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II III I B. L. BLUE, Editor and Publisher. PERUYSBURg! "; : OHIO. Cotton to 'being rushed to market in Eon Ui Georgia to get tho bcnellt of tlio present prices, and tho compress nt Thomasvillc is being worked night nnd day to get tho staplo ready for ship ment Miss Maiiy B. IIarhis, of Warner, N. II., has one of tho largest and most valuable collections of autographs in tho United States. There are over 1,000 in all, including all the Presidents of tho United States. It has been asserted on trustworthy authority that 35,000 persons dlo annu ally in the United States from typhoid fever alone. This is equivalent to ono in each 2,000 of estimated population. The great majority of these lives could bo saved by proper attention to tho water supply of cities. Eustace C Fitz, who recently died in Boston, left an estate of S"0,000, of which $3,000 each goes to Brown uni versity and Colby university and 810, 000 each to Wellcsloy college, Amer ican Baptist Missionary union, Boston, and tho American Baptist Homo Mis sionary society, New York. The defalcations on the part of men nnd boys occupying positions of trust in IStU in this country amounted, ac cording to tho reports of the fidelity insuranco companies, to S25,000,000, and this is said to havo been an in crease of about S",000,000 over the ag gregate defalcations of the year be fore. A nr.Y noons firm in New York re cently applied at tho sub-treasury in that city for 5,000 in pennies. Tho call was promptly met by the treasury officials, the pennies placed in bags, each containing 5,000, and it took 100 bags of pennies to meet the order. Tho total weight was one and one-half tons. TnD "girdle worm" has made its ap pearance in Chautauqua county, Kan. It first deposits its eggs in the sap of tho branches, and later girdles them so that the wind breaks them and they fall. Then the eggs hatch, and tho youug find refuge in the earth until the following spring, when they climb the treo and do business again. The general convention of the Epis copal church in Minneapolis developed the fact that, excepting tho Lutherans, recruited principally by immigration, and the Disciples of Christ, tho Episco palian communicants in this country between the years 1880 and 1800 in creased at a greater ratio than any other Protestant denomination. It will cost 5, 703, 570 to maintain the public schools of New York city in 189G. Of this amount 83,733,327 is for salaries of teachers in grammar and primary schools. The kindergartens will be continued. For the enforced attendance of chronic truants and tho maintenance of truancy schools tho sum of 525,600 will be expended. A jioxstkk radial drill for the United States arsenal at Watertown has just been completed at a machine shop in Uolyoke. It is the largest ever made in this country and it weighs twenty two tons, but so carefully are the bear ings made that the arm, which weighs teven tons, can be moved about by tho pressure of a man's little finger. San Fhancisco declares that it will soon have tho largest store in tho world. A big department store to bo called the Emporium is now being .built there which will cover 0,000 feet more space than the noted BonMarcho in Paris. It is to contain, besides tho multitudinous departments found in the "big stores of most cities, a cycling fechool, a barber shop, a bank and a candy factory. It is estimated that there are at present 1,500 cases of typhoid fever in Chicago, of which nearly -100 arc in tho hospitals. Analyses by the city bac teriologist have proved that the water supply from tho Hyde Park and Lake View pumping stations contains germa of the disease. Tho health board at tributes the outbreak to the improper dumping of garbage, and has taken steps to correct the evil. One of tho curiosities of tho cable code method of sending information is shown ill a recent message announcing tho loss by fire of a ship at sea. Tho message was conveyed in three words of Scott's cablo code: "Smouldered, hurrahl hallelujah!" "Smouldered" stands for "the ship haB been destroyed by fire;" "hurrah""for "crew saved by boats," and "hallelujah" for "all hands saved inform wives and sweat hearts." The homes of few of tho world'3 great men have boon as carefully pre served as Goethe's at Weimar. Noth ing has been disturbed, and in his bleeping room, where ho died, tho same spread covers tho bod, and his drinking cup, sponge and wash basin are in tho same position in which ho left them. The old man who once in the poet's lifetime repaired his coach still visits it periodically to seo if it needs attention, The Russian empire is not devoting its entiro engineering skill to tho en terprise of constructing a road from Moscow across Siberia to the Pacific ocean. A project haB just been offi cially announced from St Petersburg for a canal to connect tho Black tea with the Baltic largo enough to admit tho passage of ironclads of tho heavi est tonnage. According to tho plans announced tho point of departure will bo at Riga, following tho courso of tho Dwina as far os practicable, then by the Dnieper to Kherson on an arm of the Black sea. Its minimum depth is to be thirty feet. VJ.JUJ.J.A.VXAJ.J.XAJUUiM.X.VJ.J.AA,AAf OCTOBER 1895. :jJLJLJLJL: 3AL10 1112: : ,20 21 22 23 24 25 26; 27 28 29 30 31 ... ... f frTf -ft visiV'rJr FFt-tttttt t trr' The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. Maj. Akmes (retired), who was ar rested recently for using insulting language to Gen. Schofield, and con fined in the barracks at Washington, was discharged by Judge Bradley, of the district supremo court, who char acterized the arrest as unlawful, ty rannical and capricious. It was feared that tho steamer Africa, with her crew of ton men, had been lost on Lake Huron. The anniversary of the execution of the seven students and the beginning of the first Insurrection was celebrated by Cubans at New York, Tampa, Key West and other places. ) The Missouri state grange, in session ' at Warrentown, passed resolutions de- ' manding an export duty on ngricul- tural products. j A stay of proceedings was granted in the case of Father Flaherty, under bcntcnco at Gcneseo, N. Y., for asault- ing a young girl, and the prisoner was liberated under 10,000 bail. A stoiiage reservoir at Scranton, Pa., containing 2,500,000 gallons of wa ter, burst and did great damage to ad joining property. Edwaiid Evans mot his wife, who had just secured a divorce from him, on the street at Alexaudria, Minn., and shot ber dead, and then sent a bul et through his own heart The executive committee of the Na tional Library association decided to hold the next convention at Cleveland, September 1, 189'S. Cincinnati's board of trade will send a junketing committee to Mexico to drum up trade. The state health authorities of Ken tucky were alarmed over the preva lence of diphtheria and typhoid fever in the state. Many deaths were re ported. Lizzie Bryant, aged 14, died at Sa bula, la., being the fifth victim of tho poisoning at the Taplin-Gage wedding at that place. Mrs. JosErn Bukns died at Duluth, Minn., from blood poisoning. While caring for her young son, who was ill with diphtheria, the child in its agony bit the mother and death was tho re sult Mosheh & McDonald, one of the largest logging firms in Washington, whose property is worth S500.000, was placed in the hands of a receiver. Mns. Catherine Ha.uk, aged 64 years, -was murdered at Dayton, O., and her daughter, with whom she quarreled during the day, was held for the crime. Hanky Lyons was hanged in Chi cago for the murder of Albert Mason on February 0 last Four men were killed and seven others fatally injured as the result of the collapse of the casting house of the Cleveland valley mills at Cleveland, O. The exchanges at tho leading clear ing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 11th aggregated S1,144,30.7C2, against 81,137,0S'J,777, tho previous week. Tho increase, com pared with the corresponding week in 1894. was 23.2. A boy named Tooiney died at Pitts burgh, Pa., from excessive cigarette smoking. He had smoked several boxes daily for years. Mandy Cady and Florence English, her paramour, were sentenced to be hanged at Washington, Ga., for the murder of the woman's husband. Sailing vessels and revenue cutters from Behring sea report a great scarcity of seals this season and aver that in five years the beals would be wholly exterminated. The Citizens' bank of Omaha, Neb., was closed by order of tho state board of examiners. Inability to realize on outstanding paper caused the failure. There were 208 bubincss failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 11th, against 207 tho week previous and 231 in tho corresponding time in 1894 Daniel Law60N, aged 25, and Miss Georgia Rhinehart wore found dead in bed at the Ewalt house at Omaha, Neb., whore they had been asphixiated by gas. Delegates from normal schools of Illinois, Iowa, Missouri nnd Kansas mot at St. Joseph, Mo., and formed an oratorical association. By tho explosion of a threshing en gine near Mountlakc, Minn., Joseph Schumacher, Jasper Mai otto and two other men, numes unknown, were killed. At Liberty, Tex., Kit Robinson (col ored) was hanged for tho murder in June, 181)5, of John Johnsou. Edward Kessler, manager of the Louisville branch of tho American To bacco company, stood before a mirror and committed suicide. The Illinois Federation of Labor in session at Peoria laid a motion on the table expressing sympathy for Eugeno V. Dobs. Will Hendeiwon (colored) was taken from tho sheriff ut Juckbon, Mo., and hanged for assaulting Minnie Rust. GnoitaE Turner, in u fit of jealousy, dashed a cup of sulphuric acid in his wife's face at Sisteruville, W. Va. Sho died a few hours after in great agony. The bill providing for the removal of tho intruders from the Chorolceo na tion passed both houses and was signed by the chief. The amount of laud hold wan estimated to bo 100,000 acres, and 815 families would be compelled to move, but Would bo paid for improve' monts made. John F. .Sovi.k nnd other old settlers on land linn Aberdeen, Wash., valued at 81,000,000, won tho suit brought by the Northern Pacific railroad company to eject them. The drought in Adams county, O., whs so severe that farmers were com pelled to haul water for tstoolc from (I to 10 miles. Water was selling at from twenty-flvo to forty cents a barrel. Ex-Postmasteu General Wana makeii, it Philadelphia, was elected president of tho American Sabbath School association in session at Wll liamsport, Pa. A call was issued for a national convention of colored men to meet in Detroit, Mich., December 12 to delib erate upon principles and measures important to their welfare. In attempting to stop ncross tho track in front of an incoming train at Mount Mclgu, Ala., Miss Mattio Mur doek was struck by the engine and in stantly killed. Mazei'I'A, the famous champion trick horse of tho world, valued at 5-10,000, was Instantly killed in a train wreck near Waterbury, Conn., nnd George W. Lusgoe, his groom, was fatally injured. James Hunter, William Reynolds, Harvy Stciner and Charles Volkmau were drowned near Baltimore by tho capsizing of a boat In a fight at a political meeting in Knott county, Ky., Tom Howard and Henry Patton (democrats) and Josiah Combs (republican) were killed. Heavy earthquake shocks were felt in the central portion of tho Black Hills in South Dakota. An electric car in Pittsburgh leaped from the track and went down an em bankment 10 feet high, killing four persons and injuring twelve others. Tun Masonic templo block in Du luth, Minn., was burned, the loss be ing S200.000. J. B. Brewster & Co., manufacturers of carriages in New York, failed for 8140,000. At a meeting of the Massachusetts Reform club in Boston Secretary Car lisle spoke on finances, declaring that the free siver coinage idea was waning. Tun State bank at Everest, Kan., closed its doors. Aliiert Peterson, Alexander East man, lno Ingesou and George Payne were suffocated in a coal mine near Story City, la. The Commercial bank of Springfield, Mo., closed its doors with liabilities of 50,000. The farmers! national congress adopted a resolution at Atlanta, Ga., favoring reciprocity between tho United States and the South and Cen tral American countries. Col. George Mendell, the second ranking officer of the engineer corps of tho army, was placed on the retired list on account of age. In the United States court of appeals at San Francisco Mrs. Leland Stanford won the suit against her to recover 815,337,000, alleged to bo duo the gov ernment from her husband's estate on account of Central Pacific bonds. William P. Donnelly left Paw tucket, R. I., to walk and trundle a wheelbarrow to Sacramento, Cal., a distance of 3,000 miles, in eighty-two days on a wager of S1.000. In tho national conference at Syra cuse, N. Y., of Congregationalists tho doctrine of the church on temperance was declared to be total abstinence. Franklin L. PorE, aged 05 years.one of tho most noted electricians i the country, was killed by a shock in tho cellar of his homo at Great Barring ton, Mass. Ledbins B. Kino, of Lockport, N. Y aged &3, committed suicide by jumping over the American falls at Niagara Falls. The treasury department discovered a counterfeit S10 silver certificate of the series of 1801, check letter D, bear ing the portrait of Thomas A. Hen dricks. The Farmers' National congress in session at Atlanta, Ga., refused by a vote of 251 to 104 to adopt a resolution favoring the free coinage of silver at a ratio of 10 to 1. John L. Thomas, assistant nttornoy general for the post oflloe department, in his annual report to the postmaster general says the mails are virtually closed to all lottery concerns. Three bridge carpenters were knocked from the top of a high trestlo by a falling timber near Butte, Mont, and killed. The visible supply of grain in tho United States on tho J 4th was: Wheat 44,180,000 bushels; corn, 5,375, 000 bushels; oats, 4,029,000 bushels; rye, 7HO.00O bushels; barley, 3,027,000 bush els. N. B. Falconer, a leading dry goods merchant nt Omaha, Neb., failed for 8150,000. The two pacing mures, Miss Rita and Josie 11., went a mile double in 2:l2Jif at Lexington Ky., making a new world's record. The bchooner Nellie Duff sank off Lorain, O., and Capt. Peterson and two bailors were drowned. IlErouTS to tho agricultural depart ment in Washington show a decline in the condition of all tho principal crops except oats, ryo and barley. Jack Crews was hanged at Denton Tex., for the murder of tho Merrill family in 1803. He killed father, mother and children. The hanging was public, the crowd being estimated at 10,000. The United States supremo court opened its fall term in Washington. The advisory board of tho American Protective association met at St. Louis to perfect a national organization. The national purity congress, com prising ropre&ontatlvos of all churches and other religious bodies and philan thropic associations in sympathy with tho objects of tho congress, met in Bal timore. Florkntina Suaiito, a Mexican, was lynched at Coluba, Tex., for tho mur der of II. T. Saul, a stockman. The State bank at Fort Scott, Kan., slosed its doors because of the defalca tion of tho cashier, J. It Colouiun. A passenger train on tho Norfolk & Western road was wrecked by a broken frog between Blueflold and Kenovu, W. Vo., and beventy-six persons were Injured. News was received at Fort Smltlv ' Ark., of the assassination of Cndo Mil ler and his wlfo in bed at their home on the Oklahoma border. Mrs. Joseph LAnodon. tho wlfo of a farmer living near Dulta, O.. gave birth to live children, all of them males. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. ' Mr.s Sarah E. V. Emery, tho well known lecturer and writer on woman suffrage, died ut Lansing, Mich. J. J. Brooks, ex-chief of tho United States secret service, passed away at ' his homo In Pittsburgh, Pa, I Judge Cyrus L. Cook, the republican candidate for congress in the Eight eenth Illinois district, who was nomi nated to succeed the late Congressman Remann, died in Chicago of heart dis ease. Gen. William J. Landram. of Lan cabtor, Ky., veteran of tho Mexican unci civil wars and a personal friend of Gen. Grant, died in his 03th year. Elisiia P. Ferry, governor of Wash ington territory from 1809 to 1875 and tho first governor of the new state of Washington, died in Seattle, aged 70 years. The republicans of tho Eighteenth Illinois district nominated W. F. L. Hadley, of Edwardsvillc, for congress. Clara Doty Bates, a well-known authoress and writer of children's stories, died In Chicago, aged 57 years. FOREIGN. In the hurricane which swept over La Paz, Mexico, 1S4 houses were de stroyed, four lives lost and twenty-one persons were wounded. Nineteen craft, including an American schooner, were beached. Havana advices say that tho rebel leader Amereaga had been condemned to death, nnd Liewbal, another in surgent chief, to penal servitude for life. A WOMAN was arrested at Adcrno, Italy, on the charge of polsonlug chil dreu. After her arrest she confessed that sho had poisoned twenty-threo children, and led the otliccrs to tho graves of ten of them. It was stated that the total number of killed, wounded and missing Ar menians up to date as a result of tho recent uprising was over 700. Ross C Van Bokkelen, who embez zled 513,000 in gold from tho Mer chants' Loan & Trust company of Chicago was captured in Mexico and would be brought back. To prevent her pilfcrings from be ing discovered by her parents, a 14-year-old girl, the daughter of a laborer in Santander, Colombia, murdered her three little brothers. It was reported that the sea coast town of Baracoa had been blown up by Cuban rebels. Four persons were fatally burned near Winnipeg, Man., while fighting prairie fires. Gen. Erasmus D. Keyes, who was a volunteer brigadier general in tho war of the rebellion, died at Nice, France, aged 85 yenrs. At Chatham, Ont., the banking house of S. Barfoot was closed, with liabilities of S200.000. The German steamer Emma collided with the French bark Paciflque off Spurn Head and twelve persons were drowned. As a result of the British consul's in terview with him the viceroy of China ngrced to execute eighteen more per sons accused of murdering mission aries. It was reported that an armed col umn of British soldiers was passing across Brazilian territory on tho way i to Venezuela to maintain British claims as to disputed boundary lines. LATER. John Flaherty, a notorious burglar, jumped from an Erio train near Port Jervis, N. Y., on tho 15th. Flaherty was being taken to tho Albany pen. Although the train was running at the rate of twenty-five miles an hour, Con stable Garr, who hud Flaherty in charge, jumped from the ears and caught Flaherty before he had gone a great distance. Tun secretary of state has recoiTed a telegram from Minister Denby dated Peking, October 11, as follows: "Sev enteen criminals will be executed ut Ku Cheng. Tho yamen (board of for eign affairs) agrees that all leaders shall be executed, all participants sen tenced to imprisonment and ull impli cated tried. " Dr. A. L. Black, a prominent physi cian of McKcesport, Pa., dropped dead on the night of the 14th immediately after dismounting from his bicycle. Heart disease was tho immediate cause of death. For the first half month of October the receipts of the treasury havo been 813,230,332, and tho expenditures S22, 721,000, making the net deficit for tho half month 89,481,(108. The deficit for tho fiscal year to date is 810,309,325. President Cleveland and his fam illy have returned to Washington from Gray Gables. The lasterb' strike in tho Thomas G. Plant Company's shoo factory at Lynn, Mass., which has been on since August 20, has been settled. The company con ceded about CG per cent, of tho increase of wngps demanded. Railroads entering Chicago were dealt a severe blow on tho 15th by tho decision of tho state board of ware house and railroad commissioners that charges for handling freight at tho Union Stock Yards aro illegal. A iioileh of n steamship lying in tho harbor of Spczzla, Italy, exploded on tho 15th, killing four stokers and badly injuring one of tho engineers. The Luko Erio & Western Railroad Company has declared a quarterly divi dend of i per cent, on tho preferred btock, payablo November 15. The supremo court of Nebraska has decided that tho freo stiver democrats could not bring an injunction suit to prevent tho hard money democratic candidates from appearing on tho offi cial ballot Justice Post intimated that mandamus proceedings would bo tho proper courso, the supremo court not being a court of original jurisdiction, Action was thereupon begun In tho dis trict court. FOX AND NAPOLEON. The English HtittCHtniui Fnaclnutoil by tlio l'lrst Consul. During the summer of 1S02 Fox jour noyed to Purls, whero ho was presented to Bonupurto early in September. Tho English statesman was fascinated and, although tho first consul said nothing definite or prcciso, his visitor departed convinced that his host desired nothing but peace with a liberal policy, both domestic nnd foreign, ns far as was consistent with safety. But the attacks of tho English press becanio none tho less virulent in conscquenco of Fox's favorable report, or of his brilliant de fense of Franco from his placo In par liament Toward tho closo of January Talloyrand remonstrated with Whlt worth, this tlmo giving point to his re monstrance by a plump demand as to what England intended to do about Malta. Whltworth replied that he was without instructions, and made an eva sive answer, hinting that tho king's opinion of tho changes which had taken placo In Europe since tho treaty might bo of importance in determining him as to the disposal of tho Island. This was the first intimation that England did not intend to keep her promise. A few days later Sebastian! returned from the east, and on January SO, 1803, tho Monlteur published his thorough und careful report. It was a long doc ument, fully oxplntnlng every source of English weakness in the orient, and setting forth tho possibilities of re establishing French colonies in Egypt and the Levant. There was only one menacing phrase, but it expressed an unpalatable truth, that "six thousand French troops could now conquer Egypt" The publication in Englund of this paper raised a tremendous pop ular storm, nnd it has pleased many historians to regard Bonaparte's courso as a virtual declaration of war. In reality it was merely a French Roland for an English Oliver. If England in tended to keep Malta, let her beware of her prestige in the cast Had Bona parte intended to act on Sobastianl's report, he certainly would not have published it. Of courso the English populnce utterly failed to grasp so nice a point, nnd the incident so strained the relations of France and England that all Europe saw tho impending crisis one or the other, or both, must consent to a modification of the treaty in respect to Multa, or there would bo war. Prof. William M. Sloane, In Cen tury. SIDEBOARD SCARFS. Suitable Covers for Smooth Articles of Furniture. A dainty scarf for the sideboard may be made of a piece of linen Inwn meas uring one and three-quarters, or two yards, in length, by fifteen to eighteen inches in width. Hemstitch the edge one inch and a half in depth, and an inch from the hemstitching embroider a design ot sweet peas in tho natural size and with the natural color of pink and white Asiatic filo floss. Work the flowers in loug and short stitch and the stems and tendrils in stem stitch with gray-green Asiatic filo. This scarf will be found very satisfactory placed tipon a highly pol ished surface, but is not a suitable cover for a coarse piece of furniture. The same size and kind of scarf will be very satisfactory worked with a design of carnations etched with black Asiatic filo. Represent the blossoms in groups of two and three in a place with crossed btems or as if dropped on. A heavier linen scarf may bo em broidered with yellow chrysanthe mums, or even with "black-eyed-Su-sans." Work the petals with Roman floss in satin stitch and the center with dark brown or black Asiatic rope silk in French knot stitch. Womankind. Tho Milkman's Woe. The milkman looked sad. "What fearful waste," he said. "Of what?" asked his neighbor. "Rain," replied the milkman. "After a long dry spell we get a lot of rain just when wo are being watched so closely that we can't profit by it" Chicago Post. How She tliKlgt-il Him. She Who is that man smoking a cigar? He That's Gympson. He pays fifty cents upleco for his cigars. "Well, he 'seems to expectorate a very common sort of saliva." Chicago Record. M0WLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. Tho man', who live bet tor than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting tho world's best products to tho needs of physical being, will attest the valuo to health of the puro liquid laxative principles embraced In the remedy, Syrup o Figs. Its excellence is duo to its presenting in tho form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, tho refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing tho system, dispelling colds, headaches nnd fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and mot with tho approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid noys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly freo from overy objectionable substance Syrup of Figs iH for sale by all drug gists in 50o and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by tho California Fig Syrup Co. only, whoso name is printed on every package, also tho name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. Fall edioin In fully as Important nnd as beneficial as Spring Medicine, for at this season there is groat danger to health in tho varying tomporuturc, cold storms, malarial germs, provalonco of fovors and other diseases, All these may bo avoided If tho blood is kept pure, tlio dlgostlon good, and bodily health vigorous by taking Hood's Sarsaparilla Tho OnoTruo Blood Parlflor. Hnnfl'c Pillc euro all liver Ills, bilious- ncss, hciulaohcs. 5c fl MADE OF THE 8 RUN EST OATS! 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L. DINOLEY, Jr. 204 Front St. San Francisco "Ten acres of Irrigated land In California are equal to 160 acres In Illinois." AUOLPH SUTRO, Mayor of San Francisco. EST IN THE WOULD. vox G,w&avwfi ox ucva3rcY33VHWs "otttsa vaftv'VStxuu, WMwaWed. THE RisiNfJ SUN STOVE POLISH in calces for general blacking of a stove. THE SUN PASTE POLISH for a quick after .dinner shine, applied and pol ished with a cloth. 3Xorse BroH., l'rops., Canton, M., U.S.A. No Failure of Crops ! A Sure Thing! GARDEN, FRUIT AND TRUCK FARMS. lO ACItES will eivo a family a (rood Uvlntr. 40 AOIIE8 -will place you In a tow years In an independent position. WHY 8LAVE ALL YOUR LIVES I "when aeorffla and Bouth Carolina offer lucb. grand inducements for tho frugal, thrifty man and womnn-cllmatfl. ioil and aurroundlnca unsur passed. FHKK IUILUIUU KillE. Free moving of all your effects, from the time you roach our road. Call or addroes LAND DEPARTMENT. Aucuntn Sonthrrn It. R., Carolina Midland It. It. Waltkh U. 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Vrom OritdoM rzoplomt rpl41 dlutpjitir, anil lo lu ji mt Inut twotblriJ of fcll ijnptorai a-a reroorti. BOOK of tntfrconUU of tattMUlnui cum vent FRE0. TEH DAY8 TREATMENT FURM8HED FREE by will Ull. II. II.CIIUCUN Jk BONH, HpfdulLI., Atlanta, Co, W1UUI TIIU F1PU tntj O M ntu, AST 1-1 M A OR.TAFT'S ASTHMALENB Binir aUracl.wt trill mil Irlit'UU IICU UOTTLK CD rC xiu sit. tut nnui. . to., uOiuutiu, , x. rntC i r V H f A (1 Ml 19 ii 4