Newspaper Page Text
tw.ftfc.fc.'
loJU/Owt:^
Ufc ma: I'-.-u tfc.
road.
I Worn tbe valley aadshptaghmf
Whisper It low to my kraut. O i
Vo tfc* hMa Mm bum tit. im
■KWn vvm end fmjrrai t Uimvurtfc wtnd Mom,
Ana far fc> the M the young moon glows
Wfcfc tfc* Mm 1 gUramer between*
O rose, when tfc, kite grow *- * Bit
Witfc the shadow of .Murat .lay*.
So Hi* buart ri.lMiw vainly k
Sortfc* Itltr. that grew by the vrtoUngawk
And curtained til. shining waft
Ah. wotaler not that my put** thrill.
And my eyes grow dim wtrfc rests
Bh iwm.-. O rosa, Hit p>**]* *]»u
tfc-ir musky fic^raoc-c above the Kin.
fcarw grave oi the kmg. Lag yrata:
-llcyiield Herald.
Til Eli! NEW NEIGHBOR.
“Oirhr cried Margery Kearney, ‘Tve
Men him!—Olive SUirfirig—our Dent
neighbor!"
In quite a whirl of excitement Mar
gery had dualicd into the cozy room
where her three sisters were sitting.
She was shining with min, from the
jjood her silver gray gossamer to the
T*ry tip. of her rabbets. The fluffy
brown curl* across her forehtad were
sprinkled with bright drops, and her
Cheeks were glowing from her rapid
walk.
“You diJP interrogatively chorused
three eager voices,
t “1 really did!”
' "Is he handsome?” asked Janet, who
appreciated ail beauty ns intensely os
only a pL-dn looking person can.
“Intellectual looking?" inquired Clo-
*iWi\ who dipped daily into Emerson
and professed to adore Buskin.
“Jolly?" queried little Bertie, who was
at the age when jolly people seemed
created for her especial amusement.
“No—no—no! ’ laughed Margery.
“Not handsome, or learned looking, or
even jolly. lie is simply the most awk
ward looking mortal I ever beJjeUir
1 And she ttoho into a jieal of heartiest
laughter at the recollection of her en
counter with their new neighbor,
j “You see it was this way, girls," jerk
ing off her gossamer, and disclosing a
-form attired in a dress of chocolate cash-
-more—a form that was trim, slim and
•willowy as that of sweet 17 is. apt to
be. “I was running. home in a great
Jiurry—for it's chillier out than you folks
■nuiginfc—-and just as I camo opposite the
gate of *The C»:iks,’ I stop;»ed very sud
denly. For right there was tho most tre
mendous black dog I over saw. I said:
‘Go way!’ end lie didn't fcudge. I shook
pv ytnhrett-j £,t ijjtn. He wasn’t a bit
.afraid.. I said: ‘If you don’t get out of
ths way I'll hit youf and ho actually
. grinned, There was nothing to do but
step out in the Gtreet—it wan so muddy, ]
too—and walk around him. But just
"tlien—I suppose my dilemma was ap
parent from the house—down the path
Jbe came running. Oh, he looked so
'ridiculous! He is about as tall as Jack's
bean stalk, lean os a lath, and brown ns
an Indian,"
• “Well,” exclaimed Janet, “ho must be
charming!”
“Ob!” cried Margery, going off into a
fresh paroxysm of laughter. “What,
with his glasses and his coattails flying
straight out as he rushed to my rescue
he looked liko some great curious, com
ical bird!”
"Birds don’t wear glasses,” corrected
B<_frie. “Wgg his coat a .wallow tail?”
r ‘Thcaopeairoj.inforjuaUdn'wasIgnoretL
k “Well, "lie called oil Uiedog, and apolo
gized for the monsier, and—tliat’8 all.”
“I wish he’d offer me tbo use of lus li
brarysighed Clotilde.
“They say ‘The Oaks’ is a perfect pal
ace as far as furnishing goes,” murmured
Janet
“I think ril ask him to loan me the
lovely white pony,” decided Bertie.
Tbo rain bad quite
ceawo. in* arternooo sun, weary of
■outing, was coming oat in splendid
•tala. In ito radiance every drop on
*vcry clover leaf waa a glittering jewel,
and the pool, in the street reflected bite
of the brilliant sky.
On aud on wandered Bertie, her ecar-
h-t skirt blowing backward, her yellow
hair tangling fliMsily as the breose caught
and played with it As site passed “The
Oaks" she paused to put her small, in
quisitive face against the irou railing and
peer Ummgli.
What a grand, big house it was! And
bew smooth and green was the large
lawn, all lovely with beds of bloom!
And how sweet the flowers smelt lifter
the rain—tlie geraniums aud carnations,
and sweetbrier and verbenas!
“I should so love to see tho funny man
Sister Margery saw," she said to herself.
And then, just as if she had liad a in ogi
val ring, her wish was gratified. For
out on tho main walk, not twelve feet
away, from a small side path came Mr.
Sterling. a
He saw tho little maiden outside the
railing—the bright eyed, curious face.
He liked children. He sauntered towards
the gate.
“lieilo, little lassie! what is your
name?"
“Kearney, sir.”
“Oh, you’re one of the Kearney sisters,
are you? Which one?”
“I’m not the clever one.” she said.
He smiled.
“NoT
“No. Clotilde is the clever one.”
“WellT
“And I’m not tho good one. Janet is
the good one.”
“Indeed!”
with a nod. “And I'm not the
pretty one cither. Margery is tho pretty
one."
“And your
“Oh, I'm tho bad one. At least that
is the way Uncle Dick says we ought to
bo dis-dis-distinguished!”
She was breathless from her struggle
with tho l»ig word.
“Then," ho said, laughter lighting up
bis quiet brown eyes—“then it was Mar
gery I saw today?”
“Yes, and I think,” indignantly, “she
was all wrong. I don’t think you’re one
bit awkward."
“Ehr.
“I think you’re downright nice. And
some day—not now, because the girls
said I mustn’t, but some day, when we’re
better acquainted, I’m going to ask you
to let me ride on your littlo white pony.”
He bowed gravely.
“Certainly.”
“It’s so sweet!” growing friendly and
confidential. “Do you know that last
summer—keep still, Kitty Kearney!” to
tlio pussy, which was writhingly at
tempting an escape—“last summer Mar
gery, who is the grandest artist that over
lived, I think, made a sketch of it
when it was out at pasture. Just wait
hero and I’ll run and get it. Como on.
Twig!"
Away she scampered, her littlo dog
after her. Smiling amusedly, the tall,
brown gentleman by tho gate waited her
return.
In about fifteen minutes sho was back
with a flat book under her arm.
“It is in there, and he is eating grass!”
He took the book rather diffidently,
but very curiously, too. It could not
matter. Sketches were made to lie
looked at. And this was a sketch of his
own pet pony.
r ‘By George!”
He almost dropped the book.
“Oh, please, please,” cried Bertie, in an
agony of remorse. “I quite forgot your
picture was in there. What won’t Mar
gery say! Oh, never mind tho pony’s
picture nowl”
She snatched the book, turned, ran
home os fast as her fat legs would carry
her, leaving Clive Sterling crimsoning
I and laughing as he never had crimsoned
. But this rash resolution was rushlessly I an d laughed before,
crushed. I “Well, I've seen
myself for once as
. "The Oaks" had been shut up so long ! °% re thanks to the pretty one!”
—ever since tho Koarneys had come to I He dropped his eye glasses and saun-
live in the gray green cottage near by. Its j tcred back to the house. For several
owner had -gone abroad on the death of
his mother, three years ago, leaving his
handsome house in the care of a couple of
servants. But now that the news of his
return had spread, curiosity was rife in
the fashionable suburb of Rivervicw. And
not the least interested were Clive Ster
ling’s near neighbors.
■ A pleasagt room this in which the sis
ters sat; a homelike room, even if the
carpet was threadbare, the cliairs venera-
ble, the damask curtains darned—per
haps all tho more homelike for these sug
gestions of social service and experience.
Janet went on with her ti»A of re
modeling an old dress. Clotilde went
over to the window and looked wistfully
through the drizzling rain to the red
brick chimneys which rose above the
house which held the coveted books.
Margery, obeying a sudden impulse, had
snatched up her ever ready sketch book
from the table acd was scratching vig
orously away. An o cstatic giggle from
Bertie, who was peeping over her shoul
der, called the attention of the others to
her work.
I “What is it?” asked Janet
I Margery looked up with a nod and a
smile.
, “Wait a moment”
On her brisk pencil flew, the dimples
in her pretty cheeks depening as her
mischievous smile grew.
, “ThereI”
’ She held up the open book. The otbert
flocked around her.
i “Oh, Margery r
“He can’t look like that!”
j “What a caricature!”
' Indeed, comical and grotesque was the
drawing of the loug, lank figure, with
the spidery extremities, the flying coat
tails. thg tremendous goggles.
“Oh, just a trifle accentuated—not
ite a caricature,” she said laughingly,
i she scrawled under the picture the
“Our New Neighbor.”
“The rain is clearing off 1” cried Bertie.
days he neither saw nor heard anything
of his neighbors. Then be chanced to
encounter Bertie.
“Oh, please, I can’t talk to you,” the
child said. “The girls ray I am so un
reliable. You know Margery caught
me when I was sneaking her sketch book
back, and made me tell her where I had
taken it to.” -
“And then?"
“Then,” confessed Bertie, with a con
trite gulp, “then she sat down and cried!”
“I rayl Nor
“She did. There sho is now! Oh,
Margery, Margery I”
The girl had come unexpectedly around
the corner. To avoid a meeting was im
possible. She was quite near her sister
and the master of “The Oaks.”
“■nils is Mr. Sterling, Margery. You
know you weren’t reg-regularly intro
duced before. I've been telling him how
yon cried about”
A delicious blush of mortification, re
gret, pleading swept across Margery’s
wild rose face. Frankly she held cut
her hand, lifted her clear eyes.
“I am so sorry for having been so
rude! Will you forgive me if you can?
And come over and play tAnnfn thia
afternoon?"
“Thank you. Yes,” he said.
“Why, Margery,” the others raid to
her when he, after a rattling good game,
had returned home, “be is just splen
did!”
“Good looking, too!”
“And a gentleman!”
“All three!" decided Margery, prompt
ly, as site sought the sketch of their
new neighbor and deliberately tore it up.
She Is Mrs. Clive Sterling now.
Bertie was her bridesmaid.—Kate M.
Cleary in New York Ledger.
Among odd and pretty German “fa
vors" are perfume bottles made to simu
late English walnuts. Ribbons or oorda
and tassels attach them to a button or
to the wrist of the dancers.
days, journeying toward the new town of
Murray City. oo the Murray river, and
** were only two miles from a post
rtetino, where a guard of mounted po
lice luid tlide headquarters, when the
driver of the stage or wagon stiddcnlv
brought his horses to a dead stop. This
was in the days of thirty years ago. be
fore any part of Australia was half civil
ized by the English, and before the big
island had been more than half surveyed.
There were plenty of bosh rangers haunt
ing every highway, and every stage was
usually accompanied by a guard. In
our case five of us liad put together acd
hired a private conveyance. It was one
of the usual stages, but making a special
trip for Our benefit. Of the five three
■were Englishmen going up to tho valley
of the Murray to locate land, the fourth
waa an American who had been in the
country two years, and I had landed in
Melbourne only the week before. My
compatriot was named Davis, a widower,
ami he hud his only child along—a
bright little girl 8 years old. He was
going up to sheep ranch in partnership
with a friend already settled, and he
could not bear to leave his child behind
him in the town.
The five of ns were well armed, and
every hour since leaving Melbourne we
bad been ready to defend ourselves. As
we lifui met with nothing to alarm us
thus far, and as we knew we were close
upon a station, no one was prepared for
what happened. The stage hail no sooner
stopped than two men came up on a
side, covered us with revolvers, and a
gruff voice announced:
“Now, then, tho first move and off
goes yer heads! Step out here one by
oner
I was the first one oat. It was just at
sundown, and on a portion of the road
between two ridges. The two men on
that side were rough, unkempt, des
perate looking fellows—fair samples of
tho other, two—and the instant I raw
them I knew that we wore in for trouble.
When we were all out they ordered the
driver to turn into a blind road to the
right, and we followed after tho wagon.
As wo were ordered to follow the veliicle
the leader of the gang said:
“No foolishness, now! Tho four of us
have got our pistols looking right at ye!”
After going tliirty roils we were as
well hidden from the highway as if we
had gone ten miles, and were brought to
a halt in a little glade. As there were
five to four, you may wonder that we
did not umko a break, Tho first man
who had moved to pull his revolver
would have been shot in the I jack. Da
vis could not have been counted on any
how, as his anxiety for his child took all
tho fight out of him. The driver, if not
in league with the rangers, was at least
treated as neutral. While ho was arm
ed, he took matters so coolly that we
saw lie was out of the scraiie. The five
of us were placed in a row, and while
three men stood behind U3 the fourth
disarmed us and went through our pock
ets. Wo were a poverty stricken crowd.
The $80 they took from me constituted
my worldly wealth, while Davis raidtthe
others had been too sharp to trust their
money to a stage unguarded. The whole
amount did not- pan out over $150, and
the bush rangers were fnrious.
“Why, you bloody bloke!” shouted tho
leader, “you alone ought to have at least
£200 with you!”
“Do you think I’m carrying my money
about tho country for 6uch as you?” pro
tested tho hot headed victim.
f Tm a-wishing you hadn't got a blast
ed penny!” added the second.
“Tho idea of it! You’ll all be hung
for this!” growled tho third.
Davis and I had nothing to say. The
leader, speaking to the two of us, asked;
“You are not English?”
“No; Americans.”
“I thought so. Where ye bound for?”
We gave him our destinations.
“Well, we’re a bit sorry to take your
money, small as it is, and fo delay your
journey; but we’ve got to do both. These
three coves is rich, and we ain't going
to let ’em off with shillings where we
ought to have pounds.”
While we were held under guard one
of tho men went over to the driver and
held a consultation with him, and the
result wa3 that he turned his team
about and disappeared in the direction
of the highway. Wo were then ordered
to proceed in a northerly course through
the scrub, one man leading and the oth
ers bringing up the rear. Not a word
had been addressed to little Eva by any
of the men, although all bad looked at
her with softened expression. She real
ized what was going on. but went
through it bravely, and when wo started
through the scrub her father carried her
on his shoulder. We traveled for six or
seven miles before halting, and then
came upon a camp fire, with a fifth
bush ranger sleeping liesido it. He was
rudely awakened, and I then raw that
he had his right arm in a sling, having
been wounded or meeting with an acci
dent. The camp was a thicket, with a
temporary shelter of brush to sleep un
der. The five of us were ordered to sit
down under this shelter, and then every
man’s feet were tied together at the
ankles and a guard took a scat before
us. Then the fire was replenished, and
the bush rangers gave us such a supper
as they could afford, which consisted
solely of roast mutton and a flour cake
baked in the ashes. When we had eaten
this and been offered a drink of water
all around, the leader sat down before us
and said:
“Now, gents, business is business the
world over. We have got to make
money. We want it to convert these
’ere natives from the error of their ways,
and it will take a heap to do it. You
first gent, who was so ready with your
tongue, how much are you worth?’
“It’s none o’ yer blasted business, you
scoundrel, you,” was the hearty reply.
“Well, mebbe not. Being as you is
so poverty stricken, 111 put you down
for only £300. Now, you second gent.”
“I could raise £100 if in Melbourne.”
“That means £200 for you, then. You’ll
lie a half or more. Now, you third gent.”
“TO
this day's
but not until after I
You also go down for
£300. Now, the fourth seat,”
“You've gat my last dollar,” I replied.
“I landed in Melbourne only a week ago.”
“That’s bad for all of us. but I guess
you toil the truth. Now, you fifth genu”
“I might possibly raise £3 if up at the
ranch.” replied Davis, “but that would
be nil I am poor and just making a
start.”
“Is that your little gal?*
“Yea”
“Where’s the mother?”
“Dead.”
“Shoo! That’s too bad. What’s the
gal’s uvaei”
“Eva.”
“Mighty sweet. Say, gal, come and
kiss me.”
She went over to him and kissed his
bronzed and bearded cheek without the
slightest hesitation, and he held her for
a moment and looked her over and said:
“Sweet as Ininey! I wouldn't hurt you
for all the gold in the big world!”
She was allowed to return to her fa
ther. and the leader then said:
“We shall hold you three peppery
gents until you raise £S0O for us, and as
those Americans might give the alarm
we shall be obliged to hold them as welL
Sorry to do it, but business is business,
and If wo don’t look out for ourselves no
one will.”
Each one of the Englishmen swore by
all that was good and great that he’d
never pay a cent, but the bush rangers
only laughed at their words. At a late
hour wc were ordered to go to sleep, and
the last thing I saw before my eyes closed
was the guard sitting on a’rock at my
feet The night passed quietly, and as
soon os we liad breakfasted in the morn
ing the leader took pen, ink and paper
from a box and said to the Englishmen:
“Now, then, here's the chance to write
to your friends to raise the rocks, and I ll
see that tho letters resell them.”
Each one of tho three refused point
blank to make any attempt to raise
money, although it was plain they had a
desperate lot to deal with and that they
would suffer for their obstinacy.
“Well, some other day will do just as
well,” laughed tlio leader, “but I want
it understood that each day of delay adds
£23 to tho ransom.”
We were then untied, given a few
minutes to get over our stiffness of limb,
and then wcall set off over a rugged,
scrubby country toward a range of hills.
We traveled steadily until noon and then
came to a very secure stronghold among
the hills. By placing us in u natural
inclosure of about an eighth of an acre
wo were surrounded by rooky walls on
three sides, and on the fourth the bu.'h
rangers built their fire and made their
camp. As wo were penned in here the
chief of tho bush rangers announced to
tho Englishmen that lie would give them
two days in which to make up their
minds to send for the money. If they
held out at the end of that time lie
would take his own measures to extort
tho money. One of tlio Englishmen was
a large landowner in Australia, another
was a civil officer at Melbourne, the
third was fresh from England and was
intending to shut a manufactory of
some sort at Melbourne or Sydney.
Davis and I both labored with them to
make them realize the situation, but
they were pigheaded and obstinate, de
claring that it was all a bluff, and tiiat
tho rangers would not dare proceed to
extremes. Wo believed differently.
Tliey were escaped convicts, each one
outlawed, and a more villainous gang
one never looked at.
On tlio morning of the third day, with
out having annoyed us in the least dur
ing the interval, the chief called for their
decision. Each Englishman curtly re
plied tlutt lie would never get another
dollar of their money. The civil officer
wa6 the leader and the most independent.
He was seized, tied hand and foot, and
after his boots and stockings liad been re-
moved Tie was placed with liis feet to a
fire. Hostood the torture until w“ could
smell the odor of his burning soles and
then gave in. Tho other two followed
his example without waiting for the tor
ture. Each one wrote a note to a friend
in Melbourne worded by dictation. While
the chief was a roujjh looking fellow^ ho
proveJ to Lave a very fair education.
When the letters were ready he took
them and started, presumably to find a
messenger to act as a go-between. There
were four left to guard us, and after the
chief had gone one of them bruised some
herbs and kindly tied up tho English
man’s feet. Our three fellow prisoners
rather shunned Davis and myself during
the afternoon, seeming to be put out be
cause we were not called upon to ransom
ourselves. But we afterward recalled
that they made much of the child, and
had her with them a good share of the
time. Each outlaw also had a good word
for her whenever she came near, and she
was permitted to rqn about without re
straint.
At 4 o’clock in the afternoon this was
the situation: Three of the guards were
asleep beyond the fire. The fourth sat
on the ground, with his back to a rock,
reading a novel, while he bad a rifle
acroerhia knees. Davis and I lay close
together, talking matters over, and the
Englishmen were ten steps away. little
Eva was running about, shouting and
playing. All at once we heard the pop
of a revolver, followed by a death cry,
and as we sprang up two of the English
men, each with a pistol in hand, dashed
past us. In sixty seconds more every
one of the bush rangers was dead. They
had coaxed Eva to bring them the
pistols, wl-.ich were lying on the far side
of the camp, and she had (Kissed behind
the guard and made two trips. As soon
us they had the weapons one of them shot
down the half asleep guard, and then the
others were slain before sleep was fairly
out of their eyelids.
• The smoke was still hanging over the
camp when we began the construction
of a litter, and within half an hour wa
were headed for the highway and carry
ing the victim of torture along with us.
Wc kept going all night, cs wo-had to go
6low, anil about daylight came cut at the
stage station. A squad of mounted police
set-off for the camp, auu ou their way to
it came across and killed tho leader of
the bush rangers, thus wiping out the last
of a bad gang.—-New York Sun.
May do’for a stnpiit boy** excite*; bat
wiott cm be raid foe the |«rent who
•era hi* child languishing daily and (ails
to recoguixn the want of a tonic and
blood-paritier? Formerly, a course of
bitter*,or sulphur and molasses- was tbo
rale in well-regulated families; hut now
all intelligent households keep Ayer's
Sarsaparilla, which is at once pit .curat
to the taste, uud the must searching and
effective blood v>e<ficine ever discovered.
Nathan 5- Cleveland, 27 K. Canton at.,
Boston, writes: “ My daughter, now 21
years oM, was in perfect health until a
vear ago when she bc^an to enmyisin ol
fatigue, headache, drUliiy, dizziness,
indigestion, tout loss of apimtite. ? con
cluded that nil her emu ids: lit* originated
iu impure blood, soil induced her to take
Ayer aSarraicirtila. Till* medicine soon
restored her blood-making nigaiis to
healthy action, ami in due time reestab
lished her formin' health. 1 Hud Aver’a
Sarsaparilla * must valuable remedy for
tlio lassitude aud debility incident to
spring time.”
J. CKstrkrht, Brooklyn Power Co.,
Brooklyn, N. Y.. says: “As * Spring
Medicine. I Hud a splendid .substitute
for the old-time eoniimuiids in.Ayer’s
t-arsaparllhi. with a few doses of AVer’s
I dls. Alter ilo-ir use, I fed fresher and
stronger to go through the summer.”
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
rnzrAHKn HY
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass,
rrio* $1; am bottlt., ,15. Worth *3 a bottla.
$525fp
♦*
profits per month ;will pr- -ve tt
'•' '- 1 just —*
- fel is w imrtraits Just out
Sample seut fkkv. to all.
hides ter & Son/.'S Horn! st N.Y
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
|Clcan$*s ana b'rautiGci the h*ir.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Tail* to Restore Gray
Heir to its Y'luththI Color.
Prevents Diuvtnift an<t hnir f iiitoff
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PEHSYROYAl FILLS.
I.od Cross Diamuud llrond.
7Thkonlf rellab's H!l tYitle. 8*r« and
j}! * nf7 ’. I.otllcw. c«k liruifgUt fortliulMa*
M Urn ltd. w red tnei*HU Imxm, tsalcd
U Taka no other* y'.*a44e.
I T’rtwolura “lietlof for
f "wueaiurt iu.«z ItCWn IOC
__ . I J-U'Jn v» igti<r, hr mol!. JTiwtsilum
dbitfcmtcr VfcuUoal <!'*» Ms*1mu m-ilaSa, VJ*
Swiss Condensed Milk Co.
BICI BRAND
GENUINE SWISS CONDENSED MILK.
(Jnaraiitecd :fie lichenund purest milk roan-
ntnct-.irrcl, rimTahdiij: over 10 pereent <>rbutter.
Cliil'iraii Hurt imalhu will thrive wouderfnllv.
aud families will find Its use mote economical
than o-diuaiT cows milk. See y..«r crocor elves
yoi JKlel Swiss Condensed Milk.
Import .\geat, Jf.t UKS P. KttlTU,
New York and l klcago.
-THE VERY BEST-
MU S I CAL
Instruct ion to he secured at tine
METROPOLITAN CONSERVATORY
21 E-ist 14tli Street. New York fiity.
Book giving full particulars sent fiee. Can
enter at any time, hoard turn shod in connec
tion with the fchool. H. W.lkaiCEXE,
General .liauuger.
) SCHIFFMAiWS AS THMA CUREl
5 Instantly relieved tho isost nolant attack. No fl
I waiting for results*. Its action ta iminedu V
I ate. direct nnd certain, imdaeor* fa the result I
I in all curabla canoe A single trvd convince* E
] the rnnrt .skeptical. Price ->()c. nod £ ! .OU, oi g
1 dranrfcU or by m ul Tri ll package /Vat to oay P
E oddrese. i»r. U.fiCKlFyXANS* St. fOtaU Xbrni
MADE WITH BOILING WATER.
EPPS’S
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING.
COCOA
MADE WITH BOIUNC MILK.
TO WEAK MEN
Suffering from the effects of youthful errors, sariy
decay, wasting weakness, lost manhood, etc* I win
■end a valuable treatise (seeled) containing tell
particular* for home cure, FREE of charge. A
splendid medical work; should be read by every
man who la nervous and debilitated. Address,
F. C. roWLEH. Moodn*. Conn.
CURE
Blok Headache and relieve all the troubles Incf
dent to a bilious stole of the system, such as
sjsiem, suen as
Dizziness, Nausea. Drowsiness. Distress after
«•“»>« IJto in the Side, *c. While their most
remarkable success has been shown in curing
SICK
.U Casrs’s Lrmx Liras Pitta
r valuable in Constipation, curing
—— *-»*—ting this annoy ing complaint, while
l^^oosTect^ldisonlotsoftLe stomach,
stimulate the liver and regulate the bowels.
Sven If they only cured
HEAD
be almost priceless to those
1 who suffer from this distressing complaint:
but fortunately their-goodmas does not end
here, and those who once try them will find
thMm tint, nil). I_ — *__ _ .
arcira, ouu uiuap wuu uucu ITT Uiem Will find
the» little pills valuable fn so many ways thet
eu5siaas*“* fla «^ !S f
ACHE
la thebane of ao many fives that here Is where
SiSJTfeJSJES'V* Our pills cure it
while others do not.
Carter's Iattlz Lrvra Plug are very small
and very easy lo take. One or two“
a dose. They arc strictly ' *
not gripe or purge, but by U
Srefor^ 1 Wh “-v? 0 -—- Tla *® **- ® nente
for * 1 - everywhere, or sent by maa
CASTES 10B1CBIS CO., Era Tote.
SCUT.
v <••« -
tTiiia.t-i,fcta...
•* lki.ti-i,»rc .....
•• Warhl.^tO.i....
•* cmuchutsv.He..
•*. ly rJ.Un tf ....
” K Ctiu-I.ml
• Uubih...
• r *»<eo.i»i'oro
I.v «...r,|.imr„,,..“7
“ I a id . h
lv..rh.4lu
fcv Given*lx>ro. .’7
Salisbury
■* Ch.ri.-tte
“ * .a-toni * - - —
It spapuuhuijf
LvHvt Springs....
“ >eh till*
“ Hrnd>r*-mvlJle
■ rSp irta-ihurg ...
Cv epmtnnhuiR 7
•* t.revnvtllo .....
** ^cnecu
**' Toecna
" . C kuoIi*........
>rLuU
* A then.* -
Lv Gs'ne-vllle.....
Vr Atiama
Lv Atlanta-.
“ Galne-ivllle.
“ Athena
“ Data
•> Cor ella.
*• Toccoa.
“ Bences.
“ Uiecuv’llc.....
Lv Spartanburg
“ Hemltrsonville
Ar A*heril’.e
“ Hot Springs
ssasirara V i Y
- iOp'U
8 <4 pm
T 00 pm
8 40 pm
Lv Spartanburg
“ Gas to la
Ar Charlotte
“ Salisbury
“ Greensboro..... j
i a» am
n »: nm
t in am
« 0 am
7 IS nm
9 62 pm
4 48pm
8 80 pm
7 08 pm
8 40 pm
At Durham
“ Kalelgh
“ Goldaiiorp
1J 1 bin
I a5 pm
* l« mn
*8 28 pm
♦7 80 pm
12 50 pm
Lv G ecu .l>oro
Ar Danville
“ Rielunond
Lynchburg
“ t'harlott-vllle
“ Uaidilnzton
“ Ila’ilinore
“ J bHadolphla
“ New Yora
7 .V. ....
ii am
8 an pm
12 " ■ pm
9 IB pni
7 l9pM
8 30 pm
8 ill mn
0 SO am
8 80 pm
10 :« pm
5' 15 nm
s ."-fi am
11 oo cm
U 53 sin
+8 zoom
10 47 am «»
l 30 pm
No. tt, daily except Snndny, leaves Atlanta
5.!tn p. in.; arrive* at Lula Alt p. in.
No. 10 leave* I.nla daily except Sunday 6.1S a.
in.; arrives Alia taH.r-0a.rn.
Nos. so and 81 connect at Cornelia for Tallu
lah Kails daily.
•Daily.
•fDaily except Sunday.
v Mfflau SleejM-Car Serrice.
No. M liii rultman Sleeper Now York t<
- —— - .—....... .ivn ,wi» to At
lanta.
N '. t>2, p f>Uman Bleeper Washington to -New
Orleans and Wasliinpt-'n to Birmingham.
No. 5' Pullmnn Sli cper Atlanta to New York.
No. 831’uUmnn sleeper Nmv Orleans to Wash
ington, D, C., nad Birmingham to Washington.
L. L. MCCLESKEY,
Diy. Pu*.on£0T Agent,
JAS. L. TAYLOfi,
Geu. Passenger Agent,
Washington, D. C.
II au tiftc
Ueorgia Railroad Co
Stone Mountain Houto.
Omen Gsxeraz. 1
Augusta, Ua., Sept, -.let lit 9. f
The following schedule will Ira op, niton «u-
til further notice:
ATHENS BHANCE.
80th Meridian
Time.
»ls. 1
Past
Train.
Dav
Mail. .
Fast
Train.
Lv. Athens.
Winterville
Dunlup....
Crawtord..
Antioch...
Jiuxeys....
Woodville.
Ar. liuion PL
0
8
U
18
24
27
35
10
8.30 a m
8 40 a m
8 50 a m
i.o7 a ui
9.23 a m
0.30 a m
9.47 a ni
9.55 a m
8.40 a m
0.12 • m
9.20 a m
lO.liO a m
10.29 a m
10 53 am
11.22 am
11.35 a m
3.B0 p m
4.06 p m
4.10 p m
4.27 p m
4.13 pm
4.50 p ir.
5.07 [> m
6.15 p oi
Lv. Union PL
Ar. Atlanta .
Gal nr. sv ilia
10,04 a in
1.00 p in
6.25 p id
2.10 p m
5.45 p m
Lv. Uaion Pt.
Vr. Augusta.
VVashingt n
' aeon
Mili’dgvile
12.17 p m
3.35 p m
2 20 p m
8.00 p m
4.11 p m
5 85 p m
3.15 p m
7.20 p m
TRAINS WESTWARD. *
Lv Augusta.
Macon ....
Mill’dg vile
Washingt n
Ar. Uoioui’t
v. Atlanta..
Gainesvili;:
Ar; Union PL
7.45 a m
7.90 am
10.01 a m
11.05 am
7.10 a m
9.13 a m
11.10 a m
1.55 p m
S.Co a m
5.55 a m
11.46 p m
2.45 p m
5.89 p m
Lv. Union Pt.
Woodville.
Maxnys. „
Antioch..
Crawford..
Ilnnlap....
Winterville
Ar. Athens.
10.15 a m
10 24 a m
10.41 a m
10 48 a m
11.04 a m
11.90 a m
11.25 a m
11.40 a m
2.10 p m
2.81 p m
3.06 p ni
3.21 p m
4 03 p m
4.39 p m
4.51 p m
5.15 p m
5.35 p m
5.44 p u>
6.01 p m
6.08 p a
6 *4 p ,-n
6.40 p a
6.45 p m
7.00 p m
Leave Athens*.... A 15nm
Arrive Union Pout. 8 4$ p m
beae Union Point*
Arrive Athens.z 9 80am
•ExceptSunday. »Wam
UNION POINT A WHITE PLAINS K. B.
Leave Union Point*
Arrive at Siloum [
Arrive at White Plains...
10.10 a m
10.85 a m
1110 am
*5.40 p m
6.05 p m
6.49 p m
Iraave White Plain*......
\rrive at Siloam
*8 00 a ni
8.85 a m
9.00 am
•uxcu
BBS
Arrive at Union Point....
•Except Sunday.
oLhtPlNU AND PABLOS CABS.
Fast trwn : Sleeping cars between Atlanta
Augusta and Charleston. Night express:
Sleeping ear* between Charleston and Atlanta.
August*and Atlanta, August* and Macon.
Trains No. 97 and 98 will atop at and receive.
P***® n K* r * to and from the following stations
only. Grovetown, Hiirlem, Dewing,^Thomson,
jaagaasgaffiaiga?
Oonagton, Conyers, Laibonia, Stone Moun
tain and Decatur. .
rSSSB. Ath8M oonDect wi ‘ h
J * w -K. B. DORSET,
»!SfTK.TttX^
A GENTS wanted atronce for Life and Reml-
nhuencesaf Jefferron Davis. Edited by Jus
tice Uunar, D. S. Supreme Court. Dart cf pi o-
Completooatflt *L Address •
_AIL WOODWARD A CO., Baltimore, Md.
awft—Afew general agents wanted. d-JanS
For Male.
One two-story bouse on Foundry street,
lot exteudina back to Covington & 7iI>icoit
Railroad. A splendid lot for a warehouse.
Also, one large dwelling on Oconee st,,
now used by Public School. This prop
erty is Valuable.
Shackleford & Hattaway,
Real Estate Agents.