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THE SOUTH WESTERN NEWS.
Iwggtss & Marshall, Prop'sg, |
1 LBE STREET, OFPOSITE COUR BOE--C. S. All htsopened si-lags GOGERY STORE,
pd he will make it REAL HOT for all, who try to UNDERSELL HIM. Special reduction on goodsin large quantitiss
iR
. g /Sf £
0 Jers
£ / %
Y € 208,
SRR T
hliked Every Wedn’s Morning
THS PATER eR Co eet
Jierising Burean ((oSpruce Bt.), whereadver
[~ TERMS:
(1 YEAR. ..coeeenvenges .$l.OO
i@ All papers stopped at expir
yion of time paid for, unless in
s where parties are kvown fo be
,gponsible and they desire cons
jprance.
livertising Rates Moderate,
{INERAL DIRECTORY.
CHURCHES.
Preaching at Baptist church Ist
ot srd Sabbath in each month.
loming Services at 10:45 A ™
freng Services at 6:45 P M
bhath School at 9.A M
Prayer meeting every Wednese
iy night.
Rev. B W Davis, Pastor.
Preaching at Methodist church
it 2nd and 4th Sabbath in each
wouth.
fbbath School at, 9.AM
orving Services at, 11AM
frenine Services at, TPM
Prayer Meeting every Thursday
aight.
Rev. F A BraxcHa, Pastor.
A M E CHURCH.
hudey Sehool at, 9 am.
larning Services at, 10:30 a m.
frnine Sepvices at, 7:30 p m,
lss meeting every Tuesday
Bght, :
Payer meetinc every Thursday
Ight.
Rev. R R Dowxs, Pastor.
CITY GOVERNMENT '
Magor - Wm. Kaigler,
(uneilmen —W ¢ Kendrick, W
dbeatham, €' Deubler, J A
lddey, T R Hannah.
(lerk—J 1. Janes.
~Treasurer—F W Clark,
Vahall—L, A Hateher, |
Deputy Marshall—John B Roberts
Street Overseer—Nick Kenney. |
Council meets first Monday night |
teach month,
COUN'Y OFFICERS.
l)rdinary—-l{ S Bell
Uerk Superior Court-J G F Clark
Seriff— G Marshall
lix Receiver-—C M Hassls
I Collector—J H Crouch
easurer—J 1) Laing
iveyor-J E Waller
Moner—John Daniel
bungy Farm Supy—W H Gams
2y
LEGION OF HONOR.
i ]mel Council, No 795—" L
Mize, Commander: J G Dean, Secs
®ary; Mrs, «; I, Mize, 'l'reasurer;
Neets 20 andl S Monday night
Weach month,
.
TERRELL, COUNCIL, NO 691,
Bl Archanum —Chas Deubler, |
gégent;’l‘ R Hannah, Secretary
®ets Ist and 3rd Friday night in
tch mopg)y
\_‘__*“____________
~ ENIGHT< OF HONOR .
S,Dfl\v&m Lodge, No 1258—J M
Mmong Dictator; H S Bell, Re-
E"Ol’; T R Hannah, Financial
H'P‘"Wr; A J Baldwin, Treasurer.
WS 20d and 4th Friday night
W each month,
e i e S
MASONIC.
XPT Schlo‘v Lodge, No 229 F A
BéllJ M Simmons, WM; H 8
e Secremry; T R Hannah,
nfmu_rer. Meets 3rd Saturday
ght in eqcly month,
A¥RENCR ¢ 4 CHAPTER, NO 49.
liE Be‘flnwer, H P el
P W'D Murray, Scribe; J €
™ lirk, Secretary. Meets 2ad
l “daynight in each month.
r| Hl THURMOND, D- Dn s
DENTIST
NAWSON, - - GA.
;0 ——
SATISFACT lON Guaranteed
in FILLING and PLATEL
WORK. Highest recommended
Anaesthetic used for Pain
less Extraction of teeth.
X #
No harm, 1o dimage 1o gums or
EHEAILTEY.
Patronage respectfully solic ed
B&s™ Office in Farrar Building
sept.22-'B6.tf. :
Barber Shep,
——1)O(
* When you want a good
Shave, nice Hair Cut in ‘all the
latest styles, a hoss Shampoo, or
your Hair, Beard or Mustache dy
ed, call and give me a trial.
LADMS DESIRING
Work in this line can be waited on
at
THEIR RESIDENCES.
Polite attention to all.
WWhen you come ask for
Old Bragg.
B&s™ Shop in rear of F. Bethune's
Bar.
may,4,'B7,tf,
i A \
- DARBER SIEOP.
o oo o
WHEN you wanta good Shave,
nice Hair cut in all the latest
gtyles, a boss Shampoo, or your
ilair, Beard or Moustache dyed,
call and give me a trial,
LADIES DESIRING
Work m this line can be waited
on at
THEIR RESIDENCES.
) it 8§ :
gar Shop under Post Office,
Archie Maund.
iRt S g e SR
3 -"”ol”»;.“"‘-;‘;j‘ N le L . 5 31 %
o
fi*fi:‘l}l A L dar s {
ey =l o e RN
| S
CURES ALL HMUMORS, ~
from a common Eletch, or Eruption,
to the worst Scrotaia. Sslt-ricum,
i Fever = sores,” scaly or Rougi
Skin, in short, all disepses caused by bad
blond are eonquerved by this powerful, puri
tyineg, and invigorating medicine, Great
Eaving ©leers rapidly heal undeor its be
nign infinenee. Lspcenlly has it manifested
its poteney in enring ‘Fetter, Rose Hash,
Boils, Ca rhuncles, Sore B.ycs, Serol
nlous Sore- and swellings, Hip
joint Briseasc, white swellings,
Goitre, or 'Fhick Neck, and Enlarged |
Glands., Send ten cents in stamps for a |
large treatise, with colored plates, on Skin
Dis-ases, or the 1K aimount for a treatise
on Scrofnjous A cctions.
“rHE DBLOOD ES T LIFEY
Thoronghly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce’s
Golden Medieal Biscovery,and good
digestion, @ fair skin, buoyant spir=
its,and vital strength, will be established.
X
CONSUMPTION,
which 1s Scrofula of the l,uugs, is ar
rested and cured by ths remedy, if taken be
fore the last stagces of the disease arce reached,
¥rom its marvelous power over this terribly
fatal disease, when first offering this now
cetebrated remedy to the public, Dr. PIERCE
thought sm'iuns*\' of calling it his “Cone
sunmption C re,?? but abandoned that
name ng too limited for a wmedicine which.
from its wonderful combination of tonie, ox
strengthening, alterative, or blood-cleansing,
anti-bilious, pectoral, and nutritive proper
tics, is unecqualed, not only ns a remedy for
consumption, but for all Chronic Dis
cn_sc- of the
Liver, Biood, and Lungs.
* If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have
gallow color of skin, or _\'l-Ilumsth'm\'n spote
on face or body, frequent hie adache or dizzi
ness, bad taste in mouth, internal heat or
~chills, alternating with hot tflushes, low spirits
and gloomy for bodings, irregular appetite,
and coated tongue, you are suffering from
Indigestioit, pyspepsia, and Torpid
ihvery or Riliousness? In many
- cases only part of thicse symptoms are expc
rienced, As @ remedy for all such cagcs,
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery is unsurpassed.
ror Weceak 1.1m%s Splnlnlg of
Biood, Shorincss o hl’(.‘(l“l, ron
chitis, Asthhma, severe Coughs, and
kindred affections, it is an efficient r(‘m(-di'.
SOoLD BY DRUGGISTS, at $l.OO, or SIX
parTLES for $5.00. : ;
Send ten cents in smn:‘{m for Dr. Pierce's
haok on Consumption. ddress,
World's Dispensary Medical ASsO
ciation, 663 Main Street, BUFFALO, N. Y.
________________.__—-—————-—-_____—-——-—-—"'—"_—
2 ¢y $3OO REWARD
i
; L! s offered by the pro&rictou
ol of Dr. Sage's Catarrh c:qu‘vl
. 4§ for a casc of catarrh_whic
' ; they cannot cure. If you
W have dit:c:harglgi i;rnlm thct)
o o or otherwisc, partia 088 O
I 3.%%?‘: ‘l'fi;&s‘),i Hoaring, weak eyes, dull Emn
or pressure in head, you have Catarrh. Thou
‘ sands of cascs terminate in cnnsnmrhon.
Dr. Sage’'s CATARRE REMEDY cures he worst
S wQold in the Head,”
cases of Catarrh o
cases of Qrrhal feadache. I cents
e ,';‘/( ‘
‘ " ,"T,’ / 4 ".1‘
WA 4
[P " j,‘,“‘l
"
\”\: gj
\qm
‘%? r‘:‘\\\\
Filling a Long Felt Want. With
generous BARGAINS from our
Well Selected Stock of
Dry Goods, Notions.
Boots, Shoes,
HATS AND
GEXERAL WERCHANDISE,
We keep a FULL LINE of
every thing than can be found in
a First-Class .
Dry Goods Store,
but make a specialty of
WHITE GODDS,
Ladies Dress Goods,
Gentiemen’s & Ladies
FINE SHOLDS.
And our Line of Hats, both
Straw and IDDress, is as
complete as can be found
in South West Ga.
Oour Motto:
SPEED,
CORRECTNESS and
SATISFACTION.
Give us a call.
w. o L °
illiams & Bavis.
Adawson-2-17-1887 tf. 1
The fact that Georgia permits
boys to be admitted to practice of
law in her courts is disturbing the
Boston Advertiser These selt-same
boy lawyers have played conspies |
ious partsin the diepensation of
ustice. Judges usually appoint
them to defend criminals, and they |
invaribly convict them, unless the
prisner does as an accused man ‘
did in a neighboring county. Hav
ing no consel,the Judge appointed l
a young man to conduct his de
fense; one sight of the boy lawyerl
satisfied the prisoner, who rose and ‘
said: ““May it please your honor,
I wish to put in a plea of guilty.”
No, boys don’t practice law |
much; as some has said, they are |
bred to the law, but the law is not
bread to them, and they take down 1
their shingles and take up hoes.—
News and Advertiser |
—Tltch, Prairie Mange, and
3cratches of every kind cured in3o
minutes by Woolford’s Sanitary Lo
tion. Use noother. This never
fails. Sold by W C Kendrck,
Druggist, Dawson,Ga.
| L
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
The best Salve in the world for
cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulecers, Salt
Cheum, Fever Soles, Tetter, Chap
ped Hands, Chilblains Corns, and
all Skin Eruptions, and postive Iy
cures Piles, or no pay required.
Itis guaranteed to give perfect sat
isfaction, or money re;unded
price 25 cents per boxe kor sale
| at Crouch Bro’s,
DAWSON, GA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE. 1, 1887.
SHE RODE FOR EARLY
.
The Story of a Brave Southern
Woman as Related by a Scout.
Columbus Enquirer-Sun. ]
RemsviLee, N. C., May 18.—
“The was a beautiful woman and I
have always wondered what misss
ion she was on.” 'he speaker was
Mr. Reid. who was a scout in the
war under General Early.
“‘One morning in the valley.’ he
continued, “I was ordered by
Lieut. Atwood, who was chief
scout, to report to General Early
for orders. I rode at once to head- '
quarters, where I found a finely
caparisoned steed with a lady’s side ‘
saddle on, standing in front of the
tent door. Gen. Early came out!
and simply said: *You will go as l
escort to a lady; obey her or
ders.’
*Soon a beautiful woman tripped
torth and leaping on the charger
secout in a gallop. I tollowed.‘
We galloped full ¢leven miles. Not |
a word was exchanged That eve l
ning, when within a mile or two of |
the Potomae, I saw a large white |
| farm-house over to the left. lere
| the first word was spoken. Reining ‘
u» she motiondd me to haly, and |
gaid : i
“I will dismount and go to that I
house. Take the horses and con- |
ceal ther in the woods; feed and l
curry them and then come to the
house, and I did as ordered. After l
. we had supper she signaited me to i
leave, and 1 was soon out and had
the horses ready and waiting in the |
hend of the road. She was prompts |
{ ly on hand, and as before set off’ at ;
| a gailop. Ve rode all nizht long,
silently, swittly. As day dawned
we left the public roads and took
across the country. About 9 a.m.
while going across an old field, my
fair companion halted beside a
broad, deep diich, and beconed me
o her. .
Place these horses in that ditch
and get in yourselfand stay here
un‘il I come to you,” said she. |
She dismounted and I occupied |
the ditch as directed and saw her
dizappear through a thick skirt of
woods that fringed the edge of the
field. Ijudged we were in the lo
cality of Boonsboro, Md Tired
and worn out I soon fell asl(‘ep. It
must have been late dinuer time
| when I was aroused by what seem
| elthe very ground in a jar and
’ pumble. I sprang trom the ditch
| and crept to the woods and discov
ered that a plank road ran just
parallel and that a very large forze
of federals, artillery, wagon, ete.,
was passing down it. I soon got
back to the ditch, dreading discov
ery by bummers or straglers, but
I was ready to take care of them if
not more than one or two had
‘ come But none appeared. There
' Ilaid full an hour, when a light
' step and the rustling of a dress |
{ caught my ear, and, looking up,
there she stood. |
¢ sQnic’, brinz out the horses,
she said. Which I did. Then,
mounting her ~wn, she handed me
a message sealed up in tissue paper’
and said: ¢ Give that to Gen. Ear
ly.” And away she went. That
| is the last of her I ever heard or
knew. Sometimesitcrosses messa
dream in fairyland, and 1T wonder
who she was and where she is—but
thatis all. I took my time getting
back and drew a long breath of re~
| lief when I struck the Virginia
| side. When I saluted and handed
| her message to Gen. Early he read
‘itand said to his orderly: ‘Give
“this man something to eat and have
his horse fed.”
It is estima‘ed that Mr, O’Brien
already his encugh brickbate on
¢ hand to start a dry well.
. -PROTE TION.
R
The advocates of the " protective
policy openly declare, that manu
facturing In the United States
would be a losing busines if left
to the cowpetition of the world.
All kinds of goods and wares are
made in England, France, Germa
ny and other foreign countries for
domestic use and foreign trade,
Those countries have their home
trade and foreign trade, and seek
to extend the latter by sending
their goods in ships to countries
whose ports are open to receive
them. The larger portien of their
trade consists in an exchange of
goods. They have the seas of the
world open to effect this exchance
of goods. In the United States
the Protectionists say it is necessa
ry to prevent competition, because
forcigners can bring their goods
and wares here and sell them to
our people at a lower price than
our manufacturers can afford to
make them. Now mark. It is
not contended, that, if the foreign
goods are excluded, our jnanufac
turers can supply our people with
them as cheaply as the foreign
manufacturers: Therefore the for
eigners must be excluded to enable
the home manutacturers to obtain
hjgher prices for their goods. In
excluding them; our government
forces the people to pay more than
they wouud have to pay if foreign
goods were not taxed so heavily
as to prevent their being brought
here and sold to them at lower pri
ces. T isis the protection gran
ted to the manufactories of the
United States. The people of
this country are forced by the pro
tective tariff to buy the gools of
the home mwanufacgurers for the
special benefit of those manufac=
tarers. The protectionists insist
that it is necessary to prevent for
eign competition, It is plain that
the object is to extort an advance
in the price ot the goods of the
‘merican manufacturer. This is
an admission that the American
manufacturer cannot succeestully
compete with the foreion manufac
turer, or it exhibits a desire to ob~
tain extravagant prices at the ex
pense of the people. This protec
tion injures the working men in
the factories, causing them to pay
higher prices for the goods they
need:it injures all classes of our
people for the same reason, ana
especially the farmers upon whose
labors all classes depend _ for the
general prosperity. A great deal
is «aid ahaut the low wages of Eng
land, and the high wages paid the
operatives in the factories of the
United States. Good
prices are more readily and consis
tently paid the factory hands in
Great Britain thao the same class
in our country. We will show in
an article later on, that the Eng
lish factory operatives are better
off than those in our country, and
we pa-s that point for the present.
Some of the views, we have here
tofore expressed, are sustained by
| what the protectionists themselves |
‘say. They declare that protection |
is necessary to sustain munufies |
tures, that they cannot live with-~ i
*out it; tLat heavy duties enable |
them to raise their pricesand net|
twenty=five to thirty per cent
. more than they could if put in the?
| open markets of the world. Well
; they get that per cent and more
,under protection. We give the
follo wing statement as to some of
the per cents given them by our
tariff. Calicoes 50 per cent; spoul
th ead 73, 77; iron 61, 88, 91; steel
rail 83; silk 60; carpets 58, 105,
blankets 72, 92, 107; flannels 74;
knit goods 57, 83; wool hats 57.
| We might extend the list, but
these instances are enough to show
thé greatinjustice which is done
our people. Let us illustrate this
matter by some instances and fig
ures that cannot deceive an honest
inquirer. A pair of first class
blankets, English make, could be
sold in our cities for $3. The 35
cents per pound specific duty and
35 cents per pound, advalorem dus
ty upon these British blankers,
adds to their price 82,45, add this
to 83 and it makes the protection
price $5,45. The British manufac
turer cannot pay two dollars and
forty-five cents tor the privilege
of selling his three dollar blanket
in this country and carries it back
to England. Our tariff thus gives
the home manuacturer a protection
of two dollars and forty-five cents,
and he sells a blanket of simular
value to his neighbor, and pur
chasers generally, for $5,45 that
the British would have sold him
for three dollars. Reader, that’s
protection! In 1882, in conse
quence of this high protection, the
value of blankets imported in this
cou.try wasonly $8,877; the sum
received upon them $6,864 which
went into the United States’ treas
ury.
The manufacturers ot Vassachu
setts and Rhode Island received a
tribute of $8,000,000 and some
thing more upon their sales of
blankets under the 60 cents pro
tection. And yet the protection
ists tell the people they will get
their wants supplied as cheaply un
der protection, as they could get
them from the British. How did
they get the 8 million of dollars
extra? by selling their three dollar
blankets to the people adding the
duty to the $3, for $5,45? The
protectionists say this protection is
only a temporary measure. They
call tor help, now, and .in soma
short time will get strong enough
todo without it. They said that
in 1789, neariy 100 years ago, and
yet their cry has been for protecs
tion ever since and will contmue
till Gabricl blows his trumpet, if
the government should last that
long, and wickedly indulge them.
Milledgeville Recorder.
There is food for reflection in
the statement, recently made in a
New York daily, that about one
halt of the insane people in “the
United States are of foreign birth.
The annual cost for the mainte
nance of each unfortunate is $llO,
which foots up a sum exceeding
$500.000,000 yearly. Add to this
the prison, almhouse and hospital
bills tor our alien population, and
the aggregate becomes stupendous
Add to this the enormous exodus
which has just set in hitherward—
greater than the capacity of the
rezular lines of steamers—and our
economists will wouder whath
er the country can long stand such
a strain upon its resources. Zion’s
Herald,
And in these our Southern
States we want none of this unassi
milable population. We have the
Negroes and we prefer them.
These Christianized. We hear
much of the ‘demoralizing influ
ences of slavery,” but a thousand
times over give us these ex-slaves
and their posterity rather than the“
foreign hordes of atheists,commun
ionist and anarchists who are pours
ing into the Northern States. True
we have to solve the problem of
two races at opposite poles from
each other in the social scale, but
even with this huge disadvantage,
our population is more homogen—
eous than any other in the couns
try. Nature bas divided us; the
gospel has united us. Thank God
for the South, forthe old South,
“out of which this peace has come!
THROUGH TC MOBILE,
The Central Railroad Pushing its
Alabama Extensions
Savannah News,
The Central railroad is rapidly
pushing it extensions.
President Alexander has filed a
declaration with the Alabama see
retary of state for the purpose of
organizing the South Alabama
Railway company to build from
Columbia to Mobile. This will be
a continuation of the road from
Blakely Ga., to Columbia and wil!
traverse one of the best timber and
agricultral sections of Alabama,
making a direct line from Mobile
to Savannah.
The Blakely extension to Colum
bia, a distance of twelve miles, was
decided upon gome time
ago and preparations are now
being made to commence work. The
road will be completed early in the
fall. Columbia with its spendid
river transportation facilities, which
have given it a population of 1200
inhabitants, will in the near future
be one of the most important and
prosperous towns on the Chattas
hoochee. Its cotton receipts last
year were 15,000 bales, and the out
look is for much larger receipt this
season. The people are alive on
the subject of the Central’s exten
gion to that point, and the contin
uation on to Mobile will give that
gection of Alabama a hoom that
will be likaly to result in the build
ing ot a large trade for the outlet
DOTLS.
In Chicago,more than any place
else, the sentiment in favor of a re
stricted immigration is taking
shape, though it is becoming prom
inent so far east as New York.
Good citizens are needed and wan.
ted, but the paupers, mfidels and
Anarchists, of whom we get so
many, and who never become good
citizens, should be refused our hos
pitality. —Ex
It is thought that a stupendous
difficulty is on our hauds at the
South in solving the Negro prob
lem.” But give us this problem a
thousand times over rather than
that terific problem which the
Northern States must solve in the
case of their insurgent Foreign
population. We shall geton very
comfortably with the Negroes. It
we had been let alone, there never
would have bzen any trouble at all.
And now, social disturbance is less
probable here than in any other
part of the United States. We
are not needing sympathy; but we
sincerely tender oursympathies to
those who need them. And, with
out changing the subject, we hope
that the seven anarchists in Chicas
go will speedily hang. |
i |
The Admirers |
Of the I W Harper,Nelson county,
Ky, whiskey, are hereby informed
that this whiskey is not sold pro
misciously over the country, but
placed Into the hands of ona dealer
who is authorized to guarantee that
the whiskey is sold pure asit comes
from the Disiillery. Sold in Daw
son, only by
FRANK BETHUNE,
Dawson, Ga
Berxnens Bros, & Uk,
The Salvation Army has been
holding forth in Athens for two or
three weeks past, and on last Sun—
day night, at the Oconee street
Methodist church, The Rev Simon
Peter Richardson went for them
~with gloves off. He spoke of the
‘army as religious tramps, and con
‘demned their ways and methods.
He showed by the Bible that their
way of doing business was not or
thordox, and made a strong appeal
to the churches to keep clear of all
such treaks.
VYOL. 1111.-—-No-5
COUNTING THE TREASURE.
The Internal Revenue Order—
Treasurer Hyatt Takes Posse#e
ion,
WasniNaroxn, May 28-~The ex
ecutive order consolidating and
abolishing & number of internal
revenue districts will take effect
on 15, or asseon thereatter as posi
ble
COUNTING THE BOODLE, ~
Actine Secvetary Thompson tos
day appointed a committee tomake
an examination of books and assets
of the office of the United States
Treasury, incident to the transfer
of that office from Mr. Jordan to
Mr, Hyatt.
The committee in making the
count will have the "assistance of
seventy-five persons, including the
experts. It began this afternoon
and can hardly finish inside of two
months. Treasurer Hyatt will
formally assume charge to-morrow
morning.
What Is Needed. v
The Abbeville Press and Banner
evidently believes that the salvation
of the South isin farming. Hows
ever that may be their is as much
common sense in this paragraph as
was ever crowded into like space:
Much 'has] been said Jof late
about the necessity for the estab
lishment of factories of all sorts,
from fruit-canning to cotton mills
and National banks, A friend re
cently suggested that there is a
greater need, and one within the
range of possibillity, and that is
prosperous farms. If we could
have thee sam energzy infused into
the farms, and the same amount of
constant and systematic inteligent
labor applied to our farms that is
required “to make factories, cotton
mills, and banks a success, the
country would prosper beyond any
reasonable expectation. What
good will enure to you, my triend
of capitalists building wagnificent
tactories, it ye stand here idle all
day! How is it with you! Are you
applying all your energies to make
the farm a success' We need sue~
cessful farmers. They are not to
be found among the lieners, who
spend one day in the week with
their teams going to town to buy
corn at double price, which they
should raise at horie. Tt is seldom
tound ameng that class of men who
go to mule dealersaud buy Western
mules instead of raising them. The
prosperous man is seldom found
without a pasture and some good
cattle. The trouble about the all
cotton plan is, that people begin to
work on the crop in March and fim
ish early in November—with »
month’s rest after laying by, We
need profitable employment for the
whole year. We need pastures’ in
which our cattle way graze. = =
De-lee-ta-Lave.
The use of Delectalave imparts
such agreeable sensation to the
mouth and teeth, ay to make.it a
pleasure to children as well as to
adults. Use Delectalave when you
rerform yourdaily ablutions. {'h'c
lmbitual use will preserve the teeth
iin a healthy condition during. life,
'For sale by J. R. Janes’ Son Dawe
son Ga. :
————— OBt
Remember gour honor, which
raises you ‘above fortune snd
above kings,
o S
Pugilist Jake Kilrain has &hal
lenged Pugilist John L Sulivan to
combat in a twelve foot ring for the
world’s championship and five
‘thousand dollars, ay
eS)B e “ X
t The Blade Temperunce Legion,
instituted by the Toledo B ads.
now numbers 19,334 mewbers wuo
are pledged to total abstinence tila
ltwunty—oum yeusof age.