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IPohos Extract |
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THIS IS THE GENUINE!
SOLD ONLY IN BOTTLES WITTI BUFF WRAPPERS.
SEE THAT STRIP OVER CORK IS UNBROKEN.
6?//' trade-mai k around every bottle. In sickness
Every Drop Is Worthits Weight InGold!
INVALUABLE TOR
BURNS. SUNBURNS, DIARRHtEA, CHAF
INGS, STINGS OF INSECTS, FILES,
SORE EYES, SORE FEET.
TH? WBHDER OF HEALING!
For Files. Bleeding or Itching, it is
the greatest known remedy.
For Burns, Scalds, Wounds, Bruises
nnd Sprains, it is unequalled—stopping pain
and healing in a marvellous manner.
For Inilatnctl and Sire Kyes.—lts effect
upon these delicate or uns is simply marvellous.
It is the Ladies’ Friend.—All female
complaints vield to its wondrous power.
For I leers. Old Sores, or Open
Wounds, Toothache, Faccaclie, Bite*
of Insects, Sore Feet, its action upon these
is most remarkable.
H j;< oai'd t. v /> f;/> b y /’// is tcia .vs /
(>■/;/> /.v uosrri 1 i s/
Caution.—POND'S EXTRACT has been i:ui- '
toted. The genuine has the words “ /’O.V/AS’ i
EX TRA ( T" blown in the glass, and our picture
trad* mark on eu mounding buff wrapper. None
other »-• genuine. Always insist on having 1
PONO'S EXTRACT. Take no other prepara- 1
tion. Lt is never sold in bulk or by measure.
IT 1 UNSAFE To ISE ANY I’REFAKATTON EXCEPT THE
Gtnnii,- with OCR DIRECTIONS. Externally and ,
Inti a’ly, Prices. 50e., sl, $1.75. Sold everywhere.
(tJ’Orii New Pamphlet with History of our
Fkki arations Sent FREE on Aitli* ation to
FOND’S EXTRACT CO.,
70 Fifth Avenue, New York.
2i ” )
V 7 ' ‘;.' ' ? ' s«ss
. ■
, Bi KI
It’s Tema • . ■ific
a .tfon’.ip‘iiL Ipmls
I giwtitmtipr : i- :ml over
n. - ’ i ■, hov.'i ■. ■ .
_ Also for ■ ■■
' ..." ■l.ll, X'C-
«•• Tc-- iic ■ dr.l ' . 1 s.;!« hi- 03
I:■ s its < : ,e I’li 50e.
R -HI by ail ! ■■■ ■ ! y Gl
Ol) 1 of ],.! - ■ 1, .up : ;„y by
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MARKETS.
SI MEi: V! MA.
"Pl iers given d< li \ /rd !’■ -ni wagons.
M ' .70
Corn . d‘A
Flour . . 2.75
< ’ounlrv l*.::< <»n, li” round I' l
Sw c<-l Rotators . 75(" 1.00
Irish “ 1.00
Peas . 75;./1.25
Fotin try Lard !<•
Oats .V.
Fodder 2.(10
Jlay, per hendre I l.l'L
< ’liickci• • . .12’ • '2O
Eggs ’ ID
Unn.s . 10
Sii l 7
<' Co
\l, :. I . .. . !
Irish “ . So
Peas . 750 1.25
ilav. per linn-!;i I . 1.00
Fodder . h50(J2.0u
Butter . . 12’..("15
Eggs ... . Io
Chickens I2 I j("‘_’o
Turnips, p; ’• 1 'h . 5o
Turkeys. . ... 50("7„
„
OTRACT.- i-
Z •' A '1
A ftest Effective Combination.
This well known Tonic and Nervine is gaining
gn at renuti’tionas acure for Dcbilily, liyspi'p
m:i. and M JtVOTS disorders. It relieves all
lam;uid and debilitated conditions of the sj-s
--t<: strengthens the intellect, and bodily functions; ;
i :il'isupworn out Nerves: aids digest ion ; re
f: in:, .Jred or lost Vitality, and brings back
y >uthful strength and vigor. It is pleasant to the
t..’Te. and u i >l regularly braces the System against ;
the depressing influence of Malaria.
I’rice-SI.OO per Bottle of 24 ounces.
x ' ou SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
Send for
Catalogue.
f THE PAEffl
ißreecii-Loading, Double-Barreled Shot Guv*
- • ,i 1
PARHER BHOS., Msfers,
MERIDE.Y, COMM.
Mi'-ir.rnci l ‘Sir ■ ” 'i l
LIGHT AND AIRY,
In the Park,
It is evening in the park.
And the softly coming dark
Sees the toads.
Snipping up the helpless tiles,
Each a dainty, juicy prize,
In the roads.
It is evening in the park,
And the softly coming dark
Sees a pair
Cuddled up upon a seat.
Talking tender, low’ and sweet,
Everywhere.
—Washington Critic.
A Strange Scheme.
Cashier—Not a dollar of that $200,000 you
have been lending to your stock broking
friends can be collected.
Director—l see. The bank will havo to
break, but if it does the directors may land in
the penitentiary. You have no money ahead)
I suppose?
“Not a cent.”
“I thought not. We havo kept your salary
small on purpose.”
“Eh?”
“Yon will bo out of a position and likely to
starve when the bank breaks.”
“I know it.”
“Well, hero’s $20,000. Take it and go to
Canada. I’ll announce that you have skipped
with $220,000, but we’ll take good care rot
to find you.”—Omaha World.
A Married I’net’s Song.
The trees now teem with tiny buds,
The wildwood wakes with birds;
The air is filled with fresh soapsuds
More eloquent than words.
The sounds of hammer, saw and ax,
Which fill the atmosphere,
The stovepipe, cold grub, carpet tacks—
All prove that spring is hero.
New York Journal.
Earning an Honest Eiving.
“What are you doing for a living nowa
days?”
“Writing humorous poetry for tho ’maga
zines.”
“Humorous poetry? I didn’t suppose yon
coul 1 write anything funny.”
“O, my stuff is funny enough for the mag-
< azines.”
“Where do you gnt your inspiration?”
“My room overlooks a graveyard.”—Ne
braska State Journal.
Pride.
There are people who hold themselves so high
(And they’re right, for they net as their In
stincts teach ’em)
! That if for a year you should try and try,
; With a ten foot pole, you never could reach ’em.
Cut show us a prouder pair, if you can,
! A prouder pair in the whole creat ion,
i Than the leading lady and leading man
Os a village dramatic association.
—Boston Courier. I
A Disastrous Kftect.
, Physician—How did the sedative powder
affect your wife last night, Mr. Smith?
I Mr. Smith—Disastrously.
i Physician—Disastrously ? Wasn’t she able
: to sleep?
Mr. Smith—Sleep? Why, the baby cried
from midnight until morning, and she slept
through it aUl—Now York Sun.
i .
Iler All Too Solid Love.
• A St. Louis maid threw her loveria kiss,
A St. Louis kiss which they’ brag on.
’ It hit tho young man on tho side of the head
Ami knocked him cold off of tho wagon.
The coroner said it was hardly worth while
To proceed to impam I a jury,
Since no man could stand being hit by a ktes
Tnosizo of tho map of Itliseo’irl.
—Detroit Free Prcsa
Didn’t Care for It.
Ethel—Did you go to Italy ?
Harriet—Oh, my, yes! Wo stayed there
two months.
Ethel—What did you think of tho laz
zaroni?
Harriet—Ob, it’s awful. I tried jforiio tho
1 first night I was there, but it doesn’t suit my
’ taste at nil.—Life.
; I
tils Literary Taste.
, • lhe boy is but a fortnight old
And Isn’t much on letters.
, Tho babe rejects most scornfully
, I R. Haggard and his betters.
, He will not look at Henry James,
! At Stevenson ho growls,
( But morning, noon, and eke at night,
He’s much engrof»sed with Howls.
' —New York Evening Sun.
TTis I’ast Life.
Miss Decollete (sarcastically)—l like ycur
way of introducing people, Mr. Airbrake.
Mr. A. —What’s the matter with it?
Miss D.—Why, you jumblo tho names up
so I can’t understand any of them. What
makes you do it?
Mr. A.—Habit, Miss Decollete, habit, 1
assure you. I used to boa brakeman on a
Dassenger train.—Washington Critic.
Ono That ’.VDllßoar Telling Again*
A certain fort in the far west, so the story
goes, was in command of a major of artil
k-ry who was constantly lamclitlug that his
favorite arm could not be more frequently
I used against the Indians. Finally one day lie
took one of the small howitzers, which de
fended the fort, and had it soci’i’dy str . oped ■
to the back of an army mule with the muz- ’
zle projecting over the animal’s tail. With
this novel gun carriage be proceeded in high
feather with the captain and a sergeant to a
; bluff on tho bank of the Missouri, near which j
' was encamped a baud of friendly Indians.
; The gun was duly loaded and primed, tho
l fuse inserted, and the npile backed to tho '
edge of tho bluff. The major remarked ’
I something about the moral effect the exhibi- •
j tion was likely to produce upon the Indian '
allies, and stepped gayly forward and applied
' the match.
The curiosity of the mule was aroused. Ho
I jerked his head around to see what was
: fizzing away there on his neck, and the next
! second his feet were ali bunched together
and making forty revolutions a minute,
; while the gun was threatening everything
under the canopy within a radius of ten
■ miles with instant destruction. The captain
! shinned up the only available tree. Tho
sergeant threw himself flat on the ground
i and tried to dig a hole with his bayonet to
crawl into, while the fat major rolled over and
over in agony, alternately invoking the pro- j
tection of Providence and cursing the mule.
. Finally the explosion came, the ball going
; through the roof of the fort. Tho recoil of '
’ the gun and the wild leap of the terrified
’ mule carried both over the bluff to a safe
anchorage at the bottom of the river. The ,
' discomfited party returned sadly to the fort. ■
Shortly the chief tho Indians ap
peared and announced briefly, “Injun go ;
home.”
Questioned as to why, he thus explained: |
“Injun ver’ brave, help white man. Injun
use gun, use bow arrow, use knife, but when
white man fire off whole jackass Injun no 1
understand, no think right. Injun no help
um tight that way.”—Toronto World.
Ho Nursed a Striking Memory.
The clock was just striking 9 yesterday •
morning when two dogs jumped at each j
other at the corner of Monroe avenue and |
Randolph street. Neither was with his mas- !
ter, and both could have been placed undo
the head of “unknown.” Inside of ten sec- |
onds twenty men were around tho dogs. In
thirty seconds 100 men had gathered.
“Throw w 15 jr on ’em I” I
“Call the police!”
“W’ho's got a cane?”
“Kick that yaller one!”
AU these and a dozen other exclamations
flew from mouth to mouth. Seven or eight
men rushed in to cane the dogs, and three or
four others to kick them, and theu fresh | j
voices cried:
“Let up on ’em!” | 1
“It’s a shame!” „ ]
“Knock that red faced man down!”
“Let go, there, or I'll smash your nose!” ; ;
There were four wrangles, two fights six I
“dnro-you tos,” fifty growls nnd a hundred :
surly inquiries, and at four minutes after 9 !
the dogs bad departed, tho crowd vanished ■
and the sole reminder of the incident was a
man sitting on a barrel nursing a black eye. >
—Detroit Free Press.
Not That_Kind <?f a Bird.
- ' -A — : -z==r-
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■'“iZW- 1 i
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*' i ' ' -i
“WELL, MY LITTLE BOY, WHAT DO YOU
want?” —Life.
A Nice Servant Girl.
Mother—What, novel reading again, Mary?
Daughter (pulling up the heel of her slip
per)—Well, there's nothing for mo to do.
You do everything about the
M.—l havb to. I’m su.ro I don’t know
what’s to become of you, Mary. You can’t
cook, you can’t mako bread, I can’t trust you
to make a bed. If your father and 1 should
i be taken away what would beCOnid of you?
D. l’d get married.
M.—But suppose you couldn’t get married? I
D. —Well, if the worst camo to the worst, I
could hire out as a servant girl.—Boston
| Courier.
A Boy Again;
“Henry, you were talking in your sleep,”
• ru’d Mrs. Jones to her husband.
“What did I talk about?” inquired Jones,
anxiously.
“You spoke of ‘raking in the chips?”
“Ah, yes,” said Jones, with a relieved look,
“early associations, my dear. I dreamed I
Was a boy again. I was always the one to
rake in the chips.”—Detroit Free Press.
HERE AND THERE,
It i” mid that a New York modiste has paid
$170,000 for a house on Fifth avenue.
An Ohio lad has just shota companion who
stood near his target by trying “to see how
near he could miss him.”
A Chicago firm has already sold 10,000
drums this year—presumably in anticipation
‘ of the presidential campaign.
A young man in Maine is accused of hav- :
ing voted thirteen times at one election, and 1
he is in a fairway to be convinced that the
number is unlucky.
A. British shipmaster at Now Orleans re
ports that while off the coast of Patagonia
butterflies were blown aboard his vessel at a
distance of 150 miles from tho land.
■ At the New York water color exhibition
; the picture of a red headed girl, by Miss
i Nowell, hangs on the wall, and near it one
, of Zogbautn’s cavftlrynioti on u white horse.
The lumber export from Ottawa, Canada,
j to tho United States during January, Feb-
I ruary and March was valued at >.300,902, an
increase of 21 per cent, over the same months
| of 1887.
The managers of the Cincinnati exposition |
have obtained a number of gondolas from |
Venice, and propose to have them on exhibi- I
tion on a small lake attached to the fair '
grounds.
A woman’s invention is a baby wagon for
the house, thoroughly padded, in which the
baby cannot be hurt, even if it tips over. The
wagon can be turned into a cradle and made
into a swing.
The word Birmingham, so common in ;
naming towns and cities, is composed of I
three words, which together mean “tho hill ,
which is the home of the broom,” a small
English tree.
It is said that Perry county, Pa., has a man
who deals out whisky in a saloon licensed by
; himself. He is one of the associate judges of
the county, and his place of business is in the
! borough of Blaine.
I The water in the Great Lakes is now the
j lowest it has been in forty years. Shipping
j is crippled by it. What makes it high or
! low is a question the experts have not yet
been able to solve.
The introduction of An riran watches into
England has reduced the number of gold
cases marked at the London assays office from
34,844 in 1876 to 20,416 in 1886, and of silver
cases from 119,304 in 1876 to 95,70 b in 1886.
As an evidence of the progress that mod
ern ideas are making in Japan, it is stated
that that country is now building thirty-four
new railroads ata cost of over $50,000,000,
and it has hundreds of miles oi railroad al
ready built.
A Nashville minister said in his Sunday
sermon that “the woman who will occupy
two seats in a street car. in violation of her .
neighbc r’s rights, may be respectable, but ■
I can have little claim to either religion or
good breeding.”
Edward and Diary Stetson, aged respec- j
tively 11 and 9 years, have made the journey’ 1
I safe from Damariscotta, Me., to Seattle on I
the Pacific coast, with no other guardian i
than that special providence that is said to
care for children.
In a recent fire near Tower, D. T„ a girl
barely Itt saved the lives of two small chii- |
dr-jii by rushing tiwough flames to their bed- j
side, and dragging rhem to where she could '
thro w them tv the ea’tn without danger, and
herself leaping a-ter.
Two prominent St. Louis men have en
gaged in litigatM'ii over the ownership of a
duck valued at D.venty-five cents. The pre- ;
liminary suit ins de costs, in addition to the •
attorney tees, S4B, and now the case has been ’
taken to the circuit court.
A London, jew -ier recommends diamond
cutting and polishing as an excellent em
ployment for wainen, saying that he believes
that any woman or girl with quick intelli
gent coßiid leart.i to polish a diamond “very
fairly in six moiiths.” Ho says the qualities
necessary in this, xrt are “grt- •* honesty, good
education, quick intelligence, great patience
and good eyesig ht.”
‘ THE\_YOUNG PEOPLE. ~~
Bobby and Fk ssie were playing “boarding
house,” with Flo sie in the role of applicant.
“Havo you pare ntsf’ inquired Bobby, with
great stiffness a ’ manner. “Yes, sir, two,”
replied Flossie, timidly. “Sorry, ma’am,
but we nevei* take children who have
parents.’’—New ork Sun.
Our little H»iJ r.Y. 4 years old, watched
I very intently last Sunday while his f.f her
was looking for stray gray hairs in his
mamma’s head. At last be thought he would
assist in the search, when accidentally pull
i ing out a brown hair, he quickly exclaimed:
| “Put this back again!”—Now York World.
| Ellie’s baby brother had a soft spot irt hiS
I head, as all babies have. One day tVhile hbf
■ mother was bathing him she said: “Maninui,
I is little buddie old enough to be ripe?”
Mamma what she meant, and the little
i girl answered: “You told me that the apples
< were ripe when they got meller, and baby
has got a real meller head.”—New \ ork
World
One day tho children’s grandmother, who
Ilves in the country, brought them a hen and
chickens. They were a great curiosity to the
children, who had never seen a hen and her
chickens before. Charlie listened with aston
ishment to the clucking of the triother t ' bet
brood, then, appearing to solve tho myslefcjr,
ho exclaimed, “Old hen’s got the hiccoughs! ’
—Boston Post.
This small boy, while out- walking the other
day, became much interested in the move
ments of a lot of feathered beauties, headed
by a handsome rooster, which were crossing
the roadway just ahead. They got over in
safety, but one of tho fowls had a narrow
Escape from being run over by d p:‘.r::ibg ;
team, and her frantic attempts to flee I rom
impending danger excited him considerably. I
Just as she reached the sidewalk the rooster
crowed lustily, and Master Bert turned to tho
Historian, with indignation in his tone.
“Uncle, uncle,” he cried, “isn’t that rooster
naughty to laugh at tho poor bon so?”—Bos
ton Record.
, HOW TO BE HEALTHY AND WEALTHY.-
Be cheerful. “A light heart lives long.”
Don’t worry. “Seek peace and pursv ■ it.”
Never despair. “Lost hope is a fatal dis
ease.”
■ “Work like a man, but don’t be worked to
i death.”
Spend less norvbus energy each day than !
you make.
Don’t hurry. “Too swift arrives as tardy J
as too slow.”
Sleep and rest abundantly. Sleep is na ,
turu’s benediction.
Avoid passion and excitement. A mo- |
incut’s anger may be fatal.
Associate with healthy people. Health is ;
I contagious as well as disease.
Court tho fresh air day and night. “Oh,
if you knew what was in tho air!”
Don’t overeat. Don’t starve. “Let your !
moderation be known to all men.”
Think only healthful thoughts. “As a
man thiilketh in his heart so is he.”
Rinsing: Oitt Poisons 1 -
A curious and novel method of saving ,
j life in certain cases of poisoning has been
originated by Dr. Carlo Sanquirico; of
Sienna. By largely increasing the vol- !
nine of the bl«>o<l. which can bo dpn« by 1
In jecting into the ntlories saline solid ions !
to ihe amount of about 8 per cent, of the :
weight of the animal, the poisons are :
actually rinsed out and eliminated from
the system. In this way the lives of |
dogs and guinea pigs were saved after
being dosed with deadly amounts of
strychnine, chloral, alcohol, aconitine,
paraldehyde, caffeine and urethan. With
certain other poisons, as morphine, cara
fine nn<l nicotine, the method failed, It
• Is not at all impossible that this discovery
may introduce an improved treatment,
not only for cases of poisoning, but for
certain diseases. —New York Mail and
Express.
The Italian Bootblack’s Discovery.
The march of improvement is still on
ward, nnd the Italian bootblack lias
Caught its step; A gentleman wild
j 'wished to have his lihdetstauding bi iglu
ened took his seat in the chair of an en
terprising son of Italy and soon had one
of his shoes adorned with a nice patent
1 lather shine. When the artist completed
Ids work he took from the drawer of his
box a piece of canton flannel about six
inches wide and a foot long. Firmly
grasping its ends he applied its v.a oily
side to tlie tip of first the right and then
the newly shined boots, and rubbed them
lip until thd polish oil tlieni
smooth as that of the patent leather.
‘•lt maka the shine verra nice,'’ he
explained, as he pocketed the nickel.—
New York Evening Sun.
Tho Study of Short hand.
| Nothing, in my judgment, surpasses
i the study of shorthand for mental train
ing. It is, in its very essence, an ac
quirement that lies far outside of the
mental limits attainable by idiocy, and
the application of its principles call ‘ for
the constant exercise of a greater and
steadier power of concentration than the
technicalities of any other known aci mn
| plishmcut. The fastest writer is ha' itu
nlly, on the average, from six to a dozen
! words behind the speaker, and to carry
these in the mind, while at the same time
executing multifarious stenographic in
tricacies upon the paper, is a feat which
can hardly lie said, with truth, to lessen
the brain’s retentive faculty.—A. E.
Leon in The Writer.
When Buying Wearing Apparel.
It is astoni bing to observe how few
people understand the common rules of
measurement in purchasing wearing ap
parel. For instance, a man will buy a
coat that is a “size” too small or too
large. A ‘•size’’ smaller or a “size’’
larger is what lie probably needs, but ho
does not know what a “size’’ is. Well,
a • size" ina coat is an inch, a size in
underwear is 2 inches, a size in a sock is
1 inch, in a collar 1-2 an inch, in a shirt
1-2 an inch, in shoes 1-Gtli an inch, p.* nts
1 inch, gloves 1-1 of an inch, and in hats
1-S of an inch. Very few purchasers
ever understand the schedule named.—
Globe-Democrat*
Prevention of Bvnporation.
A Colorado farmer recommends a
[ somewhat novel method of preventing
j the loss of water by evaporation from
open tanks or ponds. It consists in giv
f ing the surface of the water a thin ciat
i ing of oil. and was successfully adopted
I by him during the unusual drought of
■ last summer. He demonstrates the cor-
I rectness of his theory by tilling two ves-
I seis of equal size with the same depth of
water and pouring n few drops of oil on
the water of one. In due course the
j water in the other vessel will entirely
; evaporate, while the one that was oiled
I shows no loss.—Chicago Times.
AVhat “Islam” Means.
I “Islam” is the favorite word among
i the Mohammedans, by which they desig
i nate their own religion. It means abso
lute, unquestioning submission to the will
of God, especially as this is revealed in
tho Koran and in the traditions of Mo
hammed. —The Gospel in All Lands.
Musical Item.
Visitor—Your little girl plays nicely on
the piano. Perhaps she has dormant
genius.
Father—For heaven’s sake, keep quiet.
Don’t wake it up.—Texas Siftings.
The people of Tokio, Japan, have
taken to eating horseflesh, and there is
quite a demand for it.
Whenever a sentence beginning with
“and” will make complete sense without
the “a;id,” it should be discarded.
The new government building at
Chattanooga is under process of
construction.
The National cemetery at Fred
riclisburgj Vh.i contains the remains
of 15,000 soldiei's.
The Democratic convention of
the Ninth congreasional district will
bh held in Gainesville Aug. 14th.
It is said there arc 320,000 in
sects in the world. The musquito.
on account of its industrious hab
its, is justly the most famous.
Cartersville is going to have an
iron furnace, costing SBO,OOO. The
citizens have subscribed $30,000,
and M>-. Hugh Neal $50,000, and
the latter will build it.
Gordon c ninty will be he first
to act in electing delegates to the
congressional convention, and if the
wishes of the people are consulted
will send a strong Clements delega
tion.—Calhoun Times.
An enterprising Frenchman ad
vertises that he will cross the At
i lantic ocean from New York to
; Norway in a balloon. A course of
[ lectures, admission 50 cents, pre
j cedes the date of sailing.
A re-union of the members of the
convention at Worcester July 20,
1854, which formed and gave name!
to the Republican party in Massa
chusetts. will be held in Boston the >
first or second week in July.
John W< Mackay, the bonanza
king, has a dinner service worth
SIOO,OOO. The silver was furnish
ed from his own mines, and upon
the completion 01' tilt: Set he bought
' the dies outright, in order that the
set might never be duplicated.
We see tlie papers almost every
day report of purchases by Michi
gan and Wisconsin lumbermen of
j largo bodies of timber land in the
South. Our people may not ap
preciate tlie value of their present
| holdings until too late.
' An Unfinished war vessel, started
! twenty-live years ago at the Brook
lyn navy yard, was sold the other
day for $lO. It is not stated how |
much had been spent on her, butl
it is hard to see how, if she was
worth selling, the price was not
| greater.
A negro man by the uam» of
Means, who killed William Wal
ters, colored, at Macon, Ga., and
I effected his escape, has been iden
tified at St. Louis, Mo., and is be
ing held to await a requisition
from Georgia. He confessed he
was the man.
The question of the day: Mrs.
Wistful—“'What happy people yon
are to have six nice daughters!
What resources for your obi age !”
Mr. Quiverful —“Yes. Resources
enough! But the difficulty, nowa
days, consists in husbanding one’s
resources.”—Punch.
John Wanamakcr, of Philadel
phia, divided among his 272 em
ployes this week about SIOO,OOO in
dividends and percentages, besides
giving them SIO,OOO as tlie basis of
a pension fund for the old and di -
aided. Nodanger of any strikes
in that concern.
There is an alligator iu Central
park that lias a mania, for climbing
fences. The attendants h ive been
forced four or five times to put him
back in his own domain, and have
finally had to tie him up. It is
thought he has designs upon the
governorship of the state.
The people of Marion, S. (?..
blacked and whipped a white man
by the name of Rich who arrived
there from North Carolina with a
colored woman to whom he wished
to be married. 1 oth him and his
sable sweetheart hastib kicked the
I l?.st o' M ■■ heir feet.
■
Ignatius .. nelly .. o t■> b<
1 prowling aroitmt e vicinity of
S hakes pear/s tomb at Stratfe-r.l-on-
Avon in dis.u s■?. 11.- w-is disco'.'-
. ered weeping at th? ton b last wetk
but left on b< ing found on 1 as he i
afraid the people <:i‘ th? place will
1 treat him harshly on a-recant <4
his book.
i Col. Nelson Tift., of Albany, Gt..
has 1,000 young pecan trees that
are now growing. Those trees came
from 11 e :iut r of his large trees that
; are now of htt ;c proportions, Iron:
forty to f !ty feet high, and theii
' wide sj r< adi ig branches cover r
circumfc: enc ■ c-f 15 > feel. These
’ trees are a mt twenty-live year,
old and fruit most prolilicr.ilv. The
nuts are of unusual size and art
! greatly relishcu by all who Lav,
•aten them.
. ROBT. DOUGHERTY. J. M. ROBERTSON,
A. L. SNOW, W. R. HALL,
f J. G. HUNT, D. T. ESPY
. THE SOUTHERN BSMT «T.
; AGENTS FOR
. lion and Coal Lands,
Fruit and General Farms,
Tan Bark and Other 'l imber.
OFFICES:
NO. l-r: READ HOUSE BLOCK, CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
LAFAYETTE, GA., AND SUMMERVILLE, GA.
Persons having Timber, Farm, Mineral Linds, or Town property limy
wish to sell, are solicited to confer with us. We will sell or buy for par
ties at a reasonable commission.
Our friends in Chattooga, are cordially solicited to give us their pat -
nonage. With our combination with the LaFayettc and Chattanoogiff'
offices, we feel assured that we can serve our customers well in selling
Real Estate for them. Our associate, J. M. Robertson, of ChiiUanooga P
is well known in ( hnCloogn county.
Office back room of CiiaTToOgA Nkws office. Our friends are cordial
ly solicited to call and see us.
J. G. HUNT,
D. T. ESPY.
“THE GIRL I LEFT BEHIND ME.’"
COPYRIGHTED IBT7
- J.
.."-"'■'T . .- .’'A?.''- 'H- >■ j
- A' X— A
-■ -- •- 1. “
1 ■ if< l bv the. use of a Buggy made by T. T. TTaydock. which is not only the Leading
picliirr. but Tits: EVADING BUGGY OF AMERICA. Has
' . < sni\ t.- Kins Bolt and Fifth Wheel. Ask your dealer for the T. T.
liAYDiiCK BrGGY. with the Haydock Safety King Bolt and Fifth Wheel.
Life is insecure riding ever any other.
('ih: p’.c.rc will be furnished on aUrjccWd, printed in elegant style, to any one who will agree to frame it.)
[■ wr.orarrvar.l '2?. T. HATDCCK, ’
C ' '\v'bJ«i>U fir- On* «»<> Twelfth Sts., CINCINNATI, 0.
AGENTS WAFTED WHERE WE HAVE NONE! NO INVESTMENT SO PROFITABLE,
R. T. CONNALLY,
—FOR—
Boots. Shoes, Slippers, and Leather.
V -— ——J o o }
Ladirs if you want the be.st lit, Intent nlvlcs in Fine Shoes and Slippers conic?
1 toseenic. Young Gentlemen, or old ones, if yon want the Latest Stylos in
Patent Leather Congress or Bats or Common Sense for Comfort and Ease come to
see me.
I luh <‘the largest and best line of Infants and Childrens Shoes in the coun
try. Remember mine is the only house in Rome that has a line of Bay State
.1 Boot sand Shoes for Ladiosand Children; also for Men.
Fresh Goods, Late Styles, Lowest Prices,
<SS*Laid»es Slippers fro in 25 cents
R. T. CONNALLY,
No. 21C Broadway, Rome, Georgia.
~ HOW"=C&
■ Store Fixtures.^”"'7g;
cedarCliesls.CabiDeis.Wardrobes • .•■s»
SOABINET WORK gn, L?vM.j».^i || r. T .»»’Catalo?,iiß haul
Jr use Dr. SALMON’S
/ HOG CHOLERA SPECIFIC! <
CHICKEN POWDER.-SHEEP POWDER, fl
CATTLE POWDER.-CONDITION POWDER. I
J ( PREVENT & CURE HOC CHOLERA. I
■» DESTROY & PREVENT HOG LICE & WORMS, f
V. WECAN< CURE CATTLE MURRAIN,TEXAS FEVER, <lc. f
CURE CHICKEN CHOLERA & CAPES. J
I CURE SHEEP ROT, TAPE WORM, &c. /
'Nfc MANUFACTURED BY THE VETERINARY NIEDICIN E CO- /
NASHVILLE, TENN.
] ivile bv Th.impsox 11: i.:> A- <Sammorville, Ha- lloi.i.isA’ Hinton
::.:i..iii< 1-vilb-, ibi. -ibmr. I'. IL,:o >n,'l rion Factory, <fa. Tkion VI ax’fu. •
: 'I l ion l-'.:< t, iy, (bl. Hii.as, T .ii.iai-euko A Foster, ’Taliaferro, Ga. J. I‘. H'm
i Bim.. Holland s Store, («a. Kendrick A’ Bro., Kartah, <«a.— it.
1 I Bii.iarp, Menlo, Ha., M. K. Smith, Alpine, Ga., L. M. II endon, Menlo, Ga.,—
j ' J. T. M< W iioktek. Teloga Springs, Ga.
i‘ I
s i WEAK NERVES
Paine’s Celery Compound is a Neiyo Tonw
which never fails. Containing Celery ana
O ca. thowu wonderful nerve stimulants’,it
r ’ i B Bpcedily cures all nervous disorders.
F RHEUWIATBSM
E E U WiZ Vi? carwesßhPUtuatism.aii'ln-.'toH s the blood
i making organs to a healthy condition. It is
thG true remedy for Rheumatism.
’ E KSDKEY COMPLAINTS
KSj S Paine’s Celery Compound quickly restores
the liver and kidneys to peril ct health. This
E&RL Ba ES curative power, combmed with its nene
1 ; t'« tomes, makes it the Lest remedy for all
kidney complaints.
J dyspepsia
e P.une’s Celery Comi-ovnd Btrenrthenß tha
4; a Btomach. and ouieta the nerves ot the digea-
a b tive organs. This is why it cures CWU Uia
fe?; Ff ffTS STS E I S’® SB worse cases of Dyspepsia,
tyjmDy UHl] CONSTIPATION
I Paine’S Celebv Compound is not a catnar-
B tic. It is a laxative, giving easy and natural
action to the bowels. Itcgiilanty surely fob
lows its use. ’
Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Becomxueuded by andbusiAMS
Neuralgia, Nervous Weakness, Stomach
and Liver Diseases, Rheumatism, Dys- -rice »1.00. Sflkl by Druggists.
pepsin, and all affections of tbs Kidneys, WELLS, RICHARDSON Prop »
O" WE WANT
t
? A Few More Subscribers.
—IT’S THE J’RUTH, AND WF, WANT YOU TO HELP US
GETTHFM.
' ' Speak a good word for tlie NEWS an 1 it will
• e ; Speak a good
j .word for you and the county in which all of us live.