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' I I Absolutely Pure A n*'iim of tair.ij-l..'kinc ) * ' ’• . Ilia'll i'M Ml 'ill in !' !• < • • i»iI .> (fOTt-rilllM lit If | > I A !,■ :**> • $ V; Vl-' ; Bick Headache ai#«l bMt rteTit t■ • »l J . .M H 08 Dizziness, . -f‘or eating, lv. . iriuoed jemarkuix.o. iiac irlisg 'iC ■ s-'-f Hoafliflif. >■': '■ ■ I’lll* lira equally \ : i .11 ro %-t-ntiuit f: n\r0 eorrer»»l; ‘ ‘ .itlio liver ui'i i■. T Urey only CUled &»'•! i.;u t,i r) ■ is* j u L .-'» Achath* - V owhO ■offer r. ' tf 'VW Uatuly i: I i: -’ 1101-0 arboiricot'y t’ - ■ 1 -1 Iiinlu ei»u ‘ 11 » -■■■ i !* linstoiio mil: - 1- . i::leliliea4 s :=* 'iBlhoV-.r.r . : r. . V r - • ifaVnfirO vema’t - t while Othur* ilo i.' I Cirt< r\* I.i! . rry . mil at;4 voryew t' t i' a dose. TLiyar. * • ;*«* |>urg'*. brt 7 ♦’ : ^ ^“2 Qscthem ln\.> ' . r?l by dpn^lslst SMALLFiSL. M/U. PRICE If i ■ a CONSULT'( • BROW. SCROFULA t ■ or COLD c ;tion v. z ; ■; of Flosh Or any T)L**a*'' r • ro *1 and I 'ttiyB mre Jnfl • SCCT ER:‘ PURE CO D ER OIL With Hypophot pIiHoa. PA>; T ' • i f-. .4a/f/• r *rr,tf'n I'rm’rion. *; nd let no cm mtmnwHtn ■ '' V*** <• fl(Nv/>; a rulisHtut*’. Sold ! >/ fill Drum/lata. •ou M . 1 “<>. N.Y* 0. R. . WHITTEN. Woo< - nithShop, PFvEKCOTT. ARK. Will nil K flirt m ill; ' I pairing. It III piiiitli li u! HOIlotl tin.! M ■ T . i • 1 ^ ffilitr;iliti • . I i. I' faction l: 1 1 *f' in nr tin ... ■ 11 U III I SAVES MONEY. asrtfsssaafttss.1 "wrw •peel oil' |ir I>. > «<1 aw a Family Medioino, und w«i>,>Ho» u ««ntlui'» it!( I b.y ro ■liovo illlht allb' • i nltoiiw lruia Ihel.od-, will, ul «.*«!• •> -r tO>,.l..*. Adapted S» •>. HU and «ld. - rl«e, v->t. tiuu> L\ lill¥WUl£KE. Ui' 1 Mli' PflO'sC SUP* IRRr# /AENSTI ON on a*:nt;4i*' s*v MtS!» : •' ' >i i MrAwnwa BRAOHIV. " •' Atlawaga. f fep' . 1 ' > * v i till til* JUST SO. I. ''igliiug like a furnace. »*ver . ar* in lov - min i in adoration * M hi* lady > gl.iv r. Think* no girl was ev er « hlite so sweet *1* -he. Tell* you she’.* an angel. Lx peel* y on to agree II. Moping and repining. * • looniv and morose, A *k* the price of poison, l iiink* he’ll take a do-. . " omen are so fickle. Lov e is all a sham. Marriage is a failun . Like a broken dam III Whistling, blithe and cheerful. AI way * bright ami gav, 1 lancing, singing, laughing All the livelong day . Full of fun and frolic. < aught in Fa-hion's vvhirl, Mi ink - no more ot poison <»ot another girl —[Somerville .lournal LAURA. A pleasant gathering in honor of (’apt. Morrill’s return from foreign service had assembled at the Astor House. The guest was an officer in the I'nited States navy. lie was shortly to be married to Laura Men ton. then in London. ('apt. Merrill had one weakness— an overfondness for wine. Time and again had he promised Laura to avoid the cup, and had as often bro ken his promises, flow could he re sist now, when her name was toasted by his friends? Again he yielded. She had said to him. with unusual earnestness in her sweet, appealing tones, when last parted : "If you break your word this time. I feel as if some terrible evil will re sult from it." 1 lie words which had sunk deep into his heart, had kept him sober all the passage home. This meeting with his friends, however, spoiled his good resolution A week later he was bowling out at sea in his own cutter. ( hie night about six days out, the wind was blowing a perfect gale. The captain, having left the charge of the vi -el to a voiing and rather inexperienced midshipman, was lie low in his eabin with his other of ficers enjoying himself over bottles of old w ine. "A dark night, captain,” re marked the lir-t lieutenant, laugh ing: just tin kind of a one to enjoy ourselves as we are now doing." "Aye, aye. Mr. Minton,” an swered Morrill, as with unsteady hand he poured out another glass of wine: "hut -oinchuw. I don’t like the shrieking noise of the wind in our rigging to-night. It sounds un pleasant . ” The captain shuddered as he spoke, while hi oilieers looked sur prised. Still the wind kept howling l'he noise would seem to go with un earthly sound right through the creaking timbers of the craft. "Ha! what is that?” exclaimed Morrill, suddenly rising with iiu unsteady limbs, as a sort of scream seemed to run i|uiveriug!y along, right under his feet. • It i-. nothing, sir,” answered the first lieutenant, “hut the grating of the main yards in the slings." More wine more and more! There was laughter, there was shout ing, joking and singing down in the cabin of I hat torm-driven vessel! And in the midst of it all was sud denly heard a long, grinding crash that threw the revellers off their feet that sent the cutter, half buried in the sea, upon her beam ends with shaking, cracking timbers and reelings masts. Down into the cabin fell a man gled form headlong; the midship man, Mr. Mard, who had been knocked over ami badly injured by a falling spar. ■ • M ii’ve ran into ” began the poor fellow; but that was all he could say. His eye- were turned with an expression of half-reproach upon the intoxicated Morrill. The latter, somewhat sobered, daggered tip will: his otlieers to the deck. Through tin gloom he could just make out a vessel a brig appar ently sinking. «»nly the stumps of her masls remained, while it) the lurid light of her lantern, hung up in the mi/./.eti rigging, her hull was set ii. half buried. •Down helm"’ howled Morrill, now completely sobered. \s his own vessel had suffered no damage except the loss of Iter booms forward, aim the splitting up of her starboard, the men were able to obey order , Morrill wa- ibotit lowering his i bouts when lie saw those of the ollici vessel approaching. "All saved?” lie thundered through his speaking trumpet "All hut one!" was the hoarse re Sj loose. I'wo of the boats were soon along side. and their occupants on hoard the cutter. Lite hrig had by this time gone down. "You said you lost one life?” said .Morrill, in an agony of self-reproach. "Yes; she took passage in our vessel at London; a Mi>s Menton Miss Laura Menton !’' "What!” screamed Morrill, start - iug hack as if shot. "My (Lid! ll is then the vessel in which Laura was hound to New York that I have run ' into!” ‘‘She must have gone down with the hrig,” said the informant, “as; we saw nothing of lier after the col-! lision. although some of the passen gers say they heard her scream.” .Inst then the third boat, contain ing. besides its sailor crew, some thing white, came alongside. The men mounted the gangway, hearing the white object between them. A horrible fear possessed Morrill. The light of the lantern revealed the pallid, beautiful fen- , lures of Laura Menton. "Dead!” was echoed from lip to lip. “Dead!” repeated Morrill: "and all my fault Had 1 not been below, drinking, this could not have hap pened! lam Laura's murderer!" Overcome by his terrible feelings, he fell unconscious to the deck. When he recovered he was in a de lirium. There he lay day after day. raviugabout his having killed Laura. Gradually he recovered, but ho was a changed man. Die cutter put back to New York, where it arrived just as he was able to leave his couch. Ili> misery wn- more than he felt willing to hear. He snatched a pis tol one morning to put an end to his life when lie heard behind him a I voice that thrilled him through ami through. He turned to behold Laura Men ton as radiant and beautiful a- ever. He opened his arms. ■ Promise inc,” exclaimed Laura, “that you will never touch another | drop of liquor again. Otherwise—” and she motioned him hack. “Never, so help me t.od!” cried he. fervently. she felt sure he would keep his word this time and Hew to his bosom. , Such experience kept him sober ever after [Chicago Ledger . Did You Know It? Webster's eloquent description ot the British Empire is very readable, but we doubt whether it is generally | realized that we. too. have a domin ion on which the sun never sets. It will hardly be believed, perhaps, without tin examination of the maps, j that San Francisco, in 'end of being the west line of this dominion, is on l\ about midway between our east I urn and and western limits ; and vet it Is a fact that the furthest Aleutian , isle acquired in our purchase of l Russian America, is as tar to the west of that city as East port, Maine, is to the east of it. Between the north-west limit of Washington Ter ritory and the southern limit of i Alaska there is a break of a few de grees, but with the slightest reduc tion our territory extends through lit? degrees of longitude, or 17 more than half way round the globe. Hence, when the sun is giving his good-night kiss to our westward isle, on the coniines of the Behrings sea, it is already flooding the fields and forests of Maine with its morning light,and in the eastern part of the state is more than an hour high. At tin very moment when the Aleutian fisherman, warned by the- approach ing shades of night is pulling his canoe toward the shore, the wood chopper of Maine is beginning to wake the forest echoes with his stir ring music of the ax [ 1 lie l.reat I»i v i d e. Don’t \ on know how to spell?' ’ asked the exasperated teacher of the extremely phonetic boy. "Oh, yes, said the boy. "1 know how to spell well enough, but the men who made the dictionaries don’t seem to. [Somerville Journal. •Did yon ever fall in love'- "\es but 1 got out, wiih lb. a o -Iunco of I her father. [Epoch. rill-; M ISSlssI I’l’I AND OTIIKH SONliS: By Dkoki.i i*. Smootk. Author's Kilition. —Bifkai.": Charles Wells Mu niton, |s:in. Mttlt* le>ck Republican. 1 his is the volume long looked for, and recently received and mentioned in these columns, with the promise of a full literary review; hut upon glancing over its bright and gifted pages- hoth neat in print and brill iant in thought—we find that to doit justice, and give the reader anything like a comprehensive view and intelli gent outline of the true merits of its contents, would require more space than our meager columns and large type afford, and hence can bestow but a passing and cursory mention, with a snatch here and there of its rieli and devoted style, with at pres ent perhaps one full poem as a brief sample of the beauty of the whole. We have long known (icorge 1*. Smoote as a jurist, statesman, and poet, and one of the truest and most unpretending sort of men that live, possessing far more worth of head and heart and all the redeeming at tributes of manhood than the passing world and casual observer would ev er dream of; but never until recent ly turn we known that his poetic thoughts were to be “printed in a bock’ —a boon to the public for which we now specially thunk ids faithful and devoted wife, who urged him to the work, and in n manner superintended and looked after it herself she too possessing fine liter ary taste and judgment. which ena bled her to see and appreciate the genius and literary gifts of her hus band. And aptly and properlx lias he dedicated this little volume to the devoted wife -Juli > lioode Smoote —the dedication itself comprising two full pages of rhyme, mo-1 unique and touching in sty! • and sentiment, a sample or two from which we give. S|ieaking of the book. he savs to her : Hu- criiir in.i ?r*i iin*l it worth hi* . Nor do | laj W !io-« imUi hiiidi Nation-lov to hi ar . "t ni'i I n rli tri-iiil'ItiiK' V*|*i am! h a: I'.tf ]>af •]>« h to tin . • a ml • .i Of»-\i*f\ • III , will l.:i- tin wi-'l Km-W I hr -• a' iiunit - ami thought** it- \ »t*o*« j»h > w Ami again, in loving confidence and manly and becoming apprecia tion of his wife, in both head and heart, In say, directly toiler: lint w» ar* not prepared to judge of thi-. ^ .hi would at once decide if with a ki*.-, \-o rting flint tin- *rrdiet -li'Milil Im hi:ii* . And that my >*mg- arc more than halt «li> in* . Ami I. in htvlug vanity, would own, I hat hotter judge than ^ on, wu-nevri known. H it •,n iil' does not possess a !>»'!i• 1 ■ ’ < milv. u irdoesit reipiire any in t r ie I: i liand to discover a ..I apj,: a !••• ih fond partiality of the devoted wife. And again, from this admirable dedication, wi give this one more thought and sentiment: oil' not for th* -tar- in glory’.- -kies Would • *'\'diang«* the light which fill* <1 your e\ eg. While flin- w* -at eoii\er-ing many time AN*ith earne.-t, liopeful wuds about my rhyim - All, we think, as originally admir able as it is devotedly beautiful and becoming. t he tirst and principal poem in the volume is entitled "Songs of the Mississippi." the Prelude to which opens with this poetic and romantic yet perfectiy natural thought : We all love rivers I « a th** lift!*- rill* l liiit gurgle down th* valley* round om lemi*-, I.i\*• e\cr in f»nr memories and heart Ami at all times we feel a joyou- -w.dl \N ithin our soul-, and coursing all our \* in-, When any (lowing river inert* the • \« Ami then the author approaches ami salutes the great Mississippi in these grand words : ’Tin t Ini - I love all fdr< am*, but unto liar, nir mighty Mississippi, got - in\ la-art, Mon than ill other ii\« r> id the i-artli This and "An old Arkansas home," are the grandest poems in the hook, in style and thought hordering on the Pastoral and the Kpic, and as weird, and poetic, and romantic as any of the bewitching productions ol Joaquin Miller -the Literary Wizard of the Wild West—and much more interwoven with home-sympathies and common sense. The Old Arkansas Home is located on a stream well known to us. and which 'lie author thus describes: 1 In- Hull rail bayou winds along. I broiigh with pirn* wood* for* vt-r gr* en It utter- blit a sluggish -ong, Win n summer Hower* it* mat g h *cti en. Hut dashes with u headlong roar. When whiter cloud* their rain storm* pour Though iii (but -oft and sunny fUmr Hie winter stay* tin- brief* -t turn I «*r scare* tin autumn i>'uu•> have died \\ Ihmibn i 4\ spring rmu ws tln ir \ ernal pride. Very pret I y. isn’t it V A ml mi :more pretty than true: for we havi [been there, many a tune and oft, ni person, and shall ever dwell there in thought. 1'his whole poem is vert touching, oid describes in matchless i inngcn Vn < >ld Arkansas Home a tvpe of tile Southern Home everywhere in it' ante-bellum grandeur and pro verbial hospitality, and then in its helium chivalry and patriotism, and finally its post-bellum povertv and dilapidation, hut still clothed in hon or and dignity. Hut while these two poems the Mississippi anil the Old Arkansas Home are perhaps the grandest in memory and most lofty in style, they are In no means the most beau 1 tiful and tender, and touching. Here for instance is a little gem which we give in full; and which, to our thought and heart, is inimitable in beauty and tenderness, and can hardly be read without tears by any , parent—especially such as have wept over the loved and lost, and pressed the cold, silken lips of death for tte last time on earth : INI'\ MIS in ma no Weeping x\« Mood within the gloom, Which hang* *o darkly round the tomb. With fricml* who deeply felt our lot**, And came to help u« hear our cros*, And give our heart* that sad relief, Which spnngs from sympathetic grief They gently raised the coffin lid, Which from our eye* his young face hid t here lay tin baby. Mill lu death. No beating pulse. no balmy hreafli, No winning, loving -mile wa* then . The mother’s breaking heart to cheer While standing therein corse and Miroud. With spirits unguishi-d, broken, bowed. Nor hoping that the hot, dose night Around our souls, excluding light, Would ex er break it* cloud* away. A ltd brighten into cln erfhl dux While standing thus In side the gravi. \ xvm .an's hand, devoutly brave, • th ' be that ban 1 forex er blent ' hid lax upon upon Id* little breast A milk xvbite rose. No word she -aid. I’.'it laid that emblem on the dead. And o’er our hearts it sxvcetly -bed Celestial fragrance— hope* divine. Which lifted them to that pure Mirim-, Within fin- cloudless world on high Where flowers bloom but lo ver do We feh tin- babe wa* in that land. And from our heart* xve blessed tlo hand Hie gentle hand, and fragrant Hoxv» r. Whieli pointed there in that *ad Iron i Mi! balmy and eternal dime, •mi far above the woe* of time. When- earth’s redeemed—redeemed bv grac. Iln-ak forth in song* ofendh-** praise, Whose echoes through the starrx spin re*. Are sometimes heard by mortal ear*, M/ x g. nfle hand* and embh in* wh.t«. I’oini up to thy undying light,* I-rom every sorrow stricken hearth. And every open grave on earth. Really, we would rather he the author of such poem than the master of all the kingdoms of earth : as n>> mind could conceive or pencil ex press it than that of those whose souls and hearts belong to the re deemed of the Lord and are des tined to enter and enjoy his king I dom forever. Like ourself. .Judge Smoote has tasted sorrow to the dregs, in the wav of bereavements in the domestic circle has lust loved ones, dearer than the life blood which throbs with every pulse and the foregoing swiei little poem, as ipioted in full, clearly alludes to one such tender occasion. And here is a similar one in scribed to the editor of this paper "To W. Jasper Blackburn" in sympathy for one whom he knows has tasted of like griefs —entitled . "The l’ast." the opening verse of which we ipiote: I’liiit world w ♦ < :tll til* i*u«t Wiiat iilid<|o>V' linger flier* of Joy* that bloomed but could hot hod t >f love* now all d*-*|*air Which we shall show our appreci ation of by copying at some future time, with suitable response. 1'liis little volume contains but '.'I pages, but is brim-full of pure and poetic thought, which must be read to be appreciated. We would glad ly give it a more full and deserved review, but will desist for the pres ent ; simply slating that it is on sail at the old Wilson A Webb stationery establishment, this city, at but SI per copy, sent to any address bj mail, postpaid. It is altogether a production in every way creditable to the home-literature of Arkansas, and the entire South, and should be purchased and read by all who can appreciate and have any disposi tion to encourage native genius We commend it It should not fail to ho mentioned that this noat little volunio of sweet anil sensible poems not one that duos not glow with genuine poetry anil sparkle with the scintillations of common sense- contains, as a frou i tispiecc. a perfect steel-plate likeness Of the gifted author: which, to frame and keep, where it may he tin better preserved and always seen, is worth live times the price of tin hook. [ 1'his hook of poem for ale al : Moni-rief's and Hinton' Inn- .Ion . 1'ieseott, Ark.j WELL DONE, DEMOCRATS. Fellow Democrats: \our Centre! Committee congrat ulates you upon upon the great Me lon Ihnt has been gained. Never in the history of the State has our party displayed such concert of ac tion. such unity of feeling, or such sclf-eontrol, in the face of unprece dented provocations. Though un principled agitators have, in many localities, do e all in their power to precipitate a conflict, vou have been too wise to resent thrir conduct.— And. notwithstanding the Republi cans have industriously circulated the report that election frauds and crimes have been committed, no vi olence, no crime, no blood-shed stains the bright glory of our vieto tor\ It has been a contest between the honest people of the comm unity, the owners of property acquired by their own industry, the upholders of the law, on the one hand, and on the other a misguided band, led by reck less adventurers hungering for spoils and for the restoration of recoil s'ruction and anarchy, and nobly has Democracy maintained the struggle. Hut, fellow Democrats, this i> not the hour to disband our forces. We are on the eve of a greater and equally momentous oonllict. The National Republican party, envious of tin South, seeing us rise with uion- than renewed vigor from the ashes of our desolation, has rc solved to erusli us. It has devised a Tariff bill, imposing taxes unheard of in the history of our country, even in tin midst of the Civil War a Tariff bill directed solely against us. and designed to how us to the earth bem-ath the weight of unjust and unequal taxation. The Lower House of Congress has passed an election bill, justly called the Fore bill inking from us all control over out •■\\u elections, pin iug Federal bayonets a‘ every poll, and turning us over, bound hand ami foot, to the merer of our political enemies. I’luse measures, and others of like nature, show that the Republican par v is resolved to enslave us, to tr< it ns as conquered provinces to be rule i by the bavouet and deprived of those privileges and that political equality which constitute the most s.iercd birthright of every American citizen. Ill I lie face ol tin's” dangers we must imt J)jnt'li. \\ i must present to the enemy an unbroken phalanx, fly every means, by bribery , by in timidation. by the repeating of col ored i ite- by every device that fraud I III e.ilieoet or malice suggest, the Republicans will strive to carry the November election for congress men. Above all they will try to precipitate a race conflict. One ne gro killed will he worth a treasury to them in awakening hostility at the N >rlh ; and tin leaders will in every way endeavor to urge these unfortu nate people into violence. Rut be calm, be self controlled. Let our victory be as great as that which we have ju-t won, but let il be charac terized by the same moderation and forbearance. Keep up your organi zation. Maintain vour clubs. Let not your inteiest ting. Our liberties are at stake, and now, as ever. “Kternal vigilance is the price of liberty J. K. Wu.uvms, \\ . L. Titicuv, ( liairman Secretary. How Long to Sloop. Lii to the fifteenth year young I people require ten hours, and until tin twentieth tear nine hours. After that year every one finds out how much he or she requires, though as a rule six to eight hours is necessary. Light hours' sleep will prevent more nervous derangement in women than any medicine can cure During growth there must be ample sleep il the brain Is to develop to its full ex tent and the more nervous, excita ble or precocious a child is the more sleep il should get. if it..- intellectual progress is not to come to a prema ture standstill or its life be cut short at an early age. He-.-u ••Out* «>f llit horrid pupeit lias sent an artist and a reporter here to write up tin hathinw scenes. J think they ire over there on the sand hank Jennie: Mow scan daio' - ! l.ci u >><• ov« r where they are and sit down I he he-< ideas are .iinonn .III w hich were never heard of before. • PROFESSIONAL AND BUSINESS CARDS R. L, Hinton, M. Oh PHYSICIAN & M'lmKON, KKIrtroTT, - - - AliK, Hoiili-iifi* on K'i't Str«*«*t. Offirf Hith privut*1 <on*lilting, room, on Wf* Main St. (i. I’. Stun.‘te. T. C. Me line. J. H. Arnold Siriootc McUac Sc Arnold* ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, LANO.COLl.ETINC —AND— INSURANCE AGENTS. l'RKSCOTT, - - - - ARKANSAS. Will practice in both State and Federal court*. W. 7 Tsapklni. u t SrtMn Hotirp r-.tUe To .'.pkins Sc Q-rooson, ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW. Real Estate and Loan Agents. I’KKSCOTT, AKK. W ill prailic<' in all ('oiirta, both State aid Federal. Bus!now attended to pr >niptl/. Dr. T, M Milam, DENTAL SURGEON, Washington* Ark. " h‘ * rn i U i iIil I.mi In* hr ;nl'jiinrtrrn. will \i-it IT* ! i ri Liihtrl. If you tail to w#«* in# <1 I will call on von in \t 1 -i? \\ ill icliiiiiii-t* i gnu in nullinf frith for - 1 < >?!»«• it Mi >;iin Watt's rcsidi-dra Df?. D L HARTSFIELD, UENTAL SURGEON, Prescott, - Arkansas. W I visit f unll ' n notified* Perfect flu of p!ut<~ I'uarttnteed. < * fit re at Dr. T*ii • i i . •- *n '•* old place on W'M Main Street. J. M. POWELL. DENTAL : STTRCH30M, I'KESCOTT ARKANSAS. All OIK H‘**>rn111.•<■■ 1 to OVI Hlllisfltl'ttun. OFFl<h »t Dr. W ii.olli'lil’, Iimij; ■‘tore. NEVADA COUNTY BANK, W. H. TERRY. Cashier, PRKSroT!\ - ARKANSAS Wiil lo n * \il bunking buxine**, re ceive de|M.-*iUf eL . < V>rrespomb*nts: Western National Rank. New York. < ’oiuni< renil Rank. St. Louie, (ft rncci National Rank. Little Rock. YV l, (iaine.- J YV (lainei W. L. Gaines & Son, N\i.'i ain iui.lt, prkscott, - ARK. i GEO. E. MASJTZ, COUNTY SURVEYOR, I’rescoti Arkansas. \l! work .. |,Min|,tl\. (iivc number of land without fail wlion you writ.. Char* r,i mbV. TOM ALLEN SCHOOL Will Open September 1, 1890. RATES OF TUITION: Ut, ^ml 3rd tml Ith kimIh 00 II ado* ..... . H 00 Miami E C'-.anisvky. Principal. I M. Y| Kak, 1-t AiwiaUnt. J. R. HARRELL ACOT, Blacksmiths &P i Wagon Maker*. REPAIRING WOOD k IRON PROMPTLY DONE Horseshoeim; and Repairing Buggies A SPECIALTY. Knlargeil JSliop. Hotter Kuriliti' , ami mure hikI belli r material then i ■■ t before. ./ I!, llarrell will also do cun ning. \\Y ire .il.-e manufacturers ami agents for the c elebrated Lynn'- Combination Harrow ami Sera|iiT. aiel will furnish then) on da ! rnand. , *•» SI.up next to AIetlm list church, o* W • •'t S* '..nil >ir« 'Wc* gtiurontce * i work to give satisfaction. MOORE & DARBY, xjr ncl e r t a 3s exs, Pr (•■ A •. Arkansas. i : !\ 1 . ;■inkers estHbliMh i ».» if. I’ •' li i > stock of tn .it!” i ! . . 1 i AN*- hive lot of t»*• 1 i »"flitis ruvvml i:. ! ’ ‘ IV rivet Ht ! fijnnnurtiH?*). \\ . * *1 • "i .ho t tuner* I hiuI I yjlovvw lurmsLicU.