante
’Tv--I
i i
R. & D.R. COMP’Y
Condensed Sehdule
IN EF1ECT MAR. 13 1886.
o
Trains run by 75th *3. end an Time—one hour
faster than 9t th Meridian time.
-o--
O OI> .< »KTH.
NOUTH BOCNB, miLv.
Xo. 51 o. S.1
I
r* Atlanta -I 00 j m xo 40 a m
> ( Gainesville, CO 12 “ :;8 «
• Lula, -.s 36 “ 00 “
Toccoa 10 39 “ o\ 01 p m
Seneca 11 37 “ 12 56 4
Ea-ley 12 36 a m 2 10 44
Tt Greenville 1 02 “ 2 32
tr Spark Gaffney nburg (M 17 " 3 -t3 “
. CO 11 “ 4 30 “
“ Gastonia rf 20 *• 6 41 4
it Chariot e lO 05 “ 6 -5 *
Ar ivc S Salisbury ilie ’O 41 “ 01
ates 12 40 { m
" Ashvi le 6 55 44
“ Hot Springs 9 39 “
11 Raleigh 1 50 p m *6 50
r ; Dany Goldsboro He 8 4 . 40 2 a “ m 9 1 47 20 i ; ‘ 3*2
Gre n boro I 10 10 1 28 ‘
a R c mond 3 ,5 6 4o
3
: Lv c king 1 05 2 t 0 “
r Charlottesville co 30 “ 4 10 “
: W sli ngton oc • 2 t “ 8 30 “
: Baltimore 11 25 “ 10 03 ]• m
New Philadelphia York w 00 a ni 12 35 “
o 20 “ | 3 20 “
<
-o-
Cr( > \'r ^OTTH
SOUTH B'JUNDD. DAILY.
No. 50 ) X . 51.
Le.ve New York 4 a m 4 30 pm
1 uhno’e a 7 6 57
p 9 it 9 42 “
w«sh ng-on 11 1 (>0 “
3 p m 3 00 “
44 Lv ic.iburg 5 5 15
a n:
“ 2 20 “
8 05
10 44 9 48
n a 3 *5 00 n in
Lai -igh 5 p 3 U145 pu-
A ff ne 8 ii 3 ;
O
‘ bt ff es iHe
1 ? tw -"? v 3 5 1 ! a m
1 cave c t M . : 1 P 01
“ Ga-ouia X 1 l
“ Gaffn vs n
m
“ S artanburg i
as m ; •
it Greenville 05 . 4
Kas’ey -si it ii
Seneca CO t i
ii Toccoa O - ii
Lula 11 :
Gainesville ii i i
Arrive Atlanta 1 P ni
*Da ly except Sunday.
^ ^ MilitlCf M ?l Cl/?' „ r , e? V?C€.
esr On trains 50 and 51 Potman Pnir.i
Sleer>or between Atlanta and New New
Orleans an ! Washington via DanvJ] e
^ 0,1 tr «•■•<> 5-’ Pullman Buffet
AiS^la" “ slm ’l-' ton “' ld
° n ril ins 52and 53 between Richmond
an ffJ! 5 ^Trough , 'l eens ^ t tickets ” a ’ Go,ds sale | oro at * . .
. fl on principal hfon, sta
PPly to a ’ r * 8tiG1J
a any agent of the Company, 01 to
JJ\$ ’ / ' TIV ' WashnrfcrX GR Per fr cc Act
<?.
SO. L HAAS. T. M.
5 ^ ■» hi ngton. D. C___
-
nrPTC! P A PTTT? tnar be tomd an file at o«i
AGENTS V7ANTED
sell the Improved *
In every town to ■
SHANNON LETT iiV 5 OIL FILE
Price, $ 3 . 25 , the grt .test Laii©r-Savinq j
Office Device ever invented, and |
THE COSMOPOLITAN |
M Price, $ 2 . 50 , the best I
illustrated low- | !
fl j price magazine in
P world. It ;
* the con¬ !
tains 64 pages and
ci, i i :g£i is class brim short full cf stories, first-
m&i ■Ip a : l| A? scientific ary travels, tinguished articles, adventures, and by foreign lltcr- dis¬
and American writ¬
ers ; also entertain-
ing Juvenile and
invaluable House¬
hold Departments
G et SAMPLE
COPY at NEWS
STAND or sendCO
m No. Trice 4 A $ 2 File, 25 cts. full eks to particulars. for the same Puflish- with
. .
$1.75 in value for only $2 50.
sc!ilic;:t l r;:io c3., rsckcctzb, #. y.
m UNN, NTS
II
. 'Jt
M i\ ■Sji MS
MSS Aft pr Forty years’ the
1 experipnoe in
IV'l'.llY preparation of more
[«T ' 7 ■ than One Hundred
Thous asand applications for patents in
the United States and Fore.cn coun-
tries, the publis ublishera of the Scientino
American contin ue to act as snueu ettora
for patents, caveats, trade-! nde-marks. co 2Sd
haaad ritthts, etc., for the United T England, nited States, and
to obtain patents in Canada. France,
Germany, and all other countries les _'I Their experi-
ence is uneiuaied and their fuciiitie s are unsur-
^ Urawinpa and specifications prepared and filed
in in the the Latent l’aient Office Office on on short sn notice.. Terms very
reasonable. No charge fo r examination of niodeta
or drawings gs Advice Advice b„ by mail free
Patents obtained obtained throuirh t h rough Wnnn Mnnn A ,t Co. Co. am are not not teed . iced
the Inthe largest SCIENTIFIC circulation and AMERICAN,.which is the most influential has
newspaper of its kind published in the world.
The advantages of such a notice every patentee
understands splendidly illustrated
This large and newspaper and
is published ’WEEKLY at $3.00 a year, is
admitted to be the best paper devoted to science,
mechanics, inventions, engineering works, and
other departments of industrial progress, the pub- of
lis .ed in any oountrv. It contains names
all patentees and title of every months invention for patented dollar.
«acn week. Try it four one
Sold by all newsdealers,
M “ p a “blX«‘§f
*>i Broadway, New York
Handbook about patent* mailed free,
LiPPliN corrs
mt Monl/ity Magazine .
1 Tt "s a library in itself, with its varied and
exee e> t tab.eof contents."—Mercury, ban
.ios , Cal.
“Enouuh new life has been infi sed into tlic
pc iodical o rebble the circulation and make
it on o r the most widely-read and talkcd-of
publications m the wor d.”—Baltimore Amer¬
ican.
inti “IJpi'incott’s variousg intsaa* Magazine is almost of iuht prismatic wliict]
e g earns
it throws on some of the people and the opin¬
ions of t -day.”—Boston Post.
“In purely readable qual'ty surpasses al¬
most all the o li rs. It needs only to b<
known to le firmly established.”—Boston
Herald.
“Lippincott’s Magazine is now one of the
great American montlilies.”—X". Y. World.
‘Good fir Lippincott! and credit to al
movements which regard the present and an-
tie pate the future spirit of the age, and act
promptty and fol boldly on such convitipns. tracks, but It
i ease to ow tl e <dd heaten to
disc ver new and | lcasant paths requires rarer
abil ty.”—TaMe Talk.
cided ‘Lip incot.’s Many Magazine has a chived a de¬
success. ]x>pular unging blows on tin-
ga’.ew; y of favor h ve been struck
si dejia ce rhe publishers complete inaugurated their new
ure,— ! novel in each number,
—Nat onal Baptist.
NUMBER 227 CONTAINS
“TZtrueton's ’/Itrj’o//."
20,000 extra copie* of “Br leton’s Bayou.’’
i y John liar ert« n. were do anded by the
public id m ithin two weeks after its issue It
i - fiiir to exceed in sale his famous “Htlen’s
Babies.”
NUMBER 228 CONTAINS
(( Miss Defa?\(je”
Py Franc's Hodgson Burnett. An exquisite
ere-* i ion b aring even rank with “Tliat Lass
o’ Lowrie’s.”
NUMBIR 228 CONTAINS
“ Sinfii'e”
best* By Julian IT-.iwtborne, pa d decid dly" his
works, R<phte wi — dramatic effects
and situations. Ihe plot is w eired , ingenious
drawn, and al so a b d ug. excite The intense charr.ctj^jiire infWest. strongly
NUMBER 230 CONTAINS
.'I Self-Made Man.”
B M. G. McClelland, author of “Oblivion,”
“Princess ” etc. An admirable story; n which
the hero D a ma vellously real and attractive
in fig ic. The vnnous situati ns are doscribed
a icas’erlv manner. A valusble addition
to t. e fiction of the day.
NUMBER 231 CO NT AIH8
“Kenyon's Wife ”
A new novel. By Lu y O. Lillie. A work
of gre t power tha‘ fascinates by its charm¬
ing s m i city, and ’n w rich the scenes are
so the v end v dly porirn ed t.iat reader regrets when
.s reaceed.
r/A LOSl
[foyw Fl Sight of the • artics who can iTi’ereell
Wm Ifa ggMfe mm r£. J.D.SMITH&CO •S
C// LIBERTY, S. C.,
fak \ in all kinds o
’ S.I
f . . Tombstone aarfc’eWork
We put up an < i liver (r. r w r! 1 1 I e-
( m f a'iscfioi gt arai ie < i < it i ed Xo extia lane for left ring. Spe
elmu.s of our work can be seu. n lu i < cco; etflctarv. For f :her ] Rr' ; ci 1. is apnh to
r. SMLH & CO., Liberty, S. C,'
ss j&m THE LOUISVILLE
■ BUSINESS COLLEGE,
Cor. Tliird a Jefferson Streets, Louisville, Ky.
nook-li'eepinr/, banking, 7*i?unans/ t ip s Short-
Hand, type- V riling T Arithmetic, dc.
X' • Text Pc oks or Manuscript' Graduates copi< d : r.d recopi* d 1 y Mrdcr.ls. Has the lai ct-gt 1 on
endorsenient as to true merir. have n< trouble in r< taining .-i nations.
^ Instructions given b} n«iil. Improve ycur sraie Louis md ollaim
* aptical eduatron. ^
Address College as Above+
ill to be made. Cut this out and
return to us, and we will t*end
you Value free. someth ng of great
ami inijiortan ce to you
‘lint Will rtart you in business
which will Ininir you in more money righ
away than anything else in this world*. Any
one can do the work and live at home. Either
sex, all ages. alt Something workers. new. We that just coins
money tor will s ar: you;
capital not needl'd. This is one of the gen-
ui'.e, important chaneesof a lifetime. Those
that are ambitious nd enterprising will not
delay. Grand outfit free. Addr< ss.
True & Co., Augusta. Mains.
TFF CENxURY
for 1SS5-8G.
The remarkable interest in the War Papers
ami in the features many published timely articles and strong
si'dal given that recently in The
Centuky has magazine a regulcr
eirculatiop of
MOKE THAN 200,000 COPIES MONT TILT.
Among the features for the coming volume,
which begins with the November number,
are:
the war papers by general grant and
OTHERS.
These will be continued (most of them illus¬
trated) until the chcif events of the Civil War
have been sides. described by al leading Grant’s participants
on both Gene j apers in¬
clude description of the battles of Cliattonooga
and the \\ ilderness. General McClellan will
write of Antietam, General I). C. Buel o
■shiloh. Generals Pope, Longstrcct and other
(. the Second B It run, etc., etc. Xaial com
bats, including the tie tight by between officers the Kcars-
urge and A aba -na, of both
shins, willbe described.
Tne “Recollections of a Private” and spe¬
cial war papers of an anecdotal or In moroua
chara ter will be features of the year.
■ii-HIAL STOKIi S B\ « . V HOWELLS,
lARY 11 ALLOCK FOOTE. A V D GEOIIGE
w. CAFLE.
Mr. Howell’s serial will be in lighter vein
than “The Rise of Mias Lapham.” Mrs.
Foote’s is a story o' mining life, and > r. Ca¬
des’ a novellette of the Acadia ns of I.euisia-
ta. Mr. Cable wil also contribute a series of
■apers on JS ave songs and dances, including
negro serpent-worship, etc.
sri < 1 AL Fl ATI RF 8 .
Include ustrated “A by Tricycle Fennel.; Pilgrimage Historic: to Ron e" il-
1 T j ers by
Cdwaid Egg'es on, and others; Pa 1 ers on
Persia, bv tC G. W. Benjamin, late V. 18.
Minister,* with numerous illustrate 1 s; As-
ronomical Articles, practice 1 : nd jopnlar,
>n "Sidereal Astronomy”; Pap' rs on < hris-
ian T'nity denominations; by re] resen.atives of various re-
igious by various Pa person Manual Ed¬
ucation, exjierts, etc., etc.
f 1H 1 T s’H'i II S
By Frank R Stockton, Yrs. Helen Jackson
n. H.), Mrs. Harris. Mary H Hallocn Bovesen, Foote, Joe
handler II. T. A, Ji.n
vier, Julian Hawthorne, Richard M. • ol n
ston, and others; and poemsliy leadirprocts
The Departments,—“Open Letteis,” “Kric-a
ic,” wil! be fully susta ned.
THE ILL1STR \ TIONS.
Vill be ke >t up to the standard which ha
made The Century engravings famous the
world o\er.
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o October. 1885 with a year’s subscru tion
Teginning with November 1885, for Oi.OO for
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for the win le. Pact, numbers only suj j.lied
t these prices with subscription.
A free specimen copy 0 ack uambers) will
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All dealersand postmaterstakesut sriptions
and supply numbers according to ou: spc< id
ofi'e" or remittance mac lie made directly
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247