Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893, June 26, 1885, Image 1
CRAWFORDVILLE J J 1D J/L. \jJL r 3 *1 Volume 9. Dr. ¥. M. DURHAM, SPECIALIST. ;o: Makes the treatment of all Chronie f>is eases a specialty. Office, 5 H}4 Peaelpree St., Atlanta. On. jne5 ’85 i a.--r ar ■ .. * —FOIt EXCURSION RATES TO Sullivan’s IsLumI, S. C., Beaufort, >S. C. AND ALL OTHER , , Slim 111 PI It rSUI IS} AND ANY OTHER INFORMATION YOU MAY WANT, WRITE 10 JOE. w. V; iUTE, (ieuerai Traveniig Passenger Agent, may22-M Augusta p; n - Stokely Carter, WIIOr.ESALE DEADER in Tobacco and Cigars, 115 JACKSON STREET, Opposite Vv anvil Block, HAS JUST OPENED AND SOLICITS YOUR ORDERS. A FULL ASSORT¬ MENT OF Chewing and Smoking Tobacos 1 CIGARS rod SNUFF always on band at Dottomprices. ll>a y *■ _ 1ST OT ICS GBlO.R. LOMBaIID & GO ■? Foundry Machine AND BOILER WORKS Just Ant vb T>E1*d. ; Augusta, Georgia Buy, f*eH. Exchange,'lent or Repair on best manner and terms. lioilers, jsaw and (lirist jfliils and machinery, ZlLno V^XICcl , AV (^ j OOf] v/vyu j ^ Have on hand a L trge Stock of Shafts. Pulleys and llmges, upwards of 50 Engines and Boilers, also steam and water pipe at reduced prices. Sorting Injectors, Vanduzen Jet Plan. B>1G Nut Washers. Circular Saws. 1- lies. Ac. i®* rite for prices, promptness and good work. Cheap will be our aim. FOUTZ’S HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS ■ roirrz •^rouTZ F0UTZ No TIoftsK^til! die of Co vie. Bois or Lvxo Fever, if Fout? > PoWftprs nr< ns* d in and time. vent Hoc Cholera. Fouti's Powders will cure ?>re t Foutz’s Powders will nrevent «aeks in owt.s. '»f milk Foutz‘8 Powders will increase the qus«miU the hntter i«»ni »nd creRin twenty per cent-, and maKo af FouU ^Powders will rtiro or Cuttle prAvont subject. »ima«t every Di abase to which norses am 1 »r«' Foltz’s Powdkrf will gitjs bAiur action. everywhere. DAVID K. FOtTTZ. Proprietor. badvimore. PITTS' OARWJiAlIV h For Infants and TEEHISG Sm An instant D> ^iise relief U aronhe tor Lobe Aom^ of Ljfanks. and bowel*. Makes theori*ie»lq>eri«i of teeth toSifVwilShe tbVr^tleiaLovW- W'M come the exhausting care• an.li long watehes of the luotlrcr. » the Syrup yet introduced, For sale by Dr. R. Sharon, ti Be n ’ J.T.WrighMU^ow r T r WH«ulA&town my2T^l > - - Clinard House Athens, Ga, A.D. CLINVKD, Pr;)j>rieti) Porters at Each Train" Commercial Rates. Large CoauattllMs Sample Room. CRAWFORDVILLE, GA., ft] DAY, JUNE 2J0T, 1885, To Dyspeptics. a The most common signs or Dyspepsia, of Indigestion, are an oppression at the stomach, nausea, flatulency, water-brash, heart-burn, vomiting, loss of appetite, and constipation. Dyspeptic patients suffer un¬ told miseries, bodily and mental. They should stimulate the digestion, and secure regular daily action of the bowels, by the use of moderate doses of Ayer’s Pills. After the bowels nro regulates, one of tlicse Klls, taken each day after dinner, is nsnnjiy all that is required to complete the care. Aveb’s Pills are sugar-coated and purely vegetable—a pleasant, entirely safe, and ro liable medicine for the cure of all disorders of the stomach nnd bowels. They are the best cf all purgatives for family use. ; peepabeu bv , Dp. J.C. Ayer&Co., Lowell, Mass. > Sold by all Druggists. Ji. B. B. s without doubt, one of the mod valuable popular madieines known ta the medical scienoe, ami ms relieve l mVe suffering humanity thin any other medi¬ cine since it, came into use. It has never failed in a single Distance to produce the most faVorahte results where it has been properly used. P.iysici.ius everywhere recommend it,as doing all it is claim si Si. do.Tlie following certificates are from two prominent physicians, who have done a large and successful practice for many year*,mu) upon whose judgementtue pub liocjfiiMfely rely : Chawt'otjdvu.i.k, <;a., fFaSpast Jyne 1 till. 1885. EhtorDismocrn0— For wilrft’nr>umat\t ten years 1 have been sufr 'ring n i,i the muscles pf my right shoulder and neck. During this timed have tried various re u edies, hat h patent m ‘djcmqs amlAliase pre¬ scribed by physicians. Last summer 1 eo n n meed uti'i r B |H.„ >. and could see an improve .lent by th • t tme 1 had taken me b )tUe. I It ive Ituaa taking it at Inter¬ vals since last se n.n r and er.n say, it, is the best medicine for rliemmuism 1 Jiave everirirtl. I t dee pit .inure ia fe.'rn u.it j it l in.g it to tile pn ide... J 'V. (to >. A. M , M D. ffiuvr \trt7%u ','. tI 11 ■, ia, tsr>. - HliUtr L) Ah i.p, N iv mi iya' oi ..i4'yiur l li vl what I mi ppTfM■ ■ t^ P %H a Jauldlaw t Kscr • -vie ■, o i l ig t, si e of neck 1 us -djloea! applieatioiH vviiicb ef ectrd no pareopti )le go,!. 1 oo n i ■. ic.-.i t!le „ <H ()f j;. jj. » an I took it re ; early twelve nnttljs a') I I i due till! th vo.',: w is U • ,1c. I o/ei'. .vn II n ».v c , \fi. it wc’t I c icc.rl il.y re • » I II hi 1 if i q i l; toa’e and 'It >r iti-.' ■ in '0. -in,'. s I. Fau.vuju, ,M. !). ZZT For s lie by all dr.i 'gist. Merel»Ah& ana Farmers n Y ft [T U |) id T A VT 1 I Ik AL n G 1 U Via GEORGIA K.VlLNOA D from the fol lowing stations t<» AUGUSTA, GA. Now is your chance '■ Just notice the rates and date ! THURSDAY, June 25, 1885. Tickets good for return passage until Sat¬ urday, 27th, including th« night train. From Union Pt.to Augusta and return, 2.30 “ Crawfordville l t 1.90) “ I! iruetr, 1.75 “ Norwxrd ( l I < 1.50 “ Cnmiik it 1.40 Unless you purchase Tickets from tire Agents, you will have to pay regular rates as Conductors have no authority to sell the Excursion Tickets. You should avail yourself of Flits oppor¬ tunity. Ample aocommodation for all. Tickets will be sold for trains Nos. 2 28, and No 4. Get to the Depot in time, to get vonr Tickets before the train arrives. ‘ JOE W. WHITE Geu'l Traveling TasS Act, Augusta, E. R. DORSEY, Augusta. General Passenger Agent, TO OUR PATROLS. „ . , - „ ,,, pudding is repaired,a d ask our friends to rem -mer us in placing them order. lleapeetfullv, RUFUS CARTER & CO., J j^kson Street, Augusta, Ga. ---,——--------- MARSHAL HOUSE, , On cornerof Broil a . t Campbell St AUGUST A GA .A, New Laugh «sc Airy Looms Transient Board,§ 150 per day. Regular and Day Boarders Dasired. Will Sell TICKETS for Single Meals, Mrs. J.0.FLE3IING, Proprietress. T" " s LOVE M E. JmS Love me, love, but breathe it ldjPi| Soft as summer weather ) If yon lave inn tel! Hie so, As we sit together. m '•Sweet and still as rases bio v — M Love me. love, bat breithn it low. T'dl m<*-oniy dvi%y«yuce«p*6-' i# Words are chain as w iter ; g If von love me, looks and sighs,; I Tell spy mother 1 ) daughter— More than itH the w >rl I nov know — Loveyne, Word's ioveawwl others, storm hreiitha arid it sn<^v; loiy,.^ for, Wind hud chiit'i’geful'sveadWtir— • J;the s i ill > v w it ers tiOWC a nutLvMs'sS^id’dam. aalohil \ Lave ra>; lave, but'breathe it low. - ■■■■'■ — , T"jp sTE p 'EMS m iNUMEN F ASSOTIA-TION.; wn.vr it no Dikii AND WHAT IT PURPOSES iK af?4:i:.' APrKAD TO o ico a or v n-k a n a ns. Augusta Giro mete. r%n» A • The Stephens Momun mt'Association has acwnpHs'i 1 1 t ie tint great step towards the ekeentiiVa of its final pur pose. It has purchase d and assumed legal ownership of Mr. Stephens’s old homvhud has transferred the body ol the dead stdte's Wiu fr> n Its' tompoj'ary tomb hi t-h J Sikate 0 I'lit d to the fgraVij in the grounds of his own loved Liberty Hall, which is to be its last earthly resting place. It is meet and fitting that the bo ty, in dentil, should lie in the soil which gave i t h'l-th, and where, in life, it most loved to be. “Til »tv let the states at m sleafi, There let his Oeo-gia keep Vigtfand guard j d ' Life's todsO lie jaiirue, gnertm me,, Fame’s Tiierti sp’endid him re.st.’L&j.. won. let If tho spirit of the illustrious dead, freed from its pain-racked mortfil fram', ever comes hack to visit the scenes of its earthly career, of a surety it will hover more constantly and lov¬ ingly over no spot. with its hallowed and hallowing influence, than over the place where now lies the tenement of clay w deli once enwrapped it. Having accomplished thus much lmving s^v! d-Libel' y II ll k f|om pass¬ ing info [lie hands of strangers, and laid away the precious rein ins of its Miwrn- wWht-s*i? tmv I'lins-'ojVJ * To 1 ground, the Association, gratefu those whose generous aid enabled it 'o dn this, will new press forward to the aclin-ve e ent of its ultimate object— t he erecti m d t ma.'blc mo nimeut to t ih ni' 4 no *y of th * < Jr ' U- G ' ti n 'll dr. It feels tb,id Georgia never had a siWl whose life more sliiuiugly illustrated the qualities of the pal riot, the sta’es m;»n and the l’hilalitliD pisl, than did . Alexander IL Stepijens in V\a mn*Vt Ions c ivhm’ w iic’i (in*l vou chsafed to lmn, anti it will pause not in its labors till a shaft shall i iso above his grave, emblematic, in its purity and beauty, of the pure and hea itiful life of 1dm whose dus it covers, and telling in words deep graven on its i olisbed sur¬ face, of liis wisdom, his justice, liis moderati on, his courage, his devotion to truth and duty, liis love lor humani¬ ty, his tender pity for the sad and suf¬ fering, his all-embracing charity, His infinite gentleness towards all God’s creatures, Ins lifetime consecration to his country, his death in the service of the Commonweai*h, and of the loving trust in which that Gummonwealtii keeps his sacred dust. As Agent of the Moimmoit Associa tion L publish this statement, and with it an appeal for the contribution of money to complete its undertaking. It purposes not to rest with the purchase of Liberty Hall and the burial there, of its beloved Master. That was but the first step in its laior of love, and it de sires to go right onward with the next. Z nor one who was a more passionate of liberty. His name sheds lustre upon the pages of his couotiy s history, and his career is one ‘ >f J'f grandest tributes to the benign mAh eoce of Us institutions. No shrine ^ re d o„ American soil commemorates an exam pi i more nobly inspiring than Us aild it WO uld be a thing of peel iarly J pleasing significance to see pa t s In eyery , tate in the Ullion tak ing l)art jn buil(ljng a monument on Georgia soil to a Georgian whoso patri otism was as broad as the continent, as pure as the fiauie on vestal altars, as steadfast as the rock-ribbed an<U ancient hills. To the many throughout this land who Have been the personal recipients fliis benefactions — of his help in on way or another, need u won! be said in this behalf V Ttiere is probably not ft ei mu tv in this .State- -nay, not a stale this- Union where there is not. one or than one of this class, and in and s beyond tliejSeas arc those who W felt li iii.l, the bounty .vl.lch nev„ off tint- Ur.-.l free of and S o'diers. is there one among them ell who, now that the hand which him can help him no more, will make nq response to this appeal ? Is there one among all those who have welcomed-with unfeigned hospi to the shelter of his n ol'-tu-.' a'M the ebber of bis table, who will h. vo no part in this testimonial of love, a 4 gratitude, and admiration over the ave of him vvliose benevolencuavas us undless as the air, -whose chaiitv was . jyjde as the welkin ? Where are yinnig, and tlie old, and the nuddie aged ; the white and the blaek. the native and the foreign born, whose burdens liavn been lightened, whose lives have been brightened by this friend of the human race,—by the ten¬ der touch of that gentle hand, by the kindly tones of that voice that is still¬ ed ? Where are those who have reaped benefits from his friendship and his patronage? Surely not one living of all that 'host is willing to have his name omitted from the list of the builders of the monument to the mem¬ ory of his dead benefactor. Ami of those who themselves have died, surely rot one has left children who will not gladly add their mite to show that the memory of their father’s or their moth¬ er’s friend is dear to tliem. it but each and ail of these were to contribute as they can and should to the work in hand, by that new-made grave under toe peaceful shades of Liberty Hall would rise a marble pile almost heaven kissing in its height. I have been requested to act as agent in receiving snbscri ptnns and contri¬ butions of money for the Association in behalf of which these words are written, hot there are many in Georgia ahd elsewhere whom I cannot reach in person, who donbtlftSS would cheerfully avail themselves of an oppji'tunitv of pining in the proposed tribute to Geor¬ gia’s patriot statesman. To all such I would say that contributions seat to the Augusta Chronicle, Augusta, G i , tfi the AUiima oW-i**-**^ Atlanta, Ga.; to W. R. Gunn, Treasurer of Tire Association, LYnwloidvHle, Ga. ; to .Joseph Myers, Augusta. Go.; or to me, at either Atlanta or Aiigus.sa, will be . properly receieed anil appled, and ac¬ knowledged" l y letter and through the columns of the journals named. The Association has also engaged the .servi¬ ces of Miss Gay, who has been actively and successfully prosecuting work to which she was appointed, and win)is commended to ell or. whom sho may call as a most worthy and devoted lady. The Association will he grateful to all newspapers publishing this appeal, and deeply appreciate of any aid from the press in accomplishing tho object of its formation. T. K. Oor.ESitY. Agent Stephens Monument Associa¬ tion. Another Cancer. About tlrree years ago there appeared on my right breast several hard lumps which gave me almost intolerable pain. They continued to grow, and finally developed into what the doctors called cancer of the breast. Iu a short time' I found my strength gone and my con stitution a total wreck. From a ref bust woman I was reduced to a helpless invalid. Several of toe first physicians of Atlanta treated me for cancer, hut witliout improving my coieiition In flic iea^mel IfnliTlyLbal, they could do nothing mme for me. TH. cancer by th]s time vas eatimr; out my lmpiuve, aridR|j> ‘ haH now bnyug no all a my ^ > A ’^not 1( Hire a J * 1 fed - ' ' too gmlefol . loi ; wonauwi rP r ,. 0V . • for Swift 8 pec ^ ■ cheffiffn ,,, ly . m mv grave to-day. I most recommend it to all-ttwaeMho.«« «* iering with this fearful I m«s. Jank Cdemo. I . Atlanta, Ga., April 1*>, Treatise on lilood and Tskin l>Lseasts mailed free. i Xu ii Sivikt Stju ifte C<>., 1'rawer 3 , Atlanta, Ga. 1 of It. lapjau. i __Buy your ulows Little Joe, tfcuy Newsboy [New York World. ) ft was a very small funeral inocea siou tiiat wended Us way slowly from the Kings enmity hpsjijia! to the Holy Crofs cemetery at Elatbiisli yesterday morning. There were , no hand some carriages, lie U bivhHjg jiniu^ ^unr of sqnH, liacks, plaid only ‘ vrsj a coills, followed liy a solitary coach. Hut thy mourning was jast as siucefe as at the largest and most' imposing funeral. Audit was dot confined to the four boys who accompanied the body of their deeeAU> i friend to its his resting placd. A hundred faces were with tears. “It’s only a newsboy,'’ said a police¬ man. Trite, only a nowslny, a waif from'the streets ot‘ a great city. Hut no pjiilantliroaist was ever kinder, no friejKl tittle mcry "'true, no' soldier braver than ,foe V'lanigan. Every news¬ boy about, 'the ' tflflM's of New York's knew and loved him. All owed him ;t debt of gratitude for the many good deeds lie had done in his'liumble wav. Little .Toe first appeared on the streets of New York tw<i years ago. lie was small and slight, with great brown eyes and pinched lips that al ways wore a smile. Where he came from nobody kitew and few caved. Ills parents, he Said, wetie dead and he had no frletid'S. it Was a hard life. Up at 1 o’clock in f.he morning, after sleeping in a dry gooods box or an alley he workad stWdliy tiin.lte at night. lie was misused at first. Dig stole his papers or "Crowded hi n out of a warm plac?!it* nlffTlt, out he never complained; The teMs would welt up in his eyes, out were quickly brushed away and a new start bravely made, Such, conduct won bun friends, and after a little no one dared phty tricks upon little doe. His friends lie lemein bered and his enemies he forgave. Some days he had especially good luck. Kind hearted people pitied the little fellow ank Isniglit papers whether they wanted them or not. Hut he was too generous to save money enough even for a night’s lodging. Every bay who •“gotstuck” know In was sure to git enough to buy a supper as long as Joe had a iienny. But the loud wovk and exposure ,gan to tell on his weak coiisHtutiou. ITe kept grOwinaf thhmor and tliiuuer, til! there was scarcely an ounce of on IPs little holy. Too skill of hit? face was drawn closer and closer hut the pleasant look never faded away. lie \*fti iincnmpbuiihig to the last. Two weeks ago lie awoke one in n ning after woi king hard a riling “OxIaMs” to diml himself too w mk to move, lie tried his best to get, upon his foot, but it was an attempt. The vilaljfm'ce whs gone, “Where is little .Joe ?” was the uni¬ versal inquiry. Nobody bad seen liiui since tho previous night. Finally lie was found in a secluded cornin', and a good natnred Hackman was pursuaded to take him to the hospital iu b’Utbus'i where he said lie once lived, Every dav one of the boys weaiv to sr« him. On Saturday ft new shay wi»o had abas ed him at first and learned to love lmn afterwards, found lmn sittiug up m hts cot, his little buicveined.hand bU ' 1 ' h ' ed out upon tne covet e . “i was alraid you wash »>" *«'». Wllh H0 “ 1(; T to sec you once mo.e so much, i guess it will be the last t me, .D-vry, Hu 1 fw 1 ,(, ' v S '" 3 *‘ Now, . einy, \r tm ‘ " ,y ‘ ,,r i a _ '«Imt ii'Kht h hii K y 4 , jn * D»'> "■% ° im.t ' ' 1 > J ■■ ‘ ' . hm ju way. but how th y iH ,t ■ know » • K*»Hlly *«**•" :n 0, f ot u,e a ‘*“ ^ J passed a teadutiou which icau as J ta SH me hrvckaaau who bore LHUc Joe to the hesp^ i«h»« Wmdly oilcicltUe use otUliis carnage, Tho hunal took place yesterday. On U.e coffin was a plaUs, piirehassd »y the hoys wl,0S ‘ : waB .aprewivc from Us very sun" Ucty. This ’ was the inscup mu . Little Joh, aged 1 A. The Best Nowsliuy in New York. WE AM, MKBD HIM, There were no services, but each hoy sent a flower to be placed upon the coffin of his friend. After all, what did it matter. Little Joe was deal. riMr Room,” Ure >***.-it Jots, cigar hi town it R . it. Reid a. Num >er 26 Mr Oglesby's Appela. j Augusta t hr uni •)(;.] Elsewhere wo |n b' ali a very truthful anil tii'iiiftfffiil ;iii « l h r tho *n'< • j> r nt-fd rt fitting Dial .ill mil il lit ,i> Vyxun Ur IL Slop in i , at I, < / .l.iil. Mr. T. lL Ofleib,', '.11 . i S Miido-tll upon ilia p.-onlo of t? >or<4i;i menially and t > the i> ?<> »lo of the whole (Tifioh incfrteiitallv, had a It)"'?, clone nid I'ftmilkh'acquaintance 'Vi h ic il» nhi nous'niSf he sb'tfthtefuily and i>a . hcl ic.illv etik'gizes. Wll.it In sijli of Mr. Stephens i3 nothing bat the truth. Irrtimiriiy, luc pra Sos wo give Ure 'ca! nr.' Urn fervid, and affection, t aiding hy tlir gr iv ■, is prone to ex* aggera u go? 1 qua itses an 1 suppress o ' exctjsee what is. faulty and weak in tti me wo have 1 wed and lost. Mr. Stephans, i y is ha a in and, therefore, impeccable, 1)at Ids virtues were so umiuHousj^shiuiiig tiiaC and trail sCJiidant through the mist of eternity, we can hot or do not care to discern what tVero hut moles uphn the su 1 of ids c i* reer, The merely critical Spirit lie him¬ self exhibited through liis biographers. llistoraris of different epochs and of divifgeiit opinion will take care of that portraiture. Mr. Oglesby’s task, so •admitably pm-formad, was to set forth the leading qualities of one of the most wonderful min one of the best of mor¬ tals ; a tnan in whom Georgia takes proper pride, because lie was not only a great Tribune of the i’coplo,but a lover of his fellow men. It is not necessary lor ns to repeat what Mr. Oglesby lias mid with so much power and spirit concerning the noble traits pi character conspic >us in Mr. Stephens." Wo are simply required to emphasis phis appe il to the public in aid of the dutiful object. If all men who have admired t,ho (J >mm mer, who have shared bis hospitality, who have partaken of his Iron ity, w to have bien upl fted hy his wis ! > n, wao hive bsit bettered hy Ins eva nple, should con¬ tribute but a single dollar to a m urn infmt to his memory, what a majestic, marble structure wonld rise under the oaks of Liberty Hail and oyer the dust of him wlio though dead speaketb, and who though never appall *1 by mortal man, wav like unto the little child n reverence for hie maker, ami whoso IMU'petual prayer was ‘‘Not my will., but Thine lm done WIlHf l-r t.h« Editors,’ ns a rule, rarely ever agree. and conseqiienny are continnally at loggerlieads. They will take wp the same subject and discuss it in their col¬ umns, give ft a thorough analyzing, show up all the points, anil if you will take liroir an.teles and compare them, there will always be some ]x>int of dis ngrcenient. There, are, of course, ex¬ cept ions to fids us well ns toall other general rules, and we propose to give an instaueoAvliere tinee Georgia editors are unanimously of the same opinion : 'I’hft editor of the hknithern World. published in Atlanta, says : “I know the proprietors of liradlield’s Female H#d Kil)1 vout -h for their ,, j, iu vhj , s oonmmnity 1 ^ , J)y ()W( , knowledge, can tes tj(y tll#t jL j8 H gn .. lt U)()|l to women. | Ims no superior, and every lady ought to send for mid lead their oook on feuiaie diseases, which they mail Lee.'” The tdill>1 . of tIl<5 MilledgevilleChron ^ ^ n nu ltiel3’s Femalo Regulator the greatest blessing ever discovered for suffering women ; say* he knows oi six ladies iu liis coniinuni ty who have been cured som, I and w« II V> 1 » " s ‘‘- : "“ l >'« i " ,v,s « ew,jr ,f f"'K «'o» an to use »t From ihoeGiior ol fhe .au.esv.d.v Eagle: "I consider ra I field’s t'ein L "‘"dicine ever ...... p,qm|.u and offered to the public for • lie disease l"i' which il is leeoinuiei,li¬ ed. I am well aequainted wilh a la<ly who never had any health until she commenced using if. It gave her do¬ me 1 iate iciicf. and from tb. t time un¬ til now she has enjoyed the best <>t lieu It h. J can say with benly good will, "God speed Dr R rad tie Id in the sale of his ru ver failing Ki-male UegH hltOI'." ^,1 for m,r Imok containing valua iA information for women. L will be mailed free to applicants. ,j <ur |p. A! , 1 .- 11 :i.d Ui wi-aigbCo., Hox 2 H Atlanta, Ci. II:;t'H/.ii;Ati. Ga.. July 8 li,lSf?;> i>r. W. M L’itts ; Dkaii sia-l’l i/ s’ ilABMiN.vnvBsells well. 1 use ir, in my own f ooily and if giv.-s sitisrac tjou We expect to keep it, as a family in Heine nod recent tteti I to otuers for tl eir sliffi tcethivff cliildren. 'V ALTAI; CLARK. —Large lot Flotlr at R. Tuppma’i.