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ALBANY WEEKLY HERALD:
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1893.
■
§
STILL NO FEVER.
BruD.wIck t'aulai Out •( Ihc Dnrk-
■m, and Full of Hope.
Special Telcgrnm to tho HellALli.
Brunswick, Aug. 31.—Eight days
without fever. Quarantine will be re
moved on fifteenth day.
Board of Health will issue no fur
ther bulletins unless other oases oc
cur. Good bye. Timks-Advertiser.
JIIDUB DUIISnAL CLARKE
BcilKn Ilia High I’oti I ion For ihe
Heat oI Renaona. •
Special Telegram to the lloraUI.
Atlanta, Aug. 81.—Judge Marshal
-J. Clarke resigned liis position this
morning. His reasons are that the
work is too hard for the small salary
paid him.
THOSE CERTIFICATES.
The Cilr line Three Thonnnnd Dollnra
Worth ot Them.
As announced in Tuesday’s Herald
arrangements have been perfected
whereby the city is now in possession
•of $8,000 of the new crisp olearing
Bouse certificates.
A Herald reporter called on City
Treasurer H. A. Tarver Jr., this raorn-
jng and found him busy issuingoheoks
for tho new money.
“You see,” said Mr. Tarver, “the
city has borrowed $8,000 in this cur
rency and we have $1,000 deposited in
each of the banks of the oity, but, as
yet, very little of it has been paid out,
from the mere faot that very few of
those to whom the city is indebted,
Icnow anything of the city’s recent
raise,” and the handsome city oflloial
-smiled blandly.
“By the way,” he resumed, “I wish
you would just say to those of the
-city’s employes who are behind with
their salaries, that if they will call on
me now with their warrants properly
drawn and certified that I will issue a
check in full in settlement of the
claim. And, another thing, I want to
-complimeut the Herald on the neat
manner in which the certificates are
printed, Mighty nice work—mighty
•nice work.
“No, I don’t think I know of any
’news, only that I think Albany is
Bolding her own pretty well during
the alleged hard times, and now that
■the clearing house certificates are out,
it is more than probable that the future
sailing will be considerably smoother.”
The Democratic platform upon
which President Cleveland and the
Democratic majority in the Fifty-
Third Congress were eleoted is a
straightforward declaration of princi
ples, and there is no excuse for any
misunderstanding among Democrats
as to what it means or what its pledges
are to tho people. And Democrats
Who really mean to “stand on the plat
form with botli feet,” don’t need to
juggle with it on the ourrency ques
tion any more than on the tariff. It
distinctly declares “that the dollar
unit of coinage of both metals (gold
and silver) must be of equal instrinsio
and exchangeable value, or be adjusted
by international agreement, or by
such safe-guards of legislation as shall
insure the maintenance of tho par
ity of the two metals and the equal
power of every dollar at all times in the
market and in the payment of debt.”
Stories of Professor Loomis.
How many Yale men will recall
the nights with Professor Loomis in
the Athenaeum observatory and that
odd personality of his, as hard to for
get as it is to describe. Stories about
these night encounters are numer
ous. Asking a timid student at the
telescope in his incisive way, “Do
you see the moons of Jupiter?” he
got he reply, “Yes, sir.” “No, you
don’t," snapped the professor; “they
' are all in eclipse.”
We recall also Loomis’ smile of
.mixed irony, contempt and humor,
when his young lady acquaintance
■described the telescopic edge of the
gibbous moon as “just like Hamburg
edging.”—New Haven Oor. New York
Post.
Banish tmi 'habit of attending to
two things at one time, for you
know that “he who follows two
hares is sure to catch neither."
Know what you are going to do and
remember to do it well.
A woman says that a man will go
through fire and water to win the
girl of his heart, but he will not al
low her to see him with a four days'
growth of beard on his chin.
Amber, although reckoned as a
product of the mineral kingdom, is
in all probability rosin from an ex
tinct species of coniferous tree.
There is a salt mine at Wieliczla,
an Austro-Galician town, that has
been worked for 600 years and is
still yielding fresh supplies.
Reports from Brunswick say that
the city waB never in better health.
The South is at last free of the pro
fessional base ball player. May he
live long and prosper somewhere else.
CENTS THAT DROP FROM HEAVEN.
A. Little Boy Told a Story WI1UI1 Sounded
Very Much Like utt Untruth.
Little Richard M. was a very hand
some and very pleasant boy. The
house he lived in, in a small city,
had no door yard in front of it, but
the sidewalk was wide aud clean and
nicely shaded by elm 'trees and was
not so much crowded with passers.
So it was a pleasant and safe place
for little Richard to play.
The only-objection to it was that
people passing by were apt to bo so
much pleased with the bright faced
little follow that they would take no
tice of him in a way that might
make him vain—so his wise mother
thought—and quite often a gentle
man passing would give him a cent.
Richard’s mother thought that this
was not good for him, and so she
very plainly told him not to take
any more cents if they wore offered
him. He was to thank any such
gentleman for his kindness, but to
tell him that his mother did not ap
prove of his taking money from any
one.
One day after she had given him
his charge little Richard brought in
a penny. When his mother saw it,
she reproved him for disobeying her.
But ho answered, “Mamma, there
did not any man give me this cent.
God threw it down to me out of
heaven."
This shocked -his mother nil the
more, for she thought that it must
bo a lie. Sho did not see how her
little boy could possibly think that
he was telling the truth. So she re
proved him very solemnly and tried
hard to make him see how wicked
he had been and to confess his sin.
But the little fellow stuck to it, and
said over and over again: “There
was not any man there. God did
throw the cent down to me from
heaven.”
His mother was greatly distressed
and kept trying to get Richard to
oonfess his sin and ask forgiveness.
If she could not get him to do this,
she thought she must punish him.
But before she did so she talked with
a young man who studied and slept
In the front room on the second floor
of her house. He was able and glad
to explain the strange thing. He
did not know that Richard had been
forbidden to take such gifts, and one
day sitting at his front window,
when the little boy was playing be
low, he tossed a cent down to him
without putting his own head in
sight. The cent dropped and jingled
on the pavement. Richard looked
up and around and saw no person,
and he honestly believed what he
told his mother.
No doubt she was very thankful
to be thus saved from doing cruel
wrong to her dear, truthful hoy.
The mothers who read this will pray
God to keep them from doing such a
wrong to their children. But, chil
dren, dreadful as it would have been
for little Richard to ho punished for ly
ing, when ho had told the real lione3t
tru th, it would havo been even more
dreadful if ho lmd told a lie and de
ceived his mother. Do you not think
so?—Church at Home and Abroad.
A Sultan's Kind Reply.
Tho sultan of Morocco is so often
rude and unmannerly to strangers
that I take pleasuro in recording here
the kindly way in which he received
the request of a Gorman princo who
some years ago camo to Tangier for
his health. He was suffering from
rheumatism and brought with him
his equipages. Tho first day ho at
tempted to drive up and down the
Malabar beach he was stopped by the
soldiers and forbidden to drive any
farther again in the city. He im
mediately appealed to the sultan,
who wrote back the following an
swer and had it dispatched from Fes
to Tangier by a particularly swift cou
rier: Yes, he would be delighted to
have this stranger prince drive about
his city of Tangier, and he gave him
permission so to do, hut with one
condition. Every time he drove
abroad he would please take the
wheels off his carriage, otherwise he
might run over and seriously hurt
some of the little children in the
streets.—Stephen Bonsai in Century.
We have a speedy and positive cure
for satarrh, diphtheria, canker mouth
and headache, in Shiloh’s Catarrh
Remedy. A nasal mjeotor free with
each bottle. Use it if you desire health
add sweet breath. Price 60o. Sold by
H. J. Lamar & Sons. (6)
IT’S a 00.
One Fact About the Truth.
The great advantage of the truth
is that you didu't make it, and so are
not in any way responsible for it. It
can take care of itself, or, if not. so
much the worse for the facts. It is
very strange that among the argu
ments in favor of truth telling enu
merated in books for the young no
one has ever thought to bring out
this one of its superior labor saving
qualities.—Kate Field’s Washington.
Shiloh’s Consumption Cure*
This is beyond question tile most
successful cough medicine we have
ever sold. A few doses invariably
oure the worst cases of cough, croup
and bronchitis, while its wonderful
success in the cure of consumption is
without a parallel, in the history of
medicine. Since its first discovery it
has been sold on a guarantee—a test
which no other medicine can stand. If
you have a cough we earnestly ask you
to try it. Price 10c., 6O0. and $1. If
i rour lungs are sore, ohest or baok
ame, use Shiloh’s Porous Plasters
Sold by H, J. Lamar & Sons. (1)
The Cllr I. Gains to Slave Fire Wanle
—A Good Move.
Following upon a suggestion print
ed in the Herald a few days ago, and
at, the instance of Engineer Tom
James, the Fire Department Board,
yesterday, decided to divide the oity
into tiro wards. The plan has been
under contemplation ever slnoe the
inauguration of Albany’s part-paid
lire department, than which there is
none better in the State. The oity
lias one of the best water works sys
tems in the South and this, -coupled
with the fact that the department is
thoroughly trained lias made it neo-
essary that the (ire wards be estab
lished.
And so, yesterday, the Board got to
gether and arter a few minutes’ dis
cussion and calculation the following
plan was accepted:
Ward No. 1.—The lire limits; north
and soutli, from alley in rear of God
win’s stable to alley in rear of Wil
lingham’s Hall; east and west, from
Front to Jaokson streets.
No. 2.—From Farkas’ stables west up
Broad to oity limits, then from the
stables north up Jaokson street to So
ciety. This will be known as North
west Ward.
No. 8.—From Farkas’ stables south
down Jackson to cemetery, then west
up Broad to oity limits. This inoludes
the southwestern portion of the oity.
No. 4.—From Westbrook’s oorner
south down Jaokson ti> cemetery, then
east down Broad to the river.
No. 6.—From Leben’s oorner east
down Broad to the river, then north
up Jaokson to Society.
That completes the fire wards into
which the oity has been drawn and the
plan is an excellent one. Whenever
an alarm is sent in the fire bell will
tap the number of times of the ward
in wliioh the fire is located.
But the plan is a simple one and
doesn’t need any explaining. It may
be stated, however, that the bell will
tap the number of the ward three
times and then a general alarm will
be turned on.
Now, be on your guard when the
next alarm is sounded and see if you
oan tell in what direotion the fire
originated^
A Llnlr Sired Fight This IHornlna.
From Thursday's Evening Ilorald.
There ocourred a most regrettable
personal encounter on Broad street
thlB morning between Mr. Jos. S.
Davis, County Sohool Commissioner,
and Prof. Z. I. Fltzpatriok, late prin
cipal of the Albany High Sohool.
The dflioulty took place just in
front of the Albany Drug. Company's
establishment, and sprang up so sud-
deniy that very few pe’rsons were
aware of its progress before the gen
tlemen bad been parted.
Tlie encounter grew out of a recent
correspondence between Mr. Davis
and Prof. Fitzpatriok, relative to some
matters of final settlement between
them as teaoher and oounty school
commissioner. A crisis was readied
this morning when the gentlemen met.
After an exohange of a few remarks,
Mr. Davis struck Prof. Fltzpatriok,
who returned the blows until both
were caught and held by officers and
friends. Fora while considerable ex-
oitement prevailed, and further trou
ble seemed imminent, but quiet was
finally restored by cool heads.
A light walking stick carried by Mr.
Davis, and an umbrella in the hands of
Prof. Fitzpatrick figured conspicu
ously in the paBSsge of the few licks,
but neither of the gentlemen was
much hurt.
That the affair will be amioably and
satisfactorily adjusted is fondly hoped
by the numerous friends of both par
ties.
The John Ellis Co., of Maoon, has
failed for $33,000.
The clearing house certificate is
gaining a foothold upon nearly every
town in tho State.
Mb. Joe Hall,' who has been one of
the four paid firemen slnoe the depart
ment was reorganized, as stated in yes
terday’s Herald, has resigned his po
sition to acoept a more lucrative one
with the Albany. Electric Light Co,
and entered upon his duties with that
corporation this morning. Mr. Hall
made a good fireman and while bis
comrades were sorry to see him go
they are glad that the Fire Board saw
fit to elect Mr. Ernest Moore in his
stead. Even when Albany had only a
volunteer department there was a no
more valiant fireman than Mr. Moore,
and it is a matter of general approval
that be should have been selected over
the numerous applicants applying for
the position.
—A young lady afflicted with an un
desirable amount of adipose tissue
succeeded in ridding herself of a large
amount, of it without injuring her
health. This is how she did it: she
began by getting up at 6 o’olook every
morning and taking a three mile walk
before breakfast without considering
the weather. At » o'clock she
had a large cup of coffee with
very little sugar and a slice of dry
bread. At 2 o’olock more bread and
some vegetables composed her dinner.
At 4 -AO she took another long walk
followed by a cup of tea and a few
oraokers. Ninety days of this regi
men reduced her weight from 186 to
146 pounds.
AT THE CEDARS,
You hod two girls, Baptist*,
One Is Virginia.
Bold hard. Baptiste.
Liston to 1110.
The whole drive was jammed
In the liond of the Coders,
The rnphls wef t) dnmmed
With tho logs light rammed
And crammed; you might know
Tho devil had clinched thorn below.
We have workod three days; not a budge.
“She's as tight os a wodgo
On tho ledge."
Says our foreman,
“Mon Dieul boys, look hero,
Wo must get this thing dear.”
Ho cursed at the men.
And wo wont for It thon,
With our cantdoga arow.
Wo Just gave “Ho, yo ho,”
Wlion sho gavo a big shove
From above,
Tho gang yelled and tore
For tho shore.
Tho logs gavo a grind,
Llko a wolf's Jaws behind.
And ns quick ns a Hash,
With a shovo and n crash.
They woro down with a smash.
But 1 and ten more.
All but Ibaao Dufour,
Were ashore.
He leaped an a log In front of tho rush.
And shot out from tha bind,
Whllo tho Jam roared bohlnd.
As ha floated along.
Ho balanced his polo
Aud tossed us a song.
But Just as we eheorod.
Up darted a log from the bottom.
Leaped thirty foot, fair and square,
Aud oama down on his own.
Bo went up like » blook,
With tho shook,
And when ho was then
In the nlr
Kissed his hand -
To the land.
Wbon ho dropped.
My heart stopped,
For the first logs had caught him
And crushed him.
When he rose in his plaoe
Them was blood on his faco.
Then were some girls. Baptists,
Picking berries on tho hillside.
Whom tho river curls, Baptiste,
Yon know, on the hillside.
One was down by tho woton
Sho saw lease
Fallback.
She didn't aomam, Baptiste,
She launched her canoe—
It did seem, Baptiste,
That she wanted to db too,
For befon you could think
The birch cracked llko * shell
In the rash of hell,
And I saw them both sink,
Baptiste!
He had two girls—
One is Virginia.
What God oalls the other
Is not known to me.
—Duncan Campbell Scott in London Ban.
Row • Now York Town Woe Named.
The speakership of the national
house of representatives, strange to
say, has fallen only once to tho great
state of New York. That time was
when James W. Taylor was speaker.
He was a native of Saratoga Springs,
and old residents still tell how his
beautiful wife named a village a little
north of that summer resort. The
town was about to be incorporated
and several persons were gathered
at the Taylor mansion before going
to Ballston, the county scat, to file
certain papers. They talked of sev
eral appellations, and finally the lady
of the house said, “Lot me settlo
this." She got the family Bible,
opened it, and her eyes fell on the
story of Paul’s message to the Cor
inthians. “Its name is Corinth,"
she remarked, and that is its name.
—New York Sun.
The Feet of English Womens
To see an English woman at her
best one must behold her on horse,
hack. Her perfectly fitting habit,
which is always a masterpiece in cut
and style, sots off to advantage tho
fine mold of her figure. Her feet,
always her most defective point, are
hidden from view. Her bright fair
hair is scon at its best under the
shadow of hor hat, as are also the
glowing tints of her complexion. But
outside of hor riding getup she cares
too little for the finer details of dress
to produce a good effect. The Eng
lish shoe, for instance, is a terror.—
Lucy Hooper in Home Journal.
A Provision In * IJoctor'i will.
A Philadelphia physician who died tho
other day left a will containing some
queor provisions, including this one; “If
my family never settled with Mr. Foster
concerning tho dog, I wish and want
them to give to the boy Foster who was
hit the snm of $10, but if they have set
tled with the said Foster, then they are
not to pay any money to said boy. This
is in fulfillment of a promise I made to
them when I was in trouble concerning
the dog.”
Too Knoll Imagination.
Pity the man or woman devoid of
imagination, but ho or she who al
lows the imagination too great liber
ty becomes its subject rather than
its master. The man who wears a
rubber on the pedal attachment to
his cork leg because the cork foot
aohes without the rubber is as unfor
tunate a victim os the Scotchman
who fainted on account of the heat
in church, the first Sunday after
stoves were set up, although a fire
had not been lighted in any of them.
—Good Housekeeping.
A hoy needs to be taught to dis
tinguish colors os much as a girl-
more perhaps—for girls learn in
stinctively over their frocks and rib
bons. More than one boy has lost a
coveted position at West Point or
elsewhere through a late discovery
that he is color blind.
The article in the Herald a few days
ago, stating that an unnamed creek
flowed into the river two miles north
of the city, has brought the following
suggestion from Mr. Geo. W. Carroll.
Says he, “It will not be confounded
with the other two streams, and em
braces both names. How do you like
‘KinchamuokaleefooneeV’ ’’
LOVE AT THE PISTOL’S POINT.
Tha Storjr of Two Ulrln Who Brought Two
Uiudtful Lover* to Time.
This is about two girls who lived
in a western mining town, and who
might have been married to the
choicest young men of the town if
they hadn't each fallen In lovo with
one of the weakest The boys were
friends, named respectively Smith
and Curtiss, and they wore so slow to
“pop” the important question, even
while desperately in love, that the
girls concluded to bring them to time.
"Just the way men do," said Sally
Hanks, “take a six shooter and aslt
them their intentions. Thero won't
be any need of loading the shooters
—they'll be so scared they'll drop the
minute they see them."
The young men wore partners in
business, and Sally Hanks and her
friend Ethel Barber called together
at tlioir office, carrying the weapons
concealed in their handbags.
Ethel trembled so she could hardly
stand, but her friend Sally was
nerved right up to business.
“We’re just tired of shilly shally
ing,” she said sternly. “If you don’t
know your own minds, wo’U holp
you to find out, and we won’t stand
any more fooliu, for ther’s others
wattiu," and she took out her six
shooter and hold it under the nose
of Byron Smith, who nearly fainted.
“I’m your huckleberry,” he gasped
and dropped on his knees.
Curtigs took the weapon in a gin
gerly manner out of Ethel’s hands
and asked her to be Mrs. Curtiss at
ihe earliest possible date.
But Sally kept hers, and they’do
say that it has figured in their do
mestic history on occasions since
then, but I can vouoh for ite never
having been loaded.
Onee when Byron Smith refused
to eat some bread his wife had mode
and threw it on the floor Solly had
recourso to her six shooter. Point
ing it at him, she said sternly t
“Piok'up that bread.”
He picked it up.
“Now oat it.”
He ate it to the last crumb and
then wondered meekly why his wife
laughed.—Detroit Free Press.
Romance of an Orchid Hunter.
Orchid hunting leads to strange
adventures. M. Hamelin, the col
lector who has sent home all the
specimens of the Eulophiolla oliza-
botliu) that have hitherto reached
these shores, narrates in a letter how
he won a dusky bride and, moreover,
secured his preserves of the famous
plant from all poaching on the part
of brother depredators — or, more
euphemistically, plant collectors.
While searching the woods of Mada
gascar he had for guide and hunter
the brother of the chief, Mayomhosa.
This unhappy guide had the misfor
tune to be so severely mauled by a
Madagascar lion that he died, and M.
Hamelin returned alone to tell the
tale. After the recital the irate chief
gavo the survivor the option of mar
rying the widow or being greased
and burned. Ho chose the lesser of
two evils, but coupled with the mar
riage contract an undertaking on the
part of his brother-in-law to close
those lands to all other orchid seek
ers.—London Telegraph.
Politeness Fays.
Virtue is not to he measured by os
tentatious giving. There is frequent
ly more real lovo for humanity in
the soul of the man who removes the
banana skin from the pavement than
in the heart of the donor of the me
morial window in the church. Polite
ness, like all other faults and virtues,
may bocome habitual. It is surpris
ing how many small acts of kindness,
how many little deeds of helpfulness,
one may do in the course of a day
when there are inclination to bo kind
and a lookout kept for tho opportu
nity.
One may set out with this inten
tion in the morning, and the footing
up at night—not to others, but to
one’s own secret conscience—will be
cheering and encouraging.—Chicago
Inter Ocean.
Gentlemen Who Aspire to Be Flunkeys.
With the exception of Lord Carring
ton (who did very well indeed) the offi
cial actors in the ceremonial at' the
duke's wedding appeared to be very Im
perfect in their parts, and it is a wonder
that no accident took place, It waa odd
indeed to see a number of arlstocratio
personages walking backward with the
appearance of being saturated with the
most slavish servility, but even more
grotesque and remarkable were the con
stant and profound bowings andsorap-
ings of all the courtiers.
Lord Palmerston once remarked to
Lord Dalling, who repeated the saying to
Cbarles Lever, “What a happy arrange
ment it is that in an ago when our flun
keys aspire to be gentlemen there are
gentlemen who ask nothing better than
to be flunkeys,” and he never said a bet
ter thing.—London Trnth.
The Ago of * Wliale.
It is believed that whales often at
tain tho age of 400 years. The num
ber of years these huge creatures
havo lived is ascertained by counting
the layers of laminsB forming the
horny substance known as "whale
bone.” These laminee increase year
ly just as the “growths" do on a
tree.—St. Louis Republic.
“Level llendcd.”
From tho Brunswick Times-Advcrtisor.
Editor McIntosh, of the Albany
Hebald, writes a snappy editorial on
the quarantine craze. - Editor Moln-
tosh is a level beaded man.
A QUICK FIRR
T.nat Night, Rut Quicker Work hr ll
Department.
From Thursday', Kvkniko iikaald-
Lusty cries of ‘Fire’ in the Northern
portion of the oity about 8 o’olook IaBt
night, brought out the usual orowd of
sightseers, who discovered flames issu
ing from the roof of a four-room cot
tage on tho corner of Washington
and Tift streets, and gaining such
rapid headway as seemed tq threaten
the entire destruction of the building.
The origin of the fire was evidently ■
in a rear room, and the whole top of
the house between the Celling and the
roof, was gutted in
short space of time.
Tom James and his
remurkably
But Foreman
boys were wide
■
the three-eights of n mile lying be
tween- tho station and thb burning
dwelling like the wind, had two lines
of hose laid and had gained a complete ’
mastery ot the situation in a very
few minutes.
Only the roof and new plastering
will be required to restore the build
ing to its former state, and the fire
men aro deserving of great credit.
The house was oooupied by Mr.
L. B. Nichols, whose family (is at |
present visiting in Pmithvllle. Mr.
Nichols had just left and looked up
the plaoe a few moments before the
fire broke out. The doors were burst
in by those persons who were first on
the ground, and a considerable portion
of the furniture was saved, uninjured.
Mr. Niohols has Insuranoe to tho
amount of $600.
The building was the property of
Oapt. T. N. Woolfolk, and was insured
for $760, wbioh will fully oover tho
loss.
UEUROIA'S tax returns.
A Shrinkage st Abot.l Twelve million,
la Yalaee.
The Atlanta Constitution says tbn
returns have been reoelved at the
comptroller general’s office from alt
the oounties but three, Fulton, Bibb
nnd Floyd.
The digeste of these 184 oounties
show a total valuation of property
amouritlng to almost $826,000,000. ‘
When the figures oome in from the
three missing oounties the total will
run up to about $408,000,000. Then to
this sum Is to be added over $40,000,000 |
for the railroads of the State, and an
other important, sum for the street
railways whloh are returned separ
ately.
So when Captain Charley Furiow
gets it all figured up the State will
find that she lias $460,000,000 of prop
erty returned for taxation. The
amount will probably be a lltjlo ovor
that and may boa trifle of a'million
dollars. Last year the amount re
turned was $403,000,000, but without
the railroads it was $420,000,000 in
round numbers. The decrease will be
approximately $12,000,000. Fulton may
give an increase, but it is doubtful
about Bibb and Floyd.
All but twenty-Blx oounties show a
decrease. Some show a very large de
crease, too, from a quarter to thre
quarters of a million.
It is a noticeable faot that very few
of the “wire-grass oounties” show an
falling off In the value of property.
The riolieBt prize ever earrled off *'*
by the winner of the Derby stakes was
over £7,000. This fell to Sir Bevys In
1879, when tlicro were 278 subscribers.
—The change in the weather is most
ref resiling;
Thomasville is complaining of the
warm weather.
A STRANGE CASE
How an Enemy was
"
The following graphic statement
rend with Intense interest: “lennnotd
the numb, oroopy sensation thatexlstei
S arms, hands ana lofts, I had to rub and
ose parts until they wore sore, toovei
a measure tho dead feeling that bar’
possession of them. In addition, I
strange weakness In my back and nroi
waist, together with tin Indescribable,
feeling In my stomach. Physicians i
was creeping paralysis, from w hich, a
Ing to their universal conclusion, tin
relief. Once It fastens upon u pon
say, it continues Us insidious prog~
It reaches a vital point and tho null
Such was my prospect, J had been dc
a year and a naif steadily, but with i
tlcular bonoflt, when I saw an advert
of Dr Miles' Restorative Nervine, r
bottle and began using It. *'
may seem, but a few days ha ,
every bit of that creopy feeling ha
and there haB nob been oven A ‘
Indication of Its rotun