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THE CA : ..;: . - : ... - : '-'4- ~
Lli .■r'f-, ■IRC’ 1 ; 9 t --- 1 " T T* m "T £i*
•W";
ESTABLISHED 1875!
As Corbett Knocked Sullivan Out,
So Do HOOD, ANDERSON and CO. Knock Prices Down
Our New Goods Are All in
Prices and quality guaranteed. \V* have a fine line of
Millinery, Dry Goods and Notions.
We can please anybody who will give us a chance. Our line of SHOES and prices will fit any one.
HOOD ANDERSON <fc CO.
HARMONY GROVE, GA.
LOST LETTERS.
My Louis XV. chiffonier is a
TUry handsome and graceful piece
of furniture. It is inlaid and
polished, with locks of burnished
copper, and always scorns to bo
smilimt ns if its red and white
mosaics were given merry, rosy lips. by
It wus to me my i
grandmother, grandfather, who inherited and I verily it;
from her 1
believe that it once stood iu
boudoir of tho palaco of Marly.
Never was an innocent 'little
piece of furniture abused ami
rated so mercilessly I chanced as my think chiff-
onler was when to
of it one day in during my sojourn You at
tho Pineus, Grreco. will,
no doubt, ask why I thrust my
trembling hand through my hair
and cried out, “Miserable idiot!”
without stating whether the epi-
chiffonier. thot was applied Good to heavens, myself or my the
only wonder was that I left a
single hair on my head, Judgo
for yourself.
1 had been so fortunate—some
time before—as to bxj loved by the
most charming of women. I shall
not attempt to describe her, not
even by tho color of her hair; it is
sufficient to say that for two years
I called her “my angel” and
“bright imago of my dreams.” At
the end of that period I allowed
ono of my friends to say to me, in
speaking of her: “How could you
bo such a fool?” She sent me back
my letters, and I neglected to re-
into!a^drewur of P my SS!
without thinking to turn the key.
That chiffonier was in my room;
my room was in my mother’s
chateau; my mothers chateau
was 800 of leagues Provence. away, In in the
middle setting
off unexpectedly I had completely on a diplomatic forgot-
mission
ten to destroy those remains of an
attachment .which had been de-
lightful—so long as it lasted.
When I accidentally those called from out
tho memory of letters
some obscure corner of my brain I
started up in surprise and shame,
for I knew that seriouslv mv thoughtless-
ness might compromise
a woman who had done nothing to
deservo such treatment at mv
hands. I felt that my conduct
had been unworthy of a I gentle- rushed
man, and in a fine frenzv
out first of steamship tho house, bound inquired for for Mar- tho
aeilles, took passage, and, listening
to nothing but tho voice of my
conscience, returned to France.
A week later I arrived at tho
maternal abodo, and I will spare
you a recital of tho ejaculations, ! So
the “What vou Georee fs
soon appeared. !” which greeted My mother mo nearly soon
ns I
stifled me with her embraces and
was sure that something dreadful
had happened to me, and Iliad
great difticulty in reassuring f her.
When she had grown calm possible: said,
in as indifferent a tone as valise
"Will you have my sent
to mv room, mother dear?”
“Certainly, o'ut, she' mv S son; nvored? you Then! must
Iw tired a
summoning a servant, she said;
2P 5 ®- 1
said smilingly
ins^^lmy.SerLTn'Sd the door, saying merrily:
to
Here comes the present oc-
^Glrieller-I cried going to
meet my cousin, the loneliest and
most charmmg ot girls, with
abundant blonde hair, eves as blue
as heaven, a smile of childish in-
nocence and teeth like pearls. 11
was she, of ail persons, who was
occupying the green room, and
who.no doubt, cupboards. hadvansacked
drawers and
Unfortunate, thrice unfortunate
“' h ?‘ I ™ !
Gabnelle—gav, artless . and . con-
fidmg, Tier though a demurely, trilie shy -gave she
me hand as
“How do you do, Cousin
George?” face
n?
CARNESVILLE FRANKLIN COUNTY GA. WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 12 18921
nana aaa
lookod searchingly for some sign
of dissimulation in her soft eyes,
Had she found the letters, had she
1T V?* inane had loved *i le me ar-
dently , and had been so imprudent
fts .f.° express her sentiments in
tvntmg, running the gamut of ohs
and ahs with plentiful exclamation
points attached thereto. And
suppoeo little Gabrielle had read
thom-I blushed at the thought,
Hut quite calmly she said: How
do , you do, and Cousin George?-that
was ail, maidenly in my great httIe pann lay'
* « >f ‘> «»>. hand-
Ah > but wlla f ab >' s « > s deeper
t , m a a woman s heart, as the
psalmist . , she had
? tho lottere! says; suppose rh nl
make re:l i to ? into ° y the
sure was go room
an(1 loolc for thom - Clabnelles
room! What sweet melody in tho
words, yet I felt that £ dare not
enter that sanctuary, although 1
had known my cousin since she
was a child.
“Como, George, and see how
prettily I have arranged your
room,” slio said suddenly.
Joy, bliss, ecstacy, filled mo as
she spoke; I was saved. Inno¬
cence had come to the rescue of
depravity! Lightly and gracefully she
ran
up the staircase; what a pretty
like figure culprit, she had! feeling 1 followed afraid her
a almost
Jo go; but yet, 1 must at all
hazards get my letters,
My former room was perfectly
charming, decked out in £d°Ta” blue and
modestly draped with snowy cur-
tains which looked like the wings
around of guardian angels. the I old looked chiff-
there anxiously for usual,
omer : it stood as
Cousin “May Gabrielle; I have I some dying water, of
am
thirst,” I said,
She took up the carafe, but I,
artful demon, had already ob-
served that it was empty.
ait a minute. I will get
some,” she said, and left the
room.
I rushed to the chiffonier, . and
opened the drawer—horror! it
WJIS empty !
The next instant my cousin re¬
turned, gavo me a glass water,
then showed me her album, and
we talked merrily, just as we used
to do when we were playfellows. letters?
But where were my
Had she found them and hidden
them away, or had she burned
them? My head seemed to swim
as I wondered.
As soon as I could think of a
pretext I left Gabrielle, and m the
mother. hallway I She met greeted mv aunt jovfully, her
me
then shook her finger with at me in a
mysterious way and a very
knowing ‘‘Come air with whispered: naughty,
careless boy!” me, I you followed
into her room, where she opened a
drawer saying meanwhile:
“When first arrived here it .
we
fortunately occurred to me that
before bachelor’s putting a young would lady be into well a
room it
for mo to look about it a little. I
have p*na.*s'^us had some experience of %oung
Vsrirsr-ia-::
fzi isa*arts.
d- had been slipped under v«,p my door. t
1 d^s“ Ts
I
!^ U ^ a “ d the “ 1 1111(01116(1 “
d d .
^ m do you
“ ____" 0 ‘ a 1___ ^ ^
V*® cousln ’ 13 irom
Gawieue-
breikfost , , , . ,, L
breaktast Hour. horn When v> nen I i heard uearu
my cousin go downstairsl darted
and was blushed, gmngto turned speakto her hei^ face
but she
?way and, putting a pieceof paper
‘ U -'-TaL h tec47our UI '
AA f* e Datk 3 our ktter letter and ana
speak to mamma.
Thunder and lightning! It was
my writing, mv style, my name,
are adArahlA. therofora i
arm re you. 7> lu you listen to mer
wm yon let me devota m} £ . lifo
to you ? A word from nd j
throw myself at your feet.
George.”
It was indeed, my letter—it was
No. 1 of my effusions to the ex¬
queen of my heart. It had slipped
out of the package of letters and
Gabrielle, finding it in the chiff¬
onier, thought that I had placed it
there for her, and her answer was;
sult “Speak to mamma.” Tho I re¬
of the accident was: spoke
to “mamma” and I married
happiest Gabrielle; I adore her, and am the
husband In the world.
The christening will take place
next month. Thanks, thanks, old
chiffonier !—Translated from the
French.
Becamo Discouraged.
Grevneck—Do you know I think
I will carry a notebook around
with mo and write down all the
make. funny mistakes I hear people
Bulfinch—Yes, I used to know
a fellow that did that.
Greyneck—Did he get many ?
Bulfinch—He did at first, and
then he didn’t got any.
him Greyneck — Whj^, wliat made
stop ?
lie Bulfinch—Well, couldn’t the coroner said
quite tell. — Boston
Courier.
Esthetic Turns-
since Quester—Have the you seen Jiggins
arrival of twins at his
house ?
-Jester—Saw him this morning.
he Quester—Indeed think ! What does
of the new arrivals ?
*“■*» ^
c ^uijesi;]netic.
* JtaLLtW
aitog-t^r too toot.wa two
Corsets For Girls.
The mother who has made up
her mind that her little daughter
may wear her first pair of corsets
cannot be too careful in their
selection. heavily stitched Up to waist a certain age nicely, the
acts
but becomes after rostive a time under the growing the girl
of and annoys drag¬
ance cutting strings
ging figure skirts. Then it is that the
which should be provided fit with the a
stay will not only
needed waist comfortably, bust but and give back. the
support to
AO MaKe irune
One pound of the best prunes,
one box of gelatine, lemon Stew juice, the
cinnamon, sugar.
prunes in one quart of water until
they are Soak in pieces, gelatine removing in the
stones. the one
pint of cold wator and when tho
prunes should are done be soft. add the Sweeten gelatme,
which to
taste. A little lemon juice of cinna- is m-
dispensable, Pour and a trace mould and
mon. mto a eat
cold with stveeteuod, whipped
cream,
_
Electrical looking.
Cooking hy electricity ts being
demonstrated tho in England probabilities and of is
surely tho one future. of Fancy, the
near 1>ig too,
convenience of doing a .electric family
ironing.with a single sanation
flat that knows no or
ssst.-a.isiri;
water is heated to boiling and then
Hleveriv'droif^f^Tlm Vtoe iToUot
^P^ltM'the whHet- morion
r™ g ^
c *
A . Good _ . B Retort.
A one-legged ?<»<*. who pohtical metty orator,
« oess aa f} f u i m hantenng was an Irishman, sue-
W as asked by the latter "how he
had come to lose Jones, his leg.”
-Well,” said “on exam-
ining my pedigree, and looking up
m T descent,! found and there becoming
8ome i ns h m me,
| ronvticed that it all ^fd settled m
f ' fc^n^deu^ PaT^it
,„ d v good thtog yf
it had settled in veheadril _
A HUMAN ALIQATOR.
Curious and Revolting Spectacle ol
Physical Deformity.
One of the most curious and re¬
formity volting spectacles of human de¬
is to be found near Way-
cross, aligator. Ga., in the form of a human
The monstrosity is a
bears boy 14 years of age, who not onlj
a close resemblance to a
saurian, but hisses, bellows with
anger and foams at the mouth
when enraged. He can neither
talk nor walk and is practically _ n
idiot. When hungry, however,
he can make known his wants by
groaning and searching around the
room, half rolling and half crawl¬
ing on his belly.
The boy’s body is almost entirely
covered with scales of a delicate
texture. His head is long and flat,
and his eyes are round and heady
and blink with a superficial lid or
film like those of an aligator. His
mouth is long and wide and is
filled with an unusually large
number of big teeth. His legs and
arms are flat and crook sideways
from the joints. Altogether he is
as beast near a blending of human and
as one ever saw.
The boy has a groat fondness
for water, which seems to delight
him immensely. He knows of its
presence he by instinct. A few days
ago was taken before the Grand
Jury The for medical examination.
loss jury and allowed pronounced him him harm-
to remain
with his mother.
Kindly Advice.
First Blue Ribbon Man—I saw
you other coming day. out of a barroom the
Second Blue Ribbon Man—Yes,
I was in there gathering materials
for a “Sketch on Lifo in tho
Saloon.”
First Blue Ribbon Man—I did
not notice that you were, or had
been, making any Ribbon notes.
Second Bluo Man—No;
the materials I get there I carry in
my head.
First Blue Ribbon Man—Well,
my friend, my advice is, don’t get
too many of these materials into
3 'our head or you’ll he having the
delirium tremens.
Unsophisticated
Mr. Ashdale Flats—Yes, sir,
sight. we can always spot a hayseed on
Mr. Drexel Houser—Of course.
TliereVone now standing on the
corner, I’d bet my last dollar.
The Haj'seed (approaching)—
Gents, can I have your attention
for a few minutes in a little exit *r-
tainnient of mine? I have he o
three shells, and hero, as you see,
a tiny rubber ball. Now I put the
rubber ball, etc., etc.
Wanted Her to Laugh-
“I tell 3 'ou,” said tho mail with
a discouraging confiding nature, "it is migVv R
to have your \.,
laugli at j-our efforts.”
“Aline never does.”
“You’re in luck.”
“1 don’t know. You see I v. rit<
for the comio papers,
A Strange Onimission
“Oh,” she exclaimed, “liow
could I be so careless!”
“What is the matter?” asked
her father.
“Here I've been home for a week
and just happened to think that I
left two engagements unbroken.”
Sciential* Drops,
X » . . .
v 'omme 1U o of o"v.-n ox^on.
^fter hydrogen is composed of oxygen
and m the proportion of
one volume of the former gas to
two volumes of tho latter.
Tho celebrated high electric light
mast at Minneapolis, has which is ->5;
feet high, proven! ineffective
for logger lighting usid, purposes, and is now
no
0ne of the latest inventions in
electricity cc , nnect i 0 n with tho application of
to street car service trollo'v** is i
gelf-Iubricafing whichiSZ Stonrion gear for ,!ft‘r£
;»jnr ufriZi**, once out in operation
zapzprftts
sas* hesk. 1
s
tL la^ tefng utflLd'In Stifa to-"
earth, kxjdite. is rev-
At Bnrgbreh.
ations, and which is eight inches
wide and some thirty or forty feet
nation high, is of being mineral used in tho inipreg-
waters.
The color of certain shrimps i and
^ , , , th wr! th •_
vHto' ‘rrou.in« to
SW_*f toe 6 i^^^S'are
L b ^more much
^ '^ va^tlv ™ S
wh h are a h,tl e larger,
theshrimne ^ are K srreeu and Always vellow
and ^ s are
while those of
^ sponges, are red, Mu. or.
®8W&.----------- 1
ROYAL APPETITES.
The Kaiser a Simple Eater, While the
Gear Likes Quantity and Quality.
The simplest royal eater, the
King easily with the satisfied, largest appetite
most is the Ger¬
said man t to Emperor. be William II. is
ating, and extremely with undiscrimin¬
a most excellent
appetite. This is not the case
either with King Humberto or the
Austrian Emperor. They aro
dimciles at the table, and in every
way different from the King of
simplest, Wurtemburg, whose tastes are the
and who has a singular
penchant with for a beefsteak served
onions.
And which of all European sov-
ereigns the has done most to advance
fine art of dining to the dignity of
a art?
It is the Emperor of Russia,
He curiously combines quantity
and quality. His appetite is l&rgs
and nis taste delicate. The office
burg of imperial sinecure. caterer at The St. caterer,
is no
a hard worked, is well paid. Of
course, this chef is a Frenchman,
birthplace, Strasbourg and has Franco the honor of his
is glad to
had emphasize to choose the fact nationality that when he he
a re-
mained a Frenchman. The Tsar
knew the treasure ho had secured,
gave him the rank of colonel,
which allows him to bear a sword
as well as a stowpan, and, recog-
-mzing his patriotic sentiments,
Considerately which should glossed over the rule
Russian compel his chef to bo
a Krautz, though imperial subject. Colonel
caterer to
the Emperor of all the Russias,
remains a citizen of France.
The Rattlers.
The structure from which tho
rattlesnake takes his name—the
rattle—consists mainly of three or
more solid, horny of rings, placed
around the end the tail. These
portions rings themselves are merely dense
of the general outer skin
of the body, but the rattle has also
a solid foundation of bone. For
the throe last bones of the tail be¬
come united together in one solid
hole or core, grooved where the
bones join, while they increase in
size toward the hinder end of the
complex bony bone invested thus formed. This
core is bv skin also
marked by grooves, which corre¬
of spond with tnose at the junction
the three bones, and this skin
becomes much thickened, and so
forms an incipient imperfect rattle
of such young snakes as have not
yet cast their skin. When it is,
cast the skin investing tho tail 1
elose to its termination is not cast
off, but is held fast by the enlarged
end of the bony core before men¬
tioned.
The piece of skin thus retained
becomes a loose ring in front of
the incipient rattle, and thus forms
a first ring or joint of the future
perfect rattle. The same process
loose is repeated ring at additional each molt, joint a being fresh
or
thus formed every time the skin is
shed. Thus the perfoct rattle
comes ultimately to consist of a
number of dry, hard, more or loss
loose, horny rattle rings, consist and in this
way a may of as
many rattling as rings. twenty-one It is the coexisting shaking
of these rings by a rapid and vio¬
lent wagging of the end of the
snake’s tail * which produces the
celebrated rattling sound—a sound
which may be compared to the
rattling rapidly shaken of a number bag. of peas in a
paper
And She Believed Him.
It was n Pa rlv midnight fro^it
th ' ne e } VO untr 11 bride Driae ne. heirl i i tno Gio rront
«P m ms stocKmg reel feet The sne 6 Sd uriod
£® r ®J es ^}i ?GT }} ^, at st , tha
*
S W Vu novt f ( M
-, i p
“f' ‘Terfem I wouldn^ vea!s
“me d a LTo“r so much hone™<x.nistSelr in the to
come, D v, ou ^ )no 3 moon is oareiy
°^ er » here \ ou stay out nearly
“M‘e v 0 WS SST
*:=s5,|ii <, rv
crraa^jSi
ittfSti'ararftr Tn T v i " i
r _„ „
stfs^dfento tol§ tor tofdoctor^
me I have heart disease and
^
sobbed, “Forgive me, herself George,” she
breast. throwing “I have been on hia
very selfish.
I know you try to do what is the
best for you. Never again will I
scold you, for it would drive me
rrozv if I knew I was the cause of
fou^ killing yourself,”
Inaoeent Bobby. -
51stcr . Featherstone-What_ when you told her did I your
was
ho ? £< ZJSS t?
Hnffotfone
I
^ ■■■■
XVII—NO. 41
HOUSE AND HOME.
Our Lease of Life Dependent
Upon Our Nervous System.
Exhaustion, Its Symptoms and Some of
Its Causes—A Physician’s Wholesome
Advice—Other Valuable Hints for
the Domestic Circle,
Nervous exhaustion is a term
which carries with it a multitude
of derangements of a nature not
describablo. It means exhaustion
of tho very centers of life, an ex-
liaustion which may bo more or
less complete. It marks a failing
vitality or an overstrain of some
part or the whole of the nervous
system.
Nervous exhaustion may be the
the beginning end of the end, or it may be
of the beginning. At tho
same time it is simply an indica-
thu of ;t weakened nerve force,
A human being h.us, at best, but
a certain lease of life, and this
is dependent upon the nervous sys-
tom. When the ordinary wear
and tear of life is not replaced by nu-
tritious foods it must, of necessity,
. Tis '.''generate iu one degree or another,
and simply a question of waste and
roundings repair. When external sur-
aro so forcible that t hey
R-supplied, wear a wav more energy than can
the nervous system be-
gins to suffer, and power°born though it may
iiavo a resisting of 'a
strong constitution, cannot but
suffer in the long run.
\Vell defined cases of nervous ex-
buustion have a distinct line of
symptoms, which prominent amon<-
are a general feeling of
goneness, dilated pupils, clammy
nands and cold feet, bluish nails, a
lack of color in the cheeks or a
feverish flushing, restlessness, in¬
ability thoughts to concentrate one’s
and sleeplessness and
'Ren id till depression. Loss of weight
decline a; appetite and a general bodily
Nervous are accompaniments.
exhaustion comes from
mental strain, from long exposure
to wind mid weather, from worry
ot all sorts, from disease affecting
a mental depression or a waste of
vitality and from excesses. It is
more lu’o til .likely t:i at to develop other period, in middle al-
hi High does any
i it affect both the
young and the old to some extent,
file time of-life when the system
is most hardy being selected seems
to bo attributable to the extra ac¬
with tivity which this jieriod carries
it. A strong woman or a
-■-rroug man may break down under
circumstances which one of less
vigorous constitution could with-
siutid with impunity. Those who
are born with a nervous tempera¬
ment which is expending its energy
on victims every and possible their occasion are the
ami sisters the fortunates. quieter brothers
betting Along With One Dress..
If you are limited as to means,
and must make one dress serve
many needs, choose a color that is
not register striking—none of those that
themselves each time on
the retina or stimulate tho un-
of friendly times to counting have the number
With certain 3 ’ou change appeared in in it.
the dress¬
ing of the neck, fresh knots of
ribbon, laco or some pretty conceit
of your own, a single frock in its
time can play many parts. It is
ono of those touches of the homely
that Howells sometimes uses with
such skill, when, in speaking of
two little old maids, he told now
their black silk dresses, from many
small makings holes over, where retained tho lines of
the thread was
ripped high out, and tho throat how they wore
them at when they
went ou their little shopping ex¬
peditions, if and they at night “turned
them in” wont out to tea.
Even if there is a touch of pathos
about all this, the 3 ’' were undoubt¬
edly people. ingenious and resourceful
’ittle
Pulled Bread-
Put a loaf of light, flak}" bread—
baker's when convenient—between
two pans, and let it heat through
in a moderate oven. It will tak e
about twenty-five miuutes for this.
Take from the oven and with a,
fork tear the soft part into thin,
ragged pieces. Spread these in a
nan and put thom in a hot oven to
brown. It will take about fifteen
minutes to make them brown and
crisp. Always Serve at once on a napkin.
serve cheese with pulled
broad. This dish is considered
more elegant than crackers for tho
choose course in a dinner or
’uncheon.
- ^ W *‘* r . C ^
the coffee for several hours in cold
water—it mav be soaked all night,
Then bring it to the boiling point
and let it simmer for a few
minutes just before using. This
is said to be the most economical
wav for more is obtained from toe
coffee by is this treatment The
eertainlv fine. delicious^ Lena
aromatic l«,iling dissipates'the oils, probably
and as
these are the most valuable prop-
e J tioa of the coff ^* the necessity
g n0 ‘ to ^ toT more
til an * from three to five, mi tes
nu ,
*nd simmer rather than boil, so r.a
to preserve, as much as possible,
the fine flavors, which are so
quickly the high dissipated by boiling, yet
temperature seems to* ho
necessary to extract the desirable
properties of the bean. One must,
seeming therefore, ever bear in mind the
should reach paradox the boiling — that point coffee and
yet not boil.
A. Mexican Prima Donna-
The popular singer of the future,
it is said, will be Miss Marguerite
who Churchill, a Mexican prima donna,
at home is making a name for here df
and abroad. Miss
Churchill is tho daughter of a
Spanish officer and an Indian
squaw. The latter, of course,
claimed to be a descendant of the
tribe of Pocahontas, At tho
death of her parents the young
girl was adopted by an American
head family in San Francisco. The
of the family was a musician,
who §OQL } discovered the possibili¬
ties of Miss Ghum lull’s voice and
proceeded to develop tnOML Tho
young abroad, woman and begins is now long singing
a engage-
inent in Vienna this fall.
Bret Harte’s Pretty Daughters-
Bret Harte, tho writer, is the
father of two charmingly pretty
daughters. has Jessamine, the elder,
literature. just made a She successful is debut
m tinguished looking a tall, dis¬
strongly marked girl, With a
her light hair personality. She
wears curls short, and it.
halo around daintily, making a shining
her pretty face. In
her dress is her individuality par¬
ticularly all marked, as her gowns
are made after the same model,
a l° n K clinging bell skirt, which
she allows to sweep the ground,
and a full blouse waist made with
a low round neck. Such is tho
costume she wears continually,
street, never when, altering however, it, not even for the
the addition
of a sailor hat becomes necessary.
Sealskin Plaits and Ruffs.
Fur this winter is to be treated
exactly Evory as though it were cloth.
effort is and will be mado *"
to render the felt pliable, that it
may be worked up in designs
never before dreamed of in fur.
The shiiring, plaitting and ruffling
of furs is specially adapted to the
present like it, too. style Sealskin of dress. Women
is the chief
reliance in the execution ef the
new ideas. Though other furs
possible are being brought as nearly as
to the sealskin’s perfection
of pliability, none aro able to rival
it successful^.
ACADEMY OF THE
Immaculate Conception
86 LOYD ST,
ATLANTA. GA«
This boarding and day school,
under the direction of the Sist r=
of our Lad}* - of Mercy, affords t
3 r oung ladies all the advantages of
a thorough English education.
TERMS PER SESSION, Iik-Iu g
board, tuition and washing, $73.
Music, drawing and painting it v.;:
extra Studies charges.
will beresunsed t Mouda
in September.
For further inform tion addi -
as above.
3-?S»
ROYS! ON
HOTEL.
Comfortable Rooms.
Elegant Fare,
Careful Atteatioi!.
A Comfortable, Home-like Stop pm
Place for the Traveling Public.
DW JOHNSON Pbopkii
LAVONIA
Livery 1 Feed Stasik
Is prepared to supply the
traveling public with line
stock, elegant buggies and
carriages and careful dri¬
vers at moderate prices.
W. u M. ADDINGTON. . nmMPTnM
ProprieLr.
BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALV!
The best salve in the world for c
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, ft
sores, tetter, chapped hands, corn t
all skin eruptions, and positively c
piles or no give pay required. It is gu;
teed to perfect satisfaction
money refunded. Brice 25e. per l
For sale by Dr. J. R. Tucker.