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THE ATHENS DAILY BANNER.
THE ATHENS BANNER,
Published Dally, Sunday and Weekly
BV
T. L. GA NTT, Editor ami Proprietor,
Jack on street, Athens, Gat
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T. L. GANTT.
TJ1E FARMER’S PROFITS.
Farmers, it has been said, are the
greatest grumblers of all classes of men.
They are discontented with droughts
and are not happy with rains. The
golden medium is never realized by
them.
They are always depressed, and com
plain of hard times, and we must con
fess that for several years past they have
reason to do so. But as much as they
complain, and with all the hard times,
the farmer’s profits will compare favor
ably with any professional man’s if lie
will but consider the ratio of thecajm-.il
invested. The Xew York Times lias
figured out the farmer’s profits as fol
lows :
Suppose, says the Times, that a fann
er should move to the city, lie would
have to spend, twenty per cent, of the
value of his farm in household expenses
in order to secure all the com fort 9 of bis
old life in Ids new home. Then, there
is another thing to be considered. The
farmer works less than the average
business man. lie has more freedom,
and it is easier for him to take a day off
than it is for die city toiler. The risk
of loss in farming is smaller than it is
in almost anv business in the. cifv.
course of time have it. The State is
able to provide for this class of its un
fortunates, and it remains with the
Legislature to pass this bill and de
mand the State’s fulfillment of its duty’
to these people.
The insane asylum at Milledgeville,
is crowded with .lunatics, earned there
by the continued use of intoxicants and
opiates. This would be stopped by
having a home for these pitiable crea
tures, where proper medical treatment
would restore them to former health and
name.
We hope Mr._ Venable’s bill will
count is Jglven by the Rockdale Ban
ner :
‘The term “Uncle Sam” came into
use in the war of 1812, and originated
at Troy, X. Y. The Government in
spector there was Samuil Wilson, uni
versally’ known as Uncle Sam. When
ever he inspected supplies furnished
the Government, he would brand them
U. S., meaning United States, but the
abbreviation, being then new and not
generally recognized, the woikmen
supposed it to be Uncle Sam, the in
spector. Afterward the story was re
peated and got into print, and from
that time the name has been facetious
ly applied to the United States.
A SUGGESTION.
Why does not 'the committee who
have charge of the Olive bill avail itself
of the liyrul knowledge of the state’s
counswpJJK Attorney-General ? If the
bid should . pass and the
Governor had doubts about the con
stitutionality of it,he would take coun
sel of the Attorney-General. If that
official advised him that it was uncon
stitutional iu whole or in part he would
veto it.
It is true that the Attorney-General
is the adviser of the executive depart
ment and not of the legislative, but it
takes both departments to make alaw un
less a constitutional majority sufficient
to override a veto is found in favor of a
measure. Therefore it would not be
improper for any member Of the com
mittee to inform liiinseif in advance of
what the Attorney-General's opinion
oi the law is. If the bill should pass
the Governor will be certain to re
fer it to the Attorney-General, and as
it has to run the gauntlet of his opin
ion anyhow, it would save a great deal
of time and trouble for ‘the committee
to he enlightened iu advance.
BETTERMENTS.
If the lessees of the State road are not
entitled to betterments, technically
speaking, it seems reasonably certain
*. that they’ are entitled to whatever their
This encouraging view of the farmer’s ' contract with the state insures them,
profits is fully sustained by the’facts of. Why call it betterments? It misleads
the case. The small farmer, for in- J and indicates something done over and
stance, the man who has from three to j beyond the contract which they have an
equitable right to claim compensation
for. It. is true this is the substance of
their case, but the shape of the claim
seems to be unpopular. Then let them
say to the General Assembly, we stand
on our contract. Take notice. Your
five thousand dollars invested m land,
stock anil implements, will get a better
living out of his property than a merch
ant with the same capital. The fact
that when farmers borrow money or
buy supplies on time they pay a bigger
interest than any other class of people I road will be ready for you at the expi-
show- that,however much they grumble, . ration of our lease in precisely the. con-
' dition we agreed it should he. Then
let them go home and give their atten
tion to something else while the Gener
al Assembly i> cogitating on that. It is
the contract. No man can blffrne them.
The state agreed to that at the start.
Heretofore they have been asking
what the state wanted them to do, and
what the state was willing to do. The
state does not reply. Let them now de
cide ami act. Say to the General As
sembly, “We retire. Read the contract,
and govern yourselves accordingly. We
stand by il and claim nothing outside of
it.
If this is done it will “bring Camilla
toiler milk” in short order
their work is profitable beyond many
lines of industry.
Many farmers think they get a very
poor return for their labor because they
do not accumulate money. This is not
the way to look at it. "When a man with
only a few thousand dollars, makes a
first class living for his family, without
running much of a risk, he is doing
well, and this is precisely what the
average fanner is doing.
THE UNIVERSITY’S PROSPECTS.
Never did the State University expe
rience a brighter period in its history
than it does today. It has always been
ranked among the best colleges of the
South, though not among the most
prosperous. That is to say the advan
tages of our State University have al
ways been recognized along with those
of the best institutions in the land, but
for some reasons the college has not
been as largely patronized as it might
have been, or as it should have been.
But a new era has come, it seems, for
the grand old institution, and tills, its
centennial year brings the dawn of
brighter days. For this change many
ia isos may be accredited.
First, the untiring effortsof Dr. Boggs,
our efficient and worthy Chancellor,
liavc identified the University more
firmly than ever before with the citi
zens of Georgia. Again, the general
agitation for highei education that is
vibrating throughout the length and
bread! h of the State, has had a tendency
to elevate the State University, and
given it more prestige in the eyes of the
people.
The friends of the University all over
the State are more hopeful than ever
of the appropriation bill, and in time
the college will take its stand among
THE WAR ON JUTE
The Farmers’ Alliance is waging the
war on jute with determination. Every
day, we read of a boycott being de
clared against some merchant for pur
chasing jute bagging, and the State Al
liance of Alabama has passed a salty-
set of resolutions condeming the Mont
gomery’ Advertiser because it pub
lished articles calculated to discourage
the farmers in their fight against jure.
So it now appears that jute must go, as
the Alliance has entered upon the war
after careful premeditation, with the
determination to win, and will accept
no oiler of compromise.
We commend the Alliance for this de
termination on their part to break down
monopoly bent on robbing the toiling
men of their hard earnings.
‘GOT IT ON THE BRAIN.’
The American people are just now all
mixed up on the subject of pugilism
They’ve “got it on the brain,” and it
_ rules them in its reigning sway. It is
the most thorough institutions in the • condemned by all,but yet they all gowild
land, unquestionably.
The fall term of the University will
open on the nineteenth of September,
and it is believed that nearly three hun
dred students will be in attendance.
MR. VENABLE’S BILL.
The bill introduced some time ago by
Representative Venable, of Fulton,
providing for the establishment of an
inebriate’s home in Georgia, is surely a
bill that ought to pass.
, Georgia is behind in this philan-
; thropic movement which has been
, takeu by other State’s, and it is a re-
I flection on the Empire State of the
\ South. *
i Mr. Venable.was prompted byhigh-
| x est phtlanthrophic motives when°be
t framed tlie bill, and hq deserves credit
j for this timely step,
jr The Georgia Legislature will not
l voice the people by refusing to pass Mr.
Vpvo $ i,k>:5 bill. Georgia needs a
i- in.'br::'.'.e.', and must i;j the
at the sight of Sullivan or Kilraix
and a thrill of excitement goes through
them even at the mention of the names
of these- two half gods. The Mrcon
Telegraph pertinently remarks:
There are few who will deny that
prize fighting is a brutalizing, dcmoral
izing sport and should be suppressed
but tlie man most responsible foe its
popularity was cheered at every station
from New York to Mississippi, and at
the end of his journey received an ova
tion. This seems to show that iu most
men there is an admiration for more
physical courage and strength, which
overbears their civalizeil notions of
wbat is right. Under the circumstances,
it would not be remarkable if Sul
livan is acquitted by a Mississippi jury,
even though not a man on it doubted
his guilt.
NATIONAL
EDITORIAL
AT ION.
SbOC -
The fifth annual convention of the
National Editorial Association will
meet in Detroit August 27tli to 30th
inclusive. The citizens executive com
mittee {have issued handsome invita
tions to the press of the country, and
arraged a pleasant program for the en
tertainment of the members of the As
sociation. A large attendance is ex
pected.
Civil service is a consummate fraud
as practiced by Lewis. the Atlanta
postmaster. We are glad to see that he
has been condemned by his friends even
in appointing the negro Perry over a
white man who stood a better examina
tion. Atlanta is-justly indignant over
the affair.
The prohibitionists of Rome have
yielded the sponge, virtually'. It is
well that they have; for there might
have been serious trouble if they per
sisted. They election is over, and the
majority is six hundred for the wet
ticket. So come, now, gentle Romans,
abide by the decrees of the fates.
We stand in with the Atlantians who
burned Buck and Lewis in effigy. Let
them build a fire that will light up the
hills and valleys of Georgia, and teach
those that want to put ihe negro over
the white man, that they’ can’t do it and
live quietly.
Did Lowky Kilarin? That is the
question that is now agitatingfche world.
What has become of the defeated pugi
list, we wonder, Isn’t he going to show
upas manly as John L. has done and
stand up to the racket and make a clean
breast of it all ?
Gen. Lewis, the Atlanta postmaster,
says lie don’t know what to do. Let
him stop putting negroes in office who
will conic in contact with white ladies
of the South, and then lie will have a
clear conscience.
The indications now point to a close
and heated race for Georgia’s next
governor. Although the election is a
long ways’felt’, two or three candidates
are virtually in the race, and the wire
working has begun.
bill, especially hack-country |1artncr&
who had been in the habit, of sending
“the boy” to the village store in the
busy season for a couple of hands of plug
and who noted that the measure forbids
a boy to evep touch tobacco in any form
But the bill was unanimous. The new
law went into effect Aug. 1.
The tobacco statute having been ably
designed to sharply twig male minors
less than 10 years olJ, who are addicted
to using the weed, no one doubts that
tlie Executive arm of the State will be
able to do its duty, hut scoffers are ask
king whether the same arm \v ill reach
out impartially for f» male violators of
the statute. Will a minion of the law be
justified in invading tlie home of a
young lady less than 1G years old who
smokes cigarrettes, and will a judge be
justified In fining her mother $7 and
costs for the daughter,s offense? That
is the delicate question, anil able law
yers arc a great number of Connecticut
young ladies who smoke cigarettes, and
many of them are less than 10years old.
Not less than a score of Nonviek maid
ens smoke, and two or three girls in
short dresses occasionally are seen puf
fing at a cigarette while on their way
to school. In many instances the female
smokers boldly buy tlieir tobacco sup
plies at the cigar stores; in others a
gentleman friend t whose age ranges,
from G to Go years, ministers to the fem
inine demand. In Hartford the number
of young ladies who smdke is twice or
three times as great as that in this town,
and in Briilgeway, New Haven, Meri
den and Waterbary there are female
smokers, bot h minors and adults. It is
evident to everyone that the officers em
powered to enforce the Juvenile Smok
ers’ act will have to be men of conspicu
ous tact anil inexhaustible discre
tion
A startling illustration of the passion
with which Connecticut girls have ta
ken a stand on tlie tobacco question may
he noted. At Waterbury not long ago a
fashionable young lady talked freely
with a newspaper reporter. She said:
“Oh, yes we all have smoked more or
less, i hardly know of a girl iu mv ac
quaintance who has not smoked cigar
ettes at some time or other—just to see
how it would taste or seem, 7011 know.
Then lots of us smoke them for tooth
ache. You doubt it? Well, just try it the
next time you have a toothache and
see whether it is of any good. It’s a
sure cure. Most of us have the tooth
ache quite often, yon can imagine.
Still an)therConnecticut city girl ex
pressed her views: “Why of course we
smoke more or less; all society girls do.
I mean cigarettes, of course, though 1
know a good many young ladies in the
highest social circles v\h» rarely pass a
day without smoking a half, or at least
part, of a regular full sized aud mild
cigar. Why, its easy enough to
cigarettes All the drug stores keep e
arettis nowadays, you know, and not
ing ill is throught of a young iaily who
goes boldly in an l buys a 1 aokage.
Why should it be considered a ques
tionable act? Mow is a dealer to know
whether the purchaser or a male mem
ber of her family is going to us them?
Why, in Now York anil other fashion
able cities society girls smoke more or
less. Lots of girls learn to smoke in
boaiding schools. They frequently be
gin by borrowing a cigarette of a gent
leman friend anil after they have learn
ed what a jalloy thing tobacco is, why
they take up cigar smoking—-just a lit
tle of it, you know, because then they
have learned to enjoy smoking as a
luxury, not as a novelty.”
The prohibitionists of Rome will pro
secute the contest of the recent election
to the end, no matter what the result
may be, as they desire to purge the bal
lot of all illegal votes.
Grover Cleveland and CoLLamont
will set out lor a two weeks’ yachting
cruise in a few davs.
Catarrh Can’t Be Cured,
with Local Application, as they cannot
reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh
is a blood or constitutional disease, and
in order to cure it you have to take in
ternal remedies. Hall’s Catarrh Cure
is taken internally, and acts directly on
the blood and mucus surface. Hall’s
Catar rli Cure is not quack medicine. It
was prescribed by one of tlie best phy
sicians in tiiis country for years, and is
a regular prescription. It is composed Henry B. Tompkins and Dr. Hunter
BLOOD ON THE MOON.
Alabama to Be the Scene of the
Conflict.
Spiecial to Tlie Banner.
Atlanta, Ga. August, 10.—Mr. 'Wil
liamson denounced Mr. Pat Calhoun’s
statements before the legislative com
mittee as unqualifiedly false and the
correspondence begins.
By seven o’clock night before last the
correspondence was started by Captain
Jackson, as second for Mr. Calhoun,
caryinga note^to Mr. Williamson at the
Kimball house.
Mr. Williamson telegraphed to Rome
for his friend, Mr. Jack King, and ar
rangements were made for a meeting in
Alabama today.
Last night Mr. Calhoun and his sec
ond, Captain Jackson, left for Alabama,
via the Georgia Pacific.
This morning the other party left via
the State road, and was as follows: J.
D. Williamson, Jack King, Judge
BEFORE HIS EXCELLENCY,
Sullivan’s Interview With Governor
Lowry.
One of the most interesting incidents
of the Sullivan party from Jackson to
Meridian on Monday evening seems to
have es -aped the attention ot the lynx-
eyed reporters who were aboad the
train, but the accuracy of which your
correspondent is assured by parties on
the $ain cannot l y questioned. It is
Sullivan’s meeting with Governor
Lowry.
The governor, as it is known, board
ed the train with the party with a tick
et for Meridian. The car of Col. J. C.
Clarke, superintendent of the Mobile
and Ohio road, was attached to the last
car of the train. The Colonel learning
that the Governor was aboard and
knowing the car to be crowded, sent
forward for him aud invited him to ride
with him in his private car, which invi
tation was accepted.
When the train was nearing Meridian
and after dark had come on, the Gov
ernor looked up, upon hearing Sheriff
Childs voice, and beheld John L. Sulli
van standing in front of him with un
covered head
Sheriff Chiles -said:
Mr. Sullivan’s request
him back to see you.”
John L., with hat in hand, said, in
substance:
“Yes, your excellency, I wanted to
pay my respects to you. 1 have no idea
that you have any ill feWings towards
me personally. Now I want to say- to
your excellency that ’ I have no hard
feelings towards you and do not blame
you for doing your duty as the Gover
nor of your State, but Governor, if you
knew me well you would know, that 1
am not a bad-liearted man.
I do not want to break your laws. I
did not know that the fight was to come
oft’ in Mississippi till the last moment,
and when it was too late for me to rem
edy it. It was then fight or be called
a coward. Those people had already
said that 1 was a coward, and I know,
Governor, that you would be like I was
you wouldn’t allow them to call you a
coward without lighting. 1 desire to
pay my respects to you, Governor, and
say to you that l wish you well and
that you will have success in life and
that your efforts to enforce your laws.
tle ^ctieabiiu-?^
S er system and ^
I em » Wliich Maa . ? th « * J
■"‘"laea
nouncea it the Va* Lil
the Uriegr "
,n wi t , h larbedwh!S*l!S
and being i ns , ** to It, J ^
used for°t e T c U > th el$
a,on «tl,e line. i" n «
? V9tcni the rails wiln' 6 "*1
1 overbearing^' 11
so the Steltoniro^olX
tfce wheel which
Jawing will he the ! 4]
bearing win be il
tlie track on curve, ! Si
speedy. ,lt a j
. There are tim^T^T"—
s'tude will overcome'*!^ r <
when the system l,t 1
to furnish ‘the etem Veifot i>ni*l
Twtej’fO
lug the blood is A
baisapaiiii), r -°- H. ^
another cpgoTj
An Officer Shot wTv ^
Patroliog ]jj
Chicago, Augusto.-.^
tj? 13 mor,lil % while ot
: “Governor, at , ie * v '!’ of 1)l,s l’ ,:lil i*sticrt.J[
t I have brought u> beat, lie was
stun ly lulled .-u,he ^
and Clinton streets, nm,*
of the Twelth street station
mg at the corner of n arri ’
ferson streets when he heard ,
fired in rapid succession ij
the corner of Clinton
streets, and font
' I
ai >»l llJ
L dicer p re]
dead. Two men were seen
ing in an alley between C
and Law avenue, running nortl 1
officer gave, chase, but Rilled
the men. They are known to'tiJ
however, and will soonbswij
r l lie most delicate corstiinG* I
safely use Dr. J. It. McLeanV|JJ
Lung Balm. It is a sure J
coughs, loss of voice, and all iimii.1
Jung troubles. "*■
aWoTaSA
What Liquor and Over-Cot!,
Brought Upon a Traveler
Special to 1 heJJa-uur.
Helena, Mont., Aug.
named Reed has been making at
Yellowstone park, in a surrev
Billy MiligaSi as driver. R TO lbii
rhich I assure you 1 had no intention s’derable money with him, and
of tlie best tonics known,combined with
the best blood purifiers, acting directly
on the mucus surface. The perfect com
bination of the two ingredients is what
produces such wonderful results in cur
ing catarrh. Send for testimonials free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Prop, Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, price 7oc.
GIRLS WHO SMOKE.
UNCLE SAM.
Few people understand the origin of
the term “Uncle'Sam,” as applied to
the L uiled Stiles, bat the following ac-
Connetlcut is Full or Pretty Females Who
Like to Puff Cigaretts.
A delicate judicial question will soon
invite attention in the Land of Steady
Habits—Will the coming young woman
of 12 to 10 years be allowed to smoke?
One of the interesting and farreach-
ing,laws that were enacted by the last
General Assembly, says a Hartford,
Conn., dispatch to the New York Sun,
is the famous tobacco statute, which
provides that a “minor under 10 years
of age” shallnot touch, taste and handle
not tobacco “in any form,” the penal-
tly for violating the law being a fine of
$7 and costs to be Inflicted on the fath
er of the offending lad. The statute was
worried through the Legislature by
good anti-tobacco folks, who “viewed
with alarm the dire encroachments that
the tocacco habit is making among the
young (boys) in the public school and
on the street.
It has long been noted bv them with
pain that tender youngsters of from 9
to 16 years smoked “snipes” in the
streets and chewing navy plug with the
solemn satisfaction of an able seaman
both in school and after school hours. It
would have pleased them to knock out
tobacco wholly in Connecticut, but be
ing keenly conscious that it would not
do to be radical with legislators nine-
tenths of whom chewed plug, and in a
Commonwealth whose best crop is to
bacco, they bore down all the
more heavily on the juvenile tobacco
habit.
Some of the hard-headed old legisla-
ters uiXiiot fancy the stringvqt tobacco
Cooper.
The exact place of meeting is not
known;but the two parties will meet
during the afternoon, settle the affair
or fight.
Governor Gordon has telegraphed
the Governor of Tennessc and the Gov
ernor of Alabama to order the arest of
the duelists.
It may be the whole party will be
scooped.
The fight will take place near Gads
den, Ala.
TRYING TO SCARE HARRISON.
A Pretended Dynamite Package,
Which Was Harmless.
Special to The Banner.
New York, August 9.—The Trib
une’s special from Boston says that one
of the teams of the Boston City Parcel
Delivery Company w as stopped on the
street Wednesday by an unknown man,
who handed the driver a small parcel
addressed to “President Harrison, Ho
tel Venderne.” The driver took the
package, but before it was delivered it
was examined by the superintendent of
the Parcel company.
The package was found to contain
two pieces of thin board, a few’ matches
and a book bearing the startling title of
“Dynamite Cartridge.” There was
nothing dangerous in the parcel, and it
was afterward delivered to the hotel.
We are ghid to annonnee that Mr.
Erskine Heard has recovered from his
very severe attack of last week, aud is
once more on the streets of Elberton.
lie is considering moving back to El
bert, his old home. We w ould be glad
to om o more see him a Citizen of the
g’. r.nJ old county.—The Star.
of breaking.
John L. then bowed himself out, the
Governor simply in his courteous way
acknowledging tlie greeting of the
champion. Col. Clark,who was watch
ing intensely the.,big fellow all the
while,turned to the Governor as the big
fellow went out the iloor and said :
“Governor, he said that pretty well,
didn’t he? lie is a man of more intelli
gence than I had expected.”
The Governor has not given his im
pressions of Sullivan, etc., but those
who were near say that it .was plain
that the big felhnv’s gentlemanly de
meanor, etc., touched the Governor in'
a soft place. He was heard to say that
“lie has not got a bad eye by any
means.”
To a prominent lawyer of the party
■Sullivan said that the newspapers had
done him great injustice in making him
out a bad man. He said he couldn’t
fight the newspapers. He said that
while his domestic relations were as
pleasant ami as happy as most men,that
the papers had unjustly represented him
as a monster in human form.—Picayune
SUCKED OUT THE POISON.
How A Negro Lad Saved his Brother’s
Life-Tlie Bite of a Rattlesnake
Counteracted by a Brother’s
Devotion. .
Special to Tlie Banner.
Augusta, Ga., August 8.—At John
ston, early yesterday morning, a negro
boy was bit by a rattlesnake while cut
ting wood in the woods.
The boy screamed for help, and his
brother, who was also cutting wood
near by, ran to him. He sucked the
poison out of his brother’s leg, spitting
it out, and continued the sucking and
spitting until then father arrived witU
some whisky.
At this hour the leg which was bitten
is scarcely swollen,and the boy is likely
to recover without any great inconven
ience. The rattlesnake was killed, and
was quite a large one. The boy who
sucked the poison out said he heard an
old man, a longtime ago, say that there
was no danger in sucking out rattle
snake poison, and that in every case it
would afford immediate relief to the
person bitten, and that if this process
was tried in time it would always effect
a certain and quick cure.
lie rinsed his mouth out- thoroughly
/with whisky, but swallowed none. The
boy says he feels no bad effects from the
method he used to save his brother’s
life.
TWO MILES PER MINUTE.
Wonderful Speed Made by an Electric
Motor in Marylands.
Baltimore,Md M Aug. 9.—On a two
mile circular track the startling speed
of two miles a minute was maintained
for about ten miles- by the three-ton
motor of the Electro-Automatic Transit
Company, of Baltimore City, at then-
grounds at Laurel, Md. This speed
equals three miles per minute on a
straight tiack.
David G. Weems, the inventor, con
ducted the experiments. The company
will build at once a five mile circular
track on Lrng Island to demonstrate
a spree gave Miligan $700 to n
him. O11 their return trip throi
park, Reed, still muler tin* im] Uf£ ,,|
liquor, confided to iris coiupai
he had in his valise a valuable
diamond. On their arrival an
springs Reed retired early. XextuJ
ing Milligan and the diamond t|
missing. Reed started in pursuito
tured his man and turned himoriJ
the soldiers in the park. As therein
law in tlie park. Lieutenant Edit!
was compelled to let him ^ r o. R«|
loss amounts to $10,000.
Sick headache,hiliousness.iis
tiveness, are promptly and a®r
banished by Dr. J. II McLean’s
anil Kidney Fillets (little pills.)
most vigorous and
i' I
Even the
people have at times a. feeling of wa
\ , ness and lassitude. To dispel thisfs
ing take I)r. J. H. McLean’s San
ilia ; it will impart vigor and vitaM
9-15 j
THROUGH AND
A Thrilling Accident near .Monroe--ij
Lady and Child Hurt.
Special to The Banner.
Monroe, Aug. 9.— Yesterday. aWI
four miles from here, the mulc» n j
tached to a wagon loaded with lunilwl
became frightened by the sliding®* 1 !
of some lumber while going do* 1 !
steep hill.
While running at full speed the tei
came into contact with a ' l0r ^'
buggy occupied by Mrs. Julia K. - j
lan and her child, the wagon ton?
p issing entirely through the horse J
killing him.
The occupants of the bugg} I
violently thrown to the ground * D *1
rionsly, though it is hoped, not * . J
injurned.
If health and life are wOTthanjthgl
and vou are feeling out ot >orj ; I
tired out, tone up your system t
ing Dr. J. H. McLeans bar*]
9-15.
Dizziness, nausea, drowsing M
tress after eating, can be j J
prevented by taking Dr. *>• »-j e p jii.J
Liver and kidney I diets J ^ |
THE GREAT SUGAM RlSl
To be Made an International Oj*®*
troling all the Sugar of the
Spicial to The Banner. _
San Francisco, Aug. 9,-_B P eric *
in circulation here that the - •
sugar trust has about comp * ^
tiations with an English- <■ ^
dicatc to get the sugar mar e» ^
world under one supreme con ^
plan includes the bunding
term of all the principal sug» r .
tions in Cuba, the Eh* j 1 ’^' pi* 1
Java and Mauritias, w no 1 un J<r
the main sources of raw sU
control of the syndicate.—__ h>r ,j C
puY, 0 ; »S:h”»S^|i
and Kidney Pdlets 1$ 0 uue 9-D
and more agreeable. gkin uW
Pimples, blotches,^* ^cesses
spots, sores and rdiers, , such
tumors, unhealthy disc £ an d oth,
catarrh, eczema, ring syuipt°®Lj
forms of skin ***£’;$. *
blood impurity. 1 akc 1 O' 14
Lean’s Sarsapari.-a*