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AFTER THE MURDERER.
posse scouring tub couk
TRY BOB THE NEGRO WHO
KILLED HABSHAL IIVEE
AT PABBOT.
■e Wri Stvr inil Eh« at Lnl Night
at Haaacr.
Particulars of the killing of acting
Marshal Lee Huff, at Parrot, by an At
lanta Negro who was on the excursion
train that came to Albany over the
Columbus Southern road on Saturday
afternoon, returning that night, were
published in yesterday’s Hkrald.
Our information yesterday was that
the Negro had probably been captured
in the neighborhood of Weston, and
that he would be lynohed last night;
but it seems that he is still at large.
Last night he was discovered at
Sasser, and several shots were llred at
him, but he outran his pursuers and
made good his escape. He was steal
ing a ride on the train that was com
ing to Albany last night, and was dis
covered when the train renohed Sasser.
He came down the rnilroad towards
Albany, and when the train reached
this oity last night this faot was re
ported to the police, and Officers
Mooney and Barron, in company with
a man from Columbus, went out on
the road to meet the murderer. He
failed to show up on the rond, how
ever, and the officers came back to the
city after B o’olock this morning.
Mr. I. P. Cocke, brother-in-law of the
murdered man, left here this morning
to organize a posse of men to scour
the woods from Sasser to Albany, and
it is thought that the murderer will be
brought in to-day.
The Atlanta Constitution of yester
day had a report of the murder, and
said that the Negro was an Atlanta
Negro, and that he went by the name
of Jules Spikes. He is a tall Negro,
weighs about 160 pounds, and has a
fresh scar on the temple, made by the
whisky bottle that was broken over
his head at Parrot on Saturday night.
Ij liter*
THE MURDERER TRACKED INTO* ALBANY
THIS AFTERNOON
The murderer of Lee Iluff is prob
ably now in Albany.
Mr.J. W. Sheppard, a bailiff from
Terrell county, is positive that -he
tracked the Negro into town to-day.
Mr. Sheppard arrived in the city just
before 1 o'clock tills afternoon, lie
had been on the Negro’s track Bince
yesterday morning, and followed it to
where the public road that leads west
ward from the city crosses the Blakejly
Extension out just beyond the guano
faotory. Here the Negro took the
railroad track, and it was Impossible
to track him further; but It Is certain
that he catno towards the city, and he
was heard from between where he
took to the railroad and the guano
factory.
Mr. Sheppard started out with the
Sheriff of Terrell county and posse
yesterday morning, and, by direction
of the Sheriff, crossed a creek and took
a different route from the others. He
soon got on the trail of a man whose
description answered for that of the
murderer, and followed it all day, los
ing it at times, on account of the rain,
but finding it again. He found that
the Negro spent last night at the
Walls place, in Terrell county, near
the Dougherty line, and that a Negro
tenant oil the place put him in the
Albany rond this morning. From
there Mr. Sheppard had no trouble in
keeping his track to where lie struck
the railroad half a mile west of the
city limits.
Mr. Sheppard came on into the city
and reported to Sheriff Edwards and
Deputy Sheriff Godwin. These offi
cers at once set out to have a thorough
search made for the murderer, and if
he is in town he will be cauglit.
If this man whom Mr. Sheppard
tracked into the city to-day is the mur
derer, then it could not have been him
that they discovered and shot at at
Sasser last night.
Slopping u Kiiiiit,vnj- Horse.
Prof. Gleason, noted as a tnmer and
trainer of vicious horses, thus explains
the manner of stopping a runaway
horse by using nothing but a straight
bar bit and lines. For instance, your
horse attempts to run away. Let him
go for a distance of fifty yards, then
haul in your lines perfectly tight.
When you get ready to give the com
mand to stop, say “Whoa!” at the same
time you pull the right-hand rein, giv
ing a powerful jerk, and repeat the
A Pualon With Ike Republican. •( Ike
Tenth District l'rtksblr.
Tom Watson was in Atlanta on
Monday, on hia way home from Wash
ington. He was in consultation with
Col. Post and other leaders of the
Third Party ail day, and left Monday
night for Thomson, hla home, where
he was billed to speak on Tuesday.
Mri Watson, when seen by the report
ers, refused, absolutely, to have any
thing to say for publication, saying
that lie had been so badly treated by
the press that he did not wish to make
any statement of any kind. On the
subject of the “jag committee” he was
particularly sore.
It was learned from a reliable source
that the mission of Watson in Atlanta
on Monday was to bring about a recon
ciliation between Winn and Piokett,
of tha Ninth district. It is said that
both Winn and Piokett, by the inter
mediation of Watson, signed an agree
ment on Monday, submitting their
rival oandidaoy to a board of arbitra
tion, the State Executive Committee
of the People’s Party to be tho arbl-.
trators.
Watson's game.
It looks very much like an effort
will be made to bring about a fusion
between the Third Party people and
Republicans in the Tenth district. On
Monday night, for several hours be
fore leaving for home, Congressman
Tom Watson was in a star ehnmber
conferring with Collector Walter
Johnson, a big Republican boss, an
other one of Buck's lieutenants. Noth
ing definite could be learned of the
conference, but it is pretty certain
that the subject discussed was a fusion
in Watson’s interest.
MUST GO TO PIECES.
There Appear* to Be IVo Hope for (lie
Terminal Myatrni.
A United Press dispatch from New
York, under date of August 9, says:
The best opinion on Wall street is
that since the last report on the condi
tion of the Richmond Terminal there
is nothing to conclude but bankruptcy.
Disintegration is possible. The obli
gations, $10,000,000, is an enormous
embarrassment. Yet there seems to
be an earning capacity which, wore it
not for the stubbornness of some of
the security holders, might be used as
a basis for a successful reorganization.
Theye is no hope that these stubborn
security holders will do anything else
than await the action of the courts
and the complete disintegration of tho
system.
FASHION NOTES.
Tho church wns dhn audUlont
With the hu»h Iwfnro the prayed*
Only the eoiomn trumbling
Of the orgau etlrred the air.
Without, the wroet pale sunshine*
Within, the holy calm,
Where print and people waited
tor the swelling of the psalm.
Slowly the door swung open.
And a little baby girl.
Brown eyed, with brown hair falling
In many a wavy onrl.
With aoft cheeks flushing hotly*
Sly glances downward thrown.
And small hands claspsd before her.
Stood In the aisle alone.
Stood half abashed, half frightened.
Unknowing where to go,
While like a wind rocked flower
Her form swayed to and fro:
And tho changing eolor fluttered
In the little troubled face.
As from side to side she wavered
With a mute. Imploring grace*
It was but for a moment:
What wonder that wo smiled.
By sudh a strange, sweet picture
From holy thoughts beguiled?
Up, thon, rose some one softly.
And many an eye grew dim.
As through the tendor silence
Ho boro tho child with him.
And long 1 wondered, losing
The sermon and the prayer.
If when somotlmo 1 enter
Tho many mansions fair,
And stand abashed and drooping
In tho portul'a golden glow.
Our Lord will send an angel
To show me where to go?
-Sunday School Visitor.
The Glacial Balance.
Tlie glacial balance is sensitive. A
very slight continuous preponder
ance of supply over wasting might,
in a few years, betray itself by really
formidable and altogether irresistible
effects. Without one additional de
gree of cold, it is conceivable that a
persistently augmented deposit of
snow upon the Gerstenhomer and
the Schneestock, although otherwise
scarcely perceptible, might enable
the Rhone glacier to overwhelm
Brieg. But this would be on exceed
ingly small step toward the restora
tion of a former state of things,
wlion an ice stream close upon 260
miles in length, starting from the
same source, crossed the frozen or
nonexistent Lake of Geneva, and de-
bouohed by Culoz upon Lyons.
Without severe cold, as well as
heavy precipitation, ice could not
possibly have gained so great on as
cendency. And this was no local
phenomenon; it was simultaneously
prevalent over widely separated
tracts of the earth’s surface.—Edin
burgh Review.
Hints on What Untile* Wonr.
The accord lon-pls I ted blouse Is a
new ami popular factor 111 the Held.
Green and white is tile combination
most funded for outdoor wear on hot
days.
The sailor hats are higher in tile
crown, wider in the brim, altogether
more mannish than those of last year.
Many modish white wool gowns dis
play sleeves of green velvet, that be
ing the only bit of color in tile toilet.,
Yellow is a particularly favorite
color this summer, and, if carefully
chosen, suits blondes and brunettes
alike. '
Russian colors promise to be more
popular tints for early autumn, and
they are emeralds, a dull blue, a deep
red, and black.
Velvet sleeves have come into favor
again, and, oddly enough, aro seen in
tea gowns and dressy home toilets of
delicately tinted lawn. The sleeves
are out in fancifully flowing shapes.
Delicately figured bengoline silks
are among the dainty novelties for tl^!
coming season. For church, visiting
reception mid high teas bciigaline is
the favorite material, and it supplants
cloth and even crepon in popularity.
Striking among the novelties for
wenr nre tile toilets of pure white,
from the tip of tile snowy parasol to
the siloes of white linen or oo/.a
leather, which are worn with white
silk stockings nnd peep out from the
lace-edged rubles of white surah petti
coats.
Ubiquity is fatal to any fashion, con
sequently the shoulder frills of lace
which have decorated every sort of
gown, from zephyr to velvet,are being
replaced in some dresses by chemi
settes of exquisitely fine Indian lawn
word “IV boa 1” Don’t move the left drawn up on baby ribbon and in
hand, but do all the work with the others by fichus of India muslin, edged
right,
Tlio Sling Among tho l.rnelltofl,
Tho inhabitants of Palestine made
use in very ancient times of the
sling, the most skillful in its use
being tho .tribe of Benjanjin, whose
boast it was never to miss their aim.
What makes their Bkill appear more
surprising was that they managed
the sling with the left hand. The
men who came to David's--help at
Ziklag were no less adroit. They
used at will either the right hand or
the left. The sling was also the fa
vorite weapon of shepherds, who
with it drove away wild beasts prey
ing on their flocks. This makes
David’s victory over the giant Goliath
less surprising, as he had no doubt
groat practice in the use of this in
strument while guarding his father’s
sheep.—Harper’s Young People.
A Coining Star.
Managor—Your daughter would
muko a lino appearance on the stage.
Has she any talent?
Proud Father—Wall, when itcomes
to elocution, she con olocute all the
girls in town right out o’ their boots,
but when it comes to music she ain’t
there. She can’t play nothin, and as
for singin she can’t tell ono tune
from another.
Manager—That won’t matter.
She’ll do splendidly for topical songs.
—Now York Weekly.
John Knox's Last Words.
Tiro hist words ®f John Knox were
“I have meditated upon the state of
tho church, tho spouse of Christ,
have fought ngainstspiritual wicked
ness in high places, and I have pro-
vailed ; I have tasted of tho lieavonly
joy, where presently I shall be. Now,
for tho lustr time, X .commit soul,
body and spirit into his hands. Now
it has come.”
• Mi ,
' A OAST IRON MATCH.
When you give the terrible
jerk twist the horse’s jaw to the right,
and if you have the presence of mind
to repeat the word whoa at the second
jerk of the lines, you will be surprised
to find your horse standing still.
—Office Boy—Can I have this after
noon off, sir? Employer—Is your
grandmother dead? Office Boy—No,
sir; the family’s all well, thank the
Lord. I want to go to the base-ball
game, sir. Employer (checking by a
powerful effort a tendency to faint)—
You can have the afternoon off, and
next week I will make arrangements
for taking you into partnership.
The people of Albany must make
the neeessary arrangements for a big
Democratic rally in this oity on the'
night of the 16th inst. The crowd that
will be here will do the rest.
with tiny gathered frills, nnd worn
with their ends tucked into the belt.
The Fire Plugu Being Put Up.
The work of putting up the fire
plugs has commenced, and something
over twenty are now in position, ready
for tile water to be turned on.
The plugs are very neat looking
ones, rising about two feet out of the
ground, and are alt painted a light
green. Each plug has two openings
for hose, and will throw a stronger
stream than an engine, and doesn’t
have to wait to get up steam.
There will be a plug at every street
crossing, and one in the center of each
block, so that every building can be
easily reached by at least half a dozen
streams of water. The plugs are being
pat up at the rate of about ten a day.
Juvenile Economy.
Mr. Citiman—How in creation do
you manage to wear out your shoes
so fast?
Littlo Son—Wallcin to school to
savo car faro.
“What do you do with the money?"
“Buy candy.’’—Good News.
Pythons, or rockBnakes, are mostly
Old World forms. Three kinds are
known in Africa and two in Asia,
with some snakes which aro similar,
savo that they ore much smaller.
A German Idea.
The German colonial office has is
sued for the use of all pioneers in
distant lands, more especially in
Africa and Now Guinea, a manual
of instruction telling how to collect
vocabularies of languages, of which
no previous record is available. The
words are arranged according to
subjects.
Watson’s cotton row is hoed, and
Winn will have to Pickett.
A* Incident or Military Ufa Among Haw
York'. Cltla.n Snlilt.r...
Jordan Rogors, from Poekskill, N.
Y„ was at tho Great Northern re
cently.
“The departure," he said, “of some
of your militia for the state encamp
ment reminds me of a little incident
that occurred a night or two before
I left Peeksldll, where the New York
boyB were encamping.
“On this night the countersign wu
‘Gettysburg,’ and some of the bat
tery boys, who were stationed out
on the edge of the bluff, ‘caught on.'
Several of them had some fun with
the guard after taps, and one inci
dent in this connection has an espe
cially humorous side to it. It seems
that no enlisted man is ontdtled. to
the countersign. If it is absolutely
necessary for one to enter or leave
camp after tape he can go past the
guards only by means of a pass which
las been approved at headquarters.
In the battery detail from Brooklyn
is a private who knows how to make
the most of a good thing.
'He is a large, well built man,
with a voice to match his size. He
was one of several who got hold of
Gettysburg’ on the night referred
to. He has a coat with a capo fash
ioned much like the regular officer's
cape. Shortly after taps he put on
his big cape coat, buttoned it closely
around his throat, gave his private's
cap the crush in tho back which,
more than the braid, distinguishes
the officer's cap after dark, assumed
a majestic Btride and started for a
walk around tho camp grounds. Ho
was soon challenged by a sentry.
The conversation which ensued was
something like this.
“ ‘Haiti who goes there?’
“ ‘A friend.'
“ ‘Advance, friend, and give the
countersign.’
‘The battery private walked slow
ly forward and said ‘Gettysburg’ in
his deepest bass.
'The sentinel began to say ‘The
countersign is correct; advance,
friend,’ when the big private, assum
ing an authoritative pose, said
sharply:
“ ‘Don’t you know how to hold
your piece when you aro talking to
an army officer?’
The sentry was in the correct po
sition, and began to stammer that he
thought he was holdiug It properly.
Don't let me see any more of this
carelessness,' said the private more
sternly than before.
“ ‘Point your bayonet down when
a regular army officer approaches.
Hold tho piece in your loft hand and
salute at the same time with your
light. Don't you know the new reg
ulations regarding the salute to reg
ular army officers?'
“The rattled Bentiy admitted that
that part of his education had been
neglected, but added that he would
profit by the advice given him. The
big private left him standing there
with his bayonet pointed toward the
ground and his right hand in the air.
“After instructing a couple more
sentries in a brand new system of
guard duties the private went to his
tent and laughed himBelf nsloep.”—
Chicago Inter Ocean.
S.ved by the Big Dog.
As little Cal Stephens, of Ossawat-
omie, Kan., was playing around a
well that worked with two buckets,
a rope and a pulloy, he fell in, carry
ing the top bucket dowji with him.
His screams attracted the attention
of Bob Layson’s big St. Bernard dog,
Hadley, who, without a moment’s
hesitation, sprang in tho well and
either by accident or intention car
ried tho other bucket down with
him, overbalancing and bringing the
other bucket with little Col clinging
to it to the top.
Aunt Biddy McGee was thoro and
rescued littlo Cal. A ladder was
soon procured and Hndley wns
brought out. As Aunt Biddy MeGoo
with her arms around the wot child
and the dog was gently crying, tho
peoplo who had gathered went down
in their pockets to got a medal for
Hadley.—Chicago News-Record.
Inhabited Moons.
Though our moon is supposed to
be dead and cold, similar conditions
are not assumed to govom all tho
satellites of tho sister planots. Some
of those pertaining to Jupiter aro be
lieved to omit light of their own,
showing that they aro still hot,
However, astronomers aro usually
eager to find evidence of life on
other spheres, even discovering on
the earth's attendant orb apparent
traces of mighty works of engineer
ing artifice—the imagined creations
of races of beings long extinct—such
as the stupendous bridge that ap
pears to span a crater of the moon
volcano called Eudoxus.—Providence
Journal.
Lkt’s get together now. Georgia
Democracy is carrying the day.
Comb up to Albany next Wednes
day and see Ben E. Bussell nominated,
Tex Hbbald is getting new sub
scribers every day. The people want
the news.
HHHI
How mm Inyaluiu. Dud. with a Mull
for M.t.blug HI* Dug Com. to Orlof.
Ho hadn’t been in the villago very
long—about ton days—came up from
New York to spend his two weeks’
vacation—und had brought his dog
with him. an ugly, savage, vicious
brute that hod already terrorized
the canine contingent, while he and
the dog were the center of a circle
of wide circumference whenever they
walked abroad.
It was Saturday afternoon, and he
strolled down elm shaded Main street
radiant in a black and yellow blazer,
a broad Rash and—a cigarette—dog
following. He was out of matches,
so he pulled up at the “grocery store
and postoffice” to purchase some.
He didn't inspire much awe among
the congregated villagers, ns they
had already “sized him up," so that
when Cy Blossom drawled out “ 'Eke
comes that striped dude from Mul-
lenses boardin house,” it didn’t cause
any great excitement, but when Cy
added “with that dorg of hisn" there
was a shifting of legs and a sudden
grasping of canes, umbrellas and
oh ail - backs.
“Speaking of matches,” said he, as
he passed two cents over the counter,
took one out of the box and lit his
cigarette, “aro thoro any of you gen
tlemen about here that has a dog he
would like to match against this dog
of mine—great dog, gents—he's got
a fine pedigree—he's a trained fight
er and he can walk away with any
dog of ton times his weight in this
village—I’ll just bet twenty-five to
one on that”
Kind er think yor can’t get no
bets on that,” said Seth Hawkins,
tho grocor and postmaster of the
villago; “there’s no dogsroun here
that’s trainod tor fight, an I never
heer’d of one that laid any claim to a
ped-ped-er-greo. ”
’Hoi on, thoro, young feller,” said
a toll, rawboned old fellow leaning
up against tho counter. “Hoi on;
what’s that ye bet, twenty-five ter
one that dorg o' youm kin walk
away with any dorg in the village
ten times his weight?”
“That’s what I said.”
“Wa-al, 'ere is my one—plonk out
yer twenty-five.” (He planked It
out.) “Beth, you hoi tho stakes.
Now, young feller, jes' fetch yer
dorg along, an if he kin walk away
with him I'll give yer fifty cents for
every poun he weighs. Corns on.
boys.”
It mado quite a procession, ho mill
his “dorg” and about a dozen villa
gers—the lotter in a bunch ut u re-
ectful distance from tho former—
e old fellows leading, and they all
tramped up to a little ramshackle
old house about a mile from the
store. The old fellow pushed open
the gate and they all entered a littlo
inclosure that was strewn with old
lumber, barrels, pieces of iron and
odds and ends of all sorts. A sign
over the door of the shed read,
Samuel Bodldn—old junk—pigs for
sale.”
Now, mister, wo all understan
that dorg o’ youm is ter walk away
with mine or I’m ter git twenty-five
dollars.”
That’s it,” said ho, tugging at his
dog’s dollar. “Where’s your pup?”
“There lie is,” said the old fellow,
pointing to a heap of rubbish about
fifty feet away. “We ain't got no
ped-ped-e-strol, it got broke, but ye
can walk away with him perhaps
all the same.”
It was u cast iron one—weighed
260 pounds.—New York Herald.
Complexions Under Eleetrlo Light.
When the olectrio light first come
into vogue great alarm was created
among the fair sox by the statement
that tho new* light was an active
agent in the creation of freckles.
Since then tho world has grown
wiser, but still tho ultratruthfulness
of the modem Uuninant in revealing
the nctuulities of featuro and artifi
cialities of complexion mot with in
overy ballroom has militated great
ly against its popularity. A promi
nent Now York society leader has
earned the gratitude of millions of
her sisters by tho discovery that all
its objectionable cllhractoristics can
he removed by covering tho incan
descent lamp with pale yellow silk.
Tho effect on tho complexion is
said to bo “creamy and facinating,”
and it inuy be takon for granted that
henceforth tho stanchest advocates
of the electrio light will be found
among the sex that has found a new
way of causing it to render tribute
to their attractiveness.—Electricity.
THE red;
IN THE
PUT
Oat of 9*3,000
the Patieal (JrMHll
Get 910,3
IN Til
The lawyers In Atlanta’s <
Steve Ryan case are exliil
gree of modesty in the
that will excite the ndnilrn
profession. They brought $7
court. Rosser Carter br
original bill, and they want ?1
tlielr share of the work.
Charles S. Kingsberry will a
$16,000 be paid to him for Ills ;
servloes, and Ills attorneys,
Calhoun, King and Spalding, ■
$16,000 for their services. Air. II
Peeples, as auditor, lias not yet
what he will want for tho time lie li
devoted to the ease, hut It is suppi
that he will ask at least $10,000.
these expenses oome the costs <
amounting to $2,000. The stenoj
demands the same amount, an
there is a printing bill that nmouii
to $1,600. Tho Inoidcntnl expen
will amount to fully $2,000. This a
sorbs $64,600 of the pot, leaving a lie
$10,600 for the patient creditors, i
really should oonslder thcmsclvei
look,
ANOTHER ONI! ON SAM Mil AI
■I. Has Quit the Third Parti en.i - l
I.lrliig.lau la Go for Ii.
iecti
riddles ami Violins.
Boy—Is this instrument called
fiddle or a violin?
Professor—Ven I blay it, it's
Violin. Von you blay it, it’s a fiddle.
-Good News.
Two bailiffs at Bolton, Ga., captured
a blind tiger the other day, and turned
it into a Sunday-school.
Mr. M. D. Gobtatowsky is building
a briok stable on bis lot in rear of tbe
Hbbald building.
It is probable that the adjustment
of Third Party differences in the
Ninth wilt put Winn out of tbe race.
No other town in Georgia, outside
of our metropolitan cities, can show ns
much improvement and substantial
growth as Albany is taking on this
summer.
A prominent citizen in one of tho
counties of the 8econd Congressional
district writes: “Send me the Hxbald
until January 1st, 1893. I want i
Democratic paper during the cam-
paign. There is none published in
this county.” This comes from a
county in which there are two alleged
Democratic papers published.
Ben Russell's gallant fight in the
Second has won the admiration of
PemooratE throughout the State.
The way In whioh the Negroes of
the South are voting the Democratic
ticket this year will be a lesson to
those Republican organs whioh have
to long harped on tne oppression of
the negro voter.
The Atlantn Journal tells the
ing good story on Rev. Sam
going to show that he lias Just
another double-jointed, buck-
politioal, lmnd-spring, somersa
It is said that he left for a
tour in the West Just after he
appointed in not getting tho
tlon for Congress. Beforo
said to Col. Livingston: “Y<
the Third Party with ail
PutyouraugerIn and bore ti
tired, and then let me know
oome and boro awhile;”
IVhrre la the Alllaurel
l' - mm the Kuvunnilli I’iim-.
The People's Enomitjilar, of 'I
vllle, asks If the Fnfliljj4’
dead?
From this district all tli
seem In be In I lie affirmative.
Tin - object uf the AUianrg ‘
It promised to bring runners
fill - Hip purpose in Impnniiq
of agriculture and ol beti
social and material condil
planter in tho West and
idea was commendable,
to trusts nnd combines, an
upon Jute bngglng ami it
in behalf of diversified
b success.
Tho farmers’ position In
try is one of isolation and I
object of the Alliance wns g
But in an evil day the
into politics. The Peeks, 1
nnd AloCunes brought it i
days. From being a power
became n maoliine of dou
poses. It wns misused and
ends misoarrled. After
name the People’s
staunch Alllancemen ren
Democratic party. Otlie
turned to the Democrat
more nre reclaiming their <
ance every day.
The Alliance was killed' b
New Version of nu 01.1 N
Two years ago a Chicago (
ped at Decatur, Ala., says ni
nnd while sitting on the b
piazza, talking with the p
the hostelry, noticed n t
cock strutting about the s
“Yep,” replied the ho
“best in these parts, I reeko
“I’m something of a chicle
myself,” continued the trav
“So? Glad to know it, sn
“Tell you what I’ll do—I’ll
a game of seven-up for th
remarked the Chicagoan.
“Do it with pleasure,
ids host.
The cards were produci
T, won. Tlie rooster was t
to him and was brought b
Fair city,
A few days ago the Chic
registered at the same hoti
tur. Tho proprietor immed
ognized him, “Aren’t y0 .
who played me a game
years ago for a rooster?” i
“Yes, sir.”
“Wall, I've been thinking
sah, quite a powerful lot s
time. Do you know, snh,
been able to remember what yc
against my rooster, sah, on
casion? That was tlie first:
kee trick I over experimen
sah, and you will obll
nominating the sort of
fer.”
Shiloh’s Consul
This is beyond
successful cough medic
ever sold. A few dos
cure the worst cases ol
and bronchitis, whll-
success in tbe cure ol
without a parallel
medloiue. Since I
has been sold oi
which no othe
If you have a co
you to try it. ]
If your lungs ar
lame, ur
mm
■
. • .