The Weekly banner-watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1886-1889, July 27, 1886, Image 2

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THE WOOL-HAT BOYS. . The friend* 01 Capt. Carltor paid a most fitting and deserved compiim to the yeomanry of thi Sth distiict when they elected Mi. Wooten, “a wool hat boy” from Wilke* county, to preside over that body, and with pleasure we say that he acquitted himself in a man ner highly creditable. As Capt. Carlton's vote came Irom the farm ers of the district, it is right and pioper that this class be recognized and honored by his friends. And right here we will say that the ex ample set by the Carlton delegate* in the Tuesday’s convention should be followed by oilier political bod ies in the state. While the wool- hat boys are the sinews ot the coun try, they are kept in the back ground and the politicians and pro- fis.ionals allowed to reap all th< honors, lienee we say that th» election of this gallant yonng far mer from Wilkes to occupy the highest position in the gift ot the convention that lately convened in our city was a ftep that should break the ice that has always fiozen the honest tiller of the soil out ol every honor. Capt. Carlton pro claimed himself the people's candi date, and by thus honoring one ol yeomanry of the district his friends proved that he did not se cure votes under lalse pretenses. The distinguished gentlemen pio- posed by Mr. Keese’s friends would have made a most excellent chap man, but unfortunately they wcie in a hopeless minority, and the mantle fell on the shoulder's <,f a young farmer. We have always contended that this class of our pop ulation should be pressed more to the front, and trom this day onward we intend to battle harder ihan ev er for the advancement and lio-> 0 t of the wool hat boys. They are the ones that do the voting, and why not let them also reap thcii full share of all th-s? They are the men who are responsible for Capt. Carlton's success, and his friends were the first in the state to recognize and honor them. T11K KK-.fl’OnTlOXMKNT 111'S1- N KSS. In going into the convention un der the old basis ol representation, the delegates that convened in Ath ens on Tuesday morning last did not repudiate the action of the exec utive committee, but for the sake oi harmony, and to secure the nomi nation of the gentleman far whom bey were instructed, they consent ed that the old rule of 2 to 4 be adopted. Wilkes county h3d in structed its delegates to withdraw from the convention in the event of the new basis of 3 to 5 beingadopt ed, which would have broken up the meeting and destroyed the party in the district. There w:s no other alternative for the Wilkes del egates but to withdraw, while the other counties had not received such arbitrary instructions, lienee, the action ot the smaller counties, in accepting the compromise, will he endorsed and applauded by tbe people, for it was a necessary and patriotic move and prevented a split in the convention that would have resulted in i free-for-all race for congress. As Cap'.. Carlton had a large majority of the votes piesent, nothing vvi s Aacriliced and the wishes of the people carried out to the very letter. The defeat of Mr. Lewis’resolution showed that the convention endorsed the action of the executive committee, and this was a decisive victory for the smaller counties. This vexed ques tion, that at one time threatened to create a rupture in the party in the Sth district, will now be referred to the highest tribunal, the people, and beyond their voice is no appeal. The representatives from the smalle counties gained a victory indeed in the defeat of the Lewis resolution, and at thr same time, by their con servative patriotism, kept ti gether the party in the district and accom plished the purpose for which they had convened. These gentlemen not only deserve the applause of their own people, but the thanks so the democracy of the entire state. “T11E AT11KNS CUQU K.” the legislature, is an injustice to the "Tammany braves in -New York smaller counties, for' in many in stances it gives them but little over half the representation that more avored sections enjov. Alabama has the fairest system ol rcpiesen- tation that we have yet seen, viz : A delegate for every one thousand democratic voles that a county ma\ cast, taking the official returns ol the last national election as a guide. It is the duty of the executive cmn mittee, when it convenes, to tix th« apportionment ol every county in the state. This is not only entire • fair and just, but it acts as an i’icen live 10 ihe various counties to swel 1 the democratic majority as large a* possible, as it means an increase in their political power. We want to see this matter brought up in our state convention, and in the mean time let the press discuss it. Some thing must be done, or the troub'e threatened in the Sth distiict wih spread to other sections ol Georgia. The state convention is the tribunal that can and should settle this mat ter, and we h pe that at its nex meeting a moiv equitable basis ol epie-entation will be fixed tl an the present basis. when they celebrated Independent day. He is also a spoilsman Said lie, after characterizing civi service reform as undemocratic ai d unconstitutional: “If the spoils don't belong to the victois, 10 whom do they belong? ’ And this senti- nent was appliuJed sine.-rely Senator Vance had opened li s pecch with praise of the president ;nd his honesty, and then he re'er red, without mncli ado, to 1 lie spoils topic. It was rather inconsistent to sav the least, thus damning the president with faint praise. The southern senator is undoubtedly a pokesman for his party, and wile" he expressed his disapprobation ot 1 seivice reform, he voiced tht sentiment of dim ;crats; he meant that the public offices we:e not be- ug;given out fast enough to satisfy he demand ol the rank and tile o! he party It is the muttering ol discontent, and it is plain to be seen that the president ivnli his advanced ideas of reform does not suit the O'- ALMOST LYXCIIKD THOUGH IX NOCK.XT. THIS CRUEL MACHETE. A STORY OF THE LAST REVOLUTION IN CUBA. MY FLOWER. , A PUBLIC INSANE ASYLUM. LOTUS. Attention has frequently been called to the danger of innocent persons fa'livtg victims to the in s directed indignation of the popu ace in cases of summaiy execn- 10ns. Ciicumstances frequently seem to point to persons as heiiii guilty of terrible crimes, when only the most patient investigation and he coolest judgment can detcrmiui the question of guilt or innocence Men who are excited and inuignan it the commission of a crime an not the proper persons to be the judges and executioners. Some two years ago a man ac cused of a shocking assault was lynched at Jacksonville, Ill., ctrcn stances pointing to him as the guilty party. The other day the real culprit died, confessing th deed and exculpating the victim that had been murdered by hi well-meaning neighbors in thbir un lawful and almost insane zeal t< punish crime. A case occurred in Texas the other day that should impress th above truths on the minds of tht people all over the country. A worthy old citizen of Collin was found in a dying condilion, and circumstances * indicated that h* was the victim of a brutal murder He made a dying declaration in which he accused a neighbor o 1 having assaulted him. Public opin ion was excited and the people were terribly aroused, and sever 1 times a mob was on the eve o lynching the accused. He was ar rested, and fortunately wise coun seis at length prevailed, and the law was allowed to take its course The accused was held at Ihe Coro ner’s inquest, and it seemed for awhile that there would be no trouble to fasten the guilt on him. Finally evidence was obtained which showed beyond question that the prisoner could not have done the deed, and that the deceased had committed suicide. It was only in the delirium of the dying agony that the victim conceived the idea that the accused had assaulted him Scarcely a day passes in which there is not a lynching in some part ol the country. People have got to resorting to lynch law even in cases of theft and common assault. It is time to cal! a halt in the matter. Good citizens should be law-abid ing. and they should see to it that the law is enforced in a lawful man ner. There is hardly room to doubt that many innocent people are lynched every year, and that ire- quently what is called mob justice is only mob murder.—Savannah News. Tlx- Oy.lrr nn.l III. Slli-IL Suppose that, placing two oyster shells in their natural position, we insert a piece of India rubber between the valves at the lx.in: where they are hinged tn- Bothcr. If we now forcibly close the shells by pressure, the India rubber is compressed. When wc release the press ure of our lingers, the elasticity and re coil of the India rubber forces the valves ep.irt. In such a fashion, then, d nature provide for the constant main tenance of the unclosed condition. The "liRaineiits" of the shell are natural . l.istie pads existing at the l.inye hue. lly their elasticity they keep the valves unclosed. There is no strain involved in the action, which is a merely mechanical one after all. Hut whe.. the more infrequent net of closure has to Ik? performed, then mus cular e;i rry requires to Ik- displayed. The quick .-.n:.p of the valves reminds us tlutt muscular exertion, even if necessitating vital wear and tear, lias its corresponding ndvonta.ye in the rapidity and elievtive- nt-ss will, which it provides for protection maillist tic entrance of disagreeable or noxious elements into the internal nr- ranuenictils of oyster or mussel l.fc.— ]-curiu m's .Mari’.zinc. Terrible Fate Which Overtook s Hand j Among the sheaves, when I beheld thee first. That happv harvest morn a year ago, A thought crept through my heart with sudden glow, . . ' in an asylum if there is the Vli'ghte’s'I hoM That never sunny mountain top had oI thejr reCovery j n these institutions An Bx-Patlent’1 Words of Warning— j I love the lotus blossom when It wreathos How to Avoid Mental Disease. Its painted petals in my sweetheart's tresses, I would earnestly entreat the relatives And she, enchanted by its odor, breathes and friends of lunatics never to put them 1 Hott wonts of love, and soothes with soft of Noble Spanish chivalry—Missive I A fresher, fairer flower—the very air From » l!raYo'Chlca:oan«>sha(lov. i of ! Klosed thy dear face and seemc to et u htarto‘1 Night. fair, nursed - eWthing^ foXTa™'shut I And **and ^t°h^aLr S sighs, li ftjro ther co ax urn;! uv'e 5? *th ^ sy*m pa t h eri 0 j For that love's sake she has yet told to no action would Certainly increase the vio i lence of his disease and retard Us enre. ; I love the lotus blossom for it grows The same thing is true of mental disca-.es. | On a lone gi-avo beside a silent river; . -• — - - ... t u:„ n Again, a person is taken from a home 1 There my youth’s mistress takes her last re- much blood. Whenever it is drawn, Oh! child like woman, that hast kept ttnno , wtl ere ^ lias delicate food ou a table fur- poso; either aiiuinst the soldiery or in riot, j heart , | nished with respectable, for want of a I loved, I hated, and I now'forgive her. somebody dies. Do yon want a little tale : So pearled with the morning aew, nij letter word I will say, furniture, clean | -Justin H. McCarthy, AL P. of tho machete—-one that is true and flower! my flower. cloth, dainty dishes, glassware, etc. There I — shows wliat awful havoc may be done • HowAkssing dull my heart was In that | muct cat off a |> are p i an k w i t h ill- I R©«mt «r the Hnt Boat itace. nour. And the serene, deep* summer heaven “But the machete means something to ! above ... . . the Cuban,” ualtl the old don. “It isn’t j Leaned down to gaze on thee witn loo » merely n rusty old relic. It has drank of love. — I . with It? , „ “Well, at the outbreak cf our Inst re- 1 Owning thy beauty* yet devoid of art, bullion here the Spanish forces iu the And insight to discern, that by God’s grace Island made no headway against the ' My life’s best angel met me face to face.. bray’j work of the insurgents under the | —T. Westwood. noble Ccspides, who, in October, 1SG8, I . —— With but li.ty Other Stout hearts about The Protest or tho rroof-lt©ador. him, mfscil the standard of independence ! However, since the proof-reader has on his plantation at lXmnjagua, and by J been graciously allowed to say that, his December had an organized army of ' soul’s his own, it is perhaps worth while, r~\000 men—the nucleus of tho effort for m jia amusement, to hear how he puts liberty which flamed through Cuba for ! t he case. In tbe first place he says that i^ht bloody years, costing Spain untold „n nnthor intent on what he is writing, w eat oiT a bare plank, tasting knives and spoons, made of'pewter, j while ulFhis food La mixed together on one plate. All around him are hU fellow luna tics, eating like hogs with their fingers and muttering to themselves. The keep- It is a pretty sight race days to seethe girls who dote on rowing men—and their name is legion—urging their heroes on. Who thinks it is difficult to pull out winner in a boat race? Absurd! The ers meanwhile are cursing and swearing shells glide along so easily, the seats throwing potatoes at the men for a joke. Your appetite is destroyed, and the little food you manage to force down is not digested and barely suffices to keep body and soul together. I have no special fault to find with the quantity or quality of my food, although I was never able to as for the tea and had enough to I picked up until another interruption. ! This is not for a moment, but all day, J all the week, all the year, all his life, j After puzzling himself until he is half l blind, his brain weary, and work pushing IJrave and j upon him incessantly, a letter may l*e left ■'■'.’••'i'*'- • -* vroiig madhouse. If value of money and what it can do for you live in a public insane asylum. I've been a miser ever since I left it. A good private nurse and a skillful doctor can ofteu restore a pa tient to reason who would never recover if placed in an asylum. A word or two to individuals suffering A Georgia Oxle*' Willow Farm. Al*>ut a mile lielow the city of Macon, !»«., is an ozier willow farm. The willow switches, at the end of two years, are from fo ir t«» seven inches long, and are cut and gathered into bunches like sheaves of wheat. They are steeped in wafer and the bark at the larger end loosened for a couple of inches by ma chinery. The leaves and bark are re moved by a little machine, and the switches are placed in the mechanical stripper, and with a pair of pliers are pulled through with A sudden jerk. They are then wiped off with a woolen cloth, bundled and laid away to dry. All the leaves and barks are dried ami baled. They are used for medicinal purjioses, and command a price of 25 cents per pound. The average yield is a ton to the acre. When dried the willows command $200 per ton, and find a ready market.— Chicago lic&ld. t.> take I little i tirely different character from an entirely ; sj>e”mi three months m :;:.iv,; U,i;‘oe“,e Z I to I A want to realize the afternoon between breakfast ami dinner, or between dinner and the llavaua even ing ball. URATE AND GAT AND NOBLE. “They were an even 5,000. gay and noble were they. They held tho j ou t or a comma inserted in the ivl-it a .a.T'Lr,,1'rTf , n I,ain ' i P lace . when slam-banR goes a volley at. j from nervo'asiiess7a mild form of insanity, i, M l* a !q t arriT ,rVt I n^«nK , v the P"*.( reader! He has seen consclen- ! aIi<1 which !s always liable to develop into 1 . . and armal at ]la\ana the> nmdel ; tious, patient .worthy proof-readers shrink a 8er i ou ^ mental disease Never under 1 hey were Splendid fellows, and it IS said . rinin* when nn nnthor visits a nrillt- ) a 8e • ua * In f nial u,sctwe - fhev rrTirnsni.tfsi ViVin (Nvi ooo i nuu cringe non an auuior visits a pniiir any circumstances, use either Lquoror ' ln * "‘'. lce -. k ' St 80metbi " K have ! tobacco; the (ewer drugs, the better. All ■ * - - • - - - escaped their notice. Ho has seen au . ti leso things render tho nerves more sen- author scold a proof-reader for some tn- sitive and 1 can say from bittcrexperlence iling oversight when that same dnv^ the . f | 0 f ar morc harm than good. Avoid proof reader had corrected an historical , anoi i ynes M8 you would poison. You had iduuder which would have cost the uuthor j letter lie t wake all night than suffer dearly had it seen the light. He has seen , f rom tlie effects that invariably follow ua author brag of his penmanship, and f rom their use. Fresh air, gentle exer- when his mauuscript has been sent to ! else—violent exercise is very injurious— him because it was unreadable, he him- • um j suitable employment are the reme- .^elf was scarcely able to decipher it,— | that will alleviate this disease. Don’t Detroit Free Press. j think about yourself; get outside of your- inuch. as possible. I accomplish was a Ticii family’s or a titled family’: sou. Nearly every man had his own volet* Their uni.orms and accoutrements—fur nished at t heir own cost—were dazzling in gold and lace. A month of the wildest social debauchery followed their arrival. Fetes, balls, receptions, bullfights, carni vals, welcomed them on every hand. At last they came out lic*re—over beyond the cnlzadn there, near, the Guines railway— and went into camp. Instantly this cal- y.ad:i, all the way back to Havana, was ! . transformed into another Paseo de Taeon, What t,ie Hlmltt Llve * ° n * throngwl with the equipages of the aris- ! Human live is supported iu India upon torracy rolling to and from tho brilliant • l>arvst mimnnnn of necessaries; the vil- camp. The magnilicence of the city’s so- j itt K« population feed upon the commonest cial gnyotics w:u* simply transferred there. I grains, never eating animal food (which is “One night a great fete had lieen givc^i ! contrary to their religion) uud rarely tast at the tneampment, more brilliant and ; the finer grains, such as wheat an<3 gorgeous than aujthing that had preceded ; harley. The clothing it. Ju.-t Ufore midnight, when the fes- Best, and I was distre: tivitfes were at their height, the com- Bie people in Hie northwest provinces mnuder of tho resplendent troop, on re- i shivering and half naked in weather so pairing to his headquarters tent, found I cold that I was glad to wear two topcoats, the following note pinned upon a diniinu- ; The houses are built of clay, and almost live insurgent ling surmounting a gor- j destitute of furniture, and I understand geous pyramid of flowers, the gift that : that a targe portion of the population only day of some beautiful llahanas: eat one meal a day. “ ‘After your other guests are gone we Of course this in nn eastern country will visit you. l)o us the honor to receive ! does not signify what it does in Europe— us standing! Washington Kyan.’ i life can be sustained on less food and less this by frequenting places of amusement and losing self in the woes of the hero. I forget myself and my troubles, most of which are equally fanciful. But the best of all specifics is music, which acts like a charm to soothe the aching and feverish nerves. Make up your mind to avoid , everything that injures you, screwing distressed to see many-of j your courage up to the sticking place, — . . bearing always in your mind the mad house. If you do not exert your will power, its doors may .close on you, per haps for life.—“Jaques” in Brooklyn Eagle. move so lightly, and the oars gleam so brightly, that it must be the simplest thing in the world. Only when you arc hard at it, and it seems us though the in fernal boat were held liack by a thousand submarine hands, and your tack aches so that the tears drip from your eyes, and there is a noise in your ears like the din of n million boiler factories, and you can’t think, speak or hope, but only make frantic efforts to pull your almost unman ageable arms out of their sockets, then it’s easy—oli, so easy! Ages later, you arc conscious of being past the finish, and you gasp, in a voice that is certainly lfot your own, while a drop of blood fulls from your mouth and leaves its record on your flan nel breeches: “ i )i«!—wi—beat—’em—ver ’—bad?’ ’ “Beat them? They crossed the line* ten long!hs ahead. It was a stern chase from the : This, after months of training and no end of deprivation. Who cures to row Ids first race over agaiu.—Blakely Hall in The Argonaut. 18361 i 1 SWIFT’S SPECmcj s sj s 3 s s s s ’ A BEMEDY HOT EOE A DAY, BUT FOB' tar HALF A OEITUBY “©a BELIEVING 8UFFEBIHG HUMANITY! sis S.S.S. s AN INTERESTING TREATISE ON BLOOD AND SKIN Diseases' FF EE TO ALL APPLICANTS. IT SHOULD BE READ BY EVERYn^ ADDRESS THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA °° ■)©ooff»KWw l ir Hereford’s Bread Preparation THE BEST B\KING POWDER IN THE WO Is made by Prcf. !(. powder of any nutrit lr .supplies « «\ aIHU. <»rd's process, the only pron'ss that pn value. »us and Htrenp’ riv 5 g phosphates ORbla’ii Study of the Finoti'«ni«. It was soon after her own disappoint ment that Ouidn discovered that hlr companion, a shy, grave little English governess, was also having a love affair with an Italian. The girl had lk*en some what imprudent, slipping out at Late hours to talk to her lover, for both of them were afraid of the bitter, disappointed woman with whom she lived. When she war. dis covered through her own imprudence ^ lhad given Hindi a hold niton her winch she used for her own advantage. “Only on one condition will I countenance this affair,” said the severe and angry novel ist.* “You must tell me everything re lating to this affair, every word that has passed between you and every emotion of your heart.” The girl wept and raged. Otiida war. he had no friends to go to, an ! lvl •as Finally si tears and angry i pretty, tender little hint vows of her iia: un died id told, amid lions, all her ; —"U the gal- feel- idulteration whatever. “I.lTe** Ivory IMfftir* from “Demi." “That knife handle is worth twice as much as the other,” said an ivory dealer to a reporter, us he pointed out two hand- * was tho hero from Chicago who ! nutritious diet than in norther climes; the j a life for Cuba, whoso real «reat- labor power ot the Hindus is smaU; there is ! ' lllkB ' 80 tht re l‘°“er asked iu what ir peojile up there never re LOnlYl MOST PERFECT MADE Prepared with tpecial rejrmrd to health No Ammonia, Lime or Alum. PRICE BAKING POWDER C0. t CHICAGO. ST. LOUIS* ~ eorriAi Some of Mr. Reeses frientl worked the above cry for all it was worth, but the withering rebuke they received Irom the people showed that they had taken up a cold trail. Hut we will say that there is a clique in Athens, and the Banner-Watchman is at the head of it. The mission of that clique is to take political power Irom court house rings and place it in the hands of the people, where it rightly be longs. In the nomination of Capt. A 1>1 T LTKRATKl> WINKS. Most people outside the div counties, and in son.e of then) lot that matter, have long known that most of the beer drank in the coun try is not lager, hut bogus beer, and that a very large proportion ol the puie rye whisky sold is not whisky at all, but manufactured or “rectified” stuff that is as unwhole some as it is fraudulent. In some sections ot the country the consumption of wine has been increasing, and the sale of pure do mestic wine is generally toleraleii if not encouraged even by the pro hibitionists. The truth is that good wine is very wholesome. St. Paul, it will be remembered, counseled Timothy to drink no more water (exclusively he doubtless meant) but to take a little wine for his stum- EXTRACTS MOST FERFECT MADE Pun-sl nr.d Ftrortpcat Natural Fruit Flavor*. Vanilla Li-r.ioti. Oranci'. Almon.i llobd.etc., flavor as delicate!* an>i n-ifuraily us tlu truit. utuxuj. price Baking Powder Co* 6T. wus. FIBE! FIRE! FIRE! Ihfc 1.1YI.I1 1 ’A OiX •icnui Fire Cxtin- J.N. SUTHERLAND, Beltoa, S. C. GIN SAW FILING MACHINE. The TAYlOU GIN saw one »f tne best iri-lf. anybody c*n file Gin Saw. with |l« Requires no p-sctice Do* a i s work hr It should '* 51*»-« an ' ten times insier tha t by hand. t\- •cry Vacliine warrant. «1. Price $1 k I u\» fur iia?lf every sea-on. Or.l- r ir.»iu -I. N. srTIIKHf.ANM, Ite’inn. R giiize, j far less taken out of the humau machine ami for whose memory they have t»nly j than in our lalxirious western life; it con- xnntlo one daub of a portrait. | sumes less and produces less; besides, the “The missive created the greatest mirth I Asiatic lias the power of (\igesting a and hilarity. The camp and its guests . greater quantity of food at one meal than were wild with mirth and delight over the ! is possible to Europeans; but, when due grim wit of the crazy writer and liis pre- j allowance is made for all this, it is not to lent ions message. They drank toasts to ! be deuied that the poverty of a great part him: sung mock praters of his valor; the • of India is extreme and more acute than bands blared ferociously in his honor until j what we witness in Europe. It may be the small hours had come and all the city said with truth of a great part of tho guests had gone. rural population that it is never far ro- siiAixnvs of A starless night. mov^d from famine. A scauty harvest any “Then n hush came upon the splendid | )ear brings that calamity within meas urable distance; a failure of crops means death to a large part of the population un less fed by government.—Contenv' rary Kj»vL. camp, and wine and sleep wrought silence under the shadows of r. starless night. “it might have been the restless wind soughing through the dark canyons, but the commander could not sleep. He read and rv-ivad the daring message until the link* insurgent flag grew .and glamoured into an awful menace. Surely there must !h* a great .* form coining on. Surely it must lx* swetping out of the night upon the camp from everywhere. Surely “But the storm was there! and it waa winged death. The trumpeters had no more than time WINGED SCAVENGtuS Sr . nt SOUTH 1 and Famluntentu! Facts as to the Xatio fliilly ot the Turkey But/anl. The so-called turkey buzzard is not a buzzard, but a vulture. By insisting upon this distinction the buzzard tribe could improve its reputation for ckanli- ness. it is against the law iu almost to shrilly summon the heavily sleeping l every southern state to shoot a turkey buzzard. for tl»i: telbi camp to its feet when God only knows how many horsemen were upon them—black, brown, yellow, white—but all men—men with awful purpose. “Their hosts had received these devils of the night ‘standing.’ No cry went up from that camp, save ns each of these flower of the chivalry of Spain saw j *-*—• swift death in one lightning stroke cle- ihougb his knowing tills does not imply hete gleamed ^bat he has superior knowledge—and lie is There are t’ I rohibit ion; tho buzzards are the ers of the south, and there is no what sort of a pestilence a dead turkey buzzard would bring on if anylKsly should kill one. The turkey buzzard is a knowing bird. He knows lie is not good to lie eaten- scending. Every time a mac in tbe glare of the Dickering camp severed a Spanish head from its body and struck through to the heart of some noble woman in old Castile. “A half hour aiul all was over. The storm was gone. These awful spirits of the night swept away into the night again, leaving but one moving thing—a* mon strous insurgent flag 1 tearing these words: “ ‘They were royal hosts. They re ceived us standing.' “The morning came, bringing the most perfect peace that ever fell on soldier’s camp. The Culmii machete had wrought it. Onr Havanese brought two car loads of gold laced caps into tho city that day. These were sent hack to Spain in place of the 5,000 who had left it. So, my friend, you may now well remember the machete of Ctffia!”—Edgar L. Wukeman’s Cuba Letter in Chicago News. not shy of mankind. He li mfirket places in the southern cities, wait ing for bu. incss to close; and when the crowd of purchasers lias departed the buz zard descends and feasts upon the odds and ends that have fallen from the butchers' and the fishmongers' knives. The scarcity of hash, mince pie and li.**h chowder in the southern states is some thing for which the buzzard should have credit. In Charleston there is a big pub lic market down by the water, and the buzzards always clean up after business hours. The wisdom of the turkey buzzard is known also by one of his expedients for getting rid of work, which is fatiguing in the southern states. He goes to the mouth;; of rivers, where the conflicting forces of current and tide deposit on the bnul:a a considerable proportion *>f the the difference lay “Well, one handle is formed of live Ivory and the other of dead,” replied the mer chant. “By live ivory I mean ivory taken from an auiuial recently killed. That sort of ivory Is expensive, because it Is hard to get. It is strong, because there is life in it, and it is used for the handles of the best knives, and where dead ivory could not be used. When nn elephant loses a tusk that tusk becomes what we call dead ivory. He sheds the tusk, and it has no strength in it. It is brittle and breaks easily, and can only be used for the handles of pocket knives, or in other forms where the ends are protected. If they were not, the ivory would split a ml crack in a very short time. The ivory taken from tin* tusks of the antediluvian mammoihs buried in Hie soil of Siberia is, of course, all dead ivory. Its uses are, therefore, limited. If you ever want to buy any ivory goods, be sure to ascer tain whether it is live or dead ivory be fore purchasing. If the former it is strong a:nl durable; if the latter, it is brit tle and liable to crack, even where fast ened. “ The same rule, implies to the horn. Deerhorn anil buckhoru, so commonly used, especially in the handles of pocket knives, is much of it made from the horns shed by the deer, ami of lit tie value. The live-horn is more expensive. —New York Sun. ing of her own p*.M>r little h«*art was ban to relentless questioning. In Ouida's »e novel the w.:<•!.* thing appeared r.s a care ful study of the emotions of an innocent, loving girl. The little governess is mar ried and prosperous, happy mother of beautiful children.—Cor.. New York World. *•! ( li •mic'ii \V *rks, fb Paying OflT :i Church I>eht. John Buskin, being asked the other day for aid in paying off a church debt, replied by letter thus: “I am sorrowfully amused at your appeal to me, of all the people in the world, the precisely least likely to give you a farthing. My lirst word to all men and !x»ys who care to hear me is: ‘Don't get into debt. StArvc. and go t*» he:ven: but don’t borrow. Try first beggin I don't mind, if it's really needful, ste ding. 'But don’f buy things you can't p ;v for.’ And of all manner of | debtors, pi ms people building churches they can't piy for are the most detestable nonsense to me. you preach ar.d pray behind the hedges, or in a sandpit, or in a coal hole first? And of all manner of churches ihus idiotically built, iron churches arv tho damnablest to me. And of all u.v si fts and believers in any ml: g spirit. Hindoos, Turks, feather idoiutois and Mumbo .I audio log and tire wor shippers who want churches, your modern English evangelical sect is the most al>- surd and entirely objectionable and unen durable to nu*. All which you might very easily have found out from my books. Any other sort of sect would, before bothering me to write it to them.”—Chi cago Times. A. R. ROBERT ON t Marble and Granite Work-3 >1 Mi j carrion and other unwholesome things To tlio Internal Cmpini; Ground.. tjuit ore toward tlie sea on the «<» f„ii i,_j f .* ,* ... . ri\er s flood, and there lie accommodate* ,i " f r 1 ' 1 ' " ll1 .t ol,lk : r3 °*| Ids not very fastidious npnetite to the the l uion army marrh off to the eternal I movement of the tides. Alt 'animals that cantpiiiK dronads ever* year. 1 his j perish inland are found by the buzzards. It is even said that flocks of these birds Kii.tl; ?»« Mill, **l any kliui fer Woo I c 4*u*uli ihe * ill* ki-MiN of I-;ngii •**»■!! Kngii.f. Ii*ii!**r or M» c’liutry of any ri.H* l A'. i .td Hors J. N. SUTHERLAND, Bftlton, S. C. Mine from nn ex-official of the pension de partment. and it was called out by the re mark that since the war 150 prominent officers of the old Army of the Tennessee had died. “The boya are going.” he con tinued. “at the rate of 3,000 or 4,(MX) a year, and I estimate that every two weeks a full company is mustered for the last roll call and that every three months a full regiment goes over the line. Four regiments a year, forty regiments in teu years, a grand army corps of nearly 100,- 00J :ac:i in twenty years—at this rate tlie boys will soon Ik? gone.”—Inter-Occaa “Curbstone Crayons.” Carlton for congress we triumphed, and now that *e have the politi- | ach *ake and his often intirmatie It is stated on what appears to lu- good authority that vast quantities of vile compounds are being sold in he country as pure California dans under foot, intend to keep them there, and they can just squirm and rave to their heart’s content. We have the wool-hat boy* on our side and intend to keep them, too. -The Athens’ clique” embrace* every farmer in the Sth district, and is banded together to crush out court house rings and prolessionat politicians. Don't yov forget it, that “the Athens clique” is now triumphant, and that tri umph means victory for the yeo msnrv of the Sth district and dis pair and destiuctioA to the old ringsters. They have won their last victory, for their candidate did not carry a single county from the day that Capt. Carlton took up the standard of the people. He was nominated as the people’s candi date, he will be elected as the peo- ple’a candidate, and serve the peo ple faithfully and devotedly. THE BASIS OF HEl’lSESENTATION. When the state convention meets on the sStb, we hope that body will take some steps toward more justly equalizing representation from the various counties in tieorgia, and thus settle a question that has al ready come up in the Sth district, •nd will, it something is not done, disrupt the democratic party. The present basis of representation, of allowing a county two vote* in con ventions for each representative in wines. It is said that iheie are sev eral large establishments in New York alone devoted to themanufac ture of bogus wines. These wines are sold as low as 30 cents a gal lon, with a liberal discount for cash. The wine is said to be made of stale grapes and raisins, together will) sugar, water, acids and other in gredients that are cheap .and plen tiful in all huge cities. All brands are imitated and the cost to the manufacturers is said to be from 10 to 12 cents per gallon. These wines, like imitation beer and doctored whiskies aie object ed to not only because ih. y are the means ol defrauding ilio-e who purchase them, but because they are unwholesome and therefore in jurious. It is strange that while the laws of every stale of the gen eral governmen restrict and regu late the legitimate manufacture of beer and liquors, very little effiott has been made anywhere to protect the people against the spurious ai- ticles.—Savannah News. *• Hu* jirojK-iiy o: Joii 1 . u..u.-ustlijvm lie. MricMi. M., lu .a or, l.‘, 0*-A RKKcoUN 1 Y — *'» hcicaM, Mrs A U1 Jam . U. applies fur •l /!rMl |,* )u f.om Maid Giw iu t* "•» vl |, r law. Tnr>e are there c and tern j>h a'l coucvruid t«» »*»*>* 1... 1 xu nr term U the Court I or •n.ti » utility to he held «u ihe Hist Moil «ll*>chai|go Mieu.d Or hi an* of said li, rut admiuisirHtio ; tbe RKEiuo.Si V—linn*.* jjiiic biuUu* or of the tmiat.* of Joht dec *A.ved, has api.lie l u discharge These are tlier<*orc lo cite aiul ««<m mail ail concerned U» »h<rw cause at ifre ■ CKultir terui oi the court of Ordioaiy of said county. i<» ire held on th.* Hist Monday in Novetu- l>cr next why sa ddtsctmrue bliottld not he rraut- c 1. Given ut.dcr inr hand au otticiat Migaatur. «t ollice this aru day of July, lagd. * FHfcNLY.QCO. N uTICK, to tlcbiofi and creditor*.—.vll pen»on c hovmgdei&intaa K aitntbee*taie of John W Nicholson lateut 1 ini tr county, drccascd. are hereby notl ‘ierl to r rdtr n i ^eir demand* t • the undersigned a cording to law. nd all |.eis rtain* dehte 11* *uld c>tatc are required to untae itn mediate pay tuQtiU .l«H\N UCUvSK. . „ ... W D GttIFr CTlf, Rxecntora of John W Nicholson deceased. G nn itn eased baa applied to iuv lo have year* support set »«ide to her from the cata.c ol artid dtceaawd Thi Isinerefure to c teai.d »dmon- i-h ail • onermed lo *bo« cause if any they have at rny ollice on tbe first Mo iday Id ’us"t next • lie said apiditaion shaii noth- granted aud •*‘*e rears all-iwid as fixed by the return of the appraised lor that pun-oseJaly 3rd)886 B tk TH H ASH Kit OMina-v.__ DICKEYS’ PAINLESS EYE WATER! KKLIEvKS AT ONCE, cures inflamed and weak eye* in a few hours. Gives hQ FAIT The Beat Ueuirdy in the wor d lor granulated lid* I'drc'Mi'eatsaioule. Aak lor it. Have bo other. m DICKEY & ANDERSON, Pro'n Use “seven Springs, *«,") Brutol, Teun. WOMEN! Senator Vance ot North Caro lina is an outspoken and strict par tisan. He does not believe in civil service reform and took occasion to say so at the great powwow cf SEgS®.* f^eou. Louisville, Ky. It is net necessary for you to suffer any longer with those troubles peculiar to your eos when ssrsrai!SKf“ " the mlM power* ot flfinos* Frtcef lVliat iN.rtu-wl** Kln S Has hone. Kiiw Luis, of PorttijBil, has done soir.e- thimr lnsiile ruHn*^ a peaceful country. He luis iii.Thlmtl half a dozen lan^U.-’.^es and translated li\e of Shakespeare’s plays into Portuguese.—Inter-Ocean. New York and Brooklyn consume 21 | per cent, of the malt liquor of the uuion. | Tlie Very CnuaplcuouN Tnlly-llo. Nothin*? conM be more unretiriuj? than the coaching? that 1ms liecome intensely fashioualik* to a few of the most preten tious people a* town. A four horse drag with glittering harness, bright vehicle, liveried flunkies, loud hqgler and load of women gjiyly dressed, is quite as re splendent ns n circus chariot and com mands as much attention ns it rolls along a crowded street. But it is the loading or unloading that Is jmrticularly an amuse ment for the spectators. I have seen a distinguished belle mounting to the top of n cor.cli in the midst of a rabble, in every way ns conspicuous as a queen of the wire about to nsceml to the height of a tent pole, with a saucy urchin comment ing shrilly ou her appearance, like a clown helping o:*thc exhibition, aud she was nil the while ns placid iu» though se cluded in her own boudoir.—New York letter. __ John Q. Adams anil life Coachman. A few days \x?fore the Inauguration qf President Harrison, the horses of John Quincy Adams became frigbteueil near the Capitol, by the dis*.barge of Colt’s fire arms before a committee of congress, aiul ran away, overturning the carriage uud injuring the coachman. Mr. Adams re mained ftt home for two days, aiul l>e- stowed nil the attention and time upon the man that a child could give its father, regarding alike the religious condition find physicial sufferings of his unfortunate servant. The first interview between loan and master was quite touching. “Your horses ure gone uud the carriage with them,” said the servant, when lie first saw Mr. Adams after the accident, and adding to this that he was a “dying man.” “Never mind the horses and carriage,” said Mr. Adams, kindly. “If you ure a dving man. think of j*our soul.”—Ben: Ferley poor© The >iirkn;Li(iea or German lU'i’lmrntii. To take the collective list first tho guards are designated “llatnmel.” or sheep. Tlie cavalry christen the infantry, as a body, by the alternative names of “sand hares.” “sand carriers” ami “clod hoppers.” The infantry invariably speak of the cavuly as rooms.” The guards call soldiers of the line “field rats.” The cuiraissiers are known as “flour sacks.” the hussars as “pack threads,” the artillery as “cow soldiers,” aud the pioneers as “moles.” Coming to separate corps tn the guard, the First regiment of foot are called “tin heads,” because of the color of their helmet: the First grenadiers are the “potato peelers,” the chausseur*s are“ green frogs,” and the lnizzars are “glow worms,” the uniform of the first being green and tUnt of the second scarlet. Tbe Third uhlans are “dnsties,” because of the dull yellow of the facings on their tunics, and tlie pioneers are ‘Earthworms." In the infantry of the line tlie men of the Eighth ure “cracknel guard.” au allusion to tlie yellow knot of their epaulettes, uud those of the Twenty-seventh are the “botchers,” because they are said to patch their uni forms almost as long as they will hold together. In the calvary the Seventh cuirai.vsiers are the “whitesmiths, the First huzzars the “death's heads” (their shako bears this emblem); tho Fourth huzzars are the “partridges,” so called on account of their brown uniforms.—Brooklyn Eagle Craxy King Lutlwig an “Lohengrin.** More picturesque, if sttll more absurd, was his making believe to be “Lohen grin,” in a tank constructed on the roof of his palace, wherein he tried to go boating in a gilded bark drawn by swans. But the water refused to look picturesque aud pretty and got turbid and stagnant. So the Troubadour King caused it to be col ored blue by means of a quantity of in digo. Then the blue water stapled tlie plumage of his swans and disagreed more over with the poor birds to an alarmiug extent. But his majesty, then the liand- I somest man in Europe, looked into his j glittering silver armour and swan-crested helmet the very ideal of Wagner’s hero. A Ciii iouN Experiment in Guernacy. | That suit of armor, made expressly for the The history of Guernsey furnishes a cu- S was composed of solid silver and rious and perhaps instructive instance of ! cost > * Iwlieve, some $18,000. The helmet the kind of uses that paper money may ! nn d shield were veritable works of arts. f * determined to build a meat I After Wagner’s death the king lmui- will hover for days and nights over a horse or cow that is on its last legs. A northerner was driven out of southern Georgia last winter by some one telling him that the buzzards were beginning to keep an eye on him. Last summer the sheriff of a county in Florida disappeared hi the woods after having loaded up a big revolver, and told his wife he was going to shoot himself. Some little effort wps made to le;;rn whether he had kept his promise, hut after a day of searching in tlie cypres:; swamps the searchers sat down in the shade of their houses and said they would wait three days, when the buzzards would find him, and then they would find the buzzards. The turkey buzzard, despite his fomiid- ; able look, is a harmless bird. Not only •does he never strike a creature till it is down, but lie hardly ever strikes it till it is dead.—Georgia Cor. New York Sun. The Monitor** Narrow Escape. Since the opeuing of the Monitor-Morri- mac naval battle panorama lost January, the spectacle has been witnessed by many persons who saw the actual engagement in Hampton roods twenty-five years ago. Not long ugo the panorama was visited by one who actually participated * in the battle. This visitor was Samuel Driscoll, a fireman on tlie Monitor. He was loud j In his praises of the mimic flglit, aud im parted a hit of news concerning the Moni tor. He said that Immediately after the engagement the Monitor broke the rod of her eccentric, nnd was laid up off the Rip Rope for nearly two weeks In an entirely defenseless condition. She might at any time during that period have been de ployed by the Merrimac, hut she deceived SESLF keeping np steam.—New market, amt 114,000 were devoted to ]iay tlie cost. Notes were issued l>y tho au thorities for that uniount, nml were suiir- nutcod on tlie “wholo of tho projierty of the island, said to be worth four millions.” These notes wore worthless outside of Guernsey, and so they were never export ed. They were one pound notes, and were numbered from J up to 4,000, With them thy coutreetor was I Slid, he paid ids work men iu the same money, nml those that supplied him with materials. Tradesmen took them for mods, landlords for rent and the uuthorities for taxes. “In due season," to quote from Jona than Duncan, “tlie market wns complete. Tho butchers' stalls, with some public rooms constructed over them, were let for an annual refit of i‘400. At the first year of tenancy tlie states called iu tlie lirst butch of notes, numbered from 1 to 400, mid with the £400 of real money received for rent redeemed the i'400 of representa tive money expressed by tlie meat market notes. At tlie end of ten years all the notes were redeemed through the applica tion of ten years’ rental; nnd since tliut perjyd the meat market lias returned n clear annual revenue to the states nnd con tinues to afford accommodation without out having cost a farthing in taxes to any inhnbitnuL—Cassell’s Kuniily Magazine. Frugal Habit, of David Davis. Though in tho possession of ample means—his wealth was rated in the mil lions—David Davis continued to observe the frugal manners of his early,days, even after being appointed a justice of tlie supreme court anil elected senator. Punc tually at 1 o'clock every day he made his way to tlie stand kept for many years by a woman called “Dyspepsia Mary,” and there ate his lunch, which consisted of two apples, a ginger cookie and a gloss of milk, costing him fifteen cents in all. Tht. hill of fare was never changed. In other ways ho was equally economi cal. I doubt if his expenses before liis marriage amounted to more than $2,SOO a year. Hu lived at on old fashioned hotel wher. a modest apartment was always kept ln readiness for him. This lie used as a sleeping room, sitting room and office couihiued. It was here that he spent must of his time when not occupied in the discharge of his official dnties. He was at *11 times accessible to callers. Though fond of company, he was rarely seen In “society.” The empty chatter of drawing rooms had no attractions for him. With a few congenial spirits, how ever, he knew how to exchange the small talk of the hour, and play the agreeable jmst.—Washington Cor. New York Tribune. mered the whole suit to pieces with his own hands and caused the fragments to bo melted down.—Lucy H. Hooper in tho New York World. Ilrottivr Ganin.r*. Most Solemn Heller. “I, lie* bin movin’ 'round on top dis yairtli moos' 80 y’urs now, an’ it am my solemn belief dnt de pusson who pays de least attention to de weather tnjoy. life 30 per cent de best,”—Detroit Free Press. Machine Cum for the IlrltUh. After much dallying ami hesitation, the British war office has decided to adopt the machine gun for the army. Three- barreled Nordcnfeldts, each weighing sixty pounds, nnd firing *100 bullets in one minute, and five-barreled nuns of 130 pounds, aiul firing (100 rounds a minute, are to bo sent to E^ypt and India. The twelve-barreled gun, that fires 1,200 rounds a minute, is Iteing experimented wit h.—C liicago 11 erald. Nurses, n class annually responsible for much trouble ut summer hotels, are “not taken” at several this year. Mexico'* First aiul List American Colony. In the time of Maximilian * colony of Americans asked the emjieror for land on which to settle, lie kindly Rave them their own choice, and they settled at Cor doba, where they had the advantage of the tropical clime aud were secure from yellow fever. They were 300 in number, and in a short time, with true Atncricau industry, they made business brisk. Three American hotels were established, ane the plantations were the finest a^d most prosperous in the land. Maximilian looked on the little band with favor and gave them ample aid aud protection. Dar ing the rebellion the liberty party made raids on their homes, destroyed .their property, ami not only made them prison ers aud hurried them off to Yucatan—a place from which there is no escape*—but murdered them whenever they wanted sdme new amusement. Maximilian 1tas powerless to help those who had pros pered under his care, aud just when he was to be shot, the last of the colony, who feared the liberal party, deserted their once happy, homes and went to another country. Only one remained, Dr. A. A. Hassell, who has been the solitary Ameri can here for twenty years. The hotels have disappeared, and the plantations, now possessed by Mexicans, bear no traces of their once tidy and prosperous appear* auce.—^ielly Ely’s Mexico Letter. ck of fin's!. • l (Jri Al.-o a large stock to s dent from.—t'ai. uud g.f m A.R ROBERTSON, Athens, Oh THREEiilJLLS m a mmmm - AJtoTnvrtr for all T>i<*a*e« nf th* Liver.EI4 Rf,Ta, Mom.irh and Rowel*. 1 TflPiswmaen and Rowela. \ t>.».’r,| >»•“ mmm v jo: j To ISuu Alicad of tho Train*. I have always owned fcist horses. I re member one which achieved quite a repu tation while 1 bad him. I sold him to the Albany railroad to run ahead of trains. That might seem somewhat novel nowa days, but at that time trains did not run as fiist ns they do now. Neither were there the facilities for telegraphing and flagging nnd switching trains, to prevent accident*; ar.d that was what my horse 1 was used for. He was started out every | day just before the passenger trains’ j leaving time to flag the train coming the ! other way. and lie always made it. Horses were useful animals in those days. It | was a common thing to hitch a team of horses to a car and pull it into New York, after the regular trains had passed. The father of Dan Whitmore, of the Mer chants' Exchange, used to do his market ing that way every night. I have had a great deal of fun on those trips, as I was then quite a lx>y.—E. Goddard in Globe- Democrat. I>r. ton (iuililrn a Noted Authority. Dr. von (Hidden, wh<* lost his life in | the attempt to prevent the suicide of the late king of Bavaria, was a noted au thority in the science of mental and ner vous diseases. Investigations have lxx»n carried on iu his laboratory in the minute anatomy of the brain, spinal cord mid sense organs which have proved fruitful of results. Among these he established a method of studying the connections of the nervous system, which consists in extir pating a sense organ or other part of an animal when young and then allowing the animal to grow up. At death the ani mal is minutely examined and the nerve filers which have failed to develop indi cate the paths of nervous connection l>e- tween the extirpated sense organ and the brain center, l ie had been working for many years by this and other methods to determine the mode of connection l>c- tween the retina and the brain, but tho results of his labor have not yet been made public.—Chicago News. H. P. SMART & BRO. Manufacturers <if Yellow l’ine I.naiiier of Krerr lii.eri|iti»n ROUGH S DRESED r. Wcatlierboarding Pickets, Vegetable Flooring. Shingles, Stav nd Fruit Crates, etc. etc. Steam Saw and Plaining Mills h EirnnannsICmti Connected with npril 13\ Midville l»v Private Kail road and Telephone Lii Bitter Extract* Injurious to Digestion. Believers in the necessity to health of spring bitters will lie interested in tho in vestigations of IJr. Cheltsotf, a* reputable European physician, who lias found that the common bitter extracts really act in juriously in retarding digestion, while there are no beneficial effects.—Medical Journal. A Jockey Winning a ltace. One who was close to the rails on the Derby day seems to have been au observ ant man for he describes his impression of Archer, who rode the winner, as ho shot by: “To some extent,” he says, “be has a countenance peculiarly suited for tho expression of pain or anxiety. The short upper lip displays nearly all his teeth, and the face, long and thin, with high cheek bones and yellow ashen com plexion, suggests a grim likeness to a death’s head. Justus ho passed he waa still fighting for the race, and indeed one horse was iu front oi him, but it was tbe horse immediately behind him that seemed to trouble him. 11c was looking around at this horse, and, heavens, what a look! It was like that of a man about to be hanged; a duellist lighting with a foe at «nce feared and bated, a man, in short, in any position of awful strain, with the complex emotions of terror, hope and re solve. It was all the observation of a sec ond, but it brought home to the miud tho abysmal depths of life or death, exultant joy or horrible despair, that underlie the gayety aud the blare, the bright dresses, the smiling women, tho popping of cham pagne bottles, and the vacuous noises of tlie Eosom race course.”—London Letter. Duflulo and the Indian Qustlon. Whatever may be said against the buf falo destroyers of the far west, the meat killers, the tongue huuters, and robe seekers, they have added no small item to the settlement of the Indian question on the plains. The winter of 1881-2 saw their deadliest work, and over a quarter of a million of robes were shipped from this valley, holding now about the sat^ num ber of cattle. The true plains buffalo is now practically annihilated in the United States, there no doubt being droves of them on the Candtan rivers further north, but in this district even they are rapidly disappearing under the rain of bullets that lias been poured upon them for the lost ten years. There is still left a species .called the wood, or timber, or mountain buffulo that congregates in very small herds and that occupies the district of the Big Horn and Wind River mountains. They are also found in the Yellowstone National park, and will no doubt remain undisturbed there for years to come.— Yellowstone Valley Cor. New York Times. Never calculate on a mild winter be cause you are short of feed.—Rural New Yorker. In New Jersey the mosquitoes are so bad at night that no girl gets courted un less she has a good mosquito bar. HAMPTON & WEBB, MANUFACTURERS OF ALL KIN PS OF C A ND A M*DE OtJTJGF fl KH 8UG.IK t iikCandy a pecialty, Cocoaut, Peanut, Bars& ilj ^ •».r’RAW FORD &CO S . PALACE DRUG TORE i'inesl goods at lowest price ' Fllll HM1S, CMUS-Ml mil IT 5Jj | PJI, Hair, TO^in‘ffi^D ,elR FLESH cr BRUSHES Toilet Powders Drugs and M on’t fail to call on ua—Opposite I’ost-Ollice. x'.rA-u te ledici n '".QremloFel PIANOS, 0 RGANS, GUITARS, BANJOS. BLANK BOOKS, PAPER, INKS,Etc. (uH<a (fiasieetl QlereSoHelisfi REDDUC OT0G ROF eawdiS ,skcolG ,se PIANOS AND ORGANS MST MIKES, LOWEST PIES, E1SIEST rouble fo i-how an Instrument. Ladles specially invited to drop info's Piuj Him,Mu; street Ito l