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THE B VNNER-WATCIIMAN, ATHENS, GEORGIA. JUNE 4, LS89
.,iid :ul4r<*
holder
sses given to
omitting
s^r^’-ou nie
^'*zr r -
, Fl>tr KMUKKlS, 1888.
- ^ 5 - 000
Ul^-'V ‘ ( t > West 32(1 st
I>* ^ ’ . - 15,000
York ( l, y * p _ 15,000
■i"-V.»’York,S.V 15,000
’Manor, Tnnis Co.,
y 11.11, _ v ]5,000
. ’ mion National Bank,
.ositor, l . 15,000
?!Tm,Gregor, Tex 13,000
r ]*etalunia,Cal 15,000
'^"kett,San Francisco, -
15,000
* Guavmas, Mex, 15,000
V m'v Lewiston, Me 15,<«o
’• ""U’l Bank of Lead-
|,or..irt Nal _ . 15,000
rKVliler & Bros.,l,mE.
. Baltimore, Md lo,000
i5,ooo
debitors through " ells,
‘ t( 0 jsau Francisco,
P' A : . - 12,500
Miller, Lower
Limited, San Francisco, Col - 45 000
Abert Leonard, l,44f> East Franklin 5
St. Richmond, Va - » 0 onn
A K Pierce, Boston. Mass is’ooo
f !°. E Bartlett, Boston. Mass - ir/000
m. Babsou, care Pressons Ex-
press, Boston. Mass - r.
F W Smith, San Jose, Cal 3 is’ooo
E C Bartholomew, Titusville, Pa 15,000
0 V Terrell, Decatur, Tex - “g
■lo-Californian Bank, San
All
15,000
15,000
ngl
Francisco,
Citizens’ Nat. Bank of Kansas
City, Mo., - _ 15 000
Uniou Nat’l Batik of Kansas City ’
Mo. - - - is 000
A depositor, Canal Bunk, New ’
Orleans. - •— - 15 000
A depositor through Wells, Fargo ’
& Co.’s Bank, Sau Fraueisco,
of Detroit
Cal .
Third National Bank
Mich.
Anglo-Californian Bank of San
Francisco, Cal.
Wells, Fargo & Co.’s Bank San,
Francisco, Cal.
Frank J.Knecht, Kankakee, II -
15,000
5,000
5,000
5,000
5,000
Johnson & Walker, Marlin, Tex 5,000
»nee
illage
^UIUII. A lA OJ
Chas W Webster, Hardy, Neb - 5,000
Robt. Schumann, 1,448 Lingo St.
Philadelphia, Pa 5,000
E T Robbereon, Springfield, Mo 5,000
Louisville Banking Co., Louisville,
By - - - - 5,000
J J Wayne, Dcs Moines Iowa - 5 000
Christopher Rourk, 6031 St., N.
IV., Wasliiugton DC - 5,000
Maverick National Bank of Boston
Mass - - - 5,000
H D Mueller, Jr, care American
Express Co., Quiney, III - 5,000
E L Frenks, Riverton, Ill - 2,500
Miss A T Buttere, Boston, Mass 2,000
Mary McDonald, Bostou Mass - 2,500
Scotia. Canada 5,000 I V J Jescli, 341 Fourth St., Jersey #
0,a ,ha Neb - 5,000 City, N J - - - 2>0
Onun.i, .>c , I Shaw & Horst, Navasota,Tex 2,500
R L Malone, Griffin, Ga, . - 2,500
Bank of Commerce, Memphis,
Ten n. - - 2,500
Cal 5,000 | \ depositor, New Orleans Nation
al Bank, New Orleans, La.
L.
Nova
'nirk.^S E Morris St In-
isiiolis, Inil - - a ’ 000
,on Paris & American Bank,
mitri, San Francisco
Germania Savings
5,000
n li New Orleans, La
& Miss Florence
Nat’l Saving Bank of Washington,
- 2,500
5,000
5,000
5,000
Melody
Bomb. Chicago, Ill - > ‘N 000
\at-i Bank of Sulphur Springs,
. - - 5,000
Kdwards. North Platte, Neb 5,000
HimUl Columbia St., New
nrk - "
Hot & Snyder, 120, Bank
Philadelphia, Pa - o,000
Johnson, 2 Garden St. Arch,
5,000
,-ton, Mass - ■ •
(roner it harsh,Purcell, Ind.
ollins, Augusta, Ga -
^respondent nt \ crii Oruz,
5,000
5,000
5,000
5,000
n Bros, Dubuque, Iowa
llios M Scl•(•idler, 1.600 Arch
, Phiiadelpli in. Pa - 2,500
111 western National Bank of
l.ilailelphia, Pa - - 2,500
Imitzer, 112 Canal St., New
ork ('ity - - 2,o00
oliiusou, Baltimore, Md - 2,500
U Burke, Cooperstown, Wis 2,500
Poison. Gadsden, Ala - 2,500
sluirg Bank. Vicksburg, Miss2,500
Harder, Hock Island, Ill, 2,500
Nat’l Bank of Waverly, New
ork. - - - 2,500
II Wolff, East Liberty, Pa 2,500
ilborn. care Meyerhoff &
ichengreen, 30(» Market St.,
Mia., l’a - - 2,500
ml City S’v’gs Bank,Galveston.
2,500
I Hays. 3,329 Morgan St., St
>uis, Mo - - 1,250
M arker, 120 W. 17th St., New
ork. - - - 1,250
rtiowan, l,070Third Ave., New
rk.
Wilton, 142 W 124th St New
rk - 1,250
DC - - - -“- 2,500
Jno. Diehl, Beardstuwn, Ill 2,500
W II Coleman, Edna, Tex - 2,500
A depositor, Louisiana National
Bank, New Orleans, La - 2,500
JA Ramon, 436 Bush St £ San
Francisco. - 1,250
Mrs. Rachel Salinskey, 207 Broome
St. New York City - .1,250
Luke Mulroy, 215 East 88tli St.,
New York City - - 1,250
Geo. Koehler, 17 First St. San
Francisco. - - - • - 1,250
IslandCity S’v’gs Bank of Galveston,
Tex - ' - - j- - 1,250
Bank of Greenville, Miss., for M
B Hendel, Greenville, Miss - 1,250
John Clem, Convent, La - 1,250
Louis Adler, 510 W Madison St
Chicago - - - 1,250
Merchant's and Planter’s Bank 6f
Pine Blulf, Ark - 1,250
A depositor, through Wells, Fargo
& Co.’s Bank, San Francisco,
Cal 1,250
Jerry Graves, Lowmoor, Va - 1,250
Samuel Killeen, Sicamous, B C.,
Canada, - 1,250
0:to Vcn Rosenberg, Hallctts-
ville.Tex - - - 15 000
M Tehants’ Nat’l Bank, Watcrvillo,
tir M « 15,000
FLtwlinson, Lexington, S C 15,000
* N lfyjidinan, Gen. Pass, Office
C B & Q R Rj, Chicago, Ill 15,00(1
P Weber, 11(S Liberty KtCleveland,
0 - - - - - 15,000
(V J Brackett, Calhoun, Ky - 15,000
J D Riser, cor Main and Olive Sts
Mansfield, Ohio. - - 15,000
Hank of Commerce, San Diego,
Gal - - , - . - - 15,OOfi
Ralph E Staples,South Bend,Ind 15,000
Osmun & Brother,Sixth and Union
Sts.. Allentown Pa. 15,000
W A Tanner, Minneapolis, Minn 15,000
Christian Schmidt, Redbud, 111 15,000
Pnt’k McCann, 1154 Elk St.,
Buffalo, NY - - 15,000
Manufacturers National Bank of
Brooklyn, NY - - 15,000
Wm. Africa,Altoona, Pa - 15,000
S P Harris, Mariana, Ark - 5,000
E A Rippey, El Paso, Tex - 5,000
John Ross, 406 Cambria St..
Phila., Pa
Janies Leary, New York city -
Harry Lee, Washington, D C
Marcos Lopez, St Bernard Parish,
La ... 5,000
N A Sager, Coiambus, Ohio 5,000
D D Wilkins & Co., Duck Hill, Miss
EEJ Boos, Jackson, Miss 5,000
M L Fay, Worcester, Mass - 5,000
German Bank of Memphis, Tenn 5,000
Anglo-Califoraian Bank Sap
Francisco, - - 5,000
A correspondent through Wells,
• Fargo & Co.’S Bank of San Francfseo
Cal - - - 5,000
E Nettel, Chelmsford, Mass 2,500
D O Mills & Co Sacramento Cal 2,500
S Fried, 30 Canal Street, New York
City - - 2,500
Geo R A Willey, Washington,D C 2,500
S Grabinsky,711 7th St.,St Louis,
Mo - - - - 2,500
First National Bank of Taylor,Tex 2,500
Rock County Nat’l Bank janesvillc,
Wis - - - 2,500
J G Ruple, Columbus, Ohio 2,500
The Pacific Express Co Memphis,
Tenn. -
Midland Cigar Store, Colorado
Springs, Col -
Michel F Riordan, New Britain,
Conn - - -
Chas. E Dougherty, St Louis, Mo 2,500
Fritz Schult, Elgin, Ill - 2,500
Carbonate Nat’l Bank of Leadville,
Col - - - - 2,500
TRClauser, 1,928 6th St Har
risburg, Pa 1,250
A Overlitner, Suinmerhill, Pa 1,250
Mrs Joseph Reeves, Red Bluff,Cal 1.250
C H Reiman, New York city 1,250
City National Bank of Austin,Tex 1,250
C H Abbott, Birmingham, Ala * 1,250
Columbus Insurance and Banking
Co Columbus, Miss - - 1,250
A depositor People’s Bank, New
Orleans - - - 1,250
A correspondent through Wells,
Fargo & Co.’s Bank of San Francisco
Cal - - - - 1,250
Hannah Doherty, 409 Beacon St
Boston, Mass - - - 1,250
IT CANNOT LAST FOREVER.
THE EUROPEAN STRIKES.
I've a word of comfort for you
Who oo life'* rugged road
Are toiling 'ueath the burden
Of a heavy, hopeless load.
It will make your heart grow lighter,
Whatever be your wrong.
And give you strength to bear it
If you take these word* along.
And say when clouds of darkaeM
Around your pathway hover.
"The kuo fa shining just beyond.
It cannot last forever.** . rT'i
Just try them when you're wearied
By each petty taro and strife,
By each little aggravation
Of your common daily life.
When angry words are rising
That you can scarcely smother.
And everything seems “twisted up,"
And tied in knots to bother.
You'll And these words are like a knife
Each twisted knot to sever;
Then straighteu out each tangle wit^
“It cannot last forever.”
Or if some great disaster •
* Like a cyclone sweep your sky.
Anil stunned and helpless with the shock
Beneath the wreck you lie.
Remember that no storm tomes
- But has a clearing day;
The darkest uigbt a morning;
An end the longest way.
Then take those words to cheer you.
You'll find them like a lever
To raise your sinking spirits up.
“It cannot lost forever."
—Lilia U. Alexander
They Arc Not Yet Over with by Any Man-
.1 ner of Means. i( • ol*
The dispatches from the scene of the
labor riots in Germany are puzzling to
most Americans, proving as they do that
matters are managed quite differently
over there from what was supposed. If
it had been a rebellion against the gov
ernment proper, the little band of mal
contents would all have been in prison
or in ‘their graves by this time. But as
it is merely an industrial war, strikes
2,500
2,500
2,500
DRAWING OF MARCH 12, 1889
Isaac Lowber, 701 South 20th St.,
Philadelphia, Pa - - 30,000
Jno. Sehwenk, 1421 North 24th St.
Philadelphia, Pit - - 15,000
E Nusbaum, (Sl-f ArcITSt., Phila.,
Pa - - \ - - - 15,000
Bank of America,Providence R 115,000
Wellington A Griffin, Guide office,
521 Clay St.,San Francisco,Cal 15,000
A Correspondent through Wells,
Fargo & Co.’s Bank San Francisco
Cal - - 15,000
4>2.>0 | j aS) j* Commons, Chicago, Ill 15,000
Miss A Emery audBenj. Nusbauin,
. . „„ , .103 South State St. Chicago. Ill
othstem, 40 E Broadway, New Care National Librarr Associa
rk, - - - 1,250 tion . - - * - 15,000
E Thorne, 591 Grand River Fred Scliade, Chicago,Ill - 15,000
e., Detroit Mich - 1,250 German Bank of Memphis, Tenn 15,000
W Scbold, 713 Dubon St.,
troit, Mich - - 1,250
on it Kountz, Natchez, Miss 1,25Q
John Feedler, Correction-
le, Iowa - - 1,250
fie Hank of San Francisco,Cal 1,250
phis Nat’l Bank of Memphis
n» - - - 1,250
First National Bank of Memship,
Tenn - . 15,000
The Continental Bank of St Louis,
Mo - - - 15,000
Chace & Butts, Providence, R I 15,000
Denton S Hamilton, Hamburgh,
NJ .- - - - - 10,000
Anglo-Californian Bank of San
. Francisco - - - * 5,000
Nat’l Bank of Redemption, Boston,
Mass. - - - - 5,000
Henry Jessel, 154 Essex St., New
York. . - - - - 5,000
A J Scott, 86 Fourth Ave., Chicago
Ill., - - - -jr - ?,000
Jno A Martin, 45 Ave A New York
. f 5“™: Detroit,' Mjch, - 15,000 | 179 West Madison
Chicago, Ill - - - 5,000
A Depositor, Union National Bank
New Orleans, La - - 5,000
Adoue & Lobit, Galveston Tex 5,000 ‘
G W Malcom, Pittsfield, Mass 5,000 '
Gresham Indinnnli vi«« lRnonI Peter Schweickhart, Emporia, Pa5,000
*■ • • ’ lnU,an0la ’ “If® J Ketcham National Bank of Toledo,
Ohio - - - - 5,000
W H Thomas, Boston, Mass 5.000
Lorenz Siebert, 813 Sumi#it St.,
Toledo - - - 5,000
Albert B Thielbar. Peoria, Ill 5,000
A Gallagher, Philadelphia, Pa 2,500
A Depositor, Peoples Bank, New
Orleans - - - 2,500
AWING OF JANUARY 15, 1889
•jink of Key West, Fla., - 30,000
Depositors through Wells,
ffo it Co.’s Bank, San
incisco, Cal - - 30,000
Fort Yates, Dak, 15,000
iti.ita, New York City, - 15,000
ijan National Bank, Denver,
- - - 15,000
alderman, Philadelphia, Pa 15,000
nd National Bank, Bay City,
- - - 15,000
McLain, Colorado Spring,
L- - - 15,000
Dickson, Detroit, Mich 15,000
“’*» National Bank Alpena,
h , - - - 15,000
nal Batik of the Common-
dth, Boston Mass - 10,000
M 11 Dibble, Middletown,
1,1,1 - , .' 10 000 ■ —•
w Sewall, Chicago, Ill - 10|000 Ci ^ National Bank. Louisville
dton Nat. Bank of tort Wayne,Wiltow Idind>eb I^fiOO.
j II Brown Duncan Ariv Vnon I W L Bedford, Humbolt, Mich 2,500
Po*or, fniSlik ' Jffi W®
w Orleans,La _ _ qoO I ^ Davignow, U IC F Society, New.
Bank, Taylor, Tex <0M | jJ&S&gSu, «,* Dlvi'alon
.. N
DRAWING OF MAY 14 1889.
Alex Tafaureau, 152 Chartre, St
New Orleans, - - 15,000
Alfred & Margaret Friot, San
Francisco, Cal - - 15,000
Wm S Johnson, Boston, Mass 15,000
A Correspondent through Wells,
Fargo & Co.’s Bank of San
Francisco, Cal - - 15,000
A Deposttor New Orleans National
Bank, New Orleans, La - 15,000
David Simmons, 117 Charlotte St
Peoria, Ill - - - 15,000
Wm H Rcigart, Peoria, Ill 15,000
F B Baird, Room 13, Lakeside
Building, Chicago, Ill - 15,000
A party through United States
Express Co Chicago, Ill - 5,000
F Paglinca, care A S Blake, 309
Canal St New York city 5,000
First National Bank of Detroit,
Mich - 5,000
Bidwell & Donovan, 1185 Niagara St &
512 Rhode Ielaud St ;Buffalo, N
Y - - - 5,000
L M Fry, Weatherford, Tex 5,000
Anglo-Californian Bank of San
Francisco - - - 5,000
G C Goodrich, Baltimore, Md 5,000
Rudolph Bloomquist, Chicago, Ill 2,500
J D Collins, Atlanta, Ga - 2,500
A Keller, Lamar, Mo - 2,500
F A Harris, Boston, Mass - 2,500
R C Palmer, 721 Eighth St N W
Washington, DC - - 2,500
Til Nowack, Scaly, Texas 2,500
T Consodine, Villa Rica, Ga 2,500
First Nat’l Bank of Honey Grove,
Tex - - - - 2,500
RofinoEsteves, St Bernard Parish,
La. - 2,500
L Adler care Felsenthal, Grast &
Miller, Chicago, Ill - - 2,500
Thos Williams, Stubenville, Ohio 2,500
National City Bank, New York
eity - - 2,500
Matthew P Brown, 185 Brooklin St •
Cambridgeport, Mass - 1,250
J W Clongh, 37 Merchants Row,
Boston, Mass - 1,250
M J Horkler, Bots’ House of Refu;
New Orleans, La - 1*1
Jno N Rambaut, 201 Decatur St,
New Orleans, La - - 1,250
Anglo-Californian Bank of San
Francisco - - 1,250
For full particulars of the Grand
Mammoth Drawing of 18th inst, see
scheme in another column of this paper
to-day.
now We Should Rmat he.
Dr. Campbell said the object of breath
ing was primarily to vitalize the blood.
The injury of breathing bad air was not
bo much the taking of impurities into the
lungs, but a lack of nourishment. Every .|
molecule of the body was kept in motion
by the breath. The reason sedentary
employments and tight lacing were in
jurious was not a failure to get oxygerf |
to the blood, but tlie failure to give suf
ficient motion to the molecules, without
which good health was impossible. The
vitalizing of the blood furnished the
mind with new truths. The lungs took
in four times as much air as was neces
sary and rejected three-fourths of it So
should the mind take in all that came to
it and reiect all that was not useful.
There could be no good, pure, clear, deep
thinking withoutgood, deep, pure breath
ing. Every occupation and work I tad its
own method of breathing. A-man train
ing for a foot race did not breathe the
same as a billiard player. A great many
ailments due to sedentary occupations
might be cured by abdominal breathing.
Deep breathing was a cure for anger and
uncharitablenesa.—Chicago Herald.
LonjcfeUow and Euripides.
In the course of Professor Jibb’s speech
at the entertainment in behalf of the
Longfellow memorial, he said:. The pe
culiar source of Longfellow’s immense
popularity has been his faculty of saying
what every one can feel as true in a form
which every one can recognize as beauti
ful; he pleases fastidious minds, but he
can also speak to the hearts of simple
folk with such power as to make his
words household words among them;
he deals with universal sentiments, but
he was not commonplace; he was lifted
above that by his delicate truth of feel
ing, his exquisite fancy, his sense of
humor, and his perfectly trained gift of
expression; we might apply to him wjjat
Mrs. Browning said of Euripides; his Is,
indeed, a “touching of things common
till they rise to meet the spheres."--
Glasgow Herald.
DRIVER AND CONDUCTOR TRAM CAR.
followed by rioting. Emperor William is
as tender with them as with so many
misguided children. He receives depu
tations of workingmen, appeals to‘the
capitalists to be conciliatory, sends his
trusted man to arrange a compromise
and talks to both sides “like a Dutch
uncle.”
The first strike was by the men who
An ICtupcrur'H Studeut Days.
During bis school career the German
emperor.was a model of the studious Ger
man youth. He took fils place as a com
mon l>upil in the public school at Cosset,
and played and studied with the other
scholars. At the final examination he
was. indeed, only tenth in the list; but
tHen lie was two years younger than his.
mates, and was rightly considered to have
done so welt that his tutor was immedi
ately knighted. There is no cramming,
system in Germany; he passed without
aid or favor.
At the University.of Bonn I have sat
on the same benches with him, and seen
him, with his little note book, writing
down, like a hard worked reporter,
nearly all the professor uttered in his
lectures on the great German authors or
on the geuius of our own Shakespeare.
The prince was anxious also to study
subjects not just then in the curriculum,
and for these the professors attended at
his rooms.
By the professors the prince was
treated with an almost servile adulation,
and he won their esteem and love. He.
had them all in turn to dinner at his
rooms in a villa which overhung the
Rhine, with the honeysuckle, clematis
and Virginia cretepers reaching over and
down tlie garden walls almost to the
water’s edge.
Tlie queen sent him out from England
a splendid boat, costing nearly £200, but
he used it very little, and it generally
lay moored by the bank beneath his gar
den, idly rocking in the ripple of the
Rhine.
But he took part heartily in all the
amusements common among German
students, namely, beer drinking, duel
ing, torchlight processions, carriage
driving, bathing and, in winter, sledg
ing. I do not think he ever fought a
reely wi
duelers, and i*.i knolpen (drin’riag bouts)
mid torchlight serenades, sipping and
sitting-with the sippers of light German .
beer till Lite into the night.—All the.
Year Hound.
ran the tram cars in Vienna; the next • rea j duel, but he mingled freely with the
m the mining districts of Westphalia. 1
The emperor flatly told the operators
that the men’s demands were only
reasonable. The coal companies had
been favored with special tariffs and
granted freight rates at cost to the prin
cipal cities (the government owns the
main lines of rail), and their profits had
been great, shares advancing 50 per cent,
in two years; yet the condition of the
laborers had grown worse. At the same
time there is a strike in the building
trades of Berlin and a heated debate in
progress in the reichsrath. Still Emperoi
Ur 51 Johnson, Albany.New
P f s - . t 5 000
Williamson 2005 North ’
°nt St., Philadelphia, Pa - 5,000
fd KW ! ,or > Branch State Notion-
^ank Xew Orleans*, La - . 5,00
l'' * ncke, 244 South Broad- 500
r st . » Baltimore, Md
FPositor, through Wells, Fargo5,00
' »an Francisco, Cal. - 5000
Pouts, Jr., San Antonio, Tex 5600
ii°B ers ’ Winteract, Iowa 2„00
Dond, Jersey City, N J 2,00,
Mwin, Arabia, Tex - 2,500
National Bank, Cairo, Ill 2,500
[ ^nts National Bank Louis-
l t«y - _ _ _ 2 500
»nai German-American Bank *
M >nn - - 2,500
2,500
St.N Y - - - 2,500
Anglo Nat’l Bank of San Francisco,
Cal. - - - - - 2,500
Fanners Bank of Fresno, Fresno
Cal. - - - - - 2,500
O H Hunt, Medarv ville, Ind 2,500
G J Nolan 119 Joliet St., Joliet,Ill 2,500
Geo. E Branch, Boston, Mass 2,500
R P Bemiss,San Jose, Cal - 1,250
TH Tryon, Titusville, Pa. 1,250
B Glovannoni, 661 B’way, New
York city. - - - 1,250
A Depositor through Wells Fargo
& Co.’s Bank of San Francisca,Cal 1,250
A Correspondent in Bangor. Me 1,250
Masonic Savings Bank, Louisville,
Ky A Piper, Parsons. Kan 1,250
Valentine Balz, 2168 Archer Ave.,
;o National 0 !; Chfeiro ° ® ,6 °° I WilU^oster! MiUersburg, Ind l’250
aiiouai IL.uk, Chicago, Frederick Frank, Detroitfkich 1,250
alifornian Bank,Limited, ’ 1 V T W , Woodward, Indianopolis
mncisco. Cal - - 1,250
Liehr. 2n.\±
ho ‘vr h f’ Poppleton Ave.
. - _ 1,250
{fS°*. Washington, D C 1,250
L B "' n », Guardian, care of
X* Jagg’s Selma, Alii - 1.250
V W
Ind - - - - 1,250
Dan Dowley, Watchman Jackson
S
Fourth
Tenn.
1,250
N’atiotSlfeank^raaha Neb 1*250 I JIjenn > 232 N Wells St. Chicago,
’ ’ ’ Ill - - « - - 1,250
- 1 P? r -° F FEBRUA:RY 12 > 1889 DRAWING OF APRIL 16,1889.
i am and American Bank, | Frank Kneeland, Boston, Mass 15,000
Out Way to Clear ill# Scuta
Two gen'lcmen were walking pn F\
street‘recently when onoKud:
“Let's cress the street. There comes a;
man to whom Lowe some money, and I
don’t want to meet him.”
“Does he dun you?”
“No; that’B the worst of it. He never-
speaks of it.”
After they had crossed over, thedebtox-
walked some distance in thoughtful si
lence. Then he said, seriously: •
“I wish that man would get mad about
it and go at me with a club. I can’t pay
him the money, and 1 wish he would 1
thraah me like fury and settle the matter
so that I wouldn't ever be afraid again to
meet him.”—Washington Post.
Big Jersey Sale
A Worthy and Wire Hea.
Bridgeport, Conn., has a ben with a
head for mathematics. She sat this
spring and hatched out a few chiqkens,
which were taken from her and added
to another flock. But she would not
give it up. Instead, she went outside the
coop and clucked till she got her proper
number of chickens—no more, no less—
and strutted about with them at her
heels the proudest fowl In all the Nut
meg state. When the young ones were
big enough to go to roost they feared to
follow her to such a height, so she took
them one by one upon her backhand set
them off carefully in a row, then perched
at the head of them, confident that she
had discharged the whole duty of a hen.
—New York Commercial Advertiser.
A CAR GUARDED BY POLICE.
William forbids measures of force, re
bukes the local authorities for using the
troops and guarantees an arbitration be- ]
fore an impartial board. It appears in
evidence that many of the miners re- |
ceive but $3.25 weekly wages. Public
feeling is very pronounced in favor of
the strikers. According to recent dis
patches the coal operators liave failed to !
keep their agreement, so there is a strike
In Silesia also and the situation is critical.
Tlie Proper Incentives.
A messenger boy last weok broke the
record and ran a mile and a half in eight
een minutes. He was coached during
the entire distance, however. There was.
a dog fight at the close of the first quar
ter, a street band at the end of the half,
a fire engine at tho third quarter and a
circus procession at the finish, while a
woman who had a letter she wanted him
to mall was a close second to him all the
way. . You can get an awful burst of
speed out of these fellows if you know
how to work it.—Burdette in Brooklyn
'TO OUR READERS.
Malaria or Ague Surely Cured! .J
In this broad assertion, we speak not
falsely, but state postively, that these
and all miasmatic poisons, can be radi
cally driven from the system,and a per
manent cure guaranteed. Thousands
of chronic cases, whose testimonials
bear evidence, have been cured by our
infallible remedy , which contains ncih-
er quinine, arsenic, or anything injur
ious. Full treatment free by old phy
sician of highest standing, also trial
remedy sent on receipt of address, to
ASAHEL MEDICAL BUREAU, 291
Broadway, N. Y. may 31dlv.
Clarke’s Extract of Flax Cough Cure.
It is a cure for Whooping Cough. It
stops the whoop, and permits the child
to catch its breath. It is entirely harm
less. Good for any cough of childhood
or old age. It heals the bronchi and
lun^s, and stops the cough. For Winter
or Bronchial Cough this syrup is the
best ever discovered. Only one size,
large bottle. Price $1.00, at all Drug
Clarke’s Flax Soap makes the Skin
smooth, soft and white. Price 25 cents
Noah All Bight.
‘Dr. Tanner was not the first man
who-lived on water fot forty days,” said
Smudge.
“No?* 4 queried Fudge.
“Of course not.”
“Who else?” r
“Well, what's the matter with Noah?”
—Toledo Blade.
To Succeed Alien Thorndike Bice.
Gen. Lloyd S. Bryce, son-in-law of Ed
ward Cooper, ex-mayor of the city of
New York, and
member of the
Fiftieth congress
from one of the
New York city
districts, who is
to succeed Allen
Thorndike Rice
as editor of The
North American
Review, ‘ fa a na
tive of Flushing,
Long Island, and
87 years of age.
In speech and
style he is said to LLOYD s. bbyce.
be quite Anglicized,and his education was
largely obtained at the great university
.of Oxford. He gets his title of “general’
from the fact that he was appointed pay
master general of New York state in
1886. His tastes are said to tend much
stronger to literature than to politics,
though he takes quite a healthy interest
in the latter, os is shown by his election
to the United States congress from a dis
trict of the metropolis, and as editor of
Tho North American Review he will
have abundant opportunity to develop
in both directions.
Bobby Proposes an Amendment.
After Bobby’s father bad repeated the
usual prayer the other day Bobby asked:
“I say, pa, what makes you pray foe
daity bread all the time?” K !i:
“Eh?" ' . . -' ;
“Ain’t it about time to pray for some
earty vegetables?”—Lewiston Journal
The Yturbide, in the city of Mexico, is
probably the grandest hotel in the
world. It was built by the governor for
his palace, and cost $3,000,000. It con
tains a room, used by Governor Ytur
bide for a chapel, that is frescoed in
solid gold.
Little Frankie was tajeen in to see a
new sister who had arrived during the
night. He looked at her a moment and
exclaimed: “Yatsl You call that a sis
ter; it’s nothing but a yed baby.”—Troy
Telegram. *
The eleoivio light let down in the fish
nets used between tho Isle of Man and
Anglesey attracts tlie Crustacea and
other creatures ot the deep in large
numbers.
Minister to Turkey.
Solomon Hirsch, whom President Har
rison has appointed minister to Turkey,
is of Jewish birth and first saw America
in 1854. He remained in tlie eastern
states four years, serving as a clerk in
tlvo or three dif
fer e n t stores.
Then he traveled
to Oregon, and,
in partnership
with his brother,
engaged in busi
ness. He am
assed consider
able money, go
ing upward step
by step, till in
1864, six years
later, he went to
Portland and be
came the leading
member of arner-
SOLOMOX HTRsnn-
cantile firm which is now the wealthiest
outside of San Francisco on the Pacific
coast.
Mr. Hirsch lias always taken a lively
interest in Oregon politics. He was
chairman of the Republican state central
committee in 1882, and prior to being
elected to tlie state senate he was a mem
ber of the assembly. He is just now 50
years olci.
The Hollydale Stock
FARM
Has Decided to Close out the Entire
Herd of Jerseys, Numbering about
One Hundred
Of the Finest Cattle ever seen in the
Southern States.
This sale will take place on June 20th
at the farm just in the suburbs of the
city of Athens. Terms cash, or paya
ble in the fall with baukable notes with
interest. Owing to the great num
ber and varieties of families represent
ed, it will be impossible^to mention in
detail the many, meritorious qualities
of all, they are either registered or sub
ject to registry and the announcement
will be made fully on day of sale. The
bull that stands at the head of this
famous herd is “Itubana Rioter,” one
of the grandest inbred Stoke-Pogis
Victor Hugo bulls in America today,-
possessing 96J a % of the blood of Mary
Ann, of St. Lambert, and 87%% of the
blood of Ida, of St. Lambert. He is
the sire of nearly all the young cows
and heifers, making crosses on the
Comassie, Scituate, Eurotos and various
other families of prominence in the
Jersey world, and a more promising set
of young cows and heifers never en
tered a prize ring. • :
In this herd can be mentioned “Alice
Jones” 31 lbs in'-7 days, now dead*
though a number of her progeny show
her to have been a most wonderful cow.
“Laughing Maid” sold to a celebrated
Tennessee herd with her great record,
has a number of daughters and grande
daughters which show the great excel
lency of her blood, being the daughter
of the great “Tormentor”, brother of
Princess 2d, with her phenomenal re
cord of over 46 lbs in a.week.
“Scituate,” of Woronoca, tracing
back directly to “Jersey Belle,” of
Scituate, with her record of over 28 lbs
in a week, is a most worthy representa
tive of the family. ‘In fact there is no-
samily of Jerseys of any prominence to-
be named,-but has a representative in
this herd. -j •
In the selection of this herd,‘it was
prominently the idea to collect the best
members of the best families and cross
them on to the finest bull to be had,and
the great expense was always if\minor
consideration. The result has more-
than satisfied the most skeptical, and a
would-be purchaser will be astonished
to find himself able to purchase on the
above date anything in the Jersey, line
his most fastidious taste may’wish. Do.
not fail to attend this sale, for there
will be sold .to the highest bidder the
finest and best collection of Jerseys
ever offered to the public.
1 For particulars address, y
: 0. B>. SEcReh,
’. r - 1 . Athens, Ga-