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I tfAT T1M1? Y " ; 1 ~ ~ 1 "" ~ ZZZZH - — --- - ■-— - --—:— ,--- -PRESCOTT, NEVADA COUNTY, ARKANSAS. WEDNESDAY, FEB. 15, 1888, NUMBER 61. Absolutely Pure. This powder novel v.,. ;, . \ vnnrbr. o* purity. strength and whole More economical than the < 1!:: iry 1 iuds. and cannot be sol t in »*n}> -t:ii. n with the mul titude #f low test, sh 11 ■ ght alum or phos phate powder*. > ni‘hi > KOVAL RAKINO POWDKlt CO.. 10d \Y i St.. N.-w York i • p Painful ry \ -y — r,-fn„, Dcanty a- l Xrr^MUt Menstruation cr OKTHtiY SICKNESS. If laker, dii-'i . th * II.WIJK OF LIPS ^reat •ufTr-r:r • tml < ... ,\ d for ; took ' .Mumauk to \\ is*. : .:i'M free. BAAirnu •• it : Co Allan te 0# jMEKRELtS I j i pr : ** •' ? pH. v for tb* c of whkli • • M mink nd. It l i. • • t -nr* an-J etrcugth to •V' r>0 lit fin I tf>rrtriB danger tis <!* ; - . i- ' : ttilaii Uen. Ills of. - it \ ■' ■ < * f hEHKKM/iin ' I< t/.rur nanry greatly r» lie' • 't‘<* j a!: ui i "tlu rl. -'lau-l Eromotra *(>«*-• !y r- •v-rv. li a :iU infuroto ifrly make the critical change I acrl 11 < Wmnanhr. I. Ill r- • t . t i too .v> t*«i tal i n at all times v 1 v. I’r. ,§l. ron * ■ j k i v all i 'T*. TAXKBml .* r.LOUIS* It will make the v i hin;r om-thi. •aeier to do, and h**.v > >t >td • * vl'in and sweet. Silver Boa]) in . . 1* ; Ml' V by a clean pro nr 1 i » sup«!i<>r tt all other brand n ev rj wa b Ing merit and \ • Bee that each Wrapper on « vary cake of Silver l »ap \ t! A meric**, i Eagie, holding tho s- * d ud Silve r Dol lar 111 Trade-Mark and our giuuv.ntt>o that Silver Bonn quality. None other genuine. EMPIRE SOAP CO NT. COIRS, MIS MERE WE m AGAilt. ./. // Kershaw S Co. Wr nilll in ll!l tl*i* v-mi* "* t\* n. .I\ MV Ul'<> IliTi* to-<-ll ' i .. COIHH 111.HIHl JCft " hut \ Oil \\ llllt III ilu liur i.l t Fancy an*l Family ^roc ’ios, i Wliicli will In- .-.,M .it !«••. • \ !■ ■ 1 imukl’nl for |»u«it put o n;'< , Mr • >!i> It ■ • • • i• i11tinim*<• ••* tin* ■•aim-. J. H. KER9H4W & CO. WEST FRONT STREET. PR ESCOTT. ARK. Wa-iiinji Orilc! I n Nevada < 'in nit I . iiit^ f Vlncv k-on. ri .inlirt, | Daniel Jackson, ISfom’nnt. Tile defendant 1 >:i; • i ■ I . I a»*k" 11 '• a ,n!,‘ ^ toippmi in till# court within thirty u&ys Mill answer tho .'imiplninl of tin' |iliiintiti Vinoy Jackson, (liven uri'l' i' uh hau l till* (ho IGlh *lny of I Savin let'. |H«7. Clo. W.Ti Id V, Clerk. A true eiiio fi.n , '1. "■1 onl. Ci. .. W. Tit.in . 1 'lork Atkinson A Tompkins. Ali'ls f. r l’lnlnlifT. address Cm the Arkansas Bureau of Immigration. !"\ann II. Roots. lm.si(lcnt. ,)an. Iii'c.e McRae, vice-pn shield ; Cco. R. Ilrown. treasurer. Ollicc of tin- Kxecntive Coniinitlee. | Kti ti.k Rock. Auk., Fel>. if l.s.sx i lot he Reofilc of the State of'Ar kansas : I lie undersigned, coni]losing the executive committee of the Arkansas IStircatt of Immigration, organized H|!' convention held at the State capita! on January dlst and Februa ry lst- lsss-lake this method of call ing the attention of the people of the Slate of Arkansas, to the importance of the work began by the eonven tion. i<mi have a State second to none in tiie l niou in its natural resources. It is the equal of any State in adaptability to raising cotton. It has carried off the lirst prize wherever exhibited. %.Vs a country for vineyards it has no superior. It has almost boundless fields of the finest steam and heating coal. It has lead. zinc. iron, manganese, antimony, silver, gold, gypsum and other metals in profusion. It has more miles of navigable riv ers tban any other State. It has every lay of land and va riety of soil that can be found any where. I here are two millions of our land belonging to the State: one hundred and sixty acres of which she will do nate to each actual settler. The St. Louis. Iron Mountain «V Southern Railway Co. own LOOn.lioO acres of fertile lands, extending di agonally through the State, from Missouri to Texas, and from Little' Rock to the Indian Nation, which they will sell on lonp credit. Altlioujrli luit aiiont 200 miles iii length. north and south, it produces every kind of crops, commonly raised in the temperate zone, as well as many of the semi-tropical fruits and crops. It has a line and rapidly improving; public school system. Its rate of taxation, limited by constitutional provisions, compared with that of many of the States, is merely nominal. It has vast forests of pine. oak. ash. walnut, cherry, hickory, pecan, o'tm. cottonwood, and other varieties of timber. It has a salubrious and healthful clnnate. It has railroads traversing it in ev ert direction already in operation, others building, and many more pro jected. It has cheap and good building ma terial. It has splendid building and pav ing stone. It has cheap lands of excellent character. In short, it has everything that could be ashed by the earnest immi grant seeking a home where his labor would be fairly remunerative. Notwithstanding all these advan tages. vottr State has not made that advancement that she should have made, because her citizens have failed to present these advantages to the public and make them known to those seeking to better their condi tion by changing location. The con vention above referred to agreed up on a plan of action, which, it it re ceives the hearty support of the peo ple. will turn the attention of the countrv to Arkansas and give it a fair start in the race for prosperity. The railroad companies operating railroads in this State have agreed to issue excursion tickets to any part of the State semi-monthly, at half the usual fare, good for thirty days, and will commence tts soon as the com mittee notifies them that the people are ready for the work to begin, which.will he when the county bu reaus are established, the necessary funds raised, printed matter ready, and proper committees appointed, charged with the duty of showing them over their respective counties. The convention selected one per son in each county, whose duty it is to organize a bureau of immigration iu their respective counties, to gath er statistics, and raise money to car ry out the plans arranged by the eon vent ion. These men will call upon Vou to organize and to raise a bind of in the State, in tm‘ pro-1 1 portion in each county that the as i scssed value of the property in the i county hears to the aggregate value of till the property in the State, one third to he spent hy the executive •committee in advertising the State at large, and two-thirds to he expen ded hy tile respective county bu reaus. Io make this work effective, there mas! he hearty co-operation among all the people. I'lic work must he hcgao promptly and pushed with vigor. inc convention whh-h inaugurated this work, was composed of leading men from nearly every county in the State, men who love the State and have its good at heart. i ^ ill the people of Arkansas res pond to the call made hv the con vention. and show to the world what Arkansas is and what she may he 1 made. I hero arc thousands of good. live ■men in the I'nited States who are eagerly seeking reliable information as to the different sections of coun try. Men who can be secured to build itj> our waste places, and assist us in working out the destine of our State. ^ our active, earnest and immedi ate co-npcmtion. will redound not only in the welfare of the State at large, but to vottr individual good as well.’ I’eoplc of Arkansas, your place is in the front rank in the march of progress. I'he question to be decid ed by you is. will you take the place to which you are entitled, or you will allow the prize to he snatched from your hands hy those who make up their lack of the advantages possess ed by you. by superior energy. All newspapers friendly to the prosperity of Arkansas, are request ed to publish this address. Very respectfully, Loo \\ II. Roots, ) W. 1*. Fi.r/n ut-.u. j .. . . > hx. ( out. A. M. < .;ow. J. II. CutNIU-NXlXI.. J While iu St. Louis, a short time since. Col. Zch Ward, of Little Hock. was interviewed by a Repub lican reporter, and is reported as saying: "Arkansas was never more prosperous than at the present time, lit fact, it would not he rushing the imagination to say the old state is booming. Agricultural interests are in line condition, and land is becom ing more valuable daily. The popu I itioo ,>f the State i< increasing stead ily . and we tire lucky in securing an excellent < lass of immi grants. We are draining Indiana and Illinois steadily, and every day brings us reeuits from Kansas. Iowa, and the cold regions of the vast Northwest. Then, there is a steady stream of immigrants pouring in all the time from the old Southern stales. Tennessee, tleorgia and Al abama offer no such opportunities to industrious agriculturists as Arkan sas. There is still it lot of public* land that can he had cheaply, and the climate is such that people in search of homes are naturally attract ed to it. We have a healthy foreign immigration to the State, too. Dur ing the last few years a number of Swedish. Polish and (ierman immi grants settled in the Stale, and all of them are prospering. The immi grants mostly settle on farms which they cultivate themselves, and it would astonish you to see how readi ly the (Jermans, Swedes and Holes learn the line- points about the culti vation of cotton. They make excel lent farmers, and very few of them hut succeed in getting a hale of cot ton to the acre.” Kdward Atkinson has been exam ining the reeords in ready made clothing establishments to see wheth er the white man in the Knifed States is deteriorating in size and weight.— I'lie general result is that the nver uge height of New Knglnnders is found to lie feet * !-:' inches, and if Southerners o feet 10 inches. The average weight of Americans is lie iwccn lo.'i and ICO pounds. Mr. At-, kinson also discovered that the aver age weight of men in this country have increased perceptibly sinee the ivar. 1 Ic is convinced that Ameri , ois are increasing rather than de creasing in size.. -From New York World. _ Man is individually improbable, and collectively progressive, there fore. through varied experiments, he s shiv ly civilized. I * " " WIIKN I MISS MV WIKK. Von n*k me when It Is I nil** My wayward little wife? When is it that I do not mins The partner of my life? Or do I walk'or do I sleep, < >r do I *igli or laugh, Kirhard is not himself at all Without Ills better half. At curly dawn or dewy eve I 'it and smoke my pipe. \nd t!iink of you as from my eyes The tender tears I wipe. Oray Oriefhn- «luinied me for her own, And sorrow lllls my cup; I have lint one—the rest, my line, Like me, an- all broke up. The world is Imt an aching void. Our home a cave of gloom, The buttons they are off my shirts, And oil the r\e the bloom. Kaeli dn\ is an eternity Since yon are gone. Hope flags When I look round the room and see raiment all in rags. When shall I we your sweet blue eyes, ^ our sunny golden locks A bending o’er a basketful of my long iindarned socks? Oli. do 1 miss you? Don’t I. thoiigli! My soul is on tin- rack. < Hi, love, the nights are getting cold ! •Come home and warm my back’ —llostnn (tlobe. ! ( ”™. —OK The Millionaire's Daughter. Geoff ry Weston had eloped with a millionaire’s daughter, one line morn ing and the father of the girl had dis inherited her and cast her off forev er. Then (leoffry had held his wife in his arms and swore by everything he held most sacred, that the girl who had sacrificed so much for him should not want for anything. ••Never,” he declared, ••while I have ten lingers and all my senses and can work, beg, steal or murder to get it.” ••() hush.” cried the little wife, with both hands over his mouth, ‘•don’t say such wicked things.” lint she did not think (leoffry was really as much in earnest as he was; she only thought he meant to do his best for her. The young man was deep in his employer's confidence. He handled quantities of money every day and had keys to the great safe and con trol of the account books; but Geoff ry had only a good salary and had no right to furnish his little home as luxuriously as he did. The girl knew nothing of the ways and means. When in the course of a year her father—a widower—married a school mate of her own. and she began to meet this girl occasionally, she also began to vie with her in costume, and bills came in to Geoffrey from milli ner and jeweler, as well as from gro om- Mid butcher. He could not pay them all. !!•■ did what he could, paving a little here ami a little there: staving off this one. satisfying that. It was a hard task, hut he never told his wife a word about it. At last the time came when there seemed to be no hope of evading the consequence any longer, and desper ate thoughts of what he might do. if he would, made him shudder. In this mood he went home one night to And his wife in tears. She held a little note in her hand, which she thrust into her pocket, but her strength of mind was not sulllcient to keep it. At a question, out it came. ••It’s from Mine. Flouncett.” she said. "1 wanted her to make me a now costume for Mrs. Ashforth’s lawn party, and she’s vvrijtcn me the most impertinent answ.tr. Tin* moan thing. I’ll just go to some body else. I want a very pretty dross. My stepmother will bo there, and she says such horrid things: and father warned me that I’d be in rags if I married you. and you said you’d never let me need anything. Now it is time to prove you meant it all.” ••I did mean it. and you shall have the money. Uosa.” lie left the room, wont out into the hall and paced slowly up and down. ‘•Come to supper, tlcoffry.” said his wife. Hui he answered: ‘•I’ll be back in a moment." And she heard him shut the door behind him. As he did so the safe key fell from the pocket of the coat he carried on his arm. to the marble lloor of the vestibule. Ho stopped to pick it up. but lfosa heard the sound and knew it. Her husband had a bad habit of dropping that key. She ran to the window and saw him take a ear that passed the corner in the direction of his place of busi ness. His movements wore more I 1 rapid and nervous titan usual. A bold chill ran through her frame, drear! of she knew not what. "What a child I am.” she thought. Then the words he had uttered on ' their wedding day came back ; to her: "I will work. beg. steal or murder to get you all you want.” How she had put her hands over his lips to stop him: still not believ ing that he would ever do anything wrong, but now—now what hurl she done ? "Suddenly her own folly rose before her. plainly delinetl to sight. She knew how much her husband made, how much they spent. He must be unable to meet his expenses. Her poor (Jcoffry! How could she have been so blind? And now. under the pressure of her foolish fretting for a new dress, hr' had gone, as he said, : "to get the money.” S How? Where? She mneinbere<1 the fnte of n faithless elerk of her father’s and re ! membered that it was said "lie stole for the sake of an extravagant wife.” i ^ And her heart smote her. What could she do? j Was it an angel that whispered in her ear. "Follow him?” Afterward she thought so. She caught up a hat and sacipie and ran out. putting on her gloves as she went. She took a car and went to her husband's place of business. The street was dark and lonely : i no one was astir, but through a crack of the closed shutter, she saw a light shine. She tried the door. It opened under her touch and she en tered. Some one had lit the gas in the in ner room. It threw a shadow high upon the wall. Now the shadow vauished. Trembling with excite ment she crept up to the door, and saw her husband bending over the great safe. He turned fiercely, with his hand at a pocket in which she knew he : carried a pistol. "Who is there?” he asked in a fu rious whisper. And she answered: ■•(Inly Rosa.” And lie sank down beside a desk and looked at her strangely. “You here! Why did you follow me?" ••1 was frightened," she said. ••So was I. I remembered to have left the safe unlocked, but it is all right now.” "No. (ieoffrey, it's all wrong. I am no longer a foolish baby. 1 seem to have come back to myself, l’ut that money back. If this is the lirst time I have driven you to such a thing 1 thank <!od for it. You have kept your vow, even to steal for me. l’ut the money back.” (ieoffrey looked at her in amaze ment. "Tell me all.” she said. "Tell ! me all. darling." And in that lonely place the the two young people talked together for long hours. "We will sell the piano and my jewelry and all that we do not need." said the girl at last, "and I will keep house for you as a poor man’s wife should, and we will be just as happy as we have been together. Win . should we not'? And in time we shall be better off. At least we will be honest- and safe, as honest peo ple always are. Oh. (ieoffry! to think to what I might have driven you.” They walked home together, arm in arm. and the next day set to work to struggle out the load of debt up ton their shoulders. It was a hard task, but they succeeded at last, and to-day are happy and prosperous and on the road to fortune. Yet I think that Rosa, when she I kneels to pray at night, never forgets what might have been: and in her husband's hemtisa certain thank fulness for his escape from the edge of the black precipice over which so many erring ones have fallen. After rain follows sunshine. Stop that horrid cough and cure consump tion by using Warner's Log Cabin cough and Consumption Remedy, you will find the sunshine of health soon following. Two sizes. §1 and oO cents per bottle. The French chamber of deputies Saturday adopted the Mexican treu I tv. | • JEFFERSON ON PAPER MONEY. ••I am sorry to sec our loans begin at so exhorbitant an interest. Ami | yet oven at that, you will soon he at the bottom of the loan-bag. We | are an agricultural nation. Such an one employs its sparing- in the pur chase, or improvement of land or i 'tie\s. The loadable money among them, is chiefly that orphans ami wards, in the hands of executors and guardians, and that which the fann er lays by till lie lias enough for the purchase in view. In such a nation there is one and one only, resource ! for loans, sullicient to carry them through the expenses of a war. that will always be sullicient. and in the power of an honest government. I punctial in the preservation of its 1 faith. The fund I mean is the mn-s [of circulating coin. Kverv one knows, that although not literally, it is nearly true, that every paper dol lar emitted banishes a silver one I from the circulation. A nation therefore, making its pnrehaxes and payments with bills lilted for circula tion. thrusts an equal sum of coin out of circulation.”—Jefferson’s works. Vol. VI, 1*. ltlJt. "In this wav, I am not without hope, that this great, this sole re source for loans in an agricultural country, might yet lie recovered for the use of the nation during war, and if obtained in perpetuum, it would always be sufficient to carry us through any war; provided, that in tin1 interval between war and war. all t he outstanding paper should le called in, coin be permitted to flow in again, and to hold the field of cir culation until another war should re ipiirc its y ielding place again to the national medium.”—Jefferson’s works, Yol. Vi. I’. 141. "Hank paper must tie suppressed, and the circulating medium must lie restored to the nation to whom it be longs. It is thk only ki nd icon which TIIKV CAN UKI.Y Ft lit LOANS; it is the only resource which can never fail them, and it is an abundant one for every necessary purpose. Tiikas i m iin.i.s. itoiTovii.o on tanks, bear ing or not bearing interest, as may be found necessary, thrown into cir culation will take the place of so much gold and silver, which last, when crowded, will tind an ef)iu\ in to other countries, and thus keep the ipiautum of medium of its salutary level.”—Jefferson's works, v. l>. p, l'MI. "We are now without any medium : and necessity, as well as patriotism and eonlidence will make us eager to receive treasury notes, if rot ni>ki> OS -n:- in. TASKS.—Jcff'ctsoil's works. Vol. \ 1. I*. ;|Kg. *‘lint Congress could then have issued treasury notes, payable with in a lixetl period, and founded on a specific tax. the proceeds of which. Ms they come in. should lie exchange able for the notes of that particular emission only.”—Jefferson** works. Vol. VI, 1*. .182. ••Treasury notes of smail aiwe'l as high denominations, hotto.md on a tax which would redeem them in ten years, would place at our dispos al the whole circulating medium of the l idled States: a fund of credit suUicicut to carry us through any probable length of war.”—Jeffer son’s works, Vol. VI, 1*. 4151. "In both eases, the truth is. that capital may lie produced hv indus try, and Accumulated b\ economy, lull .iit.oi.kks om.v propose to cre ate it by lege:deniain tricks with paper.”- -.Icffersons’s works. Vol. VI, l\ 241. "There is indeed a convenience in paper: it's easy transmission from one place to another. Hut. this may be mainly supplied by bills of Ex change. so as to prevent any great displacement of actual coin. Two places trading together balance their dealings, for the most part, by their mutual supplies, and the debtor in dividuals of either may. instead of cash, remit the bills of those who are creditors in the same dealings; or' may obtain them through some third place with which both have dealings. The eases would lie rare where such bills could not be obtained either di-1 rectly or circuitously, and too uuiui- ■ port ant to the nation to overweigh the train of evils flowing from paper] circulation.”—-Jefferson's works, v. <i. p. 2J7. I “A ml it is fur this |.cttv addition to the eapi Lut of till' nation, this minimum of one dollar, added to one hundred and ’thirty three mid : a third, or three-fourths per cent, that we iue to give up our gold and diver medium, its intrinsic solidity, its nuiveisal value, ami its saving powers in time of war. and to soli -titute for it paper, with all its train of evils, moral, political and physical, which l will not pretend to enumerate.**—Jefferson's works, Vol. VI. I*. 28th ‘•The bankruptcies in London, have re commenced with new force. There is no saying where'.his tire will end, perhaps ill the general . > iitlagmtioii of all their paper, ft not now, it must prolong. With only fwentv millions of coin, and three or four hundred millions of eireuh ting paper, pub lic and private, nothing i- necessary hut a general panic, produced either liy failures, invasion, or any other cause, and the whole visionary fa brie vanishes into air, and shows that paper is poverty, that it is only the rhost of money, and not money itself. Jefferson s works, Vol. 2. I*. 40G. Ci r-. ■ii'ii’AT -'JN IS called tho -l r.ii of i v-a.-'-v,'t . • came th»*ro i i . i «• iunn._ u which diM ;ik.. -4i. • •• i: ... . , AH by the*. »»•»:{ it : . . • . i . • • the rctenthmor *. • . m. . hi the stomach . ; w « hy • *: »■ i*i l.lvci. i .. i .* • 1 1*1: ! . J.r. ... , v Nut tin's nv. ii ea:j.j.i is u, v Accompanied with. .« a r« -ulii».. Loss of Appetite, Sick Headache, Bad Breath, etc. Tho treatment of Constipation doe* not consist merely ill unloading 1 he bom :*. The medicine must notoiily act ima pur&a* live, I a! him tonic ns well,and iiih pniducr afti r i' < use greater font ive ness. T- > a regular habit of body without changing tho diet or disorganizing tho system •*My attention, after suffering with Cor.%rtpft tion for t #u or three years, wastailed to Simnn*r I.iv« r Regulator, and, having tried almost even thing chc. Concluded to try it. I first took a wincgl.i* sful and afterwards reduced the dose to a te.'i'poonful, as prr directions, after each meal. I found th.it it had done me so notch good that I continued It until 1 took two h«>tllcs. ratter th nl have not experienced any difficulty. I it in my house and would not he without it, hut have no use for it, it having cured me." lino. W, Sims, Ass’t Clerk Superior Court, Uibb Co., lie. Take oitl;•/ the Crmiiitr, Which h."»s on the Wrapper the red ss Trade mark and Signature of J. 11. ZHILIN & CO PMFgiSiomt, \ < i jus is» ;;i ns U. V. .Sinm.tc. T. (\ McRac. J. II. A r:.old. Smooth & Arnold, ATTOSNtVS-AT-LAW, LAND. COL ECTiNC —ANIK IN r U T A^C1; V : : I • \ PRESCOTT, - - - - UtKANSAS. Will prni'tico in b.at. Stuii- yinl Knltrnl com I., W. K. Atmnmun- W. V Thickimi ATKINSON ft T0WPKIN8. Lawyers and Insurance A^eiils. i-ukscott. auk. JUTCOI.I.KCrioNs A split I U.iVW •I. M. Montgomery. 1). it. Mmlilen H L. M oiit^oruery. MONTGOMERY. MADDEN k MONTGOMERY ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. 1‘KKSCOTT. - - . . M{h Ht iil « t;.t»* .*r*vl i:.siriiiict' npnt-. PnMtt»t dwelling, l i.-hn l.r-u • »•* m ll or rent. Spvrml m.4 prompt ailenth.* /nt u to e»4 lectiohf*. n. I. »r t*» W tl WnlUr. K’Ot Klin Street. Dr W. a. Wing&eli, PHYSICIAN Wli si I'lCK-i III . . A I I. . Ki^r.i-cytillv nrt'.i- l.i- pr.iti-n.it i.al to thu citi/.i'iH ol' PnamoM au l lui.oiH. «rom<?K nt i.n it-, .1 riup ■ Iiiriiitt the .liiy :v; l t lil. rt- ; li- . -it • R* L. Hinton, M. B, I’llYSICIAN AMI si KdEON. PRJSSCOTT, AUK Uiviili'in .• in Ka>t .-, !, l Street. Oifii-o, with Private Contilth - i*., \Y«*l Main Street. Or. £. K, Yrmistead Ui -p.-i-tfulI\ t 'nili-r. hi, 1*11(1 !'l><ION AI. si-IKVlt KS To tin- oiti/.i-n> nt' I’n-i- iti mill iK-in-:,. lie •nut l«‘lii'.tliti ut hi- r-'^ili'iM-i* - r nt Mil btiru’k Jnti' i-i-irr. win i not pi--ite-nni.nlly enj-ngi'il. NEVADA COUNTY BANK, W. H. TERRr, Cashier, PUKSt'otr, - - - auk AN.-AS Will U,I I, general hanking ImnIhv*)*. re ceive ilepo*iu9 ol4*. Co trope ml;* nt*: WenUru National Hank. N%\v York. Commercial Hauk, St. I,*.wit, German National Hank, l/itu* il«-ek. J. M. AVXkh. J. tf. CaMil Ne i vjf, AUXER& CARRINGTON, Carpenters and Builders. PKKSCOTT, .... A1IK Will il.i work promptly mi l n,ti-!'m-;..i-;u either in ci'y or I'.uuilri , .Mt-Slu •p on Kant Front -tivet nei.r .Up. ;. W. L. GAINES BOOTISHOfMER V.i>T HAIN s l |; KI T. PKKSCOTT, - - AUK. O. R. F. WHITTEN, ! Bkcks&tiih AND WAGON MAKER, Prescott, - -Arkansas. Ki'puirino in wood ami iron done prompt Iv. ' HOUSES1I.5KING A SPECIALTY. I it" Simp near Aonliinv, eormr Klin unit Wail Sueoml «LrcoU. Your patronage .elic ited. X lltf