Newspaper Page Text
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nw Jor tewa
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® for tb« Daily
.thia
lively of
.......i and Sos*'
iWmuTKm
ie of the Sun
7 yester-
I Journal:
........ miK>TnOV
msolidation, both
•
^
well as their
x^T' bftVe realised
“V’ ... . field, here
and that
r supported, con do
-Griffin than two that
for an exto-
community of this
t a drain on
the two po-
Sr is now obviated
believe will be op-
I that oil can and will
ho one.
„ now covering
te best
;;that has
Ithem. It is also
k» the rates of advec-
e advanced, but will
■ 8 pfBfc**k£f reasonable " • fw.ojj a.*v fig- •
1 same
Nkws has always
1 obtained. The price of
l also remain as here-
the ttnited support
and county, it will al-
- aim and effort, as it ol-
heretofore? to serve
st of both and to give
5 just as good a paper os
support. Gle&neh*
* Douglas
aory Speer is talked of for
! General «*f the Harrison
3 Walter Miller is
> Hie Supreme Bench.
is a sensatkm/d runibr to the
‘ jPreeideJt Harrison has
with “his cabinet, and
lorn and Proctor have
l to withdraw if their wish-
I to appointments are dis*
m w& do not P lace ml1ch
she rumor, p’ - • .■
I indication of the advoncc-
ob city property in
ate the fact that at a
i Savannah a tew days ago
f residence lots in an un-
of the city were
These lots were
ago for $5,000 by
of the Morning
r and his able coadjutor
i have made th$ Al¬
ii Fanner and Fruit-
e foremost papers of
I tlfeir large and rapid-
J circulation compels its
1 to Atlanta, where they will
• facilities for publishing
the leading alliance
The best wishes
1 4 *n Sjcx attend them in
KKWAKp. 9100.
rTffittis
t^rt°»4ngb^- r known to
is constitutional
it
1
number of con
: the slightest
tion to the success of a mission¬
ary. Bible “He goes‘to a nation with a,
||^, in one hand, a catechism in the
r id pathetic figure,
but the catechism is forgotten and
the Bible Has grown Into ft charter of
freedom and true national life. 7 The
great power of the missionary lies in
the fact that the growth of civilisa¬
tion has not been “through the
sprepd of the arts but of ideas, and
the chief agents have been Jiving
men with empty hands bnt believing
hearts. At the source of the civiliza¬
tion of every nation in Europe lie the
names of individual men who were
unversed in knowledge of the arts of
their day, but carried only the seed-
wheat of spiritual fact and moral
ideas.” The task of the missionary
i East is to start those nations
on that career of endless pro-
wfaich is the prerogative of
and which differentiates him
from the lower creation; and this, he
thinks, can be done by the Christian
missionary better than through any
other agency. “One missionary will
rt the living current
than all the delegu
tions, simply because he (jeginsfart
er back in his teachings and awakens
conscience, and the sense of selfhood,
’ of the dignity of human nature,
life of nations, as of man, is from
in outward.”
While X<atin and Greek will never
cease to hold their place in the front
rank of educational agents, it is an
anachronism of the grossest kind to
insist on p prolonged study of ‘these
two dead languages, #
as the neces¬
sary basis for the general cult ure of a
well educated gentleman in the latte
end of the nineteenth century; the
more so’, that experience has taught
that nineteen out of twenty young
men who have been driten through*
this routine of the dead languages at
school, in after life make no use of
them, and the fruits which their
boasted classical training has to
show are in the inverse ratio of the
labor spent upon it.
i It is said that Tom Hardeman, o 1
Macon, will enter the race for Con*
gress in the sixth district and give
Blount, the present incumbent, a
sharp race. They are both popular
Shrewd pottttetaus, and It
would make an interesting contest-.
A Remarkable Adventure with Vigors.
road, Mr. had Gabbett, remarkable district engineer at with Abu
a adventure
tigers ing by lately. trolly between Mr. Gabbett Abu was road travel¬ and
Bon when one of the gatekeepers
save him khabar of a family Of
by his trolly men and the old gate
keeper, started at once for the scene
of operations. Be had not long to
wait before three fine tigers broke
Btflt M°aia\ttT 6
then fired at the next one, but, though
the make brute off was toward hard hit, river he bed managed in the
to a
vicinity. Mr. Gabbett then had a shot
at the third, and succeeded in wound¬
ing him badly, but tho-animal beat a
shepherd, whom he mauled rather
stripes, badly. who. Mr. Gabbett hit and opened rolled fire .on
was and hit twice again. over,
Mr. but charged, Gabbett aiming was another shot
was
the when infuriated his foot slipped beast dealt and him he fell, blow and
a him
on the head which rendered in¬
sensible. The old gatekeeper very his
pluckily attacked the tiger with
sword, but only diverted the fury of
the animal to himself. The brute
felled him to the ground with a stroke
of liis paw, and then returned ret to Mr.
This diversion fee saved that
gentleman’s succeeded in life, da* wing for him^&lightly
i
and then fell dead. A fourth tiger
also aiso appeared appearet on the scene, but did
not molest molest any an one. Mr. Gabbett waa
brought into into Aba road.—Calcutta
She bad tone something naughty and her
mother had sent, her off to bed a little earing
s usual, and told her she would ponaa
her tor it In the morning. The Child kns“
town to say to- prayers and tee put in tots
' rpolition:
Pm*, God, won’t j-ou take mamma up
heaven, not tor altogether, but just for
tomorrewr— San Francisco Chronicle.
Convincing Proof.
tn many Instances iE ha# been proven teat
B. B. B, (Botanic Blood Balm), made by
Blood Balm Co. Atlanta, Ga., will cure Wood
poison in It# wane phases, even when al
other treatment falls. • •
A. 1\ Brunson, Atlanta.Go.,write#, "ihad
84 running and ulcere on one leg' and 8 11 on ■ tee
other, icr. and felt felt greatly greatly prostrated. prostrated. I believe
1 1 actually actually effort# swallowed swallowed a a borrol barrol of of medicine, ra in
vain to cure the diseaiw. With little
hope l finally acred on the urgent advice ol a
friend, and got a bottle of B. B. 1). I experi¬
enced a change, and my despondency was
somewhat had taken sixteen dispelled. bottles, I kept and using all the it until ulcers, I
rheumatism poison have and disappeared, all other and horrors at last of bloo(j I
am
lyT sound and writ again, after ah experience of
i; t ij
ease woe
poison. of corruption,
mas#
sating my skull bone*. By nones
paBamsss my if kidneys and wore hie deranged became burden. 1 lost
i reqgth, a
°° W * ^
twriv* UaBtes *' ’
WUlB.Sw.lo Intoreet
Irvin* Bishop*. recrot died
airoeaato the character trf tea mysten
the CKasaga&rjB.sss first to date the title of mind reader, ami
Wallace I* Bight, the ambitious but only
P>rtially unnommCTi'cUss of
itly of that not
i who are bsst described aa “mus¬
cle readers.” They both retired from public
inhibitions, which they found unprofitable
because they Invariably failed in their per¬
formances unless they happened to select a
subject so nervous and impressionable that
---- *' ' hem to the hidden
it waa far differ-
difference
Of bllfEK*
pertinent*, and while many of them are ex¬
plainable on the easily understood and demon¬
strable theory of muscle accredited reading, him there which ere
many strange things to
AT 6 not explainable upon hypothesis, dif-
Xbow versed In the art of nocroniancy
ter as to whether Bishop was being, merely endowed a trick¬
ster or an abnormally gifted is
with % fftrwte whose keen perceptibility not
The testimony at those who have been
closely associated with tee > dead dead man has an
on this question. Dixey,
the c ome dia n , whose whose guest guest Bishop whs at the
lambs’club in New York, where rhere he he found found his his
end, has long been intimate with him. In Dixey
is himself a necromancer at ability. card
tricks and other sleight of hand performances
he has few superiors, even among professional
prestidigitateure, and he frequently amases
his friends by his adeptnem as a blindfolded
muscle reader. Be has consequently studied
Bishop’s gtarvels with much interest “Bish¬ I
op,” be says, “was really a great man.
mean that seriously, I never expect to meet
hht equal in his peculiar {tease of what must
have been an abnormal mental development.
While believer publicly figured aa a sleight
of hand performer, he was one of the great¬
est living expert# of teat class, and much of
what be did which was most mysteripns mysterious was ’
entirely dim to consummate
accomplish things*
which are not ex-
plainable by any
law or secret
known to either
scientist or necro¬
mancer. I attend¬
ed one of his per¬
formances in Lon¬
don at which was
present ad aged
social standing, of*
notorious dogma¬
tism, and a defiant
bility of any one w ixvtmj bishop.
telling what was
impressed on bis mind. To him Bishop was
particularly invited to address himself. Be
asked the old geptleman to take card and
pencil from his own pocket, jo go to any oor-
nor of the room, to write anything be wished,
to be certain that he waa not observed, and
•then to return tee card to his own pocket.
An imitation of this wonderful experiment
has since been given by Slade and Foster, the
spiritualistic charlatans, and by the late Com-
mender Caseneuve, the wonderful Cuban
prastldigitateur. But all of these handed te.
writer a tablet of their own, and when he
hod tom away the top leaf, on which he had
Wfc*S itijir 1 ) 1.1 tivvU WIvUlll —WtGluv #•—y* eUv g——— A —
former's benefit In Bishop’s case I say post
tivaly that no human eyo saw what tee rid
gentleman wrote, and that the card never
left the latter’s poeseesion. Bishop was blind-
folded. He cautioned the ol<l gentleman te
think intently of what he had written. Thee
Us hands fluttered over tee subject’s head
with that strange, tremulous motion which I
could never decide whether it was intended
for affect or was the result of a highly strained
nervous condition. In a few minutes h«
blurted out, ‘God save the queen.' The aged
scoffer’s mouth fell open, and when he pro¬
duced the cai d those four words were writtoh
upon it. That is a performance I could nevei
explain and whose equal I have never wit¬
nessed."
This experiment, though far superior, is in
same respects similar to that which cost
Bishop’his life.
Briefly, that consisted in Clay M. Greene,
the playwright, mu) the “Boy," or vice preei-
dent of the Lambs’ dab, b, going tot into an upper
story of the house and I selecting sense word
from any !>ook in any room, room. He picked out
the minute boA of the organization and from
it thomanid “Tounsand," which is not that of
a member of the club, but of a lady whose
name was signed to a letter concerning tbs
proposed memorial to Lester Wallack. Bishop
iVas blindfolded, and seizing Greene hy ena
band hurried with nervous steps to the very
room the “Boy” had turned visited, quickly qnidgy seized
the minute book, it* pages
over and calling excitedly far paper wrote on
the back of au envelope £ks some strange hiero¬
glyphics. Then it that be fell into that
cataleptic state That which prefaced his remarka¬ last
ble death. writing, which was the
successful and mysterious act of Bishop’s W. life,
fell into toe hands of Charles Thomas,
the successful playwright, awl by bis permis¬
sion is herewith produced for the first time in
print — -
BISHOP’S LABI HYSrXRIOCS FXAT.
By placing that strange writing in front
of a mirror ifciwill be aaea that itspells tee
name “Toonsand" backward. Those who
believe teat Bishop possessed seme ocdult
power argue from this that be n received
Greene’s mind mind a a direct direct mental
which was naturally received in the
veyance from the mold or matrix of the one
the metal or type of the other. The be¬
in Bishops trickery contend that the
backward waa only intended to
the effect at the performance. experiment
The use of the boric in this
a similarity to one phase of a remark¬
feet which Bishop accomplished for tee
of the faculty of the University
Edinburgh. That is now known to be a
and yet its explanation utterly fails to
the riddle contained to the tragic occur¬
to tee Lambs’ club.
When to Europe on' his first public tour
was invited to take dinner with the
of tbs famous University Of Edin¬
In the house of onejof its members. In
of tee entertainment, when tee
of the young manb powers were <tb
be requested one of the gravest pro¬
to goto the room above—whatever it
be—pick up any book be might find
and bring it to the dining room. This
done. Bishop did not touch the solum#,
requeeted the host to place his own vtilt¬
card between any two pages of the booh
noticing the numbers thereof. Then
requested a third pr of esso r to held tbs
It was a heavily worded treatise on
“Protemor," said ^Btibof
late,’
word for ward. Tbe faculty w*»
books which
opened it at
snts his
him to
ph on
the others,
that it could scaroely faU to first attract Uu
attention of a person entering the room.
With this explanation the trick is easily un¬
derstood. Of course, the host did not place
bis card between pages 04 and 06, but when
Bishop announced that the card was in teat
position uo one thought of looking for a
second card elsewhere. Had the wrong book
been brought him, he would have diverted
the trick into another channel.
Did Bishop ever have an accomplice!
■Even those who daw him ps a trickster dp
not think so. They think he was too smart
to ever intrust his secrets to anyone. The
testimony of Charles Frohman, his first
American manager, is valuable in this re¬
spect. His first appearance in New York
was in Steinway hall, and the receipts were
•48. Frohman determined that a first class
theatre must be secured and the attention of
the scientific world drawn to the perform¬
ances. Wallack’s theatre was leased. Invi¬
tations to a private test were sent to scien¬
tists, doctors and newspaper men. On Wat- the
day preceding the first exhibition in
lack’s, they assembled in one of the parlors
Of the Hoffman house. A committee of
prominent gentlemen was appointed to take
a needle and drive to any place in New
and hide it Bishop, blindfolded and clasp¬
ing one of the committeemen by the wrist,
was to drive the same carriage over the same
route and find tee needle.
“When tee committee had gone," says Mr.
Frohman in speaking of this occurrence, “1
became worried. I had never seen the ex¬
periment tried. Failure meant a disastrous
loss for me. While the crowd was busy with
tee crilatiori and laughing at the jokes of
M a r s hal l P. Wilder, who was there to enter¬
tain them, I whispered to Bishop; ‘Do you
Med any assistance! I can have scone one
follow that committee and report their move¬
ments to you secretly f I He looked at me
calmly ami said: ‘No, don’t need any
assistance. I can do it. Bnt even if 1
find that I can’t I’ll avoid a failure.’ I asked
him what he meant ‘Why,’he answered,
with the utmost determination, ‘if I find I
can’t do it I will run over some one with the
carriage or else tee upset the committee in the
street’ But experiment,was a complete
success, and he found the needle in tee upper
story at a Fifth avenue house."
One more illustration and I am done.
Bishop onco told me that whoa he was in
St Petersburg tee late assassin haunted czar
asked him if he could not employ his seem¬
ingly mysteriefu* power to detect murderous
schemes against tee life of the ruler of the
Russia*. The mind reader—if that is the
proper term—answered that such an idea had
never entered his head, but he did not think
he would prove of value to such a method ol
detection. If, he said, a would be assassin,
for instance, hid a digger to one spot, and
then when the mind reader seized his hand:
be should think of the weapon being to an¬
other plaee, the operator would inevitably
lead him to the location on which
thoughts were centered, To please tj..
morbid mind of the emperor, however,
Bishop tried a curious experiment distin¬ which
he subsequently repeated with lee
guished people numerous times. While be
was absent to another room members of the
royal family arranged. themselves to a tab¬
leau to which the czar was pictured as being
afahlufl by bis own sou, tbc piroaonb emperor.
Then the actors in this mock tragedy scat¬
tered themselves about tee apartment.
Bishop entered the room blindfolded and
Clasping the right hand of one of those who
had witnessed the tableau, he quickly picked
out the participants in the mock assassina¬
tion and to a few minutes stationed them in
tee exact position they had previously occu¬
pied with the czarowitz’s dagger suspended
ever his father’s heart. Thereceuld scarcely
be trickery there. • '
So tee question will have to remain i
open one. Louis N. Meoargee.
The Wedding of Hiss Frelingh.iy.en,
The “400” of Newark, N. J., was somewhat
distracted recently by the marriage of Miss
Freltoghuyseu and H. Winterop Gray, of
New York. Both bride and groom bgve all
tee “best circles,"
and Miss Freling-
huysen was known
throughout the
length and breadth
of the United
States some years
ago when her
father.was secre¬
tary of state, smd
there was talk that
the beautiful and
accomplished bq.
daughter would
the “first lady
of the land” and
wife of President
moTof Arthur. Tbe rn- MBa tfRELDfG
their ~
gagement was nev¬
er affirmed or denied by either of the inter-
ested parties. Mr. Gray has been married
before, his wife bring the daughter of the late
‘Billy" Travers, of followed New York, wit and club
nan. A divorce charges of infidel¬
ity made by the wife husband, since which time
tee divorced has withdrawn from soci¬
ety. The newly married couple will reside in
New York.
___
A Twenty Wear Year Search.
At thn. outbreak of the civil war a
jri u family named Lindsey, con-
of man and wife, with three
iitiivu, a girl and two Independence, boys, wetje
iu to slavery at
The entire family were separated.
At the close of the war the father
up ids mind that he would de¬
vote tiie remainder of his life to dis¬
the whereabouts of his family.
the past twenty-four years he has
th:>t sole in view. He has
innumerable mid wi hardships bearing the brand
to accom¬
his purpose, lii Missouri the old
obtained the first clew to tbe
reported of by his wliite son Allen, be who
a man to at
Tex. The old man worked his
to Paris and there met his son
From him he learned the
of his other Son and
whom lie visited. —Chicago
. . .
Agony te Courted ~ ~
persons who, neglect'to attacked seek, by a mild form of
prompt retief-
resort torture to Hostettor’s is prevented Stomach by an Bit- im¬
b Wood
vbieh
-------„JPHl . re and
but wife, which tea vegetable only is it
and
poisons, often taken a# coretire^ol
arg not. Bmidee expelling ov£ tbe
ey stem, ^ h
..NO CENTURY
...
" Italy at “ Able Men Meet to the
Avenue Presbyterian Church to.
York—The New Moderator. 0a W. C.
Roberta—Some Presbyterian Pacts.
The general assembly of the Presbyterian
church, held in New York this year,
brought together as attractive a body of
gentlemen as ever met. in the metropolis attend¬
was a curious fart that though the
ance on the first day was not fnll, commission¬
of the okler delegates (known as of straight.
ers) were there, and the array
. THX ASSEMBLY IN SESSION.
dignified forms, Ann Aryan heads and clear
cut scholarly faces waa such as to delight any in
man who takes even the smallest interest
anthropology. The philosophical theory that
men’s religion is very largely determined by
their mental and physical make-up wasover-
whelmingljf demonstrated there; and any close
observer looking down from the gallery must
have said; “Whatever else it may be, Bresbv
tertanism Is assuredly a logical system. Ad¬
mit their premises and such men es these can
prove_________ their ease "
. The entrance of Dr. Howard Crosby, chair¬
man of the committee of arrangements; Dr.
Charles L. Tbompeon, retiring moderator;
Dr. Joseph T. Smith, of Baltimore, former
moderator; William EL Roberta, stated clerk
and perhaps the best informed man to the
assembly on the history of the church; Dr.
Dnffield, erf Princeton, and other honored
members of the denomination, waa # greeted
by that quiet but joyful murmur which is
tee Presbyterian for “applause,” and it was
not till late to the afternoon, when relig¬
ion as such had given way to business and
business had considerably relaxed, that the
assembly veaturaed to dap hands and laugh
aloud. The occasion was the witty speech at
the moderator in reply to Warner Van Nor-
den; the latter, a lineal descendant of Eve-
rardus Bogardus, the first minister whoever
preached on Manhattan Island, presented
with a neat and rather formal address a
gavel mode from the timbers of the old
Dutch church, and the moderator made a
most happy impromptu reply, combining the
synod of Dort, the stiffness of Dutch Calvin¬
ism and the fact that Dutch blood is still
found to the “Van” of civilization in one para¬
graph that convulsed the assembly.
Dr. Howard Crosby’s church, at the cor¬
ner of Fourth avenue and Twenty-second
street, is plain to the very extreme of Cafvto-
istio simplicity; bnt it-i* spacious, and its
acoustic qualities are so good that every word
I
PRESENTATION OV GAVEL.
could be heard to any corner of tee galleries
The floor, of course, was reserved for com
misdoaers, officials and returned mission¬
aries, and after the' introductory sermon by
Moderator Thompson, the first day was given
to business and the first evening to social en¬
joyment. Of coarse tho great interest was
in the choice of a new moderator. Three
candidates were presented, and Dr. Roberts,
president of Lake Forest university, was
chosen on the first ballot.
William C. Roberts, who will wield the
gavel till the next assembly, was born Sept
23, 1832, at Aberystwith, Cardiganshire,
Wales, and came to America at the age of
17. In 1865 he was graduated from Prince¬
ton collegd, and at once entered on a full
course fa the theological- seminary there.
His first call was to the First Presbyterian
church of Wilmington, DeL; fa 1861 he went
to Colnmbus, O.; to 1864: to Elizabeth, N. J.,
years’ labor there
and elsewhere he
was made president
of Lake Forest uni¬
versity, near Chi-
oago. He is well
and widely known
as an earnest work¬
er and efficient or¬
ganizer, and, so far
such a demo¬
as that of Presby- william a. bobkbts.
teriankm can be said to have one head, his
fitness for tee place is universally recognized.
This gathering inaugurates the second cen¬
tury of the general assembly of the United
States. The first meeting took place May 21,
*1788, to the Second Presbyterian church of
Philadelphia, and there were present twenty-
two ministers and ten eiders, representing
twelve presbyteries in six states. That body
Considered itself Indirect descent from the
first general assembly at the Church of Scot¬
land, bnt the first permanent Presbyterian
bodies to America were among the Dutch to
New York and to Long Island. However,
the presbytery vteblisbed at Philadelphia to
1005 was ScStch, and to 1716 it resolved
itself tote a synod,.and by and by this
synod called a union with those fit
New York-and other places which finally
grew into tee general assembly—hence the
Scotch succession claimed. This body ta the
highest authority to tbe Presbyterian church
of the United States, end 9 the cumulation
of powers is on precisely the same ^ principle as
that of tbe government of the country, so
many unite of one order combining te make
a unit of tbe next higher order, with all local
rights reserved to the lower ofders, tbe req^tr
who desires to get a comprehensive view of
P resb yteria n government may compare them
agR-'"i The sasrion to tito hs township. n
The presbytery to tbe county or district
liie synod to the state legislature
the general assembly to tee national eon-
Nervousness and Dyspepsia,
, coaseious-
tirae in tbe
severed head and jihynical sufferin'' is
felt in both lime parte of bead the fulls executed under body. the
sword Every under a tbe executioners ux.
or
survivni of will which and qoiwdousucss. wasihrigu! of
The eyes turned, which showed
pain; the lips moved, mouth
that they wanted to spwtk; the
opened, in order to bile, in a kind of
fury. There is not a movement of the
face mark which of tbe has continuation not been interpreted of feeling. as
a mowed
And ever .since heads the of multitudes guillotine during
down the have
the re ton of terror, scientists
stood around the scaffold, bidding all
their humane facilities vanish, and
concentrating their “Does whole consciousness intellect on
the one question,
remain after tbe "victim's head issev
ered from the body?”
In connection with this belief Dr.
Love quotes a terrible Anamite story told who by M.
Petitgand beheaded by about tbe sword an in 1875 at Sai¬ was
gon: '
“The place of execution was the
Plain or Tombs, a vast tbe sandy Anamitea tract,
serving and tbe tChinese.. as cemetery Four to Anamite pirates,
taken with be beheaded. their arms The in their chief hands,' of tbe
were to
band, a man in the prime of life, ener¬
getic, muscular, brave without boast¬
ing, and firm to the very last, had
tracted my special attention, and I de¬
cided to make my observations on him
only. Without losing sight of him
for words asingle in loud moment voice I exchanged with the officer a few
a
in charge, also looking and noticed that with the the patient liveli¬
was at me
est been attention. completed, The I took preparationshaving stand at the
distance of about yards my from him.
two
He knelt down, but before bendin,
his head jm exchanged a rapid loo;
with me.
“His head fell down at the distance
of where about I stood. a yard It and did not a quarter roll in from the
usual way, hut stood with the surface
of the wound which resting on the sand, a
position accidentally by reduced the to hemorrage minimum. was
a
At this moment I was terror stricken
at seeing the eyes of the doomed man
fixed frankly on my eyes. Not dar¬
ing to believe in a conscious manifes¬
tation, I went quickly to one side
the head lying at my feet, and I found
that the eyes followed me. Then I re¬
turned to my first position; still the
eyes went with me for a short distance
The and face then expressed quitted me quite that suddenly.
at, moment a
conscious agony, life agony of a per¬
son in a state of acute asphyxia The
mouth opened violently as if to take
in a breath of air, and the head thrown
off its equilibrium by the motion
rolled oYer. This contraction of tho
maxillary muscles was the last sign of
Ufa Since the moment of decapita¬
tion from fifteen to twenty seconds
had passed.’’-New York Press.
• - . ■ ..fiz-'-
y’eetl the ,Yankee.
South America presents many good
opportunities That portion for young America just
now.- of the great west¬
ern continent is settled by former
residents Ibo of pr^udices Europe and who conversation bring with
of the fatherland. The English speak¬
cipally ing portion drawn of tho population is prin¬
from Great Britain,
force and, of course, these people lack the
and persistency of the Yankee.
As an instance of this conservatism,
my brother, who is in Buenos Ayres,
had grCat difficulty in inducing a rail¬
way company, with which he is em¬
They ployed, finally to make brought use of the typewriter.
one from the
United States, and nave since obtained
-several more. They say they would
not do without them now.—Kansas
City Journal.
body me, It ie sold tevery by
to fcOti try it this season 1 sold by au
druggists. ie dollar
Ssts^sSk
The Chief Beaaea tor the great sue*
toss Of Hood’s Sarsaparilla is found in tho
article Itself. It is merit that wins, and tbe
fact teat Hood’s Sarsaparilla actually ac¬
complishes tvhat Is claimed for It, Is what
has given to this medicine a popularity imd
sale greater than that of any other sarsapo-
Mtovi-f XA/irie ‘'Ilia or blood purl-
m Cf 11 IVIIIS fl er before the public.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures Scrofula, Sait
Rheum cud all Humors. Dyspepsia. Sick
tdache, Biliousness, overcomes That
Tired FeeUng. creates an Appetite, strength-
«te the Nerves, builds up the Whole System.
Rm4>i Sarsaparilla is sold by all drug¬
gists. »t; six for J 6 - Prepared by a L Hood
• Co., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
fills
INTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE.
■
Scid
I
1NGS take plaee Senii-.
Dei-eraW), ami it# GHA eiri, oYt
BEU DRAWINGS take place on
other ten month#-i» the yea? and an \
drawn in jmhilc, at the Academy ot Marie, K.
Orleans, ■■■■M ) .. .......—
“We do hereby certify that we. eupervidet
arraxiireiuciits Annual Drawing# for of all The the Louisiana Moiithly b.a and Sea
tery Company, and in StuteL/ Btute 1
control the Drawings p on manage ,
tl ifcclvea, and-t
the same are conducted w
and in good faith toward all parties, a#
authorize the Company to use this certli
with fuc-Muiile# of onr slgnatnrerattach
it advertisements.”
■-M A - v-
JR
Ce»»itwl.B,„.
our counters:
Mammoth Drawini
«tb. ftggro*™,
UdOQ.ooo ;
Capital Prtoe,
100,000 Tickets Ei hth at $40; ,S: Halves »20;
fortieth# $1°’ ? " Twentieth* *2; 1
LIST OF PRIZE#
isssstz’as IfSSSf ToStzz:: fe
2 Prizes of 20,000 are......... 40.000
25 tinSff Prizes WEr 2,000 50.000
100 Prizes of 800 are. ........ ‘so.ooo- 50,000
bof < are.
200 Prizes of 600 are ........ 120,000
500 Prizes of 400 are.......... 200,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES
100 Prizes! do. of 11,000 are............... #100,000
100 800 are...............
100 do. 500 are..-............ 50,000
TWO ncmbhb*' TERMINALS.
1,098 Pri^s o! #200 are ............... #300,600
3434 #3,159,600
AGENTS v\ AJVTED.
For Cinb Bates, or any further information
desired, write legibly to tee undersigned,
clearly stating your residence, with State,
County, mail Street delivery and will Number. be assured More by enclosing rapid re¬
turn
an Envelope bearing your full address.
IMPORTANT.
Address M. A. DAUPHIN,
New Orleans, La.
Address Registered Letters Contain¬
ing Currency to ■
NBW ORLKA.VS hafttKAX BA NIL
New Orleans, La. . f
BANKS of New Orleans, and tbe tickets are
signed by the President of an Institution
whose chartered rights are recognized to the .1
highest tions Courts; therefore schemes. beware of ail imita- i
or anonymous 3f&
in ered any Drawing. less than Anything Dollar is in swindle. onr name of-
for a a
.. ■-
PYpEI umwrs
I /\SURECUnEfD9
CHILLS &F
DUMB f\BUE:
l oll s.VLK BY ALLimUGGtdTS.
MBSSjgt.
Mo-* ^vi rtiso»urt».
Road Carts !! v n e K
Ten per cent, anybody cheaper OUgglcSi Durvrvinn!
than
Don’ buy before getting Onr prices and
catalogue#. THE GEO. TOCKELL
W. 8 CO.,
Name this paoer. NASHVILLE TENN
—
‘
I-U-ri? titl'Am
| i'.c-v.M’ H i!* i : < AkU-r#-
11 l i t w- - —
U Hi , • ’O- Si. *
.
FOR MEN ONI
4 POSITIVE IsJSjLsSSwot’!
V rrrrvj U JXJU -n w«k»« ofErronorXzMWMtel of Body sad r
HINDKIUCOliKS.
PARKER S GINGER TONIC
The best ot .11 r JJuedifc IndiUi. fat
Inward Paine, Crlic.
tion. Exhaustion and ag Stom¬
ach tbs and Bowel effective troubles. ARo j
mom
Coughs, affections Colds, el the T Bronchitis breathing -
t
It promotes refreshing
sleep improve* tbe appetite.
..... m
WANTED^ ■■mHH Cand us onr dollar, and W»
will send JO
isrs, and 0
you Addi f rout #U0 to #3 0 per month 1
■