Newspaper Page Text
L7 A |iilwJ
.\tiie:
fuakinff th
fP Hi l‘' T ?
■Uv tnn>-’
liw' i-Mlr
UORRIBLV burned.
„ IMI'I
' 4i " A l>l"‘» 1 »-
(};, Oct.Mrs. Dr.Spence
,(Watkiiurilh. was horribly
-• (J j^., in 1 apt to prove
I* 1 '*" ar ,.... u-f.ire day light to pre-
' ^. t J„r herself amt invalid
* s)lr . h: H kerosene lamp and
jit Heir tlw stove while she waa
th.- fir*-. When' the finished
i,,. and started to .get np
jH>sture, she accident-
IIV SUITS.
Gils’ Forsisliigs!
Mr*, imrliitm al
r the lamp, setting fire to
an invalid, and haa
, ars. and. consequent-
her assistance. Mr.
neighbor, heard the
liiickiv to the bouse,
«• in the door be found
...jost completely envul-
U,. quickly extinguished
until she was almost
j.,.ssible has been done to
r -'ltb-rings. and. at the prea
sh,- is resting as well as
, t, ,l; but grave doubts are
M her recovery, as she is a
lv. Dr. and Mrs. Durham
k the oldest married counlo
having lived together for
i-.-ars. The liusbund being
i invalid makes this offlio-
Sl,l.
A FATAL DAY.
IcidPi
Hoi
W\suinot<i.n. * >< t. :i.—Four tragedies
oftirUtl th*-!-«ace of Washington 8un-
1V < >ti,- was a case of murder, two
i-rc |,rokh'h- murders and the fourth
is a e.w "f manslaughter. Joe Shoe-
F ,k,-r. white, a regnectabl® young
iincr. with a wife and three cllilren,
iil,- drunk, killed a negro man named
. iiia- Maithews, near Tennallytown,
uhnrhof this city.
Fames i >w, u. white, was disembowel-
hi an unknown negro man. on North
and will probablv die.
•uioti Jatkson, a negro man, was
;n,l badly mangled in Trmnble street.
to liis assassin, anil
This means more that at
first would be imagined.
Suits complete or coats and
vests, or separate pants. Dress
suits “all alike” in Clay Wors
teds, Diagonals, etc., or dark
coats and vests with stylish
neat stripe trousers—not only
good quality, but good style
suits.
Stylish coats, long enough
not to look “bob tailed." Vest
well a, not too low, but low enough
to show some of your scarf
and to prove that you do wear
a shirt; and trousers—not
mere two-legged pants, but
garments, with that touch of
style in size, shape and “hang"
that makes a man’s legs look " ew
“■"** gentlemanly. You can’t ex
actly describe a well dressed
man, but you can become one
„11<. live
. lb-id, ft negro, wns instant
ly a bullet from Sergeant Ken-
>Iv,-r. the shot living Aral in the
ini,- f<> prevent Held from plnng-
if,- into the lmdy of Officer Skin-
> was attempting to arrest tho
r theft.
('memo, Oct. 3.—Henry Irving and
Kllfii Terry have reached here, accorn-
panie,! by the London Lyceum company,
and have l» gun a lengthy engagement
a* the Colunthia theater. Mr. Irving
w.is met by a party of theatrical people
and in-WKjiaju-r men about 65 miles from
the city, ami he entertained his guests in
hi- private ear. The actor expressed
linns, If a- highly pleased with the ro-
(V|,ti,'ii he hud met with in the United
Staff.-, and Miss Terry wua equally
pi,-a-,-I with the present tour.
Mii.w.u’kee, Oct. 3.—Mr*. Jennie
Kinikill. manager of the Kimball Opera
< oiniijtie company, and mother of “Co-
nnne." and Arling Schaafer of Fond du
La* . Wis., a meiulier of her company,
w, r> married h'-m at the Hotel David-
M.ii. The wedding was a complete ror-
pn-*- to tie- iiieiuU-rs of the company.
Mr-. Kiiuhall met Mr. Schaafer first in
Denver several yearn ago, when ho be
came tut, r for Corinne.
(iarta Went to tliv Fair.
Cut, oi,«. Oct. 3. —('atarino Garza, tho
Mexican lmndit. revidutioniiit and poet,
.«I»'Mt three weeks in August at the
World - Fair. With his lieutenant. Ring
Sjindoval. he was a guest of the Palmer
House, !«,th, ,,f course, passing by ax-
n !!: "i ? • Thi "= t,i « fact
that l.'th Mexican and tfnitod States
tr>«>jr- wen- hunting for (Jana on both
r"l'r with a price set on
in- head by the Mexican government.
A Next,. Miinlerrr Mutt Hang.
I’.ittMiMiii iM. Ala., Oct. 3.—The negro
Mit* hell W oot,-n, has liecn found guilty
of th<-M, Swesn murder at Ozark, and
-m, I,,,,i to hang on Noveml«r 22d
ti> \t. It wa- tin* foulest sort of murder.
linn M, Swean and his aged wife
i' , > !*iei"selve8 in a log cabin,
iti-ir hou-,. was entered by night and
bv wearing one of our suits.
You know we have the stock.
You ask what about the price?
Why, they are simply marvel
ous bargains 1
Gray Sack
Cheviots
Hull, that were
$2000.
Now to (io al
$13.50.
and Cheviots, Sacks $1 N ^ 00
and Cutaways.
Pants Once
$6.00 AJil) $6.50.
Now Slaughtered
$400.
Pant* Worth
$5.00,
Now Offered at
$3.00.
And all this even in the full
light of modern civilization
offered at • *
FULL SHAPE
ft BIG VALUES
It is like a Fairy Tale to
write of the gorgeous beauty
and richness of our Neckwear
styles at present, such as you
sometimes see worn and such
as we now can show. But
dressy Neckwear is unusually
costly everywhere, and only
such as our present efforts
have brought Marvelous Bar
gains even among these
choicest of novelties.
VVe will offer the choicest
hour-in-hands and Tecks in
stock, $1.25 and $i 50 Grade,
75 cents
A special lot of beautiful
new shapes and colors
Four in-hands, 50 Cents.
A Miscellaneous Bargain
comprising good styles in
Tecks, Four-in-hands, Wind
sors and Bows, 50 cent grade
at 25 cents.
SHIRTS.
s
H
Biggest bargain yet in Wil
son Bros. Plain, Striped, Fig
ured or Embroidered centre
puff. Sold at $2.00—now of
fered at $1.00.
A
W
Very cheap. We have a
French Balbriggan, $1.50 per
suit, at 90o.
OTHER FURNISHINGS!
Such as Suspenders, Haud-
kerchiefs, Hosiery and Hats
at big reductions.
Tnc Latest Patterns for the
Lowest Price at
s
i&s ail fees
Wo have just returned home, arid have Rparod
no paiuH in making a choice selection of new
goods for this section of country.
So many people ask why we buy so many
goods. A question easily answered. For] by
baying in such large quantities, we grind them
out at tho *3ry lowest possible figures, and are
thereby enabled to
DEFY COMPETITION!
And most tlio lowost figures named by my
lionsn in the country.
GOODS WELL BOUGHT
Are no trouble to soil. We not only want yonr
custom for a day, but as long as wo are in busi
ness, and an examination of oar Fall and Win-
tor Stock will insure this result.
The Almighty Dollar has producod the same
results iu all ages, and the manufacturers are
always on the alert for the man who wiolds tho
Potent Letter and always ready to make heavy
concessions to got it in his clutches. We hove
asod it as a two-edged sword, and now offer yon
tho benefit derived thereby.
John B. Shaw.
A
What have we here ? Why
every kind and size and style
iu particular, and too many
shoes in general. We know
we ve got to cut down this
stock, and to do that you know
we’ve got to cut down the
prices. We’ll set the hair on
this stock and part in the
middle with these marvelous
bargains.
Regular £6.50 and- f7.00
Congress and Bals, made by
Hess, Hciser and Banister.
For a while at
s
Forsyth Street Stores,
$5.00.
Standard $5.00 Mens’ Hand-
welt Calf in Congress or Bats.
Temporarily at
$3.00.
Usual £3 00 Shoe, will com
pare with any >3.00 Shoe for
men in town or anywhere else.
While they last at
$2.00.
Ordinarily sold for $2.50,
Men's scrviccale Shoes, made
to wear—selling extraordin
ary low, at
$1.50.
Even $2.3o Shoes—Men’s
Buff Congress—cut to
$1.00.
Boy’s regular $2.25 Shoes,
Lace or Congress, at
$1.25.
“In Shoes," “you can get
there with both feet” with
satisfaction. Come to see the
marvelous bargains at
A Bare Foot-iug tip of the
saving that ladies can make at
the Forsyth street stores,would
make remembrance of" hard
times seem like a dream.
OXFORD TIBS'.
£400 grade. This is an
elegant dress Slipper, with or
without silk tops—plain toe
or patent leather ti/, for
$3.00.
Worth £3.00. We can also,
give you this one with a silk
top or pateht leather tip as well
as prrfcctly plain—of course
these are hand sewed, at
$2.00^
Sold for £2.50. This is a
fine Kid Bootee—Oxford—and
is very pretty—hand-sewed.
But now offer at
$1.50.
Good values at £2,00. A
good serviceable, common
sense Oxford Tics for comfort,
now at
$1.25.'
Misses spring heel, £2.00.
Made by Drew, Selby & Co.,
and lias patent leather tip at
- $1.25.
Child’s spring heel Oxford
Ties at big reductions.
Ease, Economy and
gance.
Ele-
Styles, Shades and Shapes,
and at marvelous bargains at
117 and 119
DAILY MARKET REPORTS
■ru.l.* turjwiitln" steady.
l *‘ t • 3. — Pork Arm hoi quiet;
IN.iiki»|N.89. Mi'lriln* non
Ij»nl quiet and ateadr.
3 - <’a«h quotation* w«
>rk. SIN.W4I7.UI. lard fW.au
r!i»-. Umjw. fa 45(10.30. Dry
17.17* iftLW; abort
Plain's Era and Bkta
’^-Ointment
tmingnboMtlMlM
Teller, Belt Rheum, Bald Heed, Old
Chronic Soree, Fever Bone, Ecremt,
Ie-h, Treirio Scratches, Bora HIpplu
M'lPilee. It |e cooling and soothing.
II,sired.o( caeee hare boon cured b,
It alter all -Hher treatment bad Called
•t U nut ql In 33 and 60 coat boxos*
™’n,aon_itauto(et your onion
br. Eldrldge; ho hu L*a-
drear, beet rerleUee.
London, Oct. 2.— Dinpatchcs to tho
Time* from Pari« nay tho Delta of Ton-
quin wan entirely flooded by a hurricane
recently, which nwept away many
dwellings* A nnittlier of tlioir occnpants
eaca|N*d on raft*, but many wore
Urownod. 'file vicar nifwtiiiic haft issued
a prvwinK appeal for funds to avert fam
ine, as tho crops were ruined by the hur
ricane.
|*rrfrrrwl I*r»th to Kill** In Nllterl*.
Warsaw, Oct. 2.—Captain Totnasso-
ricz, of tho Rui.sian artillery, was found
guilty of ill treating a sentinel and forg
ing certain documents. The courtmar-
tial nontencod him to exile in Siberia.
An soon as the finding was announced
Captain Tommassovicz drew a revolve
and shot himself deail.
Six thouaand coal miners in Yorkshire,
who wont on a strike July 23, lost, have
fNNUiucd work.
Late London dispatches say tliat the
reliols roNUimnl the Uanltaplment of Rio
and kept it up all dny Sunday.
At Hamburg, three now canes and ono
death from choh-ra are re|N»rtod. Two
previous \iat.ionts have snccumbod to the
Ubeaso.
The (Jolden Dragon, a hotel at Konigs-
wirtcr. a resort of Rhine tourists, a short
distance below Drachenfeld. tho noted
mountain, collaps«l, killing seven por-
Uood’s Sarsaparilla,
after taking Hood’s,
to get flood’* "
’—before taking
•‘I’m so well”—
Moral—“Re suro
r«r Ow rtfty few
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup hu been
used • children teething. It soothes
the eh* <d. softens the gums, allays all
pain, cures wind colic, snd is the best
remedy for diarrhesa. Twenty-five oeoU
a botUe. Sold by all druggisU through
out the world.
Lady Florence Dixie declares that she
knows one woman who, disguised, is the
captain of a sbip, and two who are efff-
ent pilots.
REGULATOR
tut* rmrew an Infallible
sjerffte for all «lerang»-
tnon's ntK-ntlar to tne
•sWi-leNeisocbMchroele {
womb and mtrun tUs
ONE CENT A WORD COLUMN.
ootnmn at tbn rate of OuOat pmt Word for
‘JfSSSLTRl »(• SJSfrtlssmsa* takse for Imb
ban nrrcKN uiurra.
FOK SALK OR KKNT.
M V Six Room Krultlnicr In Uruoklyn
ilvlKlit.-i,tbrcc-qturtcni «»f a mile from
city. !lou*i-convenient; well located: water-
W'Tkn throughout. Apply W, T. DAVKN-
O Stt Seven Konm Keaidenre
nr one xix-rooui reatdeuce
street. l’<M<He»ii'lon Riven at •
STANF1KLD.
In fa-eton.
on Jackflou
nee. IM)SA
sept I-’ if
r| WO nice dwellings,
1 (4 rooms) and one on Hell HL. <«
»"*tb in good *«-4er. J. * “—“
College St..
L, (« rtNims.)
A. KOBT. pfptA-tr
* In Thomas lip
ply to liank Southwestern
s lllock.
Georgia.
WHEN AT THE
WORLD’S FAIR, Chicago,
be sure to call at the unique exhibit of
LIEBIG COMPANY’S
ixtftfcr Of BEEF
in the northeast part of the AlfRI-
CULTURAL BUILDING, north
aisle, <u the Uruguay Department,
and get a
FREE GUP
of delicious, refreshing
BEEF TEA
made from the world-known
iu COMPANY'S Extract ok Bekk
'balsam
isesrgu*'
LOCAL RCHROVLIL
Arrival and Departure if Trains.
8. A. k U TRAINS.
latavi-s for Savannah-Mixed 9.8t)a. m.
•• Montgomery 10; 10 x in.
CENTRAL TRAINS.
Arrives from Macon.
..W:JH p. Ut.
.. 7:9ft p. m.
..It;IS p- m.
rcfulatcs and rromote*
healthy action of all fupo-
lions of tna gmeraUva
organs. Yaeof ladles at
tha aga of jHilwrty, snd
older one* •* , lh *
pause, will And In it a hesltnjr. toothing tonte.
Tha hlghas* reeonuneadations fmm promV
ent physicians and tbosa wbobsvs trlcdll
iV rite for book “To Women." **H*Atn*_M
by all draggista. naanrixu) RxoeLaToaCo,
propnaters, Atlanta, Us.
IF YOU are going to the
Wold’s Fair and other points
get an accident ticket from
W. T. STANFIELD,
KptfrlB - Windsor UoteU
FOR RENT.
A nice six room resi
dence on College St.
Good neighborhood
Water attachments,
j; A. FORT.
INULK8IDR RETREAT—for
Women, Hclentlflc treatment and cares
guaranteed. Elegant apartments for ladies
- - cimnnement Address
NuhTttk, ecu. iwadAW t,
Forsyth Street Stores.
TV o. »8SO.
Peoples National Bank,
OF AMERICUS.
t’AMTAr, 130,000. Snnn.vi, 123,00a
ORGANIZED 1883.
BANK • OF • COMMERCE.
Commercial paper (Uncounted and loans
E ule upon approved collateral, Exchange
ught and mild. IK-immUm mdlclted. Demand
and time certUK aten Issued. A general bulk
ing buslnes transacted.
DIRECTORS.
J. W. ShcatcM, J. R. Stapleton,
U. A. Flicker D. 4. Shvmeld,
C. A. Huntington, Frank Lanier, 1r.,
••• , IkNlmvn, Frank Sheffleltl,
Bank of Sumter.
T. N. UAWKE8, O. A. COLEMAN,
President. Vice-Preft’L
W. C. 1’URLOW, Cashier.
Dt ar< to ax: a A. Odeman.G. a Hawklm
B. H. 4*msey, T. N. Ilawkes. W G Park w. 4,
W. Fur low, It. 8. Oliver, R. M. Stewart, Di. C.
T. Matbls, Arthur Kylander, W. M. Hawke*
Liberal to its customers, accommodaUng to
the public and prudent In Its management,
this bank solicits depoelts and other business
Receiver’s Sale.’
(hatfield A Woods Co., eL al. i
Americus Times I*ub. Co. |
Agreeably to the terms of r. decree granted
by the Hon. W. H. Fish al the May term, IW8,
of Sumter Superior Court, In favor of cbat-
tteld A Woods Co., and other creditors of the
lcus Times Publishing Coaipanv for the
if the property of saltf company for the
benent of said creditors, 1 will sell at public
rv to the highest b’dder for casb. oa
. Tuesday la November, ISM, during
legal hours of sale, all the property
sets of the Amertcus Times Pub. C_.,
sitting of presses, type, machinery and Bx-
1 of an kinds used In printing and ruling.
dock of paper on band, and the good will
subscription books of the daily snd
weekly Times-Kbcohdkm, and all other prop
erty not herein enumerated. Inventory can
be shown at any-Ume and. on day of sale.
Property can be Inspected at any time. Hold
to satisfy the judgments against said com
pany granted uutler the decree aforesaid, as
well as for the benelt of all creditors and
the stockholders of said company.
IIAMtiM MYRIU
Receiver Americus Times Pub.
Americus, Oa-, October *nd, 1
ICR.
b. Co.
Notice.
Notice Is hereby given that at the ap
proachlng session of the General Assembly
of Georgia a bUl will be Introduced to make
the Hoard of Education of the city of Amerl-
us elective by the May«»r and city council of
mertcus: to reduce the number of men-
rn> of said board and for other purpose*.
Sept 77
_
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
W.'
WHEN A BICYCLE
Baglsy
UM,
IfuffiUng, opposite the
*ep7Wtf
D A. HAWKINS,
*Otico In^WheatTy Vlhq^r^cwspaper Row.
W P. WA1XIB,
* Attorney at Zmw,
.. .. ^ Americus. Ga.
WIIIwicUm lo an the court*. Oflice: Tele
phone Kxchange Building.
A Law,
h 8t. Myne building,
t to all legal worken
1 A. IIIXON,
, Attorney at Lav.
J Americus. (la.
(Mice in Bagley building, nppomte the court
house. PjomptaiieuUuaglvento.au *----*
I # Attorney at Law.
WOl pracUce In the counties of Sumter,
Chley, Macon. Dooly, Wehster, Stewart, In
the Supreme Court, and Utc United Stale*
J.*
attoiImsy at law,
Americus, Georgia-
Office: 4IIH 4ackson street.
8HIPPA SHIPP, Oordele. Oa.
If Office: Over Rank of Oordele.
D. D. TWIOOa.
Americus, Ga.
’ Wheatley building, next to
Attorney at Lai
,Oflcete —. ......... uv,, M ,
WIJLpractlce In.aH court*.
ethiwA
D a A. A HAWKS,
Office 1MM Lamar 9
»» MoleLATl calls le
Drug Co. will be responded to promptly.*
) K. S. H. McKKK,
. Dawrurr,
.t. ®«c*P**n by Dr. Wor
sham, N<x 8QSH Lamar street jaciit
r. amioR horimk
Office ovhr Davenport's drug store.
r° K«v, Tim
D r. 4. i. da iui y,
Pnraici am amd Sntonov,
Tenders hlsprofesAonal services to the peo
pie of Amencws and surrounding o.sntry.
Omcs: <t>H 4ACKNOM sv.
one door south
prompt attenUon. febl9
D R.CURUOWHM,
PUTBICIAH AMO SPROEOM.
Offer*I hie professional sendees to the peo-
AllM Iloua^. Call. Ictt .1 DiSSporti™,
Southern Lady Wanted
To miSSbl kbd tonect tor our
Ftuo Art Ooods. *
•is porwook.
CinCACO UTII0CRAPII CO.,
RfHIkSwab OBCAMbXu.
In offored to you at lees than the price which it l« listed, you havo no assurance
that you are not etlU paying more than the next pnrehaser will pay, snd more than
tha aotural value of the machine while on a STRICTLY ONB PRICED article
every purobaaer la aureof buying at the bottom prlc -. Every Columltla rider knows
that Columbia* are not only thelieat bicycle* in the world but tliat they aro the
cheapest In the end. A Colombia at $150 00 I* more economical to buy than any
other maebine at any prloc at whiob It can be purchased WHEELS TO KRNT
W. II. C. DUDLEY, .Tr.s A K ’t,
Offlco 523 Dudley Strcot.
Queen & Crescent Route
••Finest Trains in the South."
Through Can toChlrigo without rhang*, from
New Orleans. Meridian. Birmingham. Chat-
maooga, Jacksonville. Fla.. Athr.ts, Mscmt,
Lexington and Georgetown, Ky. Choice
of routes via Cindima* or via l^uuville.
lowed on ail World's Fair tickgt*,
iga, Louhville. ludianapalts or
oa or s^dress aay agent of the Queen &
Crescent Route « E. T. V. 4 G. Ry.
W. C. RINKAESON.-G. P. A., Cincinnati, O.
THROUGH CARS TO CHICAGO.
*t»SSSS***»SSWSSS***»S»***S»**1
C. 4. EPPINQ. C. T. HAMMOCK.
The Americus Lumber Co.
t. 0.. AMERICUS, QA. MILL, 0ATEW00D, GA.
—. Donlors and Manufacturers of
Yellow Pine Lumber.
Orders or calls left at Bank of Sumter will be promptly
attended to.
8rpt M-lmth-d w
T. GLOYEIt,
(UNDER TNE OPERA HOUSE.;
SECTS THE PUREST AND BEST lilt A NDS OF
LIQUORS, WINES, BEER, TOBACCO AND CIGARS,
Gun*, Mhetls. Loading Implement*. Klc.
U afford* bln great pleaattre to announce to bi« friend* that he Is here to serve
then. When you want anything In hia Hoe, call at bla vtore and get it.
• UK KKEPH THE HBgT.
DECADENT INSTITI
French Market
Its Departing Glory.
The glcrics of the French
New Orleans have been told ter
lifencra*.Iona. Tho time has aeemlnglf
ioao jvhei its retjuieni !a to
The French market I* »H.m in all lit
peculiarity of shape ami stall offering*.
Thoro arc the same golden heapa of
orange* from the Indian river, lemon*
from Messina nnd California, tropleat
prape* with their purple color *o rleh
in them that nothing- imperial Cto**r
ex or wore could vlo with their beauty.
Pyramid* of yellow squashes from th®
Louisiana low land* and beau* and
beet* and berries in endless profusion
nnd confusion. Thero la tho same
noisy chatter of foreign tonffnes, there
in noailiiuinution of tHo crowds who
dicker nnd chaffer around the wooden
stalls, but. according to the Philadel
phia Press, tho glory of tho market,
the old creoles, tho beauteous maiden*
with a stout “mammy’’ nnd a chunky
I negro l>oy, baskot-ladoned, lagging
after them; a slender, wiry, nervous
man with n gray-haired colored man
trudging along at hia sido with basket
filled with tho good thingaof the earth
—all are gone nnd tho.French market
is French now in nothing lmt name.
Another tonguo is fast supplanting tho
liquid tone* of tho languago of old
Franco. Tho Italian*, dark-hued,
scowling men, with Acre® Neapolitan^
and Corsican oath* In their beard*}
stout women of swarthy race, heavy
feature;;, bare nrms and ponderous girth
stand and call their good* and ware*
to the passer-by. Thcso aro the peo
ple known by the discriminating sail
ors and caroloR* ^mcricaiyjfi
goes," and they
ket
To those who havo never seen th®
French mnrkot in its glory it may b®
said that it is simply n succession of
roofs upheld by great, square, squatty
pillars of brick work beyond Jackson
square*nnd within a stone’s toss of th® (
yellow Mississippi. Its proximity to
the old French quarters of New Or
leans; tho fact that in its bcginnU>«
and at its zenith it wa* tho grand basar
of tho creoles of antebellum and post-
bellum days, and that evon now in ita
decadence tho flavor of ita former
prestige in tho market* of tho world
still clings to it in tho strange and fas
cinating tongue of tho emigres, make*
it a place worth visiting. There wa* a
time \vhen these great vaulted anm-Je*
were peopled with men and w'4en,
black and white, rich and poor, all of
whom spoke tho pathos that George
W. Cal’* has enshrined In “Old Creole
Days." Then were tho times when th®
Marchandes were picturesque, figure*
in the midst of the wealth of color
stood ont in glaringmassen, front
known edible product.ofAh* vegetable
[world, against the black background
of the old buildings themselves. Those
were days worth recalling. Those were
tho times when tho mighty racer* of
tho Mississippi, tho Leo and Natchez,
vomited volumes of block smoko from
smokestack alcoves, while down below
a dozen darkles were passing coal, and,
as tho legend goe», smash lug up ticrcea
| of hams to feed tho flames, with a
hundred-and-forty-pound rousta
bout roosting on tho safety valve. It
was in this period tha^tho French
market was at its best, butfeho racers
will race no more ax in tho day.
and tho beauteous maidens ani*
> and gentle matrons <
creole days aro sleeping in th®
liuyou cemetery. |
mm
■ .... .