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M REST, GA,, SEPT. 7. 1894
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(ffffs IN 7 HU SEW 7 :\P f rr
«gh Mr. ClevHa: d A
c Gorman bill as tlnk
ms
irfidy and branch d *.v.t- c,
to has allowed it to bemme
itfs worth \v!»i!e to note
ie salient featnr-s wherein
trnm the McKhdev act
one ar,l II: = W.U*
gMlter. W« confin. our
•
the . moment on the most
s^Pi .rticIA, which up to
y. B tnth of Aurilh paid ci..
which will »»w rrlmit
i to Miclc Which wened.
under the McKiulc, act
wblcli will now bo tinted; to
the. Vine*.;, bill
, iulie,, but which the .calc
Mi cried lo the free li.l, and to
( tlm. that the h..n* made
■ i ow which dMir. were
-
■#4a5 ro»mo*fe- which
wore- tov—l, but
first
-to wool.
tKlwksfrecall wools
Inthcrty 'bccn imported
10s Ayres.Australia, New
Ctipgwf Good Hope, Rus
«nd Canada, to
mm so called bug
' wools; also all
4»mc1, goat, eipicit and
Ice animals, inchiding
'« hair and swell
•; character as have
mported from Tur*
D'pt, Greece, and
pt important
ns to the free
►, not hacked or
of flax; hemp and
id twine wholly or
Tampico fiber, tna
r sunn. Among the
arlaich are relieved
—hflah of all kinds
. 1 bulk or
m trees, shrubs,
corn, cabbage,
id yolk of eggs,
if© offered to
£ J
,
mm
m
4‘,
■
:ri
m
m m
m W
;;a
-rr -s
not above No. 16 Dutch standard
in color, which free up ttNAug. 29,
9pl free by. the-House, will
now pay an ad valorem duty' 6f 40
cent. Molasses, also, formerly
free will henceforth l © subject to a
tax of from; 2 to 4 cents a’ gallon.
The five other articles, formerly
free, and left untaxed by the Wilson
bill', br.t now- subject to a duty, are
dates, olives, green and prepared,
pineapples, cocoutiuts, and orchids
cr lilies of the valley, the first four
living -20 per cent, and the last
named 10 per cent, ad valorem.
We come, lastly, t<> cer'Xin pro
(h|Gt ,, whkh _ wcr ; ti . xe d under the
McKinley, act and which* the
Wilson bill rnade^freejjm^wnich dutiable
the Senate pet back on the
Conspicuous among these is
! ‘-S“ r - which in.t.»d oRhtt
| I J f cent, par pound formerly
levied, ’ will now pay 1 one-cighth 0 ot
“ ,hc ^P° r<5n '
“‘ l vl,lorcm ra ' v *"*“•
, “ re ,“"' 1
'^' ch I fTO >- “ c
"»« "> « *■«) 4° c«:.l.
|H-r Ion, nwlcd of 75 cant., which
«“>• ;>P *•> A ' J E ,,St ^ XU
*«*’* unmixed »ti<faction
certam other .altorat,on. m.dc by
'•» • Sc "“'. c b '"; \
<*“« will bo lo check
in some degree the wanton sacrifice
“f "* "ffifflt...... intehrsts of our
NMtl ’"“ >° tho “ of thc
Canadiwn Dominion. Tims ap¬
ples,green or ripe, dried or evap¬
orated, were exempted from duty
by thc House, but the Senate levied
upon them n tax of 20 per cent,
ad valorem. The same duty is im¬
posed on beef, mutton, pork .bacon,
and hams, and in short, upon meats
of all kinds, dressed or undressed,
prepared or preserved. Lard,also,
instead of entering free, is to pay
1 cent a pound. Wc remark, fi¬
nally, that eggs, with which the
Canadians were preparing tp flood
our markets when the Wilson bill
relteved them from taxation, will
be to a large extent, thanks to the
Senate .stopped at the frontier by
u duty of 3 conts per doxen.
. Favor.
The South In High
Editor Watterson sums up the
financial situation in the south in a
few e ... breexy, 1 .„ ... exhilarating 1 lines. ;™
1 his is thc viow he takes of it:
With southern bunk clearings in*
cretifiing at the rate of 36 per cent
over last year; with southern rail
roads ... showing . .
an increase m cam
ings as compared with 1893, while
those of every other section show a
decrease; with big crops of cotton,
„d wheat, and with plenty
, hominy, . , powwni, -*wq{t
watennelons and other
be had tn season for
of thc inner matt,ave can’t
how any Kansas
northwestern
s, blizzards and
can keep away
_ • • ; 7'V’ /■-i
■
c situation in a nutshell,
J - a ire the skies are bright
pite, els are tunning,
and c
tvei
. a..
ss
r
m
S"' '-V .»■:
________ _
Police Brutality. : U
A young lady aisifher brother started
to leave the city to which they lived
for a day’s outing. They were thor¬
oughly refined, respectable peoplo. Tho
lady became ill and overcome with tho
heat before they reached tho train. She
decided to return home, at the same
time urging her brother to go on. . She
eonld easiiy reach homo alouri she de
djhml. wpuINmi Thus persuaded, tho young
man to tlie tTain. Tho sis¬
ter turned about and began to retrace
her steps, Bbs is rirlicttd with r, tend¬
ency to faint and loso consciousness
#
at times. She began <© feel worse and
worse that morning on - the street and at
length fainted, falling upon tho street.
A brawny policeman hurried, up and
had her dragged ton police station. She
recovered from her faintness, explained
tho rituaticn and t#hl the officers wbero
*he lived. Then she made a move to go
home. “No, yon don’t,” exclaimed the
roundsman, grabbing licr. He had her
locked up in a dirty icon in the jail
with a lot pf the lowest women prison¬
ers, who made the place hideous with
thoir blasphemy and dmnikennosa. Tho
astute policeman, trithout making the
slightest effort to see whether tho girl
told tho truth, entered against her tho
charge of drunkenness. Sho had to stay
in tho vile prison till next day, when
she found means of getting Word of her
sad plight to her family. Then sho was
released without n word of upologyfor
tho indignity that had been pnt on her.
Sho ought to fine tho city for damages.
Sho could collect it. It is qaito too
common lbrignorant, callous policemen
to class all cases alike as “drunks.”
Tho best of peoplo may Ik) taken ill on
tho street at time.. It occasionally hap¬
pens that these undiscriminating officers
piteh a man into a cell as a drunken
case when ho is suffering from a broken
head or other injury and is not intoxi¬
cated at all. And more than onco Inch
a man haa died in tho cell when surgi¬
cal- attendance would have saved Isis
life, A little decent Immauity on the
part of polico officers would not bo a
bad thing.
Curious Freight Hates.
One would scarcely expect that flie
Brilish would discriminate against their
own fellow countrymen at Jtouio in fa¬
vor of American farmers and food ship¬
pers, yet such is tlio caso. American
dressed meats, Wheat, cheese anti butter
can^bc shipped from New York and Bos¬
ton and put on the London market at
lower rates than similar goods can ho
gout to tho metropolis from districts a
hundred miles away. British farmers
find this an added burden to thoso they
already boar, and. they arc grumbling
accordingly. They have formed tho Ag
rtoultoral union, and nun of its objects
is to got parliament to interfere to pro
vea * tho railroael companies from work
toff against tho British farmer while
thoy favor thoAniericail ^ lx)th ia
the United States and Canada
American food products to Eng
l*»d to such immenso quantities that
H* 7 **? ^ handled by tho boatload and
tlw earload, while tho British ngricnl
turJit remla ^ ^ R11(1 cborfie to mar .
ket in small packages. The same trouble
exists in our own country, where freight
*• sometime* conveyed a thousand miles
coula do cfunea oo mucs to soiue wey
8t||tiou Xhc t^p^Hon companies
of Great Britain make moro out of tlio
American trade in food products than'
they do out of tho homo trade —heuce
they core littlo what becomes of that
But wither parliament will arbitrarily
fix railway freight rates satisfactory -to
the British farmer remains to bo sceu.
No citizen of Ctoua outside of im¬
personal attendants lias ev*r
m tho emperor. It is against law and
, custom to look upon bis face. Itiafaa
pocsiblo for him to .gfct any accurate
idea of other countries or of civilirttlon.
» i« kept like a baby in straddling
*kes. Tho affairs of tho nation arc
otoAbjxico n
weakling who
these
oy’fi
how for
* FOR SALE
The following described property
is situated within a mile of town
and is an excellent piece of land.
The owner needs money and is of¬
fering this at a sacrifice :
Sixty acres, mere or less, 120
rods from the corporate limits cf
Demorcst; 20 acres cleared and
fenced; one frame and one double
Teg dwelling; three fine springs,
good soil, some good timber
some fruit. Price $9 per acre;pur
chaser has choice of cash down or
one-fourth cash, and balance in
three equal annual payments with
S per cent interest. Title perfect,
no incumbrance. Call on or ; d
dresB The Times for any other in¬
formation.
F. D. -Hahnenkratt,
Demorsst, Georgia.
*
DEALHU IN
Real Estate.
I always have bargains in
*4 0 % # .
* B~~* ** ft t*TYl f lV
w
Property.
.1 also have on hand some valua¬
ble Fruit Land.
Lake View Hotel
L. Demarest, Gn.
,
One of the coolest and best kept
hotels in northeast Georgia. Sum¬
mer boarders’may get at thia hotel
pleasant rooms and good bcacd at
reasonable rates. Write for terms.
NORTHWARD
—To Thc—
Summer Resorts
Of the •
Great Lakes [ Big 4 f n
In old Gaul all roads led to Rome
Ir the south all roads northward
lead to Cincinnati. At Cincinnati
in the Central Union station di¬
rect connections are made with the
Big Four Route, whose nortlien
terminals are Chicago,Benton Har¬
bor, Sandusky and Cleveland—the
principal southern ports of entry
on Lake Michigan and Lake Erie.
From these cities steamers traverse
the entire territory of the great
lakes, eastward Toronto, Mon¬
treal and the St.Lawrence riser 5 to
Put-in-Bay, the paradise of Lake
Erie; to Detrdit; up Lake Huron
to Mackinaw Island. From Chi¬
cago and Benton Harbor steamqr
reach out to all points on Lake
Michigan tnd Lake Superior. terminal
No other line enjoys the train
ice facilities-nor offered by the the superb Bij* Four.. serv¬ Nc
transfers across Cincinnati to mal e
connections. Be careful to have
vour ticket read via Big Four route
BOMcCORMICK, D B MARTIN,
Pwupr Traffic Mswict. 9MrtIto.at.Airt
Cincinnati, 0.
;. y i ^ - i -
Warwick
yf
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.
nr
iWi Absolutely
King of all
Bicycles. the Best
*&o<&
Light Weight and Superior flaterial
Rigidity. Every Ma- sod Scientific Work
———
chinefully warranted
■J>y
.* >; >
, -
SWISS' M
5 Styles
Highest Honors at the World's Colurtian Expesttin.
Send twoxxst sUmp ter oar 24-page CsUtogoe-A work of Art.
V
Monarth Cycle Company,
Retail Salesroom, a8o Wabash Ave. Lake and Halted Sts., CHICAGO, ILL.
RALEIGH RIDERS
PRIZES IN 4*91 Vi.V
WON 9oo PRIZES iN i89a
a,300 PRIZES IN 1893
3,600
■f Bicycle
Don’t you think the Raleigh
must run easily to accom¬
plish such a record?
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Our catalogue will tell you why you should ride a
RALEIGH BICYCLE.
RALEIGH BICYCLECOITPANY,
' new york:- 4K-
208I-83 Seventh Ave.
“Zimmerman In Training,” 50.ccnts. Reliable agents wanted.
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•mDISTISCT ^■RXOT
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Nothing in This Work! : v
Is cheap whether S3
so as a newspaper,
measured by the cost of its production or 1
value to the consumer . We are talking t : V
an American, metropolitan, daily paper of the
of progress to be without it. There are other ■■
-noneMt good, bit. none better, and
Uhe U. H prints all the real nem of
the world— the news v mi fn *—' Jnrt gig
and prints it m the sh, 7 . ile
- SDace
■, '.'Jnr eanread:
-
% work is p.ndfint
■-1 5 • too. an saner and
h&. news free * **
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