Newspaper Page Text
Tlxe Greorsia ‘WeekLy TelearaDh and. Journal &c Messenger.
Telegraph and Messenger.
MACON, SEPT. 27, 1870.
Col. Lawton’** Acceptance.
Forsyth, Ga., Septombe/ 21, 1870.
Col. TP. J. Znicton:
j-yym p Tn By a resolution of lbs Convention
assembled to-day, at this place, we were ap
pointed a committee to inform yon of your nom
ination os the Democratic candidate for both
the 41st and 42d Congress for the Fourth Con
gressional District of Georgia. Trusting that it
vill meet with yonr approbation, and that yon
may accept the same,
We remain, yours respectfully,
L. A. Lake,
Jno. D. Stewart,
T. F. Newell,
Committee.
Macok, Ga., September 23d, 1870.
To Messrs. L. A. Lane, John D. hteicart, and
T. F. Noted, Committee:
Gentlemen—Yours of the 21st inst. inform
ing me of my nomination has been received.
I accept the nomination and will nse all lauda
ble efforts to be elected. Hoping that the gen
erous confidence reposed in me by the Conven
tion which yon represent may not be misplaoed,
I am gentlemen, very respectfnlly,
Your obedient servant,
WrsBORN J. Lawton.
The Georgia Press. I f rom that section will certainly be small in pro- 1
The Democrats and Conservatives of the 1st ^6°^ of TaTbo^U hardly prove an aver-
Congressional District, have nominated capt. a ge—all that will be, has already been made, as
W. W. Paine, of Savannah, as their candidate fruiting was stopped by the drought,
for the unt-xpired term of the 41st Congress, We hear of muoh damage to the open cotton
and Hon. A. T. McIntyre, of Thomas oonnty, | b y «»e heavy rains of last week. In the north-
Foreign Notes.
[Prepared for the Telegraph and Messenger. |
The “London Times” has brought forward
several publications, pretending to know the
efforts which were made by France and Prus
sia to secure the alliance of Italy immediately
after the ontbreak of the war. The French
for the full term of the 42d Congress.
western part of the county the damage was eon- Government, being ahead of its rival, made the
, , . , , .siderable. Mr. Henry Green thinks he was TOOBf . Finnmra- bnt
Frank Johnson, freedman, shot and danger- damaged $1000, as he had 300 bushels of com as the crisis had cone over night, the Italian
ously wonnded Sam. Henderson, ditto, at Thom- and some cotton flooded and ruined. Fences Cabinet succeeded in escaping any formal alii-
asville, last Saturday night. were washed away that had been standing for anoe on ^e p i ea ^ the army wa3 not ready;
Jim Porter, a mulatto who assumes to repre- T®" 8 * . and the French being confident of victory, at
1 The Talbot oonnty Treasury is in demooratio loat accep ted this excuse, Italy promising to arm
condition : | with all due haste. Count Brassier de St Simon,
sent Chatham county, in the lower branch of
theAgenoy, has been arrested in Atlanta and
made to give bond in the stun of $750 for the
seduction of his niece, Bath Williams.
The Savannah Nows say3:
Tho Bads had a conclave on Monday night at
their wigwam, Market Square. Wilson was the
orator of the occasion, and the vote was taken
Beoeived in the County Treasury since March I the North German representative in Florence,
22d 1870 $0315,30
Paid out —— 4199,77
Leaving baL in Treasury, $2115,59.
In Hearing.—On yesterday morning (says
the Newnan Herald of Friday,) our citizens j
had been authorized in the meantime to invito
Italy to an alliance with Prussia on the follow
ing basis: “The Berlin Cabinet would not ob
ject to the faithfal execution of the Franoo-
Italian September Convention, viz. Italy might
compel Franco to withdraw her garrison from
Borne, according to the stipulations of the
andreceived with great applause to send thi| e heard plainly the whistle of the Engine on the treaty* though the departure of the French
speaker, “an dey ain’t ob no ’count o’ dcmsel- The cars are expected to reach the Depot, m
ves. Now, we’se gwine to try do simon black this place, before the first day of Ootober.
Republicans.”
Mr. Selig, of the firm of Guekenhoimer &
Selig, Savannah, wholesale grocery merchants,
died in New York, Wednesday morning, of con
gestive fever.
The Columbus Enquirer says:
The English Colony.—Tho total number of
English operatives brought out by Wm. Clegg
was seventy-eight—principally women, but a
fair proportion of mon and children. All are
Ex-Gov. Yancb was in Augusta on Thursday;
was serenaded at tho Planters’ Hotel, and made
a half hour’s speech, in which he gave some ac
count of affairs in North Carolina. We extract
the following from the Chronicle & Sentinel:
troops would evidently swell the hostile ranks,
facing the German legions, by ten thousand
men. The recovery of Nioe and Savoy, ceded
to France in 1859, was offered as a farther in
ducement. And, in truth, the ooonpation of
these two provinces which have remained Ital
ian in heart, wonld have been accomplished
without almost any bloodshed, as they were en
tirely destitute of troops. The bait was tempt
ing enough. The cession of Nioe, the home of
Thirty thousand white men (in North Caro- Garibaldi, and Savoy, tho cradle of the Kings
lina) stayed away from the polls in disgust, of Italy, is looked upon as a crime by every
and the constitution was adopted. The men I Italian. Their recovery would ■ have under-
who were running the machine got into office mined the power of the party of action, and made of the
THE ‘TAINKILLEB,”
after twbntx years trial,
Mow Long can Faria hold Oat? I From Atlanta.
Tho Paris Bovue des Deux Mondes publishes Special to the Telegraph and Messenger.]
an article, on this subject from a high military Atlanta, Sept. 23
authority, from whioh the following is oxtrao- Senate.—The Gainesville and Ellijay nlq.
ted : road bill was reconsidered. The State aid clause
The possible duration of resistance increases was stricken out, and the bill passed after a
in proportion to the size of the plaoe. Sebaata- I y.v.,.
pol was defended for eleven months against an ® * . , , .
army of 200,000 men and pn artillery which at After a protracted debate the relief bill p^ss-
the end of the operations amounted to more ed by about two majority,
than 800 pieces. Why that long defenoe ? Be- Bullock vetoes the Savannah bill on the
nitionB. because it requires a residence of three months,
The French oapital wonld be still more diffi* and fails to provide an opportunity for the free
cult to block up; its continuous enciente is exercise of preference at elections in the elec-
aboutthirly.Bixkilomerios^ve-eighteofamile Uoa of mnnlcipal oJflcerg lecbmmends
each) in circumference, and the line of the forts .. , f. .... . • . “
more than 100 kilometres. To invest it would “ e divided into wards, as in other
require a vastly superior army than the one the cities. He thinks the concentrating of voters
Prussians can bring before the walls. The in the Oity Hall will result in Berious disturb-
great extent of the fortifications moreover pro- ^ or ^ ^ of harah a xmneceSBIirs
seats & considerable advantage. ~V - ... _ “ , , " I w™“ u »**ar, recommend it aa a most effects - —
What inflicts most injury on besieged plaoes measur6a * or ~ 9 Preservation of order, as in oration for the extinction of pain, it m , re l K
is the convergence of the enemy’s fire. The the last Presidential election. The message the best remedy ever known for R DOt only
town being ordinarily of no great extent the was tabled. Bums, Ac., but for Dysenterv or ^
conoentrio lines with whioh the besieger sur- Senate to Monday. sort of Bowel complaffltit fcL renSv^’ * ,a *
rounds it causes the missies to cross, and, ably Bunm.^
direoted on a tew seleoted points, they could do House.—Soott moved to reconsider the tax T ° r _ effiaenc 7 “ d rapidly of action, in
the greatest mischief; daring that time the bilL Lost—yeas 51; nays 68. cities of India, and other hot climates it hut*?
forts reply by fires necessarily divergent, so The House concurred in the Senate amend- Como the Standard Medicine for all each comnliiniT
Uiat, for an equal expenditure of ammunition, ments to the bill except the striking out “ “ for Dy8pep8U > Um Con^T®*’
its guns can only have a very inferior effect. I . ... . . p KUlg ont other kmdred disorders. For Consh« ~ 104
- " ,o «,*. rs “tst iTaE bIH 10 B r h ' tir*??* 535
herefore be considered narallel. and con- ThomaB > Batts > Snmter, Macon, Schley, Colum- accompany each bottle.
ii still receiving the moat nnqoalified Wim •,
to its virtues, from persona of the hjgWff*
ter and responsibility. Physidans of the
RnA<*tkKilifv MAnmmsnil ii — _ ... ...
The Rawlins Fanil—Fisk and Grant.
General John A. Bawlins, late Secretary of
War, whoso ability, as well as purity of char
acter, have been the theme of praise by the
Northorn Press—irrespective of party, died
from over exertion in a fruitless effort to mam
nfacturo a Statesman out of IJ. S. Grant. He
had previously made him a General and then
President, but wore himself ont trying to teach
him the mere alphabet of Statesmanship,
died poor—the only prominent friend of Our
Excellency, the President, who over committed
such a faux pas. A subscription was started
for tho benefit of his widow. The Chief Mag
istrate of the United States of America heads
tho list with a contribution of $1,000—a mag
nificent donation, considering ho bad himself
received from friends $120,000 only a few
months beforo.
Tho letter which we pnblishe d yesterday from
the New York Son tells the balance. Is there
anything to be found in the political history of
this country so disgraceful—so humiliating?
Give ns a President, for Heaven’s sake, that
will at least throw a dim shadow over this lnrid
national shame! Cannot the Attorney General
lately harrowing ns with his presence, cite some
case that distantly approximates to the dismal
profundity of such meanness? Cannot some
Collector, or Deputy Collector—some Assessor,
or Assistant Assessor—some ganger or inspec
tor, ronte agents—some anything that holds
slice of stale bread in his hand by the grace of
Grant—discover for their Master’s sake, in his
tory, another President, Governor, Mayor, Al
derman, or policeman that had, in years gone
by, done something nearly as mean T It really
wonld bo a relief to every American.
Peace Prospects.
The morning despatches of Friday represent
that Jules Favre was closeted with Bismarck all
day Thursday, discussing conditions of peace.
The telegrams assume to give tho points of a
projected treaty so far as settled. If reliance
is to bo plaoed on this despatch, peace seems to
be not improbable or very far off.
One of the most interesting and affecting
sights in the world is to see the intense solici
tude of that yonng, innocent Bismarck, over
tho peril of Germany from that grand nnthro-
pophagas, France. He is so anxious to be se
cured against all possible danger of anotber
war—so fearfnl that any thing short of the am
plest “material” guarantees shall keep this
fierce French wolf off of his German iamb, that
really even the undiplomatic world cannot help
feeling tho deepest sympathy for the innocentold
gentleman. But who will next suffer when
France ha3 been securely tied ?
Mark Twain’s War Map.—Mark Twain has
just prepared a war map for the Buffalo Ex
press, and announces it with the following tes
timonials:
“It i3 the only map of the kind I ever saw.”
—U. S. Grant. “It places the situation in an
entirely new light.”—Bismarck.—“I cannot
look upon it without shedding tears.”—Brio-
ham Youno.—“It is very nice, large print”—
Napoleon. “My wife was for years afflicted
with Ireckles, and, though everything wa3 done
for her relief that could bo done, all was in vain.
But, air, since her first glance at your map they
have entirely left her. She has nothing bnt
convulsions now.”—J. Smith.—“If I had had
this map I could have gotten out of Metz with
out any tronbio.—Bazaine.—“I have seen a
great many maps in my time, but none that
this one reminds mo of.*’—Tbochu. “It is bnt
fair to say that, in some respects, it is a truly
remarkable map.”—W. T. Sherman. “I said
to my son Frederick William: ‘If you could
only make a map like that I wonld be perfectly
willing to see you die—even anxious.* ”—Wil
liam L
Grand Ovation to a Bond-Queen.—A press
dispatch from New York dated Wednesday,
- says of Mile. Nilsson’s first appearance the
night before in that eity:
Tho entrance of Mile. Nilsson was tho signal
of applause. The stage in a few minntes was
strewn with bouquets. As the songBtressbowed
her acknowledgements of her enthusiastic re
ception the cheers were again and again renew
ed. She first sang Handel’s “Angels ever bright
and fair.”
As the high liquid tones of her voice arose,
the audience became electrified into the most
rapt attention; At the end of each verse, the
applause which greeted her was of the most en
thusiastic character. When she had finished
them all, the scene was of a kind.that baffles de-
soriptior. Numberless banquets* were thrown
upon the stage. She acknowledged gracefully
the enthusiastic tribute.
As she moved from the stage cries of “Bravo,
bravo,” mingled with deafening applause, fol
lowed. Never, probably, didsongstress receive
more hearty reception.
The charming air “Ah fora e Inni,” from
La Traviata, was last for Mile. Nilsson on tho
programme. At its conclusion the audience
rose en masse and sent up cheer after cheer.
As Nilsson was leaving the stage, the enthusi
asm was unbounded. In response Miss Nilsson
returned and sang a Swedish air. Taken in all*
her first appearance in America was an unqual
ified success. A crowd followed Mile. Nilsson
to tho Clarendon Hotel, cheering her until she
disappeared.
On her way from the Concert to her hotel
that night, she lost a diamond butterfly valued
at $2,000.
fair proportion of men and cmidren. AU are .uuniug lulu Uiuuo —— t — r i"I rnnut therefore be considered ttarallel and con- u ““"i ouuirer, -nj.ou, ocoiey, tjoium- accompany eacn Dottle.
"ed t 0 a< bitter r d O erth. Wa ^er d tbey W had Thei7 wa? overthrow of^Austria hf1859. 8 'J?he Italian tri- seqnentiy if tho artiUeiy of the besieged is olB y» Polk, Quitman and Webster counties, _Price 25 cta„ 50 eta., and $1 per bottle
offered by Darnell to invite
the State Fair—
ift frasgai HALLS
Brownville—thus forming
colony. Theso skilled laborers were picked up
in the chief manufacturing districts of En-
land, and induced to immigrate through the
streunon3 efforts of Mr. Clegg—himself an En
glishman.
Of the disturbances in Laurens District, S. 0.,
between tbe white people and the Radicals,
mention of which has already been made, the
$24,000,000 in bonds for the purpose of build-1 stragglers belonging to the corps of de Failly tions. As to these latter they are so construed
int? railroads. But no railroads were ever built, after the first battles of the war. Representing that each advanced bastion is protected by the
and the bonds were given to their favorites for the most various branches of tho service, they four others to the nght and as many to the left,
the support of their wickednesses. These bonds | resolved on pillaging tho warehouses of the rail- [
However, the Prussians have shown at Stras-
Monday was adopt-
ed—yeas 53; nays 51.
W. P. Price is nominated for both terms of |
Congress in the Sixth District. Many d6mo
hair
JZWEWER,
were sold- at first for about CO oents on the dollar, road depot in Rheims, when they had reached bonrg that they count less on the evil they can I crate are absent. The Radicals propose to pass
_ - * _ . • « ■ * I 1L.1 : I fin fha Mmnftrtfl ond ilia navnann ffion nn I .. .... ... _
and finally for about CO cents, a basketful—the | that important emporium^on their precipitate | to^the ramparts and the I the Akerman no election bill, and adjourn until I in veiy aged persons, as it furnishes the nutrifo*
money srant in rascality, and then, when they I retreat. They made at first a secret agreement I disasters thoy can inflict on
became worthless, the Legislature turned round 'with about fifty small tradesmen in the city; population. In the capital that odious caloula-
,y and repudiated them. They collected $300,000 then, taking possession of the depot, broke one tion would be foiled. The German batteries, .. _
PnnsHtntionalist of Thnrsdav mvea the fol- b 7 » apodal ta x for a school fund, with which to hundred and fifty cars open and threw their if established outside the forts, could not reach the Legislature two of their own race.
Constitutionalist of Thursday, gives the fol 8chools for the education of the color- contents upon the pavement. There were bar- the city; if they were brought to the walls they Urge Democrats and Conservatives to
lowing additional particulars : ^ Then they replaced this amount by special rels of wine and powder, boxes of cartridges oould hardly send their piojectiles beyond the . .
Serious Disturbance Between the "Whites tax bonds and repudiated the bonds. Yot they and biscuits, balls and coffee, arms and sugar, old octroi barrier. A large space, all the old *77
and Blacks in South Carolina.—Reports were established no school, and taught no colored t piled up in the most piotnreaque confusion. Paris of Lonis Philippe, wonld, therefore, be a I tJOn ' or * falr aE d free election in November,
current in the city, yesterday, of serious dis- people to read and write, but spent what re- Even a largo part of the personal effeots of the shelter for the population.
tnrbances between the whites and blacks in mained unstolen of the $300,000 upon what I Emperor wero handled in the same unoeremoni- I But we have supposed the siege regularly Startling; From Atlantal
Liurens, S. O. Armed bodies of each wore re- they called militia, but who were nothing but ons manner. I oommenced; could that be so easily aeoom- Special to the Telegraph and Messenger.]
presented as organized and a collision imminent vagabonds and thieves from East Tennessee. The tradesmen making their appearance on plised? M. Raymond calculates that at Sebas- I Atlanta, September 24.—The R*ai«alg are
at Newberry, Ninety-Six and at Clinton, in During tbeir two years’ term of office they de- the soene of the chaos, the sale began. They topol the allies had the sea and their war ships B0 confident of carrying the AVer™™ bill' in
g-mat hath
Restored to its original youthTul color by its
It will make Hair grow upon bald beads, exceDt
1 Vftrv riprsrmet if n .. ***
after the Fair. I principle by which the hair is nourished and sap.
The negroes in Troup oonnty nominated for I P° rted -
It will prevent the hair from falling out, and does
return
Call meetings at once to peti- I
not stain the skin.
No better evidence of its superiority need be ad-
dnoed than the fact that so many imitations of it
are offered to the public.
IT IS A SPLENDID HAIR-DRESSING.
Our Treatise on the Hair sent free by maiL
R. p. HALL A CO., Nashau, N. EL, Proprietoa.
Per sale by all druggists,
septl-eodlm
“Barrett’s” scientific discovery.
Laurens. Indeed, apprehensions were excited stroyed the credit of the State, built no rail- paid 20 centimes for the roll of Imperial cloth, to bring their heavy guns. At the attack on ,„ , , .. . . .
in behalf of a squad of white men who were re- r0 ads, and established no schools, and then call- one frano nine centimes for a sack of coffee, 50 Antwerp the French had before the citadel *“ e House that they don t disguise the intention
ported to havo organized in other portions of | e( j on t a standing army to suppress a rebellion centimesfor aloaf of sugar. The baggage belong- ninety pieces, which required 10,000 horses to of the bill to defeat an election. Johnston, one
the counties to march to the districts in which 1 which existed only in their fearfnl imaginations, ing to the officers of a regiment of marine in- draw the carriages. Thus, then; more than of Bullock’s secretaries said if the bill passed I Tausr what Tmk has Sanctioned -The
the disturbances originated, to assist in repell- And this standing army was the last feather fantiy was likewise disposed of. The officials fifty thousand would be necessary to bring to thare W ould be no for Democrats in that the voice of the dcodIb is the vnt™ TT
ingthe negro insurgents, who were pressing I which broke tha camel's back. of the railroad having coventrated by this time, the capital the artillery which assailed the Bus- ™ re vr°tUd no chance for Democrats to I that the voire or the w the voice of
the whites from their homes^sinco nothing had South Carolina Aevairs. The Savannah I now a,tac hed the plunderers, who made a des- sian fortress. Those animals are not to be I G eor g ,a for the next twenty.flve years, and that I vimty, may, m some cases, be open to doubt, bat
been beard from them since their departure — I perate resistance. At last fifty of the pillagers I thought of, but Prussia, doubtless, counts on I tbe bill was better than prolongation. The j the teetimony of honest and enlightens! witnewei
Noacconntof actual collision has yet reached I News, of Friday, says: were captured, among them forty soldiers. This replacing them by road locomotives. I Conservatives urge that the bill gives all power I extending through a series of years, ana*lltotli»
us, but tbe reports received indicate an immi- A private letter assures us th*t what has been incident of the war has been first published by w „ Bullock, and rti»t « Hill and other Bwne P^P 014 “ worthy of credenoe, admits of no
nent war of races. The cause of the distnr- published in the Savannah newspapers in refer- the Paris paper “Le Temps.” It was afterwards Tnr RIVAT, nr NIARARA n mu question. Upon such testimony the repuUtloa of
bance seems to bo the killing of a colored man ence to tbe contest between the Conservatives oonfirmed by the correspondent of the “Figaro.” 1 ™ E VAl4 MAGAKA. I«imnW*W .nhn I ** p 01
by a Mr. Chappell, at Chappell’s depot, on the and the Radicals, is not half told. Onr corres- The Frenoh residents of Hamburg have pnb-
Greenville and Columbia Railroad What were pondent from Barnwell Distriot represents the lished in the “Boersenhalle” a protest, in the
the circumstances of the homicide we have been women and children as flying from their homes French language, against the assertions of the
nnable to learn. Mr. Chappell surrendered under a reign of terror, like unto that which I Paris papers that Frenchmen have been exposed I u»in of Snow white Foam,
himself to tho authorities at Newberry and was | visited North Carolina. Several families have | to all sorts of ill treatment in Hamburg. The
Conservatives are completely in his power. The „ ....
.. .. „ Hos tetter’s Stomach Bitten as an antidote tal
Radicals are using treachery after pairing off | ^^^ Daringthat ^
The Great Cataract In Sooth America— a ,„ Q|i
Nearly Eight Hundred Feet Foil—A Col- Democrat3 > and |bey expect to carry the ty years that it has been before the world iannaa.
bill through next week. ^ I ab j e preparations, intended to compete with il,
TVfp T>;-Wd Rrnwn mi" fn the T-indnn I is reported that secret circulars are being have gone up like rockets, and coma down the ex-
lodged in jail. The colored people threaten to taken refuge in Georgia, leaving their all behind North German correspondent thus expresses the Times on the ill t • onaon distributed to select a prominent colored man I tinguiahed sticks. Meanwhile the progress of tint
take Mr. Chappell from prison and administer them. general opinion of the German people in re- Tn the month n f Aniil lad 1 ..fiaeach county and put him to death, and charge I incomparable tonic has been swift andeteadr-»4
lynch law. foe whites Jwva risen to prevent | A Bio Crokeb. The News heralds a croker | sped to thewar: Wefeelthe horrors of war | Sght was discovered onthePo- I ^ Demooratio Ku-klnx. Bullock wifi issue | wa J® upward and onward like the eagle’s flight Its
The Chronicle and Sentinel learns that some I the Savannah Bepnblican writes that paper I member to the field of battle. The men who ions, and at a great distance from his boats, I t b6ra on v hite radical candidates and will t0r ’ 8 Bittera “ one of 0101,1081 popul&rremedimia
five hundred laborers are already at work upon cheeringly from Monticollo, under date of 21st »» the P lains and mountains of Mr. Brown was not able to devote more than Northern elections. Continue to °“ 8t#ndom > andoom ^ d8 a 8&l8 th « ^
1 1 Alsace and Lorraine were our sons and broth- a couple of hours to the examination of the I . ” . | other medical preparation, domestic or imported,
, ors. They wore called away from their fields falls, which, by hasty barometrical observa- nr 8 e peace, a fair and free election, and Con-1 on auseide of the Atlantic. As a cure for dop
ing at both ends. If necessary, this force will^ I am certain Florida will redeem herself this | and counting-houses, from their colleges and tions, he found to be nearly 900 feet in height, servaliveB to return to their posts in the Legis- Uia, bilious disorders, nervous affections, gwwnia*
1,., ...i.,. i-'—-»*». ' >•> i '-‘ .-1 - i.l . 11 . . bility, and a preventive of epidemic fevers, it tikes
and Superintendent Winder are in earnest, and | Democratic majority in the Senate It would I an unprovoked attack on their country. Yes, I retU rn to Georgetown, in consequence of the [ ^ “““ “
bo a lasting blessing to impeach Reed, try him we may weU feel and dread the horrorr of war, strong desir e expressed bv the community that MARRIED,
before ajnry of honest men, and send him where and jest for this reason we are resolved to fight JV-i S urvev should be made of the falls
he ought to be, in the Penitentiary iir “ I tn thn .mi | a careiui survey snouia De maae 01 tneiaii3|
ironed by nights and worked
sun.”
—o — 1 - —- "...nuu wuuuugwuM) uum men cuueges ana i tions, He lOUna to De nearly 'JUU ieetin neigtlt, Bervauvea reiuxu 1C
be increased and tho entire work will be pushed fall, and elect a Lieutenant-Governor and Con manufactories, from the women who loved them, the breadth of the river at the top of the falls latore without delay,
forward with great energy. President Bridges gressman, of the pure metal, and also give us a and the families whioh depended on them, by heing 100 yards and its depth 15 feet. On his The crisis is immim
will connect Wilmington and Columbia by a di
rect road in a few months.
The Columbns Sunsays the English emigrants,
to be employed in tbe Eagle and Phenix Man-
precedence of every other remedy. This fact should
teach the ambitious country dealers who eadMTor
to foist their local abortions, on the public in lit
tentiary for life, out this struggle to the hitter end. Germany a caremi survey suuuia ue maae or uw ran* in Kansas City, Missouri, on tno instant, by at ead, how futile their small attempts to cajole tbe
hard from sun to must no longer be considered a nation whioh it de a ^» ^ r * the Rev. J. W. Lewis, Hon. James Jackson, of Mar community mast necessarily be. Where tho game
is safe to attack, whenever the rulers of foreign Governor to proceed at once to the tails conj Ga., and Mrs. Mary 8. Sohoolfuld, of the ash have failed there is no chance for the “ sack-
The West Point Shield of Friday says: I countries think it convenient to divert the at- I that purpose, aMOmpamed by bir^ G. f ormor place. . f
There never was a greater nnanimRy in the te “‘ ion °l their 8nb i e ° ,B tbei ? d ° me . 8lic I I Ba ny, Houston county, on the 23d inst, by the |
nfactnring Company, call biscuits “buns.’’ ^ _ w
Tho other day one gave an order at Cook’s Ho-1 ^ rec, | er in the I policy. France most be taught that she, too, I The result of their journey is embodied in the
t,l for more ■ W lo . oolorrd w^I.r. Ho “* k '« ™ Si
on her neighbors. per, 01 the 3d inst., which, perhaps, you will
And so tbe German press demands gnaran- deem of sufficient interest to insert in the col-
retnrned with the reply, there were no ham
bones left.
Columbus Cotton Receipts to Friday were
29G5 bales. Sales 2G21. Stock on hand, 1916.
maishaling their clans throughout the country
under wise and prudent leaders, with a deter
mination to win the fight this fall. Their man
agement of the campaign so far
did. Discretion and wisdom have
pulicy. Discarding the old fogy
Rev. W. Knox, Major JohnB. Cobb, of Macon, and
Mrs. Alice Culler Leak.
Procure the genuine “Barrett's.”
^ - '* -..-.A
Died, in Columbus, Ga., on the 11th instant,
Maggie Bell, infant daughtherof John J. and
Elizabeth Drown, aged seven months and nineteen
The Democratic Executive Committee of I Bourbons among them, they have accepted the j 5ae7tateamen ofEtmope musTgradoiffiy imonsl I town paper =. days The tender bud was early nipped. We hoped
Muscogee have declared an election for fit Leg- I wtuation and intend to make the most of tom themselves to the idea thatthe German ‘ Although I am anxious that Mr. ifrown, B he would be spared for many beantifnl years.—
islative candidate* Tuesday, 4th October. This is the part of wisdoin and they have acted consulting only the instinct of self-pre- as a discoverer of the Great Kaieteur Fall, Angel baby, onr heart’s affection were placed on
1 ,n «■"»""» ” Q, ' ,A ,ead - 1 servation, will seek in a reotifioation of the aad the director to the successful expedition thee . but alaa j ^ death> death ^ hMhed that
frontier, a guarantee against the eternal en- which we were permitted to accompany,should aweet voice t0 uson earth forevermore. Yes our
oroachments of France and her hankering after have the telliDg of his own stoiy, yet I can h ffnnp hnr lnaa M ,
German Rbine provinces.” n . understand that his friends m Georgetown .
A. Sclave Committee recently organized in J ^ill be anxious to hear, at once, of his sue- | en “ 9 a ™
Phalon’s Yitalia,” although transparent ind col
orless, will darken gray hair to tbe exact shade it
wore before it began to fade! Among tbe triamphl
of toilet chemistry it stands pre-eminent. It h
clear and sweet smelling, and its name is a “hone-
hold word."
Sold by all druggists and fanoy goods dealers.
. „ . , wisely, in throwing aside the old political lead-
A correspondent of the Columbus Enquirer ergj and tB v,- ng men foP their standard bearers,
illustrates the feud between the king snake and who are up with the spirit of tbe age.
the rattle snake, in the following letter from
“Rabbett’s” a thing of Joy,
Leake Station, Russell county, Ala., 21st:
Yesterday evening, just before night, Mr.
Rofas A. Strong, a gentleman who resides in
our village and owns a farm abont a mile and a
half ont, came into town from his farm, accom
panied by a negro man bearing two live snakes
on the end of a long polo; one a large rattle-
I Maggie baa gone, her loss we ssdly mourn. Oh!
soroning mother, my; heart is aching
“Spalding’s Glue” has now taken tho phw 0!
all cements and Mucilages.
snake, and tho other a kingsnake, one of the day or two will post us as to tho truth or falsity
largest of his variety. The latter was tightly 0 f tbe rumor, but if not true now, it soon will be.
wound three or four times around tho neck of the F ra noe, as she stood before the war, was the
and firmly held there—about a foot of each end | maintained the unities in some degree of har-
Rnsslan Unity and Unity Broke
Loose.
The telegrams in our last announced, (with a
caution,) that Russia was making a unity move- . „ . .. —- - — — , , - “ - . —
ment on Turkey, and her troops were in motion ^ colleague, Mr. MUcheJl, at the top, of W- Cheer up bereraved P^- yoa have the and the affliction <
es. A SaKSS’SSd r ^ven hundred and fifty feet Above, the blessed^aUsf^cUon of knowing tlmt deato cannot into gladness,” i_
The Polish paper “Czar ’’ cautions its conn-1 Potaro 8 llde3 smoothly in a slight depression enter that sphere to which the departed are re- | Bitters ” is the beat friend of the invalid,
trymen against thepartioipation in this Utopian o? the table of conglomerate sandstone, and moved. Look to thatfnture where the sundered Uea
enterprise, wkioh could only injure the Polish I disappears over the edge in a body which we 1 of earth &ro reunited* M. B*
oaxxse. I estimated at 80 yards m width, and of depth
Victor Huso, the phrase-maker, who is never I uncertain in the center, but shallowing rapidly
wanting wherever there is an opportunity of {toward either bank. When Mr. Brown dis-
to seize the Black Sea and the Dardanelles.
PPHPH I W||| ir ... „ Pain may be said to follow, pleasure is it*
Paris, has oalled upon the youth of all Selave cesg . The fall has a clear descent, according f° rtbee ' but remember your darling is resting from ow, .but the misfortune is. that in this putkoltf
tribes in Europe to forma society, oalled“White I barometrical observations .taken simultanc- I 8 * n and 80rr0,r 80 teoe. Some say don’t weep for.l case, the substance belongs to the shidov; tbs
Eagle,” for the purpose of delivering th® I ously by Mr. Brown at the bottom, and by I Die pure and gtnlesa, though she was our pride and I emptiness to its cause. But pain mtyberelieM
cauaod to turn from “mourning
inasmuch as the “Old Ciwlin*
Cuildben my for Wineman’a Cryetalized Wont
Csndy! - .
TRIBUTE OF RESPECT.
w u[ ir|[-i _ o— 0 P At la regular, oommunlcstjon of Dumber City
ttSSBFEZSSZEZ* in this I moirionr”check "and order”” She kept Russia I grandiloquent tirade, has recorded his anatbma I covered the fall in April, the^rooky channel I Lodge, No. 199, F. A. M., held September 17, 1870,
condition they were brought a mile and a half, from Tnrkev-Italv from nnitfzino on tha German war. When he first made his was completely covered, and the Stream must the following obituGy aud resolutions were
tho pole being run through the loop made with £ . ® Daly irom unitizing appearanC e m p arl8> dressed as a home-guard, have had a width of at least 100 yards. At adopted:
the body of the rattlesnake by having bis head ^iomo anci the Papal States—and Germany from the enthusiasm, of course, was immense; in prese nt it is diminishing id volume, and, as The great Architect of the Universe bae in his
tied to his side, as above mentioned. I suppose unitizingfrom her Holstein conquests clear way fact, Victor Hugo is nothing if not “immense. t h e Indians assured us, will continue to do 80 inscmtable wisdom removed from .mom- n. n „r
tbe kingsnake was afraid of the other biting down to the French boundary, so aB to give her ^ 6fc the Ba “® P°° r ° ld indulging with the ^ October, when only the central and deeper worthy and highly esteemed brother Lauuhlin H I ea8 ® 8 -
who denounoesthe Germans for carrying on this . * • of A. j* , . ’ . , tribute that wilt be rendered him, Nsdin this hour *
Brother Clemens was born November 5tb, 1838,
Use “Barrett’s Hair Restontive.
Rosadaijs ! Rosadaus !—Boils, carbunclee, at?-
tions and pimples on the face, aallownes rf tb
complexion, general debility are brought about V
an impure state of the blood. Rcssd&lU hubMl
found to be a permanent cure for this claM o!
before they had brought them so far. When
they were first found, the kingsmake had nearly
his whole body tightly coiled around the rattle
snake and was biting him on tbe throat. It is
not known bow long he had had this advantage.
The struggle in the outset most have been des
perate.
A crowd collected aronnd them ns soon as
they appeared on the street—which was in front
of the hotel—and in abont ten minutes the king-
snake began to relax his hold, and soon be
coming disengaged, be attempted to escape un- I oration
a year.
derthe hotel; and although it would seem he
was entitled to be set at liberty foe his noble | ambulances, the needle-guns, oannon, ammn
deed, yet he was a snake, and going where he I „ - . , . ,,
wasn't welcome, a few licks with a club placed mtl0n were all ready made, marked and laid by
him lifeless by the side of his hated enemy, for nse when wanted. The troops were all with-
who was dying from the severe and protracted in a fortnight’s caU, and what was still more to
choking he had received. The kingsnake b®* the purpose, even the plan of tho campaign
came frightened at the crowd—otherwise 1 1 r r
age down by the Straits of Dover.
From tho moment that Prussia unitized I
Schleswig-Holstein, and by the overthrow of | “jr” uii I ""“Aq wa 81W tho Fcll T eannot imagine anv-
V, “T, - oa „_. . , a . „ old prophecy of his would be fulfilled. Thir y As Wo saw tMFW i cannot imagine any
Austna, not only made herself secure, bnt also y ea ^ 0 g O Yt 0 t or Hugo published a poem, “ Ii-> thing more beautiful. The oentral portion,
obtained oontrol of the Germanic States, she Rhein,’“demanding the abolition of the treafioi which is never dry, forms a small horseshoe “d died, after a long and painful illness at hiaresi-
began to prepare for this war to unitize on I of 1815, and the reoovery of the Rhino frontier I or re-entering angle, and the water in this part I deuce, August 9tb, 1870.
France. | for France, the very same thing. Napoleon at- preserves its consistency for a short distance For many months previous to bis death, it was
tempted to accomplish now. Had the French from the ledge. But every where else, and evident thatthe tide of life-was ebbing out, and
The letter-writers say that almost every prep, arms conquered, there would have been “im- here also, at a lew feet from the top, all sem- that ere longthe grim messenger would rfaim its
ation antedated the Spanish question by about mense” enthusiasm for Victor Hugo; but as the blance of water disappears; it breaks up, or viotim. Without any hope for the restoration of our
Wilson, N. C., May fid
I hereby certify that during the summer *
of. 1881,1 was severely afflicted with cutan&t-
having, had as many as fourteen large cirbaas*
aad twelve ordinary boils. I suffered so mn.-h
them that I could not get out of the house
time for several months Being induced to by Ik
extract of Rvs&dalis, I was entirely cured ty 1 *
use of one bottle of that truly valuable me*® 1
W. A. Dabdkasi.
AU the wagons, the raUway cars, the * 8 .. a diCorent one, the poet fails to see blossoms, into fine foam or spray, which de
. oannon. ammu-1 2t sympSS'” 8 ’ • 6061133 “ the well * kn0WQ rocket-liLe forms o:
Horrors of Abe War.
Jnmsx on ms Musole.—An altercation took
plaoe at the Grand Opera House, New York, on
Wednesday, between the proprietor, James T.
Fisk, Jr., and Max Maretzek, who was conduct
ing the rehearsal of the Opera Bouffe Company,
during which the parties came to blows. The
quarrel resulted in the dissolution of business
between Fisk and Maretzek. Carlo Patti will
be conductor of the new opera season.
Andy Johnson to be at .Dalton. The Cal
houn Times is informed by Mr. Palmer, 8ecre-
**•7 ot the Oherokeo Agricultural Association,
that Kx-Eresideni Johnson has accepted an in-
vitailor to deliver an address on one day during
Ute Fair, which opens on Wednesday October
6th.
JUDO. Ioohrane, re!yin BO n the inspiration
«f the occasion, will deliver tho -.Denim* snee^b
at tbe Ow ea.villa Fair, October 4th. 8 ^
don’t think he wonld have turned his antagonist I wlt ^ 1 topographical surveys of every foot of I tbo seat of war,
loose until he was quite dead. 1 ® * J : t ...
Serious Accident.—A section of the interior
Colonels Seymour and Carleton, of the British
army, who are with the armies now operating
in France, attest the horrible sufferings at
Without any hope for the restoration of <
brother’s health, we felt that, though sore would be I
I the affliotion, that we could bow submissively to the
the Staubbach and similar waterfalls, Jut D iTin8 but never did we fully realize what the
multiplied a thousand times, into a small dark magaitai a of our lo« would be, trnUl,
—ol, over a semi circular curtain of precipice
Apply ‘-Barrett’s”—directions on wrappw-
NOTICE.
l we were sum
moned to perform the lest aad rites of our order for
LpOOl. HfHpqpi
'deeply hollowed by the action of the spray.—I.... T , ..
The cavern behind the Fall is the home of « was then that the^many noble andman-
A LL who are weary of “Cotton,"
1
The soldiers and peasantry I thousands of swallows, which issue from it in I deeffl’v
uu nuu ms u nootj ua va/kwu, . U)yF
price and.loesM, and its exhaoatu***
oome up and enjoy fine stock, sweet hty, ^ ,
and water, fruit of every kind except hop*®*
offer for sale a beautiful Farm of about 2i8“2
with a plain Cottage House, Out Houses,
Bpring House on it, laying on tho Alw*®*.
Chattanooga Railroad, in eight of Cloverdsie WJ
France to be passed over—careful reconnoi-1 are perishing from _ r
sances of roads, bridges, fortifications, allmade lated, the dead outraged and prisoners famished, their multitudes at mgut.- lneball itseltis i -J * I uaatttnooga Baiiroad. in estntor mwwri.Ss
bv German officers were filed awav in the “rioht The Tribune’s special dispatch fromBriej, one vast descending column ot a fine dry-look- be filled, and with feelings of deepest emotion we contiguous to the farms of Gewge H.
* ... 117tb, says the distress is so great in the depart-1 mg, snow-white substance, bearing a resem-1 turned from tbe scene to ponder upon the ineorota- I Cooper Niabet audmyself. No
hand tier, second drawer from the top in the ment8 Q f Moselle, Woerth and Ardennes that bianco, in color and consistency, to the snow ble decree of Divine Providence that removed a ^w r ^ti2fi«L a ^^I,k 11 w^ < b^own as ‘-XM
venerable Baron Von Moltke s cabinet. the authorities are prepared to appeal for aid to of an avalanche, but surpassing all avalanches man so useful, from among us, in the meridian of { a nt Grov^Fjrm ” through which tha Aid* 0 * 5»
There never was such perfect readiness for aUntratral nations, and especially to America I have seen in size, and in the beauty of the life. Bom and raised in our midst, and intimately I Chattanooga Baiiroad runs, oontaing
unitizing, and when a nation wants a fight, it and “*h® people we depend- forms taken by the material of the Fall.— known to the most of ns from boyhood we had acres - bounded ail aronnd by mounUiM. 'PL^
needs no very ingenious strategy to secure the ? nt L°£ tbeU f r ? pS an ^ C3tU °’ “ d that nothing Kainbowa of great splendor were observed, WA to esteem him, not on“ «V^khy ^ ^ watared by rpringsand
... . - ,. 18 lett Yemaining. Their houses, stables and one f ro m the front of the Fall in the morning, highly respected member of the mystic tie, but as a «“hraly acroea the nch aliuvtima o too w rtft
position of the challenged party from a self- barns have been destroyed and their fields and | nnn *hft summit in the afternoon • bnt useful citizen, good neighbor, and a genuine true le y> w »th an unlimited range rad B
young ladies of the city, aided by gentlemen, confident and Ugh spirited antagonist. Pros meadows trampled down. They have had no [ t v:_ reverted forming a colored loon or hearted Christian gentlemen. ’ and cultivate hogs, sheep, caUlean ^
experimented somewhat. Prof. Caldwell and a aia read _ {m tbe fighb-wimted it-ana harvest at all. Their cattle, sheep and swine When the tocsinof war wae sounded in 1861, he wJ1 “ah® f> n ® spiendid faqate*
number of ladies and gentlemen from Atlanta , , ,J u ® _ have been seized and their laborers pressed in-1 the whole mass reemed to having just croased the threshold of manhood, link- I J aaa ?f> or 11 oa ? he eo divided
executed some fancy skating, much to the ^ long before the Spanish question was flushed to , ho „ Noteven com enoughia left for pr«3ipitatoitself auddisapjiear, anddart out ed hla fatewith that ofhis country and went forth
tonishment and pleasure of the lookers oh. had Napoleon’s neck under the guillotine se- seed. Starvation and pestilence impend. You, underneath, black and fowling, at the gorge to bUtie for her rights t for Iom long years he » “armt^lUUertm oil ^
curely waiting the touch of the fatal spring by our American brethren^ know^e d^olal and outlet of the pool . ffic^SSS^ offi*
Bismarck’slitUefinger. lion in which w. live. Yet yod have been — doraoftoe%arheretarn^“mfraS^qaie^ of Cedarto*n,^ ~onty wiU^
. . .. - ... - * . quickly restored. Your oountiy is naturally AFlourishino Georgia Family.—The Roma in the result, he settled down and commSeedthi T“«M---For the first rad lsstrra^ ^
The protestatiems of the French democracy nch and ours is naturally poor. Onr resources I I auiet and oeacefnl vocation of fanning. »ho I will be made low for CASH, or —*■
scaffolding in the Colnmbns Opera House fell
on Thursday, by whioh several were hurt. John
Prince died of his wounds.
The Rink —The Coiambus Skating Rink
was opened Thursday night amid a blaze of
eicitement. Big crowd present. Large num
ber of boys and youog men made their appear-
anco on wheels, with the usual mishaps. A few
The San gives a lively report of Colnmbns on
the law and'order question. Utah, SniderviOe,
Keller ville and the Triangle in Columbus appear
Titles
A Flourishing Georgia Family.—The Roma j
to be in a state of anarchy. They have oomplied I now that they had nothing to do with making I oannot compare with yours. Consequently our 1 Co “™® rci * 1 °* 4119 23d “*■ :
with the 15th Amendment and liberally abolish- this war an false. Wo appeal to all contemdo- sufferings are unspeakably greater. We implore W® noUoed on the train, yesterday, a Mr. , - —* — - JU » , -
•ii »n itisHnniinTi nf /wtnn I . . , , , I you to send us aid.” The appeal is signed by I Oasain, who has been living in Griffin, Ga., but I entering upon a career of proeperity, when the “all I , ® snnnaiinataUmenta.
e dia c t of color, race or previous con- raneous history to show that they were one of Majors and other civil eodewuUoal authorities who has determined to make Rome his home, devouring sickle of time laid him low,” casting a | f ® a ® aW ®- Come and 8 ®®- TAlfRfl ^ gifiBBT, -
dlt, °n. | the two grand convergent forces which shot the of the numerous villages and towns between He bad his family with him, and there was just de ®P 8 loom ,°ver the entire oommunity. But we - ~ -...-/wen-
unluokv emDeror into the fatal trao nrenamd I Metz. Nancv and Sedan. I thirteen of them. The oldest boy was fifteen 1 npon fflaVhilactcr as^ro^Mumot add'scJrthing'tcth*
' ’ ying
>t we
We have missed (says the Talbotton Standard) nnlneky emperor into the fatal trap prepared [ Metz, Nanoy and Sedan.
the Telegraph and Messenger two days. We
fear the Standard will have to be suspended if
it don’t come. Come, Col. Clisby, we can’t get
along without yon.
Cannot comprehend that, bnt know the pa
pers left this office,
Death oe Judos J. R. Kimbrough.—We are
for him, and resulted in wiping ont Franoe as
one of the grand balanoea in the European sys-1
tem.
Bat Franoe disabled, all the unities are going I
abont loose, and now the interesting question
arises.where are they going to stop? Prussia [
years old, and the mother I to
Hartford Insurance Business,—Tho Hart- and a finer-looking, plumper, healthier lot of th&taSbtei£ibui» toWsmSSMwTw “e^tKf wS I Facts roa the tomira-ie*-—w
ford Courant oonsolidates the inauranoe busi- ° luldrea never saw. The mother is as jaun- but discharge a duty which we owe the honored {Interested of hundreds flL^tbat
ness of thatcity forthe past year as follows, I ° f ^ I d8ad Stter
571,237; Losses paid $49,155,283; Dividends graze. He has gone to Pryor s station to forage I teemed member, the community a useful citizen, I different unH. of Sowing Machin*> j“L
pained to announce Ihe suddendeath of ',Jnte I demands Eastern France aid thaV ra weKave I Pa« d atockhddera $12,757;5S0. Eghty-fonrmil- £“ °°“ 9 ^ Rome, where | I found yours to wear better U-n-J^o,^
Kimbrough, in Talbotton, on tbe evening of tie | remarked, is bnt a small beninninm Italv nni- 11 1008 reoeived in promiuma, only thirty-five mil-1 meef wltn * neart y welcome.
Ififch .TnHfiut TTimhmnoh littfil* Mnimuntnil I ^ ■- - — - - _ ... - I iiODS hlT6 hfqp pffiifl nnt fur I06868, AU(1 there I - hi ■ ,T *
is an exoess of receipts over both losses and I „ Discoveries of Potash in Nevada.—The
dividends of twentyrtwo millions to be carried rewiv^s^lS ’p^^J^m N^vaSj
to surplus account, much of whioh has been ab- where extensive deposits have k*in discovered!
sorbed by the issue of new stock and increase { This important new souroe (of onr mineral
ofoapital, '• ! * * ’S' 1 r ■■ ‘ * mm
Cloverdsie Depot, Alabama and^^^
Facts foe the Ladies.—I_ean ^f«®,j2 P
18th. Jndge Kimbrough lately represented this
county in the Legislature, was universally es
teemed for his benevolence, and appreciated as
a most excellent Christian gentleman. The
oommunity snMains a great loss in the death of
Judge Kimbrough. We tender onr sympathies
to the bereaved family.—Standard.
Crops.—The Talbotton American, ot the 26th,
Bays:
From observations, taken while on a recent
transitory visit through Marion county, we are
tizos Rome and the Papal States—Russia uni-
tizes Turkey, and that is bnt a beginning; for I
with the Black Sea and Constantinople she
strikes for the trade of the world and oon fronts
John Boll in a career of eastern acquisition j
with every prospect and condition of snooess.
Then np springs the grand Germanio Empire,
which will never be satisfied short of fall oon-
Gso-
Resolved, That we tender to hit grief-stricken i ten years’ experience in Sewing Haohi“^ “ ^
family, onr most sincere oondolecoe, in this thetr I Linds voura has stood tbe most an
hour of sorrow, with the prayer that he who tendon | - * 1 —
the winds to the shorn lamb will enable them to [
bear their loss with resignation.
Resolved, That these proowtoge be spread won
the minutes of tbe Lodge, and that aoopy be furn
ished the family of the deceased.
Resolved, That a copy be forwarded to tbe Mason
cat Miiun, jvtuo —w *""7 ,7 .a—
[ teat tor durability and wmplioity*
Lyedenveldb, N. ?.
wealth not only fnrnishes now the very purest Meraamrer for rmMWii«n, and that
potash, but the lyee resulting therefrom have [ the Savannah Morning News 1- requested to copy.
First Congressional Distriot.—The First also become available for bromine. The sonreea T. J. Smith,
Congressional District nominated Oapt. Paine I ,°* * )rom ^“ e > idu>ert °» hare been the mother I IX A. Graham,
tool ot the German rivers to the sea and an ua- | of Savannah, for the reminder of the 4Jst and *fi® ®®a S. P. Smith,
otTJfMon^pTr ihat'So^ in^n^f 8e f °“ d from If 9 ® tralU f ° f Doy ® r J- T - of Thomas county, for the 42d Lo^rer Bretagne and Eng^aS&J W 2 A trao extraotfrom the minnt^sSfc^ber
quenoe of the lato drought \W onr^d" I ‘° Ska 8 er To sum it all up, this unity Congress. Capt Paine we do not know per- I the Doad Sea. Sinoe the diaoovery of the potash IT, 1870, T. J. SMITH; 1 ■’ •
that an experienced farmer trave it ** hia m{ n j I business bM only just begun, and if any body | sonslly, bnt McIntyre is • sterling man in evarv I these sources h»ye I fitoewUty.
ion would
I BURIAL CAS^
_ -rj^T! havetastore,
experienced farmer gave Uas ImfoniQ 1 1 buaineaa has only just begun, and if any body I aonally, but McIntyre is a sterling man in every I ^P 08 ** 8 iQ Stawfart all these source*^have I Secretary. I farent »i a * 0 > whioJl **
Idnot^roduoeonejourth of the [willteUn, where, M^wtUmake a valuable rep- Sjo?. ^P,p»re,t the hatrffom faffing out, mifi
V-rtf'X *£• ^ j tanoo. ... »•**. 1 -- — •*
l «g®tahtaBMl|an Hair Benewer.
•epKMUwAwIm