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About Crawfordville democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1881-1893 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 27, 1889)
£0NC TJ IffI)IAN SLHMEK. EV WM. BXCOHTOJf. Come to tie lints w tiers tho naiads are throTr woodland and with ivy by OoiiiP, f*»r oven to l>*dio!d th*-*- ara longing, O Hpii'it 1 , jYtifcv and child < t Um (Jawu, Wo l. art n r hr tho mist on tho •i !«i in, the c Un tha «nn; Wfi t<r wo t.i .inti, fail of the fo.a liJCi S 3 SI- m#?rlraid, woiconao wain. In am itli the r ,y ■ 't v.iniiisar* droo!"? Th ovds thou delay* in her A wj car h tboo, her fairest and bout. Jiiwitifnl vi4;tent, well wo r ‘member Ttio wind* too north tout we#o cruel to . tliO They ,.-i i <■ to p ou tho lap nt Ni> no th , »afar , to tho lab *«»>«•• We’ll rn ' i a )i in thob^Mt of tho ■’ 1 „ w.M. U;:ur -rate jan«t .y* *»>,". Aud fair tt* the vision* r hooil. will thine. The purjde and gold of the dell* ho j ■ i»i< i: ? i v rv - of v< nji ii'i i j'*mi la h a. i i ‘■aim mi !,iV v :' ! “ ,v /' l, r a h ', ,r Ah th 1 ■rtV.nth.l’biu"!'. ■‘o.Viimin.rb.o;-. A at h v t ©t. con e to t- ' haunt* where th© naiad* are t iit'otignt Y nr thee with ivy by wooilland and law n ; ir c* to iir-ho)d tin u aro longing, pb it *f Im s ity k .4 child of th« dawn. W \V; October. 1*#7. A MODERN MAGDALEN. Cr M. C. fAIU£Y. ( HAI’TEIt XVI. (1 iisnsmi) Below stairs tin rc is commotion, anil Lurry, ami bustle, ami moro ur h , ; cunfu -ion. Kibboy is master of tho situation 11c noithor loses his pmi ciiCO ol iiliinl nor Ins amiabio pho iility ot manner. Ami ho orders his staff of servants utter the fashion of a great general on tho buttle filed. liildc v does not suspect that 1m is lining watched* Nevertheless such is the fact The Mtppor-room is marvelous in it urrangement. Kibboy looks it N’oth- over with the eye of a connoisseur ing is wanting to add to its perfection. People stream in and out; they cut, drink. laugh, and go away again, only to return a little later ami repeat the eating mid drinking, tho laughing and shattering. Ho tlm hours wear away. Mud sin I Hindus refreshes her elf with u sic ,tu behind tho eurtains in tho .lininit room, ami .oni.'s out serin ora ' ,, 'm.Vs i,, i,,, r ,,,,, I ufarg- plows tike a star of tl,e Iivightest. radiance. Her blue eyes are . lear and bncht as Hummer skit c Hie . ,.' |,| ,,,.,1 , m ite ferreta ,,,, ti 1 a,..,, hr littln it «s t* th a* nnybo<n J. v ji'ot.iy d tv 1 lined in lun' urr.r7„« ill) ... own num! gallaut Oaptaiu | to her lent to night, but this task is more diflicuit than she at first imagines it will be be. The Captain has angled some in his own time and though lie at once n:b ldes debeab lv at the bait thrown out lty bis fair guest, swallow he is too experienced hook and a fish to at once if, nil. 1 uo watches the pair secretly. 1 Mho login hope and almost believes that (ho Captain is m love with Miss Lafarge, after till. 1 ut, outwrrdly, j who is as gay us the rest of them, and never loses a dance, bo it wait’, nr g fl¬ op, or the stately idd cotillion t-dio receives enough attoniiou to turn the head of another girl, ami enjoys it nfter a fashion, too. Put she is not aorry when the clock strif es one and the revelers begin to disperse, still. the Captain hovers near Mi s Lafarge. Madam sits in a gie.it carved chair filial- the open door nf the hall ns tho guests 1 ouio down the t in's, wrapped and ready for departure. “Cai riage tor Feriiileun," "Carriage for Hnvcrly," ‘'Carriage fm 'dttnwood,” ■ tv the different voices of the coach- 111 on, ns the catr ages roll up before the cut anco and emtio to a halt. The short, fat man who lias occasion¬ ally been Nnui moving unobtrusively the among tho set vants during latter part of (he evening is standing in the aha low of the staircase. Quite acci¬ dentally, nf course, kibbov, the butler, has jus! ap| roaehe.l him for a moment. It a m : , 1 'rant 1 ik pa.vu 1 between \ )V /s 9/ '■ / -v ! All/ ) \j j. * V’-Vy'i ,r i , > , Li \ n s j ja '■4 ; , l; 11 i r 1 t r \ > : m . %v f. t u \v t me t Ol> Mnl At the ntioit of Yl: Lafarge’s came, the Lube who has net vet seen THE DEMOCRAT, CRAWFORDVILLE. GEORGIA. her, turns cnrionsly about as she comes 1 down the stairs. U the mention of Miss Lafarge’s | name, the short, squat person standing j in the shadow of the easement peers forward into the light and stares He at- is tentively at tho the floating kind-hearted figure. lady curious to see | jr) yesterday too ill to grant him ! w was an interview. Now. at the announce-j ;n<-rit of her name he leans slightly for- full tv awl, and as she comes tinder the ; ginre of tho .gas light cariosity gives w ;i yto am izement This emotion is ; ing quickly displaced for he glances by one of at overpower- her with j rage, tin eyes of a devil. Totally unconscious of the effect her presence has pro 1 need on the sot-dot ftif i,errant, Miss 1 .afarge gracefulL aj> j i roaches the great carved chair where Madam is seated, to say her adieus, i, ibbey Hiirni »• s iiU'K that ft way the from rat his hands shaking so cups tic fm the fray he is holding. ( apt sin Hazard steps toward her as i iic paunf-i in front of JNiadarji. . • Lafurge opens her pretty mouth, and ■ i s in her silvery voice how much she ! h=.'« enjoyed the evening; says some ,-..gyal...... Ihi:j.loMun, Madam i- ;'i.<-n lie), and glances < asually for t L<* lit t time at the butler. hat she sees in that scared produces a strange effect upon my I 1 he light fades from her eyes, tho bloom leaves her lovely face. She lod. • awav, partly recovering herself, ""!‘, la.ii Kiv, 'T not l r^±y fee . 1 ,-, , S 1 l, nL j ,J| k » -i. v; a*. k!uj s.ivh, faint ly. \V i. h your per misHion, Madam, I will bid you good ’ him stoops before Madam, then turns toward the Captain. which is An cv.l nmrtcnat.ee on w t ..,. -:y evil emotion known to the human be rt, Peers at her from the shadows of tho stairs down which she bus ,nst oome. Miss l.afargo secs this face. She re treat , two steps. White foam begins .................................... ".lii'lith,” says a low and warning voice. Her teeth chatter. A sudden chill freezes tho \«ry marrow in her bones. “Judith." Now she shrieks. A long, wild I eroing shriek, that rings throughout the house—a shriek that paralyzes .Madam in her chair a shriek that fetches the guests from tho chambers— a shriek that hr ngs the servants from below stairs Urn policemen from the park The grounds. butler drops his tray anil it. falls crashing to ... the floor. lie looks irn !'l<>rmg!y at Hazard, who stands trans¬ fixed with astonishment. People crowd into the hall; guests and servants mingle confusedly to gether. ImfaritnrOo. notm.ly, nothing but the evil face and twinkling red eyes of the stranger. 8he shrieks him; again. her Suddenly like she . rushes toward eyes look blue flames, she leaps upon him like a tigress, and, snapping, snarling, buries her little white teeth repeatedlv in his How like a beaut fill demon she looks as she snarls, auiT growls, and bites. But it is a sickening sight, CfifAPTKK XVIL MAIL *\ RI . policemen know their Jk duty and do it. They I ,.'i-/e i her There olmrl,! is a .....'4 short Her (1 but pretty furious hands struggle. are scratched and bleeding. * ‘ hut they are at last se cnrelv bound behind her. Jl Ms she stands before her WJ/ •i enptors foam and irotll falls from her hvui lips. Her long blonde hair >-• - sweeps town over her R torn and iii blood-stained > . - i ball dress; blue lightnings seem to ; hoot from her flashing eyes. .Vs Hazard looks at her the truth i ivsts ujioti him. S in m-1,1. M ' l ■ he I word , is w taken taken up tin and ana passes l isnes II in 1«|* to lip. he circle crow it about surges the i i, U aiitl forms a dense l ttS« ctroup in tho hall, M ml ' !' n to Inis fain tod. Loo flits away r&r , . i mji .wr uvttU's the uamnlior Miss Lafarge, unconscious of tho , curious stare of which she is tho ob • i l,„,Lo ctrniirlit V ?|“‘ before her She sees nol..*tl> , bit , the ra.Mallx „I 1 „ 1 butler „,|W »„1 and ti's equally rascally confrere. 8 ho I'tH’OfflUZPS both. ••Smith’ 'to ah,i «e reams ioM “S earth \\hv arul V bn. 1 ’ 1 011 tb.. ‘ lie .j losU • ilid jon not tell , me that wretch was here? Host! All lost!" Then she heaves a great sigh. • I'lns 1 - i i> ottv bit of work " hisses I'otiithorne l ouiiuoiiu at a. the ir.niu craven butler ouiur. “1 b heve this is a vile plot between you both to rum me “1 thought she was dead,” begins Scnrtli, pale with terror. "You sent me vourself a newspaper account of her death. 11.>w could 1 know slt^was a! jve and right here under my very ise? I toll you l am as much sur It d ns vou e.tn other possibly be.” that died,* xvas the one r es tht' false Miss Lafarge, “She H as burned in the railway accident, f hen the floor tlew up to the coiling - d ih eetii nr .'ame down to the floor. /. g'it to have died, the silly goose /. d me everything. They carried fl on a bon’d she was a long, t : t a sheet. 1 gai Black 5 is the color t Ami 1 sent a notice oi i to the newsp per Oh, it ■ I w omeu P - l wanted 1 I wt r little white toot S butler by th ft an ta < Oman to yo B / t ward. sts do a pea! of in She writhes and ft: it? laughs at the bul cart i - tuy sister,* shouts Yliss whose fancy at priisent is to it h v t ether, the but er, in her own M v s ter. dearth's real name Donitlsome. and she is *— im (home's wife, l'oor thing. **— im leads her a hard life, and she goes* inad occasionally over it." Then she nods her head at her late victim, “That's Jim there. He’s a tyrant and a villain; a liar, and a thief. So von dor mr poor sister goes mad and runs away from hira. J’d go mad myself were I tied ap to such a wretch as he is.” Donithome is backed up against the staircase, closely guarded cut either „j<|o by a policeman. His face is de rnoniacal in its look of b&Aled rage and hate as his mad wife pours out the voA UBOe 0 f her sarcasm upon him. What she says is true enough. “ I tonithorne was once the editor of a fifth-rate country newspaper," whis p ers a policeman in Hazard’s aston :shed ears. “A lug lib"! suit ruined him, and he went out of the newspaper business. Since then he has been eu gaged in various enterprises, all ®or» or less questionable. It s more than suspected that both him and bis broth er-in-law, the butler here belong to a cfang of burglars. His wife is, or whs, a designer lor an Eastern manufactur j ncr ~ house, and is inclined to giddiness. - / jyMW A Z : _ f' A \ - , \. /lyv^k/ /y '■'.{} A ; /. V f, \ iolA l/-\<SJd /\ / ' \ k > V Wn \k \ t il/ \/ 7\ < PI \, bX V ^r frfl 1 ZjA '-A V V \ ' -vf f. r 'A -V"' I ] y tf Jj\ ,’r jrn T k/’J -K ^ViV' X3/Jr Vv AJL /\ / /mu/ V ' f f\ 1 f j'j 1 1 P L IJ . j V 1 | / \\ / u / 4\ / .fif Jr j / '' U f [ / ■ /'A \ ^S_A\ l I ™ ^ ru^ g ojni .f )ni iy p U u ei l Hazard!n sleeve at Hu's juncture. - She ran off last fall with a low fellow i»i i read an account of tho atlair m more than fifty papers. She is wanted now for escaping from the, Riverton l.unatic Asylum, and I’m mighty glad , vo got . her ut , laflt^ 1 . n WO Somobody pulled He looked Iiuzard s sleeve and be- at this juncture. up bold the village constable. This offi t> lLo stepped aside. tlli down fine, wins “ We’ve got m porn tho Constable. “We watched uutil tho plate was taken out of tho house-a bft at a time, and secreted in a wagon that has been standing under the trees by the little gate in the wall. for the last hour or more. watched." They never suspected that they were A scream of rage bursts from Ivib bo,’, lip. .. tho Constable's word. are borne to hie ears. “You'll never take mo, cries Ktb boy. “I haven’t been out of the house to-night. looks strangely like , lus . Hearth crazy sister as he gives way to Ins rage and terror at this unexpected turn of affairs. “1 won’t be arrested—I swear x r won’t* ■,, * —.....•*— - i Ye*, you Will, ,, tho (oustalle . « v iej lies 1 • zxcr i cheerfully. “1 wan within arms length of you both when voti passed the plate from the pantry window ami gave it to this gentleman with the side-whiskers, It’s all up with you both. This last Raul at Bywater l’ark lias finish 'd | your business for some time to come. ” I i : Hazard w„ .i„j,i shuddors, Ar . | Away with them all. he says im- i patiently; “away with them! When they are all gone, hazard : turns to Madam, who has remained uu- ! conse.otts all this time. In vain 1 oo )in „ ap.dird the camphor, the smelling ! | sa jtf,, the sal volatile. | Tho moment Hazard touches her he l knows what has happened. Madam . l)„ndas 1 ..... ‘ was ' vorv *, old.'‘The shock, ’ the ; excitement has boon greater than she , ^ She lies back in the great , carved chair quite still and cold. Her; heart lias ceased to beat. She is dead, | TO uu coNTis"so. 1 i . j From Father's Well. is tliete no in pe t i * 1 in ho is none . The doctor lad down tlie heavy band whso r*oAra rapid, dickering p ilse he waa ...... a,, »*. mg lamtiy oi me sirs man. “Ho may last until morning, but moro likely ho will pass awav at tho turn of : ' the n ulit ” t to does not know mi, so. .. o. . it , ;1 . o wife. v | “Ho is not-cons ions," answered tlie, doctor, gravel v. “His mind wanders. "Will |... •!.>,• ..,,,,. 1 , 0 ' ' " ‘ j No; uo , is 'el' happy. IIo is • t, , .,,. k ing in his sleep. Do not left disturb tho patient, him, said the doctor as he whose life lio was powerless to save. 1 lie dying , . m in w ho was „ , u so poor.it this moment tltat ho could not purcltaso one hour of time, was rich in the worldly possessions ho was abou t to leave forever. He had houses anil lands, and bank stock. He had rich vuiuds to tempt his latling appetite. It was Ins pleasure to drink of many different wines at his grand dinners. I et his rest), 'S3 si'i: it craved one luxury- a ample. Iho.vIv thing that all his wealfcn could not buy. He is speaking, and L v bend cage ly to hear, He is asking His wife presses a g ’i n- Iii* filled with a sweet unit cooli: s * $ it. 'i hca his loving child potr out a ass of his favorite W ,11C «Uitl toiitlci * V ;:s him to take it ** N o* no; no11 h t j He spe < bend lew 1 try 1 rs luiteri wo : “j iY *• Y\ hat does he mean ? despair. “It nst “Papa. dear, wlmt is it asks bis t-facevl cliild. “I— want—a—drink —of sh wa¬ ter from-—father’s—well." That was all. He closed his wearv eyes to open tho i. eavei ;lV hvcie, where, when life s little dream is over, we sliall all one day slake oar tlurst from our Father's well. Dwelt t'r-.e J’rrss. ’ FROM FAB AMD NEAR. Interesting Xews From Tarions i Farts of the World.. \ Disabled and Derelict Ships Ee* ported by Incoming Vessels. More teles of tlie suffering of tempo<ft towte/1 mailing craft have ertme to hand. The steamship Hudson from New Orleans reports having passed the Its Hon bark Leonada with the upper part of her mainmast and her uiiz sen topgailantmasccarried away, The bark Sappho, from Pensacola, with a cargo of yellow pins for Buenos Avres i*as thirty-six hours muter the lash of the storm, sllP wag thrown OD her beHm en<1 . s BIl(1 her crew bad to cutaway iter foremaet to sf.ve her from capsizing. The jihboomand ina-in topmost went by the board with, the tore spoiling nearly all her provisions. Her sails were torn and lost and part of her deck load washed away. Wie put into New York • port for repair*. xl*taSJuSjftSrSJSflS5JS N. of or Hand, New Haven, which was briv en ashore at Frederickstead, St. Crojjt, by tb» storm. ~ The aelioon-r Ropsbmi. from Greenook for St. .Johns, reports having passed a balk with nothing standing but her mizzenmast and bowsprit; standing. also She also a derelict, with foremast anil floating ke. passed two large icebergs Shinnecook, and her decks were awash, was bound from Pensacola with a cargo of lumber for St. Nazaire. The Cufic, from Liverpool, passetl Sarah the same wreck, as did "O' the bark Ci«mbera,fr u m A.u»t«r Johnstown Rising Again, \ That Johnstown, Penn., will rise again there seems to be no doubt. The enormous | tank of restoring the Pennsylvania Railroad tracks from South Fork to the famous stone bridge possible continues the: day and night. Iron AVith all energy Cambria Company b{lsy aitct hundreds 0 { „ lon engaged in rebuilding the structures demolished or jc damaged. light works, Planing mills, gas works, elec tr and other minor industrial eMabliiwuj&Mih'i are put. iiiworlvi]» 2 ;or rfer. Stores h«ve been reopenwl, t^inj’orary nn<l nl ♦h'lUft’h building* iJj« they !ii«rch;inu are only ill have a good stock on hand and find ample demand for their wares. te'riTASWS'Srsje Of tho majority timm eoursn of are only tem porary structures, hut they answer every purpose. Some substantial buildings, liow ever, are well under way and many loumla tlon8 arK fc »' u « !al<L Our Agricultural Exhibits at Pari*, One of the employes of the United States Agricultural Washington Department who Paris, has just r« turned to from describes Sr^aTSMSSlf"or*tto*^S;^ proj.riatal by Css;',*-, only rao.uoo or thereabout* was obtained for the agrioul turnl M tat. w.irk ill collecting malermls before Novm.i r , th« narrow limits of time an d „* y, tkedejwrtureutsucceeded m get tincip 1 very creditable 1 exhibit, which has stjfJ^jpu-gw^rai •--w.tmal sttentjon, -.-.ay «id will be roc award* tood, from e piTeuaiv* private published. It is muler fc sources, thaL a larger average <>f goM, silver and bronze medals will be carried off by the United States than scoum. by any other exhibitor in the agricultural A Ccexv Saved 1< rout UnnwIlialiRin. The Tonga steamer Waintti, bos brought to Sail Francisco GarstonJ the Captain and crew of the British ship Captsiu Davies, from g, vv., for S«n Francisco, which foundered in mid-ocean. The shipwrecked sailors were twenty-two days in an open bunt without food or water. On the tweuty-se.amd tl^r'nSe, day the men, driven to '^SZ'ot 'WSI to save tho lives of who the should others..They be were casting lots to see the victim when they sighted V\ allis Island, the native* of the islan, assisted the exhnused men to land, and treated them m the kindest manner.* A minion boat took the rescued men to Tonga. Saved by a Ten nip. railroad An unknown trackfrom tramp Council was walking Bluffs on Mis- the I to soari Valley, Creok be and found between broken Crescent rail and | StmiT a on a high eiubankBomt where the rail makes hJl!U . p clll Vtf . j t wtts m , outside rail next to the river, ami no train could bavewwsod over in safety. The next train due was the limited passenger, ami he Ka-sas who mid tried to raise the operator, was not at liis post. Hu then aroused the nciieu hands, and ^ey took the hand car and went to the t- •/.U..,, red. arriving tlx ve hwt in time to flag the limited and stop itwithiua fest of almost certain destruction. ncstbofltol, „ ^ ^ Younger. In the Stillwater (Minn.) Penitentarv Bob Younger the youngest of the notorious Younger brothers, who were sentenced to life imprisonment for murder in connection with the robbery of theNorthfiold Bank, died a few day* sluoe of consumption, from which he hail been slowly wasting which' aw ny for some weeh8( andon 0 f Governor his pardon waa recently asked of the but not granted. A Family Sconr* 5 cl> by diphtheria. A family named Zemthall. consisting: of na ants and ten children, left Boone, Iowa, a xv wtvk« ap, * for Milwaukee. They went in h v. 1 -n. i«ei;i’’ ten days on the road. Diph th- ria broke out in tUa family on their ar nvai ot Milwaukee, and six of the children tiitni in six days. T nharoi’s of Five HepuhliM. A i’ e»ing:of representatives fix>m various i ■ ml and tm ies unions in the five Ceu¬ ta republics, will l>t? held soon oi rat or the purpose of perfecting a mnimtion something: like the loft >r in the United States. Severe ?k>mine in Montenegro. that 2a t in y s« >n t ite V i 'holas in tu« fas stricken di: .riots. Photogrtphie Accessories. for ph< 'logran v. m E it Offic in W thout number. atfcae. who stas in the a ■ye. Another ae t s> v enables one tr tire the head >t . tl ic cter upon a class tain conceals ail but tt Just in front is pi it is proposed the head sh ap; near :it __ Vie.1 in the L'leturv.— Nilari Pc. ^ m. [ PEOMIUENT PEOPLE. Loed Texxtsox walks three miles every lay. Kirtr, AL.P0N3O, of Spain, weieiis thirtv ive pounds. Mrs. CrjsvxLArrD writes a letter to her oaother every day in the year. Mast Asbimsox is responsible for the popularity of English shoes among Ameri HETIS. Mr. Emsow smokes a great deal; the more work he does, the more cigars he con¬ sumes. Georoe W. Williams, the historian of the colored race in America, is living at Worcester. Marshal FrELi> is rated the wealthiest man in Chicago, with a fortune amounting to *s,aco,ooo. Ex-Senator Platt, of New York.reaches hi- ofiiee by S ;ofj every morning and never leaves before 5. Joaquin Miller contemplates purchasing a vac-lit and leaving San Francisco for a cruise in the South Seas. Mmz. Carnot, wife of the French I “resi¬ dent. U nf medium height, with olive com pierux. ai«l Roman features. Charles F. FaArar. son of Canon Farrar, of England, has come to this coun¬ try to complete his education. Prince Bismarck now devotes a gTeat of time to playing solitaire. This was a favor¬ ite card game of Napoleon I. Senator. Mop.eill, of Vermont, isseventy nine years old, and has represented his State at W asbington thirty-five years. Theodore Roosevelt, Civil Service Com¬ missioner, is His getting comfortably near im¬ mortality. handwriting has been dis¬ covered to be as bail as Horace Greeley’s. Ex-President Cleveland is still un¬ decided as to his European trip. Mrs. Cleve. land is said to be anxious to go across and spend a few months in the south of France. Mark Twain asks from SotXito a $1000 for a story or sketch and he gets what he asks. Frank Stockton’s price for 3000 words is$2J0. T. B. Aldrich charges $300 for a few verses. Sir William McGregor, Governor of New Zealand, has recently made the ascent ofHouut Victoria, 13,121 feet high, the high¬ est peak of the Owen Stanley range, New Zealand. Miss Helen Gould, daughter of Jaj Gould, had is said to have always believed sire s, mission to teach, and even now in¬ structs four music pupils, members of her church, at her home. Wilxie Collins, the novelist, is short and delicate looking, with very small hands and feat and a cheerful face. His luxuriant hair and beard are snowy white, and hehabitually smoker. wears spectacles. lie is an inveterate Amono the distinguished octogenarians who make a practice of earl v rising may be named Cardinal Newman. He is very feeble, but still receives visitors, and always treats Americans with especial cordiality and courtesy. XVilliam E. Henley, who has won recog¬ nition as a poet, was a laborer of dissipated habits when au accident that crushed both of his legs laid him up at a hospital, where he came under the influence oi Robert Louis Stevenson. Count von JIoltkf, has been appointed Honorary Infantry Colonel of the Seventy-first Aus¬ trian Regiment. If anything can prove that ltifiS and Sadowa are extinguished in the memory of Austria this appointment, by which the Austrian army salutes its con quaror as a comrade, must do so. XVhen Mr. Andrew Clarke entered Lon¬ don health. Hospital as Scotch an assistant beggar,” he was said in pool “Poor one of the faculty, "let him have a place; he can¬ not possibly live more than six months.” He is now. . iter these many years of eminent sir Sljr A (Jeulte, fcbeov.yt famous physician in England, TEE COUNTRY’S SCHOOLS. Synopsis of the Commissioner of Edu¬ cation’s .Annua! lieport. Education H. N. B. Dawson, tho Commissioner of has filed with the Secretary of the ’ Interior his annual , report . for , the year ended , , June 30, 1889. He says that from an analy , Lso f the statistics of public schools for the decade of 18 ', b-‘VT to ISsti-'sr, it appears that tho growth of the System, considering the country, outstripped during that period Se^of fourteen to in population, sir. to --ears of age, being l.ti per cent. This gain, theUoimnk-sioncr savs. is due entirely to the g o{ the nu blic schools in the two ^ .„„i mm-e Th^timeStta wiecinllv inthe £jlV0r 0 f fi-se schools supported by public funds, he says, is becoming each year mm universally prevahnt. The public schoolsvs. terns of the Southern States have been un dor going an unprecedented each development, loca under laws adapted in practically casa to all cir cum- ances. and are now es tnblb-UH on a isermmmnt basis Coloredcuu dren are apportioned an equal State of share Delaware. ra the school funds, unless in the ami their schools are kept open as those long of and the uivieras weii paid teachers as white inhabitants, In the course oT Us remarks upon thepub lie schools in the "In principal department cities, the oi Coa- city missioner ••* no manifest scho.-l work :.s improvemeut schools, and mere this tor the thiui in the primary the reason, uerbaps, that in them there was greatsst for improvement. ” NueComimsdoner room inabOlty regret his to report a geuei-at adoption of ph\sical vrain iug in tee public schools, FOTJTZ’S POWDERS FORSE AND CATTLE ^*-fFCUTZ, U No nnr. 1 T will .!ie Of coua BOT* or Lrss r* an<ft crfATO tweaty per cent., and ciaxe the butter uria ^FoaTi'Wo’rders wll rnr- and or prevent atT*e &"e nlrr^t- suoject. eteEI' D:sea«* to xr; di Horse# t SATiSi-ACTlO*. I'crTZ*# I\x*vr»TK* WIIX UITK Sold even where. DAVID S. rOUTS. Proprietor. BALilSiCRE. 1HX FOR SALE BY Ilammack, Lucas & Co., Dtuggists. (3) 1 i mafijj i 1 piyliiLyJ >i i 1 « ; - ... . ■ ST.LOlii5.Btn. rMJJEf. ^ iM. 7 3 OALLASTEX. 1 Titus Rickards, Crawfordville. ■ f f u 0 2 I PABBBTT’S i proclamation: to the readers of the Democrat. | > READ THIS THROUGH; 1 It Will Surely Interest You! will Gold buy Paper 14 R-ollsp andH Border enough for a® 312x12 room, beautiful P a t-J| Sterns. H 1 i 415 ®“ 1475 & will buy a 9 piece bed room a suit, 12x20 glass, cane seat IS & chairs and rockers; whole suita f-5 consists of one bureau, onefl | washstand, one centre table,* P four cane seat chairs, one cane* $ seat rocker. In addition to the above I have an elegant line of walnut, oak, mahoganizcd and I immitation walnut suits,, woodi 'a and marble tops. . $7.25 $8.50 $10.00 will buy elegant willow babyj carriages with parrasols. 0.25 DOLLARS 6.25 jwil] cover your 15x15 ft. floor! with nice china matting. 12. skra will buy ft. which a carpet] will 15x15 sent! be made and ILeady to put down, including] ftacks. $1.00 will buy the best shade' you ever saxv on spring rol-j lers. 1000 shades on spring rol¬ lers at 50c each. -$1 3 . 00 - for a 5 hole cooking range 53 pieces furniture. $8. 00 for Xo. 6 stove with 20 pieces furniture. |Wheeler & Wilson SEWiNG MACHINES. Plush Parlor suit 7 pieces 'solid walnut frame. I have everything needed in your house no matter what it [is. Catalogue free. L, F. L ADGETT 1 , 1110 & 1112 Bread St y\ Augusta, Georgia. | •o 4 4$ . w’ i .. p