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ThRRESPONDENT'S
IONS OF GUASINA.
sW shot Went I)own
0e 0 , of the ,, ullets
rbe° r.. Sn, "sln-luck
riek rS
I'tlar seins Ever Sang.
, shall, the New York
a, ondent who was
correSpl has written his
tor Scribner's Maga
Sich the following ex
eden shot. Every one
aY men without cries,
in i umpin the air, with
ping huands. They just
a clods in the grass.
"m that the terrible thud
tome .ck the earth was
they struc t
than the sound of
Swere only wounded.
Aod. ... - ,,, ..
,t h that is awe-lflt i
h deth of soldiers on the ]
Almost all of us have
jud women die, but they
in their carefully arranged
doctors daintily hoarding
. spark with loved ones
about. But death from
less awful than death from
Ol the battlefield there are
le scientific problems of
crobes to be solved. There
, no codding-nothing,
'othing but death. The
-heis strong, he is vital,
oe in himis at its fullest
hen, suddenly, 'ehugl' he is
waht 'chug' of the bullets
jesh is nearly always plainly
But the bullets which are
so far as I knowo, do not
'their way. They go ilentl
to thoir mark, and the man oi
" , rli rot
d or torn or ,ea,. -........
e bullet shriek that kil
oFish; did not hear the I
shriek which struck the many
who were wounded while I waS
em; I did not hear the bullet i
which struck me.
re is one incident of the day
shines out in my memory
all the others now as I lie in a
ork hospital writing. It oc
at the field hospital. About a
of us were lying there. A con
s chorus of moans rose through
e branches overhead. The sur
with hands and bared arms
g, an 1 clothes literally satur
with blood, were straining every
to prepare the wounded for the
y down to Siboney. Behind
i4Gif,,on McClintock with his
c' t .
-r -, quavering chorus,
ctuated by grounL., and made spas
ic by paiu, trembled up from the
e group of wounded Americans in
midst of the Cuban solitude-the
ckiest, most heartfelt song that
an beings ever sang.
'There was ohe voice that did not
keep up with the others. It
so weak that I did not hear it un
sil the rest had finished the line:
Let Freedom ring.
'Then halting, struggling, faint, it
ated slowly:
Land-of-thl--Pilgrims'-pride,
Let Freedom-
1The last word was a woeful cry.
e more son had died as died the
ers."
Kirmess.
In some portions of Germany the fE
ess, or church mass, formerly
ed in honor of the dedication of
church, is now observed with the ii
ial character of a harvest home. R
marks the close of the year's la- I
hr and is celebrated by three days a
d music, feasting and dancing with I
prtners chosen or allotted, according
bdegree of coniliness, at the preced
g May festival.
In south Germany the end of the
hrest is marked by the sickle feast.
he last sheaf is carried in triumph
bthe barn and placed on the floor,
While the younger couples dance
round it. One half of it is then
eeked with ribbons and hunk aloft
While the other half is burned. Its
ases are treasured as a remedy for
,oeumatism and are sometimes used
imaking amulets or charms. The
-asants leave for Wodan, dr "the old
Ime," a few ears of corn and a small
a'Umber of apples, it being considered
ilncky to strip either field or tree
Idtirely bare.--Lippincott's.
A Dried-Up Lake. B.
Tulare lake, in Tulare county, once ii
h largest body of fresh water in bi
aslifornia, is now dried up. About v
1872 the lake was about 80 miles long r
'ad 35 miles wide at the greatest a
width, but its depth was never great. c
Itrigation was introduced into this I
Srgion in 1872-75, and as the water o
as drawn off from its tributaries the
take began to shrink in size. In 1895
tsi lake was only four to five miles
tide; and though it remained station
WY in its dimensions for some time,
hck of rainfall and increased demands
hirrigation upon its former tribu
ies have finally prevailed,and Lake
e has dried up. Farmers are
reclaiming the land and putting
into shape for cultivation, and
els are being made and gates put
control the waters that a rainy
, may send into the old lake
, ngineering News.
ONE O-" THE INKNOWN DEAD. A
Pathetic Incideut Which Attended the
Death of a Soldier at Montauk.
He is one of the unknown dead. A
plain wooden cross marks the grave
where he lies by his comrades on the
hillside overlooking the lake at Camp a
Wikoff, Montauk. There was none
beside him at the last to whom he was
anything more than a dying sollier,
yet he died with the smile of a hope
realized when hope was all but gone.
From the time he was brought in
there was no hope for j.im. The
deadly poison that oozes from the
Cuban soil had permeated his system.
They call it pernicious malarial fever.
It doesn't matter much what they call
a hopeless disease. The soldier alter
nated between unconsciousness and de
lirium,and all efforts to find out who he
was were unavailing. His one glim
mering of reason was when he called
in plaintive iteration for his mother.
! "Mother I mother ! Isn't she com
ing at all ?"
• , ~~~1.. .
ing at a i ' - d
Across from him was another sol- and
dier suffering from malarial fever in a inst
lighter form. His mother had come of b
on from the West, and had found him porl
already on the road to recovery. She que
sat on the edge of his cot holding his The
hand and talking in low, happy tones. incl
When the surgeon came along on his afte
rounds she rose and half turned. The trei
unknown soldier turned on his side to 1
and saw her standing there. For a can
moment there could be seen in his cot
eyes the struggle of returning con- hei
sciousness; then a great peace shone 7 i
on the wasted face. fae
"Mother," he said weakly. "You've thi
come at last."w
The woman turned and saw a pr
stranger feebly holding out his arms
to her. She stood amazed, but it was es
only a moment before the mother heart as
comprehended.
"Yes, dearl boy," she said softly. a
"I've come." a
"Lift me up," he said. "I want to h
go home. You've come to take me h
Shome, haven't yon, mother ?" b
9 She tooped over and kissed him, b
8 then sat on the edge of the cot and k
t took the emaciated form in her arms. b
He leaned back, his eyes closed, and
9 he smiled. But soon he opened his
y eyes again.
a "I don't believe I can go," he
c- whispered. "Don't you mind, mother, 4
a but - I- don't -believe -I - can-
gh His breathing grew slower and
r- softer. His head dropped back, and
tr- "I've longed for you so mother," he
ry said, and died.
he The woman laid the body down and
nd went back to her own son.--New York
his Sun.
were frequently left there v" - 7
keeping, and from time to time these thi
relics of prehistoric housekeeping are ple
unearthed. Mr. Lefroy of Toronto, hie
who is now in Ireland, is the donor or
of the good-sized piece of the cheesy- aft
looking stuff to the museum. He all
t writes:
t "I have just sent a piece of 'bog
butter' to you. I don't know whether 7
it is a thing of sufficient antiquity and to
rarity, but as the Dublin museum has gi
it a keg in a prominent position, per- qi
haps you may consider it worthy of ti
adiission to a place in your museum. tI
The keg of which this is a portion,was h
dug up recently in a bog near Dun- n
le lavin, county Kilda". The stave"
are said to have been around it, but
to have fallen off on removal. It lay t
in a peasant's garden, and the dogs t
he fed on it for a time."
ly Mr. Lefroy has also secured an
of "Ogham stone," and it will come over
he in due time. An Ogham stone is a
e stone which is occasionally found in
a- Ireland, iscribed with the "Ogham"
kys alphabet, which was current in Ire
ith land prior to the ninth century. The
ng Oghn alphaboet is of the runic variety,
ed- the characters being straight lines,
generally upright and parallel. -New
ork n........
Sun Yat Son Turns Inurlgent. . lo,
Sun Yat Sen, one of the leaders in in
the rebellion in China, is quite well to
known, not only in this country, but He
also in many of the countries of Eu
rope He has always been known in an'
China as a dangerous rebel leader,and sei
aprice has been set on his head for by
some time. In fact, his visit to this to
oe ntry wa due to the fact that he q
was being hunted by the authorities hE
in his native land.
He was in San Francisco for some w
time before any one found it out, and in
before he left he managed to organize w
several societies which, hile seem
ingly peaceful in object, were in reality S
hotbedsof rebellion. Sun Yat Sen B
was described as a cultured, pleasant
man of unusual ability and education,
and his pleasing manners and polite
onversatio won for him many friendsi
cot only amwog the Chinese residents _
of that city but also avi'dlg the Amerii r
cano . He manifested great interest f
5 in the mission work among the Chi
5 nese, and it was in that way that he
succeeded in winning so many of them
, over to his side in his schemes for the
, overthrow of the present dynasty.
Sove His adventures in England and his
:e arrest there are matters of history.
e It is the general opinion among those
g familiar with conditions in China that
id Sun Yat Sen will prove a strong
at leader, and that a rebellion under him
qy is likely to amount to more than if it
Swere under an rdinary man.-Phila
delphia Press.
&GLIMPSE OF DREYFUS.
PITIFUL LIFE'S ROUTINE OF THE
PRISONER ON DEVIL'S ISLAND. c
Narrative of the Cook on Board the 4
Dutch Ship Andalutsia. Which Recently
Visited the French Penal Colony-Ap
pearance of the Prisoner-Aged Rapidly.
Our ship, the Netherland steamship
Andalusia, was anchored off Devil's
Island recently after a Visit to Cay
Ben:e, when we were hailed from
shore. At the same time a small boat
put off, manned by soldiers. They
came alongside to ask the captain for
1 the loan of a cook while the Andalusia
- was waiting for freight. The cook of
the little garrison had broken his
e arm, they said, and our cooly was to
- teach one of their men, so that he
d might be able to attend to the kitchen
until another was'sent by the com
m- mander. . . .
The captain sent me to t.ue 1S-u , u ei
and while busy in the little kitchen yells
instructing a soldier in the mysteries fight
of broiling lamb chops and cooking leg
pork I had plenty of opportunity to cont
question Captain Dreyfus' guards.
The men, who had at first seemed dis- and
inclined to speak, became loquacious tran
after awhile. "He' was not so ill- othe
treated as those in the world seemed woo
to think; "he" is not confined; "he" itv
can go everywhere on the island. Of biv(
course, two men are always at his by I
heels. "He" gets up between 6 and whi
7 in the morning, and his first break- if I
fast consists of a cup of chocolate. If saw
the weather is good "he" goes for a
walk soon afterward and winds up his I c
promenade by a bath. ho]
"But are you not afraid he might sei
swim away or commit suicide?" I
t asked.
'"Not at all," said the soldiers, "for all
a rope is fastened to both his wrists, di
and the ends of the rope arein the o
o hands of the guard. After the bath
Le he takes his second breakfast-butter, a
bread, ham or eggs and a bottle of fo
, beer. Then he goes in for study. hb
d He reads and writes for several w
5. hours." w
hd "What kind of books has he got?"
is the soldiers looked at each other.
After awhile one of them said:
re "He is only allowed to read techni
r, cal works, but he can write whatever
he pleases. He is now writing an ac
count of his life." r
na "Must he show you what he
ua writes?"
'. "No; we read only the letters he
he desires to have .forwarded. These
are sent to the commander at Cay
nd enne,"
ork "And does the commander send
them off as received?"
"No, they are copied and the orig
;nalo are retained at Cayenne."
,t does he do besides reading
ring?"
,weeks ago we received per
from the commander to play
ith the prisoner, and he has
an inveterate gambler since.
inner-he has always soup, a
nd dessert-about 2 o'clock in
srnoon we always play baccarat
jr."
iat are the stakes?"
soldier laughed. "He has not
~ ,~ .sou and there are not probably
three ffancs on the wuole ,s'' et of t.
play for shells. The prisoner getscam
his supper at 6 in the evening--roast, oa r
or ham and a bottle of beer. Soon
afterward he goes to bed. He is not coe
allowed to have a light, you know. Tra
Only the guard on the door keeps up to l
a wood fire. He says the hours from
7 to 10 are his worst. He cannot go eq
to sleep before 10 o'clock and the life
guard is not allowed to answer any ani
questions he may put. In the day it
time we may talk to him, but only on
the most trifling subjects, the weather, ba
his health, etc. Our own country is mi
not to be mentioned." be
"Is he allowed to smoke?"
"'No; that is, I think he is not, for th
the commander does not furnish him th
tobacco." for him? L
"May I leave some cigars for him?
1 The soldier did not answer. I
r emptied my tobacco pouch and my
a cigar case on the table. I hope he got m
a what I left for him. e1
As I was about to return to my T
' ship I saw a man, followed by two
* soldiers, approaching the ostrand.
* Dreyfus ! He seemed to have heard of
9, my presence and measured me with
W questioning looks. His lips moved,
but hedid not speak. He is a middle
sized man, cadaverous and of a yel
low complexion. His eyes are deep
in in their sockets; he walks with a
alf stoop and his forehead is furrowed.
ut He is growing old rapidly, no doubt.
u Dreyfus whispered with his guard
in and, when the latter had nodded as
,nd sent, walked up to me and shook me
for by the hand. "Bring my good wishes
his to the wide world," he said, in a voice'
:ies 'alked slowly toward his hut. where
he remained standing at the door,
me waving his hand as my boat dashed
ad into the billows. Half an hour later
use we were on our way home.--Karl
em- Weinheber, Cook of the Netherlands
ity Steamship Andalusia, in Kuche und
Sen Keller.
A New Incandescent Filament. er
Dr. Auer von Welsbach, the distin- 0
guished inventor of the incandescent b,
gas light which bbars his name, an
nounces a new incandescent filament
tried in Germany with startling re
sults. This filament is made of osmium, a
one of the rarest of metals, which is
not only the heaviest of known sub
stances, but is practically infusible.
From this circumstance it derives its
value as a lighting filament. It may
s be subjected to any amount of heat 1
t and it remains unmelted. Raised to
the temperature at which platinum is
n almost instantly volatilized, it attains
•t a luminosity hitherto unknown, emit
ing a white, light of almost sunlike
[ wa.
THE RETREAT FROM MOSCOW, '
Napolien's Soldiers Fought Like Dogs
Over a Piece of UHoteflesh.
The provisions brought from hMos
cow,Russia, at all evenut such as were
attainable by the rank and file, were plant
exhausted by October 30, and horse- 1y pr
flesh was becoming almost the only Any
article of diet. If a man had secured
a little rice or a few potatoes, he con
sumed his stores, if possible, out of
s sight, or, if of an unusually generous
disposition, shared them surreptiti- of ai
a ously with one or two intimate friends. ence
,t Darker stories began to be told. One ited
y day Bourgogne, half by force, half by Any
r persuasion, had succeeded in persuad- pert
a ing another soldier to "spare him ing,
f seven half-cooked potatoes for the of t
is price of fifteen francs. As he walked
to on, lost in calculation as to the length
ie of time he might prolong existence ,
n by the aid of this addition to his sup- bu\
. plies, he missed the road. kin
"I first found out that I was
d, astray," Bourgogne says, "by the
en yells and oaths of five men who were
ies fighting like dogs; beside them was a
ug leg of horse, which was the bone of
to contention. On seeing me, one of
ds. them came up to me, saying that he
is- and his comrade, belonging to the bt
)Us transport service, had with some ki
ill- others been killing a horse behind the ta
ted wood. As they were returning
s" with their share to their
Of bivouac they had been set upon
his by three men of. another regiment,
and who wanted to take it from them; but
aak- if I would help them to defend it,they
If would give me some. Fearing the u
same fate for my potatoes,I told them U
his I could not stop, but if they would a
hold their own for a moment, I would I
ight send them some help, and so went on.
?" I "I had not gone far when I met two
men of our regiment, and told them
"for all about it. They went off in that
:ists, direction. Next day I heard that
Sthe when they reached the spot they found
ba only a dead man, ust despatched with
itter a bludgeon of firewood, which they
le of found lying by him stained with
tudy. blood. Probably the three assailants
veral had taken advantage of the moment
when one was imploring my aid to get
got?" rid of the other, who remained alone."
other. -Cornhill Magazine.
The American Way of Making War. lion
The war is practically at an end. It pros
has been one of the shortest wars on law.
record. The president sent his ulti
matum to Spain on April 20. The
American ambassador to Spain re- ing
ceived his passports on the following (for
day. This makes little over three pos
months. In that time the Americans tree
have destroyed two fleets and, in fact, wit
totally annihilated the sea power of trel
their enemy. They have captured ext
two great ports. They have defeated
the Spanish troops in the field and
have taken a province and thousands
of prisoners. Above all, they have
improvised the army with which they is
did this part of the work. Not bad of
for the interval between rent day and p1
rent day! The manner of the improvi- e1(
sation is a striking indication,in some
ways, of the American system. Most
of the ftdops who swarmed up the
slopes at Santiago and captured in
trenched positions held by seasoned
t troops and swept by artillery were
mere untrained butchers, bakers and b
* candlestick makers at the beginning a
* of the war. When they went into
tcamp at Tama they were the rawest
of raw hands. Many of their officers
were probably very little better. Their
commissariat was a practical joke.
Transports, medical service, all had t
P to be created. The chief part of their
g equipment was their spii t as free
he men, their general intelligence, their
y lifelong habit of turning their hands
y and brains to anything, and to master
o y it at uncommonly short notice. In
On one word, they had nothing at their
e, back but the system; and their whole
military organization is based on the
belief that, with this, they have the
or wherewithal for the ruggedest hour
for that time and spite can bring against
their country in time of danger.-
,, London Daily Chronicle.
T
what a Knot Is.
Probably there is no nautical term F1
more frequently used during the pres- lug I
ent naval war than the word "knot." plan
The word is synonymous of the nau- der
tical mile, or 6080.27 feet, while, as foul
every one knows, the geograpical mile will
is 5280 feet. This would make the ol
knot equal to 1 15-100 of geographical
miles, and,therefore, in order to com
pare the speed of a boat expressed in
knots with a railroad train it is neces- n
sary to multiply the speed in knots pla
by 1 15-100.
Another point to be remembered is for
that speed means a distance traveled oil
in unit time, e when one speaks of a
boat having a speed of 20 knots it is la
not necessary or proper to add per
hour, as the word itself when em
ployed as a unit of speed signifies
nautical miles per hour. A cruiser
that makes 21 knots travels 24.15
geographical miles per hour. The
fastest speed yet obtained by any boat
I is said to have been attained by the S
yacht Ellide, which is known to have a
d a record of one geographical mile in *
Im. 36 1-2s., or 32.2 miles an hour.
In fact, a recent article in one of the :
engineering journals states that a ree
1. ord of 40 miles an hour has been made ;
it by this boat.--Philadelphia Record.
at A Magnet for Surgical Work.
3n Charles Aechele, an ironworker,was
e- engaged in chipping a steel column on
e a new store front in Newark, N. J.,
is when a sliver of the steel entered his
b- eye so deeply that it could not be ex
le. tracted with forceps. Dr. Webner
its took him to the Newark Public Eye
ay and Ear infirmary anti, after a slight
eat , incision was made, the steel was drawn
Ito out by a powerful electro magnet. The
"ss sliver was three-eighths of an inch in
tins length. It is thought that the sight of
nit- the eye may be saved in spite of the
ike fact that the pupil was penetrated.
Naw York Sun.
Trespass Notices t
Samuel
Hunting of any kind on Greenwood at
plantation, likewise seining, it positive
ly prohibited under Aenalty of trespasa.
Any permission heretofore granted i Att
now revoked. No exceptions.
CujA. H. REED.
From and after this date all bhunting
of any kind on Ambrosia and Independ At t
ence plan'atioa is positively prohib
ited under penalty of treeepassing. 131t a
Any one found on these places without
permission will be considered trespas- :
iug, and prosouted to the full extent l hl'
of the law. S. D. BARROW.
WARNI' G.
e The public is hereby warned against
buinug wood, posts or timber oi any
kind from tenants on Ogden and Oak- Ph
e Icy plantation.
e MRs. I. L. MAI1THWS.
a Oallc
f WARN ING. or
e The publio is hereby warned agaius,
Ie buying wood, posts or timber of anJ
ne kind from tenants on "Live Oak" plan At
he tation. E. L. NnwsEA.
eir Trespass Notice. O
Ion From and after this date hunting tico
)ut with dogs or firearms, also seining on .
iey the Green Oaks, Seven Pines, batter'
the white, Home and the Carr plantatioli
s is positively prohibited under penalty
uld trepassing. Any one found on thest
uld plaoes without permission will be oen
on. sidered trespassing and prosecuted t Di
on. the full extent of the law. F,
C. C . HA ILTON o
that
that Warning.
und The public is warned against buying
with ire wood,posts or timber from tenants
they on Rosedowv, Texas and IIazlewood *
with plantations. JAs. P. BOWMAN.
Lants -
sent From and after this date, all hunting
o get of any kind on my places, Solitude and *
ne." Swamp Tract is positively prohibited
under penalty of trespass. Any one
,found on these p'aces without permis
ar. sion will be considered trespaseing and
d. It prosecuted to the full extent of the
,r s on law. W. B. SITH.
3 ult i
The From and after this date, all hunt
- re ilg of any kind on my place, Pinuoeale
wing (formerly owned by J. S. Griffin) io
three positively prohibited under penalt of
ricans trespass. Any one found on this place
ct, ithout permission will e cousidred
werof trespassing and prosecuted to the full
ptured extent of the law. W. W. LEAKE, Js.
ffeated W. W. LAB, Ji.
us and All hunting or fishing on the Afton
y have Villa, Layson and Maxwell plantations
h have ie positively ptrohibite4 under penalty
ot bad of trespass. Any one found on these
Lay and places without permission will be con
np rovi- sidered tres!,pasig and prosecuted to
n some the full extent of the law.
L 80Rns. VIRIGINIA Z. HOWELL.
Registered Jersey Bulls.
The registered Jersey bulls, Gov.
Foster and Palona's Tamerlane, may
be found at W. L. Stirling's and at Pe
can Grove re'pectively. For prices
and particulars, apply to W. L. Stril
ing, or R. M. Leake.
From ard after this date, all bunt
Ing and fishing on the Cottage planta
tion is positively 'prohibited under pen
alty of trespassing. Any one found on
this place without permission will be
considered trespassing, and prosecuted
to the full extent of the TLERw.
Hunting of all kinds, with dog or hi
e gun, on the Rosebauk, Pecan and In
dian Mound plantations, is hereby
prohibited under penwlty of trespass
SPersons found so engaged on any.eo
these places willbepros cuted to the i
full extent of the law.
MRa. Ri, BRLAND.
m From and after this date, all bunt
a- ing of any kind on the Pecan Grove
" plantation is positively prohibited nun
u- der penalty of trespassing. Anyone
as found on this place without permiseion
le will be considered trespassing and pros
he seuted to the full extent of the law.
cal R. M. LEAxU.
in From and after this date, a'l hunt
sing of any kind on the Greenwood
ts plnttion is positively prohibited
under penalty of trespassing. Anyone
led found on this place without permission
will be considered tresporiog and
f la emzted to the full extent of the
ner law Miss S.MAITHEWB.
FF. H. Tenney, .
...Deuler in....
"C Groceries, 3
E Dry Conds,
- Boiat, Shoes,
Hats, Notions, =2V
TI1NWA U HARDWARE.t ,
ST. J. St D aERSON,
S-i atimaker
ye an* Jeweler.
ht .
rn Gold and Bilt r Soldering a
he Fpecialt . rark guarantu
in 4 teedl. O,. 'te j'upfloiicc ,
of4 0
he T.T.rtA ( y f¶it.t,1t.011AA
V $#
Samuel . Powell, John C. Stone,
St. 0Franisvlrla.' Clinton, L.
POWELL & STONE,
Attorneys - at - Laws
St. Francisville, La.
ROBERT SEMPLE,
AttorfI'Y - ait - Law.
Will practicte in the courts of the
13th uld 1 ith j licial districts. Dir
~g vc^ ti, , wail meet clients at the
ý rt ' liouse in Bayou Sara whenevte
Pci T Coupoo Pos-office, La
DR. A. F. BARROW,
k Physician and Surgeon,
St. Francisville, La.
Office in Leaks building. Telephone
a:lls answered from either Kilbourne's
or 3umford'' drug stores.
us ROBT. C. WICKLIFFE,
an Attorney . at - Law.
ST. FRAxlISIs , LA.
Office near court house. Will prac
ing Lice in the 1Nth Judicial and Federal
on "ourts.
tter W. RICHARDS PERCY,
salt Attorney.at-Law &. Notary Publil,
heet ST. IFRANCISVIrlIE, LA.
0'n' Will practice in the 13th Judicial
d 'District, 4th Circunit; Supreme and
Federal Courts. Office in Bank Build"
SIDNEY POWELL, D.D.S.,
Ding DENTIST,
wood ., Ys olrille, Louisiana,
Ii prepared to do all work in
uting his line. Office at residence.
Ib gbn e -_ . ..-.-
A. T. Gastrell,
IABDWAlE, STOYES, WAGON
ia OCABBIAGE WOOD WOREL
Mouse Furnishlng Coods.
01P8, WOODS' l0oWlia IA.
CHSla, HAT RAKES, SASH,
BLINDS, DOORS, ETC.
JOSEPH STERN,
....Doalor oa....
1 General
oerohandie*.
hUeI Stable In Cmnaection With Star,.
0 supply of Horses and Mules for ssla
,atisfaction lGuarsateed.
JOS. STERN,
]oot of HW il.
) L. P. KILBOURNE,
Druggist .
nt- and Chel Iast
on
be eR Doyal and Prosperity btrMts,
ted St. Franoisvile, La.
or p3rar4ptions carefully compounded.
Iiu- oioe selection of Drugs, Patent
.eby Medioines, and Notions.
the Fresh Carden Seed on Hand
T. W. RAYNHAM,
runt- .
Cyon ontractor
.and Builder,
Swood Sah, Doors and Dressed Lumber kept
ibited eonstantly on hand at shop,
near residence,
g. and
of the
Al. prices to Suit the Times.
oeLlveree, Feed A Sales Stabloe,
oe-" .ee"
Sa Garay o sosn
Jas. . .agearl,
1- .....eed les tblo..
: RLEA 118 eMARKE
oiFESe 3EATS, ON ET WEIGhT
.0EAP PRICES.
*i,