Newspaper Page Text
T EffR' FINISH , you, ysl ºýýýntiatjoYS, to greet you, r.ats-nv •a to ethe hanu l etl 'ia t lands ot thsat 0 eyea grow wet we aOeetyJu' Y -- g _peen h etosee you; ...ashing;ton Star. Srlgntiso Trenches. ale shared hardships really shared them, nuot the same places andl same fights, but gnuie th last hardtack, drank d $antiago water from "teen, lain side by side he trenches for days aund Ve, and had your shirt same bullet that grazed e you have done all this ou get to have a feeling is hard to describe; not brother!y feeling, but a likiag, the whole mean 'isconveyed by the words, ,e pretty rough wlln enn tines, in a good-hearted bone fellow is lazy ani d einthete-t and let the , do all the work about o her fellow kicks; he goes t, grabs his buuky by the ,tches him out. "Get to ay son of a gun," he says, g pretty nearly like it. not mean anything, that. fellow swears back and puts e scrap, perhaps, but he ds. It is the buuky's way. onecase of two buukies really t and scrapping, however, d be pnt on record. It hap n Private Doogan and Pri of the -th infantry braised one another "for it was all about a Spaniard Santiago, and the like of it hppened before and is not happen again. The story SmPrivate Doogan himself. Doogan au3 Private Henry ' gnearthe fire at the end of y street the other day, onions. They had a good eetbwveen them and were industriously at the pungent with the:r knives. A huck n appeared at the other camp, aunl Doogan looked maid: "There's that fellow here the other day. Go over buy some fish for dinner, yourself," said Henry. "I ea continental for fish." ii _yez lazy son of a gun! Git o I" t - condemned if I do. Go v ed with Private Henry's a When he was :idr of hearing )oogan vsid: 'i''s a mighty I ow, Henry is, only he's too t P-y. I: b.on my bunky the war broke out, and on foine togither. Little i likethis happen now and agin, w, but they don't amount to But we had the hottest ever see onct. We wuz l. How was it? Why it was eqSantiago in that fight with iards. You see we'd been a 'pretty much all day, in that Cuban climatd. The whole 'the sun was blisterin' hot, o' a senddint in the afternoon sdme down and we wuz wet t through as suddint as you About night-toime we halted. oa hardtack and took out our d scraped the mud off our e're in for a good shlape the bunky,' sez Oi, anld we hot' on tehed out on the ground, not for not'in' but to shlape. The g Oi knowed somt one wnz 'Us to git up and move. It pkh dark and we hadn't been 'mora'n a couple o' hours may ap, bunky,' sez Oi; 'orders of 9 to march.' Henry were in' like a dead man, so I give re shake and say: ';it up, you '' 'tgbone,' sez Oi; 'quit your y' 'and git ready to march.' Wan,' sez 'ee, and leave me Y 'sez'ee. He was still ashlape, were, Mo Oi rublbed his ears =bted: 'Git up, vou son of a ms0i; what are vez afther ex- h ? To shlape ally night whin e bMas ome to march'?' Wid that '1 abound ul and wuiz ready in c ' , but he wluz in a mighty bad I: Henry were. We marehed in 1 hborhood o' six hours, may- t i~1ngh the stinking mud that r 'Ptoyour middle, and Henry i nid word the whole toime. I Ie stopped they set us a-dig- i benches, and abloit the brak o' SWere a-shtandin' up to our i 'em, wid the wather around Henry never sail a word _holetime, though I'd bin a-re on things, pleasant-loike. SA way, whin things don't go to lay something pleasant ýe rfni. But Heumy, he shuts leeeby the mumu face on him Was blame I aggravated. ell, just about the brak o' day sta begun to whistle all around We knowed the Spaniards wuz o, though we couldn't see a latungle. Whin it growed We made out where the Span es wuz, but we couldn't see he')agoes. We kep' a-pump ing at 'em, wit' the bullets a-flyin' around above us, for all the world A like a swarm of hornets, whin Henry shtuck his head up a bit to see what he could see. Whist-a bullet went frc right along by the side o' his face. It an didn't touch him quite, but it burned mi like a redhot blister on the side o' his G. phiz. as " 'Now,bad cess tothe son of a gun tr of a Spaniard that foired that,'sez 'ee; fo 'if Oi ketch a sight o' him Oi'll pump fu 'im so full o' lead he won'tknow what n knocked 'im into next week!' Thim n wuz the first words he'd spoke since sc the night afore. Well, he stood up, iH loike a idjit, a-loadin' his gun. Just n then we see a Spaniard pop his head f up, an' whist!-a bullet cut through g PHeury's hat. ti "'He near got yez that time, g bunky,' sez Oi. a " 'The nixt toime the wicked Span- t ish beggar shows his head,' sez 'ee, 'yOi'll fix 'im,' sez 'ee. t " 'Oi'll bet yez Oi hit him first,' sez (Oi. e ' 'What'll you bet?' soz 'ee, savage k oike. " 'Oh, anything yez plase,' sez Oi. ' 'Half the month's pay,' sez Oi. d " 'Oi'll take yez up,' sea 'ee. rt "So we shtood there a-waitin', the bot' of us, for that Spaniard to show i his head agin. Our guns wuz sighted on the place we thought he'd appear, ot you know, and our fingers wuz on the a triggers. We waited in that same n- p1oition for two minutes, mayhap, s, though it seemed like half an hour. Finally, all a suddint, we see a head. ch The very same moment I fired, and ed the son of a gun of a Spaniard dropped <d down, picked sure enough that toime. he " 'Begorra, bunky,' sez Oi, 'yez ut owe me half the month's pay,' sez Oi. " 'The mischief, Oi do,' sez 'ee. he 'Oi shot the son of a gun, mesel.'' to " 'That you did not,'sez Oi. 'Didn't Oi foire the very minute he showed i: hisself, and didn't he fall down of a Lat. hape?' S"'What's yoz talkin' about,' sez t 'ee. 'Didn't Oi foire the instant I see th, him?' sez 'ee. me " ' Iayhap yez foired,' sez Oi, 'but ag 'twas me that kilt 'im, anyhow,' sez te: Oi. br " 'Ye loie, ye read-headed son of ag an Oirishman,' sez 'ee. k " 'What's that,ye dirty blackguard,' to sez Oi. 'Oi don't take the loie from pl auny wan,' sez Oi. 'Come out o' this ditch and we'll see who's lyin',' sez I, Oi. "Wit' that the bot' on us climb li out'n the trench, t'rew down our guns and squared off. We had it hot for a few minutes, the bullets a-flyin' around, but niver touching wan of us. n e Finally, Henry landed wan alongside r t of me face. It made me biling mad, V it did, and Oi forgot me tactics and t r wint for him. Oi slugged him wan I d on the tip o' the jaw and he went w down of a hape. " '(it up,' sez Oi, foldin' me arms, r, 'and we'll see who hit the Spaniard first.' 'I "Henry jumped up and we went at it agin. Begad, we drew more blood it out'n wan anither in them few minu tes thin the Sraniards did in the to whole war, but we didn't decoide the matther, or prisintly a big sarjintcome 's along. g "'What do you mane,' sez 'ee 'to ty be afther foighting ache ither. Brake 0o away there,' sez 'ee, knockin' about ky wit' his gun b'twane us. 'OtGit down nd in the ditches there, and shoot the tie Spaniards,' sez 'ee. in, "We picked up our guns, shapish to like, and jumped down into the est trench. The sarjint stood a moment 'uz watchin' us, and thin he said: as " 'If I catch you two mugs--' He ith niver said anything further than that, a- for just then a mauser ball hit him in hat the stomach and he were down in the ole grass a-groanin' and clutchin, and bit Lot, in'. In . "Well, sir, we niver said anything more about the dead Spaniard the rest o' the day. The enemy kep' us pretty busy till toward night, when we wuz wit'drawn from the firin' line, and whin we got to our quarters we didn't give a rap foir nothin', but to get some shlape. It's me private opinion, sir, that we bot' kilt that Spaniard, but we've niver cared 'particular about arguing the matther out-" "Begorra, Henry, that's a foine fish yez have there. Eighteen cints? Begad, it's dear, but it's worth the price to git a taste o' say food. Oive just been telling the gentleman about s our scrap down in Cuba." e "I warrant you made yourself out a e regular Fitzsimmons," said Henry. n "Sometime, sir, when he ain't around r you shall hear my side of the affair." -Walter Strong Edwards, in New e York Commercial Advertiser. The Glowworm's Ray. t The glowworm's light is said to 4 have been shown to be due to the emission of rays similar to Roentgen's. Three hundred glowworms were caught near Kioto and placed before i 1 photographic plates screened from the light by several thicknesses of paper, -together with plates of brass, copper t and aluminum. A piece of cardboard y with a hole in it was placed between the metal and the photographic plate, and for two days the arrangement ý' was kept in a chamber sheltered from r all foreign lights. On developing the 1 plate, however, it was found to be d blackened, except the part opposite ý- the hole in the cardboard. The rays e. of the glowworm would appear, bow ;o ever, to penetrate metal and excite t luminosity in cardboard. When there ts is nothing between the sensitive m plate and the glowworm the rays are said to behave like ordinary light, but sy in traversing some metals and card ed board they seem to acquire properties uz like that of X-rays, or it may be that a the ordinary glowworm emits X -as ed well as ordinary rays. This account ºn- savors somewhat of the improbable, ee and in regard to the latter part of it thare may be a third explanation. AN ALASKAN WONDERLAND. A Mecca for Naturalists-Skeletons of I ColoASal MonsterR-Fantastic Mirages. "Along the coast region southeast A from Yakutat bay, between the beach the and the St. Elias Alps, lies a most re- hout markable tract in Alaska," remarked ramn G. W. Stephens of Seattle. "I went and ashore at this bay during a summer trail trip to Juneau a few years ago, and I in p found a veritable wonderful that can Wit furnish a large amount of material for " museums, Naturalists will there F find many interesting problems to thet solve. That section of the country star is mostly a low,sandy flat, almost bare was next to the coast, but covered pro- strs fusely nearer the foothills with a firs growth of timber and brush, amidst sni the lakes swamps, and glades. Grass fac grows luxuriantly, as there is an wit annual flood. In the summer season wag the game comes down out of the ' mountains and browses on the vege- Yo tation in those low flats. Some of sai Z the bears are of immense size. But the I saw no deer of any kind. Skeletons an' e of some gigantic animal that lived far ages ago are found in a good state of . preservation in some of these long, ca; low flats. Jaw-bones twenty inches pe in diameter and three feet in length me have been found there. Ribs sixteen in w feet long have been exhumed. That of d animal must have been a monster. fu r, "But the most wonderful things Ji i ae a seen in the mirages during the w ne days and twilights. Over this waste w P, of sand, mud, and gravel are scattered in ir. stranded trees, logs, stumps and B d. snags. The mirages produce entrane- gi ud ing pictures of mimic lakes and water- si ed courses fringed with vegetation mirror- b te. ed upon the surface, while the grassy Tez mounds, stumps, trees, logs and roots s )i. which have an actual existence are d ee. distorted and magnified into the d shapes of ungainly animals and rep n't tiles of enormous proportions. The a ed foes and mists from the seas are a a driven across these wastes by the winds, and as the objects I have men- J sez tioned loom up in the flying vapors i see they appear to be living creatures I moving rapidly through the air, and but again plunging through the sea at a sez terrific rate of speed, while huge breakers roll over them and dash them of against the mountains. One scarcely knows which to wonder at the most,or rd,' to think the strangest, the rom phenomenon of these mirages this with these horrible images, sez or the actual remains of the gigantic animals."-St. Louis Repub .imb lican. an Generosity Among Soldiers. fi The sight of the war cured the writer of one notion--that the military th professeon may tend to make those no who follow it brutal and cruel. On wE the contrary, it seems to make them an more generous and kind. It is not tri to be supposed that it is war that or makes them so; it is probable that the th removal of the professional soldier tb 1 from the field of competition for exist- a ence among independent workers and fo t "business men" leaves him little ce d chance to fall into that hungry and fox- sf _ like instinctive hostility to one's fel lows that is developed by the social oc ie struggle for existence. All soldiers, L whether officers or privates, seem to s1 be engaged, on the other hand, in a ti kind of competition of generosity. It n Sis a great point with them-a kind of h invariable rule of conduct-to be ,n ready to share what they have with e others. This rule of generosity does b not, of course, save them from doing cruel things occasionally. They have t he not ordinarily a very delicate sensi nt bility to one another's pain;, they do a not seem to waste much sympathy on one another's physical sufferings. e They bear their own without com in plaint, and seldom ask favors when he they are suffering. But when it comes it- to "grub" or shelter, they will give a comrade, or even a stranger, better than they have themselves, if they: est possibly can. And the work of an officer, even in the most active qnd ty terrible campaigning, seems to be nz easily consistent with the finest man n't liness and most delicate sympathy. And yet we should not encourage war in the expectation of cultivating fine butr, sentiments any more than we should out invite yellow fever epidemics simply because a yellow fever epidemic de ish velops fine cases of heroic self-sacri its? flee.--Boston Transcript. the-- ...,. Joe Jefferson's Birch Bark Check. wa There is a bank in a little country try town up in the mountains of New eff Hampshire, as the story is told, which in holds a check of Joseph Jefferson for mh $2. The check is in a frame, under th glass, and will probably never be seen tw by Mr. Jefferson. It was written while se the veteran actor was out on a hunt- gr ing and fishing trip. While following the road on foot to a town he came in te sight of a farmhouse. Here, he a thought, was an opportunity to hire a ar wagon and team to carry him the re- w Smainder of the way. But to his sur- nl prise he found he did not have the $2. o g Not a piece of paper could be found. So the old comedian took out his knife, P r cut a wquare piece of white birch bark ci 1 from one of the trees near by and U a wrote a check for the amount on that. , When the little country village was a t reached this unique check was taken h Sto the bank by the farmer and immedi e ately cashed. The bank had it framed e and keeps it as a souvenir of the great ae ctor. _Portland Argus. Veteran Working Implements. i SG. C. Barton of Brownsville, Mo., .e has a scythe snath that he has used I re every haying season for forty-five r e years, and it is in good condition now. it He also has a cart built in 1869, and a d- pair of wheels built the same season, es the tires of which have never been at reset, and do not need it. While Mr. as Barton was telling this he was sitting t on a little bench, built over a hundred Le, years ago, such as the blacksmiths of it that date used to sit upon to straighten nails.-New York Tribune. JIMMY WALLACE. Tres E* TVonderful Thing at Camp Wikoff From a Boy's Standpoint. A woman and her little son went to the camp at Montauk, L. I., and for Hunting c hours he gazed at the strange pano- plantation, I rama, forgetting hunger and weariness ly prohibite, and barely speaking a word. On the Any permiei train home she asked him what scene now revokei in particular had impressed him most. Without hesitation he replied: "Ohl Jimmy Wallace I" From anc For a moment she was surprised; of any kind then she realized that from a boy's ence plan'sa standpoint Jimmy Wallace probably ited under was the greatest attraction in that Any one fo strange city of tents by the sea. She permission first saw him early in the afternoon, a ipg, and pi small black boy, with a sweet, childish of the law. s face, gazing up into an officer's eyes z with adoring approbation. The officer a was saying: The pub e "Now, Jimmy, don'tyou do it again. Tig wo - You gave me an awful scare when they kind frm f said that they could not find you. I ley planta it thought you had gotten on some train s and been carried off. Don't wander d far from the camp !" ýf And Jimmy touched his ridiculous ;, cap in true military style and scam s pered away. The pul h Later the woman found him adjust- buying we n ing his suspender on the one button kind from at of his ragged trousers, and for a bliss- tation. ful ten minutes she and her son had ge Jimmy all to themselves. At first he he was shy and gazed at his visitors From te with his gentle eyes just as any un- ith dog ed important little boy might have done. with dog nd But presently he lost himself in the theitree ic- glory of his achievements and posses- white, Hi er- sions, and then, indeed, was Jimmy is positiv or- brilliant. la trespw tsy "I did live down in Tampa," he places w ots said, "but I didn't have no folks, so sidered t are de Ninth cavalry dey took me long wid the full d the dem to Cuba." ep- "I suppose you were in the battle Che at Santiago ?" the woman asked, with are a smile. The p the "Yessum, I was, an' I didn't hide. fire woo en- I stood 'long by de colonel all de time. on Rose ors I saw de Spaniards all covered up wid plantati ares leaves like de trees, an' dey shot and at us like murder. An' sometimes dey From ýt a yell out. 'We'se Cubans.' an' den of any l uge when we uns went up close dey'd fire Swamp iem on us. Yessum, an' I wasn't scared. under p ely I just ran after the colonel." found o t,or After a pause he went on, looking sion wil the regretfully down at his airy costume : prosecu ages "I'se got a suit just like de boys, law. ges, an' a gun, an' a little Spanish pony the named Buffalo Bill, an' a mule named pub- Jack, an' I'se got a little tent all fur ing of myself up on de hill by de colonel's- (formel an'-an'-dat's what I got," with a positive final burst of pride. trespas i the The woman could not believe all withou itary that he told her, for he was certainly trcepaE those not more than 10 years old, so she extent On went up to one of the Ninth cavalry them and questioned him. Yes, it was all All . not true, the trooper said, but he had left Villa, that out one item more touching than all Villa, t the the rest. While he was standing by isos ldier the colonel in that battle of Santiago f treE exist- a bullet went clean through his left places s and foot, and when he was lifted up to be the re little carried back with the wounded, he d fox- said : i's fel- "I'se glad I got de ball 'stead of de social colonel." Th diers, When the woman left camp at night Fste em to she spied Jimmy Wallace in a side- e i, in a tracked parlor car eating a slice of befo y. It watermelon which almost hid him from canf md of her view. and 1 bo be 'Good-night, Jimmy," she called, g, a with "but why did you not tell us about y does how you were wounded ?" Fr doing Down went the watermelon and all g a have the white teeth showed. tion sensi- "Why, I done forgot dat 1" he said, atly hey do and again attacked the melon. this thy on "Poor little fellow !" she murmured. ansi erings. "Poor i" exclaimed her little boy, t th , com- 'Why, I'd rather be Jimmy Wallace when than President McKinley I" give a Fungi That Kill Locusts. better The Colonial Bacteriological insti- di f they tute, attached to the Cape of Good d of an Hope (South Africa) department of r ive qnd agriculture, has issued its report for thee to be the year 1896. Though belated in ap st man- pearance it is a valuable document as apathy. indicating the importance of the work age war carried out at the institute. Besides aa fine the elaborate experimental investiga- 1 should tions which have been conducted on ag simply rinderpest, we note various directions plai mic de- in which the activities of the staff der If-sacri- have been engaged. For example, no fon less than 1039 culture tubes of a lo- wil cust destroying" fungus have been for- 01 eek warded to different paris of the coun u ntry try, and the reports received as to the o ew eficacy of this fungus are encourag dwhich ing. In order that the beet results n rson for may be obtained, it is recommended pl , under that the Veldt should be inoculated a b eseen twice a year, as the cold of winter ten hile seems to act deleteriously on the fun- . oont w gus.Mallein and tuberculin, foy the de- . came in tection of glanders and conedmption, c r, he are also now produced at the institute t ire a and arrangements were being made, th e re- when the report before us is drawn his e ur- np, for the elaboration of anti-venom ethe $2. ous serum, as well as an antitoxin for me found. tetanus. The staff' is, the director : hi i knife, points out, lamentably insufficient to irch hbark carry on even the work at present r by and undertaken by the institute, and the ton that. appeal for more assistance is certainly alags was amply justified by the record of what 3 s a taken has been already done by the depart I immedi- ment.--Nature. it framed the great Curious Work of Bausy Bees. One of the most trying processes of - -the industry is the making of wax. nents. Bees gorge themselves with honey, ille, Mo., then hang themselves up in festoons has used or curtains to the bive, and remain forty-five quiescent for hours. After a time tiontnow. wax scales appear, forced out from the 869, and a wax pockets. The bees remove these ne season, scales with their naturalforceps,carry i' ever been the wax to the mouth and chew it for While Mr. a time, thus changing it chemically. Ras sitting Wax-making is therefore an expen a hundred aive industry, for it costs not only the ksmiths of time of the workers, but it is said straighten that it takes twenty-one pounds of honey to make one pound of wax. Trespass Notices 9 Hunting of any kind on Greenwood plantation, likewise seining, is positive ly prohibited under penalty of trespass. Any permission heretofore granted is now revoked. No exceptions. CHAs. H. RzED. From and after this date all hunting of any kind on Ambrosia and Independ Ati eonce plan'ation is positively prohib ited under penalty of tresspaseing. Any one found on these places without 13th permission will be considered trespass- ug ing, and prosecuted to the full extent BLrl of the law. S. D. BaRRow. rep WARNIRG. Po The public is hereby warned against bu'iog wood, posts or timber or any kind from tenants on Ogden and Oak- P1. Iley plantation. Mns. I. L. MAiTHmwS r -- Om WARNING. or The publio is hereby warned againes, buying wood, posts or timber of any n kind from tenants on "'ive Oak" plan Ai s- tation. E. L. NzwsSUn. 1e Trespass Notice. n- From and after this date hunting tic e with dogs or firearms, also seining on " he the Green Oaks, Seven Pines, batter e white, Home anai the- Carr plantationl 3 is positively prohibited under penalty Al of trespassing. Any one found on these he places without permission will be c n. so sidered trespassing and prosecuted t D id the full extent of the law F C. AI. BAnLTON tie - ith Warning. The publio is warned against buying fire wood,poste or timber from tenants ei on Rosedown, Texas and Hazlewood " i plantations. JAs. P. BowMAN. ley From and after this date, all hunting len of any kind on my places, Solitude and a fire Swamp Tract is positively prohibited ed. under penalty of trespass. Any .one 1 found on these p'aces without permis-` ing sion will be considered trespasing and ne prosecuted to the full extent of the )ys, law. W. B. SMITH. From and after this'date, all hunt. fur ing of any kind on my place, Pinedale 's- (formerly owned by J. S. Griffin) is h a positively prohibited under penalt of trespass. Any one found on this place all without permission will be cousidered inly trespassing and prosecuted to the full. she extent of the law. .alry \V. W. LeARs, JR. s all All hunting or fishing on the Afton a all Villa, Tlayson and Maxwell plantations g by is positively prohibited under penalty tiag of trespass. Any one found on these left places without permission will be con to be sidered trespassing and prosecuted to he the full extent of the law. , he Sl VIRGIZIA 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 respectively. For prices and particulars, apply to W. L. Stril ing, or R. M. Leake. From and atfer this date, all hunt 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 fall extent of the law. Th loaABD BuolE. Hunting of all kinds, with dog or gun, on the Iosebank, Pecan and In dian Mound plantations, is hereby S rohibited under penalty of trespass ereonse found so engaged on any of these places will be prosecuted to the Stall extent of the law. La Ms.. M. BILAND. a- rom and after this date, all hunt n g of any kind on the Pecan Grove us plantation is positively prohibited un aff der penalty of trespassing. Anyone no found on this place without permission lo- will be considered trespassing and pros ,r- oated to the full extent of the law. n. M. LsUKu. sg- From and after this date, all hunt ts lug of any kind on the Greenwood Led plantation is positively prohibited ed under penalty of trespassing. Anyone ter found on this place without permission an- will be considered trespassing end uasdntad to ,. full .extent of the de- law Miss S.MIs E's. on. ---1------- - F. H. Tenney, w ....Dealer in.... I Crocerles, j Dry Coeds, Boots, Shoes, :[ S Hats, Notions, . TINWARE HARDWARE. S s T. J. HENDERSON, * Watchmaker : * and Jeweler. >r * Gold and Silver Soldering a S spv eialty. Work gusran teed. Opposite poetoffce, id BT.S FIA4: CAj.I.., IOUlalANA of AA M Iamuel J. Powell, John H. Stone, St. lranoisilla Clinton, LM. POWELL & STONE, Attorneys - at . Law, St. Francisyille,' La ROBERT SEMPLE,.. Attorney - at - Lawr, Will practice in the codrte of the 13th and 14th judicial districts. Dur ing vacation, will meet clients at the Burton House in Bayou Sara whenev*e requltbte I. Point C.dupee Postoffico, La It DR. A. F. BARROW, Physician and Surgeon, St. Franciaville, La. Omee in Leake building. Te1efr' -" _ ,Jls answered from either Kilbuarne' or Mumford's drug stores. I OBT. C. WICKLIFE, a Attorney - at - Law, sT. FRANCIYILLBT, -TA. ;-.,. Office near court honue 'ra aLU tice in the 1Nth Judioii eral er W. RICH fl'[i p RCY., Attorney.at-Law & Notary Pybli'o, Lest ST. } uANCl.tLLhE, LA. n W 1 prictice iu the 13th Judicial Dieslict, 4th Circit; Supreme and F tral Courts.. Office itn Bank Build. SIDNEY POWELL, D.D.S, g DENTIST, jute ood k Franisville, - Louisiana,. Is prepared to do all work in ting his line. Office at residence. and _ 'e A. T. Gastrell, nd I IWAUR, STOY-$, WAGON the ai OABBIAGI WOOD WORK. g Mouse Furnishing Coodls. iale r, WOODW roWING IA. " n) isi R , IAT HAIES, SASH, place LINDS, .DOORS, ETC. Ired - full. JOBEPH STERN,. Ja....Dealer 1m .. Afton General tion IMerohafldio :nalty these t' stl It Cnnuetli With Strt. ted to supply of Horses anc Mules for slae. ktisfaction Guar.ateed. SJOS. STJERO, Foot of hilL. Gov, __ __ _ __ __ _ __ _ lat Pe, L. P. KILBOURNE, Druggist plant- and Cheirst,_ oueseoi Royal aun Prosperi(t Street, euted . ranolrlue, ao. og or hreseiptiois carefully compounded. a and In- oio selection of Drugs, Patent hereby Medicines, and Notions. to thFresh Carden Seed on Hand T. W. RAYNHAM, n G rrove >, Contractor eLaw'. and B il Ierm rrohibited soutan hand at ey .: :::: •- rEUTSCH, :-" Live---Peed A Sales Stablo,.o lon nS , s:ayou Elara, ; I i e.a ,a .: ". ii; .... ........ ....... .. ..:: .. ........ *...... r LEiAS the MARKEI st e --WITH vllANA FRISI MEATS, HONEST WEIGESt\ M W CREAP PRICE.L