The Conyers examiner. (Conyers, GA.) 1878-1???, May 11, 1878, Image 1

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W. & HA BP, Publisher, II . 1 . TIIE CONYERS EXAMINER, * W p^hed every Saturday, By J W. E. HARP, T' V0 rOLLARS PER ANNUM. Al »tfs for advertising SlTwre, ntg will be inserted for ONE for the first insertion. ^ (11 vrffTY CENTS per square for For each con |« " for 0 nc month, or less, a long (jciuJince, ) .^ eral discount will be made. kgJbne mch in length, 6v less, constitutes ‘itSicesinthe ^ Cents local line, column each insertion. will be in *Zrrrn per rc« and dea t} T win be published as 5 t« «•« but obituaries , will be charged r;i r^Liberal Sin* rates »t». will be given to merchrnts others. who desire to advertise by the ana w A HAKP. year. Business Manager. (UWIEO DR. BUTTS life No. 12 N. Eighth St. St. Louis, Mo. ^ v.d Breater both experience male and female In the than treatment physician of the SLt <>f result, of hi, long and any euccc»»fui jjjjj|ahlitw, eivea the just published, in new .rorltt, entitled rhaPHYSIOLOGY OF MARRIAGE The J PRIVATE MEDICAL ADVISER , arc really Guides nnd Pelf-Instructor. In all mat **“1.1 nina to Manhood beautifully and Womanhood, Illustrated, and and supply* in plain They understood. are The two book, embrace 54i Mt/l contain .slnablo Information for both married and "Kwlistour JE.with oil the home recent improvement, say: “The in knowledge medical treatment Imparted mltatt? papers is In of questionable chnr u new works that no way should know. Tho j. hut ii inmethlng of early indiscretion; everyone the Man, otherwise "•BC .1 ‘he healthy Victim maybe, but with wa ning vigor in the primp *n SINGLE J^tfprice extra. in money Sent under or stamp*. seal, ori I Lire GEO. W. GLEATON, Attorney at Law, MltERS : : * : : GEORGIA, Sill practice in the Superior and Supreme jourtt of the 8tat). fadal attention given to the collection 4ms. m.-»y3-iy A. C. McCALLA, Attorney at Law (MYERS, : : GEORGIA Will practice in Rockdale and adjoining coun lies. v3-nl5-ly DR. RICE, Macs, LOUISVILLE, KY., Jl tyjoUrtY educated and practice legally will qualified phyefclan Cure# aliform# and tho 0fl4ttocesstttl, as hit prove. of prims, chronic nnd nexual dUeasea, £>PQrmfit03?«« rhea and Impotency* as^theresuitofseif *buw I o yoirtb. sexual * excesses in inaturer years, or other taut*!, and producing some of the following effects: Nervou#* ncii, fiemfnnlKmlsslong, Dbaincss of Sight, Defective Mem¬ ory, Physical Decay, Pir&ptof oa Lobs Face, of Aversion Sexual to Power, Society «e. of Pemalw, Confu.dou of ]<leiui, unhappy, thoroughly t mderingmarriage "Lrmr improper syphilis er are rriw* S!i5l‘ l iS2?V er ci,r “ ^ ,||e,te4 from the system; GON¬ Yittdiieuieiquickly ORRHEA, Gleet, cured. Striotnre, Pationta treated Plies and by mailorex- other pri jfm. Consultation free and invited, charge* reasonably aadcorrespoudonce strictly confidentiivt. A PRIVATE COUNSELOR OflOOpngM, .ent to any lead nildre.s, wourely all. Address aenled, for ahoya, thirty (10) Cfrui. Should bo by as IP.Ut t>»Mhours from# A. M. to 7 P. M. gmulaya, it to A, Remedy of tho 19th Cnntnry. tBAOt Barham’s Infallible PILE CURE. Manufactured by the --Barham Pila Cure Co., Durham, N. 0. n«*ver fall# to core Ilemarrhoidi nr Pile*, who# a enre is possible, Prlee List and bona lido teotliaool#!# furnished on Application F» Me, if gmrr, Mi Whitehall St. Atlanta. Ga. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN Mar, China, Glass and Stone Wares, Lamps, Lanterns, silver-plated goods. ^STdoodB Carefully Repacked. Quick sales ud Short Profits, for CASH. Established 1850. march 2,1878. 6m. PRESCRIPTION speedy Cure of Seminal Weakness. FREE! Lost wanhoori and all disorders brought on by indis SSfjE'jp WH » »‘*th Ntrvet, Cincinnati, ss*r,WS ©. 1 »BS w _ I*00K BEFORE YOU BUY. WEAVER & MADDUX, dealers in 111 GlffiDS, y Motions, HATS, CAPS, BOOTS* SHOES, &c. OF ALL KINDS. Tobace ° and Cigars, Confectioneries * n 4 i Mact,Ev erything Kept m a FIRST CLASS STORE. ®© DEALING, IS OHR MOTTO. I ?~ I ' ERM S CASH and Short Profits. Feb. 1 6, 1878. tf I JJfSSSsr owe or pravant Dlsaaac. __ QPlU Mlggaiig r° B PRINTING Af THIS OFFICE. mi M \ T/i mm 13 m m J ’1 : 1 UK M m Error Ceases to be Dangerous, While Truth is Left F to Combat ree it.” CONYERS, G A.. SATURDAyTmaY 11 , 1878 . VEGETINE WILL CURE RHEUMATISM. Vegetine vs. Electricity. Mr. H. R. 19th> 1877 - eight months, at which time I commenced using until the j>ain had left me, and my general health great P fg * n , blood unprqve purifier rapidly I had under influence of this also suffered dreadfully £“»«.!? *«. k Ih *^e dover better. I nyejres The constant for pain disappeared and heav and . the discharge u of mucus from the head ceased With My appetite got tetter, and strength seemed to come every dose of medicine. Too much cannot be mud in its favor, and I always take pleasure in rec¬ ommending from disease it to my of the friends blood, who may be suffering 3 they try any it they of for I feel satisfied are sure a cure. I am, very respectfully jpurs. Manager Western Uniofi 'Telegraph Office,UrUn’a.O. Verdict for Vegetine, VEGETINE WILL CURE RHEUMATISM. Mr. H. R. Steve** ° > Feb - M. 18 ” ter Had a (severe attack of Rheumatism, and a fri Who had used the Vegetine advised her to try it, she did so with perfect success, for after using a few bottles ot it she became entirely cured. I am myself at the present time uBing the Vegetine for Rheuma twm with good success. My other daughter has also used the Vegetine for Catarrh and Nervous Debility. $nd has been greatly benefited by its use. I have also recommended it to many others, with good suc¬ cess, and I honestly believe that the Vegetine is tho best medicine for the above-named diseases that there is, and I always wish to keep it in my house &a a family medicine No. 14 West K. A. KISTLER, Fulton Street, Columbus, O. VEGETINE. A Family Medicine. M*. H. R. Stevens? INN ati> °hxo, April «. U*. Dear Sir—I have been troubled and suffered a great deal from Catarrh. I have tried many remedies : thev did not cure me, and benefited me but a very little, and, dear sir, by using your medicine called Vegetine I have been cured. My niece was cured entirely ef Rheumatism by using your medicine.Veg so s “ e is able to attend to her studies at school .She „ feels thankful for for she has been a very great sufferer from your Rheumatism. medicine, I would say to one and all, Try the Vegetine for such complaints DA^b ; a few h Imttles will cure you. A e & YOUr8trUly ’ ELIZABETH AllNET, his wife, JESSIE Street> Everett Street, ^ Mr. Arnet . . . . large real , estate Cincinnati, Ohio. wealthy is a owner, a i old resident, and well known in Cincinnati. Rheumatism is a Disease of the Blood. blood from its diseased condition to a healthy circu¬ lation. One bottle of Vegetine will give relief; but, to effect a permanent cure, it must be taken regular¬ ly, long and may take several bottles, especially in case* of standing. Try it. andyour verdict will be the same as that of thousands before you, who say, “ I never found so much relief as from the use of VEG¬ ETINE, and ” herbs. which is composed exclusively of barks, roots FOREIGN REPORTS. DAWSON & BAXTER, Prescription Druggists, it . VEGETINE is'highly spoken of byall whahave tried JOSEPH WILLARD, Druggist and Chemist, Ills. _ Sell „ great deal . of VEGETINE, „ _ and Chicago, it good a gives Satisfaction in all cases. T. P. SMITH * CO., Dispensing Pharmacists, Chicago, „ Vegetine sells first-rate, _ Ills.. and is good medicine. gives goad satisfaction a YEGETUSE Prepared by , H. R. STEVENS, Boston, Mass. Vegetineis Sold by allDraggists* GO TO FOR WINES. LIQUORS, CIDER, CHAMPAGNE, &c. Oysters, Sardines, Crackers, Soaps, Blacking. FINE CIGARS and TOBACCO. Pickles, Peanuts, Candies, &c., BOTTLED BEER OF THE BEST BEMDS ! A Specialty. C/TAll Kinds of FANCY DRINKS at Short Notice. A FINE BILLIARD TABLE attached and Privately arranged. House, . Under the Whitehead Conyers, Ga. Feb. 16, 1878. SMITH k FARMEP. NO. 19 WHITE FRONT, CONYERS, GA,* — Dealers in— DRY GOODS, FAMILY GROCERIES HARD-WARE. CUTLERY, CROCKERY-WARE, GLASS-WARE, &c. HARNESS, (Mine, Hats, Gaps, Bools, and Stas, (top. A full line of Notions and Ladies Dress Goods. A FINE LOT OF GOOD TOBACCO, CIGARS, ETC. WOODEN-WAKE, TIN-WARE, Jug-Ware, and Bratania Dippers, &c.» Sardines, Crackers, Fancy Candies, Nuts, etc. Ic fact we keep a good stock of all that is usually kept in » first class Dry Goods or Gro¬ cery store. All of which we WILL SELL QM TIME TO GOOD PARTIES. aplr. 13, ly. a week in your own town. $5 outfit gUU Inlj free. business No at risk. which Header, persons if of you either want a sex can make great pay all the Urn* they work, 1 write for r*rfleu!*rs to H. Ballet <fc Co.Port ! land, Maine. 'FOKTXIY. MOTHER'S WAY I -o— Oft within our little cottage, As tre shadows gently fall. Whiltj the sunlight touches softly One sweet face upon the wall, Do we gather close together. And in hushed and tender tone, Ask each other’s full forgi vness Foijthe wrong that each has done. Should you wonder why th a custom At the ending of the day, Eye and voice would quickly answer, “ It was our mother’s way !” If our home be bright and cheery, If it hold a welcome true, Opening wide its doors of greeting To the many—not the few; If we share our father’s bounty W ith the needy day by day, ’Tis because our hearts remember This was ever mother’s way. Sometimes, when our beauts grow weary, Or our task seems very long, When our burdens look too heavy, And we deem the right alt wrong, Then we gain a new fresh courage, As we rise to proudly say, “Let us do our duty bravely— This was our dear mother’s way.” # Thus we keep her memory precious, While we never cease to pray * That at last, when lengthening shadows Mark the evening of life’s decay, They may find us waiting calmly To go home our mother’s way. The Indianapolis N\>ws tells its read era tbat the Moffett bell spun ch ‘‘taxes no industry.’ But it does. When a poor devil has but ten cents with which to pay for a drink, and the punch compels him to pay fifteen, the tax on the indus¬ try necessary to raise the extra niekle is oppressive. The Republican organs have all agreed that the only basis upon which their dis eased and corrupt organization can en tt*r another campaign is “.Southern elaims. Ihey have begun their cam puign, singulaily enough, by introduc ing a Northern claim tor $200,000,000 to be paid to bogus pensioners. The Bridgeport Farmer thinks the di vulgernent of the facts ot the Florida electoral count maybe “the beginning of the end” of the Fraudulent Administras tion. Certainly, says the Farmer, the o nfvssion of McLin and Demis afford an excellent foundation for Congreesion al action, and will doubtless lead to a rex vocation by certain Democratic Con¬ gressmen of their hostility to a reopen¬ ing and investigation of the great fraud by which Hayes was elected. An Illinois small-boy disc’oses how some red hair came to be found on two getihlernen’s coats. The hair created a tremendous domestic tempest, lie says: ‘I just picked up some of that there hair, and put some of it on old Smith's and old Brown’s coats ; I kep’ a puttin’ <^f it on every day, and you just bet they ketehed it from their old women when they went home Smith, he is solemns aoowl, and old Brown looks as if he was a goin’ to be hung.” GRACEFUL SPEECH. The value to a young lady, of a copi¬ ous, elegant, and expressive vocabulary, can hardly be estimated. Were she nev¬ er to use the pen in epistolary or rhetor¬ ical composition, the beauty and charm of cultivated conversation would add to her , influence than all the jewels . | more that . Tiffany nvj ,. J ever handled. . ,, i Add u , to „• this fact that a woman’s tongue is her princi pal f , weapou—next r ... to her eye, at least. appeal raillery ... . ^ or menace, in or scorn, in , love and , guidance, ., . and , in song ° prayer, what . . there equal to , speech , c, 7 is ^ a woraa'i s Wtitle __ Nature does much, reading and , wrmng ... d,, more m . caU.vaung ... . fluency a and lelictty of speech. Head the bes Enghsh and a,o.d cheap, and sensational literature of the day. Avoid vulgar,ty and slang m conversat.on. Use the 8? me cere 111 pnuty o an^ua^e v te talkmg . familiarly , m private, that » la keniu public speech. Bat the beat ing is a heart tratmng. Here as in Ola tory, it is out of the heart the mouth speaketb. It the law of kindness is with in the heart there will be “milk and honey on the tongue.’ They were sitting together, and he was ardously thinking what to say, when he fiualiy burst out in this manner: ‘In this land ot noble achievements and undying glory, why is it that women do not come to the front and climb the ladder of tame V ‘I suppose,’ said she, biting her apron-strings, ‘it’s on account of their pulKbaoks .’—Pittsburg Leader. Suspicion.— *A very neat definition of the word ♦suspicion’ wai that gven by a jealocs husband; ‘A suspicion it « feeling that impel# which you don’t know,’ something you to marrying aWdT Godfrey Prime was a very rich and suc¬ cessful merchant. He bad do wife, and but one child— a daughter—whom he adored, and upon whom it was delighted to lavish every¬ thing she asked for, if money wirald buy t. Annis Prime was very beautiful, and she was beside, a girl of considerable sense; too mush, indeed, to be easily sat¬ isfied in her choice of a husband. She had many suitors, but noue of them suited her. One day the merchant came home ,to his splendid mansion, looking like a ghost, he was so pale. His hair had grown sev¬ eral degrees whiter since he went away in the morning. Going to his private room, he locked the door and loaded his pistol. ‘If I kill myself,’ be said, ‘Annis will be obliged to marry some one of her rich admirers, because she wi.l have no home without. I could never endure to live, and Ree her suffer the miseries of a pov¬ erty which her rearing has so illy fitted hei to bea r ,’ Then he took the pistol in his hand, looked at it calmly, ‘Shall I blow out my brains, or shoot myself through the heart?’ he said. ‘You will do neither, if you please, p a pV said Annis herself comraing forward from behind the curtain of a window io which she had been sitting ever since he entered the room. ‘What is the mat¬ ter ? Why do you wish to kill your¬ self ?’ ‘Annis,’ said the merchant, sadly, ‘ev e, ‘ sinte 3 our moth er died I have lived only for you. Ad I cared to get wealth for, was for yon. But of late I have been unfortunate. 1 stand to-day on the verge G f bankruptcy.’ ‘Well, I am sure that is bad enough, without your killing yourself,’ said Au n i s< ‘Do you imagine, oh, foolish papa! that aU the riches of the world could make up to me the loss ot you ?’ The merchant started, and looked down as if ash'amed. Then he opened his arms wide, and his daughter flew iuto them. ‘Promise me this moment, papa,’ she said ‘ ‘ t,,at ? ou wil1 never ’ never think of s " oh a kicked thing again V ‘My darling,’answered the merchant, with emotion,‘I never will 1 ]Sow you mu8 ^ make me a promise. I can stem the tide, I think, a month longer—possi* bly six-weeks. I should not care, for myself, how soon the crash came, it' 1 could see you provided for. Will you not, in that time, choose yourself a hus baud from all those who are so anxious lo marry you *’ Annis made a face. Then, seeing how anxious her father looked, she said : ‘I’ll honestly try, papa. But whoever I choose must know the truth about your affaire before 1 will marry him.’ ‘Certrinly,’ said her father: ‘but 1 am sure it wiil make no difference. You are too sweet and beautiful to be loved for any thing but yourself.’ Upon the following evening, when An nis received company, she raide a careful toilet. She was a black-eyed blonde, and she wore a pale green tissue of silk, looped with water-lilies in her yellow, floating hair. She looked a siren; but no siren was indifferent . the , , homage ... lavish °ver so to 43 Dll at t hPl* faph _ * ^ One after . another , they . came—the „ tall, „ ’ the . short’the fair, the dark. She Dl , , looked tn blue eyes, and she looked in black ; but not . . heart-beat quickened , a even when the . , handsomest , ... tfe man m room bowed low before her, and , murmured flattering words in honeved tonM . A)) wou , d nQt do feh a uive avereion t0 8 , me of tb and bavi t int0 a fouli3h ,, abit of having every- ^, Mng ^ of ^ lalb s e h e oou Jd not reconcile her- 8(jlt tl , the idea of ■ , m3n for wbom sbe did ^ ^ ha|f ^ ^ as ^ djd fm . ber n When the month was uearly up, dux ring which the merchant, while he waited anxiously, said nothing, Annis spoke. ‘Papa,’ she said, ‘you are worth a doz¬ en of them. I had rather live in poverty with you than in affluence with one ot them.’ * X ou don’t know what poverty is,’ said her father, gloomily. ‘But I have a euriosity to know,* said thedaughter, bravely. ‘Be a good papa now, and don’t tease me. I am sure you can save enough out of the wreek to fur-* niih two rooms, and cook has been giv¬ ing me lessons. Won’t it be fan ? The rained merchant sighed, bat he wss not altogether displeased. tWO DOLLARS Per i&fum The girl had such a sweet and coaxing voice—she looked at him so loyiDgly and he was in the habit of giving her whatever she wanted. So the end of it was that he let her do as she liked in this. Godfrey Prime saved nothing from the wreck. He was an honerable man, and gave up everything to his creditors, even his daughter's many and costly or namenls—with her consent, too. But even then all was not paid, and humble as Was the home to which the pair betook themselves, the saddest thought that entered there was that a dollar remained unpaid against the name of Prime. ‘It must be paid somehow,’ said Ari nis. ‘Oh, if there was only anything great, anything grand, that I could do ! It is a shame there is not, after all you have laid out on me. papa. Why, I am the worst investment you have made, I do believe. Help me to think if there is no way in which I can earn to make you even with the world agaiu, I could not be an artist, for though you paid ray drawing-master such fabulous suras, I am sure if I were to sketch you something, you would be able to distinx gulsh that it bad four legs and a head, and that would be all. I never could make any difference, on paper, between a hoise’s head and a dogV. I don’t think I should ever succeed as an aettess, and though I have a tolerable voice, I should be so frightened, if I were to try to sing in public, that I could not utter a note.’ ‘Ah, my child,’ said the father, ‘if you had only married some one ot those rich admirers of yours!' Annis laughed. ‘U hat is the use of saying that, pana? Not one of them has been near us since your failure. I always suspected their devotiou was not to be' trusted. But if one of them did care enough for me to come forward now, and offer to pay ihese dreadful debts, 1 believe I should fall in love with him out of sheer grati¬ tude. I would marry a clod, to see your name cl^ar of debt.’ The father and daughter had come out fer a short walk at evenirg, and neither of them noticed that, as Annis said these words, a gentleman, who had been walk ing behind them, passed them slowly, with a lingering glance into the girl’s beautiful face. Some days passe.d and then a very queer letter came to Annis Prime. It read: ‘Deer Miss: i hav wacbt you offeu when yu didunt no it, i hurd what you sed too yure fothur abowt marium enny wun hoo kood pa hiz dets. i kan dooit, und if yule hav me, i will, ime a clod, but ive got the munnv. Ware a wred roze in youre hare, when yn go oat too wauk the nex tyme. it yon aksep, and the jent that givs you a bokay will be mee. Clod.’ Annis spelled out this strange epistle with some difficulty, lov it was misevably written, aside from the spelling, Then she showed it to her father, aud laughed till she cned. ‘He spells rose with a *z’ and red with a ‘w, But I think I shall ‘aksep,’ papa, if yon don’t object just for the sake ot the ‘bokay.’ You’ll be with me, you know,’ Accordingly, the merry girl, when she went to walk that night, wore a red rose coquettishly below one ear, where its crirnsom and velvet beauty brought out the golden tint of her matchless hairrav ishiugly. Her father Jwaswith her. They had not been walking long, before they no¬ ticed approaching them, the strangest specimen ot humanity either had ever beheld. He was tall, and awkward in his move¬ ments ; h : s hair hung long and straight upon his shoulders. He wore a very broadxbrimraed slouch hat of,soft felt, a red neckxtie, a blue vest, a swallow-tail coat, and plaid unmentionables, with patent-leather boots, narrow of toes and high of heels. In one hand he carried bouquet, which he held at arm’s length, as if it were something explosive. ‘Here he really is, papa,’ said Aanis, with a smothered laugh. Now be sure you are civil to him.’ She accepted the bouquet which the stranger proffered her smilingly, and her father politely invited him to go home with them, which he did. Annis noticed, with some surprise, that her bouquet was made up in exquisite taste. But that she attributed to the florist of whom the ‘clod’ had probably purchased it. But what surprised her most was to find, when the evening was over, and the strange guest had departed, how mu h she had really enjoyed it. In spite of bis oddities and awkwardness, the ‘clod’ had contrived to be interesting. NO. 2 d ‘lie has fine eyes and good featuies, papa,’ she said; ‘and if he would cut bis hair, and dress with some regard to taste, he would please me better than any of those others whom you would have liked me to marry, arid who I am sure would every one have instantly withdrawn their suits had they known the condition of your affairs. I wouder if he is really so rich as he says V ‘Have no anxiety aborit tb’e money, said God Fey Prime, to his danghter, afx ter a few days. ‘The fellow has come most unexpectedly into an immense fortune. He could pay my debts and set me tip in business again, it he chose, without miss¬ ing the money. And he stands ready to do it, if you sin marry him.' ‘I am ready,’ said Annis. gaily. ‘My heart warms to him already,’ The marriage took place soon. The merchant #as reinstated business, and in a grander and more , flourishing mannet than before, The splendid residence which he and his daughter had inhabited before his bankruptcy was repurchased, and refur¬ nished in tne most riiagftifirOerit ra'ariner. Only otfe thing troubled Annis. Her ‘clod’ remained a ‘clod,’ do what she would. All her efforts—'hough she had made him cut his hair and banishhis rain* bow suit—could not make him any diff« erect from what he was at first. But he was devoted to her; and be* cause of his riches, everybody courtrid him. His fery a (vk wardness became the f fashion, and his most ungrammatical speeches were passed from tongue to tongue, as profoundest wit. Besides all this, he had a good heart, so much genuine kiudness of disposition* being always friady to succor the unfor¬ tunate, and he loved her so well that An¬ nis could not help loving him in re turn. ‘Dear Clod,’ she said to him, one day* despairingly, when, in spite ot all her in¬ structions, he would flame out in a fancy neextie, aud persisted in saying *hainV 3 for ‘have not’—‘dear Clod, you are too stupid for belief; but somehow, I can’t help loving you, in spite cf that.’ The ‘clod’ smiled and kissed her. ‘I have been stupid,’ be said, ‘and you have been more patient than I deserved. But from this hour you shall see a change in me.’ Annis laughed indulgently. She had resigned herself to see him always a ‘clod.’ But, to her amazement, that evening, when her parlors were filled with the elite and fashionable of the city, her bus* band presented himself attired in exquis¬ ite taste, and so altered in every other respect that only the eyes of love could have traced in this elegant gentleman any of the characteristics of the ‘clod.’ Everybody started, and Annis, under, standing at last that he had been playing a pas t, was grieved and offended. ‘How could you, sir?’ she asked hint reproachfully, ‘I don’t know how I carl ever forgive you !’ Her husband laughed in her face fa- guishly. ‘I’d do it again lor the same reward; and if you don’t forgive me I’ll go back and be a clod the rest of my days.’ The threat was sufficient. The Mystery of the Seven Skele¬ tons. —A cave has been discovered on the farm of Mr. Henry O’Brien, of Ly¬ on couuty, Kentucky. The cave is in ihe high bluffs that overlook the Tenon essee river. Mr. O’Brien and his neigh¬ bors explored in the other day, and they were horrified to find seven skeletons tenanting the darkness. Judging from their surroundings, and the fact that the mouth of the room in which they were found had been almost entirely obstruc¬ ted by debris, which must have been many years in accumulating, it is proba ¬ ble that the bones are those of some ear ly aborigines of the Ohio and Tennessee valleys. The appearance of one of the skeletons wonld indicate that a fearful tragedy has been enacted in the gloomy recesses of this subterranean cavern, for one of them lies across the other, and the bony fingers of each band yet clutch the throat of the victim. The walls of / i the room in which the skeletons were discovered are as smooth as if they bad been cut with a chisel. Outside of the bones, not a vestige of anything that if would indicate that the cave had ever been occupied by human beings remains, smi — JPaducha{Ny.) Sun. lift !*.» The Atlanta Cotton Exchange has adopted a resolution bale declaring will that deducted here* after one dollar per be ? from the cash price of cotton in inferior ’ bagging; that a circular be sent 'Oplant¬ ers asking that they refrain from using it, and also a circular to merck nts who handle cotton, asking that i hey do not receive such bagging on the same terms as that of first quality.