Ij - -- r - - frIJiilfmfcJlT1M1r7 nim HE ARIZONA SILVER BELT FFCtU IMTKIt OF flllAfiilxtV Saturday bctober IS 1894 FOHUST Tb Jovetdlrieit Ucrouiln Interested lo Viv Ibiportmit ulfl The aeMutt t ifovcrnment in MtUiii lipftvt cv rUnn Inrge tract of llie ptlWl forest lntulh In tho wcttvs reMUTea was outlined recently In Uicfco columns Lilrcwlse the value tof tlieMj vast forests Vrtis referred to In their relation io the jfvont hrlirattag systems of the west and thcii utility In supplying future timber demands As tjief em remarked tho mere ereatlnr of these reserves vus lint an incomplete measure unless wmo permanent sys tem of federal forestry was also soon adopted At present the reserves are under the control of tho land ofilco of the department of tho interior subject billy to such limited cafe as ts agents cap bestow which is slight lmst summer tho army was sought by the secretary of the interior for details to protcet f rom depredations onie of the reserve Tho actinp judge ndvo cato gave an opinion that it wasnot law ful to employ troop upon sneh duty un less exprely directed by congress Under this decision it seems that tho details that hnvo hitherto guarded ex cept during tho winter months tho Yellowstone Yosomitc Sequoia and Gen Grant park will bo withheld this year A bill now before congress In refer ence to the public forests authorizes the secretary of war to furnish details of troopatpon requisition of the secre tary of the interior to protcot those reservations But why not carry tho subject a stop further as has been sug gested by forest advocates and reach the heart of tho question Substitute n bill placing the public forests that arc withdrawn from public entry by settlers absolutely under tho control of the army Commence at tho begin ning and make forestry a department at West Point with a portion of tho conveniently situated highlands as an experimental station Provide for as signing a portion of the graduates of the academy each year to command a specially enlisted forestry guard to carry out a system of scientific and practical foreetry upon these reserva tions It is ventured to predict the more this plan is considered the more one will And in it a simple and logical solution of a pending vital question It furnishes a new field of activity to the army it insures fidelity to tho national interests It would give permanency and capability at once to the forestry syslein MUD BATHS tin Novel Treatment Undergone by In valid la Italy Thore is nothing particularly entic ing in the sound of mud baths and those who have tried them at Hamburg and other places find them not agree able as experiences however o Readout they may be as a treatment At most spas the process is simply that of pour ing mud into ones bath but at some Italian bnths to which tho fashionably sick are tnrning a traveler who has taken them rinds that they are quite different The mud iu a very hot and almost drv form mneh of the consist vnrv of brick clay is applied locally to those parts of the body which are af fected The patient lies on a straw bed on which is placed a sheet Th attendant having ascertained the snf fering parts daubs them to the thick ness of several inches with the mud The Invalid covered w ith a hot sheet or blankets lies for half an hour por spiring freely then gets into a hot sul phur bath is thoroughly cleansed rubbed dry owl returns to a ted arti ficially wanned where the perspiration continues for an hour or so longtr This treatment is repeated almost every morning for abont twenty day tnd is of eat value in all manifesta tions of rheumatism The mud is dut ut of a mountain a few miles from the -pa and brought to the establishment rnd allowed to soak for several year tn tanks of boiling sulphur water until required for use TiiMryc R Tfeififtki to lied A doctor profession requires him if he seeks convenience and comfort to have two telephones one in his ofBee and one in hto bedroom As anyone wholutsoto pay tribute to the tele phone knows says the lltteburgh Tele graph their charge hardly represent Hie progress that has been made in other lines in the world incheapciiiu immoditfcs Jttt necessity is th mother of invention and a doctor 1 tho East End fvitiiid a why to have tli mvenience of two telephones and jo nly pay for one lie has his tele iihine hung upon hooks in his oillec the connections lelng made by tht telephone coming in contact wltii an lectrTe board which he has had con ducted He lso Imss wires run tbbis bedroom where another electric board has been placed The doctor may be said to take his telephone to bed with him every night He takos it from the hooks in his office curries it under his arm up to his bedroom and places it Upon Hie hooks there Should any calls eomt daring the night ho can answer them- without leaving his room thereby getting the use of two telephones for the priee df onov Tho Dolphins Changing Colors it is a popular impression among m st people that while a dolfrttin is in its death struggle it changes color1 to iltuost every hue of the rainbow While making a trip by water from jSVtV York to New Orleans a few months ago says a traveler in the St Louis llepublie the mate of the vessel caught a dolphin early one morning and the passengers were summoned on deck to o It ohng eoior as it lay gasping in the agonies of death The colors were certainly very beautiful but not nearly i vivid as had been expected These U h are not especinf favorites from a gastronomic point oi view being rather try and tasteless The ints caught by the mate was fried for2 breakfast tho ok taking the precaution So put a tr hutMlotiar in the pan while cook- tig it fb make sure hut the flsJ had riot been feeding on something poison cms vWeh is said to bv sometimes tho tse 11 the silver becomes tarnishedV ould not be safe to eat the fish Ono of Uin Old FnmUlea Japanese papei say that the oldest jiarried eon pie hi that country live in sawadatfttheJprovInee of Sado The naan is 188 yeans old and his wifo 135 ff the family mistberlng fourteen Icr rn the eldest daughter is 108 - oil mill fh - voi tot tmmmm4mmimmm mnliimmwtfnwmm iMniftM9 n A QUEER THADE The Method Employed In the VHrttcd Mud Hook A Comforta ble Revine In the Odd lluilnru Many strange ways of making a live lihood nro to bo found in and near a great city and one of the strangest of hcsohorcaboutls fishing p lostnii hora and anchor chains from the hot irasof tho bays and of tho sea along mo eoist It Is not What might be called ft nourishing industry says tho now York Kvuhlnir Post but is In Iced a precarious dependence for tho J Mssnrics of life yet it yields enough to hnvo created quite a dbcr of followers Several and sloops uro engaged nlmost ex jsivcly in thl traile and each arries a crew of from three to ten men These odd fishermen seek their inan imate prey whenever tho weather per du and of course are most active ut ing the long summer days Like iUo takers of llviug spoils from the water they know the field of their op orations thoroughly and expend their energies mostly where tho fishing is xit Perhaps of all tho grounds in this vicinity thoy regard tho stretch i ea off tho Delaware breakwater as tho most profitable- It Is widely known among skippers and all seafaring men who visit these parts ns a great ceme tery for anchors Thoy are being con stantly planted there to use the nauticnl phrase The perpetual Invol untary sowing of anchors tlicru is due to tho largo number of vescls that ire compelled by conditions of busi ness or of wind and tide to ride off the breakwater nnd to their getting fre quently caught in a gale while doing si Then the floor of tho sea at that point appears to have a peculiar facil ity for fouling nnchnrs nnd vessels arc not seldom compelled or prefer as the less of two evils to abandon them Territory up nnd down tho coast ranks noxt Ia tho anchor fishermans estcom as a fruitful anchor bed The interior waters of the harbor are more barreu yet repay search Even the North and East rivers for some dis tance up nro occasionally harvested and usually not wholly in vain The method of anchor fishing is sim ple to prlmltivencss It consists in let ting down a chain in n loop from the sides of tho vessel until the loop trnih along the bottom Then the boit sails nlong with all hands on board alert fox a bite Plain as this tackle is it is effective as any that could be devised Planted anchors almost Invariably lie with one fluke buried in the mud and the other sticking straight up If the angling chain is dragging in the direction of tho inner curve of the tip standing fluke it is nlmost it have onteh Then the line wih tho rtlicliot attached is carefully hoisted some tiraoj by hand or if the anchor is very heavy bv means of canstans If the spoil h a very weighty oiil say four live or six thousand pounds a driving engine is frequently employed The instances ure few however where the fishermen fail to secure their booty When nec essary the crew of one anchor smack u ill lend a hand to another Itoats often work in pairs A cable h stretehed between the vessels and dragged on tho bottom When an an it is caught one of the vessels take position ubove it and both crews iviistln raising it This method in ire a wide sweep of the bottom There ore two purposes for which tlie cateli is disposed of Usually the anchors are sold to be used as an chors again for a moderate or even a considerable degree of rust in no way impairs their efficiency ns such If they are too muoh eaten up by rust which seldom happens they are -sold as old iron As they nre of wrought iron the prkc brought is often aonsiderable Thore are also two ways by which the ilshcrmen find a market value for their wares They either ell them directly by hawking Jiom about among the vessels in the narlxw or they sell them to the shlp handlers Sometimes they have per mission from wharf owners or lessees to stick tho anchors up there with a lotico that they are for sale with the l ri stated As a rule they get very jood prices New anchors are sold for live cents a pound now nnd the re covered old ones seldom suffer a great er depreciation in value than one cent a pound Therefore for every one thousand pounds of nnchor they cap ture the fishermen make about fortj iiollars and if the anchor is one of tho very heaviest a six thousand pounder their haul nctv them about two hun dred and forty dollars They seldom tako a monster of that size however their usual capture Is between fifteen hun dred and twenty five hundred pounds There ure several reasons for this In the first plnco tho lighter anchors are more generally used in the second place it is tho sailing vessels which most often Ioms their nnchors and as a rule they cart y llghtcranchors than steamers nnd In the third place most lurire vessels whether stcamor sail ing commonly carry both a light and a heavy nnchor and seldom drop tho latter in the harbor or immediately off the coast using it for deeper and rougher 6cas The fact that steam vessels lose their anchors less frequent ly than sailing vessels is duo to their being able to use their steam when necessary to check the strain upon the inchor chain Tho eaptured anallor chains often make a substantialaddition to the gain f tho fishermen fetching about three three cents a pound Sometimes they c very long and weigh hundreds df I One of the divers of a local wreck ing company makes a business of keep inp ah eye open for lost anchors while examining or working r und sunken vessels He is taid tohue lb- cated several and to have made a con I sidorablbsum as the result of his cnter I prise INDUSTRIAL ITEMS Tub manufacture of nrtiilclnr granite I is now a California industry 1 As 1ET there have uecri discovered I but two processes for enameling cast iron A hkw and valuable method of coat ing aluminum with other metals has been perfected in Germany CoKU Is better than coal and char coal better still for producing intense heat because of the larger percentage of enrbotf they contain Tim oHlofopcy of bobbins for prepar ing cotton s now much increased by forming ther tubular body part of i riiiratftl ii ntllt aia MM imwilrtMrtMiBOuw tttin WESTERN FARM LANDS Vessel Engaged In Bo r arching for Ownoru Are Advised JSPt to Soil Lost Anchors I Thorn at ProeOt Coming- Yar Will Vltn a Ntrons De mand for Farm and rricpn Will Kule Much Higher The lretent Situation During tho last year u great many persons have come Into possession of western farm properties through fore closures says the United States In vestor As the present owners to a large degree are residents of the cast their only desire Is to rid themselves of these holdings as soon as possible A word of caution to such persons may not be out of place Ileal estate val ues In the west ure greatly depressed as a result of last yeurs punic In many localities it is difficult to find purchasers at any cost Kow there is reason to suppose that eastern holders of western lands may be deceived by sharpers inuking use of this very state of affairs These lands are worth something to day and later on they will be worth a greut deal more It all depends ou the ability of the pres ent holders to carry them until times improve The danger Is that certain parties with long purses and long heads will magnify the unfavorable side of the situation for the purpose of frightening timid investors Into throw ing over their western lands nt merely nominal prices A word of caution to holders of western farm lands is time ly for a number of reasons In the first place there Is every reason to be lieve that the worst that can be appre hended in couneetion with the western situation has been fully discounted iu tho drop in real estate prices which has already taken place Owners of land should bo on their gunrd against any nnd all attempts to convince them that prices will go lower The chances arc that values will enhance rather than depreciate In some localities there is already reported to be a better demand for form properties Prices are bound to be low for several years but there is good reason to believe with an upward tendency The financial depression in the United States will undoubtedly keep immigration down to a low point for a considerable period The fact how ever must ever be kept in mind that this country is the center townrd which the population of the whole world is tending Coining years there fore must inevitably witness a strong demand for farm lands in the United States In this connection it is well to bear in mind that about all the gcldd government land has been disposed ol and that farms are not going to be ob taincd as cheap in the future as in the past other things being equal A great deal is being said at this time regarding the sharp competition which the American farmer Is going to en counter In tho future as the result of the opening up of new agricultural re gions in various parts of the work It can bo safely said however th m the long run this country will he able to hold Its own Temporarily the Amer ican agriculturist may experience hard ship It may even be admitted that prices of cereals will permanently re main on a low level The situation will adjust itself in time and if the farmer is obliged to take lower prices for his wheat nnd corn he will obtain what ever commo iilles nnd services ho may require at correspondingly reduced rates It is idle to attempt to demon stratc that America is about to take a ond place as the great food fr country of the world This fact ould be kept in mind by holders of cstern farm lands Whatever may be the status of their investments to day it can safely be asserted that five years hence will witness prices considerably In excess of those now obtainable UNEQUAL PUNISHMENT Different Slaten Treat Crlmliinln with Va rylnc Decree of Severity Probably few people nre aware says the Springfield Mass Union of the Teat difference in the severity of pun i hment for tho same crime which b different states but the matter h is been fully discussed in a paper by lrcd W Wines which was read at tho meeting of the National Prison associa tion nt St Paul Mr Wines elalms that the existing penal system is un just in some respect In almost every state nnd the facts given In support of his statement are decidedly interest ing In some states thero is no capital punishment for murder while in others the death penalty is inflicted for what in comparison ore minor crimes If it Is right to spare tho life of a man who commits a brutal mur der in Michigan it Is certainly wrong to hang a wretch who has been caught setting fire to a dwelling at night as is done in Montana Nearly all the south ern states punish arson with death and in some burglary is a capital crime In Missouri the punishment for perjury Is death while In New Hampshire Connecticut and Ken tucky the mnsimum bentenco for per jury is five years In Maine Mississippi nnd Iowa however the perjurer may be ent to prison for life while in Del aware for the offense Is justifiable by fine The severest punishment in flicted in Delaware for incest is a fine of ono hundred dollars in Virginia six months in jail and in Louisiana tho death pennlty Is exacted It is clear that when thepunishment fo a given crime varies from tho exac tion of a small ilho to hanging great injustice is done somewhere and it is well that men are studying the ques tion with a view to correcting the evil Taper and Periodicals In the United States there are 1855 daily newspapers 11 papcra published every other day227 published twice a week and 14017 weekly newspapers Elghty fivo newspapers are published every two weeks 249 aro published ttVice a month 3125 every month and 30f Published every two months and every three months Thcre arc 20000 papers and periodicals ih the United States RAILROAD SPIKES The railway system ol the United states comprises J046f miles of track ItAiLnoAD stock ih the United States tVgrcgates In round numbers 810COO 0110 THE receipts of all raifroads fqr last oar were 81220751874 whife the ex penses wrre S32702120 It require 34788 locomotives 3l8S4 passenger carsaud 1047577 freight cars to operate the railroads of the country JDuiao last yda 593500012 passen gers werb carried on all tho railroads in Uncle Sams domains nnd 745110482 1ins of frciplit rnnpited V xWJTrfcyfV w rh RELICS OE GAlltBAIiDL Hla Eoueo bn Staton Island to Bo Torn Down The Qreat Italian Ocrnpled It for Two Year With Ills Compatriot Meneel lie GreW Orapea and Flower Within IU Inrloture For many and many a year now the members of the Italian colonics in and around New York have counted as a sort of little Mecca the place on Ptaten island where in the term of hl3 exile from Italy the patriot Garibaldi lived and wrought and planned He left upon the neighborhood around Rose bank nnd upon its people the Impress of his character and to this day they speak of him The house where he lived together With his colnborer Mcuccl Is ft plain Gothic nilnlr on the grounds of the Bachmun llrewing company just a stones throw back from the Uosebank etution Over its door is a marble tab let put there some years ago by the Italian societies telling that Garibaldi the hero of two worlds had lived there from 1851 to 1853 Vines clambering about the plain where tho two Ital ian geniuses used to sit conceal in summer time tho tablet from the view of passersby but they stare in through the fence with its tall palings at tho garden where Garibaldi used to grow grapes and flowers and garden truck All about the vicinity building Is go ing on says the World There are all sorts of evidence that business which is no respecter of relics ornnything else is crowding the old shrine But still the garden gate is closed against the stranger still you have to get from the brewery office the key to get a look in at the workshop of Garibaldi and Mcucci a shadowy little room on the top floor of the house with windows facing the bay There arc still the tools with which those two clever men tinkered at vari ous devices -there ore fragments of their handiwork bits of lumbering ap paratus by which Mcucci a man of most fertile mind was working cut his discovery of the telephone of wliicll he used solemuly to usscrt In his life time he was the original in veil tor And just across tho way in the brew cry yards stands tho ruius of the old plant that the two Italians used in making candles They built it them selves and for years pottered away W1IFHI3 OAIUnUDI 5IADU TALLOW CAJt IHE8 there boiling down tlie grease and making some sort of a fist at earning a livelihood though neither of them had any particular need to do so Garibaldi was in receipt of money regularly from his friends in Italy and also from well-to-do Americans who w ere in sympathy with the cause whose father he was Mcucci who had been for years at the head of the mechanical department of the grand ojieras iu Home and Milan and who driven from Italy by political enmities had found a haven in Cuba had amassed about Sf5 000 which in those days and in the way they lived was an ample fortune Little by little what with Meueclu experiments nnd his open handedncss and his association vith people who had keener eyes and nimbler fingers for the dollar than ho had his money dwindled and he died poor more orlss the ward throughout his later years of the societies of his countrymen But while the two great Italians were together they were lords Their plain place was in its way a veritable Tuscu lanum nnd tho island and its people the older ones nt least have many a tale to tell of the two patriots They had a great fashion of going fishing ou the dock at Clifton near the old Van derbilt ferry landing Some of the old shoremen still hnvo odds nnd ends of fishing utensils which were used by Mcucci and Garibaldi The furnace where Garibaldi fried out his cuudlc gtease is of brickwork with a heavy foundation of stone The caldron within is of heavy copper and the fire chnmbers underneath arc lined with iron Garibaldi wanted to be comfortable about his work and around his work place he built a summer house The remains of that ure tumbling down too but the vines which lie used to train with his own hands still clamber about the trellis posts and the scraggy trees which still thrive there To move this dilapidated old piece of brickwork will be next to impossible so far has it gone on tho way to ruin but A Lazza rl who owns tho Hotel Cnprcra on tho hill jURt above the brewery has offered to donate a plot in the middle of the chestnut grove adjoining the hotel nnd have there rebuilt out of the old mate rials the kettle as it is known to peo ple thereabouts There has been talk too among lead ing Italians of taking out the old cop per and having it coined into souvenir medals and sold Unless this is done it is more tlinri likely that Garibaldis old candle factory which has stood there in tlie brewery yard for over forty years will just disappear alto gether The Sexton Iot No Time In Doing the Hectors Hlddlng I was sexton of Grace church when Itev Mr Blank was rector there says a writer in the Utica Observer Itwns a summer night and rather warm so when the reqtor commenced his sermon I turned down the gas in the body of the church to make it n little cooler The text that night was ifI remem ber it Let there be light I was sit ting in the rear part of the church not paying particularly close attention to tho sermon nor In fact to anything else Suddenly the rector exclaimed loudlyr More light More light I jumped to the stop cock in the gas supply and turned on the gas full head nil over the church Well sir you ought to have seen those peopfe Some of them jaughed right out and those that didnt had hard work not to I found out afterward that when tho rector said More light he was not giving directions to me but quoting the dving words of Goethe MidM A 55 i r nrr -v i u Samoan head hunters fienowal of tho Brbarouo Prac tioo Durlntr Booont Troubles Native Troop Cut Off the ilesd of dirt aft Well a Men and Plato Them at tho Feet of Their K1dB There wns a renewal of the practice of hend hunting In Samoa during the rcccltt troubles between the partisans i if Mnlletoa and of Mntnafa and upon the occasion in vlolatlonof old Samonn customs thoheadsof girls ns wellasof men were taken by the native troops engaged to fight for the triple protec torate which exists under the authority of tho British German nml American governments By advices received in Washington from spies a short time ngo says a recent dispatcln It wns learned that an attempt to put u stop to the practice had been made by the American jurist Mr Ide of Vermont who was lust year appoIUted to the office of chief justice of Samoa but the nttempt was unsuccessful Us it wns not sustained by tho resident consuls When tho government troops Went out to fight MUtaufni people in the rebel lion of this year he warned them that they would be punished if they in dulged In tins practice of head hunting and yet notwithstanding as soon as hostilities were begun the head hunters broke loose nnd when they returned from the field they brought with them tho heads of their victims which were luld at the feet of the king with the knowledge of the foreign consuls serving nmlcr the protectorate On account of the peculiar circum stances of the case Chief Jus Ide found himself unable td iije libUrc out the punishment Wileh he llml threat ened to inflict The rulini authorities would give him no assistance the of fenders culd not le identified The native warriors disregarded his w am ine he Had 110 lneans of enforcing his orders I can look for no tup jrt here physical or moral savs ic cliief justice Por reasons that re not to their credit the L or nls living in Samoa declare tint l bnrous practice--must be tolew ui until the n bclllotle natives ai f r rUy crushed and so orosd to any interference with r old Samoan Institution of b Alunting The next outbreak in o iCKi therefore will probably again jive evidence of tho existence of the abominable prncticc In an enlarged ttf sortmentof nuinan ln iicK Tho strongest of all the protest against Its continuance nnd r el- ilied authority has just licen iimde by Mr Kobert Louis Mcveusou the cilcbratcd novelist who in a letter fenl from Apia tells of vrauof the icenc that were recently witnessed there IJcsay that the government troops upon re returning from the field where they had fought the Mataafuns not only brought with them the hcadr of relsl warriurs but also those of gills They marched in procession to Molinuw car rying the girls heads v hiuh they had taken and made i them an oblation to that nKlsneholy cujjry the king vho nt on the veranda uf tllt building offered thanks Ui h head hunters and crowned as heroc those who should ao been hrngid criminals The three members of the consiilar trl vmvliatc unanimously winked upon tbo occasion as they had previously winked at other incidents not lest shocking perpetrated under the re sponsibility of the protecting Jiowers Germany and ilic United states When the girls heads were brought in Mr Stevenson went to the British consul Mr Cusnck Smith and pressed him to take some action yet he only drafted a protest which was put under a paper weight where it lay un- the sava tjc ecrcsiony was ended 1 le icn spoke without any good result to - ine of the fjghtlng men who hart ken heads and some of whom hail iitented themselves with taking only he cars of their dead victims ns tro phies no next conferred with the Amrrfcan ehiof justice who however already been said wis power IcSo I must not wonder though 1 may still deplore that Mr Ide accepted the situation Jt is but fair to say however that since Mr Ide took office ho seems to have done all he could tc prevent licnd hunting It is the gov ernments uner whose authority he1 V Ids his place that reft c to give him the power to put a stop to it The old king Matasfa who was dethroned and has been sent into banishment by the protectorate forbade the taking of heads in war but the king who now rules by the grace of tho protectorate is devoid of squeninlshness In regard to it nnd even this year has shown him self rendy to accept an oblatioil of girls heads Mr Steveiison declares Unit iilany horrible atrocities have been perpo trntcd during the last campaign against the followers of Mataafu lie tells the story of Manono where the aged Matatifa flung himself on his knees before a liillsh captain and im plored prolclion for his women and children Very soon afterward at the lime of nightfall flames were observed to rise from the island There wns wild disorder all through the night the houses were burned the women rtripped naked tho food trees hewn down the animals killed and a great part of the island was reduced to ruins He tells of other outrages not les atrocious m me province ol Ana and elsewhere all perpetrated under the responsibility of the triple protectorate Tlip SuperiiUlplh iroplo of Cnlmtta The grossest Mipcrstition exists in Calcutta llecently an Indian had a live ppat flung down from hi twp btory house in accordance with tho direct iqns of a so called magician who wassailed In to cast out a devil with winch a Hjon was supposed to bo possessed The poor brute was first fed with a few bamboo leaves over vyhich the wizard mumbled some mnntrnhnd tyvfasthen pushed over the terrace ihc animal was hilled and its llcsli was distributed to tho poor UNCLE SAMS aVfAIRS It is estimated that New York line no less than ten thousand opium smok ers The United States silver thrce cebt piece was first coined in J1 lfon every w idowcrf Jfy marries a widow tiierc are eleven who espouse maidens Statistics profp that not less than three thousand ivo hundred babies are born every day ou United Stat6s sotf In the United States twoMndrbd and fifty five thousand dwelling houses that aro occupied by the owners arc built every year E F KELLNER pnwoMmgmxnvm T1W1 SILVKK BKIT fias the largest bftna fido circulation of any weekly paper in the Territory nnd is consequently the besl advor fcistng medium FAR1VIER MILES rrrx HOST KOTE0 CASTBATQR IH THE WflRLD Has hW fciiftoa now la book fta and for sale fully illutraur his rM approved Dogs dsof Alterinir Colts HnayiBitjitle ana especially nillUllUal Hor i etc Al methodsof shovlnghisropeaaJlnitniiriims and tell- 1 L VKM a HnlmaMI T niilvfllrl lllg UJU iktu mil I x v vi stock Very Important tu l Mitt r and castrators For price aiiii pirticiIdOf bock write him at Charleston CouiiO 111 iiitj - MacrBi rs JUMWJJA4UJUUJMJ rt km ilMKlFR5 lfT M 5481- 1 io1 MWjGftwi vs AwimDlrr 171a J c jj Tht folltwfiip -9 sa J W HANSOM a f oiiraa ooj JOBBERS AND DEALERS IN ienera llSXVULISttm 1 878 A Vapor for the Minerl A Id per for tho Barmerl A Papcrforthe Mccbanic Aijapgr for Everybody Merchandise Proprietors Pino Creek Stoam Saw Mills and Pi Crook Toll Road i iCMn Iir II MAIKhTItBEl OUHA kd Contractors for LUMBER frEIGM 0EE Sol We will not h Undersold Ij Anybody or In any on Arclclo and our Stock la tho Largest In Cila County E F KELLMER CO QjQjQjQjQjQj THfe ORIZOJtT A iJSTlM 111 The Leading Paper of GMa County l lllrlifft IkmEkIi lilil Birtifil MUBI SAOOW AM Billiard Pariorsr WE T McNELLYf PROPRIETOR net of Jiafeetuxl and tfcwortgx Liaur wid Oigsn First Class Gluh Rocm Atfjwtf Tw fOirceklnti arnunlH K BILLIARD A17D POOL fiJuJia I t JM pgp fij rilrM KrMiII fpr HiriH tf MATRIMONIAL AUofn n nnert dcttnptiert lotted lC ttulacM ct rtrtW iMfrf wao wiatio emtpena tor iqs er mtnmeny rti a r4m ctf4 sv forealTlOeUi vfe lor TTefckre3Q6tI ntmiwrieveTTtttnIiiiiaBfiM Bkor cf thra tr beautiful ami tUlnr CireoKriptonoCtfel4ief w U wSora you wrth tooorr i Wa tftatMltfto J1ru tBCS03AWE8e97CHlCAESUi li5JISS QU5 tla oniy aire lurlnluide 60 tet Perfect work TClct and cannot I trrttd tijcatfcMtn OonAtfntM ccmfon nee vltagiunea twmt Wfc ec rrtce uissouu FlrBlrtl Eje lrory ocuttaIr t3 ao lodxU nipn onowfia uniinar wonc copAia txmem vr vivtniu pur ii lory 4u t ine mr u rnUmadC0rMiei anpat 6i rajr tt J RE SHILOHS CONSUMPTION CURE The success ot tbii Great Cough Cure ll without a psralltl In the history ot medicine All druggist are authOrtied to sell it on a pos itive guarantee a test thrtno other cure cub successfully stand That it may become known the Proprietors at an enormous ex pensc are placing a Sample Bottle Free into every home in the United States and Canada It you have a Cough Soro Throat or Bron chit J nsi It for it will cure you If youi rhlld has the Croup or WhooplneCoogh use it promptly and relief is sure If you dreoi hattusidiousr dUeaso Consumption use IU Ask your Druggist for SHILOHS CURE Pricel0cts50ct and 100 If your Lungs are sore or Back lame use Shilohs Porettg Plaster Price 23 eta For sale by all Drug cists aud Dealers Onr of the I IIIsTTfl E rmicf 1 li u the orni Jt Wfj iu iDf f ArM illMnJrlKS la h r mirr aii make kir nf M Ih bill A tt VM h ta il t53t tf torn Ii t ihi M of Hi l WlJi lW t wtv 1 -rear nfrbtaaM a il 111 ir tA roi the fc FMttB Kf llm 4vafHrBt a4 lnura it ma m 01 inr ir rival 1 vf ifTHilf rmitfrUtvlJjrii f lit M II Ui L I I V wa tGV uceBSiK a r tnnlith llV titwmioss liorbairV rarrtfuTlf tlrftt da not U- teHhor tntirfiro witUrWeBusln a ow pl jware It builds tnd improv s the Kn rl v rfjJlra en liTOMncui JolMw this trralment YAtiTjcA by rncluans afil leading eocietr Indies PAHENTS TREATE0 fly MAIL CONFIDENTIAL SSlalr SSt4nlr Sa4lcaaUl ttMrpiferyarlftuUnto 3i 0 ft f SKTCEfL HTflCKta S IBtHtS CSlCiEl ILL E E BURLtHCAMES W OFFICE M CHEMICAL t o LABORATORY- NiMiit in riyfA ierjt 7ctrTnlhrmAll or exprru vlll rccelva prompt and currfui MicaO Gold a Silver Bullion 1iVeKte5iJr iiiren 1735 ft 1733 lTitcl Ct STer Ccb