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THE TIMES
Corner Broad and Jackson Streets
Published every Saturday by
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ljumusbtll
VOL. XVII.
THOMASVTLLE, GA.
)AY, MAY 18, 188971
Her Choice.
She celled three knights before her throne
Ah, fair wee she, I ween,
And there above them stood alone
Their rightful liege and queen.
And then quoth she "A tasfc—behold—
To each a choice belongs.
One leads my wars, one guards my gold.
And one shell sing my songs.”
Then forth there stepped the godllest
knight
That ever couched a lance,
Dark was bis eye and darkly bright
The soul within his glance.
He was the bravest of the three,
The idol cf the throngs.
“Oh queen!” he cried, “this choice to me,
That I may sing thy songs-”
Ernest McGafley
“If a woman is pretty.
To me ’tla no matter.
Be she blonde or brunette.
matter,
look at her."
Is rarely. If over*
a of pate sallow faces, blotched >
sightly pimples, dull, lustreless eyes and ermv-
ctatod forms. Women eo afflicted, can be per
manently curod by using Dr. Pierce’s Favorite
Prescription: and with the restoration of
health oomes that l*siut.v which, combined
yrith good qualities of head and heart, makes
1 angels of loveliness.
■ *• Favorite Prescription ”
I is the only mcdlcino for
mn^n.sojd bywlrufrfi'Wa,
■guarantee from the
©TOmen uikeuui aw»,
f TED.];
in every case, or money will bo refunded.
Js a positive speci/le for all those painful dlsor.
ders. Irregularities and weaknesses with which
so many women arc afflicted,
Copyright, 1988, by WObld’8 DM. Med. Ass’tt.
DR. PIERCE’S PELLETS
Sheffield Land
And Investment Company. Such is
the title of a company seeking incor :
poration in the Dougherty Superior
court. The incorporators are Messrs
D. J. Sheffield, of Thomaaville, J. W.
Sheffield, of Americus, Frank Sheffield,
of Albany, W. S. Bell, ol Dougherty,
and M. W. Hodge, of White Spring,
Fla. The company asks to be incor
porated under a capital stock of $25,-
000, with the privilege of increasing it
to $500,000. Wo allude to this matter
to show the incorporators the advantages
that wonld inure to the enterprise, if
they will make Thomasville their head-
qaarters and place of basinets. The se-
of the incorporators is an old and
luhgtaotial businesa man of this place,
his known connection wuh
company and the facilities
that would be offered for bus
by reason of the many investors
who throng Thomasville every year,
would at onco place the company
the way of doing business. We offer
the suggestion for the consideration of
he stockholders, btoause we learn that
he loiation has not been determined
Come to ThcmasvilU.
Purely VegetabEe X
Perfectly Harmless!
UNEQUALED AS A LIVER PILL.
Smallest, Ckrapert, flwlc«t to take.
Ono tiny, Supur-i-oatcd Toilet a dose. Cures
Sick Headache, Bilious Headache, Constipa
tion. Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all de
rangements of tbo Stomach and Bowels.
EllUMI
OF PURE COD LIVER OIL
giro HYPOPHOSFHITES
Almost as Palatable as Milk.
go SURnticd that It can be taken*
digest'd, and imtimlated by th® most
sensitive stomach, when the plain oil
cannot be tolerated; and by th© com
bination of the oil with the hypoplMM*
phltes la much more efficacious.
Remarkable as a fitsh producer.
Persons coin rapirtly wile taking It.
SCOTT'S EMULSION ia acknowledged by
Physicians to bn tho Finest end Best prepa.
ration in the world for tho relief and euro of
CONSUMPTION. SCROFULA.
GENERA!.. DEBILITY, WASTING
DI32A3SS, EMACIATION,
COLDS and CHRONIC COUCHS.
77.1 orrii remedy for Consumption. and
JfhtiiSj ill Children, Sold bp all Dmppist^
JAMES MEANS
$4 BHOE
JAMBS MEANS
m SHOE
According to l’cur liecds*
Silk Worms.
Something like forty years ago the
people of Georgia passed through
what has since been known as the
morns multiconlus, or silk craze.
Strange as it may seem, whole plan
tations were planted in mulbeny
trees, and snug fortunes flowed as
freely, in imagination, from the spin
nings of the tiny silk worms, as they
do from the tongues of the western
real estate agent.
The craze collapsed.
The late Mr. John Stark was en
gaged in the propagation of what is
called the mulberry silk worms a few
years before his death, but various
causes conspired to retard his pro
ject.
About six weeks ago Gus Stark
and Adolph Jerger received from the
Deparment of Agriculture at Wash
ington City a quantity of tiny eggs of
the same variety of silk worms, and
they set about hatching them out.
Their success has been admirable,
and they have thousands of worms,
ranging in size from a pin to a lead
pencil. The oldest ones will begin
to spin their cocoons in a few days.
The worms are fed on mulberry
leaves.
The reporter suggested that they
would make fine fish bait, but they
may not, in the fitness of things, be
relegated to such base uses, hut
must, instead, spin from their tiny
bodies the raiment wherewith the
fair ones of earth may be clad.
Wall lines bC Iho nboro shoes for nolo IT
CITY SHOE STORE. Thomasville. Ga.
•tlmnlatca the torpid Il v
cna the digestive organa,
hoaeln* and are uncqnaled ua an
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE.
In malarial dWtrlrta their vlrthca arc
wldAlvrrrHjrnltFd, «u» they p®*sesn pce-
front! i that- polxou.” ruawnUy Ktisnr
boated. UoNCMnnll. ;Prl«e,5i>»ct».
Sold Everywhere.
Office, 44 Murray St., Now York.
CATARRH
Dressed Lumber.
Read the advertisement of Mr.
Daniel A. Horn, ot Boston, who is
prepared to supply dressed lumber,
mouldings, brackets, and all kinds of
building material on the most satis
factory terms. Mr. Horn is thor
oughly reliable and will offer induce
ments to those who give him an
opportunity.
State Sunday Schools
Brunswick, Ga., May 9.—The
Sunday school convention met at 9 o’
clock this morniog and enjoyed a splen
did service of song; led by Prof. Smith,
of LaGrange. President Reynolds, of
the international association, mrde an
address on “Wants of the Work in
Georgia,” and asked for contributions
to meet the convention’s expenses.
The sum of $1,250 was pledged cheer
fully and in a short time*
President Reppard, of the state as
sociation, reigned, and J. M. Green, of
Atlanta, was elected president.
At the afternoon session an interest
ing talk was made by Mrs. W. P. Hig
gins.
Hon Wm. Levering gave an earnest
talk on “the instruction of the Bible.’
Judge Van lijpps, of Atlanta, was
elected first vice-president.
Rev. William Shaw made a stirring
speech on “Responsibility.”
The “Homestead.”
We have received the initial num
ber of the Old Homestead, a monthly
magazine published at Savannah, Ga.,
by Dayis Bros. The publication is the
only one of itQ character in the soqtb
Its object is to encourage literature,
art, science and the domestig virtues
that make home happy, refined and
attractive. This number contains the
latest serial story by Rider Haggard,
a complete history of the Independent
Presbyterian church, recently destroyed
by fire in Savannah, a beautiful poem
on the sa-^e, an entertaining ^ory by
Weigand, farm dots, puzzle department,
choice vocal and instrumental music, list
of valuable premiums for agents, and
selected and original matter. The en
graving, ‘“^‘he ^ates,” and those of the
Independent Presbyterian church and
its old historic bell, are works of
The attractive title page, the handsome
typographical appearance of the maga
zine, its character, purposes, and va
ried literary and musical features will
make it an indispensable necessity.
The June number will contain poems,
sketches, essays, and young fqlk’fi de
partment by several brilliant southern
writers, especially prominent among
whom are those from Georgia. The
price of the magazine is only fifty gente
a year. Sample copies and premium
lists will be a sent to any sddrttt on
application. Davis Brothers, publish
er and proprietors, Savannah, Ga.
The Lease Closed.
Mr. L. P. Roberts has dosed a* lease
with Messrs Hammond & Hawkins for
the commodious brick kcu9e facing the
South Georgia College Campus, and
next season the house will be uoder his
management and control Mr. Rob
erts has had a wide and successful ho-
experience, having been connected
with the world-renowned Ponce De
Leon, at St. Augustine, during the
season of 1887-1888, and with the
Glen House, White Mountains, for
several seasons.
Miss Annie Arkwright, one of the
most charming representatives of Sa
vannah society, is in the oity, the guest
Mr. and Mrs. Leb. Dekle. The
young lady will be cordially welcomed
here; by her many Thomasville friends.
She will spend several weeks with her
friends.
The Drs. Hopkins now occupy
the residence of the younger doctor
Dawson street, between Jackson
and Fletcher streets. The office
will remain the same. Prospective
changes in the structure of the old
homestead brings about the tempo
rary change.
The reports come from all over the
stato that times are dull. It is not a
very bad sign, as now is the farmer’s
opportunity, and they are wisely devot
ing all necessary attention to their farm
work, Who fails to recognise the im
portance of the farmer to the commer
cial interests of this country, is a pur
blind protectionist. The fanner is the
very hope of the oountry—he feeds us
all, whether we publish a paper or pud
dle in iron.
Try the Cure!
Ely’s O ream Bal m
Cleanses thB2reuaIPas*gfl%. Al“
Georgia is in trpib the empire state
of the union. Its agricultural condition
is perhaps best of any other southern
state. It leads in manufacturing; and
its mineral wealth is practically un
touched, while the marble and granite
quarries are in themselves great re
sources.
had
that
and
Some New York capitalists have re
cently obtained from the Mexican gov
ernment concessions which will no
donbt make one 04 the richest
syndicates in the world, result in great
ly hastening the development of the re
sources of the country, andperhape
have a considerable influence 03 its
politics, The ionoessions give the
sole right to bay all the land they want
within a certain area, at a price not ex
ceeding eleven cents per acre* the sole
right to establish within these boon-:
dories any manufacturing industries
they may see fit, the right to bring im
migrants into this territory at a nomi
nal sum for railroad fare, and several
other exclusive rights of a minor char
acter. Betides all this the Mexican
government will guarantee them 10 per
oent. interest on all moosys in vested by
them within the limits of the grant,
. A particle fa am.—- ~
fa BgrefnWf. FricotOe.ntDnur|!*U«rby
moil. ELY BROTHERS,seWarrenSfc-Zfaw York.
tad WfcUkey M®©-
_ lt»cnr*dattache sriffl
I out pain. Book of p«*
I Uctuan *ent FREE.
isifipaiss&
At (he solicitation of the director, of
th* Bichmond Terminal Company, Ur.
John Inman has dunged hi, intention
of resigning the presidency of that
company. Had hi* resignation been
I tent to tho dircotora at their meeting
last Wednesday, Os was expected, Ur.
Pat C Jhoun wonld certainly hare been
elected aside successor. But no direc
tor wss more emphatic than Mr. Cal
houn io urging Mr. Toman to retain
the pre-ideocy. Mr. Caiboun will con
tinue to serve the company as general
counsel with headquarters in New
York.
Editor £itts, of the CarroBtoo
Times, is the victim of a practical joke.
List week he asristed in carrying an
unfortunate to Mffiedgerille, !to be
placed under the can of Dr. Powell.
On his departure same out wind the
IW fajjhp hope-
indy insane haTing been taka to the
un at MUlcdgrrille. Brother
Fitts is now engaged in a heated ar
gument to corrrinoo the pqbEc that bn
is got insane.
The Negro at the North.
There are negro polltidans in the
south who, following the lead of
northern republicans, make it a prac
tice to cry out -about the political
proscription oi the colored race in
this section. They say that because
the negro does not vote, it follows
that he is not permitted to vote; bat
they fail to state the tact that the re-
publican party has no organization
here, and that therefore there is no
incentive offered the colored repub
licans to vote, and no candidates for
them to vote for.
All this is understood to constitute
great hardship, a great outrage, in
fact, on the negro vole; but there is
no one to deny that the negroes in
the south are not getting on in a
material way as well as the average
class of white people north or south.
There is no one to deny that the
negroes in the south are not prosper
ing, accumulating property and ac
quiring education; there is no one to
deny that they are not better treated
by the southern whites than they are
by the white people of the north.
Here they have something better than
the so-called civil rights that the re
publican sectiocalists prate about.
They have the right to work in the
trades, they have the right to acquire
property, they have a right to the
standing that their integrity and their
character give them, and they have
the right to work side by side with the
while mechanics aDd tradesmen.
These rights are unknown at the
north. There the negro mechanic
has no chance whatever, not even
the chance to earn his living except
as a hotel waiter or porter, or as a
whitewasher or bootblack. The situ
ation at the north is not improving at
Rev. Hutchens C. Bishop, rec
tor of St. Phillip’s Protestent Episco
pal church, recently said to a reporter
of the New York Times:
Instead of improving, the situation
seems to be growing worse. Colored
men would gladly learn mechanical
trades, and wherever there have been
openings for them, the colored peo
pie have shown themselves the equals
of their white competitors as median-
Only servile occupations are
open to the colored men, and
these the rates of pay are lower to
colored people than to white men in
the same occupation. Under such
circumstances, how can a rapid,
moral, mental and material develop
ment be expected of the colored race?
They put the little money they re
ceive to better use than any other
people I know of. But the margin
above the actual necessaries of life is
so very small that little show can be
made of it in any direction.
‘The forms this prejudice takes in
the north are often more humiliating
that the political antagonism the col
ored people encounter from their
masters m the south. There colored
men work side by side .with their
white colleagues in all the mechanical
trades, and no effort is made to pre’
vent them from learning any branch
of industrial employment they may
choose. The material and moral
and intellectual aspirations of the
colored man are not interfered with
in the south, bat, on the contrary,
are encouraged in many ways by the
white people who learned before the
war to look to him for all the me
chanical work that was wanted. For
the colored man was the mechanic of
the south betore the war, as well as
the field and plantation hand and day
laborer. When, therefore, the col
ored artisan copies north and tnes to
fyid work at his trade, and is met by
refusal of white men to work along
side of him, he encounters a kind of
antipathy and prejudice that are un
known in the couth. His develop
ment along the lines of morality and
industry is interfered with and ham
pered, and there is small wonder
his progress is slow and precarious
To this testimony may be added
t^at of Rev. H. A. Monroe, of St.
Mark’s Methodift Episcopal church
in New York city, who also talked
a reporter ol the Times:
“I have contended against this
proscription of my race upon every
opportunity, but it seems as if the
lines were bein g drawn closer all the
while; and when inch a representative
Christian body as the Young Men’s
Christian association closes its doors
to our young men, the prejudices of
other people are scarcely to be woo*
dered at.”
-What excuse is given fat refusing
to admit colored yooths to the Yoong
Hen’s Christian association?’’ he ns
asked.
'Neat, that I harasses heard. And
that axe c
superior tom*ha-
whit* and I was
the south there is
Is and neighborhood
meet in the north.
Wilmington—plaoes
the moat hidebound
of democratic
strongholds—a coW min may hare
anything in the t, of a residence
that he is able toV, f or . He may
bny or he may not
unable part of the
and able to pay the
uked of toy white
All this is interesting b suggestive.
Nevertheless, the profexpei pom;.
and sectionalism of Mp 0rtb
continue to declare that
people make it a business
trample on the negro. Il
enough to have the northern
picture presented.—Constitutii
surprising that j^ll “d procreaion w» quiekly
hJZjl1 ronne<, > the Zouaves and other veterans
The Philadelphia Pr
sustained by prejndioe
South, causing it to frequently
flow with pzsiion in a most
manner, drags the South into
cushion of the Oklahoma rash
most unwarranted manner. It s]
that it
seek the Oklahoma territory instead
rich fields of the South, for
there they can exercise their politic
faith unharmed, but in the South, tin
lives are threatened for the exercise
their preference. It admits that
South is the richer section, but the
safer one politically. Does the
Press think that a man with a thimble-
full of brains would be influenced by
such statements? It will result in a
good deal of free advertising of this
section, and those who would be prej
udiced by such articles are not desir
able citizens to any community. Such
attacks are similar to the attempted
sting of an insignificant fly on a bull’s
horn.
Young men who are dissatisfied
with farm life and anxious to rush
the cities, should bear in mind
the fact that there are now, in the
city of Atlanta alone, fully one
thousand young men—able, intelli
gent and trustworthy—who are
out of employment and roaming
fruitlessly from store to store in
search of a situation at wages barely
enough to give them food and lodg-
Young men, stick to the farm
—Rochelle Watchman.
ng oar applicants; men In wry
way worthy ef eqol social consider
ation with the better cli* of white
. The newest thing in London
household economy is a female
butler—a maiden dressed in a livery
men. I hare fired in the nth, il-
.V, V »n T I.A 1 1 w1l2.i1
though, until I left school,/ aer
seoa a colored person tx-
of blue, green, gold, or scarlet, as ben of my father's r L -
taste may prefer. The effect alleged brought ap in the <t . prialed s!^)]
is "more quiet and equal style.” I public school wjr' to the late -
A CITY GREETS GORDON.
fuh-
f he is willing
that weald
Georgia’s Governor Royally
Received at Elizabeth,
New Jersey.
Elizabeth, N. J., May 9.—Gov
ernor Gordon, at Georgia waa tendered
a magnificent reception to-night by the
Drake Zouaves and other veterans of
the onion army. Goa. Gordon
accompanied by hi* pervooal aid, Gen.
H. C. Elliot. On hi* arrival in tho
eity, at 5:30 o'clock, the Zouaves fired
a rotate from a revolotiouiy
Goa. Gordon and party w<*o driven to
the rarideooe of Got. Green, where aa
dinner was served. There
were twenty-five or thirty gentlemen
at the table, inefoding Gen. Kearney,
•on of the gallant “Phil. Kearney,”
Gen. Abbett, son of ex-Governor Ab-
bett, Adjt.-Gen. Styker and Gen.
Drake.
8ALCTID BY THI ZOUAVES.
After dinner the Drake Zouaves
formed in front of the remdenoe tad
presented arms as the governor appear
ed on the veranda escorting Gen. Gor
don. The two governors end Gen.
Drake entered a carriage drawn by four
hones. The other members of the
distingned party entered the other car-
loving through the crowded streets
the armory, the houses along the
being brilliantly illuminated. Py.
technics of all colors were everywhere
' the thoroughfares were sblaae with
fires. Msyor Grier and a large
blage of citizens gave to Governor
loo, at the armory, a most enthn-
i welcome. The formal introdoo-
Governor Gordon was made by
C^oseph E. Fetm.
Wesson Gordon’s speech.
':n the applause which greeted
® 0Vl ir Gordon as ho rose to reply
h*d Eified, he spoke aa follows: .
“®lDrsle, Ladies and Fellow 8ol-
di erfl: \scircely know how to thank
you fore magnificent reception and
for thoU r pmd mo in the general
order cA,; D g tbia command and
making u,' ls S pecial guest of this
valiant vA„ 60I p B- p thank yon
it.
for the trit mo j a general
order. Bu
What the Alliance Men Say.
Bro. B. F. Newman, secretary of
Pilkinton Academy Alliance, Molena,
Ga., says: Resolutions of State Alli
ance to use cotton bagging adopted
with enthusiasm. Will take 1,500
yards of blgging.
Bro. R. H. Kingman and H. I.
Stewart, of James Station Alliance,
write that their alliance heanily en
dorses the action of Atlanta conven
tion and obligates itself to take 1,500
yards of bagging, half 15th of Sep
tember and balance 15th of October.
Bro. E. T. Kendall, of Creswel*
Farmers Alliance, writes: Our Alii
ance agrees to stand by the action ol
the State Alliance so far as we possi
bly can and also to use no other than
cotton bagging though the jute deal
ers should undersell the manufactories
of cotton bagging, and will obligate
ourselves to take enough to cover
our entire crop, which will not be less
than fifteen hundred vards.—Griffin
Sun.
your complim_ ou ij not ^ f, r h, Ye
exceeded my L, j ,pp re ciato also
the courage wt Qen , D „ ke hu
hibited in thus uring 0M wio n(ar .
victimized hi, the . Btdg0 , C pi.
sode, only a few^, lg0
The twentj-first annual meeting of
the Georgia Press Association will be
held in Macon, Toetxlaj, May 28. An
unusually large attendance is expected.
Arrangements have been made for the
entertainment of members of the
ciation at the Hotel Lanier at special
rates. From Macon the association
will start on its trip through the West,
under the auspices of the Central rail
road.
Lying and Fishing-
Sow. Trtib lice, and jag and hock.
See the Usher by th® brook.
By the nrer lylns.
Sow, Mg*.in. at ere behold him.
Shawl ax fish a dealer sold him -
Col. Fred. Gnat stopped over to at
tend oee of Queen Victoria's “drawing
rooms” on bb way to Vienna, sad
appeared before her mqcriy ia ri!k
itockings and knee breeches.
■d you characterized mo
an ardenk Qli 0 f Ihg republic „Q(1
-vve and support it,
When I rcad ^ 0 m0 „ ing p lpm
that Capt. Drake, s - ew Jemji
was
about to be expell> om th , 0 . A R
for the pioniog of B ge npon 0e n.
Gordon, of Oecrgia\ whe „ j fttrth „
read tho fiery tlircat lhc rwlonbu .
bio warriors, who wm, eUiDg lheir
tomahawks for Drtk^^ j begM
to think prudence diit tblt j g n4
immediate refuge witl y m )mi3 _
diction. The iodignalf tbeM jnite
gentleman waa so intca lt , y. m ,j
retreat or another civil /.med the
only alternatives. For \ n ly had I
reeoved one badge at W, UI }, 0 f
your gallant corps, but aL„ j ong
the bine fines of those L, j. 0 f
brave old warriore, they V covered
my breast with badges unL u
decked as might have bcesLujhsl
of France by hia own brav£, wen
If, therefore, the be of thtLj. bot
pursuers ot Gen. Drake
proportion to the number hg*.,
what would have become of '
ennobled by a spirit of magnani
mity?
“Ah, sin! there is a difference in
the tribunals that try men and their
actions. There are tribunals oi laws
andcootts.' By these, convictions or
acquittal is'qmck. But the tribunal
of history stands afar off—on the
highlands of futurity whose lofty
peaks shall lift the presiding jadge high
above the clouds of present passion
and gives to his ejeji far wider
sweep of the horisoOLOf the past
Before that greater tribunal of history
we shall an be tried. Who would
not prefer to stand before that bar in
the person of the magnanimous old
veterans who gathered around the
horse and eagerly grasped the hand
of your speaker in fraternal greeting,
than in the infinitesimally saudl spirit
of the fomentor of hate m this free
and Christian republic?
history’s verdict on the war.
“What is to be the verdict of that
far off tribunal ot his|oiy between
you and me! Between North and
South—their motives and aspirations
in thfc great civil conflict* Shall I
tell you what it wfil be? It has
already been chiseled on the marble
shaft erected by a broken-hearted
Kentucky father over his two dead
soldier boys. One had joined tne
Northern, the oiher the Southern
army. Both had been killed and
they were buried side by side. On
the monument above their grave the
lather had carved words of this im.
port:
“Here lie my brave boys—one
died fighting for the Union, the other
for the rights of the States—each
died doing his duty as he conceived
NO. -IdffJ. " , 0VLi - I '- D
Resident Bf-uiist,
““■MO. - - - hreug
a£K;.SN£3S M “ tt ■*■*•«.**
= :
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
B k. iiawkins, ,71~ ■
. * i
Attomev and Oonncellor al
Law.
TIIC'MASVuig, - . Qi' JSffl
E A MeUtyrt
dtcSl-lr
N. G. TULLES, M. D n
Regular Practitioner.
_ Ovnea Horaa-l*t, u.,«. aa* i w,".
J^ITCnEU,* SUTCUKLL,
Attomoys-at-Uaw,
si
B ANSF.LL & MKRRITJ,
Attomeys-at-Law and Iaror 4 ./’* !
ance Agents.
OOe*-OvH Watvs store.
g g. mclendon,
Attomey-at-Lnw,
ProapiMuaUoa «t*«a to at
Offlca-Orer WaU*s iton, eor*»r
w.
G. PATRICK
Homeopathic Physician and
Surgeon. 1 ’
VIIOMAS TILLS, .
Can D® round ai oft ot
i®r*rmana) or at nmIl-
itwMB Broad and Craw
toaatoiuUly aaxacod
HOW THE SPEECH WAS RECEIVED.
Governor Gordon was frequently
interrupted by applause in the course
of his address, and at the close thexe
was long, continued applause.
Governor Green then welcomed
Governor Gordon to New Jersey.
He said that the Zouaves did them
selves an honor in extending the
magnificent greeting, which was an
evidence that as he fought bravely as
a true soldier, they recognized that
the war was over and the union re
united; that we live under the consti
tution and one flag, with one aim,
one hope and one destiny.
REV, O. A. GLAZE CROOK SPEAKS.
Rev. Otis A. Glazebrook, of St.
John’s Church, who was a chaplain
in a Georgia regiment and is now a
New Jersey guardsman, followed
Governor Green.
At the close of the reverend gen
tleman’s remarks, a reception wa*
held and nearly the entire assem
blage availed themselves of the op
portunity to grasp the hand of Gov
ernor Gordon.
- - — — Oaltar, ,
Hint*, etc. Alao ailt tuno ia«tratfi«nlO
and puaranteo the work fu* It tuuDt'is,
uX”.c.“ ‘.“./r^s:: .
pappara wilt mtat with prompt attention. *
o.w. hkhrixo.
turfing
So far a* wa ataani Dot oae of Ike
my onion at Ac Hew Yovk eeatea-
naal rtf erred to owe ot Cm f writer
claims of Waaldngtea npoo Dm grati-
tads of kit eowatry. It wash*whs
introduced th* male h the United
He ecadae^d faeoei
male farm at Mount Vm
brought th* aula into high favor
among the Virginia farmer*. The
male anrmtaa cf Waaiington'i mule*
were a gift from the King cf Spain.
MOT GRAND ARMY BAI
Imagine my relief, howi
on examination I found not'
grand army badge, bnt the
companies and regiments a'
organizations. AH apprebi
Gen. Drake’s reputation and
safety at once subsided and
ful assurance again
that the war was really over
peace was to be permanent,
jesting aside, how sad is such
hibition ol temper on so
misapprehension. I do not know
such a scene may affect others,
as for myself I would trust
thousandfold more confidence,
honor and safety of the republic
the keeping of'hose worn and
scarred heroes who boned their
tional prejudice* At Appooutox
who were glad to extend
greetings to the sincere man who
fought against them, than to mat 1
that republic to the men who are
A Mysterious Retirement.
Mr. Flagler, the mfUioatire owner of
the matt palatial hotel building ia the
world, it not yet la a condition to have
everything as he phase*. The New
York World says:
“There wu not a Iittl. wonderment
experienced sometime ago by Ibe mys
terious retirement of Mr. Jobs H.
Flagler from the Presidency of the
“ American Meat Gompaay, capita]
125,000,000." The eorpontsou wee
•tattieg out with a gnat flourish of
trampele, aad plenty of ether things of
a more substantial character, when sud
denly Mr. Flagler stepped down aad
our, aad lb* eaterorist came to a halt.
Ex-Senator Warner Miller ia now
elected to aaodeed Mr. Flagler, aad
matters prestuaably will pressed. Th*
explaariioa of this chaag* of l*ad*n is
that Mr. P. D. Armour i* afro *qpmcd
in th* meet btmioem, aad Uu4 k* k *a-
aual easterner to the n!ea*</«8,000 > -
000 woeth of eottea seed oD bought ef
the -trail” la which be aad Mr. Flag-
hr an jointly manned, Mr. Ar-
momr is credited with being eo touted
m to be taabhfrio wy to Mr. Ftegsr.
Com* dswa either from th* Mu*
at th* mat,” aad th* latter ro-
the meat The anal b that
d* asi always Mag jsdifwd
Rslaw ysa has* • gnat dwl i
the other fcllew."
The Road Congress.
A Port Allegheny (Pi.) inaa, who
was tilted out of a keeping ear benh
by a jolt of a train, exclaimed ia an
unconscious way: “Don’t—don’t— rather
itoi
-We doing hoaor to the metaory of
a RXi for VRAixauuTV.
“Whatsit ■ human dtai
ofafi ages ««d a! dviSxed canUies
most love sad sdmrtd What bit
that history lovta to ramA that fisc:
longest and evokes the highest tualaz
in song and in story' Thai the
sculptor make
marble and the
upon hts canvas! Is it
prejudice, and hate;
■Mate Alhste, May
r W «w thm
(hd t* see that there kas keaa
■erica i* th* state t Hi*
.tad that the prespset it gg*d
■ they are weft known ot-
Iwithth*
Wy
twaeretK
ryttem
the
t condition of her
Wm w. imi’Cis,.M. a,
Office, up-stairs. ;
ot »ro*4 aad fl«tcb*r»uo«U. $*£1
T.
8. DEKLE, M. D.,
icr.«i,.i. wiSTSSreS:
Office in Hay* Building,:
B**1<i*bc©—Coruer ColUf® ar#un# utiKM
elite iIemL
m
T®lej>bone oommunleatloo, 8©.»tor night
Pianos Tuned & Music Taufftit.
Prof. E. H. Baldwin
Takes plttHuro in loformln* the fMtepfao
Ti ;tr 0 ( j lt { ^ t. -- -«
music,
TUOUA8VIIXE, OA.
■CM*:* Lets. UltMetoWAMdl ol
BURIAL CASKETS
il?
COFFINS, v
3oth Metalic and Wood
ie© Broact &t.
NIGHT tim.
i °"’££%~ a wZ£ c S2L
»r by B. P. Walker, at hie netds
.Cor* l>*wtoo Md Clijr flt*.