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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 16, 1889)
THS NEW5 EPITOMIZED. . Eastern anti 31itldlc States. In a drunken quarr :! James Quinn, aged sixty, of Coxsackie, In. ^ struck his sou James on the head with an axe. Heath re¬ sulted next morning. Henry Simmons, r.gcd twenty-four and Eddie years, De¬ and two boys. Willie Simmons plore, aged respectively twelve and nine years, were drowned while beating at Pitts¬ burg, Penn. A PREMATURE exp lesion of a blast at Coal Talley, Penn., killed two miners, John Stokes and Thomas Allen. Patrick E. vThite and Stephen Wallace fell from a staging seventy Boston, feet M high while and working on a building in as s ., were kuled. President Harrison, accompanied by city on his way to Bar Harbor, Me where he wasm pay a nsitto Secietary biame. The firm of Brown, Steese & ClarE, about woo dealers, of Bos.«n, Maas., has failed tor f2.000, (.00. Pennsylvania Res ■ The State Conventionof ■ puoucar.s nominated Henry Treasurer K. Boyer, and of Philadelnhia. for State adopted resolutions indorsing PresiitetHar nson and tee Republican platform of IStsfc. Tee Henry Ehas brewing concern of Hew Tcrkcityhasbeen sold to an English syndi care for |8o0,000. Eben S. Allen, President of the Forty second and Grand Street Railroad Company, charged of New \ ork citv, is under arrest with forgeries of stock of that company amounting to from *150,000 to$250 000. I President Harrison. Trhilo onhis Tray to Bar Harbor, Me., to visit Secretary Blaine, spent a day in Boston, He re paired aa cn thusiasti • welcome. ilRs. Benjamin Harrison, wife of the President, was called by a telegram to the ° j General Henry Du Pont head of the great powder manufacturing firm ot v\n mington, Del., died a few days ago on the 7Tth anniversary of his birth. He leaves an estate valued at $la,000,000. : Miss Mary Cushman was elected Tax Collector and Mrs. Minerva Cushman District Glc-rk of Lockport, N. Y. Riverside, N. Y.. again elected Mrs. TO. Albertson School , Librarian. Many ladies voted in both Ssrasft.-^* Blaine, who had gone over on a special boat to await the arrival, Y?wtre killedTa coLiou n^ai" j Columbus, Ind. - ■ , | t-i j South and West. . I Ex-win, farmers, . John Gibbs and David i quai-relled over a division of crops near Kan- : sas City, Mo., and Erwin shot‘Gibbs dead. ! Later in the day a son of the murdeied man shot and mstantly killed Erwin. j Chris. Sylvester, and Archie Cock burn, while fishing from a rock ten miles south of the Cliff House, San Francisco., Cal., were washed off by an immense wave and drowned. i ; Returns Kentucky from the election tho day for after State] in- ■ Treasurer in on ‘of j dicatedthat Stephen G. Sharp, Lexing- been: ton, the Democratic nominee, had 'elected by about SO. (100 majority. I A wagon containing a family of five, fa ther, mother and three children, was blown I from the road into Black Creek five during a . storm at Mitchell, Ind. AH were i drowned. An epidemic of bloody flux is raging with | Sato.1 Ill., and eicet-in has also Warsaw. appeared Iowa.and in Keokuk, phirchall, Iowa. - : Thirty-one deaf/hs have occurred at White- i , hall, and sixteen at Warsaw. Glue Martin, of Connersville, Ind., and Miss Maud Saylers, of Brownsville, Ind.. were drowned iu the Whitewater attempting River. They ford had I been out driving, and in to the river the horse and buggy -were carried i down by the current. They were to have been j married soon. .£ T ,? rinc i et01 ^ Hutchins shot and killed , two brothers. G eorge and Albert Lewis. One of Hutchins s stray snots also killed ; Frank Dunn. ■ Delhi, Iowa, has been nearly destroyed j by fire. Every business house but one was consumed. THEjyoung twins of Mrs. Line were killed j by a passing train at Lawrence, Va. John Cap.ter. a guard a San Quenlin : (Cal.) Prison, killed his wife while sho was j dressing her hair before a mirror, and then : shot Richard himself in tho head, dying instantly. defaulting j Tate, Kentucky’s arrested Scottsboro, Alabama. Treasurer, has been at 1 The Topeka (Kan.) sugar works were i burned, involving a lo:,s of about $250,000. Severe storms were reported in Kansas, ; j Missouri and Virginia. The steamer Old Dominion ran into and ' sunk the sloop Ella May in Norfolk (Va.) ! harbor. Tho sloop’s crew of three men I were drowned. I J. Frank Colloid lawyer, has 1 a young committed forgeries to the amount of nearly j $800,000 in the name of John S. best Blalsdell, known ; one of the oldest, wealthiest and I citizens of Minneapolis, Miun. j Bozeman was chosen as the capital of : Montana at the Constitutional Convention in i Helena; the North Dakota Convention do- 1 clared in favor of Bismarck as the capital site. j Eugene Dears and a friend were drowned ! at San Diego Cal., by tho cap:d::ing of. their j boa.. The committee to examine the books of ; P,. H. Stedman, County Treasurer, of Vinton, ; j Iowa, reports a deficit of 811,509. TV. Hardee, for flvo years Probate Judge ‘ of Towner County, Dakota, ines~. has disappeared, leaving a large mclr.,1. Heavy rain and boil storms prevailed in Minnesota, Dakota and Montana, Much damage resulted. A Wisconsin Central passenger train at 4 o'clock in the morning was held up and robbed by a single Abbotsviilc. men between He Chippewa Falla, Vi:,., and got only $100. he had The completed robber pulled the robbery, the bell rope and as when soon as the train cans to a stop jumped off and escaped. J. D. King, of Janesville, Wis., has been appointed Va.-hin.cton Postoff.cc division, Inspector, which in is charge of the Columbia composed States of the District of and the of Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, West Virginia and Delaware. Washington. Secretary Ti'iNDOlibs.' directed that all the bo July ads purchased he applied by -the the Government sauce 1 to sinking fund until the requirement izr the current fiscal year, estii r.t 84TJ. eJ f»’. are met. Th' amount J3.ft83.459. already which applied all but to this purpose is of $13,500 was in 4 1-2 per cent, bonds. At the request of the Postmaster-General the secretary of War has directed the Quar¬ termaster-General to instruct his subordi nates to pay no more Government telegraph bills until the rates to be paid ore furnished by the Postmaster- General. Acting General Lash Cotr-nssrcvri Stone in Li- annual report scow., that din¬ ing the fiscal year, ending June 39. 18-9. there were certified to railroad ccapati under the various grants a total of 4k5.91i; acres of land, being a decrease of 401110 acres as compared with the preceding year. The Postoffice Department of Washington shows that the increase in the mileage of rail- THE DEMOCRAT. CRAlf FORDVILLE. GEORGIA. _ .5 7-- -ay mail service lor the fiscal year, 1889, was CM.; wiles. Nebraska furnished the largest Increase, 5'3 miles; followed by Ala¬ bama, with -iTo miles. miles; idansas, 410 miles, and Kentucky, SS5 Charles Francis V A -J Me -A*--' serve, » of L. Spring- il ‘ M field, ....... Mass., tiass., has has been been appointed appointed bv by Presi- Presi ,;-ni He.rriscn Superintendent at the Kansas! Has¬ kell Indian Institute, at Lnsvreuce, Mr. Moservt - is a gra ■iv.ate highly of Colby recommended Univer .-ity yiaiue, r..id was l.v thao.«icea3 r.n euueator of largo expo rfer.ee and a gent.eman of culture. tonStoS xn^TK has neSw remiested the War Leo nil steps to "intruders from the Sion eipation Reservation, ol 'I'hi's action Sttlers was taken in an a vcch ...... of Foreign. The Royal Grants bill was passed by tho fcVe asked for Heavy rains have fallen in certain dls tricts of Japan . At Amagi 585 houses v.ere either washed away or knocked down an.l twenty people were drowned. At Hit a toil houses were washed away and nine peop.o arowneu. p tfruwif riot took clolies ulaeo between two factious of the Chinese at Sangkong, hi siam About five thousand men engaged used the conflict. Spears and firearms were and 900 coolies were killed. The entire Pacific fleet of the British navy has gore to the scene of the recent seizure by tho American viosol Rush, on the Behring Sea. This was the result of much telegraphic communication between tho admiral m com mand of tho fleet and the Canadian andIm penal Governments. Tno fleet that went North consists of seven war ships and two torpedo boats. General PHii.iproviCH, the conqueror 0 f Bosnia, died recently at Prague from apoplexy. corruption recency unearthed cXudV the in the in German navy, for which several naval officers are now in prison. , fHE Turks ^e arming the McsHms throughout tho island of Crete. Moslems A fight took place at Heraclion between an d Christians. Ten were killed on each side and many were wounded. Twexty prisoner3 were killed by soldiers in a revolt at San Juanilla, Mexico. Henry M .Stanley is coming do^ the mfTno^ daio o£ i!^ rma ? General Eoulanoer’s trial' before the High Court of the Senate in Paris was be gun. Signor Benedetto Cairoli, tho distiu guishea Italian statesman, is dead. The crew of the schooner Fannie Chase picked outside up a peculiar substance floating just Portland Harbor, Me. It was put away in a barrel, and on arriving at port tho own ers were told it was ambergris. It is used in making tails for the finest kind of perfume and re about thirty dollani an ounce. Tin mass fore would weighs be one worth hundred a matter pounds of twenty-five and there housand dollars. ibis sum will bo divided mong the ownors and the crew. IT is said that an invention, which promises to revolutionize the mothod of th °f It T eon =isasin *.ha o-rtgidgo by eleotricitx. THE LABOR WORLD, Fovyderlt denounces trusts. ^botT( 1C Y.) has MWu ironworkers. AK. ofL. assembly has been established In Australia. About , 3,14o,573 workers , aro deprived , . , ol , their Sunday rest. Union bricklayers generally fight shy of Kew York sub-way work, Engravers and painters receive from ten to twelve cents a day in China. The twin children of a locked out miner in Illinois have died of starvation. Thomas A. F.dison, tho inventor, rarely sleeps more than four hours a day. There seems to have been an epidemic of cutting down wages nil over the country. The Govcrnmont printing office now de mauds only eight hours’work of employes. Foreign capitalists aro said to bo negotiat- mills. ing for the control of American cotton Claus Spreckels, the California sugar king, is to build a second big refinery in Phila delphia. Chicago iron moulders work entirely at piece-work, and earn from $3.85 to $3.50 por day of ten hours. Tobacco and cigar-making Brooklyn, give employ- New meet to over 80,000 persons in York and vicinity, The Printers’ Benevolent Association pays its members 37 a week when sick for forty cents dues per month, 8t. Louis claims that sho heads tlie world ^^sin^t^S- “ d ° mpl ° yS 8500 iiiE profit-sharing principle {<; beginning to be Ic-okert up. i: with favor by some - lish employer:, iu their deaiiugs \?i'.': v.m-- men. There nre about fifty establishments throughout the country in which the em jjloyes get a share of the profits aceumu* There are at Troy, N. Y., 10.000 persons trorkinguon collars and cults and their annual wages aggregate 74,500,000, aud none of them are Chinamen. a number of the labor organizations of Kew York city and Brooklyn are holding Sunday mgnt mass meetings in favor ol tne eight-hour system. Chilt gave 3090 of the idle workmen on the Isthmus Valparaiso of in Panama order to free transportation their labor on to secure public improvements. The movement recently inaugurated employers in Manchester, England, short-time to compel system for to adopt a uniform em¬ ployes has failed completely. The National Textile Workers’ Union, wlijch holds a charter iu th* American Federation of Labor, has nineteen branches with a membership of over 3000. The New York Journal has shown up the misery of a crowd of men and women in t hat city who make knee breeches at -ixty cents a dozen, and work sixteen hours a day. The International (Jicarmakers’ T nion of • twenty-one ur.io and membership of y81. are now roi uu td over 28,000 Toner of the Le-pnrtment of Labor asserts that no girl under sixteen ve&rz of sg-v should to-* allowed to work, and the country would be better off if none under tw ty were allowed in factories. There ere mere tramp printers through all tho counties surrounding London than in England, London included, These men. who are generally poor rrork inea and drunkards, come in on emergencies arid help to keep wages doTrn by ttc rhing .on abno»t aiiy tcr*ns. The .S'aficiial Electric Light Axaociationin couven'-ioa at Z.iagara Falls, adopted a reso iutioa declaring execution by electricity - ruei, requesting Governor Hill" to comma te the seatecces or all peraons sentenced uader the new law. and a-kingfor the repeal of the law. FOR FARM AND GARDEN. farmer . wishes . , to , tan , one or more sheep-1 , i skins with the wool on. To such tho j following ' taken from an oxchangK ! mn J oe u>Uul. Tan in alum n ;„m dissolve^ fli-olvei in water. Proportion, ouo poufcd 1 <f alum . to , one ga.lou of , water. ... 1U f) t the wool ch an with plain soap. li color, use aniline of shado def I i I any you i “'»• »™»i™ •»« rm* ! two gallons water; strain before u^ing; ,ifloat skins in •* ,lrn box w -to remain till color or shale you dodre c0lnc ’’ then then take take out out ani1 and run 11111 through ,h, °V' cold water and hang up in a hot rot'lli .• 1- white . wash tin skms well after tanning _ as descrfced I j abovc , - H ,, not . white , en< ugh, hanJnp s in a small room and bleach with ]%w rlucd . . sulphur. , , c Set a pail ctft, in a m , of room burniug. Be careful to kav. n0 escape of sulphur fumes ~ and jar ’ the room air-tight. . ! ‘ frefvre for the census T\Ki/tt \ I . The eleventh general census^ tmi United States will bo taken nosTTfear, ln<0 and tho fac.s -at . and statistics , WiU P T S3 Pfi Ul r' 5 f ?r0St !° r tl "c ' condition reason that they show the . the country at the beginning of th ond , century , of our constitutional • . C tcnce. It is specially importaii ,1, t b., i • , . , , tlle retul ns 111 icliitiou to lai in BD* 11 ' 1 1 ! and live stock should be full and cor , apiculture be inw tho leftdmg in j lcct » a 0 r| cuicure bem CT uio leaamg began with June 1st, 1880, and ends May 31.1, 1890 If aU farmers through j out the country will their keep accounts tor that of ! llle products of , year, it will enable them to give correct j figures instead of guess work. We i have known of a few farmers who with i held a part of the information sought, ' nn<l .,i i».]ittloT i,cU,Ue l their tUut returns retiirns, under unuu tho mo ; m ‘ mistaken idea that somehow they would ! | . bo , used iam1 against t them i lnm m assessment f,„. lot taxes. This is wholly groundless and ! absurd. There is no connection be ; the work of tho taker and tween census . that of the assessor .—American Agri¬ culturist. WHEN TO BROADCAST MANURE. A large part of tho value of the ma¬ nure of an animal is in the liquid form of uiea, asubitance containing nilroc m, i i ami ammonia ivhL'ih and by is fennentaj^Jjnftigus lost, 5l‘~io mt • precautions 4 . arc taken. . , n I his , , being true, : the safest way would seem to be to get the manure both solid and liquid, into the soil before fennentation takes place, Tin’s may be accomplished by drawing and spreading the manure as fast as it accumulates, whether in summer or win i, jr . In many places this i is practised, l,U>tl.. aoo,,,n™.o, . iw IIani|i shire winter prevent this apierally. It is also tru9 that on steep ^/Ulaidei the plant food ivould he wa.tied away to a certain extent, but on level laud or land of moderate slope I should never hosi tato to spread manure at any time when I could conveniently draw it to tho field, : ■ whether in tno fall, winter, spring or summer. It is sometimes urged that manure loses nitrogen by exposure to i wind or snow, but if manure is drawn out before fermentation commences, | ] there is little or no ammonia in it, io an ,j a< (] lfl nitre ron of manure i bo volatile met hV in the torn, to' j ammonia, the loss from this source must bo very small indeed. Jlinure spread on the surface in summer lor early fall i should be harrowed in, for the reason that if left on tlie surface it dries in i hard lumps and is hard to break up and ! mix with the soil. Manure applied in the late fall, before or «fter the freezing of the soil, is probably id tlie best po- ! gition possible, 1 and I mil I satisfied, ’ not ' only from general olw vtmToc 4 and the i l experience 1 of the most, *id * nerving far¬ mers, but from experiment* in which the exact we ght of pr'glticts has been ch.cermined, that if ail t’.Aemyard ma¬ nure could he applied in tovcm her in K'e-..il of April, the averajK yield would be increased by more than 10 per cent, from this eh nge alone. IThc explana¬ tion of thi is to he i'rinm iu the • even distribution of the plant food in the j surface soil. The fall trains and tlie j melting snows soften # manure and di solve the available ayt ftrt, wash i'.g it into the soil winr e it is left in : the be-.t condition po- y. i lor the young | plant. ! son cRouri -.1. ATOEg. A d jag •o.7 the best bed for growing pot lt I hav ever . tr.ed; ; 7 to etc / ' i r. it mud be proper >, pr ed. / should be null;red t r; of June, but if a i: afor at the north . it ,s . till early enoi f->r i;;g to insure a good Tif). Now take a plow wtfi a wide, flat, •bare, quite sharp at ^ he edge, with a sharp r coulter on (ho end, , cr m . the absence , of . this fasten , a foot wido. This is absolutely necessary , . .....rder to otmr t io " ' gi.nlu.il ... ) » xvitU tho turf through tho season, to fur a,sh n « tr,m8nt , for ... tho tll . S r0Wltt 2 Prm 1- , The turned soil ought f to be three to to.ir inches thick. It ..... ; Iocs not protect 1 well from a drought, ° , , 0l0U « > a s ‘ ^ * Holes for planting may bo cut opel ™de and as many deep, and six mchei apart where every third furrow joins its 1 *"’ . 03 . 1 fourth •' , uul tho , 0l „i bo ' «d in these holes. This makes tho rows three feet apart. 1 Do not disturb the sod endeavoring to hill those | in rows, tor f or a a flat uat cultivation cuuu.iuoii is best si, and so few weeds will grow on tho surfaco 1)0 noceS sary to plow it, which if done will . . injuriously . disturb ! the sod. All that is necessary is, when the potato vines have grown up two to three inches, run a broad, sloping tooth harrow the ground, i and , it, . will ... cl .• over • fi?ctuaUy ' destroy all '. woods and stir tho ' suifaco enough , to . hup .. it nu ,, "• Thus treated, a soil of moderato fer tility will produce a good crop, but if it s0 p 00r , ls t 0 ro.jifiro feitilizingr. do not , spread , stab , , e manure or putiesi nit compost on top of tho sod aud plow it . ll, tt( some lccoinm.» , , , r.,,. if the « mow , » j tubers touch this—as they in us t—it e » l,an S'^ th f' r)U "'S event makes them less mealy, and lit r: , di • th0 sllUs the liquid wil ho carried down through the turf j to benefit the crop. The best thing , to tob 13 • At. lnt P l,ll| to frtj.fil 10 i/.cr, applied on the bottom of the fur row as fast as the sod is turned up, and , let , this . cover it. .. a Some recommend spreading this fertilizer broadcast over tho ground after the potatoes are planted, and harrowing it well in. I have tried this method of application, anil found little benefit from it. If a moderate amount of rain falls during tho summer ,, the turf , r will -I, get ■ well it. rotted i i by „ n autumn, and tlie soil be in admirablo tilth for a wheat crop, or in spring for any other crop tho farmer may wish to cultivate. On the sea coast sea weed is oxteu sivcly used for fertilizing (lie potato crop, and -t is contended l> m;m\ tU-re that, this is o,qual to interior so Is; but it. is not the ease, for the w V.i gives ., tnug to the potatoes which often makes them so very disagreeable for eating at tho table as to condemn them entirely to cattle food. They grow extra large from sea-weed, and as they are dug have a tine, smooth appearance, I should think that if a quart or so of slaked lime was well spread around the ficecl when phmlcd this might lieiitruh/c the tang and render . the . tub palatable . . , | ts ; for tho table.— 1 t mrrtran \'/rmdturM. . a/ i . FARM AM) OARIJKN Mill,-. Professor Cook says ii •j VO v H tlm , most corn with the least labor hy plant¬ • ing it ill ilrills. For vegetables in sandy soil a Mnssa- , ehusutts gardener says he lindi nothing . better than lieu manure and phosphate J he rations honld he in proportion to what the cow has to do. A dry COW, or ono nearly so, will not n<-.-d tho satno ^-d as the cow in lull Audi „f milk. Good butler ran he mile with ad as h er churn, but it is back-aching job, and the extra time it fakes would soon buy u barrel or rectangular churn. In selecting layers choose spare and lcggy |,|r.i v; study to obtain l„ r g.....p.s, j not forgetting quantity. The ho t qual¬ ity pays best and costs no more to pro- j d ucc. j It is important that newly planted | trees bn sliaded from tile Min. Straw wrapped around the trunk up to the lower bntfjf he -. is SUCCe' s 1 1 iy U*C<I for this purpose. Regularity in milking or feeding is important, and uniformity in amount, not lavish today, because we have plen¬ j ty, and scrimpingly tomorrow, because wc are short. Some advantages of raising ducks ore-r chickens are that Ih y gro v almoit twice as fast, i.r free from vermin am l less Ih file to <P Tbey i.x c also good egg pio w Do not overfeed your bird*. do the lien* will break ' male binl become indolent, the eggs will be ster.ic, and a e:,i ;<; will liang ov r the yard that once challenged your ad mi r ;tion. A. J. Root 'ays that with lime and ^nano sifted together and raked into the ! ioil befor SC-'! 1» are planted he raises cabbages, radishes and everything in tint line with perfect immunity from the flea beetle. The Leech Business. rSiSlSa indlod by them. rswwtu o .vmeiu Vnu-vi. s i ,ut uc h • . , and »50,wfol ] whi( . h nnm i„. r 100,000 or thereabouts ' u, „° shipped Ym"**™,., to South American ports. 1 l.c nvragoj, nrh o -it 1 which they ^ , arc so.it is tto-i ft uiousaini, "iiuo 20 inc rc tail price for a KnvIi ts from to 2u leaving ft protit to the retail dealer of from nearly WW to 800 per cent. in !s : i<) there ww no regular im country, but Mai captains wuoatus t<mvd to bring them in o. cu.-uoimlly in a ,. p ,, lia iilr ,. v l v on the native leech for drawing hi uul, and during the early part of the century the American species , v ., s m considerable demand. All this S ne i,. s is .uiito widely distributed, the principal : source of supply ' i.’„.i...., appears to ■■ • have been, ns it is n ,, u. rks 1 l'to 1111,1 e8 i 1< ' ,!lllll - V Ik ' aU ' Bucks counties. Lcniehes are alight the year, lmt, only to a extent ... Summer, as tin y are easily killed by an oxoeas of lioat. .luue, .1 uly and August nre tho months when tlm smallest.luanti ties an li > , • i *. ■ I when tho greatest pLked er, in swamp earth, in air ■ and i T\atu * tight fj.riit wooden cases, holding nnulo ,:>00 rather hwnoH light each. Those eases aro inches lin ,l nre about 21 niches long, In wide and lii inches high. ! J -- ':',,,. ^ “fin M na "...o.'V qualities, and tight i wooden , pails foi H... the small . mn lio-nmmtil l qua itici os , ot th being also the packing swamp cm employed. American kept best ms, water, tin iu ' contrary, aro ill eartlioii or glass jars, ill a cool place. of Altlioiurli eonsidcrnblo quantities hand in U-oehcs i, are tiug kept houses eonstnntly Mr. on Witte is t , w npor enuiillniliy!” in <'hinn. | The steamship City of Bek in, which | —dly arrived at Hu. I nuic sco gs , tullll^S ot dll lit (• 111 J»(. til « HliiiiUiUl IU Tho Pan Hliillt IllC'n, near Shanghai. } proprietor of a public bath there became I possessed would of him the of notion illness that to from cat a which child I euro an | ,. he was suturing, „ . r ,, roman old ,, woman j 1(J pQugpt q child, wlticlt lie induced a j coolie to kill. The body was discovered by tho authorities in a large j ir, ready ! witJ| ,. rime wcr0 n/roatcl. 'I’l.e vice roy of Fukien and Clieiniingk lias i mod :L proclamation children, against the drownm;; to female which lias been com of „ late. . lie notifies fnmiln .. ,, ti.s moil hereafter the penalty provided by hi will be strictly enforced. r “ is sixty blows of the bamboo and vein':, banishment. On ii volume of liquid benzine will I n ink<- IO.tMlO volumes of nil- inlbiimnidilc, ■ and 000 volumi.-H of air highly cvplo \ I sivc, but nothing but contact withllmim i or a w hile Im i. body -.vi11 touch ell the , ; most, xTffnSW** mixture->f tMilii-.ettm v.v j por and air. ' I Tlinro. 1 In town h a man our And 1 ho Ik very wl«(\ nir, Whoa o n’erho domn’fc ff»'l JumI. ri^bt Ono remedy lie trlrn, hit. 1 L’fi just the tiling b» take in Hprhig 'I’he b'ood >o pur fy, elfcto lie tell* bin friwmlH, /ind nothing I# ho induced to try Golden Because, iiaving taken l)r. Pierce’s Medical I>lacovery too I or*, nee hiuiHyMlr.in. that t/tfi« it, it up and onrlcli the blood, and finding til wayw piodtU'cthe deni red »<ult, no eon ul ora tied he would h< f’oo itdi tooiherlment, with anything o h *. Ui i motto Ih: "Provo all tiring and fiold I’iihI. to that which Ih "ifoldeu That'll ) why Ire j^lns hl» faltli to the M( , d col DlMiovccy." Walkingftdvertiemnente 'or Dr. Hago’nf 'ii tarrh Roimwly aro tho thofiHundw it han cured. A young f*i>ark, ftilffering from a too ntrong ftetlHntin'll of l iie more tender J'eoliie^H, dojlne.t Lift coin plaint ilk an at luck of hiHsjtudo. Sanili Benilinnll. is oomlng t' 1 America, mid great will bo the < nthiiHKimn snuiHid hiih.ii' s'.:, lar n,.li.-i r i . But, v.'e Imve onr own I riglr k! ar, Miry Ander son, who will continue to bear off tlie palm in tie drinniitle, m does Lucu Ithitnn in the great iobieeo world. * Tin* fHnj/.niniM in;.lot i( hnnlfo fell \vli«*tl * <• Jfjpi Im*. 5 'ot, HulUvun (>i Sullivan Ij. -■ t t ii it <■ c i* hmji i' y .lliti-rv. Prol.MiI ' uiiu li ini-'-i y ( front liablt lij/;itioii ih from any (Ij-j ft ani/j-iiD iiL ol' t.hf I lilt i of thn body, anti 'IiJlIculf, to f mi re, fi tin* n ;i -on Unit no onu to tuko tin: Hit * in. , usually jiniscrlbi-'l. Hanitmru f t'/.' v* <*n: j re j». i r- . I to obviate till-rliffi.'illy, arid tlioy arid will hitd l.f fouml iHi-a-ant, to the la of wunif.'H < i.i., s’, i i;u L-. Ilehc om! f iu. Maf k Dnu; (Jo., N. V. All Run Down From tho wfaScunlJ*?; r-tecU of warm wcatluir, h) hurtj work, or from n long It iasri:, yon unei 1 n toolc itiid \Aii<A iiurli\t:r. Jiotjil * . '.’irftttpurlUn i;tvra n gOO <1 ntnnn{lhfi:i tho whole &y§lo/n r purl flf«i the hit/' <1, !’■ i'uinh a tho tllpyutlott. “It nfforrin mo much j>Icx.iure to rccotrwunul i Ifoorj’a Htuhbif I Ilia. My hoaliu two year# itjfu vrr. very poor. My friends lltouisht l wan pol ug with i coiifttirnptlon. I coinunencft*! ualng IToo<I'b ,h«j portlier, Ux/k flvo bo HUm of It, and to-day I can do ;ut hard a day’s work tut J ever cotild. it saved me from th", grave and p*it me on my fat l a -v/urtd, ImaiUiy tubji.” -V/iu. It. \>. Tmut.cr, HI Ka t Main «t., V.'JggoiifivUb , T>hlo. food’s Sarsaparilia Sold by all drug^l.dt .. 3)1; %\r. for %'■>. Pmparcdo uly hy C. J. BOOL & ApothurarJw?, IOO Dosos Ono Dollar §25 ^ MM T-r 1 5? : >1 PRICE uo msvfflpfl. a l ■ ■pfitl f ° r P'0 F*. icx-rs. ?0 ■ fit m r BRYANT & STRATTON Business College H Wrlirfor .ul. Krepinu. latalonue ‘tltorf anti /land. /all !W»9i'U,/. information. r iz. <t'. T LJUIJ fiJT?JlfTT V J.I/AJILI* T ‘IT Xt'fF to X . ■ Wonderful A remedy must have merit or it will ntreTW como & favori{( . remedy with t ho people. Where S~—Hr modlclne - Nabcrs * Morrow, or tfirmmguam, \u «. v ther mil a «ross of B. B. B. a month to ‘heir retail customers. They buy it ten gross at a time, as they also have a good wholesale de. mind for it. 0 her s inilar instances might be mentioned, it but we have not the space to spare. Sufficient is to know thatB. B.il. has quicker ff t tllall all other blood and.tremtth’ener pur iflers, and, as the a general hindth restorer of H vstcm, it is the b-t and only safe remedy. When your blood is impure, when aches and pains trouble you, when sores break outonyour troubled with dyspepsia, when there is a gener ; ,i funolionai derangement of thesyatem, when begin to grow better and stronger, Many are the detractors of Charles Dickens, but his amanuensis has given him the most bitter blow of all. In an interview published some time since he says: “He (Dickens) was an insatiable cigarette smoker, amt when dictating to me always had a cigaretto in hi# mouth.” Orctfon, the I’arntllB* of Farmers. Mild d, equable elinmte, certain and abundant crops . Beat fruit, grain, grass and stock conn try in I In', world, ImiII informal bm free. Ad dress Ores' lm'igra'tn Board, Portland, Ore. Have you tried “Tanslll’s Punch” Cigar? __— -------- I THE STORY OF lERIM. tfSKlwI.-'Sr mer biidi leucn nr«ni! ilk.a romano.* j ? v £y m the’ApDiyeirty « ^5 a chance <>n thl« KlSU *ri-m Pl)Bl,l»nfNO book. (Salary t/> niiit <To.. party.) | K . u. Chtcnao. HHooU. _ . / DUTCHER’S W~ FLY SILLER MftkoH a « Umn sw«ep. Krery *he<*t win kill u fiiuurt of fl|e*. stopw Imar.lUC around 7 j i \hi \ diving at tlokUog vvordi} Jk \ none, %k »i>« bard *•* I (K; 1 \\ \\ j rurcBi-raccftt ti iaiuKDTpoda®. ^ / Xji I Send ‘Z!\ ccnhlfta a to F. DUTCH«Uj fit AirianH, ^. After ILL otM& H HI ndi, coukuit $ 8 3ZD H 15th SI I B tj f>HiLA i PA T ,, )llyj( , r , re „ llnumill «»»«•,,-'l r , rtfUw , rMl . , ««». earkr (fftd tiiutimrit for one observation mouth, Five Dollar** seal sechrsly ucaletl from to any addr***, •••ak an spn-ini Diseases free, a ' ajm Plantation Engines ■'■L WRh Selr-Contalued RETURN FLUE BOILERS, FOR DRIVING COTTON GINS and MILLS. lllu trrU‘1 l’g-uphlet Free. AiMrrt* James leffel A. Co. ffWfVXMUrse)*; ! omo, j or 1 10 l.lhcrly !*(-, Now York. j I Alt i: VIII I IHMvINU OK HI Vl.Nt; A 1 Cotton or Hoy Press? W« nut; in ii far Mir i» n Holton 8 1’l f‘NH iintl i two Huy I’iHIM#*, If; r 1 Will >Hit upon mi, ui Circii nppHtidtioti In I’ricn 1(0 IKON AMI ^UMU^OKKH. M _ (tUinpa) fur purtic hy null. Name . fatten, ___ — / (n t*U»r, Chluliusler C'bon*li-.ai <’o., , Pbllua*, I*% ws o On#* Awetl tn rm ell 4 < unify to m» i«« an 4it.\ to hi j ?!io ID n I* f i:\IMt »M * Nriilfiff Voir « i ~ If way of nltn Jpmjt'iK *«»' • » I ai ! l nit; n*"v ko<*p J * -'i; iujw hi jtiNHit. Ann jug i;an ■" <. (' “firnii Hon a paid «, lifHIlt Gtl Ai,f, wttloa in GOtlfi I’k w)t**Utoi mad* l-y MnrliiiioN n m op IiJin ■ 'Jon 2(Ht iiinchiii"* di« in om*< hiu :;:r ’ ”tvi orntwir la*t. and satihf»t •f loii y.iiu arantf- a» at uu09 to .1. t | A 1,1.S A t O., *[rui plow, T«» till. 8/5,..,. i > n». AfionD f A HIO.NTII j/rc/orird can wfiti »*• »«ift»lft non working furnlun ii homn am I id V, thelf w liolc Miuff to tht* bu5ln«M. Hjjttrft irwunniifH ma y t>o i>r.»n»*bly miijlnr*>l also. A faw vunuix lrt In Utwnu and oitf r.n. H. r JOHN KON A co , i(i(W Main Ht., tUcbmtmd, Va. N. li. J'leanf. nt'it< ny a tut btminrtt twper (once. A'«u*r mind obi-ut ttndi n{j at nan p for r*pty. n / •*. ■J. it Co, I\T. C. Y- Xj. ' Nashvills, Tenn. College for Young Ladles, vvtUi Ih flie fid jiuiitt*. Dfiding id IjogI cf thl« section. l>uiUinu«M>f < wHluvt.l i:,m, ,-D or Its 1 N«jw In .1 ’ litjlltiiiit I 1 /) roi.tnd, 20 «>ln» *-«, 320 n fro in in HIaIlh roll « otiiKo Van<iorOnfH in Litersture. ! •inr, Aif, i i i viJ. ■*/«.» in Uq1« v mity, fully >■ p f ; i «'l (i ..jnuBinm, sii'l President, till modern r.onvM'D-iM . •«. .; ■ . '.i . ilev. <Jko. W. I to i'Ki t, it. It., NusUvtJie, Term, 1 • MUSIC ART I'wlturr. ELOCUTION Wfi»ii abl<* 'omliiuua an<l wl Ontiq itl to OFDgr IV Ft ii'hnlR. All Into rwM will rm --.Ira v.t i’lfo* hihU'»ii JJuflton, |'rr«, Maaa. liy MKi IMP K TOf i > U »,-JH Hi S. t JMd.I.U J.. r.i Gl-'U’dift. IX £ k ipll \ ffibFk S? A TBfl I'f cm Whisky naN. '■ j Orators' ay Cura f<»r Con nii)fttit>n i- J HK IfKST {for kc-ipJnx th» vole© i cifttr. 25 cents. FARMS ■ illlinu ,( , JM o;,;, Kruadwar, LANDS N. T. A K* it ml nt« Hit v ii 1 an o. K. m r MAr.'fuXt, . v* 1 PEERLESS DYES S Arc i.nurlmrA.®!*, tb.■ i;yC-T. who hiivr* u«<*d ■ for ;iy ill- IM HTOFALL, SoS I i.-viT) wfaure. 26<i. T prescribe r.nd fall y a* dortto !’U d as tho only JW Cart* 0A7S." ! -i ^1 specific foi t u e certai u cofl ri TO *> of thiU dii-’ -ase. HotrulMd w U.H.i.V- ,..flA If AM, M. D. f •»iM> Birtfiuue- Alhfttertlain, N V. r Urdanly by th« We have sr.id Big tt for ■ Citniai Cs. lany ypari. »*nd it bat wjjUk Clncianaii,^ "iv*n the best of tuiit* Jf »«ictlon. DYCHEACO.. Ohio. D. i:. 'if. f A*r,Vsi.Q<). Chicago, 7r*a- c . : ’d byI>ruL.'. x a. n. t;.... . Tli rty-thns, -9