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TIMES-JOURNAL
Timcs-.Joiirmtl Prli*ilnsf C oin 5 .
Subscription $2.00 per Annum
SIX MONTHS. THREE MONTI1K, s°*
FRIDA 5 JUNE 1 1,1 '39.
.
Democratic Organ of Dodge County,
Advertising Kates. !
Heading Notices 5 c. a line each insertion.
WEEKLY.
1 ave* one month . . •4 ' *5
j “ *• ** 2 (JO I
2 75
“ three months ■j
*» » 4 ",
Abo r • 0 5 5°
: 7i
~ ** trrclvc months 5
k
*4 i \ on
S |
ti
O
SEMI-WEEKLY.
I squnre one month.
z “ ** “ ............ 3 -5
.1 5
4 7
“ three month h. A iXJ
3
4 twelve months. (u
••
,,,
3
4 m
to “
20 .
*A .'tjuarc is one inch, single < olumn.
'Jen j,cr cent, extra lor sj»e< v.il position in paper.
Wlial We Export.
Statistician Dodge of tlie United States
agricultural department lias prepared a
table of figures on tlie annual production
and export trade ot the Union.
Our agricultural exports consist al¬
most altogether of cotton, tobacco, meats,
butter and eheeae. These
t-^:i -i-.t. of farm
<{
Tr; opportunities.
- We export more Hum two-thirds of all
the cotton required in Europe; but, on
the other band, Europe gets from other
countries three times as much wool as
we send her, much of it from South
America and Australia.
Tho United States makes no remark¬
able figure as a country of exports. We
! ought tu raise more llax and hemp. We
import annually $ 20 , 000,000 worth of
fruits, half of which ought to be pro¬
duced at liomo.
Murder Mysteries.
Years ago the Nathan murder hi New
York city made a sensation throe,v^ut
tho country. Every resource IttivAo
the detective agencies of that time
brought to hear, yet lHo murder rem;.
' x this day ivn unsolved mystery.
!t seems not so surprising, perhaps,
Dial tho murderer of Nathan wax never
known. But it does seem otrange that
today, with all our telegraphs, tele¬
phones, rogues’ galleries and rival de
tcctivo agencies, there should be no loss
than four murders full of mystery.
Two of the bloody crimes took place in
Chicago, two i;i New York In Chicago
Tascott, tho supposed murilerer of mill¬
ionaire Snell, is indeed known, but lie
lias concealed himself so effectually that
it seems as if only the day of judgment
^onhl reveal him. That one so well
d 1 . n- week -. ait la'ii 'li Die b. uiv
^^Bexplicabkx drug
New York, Mareli 7, a young
^1. rk, Guenther Wochsung, had his skull
cloven with a hatchet, in broad dayliglit
in tlie early morning, sitting in his store.
No clew to the murderer Ikes been found,
probably now never will be.
Again, April 15, Mary Tobin, a re¬
spectable young lady, leaves Bort Rich¬
mond, Staten Island, to go to New York,
and thence to her home ill Pennsylvania.
Two weeks afterwards her body is found
floating in the waters of New York bay.
So far as known the girl had not an
enemy i:i tho world. How did she come
t.) her death? Not a ray of light has
been thrown on the case thus far.
Will the Tobin case also join the dark
procession of mysterious murders?
Tli* situation of Ha y U „
as bad aiul disgraceful as it can lie. It
the two contending parties there would
destroy each other, like tlie Kilkenny
eats, then there would L> some hope.
There could be a new deal and afresh
start towards civilization. But this they
show no signs of doing. Voodocism u
rampant. Black and white babies n,v
sacrificed i:i terrible heathen l itos. if r,-.
ports are true, The worst vices of civil
ization and the most frightful practi.v.
of African baibarism at once hold »wa\
over the'-. retched mongrels who now
inJu:’ it liatti. Current talk from Wash
ingU):i w lusjiei-s of a protectorate by tlie
i'uitcd States over Ilayti. Etiropi* ln.ighl
|ierlia|» iu»t like it, but what comd she
do?
___
Once more the itatement is being
pas 5 H*vl around -.liat vater gas can liefur
nished for fuel at 30 cents per thousand
feet, and for illumination at 40 cents
Then why is it not thus furnished?
--'XT’
Su,,1 .
T, '° Amo, ica " "‘ Pr ‘
Nearly half a century ago American
school called teachers teachers ‘»epn institutes to hold
came together in the spring and
summer ami vacation. found to lie They very were bene.r peasant ’ “
were
the teachers. Lecturers were employ.-.!
c ( ;u . j s in literature, mathenaati's and
tlie sciences were formed. Teachers I.e
came for the time pupils. They obtained
new ideas not only in book learning, but
in manners and morals, and sometimes
even in personal cleanliness.
The institute stretched out and cn
larged till finally regular sunimi r nor
mal schools were established, Here tiie
teacher of limited time and means could
come, and with small ex(ier.se, in a ecu iv
of ten weeks or so, perfect Ilium !f in
one or more stuuies. ,. After two or three
of these Hummer terms lie received a di
ploma and was a graduate of a noimal
institute. The institutes were in all cares
“co-eds,” and more women than men
usually took tho course. These schools.
as well its the old fashioned teache s in¬
stitute, still flourish and do much goad
Then another summer school took its
rise. This was that of which the
Chautauqua Circle is the type. Persons
of a religious tendency naturally gath¬
ered at the same spot for summer recre¬
ation. What more natural than that
should seek profit . .,
tlipy as w* a., ..on.. -
ment in these “ * u ‘°‘' a 1,11 . 1 '*•
Sunday school ami the teachers ms t
tore combined formed the model the
over the Union, and has spread h.<-rary
and scientific culture of a popului cuar
acter as nothing else ever did. The south
now lias its Ch^^j la. So li.-is t ’ead.
sc
lusophy^^^^^H
1 H.-c u 1 i
Th
Engl |
sity a
hehy YaA
crude cut
sold at thirty cents a vi.,„, s . irK p
s “ jt h;ls liw “ V ‘’‘T gratifying.
There are several systems of
tho fuel gas, all in sharp cor
I _ ron) these in time satislactor® _
must he obtained. Thus far tin'
ing power of tho manufactured
only a little moro than three-fifths t'ia
of the natural gas.
Beware! 'File sea serpent has already
been seen twice this season, and it has
not been a very warm spring either. Once
he was in the Atlantic ocean, and very
properly not far from the region when
Ignatius Donnelly locates tho isle of t!u
lost Atlantis. Only two weeks later In
was in the Hudson river, near Non-In ; g
trying desperately to "hump” himself s<
that he could turn around in the nano-'
channel. Ilia body was of the ek . nn
fercnce of a whisky barrel.
The rulings of the interstate and rivi
service commissions are of little import
anco to the public in genual But a
ruling which lias excited the keene..i m
terc.st throughout the country is tli.
adoption of the double umpire system in
tiie national game of baseball. It giver
general satisfaction .
The American Unitarian association
;>- >i t this year that tiie work of cIimcIi
xteiision has never been so wide or so
satisfactory in tbe history of tlie organ¬
ization as during tiie past year.
A new Boston idea is the formation of
classes for the political education of
women. A club of ladies take up text
Ixmk-Ron nolitSeal historv and economy
ind discuss the.
topics at their meeting. The subject has
attracted tlie favorable attention of prom
inent men in Boston and ways: tliev are aidiim
the ladies in various Recently
I’rofessor W. T. Harris lectured before
the class on “The True Function of tlie
State.” Ilia lecture included a range of
subjects from anarchy to the competitive
Suad Showers ami Drifts.
Dry, loose sand, wherever it occurs, ia
constantly being shifted by tiie wind, and
often buries cultivated kinds, buildings
those of Cornwall reach 300 feet in depth,
while the drifts of the Gobi desert are
40 miles long and 900 feet high in places,
On the shores of the Bay of Biscay the
drifting sand travels inland 10 feet a
year, iu parts of Denmark 24 feet, and
hi southern India H yards. In some
Ibices wlJ barriers of vegetation
have been cieated to stop the destroying
drifts. Fine sand is taken up to a great
l.eiglit in the air, and deposited manv
miles away. In 1SS2 Iceland was visited
by a remarkable Kind storm, lasting two
weeks which hid the sun and objects a
few yards oif like a .lease fog. and caused
the death of thousands of sheep and
horses.—New York Telegram
TT:© Natiou’i Great Mett.
^ ; V v . Capt. Anson born; „
,‘ was
..yy-yt.', KUri L^'ftvan " born?
-I "B.:.lv.\. don t\ «• that either.
uwoui d buy me a his
tory of theVfuited States. ■'-•Chicago
* Herald. \
yirs. Stewart's Will.
This mouth the case of the will of the
, 'j.e VK , iAV ^’.rro'-ate , o( . . j c’*xirt Stewart is brought up-in
“ of New York again,
^ ur l)( d .. >lt j, ,,f »i r3 . Concha >1.
~
;.' ^ Kosalio nu.Ur, one of the
‘
h ir undej . tl)e vviil< brought suit to
^ May of tho t , 1 C!i e nl year.
the a it had been going on ia tii court
for one year. As far as it luft programed.
the court costs alone of the case have
amounted to §100,000. The fees to the
lawyer are in addition to this, and,
course, crane out 1 f the private (xx-kets
of plaintiff and defendant.
Incidentally, the crumbling away of
the great Stewart millions is one of the
points of interest in the suit. These mill
ions somehow seem 10 be of evil omen
There is a popular tradition that the
Stewart mansion itself v. as haunted, and
that its builder and owner hints* If feared
to live in it. And it stands empty and
desolate today.
The great cathedral which Mrs. Slew
art built has been the cause of litigation
almost ever since the beginning. Tbe
architect who planned it sued for a sum
outside of his contract, declaring that
Jud fo e lliiton Had overreached Wuw in
bargaining.
Poor Mrs. Stewart wa3 no more than a
six-months-old baby in the hands of the
various contending factions. Judge liil
toil seems, from the evidence at this long
t(J | lavu ru led her with despotic
v . jp. evt .„ tol l her what gowns
; ' d w _ She Ui.l not care for
; ^ anJ did not wish |
the wanted
•• '
^ (
nc ssL
at.
putfs. I
over
Ik' Iver
pot
kn ordt-i’
fc^'v.v, it
they ha L, Sr,- a)
liavo just taken a Hitch air 1U “
| boil with their bea __ and
post corset r
drawn themselves as small as they do
sired. But tho |>oor boys had no corsets
allotted to them in their regulation out
fits. They ought to have them.
Cardinal Gibbous has defined his posi
Don clearly on the temperance q a-stion.
j [Iis view is also that of Bishops Cyan
j and Ireland, workers earnest in the and Roman eloquent Catholic torn
j penutee
eluneh, and of the pricsfuood generally.
Cardinal Gibbons favors high license.
with inor.'il Miasion, as the best means «>i
, promoting tempo ranee. Ho wlju 1.1
tlie sale ot liquor on .‘■iiinday strictly pro
feibited. The V >olice should tn* compelled
to enforce the Sunday liquor laws.
Tiie new capital punishment law in
New York forbids the publication of the
details of an execution, it is u grave
question whether the law is a wise one.
An execution need not In* ojiest to the
public, but events in tlie nature of star
chamber proceedings are objectionable
in a free country.
--------—
“IiTereronce for the law is bred in us,”
said Mr. William O'Brien, speaking for
himself and Hie Iris!* in general, at his
exmuination before the Darned coinmis
sioti, in London.
---
It bas been prove.] em trial that gin is
as elf eot ive as whisky against a rattle
snakebite. This is in the nature of an
import discovery.
The rate of postage to Canada has
been reduced. Hereafter it will be three
cents for each ounce or fraction of an
ounce.
Tlie eighteenth annual meeting of the
Woman’s Baptist Foreign Missionary -
c : etv w j!| g e | lt? | d i„ the First Baptist
c | 1 U rch, BixH.klyn, N. Y„ corner of
Pierropint and Clinton streets, on Wed
■** *
Rev. J. H. Guiining. pastor of tlie
Harvard Street Baptist church. Boston,
has resigned h^^astorate, tho i\sign.a
tion to lake [
Mr. J(ilm D. iWca . ke.eller , „ has , just given
S109.0U0 to the American Baptist Bditaa
tion society for educational work in the
United States, pavable $10,000 each
month, beginning with March and end
ing with Decemlier next
Eev. tVv A 4 r (,. i/licri Ldwwcs.Mcarof vi«.r to p, Peters, .
Carmarthen, has been nominated by the
crown to be bishop of .St Asaph. Tiie
nc ' v bishop is a \< elslmmn by birth,
about 45 .wars of age. and was ordained
m Hie fcishop of St David a
. Nort. . ? Branch. Mtch.. Methodist church
k„. .1 j..u.s. “wr u . • a-. 1 -.
A Mot. 10 , i.-t e‘ u re. 1 .v :ia rcc e n; iyd e <! 1 -
cate., fo. t.m Indiansof ,ayn,o Ut h< Mich.)
mission At oeUieation tae enureh was
praaonuG with two dozen hymn booksin mA
tbe Oibwa diale.sE the Tift „f n»
odidl Book coucero.
The throe e lectrical machines that are
to be used for executing murderers in
New Vork Imvecost, $8,100 They will
destroy life in the one hundred and Of
tielU part of a second.
______
This year the graduating class at West
Point numlars fortv-seven There are
onK . twenty-five vacant second lieuten
ail ,' ci4M . The surplus graduates will be
commissioned by the president as addi
tiunul second lieutenants.
Since Aug. 3, 1837, the United States
of the treasury Inis bought
JuiP.Til.COO of 4 and 45 [cr cent, bonds,
paying for them .$195.(120,428. With ac
creed interest their cost ar maturity
would have been $35,0t:5,541 more than
t j,i ri
Some French scientists have a new cure
for ilruni.-enness. It is to hypnotize or
mesmerize the drunkard He is kejjt
under the Influence . of the sped a sum
cient time, long or short, till the appeti e
for alcohol wears out. He is simply n*
for the time by an influence which 1 .,
stronger than the craving for liquor.
The piint .ple is t.iu same t nit * iu_a
^earner made use of in Ins day.
-----’
The National Militia.
Tlie Tory St. James’ Gazette, of Lon
don, seems to have a poor opinion of
Yankee fighting material. It says
tiicre should State^theordvX^^ be a warlike inva sion
United
estmuistert. i tT 1-aiiii. Nearly
250 years ago this confession was adopted
bv tlie general assembly at Westminster.
It has been tie■ standard of faith ever
since, to wliieh each one joining the
Presbyterian church has subscribed. One
of the articles of tho Confession of Faith
is that God has predestined certain men
and angels to be saved i:i glory, while
others are to be damned eternally, both
i,.- < sius t . R was God's pleasure.
For many years Fre in teri ms have
.r row ing restive under Elis teach
. n -hicli is called the doctrine of rep
robation. The same idea is variously
to under the name of foreun>ina
tK)Ui pivdestination and election It was
„. )t a ion of tlie tns()iration of the
Bible, or of L.itli in it, but a question of
whether the views of tlie fathers of tire
erC o;l were suitable to the present age.
g t t jie general assemblv. tiierefore, it
was found that fifteen loyal am! faith
f n \ presbyteries out of 20 i hi tiie entire
coniniunioii respect fully petiti :uvl fora
revision of the cree l ami confession,
p. irt k-ul ar Jy in regard to predestination
and election. The assembly, as admirable
tempered and able a body of ministers
aa ever came together, decided, in tin
true spirit of republicanism, to leave the
matter to the vote of the presbyteries
themselves during Dm coming year If
» majority desire revision, it v.-i!l be time
enough to take action after this D asecr
W :ned Tiie two divisions of Obi and
New .School Presbyterians have di-up
pea red.
The thirl serious question before tiie
assembly was Untof temperance. First,
the lav.hr.u declared themselves i:i fa
v ., r ,.f a resolution expressing genera!
synmet ;v wiili r.!l movements in favoi
of total abstinence. Y.,., they p.^1 a
vote in favor of constitutional prohibi
t jon o„ the fast day of the session,
however, lie Cr. Howard Crosby se
eared the passage of the following
iirtiqu*- utterance, it was carried with
applause:
Ib-NolvHd. Th« tho deUverances of this tsoem
ol.,- oil the witF'-t of proUibltioa an. oot u be
~~“ w
lineal laity
Lh- Oliver Wendell Holmes thinks it
very possible that the literary center of
tho country may bo Milwaukee some
dav It is possibio that eitv was the ua
tire home of the poetrv of passion. His
own best poem Dr Holme., beikvos to
bo "The Chambered Nautilus," unless lie
excepts "The Voiceless." which is also a
favorite with him. He doubts whether
this c m will ever nroAice ,. - - > *e
markable a group of men r- xvere .o
get her m r««ton m the .lays of Long
fellow, Theodore Barker. Motlev. Bros
C ott Emerson and Wer.teli Ph.itlips
I 2 ,well-nd Whittier were a-coe^ ‘ .' t!r u
and .. Dr. Holmes , should ... have a. cl ... Ins
own mine
In Berlin r.n exhi; iricri < f appliances
f.w protecting workii.g • pie from ac
cider:i in factorl:-s i:as tn held ft
was under the patronage *J the Buta.^omi emperor,
whoappnmNlofitsobnx.t
nent Gorman newspajK r ,n»h> the cn-i
cism that if the emperor had t .bo rgi.t to
a ^ p rruv N , thi.tg--. might he :> t
&
«P™*- a
w.neh womd m a iug.i , l.anJeu exercise
The Times-Democrat and many promi
citizens of New Orleans have been
for months to persuade the
of that city to pass an ordinance
an annual tax of three mills for
It is claimed that, once thor
drained. New Orleans will Ik? one
ihe most iiealthful cities in the Union.
Rut the ordinance was voted down.
-
A world's Sunday school convention
will meet in London July 2. Delegates
from the United States will go thither
j n one party by the steamer Bothnia,
which leaves New York June 10. This
will lie one of the most interesting and
picturesque assemblies that ever came
together, Chinaman, Hindoo. Turk,
Arab and Kaffir will meet on common
ground anil join hands with western
races. The “Sweet P>y and By" and
„ Hold tho p olt - w ju dou btless liil the
air with melody in many languages.
Mija|e ased and elderly people will
. live [Q llm ij e t i, c tour of Africa for
, )leasuro The scream of the loeome ive
aJ lhe Congo will erelong send the
t , R1 dumonsand tile s , K)ok , „f
^ ^ African jungle cowering back lo
„ dl . , 3 ; r Th(? Congo nii i ruad ar ,. und
the cataracts will be 204 miles long ai d
wd j coa t $5,000,000. it will start at 5' 1 -
tad [. Die head of lllV ?
■npiied to tlie
French exhibition of 137S.
One of our supposed model machines
is a contrivance for salting and coloring
dairy butter. But as Europeans do not
use salted butter and do not like it, the
French have invented an equally skiliful
contrivance for taking the salt all out
again. Both machines are on exhibition,
and tho spectator can take his choice.
Tlie exhibit of American inventive
genius at Paris is certainly wonderful,
Wo have not, however, advanced very
greatly in tlie matter of agricultural ma
chinery since 1878. Other nations have
caught up several of our mechanical
ideas and improved on them ti'.l tliej
sometimes surpass the original designs,
American ideas, in one form or another,
pervade the machinery of all nations in
the exhibit, Margaret Sullivan writes,
Tliis is especially true of steam engines,
machine tools, metal working, making
paper bags and wood working machinery.
America is tlie only country except
Great Britain that shows improvement in
printing machinery. I’orall nations,tlie
electrical inventions are the most n i
merous and interesting.
In tliis field it is gratifying to know
that three American inventors hold the
first place. They are Edison, A. Gra¬
ham Bell and Brufessor Eliliu Thomson
The last is a new name, but one which
will become probably as familiarly
known as either of tiie other two. Bro
ft css nr Thomson lias discovered how to
anial .. amate metals b\ eltcliK..i process, .....
0
Metals that v.iil fuse in no other way
yield to his process, which promises very
important results.
At the i arts exposition n,hson J«aa493
inventions, representing most of his dis
coveries. ilis display covers 9,000square
Let
i he American phonograph is the won
der and delight .4 European visitors
Hiere are (iheiiographs which answei
back u, the sons and daughters of each
nation in their own .anguage. In elec
trical inventions it is interesting to note
that the French t*md esjKfially to pure
st .i,. lu ... .while Americans occupy panic
»•“•" •>
The less keart and brains parents and
teachers have, the more varied and tor
turesome are tlie punishments they de
vise for helpless children A school
teacher has l.vn found who first flogs
Ins pupils severely and then
them to shocks from an electric Littery.
llavv Ji v will rov* re that man in after
year;-.
--
Some queer methods are resorted to in
Klir<( , v to discover the existence of So
. . . |{,,i-i lml recently a revolu
‘ “; :r ‘
'
dr ‘ H ' ° f " orl;,n "" ,en T They read . the .
circular and some of them expressed
tL, Presently numbers
ot were arrested. At the trial it
was I-loved that spies of the ISelgian
government had prepared tlie circular
and distributed it. Before being issued
for circulation it had I ^en read and a p
proved by no less a personage than the
Belgian immster of the interior himself.
The circular had been an infamous trap
to catch the unwary Those facts were
brought out so unmistakal.lv ' i:. court
tald oswere turuci , The , ^ .
«ere tlwmselves arrested for issumg tbe
circular. - *
..
p,^„ c h Rights in Newfoundland
Waters.
Flore is something scarcely anybody in
t be United States knows: Of the vast
possessions Trance had In America one
hundred and fifty years ago. one insig
nificant speck remains. Tliis is the Mi
quelon islands, an infinitesimal group
near Newfoundland. With these islands
France lias etiil held fast to certain fish
tag privileges 1 0:1 the Newfoundland
coast. The fishing privileges ... have . been .
a bone of contention between the New
foundlanders atul France for many
years. Treaty rights count for little
with Newfoundland fishermen, who
neither know nor care what was done
more than a centum ago. They are
determined to drive French fishermen
from their shores. Rritisii man-of-war’s
men are constantly employed in these
waters protecting the rights of France
against their own countrymen, It is
rather an unusual state of affairs.
Going ft Alono.
Already .... there ... .
oaguw* to arise 1 ron '
summer resorts that cry in the text of
the old Hard Sliei! sennon: “Men is
source and women is plenty." Girls are
i -rood and ", ,‘wu prettv, and with wardrobe igor
geoos ........... ..............
voua*” men to appreciate it ail. It is the
lnl , , .. .... rru„ bov; . \, est worth
'
i fraying an-too poor to go to sum.um iu
wear «ix costumes a. a.ty. it
igem as if ail the civilian
hiidiero - like Eiigkvml and
are sot men
i! ly in
Ikfekri will
jfcli 1
^■WWivn, dm com:! 10 : 1 . each eiiliix:,:
ing as much ;ts he needs The climate
is perfect, the soil brimming forth in
abucdanco both tropical and temperate
products. Sickness, poverty and crime
are alike unknown. The jieople iiehave
themselves because they lake to They
have a cliurcii and a school. Tiieir isl¬
and is a garden of delicious f ruits anil
beautiful flowers Tho nut vrs have the
manners of couiteous. higL Itrevl gentle¬
man. There is no liquor on the island
and no tobacco. They :sv gov ■ rued,
such as it is, by a magistrate, elect* i
every year. They gave fruit, fimver
and tisli to CapL Bunn, but iledined to
receive money iti return. Money was of
no usy to them, tliev sail I. How could
electricity and taxes and a mortgage on
their island improve the condition of
those people?
Aii Gnsung Martyr.
Tlie most heroic life of modern titnea
ended recently at Kalawao, Sandwich
Islands. It requires a high order of
human courage to face sudden death.
But to face knowingly such a death as
the one which at last closed the lifeahove
i:atne<l requires courage superhuman. In
18 ,.', Father Damien, a wealthy, highly
cultured Belgian priest, in the flower
of young manhood, suddenly appeared
on Molokai, the island of lepers in U, 0
Hawaiian ,, group, i here were 810of these
forsaken wretches on tho island. They
huddled together on :t peninsula of wi,ite
sand, washed by the sea on three tides.,
.,,, they lived i ,n a state of loathsome
nuseev
winch levolts the imagination, .stn-.■»
cared for them, or sought ia any way i»
alleviate their suffering. They
their time in playing cards, and inSrink
in a i hem-elves •*■“> i<« s .-.tfu>
ness in a beverage they F»exved from t>o
root of a plant called "hi.” Tlie Su»i
wich Islands bad been ostensibly
tiamzed, but the leper colony bad
lapsed into barbarism, and were wor
shiping their old pagan deitv. IaiLa, and
sacrificing to him. Tbeir ..mrality was
a t the last, lowest ebb which dograjntir.u
could reach.
Fatiier Damien’s future would have
undoubtedly been one z ,?z of Die test l.rd- ::i
k r 'Ded, eloquent and x cry (/sjular. He
* ' to a £. Life amon„ tu*. ^ Ie(x;rs He
k,leu '*‘c could never -sa? nif friends or
fauul v ,noro - Ho wasimK-e.l dead totlx*
-
Ww. tigk t!*e ho trible doom
t,u A cel tomiv awaited lu.m. ^Hi course
° 1,1,0 ,0 tor> would tlie tho -oathsotoe
u0 “ lh of the ^
fI ° '“^red with the leers sixteen
years, lie first aineiior-ou,! im tlJi ir i.livsi
eal condition, ti.en | l lc [ 1 IU -la . re
li.H.m ” n- m.ido . i obser.a’.ions on the ,
disease of leprosy which ha%* a lasting
scie-nUfio value. He cUsged the fright
ful, detriuche.1 colony comUh- to .Ieirl.de
cent, Christian «Htivatin^
houses and C
the doom lie had in voted <!<s cended on
his head. He was stricken we I, l epre
.,,
But lie lived till 1889, worldag to the
very last among those wdic.tr. none but
hJmself_wou!.l ' help. -
- inTuU
p|,., r l Bngt-r along alwavs com
plaining about tdiut continual tired feel- Pv
ugf H„ > 0 , w of Bug's *W> ■
... • ,, \| »kh* will entindv
; ,icl » : y jiate digestion.
Hlruman ^ llKJiiiHAN,
i!^pCitan> t O Ad VBftlS TS.
Fro in thin date all lefjal notices
nirxt be paid for in (((trance, (is
required by lair.
Tin; Tnusdonaa I'mxnsG Co.
1 :. ,i,.s>s.
-
Notice to Tax Payers.
I will be at t'a - following (daces of at j
the time named mr the purpose j
receiving ta xes. Ail parties w ho have
not vet given in are re quested . to meet
piiy .,.s ibis is positively my
1 rol ind. and 1 will close my books
July 1st. Those tailing to give in by
that time will he don' le taxed :
Edtiins District. June 11; Mitchells
district, June 12: Pond Town district.
,)u IU , j;{ ; c .attncey district, June 14 anil
15: Eastman. June 1. 22, 28 and 29:
Rawlins district, June 29.
my .11 Jr J. il.iiinni vs. T. R D. C.
Uitiition for Letters of Admin
iiifr.ition.
To all whom it may concern :
J.i Raw hr,- h ving in proper form
.
applied to me for permanent letters of
.iiluiiuistnition on the estate of John J.
Rosair. late of said county, deceased.
r „ ; ,n :m d ,-iugiilar the ered
jf., rs : ,nd next «>!’ kin «'-f -aid deceased,
! to he and appear at my office \\ ithiu the
j time allowed by law] and show
''; : b u tfic r'‘‘'‘granted t°
l 5 , i V ,f Tiaw l‘its oii estate of sa
. .
j deceased. lianu and official signa
Witness my
this M:iv 27lh. 1889.
i M It’ll A EL L. BURCH.
Ordinary Dodge County.
| (>. ft. I'.vi.iiot x, ___mydl-4t
Aii|dimiiit’s Attorney.
Gi:oi:uiA—Dodge (Oniity. ( harles
T’o all whom it may dim eoneern :
A llozar having in form applied of
: the undersigned iind for the guardianship Mnltie Hall,
S the person pro;., tty of
ehild off. H. Hall, late of said
i, j \ deceased. Notice herel \
his application will be heard
the
AND B0S051S.
i - - A b,a: :v
j
! c- .y 5 »
€f€Os Element &
The Celluloid Company confidently lilgii
gsi-H, that they have attained tlie
os: i:n; rovexient i>■ their wat.-rpreo!
ivollars, cuff's and bosoms, wliieh Inis
’
< ■
i..' ,'<■ N,
•-5>4 -S—,
'Mk ash j* Mm £
.ov,.-been renehed in this lino of
;pron!' go als. We have examined their
latest iinjnovements, and tested them
‘by every t,lean.- at our eommand.
re com im -.d that tliev have never been
^ fv „ ( . d Wl . an . r ;. ildv to give the...
heartiest indorsement. They art
piiable. most durable of any goods on
be market, cud resemble linen more
osrfectiv titan anv wati-iproof imita
; Lm,e strange: s who have little
aeqiiaitita.nee with tlu -egoods are under
, the impn -sioii that celluloid is an ex
! plosive materia!. 1'his i- an entirely
wi’ii hotle-' anrai’i!! iJun-Vr The'linen aml’h
meit. bn: never ignite.
interlining makes it much Wronger than
any otlu r goods in tliis line. We shall
j , ,,,,-inimr of of Celluloid tlu-same.
a full assortment Collar
; Button, at 5 cents each by mail, post
;* 1 ThZ !n,t^
| iara and^ i| e ini'never larni-h the
* mlfs.
Geliiilcid Collars anil cull- cost no
mor * than linen—look hotter and wear
Si f r.«rjns!t
require no laundry mg—are iiianufiie
nifi mu' " In ’j”. 'S
( *'q h'ev v t htin oft* with soap
a , 1(l v ,- atel -.' save their cost in a
( Werf -, s w ,.. |r> ( j-y them. Cellulo.* .
Keep thi- .br re!V.-e,ice.
. < ol ar> am Ln>j- aj^w'«y
t |„. . in ie' tree < f jsistage, X? bv ad
dressing (hmrge Cb-mfc'.f Co., East
ooq -traet, New York, at the following
i>- : e
Gents’' Collars, 2.V,« for 2.75--4 7 do/ do/
fut:-. MV.Ofor 84—l.uOdoz *
j -alies’Dollars,Foe,<5 for
‘ i.7->—J.OO doz
- rolls, 30c. G for
! small Bosoms. 50c.
L,trw Bosoms, 75c. Gle-ek
IDmii. h- Podal Order, or
^it Ea-'t
! X‘ 23 I St., N York Git}'.
i mv‘M 4 i T !!
_——-----; - — -
I Il'i’d • !-' x AI.I-- 7 3
Allow their childnot
? : u )4 cnmgh and eiiludy-ay : .Gb ; « ^
r
! U-h Ai,' 'V>-V -1 d A: n^wiili ■- tne’t:'. f' iu.--. until
they sm^h-n.w! dov. lung '-r or*--on
-i 1 • " •' ......- .'VEtc.' ^
-
Hi'. ‘ '
in i 1 -Loan ’ v ii. iTGiin. M. D..
. l-3m fn.
rnoi essioxal ca nos.
II. I. I». II Ell It MAX,
Practitioner of
Med t ine and Surgery,
EA>TM AN. GEORGIA.
Ollice at City Residence Drug Store of llcmnan Ave.
£ Herrtnau. cor. 1st
and County Road Street. 7-5-1 y tiles
ARRIS FISIIER, M. !>.,
Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur.
Office at Eastman Drug Store, next
door to post office. Residence, corner
Fifth avenue and Uhureh street.
Eastman, Ga., Jan. 11, 1889. ly tues
AS. It. MOOD, 31- D.
Physician and Surgeon.
(Mine in hii-emeut rear of Masonic
Lodge, formerly oceiijticd by Dr. U. I'.
Latimer. Resilience south sideoft'ourt
House Si]ll;l r c. to dee 10
K. W. I,. SMITH,
Dentist,
haWKIXSVILLE, GEORGIA.
(Ifilee in Pulaski House.
12 - 1 - 88-1 y tues
V'kACV & i,..,iliz» ,
Attorneys at Law,
KASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Will praefiee in all the courts of the
Stale. Attention given to Convey
an eing Examinotlou of Titles to Land.
Ftirulshing Abstracts of Title, Exeen
tor ^ > Trustees. Partnersliips.Colleetions, Law and all oihci
; Uontnu-ts, Criniiual
| ( )| . a , R .j u , H „f practice. Office at Court
n olls( .. 2-1 -ly tues
j ! —---- ------------------- HERRMANN,
| (
Attorney at Law,
A 8 * GEORGIA.
y i 1 1 practice in the ilifi'erent counties
MkHAHaH|^ttiLSoi 1 11 1 )
LUMBER CITY, GA.
March 14, (1 mo. tu
L. SHEA,
f
MERCHANT TAILOR
MACON, GEORGIA.
aprl-Iy
Flour! Flour!
rtii-VEK Kino, Ro v a i. Own.
Mauohv’s Pride, W iiite Satin,
ILuty Joe, Centrai. City.
Rei> Rose, Bi.i.'e Ribbon.
The best brands. Sold by Pendleton
Bros, at the lowest cash prices.
S Mil, M ASON.
r. is mo v ahi. /; 1 : a it u eh.
Fourth Avenue near I’ostofflee.
Kastman, (Hi.
First ClaS3 in Every Respect,
Ticket, 10 shaves, $1.00. Single shave
15c.
Mar. 22 0 -mo fri
Coii{/h and Cotujh!! and Cough!!!
\\ hat in the world is trie reason von
will eough ami keep toughing and still
keep trying interior medicines w hen
BEfios’GnfcKUYCortJH.Synrcwillpos
iti vely relieve your eough at once t Ibis
!aet° amrre^ ‘,a aXe‘ , t,, \d)T^aie''hi
by'll. 1 r iG
Eastman ' Fisiieu, M. D., Drug
gist, l-3tn fri.
For Sale or Rent.
The Dwelling House of Mrs. Mug
ridge, next to tin: residence ofJ. F.
D* Lacy, is offered for sale or rent to
m'' 1 " For
1
DeI.acv &. Bisiior.
H. W PEN 1 HA- TON,
Collector of E. T. \ . «x G. E y. -t.iims,
EASTMAN, DA.
Having been fifteen years in the rail
road service, handling claims for dam
age, loss, overcharge, etc., I am pre
pared to collect with less delay than w
r ‘;« K mT-auS est^
will he represented by Ihe I legal
-erviee obtainable in this section of the
State, ami at very little . xpc.se In
formation of any kind will be supplied
1 1 f F ' pt! v.
_
_
Louis Mo. East- Dis
patch (erhially s:ivs: "India ii \\ < en are pro
healthy and strong, often
inarching for days with their babies
upon their barks. In t. ft, they fre
, |M , I:l ly go the day before an.l aft.-rcon
great sl-ength and |a>wer of endurance
Ty using a weed that grow s in their le¬
cality. out of whi.di a medicine is^ now
le-ing made, and ••|.t. \ t,*r_^^
under^the uamelNVIAN
WEED Female Medieii.e)
has proven a great lih'-ing to tiie veak,
delicate, o»vr-«o'k>n ■
^ m-e it ! .<■• p »o -r .inn in ea ..him IlUr .
! »"• ' h ‘\ *" ‘ V
M. M. Bush A t o., Lbaur.A^v , k* ep it.
_