Newspaper Page Text
AftD THE BEST 1:' AT.WAY' THE CHEAP
EST 1ft THE ESP.
M. CRIBTE
Tun small-pox is raging fearfully in
Minnesota. One hundred and thirty-
three cases are reported -in. one little
town, whose inhaWtattitti Are preju
diced against vaccination; | \ ?
' I
,3 AGENT aT AUJAST FOE
MacoV proposes tb have an art ex
hibition some iiroein May next. They
propose to exhibit pictures, ceramics,
bric-a-brac, etc. Wo hope “Tom Ar-
ter” has preserved the overcoat lie
wore on his tour with Louise Clarke.
H. HART’S
iiiisgy aad Garriafie
FACTORY
At DAWSOtV, BA.
IU.J s aii:horit-<Ueeell Boggles and Carriages,
and
A‘hc Orderh for all Binds of He•
j;q > r.N on Fine Vehicles.
a! (, in fact, tbfi autlioi’rod agent
Cl and wtll keep BliggU* on aa.'e
ii Km Buggy is soli known no
The disgraceful rocking of the
theatre in Griffin is not only a blot
upon the fair name of that town, but a
shame to the Stale. We hope the au
thorities will have the manhood to
punish whoever is responsible for it.
Atlanta is reaching out after the
business of the ‘ entire country. Wo
notice in the Constitution of yester
day that Phillips & Crew, of that
city, are selling tickets to Lotla’s per
formance at the “Academy of Music’’
in Buffalo, X. Y.
Oscab Wilde, the msthete, is in the
United States, and already Macon is
reaching out for him, as she is soon to
have an msthetical art exhibition.
They say Oscar dines on tiro perfume
of a lily, so the light diet of a Macon
hotel ought to surely catch him.
the Cincinnati _Commercial
make llie following extracts
fdorn a letter of Mr. E. Halbert, ad
dressed to Mr. Fred Wolffe, of the
Er linger system. We regret "that
our space will pot allow us to give
the-Jettor ill Ita entirety, for it is ful!
of marrow*' It gives facts and figures
that cannot bo disputed. We clip
only such portions as refer to out-
part of the great Erlanger system.
Bit thife iS- aHother new field
opened toi Cincinnati by the Ei lon
ger system. The commerce of the
United States with the West Indies
-constitute nearly eleven per cent, of
the entire foreign commerce of the
country, 1 the greater portion with
Cuba. The commerce of the Uni-' length of the system at 2,000 miles
ted States with these islands for j and the cotton rccciplsatonly 2,000,-
1870 was, dm port 8, j£7i,(i20,lO6; ex-jOOo hales per annum, wo have,
c.co.mmcrce of the world
moves mainly East and West, not
North and South; and that as the
shortest traiis.coiitinerital line it
will draw to it apropcrtioniitely lar
ger amo u it t of traffic thin its longer
trans-continental competitors.
8. That slicing the shortest and
cheapest route from the interior
Colton States and .the trans-Missis
sippi region, via Bmnswick, to
re and European markets,
it- *rso the shortest- and
cheapest rente for the importation
of the vast amount of supplies re
quired by the interior Cotton States.
* * . *
13. That, estimating the total
London Jfcrtn^Jsy Eeriew.
It-is said that if a
from the great wait off
<-ls -u-iniilvweslwan
es ou tlie grass of ;
jit evcumallv f
thriving, but no longer a- calf—it
will be a cow. The same journey
might he reversed. The calf might
go eastward front the Volga, and
finditseif a cow in China. Over
the immense space of ground
which that Mongolian Io would
cross, there blows In summer the
most exhilarating of breezes. There
also grow* profusely one of the
most interesting of grasses, the covil
grass or Peuiia stipata. During the
month of Jane the covil grass is in
flower, and the whole .immense
plain is often a sheet offlower bear
ing herbs, impregnating tl
phere with ah aromatic peri
phere with ah aromatic perfume. On
this grass feed innumerable flocks
nf llfirspa anti TI 1 <1 |.r\ - n n<1
Orric* or (-.iii.-AnY, MusoooerCo., I
ports, $35,075,591. J'otal, $106,595.-
094. The imports, consisting of cof
fee, sugary Spices, and lipnicaj
frtritsj traverses the entire Eastern
United States coast line, from Cape
Sable, Florida, in fact, sweeping
hundreds of miles South, and South
east of the Cape, to avoid the Ba
hama banks, and thence paralleling
the daugeroihi Carolina eoast to Bal
timore, Philadelphia and Now York
for distribution in the Western and
of
i*be i; -fnignyil
for ii; ti i Foctw j
ii. A'Vu-r. The If an Buggy L
th* ptoj >, of Hoi hwc.il Georgia, hftYlug been
r :^r
’K i'llf seen ON FOR
v
A
ita. Ben L. Estes, a bright young
man of Homo, for several year3 past
connected with the journalism of that
«ty, died Thursday night. .He was a
brave, tender and true young man.
and beloved by a large circle of,
friends in Rome. lie was a nephew of
t.vli Thomas H. Willingham,-of thi»
city * '} '
that
We bay* tmt OME
Every vobtelewhkh we »IU • * gtixrta
If you want u ' _
ffi 1 ©©© BUGtfT
Don't i.t:. to cfi.ll on me before purchaalng.
M. Crine,
HKOtVD
Opt. 2«>-ly
ST., ALBANY, CJA,
RON
MARK
UTTERS
as : lie resit It, an average traffie
1,000 bales per mile per annum.
14. That estimating the popula
tion at S,307,591, we liave an aver-
age poptilation of 1,153 per mile.
15. That ibis system, by. its con
nection with the sugar districts of
the Southwest and the rice fields of
the Atlantic const, will naturally
command I lie.largest share of the
traffic in these commodities for in
terior markets.
Northwestern States, over seven 1C. That cuimeSttiiig with the port
himili'nit m ■ loo rant- A t «i i |»A #* f r»A ■■ 1 » "A i I * iiiinr iiri/.T - a.. 4b- A .1 i f
AWishinoton dispatch says
it appears to be generally conceded
that ex-8en\lor Sargent has been defi
nitely' selected’by President Arthur
for appointment as Secretary of the
Interior. It is understood, however,
- s! v<irft'-vnt''minaMon will not be sent
ta the Sbnate-tul--iP 'vi-,the Senatorial
olsction ifi Iowa, tbward'tRuibse of
the present month,
Geneka-L Josepjs K. * Jouns’j
at last published a letter disclaim- i
the interview with the Philadelphia
Press correspondent in which he was
.made to prefer such disgraceful
charges against Ex-President Davi3,
which disclaimer we reproduce in
another column. It come rather late,
and we are inclined to the opinion
that it would never have come at all if
Genera! Johnston had not discovered
the fact that the people o' the south
repudiated the slanderous charges pre
ferred againBt their chief.
hundred miles out of a direct route
as compared with the Erlanger lines,
via Brunswick, Columbus and Chat
tanooga to Cincinnati.' The distance
from'Havana, Cuba, to New York,
by sea, is 1,280 miles, and from New:
York to Cincinnati 741 miles, or a
total of 2,024 miles. From Havana
to Brunswick is about 500 miles, and
from Brunswick, via tlio Krlanger
lines, to Cincinnati 723 miles, or a
total of 1,266 miles, a saving dis
tance of 798 miles and six to ten
days in tavor of the Erlanger lines
and Cincinnati. Havana to Chicago,
via. New.York, is 2,192 miles; Ha- f
vana to Chicago, via Brunswick, the '
Erlauger system aud Cincinnati is
1,530, a difference of 656 tniios in
favor ot Brunswickj the Erlanger
system and Brunswick. The sav
ing distance via Brunswick an i Cin
cinnati to Detroit is 346 milts, to
Cleveland 257, Milwaukee 7U, SL
Louis 778, St. Paul 655, Kansas City
776, Indianapolis 7f'
of Brunswick on the Soutli-Atlantic
coast, and New Orleans on the Gulf
of Mexico, it gives to the system the
shortest possible line to and. from
the West Indies, Mexico, Central
and South American ports, and
thereby’ secures a. very large new
import and export trade, via Bruns
wick and New Orleans, from six
hundred to one thousand miles
shorter than by- the present routes.
of horses and mares, and its flower
communicates to the milk of the
mares a certain aromntic quality.
Out of the milk is made what the
wandering tribes of Tartars consid
er as their nectar or ambrosia, or
soma. This Tartar nectar is known
by the name of koumiss, and the
koumiss which is drunk at this time
of the year has, it scents, a peculiar
virtue of which koumiss at other
times cannot boast: ’ moreover,- Hie
driftkers of koumiss at this time of
the year drawn .from their pota
tions a power which, it is said, ena
bles (Item to set at defiance, appar
ently; at least, most of the. woes that
distress mankind, whether mentally
^COLCJICIH Ci. Ocb 1,1S6(L ’}
R Dbjfl’.tt Cki., RtjchCJtitr, S. . -
, i‘Ji—For e./h-oeu months I Huifeml
“tfweiy with ft tiisjaw of the kicnoys aud a tor-
P w , 1 i* er . -after frying every remedy that I
conia hear of, besides liefog under tho treatment
of some of our ablest physicians, £ had about
given up my case as hopelessly incurable, when I
• npo ^ m f^S,TS l % ^
Kfduey and liver C
became completely cured.
0 . A. VASOX. A.,H. ALFRIKKD
VASON Jb JLJLFKIENI)
Attorneys at
ALBANY, 6A.
sasSsasae
-Le 7.35pc
Law,
. ,-ann»h_ Ai 7:15* a
a . w „..£r &S0a m
At
Active and prompt attention given to col-
fcpreE3 °^ 6 3g>-
H4M . / tlul r *•» mu *» *:T* JOJfEfj JESSE W« TVAI*PEllS.
little faith in »t8efic.icy; bat to my great Tor and iAiiv>a% a ... .
^tis.actton, after I had commenced on (hesecond JOKES & WA TERS
bottle, 1 contmtievl the use of tae medicine until I wWiifcw eJtr fin I faiIO|
'-'-'m/mm* * ‘
mm
SfSS
Ai.BA.vr,
OA.
Judge Court of Ordinary.
Hkbetokobe, the Southwestern Hail
road has not been giving in its proper
ty in this city for taxation, ft being
claimed by the management of said road
that its property was exempt from
such taxation. Under the terms of
its charter, some time last year the nmt-
ter was brought to the notice of the city
council, and an investigation followed,
which resulted in declaring the
property in question liable lor taxation.
The authorities of the road have resis
ted all demands that have been made
upon them for taxes by the the city,
and yesterday the city authorities had
the warehouse of the railroad levied on t
With the view of having tho question
at issue tested in tho courts.
BROWN'S TKCN* 15 ITT MRS ora
a ce ot<-Tu euro ibr till* diseases
icquiring: a\ complete tonic; espe*
ciatt? Indigestion, T>yspep8ia,lnter-
Fevers, Waul oi‘Appetite, j
nf strength l;Aolc of Knergy,
etc. Km-iclie** «Ue blivod. strength
ens the aud gives new
lift io tlie nerves. Acts like a
charm on the <lig€«tivc organs,
r; moving all tlyspeptii- symptoms,
such as tasting the food, Belching,
Bent in the Stomach, Heartburn,
cu:. The o*.ly Iron Preparation
th&t will not blacken the teeth or
give headache. Sold by aU Drug*
gists at £l.Oo a Ijottle.
BROIVY CHHinCATi OO.
Halt {more, Sfd.
Co. atti n
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS,
plmti m m.
W ILL Ihi rented to the highestbl’ dcr, before
ttie Court Hoxso d<>oroiDoai ictiyCouu-
ty i > Siturday, JUc Sthof Horem» er next, the
P’rsm.lc rReTboarfcs
SWAMP PLACE.
H%iru* wile* irem Albany. The plftntfttlon is in
pc d artier -with all necessary oalbfttMinea and
ul gin stand.
x.'uo-ditfvst
Seoeivcr.
The political pot will soon begin to
boil in Georgia. Tilings are working
rapidly it (bat direction now. Henry
G.-ady interviewed Ben lliil in Wash
ington the other day upon the politi
cal situation in the State, and the In
dependent new departure. Mr. Hill
made free use of Dr. Felton’s name,
and criticised him and his allies in tho
State with some severity. Now Dr.
Felton, in the CnreiiLution of yester
day, comes hack at Mr. Hili in his
characteristic style, and, taking UP the
Senator’s record since the war, deals
with him rather roughly. It is in
teresting reading, and the News and
Advektiskr will publish it to-morrow.
We shall then await Mr. Hill’s reply',
which will undoubtedly be a racy
document
The Savannah iYetos’ editorial un-
Mr. Hnlbert bere speaks of; the
large per cent, of loss in tropical
fruits in consequence of long lines of
transportation, a great deal of which
could be saved by using the shorter
line of the Erlanger system. Coffee
question is mentioned in connection
with that of tropical fruit, atid Mr.
-il.bert thus proceeds ;
rapidly growing and
profitable .vt„ travelB from six to
sevenbundred tu— j-* V»f a direct
line to Eastern ports, tn ere.„■
reshipped, with all the accuuulated
charges incident to a transhipment,
to the markets of the We t and
Northwest; a greater distanu than
from Brunswick, via to Erlanger
system,'to Cincinnati. That is to
say, Cincinnati, with tho advantage
iu'distanee of six hundred miles via
Brunswick to the West Indcs, and
over one thousand miles via New
Orleans to Central Amorim aud
Brazil, permits her Eastern Atlantic
coast competitors to monopolize this
trade.
Cincinnati lacked the traiFporta-
tion lines or the capital neccsssary
to embark In this trade, then she
might with propriety permit others
to transact her business and reap
the profits therefrom. She his the
moans of transportation provided in
the Erlanger system, and she has
tho capital necessary to do the busi
ness. tj r .
* * * ■ * - -
New York to San Francisco via
Chicago and Omaha is 3,338 miles,
arid from Brunswick via the Bruns,
wick aud Albany, Shreveport and
the Texas Pacific; is only 2,45j miles
—a saving in distance of 880 miles,
in favor of Brunswick and. tho
Erlanger system. *
New York to Safi Diego, from
I* One Parly Better than Another t
New York Srun.
We are frequently told, by per
sons never troubled with political
convictions, that thero is really no
difference in principle between the
two parties which make the politics
of the country. Mr. John Sherman
is reported to have recently declar
ed, while looking alter his Ohio
fences, that this strife was ail a sham;
it was merely a contest for office:
there was no principle at stake. Yet
Mr. Sherman, who makes this ex
traordinary confession, is tho same
who engineered the .FYaud of 1876,
to keep the Democrats out of the po
wer they had fairly won, and who
openly said front his place in the
Senate that anything was right
which would prevent the opposing
party from gaining control of the
Government. -
To those who agreed with Mr.
Sherman in Ibis opinion, one which
has been thoughtlessly expressed by
many morally belter men than he, it
must be a matter of small moment
Arthur, v ic» 8 G 5“ ena
sonally honest and rc'spfcctaBlwrfe-,
would, in tine "eyes of such people,
make just ad good a President as Mr.
Ttlden. On the oiherhand, prudent
citizens who believe that the doc
trine and policy of one part}’ make
: and
Now York via Kans^ UBy=uia“the 1^™*#*™™**°*-
del- the heading, “Indcpendentism in
Georgia,” in its issue of Monday, is
rery intpoli tic, to scythe least of it.
Why go back to the unfortunate split
that occurred in the Democratic party
of the State in 1880 and try to open
the wounds that timo has almost heal
ed? Why characterize Mr. Norwood
and those who saw fit to support him
iu opposition to Gov. Colquitt, after
tho State convention had failed io make
a nomination, as ‘‘disorganizes” and
“Independents?” Would yon make
aliens of them now, and try to drive
them into lino with Dr. Felton’s party
of Independents? There were thous
ands of Democrats—“organized” Demo
crats, if you please—who opposed Gov
ernor Colquitt and supported Mr. Nor
wood in 1880, and we protest against
the spirit of the article of the ATeu:*,
above referred to. It is not only un-.
kind, but dogmatic. Wo are glad to
sec that, the ATetra is*
exhibiting any such
thirty-second parallel, is2,927 miles;
from Bfitp.swick, ;via the B. &- A.,
Shrevepw&aBdtjW-ai’WfAi > Pacific, is
2,170 miles—a difference of 757 miles
iu favor of Brunswick and the Er
langer system. . „
We find then that Brunswick and
Albany, as part of the Er Anger sys
tem, Brunswick to Shreveport, pass
ing centrally through the great cot
ton belt of tho world is nearly 900
miles shorter fo San Frantiseo, and
over 700 miles to San Diego, the
shortest line across the continent
north of the Gulf of Mexiio, thus
iss 1
clearly establishing the claim that
it is the Trans-Coutinental Line,
This great Short-Line will command
the world’s commerce across the
American continent.
* * * * *’ *
After, showing -that the.system
practically has a monopoly of the
lumber trade of the “Long-leaf pine
region” of Georgia, Alabama and
Mississippi, Mr. Hulbnrt summari
zes as follows:
We find:
1. Tlfat the port of Brunswick is
the best of all our South Atlanti
and as such is the Eastern
Atlantic terminus of this
great system.
2. That the Erlanger system from
the pc rt of Brunswick, via theBruns-
wick and Albany Bail way, its ex
tensions and connections with the
Texas Pacific, offers a line nearly
1,000 miles shorter across the conti
nent than atty other traus-continent -
al line.
3. That being nearly l, 0 *® miles
the shortest route across the conti
nent north of the Gnlf of Mexico, it inczthi?
will command the European trans
continental commerce with China,
Japan and the East Indies.
•L That the line from Brunswick,
via, Albany, Montgomery, Selina
and Vicksburgto Shreveport, a con
nection with the Texas Pacific a’nd
the Texas system of^idlways^pass-
to that vast
line to the Atlan- dog.
or physically.
tijne little' has . „
West of Europe of this Tartar am
brosia ; but no one in England need
now be ignorant of it, since it lias
been brought prc-emineiilly before
our notice by Dr. Garrick -in bis
work recently published on the
subject. As regards the effects of
koumiss op. its drinkers, Dr. Car-
rick’s cases arc numerous: We se
lect one at random. “A young la
dy of 19, who had lost a brother
and a sistcr of galloping consump
tion, became hot-self so ill that by
the spring of 1875 Aecjas unable to
leave her bed, amT-atn^pusultution
where several pit} - icliuVs were pres
ent it was decided,- and quite right-
ly, too, that it would be better to
pas3 the few remaining days of her
life in the midst of the family.” She
insisted upon being conveyed lo the
steppes, “contrary to the advice of
parents, friends, and the majority of
her medical advisers.” For the med
ical details of her cure the reader
may be referred to page 268 of Dr.
Qirrick’s book. Suffice it to say
that he tells how, in the month of
July, 1S75—‘f. et,TKTOr-5H0-saa-T>eon
14 mouths under treatment with
konmiss milk—she “danced a qua-
to the present- t? 13 «r physical trouble, remember the great
l-nrrro,, danserof delay.
Thofisaiuts of equally strong euSonajmenta—
many of t-hptu in cusps where bojie was a> andoned
—havfc been Tolnutary jjiren, showing the re
markable power oi' Warner’s Karo Kidney and
I-ivvr Cure, in aU diseas e of the kidneys, lirer
and urinwy organs. If any one who reads thfa
Office over Centra? Railroad Bank,
fanlS-ly
&06 a *n Ar.,. MIW , Albany T7:
• ft xn Ar.~—.Coiumboa _Ar 1:40 p a
MinedgeTiHe..^.^- it fc44»m
-Efttaau»n~.^ #M4r M M JLr ll:S9 aa»
..Ar 4.45 pK
““ 3:45pm
. Ar..,
5:20 am Ar„^-—Augusta r
■53b
James Callaway,
Attorney at Law
CAMILLA, GA
I OPFLU for sale ten thousand biisfrksof
(venuineTexo* KeJ liu^t Proof Orts se-
Iccteti by a party on Iho spot with a view to
getting nothing but the genuine article. They
are the same quality tliat I sold so nan"
W. A. FORT,
mmmmrnm uimm,
] which gaw “ ''V^riu
tlon; inTrf*?tri Bu t bear<i*of*;’i A'lngle
—.. w . |_
stance in which the: failed give ner/eef satisfac-' ,
lion. If rcfri,rL< free the corn crops out West
are to be credited. ti«D vr>,c of corn wcilr: ie r
much higher ne-Yi sei*M>u th« n it did the past,
hence the necessity o: sowing more Oats and
curlier than last seastju, in or<wr to secure a
stand before the freezes come on tn^m. i xun
prepared to All orders for early bowih*. The
tiemand for Seed Oats will be unprecedented
ly heavy this season, anti I have advices from
Texas of a marked advance iu the price of
them, and I think it advisable for those in
need of Seed Outs to .>e<;are then, at once.
1 will exchange Oats for Cotton Seed, or
will buy all the Cotton Seed I can get, at th
Jghest market price, for the money.
Albany, Ga., August 2G*th, 1881.
wtf. -
life had bepn wonderfully prolong
ed by a treatment which, if taken
earlier, might probably have saved
it
^tbo South.
•«f) ‘Auvqnr.
‘osuon OftSojT Ol osop
•esvao-fr . wra „ Bto ,„
®l*o!S jo ia«.*paia : pnBn poc*v joj OO’OIS
mm Mi
the peace ami prosperity of the
country, anil that those of the other*
Jo not, might consider the elevation
to tho IVesideney of any man op
posed to their party a great public
calamity, even while feeling the
most profound respect for bis per
sonal character.
The Democratic party professes to
day the principles upon which-that
party was founded at the foundation
of tlicGovernmtait, They were for
mulated by Mr. Jefferson; and main
tained in practice through the twen-
four years of Jefferson, Madison and
Monroe. They are all based upon
the great principles of strict con-
strdetion. That leads logically and
inevitably to a simple, pure and in
expensive Government, confined to a
few objects and administrated by a
few servants. . The opposite doc
trine tfflihpSifSfeower ignonog the
Tenth Amendment, has been pro
fessed by tho opposition to the De
mocracy from the earliest to the 1s-
Mr. George ft. L _
agent of the Louisville "an&- D “^ ,
villa Baiiroad, was recently siieak-
ing to a Cincinnati Enquirer repor
ter upon the subject of travel to the
South, and the kind of people who
are going South this rear:
“Fite weather,” said Mr. Horner;
has been quite unfavorable for
Southern travel. It has been too
warm to induce people to leave their
homes here tor winter residences in
tho South. The most of our travel
during the present season, however,
has been people who were going to
Florida.’’
“Are they people who go Sontli to
spend the wiuter, and go for that
purpose alone?’’ asked the reporter.
“The majority of the people are
•szKSKdinbz HKiama
crxv asiara tu tnnvaa 'ivtraxM
SS3JHHYR
It lends to wipe ont the States by
continually trenching on local pow
er; to consolidation imivo-jatfcnn
splendor;’j ! kt**-™gance; a multi-
jMjaui^nsfoffice-holders, and ever
licreasjng taxation to keep, pa’ije
with increasing expenditure*- 1 That
these arc still the underlying and
animating principals of-- the
two parties is shown hy -a very re
cent history. Why was Mr. Tilden
cheated out of the Presidency, to
which he had been so overwhelm
ingly elected? Because the Kings,
monopolies and favored interests
which had grown up aronnd the
general Government nnder the the
ory of implied powers, dreaded the
application of the Jeffersonian rule
to their cases, and foresaw that Mr.
Tilden would ent them loose from
their customary supports and com
pel them to stand or fall; without
any artificial advantage over the
rest of their countrymen. What
would have been the result had not
the Federalist Bepublican3 thrust
their standing army between Mr.
Tilden and the office to which the
people had elected him, must re
main forever a matter of conjecture.
These are some of the reasons why
we have usually given our aid to the
Democratic side since the develop
ment of GranHsm. But it we
thought.there was no difference of
principle between the two parties we
shonld not concern ourselves with
the; snccess or failure of either.
Guilty’or Wroai.
have a fe.-hioh of cou-
_ * twtSh
large mass of “patent medicines,” and
' they are gniley of a wrong.
~ advertised remedies
it is asked for them,
; know of—Hop Bit-
tors. The writer hashac*
use "
Trit-Jce.
_ such a climate as
year In Bay City,
' it to be first-
teat is
the mange on yonr
those who are going there for the
purpose of making Florida their
home.”
“From what section of the country
do they mostly hail
“Thoy come from all parts of the
country, but the most of them arc
from Ohio and Michigan. . Some of
them from Northern New York.
“Are they mostly merchants and
capitalists, or are some of them
farmers?”
“I think a majority of them are
farmers who have sold their North
ern farms and want to try farming
in a climate that is not so cold. The
most of them are well-to-do people;
and are Seemingly glad to go South.
They all believe they can do much
better there than they can in the
North. Many of them have made
trips to Florida to see the State be
fore selling their lands iii the North.”
“Then you think that the majority
of tho people who have passed over
yonr- rdad this winter, destined to
the State of orange groves, have
gone there -with a view of remain
ing?”- • -
“I gm quite sure of that, and ac
cording to the best of my informa
tion the travel with that class of peo
ple has been much larger tins year
than in former years.”
Sue* Reports Do One’s Heart Good.
Is Fareite Journa’.
Mr. Frank Wilke, North and 9th
streets, stated, that it was not only
highly praised by his customers, but,
the SL Jacobs Oil has not failed to
give satisfaction in a single case.
It Is Found at Last!
Soiothtko Nsw Unde: th* Sox.-
A new era is dawning up
Hitherto she has been called upon to
suffer the ills of mankind and her own
beside* The frequent and distressing
irregularities' peculiar *■— ~— t —
long been to her the ‘
woes unnumbered.” In l
of the rich jtud hovel i
woman has been the (
fient victim of a t
to man—and without* i
Lord, how long!” in the t
soui, bath she cried.
will,suffer not
male Escalator,
Friend,” ig tors *
Prepared bvl
ti, G*; pris -