Newspaper Page Text
Banes County ; Journal’
VOL i .
LARGEST
" STOI'E
NORTH GEORGIA
“tm <xa.
WHO !•' "V liODDS
Y ' • HIT*.
Merck‘<mtv will do well to Ret our
,r>es before biiyin
Alien MG BROS -.
Athens?. Go. • *
[THE J
piiiiiii
hv&ertvr&titsssia
,• ,'Continued from last week. •
•• . r .■ ,
Charles Prados furnished some further
information' in'regal'd to‘himself lie
was staring at a hulol in the Kuo de
r f *. it tens certainly a drunken man.
Paradis Poissonsiere, a small hotel nsed
t*y commercial travelers and merchants
nf the second class He had been in Paris
only a month.
.Where was he from? He said that ho
catne (from Sydney, where he was con
nacd with it commercial house, or,
rather, be had given up the situation to
rmiie to Paris to seek his fortune P,nt
while speaking of Sydney he had in his
ysiber rambling answers let fall lb*
name of ‘ Buenos Ayres, aud Bereardet
remembered that. Buenos Ayres was.the
(place where- U. Kovere had boon Preiioh
rojittul The paid no attention to
this at the time; for wflat good-? Prados’
real-'eiajhiuatioiv would he conducted by
AL Ginbry *, Beruardet) ,was not da
e.xnmiun&lkagis-ihife. Ho Was the fob
rrt wko’htmtud <1 it crimiuajs.
This Prudes was stupefied, then furi
ous, when", the examination over,, be
LamedUkat ho was not to bo immedi
ately set at liberty. • • ,
• . What! An ahsnrd quarrel; a collision
•without a wound, in a stt'eet in Paris
was sufficient tp iioteiia man and mains
him pass the night in the station bouse,
with alf the vagaboudsof both sexes col
lected there!
I ’-*• Vcu may bemoan your fate to ymtjf
filf tomorrow morning,”said’ Bernar
let.
in the mrar.timo they searched this
man,. who, very pale, making visibly
powerful efforv to control himself, bit
ing bis lips and his blac k beard, \yLilp
they examined' liis pockefboqk, while
looked a£:;i \v ifte >a
feV (..Bitlfuiu'dat
hail divined it at the'time of his arrest)
in hit right pocket.
•The pdeketbook revealed nothing. It
contained, some receipted weekly bills
of the hotel in the flue do Paradis, some
envelopes Without letters; without
stamps and hearing tho. name '‘Charles
Praties, .iperchant, ” two haute, bills pi;
100 francs and nothing more.
Bern'nrdeit very simply asked' Prados
ljow it was that-he had Open' liis-persou
nddressed letters whkji.he evidently
lmd not received, as they were not
stamped. He replied :
••They-are not hitters.- They are ad
dresses which 1 give instead of visiting
cards, as i have not had time to procure
cards. ”
"Then the addresses are in your'writ
ipg?''. • , •
‘•Yes,’’ Prudes answered.
The police officer looked at them
again ;tben, saluting the brigadier and
his men, wished them good night and
even added a littlo gesture, rather
mocking, in the direction of the arrest
ed mau. Prudes made an angry, almost
menacing, movement toward Bernar
tlet TJhe guards standing about pulled,
him bark, while the plump, smiling 1
little man, caressing his sandy mus
tache and .humming a tune, want out
into the street.
Cue would havo taken M. Bemr.rnet
for a happy little bourgeois, going home
(row some .theater tin* (Jeserted
drop* and rej-uiir-c .1 > n *>r •
vaudeville, rather than 11 ]j< .ll -;>y wno
fcvi jast secured a prize u "wiTiUed
; <jmickly, ho walked gayly 11a ratehod
his borne, where Wine Berna'rdet, ul
ways rosy and pleasant, awaited him
and where his throe little girls were
j sleeping Ho felt that, like the Roman
1 emperor, lie had not lost his day .
He again hummed the quatrain, and
although not in a load touo still it
sounded like u Groff faufaro of vietogy
i in the gray fog of this Harts night.
CHAPTER XIV
, II Ginory was 'not vrVthotit nneasi-
I ness when lie thought of tho detention
lof Jacopos Dantii* Without doubt all
I cri.s®srsf aW accused persons, are re, 1
j cent, Th-ey try to hide their guilt unm r
' voluntary silence They do not sp ;tk
, because they have sworn not to 'i ’
| are bound, one knows not by wh. 1
an oath which they, cannot break 1 ; i
| the .ordinary systctil of the guilty who
cannot defend themselves. Mystery
stems (nvthinn stfciy
| licit liantin, intimately acquainted
with RoVere's life, might be acquaint
' ed with fxmm secret which lie could not
disc!osd* add which did not pertain to
him at . nil' What secret? Had not an
examining magistrate a right to know
everything? Had not (ill accused man n
right to speak? Either Dantiu had noth
ing to racial and lie was playing a com
edy and was guilty or, if by a few
words, by a confidence made *0 the
magistrate, he could escape an acc-usa
: tiou, recover,his liberty, without doubt
1 he would speak after having kept nn
1 inexplicable silence. How could one
suppose that an innocent man would
hold for a long time to this mute sys
tem?
The discovery of the portrait in Alma
Colard’s shop ofight, naturally, to give
to. the affair anew turn The arrest of
. Charles P-rades brqught an important
element,to these researches. He would
! he examined by U' Ginory the - next
i morning, after having been questioned
j by the commissary of police.
Bcrnardet, sprucS, freslily shaven,
was there and Seemed in his well brush
ed redihgote like a' little ahlw come to
assist at some curious ceremony.
On the contrary, Prades, after a sleep
-1 less night, a night of agony, paler than
the evening before. Iris face tierce and
its muscles .contracted, had a haggard
expression, and he blinked his eyes like
a night bird suddenly brought into glar
ing sunlight. He repeated before the
examining magistrate .what he had said
to the brigadier But his voice, vibrant
a few .tours'before, tad become heavy,
almost raucous, as the. haughty expres
sion of his face had income sullen and
tragic.
The examining magistrate tad cited
Mine Coiurd, die shopkeeper, to appear
before him She instantly recognized
in this Prades tire man who had sold
her the little panel by Paul Baudry
He denied it. fie did not know of
what they wi re talking Ho had never
seeu tilts woman He know nothing
about any portrait
"It belonged to Al. Revere,” the
tnagjstrgto replied—“Al ..Revere, the
murdered man; M Rovero, who was
consul at Bueuos Ayres, and you spoke
yesterday of Buenos Ayres ia the exam
ination, at the station house in the Kuo
de la Rochefoucauld. ”
“A1 Rovero? Buenos Ayres?” repeat
ed the young-man, rolling Iris sombrero
around his lingers.
He repeated that he did not know the
ex consul, that he had never been in
tenth America, that ho had come from
Sydney.
Bcrnardet at this moment interrupt
ed him by taking his hat from him
without saying a word, and Pwdes cast
a very angry look at tho little man.
Al. Ginory understood Bcrnardet‘s
move and approved with a smile. He
looked- in the inside of the fombrero
which Bcrnardet handed to him.
. The hat bore the address of Gordon,
Smithson & Go., Biyupr street, Eoiidou
“But, after all,” thought the magis
trate, "Buenos Ayres is one of the mar
kets for English goods.”
“That is' a hat bought nt Sydney, ”
Prades (who had understood I explained.
Before the hold, decided, almost vio :
lent affirmations which Mine. Colard
made that this .was certainly the seller
of the portrait the yenug man lost coun
tenance a little. IJo kept saying over
nnd over: “Von deceive yourself.
Madame, I have never spokeu to you. I
have never seen you. ”
When AI. Gindry asked her If she
still persisted in saving that this was
■the 1111111 who had sold her tho picture,
she said; . .
“Ho I still persist? With my neck
under tho guillotine I would persist.”
Aud she kept repeating: "I am sure of
it. I am sure of it.”
Thisprelimiimry examination [trough t
about no decisive result. It was cer
tain if this portrait bad been in the
possession of this young may and been
sold by aim that he (Charles Prades)
was an accompH’eo ' of* DantriPs,- if not j
tho author df ttie crime. They ought,
then, to .bo brought face t,o face, and
possibly tfiis" might'bring about an im
mediate rcsglt. And why nqt.huvo this
meeting take place at once, before
Prados'wa's sent where > Dun tin was, at
Mazas? . ■
J low to Look Good.
Good looks are really more than
skin deep, depending entirely oil a
liealthi "Of.dition’ of all the lvita or
gans, If the -liver is inactive, you have
a Bilious l*>nk,- if yoiir stomuch is dis
i r.iiered, yoh li.gva ad yspe.it ii,' -look, if
kidneys are affectee, you. have a.pinch
ed. look Secure good health, and you
Will have ' good looks, -"Electric Bit
ters ’ is a good Alterative atd Tonic,
Act*, directly on the stomach, liver
vA kidri Vt " ifiesthr Uopd, cures
Uotchm: lid hods, and . give*
ad pompler.icn.' very bottle g-sr-.n
teed. tkM at. E. G. Harder.-.an A Bro
Drug Store- £0 cents per b>Uje. L.
ijhnrp is Bl'ty
IIOMKi:, G.\ m THURSDAY, ’ MAUCII 31, 1838.
A Wonderful IMucovery.
Ties last quarter of a century records
! many wonderful discoveries in medicine,
! but none that hare accomplished more for
; Imniaiiity (linn that sterling old household
drowns’lron liittcrs. It seen"' 1
.. 11 the very elements of pood !.■
.ml neither man, woman or child can
i it -.viihout deriving the greatest h
s’ Iron Bitters is sold by all de
51 Ginory, who had urte, 1
word “Mazas,'’ noticed tho expu., u
of terror which flashed across and sud
denly transfigured the young man stage.
Prudes stammered:
“Then—you will hold me? Then—l
am not free;" '
M. Ginory did not reply. lie gave an
order that this Pra/leS shiinkl be guarded
until the arrival of Dantin froig Mazns
111 Muzas, in that walled prison, in
tho cell which had already .made him
ill, Jacques Dantin sat. This man with
tho trooper’s air seemed almost to be-is
a state of collapse. When the guard
came'to his ofcll, be drew himself up
and endedvoredYo collect all hik energy,
aud When tlid door Was opened and h.n
was balled ho appeared quite like iiirii
self. When lie saw. the prison wagon
which had brought him to Muzas and
now awaited to take him to tho Palais
do Justice, he instinctively rccoileds
then, recovering himself, ho entered tho
narrow vehicle.
The.-.iilea,-Phe-sensation.'thtat ho was
ao near all this life, yet so far—thus
he was going through these streets, fill
. ed with carriages, with tnon and women
who were free—gave him a desperate, a
nervous, sense of irritation.
Tho air which they breathed ho
breathed ami felt fan his brow, but
through a grating They.arrived at tho
palais, and Jacques Dautiu recognized
the staircases which he had previously
mounted that led to tho examining mag
istrate’s room. Ho entered the narrow
room where M. Ginory awaited him
Dantin' saluted the magistrate with a
gesture which, though courteous, seem
ed to have a little bravado in it, as a
salutation with a ; sword before a duel
Then lie glanced around, astonished to
see between two guards a uian whom
ho did not reoogii ize.
M. Giuoiy studied them. If he know
this Prades, who also curiously return
ed his look, Jacques Dantin was a great
comedian, because no -indication, not
tho slightest involuntary shudder, not
tho faintest trace of au expression of
having seen him before, crossed . his
face, liven M. Ginory’ keen eyes could
detect nothing He had asked that Ber
uardet lie present at the meeting, and
tho little man’s face, become serious,
almost severe, was turndll, with eager
interrogation in its expression, toward
Dantin. Bdrnaidot also was unable to
detect the faintest emotion which could
be construed into an acknowledgment
of ever having seen this young mau be
fore. Generally pri ..- rs would uncon
sciously permit a gesture, a glance, a
something to escape tije'ia when they
were brusquely confronted unexpectedly
with s’onio accomplice. This time nut a
muscle of Bautin's face moved, uot ati
eyelash quivered.
At Ginory motioned Jacques Dantin
to a seat directly in front of him, where
tho light would .fall upon bis luce.
Pointing out Prades, (masked;
“Do you recognize this mau?”
Dautiu, ufte, a second or two, ro
plied:
"No; I have never seen him.’’
“Never?”
"1 believe not. Ho is unknown to
me. ”
"And you, Prades, hive youev.er seen
Jacques Dantin?"
"Never, ” said Prudes, in his turn.
His voice seemed hoarse compart'd with
thy brie*', clear response made by Dun
lin
"lie is, however, the original of the
portrait which you sold to Mine. Go
lard.” , . - , .
"'The portrait?"
"Look sharply at Dentin'. Look at
h-ini v.'/’li, repeated - -VI Ginory "-y<s;r
must .recognize that he is tho 'original
of- the in question. ’
"Vos. . PradesTepii: and lliseyes were
fixed upon the prisoner
“All!” the magistrate Joyously ex.
claimed, asking, "And how, tell me,
did you so quickly recognize the origi
nal of tho portrait which you saw only
au instant in my room?”
"1 do uot know," stammered Prades, .
not comprehending the gravity, of a
question put in an insinuating, almost
amiable, tone.
"Ob, well," continued M. Ginory,
still in a conciliating tone, “I am go
ing to explain to you It is certain that
you recognize these features, beeausa
you had w ‘ long tim'e in which to con
template them; becauso you had it a
long time ill your hands when you vvevo
trying to pull (til tile frame!”
"The frame? What frame?" asked the
youtiguiun; stupefied, not taking his eyes ,
from the magistrate’s face, which seem
ed to him endowed with some occult
power M Giuoiy went on:
“The frame -which you had trouble
in removing, since the scratches show
in the Wood And what if, after taking
the portrait to Alma’ Golard s shop, we
should find the frame in question at an
other place, at some other shop? That
would uot bo very difficult. ” And M.
Ginory smiled at Beruardet. "What if
we could add another new deposition
to that of Mme. Ctlard’s? Yes; what
if to that clear, decisive deposition wo
could add auothur —what would you
have to say?” ...
-Silence! Prades turned his head
around; his eyes wandered about, as if
searching to find an outlet or a support,
gasping like a man who' has been in
jured.
Jacques D.uitiu looked at him at the
same moment when tho magistrate,
with a glance keener, more piercing
than 'fever' seemed: to search: his*very
soul. The. young man w.us now'pallid
aud unmanned.
. \t 1 m f .vi- Prades pronounced sonio
'wen,-; , \Vb:if.'did. ho- want cf him?
/Vh;V 'vame was ho fall an 1 v bo
whs this other dealer of win tb
e arid whom .ho 1 ii • : "
gee .hm c ' eis this witness
with “tin' new d-p.'-aUi-'U:" < ■
I desire to attest to the merit I of
Chamberlain.s Cough Remedy as
one of the most valuable and efficient
preparations on the market. It broke
l an exceedingly dangerous cough for
me in 24 hours, and in gratitude there*
for, I desire to inform you that [ will
never he without it and you should
feel proud 01 the high esteem in which
your Remedies are k Id by people in
1 general. It is the one remedy among
ten thousand. Haccess to it.—O. I*.
Downey,EditorHeiiioerat, Albion. Ind.
f'or sale hr R. T. Thompson, Homer
• . Ga. -
“One Is enough, " lie said, easting a
ferocious look at AI the. Oolartl, who, on
a sign from Al.-.Ginory, had entered,
palp and fall of fear
He added in a u*nacing tone:
“One is even too tnneli. ”
The fingerst* liis.riglit hand contract
ed, as if around a knife handle. At this
- —-e- r
“I'ott deceive t /ourself.”
moment Beruardet, who was studying
each gesture which +1)0 man made, was
; i.onviuccd that the murderer of Revere
I was there, lie saw that hand armed
j with the knife, the oub'which had been
found t!i his pocket, striking his victim,
gashing the ex-consußs throat.
But, then, Dantin? All accomplice,
without doubt; the head, of which the
adventurer was. the arm. Becauso in
llie dead man’s eye Dantin’g imago ap
peared, redacted as clear proof, ljlco an
accusation, showiftg'the person who was
last sceu in Rovere's supremo agony,
Jacques Dautiu wx .(here. Tho cyo
. spoke,
Alufc. Gcl.trds tef.i ' t'o longer
; permitted ii C..." . T ,Tt. This
! Charles iTufic- w s c'.Tt . -;y v.'io uian
who sold the portrait.
Nofldng cotlhT be pi.A'i dc: p tlptt
tho two men had nevi rnu t N 1 sign cf
emotion showed tlrat Dauflti *hi*d • veh
seen tlio.young man before. Thp hitter
alone betrayed himself when he was go
ing to .Mazes with the original of the
portrait painted by Baudry. -, ••
But, however, as tho magistrate un
derlined it with precision, the fact alone
cf recognizing Diintih constituted
against Prades anew charge. Added, to
tin; testimony, to the formal affirmation
of the shopkeeper, this charge became
grave." - : -tt *" * ”,
< lolfllv M. Ginory said to his registrar,
j "An order!"
Then, when Favor'd had taken a pa
per engraved at. the top,'Which Prades
tried to decipher, the magistrate began
to questiou him, ond as M. Ginory
, 'spoke slowly FavoriT filled in the blank
places which made a free man a prisoner.
1 “Vou are called?’* demanded Al. Ui
nor.v.
"Prades: ”
. “ Ynur first.namc2i’.’ .
. “Henri. ”
1 “You said Charles to the eommijsavy,
ot police. ” ' * •
"Henri Charles—Charles—Henri. ”
,TUq magistrate did iiot-pye;j make a
sign In Eavcrei, seated before t.’ic table,
aud wlio v, r, very quickly' without M
Ginory dictating to him.
“Your profession?” continued the
magistrate.
“Gomiuission merchant. ”
.“•Your agd?”
“Twenty-eight.” ... ; (
“Your residence?”
“Sydney, Australia.” ■’ •
And upon thisofficial paper the replies
wero filled in one by one in tho. blank
places:
Court of the'First Instanep qt the Dejiartmeiit
,o£ tliu Sviqe: . • .
. ‘ .W.e; Htlnic • jltnimUL
Ctpg rails' Winory.cxam
War::i?xt of o-inmit- thing nmgistrtoof tli
ir.*:H i aganiav l“ra <v.mrt oJ[ U*t' Ur.-t lu„
Vi-i ' Ptatiro <# th% clcpari
—-- , .'jnnnt (rf Jtlte Pctno
. Notv - Write r*xa<*f!y ooimnund atul #:njoui
tin? mu hit's, Christ iim nil oilicor.** iimJ gnanlii
naincjs, professiuits of tlio public foyee t
Rge. rosideneb aud nh cUi<litoT to tho iirisnr.
tureof vhargo. ol'tletent*ton, failed tY.b.
. Wazas, in conformity
Description - to • tlio. law, Trades
(Chatjlc’s Henri ), nged
Height meter yearn. coimiiisKfon
. merehant froiii Byd
oentiinbters Tiey Accused of conr
t plicity m tho murder-
Forehead of Louis Fierro Ho
... \ere. We'dircct the di
Noso rector of w.id honnu of
do ten tid n ’ to rec.eivo
Eyes und hold hiu till fur
ther orders. com
Mouth maud every mau in
- tho public to lend as
Chin Kistnnce ih order to
• r yeoufe Jhe present or
Eyebrows <Ut, "in cose such no
eossit.v arises; in whiulf
,fi;ur wo utttach our name
c -and seal.
Senerai appearance Madp at tho Paints.
do Justice, in Paris,
the ljth of Febr.uary,
I.IXI.
} And below the seal was attached to
! the order by the registrar. Al. Ginory
1 signed it, saving to Favurel:
"The description must be left blank
They will fill it out alter tljo measure
uicuts are mi en ’
Tie n ‘rv..:,.-" till BOW, no?
f .„,. . - e : • as passing
a;, ml L - t - , vjvJejjti
start. A cry l a-x fi -■ ■
" Arrested 1 Havp you urre- disc?”
M t.igory v-p Mae vtbio. fie
AN ENTERPRISING DRUGGIST,
There are few men more wide awake
' ami enterprising tlmn X,. G. Hardeman
ii flro. who spare no pains to secure
i Jhe host of everytnir g: iu their line for
their maev eustomers. lliey now have
the valuable agency for Dr. King’s
New Discovery fnir Consumption,
Coughs and Colds. This is the won
derful remedy that is producing such a
furor all over the country y its many
startling evres' It absolutely cure*
Asthma. Bronchitis, lloars°ness and
all affections of the Throat, Chest and
Lungs. Call at above drug store and
get a trial bottle free or a regular reg
ular size for 50 cents and sl,oo'
Guaranteed to cure or price refunded.
wos cajih uiidTieliTlns pehEwlth which
he had signed tho order, suspended in
the air.. ITia young .mail rushed forward
wild with anger, and if the guards had
tint held him back ho would have sdized
M. Giuory's fat neck with both bauds
The guards held Prades back, while tho
examining magistrate,' carelessly prick
ing |iia table with his pen, gently said,
With a RiniJw: ••
“All the .-ame, more thau ouo’male
factor has betrayed himself iu a fit of
tuiger, 1 -lVtivo oft-'iHi- tliwnght that it
would take’very little to got myself as
sassinated when 1 had before mo au ac
cused person whom I felt was guilty
and who would not confess. Take away
the man!" , e • V.
While they wero pushing Prades to
ward tho corridor ho shouted, “Ca
nailles !’* M. Ginory ordered that Dautiu
should be left alone with him. "Alone,”
lie said to Beruardet, whose look was a
little uneasy. The registrar half roso
fi'om his chair, picking up his papers
aud pushing them iuto’tlre pocket of his
much worn paper case.
"No. You may remain, FavoreL"
"\ypll, ” said the magistrate in a fa
piiliar tone when he fo.und. himself face
toi face with Jacques Dautiu, “have
yon reflected?”
Jacques Dantin, his lips pressed close
ly together, did uot reply.
“It is a counselor —a counselor of
Rn especial kind—the cell. He who in
vented it”—
“ Yes, ” Dautiu brusquely interrupted.
“The brain suffers between thoso walls.
I have uot slept since I went there, not
slept at.nil. Insomnia is killing me. it
seenis as if I should go crazy. "
“Then?” asked M. Giuory.
“Then” —
Jacques Dantin looked fiercely at tfne
registrar, who sat waiting, his pen o> :
his car, his elbows ou the table, his
chin on his hands.
“Then, oh, well 1 Then, hero it is. 1
wish to tell you all—all But to you.—
to^you” — _
“To iiie' alone?”
•■“ Yes, ” said- Dantin, with tho same
fierce oxpres.sioH. -
"AJy dear Eavorcl" — tho magistrate
’began.
■•* Tlio registrar had already risen. He
slawiy' Ixitved and went out.
“Now,." -. said,, the magistrate to
Jacques Dautiii,,“you pan speak.”
■ 'Th'o-nian"stili hesitated.
“Alonvieiir ) * , " li asked, '“will any
Word said .here he .repeated—ought it. or
must it be repeated—in a courtroom at
tho assjzo's—l know not where —any-
where before the public?”
“That depends," said.. 51. Ginory.
. “."But what yon .know you owe to jns
tico, whether it be a revolution, an ao
cusatiou or a confession. I ask it of
you.”
Still Dantin hesitated. Then the
magistrate spoke tfiefe word#. “# dO
-i!.” . .. l( ' ... -, .. ; . ... ,
Wi*rh ; a violent effort, flip prisoner be- -
•gan: “So bait. But it is to a man of,
honrw rathdb that! to.a magistrate to
whom 1 address these words. If I have'
hesitated to speak', if I have allowed
uiyst If’ to be suspected and to lie ae-.
cused, it is because it seemed to in® im
.possible, absolutely iiiijiossiMe, -.that
this same truth should not bo. revealed
‘—l de Hot know iu what way—that it
would become known to you without
compelling me to disclose a secret which
was not min i. ” •
“T’o an ■e.aiiniiiHig magistrate' one
may toll o’, erything, ’ ’ said Al. Ginory.
.“’Wediare listened to confessions iu our
qflficits which are s inviolable os thosa
'of the confessional made to a priest.”
To be continued neit week.
THE
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thors in very number. Splendid rend
ing for women and other Special depart
mentsof unusual interest.
It stands first among “weekly” paper;
n size, frequency of publication and
freshness, variety and reliability of con
tents. It is practically a daily at the
low price of a weekly; audits vast list
of subscribers, extending to every state
and territory of the Union and foreign
countries, will vouch for the accuracy
ami fair ic i ts news columns.
\y, •If : <!.:• v.r i- 1 newspaper
•iiid lie- . O' Ai Y ,KH:K>AL
together one ,y*. r lor f isw,
The regular subscription price of the
1 wee paper $-.tO cish.
|p*^ r5S Cut a loaf of bread made of
¥ Igleheart’s Swaus Down Flour. You’ll •
I' find it as white and as light as —swans
down. Eat a slice of it and you’ll find its
goodness and sweetness equal its looks.
iusmmrs
snm mm Rmr
is milled from the best winter wheat that the
finest soil aud climate can produce. Ask for
it at your grocer’s, if you want the best
bread and pastry that flour will make.
. IGLEHEART BROS., EVANSVILLE, IND. e \
sraoira points:
Durable Roller Chain.
Less Friction,
Greater Speed,
Light Weights,
Great Strength
And Durability
More Modern Practical Improvements
Than can be'found on anv other wheel
*****-• • ****
DEALERS WANTED.
KEAtING WHEEL COMPANY. MIDDLETOWN . CONN.
' I *—] p DeLOACH'
H| M ft Voriobfo Fi iciioa
!:L -asm Aft reed Sew F.ills,
DeLOACH MILL MFG. COMPANvTAttantaf Gj„ l. S. A.
165 Washington St, New York City. 11l S. llt6 St * -t. I ouis, Mo. >-i
Those iiitoresfed in .can seethe liand*one I '- 7 Catalogue of tho
P ‘/iCfyjei : liiifi'.ctuj-iii Cos.. tl.ls < fee.
A. R.ROBERTSON
Monuments end TombstcneLWciks.
ATIIKNS. (i\.,
I havc’ cTlways on'hand and for sale a large stock of
MONUMENTS "and Tom!’> STONES
■- At KO C K I*. O.T T 0 M 1* RICE S.—
MOXuM EXT S , TO ?,I 11, HEAD nml FOOTS TO X E
An il VKADE E T O M I.i S.
Vou hliould always go and see RO 1> E Ii T S 0 N' Sand gef'nis pricei
Remombor ROIIFRTSOX l’nys ail the Freight to your nearest depot.
A. li. HOP.EDISON ..
115 Thomas bt.,
Athens Ga.
I .
NORTHEASTERN R. R. OF CEGRG9A
ni;T\Yi:i:X ATHUX.S AM) I,UFA
TIME TABL E Xod. To Take Effect Oct. 18. 181*7.
SOUTHBOUND
II li 8 - i1" 14
Unity fully Dally NoUTIIK.'.STeHN RAILROAD STATIONS,
■* ,vx
A. M. F.M. A, M. Lv * “•* ' *** A * r *
r, 30 Pi 11 05 W* >... . N f -i*
B *J' 8-Ri l\m . Maysvi KV • toU b
725 tW l*o lltrn‘m J*rt*'* . •• v J
*OS Ul'* ..." - ... '
i;l lL') F •* t *
A M P M A M AT-* •• • 1 *• M 1 •• 4
tStov 4 * ■ tfi jH#
NO. 52.