Newspaper Page Text
A Swim for Life in a Canyon.
A correspondent of the Pioche Record,
writing from El Dorado Canyon, Nev.,
says: ** Another of our old-timers has
been swallowed up by the treacherous
Colorado. Barney Coleman and Ben
jamin Gooch, accompanied by two In
dians, started up the river last Friday
morning in a skiff for the purpose of
catching driftwood. After reaching a
point between twelve and fifteen miles
up the river the boat, becoming un
manageable, was drawn into an eddy
and disappeared in an instant. The
skiff al the time was near a steep cliff
of rocks, whose walls were two hun
dred feet in height, and the Indians,
observing that the eddy was about swal
lowing the boat and crew, jumped out
and clung to the •rocks, and Gooch en
deavored to do the same thing after
them. He secured a slight hold to the
perpendicular side of the cliff, clung to
it only for a moment, then fell into the
water and was seen no more. < 'oleman
sprang from the stern of the skiff out in
to the river ami got beyond the eddy,
where he watched for the appearance
of the boat. He hail not long to wait,
but it seemed to him ages, when ho
caught sight of it, bottom upward, a
few yards down the river, when he swam
after it. overtaking and clinging to it.
In this condition, for three miles, he
went shooting past rocks, ploughing
through breakers, and whirling a’-out
in eddies, when he came face to fa to
one of those roaring rapids amt lr< . i
erous eddies so numc o:ts and so dread
ful in the Colorado. There w*se * -.in*.*
Io lose. Another chance be«* ’e
anil death, ami that ehan - :- - i:>-,
was the only one in a th -ad ihe
resolution was form si t- a. -u r-. an 1
executed the next. » ts in
the mid't <>f therapadfe.Maaatsagon<*
another breaker and or s - -nt Vbis
was an ind < r. v r
mats whose s. |e r ».:••; - d
hint, as he felt a priauam*cW hands of
death; and tl-’ g'l Nil -.-arcely
knewn his s:reng"h -e, n re w u a
desperateoppor.ur r . st. and he
says that he felt that he w <s a mere
straw at the mercy of a wave one
second and an eddy the next.
Here was waged a fierce and pro
tracted struggle for life between a pow
erful man and skill.ul swimmer, weigh
ing 225 pounds, ami fit st a whirlpool
and then a rapid, whose force and size
and danger can never be realized ex
cept by the man whose life was
trembling in the balance; but courage
and human strength at last prevailed,
and the brave man swam on over
rapids and through whirlpools for the
distance of three of as perilous miles
as were probably ever won by man.
Who can imagine his feelings as he
reached in safety and crawled upon the
river bank, where he lay for some time
completely exhausted? As soon as he
had regained sufficient strength Cole
man set out for the canyon.and, shoele-s
ami naked, after a tramp of six miles
over the barren, rocky mountainsand
through deep canyons of burning sands
in the heat of a broiling sun. lie ar
rived, his feel bleeding and fo.irfully
lacerated by the sharp rocks.
Sagliulicu Instead of Siberia.
The Abt’oc Vrcnu/a, which is usually
well informed in administrative matters,
states in a leading article that the Rus
sian Government is actively engag<‘d
discussing a project for abolishing* exile
to Siberia. This may seem an untrust
worthy rumor to persons unacquainted
with Russian progress, but it is, in ef
fect, altogether in harmony with tho
tendency tvoth of the Russian Govern
ment and people to give over treating
Siberia as a huge Botany Bay, and make
use of it as a colonial adjunct, like Can
ada or Australia. Os course a place
must still be found for the tIO.OPO exiles
who are deported from European Rus
sia every year, and here the iecent an
nexation of Saghal en comes in handy
to play in the North Pacific the role that
New Caledonia plays in behalf of the
French in the South Pacific Ocean.
Should the island become over-crowd
ed, as it would very likely be in course
of time, unless the stream of exiles di
minished, a second penal settlement
could formed in the inhospitable
wilds of N’ovoe Zemlia, where a Russian
geographer has recently demonstrated
the winters to be not so bad as usual
ly represented. Whether this be so
or not, or whether Novoe Zemlia
will ever succeed Saghalien, it
seems to be t?’orably certain that
before long the indiscriminate distribu
tion of exiles overt he huigth and breadth
of Siberia will undergo a thorough over
hauling. At present, exiles are shot
over the Urals into Asia in a most pro
miscuous manner, scarcely a thin! re
maining in the districts' assigned to
them, and a large proportion wandering
about the country like vagrants. In a
word, in most essentials the deportation
of non-pohtical convicts is simply a sort
of enforced colonization, with a suffi
cient grant from the State to keep the
exiles from actual starvation. This in
trusion of a needy criminal clement has
always been a grievance to the regtdar
Siberians, and has been unaniniousTv re
garded by Russian statesmen as the
principal cause of the stunted growth of
the country during its .‘1(M) years’ exist
ence under Russian rule. Now that the
European railway system penetrates be
yond the Urals, and the province of
Tobolsk has been placed on the same
home administrative footing as St.
Petersburg or Moscow, the denortation
of exiles, to Western Siberia ‘at least,
has become an anomaly; and of the two
they would be kept in hand better in the
Island Saghalien than in the eastern sec
tion of that great appanage of the Rus
sian Empire.— London Globe.
—An incident of the recent Scioto
disaster on the Ohio, is told by a West
ern paper. It appears that a young
•fellow on board, just previous to the
disaster, was boasting to his girl, to
whom he was engaged to be married,
and who accompanied him on the ex
cursion on the fatal Fourth, that ho
could swim ashore and carry her easily,
but when the collision came he desert
ed her and took care of himself. She
was also saved, anil when he came to
congratulate her upon being still alive,
she refused to speak to him and handed
back the engagement ring.
—An exchange says that the move
ment to sell potatoes in strawberry
boxes is weakening.
A Curious Snuff-Bex.
Shortly after the breaking out of the
French lievolution, its advocates de
nounced our Premier as “an enemy to
the human race;” that man. “so easy
to live with," who sang the song about
himself, called “Billy Pitt, the Tory.’
His Secretary one day* told him that a
foreigner, who spoke English tolerably
well, had twice or thrice asked to see
him; but, not looking like a proper a|>-
plicant, had been sent away, the great
man’s time being too precious for him
to admit every stranger who, on frivo
lous pretexts, m ght seek to gratify an |
Idle curiosity. This person, however, i
had said ho should return in an hour: |
the Secretary, therefore, thought it his _
duty to inform Mr. Pitt of such inten
tion, and ask his fuither orders in the
affair.
“ Hate the goodness,” said the Min
ister, “to open the toji left-hand drawer |
in that cabinet, and bring me its con- j
tents.”
These were a pair of pistols, and a ,
morocco case; opening the latter he pro
duced a snuff-box, in which was set a
portrait.
“Is that like our visitor?” asked |
Pitt.
‘•lt is the man, sir,” answered the
Secretary.
“Ha. 1 have expected him for some
dins' He is sent over to assassinate j
me: so. when ho calls again, let him ba !
■ shown fir-”
••Sir!' uxCl.-iimed the attached re- ;
tuber. “ will you expose to danger your .
life on which so much depends?”
“ There will be no danger. I thank
sou; but you may be within call, if you
Ae.-vnlingly the Frenchman, on his
,r» turn, was 'ushered Into the room
win re William Pitt sat alone—a loaded
i pistol ia om- hand, th? tn mature in the
other.
•‘M nsictu; Mehce de la Touche,' 1
, said Pitt, calmly, “you see I am it.
j every Way prepared tor you, thanks to
1 an agent employed by this Government,
j Attempt my lite, and your own instant
ily pays the forfeit. In any case, 1 shall
> have you secured, and given over to the
law.”
The intended assassin stood paralyzed
and dumb at this cool reception.
“But,” continued Pitt, “there is an
other alternative personal safety and
high rewards are in your power. Sell
your services to Great Britain: make
your market of whatever secret infor
mation you can procure, that may guard
us against the machinations of your
country; be, in fact, one of the necessa
ry evils which policy forces us to use in
desperate cases; do what no honorable
man could do to save yourself from
speedy death; your conscience is stained
by purposed murder. Comply, perforce,
with these conditions, and you shall be
us liberally paid ns you must, by all par
ties, be justly despised.”
The Secretary used tpr<q>ent his illus
trious blaster’s Words, which were, as
nearly as possible, to the foregoing ef
fect. ‘
The elever miscreant joyfully accepted
these terms, and for many years earned
the bribes of a spy in our behalf.
No doubt a snuff-box was tho safest
medium for the warning portrait, as
fancy heads frequently adorned such a
thing; while, had the miniature been set
as a locket, whoever -aw it must have
been sure that it depicted some real in
dividual.— Loudon Society.
Parasites of the Fly.
A microscopical discovery, which may
■ prove highly importnn! in a sanitary
point of view, has been made by I'hoiu
as Taylor, M. D., microscopist of the
. Department of Agriculture. About a
I year ago, while dissecting out. the pro
boscis of a common house fly. Dr. Tav lor
discovered minute snake l:kc animals
moving quickly from the proboscis.
Continuing hi.« oxporlmohts from time
to time since tin n. Im found that house
i flies are very frequently inhabited bv
these animals. He has found thorn geii
erally in the proboscis of the tly, al
though sometimes they are found in the
abdomen, and he thinks that flies
are carriers of these minute snake-like
animals, they may in like manner be
conveyers of contagious germs, much
smaller bodies. These animals meas
[ ure about eight one-hundredths to one
' tenth of an inch in length, and about
I two one-thousandths of an inch in di
j ameter. They are classed under rhe
i Nematoidiv, genus Anguillula. They
are much larger than trichina* or so
called vinegar eels. Mr. Taylor has
found as many as seven of these ani
mals in the proboscis of one tly, and
three more in the abdomen, ten in all.
Svmetimeji none an* discovered, some
times one only. but frequently four are
seen. 1 heir presence is usually indi
cated by a rolling movement in the an
terion portion of the proboscis. When
this is observed, if a drop of water bo
placed upon it. the animals will readily
leave tho proboscis and take to the
water. They are frequently observed
passing in and out of the proboscis, to
and from the water, as if the proboscis
was their natural home. A power of
twenty-five diameters is sufficient to ob
serve their general movements, but for
examinations of their structure from 250
to 500 diameters is necessary. Thev
are perceptible to the naked eye in cer
tain light. Mr. Taylor proposes to make
the experiment of feeding flies on tri
chinosed meat to test the possibility of
trichina* or the eggs of trichina* being I
taken up by flies. Scientific Aniuican.
“Gracious, Sybilhi. how Count
Champignon sneezes; he is unaccus
tomed to our climate: go and tell him
to come away from that window.” The
Count was a delicate looking little fel
low with an enormous endowment of
capillary decoration on his upper lip.
whom her mother mentally re
served as a sweet matrimonial boon for
the Count, moved toward him at a ( hi
cago canter, and archly attracting his
attention by a sharp thrust in the" ribs,
explained: '‘Count, I've got a message
from ma to you.” “Ah. zat is so vera
kind,” he murmured, with agaze of ad
miration at Sybilla, who continued:
“Yes; she says if you takeoff that mus
tache an<i put it on your head you won't
be so apt to catch cold. -Chicago
Times.
Mrs. Emma P. Ewing, an authority
on culinary science, says that bad cook- i
ing has made America a nation of dys
peptics inebriates and criminals,
From Death to Lite.
A reporter for the Mail and Express I
was walking in the vicinity of the Fulton
Ferrv a few days ag», in'the company
of one of the officers attached to the life
saving service. There was a rush of
people to the Fulton Market slip, and ,
the officer and the reporter joined the ■
crowd to see the excitement. “It was
nothing,” one of the spectators said,
turning to go aWaJ; “only a boy ■
drowned!” The life saving officer, how- j
ever, seem< d to take a different view of .
the drowning of a bojr, and he hurriedly
elbowed his way through tho crowd till
he was at the water's edge, with the re
porter at his elbow. Three of the fish
ing schooners were tied up nt this part
of the pier -ide by side, and on the deck
of the third lay a naked boy apparently ,
dead. Half a dozen market men and
i fishermen stood by, saying that the boy
I was dead and that that was all there was
of it. The life-saving officer sprang
aboard the nearest schooner, and was i
I immediately stopped by a policeman
who was oh guard—for the boy had
been out of the water for some time.
“ Stand back,” said the life-saver, “I
I am a physician, 1 ' and, followed by the
reporter, he was soon on the deck on
! which the drowned boy lay.
The officer-physician felt the boy s
skin, felt for his puke, drew up one of
■ his eyelids and looked at the pupil, and
I asked the bystanders how long the boy
I had been out of the water.
j “ You can’t gel no job here unless you
J are an undertaker,” said one of the
, men. “He was stuck in the mud most
ten minutes, and he's been layin’ here
ten minutes more; so, if you fetches
him to life, it’ll be a little resurrection,
and don't you forget it.”
The officer paid no attention to the
man’s opinions, but devoted his whole
time to the boy in away that seemed to
indicate some hope of saving the life
that was apparently gone. The boy
could not have been colder or more ap
parently lifeless if he had been dead for
a week.
The officer opened the boy’s mouth,
an operation that required some force,
and found it full of mud. Pulling the
lower jaw down as far as possible,lie in
troduced one of his fingers and care
fully but quickly cleaned it out. There
was enough mud in the mouth to choke
the boy if he had not been in the water
at all. The officer whisked off his
coat, rolled it up into a pillow, and laid
;it on the deck. With the assistance of
j two or three bystanders, he turned the
• boy over on his face and laid him so
| that the coat-pillow was directly under
his stomach. Taking the boy’s two
ankles in one of his hands and giving
them to one of the men to hold up so
that the patient’s feet were several feet
higher than his head, the officer pressed
carefully but firmly in the region of the
small of his back, and immediately a
stream of water gu-hed out of the boy’s
mouth. It had been all this time in the
lungs, wailing only tor proper treat
ment to help it out. The boy was then,
after a minute or two of this exercise,
turned over on his back again, and the
officer knelt over him. Putting one
hand on the boy’s right side and the
other on his left, just over what are
known as “the short ribs,” the officer
gave them a powerful compression, and
then suddenly let go. The instant ho
took off his hands the ribs sprang back
to their natural position, and a draught
of air rushed into the lungs. This was
repeated a dozen times or more, but'
still the boy was, to all appearance, a
corpse.
“Oh, give us a rest on that,” said
another of the men. “The boy’s dead,
and that settles it. Can't you let a
, drowned boy alone!”
| I'he assertion that the boy was dead
’ seemed to be only too true. He looked
: like a piece of marble; ami the reporter
| suggested that it was not worth while to
make any further efforts.
■ “AV hy,” said the officer, “1 haven’t
I begun yet. The boy may live and he
| may not. But he's going to have a fair
i chance for his-life, anyhow. Stand back
a little, all of you, and give him a little
more air.”
Discontinuing for a moment the arti
ficial breathing process, the officer took
' one of the boy’s hands between his own
j and began to slap it vigorously, at the
, same time setting three of the bystand
| ers at work on the other hand and two
feet. The reporter relieved the officer
at tho slapping business, and the latter
resumed the rib-squeezingproce->s, com
pressing the noy’s frame till he must
have cried for mercy if he had been
conscious. With four men slapping his
hands and feet, and an expert trying to
start his breathing, the boy must have
been unreasonable, indeed, had he been
dissatisfied. But he still lay as dead as
a stick, and, happily unconscious.
i After about live minutes of this treat
ment, very much to the surprise of the
market men and the reporter, and
greatly to the delight of the life saving
officer, the boy gave a slight gasp for
breath.
Just at this moment of triumph the
policeman on guard called across the
decks: “Say, you’d better let that boy
alone, lie's dead enough.”
“ Never mind what they have to say,
they don’t know what they're talkin ’-
ab mt, ’ said the officer. “Get me a
•_: 'ass of brandy.”
He redoubled his artificial breathing
It atment, and one of the ti-hing sailors
went down into the cabin and soon re- i
turned with a tumbler nearly full of not I
very inviting-looking brandy. The boy I
meanwhile gasped again; had twitched ■
a little in the legs; had rolled his head
to one side, and at lengt h had drawn a I
good sized breath. Ihe minute he
breathed the officer picked up the glass
of brandy and poured the liquid down
the boy’s throat.
‘‘Now, get me two or three blankets,
as quick as yon can,” said lie, and at
the same time he unrolled his coat and
laid it over the boy. The patient con
tinued to show more signs id' life. He
soon drew short but regular breaths,and
raised one hand to his head. Under
the influence of the warm brandy in
his stomach and the fresh air in his
i hmgs, he opened one of his eves.
I “He is all right now,” said‘the officer,
I getting up with difficulty and straight
i cuing the “Kinks” out of ins back.
I “H rap him no weli in these blankets
i and put him in a berth. Be sure you
make his hands and feet warm. If you
*t ' *
w 'i warm water, c-rk them
and put ’hem against his feet.
oi fifteen nrnrtes give him anotner
of brandy. «?© will be able to talk to
you inside oi an hour and tell you where
he lives. But he will probably be too
weak to walk home; some of vou will
have to carry him. Come, old fellow
(to the reporter), let us go. There is
I nothing more for us to do. A. x.
Mail and Express.
Afghan and Biloch.
In all resneets, particularly from a
governing asjvect. the Biloch is infinite
ly to be preferred to the Afghan.
Though phvJically inferior in bulk and
weight of body, he is the Afghan s
e ptal in courage, and his superior in
endurance and intelligence. One spe
cially good trait in his character is that
he never sulks or bears malice long,
wiiereas the Afghan does both. Here
are illustrations in point. I never re
hwnlber having an Afghan whipped in
jail without the fellow showing by his
sullen looks and scowling face that he
bore the striker, if not myself, a grudge
for it. But here, in the Derah Ghazi
Khan Jail, the puffishment over, the
Biloch is as frank and pleasant afi he
was before. One man. I remember,
who was in as a bad character, would
not Wdfß. H»< was warned that he
would be whipped. He tHefely laughed,
ami said: “That won't iliaku any
difference, sahib. He was shoUti
a man. being whipped; he only looked
grave. Finally be was whipped him
self. He was taken out of his cell,
stripped naked, tied wrists and fittkles
to the triangle, and given twenty or
thirty—l forget the exact number
strokes with a rattan. During the op
' eration he bit at the wood, bit almost
i through his tongue, bitt never either
groaned or winced, lhe punishment
! Over, he threw himself on the ground on
his face, When the usual skin of cold
I water was dashed over him, and then
j the commiserating water-earner stood
: upon the beaten parts to deaden the
j pain. Still he would not work. 1 saw
i nim a day or two after in his cell, look
l ing happy and unconcerned, though he
I must still have been very sore, and for
days would not be able to sit down. He
. was pleased to see me. He seemed to
have an idea that not being in jail
I for any specific and proved offense.
!it was not right to give him
hard labor, and so put him on
; the level of a convicted felon. 1 remon
; strated with him for his obstinacy, to no
I effect. One day I observed his splendid
curls shining with oil or ffhi ■. I asked
| how he had got it. He had saved it
i from his food, was the answer. J. cut
’ Ids ghcc; still no effect. At last, as his
' example was becoming infectious. 1
’ warned him that if he would not work 1
should have him transferred to the
Multan Jail, where 1 believe his Ab
salom-like hair would be cut short.
That threat frightened him—his ring
lets being the glory of the Biloch: he
said he would try to work. He made
a pretense of trying, and failing, was
sent off to Multan, where I have no
doubt he is now, though prison-cropped,
as smiling and light hearted ami do
nothing as he was here. Now, it is not
the Afghan nature to behave as that
Biloch did, and that Biloch’s case is
■ typical of others. Similarly circum-
I stanced. the Afghan would have sulked,
j worked, fallen ill from fretting, and
I some day- after his release, perhaps.
' killed the human instrument who had
i beaten him.— Blackwood's' Magazine.
Things Learned by Experience.
Ts your coal tire is low throw on a ta
blespoonful of salt, and it will help it
very much. A little ginger put into
I sauasage meat improves the flavor. In
i.-itig cake dip the knife frequently in
I coklwater. In boiling meats for soups
' use cold water to extract th- juice. If
| the meat is wanted for itself alone, plunge
i in boiling water at once. You can get a
■ bottle or barrel of oil oft' any carnet or
j woolen stuff by applying dry buckwheat
plentifully and faithfully; never put
water to such a grease spot or liquid of
any kind. Broil steak without baiting;
salt draws the juice in cooking; it is de-
■ sirable to keep these in if possible; cook
I over a hot fire, turning frequently, sear
ing on both sides; place on a platter,
salt and pepper to taste. Beef having a
i tendency to be tough can be made very
palatable by stewing very gently for
two hours, pepper and salt, taking out
about a pint of liquid when done, and
letting the rest boil into the meat.
Brown the meat in the pot. After taking
up make a gravy of the pint of liquid
saved. A small piece of charcoal in the
pot with boiling cabbage removes the
smell. Clean oilcloth with milk and
water ; a bniah and soap will ruin them.
Tumblers that have had milk in them
should never be put in hot water. A
spoonful of stewed tomatoes in tho gravy
of either roasted or fried meats is an
improvement. The skin'of a boiled egg
is the im st efficacious remedy that can 1
be applied to aboil. Peel it carefully,
wet, ami apply it to the part affected’
It will draw off the matter and relieve
the soremss in a few hours.
Rich Find in a Trunk.
A young fellow who was one of the
“ reserve’ was ordered to Rouen last
year to serve the usual fourteen days.
He had no trunk. His funds were low.
. He asked a maiden aunt to lend him a
i trunk. She had nothing but an old
fashioned portmanteau, which was so
queer he refused to take it. He could,
however, find no other, and, ashamed as
he was to be seen in such company, there
was no help for it, shoulder it 'he was
obliged to do. Offered employment in
uouen, he made it his home, the trunk
Jay hidden and forgotten in a dark closet,
until one day while rummaging he came
upon it. He determined to send it back
to his aunt. As he emptied it he found
it had a double bottom ; he opened this
double bottom; he found in it 110,000.
.e carried them to the bank and found
the money good. He capered for joy, nut
only with his legs but with his tongue ;
so news of the discovery reach' <1
j his aunt s ears, and she said the monev
belonged to her, and she found the junk
dealer who had sold her the trunk ; J e
willingly became her witness to this fact,
but added : “ Zat drunk ees my righds
and zat monish ees mine.” So they have
a i gone to law.— J',tris Corresponds nee
Orleans Picayune,
11* . i
u ii l
TEZSTTST. .
Refined Petroleum and Lubricating Oils.
|sep3 6m |
HERRON’S!
Special Announcement for the Spring!
We present to our patrons, and the public generally, this Season the most com
plete assortment of Goods ever shown here.
They were purchased for CASH, and we now offer them at INSIDE FIGURES
IMEa,lx.e BTo Mistake S
BUT SEE US AT ONCE, AS WE SELL AT
BOTTOM PRICES FOR CASH.
We know that money is scarce this year with you, but remember that
Prices will be in Proportion to Your Purse
and if we have the Goods you want, and you can spare the money, now is the
time for you to secure
THE REST GOODS Cor flic EEAST MONEY
HERJRON <fc SON’S,
FOUNTAIN HEAD FOR BARGAINS.
THE “WHITE” SEWING MACHINE,
The Ladies’ Favorite!
because
hßit is the lightest running
JBV
ie makes the prettiest
stitch ; and has more conveniences than
V Kaii any other'Machine.
V#a|| lfc<ai J It is warranted fiye years and is the
easiest to sell, and gives the best satis-
VII faction of any Machine on the market
■ fl -
h JR l J® Intending purchasers are solicited to
V K® examine it before buying. Responsible
dealers wanted in all unoccupied ter-
\ ri to ry.
•T. I>. Ac T. SMITH,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers,
111:1111 "hh llll 59 Broad Street, ATLANTA, GA.
MONUnweuhPX S ° RE THROAT BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA, PNEU-
' A COWSUMPT I°N, Diseases of THROAT, CHEST AND LUNCS.
H fl J si Bjil Tftß Bl llas always been one of the most important
XII I \fl fUi 11 L Illi II weapons wielded by the MEDICAL FACULTY
MH LOH 111 ill Illi || gainst the encroachments of COUGHS.COLD3,
CONSI MPTION ml7.i, T* 1 . ■ WU W BRONCHITIS, ASTHMA, SORE THROAT,
and LUNgs ’bidit h w novl’lh 11 . and ad . vanc « tl stages, and all diseases of the THROAT.CHEST
RYE Its saiot h fru-OolinX ™ adv antageously compounded as in the TOLU, ROCK and
svstem after ttie coi?’ii a diffusive stimulant and tonic to build up the
Yr'" aner tne cough has been relieved. Quart size bottles, Price SI.OO.
r , tai ■■ SPECIAL TAX OR LICENSE.
he TOLU, ROCK AND RYE CO., Proprietors, 41 River St., Chicago, 111-
■III 11 - t.
Dr. K. I”. WRIOHT,
h holesale and Retail Druggist,
Dealer in
DRUGS, MEDICINES, CHEMICJiuS,'
1 " Glass. Lamps and Lamp Fixtures; Surgical \ni>a> »t is such
r ,s Supporters. Trusses, Lancets Socket Case? 1 et? etr
compare with Atlanta ‘‘ *'° rner ° f K ‘“ B “ nd Harai,ton streets, Dalton, Ga. Prices guaranteed to
ie!B ts
Tlie Halton Arg’ll
CIiANGRD FROM IXDEPEX’EEXT HEADLIGHX»-U> * ’
■wS
Brightest. Most Progressive. Ttkhavksiw* , llips '
’ F and will do |C<x ,'upou •
News Paper in NorthtP 8T ° i
ONLY OISTE I
i m. .11>!•., fhr, > “ llon s,ei t (
'h“'b.mu-. M.-; Mill M
A B -