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the ROCXI* or LIFE.
Two children down by the shining strand,
With eyes as bine ns the summer sen,
While the sinking sun fills all tho land
Witn tho glow of a golden mystery;
laughing aloud at tho sen’s mow cry,
(lazing with joy on its snowy breast,
Till tho first star looks from the event
And tho amber bars stretch over the
west
A soft green dell by tho broczy_ 6horo,
A sailor lad nnd a maiden fair:
Hand clasped in hand, whtlo tho talo of
yoro
Is liorne again on the listening air.
For love is young, though love be old,
And love alone the heart can fill;
And the dear old talo that has been told
In tho days gone by is spoken still.
A trim*bnilt homo on a sheltered bay:
A wifo looking out on tho glistening sea;
A prayer for the lovod one far away.
And prattling imps ’neath the old roof-
A lifted latch and a radiant face
By tho open door in tho falling night;
A weloome homo and a warm ombraco
From tho love of his youth and his chil
dren bright
An aged man in an old nrm-chair;
His
And tho open _.
Sweet on tho bay tho gloaming falls,
And bright is tho glow of the evening
star;
But dearer to them are tho jasper walls
And the golden streets of the land afar.
An old churchyard on a green hillside,
Two lying still in their peaceful rest;
The fisherman’s boat going out with tho
tide
In tho fiery glow of the amber west
Children’s laughter and old men’s sighs,
The night th«t follows tho morning clear,
A rainbow bridging our darkened skies,
Are the round of our lives from year to
year!
—fChambers’ Journal.
the great art of eatixu.
Well-Known Hen nnd Tbeir Dinners
...Home ofTbose Who Know flow to
UItc Orders— A Dinner That Cost
l our Thousand Dollars tor Ten
Uucsts—Enters That Are Considered
Artistic nud Otherwise.
Special Correspondence Philadelphia Timet
Nkw Yoke, October 22.—The other
day the great caterer—I mean Delmonico
—talked about what people eat. It is not a
safe but a reasonable assertion to make,
that wbat New York people eat that is
good they think they eat at Delmonico's.
I mean, in plainer words, tbey gratify
tbeir normal appetites somewhere else
and give the whimscy of their stomachs
the syllabub of cookery at the central aud
fashionable place. If thoy were really in
earnest in gratifying at once their snob
bery and tbeir Lunger they might Just as
well eat at one place as another, for the
cost is not much higher or lower in all
good places. I know many people who
avoid Delmonico’s when hungry and
go to some other place to spend the sarno
amount of money for a lunch because
they are afraid of the tariff. As a matter
of financial fact they pay the same at the
Brunswick, the St. James and the Gilsey
House, aud more at the Astor House
(which, by the way, popular as it is, is
the most expensive feeding place in New
York), MarUnelh’s. Parker’s and the Ho
tel Buckingham. To asertam these facts
requires long journeys of discovery, if
you seek to kDow them by experience
alone. 1 have taken them. But all of
this does not apply to Mr. Delmonico's
talk, and introducing that, l wish to say
that lie lias served dinners which cost to
the payer WOO a cover, and of that one
dinner I shall speak presently, while I
record in a cross-table way the unpre
meditated interview we had.
THE BEST EATEIU
“Who is the best eater among your pat
rons?” was asked.
<*I don’t know; in the way ol hearty
eaters it would be difficult enough to dis
criminate. The most artistic feeder I
have seen hero was probably George Au
gustus Bala, the English author aud jour
nalist.”
“By what rule do you classify him so
high ?”
“Well, lie ate his breakfast like a man
who slept soundly, drank a light bottle of
Sautcrae with a Spanish mackerel, or a
dish of frjgd brook trout smothered in
cresses, called for a Chateaubriand steak
anil fried potatoes, drank some coffee with
that and ate the crust of a hot roll an
notated with sweet (unsalted butter) and
thus finished his breakfast. That taken
about ten o’clock gave him a chance for a
proper dinner at seven.”
“And was be as clever with an order
for dinner as for breakfast?”
“Yes, indeed; but he ate as an English
man always does—rare roast beef, blood
gravy with it, underdone Southdown mut
ton, curried dishes for entrees aud a
straight service of wine for the meal.”
“You have given some very big diuners
here. What was the greatest?”
“Well, I guess the one to Sir Morton
I’eto, by McHenry, who was creating tho
Atlantic and Great Western Railway at
that time, was the greatest public dinner.
It cost in round figures nearly $24,000,
of which $3,000 were lor flower* alone,
and $11,700 for wine.”
“Oh, monstrous! but only $0,000 worth
ol bread to this intolerable deal of sack!
How many floated tbeir food in that ocean
of wine?”
“There were one hundred covers laid,
but one hundred and forty-two satdown.”
“That was a big dinner you gavo to
Dorsey ?”
“Ob, yes, that’s the time that President
Arthur, then Vice-Presldent-eiect, sat be
side Grout. Tbey bad about as good a
dinner as any that has been given lately.
It didn't cost as much, but there were
more public men there than 1 have ever
? thend at any public dinner in New
ork. Jay Gould, Emory Storrs, Gov
ernors Hoyt, Cornell, Secretaries Evans,
Sherman, Dorsey himself—great man
that day, sure—Gorham, Beecher, Dr.
Starrs, Senator Jones and everybody—
three hundred odd, I think.”
“Trouble about getting your money,
eh?”
“Got it, though, and no serious trouble.
I am not talking politics.”
THE GRAND SWAM DINNER.
“What was the ‘grand swau dinner’ 1
heard sometimes?”
“That was a dinner at which we had a
small lake built upon tbe table, in the
centre—no, not so very small, either—and
at which tbe dessert was served in swvfc’
eggshells, rut out of marble, while in the
lake swam five live swans'. The table,was
a bed of rosebuds. That was a tolerable
dinner.”
“That reminds one cf tho dinner Cold of
in I’eirouius Arbiter.”
“Sure enough; but those old classic
writers tell things that modern gastronomy
lit ver readies. Tho finejartspn cookery and
tade service, as In painting, seem to be
better—in tbeir descriptions—than we can
rival now.”
“Dou’t be jealous; if you had lived
when no punch was good without a pearl
dissolved in It, and a handful of rubies to
flavor each glass, you might have excelled,
What was tho big private dinner?
[Mollified.] “Well, there was a gen
tleman who gave a dinner to ten people
that cost him $400 a cover. It was luxu
rious enough to be classical. His bills of
fare he provided himself, and be insisted
ou the tjnrcone, five of them, being dress
ed as sailors. He was a yachtsman, and
he bought tlieir clothes and sent for them
next day to dress his sailors on the vessel
with. The bilis of fare were the feature
of the dinner. Let me see, they drank—
°r rather tasted—every vinted liquor that
has ever been brought to America. I do
do not mean they drank every brand of
wine, but the best was not good enough
for tbeir taste. Tbey finished with a
pouste cafe made of eleven liqueurs.”
“Sat the bills of fare?”
“They are too grand. Before each plate
**t a cut-glass basin, about twenty inches
in diameter and four inches deep. Each
was nearly filled with water perfumed
with otter of roses,on the surface of which
floated half-open .pond lilies. In the ba-
»ta a perfect model of the yacht owned by
with cabin, rail, wheel for steering, brass guests tbe-most hearty, tho Bostonians rumors have any basis, and insist that all j lish or American girl of independant
work, such as belaying-pins, binnacles., the most critical, the native Knicker- cn ' ,f ’ *>«> “"d i' 0 ' 1 ,linir i -e - -
man ropes woiked and trimmed with sail- bockcr tbe most sensible.” Russ,
or knots, scraped pine masts and booms, | . «»■ ■
rigging of silken cords colored as it
would be in the prototype and sails of
satin.”
“But tho bills of fare?'*
“Yes, yes! The sails carried the bills
IT£ TWO.
My home ? Well, ’tis a small affair,
I presame you’d think ’twoald hardly do,
«i r,-„ ’ 77' „ n mT" .i ule 0, * ,s j But then for style wo don’t much cafe,
of fare. On the: flying jib wereThe words, s And it doesn’t take very much room
‘Compliments of the—’well, giver of the
dinner; on the jib tbe date and place; on
tbe foresail was tire name of tbe guest who
sat at the place where each little vessel
floated, and on the mainsail was the
menu. Then, as tbe guest bad occasion
to consult it, lie used a little gold oar that
rested on the fingers of a silver naiad who
peered over the sparkling glass and held
And it doesn't take very much room for
two.
’4 is a breezy place, where the trees em
brace
And knit tbeir bonghs in filmy lace,
But a sunbeam or two comes sifting
through,
And little makes happiness for two.
Tito honse ? Yes, ’tis old-fashioned quite;
Eight rooms or such a matter there;
bright,
And onr hearts know little or naught of
care.
Ho the love-lit days like a purple haze
Go drifting ont in a blissful maze
And affection anew stags tbe whole day
through,
And we are happy enough for two.
This land is as fair as fair can be,
With the woods, and the bills, an I
matchless sky,
With tho waving grain and the flower-
flecked lea,
And the beautiful brook that babbles by,
So band in linn i by Love’s breezo fanned,
We journey on to the ‘‘Silent Laud;”
If the world goes too, how can we rue ?
When none are happier than we two.”
—[Dart Fnirthorne.
tho
THE nHOUT WHEAT CROP.
out both hands to grasp the oar. After, Bat tho flowers dance in the sunlight
the dinner each guest either carried away • •
the bill of fare or had it sent to him
his home. Tbe bills ot fare must ba
cost $100 apiece.”
“Got one?”
“No, I have a $100 to keep.”
“Who gave the dinner ? ”
“Whisper—I decline to advertise the
Idiot.”
“But he must have been an idiot of
taste to plan such an arrangement for a
bill cf fare ? ”
“Don’t tell the people in Philadelphia
that; they won’t believe It; besides, be
didn’t, plan it; it was another idiot—I
mean myself.”
“Was that tbe best private dinner you
ever gave ? ”
“Yes; that was the most expensive, and
we never serve any but tbe very best.”
DELMONICO’S IDEA OF A DINNER.
“Wbat is your idea of a good dinner ? ”
“Do you ask mo as a caterer or a
diner ? ”
“Both.”
“As a caterer, I answer tho ono that
gives the must satisfaction to those to
whom it is served and returns tlie best
profits; as a diner, tbe best is that which
gratifies the taste, satisfies the demands cf
hunger, tickles the appetite and completes
its courses just at the time tbe pe’sou who
eats feels himself no longer hungry and
begins to wonder why, because ire does
not remember to have eaten anything ?”
Can you accomplish that blissful con
dition of things for yourself?”
“Sometimes; but not always. Wisdom
in feeding, I notice, is rare, and flesb is
weak. One cither gets too much wine at
the start or commits some such folly as
taking a drink of brandy and soda or
cocktail before he begins, and then he
will find it no end of tronbe to balance Ills
stomach.”
“If wisdom of this kind is rare, perhaps
you can tell me the names of some of tbe
few people who are really wise ?”
“That’s pretty hard. There’s Uncle
Sam Ward. He’s a good and sensible
eater, but iucliued to take food too highly
flavored. He’ll get gouty, maybe.”
“Among tbe politicians, who eat well?’ 1
“Let me see. I can’t recall many right
off the reel. There’s Evarts. He eats a
great deal and eats good food and knows
■' Among local politicians Hurbert O.
Thompson, now commissioner of public
works, is tlie best. I don’t know but
wliat lie is tbe most aristocratic tpictire In
New York. I have often admired Charles
Brooke’s orders. By the way he is a
Philadelphian, and perhaps has a tend'
ency to chicken croquettes, born of a
taste created at Augstiu’s, that should be
restrained. He is a terrapin connisseur.
Tilden, Uncle Sammy, knows wliat is
good, and tbe way be ordera the first in
season indicates how he keeps trace of the
times when new things are due. Ex-
Governor Jewell, of Hartford, is a deli
cate and careful feeder. Tho New Eng
landers, as a rule, do not excel in gas
tronomy. They order things out of sea
son and generally hash up their food.
J.et roe see, you'were asking about poli
ticians. Ben Bailer, he is a splendid
exception to the average Yankee, and so,
too, is General Hooker, who is secretary
of the Republican national committee.
He comes from Vermont, and although
ho rarely makes a good balance of the
kind of wine lie drinks, he gets the right
kind. Governor Cornell 1 don’t know
anything about. Governor Hoyt? Yes;
lie’s a big man with chin whiskers. I
rarely see him, but he can order jiut wbat
lie want?,and be knows”ust bow good it is
Then there is Don Cameron, who is a
comfortable but not a really good orderer.
Wayne MacVeagb knows bow to order a
ta-toful dinner. Bob Garrett, vice-presi
dent of tbe Baltim re and Ohio railroad,
is clever that way, and gets a dinner party
very happy in a little while.”
PENNSYLVANIA “FEEDEKS.”
“Wliat oilier Pennsylvanians do yon
remember ?” .
‘I can’t recall many of them. Morton
McMIcliaol was a patron; so was Godey
and Dr. Rush. Mr. Childs has como at
intervals. Loudon Snowden and General
Uuidekooper are Pennsylvanians who
know how to cat. Malcolm Peters and
B. K. Jamison I remember as good feed
ers.” *
“How is It you know these people so
well?”
“Well, I have been in this business for
thirty yean, and tbey bave been feeding
longer.”
“Arthur ever cat here?”
“Used to do so regularly. Hearty, but
not delicate.”
“Gram?”
“Eats wbat is given him, drinks wbat
be likes.”
“Jlayer?”
“Don’t know. He has been here fre
quently, but I really don’t know.”
“Who among tbe local people know
bow to order a good dinner.”
“Well, most all the young men of
wealth. Jeuneste dore ot New York
knows how. Vanderbilt—W. H., I mean
—Is one of the heartiest feeders I know
of.”
“How about tbe journalists?”
“Mr. William Henry Uulburt is indis
putably tbe best. As a raconteur over
walnuts and wine be has no equal. Mr.
Dana lrequently orders a buffet—a stand-
up luucb. I have served several down at^
Glen Cove. Mr. Jones, of tbe Times, I
do not know. Mr. Bennett eats yacht-
club dinners. Hugh Hastings is a regu
lar good one. Steve Fisk is a vary good
trencherman. Tom CoDnery? Don’t
think I ever heard of him.”
“Who makes tbe best after-dinner
speech ?”
“General Horace Porter Is indisput
ably the best speaker after dinner. The
Rev. R. S- Storrs and Beecher are very
popular. When gentlemen come here to
order dinners for large gatherings tbey
rarely neglect to casually drop the fact
that Beecher, Storrs, Porter, General
Woodford, the United States District At
torney. or somebody like that, is going to
speak for them.”
ACTORS AT DINNER.
“Theatrical people good feeders?”
“None worse, If I except John McCul
lough and some of the ladies whose prov
ender Is ordered by some New York es
cort who knows «hat she ought to eat
aud has rnouey, neither of which things
she has.”
“Isn’t Daly a dainty feeder?”
“I really don’t know. Sheridan Shook
is a hearty oue. John Dull is a strong
cater and hearty drinker. He washes
everything down with champagne—Pom-
mery Sec.~ John McCaull is a great fel
low for terrapin. Havcrly rarely comes
in here. Mapleson comes often, eats well
and drinks well. By tlie way, Thurlow
Weed kDows a thing or two about what
Is good; so does Peter Cooper. Horaco
Greeley was an idiot about food, but lie
came here often. Old Judge Packer, now
dead, was a discriminating man over food
and wine.”
“How about the women?”
“They never know, or at least only a
few of them. Bernhardt bad no idea
what to put in her stomach. Gerster al
ways wanted garlicy and onion-seasoned
dishes. Kellogg cats oysters and terra
pin As a rale ladles who come here to
lunch rat salads. Men order better and
more carefully than women. The West
ern people are about tbe same kind of
feeders the Yankees are. Tbe South
erners go for auy dish that is fried and
become dyspeptic In haste. Tbe people
of tbe Middle States are tbe best diners.
Englishmen get tbe best breaktasts.
Frenchmen are tho best wine drinkers
and judges of wtae, and foreigners gen
erally kuow more about eating and drink
ing then Americans. Taken full and
Tbe NlalH HuucbuMtls.
Springfield Republican.
A most elaborate effort is made to blow
away the charge that the Ninth regiment of
the Massachusetts militia, or members of
. lit, misbehaved during their triptoYork-
, . large, the Baltimoreans who visit here town. It is admitted that all along tbe way
the gentleman who gave tbe dinner was are the most tasteful eaters, the Pbiladel- J stories of misconduct sprng up, but the
placed. It was cut m red cedar wood, phlans tbe most dainty, tbe Chicago regiment and its defenders deny that these
Wliat tbe Deficiency la and Wliat
Brings It On
Jtinneap lit Tribune
Tlie total wheat crop of the United
States is now put at 308,942,000 bushels,
against 448,'700,730 bushels in 1879, and
480,840,7x3 bushel-, ft r 1880, according to
the figures of the Agricultural Depart
ment? This shortage of more than 100,-
009,000 bushels is pretty evenly distribut
ed over tlie whole country. In every
section some cause has appeared to par
tially disappoint the expectations
farmers. The New England Slates show
a regular and constant decline in produc
tion; tho Middle. States note a falling off
of 12 per cent, from last year’s yield; the
Southern States scarcely hold their owd,
while in the important re
gion of the vast West the crop is de
cidedly short. It is no. easy to secure
autbeutic reports from tho Pacific coast,
but that there will be a decrease is evi
dent, while Colorado aud the Territories
fall considerably below the figures of
1879. The only States which this year
show au increase over the crop returns for
1889 are Nebraska, Wisconsin and Kan
sas. The Territory ot Dakota makes a
great leap forward of over six million
bushels in two years, but when the rapid
ity with which the acreage has iucreased
is taken into computation this is scarcely
extraordinary. Illinois, Indiana aud
Michigan have suffered most severely, the
yield iu the first-mentioned being consid'
erably less than half of that for either of
the two years immediately preceding,
The causes which produced this uniform
effect are curiously diverse. In California
it is a late spring, aud in some sections
lack of rain. From Illinois,East and South,
the drought of this year has been some
thing terrible, while in Minnesota contin
ued heavy raius delayed harvesting and
did much damage to grain. In tbe Slates
lying near Chesapeake Bay there has not
been enough ralu to do more that) moisten
the surface ot the ground lor fifteen weeks.
Wells are dry, rivers have disappeared,
and already, weeks ago, vegetation ap
peared as ir a heavy frost bad passed over
it, so completely had it been killed by the
long drought. In Minnesota more rain
(ell in the month of Septemberthaulu any
previous year on record. A gentleman
largely interested in wheat farming in the
Red River Valley, who boasts this year of
au aveaage crop of 28 busbels to the acre,
declares that the disappointment there is
chiefly owing to the carelessness of tho
farmers themselves. He attributes his
own success to the fact that his grain
was put in stack as soon as cut, while
others who left theire in shock,
waiting for the thresher, were overtaken
by repeated rains and suffered severe loss.
It is probable, however, that the shortage
will not inflict serious damage upon the
farmers as a class. No cases where tbe
crop was a total failure, to be left stand-
ins or plowed under, as in previous years,
are reported from any section. The de
crease comes from a general limitation in
the yield per acre, and thus a part of what
the farmer loses in quantity is mace up to
him in price. The point to which wheat
has already reached in tho market, and
the probable range of prices during the
mouth that must elapse before a new crop
can be fairly on the way, insure as fair a
return up to a certain limit as tbe lower
rate of profit given by tbe prices of pre
ceding years upon a much larger supply.
The Battle Crar of Freedom.
Ballon Pott.
Sweet Evelina from the suffocating em
brace of her lover cried ont: "Give mo
liberty or give me bre ,th.”
't he Issue in YlrKlnla.
Jl'ashington Pott.
The Repndiators, tho negroes and the
Federal administration against tue debt
paying Democracy—that is the present day
contest in Virginia.
Where is Fluaciwf
Springfield Republican.
Why isn’t Flanagan, of Flanagan’s Mills,
Texas, on hand to get his share of the
gocdics ? Ho hasn’t impressed the conn-
try as a statesman who was likely to get
left on snch an occasion as this.
such charges are only false and had their gharacter, and the only daughter of an _
only origin in tho jealous enmity of other • . . ,
and rival militiamen, and “old soldiers at i *®IIectnaI, easy-going father, who wished to
Washington say the Massachusetts bine, make her his companion. She has alwayl
and nothing else, caused the fahta auddjtm- refused to be married according to the
French fashion, which ordains that young
aging reports.” This sort of defense may
do for marines and particularly confiding
old ladies; bat tlie people of Massachusetts
will not be entirely satisfied that everybody
outside of the Hay State is leagued to throw
odinm upon its repres ntatives; that
snch dense and general smoke hide3
no fire.
Tbe Kind or Kan 9avb Votes For
Washing'ox Pott.
Howard M. Kutchin, of Wisconsin, who
was yesterday confirmed as collector of in
ternal revenue for tbe district of Milwau
kee, was first nominated for that position
by Mr. Hayes. He had, however, published
in his paper an article advising that North
ern Democrats be treated as the negro was
alleged to be treated by the Southern Dem
ocrats, that the shotgun should be used nnd
their wives and daughters be outraged, all
of which aronsed a strong opposition to
him in the Senate. Under the leadership
of the late Senator Carpenter, who led tho
fight against Kntchin, -he opposition, in>-
cluding all the Democrats, was strong
enough to defeat the confirmation. Kntch
in was again nominated by the late Presi
dent Garfield, bnt the nomination went
down in the Conkling-Robertson fight and
wa3 not acted npon. President Arthur
again nominated him and he was yesterday
confirmed by a strict party vote, Senator
Davis voting with the Republicans.
lUHiermuzeu iu me columns Ui inu
titution of yesterday. His name is
Raymond, is of New York, and he
rates his first silly lie and then at-
Norne Plata Talk.
Chattanooga Timet.
The chap who printed the silly falsehood
about tho Atlanta Constitution’s superior
ity as a newspaper in tbe Baltimore San
has materialized iu the columns of tho
Constitution of
Ross
reiterates his first silly
tompt3 to explain it away. His original
effort was to show that tho Constitution is
superior ns a newspaper to all tho Cincin
nati papers bnt two, to both tho great
dailies of St Louis, and to all in Chicago
bnt the Times and Tribune, while no South
ern paper was worthy of consideration
compared with the Constitution. Now
Of the ? 0 *? explains that the great Northern
dames ho placed below the Constitntion, in
respect to their volume of news and the
cost of it, get the bnlk of their telegrams
ite
girls passively accept suitors offered to
them by their families. She and M. Wil
son have been well acquainted for thirteen
years, daring which time M. Grevy has
been to him a close friend and something
of a mentor. M. Wilson is of English
parentage, bnt brought up in France,
a natnralized Frenchman, and understand
ing English.
Robbed in a Railway Cab.—A daring out
rage was perpetrated on a train between
Utica and Erie. W. N. Brown, of Masse-
ville, Ross county, Ohio, was returning
home, having $8,050 sewn in a belt on his
body. Brown noticed two flashy yonng
men sitting near him. Thoy were very
communicative, and treated him to wine
from a flask. While lying in a drowsy con
dition on a soat and in a car fall of passen
gers Brown felt a cloth pressed over his
month and nostrils. One man sat on him
while tho other held the handkerchief. He
lost consciousness, and the men, pretend
ing their friend was overcome by the heat,
carried him ont on the platform for fresh
air. There they removed his belt, and,
bringing him back, got off at the next sta
tion, under pretense of getting mcdioalaid.
The handkerchief fonnd saturated with
chloroform canacd an investigation and
the development of the forgoing fata.
crystallized Rook and Rye.
olds, coughs and a certain
Sure cure for coi
relief for consumption. .Try it and yon
will be convinced. Sam Weiahselbaaiu,
Galieau and Stations.
To THE EDITOB OF THE WoBLD ! SlB 2—
The counsel for Gniteau is making a mis
take. He should enlist Mahone in his
cnase, for he has captared everything at
publican
and os
send for
Mahono without delay. Yours.
Jebsez Justice.
over, private wires worked by a pooling
scribbler only makes his case worse by
pretending he has forgotton tho name of
tbe city of Nashville, which contains one-
third more population and five times the
wealth and culture to ba fonnd in Atlanta.
Tho Constitntion ought to have erected
Boss Raymond’s last communication to its
colnmns into a Now York special, by way
of vindicating it pretensions, and in ac
cordance with its usnal custom of stealing
and redating. Such an exploit would have
gone some distance in support of Ray
mond's romance, and have comported with
the fitness of Constitutional news manu
facturing. The real truth is the Constitu
tion is below several Southern journals in
point of tho variety and value of its news,
and utterly inferior in that respect to more
than forty Northern papers; and tho at
tempt of its hired man to make it out a
great paper has brought just odium on
them both, as guilty of fraudulent false
pretenses.
Delay.
A. S. Saxton in Century Magazine.
Thou dear, misunderstood, maligned De-
lay,
What gentler hand than thine can any
kuow 1
How dost tlion soften death’s unkindly
blow,
And bnlt bis messenger npon the way!
How dost thou nnto Shaiuo's swift herald
sny,
“Linger a little with thy weight of woe!’’
How art thon nnto those whose joys o’er-
flow,
A stern highwayman, bidding passion
Robbing the lover’s pulses of their heat
Within the lonesome shelter of tby
wood!
Of all life's varied accidents we meet,
Where can we find so great on offered
good?
Even the longed-for heaven might seem
less sweet,
Conld we bnt Lurrv to it when we wonld.
Wbat Arthur Can Learn from Grant.
New York Sun.
We observe with interest that Gen. Ar
thur has lately spent a good many honra in
the society of Gen. Grant. There is noth
ing alarming in this prolonged and confi
dential intercourse. On the contrary, it
is highly reassuring. From General
Grant, Gonoral Arthur can learn
nearly everything that a President ought
not to do.
Bapltl Transit lu iox»s.
Oalcetlon Xeict
Very few people have any idea ot the
slowness the Austin street car is capable of.
Only yesterday a ludy with a two-year-old
boy got in tlie car. She paid her own fare
and asked what was the charge for tho in
fant. “No charge, madams. We only
charge adults.” “Then I might as well
pay. He will bo grown np before be gets
there. I’m going five blocks.”
Practice
Motion Pott.
“Dang it,” said Gallagher to Ragbag,
“what do yon want to tell snch awfnl,
howling Iies-for ? You were giving your
self dead away. Nobody believed you.
Yoa’II get the unmo of being the biggest
liar in the city.” “Do yon really think
so ? ” asked Ragbag. “Thinkso 1 I know
it 1” “Oh, rapture 1 That’s what I want.
I’m working to get the job ot selling a lot
of mining stock iu tbe rural districts.”
Good!
Atlanta correspondence Savannah A’ctct.
No opportunity seems to be loBt by cer
tain parties to give the General Assembly a
Blap because it failed to appropriate $80,-
000 to the cotton exposition. The latest
slap comes from Mr. J. iV. Ryckm&u, the
secretary, a Philadelphia gentleman who
is largely interested in the financial suc
cess of the enterprise on acoonnt of his
salary and publication privileges. X sug
gest, therefore, that Mr. Kyckman is hard
ly a proper person to sit in judgment npon
our late General Assembly, whose action
in the matter is still indorsed by tbeir own
consciences and tho people of the State.
A Goat Story.
IV. Y. Sun.
Found—A goat; owner can bave it by
proving property and pnying expenses.
Apply at 119 West 18th street.
A small man with a shnrp face opened
the door.
'Have yon fonnd a goat?”
My vife found it. Some boys brought
him on a rope aud my vifo slang thtm all
over that door step and took dat goadt.”
“Well, that’s a good way of finding a
goat. What does it look like?”
“No]yon don't! I tell yon dat was a
goadt with green wool and a parplo nose,
and thon yonr heeler he come back after
some times and SHys, T was tho owner of
that goadt with green wool and purple
nose.” Ob, no, I don't get caught so like
that.”
Then the small man winked knowingly
and gently closed the door.
Setbbal sportsmen in pursuit of game
in Formentera, one of the Balearic Islands,
suddenly came npon a deep oxcavalion, tbe
entrance to which wa8 covered with bushes
and undergrowth. They proceeded to ex
plore it, and having with some difficulty re
moved several large stones found them
selves in a well-built chamber of Moorish
design, the walls of whioh were orna
mented with undecipherable character?.
In the ni'ddlo of the chamber were two
tombs of admirable workmanship. On re
moving tho metal covers by which they
were closed the explorers discovered two
colossal mnmmified bodies, one on tho
rignt being that of a yonng woman, tbe
other that of a man. On tho head of the
woman was a diadem set with stones, which
if gennino, are of inestimable value.
Around her neck was a necklace of large
pearls, two enormous earrings were attach
ed to her ears, and bor fingers were covered
with rings. On the head of the man was
an imperial crown, and in his right hand
ho held a sceptre. Six of the disoorerers
remained to gnardtbe treasure and the oth
ers loft for Madrid to constat the authori
ties. The innabitants are said to have
known of the cavern, bnt had never entered
it, thinking it was only a resort of serpents.
The “Cut of Rom*.’’—This mammoth
Tesscl has been visited by large nnmbers of
citizens Bince her arrival all of whom speak
in terms of admiration cf her fine lines and
majestie appearance. The publio recep
tion which was to have taken place to-day
is necessarily deferred until her next trip,
all the time between now and Saturday
being required for the discharge of and
taking in of cargo. Excepting the “Great
Eastern,” tho “City of Romo” is tho largest
steamship afloat. She is 54G feet long.
Her displacement at 20 feet mean draft, is
13,500 tons, so that she has a dead weight
carrying power of 5,500 tons. The cubical
contents of her hold giro her a measure
ment capacity of 7,720 tons, at fifty cubic
feet to the ton. Her stern frame or post is
the largest single forging ever made for
such a purpose; the finished weight is esti
mated to be not less than 33 tons. On
each side of the vessel, from tho saloon to
tho after end of tho engine room, are
placed staterooms providing for abont 300
passengers. Amidships ere placed retiring
rooms, baths and lavatories, barber's shop
Ac. Abaft the cabin bulkhead the main
deck is fitted for about 250 emigrants, in
the same manner as for those forward; ao-
e jmmodation is therefore provided on the
main deck for abont 500 emigrants. Ac
commodations can also be provided on the
lower deck for 1,000 emigrants more, mak
ing a grand total of 1,600.
Alice Gbxvt, tbe daughter of the Presi
dent of the Frenoh republic, who was mar
ried last week to Daniel Wilson, under
secretary of finance in France, has a merit
ed reputation for intelligence and original
ity of mind. She is also very artistio. Sho
has expressive dark eyes, very black and
luxurious hair, and a small, delicate figure,
which shows agility and decision. Mlie.
Gravy’s education has been that of an Eng-
IMPERISHABLE
PERFUME.
Murray & Lanman’s
FLORIDA WATER,
Best for TOILET. BATH,
and SICK ROOM.
S
49-SEXD FOR CIRCULARS.-®*
TictorSewiDlaclBCo
MIDDLETOWN, CONN.
Southern office, No. 8 N. Charles St.UBal
timore, Md. oollOdaw m
PERRY DAVIS’
PAINKILLER
18 A FUHEIiY VEGETABLE REMEDY
For INTERNAL and EXTERNAL Uta.
A sure and speedy euro for Sore
Throat, Coughs, Colds, Diphtheria,
Chills, Diarrhca,Dy6cntcry, Cramps,
Cholera, Summer Complaint, Sick
Headache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism,
Bruises, Cuts, Sprains, etc.
Perfectly safe to use interna!!]/ or eztemaByfixtd
certain to afford relief. No family can afford to
be without It Sold by all druggists at JMc.
OOc., and *1 a bottle.
PERRY DAVIS A SON, Proprietors,
Providence. R. I
THE COMPARATIVE EDITION OF ,
g New Testament!
BOTH B FULL TEXT OF
VERSIONsIKINC JAMES A REVISED VERSIONS
IN ONE | IN PARALLEL PAGES.
BOOK r E Krw from error*. ChfingM ihnirn mts
•aarararasalcliinca. Onlr ONB Book JtEuriBEa
Hnraitliu*. ritml.bor, in.-ire. arearaer. siftsatis
(action. Sell. Rapidly. Containing IOOOpmvc.
AQENT8 I Prl ■©. I J. H. CHAMBERS A CO.,
WANTED (at.SO f Atlanta. Gourita
For OhlllM and Wm-vm:
AND ALL DISEASES
haul *7 Malarial fclmlai of the Slaal
A WARRANTED CURB.
Frio*. JD $ -OO- atwtexm
30 DAYS TRIAL
ALLOWED.
laaalMBM
WE WILL SFND, ON 30 DAYS' TRIAL,
DR. BYE’S
Electro-Voltaic Appliances
TO H/UESlSr
Buffering from Xorvim.tVrnknfa.r*, Gea*
eral Debility, lo»a ot nerve force or vigor,
or any disease resulting from Abuses and Otbeb
Causjcs, or to nuy one nfll'.cti-d with Rheuma
tism, Neuralgia, I’nmly-ts, Spinal Dlfflcui'Iea,
Kidney or Liver Trouble., Lame Rack, Rup
ture*, and other Direo.*:* of the Vital Organ*.
Also women troubled with diseases peculiar to
their sex.
Speedy relief and complete restoration to
health guaranteed. Iteae nr. tho only
Electric AppllancH tliwt have over
been coital run ol»;>on sclent file prin
ciple*. Their thorough efilesry has teen prate
tiddly piovcn with the moat wonderful
sneer**, and they have the hlahrat
endor*cnien*» from uiedlcnl nnd arfew.
tide men,and from lioixtrcl* who have
hern -|ui,-kly mnt niiLi-iilljr rnred by
their line.
Send Rtonce frr Illustrated Pnmplilct, giving
all Information free. Addrur,
VOLTAIC SEET CO.. W.rthall, RhA
Southern Home School For Girls,
197 and IOO N Chnrle* St, Ball laser*,
Maryland.
Mbs. W. M. Oabt, Mias Cary.
Established 1812. Frenoh the language
Of tho school.
—37th=
Popular Monthly Drawing of the
In the Giiy of Louisville
Monday, October 31. 188L
These drawings occur monthly (Sunday’s
excepted) under provisions of an aot of the
General Assembly of Kentucky
The UnitedUtalesCirouit Court, on March
31, rendered the following decisions:
1st—That tho Commonwealth’ Distribu
tion Company is legal.
2d—Its drawings are fair.
N. B.—The company has now on hand a
large reserve fond. Read carefully the list
of prizes for the
OCTOBER DRAWING.
1 Prize $ 30,000
I Prize 10,000
1 Prize. 5,00C
10 Prizes $1,000 each 10,00<
20 Prizes 600 eaoh 10,00(
100 Prizes 100 each . 10.00(
200 Prizes 60 each 10,901
600 Prizes 20 each 12,00(
1,000 Prizes 10 each 10,00
9 Prizes 300 each, an’rox prizes 2,70
9 Prizes 200 each do do 1,801
9 Prizes 100 each do do 90
Ifyou uiant tohuyj
0lotWj for Men orBays I
I either ready-ma.de ormojk?
jto order, do not fail to
[send lor our Catalogue•]
SEND
1,960 Prizes $112,400
Whole Tiekets, $2. Half Tickets, $1.
27 Tickote, $50. 65 Tickets, $10).
Remit Money or Bank Draft in Letter,
or send by Express. DON’T SEND V i
REGISTERED LETTER OR POST-O A
FICE ORDER. Orders of $5 and upward,
by Express, can be sent at oar expense.
Address all orders to
R. M. BOARDMAN,
309 Broadway, N. Y.
THE NORWAY
MUSICAL ALBUM.
Bx FORESTIER AND ANDERSON.
A collection of weird, strange, and yet
strangely captivating Songs and Melodies
from the land of Ole Bull; just the mnsic
that inspired his imagination. Norse and
English words. A musical novelty that
will delight lovers of what is wild, rich and
romantic in legend and song. Price $2.50.
Garfield's Funeral March. Fine por
trait. 40 cents.
Robert Franz' Album of Song.
Old and new. Approved by the master
himself. A book in which every note is a
gem. German and English words. A hun
dred exquisite songs. $2. bds.; $2.50 cloth.
Herald of Praise. For choirs and con
ventions. $1.
THE IDEAL. 8.'Ehbbsoil Is
the best Singing School book of the dis
tinguished author. -Admirable collection
of interesting, wide-awake, effective music,
combined - in a practical and thorough
course. Ideal sncccss’in an Ideal singing
class will resnlt from nBidg the book.
Soxa Bells. For common schools. Emer
son. 50 cents.
tEE»«BCA
HOPE-DEAF
Dr. Peck's Artificial Ear Drums
PEJGT.CTLV RESTORE THE HEARING
nnd perform the work of the Natural Drum.
Always In position, bnt Invisible to other*.
All Oonvanatlon and even whispers heard dis
tinctly. W. nto to thus alias lira, bend for
descriptive circular with testimonials Address.
H.P.ff. PECK A CO., Broedwar, WewYerk.
F. S. JOHNSON’S SONS,
IDAVID.LAMlRnH8.S0HS. P„!LA1
SCANTLDTS ~
Seamless Evapsrcfor
AND
, “SOUTHERN” CASE MILL.
FIRST CLASS SG^fiO
AT TEST LOW PRJC Eb.
S#nd tor Ifczrriptiv* P.-iea List.
THOS. SCANTLIN&SOM,
EVANOVILIaC, ind.
tki* I'jpcr.
Ace«t» wcn^f. 12 n r.-a.Vj
teliliijr «ur Sl-.W IH»!> ; .?• ifLrf
lKlMESTlC Sc ALU CO- CmCiauiU. v.
®nur«BiAnDKLirin
Xo L. SJITa. U iU., Soto At f*. t*&kil*3, XXX
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE.
GE( >RGi V. J< >N!.S COUNTY-By virtu
107 Third St, Macon, Ga,,
of nn order from Jones Court of < Irdinary
will be sold at tlio conr house doorinClin
ton on the first Tuesday in Docr-mta-r r.eit
fomr hundred and seven acres of land, moil
or less, belonging to the estate of WiUiait
M. Roberts, ddcun-e-l. situated near the
Mneon and Augusta railroad, and near tha
Iron.teel, Cutlery,Belting,|S«i”au“£'S£ ! K'fS EX.
' ' * I oin house.nnc] nllmr hnililiti'va* ndiiuna \f««
—Dealers in7
Carriage and Wagon Material*
Plows,TPIow IStocks,
Traces, Hames,
Bone,
We ore headquarters for
SPORTING GOODS
Ditmar and other Pine Powder’.
We also keep s
Select Stock of Pithing Tackle.
feb2fiwly
OLIVER DITS0XT & CO., Boston.
H. DITSON A CO.. 843 Broadway N.
Wesleyan Female College,
Macon, Ga^
WILL begin Forty-fourth Annual Session
Wednesday, September 21st.
A full Faculty of experienced professors
and teachers. The best advantages in Mu
sic, Art, Literature and Science. Prices
much reduced. Valuable and extensive ad
ditions to Library and Scientifio Depart
ment.
Improvements to be made on buildings
will not interfere with their occupancy. Ap
ply for catalogue to
W. C. BASS, President,
or G. IV. SMITH, Secretory
jnlySdlf
HUGH SISSON & SONS,
Importers, Dealers and Manufacturers of
Warble Statuary,
Monument*, Mantel*,
Furniture Slab*, Altar*,
Tile, Tombs,
140 West Baltimore Street,
And Corner North and Monument stree
Drawings and estimates furnished free
febl5eodavly BALTIMORE MD
HOP BITTERS.
(A Medicine, n*t si DrinkO
jiors, ltrciiiT, mandrake,
DANDELION,
THEY 0 0-1*31;
It nnestesof tlirSlomnch. ,,nwr!*.H!»
Liver. Kldncfs.auil Urlnsryorgans. Nr;
VoasaMAjfclecplcMncssand especially
Footle Complaint*.
$1000 IN COLD.
wm lm paid for a c»*e they will not care or
help. CFtor any thlnp *:npi:rc or lujurlou*
found In them.
A»kyonr drupRlst f-/r Hop til tier* and try
them before you sleep Take no oilier*
D I.C. t* An absolutenmllrreetPtlWo pure for
Drunkcuucss, uso of opium, tobacco aud
narcotics.
Send for Cxttular.
!!c*p Bllbfl life. Co., Rachetter,
■old bjr drursb
chetter, N. Y.,
& Toronto, Oat.
Ayer’s Cathartic Pills,
Fur All the Purposes or & Family Physic,
Curing'
Costiveness, Jaun
dice, Dyspepsia, In
digestion, Dysentery
Foul Stomach ana
Breath, Headach,Er
ysipelas, Piles,Rheu
matism, Eruptions
and Skin Diseases,
Biliousness, Liver
Complaint, Dropsy,
Tetter, Tumors and Salt Rheum, Worms,
Gout, Neuralgia, as a Dinner PUL and Pu
rifying tho Blood, are tho most congenial
purgative yet perfected. Their effects
abundantly show how much they excei all
other Pills. They are safe and pleasant to
take, bnt powerful to enre. Thoy purge ont
the the foul humors of the blood; they stim
ulate the sluggish er disordered organs into
action; and they impart health and tone to
the whole being. They care not only the
everyday complaints of everybody, bnt
formidable and dangerous diseases. Most
skilful phy sicians, most eminent clergy
men, and onr best citizens send certificates
of cures performed, and of great benefits
derived from these Pills. They are the
safest and best physio for children, because
mild as well as effectual. Being sugar coat
ed, they arc being purely vegetable, they
are entirely harmless.
PREPARED BY
DR. J. C. AYER Sc CO. Lowell, Mu*
Practical and Analytical Chemists.
Sold by all druggists aud dealers in med
eoin.
.b §:3
iff =
"3-VS $ ? e~- a nj •=? hb. . 1
ffgm if* a* O
*r i.isfi
S TARTLBNG
DISCOVERY!
LOST MANHOOD RESTORED.
A victim of youthful impru.lir.cn cavs.uf
Premature Decay, Nervous Debi!'ty,LostiIin.
hood, etc, having tried in vsiu every tnown
remedy, baa discovered a simple self cure,which
be will tend Fit EM t J bis fellow-sufferers, ad*
dresa J. II. BLKVES. 4d Chatham 8W K. X.
gm honse,nnd other buildings; adjoins Mrs.
Choate and others; a fonr-horso farm in
cultivation. Sold to pay debts aiul distri
bution. Terms, ono-tkird cash and ono
and two y ears for remainder, with interest.
WILLIAM ROBERTS,
oct9-td Administrator.
Executors tiai?.
| 1 GREEABLY to an order from the court
-ra. of ordinary, and consent of the lega
tees, will bo sold on the first Tue day in
December next, at the conrt house door in.
Clinton, Jones county, Goorgin, fonr hun
dred and forty-five acres of land, ir.ore op
loss—the property of the estate of John T.
Smith doccascd—situate three miles north,
of Blounts ville, lying on Cedar creek; good
and, oak and hickory timber, comfortable
esidence nnd fair improvements thereon;
convenient to railroad. Bold for distribn-
| lion. Terms cash. September 21.1881.
sep22wGw LEONIDAS 8M ITH, Ex’r.
FOu SALE.
A HOUSE and lot, with nine acres oi
1 md attached, known as the Z. A. Fow-
I lor house nnd lot in the town of Knoxville,
Ga.: also one lot of land lying southeast of
Knoxville nnd within ono mile of said
I town. Terms cash. Apply to
Db. V. E. HOLTON,
oc‘2*-2w* Knoxville, Ga.
jTIRDINARY’S Office. Jones Conntr, Ga
V Ootobtr 24,1SH1.—Notice is hereby giv
cn that Thomas Johnson (colored) has ap
plied to me for exemption of personalty
under homestead law. and I will pass npon.
the same at this office on Nove mber 23,.
1881, at 11 o’clock a. m.
Witne-s my hand officially,
oct2Gwtd* It. T. ROSS, Ordinary.
MILL & FAGTORY SUPPL!ES
OF ALL KINDS. BELTiN s, HOSE
and PACKING, OILS, PUMPS ALL
KINDS, IRON PIPE, FITTINGS,
BRASS GOODS, STEAM GAUGES,
ENGINE GOVERNORS, &c. Send for
Price-litt. W.H. DILLINGHAM A CO-
421 Main Strest, LOUISVILLE, KY.
CEBmwXUU.
THE CHICAGO
WEEKLY NEWS
lc readers to l „
era. eacqualr.tocl with
the chispfft netro-
rnlitnn wc-Aly in the
U.S. Independent ta
yciit! s all tho retr*.
correct .market ro-
port*. ax complete
■loiii.-; iu every issue.
v>.r.'nT once and get
It un-.1l Jr.n.
jfcpuTi
isc.tj
Chicago Weekly New
ChUijjo, Cibola.
When the Fields are White
with Cotton*
ips.
A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO WI*
A FORTUNE. ELEVENTH GRAND DIS
TRIBUTION, CLASS L, AT NEW OR
LEANS, TUESDAY, NOV. 8th, 1881 -
138th MONTHLY DRAWING.
LouiiiAaa State Lottery Company.
Incorporated in 1868 for 25 years by the
Legislature for Eduoational and Charita
ble purposes—with a capital of $1,000,000
—to which a reserve fund of over $120,000
ha* since been added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its
franchise was.made a part of the present
State Constitntion adopted December 2d,
A. D., 1879.
CASH PRIC ES,
—WITO—
Three Months’ Credit.
LUDDEM.& BATES?
ner uiier.
ii. r linfe!2'S“h!T BEEDr “”-| For Au 8 ust anli September
T
Look at
never scales or poetponee.
the following Distribution:
l CAPITAL PRIZE *30,000.
100.000 TICKETS AT TWO DOLLARS
EACH, HALF TICKETS, ONE DOL
LAR.
LIST OF PRIZES.
1 Capital Prize $30,000
1 Capital Prize 10,000
1 Capital Prize i 5,000
2 Prizes of $2,500 6,000
5 Prizes of 1,000 6,000
609 1C,000
100. 10,000
60 10,000
20 10,000
10 10,000
9 Approximation Prizes of $300.. 2,700
9 Approximation Prizes of $200. 1.800
9 Approximation Prize, of $100. 900
1,857 Prizes, amounting to $110,400
paid
want-
A little Cash Now and^tuc Balance
When Cotton Cones in.
29 Prizes of
100 Prizes of
200 Prizes of
500 Prices of
1000 Prizes of
During tho months of Acgusi and Sep
tember, wo offer Pianos and Organs at
Lowest Cash Rates, payable—
$23 CASH ON A PIANO.
$10 CASH CN AN ORGAN,
And thebnlanco in three months, without'
interest. This offer expires October 1st,
next. Buy now, nnd buy as cheap as y ou
can next fall with cash in hand. Nothing
gained by waiting. Prices will be higher.
Anotlier boom is closo at hand. Manufac
turers will not be able to half supply tho
Responsible corresponding agents i - . , . . -- —. - —
ed at all points, to whom liberal ccinpen- I demand, aud instruments will be scarce
sation will be paid. ““ h '£ h -
For further information, writ6 clenrlv, .—
giving full address. Send orders by ex- WarerGOITIS CilOCK E BlOCR.
~ ress or Registered letter or Money Order
RDINARV’S-Offloc, Jones County, Ga.,
October 24, 1881.—Notice is hereby giv-
that Thos. J. Miller, of said county, has
applied to me for exemption of personalty
under the homestead laws of (Jeoi-gin, and
I will pass upon tbo same at this efflee on
tbe 22d day- of Noven her, 1881, at 11
o'clock a. m. that day.
Witness my hand officially.
oct26wfd* R. T. ROSS, Ordinary.
'•coo ui no^utcivu icbbci
ly mail, addressed only to
M. A. DAUPHIN
New Orleans, La.
or, M. A. DAUPHIN, at
No. 212 Broadway, New York.
All onr Grand Extraordinary Drawings
are under the supervision aud management
of Generals G. T. BEAUREGARD and
JUBAL A. EARLY.
Notice to the Public.
The publio are hereby cautioned against
sending any Money or Orders to NUNES
& CO., 83 Nassau St., New York city, as au
thorized by the Louisiana State Lottery
Com i any to sell its Tickets. They
are flooding the country with Bogus Circu
lars purporting to be of the Louisiana
State Lottery Company, nnd are fraudu
lently representing themselves ns its Agents.
They have no authority from this Compa
ny to sell its tickets, and are not its agents
for any purpose.
U. A. DAUPHIN.
Pres. Louisiana State Lottery Co.
New Orleans. Lit.. July 4. 1881.
iUii’^Uvertiseraruts.
GEORGIA, CRAWFORD COUNTY—
James H.D. Worsham,administrator on es
tate of Colin Murchison, deceased, of saiu
county, a; plies to me for leave to sell all
the properly of said estate:
This will cite all persons concerned to
show canse before mo on the first Monday
November next, if any they have, why
said application should not be granted.
Witness my hand officially September
3Cth, 1881. VIRGIL S. HOL'D iN,
cct5-4w Ordinary.
Now, with a magnificent stock—all from
old and standard milkers. Prices the low-
est. Terms the easiest. Two hundred in
struments to select from. Best makers
only. Our very cheapest instruments ara
perfectly reliable. Pianos and organ*
sent on 15 day s test lri.il. It’s all we ,-v-k.
Give us the privilege and wo will be happy.
SEND FOR IATEST PRICE LIriT,
And oblige, yours truly,
LI DDKX A BATED, ‘invnnuah, Os,
Ike Great Piano ni'-I Organ Dealers of the
South.
I F YOU MANX a First-class Iteligious-
ond Family Newapspcr, ‘■•.lbscribo to
THE METHODIST.
Drs. Wueelet. and Cunax.. ... ..F-IUoj?-
TW0 DOLLARS A YEAE
New subscribers for l- -’ will receive the
paper the restof this ver.r FREE. Add roan
H. W. DOUGLAS, Publisher,
oc!3weow2t No. 15 Murray St, New York.
GEORGIA, BIBB COUNTY.—Mhoreas
R. T. Avant, administrator of ihe e?tr.!eot
K»XIM.HA sail WHIUUS.
* .... c*tTN IS
The Famous Seltzer Spring of Germany
in every American home.
Tarrant’S Seltzer Aperient,
Based upon a scientific analysis of this)!;
ebrated German Spring, isiis concentrate
duplicate, with thirty to forty sparkin
doses in each bottle.
SOLD bV DRUGGISTS TBE WORI.
OVER. dctl8deod&wlu
Mr.ry D. Brown hi - rr.i-1.
letters of dismission from
These are therefore to
ish all persons concerned
appear r.t the Court of
county cn first Monde; in
show cause if any they I
plication ehouiu not be _-ra
my hand officially. < ; ct
lieauou tor
aid estate:
e srdndnton
> ‘ -c appear and
rdiaary of <a;el
nonary next, to
wi.y scid ap-
ta. Witness
1881.
oclDw ’.ri* i. K. MoMAN 1'ri. Ordinary
NOTICE.
NOTICE is hereby given that four weeks
after tVis date I will av>i ly to the court of
ordinary of Bibb count; for an order to
self the real estate leiou ;ing to the estate
of Mrs. V. B. Wade.
A. B. Rb S8, administrator
octVwtd .of Mrs. V. B. Wad*..