The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, October 09, 1885, Image 1

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' ■ Bl - u " _ ■i 1 ' ..THE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES. _ -• VOL. XIV. ADRIAN. BY OTHO BEA-LiLi. CHAPTER VII. A BAOOLGE MASTER’S CONNECTION WITH OUR STORY. AN INTERVIEW. Adrian liad been a\Ay from the home of Airs. Godsey for a fort night. A baggage master, Sam Rawles, who had been wounded in the wreck of the train had survived under the skillful hands of physi cians and watchful care of gentle nnrses, and had found his way to Mr*. G odsey's house, having tender business with Alice. After that darling girl had listened tearfully to Sam’s nanative, and responded jftjfully to his light hearted jokl? id*o<at his recovery and returning Strength, the conversation turned on Adrian Sterling. She told Sam of Adrian’s long illness, of their care for him, his gratitude, find lastly of the missing valise, ho clue to which had vet been found. «/ Sam, at heating this, opened wide his big blue eye*, ulld raising his huge fists, brought them forcibly to his knees, saying: “I’ll bet a horse that 1 know something about that valise! Say, •did it have a card on it, fastened to the side?” Aden, her hopes suddenly bright eniog arose and looked eagerly into Sam's f;use, as he went on: “There was a tail, thjn, dudi.di lookin’ chap -width goggUs .over his eyes took a valise and puliexi the card off and threw it into the lire. lie then laid the valise aside where he co-uld got it when he call ed for it, and I saw him do it with these eyes. They’re big to see right, aint they dear?” “How hi the world? Why mercy on Sam, bnw did you manage to see aH (that, and you jammed in between the broke# sides of a car and nearly killed." •‘•I warn’t quite as near dead then as after the shock. You see when a fellow gets knocked around and mashed up a* as I did, hedomt lose his senses directly, but when the sorcuos of the wounds common lapses into forgetful moss. I saw that done, and felt sort o’ curious about it but said nothing, and bad net thought of it since.” As Alice saw, in the circum stance stated by her lover, a clue that might lead to the detection of the real criminal and tlie triumph' ant acquittal of Sterling, her eyes glistened with rising tears. She proceeded to relate to Sam what she knew about the valuable papers in the stolen valise, and how its owner had been arrested, charged with larceny after trust, and- was then under bond, ami she urged him to write, at once, to Adrian Sterling and acquaint J.iiiii with what he had observed. As Sam took his departure, in order to oi>ey the earnest injunction of Ids little sweetheart, he rejoiced in the double reward of her approv ing smiles and the consciousness of serving a worthy fellow mortal in trouble. We left Adrian, with head bow* ed and heart wrung, in the presence of Ellen Estes, the woman he loved nnd who had l«en the star of his hope in all the gloom and humili ation that bad overshadowed his way. He knew that she had laved him. Were the circumstances, he asked himself, that fate had woven around him so damning in their character that her pure no nd h-»d found it impossible to hold her faith in his innocence? He could not believe it. But he had acted hastily. 11c should not have sought an interview with her un’ii he had compelled all men io acknowledge his innocence ami his name should stand forth before the world as clear as the morning star. 1 hese thoughts pas.-ittg rapidly throng i hbmino,his resolution was quu-kiy taken. lie had come to relate, to her, in minutest detail, the history of the events through which he had passed in liis absence. IL- had hoped for her sympathy. She 'ad met him with the sternness, whmh , er real or assumed, of a judge re idv to try a criminal at the bar. lie had been weak enough to lon* to feel the thrilling touch of the gen tie hand which had rested so con fidingly in his own in days gone by. She had withheld it, and it was well, for the hand without the i heart’s waim, loving pulsations throbbing through it, is colde*’ than the lib less clay. He would at , once depart, never to enter her : presence again until he could come with an escutcheon as fair as that of her own proud father. i Ellen was yet standing? bor arm • resting on a cabinet, her face par tially turned away, with an express ; ion struggling between regret and expectancy. Rising, Adrian said, sadly, but ■ with dignity, “Miss Estes, I confess ; that I had expected a different reception. 1 hj,v& frepp taught that it is not usual for your se* to ■ accept, as readily as mine do, cir cumstantial evidence against those Whom they have once trusted. 1 can n«»< t&l) IJ'J.’Ht a sweet comfort to me, while paastiig though the , ddep waters, your sympathy would have laen. But I will riot com plain, and God forbid that I should iccasyrc. Pardon me for this in trusion. | haye only to ask in taking my joa-v# tb#i yo# jj-jjJ not wholly cuudemn me n.ufil i 4plj have had opportunity to place her fore the world such evidences of my innocence as may be accessi ble.” While Adrian uttered these jj;ofd>, Ellen stood with downcast looks, daring to meet, the earnest pleading £ho eyes which in the recent past had no 1 expression for her but Tfllit (tf”tcns derness. His tones, tremulous %’Jth emotion, had ceased to fall upon tier e*r She looked up. — Adrian was She heard the faint sound of his' footsteps as he passsed out through the taai, I J;*’’ heart, with yearning tenderness too Ipng prompted her to cry out and call him back. But pride restrained her. X pjidden fnitness crept over her and she sank the floor. CHAPTER VIII. On a leading out from the public square of Itockiyn, the time of our storv there stood near the corner a modest little office, at one si,&? of the front door of : I which the passer by remq j# bronze . letters on a piece of japanned tin, • '‘Thomas Converse, Att’y at Law.” ,| An observant visitor entiling would havelxccu donees truck with a certain air of neatness and ordpr , which pervaded the place. There was nothing intentions. A few plain chairs, a tabi« a plain desk made up the furniture. A l:icg© inkstand and a heavy metal 1 pen rack \W»«‘h ppns occupied the ! table. Is this a lawyers ofljue? , , Where arc the books —the tomes , of ancient precedents and modern [ I instances? The tire place, orna? , mented by a pair of huge andiron* ’ and guarded by a shcctiroiqfuiider, i is Uttered with paper. Nqt much eign of business here. Passing , through u door at onu side of the . chimnev we enter anothpi room, | Ah, here they arc, —the books wo , mean, —from floor to ceiling, from ; corner to corner, arranged in i' shelves, each sepeigtc row, and | I each individual volume, with M* . » leather back and gdt 'ith'j looki-’g I!as if it had its office to perforin in . ’ maintaining the n spertability of | I the proprietor. We shall not detain the reader |j for a ileseription of this room in ] detail. Suffice i‘ that, like the oth t er, an air of neatness and systemat | ic arrangement pervaded it- ( )!1 . rh<- table in front of the eo-y tire | ’ ph.ee there was neither paper, book i no other implements ofalawyers >j work. Ava-e of flowers on this table suggested the thought that r so u#! loving heart, that perhaps > mule smuhi/C in th.--homeof the / lawyer, sought to extend its inilu CARROLLTON. GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, OCTOBER 9, 1885. 1 r. once into his workshop and give • that too a flavor of home. An easy chair stood by the table and on it sat, or reclined, a middle aged gen tleman whose person was in keep ing with his surroundings. His physiognomy suggested nothing of the sharp trickster at the bar. To the c<»ntrary, the refined lineaments of his face betrayed that high and noble intellectuality which is devel oped by profound study and deep research after truth. While he had, it is true, a thoughtful expres- I sion, perhaps approaching to stern ess, he seemed like one at peace with himself, with the world and with his God. Such was Thomas Converse, Esq., in his appearance. And his looks were a- faithful in dex Ip hjs character, f or ] IC wag wiuely known as a maq of unbend ing integrity, relined in manner and feeling,—noble in bearing. Cultivated in all the polite litera ture of the day as well as in the law, he was a most agreeable com panion as well as an able and faith ful coqqselorj anawithal.au ardent hater ot invamiess m all ot dla« ' guises. As Mr. Converse sat reading a j volume of Ruskin on the day of the occurrences related in the opon il, £ Iff phj ß chapter; some one knocked at the door, and, in res? ponse to the lawyer’s cheery “come in,” Adrian Sterling entered. “How do you do, Mr. Sterling, how do you do sir?” Greeting his heartily he arose and, hdHgmg Hnottf.er »||air ; It for him near his own, “1 am better in body than In mind, sir, but happy to find you alone, and, as 1 hope, disengaged,” re.-ponded Adrian. “Quite at your service, sir, quite at your t-eMuce; 1 have heard, 1 WiU) iCgrof* were in some trouble, blit L have Indulged the hope that it was not of a serious nature and that, not springing from any fault of yours, you will soon sec your way out of it.” -7<\i;r bjudness and good opin ion,” said Adrian, ,“gous far jq lighten tbc weight of it. 1 will state the circumstances and put myseU' guidance of your supeiior wisdom and experience. ‘i 11c now gave the lawyer an account, in detail, of his journey to the west. Ins acquaintance with the man \V ilberly, £hi; pljl* road wreck, the loss of his valise and the papers belonging to Jones and Carpenter bis long progtra> tion and recovery and rhp tepiplp shock of learning that he was sus pected of the crime of converting tq qis ii’c rhe property entrus ted to him, not fopgetting to men - tion his recognition of Jocelyn as the same man who traveled with t him under the name of W4berly ? As Adrian pyoepeded with his narrative he watched anxiously the face of his listener to catch if pos sible p.ny sign of the impression it might give, pis only wheq tlw conduct of Jocelyn was mentioned di<! the lawyer indicate in any w«yy whst was passing through hisnjind. At that point in the stoj-y he ut tered a guttcral sound,, something |ike “ahha ? ahha,’’ which may or may not havp mpipit thaf he siyw a clue to the solntian of the case. Having heard Adrian’s story ; Mr. Converse sat for a piomcnt ip deep thought and tl]en f>nidj the present 1 spe byt one thing so do.’* I will write at once to the bankers at Leavenworth and ask them for a full description of the fellow who borrowed vour name ! V and perpetrated this oqtragequs fraud. While awaiting their aih swer, you will write also .to the physician, who attended you in , your illness, and ask him to come <jn here at once, bringing with him such documentary evidence of his ideality and 1 ospcctability as will leave no,doubt of the fact in the i minds.of thepartieb interested. — Meanwhile I haw to request you to say little about the ca-c as possible, go little into public,—dimply watch and wait and if any new develop ments in the ease appear come at once to me. As to your arrest and the bond you have given, the j whole proceeding was illegal, out- I rageous and absurd, and you can t be released whenever we choose to move in the matter. Os course wlioever committed the crime com mi Hud it ig the <Jty of Leaven— worth and could not be held to an swer for it here. JBut what we want is,not your release at present, bntyonr full and perfect vindica tion. To this end let us write the letters at once ” With this he fcf.Qse and, going to a desk took out writing material and placing a chair at the tab’e for Adrian, seat 1 cd himself at the desk. The letters were soon written and Adnan less tbc office with a far lighter heart than he entered it. A'oont a week after the mailing of these letters, Mr. Converse was surprised in the midst of his stud> I ics by the abrupt entrance of Ad* rian. who in his excitement had I omitted the usual ceremony ot a rap at the door. “Good morning, Mr, Sterling. You have news touching our case?” •‘I have,” replied Adrian, produ cing two letters and placing them in the lawyer’s hands. Mr. Converse, taking one fro in its already open envelope read as follows: “Mn Adrian sterling.; Rppklyn Deur Sin —You win doubtless l>e surprised to ' hear from me, but what I have to disclose may bd of great interest to you. When the train was in wreck and no one was supposed to be alive nmon; the ruins. I -aw from • where 1 was hemmed in between the timbers, a tnan whom 1 will describe as best I can to you. 1 He saw a valise, and approaching it he looked down, and grasping it pulled oil tne card at tached, which he threw into the fire, looking around too see 1i any eye »<?w what he did.” < “He then laid the vilise aside, and I reinembor no more ; lie was a talk spare rpaq. 'yitp a ( s,rto“th moo and taotjin mustache, and wore, a ’ pair of goggles, what eblor I could not see'. If what 1 have here disclosed should throw any > light on the case in which Miss Alice tells me ( you are so aoncerned I am glad to be of service to you. and will help you in every way to find the . guilty villain who has, no doubt, executed the 1 deeds, received the money, and left lor parts un known. I think I know bin. as I have seen a min vary much like 1 reiuamber seeing him that night be- 1 fore the courts under charg: of gambling , Write me at once with directions, “ ] Sam’l Rowi £S, 'Master j r- R. R, “That is highly important cvi- ’ donee,” said the counselor as be 1 finished reading. He then took 1 up the other letter, which proved 1 to be from Di. Godsey and an nounced that he might be expect ed to arrive on the next day. t He had just finished reading $ jyliep tim posiijiioi ou lured * and t laid his own marl on the table.— , Selecting from several letters one postmarked “Leavenworth,” he ( broke the seal and scanning the n signature, said “this is from the c bankers at Leavenworth." lie read t ir, alone to Sterling, ft t a coinplptu dcscripfior, * of tfip, who had executed the deeds in the nemo of Adrian S’eiling, and it v answered to the description of the man ¥ r r jibHi.iy io eveey particular. « “So far as y<-ur complete vindL c cation is com erned, after getting = the evidence of Dr. Godsey as to ' your detention by tbc injuries sus- !l tained in the railroad accident but t one t|{p»g will rernipn |o bp done,, s You must go to Leavenworth,. I ] will accompany you, and we shall see if those bakers will able to ’ identify you. c 0U the ai riyal of the stage next i morning Dr- Godsey alighted at f the hotel, and calling for writing • uiatei’ials indited a ip, Ad' i a ai|d seqt it at qn«e by the poster. In halt an hour he vyas shaking * his former patient by the hand 4 Adrian Jost no tirpp in poiufucting g bur. into the presence of his conn sei, without whobC advice he would take no, step in the ca§p. Arriving at the office he a frioiuU.anti Mr. with ns f little delay as politeness would al- t low, proceeded to call fqr and d amine the panel’s which the Doc tof had foi the purpose of identifying himself as a practical 8 physician and worthy of credibility. 8 He found them entirely satisfacto- r rily. After a thought ] hq turned abruptly to the r doctor and said, Doctor we want yon to go Lcavenworh in behalf of our mutual friend,” “I will do anything in »n.y power c sq senvp him,” replied Dr, Godsey, i So it was arranged that the trio v start before day in Air. Converse’s carriage, inorder to catch the morn- 6 ing tram for the west. c NOTICE: The author, having been more Dro ll x in draughting the closing l-hapters ••Ad rian.” than he had expected, i,re compelled S to keep a portiqn optima etqry for next issue, in ybich it will qe concluded. . —1 Everything that has been learn- j ed in youth, and everything that } we k‘arn day by day, can be con- t verted into power that shall make } us better parents and children, bet ter brothel's and sisters, better ( neighbors and citizens, better men ' . and women, if only vitalized and i brought into living activity by ! , character aqd wdl, } i Good hick is a pleasant c unpan- : ion to overtake on the journey of , life, but a dreadfully disapointing one to wait for.—[Merchant Trav. 1 cler. j' J | NEW YORK UIFE. ft I ■ . I “by THE MAN FROM TEXAS.” _ | In Texas Sifhnx's. - j Night in the most crowded part ' of th? great city. Night, with the ’ poisonous breath of the sewer, the ? dank, damp vapors of the river, , and the noisome exhalation from the garbage and tilth that surround i the homes us the poor in New’ York. Midnght on the Bowery. The breeze of heaven, God’s free gift to all, comes to this hell on earth laden with the dews of fever, the pestilence of the over«:rowded tene ments of the poor, and the ton! smells amt poisonous vapors that i exhale from the unclean places of this cess pool of the metropolis of Ameiica. Wo stand on the Bow ery near Mott street on Saturday night, Cusick and I, as the clock in a neigh boring tower strikes twelve. Behind us Newspaper Row—the nerve center of America—into which converges lightning flashes of news from all the ends of the earth, and out of which radiated the same news on the broad pages of millions of newspapers. Over there to the right, the great Brook lyn Bridge outlined by rows of electric lamps, against the back ground of night. Under its gloomy arches, reaching up to the City Hall, are tramps asleep, and thieves loitering around in search of prey—thieves who do not hesitate to fracture the skull of a drunken man for the chance of linding a few dollars in his pockets. To the left, on the next street, the sombre prison called the Tombs, that looks like a gigantic Egyptian mauso leum. Glare and glitter of gas and elic tric lamps light up uhpost tho ( |hp. or day this, the most ( unsavory of all the great arteries ( as the city. The restaurants and drinking saloons, of which there arc several on every block, arc all . open, and so are the pawnshops that are YQry numerous on this t tVYU-oughfare. Ifere is the “Boss Tweed” where the 4 cheapest mea.l p 1 the q-Uy is sold. ThjC pluue U kt>pc by an Irishman, and is patronized by tramps, beg- r gars, and street fakirs. Those , wretched specimens of the flotsam and jetsam of arq ' ( tp lie saii ftroadwy selling g shoe laces, lead pceils or candy, breakfast, dine swp here. They qXteu combine the three meals in j one when trade is dull. The menu j. it not elaborate. Hash, a piece of bread and a cup of had?,all Ifop hvc cehis. f and coffee costs ton while the half of |hak amount will pay t a cup of coffee and a plate of ( soup with bread. The coffee is . j not good, the beef is and j toughap.d uometimca a dead fly s \vith the beans, but the j poor w-retch who has only made f twenty cerfls* during all the long r day in the crowded streets is glad ~ to get so much hunger-assuager for 4 so little money. He seldom “-aas- c sea” Hie waiter on account of a fly, I Hiorc ox less, He knows that if he did the bouncer of the establish ment would quickly “tire him out.” Ho slieps off to one of the < lodging houses that are to be found ( on all the cross streets in this ( neighborhood—lodging houses ‘ where he can get the privilege of t sleeping on a cot for ten cents or j on tlie floor for five cents. Vendors of fruit are on every street corner, their stalls covered , with oranges, apples, etc., and ? lighted by flaring gasoline lamps. 1 Here a peanut merchant asleep over his unfragrant roaster, there a 1 man with a frame covered with ballads, “3 for a cent.” Whack! whack!! a policeman*B i club comes down on the head of a staggering rum-soaked wretch. ! Ho is too stupidly drunk to offer resistance or to know that he is addressing a policeman, and he uses bad language. The police man beats him on the head with his heavy club. He falls uncon cious and bleeding on the street. ' To-morrow, if not in hospital, he will stand before a police justice and be sentenced to six months hard labor for resisting an ofib er. t Some of those New York policc » man are the most brutal of beasts. 2 If one of them would come to Texas and commit any sue!) outrage , he would get tilled so full of lead I (in 28| miutes by a Waterbury watch) that he could be used as ball:ist for a deep-keeled yacht like the Gencsta. We next come to the dime mns , eiims. There are several of them in this neighborhood, but the fat woman and the living skeleton have gone home, and the Tatooed Greek has washed off his tatoo and is drinking beer with the Circas sian Beauty in the Jbeer garden up the steet. This is the region of the drinking saloons, where free boxing and wrestling exhibitions arc the at traction every night, and where short haired men, loud in the mat ter of clothes and profane of speech, sit in an atmosphere of tobacco-smoke and gloat over ex hibitions of what short haired toughs call “science,” and long haired men call “brutality.” Blaring music comes from other saloons filled with painted women and tipsy men; women who drink beer and smoke cigarettes, and who arc hired by the saloon prop rietors to drink with and entertain the patrons of these dives. The rural youth on a visit to the city and poor Jack ashore are the Hies that these spiders like most to invite into their parlor—a drug in the beer or a sandbag in the neck, then a hand in the pocket and after that the dazed patron is shot into the street; and a policeman who is “in” with the proprietor of the den carries the victim to prison and charges him with disorderly con duct. Further along we come to the telescope man who has set up his ' instrument in the streets, and who • with brazen tongue is heralding the beauties of the moon and the “ fixed stars, all of “which ’ ■ “ye can see through this ’ere hins titntion for five cents.” Small ragged boys are yelling, “’ore yer's Texas Siftings an 1 yer Sunday Dispatch,”’ A man is holding forth on the . merits of two cent cigars, to sell 1 six for ten cents. ( “Natur’s Wonder, the Nonde script,” and the “Turtle-Faced Boy” are still cu> exhibition, and a hoarae-voiwMi man who stands on < |he sidewalk is calling the atten tion of the passers by to their J merits. < Down aside stieet here we are t taken by a detect ive friend of ( v i Cusick to a tah tenement house, i inhabited by Irish laborers and 1 Italian rag pickers. In the base ment is a dingy saloon where beer is sold at two cents, and whiskey at three cents a glass. In one 1 room on the second floor that is j about twelve feet square, we find i twelve persons, men, women, and chrildren, lying on rags on the ] floor. 2k broken stove is the only article of furniture in the room. Some are almost entirly naked, and most are drunk. A pandemonium of noise, a hell of vice and misery, is this crowded corner of the earth. 1 stand affain on the Bowery, and with the rush i and rattle of the elevated railroad : overhead I look at its hurrying J through, its glare of light, and its sleepless activity, and I think of the peaceful vine clad valleys of Italy, the Emerald hills of Ireland, ■ and the fruitful Western farms whence most of these poor people around me came. Andi wonder why ’ they stay here,or whether, if they ' had known the life that was before ' them here, they ever would have 1 come. “God help them,” says Cusick. Ah! surely, God will help them sooner or later tc Disease, and Death, and Kost, but it is men who should help them—men of power, and influence, and wealth; help them in their poverty and need— and do what can be done to save them from themselves and their sur roundings. o The business in which yon know you could make money is generally ] the other man’s. ! L | NO 41. JIW ■i 1 zSSFJx * lirei BEST TONIC. £ This medicine, combining Iron wMh pure Vegetable tonic*, oulrkly and cowp<«aty < urea DnpepW*. IndU'CMion, WvfJint'Mß. 1 n T« M ‘ «'««»<». Malaria,Ckllla aa«l Fevms aad Meandata. It is an unfejlhwr remedy for Dtneaaes of the Kidneyn and Liver. It is invaluable for Dferesre peett'dar to Women, and all who ired sedentary lives. It dore not injure the teeth, ratine headaehejnr pnMlnce const! patk»n-oMre Iron medieme. «k. It enriched and purities the blood. Mlmatafre the appetite, aids ihe assimilation of faod. re “earthurn Rnd Belchinc, strength ens the muscles and nervre For Irnermittent Fevers, Latitude, Lack of Energy. Ac, it hsi no equal.’ l The genuine has above trade mark aix? crowed red lines on wrapper. Take no other '-onlrM eeow.S CBK*IC4f ro.MU.TnaM. PROFESSIONAL AND LAW CARFX. 'l .< n'lin'lw- w. w. 0. ADAMSON, Atto’ney Mt Law CARROLLTON, - - - &A. Promptly transacts all business confided to him. Holding the ofiicu of Judge of the City Oaart does not Intel sere with his practice in other conrU - str. s. e. grow. ATTORNEY. AT- LAW. AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. MCNEI loans negotiated on improved farms in Carroll, Meara, and Haralson counties at reasonable rates. I'iUe* to l.wds examined and abstracts fni niched, OflUce np-stalrs in the’court honse, Carrollton, <»a. J? W?JONES, Attorney X.o.var JOEL, - - GA., 14-17-ly. A. J. CAMP, Attorney atlsaw VILLA RICA GA. WM. c. HODNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TULA RICA, - - . - GEORGIA tdF'Oipcb qvpr Dr. Slaughter’s Drugstore. Prompt attention giv cn to all business intrusted to him. W. L. FITTS, T’liyslcicin cfc Ou.i-ar CARROLL'I y.V, - - GEORGIA. Will, at all Unite, be. found at. W. W, I Fitts’ drne •tore, unless professionally absent. 88-ts AV. F. BROWN, Attorney JXt Lmw. CARROLLTON, » GEORGIA. c. P. GORDON ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, GEORGIA. —— - - . - ■ . , , _ _ W. W, & G, W. MERRELL, Atto’ncys atLaw, CARROLLTON, - - GA. Records and land titlea examined. Will colieci claims, large or small. Especial at tention 2tven to the business of managing estate by Execuxors, Administrators, Gar dians &c and othe>- business before the Or dinar}. Will practice in all the superior courts of the Coweta circuit, and always at tend at Haralson court. JFill practice any where and in noy court where clients may require their .*?rvico«e DR. D: F. KNOTT Is perma,DOiit!y located in Car rollton and tenders his PROFFoeIONyiLL SERVICES to the citizens of Carrollton au.i vicinity. Oflice, Johnson's .Drug Store. Residence, Seminary street.l-tf. BARGAIN AN ORGAN. We have for can sell for less thas fae tory prices, an ESTEY & CAMP organ, b steps knee swells, height, 5 feet 11 inches ; wioth, 4 feet 2 Ju ches ’ def ? th - 2 fe et; 'vdgiit, boxed, 850 lbs. » Y i-T Or * a ?ii M ant ‘xcelled for purity of tone, da rabihty, and beauty, and fs fully warranted io five years, Apply at once to J. B. BEALL. - ■ (. DR. D/W.DORSETT PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON TEMPLE, GrA. Having permanently located at Temple I offer reli services to the citizens of Car’ Ob temr J JO .nA nS >“ ttlll ’ eS - 1 Special attentioata Campbel) A Bell’s Vtore? All rauTprompUy* ai‘ KM Wrights Indian Vegetable Pills LIVER And airßiliousComplaints sril> FREE! gPwBLE SELF-CURE .A fa vorite prescription of one of the I n oted and successful specialists in the U a F forcurp DeMMtw Manhood. Ueaki, and Z»o^aw I >'^iDsealedenvelopeJree. j Address DR. WARD & CO., Louisiana, Mo.