Newspaper Page Text
KILLED A WHITE
EXPLANATION OF A BOLD HUNTER’S
TRACIC FATE.
The Misfortune. Which Refrll Thon»»
Rrouaon, Who Had Khot « '* IMuintom"
Derr—III, Desperate Ft|(ht With » III*
llurk—Hk> letons of Both Found Later.
The recent statement that the .Smith
sonian Institution offers a reward of
$1000 for the skin of a white deer
said to have been seen in New Jersey
recalls to the memory of the old liunt
ore of the Allegheny Mountains the
fact that hunters would no more kill
a white deer than a sane man would
go over Niagara Falls. Aside from
the fact that a white deer Is regarded
ns an animal which nil hunters are
in honor bound not to kill, tile belief
has been elinost general that the slayer
of one of these deer would meet with
dire misfortune, so that from time Im
memorial such white deer as from
year to year flitted ghost-like through
the thickets and woods of the Alle
ghenies were safe from the Indian’s
arrow or the white man’s bullet.
There are hunters still living In
Clearfield County, Penn , who to this
day believe that the experience of one
man proves the connection between
the killing of a white deer and calam
ity. This man was Thomas Bronson,
who, with his wife and two young
sons, lived In the Green Woods not
far from the head of Cold Stream.
Bronson was a man of taciturn nature,
n daredevil who wns regarded by other
hunters as a good fellow to let alone.
He was reckless and brave, but was
not looked upon as a good neighbor.
Early In the fall of 1853 Bronson
while hunting In the vicinity of the
Knobs espied a deer whose coat was
ns white as snow. He was undis
turbed by what he styled the tSnid
fears of silly sportsmen. Bronson’s
rifle cracked, and the deer, after a few
spasmodic leaps, fell to the ground
with a bullet through Its heart, Its
white skin died red with its blood.
Bronson dressed the deer, which
was a seventy-five pound doe, and,
wrapping the meat in the hide, carried
It home. If he gave any thought to
the fact that he had killed a white
deer It was simply to reflect that the
hide might bring high price ns a
curiosity. He afterward remembered
thut a raven croaked overhead as lie
was passing along the woodland road
in the evening, but as ravens were nu
merous he paid no heed.
Six weeks afterward Bronson, while
searching for the den of a pack of
wolves near the head of Cold Stream,
fell upon a pile of rocks and broke
his arm, an accident that laid him up
for some weeks, during which time he
was visited by old Jim Morrison, the
veteran hunter of Rattlesnake Run.
Jim lind heard of the killing of the
white deer, and he was not slow to tell
Bronson that he had done a most fool
ish thing. After Morrison had de
parted Bronson got to thinking about
the matter. But, although misfortune
had overtaken him, he was not con
vinced that the dentil of the deer
lmd anything to do with it. Neverthe
less from that time on there wns a
perceptible change In his spirits. lie
lost his bravado and was less ven
turesome. He lost his nerve complete
ly when, a year later, one of his sons
ran away from home and left no
trace and his wife died of a snake bite.
Bronson became taciturn and moody,
shunning such hunters as came into
tae Green Woods and living the life
of a semi-hermit.
Three years after the killing of the
“phantom” deer Bronson started out
along the turkey path in the direction
of Trout Run. He had not gone more
than a mile when he saw a big buck
cropping the twigs loss than 200 yards
away.
He stalked the buck until be was
within easy shooting distance, and
then, taking steady aim, he fired. The
deer dropped In its tracks, and Bronson
hastened’to its side to cut Its throat.
He had approached within a few feet
of the animal when the latter jumped
to its feet and fiercely attacked him.
The buck had only been wounded, and,
ns in such cases, was a most danger
ous antagonist. But Bronson drew
his knife and fought desperately for
his life. The battle continued for some
time the sharp antlers and front hoofs
of the buck cutting Bronson’s flesh
until the blood flowed from a score
of wounds, while the hunter repeatedly
thrust his kuife into the deer's side
in the endeavor to reach the heart.
Ten days later Bronson’s only re
maining sou, who had remained at
home when his father started out
hunting, appeared at the settlement
and inquired for Ills parent. No one
had seen him. however, and his disap
pearance was a mystery unsolved un
til spring. Two fishermen who were
on their way to Trout Run for a fish
ing expedition early in April saw the
skeleton of a deer lying a few yards
from the path upou which they were
walking. Out of curiosity they inves
tigated. and were astonished to see,
some fifteen feet away, the skelctou
ot a man. Jim Morrison proved that
the human bones were those of
Thomas Bronson, as he readily iden
tified the latter’s rifle and hunting
kuife. Morrison explained to the fish
ermen liow the tragedy had occurred,
the wounded buck having killed Bron
son, and then dying from the wounds
the hunter had inflicted upou him with
rifle and kuife.
Utah’. Industrial ProtreH.
Utah has more than doubled its man
ufacturing plants since 1890, the num
ber increasing from 530 to 1400.
Rich Canadian Indian*.
ada, own $9,840,000 worth of property,
or $615 a head.
SAW A BLOODHOUND IN ACTION
Unerring Work by a Bog Valued at a
Thousand Dollars.
“I had an opportunity to observe the
efficiency of the bloodhound as an in
strument for tracking criminals while
I wa.s at Wichita,” said a Macon attor
ney the other day on returning from
a trip over into Kansas.
“An atrocious crime had been com
mitted out in the suburbs. The Sheriff
was promptly notified and lie respond
ed Immediately with his large, som
bre assistant. The dog was taken
inlo the house and to the room where
the crime occurred. It immediately
started out with a bound, cleared the
fence and dashed into the timber with
the Sheriff and others following close
behind. The hound ran to a stream,
where it appeared to be mystified for
a few minutes. It ran up and down
the banks, panting and wagging its
tall nervously. Suddenly it caught the
trail again and dashed onward up the
bank of the stream, ran around a free,
shot over a brush pile and then took a
bee line for town.
“From this time on it never faltered
nor seemed to be In doubt for a mo
ment The trail led to a mammoth
grain elevator. The dog burst into a
side door without hesitation, and
darted for the steps, dashing the sur
prised workmen right and left. It
went clear up to the topmost floor of
the elevator, circled around a few
times and then darted down another
way. When it reached the bottom
floor it ran out on the sidewalk,
through the business part of town and
then to the boarding district. It was
blocked by a closed door at a small
boarding house, but when the officers
caught up with the dog they had the i
door opened. The hound ascended the
steps at a bound and went directly to
a room occupied by one of the board
ers, pushed I lie door open with bis
fore feet and attacked the clothes (if a
man who was in lied asleep.
“The savage growls woke the man
up and lie yelled loudly for protection.
The Sheriff entered the room just in
time to seize the dog and pull him from
P'e man’s throat. By this time a large
crowd had congregated at the entrance
of the boarding house and was impa
tiently awaiting the appearance of the
quarry. The Sheriff telephoned for
guards before attempting to remove
his man to jail. A patrol wagon came
and the prisoner and dog were seated
in, surrounded by policemen with
drawn revolvers. When the start was
made for the jail the crowd must 1mVe
numbered fully 1500. They were vo
elferously demanding that the prison
er be immediately hung. But there was
no leader and lynching was averted.
During the drive the dog never for an
instant took his eyes from the trem
bling victim. So perfect was the
hound’s work and so thoroughly had
it terrorized the prisoner that he con
fessed to the crime soon after he was
placed in jail.
“I was informed that the blood
hound was worth $1000, and was one
of the best in the State. It was not a
very prepossessing animal, but when
It was in action, like a courageous sol
dier, it looked much better than it did
when on dress parade.”—Kansas City
Journal.
Tideci in Swiss Lakes.
Tides of the ocean, as every one
knows, are the result of the unequal
attractions of the suu and moon on
the earth’s surface as compared with
its centre. As the proportionate dif
ference on account of its lesser dis
tance is greater in the ease of the
moon, its tide raising influence is rath
er more than twice as great as that of
the sun, notwithstanding the dictum
of the man who would not believe the
moon had anything to do with it lie
cause he had seen tides when there
was no moon. Visitors to the lake
country may not be aware that our
small inland lakes have tides which
follow the moon with even more pre
cision than the ' The
open ocean.
water in a lake "rocks” as though it
were a solid mass, but slowly, the sur
face changing its level as the meridian
of the lake alters its direction with re
gard to the moon. It requires, how
ever, minute observation to detect this
tide. So small is it that the difference
between high and low water in a lake
100 miles broad is little more than an
Inch. In some of the lakes of Switzer
land. besides the semi-diurnal tide,
phenomena have been observed, called,
locally, seiches, in which the whole
body of water rocks or vibrates in
twenty minutes or half an hour. Brit
ish lakes are probably too small for
similar phenomena to be easily per
ceptible, but Dr. Forel, of Lausanne,
has made careful study of the seiches
of the Lake of Geneva, and his analy
ses, showing that the movements aro
often compound oscillations about two
or more axes, are full of interest.—
London Telegraph.
An Kxpeimtve Kducntion.
It is suggested, and the suggestion
seems eminently reasonable, that whan
England gets through practicing in
South African she will have the ablest
army in Europe; an army tit to be
compared with Grant's in 1805. It Is
the great drawback to the military art
that a nation can’t learn it thoroughly
without practice, and that usually, as
the world is managed now, by the time
any generation in any nation becomes
exceptionally proficient at fighting the
chance to use its skill passes, not to
return until its veterans are past the
fighting age. Nothing but a rare eonj
bination of circumstances can enable
any modern nation to recover the value
of the money and the lives it has in
vested in the making of an efficient
army. The most profit that England
can hope for from her 200,tXX) sea
soned veterans is respectful treatment
from her neighbors while she is nurs
ing her wounds.—E. S. Martin, in Har
per’s Weekly.
A level-headed man is one who al
ways agrees with us.
U
imtSS
A novel system for heating cars is
in vogue in Christiania and Stockholm.
Under each seat is a perforated metal
lic box, and in this are little red-hot
bricks of compressed coal, so prepared
that no smoke or odor results while
they are burning.
The worn or soiled Bank of England
note is seldom seen. This Is because
no note of this bank is ever reissued
by the establishment. When cashed
it is kept and put aside for destruction,
The average term during which a note
remains in circulation is about a
month.
A curious tombstone has been dis
covered in an English graveyard.
The inscription rends as follows: “In
memory of William Griffiths; died Oc
tober 25, 1835, aged 127 years. Also
Willm., father of the above, who died
October 2, 1845, aged seventy-two
years.” According to the dates given
the son was sixty-five years older than
the father.
Bologna's two square leaning tow
ers, the Garisenda and the Asinelli,
which are more startling that the tow
er at Pisa, are safe. A rumor was
started that they showed signs of
weakening, but a commission of engi
neers pronounces them as solid as
ever. The Asinelli tower is 315 feet
high, and was built in 1109. The Ga
risenda was built a year later and was
originally taller, but is now only 153
feet high. Its inclination, however, is
greater than that of the other tower.
Mme. Ilubertine Auclert, a French
woman, who favors equal rights for
women, lias hit upon a novel way of
preaching the gospel. The new French
postage stamps represent a young
woman resting her hand on a tablet
which bears the words, “The rights of
man.” Mme. Auclert has caused to
be made a quantity of blue stamps
which show a young man resting his
hand on a tablet with the words, “The
rights of women.” She recommends
persons who believe in equal rights to
affix one of these stamps to each let
ter, side by side with the official stamp
of the Government,
--
A Chinese manuscript in the Paris
Library proves that anaesthetics for
surgical purposes were used in China
1700 years ago. It states that when a
surgeon conducted a serious operation
he gave a decoction to the patient, who
after a fe.w moments became as insen
sible as if he were dead. Then, as the
case required, the surgeon performed !
the operation—incision or amputation
—and removed t*c cause of * he 1
ady; then he brought together and se- j
cured the tissues, and applied liui- :
ments. “After a certain number of '■
days the patient recovered, without
having experienced the slightest pain
during the operation.”
In a southern department of France,
not so very long ago, a well-to-do
young lady married a youth of spend
thrift tendencies. Anxious to win him
away from his undesirable compan
ions, the girl hit upon the notion of j
employing her husband as secretary in :
connection with some charitable work I
iu which she was from time to time ;
engaged. For his services with the !
pen she paid him a fixed salary of $20 j
weekly, and, as the gentleman in ques- j
he tion possessed compelled no to means accept of the his queerly own, j j
was
conferred berth. It is related that
from time to time he “struck” for !
higher wages, but the wife was ada- j
mant, and refused to increase the
weekly payments by a single cent.
Key-Wliulliig Watches Seldom Seen. “5
“Speaking of things that are disap
pearing in the upheavals and transfor
mations which mark the age in which
we live,” said a New Orleans jeweler,
“how long has it been since you saw
a watch that you had to wind in the
old-fashioned way with a key? You
may still find them, and occasionally
you may find one for sale. The chances
are, however, that when you do run
across a watch which is to be wound
in this way you will find that it is now ;
regarded as a family relic, a sort of \
heirloom, which is kept simply because
of its sentimental value. The fact is
that a majority of the watches of this
make, in cases where they are worth
it, have been sent back to the factories,
made over and put on the market
again with stem-winding works. The
disappearance of key-winding watches
was natural. It was too much trouble.
It consumed too much time, and there
was always the perplexing problem of
a lost watch key. The stem-winding
watch was a business necessity, and
that is why it is in such universal use
at this time. It is a time saver and
consequently a money saver. In my
judgment the time will come when
only open-faced watches will be found
on the market, for the same reason, j
It takes time, you know, to open a !
watch. That’s why railroad conduct- i
or*, the men whose business is run on
seconds, use open-face watches. The
old key system of winding is gone, and
tin next change will be the disappear
ance of the double-case watch.”—New
Orleans Times-Democrat.
Tlie Vatu* of a Rich Mind.
A rich mind will cast over the hum
blest home a radiance of beauty and
wholesomeuess which an upholsterer
or a decorator can never equal. Emer
son says, “There is no beautifier of
complexion, form, or behavior, like
the wish to scatter joy, and not pain,
around us.”—Success.
CURIOSITIES IN LAW BOOKS.
Caic Was Beverseii Because of Voice
licet ion of the Judge.
“Law books arc full of curious de
cisions,” said a member of the legal
profession, “and frequently the higher
courts have reversed cases on the most
peculiar grounds imaginable, But I
recall one case which is probably more
peculiar than any other case which one
may find among the many reports
which have accumulated since the ear
liest report was handed down. As
strange as It may seem, the ground
upon which the Supreme Court re
versed the finding of the lower court
was found in tin exception which had
been taken to the intonation of the
voice of the trial judge. It wns in a
suit for damages against a railroad
corporation. Action had been brought
against the company by a former em
ploye who had been discharged and
blacklisted by employers during a dif
ference between the corporation and
members of the Switchers’ Union. De
tarnation of character and loss on ac
count of being out of employment, ex
emplary considerations and other
grounds were assigned in the declara
tion filed in the case. The trial came
on and the evidence tended to show
that the man had been discharged and
blacklisted without reason, and that he
had sustained positive damage on ac
count of these things.
“But when the time came for the
judge to charge the jury and to give
the jurors the law from the books,
as the saying goes, the interesting part
of the yarn began to unfold. The judge
was a deep-toned, deep-lunged follow,
and when lie bellowed in earnest it
would sound like a peal of thunder
from Mammoth Cave. But when lie
made an effort to soften and modulate
his voice he could make it as soft and
as gentle as an angel’s whisperings.
This is exactly what he did, according
to the attorneys for the plaintiff. While
charging the law which affected the
rights of the plaintiff, his tone was
mild, meek, scarcely audible. ‘But,
gentlemen of the jury,’ he stormed out
with thundering emphasis, ‘if oil the
other hand, you find so and so to be
the case, you will return a verdict
in accordance with your sworn duty
for the defendant.’ Emphasis settled
that case. But the attorneys had been
sharp enough to note an exception
to the way in which his honor charged
the law, with particular reference to
the intonation of his voice. The mo
tion for a new trial was made on the
exceptions noted, tile case appealed
and the Supreme Court finally took
the matter up. The attorneys ex
plained the difficulties in the way of
giving the judges an adequate idea
0 f the effect of the trial judge’s voice
on the jury, but they gave a fair idea
0 f it by saying that the law for the
plaintiff ‘was charged in nonpareil,
w hile the law respecting the rights
of the defendant company was handed
down in bold-face box-car letters. The
Supremo Court reversed the finding
0 f the lower court, the case was re
man ded for trial again, and damages
were finally assessed against the cor
portion.”—New Orleans Times-Demo
crat.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
Good counsels observed are chains
of grace.—Fuller.
In great attempts it is glorious even
to fail.—Longinus.
The one prudence of life is concen
tration.—Emerson.
Admiration is the daughter of ig
norance.—Franklin.
The golden age is before us, not bc
hind us.—St. Simon,
Tlae beauty seen is partly in him
w jj 0 set!S it.—Bovee.
Levity in behavior is the bane of all
that is good and virtuous.—Seneca.
Better to be driven out from among
men than to be disliked by children.—
Dana.
Loving kindness is greater than
laws, and the charities of life are more
than all ceremonies.—Talmud.
Have you so much leisure from your
own business that you can take care
of that of other people that does not
belong to you?—Terence,
Don’t Gel Rich, “Fapa.”
The children of a certain family, dur
ing its prosperity, were left In the nur
sery in charge of servants. When ad
versify came, the servants were dis
charged and the parents lived with the
little ones. One evening, when the
father had returned home after a day
of anxiety and business worry, his
little girl clambered on his knee, and,
twining her arms around his neck,
said:
“Papa, don’t get rich again. You
did not come into the nursery when
you were rich, but now we can come
around you, and get on your knees
and kiss you. Don’t get rich again,
papa.”
A man whose wealth keeps him from
his family, sleep, healthy recreation,
or the time to enjoy the legitimate
pleasures of life, is managed by
money.—Success.
How to Teach a Pet to Ride a Rail.
Many readers have doubtless seen
hears standing on a rolling ball and
maintaining their balance perfectly
while rolling it about the arena. I
have a bear who delights to do the
trick. He can scarcely wait for his
time to come to perform. He was
taught, as they are all taught, by jog
gling his pedestal while he tried to
keep from being jostled off. Gradu
ally the pedestal was substituted for a
ball with many flat places on it. and
this was followed by a perfect sphere.
He has been performing two years
now, and I have never known him to
slip and fall off.—Frank C. Ilostock, in
Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly.
/ household
Stv HINTS •
\\
li
Cliaira For the Drawing Room.
Rush bottom chairs have for the time
being quite superseded leather ones as
the most correct for dining room use.
They are exceedingly durable.
The Right Height For a Divan.
Many divans lose much of their com
fort and effect by being too high. One
foot high, two and a half feet wide
and six feet long is the proper size.
A Helpful Hint.
If your woolen dresses look dreadful
ly creased and wrinkled after pack
ing, try the following plan, and don’t,
however, if you are tempted, try to
iron the creases out. Instead dip a
clean piece of stuff of the same mate
rial as the dress, if you have it, in hot
water. Wring it slightly and sponge
the creased places with it. Then hang
the dress in the open air, but not in the
sun, and the creases will disappear as
it dries.
To Preserve Cut Flowers.
A bouquet sprayed with water and
placed under a bell glass will last many
days longer than if simply placed in a
vase or bowl, while if a buttonhole
or a spray for the hair is required
to look fresh all day or at an evening
fete a dab of scaling wax at the end
of the stalks will keep the flowers
fresh for many hours.
Violets, primroses and many other
simple flowers, if placed in a bed of
sand and kept moist, will keep fresh
for some weeks, while such flowers as
foxgloves, campanulas, etc., if placed
in water, with the bottom leaves on
the stalks kept under water, will last
thrice as long as if the leaves were
stripped off the stalks.
Ferns, when placed in water, should
always have some of the fronds left in
the water, as it has been proved over
and over again that no nourishment
can be taken through the stem alone,
The Ideal Red Room.
Every bed room should be provided
with the essentials for healthful sleep
and the daily sponge bath.
As nearly* as possible the room should
be kept free from anything that would
tend to contaminate the air.
It should be as large as one could
afford, and the windows so arranged
that they may be opened at the top
and bottom.
If possible, the floor should be bare
and the rugs so small that they can
be taken outdoors with ease for clean
ing and airing.
Everything about the room should
be washable.
The bed should he light and fitted
with strong castors, so that it may
readily be moved.
The springs ought to be firm and
strong, and the mattress of a kind that
will not allow the heaviest part of
the body to sink and so cause the
sleeper to lie in a cramped position.
Above all, do not overfurnish the
bed room.
•f ,— -i
tf.j
:nj
■eg
Cream of Squash-One cup of cooked
squash, one quart milk, one slice on
ion, one and one-half tablespoons but
ter, two heaping tablespoons flour, one
teaspoon salt, a few grains pepper and
celery salt. Scald the milk with the
squash and onion; remove the onion.
Stir in butter and flour rubbed smooth;
add seasoning; cook two or three min
utes.
String Bean Salad—Select small, ten
der beans of uniform size, string and
wash in cold water, then cook in boil
ing salt water, uncovered, for fifteen
minutes, when tender turn out in a
colander and rinse in cold water. Let
them dry and put them into the ice
chest until ready. Mix them thorough
ly with the French dressing and ar
range on a bed of crisp lettuce leaves.
A garnish of water cress is an addition
to this appetizing salad.
Cream Filling—Put one and one
fourth cups of milk on the stove in
a granite ware pan. Mix together
one-third of a cup of sugar and two
tablespoonfuls of flour, one-fourth cup
of milk and add to the boiling milk, j
stirring constantly for several minutes I
until the mixture has thickened. Take !
off the stove, add a walnut of butter, 1
a teaspoonful of vanilla, and the yolks '
!
of two eggs beaten up with a table
spoonful of water. Mixing in the 01 -
der given will insure a smooth filling.
Apple Catsup—Peel and quarter a
dozen sound tart apples, stew until
soft in as little water as possible, then
pass through a sieve. To a quart of
the sifted apples add a teacupful of
sugar, one teaspoonful of pepper, one
of cloves, one of mustard, two of cin
namon, and two medium-sized onions
chopped very fine. Stir all together,
adding a teaspoouful of salt and a
pint of vinegar. Place over the fire
and boil one hour; bottle while hot,
and seal very tight. It should he about
as thick as catsup. 1
DIFFERENT NOW.
Biggs—Suffering Aesop! Look
Bluggers! Did you ever tee
seedy-looking clolhes? such
Buggs—They are surely a tri fle bad,
that’s true.
Biggs—But when I knew him he
used to wear expensive and "•ell-fit.
ting clothes.
•‘Yes; but he’s rich now -”-San
Francisco Bulletin.
ails
“ I tried Ayer’s Hair Vigor
hair from to
stop my falling. One
half a bottle cured me.”
J. C. Baxter, Braidwood, Ill.
— ii ] ■
certainly Ayer’s the Hair Vigor isj
most eco
nomical preparation of its
kind on the market. A
little of it goes a long way.
It doesn’t take much of
it to stop falling of the
hair, make the hair grow,
and restore color to gray
hair. $1.00 a bottle. All drnjfists.
It your druggist cannot supply you I
send us one dollar and wo will express’ 1 '
you a bottle. l?e sure arid give the name
.1 r»r TSKggJjJg-jJkj |
w 50U DOUG by I,AS '
stores direct
i to wearer
j Stewr- % A Y\ profit; at- one also
' a yv ' [by
ill the best
shoe
j E dealers
j where. every
•
j j S–;, m Wfj I-? Of /
j •am /• IU
•7~- Fin
I*- ”
;
j
' 1 Notice increase of salts in talle la'ir.v:
1839 = ns.:oa r,ir«.
II 1
■
1901=1,566,730 Pairs.
Business More Than Doubled in Four Years.
THE REASONSs
VV. L. Douglas makes and sells more men’s
$3.00and$3.50 shoes than any other two man
| ufacturers in the world.
W. L. Douglas $3.00 and $3.C0 shoes placed of
side by side with $5.00 and $(5X0 shoes
other makes, are found to be just ordinary as good.
They will outwear two pairs of
$3.00 and $3.50 shoes.
Made of the best leathers, including Patent
Corona Kid, Corona Colt, and National Kangaroo.
Fast Color Krolnts and Alwnjn Black Hooks Used.
W. Ia. Doug’laa $4.00 “Gilt Edge Line"
‘ Shoes cannot bymu.il be equalled V5c. at any price. Catnloirn fi
extra. c.
W. L. Poughii, J0> rock ton, M. UMi
Nfalsby – St., Company, Atlanta, Ga.
41 S. Forsyth
■ Engines and Boilers
Mfim Water Heaters, Steam Pumps am)
PenbertUjr Injectors,
■giiflgfe
Manufacturers and Dealers in
SMILLS,
Corn Mill.,Feed 31111*,Cotton UinMaehii.
ery and Grain Separator*.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth aci
1 o«ks, Knigjit’s Patent Doe*, Birdsall Saw
a'–ntiWSfinsu™!^ Catalogue
BU(1 quality of pooda fruarnnteod.
tree by mentioning this caper.
L m
f -
r \f\
ill K/iire w* a \
T 1RS
■~* The life of a tire, ease of repair and
its lasting qualities determine its worth.
G – J Tires are made from the best
quality of rubber. They are light enough
to be resilient, strong enough to be dur
able, and easy tiding, which insures com
fort and safety.
Catalogue at our Agent’s or by mail.
Q – J TIRE COMPANY,
Indianapolis, Ind.
WE PAY R. R. FARE and under $5,009
Deposit, Guarantee
200 MIF.E SCHOLARSHIP*. board aX
COST. Write Quick to GA.-ALA.
BUSINESS COLLKUF, MACON,
nDAD<SY NUW DISODYEKU
Kl-re. E.-. H. H. a–EEN'BSOHB. Box B. AU.n ■
Gold Medal at Buffalo Esn»«» lt,0 ?‘ rn
McILHENNY’S TABASCy
'25 chf
If aOlirtril with Thampson’s Eye Water
weak eyes, ttae
WsPi
In time. Sold by riruggtsty.
:15 cu