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VOL. i.
LARGEST
STORE
IS ORTII GEORGIA
litlllL IS.
Bollsalb hi mms
NOTIONS SiSfflS iUi'A
will do well to Rot ou
price: before l.ui\ in
MICHAEL BROS -
Athens, Ga.
INQUIRIES AND ANSWERS
fit ate A''Tii'uli(:r:'i jtK*nt K-;r
--ril.shcs lui'yr.ii j? 1 i*.
QncStTOX. I li'.’.’i •* what ; • 1 ■ :.•
'tho ITcbrii.'.rv report aWat' ■ ; ' ruf '<-"
Of the corn K’T'ii'o, have
wasted heretofore. r; a.v glv-.
lie more* infuni/atiuu an t?iis s-. ■ 1 • ‘
After tlie stalks are OiroditO. h>\v ;• -t -
fodder kept, and ivhat •> its
vaiae? C;:’i it T-e % fV • i . * !•:
witheret usi 11 g any ■■ l ■ v • -
ami is t her*; any to. mil.
*
A ... . ; - Ai
Vied the fodder may t>o h< ot hi ; •••in:
Or any dvj place, nut 11 need* di’ -v
taking care not. to rli.-unrb th*:'
for no mat io r bo*.v dry e‘
seem, there is av i:*:• t:• u'T• •Tiff ju-.
to cause, a shirk? T nil*■nrer : a. -u.•
ti:ft fodd<. ** i•' Jis .•:- ■ l e>• : ’• •'.
lueut-r* tiou vc••*.;*. A is *t: • e • m
feeding t;• • .'••' ' •
f*ho\vn by ■• • • . . ' :
Oe-tfconvr-'-d r n. .-
host qr;-i‘.'*:.y . ha •• A ■ A
KxrK-riiicu'. . \ •..* . •
this: f..*y;r* ).•• . :: r - '' •
It has
t! J'.ir as "hi u . ■ :r.
mi niC •*:••■. in i
n*.d ike • • : V- " ■ ' ;
of ‘’Co: >•: -••>•
lowing i. .
p.l •
letins
;nr*v- l > - •
you t- :
k<. i.
that
list. Y
c-m n ire • .
Bake-.'.n
In J ..
suV s
*fra<s fedij 5 to" i > auiug
of tUe lAefK ' o'. otiik'.iuir me corn .stake
for stock food. It is tm; almcsst mover
sol practice in the son' ll ro gatlter and
cure tho blades. mu’ haivest the -s of
corn, leaving the entire stalks m tho
Held to prove an aim* at unmitigated
nuisance and obstruction in the prepara
tion and cultivation of the land in thn
succeeding crop; and winter homos ami i
Liboru aril in retr-sits for moors that v.-iil !
lie ready to atta-dt such crops. ospa-i.i’iy
it it shall bfii :m in.. -roji of o on.
ers have habitually oo.’isi-ior'-i : i: rise
part of the crop as of no pm< ; i • il va'm-.
Indeed, coni stalk's, especially of the
large typos of coni planted in the south, !
are of little available food value because
of the mechanical condition. Even in
the north the old method of feeding tho 1
stalks (“stover”) without any mcchaui
’cal preparation was but little less waste
ful mid slovenly than leaving them ir.
tlio fields. But the use of machinery
for preparing the the corn stalks, shred
ding them into a coarse hay, is rapidly
ext nilinsf. A uatnhor of very effective
machines may now be bad at a; -if-rata
prices, thai will convert the hard, flinty
stalks into a soft, easily masticated sub
stance, vert similar in mechanical con
dition to coarse hay, that is readily— :
even greedily—eaten by horses, mu ret
uiid catfio.
In Bulletin No. 2d. already referred
to, the whole subject was discussed at
soma length, showing bv experiments
made, and by analysis that the value of
the naked stalks that are generally left
in tho field, alter harvesting tho oiu-s,
shucks and blades, amounts to fully one
sixtli of total value of the crop.
Bulletin No. 8(1, published last ,'a.l
says further on this subject:
The station has just finished shred
ding tho corn stalks front five acres of
corn. Tho crop was very much injured
by tii? extreme heat and dr. nth, ami
the yield of grain was cut off at bast 25
percent. Tho corn was cut down just
above the surface of tiro ground dug-.
28, and immediately shocked, placing
about 150 stalks in each shook, and
tying the top of each shock with twine.
No rain foil on the shocks and tho ears
were husked out Oct. 3, and the stalks
immediately run through the shredding
machine, being apparestidy perfectly dry.
The yield of the five acres was as follows:
Shelled corn 155 bitshels.
Shredded stalks, or stover. 14,000 pounds.
Confitr.ied on fourth |>as e :
THE massm . |
|K!MC ofth^
Abovre^/^d
Vja DY |VLES CIARETIE
COpyRtOMT. !R97 BK R F. FENNO VCO f . t
Y. a i.a% ■> u Du yoo pn-sii,: .
in no t \;)liijjatioir/ Do y;ui in
tituch ynam !i ; j: himt l know not- whni
H.;'ru];lo .1 duly to )io:ir rV ] )., you i.. ■ p
'to yoi.r ey.sieniiitio fuo'JU / For tiio lust
'tiuio, do yon still persist ii; tiiis?"
“I l.nvo iiotliiuj;—nothing—nothinst
to toll you," Dun tin cried iu-n aort of
rage.
‘‘Oh, tvell, .TacqnesDantin"—ami tho
luagiKtrate'H voice was grave and sudden
ly solemn —“you uro from this moment
arrested.” The pen, uplifted till this
instant, ft 11 tpnu tho paper. It was an
order for arrest. Tho registrar looked at
‘the man. Jacques Jhuiuu did hot move.
Ills expression seemed vague, tlio tive-1
exprets iou of a p>. rs'.n who ‘dreasns with
wido open eyes. il. (jinory toiVK'd one
of t);o olectrio buttons above his table
and pointed Dan tin out to the guards,
whoso shakes suddenly darkened rh •
doorway. “Takeaway the prisoner,” ho
said shortly and mechanically, and,over
come, without revolt, Jacques Dautir.
allowed bimsolf to be led through Ufa
corridors of the; palais, Baying actlifau--
compreheadtrft nothing, stninbiing co
casiotmliy like mt iu'toxioated man or ii
soiDuauu.si ist.
CKAPTEK XT.
M. Beninrdct was triumphant. He
wont homotodiuui rin jubilant mood.
His three little girls, dressed alike,
elnspcd hiir. round tho neck, nil at the
same time, while Stine, iiernardef, al
ways fresh, t ailing and gay, held up
her face with its soft, round, rosy checks
to him.
“ My littlo otii-s,” said tho officer, “I
biTievo that I have done well, and that
ray chief will iidvuneo uio or give mo
soil," acknowledgment. I will buy you
seme bracelets, my dears, if that hap
pens. But. it i> not the idea of filthy in
cn- which fees firgtd me ou, and I be
lieve that I liavo certainly inn.T.i a gri at
sirido in judiciary in-.rum ion, all ow
ing to my kodak. .It would bo too long
n ospliibatton and perhaps a perfectly
useless one. 1 .' r.g go to dinner. lam
as hungry Is a wolf. * ’
Urt tiv'.'j trill;.-, icitl* - fjood nppotifn,
W4*rcly to u.)i hovr tbo .*is.-Lis.- , iii
wus uiitloi* !<jck and l y. Tbnan bad
been measured and hud became a nun.
her in tho coliccticn, always iiiciviiMiig,
of accused perrons in tiro catalogue oou
tiuucj each dry f"r the lnuseum of
crime.
"Ah! He i* hot lrsppy.” said Her
liardut. betlvw'U two spoonfuls of wap.
“Xot-hitppy, not happy at all. Mot hap
py, and astonished —protesting, more
over, his innocence, as they all do. It
is customary. ”
"Hut,” sweetly asked good little
Mme. Bernaidet, “what if bo is inno
cent?" And the three little girls, rais
ing their heads, levied at their father
as if to repeal, th- ir mother’s question.
The eldest- nmrmttrci.l, “ Vivs, what ii
inanima is right?”
liornai'det shrugged Ins shoulders.
"To hoar thotu, if ouo l'stened to i
them, ono would believe them all ’■ :
c'.ufc and tho crimes would have to ,
commit tin mec'vos. If tills one 1s Inno
cent, I (Emil lie ast'oiii-rhud as if I should
f:;i- snow fall in Baris in .Time. He v.ii.
bave to prove that be is innocent. Tin. -e
things prove* liiAinS!’\nx. Givo me i.oniv
more soup, Metuuie. ”
As Alms. Bcrnardet turned a ladb.fe ;
of hot soup into her lui.-.baiu*
sue softly asked: “Art; then; no ■ .
cent duos condemued? Do you u. ;
eVive vourrolf?” Bernurdei ."‘l ;;
satit-g. “I t. mot say. No one i..•• ..
lil’ln, tic- ■ i The shrewdest (!*• .
themeolve!.; ti.iy aru sometimes de j
but it is ..■ very rare. As well f i sr. j
that it cots not bnpjien—lit-snrqu-. -.. ]
yes (and the three little girls open.to j
wide thou - large '. hit; eyes us at a play). j
the T.eficrques of the Courier do Lyon, ,
who has laaii;* van vve*op so many limits ;
i.r, the; theater at Montmartre. One
would iikv; to revise his trial to reinstate
him, but no ,ue lias 1 ;l able to do it.
i have studied to - trial. By my lai!h. I
swear, 1 would oondemu him still —
•Ah, what good soup!”
"But this ouo today?” asked Mine,
fcarimniot “Art tboa certain? Yvhat is
his name?”
“Dautin —Jacques Bautin. Oh. ha is
a gentleman—a very fini! man, elegant
indeed —some Bohemian of the upper
class, who evidently needed mousy and
who— Novelo had some valuables in
his safe. The occasion made tho thief,
and there if is.”
I “Papa,” interrupted tho eldest of the
three little girls, ‘car.t thou take us to
i see the trial when ho shall be sworn?' 1
"That depends. It is cot easy l will
i try. I will ask. If thou wilt work hard —
Oh, dmne,” said Bern aide f, “that will
be a drama!”
“I Will work hard. ”
On the. mornir.g o: Feb. 20. ldOo.
\,.i sick wdiH rb.euujttt-ito.n, aud lay in
beil until May 2!st. vh-. I got a bottle
ot Cha-.nber'ttin’H Pain Bairn. The
iirst application oi it relieved me. a1,.i03t
~io3t cuvir-lY froi he pain and the
second afforded complete relief In a
short time l was Me to be up am’,
about again —A. T. Korcauv. I-uver. e.
Minn.
| Sold by 11. T. . Thompson.,
Homer, (.hi.
lIOMEiL GA., THIKSDAL MAIM’II to, *BOB.
At dessert, after ho bad taken hie
Coffee, he allowed liis three littlo girls
to dip lumps of sugar into his Kiracer.
Ho threw himself into his easy chair;
“Ah,’’ Iwtsdld, frpctttng n paper.
ho gave a sigh of satisf.'.otion. like a
man whose daily, wearisome tasks uro
huhiud him, and who is catching n mo
uieut’H repose.
"Ah,” ho said, opening (• paper
which his wife hud placed on a table
re ar him, together with k little glass
of cordial sent to them by Homo cous
ins in Burgundy, "I am gtring to see
what has bane*. . - ft and wh‘B‘t tbese good
jouilralists have invented about the af
fair in the Ronlevard de Oiiehy. It is
tme, it is a steeple chase between the ro
ticrtors and r.s Sdinctimes they win the
race in the mornings. At otlmr times,
when they know nothing—ah! Then
they invent, they embroider fchoir I,in
ter) oc "
A petroleum lamp lighted tho paper
which Bcrnardet uni >lded and began to
read.
"Let us see what. Luteco says."
He suddenly rcmcnibi-vcd v.iiatPaul
Bodier had said to liini, “Bead my
journal." Tliis woman in black, found
111 tlie provione, did she really e.-.i.-t?
Had the novelistwritten a romance in
order to follow tho example of bis
friend? He looked over the paper to set,
if Paul Kodier had collabonit*-.d, as his
friend had. Bernardet skipped over the
headlines and glanced at tbo theatrical
nows. "Politics —they are all the same
to me—ministerial crisis—nothing new .
about that. That could as well bo pub
lished iu yesterday’s paper as iu today’s.
"Tho Crime, of the Boulevard do Cliehy. ’
Ab, good! Very good. Wo snail see.
And he began to read. Had Paul Bobi r
invented all the information to which
ho'bad treated tho public? What was
certain was that tho police officer frown
ed and now gave strict attention to
what, he was reading, as if weighing
the reporter's words.
liodkr had i.-publi, bed tbo bi<tgniphy
of tho ex-consul. A!. Ilovero had ti *
mixed iu Booth America l.'i - iol-vit
dramas. Ha was a romantto >. r.-on
about whom more 'is. ho mVvt titure
in Bur: v Ayi* s was knewu. Tho rc
r,firt.x bad gained be int'cmsie o Ivoiu
an Argentina journal, tla, Pswiiso, es
tablished in Paris, and whose editor, in
South America, had visited intimately
the French consul.
Tho appearance of a woman in black,
these viflts made on iixed dates, H3 on
RnuiversuriCH, revealed an intimacy, a
relationship x'orhr. ps, of tho murdered
man with that unknown woman. The
Worn .. vr,s j'wnug, - legant and did not
,; v- in >i,v7s Rodier hud set himself to
disco. I.*;,:* .-etreut, her name, and per
haps, ti.un.ka to her, to unravel tho mys
tery Till cr.vckload the murder.
‘‘Here ! That is not very prooiso iu
formatio!-. ” thought the police officer.
But it at blast awoke Btscnardot’s carios
ity and iuteiligeuce. l\ Solve Ino prob
lem, but it put ono. ?.!. Uo Sartiues'
famous search for tho wouir;;; -cue nat
urally to Paul Rodicr’a pen, and ho
finished t&o ntffiol'o with somo details
about Jacques Dantiu, tlie intii.arite, ihe
Only friend of Louis Pierre Ha vre, and
tbo report! r, when ho had written this,
Was still ignorant that Dantiu was uu-.
dcr arrest.
"Tomorrow, ” said Dcr a: a ’--t to itim
eelf, "ho will give us Dantin’s biogra
phy. Ho tells me nothing new in his re
port. And yet”— Ho folded up the pa
per and laid it ou tho tubia, and while
sipping his cordial he thought of that
mysterious visitor—-tho woman iu black
—and tub! himself that truly tho trial
roust bo there. Ho would sc.' Moniche
and his wife again; ho would question
them; he would make a thorough
search.
"But what for* \i u bava tho guilty
man. It is 100 to i tbo assassiu is
behind bars. The wciaai, might be Su
accomplice. ”
Then Bamardot, filled with passion for
his profession, rather than vanity—this
artist in a police sense, thi3 lover of
art. for art’s sake—rubbed his hands
and silently applauded himself, because
ho had insisted, and, as it were, com
pelled At. Gitiory and tlio dwlors to
adopt his idea. He, tho humble, un
known suboffl- it. standing back and
simply striving to do his duty, had in
fluenced distinguished persons as pow
, orful as magistrates land members of tho
i academy. They had obeyed his sugges
j tiou. The little Bernavdc-t felt that ho
j had done a glorious deed. He had : xpo
j rirncod a ?fr<-mr - - lviction. wb.ich
would .not tjo denied. TTo lmcl proved
that wh.it had born eiutoiierod only ti
chltmiiii n;s n reality, it" hail ncocni
plislmd tx ncoNiing inipossibiiity. ib li;id
evoked the dead man's sac-rut even from
the tomb.
“Arid Ml Minor? thinks that it will
not help his candidatnre at the acad
emy! Tie will wear the green rolie, and
ho will owo it to me. There aru other,
who owo low Horn ‘ttsinpr t ■ • i. '
With his fariultj for believing in his
dreams, of in'; his visions appear,
realized and living—•> ftv.' .■ vloU iu
such a mail seemed like '.ho: ‘ a: . o hal
lucination of a poet-—Burnavrief did not.
doubt for a mornont the reality U this
phantom which had appeared in the
retina of the eye. It was nothing more,
that ejo removed by the surgeon's ronl
4nl, than an avenging mirror. It ac
cused; it overwheliued. Jacques Daniil)
was found there in all the atrocity of
his crime.
“When I fbink, when I ihini: that
they did not wish to try the experiment!
It is made now,” thought Jlerimnlot.
M. Uiuory had strong!,: reen.-mneud
cd that all that part of the eitumiuntin.u
should not bo made public. Absolute si
lence was necessury. if tho press could
have obtained the slightest information,
every detail of tiio experiment, would
have becumo public property, and tho
'account would have been embellished
anil made as fantastic as noKsihl". This
would have been a deep mine for K<l;oir
A. 800, who would have worked that
lode well and made the I'lirisians skad
der. How tho ink would hose been mix
ed with Bovere’a blood! :t was well
understood that if the s .sp-cted man
would in tho end confess guilt the
result of too .singular scientifically in
credible experiment should bo made
known, but until then absolute silence.
Everything vV.cJ. had been said and
dene around tho dissecting ic.bl" at Hie
motg.no or in the examining magis
trate's room v. nub'! remain a- ct.
liut vvouitl Duntiil ccinfess,-
Tho next tiny after AI. Giuory had nut
him under arrest Bfeniardc-t bad gone to
the palais tor news. Ho wished to con
sult his chief about tho ■‘Mvoniiiu in
black," to ask him what lm thought of
the article which had been published in
tho paper by Paul ltodicr. JVI. !,'■>.icbo
at tached no great importation to it.
“A reporter's infermatioh. Very
vagus. Tliero is always a woman, p;.r
bleit, iu tho life of every man. But did
this one know Dun tin? til") i ems to sue
Vi;,,ply tin eld. abandoned triend. anti
who came occasionally to usk >.i,.l of
'tho old boy”—
“Xhe wornau noticed by Mcirichc is
young,” said Beruardet.
“ Abandoned frieicls are often young.”
iU. Bericho replied, visibly enchained
with his ohsi rvation.
As for Dentin, ho still maintained hie
yibitioato silenci . TU p: r c-a.-d ::i I’.ud
i'np i.vtons au Brr.v.t for which there
was no motive, anil ho kept tho haugh
ty, alm-j: t provoking attitude of tb"H<-
Whom tho chief called tho greatest cul
prits.
"Murderers in redingotes heiievo that
they have sprung from Jupiter’s thigh
and will not admit that any ono should
arrested except those who wear
smocks and peaked lints. They believe
in i:u aristocracy and its privileges and
threaten to have,; removed. lou know
that very well, Bernavdot. Then, as
time pusses, they become, in a measure,
calm and meek as little lambs; then
they wiVimp-r and confers, llautin will
do as all the others have done. For the
moment, he howls about his innocence
and will threaten us, you will see, with
r, summons from tua chamber. That m
cf no importance.”
The ciied thou gave the officer feme
ii ,;trt; 'tions. He need not trouble him
■ cif any more just uow the Dan
tin affair, but attend to anuthi r matter
of boss importance, a trivia! all,'! -r. Aft
er thotnurdc-r audhisosperieu'- sat the
morgue this muiP v seemed a low one to
IJcruurdct. But each duty Ims its antith
esis. Tho police officer put into this
petty affair of a theft thy same kuil, the
same sharp'attention, with which he had
investigated the crime of toe Boulevard
do Glichy. It was his profession.
Beruarlct started out oil ilia quest It
was near the Halles (iu;u*kefs) that he
had to work this time. Tho suspected
man was probably one of tho rascals
who prowl about day. and night, living
on adventures, and without huy honm;
sleeping under bridges or iu one of tho
hovels on the ouGkirt? of tho ' Sue do
Vonisc, where vice, distress and crime
tlcurishoiL
Beruardefc flket' questioned the owner
of tho stolen property, obtained all tho
information which he could about the
suspected man, and, with his keen
scent for a criminal aroused, he glanced
at anything—men, things, objects that
would have escaped a b - practiced oyo.
lio was walking slowly along toward
tho Permanence, looking keenly at tho
pasßcrsby, the articles in thft shops, tho
various movements iu tiie streets, to
eee if ho could get a hint upon which to
work.
It was his habit to thus make use of
his walks, iu a promenade he had more
than once met a, client, past or future.
The toys tied before bis piercing eyes,
toforo this fat, jolly little man with
tho mocking smile which showed un
der his rod mustacha This Bright which
he inspired mado him laugh inwardly.
Ho knew that he was respected, that ho
was feared. Among all these passersby
Who jostled ''ini without knowing that
be was watching them ho was a pow
er, an ntiknown but sovereign power,
lie walked along with short, quick steps
and watchful eyes, very ranch preoccu
pied with this affair, tbifikiug of the
worthless person for whom ho was seek
j iug, but. tie stopped occasionally to look
j at the wares spread out in some bric-a
-j brae shop or m some bookstore window.
I This also was his habit and his method.
! He ran his eyo over the illustrated pu
| pers lying in a row in front, over tho
| socialistic placards, the sougbooks. He
| kept himself au courau! with every
thing which was thought, seen, pro
claimed and sung.
“When on? qov'-nv," thought Tler-
6ea ts Th e H’ i©nd I k e
Mr. A. it. Thomj r-. of Marysville,
Tfl.,has found mm re valitabio discov
ery than bits yet. been made in the K.'on
dike, for years hr suif-nvd untold agony
from ronsmnnl inn acconipanied by hem
orrhagpi l . and was a ••.•..•lately cured by
D 1 v!c-'slSw it, v vi r, for Com um
pui,n, cTiiigle; and > c c, lie declares
that g<)id is of little v alu< in cohipari
son to tlii.- marvelous euro, would have
it oven if it coat a hundred dollars a
bottle. Asthma. .Ji-oiuhitis e.nn ail
other throat ".ml lung affection.? tire
positively ou/ed |jri>r. Kiiig's Mew Ilia-.
c.'V.'ry for Consumption. Trial bottles
bodies flee tit J.. G. Ikmlnit'.ii &■ Tiro’s
mid I„ J. Sharp & BroV Drug Stores
lIAR.MOX Y GROIT,, OA.
nardet, “000 ought ro have tho habit "I
j>oing afoot in tbs stri. ct. Quo .can leai u
nothing from t 1.19 depths ef a coup'?
driven by a roachiimn wearing a tiic;il
ored cockade.” Ho was going ;o the
prefecture, the XVrntsnchco, win .1 iu
the Hue dcs Bon - KnfaCts ho wav in
stinclively sttvaoted to a sir p wind-.w
whororusty oUlormr. tattered imifnrnis,
worn shako*, garments wilhout value,
snioky pictni-.m, yellower! cngravingH and
chanro ornaments, rare <id copier, of
books, ohl romances, ancient books
with oaten bindings, n mass of dissim
ilar objects—lost keys, belt buckles,
abolished medals, battc and cons—vote
mixed together in an oblong •"••ace as '
a sort of trough.
On either side cf tl b "ho vimio
hung some soiled unirom: 1, a zount ' -
vest, an academician's old habit, logo
brious with its ccnbrcidcries of green, a
soiled costume which lit and been worn by
some Pierrot at the caruival. It was,
in ail its sad irony, the vulgar “hand
mo down that!” which makes ono think
of that other morgue whore- tho cloth
ing has been rejected by tho living or
abandoned by tho dead.
lb tfijorridt rraa r nf n molau
choly t?m)xraiiu r.t >u> r a drearoer, and
ho did not fcivo much tinio v > t)o tear
ful side of tho I'ut In? was pos
i?ess(.d of :i ravonotifi curiosity, and tho
sight, liov.c* ■- frequent, of that film})
window always attracted him. Wish,
moreover, that sort of iiiaguetisui which
the searchers, great or small, intuitivv.
ly foci —n collector of knickimucks,
discoverers cf nnknown countries, book
wthis bent over tho volumes at 4 sous
apiece, or chemists crouched ever a re
tort—Bcrnnrdet hud becli suddenly at
tracted by a portrait, exposed as au ob
ject raver than tho others, hi the midst
of this detritus of aM'.riVlom*! !usury or
; of past military glory.
Yes, among th3 tobacco boxes, the
' belt buckle, tho Turkish poniard,
; ’ViitchfH ivita bcoUvii *■>-'ri,
i piuco .Tapancso ornamcntM, i\ iiiiinfu;p;-
oval iu f'lnii, lay thoro—?ori cf
; medallion without :•* fr ini**, cud at firK
j sight, by Kingtilal* rft'rav tion, it drew
! and hold tho attention cf tho t v':'-.'
1 olTic: r.
“Ah!” paitl Beruardefc oufcloiiu. * f hut
this is ginguhu*. ”
- Ho h-iiucd lonvavd urdil Idr nose
! touch ini tlio cold gUiMs aud : * fixed
j ly at tlii* picture Thi? ; . puiafiajr,. m
la cge as oik J a h uul, vran tl.lo perrr-u: ol
Ia man, and Bora aid of fully iicl’.cvod at
I tlio first look he -.vc •iro-.i-d vhc Vc-vsoia
• whom the j er had re \ i du • .
1 Ashi shallow foil ucross the vrindow
* Bernardot coaid unC ih
\ ■ r • • ■ . '1 :■ z duocth iu tho
j•' I 'l : • fai ' • Yji : ' 1
! Mte; ,i to • -no tiid.* :• ii hv (..or.ld
Iv. ■•i' V viow. ■ .ilr dly. there could
i be no doubt-, the oval painting was cer
! taiuly the poriraifc of Jucduc:; L'.uit'n,
j now of n rixi'e. Tin re was tho
; same high forehead, the pointed heard,
: of tho sr.3 color: the hiaek
i tightly buttaiir and up a?*.d edged as tho
neck with tlio ir.*.m?W’ino of a white
linen ‘rfc-Bar, giving, .u nifinbiing a
and übl , till lainti , t
trooper, of h t; word mu an, of st Gub-ard
(a. partisan of tho Duke of Ordof
the timo of CloT'ofc.
ironiothiiig cf v> co? noho :nr it* pahit
i.ug, without- doubt, in h:* quality of
amateur phofographor, inucU cccns
tomed t< ritici • • re
not a perfect liken* *s, 'Hcvnardefc found
in this picture i flartßiig rosomblancc
fo Jacqut s Dantiii. It was tb" very man
| himscli. Hu appeared his thin
| face standing out- from its pweeiilsh black
! f-iomln r l uokgn.uud; the poiso of {ha
! head displayed the smite vigor s i:i thv
i original; tho clear cut icatiwoM b.-okod
i energetic, und I iio skin had the sumo
I pallor which was characteristic of Dan
j tin's completion. This head, adndraldy
painted, displayed n iislunishiug life—
like ir.icnhi: U iu*ii La:v •: clone ’y -
master linud, no doubt f t at., ai ; i
though ;:l this portrait .Jac<y .and Dm .
looked somewhat younger—for instance,
tlio hair and pointed heard showed no
silver; streaks iu thorn tho resem
blance was .so marvelous that Her nardet
I immediately exclaimed. “It- is he!”
| And mofrfc certainly it- was Jacques
j n.-mtiu himself. The more the cfhcer
j examined it tho inoro convinced ho be
came that, this was a portrait of the
| man whom ho had accompanied to tho
j cemetery and to rr' son. But how could
j this picture have coxno ralo ibis brie-a
-! hrao shop, an* of whom could the dealer
i liavo obtained it? A reply to this would
■ probably not be very difficult to obtain,
and tho police officer pushed back the
door and found himself in tho prescnoi
of a very largo woman, with a pale,
puffy face, which was rurrouxidcd by a
lace cap. Her huge body Was enveloped
in a knitted woolen shawl. She Wore
i spectacles.
To to continued next week*
Diseases Gf the Gle-Jtl r>ut tie-rvea.
No one need suffer with neuralgia* Tits
difiniwe ie quickly and •peniianem ! y cured
by lirowna* Iron Bitters. Eve*y diwase
the Hood, nerves and stomach, Hiroui*
or othervrisc, surcauibs to |ro;
Bitters. Known and used (’or r.early .■
quarter of a century, ii 3tft:ls io-d::y rbro-
naior.g onr mo t vala* 1 rrinedi;-^.
Brovui' froa Bitter? is coW by Hi Jesters.
fl \JS* from
■x .My SOF Is n journey tlint was never made by better Y*4r, iU
...T flour than Iglelicart’s Swans Down—the ,i;,,j*].ji : j|| |L .
that makes the whitest, sweetest bread and the
ft* cake and pastry ever baked. Boil and climate never combined to '
W prodwee choicer winter wheat than that from which this pecrlcst’B '
h patent flour is milled.
IGLEHEART’S
Swans Down JPlmsr
ii' more economical than flours that cost less, because it makes better
food and more of it. Ask for it and notice the brand when buying.
IGLEHF/ART BROvS., KVAySVILLH, IMP.
Keating SlcicieS.
STRONG POINTS;
Du rah 1# Roller Chain.
Less HFriction,
Greater g-Speed?
Light Weights,
Creat Strength
And Durability
More IS ociern Practical improvements
Than canlfoelfound lon anv Mother wheel
* # a * * -a 4*#***-^
DEALERS WANTED.
KEATi N't Wiiito l, COMPANY, MIDDiHTOWN C*) )'■ ,
•' | *~~~l , DeLOACH 1
y jf S S) VdriffWff Friction,
-1 Waai? JS, Feed Saw Mitts,
3WR&mm. -$L W- ShinuteMS!* i
ggs '
: ” tolAyto ESAD""
' '• : ' - to"-” v;';- -f -l'ors
'•■ ■ if' •• ' h . cad ?*a Htiflors,
A''':¥v'vVh£..' ... -.••AY ■. {Jhaf*ing, Burleys
7 r -?’*;*• to-:*-. and Mill Gearing.
- SAW sh-ako A sfcoau*.
.- -?= LARGE CUAKSbE f l ’ r X.
OeIdACH iVikL MF% COMPANY, Ailaott?, 65., O'. S. A, ■
I IS? \v.,v'?(jwn Si,, title vVi Cm. If! S. (!-!* H , St. l: 5, Mo. .. 4
Tlio- - ioiyrc-.toti in 'hi-ibb Vy ,cii s. .-”r- Hundsor'e i#-S7 'Jnthloguc of (lift
n 4anufttCtt:ritt (k*„ :;t title of ec.,
' A. R.ROBERTSON ;
fin ami men ts and Tom bstonelWdries*
ATHENS, <IW - .'A
s iavoTaiways ‘on hand? fand for sale a large stock of
MONUMENTS as-.. TOMB STONES
—At it 6c k n o;t to it rr 1 c-e s.—-— —•
It () \ u Jf K>;T S . Tl>3l n, HFA 1) ami FOOTS TON Er
An and fR A D I.E TO tt S.
• i should always go nnd see R O 15 E 1. 1 S 0 N S statl get ids jnicfis
i’eruembor ROIJFRTSOX Pays till the Freight to your nearest depot.
A, 11. 110 i> KRTSO X., \
115 Thomas St.,'
Athens' Ga.
NORTHEASTERN R. R- OF CEORCS&
BETWEEN ATHENS AND LULA
TlMfi TAftLFNo2. I’d take Effect Oct. IS. ICC 7, • ;
AIUTHDOE'ND N<.nnium“N.n >
-A —rp— —-*W : —rr.r-ff- r i*-V#|| : - -
iwiily ltidiy ißily XOlmitlASSKtalS BASUMMU STATiOA’S- l>j
A.M. I*. '* A..M.1..V AtA.tt V-. Ah. A.K
r, ro sir. ltd'. W bills F j 1 ’;?. *s! Aif
s.; u r.c ... Kni'iiuuiv Uno-®..,.. !??y <
[, v 5 vi; scXtTr.v.v.v.vv.v.'.v.v.tv.-.v '
I K TtV. i-.-r.il. i™t -h . •
NO. b>.