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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTIONS ATLANTA. GA- TUESDAY JUNE 9 1885;
■9
A BIG STEAL-
A BANK TBLLBR’S SHORT ROAD
TO FORTUNE.
The Teller of tha Manhattan Bank, of Waw York.
Puta Ona Million Six Sandrad Phoaaand
Dollara of tho Bank’* Money in Hi*
Pocket, and Blipe Oat of tho Olty.
Nit You, June 3.—[8pecial.]-ilt wu dis
covered to-dij tbit Richard 8. Bcott, the pey
ing teller of the Manhattan bank,'had de
faulted with 31,603,104.
Scott, who la about forly-fiveyenr* old, and
baa been with the bank for twenty yeara,
did not appear at the bank,
nor did be notify the officer,
tbatbewaato boabaent. A motsenger wu
lent to bia home, but neither he nor hia wife
could be found. Hia wile wu traced to her
aiater-in-law’a house, and when informed of
her huaband’s absence, ahe expressed great
surprise, and said that ahe had imagined he
wu there u usual. She could not tell where
he wu.
TBS IXVXSTtOAVIOX.
■ff hen thia wu reported to the offieials of the
bank, their suspicions were aroused, and a
meeting of the directors was called. Tho
books of all the employes were examined and
also the cuh of the institution. At first noth
ing wrong could be discovered, but when
the gold was counted, and Scott’s
books examined, it wu discovered that he hod
credited the bank with $130,(10 moro gold
than wu in the vaults. Thia, of course,
after this amount had been
taken from tho currency, caused
the hooka to balance exactly, and others cov
ered the defalcations. It wu also discovered
thatjthe slate upon which he kept hia daily
memoranda wu missing, and that it could
not be told how long the defalcation had been
going on. *
ns actios or vnx siascvou.
The meeting of the directors did not close
until nearly 11 o’elook to-night, and the do-
tectives were Immediately notified, although
the matter wu not reported at the regular
police force.
Scott hu always borne a good reputation,
was not known to havo speculated, and u
Ur. Hays, the president of the bank, uys,
wu not a church member or
teacher in a Sunday school. He wu
a member of one of the leading athletic clubs
of this city.
Cashier Baldwin, of the bank, would say
nothing of the matter other than that he sup
posed that by this time Scott wu in Canada.
At a late hour lut night the police or de
fectives had found no true ol him. The bank,
with the exception of the bank ol New York,
la the oldest in this city, its charter haring
been granted in 1139. Its capital is over $2,-
000,000.
TUB FIGURES HORS IS DETAIL.
Nxw You, June 2.—Between 11 and 12
o’clock tonight J. P. Baldwin, cuhier of the
bank of the Manhattan company, visited the
offices of tho newspapers and gave to euh a
copy of a statement sent by uid bank to the
clearing house this afternoon. Tho statement
is signed by D. C. Hays, president, and sots
forth that, u the paying teller did not
appear at his desk this morning, and sent
no excuse for his absence, a meeting of the
directore was called. An investigation into
the paying teller’s account ahoweda deficiency
of $1,373,000. The paper made known that this
fact was given out that the exact amount of
the defalcation might be officially published.
It was added that (lie capital of tho institution
is $2,300,000 and unimpaired. The surplus,
after deducting the above deficit, is $025,000.
PUBLIC ROBBERS.
Tales ot Theft from Louisiana and Idaho—
Bharp Practice,
Niw Oblsass, Juno 5—John H. Aulde-
morte,for seventeen years confidential clerk in
the United Statessub-treuury in thia city, hu
absconded with several thousand dollars of
government money. The exut amount of tho
defalcation hu not yet been ascertained, but
it is believed to be more than $13,000. The
f overnment, however, will lose nothing u P.
'. Uerwig, sub-treuurer, will make the
amount good, lltnrlg received a dispatch
from Washington this morning,
to the effect that the
government had taken tho case of his ab
sconding redemption clerk in hand, and that
telrgiame descriptive of the man had been
sent to all puts of this country, Mexico, Can.
ada and Europe, so that bis escape will be
almost impossible. It is believed that Aufde-
morte has gone to Mexico, but it is thought
that even hie sale urival on foreign soil will
not save him under existing circumstances,
because as he has been a defaulter to the gov
ernment of the United States he can be ap
prehended and returned from any country.
ASOTIISR SWlSDLRa VU1XS Ur.
PonviAxn, Oregon, June 6—A special from
Lewiston, Idaho, to tho Oregoneau, gives
more fully the story of tho defalcation of lease
Ulbbe, postmaster at Lewiston. He wu ap
pointed in Much, 1884. Lut January a reg
istered mall pouch was robbed, but an official
investigation developed nothing and the affair
was eventually forgotten. On May second
Uibbs lett for an alleged silver
mine on the upperjColumbia. The postal in
spector, alarmed at his continued absence,
investigated the affairs of the office, found in
Hibb's writing receipts for a large number of
registered mall pouches, destined for fictitious
names in differrnt poitoffices supplied
from Lewiston. The modus oper-
andi wu u follows. Lewiston
fs the mail distributing point for a large
number of offices in northern Idaho and eut-
ern Washington territory. Hibbe would issue
noney orders on fictitious names at these
offices, drawn in favor of a bank
In Iowa where the orders were payable. The
customary letter ot advice wu forwarded to
the par lag poelmuter. Uibbs then wrote to
the bank that he would shnrtty visit the town,
enclosed the money orders, and requested the
bsnk to cub them and place the amounts
on deposit to his credit until he
arrived. Later he wrote to the bank that ha
could not make tho contemplated visit, and
requested that the draft for the amount of
money on deposit be returned by registered
mail to the fictitious names attached to the
money orders, and always at some office
where the mall puled through Lewiston.
When the draft arrived Hibbe signed the fic
titious names and returned the receipted
cuds, and the transaction wu completed.
Money orders lie limited to $3M in favor of
one person, but with forethought
and judieiooa distribution of dates and places,
an opening offers through which
unscrupulous postmuters could bankrupt the
United Stales. The amount of the defalcation
exceeds $2*,M« end is expected to reach $33,-
000. The postal inspector says the robberies
will necessitate the authorities reorgnisingthe
mosey order system of the United States and
elsewhere. The scheme is surprisingly sim
ple, and the officers are surprised that H was
never thought of and worked before. John
Evans, cuhier of the First national bank;
William Kfltonbaek, cuhier of the Lewiston
national bank, and Alexander Tbieeser and
Woodworth, were Hibbe's bondsmen for
$*,see. Alexander end Tbioaaer were secured
before Iiibbe left. Hibbe wu lut seen on
May 3Stb, at the second croesingef She Cana
dian Faciffie road, on his way to Missonis and
Helens, for tbe p . —
dered to be sect I
Briefly Told.
Ficm thelt. Paul Globe.
Am offeulve partisan Is a fellow whose party
>t licked.
THE GEORGIA. DROPS.
A Talk With the Commissioner of Agrlenl.
tnre on tho Condition of tho Crops.
Jndge Henderson, commissioner of agricul
ture, wuuked Friday about tho crops of
the state. Said he:
"E
grow
"How is the grust’’
"It it growing jut u elegantly u the corn
and cotton. The farmers are not afraid of the
grus, however, as long u the crops keep up
with It. A grass season you understand is
where tbt‘farmers are overcropped and can't
get aronnd to tbe grue fut enough, and it
gets tho lead. When the grau begins to
knuckle down things ars fa
a bad fix, for you can’t tear away tho grau
without tearing up tbe cotton."
"How ue tho crop* pitched? la there
more corn and wheat in the itats than
usual?’’
"I don’t think there it more wheat. I notice
an estimate oi tho wheat crop which is put
at two million buahels, and I would net be
surprised if that wu not about correct. Tho
lergeet wheat crop ever made in the state wu
three and a half millions. I think tho oora
ciop u to acreage it ninety or a hundred
per cent of an average. The condition
ot the corn crop Is elegant. I
never saw anything like what tbe corn crop
has been doing for the lut ten or fifteen days,
ever since the recent rains set in. The acre*
ago •• compared with lut year is, I think,
about tho same—possibly one per cent greater.'*
"What are the farmers interesting them
selves in, in (he way of a now crop?"
"Milo maixe is the leading crop in the way
of something new. It hu been planted more
extinslvely than in former years. This speaks
well for the fsrming fraternity. If it turns
out thst it is not injurious to tho
land, it will bo a blessing
because it will producs more to the aero than
corn will. It is quits as nutritious for man
and beut and produces infinitely moro forage.
As a forage crop ft cannot bo excelled."
The commission said further:
"The land is in better condition for produc
ing than I have seen it for hilt a decade. The
sou is well pulverized.”
"Are the fermere using as much guano u
usual!”
"Yes, they are using mere thie year than
ever before, by probably ten thousand tons.
I think a fraction over a hundred and
fifty-two thousand tons wu tbo largest con
sumption of guano ever known in the state,
and! am pretty enre the receipts this year
will be a hundred and sixty thousand tona.
The lumen have, however, made more com
posts thie yeer than usual, and with anything
like activity they should miko money. I
think te a rulo they ua practicing very rigid
economy.”
"How about farm labor?”
”1 am told that the band! everywhere are
working ateadier than they havo been known
to do for many yeara."
Tho commissioner uys ho thinks the oat
crop will be a abort one compered to the but
crops heretofore.
WHY HE LOST HIS BOUSE.
Dow a Henpecked llusbnml Was Made
Happy.
From tbe Nashville Union.
“To the Unlon-Mr. Editor: I have frequently
heard the expression ‘Ol tho block hone and the
gray marc tho grey maro Is the but ol the two.' 1
bare uked my teachers and all tho gentlemen I
know to tell me the origin ol It. I find they til use
It when they went to show women’s Influence over
the sterner sex, hut none ot them know bow tho
expression originated. In this dilemma I appeal to
you, believing that some ol the smart young gen
tlemen thst write inch pretty things about the
commencement exercises for tbeUnloncaa fur*
nish me with the desired Information.
Respectfully. “Mast —
The saylug jou refer to lien old one In Eng.
land, nbere It Is stld to be founded ou the follow,
tag story:
a henpecked husband appealed to his father.
In-lew, claiming that bo could not get along with
bit wile, u she peialtted In trylug to rulo him. •
The father-In law, desiring to answer bUdsuih
{ er's husband's corn pin hit lit a yractlcal war, told
dm to hitch the black home and grey mare to the
wagon and put a buket con
taining one hundred fresh eggs In tho ve
hicle. When this was done the auOerlag benedict
not toe wire roiee toe nusneuu. in cacn insisnco
when he lound this to bo the case he wu to pre-
sent tho wife with an egg. Bnt should he
dud e firm house where the husband ruled
the wile, then he wu . to present the
husband with either one of the noises that
he mlsht choose. ’’And,” said the good man u a
patting injunction to bU son-in-law, “should ion
give sway both of tho hones before yon do ell ol
tho eggi I will agree to mold my diuahter to your
wliIn., otherwise.yonwffi hereto do as your
neighbors and make the beet of e tod barseln,
The story goes that the modern Diogenes started
out slid stopped st a nclRbbor's, where the
wife met him at the door end uked him what
he wanted. “I want to see your husband!”
ventmed the visitor. “Tell mo what yon went.
I'll do Jnstu well as he would,” wu the reply.
a good-tor nothing fellow, whoso room
wu a good deal better tha i his company. Dio.
genes, Jr, gsvo the ibrew en egg end drove on to
the nest hones. Here, when be asked for the
I husband, tbe wife said ne wu breaking flax la Ue
hern end bed no time to goeelp with strangers,
but the good men conld communicate any bust.
mis he Etd to her. as she wu the hoes, anyway.
Bhefgot her egg. too, end the benpeeeed spouse
continued his search. After he bed given
away ell hie <ggi but one. and was
stout to believe ell women alike, he drove up to
* line form-bouse, wherein* wile again came to
the Ooor end said: “My good muter U using e
lisp, sad 1 would not like to wake him, but II you,
sir, will come In end pot up your hones end re-
Pish yourself end rest until be awtkene I will get
him to come down and see yon on whatever bus!-
ores you may have wit
■eld tbe modern I
noble women, wl__ .— __ —,
ruled by her husband end obeying hit annul-
estwlsh. It will please me to present this fortu
nate and happy husband wita either one of my
fsther-ln'law't horeu thst he may select” But
no sooner had these hopes arisen In his breast
then tbe man ot the house arose from hia nap end
came down to see hit visitor, who said: “1 with
to present yon with one of thou fine bones.
Which one will you haver* The old farmer
looked the Ann roadster* over carefully end utd:
“Of the black hone end the grey
more. the grey mere is the better of
the two.” Hia wife then put her eras aronnd his
neck end sold coextagly: “that may be true, but
J ou know bow 1 hare always longed for s Mace
one.” Upon this an argument era* between
them which resulted In the surrender ot tbe bus
bend, to whom tbe henpecked man presented bis
lattrfg, explaining why htgavo tt Instead of the
Having exporter ce.1 all these episodes, the hen.
E cked hu.oai.il returned to the bosom ot hie
ally, believing bitn.ll no wore* ol!
then the rut of mankind, and
a good deal bettor off than many, which
reflections erased him to tow every endeavor to
please hie wife, whoaooo became M pleated (tut
her huatand found It e pleasure to anticipate bee
wishes sod assume hia shut of the responsibili
ties of lift. This reform ted to * reconciliation
between them, end they Ured long end were tup-
py la seek other's love eon con lids nee.
HISTORY IMA NEW DltKif.
... J«n
County School GlX Aged Ton,
From the Lancaster Intelligencer.
Following teen exact copy of a composition In
history by a little ttnyear old girl attending one
el the secondary school* ol this ally. Tn*
sm, SMsytfSod
originality: man.
L William Penn we. bore In BoatOB ln ItOU. HU
father wu a soap and candle mater. Bel William
did net US* that trod*. Then the goveremut
Su^d5 u k m .ff. a W°^h?5iS^
^iSrS&ffi&e lut proskteat of the
United Staten. horn taVlrgmia In the yaar. When
George wts e little hoy he would never teUn lie,
•saueeh* thought IIwas not nlea. Ittt* not
nice Miter. He studied ail kinds of things to he
‘ P*abS* Lincoln wu bore •» WMu In ISJt
His father wu e wool comber, bat Abrsm did not
like thattrade. On*dejrAbremwueundloson
the railroad and e ■** hr tbs usms of Gitus
reSMfiSSSSrt America
ODLUN OUTDONE.
Robert Hammond's Great Leap of On*
Hundred nnd nriy-Flve Feet,
Bax Asvosio, Texas, May 23-—When the
news of rrofessor Odium's fatal leap from the
parapet of tbe Brooklyn bridge retched here
we were talking over the affair in the "Gold
Boom." Bam Graham, ex-sergeant of Ran
gers, celled attention to a parallel incident
which attracted a great deal of attention on
the frontier, at tbe time end gave the name ot
"Hammond’s Leap” to a lofty canyon wall on
tho bank or tho Rio Grande, about six miles
west from where the alkaline watere of the
Fecei empty into it. The traek ol the South
ern Pacific railroad rune close to the river here,
and u you whirl by tha trainmen wilt point
out the spot where Robert Hammond made a
cheer leap of 155 feet to the muddy waters of
the Bio Grande below. This leap was made
in tho early summer of 1882, when tho railroad
wts tn proceu of construction. A great doal
of heavy rock work was done along tho Rio
Grande after the road crosses the Pecos end
about ten thousand navvies were concentrated
about Vinegaroan, now a city of tho put,
whoso only monument is a vast pile of empty
bottles. Tho contractors established great
camps convenient to their work and tho white
tents dotted the mesa top in every direction,
making the encampment* of one of the largest
army of workmen that ever built a railroad.
One cannot imagine a more dreary, cheorlesa
B lare than this great mesa, which lies between
ic Feces end the Rio Grande. Its face is
broken by deep canyons end narrow arroyas,
whose welli in many instances have a sheer
descent of 300 feet. Tho soil is thin end strong
ly Impregnated with alkali, but it sprouts
abundant crops of buneh and muqnite grau,
end tho hardy prickly peer, tho epeer-like
lechegicr, the ceta-elew, the dagger plant and
that peculiar member ol the cabbage family,
the reteilus—out of which, by tho way, tho
Mexicans distill a very excellent quality of
mescal—grow there in abundance.
A wild oousvav.
Before the advent of tho railroad this mesa
wu tbe favorite hunting groundof thst rem
nant of the Lipin and Comanche tribes, who
havo been driven to a lut shelter amid tha
peaks of the Santa Rosa mountains. In pu
ling to and fro acroes tha mean they made a
broad trail, which is not obliterated yet. Gamo
wu abundent then, end black and white tttl
deer, antelope, wild turkeji and jack rabbita
were u plenty u peach tree* in Delaware.
Rears of the black end cinnamon variety had
their lairs deep down in tho cenyone, from
which thoy emerged in the late evening and
early morning to dig for atato roots and hunt
for beo nests in the rock crevice*. Tho moun
tain lion howled on the topmost peak* end the
yelp of the coyote awoke the echoes of the
plain. Occasionally a loafer wolf, grant end
gray, skulked along among tho chapparal.
Eagles screamed from their eyrlu along the
river benk, end vultures circled iuily through
tho air. Tbe waters of tho river ewermed
with fish, and the Indiana always returned te
their camps in the Sant* Roau fat and saucy
after a brief sojourn in such en Eden.
When, however, the canyons were made
musical with the chink, chink of the churn
drill, the louder champ of the temping bar
and •ledgo-hunmer and the reverberant boom
ofthe! giant sand blasts,” that sent whole
mountains hurtling through the sir, tho game
lied, the fish scurried away end tho panthers,
hears end wolves hunted nuloter quarters. The
S tated redmen from a safe hiding place ou
o Mexican aide watched the busy scene with
wide open eyes, heard tha “big thunder” ot
tho blut with loud beating heart and stole
hack to the Santa Rost*. The only animate
beings that did not seem to mind tho nolso end
tumult were those pestiferoue little varmints,
tho vinegaroan. the devil-hone, the tarantula,
tho centipede, the stinging lizard and the rst-
tleinake. They remained and disputed the
ground inch by inch with tho invtdera. They
caused a great deal of trouble and tho navvies
feared and respected them. It was a stinging
lizard or scorpion that canted "Hammond's
leap.’’ Hammond was n nnvvy, born in Eng
land and st (be time he made the foap about
twenty-six years of age. Ho was of rsthor.
slender build, but wiry and muscular, and
Jack Harris, tha contractor for whom he work
ed, considered him hie best cburn-drlller.
Harris’ camn wu stthe heed ofadeepeanyoa,
shout one mile south of Vinegsrotn. Ue wu
Hammond worked in the day gang end tbe
big well tent he shared with six or eight oth
ers was about three hundred yards from the
edgo of tho lofty wall, against whose bus the
muddy wateriof the “greet river"dashed and
tumbled. At this particular point the river is
quite deep. One night tho sleeping occupants
of Harris'etmp were aroused by a aeries of
startling yells, which came from Uammen’s
tent. Before they could collect their leases
end eettled in their minds whether or not the
camp bed been attacked by Indians, Ham
mond dashed from the tent, and although held
by hie companions, Anally tore himself away,
and yelling *t every jump,made giant bounds
toward the river. The drillers end blasters
in the cut stopped their work and ran up on
the bank to see what was the matter. They
saw Hammond u ho duhed toward them
and beard hia agonised yells. A cry ot horror
burst from their lips u ihe yelling man reach
ed Ibe brink oi tho precipice and without e
second's hesitation leaped out end shot down
like * plummet to the boiling flood 135 feet
below. They heard the loud apluh made by
hie body when it etruck the water end then,
with blanched feces and bushed voices, hur
ried down to the river to search for the poor
fellow’s mangled body. What was tlicir sur
prise to meet the supposed dead men unin
jured. Ue wu shivering with eold, however,
end the muddy water dripped from hie clutli-
" Whit wu tho matter?” cried the group of
searcher* tn choree.
"One of them Internal stinging llstrda got in
my esr and nearly drove me cruy,” answer
ed Hammond, "but he popped out when I
struck the water. By the way, boys, whet do
you think of that jump?"
"It ought to have killed you,” laid on* men.
"It didn’t, though,” cried Hammond with a
laugh. ”1'11 make it again for a ten dollar
bill.”
The next morning Jack Harris had the die*
tsuce measured, and tha tap* line held close
to tho cliff edge, marked 155 fut end a tew
inches when the other end touched the water.
Hammond did not tnpetr to suffer from bit
terrible flight through the air. He worked for
Hurls until tbe letter’s contract wu finished
and then went into Mexico to work ou the
Mexican Central. He wu in hie under cloth
es that night and bis fast were protected only
by thin socks. He struck the water lut first
end described the uoution experienced u
similar to that if tbe feet had bun smartly
slipped with a broad strop, While in the air
he felt no difficulty iu breathing end tbe In-
creued velocity u bis body neued the water
we* not physically perceptible.
some n Aim topics.
From the Doufltirtlle, G*., BUr.
Thu* lee man In DoagluvUi* who free curled
piece of wi
seven yean,
wu.
From the Dublin. Os, Feet.
Mr. H. B. Lowery, living In the lower pert of.lhls
eeunty.hu a null gourd which was grown la
tall—the year of hie birth. It bu been In bis
realm all the while, end It would take a great
to divest him ot IL
From tho CansesvlUe, oa. Register.
Mr. A F. Bagwell, living near Carnasvtll*. hu
S uit* e collection of old coins. Amonx taeos ere
pentth dollars beertnxjitat* I7SS, 17*3. 17*1. 11M,
lGlTlic,.totaled 1»U. He hu Peruvian colas
theelsaof a dollar beartox date INI and MM.
French fit* Irene places bearing dew 1*12, !«».
Itetead KSe A Mexican doDar bearing due
is A and a balt-dellu of United utstee coin dated
HOT. _ rrfl
From tbe Marietta, Oa. Journal.
The public well st Lott Mountain hu been dog
about M yean end John Goodwin ha* just put the
first sbelter over ft.
Mr. beniel a Arnold, of this pteee.hu * needle
caw tbet wu canted through the Revolutionary
wu by hie great-grand-CsUrer, Mr. Hopkins, oas
ettbo slgnere el the declaration ol Independence.
Mr. Anrold rented It te the latewar end ft to well
piuerved jet.
(uticuTa
INDORSED BY PHYSICIANS, DRUGGISTS
AND CHEMISTS, AS NEARLY
INFALLIBLE.
diseases
The emu ka Soar, u Its first clue quality de
serves, leads all ot my soaps in demand, bout u a
triii t soap and u a bcautlflrr and protector of the
■kin. DR. W. U. HALL.
Frankfort, Ky.
SATISFACTORY RESULTS.
You Comma Bixxuice exceed both In sties
end good results any sktn remedy
handled, and it la with pleasure that s.
mn.d them to cur customers, assured tbet they
will receive real benefit and satisfactory results.
DR. D BOWMANS BON.
Bourbon, Ind.
NEVER FAILING.
I do rot know ot any Instance In which the
Crvtcuaa Bausons btve failed to produc'd satis
factory results I believe I btvo told more of
SCROFULA CURED.
i, a. u. ratTSHSua,
Druggists, BrooksvlUe, Ky.
ECZEMA CURED.
I wu * sufferer with Eczema (or two years, and
after tryleg many remedies wlthont cure, wu
BEST BLOOD MEDICINE.
1 have sold more of your Cuncuaa Itr.soi.vxsT
taint iit'ii, biisau wii
O. K. DICKINSON,
v-uucun, reap, v, rents; onucura noroiv
rotter Drug and Chemical Oo.. Boston.
Bend for"How to Car* Skin Diseases.”
T»T TWTPLE3. Blackheads, Sktn Blemishes and
A A ill Baby Humors, use Cuncuaa Hoar,
aunwedwky topcolnrm
French Wine Coca
Strengthens & Exhilarates I
Sustains and refreshes, aids digestion, Imparts
new euerilts to the worn or exhauatod mind end
body, end excites every (acuity to healthy action.
COCA
is ■ wonderful tnvlgorator ol the genital organa
end is* apecldo for all nervous complaints, such
u SICK URADACnS, MSI'XAl CIA, WAXgrULXBS,LOSS
or MFXORY, xzgvors TUMORS LOSS OT AFFSTITS,
nxrgissiox or snares, xtc.
Pemberton’s Wins Coca
will vitalize your blood end build up your health
stones. Lawyers, ministers, teachers, orators,
vocalists, and *11 who speak In public, will find
the Wine Coca, taken hall hour before speak tag, e
Specific lor the volco.
WINE COCA
Is Indorrtd by over 20,000 eminent medical men in
tbe world, end Pemberton's Wine Coe* is awarded
tbo palm over all other tovlgorants by physicians
and people who hsvoTued 1L Turks is hkaltji
atm joy nr avaav gums.
rtfc BALE BY AM, DRt/OfllSTi
J. S. PEMBERTON (t CO.,
Sole Proprietors aoc Manufacturers,
wkynrui ill.tNrA, OA.
DROP8Y
Treated Free!
DB. H. H. GREEN,
A Specialist for Eleven Yeara Fut,
Hu treated Dropsy end Its complications with the
more wonderful sueoewri uses vegetable remedies,
entirely barmlcsa. Removes ell eymptoue ol drop.
■ttJ^SSS&a&bop*!-* by lb.beet,
ilc 1am. -
_ .om tho flret doe* the symptoms rapidly dlun-
peer, end In ten deye at least two-thirds ol aU
'^S.ne'msycryhumbinwithout knowing any*
younrlt. In ten days the difficulty ol breathing
is relieved, the pals* regular, the urinary organs
^“uS.'&^^ysa^wittiwt
days’ treatment; directions and terms IroaOlv*
fail history ot esse. Name sex, hoar Ions afflicted,
bow badly ssrollen end wtwre. la bowels eottln,
have Iris “Orated and dripped wain, flood for
free pemphlit, containing testimonials, qumtlous,
<( Ten days’ treatment furnished free by null.
sawflMpaswygiqjk
It Jones Avenue, Atlanta, ua.
Mention this paper. mon wky
Veterinary Specifics
Cere Disc tau oi
Htrsw, Ctttlfl, P*gr POPf
Used by U. S, Government.
unis—Fevers, Inflammation,' gpfnsl
A. A. Mrelngltie.Milk Fovor, lfogCholera
It. Il.-hlralns, Iqinrn-l. ill,, iimiuinm.
L, <■—J>l.tcir.;*cr, Ns*al D““
I>. I>. -Hot, fir llrukr. Worms
tc..P.. C oqghm II—vtre. I’n.amooU.
K. F.-<.«Ho nr lltlpM, ll. H t «. hr.
1<J. ()■ Mlw«rrl»K«. Il. r.i"^)^..
Il.ll—I rlnary and Kidney Hlsas-
I- I—MnipttTa PUe«esa,M«wga^
'A. K-Uirtares of HI«o«Hoti.
Frlee, Bottle (oswmdoMdt - • .73
•nJMKhfiMSHSfflBE* txM
nr STABLE CHART'S*
Mounted oa Rollers A Book Milled Free.
Hemvbro.’Med. Co.. 109 Fulton HI.. X.E
■ua wed wkynx id mat no 2
PUBLIC
IMPORTED H0L
TUESDAY;
AT NASHVILL
The ortderslgnrd will sell slsty bead of Hotel
aim and condition. Heifers bred an 1 dae Ps
—Em with great care by Jobs W. Ml, ou of
uu
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY
Eighteen Sizes and Kinds
ALL PURCHASERS CAN BE SUITED
MANUFACTURED BY
hue A. Shcppiv-l 4 Co, Billlnote, Mi
AND VOB BILE RY
HUNNICUTT & BELLINGIUTII,
Atlunta, Cfooruln.
JaneS-wtyXt cow
DO YOU WANT TEACHERS
DO YOU WANT SCHOOLS 1
SoQiktro Mccl Ageoej'—Eslalilishtd ISSO!
rpKAClIIRS WISU1NOPO3ITI0N8,
BCIiCoEi";NEKDINO TEACHERS l
•dfircM, with stun Pi B, 0. WOOLWINE,
LE PAGE’S
■LIQUID GLUES
UNIQUALL C O FOR C E M ENT]
lufThteM'Ssg
Btcraprairp^HMOff?. j. on. *««>;
" • l-l-t A. M’fl’ .. Iltlt,
mi. M.Youi.if J7*Unt’it* . hr.LN.YorC
■MSOLID RQLLKDCOLD
/ NMsaafcC&Sig
jJ vim Sonlhetn Knftrprt?o of.
fen tho flnnd Ring ntffi •‘euta »*jr ninil ru-i tatd.
Half-round Wedding King, 90 couti. BUtnpf
taken* Addrene
F.o.Bo.W« TJEWCL Xtr«S?«:o fl .
is K.'GoM Ring* fiM, t-i.no, ss.oo, rtM,
Slb.uo, with fine Onyx or other atone aota, 13.00.
10.75, 88.K0. 810.00. Meaauro finger with allr of
paper and cncioeo lor also. wky
THE MAN
• Tea Waxen" Meals*.
.* 800and
'tstgKSW&ra
raaautmF
LYON & HEALY, j
Bute & Monro* KU, t chlrngo.^
UlJIssOrJ jMlSair
BAND CATALOGUER
M MM. iWMi.aNNmMf
ussjXrSSra'
>Birr Bv.OMMklipL.
1m ImMm IfleiF—sIwg n
AwIflf kwiMl * Q
'•MtMGf ahalM Im4n ‘
Administrators Bate.
A ORUABLY TO AN OIIDBB OF THE COURT
ikol Ordinary ot Ilnbrr.liam county, will bo sold
■t auction st the courthouse door of Fulton coup,
ty, on the OrslTuesdey In July next, within tho
li gal hours of sale, tires following properly to-wll:
One lot In the ally *1 Atlanta, sltuetwt on the
southeast comer of Boulevard snd Old Wheel
streets, fronting on Boulevard street fifty four and
one-ball fret end extending beck along 0I<1 Wheel
street one hundred andalilv one feet. Betas lot
number thirteen of the Lynch survey ssper obit
on file with tbe city eoglneer. Bold as the proper
ly ol E. Y. Davis. 1st* of llsbenaem poutv. de
ceased. Tonal cash. This 2d day of June, [M6.
W. H. DAVtd, Administrator.
JnneOwtw
a VIA HIT. Hurt* run? In 10 to
I HiuiliNilUfti triuitniQiitre
I or by «X|»r«*a. 16
lBr«ISar®k^W5!R
FARMERS, NOTICE!
I 1||§|P>
if; -
We are gelling Engines, Separators,
Rcapcre. Mowers, Wind Milli, end all
kind* ol Machinery at prlcea and on terms
to suit these herd timet. We can SAVE
YOU MONEY. Write us at once and be
convinced. PBRKINS BROS.,
Atlanta, Oa.
jooe»-wky2t
no stamp f
Boston, Ms
W ANTED LADIES OB, GENTLEMEN TO
taka UihlePltOTaai fcoyawt al UmIt pwn
homes; work rVi.t by mill (kincono ol,Je tton)
' ‘[.ItJF^SSsF
LA0IE8 ONLY' AilCgCSTg%x>
IpwUhi Vmpmj. Jtorth a Mr, Cliwiiatil, O.
SALE OF
STEIN CATTLE!
JUNE 16,1885.
E, TENNESSEE
Ue firm. Item Ik*best herds u Berth Uollud.
qusraeltae, en* week before day of sale, where
teguee ready Jane I. Write for one.
GUTHRIE. HULL Ac CO.,
BhetbyelUe, Kentucky.
May 20, way It
M. RICH tfeliRuS.
51 nnd 51) Whitchill Mrtet, Atlanta, firo.-ga.
Have justreepived a very
large stock ot White Goods
to” Young Ladies Gradu
ating Suits, our prices and
goods will noth please you.
W hite Fans tor the Grad-
uatingclasses at all prices.
Our White Suits In boxes
are the nfees goods tor the
money you ever saw. The
*3 and $3,50 are well worth
$5. M. Rich & Bros.
M, RICH & BROS.
Are now exhibiting the
finest and most extensive
line oi Body Brussels Car
pets with Borders that
have ever been brought to
Atlanta. They embrace
Bigelow, Hartford, Lowell,
Homer, Sloans, and other
manufacturers. They were
bought before the recent;
advance and we hav) there
fore secured them at the
lowest possible figures,
which enables us to sell the
BEST MAKMS at lower
prices than our competi-
tOJS.
"Wo reduce on Monday
?o close oat our stock of
5,000 yards extra grade
Fancy Matting from 30
cents to 17y a cents per
yard. These grades of Fan
cy Matting cost more to
import than wo are going
to sell them for. We need
the room and must sacri
fice the goods.
Parties out of the city
who desire AWNINGS will
be forwarded estimates and
samples on application.
We ship Awnings complete
ready for hanging.
M. RICH & BROS.
WANTED A WOMAN
of rcdbo, energy and reipcctabUlty for onr bail
new In her locality. SALARY 939 to 9.10; ref.
SHORT-HAND BY MAIL.
ns
jm |1wb in PBACTlflL inOBtsilAXP U
"r l » : ’-,' ! ltAi-iHu".fKM , S-lVil«N. lie”.
GIVEN AWAY.xSk?
60
>ru*« Nmm m4 Cbrarre. VI*IUn«
Gw4aa.t*Uka,iiaiMa<Mi,IOe.,t!Mciatf. Wirnaladbaat
N* BuuyU IMo 4* L.JONta*CO.,NMua,N.Y #
MAP the world. Price reduced half! Catalogue
free. Addra« H. O. A K. TUN WON. Atlanta, Qa|
LOSTMANHOODM 1 —
nil—p|UlK«»tte>aa. t —
OT *Ur«M. Hr. Thwl. I* hL Mark*. 1’lffiM, Niw Y.rlJ
w
tenet pot nwnry). On our u
bit), i ,
« . BATH 8YHTKM" Iho «alo of only 2
coplci M tiny pajm a HAL.UIY of
1.081.19 a year. Price of book f?.50 to 51.75. It
-jIIA FAY TOO TO WRIT! FOIt PARTICULARS. AUo’J
*TATX Agisth wiintcd, practical book won only
for tho UtU-r poftltinii. Union PublhhlnK ]fou«o (
Conitltutloa jniiMiinr. Atlanta. Ga.
SIOOSffiBIFREE
TXT , -xiril I.V|V- I.'ICAI, AND TRAVELING
W AJN IrjI'Af.ntalorttiobatselimx ar
ticle m the market llicfl by ail liorsj nwncre.
Aihlic •« Wm. Mulloy A Vo., Greet Fells, N. It,
wky 41
fllHE CONSTITUTIO* JOB PI
l»l«ts!j l |raaml , uiVrr*'tao* n plata'*nail'll‘trev
JOB PRINTING DEPART.
' en aMortmeui^l Ihe
Mud, Doslpeld, tn euy aaarsM in n. GnlleS
States upon recilptolsevcnly-flv*cents for l«ea-
tv-hvo i,nls, or tl'J5 for e pack ot filly rar>1«,
Addrcis Tbe Comlltullnn. U
IHE LARGEST PE mil ORCHARD IN THfl
world. One-hall Inteml In 2.000 acres (eg
..-,000 c nrll to MliTC t .rtnr r. 100.000 prreeb crcc*.
imj seres lii peach orchards, other fruits, dales
about 110,000 annually Can be Iml ilulteiy ex-
tended, li years experience. Reedy park. t> for
X
T.llSKVIlULLayuRaALB-WEWlLLdSLL A
Ii w rrslrtered Jir.r t hulls retulv lorearTlee, oo
time, to spprosed partiui. Apply lo I. J A A. W.
lllll. Allanls. Os.suAwklygm.
‘SlRgGr’CSKSiUtfi
!viu.tii>? an t o| | , {]
'■r o -J
ware nriOoBtHHIloB,
CiAl.K-MKN WANTKD TIIltOCOHOP V TUB
IO »outb, totakeord^ra for pnntc<l Yi«Uln<carde
»r»! oth*r hihtli k. Good p«f. htandar<l NefraCo..
C2 Horton at., Atlanta. Ua. Bend return poaUffe,
W ANTKD-FITUATIO.S BT A GOOD. STEADY
and Icdpitrloua prlntor. Beat of ref*r*?oc*a.
Prefer work on fotne “country paper." A>Mr«aa
J. O., rfrawtr M, Atlanla, Oa.
W'
A businesswoman
R*nd refereorra wlU? application. ApotytoJ. R.
Ok? A < o„ U Weal FajetUJitreet, BaUIoi >re, Mil.
Jute»lmw
70.'
HETMSHfflllLES
ask* tkt BEST AHOFIMd Ifl the WORLD.
OvMBMtakL Ihutblt oad Chaap. DUTer*
yat aiyly la Ytn aad tioa* lead for C lrcto*
MHLfrAMERICAN ROGFINQ CO.
W cuff Street, \xs&