Newspaper Page Text
THE ENTERi’Ui^E.
----
=rr:
KLLAY1LLK, OA., SE1*T. 16, iswi,
A. J. IU*», phUtqp S"d l , roiirlt)tor.
FOR GOVERNOR.
JOHX 13. GORDON.
FOR CONGRESS ■
8 b l>., DIHT.,
CHAS. F. CRISP.
FOR TAX COLLECTOR.
T Adidate HKRERY announce my name as ean-
for the office of' ln.\ Collector
for Schley iii .January county at the Will approaching lie
election next. very
thankful to the voters of Selflny county
to give me their support,
aid I j M. R. M'N.V.
FGIi SHERIFF.
The friends of William Allen announce
liis name as candidate for .Sheriff of
Schley county at the approaching elec¬
tion iii January next.
FOR NHF.RIFF.
pandidale 1 rcspeetluily the annouiiee mv name mm
for office of sheritf «d
Schley county at the ensuing election in
January next. 1 ,. A.tlti.Ks.
A Hanoi NO in Butler to-mpfrow
(Friday.)
The Hawkins (ippse in Amcrieus
ft first class hqtel closes fqf want of
patronage.
The president bps appointed
Judge Manning, of {,puisiana, as
piinisterto Mexico to succeed Gen-
Jackson-
An artesian wplj tit Belle Plain,
Iowa, has hurst, throwing a stream
pf water 10 inches in diameter
hundreds of feet in the air, forming
fwo rivers, washing houses away
pntl drowning people.
The Quitman Free Press and
Rainbridge Remoerat are conduct¬
ing the Congressional campaign
nvith as much vigor as ever. The
ftoys sliould call a ltalt and save
then- ammunition for two years
fience.
W i: arc glad to note tlut4Col. U.
W. Hancock of the .Sumter Repub¬
lican, takes control of that paper
alter being disconnected with it for
several months. He is the pioneer
pf journalism in Southwest Georgia
and lias done more perhaps for
Amcrieus than any mail Unit has
ever lived in it. Wo hope a bright
future awaits him and that his last
days may be his best.
I'clicc Creek Thirty Years Ago
anil Now.
Uchee creek rises in the western
part of Schley county winds
down between a chain of low hills,
till it forms a junction with the
angry waters of Buck creek. Tliir-
ty years ago this ci e -k tineaded |ts
way through an almost unbroken
furest, and its many deep pools
teemed with fish. In some of tlu-
piostfertilespots a few early settlers
jiad built log cpbins, and cleared
a small platt in the vicinity, which
being fresh required but liriie work
to make it produce freely. This
ground was planted in porn and
pther grains necessary for the sub-
stance of man. The woods were
full of game which made living
cheap, and manner of obtaining it
/acimiting to those early woods
craftsmens. The trusty rifle from
the little square windows in the
hack of these primeval cabins, has
often felled a huge- turkey gobler
«»' "" "r ii ! ii " c "' 1 ’-
I lie people had few \\ ants, that were
m,t ..Sly satlstted, which offi-rcKsl
much time for the sports of the day.
The “pig path” and “cow trail” were
the most frequented roads of travel,
as by them could be reqehed the
nearest point to the “Piney-woods
Grocerv ” This was tlu-condition
iilon^ the creek, but out on the
ridges and along the “stage road”
were large farms owners,' wpjl tilled by trus-
t.vslaves whose were weal-
thy and prosperous. A few years
latcr a mania for going n west struck
these creek settless, and many
turned west warn! Such fabulous
stories had been tol<l i>i the frontier,
that some set out and even made
journey in ox cart 1 . To-day early'settlers there
is hardly ogu of those
left. Their places have been filled
by a more energetic people a pen-
pie who have filled the forests,
*■“* «*•
are enjojing all the privileges of
modern ' civilization.
Memory does dot unfold to me he,
record till several years later than
the time ehout whieh it, thot record
IJfliid many incidents of interest. I
was born and have been raised near
Uchee creek. As a boy I hunted
the ’possum, and spent many an
hour around the “fish holes” at
night little earing whether I
caught a fish or not, so interested
was I in the many legends and
witch stories as related i.y the “sla-
very time negreos’who were always
my companions on tiiese occasions.
Space wdl not permit me to write
more at present, but by permission
hereafter, as they are connected
With other characters I may intro-1
duce, relate some of the uiQgtW
resting of these stories, which 11
have not yet s^en in print. C. ;
t-
I
Fm'Ipm, l.n w -suit*.
Southron Cultivator.
j Nqt |pt)K agi, “lloh hoy,” in
;t mnnHjve form t»Tiv«* an account
of “The Line Felice suits” in a cir-
euit court of Alabama. TJ)c case
had been on the docket for four
years, but at each sessjoi) of the
court, on motion of one side or the
other, had been continued to the
next term.
The plaintiff qnd the defendant
were planters n hose lands adjoined.
Both estates wcfi- large, iiuipbering
thousands of acres. Both men were
of high Htamling in the community,
educated, aeeo>jiulisf)pd and influ¬
ential.
A sinjrje fence, about two miles
in length, had formerly separated
the plantations,and had been jointly
kept in rep-dr by their respective
owners. But the cattle of one hav¬
ing broken over the fence into a
Held of the other, and !i hired man
having injured or killed some of the
trespassers, ill feelings sprang up
over the occurrence between the
two neighbors which culminated in
ft ijuarrel am| f|ie disagreebleagree¬
ment that eneh should build and
maintain a sc; erate fence immedi¬
ately alongside the other’s, Hut
i even this double protection did not
prevent marauding cows, owned by
the plaintiff in the case, from break¬
ing into tiie defendant’s field where
they were killed and for which the
plaintiff hftd brought suit. Rut un¬
der the amending skill of the law¬
yers complaints and cross-bills had
increa-.nl until they included the
entire two miles qf double fencing
and the dividing line between the
the two properties, and the princi¬
pals to tlu> suit had become alienat¬
ed and for four years, though resid¬
ing but a few rods apart, and this
in the country, had never spoken
to each other.
In (lie fourth year of this ;i}jtna-
tion a new judge- had been, appoint¬
ed for the circuit and before him
the case which, from its long
continued presence in court,
remit detl of “Jarndyce,” was at
lasts .untied for trial with both sides
announcing ready. Each had gone
to considerable expenc.se in the re-
taining of counsel amj the employ-
ment of engineers for surveying the
lands and drawing maps of them
for enlightening the court and jury.
Kcores of witnesses htnl heed sunt-
moned by either side and the coin-
mimity for miles around, in one
manner or uno»!ter, become involv-
td in the issues of the case, were
now filling the court.
Several hours had been consumed
in obtaining a jury and other preli-
m in ary work, when the taking of
evi<, ‘‘ lue for tl,e P ,ai »tiff was about
to proceed. At this juncture the
presiding judge, a Rian of fine and
noWe bearing, asked the attorneys
to desist a few minutes as he had
something to say hearing on the
~ When the lawyers were seat-
ed the judge, leaning forward, said:
“ r ^ xve » ,n inquiry-indecd a re-
<luest ~ to II,ake of the P ar,, * 8 >
l'ioi'diff and defendant, in this suit;
1 fepl as if l \ ,lly8( ' lf t R’P !l sense >
a ,, '' r L y to || a,ul “O' deeply con-
eerned uyer it. Beat w ith me w ole
explain mj interest in it.
Leaning a little further forward,
with an elbow on the bench and the
hand of that arm at his face, the
Judge resumed:
“Forty years ago there lived in
the community w here np\v reside
the plaintiff and defendant, three
meo who were neighbors and
friends. Tiie home of either was
two, frt the Tf tt lanidics were almost as
oner«...Uy 1.. their .m-cti..., f„r ....
another. In each tannly there was
*> son- Three boys, of about the
same age prattled together a* chii-
dren, in youth attended school, or
played truant together, and in
young manhood wore more as
orotnors tmui iieignuor.s. . , .
“The lines ran in pleasant places.
All that parental tondness and
Ananflal competency could supply
was theirs, and it is not unlikely
that their fathers looked with eyes
of . pleasing < . anticipation ......... to their
throe sons succeeding them, not
only in fortunes, but in jointure ot
friendship which had long Round
them together.
“The hoys were each about six-
teen years of age when the father of
one was t«Hen from the happy circle
1 lie two school mates of the borenv-
to.m liimstlf. .Vt tlu btuial in !l!! uir
little church-yard on yonder liill,
their tether, were an,on B the poll-
bearers. Two 'see,.,,,! years went by and
the f.Ou-f of » of the top
was laid very nearly alongside the
one had gone first, and a little
Hter the father of the third follow-
«*d The three neighbors in life
were qei^hbors again in the little
(lead.
The boys of whom have spoken
are now men well uJpng in years.
One ls the plaintiff in this case, an-
other the defendant and the third
i» the presidyig judge. The on-
coming of this trial has weighed
heavily on me of late. Last even-
after my arrival by train from
in >’ home, a few hoars distant, I
walked over to the Uttie graveyard
beside the church, with U)e little j
school house Just across «,e road;,
the fhurf}) in wltb'h <>ur father*and
mother* w<>r«hip together—the lit-
tic academy where we three boys
llrsl attended school. The nig.it
the three marble slabs hearing the
names of our fathers brought vivid-
ly before me those old days when,
with our arms locked about eaph
other’s necks hi the mo«i jqotlfurly
; wiiy, we walked hoijietyard from
j school, each so fuj of devotion to
t|io other tv,’Q fRut he would
assailed any fourth hoy saying
ought Ogains%i#m.”
(Concluded next week.)
(ft”; -S—*.
■
Prohibition was (lefoated in Chat¬
tooga county.
In Dacota a pretty maid of I(>
drives a stage.
Frost in Onondago county N. Y..
Wednesday night.
Cholera reports from Italy,72 new
cases and 52 deathft.
Cholertt reports in Italy yesterday
89 new cases, 41 deaths.
A man in Ht. Louis shot his son-in-
law dead in a law' office
A fine new hotel is to be built at
once in Brunsw ick, Ha.
The great French scientist, Cheu-
reul, is 100 years old to-day,
A dress-maker at liar Harbor lias
fallen heir to 1100,000,00(1 in England
Three hundred Mormon immi¬
grants arrived in N. V., Wed ties,
day,
Not a brick building in Charles¬
ton escaped injury by the eartl)-
qauke.
Two deaths from yellow fever Sun-
day tit Bixoli, Miss., and 8 other ea¬
ses.
Real estate in Columbus, Ga., in
six months lias increased in value
2o per cent.
The total of defalcation* by U. 8.
government officers since 18(51 is
*«•> -cm- mo, 4 i- / 7 r 0 48 iq
. ,
., _ <- “‘atham, postmaster
'
' a> n 1 * ,in "’ * i<l * ( * n L v
Ur,s ,n ^ ! ■
Prof. Rutherford’s house, Athens,
Ga., was burned to the ground, Fri-
night; loss -^5,000.
The „nti-prohibitionist of Upson
bounty, Ga, have nominated acan-
<li(iate for th( . legislature,
Two >’» un K ,adit ‘ 9 - of Manchester,
N ' H - kil le(1 |>y poisonous strawbor-
flavoring . in ice cream,
An explosion in a colliery near
Scranton, Pa., killed five men and
injured 2, probably fatally,
Two <jk , ODe ftt Augusta,
(j a ; anf j ooe Athens, died from
the fright of the earthquake,
Gen. Cha tham’s , , las words . were:
‘There go the troops; bring me ,ny
l,or8e ; 1 a,n B oin K l,> the fro i'L
A woman, of 40, near Nashville,
Tenn., weighing 80 pounds, died of
fever, leaving 20 living children,
A mortgage for $1,500,000 against
tlie rt oine & Uarrolton raiiroad, has
been recorded in Polk county Qa.
he damage to public ant. private
property in Uliarlaston, was estuna-
“< ■ «» f12,o<>0,000, and 8,>00 persons
left the city.
Three persons in Augusta, Ga.,
have been crazed by the earthquake
shock, one of whom blew his bruins
out.
«b«»«y * «-nih. um t
^ j, ^ and 7 of the “’0 liuiiguri'tn la
(kiat ‘ j s '
A hark from Aspiinvall is oft
Pensacola, Fla., with seven cases of
yellow lover, one lher past- having
proved fatal.
Youn<^ Adam Forc-}>nugh has a
] l( , r , se , 14V, hands higlnveighing 800
pdiinds, that walks a rope 20 feet
from the ground.
ere were three rai road , wrecks ,
between 1 1 Augusta and t barleston
utM a ^ UIJi kl Ul " vvo eil ^ 1 • ‘
A gentleman at HogansyUle,Ga.,
shot at the earthijuake, thinking
that a mob of burglars were attack-
ing it is house to rob him.
A fugitive prisoner, who killed
q 0 p r( t v sheriff while attempt-
"*">™ i ' lur " «* *»»«• <*
Greenvill, Texas.
battle i,, R.mmeli, yeeterdey
between acllierents ot 1 mice Alex-
muter, ufBu'Borh,, the revolt,.
U ( . instfi j G»e latt< r wut w-h-ateU.
Prince Alexander has again deei-
ded to abdicate, topreveid the occu-
pution of Bulgaria by fi»e Russians
and to preserve its independence.
Loss ;ff $2OH,0(J0 from the burning
of a p „i ace cav slied.Jersey
City . ., l)tl nf 25]000 , )V t m. burnili ;,.
oft h e tobacco exchange .Petersburg
Va
An eightee,.-months-old child
died of starvation in N. Y. while ^he ;
mo.ther a widow was on ft drunken
spree; she carried the child atbprlu
with her some time after it was
dead.
south and North Carolina, Alaba-
ni«, TenneHHee, Virginia, Mlgjijjfitii,
Ohio, 1-Vninyl veil ia, Ne>y V«>rk,
Florida, Kentucky, West Virginia
till arp lepoftecj u.-s t baring ill the
i earthquake.
^ # public meeting, citizens of
Atlanta subscribed *1,.>27 for llw re-
u t .f 0 ( charleston, 1’rollers of aid
I are se „^ ( 0 city irom all jmrls
j 0 f the country,
i
Airs. Elizabeth llocigcrs, a wouum
of.'fit anil 1 lie mother pill children
has hcci) appointed Master
i mail of one of the districts of the
Knight* of Labor in Chicago,
■ All places on the Mobile and N.
O. railroad have officially quaran¬
tined against Biloxi where the yel¬
low fever prevails, except Missis¬
sippi City, and there the people have
established “ashot-gun quarantine”
of their own.
A man who attacked Ciurksville
Ga., in the papers, is told by certain
citizens of the town that his advice,
as “a two-for-a-nickel-dudc,” lias
no r,l,ir e weight with the travelling
public than the dust upon the tail-
feathers of a loose carrion crow'.”
_____
li/T W ii\i Ivfnioi-e taking th.-m at anything for the else lu by st
un agency
-ucceeil g.'itnph selling look None out, fall. Terms llegitmers free
RfjoK .
HALLE IT < < >. l»ortlaml l Miiiim
BUFHA VISTA HOUSE,
BUENA VISTA, GEORGIA.
, ‘" u< ’
ll ffi!!4s. > Ae^m.^lmioo^oodrtr!a^dm
in every respect. JIates reiisonable.
J B. Felder. NI erriil Vnjlnwfty.
FELDER \ CALLAWAY,
GENERAL AGENTS,
AMEBIC ITS, C 3 -A
Ol li HPEtTALTIICS: Real E 4 ate, Im
sttrane *, Lpaus and 1 ’roduee llroUer-
age.
— ('.iricshnndence Solicited.—
In scm.i-n srfKar.on corirr surra
TfiliM i
i>. I.. M.-.sskv, Tr.msforee, i Uifi-Nisi
of Hank ur VMKRft OS. vs i to forc;:lu:-t-
J. I-; ai-t! 7 .. T. Wo.MAfK. , mortgage.
MitciiK t, Rt:irrojr,ne«-tq:>ton'
Tt heiugrt-presented to th.-tnurt by Hie
tern-of o .--going Hank petition of of inerieus < J L Massey, that said trails cJc-
A Seiik"
feudant..- J K and V. T W omack of T
county promiss (Ed execute for to > ;<i«t nuiidied piaiili!’V;t|iefi
ty note one
thirty duo (Mini's dated 111', r! tv ofi'Vb. lv-s
and enOct lsi. ;iiei..u.f'.,«r payable to
Hank of Americas or I m-:u or and ihc hi-t-
ter to soeuve the ys-.yi: v..t of this
sum, did upon the same
day Hank execute tin-b-certain and tl -liver deed to mM
moriLrag - upon
tiie cast file of lot of ',. 1 I -1 No. i 15 - 1 ) oit.
hundred and lift,) -four in JUth Dist. of
d fcJchley red ennniy twenty-tivo fontniitirg 125 - cut- hue less
am! acres more or
being a ;:-i !of the l, G .Sinith old place
and it appearing the that there is dm, upon
said mortgage sum of (.f 130 . 0 )) one
hundred, and tV.ivty dollars and !..r 30 .(H)i
thirty dollars dollars intbiv-af .foes. gild Whei-eforo 13 .IX); thir¬
it teen is ordered attor-jii-y, that stud defendants(lppity
into court by the I <t day of tlit itoxt torni
or show cause to t’.,e contrary if any they
liave why the principal interest mid at¬
torneys fees and in default thereof tlu,
mortgage equity of redemption will forever in and ho (o this
property barred) fore¬
closed and Tt is furtliurordered
that this rule be published once month
for four months before next tenn of this
court in the Sumter Itepublican as re
quired by Allen in", fejiteinhcr Fort, .). Term C. !S. W.C, 1 ssfi.
ts.
It appearing to the- court Ufis rule lias
not Ilet-n \ ed b.v puljlii-atior. as requir¬
ed by th. rule or oi liervv , -,* served anil if
further appearing that Use legal »dv< ir-
tisii the g of chley i Ito county i« Slew published
in ; Conisty J-.ntliu-iiish a
new spa l.i r i \ib'isli<-t4 ,n Schley (.-guilty.
11 is ordered by the court that serrii-e
• if Ibis rule la- j erfeted Try puhlictuion in
said Schley lor‘four ( ountv E.iterprise once a
liionlh months bc toie die next
term of this court. March 'I'erm lfui.
Allen Fort, J. s. r. >s. tv. c.
A true extract from til,- minutes, May
lfitli, 1 --S 6 . J. X. C'hi.nbv, clerk.'
..........t-T
Mattik IlAi;Tand J K - for’closemort- ivtition.*ml
a V'NVmoYxs'nmls <
A* Ai.i.cms. 1 L-'-ul-t'Av - gage, Sclik-y
arts?dtft Mpp'-iuii" mV he the puti-
ceased that Amu* Wiggins »i' said comi-
(hi.vofseptoiniii-ri.sTst.exeeutedaiidde- livcrcd toiianici F. Hart, iiim-tgageoii
a
iVit't'I-tst-ou-y t'llo plauof
district IVs.'itj anV'iwkcontiiiniiig as vyt*»tjialf <*F lot No onetlwusim! 173 f south
twelve and one half acres more or lew,
tluTO Lciiiff one acre reserved where the
tuinilv yard now is and the right of
,*? th'e** l P “&
^curing pa.vnient date of
promissory notesof same witlimort-
lie paid baU in the sf^lo^iiddli^ city of Oolurn-
cotton to
bus, thirty Gt., the other live notes above rack
tor bales of cotton shuio m
due Nov lag ism, Nov 1st, lss-g,
>'«v ls b lhs: )i N<>v i8»4>Nov 1st,
am>eurii(K diat said cotton was rea-
^j dollars at ed\orffYa^nvowi*^'vThe^innoDixty bale the
k ^ ,ak per si avT^i makinig sum of nine
‘ , us ni andT5
- d s p AHums
fulled and refused to del i ver the said cot-
Ih^forto
part thereof and still ret uses to puv the
SAllums into i- this dWSatt court
fief the pay first day of the on or
-to m-xtterm of
dc-fanltwi thereof the court will proceed
provided by law. ,v i.i.i:n Four,
mattik II utr and j , ’Fotviosoiliort- St-iiloy
R Rkmpahm, f gage, sn-
yiios K^vmoixs^of John’ I - <nil" Nisi,March ' ,(,uvt
Schley cu. s Term 1 18 W.
It being made to appear to tho court
‘^not'been^ VwinXve lervl^ ‘wiih^S.pyir'il"
staiM ‘rf/Ab.lrtma'"
IT rT-’idcnt^-'uw tf It
tnuu-4 ti',1 the next Term ot tluscu;\n
}S{J n th g. t
said nisi in tin- Schu-y i •minty Enter-
prise,
court. This March 2iiU»
w. H. McOin.-nY, Pinimiff uitorncy’s.
i8^ true “ ,rttt ' t 1 T
... ,
, \ M F R I 0 A N F A R M E ||
FREE
TO ALL OL T K SUBSCRIBERS!
Farmer^ •?/ s ' } ~ "i ■ ■*
. ,
"T i read the American m*- rf*
m “. 9K[ IT HAS MADE ME PROSPEROUS WITH AMO HAPPY. I DONT READ ANY,
| GET IT FREE cfe -s, NOT EVEN MY COUNTY Wwb
MY COUNTY PAPER.
I ; £ j,* IT DONT PAY.
§ ■ ■* ; ' Jk ^ySpillte V 1
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All our subscribers who will pay their subscription accounts to
this paper in full to da te, and one year in advance, will
be presented with one year’s subscription to the
> sixteen- page Agricultural Magazine, published by E. A. llaekett, Hi Fort IVayne, Indiana and which is rapidly taking
■ liIlk as out e of the leading Agricultural pul ilient ions of the country. It is devoted exclusively to t lie iiO, crests of the 'Parmer
Stock Breeder, Hairy man, Hardener, and their household, ami every species or industry connected with that great por
turn, f t lie people of the world, the Fanners. The subscription price is One hollar per t ear. Ujii iners cannot well get
a '< tig without it. It puts new idea into their minds. It teacher them how to i'ai in with profit to themselves. Il makes
the hoim happy, the young folks cheerful, (lie growler contend, the down east happy, and the demagogue honest,
AI llw ()ld Wuoden JOHN Drug 1+1. Store. ii A LL. the Post {H'i‘ictn
near
Amerlcus, Georgia.
DRUGS, MEDILINES, CII'ElVIICALS.
Fine Toilet Soaps, Brudu-s, Ilonlhs, M.
PERFUME“ AN” Fm TM-LET .‘HE'W‘LES,
IN GRE .‘T VA IIIETY.
Noxmm.,-I.:'?.¥si‘,$3€‘aIixETETi'S'Ifif‘i‘LKIa‘hcm’m’ly ("’"“"""'d°d’__i
DIXON BROTHERS.
Dry Bonds, Groceries, Provisions, Ebthing, Hunts. Sham
Crockery, Hardware and Furniture.
s26-ly. Ellaville, Ga.
•V^UU.UUUspiivi eODFWRVIin ptVsots .is K i ve n7wa7 postaire’
s cents
!i!f'i^Hi^f work S that jrge will vabmahHt titim. 6 wfif
v mi m at hriiiK
[-wanted everywiierfl, oif either sex'of all
j tunes for all w«>-k.-rs absolutely Htlsiired
10 THt PLANTERS OF SCHLEY and AOJOIMISfi COUNTIES
Having- rented the Warehouse of W, I) Murray for the coming season
I beg leave to call your attention to the same, and respectfully asking of
a liberal share of patronage. Having an experience of eighteen years in
the Warehouse business, I flatter myself that 1 understand it.
I shall endeavor ut all time* to get Amcrieus prices for cotton, wiiji-li
can be done, save the difference in freight which :tmounts to about onp
eighth of a cent per pound. My charges will he the same as Aniericus
charges, fifty cents for storage, twenty-five for extra storage, and tvv -utv-
five cents per bale for selling. But any farmer has a right to sell his own
cotton and I shall at all times render hint any assistance lean in sodding,
1 have employed .Mr. J. 11. Gaines as rqy seals -man, lie having been in
the employ of Mr. W. 1). Murray for two past seasons. I believe lie is a
man that will stand perpendicular between the buyer and seller
I have engaged Mr. Murray to look after tiie warehouse business until
1st of September, being compelled to look after and wind up my business
in Aniericus, \ then come among you as a citizen, and all I ask of vnu
is a fair trial. Respectfully Yours,
W. 11. TONPEE.
aciOHi
COLLINSVILLE JBlRAl SPRINGS,
COLLINSVILLE, A L A.
I be. e .springs are just one mile roui depot in the alx-vo town convenient tothe
resident ■ .
portion <>t the town. One i>, i-halvboate the other is sulphur. They arc nq
more t ban fifty feet apart. Roth spring* are noted for tfio cunitive qualities of their
Gian s\ stein that needs building of the hie
up, this water can’t ]>e beat.
The Sulphur Spring
rll mBTo« a aG"?n edf, T, the< ‘ ,, . r ' , - Mve ,q''?l it0S of its >" all female disorder*
The Mountain Scenery is Simply sublime I
fineYree^AtaurVTaYcan^ Collinsville In, ilS
'Jsxi01o£
S10.00 to $15.00 per month.
Kll, ‘' i 1 '"' Ga All Inquire* aA‘
where you change ears and goon the A (Ls‘ij^ m ^"" or - v thente Biriiiinghum,
TO WHOM IT MAI CONCERN.
.noRiii M
g : l
[a
us
I v
V, *
___________ _ w .+•< V
1 The»e-
relier kJIlKHfflE «toubd of
free. Pill*. Plod out about them oaoh box la woi-.a tuliiui tha oo.t a hot
bfterydan’s mmcagm Condition
Powder is abHolutftfy ^ & Birr iiruh bwSM-S
iSW.JSSSKW asntrated. pure and tiiarlxly OneounceH con-K ■ mm
Bg2g ”J55f [;. xt i?
™ ■ _ ------ ff _ in book goiti. ny mill rilu8Wat«a frf*u J;
a 1-4