Newspaper Page Text
” A by the Neva-
da Assembly imposing a fine of S2O on
any person who treats another in a sa
loon. The bill does not. prevent any
number of persons from going into a
saloon and drinking together, but re
quires that each man shall pay for his
own drink.
’ Next to Baltimore Philadelphia pays
ftf ’and eats more choice sea food than
any city in the Union. The cooking
in Baltimore and Philadelphia is dis
tinctively American, and the best of
its kind, while in New York a species
of Franco-American kitchen supplies
the tables of restaurants and clubs.
Among the many prize offers of the
French Academy of Sciences is a sum
equivalent to about $20,000 which was
left by Breant in 1849, and is still un
awarded. It is to be given to the per
son who shall find an effective remedy
for the Asiatic cholera, or shall indi
cate with absolute certainty its causes.
A German forest-keeper has pub
lished in the Leipsic Journal a cure
for hydrophobia, which lie has used
many times in .fifty years with invari
able success. The bite must be bathed
with warm vinegar and water as soon
as possible, and when this has dried,
a few drops of muriatic acid poured
upon the wound will destroy the
poison in the saliva and insure the
patient’s safety.
Soap trees similar to those growing
in China and Japan are said to flour
ish in Florida. They are prolific bear
ers of a berry about the size of a mar
ble, which may be used as a substitute
for soap just as they are taken from
the trees. In Florida, however, they
at*e usually boiled down and cast into
bars. It is thought they may be made
to grow on Northern farms after a
little acclimatization.
The law of Kansas sentences a mur
derer to death, but the sentence does
not take effect unless, at the expira
tion of one year, the Governor signs
the death warrant, when, if that is not
done, the prisoner is confined under a
life sentence. No governor has ever
been elected who w’ould sign a death
warrant, and for this reason there are
now about thirty death-sentenced pris
oners in the penitentiary at Leaven
worth.
“San Francisco,” says an inhabitant,
"has not been a clean city from its
foundation. There is Oriental dirt and
Occidental dirt. It has come to be a
foreign pity. Merchandise fills the
sidewalks, and in many places crowds
pedestrians into the street. Offal is
thrown there. The’six months’ trade
winds of summer and the six months’
showers are the two sanitary agents
which keep watch and ward over the
city.”
The California orange-growers have
discovered a new process for removing
all substances that injure the appear
ance of their fruit. They put a half
bushel or so of dry sawdust in a bar
rel and then pour in two or three
boxes of oranges, and turn slowly with
a crank. The fruit cornea out as clean
and bright as a gold dollar. One man
can clean about eighty boxes a day,
while washing ten boxes is a good
day's work.
A Mr. Crawford, who is a member
of the Chicago Trades and Labor As
sembly, has made complaint to that
organization against the action of a
barber shop owner in that city, who
reduced hi« employees’ wages 10 per
cent, just before he proceeded to ex
pend SB,OOO in “unnecessary display
In his shop, even to the extent of im
bedding 400 solid silver dollars in the
tiles of the floor to add to the glitter
ing show." Mr. Crawford says he
wants to see the barbers organizing
for the purpose of opposing such
steps.
The wax plant is now grown on a !
large scale in Algeria, and its product
is gradually finding its way into the !
markets of the world. The process of
separating the wax is simple. The
fruit, inclosed in a bag of coarse cloth.!
is (dunged into boiling water, on whose s
surface the substance soon floats. The i
wtx is of the same chemical composi- J
tion as beeswax, and is likely to be ;
largely used in place of ft. It is stated
that these wax plants may be seen
growing wild in Pennsylvania and the !
Carolinas.
In the heart of Wyoming Territory
is a mouaum ei solid hematite iron,
with tiOQ feet of it above ground, more
. Manta mile wide, and over two miles
ia length; a bed of lignite coal big
the world for cen
• M UkM of aoiid soda, one
them over tMM acres in extent and
‘b.*& thirty feet in depth;
4
im basin which contains
more oil than Pennsylvania and West
Virginia combined, from which in
places the oil is oozing in natural wells
at the rate of two barrels a day. At
least, so says the Butte -
nter-Mountain.
Some time ago Prof. Virchow
brought together the results of an in
quiry into the relative proportions of
the blonde-haired, dark, and mixed
types among the school children of
the. German empire. Since then the
inquiry has been extended to Belgium,
Austria, and Switzerland, and em
braces nearly eleven million children
in its scope. In a lecture at the Ber
lin Academy of Science, Prof. Vir
chow now shows that more than 50
per cent, of the school children of cen
tral Europe belong to the mixed type.
The distribution of the purely blond
type, which contributes something
over 25 per cent., and is associated
with unmixed Teutonic blood, is
rather curious. It is highest in Han
over, where it forms 43 per cent, of
the population, but it is very nearly as
high in the extreme east Prussian and
Pomeranian districts, where history
and tradition locate a preponderating
Slavic element, and points to the com
pleteness of the gradual industrial
conquest of those regions by the
Teutonic race.
A peculiarly ghastly experiment in
furtherance of the ends of justice, has
been performed in Paris. A chemist
named Kel is charged with having
murdered his female servant, whs
mysteriously disappeared some months
ago, and disposed of her body by burn
ing it in a stove. He says that the
stove in question is much too small
to be put to such a purpose. To prove
that it is not so, the prosecution, hav
ing had a sac-simile made of the stove, !
asked for and obtained an order from
a Juge d’lnstruction, which was
sanctioned by the Prefect of Police,
for a dead body from one of the hos- i
pitals. In possession of this corpse, ■
they proceeded to cut it up into pieces,
and fed the stove, which they had
lighted, with the fragments. The re
sult, so far as it went, was in confir
mation of the theory of the prosecu
tion. In a surprisingly short time the
whole body was consumed, and nothing
remained but a few ashes. It is ob- j
vious, however, that the proof thus j
afforded of the possibility of the dis- !
posal of a body in the manner alleged |
by the prosecution, can only be [
material if the positive links in the
chain of circumstantial evidence
against the prisoner are all of them
thoroughly strong.
Life in Abyssinia.
■ • TirtWiijßPTty’ofhouses have a sec
ond story, at least a sort of attic, under
the extinguisher roof of thatch, rim
ming a circular frame of dried mud or
wood resting on the angles of four
walls of mud and stone, either in
square, or the ground plan taking the
lines of a Greek cross, and the interior
face is surrounded by a circular outer ’
wall of the same material. Within,
live the occupants, with their cattle |
fowls, dogs, cats and a Noah’s ark of :
insects, which the natives foster with
the greatest care by not touching soap
and by using very little water. The
excessive disregard to cleanliness is
quite a mania with the Abyssinians.
It is not from a want of water. There
is plenty; and the famous soap-tree, ’
called indoed, grows everywhere, the
seeds of which, when carefully dried i
in the sun, may be worked into a good |
lather that is very cleansing. An !
Ethiopian will tell you without a {
blush that he is necessarily washed at
birth, washes himself on his marriage I
morn, and hopes to be washed after
death; that once every year he clips i
himself in the river on the festival of
St. John, and every morning he wets
the end of his toga with the moisture '
from his mouth and freshens up his
eyes. Whenever he feels hard and unj
comfortable, he will anoint himself
with mutton fat till his head and body
glistens in the sun.
Facts About London.
About 3,000 horses die each week.
About 129.000 paupers infest the
city.
About 11.000 police keep good order.
About 120,000 foreigners live in the
city.
About 10.000 strangers enter the
; city each day.
About 9,000 new houses are erected
[ annually.
About 700,000 cats enliven the
moon-light nights.
About 2,000 clergymen hold forth
< every Sunday.
About 620 churches give comfort tc
I the faithful.
About 125 persons are added to the
; population daily.
About 28 miles of new streets are
laid out each year.
About 500,000 dwellings shelter the
I population of London.
A Little Jlceainioilorc
?rop i 8 abr
An inatk / ’ mess of the
late Corams are p , .f New York,
as well as of ot his name,
occurred ten i aHrears ago. Some
persons in Nt’'» arßWas started a pro
ject for a new, buHpnpany. In order
to give solidity r j,areir enterprise they
treated with Gi Wi, and he agreed to
furnish money i'lfcarry out the under
taking. The members of the old gas
company, a very solid concern, at first
laughed at the idea of a rival, but when
it became known that Commodore Gar
rison was backing the new company,
they began to shake in their shoes.
Everybody m New Orleans wanted to
take stock in the new company. The
canning managers of the enterprise now
supposed that success was within their
grasp, and,’coolly neglecting to call upon
their great backer in New York for the
promised aid, they began to lay mains
and get ready for active work. It was
not long before it leaked out that Gar
rison was not in the new company after
all. Thereupon the subscribers to stock,
who had just been so eager, began to
back down. The managers could do
nothing, and the new gas concern was in
a bad plight. AU this was not lost upon
Commodore Garrison, who was not in
the best of humor over the attempt that
had been made to use him. He imme
diately dispatched a secret agent to New
Orleans, who quietly bought up the
stock of the new gas company until he
got the controlling interest, but without
any one suspecting who furnished the
money. Then an assessment of 40 per
bent was laid upon the remaining stock
holders, who as was intended, became
alarmed, and sold out their stock as fast
as they could. Garrison’s agent clutched
it all, and when everything was in his
hands the fact was allowed to leak out
that the Commodore owned the new gas
light enterprise, and meant to push it
through. The newsfeU upon the old
company like a trip hammer. Their
stock dropped from 160 to about 60, and
there was terror among the stockholders.
A desperate onslaught was made upon
the Commodore. He was called the
enemy and destroyer of the widows and
orphans who had put their money into
the old gaslight company. Garrison re
mained perfectly calm,
“Well, gentlemen,” he said, “I’ll either
buy out your whole concern at par (the
stock of the old company amounted to
about $2,000,000), or I’ll add $1,000,000
to your stock and we’ll consolidate. Take
your choice. Otherwise I shall go on
and construct my works.”
The old company thought it better to
have such a man for an ally than a rival,
and they accepted his offer to increase
their stock and consolidate. The agree
ment was hardly concluded before the
consolidated stock ran up to 180. Gar
rison made a million or more, and the
persons who had undertaken to use him
for their advantage saw him reap all the
benefit of their scheme.
An Ideal Realized.
It may be taken as a sign of the times
and the beginning of a reaction in the cry
for educating thg masses, when a lady
can advertise for a' servant woman ana
receive two replies from New England
girls of excellent mental attainment*.
One of these girls told this lady sh,
longed for a quiet home, and was pre-1
pared to work hard to keep a roof over
her head. She was refined and well ed
ucated, coming from an excellent family
in Maine; she had tried to earn a living
by teaching music and singing in church;
but the strain on her nerves to live de
cently could not be borne longer, and
now she determined to enter the services
of a family, and do her duty there in a
self-respecting manner. After some
questioning as to the privileges to be ex
pected, she replied that she desired em
ployment, but as she could not associate
with other servants as friends, she claim
ed only the customary “day out,” and
to go to church Sunday afternoon. The
young lady was immediately engaged,
and the good fortune of the bargain is
mutual up to this date. A home rather
than servitude has been secured, and the
family already feels that it possesses a
trusty, conscientious friend in the
“housemaid,” who is a thorough lady,
though she wears a white cap aud apron,
and works with perfect understanding of
tar many duties.
ettPrivatß. The Fenian ram, says
the Hartford Times, that aroused con
siderable public curiosity through the
columns of the newspapers two years
ago is still at New Haven, in a wooden
building on the bank of Mill River, near
the Consolidated road bridge. It is
about thirty feet long, cigar shaped,
burns petroleum for fuel, and can make
excellent speed under water. It is said
to have cost $15,000. No one is allowed
to see it except those in whose charge
it is, and they refuse to talk about it.
Th© building has no side windows and
the door is strongly barred.
■3 Driven Wild
, take the advice
(though he calls
an evening party
nd rid yourself of
r the use of
Sarsaparilla.
ice I was attacked with
jssing form of Eczema,
ead very generally over
an intense itching and
i, especially at night,
in the virtues of Ayer’s
amenced taking it, and,
less than two bottles of
entirely cured. —Henry
he Hope “Nine,” West
the well known journxl
ochester, N.H..
severely, for some time,
d failing to find relief
lies, I have made use,
hree months, of Ayer’s
h has effected a complete
this medicine a magnifi
® -.-. t remedy ror all blood diseases.
For all disorders of the Blood, >.w 13 s
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
Pwjtotod by Dr. J. C Ayer A Co. LowriJ, tv PragidsU. Price , .lx boule, <5.
The San Francisco Chronicle says
that the teeth of a bullock recently
butchered there were found to be thickly
covered with pure gold, and considera
ble gold was found in the pot in which
the head was boiled, The coating was
submitted to a chemical test and found
pure. It is supposed that the animal
must have drank from some stream
abounding with the precious metal,
which became attached, grain by grain,
to the animal’s teeth.
The late James Porter, of Shippings
port, Ky., was a giant of no mean pro
portions. He was a well-known tavern
keeper of that town. Because of his
height—about eight feet—his tavern
was a great resca t for boat-men along
the Ohio River. One of his peculiar
feats was the power to crash goblets or
glasses by his powerful voice disin
tegrating the particles of which they
were composed,
An Important Arrest.
The arrest of a suspicious character upon
his general appearance, movements or com
panionship, without waiting until ho has
robbed a traveler, fired a house, or murdered
a fellow-man, is an important function of a
shrewd detective. Even more important is
the arrest of a disease which, if not checked,
will blight and destroy a human life. The
frequent cough, loss of apjietite, general
languor or debility, pallid skin, and bodily
aches and pains, announce the approach of
pulmonary consumption, which is promptly
arrested and permanently cured by Dr.
Pierce’s “ Golden Medical Discovery.” Sold
by druggists.
Sleep:—The thief that robs us of our time,
giving us health in exchange.
Freckles, Pimples, Salt Rheum cured. Ad’ss
Dr. M. Hutchinson, 110 Clark St., Chicago, 111.
Ciouds:—The curtains of light, as sorrows
are of joy.
An Only Daughter Cured of Consumption.
When death was hourly expected from Con
sumption, all remedies having failed and Dr.
H. James was experimenting, he accidentally
made a preparation of Indian Hemp, which
cured his only child, and now gives this recipe
on receipt of stamps to pay expenses. Hemp
also cures night sweats, nausea at the stom
ach, and will break a fresh cold in 34 hours.
Address Craddock & Co., 103 i Race street,
Philadelphia, Pa., naming this paper.
When you speak to a person, look him in the
face.
Weak lungs, spitting of blood, consump
tion, and kindred affections, cured without
physician. Address for treatise, with two
stamps, World’s Dispensary Medical Associa
tion, Buffalo. N. Y.
Massachusetts was the first of the thirteen
original colonies to introduce slavery and Geor
gia was the last.
If afflicted with sore eyes nse Dr. Isaac
Thompson’s Eye Water. Druggists sell it 25c
Wouldn’t David Davis look gay on roller
skates.
“I Dan t Want Rei Jes. but Cure.”
Is the exclamation of thousands suffering
from catarrh. To all such we say: Catarrh
can be cured by Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy.
It has been done in thousands of cases; why
not in yours? Your danger is in delay. En
close a stamp to World’s Dispensary Medical
Association, Buffalo, N. Y., for pamphlet
on this disease.
Foob—One who shows his folly and doesn’t
know it
Pefkjkixjj) BKKf . tomio. the only
of beef containing its »wZri T
rtw. It contains blwxl-Atking,
and life-sustaining properties;
tor indigestion, dyqiepsia, nervous
and ad ’ form ot general debility;
enfeebled conditions, whether the
result at exhaustion, nervous prostration, over
work of acute disease, particularly if resulting
from pulmonary complaints. Caswell, Hazard A
Co., Proprietors, New York. Sold by druggists.
The camel is the only bird that we yearn to
hear after listening to a man learning to play
the violin.
important.
When you visit or leave New York olty, save b3ur<ags
expressage and 83 carriage hire, and stop at the Grand
Union Hotel, opposite Grand Central depot.
&ki elegant rooms, fitted up at a ooat of one million
dollars. 81 and upward per day. European plan. Ele
vator. Restaurant supplied with the beat. Horse oars,
stages and elevated railroads to all depots. Families
can live better tor lew money at the Grand Union
Hotel than at »nv other first-class hotel in the city.
Virginia punishes her State Prison convicts
by witholding their rations of tobacco. Two
days brings the worst man to time.
Marriage and Health.
Pittsburg, Penn., Nov. 5, 1883. Mrs. Lydia
E. Pinkham: “As is frequently the case with
mothers who havo reared large families, I
have been a great sufferer for years from
complaints incident to married life. I havo
tried the skill of a number of physicians, and
the virtue of many medicines without relief,
nnd as an experiment I concluded to try
yours. I can assure you that the benefits j
have derived from it came not because of any
faith I had in it, for I had but slight hope of
any permanent good. lam not a seeker after
notoriety, but I want to t«U you that I have
been wonderfully benefited by your medi
cine. lam now using my fourth bottle and
it would take but little argument to persuade
nw that my health is fully restored. I should
like to widely circulate the fact of its won
derful curative powers.” Pheba C. Roop.
Dalle Great English Gautaad
DIBII S rlnSs Rheumatic Remedy.
Hex. 81.00: round. &O eta.
IW PREVEMTIVE MS’S
fcjyifjlaaifonx 82 to DR. KENNEDY, Auburn. N. Y.
WOifF
Necdtsg renewed sOwsgth, or who suffer from
bsflrndtles peonllsrto their should, try
Birtw j
Thin medicine combines Iron with pure vegetable S
tonics, and is inralusble for Diseases peculiar to f |
Worn on, and all who lead sedentary lives. It En
riches and Purifies the Blood, Stimulates
the Appetite, Strengthenß the Muscles and
Nerves— in fact, thoroughly Inviaorntds.
Clears the complexion, and makes the skin smooth.
It does not blacken the teeth, cause headache, or
produce constipation— all other Iron medicintt do.
Mm. Elizabeth Bantb, 14 Farwell Avo., Milwau
kee, Win., says, tinder date of Deo. 26th. 1884:
I have used Brown’s Iron Bitters, and it has been
more than a doctor to me. having cured me of the
weakness ladies have in life. Also cured me of Liv
er Complaint, and now my complexion is clear and
good. Has been beneficial to my children.’’
Genuine has above trade mark and crossed red lines
on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO..BALTIMORE, M».
Ladies’ Hand Book—useful and attractive, con
taining list of prizes for recipes, information about
coins, etc., given away by all dealers ih medicine, or
mailed to any address on receipt of 2c. stamp,
to Soldiers & Heirs, sendstump
f° r Circulars. COL. L. BING-
S SS9 HAM. Att’y, Washington. D. C.
Paynas’ Automatic Engines and Saw-Mill-
We offer an 8 to with
60-in. solid Saw, 60 ft. bolting, cant-hooks, rig
for operation, on cars, gl,loo. Engino on skids,
less. Send for e're.ular {B). . ft/W. PAYNE de
SONS, Manufacturers of all styles Autosllatie En
gines, from 2to8;o H. P. • aJao Pulleys, Hangers and
Shafto*. Elmira. N. Y. Box 1850.
IMMEDIATE RELIEF!
Gordon’s King of Pain relieves pain of whatever fist
tore, the moment it is applied, and is a household
remedy wherever known for Rheumatism. Neural
gia. Headache and Toothache, Burns and Scalds,
Sprains nnd Bruises, Diarrhoea Dysentery. Sore
Throat, Ulcers, Fresh Wounds, etc. Burns will not
blister if applied, and Bruises will heal in a day that
would require a week by any other method. The
remedy Is furnished in powder, with labels, etc., and
is sent by mail, postage paid. It Is put up in 50c., 81
and 85 packages. The 50c., or trial package, when
reduced to liquid form, will fill 24 2oz. bottles, which
are worth at retail, $6. Agents can coin money sell
ing it. It Is worth ten times Its cost for burns alone.
Send postal notes or two cent stamps. Address
E. G. RICHARDS, Sole Proprietor, Toledo, Ohio.
jjtsx. ES n no ■ gw sales, and 300 perct.
® I? ®l Jw profit made by nienS
tel Ba ra ph ra « ® and women with our ■
§6 K? £■ Eg M “ jBJa labor-saving inven- 1
® fl! SI si KB SB tiqn. A lady cleared I
SI M is ® Ss Bf TA S7O in one street. An 1
R S 3 @Ljv ra K K. Went writen:‘’Yonr 3
WWC 'or ™ HI "Apian brings money
quickest of any I ever tried.” Any man or woman
making less than S4O per week should try our
easy money-making business. We guarantee it the best
paying in the land. $1 samples quick selling goods free .
to any lady or gent who will devote a few hours daily. Ex
perience unnecessary; no talking. Write quick and se
cure your county. Address, B U. Merrill it Co. Chicago
fflwi r r <> tv
BMM 3AGON SCALES,
Don Lavers, Steel Bearing!,
EcSSf Nk M Brara Tare Be»m and
sWjk-JK'S Beam Box.
*N» JONES he
w* wvw pays the freight—
istlfliS': f° r 're® prioeliet mention this
pwer and address JONES
OK BIN(.H A VITON,
Qtnghgmty, N.Y.
PENNYROYAL
“CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH"
The Orlstma an« 3 enntae.
Vtasrv rntahk. Bewarset wsfehlr*. l i e‘tet' aE a,
TO* i LAII7e , B En^ b '*" *"***“**
• 807 Marti.on Sg.,rii>lu4a, Pu. I S BtelwW B
■ -STIAimM
JL AND BOILBNS,
A Horizontal r
W Ifredffe-Boat
Flour, I’. wdvr, Slate and
MU! Machinery. TurHnu
Wheels. Shafttag f’lrUeya, Mmfr-
S pyT&fißy-jWjlMj;' ere, Ac. Illustrated Catniogae
•‘tf’JßErWr’Sv mailed free.
YORK IW’F’G CO., Ysrk,
so.aend tor Dog Bnyera* UnfAkW
Ww . colored plataa.l•<>««-■
’ '»• \-e y7/- > era,lng«atniaerent
, r r U ”'l * re “d where to bar V "
»dfs. jAnittafc ' Jptbem. Alto Catan! Bn* rnrnlaMa&ap ■'
d?®o»>4s ot all kinds. Directions ftj*
■VZaS.:Ur’ Sf-I raining Doga and Broodtag Xarrato. X
Ww WUIL Mailed fin- 16 <Xmtfc f
ASSOCIATED FAMCIEBS ft
8. Btk Stavtofr Pkllnd’a. Z
BEsfTRUSS E¥E« USEO.
W Improved Elastic Trwss.
Worn night and day- Pos
itively cures Rupture.
SS.WSS3BS
circulars to Die
New York Elastic
Truss Company,
i JRoanoke Cotton Preao.
oeOElwaiftetw-o made. Coats levs than shelter
OTer other presses. Hundreds
!- i - * n actual uae at both steam
t i K ’ii O# and horse power gi ns. Bales
V ejRBsJI i raSB / faster than any gm can pick.
V. / Tk” n * w improvements in gin
V described in the words
FrTiSgj J of their inventors free teal!.
r TsKti -t Address RoamOKK blow AMD
sCTwjk Wood Works, Chattanooga,
.. j- -WAi Tenn., or RoaXOKB COTTOM
t ’ Press Co., Rich Square, N.O.
YOU ARE Wr
with your Window Fastener. Try
Eeiache’s Durgl-jr-Proof Baah L',ck
and An'omatic Window Holder and
YOU WILL BE. Mada of Mafie*-
ble Iron and cannot l-e broken. EqtrU
Inal! respects to cords and weights, and at ene
tenth the cost. Can be applied with a serow-drtrar
by any handy person, sample complete for the
window mailed upon receipt of 10 ets. Agents wanted
in every town. J. R. CLANOT. Syracuse, N. Y.
R. U. AWARE
THAT
Lorillard's Climax Hog
bearing a rtd Un too; that Loriilart’g
Rv»* Leaf fine cut; that Lorfllard'!
Navy CHgpluge, and that Loriljard’s Hnaff«,*r«
the beat and cheapest, quality considered I
It teuchea the Mltrhe,. Ribbon sad Arrasesa
Embroidery l.e.trc and Kenaington PntHling.
How to do stsmoing, etc. Send stamps to pay postage, i
T. E PARKER, Lynn, .Haan.
AGENTS WANTED
We want a reliable Lady or Gent ta each town and
township to sell our goods; also general agents. Par- I
ticolars free. Address jEresMOS MTo Co., Toledo.O. ,
MnDDIIiMC GMor*! and
MUIfl HlriEOpi um Habit*
EASILY CURED. BOOK FREE.
OR. L C. HOFFMAN. Jeßanon. Wisconsin I
Moml i
TMffiSTOrS KITOOTHPOWDEB j
Reaping Teeth Pwi-fect aad Cans Haaitfcy. 1
Elaraiiine Habit Cure* fa 18
*• ’AO dayo. Nopay tilt earoA. ;
Wl I Vlrai Da. J. arnwncra; Labaaea. Ohio j
EUSA9UY TAUGHT AND SITUATIONff :
S&L£unArßl Cuvuhua taw.
I VALENTINE BKOS., Janeavtila, WU,
A’t* E? NT ft Obtaiaad. Sead stamp Rar
f* I til I O fnventms* Guida. L. RiVie- ;
pam. Patent Lawyer. Washington, JDJO. . j
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DOUGLASVILLE,-
- ■ fi.mt nxnn, ? X^gew*
Will iuactice - -
Court of
W. A. JAMLS.Wgm
iY
Will PMCUCC :
Will practice in all the
business v. ill ! ci-v-.- tmiript :
in Court-Hotue.
FoTcaml',
ATTORNEY AT LAVI
CM Esgisw a«i S msfor, ■
DOUGLASVILLE, -
M
ATTORNEY at law
vX>. pr “ lte “ *“ aw f”* ’ Wi:
— .gEKH
M, EDGE % J
MMfey at
aMr . A:
wFI R.
Physician and Surgeon \ j
DOUGLASVILIE, GA. WH
Special attention to Surgery and Chronic Dis-
eases in either sex.
Office Upstairs in Dorsett’s Brick Building.
p. s. verderyT
Physician and Surgeon I
Office at HUDSON & EDGE’S Drug Stox«f«W J|
where he can be fonnd a'; all hours, exc<4>t •
when professionally engaged. Special atten- ■
tion given to Chronic cases, and especially ■
all cases that have been treated and are still
nnenred. jan!3 ’BS-ly
I RESPECTFULLY offer my services as Phy-
sician and Surgeon to the people of Doug- ■
lassville and vicinity. All aills will be attended
promptly. Can be found at the Drug Store of ■
HUDSON & EDGE, during the day, and at
night at ray residence, at the house recently
Occupied by J. A. Pittman
J. B, EDGE. I
‘"a- DENTISTRY.- J
A— l Jt-yjg
•fc K,.
Jsl f
V .■
- filii
HA
DON’tWoOW 1 ■
WELL, IT’S SOI K
You can get your Lumber Dressed ; get
Moulding, Brackets, Banisters,
Picket!*, Turned and Scroll
Work Cheaper at ,
tajMli tag Mm|
Than at any other mill in Georgia
C. T. PARKJEI®
InE First One.—ln one of the di«
vorce cases in the Supreme Court
?<ortLampton, after a young man hadg|
r, .--ited that his wife cuffed him awimidw
.. id at one time whacked him over ibe«
--.t-i with a poker, the court wag ted to9HH|
n -nk that after having heard 225 di- ■
< cases upon the liench that wae the ®
:int in which a man had asked for a di
from his wife tecanee of sruei
••■ ;-. v•■ 11 -•,t m c t. - - S'pri ngfteld {Mms.) »
Hi'.r’. L<j7k.—She ras affile
nd ;. I let e*re a snap .
m ■■-. I.nt miy loved, her poodift.
ci. -.ie got into her ’teens «b<3 d&M
c-,r-.i f”? Vat
AT • -j. ->t.