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'"OCCOA, GA. MAY. t)U i.Q«/X •
PwATES OF SU BSCRIPTIO N.
One year in advance £1.00
.Six months...... . 50
Three months.. .. .25
"Subscriptionc Order, paid in Advance.
Send l-'Oney Postal Note or
n»ft. Address,
Tub Toccoa News,
Toccoa, Ga.
MUSICAL CONCERT.
“Let us have a concert.”
“What shall it be?”
“We can have selections cf songs, i
duos,trios, and choruses, interspersed
with piano solos, four hand, six hand
and eight hand pieces.”
“Oil that’s too common, let’s have
something different, something new
in Toccoa.”
“Well there are Cantatas, Operet¬
tas, Oratorias,—”
“Yes, that’s just it, lets have some¬
thing of that kind.”
The above conversation occurred
in Miss McLaury’sschool some Aveeks
ago, and it wac decided to have a
concert.
There are Cantatas and Cantatas,
good, bad and indifferent; easy, me¬
dium and d'fficult: new and oldpvhat
one to select,—there was the rub. It
must not bo too simple, nor yet too
difficult for these young ladies, or be¬
yond the possible compass oE their
rvoices. But it must consist of music
•cf as high order as possible; it must
•be such as to develope and strength¬
en their vocal organs without severe¬
ly straining them; it must expand,
improve and beautify their voices,im¬
#
part a correct musical taste, and lead
the pupils on in the direction of clas¬
sic music.
Among the many cantatas to se¬
lect from, the choice seemed to fall
on the Flower Queen, as the best in
all respects for this particular class of
young girls. The music is relative-
]y of a high order, affording good
practice, is very sweet and attractive
to the singers, and delightful to the
audience. As it is sung and acted on
the stage, the young ladies decked
with the loveliest flowers, flitting a-
round amid grassy lawns, graceful
shrubbery, shady bowers of richest
green, pouring forth strains of sweet¬
est music,present a sylvan fairy scene
of charming and unsurpassed beauty.
Miss McLaury is now drilling her
pupils and other young ladies, in¬
cluding some little Misses,—sweet
little Heather Bells—for this delight¬
ful concert,which will be given short¬
ly; the date will be announced next
week.
THE CINCINNATI CONVENTION.
Elsewhere will be found a report
of the meeting.
It was a heterogenous assembly.
The delegates were of all shades of
ability and character, from men of
common sense and good judgement
down to eratic and visionary cranks.
They represented, not political
parties, but labor organizations hav¬
ing wide diversities of interests.
They were terribly in earnest.
They believe their rights have been
trampled on; their privileges cur¬
tailed; that unjust laws discriminate
against them, and favor the money
power; that a portion of their hard
earnings is wrongfully taken from
them and given to others; they are
thus kept poor, while the favored
classes are made millionaires.
They are determined to right these
wrongs Some claimed that this can
best be done through a new political
party; others opposed, thinking the
same ends can be accomplished with-
in the old party linos, and managed
to stave off the formation ’of a new
party. Still it was only a postpone¬
ment.. A platform was adopted, a
program eutlined, and the third
party will doubtless be fully organ¬
ized on the 22nd. of February 1S92.
This will really be a fourth party;
for the National Prohibition party
has been organized as a third party
for years, it is composed of some of
the best men of the nation, backed
and urged on by the powerful influ¬
ence of many of our noblest and most
talented women.
The Southern Alliane men gener¬
ally are not in favor of the new party;
they prefer to remain shoulder to
shoulder in the old Democratic ranks;
and will doubtless continue do so,un-
less mo* the to Democrats , fail . to , meet ,
demands „ A , by , legislative . , . enactments,re-
pealing unjust laws and making new
ones, securing to them their just
rights and privileges.
The effect of this r ‘ ew P avt 7 u P on
the two old parties, . the results on the
.-^eresLs o t le ^-©uth, the influence
or. toe race problem, all remain to be
seen. Right or wrong,the new party
-•t this writing seems inav ; tsb!e: it
is
C *■ 1
fl
tO til , seq €r re
crowd of present office holders and
fill their places with ntw men.
FROM PRCIT.
The fourth Sunday in May we
inet at Damascus church; the crowd
was large; we had fine singing bv
Prof. J. L. Underwood. After which
Rev. E. P. Stone preached an ex¬
cellent sermon. VUe were glad to
have them with us. It is more than
likely that Prof. J. L. Underwood
wl H teac h a class at the Damascus
church; we will be glad to have him
do so. J.
The (juestion of Cleopatra’s beauty
is an old one, but it has been brought
into fresh prominence by Sordou's
•Cleopatra’ and Mrs. Langtry’# revi¬
val of Shakespeare’s play. The only
authentic dortrait of Cleopatra that
is known to archaeologists is a bust
which appears on a series of coins. It
is on the reverse, and bears the in¬
scription in Greek. ‘Queen Cleopatra,
the Divine,the Younger,’ while on the
obverse is a portrait of ‘Anthony.Dic¬
tator for the Third Time, Triumvir.’
The workmanship of t! e coin is far
from good, and this accounts in some
measure for the undeniably plain ap¬
pearance of the queen. Yet the like¬
ness, so far as the features go, is a
true one, for the other coins of the
same series,though of a different type,
give her the same features—an aopii-
line nose, a strong chin, a long neck
and narrow shoulders. The fact is
that her beauty was not so remarka¬
ble as one would think from the spell
cast over Caesar and
The grave of Annie Rutledge, the
early love of Abraham Lincoln, will
soon have a fitting monument. The
body, which for nearly 55 years has
rested in the cemetery at New Con-
c° rd HI, was recently exhumed and
buried in Oakland cemetery in this
city. It was to rescue from oblivion
the remains of a woman so closely
and dearly related to Lincoln that a
subscription was staitedsome months
ago among the citizens of Petersburg
for the purpose of erecting a suitable
monument. The difficulty in the
way was in discovering the grave,
which had been beaten down by the
storms of years. Old settlers say
that a storm aH} r time within a year
after the funeral would bring Lincoln
the most violent paroxyisms of grief.
Annie Rutledge died at the age of 19
of a broken heart caused by the de¬
sertion of Henry J/cNeil, her lover
It was then that Lincoln began his
wooing, and the pair became engaged
but Miss Rutledge died before the
date of the marriage arrived.
The 150 anniversary of St. John’3
church is soon to be celebrated at
Richmond, T va. This shows what an
old city Richmond is, and doubtless
other temporary houses of worship
precede St. John’s. This was our first
church, and froai it all that large pla-
teau kuown as Church Hill took its
name. The labors of late Thomas
II. Wynne and of R. A. .Brock have
rescued from oblivion and decay the
church’s records, and having been
edited, annotated and published they
are part and parcelofthe glorious his¬
tory of thi3 commonwealth. It was
in this church, before the Virginia
convention,tliatPatrick Henry uttered
the trumpet note of the revolution in
the stirring sentence: ‘Give me liberty
or give me death/ and it has been the
scene of many other interesting oc¬
currences. Though of wood, it stands
in good condition, having escaped
multitudinous fires, including those
made by Arnold’s men, the great con¬
flagration of 3786,and that of evacua¬
tion day.
BURTON.
After escaping the April frosts it
was thought the fruit crop would be
abundant, but the May frost has dis¬
sipated the hope: it is now thought
the crop will be very light, JVc
tice also that wheat is considerably
damaged by the frost.
1 he drought is oro^en and we are
now having rain plenty.
Measles seem to be the topic of
quiry just at this time: several fami-
lies have them. One old lady, Mrs.
G. IE. Dixon, has died from the ef¬
fects of them, d/any people are so
afraid . of , them . .that
it is causing o
sum at-tennance at euurch and Sun-
day school.
The Rabun Count}'- Alliance ha«
endorsed the Twitty bill and request-,
ed their representative and senator to
vote for it. They did not approve of
the biU before the Legislature to
change tin? public road laws while it
; s believed these laws should be
changed, that bill does not seem to
be what is wanted. TT
Ml » 1 HEY IN
i LOADS OF IT IF YOU GO AT IT
RIGHT.—THREE THOUSAND SEVEN
HUNDRED AND FIFTY DOLLARS
FROM TEN ACRES IN VIRGINIA
—NUTS FOR FARMERS TO
CRACK — A NEW
METHOD.
Danville, Ya , May 15.—That
there is money in tobacco, and a lot i
of it, a man need only visit this bust- 1
ling town-is find out.
Of course there are dead loads of
money in it,or else how could all of the
mammoth warehouses, factories and
prize houses have been built?
Yes, bless your soul.there is money
in the juicy weed—money it. the seed,
money m the plant, money in the
leat.
FACTS AND FIGURE®.
I was talking with Col. E.R. Cocke >
of Cumberland county, Va. one of
the best known farmers in the state.
[ asked him about tobacco raising.
Ycu will hardly believe him, but
they say his word is as good as his
bond up in his neighborhood, and his
postoffiee is Centeisvillc, V a , and ll*
you should want to write to him just
fire away. Colonel Cocke says that he
had a ten acre field in tobacco last
season. It was all cured by the new
Snow process and sold on the Rich-
mond market.
IFii.it did lie realize for it?
Well, he ea)s it sold all the wav
from $12.50 to $55.00 per hundred
averaging $25.00. lie gathered in
1,500 pounds to the acre, 15,000
pounds 1 in all. Now, let’s see at 25
cents per pound—$3,750—and all
from „ ten of ., land .
acres in one year,
and , last . rear at . that! . , ■ Stunner ^ that, .
. but , cool, . sober, , every-day-sort ,
of
T .be » it .. remembered, , , , however,
as you
gojalong, that there is no century-
ago barn cure in this, but the farmers
referred to are progressive and use
the latest moderen improvements in
the cure of theirtobacco in which lies
its value.
If a farmer can average a bale of
cotton to the acre and can &f_t nine
cents for it, which he may or may
not get, he thinks he is doing mighty
well. But see the-||itFerenoe : At the
outside $450 is all any farmer would
expect to realize from ten acres in
cotton. There is a slight difference ia
that and $3,750. But fact3 are facts,
the labor.
Raising tobacco is not as elegant I
know, as cotton. Of course it dosen’t
look very nice to see a horny hand
catch up a fat, green tcbacco worm,
that is enjoying himself so hugety,
feasting upon a large, waving leaf of
the juicy weed, and unceremoniously
seperate his head from his body with
the fingers. It is not nice. It is
shocking, and the sooner some fellow
invents a sort of means of private
execution for the poor unfortunate
worms, the sooner that fellow will
mate a fortune.
There is, I think, some more work
required 1 to raise tobacco than cotton
ut not m>C i.
A GLANCE ABOUT DANVILLE.
rr,,. This city ., is . the largest t loose leaf „
tobacco . , instket the T United t - 4 j d. States,
in . x
It is also a great plug manufacturing
town. I notice that the largest build-
ings, however, are not factories, but
what they call“ prize houses.” When
tobacco is sold on the market it is
immediately rushed off to these "prize
houses,” where it is hung up for two
or three months, until the oil is dried
off that has been cooked out of it—
losing ten pounds to every hundred.
There are a great many of those mam-
oth unnecessary ‘prize houses 1 here.
They are from three to five stories
high, and manyfof them are of brick.
They caver, I am told, about 150
acres of ground, with a spread or floor
space of more than 1,000 acres. These
prize houses were built before the new
way of curingltobacco was in vented,by
which it is not prized, and can be
packed away in less than one tenth
the space. C. F. King. In Atlanta
SPECIMEN CASES.
S. H. Clifford, New Cassel, \Yis.,
was .troubled uwith Neuralgia and
Rheumatim. his Stomach was disords
ed,his Liver was affected to an alarm-
ing degree appetite fell away and he
was terribly reduced in flesh and
steerrgth. Tiiree bottles of Electric
Bitters cured him.
Edward Sheppard, Harrisburg Ill.
had a running sore on his leg of eight
years’standing. Used three bottles
of Electric Bitters and seven boxes
of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve and his
leg is sound and well. John Speaker,
Catawba. O., had five “large Fever
sores on his leg. dcelers said he was
incurable. One betPe Electric Bitters
and one box Bucklen s Arnica Salve
cured him entirely. Sold by W. IL&
J. D.ivis at Drug store.
For Bibles or any other books pub
lished anywhere in the world call on
Rev, T. O. Rurie,
A WAR
In 1801, a few days before the bat¬
tle of Franklin, Term, while under
the command of Gen. Ilood.about 10
miles from Columbia, a brother sol-
dier anti myself arranged a plan to
break ranks and meet at a large farm
house just in sight. . t was rai ining,
we had a good appetite, and appa-
rently in reach of plenty. As the
army moved on, one dropped out of
the ranks, and soon the other, but
when I reached the house John Gon—
nev was there.
Plans good so fa r , and from every
appearance we welcome; , i
were spien-
did dinner prepared and heartily re-
ceived. Shortly after we had
the army 'I struck camp, and we could
‘
nri f 6 tpppm^xcept.he . ,
mud n, and and r ram, l as it «as some tunc
befora dark; this gave us more ease
and anac.mrorr. comfort Sr sc the the ev-enino- evening was
spent chatting and eating apples by
a good fire. We both wore the bon-
ors of Lieutenants to which we were
justly entitled, and did rot want to
be publicly seen behind “foraging a-
bout.” This accounts for our long
stay with those good people; we
knew we could stay there until about
park, and then go unnoticed. Upon
leaving, our pockets were filled with
apples, no charges for anything; we
were urged to have something more
to carry along, which we refused, and
thanked them most heartily for their
kind favors . We ba(ln > t lost sitrht
o£ Captain and cook> an(1 - so ™ e _
thi d f()r breakfast next
• m , *
i?ieg. I he next . house lust . . out
was
or c sight ... and , my partner . made , move
a
that ,, . we get , our canteens filled .... . there
with ... sorghum,turnips and pumpkin,
’ ‘ a 1 h
. Mv r ,
canteen nlled with syrup;partners
with milk; ’ he had an appetite rt for tur-
m P S ’ 1 for P utn P k,n * Darkness com-
,n = on 1 loaded up w,th one ^ ood
b, = P um P kln ln a sack ^ and walted a
^ ew m,nutes at tbe f° r Gonney,
tk ’ r,k ' n S ke would come out th°re. 1
gave him up and hurried out to the
main road on which thg arm y waf >
encamped and stood there some time
waiting for partner, until I thought
sur ® he had struck the road in my
front. I moved off in quick time,now
dark ami raining. I was reasonably
well equipped, having a good oil-
cloth with a hole in the center to put
my head through. So under this I
carefully drew my sack with pump-
kin secreted in the best manner pos-
sible, although it was imposible to
hide the bulk, and carry it some six
feet from the ground. As I neared
the camp fires,I lowered the rear end
Q f the sack and walked bent back a
little. As some fires were near the
road) j we ll knew I would be criti-
c i sec j until I reached my company,
and so j moved right on in search of
m y command,receiving less applause,
but „ 0 si , of honor r showli . As j
passefJ th , camp fires they * ou H set
a rr |; mp . e Q f me an( ] remark: u I)id
yoa hrin , it aUr UI want a piPce »
lcri “Commissary wagon , broke , down \ OVj ?
“Hello, stranger, what command do
you , belong , to?” (A little low Cap, ^
bark , , on or off.) \ J well ,, knew what , K it
'
took . .
to conv,ct ’ 1 badn 1 a P ound of
P ork to commend or condemn,I pass¬
ed r, £ ht on as thou ^ h 1 knew where
1 was S oln ?’ and occasionally would
ask ^ or Cheatham s Division. Some
wotdd sa 7’ “next fires out there,’ oth-
ers “gone to Columbia.” #
“ How far? ” 1 wou ' d ask - “ Ten
miles” some would say.
“I wish that fellow belonged to
our mess.”
“IIo! stranger, get a transfer to
our command.”
Others would add: “You can’t car-
ry that through.”
j } iad no j c i ea of laying the pump-
k j n (] ovvn there, and from the way I
carried it they di(h p t either . So j
stepped on? found out fo , certain
that my command had goneon.Camp
fi res SOOQ in my rear, proud and sor-
ry both . prondto rid of the camp
annoyance, and sorry because I had
had lost partner. I would lis en and
look back to see if I could see Gon—
, he would ,, , , . ,
ney as pass those bright
s=t. f rs.rn
up, and nave company. Very dark,
mud plenty, and raining, some four
miles soon made. I heard a horse in
front, powerful proud to hear that,
and to find but one, as I knew he
was on business from the way he
came, and we would Have no foolish¬
ness and get facts. I halted him in
my front and so made vnyself known.
He was a courier from our command
pj ft ^ave me dir ctions, charged me
i Uc j lf where oUr armj J i e f t the
-
pike.road, and went through some
farm*, I asked if he had met any
one m front of me, he said no. i
Company K. I ]
(to be continued next week.) j
TALLULAH FALLS,
A new feature at Tallulah Falls is
the U \S itch s Head. It was only
a few weeks ago that a photograph
artist was witn a ... ortue and , gioom, ,
who were stopping at the Robinson
House, at a well known and ?.ic*wr-
P> ,int on T.U»..h Biv n ,t.Ui.«
p 1 tures of tne 1 ride and groom, and
while the operator, with heft 1 uni! *r
the focusing clo:h, was scrutinizing^
the figures on the ground glass,
and behoid, a third figure appeared
the glass which very much re-
minded them of “Siballa,” the witch
we have read about. It looked as if
d ' i- re " n P at tkat ' ,er % n inn^e, ex
.
P«“'>’ to f ' irm a oomrwtin* and
unique background for the happy
couple. P It is remarkable that this
I wi „ he „ ce!orlh
bo knuwM a * tlie VN uc,r * , . " ,lb
never discovered before, for the place 1
where ]t exists ls 01,3 " il!ch . hundreds
of P eo P le visit ever V da X d,ui ^ r the
summer. Above the base of the
gra\ syenite wall that rises up from
the waters edge, towering about 35
feet high, the profile stands out in
perfect and clearly cut outlines
against the cerulean sky. The nose
is a little hooked, the lips are some
what sunken, and the chin is perfect¬
ly formed.
J. C. Cannon and children have
returned home after an extended vis¬
it to relatives in North Carolina.
Tom Ellard has returned to the
express service on the B. R. & A. R.
R. after several months absence.
Mrs. Rittenliouse Moore arrived at
Tallulah last week; her daughter Miss
Minnie came up Sunday.
Miss Lettie Dowdell who has been
a guest at her cousin’s, Judge Thom¬
as, leaves Friday for her home.
Mr. and Mrs. Chas. M. Veri er of
Opelika, Ala. spent several days at
the Grand View recently.
Mrs. Alex Hopkins and Mrs. Chas.
Hopkins, after ‘several months stay-
in the mountains, boarded the Wed¬
nesday morning train for Atlanta.
They were guests of the Robinson
house while at Tallulah.
F. Eudoi: H.
J W. Lancester, Hawkinsville Ga.
writes 4 My wife was in bad health for
eight years. Five doctors and as many
more patent medicines had done her
no good. Six bottles of B. B. .>4.
cured her.
G EORGIA, HABERSHAM COUNTY
Court of Ordinury of said County.
Sitting for County purposes.
The petition of Major Young April Term 1891
Davis, J T Ed¬
monds, YVm Busha, W F Sewell Esq. and
others, Militia District praying the establishment of a new
out of and from the Toccoa
and Currahee rpditia districts.and the appoint¬
ment of three commissioners to lay out
and deline the lines of the same, having been
read and considered; it is ordered by the
Court that commission issue to W G Davis,
James Smith and Robert J Moss, Esqrs., au¬
sioners thorizing aforesaid and empowering them as commis¬
lines of district to lay prescribed out and define the
483and following, anew of the as code by section
of Georgia.
B. E. EDGE, Ordinary.
COMMISSION.
To W G Davis, James Smith and Robert J
Moss. Greeting:—Ycu are hereby appointed
Commissioners of militia to district lay out and be define the lines
a new to made out
Toccoa and Currahee militia districts of said
county, to be known as Broad River District,
No. — G M. as made known to me as
ry by the petition ofa large number of citi¬
zens of said districts, you are hereby
ised and empowered to proceed to layout and
define the lines and bounderies of said dis¬
trict as prescribed in the code of Georgia
tions 483 and following. Given under my
hand and seal of office this April 7lk 1891.
B.E. EEGE, [L. S.]
Ordinary Habersham Co.
REPORT OF THE COMMISSIONERS.
GEORGIA, Habersham County,
To the Hon, B. E. Edge, Ordinary of
ersham County: We, the undersigned com¬
out missioners'appointed and define district by your honor to lay
a new off of Currahee
and Toccoa Districts, beg leave to
make assistance [the following report: We, with
the of the county surveyor,
met on the 21st of this month and
located a beginning corner on a white
oak, north line of right of way, at East end
VVhiten’s cut, on the Richmond and Danville
Railroad, and running in a Southerly direc¬
residence tion along the ridge road by Frank H ulsev S
to the Low Gap on the Currahee
mountain and made a corner on a BlackGum.
Thence S. 42° 30' E. 112 chains to a White Oak
in Currahee church yard. Thence along the
Leatherwood public road to the ford of Leath-
erwood creek in Mrs. Mary Bank’s field.
Thence down said creek to the line of Frank¬
lin and Habersham counties. Thence along
said line in an easterly direction to the Toc¬
coa District line, thence along said District
line in t lie direction of Toccoa city to what is
known as the Coker crossing on the Elberton
rail road and the Toccoa and Carnesville pub¬
lic road, thence along said public road to the
corporation line on the west side of said Toc¬
coa the city, thence side along said said corporation line on
west of Toccoa city to the north
side of the Richmond & Danville Rail Road
; JtheNorth JidTto the 8 beginning coiW
We find upon investiiration that there is more
than enough for a captain’s company in the
: older Districts of Currahee and Toccoa and
Honor to pass an order creating said District
“vEl 1 ° f dti “ ,,s
Jas W.G.Div*, Smith, !„ pC
ommissioners. . .
R - J ' Mo38 ’ }
.April, 28th 1891.
Y^iourtof Ordinary,Habersham county '
V |
Sitting for County Purposes. J
Upon reading and considering May term 1891.
the report of
the commissioners appointed to lay out and
detine the lines of a.new Militia District out
of and from Toccoa and Currahee Districts in
said county, and it appearing from their re¬
port that the statutes in such cases made
and is provided, therefore-ordered Lave teen fully complied with,
It ! that a copy of these
proceedings be transmitted instantek to the
Governor of said State, arid be publi-lied
the court house door of said county and in
the Toccoa News a public gazette or said
countv in which the Ordinary of said county
does his official advertising, f<*r the space of:
thirty days. Given ^ under my hand and official
signature this a ^[l^ a< 2 !
nlin .. ry i
m23-39JC-13 Habersham county,
T. W. Dennington has been alon
'
• i • i
ln the , P«#no T and olw organ business t , since
the middle of January last, give hit
a call.
I\OW TRY THIS
Ji will cost you nothin'; and will
surely do you good,if you have a
Cough, Cold, or any trouble with
Throat, Chest, or Lungs. Dr.King’s
New Discovery f..r Consmnp-.lion 4
Coughs and Colds is guaarnteed to
give relief, or money will be paid
*>™ k ’ f ,U f? rs fn;,n Lh 1S jlpp e fm,nd
t , 1 “ . use
t sample bottle recovery.
ry a nt our expense
and learn for yourself just how good
a t‘ H.^-J. ing it is. I riel bo*ties free at
Da\is Drug Store. Larce
size 5Uc. and $1.00.
A brilliant meteor passed over (lie
town ol Darien, Conn, last Tuesday
ni?lht.
The pay of public school teachers
»< N. n \ v or. ImOwea . "utreased.
'' 1 • ^'PP « »»» appointe.I
mted Statcs co,lsnI »tCoqmmbtqUhm.
It I. reported that the I.ata .ill m
peacefully surrendered to the United
S , ates ‘ *
Pierre Loti the marine novelist has
been elected a member of the Frenci
Academy.
Queen Victoria laid the foundation
stone of an infirmary at Derby.
lhe pope will sent an autograph
copy ot' his encyclical on the laboi
question to the emperor of fiermaiiy.
President Harrison lias issued a
proclamation opening to settlement
1.600,000 acres of land in North Da¬
kota.
Buckle v s arnica a lye.— h
best salve in the world for cuts
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rlieuu
fever sores, tetter, cliappe 1 liamD
chiiblaius, corns and all skin erup.
ions and positively cures piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to
give perfect satisfaction or maney re¬
funded. Price 25 cents per box. For
sale by \V* H. & J. Davis.
Miss Ellen Dooley, a public school
teacher at CThicopse, Mass, was ctab^
bed five times by an unruly boy whom
slie was trying to punish.
Rev. G, A. Andrews of Essex,
Jfass. was found guilty of setting lire
to Ins premises in order to obtain the
insurance money.
T wo men in the vicinity of Oliviet
S. D. last week captured 30 youn_
wolves, for which they received $90 in
bounties.
Nicholas Gaulrapp, a young Ger¬
man working in Harlem, died from
fear of hydrophobia. The dog which
bit him showed no symptoms of the
disease.
An inventor living in Black Rock
N, Y. has attached an automatic mu
sical instrument to a bicycle, and ap¬
plied for a patent.
A shipment of sea island cotton
seed has been sentjjjfrona Savannah t<
the slai d of Borneo for planting a
the request of the Governor of British
North Borneo and Lcbuan.
Scrofula is an impurity of the blood
which produces unsightly lumps m
swelling which, accumulating in tin
glands of Lhe neck causes painfn
running sores on the arms, legs oi
feet, which develops ulcers in tin
eye s ears or nose often causing
blindness and deafness. Take P.P.P.
[Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Patass-
ium]. It has proved itself the most
remarkable of all blo> a purifiers.
Rev. Francis Bellamy a brother o
‘Looking Backward’ Bellamy, lot-
resigned his Poston pastorate to t**k
an editorial position upon the Youth's
Companion .
Postmaster General IFanamr.i.er
said to have received more flower
while the presidetial train was passin
through the south than any othe
member of the party.
R. S. Hale, of the Harvard
association, made a mi’e walk on Tu
esday in six minutes fifty-six and
one-fifth seconds, thus lowering the
American collegiate record by three
minutes 3-10 seconds.
Mayor Davidson will deliver the
reception to be given Senator Gor-
man in Baltimore on Mi.y 14 at t'a
Fifth Regiment Armony. The .«,!•
will be non-partisan and will involve
an expense of $6,000.
, Mrs. - Almira .
Locke, mother m
David R. Locke (Petroleum y.
Nasbv), who has been living in pov¬
erty at Wheeling W. Ya., has bee-
granted a pension on account of lu¬
lu'e hmband, Nathaniel Lock**, h-i -
ing served in the war ot 1?12,
an I often times with dizziness wouUi
'">11 to take P. P. P. at once. P
P-R [Prickly A „.,Poke Root and
the Potassium] will cure you and arre.*
disease in its incipieney.
icriiu.. h»vekef*o roaefot*.,
ip fexas, n ora lar u «», by Ann a Psge, Aa=;i:
and ! J»:«. kfcnn, Toltds, Ohio.
ite cut. Or h»-r» arc doing ai w«ll. Vfhy
«<»t TO H? Sr,u b e ra.ru av«r a
flotuk d# work &ad lire
% it u om*. where- cr yc« are. Evee be-
£ ri«i arc eamir earning from rr to
WYh* f U»ada;. Alla*«>i. YrA shew y«a how
and start you. Can w©rk in vpare rimt
or ail the time. Big a*.-any for work-
M L Follare unknowa aaicag th^sa.
E.XaDeKi: Xf£W aj>d wftjderfal. particular# free.
Co., »** it10r<irHand,Ma!a«
:? “i- -i- <•%
A Household Remedy
FOR ALL t.
BLO0OANasiciE-|| DISEASES
#
ft
M b
, s
Botanic Btel Bate i.
It Cures SCROFULA, lilCEP.3, S/UF
______ RHEUM. ECZEMA, tver.
A form ot malignant SKffi EfU PTiOM
i sides being efficacious Ir. ter.ir.j.
system ar.d restoring the c-tr.s‘.?.
o v.hen impaired frerr. c.y cents its
• aimost supernatural pea'ing prr rert’es
A justify us in guaranteesag a tuic, t!
directions are followed.
I SENT FREE rn.*’
4 BLC0D BALM CO.. AUsnta. Ca.
4. ^ <N- >
«
tmsm iiif
Pianos a ad Oii/ans .
JllSlI'llMCllfS J. 1/ ?•• t . S.
Prices loir.
y// y z (iS 1 ’.
Fijr/ui es proi e i/ial /
si in /land!in (/
Y’/ie moslpopa/ar
Pn sira men is so/d ?n /he
Stale.
7 . V\ 'Denningfen.
Yoccoa , Ga.
e
ig |gfr
A
LIPPMAN BROS., Proprietors,
Or^gjists. Lbnman’s Block. SAVANNAH. GA.
•u
• MB Sl D I-? *
eIKS m
m
■
I ■■ -i Vi
U I * *.Vv i
■
Physician* ena^rsc P. P. F. as a i r-.R' '• uat i*»ii
an4 prescribe It w ith great satisfactio th*- c u •«» ot a.
forms and stages ofPn and Tertiary
S33
Syphilis. SvphiTiuc I Ihcumatis By Bill, .Scroluluu.** tlr#r* ana
Bores, Glaudutar Sw elliogs. Eiieumati ! sih ,
ali iro<u:n
|j
W pi OS
o o Sr-™i r C3 tzjra SGK3
Ekin I liseasts, feczema., unrou.o ref mu- e
curial P»i»on, Tetter, SeaM lie ad. *-'<•, *•-'«■ ■ •wwHror
p r p f. a l „,« crful -oMi*. ag»w?!5gs »«.l an gjjydlent
' m S3 SS Fpfp J E3> ,
iltlllilfs p
Cur < V.
“uSSf.Vbo.c ..stems ar«s pnisonefi *it4 whoso !&riti< blood la 1a
■ n ininare ron'iitlou due to 1 leli.traa! ir
’{.Malaria CURES
O
pAcaftiariy \
oieauioiBg prgpnrtie :ldj :e itoot
anl Pota>««
2M
I » k
LIPPMAN BROSw Proprietors,
Druggists, Llppman’s Block. SAVANNAH, 6A.
Mm TbbsIsm
Liu
FINE SI0W GASES.
j jerry MT’G CO.. Nashville, Tenn.
■ | a b»e«rn«a! at ionerablr. oars EM lint by those of work, of
, and in their
j ! Th Ik"
1 Befriaa*rs are earning; from ?25 to pf'rvreek ud upwards,
| *“ ft you il Lore. the Full •an¬
i. MAlVtL.
A’ \ ti
A
fir
I a
■% t , a l f|fi||| nnn tooth A TEAR! any fairly mt*Il I
rni.li
EfrvF iXZSlirZXi
C, AtLE.V, Lftx Aveusta, Moiae
^
-
Ltj
A pamphlet of information and ab
straet of the laws, showing Uow to /
Obtain Marks, Patents. Copyrights, Caveats, Trad eM
MUNN setit free.
X Address A CO. A
^^361 New Brondway,^^; York.