Newspaper Page Text
Valuation of Property. '
.....11,433,677.38
2,572,113.00
6,000,000.00
Store and'dweSng corner O and Wdlf streets,
new rented for $28 per month, ft,HO.
Court House. '— 7T
_Truck_farm ot twenty Mine neros with news y
roomhouBO. 'V i" '
i
Six aoreawltb borne near BTVAGdooks. '
es feet front on Cochran avenpo, 23 foot from
street oar line, for $111. •
N ■
$1,200 Will buy nine lota almoit In oentro ot tbe
elty.
^I<^oornCT^Lon^on>treetand Cochran avenue
Three itoree on Bay itrect,
p Truck farm on: bold aalt creek, IK miles from
OUT# • t .*
Estate Agency,
Pnu&wick, Gfa
216 Newcastle Street,
A Very
A highly ImdUgcm Indy known tout*
doctor ii lull’d to him that one day the
was walking |*at n |iuUie InatiMtioa
and observed n child, in whom abn wna
particularly interested, coming out
through an iron gala. Site mw that ha
let go the sate Biter opening U. and that
it aeetoed likely to dme upon him, and
ooocluded that It would do so with anch
force ns to crush his ankle; however, this
did not Impiwn. “It was impossible,"
aha said, “by word or act to be quick
enough to meet tbe supposed emergency;
and, in (act, 1 found 1 oould not move,
for such intense pain came oo in tbe
ankle, oonesponding to the one which 1
thought tho boy would have injured, that
I could only put my hand on it
If You Are Sick
B»W-
! to lessen
— — —— Hnionsv, Kidney ..!■>...,
OnarntpstlsB. ywaals troubles. Mm and aim
BIsspIsmw. itmsl l-srsirtl^ or Nervous Pros,
nation, an PaiaWs (Mery Compound aad he
cursd. la each of than tho r.in l> tacatai or
physical overwork, anxiety, exposmo nr malaria,
tbs elfcet of which is ta v cskea tbe nervous sys
tem. rotalUac more of there diseases. Bcsaove
tho ostea with that (teat Nerve Tonic, aad the
HBKLT Will diupp$an
Paine’s Celery Compound
„£t*tf* / Bowiw, Springfield, if us, writes
its extreme polnfulnoee. I am euro I
not move so as to strain or sprain
The walk borne, a distance of about
quarter of a mile, was very laborious,
and on taking off iny stocking X found a
circle round the ankle, as if it liad been
painted with red currant juice, with
large spot of the same on .the outer part.
By morning the whole foot was Inflamed,
and 1 was a prisoner to my bed many
days." -W. H. Hawley in Boston
If people only
doors,
five or
i before retiring, and
six or a dozen deep, stn
would no more omit it 1
their eupper.—Yoatn’e l
Somebody ought to write a novel
about people with these black or dark
.blue eyes which are transparent as
. so many Swiss pebbles. They are eyes
. of intensely passionate natures, strong
forgoodor era, but with tendencies the
wrong way, the eyes of born devils in
human shape. When such doll dark
eyes show the red light that comes of
caution insanity in its first stages is at
work on the brain, and such a man or
woman needs care life long, or some
crisis of trouble may lead to an outbreak
of madness. It is the eye of one likely
in. frenzy to commit manslaughter.
The most beautiful eyes in the world
are tho dear gray, with large pupils,
and iris which chr.ngis and darkens with
feeling as from the shadow of a .cloud,
Tho steadiness, brilliance and suscepti
bility of such eyes are index to, the rarest
- intelligence, quick and accurate, and the
high romantic sentiments which in such
characters become passions. Truth, lib
erality, loyalty, are the vital breath of
such spirits, but alas! those eyes arc not
of the long lived. Dust is over them al
most before wo can say wo have known
them for our own. T{io bluish white of
the eyo betokens consumption before its
hectic brightness olurms with unearthly
beauty, and the loss of color hi the pupil,
turning brown instead of black, is caused
by heart disease.—Shirley Dare’s Letter.
• * Wild Hone of tho Flalns.
So much has been written of the horse
of the plains, which, foaled upon the
dew kissed grass of tho prairie, has never
known a halter or the touch of a man’s
hand, that descriptive reference to their
fleetness, wariness and oftentimes their
graceful beauty, particularly among the
stallions, would at this day lack interest.
But one curious fact is known to but
few aside from those who have followed
them for hundreds of miles and studied
their habits closely. If there are enough
in a bond these animals group by thir-
teens. With every stallion there ore
twelve mares. What becomes of the
weaker males whom the stronger fight
away—whether they bido their time to
get tho quota of females or, in tho des-
pandenoy of equine bachelorhood, go off
alone and starve themselves—is not
known. The matrimonial regulations of
tho wild horse, however this may be,
allow to each male [twelve consorts,
and, the remarkable feature is, no more.
They draw tho lino at an even dozen.
Even when the bands that roamed these
great plains, then tenantless except by
other wild creatures, numbered in tho
hundreds and more than a thousand this
peculiar division into families was plainly
noticeable. They kept a little apart and
never voluntarily mingled.—Colorado
Cor. Chicago Tribune.
A Waste of Fiber.
It Is stated that two-thirds of tho wood
used in paper making is waste, though
experiments indicate that this can be
profitably converted into fertilizers.
Opium for tho Tcllow Fever.
Oar Cbineso reporter asked Dr. Yong
Tyso Hing, of Pell street, about his ex
perience with yellow fever In China. “In
Kwong Tung, Boo Kien, and Kwong Si, 1 ’
he said, “there were a few cases of yellow
. fever soverol years ago. The fover was
called by tho natives ‘wun biun.’ It
never became epidemic, owing to tho
people’s habit of smoking opium. ’’
“Does the smoking of opium prevent
or cure yellow fever!”
“Certainly it does. Wlfercver opium
is smoked It destroys yellow fever."
- “But is not tho opium smoking habit
as dangerous os tho fever!”
“No: it takes at least a year of con
stant smoking to acquire the habit, as all
old opium smokers will testify. There
might lw yellow fever all over the United
States, but the Ghineso opium smokers
would not bo affected.”
Dr. Li Shi Leon, of Mott street, said;
“Why, certainly opium smoking cures
yeBoW fever. > Ibed two cousins in Mem
phis during that territfo yellow fover
my.case a
the rtoflittc
have
I mjr Meads, If i
17 Compound
111 Cure You!
For the Aged, Nervous, Debilitated.
m •
• 1 iHi
.
-ij&SnadfaMii
•/ .
i- -
IS THE TIME TO INVEST IN
ter
A Dress Dyed ) roe
4 Coat Colored ' S IQ
Garments Renewed J eurra.
A Child can usd them!
MmuMmI ter M Fnnoy Md Art Work.
MdrafRiiii and Merchant*. Dyo Book free.
WEuiiTictURDSON & CO. M*. 52Eg5?n
—=
Never Before Sold at Such Low Rates I
Great || Reduction in Pricesl
Farmers’ Implements of Highest Quality,
rMillBHardware, Building Supplies,
ICE CREAM FREPJZERS, REFRIGERATORS, CUTLERY.
GREAT BARGAINS IN
Cook Stoves for Wood or Coal, Oil Stoves,
kFSSS jfbibnd o the housewife,j
Wood end Willow Ware in every dsslgn. In Croekery, Oliu, Tin end Agate Ware we have a fine and
reedy to offer at bottom prices. We will bo pleased to sbow our (took
large assortment, which we are
all timer. Satisfy yourselves and na by giving na an early call,
n^.^ElCHEJLSOKT.
AUG. F. FRANKLIN,
Dealer. Broker anil Commission Merehaitl.
lay,
tain, Feed, tar,
Mill Feed I Generally.
Car-Load Lots a Specialty
We Compete with any Market in Quality ai\d
* Price, and Mean just what we Say.
Glauber & Isaac,
're uee and taissim Mantels
irunswlou., Oa.
Office and Wdreroom in the former Freight House of the B. <fe. W. R. R.
next to Freight House of E. T., V. & G. R. R.
HEADQUARTERS iFOR
Dry Salted and Smoki n Meats, Hams, Breakfast Bacon, Meal
and Grist, Corn, Oats, Bran, Hay, Mill Feed, Apples,
Potatoes, Onions, Oranges, Lemons, &c.
Consignment, solicited. Parties wanting anything in mv lino will And It to their advantage to
Wool°3tc m0 boforo P urr,,,l *l n 8 elsewhere. Highest market prices paid lor Hides, Fnrs^wax,
Hodges & O’Connor.
Alter one year’s trial It la now an acknowledged fact that we
in 1873, who limply ftuokeff their
bail caught tho
B moment thoy H
fover, and got well in km than twenty
boom. No, there U no danger of getting
tho opium Imblsif the patient docs not
■moluSlotimrthaniix month*; bat, then,
.itUa naru thingtoleamhow totao the
Kmr ■
piptj.V—WonCtunFoo in Now York Sun.
Thera are tenor (adder eight* in thie
world then ilmt of mate* whom tho
oatacpeaf ream tne wle-radt.;. * **
Keep the Purest and Freshest Drugs in the City.
Our Prescriptiori^DepaHment •
vpwplete, as the amonntof work done demonstrates. We also guarantee
HUNSWIC
PEAL
POPULATION.
1884..
1888..
1892..
65,000 acres of Timber Lands on line of Railroad. -
Thousands of acres of cypress lands.
60«Q00 acres of Timber in one body; good as can be bad in the
State.
CITY
One corner lot, 30x90, with UO foot street front,
i Newcastle street. Excellent stand for any
business.
Most dcsirahle;residenco lot 00x130 fronting on
two streets nenr park.
Six room house on Union streot
Three Town Commons lots near Dr. Halo’s,
cheap, cheap, cheap.
One lotjfrontlng canal.
Two water fronts In Now Town, with railroad
running on line of same.
.situated In business portion of city.
One of the most desirable lots on Newcastle
street south of park.
Excollent|buslness lot 60x180 on lhe Bay.
Modern cottage with lot 90x180 on London
street. A pleasant homo in tho best part of city.
at alow flgure.
Four room oottage In Dtxville with lot 90x100.
Can bo bongbt cheap as owner Is anxious to Mil.
Two story houso Just completed on 1st Avenue.
Truss lot on Boulevard In two minutes’ walk
of post office.
Lot 80x100 fronting railroad and adjoining lots
on which the Oglethorpe hotel is situated.
$300 will purchase six Town'|Commons lota In
one body.
Also Farms and Farm Lands situated in
r;‘ v- - 'a? '
mt * ■
this and adjoining counties.
Jo Trouble to Slot
Jareful attention paid to tbe renting of property
Reference*, Oglethorpe and First National
OGLETHORPE! .IBOTTLIN G WORKS.