Newspaper Page Text
o Just Sa.
There 15 said to be a constant
« wranse in the number of well-to
]weiople in this eountry who
f'?iulli)it valgar fora girl %o know
b thing about housek(‘anplug. It
iu’to pe hopal this is not true.
llioor housekeepiag is one of the
marks of vulgarity, and a woman
who deesn’t know how to keep
Jouse 18 liable to be thought val
gar by 80Y one who ecrosses her
threshnld.
—:Cure for Love.
A lady who kunows its valus
gives the following recipe: Take
12 ounces of Dislike, 1 pound of
Resolution, 2 ounces of the pow
der of Experience, 1 large s;;.rig
of Time, 1 qaart of the eooling
water of Consideration. Set them
over a gentle fire of Loove, sweet
enit with the spoon of Meclan
choly, put it at the botiom of
your heart, cork it down with the
cork of a gcund Consecience and
et it remain, and you will instant-
Jy find ease and be re:stored to
right sense. These things may
pe ind of the apotheecary, at the
pouse of Understanding,next door
to Reason, in Prudence streef, in
the Parish of Contentment.
Woman Detective.
A Texas woman, Mrs. Theall,
living near loaston, has distin
guished herself as a detective,
Her husband, while returning
homs in a bagyy, was shot down
onthe road. The horsa cam:
homa with the Ldood stained car
riage and without a driver. The
wifs jumpel into the vehicle aud
drove rapidly baek te where the
hasbwnd lay dzad. She narrow
ly exivmined the sarrounlings,
measared the foot traeks aud oth
er traces, and so loeated the mar
derers —three men —that they
were arrvested awd jailed.
Capital Comiang South.
Tha amount of eapital placad
in Southern mining anld manu
facturing industeies darinz ths
yaar just passad was 812),226,00)
against 365,312,939 in 1835. This
fact alons establishas ths wondoar
fal prograss of our sestion and
inlicates the confilenes of North
exn and BEaropean wapitalists in
the stability of the Sonth’s iron
and manufacturing interasts,”
This rapil growth has been the
subjact of diseussion the union
over, anl facts and fisuras illus
trative of the Soath’s onward
strides appaar in every journal in
the country.
The Sad Side.
Dr. Matt Alexander, one of the
laling physicians of Kaoxvillo,
Tann., committed saicids by tak
lag morphine en Tuesday. Ho
lelt a nota which read as follows:
“Idie with malics toward none. lao
tohell. Telil my s to gn to heaven.”’
Poor follow! What a lagiey
for a father to Jeava a shn! How
mach mora manly it woal? hava
bsen £or him to have sparal his
ovn life and to hLave fought the
battle through. He might have
won the fight. Thousanls of
of others have dona It. It issneh
B%arrences as this that cast a
gloom over the haman heart, and
form the sad side of this world of
ours.
Fiorenea Was 111
Miss Nina VanZandt,ths yonng
fomale erank who i 3 piaing to
Mmarry Spies, the anarshist, mudo
aChieagy doctor the other day
S 0 mad that he wanted to kiek
Somebody. Sha sant a note to
bim abogt midnight requesting
him to hasten to her house as
“our Florenes” was very ill with
diptheria, The doetor, who is a
kind fathor and very fond of chil
dren, imagined that tho lifs of
some littls girl was in dangar, al-
Most ran his legs off in order to
save the little snffsrer. Oa arriv
10g at Miss VanZndt's houss hs
diii(:overed “our Florence” was an
ugly poodle, and in reply to Miss
Vau'/mmlt’s tearful quastion as tH
What should ba dous, told her to
“drown the d—-—yn dogz,” and then
the man of .medisine snoited aud
climbed down the front steps in
great rage,
Saved iiis Lafe.
M, D. I. Wileovson, of Horse
Cave, Ky., says he was, for many
Years, badly aflicted with lathisic,
4lso Dinbotes: the pains were ol-
Lost unendurable ‘and would
Sometimes almost throw him into
tonvulsions, He tried Flectric
.l_nttnrs and got yelief from the
tirst bottle, nnd after takmg six
"“!Hm was entirely cured and had
Biined iy flogh cightoan pounds.
SDRYS ha positively beliaves he
gould hava died, bk it ot brou
]“'_:‘t“llf: reliof uliur:_lml by Elestrie
b urs, Sold ut 39 couts u botile
Y Ciaael Bios.
THE DAWSON JOURNAL
JORDAN & RAINEY.
A GREAT MISTAKE HEED 71HE WARNING
THE merchants of Dawson are still trying to make the people believe that GRO
CERIES ave very cheap in this market, but that is only a blind. If you will just
call on C. 8, ALLEN vou will find that Staple Groceeries are very high, but he will
,;;iril at as small a margin as any one. He is on Lee street, opposite Court House.
Jont fail to eall,
Y : ' . I
The Girl With Laughing Kyes. ‘
I love the girl with tecth like pearls 1
That Slcum from rosy lips; |
And fai®would steal the sweets they yicld, i
As bee the honey sips;
But yet above those charms of love
My heart woull seck the prize
Of rarer worth, the peasl of mirth—
The girl with laughing eyes,
'Tis sweet to hear the music clear
That ripples from the heart
The laugh of joy from maiden coy,
So free {rom slavish art,
But yet the glow of mischi-{’s flow
From glancs that quick replies
Reveals the bliss of happiness |
Berind those laughing eyes, |
The same is trae thongh eyes be blue -
As stars in LEden’s clime;
Or dark as nizht, with passion’s light,
Unfathomed, deep as time,
In pleasure’s mart they show the heart
That sorrow quick defies—
The joy of carth, the quecn of mirth—
The girl with lsaghing eyes.
Oh, I could gaze now all my days
into those deptis that charm,
And bless that joy without alloy
That knows no grief’s alarm,
Thera’s words of biss within a kiss,
And heaven i jove's sighs;
Bat far more sweet the joy complete—
True love from laughing eyes.
Then ever lanzh and let me quaff
* T'he nectar sparkling bright,
Till, drunk with mirth, T leave the earth
In shades of gloomy nizht;
And in my flight throush seas of light
Pil wake the vaniied skies
With joyful lays to sing the praise
Of girls with langhing eyes.
Making Restitution
Tha agant of the Air-Line rail
road received the sabjoinal exm
wunication, which explains itself:
“Cruerneville, Cal, December
21, 1850. —Passenger Agent, At
lauta, Ga.—Dear Sir: In the
spring of 1879, I stole a rile on
the passengar train from Guins
ville on the Air-Lino railvoad to
Mt Aicy. Buab sinze that tima
the Lioed his myl» a Christain of
ma, shown mo that I mast make
restitation Hr all sach wrongs;
and praisa His name, if it should
take overy cant I mika whils I
s 1 5 1 3. ey
live, I'll maka it all right. Bat,
oh, it pays to b 2 a Christain at the
cost of anything in this world.
Not a theoretical nor a santiment
al Chustain, but one that has his
!
foet firmly fixed on the Rock of
Agos (Jesus Christ) with tho
love of God welling up ia the soul
all the time. Glory to God for
such an experienee. I dou’t know
what the fare was, but think two
lollars enongh. Find enclosed a
monay .ordar for that amount.
Perhaps tha road has changed
hands sinca that tima. Will you
please to see that the right men
get the money.
Respectfully, yoars, saval,
M. C. Barry.
Wanted to be a Wizzard.
The uadvance agent of barn
storming Wizzard had just landed
in the country editor’s office.
“J want an ad. in your paper,”
he said.
“What for 2" asked the editor.
“For the greatest and the only
living prestidigitator. He can do
anything and everything, change
water into wine, and wine into wa
ter. Take a twenty dollar note
ont of a cat’s moath; take a ten
out of a turnip; take a five ont of
a man’s hat every time he puts
his handin, and so on.”
“Do all that, can he?” queried
the editor.
“You bet he can, and not h&_tlf.
e
“(Clan he take a dollar out of an
editor’s pocket?”
“(lourse he can; a hundred of
them, for that matter.”
“\Well, he's the man I'm looking
for, and if he will teach me how 1
can do it, I'll be darned if he can’t
have his ad.in every column of
my newspaper, free, and I'll gét
out a supplement besides.”
Miracalous Bseape.
W. W. Reed, draggist, of Win
chesta, Ind., writes: “One of my
castomers, Mre, Louisa Pike, Bar
tonia, Randolph county, lud,, was
a long sufferer with Consamption,
and was given up to e by her
r-h\':vsicinn's. She heard of Dr.
King's New Discovery for Coa.
gamptior, and began buying it of
me. In six months’ time she
walked to this eity, a distance of
six miles, and is now 800 much im
provoa she has quib using it She
fanls she owes her life to "
Peae Trial Bottles at Crouch
Bios. Deag Slove
Dawson, Ga., Thursday, Fcbruary 17th., 1887.
AGARIC. |
WHAT ATLANTA HAS BEEN USING 1
“TO MAKE DRUNK COME.” 1
Atlanta Capital.
What is Agaric? |
For months, past. the public
bave pazzled over this question,
anl to-day the people are as ig
norant of what the liquid is as
they were several months ago. A
great many people believe it is
the namo of a man whe rans a
wine room soms whers in the
city.
What is Agarie?
That’s the question. It is not
whiskey, it is not brandy, neither
is it a fermented liquor, and yet
it is sold and bought for liquor
and is relished by a'l topers al
most 2s mach asliquor. Whetb
er it is intoxicating or not, itisa
popular beverage, so a Capital re
porter male some investigations
conesrning the liguid.
THE SUBZCT HANDLED SCIENTIFIC
ALLY.
Tisst, the reporter made a dip
into sciene2 and arese with the
following formula:
Thyma,
Marjoram,
S:lgt‘,
Lifeeverlasting,
Corlander ssed.
These are aliowed to ferment,
but no aleohol or other spirits are
added.
When taken in proper doses,
and not “swillad down” to make
draunk come, agavie is exhileratiny
and stimulating, bat not intoxiea
ting. When taken in largs doses
it produces
1 A DULL, SLEEPY SENSATION,
‘ And tho effates are not unlike
{ those of an sesthetic, particularly
| ehiloroform.
‘ As the benumbed senses grad
| nally surrender to the effects of
i the drug, a sweet feeling steals
| through the soul of the victim and
‘ he lies down with bright anticipa
l tions foating through his clondad
| brain and his soal is as happy as
i ha who expects to enter the realms
of paradisa.
The.Agarie expert, who was in
terviewed by the Capital reporter,
said:
“I have been drank--I mean
sick on agarie--gaite a nuambor of
t'mes. When you have taken
}lbf\’ll'l your last load, and your
stomach adopts a protective plat-
Tform, and sit down and clos? your
| eyes-—O, blissful moment, O,
I sweet Blysium—and you are dead
lasleap in a pair of twin sec
louds. Youare liable to remain
dead from four to ten hours, it de
pends upon yeur constitution.
Whnen you awake, instead of hav
| ing been jubilant, in paradise, you
I feel as if you
i HAD STEPPED FROM THE OONFINES
| OF HELL.
Your throat is dry and parched
| and you tongus is swollen. Your
} eyes feel as if thoy were set in li
| quid fire,and the throbbing of your
| temples is the striking of sledge
| hammers upon the brain that at
| every blow bursts the skull into a
; thousand fragments. Every res
l‘ pirati>n producas a spasmodie ac
| tion of the heart, and the air in
} baled into the lungs comes out
l like the draft from a blast fur
| nace.”
| This same persen said o the re
| porter that he had drank agarie
‘in small quanities and it did him
| good.
‘ When a man drinks too much
| agarie, he does not entirely recov
"or from the effects of the drug for
' ten or fiftean days, and if the vie
'tim has any liver troubles he may
'bo two or three months getting
Lwell.
| Nevertheless agaric is quite a
‘ popular beverage. no matier what
'it contains, or how it effects the
i gonsmlmeYs ¢ o
{ A young lady in IlTinois is nam
, e Shorthose, tmt recently she got
mad beenuse & man ealled her
tocks for short,
THE GENTLEMAN,
Brief but Interesting Analysis of a
Rare Character.
There are some 'men who, by
their manuers and livas, &'ve the
stapidest of their fellow-baings a
glimapeo of the Atmmifivty - himsclf.
They aro called gentlawmen.
The title has been misused a
great deal, but it never had bnt
one meaning. It moeans a man
who has the inatinet and practice
of geantility. The mere worl man
means all that is manly-—strength,
earnestness, honesty, fortitude;
when to all this you adl gentility
you gat all that humaaity ean ear
ry without tumbling upward and
disappearing witlin ths gates of
heaven.
Clothes do not make the gantle
man, alihough some silly womn
and fools seam to think so.
A “swell” is not a gentleman,
for his manners are only skin
deep, and he has barely enough
for use among his owa acguaiun
tances; whereas the ganuins arti
cle is a gentleman at hoart, and
consequently cannot help being a
gantleman to everybody.
No nnfortunate accidsnt of birth
or fortune ean keop a true gentle
man {rom living according to his
character, Sometimes he i 3 a
millionaire, and is named in the
newspapers as giving great parties
and receptions, and occupying a
box at the opara; butb such streaks
of luek do not prevent his spaak
iny civiliy to his smployess, and
riising his hat to his old eolored
narse if he chances to meet hor in
tha street,
Sometimes he is so peor that he
has to be a policeman or drive a
| strect car, or tramp about as a
l book-canvasser, or as agent for
‘t'xe sale of laundry soap, bat in
{any case ho tells the trath, robs
ino one and is civil to everybody.
E Often he is a merchant, somoa
{timas has not enough Fbrains and
l vitality to be more than a common
|laborer, but no amounnt of hard
work, poor pay and bad company
ean keep him from acting his true
‘nature to every ons with whom he
| eomes in contact.
> never putson airs, vet every
|b)ly who knows him admits his
| superiority.
‘ It is plain to all that heis bet
ter than those abyut him, yet no
| one is ever jealous of him.
’ Hs never “lays dowa the law,”
{ or talks about his likes or dislikes,
' yeb men who are telling coarse
!storles always stop when he ap
! proaches.
' Hois always a wor:hiper of
f woman, but none of his aequain
gmnces ever venture to introduce
| bhim to women who are not all
“ they should ba. Oa tha other
' band, women with whom other
| mon try in vain to becomd ac
| quainted will take pains to be in
| troduced to a true gentleman.
He may never send a laly a
‘ bouguet or a box of eapdy, never
| pay her a compliment, and yet she
é likes hima better than the whole
| flock of well-dressed batterflies
| that flicker around her.
3 may have to work so hard
or dress so poor that is name is
nover seen in the newspaper lists
of men who attended Muvs, So-and
80’s reception, or were present at
Miss Blank's wedding, but Miss
Dlank and Mrs. So-and-so would
have willingly missal a dozen or
dinary fellows for the pleasare of
seeing him.
His acquaintan s seldom think
of him when they ars looking for
soma one to ask to “oo on a lark,”
but when there is a funeral in the
family, or sgome other trouble, he
is the man that is always applied
to for eounsel and help.
I have seen a rich gentleman
stop his carriage, while riding for
pleasure, to take a poor ~ washor.
woman who was carrying a bundle
groater than her strangth, [ have
soen a poor gentlaman riding
home in a howse ear, with a ban
dle of tools in one hand and a
bandle of seraps of wood in the
other, give a seat to a lady, while
a lot of well-dressed fellows buried
their fuces in the evening paper
Neithor tha rich gentleman or the
poor goutleman got any pay for
thoir-eourtosy,nor-did they ox
pect any, but it is a comfort to re
member that Gad has a keen eye
sight and a long memory.
Indead, it is the lack of the feel
ing that one ought to have some
recompense for his grod deeds
that distinguishes the gentleman
from the common poople. The
man who says, “It's no good to do
kind things, bacause nobody ever
gets any thanks for it,” is not a
gentleman and never will ba, un
less he gots rid of his selfish no
tions.
The g=ntleman nevar is anxious
to have paople know who or what
he is; withoit baing conceited he
knows thatcharacter anl eondact
will introduce him in time, and do
tho Dusiness more thoroughly
than any amouant of talk can do.
Ha never talks aboat himself or
his belongings, and what they cost
him; by this sign you may always
distingnish him from the swell
and the pretender.
Often he balongs to the church,
but if he lival a ihousand years,
and you woere to mact him every
day, you couldn’t fiad out from
his conversation what his donomi
nation is, for to him a man’s be
liefs —his own included-—amoant
to very little when compared with
his life.
The true lady differs from the
gentleman only as sister from
brother, and all that is said above
applies as well to her. Shabhy
clothes, poor fare, hard work, and
a bouse with bare walls someatimes
combine to let a woman down, but
they never change tha character
of that blessed creature to whom
wo allade, when in varnest we say
“lady;” and should it ever be our
fortune to meet her and the gen
tleman in the better world which
we all hops 1n some way to enter,
we will probably find them look
ing and acting just as they do on
earth, for hera they are every
body’s good angels.
A Distressine Sitaation
Boston Reeord.
A Boston man, visiting Wash
inzton racontly, went to the Capi
tol, and thinking it would be com
fortable in the gallery appropri
ated to ladies accompained by
gentlemen, appsared at the en
tranco anl was stopped by ths
dom‘l'mc[rox'.
“No geuntlemen are admitted
here except with ladies.”
The old gentleman (for he was
a Bostouian of matare age,as well
as blue blood,) was equal to the
emergency.
“Bat my wile is in here.”
“Yery wall; go in.”
On entrance he discovered, to
his dismoy, that the oaly person
present was a well-dressed colored
womafi.
Oa coming ont the doorkeaper
civilly inquired:
“Did you find your wife?”
“Did father injure your feel
ing last night when lio asked yoa
out in the hall?” said a fair dam
sel to a clerk in a dry-gools store.
“Yes,” ho replied in bitter, re
vengeful tones, “but I can forgive
him that for your sake, dzar.”
“Then you will come again?”’
she asked hopefally and brightly.
“Yes love, I will come again.”
“Whan, Harry, when?’
“When your paisin the eold,
cold ground, Annie.”
“No soonar than that?” sho ask
ed, with tears in har ey2s.
“Well,” he said forgivinaly,
“for your sake I might be induced
to come to his faneral.”
Iris woll for tue cities of the
sonth to know that Chili is groat
1y esaital ovar the appaavaues of
{ gholara on its boandaries, and that
1n Mendoza forty Jdoaths o day
‘tmm tue plagae nrv wopariad,
VYOL. 22.—N0 39.
STONEWALL JACKSON'S SPIRIT.
Mounted on a CGray Horse it Rides
Throngh the Barracks of the Vir
ginia Military Institute.
Lexington, Va., Special to Times-Demo
crat,
A cousiderable sensation has
been created at the Virgima Mili
tary Institute here and in this
scetion by aeemarkable phenome
non, or optical illusion, or what
ever it may be callad, in which
those who witnessaed. the sight in
sist they dircovered a wouderful‘
likeness to Gen. Stonewall Jack
son in the strange visitant. At‘
the breaking out of the war that
officer was a professor in this in
stituto.
The following statement is given
by James Hilton, a well-known
citizen of this p'ace: “Isend you
a thrilling and trae accoant of a
ghost which has recestly appear
el ay the Virginia Military Insti
tute. On the night of the 23th,
shortly after 12 o'clock, as the
sentinel was walking his lonely
beat, his attention was attracted
to the front parracks by a slight
sound resembling the rustling of
lewes by a gentle wind. Instant
ly between the two large forty-six
pound siege guns there appearsd
a soldier dressed in Confoderate
uniform and mounted on a large
gray horse. His sword was drawn,
his horse tightly leizned up and
two white plumes floated grace
fully above Lis hat. Tho sentinel,
at first almost paralyzed with ter
rar, had gazed upon the objeet
but an instant, when it started
through the sallyport ints the
corurtyard at a rourd trot, crossing
the sentinel’s beat and making no
andible sound, although he was
passing over a solid brick pave
ment.
- The santinel challengad, with a
‘rloud voice, “Who goes there?”
‘The rider did not heed him, but
passed on at the rane pace until
arriving at an abrupt, danzerons
anl impassable procipice at the
raar of the barracks ha vanished.
The sentinel promptly ealled his
Ecnrpurul, who informed the lieu
tenant of the gaard and the officer
io‘i the day. The guard was im
‘m>liately tarnad oat and thongh
& close ~d minute search was in
i stituted no trace of horse or rider
¢ould be found.
' On the next night a similar
phenomenor. was witnessel by a
lp'u'ty of cadets and eilizens, This
:tims n sentinel was stationed in
‘the center of the sallyport to
await ths reappaaranes of the
‘horse and rider. Al the same
time as on the nizht bsfora, pre
;cedml by the sama sound, the
;horss anl rider appeared and
} start>d through ths sallyport at a
great pace. Thae santinal eom
} manded, “Halt! who goas tisre?”
’ I'he horse approachel nearer, and
when two feet from tha point of
the sentinel's bayonat vanished,
only to reappear just ‘n the rear
of the sentinel. Then he passed
on in the direction ha had taken
the preceding night, again disap
. pearing at the edyge of the preci
piee. An old vebteran presant rec
-lognized the grand and imposing
form of the ridez to ba none other
than that of Gea. Stonewall Jack-
Isun. So far no explanation can
Le given.
\ if the Sufferers rr¢»:|lT)n3llm:)-
tion,
Scrofula, and Goneral Dability,
will try Scott’s Emulsion of Pare
Cod Liver Oil with Hypophos
phites, they will fiad immoadiate
i relief and a permansnt banefit,
| Da. B. H. Baovsax, Brolduax,
|L, says: “I gave Scott’s Emal
[ sion to Mrs. C., troubled with a
! very severe Brouehial aflestion.
| Added to this the birth of a child
(and sabsequeut illuess, she was in
’z'.l very bad coudition. I srdered
| Seott’s Fmalsion, which she eam
| menead taling, givivg nt the same
| time somo to the baby, which was
| very poor (weight threa and ana
| balf ponads). Sineo iaking the
Jimalsion, eough is gone, looks
| frpah, full in the face, tlash firm,
1 good eolor; baby same, fat auld dn
ifiue wud.nwu. . L&
"~ © A TOUCHING SCENE. ¥
Out ina large Wufrt;*@ R
onoarmed tramp was &% |
before the city reeorder g
seemed to bave walked 0"&
continent. He wus %
thongh in rags, bad an :
‘ance of having been reared il
luxary. e
" The recorder, who was ‘a man
of 35 or 33 years of age, looked
upon the offender sternly, saying:
“You are accused of vagrancy and
‘drankenness; what have you gof
to offer as an excuse?”’ é 2
The tramp arose, and looking
into the eyes of the recorder, said:
“As to drankenness, I deny the
assertion. After wandering over
the United States in search of my
loved ones, I arrived in this ecity
three days sinee, a vagrant by the
law, harmless, pennileas, sick and
hungry. I was weak for want of
faod, honce the aceusation of
drankenness. To make my story,
%ir, as short as possible, T will tell
you, as you have disposad of your
other prisoners. 1 was a Confed
erate officer, in Fort Donnelson;
was wounded in that fight, and
when the surrender was made my
comrades thought T was dead, and
wrote to that purpose homs to my
‘wife and only boy, a lad "of thir
teen. Hoygever, I recovered
enough to go to Rock Island,
‘where I remainad a prisoner until
aftor the closs of the war. I then
, returned to my home in the South,
to nl it destroyed, and my wife
and boy gone. 1 went to the
northorn eity where I first saw
and married my wife; but her en
tire family had disappeared,moved
off or died. T then began asearch
| for those T loved, which has car
' ried e into every part 2 the
\ Union; I have locked everywhere.
Hanger nor eold, nor heat, nor
poverty, disease nor sufforing, has
aver shaken my purpose. lam
now 60 years old, worn out and
realy for the grave, but I want to
prosecuts my search as long as
life exists—l feel that T will find
my boy some day.”
The recorder had paled and waa
trembling like a leaf in the wind.
Arising, he beckoned to the tramp
to follow him into an adjoining
room, and in there the scene was
shut out from the eyes of the cu
rious. A sobbing was heard, and
the reccrder was heard to say,
“Tather; oh, ray father;we thouggl
you were dead.” and in a few min
ates he returned, saying, “the
prisoner will be taken care of.
Ho is my own father, whom we
heard was killed in batile. My
mother, after the Union arny had
movad into our Sonthern country,
veturned to the North. Having
heard that he was killed, she mar
ried again and died ten years ago;
that was the reason we had never
heard of her. He shall now stop
l his travels and find a home with
1 me,” and, with tears of joy beam
| Ing in his eyes, he presented the
tramp 1o his friends, all of whom
gave him a hearty weleome. A few
days after he was on tho street,
dressed up handsomely and at.
tracted attention and respeot by
his manly appearance. :
Ty Ty Route. .
A Pointer for Dee., published at Roaton.
'The namo of the Ty Ty Route
has not the most remote connection
with the underlaying timbers eof
the roadway. Ty Ty isastation on
the line located among the pines
anl turpantine orchards of the
Branswick & Western Railroad, a
most important link in one of the
greab thoronghfares between the
West and Florida—~over which
through palace cars ran between
Cincinnati and Jacksonville,
Sare and prompt eonnections are
made at Albany, and there are no
disagresabls clianges, or transfor
—+the same ruale applies at Way.
eross, when connoetions are made
for Savannrh and Jacksonville
thanes the roal ranson to DBrune
swick, whera is Georgia’s greab
deap water harbor anloene o% the
finest ou the whole Atlantic coast,
and to which port the road carries
a large trade in eotion, timber and
naval stores.
Just What They All Say.
Hon. D. D. Hiynie, of Salem,
111, says he nses Dr. Bosanko's
Cough aud Lang Syrup in his
family with the most satisfactory
resalts, in all cases of Coughs,
Colds and Croup, and recommends
it in particalar for the little ones,
Sample botils free at W, Q. Ken
drick’s, ID vwson, Ga. S
A Loady in Poxas Wreites;
“My ease is of long standing;
has bhafll o 1 meuy physieinns; have.
triol every ramaldy 1 crald benr
of, bat 1o Ligli's Fonde Rege.
lacor i all that celicved )
Weita Taa uv':hldJ{J Rdz& a
Co,y Ablaas, e MR e
: Loy e