Newspaper Page Text
The henry county weekly
CONSOLIDATED JANUARY 1,1591.
VOL . XV.
niIOFESSIO.XA L CA UI>S.
j |«e. i». nuniiiM.
DENTIST.
Ml'hoNOl <i II 4 1a
Any ont* lU-sirimr work tlnm* <*:»» •*<* ac
rommo«l:tN-d uithur l»v :*allirjs 0,1 ~,4 ‘ *** por
eon or iotiirossiiyir no* through Ihc mails 1
I'crms cash, unlesg special arranf?v*mcuts
arc otherwise made.
Gv.n W. Bit van 1 NV.T. Dioken.
It IS V A A: IMMtI
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
MrDosorcii, Ga.
Will practice in the counties composing
I he Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
ei Georgia aml’the United States District
Court. ° apr27-lv
| A*. 11.
attorney at law,
McDonough, Ca.
Will practice in the counties composing
Ihe Flint Circuit, the Supreme. Court of
Georgia, and the United States District
Court. marl 6-1 y
g iti: t<; \>.
attorney at law.
McDonough, Ca.
Will practice in all the Courts of Georgia
Special attention given to commercial and
other collections. Will attend all the Courts
it Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over
fur: Wkuklv office.
j l\ WALL
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonouuh, Ga .
Will practice in the counties composing the
Flint Judicial Circuit, and the Supreme and
District Courts <# Georgia. Prompt attention
givm to collections. oct. r >-’79
W A. IlltOWI,
* ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in all the counties compos
ing the Flint Circuit, the Supreme Court of
Georgia and the United States District |
Court. janl-ly
Ij * WKKJPI.KH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hampton, Ga,
Will practice in all the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court |
of Georgia and the District Court of the [
United States. Special and prompt atten
tion given to Collections, OctS, 18H8
Jno. 1). Stkavart. j K.T. Danikl.
mriIHAKT A immi:i..
ATTOKMiYS AT LAW,
Giukkin, Ga.
| Oil A I YU.
• ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Gate City Natioal llank Building,
Atlanta, Ga,
Practices in the State and Federal Courts.
East Tbe Vlrpua Ha,
R'Y.
IS THE ONLY
SHORT AND DIRECT LINE
TO THE
NORTH, SOUTH,
EAST AND WEST.
PULLMAN'S FINEST VES
TIBULE SLEEPERS
B ET w k k n
ATLANTA & KNOXVILLE
MACON & CHATTANOOGA
BRUNSWICK & ATLANTA
u I'l'iioi rnnM«i-
Direct Connections at Chat
tanooga with Through
trainsandPullman Sleep
ers to
Memphis and the West,
al Knoxville will*
WleeperM lor
WASHINGTON,
PHILADELPHIA,
AND NEW YORK.
FOR FI'RTHKR INFORMATION ADURKSS,
b.w.wrenn, chas. n.kicht
drii'l. I’a!». As A.< . I*. A.
KNOX VI 1.1. F. ATLANTA
(irorgin Vli«llan«i A Wnlfß.K.
SOI Til.
Leave McDonough *;“•
Arrive Greenwood ... 1
» Griffin *■<»•' “
NORTH.
Leave Griffin JP;»
Arrive Louella M
• Greenwood
“ McDonough 5:0o “
M. E. GRAY. Snp't.
Highest of all in-Leavening Power.—U. S. Gov’t Report, Aug. 17, 1889.
HqvD Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
AN IDEAL HOME.
A home of comfort and delight
Of calm content and happy days,
Of joys,
Of simple pleasures, simple wavs.
The husband and the wife are one,
United by the sweetest ties,
He, ever ready to sustain,
She, ever quick to sympathize.
And as home intimacy grows,
Showing their taults unseen before,
They do not love each oilier legs
Because they know each other more.
Without, a sheltered garden lies,
All dear, old-fashioned How'rs grow
there;
Ca nations, johnquils, stocks, sweet peas
And roses clustering everything.
And when the hard day’s business done,
The happy husband homeward hies.
A perfect picture waits him there,
For loving heart and tired eyes.
A woman standing by the gate
With smiling lip and eager air,
Love’s sunshine lighting up her face,
Lsberimtns dropping on her hair,
The child asleep upon her breast,
Docs but enhance the mother’s charms,
Ami with a heart brimful of love,
He takes them both into his arms.
O, you who hasten to be rich,
And stake your very souls for this,
Bethink you, lest, made blind by greed,
You snatch by gold to lose the bliss!
Bad Ems, Prussia. Fai vettk.
OLD TICK ANDERSON
Will Lead His Hrlgaite Once Mora—
Thi*Time to Dinner.
Tige A nderaon’? old brigade is to
have a grand reunion.
And the old man will he there.
There was a meeting of the mem
hers of the old brigade at the court
house on yesterday.
Representatives of the Seventh
Georgia, First Georgia regulars,
Eigth Georgia. Ninth Georgia, Elev
enth Georgia, Fifty-ninth Georgia,
and First Kentucky were present and
arrangements were consumed for a
grand reunion of the entire brigade at
Marietta July 21, 1891.
This will eclipse any reunion this
year, as no pains will lie spared to
make it a success.
Dr. Henry L. Wilson, of the Sev
entli, will preside over the brigade re
union, and short speeches,will be made
by Judge George 11 illyer, of the Ninth
and ex Governor McDaniel, of the
Eleventh, Colonel Peter F. Smith, of
the Seventh, Colonel John Milledge'
of the First Georgia regulars, Colette)
John C. Reed, of the Eighth, Major
T. F. Jones, of the First
and bv others of the brigade. All
necessary committees were appointed.
It will he a basket dinner, and all old
veterans are invited.
This will he an ovation to Tige An
i derson, who will be present. Resold
\ lions were adopted requesting Geor
gia papers to notice tins affair, etc.
For Over Fifty Years.
It lias been said that skilful adver
tising will accomplish wonders, and
ibis is partly true, for it is no uncom
mon thing to see various nostrums
achieve a brief notoriety in in this
way. But they do not outlast the
notices that herald them- Thus it is
that the mercurial and potash reme
dies are constantly appearing liefore
the public in new disguises; Adver
tising, however, will not account for
the popularity that S. S. S has enjoy
ed for fifty years, nor for the fact that
it has become a household remedy ;
nor will advertising account for the
thousands of testimonials that the
people have given in its behalf Only
the most sub.-tantial merit can account
for the estimation in which this won
derful medicine is held.
Mr. T. 1). Tinsley, of the firm of S.
U. Jaques it Tinsley, Macon, Ga.,'says :
1 consider Bradvcrotine a great med ; -
citie. and the manufacturer a public
benefactor.
Hunt’s Cure rapiidlv destroys
Itch. Ringworm, Eczema, l etter, and
like troubles. Under its influence tbe
diseased cuticle scales off. leaving a
smgoth, white, healthy skin in its
place. A wonderful remedy and only
; oO cents per box
AND HENRY COUNTY TIMES.
McDonough, ga.. Friday, jut-y b. i߻i.
A LAWYER’S MISTAKE.
How He Killed the Ooose that Laid the
Golden Egg.
When the lawyers meet ou the cir
cuit and gather about the hotels at
night usually you can hear some of the
liest stories going, and often they are
told at the expense of their own frater
nity. This one was told in Valdosta
this week.
On one occasion two old farmers,
near neighbors and friends, fell out
about a pair pf andirons, aqd no
amount of talk could bring them to
an agreement. Neighbors interfered
and tried to settle the matter iu vain.
At last one of the men went to the
country town to employ a lawyer.
When he called at the office he • was
very much disappointed when lie learn
ed that the lawyer had been retained
by the other farmer, “but,” said the
lawyer, “I have a friend over iu—,
who is as good a lawyer as I am, and
he will take your case and represent
you faithfully and well. I will give
you a note to him.”
The farmer put the lute in his pock
et, went home, rose early the next
morning and started over’ to the neigh
boring ton 11 to see the other lawyer.
On the road he began to wonder why
the first lawyer had taken so mcuh in
terest in his case, when he was em
ployed by his enemy, so he decided lie
would open the note and read what he
had to say to his brother lawyer. It
read as follows :
I tear Tom :
I have a fat goose
And I send you another
You pick the one
And I’ll pick the other.
The farmer turned his horse around
and headed for home. When he ar
rived at the cross road which led to
liis neighbor’s house, he took it, and
lost no time in finding his man, and
when found they settled their case in
ten minutes —Valdosta Times.
fit Miser’s Murder.
Tbe Atlanta Constitution relates
the following sad and pathetic story.
Years ago, in a Southwest Georgia
county, an old couple, with an only
son, lived in a rude cabin in the woods.
It is related that tbe old man was a
miser, and drove bis son from home to
make bis living in the world at a very
tender age.
Years passed and the boy was given
up by bis parents, they thinking that
be was dead.
One stormy night a tall, bearded
stranger knocked at the door of tbe
little cabin, and asked for shelter.
It was gru Igiugly given him by tbe
obi couple, but when the stranger
showed them a bag of gold which he
carried in his valise, they were over
joyed.
That night, as the guest lay sleep
ing the old man crept to his side. There
was the glitter of a keen blade in jthe
darkness, then-
When morning came the old wo
man looked on the dead man’s face
and screamed wiih terror.
“God have mercy on us !” she cried
“We have killed our Imy—our son
that was lost!”
It was so. They luid not recog
nized him when iie entered, and prob
ably thought to deceive them until
morning, and then have a happy fam
ily reunion.
Growth of the Hair After Death.
Tbe body of E. M Haskell, who
lias been dead for over twenty years,
was recently removed from bis grave, at
Northfield, Mir.n., it being purptosed to
put tbe body in another lot. When
bis body was exposed it was found
that he bad a beard over twenty-three
inches long. llis wife said that before
he died he bad been shaven, and all
his hair must have grown after bur
rial.
Tasteless Ca-tor Oil. What a bless
ing. No longer will golden bribes be
offered or corporal punishment inflicted
as a persuasive for children to swallow
a dose of castor oil. Cheatham's Taste
less Castor Oil is taken hy them with
delight. They cry for it. Pi ice 24
pipts.
OUR NEIGHBORS.
What is Going 011 in the Comities
Around Us.
* *
*
Sl’Al.lUNii COI NI T.
From Ihe Morning Call.
'l'lie people in the neighborhood of
Liberty Hill will spend the 4th of July
by having an all-day singing at that
place. Prof. W. J. Mullins will lead,
and all lovers of sweet music are cor
dially invited to attend.
Jim Moore, the escaped criminal from
the county jail, which was noticed iu
these columns yesterday, has returned
and is again behind tho bars, lie said
he preferred standing his trial than re
maining a fugitive, and lie returned
bright and early yesterday morning
and surrendered to Sheriff Patrick.
Jack Manley, au old negro living on
Mr. B. S. Strickland’s place, in North
Griffin, was killed by lightning yester
day about 1 o’clock. The old man was
sitting iu his cabin door when an elec
tric holt struck his cabin, killing him
instautly. Ills wife was in the house
at the time but sustained no injury. '
A call is published elsewhere for a
re Union of the survivors of the 44th
regiment, Confederate veterans, to be
held in Griffin on the 4th day of August
next. There are a number of members
of thisgallaut regiment Hying in Spald
ing county, and they hope to nit et a
large number of their surviving com
rades on the day designated.'
Yesterday about 1 o’clock while the
old negro janitor was feeding the pris
oners in the jail, who also has the
courthatse under charge, left* he jail to
close sonic windows at the court house,
hut failed to propeily close the prison
doors. As soon as the janitor was he- |
yond hearing the prisoners injthe room
alluded to began the work of escape,
which was an easy matter. Three ne
groes were confined in this cell, one
muider and two with lar
ceny. 'l’lte cell door being opened a
breach was easily made in a partition
wall, when Jack Moore and Andrew
King made their escape There never
was a county more in need of a new
jail than Spalding. The present build
ing is a farce and a reproach upon jus
tice, and it is hoped the County Com
missioners will soon remedy the mat
ter by the erection of a new and secure
prison, win re evil doers can he retain
ed until justice is meted out.
ROCKDAI.K.
From the Banner
Last Monday about 12 o’clock Mrs.
Jas. P. Nicholson of Sheffield district
died of catarrhal fever.
I)r. Quigg will deliver tbe annual
address at tbe Sunday school celebra
tion at Centerville, duly tbe 22m1, in
stead of Elder T. M. Harris, as hereto
fore published.
Mr. Wingate Maddox died last Fri
day evening and was interred at Liber
ty Chapel burins ground last Saturday
evening. His funeral was preached by
Rev. W. S. Hubbard.
On Friday before the first Sunday
in July a Baptist church will he con
stituted and organized at Almon. It
will likely be constituted by I!evs. A.
J. Goss, If. F. Buchanan and J. F.
Wallis.
Mr. T. S. Almand, who lias been
suffering for some time with a badly
cut foot, is now in bed on account of
other sickness. Verily be is having
a bard time.
Mr. Fletcher Statisell, a very prom
ising deaf mute who has been attending
school at Cave Springs, Ga., for a
number of years, is now at home at j
this place He has finished his course i
at Cave Springs. We understand ,
that his father, Mr. .1. J. Statisell, will 1
make an effort to send him to Washing
ton, I). C., where lie may be fitted up
to be a teacher of those of like afflic
tion with himself.
Mrs. Nannie Branan and Mr.
Chailes Wallis w<‘re united inmatriaee
by Rev. W. R. Branham of Oxford
Sunday afternoon at tbe residence of
tbe bride. The happy pair left imme
diately for an extended bridal tour.
The contracting parties are well known
in this section and congratulations and
good wishes were profusely showered
I on the newly wedded pair.
* *
«
Bt'TTrt.
I From the Argus
There will be an all-day singing at
Macedonia on first Sunday in July.
Everybody iuvited to come and bring
well filled baskets.
The crops of Butts county have
worse “ryn away” with grass duting
I the month of June than for many years
before. The ocutiuued rains was the
cause and not for want of industry on
the part of the farmers.
Pleasant View church, a new and
handsome little church building at
Fiucherville iu Butts county, will he
dedicated on the 4th Sunday iu this
month, and an ordination sermon will
he preaciied ou Saturday before the 4th
Sunday,' by Rev. Mr. Kimball,
Let it not he forgotten that the Butts
County Sunday School convention will
he held at Falkland's Chapel on Fri
day before the first Sunday in Au
gust.
It will require 400,000 brick. 400
barrels of lime and 140,000 feet of
lumber to build the Jackson oil mill.
Tho building will be large and all the
appointments will be the finest in Mid
dle Georgia.
Mr. Joe Caston, a young farmer liv
ing near Towaliga, has been sick about
four weeks. During la*t week Ins
neighbors, following up those noble
traits that has ever characterized the
people of Butts county, gathered them
selves together with plows and hoes
ami worked out his entire crops. The
good people of that neighborhood nev
er tire in good doings and at last will
reap their reward. They did right,
A friend in need is a friend indeed.
(’harlie Glass, the accused murder
er of the negro that was found in the
creek near Indian Springs two weeks
ago, is now sleeping in a cell in the
county jail. lie was arrested at Ro
chelle, Wilcox county, by the marshal
of that place and sheriff Beauchamp
was telegraphed for. Mr. Beauchamp
went down on Monday night and
brought him in on Tuesday’s evening
train. An Argus rtqiorter visited him
hul he refused to make a statement for
public.
FAYETTE.
From the News.
Mr. Koht. Rivers, an aged old man
died last Saturday night at 11 o’clock.
Mr C. A. Thornton of Hopeful and
Miss Joanna Jackson of this place were
united in the Holy bonds of Matrimo
ny last Sunday.
Mr, J. M. Dorsey, who has been
quite sick for several weeks, left Tues
day for Atlanta where lie will be treat
ed by a physician of that city.
The union singing that comes off at
llopefui church in < tetoher will he the
higest sinking ever held in Fayette
county.
Hon. Charles L. Moses, of Coweta,
w ill he on hand at the Alliance picnic
next Saturday. Mr. J. L. C'hupp will
also be present on that day.
All our folks who joined the Inman
people in their picnic last Saturday say
that the ladies of that town, as well as
the men, certainly know how to pre
pare for such occasion.
Mr. Robert Ward, who has been
renting land from Mr. C. B. Brogdon
for about 8 years, and rented from him
for the present year, worked it until
the 15th inst, and went to Mr. Brog
don, turned the crop over to him and
left.
We arc sorry to note that Dr. W.
S. Russell, who ha<l about recovered
from a very severe spell of fever, has
been confined to his bed again. At
this writing we learn that he is sonsid
erably better.
The people of this section are count
ing on a nice time the 4th of duly at
the Farmers’ Alliance picnic to be held
at Flat Creek. We have already been
assured by the female members of the
order that there will lie nothing short
in the way of refreshments at aliout
1 2 m.
l’rof. Denton was ir. our office a few
minutes Monday. He looks somewhat
“sun-scorched,” but he is “still in the
ring.” it will be remembered that he
has been bearing-off lumber at a saw
mill about three miles above town for
the past week. All teachers are not as
lazy as we thought.
Mr. d. H. Waller has a calf that will
bear watching; it came up missing a
few nights ago, but was discovered
bright and »oon next morning lying
near the house, completely hooded
witli a bran new bow basket, worth at
least a dollar, and now the question is,
who has lost a basket ?
Ilow l» (ore All NMn His
ruses,”
Simply apply “Swwxt's Ointment.”
No internal medicine required. Cures
tetter, eczema, itch, all eruptions on the
face, hands, nose, Ac., leaving the skin
clear, white and healthy. Its great healing
and curative powers are pose -Sect liy noc
other remedy. Ask your druggist for
Swavxk’s OiM'ut.'f.
WlLLMflTkvro rill: MA.
1 IlilUan'at’iwiiilnil TYIt-|t!inuo la
■ i n ■■«■■■■ 1 (lie Itoai- of
Niiii
j (>llO of the most curious arrauge
-1 incuts contrived by this most curious
man for his persotial amusement aud
gratification is the arrangement which
Mr. Edison calls his “coamical tele
| phone.” Edison owns an iron mine
jat Ogden, N. J. There is a bed of
I magnetic iron ore about a mile long
i and 420 feet wide, which he says runs
down into the earth for five or six
miles. He estt mates the amount of
J iron in the mine at 2,000,000,000,000
: tons. Around Ofiden there is an enor
mous intensification of the magnetic
, forces of the earth. It is a well-known
fact that the daily variations in these
mi gnetic forces, us shown by the nee
dle, are directly influenced by the
disturbances in the sun’s spots.
These variations are tegularly recorded
j every day at Kew, near London. Mr.
Edison says that iu his iron mine near
! Ogden he has more than a million
times the concentration of magnetic
j # 0
lines than there is at Kew. To record
the daily variations iu his own mag
netic lines at Ogden, Mr. Edison lias
constructed his cosmical telephone.
“There are the most wonderful
things going on in tho sun's spots all
the time,” lie says. “Didn’t you ever
see them ? Why, tlioy are beautful.
The disturbances aro tremendous.
Bursts ef hydrogen fly out of these
spots 000,000 miles long. Awful
things happen up there. You can see
them every day willi my telescope.”
To construct his telephone he lias sur
rounded the whole bed of magnetic
iron with poles. On these poles he
lias strung a cable of Fifteen copper
wires. The ends of this cable runs
| down into a little house, and are eon
luected with the ordiaury receive rof a
common Bell telephone. The idea is
that the surrounding of this enormous
bed of magnetic iron with the copper
wires will operate for the formation of
a gigantic magnet such as is used iu
the receiver of the every day telephone.
Through this tremendous receiver
Edison says lie will put in direct tele
phonic communication with tho sun,
only the communica'ion will he one
sided. He can hear everything that
goes on up there, hut he can’t do any
transmitting. He believes that every
disturbance in the sun's spots will
cause a corresponding variation of the
concentrated magnetic lines at Ogden,
and that this variation will be at once
detected in some way by the receiver
of his cosmical telephone.
“Yes, sir,” lie says, “I can hear
them with this telephone. The next
time there is any violeut change in the
sun’s Spots which d'sturh the magnetic
lines on earth I shall know it, and if
000,000 miles of hydrogen go chas
ing away from the sun I shall hear it.”
The cosmical telephone is rot yet
completed, as tho wire stringing is not
yet finished; hut scientific people other
than MapEdisou will watch with curi
ous wonder to see what success he
will achieve. New York Recorder.
A Georgia Yarn In London.
Not long ago an Atlanta paper pub
lished a horrible story to the effect that
in Wilke* county, Georgia, a negto wo
man had killed her child, cooked it, and
served it to her guests. The story was I
sent out from Washington, the county
scat of Wi’.kcs, and was discredited by
most newspapers, and looked upon as a
sensational yarn. Subsequently the
Wilkes county paper published ati ac
cout of the origin of the story. It
'seems that it was started as an April
-1 fool joke, and correspondents who was
on the lookout for something sensation-
al, telegraphed it as actually happening.
This was decidedly a fool proceeding,
and its consequences have been very
curious.
It seems that this April fool yarn
has been reproduced in London, where
it has created a profound sensation and
lias been made the subject of heavy
leaders in the solemn journals of the
English capital. In a cable letter from
London published in the New York
Times' last Sunday the following is
printed : “Ever since Dalziel’s Agon
-lej obtained a foothold here, largely by
i its success in serving the London Times
’ with reports of the liurbball trial iu
Canada, the Loudon pajiers have been
printiug daily long dispatchers from
America giving details of some widely
sensational crime or freak frotr. the
west or south. This reached the climax
of alrsurdity the other day iu a third of
a column dispatch alsmt a negro woman
I Henry County Weekly, Established 187 ti,
( Henry County limes, Established 1884.
cooking her child as veal for a party
and then leading a contiilion afterward,
a story which the Times printed, and
the other papers, which were not able
to alford the service,.indignantly com
mented upon.”
A\ hy the London papers published
these sensa,ional stories it is difficult to
understand. Their editors cannot cer
tainly lie so ignorant as to believe this
stuff. Why then should they palm it
olf on their readers ? But, perhaps we
ought not to be surprised, for Loudon
papers during the last few years have
allowed matter logo into their columns
that no self-respecting American editor
would publish.
1 he pnuting of this sensational yarn
in Lon'dou, however, should warn
American papers to be cautious in re
gard to printing sensational stories.
The temptation to print them without
due investigation, we know is great, for
great is the joy in the heart of a news-
paper man when he scoops a rivnl con
temporary, but the reputation of the
paper publishing yarns that are proved
to be untrue must in time suffer. The
public love sensational stories, but they
do not like to be taken in.—Mobile
Register.
A WKSTKItN I>UKL.
Both Men Were Killed and Then the
(Same Proceeded.
0 A tight, a light!”
The interior of a gambling hell in
a small mining town in Montana, live
years ago. In the foreground of the
picture stand two men who have just
risen from their chairs and are facing
each other, their pistols half drawn and
an insane glare darting from their eyes.
A pack of cards is scattered over the
floor where an angry blow lias thrown
them. At the cry of “Eight,” all the
occupants of the place gather around
the combatants—all but the faro-dealer,
who sits like a stone and never moves,
save to toy aimlessly with the silver
box before him.
“Fair play,” cries a hoarse voice: “if
you’re goin’ to fight, fellers, do it on
the square.”
“He says 1 discarded the ace o'di
muns an, showed’er up arter the
draw.”
“You did.”
“It’s a lie?”
The strong arms twitch nervously
and a silence falls upon the crowd.
“Here, Jerry, if you fellers mean
business, go at this thing in a business
like way,” speaks the hoarse voice
again. “Git over in that end of the
room, Ike. Jerry, you stand there.
That’s right. Now, (ire w’en f give
the word. I’ll shoot the feller that
tires ’fore I say to—understand?”
The two men face each other with
pistols aimed and murder iij their eyes.
Such a scene is no novelty in that town,
but every time a duel like that occurs
an awesome stillness comes over all lie
holders. Every face is drawn with
anxiety—every face except the faro
dealer’s, whose lips wear their habitual
snake like smile.
“One!”
A perceptible movement of ihe mus
cles as the combatants nerve themselves
for the ordeal.
“Two
Eingers creep along the trigger
guards and rest firmly on the triggers.
“Three!”
A simultaneous movement of the in
dex fingers—a short, sharp report —
two lnrsh groans that rise as one, and
the duelists fall upon the rickety floor
with a united weight that shakes the
flimsy building from foundation to
roof.
Both are dead, and everyone, for a
moment, is awed with the tragedy, save
the faro-dealer. lie smiles as before,
and raps bis silver box :
“Game, geutlemcn !”
“Say pa, give me a quarter?” “No
sir! What do you want with a quarter?”
“Ob, nothing, only Jimmie Jones wants
t> bet me 2~> cents that you are the
stingiest man in town." N. 15.—He
got the cash.
Cured.
An old physician, retired from practice,
having had placed in his hands by an Hast
India missionary the formula of a simple
l vegetable remedy for the speedy and ner
nianent core of Consumption, Bronchitis,
| Catarrh, Asthma and all throat and I.ung
I Affections, also a positive and radical cure
! for Nervous Debility and all nervous com
| plaints, after haring tested its wonderful
curative powers iu thousands of cases, has
; felt it his duty to make it known to iiis
I suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive
i and a desire to relieve human suffering, 1
will send tree of charge, to all who desire
it, this recipe, in German, French or Kn
: glish, w ith till! directions for preparing and
j using. Sent bv mail by addressing with
stamp, naming this paper, W. A. Novis,
H-JO Bowers' Block, Rochester, X. Y.
NO. 44