Newspaper Page Text
THE BANNER-WATCHMAN, ATHENS, GEORGIA, JUNE 1889
y.-i.
— -
BANNER - WATCHMAN
ESTABLISHED 1834.
Daily, Sunday and Weekly.
The Daily Bannkr-Watchman is delivered
bv carriers in the city or mailed postage tree at
143. a week, 50c. per month, $1.25 for three month
or *5.00 a year.
Tin Sunday or Weekly Banner-Watch-
*vn is delivered in the city or maiied postage
tree tor $l.oo a year
Contributions of News solicited from all
fcponsihle sources Address,
MARK COOPER POPE, PROPRIETOR,
Athens, Ga.
BISMARCK OF TO-DAY.
Bismarck has grown old during the
last few years, his mustache is white as
snow, and his walk less erect than in
former years, bat the power of his face
and the might of his eyes live still the
same as they were ten years ago. When
he sits down,it is as if he was on guard,
his sword laid across his knees, as
formerly old Hagen used to sit, and
though he is no Hagen in guilt and
wickedness, he is a Hagen in faithfulr
ness, and, if need be, in stern w rath.
And he is on guard at the gates of the
Fatherland.
Bismarck, as everybody knows, is not
an orator—I nearly said, tTiank God, he
is no orator. His speech has been
likehed to a forest stream which rum
bles over stones and roots. The com
parison is somewhat poor. I think I
know a better, though a rather techni
cal one namely, bis speech is like quick
silver drawn out. Take a drop of quick
silver containing some lead or zinc, put
it on a pane of glass and hold it slant
ingly. The drop swells and rolls, but
presently it stops, becomes thinner and
longer, remains immovable for a mo
ment, gathers new strength to flow, be
comes thin once again, and so forth.
Thus it is with the Chancellor's
words; first half a sentence comes out,
then he hesitates, stops, or utters a
short inarticulate sound, and goes on
again. It is evident that to speak is a
physical exertion, hut even w T hen he is
in first-rate form he does not talk
fluently.
But on closer observation the reason
appears very soon. The form of hi6
speech is improvised oh the spur of the
moment, but, unlike many fluent speak
ers,he does not use the first expression
which may come to his mind, but while
he is uttering the first half of a sentence
he is thinking of how to shape the sec
ond half in order to express exactly
what he wishes to say. If he make a
joke or a .slight observation he speaks
quickly and without hesitation, hut as
soon as he returns to the serious treat
ment of a political subject this painfully
accurate expression, the result of men
tal work, becomes again apparent,
which shows that he endeavors not to
say a syllable which he cannot recon
cile with Ms responsible position. This
is the reason why his speeches concern
ing foreign politics, read like official
diplomatic documents, every word is
carefully considered.
His voice is peculiar, high-pitched
and not very powerful. It has been
called a thin voice, but this only ex
presses one of its qualities. Another is
that it is so remarkabiy young that one
would think it almost incredible fora
man of his age to possess such a voice.
If one does not see hRn while he is
speaking it is difficult to believe that it is
not a young lieutenant of twenty-eight
who is speaking (which, by the w ay, is
rather a pity, since the snarl and the
drawl of the German lieutenant is pro
verbially detestable.) But put in con
nection with this quality it can sound
extremely soft and flattering, and I
should not be surprised if ih former
years,when he was Ambassador,some of
his personal successes had been due
just to this timbre of hip voice.
by both methods, snaps his lingers in
the face of the public, and defiantly ex
claims, no man has ever yet called pie a
fool. -i',t I 1| ■! UR , ii
O vain boaster, weighed in the bal
ance thou art found wanting?and when
thy relaxed,nerveless hands shall cease
to clutch' thy gold; then thou wilt dis
cover too late, what in fact thou know-
est now, and so do all men, that thou
bast nothing, and art nothing, but a
thief and a fool.
‘V ‘MBS. CLEVELAND. i v
At the marriage of Mr. Perrin and
Mrs. Folsom Mrs. Cleveland wore a
white surah silk dotted with black stars
and trimmed on the front with pink
satin. At her throat was a cardinal
rose. Her brown hair was done a la
pompadour in front, as her best pictures
show her. The World correspondent
was the only newspaper maii in the
house. Mrs. Cleveland pleasantly said
“Do not puff us, will you?” Mrs. Fol-
some wore a gray- travelling dress of
Henrietta Cloth, and her silvery hair
was arranged like her daughter’s.
Mr. Perrine wore the conventional
clawhammer and white tie. He was
vivacious and witty, laughing heartily
at his own sallies. To the reporter he
said: “We go as far as Omaha, re
turning to Buffalo within ten days.
Mrs. Perrine desires to see Omaha.
That’s why we go there.” •
After the ceremony the relatives pres
ent saluted Mrs. Perrine, Mrs. Cleve
land being the first after her new father
to kiss her mother’s cheek. She left a
tear upon it when she did so. Mrs.
Folsom looked at her daughter a mo
ment: then, wiping the tear away, took
Mrs. Cleveland’s hand and said “Fran
cis, wish me joy,dear.”
“I do, dear mother; you know I
do,” said Mrs. Cleveland, and then she
kissed her mother again. This time
there was no tear-stain, and the old
winning smile had come back to the
girlish face. Mrs. Cleveland did not
kiss her new father; she shook his
hand.—Ex. •
of them consult him religiously before
nisiking business or other important
movements, llis judgment in business
matters is .regarded as extraordinarily
good. ■■ ? » •«
Of course he is rich. Just how rieh,
however no man can say, though lie
must possess several millions, tie has
given away a fortune, every twelve
statesmanlike views.
The best that can he said of Cleve
land; up to this present writing, is,
that he is I capable, honorable, admin
istrative ofiieer, with good talents,
even the very best for ex
ecutive work; but without the
faintest trace of that rarest,
gift—geuius.
diviuest
months for years. Of the extent and
scope of his benefactions, indeed, no
A TORY CRY OF DISTRESS
There is a strong effort being made in
one save himself has any accurate England to induce the Libernl-Uuionists
knowledge. I ehaneed onqe to fee a to j rop their separate organization and
private record of his charities. It
covered a period of one month of thirty
days. Within that time this most gene
rous of philanthropists had given away
$28,000—nearly, as you see, a round
thousand dollars a day. He has an army
of pensioners. Old people, formerly on
his paper, who. are on his pension lists
will be taken care of even though fate
should decree his death. Arrangement,
are already made for this. They will
be protected no matter what may hap
pen to him. He has a beautiful house
in town, another in the country, and
third by the sea, at Long Branch,with a
troop of servants, and a variety of car
riages. But he spends little upon him
self aside from his household expendi
tures. While iii town, he does not ride
in any of his carriages twice a year. He
walks to and from his house in the
than our. hearts desire.
Surely it would be the . highest wis
dom for us all, to close for a while the
printed page; and relax just for a little,
the tort, weary muscles, and lift our
eyes,in devout gratitude towards the
supernal. ♦ .
THE OBSERVANT CITIZEN.
Despatches from Augusta, - Me., re
port that young James G. Blaine, jr.,
has once more donned his overalls and
is presumably again hard at worked in
the machine shop to which his father
sent him after his flamboyant career in
New York. Much was made of this at
the time the young man thus begau to
earn a living “at eigty cents a day.”
He did not then stick to it long, how
ever,for he has been for a month with
his father in Washington and spent the
last week with the “boys” ip New
York—touching which stay many
stories are told. Meanwhile his young
and pretty wife is working very hard
with Belasco and Frohman, preparing
for her debute on the stage next Fall.
She is five or six hours a day at her
lessons—exercising her voice, learning
all the business of the stage, studying
various tasks set for her by Belasco and
doing exercises in calisthenics mean
while. She has no desire, it is said, to
go upon the stage, but it is a matter of
necessity with her. The Blaine family
make no accusations of any sort against
her, but since the time of her refusal to
live with Madame la Mere at the home
in Augusta—for reasons which those
who know that lady’s eccentricities of
temper say were amply sufficient—she
has received not a cent for the. support
of herself or her little babys from either
her husband or his family.—Ex.
IS HE A FOOL*
Sometimes a man, of undoubted in
tellectual force, hut who has perverted
his powers, and all his life, has endeav
ored to make the worse appear the bet
ter cause, will remark, as if it were to
his credit, that no one has ever called
him a fool. This is really a confession
that the charges against him of pecula
tion, fraud, and miscellaneous infamies
cannot'be disproved. It is the same as
to acknowledge, that he fe a knave.
This parade of intellectual supremacy
leads the unsuspecting, and the illogi
cal to fallacious conclusions. When
one has reached middle life, and has
built a high character, by right doing,
no harm can result; but, those who ate
young, and whose characters are in a
plastic, and formative condition, may
be misled to their ruin, by the specious
and plausible statements, of a brilliant,
audacious,and unscrupulous intellectual
monster. Every fool isr.at a knave;
hut every knave is a fool. A large es
tate is desirable, if it be acquired hon
ostly, and used wisely; otherwise, it is
a curse. Men wish ‘a long rent roll; a
yacht, a cottage by the sea side, or in
the mountains, European travel, art
treasures, and rare paintings, until they
will use any means to acquire
them. Whenever they get them, they
setup to be considered as somebody;
and unfortunately, their Neighbors are
hot very particular in looking into
their antecedents; if only they can
make brilliant displays, and entertain
•sumptuously. Thus a premium is put
on vice and dishonor; and the pompous
maudlin, tipsy, successful man of the
v/erld, who is determined to put money
in his purse, by hook, or by crook, or
West End daily, for the sake of the ex-,
ercise. In the country, he spends
great deal of time walking about bis
grounds, and frequently gathers clus
ters of roses with the dew still sparkling
upon them, and sends them, perhaps, to
a friend or. neighbor, or more likely to
some one who is ill.
He is abstemious in his diet, and even
when he attends splendid dinners,
whether in his own house, or in the
house of other, he' scarcely more than
touches the viands laid before him. For
years and years.he never used any kinds
of intoxicants, although wine .was
placed before his guests, which they
might'drink or allow to remain un
touched, as they pleased. Recently,
however, his physicians ordered him to
take a little liquor for his health.
He tried it for a time, but it was so re-
pellant to his own desires, that I believe
he has already returned to his old
practice of touching not and tasting
not. His town house is a repository of
mementoes of distinguished men, and
the collection of manuscripts in his
library probably cannot be surpassed
by that of any other individual in the
country. He tells me that some time
he will give his manuscripts to some ap
propriate institution in this citv. He
has entertaine^jpore distinguished peo
ple than any other man .in America (
and his correspondence, .which extends
all around the world, is quite volumin
ous enough to require the services of
two men. Withal he is. the most ap
proachable of men, and ho one, how
ever poor or lowly, has met with a re
buff, or, going at the proper time, ever
failed to see and converse with him and
receive the most courteous treatment.
Altogether he is a man among men, and
he deserves all the happiness which is
Ills, as he enters on his sixty-first year.
GEORGE W. CHILDS.
A Correspondent in an exchange pre
sents the following facts, in regard to
one of the greatest editors of the day:
I called in at George W. Child’s office
the other day and added my congratu
lations to the hundreds of others which
had been showered on the good publish,
er, on the attainment of the sixtieth an
niversary of his birth. He sat at a
handsome desk, his kind face wreathed
in smiles. He was just reading a letter
from Grace Greenwood, who truthfully
observed that he didn’t look a day older
than when she met him twenty years
ago.
He is the youngest looking man of
three score years that I have ever seen
His face is as smooth and round and as
destitute of wrinkles as the face of a
baby. It has a baby-like expression of
placidity, too. With all his care and
responsibilities that attend the manage
ment of a big business the fact that his
countenance shows no trace of wrinkles
or worry is marvellous. He is at his
office from 9 in the morning until 4 in
the afternoon in summer and until 5 or
6 in the winter. He has, therefore,
wisely made his sanctum as comfortable
and beautiful as a lady’s boudoir. It is
inlaid with costly woods, carved and
decorated by the best artists. Me
mentoes of friends, nearly all of them
men and women of distinction, cover
the walls and crowd the chairs and
tables above the room. Mr. Childs’s
newspaper, which under his direction
has from a losing property become one
of the best paying publications in the
country, yields a net profit of about $1,
000 a day. “This property,” Mr
Childs loves to say; “was built up with
out freaking other people down:” Cer
tainly among his stanchest and most
admiring friends are his rival editors,
He frequently gathers them under his
roof at a dinner or reception,, and many
form with the Tories a body under one
name and control. In the May number
of the Nineteenth Century Mr. Edward
Dicey makes an earnest appeal to this
ond. It is inspired by the indications
that, as matters are going, Home Rule
will win at the next general election.
The reconstitution of the Liberal
party on the old basis, it is asserted, is
now-hopeless. Fveri if Mr. Gladstone
should die, or, as Mr. Dicey sardonical
ly expresses it, “be translated to those
serener spheres which, in the opinion
of his admirers', he is so eminently cal
culated to adorn,” Home Rule would
still be a part of the Radical platform.
The contention is that the Liberal-
Unionists are simply frittering away
the Anti-Home Rule strength and all
the time losing their own influence in.
politics besides. “The Liberal-Unionist
party,” says the writer, has proved a
failure,” and he refers, among other
things, to the losses at the by-elections
for proof. It is worse than useless for
it to continue longer in its present at
titude .and foment such quarrels as the
recent one at Birmingham, which
threaten to further weaken the govern
mental alliance.
The prospect is, according to this ob
server, that if the Liberal-Unionists
members of Parliament present them
selves under their present party banner
as candidates at the next election they
will be defeated “in the great majority
of instances.” The average Tory does
not enter heartily into the support of a
man who calls himself* a Liberal, and
vice versa. The division in names
creates a disastrous coldness. With a
union under one management, though
some votes may be lost at the start, the
situation would be much improved.
Thus reasons the writer, who clearly is
in a very bad humor and is not
fond of America, as is indicated by the
following;
“We shall be told by the Gladstonian
organs, in the transatlantic jargon
The last Legislature of New York
passed a law, authorizing the Board of
.Estimate and Apportionment, of New 1
York City, to issue bonds to the ainouiif
of $400,000 with w hich to build a w ing
to the Museum of Natural History. May ?
or Grant refuses to sell the bonds, and
turn over the money to the committee,
unless the museum is to be kept - Open
on Sunday—the only day on which
the masses could visit it.
The committee will .not give their
consent to what they consider, a dese
cration of the Sabbath. Thus for the
present, the matter stands with no im
mediate prospect of having a new wing
built.
The time is auspieiousfor the thorough
discussion of the Sabbath question; on
which much is to be said pro and con.
which they have adopted since they
joined hands with the Irish agitators,
that another Unionist has thrown up
the sponge.”
Mr. Dicey says that fie has not
“thrown up the sponge.” But he has
admitted a desperateness in the situation
by demanding the amalgamation of the
Tory-Liberal-U uion alliance under
penalty of defeat, and this comes very
near it.—Ex.
The Department of State has a very
dedicate find imperative duty to dis
charge, in seeking immediate redress
for Miss Fanny Van Nostroud; M; 8
Nannie Marvin; and Mrs. A. L. Dorr,
of New York. On April 10th these
ladies sailed from New York.
While at Nice, Mme.Gourrieri agreed
to make them two dresses, by a given
time. As the dresses were not com
pleted in time, they left Nice without
them, come on to Menton
and took apartments at the Hotel
de Menton. Here they were arrested,
and thrust into a filthy, damp prison;
tried before a magistrate, and compell
ed to pay $100 for clothes which they
have never received.
The whole matter has been laid be
fore. Secretary Blaine, and it is believed,
that an apology will be demanded, and
a restitution of the money, and other
redress besides.
These were delicate, refined ladies,
and thers is no excuse whatever for the
indignities offered.
Neither apoligies, however, nor res
titution of money fraudulently ob
tained, nor money in anjr amount, can
atone, for the contumely, insults, and
degradation offered those noble, unpro
tected ladies. The progress of this case
will be watched with great interest;
and the gallant, courtly Secretary of
State will have the sympathy of all
Americans, especially of all the women
thereof, while he insists upondemanding
that the most extreme measures shall be
taken against Mme. Gourrien, and the
ruffians who executed her orders.
A Little Chiu** I..
Ralph
ei?e, 13 the hero of
dale, pa. 1
ow:
Several
around an wiprotecteS,^^
Widner decided to takSSti
As the Water rises J
sarfac* the little fellow» " a
*t by lying “^ughti
putting his head dow n
in trying this (eat h«V*n5|
and plunged head fi™ l 051 Hi
which is over six feet dJ? llle «
he turned a complete 600^
up head first, but asU?'
uttered a cry that attracted ? ^
of a playmate, Ralph
years ot age. The latter
p k C f\u nd ’ With a PrecocX*^
mind that would have d«T ptc, P
adult, he took in the situS*! *
and, seizing the already X* 1 *
boy, he held his headaL* .'
of the water until thanJ?^
the children drew a man V( *t|
restored to his parents rat her T?* 1
for his dangerous bath f
completely)
i but
J*T««ervat|on of gi>v,
Mr. Priestly Smith, ophthalmj.
to the Queen’s hospital Bto!'
has prepared for the sch ’
town a series of golden piece*,
important subject, which
on a mounted scroll, are to hi i
in all the board school room,
cardinal maxims are all that
sidered needful for the sclmu.^
in mind. These are: “Sit —
square, keep your eyes at ,
inches from your work, writeon ^
and not on a flat table, read *£'
book well up, do not read vs?
print, do not work in a bad lW
you cannot see your work prLl
your teacher." As there is 2!]
pictorial example, this is ill, ^
four drawings exliibiting g^,
positions.—New York Telegram.'
good mil
A student of the theatre notice, J
the negro is not such a popular J.
ter on the stage as formerly,
Irishman is continually a soata 1
pleasure. His wit and humor,
never cease to enliven the stage.
DR. GREENFIELD.
A LOST OPPORTUNITY.
On the 21st ult. Mr. Cleveland was
entertained by the Young Men’s Dem
ocratic Club of New York, and deliv
ered, as was expected, an oration.
There was too much consciousness
about it, and egotism, and therefore,
, judged by any high standard of oratory ,
the address was a failure ; and as for
statesmanship, it is not to he consid
ered, for a moment. The ex-President
seems to have the presidential bee in
his bonnet, just as if he had never tasted
of the sweets and bitterness appertain
ing unto that exalted station. He seems
never to have forgotten for a moment,
that by many, he is spoken of as a pos
sible winning candidate for the Presi
dency in ’92. With ■ sadness we are
sometimes forced to reflect, that the
race of available statesmanship is ex
tinct. We say “available,” be
cause we believe ' in our
hearts, that our country is full of
cultured, gifted, profound men, with
great legislative and executive ability,
who cannot be induced to accept any
office, under any considerations.
Mr. Cleveland ought to be removed
far above all ambitions, whether petty
or great, and ought to have abundant
information to give the people on all
public matters, affecting their interests.
It was a grand occasion for giving to
the country an ideal mission for the
Democratic party; for discussing the
tariff and the surplus; for setting forth
the iniquity of the pension robbery and
jobbery, while giving bountifully all
that is just to the heroes of the war; for
attacking that monster iniquity of the
age, the trusts ;and for showing how
only, through a proper tariff, it can be
made impossible for any trust to
survive. Instead of all this, we have
fine words enough, and well rounded
periods; many utterances of what is
plausible and popular; and all the
while, a significant sideglance at the
convention of ’92.
The ex>-Pressident has disappointed
the country. Most probably, he has
been overrated. Perhaps, after all, he
is on\y an houorable executive officer,
who regards “public office as a public
trust.;” but is utterly incapable of con
ceiving and expressing broad, original,
We had an ececntric friend, of very
orignal views on all subjects, who used
to say, in the beautiful spring time,
after a ride alone in the country, and
pleasing meditations on nature and the
God of nature, that Dr. Greenfield is a
most eloquent preacher, whose ser
mons leave one in an exalted and devout
frame. We were only a lad, when we
heard this remark; but, it stimulated us
to thinking on the significance, and
beauty, and granduer of what other
wise we considered common objects of
nature; and
“In all our wonderings round this world of care,
In all our grief i and God has gi«en our share,”
We have never ceased to think pleas
antly, and sometimes rapturously, of
Dr. Greenfield.
A word spoken in season, how fitting
is it! It is like apples of gold in pic
tures of silver! We should sow beside
all waters, and never withhold our
hand; for we do not know whieh shall
prosper, this or that. The chance seed-
thought of our friend, who, long since,
has been clothed upon with immortali
ty, has continued to bear fruit in a long
and not uneventful life. Thus too, the
power of littles is illustrated. “It is
only the littleness of man, which sees
no greatness in a trifle.”
The plucking of the forbidden fruit,
whatever it may mean, whether it is to
he interpreted literally or allegorically,
seems to he & small affair, in itself, still
it “brought death into the w orld and
all our -woe.”
There are sermons enough in green-
fields, and in barren fields; m vegeta
tion ruined by sun, or water, or prema
ture frost, or devoured by omniverous,
omnipresent worms, had w*e only eyes
Tho Macon Evening News informs us
that Mr. Tift, has located at Tifto'n, on
the Georgia, Southern & Florida road,
96 miles from Macon, an experimental
or model farm. He 1ms set aside 1000
acres for this purpose. Professors Irby
and Fitzgerald of the Mississppi Agri-
State of Ohio, City okTolido,
Lucas County, S. 8.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath (
he is the senior partner ofthefimf
J. Cheney & Co., doing busintsiij
City of Toledo, County and Stated
esaid, and that said lirm will pi
sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL
for each and every case ofCiTiuit
cannot be cured by the use ot 1
Catarrh Cure.
FRANK J. CHEml
Sworn to before me and subs
ed in my presence, this 6th day ot 1
cember, A. D. ’86
A. W.GLEASOX.
SEAL./-
‘ Notaryl
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in 1
y and acts directly on the b
mucus surfaces of the system,
testimonials, free. F. J. CHEXETI
CO., Toledo, O. Jp0"Sold by I
gists, 7pc.
ularke Sheriff Sale.
to read them.
Wise is he who has learned to read
this book of nature, which is ever open
to him. And now, in descending,
copious showers,refreshing the thirsty
earth, he must be stolid indeed who is
not taught his utter helplessness, and
a lesson of gratitude. We have stood
powerless, and looked for weary weeks,
at the Heavens which were like brass,
and have watched the unproductive fur
row*, almost in despair, for the germi
nating seed. Now, however, he who
rideth upon the wings of the wind, and
who holds the waters in the hollow of
his hands, has been touched with com
passion for us, and the suffering' earth,
and has graciously granted us more
cultural College, at good salaries have
been elected to take charge of the farm.
One of these gentlemen is a Horticultu
rist, and on his arrival is to go to Au
gusta, and study under Mr. Berckmans.
The name of the farm is to be cyclo-
netta; because, it is situated exactly,
in the track of a former cyclone.
From the kindest motives, we would
say, that it is a mistake to locote a
model farm or anything else . in the
track of a cyclone. It is only a ques
tion of time, when another cyclone will
traverse the same track, and overthrow
with tragic results, the Careful labors
of years.
The name is ominous. The spot is
under the curse of Heaven. Construct
elsewhere Mr. Titft; before too late you
regret it, in tears and anguish.
W71U be Sold befer- the Court Emi
VV in the city of Athtm,
i riiiiiiiniM
ily next, wiiml
_ lay u ,
legal boors of sale, the followtu
wit: One house and lot in the cii
Clarke county, Ga„ bounded onj_.- .
lands of Jim Heard, on the Bjmtb kji
Cox. on the East by Mr. J. 8
West by Morris street. Levied on
erty of Isaac Williams, to satlsb
from Justice’s Court, ^I6th district,
county, in favor of E. h » alei •
Isaac Williams. Levy made by ’•
X o„ and 'urned over io me for r
and sale. This May 29th, 1889^ ^,
7-2
Clarke Sheriff Sale.
ill be sold before the Court H<*| j
President Harrison will spend the
summer w*ith his family at Deer Park,
West Va., in a cottage belonging to
Senator H. G. Davis. Deer Park is in
the midst of the Alleghanies;. and is
within six hours ride of Washington.
His nearest neighbor will be Stephen
Elkins. With such proximity, it will
not he easy for him to carry out those
resolutions of reform, which recently,
in penitential moments, he has formed.
On the high,cool Alleghanies he may get
rest and vigor; but contamination from
contact with Elkins may be too great
price to pay, for escape from the malaria
of the Patomac flats!
North by S- Marks’ estate, So-|y
Jackson, and on the West by
Levied on as the property of Phoew
satisfy a 11 fa issued from
district, G M, said county, in g
Jackson. Levy made byK.
and turned over to me for adverusw-i
—This May 29th.
Notice.
Sheriff Sale*
G eorgia clarkel cocnt^Mi*
before the court House itow*
on the first Tuesday in July * *
aeafflgafgwgkaa
BLAINE’S PRETTY DAUGHTER HATTIE.
Miss Hattie Blaine is indeed excep
tionally pretty. She has a complex
ion of roses and lilies, and the roses are
kin' Trustee, to satisfy ^Hfi ?
State and coraty
Linton tax collector
noUc^^ve^Ttenantto^^J
exquisitely tinted. Her face is heauti-
June 1st, 1889.
7-2
ful. It is a soft,rounded.oval in shape,
and her eyes are large and expressively
blue. Miss Hattie Blaine will be a de
butante here next Winter, and one
hundred to one that she’ll be a belle,
with a following the like of which has
not been seen here for many a day.—Ex
Every Lady
Her Own Physician.—A Lady who
or many years suffered from Uterine
Troubles.—Falling, Displacements, Leu-
corrhoea and Irregularities, finally found
remedies which completely cubed her.
Any Lady can take the remedies, and
thus cure herself without the aid of a
physican: The Recipes with full direc- Health
tions and advice securely sealed sent
Free to any sufferer. Add ess Mrs. M.
J. Bbabie,252 So. 10th St., Philadelphia
Fa. • Name this paper, JuneSwm.
LUCY COBB INSTIT^
ATHENS, GA
A Boarding Sc
Lady Teachers,
All denominations rep’
ted,
Board $15 a m° ]
nth*
No Secret
record
Miss M. Kuth er
for 1 ''
]>rin fi P