Newspaper Page Text
rf
immszi 1 earth-life a garden ol <
' 4 xd boy and char.tn with her innocent
c nn,
• I bought wtth spure love she would tin my
* Btr&vrSR My pathway with brightness oi
v And we could resist the cold world’s cruel
Wi* powers—
* 'Vtoaa Lillie, dear Lillie, the child ul my
m heart. r
a
The days vanished quickly: not e’en did we
A AnT sluul©w Eif*? of trouble, if? of care, or of sorrow;
When, in sweet stMXv&fi communion, new pleasures »•'*'*
Thus would blest moments •** with «re-»*-JI youth s rosy
were my '
nabmiBft , ,* ■'
Mm® off with
While scorning, lingering with I.lllie, the child . . of , my
heart.
Bnt clouds d
around us— tlmt
Though^aroest aad holy the lore eu
wound ua ‘
.
bound us,
• .Thciiabiileiu 'They rudely, relentlessly tore tre apart, fle
ArtiMMMadiHAre. to repot, the lightning's rce
M thWMer s lend crashes,
in wild, fearful tempest, that plunges and
dashes, child of
Aaaallad my dear Lillie, the my
heart.
^ A wpdm mrvr are'gloomr, my night lone and
▲«4 Hie dreary, towlyrrxT stokl—I
passess w am weary I
I 5 ut this I know' surely—no question—no
Kiat querj heaven r — •will kindly the
assuage keen
smart!
£ And tin>mrh upon earth I. fehall never more
Jn yon fairer world I shall lovingly meet her.
And O, the bright prospect! Can;Joy be coin*
0, Aillio, dear Lillie? sweet child of my
heart!
A MA Oli#' I>A NCE.
What an Astonished English' Tourist Saw
. in the Land of the Golden Fleece.
Before the “liaka” commenced the
principal lenolhy. speech chief present the made intending a rather
to per
* ffAfwteA. lAmdcrstood from the inter¬
preter present that the chief -exhorted
tho male, ccrps do de their ballet,^bofh B##]e that evening; and fe¬
to very best
*&us not to antics—ifh.-ftl indulge hi any unseemly or frivo
in Apienean par
” lance, are kfiown as “nionkey-shrnes,"
I presume—but to govern themselves in
'-st ri c t e e ee rfiftaeffwrith the i mm u ta bl e
traditions of the “haka,” as handed
down to them from their remote ances¬
tors. Then the chief, « talk old man,
. ^viffi dignified a. Very sonorous'; voice and : veir
mien, sat down on a low stool.
Around him crouched, clasping their
knees witli their hands, a number of
ancient Maori women, and theh the
“haka” commenced iiyearnest It may.
not be altogether correct tfi term' this:.ex- '
traordinary does exhibition a daues, -since it
not comprise any absolute salta¬
tory movements, of the extremities. is
rather a klrtfi of ‘ i hythndcal stampede,
wild hut measured—now ferocious, and
now sensuous. Of the words of the grim
trdohing*chhnt while intoned exercitation by the per¬
formers their was at
Its height, I was favored with a full and
true copy in choice Maori, the chief
courteously dictating the strophes and
— ifi precise order as Would they oc
‘ (TitTert: bnt no useful purpose be
served by transcribing the Maori libret¬
to leaders here. I might lb >the mst well quote the dtfynf cele¬
as
brated “Marowski gffiTftmr-fiilisfei language” invented
Mr. an , deceased,
'B^n I Cdbk« sfo„H,h|vp fhofi Is th*re any rea
lusanjj* ton w®' iimiiir ||regActaje to,.lhe yerge of*,
a eonscrentiotH* com-.'
postom anu proof-read¬
ers. What my ears seemed to hear was
ns follows:
Hotieot, hoticot, hottcot, te tafrn %
Hoticot. hoticot, hotledt! hoflcqt.ne taira!
Taim! Taira! ttilral
And so on, ad libitum. And each renc
tition of “Taira”—or what seemed lo'bo
panting, mouth. “Taira! groaning, foaming at the
ti Ufk Taira! Hoticot te taira!"
i®-i itojfft qiatroo, ji who might *.4gfap( haveheer:
t 1 ^ tl i o r W.,
splendid but terrific. Now I fancied that
I saw Clytaemjestia, hpr arms pimple to
the the elbows British wifff her hosjlail^ g^rp;
now warrior queen, ‘‘bleed¬
ing the from Icena the Roman rods,” and rousing
to vengeance; now Helen
But Maegregor, tlieteis-s raffing at the Lowlanders.
te taira.” anon ’Tis change. of “Hoticot
on a troop frantic
Bacchantes that 1 seem to be gazing—
Bacchantes, their disbelved locks liang
ing exjfltant. over dninkeiA tlyjir shoulders—Bacch fiercely antes And
wanton,
then I have a vision of the Almees and
Ghawazie of Egypt; and then, upon my
fford, 1 am for a moment persuaded
that the howling dervishes of Constanti¬
nople Wahoa must have* sisters, and tbatit is to
that they have all pome. “Hari¬
cot te taira!” the cry is shrilly echoed m
V «■ the distance. Outside the “whare-peni”
they tell me the. small Maori boys and
girls are gettffig tip a ! ‘dmka” on their
. --own formation aocauto. has VYjthin,auothgt taken place. With trans¬
as¬
tonishing thqs4roinati-rdtreattb adroitness the. front -rank, hack-'
open*. the
•» rngntp], They interest i^pd ^ mpp cc i p c fiii thii front * -
'*t<*|uf,SriAy Ae me now. horrible. They iMevirMnd are pict
Worn flKfxm; gaffneTCts, ffieir IuBIcrohs *ar
rangement in shirt-tails.” *W»that*SU I tell vou
that it is upon their faces r
should look. Gleaming ^d black eyes,
splendid I&Gb teeth white glistening
othJaok Be batr in which her- •
! pents seetn to uncoiling themselves;
the sweat beading on their bronzed
brows. I tell vwu Wat it is their ffiartd
arms that you sMd mark, the muscles
gloviously slowly raised developed, the hands now
above the head a» 4 a ador
ktion now flung wide apart, now prone,
tion, now supine remoustoapoe; asm-entreaty, in dimrecm
in but m#w: extpad
cd, and with bony forefingers pointino
to you—yes, to yourself. The eyes Hash
defiance -W? at voir 1 ’. thp teeth h nro g nashed
n tts vr 11 you
,1 the paktna.”* What righrhaVc ’
yon td
an inch of their Janas? Why did
SS^SSTi,^ Maon. Ho had his priests, 40 hig idols,
•4 u 2£ 8 his superstitions,. and his
>3 *»p«. fYou have given him pigs and
j , ‘SSHreJrS juimi m food, what snore suceuiont
!
el •Mg and panting, ”i°i a n Stamoirfg -'. b r 8 ’- who and Wcre wvith- y. el J
•thought, mg, trying to lash themselves, so vou
into a n*ii paroxysm ,a,Ti of blood.
'll“mn
itsas&isassrtaS
tholi- iiftMn.matu „„„•• •
&sr* w Sr suse* ‘s
c
this inexplicable tumultuous tintdtn<xrTc %
'SfSOBm&ES^ jndcscril) DiB contortions and ^postur*
8 risl1
inprs and tig* ,
now fon 4 »,» t,w tifivai, now bold; bu t al
between the ■•pakehas” and the dusky
Mtcnads walked a tall Maori wito a
short pipe. in his shiit-sleevse and “slop
panta'aud * cabbags-teee hat on his
.kfcvd, and bearing a *inc slop-pail full
of beer. Tim tanks were at once brok¬
Sink en.;, the performers, male and fe male,
on their haunches, while the Maori
cap-biM-er 'vont slowly from group to
Mutui KUSYpUi administering refresh*
nient from his bucket, their llie potations. dancer^,
were most moderate ia
Few took more than a third of th« others glass
iul of beer proffered them, while
were content with the merest sip. Nay,
I wi* afterward told that the younger
“haka” dawcers, both male and female,
often decline to drink any fermented
liquor at ail, and refresh themselves
trot a TfriEm g ptmnwt-ntspberry vine¬
gar especially jirovMled for them. The
reaUy uillueiituiI ^liicfs jlo strive their
very utmost to incuIcateTSte doctrine of
temperance, using the perhaps selfish
but eertainiy practical argument, "If
WO drink strong drink, in a short time
it will be all ‘patndn*,’ and there will ba
no more Maoris at all." After refreshment," this slight
“recess for repose again, end tall
the "haka” began bat that
Maori in the cabbage-tree hat and with
the slop-pdil of beer had broken the
spell, and it could not be rewoyen . We
sent our compliments to the chief, with
an intimation that were more than
satisfied wkh the proceedings of the
evening; so, after one more “stam.
pede," and one more howling chorus of
■the "Haricot te taira" type, the chief
made another speech, and the assembly
was dismissed. I had witnessed a re¬
markably full strange and interesting spec¬ I
tacle, ef matter for meditation.
have put down neither move nor less
than we three -pakehas" .saw. The
aspect which a “haka” can assume
when thy natives are plied with rum by
Aoughtfrss or by "larrikin” tourists I
can imagine—and imagine with a shud¬
der .—George Augustus Sola, in the Lotto
dqn TcUoravh.
SUidOaul's-Alule.
Many years ngo down in Idaho, during
a gold excitement, a good many nieu
went into tlw country to make money
outside the gold-hunting industry. Their
idea was to make the other fellows delve
for afterward. the gold while Rollin they appropriated afterward it
Nevada’s Congressmau, Daggett, establisheri
a
ferry-boat thk on a small creek and named
time place “Death’s Ford,” at the same
effect inventing it a musty legend to the
that was thus named because so
many lives had TBtfireal bffen lost in the attempt
to cross it. was not over a
dozen yards wide, and the water no¬
where over two feet deep, but b|ck hp yi igged
up n iiafboat and pulled, it and
forth by a rope Contriv^riro'. \V*tienever
the prospectors crossed tie regaled them
with horrible tales of the treachery of
the stream, and the remorseless quick*
sands which had drawn so many men
and males to terrible deaths.
. In tipj nigiit when he ferried people
'river ft Woidd caution them not to get
.<Piltoi3U'83 too near the edge of the bqat, as a fall let¬
ting the dun old lantern go out and
lAcssad ifiakiug slow time? he Sflequently iro
t|a ijfi.sseB 6 gcr»#ith the idea
For that tpe fefealii w* li:M*a mile wide.
wind mght trips' high he and charged the $o, but bad if the
was weather he
struck sanguine prospectors for much
larger Aims. In the daytime $1 was
his.modest charge.
He went along in this way lor
several months, the men who rushed to
iiotrir ri tjHs Jp<||uMk upon him as a bene
to Ms this conquering of
soTOrmidahie an obstacle to travel as
“Death’s Ford.” One day Charlie Stod
ibaiik'wiljb thud, tlie promoter, appeared'op the
iitfitt ft)'dross. a/mffeym4 -In' the kofirijisd midst the flat
Of the
stream, just when the ferry-man was
tellibt' hpfv tk.figerons the place was,
the jpuilaj Vra\f restive and fell over
boaru. One leg caught on a rope, aWt
he got his head tinder water, and, itn
able to exteipate hiinseK, wjis drowned,
When he was ctit loose lie lay there in
the middle of-“tleaih'e. Ford,” haUf out
of water, so that all who came along
saw what a miserable sham the ferry
was, and tuat any four footed animal
g^t cojtfid walk across. aWayl Daggett tried *lb
the mule bnt hte was too
in heavy to budge, and so he lay there
plain sight for weeks, until Daggett’s
business as a ferryman was ruined,
That’s the reason old Dag hardly ever
Spehks to Charlie Stoddard when he
meets him ,—Carson CKev.) Appeal.
A Merciful Man.
“Tlie merciful man is merciful to his
beast” Yet how many fanners, and
especially tcjun.in driyfng farmers’ boys, after heating a
to the village, think no¬
thing of letfing lmui!, them stand about the
sln trl.i fi;i at a timevperlHipff with
siping upt evett; a blanket, whjk oi they are gos¬
*|#se ahjiui near a their warsh ordinaty stcrvg kqiiness. taking ex
'■k ciiArfoft JfiniitRiiiatoi'loch., got a
happy l ' 10 u « ht and being a humane
'» aeted , °? Noticing the exposure
' Atmmis coming to the city, especially
cold and stormy weather, he deter
L, ^[tojfftv I *!’ 1 *' r ^ rtte iaroters ® ch«nfottoM» an pppotfunity during to
tooir stay. lie purchased land just off
p ^ p 5 , .? tree * and P roo ? d « d WIth
Ject *«**«“!'?• of jokes He from was all made quarters the sub
W many
enterprise but 1 te went on
» n,r earned out his plan, and to-day
h< ro ls no,h ! n g «n Kalamazoo so popu
J fl 'rito country people coming to the
***' ‘"'•bJi.sjmfe.s as the farmers’ sheds,
Uu^ Oil w-ejlcscribed nglit waiting-room, as follows:
ujslieil me is a wanneri, well-fur
and .•.omfo r tahlv supplied
nffiespahn IVoeks Vpavtoieiits for mwvwCfi lor and ladies’ hats amt ward- in
another tables and wraps;
room are a restaurant;
the waiting-room, you and your ladies
ah ({lit bv simply stepping on the platform;
you hanff a dune to an fititiidiBit hostler
•• igirsehi wot only.atteudat to but fed.
ample lunch, free, or of for a low rate you have «s
a bill fare to Choose from as you
"“ y desire. Wlieu you dioo.se you- and
to&gjsr"* yours go out on the sheet, transact your
SnndayB theso »he<l« are #ll«d. I.adiea
sartr
have doors and locks, so if a man comes
egasssjrsAtss
A Word In Behalf gf tditle GtrU.
* 4 l«iaiwAv- M\ \ thin^ ’
to Wirr-ciW t I,
nice for Utile girls to dp, you, know."
And this system, ortfeh. begun in
Infancy is followed out till the "
grows up into womanhood, either ac¬
cepting her trammels a* a matter of
course, or chafing vainly all cherishing the
along, envving her brothers,
s
one girl at Infist expressed when .-lie
said; “I fairly girl!” hate uivself finds i* for heathen having
♦eefi boro a
j tLm ^ g y well led this, but when girls feel
in enlightened something in Christian their training countries is
so awry.
Now, while it is true that a large girl
in many respects cannot do as a large
it boy is does, and usually has no desire to,
also admitted equally true rides) (with the excep¬
tions to all that a little
girl boy can do aDd almost exactly usually what a little
can she wants to
and further, if allowed to, she
generally will do it. If mothers will
jt guide will instead be vastly of to thwart the benefit this tendency, of their
girls poys. and There not would at all to the to injury be of good their
seem no
reason girls why the training and education
of tially and boys sboidq ijQt t)o esaea. r
identical op to » certain age. Be
pot in too great a hurry burden to impose upon
your fche little girl the of her sex.
comes into the world a Uule, happy,
free human being, caring not whether
she is a boy or a girl so long as her di¬
vine rights of food, love, and a good
Pod }ime generally are not denied to her.
gives her life; do not you, because
she is a girl, curtail her liberty or for¬
bid her the pursuit of happiness in her
own ami Natures yyay» filings that
are “nice" for a boy are “nioo’' for his
sister while both are little children.
Things active girl that are “proper” for a healthy '
far healthy, are usually just as “proper 1
a active bov. It is a mistaken
tain notion disregard that r certain of the rpliglinesfees, proprieties, a cer¬
a ees?
tain boisterous liberty, may be allowed
tO they our boys because they are boys, when
Would are not permissible to onr voitgk girls.
we nave *our girts and
just boisterous, then? By no meatjj. And
as litfle'should we have our boys so.
But we would have our boys strong,
athletic, fond Of exercise; we 'would M
them run and climb, and evep shout,' if
the exuberance of their spirits demanded
it—all in the proper tifne and place.
We should not deny the same priyir
leges to our girls, so tar as their strength
allows them to take them. Some forms
of exercise, to be sure, such as jumping
rope, the like, running tip and down stairs, and
are to be deprecated for gii U,
them Many mothers and physicians think
not desirable for boys. But if a
girl goes fishing with her brother; if
she «an walk as nnwearily; if she can
climb a tree with as monkey-liko facili¬
ty; if she can drive a nail straight with¬
out detriment to her fingers, and lias a
Yankee dexterity with a jack-knife; if
in behind shooting her she hit does not have to aim
her—then to she is something both in front of
a useful and a
happy girl. She is laying Hp strength
against the evil %eUessl£feapiAitaM fl:w§ to come, when so
many women fc
their “nerves." She is keeping |Ar
brother in a purer and more retimirg
companionship the than any iiubi/hooil. afforded by
rough village boys.—
A Modest Humorist.
Tid-Bil* publishes the following
concerning throughout a the modest mail who is known
entire country:
The Nori;istp.wu Herald was one ot
the first weeklies, noVyirafessedly
ons » to eutef into what Wei hbw uifder
stand as paragraphing, as a business,
“ made a point of it as early as 1871—•
P^NP t- Tno * 1 earlier—anti title of the column marie ft oriiwo Mit wBfi
l
day amusing which comment the Herald on publishes the follies weekly of the
is “Editorial Etchings.” Probably not
* tenth of these Wuo see the italic le
gend, Norristown Herald, in their fa
vorite paper with some regularity, after
w-Wit of fun, ever s aw th is - h ewfi ing m
fke paper itself—jtossibly tlier# may
.even Norristown be t^osf is who place do. not nqjf kij far 6 w from £b_.
a very
toe marble stoops and white blinds of
Philadelphia. know But every one mnst
the quality of the humor they
reake in.Norri.stown, wherever the place
may be, or whatever sort of 4heat4he
humor may come into the world under
toe auspices of. The fact is, however,
that there are few weeklies,; not^ of -city
manufacture, ud shrewdly which edited are than more the Brightly Herald
ft
face or present to theitfoyld a more comely typographical
The eQitor, Morgan R. Wills, f] hot ‘
is
the writer of the E“ditorial Etchings.”
They are written by J. H. Williams, who
says of his life history that it may be
compressed read like into a sketch which would
this: “Was born; learned tho
This printing modest trade; was married; still live.”
account of himself it is per¬
haps allowable to expand a trifle, if
only wise bald “to lead and vertsimilUudo.to 'uneeiiwlfiei^ An other
Mrfrttoive."'
Mr. Williams’ life has, in fact, not
been an eventful ope. As be says, it has
been as even apd serene “as the exist¬
ence of a wax figure of Jnliiig Caesar in
a dime museum.” He was bornJp
Montgomery from Philadelphia.) county, Pa. He (fourteen suffered Wle*
a com¬
mon school education, where he was
made familiar with the four BL’s—Read¬
His ing, ’Kiting, ’Rithmetic, and Rattah.
in the stoek of of knowledge was increased
Norristown course printer. itn apprenticeship ITiiring"his to a
ship skits he began to contribnte Meircury humorofs —using
to the New York
gested the pseudonym Irish of Joke “B. which Dadd,” sag- hid
by an her
constructed. He continued writing,
though until irregularly, for several years,
mington engaged (Del.) as Commercial; foreman of When the Wil¬
he
left tins post it was to accept the posi¬
tion on the Norristown Herald, which
he now holds witli.so muah credit to
himself, and with s 0 nificU satisfifetilul
to those exchange clip editors whose busi
ness it is to iun from other papers.
Mr. Williams was married early in
the sixties, and is apparently a con
tented and prosperous man—growing
old, according to his own account, “at
the rate ol twenty-four hours » day.”
Temperature is mainly the secret ol
success or failure in making butter, savs
Henry degree Stewart, and the difference of' a
or two in the cream when it jje«;
into the churn is sufficient to prolaoe
a vast amount of trouble in the way of
foaming butter cream, butter not coming, liot and
a matter not for gathering. surprise It that should this small bn
variation hi temperature should produce
such results when we think that at 36
degrees fluid, but all at the 32 water degrees in the world is
it becomes as
hard as rock, and if this were continued
It would make the whole earth uninhab¬
itable.
A Perfect » S«rw MpM o » .
.
5 in An
known i n d the*
clerk’s doitt, I e *httpts ringing
frcmi fc'Wtfler. The rope had a knot
the lower emL aiul At first I tht^ighi
catne down stairs,approached the clerk's
desk and said; .
SSJStafJSF . " ‘Why,in. thmuk>i- dide’v yon send
“ » r ““ p 1
••The dfcrkr took the etnf of the rbbe
in hi? montbj cordial shewed voice, tt a moment »r so*
and. in a replied: 1
mVijaacyrsK- ear sir.
"A few mknttes later another toan ■
came up aml Siiul:
“ T want to kilovv if I agu to have a
fire in my room? If Von db u't intend to
have one' made, say so, and -Y’fl walta
jxmi all fiver this honie.’
"Ihe clerk seized the rope 1 again andi
chewed it, Then Uuning to tke frown.-'
in# man, 'You It* replied.! really .. ,* -* • <g
." must panloft me, sir.- I*
will go up turd make toe firejiyiself.’
“ -What a strange man yonv clerk
is,’ I said to the proprietor of the*
hotel.
prfetor V Hk‘’s_a replied. great ®h»losq#tfwtTthe TJo wlxat pro* he'
would have done had you Know
he not chewed that
W'P’f ' ' HI **»*»■#»■ ;«r
“ 'No.’
“ ’Well, he would have shot those
men. When a man gets mad he grita*
tion, his teeth, he adopts and then vialerit finding no satisfaoj Some*
means.
time ago, a fellow, just for mischief,
slipped behind the desk and cut the!
rope; and then, before the clerk had'
noticed his loss, the fellow, mad# soma!
grasped complaint. The clerk thenin wheeled around,
the air,and arage,jump¬
ed over tfip desk, seized the offender and
.
almost killed him.’
r ‘He Is a remarkable man. ’
r •The most consistent and docilo
man in the world so long as his rope Is 1
in workdiernroer. Some time ago the!
ai®Sili clerk 8 S i
wees, offered the toge bkjt kahwy tq,
leave me and go With h; % 1 raised*
ills salary and succeed... in , holding 1
mouth him. l«qk again, bilh. got the rope in his
vtfci you see bow lunch of
tiie rope is wound tke above? Well,*is soon
as lie chews knot off fiw: Odd he lets
doVvn the rope 3 »‘Hies another knot.
Wit 1 1 in the past six month# fie Jpas worn
ont tlirec sets of teeth, gee that naan
with the small grip-sack? Hu is a
tho dentist clerk’s find teeth- lift# (*>&# j’Jl sfctm&h t^ffou work on
wh ill’s a
farS, that fellow is thlF most perfeiff
jihilosopher. I j ever law .”—^rlcansmtf
Traveller.
I* BROWf 5 N
saw*
in* ^ THE
BEST TONIC.
This s Iron with pure vegetable
tonic > far D»eMe» pechliM to
Women, and who lead wdontM-y lives. It Bn
riches and P
prod.oe constipation—oil other Iron medicine, do.
Mbs. jwejWw., Elizabeth Baibo. 74 FarweU Are.. is84- MUwau
I Obeti say, BrdWto’a under dats of Deo. Stth.
i>av«i Xrpn Bitter#, sod it has bean
ore r»— «ored me of tha
l»vat4a lif». Aloe* cured me of Liv
good. plaint, Haa also ana now mir complexion is clear and
been beneficial to my children ”
MM- Lorma C Bkagdon East Lockport, N. Y.,
says: I have suffered untold misery ^ from Femide
SssS&gi to™ " othtn *
Ge wWArk and orossed rod IinflO
on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. % BALTIMORE. M»
me' CUTTLE
AT ■i
AUCTION PRICES. ia
Bull, Pel-soiVB of the ^psiring s nioj ibrrin^btireif TOa»a
trot Milk ana Butter Families, rah
get it of ue, cheap for CASH, or ,'t'V
autiTNovemBerriXt! iote drawing
interest at 8 per cent. This is a
SLftaJSTC3B
tp get a start in Blpot^ed thel,argest Cattle that will pay.
We have one of ami BfcBtHuwls of
Jerseys in the United 8 tates. Every Animal is
Register. registered, We or have entitled Cows to be, that in have the laadfe A. J. 0. C.
from
14 lbs to 21 ibs of Butter *
: In seven days, and some that will make, daffyy
SIX GALLONS OF MILK
Onr Service Bulls are STRICTLY STAND AMD,
that is they are out of Dams with large reeotda
After September 1st next our Herd will beat
can from Atlanta. , _ -
Caff on or address, :
r*\ Woodward. McClellan & Go.
Saiark Fclzat, <3-a*.
For UantLsoraest j Cheapest: Best
IRON ROOFING, '■4*'
*' siwwktmBJG, Atalogae
6 ea«t tor Itlnstratftd and Price* U
. 9 C 1 ” qt f MA ” < < ^° 1 “ tTOATPfct
^5 fox Q3ctS- h
>o any one who will introduce our good^ •
and will Influence sales among f heir friend*,
.Wo will ieid samples which will bring them
$5. Send 33cts for postage <fcc.
MeuCEU ifANDFACTURINO Co.,
33 A 35 Liberty Street, N. Y,
■
StriCtUrGS CUTBCl
Without Caustic, Knife or Dilation, Per¬
manent mid Painless,
Address
Dr. B. W. Tm uir.tj. H: #<
Ai.
ssa-wls orvEtr jh.-vta.tt.
To any lady who will agree to show !o her frlendl
and try to liifliierica.saka; we will Bead Ire- by mail
<¥> tfccomu e W'garit P tuadiun^ 0 ^e iddid shawl on receipt oi
o. to j.ftjr postage and packing
oxpcn.iev. ,l; J? MRucictt MANUFACTJaititf Co., 88 ana
8 l erty ftt *» New Yor *
Write at onca and Mention this 9reat Paper.
25 Aire^b^tllr ««nta (ten (Ul “it?* 1 ‘ 1 '® U,# *• wltk,Ml *' f “ *** * < , * «
**f °l ihr abov* rent puveild en iii ns.i a
ftvn* is* fti—A-f«- "nittilu tta
.. .
$y w j. ^dgnTS
Canpbinetl Fire. & Wafei fro til
Cement'Hoof faint
atlanta,’o ia iita .
r i
58W®saSw3^ the
—*■ -W. ik Y McIiON,VIJ>;
«m m m r*%i# Akn*r<HMtti.
Tit MW and Con Plante?
4 ?%fi t
Fertilizer it t>a*, r? Distributor. h* \ *
mi ate*:
.. 5
bttpn, Blghe«t Att .ward Ga at Intern tlonal Cotton Eihi
ntg, , ttaa Xrkanaaa State F air tV>
Ktional Cotton Flantera’ tasootation, the Gtmi
S withera Eanealiiou, Lnwlari h», Kr , and ih
World’. Eipoaltion, Ngw Oxleant, La , and whinS
bau NEVER failed in Any c -ntest, has be^n sli'i
further impro*<d,*ud te yiow faily adapted to
character of aoll and the most unsiiilUd labor, tw
Wht’Sr.t^rSbT.’lCt tn.de, and wU
&ve its Cost Three Times Ovei
—IN A—
SINGLE SEASON.
At it plant# from eight to t#a acres per dai
with less than one and one-half bushels o'
seed per acre, and opens, drops, distributes fe>
filiseiw and eovers at one operation, saving
TWO HANDS AND ONE TEAM
The price has been re^ticed to suit the time*
Bend for circular giving fall description iM
term*.
Globe Plauter Bt’fg Co.,
236 Marietta Street,'Atlanta. Ga
M;it FLOYD,
Wwdkiikgtoa, 6 b.,
Dealer Xn
. '» M tM
jyy? m it
Furniture!!
>-f **r ■■
u f ■ rt- ’Hi*
lottrii ■ /
COFFINS, ETC.. ETC.
W
iwtof'fa A Vnll Stock ot ta
£U iilDU Sod.fl,
III
i t Beadist^ads, Bureaua,
:«"i coy :: -
us T'-rivOsdi i
: "Pi mm 60 t;U m; ua* 4
.f-re. -r
i.
Wardrobes, Loimges,
, ' n'r-h
ffi
wnffn tmq U *
!
-
p-ot cs."-i ; w ".a- -■joa
rnattm : 9 !fn» ■ in eD
■Jitsal sr bint »I Ml if A
•»rfi hatrd^-i
hv*fnp«t 1 :J iT '
KlPDrin nU SETS, httmo.
r-*B
IB fife - a a f l «dlfal ' bn«
h s « S'md »tn mat W ? i ” Jd
, ,
,
4 mo ■»(«: # iool
—A 1 V
or stn> <a«»i«tru"j9*
Wii 1 -:, -fT
ATLANTA PRIONS.
rd i
mil : sw
ft iff •mb tut. ft 'tVt ff ;' vm I }
•
. till
r f*T! T I i u
JL ..L j, ZU if.
IN AU ITS BRANCHES
Promptly Attended To,
mmi*
Central Hotel,
- 2 * bkm bv,M !
■■ '
: '
ft ft .OH r M ft 1
TOOl
...to- - - rerere.
Thii hotel io well knrtwn te tM citizens of
, f ccnte^oMh.'hil'iineBs'porboi/of
convenient the to Poetofiiee, Telegraph Aegur'a'
Depot, and office and
other imlno menu to the pnlhu
iuo j, as sulj fiist-elare *.ol«i» can afford.
mmt tpt wkA yMawqp mm % III flTT
...... __
i Vb.Mbv 1 - — -- - « — ■*
iswe m rwal
k> h rt a «* ,W / *
■
Min* k» i*» <m bim -mi# -A-iisniD UUm,
v immm mm s§
tFJWwjamoK, mmSaSSmii
Will give personal and p&vifcd
■IWHIIO MMU MlUng •
.xM .mJI -r maiimh* mm
Liberal cash advances made on consiaoraeniT*
— ...... . — - 1 — .....** •
-Fnnrttuffi^tr^KlgTI^e! •i i yatawfiT msh wets . _____
a .v - . -A A - —. • a Aa M « mm. mhh.
*#• ■ kMl rnsa FORiTANETY DAYS!"**"*
ti ;tdm ,i*o« .,^1 ft -, * jfM____
NOW ___ IS THE TIME TO BU FOR g
Y , ALL WHO WANX4WWVWV»
ATTHIftlLD fiSTABLISHEOaauaE OP ’? /
It * 1 *'** w " vAuaM jagf
_
PL ATT ©g§SS.
The Largest Furniture Emporium iiTtfiilState.
ftOARANTEED TO GIVE SATIBFACTlOf?TO
We t^;e great pltaeure in allowing our fiords. CO u-s*”****--. it OO'tO COHE "'
satisfy
ft M Goods Gbpii Tb inj-BHlsi M V cu
r-FC I
Feb 26 1 yr AnsBagH mm s.
'
PLHASUfiE AND PROFIT
‘ .'JOHN l&F&AJ®gZ
)tician Jeweler aad-tEn|tever,
Wafches and Clocks Repaired.
.........
?39 BROAD ST., opp. CentitlJIoMi AVGOOVA. GA.
a>:*»' «» ■ •.*#» *• ’ rmmtmtt *
TJIIETX YEARS EXPERIENCE in fitting lenaas in %>ectecl«g mthm m***
, Ppticiy ftepirtn^nt.ConmjBH, , m ^ # ^
Visa ole (pul SILVER fur Biamoiid ( Spectacles. Beate? MeUafelslelfi »
PL ATBD WARS AT L«W* 5 »Ts
PPRSONAt ATTJSfTlON TO 5 Yji SlK»OGRAM OL^M'. fAdKHfarr **
_
SIBLEY &
* * ft' iMbmK
Cotton Tactoijrs,
T33 Reynolds Street, AntMUrdhy , ■**
Orte for Baiii sii lies Fillei at Infot Mattel Prite s,
fShetfal Adfatiees Made on OoUan infitoMth mi mm mmt
f. BURE.U 8 EN, Agent *t. Lincoln ton, G». \ a
mmi. . -m
-
THE
18 PREPARE!) ffO 1)0 Jtti KlSiWOt " ' 4 "**
NEWSPAPER Wo’RiPi
m in iroff pos3ib£e it.^nn^b and at the sec vnTi Y
1
tfi *t M.~- I »'*: ■■
READY PRINTS
' 2*'. n^yth
Ifceh rf*fW *ti * INSIDES OR OUTSIDES * „ 4*t»m“
of good wlmansliip' fufjistieii atneaitlie ®CI[®pei f" e*
NO EXTRA CBAMK FOB HE AIX ‘X
Publishers who desire to furnish their Subscribers with 1 int of
reading matter at-fbe least cost, will do well tocommunieatt L<*.
We wiR print the inside or outeide, or the Viffiolfe'paper if * flfi
fngly gly Bamplhs low low and and of Rerffly defy defy cwnpetitioiRro competition;--' Prints sent on application, and prices quotedthlf lltlftfirpris- '
* * • s « 4
Afi we ask is an opportunity to serve fellow publishers, co >Ql w » Bat we
can give satisfaction. -ia nm**ua*m> r -am Mi* tol aaeWM(
.-.«tWt: ! «V U-. THE PLOWBOY COM»AgWWi
.'-tat mmmsSafc, ’tfi..- f ta 6a
■
1 «••**-’ »’«■> ’• «• *”«*ScFA C IUBBe
&£ sum mm tw»-
Boon; WWZms&
U . Hilton, Tjfrftrrm.'BaaBSsrc.
ii.-ta Window Mfifelf’flarJwafSr
Glass and
utmii
: ai,ooaooo- 1 »
•
Stock Larger, Prices Lower
The Largest Stock South.
[ •■ &m tings, Qbroaos,etc.,
#• mam'.' T
LWrfM.are.reeM.. •
Jas. + G. a Railte to, ’ & *A * vr Sons, iA* : -
■
.abnM 714 Broad Kii.Jfi St,, tt-m Augusta
On,
_
- ■
-
aw ■e •> •
*' it! y ■:
’
I Oarpsta amm x i h |
ar.4 House-liiiroj.hlng Good*.
largest etook sooth of Laltimor#*
■ ' > WINDOW SHADE3, WALL
BORDERS, LACE CUETAIS 8 , # "■' < • * 1 -
MOTH * 00R1WCE8 and POLE^
«•«•»»* I
' „ I
BPHDLBTERY, ENGRAVINGS,
CHBOM09, PICTURE FRAMER
AA.AXIJaJj HATIiTR Ou fJl-SKKRY vi .■ m IV ri XV I ,
AUGUSTA __ __ OA.
A'UyE.
A-m MX M
texn'fl h>-e toibs
Mot2u»T^ .*£
■i
•dhVMpoadffflesaitllft fitWShfiiflMMIhs of
of teething the salivary glamlflMtP'Acited,
«»t^es neutraliaesBeta, the ooreWStofiises-e
*04 ,, -
here is V otae,
sue ; dar
lings.
-u %
.! f r t.. II ii
<«• mm mm aid rtMaswsfl
* J **!*?
4m
"'•MM 1 MW Ms towrt-re
'rSS*5SgB
s; • * »
* >-».•»>*- ; %# riM * **? ■»,-?
AtoaonJ S'< mmi Ms* 10*1*0
_ mOK«rfc * . j. -re
•a*
♦» the trade a ^pccialtv. litena
factory on Ella street, fireworks by whole
'''
TftJ Bread SteWl AUGUSTA, QA.
~,<r-