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| Halfbacks,full-backs a
| weak-backs are relieved by
I Belladonna
*
ST TOUCHES z .
THE OOimj
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DR. Hrowne l» Senior Surgeon t> the Central I ondon Throat and
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Kinqstox, N. 1.
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STOLE A REGIMENT,
Feat Accomplished By a Confd 3i
erate Officer.
Knoxville Sentinel.
Gen. A. J. Vaughan not long ago
visited the battlefh Id of Chicka
mauga, he being otie of the park
; commiseioners, and went over the
entire park, observing the location
<>f the different monuments and
ascertaining for himself if the spots
[licked out as marking the location
of the different regiments and dif
ferent events in the great battle
are correct. Said Gen. Vaughan :
"I was particularly struck with
the ground marked as having been
i occupied by the Seventy-seventh
I', nnsylvania regiment. Accord
ing to the way the park is now laid
out, it w uld appear that the Sev
■ enty-seventh Pennsylvania regi
] meat was flanked by other regi
ments, and that, in fact, aa entire
division was stationed there in line
of battle. Now there was a very
remarkable circumstance connect
ed with the capture of the Seven
’ ty-soventh regiment, and I consid
er it one of the most remarkable
events in the whole war. It would
make a good story.”
Gen. Vaughan was requested to
give the particulars of the affair,
which he proceeded to do as fol
lows :
“At dark on the first day of the
battle a! Chickamauga, it was de
cided by the confederates that a
night attack should be made upon
the enemy and for that purpose
Cleburne’s division was directed to
march in the advance with Cheat
ham following close after at a cer
tain number of paces in the rear
of Cleburne’s division. Dessler’s
moved off in front and was follow
ed by Preston Smith’s brigade, in
which I was an officer. It was
quite late at night when the order
‘Forward march,’ was given. It
was a very dark night. Dessler’s
brigade was ordered to move
straight ahead, but on account of
some obstacles it obliqued to the
left. Our brigade, moving in the
rear of Dessler’s did not deflect its
course, but moved straight ahead.
We had gone but a little distance
when suddenly a man, who had
been lying in the shade of a tree,
jumped up and approached me
saying: ‘Colonel, where are we?
Where is the enemy located?’
“I perceived at once that this
fellow was a federal, and had mis
taken me for one of the officers of
his regiment, and it became appar
ent to me at once that the enemy
were close at hand. Preston
Smith was rather in advance of
his men, and looking ahead of him
he perceived a regiment standing
out in the dark. He naturally
thought it was Dessler’s brigade,
and he rode up to find out the sit
uation of affairs. When he got
close to the regiment he was met
by some of their men who, as soon
as they could distinguish in the
dark that he was a confederate,
shot him dead. That is how Pres
ton Smith lost his life.
“I heard the shots fired and a
bout that instant the federal sol
dier who was talking to me recog
nized that I was a confederate al
so. Quickly drawing Lis gun he
tired, but he did it so suddenly his
atn was bad. The bullet passed
in front of my breast and lodged
in the body of john Donelson,who
was on my staff. It struck his
watch and drove the watch com
pletely through his body. Os
course he died instantly.
"I ordered my men to fire at this
federal, and the scattering bullets
fell in a shower among the federal
regiment that had killed Preston
Smith. Pile Yankee regiment was
in dismay. They did not know
where tho firing was coming from
nor how many men were doing the
firing. I rode rapidly up to where
the regiment was stationed and
called for the commanding officer.
The commanding officer came for
ward and announced that the regi
ment was ready to surrender. I
called for the standard bearer, or
dered the colors handed over to
our men, and then sent a guard to
march the regiment to the rear.
"\i hen I visited Chickamauga I
observed that the federal officers
who selected the place marked as
the Seventy-seventh Pennsylvania
regiment that surrendered that
night, had also marked the loca
tion of a couple of other regiments
flanking the Seventy-seventh Penn
sylvania.
‘‘Now, it dues not seem possible
to hie that two federal regiments
could have been in that vicinity
without our men meeting them,
: and it does not seem probable that
i the Seventy-seventh would have
surrendered so easily had there
been any other federal troops in
that vicinity.”
The way to cure catarrh is t?
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Hood’s Pills are prompt, efficient
always reliable, easy to take, easy
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BRUTAL MURDER AT ROME.
Frank Evans Shoots Wm. Cole
man in a Saloon Row.
Rome, Ga., Dec., 10.—Last night in
Stoffregen’s beer saloon and restaurant
Frank Evans shot Will Coleman ami
Coleman died at 2:30 o’clock this af
ternoon from the effects of the shot.
Evans and a man named Kendricks
came into the restaurant, and a few
minutes later young Coleman and Ev
ans got into a dispute over abet. Cole
man knocked Evans down, but imme
diately helped him to his feet, placed
him in a chair and told him he was
sorry for the occurrence. As Coleman
stood by Evans’ chair the latter sud
denly pulled his pistol and shot Cole
man.
The ball struck the boy in the left
side near the collar boue. At first it
was not thought to be a fatal wound,
but today he sank rapidly. The bullet
had torn a hole in his lungs. Evans is
in jail.
How to Cure a Severe Cold.
A few weeks ago the editor was
taken with a very severe cold that
caused him to bo in a most misera
ble condition. It was undoubtedly
a bad case of la grippe and recog
nizing it as dangerous he took im
mediate steps to bring about
speedy cure. From the advertise
ment of Chamberlain’s Cough
Remedy and the many good recom
mendations included therein, we
concluded to make a first trial of
the medicine. To say that it was
satisfactory in its results, is put
ting it very mildly, indeed. It
acted like magic and the result was
a speedy and permanent cure .
The Banner of Liberty, Liberty-'
town, Maryland. The 25 and 50
cent sizes for sale by H. H. Arring
ton.
The Arizona Mummy.
An Arizona hunter, named John
McCarty, has brought into Pres
cott, a mummy that is believed to
antedate the Indians, and is of a
decidedly different type. He found
it while hunting a lion, which he
had treed and brought down, in
the Verde canyon. In a cliff
dwelling he had found a sealed
chamber, 7x9 feet. Tearing it
open he met a ghastly sight. It
was his mummy skeleton on aso-’p
weed mat with the body upright,
and head erect; the long arms
hanging straight down from the
shoulders. In life he was about
five feet seven inches high. In one
hand was grasped a stone axe, in
the other a bundle of barbed, flint
headed arrows. As the air rushed
into the vault, the rawhide shafts
of the arrow-heads and the raw
hide handle of the axe crumbled
to ashes, as did the mat and the
mantle which covered the mummy-
The fine, brown hair, about two
feet in length, fell from the head.
In the cave were found several
earthenware bowls, a tortoise shell
and about SI,BOO worth of best
grade turquoise in the rough, just
as it was taken f rom the ledge.
The pieces ranged in size from t:.e
dimensions of a walnut to those of
a hen’s egg.
Buuklen’s Arnica Salve
lhe Best Salve in the world for
Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
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fur sale by H. H. Arrington,
A MEAN REVENGE.
‘■Sam! Sain! Sam! Where the
deuce is that fellow?”
I had rung the bell until I was
tired and out of patience, and
then calk-d for him until I was out
of breath, and still ho did not
come.
If you wint to know who I am,
allow me to Inform you that my
; name is George Boomerang, better
known in Frazedoua, where I Re
side, as Captain Boomerang, late
of the army. lam a man of con
siderable wealth, own the finest
house in town and keep, or did
keep, a man l?y the i.ame of Sain,
:whose duty it was to brush my
clothes, hat and boots and adjust
I my leg. -
I refer to a wooden leg. The
original leg ran against a cannon
ball during our late unpleasant
ness, and I have never seen it
since.
Well, it was Sam’s duty to take
that wooden leg off at night and
( to be on hand in tne morning to
i put it of. before I got otit of bed,
and now you know I was yelling,
“Sam! Sam! Sam!”
And when I inform you that this
was the morning of my wedding
;day perhaps you can imagine how
> anxious I was to got on to my legs
' as soon as possible.
i “Yes, ma’arn, I was the lucky
; fellow that had walked into the
affections —on a wooden leg too —
of the handsomest girl in Fraze
dona and was that day to lead her
to thialtar. But I must get my
leg on first, and, as Sam wouldn’t
or couldn’t come, I rolled out of
bed and went hopping around on
one foot to find my leg.
Now, my dear reader, when the
surgeon trimmed my stump after
that little affair with the cannon
ball he sawed it off uncommonly
short, so perhaps you can faintly
imagine my feeling when, after
hopping around my room, I found
what I supposed to be my leg, but,
upon attempting to adjust it, dis
covered that it was intended to go
on below the knee.
“Do wooden legs shrink? That’s
just what I want to know,” said I.
And then I rang the bell and
called “Sam!”
Well, Samuel didn’t come, but
my housekeeper, Mrs. Bloom, did.
“Mrs. Bloom,” I cried, “where is
Sam?”
She answered mo through the
keyhole of the door. “He left the
house last night about 11 o’clock.
Took his trunk with him, and said
he was going to leave town by the
midnight train.”
I couldn’t understand it at first.
I had always used Sum -well, paid
him good wages, and he seemed
perfectly contented with his situa
tion, and served me faithfully un
til now.
Suddenly an idea struck me, and
the whole cause of Sam’s perfidy
was revealed tome.
“By heavens, it is Slympkins!”
I yelled. “Slympkins is the cause
of all my woe. He bribed Sam to
steal my leg on this my wedding
day and leave this insufficient prop
in place of it.”
Jim Slympkins is or was my
rival. He is the only son of his
father, who, by the way, is the
most wealthy gentleman in Fraze
dona. Consequently Jim doesn’t
do anything but smoke cigars,
drive round town behind his splen
did grays, and devote himself to
the ladies generally.
I had rather have the advantage
of Slympkins. To be sure, Slymp
kins had or was expecting to have
much more wealth than 1 could
■ boast of, but he hadn’t my face,
!you know, or anything like it.
I was sorry for Slympkins, but,
; Lang it, my dear sir, what could I
de? If he had chosen Miss Short,
M:ss Ginx, Miss Broad, or, in fact
; any one but Miss Amelia Seymour,
lit would have been well. But it
i was really absurd for Slympkins
to suppose that I would allow him
(er any other man to marry Amelia
—at least while I had a wooden
l‘g-
I would have given Slympkins
anything in reason, but it was
truly ridiculous for him to think
that I would give him Amelia. I
l* !d h r so, and then I folded her
ito my breast, and she fulded me
to her breast, and I allowed her
to sip the honey from my ruby
I lips.
Yes, I had won her, and poor
i Slympkins was fairly wild with
rage He had sworn to be re
; venged, but I laughed at his
threats.
I was seated at the breakfast ta
ble sipping my coffee half an hour
afterward when Mrs. Bloom came
rffnhing in crying:
“Oh, captain, I know all about
it!”
“What, the leg?’’
“Yes, I tnink so. My daughter
Eliza says she saw Mr. Slympkins
give Sam some money last night.”
“Yes, I know it was Slympkins.”
“Moro than that. Sam was
married last night to Miss Sey
mour’s maid, and they went off
together by the 12 o’clock
train.”
“But, my dear woman,” said I ?
“I don’t care anything about
whom ho lias married or where he
has gone. The question is, has he
carried my leg with him?”
i “Why, I’m sure I don’t know.”
■ “Well, that is just what I want
to know, ma’am. This isn’t a
time for trilling. You must re
member that I am to be married
today, and, by Jove! I want my
leg!”
“Why don’t you ask Slympkins
for it?”
“Yes, and be laughed at. No, I
don’t intend to let him know any
thing about the trouble he bus
caused me. Besides I don’t know
that ho has got it.”
“But what are you going to do?”
“Why just as soon as I finish my
breakfast I shall go to Mr. Sey
mour’s and tell him of the perfidy
of my servant —and I shall take
that leg to prove my statement —
and, unless he objects very strong
ly, I shall insist on being married
upon crutches rather than to have
tho wedding postponed. That
would please Slympkins too much.
It’s what he expects, but I’ll disap
point him, by Jove 1”
I finished my coffee, and going
to my chamber I took the owner
less leg, and wrapped it up in pa
per. Then I came down, and or
dering my carriage rode out to Mr.
Seymour’s residence.
The old gentleman met me at
the door. He took no notice of my
crutches. With averted face he
bade me good morning and led me
into the parlor.
“I’m sorry, Captain Boomerang,
very sorry, but the wedding will
have to be postponed.
“What, not on my account, I
hope?” for you see I thought he
had already heard of my loss.
“Amelia is”—
“What? My dear Amelia! Oh,
has anything happened to her. Is
she ill?”
“It’s nothing serious, my dear
captain.”
“But is she ill? Oh, where is
she? Let me go to her. Do let
me see her!”
“She’s in her boudoir. Go. Per
haps you can comfort her.”
I did go. I burst into the
room and found her lying on the
sofa.
I rushed forward to clasp her in
my arms, but recoiled in surprise
and amazement when I saw upon
the chair in front of the lounge
upon which she was lying my—
“ Great heavens ! Amelia, where
did you get my leg?” For you
see I recognized the limb instant
ly-
“The le — Oh, George Henry, l—
l can never be your wife,” she
sobbed, fixing her liquid orbs on
the limb before her.
“But where did you get my leg?
I reiterated, at the same time un
folding the paper from the short
■ one that I had brought with me.
“Where did you get mine?” she
[screamed, hopping up from the
longue and clutching the limb that
I still held in my hand.
“Y urs!” I gasped.
“Mine!”
“Oh, this is too much!”
Amelia sat down, too, and for
; about two minutes we gazed into
lone another’s fac> s without speak
ing a word. At last I spoke.
“Oh, Amelia, Slympkins has
played a cruel joke upon us! He
bribed your maid and my man to
’change these limbs”
“Yes, and now”—■
“But luckily we have found it.
. out in time, and now the wedding;
can go on as if nothing had hap
pened.”
"What! Would you marry mo
now?”
"Now!” I cried clasping her to
my breast. “I'd marry you now
if you hadn’t a leg to stand
upon.”
Then I kissed the dear crea
ture, while she laid her beautiful
head upon my breast and cried for
j»y-
In conclusion I am happy to in
form the reader that tho wedding;
took place at precisely 2 o’clock
that day. Slympkins was not
there, and I haven't seen him
since, but when I do see him—
well, I’ll write you about it.—Tit-
Bits.
POOR DIGESTION leads to
a nervousness, chronic dyspepsia arid
great misery. The best remedy is
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA.
How He Did It.
As we were waiting for the coach
to Custer city I fell in with a
stranger who was so pleasant of
speech that I asked him to have a
nip with me. Later on wo began
to talk about road agents and hold
ups, and I asked him if he thought
the road safe.
“It’s hard to say,” he replied.
‘‘You may get through all right,
and then you may be held up be
fore going 10 miles.”
“There wi 1 be five men of us.
We ought to be able to stand off a
highwayman.”
“Yes, unless ho gets tho drop on
you.”
“But if we are on the watch how
can he get the drop on us?”
“Why, you see —well, I can’t ex
actly explain, but he will probably
do it. I’m in something of a hur
ry now, but should we meet again
I’ll tell you how the boys generally
work it. Have something with
me?” •
“No thanks. ”
“Then I owe you one and bid
you good day. Pleasant journey
to you !”
Four hours later, as tho coach
was tolling up a long, wooded hill,
there was a loud command of
‘‘Hands up!” and as we came to a
standstill a man with a gun in
either hand appeared at the heads
of the leading horses and called
out:
“Now, then, everybody down ex
cept the driver, and if I catch sight
of a gun I shall pop away at the
owner before asking any questions.
Get into line and keep your hands
up.”
I was hardly down before I rec
ognized the man who clinked glass
es with me at Deadwood. I was at
the head of the line, and as he
came up he laughed and said :
“You see how it’s done, don’t
you? I hadn’t time to explain
this morning, and now you see for
yourself.”
“Yes, I see. Is this a joke or
business?”
“Straight business, sir. Shell
out!”
I shelled and the rest followed
suit, and the fellow got over a
thousand dollars in cash and four
good watches. When ready to go
he threw me ass gold piece with
tho remark:
“I owe you one and here it is.
If any of you gents have ever been
curious to know how the old thing
worked you’ve now had the oppor
tunity to see for yourselves. Tra
la!” And he backed off into tho
shadows and was soon lost to view.
A Valuable Prescription.
Editor Morrison of Washington,
Ind., Sun, writes:_ “You have a
valuable *’■ Electric
Bitters and I can cheerfully recom
mend it for Constipation and Sick
Headache and as a general system
tonic it has no equal ” Mrs. An
ine Stehle, 2625 Cottage Grove
avo. Chicago, was all run down,
could not eat nor digest food, had
a headache which never left her
and felt tired and weary, but six
bottles of Electric Bitters restored
her to health and renewed her
her strength. Prices 50c and sl.
Get a bottle at 11. H. Arrington’s
Drug store.