Lamar County AlArchives News.....Lamar News - January 21, 1886 January 21, 1886 ************************************************ Copyright. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/al/alfiles.htm ************************************************ File contributed for use in USGenWeb Archives by: Veneta McKinney http://www.genrecords.net/emailregistry/vols/00016.html#0003775 December 30, 2005, 1:34 pm Lamar News January 21, 1886 Microfilm Ref Call #373 Microfilm Order #M1992.4466 from The Alabama Department of Archives and History THE LAMAR NEWS E. J. MCNATT, Editor and Proprietor VERNON, ALABAMA, JANUARY 21, 1886 VOL. III. NO. 12 CHRISTMAS CHIMES The meadows are brown, the hills are all bare, And up through the valley the clear, crisp air Is singing a Christmas song. Like the song of the sea in the purple shell, If we list to its notes it will sweetly tell The secret it’s kept so long. It tells of a time so sunny and fair When we watched the clouds of the snowy air For the reindeer’s tiny form. And saw in our dreams such pictures of light, As we lay through the hours of the long, dark night, Away from the clouds and storm. Such pictures as glow in fairy tales Then told at the hour that daylight And the crimson west grows gray, When we list for the chime of tiny bells That are hung in the shade of haunted dells And are rung by goblins and fay. It rings on the heart a tearful change Of a darkened time, so sad, so strange, When our dreams had lost their light. Its whispers and sings to the leafless trees Our secret that sighs in every breeze Till the day wears into the night. O, Christmas chines! Ye are merry and sad, We wound the heart and ye make it glad. With the music your ringing makes; And the weary heart that has dreamed so long Takes up the thread of the broken song And sings till it, quivering, breaks. THE RED LIGHT – A CHRISTMAS STORY – [by Amy Randolph] It was Christmas Eve. Not one of the ideal Christmas Eves of poets and romance writers, wherein the moon is always at the full, the snow always a-sparkle like pulverized diamonds, and the air always still and bold and clear, but a story twilight, with the snow driving steadily from the east, the wind raw and biting, and the sky – what you could see of it – black as ink. But it was Christmas Ever, all the same, and Bertha Hooper’s cheeks were as red as the bitter-sweet berries in the woods as she sat, all wrapped up, in the train that was steaming northward, on her way to spend Christmas with her Aunt Almira Higgins. Christmas in the country! To Bertha, who had lived all her life in the brick walls and stone pavements of a city, the very words seemed to convey somewhat of cheer and joyousness. And Bertha, as she sat with her eyes closed and her little gloved hands safely nestled into a gray squirrel muff, beheld in her mind’s eyes great fires of logs roaring up wide-throated chimneys, walls festooned with hemlock boughs and black green tufts of mistletoe; and she had half composed a poem on Christmas and its cherished associations when the ruthless conductor came along for her ticket. “How far are we from Montcourt station?” she inquired, as she gave up the bit of pasteboard. “Next but one, Miss,” said the man, as he hurried on, with his lantern under his arm. “Half an hour yet.” She had never been so far from New York in all her life before. The driving rain in which she had left her home had changed as they progressed northward into the steady fall of snow, which fluttered around them like a white waving shroud. But Bertha Hooper cared little for this. Had not Aunt Almira promised to send Zebedee, her youngest son, to the station with the pony to meet her on the arrival of the six-forty train from New York? And was not Zebedee to have a lantern with a red glass door to it, so she could identify him at once? She was very pretty as she sat in little black velvet toque, with its cur ling plume of cardinal red and the wine-red ribbon bow at her throat – pretty with the bloom and freshness of eighteen. She was dark, with large hazel eyes, almond-shaped and long-lashed, a clear, rosy bloom on either check, and wavy dark hair hanging in silken fringe over her broad, low forehead. “Mont – Court – station!” bawled the breakman, putting in a snow- powdered fur cap, and withdrawing it again as quickly as if he had been a magnified edition of the Jack-in-the-box, which children much rejoices at in holiday time. And Bertha Hooper knew that she had reached her destination. Stiff and cramped from the length of time in which she had been sitting in one position she rose up, with a little steel clasped traveling bag in one hand and a dainty silk umbrella in the other, and made her way to the door. All she could see when she stepped out upon the wet and slippery platform was a blur of driving snow, through which the lights of the solitary little country depot gleamed fitfully’ but the next instant something flashed athwart her vision like a friendly red eye – and beneath the reflector over the station door she saw a tall fine-looking young man, in a fur trimmed overcoat, a seal-skin cap set jauntily on one side of a crop of chestnut cu rls, and a red-lighted lantern swinging from his left hand, as he stood straining his eyes in the stormy darkness, as if to catch sight of some familiar face in the little crowd. “Cousin Zebedee!” cried Bertha, aloud, and she made one spring into the arms of this blonde-whiskered young giant. For had not she and Zebedee played dominoes and fox-and-geese together, in the days when she wore blue ribbon sashes, and his hair was a closely-shorn mat of carroty-red? “Oh, Cousin Zebedee, I’m so glad to see you; and I hadn’t any idea you had grown half so handsome!” And she gave him a great hug, at the same time holding up her rosebud lips for a kiss. But, to her infinite amazement, the hero of the sealskin cap seemed a little backward in responding to her cousinly advances. “I – I beg your pardon,” said he, slightly receding, “but I’m afraid there is some mistake. My name is not Zebedee and the lady for whom I am looking is some years older than you.” Bertha Hooper started back coloring and confused, and as she did so, a fat comfortable looking old lady came trundling along the platform in an India shawl and a boa of Russia sable worth its worth in greenbacks. “Charlie!” she cried, “I thought I never should find you. Is the carriage here?” “All here and waiting, Aunt Effie,” responded the young man; but her still hesitated a second as Bertha Hooper stood with averted face and motionless figure in the shadow of the building. “Can I be of any service to you?” he asked. “If you are expecting friends who have failed to meet you - .” “Anybody here by the name of Bertha Hoo-ooper?” shouted a stentorian voice, and a tall, raw-looking lad with a lantern – also lighted with red glass – rushed shuffling around the corner. Zebedee himself! Red-haired and shambling and awkward as he had been in the old fox-and-geese days. “Oh!” said he, catching up his lantern so that the scarlet bird’s wings flashed out like a spit of flame – scarcely more scarlet, alas, than Bertha’s own face. “Here you be! I’m a little late, for the roads is so all- fired bad, and I couldn’t start the pony out of a walk. Come on. how de do? Be you very cold?” “Zebedee” said Bertha, clinging almost hysterically to her cousin’s arm, “who’s that young gentleman with – with the other lantern?” “Eh!” said Zebedee. “That feller with the old lady in a patchwork shawl?” “Yes” “Its Charlie Harcourt, the squire’s son,” said Zebedee. “Just come from furrin parts!” “Zebedee,” said Bertha, with a curious little sound between a laugh and a sob, “put me into the cutter, quick, and drive me somewhere. I don’t care where! Because –“ “Eh!” said Zebedee, staring hard at his cousin, as he packed the buffalo robe around her before touching up the laggard old pony. “Because,” added Bertha, in a species of desperation, “I took Mr. Harcourt for you; and I hugged him and kissed him.” “Is that all?” said philosophical Zebedee. “He won’t care.” “No!” said Bertha, “but I shall.” “You ain’t crying, be you?” said Zebedee, noting the quiver in his cousin’s voice. “How can I help it?” wailed poor Bertha. “Twarn’t no fault o’yours,” said Zebedee, consolingly. “Of course it warn’t,” said Bertha, impatiently. “How was I to know that every lantern at Montcourt had a red glass door to it?” And poor little Bertha cried herself to sleep that night. The next morning – Christmas Day, all showed up into glorious drifts everywhere – Mr. Harcourt drove over to the Higgins farm-house. The young lady had dropped a fur glove on the platform, and Mr. Harcourt felt it his duty to restore it to her. And, moreover, here Mr. Charley Harcourt hesitated a little – he hoped Miss Hooper would excuse him for being so stupid as to allow her to fancy him her cousin. “I ought to have explained sooner,” said he. “No, you out not,” said Bertha. “The fault was all mine.” “I don’t recognize a fault any where,” said he. And if I am pardoned—“ “Of course you are!” said Bertha rosier and prettier than ever. “In that case I am commissioned by my mother to ask your aunt’s permission to take you over to help us finish deessing (sic) the church in time for morning service. My horse is waiting.” “May I go, Aunt Almira?” said Bertha with sparkling eyes. “Of course you may go,” said Aunt Almira. What was the end of it all? There is but one sequel to stories like this when youth and bright eyes and human hearts are concerned. The next Christmas Eve Bertha Hooper and Charley Harcourt were married. But the bridegroom persists in declaring that Bertha did the first of the lovemaking. And Bertha only laughs. SHYING HORSES NEAR-SIGHTED “Why is it that shying in horses should be set down to an ugly disposition I don’t know,” said a prominent veterinary surgeon to a New York Sun reporter. “It must be because horsemen don’t know what else to lay it to. The fact is that it seldom is met with unless the horse is near-sighted. I have tested scores of shying horses for near-sightedness, and in nearly all cases found what I expected. And now, when I am asked to give points on buying horses, I give this as one of the requisites: Never buy a horse which is near-sighted. There are, however, two exceptions to this rule. If the horse is to have a mate, then it doesn’t make any difference about the sight. One horse can go blind if the other is clear-sighted. If the horse is to be used for riding to saddle be careful that he is not near-sighted, for he will throw you sooner or later. “The reason why a near-sighted horse shies is very simply,” the surgeon continued. “Of all animals the horse is the most gentle and even timid. He sees a strange object and his susceptible mind magnifies it into a monster that is going to destroy him. A piece of white paper at the roadside in the night is a ghost and an old wagon in the ditch is a dragon. Every horseman knows that if you drive the animal close to the dreadful object the horse cools down at once. It is supposed that it is because the horse makes a closer acquaintance with the object. That is true, but not in the sense in which it is generally understood. The animal has not been able to see it from a distance. He is near-sighted. BOOKS FOR THE INDIANS The only written language of the American Indians was in the form of hieroglyphics, but this plan of picture-writing was not much used among the tribes of North America. As the spoken languages of the tribes, however, have such a complete dialectic structure it was not difficult to give this a written form by means of the Roman alphabet. This has been done in many instances and a number of grammars and dictionaries have been printed in different Indian dialects, besides many other books. Several newspapers are at this time printed among the civilized Indians of the West, and at mission stations, in the Indian language. The Aztecs and Toltecs kept their historical and other records by means of hieroglyphics in a very systematic manner. AN ODD PUBLIC HOUSE A curious public house is among the latest attractions in Paris. It is called La Taverne da Bagne. The walls are hung with paintings representing the horrors of convict life, interspersed with portraits of notorious Communists. All the waiters are dressed in convict uniform and wear the chains and boulets of the regular forcut. The landlord is Citoyen Maxime Lisbonne, one of the leaders of the insurrection of 1871 – [London Truth] EXPLORERS IN A PLIGHT UNEXPECTED ADVENTURES IN LITTLE-KNOWN REGIONS Dilemmas Some Of The Ridiculous And Others Dangerous It often happens, says the New York Sun, that explorers find themselves in some unexpected dilemma, and, unless they are quick enough to immediately extricate themselves, the results are sometimes serious. Lieut. Cheyne’s adventure with a polar bear in the arctic regions shows the advantage of keeping one’s wits about him in an emergency. Lieut. Cheyne was an English officer in one of the Franklin search expeditions. Early one spring he was sent with a couple of sledgemen to examine the condition of some provision depots that had been laid down the previous fall. They took nothing with them but a tent and sleeping bags, rations of pemmican and hard tack, and a small supply of tallow to be used as fuel in thawing their pemmican and boiling their tea. One morning, after they had traveled about 150 miles from the ship, Lieut. Cheyne was awakened by something pulling at the corner of the tent. He lifted the tent flap just in time to frighten a big white bear, and the animal was in full retreat over the ice before Cheyne had extricated himself from his sleeping bag. The party had more serious work on hand than bear hunting, and they would have let the animal go if it had not been suddenly discovered that his bearship had torn open the tallow bag and eaten every ounce of fuel. Here was a predicament. The men were five days journey from the ship, the weather was terribly cold, and they could not eat the solidly frozen pemmican. It was necessary to get that tallow back, and so Cheyne, shouting to his comrades to follow, set out after the bear. The chase was an exciting and anxious one, but the animal was at last overhauled and killed. No time was lost in opening the creature’s stomach, and the men returned to camp in triumph with all the tallow of which the unfortunate brute had robbed them. During last winter the James brothers succeeded in exploring a part of Somauli, in East Africa, where several explorers had been killed. The region has remained almost wholly unknown on account of the hostility of the natives. The bravery of the Messrs. James’ escort rapidly oozed out as they advanced into the hostile country. They refused once or twice to go any further, and finally the brothers hit upon this expedient for infusing them with a little courage. A great noise in their own camp generally has an inspiring effect on the natives of Africa. The Jameses had their sentinels fire their guns at frequent intervals during the night. They report that this practice greatly pleased and inspired their people, who always felt more secure when firing. The young explorer, Thompson, two years ago, was considerably nonplussed by a lot of smart and suspicious natives whom he encountered near Mount Kenia in East Africa. He had a few tricks which he very impressively performed when the inhabitants were unfriendly, and it was necessary to exhibit his great power as a wizard to induce them to see him food. He had two artificial teeth on a plate, and the feat that usually overcame all opposition when everything else failed was to extract these teeth. These Mount Kenia natives were very much pleased with this feat, but they said that if he could take out two teeth he could removed the others also, and they insisted upon seeing the entire show. Finally they not only refused to sell him food, but threatened to attack him unless he took his teeth out, and he thought best to make a forced march one night to escape his too exacting acquaintances. Mr. Thompson’s white comrade, Martin, had a more serious experience with some suspicious natives, and perhaps it served him right. He was telling a crowd of Wakwati girls that he could do even more wonderful things than the leader had shown them. Holding out his hand he said he could cut his fingers off and put them on again. One of the girls suddenly sprang forward, seized one of the extended fingers and cut it to the bone with a native knife. She had taken Martin at his word, and was determined to see the feat performed. Dr. Hayes stole a march on the Esquimaux (sic) who refused to take him and his comrades back to Dr. Kane in Smith sound after the failure of Hayes’ attempt to return to Upernavik in small boats. Hayes and his men fully expected to die of starvation unless the Esquimaux, with their dog sledges, assisted them to return north. The Esquimaux declined to make the long journey in the growing darkness of the winter. One day two natives drove up to Dr. Haye’s hut with a sledge load of walrus meat. They were on their way home after a long journey, and they accepted the doctor’s invitation to tarry a while. Everybody ate heartily of the walrus meat, and then the natives, overcome with fatigue, laid down for a nap. Hayes and his men stole to the hut, barricaded the entrance, and then drove off with the dogs and walrus meat. They had gone several miles before they saw the Exquimaux in full pursuit. The party waited for the thoroughly angry natives to come up, and then told them plainly that they would never see their dogs and sledges again unless they agreed to go with them to Kane’s ship. Finally a bargain was made, good feeling reestablished, and the poor fellows, together with some of their friends for a neighboring village, never rested until Hayes was back on the ship again. NUMBER SEVEN The mystic power supposed by the credulous to belong to the number seven is due to the ancient belief that it is a holy number. The sanctity was no doubt given to it primarily by the Mosaic narratives of the division of the week into seven days, the last of which was a day of rest, set apart and chosen for that purpose by Deity itself. That the ancient Hebrews regarded the number as possessed of some mysterious, sacred quality is plain from its use as recorded in the Scripture narrative. There were seven days in creation, seven weeks between the Passover and Pentecost, seven days allowed to feasts, and the same number to the ceremonies of purification; seven victims were offered as sacrifices on special occasions, the seventh was the sabbatical year, and seven times seven was the year preceding the year of Jubilee. The use of the symbolic number in the Apocalypse is something remarkable, the seven churches of Asia, the seven golden candlesticks, the seven stars, seven spirits before the throne, the book with seven seals, etc. The mystical meaning ascribed to this number was not peculiar to the Hebrews, however; it also prevailed, among the Persians, the ancient Hindoos, the Greeks, and the Romans. Thence the superstition filtered down through the ages to the present time. Thus there was seven wise men of Greece, seven wonders of the world, seven graces, and so on. Ancient astrology had seven planets, the Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Saturn, Jupiter, and Venus, and the seven metals of alchemy were supposed to corresponding with these, gold, silver, iron, quicksilver, lead, time, and copper, but modern discoveries in astronomy and chemistry interfered rather awkwardly with this very effective combination. In fact, the enlightenment of modern times has shown so plainly the absurdity of superstitions concerning numbers that none but the credulous are now influenced by them – [Inter-Ocean] A PISCOTORIAN HOWLER One of the most remarkable sound-making or musical fishes, is the great drum fish, or pogonias chromos, common on our western coast, and more than once the crews of vessels have been astonished at the curios sounds that come up from the sea. A vessel that was lying off the coast becalmed some years ago was surrounded by a regular band of fishes that uttered the most remarkable sounds – now a shriek would rise, then a groan, followed by numerous grunts; the rushing of steam, the hiss of boiling water, muffled tones of a drum, and even the clanging of a deep-toned bell, were some of the remarkable sounds that rose from this musical school of finny singers. Humboldt, the great observer of natural phenomena, dwells upon the remarkable sounds that came from a school of fish that surrounded the vessel. One of the most remarkable sounded like the twanging of a gigantic harp, while others were so loud and startling that the men were alarmed, fearing that an explosion was about to occur from some submarine volcano – [Atlanta Constitution] GENTIANS Shivering like children with their garments torn, All the comely leaves of their roundness shorn, Crouched in the bleached and shudd’ring grass I find them today as I idly pass, Blue gentians. Children of frost – of winds snow-kissed, Nurtured in travail – in sleet and mist, Budding and blowing in the chilling rain, With little of gladness and much of pain, Poor gentians! In pity I bend and gather each one, And hold them up to the pitying sun, To give them a glimpse of a fairer day, Before they shall droop in their quick way, Sad gentians. And I hold them close to my eager face, And the tender lines of their being trace, And I count their goodness to come so late, When no flower is left to be their mate, Lorn gentians. Though the year of my life wane drear and cold, May this kindness be left, its hands to hold, That some flower of love as a tender sign May bloom as a token of summer time, Sweet gentians – [S. B. McManus in the Current] HUMOROUS All the rage – A mad dog. An open question – Are you going to let me in. As a general thing, what a man sews he rips. The thermometer gains notoriety by degrees, so to speak. A new and precious sardine – The Prince of Wales in oil. The way some farmers treat their land is really harrowing. The man who is opposed to vaccination is probably to be pitted. Even the most inveterate toper objects to taking a horn with a bull. A young lady asks “How can I remove superfluous hair?” Comb the butter. The telephone is an arrangement by which two men can lie to each other without becoming confused. The king of Sweden and Norway is a poet. The dictum that the king can do no wrong appears to be exploded. “Round again?” he asked, as the dun put his head in at the door. “Yes, and I’ll stay ‘round until I get square.” Hayti (sic) has had 179 revolutions in 85 years. The first thing a Haytien (sic) does in the morning is to consult the newspaper to see under what government he is living. Prisoner (desirous of flattering the court) – I think there is a fine expression in your honor’s face. Judge – (urbanely) – So there is, and the fine is $10 and costs. “Using tobacco in one form,” says a hater of the weed, “usually leads to the use of it in another.” This is doubtless true, for when a man first takes snuff he must et-chew! “Why Johnny,” exclaimed mamma, “Aren’t you ashamed of yourself, going about with such a dirty face?” “No, I ain’t” replied Johnny, with a conscious pride in the integrity of his intentions, “You’d like to have me taken for a dude, wouldn’t you?” “I was never exactly buried alive” said an old clerk, recounting his experience, “but I once worked a week in a store that did not advertise. When I cam out my head was almost as white as you see it now. Solitary confinement did it.” A MACHINE THAT CALCULATES The calculating machine invented by Prof. THOMSON appears to excel, in its ingenious adaptation to a variety of results, even Babbage’s wonderful apparatus. By means of the mere friction of a disk, a cylinder and a ball, the machine is capable of effecting numerous complicated calculations which occur in the highest application of mathematics to physical problems, and by its aid an unskilled person may, in a given time, perform the work of ten expert mathematicians. The machine is applicable alike to the calculating of tidal, magnetic, meteorological and other periodic phenomena; it will solve differential equations of the second, or even higher powers or orders; and through this same wonderful arrangement of mechanical parts, the problem of finding the three motions of any number of mutually attracting particles, unrestricted by any of the approximate suppositions required in the treatment of the lunar and planetary theories, is done by simply turning a handle – [New York Sun] PAGE 2 THE LAMAR NEWS THURSDAY JAN. 21, 1886 ANNOUNCEMENT For Circuit Clerk. We are authorized to announce S. M. SPRUILL as a candidate for the office of Circuit Clerk of Lamar County. Subject to the Democratic Party. Election in August, 1886. A colored man, SAM ANDERSON, filed papers in a case for damages against Sheriff BECK, of Vicksburg, on the 29th ult. for $10,000 for false imprisonment. Alabama Senators in Congress stand up like men on the silver resolution. Senator PUGH made the best speech of his life on the resolution a few days ago. HON. JOHN M. MARTIN appears on the committees of Elections and Patents. The Democrats of the District will not depart from the old time custom of endorsing faithful servants at the next congressional convention. The LaFayette Sun thinks that the race of little darkies now growing up without any home training, fearing no one, neither the law nor man nor God, are bound to be a source of much future trouble. THE NEXT GOVERNOR – [Florence Banner] As some few papers in the State accuse North Alabama of wanting the next Governor, we make a short extract from an article in a late issue of the Montgomery Advertiser from “Populus” which we think, with but little exception, voices the sentiment of a large proportion of North Alabama, and which we hope will set at rest the acquisition that “North Alabama wants the next Governor,” “Populus” says: Whilst the friends of each candidate for Gubernatorial honors are asserting claims to popularity in favor of their respective choice, permit an Across the Mountains to express himself in favor of COL. N. H. R. DAWSON, of Dallas. His ability as a statesman and lawyer, and his purity as a patriot are facts recognized and appreciated by his numerous friends and acquaintances in North Alabama as will be forcibly illustrated in the coming campaign. I have no axe to grind, and therefore may be allowed to express an unbiased and impartial opinion that Col. DAWSON will poll more strength from Colbert and Lauderdale than any other candidate proposed. His unselfish action in withdrawing in his first candidacy, and his consistency in the continued withholding of his name entirely during the last campaign without feeling his way for the possibility of a success antagonism, illustrated liberality and unselfishness which popularized him more with his own friends and acquaintances, and won the hearty good will and esteem of Gov. O’NEAL’S constituency at the same time. One thing certain, that when the time comes COLBERT will roll up heavily and overwhelming for N. H. R. DAWSON for next Governor, and will be backed by Lauderdale in force. Such is the feeling of the people, and they will so express in convention if not through the press. So score largely for DAWSIOB in our north west corner. – Yours respectfully, etc. – POPULUS. OUR RAILROAD OUTLOOK – [From (Miss) Free South of Jan. 8th] We commend the following letter from the Hon. H. K. MARTIN, one of the incorporators of the Helens, Water Valley, Aberdeen, and Birmingham Railroad Co., of Water Valley, to Judge W. S. Bates, as full of practical suggestions worthy of consideration. JUDGE W. S. BATES: Great events never happen by chance, there is always a moving cause underlying the rise and progress of every locality. The statistics of the country clearly shows that Meridian, Columbus, and Holly Springs are growing into prominence and assuming the proportions of cities more rapidly than any other towns in the State. Not because they have superior natural advantages over many other towns in the state, but its because of the liberality, the zeal and enterprise of their citizens. While other localities having vastly superior natural advantages over these, approaching to be railroad centers, have slept the sleep of local destruction. Brandon, Kosciusko, Houston, and Ripley was designed by nature to be the grand railroad centers in Mississippi, and would have been so today, if the Gulf and Ship Island Railroad had been built when it ought to have been done, using Columbus as a centering outlet to the coal and iron regions in Alabama. The resources and commercial advantages in Mississippi will never be fully developed until this road is built, tapping Brandon, Kosciusko, Houston, and Ripley. It behooves this center belt of country to wake up. They should remember that Meridian two years ago come a spot of moving the Capitol of the state, because of her railroad facilities, realizing the fact that should this grand central trunk be from Ship Island to the Tennessee line, all eyes and hearts will be turned towards Kosciusko, the beautiful little city and geographical center of the state. I have lived on this line since 1838 and think I know whereof I speak. It runs through a belt of country from one end of the state to the other, seemingly designed by nature for a road bed, and would open up a market for more exhaustible forests of pine, post oak, and white oak timbers than any other road of the same length in the United State. But as this road is not yet built, the next best thing in sight is the construction of a road from Helena, Ark., to Birmingham, Ala. Two years ago, I drafted a charter, went to Jackson and procured its passage. Granting the right of way from Helena via Water Valley and Aberdeen to the Alabama line upon as liberal terms as any charter which has been passed in a number of years. At that time I entertained the belief that the Illinois Central road would realize the advantages accruing to them from the construction of this road, that they would either build it or lend a helping hand in that direction; but to this hour such has not been the case. Recent developments however have satisfied my mind that the Iron Mountain road would realize more benefits from the construction of this enterprise than any other road. This extension of the Iron Mountain from Helena to Birmingham would open up a direct communication between the coal and iron regions in Alabama and the Mississippi River, St. Louis, and the entire northwest. Besides, this road would pass through belts of the best lands and timber in the South. The resources of Calhoun county is bound to have transportation, with her productive soil, energetic people and her abundance of the very best of timer and stone she cannot longer say out in the cold and haul her produce 20 to 40 miles to market. Her inducements are too great, her hither-to hidden treasures are too powerful, to remain in the background much longer. The time is not far off when commerce and transportation will hunt out such localities as Calhoun County, and the question is: From what point shall it start? Accepting this as a fixed fact than what say the people of Water Valley? Would it be best for her for the branch roads traversing Calhoun to diverge from the main liens of the Illinois Central and the Mobile and Ohio at Oxford, Coffeeville, Grenada, West Point or Okolona, or would it be vest to have the junction at Water Valley? Let the prosperity of the city of Meridian and the adversity of Marion Station and Quitman answer the question. Calhoun County will be blessed with railroad transportation within the next decade of years, and when ever the junctions of these roads are located at places other tan Water Valley. Then regret will take the place of peace and quietude’s, indulged in now by our citizens. One go around with a railroad is worse on any town than three scourges with yellow fever. It is truthfully said that “competition is the life of trade,” and it is equally true that without railroads we are without competition. The road from Helena to Birmingham can ought to be built, and the people of Water Valley ought to favor it, in self defense, but space will not allow me to give further reason why. I have expressed these views for what they are worth, inviting the people to take due notice thereof and govern themselves accordingly. HUGH K. MARTIN WHO OUGHT TO SUPPORT PROHIBITION The young man who is in danger. The patriot who loves his country. The women who suffer most from rum. The total abstainer who does not need saloons. The father whose example will be followed by the son. The drinking man who feels the power of tempting saloons. The minister whose flock is ravaged by the wolf of strong drink. The Christian who like a good Samaritan loves his neighbor. The rich man whose taxes are greatly increased by the saloons. The business man, because the liquor traffic injures his business. The moderate drinker who may become a drunkard if the saloons continue. Travelers, because their lives are imperiled by being in the hands of intemperate men. The landlord, because the rumseller often gets much of the money that ought to be paid for rent. The father who wants to protect his daughter from the curse of being married to a drunken man. The poor man who is compelled to support an army of worthless men because they are rumsellers. – [Ex] It is said that the sale of Bibles is now forbidden in Rio Janeiro. E. W. BROCK, Vernon C.H. & Crew’s Mill: Cheap dealer in boots, shoes, hats, clothing, dry good, & notions; hardware, cutlery, Queensware, Glassware, Inks, Pat. Medicines, Oils, Dyestuffs, Perfumery, Extracts, and groceries of all kind. Real estate in various parts of the county. My motto is “Quick sales and small profits.” I request all persons to call and price my large and well- selected stock, before purchasing elsewhere. I will sell as low or lower than any other house in the county. NEW MUSIC BOOKS – “GOOD TIDINGS COMBINES” By A. J. Showalter. This is the latest and best of all the Sunday School books for popular use. It contains 36 pages, and on ever page there is a gem of sacred song. Bound in substantial boards. Price 25 cents per copy; $2.50 per dozen. THE NATIONAL SINGER. By A. J. Showalter & J. H. Teaney. This book is the result of much careful work by the most experience musicians who write for character notes. It is the bet of all the singing school books, as it contains enough new music of every grade and variety to interest and instruct any school or convention, and also all of the more popular standard hymn tunes of the church. This is a feature that is wanting in every other popular character notebook. The National Singer supplies this and every other want to make an ideal signing schoolbook. Price 75 cents; $7.50 per dozen. THE MUSIC TEACHER. A new monthly musical Journal edited by A. J. Showalter. Every student of music, chorister and teacher should read good musical journals. The Music Teacher aims to instruct as well as entertain. Price 50 cents per year. Specimen copies free. Agents wanted. We can furnish any other music or music book no matter where published. It would also be in your interest to write us when you want to buy a piano or organ, or any thing else in the music line. – A. J. Showalter & Co., Dalton, Ga. Barber Shop – For a clean shave or shampoo, call on G. W. BENSON, in rear of Dr. BURN’S office, Vernon, Ala. For a complete stock of clothing, hats, shirts, &c., &c. go to BUTLER & TOPPS Columbus, Miss. Masonic. Vernon Lodge., NO. 289 A. F. and A. M. Regular Communications at Lodge Hall 1st Saturday, 7 p.m. each month. J. D. MCCLUSKEY, W.M. M. W. MORTON, Sec. Vernon Lodge., No. 45, I. O. O. F. meets at Lodge Hall the 2d and 4th Saturdays at 7 ½ p.m. each month. W. G. MIDDLETON, N. G. M. W. MORTON, sect’y ATTORNEYS NESMITH & SANFORD THOS. B. NESMITH, Vernon, Ala. J. B. SANFORD, Fayette C. H., Ala. Attorneys-at-Law. Will practice as partners in the counties of Lamar and Fayette, and separately in adjoining counties, and will give prompt attention to all legal business intrused to them or either of them. SMITH & YOUNG, Attorneys-At-Law Vernon, Alabama– W. R. SMITH, Fayette, C. H., Ala. W. A. YOUNG, Vernon, Ala. We have this day, entered into a partnership for the purpose of doing a general law practice in the county of Lamar, and to any business, intrusted to us we will both give our earnest personal attention. – Oct. 13, 1884. PHYSICIANS – DENTISTS M. W. MORTON. W. L. MORTON. DR. W. L. MORTON & BRO., Physicians & Surgeons. Vernon, Lamar Co, Ala. Tender their professional services to the citizens of Lamar and adjacent country. Thankful for patronage heretofore extended, we hope to merit a respectable share in the future. Drug Store. Dr. G. C. BURNS, Vernon, Ala. Thankful for patronage heretofore extended me, I hope to receive a liberal share in the future. PHOTOGRAPHS – A. R. HENWOOD, Photographer, Aberdeen, Miss. Price list: Cards de visite, per doz………$2.00 Cards Cabinet, per doz……….$4.00 Cards Panel, per doz………….$5.00 Cards Boudoir, per doz………$5.00 Cards, 8 x 10, per doz……….. $8.00 Satisfaction given or money returned. RESTAURANT. Aberdeen, Mississippi. Those visiting Aberdeen would do well to call on MRS. L. M. KUPPER, who keeps Restaurant, Family Groceries, Bakery, and Confectionery, Toys, Tobacco, and Cigars. Also Coffee and sugar. Special attention paid to ladies. Largest, cheapest, best stock of dress goods, dress trimmings, ladies & misses jerseys clothing, furnishing goods, knit underwear, boots, shoes, & hats, tin ware, etc., etc., at rock bottom figures at A. COBB & SONS’S. CADY’S LIVERY FEED AND SALE STABLE Columbus, Mississippi. stock fed and cared for at moderate charges. New goods, new prices. W. L. JOBE’S, the jeweler. Columbus, Mississippi. I have just returned from the North with a large and well selected stock of watches, clocks, jewelry, and silver plated ware which I will sell as low as the quality of the goods permit. When in Columbus don’t fail to call and examine my goods and prices. Cash orders will receive prompt attention. – W. L. JOBE. WIMBERELY HOUSE Vernon, Alabama. Board and Lodging can be had at the above House on living terms L. M. WIMBERLEY, Proprietor. New Cash Store, Vernon – Alabama. We have just opened a large, fresh, and well selected stock of General Merchandise, consisting of dry goods, notions, family groceries, &c. We have on hand also, a large and well selected stock of School Books. The bottom knocked out in prices. We only ask a trial. Chickens, eggs, butter, and all kinds of country produce wanted, and on hand. – GEO. W. RUSH & Co. The Great Bazaar! Aberdeen, Mississippi. S W Corner, Commerce and Meridian Streets. Crockery, china, glassware, tin ware, fancy goods, stationery, jewelry, notions, candies, toys and Holiday goods of all kinds at wholesale or retail. Special attention given to the wholesale department. Trial orders solicited and prices guaranteed. Terms: Thirty days, net, 2 percent off for cash. No charge for package. THOS. A. SALE & CO. New Store! M. H. HODGE, Kennedy, Alabama. Has a large and well selected stock of general merchandise consisting in part of dry goods, groceries, notions, hardware, Queensware, boots, and shoes, Highest Market Price paid for cotton. ERVIN & BILLUPS, Columbus, Miss. Wholesale and retail dealers in pure drugs, paints, oils, paten Medicines, tobacco & cigars. Pure goods! Low prices! Call and examine our large stock. Go to ECHARD’S PHOTOGRAPH GALLERY, Columbus, Mississippi, when you want a fine photograph or ferrotype of any size or style. No extra charge made for persons standing. Family group and old pictures enlarged to any size. All the work is done in his gallery and not sent North to be done. Has a handsome and cheap line of Picture Frames on hand. Call at his Gallery and see his work when in Columbus. STAR STABLE – Aberdeen, Mississippi. A. A. POSEY & BRO., having consolidated their two Livery Stables, are now offering many additional advantages at this well-known and conveniently located Livery Stable. Owing to their consolidation, they have on hand a number of good second-hand buggies which they are selling cheap. MORGAN, ROBERTSON & CO., Columbus, Mississippi. General dealers in staple dry goods, boots, & shoes, groceries, bagging, ties, etc. etc. Always a full stock of goods on hand at Bottom prices. Don’t fail to call on them when you go to Columbus. JOHNSON’S ANODYNE liniment. The most wonderful family remedy ever known. For internal and external use. Parson’s pills make new, rich blood. Make hens lay….(to small to read) PAGE 3 THE LAMAR NEWS THURSDAY JA. 14, 1886 MAIL DIRECTORY VERNON AND COLUMBUS - Arrives every evening and leaves ever morning except Sunday, by way of Caledonia. VERNON AND BROCKTON – Arrives and departs every Saturday by way of Jewell. VERNON AND MONTCALM – Arrives and departs every Friday. VERNON AND PIKEVILLE – Arrives and (sic) Pikeville every Tuesday and Friday by way of Moscow and Beaverton. VERNON AND KENNEDY – Arrives and departs every Wednesday and Saturday. VERNON AND ANRO – Leaves Vernon every Tuesday and Friday and returns every Wednesday and Saturday. STATE OFFICERS Governor E. A. O’NEAL Auditor M. C. BARKLEY Treasurer FRED H. SMITH Alternate ------ T. N. MCCLELLAN Supt. of Public Education S. PALMER Secretary of State ELLIS PHELAN JUDICIARY B. O. BRISKELL Chief Justice Supreme Court G. W. STONE Associate Justice Supreme Court R. M. SOMERVILLE Associate Justice Supreme Court - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - CHANCERY COURT THOMAS COBBS Chancellor CIRCUIT COURT S. H. SPROTT Circuit Judge THOS. W. COLEMAN Solicitor COUNTY OFFICERS ALEX. COBB Probate Judge JAMES MIDDLETON Circuit Clerk S. F. PENNINGTON Sheriff L. M. WIMBERLEY Treasurer W. Y. ALLEN Tax Assessor D. J. LACY Tax Collector JAMES M. MORTON Register B. F. REED Co. Supt. of Education Commissioners – W. M. MOLLOY, SAMUEL LOGGAINS, R. W. YOUNG, ALVERT WILSON CITY OFFICERS L. M. WIMBERLEY Mayor and Treasurer G. W. BENSON Marshall Board of Aldermen – T. R. NESMITH, W. L. MORTON, JAS. MIDDLETON, W. A. BROWN, R. W. COBB RELIGIOUS FREEWILL BAPTIST – Pastor –T. W. SPRINGFIELD. Services, first Sabbath in each month, 7 p.m. MISSIONARY BAPTIST – Pastor J. E. COX. Services second Sabbath in each month at 11 am. METHODIST – Pastor – G. L. HEWITT. Services fourth Sabbath in each month. 11 a.m. SABBATH SCHOOLS UNION – Meets every Sabbath at 3 o’clock p.m. JAMES MIDDLETON, Supt. METHODIST – Meets every Sabbath at 3 o’clock p.m. G. W. RUSH, Supt. RATES OF ADVERTISING One inch, one insertion $1.00 One inch, each subsequent insertion .50 One inch, twelve months 10.00 One inch, six months 7.00 One inch, three months 5.00 Two inches twelve months 15.00 Two inches, six months 10.00 Quarter column 12 months 35.00 Half Column 12 months 30.00 One column 12 months 100.00 Professional card $10. Special advertisements in local columns will be charged double rates. All advertisements collectable after first insertion. Local notices 10 cents per line. Obituaries, tributes of respect, etc. making over ten lines, 2 ½ cents per line. Entered according to an act of Congress at the post office at Vernon, Alabama, as second-class matter. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION One copy one year $1.00 One copy, six months .60 All subscriptions payable in advance LOCAL BREVITIES Call on J. & W. G. MIDDLETON for the best factory thread. Mr. J. F. FERGUSON of Bedford was in town Tuesday. Judge COBB issued 122 marriage license last year. Five inmates in the new cell in the county jail, all colored. The prisoners that broke jail some time since have been recaptured. Capt. W. G. RICHARDS of Fernbank spent last Monday in our midst. Miss MOLLIE CREW after spending some time in town, returned home Tuesday. Uncle TOMMY SPRINGFIELD is not able to come to the Post Office yet. Taxes are all delinquent now, and those who have not yet paid will be charged an additional fee of 50 cents when they come to settle. Stock for Sale. E. W. BROCK has a lot of mules and horses for sale – Stock of all grades and at giving away prices. Two of our popular merchants have been selling goods so cheap that the boys have named them “Cheap Joe” and “Cheap John”. Parties who owe $2 and only have $1 should pay the $1 out and then they will stand a chance to get it back again to pay the other $1 with – Eutaw Mirror. JAMES T. ALLEN, Vernon, Ala, having recently attended the Alabama Normal Music School is prepared to teach classes in Lamar and adjoining counties. Write him for terms and have a class this winter. We were pleased to meet Esq. JOHN E. GRAVES in town yesterday. The bottom has fallen out of the roads is the talks everywhere. Capt. JAS. M. WILSON of Fernbank spent Monday in town. Sustain the churches, the schools and – the county paper. We have excellent pastors – let them know that you appreciate them. In another column will be found a list of the Grand and Petit Jurors. We are now ready to supply demands for waive notes. The weather is milder just now, but it is impossible to say how long it will continue so. The business of collection seems quite brisk – at least duns are in active circulations. Mr. R. W. COBB left with a large drove of cattle for New Orleans yesterday morning. The lawyers are beginning to move about in a hurry saying “Court is coming on.” JOHN W. MORTON will open a Blacksmith shop in town in a few days. Terms cash or its equivalent. Dr. W. A. BROWN’S horse mired up in the south part of town last Saturday and gave the Dr. a serious fall. The Birmingham Age issues the jolliest and prettiest little Carrier of the season. Schools appear to be prosperous throughout the country, which shows a tendency to appreciation of the importance of education. The usual number of drummers visit our town, as jolly and active and as courteous as ever. The presence of the drummer denotes prosperity in business circles. If you like this paper, give it a kind word once in awhile – it helps all hands – and if you like it very much, remember that actions speak even louder than words. Does the shepherd go back to his ninety-nine? Ah, no, he must continue to seek. How long? Until he finds. The work of Christ must go on till at the last ever tongue shall confess and claim him as its Lord – Rev. D. M. HODGE TOM SMITH, colored, was up before Esq. W. G. MIDDLETON on Monday, on charge of stealing a mule from Mr. GREEN JORDAN. Evidence tended to show that the def’t was caught with the mule before he left the farm of Mr. JORDAN. The def’t was committed to jail being unable to make bond for his appearance at Circuit Court. LAMAR COUNTY, ALA., Jan 18th, 1886 Editor of NEWS: Your correspondents from various parts of the county have been writing of the election of their men and expressing their wishes about the same. I beg leave to give some views that are common in the community, and in this community I will first say that we pluck no grapes but those that grow on the real Democratic vine. First, we believe that the Democratic party ought to manage and control this government from Constable to President, and we do this because we believe that its principles tend to the perpetuation of a free government and vouching safe to us the greatest personal liberty. Second, we believe that every office should be filled by a man who is affiliated with some political party and that the party be held to a strict account for the acts of the official. Third, we are in favor of an organized Democratic party, and that the party in convention assembled composed of our best and most honorable men, representing without strangulating a single voter of Democratic principles, such men as in point of integrity, ability and political sentiments as are in harmony with the national democracy. Fourth, if those holding to such political opinion and sentiments are not in the majority and can not put in office such men as would be faithful to trusts imposed in them as being of sound Democratic politics; then, we are in favor of men who are Republicans and the conduct of whom the Republican party is responsible holding offices. - DEMOCRAT MARRIED: Mr. WM. EDGEWORTH and Miss M. E. COOK, at residence of bride’s father, on 29th of Dec., by Rev. S. J. GIVENS. We have received Vick’s Floral Guide for 1886, published by JAMES VICK, of Rochester, N. Y. It is full of valuable information concerning fruits flowers and vegetables, and is no beautifully gotten up as to be in truth and indeed a fitting subject for a parlor table. Candidates are coming out freely in our neighboring counties, but they are rather backward in Lamar. Only one has announced as yet, but they will come out at court. That is their favorite time for blossoming. They can see representatives from the different sections of the county and calculate their chances. The mammoth seed house of D. M. Ferry & Co., of Detroit, probably the largest establishment of the kind in the world, was destroyed by fire a few days ago. Loss, about $1,250,000 with light insurance. OBITUARY: Died: On the night of the 13th inst. at his home eight miles west of town, BENJAMIN F. SMITH, in his fifty-fifth year. The deceased bore seven scars received while trying to uphold the lost cause. One of the wounds received hastened his death. He died expressing full faith in the Christian religion, giving his friends positive assurance that all was well with him. - FRIEND ALABAMA NEWS Ozark, Dale County, has gone dry. Chickens and hogs froze to death at Gadsden during the recent cold snap. The Birmingham Fire Brick Works lost over $1,000 by the late cold spell. The matter of Senator Morgan’s successor is engaging public attention. Mr. R. H. Wynne, of Etowah county, recently killed a sixteen months old Polard China pig which weighed 453 pounds. Rev. H. STRINGFELLOW, of Montgomery, is after the mayor, chief of police and board of aldermen of that city for not making more vigorous efforts to suppress gambling. There is a preacher over at LaFayette who has married 45 couples for which he only received $5.00 or 11.19 cents for each couple. Cheap enough! A negro woman living 4 miles from Montgomery recently gave birth to 4 babies. They were all doing well at last accounts. GRAND AND PETIT JURORS Below we give a list of Grand and Petit Jurors drawn for the Spring term of the Circuit Court. GRAND JURORS R. C. RECTOR Town Beat Farmer H. A. BROCK Lawrence “ D. H. SIZEMORE Sizemore “ W. T. STANFORD Brown’s “ A. P. COOPER Henson’s “ W. L. YOUNG Milleville “ W. M. STONE Pine Springs “ G. W. WOODS Moscow “ GEO. W. BETTS Betts “ F. M. RICHARDS Trull’s “ T. J. DUNCAN Vail’s “ J. J. HEMPHILL Millport “ ELIJAH HOWELL Steen’s “ J. J. BRANYAN Stricland “ A. P. ODOM Wilson’s “ PETIT JURORS FOR FIRST WEEK AARON PENNINGTON Town Beat Farmer JOHN WARD “ “ JOHN S. WOFFORD “ “ J. T. MCMANUS “ “ J. F. COLLINS Lawrence “ R. S. WILSON Sizemore “ R. E. BRADLEY Brown’s “ W. W. PURNELL Good “ J. V. CRUMP Henson’s “ J. B. BERRYHILL Millville “ O. M. THOMPSON “ “ W. L. SANDLIN Pine Springs “ MARVEL THOMPSON Moscow “ J. R. BANKHEAD “ “ C. C. WATSON “ “ J. A. YOUNG Military Springs “ A. L. HARRINGTON Betts “ W. P. FALKNER Trull’s “ A. J. ATKINS Vail’s “ J. N. PROPST Millport “ G. B. MOORE Steen’s “ WILEY RAWLAND Strickland “ JAS M. WILSON Wilson’s “ S. M. CURRY “ “ PETIT JURORS FOR SECOND WEEK T. N. LOGAN Town Beat Farmer O. L. GUYTON “ “ JOEL F. SANDERS “ “ HIRAM HOLLIS, JR. “ “ J. M. OAKS Lawrence “ J. F. KIRK Sizemore “ JNO. T. HILL Brown’s “ F. M. LACEY Good “ H. C. ELLIOTT Henson’s “ J. A. DAVIDSON Millville “ JAMES RIGGAN Millville “ G. W. BLACK Pine Springs “ GEO. E. BROWN Moscow “ T. M. WOODS Moscow “ R. P. HANKINS Moscow “ J. H. JORDAN Military Springs “ S. P. KEMP Betts “ FRANK BREWER Trull’s “ A. J. VAIL Vail’s “ W. H. CONNER Millport “ J. W. RICHARDSON Steen’s “ J. N. COLLINS Strickland “ J. H. CASH Wilson’s “ T. J. YARBROUGH Wilson’s “ SOMETHING YOU NEED! The Cheapest and Best Weekly for an Alabama Reader In addition to his county paper and religious weekly, every citizen not able to afford a daily, needs a State weekly containing in full the latest news of his own commonwealth and of the world. Nothing is so instructive and improving to the family as good papers. The Montgomery Weekly Advertiser is now one of the largest and best weeklies in the South. It has twelve pages every issue of the latest news of the country. The Daily Advertiser receives the complete Associated Press dispatches, which no other Alabama daily does, and it has also a special news service of paid correspondents all over Alabama. The weekly contains the cream of all this costly news. The Alabama department contains everything fresh and full that can be of interest to an Alabama reader, and no paper in the South approaches it in value in this respect. Its market reports are especially looked after, and are fresh and reliable. Its type is large and clear, and easily read. In every way it is a model family weekly. But not only is it superior in quantity and quality, but its price is as low as the lowest. It has been reduced to One Dollar per year, to put it in reach of every Alabama family. Congress is now is session, and fights between the Republican Senate and the Democratic President are coming. The State campaign is also opening and the legislature will be in session next winter. It will be a great news year, and provision should be made to keep posted. The Advertiser is the Capital City paper, and has the finest facilities to supply the news. No prizes are offered, and no commissions can be given with this low price. The money’s worth is given in the paper itself. But any one who will send ten names with ten dollars will be given the paper free one year. Now is the time to begin. Sample copies sent free on request. Address SCREWS, CORY & GLASS, Montgomery, Ala. A REMARKABLE CASE Mrs. Henry Ellis, 500 Scott Street, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, writes: “Dr. S. B. Hartman & Co., Columbus, O. I am induced by a sense of duty to the suffering to make a brief statement of your remark able cure of myself. I was a most miserable sufferer from the various annoying and distressing diseases of delicate persons, which caused me to be confined to my bed for a long time, being too weak to even bear my weight upon my feet. I was treated by the most reputable physicians in our city, each and all saying they could do nothing for me. I had given up all hopes of ever being well. In this condition I began to take your Manalin and Peruna, and I am most happy to say in three months I was perfectly well – entirely cured, without any appliances or support of any kind. Mr. G. A., Prochl, New Portage, Summit County, Ohio, writes: “My wife has been sick for about five years. In the first place the doctor called it leucorrhaea, and treated it about one year, and she grew worse, and turned to ulceration of the womb, and was treated for that tow years, but she grew worse and the doctor gave her up. Then I employed Dr. Underwood, one of the best doctors of Akron, but under his treatment she grew worse. She was paralyzed; she had lost all of the sense of feeling and her eyesight. She could not walk for nearly two years. About six months ago Underwood gave her up. She tried your Peruna. She has taken three bottles, and it did more good than any other medicine. The paralysis has about left her; her eyesight is getting better. We will continue the use of Peruna until she is well.” Mr. Isaac Nicodemus, Schellsburg, Bedford County, Pa., writes: “I am induced, by a sense of duty to the suffering, to make a brief statement of your remarkable help, as a sufferer of catarrh in my head and throat. I doctored with one of the best physicians in our place for that dreaded disease, catarrh, and found no relief. But in 1883, I lost my speech, and was not able to do any kind of work for near three months. I could neither eat nor sleep. Peruna and Manalin did wonders for me. I used three bottles of Peruna and one of Manalin, and now I am in better health than I have been for ten years, and I can heartily recommend your medicine to all suffering from that dread disease, catarrh. Mr. I. W. Wood, Mt. Sterling, Ohio says: Your medicine gives good satisfaction. My customers speak highly of its curative properties.” WRIGHT’S Liver Vegetable…..(CAN’T READ) THE FERNBANK HIGH SCHOOL now under the Principalship of JNO. R. GUIN, will open Nov. 2, 1885, and continue ten scholastic months. Able assistants will be employed when needed. Said school offers great advantages. Tuition as follows: Primary: Embracing Orthography, Reading, Writing, Primary Geography, Primary Arithmetic, per month………….$1.25 Intermediate: Embracing Practical Arithmetic, English Grammar, Intermediate Geography, Higher Reading, English, Composition, and U. S. History, per month………..$2.00 High School: Embracing Botany, Physiology, Elementary Algebra, Physical Geography, Rhetoric, Natural Philosophy, Elocution, and Latin, per month……..$3.00 A reasonable incidental fee will be charged. Board can be had at $7 per month. Tuition accounts are due at the end of every two months. For further particulars, address. - JNO. R. GUIN, Principal, Fernbank, Ala. – October 28, 1885. ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE By virtue of an order of the Probate Court of Lamar County, Alabama, I will offer for sale at Kennedy on the 6th day of February next the following lands N W ¼ of S W ¼ and S ½ of S W ¼ Sec 10 N W ¼ and N W ¼ of S W ¼ and S E ¼ of S W ¼ and S W ¼ of N E ¼ and N E ¼ of S E ½ Sec 15 T 17 R14, as the lands belonging to the estate of C. K. COOK, deceased. Said sale will be made for one-0sixth in cash and the remainder on a credit of twelve (12) months from day of sale. The purchaser will be required to give note with at least two good securities for purchase money. This the 4th day of January 1886. - J. G. TRULL, Administrator of the estate of C. K. COOK FINAL SETTLEMENT The State of Alabama, Lamar County Probate Court, January 2nd, AD 1886 Estate of JAMES B. BANKHEAD, deceased, this day came JOHN B. ABERNATHY administrator of said estate, and filed his statement, accounts, and vouchers for final settlement of his administration. It is ordered that the 30th day of January, AD 1886, be appointed a day on which to make such settlement, at which time all persons interested can appear and contest the said settlement, if they think proper. - ALEXANDER COBB, Judge of Probate of said county. NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Land Office at Huntsville, Ala., Nov. 13, 1885 Notice is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the Probate Judge of Lamar County at Vernon, Ala., on the 12tjh day of February, 1886, viz: No. 9862 ALFRED N. FRANKLIN, for the N ½ of N W ¼ Sec 19 T 12 and R 15 West. He names the following witnessed to prove his continuous residence upon and cultivation of said land, viz: J. W. PAUL, JOHN R. EVANS, JOHN H. RAY and S. M. LEE, all of Detroit, Lamar County, Alabama. - WM. C. WELLS, Register NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION (NOTICE NO. 4643) Land Office at Montgomery, Ala. December 21st, 1885 Notice is hereby given that the following named settler has filed notice of his intention to make final proof in support of his claim, and that said proof will be made before Judge of the Probate Court at Vernon, Ala. on February 12th, 1885 (sic), viz: JEFFERSON G. SANDERS homestead, 10087 for the N W ¼ N W ¼ Section 8 T 15 R 15 West. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon, and cultivation of said land, viz: J. E. PENNINGTON, HIRAM HOLLIS, JAMES W. TAYLOR, WILLIAM AUSTIN, all of Vernon, Ala. - THOS. SCOTT, Register NOTICE FOR PUBLICATION Land Office at Huntsville, Ala, December 9th, 1885. Notice is hereby given that the following named petitioner has filed notice of his claim, and that said proof will be made before the Probate Judge of Lamar County, Ala, at Vernon, on January 29, 1886, viz: No. 8740, ISAAC METCALFE for the S ½ of S E ¼, and N E ¼ or S E ¼ and S E (?) of S W ¼ Sec 21, T 12 R14 West. He names the following witnesses to prove his continuous residence upon, and cultivation of said land, viz: ZACK SWERNIGER, GEORGE W. METCALFE, MONROE CRUMP, and FILLIMON TRULOVE, all of Pikeville, Ala. - W. G. WELLS, Register No New Thing – Strong’s Sanative Pills used throughout the country for over 40 years, and thus proved the Best liver medicine in the world. No griping, poisonous drugs, but purely vegetable, safe and reliable. Prescribed even by physicians. A speedy cure for liver complaint, regulating the bowels, purifying the blood, cleansing from malarial taint. A perfect cure for sick headache, constipation, and all bilious disorders. Sold by druggists. For pamphlets, etc. address C. E. Bull & Co., 18 Cedar St. N. Y. City Down With High Prices. CHICAGO SCALE CO. 151 S. Jefferson St., Chicago. (Picture of small scale) - The “Little Detective” ¼ oz. to 25 lbs., $3. Should be in every house and office. (Picture of scale) - 240-lbs Family or Farm Scale, $3. Special prices to agents and dealers. 300 different sizes and varieties, including Counter, Platform, Hay, Coal, Grain, Stock and Mill Scales. 2-ton wagon scale, 6x12, $40. 4-ton, 8x14, $60. Beam box and brass beam included. (Picture of scale) – Farmer’s Portable Forgo, $10. Forge and kit of tools $25. All tools needed for repairs. Anvils, vises, hammers, tongs, drills, bellows and all kinds of Blacksmith’s Tools. And hundred of useful articles retailed less than wholesale prices. Forges for all kinds of shops. Foot- power lathes and tools for doing papers in small shops. (Picture of corn sheller) – Improved Iron Corn-Sheller. Weight, 130 lbs. Price $6.50. Shells a bushel a minute; fanning mills, feed mills, farmer’s feed cooker, &c. Save money and send for circular. (Picture of Sewing Machine) A $65 Sewing Machine for $18. Drop-leaf table, five drawers, cover box and all attachments. Buy the latest, newest and best. All machines warranted to give satisfaction. Thousands sold to go to all parts of the Country. Send for full price list. The CHICAGO COTTAGE ORGAN has attained a standard of excellence which admits of no superior. Our aim is to excel. Every organ warranted for five year. (picture of ornate organ) These excellent organs are celebrated for volume, quality of tone, quick responses, variety of combination, artistic design, beauty in finish, perfect construction, making them the most attractive, ornamental and desirable organs for homes, schools, churches, lodges, societies, etc. Established reputation, unequaled facilities, skilled workmen, best material, combined , make this THE POPULAR ORGAN. Instruction Books and piano stools. Catalogues and price lists, on application, free. The CHICAGO COTTAGE ORGAN CO. Corner Randolph and Ann Streets, Chicago, Ill. No New Thing. Strong’s Sanative Pills. Used throughout the country for over 40 years, and thus proved the best liver medicine in the world. No griping, poisonous drugs, but purely vegetable, safe and reliable. Prescribed even by physicians. A speedy cure for liver complaint, regulating the bowels, purifying the bloods, cleansing from malarial taint. A perfect cure for sick headache, constipation and all bilious disorders. Sold by druggists. For pamphlets, etc. address C. E. Bull & Co., 15 Cedar St., N. Y. City. Free to all. Our new illustrated Floral catalogue of 90 pages containing descriptions and prices of the best varieties of plants, garden and flower seeds, bulbs, boots, shrubs, small fruit and all applications. Customers will receive a copy without writing for it. Two Million plants and roses in stock. Goods guaranteed to be of fist quality. Offered for the first time they new Double Red Bouvardia. ”Thos. Meeham” wholesale and retail. Address Nanz & Neumer, Louisville, Ky. Collins Ague Cure. Price 50 cents a bottle. The great household remedy for chills and fever. Never fails to give satisfaction, wherever used. An indispensable household remedy. This widely known and justly celebrated medicine has gained for itself more friends in the south and elsewhere than any known medicine. Collins Ague Cure removes all bilious disorders and impurities of the blood, cures indigestion, bilious colic, constipation, etc., and as its name implies, is an absolutely sure cure for chills and fever, dumb ague, swamp fever, and all malarial affections, and has no equal as a liver regulator. Sold everywhere by all druggists and general dealers. Collins present century almanac, contains hundred of letters from responsible persons, testifying to the wonderful cures made by Collins ague cure. Call on your dealer for one, or it will be mailed free upon application. Collins Bros. Drug Co., 420 to 425 N. Second St., St. Louis. The light running New Home sewing machine simple, strong, swift (picture of sewing machine) The only sewing machine that gives perfect satisfaction, has no equal, perfect in every particular. New Home Sewing Machine Co. Orange Mass. 30 Union Sq. N. Y., Chicago, Ill. St. Louis, Mo., Atlanta, Ga. PAGE 4 FOR THE FARM AND HOME THE APPLE ORCHARD Josiah Hoopes says in the New York Tribune: One may apply fertilizers to the soil and yet neglect the trimming, washing the bark, and destruction of injurious insects. I consider all of very nearly equal importance. A top- dressing of any good, rich compost during autumn will pay the owner of an old orchard as surely as if applied to his wheat field or potato-patch. And yet the farmers allow the trees to “run out” to use a common expression, from ignorance or parsimony. As to breaking up the tough sod of an old orchard to infuse health in the trees, some difference in judgement exists, but I never could see the use of destroying the roots, when equally good results may be gained by simply scattering manure over the surface. Let farmers try the latter and mark the result; then follow up the good work next spring by heading back the tops of all old mossy trees, and apply a coat of alkali in weak solution to the bark of the body and larger branches. I like whitewash for this purpose. GREED OF COWS It is hardly necessary to tell any one, says the Livestock Journal, that the domestic cow is a great feeder, and that this is especially true of cows that are great milkers. The appetites of domestic animals are largely wheat years of feeding for certain ends has made them, and they may, therefore, be regarded as in a measure abnormal. This is shown clearly enough by the great milk and butter tests, which have shown that cows can by systematically overfed up to a point where death quickly follows. This being the case, it is necessary in feeding cows to be careful that feed of a assimilating, concentrated character be administered regularly and judiciously. The over-indulgence which a cow will practice at times, when allowed unrestricted access to grain or apples, is usually due not only to the greatly developed active udder, but far more to a want of regularity in feeding and the neglect of the feeder to meet the demands of such an appetite as they develop. With proper feeding, cows can be trained to take care of themselves with any kind of food before them. Even with apples, than which no kind of food is more dangerous to cows when indulged in to excess, this statement holds good, and when properly trained, being fed at first moderately and the quantity gradually increased, they seem to learn to measure the quantity their stomachs can managed, and may be as safely trusted in the orchard as nay other animal. In the case of bovines the trouble arises from the unnatural distension of the rumen by habitually overcrowding it with coarse food in an effort to satisfy the appetite induced by any great draft upon the system. Thus stretched, it will hold more of a concentrated food than the animal can digest before fermentation becomes active enough to be injurious. It may be stated here that, fed judiciously, apples are a healthful, safe, and an excellent milk producing food. CARE OF CELLARS A great mistake is sometimes made in ventilating cellars and milk houses. The object of ventilation is to keep the cellars cool and dry, but this object often fails of being accomplished by a common mistake, and instead, the cellar is made both warm and damp. A cool place should never be ventilated, unless the air admitted is cooler than the air within, or is at least as cool as that, or a very little warmer. The warmer the air, the more moisture it holds in suspension. Necessarily, the cooler the air, the more this moisture is condensed and precipitated. When a cool cellar is aired on a warm day, the entering air being in motion appears cool; but as it fills the cellar, the cooler air with which it becomes mixed chills it, the moisture is condensed, and dew is deposited on the cold walls, and may often be seen running down them in steams. Then the cellar is damp, and soon becomes mouldy. To avoid this, the windows should only be opened at night, and late – the last thing before retiring. There is no need to fear that that the night air is unhealthful – it is as pure as the air of midday, and is really drier. The cool air enters the apartment during the night, and circulated through it. The windows should be closed before sunrise in the morning, and kept closed and shaded through the day. If the air of a cellar is damp, it may be thoroughly dried by placing in it a peck of fresh lime in an open box. A peck of lime will absorb about seven pounds, or more than three quarts of water, and in this way a cellar of a milk room may soon be dried, even in the hottest weather. A bushel of lime absorbs twenty-seven pounds of water, and still appears as a dry powder. In this condition it will be very useful to spread over the garden or lawn, or around fruit trees, or it may be used for whitewash. This precaution is often necessary in the dairy, because of the prevalence, where air is damp, of milder, and the various forms of mould. The orange and red kinds of mould especially, which sometimes form upon the cream, have a most injurious effect upon the butter. – [American Agriculturist] FARM AND GARDEN NOTES Lack of comfort in animals hinders fattening. If shade is excessive about the house thin out some trees. It’s the sickly plants that are the most troubled by insects. Many primroses are killed every year by over-watering. Shearing lambs in midsummer is claimed by English farmers to greatly increase the growth of the carcass. To prevent drain pipes from stopping up, pour a hot solution of potash into the pipes every month or two. Many horses have a habit of sleeping standing. It is not a good one, and horses should be broken of it if possible. Trees on the outside of an orchard are usually more prolific. There is more sunlight and air, and the roots have a freer range. Churning sweet cream is not considered a good method by many leading authorities – the better plan being to allow the cream to ripen somewhat. Potatoes dug in clear weather and thoroughly dried in the sun will keep in much better condition in the bins than those that have not been sun-dried. Several years since a gardener discovered that by planting his squash seeds in earth that had a layer of coal ashes above and below it the vines were not molested by cutworms. A cool, deep and rich soil is indispensable to success in the culture of herbaceous plants and bulbs. Especially is this true of lilies and other bulbs that are usually set out at this season of the year. Don’t put rotten potatoes into the cellar. Don’t put so much corn into one bin that it can’t dry thoroughly. Don’t put uncured cornstalks into the barn unless you want a fire. Don’t try to feed a bull that you don’t need. An Ohio farmer says he killed every potato beetle in a field “alive with them,” by sprinkling once with a mixture made in proportion of 5 pounds each of “slacked lime” and copperas, and 20 gallons of water. “Beside, it benefits the plants.” Plantain, dandelion and other weeds in a lawn may be destroyed by placing a little sulfuric acid with a stick in the crown of each plant. The acid should be carried in an open-mouthed bottle with a long handle, so that fingers and clothes are protected. Salt is often largely used in the food of pigeons, and should also be given fowls, especially during the molting season. The proper way to feed it is to add it to the soft food in quantity sufficient to season the food to suit the taste, but should never be used in excess. Dahlia roots in small quantities can be safely wintered when placed in a single layer and closely together, in a shallow box. Put sifted sand over and around them, covering the crowns but not the stems. Thus treated and placed in a frost-proof cellar, they will keep fresh and plump until spring. RECIPES APPLE CHARLOTTE – Line a buttered loaf tin with thin slices of home-made bread, dip the edges of the bread in white of egg and fill the space with a smooth apple sauce seasoned with lemon rind and nutmeg, or cinnamon; cover the top with strips of bread, put a small quantity of butter on top and bake one hour. BROILED SWEET PTOATOES – Raw and boiled potatoes are served in this manner: Cut the raw potatoes in thin slices, brush melted butter over them and also over the wire broiler to prevent their sticking to it. Broil them a dark brown. Boiled sweet potatoes need to be but slightly broiled, just enough to warm through and at the same time to show the marks of the broiler. PANCAKES – Whisk the yolks of five eggs thoroughly and add to them four ounces of flour, half a teaspoonful of salt and a tablespoonful of sugar. Stir in half a teaspoonful of salt and a tablespoonful of sugar. Stir in half a pinto of lukewarm milk and the whites of the eggs well beaten. Grease a small pan slightly and fry the cakes very thin, shake the pan to prevent burning, and when they are a delicate brown on the under side turn them as artistically as possible. When done put them on a hot plate with sugar and a dash of cinnamon on each and strew over the top one a quantity of fine sugar. Hold over it a shovelful of live coals to melt the sugar. SHREDDED CODFISH CAKES – The shredded codfish put up in tin cans is a blessing to those who dislike the annoyance of preparing the fish in the old-fashioned manner. Open a one pound can of the shredded fish and wash it in two water, then cover with a liberal quantity of warm water and let stand half an hour. Squeeze out the water, separate the particles of fish and add to it half a pound of warm mashed potatoes. Whip these together lightly, add a saltspoonful of white pepper, two ounces of butter and the yolks of two eggs well beaten. Work all together and with floured hands shape the mixture into dainty little cakes. Drop them in smoking hot fat and fry to a golden color. – [New York Cook] HOUSEHOLD HINTS If nutmegs are good, when pricked with a pin, oil will instantly ooze out. When sponge cake becomes dry it is nice to cut in thin slices and toast. To remove mildew, soak in buttermilk and spread on the grass in the sun. The warmth of floors is generally increased by having carpet ling of layers of paper under the carpet. Milk, if put in an earthen jar, or even a tin can will keep sweet for a long time, if well wrapped in a wet cloth. Never put salt into soup when cooking till it has been thoroughly skimmed, as salt prevents the scum from rising. If sassafras bark is sprinkled among dried fruit and vegetables, it will keep insects from getting in, and will not injure their flavor. STILL UNKNOWN Notwithstanding the activity of the civilized races in securing a knowledge of distant countries, there are as yet many serious unsolved geographical problems. It is not know, for instance, what are the sources of the great Irawaddy River. It pours into the Bay of Bengal within one-fifth as much water a s the Mississippi empties into the Gulf of Mexico. Steamboats ascend it for 800 miles, and yet geographers do not know where are its head water. There is a river called Sanpo, which flows through Thibet north of the Himalyas. This may be the beginning of the Irawaddy, yet on many maps it pours into the Brahmapootra, which makes its way into India. Then there are enormous stretches of South America which are blank on the amp. We know the Orinoco River has a delta, but we are entirely unacquainted with its upper waters. Only two of the twelve channels that pour into the Atlantic have been explored. The native Indians, a ferocious race, said to be cannibals, will not permit the exploration of that river. In the vast forest are some very peculiar but degrades races of men. One-third of Australia and three-fourths of New Guinea are practically unknown. In Hindostan, there is a rich and populous state called Nepaul, which was never visited except by one white man. It is only the other day that Lieutenant Wissman discovered that the Kasai, one of the greatest tributaries of the Congo, was one hundred miles west of the place assigned to it on Stanley’s latest maps. Then there are parts of the Dominion to the north of us that are absolutely unknown to the white races. The Arctic and Antarctic circles are, and will long remain, a terra incognitate - [Demorest’s] THE ANCIENT AND MODERN ARK The following figures concerning the Great Eastern and the Ark are of interest. Somebody is comparing the size and cost of the Great Eastern and Noah’s Ark. The cost of building and launching the Great Eastern was $3,650,000, and this broke the original company. A new company was formed, which spent $600,000 in fitting and furnishing her. Then this company failed, and a new company was organized, with a capital of $500,000. At the close of 1880 this company sank £ 86,715 upon the vessel, thus making her total cost $4,708,575. Nothing built can stand comparison with the Great Eastern, excepting Noah’s Ark, and even this vessel could not match her. The length of the Ark was 300 cubits, her breadth 50 cubits, and her height 30 cubits. The cubit of the Scriptures, according to Bishop Wilkins, was 3165 inc. and computed into English measurements, the Ark 547 ft. long, 91 ft. beam, 54.7 ft. depth, and 20,762 tons. The Great Eastern is 680 ft. long, 83 ft. beam, 56 ft. depth, and 28,093 tons measurement. So Noah’s Ark is quite over shadowed by the Great Eastern. – [Scientific American] PRESIDENT’S LINCOLN’S PHILOSOPHY Ben. Perley Poore, in the Boston Budget, says: Some Western gentlemen called at the White House and harangued Mr. Lincoln in an excited manner about the omissions and commissions of the administration. He heard them with his usual patience, and finally said: “Gentlemen, suppose all the property you were worth was in gold, and you had put it in the hands of Blondin to carry it across the Niagara Falls on a tight rope, would you shake the rope while he was passing over it, or keep shouting to him, ‘Blondin, stoop a little more,’ ‘Go a little faster?’ No, I am sure you would not. You would hold your breath as well as your tongue, and keep your hands off until he was safely over. Now, the government is in the same situation, and is carrying weight; untold treasures are in its hands; it is doing the best it can’ don’t badger it; keep silence, and it will get safely over. WITCHCRAFT IN JAMAICA Obeshism, a species of witchcraft, is said to be the curse of Jamaica. A recent traveller was struck by the extraordinary actions of a colored servant, who, instead of entering through the middle of the open door, slunk close to the posts and along the wall of the room, continually looking over his shoulder, as though in dread of some unseen but formidable power. This man, a professed Christian of good education and fair attainments, believed himself to be the victim of obeshism, and was pining away in sheer fright. Although obeshism is punishable with five years’ penal servitude it is widely practiced throughout Jamaica, and numbers among its believers many people otherwise intelligent. MOORISH DRESSES The better class of Moors, writes a correspondent from Algiers, wear trousers confined below the knee, with European stockings and shoes. The chest is covered with a gayly-colored vest, a jacket slightly European, and a turban of many folds, and often of costly material. Rings, set with diamonds or other precious stones, are much worn by persons of this class. The richer Arabs and Kabyles wear a long robe of white cotton, over which is the woolen burous so familiar to those who have seen Screyeer’s pictures. The head dress is a sort of turban, with a cape covering the nape of the neck and touching the shoulders. A SINGULAR PRACTICE “All souls day” a very singular practice was resumed, after many years discontinuance at a church called La Madonna della morte in Via Giulla, on the “yellow Tiber’s banks” near Ponte Santa Angelo. A large subterranean cemetery is located here, part of which is decorated with skeletons and human bones and skulls arranged in every conceivable grotesque fashion, and the day mentioned it was brilliantly lighted and thrown open to the public. Many skeletons, with some wax figures, furnished a representation of the vision of Ezekiel. EGGS – Ireland is making an effort to regain her old fame as an egg-producing country. A poultry farm has been established in County Meath and stocked with Houdon fowl and Rouen duck, and the cottagemen in the neighborhood have been encouraged to raise poultry by the gift of setting eggs, to which the condition is attached that one-half the brood is to be returned to the farm. The experiment has so far worked well. A STRANGE RITE – The heavy consumption of copper in India is largely due to a religious rite of the natives. At certain seasons of the year small cups of sheet-copper about an inch in diameter and an inch and a half deep are filled with rice, and are thrown into the rivers as an offering, with religious ceremonies. The quantity of copper thus annually consumed is very heavy. WAX – The wax-plant, indigenous in Carolina and Pennsylvania, is now being cultivated in Algeria. The fruit, inclosed in a bag of coarse cloth, is plunged into boiling water, and in a few seconds the liquid wax floats on the surface. This is skimmed off and dried, and forms a good substitute for beeswax. Laconic patient to physician: Caught cold. Physician: Take Red Star Cure: no morphine, no poisons. Only twenty-five cents. St. Jacob’s cures pain. The Japanese persimmon is to be cultivated in the south for commercial purposes. The fruit, which is seedless, resembles the sweet orange in color and shape, rivals it in size, is exceedingly prolific, and is of a most delicious flavor. It is believed it will grow rapidly in favor in this country. HOW TO GET STRONG. Dumb-bells and horizontal bars, Indian clubs and the trapose are valuable under certain conditions, but they are detrimental rather than beneficial if the blood is poor and thin and poisoned with bile. Use of the muscles necessitates waste as well as induces growth. If the blood does not carry sufficient nutritive material to repair the waste, loss of strength, necessarily follows, and growth is out of the question. Purify and enrich your blood with Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical Discovery” and then exercise will develop and not consume your physique. It is said that more money is needed to put Bartholdt’s statue on her last legs. The purest, sweetest and best Cod Liver Oil in the world, manufactured from fresh, healthy livers, upon the seashore. It is absolutely pure and sweet. Patients who have once taken it prefer it to all others. Physicians have decided it superior to any of the other oils in market. Made by Caswell, Hastard & Co., New York. Chapped hands, face, pimples, and rough skin cured by using Juniper Tar Soap, made by Caswell, Hasard & Co., New York. The winters in Iceland are milder than those in Iowa. This is due to the Gulf Stream. Ask you shoe and hardware dealers for Lyon’s Heel Stiffeners, they keep boots and shoes straight. The Caroline Islands number five hundred, big and little. A PECK OF PEAS (P’S) Here are a peck of peas, sweet peas, if you will. Perseverance, patience, promptness, proficiency, push and politeness. Add to those Dr. Pierce’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets” and you will get well through the world without much trouble. The pellets prevent constipation and surplus of bile which lead to many different complainants. Enclosed in glass, always fresh, entirely vegetable, prompt, and perfectly harmless. Any druggist. The best cough medicine is Piso’s Cure for Consumption. Sold everywhere. Your character cannot be essentially injured except by your own acts. A “MADMAN’S” LEGACY “Sirs!” exclaimed a man in the homely garb of a mechanic to Richelieu, the prime minister of France, as he was entering his palace. “Sire, I have made a discovery which shall make rich and great the nation which shall develop it. Sire, will you give me an audience!” Richelieu, constantly importuned, finally ordered the “madman” imprisoned. Even in jail he did not desist from declaring his “delusion” which one day attracted the attention of a British nobleman, who heard De Cause’s story, and developed his discovery of steam power! All great discoveries ar at first derided. Seven years ago a man yet under middle age, enriched by a business which covered the continent, found himself suddenly stricken down. When his physicians said recover was impossible, he used a new discovery, which, like all advances in science, had been opposed bitterly by the school men. Nevertheless, it cured him, and out of gratitude to the spreading of its merits before the world. Such in brief is the history of Warner’s safe cure, which was won, according to the testimony of eminent persons, the most deserved reputation ever accorded to any known compound, and which is finally wining on its merits alone the approval of the most conservative practitioners. Its fame now belts the globe. [The Herald] Lightning struck a California pear tree and cooked the fruit brown. RESCUED FROM DEATH. William J. Coughlin, of Somersville, Mass. says: In the fall of 1876 I was taken with Bleeding of lungs followed by a severe cough. I lost my appetite and flesh, and was confined to my bed. In 1877 I was admitted to the Hospital. The doctors said I had a hole in my lung as big as a half dollar. At one time a report went around that I was dead. I gave up hope, but a friend told me of Dr. William Hall’s Balsam for the lungs. I got a bottle, when to my surprise, I commenced to feel better, and today I feel better than for three years past. A declaration of war – Throwing old tin cans and other refuse in our neighbor’s yard. The best Ankle Boot, and collar pads are made of zinc and leather. Try them. Only three years during the last fifty have the revenues of Brazil exceeded the expenditures. Dr. Sage’s Catarrah Remedy surpasses all others. Small and steady gains give competency a tranquil mind. Red Star Trade Mark Cough Cure. Absolutely free from opiates, emotes and poison. Safe, sure, prompt. 25 cts. At druggists and dealers. The Charles A. Vogeler Co., Baltimore, Md. St. Jacob’s Oil. Trade mark. The Great German Remedy For pain. Cures rheumatism, neuralgia, backache, headache, toothache, sprains, bruises, etc. Price, fifty cents. At druggists and dealer. The Charles A. Vogeler Co., Baltimore Md. Catarrh in the head is a disease of the mucous membrane. It generally originates in the nasal passages and maintains its stronghold in the head. From this point is sends forth a poisonous virus along the membranous linings and through the digestive organs, corrupting the blood and producing other troublesome and dangerous symptoms. Cream Balm. Hay fever is a remedy based upon a correct diagnosis of this disease and can be depended upon. 50 cts. at druggists or by mail. Ely Brothers, Druggists, Owego, N. Y. Pills Free! 5,000 boxes only. In order to convince the most skeptical of the excellence of Dr. O’Phelps brown’s renovating pills we will send a box free to any address on receipt of 10 cts in postage stamps to pay postage and packing. Address J. Gibson Brown, 45 and 47 Grand Street, Jersey City, N. J. Salvo Cures Drunkenness and intemperance, not instantly, but effectually. The only scientific antidote for the Alcohol habit and the only remedy that dares to send trial bottles. Highly endorsed by the medical profession and prepared by well known New York physician. Send stamps for circulars and references. Address “Halvo Remedy” No. 3 West 14th St., New York The Happy Hour Chair Hammock. The most delightful hammock ever invented for sitting or reclining In fancy colors and ornamental. Our customers are rapturous over it. Says one: “$50 could not get another. Agents wanted. Ask your dealer for it. Sample shipped to any address on receipt of $2. Write for circular. C. Arnold & Sons, Honeoue, N. Y. WILL COME BACK LATER AND FINISH ADS File at: http://files.usgwarchives.net/al/lamar/newspapers/lamarnew794gnw.txt This file has been created by a form at http://www.genrecords.org/alfiles/ File size: 91.2 Kb