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mt _ _iadi n L 13. HOMER, LA., FRIDAY, JUNE 13, 1890. . _ .. . ---- ln l INII III I IN II I nm1 l 11NII I I I II lm I In I III I I IIIIIII~ i I I I nIIIIN I I I II I-FI nll1~l I I Nllll'l I' I lllnl lllll'r I I I Il 1 • I INH I b 11 1 'I I II III l I I-- In il I _ I I THE SHREVEPORT ) TIMEBS CtAmINIX k La:lntt Telegraphic Market and NevswReports. .·, /? pi : Per xYear 1.1 :ctiand Reliable . . . ..:ý .Y'~' :i 5 , . r.': 1:. `R t ..`f r r I7 i. .M ' -. . , -w ý . e `··~~* ·~·- :··A 4. r '-s·~\l - 4.r~ :F I Staple and Fancy Groceries! CLOTHING AND DRY GOODS, LADIES' DRESS GOODS, B. W. EOLLII GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, CARPETS AND RUGS. Goods delivered to any part of Hornm er Free of Charge. W. P. THEUS&CO -DEALER IN DRY GOODS, µ LO'UING,B.OTS,SJIOES,HATS -o .*8oM t of Depot, Arcadia, Louisia . 'r i W 0 G.@d& Don't forg.t t call on me when you come to Y. i:e . f.,or Cottn :and all lknds of Country Pioduce, St WiES p _rlcs yW onge . Don't forgt to call on mo when oonic to Acs. willm oe i to yoar interest. . j a e.+:. ,su eA I 'VI aI" ý ,. " o W g. */jXOV %0, $,p .e pa"ta ttand Hats. SSte OT -, L. ,!j -. - :;'." ;. +4 " -. i Ajer's Hair Vigor I8 Sthe "ideal" Hair-dressing. It re. :atotes the color to gray hair 1promotes I a fresh and vigorous growth; prevents ' the formation of dandrufft; nakes the I hair softsad silken; and imparts a deli - cate but lasting pen a fume. , "Several months ago my hair rOm. menced falling Out, and in.asfew weeks my beadA 1almost bald. I m~anT~ remedies, but they did no final ly bought a bottle of Ayera Ior, and, after using only a part of the on tenta, my head was covered with a heavy growth of hair. I recommend your preparation as the beat in the world."-T. Munday, Sharon Grove, Ky. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor fota number of years, and it has always given . me satisfaction. It is an exoellent dress uing, prevents the hair from turning gray, insures its vigorous growth, and eeps the scalp white and clean." Mary A. Jackson, Salem, Mass. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor fot romoting the growth of the hair, and hink it unequaled. For restori ,t(ik hair to its original color, and for a ess. ing, it cannot be suenrpassed."-Mrse. d La Fever, Eaton Rapids, Mich.. "Ayer's Hair Vigor is a mistaie. lent preparation for the hair. I seak of it from my own experienoe. Its ' promotes the growth of new haW makes it glossy and soft. The igr also a care for dandrnff."-J. W. Bowe; Editor "Enquirer," McArthur, Ohio. "I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor the past two years, and found it alli represeite4 to be. It restores the raI orto grayair, cuses the to w frehely. a keeps it soft plia1r"-Mrs. M:. y, Vohoes, N. father, at i the at e of lost all the hair from .iith top o his hea After one month's tie4 Ayera's Vigor the hair beg coming, and, three months, he hd- Afine growtht hair of the natural color."-Pl.LCllea Saratogpriugp,,. Y.. Ayeý ilair Vigor, laasi s! Dr. J: . Aye * Co.Y Lower Mass olIbtyDriualg !.U aaP -f4 . A Course of Lore l Arcadia. One Sudlay, after the preacher had finished blrier n in none of , siian d4efioi :s yromug d4ut1e stood u, ibefore him to irlated - in the holy bonds of mattrieigny. The parson asked the usual ques dcn; · ;: w e-.U ny one objectseta. he speak or torever after hold his peace. "After a short pause he was about to proceed with the ceremony when a young man minus coat, with ankempt hair, dirty face and red eyes, arose and blubberingly said: "Mr. Preach er, I object. ' Lizzie has promised to marry me, and she has got my ring bn her finger; and 'cause Boi gave hera young filly and has a new house she has flung me off." The indignant bride retorted by flinging the ring to him. She then, turning to the parson, said: "I did not promise to marry Jake. He gave me the ring and I retnrn it to him. I woaldn't marry hi if he were the last man under the sun." Jake ran out of the church without picking up the ring, while the ceremony was finished in the most approved style, and the youag couple left for the groom's home amid much Areoicing. Americue (Ga.) Recorder. Some of the conservetivelournale of. the North are urgligthe young men of that overcrowded section to go South, but sch satrice coases the Bepaicean organsd to, howl with Iadignation and decldre tat young Republicans will Rot go South where they are not permisted to euiprss thehirpoitical opinion sad vote B thy pleast Of conrs all tit& ta1~te pouc t n pf i dalgd in *lt the api t tuintu, asde, the c urreh t migration .othe South I of~ ~i .the .n4 4be ften eaposed ~k~4deveI HOUSES THAT ARE OUT OF STYLE, There Is No Etoeue far Making Baa lb vestments of This lind: There are few towns and cities in the cont. try in which there are not a number of e houses which are said to be "oat of tylaj" They are old style houses and will not bring t the soney that was put into them. It is not I good business to build a house that will go outof style. It is not good business to putr money where one cannot get it again. There Ir ere some things that do not go out of style, a11 sbch things are founded on common hense. 'the requirements of housekeeping J do notchange naterially from year to year,1 and a house ping which meets all of the re qutrements of the housekeeper is rarely said i to be out of style. 1 . ; t t - -. LEvArTIOM. We often see large houses bring in vorý little rental when considered relatively to t their cost. On the other hand we see little I boxes of houses which bring in relatively a high rental The latter may have all of the 1 modern conveniences-a firnace, hot and cold water, a bathroom with tub, water closet and ;washatand; a sink in the cellar in whloh tq pour water from the tubs, a laundry stove, a cemented floor, plenty of light, that it may be used n a laundry; a well arranged kitobhes and chiha closet; everything handy and co0n venient--no waste room, hence no waste steps or wasted carpets. This is the kind of a house that is always in good style. There are many tbhings to be considered by people who have not much monriey and are i without a large experience in house building. Being a manof moderatemeas, if I wih tb build a house it is proper for ine to consider whether my house would have a rental vauine it I wish to put it on the market in that way. The not incomo from that property, if rented, loilld4 geed by 1 p per ceat. the current r t9 pt interet l the soetipa 9 country in wlbloh toestructure iserectod. A great many foolish investmeute are nuide ndw .' house property because people do not Sof this, and for this reason we hear a great `I I I )sn iorr ~Aa II. usea ssarst sooa. uAlaibout the folohneas of golpg to debt ahopie. Itlisavery makthnagtodo it So the property only' whatit is Iaaa it isa v resaiple matter' to de what tbhll # i if auitn tekesheirl be thepgorees setll coiae thtbpsalop. I*at toebr rented, ald then make wanee fortanes, lasuranoe and re if tiseb inoeaem then slightly of the current ratetor moesy, we l goala in debt. who are liv;ig ng t he hose berellaulsrated are peyig for it In aeociatloc. Thet cast )1,900, , wthesroryhtlsg thig oes to iltdonmplete exeepting a fursaci, cost The assockation from which they am. thsiriftoneylsomi the perpetual plan, organised on a limited pideanuuniasis; all preinltmiisaremimted to ten cents weekly paynient of ftity cwta on absOO shareasa tdnsgeured $1,8Oth0ey to pay in filtyet perweek on nine ot OOecao) Thi.toh$a0I W sweek, or $18 and (IDamontb, as the minlmum I~ps$'enttobein4s. On this ]Ilan of pay-. 0of psrliust Interest thee Is twenty isnteperahareperws ek to be paid - b~itwatonui2,oo@ oee lshara Ii. I:gqpg 1·.s:~Yd4i~5v Death of Col. landervile Mar- pi igny. gi Another distinguished Creole w gentleman has passed away from , the scene of life's great battle, Ii leaving a name, reputation and h record of which any community p might well be proud. Colonel Mandervdlle Marigny is dead. After an illness of only a few days - he breathed his. last yesterday afternoon, surrounded by a few " loving friends. tl He came of historic family. A His father, Bernard Marigny, was one of the wealthiest planters of Lj Louisiana, of French ancestry, always loyal to the king. His p mother was a daughter of a noble Ii Spaniard, Morales, Qovernor of Louisiana before the cession to o the United States. When Louis n Philippe was exiled from France 0 in 1796 he came to Louisiana, and p was welcomed by Colonel Marig ny's grandsire, whose guest the King was tor many months. But 1 the Colonel's own career was h brilliant enough in itself, and B warrants a more ektended notice b than the bare mention here made. In the . year 1810 Colonel u Marigny was born. He was edu- ° gated in France at the military " college of Saumur, and had for alaesmate the Due d'Orleans. He completed his studies and became w an offi8cer in the French cayalry. c In 1834 he resigned his posi tion and Game to Louisiana, where o be married a daughter of Governer O Claiborne, the first American a governor of Louisiana. Its father had left him a large fortune and h he returned to France with his a wife, who was made one of the ° ladles of honor in the French court. C When the war between the F Stee broke out, Mandeville Marigny found ju 84f ip.. Lois-C iana and vailinteered his services for the Confederate cause. He went to Virginia, the scene of raction, as Colonel of the Tenth Louisiana Regiment, under Gener= al Magruder. ie resigned in b 1862 and was sieceeded by Colonel t1 Eugene Waggamah. s Napler Bartlett, in his military s record bf the erliced oft the Louisiana troops in the Con- ti federacy, gives the following des- f: cription of the subject of this a sktretch at the timeotf t he wari ii "Mandeville Marigny was com missioned, among others, to raise i a regiment of infantry. Colonel i Marigly was it gentleman of tall, I commanding fgare, and probably a at that time one of the best speci- i mens of the French Creole in physique, general appearance, e manners, accomplishmehts; that b the State has prodlaced. His P father, who resigned a title to 6 become an Americatl, was old a Bernard Marigny, who once ownl ed, besides other possessions, one half of the lands upon which New ' Orleans is builtiand who spent a $500,000 plantation ia hoapitaUlitv i to Louis Philippe and his saite, s when the former was traveling as an exile in this cou The S King of the French diwed his * gratitude after his csoIeion, to b the extent of havinig Bernard'. son entered as a pupil In the 8 French Military School, -and the talents of handoville set!aped him ' subsequently advancemesit amd * position in the French army. U. C afterwards returned to Louisana and was received with great hnoer I by the people of his native city, who, besides other testimonials of U their esteem, elected kiih to sever- e al profitable offlei Bhi.poplarl. It ty soon euablaJ blm1 after receiv- r ing his coqamiasion to obtain as many congpahies as was necessary i to mkkeo regiment." ~-;;i~a~ -~.1~.... ~I possessing a superior memory and gifted with an exquisite faculty of expression, association with hint was instructive, entertaining and deliohtiul. He was the last of his name, the only surviyors of his family being two daughters.- Picayune, -&ouithern Ilscellaneto. Prunklin, La., wants a bank and will probably get it. $7200 spent and no water yet at the artesian effort in Uniontown, Ala. Reform is demanded in the judiciary system ol Louisiana. Legislators, notice. Attailla, Ala., is eonsidering propositions to put up an electric light plant and water works. Farmers and planters don'tbuy ot the North. Raise what you need, as well as cotton. With a capital stock of $200, 000 the American Fire Arms COar pany starts at Bluffton, Ala. A box, pail and bucket fastery Is needed mucbly on the Missias ippi coast. Who will furnish it? Taylor, of the Lafourche Comet, bits off the alleged protection to sugar as the "two cents bounty hoax." Lafayette, La., wants an artesian well, and hopes to raise, by sub scription, money enough to get water. It requires ten cars to take $2500 worth of grain to market, while the same value of butter can be carried iii half a cal. Cuero, Tex, has raised one-halt of the $75,000 for a cotton seed oil mill. Sn she will have it; alsd a new telephobe line. The telephone line between Markevlle and Bonkle, La., is ah assured fact. Of the $900 require *ed, 80has been subscribed. Building hascommenced on the Caffrey Central Sugar Befinery at Franklin, La. The factory is named in honor it the Hon. Dei Caffrey. Te bonded indebteduiss of SBa caipta, $830,029; expaenditures; ;728,598; rate of taxation, $1. per $100., Mnsifteld, La.; is on a healthy boom. New building aeseeMas tton8, cottoti compress, iibank, and a number of other.industries, b1 speak a lively fliture. Greenville, Miss., is looking to the establishing of a cotton gut factory. As uspal with Greenvill6 when she wani S ahti$llug in. the industrial line she gets it. The artesihO well at Ciatoan p Miss., is now 770 teat deep and ii is thought that another 100 fest will give a flot. 1Je* maohafirg and men have arrived aid gone to works The catnin; factbrof At Latfyf estt was a fallare, apid *aim ablb by the she'irff it is a ltstbl l plate plant, but needs mea capaa ble of understanding the 4isI incident thereto. In the northirwt po~t ik Legan a san couty Xntcky, yre inoh discovlier at ggIab w Asphati turn' have beet m e laupd Jumped from $1to $50 ianr ae Wfnder if this is a spited aiitr? Plaquointhe, La., is tb havs~ 1steam ferry boat acrose the MIe' sissippi river at that poiat. The bbat ls well.adapted to the pttr. pose, baeng 'KV.54y#doteet I it and feorteen fimethoani. A contract h** bess couaen d with a Nashvlit Stal t raits h the misutlrbeitoialjag der niueiy days t oI scat $6I: 00 & enaras~thfl , is gradudI' Sassming huge ltpi6i5 A other altroqi t that city; ti.ts UO1Up sad*ay t IIt *# vSohtbe l