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Ill H i IB F VOLUME X. PRESCOTT, NEVADA COUNTY, ARKANSAS WEDNESDAY, APRIL 6, 1887, NUMBERS. . . ----- - - Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, strength and wholesomene**. More economical than the ordinary kin Is. nr.d cannot be sold in competition with the mul titude ef low test, short weight alum or phos phate powders, is'nhl nnh/ in runs. ROYAL BAKINft PoWDKR CO.. 10U Wall St.. N we York THE DARKEST HOUR. For a period of four years 1 have been a victim of a very severe and agonizing ease of Salt Rheum, which affected my band-to such an extent that they almost became a burden. My baud became raw ai d horrifying, com polling me to keep it covered all the time. I'ye spent hundred* of dollar* for various preparations, hut instead of henefitting my condition, they all seemed to stimulate and encourage the t rogres* of the miserable dis ease, until I hud about given up all hope. Hut thank heaven, “the darkest hour i> iust before day.” and I am rejoiced to know that u positive cure ha- been found which \> known as H. H. II.—Botanic Hlood Halm. My family all rejoice at its magical cura tive powers in giving me relief. My hand ha* been cured and resembles a burnt -air fare after being healed over, more than any thing else. It ha- also cured my two child ren of a lonthesome form of itch which bad resisted all previous tientment. I refer to any business house in Moody and to Thos. Payne, Druggi.-t. of whom 1 pincha-ed the good*. Signed, W. A. Hkyavt. Moody, Texas, April.-7, FLESH SLOUGHING OFF IN PIECES. For two years I have beei eourined to bed with a loathesomc form of Blood l\>i.*on, which had about eaten me up, and I and others had no hope of a recovery. For awhile 1 could neither walk, sit down, nor lie down, only in misery as my tic-h seemed to be falling off my bone- in pieces as big as a hen egg. My appetite \mi* mv bones aelied and pained me, and friend** even shunned me. I used various blood purify Crs without benefit, and several physician* treated me until large sums of money had been expended, hut not one particle of goo I did any one give me. On the fHh of February. lx8«l, Mr. F. K. Jack sou (tilled to -«o if l was no- d« ad. as it Was thought 1 could not endure mv differing lime!i longer, lie eoneluded to trv a b<»ttle i»f )!. It. and got «»nc from Mr. Brocking pm, at Beaufort, S. ( , and before it bad all bt'eti Used I e mimrnccd gaining strength, my appetite iniput* cl. an.; ie* eotuiuenced beading and when two bottle- bad been used 1 was «ii> my feet and walking around to the astonishment of everybody. Witness; Mrs Latra Hakt. Fred K. Jackson Beaufort. S. (\. Mu\ 10, 1AHP. AH win* desire full information about the nipac and cure <d Blond Poisons, Scrofula aim Scrofulous Swelling*, Fleers. Sores, Kbcuimitjfetn, Kidney Complaint*. Catarrh, etc., can scciiru by mail, free, a copy of our 82-i>age Illustrated Book of Wonders, tilled witli the most wonderful and startling proof ever before known. Address, BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, (»a. For aide by 11. Monerief A. Bro.; .1. ()< llowcll, and Jno. M. Milburn, Pre- ott, Ark. IT l« A RURrLY VEGETABLE prcparaiior dANL'RAKE-BUCHU EMUS’ EfnCIEKT REMEDIES )d the Test of Year*, < all Diieasei of the IOD, LIVER, 8T0M H, KIDNEYS,BOW S, Ac. It Purifle* the iod, Invigorate and antes ths System. JfSPEPSIA.CONSTI TION, JAUNDICE, JKHEADACHE.BIL J8 COMPLAINTS, Ao appear at one under beneficial influence. i. purely a Medicine ita cathartic proper ■ forbids it* use ae a reran*. It ie pleas* : to toe taste, and as iily taken by child* as adults._ cku ash bii reused Bolt Propr talon, IvAMHAHf** t WINTER! SPRING! M A L A R 8 H m 003Li3L.X3ST£5 Ague cube Ob* I)om b day, tukon thn*» days in Nueeawilon, onrl tnontb, or when you ft* 1 Imdlytn any wu>, will ful‘: CImuiio your Blond, Kamove all B l ioui Secretion* & Malarial Poincii from your System, and Inna-o GOOD HEALTH IN THE SVUlZr. Pmer., Fifty Cent* pi n Pottle. If you aro troubled with <• COUCl !,CCLP , £ C f«ZSS in v HEST,tr; *• AiTecii<m of T« or Lunas, u'0 Dil. JACJLSON ^ Syrup iun Givenr k vviin r! p r 9 fbolcfuf S2!itt : . CO f T..-E . Sl.OGu ■ .. If your EYESaro fifrrt* ii j ; i.v v . ireti«fe’o3IND!A'<EYEo, Bold KforywharBat 8b v* itw|«r i > lEsoaoaCouiHsiiitco ‘Trs-c*1 Cei'tuct'•„/ t it tan?. Ur lad to any add r»*n or at any !>rntf ► Collins Bros. Drug Co., 8t.Loui.,W THE MYSTERIOUS LEGACY. My grandfather was a sea cap tain—not a mere claimant of the title, like the water men of the 1 ikes and the coast skippers who never got out of sight of land, and who, it' they got there could never get hack—hut a genuine “old salt,” trained from boyhood under a tar paulin hat, and as familiar with the “paths of the sea” as a shep herd is with those of a sheep walk. Spending his life on extended voy ages, lie was seldom at home long enough at a time for the salt spray to dry on his weather-beaten cheeks; and there was hardly a port on the habitable globe in which lie could not shake hands with an old acquaintance, civilized or savage. Of course iiis history was crowd ed with curious incidents. Most of these, at which my childish ear twinged and my eyes dilated, have become so faded in my memor> as to I e ineap il.le of a tolerable nar ration. The following, however, made a more lasting impression: During the calm between the old French war and the American revolution a large ship was lying at a wharf in the town of New York, loaded with a valuable cargo and ready to sail for Liverpool, and thence to whatever pail of the globe the chances of commerce V. IM!UI UlClilll'. This was my grandfather's ship, only waiting for her papers and u fair wind. The papers were soon ready and shortly after them came a breeze. Presently everything on hoard was in active motion—the easting off and coiling of ropes, the unfurling of canvass and the running up of sailor hoi s along the ratlines like spiders on their webs, while the sharp, imperative orders of the mate and the hearty “ye hoy-ye” of the cheerful crew echoed over the rippling waters ot the harbor, which looked in the rays of the setting sun as if it was covered with a cream of liquid gold. .lust before the last plank was hauled in a stranger stepped hur ried on hoard and inquired for the Captain's stateroom. Iiemg con ducted thither he entered, and, with a slight bow, accosted the Captain who sat writing at his desk, “You are for Liverpool, I be lieve, sit?” “Yes, sir.’’ “I am in poor health, and, in tending to spend the winter in Italy, wish to get a passage in the first ship that sails for Ktirope. Will you take a passenger?’ “Yes, sir, if my accommodations will suit you?” “No matter about accommoda tions, Captain. 1 am an old sailor, and know how to accommodate myself. llesides, the trim of your 8hi|> suits my eye,’’ The allusion t>> his ill health at traded my grumllather’s scrutiny, and the introduction of himseli as an old sailor toadied his heart. On noticing him more particularly he was struck with an undettnablo feeling of curiosity and sympathy at his appearance. Tall, straight and rather slender, lie was dressed in f)no blapk broadcloth, with a soil of Spanish cloak of tilt* same color and quality, \ two-edged sword, common shipboard at that time, and improperly called a cut lass, was partly covered by his cloak, and hung by his side with out a slieath. Mis hair was quite gray, and his manly features would have been handsome bad they not been so emaciated as to give nn pleasant prominence ton half doz en deep scars on his face. IJis eyes were blue and tu)l ot expres sion, but restless at times, show ing a sudden abstraction. The looseness of one of his black gloves gave evidence that he hud lost a finger or two from his lett hand. These observations were made by the captain while the stranger was lookiugat a beautiful sextant nn the table. Turning, as if startled at his forgetfulness, he resinned: “Name the price, (Japtaiu, and l will pay it uow.” My grandfather had already tlxed the price in his mind, and replied: •‘You are a sailor, sir, and sick. The accommodation of my ship, as ' - ■ ' well us my own services are ai your free command.” Tlie language of a sailor’s heart cannot be understood and knout no interpreter, and the strangei knew that remonstrance would be ungenerous on bis part. He made no reply, but eagerly extended bis hand, and my grandfather, as lie shook it, thought he saw a tear in the stranger’s eye. But noble hearts are impatient of exhibitions of gratitude and lie quickly added “1 am ready to sail, sir. Is yotii baggage on hoard?'’ ‘•This is all my baggage, sir,” lie i replied, showing him a small black satchel under his cloak. Leading him into a state room the captain left him and went on deck and found (lie ship already under way, the sails tilled with a stiff breeze, and ub>rves, ware houses and spectators fast grow ing small in the distance, At length, as darkness shut in the view, and the wind increased to a gale, and from a gale to a tempest, and for ten days and nights the noble ship, which had plowed the seas ol every latitu le. from Spitz bergen to New Zealand, under went such a conflict with the ele ments as she had never before en countered. During all ibis time the stranger had been eontined tic low, witli an apparently rapid con sumption, which rough weather on ni' \ linn mru. During the storm the duties ol the Captain were so urgent that lie could only make snatches and lias ty visits to the sick man; and al though they could have been spared from their quarter, lie could have hoped for little aid or sympathy from any of the crew, who, with the easy tendency to the supersti tious peculiar to their class, had as sociated Ins presence with the per ils of the ship. Ii would have required but slight encouragement from their ollicial to induce them to pay him the same compliment that the sailors of Joppo paid Jonah on a similar occasion, when ‘’The sea wrought and was tempestuous.” Hilt on the tenth night, just as the captain was ready to answer a summons to visit the sick man’s berth, the storm ceased with a slid denuess that was startling; the wind was entirely lulled, and no evidence of its furv remained ex cept the long-swelling billows ol the sea—the deep aftersights of its mighty passion. The sudden sitting of the tem pest anil the mournful creaking of the spars, now audible for the first time for many days, forced a shade of melancholy over my grandfath er’s spirit as he hastened down the gang way at 'lie call of the stranger. An lie seated luiiiMelf beside the berth the sick man fixed his bril liant eyes upon him and said culm ly: ‘'Captain, I am dy iug!” “1 hope not, my dear sir; this dreadful gale lias weakened yon. It is all over now, and you will soon he better.” ••No, Captain,” lie repetaed, “1 am dying! The tempest, 1 know, is over; so is tlial other tempest in my breast! This ship lias long been tossed am| beaten about liy the fury of the waves, hut it Inis been sunshine and calm computed with that tempest, Captain! Hut it is all over now, for 1 have for given him—he lias long been in the grave—but I have forgiven him!” My grandfather thought lie was delirious, but a second look at the deep intelligence of his eye and the smiling calmness of his features forbade Hie conclusion. Ho gaxed at him tv moment with mingled compassion and curiosity, anxious to learu something of a history the | closing scene of which was so dark and mysterious, but unwilling to ask it. llis look was interpreted, and the stranger continued: •‘1 told you 1 was a sailor. Ol thirty-live years 1 have spent one upon the laud. Hut this was not my choice. Like a ship, Captain, my supports were knocked from under me, and 1 was launched up on the ocean. My father was an English merchant at Cadiz, exclu sively' engaged in navigation, lit lavishly provided for m. educa tion. Having traversed the halls of science, I left Oxford and re turned to Spain at the age 20. This first of my freedom from school I spent in rambling ovci the moun tains of that enchanted countiy. In a deep island dell Shut out from the world, where the earth was al ways green and ihc sky always blue, I met one day a beautiful \ ouug shepherdess—and loved her. “I will not describe her charms. Captain, for you have been young, ami a heart that has loved needs not to he toll I that to the eye of true affection its object has no de fects. ‘•My fathei learned my secret — but 1 knew it not. I had a life long secret, afterwards which lie never learned! He came to me one morning, smiled and said: ‘•‘My son, do you want to go to Cuba:’ “I eagerly answered in the af firmative, for it had been a cher ished hut hitherto forbidden pas sion with me to travel, “ ‘One of my vessels sails to morrow,' he said, ‘and you may go.’ This short interval allowed me uo time to hid farewell to my shep hordes*, who was tifty miles dis tant, nor eyen to inform her of my departure, but I said aloud: ‘I’ll soon be back,’ and many other consolations l whispered 10 my my heart the next day while bound ing over the Atlantic. ‘•The ship in lived at good time at Havana, discharged her cargo, re loaded and sailed for Calcutta! I was a prisoner on iny father’s ship! and for five long years l was kept 11oin home—as if the waters from the ocean could wash out my love! “I escaped at length from the prison slop while lying at ltio, and took passage on a French bark for the Oiiudal.upiiver. No circum navigation of the globe was ever so long as that voyage. I strained my eyes every day watching for Ciilmiltur, which 1 knew was thous ands of miles off, and every night i dreamed ol mountain rivulets, snowy Hocks and Inn. ‘‘Arriving at last at Seville, 1 hastened over the Nevada and i sought the sunny dell where my affections had so long nestled, and where I found the idol of my heart was the wile of an Aiidalusiou shepherd! She had been told that I had deserted her, and afterward that I was dead. I did not weep, for my heart was turned to stone. ‘My father,’ said I, ‘shall never know ol his victory!' I did not go to »ct< him- It was wicked 1 know hut burning with the spirit of re venge, I turned again to the sea and never saw him more. 1 am faintf Captain, and cannot pro long my talk. In six months 1 was master of a fast sailing vessel — you have seen that vessel, Captain, but nev er in port, and I have of ten seen you, and knew your name twenty years ago. lint no matter about that. My father continued to freight his ships and to send them to all parts of tile world—I superintended, in fact,a large part of his business, and that many of his cargoes found a sale in ports to which they had never consigned. His agents sometimes tailed to re poll. “I have said enough, Captain; bcl'oic to-in or row's sun sets 1 shall ho in tlio caverns of the deep. Hut I liaye forgiven him and do not compiain. 1 have a fortune in tlie hank of England, but with it is de posited a will and the son of lna is my heir. You have been kind to me, Captain, and in token of my gratitude I beg you to accept my watch and cutless r id this paper, which you w ill carefully preserve,” Ho saying lie held out a folded scrap o| paper, which my grand father put his pocket. Morning dawned—but the stran ger eyes did not open upon it they were closed forever. In the afternoon the “llurial Service at Sea,” that most solemn of sea scenes, was performed and the shrouded body of a pirate, with a gentle plunge, broke the glassy surlaee of the ocean, and sank to its mysterious depths. It was many hours nlterwaid that in> graiidfatlp-r bethought him self of the paper in his pocket. He opened it and read as billows: Capt. bane:—On the eastern point of Nantucket, at high water mark, is a tail, sharp cliff. A quar ter league due west from that cliff 4» is a large, round stone, and near the stone is a thorn hush. That hush grows i.; a very rich soil. The duties of his station kept my grandfather a long time abroad, and when lie was in Boston ahont two years afterward, and having a few days of leisure, he was think ing about acting upon the hint of tiie enigmatical paper, when his eye happened to fall on the follow ing paragraph in an old Boston Messenger: Wonderful Discovery.—As John Rogers was breaking a piece of pasture ground on the east shore of Nantucket about a month ago his plowshare turned up a stout thorn hush, slicking to the roots of which Mr. Rogers spied several Spanish dollars. Upon this lie went to digging lustily, and did not give up until lie had hauled out coins, chiefly Spanish doubloons, of more than &&t,000 value. No doubt it was buried by Captain ! Kidd or some of his pirate kin. “No doubt,” thought my grand father, as lie put down the paper with a slight nervousness. In a week lie was again facing the storm of the ocean, enriching his employ ers by his skill mid toil, till inflnn atives drove him high and dry on the shore. There in due time he died of old age, leaving little to his family except the pirate's cut lass, which three generations of hoys have used in their juviuilc “trainings,” and which, rusted and blunted, may now he seen in the oflicc of Ids greatgrandson, a prom inent lawyer of New York. Taxed Farmers. Tlte farmer is well taxed to keep up a tiiiiif to make fortunes for manufacturers. This is very good uatnred though not very smart on the part of the farmer, iiikI Farmer Isaac Qriscmii, of Woodbury, N. .) , lias discovered the fact, and in a small publication, has communi cated his discox eries to his broth er farmers. He shows how the tax-fed people set up in carriages and country houses,while the farm er must drive to market us be can. He sees that foreign markets tix the price of wheat and corn for the farmer, while the manufacturer is shielded from such a process by locking the farmer out and escap ing the competition to which the farmer is exposed by aid ot money taken from the farmer sown pock et. The farmer’s wheat goes to Europe, ami there must stand the competition of “pauper labor” as best it can, having to buy in a dear market at home and sell in a cheap market abroad. Not so with the taiiff swallower; he makes his goods and the tariff protects him Irom the foreign competition to which tlie farmer is exposed, and i the farmer is taxed for the securi ty his city friend enjoys. The plow ami every implement on his farm, the cout on his back, the rails over which his crop passes to market, all pay tax to the outrage ous taiitT. This l lie tanner must pay that the protected and monop olist may get rich while the lariuer wonders at every ycai’s end how he is to make things meet another year. The farmers pay tax and the tax-eater gets rich while the farm er struglus to pay his way. This is how things are done, and Farm er Griscom has got tired of it, and tells his brother farmers so, and it is lime other farmers followed the example When does the tax-pay ing farmer get rich? Hut look at the tax-eating minor and manufac turer and see where they are. I)o farmers like to pay and suffer?— Memphis Appeal. Men Who are a Benefit to a Com* munity. Men of capital are a benefit ora hindrance to a community, accord ing to the manner in which they use their money. The man who locks op his vve vltli in a hank vault or invests in real estate for specu lative purposes, ami selfishly waits for his neighbors to improve tlie laud about him and thus raise his own to marketable value, exerts a retarding influence upon a commit ty. Hut tiie man who launches out into practical business enterprises, who stimulates local trade, wiio ini proves real estate, who gives em ployment to worthy people, and wlin helps to mould the future of the city in which lie lives instead of looking on'while others do it, manifests a true public spirit.— Foil Worth Gazette. THE SUEZ SHIP CANAL. How the Traffic Along the Water way is Managed. A writer in the Saturday Review describes how the traffic along the Suez. Canal is directed and con trolled from the office of Terrc plein, near Suez. The number of ships in the eamil al the same time is something very great. Ilee. S last, for example, fifteen steamers cleared the canal, of which seven were outward bound. The previ ous day nine ships cleared, and the day before seven, so that dur ing the Stli some thirty ships weie probably at one time in the canal. Sometimes there are as many as forty, and all are completely under the control of the French gentle man sitting at his desk in an upper cliainhcrat Tetreplein. The method of working is exceedingly simple. Against the wall atone side of the room is a narrow shelf or platform, along which runs a groove. \t in tervals this trough or groove has deep recesses, and at two places these recesses arc of larger si/e This trough or groove represents the canal. The recesses are the sidings. The larger intervals are tin* (Jrent Hitter Lake and Like Tim.mb. When a vessel has been signaled and is about to enter the canal at, say, the Suez end. a small toy limit nr model three or four in ches long is chosen to represent her. A group of these model ship stands ready beside the model canal, each furnished with a flag About forty have the English dag, ten or a dozen the French dag. ami so on with other nationalities. \ the steamer comes up and her name is known it is written on pa per and placed on the toy boat. The whole number of ship- ihiis actually in the canal at any mo ment can he seen at a glance: and, as tlie telegraphic signals give no tice, the toy boats are moved along, or placed iii the siding, or shown traversing one ot the lakes ai fall speed. Signals are sent from the olJice to the various •‘eaies" pre scribing the siding at which c.ieit ship must stop to let another meet and pass it. Tlie official who i^ on duty keeps tlie models moving as he receives notice, taking care when perhaps two ships going in opposite directions are Imtli near ing the same siding to give timely warning to the pilots in charge by means of the signal (tails and dags at each station under his control from the office, and to direct which of the two is to lie up and which is to proceed. Itarriug aceidonis. tiie whole amuigeinuiil goes like clockwork; the clerk can rend off in a moment the name, tonnage, nationality, draught, and actual sit uation of every stearner; he can tell wlmt pilot she has on hoard, what is her breadth of beam, what rate she is moving at and every thing else which has to he known aboil! her; and he is able without an effort to govern all her move ments, tu prescribe til • phlOe VViicle she is to pass the night, and the hour at which she is to get undei way in the morning, although he does not see her, and probably never saw her in iiis life. The fees for which vessels pay for passing through the canal are otten enor mous. Some of the large lim-rs <>I the Peiieiisula and Oriental, or the Orient, service pay as much ns .ClMMt in making a single transit. Kor every passenger half a napole on, or K shillings 4 pence is charg ed. Three fo urtlis of the. ships that go through the canal are En glish. _ The Great Age of Fishes. Many statements have lici n made as to the great age that tish may attain. Smile persons think that there are carp at Fontaine Mean that date hack to the time of Francis I., lint the majority is skeptical in regard to tliisj and for good reasons. Professor Spencer F. Hail'd thinks that we may allow an age of 200 years for certain carp. There is nothing, says he, to pre vent tisli from living almost indef initely, since they have no period of maturity, and grow every year of their life. In vYashington there are goldtish that have belonged to the same family for years, and they appear to he scarcely any larger than they were when purchased. In the royal aipiaria at St. Peter burg, there arc tish that are really 140 years old. Some of these are tally live times larger than they were when introduced, while oth ers have gained hot a fract'nu of an inch in length. It appears that m China there are sacred tish of still greater age.—Scienlidc Anier , ican. PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS CARDS G. V. s.inintf.. r. r. Moline r,. K. Minton Smoote, McRae &,Hinton ATTORNEYS-at-LAW. Vni ni ilhcii A; nts. PIlKSt d i r, . . A I! KANSAS. I rant ire iii :ili the onjr»> nml mnke ool lection. in nil |inrt> of the t-UiD-. Am agent* for 11,. following INSl’KAVCR COM PAN IKS: (rernmn. of Non York.2.’>«2.18« Oft 1 m.orwrin r- At^Micv. V. V.... \ f*,>7 ||2 <»$ Springtlold K. .V M.. .2..W.Wtf M Western A-«iiniin o <oni|imn...1.422.00* U2 Now Orloiin*.."..14 Ki“ke written throughout tfio oountv. ttsf •*'n house. mnl farm property in njred ' •I. M. Montgomery. ]). |{. M.iddt-n It I.. Montgoinorv. MONTGOMERY. MADDEN k MONTGOMERY ATTORNEYS AT-LAW. I'HKSOOTT, .... .IKK Weill 'Ntute mid i r i - mu ngont-. Kurin* mvoiliii#*, hon-c* to well or nut.*# Spoeial and fir.. attention given to rol GUY NELSON ATTORNEY-AtLAI, COLLECTING A SPECIALTY. I KKSroTr, . . \l! KAN’S AS Will |ira. li. i! in all tlif <7inr. . an I niak onlliH-tnm^ in all part* nf t|„. State. Dr. W. E. ARNOLD, I’ll \<TI< im; |‘il VsiriAN. I’liKsct n r. akk. I lm\<-liu-atn<| at |»r.it f,.r the puriH..f ft priiftiian-j nif.|ifin.., WsC1 'rt'n o at Mill.urn'. Drutr St.nv. Can lit- t'.fin.l iluririy tlif nitfht at I..I,a \fi|. luirti’. i'f'i.|i.|i, , , Dr W. C. 'Wingfield, PHYSICIAN \XI> SI'KOKOX. Pkkscci i. - - Alik.. I...-t fftfnllv littff. iii. pi,..f. -.|tuial -iniffii t.i tlif fiti/.fii- nf |*r.... (,tt itn.l viflnitv. ..■SeoPFM.'K up .tail- in tiio I'ltt'.m t.uil 111HIT. i'f'1 t” \\ liftr . Hall. Ka-t Front »trt-o PHYSICIAN AND SI PCKON I'KKscoTT, AUK l!f.i.|fin f •. Ka-l 'I fi.nil Sir. ft. uttif*. nitli I'riwitf Coii.iiltinj; I'.m.iii, on \\V.t Main >1 ri.-i. Dr. £. R. &.rmistead, Respect fully tender* his PHO FKSSION A I. S K KYICK8 totbf eitutonsof Prescott and vicinity. H» mnv he found at hi* re*Mc»e$ «*r at* Mon prior* Dr.tjj sitorc when riot pr«>fc.*h»*u%lly SUMMER’S HOUSE. < *-*r. N Front and Walnut ***l-., HUPP . - - \ KK lidd«- ' i|»|'li -d at all tim - with the he>t • •diMc* tin- market afford*, Ctam. limit and comfortable bed1*, Trnii* r»*a*t.»ti:iblw. S|»c. ial attention jjivin t*> . outmrr rial men. W. L. GAINES' BOOT;SHOEMAKER WKSI KKONT ST K FFT, PRKSeOTT. - - AUK TOM ALLEN HIGH SCHOOL. I hi* m-IiooI I ill. lava op-m .1 !'..r t, rut of three or tnmonth-, on.lor the [>rii eijml -hi |« of tin undor*ignc.|. (.'barge. per month, u* ftdlow-: Firm tirade. 1* Ml Second 11 nel". H tHI Third (irjidc . 'J 00 Fourth tirade . ■_> .10 Fifth tirade . ;i 00 Sixth tirade. :t 00 >e\etith tirade. :l ,10 Eighth tirade. 4 Ml Ninth tirade.. 4 Mi Hills papalde at the clu-e of each month. MBS. KLLA MoKAK J. R. HARRELL & CO., Wapo Makers & Repairers WEST 211(181., PRESCOTT, ARK. vv c arc still in the field, nt.d propose to d* tdl kinds of Wood Work, and lilacksmith injf in workman-like style, and at reasonable lutes. Ilt'liiiimii; Miis'ifi***, He., A *|HH.'iitlty. Mean* well prepared to do this kind of Work. Our lllacksniillilug l>i*|mi’tiueiit 1. also complete, and all Work done well amine illy on short notice. Horso-ntmeing given special attention. We are also manufacturers and agent, for tin1 celebrated I,vim’s Combination Harrow and Scraper, and will furnish them on de mand. We guarantee all work to give satisfaction Our place of business, remember, t» oit Ww Second street, next to Methodist church. J. M. Harrell Jr Cm