Newspaper Page Text
I I SI
[
m:
J .... .., ¥ . ' ww:
not a hyper-
it ha. ha. built built and am put into
tion a “—'I,000 $100,1 cotton
•story and with this year started the wheels
of. second ol more than twice that capital.
It h»« l>ut up a large iron and brass foundry,
u fertiliser factory, an immense ice and bot¬
tling worke, a eaeb aul blind factory, a
ssrsvsrCTrrr: mills lees advanced
ear large oil in more or
I construction, with an aggregate an-
m
has secured another railroad ninety miles long,
rasrssfffsng srwraaaiwa:
sd dirset Independent connection with Chat¬
tanooga andth. West, and will break ground
iu a lew day. lor a fourth roml, connecting
with a fourth indepeadeutsystem.
With its fly# white and fourcolored church-
sR’ia’srtni®® .ssL&wnrjBft
L|MmL_ and I JM Hip,.. K
wlnemakingeapaeity ........ has .
of the grape and its
doubled every year. It has successfully in¬
augurated a system of public schools, with a
ssrsn years curriculum, second to none.
This Is part ol the record of a halt decade
and simply rtows the progress of an already
admirable city, with ths natural advantages
of having the flneat climate, summer and
■SBlltffiS, —a——
above 'JSSSStiZZtU will have eea$iT4 j2Si.5aiss3Lds.kS'-
w.lcome strangers and anxious to eecuye d*
eirable settlers, who will not be any less wel-
some if they bring money to help build up the
own. There Is about only one thing we
need badly inst now, and that is a big hotel.
We have several small ones, but their aeeom-
modations are entirely too limited for our
usiae «, pleasure and health seeking guests.
If you see anybody that wants a good loca¬
tion for a hotel iu the South, Just mention
Griffin. Nnws
flnt&u is the plane whew the Churns
e published—daily and weekly-thebest news¬
paper in the Empire State of Geortf*, Please
enclose stamps in sending tor sample copies,
and descriptive pamphlet at GrifflnJ
This brief sketch is written April 12th, 1*89,
and wilt have to be stntafed in a few months
o embrace new enterprises commenced and
ouipieted. _< V* 5 f It 5 < * 1 1 1!
PBOFESSIONAI DIRECTOBY.
HENHT C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
isflDfrJ .AM(*tos, seosoU.
JOHN 1. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
SUirriN, OEOBOIA.
Office, 81 Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J, H
White's (llothlm- Store. marilliddwly
R - ^LLS, . , .
,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Will practice in the State and Federal
Courts. Office over George A Hartnett’s
corner, nov2ti
toss n s-riwiwi. aoav, t, MSlitfo
STEWART A DANIEL _
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Over George A Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
Will prattles in the State and Fedsra
•arts. julylBdtf
CLEVELAND ft GARLAND)
DENTIST*,
GRIFFIN, • i V i f GEORGIA.
.-rU’#,
WOODBURY, GKOKUU.
TwbwinssseaHs.
W Collections a a specialty.
i ■ :• „ , w.
HOW! I
Money Wanted for the
Stark Plantation.
Nffej* TC«--’
itory 1 acre. Ceu-
) for.bomding, for
- W ytelfri
-
rriEmiffli,
The Caub« of the Cost* Bic*-Nlca-
ragna Difficulty.
Panama Canal Stockholders
at the Bottom of It.
They Have Induced Costa Rica to Claim
Jurisdiction Over the hewer Part at the
Uncle Sam “Jumped on To.
London, July 10 . —The main cause of
the difficulty between Costa Rica and
iTl^TTke
u... tne parties who i,„u noiu • the r emn ants at
the Panama canal scheme in their
hands to claim, jurisdiction ov
lower part of of t|p tflp San 8w Juan river, form-
ingjhe boundary between the two
transitory nature, and each administra¬
tion pronounces as void the acts of ita
predeoessor, pretexts and precedents
for any desired course ore never want¬
ing. ~
Reverence for the Treaty at ISM.
Tim Costa Ricans 'have suddenly de-
' ed an intense reverence for the
r of 1838, which gave each state
fluvial wd^wan^htafam
"ibareM
has lately succeeded to power, were
illegal, tory belonging both as ceding to Costa inalienable Rica, and terri¬
as an
aot which was the result of open
bribery. Arms and have been poured
into the latter money state and she is in afar
better condition for war than Nic¬
aragua. It can be guessed where
S&Si aid came J. from, J£ and
A former power on the bourse who
lias been almost as completely wrecked
wrecked wrecked canal shares by by the collapse of Panama
“From the says: inception of the Panama
canal scheme the United States proved
Its bitter and relentless enemy. references By ita
irritating the ill-defined and threatening and impudent Monroe to
dootrine, it prevented the investment of
deprived English capital it of the in benefit the of enterprise that English and
conservatism which would have ao ad¬
mirably and secured supplemented brilliant French for genius the
a success
greatest “It cannot triumph be expected ef man that over nature. will
we
sit with Added hands and see the re¬
sults of our labor and expenditure ren¬
dered nugatory, au ft would be by the
competition The of a canal formed through for Nicara¬ this
work gua. l»s the company unenviable task before it
of bribing conciliating of a greedy jealous leaders, people each and
a swarm
of whom will expect a fortune as the
price of quiesoenoe; end to their nor number, con one We oount hare
had upon dealings on with the class and know
them welL When one set at leeches is
gorged, them and another must will be pacified promptly relieve anni-
or
liilated.
i not, believe j
tion ofdefendfin^ state rigltT^itohshetopI ndered. ”
never as a surre
“J OHNSTOW N.
A Plan for the Belief of the Reedy Ones.
Offielai Figaro*.
Johnstowr, July 10, — Some official
figures are given which are of interest.
They show the total loss to Johnstown,
ofcfeida of the loss sustained by tiie
Cambria Iron company < and the John-
son Steel] Bril company, to be fd,655, lit
The number of individuaTcai i of finan-
cial loss reported is 8,089.
Plea of Relief
ered A plan which of contemplates relief is now toe being division consid¬ of
fltQ
consideration.
agusfiis 13
Furaltare Reeded, -
Mr. apaugler declares that the need
now hold is furniture, for the most and elementary that house¬ people
should be given says buy these
money to
things. of the various He urgently mods raised appeals for to sufferers holders
theories of eanitabla
Beaver's ' • houriy^ commission ware id re^Oap is not the t
which has held on to relief fund
Official figure*.
Chief Clerk Mellcx, of th«
rendered hit
___________A He also Iwrnefl that
-.rasaa- their tT‘te« total 1 bodies - of
,
m
bSSdfa
—......... _
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA. TH1 IY MORNING. JULY 11. 1889.
NE WS IN BRI EF.
A Con d e n sa t ion of Interesting Items on
Various Subjeots.
Wallace Hamilton, of Guilford, Me., wag
drowned while boating.
A proposition to build water works at
Winchester, ICy., was defeated.
The Iowa Chautauqua assembly has opened
at Colfax, to continue ten day.
North EU Shipman, Wheeling, W. aged Va., 11, Monday. was drowned at
An estimate of the losses sustained at
Johnstown by the flood is $8,655,114.
Daniel Shultz, a farmer, was arretted at
Wabash, lad., on a charge _ of horse stealing.
-SSH2S
while bathing in the river
Ohio.
F. C. Leipsr, a member of the New York
Bicycle otab, vu drowned " at Manhattan
Bench.^ Burglars „ " „ \ ’ Find¬ ’ •:
entered a grocery store at
lay, 0; and took $180 is cash and goods
valued at $500.
held Services in memory of Mrs. Bayes were
In the Methodist church at Fremont,
O., on the 7th Inst.
George Grass, of New York, was arrested
at ChUlioothe, O., on a charge of obtaining
money under false pretenses.
A prisoner at the Ohio peni tentiar y has
applied to the courts for a construction of
the law relating to gained time.
Six additional signatures Were obtained
to the A m al g ama t ed association wage scale
at Pittsburg, Monday, making forty-three.
A Baltimore wad Ohio braksman named
Hardie was struck by an overhead ead bridge
near Fred wick town, O., and
ldHed. .
An engineer on the Chicago -.nod North¬
western railroad was shot on bis engine
while running past a freight train mi a
siding;
While unhitching a team of horses John
Taffinger, of Tiffin, O., aged 55 years, was
kicked by one of the horses end his skull
cnuftie& . t&SI
Willie Lobustoia, aged 9 years, while
playing on the railway track at Wheeling,
w. Va, Monday, was run over by an en¬
gine and cut to pieces.
Burglars robbed the safe in John Beeson’s
stole at Arcadia, O., getting $150 la cash
and taking from the stock cutlery and cigars,
making his total loss over $300.
A. L Gifford, manager of a Chicago drag
store, committed suicide Sunday night by
shooting himself. He was despondent at a
prospective loss of his position.
Dr. W. M. Goodlove, of Ohio, surgeon in
the pension office, and Dr. W. E. Carpen¬
ter, dismissed of Ripley, Monday O., a medical examiner, were
interior. by the secretary of the
O., By prompt attention from Youngstown,
physicians, Henry Wiadermeier and fam¬
ily escaped resting under a capacious monu¬
ment euphoniously Inscribed “poisoned by
pickled pork.”
named John Thompson, hi Colbert county,
Ala., for cursing hia mother and mw
Polic* Commissioner Werner, of Cincin¬
nati, ia a letter to the governor, made a gen¬
eral dental of Mr. Dodds’ charges. Rufus
B. Smith was appointed referee to bear tes¬
timony and report findings to the governor.
Henry Perry, a farm hand, was arrested
in Newcastle, Ind., by Sheriff Macy, in re¬
sponse to a telegram from Knightstown,
stating hone that he was wanted for stealing a
and buggy just over to* fine, ia Hush
county.
R. D. Johnson, an insane minister of Pa-
tause City, Wy. T., on Saturday kiUM his
wife and two children, then suicided. He
left a note saying he could aot live in this
sinful world and did not wish to leave his
Dually.
The sneaking dynamite fiend was out last
night At Indianapolis the Salvation Army
Was 81,700 blown 4am, belonging up, and at Cedarvllle, D. Krvin, 0., %
to S. an
energetic temperance worker, was lifted
sky ward.
The parties who have been writing for The
North American Review under the nom de
plume of “Arthur Richmond,” and who were
at first supposed to be Allen Thoradyke Rioe,
have turned out to be Julia Hawthorn end
Gail Hamilton.
Gen, W, A, Pile died at Monrovia, Cal.,
Sunday. He was a preacher in St Louis
when the war broke out, but entered the
army, attaining the rank of major general.
He was subsequently a member of congress;
and governor of New Mexico.
the next round promises to come out of the
last mill with its usual proud record as the
champion flour of the family.
drove Thomas from Carutbers Westchester and Mary Now Philadel¬ Roberta
to
phia to get married, but with the pro¬
verbial bUndnesa of love got lost, reached
the minister’s house at midnight and were
mairied ta the carriage and fa the dark.
Near Palouse City, Wash. R. D. Johnson
killed hit wife and son, about 14. years old,
and fatally shot his 7-year-old daughter and
then suicided. He tafi a note stating that
he didn’t want to live in this sinful world.
The crime is supposed to hare been caused
by temporary insanity over religion.
The mayor and council qf Milwaukee,
Wta,, refused to appropriate $ 50,000 for the
pBrehaae of teats, eta, unices it was assured
that the Grand Army would hold its meeting
in that city. P rep a ration s are now at a
PVi 1-etiU.^ At a » Chicago refused to eight go
unless a one cent rata was granted by toe
railroads.
Nashville, Stephen Bond, an aged adored man of
died a few days sgo, and his body
was not immediately claimed. Suddenly
hit son identified the corpse, but tbs under¬
taker would not give it up until $500 for
embalming give. The was paid. This ]the son refused
to son then entered suit for the
- d ** • ”~ B
Glass-Workers’ Convention.
Pittsburg, July 10. — The National
convention of the Amcrioan Flint Glaas-
Workere’ association met at BoIIaire,
0., Monday, and will remain in session
all present week. from Nearly ell parts 200 of delegates the were
The session devoted to the country. reading
was
of reporta and routine business. No
trouble is expected on the wage quea-
tion this rear except «the shade
and chimnev men who have not been
able to settle their with the
• *
Sah Jos*, (
INffifJlIB
What the Agricultural Depart*
ment hi Doing.
The Work of Secretary of Ag¬
riculture Rusk.
He Bas Established an Editorial Division
Which will Greatly Improve the Depart¬
ment — A Number o t Appointments
Made by the president—Tettow Fever
Rumors—Washington Kates
Washington, July 10 .— Secretary Rusk
has take® an important step in the work
of reorganization of the department of
agriculture. He has established a new
division, placing George W. Hill, of St.
Paul, at the head of it-charged with
the important duty of editing the re-
which being prepared by
for scientific eyes are comparatively lost
the to the secretary general public, believes, and to especially, that part as of
the people wMoh the department is par¬
ticularly Advance designed sheets to of serve—the bulletins farmers. issued
hereafter from any and every division of
the department, will pass through the
secretary's be oarerully office read and and their digested contents in will the
editorial division. A careful resume
is ca eaoa uui*
of the practical,' but least comprehension sefentiflo
mind. In advance of the distribution
of the bulletins
also emanate from,
sion, prepared a brief especially synopsis for of the es__________ of the
use
2&es& The general reader will thus be
en-
or hook. He will also be enabled to
keep pace with the important work of
the department which has heretofore
been practically impossible, The because of
the small edition printed. synopsis
being throughout distributed the country. to all the Readers newspapers
where will be enabled to send for every¬ such
bulletins as may be of especial interest
to them.
_
Presidential Appointments.
Washington, July 10.—The president
has made the following appointmenta;
Thomas H. Oavanau gh, of Olympta,
W. T., surveyor general of Washington
territory, vice J. Gabel Breokenriage,
removed. Thomas N. Faulconer, of
Sheridan, Ore., Indian agent at the
Grand SHnsjBBRg Ronde agency ia Oregon, vice
John B. Hmpovto, MoOlane, * * "
Kelly, at Topeka, of Kan., vi
Thomas V. Cooper, ~ collector _ of customs
mas V.
for Probate the distrust judges of Philadelphia. in Utah territory
James P^WBto'j Daniel 1 McGarry, Utah, of Utah, in ........ Iron in county Beaver j
county; Isaac Burton, of Utah, in Uin¬
tah county.
* Claimed to Be Vice Provident.
hardt Wabhm&ton, is the July given 10.—Peter by Adle-
name a young
German, who claims that he has been
elected vice president of the Untied
States. Hq was arrested at the bouse of
Mr. Streeter, on the Harwood road,
where his strange actions and conversa¬
tion frightened the inmates of the house
trim and complaint arrested him, was made The to prisoner the officers told
the officers that he had been elected vice
president and that he was on his way
from Christian comity, HL, to take the
oath of office.
The President's Vacation.
rison Washington, will ...... probably July 10.—President to Deer Park Hor*
join his family go Friday up » remain
to on ay, to
over Sunday and during the early part
of next week. Hereafter during the hot
weather, days at each he expects week at to work spent in about Washing* two
ton and the remainder of the time in
Deer Park. This will make vacation, it unneces¬
sary to take any extended as
has been the custom of previous presi¬
dents.
_
Rumors of Yellow Fever.
-A rumor
1 bureau that
^ on the Mox-
ipioo northward, Main,
and Anting Assistant Surgeon
stationed at investigate Brownsville, Tex, The Mexican was or¬
dered to it
consol at Browusville denies the rumor,
bat Dr. Main will nevertheless make
an investigation._
Pittsburg Furnishes the Bidders.
Washington, July 10 .—Bids for fur¬
nishing 839 tons of steel plates to be
used in the construction of the cruiser
which is being built at New
pany,>itte bmg, #86,294.30.
BURKE ’S EXTRA DITION.
Judge Eongsneeker Think Eta Has Snffi-
dent Evidence In the (taqo.
Chicago, July 10.—Judge Langeneeker
has no fear* ia regard to Burke’s extra¬
dition and says that he will be brought
bock to Chicago and hanged just as sura
a* be had a hand in the assassination of
dares that more than
has been famished the , __
thorities and he regards their action in
requiring more verbal evidence as some-
“The ease should have been disposed
of in two days,” said the state’s attor-
afflwsaiJrflsrss
on any previous occasion been required
^'trwsripsS! have always covered the oasss.’ T
m
A PENN SYLfAftiX -WflEbK
Near Wilmnrdtag—One Killed and Four
Injured.
PriTSBUBG, July 10.—Freight train
No. 18, on the Pennsylvania railroad,
was wrecked at Wilmerdiag a few miles
east of here Monday night Thirteen
ears were derailed. The train caught
fire, a carload at whisky becoming ig¬
nited from some unknown cause.
Two bodies have so far been removed
from the wreck and it is said that six or
taovo at least are ia the debus.
according Twenty-five people were on the train
to a statement made by a
tramp who escaped. Of this number it
is known Unit ten or twelve escaped.
The hands of the train say that fifteen
were killed.
A colored man sustained Berious in¬
juries. The thirteen oars and engine
are wholly wrecked. The accident was
caused by an axle breaking. The names
of the killed and wounded have not yet
been ascertained.
Later.
one The person was
names are:
ley, Injured—Andrew aged 14. Kennedy,
of Pittsburg, aged probably newsboy fatally
hurt. 14,
v. * j
Alfred Young, colored, aged about 25,
of Lima, O., contused bock and other¬
wise John seriously Kennedy, injured. aged of Milwaukee,
badly bruised, 33, will
out and but proba¬
bly John recover. Hyde, newsboy
of Pittsburg,
aged No 15. trace of others who
ported to have any been caught in the were wreck re¬
have been,found.
Confident of Victory.
the Pittsburg, July 10.—At a meeting of
coal miners of Blair, Cambria,
Clearfield, Center and Jefferson coun¬
ties at Altoona, Pm, Monday, it was de¬
cided not to enforce a general suspen¬
sion at the present time on account of
the ginia absence delegations. of the AU Maryland plaoes and working Vii“
below distnot prices are called to remain out]
and oU not oat nib to be oni A
levy striking more than has sufficient been laid to support
men district on those
oommittee working at appointed prices, and a the central
was for pur¬
pose of distributing the relief. The
convention was a unit on all things, and
were oonfident of victory in toe near
future.
Youthful Lyncher*.
lynching Cobydon, of Ind-, Deavin July and 10.— Tennyson The reoent
at
this place is having little its effect upon the
rising lin, aged generation. 10, accused Johnny of stealing Cough¬
was a
knife belonging to one of his compan¬
ions, and it was decided by a number of
small boys that he should be lynched
for the theft. He was entioed to the
woods near town Sunday, rope was
boys around his the neck, Act and, while tho
were m of bcmlt: utt a
sapling happened over to along swing and him to, a gem 3ntle-
man ceediugs. stopped pro» p
Training In Civilisation.
Indian School, Cablisle, Pa, July
10.—One hundred and seventeen young
Indians Montana, belonging Nebraska, to Wisconsin, tribes in Dakota, Indian
territory, finished New Mexico and Arizona, have
a five years' course at the gov¬
ernment school here, and left for their
homes. Six were regular graduates.
All speak English. The young men
have had good training ae mechanics
and fanners, while the girls have been
well instructed in household duties.
Utah’s Wool Production.
special Denver, OoL, July Utah 10.— A wool Salt Lake
says: The output
for 1880 will be nearly 12,000,000 pounds,
at nineteen prices ranging cents, with from fourteen cents of to
enteen and half cents. an average The quality sev¬ is
a
by excellent, May owingto The the fine feed secured
rains. exports of mutton
have been very brisk, so that scarcity
bas beep occasioned, and prices will be
stiff all summer.
Shot His Employer Dead. ’
Fort Worth, Tex., July 10.—B. 0.
Evans, the head of the large mercantile
firm of B. C. Evans & Company, of tius
urday city, was by J. shot W. dead Davis, in his store of his on Sat¬
one em¬
drinking. ployes, wlio 'There had is been groat reproved excitement for
here over the murder, and there is talk
of lynohing Davis, guarded. who is now in jail
and stron gly
_
Eyes Blown Out.
North Vernon, Ind., July 10,—Bry¬
ant Lewis, a colored laborer in a stone
in masting, xie wus wsrnoij mangieu,
both considered eyes blown fatal out, George and his Schaffer, injuries
are
city marshal, wJ(P was near at the time,
was badly braised, bat his injuries ate
not aerioua. ^
Post oh s Foul.
Hammond, Ind-, July 10.—About 100
sports came hero from Chicago, Mon
day round night, fight and end paid in $5 foul to see The a fight one-
a
was between Billy Evans, of Cleveland,
and Jack Stott, of Liverpool England.
The stakes were for $200 and gate re¬
ceipts. and had Evans his won whipped first fall had and he blood, not
man
struck him while down. The referee
declared the fight in favor of the En¬
glishman, the Chicago and crowd amid left howls the field. of derision
Skin Glove Fight to u Finish,
finish Boston, fight JnlylO. here Menday —In night a skin tat glove #100
Barney Hubbard knocked out Patsy
Collins in the third round Both men
belong in Boston.
__
Epoch. ?
The transition from long, lingering and
painful trickoese to robust health marks an
epoch in the fife of the individual. Such a re¬
markable event is treasured in the memory
and the agency whereby the good health Hence has
been it is that attained much is gfatefolly heard la blessed. praise of Elec¬
so is
tric Bitters. So many feel they owe theirree-
sdtb, to the nee of the Great
troubled
«fe.aad#f
Drugstore.
"“Kiiw**. Abbott’s ithout* Corns^Bu'nionsa^d Warts
pain. For sale by
* UNEARN ED INC REMENTS.
of Artists and Doctor* Kffeotod by
the Higgling at the Market.
Whatever a painter makes by paint¬
from one point of view, it is ob¬
vious that he earns. So much skilled
exchanges torso much money.
let us suppose that a portrait
when his skill has come to
;
ten has years, been during fully each of He has
will occupied. portrait
wo say, one a
and his annual income has
!£»"« that the au painter N z- earned by his
produce, world, which and the these judgment the of the ul¬
in cases is
timate court of appeal, has settled the
years during which* the world has
him. At the end of this pe-
the public taste; n considerable
ber of immense fortunes have imm
Sfcf ffirwaas ho possessors of which have all
want to
The consequence is* that the'painter,
instead of haying as formerly twelve
commissions a year, has now sixty.
He cannot execute all. He cannot ex-
ecu to more than twelve. The conse¬
quence is ho has to raise his price, and
a thousand thrust upon him. Thus
his income rises from £2.400 increment a year to
£12,000. There is an of
the cause of itf How can that T
does Ho is nothing able do more nothing than he usee than he
to more
used to do. He works no sKS harder and no
longer. there He is has increment no more t
yet of £9,600. an
come
A similar phenomenon, and one
equally of doctors. familiar, shows A doctor itself in the
case at
spa has a certain ---------
dealing with a a certain o class ot corn-
fee ia a guinea, and his
occupied. As years go
B. on, of nch however, people an ISfei increasing number
overeat
come to the waters over which t!
doctor presides. them, whom Perhaps he happens a king to
among of stomach ache. Hels at
cure a once
by patients from every quarter of
and his fee consequently
llK.jlJ™> nritorlfttom'VoS 1
m&sraBrstz
“economized." The increment in
their incomes has come to them, “as it
were, in their sleep.” It haacomerto
them in the natural course of things
—that is to say, in the doctor's rase,
from an increasing number of rich
men gorging, in the painter’s care
from an increasing number of rich
from men affecting people in a taste general for being art, in both
enough to follow the fashion.—The geese
National Review.
Artificial Flone
Artificial flowers are now made so
perfectly the natural—so that they much are foe-similes tho of
so that most
critical cannot detect the difference.
It is the rage now for ladies to wear
flowers, and the poorer girls, who are
equally cannot as ambitious afford as replace the wealthier flowers
ones, to
everyday, demands; or they twice a day, bunch as ot fashion arti-
cial violets so cluster get a of pink
or a roses,
and, ly natural to carry blooms, out the few effect of perfect¬
a green leaves
are obtained at a trivial cost from the
florist and twined about the artificial
flowers. Tho result is perfect and true
to the original effect. Many of the flow¬
ers you see on the corsage of belle and
beauty considered are artificial by ones. Flowers be
are some to
a very laudable extravagance and
sinful by others extravagance are regarded when the as in¬ a
dulgence late is too Droxel, lavish. For instance,
the Mrs. of Philadelphia,
who was very
and who had all
her love for flowers,
in her scrupulous soul as an extrava-
uuantities $io of artificial Housed/ ones made GoK hv
deft hands of tho
Shepherd, and would present there
baskets of exquisite copies from na¬
ture. instead of the real ones, which
Globe-Democrat. would only last a day or so.—Si Louis
©oil* 0 * Wen.
A series of “railroad ilroad notes” notes" stranger
and truer than
from grave to gay,
made by any observant irvant traveler' traveler who
has occasion to bo OR inroad.
quired took “Where a farmer be beside you goto’, of her fiffASfft an in
a scat a car.
and "Oh, surprise I’m goin’ ’em,’’returnedshe, to see Josiah’s beam¬ folks,
ing up at him. “1 never let ’em know
I’m cornin’. I like to drop in on ’em.”
Le’s sco. Josiah lives -esmLowelir
“No, in Great Falla It’s Maria that
lives in Lowdl."
fSS-3: »^or Wm
'
For an instant Mrs. £
£n wildly, as if she i
rope or
^t* ' V l
to
as w~*
But,
* 4 aiF
& f
|
them. “Go ft
•Vttu-wu Bg ban,
the mayor.*
write «“ ? 1 I
-
.
—
Central i
for abucy i
tolls how tl ,
of car*. *AUd
,
JSl an i^*a t ^ 0ni
ssssr ]
dog. Then
creates a *u and tbs*
who aevax© to I
A«
4 gaffs
steeper,
^tissptrfet
Louis Republic.
■"M ■ k
Rofchseh&l*
2**
SLV a
TtattaGtel
a
In one hand
and started
was used in t
it