Newspaper Page Text
lie tome iinrna ;*»
B i ■ I F
VOL, VI.
To Core Constipation Kofsw.
Take Oasearets Candy Cathartic. lOo or 25c.
ff CL C. C. (ail to cure, druggists relund money.
—At Albany, N. Y. Fields & Hatch, now
employing: 300 hands on knit goods, are to
increase their output. So. 17.
Sow to Save Labor In Spring Clean
ing. labor
Spring cleaning is no longer the it
mma In the days of our grandmothers.
Women understand how to save themselves
fythe use of modern conveniences. When
beginning the work everything should be
In readiness—tacks, hammers, brooms.
best With a supply of Ivory purposes), Soap (which lime Is the
for all cleaning am
■Stonfa. and carbolic acid. Good weather
should be selected, nnd only one or two
rooms cleaned at a time; air and sunshine
■should be freely admitted.
Eliza R. P abrek.
S
SS Courage and Strength
in Times of Danger ."
c Ifead the warning between
the lines. What is that •warn¬
ing} It is> of the danger from
accumulation of badness in
the Blood, caused by the
usual heavy living of the
Winter months. Spring is
the clearing, cleansing time
of the yean the forerunner of
the brightness and beauty of
glorious Summer.
Follow the principle that Nature lays
down. Start in at ones and purify your
Wood with that great specific, Hood's Sar
separilla. li never disappoints.
Mecame Tu mors under “A tumor as big and as a instead la/ge mar
testing physician ray tongue, it, I of
my operate on used my
fttvorito spring tonic, Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
The bunch soon disappeared.’’ Mrs. 11. M.
•Coburn, 579Mer’k St., Lowell, M ass.
Bheumatism-T had rheumatism for
five years and can conscientiously'say that
flood’s Sarsaparilla blood lias given me entire re¬
lief. As a puriiier it has helped my
•children wonderfully.” J1ns. S. A. Saoar.
•SW Franklin Avenue, Passaic, N. J.
zfiocdS SaMafnillffct
msm
Hood’s fil ls oure liver ills, the non-ir rita ting and
tike only cathartic to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla^
MWT BE A FOOL
Try COOSiR <«BEASE LINIMENT be
fore.you say it’s i><* good.' fli’s .under
ft ttlMKAMEE, and with thousands of
merchants handling it we have had hut few
bafcfels returned. It. will CURE Croup,
CdUglts, Cold#* Rheumatism and all
Ac tie a and Pains.
f AMTEB-4GEMTS: Ladles or Gen
tlemen for my
ne w flouseli old IVeeessi t y jsells on sigh t;
large profits; every lady wants It. Let me
_ _
star lyou.In business. AdclvessA.N IELEls,Cincinnati,O
A Scorpion Hunt in Florida.
1 knew very well that the scorpion
I was after was of a very modest and
retiring disposition, and was never
seen above ground in daylight except
Jay accident or mistake, I was also
under the impression that they were
becoming rather rare, as it was more
than a year since I had seen one. Still,
it was with more than confidence, to
say nothing of the more prosaic requi¬
sites of a stout pair of gloves, a paper
and a hoe, that I started out one
to find my Thelyphonus. I
my course to the nearest
wood, not for a moment doubting that
a few hours’ work would bring to light
the object of my search. I labored
.faithfully until dark, overturning rot
ten logs, sticks, bark, old rails, and
other field and woodland debris under
which my “grampus” would likely to
)k- hiding, but the search was alto¬
gether fruitless.—Norman Robinson, in
Appleton’s Popular Science Monthly.
TUMOR EXPELLED.
-^Unqualified Success of Lydia M,
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound.
Mrs. Elizabeth YTheelock, Magno¬
lia, Iowa., in the following letter de¬
scribes her recovery from a very criti¬
cal condition:
“ Dear Mbs. Pinkham:—I have been
taking your Vegetable Compound, and
am now ready, to sound
its praises. It
/ has done won¬
ders for me in
\ relieving me
of a tumor,
Co i “My health
has been poor
for three years.
Change of life
was working
L H upon me. I
was very
much bloated
I and was a bur¬
den to myself. Mas troubled with
smothering spells, also palpitation of
“the heart and that bearing-down feel
Ing. and could not be on my feet much.
“ I was growing worse all the time,
^atttil I took your medicine
taking three boxes of Lydia
35. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Lozenges, the tumor passed from me.
“My health has been better evor
Since, can now walk quite a distance
am troubled no more with palpita¬
of the heart or bloating. I rec
your medicine to all sufferers
from female troubles.”
It is hardly reasonable to suppose
that auay one can doubt the efficiency
of Mrs. Pinkham’s methods and medi¬
cine in the face of the tremendous v#*"
f!iwa at "timOPy. )
‘To thine own self be true,and it will follow, as night the day, thou cans’t not then be false to any man,”
LINCOLNTON, GA-. THURSDAY, JO AY 18.1899.
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4M ^ s>s ^ -v F
A Ft 4
—•
v
A DAY-TIME TUNE.
The sun sings out in a dawn-dappled sky;
And a fleeting moon croons a pale reply;
While the star-crowded chorus
beneath, round, and o'er us,
Comes muffled, uncertain,
Through the day’s drawn curtain;
And the waking world lifts a workday cry
To mate with the martiallng music on
■ high.
Eight good for the soul it is: drifting
But through dreams; whore the fat
it’s braver to plow earth
teems.
The office is better
Than the lotos-fetter:
And sweater than the bottle
Is the wide engine throttle.
So, clerk, to your work! and, maiden, to
your seams!
Tradesman to your trade! and agent to
your schemes!
There’s time for you to loaf when the sun’s
gone out; it’s work-hours while it
beams.
—Rupert Hughes, in the Criterion,
OVERBOARD.
BT O. P.
EAVY chains
§] were about his
ankles, h a n d -
sa i (Stq cuffs upon his
' ~ wrists and
the
y brand of crime
was on his fore
g||| head, on his
dark features,
and in his fierce,
wolfish eyes. There he stood, an out¬
cast from the pale of human kind¬
ness, the convict, Mark Mold, on the
deck of the passenger ship Briton,
the captain of which for a certain sum
paid by the law officers, had consented
to take him, with several others of his
stamp, to Botany Bay, as room could
not be found for these criminals aboard
the transport vessel anchored a mile
below and which had been packed to
overflowing ere the prisoners were
brought to it.
While Marl; still waited on the deck
x 'tg- sTow him in the
dark hold with his fellows a boat from
the Liverpool dock came alongside
with several passengers, among them
a handsome lady of thirty, Mrs. How¬
land, tered wife of Colonel Howland, quar¬
with his regiment near Port
Jackson, Australia, where she was go¬
ing to join him, and her little daugh¬
ter Grace, a beautiful child of six
yeai'3.
As Mrs. Howland was assisted up
the gangplank she noticed Mark Mold
and shuddered.
“You need not he afraid, ma’am,”
said the captain. “The criminals will
bo kept in the hold, chained; they
can do you harm.”
“Can you not send them away from
here? 1 wish you would.”
“I regret that I cannot, as I have
agreed to take them.”
Descending into the cabin, the lady
sat, unable to rid herself of the feel¬
ing of alarm excited by the presence
of the convicts aboard the vessel. She
at length concluded to go ashore and
endeavor to persuade the ship-owners
to have the criminals taken off the
craft; but ere she could proceed to
execute her plan the Briton was under
weigh. the bright
As day after day passed
little cherub, Grace, spread light and
joy throughout the vessel.
The rough sailors would smile,
their brown faces softening when she
ventured among them.
They always had a pleasant word
for her, for her winning iittle ways
had made her a favorite with all,
the cabin boy up to Ben Hayes, the
oldest seaman aboard.
She would walk forward the
thing of a morning and shake
with each one, her mother
permitting such freedom on the
of her child. One day, having
that the crew did not fare as
tuously as the passengers, little Grace,
instead of eating her piece of
cake at the cabin table, took it
among the sailors and make each
them take a big bite, saying she
would tell the captain to send them
basket full.
Soon she noticed on deck the con¬
vict, Mark Mold, who, having
taken ill in the confined air below,
been relieved of his chains and led
to breathe the fresh air. A
look crossed his haggard face as
inhaled the pure breeze, and,
out on the broad, blue, rolling ocean,
he seemed at once to get stronger
better.
“Won’t you have some? Here,
take it; you may have it all,” fell
childish voice on his ear, and,
down, he saw Grace at his knee, hold¬
ing up her piece of cake. ,
He seemed about to put his hand on
her head when Mrs. Howland gently,
but quickly drew the child away.
The man showed no emotion at this
action of the lady. It was natural the
mother should deem there was con¬
tamination — poison V— in his touch;
that she should not'have permitted
him even to lay his hand on the
golden hair of the child.
“You must never go near that
tnan again,” said Mrs, Hofriand.
“Wby, mamma, isn’t he a little
g°od? I’ve heard uitcle-^-and he is a
minister, mamma—say that everyone
is » little good.”
“You have heard him say that the
worst person has some good quality; believe'
but I differ with him. I dou’t
that convict, who, I have learned from!
the captain, was a thief, housebreaker,
and drunkard for years, has a single
good trait.” •;
Just as she spoke a heavy squall
struck the ship, hurling her down al¬
most on her beam ends and driving
ber through the water with everything
humming. The wind blew with ter¬
rific force, and the vast oceau was
veiled for miles by the whirling, driv¬
ing spray, which flew like snow-flakes
all round the vessel, shrouding her in
a white mist.
Suddenly there was a wild shriek
from Mrs. Howland as little Grace,
who had attempted to run into the
cabin, was literally blown to leeward
into the sea.
“My child! O God, save my child!”
screamed the distracted mother, whose
voice, however, was nearly drowned
by the booming thunder of wind and
ocean, the rattling of canvas, the slat¬
ting of sheets and ropes and the
swashing, hissing noise of the sweep¬
ing spray.
The sailors looked with appalled
faces on the form of Grace as she was
borne along by the merciless waves.
Not one of them dared to venture
overboard in that tempest, and as to
lowering a boat, it was simply impos¬
sible, as no boat could live in such a
storm.
“Save her! Will no one save my
child?” screamed Mrs. Howland, con
fronting the seamen with clasped
hands and frenzied, beseechiug eyes.
They looked at each other and not
■one moved, for all felt that certain
death awaited the man who should
plunge in that wrathful ocean; bur
Mark Mold plunged overboard, and
the mother clung to a backstay,
eagerly watching for his reappearance
but, seeing nothing of him, she bowed
her head on the rail, moaning and rav¬
ing like a maniac.
Still raged the storm and on tore
the ship further and further from the
place where the man and child hap,
gone overboard. The seamen n
changed ominous glances and shoo’.’
shook their heads.
Soon the squall swept far away to
leeward, the ship righted and the sun
gleamed from a clear sky upon a clear¬
ing sea.
From the captain, who, having now
brought his ship to, with main topsail
aback, had run aloft, a wild cry went
ringing to the heavens, sending an
electric thrill of joy to the hearts of
all on deck.
“I see something two miles off the
lee-quarter. God grant it be the man
and child!”
His boat was soon down with good
oarsmen in it, with Mrs. Howland,full
of wild, anxious hope, in the stern
sheets.
Nearer to that distant speck drew
the boat.
“There he is!” cried the watchful
captain, at last. “I think—I believe—
hut am not certain—he—yes, yes,
thank God,—hooray! hooray! he has
the child.”
Yes, there was the convict in the
water, holding up the child that the
mother might see it.
Such a scream of joy as burst from
that mother’e lips it would have done
you good to hear.
A few minutes later Grace nestled
on her bosom, weak and faint, but
showing signs of rapid recovery, as
the happy woman strained her to her
breast, showering kiss after kiss upon
her face.
Almost exhausted to unconscious¬
ness, Mark Mold lay in the bottom of
the boat, scarcely hearing the mother,
hardly feeling the pressure of her lips
upon his hands, when, at length, she
turned to him, warmly expressing her
gratitude. recognized truth of the
Now she the
saying that the worst person is not
without some good trait, and very glad
she was that she had not succeeded in
having the convicts removed from the
ship when she first discovered they
were aboard. Of course, had they
been taken away Mark Mold would
have gone with them and her child
would have been lost.
On arriving at Fort Jackson Mrs.
Howland related to her husband, the
colonel, the gallant conduct of Mark
Mold, who thereafter was constantly
befriended during his hard prison life
by the grateful officer. thefirsthe had
This kind treatment,
ever received from a liumau being
since he became an outlaw, bad a
softening effect on Mark’s character,
and he conducted himself so well that
the colonel at length succeeded in ob¬
taining for him a commutation of his
penalty, which had been for twenty
years, to half that time.
When at last, the prisoner was dis¬
charged the colonel procured his em¬
ployment and the liberated convict be¬
came a steady, honest man.
A Matrimonial Musing.
Tbe average young man thinks he
is in a position to marry if he has §250
in the bank and a steady job. Hope
is a great factor in a love affair. After
the man is forty he wonders how he
ever did it, and when he eats pie at
night and has the nightmare he always
imagines that he is marrying again c
-#250.—Atchison Globa.
Mtojlju® v*i
Ornamental Planting.
The careful use of plants will do
much to produce a bome-like eftect.
To make a beautiful and harmonious
picture, trees and shrubs should be
planted in such a manner as to give a
pleasing effect. The first essential in
creating beautiful surroundings is tha
lawn. It forms the foundation for the
remainder and no pains should be
spared to make it perfect. A rich and
thoroughly prepared soil should be
provided, one which will retain all the
moisture that it is possible for soil to
retain. Next in importance to the
lawn comes the arrangement and
grouping of the plants. Plants in
carefully arranged groups and masses
please much more than disconnected
planting. While well arranged groups
are not easy to make, anyone by exer¬
cising a little care and patience may
be able to do so as well as the man who
makes this his business. All groups
should be arranged to provide as much
lawn as he space will allow and shut
out uncongenial objects on. the out¬
side.
One may consult his own choice in
regard to the plants to be used in
working out the picture. All kinds
can be used to advantage. As a gen¬
eral rule, shrubs are as valuable as any
other class of plants, as they attain
their character and size quickly and
are easily moved if desired, and more¬
over produce a massed effect difficult
to acquire in other ways. Also shrubs
when once established are less likely
to fail. Trees and shrubs which are
allowed to develop broad, spreading
Shapes and graceful forms are far more
pleasing than those which are often
ruined by injudicious pruning.—•
American Agriculturist.
THe Fruit Garden.
Preparations for extending the sup¬
ply of the fruit of the garden should
f'b made early every winter and spring,
even, if ono only owns a small
place, fruit trees, bushes and vines
should be planted and intelligently
cultivated. First, this should be
done for family use, and second for
commercial purposes. The owner of
a small or large place who does not
raise fruit for home consumption is
not deserving of the name of farmer.
A quarter, half or one-acre plot will
yield fruits in variety and abundance.
Only tested kinds of fruit trees and
vines should be planted. Let the
nurseryman experiment with new
sorts, unless you do it on a very small
scale for the pleasure gained thereby.
Too many farmers are led to adopt
new varieties of fruits upon slim
grounds of recommendation, and they
lose money invariably by the process.
The accumulated experiences of the
many will be of use in guiding one in
the selection and cultivation of all
fruits. This experiment crystalizes
in time in the short, pithy advice
that finds its way in reputablo agri¬
cultural journals. Some times the
advice is repeated so many times that
a few are inclined to sniff at it, and
ask for something new. There is
very little that is absolutely new in
the world, but our knowledge ad¬
vances gradually, and in each little
new suggestiou that comes as the re¬
sult of actual experience proves of
great value in the long run.
The man who raises apples to-day
cannot expect something from noth¬
ing. Apple trees need culture. They
require as much intelligent care as
any other fruit. If you arc not
willing to give the trees this atten¬
tion, it is better not to raise any apple
trees. If you are willing, then select
the very best varieties adapted to
your region; but it would be a pity to
buy first-class trees and tiien stunt
their growth with poor attention.
The apples are a good illustration
of all other fruits. It is not many
years ago that we thought the apple
trees could take care of themselves.
Now there is no jirofit in apples unless
one makes the raising of them a
study. Vie must select the best trees,
guard them against diseases, fertilize
and cultivate the soil around them,
pick the fruit at the right time, sort
and grade them carefully, and then
pack and skip them to the right mar¬
ket. One mistake in this chain of
•work may knock out all the profits.
What is true of apple culture is true
of all other fruits. It is a period of
intense competition, and the survival
of the fittest will follow.—S. W.
Chambers, in American Cultivator.
A Demand Supplied.
A jeweler of Newburg. N. I., has
invested in a stock of ‘married men s
watches.” The peculiarity of these
watches lies in the fact that they are
f urnished with an alarm attachment
which a man’s wife can set at the ex
act hour when she wishes him to start
tor home. The alarm going off at
that time will remind him that his
wife expects him.
Siberia will be largely represented
in Paris in 1900—the first time at any
exhibition. The new railway and the
lands it has opened will be fully rep
resented.
THE NEW WAY.
They’ve Jrrokon down the barrier
That custom used to raise;
The girl, if you would marry her,
Must do it all. these days.
Papa and dearest mamma seem
Not '-in it” as of yore—
W hen most they favor love's young dream
The more yon may deploFe.
it used to be ttre proper thing
To cultivate mamma,
And give her potted plants, and bring
Cigars for “dear papa;”
But fashion now has made it wise
To court the girl alone,
To road her hieroglyphic eve*
And tremble on her tone.
Then, in some lonesome, dark retreat.
Far from the haunts of men
C-r maids, sbe’U bring you to her feet,
Then bring you up again.
She’ll educate you to the ways
That suit her inclination.
And marry you in ninety days
By average calculation.
— Chicago koeorfl
HUMOROUS.
•She—Hamlet is a play for all time.
He—Yes; it will never give up the
ghost.
When we tell a man a good story,
we have noticed that it reminds him
of a very poor one.
Biggs—Is your wife’s mother still
visiting you. Biggs—She is visiting
us, but she is not stilt.
“No, indeed, I wouldn’t die in the
country!” “Why not?” “The church
bells always toll vour age.”
“What makes Dickie’s cough so
bad this morning?” “It is nearly
time for him to start to school.”
“Pa, what is a hero?” “A hero is
a man who tries to read a paper in the
same room with a boy about your
size.”
De Canter—Is there any sure way
to tell the age of ahorse? De Trotter
—-Yes; ask the dealer and multiply by
one-half.
“Do yon think tlie Indian will
be civilized?” “Yes; Spotted Crow
sent in a request the other day to have
his name changed to Polka Dot.”
A Colorado gentleman advertised
left’ a well preserved skeleton, and
shortly after Uis the paper was out an old
mftid.of to war .Appeared in her best
b-kiuid. .twainW-Ws inten¬
tions were honorable.
Elderly Maiden (out rowing with pos¬
sible suitor, to her little sister, who is
frightened of the waves)—Theodora,
if you are so nervous now, what will
you be at my age? Little Sister (meek¬
ly)—Thirty-seven, I suppose.
“What kind of an alarm clock have
von?” was asked of a Third avenue
baker whose work demands his pres
ence is the wee hours, “Two years
old, fat, chubby, full of giuger and
with lungs like a lire gong.”
He—-Do you remember the night I
proposed to you? She—Yes, dear.
He—We sat for one hour and you
never opened your mouth. She—Yes;
I remember, dear. He—Believe me,
that was the happiest hour of my life.
Falcon Island’s Sudden SOnd.
The latest budget of news from the
native kingdom of Tonga mentions
the disappearance of an island in the
Pacific, under circumstances that seem
to lend some color to a popular super¬
stition. On Oct. B3, 1885, the inhab¬
itants of the Tongan capital witnessed
one of the grandest natural pyrotech
nical displays of the century. Some
30 miles to the northwest a submarine
volcano suddenly started operations,
throwing columns of steam and feath¬
ers of tire to an estimated height of
12,000 feet. When the performance
was over and people thought it safe
enough to approach, it was found that
u new island six miles long, two miles
broad and 300 feet high had been
added to the map of tbe world. It
was christened Falcon Island, but no¬
body eared to settle on it. People
who promenaded its surface had a sen
Fragile nation akin to walking on pie crust.
and unsubstantial as it was, it
managed to live for exactly 13 years,
human finally sinking and disappearing from
view on Oct. 13, in the year
18. 8. No matter what the Thirteenth
club may say, if that bold body is still
in existence, which we doubt, there is
something uncanny about that partic¬
ular number.—London Chronicle.
Homes In Porto Kico.
What interests the traveler in Porto
Bico more than anything else are its
beautiful homes and gardens, and the
owners seem to vie with one another
to make their places the most attrac¬
tive. It has been said that the De
Leon estate near Ponce surpasses all
others in its grandeur. Situated on a
hill overlooking the city, with its
many quaint bouses, painted in all the
colors of the rainbow,and surrounded
w iHi gardens of palm trees and other
na ji ve plants-, the place forms a picture
almost beyond description. The h •uses
a) . e furnished with great taste. There
is an absence of carpets, rugs and heavy
ll . iugings _ Most of the furniture is
made frum the native cabinet wood,
an d the louuges and chairs have caned
seats, which are seldom upholstered.
The floors are usually hardwood or
stone.—New York Tribune.
~
There is an establishment in Paris,
France, for the sale of water from the
River Jordan for baptism.
NO. SO.
quel: k diseases, queer cures.
Anonymous Letters, Freezing, Bees «
Other Unusual Remedies.
One physician has discovered a. mr
use for the anou.vuious letler. H
has observed that in eases of Uysteri
melancholia, rheumatism, etc., p:
tients have sometimes been cured L
a violent and sudden shock, Tie.
fact being established, the
said to himself, "why not shock m
patients into good health?” and sine
tlie idea occurred to liim his life
been not only profitable but also erff
tertaiiiing. lie suits the shock to Use
ease, bin says that be has bad bette*
results from anonymous letters ibafj
from any oilier method. A few care*
fully constructed letters, full of innuerfl
do, gbttse and threats of injury,
give a patient an absorbing interest "
life. He will forget his ailments,
that is a long step toward
Incidentally the treatment may mak
things interesting for the family dctailHj
the convalescent, but that's a
The physician who invented tlie
ment savs that results have been
gratifying.
This is a day of queer diseases
queerer cures. A ease of nervous
haustion. dyspepsia or
can give one a long lifetime of inter
csling and varied experiences. Owl
may lounge among the vineyards of
Southern France anti eat unheard-of
quantities of grapes in the name of
medical science. One can take the
open-air cure in tlie Tyrol, where tho
patients, clad simply and sufficiently
in one thin, abbreviated tunic; ramble
over the hills, or. minus tlie tunic, lie*
on the grass and soak up
There is the kotimyss cure on the Utis
sinu steppes and tlie starvation cure
Germany. Germany is the
heath of the barefoot fraternity, too.
where devour believers in Father
Kneipp paddle merrily about in the
morning dew, and, arrayed in conven¬
tional purple and fine linen, hut still
barefoot, invade the- i.. i: i ..ring
towns on Sunday-.
A I’aris doctor hns designed a dry
bath of Arctic temperature which ills*-]
counts the most noble efforts of a <lis
approving chaperon. A tank of metal
lined ■with fur, is sunk in a larger out
or tank, and the space tietween tut
two is tilled with .-in evaporating
which lowers the temperature of tho
inner tank to about 1(H) degrees below
freezing. The nervous patient is put
into this refrigerator and kept there
for a few moments, the treatment be
ing repeated every other day.
effect is said to he marvelous, and dis
ease is frozen out.
Malta’s way of treating rheumatism.
is heroic. Hut a generation brought up
oil mustard plasters and electricity
ought not to object to it. The patient
is stripped and bees are cordially in- l
cited U> settle upon his body. It
amuses the bees and cures the rhea
matism, so it seems to be a philan¬
thropic system all around Tlie poison
in the bee stings is said to neutralize
the acid in tlie blood which is respoit
sible for the rheumatism.—New York
’West African Kan ways are reported
as progressing as follows: The Sierra
Leone Bailway is completed to Songa
Town, requiring the erection of eleven
steel viaducts, and is now being pushed
on to liotofunk. At Largos 7,000 men
are at work beyond Abbeokonta to¬ /
wards Ibacinn, and the rails will be
laid to the former place in a few
weeks. The Tarkwa Bailway. in the
Gold Coast Colony, is progressing; a
jetty lias been built to facilitate land¬
ing at the port; shops, stores and bar¬
racks have been constructed, and the
final purvey is about to be completed,
Ou all these West African railways
about 10.000 rneti nrv at work.
The totai inmates of jails in the var#
oi s •’ounties in’Indiana recently were
25,723. of whom 24,0(5S were males and
1,(155 females. There were S.109 in jail
for intoxication, 4,052 for misdemean¬
ors, 2,872 for assault and battery, 2,319
for grand and petit larceny, 190 fot
murder, 24 for manslaughter and tha
remainder for various other crimes.
GEORGIA RAILROAD.
NM an 13
Connections.
For Information as to Routes, Sched>
—ules and Rates, Both—
Passenger and Freight
Write to either of the undersigned.
You •will receive prompt reply ant,
reliable information.
JOE. W. WHITE, A. Q. JACKSOST,
T. P. A. G. P. A.
Augusta, <»«-
8. W. WILKES, H. K. NICHOLSOK*
C. F. & p. a. G. A,
Atlanta. Athene.
W, W. HARDWICK, S. E.
S. A. C. F. A.
Macon. Maooa.
M. R. HUDSON, F. W. COFFER
Muiaduerifl#. g. & F. & P. A.