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The Southern reveille. (Port Gibson, Miss.) 1876-1890, April 11, 1890, Image 4

Image and text provided by Mississippi Department of Archives and History

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87090151/1890-04-11/ed-1/seq-4/

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POUT <j>IB»OM, ni*». I
FRIDAY MORNIXO. APRIL 11. 1W0
COUNTY DIRECTORY
Clrcoit Court, two t»rro», IS day* auch. Op*na
Iml Monday) in January and July. J. I). QUI.
and, Jud*# 9th Judicial Dint riel. J. M Gib
son. District Attorney.
1 r * ■ y* va
3rd Monday* in April and September. L. Mc
Laurin, Chancellor 4th Chancery Diarrict.
Senator, S8ih Dbtrfct Stephen Thraeber.
RepreeeniaOve, B. M. Batber.
Shérif, N. 8. Walle r.
Chancery Clerk. A. K. Junta.
Circuit Clerk, W. D. Paltertou.
Treasurer, 8. Bagnell.
W. H. Ben I on. Ameuor.
K. G. Si iditn Surveyor.
Superintendent Education, C. K. Re*an.
Board of Sop#-visors meet lat Monday! in Jan
uary, March and Au-urt,5lh Monday (30th day jin
September. Member»; N. MrDougall, ilittNo
k i. Fyaraon, di«t. No. »; J. A. Recan.dlrt
No. A: T. Y. Richmond, dist. No. 4: D. J. Caa
dist. No. 4. Clerk. A. K. Joum.
PORT uIB'ON DIRECTORY.
H. M. Coiron, Mayor. Aldermen, J A.Shrrve
L, A. Smith, R. C. Kelley, 0. A. Gordon, J. A.
Ovborn« T. Richard*««. 01-rk, T. 11. Foot#.
W. p. Traylor, Chief of Police,
L. Î. Newtr an. City Treaturer.
■on,
CI1UUU1I DIRECTORY.
C ".THOLIC—R*v. Frann* Lrnnan. Pnttor.
Haivica lit Sunday rm-h month, at IU am.
CHRISTIAN—R»v. P. Vawivr, P««tor.
bvrvic. Ivt, !nd and 3rd Sundays at li
and 7:30 p. m.
Sunday rchuol evary Sunday at 10
a. m.
a. m.
PROTKt-TAN'T EPI8C0PAL (-t. Jamw) — R»v.
Arthur Howard Noll, Krctor.
Hnnd»y fcbnnt at 9:30 a.m., N. S. Walkw, Supt.
Morainic prarvr at 11 «'cluck.
E»»oiiig prayarat 7;*0.
MTB1K DAT 8RHVICSS.
Moraine ®r»/»r aud Litaiy Weln.-day morainic
at 10 o'clock.
K ' > "o > * * >r *^ ,f * ,rtur * Friday ay going at
Spsci.1 »»rricra on Sniuta' day* and otk»r holy
day». *
MB'! II0DI8T— Rrv. E. II. Mnungrr, Pastor
8sr»icsat II am »v»ry Sunduy, and 8 pm first
and third 8uudays of aach month.
Sunday rchool at 9:45 am, E. 8. l)raka, Supt.
Pruyrr-mreting Thuraduy afternoon at 4:3D.
PRESBYTERIAN—R»v. H. H. Brownlee, Pas
tor.
Sunday school at 9:30 erery 8undny morning.
Praysr-meeting every Wednmday afternoon at
4 «'click.
Ssrvica every Sunday forenoon at II o'clock and
ev*ry 2nd and 4th Sunday at half-poet seven
in the evening.
COLORED METU0DI8T—R«v. J. A. Davia,pas
tor.
Service »very Sunday at S p. m aod 7 p rf
Sunday School at V a m.
Board mm-tiag ev*ry Monday night.
Claw m »»ting every Friday night at 7 pm.
. .
PORT 4)1 I 14 I HOI R»
From 8 A.M. ....
Sc»d«ye from 9:30
South Mail clivies
North Mail clore»
Night Mail clone«
°- A. li ASTI NOB. P M.. Pwt Gihnon.
....To « P. M
To lt»:30 A. M
.... 8:5« A. M
....4:16 P. M
.809P. M
Hooks" in Horses' Eyea.
A Port Gibson correspondent of tbc
.icc-Stock Journal says :
~ saw a vctd#t|»ry surgeon at Port
Gibson, Miss., rem^liu a s kjH^ » r tir
barbarous manner froÎTthe eyes of a
l T l-umj ho cued U'
which was evidently an abnormal
growth and should have been removed,
"The owner held his horse by a 6
twitch. The surgeon ran a needle
aud thread through the upper eye-lid,
and then ran them through the tin
011 ,i . , ... p
° ,c ,o rse sear and tied the ends
of the thread together, thus holding
the eyo open during the operation,
He then ran auothcr thread through
the 'washer' at the inner corner of the
eye, and gently drew out the washer B
and I,,.li :< n ,, t u, r
. *• ,e 4,, road. AV iih t
arp peu-kulfe lie carefully scraped
from the inner surface of the washer
a bony substance tho size of an ordi
nary grain ot corn and about tho color
aud hardness of gristle which was
covered over bv a thin film; aud then
... '
bathed the eyes with salt water.
•.Now. whether or not this was a
'hook' deponent sayeth not, but this
much ho does say—it had no business
being where it was.
up
all
to
"The surgeon remarked that
people are ignoraut of the auatoinv of
the horse, and consequently when they
undertake to treat a case of 'hooks'
they cut out the wrong thing."
most
The Destruction of Forests.
"We arc daily wasting oue of uature's
richest gifts to us m our wholesale de
struction of the forests," said Theodoie
B. Bnseliu of (he forestry commission
to a New York reporter. "And we are
destroying what nature was hundreds
of years in building up, and which
not be replaced for many years to
come. Year after year has seen our
people cuttiug down the woods for
almost the solo purpose of getting
thorn out of tho way and with uo
thought of the ftiturc, until to-day,
with the exception of the Adirondack«,
New York is almost depleted of its
timber growth. This is an evil in
many ways. The clearing away of
wood growths gives a sweep to high
waters and heavy rains, which wash
away much of the rich surface soil aud
deplete in a marked degree the fertil
ity ol the land. And this waste ol
fertility increases each year and mus 1
in time render the land almost sterile.
Then, again, the destroying of the for
• marked influence upon the
Ébnc of the greatest argu
of the Adi
g re«
of
pi
in
if
and
ed,
End
Bf
we
can
tig Culture la Georgia, t
1 believe this, tho southern part of
Georgia, to be tho home of the tig. I
have three kinds : the sugar fig, which
is small but vory sweet and prolific;
the purple, which is of medinra size,
and the large yellow, or Turkish fig,
which I think the finest and most pro
ductive of any known. It is a constant
bearer from early spring until the
young fruit is killed by frost. The
Iruit is very large and of excellent
quality. I have four-ycai-old trees
which produced, this year, from six to
eight bushels each. I find them profit
able at five cents per dozen. They
come best from cuttings, from ten to
twelve inches long, put out in January
ou well-drained soil, with compost and
hard-wood ashes for fertilizer.— II. Gi
guilliat , in Dixie Farmer.
A Japanese Farmer's Easy Time.
The Japanese lanu-workman lnbors
from 7 a. m. uutil 6 p. m., but he is
supposed to take about three hours
every day for rest. He usually has a
little fire of charcoal somewhere in the
field, and on this fire a pot of hot wa
ter perpetually steams. Ileside it lies
his little pipe, with a bowl no bigger
than a thimble, and he stops from
time to time to make a cup of ten and
to smoke his pinch of tobacco. The
wages are about ten cents a day for
men and linlf that amount for women.
The wants of the people are few, and
though poverty is common, paupers
arc unknown.
The homo life of the farm-laborer is
far pleasanter than that of this class in
any other eastern country. When he
goes home from his work, he will take
a hot bath before supper, and he will
take another when he gets up in the
morning. If he is very tired, he will
call in a blind shampoocr, who will
knead his whole body until every part
Ofit is rested, and if he has not the
cc ;,?.r, for hi!wito
will do tho the work for him.
He will eat with a good appetite his
diuncr of rice aud raw fish, conveying
the morsels to his mouth with chop
sticks the size of a slate pencil, and
»«.hi,* them down with the bet
'■"L A ?m- \ g! ""'
checkers he will lie down on the floor
with his wooden pillow under his
head aud sleep just as soundly as the
American farm-hand w ho makes $2 a
day, or our farmer whose year has
been good, and whose wheat is going
to turn out at least forty bushels to the
acre. AT. Y. Journal.
For the Rsvrillb).
This, to most people,is almost an
impossibility. Why ? Simply be
081186 ^! n per»istently feed the
a Very yoUllg one8; * ™ a
arPngT No. tU, rhon
have no right to feed them,and if you
reflect you will come to the conclu*
6 * on fi ,at }'°u ar e
ttie nftlure of
themselves,
As soon as they are able to travel
drive them away into a cotton or
cornfield each morning, drive up
in the evening, and in no case feed
them, as they will find all they
nee< l- 1 1 the grass is too high,keep
up until the dew dries ofl ' Never
B ety™r eggs under a chicken hen
as l h e y travel too fast for young
t ur keys and give them unnatural
food. Their natural food when
young is insects, and I have seen
young turkeys smaller than quail,
»wallow locusts. Fresh "beef or fish
fed to them will do no injury,but all
Ineal > cur d, &c., is highly in
junous. I have succeeded in get
ting three persons to adopt this
plan and they have lost no turkeys
only those killed by accident.
Try one old turkey hen and be
sure not to feed until one fourth
grown, and my word for it you will
succeed.
In tho great turkey-raising coun
ties in the north they not only re
fuse to feed, but do not even drive
up in evening. This is the turkey's
native country, and nature supplies
all they need and they know how
to find it. H.
RAISING TURKEYS.
going contrary to
bird ub the young
A railing 01 Ont Kali.
The Natchez Banner makes the
startling declaration that in 1839
Adams county raised 50.000 bales
of cotton, and in 1889 only 25,0(
This is appalling, considering t
fact that Adams is one of the b<
counties in the state, and the cutfi
vation of its lands is not attended
with any of the inconveniences tfiat
beset the farmers of east Mississip
pi and the delta. f
Commenting on this falling Iff in
cotton production, the Banner pays:
"If it had been made up by
in that of other product« of tbc farm,
if the increased fertility of Lhe soil
was shown by an increase in Die grain
and grasses, or in herds of the various
kinds of domestic stock by vdiich the
wealth of some countries is represent
ed, If the agricultural wea.th of the
ooujfity had in any way shewn even a
unit irai advance, the failing off in the
c«aton crop would not bflvc been so
flagrant a proof of the want of energy
End enterprise that has seemed to have
fbaracterized tbo farming community
Bf Adams county. Buch/ however, not
having proved to have
we must arrive at the uf ipleasant con
clusion that iruproveiij^ ut iu agricul
tural me
xease
the case
S j*«*.
n the result
mers which
in the poli
ed
of
I
a Strange Career,
S T. Joseph, Mo.,March 28.-J
Owsley, 70 years of age, was to-« a y
sentenced to the penitentiary / f or
fi ve V^ars on a charge of hurgy ar y >
Owsley is a brother of the latefgov
ernor Owsley of Kentucky,a fa»„ous
being over a million dollars. J He is
the father of two beautiful dfaught
ers, Rose and Mary,20and us years
°f a 8 e - Ho met reverses, I 06 t his
^ ortune *°d disappeared yom the
C °S7tumed up in St.Jo,c/ h , , rar
A 8°> al, <i 8 °on h number J
r i e8 began. / The police/ captured
tho burglars,six weeks a-4 0 . 1 Ows
Icy, his two pretty daughters a man
|> anie d Wingerten and / a criminal
* nown as * Scarfaced C
Ite;™ 1 ?!, *. r8, ** OS ? a,1 l
ger ten amfchîXy^Owalev
self live# with them./ X
Ro— la drey ü T t i tfJ
the mansch a rl oy. fie has no nose,
one *yjb is gone, two great scars
7- his face, and one ear has
, .bitten °fl> hut Rose says that
*. ¥*>11 plead guilty if he is con
*»3H|d that she may be confined
within the same wall? as he is. Ows
!
I3IRCS AT SEA.
Every dsy we see playing round
the ship and skimming up and down
the wave-bollows companies of love
ly little teres and sea swallows, says
the London Telegraph, the latter uo
larger tL&n thrushes. They are vague
aid casual roam ers of the ocean,who,
spying the great steamship from a
far, have sailed cloee up to see if
are a rock or an island, and will then
skim away again on their own free
and boundless business.
Yonder tiny bird, with purple and
; green plumage, little breast aud neck
laced with silver, is distant 1000
miles at this moment from a drop of
fresh water, and yet cares no more
for that fact tliaa did the Irish squire
who "lived twelve miles from a lem
on." If bis wings ever grow weary
it is but to settle quietly ou the bos
om of a great billow and suffer it for
a time to rock aud roll him amid the
hissing spindrift, the milky flying
foam and the broken sealace which
forms and gleams and disappears
gain upon the dark slopes. Wheu
he pleases, a stroke of the small red
foot and a beat of the wonderful
wing launch him off from the jogged
edge of his billow, and he flits past
us at 100 kuots an bnur, laughing
steam and canvas to scorn, and steer
ing f* r some nameless crag in Labra
dor or Fund ay, or bound, it may be
for some island or m irsh of the far
away Irish coast
Marvelously expressive of power as
is our untiring engine, which all day
aud all night throbs aud pants and
pulses in noisy rhythm under the
deck, what a clumsy,imperfect affair,
it is compared to the dainty plnmetJ
and delicate muscles which will carl
ry that pretty fearless sea swallow
back to his roost a
we

a
ho.
fiarlie" were
1 Mary were
e with Win
hiin
groov
be
I go to work about 9 o'clock for
my daily paper, and by 11 o'clock,
just as like as not, I am giving that
newspaper,language worth exactly
six times what I am going to get
for it.
\Y hen once you are started there
is no help for it. A man whose
ideas are flowing is bound to write
his very best. It is no saving to
him to use cheaper language,
goes the best he knows. But I tell
you it is a sickening sensation to
realize when half your article is al
ready in the compositor's hands
that it is magazine stuff that is
running out of you, and that only
the low-grade remuneration is run
ning in. You may laugh, but it
is a dreadful feeling. Just consider
how you would feel if you had con
tracted to feed a gar
laborers on pork an
found you were out ot that sort of
nourishment and had nothing but
terrapin left in the house.
in love with
cii
ley refuses to divulge the story of
his life for the past ten years, but it
is believed that he has trained his
daughters to crime. He wept pitt
ously when sentenced.
Can't Control His Language.
The N. Y. Shh tells of
who wrote for the papers at an av
erage salary of from one cent to one
and a half cents per word. Yet in
spite of this princely pay the scribe's
life was made miserable by a cause
which he thus sets forth :
a man
In
of railroad
beans and
An üoexpaetfid Kabnke.
He was a deaf mute who had
learned to talk by imitation. His
wife could both hear and talk, but
at the theatre they preterred
to converse by means of the sign
manual. The couple that sat be
hind them, thinking that neither of
them could hear took
comment freely and to speculate on
their relations to each other ad. lib.,
greatly to the discomfort of the
lady, who, of course, heard every
thing.
8he communicated every word to
her husband until he eonld stand it
no longer. Then, turning to the gen
tleman, he mildly asked: "Will you
allow me to see your programme T f
The chagrin and discomfort of the
pair were apparent. Hastily hand
iug over bis programme, the two
bustled out of the theatre just as the
curtain went up on the seconed act
—Chicago Tribune.
Î
occasion to
or
v
To Mi Pulled Bread.
Pulled bread is liked particularly
well by English people, we arc told
They cat it with cheese. To rjake pull
ed bread, take a loaf of fjfshly baked
jjjfcwilj while it is st
Sfdde of it out io W
the
cour8 °* ar c »ervaut girls, who save a
! great deal of money, some of them ar
cumulaliug as high as >*>'..',000."— Inter
view in Brooklyn Foyle.
a
A wrinkle cure
advertised iu a
daily paper, and nf doubt fluds
patrons. N evert!
sovereign remed
wrinkles that is m
many
llcss, there is ouc
r or preventive for
the commaud of ev
cry one, though
tho shape of a a
l is not advertised in
tent medlcino. This
is, to set your
from the startf (jood humor and con
tentmeut keep
feet coine froi
e against wrinkles
ie face smooth. Crow's
care; from a bilious
and mêlant hl y habit of llfe> and from
the habitual
idulgeuce of ill temper,
is the scowl and the
whose badj
frown. Tij
man life
due cours
case wbti
•re is a period of tho hu
len wrinkles come in the
fcf nature. In nearly every
fe they arrive before that
date, the^will be found to have been
invited
My their victim, and all tho
nostrunM],, tbo worjj w jh no t banish
or charf
them away.— Exchange.
Wouldi
Wot Take $5,000 and ha With
I out « Hod-4 ko r
fRev. John T. McBride, Pastor
'Presbyterian church at Mar
Tex., writes:
fernen —I have relieved sever
< 4 i m "'î aeq u ai iitanoes at Dallas,
^WNiau and Marshall of severe head
s ami neuralgia without a hiugle
_ re to do so inside of 35 minuter.
Would not take $->000 a yiarand
1* with ut Preston's "Hod-Ale,"
■ its < qual, which I have yet to fim'.
prayer is that tho world may
gnow of your most wonderful dis
sovery, for I can call it bv no other
Jmo. T. McRrtde.
Fur sale by all druggists. 50 cents
a bottle.
ii.j
of tJ
shal.
'■I
i
M
■ v
name
Bouse of Representatives, U. 8. I
^ _ Wasdington, D. C-, Jan. 11.1890. |
The Preston Chemical Co., Galveston, Tex.:
It affords me pleasure to add my
testimony to that hundreds who have
experienced relief by the use of your
wonderful "Had Ake."
Your obed't eerv't, W. H Cbain.
Preston's "Hed-Ake cures any kiud
of heudache in fifteen minutes.
Savings Banks' Patrons.
"People of what nationality patro
nize savings banks the most ?"
"The Germans are by long odds our
best customers. As a race they arc
thrifty and saving. The moment a
young German begins to earn money
he almost invariably begins to save it,
no matter how small the wages he may
be getting. Nor wheu he has
begun docs he stop. His deposits flow
in,iu a constant stream,untildbey reach
the limit, or until the young man has
saved enough with which to start bus
iness for himself.
once
•Next to the Germans 1 think you
may place those of Irish descent, so far
at least as saving is concerned. When
opening an nccouut bore they keep the
fact secret, even to the members ot
their own families. Many of them, ot

Epoch .
The transition from long, linger
ing and painful sieknuiM to rolniNt
hcaUh murks
ol the individual,
able event is treasured in tho mem
ory and tho ngoncy whole by tho
good It on i t li has boen attained is
gratefully blessed, Honce it is tl at
-o much is heard in praise of Eh-e
trie Bittors. So many foul they
owo their restoration to health, lo
the use of the Great Alterative» and
Tonic. If you are troubled wi h
any disoaso of Kidneys, Liver or
Stomach, of long or short it ending,
>ou will suroly find relief' by
of Electric Bitters. Sold at 50c
and $1 per bottle at J. A. Sareve's
Drug Storo.
an t-pi-oh in the lifo
hueli a remark
uso
er
Latest British emigration returns
show that Great Britain continues to
be the European colonizer par excel
lence. England has delivered her
»elf of 164,225 emigrants dating
1889; Irelaud comes next with 64,
972, while Scotland—the laud which
founds empires on a peck of oatmeal
—contributes 25,471.
Great Britain'» total output 254.568
fur 1889 compared with 279,928 for
1S88.
This makes
for
the
Of foreigners making use ot
British ports for embarkation, 83,
608 left Great Britain in 1889, com
pared with 113,230 in 1888. Of the
total of all n liions, three fourths
lected tho United States as their
home, Soot!and sending so large a
proportion as 17 593.— Ex.
SO
new
Thoir Business Booming.
Probably no one thing has caus
ed such a general revival of trade
at J. A. Bhrevo's Drug Store ns
their giving away to their customers
of so many free trial bottles of Dr.
King's New Discovery for Con
sumption. Their trade is simply
enormous in this very valuable ar
tide from tho fact that it always
cures and never disappoints. Colds,
Coughs. Asthma, Bronchitis. Croup
and all throat and lang diseases
Î iuickly cared. Yon cun test it be
ere baying by getting a trial bot
tie free, large size #1. Every bot
tle warranted.
OF
For
The talk about a poll tax require
ment in the state constitution, does not
approach even temporary expediency.
Tbe writer suggests, that to require és
or $4 poll tax ten months before an
electiou, would reduce the negro vote
within safe limits. That very thing
was tried in this city and it reduced
the white vote more than the black
v ote.— Commercial-Herald.
Mf»t4rsa S##d.
LEI RICH A EPSON A 00.
lA U»d Mo win*
CO., Vick-bark.
LITE OF THE
HON. JEFFtRSON OAVlS,
— BT—
ess isitehsob d&vis.
a
TO BE SOLO BY SUBSCRIPTION CM Y
The prospect us and complete outfit for
canvassing will be ready immediately.
Agentd Wishing Desirable Territory
on tHs gre if work|will please address.as
soon ns possible, the publishers.
QELFORD COMPANY,
I NEW YORK.
18 32 Esst 18th Street.
HOHE I FARM,
LOUISVILLE. KY .
I* racognisad as the beat Farm Journal
IN THE SOUTH
Rvvry farm topic trmt*d by practical mm.
Frio©, SO Oents

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J. AT.COUSINS. New York.
vor sale by
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KING'S
Broom F actory.
CHARLES E. KING,
Manufacturer of and wholesale de,
er in all kinds of brooms. Also |
pairs sewing machine«, organs m
furniture, and does ail kinds of m
holstrriug Satisfaction guaranbl
Orders from town and country -H
ited. Office in Person buildimfl
posife the Gibson House, VortMÊ
son, Miss. , ËM
No family in tbo
however poor can affoi
without that modern,
8ity, a newspaper. Su
for tho Times-Deii
Daily and Weekly^
the largest circulatioÊÊ
Furs.
IKE KI
OF POUT G 111.80
Offers the folio!
For fox skins....
Raccoon..
Black Polecat...!
Otter.3 f
Beaver..
Ginseng
.2
B
0.
BW
Haichef, kl» and Columbus fl. I,
qoxDEAsrn time table.
Is EffKt July 13. '89.
Ooiu.j jj li ;/ mul up.
ball.. Iiaa «..bf.
(luhtn Went rent lioiru.
torn. a.
We. i.
I ai C'aA
STAT IONS.
J.irk.on
Ur.ymnnJ
l/lin
Cal 11*1»
He* iiMti.ill*
W»-tio
Itanietoa
F.yxtu
N»«Ch<**
ti ll i » t*
I Lv. 4:00 am
1 Lv fc'A-w
Lv. C;SH am
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T. J NICMOLI© Pre*. H. J KuCKWELL.Supt
bu»i»trPi valley route.
Louisville, Hew Orleans £ Texas Railway
Nort
Ar 4:30 pj
Ar. £14 pi
KXPKKfS.
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Vlck hour 1
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1:«0 am
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2:13 *m Lv.
2:îi2 «m Lv.
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9:00 um Ar.
At
«
Pul'man Buf.t Sluoning Car* ran M
OrleiiM, Virkabnut, Mumple* anm
without chanx* Cloa* connxctii aJ
junxtinn point» with 4tv»n;>nf litifl
J M Kdwards, K. W. Ilnw, P. M
G P. A. M
MKMHIIIS.
V. P. A U. M
Reduction in Local
The Queen and Crel
have adopted a "liunj
their local business, li
be »fid at a consideiÄ
iront the regular IA
it will be limited as U
It is expected thi^B
will induce pass
ibe "Limited."
limited ' lo al li. k
c'ftH wi!i »ne m. u- mem
not lose any ptr^HB
\ ariteg" lo
din i-Miii md
tickets in a «
tbo date i.f
1
■KMa
The ooljr
for OhiUa a,
BUkMH a it
Swamp F I
from a T• f
m.
I
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t J |
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pu.
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P- Any I now
^overu- national dnnce/T
»y it or infamous and ilcgradin,« 7"
M a ver- tho modem 7
■he loss things are bad ntt ^hcJ. f,
f xi the f on by the
L'
„„ . Such I
°"* r ' carrietl I
»«•onAfsJ World, blit when?,"' Vo,nen of the I
" ' it Ironized by a « , Ä,,,, !»•
cv- positive ! C,,nrr,l ' U
kiocur-| tianity. A church i/ 0 U * m ® ofUbr'*./
1rs, an (things for the nne, ,U " iIJ do «»cli/tli
* Uhr u.. .ru„4!i h : a «»•«»«, te.
l "*- |or *" ""'AW,,
p pe». IIMM, of toaUrtl-M, »» c ->
(UHF-jnati.ro, but am i„... . ° f * f»JMTal|
P "r
»n. '»/•!
•l«M „II >,„I i, Z * to n '" • dr
Ss. t, •> u«, a*
tho^
lo
»ny church that
I «» rib. .t **" «b !.. !'
Ih. ,ZT!y^ n '- bv
„ issr', . "■»
i v..3 r n
m. r.rui
I ccr
Bd in
| ) oor. i
Ivith
Vistcr.
- n n -
ThtO faaUc Dragaa Tra.
The most gigantic 8| J I
Vor- 1 famous dragon tron i 0Cn ° f 11,6 1
idol »»y, near Oratava «„ it , "
Toneriffo. Thi. ' tho , '' , * n d of If.
- ««Il», I„ , K . .hZZZnM." d - < ' W1 '
«W »«d the buri.1
Mibwiaxippi VaJ , cy
Mensu
IfuU
fin.
a
>ur
ho
bta,
or E
mound« of the
in
i, u»» io„* mu „ ""'"r 1 -- 70».,
required, if four,«.». , lhe Bmej
growth did not ad, I, T ? °' ' ligorou * ! ,ndw
*c U ,nr. re „ÜXT
" 'S? ,o ■ Ti '*° -y
SS
pcs
»ur
nl
pSr
f No wonder thatthe
rldid not
„„ K rcal Humboldt
. ™».Mcr It ï ■ "'" J
*- I
a i xr
' Vo«"d (Ä , K V A|,ril ,2—
; on und .hé »ildl«" 1 *" ü "'
Älk JL-Ä
2Ä1&53 " Mh -
last
and
funs u» courue in fbj r .
«I bv pain .t *k . fl,prw * ch b her.hI-1?^*^
. pain at the base of » »
burning f 0Vt . r f oUo raJa ' •
»wclls uaran^in ' tbo
low. AZTenthTr 1 ^ M 'h
*I»otted With voll C H>dy hiMMÇe»
«well
7'eoplo«tT ( Ä'h" n : "'"' k »V
| -.V.hlu g I.
w *y. The scho<,k am , , lo gct *- vote.
few physicians are nhmnu°^ ^ hear
from overwork.
| «Ppear to be infecti
family in
~^tnr tlon ' but
-iUh e «r,rta
excite
■Tppear
over a
attack
.... , The dis
«un,tner carried' ff/ ' at , whW >
fifty victim" hf & " nd,ad
ty. Tho disease 1 CWOn *
iy-oix hours.
Its
«•i
U "'"
exhausted
Uw dl « , M« does
' oo* and so f* r tb e
m ore than
not
one case
every
remain
The
" ph " c -o-m<'rd4l Ut, lf
f,
Such I ^ mSSLä d''
carrietl I Äev «5WIB|& # .
of the I '
Ä,,,, !»•- !, I !' nent,l, *
U
ofUbr'*./ They d'/imt |T ' w ,, - v »"t in
«»cli/tli ey r M ,t j n thr'l'*'' tl>0
«»•«»«, te. ~»<»7 u. «k,, ,;;; 1 j
hSJPS*« tfljr -1.7a,.
-> »... / A. H ! 'Z, ""! *>4 II..,
f»JMTal| wlio^ willi,,« t., , f,« ll 'i < .'
Write
H4\
'»/•! "fi« ->r li,'? mi;Z'lT r
'" • dr '•« of «-IM a C '
u«, a* a. .i« h ,.i;:: t r( !
A* to the old
patriotic
question were put teTh
tho^- would forego the
j . I*rt
nnn Inin.
»gainst the
»•>« vote
«b !.. !' A "f° •>■•'iVd
bv ZV 0 "* rul. .,, rt r, i
"■» sysar? »K "i
v..3 r n ;rïb. fo ffiî; l '?*râ4e j
- tll, - v would say x , . '
n *• "»«»«trous LiTtL öut ' , 1 " , Y Nay.
I "'''Uhl jeopardize ^ l;,t
11,6 1 l* retM? f'Ve n privile » ' V1 °, e Y lil ° to
f Pri»ih-go. * The
of If. 1 V™ «h'>uld look at the k.Vi?.
*'* «"«uiriffl
wiae
»n veil
nee of
E
the
Jt DfiE COWAN*» PL a $ J
.
70»., o, u JJrZtZZ
citizen of the Ntal. !Tr ' W, *° H
* ! ,ndw «bi and owns h rtv ^ * "*1
Ä^öi öl
SS ,J
'
!
et
Ho
lo
would
of color
«n.l (Ik '
°* the male
of color
•najority
Let
,2—
"'
' oegro
voters combined
rf-ras*? «>- un
tors, equal tu R the > »^c
tatlves, who shun . x , , rt 'prenen
L'd and elect all J? et when e, o«*t
gressiiuinl and district t °' co "
d,c,ai «nd executive Â"' J 1 '
hroblena will he «„i J, j ho rao «
m» I» no rëZLZt-l.' , , nd "»«
r . hftv o honest elections * * T?!' 1
her.hI-1?^*^ in lh >n U, conflict J ïf ^ ,M
{amen dînent „„„ ,,c ' * r, th any
• stitution of fh e Uni^ïo?* ** ,e con -
''Ifanv Jl ü ,,U ' d8ta ^a.
'h ^»«Wwhv
|*nMnof«| irorthl»»!^' ed.
[■hould vsteÏÏ^.yo .ua,'
»V
thé
vote. T would HL ' shl ^ #h O*»h| not
hear it." ü Ver Y much
the
a
dis
>
*
<■
to
*>«ingovM rlmby ''*
wilid?V£ ,, i on r I« *
<li«n Tl». *Jr" 7* 1 '
«•i
;;"I»»«iWe nilher to „JiS 1 . 1 "
U "'" or X> ch«l Ui.ir prugr"»""-

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