Walker County messenger. (LaFayette, Ga.) 187?-current, June 07, 1883, Image 1

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■f amaritsw -iteqvine. ,i. ramurrbi*. .. —..1-.l ud im>olknre»»lnlnwt” ?V. t ]f im '* invite, tliniily hecaiui.- th« viral of tlldlwiivl artnoi from llic liloo<l. Its Nervine, Rceolvenl, Alterative «nd Ulatlvo propcrtlee meet ill the condition! hereto referred to, known icorta iiliHiilgtelolMitMEioH It quiets and eomixwcßtka pat ent—not by the Introduction of opiate* and drastic cathartics, but by the restoration of activity to the stomach and nervous system, whereby the brain is re lieved of morbid fancies, whlolutre created by the causes above referred to. To Clergymen, Lawyers, Literary men, Mer chants, Bankers,Ladlesand all thorn- whose sed entary employment causes nervous prostration, irregularities of the blood, stomach, bowels 01 kidneys or who reqrflre a n*rv«rlanU, appetirer orstimulu;it.SAM4*iTA> Nervine Is invaluable. Thousands jmwlahn it the most wonderful iO $1.30. Sold by all Druggists. The Bit. S. A. RICHMOND MED. CO., cropr's,St. Joseph, Mo. For testhnonlalAund circulars send stamp. Cfcaa. N. CriUMten, Agent. New Tork City. (84) ■MMBBUannBHVSBHBSaHIMIia J\ttor,ne\)B. - THOltis *. N.tHTUT Solioito) of Paten Caveats. - Trade- Marks Conyrights, WASHINGTON, D. C. Office St. Cloud Building:, Corner (Hh and F Streets. Opposite,U. 6. Fatcat Office, JOHN M . a A WDO X , i atlomnev at law BUMMEEVILLE. - GEORGIA, ' Will practice in the Superior, Coun ty, and District Courts. P.ft.E3Vfflaoß, ATTORNEY AT LAW. LaFayette, - - Ga. Collecting a specialty. Office east side of the square. awpt 7 d 2 _____ H. M Henry, Attorney at Law, gtJMMERVILLE, - - - - GeoROIA. -TTH.t practise In ihi; Roms and adjoining Cli Vs cniu. Collnc • a specially. ’ F. W. Copeland, Attorney at Law, LaFayf.tte, - - - Georgia. Will practice in the Superior Courts, of Horn* Circuit. WseWjKT* by *|M*cl»l sgreenient. Col *etton s a specialty. (Office np-stalrs of Dickson • tore.) - 11. P. Lumpkin Attorney at Law, LaFayette, * - Georgia. IT it.L give prompt attention to all business *V entrusted to him. ftjs- Office hi the HB«**ENGP.R Building. Robert M. W. Itlenn, Attorney at Law, LaFayette, - - - - Georgia. Will practice in- Hie Hupei lor Courts of the Home and adjoining circuits and in tiie Supreme Cmrt of Georgia Of fice oil cast side of square in building with Dr. G. W. McWilliams. 3 as 3m. sißccilaßßQuß .Advertisements. DR. J. S. RHEA, RESIDENT DENTIST. Rinngoold, - • Georgia. Offers services in ail branch- of his profession to the citizens of Walker and Utoosa Coun ties. W -rk promptly done at Dioderates P All Woi k warranted. Office on Nash - ville street, first building west oi W L Whitman’s store. New Boarding House 9Ht]B. ©eorjjia dtodaes, Cor- Market St., Avesne CHATTANOOGA, TENH. Will furnish excellent meals and comfortable Indgir.g at one dollar per clay. Don’t fail to stop with her when you go to Chattanooga. apl263m Hamilton House, D. B. RAOSDAI.F.. Prop.. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. Centrally located, Good Accommoda tions, Ra es fteas-m d>le. Tree Omnibug to and From *R Trains apl 26 Oni Jpain Kilter. CAUGHT a BAD cold] | The SUMMER COLDS art<*! ’ Coughs aro quite as dan gerous as those of midwinter. But they yield to the same 1 - treatment and ought to be taken In time. For all diseases of THROAT,) j NOSTRILS, HEAD or BREATHING AP PARATUS PeiryßavissPainKiller’ Is the SOVEREIGN Remedy ALUDaUGCISTS KEEP PAIN KILLER ! • - - ! tftisSßS SU3HS3UHI msm ~ LtieviHO vi xnm ima.. Walker County Messenger. VOL. VI. THE MESSENGER. LAFAYETTE, - • - GEORGIA. SUBSCIUI’TIOM : One Year - * ,4) ; Six Months - Tlnee Months - - -25 Gents. ——— _mbm COMMUNICATED. Atlanta, M«y 28 1883. Governor McDaniel lias made a very pleasant impression by the way he lia-i begun his administra tion of State affairs. There has not in a long time been such Pit appearance of system about the Opitol. This administration will not leave any loose ends to be knit up after it is over. The Got ernor is a man of great energy, ac customed to attend to the details of a large business. He is hot afraid of work eud he knows how work ought to be done. One of the evidences that he means to be thorough in everything is found in the faet that he has broken up the custom of letting the Capitol for promiscuous purposes. It is true it is a shabby old Capitol that we have but the Governor says it is the State's building and ought to be kept apart strictly for S'ate busimss. He refused to allow the knights of Pythias to hold their general lodge meeting in it, though he is a grest friend of the order. A few days later a large convention of fruit growers was held in At’anta and it was al-o refused the same privilege. These are small inci dents but they show bow strict are the Governor’s views of even small matters in the discharge of his du ties. It is considered certai n that he will be a candidate for another term and beyond question he will be very strong. Friends of ex- Gov. Boynton arc alroady talk ing of his fitness for the office next year and 1 suppose he ,na y be fairly considered in ?!Vc’ race. He la not a candidate in the sense that he is mustering up a support. The admirable dignity he sustained through the recent passionate can vass for the nomination gives as surance that his political method? will always be high and honorable. We would have much less mud in our politics if more i f our politi cians were like McDaniel and Boynton. It is a long time until the next State election hut wires are already being laid for its mw agement. As usual there will be no lack of cmdidates fit and un fit for the office. The rumors to the effect that Gen. Gordon and Gov. Colqu tt had gotten into serious financial difficulties in the management of their Florida railroad enterprise turn out to b* merely sensational. Gen Gordon says they were started ' b malicious enemies to i jure him. Senator Colquitt teem to care little about them. He goes alwad se renely with his affairs and counts as big a host of followers here as ever. Os the two. as this contrast would ind cate, Gen. Gordon is much the mors sensitive and I think pays too much attention to little attacks on him. He certainly enjoys the confidence of the capi talists who are backing him in bis big undertaking end really ought not to Dotice the spiteful flings which he fiequently dignifi-e with denial and denunciation. Some of the newspapers sre try ing to Bud out bow much Senator Brown is worth, peculation on this subject figur s up his wealth at from one to three millions. A late article dec’a - es that each day ot the week except Sunday throws SI,OOO into- his coffers. He is ad mitted on all bands to be com brt ahly fixed for the common needs cf life aud to be amassing riches faster than any other man in Georgia. AH his four sons will have a fine start in the world. And every one of them will improve it I believe for they are all gifted in different degiees with the cool judgment and persistent energy of the old gmtleman. Gov. Brown is now in Texas looking at soaeot h s thousands of i-er s out there, end occasionally giving his Baptist brethren a good fraternal talk. He will be home before long. They lay be does n't like the McDaniel LAFAYETTE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1883. ! admirrslration and will hold off f.orn State politics more tlmn he his for years. A power he must coutirne to he as long as he lives. IDs Wealth, his ability,his host of warn peismial frieftds scattered all through the .State will continue to mike Joe Brown a big faotor in Georgia politics and his movements will he watched henceforth with the same microscopic scrutiny which has been bestowed on them since he came from under the shad ows of ostracism to assume a place among the leaders of his party. Spy. Cedar Grove, May 25th, ’B3. In all Republican governments men have alwa’i differed on polit ical questions. As long as the bu rn in u ind is constituted as it is, men will differ. But freedom of thought and nerve to give expres sion to views and arguments are the most reliable and in fact the only method of arriving at the tru ll of any political principle. The man who is acluuted by con v.ction of duty can nlwais afford to be liberal with those who differ vyitli him in opinion. But the blind zealot, led by the passions of tne hour, is always illiberal. Organized Demoi rat thinks ms unhapjiy in my former communi cation and can see nothing in it but an effort to court Repulicans and Independents. If I was actu ated by the motive he imputes to me, I certainly would never raise my voice against anything, howev er corrupt, the convention might do. Living in a county in which the organized party is by far the strongest. I would flatter the lead ers and bow ic humble submission to everything they might do. But the responsibility of citizenship and my interest in the liiiug issues of ihe day and the {rand old prin ciples of the Democratic party com pel me to purbuea different course. Something is wrong. Woe re is it? Somebody is responsible for the wrong. Who is it? What was Stephens majority last Octobe:? What was the majority in the Con gressional election in November? Both were behind the parly vote. What caused this fulling off? It may be that such flings as was made by the Aprilcouvention, and «uch threats as Organized Demo oral is making, lias had their natural effect. It is time that these unkiud remarks should cease, and that all unite for the grand battle of 1884 We will need all the help we can get then. The effort of some men is to ig nore principle and run the party in the interest of a few men; and the man who does not submit to be dictated to by these men is to be denounced as a Radical and Inde pendent. What man is so blind that he cam ot see that a small number of prominent men endeavor to control the Democratic pirty for th-ir own aggrandizement, their l.bera i ty never lists above that of the Irishman, who prayed: “Oh, L rd, have mercy on me and my wife, and my son John and his wife—u? four and no more. Amen.” If we would save the principles of the Democratic party and Che party it self, and tx queath to our children free institutions in their purity, we must cease our internal strife and use our weapons against the er envy. Let principles be fust and the meu we select to carry them out be second. Old Sttle Democrat. Detected Throngb a Dream. The death at the Weather-field State prison recently, after an in carceration 0f27 yeurt*, of a colored prisoner, Isaac Randolph, recalls the circumstances that the detec tion of hir crime, the murder of bis wife, was due to a dream. The murder was committed in this city in May, 1856. Randolph, then shout 45 years of age, lived with his wife in a house rented from Widiam Tuttle at Washington street and Howard aven i • Mrs. Randolph was adaughterof Robert Coe, who resided near, in Putnam street. The couple had moved to New Haven from Waterbary shortly before the tragedy, Randol ph working at bis trade as a stone mason. He war a man of power ful frame and uncommon strength. His wile, was jealous of a girl nam ed Lizzie Coetel'o, and this made trouble between the married cou ple. Quarrels of a violent charac ter were frequent, he on one oc ca"ion while living in Waterbary, putting a ro; e around his wil'o’a neck to strangle her, but re'enting in time to spare her l ; fe. This \vn« the start of affaire, and on the Ist of May Mrs. Randolph called at the house of her brother. George M Coe, saying she was about to cut some greens for dinser, hut she mu-t hasten, as she had to do her washing at home. NoDe of tier relatives saw her alive afterward. Three days later Randolph called at the house of his wife’s mother, saying he wished they would bend her home, ns he needed her services. He said that Mary Ann had ruu away’, taking all her clothing. The Coe family then vi-ited Randolph’s house and found it deserted. Th-re was an appearance as though the bricks of the collar floor had been rec ntly cleaned, but this was not deemed of any consequense in de termining what hud become of the aissing woman. Randolph was arrested, however, on suspicion, but was diseharg'd for want of evidence, Justice Ben nett, who heard the known facts, advising that he be kept under surveillance. George M Cce,both er of Mrs. Randolph kept watch ofthe house at nights, and found that Randolph and the Costello girl were often inside drinking and laughing together. In July Mr. Coe, the father of the missing wo man, had a dream which he could not forget. lie appeared- to be spearing eels in a swamp in the rear of the Tuttle house’. This missing daughter came to him wilii his. Shoes, telling him he would take cold without them. In his dream he followed her to the ham near the bouse, and io a moment heard liar utter an ago nizing cry. She then faded from his sight. In speaking of this th** old man said: “flint dream means that my daughter is murdered and buriul near the farm.” Feeling mreof the iut- rprelation of his dieatn, be the same night went to the spot and dug in several places near the barn. Randolph had at this time gone to' Waterhury. Shortly afterwards George M Coe, the woman’s brother, concluded to dig uji the whole garden. Some objection was made by Tuttls, who did n twant the trees and sbr l bf disturbed, hut Coe tlireat ei ed to emp'oy twenty men to dig if permission were not given him. With a long rod he sounded the earth in spots where it appeared soft to the depth of about three fiat. .Presently, something was reached that toll like cloth, and on excavating the earth the headless trunk ol the missing woman was f mud. More digging brought to light the head, readily recognizable, and in other places other parts of her body were found. The hands and feet were not discovered, Ran dolph had burned them, intending to dispose of all the remains by fire. Finding it not feasible, lie had changed his method and buri ed what bad not bsen consumed. Raiido'ph was arrested in Water bury and was tried and convicted of murder, though denying tiis guilt. He was sentenced to deat I ’. James I. Keese, his counsel, In ask ing for a commutation of sentence made use of the argument that Randolph was strong and a gooj workman ; and as the State prison was about to liaye an addition benlt he could be uti ized iu the work. The Legislatuie changed the sentence to one of imprison ment for life. When in jail and as ter the trial, Randolph made* con fession, saying that on- returning to bis home at midnight he bad a dis pute with his wife, who struck him with a poker. He had then chok ed her, but without intending to take her life. He said: ‘ l choked her longer than I meant to , when 1 loosened uiy g'ip on ber neck I found she was read. There was nothing f r me to do but to aet rid ol the body.” The care at the time caused great excitement in New Haieo. Randolph while in prison was set 'asks which no one hut a person ot great, strength could per forin, hut tor several years be had been almost helplessfrom paralysis. The Bad Boy. Heundllls t bum Dissert IDs l*a. T understand your pa has got to drinking ngfrin like a fish,' said the groceryman to the I f.d hoy, as the youth came in the grocery and took n handful of dried apples. The boy ate a dried apple and then psst up a terrible face, and the gro coryman asked nitn what 1 1; was trying to do with his face. The boy caught his breath and then said • Say don’t you know any better tlmrr to keep dried apples where a Imy can get hold of them when he has got the mumps. You will kill ai ms hoy yet by such carelessness. I thoaght these were sweet dried app'es, hut they are as sour as a boarding-house keeper, and they make me tired. Did you ever have the mumps? Gosh but don’t it hurt? You huve g t to be darn careful when you l ave got the mumps, and not go out bobsled ding or skating or v u will liaye your head eweh up biggero a milk pail. Pa says he had the mumps once wlier. he was a boy and B broke him all up.’ •Well, never mind the mumps, how about yerrr father spreeing it? Try one of dieso pickles there in the jar, won’t yon ? I always like to baye a boy enjoy himself when he comes to see me,’ said the gro cery man, winking at a man who was filling an old fashioned tin box with tobacco out of the pail, who winl ed back ns much as to say, if that hoy eats a pickle on top of them mumps we wi.l have a cir cus here sure.’ ‘You can’t ploy no pickle on me, not when I linve the mumps. Ma passed the pickle to me this morning and I took one mouthful, and like to had tho lockjaw. But ma didn't no it on purpose. 1 guess'she never had any mumps and didn’t know how discourngii g ;i pickle is. Darn if I didn't feel as though I bad been hit in the bur of the ear with a brick. But about pa He has been follw’n a gorge every sine- New Year’s day. 1 think it wiong for women to tempt feohle minded peraom with liquor on New Yiar's. Now, me and my chum, we Cim ti.keadrink and then let it alone. We have got brain, and know when we hare got enough, but pa, w henever Le gets to going don't never slop until he gets so sick that he can’t keep his stomach inside of himself. It is getting so they look to me to brace pi rfp every time he gets on a ‘ear, and 1 guess-1 fixed him this time so be will neyer touch liquor again. I scared him so his baid head turned gray in one night.’ ‘What under tt:« heavens huve you done to him now,’ Said the groceryman in astonishment. ‘1 hope you havn't done anything vou will regret in after ycats.’ ‘Regret nothing,’ said lie hoy as be turned the lid of the cheese box hack and look the knife and s'ieed off a piece of cheese and look a few crackers out a hariel, an I sat down ou a soap box by the stoye. ‘You see, ma w:is annoyed to death with [.a. lie would come home full when she hud company, ami lay down on the tofa and snore, and he would iruell like a distille ry. It hurt me to ste mu cry, and t told her I would break pa of drinking if she would iet m“, ami she surd if I would promise not to hurt pa, to go ahead, and i proruit ed not to. ‘Then I got my chum and anoth er hoy. quite a large hoy, help, and pa is all right. We went down to the place wbers they sell krms and hga to folks who have served in the army, or a threshing machine, and Ijst their iimtw, ami- we her-’ rowed some arms und legs, and fix id up a dissecting room. ‘We fixed a long tablo in the basement t.ig enough io lay pa! out on, you know, and then we got fa'se whiskers and moustaches, and when pa came in the house drunk a-d laid down or. the tofa, and got tos eep, wo look him and laid him out on tb» Übie, and took rome big trunk straps, and a circingle, ai d strapped him down to the ta ble. He sept right along all through it, arid we had another ta ble with the false 'egs and arms on it, and we rolled up oursleevis and NO. 45. smoked pipe*, just like I read mad* icul students tin when they cut up it man. Wo put Inckniy nuts in , our mouth* an our voices would sound different, so he wou dn’t know us, rml 1 was telling the oth er hoys what a time wu had cutth g | up the last man tfe bought, when pa wole up. *'l said he was awful tough, and when we had vot < A'his 1-gs and had taken out his brains, his friends earn# to the directing room and claimed the body, and we had to give it up, but [ saved Hie leg*. I looked at pa on the table and ha begiln to turn pale, and lie er,U : rmod around to got up, but be lound ha was fust. I bad pulled bis shirt up limb r liis arms while he was asleep ; as 1m began to move I took an icicle, and in the dim light cf the candles that wore Bitting on t! 8 table in heer boUlea, 1 drew the icicle across pa’s stomach, and I said to mv chum, ‘Doc, I guiss we had better i,pan this old dulltr at d t see if lie died from iuflimation of'ho j stomach from hard drinking, as the coroner said lie did.’ l'u shuddered all over his bare stummick and enid, ‘For God’s sake, gentlemen, what does this mean. 1 am cot dead. The other boys looked at pa in astonishment and said, 'well, vrojust bought you for dead, and the coroner’s jury said you were dead, and we ain’t going to be fool ed out of a eorpsn when wo buy one, are we Doc?’ My churrr said not lfhe knew himself anil the oth er student said, Os course he is. lie thinks he is alive, but ho died day before yesteiday, fell dead on the street, and bis lolku said be hud Icon a nuisance und (bey w iuld clam the corpse, and we b night it ut the morgue.’ Then I dn W the icicle actoss him again, am) suid, ‘don’t know about this doctor. I Hnd the blood follows the scalpel as I cut through tha cuticle. lland me the blood s| tv go ger, p ease.’ I’u began to wiggle around, and we looked at him and iny (ilium raised his eycied and pa .mid, ‘bold on, gontb met don’t cot into me any more, 1 can explain I tins matter. I wus onfy drunk.’ , We. w,ditto a corner and whispered, ’ and pit kept talking all the lira -. | He said if we would postpone the hog killing lie would send and j get witnc si-s that he was not dead, but that lie was a reipact ib’e c’tizen and had a family. Alter wo held u con uHation I went !o pa and told him tlutwhat be said about being alive might possibly be true, though we bad our doubts. We bad found such cases before in our practice east, where men seem to be alive, bit it was only temporary. Before we had got them cut up they were daad enough for «1 ! practicd pur poses. Then I laid the icicle across pa’s abdomen, and wer.t oil to till him that even if he was alive it woti'd be better to play that be . was dead, because lie was such a nuisance to bis faml’y ,v d they | didn’t want him, and 1 was telling hitu dial I had heard in his life time lie was very cruel to his hoy, a bright little lepow who was at the head of his class in fyinduy ecliool, and a pot waeiover tie w.n at ah known, when pa interrupted in •, and said: ‘D ict.ir, please tak j that (arcing knife off of my ( stomach, for it makes me nervous, j As for that loy of mine, he is the | worst little whelp in this city, and he isn’t no pet anywhere. Now you let up on this dissecting bu«i- j u sH arid 1 will make it all right with you.’ We held anitber con sultation Hid thin I told pa that we did noil, el that it wae doing justice to suciety to give up the body of a notoiious drunkard, after we hid pai 1 out twenty dol lars for the corpse. If there wae any hope drat he would reform and try an J lead a difhieut life, it wottl be different, and I said to I the boys: ‘Gentlemen, we must do ; our duty. Doc, you dismember . that leg. and l will attend to the j stomach and the upp- r part of the body lie will be dead before we are done with him. VVs must re member tbutneiety bass *uie claim on us,and not let tbs l « t»r nature be woikiil upon by post u.o tern proud- vs * t a dead ilruokard* Tiien 1 .o >k my i-isle «ud cv:a . | me need fumbling arotml tbs aide i men pnrti ti of pci’s nmfinr, and I ray chum t ok a rough pic. o of ice and began to saw hit teg off, whist the other I oy t< ok I old of the leg and said he would catch It when it dropped off. Well, pa kicked like a steer. lie said be wanted to moke one more appeal to Os,- and we act ed s rt < f impatient, but we let up to see what he had to say. He surd if we would turn him looae that he would give us ten doihiis more than we paid for tha body, and that lie Would never (brink another | drop us h-ng as he lived. Then we whispered some in- re and told him J we thought fivuvabiy of hia last | propsition, but ho must swear,-vfiib | iiis bund ou tha leg of a corpse wa | were tlieu dissecting, that be wou if never drink ugain, and that he must be bliml-fo utd and led sever al blocks from the dissecting room, before we would turu him loos- .- lie suid that wag all right, e.tid we blindfolded him, and made him take a bloody oath with hia hand on a piece of ice that we told him whs a piece of another corpse, and then we took hi:n out of the housw and walked him mound the hfoct four timis, and thea left him on the c irner after be Iml | romised to send the rionev to nr address th«f I gave him. We told him to Stand 1 - still tire minutes after we’ hnd loft him, t est remove (he bliudfold and go home. Wo watched him from bohind a board fence, nnd he loan »t’the handkerchief, looked at the’ j name i n theßtreat lie p. mid found!’ I lie was not far from lioiue. He 1 started off, saying : “That’s a pret* ty tiar ov escape old man. No I more whiskey fer y ■>*».’ I did not ! sea him again until morning and | when I asked him where he was - lust night He shuddered and said,- none of your busi .ess. But I nev er drink any more; you remernbev that.’ Mu was tickled to death,- und she tohl me I wus worth my ' weight in gold. ‘ Woll, good day. That choese it tnus*y.’ And the b>y went out and caught a passing sleigh. Hoo-tlu-rn Ciiltlrntor For June. Tfc's standard agricultural jour nal for June is on our tab'e.- It affords us much pleasure to note the improvement in this periodica! since ft came in the hands of Cio pri sent publishers, and especially to note the continued improve ment, for each number really setms to turpi ss the others. It is c editable to our .Southern’ farmers that they are sustaining tbeirj'Urnal (for it is sulphate -1 ally theirs ) so handsomely. And , they will doub.less &nd that the ; more liberal they are in- tberr pat ronage the more ricfi'y ttiar pirp- f" will deserve their support. I This number has Dr. Jones’. “Thoughts for the month,” full l of practical suggestions f■* the Cult vatior of the crops nov growiti v We give a few of the leading ait - cle", omitting, of course, the greater number: ‘‘Amber CansSorghum,”’ ‘Shipping Vegetables,” “GWt II niis," “Laws for tha Farmer,’’ Bill Arp’s letter, full as usual of rich humor and tine common sense tlieth rd installment of Dickson's- System of Farming," a contribu tion to the political history of Geor gia, (whh lioe portrait of G-v Mc- Daniel and the late Senator Hi/ip, j Orange Grove Talk, with a full pat<r ; illustration of the culture and ship-- ' in ut of the fruit in the State of ! Florida, and many other artie’es of much interest and great impo l -- tau Ca. All the departments, “Cat tle,” “Poultry," “Fish," “Apiary," “Health,” etc., have received care ful attention 1 . Tine num'or has an interesting' contribution outre life and death ot John Hoiv ird I’ayne, author of Home, Sweet Home, accompanied* by Ms portrait. One ot the most interesting at' ticks of this number is a compar ative statement of the cotton crop 1 fur the pin thirteen years, show' ing the amount of money received' for it and what became of it. There are sevtrai pages of the ‘lnquiry Department’ and ‘Lettk-ftr from the Fanners’ abounding in l sugges ions a. d vai-tly instructive;- We can but advise every farmer not a sutifcribor to seed 11 jfffi l Jus. T Hurts.m- & €->, Atlanta, tin., for this valuable publica tion. The new French rifle will cur •f over two miles, and the bullet will travel nearly as fast as a seen-tub C, ft. Pied ht AttvriiOj bfeali* Col. I! Wa’t K, 9. Di. « a* Attorney, K i*ni C ty. Nk» . ttiorisc. the f-f owing riaiement Kervine cured ray wlspasmß.’’Get at Dr*’ — :