The Newnan herald. (Newnan, Ga.) 1865-1887, June 08, 1886, Image 1

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2 k u The News a 3 Herald. m PUBLISHED EVEKV TUESDAY. A. B. CATES, Editor and Pnblisher. TEBX8 OP 8LBSCK1PTIOX : One copy one year, in advance ... |1 jo If not paid in advance, the terms are 12.00 a year. A club of six allowed an extra copy. Yi ity-two numberscomplete the volume. THE NEWNAN HERALD. WOOTTEN A CATES, Proprietors. -WISDOM, JUSTICE AND MODERATION.- TERXS per year in Advance. VOLUME XXI. NEWXAX, GEORGIA, TUESDAY, JUNE 8, 1886. NUMBER ;J4. The Newnan Herald. PUBLISHED EVEItT TUESDAY. KATES OF ADVERTISING. One inch one year, #10;, a col* v«;ar, $100; less time than " $I.Oo per inch for first inserwoo* . nts additional for each luin^uw* — Notices in local column, ten per line fo. each insertion. Liberal amui- incuts will be n-.ade with those anvfrw^ % bv the quarter or year. All "transient wdvertisemeiite must b paid for when handed in. Announcing candidates, <fre., *3.u j sirictlv in advance. I Address all communications to A. B. CATJSc', Newn*ni*i P. J.: Gordon’s Kindness With good or ill, with false or true. THE PEOPLE SPEAK- Cordon Far in the Lead in Last Wee Vs Election of Delegates. J. Branch, W. J. Heggie, Blount and O. Hardy. [ I . From the Cuthbert- Ga. Appeal. Ringgold, Ga., June L—In the | An incident proving the devotion primary here to-day, which was con-1 of Gen. Gordon to his soldiers was fined to Bacon’s chosen precinct, j related to us a few days ago by the vote stood for Gordon 182, Ba con 215, Clements 112, Fain 225. * A Certificate of Charaeter. ‘•Off and on the writer has known Governor Brown mote than aquar- ter of a century as a friendly ally Montezuma, Ga., June 1. The news that Dooly county had in structed for Gordon has terrified the Bacon following in this county, and a general rout will be the re sult. Dooly is away off the railroad and the Gordon men have paid hut little attention to it, knowing that it ha t been thoroughly worked for Bacon and was considered one of j his strongest counties. Bacon has I visilad it several times and 1 a i on j his side the cleverest politicians of May 28th 1836. young friend who lives on the line of Randolph and Stewart counties, near County Line church. In his neighborhood live3 Mr. Robert Ware, who was immediately under Gen. Gordon during the war. Just after one of the hardest fought bat ties of the war, in which troops of tnnit.v has been offered to test his character and resources to the full and it is no effort for us to put on record the fact that whatever may be his eaknesses, he neither lies nor steals. * * He may drive close bargain, when opportunity of fers, but v.e repeat that Georgia can put tiust in the fact that he does not li m>r steal.”—Macon •I, the county. His managers have been exceedingly boastful as to - their strength and what they would do. There was scarcely a doubt then but that it would instruct for Bac«n. But the Gordon men have stormed the county m i carried the day. The convention met this morning at !() o’clock in Vienna. The Gordon following in the county was there in sufficient numbers to outvote the politicians. The farm ers and old soldiers, and young men and every body erfe' who fa vored Gordon mad.' it a point to be present and have a voice in the ac tion of tiie county, though some of them had to come twenty miles to doit. The vote stood, Gordon one hundred and twenty-seven, Bacon one hundred and twenty-one. Crisp was indorsed for Congress. Calhoun, Go., June 1. The people ot Gordon county met in mass . meeting to-day for the purpose of electing delegates to the gubernato rial and congressional conventions. Resolutions were adopted to the ef fect that candidates for governor and for congress, should be voted for by written ballot, and the chair- tan of the meeting should appoint ^legatee to the representativecon- j’tntions to vote for the candidate ing the majority of votes and a political opponent. Oppor-1 t> 0 th sides were mowed down like the ripe wheat before the scythe. Mr. Ware was commanded togc on picket duty. It was a bitter cold night. The snow was on the ground many inches deep. Mr. Ware had come out of the battle just fought tyilhout receiving any wounds, but with the loss of nearly all his cloth ing. To have stood at his post of duly during the night would have been sure death. As Gen. Gordon rode down the line that night he discovered the situation of Mr. Ware, oniy a poor soidier as he was, and hi* heart went out in sympathy to him. Removing his own coat, hat and shoes he turned them over to the trembling guard and finish ed his ride in that condition. Mr. Ware survived the conflict, return ed home and settled down on his farm, but never forgot this simple act of kindnest. and his first born after the war was -hristened “Gor don Ware.” It cannot be disputed that Gen. Gordon has a heart for his people, capable of sympathizing with them in their needs, both in the war and since, and his past life has demonstrated this fact to the perfei t satisfaction of all un biased minds. ft \\ lot resulted as m lows: ■jo hundred and forty-nine; ''■o hundred and forty; ■tigress, two hundred v<>; Clements, one hun- .#• gates to the gubernato- [ition are W. R. Rankin ahdTi. TTGray. The delegates to the congressional convention are M. J.Dudley,.I. H. Brownlee,'?. C. Miller and J. M. Robertson. There were four hundred and two voters present, and everything passed off quiet and satisfactory. Carrollton, Ga., June 1. General Gordon carried Carroll to-day. A uiassmeetiug of 500 voters was pres ent. The vote was twenty to one, amidst great enthusiasm and ap plause. The following known Gor dor. men were selected delegates: H. M. Williams, J. K. Hoop, J. J. Velvin, R. R. Horsely, J. P. Griflin, C. P. Gordon, J. M. Hewitt, J. W. Burn:. Dahlonega, Ga ., J une 1. —Lump kin county went overwhelmingly for Gordon to-day, amid great enthusiasm. The Gordon dele gates one received hundred au ,l thirteen votes, while Col Price, representing Maj. Bacon, received only twenty-three. The delegates were not instructed but were asked to declare their views, when Col. Baker announced that they were for Gordon, first, ’ast and all the time. The crowd went wild with excitement. Cummins, Ga, June 1—The br*ye old soldiers met here today, deter mined to resent the slanders made upon their old commander. General Gordon. George N. Lester, the one armed hero of the mountains, and William L; Chamblee appealed to the people in behalf of Gordon and purer methods in state politics. By a vote of 193 for Gordon and 108 fur Bacon, Forsyth county placed her self right on the record. There is great enthusiasm among the Gordon men in this county. The abt ve are significant words, and coining from Maj. Bacon’s or gan, the Macon Telegraph,astonish es us considerably, when it is ta ken into consideration that Maj. Bacon and that paper have de nounced Brown, Colquitt and Gor don as the political ring and triumvirate that entered intoa“bar- gain and sale” of a high public trust. This explode-, its high sound ing cry of Atlanta ring. After all of its abuse of Gov. Brown for years it now gives him as go id a certifi cate of character as any man need want. A man who“neither lies nor steals” will <jo nothing else mean. We do not believe this good certifi cate of character would have been forthcoming from such an unex pected source if it had not been shown that Maj. Bacon sent for Joe Brown during the last nominating convention and was closeted with him making friendly overtures for his “influence” to secure the nomi nation. Gov. Brown assured Maj. Bacon that he preferred him to the other candidate, but Joe Brown’s influence did not prevail anil Gov. McDaniel secured the nomination. Evidently Governor Brown’s “influ ence” is wanted again in the pres ent race by Major Bacon.—Mariet ta Journal. Tiie Defeat of Boynton. [ IIS WHO LITE TOO LOSG. We beg leave to differ. We do not think so. The Philadelphia Times has this to say about Davis and Toombs: “The two central figures of the Southern Confederacy who lived a quarter of a century after the rebel lion began without either learning or forgetting anything, could be named by any average schoolboy of the land. The names of Jeffer son Davis and Robert Toombs will he conspicuous in the annals of the impartial history of the great con flict between the North and the South, as illustrative of the weak ness that often conquers greatness. Toombs was one of the fiery hot spurs of tiie South. He was nothing if not tempestuous. He revelled in the storm of sectional strife and welcomed the flame of battle as a DAVIS' CAMP CHEST. Aa Interesting Relie Owned lty a Wilkes County Lady. Ckpaktown convention IS CO! ie < ric ;si C ■Ss Ga., June 1.—The voted on the Gordon delegates, and they were elected by suc n an overwhelming majority that the vote was not counted. The delegates were instructed for Gor don. Enthusiasm prevails in Polk Spring Place, Ga., June L—At a primary election held here to-day Gterdon delegates were elected for governor, and Fain delegates for congressman, Gordon feceix ing 415 votes and Bacon 91 votes; Fair 273 votes and Clements 250 votes. Harlem, G a., June 1— According to previous arrangement, the vote of this (Columbia) county was to- jay paced the credit of Mr. Ba- ooi. Xbe delegates axe Messrs M. The Paulding Era publishes an interview with Colonel D. Pike Hili in which some wholesome truths are told. As to Gordon’s resigning his seat in the Senate, Colonel Hill says: As to his making a bargain, it's a lie of whole cloth. Why, see here, if he had been corrupt enough to sell out, he could have sold himself a thousand times as Senator while in office for all the money he wanted. But Gordon, with ail of his misfor tunes in business affairs, ha ■ so act ed that he retains the confidence of those who have dealt with him, and no man has ever dared say he got a dollar he was not entitled to, in or out of office. It seems we have two resigning candidates before the people. Gordon resigned a civil office when no great question de manded his attention and retired to private life. Bacon, on the other hand, resigned the adjutancy c'f the Ninth Georgia, with the enemy in front, and took office in the commis sary department outside of bullet r;jj’ge. Take your choice. It is said that Bacon is entitled to it be cause he has been beaten so often. Well, it does look like it’s hard for him to catch the office, and for once, it seems, he has taken time by the forelock, for tiie rush of some counties in hastening to the front with little courthouse cliques as delegates in his favor is exciting the merriment of oid iron-side Demo crats who rallied for Gordon in 1868 and elected him Governor, though he was counted out by the return- board, backed by federal bayo nets. In 86’ the party could hardly get a candidate. Well do I re member the trouble we had to get a man to make the race, for I was on the state Democratic Executive Committee. Our people were dis pirited and demoralized. Then it was the chivalric Gordon threw himself irto the fight and siezing the Democratic colors rallied the clans from one end of the state to the other in defense of equal rights and constitutional liberty. Talk about beating such a man! Why the old soldiers would turn in their graves to see one defeated they had followed so often to victory and glorv. No sir, let us first honor the men who faced the bullets and when these old fellows have passed away and we have laid them be neath the Confederate monument and cast the posies all over their graves, we will hunt up the bomb proof boys and do unto them what • The Griftin Mews says that the following editorial from Sunday’s Constitution revives some memo ries that will not serve to help Ba con’s cause in that section: When Major Bacon stated in Au gusta that “with the circumstances between General Gordon and him self reversed” he would not have made the contest, his hearers must have thought of the case of Gov ernor Boynton. Nothing we believe in the history of the State, exceeds that in person, a' greed. Major Bacon had been overwhelmingly beaten for Gov ernor by Mr. Stephens. After a campaign in which that grand old man had been abused and ridiculed by Bacon’s friends until he vai worn out and exhausted, he lived but a few months. Colonel Boyn ton, theu president ot the Senate, succeeded to the Governor’s chair. By no act of his own, but by the touch of death, he was placed in this delicate and respon sible position. In seif respect he was obliged to ask that he be allow ed to serve out his unexpired term. His friends hoped that he would be permitted to do so without opposi tion. But they 7 counted withou lh«ir Lost. Before Mr. Stephens’ body wi .3 buried, Major Bacon was in the field against Boynton, and a cam- aigi. never surpassed in virulence and ferocity was waged against the le-t and estimable gentleman. Wh :re w. s Major Bacon’s delicacy of lecling when Colonel Boynton and his frlen Is asked that he he al- 1 iwed to finish out in peace the term to which he had been called by death ? Queer People. seeineth right. A special from Tombstone, Ari Hr a says: Captain Pierce, of the San Carlos reservation, has offered to the Indians settled tn the San Pedro vallev under Eodiminzin, a reward ol #160 for the head of each Se Indian they may kill. This Is done to induce them to fight against the hostile* instead of join ing *iem { as it has been feared they would do. Captain Pierce states that none of the Indian scouts dis charged by Gen.Crook have reached the reservation. The barber’s shop was next door to the baker’s shop, and the baker had just gotten a ton of coal. The c.,al had been dumped on the side walk, ami after the fashisD of coal men, much nearer to the barber’s door than to the baker’s to whom it belonged. The barber had just got ten the lather on a customer, when one of the genus tramp came in. “Put in yer coal, mister ? “No,” said the barber, pleasantly “no,’’ my triend, that’s not my coal you know” The tramp had hardly disappeared round the corner when another opened the door. “Put yer coal in fur ye, mister?” “No,” said the barber a little sharply;“the coal’s not mine, I say. They kept coming, and seven of them appeared in twenty min utes, and to the eighth man the bar ber is alleged to have said: “Git! The blamed coal ain’t mine.” “Now see here,” said the shavee, “there ain’t no use of getting mad over it Ju-t put up a sign sayin’, ‘This coal ain’t mine.’ That’s all ye need.” “Say, you’ve got a great head,” said the taiLir, SLd in a few mo ments he had the sign stuck on the tep of the heap of coal. “Reckon i hat’ll fix it,” he remarked. The door opened and a tall man with a shovel looked in. “Say, mister, did you put that sign up, for did the other feller?” Then the barber, closed his shop and went out and got drunk—with malice afore thought . He had only one remark to make when Justice Meech fined him $5. “Mister Judge,” he said, “can’t I make that baker pay my final” warrior whose distempered forbade him distinction as a milita ry chieftain. He had been embit tered by the election of Davis over him as the Chief Magistrate of the Confederacy, and while wildly en thusiastic in his cause, he had little faith in its agents who commanded him. He fretted through four years of war believing that cause was lost because lie did not wear its greenest laurels, and when it failed he fretted through another score of years, proud that he was an alien and a stranger to his country aud half-contented that the South had lost because he had not been called to lead it. He had, in one of his tern pestuous oratorical flights, prom ised himself and the world that he would call the roll of his slaves on Bunker Hill, and when history mocked his prophecy by denyin him the right to call the roll of his slaves even in his own heartsome and hospitable home in Georgia, patriotism, ambition and hope per ished from his life, and he impa tiently waited until the shadows settled into night. He was abie the conflicts of the able; generous in all the best attributes of personal character;justiy oeloved or respec t ed by all who know him, either in his brilliant rising or his clouded setting sun; but he lived too lon fe . During the period in which a gen eration came and passed away, he learned nothing, forgot nothin and when he was lately borne to the City of the Silent, it was the luner- al pageant of what was only a lin gering memory of generally forgot ten greatness. Jefferson Davis coines to the fo rum or falls into epistolary effort now and then, apparently to teach the country and the world that the unforgetful shall not be forgotten. He was not of the hot-headed lead ers of the South, but he was among the most extreme in conviction and cool and able in counsel. He was chosen to the Presidency of the Confederacy, and to that trust he gave always faithful but not always wise devotion. Whether another could have achieved greater re sults for the rebellion, need not now be discussed. His was the po sition in which success only could be successful, aud in which failure, from whatever cause, must fall heavily upon the responsible chief. He did his part and failed; and failing, he was respected for the dignity with which he retired and accepted the judgment that left him without home or country. That his life should be a hopeless one since sceptre and nation had fled, was only the inexorable logic of the momentous events in which he was one of the most illustrious actors. Others could renew their allegiance and revive their devotion to the Union; but he embodied the lost cause in himself as its foremost representative; his work was ended and he could only wait until the long halt came to crystallize rever- en.-e for his memory among friends and temper the harsh resentments of foes. He had co-laborers akin to him in responsibility for the at tempt and failure to establish a slave Republic. Stephens, the sec ond executive officer, and Lee, the chieftain of the heroic armies of the stars and bars, were side by side with Davis in rebellion; but Steph ens was among the first to return to allegiance and official participation in the government he sought to overthrow, and Lee maintained the sublime dignity of silence. His battles were fought; his cause was lost, he had no war with destiny, and he lived in usefulness and hon or until his days were numbered. Davis could not have come with Stephens to share the honors of the nation he hads truggled to dis member; but he could and should have been equal to the philosophy of Lee. Could Tie have learned the lesson that Lee taught in mute but impressive eloquence, his Mont gomery speeches would never have been uttered to grate upon the con siderate judgment of the present, North and South, ‘like sweet bells jangled and out of tune,’ but Jeffer son Davis has learned nothing, has forgotten nothing, and he is one of the many who have lived too long.” From the Washington, Ga., Chrun iele. It is probably not generally mown that a very interesting relic if the war times is owned in this place. It is the canip chest of Pre lent Jefferson Davis which he used while visiting armies of the South rt is solid mahogany and as well made as skilled workmanship could make it; is three feet long, two fee deej* and one foot wide, by act ual measurement; a leaf hangs lown on each side, aud when raised makes a table three feet square, the Lid forming the center leaf. The in terior of the chest is in two com partments, one large and open, the other filled with cases of different depths that slide down and rest on each other. Some of these were made for holding salt, pepper and other condiments for table use, The lamented , Mr. Bobert Toombs recoguized this chest a few years ago, and remarked that he had eaten from it in the camps near Richmond. A,t the evacuation of the Confed erate capitol, Mr. Davis found he could not carry this chest with him and so requested Col. J. T. Tay lor Wood to present it toJMaj. John B. Weems. The latter, now de ceased, was the father of Mrs. Belle Virgin of this place, who now owns his very interesting relic. Mrs. Virgin lived in Macon until a few years ago, when she moved to this place. While living l -.ere she was first offered a thousand dollars for the chest by a Northern man who finally ran his bid up as high as three thousand dollars, when this lady, whose heart has always burned with that deep sense of pa- riotism for which our noble s iuth- ern women were so.noted, frankly told him that site would not sell this relic at any price to a man who had been an enemy to the South. this chest was brought on to Washington at the close of the war at the same time Mr. Davis came through, and was concealed here. Mrs. Virgin afterwards carried it to Macon when she moved from here there. It has been in her fa ther’s and her possession ever since it'was presented to him. The following note, the original of which Mrs. Virgin has, accom panied the chest: Colonel J. B. Weems, Commandant of Post: • In return for your kindness and at tention both to Mr. Davis and my self, please accept this camp chest. He trusts that you, under more fa- orable auspices, may have an op portunity of using it. J. Taylor Wood, Colonel. April 4, 1885. A finely engraved drawing from Hou Jon’s bust of Benjamin Frank lin is the frontispiece of the June Century, and several pages of “Un published letters or Benjamin Franklin, ” edited by the Hon. Big elow, add to tiie literary interest of the number. These letters are a part of the “Stevens Collection” of .Franklin’s manuscripts now owned by the United States Government, and abound in the good humor and shrewd and kindly wisdom for which Franklin’s writings are famous. The Rev. Dr. J. M. Buckley contributes a remarkable article on “Faith Healing and Kindred Phe nomena,” which is based on many years of inquiry on his own pari and on much trustworty testimony. Ilis conclusions are opposed to the claims of Christian “faith healers,” and the article, altogether, offers a mass of curious and important in formation. In their order the ii lustrated papers of the number are a “Literary Ramble,” by Austin Dobson, along the Thames from Fulham to Chiswick, in which we have allusions to many famous peo ple known in literature aud in his tory, and glimpses of the scenery along “the university-course”; Mrs. Schuyler van Rensselaer’s second paper on“American Country Dwell ings,” with drawings of some of the handsomest country-houses in the Eastern States;” a timely pa per on “Harvard’s Botanic Garden and Its Botanist,” by Ernest In- gersoll; and a paper by John Bur roughs on “Birds’Eggs,” with en gravings of twenty two varieties of eggs. The Antietam campaign is the subject of the war papers in this number, the illustrations re ferring mostly to the battle of An- tie’am, and forming perhaps the richest pictorial contribution yet made to the series. General James Long-treet’s reminiscences are covered by the title, “The Inva sion of Maryland.” -Gen. John G. Walker writes of the battles if ••Harper’s Ferry and Sharpsburg” -thelatter being the Confederate name for Antietam. Colonel Henry Kyd Douglas, of Jackson’s staff re lates anecdotes of “Stonewall Jack- son in Maryland ;”'and Charles Car- let on Coffin, the war correspondent, describes “Scenes at Antietam.” GENERAL NEWS- The (lhambi-r*of Di-piitie.-, I>\ LYot*“f2!16 lo 250, h.is agr.-eed !• •m-ider the repeal of ihe law <■ 302 regulaling the rel ition- of tin hurch an 1 state. .Since President Cleveland pur- im-ed his Bower in the northwest in suburb of Washington then as been a mighty rush of real es tate buyers in that direction. Every - ody wants a building lot sn the Pr- -nlerit’s neighborhood. As between Gordon and Bacon Spalding county is obliged to vote against the man whose inordinate tion caused J. S. Boynton to lose tiie office of Gover- n ir when the whole stale was ot theopinion Ih i - he was justly enti tled to it.—Griffin News. Her John Most, anarchist, has been sentenced to the penitentiary of New York for one year and fined 1500. His assoi iate, Braunschweig, got nine months in the pentientiary and fined 1250; Schneck was sent to the penitentiary for nine months, but was not fined. Premier de Freycient in announc ing the decision of the Fro- Gov ernment to ex--’ '7 ices, said that there was no fear ot danger, but that the attitude of the princes had disturbed public opin ion and their presence afforded rallying point for enemies of the republic. Rutherford B. Hayes, of Ohio, is said to have grown weary of the poultry yard, and is pining for a re turn to Congress. Tiie solitude of the oblivion into which lie has fallen has become very oppressive, and he would welcome any change that would rend the veil of gloom which encompasses him. The Stone Mountain Granite Company has sold Stone Mountain to the Southern Granite Company an organization consisting of Geo. Morelin, John Geottage and Willi i m Heffron, of Cincinnati, and Samuel H. and William H. Vena ble, of Atlanta. The price paid was $75,000. Ex-Gov. Foster says the Ohio Republicans well never get tired of voting for Blaine. He is said also to entertain theopinion that if an Ohio man were given the second place it would add strength to the ticket. It might be mentioned in strict confidence that he thinks the second blank should be filled by 7 the name of Charles Foster. Capt. Eads has obtained a favor able report from the Senate Com merce Committee on his T^iuant- epec Ship Railway scheme. Capt. Eads is one of the greatest engi noers of the age. If he can secure the proper backing he will haul ships across the Isthmns. He has never failed in an undertaking yet THE TIME HAS COME FOR Medals, badges AND Summer Goods. 1 hey can be Manufactured in Newnan W.E. Avery &Co. Ve have lotind our business increasing even at this, time ol year :i‘l have added another workman to our force and hope to be more rompt in the execution ot all Watch. Clock and Jewelry repairing Our stock of Watches. Clocks, Jewelry,.Silverware, Spectacles, aney Stalionarv, Ac., will be kept up to the times in Styles and W. E AVERY & CO. W S. Winters. ESTABLISHED 1873. 6. W. Nelson WintersAHDNelson DEALERS IN- A . IX D OF EYERYfDESCRIPTICXN. 1 j» 1 The Radicals and the French gov ernment have reached an under standing respecting the expulsion of the French Princes. The Gov ernment promised the Bureaus of the Chamber of Deputies having the bill in cnarge that the Count of Paris'andhis wife and children and Princes Jerome and Victor Napole eon should be expelled immediate ly after the bill was passed. This was accepted as satisfactory and effect ed a reconciliation between the Government and Radicals, who will now vote for the Expulsion bill introduced by the Government. The concession consists ih nam ing the families against whom the bill would he enforced. At first t no government promised generally that if the bill was passed the' ex pulsions would he made immediate ly. This was considered by the Radicals evasive, but the -aming of toe very families wh< m tl ay rde ,t- ly desire to have expelled and against whom all their energies have been directed as those to be at once exiled, is accepted by the Rad icals as a full equiva’aat for their support. The passage ortho bill is considered certain. Taken in Exchange for New Ones. CHATTANOOGA, TENN. NEWNAN MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS. JOHN A. ROYETON. -DEALER IN- MARBLE&GRANITE. MONUMENTS, TOMB & HEADSTONES, TABLETS CURBING, ETC. ^•“Special^Designs'and Estimates for any desired work, iurnished on application. NEWNAN, GEORGIA The Knights of Labor, in their convention at Cleveland, have be gun the work of reorganization by adding six members to the Gener al Executive Board, which it is provided shall have permanent headquarters at Philadelphia, and shall sit in continuous session if necessary. All the commissions of the organizers were ordered recalled, and a Committee on re vision ot the Constitution, to re port at the October meeting in Richmond, Va., was appointed. It understood that provisions making state assemblies obligatory, and requiring their sanction before strikes may be entered, will be adopted. The proposed treaty be tween the Trades-Unions aDd the Knights of Labor which is under consideration, binds the Knights of Labor to refuse membership in the order to any one who is under the displeasure of the Trades-Unions. The Knights are in no way to inter fere with any strike by any craft which has a national or interna tional union, and are asked to re voke the charter of any local as sembly composed of workmen in one craft alone where the craft has a union, and to form what are known as “mixed assemblies,* THOMPSON BROS. Bedroom, Parlor and Dining Room Fnrnitnre. Big Stock and Low Prices. PARLOR AND CHURCH ORGANS WOOD AND METALLIC BURIAL CASES 0^Orders *attended,to at any hour day or night. Bepl6-|ly » THOMPSON BROS. Newnan. Ga. BRING YOUR JOB WORK TO THIS FFICE And Get it Done in The Latest Stales. We Guarantee Satisfaction. HALE SEMINARY! NEWNAN, GEORGIA. sl885- 1886 THE SPRING TERM BEGIN.S 11, Special inducements offerad to pupils desiring board. Number of pupils during the year 1885 ONK HINDBKb AND FOETY-ON*. Address the Principal for catalogue. C. L. MOSES, Principal. A. C. WILLCOXCXJ Asaist- JIF.8, C. L. MOSES,j anU. LOTHERSVILT.E, GEORGIA John E. Pexdepokast PrinciDiii SPRING TEEM Opens January 6, 1886. Tuition per Month 41 6' to *3 < Board per Month t&00 to tlfa Board per Month Jhrom Mon day to PridayT One hundred and n during 1885. Tf.Send for)eatalogue. n .,'-. J7.ly I nine pupil* "nrolt, ,ax Alexander House. BY MRS. «. M. HANVKY Aal. iOpposite Moor* and Marsh, Atlanta. Ga. First class Table aad Good Hoobm. Frio* of Board Moderate.