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“ 8 N N Y D Y ST N AOTENE§ Y I Y AT QLN By , o _iNJ ; t 2 & 3<k3 / ék 3/ X = b = % . .4 & = 5Y < : % ¥ " 7 . : (2] %' 3 i a‘w , __‘, = g A B : g By L RAINEY. Nne "-:“,J‘. e a 0 MRt L S AR E- A~ Y N AL A AL SEN I hN\ o 7 g SANE = \ 4 A ARAAT 72 N 82, NS/ - VW e N 7 AT A )D R g /’4 . = /1% > 7" > A X A 1‘ RS (i' } ? NV\ ) T p ~ o s R L A ) > o ,§)(\ o \ ENES’ DREAN. Jenks had & queer dream the othor nizht, e thought ke s:‘:fif a prize-ghters’ ring, and the middle of it stood a doughty litcle pion who met and deliverntely knoched fi' lom;nhy (f“fi' 4 scgire or more of big, y-looking fellows, u 8 they advanced 1o attack. iluits a 8 they were in size, the v..lhnt.lpigmy proved more than a match for them. It wqflcw funuy that Jenks woke up laughing,* aceounts for the dream by the fact that he had just come to the conclu sion, after trying nearly every Liz, arastie glm on the market, that Pierce's Pleasant irgative lets, or tiny Sugar-coated Granules, egslly “"kpock out” and beat ail the big pills"hollow ! They are the original and only genuine Little Liver Pille, Beware of Imitations, which enniain Pois sonous Minerals. Alwsvysasi for Dr, Fieroe's Pellets, which are Little Sugar-costed Pills Pr Anti-bilious Granuvics, @ne a Dose. ind Cipaapr =S 1'? o t:_~,i.i§‘: & O\ g VA .20 22 isl Ry W i v 2 B 8 ' Bllicns Mendaeho, o Eizziness, Constinza St /BB tionwEndigestion, BBils . a ® iouvs Atiacks, and all de- E iErs > rongoments of the stomach 3 | Q*’ and bowels, arg promptly - CRRN - relievad and permancatiy = cured by th i of Dr, Pierc 'SflPlC.’\]iin?'l‘u;':\("‘- Peligtss -~ They 8 gently laxative, or sirongly eathartic, peording to size Hf dose. Smallest, € hest, basiest 10 takeww@aeents a viai, by druggists, D ht, 1.&“? WORLD'S DISPENSARY 3EDe JCAL ABROCHE A 010 V. Proprictyrs, . 603 Man st Euiilo, N. Y. Ed -y e I Tii s i < e ] | By g Sy s B L Eesd -( . - ’rfi FEL s i b " » g Pt s » 3 oy ) i e > a - .‘ - - ,"”: e 9 E 3 5.k . @ Y - = c S 09 L O :, ; ¥ L 5 EW % ; ® PR A T BY G H i T AR R P R i v o sdfes hble Ma:- €~ arV Styies. New : andSecsrctiard. gPe CES. ¢ 8 SABO3 LK3 TFE. R ney it antacd for five . SO no Ret ! t s repre fH can ’ : W €ach ve v .l . . >t Sie- B et oWI giere dnst X Tleces je:. MBII . Ireg @ good RO (rod il e E t DI UT DAIN § EIFREICHT PAID. k , - : agrea to -su a't freick® on Pianos and ; Ps. bheve wha wact qu foery, order « 'Ait'i-. -4 ';T % W i otgery olfer, r:‘ I‘.; ‘ pu.coas el ot e B o eally mondy cad ‘i 'gl& - . o PIANGS ; 153 0C > $1.560/00 JGANS aw $:13008: 3 78000 R Spivr OrFfeERS. B neesy O £de 1 T laste tlon at top 3 -D J‘J :? 5 coa 736 Ot vas thoe o feie ey NP veaead { '_“7'"'3 o ed Prano . ; e tY LU E: ey ik R sets of = + ter san Ol mbibiiets e o sxb 5 ettt fats tee Wi . , (g Wl NLM ~‘:’:*"”"&"’ V 4 g R . 3 na {re : _. 24 N .4 i, —Chisistian Wou ko f yon want ot {Lin' o e 7i=s a Piing Or ;an, by no nu purchass v til you Bve seour-d pric 8 o & torasloo FHILL!FS & CREW, blished 1465, ATLARTA, G SENT = BE L Su f . Pos faea 88% 8 & (uladna Everv reader oj this naper who expects 1o buy anything in e o Of.l)i;.'.'--;;\-.:., UL JeWelry, Hiivey F and Clogh g, o 1 wheptoinls of buyue , ;¥4 37 @had . % B 8 EBc-Wid . Should send forour naw iilustrated cutulogue }.(II 13;,‘15, With we =eud free. gaia o pon - ) P STRVERS Bl ‘ JRWE R INR&S« R LAY Flanég £ ATWaltehatl, S, Alanta, ba. BRI R A ITAFhHEe iR e L < 5 TR EF N - BT ULD 6'_ i ?}it:\.‘ ey LW NO TPTFEC T R AT DOC FEWICHEER, (0L s now jocated.in Dawson to Clean, pair #nt Pye gnrments. Al lors always on houd at first aie helow. .z, Har's curringe op. et e t YRI T Risk H S Yy S U SN ;3%-}_& E'\ losing rxur ehild by permitting Worms t out {ts destruction. When n chind f4f« 1 p well, is 1y unnateml in Qs apred 1 grindyg ity ey o hua v <t colr ndication” Worms ; the” Er'v'f' for thiv is 8. A, A.!B{S‘l‘?(‘ .'S ?'l‘.’R,‘lii UG Askyont st for ft. Its tincely use may sare your: e s reve. g > 55 BT "A MURRELL NEGRO.” 01D WATT MURRELI’S STORY OF THE SOUTHERN OUTLAW. | How the News of Murrell's Capture j Was Reecived at the oid Home stead in Tennessee, ‘ The most tamous outlaw that | aver Ggured in southern crimuinal history, withoat exception, wus John A Murrell, ' Thete are nisuy old peopie still hiving in Georgia, and in mber\' part= of the soath, who remember| the ti:ne when Murrells uame was | # terrer to whites and blacks, and | asysonym for all that was eruel| and tigerish dn outlawry, | Some of them have old papers | storcd away, with eolumn afwr' ¢ it n about him, all robbery and l murder. Books without nuwber | were ariten codeerning his life, | as th:re were more recently of | Jesse James and others who follow l ed i, f _TILe scbereat accounts of I;Es; lonz corer read like the mad storics ia fiction, full of iueredibe! escapades and escapes, and all of! thon marked with a uaigue, halt picturesgue barbarity. ‘ Tt wasalvays sidd that histeol- | leaguies werein nedrly every county | i 1 the southern states, \§(*ffl'.?:)’! and prominentmen, who winked | at Lis ‘robbery and shared lhc! spoils, Some ot Murrell's plans were © gigantic, . covering \\‘.;u'(‘; states, and bis audacity and mirac- | vlous suceess are uvaceountable ex:ept on the thesvy of a great! cen‘ederation, : | lao ceveral - ifftances men of | prominence were im»\‘w] to lmn? beeh Implicated, and a namber of | the agzects, after Murrell was cous victed, were tried and sentenced 14 | haif a dozen stafes. There is new living in Atlanta anold darkey who was bern o ‘v on the Magerel] plangation | Sullivan county, Teunessee, about 118554 | This is Watt Murrall,” the plas terer. | . Heis vell kiown here: an han est, prosperous, lglli:'! old c!:ll"Ko‘_‘.', and a good workmwm., He hws teee i 1 Atlantasinee *65, working at the trade Le learned in slavery ity yearsago. e ‘member,” he was .“T(.\'Ell__',y a | few days ago, the time wea the ' news come theyd eau bt Mors John | I was a littie picemniny in them days, out there in the yard cuttin’ Fdo ‘ennel with a erooked stick. A ; man went up in tie house, an’ ‘ii':;«"n I heard ’ein all eryiy’ and i takin’on, and the Louse vizgers | tukin’ on like somebody was d=ad. |Bo levep’ up the baek way, I dil. ito see what 'as up. Thdu tiey | say, ‘Murs John beew caught!” an’ ot all the takin' on—don’t ralk. teemmen, don’t talk. I ’members {ibeaine as vistiday, o “Rong "o’ that Lheerd “am - talke in®‘round ’hut they dide’t talk | open. You know he was a| prescher at fus—yss be \\'m—an" he died a preacher. Such a preachs | er 2s Mars John was. Bat they! teli me he diedagood mm, a’ 1 : i'lieves it, | “You sce, the w'ite folks didu't) say m eh where the niggers could | hear, butone day Yors Tom and| Mor: Judeo, ‘as cattin’ l-mm’.s,’ ar* Theerd Mars Tom say, “he got! aipety-nine years, Hudson.” I’dJ TBeen learr:in’ how to ddunt an” I’ gay, ‘Gin’em oge.mo’yeapan’ he'd | hud a hundred, wouldn’s he?” Tien | they cute their eves ‘round, but didut say vothin’, an’ that’s how eome we to know he got ninety ruim‘ years, He served five years in | vashville, an’ five years in Jack-i son, Miss., an’ five years in We tumka. Then they got 'im par doned, 'cause the Murrells was l all rich. i «Mare John was the youngest ¢of the boys—Dick, Tom au’ EJuixu A. Ole Mars Dick Mar \rell, his brother, owns thai g;\iurreli place now, 1,400 acres gof the fives’ elover bottom in Teunessee. - I went up there to ' see 'efn 811.;%19!3.};0815{;“,611' they ; was wighty glad o see this ole ‘niggar. ‘The place is right l'dnwn at @id oe of Bay's mown. taln, close s Bal's Cap. Yes, gir, 4]l B "Cm” kad “plenty of monex, “You kuow Mr. John Thom as?? asked the old mav, inter.. rupting himselt. “The one that died here uot loug apo, One day he tol’ mie, “Wait, T had the Lig chain took off your Mars John ‘in Nashville’ I didn't know whether he was jes jokin, oraot, but when he 'dial [ read io the Censtitution that B 8 was in the legislature in 'f(;xi';_gessu-v, an’ that's w }mt.'h;‘ told e 1 b'lieve vow he badiit dene, sare snongh % e HOW A NOFBAWASGEAID. oB e N “You ever ,hghi’?*“’hintwtlmt widlow woman?” ‘asked ‘Watt,- meditativelyd “Duda’t? Now, T didu’t see {xlé, Bug its Wat theysellm A § & S« (" “Ona dvy Mars® John wed tidin’ 'loug an®saw a widow o wan cryin’ at the well He sop ansay, ‘Wat's'up? Bhe tell "im then that <he owa a mnu. §3O for rent an’ Lida't hive po money. Shé didu’b see Wow on earth sho was goin” to pay. She was moauin’ asugeeiftHY, and Mazrs Jolin gay, 2Well, 'l pive youihnfmach, Than heé pullad out a 4 hanifal of goll an’ silver, an’ecunted 839, an' w'ile she was thaukin® 'im he rode off, an? the last words he {old her was to make th- man give hor a re ceipt. B -nde wodosijong voff, but Le haduf gone far wen a mau say, ‘sltop!’ The mun stopped. . *Now,’ the other fol low say. “Dwant that fiffy dGla lars.” ‘Laiwt gof o fifty dols lars.” ‘¥és, youlis. Give me that {ifty doilavs cr Il make you give.me all. yon' got’ So the man paid the filty dellaws; but the wilow. womau had the receipt il thoe debt was paid, and the vich mah lost it & Go bady was bart, “Mars John wase’t 2! bad an’ Be dene lots er things like thatl “After awhile | was sokl; fiesh to one marster av’ theu toanath er, and {indly 1 come to blong to Me. Marshall -he learned emy tra le. Wa used to work all over: five countios in Al bama an® two counties su Miss i issippi, plasterin’. Ever'shere I went the nawe of bein"a Mur rell niguer. weat. with we. They'd say. ‘that vigzer is onc _of tha Murrel] stock.’ % “Ouae day 1 Kempar coanty, ! Miss., a lot of Pem was talkin’ 'about Mas Johu's cave down ‘there near Cliston, an® how he wwas rohiliy’, an’ one Ecllow old Chow i A& KEW TODE MAN come an’ said e was a eotton broker. e had plenty of wpn- Ry an’ éVoel‘:l)-)gly liked "1 n.. Que nicht there was a big bull at a plantation in the ecountry, an’ ever'body was, goin’, {he New York mun suy, “Boys, lat’s tuke all the money we can get aad have u big tims.) So every body enrried a big pocketbook, 'Bout a mide’ from town the whole crowd was stoppsd gy’ robbed. The New York man was-tu {ront, and bo shellad out bhe Biet ouey Then they let 'em all @o, bat when the y.-looked fur him the New Yok wman was gone, an’. Be never was seen again. Fhat was hew Mard Jobu got "eni all th carry pock atbooks an’ then robbed "em all withont anybody beia® Lurt,” “How many mea il Marredi ever kill?” asked oneof the old darkey’s andience. #] don't know for sure as he ever killed anybody, Lt they msed to make out like Le Lilled fots of folks. The way he ‘woald trade niggers was bow eow im 80 rich. He glwngs tried to rob without killiy’, “His plan wasto ran of a whole ot of viggers from one state, i sell e in cnother. Then he would go back witha {resh lot an’ sull 'em were e stolo the fust ones. DAWSON GEORGIA, JANUARY 29, 1890, S Put Marsdolnils dead” ndw,” o Lhidpo/ Ny pescs, Fol done some geod 1 this worl, | an’ more'n.a heap of us do Atlaxty Constitution, ; e Pt Wi ectllb. | For some vears past the state | of Vermont has been in serious | tronbie, says the Atlanta Cou-i stitntion. 1 A steady, gtresm ~ of emigra- : tion Fmi Lesh pousing oub of | that-sommongrenith abd vew ceis tlers Late not heen coming in. | So far from budlding ap- the waste places and makiong the% wildersess Llossom as the rose, | tha willerness has extended, | and the waste places mplifui'ied.‘ Buta brighter day is dawning For this anfortunate state. The story of ths chunyge is well told! Dby the Bocton Globe, Tt seemsé that various methods of secar- | ing imnigrants were tried with | ont suceess. At last it stroek | the leading spirit that it adyer ! tising was a good thing fov :’; business man it was also 1 good thing forastater “So the farms‘ were advertisell. ®People in the i four eorners of the carth found | themselves deluged with ncws-é papers, pamphlets and posters, | seting forth thé cheap lands and the natura! resources of Verigoat. Millions of lettorsi are now comsing in {o the com - mission r of agricaltare askine for information. © Clhpitalists imxf Buyingup farms and wil fages, The rash of immigra tion has eommenced in earuest, and it witl ill the stato with e, | 1. It 1s the old story with its netor failiug result.’ It pays to 1 advertise. Georgid, or any | ciher Sonthern state, by adopt %i::;;;_tl;e bneiness wethods of | Vermont, wonid ia a short time attract wallicos of Tmmisravts. The population ¢f’ the Bouth, | bowever, is inereasing rapidly { enouah, and it is parhiaps Better to grow paturally than to force ! a bt hoase growth, and to { brirz sndidenly in oor wmidst {strange elrmerts’ and stravge ! problems, sl tho story of Vermont's jrghabitation cuivies a lesson | with it ! : Now {6the Tissel { Never put off till to-morro=s i That which needs doinzx to-day. i If you do you may find. to_your | Sorrow. | Too ltethat vou've trifled away | the golden nn;rn‘fu‘-‘i;y of a lifes itimfl It thess who compliin of WRKNCSS aha deulily, nave Lacks inz cough and pain in the gide or chest, poor appetite, hroken slesp acd ather symntoms of a geuneral decay of vitiity, woull promptly peocare Dre. Perce’s Golden Medi ¢ine Discovery and take itas di rected they micht throw of the disease which threatens them and soon regzain a hold. on the health they are surely losinze: Consamp tigad suay be' averted if prompt weadare are tokey by the use of this staudard remedy. Tact those who have reason to feel that their goueral vitali'v is ranning law Dbe wise and do something for thems selves at gnpe. for'dclage oret dins gerous, “Gobdén Medicize Dis— covery” i 3 yearranted to heusht or eurs in all enses of «diseases for which it i= recommendad, or mency paid for Tt refandsd, . Erociscuers. i 3 Thiz rewsedy iz becoming 20 well knowniand 8o papular ae te need u()‘spgni:x': mention. AN who have used Electric Ditters ¢ing the same song of {?ra;:isen—;i\ purer medicine dues not exist dud il is gouaranteed to do al! that it is cluaied. Elce trie Bitters will cure all diseases of “Liver and Kidney, will remove all digpare Lleod.— Wil driva Malaria fron the system and prevent as “welt a 3 cure all Malarial fevers. ~For eure of Headache, Con sultption * and Indigestion ' try Llectric Biiters—Eutire sytiafucs tion gaaraateed, er woney refun ded—Price Hozts anl £l.OO per botile at T. D. Bales Drug store, - THE FIEND 14 PURSUIT.! S e HR3E R3¢ It iskizh neon - of an August day. F2R833 I 8 mEA g Hot! Whew! but now the sum mer sun beats down ov the crest prairic—scorching, withering, shive eling, heating the blood of wman and animal until it seems 0 hoil ! We have turned aside into this grove gf cotipnwoodséad much s for shelteras to prepare and eat tie nuonday me k. There ara one —thréde—five——scren—ten trees covering the space dfa qu ter of an rcre; Her' a _%fiz;g-l&u!»hlua trom a | stzata ;fig‘»fi'%n;iii‘a»q! grivel and so muny '“fi;nn!:tml atimals have come h@.h‘ ‘slake thei tharst fimhhe?flfih&fif@ for the sprce of two scres. = Not exactly bare, but erchped off se short and trodden under foot so ofs ten that it it only athin carpet teo eover thesni'. “The paths radiut= ing away through the dry and way ing gross are like the spokes of a whicels ? Ah l'but water touches the epot ona fay lik this when one hics bheen ou a suddle sinee sanrise! T eh man.of vs'says w 0 by worl of mauth, and each horse says so in his look of roliet afier thirst has been quenched. Whigky ! Drandy ! Chsmpazue! They ' would hate been dlung oside with a feeling of disgust, i) SISRFLTCL L There are no gign hoards on the praivie. Turn which way youn will and the, horion idessgnidls to Ihe waving grass. \Weare drifting on a vust inland sea--a sea of carth and ercsr and dvine flovers--bath rrass and flowersyielding ep l!u&ir% lives to the long weeks of dry, hot weather. One may have company and eomforts, and he muy be eer tnin tfgut. if he holdgtrua to the s<nil\-’\n~'s he 'will eonie “out “fil’dy.’! but yet the fecling steals pvor hin at intervels that he is lost—driven here and there by wind and w.ve and currcnt. - & “What ails that horse ?” : We all kprang to see ona of the gaddlc Lorseaion vetermm in - yé s’ and experience—standing with his head Ligh in the »ir and painting dus westo AVinlehe looks as fixed v as if his ey es hiad lost their pow er to turn, hiis nostrils quiver and dilate with excitement. We wateh - ed him a few minutes. He was the first to exhibit alarm, but now 012 hor e aftcr another theoss up his head and looks to the west, SIPe fire bhoysl” Had it been night we should have seen the reflection, Had there been a strong wind thes odor would have come soaner, There is anly a geutle breeze —linguishiog, dying uuder the fierce sun, hut ressurrceted and piven a new lease ot hife atint rvale by an nuknowt! power. Dut now we can see the gmoke driving hewvenwards and shutting tlie ‘blue of the West trom our vision—now the horses ghow such si:ns that no men eould mistake. A great wall of name fifiy miles in leagth isrvolling toward us fanved and driven by a breeze of ils own creation,but come ingslowly and grandiy. It takes me only two or three minotes to climb to the top of one of the trecs, und from my.el vated posi tion T can get a grand “view of the wave of fiee which is driving be fore it everything that lives and ean move. g We work fast. Blankeis are wet at the spring and hunz up he tween the trees to make a bulwark agai“st sparks and smoke, the horses doubly secured,camp equips age piled. up and covered, and Ue fore we are through we have visi Lfll‘l: Ten or twelve buffiloes came thundering wp—pass the grove— halt and return to_ their shelter, crowding as close to” the horses a 8 they can, and showing no fearat our presence. Next eame three: pr - four antelopes, their bricht eyca)ulghlg ont With feay and their n?)slxg‘lsrb‘l‘owsiq;; out. the lienvy ofiar with sharp “enorts, One rubs agairst me and licks my hal‘Ml :’S’.Q’ub ht'l‘ nouse. Yelp! Yelp! Hers are hal a dozeu wolves, who crowd anong i the buffaloes “and tremble with | terrgr and'a seors of serpents race ffivéx’fl:e apent ground o seck the web ditche which ecarrvies off the overflow of the sprine. Last to ‘come,and only a mile shead of the ‘wave, which is licking up every ithing inits path, is & mustang—a i sinale apimal whieh has somehow been seperated from the herd, He gopes tromy tle North, meine 1o fi.-éz;) the grove hefore the [fire shall fent Linm oft) and fhe Tums for the' Moo With Cears laid hack, pose politing and | his «y_és tixed o the goul, s paee Cis that ot wthemderbalt, e "eape Csqire over one pileof damp onefit Land gacs ten rods hevond hefore he { can check himself. * Then he cimes trotting back and erowds between {two ot our horses with a Jow \\'H!l!}.\'. s coil " There is a roar, like Ningara. The smoke drives over overus in { pall of midnighi. The aiyseems to il)e one sheet 4 flamer 'iho wave ihns swept upy te the bree occound, fand is dividing to_piss us by, iWe are .in_an pven, The horses {snort and congh o and plunge, the 3\\'s)l‘.'(ls howl and mern asthe hent y becomes intolerable. - ‘Thus for tive tminutes, and then yelich gomes, {'Phe e dias passed. andshe smoke ii-l drivingaway, In theirpath is o jcool breese;every whift of which {iza geand elizer. | g ; { dugen minates the grove 19 so clear of sisoke thit we enn seo ev-‘ @o;'y foot of the eartheariin, ' <A queep sight it i Tthas bheen the ! Miaven of re fuce tarsnukes, Tz ls, ‘ fgnphn»ri, prairie dogs, rabbits. coy - 'io.'es, wolves, antelopes, deer, buft- ‘ (aloesy hovses, aud. wen —enmity, { Fadtipathy fnd Hanase ipprosed’ or the ence that all mizhe Hvp L that ciech niizht " eseaps the fiend fiu pursuit. For half an howr *.m'hing anoxes. . - Vhen the mus rt:m; flings up his head, blows the smoke from his nosirils and starts 1 off. with a flourizh ot his hicels, The { bufldoes 2o next—the decr and the antelope follow, and in five migutes weare left alone, e Far fifty mites to the north, west | and souf “there is nothing Lat | blackness —a landseape of despair, l'z\fns' to the east the wall of fire is i Gl moviag on and on—implacas t ble—rclentiess—a . fiend . whose { harvest 18 death and whose trail is ’defl)l;mfm. - Detroit Free Press, Who Is the Senator's Heir? “K. 1. C.." in arecent issue of the Brunwick Times, says: : I had a letter yesterduy from a widely know citizen of Atlanta which contained sonve information I have eoncluded to make publie. “Yod vill find, "the lettor 'says, “that at the right tune. F. G, du Biznon wiil be brought haeck into public life. Fdiave recent’y talked with prominent young Doiwocrate in. hiatf a dozen eities of the State, andd it is their opinion, almest withe out excoption, that dfißigmm will not be able to resist the pressure that will b brousht to hear :upon Fim. lam satisfied that vo other wan is lizely to be next guvur.}ur. Lhave recentiy been told that Govs ernor Gordon favors dubizoon as bis succastor, T ‘don’t suppose that Governor Gordon will make a public declaration to this efiect, but his influencerprivately exerted wouid be poweriul. ' A citizen of Lranswick, who wafin Syvannah a few .1::3‘5 ago, says that Joseph . Prown bad expressed a desire to have n Savanouh man elected gov cruor, Lbelivve the Beaator would support dußigion.” / sasaandy . chii A street fakir pamed Leo, who s setling diediciies 1o Americus, parules the sercets on a chariat, and procluims to the peapla that to tollow him is o follow Ged, He baads fnrge numbers of negroes atter Lim, principally, women. +u3 i3IV ILy ; The viorst feature about eatarrh isits dangerovs tendeney .o cons suwplion, lood's Sarsaparitia cores catarch by paritying the' btu;,daf BRI s It is "&timated that Georgia, duringz the p:;st year, eI OVEr 4 willioy tdoliars to Keutucky for horses and mules Well Pald for o Whipping, John James Mago, a quoict mida dlesaged man, *has had a- carcer as romantic’ as that ot Monte Cristo. Mage is now a Gautema lan millionatre, who lives nine months of the year in Paris. Fif teen years ago he was a poer Ens glish collector of inseets in Gautes mela, and also acted as DBritish Viee-Consul at San Jose. One day Commandante Gonzales apdered Mazo * to” appear before him. Mago® sent word ke would snpearin o shorttime. This e consed the Commandante, who wag nelywith drink, ‘and he sout o file of soMiefs after Mazo, and when the bug collector ar penred, crdered seventyfive lashes laid: on his bure bdekad e swdinnio b v This was denc thoreughly, and when finished Gonzales shouted: “Give him twenty-five more for lek? Wien Mago recovered, which was oniy after eareful nurs< inr, as his baek was hadly cut up, e made formul complaint to the | British Goyevments The rosult | was that Ganiemala was or lered m‘ puni-h Ghnzales apd to pay Mago | $5OO forr cvery lagh "he 'received. Ty defanlt of thi< English cruisers wou!ld shell San. Jose and other codst cities, Gantemala readily puvished Gors zles, bt tried hard to evade pay: ing $50,000 to Mage. The Drits ish; however, were inexorable, and the poor hug collector was made a Duwparsticely rich man i one lay. As he bhad more coin than any oné in the ceuntry then, president. Barios went inlo part nership with hum. - Mags became one of the larzest coliee plauters, and al:o secured the exc usive frunchise for haildiag otks inmtho ports. No one can land on or leave one of these ducks withoat paying 82 to Mewo, while | he alio leavesa'tax on all freight. t He alzo owns valuable mines and itraets of tinler. His fortune i estimated at £5,000000, all due l to_ 107 lashies on his back. Complete and Permanent, ~lnthe carly part of last year 1 hadawiolent attack of rheumas usm, from which [ was confined to muy hed for over thres months, and at times was unable to tarn my self in bed, or even raize the cover. A nurse had to bein constant at tendanee day and night. I was so feeble that what little nourish ment I tonkhad 4o be-given me with.a spoon. T wis in constant agouy, and sleep was eatirely cut of the question except when | was under the inflaence of opiates, After'eal’ing in‘the best physi. cians, and trying all other medi ciues without receiving any benefit, i was inducel by fricuds to try Switts Specifiz (8. S, 8). T diss contitucd ali other medieines, and tock acourse of 8. 8. 8. ~thirtéen small bottles—which effected a complete and permanent eure. L. Lo BASSETY, ; E: Dorado, Kansas. : An Bating Sove. Mr. ¢ B. McLemore, 8 promi nent aud iufluential ‘eitizen of Heuderson, writes' under dite of Auzust 23, 1839, as follows : “Lorcirhteen months I had an eating sire on my longue. T wus treated by ths best joeal physi. cians, but obtamed no relief, the sove gradoally prowing worse. ' | cooelyded floally to fry 8. 8. 8, and was entirely tured after ugtug atew bottles, You tinve my cheertul permis gion to publish the above state ment for the benefit of those simis larly affftcted 3 ' iy C. B. McLexonrs, ‘2 Henderson, Tex. Treatise on Bloodand Skin Dis enzes mailed free. ~ S)VIFT SPEOIFIC €O, | , Atlacta, Ga, Busklin’s Arinea Saive, ' The best salve in the world for Cuts, Druises, Séres, Uleers, Balt Rbeuin, Fever Bores, Tetier,Chap ped’ Hands Chilblaios, Corns, and all Skl.’., }:lrlnptxoug' and :yosimivg!y cures Piles.” It is guaranteed to give popteet satisfaetion, or ‘mon ey retunded. Price 25 cents p. r hox For sale by T. D. Sa es, VOE:N LNt An Indian Proteets Her. A man _trom Florila moved to Lee county some tinie nzo and adoptel a little girl nawed Ida l'flyfi': lins, from Worth cumnty. fi vame is Howell,xnd, judgtiz from an Albany epeciu! io the Atlunta Constitation,he bus not lnxfia Jdfin‘ ' the right thing by hon: e H. L. Howell, who came from Florida and removed to Rediwme distriet, in Lee county, addp:g&‘ a little girl, Ida Collips, tweive - yearsold,from Worth connty. She: complained of ill treatment and fled to the house of Lewis K izht, - their nearest'neighbor; - fir protees: tion. Knignt, whois gigautie in height and half Indian, refus.d te’ give her up to Howell, who deas manded her back. Howell swore Lie would kil Knight, and reing tes his house at night attempted to are: sassinate him. He found the door of Knizht's hduse open, and the owner standing within, showinig plaiuly in the firelight. He fired two shotsathim with his . pistol;: neither of which took eftect,though one o thedalls penetratedhis coat. Knight weut oat in the darkness.. and dared his assailant to come toa wards him, and they would have it out. -Howell, however made . s ceeape, and Knight ie still the - proctector of the little givl, whe 18 happy i her harbor'of refuge. Chasing the Boar, . A novel hunt, which promises’ somp rare spart to those who join thercin, is being arranged among the crack shots and amateur sportsmen of Americus in the dense swamp of Muckalee ereeb, that™ horders the plaatation of Major M. | Speet, eight miles south of Ameris cus, several hundreds of wild and ifivr.;u‘.mgs have roamed and muls !lip!i;}i! for years. Thowr depzedas [ tions in. uneighboring corn fields - | during the summer months have \resulted in great loss to the farm '«-rs of that loeality, and it is te !mnt‘rial}y reduce | their nuubers, or else exterminate the entire lot, . that the hunt was organized. The party will con izt ot abiut lorty sportsmen, armed with Winches ter's and breech-loading shotguns, Thege will divide 'into two bands, aud the gameis started, when the i hozs will be slaughtered indiscrims linnte!y. In the drove are many oid and fierce boars that will fight with their last breath, and the z chances are even that the hunters and the dogs will not eseape with out danzerons ecuts from their ! razor-like tushes, Is Consamption Incurablel Rerd the follewiuz: Mr. €. Hi Harric, Newark, Avk., says:. “Was, down with Abeess of Lunzs andy friends and physicians pronounced - me an Incurable Consuraptive. - Begzan taking Dr. King's New. Discovery for Consumpiion, am . uow on my thicd bottle, and able to oversee the work on my faran Itis the finest medicine made.® « Jesse Middlewart, Dacatue,Ohio, - says: Had it not been for Dr, King's New Discovery for Con sumption T woald have died ot Lung Troubles. Was given up by doctors. Am now ia beat of health.” Try it. Sumple bottle frecat T. D. S;x!(f Drug store, Among the incidents ot child hood thit staud out m bold re lict, as our memory reverts to tfiq days when we were young, n’)on@ are more prominent thall severs sickness' The youny niether vive idly remembers that it wss Chame berlain's Cough Remedy cured Yer of crozp, and in tutn admivistersit” ta her own ollspring apd always with the best success. For sale by - all draggists. ; b R L It was charged that a Brooklyn ' alderman was as escaped state pris out bird, but the paper makiug it has been coumpelied to apologize, . As a matter of fact he served out his term. = ; 8500 Reward offered by the proprietors of Ur. Sage's Catarrh Remedy for au incurable case. §) cts. . fo Catarrh originates in serofuluus taint. Hood's Sarsaparilla purie’ fizs the blood, aud thus porm.uente ly enres eatarrh,