Newspaper Page Text
THE WAYCROSS HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1893.
NOTES FROM WASHINGTON.
Mr. BreckenrMge Will Ban Again—-Con-
gm* Work nnd Other Xews.
Washington, Sept. 14.—Congresman
Breckenridge will return to Kentucky in
the next 10 days and stand for re-elec
tion. He will take the stump next sum
mer, making a fight on Miss Pollard's
charges and /deny absolutely that he is
the father of her children. He will try
to prove that he never introduced Miss
Pollard to Mrs. Luke P. Blackburn as
his future wife, and that later he never
so stated to General Duke or anybody
else.
Considered in Committees.
The subject of modifying the Chinese
exclusion act was considered by the
house committee on foreign affairs, and
a sub-committee was appointed, com
posed of McCreary, Geary and Everett.
The Harmer proposition is before the
sub-committee and so is Everett's bill
extending the time for registration to
Sept. 1, 1894.
The tariff hearings were (continued be
fore the ways and means committee.
The Senate and House.
There was nothing of any interest in
the morning business of the senate ex
cept the taking up of the resolution of
fered last Monday by Mr. Stewart for a
committee of inquiry as to senators hold
ing stock of national bnuks, or being in
terested in them. Mr. Stewart made an
argument in'defense of his resolution.
Mr. Denson, of Alabama, offered a
resolution in the house, declaring where
as the house was adjourning from day
to day. while the people were demand
ing action, the house should authorize
the banking and currency committee to
report immediately a bill introduced by
McLaurin. of South Carolina, providing
for the issue of $125,000,000 in treasury
notes for the relief of the people. It
was objected to and went over under the
rule.
Geveral Grosvenor, of Ohio, has intro
duced a bill in the house to provide for
the dedication of the Chiekamauga and
Chattanooga National Military park.
His bill provides that $10,000 shall be
appropriated for this dedication, and
that the secretary of war be authorized
to determine all arrangements.
The president .congress, supreme court,
heads of executive departments, the
general of the army and the admiral ■»(
the navy are invited to participate with
the governors of the states and their
staffs and the survivors of the several ar
mies there engaged. Oct. 17 and 18,
1894, are the dates set for this grand
event,
His bill also direct** that the secretary
of war shall have anthority to procure
such supplies nud services as may be
necessary, and to call upon the heads of
the several staff dej artments of the array
for such material and stores as he may
deem necessary in • onnectic.n with the
dedication.
The president has commuted the sen
tence of W. G. Monk .convicted of a vio
lation of the postal laws in the United
States district ronrt for the northern dis
trict of Georgia, to 12 months in prison.
Preparing for the Celebration,
j Active preparations are going forward
for the centennial celebration of the lay
ing of the cornerstone of the Capitol build
ing. which takes place next J^»nday.
That it will l>e one of the greatest ;*.•!' -
orations Washington has ever ' i
©need is assured. The ev. nt is to b •
commemorated, as well a* jae iut.-
WILL RUNTHE TRAINS.
Cherokee Strip Boomers Will
Enjoy Great Advantages.
SECEETAET SMITH’3 LATE CEDES.
It W«. in
pnnl
onijiliance with an Urgent Ap
ing nature of the ceremonies must
mand national attention: The partici
pation of the principal officers of the gov
ernment, tbo president and vice-presi
dent, the speaker of the house and a jus
tice of the United States supreme court,
is fitting and appropriate. They will be
re-enforced by the representatives of the
district government and citizens.
The New Minister Co Hawaii.
Albert S. Willis, the new minister to
Hawaii, has received his instructions
from Secretary Gresham, and left for his
home in Louisville, Ky., to make lvv
preparations for going to Honolulu. ? r.
Ellis Mills,- the new Hawaiian oonsn..
took the oath of office, his nomination
having been confirmed Saturday. Mr.
Mills will make a visit to his home in
Staunton before leaving for his new
post. He will probably leave for Hono
lulu next month.
Wells on Bevenur*.
Secretary ..Carlisle has made public a
letter received from David A. Wells, the
well known Democratic tariff reformer.
The letter recommonds the imposition of
the maximum internal revenue rates on
distilled spirits, malt liquor and tobacco.
Mr. Wells, in a table, shows that the
revenue from these articles for the year
ending June 30 was $181,000,000,'and
that under his plan the revenue would
be about $245,000,000.
THE NEWS IN BRIEF.
Washington. Sept. 14. — Secretary
Smith, of the interior department, has
issued an order to allow the running of
trains into the Cherokee strip next Sat
urday. the day of opening. This is a
radical departure .from the policy which
was to govern the opening when the
ways and means were under considera
tion some time ago. and is made in re
sponse to a widespread demand on the
part of those who can get no conveyance
or are otherwise at a disadvantage.
The trains will be run under restric
tions by the interior department, limit
ing the speed to a rate that will not give
those aboard any advantage over the
homesteader who has to rely on a “lum
ber wagon and two white horses'* to get
to his quarter section.
Letters received at the general land
office describing the doings now goiug on
on the strip, relate among other things
that the troops are continually discover
ing sooners w&o have literally to be
smoked out before they can be dis
lodged. Re]x>rts say that these interest
ing persons are iound concealed in
clamps of bashes and in hollows in the
the prairie.
The thorough manner in which the
strip is being patrolled, however, ex
tends little hope to these people of being
successful in their attempts to overreach
their fellows.
Postal Accommodation* Provided.
The postoffice department has made
the best possible -arrangements to pro
vide postal accommodations fur all peo
ple who will enter the strip. Four post-
offices have so far been established and
the postmasters appointed. These offices
are located in the buildings used by the
land office officials at Perry. Alva. Enid
and Woodward. All these towns are
located on railroads—Enid on the Chica
go, Rock Island and Pacific, and the
remainder on the Santa Fe. They are
allowed to occupy the land office build
ing until Friday. After that tney must
provide special quarters.
A Novel Device.
A report received here i3 to the effect
that some enterprising geniuses wit., bi
cycles have hit on a plan to beat the rail
roads. Two bicycles will l>e connected
by an iron bar the width of the railroad
bed from rail to rail. The wheels will
be covered with iron flanges, and the
machine will be set on the rail to be op
erated by two riders. It is said iliat a
speed exceeding that of a lyrhing on
wheels or on foot can be atta.n-1 in this
way to earn' the inventors to ca f choice
locations.
Council Member* Gone.
A special from Wichita. Jvu-i.. says:
A man has reached here from Caldwell
who says the men that were burned out
of the high grass in the strip w-r* thirst
ing for revenge against the soldiers and
the men owning fast horses, and they
went to caldwell and bought several
reels of barl>ed wire, and will place
strands of it across the beaten trails to
injure those who make fin run. The
exodus from here increa-os da Iv. There
was no quorum of the city council Mon
day night, owing to a majority of the
o the strip.
IN THE SOUTH.
The Tradesman’* Report of Industrial De
velopment for a Week.
Chattanooga, Sept. 14.—The Trades
man. in its review of the industrial sit
uation in the south for the week ending
Sept. 11, states that while there is no
decided change to be noted there is an
undercurrent of increased confidence and
an oft expressed belief that the worst is
over, which in itself is doing much to re
lieve the situation.
The most gratifying feature of the
week has been the resumption of wOrk
at a number of the manufacturing
plants, and especially the fact that many
of them are receiving sufficient orders to
justify their operation. While no
change has taken place in the raw iron
market, the foundries and machine shops
generally report fair orders, and with
the increased accommodations they can
now secure from the banks, the volume
of business is being materially increased.
All indications point to a continued
gradual improvement of trade, the steady
advancement of the manufacturing in
terests of this most favored section and
valuable lessons learned that will result
in greater economy in all lines, and a
greater diversity in the manufacturing
as well as the agricultural products of
the entire south.
Fifteen new industries have been es
tablished or incorporated (hiring the
week, together with three enlargements
of manufactories, and 12 important new
buildings.
An Old Couple Murdered.
Montgomery, Ala.. Sept. 14.—A spe
cial to The Advertiser from Newton.
Dale county, says: Angus McSwean
and his wife, two very old people resid
ing four miles from Newton, were mur
dered last Sunday night. They lived by
themselves, and had in life accumulated
considerable means. The crime has just
been discovered. There were signs of a
hard struggle. They were killed with a
sledge hammer. Robbery was the ob
ject. The murderers knocked the hinges
off the iron safe but failed to get into it.
There is no clue to the murderers.
•Mr. J. A, Wheeler
“While Serving My Country
I was taken 111 with spinal disease and rheu
matism. When I returned home my trouble
was still with me, and I was confined to my bed,
unable to help myself for 23 months. After
taking seven bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla I
was well and have uot since been troubled with
my old complaints. My wife was In Ill health,
suffering with headache, dizziness and dys
pepsia. She took two bottles of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and feels Uka a mew ttiwb “ Jxxzs A.
Wheeler, 1900 Division St., Baltimore, Md.
- Fast for a Four-Year-Old.
Chicago, Sept. 14.—Arion, the sensa
tional son of Electioneer, made his debut
as a 4-year-old at Washington park, and
won the Spirit of the Times stakes worth
$11,000. The race was for 4-year-olds,
and opposing Arion were Czar, Trevil-
lian, Belle Flower and Parole. After
Trevillian had taken the first heat Arion
trotted three heats without being headed
and at no time was he forced to his speed
limit, the fastest mile being done in
2:12 3-4.
Charles DeLesseps Set Free.
Paris, Sept. 14.—M. Charles DeLes-
seps, who was sentenced to five years’
imprisonment for complicity in the Pan
ama canal scandal, has been released
from prison. His five years' sentence
had been set aside, but he was serving
another term of one year. He had
served about six months of the sentence
when the prison officials were ordered to
release him. Most of the time was spent
in the prison hospital.
Head Crushed and Left to Die.
Nashville. Sept. 14.—A stonecutter
named John Wolff was found ,with a
crushed skull in the cellar of. Mike Mar-
Hood’s Pills are the best after-dinner Pills,
assist digestion, cure headache. Try a box.
Among the incidents of childhood that
stand out in bold relief, as our memory
reverts to the days when we were young,
none are more prominent than severe
sickness. The young mother vividly
remembers that it was Chamberlain’s
Cough Remedy cured her of croup, and
in turn administers it to her own off
spring and always with the best of re
sults. For sale at the Cash Drug store.
My little boy was very bad off' for
> months with diarrhoea. We used
various medicines, also called in two
doctors, but nothing done him any good
until we used Chamberlain’s Colic, Di
arrhoea and Cholera Remedy, which
gave immediate relief and soon cured
him. I consider it the best medicine
made and can conscientiously reebm-
mend it to all who need a didrrlfoea or
colic medicine. J. E. Hare, Trenton,
Texas. 25 and 50 cent bottles for sale
at Cash Drug Store. . . : t .
Livery, Feed and Sale Stables,
X3y O. G>. I’TTE^LjXTTEIXT,
WAYCSOSS. -- -- -- GICECU
Everything ! Splendid feoats! Fine Horses! Careful Drivers!
The hot equipp.*! and hot tunnac^d StaMo ever cnmUu ted :a Wnuni or this si de
of Atlanta, jtiutijhu floh suanu.teed. ' * %
Special Accommodativr.s. fur Drummers. _£->** A trial is a21 1 ask.
Mr. Thomas Batty, editor of the
Graphic, Texarkana, Arkansas, has
found what be believes to be the best.
remedy in existence for the flux. His
experience is well worth’ remembering.
He says: “Last summer I had a very
severe attack of the flux. I tried al
most every known remedy, none giving
relief. Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy was recommended
to me. I purchased a bottle and re
ceived almost immediate relief. I con
tinued to use the medicine and was en
tirely cured. I take pleasure in recom
mending this remedy to any person suf-
. fering with such a disease, as in my
tin’s saloon and di£ff soon after being I opinion it i3 the best remedy in exist-
found. He was engaged in a drunken „ . A . , *. ,
t a.* i ~ uf4. ence. 2» and 50 cent bottles for sale
at the Cash Drug store.
GILLON & HUDSON,
FOUNDERS AND MACHINISTS,
ms im ms, - - ms, Gnu
H AVING added all necessary Machinery to our shop. v. t
are nou prepared to do all kinds of casting, repairing
and general work on Locomotives.
We also carry in stock Stationary and Saw Mills, Piping,
Belting, Pulleys, Hangers and Brass Cocks of all kinds. We
make a specialty of
STRI P MILLS AND KETTLES.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED. GIVE US A TRIAL ANDRE CONVINCED
Brunswick and Western Railroad.
Time Table.
Ill Effect Thursday, February 2nd, 1893. Subject to Change Without Notice.
From Brunswick to Albany.
No. 7.; No. Hi No. 5.;No. 3 j No. 1
Daily Daily j Daily n
E, S. E, s.; H. s. Daily Duilj
Short Items Gathered and Condensed for
Those Who Are Hurried.
West Bay City, Mich., had a lumber
yard fire. Loss, $100,000.
Twelve prisoners broke jail and es
caped at Bainbridge. Ga.
The Gate City Guard. Atlanta's oldest
military organization, has disbanded.
Tom Delk, leader of the notorious
“Delk gang,” who escaped from jail in
Atlanta a few months ago, has been ar
rested in Birmingham. Ala.
Mrs. Cleveland and the baby are do
ing so well that Dr. Bryant has returned
to New York. The little one is plump
and rosy, and, it is said, has splendid
lungs.
- Twenty masked men held up a Lake
Shore train 120 miles from Chicago, near
midnight, and after wounding the engi
neer mew open the safe in the express
car and stole its contents. They got
about $15,000.
Near Opelika, Ala., two officers of the
law, by a terrible mistake, emptied the
contents of two 44-caliber Con’s revol
vers at each other at close range hi a
skirt of woods eight miles from Opelika,
about 1 o’clock in'the morning. One of
them was hit in the head. The bullet
grazed his skull and inflicted a bad flesh
wound. The men were friends, and
each thought he was shooting at a des
perate murderer.
The Brlttanlu Beat the Navohoe.
London, Sept. 14.—The yacht race be
tween the Brittania and N&vahoe result
ed* vfc$T77 for the Brittania.
councilman harii
YOUNG MR. COLFAX.
The Son of a Former Tire Prescient Hat
Trouble with Hi* Bank.
Indianapolis, Sept. 14. — Young
Schuyler Colfax and his mother,of South
Bend, have had a sad experience with
the defunct Indianapolis National bank.
His father, the late vice president of the
United States, purchase! $27,009 worth
of the stock in this bank to be held in
trust by President Haughey for the ben
efit of young Schuyler and his mother.
Colfax knew nothing of the affairs of the
bank, was fresh from college and had
little or no business experience. He has
been down to the bank two or three
times since he became a director to draw
dividends and to perform other nominal
functions.
In the meantime his $27,000 of stock is
gone, and he and his mother, who own
ed the stock jointly, must pay $27,000
additional when the assessment is made
as required by the national banking law.
which makes a total of $51,000. He has
become liable as director for alleged neg
lect of duty, and when his friends saw
that the receiver of the bank had int>-
mated that there might be some pro? -
cution of directors, they looked abo^t
and found the facts to be as stated here.
Young Colfax in the meantime has been
engaged in the manufacturing business
inSonth Bend, and until the failure oi
the bank was prosperous.
Trying to Burn Out a School.
Montreal, Sept. 14.—An incendiary
set fire to the Mount St. Lawrence col
lege in the garret, over where 214 boys
were asleep. All were got out sately
through the discipline hr drill. This is
the sixth time the building has been set
on fire.
A Prominent Kentuckian Crazy.
Hopkinsville, Sept. 14.—Ex-United
States Senator Willis B. Matchen. oi
Eddyyille, Ky., has been adjudged in
sane and confined in the Wesleyan Lu
natic asylnrn. He is 84 years old. and
has been ill for several years.
A Convict Torn Limb from Limb.
Columbus, O., Sept. 14. — George
Brown, a convict from Cincinnati, serv
ing a 5-year sentence for burglary, was
caught on a revolving shaft ia a shop in
row at night, during which he
with a brick. Pat Devine and Mike Hal-
lesey are under arrest on suspicion and
interesting testimony is expected before
the coroner’s jury.
The Los* of a Fine Cow.
Fort Dodoe, la.. Sept. 14.—Matz
Sefeik, a well-to-do farmer, owned the
finest cow that ever gave milk, accord
ing to his estimate of cows. But the
cow died. Life had no charms for Se-
fgik then. The farmer therefore hanged
himself in his barn.
Killed While Swinging; in Midair.
Hazleton, Pa.. Sept. 14.—While in
midair on a pole swing Hannah Bara-
ger, aged 16 years, became dizzy and re
leased her hold and was thrown 40 feet,
landing on her head. Her neck was
broken and she died soon after.
DAILY MARKET REPORTS
Naval Store*.
Wilmington, Sept. 14 —Turpentine firm
at 23: rosin steady, strained 73; good strained
80: tar steady at 90; crude turpentine firm:
hard, 81.00: yellow dip. $1.60; virgin.
Savannah. Sept.14.—Turpentine firm at 28:
rosin firm at 93.
Produce and Provisions.
New York. Sept. 14.—Pork In fair demand, j
firm: mess new $l7.00t?£S17.50. Middlesnom- j
After Breaksast
To purify, vitalize and enrich the blood,
and give nerve, bodily and digestive
strength, take Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Con
tinue the medicine after every meal for
a month or two and you will feel “like a
new man.” The merit of Hood’s Sarsa
parilla is proven by its thousands ot
wonderful cures. Why don’t you try it?
Hood’s Pills cure constipation. They
are the best after-dinner pill and family
cathartic.
Mr. J. C. Boswell, one of the best
known and most respected citizens of
Brown wood, Texas, suffered with diar
rhoea for a long time and tried many
different remedies without benefit, until
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy was used; that re
lieved him at once. For sale at the
Cash Drug store.
A Cuie for Twenty Cents.
Any remedy sold at one dollar a bot-
A. M. A. MJft. M. A. M
f 5 00i 12 32f 7 30
a flb'f 9 :« * *.) 4
K 43; 9 .'5*10 v
7 ttVflO OtitflO 24
7 150 *10 221*10 4!
7 45} 10 311*10 9
8 07 j f 10 45*11 0,
8 14|fi0 4S'*I1 0!
ft i7jf 10 oOjSll 13
8 57|*11 13 *11 VA
0 2S;fll 25 *11
9 43! 11 331*12 02
M. I !
.... 10 50|fl2 05 *12 42
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I 11 40 f]2«32 * 1 12
i 8 45j j 11 57 f 12 40;* 1 21
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i 7 051.....
i 7 40!....
» 8 151
12 50
1.5,1
1 00'* 1 10! 2 00
M.J Ip. Sl.jA. >1.11*. M
(No. 2. No. 4:No. 6.;No. 12
Jnuiy |Daily jg-jfer
Dailj
b. & \Y. Shop*.
G. Cross
Mile Tun
a m.i
P. M. A. M.I A. M. 1\ M
7 30 11 40 1
i 7 10 sll 10 7 45] « w
6 01 ! 11 00 7 29 5 41
1 49 10 49 0 551 f
Atkin*
Lulaton &
Nahnnta |s
Hoboken Is
Sclilatterville ;s
WAYCROSS ’
Ware*»K>ro is
i 0 30 f 10 59
i <> 23 flO 2ffl
i G 16 flO 17|
I G 08'f 10 10
i G 00 f 10 02
i 5 42 f 9 45
i 5 34jf
5 15!
I 5 00 s
' 4 17 f 2 21
4 08
i 4 17 j f 2 58
i 4 03, s 3 45
Is 3 551 3 38
> Mile Post Is 3 45 f 3 28
Grav’s 's 3 42 f 3 24
.... Willaeoochee js 3 4Qjf 3 22
Alapaha js 3 17;*' 3 03
....Kirkland...........i:
.: Tifton.
00
6 35|s 4 30
6 05 s 3 50
5 5Gis 3 57
5 32js 3 10
4 17
» 3 40 12 30
1 45 sll 30
1 15jsll 00
12 30!sl0 13
12 12!s 9 40
12 40ls 9 15
11 25 j 9 03
11 03 s 8 42
10 54 s 8 2!
10 50|s 8 i:
10 0/js
> 49
2 45
Ty-Ty
Sumner— a..is 2 12
Poulan —...jf 2 04
Isabella... js 1 53
Willingham js 1 47
Davis a 1 35
.J unction 1 29
. Albany- 1 15
IP. M.
f 2 10
f 1 50
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s 6 0*)
1 1U 4 —
A. M.I A. M.I
505
4 35
405
340
315
shoulders $9.50; short ribs 811.00; short clear, j pouil'
western - steam 9.12*4: aty* steam. S.UjSo': I tie which claim* to cure rheumatism, is
options. Sept., —;*uct., —. j s i m p]v an imposition, for when all ex-
Chicaoo. Sept. 14.-Cashquotations were as ..pn^pa are deducted it leaves not more
folio\vs:Messx>orKSi6.i9aw.i5.Lard88.ao@8.79 I l ,en es are deducted xt leaves not more
Short ribs, loose. $ 10.32*4®W-35. Dry salt shoul- i than twenty cents to represent the medi-
ders, boxed, S7^5®7.50; short clear sides, j c j nc J) r Drummond’s Lightning Rem-
boxed, $9.7a®10.00. i * . , . * • ° ° j
Cincinnati. Sept. 14.—Pork, steady, mess, i edy, which is performing such wonder-
816.50;family815.00. Lard,steam leaf, $8.50 f u l cures that iris being prescribed by
ft 8 oS-ri?SS! :S foiS, the medical faculty everywhere, u com-
‘ •' * ... «. ..— , ’ at great expense from rare drugs
int be sold for less than Five
Dollars a bottle. But it always cures.
Sent prepaid to any address on receipt
of price. Drummond Medicine Co., 48-
50 Maiden Lane, New York. Agents
wanted.
_ Last fall I was taken with a kind of
summer complaint, accompanied with a
wonderful diarrhoea. Soon after my
wife’s, sister, who lives with us, was ta
ken in the same way. We used almost
everything without benefit. Then I said
let us try Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera
and Diarrhoea Remedy, which we did,
and that cured us right away. I think
much of it, as it did for me what it was
recommended to do. John Hertz! er,
Bethel. Berks Co., Pa. 25 and 50 cent
bottles fur sale at Gash Drugstore.
Chicago Market.
Chicago, Sept. 14.
Wheat-Cash. : Sept. —-: Dec. 72%.
Corn-Cash. ; Sept. —: Dec 42*.
Oats—Cash. : Sept. —; May, 31?$.
PoTk—Jan.. 13.80.
Ribs—Jan., 7.25: Oct. *.45.
Lard—Jan.. 7.75: Oct. 8.32.
. Liverpool Cotton Futures.
. Liverpool. Sept. 14—Sales. 10,000 bales
Tone firm. Middlings
January and ^February 4.333:4.37
/..V..4J38Q4.41:
Aprii and May 4.4UC&
February and March .
March and April..
Aprii and May
May and June.... v
June and July .....
July and August. ..
August and Ss/eoaar
September an ! October.
October and Xorember. ..
Yovember an 1 December..
...
...4.295M.32
...*.•*$4.32
...4.31f.*.3i
<tw York Cotton Futures.
Nkw York. Sept. 14.
X3ldy. Sales 158,800. Middling*.
trains
Trains Nos. 1. 4 ami 11 meet
pass at Wavcross.
i flag stations for .
pass at Waycross. Trains Nos. 4. 5 and 6 meet and
C. MORRIS, Master Transportation.
GEO. \V. HAINES. .Superintendent.
IB AS SAFE AND HARMLESS AS
A yiax Seed Poultice.
It is appEe i right to tho parta It cures aa diseases of-women. Any
lady can use it herself. Hold by AT.T. DHUGSISTS. Mailed to any
address cn receipt of Cl.
Dr. J. A. McCMU iz Co, 3 sad 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, HL
Si Idby E. H. CRAWLEY.
W. L. DOUGLAS
S3 SHOE .m,.
Oo you wear them? Wh* etxt !■ aeed try a pair,
test in tho world*
PAR-A-SIT-I-CIDE cures
thirty minutes. Price 50 cents.
T. S. Paine.
itch in
Sold "by
3mos
Juno..
July «
Wonderful Life Preserver cures Con-
October 8JW.W9 sumption. Coughs,- Colds and Croup,
November • when all other remedies fail. Sold bv
“ I all P-isgtee. may 19—1 y.
It jot want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest
styles, tWl pay $6 to $8, try my $3, $3.50, $4,00 or
$5 Shoo. They fit equal to custom made and look tad
wear as well, ifyoa wish to economize la yoar footwear,
do so by purchasing W. L Douglas Shoes. Karoo and
price stamped on the bottom, look forjt when yoe boy.
V.L.DOCGLA9, Brscktos, Ksm. Sold by
E. H. LEVY, EEO. & CO.
Benton & Upson,
manufacturers’ agents.
Machinery and Mill Sapplies,
1 ' '
ENGINES, BOILERS,
Saw Hills, Sbisgls Hills, Woad Wirk-
| lag Machinery, Sugar, Sica, Cottas
and Canning HacSioary.
I ’ "igating Machinery
A SPECIALTY.
Ovpica AND WagEHOLVE. MaoHINERY
TVharves, Adjoining ~ •
S. F. & W. Railway
, JACKSON \ Id! 11A