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BANNER-WATCHMAN.
TRADE NOTES-v
Int«ni|MHMd with Sundry Local Items, La coni
' \ ©*Uy NoM. * i J ' : ; ;
Bkat. in mtnfl that Lowe A Co. keep only the
Lost tad purvsl liquors t Ihelr bar.
Cor.roKTABLS beds and a flrst-elass attention
ean be hadat H. 11. Lntnpkiu'n. Don't forget
THJxmiy vltfc in the city you can get the fa
mous Maxi y'a sweetntarU whisky is Lampkin's.
K 11. LA«ri>iN kre^»s the finest bar-room in
Uu- city and the purest and best liquors.
Tiik only ten-pin alley in the city and the best
billiard and j*ool tables at Lampkln’s saiooU.
Ik you want to be treated like a Lord patron
age the popular saloon of R. H. Lautpkin.
Low it <k Co., wholesale and retail liquor deal
ers. broad sited. Athens, Ga. Remember.
if you waul the tarsi cigars sold in the city,
buy oi Lowe A Co. Try "Punch and Judy.”
Tan best keg aud bottled beer, porter ale, etc.,
always irvsh the bar oi Lowe & Co.
ji n Spring Is the best brand of rye whisky
• >*d iu Athens, although the Family Nectar U
auJ u> eclipse. Only uauidat Lowe A Com.
LoWk A Co. cau aud will duplicate, if not un
dersell, any bill of liquors sold iu Georgia at
wholesale. A uial is all they ask.
oi u friends from the country can get the best
ua.,1 cheapest bullied liquors at Lowe A Co's.
oi k couuiry corn whisky has a reputation
throughout the South. Try a quart or gallou.
y u a the tluesl imported wiucs, brandies and
1 tquurs of all kinds at Lowe A Co s.
Lowm A Co’s Cigars are the best in the city.
Nii disorder characters or loafers are tolerated
• round the bar of,Lowe A Co. We keep there
only our best aud purest liquors—guaranteed.
W a is k iks of llie old Kentucky style are-stead-
ijy iucrcasiiig in favor with those people who
seek absolute purify combined with that fruity
and mellow flavor *u» be found only in the gen
uine product of "Old Kalmuck ” JJarptr't Set-
ton t\>un!y Whitky is and has been for years be
fore the public aud has as well merited a repu
tation iu iu ow ii stale as it possesses abroad.
>old only by J. 11. D. Beumse, Athens, Ga-
liatNo your Job priutiug, binding book work
eer... to Uh; ^aTcmmak office. Maganines aud
music bound. Blank books made. Ruling
handsomely done. We defy competition iu pri
ecs and class of work from any quarter.
l'ike’s Toothache Drops care in one
lli.lUlU*.
BIRD S EYE VIEW OF THE CITY.
The Rleun of her eye «ts hrisht.
The gleam of her(old «u brighter;
The tint «u a beautiful Mght,
And the >econd » beautiful kighlcr.
The mountains of Georgia are full of
people. i ! J
Society never asks how a man gets
his money.
TCe era of political speeches will] built
soon begin. ' v ‘ *-
Still slaughtering stray dogs every
uiglil.s iu Alheus. :nni
Col. A. D. Candler pays tax on
000 iu Gainesville.
Cotton of the new crop is beginning
to come in Atlanta.
Gold Dust Cotton.—It la predict
ed that there will he a great deal of
yellow cotton uext fall, as the crop is
- 4oo backward to mature before frost.
Walnut lumber is worth $250 per
1,000 feet in Charleston.
A new view at Talluluh has been
named “Point Foreacre.’’
The jail rioters will be again indict
ed by our next grand juiy.
Corn in Georgia is pronounced 20
per cent, above the average.
A lodge of Good Templars will soon
be organized at Wiuterville.
A move is on foot in the state
stop trains running on Sunday.
Mr. Speer is shaking hands with the
mountain boys up to ibe elbow.
Hon. A. D. Candler will make a
thorough canvass of the district.
The prohibitionists will run a hill
ticket for the legislature this fall.
Heady-made clothing has considera
bly declined in price over last tall.
to)
Ax Accident.—Last evening Mar
tin Mijiigan, a colored boy engaged in
moving RuckerV cotton compress,
had bis toes mashed olT by the wheels
of the large wagon runnlngover them.
■ — — f—
Ami Broken.—Two negroes en
gaged at Rucker’s compress got into
a difficulty yesterday, when John
Hayes struck Alec Lawrence a blow
Many farmers in Oconee will make with a scantling on the arm, breaking
irlk Aimilvh f/> /Ira Ilium turn iiua*u >■ ...
corn enough to do them two years. _ j lmb
We are getting tired of the rains; -It -
is quite too much of the good thing.
A grand democratic ratification
meeting will soon be held in Athens.
Mr. Hart's dinner house at Union
Point is said to be the best iu the state.
Huts Them All.—A practical tea*
made by Braiublett A Bro. ut Forsyth,
shows that Chdrry's Fruit Evaporator
will do ta ice the work of auy in the mar
ket. Write to McBride A Co., who will
give positive proof.
p«>»ib Dlat*nc»d.
A1.KXARRMA, VA., AUgUbt 4, If**.
II. II. \Y*nicr A Co; hirs—1 shouul h*v« been
iu my grove to-day. hsd it not been for your Safe
Kuli»cy and Liver Cure. Mrs. Biaokss.
MY L&UOR .
Has always commanded the com-
meiidatlon of the most fastidious con
noisseurs for its purity, lieulthfuluess
and delicacy, in which qualities I am
justified in saying that it has never
l,een excelled. By the slowness of fer
mentation tlie generation of fusil oil
is id most entirely obviated, and by
tiie perfect manner of distillation all
deleterious stihstauces are eliminated
from tlie spirit. It is especially re
commended from its purity and whole-
NOiueiiess for uiediciual purposes.
I. W. IiAKl'EK, Distiller, Kelson
County, Ky.
sole agent:
J. H. D. BEUBSE, Athens Ga.
A Nov xl Fly Trap.—Mr. Thos. Hutch
eson, of Wintervllle, has a novel and
successful fly trap—a large hornet’s nest
uu.lcr the eave of his residence.
Too Much Rais.—In many sections
our |a*ople are having too much rain tor
fodder pulling, so they are impatiently
awaiting thecleaalng off shower.
Diseases Chickens.—Hundreds of
chickens are dying with the cholera in
ami around Athens, and many families
have stopped eating them. It would be
a good idea to consult some reliable
chicken doctor before slaughtering a foul.
Parlor Fvrsiturk.—John Bird will
in a few days receive a fine lot of parlor
suits at No. 12, Broad street.
Another Asteroid Disdovered.—The
Smithsonian Institute lias received from
l*rof. Forester, of Berlin, the announce
ment of the discovery by P. Hefry, of
Paris, on the 12th of August, of a plan
etoid of the 12th magnitude in 22 hours
1 minute right ascension and 13 degrees
3.*> minutes south declination.
t Inins atvon.—Messrs. Thornton Chan
dler and John Williams were ordained
deacons at Pleasant Grove Baptist
church, Madison eouuty, last Thuisday.
A large congregation present. Elder
W. F. Stark preached and was assisted
hv Elders Edwards and Sanders. A new
liou-e of worship lias been built and the
church is destined to do good.
The Oconee White Sulphur.—
There are now 175 guests at this fa
mous resort—the largest number of
visitors registered since the hotel was
Barbecue.—A very fine neighbor
hood barbecue was had below Win
terville last Thursday. A large crowd
was present, but there was plenty for
all and to spare. *
.Excursion.—This term is derived
from two Latin words: Ex mean o9
andrur to ran. So It seems that the
late smash-up was proftised in ad
vance
A Nfew Store;—Mr. Dock Dorsey
will soon open a new store near the
Georgia depot, opposite his residence.
Dock is a live, whole-souled fellow,
and we wish him unbounded success.
by some to be a preconcerted scheme
to release the prisoners now confined
in the jail of Clarke county. The fire
was undoubtedly the work of an in
cendiary, as there was no way by
which it could have caught acciden
tally. This suspicion was strength
ened by a citizen, on the night In
question, a short time before the
alarm of fire, hearing a negro tell an
other whom be bad met upon the
street to be certain and get all the
boys to meet at the jail. The party at
the time thought it was a plot to
break open the. jail and release “
prisoners, but before the fact
communicated the clfing of
bell was heard. It
.that the vould-be
firing the stable to also set ablaze
jail, and as soon as the prisoner
taken from the burning bul' "
make a rush and thus effect
lease during the confiiuion
a fire. But the whole plot,
was, miscarried, for our
men quickly subdued “
out danger to our com
may be but an idle ' „
hope it is. The negroes in
have had a fair and impartial
A Political Barbecue.- A rumor is
prevalent lu Athens that Mr. Speer’s
friends intend to take advantage of the
railroad barbecue at V.'_tkinsville next
Tuesday to liave him deliver a political
epeiv^ to the crowd there assembled.
11 this lie true, the democrats of Athens
and oilier section* ui the country inter-
ewted In the pr0|«0sell railroad will have
nothing whatever to do with the meet
ing. as they do not eare to have politics
mixed up with ini|«ortant public enter
prises. We would respectfully suggest
to our friends in Oconee that they ex
plain this matter before the meeting
comes off, lest they throw a damper on
an enterprise that is of far more impor
tunes to tlie country than the election of
an independent congressman.
F'or all kinds of furniture, coffins, pic
ture frames, window shades, etc., go to
John Bird, No. 12, Broad street.
A HearUaat woman.
They ore making brick now out of
dry earth, without a particle of water.
Much of the charity that begins at
home is too feeble to get out of doors.
Farmers are afraid that they cannot
find a market for their corn uext win
ter.
They are now talking of having a
grand ratification barbecue Hear Ath
ens.
une carp placed in a mill-pond
near Athens have grown to be large
fish.
The colored academy at Macon for
the blind is rapidly nearing comple
tion.
The wreck of the excursion train
has all been sent to tbe shops in At
lanta.
It is thought that not one sardine
box iu a hundred hold genuine sar
dines.
Miss Arie Hyde was killed near
Dawson ville by the bite of a rattle
snake.
Numbers of the resorters are return
ing to Athens from springs and moun
tains.
It is said that there will be more
combinations, than theatres the next
season.
As long as watermelons are so cheap
nobody need go to bed hungry, or
thirsty.
Our merchants are starting out a
great many drummers, and they find
it pays.
Mays ville Is getting to be one of the
finest business points in Northeast
Georgia.
The large distillers out west have
decided to reduoe their distillation 40
per cent.
The University of Georgia is adver
tised extensively through the south
this year.
Dr. Frank Durham killed both a
joint and a hoop snake in his garden
at Sparta.
Oconee White Sulphur Springs is
the most fashionable summer resort
in the south.
Our post-office is constantly sur
rounded by a crowd of negroes, talk
ing up Speer.
It Is said the reason old maids take
so fondly to cats, is because the felines
have whiskers.
Business is springing up, and the
prospects for a rich harvest were never
more flattering.
The father of Col. A. D. Candler was
the original Captain of the .Banks
County Guards.
The mother and sister of the late
Walter Rountree have been on a visit
to Gainesville.
Sunday rambles to the Georgia ex
tension are popular with both ladies
and gentlemen.
There are several weeks of hard
work yet to do before the railroad
reaches tbe falls.
An old man in the one of our moun
tain counties makes all the stills used
by the moonshiners.
A part of the county line between
Jackson and Banks counties has never
been marked or run.
Alligator hides are in such demand
that several large alligator farms have
been staited in Florida.
The soda fountains closed for want
of patronage. Too much lemonade
and beer was the cause.
We had a pleasant call yesterday
from our esteemed friend, Mr. J. J. C.
McMahan, of Crawford.
We would rise to ask, will the de
mocracy of Clarke nominate a caudi*
date for the legislature?
Asii ville is very happy now since
the New Orleans swells have com
pleted the list of arrivals.
They are now manufacturing near
Augusta pine wood oil, to be used for
ft
Court House Cistern.—The coun
ty convicts are now at work building
cistern 42 by 12 feet, near the
court-house, to furnish water in case
of fire and to be used at the jail. It
will be a great safeguard and conven
ience.
The Army Worn in Oglethorpe.
—A farmer from this county yesterday
'nformed us that he had seen a hat-
full of army worms In his cotton, but
as yet they hod done no damage. They
were not the caterpillar, although
clearly resembling tnat reptile.
An Aged Convert.—George Hodge
a negro blacksmith, doing business
near Wintervllle. was immersed by a
negro Baptist preacher last Sunday.
This old man has about attained his
hundredth year and has been perhaps
the most profane man In the land.
“How’s Chops?”—Well, they con
tinue just as fine as the land can grow.
Farmers will make all the corn they
can gather, while enough cotton will
be raised to pay store bills. We can
turn our’ back on the great west next
year, and live at home aud board at
the same plaee.
Improvement.—Messrs. Talmadge,
Hodgson A Co. are having shelves put
up In the second floor of their store,
where they trill shortly have two of
of the largest and most attractive
rooms, for dry goods end shoes in the
city. They are also building a ladies
entrance to these too ms.
A Temperance County.—There Is
not a barroom In Putnam county, al
though the prohibition law is not in
operation. The citizens of the county
have been educated to live without tbe
stimulus of the ardent, and area pros
perous and happy people. The popu
lation of the county is about 15,000.
Mrs. Gardner Folsom has no particu
lar use for Col. Folsom, with whom she
is always fighting, and is one of the most
heurtlese women in the city of Austin.
Her husband was reading the morning
paper yesterday morning at the break'
fast table, when he exclaimed In a hor
rified tone of voice:
•What a terrible misfortune!”
“Wh® Is It—Somebody got married?”
No, but a married woman In New
York, lit a fit of rage, threw aooffec
cup at her husband. The cup was shiv
ered imo fragments, and oue of them,
cutting his jugular artery, he died, on
the Mdft. The reporter says the grief of
tlie unfortunate woman was dreadful to
witness. She was frantic with remorse,
and mad” several attempts to put an
end to her existence.”
“Poor creature,” said Mrs. Folsom
with a Mgli, **1 reckon the broken cup
must have belonged to bar new China
set!”— Trjttt Sifting$. 9
Removal.—John Bird has moved his
stock of furniture and coffins to No. 12,
Broad street.' '
A Snoring Hen.—A few nights
since while sitting on our front porch
we beard strange sounds on the flower
stand, like some,doe snoring, and be
ing unable to account for U, we ad
vanced to the stand and found perch
ed on the top step, an old hen sleep
ing, snoring and dreaming quite
peacefully. ; • y ,
Grading Broad Street.—By grad
ual work thit'gnst thoroughfare in
Athens is being levelled off, and in a
short time the two abrupt hills that
enclose it on each end will be cut
ddgrg bn h level w^th tbs street. The
Dorsey hilt will be taken off from first,
the dirt being-.uaedjto repair Oconee
street. | r~| . r~' .
The jFj|£L8.-£$efory the railroad
many aiftiioljeigiiteaf different points
at Tallulah Falls were greatly exag
gerated. The altitude of the Devil’s
Pulpit was put at 1,000 feet, when in
fact it does not exceed 300. The high
est place Is Turner’s Point, which
measures something over 700 feet. The
railroad runs along the brink of this
precipice.
other day that his business In |
trict had almost played oat.
An old gentleman tells as ttmthe
has heard the scream of many a pan
ther around Tallulah Falls. "
Dr. Thompson, the nominee ffotf
Madison, gives a lie to the report the
he hasn’t paid his old debts,
The railroad lots at Tallulah will
not be sold until the location of the
southern Cbatauqua is settled.
WA8 IT A PLOT?
Bmson that tbs Burning of Hie Cellar's Subic
vaa Part ofe Plot to Reactio tbo Rountree 1
The burning on Wednesday night
... — —
of Sheriff Weir’s stable, that'was - in boy* ^hsdgowuSpto theWhlte'fenh >e !J er V* y ’ 1 we “ ked uil
close proximity to the jail, is claimed phur, returned home very unexpectedly,1 ‘ Ka . r ?. t0the *?. eal ‘ h .. of °^ r . clty -
and we searched out one for an interview
upon to* subject. " ‘
■Well” remarked our informant,
THE DISTRICT SENATOR.
Covington, Ga., August 18,1882.
Hon. Pope Barrow, Athens, Ga.—
Dear Pope:—I little dreamed that our
names would be brought Into opposi
tional Social Circle on yesterday. No
other expectation had I, than that
Mqjor McDaniel would be nominated
promptly.it the convention decided
not to regard the rotation system,
had heard that he partly desired the
nomination, and that you had inform
ed him that you would not, therefore,
be a candidate. The use of my name
was wholly at the instance of the ex
cellent delegates from Newton, and
without suggestion from me to such
effect, or any effort whatever, on my
part, to procure it. If I had been pres
ent at the time, with knowledge that
you would be pqt In nomination, I,
would have interposed objection to
the nomination ofmyself. Regretting
that the use of my name operated,
possibly, to withhold from you the
unanimous vote of the convention on
first ballot, and congratulating yoa,
the convention and the district, I re
main, your long time friend,
J. M. Pace.
Agents can now grasp a fortune. Outfit worth
10 sent free. For full particulars address E. G.
Kideout & Co.. 10 Barclay St.. N. Y.
THEY TACKLE THE WRONG MAN
Saw Ba T* a *°” ««b— ZorTtm wiPocAFaJ 1
Monro* County Oiuftr. and bof
mrmm
whom we shall call John H. Higgins,
“you secure got sorter mixed up with a
hoary Gd veteran from Monroe county,
named fambrough, and had to leave iu
aelf-defmfie.”
“Hut was that V” we asked.
“I’ll tell yon the whole story if you’ll
promise to keep It quiet. Last Wednes
day evening there came to the springs
one of the queerest old gophers you ever
saw. He brought his good lady along,
and that night the boya got together and
decided to tony dm monotony of things
by having some fnfi out of the new arri
val. The old chap looked like a super-
anuated edition of Ham, of the Gaines
ville Eagle, and it (ell to my lot to break
the ice with him- While our victim was
watching a German with open eyes and
mouth I stepped up to him very courte-
u... ...v. v“*T “~v- ou ^ y »* nd « r "l , in*hU paw exclaimed: .muieuiatety irom me paten. At tills
punishment by outraging the faergof w ... the heart is still green, the meat next
his country.
Fambrougb—Fambrougb, of Monroe
-fcounty.-ismy name.sir, not Ham!” re
marked the old coon, returning my grasp
witn a 40-horse power grip that brought
the teats to my eyes.
“I came to ask you, Mr. Ham,” con
tinued the torturer, “wbat you thought
of Csadler’a chances?”
“1 tell you, sir, my name is not Ham
—it’s Fainbrongh, Fambrougb, Fam
brougb, of Monroe!”
to the seed has begun to decay. When
-you see the core separated by overripe
meat, or thejs^d of the melon begins
to water, you had beUer let It alone,
as a spell of fever oertainly larks with
in that rind. I often see parties diet
ing on melons that I wouldn’t eat for
*100. The other day -1 was at the
home of a country friend, who had bis
piazza fiffadVilh fine melons. We
,. IW> - t ^ , i v [ cut 1 '•“PW* a Wd «v«y one
Do you think McDaniel will get the was more or less effected, although
lTnlviJlIinn t*A«. onnnin. \(. IT. A.VS .. « w . . ' ' -- —’
REVISING THE JURY LIST.
r limi
hoBozoo.
Tbe jury commissioners of Cla rke
county have just completed revising
the box, and we feel assured that this
labor will give general satisfaction.
They have added over one handmd
new names, and both boxes notoeom- -
pose 490. They have left in the jox
four colored men—Madison Davis,
Thad Boyd, Eugene Brydie and Bich
ard S. Harris. A few that were among
the chosen last time have been left
off, while others have been reduced
from grand to petit jurors, and risa
vena. This is a very difficult and
thankless task, for it is Impossible for
a few men to know the standing of
every one in the county. We feel as
sured that the commissioners acted
to tbe best of their judgment, and if
they have committed errors they were
tbe result of the bead and not of the
heart. We will endeavor to get tbe
list for publication, and give it to our
readers entire. We learn that, more
names have been put on tbe list fbom
tbe country, which is certainty just
and fair. The fouzcolctaed men on £ht>
list are among our best and most use
ful citizens of that nee, and it is pro
per that they should receive this rec
ognition. In fitch R* ate in fatbrof
having two Jury boxes—did the law
perotite-one fl 1 ledjartglSKlAJSh. Jfchtacircalar m, and advised them
ored men] to try
rests solely wii
white box to try Vbite
law would be both whfc and*
A HUMAN SKELETON
A «•
Yesterday evening, while the hands
engaged in excavating for the Georgia
Railroad extension were at work about
150 yards below the depot, they un-
The Cgta PHI #ra’
irty-elghth annual co
TERNITY.—The
convention of the
Chi Phi Fraternity will be held at the
Kimball house in Atlanta, beginning
September 6th, 18<S. The meeting
will be one of lgrfiat importance, as
new msasnrsa are to be considered tor
the advancement .of the club, which
already has flourishing chapters at
every prominent college in the union
and many In Europe.
earthed the bones of a human bfilflg, V y Ui , aQ annlulI pj^t and to a
burled about two feet beoealh tho.ur- ^ £ „ J?
face. No one was ever known to be -.i . _ „
A New Intoxicant.—A New Or
leans wn invented an Intoxicating
beverage, which he said was bound to
revolutionise the processes of pleasur
ably gettingjdrunk., He invited some
friends to dinner^mid tried the new
fiquld on them. -They drank it with
^avidity and rolled comfortably under
the table; but next day they bad to
be put under a physician’s care, ana
the host has gone to work to perfect
hts invention.
paiuting fence posts, etc.
A soldier was bung near Moon!a
Shop, on the North-Eastern, during
the war, for horse-stealing.
The North-Eastern railroad carries
out large crowds of tourists and pleas
ure seekers on every train
There have been 65 carcasses sub
scribed for tbe railroad barbecue, at- - . jz . ■ - . .
Watkinsville next Friday. A Horse on a-Tbestle.—On Toes-
A revenue officer informed ua the ^ Wr* tn * n ***c^®d the scene of
i the die- th?I
Jlj- A Calf el VWO MUk.
In imaging down Broad street y—Mr
day, l>r. Mitchell called os In and gave
ua tbe following item! On his plantation,
five miles from town, Hfss a family by
the name of Fincher. Mrs. Fincher has
a calf seven months old, that is yielding
a quart of milk per dayo^pint night and
morning. We were Incredulous, hut the
Doctor assured ustoottt
said tliai
bio case
to believe
Fincher
aliy true. W
and be co.toI
ment, sayiujc that the calf
|y milked night and morning,
the yield was a pint of trood, rich milk
at eaSh milking. Attention waa attrac
ted to the calf about a month or two ago
by'
gun# age. The tnanlpulailop cK
deg Is the only theory we cad give fti ex
planation of this remarkable freak of
nature.—time Bulletin.
a
All the heavy machinery of Mayor
Rucker’s compress was removed to
the Georgia railroad yesterday.
New postoffices have been establish
ed at Doehead, Washington county,
and Quebec, Union county, Ga.
Those street grinders will take tbe
temper out of any knife or scissors
turned over to them to sharpen.
Mr. Tunison baa res’gncd his place
in the. Athens post-office, Mr. Bur
banks being chosen In his stead.
-.The he
rockweig
' ‘stanoe. -
An acre of good land It fs said wii
produce 84,500 pounds of watermelons
that will yield 2,415 pounds of sugar.
crop of sugar cane is so i
" of ansa!
to boy symp mlUs <a
G.’h. Yancey is chairman of the
rt executive committee, while
Mr. W.B. Burnett lathe member from
Clarke,
Parties living in Cobbham can order
goods and have them delivered,
S nicker than they could send an or-
er down town.
. A lady in Athens bought a quart of
liniment from a peddler for five cents
and then burned her hand to see If Jt
was a sure cure.
late accident at Mud Hazel creek,
the engineer discovered a large white
horse standfrig Jn the middle of the
trestle. The train was stopped, when
it «is fb(nS(th4 tb« home had fas
tened'one of its lap between the
cross-ties. He was released, and the
animal walked orar the bridge with
out further trouble and tbe train
—~
nomination for senator, Mr. Ham ?
"I do not know Candler, McDaniel or
Ham, sir; my name is Fambrough, of
Monroe!" and the old fellow gave Hig
gins a look that plainly said, “Just call
me Ham once more, if you dare?” He
deemed it good policy to excuse himself
and leave, when another of the plotters
came forward, and speaking to the old
gentleman as Mr. Openheimer, wished
his opinion on Candler’s chances. Not in
toe least incensed he politely explained
that his name was Fambrough, of Mon
roe; but torturer No. 3 insisted so urgent-
lr on calling him Openheimer that the
irate granger geutiy hinted that lie
would Openheimer his intcrogator if lie
didu't git up aud dust.
After this several other parties stepped
up, and designated Mr. Fambrough as
Ham, until at last the old man began to
doubt his own Identity, and chuckled
with hl9 wife at the fan of being taken
for another man.
Having thus set their trap, the plotters
sent by a boy toe following note:
“Mr. Ham alia* Fambrough :—I saw
you to-iiight winking at my wife, and
while perhaps it was not an inteutional
insult on your part, at the same time I
demand (lersonal aud immediate satis
faction. Meet me at once on toe west
verandah, where I now await you.
C. W. Clifford."
The note was duly delivered, which
the old msu, after wiping and putting
on hts silver-rimmed spectacles, read
carefully and deliberately. He seemed
at first not to realize the situation, but
perused the note several times. In tlie
meantime the paper had attracted tbe
wife's attention, who taking it from his
hands, read it herself. An animated
conversation ensued between toe pair,
Intermingled with nods and winks, etc.
Finally the old la>ty pointed to the poreh,
and Mr. Fambrough, of Monroe, deliber-
“to'y *nd going into the oflice for
athreb-yfcar-Cld hickory stick that he
had left there, pranced to that west ve
randah like a cyclone. The boys realized
the situation just In timeto escape in the
darkness, but old man Fambrough held
the fort for about two hours. That night
he was seen comparing his note with the
signatures on the register, and it wasn’t
long before he discovered the author of
his Clifford letter.
Some of the guests who knew the old
man Informed the plotters that he would
interred in this locality, and the dis
covery smirks of foul play. Coroner
Jennings was at once notified, and
will hold an InqueTover the remains,
but we have not as yet heard the ver
dict of the jury.
Ninth District Executive Committee.
G. H. Yancey, of Clarke, chairman.
Gwinnett, W.J.Bomi
Habersham. Dr. O. M. Doyle.
Banka, D. T. Burke, inj/j ]/ •
Dawson, Geo. K. Porter.
Franklin, Dr. W. C. McIntyre.
Forsyth, Andrew L. Keith* - , -
Hall, J. E. Redwine*-? V~f ( }
Jackson, W. C. Howard.-* A V_>
Clarke, W, B, Barnett.
Lumpkin, B. H. Baker.
Madison, R. H. Bullock.
Morgan, G. D. Derry.
Oconee, J. T. Harrison.
Rabun, T. N. McConnell.
Union, L.T. Christopher.
White, J. J. Kemsey. f l
White, Wm. Tate, Sr.
A Card From Hon. H. W.
Editors Evening News, .Augusta—I
observe iu your paper tl yesterday, Jk
paragraph giving toe names of several
gentlemen who are mentioned In the
Athens Chronicle ae “applicapta fag toe
position in the State University wade
veoen? Kv fka ramfival nf TYr, nPffHa*^
l«M%a
” C^HHMR « M^WMG-Jtork Pit-
“GrawKwT*
and heeayewemayJuatputthe “Free
State” .down for Candler by 500 ma
jority. He aaya th* people are enthus
ed over nls nomination, and Intend to
vote as a unit for a ‘Btsifi who a^ran^
pjfe&aroarse
Madison la a white man’s oounty, and
they don’t Intend, to endorse Speer
andWe’ilfc'tt officers. HffJ
Our Nominee.—Several years agp
»large number of men engaged in the
illicit whisky business were arrested
andcarried to Atlanta. Hon. Allan
at
he
" LATE WATERMELONS.
IWwlrs to rTomltwn* Fhystclsn About
Ibis Topultor Fruit.
Meeting a leading physician of Ath
ens yesterday, we asked him in re-
“It is excellent,” was the reply* “no
serious sickness now—only watermel
on fevers, principally confined to chil
dren.”
“Do you* think watermelons un
healthy?” we inquired.
“At this season they certainly are—
particularly the ones now in our mar
ket. They are too ripe, and each con
tains several messes of fever, not
counting the colic and other small ail-
ments. If jrou can gat melons pulled
at the right stage they cau be eaten
until the 1st of September, but they
are very scarce now. After the cool
nights set • in it is very dangerous to
eat them.” ,
“If you can get them fresh from the
wagons they are all right?” we sug
gested.
“I suppose you are more apt to get
them fresh bj? purchasing direct
from the grofrer, but there isn’t one
in twenty fit to eiti, even when taken
immediately from the patch. At this
leave next morning before be arose. They
got up two hours before day, walked to
the station, and arrived safely home.
CALIFORNIA, OR YELLOW CLOVER.
, fee l** muon WolrAxno.
Let me say a word in favor of this
somewhat peculiar forage plant, par
ticularly as this is tbe time of the
year for securing its seeds. It is really
a species of Lucerne^]though belong
ing to the great clover, or Trefoil fam-
effected,
they had been juat p^lfod. I ate a few
mouthfuls from thahegrt of oue, and
It came nesx tying me in a bow-knot
with the coHcV If freshly-pulled mel
ons will serte one thus, what can you
expect from those that are kept for
perhaps a week? Why, the heart is
a mass of putrefaction, and It is like a
person voluntarily taking that much
malaria into his system. Now these
late planted melons, that will soon be
in market, are filled with chills and
fevera. A watermelon is a sun plant,
and should not be eaten uuder any
circumstances except In very hot
weather.-*
THE ARMY WORM.
Th.j TACklo Mr. T. F. Hudson's Orsss Farm sad
Clson Up FIRo*n Sosos la e Sln/ls Nl*ht.
Mr. Tom Hudson, the famous carp
and grass farmer of our county, was
in the city yesterday, and brings the
astounding report that the army worm
has i Availed his grass farm and is de
molishing it at the tate of fifteen
acres In a day and night. It was only
a few days ago these pests first made
their appearance, and their increase
is wonderful. Soon they covered
the grass on a meadow of fifteen acres,
and in a single night bad swept it as
if with fire. What was only a few
hours ago a luxuriant growth of hay
was transformed almost into a barren
desert. Yesterday morning the worms
were seen devouring the bushes, strip
ping them of every leaf. Their appe
tite is most voracious, and they
greedily digest anything green that
comes in their way. Mr. Hudson is
now at w ork mowing his bay in the
fields adjacent, to save it before invad
ed by this new vegetable plague. He
is afraid that it cannot be harvested
in time. He has seen none of tbe
worms on his cotton, although there
is little doubt of their attacking it as
soon as the tender grass is finished.
These worms are the natural result of
the .wet summer, and It is feared that
their spread will seriously injure
orops. If their ravages can be stayed
for a few weeks, until cotton can take
on more fruit, they will prove a bless
ing in disguise, as it will not injure
the staple to have the rank foliage
stripped off that the sun may strike
.!
Tho Dream of a St. Louie Maiden.
/Yam tirCklcag* Trilmm.'
“You ate sad, Myrtle."
The dead leaves were being blown
ruthlessly across the. lawn by the
gusty October wlnda that swept over
St. Louis, while across the sky-laden
clounds, whose darksome front be
tokened a coming storm, were hurry-
* culiar in Its growth that all traces of
vegetation entirely disappear from
the middle of June until near the first
of Ootober, iU growth being confined
almost entirely to. the winter months.
Us great value consists in the facility
with which it grows in connection
with Bermuda grass, as it grows
wbflSJhat grass Is entirely dormant
All that’ is necessary In order to get a
stand is toscatter the burr like seed
pod* over theBermuda-iod, and If cat
tle arvkept off they will come up and
form a rank and luxuriant growth fit
for nrowingby the middle of May. it
makes a hay that Is greatly relished
by Cattle, although eaten but sparsely
by horses,' they can become quite fond
oflti It makes, however, a rich yel
low butter of exoe 11 ent quality. A lady
VHend who is an excellent judge of
such mattei s, tells me that she con
siders this grass, In connection with
the moat valuable produc-
lot. Tbe seed in limited
be obtained at various
places around this town, and I think
anyone who will give it a trial in
connection with Bermuda will become
convinced in a year’s time of its great
‘fetys t Qne seeding is sufficient for tbe
bora, Uke pods distribute them-
selves after the first Year. It was
vacaat'by too remora! *
As my name appears in the Ittt.-t beg-p*- E- B- Ware. And the advantage
la Its extreme.earliness,
fused to.
(have never as yet heard of a single)
thing about mortgaging bia property,
jatoaif'Se’ nlaaae of one of these
; Mr. Candler pute his shoulder
| between the two men.
leave respectfully to state thatl usnot
aa aspirant for . "
sponsible place.
--- Very—.
Henry W. HiljjauS.
Kimball House, At
FraNiTt-ax.—For
of all kinds go t* JohdSfcd’t, No. 12,
Broad street, Athens, Ga. ;
.ssBsafc ""V 1
Wiunsma. N. cd
H. H. Warner: Sirs—Yoor Bale, EM
I Ex-Chief, Fire ”
A N#wr Puzzle.
VOLCANO 'BURST IN OGLETHORPE.
An !5*pYo*?on.thffit OqqnrreA, ( !n tfvs Eartli Many
Wears Ag£
Mr. Aycock, who farms, on Broad
river, in Qgletb^rpe, was in ,ti»e city
yesterday, and, tell*, ua of an extinct
volcano near residence, on Shoal
oreek. Many years ago the people In
that section were aroused one night
by an Immense explosion, that pound
ed as H twenty or more kegs pj pow
der bail been touched oil'at once. It
created great alarm, and some thought
it a signal foit judgment day. The
next day a company was organized to
examine into the mystery, and it was
soon solved. * Near the Intersection of
Shoal creek and Broad river a large
hole was ’found 'in the earth, still
smoking with Internal' fires,. And the
earth for some distance around was
so warm that the pit was approached
with difficulty. The chasm blown out
wasaslafge as a smiMl^hquse, and
was twenty-five or thirty feet deep.
Large trees had been blown up, and
their trunks were charred as if by fire.
The rocks around were blackened and
the earth scorjhed. Afterwards, when
the ground had cooled, a substance ra
mbling tallow waa seen oozing from
the cracks In this volcanic blast, and
It can he seen to this day. It has been
about 5ff years since this disturbance,
but the cavern ' made by the
subterranean explosion Is still seen,
the sides yet dripping with a tallowy
aubstaaoe. Mr. Aycock is one of the
most rallahla men in 6eorgia, and he
was one who hmud.the explosion. We
have promised to visit this wonderful
plaee. at imna fawe day, when we
will givea fuller acooitntofit.
A Negro Burned, to Deatn B% Year*
Ago, in GreeneviUe, S.C.
EnterprUe and Mountaineer.
I was born on June 8th, 1810, at the
Fork Shoals place, sod the first time 1
was at GreeneviUe court house, I think,
was on July 7, 1827. I went up there
to see a negro man burned to death for
killing a Mr. Peter Garrison. Some lit
tle time previous it war circulated
throughout the county, (that is, the low
er partof it,) that there was a runaway
negro in the county, breaking in milk-
houses, smoke-honses aud kitchens and
steaUng provisions. Mr. Garrison was
out on one occasion, and got home a lit
tle while after night. He went to his
barn, or an old house he used to live In,
to get some fodder for his horse, and he
stayed so long his wife and daughter
went to the fodder house, entered and
called him. He did not answer. They
soon discovered him lying down on the
floor, and they shook him and called his
name, hat he never answered. They
felt about him and found something
wet. They then went and got a light
and made a search, and found he was
dead. They informed their neighbors,
and next morning they discovered that
there bad been a scuffle, from signs
in the house. There was a large poke
atalk lying on the floor, cut Uke a stick.
It grew by the side oi one of toe doors,
outside the house. The neighbors came
ia from every direction, and caret at
search was made. They supposed that
Mr. Garrison had found him in the
house, and tried to capture him, and in
ao doing, the negro kiUed him by stab
bing him. They said he was cut in
three or four places. It was said the
negro belonged to a man who lived in
Georgia, by the name of Boon. I think
a Mr. Underwood was. sheriff at that
time, aud he hired a man by the name
of John Stone to born him. I went an 1
saw him brought out of the jail, a little
brick house that then stoood down be
tween the old court house and tlie pub
lic spring. I and some other persons
rode on past to the place where the altar
Was prepared. , ,.
Tbe place where he was burned, is lo
cated or the Pendleton road, about one
mile from the court house, and within
the present limits of the City of Green
ville. They had cut a postoak tree square
off, nearly as high as a common man's
head, and there was a staple of iron and
three or four links of a chain .and when
they pot him ia too. altar, they locked
these links around his neck and fastened
them. The altar, I noticed, waa made
of several sorts of wood, with a good
deal of Ughtwood, The sheriff had thir
ty men aa guards, After patting him in
toe altar, they packed in shavings and
Ughtwood around him.. Then they
brought a barrel of tat and knocked out
one head of the barrel and poured the
TANNER OUTDONE 1
Moron Telegraph <* Meueaper.. ’
The details' bf orib of .the most marvel
ous cases of protracted abstinence from ”
food has just become fully known, tfibagh’*
R has been going on In Forsyth 'for 1
weeks. Perry Cooley, a mulatto, ijail-"
Ing from Anderson, 8. C„ was arrested *
about June 1st, in Monroe county', oh a "
charge of burglary and committed to
jail to await his trial at toe August term *
of court. He expressed his determine'- '
tion never to go to toe chain gang, stat- '
Ing that he preferred to starve. He
steadily refused food for weeks, as con
be testified to by Sheriff C. A. King ahi’ ,
deputy' sheriff J. IL King,' who ' lias 3
charge of tlie jail and sees to the feeding ’
'of the prisoners. He always refused to ‘
eat, and while it was then left in the”
cell, the food was always found after
wards untouched. He offoh begged
Sheriff King to let him have a razor, un
der pretense of wanting to shave, anil 1
also asked the loan of his knife j but as
Mr. King suspected his Intention, he "
was never allowed any kind of lnstru- '
ment. But he still adhered to bis pur
pose of self-destruction, and after a
month’s '• ~
TOTAL ABSTIXESCB FROM FOOD, ’ 5< l 1
Mr. King called Dr. L. B. Alexander in
to see the prisoner to ascertain his con
dition. He was found considerably re
duced but free from all symptoms of in
sanity, being in fact quite rational and
Intelligent. He reads and writes well,
and is much above the average of bia
race. Mr. King and Dr. Alexander
finally prevailed on him to alp a milk
punch, which he then did under com
pulsion. But he he has continued reso
lutely to refuse all food, and can be in- *
duced totaste only milk punch or wine
occasionally. Like Dr. Tanner, he
drinks water freely, but outside of. that
he hasn’t taken enough nourishment in
over two months to ktep an ordinary
man alive three days.
He has lost about 60 pounds of flesh
and is merely a skeleton. He cannot
walk a step, and can only get up with as
sistance. When lying quiet he has the
appearance of a dead man. His temper
ature and pulse are far below normal,
and his respiration yesterday was only
eight per minute. The blood has set
tled about in spots under the epidermis,
and he looks somewhat like a calico
circus horse in a trance.
Dr. Alexander, who has been watch
ing his case, says he cannot live more
than a week longer as he is now not
far from a dying condition. It was,
therefore, proposed yesterday to use
force and Introduce through a tube into
his stomach beef extract and other nour
ishment in order, if possible, to frustrate
his
SUICIDAL ATTEMPT.
This doubtless would have been done
sooner, but until now the supposition
has been that he clandestinely ate of the
food lett in his cell, and that his starva
tion was merely a pretense; but careful
watching by several persons has induced
the conviction that he really lias not
eaten one particle of food since his incar
ceration. Mr. King says that by pass
ing the hand up and down the prisoner’s
stomach, he can easily feel the project
ing bones of the spinal jolnmn, and that
Perry’s size is not more than half what
was when first confined to his ceil.
The case excites considerable interest
among the medical men especially, who,
in common with all others, are no little
puzzled by this extraordinary perform
ance of the prisoner, who, while trying
his utmost to commit suicide, has suc
ceeded in fasting longer than any person
on record.
He will doubtless now take a change
and recover, as Dr. Alexander has deter
mined to force nutriment down bis throat
so as to sustain him until his trial fixes
his future mode of life. This will take
place about September 1st, if he can bis
kept alive two weeks longer.
Cooley has been an Inmate of our bar
racks' on more' than on» occasion, pb" ’
was arrested ini Houston county about
three months ago, bat was discharged *
because of insufficient indentifieatioh. U “
He was soon afterward arrested in ’' 1
Americas and telegrams sent to Chief* 1 '
Hurley, Who caused his release by re
plying that there were no charges here
against him.
ing as^if,in mad haste. Holding her
little head against his heart, George tar all over the wood, them on him, and
W. Simpson saw the sun go down in even on his head. Then they knocked
the reddening west and the shadows ** barrel to pieces and piled the staves
of night steal swiftly across the face around his head. Then they permitted
of a deflate earth. : p r < \ ft toe black people to come near him. One
Tes,” replied Myrtle, looking up » few words with him. Then
trustfully into the glad dark eyes of there was a white preacher, who went to
the doomed man and prayed for him,
and then tho sheriff permitted him to
pray. There were four men who stood
around tho altar with Ughtwood torches,
and toe sheriff stood with his sword
drawn up over his right shoulder,’ and
when he brought it down the four men
put their torches to the tar and shavings
The pine caught quickly, and in a little
time-flames were covering him. I could
see him moving his head about. Borne
men held their watches and said that he
lived five minutes. After the pile of
wood burned clown, you could sCo hffi
head and shoulder. I saw Stone fakes
>ine pole and knock his head and throat
U down through the links tost were fast
ened around his neck, and he further
£ Jled the wood on him. I stayed until
e commenced smelling badly, and then
left forborne. It waa safe! that Stone
burned him three days end nights, and
never burned his fiver ”nd lights up.
“*■ :n‘Cj
Arm la am wttli BepeMioeas fee Moesta the lioa.
• r tmaH■eert*.| “. ■! )i
ahead of any other
dover or grass. It can be out where
it grows In sheltered places, as early
*»ti>e latter part ef February. Still
another advantage is ttie facility with'
which It fcrows under grape vines khd
fr°ft trass, making for these an excel
lent mulch, as it rots rapidly, making
me ground soft aud pllable^md uuder
thieee rotted items are to be found large
Fran the 4ngtufa .Yon.
The following was cat from the At
lanta Daily Boat
•ral answers wwe WS^leujMf.
like for acme of your readers to try
their hands at it. ’“‘j ’ ‘• , ! .
ATlgnor.agentofa New England
town, bald office for one
end of which he gave tbe
statement of his aeopnat.
the 'only man she had ever loved
“Yes, my darting; it has been such a
dull, dark day, with grieving skies,
with gedden, dead leaves falling anS
wreathes of ghastly mist drifting j 1
/about. I have been thinking of you 1
all day, sweetheart, only I have not
been, here all, but away, away, I hard
ly Know where; only in the land
where my footsteps have lingered I
cried for love that did not come,
lior felt hungered for love’s own gifts,
nor felt lonely, nor desolate, nor afraid
because beneath the turqnoia skies of
;ny mystical dreamland, in the rose-
laden air, love was always with me—
love with strong arms, and clinging
kisses and deathless tenderness. And
knew no sorrow, nor loneliness, nor
heartbreak. I was happy and content,
and joyous forever.”
George pressed the lithe form more
closely to him, Is if in fear that some
unseen, mysterious, mysterious pow
er might suddenly take from him the
one he loved so well. For an instant
he uAspeuk; aad then turning
awaT", so that hfs words should not
reach Myrtle’s ears, he said In low,
bitter tones;
“God help and keep my loved one.
8l >e.nhaa evidently been dreaming
Y Chicago.”
Singula* Matrimonial Trouble. •/
A fight haa just taken place between
Jonah Cruise and Moses Porter, of
Flowery Branch, Ga., originated to a
Very remarkable manner. Cruise
tyas engaged to be married to a girl
wbSeeflfSinUy Were opposed to. the
matehkvBerter, who Irad bee* wafer.
teS-IW WSWrfSd Mtafringt »|m fepH
»®«M*ttwWente, ****“*•*•
■itnation and nuuried tbe clrl
imself. To get the marriage tysMpe
borrowed money of Cruise, pra
ng to want it for another purpose,
return Hat
J6iin Campbell.
THE SOUTHERN SCOURGE.
tees New Cum Beportetf’et Brownaville.
Brownsville, Texas, A tig. it, '’82,
Seventeen new Cases qfyellow fever
are reportadheto to day—t^ro/fn tfie 1
first ward, six In the second, four in
the third and five in the fourth. There
have been three deaths—twe in the
third and one in the fourth ward! ’ All
were Mexicans. Ten parents are now
In hospital. The daily paper here has
suspended Its publication, the force
beingdown with tlie fiver, Tam
pico, the source of out trouble, {s quar^
antfhsd against Brownsville.' ’ ’ : u
„In 'MTstaiiibiros the fever cases' i
raweeu
, v - v.—,— ’ja-an tlis mMljefiiaMBHI
. Thii is- the difference the topn owe the agent; and how
Does
mash.
published in Turns Siftings, the
® r 50 e*nts in stomps, it will be mail-
by .the .authors, Sweet- A Knox,
‘ Aostta,-Texas, to any address, postage
P*ld. the demand for this book has
•qfebfiAtbi biotofyrof
Jlterpttm. U.0W ..efgE|
ordered by booksellers before the
first edition came from the press.
i tuorous menViluftfoAftffiUMd- the
tfAUj tdy the licecBt.Wifi&dte hadheen
I&ftn fc ifefetojfert.and ttfey Were to W
- married the day after she gnd Porter
married. At present it seems that
Cruise la tlkely to win, a* be has Por
ter’s wife who seems to be happy with
Mg’ M ’M. tatimen and Mias 86ir§$!
of Jackson county, were united in
wiirwUmi 1 issfi Sunday. Mr. Pittman
takbs hts bride to Texas where they
will in future reside. We waft them
•urcongcmtoUtioQSe
ifejupr.of the affection of hi
l^bpB^ICMilkife/rriSlfelWlllS, d *
■the quarantine serviced
as insufficient^.,; (j
■or of Galveston, Texas, ha|
tHjrelmbnnemant of the aufo nnf,
I*3,000expended by the local authori-
tlsalnsMitagSiSbsInimiyntailitta
frw 4toleastnwito«IWHHbnial Bitofe
of HsHttla. y*niiilliiiiatChfoIstapdj|
JliII
speer inGainesville.
Atlanta CoMtitulum, ■ ’"' 1,1 ' ■
Gainesville, August If.—Hon Emo
ry Speer, the. Independent congressman ’ ’
of tlie ninth, opened the campaign hero
to-day, in a two hours? speech; at <foi-
lege chape], commencing at 11 o'clock,
. m., and stormed the "fort” by the
repetition of his speech which he has de
livered fifty times, more or less, at every
court house in the ninth congresziofiat ’
district. He was introduced by Colonel '
W. L. Marler, and commended the recit- " 1
tal of his wrongs, making a strong appeal
for toe sympathies of his auditors. He ;
placed himself upon the defensive stid
begged for votes. Upon the stage While
he was delivering himseli he was hu«- ’ 1
rounded by United States Marshal; Ja*. !4
Longstreet, of New Orleans fame, Colon-”
el Peter F. liakahe, of Minnesota, and
Oolohel W/L. Marler, Ex-Governor RtN'
ftre B. Bnllock’s solicitor-general of tbb ‘ r
western judicial circuit; and other-,
who, from their faces, looked as If tody
indorsed all he said. 1 He was proceeds!
into the chapel by a porter, who was
loaded down by scrapbook*, congres
sional records, and his private corre
spondence, from which he cited copious^
ly during his speech.
His effort was labored and hts harvest 1
anything but flattering. That drunken"^*
crowd was not lhere to cheer hiui and"
his remarks fell fiat before the ears of
democrats. He looked hacked and the
universal opinion on the streets this
afternoon is that his speech was weak—'
the j weakest he ever delivered in'Hair/
county. Once' of twice * lie .'broke*' w ,J ' t -
spell of gloom and dealt In a few flights
of rhetoric—but his speech was prosy
end] created no enthusiasm in the ihfdn.
He heaped hit abuse upon Henry ‘Pi’'
Christy, cabling him a thief and ah to-‘
grate; ’ upon F, H. Richardson, 'tire 1 ’
Washington correspondent oif too CW^'
Wstch-"
i''
decreasing; four favy |rtitngon, anduponV.l>
S the last twenty-fc.ar hours ending
plnea-m.. The weather is clear.
/.ft*. - .
ceived a reqiiest.fr
Pausacola, FlaL.'io aetail theannreon
of that service etatloned *jf¥ent^^
and fearless editor at the tia:
man, calling him Gditoiu Gantt and a
bench-legged fire.' He taikiedthe name' 1 "
fa^onTxiUD. cSr. tet .ti
“s# enough to see that it ^ak^ Y'
wise to follow .thiitllM of .tactics' and /'
A —->ed him liifo a hot potato at M few
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,! !(•
_ uctiou
to the pe'!reatiob.'"tt"f&ilds , aow IdP *
vindication 1 iriffi 1 'WfVnf‘Wto.*’ 1 ’
soufjbnt it'ls' too'lafa' to pray when toW ***
ikivlt fnrWfik’ 11 ’■* uav ' **™w 7olo<r»q
ST iuortwre 1 HHS kwuiyiim olid/f
tiUtewSjoa Ourtoay
intended says it wvrks >ike acharm,''t>
Fwe takopleasufe ia recommending p>
PP , 1^ •*”' ’
-t w Attfcheq to wagons by D- C. Hurley* ,.
,.. . »■■ *■ — »
V Ml For.tretoulousares, wakefulness, dizzi?;:'
and lack of energy, a most valuably :
remedy ia Brown’s Iron Bitten.' *- — >i