Newspaper Page Text
' ■ .L ■ ■ ,
(WLEDGED FAILURE.
.pants in TUB great new
□BK STRIK BDESPAIR '
Them APP* tor ItalR.t.tement
•re Uefo*ed— 1 The Losses
-t Have Incurred—Other
Uhor Trouble., Eta.
.f lMBstoremen standing idle on
‘ the streets along the river
‘ Msmned almost their normal
L though it requires a larger num-
nti do the work now than for-
ThV steamboat and railroad pier
*»U claim that business is as good
fies rike, and that freight Is being
■S the utmost facility. Steamers
J„„ T “g at advertised time, and the
freight on the railroad piers no
fmanv strikers are straggling back
applying at P>“ 68 wher t th °y, ttre
Am In many cases where they
m be taken back they were
Zloyment. and in other cases
: e welcomed. The longshoremen
'.Cuban steamship docks returned
j a y on the old terms. Some of
admitted that there were too many
the business for the unions to com-
.omusnies successfully. It seems
Crercsse of defeat of the freight
. an d longshoremen than of the
diets, whose cause the former two
A labor espoused.
ue mutteringsof a threatened gen-
keon the Reading railroad in snp-
!he coal handlers, notwithstanding
linked statements that an amicnble
®t had been reached between rep-
-| j the comnony and the differ-
isea oi labor employed by it. If this
i-cun, it will be a serious one for
i el though it is not likely to help
ken on other lines. The statement
»led to-day that the strikes in the
tying trade have diminished by eight
Ithousand tons, the amount of coal
juld otherwise have reached points
tate delivery up to date,
lommercial Advertiser sayB regatd-
bigstrike: The strike of railroad
hiudlers in this city was a week old
ht. The longshoremen quit work
iary 27th. Both strikes are now ad-
eren by their projectors, to be
They have not helped the cause
oal handlers nor brought about any
jot pay. They have not even seri-
iterfered with the business of the
lies against which the movement
reeled. There never was a great
cveamt in New York city which
io miserably as these strikes. At
lent time there are 8,714 freight
a and longshoremen idle in New
:ity as a result of the strike,
weeks ago these men bad
employment at good wages. Most
i laborers will never regain the places
ft at the command of the Knights of
Probably one-half of the men who
uen strikers' places have been
t from other cities. Now that they
cured good and steady employment
ill stay. The strikers have therefore
led in adding 3,000 to the poor labor-
lew York, and have thus decreased
nr chances for getting employment
er, besides the wages they have lost
le suffering they have brought on
Ives and their families. Theso are
y tangible results the strikers have
loss in wages to
la an item a great deal
than moat persons imagine,
are 1,545 freight handlers
Put and North rivers who have
o-day lost seven days' work on ac-
of tba strike. Their average wages
•I work are $1,56 a day. They have
unfore; $13,186 since they have
lla There are 7,200 longshoremen
Jorth and East rivers who will have
Us os account ofthestriketwoweeks
mw. Probably they averaged $2.60
or the most part at this season of the
On this basis of calculation tho 11
is longahoremen have been idle have
* $198,000, or a total cost on the
tkss of $211,186 thus far in the mat
Advice to Thoae with Th«trt.,l
from a Succm.ful Actress
George Cwvan, in the enrrent Brooklyn
Magazine, oners some good counsel on
theatrical profession for women. To the
question: ‘‘Can you advise young women
to adopt the stage V" sho says the nnsw»r is
ffi'oXl qnaUfl6d
If the aspirants are well balanced by na
ture, discipline, and education; it they can
po upon the stage under the right protAt
ng auspices; and if they have that whTch
should be first, last, and forever-wlnt™
then by all meanB, yes. The stage is, ini
deed, a most templing calling, almost tho
net! P hh eB810D wtich womcn can com-
pete with men on equal terms. It is on the
w ° mi ® hM accomplished her
greatest work. In none of the arts or pro
fessions are thoro such great feminino
names as the stage possesses.
thei principal reasons urged against the
stage for young girls sre, that the labor is
too severe and the temptations too many
and great The first iB no obstacle—noth
ing of real value is attained without hard
work, severe work. The second is sup-
P 08 ^ to oover most of the ground.
The difficulties in the way of obtaining a
start are to the novice apparently insupera
ble, and many give up the wearisome con-
test. Such difficulties are not,' therefore,
without advantages, those who override
tho barriers being often the ones whose
talents are undeniable. The fortunate tyro
being legitimately started on her upward
oareer, as she hopes, with friends' advice
in her ears and a good mother’s counsel, I
trust in her heart, looks about for the
so-called temptations and trials of
stage life. She will soon learn that this
bng-bear need trouble her but little. Unman
nature behind the footlights is not a whit
different from human nature before the cur
tain. The question or morals and good be-
bavior lies with the individual, and is large*
ly a matter of character, disposition and
temperament, and sho will find scarcely
more respeot elsewhere, if she desire to in
spire it, than amonp the large and varied
assortment of people which make up the
class known as “professionals." It is not
the stage alone which numbers among its
disciples women whose yielding and pliant
natures render them susceptible to the in
fluences for evil which may surround them.
Unfortuantely, they are not aggressive in
fluences, else would they sound their own
note of warning. They are fnriive, watch,
ful, but discriminating. In every walk in
life women who are obliged to write failure
after every honest effort, may bo driven to
a loss of self-respect, as men are to dishon
esty; but such results must follow where
there is lack of ability or a profession over
crowded. It is only contended here that a
young woman with requisite talent and the
physical endowments which must go with
it need have no fear that she cannot pursue
unmolested her work upop the stage, nor
has sho reason to feel prouder of her viotory
than if she had followed any other bread-
winning voeatlon with like moral sucoees.
Miss Gayvan calls attention to the fact so
often reiterated that the life of an actress is
filled with hard work, and no success con
be gained in tho profession without years
of tbe most diligent study and faithful, un-
intermitting practice. Nor is the compen
sation for this as great as is usually sup
posed. Miss Gayvan says the salaries of
players are popularly supposed to be large
clined was made to him, especially
so since others who, like Mr.
Toombs, were members of the
provisional congress, were present and par
ticipating in the election, have published
statements which show that they were not
aware that, tho offer was made, which Mr.
Toombs, in his self.denial, declined.
Should you feel interest in looking further
into tho matter, you will find that some of
the statements of members of the provis
ional congress, at pp. 236 et seq., vol 1,
“Rise and Fall of the Confederate govern
ment.”
If I have inflicted upon you a longer let
ter than was expected or desired, on a sub
ject of so little general interest, you most
attribute it to your friendly manifestations,
and believe me respectfully and tmlyyonrs,
Jefferson Davis.
THE NEWS FROM EUROPE.
THE POPK'd INFLUENCE IN
GERMAN ELECTIONS.
The llerlln Post Has Another Sensational
Article—Germany Uuylng Horses lu
England—Austria Urged to At-
tack Itnasla—Notes.
EXPEIUr NOE WITH A SILO.
and easily earned; and they do seem large
in many instances. But when it is consid-
teiuatlon In the Minnesota State
■lUdlng by a Gallery Settling.
Pin., Minn., February 9.—A sensa-
“ «ased in the hall of the House of
this afternoon. The special
* “* day w»« tho final passage of tbe
“asei bill, and the gallery and hall
**ed with spectators. The capltol,
toost new, has been considered un-
» some months, and considerable
“6 “• recently fallen. Shortly
*• Moon began the attention of tho
*n was called to the fact that the
ao« beams appeared to be settling,
‘““a, 1 **declared that tho gallery
!® nr , inch ®*- A motion was
“J carried that spectators be ex-
^whereupon the gallery aisles wore
ored that, as a rale, they are paid only dur
ing twenty-five os thirty weeks
in tho year, it is appar
ent that they do not represent a largo or
certain annnal income; for Instance, a salary
of $200 a week for six months represents
only $100 a week for the entire year; and so
the ratio decreases as wo ran down the scale
of pay and tho length of engagements. Re
membering, moreover, that andiences never
forgive shabby or plain clothes, and also
the thousand and one necessities of stage
life, it is very plain that even an apparently
exorbitant salary may dwindle to a very
ordinary compensation.
Tho expenses of a traveling professional
life ore not great, unless willfully mado so,
and oonstnntly playing in a single play for
which bnt one set of gowns need be pro
vided wiU often leave a margin to be saved
or frittered sway, according to the nature
of tho player. Many traveling, year after
year, and always in the same part, have
managed to pnt by handsome snms. Never
theless, concerning traveling companies,
Miss Cayvan has fair good words to say,
finding that the life these most lead to be
moet wearisome, and without social oppor
tunity or leisure for personal pursuits. The
want of a home, that saving means of
grace for man or woman, is, she says, the
strongest argument that can be urged
against the stage as a profession.
opinion of many that a frightful
* narrowly tt>a ■»■«■» ■«$
V WU narrowly escaped by tho prompt
“•Chairman Donnelly. Subsequently
. P***®d for an Immediate
building by experts,
was built in 1880, and was
repaired last winter. It is
» uoters art affected with dry rot.
AS INDIANA MYSTERY.
”«f»l Wind or a Party of Unnters-
Murder and Suicide.
N.n fmm w2»w7i A ^
^ Partv nf Vmnt.k., —
. -■ , Ini, says: Yes-
iceefYr E ? nt * ni passing the farm
“?o(Il, nr y Unnhanli in aippccanoo
oAw COTer,id th « mutilated re-
“®" th ® hon »e- Inside
ith hZ! ^* 00T * red * Utile 2-year-old
lira n„°t T0 * t cut ftom ear 10 ®ar,
S'aMu-** b V®'y alive, bnt so
berb?i JBJ ?t T ® d * bon * the head aa to
Dnnhaa'a body was
1,^™ b . 7 , ho P* aa to make itlm-
-Z^'tain how be was killed. It
^l thro» th n V? 1 ”' Dnnh * m wiU ro-
went u -"ft* u P° n th « tragedy,
hh ehlM H“ 0Ug “ ““t Dunham
*®kiu1d d hi^!|? ptedtokmu * wi '®
5 , cc d,h,i,o * ,>
bA&'rv.grsi.SLT
0,9 Uo “® of
‘tier, fofVS??.?!.® 00 ? one > ** dn ® to
ewe m wh.vZv 16 ' ■ Democrat
“other, who in an
a *nd Joaanh V* ? i, ® d ber two sons
DAVIS AND TOOMBS.
Was the Ueoralan Offered the Oontedermte
Prealdency?
Auguita Chronicle.
Mr. J. C. Derby, of New York, permits
the editor ot the Chronicle to make pub
lic tho following letter never befoto in
print:
Beauvoib, Miss., September 1,1885.—J,
O. Derby, Esq.-My Dear Sir: Yonr kind
letter inclosing a reported interview with
General Hebert Toombs, wonld have been
sooner acknowledged bat for my absence
from home daring a largo portion of last
month. Tbe same cause, with numerous
engrossing engagements, will explain to yon
why I have done noting on the work to
which you allude.
The logio of General Toomba's remarks
will hardly commend itself to a severe an
alysis. The conclnsion to be drawn from
hit view wonld be that a military education
unfitted a man for military command, bnt
qualified him for civil administritioo, and
henoe it wonld follow that graduates of the
military academy ehonld only be employed
as dvil magistrates, and that generals for
the army shonld be sought in tns literary
colleges, or perhaps in the theological
■ominaries.
We had many distinguished generals
whose previous life had been passed, as we
have eminent bishope who wert bred as
soldiers, bnt not, therefore, in either one
cue or tho other.
With characteristic consistency he finds
the two men fitted to be President of the
Confedersoy among the graduates of West
Point Bo far very good fer his theory,
bat then he finds Gen. U. 8. Glut, tho
greatest soldier produced by the war. He
was also a graduate of our military acade
my. I might retort on Mr. Toomb's criti
cism of myself as s dvil executive by re
citing his career as a soldier, bnt I forbear.
In regard to General Toombs haring re-
fused the presidency of provisional govern
ment of the confederate States, I nmat ad
mit that he was in a better podtion to know
the facta of the esse than myself, si he was
present when the election was held, and as
a member of the provisional oongreaa, was
a party to the can visa and final choice,
while I wai far away engaged in
tbe duties intrusted to me by the
convention of Misaissiwpi, by which
I was appointel commander-in-enief
of the army of the State. It ta a oity, how-
ever, considering the reward doe to the
The Marreloofl Che apneas of tho Food It
Produces#
Mr. George W, Koiner, a leading farmer
and stock-raiser of Augusta county, Vo.,
has fnrnished the Staunton Vindicator the
following account of hU experience with
the silo:
“Last Angnst I put up a frame bnilding
12 by 12 feet and 12 feet high. The frame
is 8 inches, planked np on both sides. The
space between was filled with sawdust. I
pnt in a plank floor and covered with plank,
with a door in one comer at the gronnd.
The bnilding did not cost over $20, with an
estimated capacity of 30 tons. On Angnst
23 green corn was eat. Not having planted
the com for the purpose, and only a9 an
experiment, I selected the lightest growth
in the oom-fieid. The com was ent in
half-inch longths by stoam power, and dar
ing the filling of the silo throe men tramped
the out fodder as tight os they conld paek
it. The silo was only filled half fall, not
feeling snre that this plan of house wonld
keep it well. The top wus iiieu covered
with one and a half feet dry wheat chaff,
and placed loose plank, olosely fitted, cov
ering the entire top. Upon the plank was
pnt two feet of stone. Tho gable-ends were
nailed np. and the job was completed at a
cost of aboat$l per ton.
‘‘On December 5th I opened the door at
the bottom made for tho purpose of getting
tho ensilage ont. I found it in a splendid
condition, exeept a few inohes around the
sides and on top. Fearing there wonld be
some trouble to tench stock to eat it, some
of tho ensilage was offered to horses, cows
and hogs—all ate it at once with as much
relish as if it was green clover. After feed
ing the ensilage n few days to cows, they
inereased their flow of milk, besides giving
a richer quality. The stook, which have
been fed upon ensilage alone, oxcept access
to a straw stack, have Increased in weight
and manifest an increased appetite and
taste for it It is said that green elover,
cat when in bloom, makes os good ensilage
as green com. Clover that will make two
ana a half tons of hay will make twenty
tons of ensilage per acre, and oorn that will
make forty to fifty bnshels per acre will
make twenty-five tona of ensilage.
“The ase of ensilage will produce a revo
lution in farming and stock-raising. The
iresent low prices, demanding a change
rom the old management of stook-raising,
ensilage is the one great panacea for the
stock-raiser. Instead of soiling wheat at
than cost of production, beef can he
grown at almost half the cost nnder tho
present management Cattle will thrive
and grow throngh tho winter as in snmmer,
and a steer raised on ensilage daring tbe
winter months, at two years old would be
abont as large os at three nnder the ordi
nary regime, thus saving a year’s feed. It
will open up the dairy business in a new
light Milk and batter can be produced in
tho same quantity .and cost in winter as in
summer.
“Writers on the subjeot who havo fed
ensilage, claim that one acre of heavy clo
ver or com ensilage will feed four cows six
months; if it will only keep half that num
ber it will be a wondortnl improvement
npon tho present way of wintering stock.
Stock have been fattened npon ensilage ex-
Insively.
“dirJ. B. Lawes, the eminent English
agriculturist, after experimenting with en
silage, says it lose* only one-tenth of its
nutritive value as compared to its green
state. Ensilage is rich in albuminoids and
nitrogenous subs tan oe, and tho process of
fermentation which it nndegoes in tbe silo
is said to take the place of one degree in di
gestion.
“The idea that a silo ta expensive has de
terred many farmers from trying it. The
above described plan is aa cheap aa can be
made, and has proven to keep ensilage
abont as well aa the more expensive under
ground plans The silo has oome to stay,
stay and will enable every farmer who uses
it to keep donblo the n amber of stook,
and keep them much better, and at leu
coat. It is as applieabie'.to sheep husbandry
as any other stock, and hogs are said to
winter very well upon it."
Beblin, February 3.—The Munich Alge-
mome Zeitung publishes Cardinal Jacobini's
letter to the nuncio at Munich. It is datod
January 3rd. The Cardinal says that in
view of tho impending revision of the
church laws, the Fope desires the Centre to
support the septennato bill in every possi
ble way, and concludes: “It is well-knonn
that the government attaches the greatest
importance to the passage of the bilL If
by its adoption it shonld be found possible
to avert the danger of war in the near fut
ure, the Centre wonld render a groat service
to tho fatherland and to tho canso of hu
manity in Europe by supporting tho bill.
In tho contrary case, the hostile attitude of
the Centre would be considered unpatriotic
and a dissolution of tho ltelohstag wonld
cause embarrassments and uncertainties to
the Centre party.”
Cardinal Jacobin! instructs the nnncio to
urge the leaders of the Centro to influence
their colleagues in favor of the septennate
and assure them that such course wonld
greatiy satisfy the Holy Father. The Roman
Oathoho bishop of Limbarg, in Uesse-Nns-
ever, considering thei^^^^^***
self-abnegation of Mr. Toombs, and to the
Ihistorici importance of the matter, that be
has not more specially stated in what man-
ner and by whom the offer which beue-
sau, Prussia, has forbidden tho clergy of his
diocese to take part in any agitation against
the septennato bill. Ho declares that in
view of the reoent note of Cardinal Jacobini
giving expression to the Pope's wishes that
;he Catholics of Germany help the position
of the Papacy by assisting Bismarck to ear-
7 hi« bili. and thnsunnnrino hU frinndahin
and influence. The newly elected member
of tho Centro party in the Reichstag for
Limburg must not be impeded by anti-eleo-
tion pledges from carrying ont the wishes
of the Vatican. It is believed that all other
German Catholio bishops will pursue a
course similar to that of the Bishop of Lim
burg.
Berlin, February 9.—Tho Berlin Post’s
Paris correspondent writes: “A deceptive
calm followed your recent article referring
to General Boulanger, but ho is now moro
powerful than evor. Even his former oppo-
nenls are turning toward him as the rising
sun, finding it impossible to struggle
against tho growing popularity of
tho man, who is regarded by the
masses as the long oxpeoted liberator.
Tho whole conntry is anxious for
the 'revanche' and arming Bilently, but
with the evident belief that the hour is
coming.”
The Post adds an extract from the Paris
Figaro, an article signed by Aurelian Scholl,
imputing tbe grossest immorality to Ger
man women. This will raise a storm ol in
dignant protest in Germany.
Tbe Hody or Will Harbor, Who l
Drowned a Mouth Ago, Drawn Up
Into m Saw Mill.
Chattanooga Times.
The body of Will Barbee, the half-witted
yonng man who drowned himself in the
river a month sinoe, was recovered yester-
da; '
lay in a very peculiar manner.
About 8 o'clock yesterday morning the
huge log carriage used in polling logs from
tho river np an incline into Loomis, Hart
A Co.’s saw mill descended into the water.
A negro named Marson Franklin, who was
on a raft of lops cot two of them loose,
drove tbe hooks of the carriage into them
and motioned the men in the
mill to drew them np. As the
carrisgo ascended Franklin thought
he saw something like a man's band under
neath the logs. They were quickly landed
in the mill, and as they were rolled on the
carriage the workmen were horrified to find
a dead body on the carriage. It was quickly
identified as that of the unfortunate Barbee
boy, and his family were notified. Coroner
Nelson was toon on the scene, and sum
moned a jury ot inquest. A verdict was
rendered that the deceased came to his
death by drowning.
The body had keen in the water nearly
five weeks, and waa badly decomposed. It
was readily identified, however, and tamed
over to his father for burial.
If Sufferers From Consumption,
Scrofula, bronchitis sad general dabUltv will try
Scott'a Emulalon of Cod Lirar Oil with Hypopho£
phitoo, tbay will Had immodiato roUof aud porma-
uolbtoiat. Tbe madlcnl protaaalon unlroraally
It a remedy of tho groalut talas and vory
_ jiuty
arts. Boaulta moat gratifying. My littls patleoti
take It withpioreuro. — W. a. Hulbert, M. V., gal
bbnry, IU.
A Hoy Killed by a Lady.
Mxupiiu, February 9.—Last night Mrs.
Thompson, proprietress of a shooting gal
lery, while firing at a target by looking in l
mirror and aiming over ner shonlder, shot
and killed Willie Finley, a 16-year-old boy
who was employed as marker in the gallery.
iln. Thompson was not arrested.
-Bos. TOabonyNtwby called at tba police bar
racks juterdar afternoon, and aaklr - -
of off cer Henry, went ont
Seeing » cumber ef prtaooeri tLroojh thebara.be
eosMedwIth them end tipreeeed deep sympathy
for peogb who W..UM allow UeiuMlt ee bi ba locked
leal ntjsfeim
found at tba atnoe e> ixdatarwna ai
tn»t bo woe amatol »r.d locked np to
BOULINGEH’B PREP Alt ATION8.
lla U Getting Heady to Bend Troops to the
Kftitern Frontier.
Berlin, February 9.—The Berliner Nach-
richter says it has anthontio information
that General Boulanger, the French minis
ter of war, is preparing for a movement of
troops to. the eastern frontier. Four bat
talions of intantry are to go to Verdun and
Toni, and quarters are being prepared to
for them. A brigade of cavalry will also go
to Verdnn and a provision train to Toni.
Four battalions in Algiers havo been ordered
to France. General Boulanger has in
structed tho military railway committee to
remain in permanent session. * The Naoh-
richter adds: Paris advioes state that owing
to nrgent representations by his colleagues
Genera] Boulanger has postponed issuing
orders for these movements until the 21st
instant
Electricity Crowding Ont Gas.
FOrt Worth Gazette.
As electricity slowly crowds ont gas as an
illtiminant, wo wonder that efforts hava not
been made to rue the latter aa a fuel in an
ordinary gas flame 95 per cent is consumed
in producing heat and tho remaining 5 per
cent only in producing light We learn this
from an exoellent authority, and also from
the same source that gas is far moro efficient
than raw coal as a heating afient, and it is
also far oheaperto turn ooal into gas, and
use gas in a gas engine, than to born the
cool directly nnder the boiler of a steam
engine. Bearing these facts in mind, it
would seem that the day is not far
distant when, both by rioh and
poor, gas will be used
the cheapest, most cleanly, and
convenient means for heating and cooking,
and raw ooal need not enter onr honses.
Also that gas engines must sooner or later
supersede steam engines, and thus gas be
naed for driving the machine that produces
tlectricity. With the aubstitotion of gas
for ooal, as a fuel, will end tho present abom
inable and wasteful production of smoke.
There will be no more carting abont of coal
and ashes, and no more tronble of
using wood and paper to kindle the fire.
No more coal scuttles, no more sooty chim
neys. If it is aa we have stated in the be
ginning of this article, it will pay gaa
companies to look into the matter. We do
not say that the electric light is an entire
ancceas yet, for we beUeve that gaa
can be supplied cheaper, given the
same amount of light. Bnt the
prasenl lack of improvement in electric
lighting ws believe to be dne almost solely
to speculation. The matter has been taken
from the hands of men of science and pnt
in the Hands of stock jobbers. Bnt we
trust all attempts have not been east off to
give regular and efficient (apply at area-
100 Orango Grove Tracts of 4.0 acres
200 “ “ 20 “
400 ** ««, 110 “
800 «i “ V 8 “
1GOO “V “ 2J “
WITHOUT MONEY and WITHOUT PRICE\ COO City Building T^>ts.
HOMES and
ORANGE GROVES
20,000
■ACRES
in 2 j to 40-Acre Tracts
ALL FREE!
Ewory Word of thin ndvortiso-
mont iB important. Don’t miss
it. PBOFIT BY IT. It ia for
YOU
Wo doalro to impreu that thta announcement
me&na axaetto what It it i*ye: thatavery applicant
can secure, abeolutaljr free of any ebarga for tba
land, ont of the above divisions of valuable ~
means exactly that-nothing lees, nothing more.
OUlt METHOD: NOTE ITS FAIRNESS:
We have Jart lmed a lama abaot of deutlod
Boon Plana, iUnatraUnx nine different atylaa ot
bonaaa, coatina from MOO to S1.B0J each, which
thla company ia prepared to build for Its patrons at
St- Andrew a Bay. In onlar to defray at least a por*
tlon of the very Utro coat of advertising, setting up
•“•■a designs, and exacting a legal Warranty Deed
foroaohapplicantwawlUchargaMo. for mailing
thla sheet of House Plana to applicant*. Th# plana
* 5 tojanyon# who will avar desire to
build ft house. They are all new. and gotten up
expressly for es. If yen select from the House
PUaa ftny one that aulta you, wo will bnlld the
house on your property, and give you five yeare*
time to p»y for the hotme, charging yon 6 per cent Florid*, Ohio and
Interest on the coat of the houre. If you do not
caro to have * houae built, von are not obliged to
doao.vou being left entirely^ * “ ' * ‘
yourself without In anyway affec
property. The property will be ......
whether you have houee built or not With the
sheet of Houae Plena will ba sent a numbered
FKEE LAND WAltltANT
Id a aaalod envelope. Upon lb receipt you wUl
open the envelope, elgn your name In full on tho
propor blanks «o that a Warranty Died can bo
made In your name, and return the name to aa. A
Jowtforlbapboaof land callad for by the Free
Land Warrant will bo Immediately executed la
absolutely free.
r OCAL COLONY CLUBS.*™
I j of House Plane and five t Freo Land Warrant*
JL* will
will be sent to any a id-cm, to be distributed
among friends, on receipt • •••<* the Uodao
Plana; ten for $3; fifteen for $3; twenty for $4;
and twenty-five for SB. Mo more than twonty-fivo
are desired from any one person acting m agent for
others. Deeds will bo made as tbe Club Agent di
rect!, when he returns tho Froo Land Warrants.
ay YOU WILL BE a Tit.\I roil to yonr own In-
tereala and those dependent on vou If vou fall to
avail yourself of this great Free Land Offer. Secure
it for your children.
The 8t. Andrew's Day Batlroad and; Land Com*
pany numbers among its omcers and aiocahuidet*
some of the moet responsible and energetic men of
Florida, Ohio and New York, who are enllatod
heart hand and pocketbook In tblx great enter
prise, and we refer to two thousand prosperous Bot
tlers at Ht. Andrew’s. And now wo await your
pleasure.
Address either our Northern Office at Cincinnati,
or onr Eastern Office at New York, where all deeds
are Issued, as follows:
The St. Andrew's Bay Railroad
ANI) li.\NI> (JO.,
He. 227 Main 8t., Cincinnati. 0.,
No. 29 Park Row, New York, N. Y.
Remit by postal note, registered lotter, or bank
draft Do not send stamp* when it can bo avoided.
TO BE BEAD IN CONNECTION WITH ABOVE.
bren.oiafromJlItolJOO for culinary^ Building
With a broader bualne.i policy than baa cbarac-
tarixad any othar Houth.m corporation, wo have
itaadUy appnclatod the relative value of land and
Poof*- We are bolding for onr own proflt certain
U* tatauc* la offand
FBK1S AS AIK lo all wbu apply ta time.
a llttla more than one year a«o tba BL Andrew'.
Bay BaUroad and Land Compaov acquired control
Sff! ot “* mo * t 6o*tr»*>le
.V‘*,“,“ u °J ftaliea. altuatad around about
Andrew',, on the aouth-
ore.1 Gulf OOML Sorer. u>. war tba town known
d“d mw o Day waa tba home of many wealthy
neoplA who bad aonght the .bore, of tba baauuful
bay aa a location whore could bo found In th.lr
highest perfection Ibo pMullor delights of a Florida
hum. .Baringtbawartiie town waa bombaZd
b y.**3*re 1 Hreband nearly iw.pl ont of axial
•oca. Tba Inhabitant, dad. abandoning th.lrahat*
tend home, to the torch and pillage of the enemy,
and not until abont ten yrere «o vfa. there ISy .L
tempt mado to nooeupy tho town. Thu Company
•>*«“ Jf**»a jparetloua a little more than a year
*do. 81ooe lh« Urn. there baa boon tbe moat re-
"boom” created for Bt. Andrew'. Bay
P 1 *'**•»•>*•« known In tho Flower Bute.
fu’laTj?'V.? 0 ™ * h “ •** thousand vlaltore from
*•> P"£ of th, counter leached that point ta onset
®» Joalnre. and dmUlng bonaaa
been erected by the hundred. Prop*
esty secured at the beginning of the "boom" has
Lola. Every "old .outer” ha, reallxod abend
compliancy In dtepMlng of a portion of hla land at
gW-WWf-. Dock, have bean erected, hotel,
built and added from Urn. tv Urn.; a lln. of ..van
txwtsply-regularly between HI. Andrew'. Hay end
other point'; end altogether the outlook prom la aa
that 8t. Andrew a ll.y will In a few year, become
the moot Impoitsnt city of the Gulf ciaaL it no.,
mao. .very natural advanUiie-e deep bay Imoro
J* 1 ! ®'* mil*, long with lUvarlou. branch..)
moat charming and moat ua.lul body of water on
Ibo ooaat, a safe harbor for tho Heats of tho world.
bor really aeoeeiible, and sufficient in quau.ity to
furnish cargoes for years to tbe entiro carrying
capacity of a nation'. Heel; . dimita tbit h.oh
lh * hh-'Juf perfection ot
earthly delight; free from malaria, high, dry land,
and bsaatifnlly located. Thee., are. imong other
«* Andrew's Bay t* the most de*
■lrableioeatlon for a Florida home that the Huto
t^pgaLA.drew-.wmb. Ht, ‘ZoTd ass
np to March,
Company will pay than again at that data to De
cember. 18*7, both on Its own Undo and thoae du-
poata of under thla Ureal Fret Offer.
Never Open Yonr Month
Ea?pt ta put something lo ret Into it. u an exul
tant motto for tea gossip and the anlbrer bom ce-
terrh. Bnt while the goaetp Is practically Incurs-
bta threw Is no excoae for any one's aoffOring long-
re bum catarrh. Dr. Saga's Catarrh remedy 1. an
unfailing cure for that offensive dtaaau. ft heals
tba diseased membrane and removes tba dull and
oppreaaad aenaauon which always attends catarrh.
A abort trial of this valuable preparation will make
the .offerer fret likes now bring.
Don't taka that “cocktail In tba morning,’* If you
ban a "swelled bead." nan.sated and
xna tun and safe way, to clear tba
“bwaba from tba brain, reeonr roat for food, and
tens up tbaMrvousnitem. la tense Er. Hares'.
"Ptaaaant Purgative Peltate.” gold by ell drag.
Th» only reliable cure for catarrh. la Dr. Bags'.
litflk *
Catanb Bemedy.
CONSUMPTIVE.
OIYE MIUjIOW
tus recorder thU morning.
GUARANTY ^ru^'SKT,
Free Land Offer that la aubetantlally Improved
during tba nail two yaare, and pay at tbs rare of
f 10 par acre, with tba ooatof tba building tmnrova-
u added. By that Urn. property wUl b. worth
$M ,
SHUT OT IT Thl * 0r ** 1 r,t * t * n ' 1 ° B * r **
(vlIG * 1 .open to anybody except those
Andrew a Bay; also, reald.nu of Penoacolo. and
Washington nud Jackson counties Florida.
NO CONDITIONS
2%* —»*» >;« compllad
with. You are not rwiulred to move there or 1m-
P^_ T * *07«7' unless you do so freely and at your
own pleasure.
OUlt BEFEBKNOES.
Thoae who have dune bntlnau with us. In one
day tba following Uat of apppllcmnti secured Orson
Orove tracts, ranging In aim from IK to to acres
each, (pec* In good newapapare cotta I m muck
to giro a Bit of au who have received tree prop
erty at our hand.. Each one of the following Bat
can testify, If be la to disposed, to tba absolute 1-
M McCann, Tyree* Pa
W A Kinston. Lockbavan, Pa
H1U, -
2S| r k2j2L^£?lL 0,bu,,n .*V Ro corrMpond-
«nnt re 7 Of tlr.m and this office
E B Knowles. Branford. Pa
T Murphy, Hootlngt.,n, WVa
J H Baxtreaaer. Mlddtetown. Pa
W L Colvin. Bontricw, Hob
Prank A BnaU, Ansonla. Coon
A Jarrett, Hutchlaaou, Mina
Lawta Brlndla, Lateoba, Pa
Elmira Eappla. Lateoba Pa
J W kfcCoecb. Ban to 1's. N if
J A Daria. Pterro City, Mo
Jamea B Bowtey, Olathe, Kao
M Mine ban, Gordon, Ark
Oao a Kopp, Haber's H11L Vs
w F Bras ton. Cedar Plain. O
Wm C lampooa. Golden. Col
r B Hlblat, Bblanston. W Va
MJ Lqnquaat. Blrmlnrbam. AU
Joel P Kays. Colwlch. Kan
Jno A Kramer, Blooznaburg, Fa
and Kondien rUrA-M K.n
Wm F Hrkelbach. Bbafk Pa
HIT? 8 Enapp. Owynadd. Pa
M E Lewark. Wabasha, Minn
Mrs J A Dario, Hillsboro, in
John Cord. Hanna, tad
O P Pox, MtCarmeL Pa
C F Utrong. Oloncaater, Maas
Andrew PaUlran, •• ••
Georg. W Lurie, * "
McMillen, TranaBta Mth
Ward. Fituburg. Pa
W 8 Darts. Highland Park, III
■obart 0 MorrUou. Anchorage. Ky
A B Daria, Knnka Hortnro, Ark
Jama. Karen. 8chnyter, Neb
fur Md reoalvlng free pn p«ty, . n .i tk •
•ant tbVniimreJwfc 0 ®" 111 !* 11 ':”' n ‘ er " 1 J' repre-
rere V r ***,T*d CranK-) (iro.o trwLi
free, at our bauds, la one day's bumneoa;
P,!A Genera! DsUrery
Cm, Mo.
FeblS dlo-37 3t—Wkly fab li mar 1
Abram Maun. TM Penn af
William N Allen. Tit Oak 8t
Bt. Paul, Mixm.
“*»>». eorn.r Isabel and
Starke 7 HU
Ooo Sloven. 20 Isabel Ht
PaiLaDKLruu, Pa.
rueamj. 8r, Mt( » Third St
Wm H Bower. 2d arm Erie Are
Jamre Brown. 717 Bat rom Ht
J P nature, l no Marshall Ht
A B Hblpley, ggg Oon
1 Toot, H. y.
Oaonn B1 Oolllna, 10 Fifth St
F K Hendrick. Ill Pint at
" E Chattarton, 1X7 Third 8t
JAMES
©ANNT,
Sole Manufacturer
GANNT’S COTTON 8EED PLANTEIt.
July 13. 18S$.
WILLOW LAKE NTESEBY. I IKFtnVrUKT-
ulsgua and Price
'll. 11.Tl MPH
Applied For.
fel-G-dun wed (tidu