Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, August 11, 1886, Image 5

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"All,' K.NQI'lltKK ■ SI'N : (.Til.l'Mlii ,s y&MtGIA, W'BDXKSRAY MOUSING, AI GI ST II, ls«i;. He Travels Incognito and Gets in Where Reporters are Outlawed. [■„,) ralkern Krni.i Tiilkervlllp—'The) (T • nether 1*1 he » Tlioumnil W'nie. Hull On » Aw-v Warm Sprlnint suit It, W'nnilertul (harm. . Mimmer KeHivrt—The V'.mnurer.sun Man Mora). |/e*> till it Dwlilro to Write it Honk—V,i„ i,, «'»)■* A in) Editorial Correspondence Enquirer-Sun. Warm Springs, Meriwether Cocxty. Cta., August 10.—One morning in Decem ber, years ago, I ran down the streets of a southern city to report a 9re. When I reached the locality the tire was out ami the crowd had dispersed. Leaning ag , a wall and sucking the wreck of a chad* pipe there stood a superannuated sailor, arrayed in a blue shirt and a grin, i asked him how they put the tire out so quickly, and he said: “By the aid of Providence and the ingine, the ingine principally." Here is a letter from an E.vqciRER-' man who is “Innocent” and “Abroad," in nocent principally. Dr. Seth Jordan, of Columbus, having recommended me to g-. to drinking water for my health. I set out Sunday morning for Warm Springs. Dr. Jordan said the water in Co lumbus had too much iron. to-i many spikes in it for my system, and that lie didn’t want one of hU patients going around with his system all spiked to p.ec- • like a wornout cross-tie. The Columbus and Rome train or. Sun day morning was long and loaded with ex cursionists bound to Cataula campmeeting, a colored campmeeting further on. and to Warm Springs. The trip upj was unre lieved by incident save once. A biack sausage-lipped citizen of eighteen summer, and about half as many winters, who boarded the train in Columbus without eating his breakfast, hooked what he thougnt was a lunch basket from his "anty” and devoured the contents. When the theft was discovered it created intense excitement throughout the wnole car-load of colored campmeet ing excursionists. Tne boy had eaten the sacrament. In the midst ot the upbraid ing that came upon him like the breaking of a black cloud, he sat sated and serene, and occasionally closed his eyes as if shut ting out the vanities of earth, and saying to hnuseli, “when I m hongry I jest as soon flauK a campmeeting as anything else.” They called him "Jim,” while' they combed him with their tongues, and ••Jim" seemed to belong to that class of colored boys who are tne proud product of the new'soutn. and who are equally at home in a rooster coop or a revival. On arriving at Stinson I took the Warm Springs stage for the Springs. Tne Warm Springs stage seats nine people, and carries twenty-five if necessary. It is ricn- ly furnished inside, and with an engine hitched in front, it would pass anywnere for a narrow gauge Pullman car. ' Wnen we left Stinson tnere were five of us inside, and one man sat with the driver. It was soon evident that we had no ordinary crowd aboard. They all seemed to t>e well known to each other except your cor respondent. I was incognito,ana a stranger. Od the left hand back seat there sat a little man of perhaps forty. He was sandy- haired, restless and positive. In old North state parlance he was a "whole team with a tar-nueket swung to the coupling pole, and a big yaller dog under the wagon.' He could out talk a woman’s rights conven tion ten acres square. I would stake a pair of diamonds against a pretzel that he could out-talk any man in America, ex cept a man who sells buggies in Columbus and who sat on the front seat facing him. It was a war of giants. It was Greek meet Greek, diamond cut diamond. I became interested. Great talkers as a rule are not good talkers. This couple were an ex ception. Their tongues ran like a mill- tail—like two mill-tails, but there was an oeean-widtU between either one and a fool. The only difficulty we three silent men had was in keeping one quiet while the other was getting in his work. Their conversations would stream out of each one at the same time and meet in the mid dle of the hack and double up together like two dogs fighting. It was a blizzard of wit. Alter we nad traveled a mile the man who sat by the driver said "«'o!" Tne team stopped, and as he crawled down from his perch he said to the driver in an undertone: “There’s some tail lying going on in that stage; I’m going to get msiae ana take a band in it.” He never got in anything to speak of but an ear. fie just joined the silent majority for an hour at least. 'I he sandv-haired wit on tne back seat was an old Colurnbusite, who is now a Texan by adoption, and who had just returned on a visit, The other men in the stage called him "Bob.” Somehow I liked "bob.” it is true he monopolized the conversation, but he had earned the right to do it in a fair contest with the buggy man from Columbus, and he had to earn it again about every five minutes. Por tne most part "Bob' never made any punctuation point nut a comma. But whenever he would stop, at long in tervals, to get nis breath and plant a semi colon uke a rare flower in his lurid path, the buggy man would take advantage of his exhausted condition and , -mp on him again to fight for tne Sv-r and tne rest of us would dodge nick and squat and ho.d on to the seats and water, tne sparks fl; I haven't nad as much fun since the day my uncle died. At last there came a .a..:, for a second. I gazed pensiveiy out of the window with my mild oi -e eyes—in fact . hardly ever gaze out of a wmdow with anything the- am: said sornelr g ibo it a war with Mexico. Then 1 thought the Texan was a powder man ar.d tr.at .'nad set him afcre. On! you could almost smell the saipnur in his lurid eloquence. - War -*.tr, Mex.r.o ». '■ ' great 8c U if this ■ ■ ram-shaocraw:.s.-.,n coo.'.try of - • ■" ■ i . rth a piper • - - > “■ had atone in tne gro ..vl »•.•. :.• ; if-:x. • is to-day. If Me ; e.a’v: and B • . v greas nad an .- g.-.r, ... v s : g:zz<'. v aforet raan. mai o Jgg *■ and P-t him go free. I d ,]„ it .,,, Ul „ f;1 , canChirac ter J’" '" y ’* «**)• riJh h t e ol e iie" rt "f' He went m,f r V; •**'* n ‘ r " '' r I'CGSI, hut at. t.„, tw h "'»'• exploded and t.m ■ • , streams ruing,ed like a catarvt aridl.n* mu.es ran away up hilL somebody called out r’rltf 11 - arid turn-, *ng. ,h. would nt one o? them biameo newspaj^r reporters have a v.ft a.-.ai, o- aHi't 1 J" biro m l.qket Agent, ?. (.. Ho.vsrd, of i/ ■ - * and R, e r at nt pji.ed hift nat over his evc-s and lean- back and shook until the ftuRiwrt*- 1 « ■ r. . .. .. .t he gave me a mar. I read l.g. p. .n .. fne look -Aid. f;< *,asv . i wo:, i ?:.V; ' was oeginning to look *.,—•■.■ Mex.cans and ;epr>rtere and! fe.t grateful to him. The Texan s ?ill for war: hut, sin-:etf had i:t ?,.-><■ nr.g again. -. ,. ... ...... f.,.- trarrior as if yore. Ills aws worked, and his eye st..i flasbe I f.knew ne wan breeding brim f r >r the greasers a, e, out. owing to was ail j/antomime ' • ■■ »[> said be w u goi g to iV 7 .•springs ;-,r the first time in fortv '/cars ar.o. although he was a strar.g-r v, ’rn I saw at. once that ne was a moderate t&ik- er who had been packing himself fortv rears for this .■ asi-;. and that : ■ aoisted the gates for the first monting ia the stage It waa a flood that 7 - -- - - ■-• sent old Noah to a tree top. It was admitted by the crowd that nobodv • . .gi.s a buggy from r f passeager ever had any c-aose of complaint. And - ga..nered from bis own description of his veoic-les that they ran easv. Infect. ■ f rae : the impr >n that w hen y , . unhitched a horse from one of his --■■ ■ turned him loose the buggv would just rear up the shafts in front and follow the horse around the lot. I inav have been mistaken, but that's the idea j got. I don't want to mispresent ar.vbodv At last we reached Warm Springs' Aft-, arriving, the fellow-passenge s the st ig got acquainted all round. Leaving out and coming down to hard facts and opin ions. I would rather travel with V' and the buggy man than any two men J ever saw. They are masters of the art of: m but they never say a foolish thing. Thy. were the twin pets of the crowd at the springs and they were the centre of attrac tion :n every assemblage. I hope thev"! be there when I go back. If thev are net they will be— "Though lost to sight, to memory dear. " Mv own opinion i.s that "Eob’3” opinion of Mexico and the United .States the compelled belief of sevvn-te.-.ihs of t.n- American people at this writing. The rashest remarks are often the truest. One- man at the Springs was meddlesome enough to say if Bob was so hot for war a.s we ail supposed, he would have remained on the border this summer.where he could be close to the Mexicans. But I explained to him that Bob had only backed off to get a running start at the'm when hostili ties did begin. I ought to say something about Warm ■Springs. Other people are saying some thing about them all the time. ' On alight ing from the stage I felt a sense of gratifi cation steal over me—gratification over the fact that I had at last reached the place of which I had heard so much; a place where the air hides and holds a balm for a wounded lung sweeter than any that ever grew in Gilead: a place where they cheer up and fleshen, and eat and drink, and bathe and flirt, and sleep Minder three blankets in August—all to the sound of rapture-raising Italian music. To quote from that estimable old lady who presided over the affairs of the people of Sheba, “the half had not been told me.” Warm Springs is my ideal of a pleas ure and health resort. The sizzing debauchee who lights the candle of life at both ends and who prefers a decade of de lirium to three score years and ten of plodding purity, would find no affiliation here; and the watering-place beauty whose highest conception or existence is a round of balls and bands and dissipation and deceit, might deem this place too tarne. But I like Warm Springs: and this fact ac quits rne of the suspicion of being either a debauchee or a watering place oeaaty. Here is the way. to teii it. Tnere is abso lutely nothing lacking at Warm Springs that any reasonable .man or woman co uld desire. Tne air is an exhiiarator. the water is a tonic, the mountain breeze is a ceaseless fan, ar.d the baths will come nearer making an old man young again, than liquid that can be found or furnished in the thirty- eight states. Blessed are the people that can come here; and the blessed are very numerous just now. Tnere is something in the atmosphere and tne crowd and tr.e surroundings at Warm Springs that makes a man forget his troubles. ’ Yo . car. .ay ae.de your cares along with your coat. Tester-day even.r.g after I nad taker, a sunset natr. and eaten a supper that would nave made a gt dizer out of an epicure I sat rands and smoxed as I dj dreamed as I smoked. In the par- lor behind me. with lamps aoo-.e and laughter r.e.ow Mere the '.e.,es and matrons and children from a., south, ar.d mingling with tne cadence of their tomes varne the dr.; ;. . .'.g the aroma of spine trees and a., a., with the hot passion if Iiary. inurm.rsii^.7 such wmoemdiogS this ..”,e m-x y 1 %/»rM n<o in .-'n'-.i/- nr*.*? r»bll.y ffi? ia*..i r'.-rrt'M .Va v m7 piutr, b>\<i OQ "air; %Ua*4 s,' Vi«Li.iV. i r^i'ili. V.' is-. v .1, r,a« J Jarkvirr. ,.Jr ? v an i*xj#« rtiyJ to flit?. II«- 1 :h. for ./arknon thr» rnornlnff. M- A.*) iii-u’kiiur iifi'i Mtm. iJlHikinar y/jf/i rh<-ir little {fnt.KJdmj^htc-r, thi* tiny .'li t* i/iilian) iti.iU oil'* #if th« favorit** and inUrr^.tiiiK farnilv i'roupH of tlur fj it'*i. Tn«:v: two i/Turi<Iji;ir«'iitH an* j^row- irijf old vr-ry aIowIv ar.d •.* r, i(raf * fully. Major R/ibert Bar in a irieara to ha e the friNide tra k with the iadlf;«. He i« ju**/ irreAfatihle. H<* i/ the only man i H ; iW wiio could tickle a lady into con vn!j»iona without touching her. I saw him I do it twice. 1 he v. hole crowr! s# ; cmed aorrier to lo‘e* j Hr. Billard than any other giicft tvho left I f unday evenin/. Ifc nromised to come a/ .i .. Me^rs. It. Ji. Murdoc k and \V. )i. I !' •cl! are the philo.Hophen of Warm Hprin^s. They Unit . and live it. Noth- i* y ever rufRea eft tier one excel f the din* 1 It • * t: • i*. t . e had of this Marched j ar.d •'u.celens wor.’o .*o th travel t .rou^h it* Ir. ( h.rey H.iVii Inn lena (fu-li j than a.iy hotel proprietor I know* •icd dhol'i.v* cfficiouhneca H f runs hm ho*el like :t was done by | cloc kwork. aiHisf ed ov hia clerk and tfen- erai lieutenant. Mr. 'f .**. 7'idrnarah. whone friithfuineas i.i evinced in toe fact that he hvi held ;>o«it:o i twenty yearn. Mr. . bavin and ni* clerk appear to be on termn of personal friendship with all their regu lar ^ue^t*!, which is a rare and commenda ble feature in a landlord and clerk. It ft peak* *ve!i for both. Mr. TidmarMh rloc*. not wear the traditional hotel clerk’n dia mond scarf-pin. bet he we\r*i h face that it dvcn an hone** man more* i<ood ;.y look at j than it would to he daz/ied by a di t;.*.ond. Vs’mt f have written ‘.h merelv the preface, to r/.y h^ok entitled “A Fleauty’h Kxperience a* '.Varr.-i fjprin^ 4 !. ' In to morrow's paj er v.iil an pear chanter I. Persons deMrir.s' to err»i*?ra*7- rrorn trie ter ritory in which the Kx^v.'HER-Hvy circu lates can redu.-ed rates by applying to the railroad companies. H. MR. HEODEN HAS RESIGNED. Mr. Kundnll is c irrvinjc Mr. i)nmihue nhm^ with him. Th. division workers believe Unit a place in the vviml dele K a te con volition will he better than heintf a member of the ward eommittei*. 'I't.e vote-, must he had by Mr Itandnll. Many oftlio.se who have an idea ofheoominK nu niherh of the conventionH have loritf been aspirants for positions un der the federal I'overnnient. The know! e dye* of tin- .* facts tends to make the M|<ht more intercHtin((. ON THE TRACK. lie hi >1 on moil it. I'urh N •••ti*r»lnj. MoNmoi tii Park. Aug'.uit 10. rind r. • e for all a^*i, om- mile* and 1-1 f 5; Per »:.a won. 1.-ini' .Stop 2d. Monapale Rd; time. s-eond race, for two-year-olds, three, quarters of u mile: Hanta Itita won. !.oui.s & 2d, Ofalla 3d; time. PldJ. Third raee, for fillies tiirce-vcar^-old, mile an j a half; Dowdrop won jVeelsa 2d, ten h-nifths ahead of Pun* Kve 3d; time.. 2. Vi. Fourth race. m!h* and a ouart«*r: War Hi^h- won. Mprint'rteld 2d. Heel and '1‘oc* ?a\ Time, Fifth r;e e*. for three-year-olds and up wards. three-quarters of a mile; Marsh P**don wort t#v one ienKth, Ben Thompson 2d. (piee i Father VI. Time, 11'. Sixt/. race, hurdle race; Kcquudor 1st, Baby 2d. Buckra ‘Ui. Time. 2:51. m utui is itv rimuielul. 10. I |i in Cons I New Yokk, AiiK'ist 10. Noon HI»h k« sternly : hut otilet. Monev •* is> , V f "-H I-.k* mi/iK* Iona ** -» , iliort it • - , tufn tiornl I dull U ail (l ivi rnin»Mit IjoiiOh 'lull and ni<' l.iin«' 'i Ne.w Yoiik, AuK 10. I.x>:liaiu{i f I HI 1 , Mono , l "»; per root «#ov«*m»in*i»l IioikIh dull arid shad*- i'ni‘1. .New four per * eats I/O .., tloei per rent.*. 1/1* i hid. Htu*e hoods dull. cmed to The re-.i^T.ation of lector Jiedder» ;.s nov/in the hanrls of Prrrsidcnt Cleveland. It tvaa forway.ed to him a abort time ar.d his successor will v/jn tx; apjodnled The report that Co hector Heoden had done so canned a sensation in the custom hoc.se yeiteruay. .V feeling of uncertainty per/aded the entire service. No one, how ever. could be found who coaid or would ftfreak with -uthonty in regard to the re port. Collector Hcoder, was absent, and was rjnderst.vyi to V: in HaratOi'a with his family, hf^ciai Deputy Collector .Perry ;.s acting as collector, and would not teii whetner the collector had resigned or not. He positively refused to hay anything in regard to the matter yesterday. The col lector e private secretary, Mr. Parker, has also feen absent from hte dealt for two or three days. Surveyor Beattie attended toe funeral of the late Governor Tiidem Naval Officer Burt left hix office early in the day. Thus no one was left who was competent to speak in regard to the reported tion. The general impression seem- be that Mr. Hedden s successor wi.l be a new man not identified with local politice. WiLson r;. BLsaeil, the president's former law partner, Is mentioned. Htirveyor Beat- tie is thought to r>; out of the question for promotion, as he has been too closely iden tified with the Hedden management. Chief Clerk of Customs Joseph Treioar. who has been in the customs service for thirty-three years and is a democrat, wvxild be j*iad of promotion. Conj^resarnan Hew itt is understood to favor him. FORMER REJS'IOJTATIOJTft OF COLLECTORS. More than one collector has been re moved from office before the expiration of his term. Collector Robertson was the first in many yearn to fin oat r.is entire term. The most famous removal was that of Arthur, who was removed under charges by President Hayes. sis than tr.ree years later Arthur was nimseB president, his re moval having led to his nomination for vice-president on the ticket with Garfield. Collector Merritt, who succeeded Artr. .r was retired in the middle of r.is term to if.ve place to Robertson, and was if.* en tr.e place of consul-genera, at r.o.cdor,- It is a curious fact that every merchant who has filled the office of collector ha« been m vre or less a failure. The oniy exception to thus rule was the late Au^ist.-its He hen. who was collector under Bucn.ao.an. W'FIaT THE FOLfTTC;Ail’S SAT. Th e 1 oeal po iitic-ians jfe neraiiy oe. .e r ed the report c/Hedden s rejs'i^o.ar.ion. tn.e.-.rf Grant said: ■‘Home time a^o f heard tear, the county democracy Leaner^ were alarmed aiwjf. the custom nc'ise f was told to at Collector Hedden would not te in tffi te after Heptem. ter I. Last ni^.t t .* attended the meeting of the democrat.it state tornm.ttee at the Htff.ttao o.t tse was wnispered a rotund tear. Hedden s res ignation nad oeer. reo testeo*. T notuted t nat t o e c«v’i n t y de rn tc rat ;- mem ters w ere nervous and were rather careful ao*t’tt SCtTir-# ao explicit denial, f tanr.ot e ven ..tv- a^o.oe w'oo wfCl be hits sitcceesor • Of octree Collector Hedden s rwsi^nafiuvn w-.;; te anotner t.ow- to tne county demoon-vy .as te the president s a.dmir.i year Its ieai'ieri were dtisapp*t..oted te- ta .se they could not manage to e cusr.itm o t'.se post office and internal re --e.t.te tf- fi.teis as toey pieased. Tammany Hail had o«tth.o.^ to ezpeitt from to e atot.o.sr.ratato. tot the county democracy dud etrpeer, more than tr.ey .ta-e thtamed. Tit*.*7 are m.t-re disappointed w.th the a-:.m..v:strituvn tos.t we are and .f toe.r ^rrteu anoeis were made po.tiun it wvu.d te U.at-V'-ered tos t v.t.ey are 10 s w. 0.^ toe tod tf r-fie.ttvC t- ^'GVLl Hij H-s FtbCES. Wax.-... -Gr pi ea.ee ** ftl * h'+fXM* Hir«. , PtMt step here for a moment t is—didn t they p* they left tnat off p.r«4 s a Jt«; 1 /. 3 *. # » K •« Iii'.|»kii««* do I V 1 i'ii» ml ./» .Ik ,VW 1. j.n 1 r»/li*Mi I w j f##; 1.0 lavil.I.K, -VuK'Ml l'». limln. Ill nki*» lU'.i lv Wlir-ilt No. V. 1 i*iI Vic. Corn, No. / whin* IV, (l.U'U iic.w No / ml k««<1 82c, ClttrisrtATi, Annum in, WIiimiI Mtny uru! lo.* »*r No l rml I ,Vt« Corn 1I11II and lowi*r No f. iiiUi -l W Hi 11n iullv<* No, mlMiul N 1 ,V.' fllil.l'.Ali'i, A 1 i|y iinl 10. f olf'ru* In |<oo»l #lu imiii'l Itio, mukoi •!, - 01 iimoil lin , prlmn, 7 «<n J0 » Hok-' 1 *, npi*n k»*Mln komIih «w:iir» <• uii-l I'm i.i Galiullina juiuu* I. II !<<«:. KooU fain (o I II! ftilr V MV’ «oiitinoii lo Komi i t/.iio .it l .' - o , ' ' »*ul.i Il'iK il 'lull, » lioli «• wl»I».*• -. nil ■■.inh v ! .<«•.», «i*» on»l.-. I ,v ft j , j.i ii..* ,'IIg*. - ii,li«*»j , i.iioloo ynliovr ulnrlliir'l U Ilk.'. NN v Yoiik, Au«usl 10 ' spot, fulr Ulo '.nu, » O.iKHl Oiii» l ; i|||» l.ii|»|/»M 1 ' "iitrlfuaal # Li.ia,ip a im«l i.Mpiili i i.iinn« i i;au> Gir j/ooii MilinliiK l H 10 I l i . mMn»*'J ;i'‘. .‘i >«*Iio*a l 1 , i 7 , fcfuo'lar'l <i I- Hrown ' 10H I'.k ill/: Man Turin. scUJarn't jh /'-» , IPuuIIiik Viridnia ii-« t. Iti' h. ,V. Ajic^iiany VirKirtia i/aimli Vi Hr hioo.i I v Han • in ’.if. k‘* A*. Ohio . ill' I. A V. I' '| IT J r hlca^oA. N. ‘.V mylll/K k |nlt»n») fl HI. Paul »! ' pr<*fijrr«j' fl". A J UU:k Krm M'Tiipiu t .V 1 Par Tin «♦ Ntimtoira. Ha lator#a, Au^iist 10. Weather Hear ar.d warm, track font and at ten da ft re iar^*. First rar»*, tiircc-^uartcni of a mila; f/ird I.or.ou* v.on. Tambourttte 2d. f'cconic 3fl. Time, l lbp H* - >.od race, mile arid V/j vard.s; Barn urn W'»fi. .*\retino 2d, Free Knight 3/1. Time, 2 1 v. T:iird race, for two /-year-olds five-eighths of t mile; Laredo won. lAz/At: Keeps 2/J, i’iriv.-tV: :pl. Time. 1AI2/. Fourth race, one mile; Falconer won, Fef.fo2/J. Bittie Minch 'PJ. Time, 1:FL Tin- i hlMM IG'"-. C/i/ f auo. .August 10 - U’eathcr nbowery, aVendarrce wtr>t\. track fast. F.. '* race, three-q.j.iriers of a robe, Go:. • ova:. ' y Fanebeti.e 2/1. Veurestie 'Pi: time 1:l^T. Mutuals paid *11H.70. Kxtra race, three-quarter*, of a mile, Modesty won. Mountain Barite 2/f, F. nair.v and Waukesha dead heats, 'v* uiat.o! B-ecpt*'. Kofu/.-i A ./ ji i rn! *w ji!' .»■ '^*r h<:;i*e*tnMrr anil i/»r*./»n#*f Ovi/ilc r an S Nomm^t Nuie/oh'-; arel Icueo.M December arc) January ..'.'i.t i.'ir aici Fc • Oil Ala fell . t VolM t oe.pl he , suid Vi ba.es of i/Pl /!/✓. .no.oil<: e;//j Ua.cs ii * loaf tto'l » ; iislicl »> y . A UKIIsi. 10 Hii/fur ijulcl. ill, Auk'ilI 10. Hoi/;ii 'jiili llosln mill I ti rpent Iim*. '•» . Vohk, A'Jf/usI 10 llomu il'i.I sfrained fi •// I'.rpc.ilinc sf/;a/|y :>lo, sa'.a’I’Ui:, Ann M ‘I .iG' ofmc s««*ad> -II t ». , , VK. h.irrcJs. Rosin I, in '.r/. - 91 i t, sai/-K '# .r WM'Oio.o A’ji/iisI JO i urpenMne steady .,o li/.sin Hi in strained W: if'sitl Ht*.. Ur g vi oO; fiiule i'ii|«enNn<i l.rm lmi»l 7V,, Haul .mil llJilm. vie/fed, It an/I */i j^.g/iUs, ii /tyl x.; 'tux ts se- lee'e./J, Vi an/1 ho p/»»i/./|s, Rev 10; /. do/.»enlU/. Ile/ ee /t /NR/ legas >.■/,/»/.', W hlnUy. f Hif.Mh't, Auif 1*1 10. Whisky s»ea/J7 j/, Hr G/i./s, A-i^ isl 10 V/lilsky slea/Jy i.(StriBfiA-ti, A'.jfosl JO. Whisk/stea/ly //7 » rHylils. N ev/ ‘/tihie, A i% is*. »0 l’tnty,tn U, l.i /‘.tysri Bat won. r>awn of fta*. 2d. Fred Woiiey VI; time i . Tr..rd race. It miles: ./irn Gray v,/ n, Gu/:...t 2<i. Lier.a/Vi. 'lime !.>>;. rrace, , rode: fflnd/. 1st. Grvl/J 2d, ABmonyrvl. lime l:t r >p F. ft o race. L m 11 e*s Fu n ka w on, Mam te Hunt 2d Idle Fat .VJ. Time A mref MHKfttK Mfff.fi. The Voltaic Be;/.* Co Mar*..a... Mice., offer to send their celery rated Voltaic Belt-, and Electric Appliance* on tolr-.y days trial to any man afflicted v. lt.o Ner*v- oiuA fjeoility. f/vsts of %’>tall?.y, Tanhivvi. Ac. Illustrated jya.mphifet in eaied en velope with full particulars, ma. free. Write them at once. U.wtf uso.. .Af.eo’ rie 1 '. .*'•/> *»o-*e.v. iV.oeiV. 'iC-.* G.-. ,Ac 's . /.* V iV . Vt v . >.• < y,. U . U / . /. i ;&*,. // .. / . . f . « . u. V < •» Veis dear, wnat i.s it' • Gro'.er did you write that letter to Al bany -that one r.*ht there that my finder i.s on ' • Ve;s. dariin^, ha-ha’ pretty well turned, don t yon think so • ffave they printed ,t lu.-sf. exar.tly as yo'u v, .'ute it, Grover ' Jru:s* took it O'ver care- '“ivhy, yem, d.eareist 1 tn'^nt it w^uud please ern— ye?s tr.at s , u;st ass / wrote it lo re— ■» hy V •• V/eB T Grover, it remaffir.s -in present STurrr/unri-ir.^.s and in a FI that the future may hare in store f rnmst revert to the time I lived in A.ha.vy as tne napp-.erst period of my life/ I.s that as you wrote uf. If, f /fSi ’.ce-..* repf/r. on v>tiy,n f.vftnrftw / • . *‘ ■. /.• a . .•■•■' .•spov-js sp.si'.vau? *. fruiv. -.ue s.^-.’V.v.. «v. vvrea.v Li - .per. < .an-.e s..*„*i vi r f....o^joei': vriift t "Jer.i.r«s ,v» six v.r, •> . siv re-pr/riu h'uw* .‘i *■. >» ao/J <•» k.sivir.^’ov. s/. vwur.jf t vivi'y i<v»« *:t** co^Oitiov,.* ut '.ViV* "ue Uv«‘*.xr. a •./ , *..sr, cs^ovn i*v n»>ev n’»sm f l s:sr.-s ,* <i*. • t v. -.i-. '..*,*i *.v uss.w.par. irtR v,< .w o ,-o »s«r,. S’.v.w! u s-1 - s ues vf >.r, v. sievsr. J.OVA.-US wif.o a Asisiv.vjf '. >wiswn At icve ftl/iirt U’f'.r.e ul i.bctr.* «a« our. .') *•* '/Sf.iMi A -.jf .A a .< JAH WASUl i 2. ,y>. Vl„»K M AUfST’* ( 1 \ I HAI.J'KOIM.MS MhPii.llAM.> .v Ili.Vffiy LINE : j '!• r*j a i* ',o/./. w a /;*. r> a A vfif •. st' . set. O ’- ar».*: *.fb • A .i; .st, . <AA the !/✓.*. /a.>.-s ef h' ./ • \f,p. ' F‘,Ap*. F.o p-.7 ■•a//-*. y. ',w.o/. vfea. v.r, |, ^ b/M/»ri :^r r/, G ’var.o vat. 4. ( r.t.vt frei^ns in '.rvpovf.oY, f/wi Nof v/.wvs v, A pa.^.r. ,/y.ia ''/'.r.er p'.- ufA .1*, pv or, W HEIM Lift, ^A/a// ..-vi “••< ( s,. ,//.*. V .egfla/s at . f.v.' r>i . .*. vr'.’ij/A i..*,/; Api.. s/..'. oot* A Vf'/e //a /*• .>•* >** 't,; -.//. v*s TV. -./s, *’• < *• .v. r.'.v />i., .*. v.'VIj/* svl A ifK.xt r. ..v.,a vf//.fG.u // <*n ,i ..-a »s« V,. *..V,V/,S AS* l¥» fOY HlbififMWliCA *7,4 Af^i, •A «... CV/V R'»SV. -Cenuiiniu th. un ' -nan^ em.' added excepting the last >...r or sever, weear.s. Are yo-u per-fect-.y siv re you added that. Mr. Oeuc.and ' Ver?- w^... ; f.'.r^i <e you. then. (VMSft < »V.. yAA** AAl*. -.UAir *ft '•V *• »• ■’•** uv. U-a/u*r ..sari/.jf w .v,v,.s «i.. *^s .**, > srj vvan r.o**. .* .•*.**•.•-»** v.a, .•'.gf.%‘. ur a//. .**»v...\* *f. **/ >■*'• •••• «•VAT. 'V.V.;<\«*jAV‘*T# 'U/.^.VVW V/ V.A ^./,t «... .w*. *A >^A'Af. v,rt si. vf f ..*;...<«*.AO VA/Ur -:*rgs vf Wa,< ..W. '-^-NVSl.V....,,. .Va* . *r*>v ■« AA « *>'• •• z+ri *, i. «.*.^t*s r..*. ^••■•v.n s nhevis v. m ;*n. ha vf l ( vrtfrrwic:#- V H \<'/i AJf*V. g'G’.^G*. S Ll.'.rt .l The cenn fiaive m tne w-.r'.d fur Ou-hs Br’U/iseis. fiivre«. '/.•.'.er , s. haif. Bhenrn.. Fs-vei? rio-reis. Tetter. GV. a pped Handis Ch.To‘.aims. Norms and alf fflr..'. Eruptavnis and poair.n s- .7 murejs Bheis. or no pay ;*.s reiyu.red. it .u guar anteed v. re perfect siatos-fantuvr., ur mc.ney refunded. B.noe >lv eer,te per '.•u z. F vr >.a,e 07 Brand,', u '.'U-v. r. erifc ued.d w The vry Us uaused ;n teviuam yuarters tnat the L'edited .fitateis sh«u»md nr,r, s^rree t»u sivr* render fu^if.ne dyr.anuitems to B*.j*v.and. The p'.eia ;is sutnanoed mar. d’ynia-m.te .is not a vrmn.nai our. a fur at vssspon. A.s ur.e ilk Tf tyma- mif.e tw ener used n Ixr.di'.st t vw so: 'ienf.ly not fnv me :-vfpnne vf rn ur/ex* vut tn nyodiUite a ;.r. effise.t /•/ed. tnere .u a ^ J anaren ishs vu tidal .h Gh.oa^". Ka;**.e tneee. *.vu«»v:• sa.v.vs threw tom ms mere-,; m prfir.oe pitirnuta* sffeot. ’ ff the ted tnatejs .is v. safis stent er tn 1 -r.an*. rt»s hendis fr.^rtr-s ri/.^v.a.nd. '.a,:ad.t v.a,< *.e ref* W’. .•••.,! J H HiO/.LHJty />>•-»•« /..♦ Sa.iJiti4.AiJi J W k J/.ftNtRf M P* I* S 4.1 T it' 1 A. It A J. 11) * J S P-rt-s IS «V 84.l l Jtx4./i u '.u ; . i 1 " (i • MM 1 • : ,M -i I”"’ t.I.f i ll.llilMI .l'itll"i|l|t«( I # O .« » a.*l I- ; !,. 11 V 5 .ay uvi MejutQ) jb fe-w in tne rvvs v- *:•• • - l * • Unta atue ofiher nay. and a vm ■'• - '• •‘* < ' : mtution rep.wter >'h.u was tn«*: vr . »• vent and. p>ut ,n tne paper Thie man “I :«..m Tunms.; ^ n ..V..".. g ..• ' - ' ; •..•: gi'. »• ' EteoU* m «| r.q.l! -1 I *' Tm*Tfx^tv- i ; ; ; ,v* '■ - * 11 -, ■*' aaaww* a »:.i; i 4 I - >. . . mS til ... ■ ■ • : V, ,T,. ti.'iX ■ » • •-, ‘ saxutttwv. fix... 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