Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, August 08, 1886, Image 3

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DAILY ENQUIRER-SUN, COLUMBUS, GEORGIA. SUNDAY MORNING, AUGUST 8, IWW COMFORTING WORDS. Gentle and kind and tender As sunshine after min, My thoughts to thee, thou tried one Go out with sad refVain. I know that many trials, Thy cherished hopes deferred, And chords of deepest feeling Within my heart are stirred. I long, but oh! how vainly. Some welcome word of cheer. In accents kind and tender, ’ To whisper In thine ear; To sing thee a song, thou tried one l'o last through time and space Like the lutio of light that lingers Where shone a sainted face. Tile May is like December, Thy jnya of youth are few, And m thy life's young morning Clouds bide the snn from view But lose not faith, thou tried one Still patiently abide; There are whom God Hi us lendeth More closely by His side. Through Marnlt’s bitter waters, Through Sinai’s desert sand, I'nto the living fountains, I’nto the promised land. With cords of lave He leads them Who follow His behest; The poor He crowns with riches, And the weary with His rest, —Thomas Wista UNITED. It is An III Wind Thai Blows No Good, Carrie Welton locked the schoolhottse door, and walked down the dusty highway toward the farmhouse she called home. She was very tired, and the long mile before her seemed interminable. Just, then there was a sound of wheels, and a span of bay horses was reined up close beside iter. “Would you like to ride home, Miss Welton?” some one said. Carrie looked up into the sun-browned face of Alexander Hall. There was no smile in his eyesund theshadowofa frown was a visible on his brow. “I thank you—no. I prefer to walk,” Carrie responded. “Very well, (let up, ponies.” And the span and buggy whirled past her, leaving a cloud of dust to settle upon her linen dress and straw hut as she trudged along the highway, looking very flushed and angry. “The idea ol' his thinking 1 would make up with him in that way!" she said, men tally. “No, indeed! He will have to apol ogize before I ride with him again. I could see that he was as set and stubborn us ever. No doubt lie intended to give me another lecture, and thought this would would be a splendid opportunity. He will learn that 1 have some dignity! 1 can tell him.” Carrie was so tired she ate but little sup per that night, and retired early to her room to think over matters in solitude, away from the chattering tongue of good Mrs. Smith, who felt it her solemn duty to “entertain” her hoarder—said entertain ment consisting in recitations of the neigh borhood affairs, past and present. When Carrie felt well and happy, and was not worn out with her day’s work, she | bore it very heroically. But to-night she was too nervous to endure tlie ordeal. Mrs. Smith’s voice united upon her nerves like the filing of a saw, and she flew to her room for protection, pleading a headache. In truth it was a heartache which troubled the girl. During the last six months she and Al exander Hall had been very good friends- such very good friends that they were in fact lovers, and needed only a few words to belong to each other for all time; words which would have been spoken ere this but for an unexpected event. Smithtown boasted of two stores which, of course, were visited at certain periods by drummers. One of these, a handsome, dashing fellow, had recently made it in his way to pass Sunday iti Smithtown. Every one in the little town know why he had remained. He had chanced to see Carrie Welton one evening at the store making some pur chases, and he was not slow to express his admiration for the teacher. He begged the favor of an introduction, which, owing to the somewhat informal maimers of Smithtown society, it was not difficult to obtain, since everybody knew everybody there, and the handsome agent seemed a very nice fellow indeed, one whom all the young ladies would he glad to consider an acquaintance. Mr. Parker attended church the follow ing Sunday, and walked home with Carrie, much to the indignation of Alexander Hall. He took it upon himselfto say some very cutting things to Carrie when they next met, io rebuke her for her readiness to receive attention from a “clothier’s dummy,” as he called Mr. Parker; and they parted in anger. Their next meeting was upon the dusty road. Carrie congratulated herself upon her behavior," and then site cried herself to sleep. But she was sttre that lie would come again in a day or two, and then site would be a little more gracious, and take him back into her favor, for really Smith- town was very dull without him. But. Alex did not come to her the next day or the next; and n whole week went by' without her seeing him. Then it strange report came to her ears. “Alex Hall has an auction to-day,” one of her pupils remarked. “An auction! What for?” Carrie asked, wonderingly. “Why, lie’s going away—going off to take up a claim in Dakota. He’s sold ins farm to Mr. Roberts, and to-day he sells his horses and maehiney.” “Does his mother go with him?’ asked Carrie, with a dull pain in her heart. “No; she’s going to Iowa, to her daugh ter. Of course the farm belongs to her, and the money will be here; and she says she does not want to go into a new coun try. But Alex is wild to go, and pa says he will be a rich man in a few years—that land out there will sell fora big price.” It was not a very orderly, school the re mainder of that day. Carrie seemed to be in a sort of nightware. C ould it be true. And was he going away without coming to say good-bye to her, and this shadow between them? , But he did all the same. 'I liree horrible days and nights went by, and then she saw him pass the school-house on his w «iy to the afternoon train which would bear him from Smithtown.lt was the noon hour ami she and several of the larger girls wen- sitting under a spreading oak, watching the smaller children play “King around the roses.” , A As he passed by lie swung hat his to the children, with whom he wasa favorite,aim said: “Good-bye, girls! good-bye, hoys. I am off for Dakota!” And then he was gone. . „ How the dreadful weeks wore b.v Carrie could never tell. But they did go by and the end of the term came at last—in Au gust. It was three months since Alex Hall had gone. Mr. Parker had visited Sin it h- town once during that time, and had been astonished to have Miss Welton turn her back upon him very deliberately when she met him at the village store. He was not accustomed to this kind of treatment from nretty girls in small villages; tor A r. Parker was one of the young men who have a “sweetheart in every port, ana he had fullly resolved to make Miss Welton his Smithtown sweetheart; and now an his plans were upset by the disdaimui manner of that young lady. He sought explanation by post but his billet deux was never noticed, and he was obliged to look elsewhere for a sweetheart to make his number good. , The very day school closedI ( a me ceived a letter from her Uncle Turn, i ncie mn‘n 1'??, 'L er °. nlv nettr relative, a roving f . ?? hemI * *'i tastes, a Jaek-of-alf- traues and good at none. But now lie wh!!!v l | h T\ lb “ n<1 “ new location; time he d 1)<J ,ikel - v to remain some I "I am in Dakota,” he wrote, “and I’ve taken up the nicest claim you ever saw— ' In/?l 68, 1 i Y l \' e V u l lt me a little house i ? n( J 1 old bachelor s hull. I go where I please in the day. I’m only live miles i from the railroad, and people are coming 1 in and villages going up fast. I have plen- I t.V to do and see—odd jobs of carpenter | work to keep me in living expenses, and then I go back to my ? and slci i> nights. Non know I ... (l soldier two >ears in the war. Well, mat counts just i 80 m uch tune on my land, and when ! once own it lean sell it or keep it fora i homestead as 1 choose. Lots of women I are taking up eiaiins. Now, I have been thmkingof you, Currie. There is :i splendid i quarter section a little way from mine. It j will he picked up soon, and if von warn I to make money and have the grit’ to stand ! roughing it, you’d belter pick it up. You ; must, have saved up something, teaching I so steadily as you have for live y -ars. !i : would cost you but little to come rut in u i on a landholder’s ticket, but a little more I to put up a small cabin, and but a little [ »i'»re to keep you for six months, and then j You just about own your land -;.i least you have only got to m ike periodical visit's to i K alter that. And you can wear vour old | clothes and dresses as well us the'best of them. And in a few years you will be a rich woman, Carrie, for this ‘land wiii sell at a good price, it is so admirably located and fertile.” Carrie had no sooner finished the letter than her decision was formed to go. She hated Smithtown and everybody in it. and the further she could get away the better. Hie wrote her uncle that she would arrive within the next three weeks, and she was with him in less than two. , have tiie lumber all ready for your little house,” lie said, as lie drove from tiie station to his bachelor’s hall. Somehow, she was lighter hearted and happier since she knew she was in Dakota than she lnul been for months. She knew why—she did not cheat herself. It was because she \yai in the same country with Alex Hall. It gave her a sense of com panionship—this very knowledge. “In the morning I will take you out and show you your claim,” continued her un de. “And I’ve chosen this site for your cabin. 11*11 be about a mile from mine— just a nice walk for you when you get lonesome.” The next morning was bright and sunny but of course windy. “"What a wind! Does it blow often like this? ” asked Carrie, as they roiled along over the smooth prairie. “Wind? Why, this is a calm day,” said Uncle Tom. “Just wait until you have seen a Dakota nli/.zard, my dear, before you talk of wind.” By-and-by they came to Carrie’s quarter section, as Uncle Tom called it. Carrie could not see where it began or left off, as she told Uncle Tom. It was like all the rest of the country—just land and nothing more; prairie melting into prairie as far as the eye could reach. “Well, but I know where the invisible lines lie,” responded Uncle Tom. “Now over yonder on the knoll vour cabin will be built after we have attended to the le gal formalities, and that is the extreme southern limit of your claim. A little south of it there is a slight ravine, and then another knoll. The ravine is the di viding line between the two quarter sec tions.” “Who owns the other one?” asked Car rie, anxious to know who might be her neighbor. “I don’t believe it is taken, though I heard something about it the other day. Some fellow was looking it up, I believe. There are dozens of them around almost daily. That was the reason I was in a hurry for you to come.” A few days later, after the legal formali ties had been attended to. Unde Tom drove Carrie out again to look at the cabin that was in process of erection on the opposite knoll. “Whv, that claim has been taken, too! I wonder who will he my neighbor?” que ried Carrie. “I can find out at the land office,” Uncle Toni replied. He did so, and gave Carrie the desired information the next day. “It's some fellow named Hall—A. Hall,” he said. “He’s just sold his interest in some claim about fifty miles north of here, and now lie’s taking up this, which he in tends to keep as a homestead. They often sell out at a nice figure after staying a few months on a claim. Some fellow pays them a good sum for their chance, and thev go elsewhere.” “A. Hall.” Carrie felt a sudden leaping of her heart, and a curious excitement. But it was not likely that if was Alex. It would be too wonderful to be true. Yet it was Alex! She saw him at the post office the next day, and passed him without so much as a glance. Alex looked as if he had seen an apparition, and took a step forward, and then stood still, chilled by her cold glance in which there was no recognition. After all, it was his own fault. He knew lie had conducted himself like a brute and an idiot when he left Smithtown. He had realized it a dozen times since—realized it constantly, in fact.*—with a dull heartache, whenever he was alone with himself. But he had never been quite brave enough to write and ask her pardon, believing that ere this Mr. Parker had the first place in her heart. And now she was here in Da kota! How strange! A greater surprise awaited him in the knowledge that Car rie’s claim and cabin were just opposite his own. The two cabins were completed and furnished, and the occupants moved in. Alex’s was the more pretentious of the two in the exterior, and Carrie’s the more sumptuous within. For she had brought her hooks, and she had a few plants, and, with those indescribable feminine knick- knacks which some women seem to create by a turn of their hand, her rooms were very cozy. Yet she was not very much at home. She passed a great deal of her time at 1 nele Tom’s, setting his batckelor hall to rights and mending and darning for him. But she went to her desolate little house to sleep. She was not timid—she knew that no harm could come to her there. She knew that the law of kindness pre vailed in this new country, which was better than any law “to keep the peace,” to bind the people together. She occasionally saw Alex, but they never recognized each other; yet there was to her a sense of protection in the knowledge that lie was so near. “Got acquainted with your neighbor yet. Carrie?” asked Uncle Tom after a month had passed. “N<>, and I don’t want hisacquaintance, answered Carrie rather icily. “Nice fellow, I think,” said Uncle Tom. “lie’s got business in him, and will make a successful man. He’s taken up a tree claim now. 1 was talking with him to- ( ft *‘AVhat’s a tree claim?” asked Carrie. “Oh, you plant so many trees and have ’em growing at a certain stated time say two years- - and the land is yours. He said you might do that and be worth just so much more. It would cost you but a trine to have the trees planted.” “He is taking an interest in my affairs, is lie” Well, nobodv thanks him for his advice,” snapped Carrie, in a voire very her. I nele Tom wondered and the days had not been long. And yet she and Alex had never exchanged a worth No one—not even Uncle Tom— knew that they had ever been friends One November day Carrie was ‘tacking a comforter,” which she had pieced to gether out of bits of calico. The wind had been blowing with increasing fury from the northwest all day. Toward evening it became terrible and a sleety snow began ;»■ fall. It seemed ; > shake the little cabin to ii- inundation. Carrie felt her heart sink with fear. This was something beyond any of her former experiences, and she remembered what Uncle Pom had said of a blizzard. “This must surely be a blizzard,” she thought. Higher and higher rose the wind, louder and louder it shrieked. The wails of the house shook, trembled, and then— Carrie was conscious of being lifted up into the air by some unseen force, and whirled through the darkness and then falling. After that sh6 knew nothing for a brief space. She was only stunned, and when she opened lu r eyes she found herself still in her own room, but with everything in a confused mass of ruin about her, and Alex Had kneeling by her. rubbing her hand- and calling her name. “It waft not necessary t • come- over, ’she said. “I am not hurt m the least.’ Alex broke into a laugh. “Come over!” he repented. ‘ it is you ! who have come over. Miss Carrie; von made the first c all in spite of yourself. And very glad am I lo see you, even io this un ceremonious manner.” “What do you mean?” she asked. • 1 mean that you came, house and all. and planted yourself right in my dooryard with a thunderous clatter. It is a wondt r your neek was not broken, mv dear. An- yon sure you are not injured?” lie asked, with a lender concern. “Do you really mean, Alex, that m\ house blew over into your yard?” I “I mean that, Carrie. I always thought : your cabin rather shaky—mine is t w ice a.** 1 substantial—and now you will be obliged to accept my hospitality for the present. : Fortunately I have a man and wife stop ping with me this week—friends of mine fr in i o them Dakota, whom ! am enter taining until they get a house built. They , have slept soundly through all this bliz zard. They are used to t ht e«.untrv. But I will w ike tiie good woman :iu v, and she will attend to yn* The next d \v Alex said to her: “Sim e you unbent sufficiently to call upon me in such an unceremonious man ner, Carrie, before I had begged your par don for my old disagree able meanness, can t you stoop still further and marry me. now that I most humbly era,*e your for giveness? I have always loved you.” Of course Carrie could not refuse. “’Pon my soul !” said Uncle Tom, when lie had heard the whole story. “It’s better than a magazine yar i! You a *e the hero ine, Carrie, and Alex is the hero, and I am the sort of good angel, you know, that fixes up things.” | “You and the blizzard,” laughed Carrie. A Fortunate . 1 Capt. Coleman, sohr. Weymouth, plying between Atlantic City andjN. Y.. hau been troubled with a cough so that he was un- I able to sleep, and was induced to try Dr. : King’s New Discovery for Consumption. I It not only gave him instant relief, but al ; laved the extreme sorenetH in his breast. | ! His children were similarly affected and a i single dose had the same happy effect. Dr. j King’s New Discovery is now the standard remedy in the Coleman household and on j board the schooner. Free Trial Bottles of this Standard Rem edy at Brannon & Carson’s Drug Store. eod&v, BlYK LKN’S AltSIf’A MUF. < | The best Salve in the world for Cuts, ; Bruises. Sores. Ulcers. Salt Kheum, Fever : Sores, Tetter. Chapped Hands, Chilblains, i Corns and all Skin Eruptions, and positive- i 1 ly cures Piles, or no pay is required. It is 1 1 guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction. I or money refunded. Price 25 cents per , box. For sale by Brannon & Carson. je‘24 oedtV-w I'D r (/ran-haw .1 Davids .r :: Dawson J col Dean C C Dorsev mi* < “ Duke mr* a! A Duke miss 'J Dukes mr- f Faulkner miss { Freeman mrs I. Fulton M >( -tt \V H Ferguson < R Shanur mi.< • N L B Ra Redding Re\ I’w. m-hi* miss .1 Richard vm mrs L Robison miss F L Roger-- >,' (' Rbers mrs D col Rogers miss S hanin*is J J •the girl, generally so unusual to what had conic o sweet-tempered. The weeks went by and November came. Carrie was on the third month of her six. She made a givut many friends, and had read and sewed, and made her uncle s cabin and her own very tasty and comfort- ,1, ie, and neat with her handiwork. She felt that her time had been well employed Goins .1 Snider S \\ Green \V Solomon N Hamilton M Snob lugs R R Hampton \V K Span mrs W Harrington J T Strait J Harris miss N Tally R iiartic-sW Taier mrs K Hannis miss S Thornton mrs (; K Harris L 2 Thomas II .M Holiday mrs S Thomas T Holsey miss M Thomas K Hughes miss J Towns mrs It Heard miss D Tyler mrs L IrvingS Vaughan mr.-s Dr Jones E 2 Watkins L Jarrett mrs J col Walls G John miss L Williams mrs M A Johnson miss E Weaver inrs S J, Johnson miss M Wells B Johnson G A Wells W S Kimbrough C col Williams W R Knight J B Williams J Lambert son H Williams miss A Lamb C William.- mrs F Love miss M Williams m-ssG McCav D William- B i McAdams T J Williams mr- .1 McAdams A Winters'I I Wright mrs S When calling for these letters, please sm are advertised, giving date. THOS J w vn Mlnrit.* ot* ••u'v *i»nl IVirnimr - mt’tii.D'H fi!’.' i Hr irt' r.t) Mi t-m Rltu.lv Flux, dulls am • •» Break) ikmrl ii the LIVER. 11:.•» nt, Torpid11> of Dyspepsia, indigos* tip• tion. Fl.itti* Cured by S. 8. 8. CAUTION. Consumer* should not confuse our Specific with the. numerous imitations, substitutes, potash and mercury mixtures which are got ten up to sell, not on their own merit, but on the merit of our tvmedy, An imitation is always a fraud and a cheat, and they thrive only as (hey can sb alfrom the article Imitated. Treatise on I Howl and Skin. Diseases mailed free. For sub: by all druggists. THE SW IFT SPECIFIC CO., Drawer 3, Atlanta^ (7a. S. S. S. vs. POTASH. I know I have taken one hundred bottles of no good. Last summer my fare, neck, body L >■ luM.M •petite lleidiohu. Foul Hnnith, !v • .'ll trite s ire 1 m «l t Fe.aides Bern ing-dou n t. SBOiger's flijRftUTU i- Invaluable h i-not.i pm-u ei 1 >r nil diM»*»mM, n ' 1 disonsea -t the LIVER, ''ill i£.!yJLT' STOMACH n t BOWELS It changes tne eomp'eximi if-m a waxy, yellow titu r e. t«* a rnddv, healthy color. It entirely removes lw jdoutajr .-pirn-. It is «m* of the BEST AL TERATIVES arid IFIERS OF THE BLOOD, and I* A f ALU Abb. F ''CNIC. I hnvo had blood poison for ten year iodide of popish in that time, hut it (lid and limbs were covered with sores, and I could scarcely use my arms oh account of rlieu matism in m\ shoulders. I took S. S. s., mid it hits done me more good than all other medi cities I have taken. My lac . body and neek tire perfectly clear and clean, and my rlieu matism i- entirely gone. I wcivlu-d 1 Hi pound- when I began the medicine, and I now weigl 152 pounds. My llrst bottle helped me greatly, and gave me an appetite like a strong man l would not bo without S. S. S. for several time- its weight in gold. C\ F. MITCHELL, W. 2Jd St. Ferry, Now York. C O X-jTTIM: 33TT S ST ADICEP l‘\* tftlo by all Diuggis: AiimArmi rice 01.00 per bottle C. F STAD C5R, Proprietor, WO SO. FRONT ST., Phlladelohlii, Pa. BLOOD AND MONEY'. during hi- pilgn world, regardless to do in shaping oagt through thi- OOILATIMIIBITS, G-EOTOC3-XXV. FOUNDERS MIS MACHINISTS. M \M FACT! \\\)\\< (U’ . hvullh'n i. pu , e tiie oft-repeated loud'.” Wi.hptav- id idotighing through mir uni inf lleetiud faculties !• r. and men. women and tore lovely. ■ h: tk..-, ; - and the \t the Party. She—“Hark! Sit *h exquisite ! !bd you ever hear a mure aecomj li-i «-«l singer?” He—“I never did. But I've heard » m that could make a plaguey sigiu more music.” red blond one am! tie of IL R. 1 i. than and lilt;.*, and ev . Simmons’ Iron C'ordial sends to the cheeks of the sickly strength to the muscles, by giving an a|>- | petite, aiding digestion and building up the system. All sickly women win need a never-failing Female Kegulator will lie delighted with its prompt action. eod.vw Would lb- a Mean Trick. “DinP.v, did you be Fadin' in the m n-- pap< rs that Jay (lould’s inco.me is tin t ints ivery toiine the clock ticks?” “Troth, an’ Oi did. Wouldn’t it hi a mane thrick now if some blaggyard was to snake in an’ stop is dock fur him. - Merc hunt Traveler. In nearly every ease where a man shoots j himself in large cities the widow applies ! to the coroner for the pistol. They gener ally say they want it to keen. use or M:T i i:ic%. List of unclaimed letters remnim.-.g m the Co lumbus. Ga.. post office for the week ending Aug. sth. If not called for within thirty days will he sent to the Dead Letter Office: , Abert G W McGannond A Co . Abner miss A E Mallory T II :i • Alislin 8 J Monro R ! Harnes mrs E Moris miss M J. j Beachermrs E L Morris J Bennett mis- L Murphy T Bolton miss H Neal Dr J S 1 Bowman C Norton W F Brad berry miss .1 Nunery M Brodnax miss E V Oats A ! Brooks H O’Neal JG i Brooks J L Owens inr t A R : Calhoun mrs K T Oweing H 1 Cain 8 Philip F 8 Casolbary mr« L Porter mrs L Christopiier H C Pritchard A: Co M A Cole- A Prior T Ramsey .1 1 Vmund. the unparalleled i up’uistakahle proof from c character and integrity, linger to B. B. B. Botanic e best, the cheapest, the udert and most powerful blood ivmedy ever before known to mortal man. in the relief and po&kive care of Scrofula, Uheu- nuai-m, Skin Diseases, all taints of blood poison. Kidney complaints, old ulcers and sores, cancers, catunh, etc, B. B. B. is only about three years old—a baby in age, a giant in power—but no remedy in America can make or ever has made such a wonderful sW'.dng in its magical powers in curing and en tirely eradicating the above complaints, and gigantic sales in the face of frenzied opposition and would-be money monopoli-ts. Letters from all points where introduced are pouring in ‘upon us, speaking in ihv loudert praise. Some say they receive more benefit from one bot- lve from twenty, thirty hundred bottles of a boasted decoction of inert and non-medicinal roots, and branches of, omiuon forest trees. We hold the* proof in black and white, and we also hold the fort. g’olicrm.in's ^ icu s. Mis. M. M. Prince, living at is WV-st Fair street, Atlanta, (it., has been troubled for several months with an ugly form of catarrh, attended with a copious and ode-ie-ivc di-charge* from both nostrils. H.i system became so affected and reduced t hat she was confined to bed at my bouse for some time, and received the attention of three physicians and used a dozen battles of an * xte-n- sivelyadvertised blood remedy, all without the least benefit. She finally commenced th • u-e o" B. B. H.. with j» decided improveinen: M »nc.-. and when ten bottles had been used, she w.i- entirely cured of all symptoms of catarrh. It gave her an appetite, nd increased her strength rapidly, and I cneerfully ivcoinmend it as a quick and cheap tonic an*’ Blood Purifier. J. W. Gi.okk, Atlanta. .January in. F Policeman. A Itoolt of Uoitilcrs. Free. All who desire f’uil intonnaiion aoout the cause and cure of Blood Poisons.Scrofula and Serofiilous Swellings, Fleers, Sores, Rheumatism, Kidney Complaints, Catarrh, etc., can secure by mail, free, a copy of our 32-page Illustrated Book of Wonders, filled with the most wonderful and startling proof ever before known. Address BLOOD BALM CO.. Atlanta, Ga. <12tavv se.vw top col n r m S! im 1 ‘s in' - 11111>rtivc<I Alisin pliiiii Ice Mitcliiius. Siiw Mills, I’lniii.-, Ilnlluw Waic. Cano Mills, Syrup Kolllcs, Steam Enmnes and Cotton Presses, Dealers in LI MIL Dressed and Matched Ceiling and Flooring nn>l other LUMBER. Specialty made of Dressing’ Ltiml cr for other parties. AGENTS Eon THE Royal Pumps, Juclson Governors, Eberman Feeders and BROWN COTTON GIN. All Hie very ].imp!' Ve! , ';!!!:S: ilU|)l'OVell I'tll 1 box, 1 piileiil whipper, 1 Wu iu'il.-'ll i" ns, ex 1; a . i • me hrush. east. , sled bearings, ii : : ' :• v .! ! 1 !' ", ei;|:irge<| dusl-proof (!nn 1 dense!'. Sli'oii“ ; !i.:; simple ,; ; . mi-: i-ii iimi, durable. gins last, runs liglil. e ie.iliS 11. . e : pel Fee' 1 .'. ail< 1 pl'odllCCS lirsl- ehiss samples. Delivered free of iivdhl a! ■ n\ , ■' i aide point. Send for lull (Icsrrlpiiuii je20 wcl.HexwOm n i-ernale ifisoty iT-AAJ 'JST'DCiT, YA. Aj Wll.l. filVK PERMANENT REL E F Opens September 22d, lsHii. One of the Fikst Schools for Young Ladiks in tiik Fnion. AH Departments thorough. Buildings elegant. Steam heat. Gas light. Situatiop heautilitl. ( lunate splendid. Pupils from nineteen Stat* -. All ii ;•**it:i:i* advantage.- in one greatly reduced charge. Board. W. : ,>.g. j.igh's. English. Latin, French, German, Music, for Selloiu.-.iit .e.ir, Irun S> piemhcr t«» June. N24IO, No Extras. For Catalogue va rile u Ri.v. W.M. A. HARRIS, D. D.. Pre* ident. iy?eod2m Staunton, Virginia. Nervun^m s- or N'< rvoti- Exhaiisiion. Everybody knows that a strong, vigorous nervous system is essential to good In alth. MOXIE ended by clergymen and t v.-icians. us no alcoholic or ot In r i die endorsed by timulant. THREE Grab Orchard Water OrsPEPSiA, SICK HEADACHE, CONSTIPATION, ILLS i food : not a medicine. It induces i good appetite. It ins.iri s .-sound, healthful sleep. It is perfectly harmless. Only •'»<>(• >i quart Itolllc. For-ale, wholesale and retail, by M. D. Hood A -’o.. Geo. A Bradford and 1C vans »v Howard. up6 dly iirm ‘ 'III*' 21st Annual Sessir.u opens September 15th, IHsG. For cutah g'u or -pecial information :• j»p*y t.i W. it. ABBOTT. Principal. Bciiev’i* P. <).. Va. jv30 eod2«t <iir,\ wiumi vui,i;i iniit'nv, H |V( IH.sTEK. V V. « :»»•-- r n.ver i’v; College, Army, Navy n •■•ad f*'•• citalogue. lie hum tv furaP I)iKea-es of the Liver. Kl,i> •yn, Ntoniarh umi l’.i>Hi*lii. \ pn-dtive re f" ! Mirk 4'ou»Li|»u(iou. Done, one to two leii.spnuiouis Reduction in Gas Piping and Fixtures. \I r E HA Vh decided to push the Gas business in Columbus, and in order to do so have’ reduced • * the price of Gas Pipe and J* ixttire-. Now is the time to put pipes in your dwelling or store cheaper than ever before. Cull and see our styles of Fixtures. GEORGIA STEAM AND GAS PIPE COMPANY, Telephone 09. 13 Twelfth Street.