The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904, April 22, 1893, Image 2

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m Weakly Timss-ftiteipiise. ' THOMASVILLE, GA.. Mb Triolett, Editor and Banaicr. Saturday. AFRH. ^J '1893 Georgia needs . - a sta»e board of s7il with tie grip Secretary Smith at Griffin. ^ ' ’ ' There is, apparently, - Georgia politics. lu'l The hog aud hominy schedule w # mighty safe oue. f Belgium is in the ra’dit of a of great labir riots. The Iowa «litura were entertained yesterday in Tallahassee. Savannah is staking steps to keep out cholera'this summer* Col. D. N. *Speer, of Atlanta, for mer state treasurer, is dead. The grand jury sti'l has the Red trine ca 5 .e under investigation Atlanta. . An "exchange says: “According to the Charleston Presbytery, the Hello girl is bound f«>r hell—oh!’ Cotton took another big tumb’c a day or two ago. And yet planters are bound to plant a big crop Editor Pcnd.eton just goes right ahead getting out one of the best papers in the state. When the Woild’s fair opens tn the 1st of May. Georgia will be con spicuous by her absence. More’s the pity- ’The W. C.T U. meets in Macon on next Monday. It is the eighth anual meeting. Many delegates will attend. A democratic president will formal y open the World’s fair in the great democratic city of Chicago. This is as it should be. Governor Ni iil.eu is going for the lynchers in Georgia. Go in. governor the people arc backing you Twenty magnificent war ships are anchored iu Hampton roads. I 1 i*e of them belong to England’s boasted navy. llderiag to tlio work performed by Goveruor Norfben,-tho Constitution say.-: . : ; Few people out over 5hastate ever dream of the bard and teduyis toil they tie a man to when they rise up and Call him to the governor's chair* Tjicre is not a h j nPworking man in the.state but who can some" time look around him and say his task is done for at least a whi’e, bat .the governor of Georgia has no ouch unction as this to lay to' hi* soul ever. His work is an unceasing one. Governor Nortbcn H one- of the earliest risers in Atlanta. He is up with the lark and *vn every morning, for he has never grown out of the habit since ho left bis big old farm awa^ down in south Georgia, lie eats breakfast just as early as the farmers, and then he goes to the capi- tol to work. He has all manner of work to do, reading petitions for par don, studying the evidence in the cases of the world like a judge, writes jiil correFpqBdeut id the LnV.v York Herald is iu Hawaii writing up the situati m out there for that great New York daily. Refer- ihg to Col. Blount. be says: - •T ought to say that Cot Blount’s ..iysteriouis powers and his very judi cious conduct keep all eye3 here on him. He is the most silent man ihey have ever seen out here. He is accessible to every body of all parties; be listens to a’l who come to him; but, as everybody reports he never says a word. . “He gets more out of. you than anybody I ever knew,” said a dis*- appointed man to me to-day, **butTie never tells anybody any thing cf what he knows, thinks or • means to do.”' ' ~ •Morco»er, they. Bay of liiui he i> friendly, eveo genin', with everybody, but ehowa by hie occasional questions that ho knows a great deal t»bout island affairs, aod by the lew eiders he has so iac givcu, that when he Chicago, Apr.l 16.— Iliunn ad die of hi* i-.div dual tahihii. It is the kir.etogr.iph, he Iasi of his wonderful invention, displayed ip • c.mnic ion with Vie most mast versatile group of pfionograpluever fjroygl.r togerntr. It is oi lire eye what the ('hunter jph to the ear, . a mechanical retina, which stores away a iivmg pictur"-, to be reproduced in all its actions, every movement faithlul'y shown at any li ne and in atty place. With the kinctograph if is possible to show Oh caeo Chauncey Depew Biltvtring atp: cell-aboard the flag+hip Cucago in New Yotk harbor.. Not a photo graph of arrested action, hut ' the liv ing man, his every gesture, the plav ol expression do his face and the move-' menu o! fcis l.ps. It Will transnpt and reproduce moron of any k r.d h r any distance on an average of thirty or forty letters acts he means business. They have a day with his own pen and ink, esy gsvenhim etevermcknames here. They ing nothing of the countless number call him the Minister Recent, Mr. that he grinds out through his sten- Stevens being still the Minister ographer and private secretary, studies the merits of applications for office in this county or that when a- judgeship or solicitorship is vacant- does a thousand and ono things till he finds dinner hour is at hand. He goe3 home to dinner about 2 o’clock and eats and runs back to the office as hard a3 he can trot. T he same programme is enacted through tie afternoon and when the electric lights flash on at night he is surprised to find he is in the night so soon and that his work for the day h but half completed. Rolling a great bu: of papers under his ar them home to continue his work at night and frequently a light is seen burning in his study till the wee hours of early morning are cequeliug with the rooster in the backyard, just to hear them crow the hour of dawn. Resident* I must confess that, eo far as lam concerned, Col. Blount emi nently deserves this title. i di I Sat.iouisiLS: “Colonel, how aie the fish biting up in your way ?” “Splendid! ain’t been sober iu a week r • - * * * Surey summer lime is draw iog near, — For whut could else provoke That epldca lo in the air— The oMl.lickbrrry joke? ■ ' & ’ * - * The Hartwell Sun . gsVys ‘that “a tidal wave -of - reHgi'* n is sweeping over the Pay Up neighborhood.** A' •‘pay up’* neighborhood, is au v excel lent one f.»r an editor to get salvation predicts another C-100 Well, that --rii us of the j.res- Some t-ciei flood iu the y flood li es not < ent day. Princes and Princesses arc fairly tumbling- in lo Ne*v Y«>rk on their way to the World’s fair. Ai d Ward Mc Allister is happy. New York is right to use ihe is a fine field ope cure. It will be a wanck away from Chile withou country in trouble a? country. Egan needs a trying to but the veeiy cure. There iu that city for the Here's a new R chmond in t he field. The Savannah News says that John e McD.mough, Savannah’s popular mav«*r, is being boomed by the wiie grass lor governor. The News quotes a prominent citizen of the wire grass on the subject. "We wiregrass people,” *aid be ’“want to control the governorship the next time and the man we want to overuor of Georgia is Joan J. McDonough. As mayor ot Savannah he has shown himself to be a man ol the people, who like Cleveland iu \ci hesitates lo do what he thinks is right, irrespective of what may be the rc suits to himself politically. 'N e hav watched his course with ndmirin pride, aud if Savannah will help we can arouse a stroog senti Mayor McDonough th state and when the com The interesting article by Mrs. Loulie M. Gordon in yesterday’i Constitution on the new liberty" bell douhtlcS3 caused many of our readers to resolve to furnish some relic piece of brouz-3, gold, silver, copper nickle or tin, or some minerals from our mines, to g» into the casting of the bell at Troy, N. Y-, on the 30-h instant. - It will be Eeen that the time is short, he take? Persons desiring to contribute some thing to represent Georgia should send it to Mrs. Gordon without delay. The he 1 after the World's fair will go to Bunker Hill. Liberty Island, the battle field of New Orleans San Fraueiscoaud other points wheie cel -brations are held until 1900. when it Toes t» .Jerutf *lem. then to the wrld’i •xpoi-iiion at Paris, and afterward throughout the World. We must have some Georgia con- ibutioiis in tint bdl to swell it’s ringing music.—Constitution. nth Georgia ought to furnish ithing for that bell Wasiusgton, April 19—The president expects to be* absent from Washington ab mt a week in attend- anco ujnm the naval iuview and the opening of the World’s fair. He will go to New York next week and re* main^ until ihe official ceremonies connected with the review are over. A short rest will follow his return to Washington, and he will then leave for Chicago to be absent three or four days. - The details of the programme are not arranged. President Cleve land will not attend the naval rendez vous in Hampton Roads, aud Mrs, Cleveland will not accompany her husband to Chicago, although she will go with him to New York. All the ladies of the families of members of the cabinet will be with the presi dent and his cabinet in New York, ttud probably will accompany the presidential party to Chicago, On Grover’s stormy banks 1 stoo l ; A ml cast a wishful eys, To t urope’s fair and sunny himl Wl crs -lowly bakes toy pie.. • Washington, D. C, April 18.— A telegram was to day received from Secretary Hoke Smith from Athens, Ga., stating that ie was ill with a severe cold, but would return to Washington in.a day or two. Since his appointment as secretary of the interior Mr. Smith has given from fifteen to eighteen hours a day to his official duties and in consequence he is overworked and greatly in need of rest. B! nding Snowstorms, Nkw Youk, April 17.—Snow has been falling fast in the middle sec tion of the Hate since midnight At Rochester the supw- is heavy and a strong wind U blowing. At five o’clock, about, five. inch€*s had fallen and it was still supwing hard, A Mild on a Bscyclc in 1:56 2-5. 0 his is the fastest- wile ever ridden on a -bicycle. The remarkab’e feat was accomplished.bv J. S. Johnson, At Iiidep^nlence. Iowa, and the ma chine was- geared with --Elliptical Sprocket. Columbia’s have Elliptical Sprockels. ' -Senator that ! siftifflJlpi m. 1 \vm btr«>LT bel. re tlia «ou7t hoaso door, iu Use city dl 'rtoiuMTille, Ua„ bttwt-u tlio lejfal !i<iu» t.»!•?, du uio first Tuchdajr in Maw Uim following' described. pro; orly Wild Und Kiisnir Sales For May, 1893; sMbefore t May. 3 m« 6 "*?ollowiTiK ilescr to WUt^Sif m«iu ue loisotlau«K>t*.’» JC, ui aua 6i. la tb»...«. trie; or lhoaas Couiity On..•.«lt scribed ^ f..l- lous; -iG' |u ftin-wu^ ott tl«o eas tern sl ice of Nu.’niHu.u;*,- Muartl acre* b. lot So. di in the. ijoitbeaet •. vrutr *»t the lot. belag mu mmsnale uitd VsWv y»g ca*Ua»«l vre-t, equai-SgUnt ulilahca. uttrnn e dot i\x yact In lut4 No.’e JO arid Ji Iji.irfaud lieiug lu the ■coui.ryt.f TUouius aaii'stuto vt aoorsla. Notice given to uuh£t in .posseeiieu levied on ,'aa ihp uri'pery , of -Mary... B. Shaw, to satisfy a O'rinaet superior com e. 11 fa, issued the JtSddajrcr Mttrcn-iW3. The ban a Mongage lnccstmoot-& AgVnoY Co., vs Maty «• Tenant-jn possession, not)fled in mjr, also at the same time and place, p«rt t No-3, in block D. !>., fronting on . tal- - --- - - “* feet, runuing back 1W feet. Use city ol Tiioruasvillo. Ga.. ontbeflret Tu«l day In May 1893. tlio following wild \ax>d,ta- first Tuesday in wit: Lots of land No. 60.and 59, in the 17th described pro; orty district of «bornas county, Go., containing 3S0 !1mw*S«'|UR. ol iicrcs more or Ices. It virion >• “ PWP>«I u 61, la *Mwl ”— acres more or less, xeviexron »» :ot Bobert 8. moo, to oatlsf r« St»» - »-x am mu’ ilia. •akiug ab • j of if Egan gels involving the tin with that The Island ol Xante, one ol Ihe Oaian isles, has recently teen the scene ol a (ttetl e .rdquake. Many buildings and scores ci lives were sacrificed. The Union U ague Ciub oi New York has black balled Young Selig' man, one of ihe wealthiest Jews ii New York. Ard there is a great hub bub over it. Senator Paso i ivas re elected by tho Florida legislature on Monday for another term of six years. He dc served this recognition ai the hands of his coustituonls The Duke of Veragua, a lineal de scendant ot Columbus, has arrived New York. He will lie a conspicuous figure at the opening of the World’ fair, on the first of M Ati.anta, Ga, April 16-^-To city stables were destxoyeJl by fire this morning ..od 1-10 mules perished in the flames. The loss is $30,000 and the insurance $10,000. The republicans are asking by what authority Col. Blount ordered the stars aod stripes hauled down in Hawaii. The democrats retort by asking upon what authority they were hoisted. Havana. April 17.—The Colum bus Caravels, the Santa Maria, the Mina *nd Pinta. sailed hence for the United States to-day. They will take a prominent part in the great naval review to be held in New York. - The Georgia Colonels are slowly r. ' and sadly returning home. Footsore, weary and disappointed they will reach home some lime early next xhonth, provided the walking is good. * : JT They left their baggage with the jk ; : . landlords in Washington. Gold has again run down to the V danger line in the treasury. It may yet becomb necessary to issue bonds. - yi, e republicans left the country bank rupt. Four years of economic, honest democratic administration will restore • things. At Denison, Texas, Cliff Henry baa _jmpleted an invention which he de clares is a perfect protection against pickpockets. He will introduce it ot the World’s fair. When a pickpocket introduces his Huger or fingers into the pockit, the member is grasped by steel clasp and at the same time a needle perforates the linger. It lie attempts to remove his hand the needle sinks deeper. By pulling a steel wire the instrument is made harm- The instrument is expected lc be sold at 50 cants when pitented. the aerea ton in the hta»c of Georgia th* last report ir-mi the department of agri culture has ibis to say : “SjKCial inquiry was instituted for this rep acreage of cotton, ot which much has been said in the public press of >aie. It will, of course, be understood that i in the northern sections of the stive •nt for I this is a proposed rather than an dual increase at this time; and, per- ips, the publication of the deplora c fact before entering on a new ex perience of low-priced cotton. Th *sults ai rived at are cs follows There is aa estimated iucrease in cot ton acreage in the northwestern sec tiju of 14 per cent; northeast, 5 per cent; we-t, 10 per cent; central, 11 ; cast, 11 per cent; southwest, 10 per cen'; south, 7 per cent; south east 9 per cent.” y It remains to be seen if the Chicago Exposition will not be opened Sunday, despite the fanatics whose suecti.-s in keeping it closed will have tt.e effect of crowding the saldons. the ganih ing dens and the low ro-orts of umu-euieut'. Bishop Spalding, of I minis pu the care very clearly hu interview the other day when he (■aid: 1 hoj.e some means cau yet bo de vised through which the Fair will be opened Sunday. There will be thou sands «d visitor here, and with the saloons and places of vice being wide open while the gates of the Fair are shut, I Jeur there will be cause for regret that the Exposition was closed. —New York Worid. Le- T« U8„ I”* AOtS*.- XA ,aw - _ —V ' oriSjs^le^iad'onthaprojpcrtyof wore or less, htnuw » , T liurtress. u> satisfy a State an<f ilia- issued ity H. B. Hurst, Tax Collector TDom as county, Ga,, for tho yearMW. Montgomery, Ala , April 19— This morning a teriffic wind fctorm passed over Midland City, about sixty-five mi’es from this point. The Alliance warehouse, Masonic hall* drug store, several store houses and dwellings werecompktely demolished but fortunately no one was killed. The entire loss could not be ascertain ed as there is no telegraphic commu mention. Washington, April i7.—Emauch pation day was celebrated hereto day by a parade ot colored residents ot the District and by a public raaS3 meet ing at Lincoln park, where speeches weremade in commemoration of the day, thirty oue years'ago yesterday, wheu slavery ceased in the District of Columbia. The colored public schools were closed in honor of ihe occasion New York, April Leland Stanford- said ye>;erda ex-Pres»den Iijfrisqnw6uid.su gin his course «>l kc’ures at ill land S anf-.td miversi’y. .,*‘1 have abb r«v! c 'if war,” he txpUictd,- ‘and l have T-ug^es’ed .0 General Hartiscn ihat sn his ketures he devote hitaself to any extent be desires to arguments for peaceful arbitration.” From Wednesday tiighf, May 24th, Friday night. May 26, the Georgia Sunday School A^sociarion-will be in session, i.i Athens. The convention will be composed of delegates from the county associations throughout .the state. Two hundred aud fifty 300 delegates will be in attendance. 'street, tlicDue c-ulhoun str ct iU feet, puratcU to ly aU5 fsetto > marcia of ot-Iot boua street, 9» lee T , xunmng uaca. i«w iwk comineueliiif ^0 feet liyrtbr Os telly Jrotn tho in- torseetimur Oak ana CaUiOun sf"-et- Uicrda uortliwsirrly utrjgHt, uncles toe 1U3 net tbanee nonUwwnuIy UU lev., Calhoun stryt, thence eouiuvrcs’eriy Strcc-t, thence aloug the 1— , s reel Vk> I..et to stirttay; V-Ciut, scribed iu deed, to 1» : Marian. ITOui Olutoii, Saiil land 1>£aBS iu lUo city of 1 YfUe, levied b» a? U.C party of H. 1 shall ct al to a itisfy u court or o dlanry isaut d in February term, liOi. Jos. f*. MerrtU. yAa E. E. ilarqhalt at at ' Also a nie and place. Tho folly wing -Ucsfc building ilml the real estate UfOn which lc Is GEORGIA—THOM AS COOSTT. . Ordinary’s Office, March 6 *«. H» U, 'WbaUy adratotetrator of tho estate of i. E. Whaley deceased, has Applied to me for letters of dismission from said administraSioB and I will pass upon said application at mj. office on the first Monday in June 1«P».._ _ Jos H. Mkehidu Ordtaet*. Crai toilet »ei. -J places tin set. J », ‘i ieathtr pillows, o lour, shovel ton* and \ t, 5 window shades,9.1 spreads, i marb.e center t rockers, l chairs 1 ct Osage City, April 19.—Abou 4:30 o’clock yesterday afternoon one ot the worst cyclones which ever visited K a rums struck ibis city, and in a short time forty buildings were wrecked and several lives lost. About twenty persons were seriously injured, many of'whom will probably dU I AN don, Kan., April 19.—The cyclone here last uight blew down the court bouse, jail, and the Meth odist church, killing Henry Ilirsb, who was standing on the street corner. iVhlddcu Rous* *»«°cRy*oi Th. ! and ...asville, >atisfy a }, 1S90, GEORGIA—ruoMAS CcCXTY. ' Ordinary’s Office, March P, ’93. Whereas, J. T, Ylttuinn executor ot the last Will jinil ustament if John G. rittuinn, dc- a*cd,Tepres»;iita thtlie court in bis pctiUMi, ilv filed that ho has folly adunulstcred John Pittman’* estate. This is therefore, to cite • i "^ocerned, heirs and creditors to i. if any they can, why said exceu- l ho discharged from his admin- 1 receive letteis of dismission on day iri Juno lt!93. w Jos. S. wkuhiia, Ordinary. tl^ dl, iH’k! eit I Sold bj R. L. Hicks & Co „„j handsome, h*r- ) • kes healthy women. away bad drea rs, arc peaceful sleep. Sold r cable, 1 c uw fchad - Jd lifts the nctve, d ives g’.vis quitt net and t Uondur<mt, Peaccck Nashville, Tenn., April 19.— Adjt. Gen. File received a telegram from Tracy City today saying that miners were threatening to release the convicts to-night, A later telegram denied the truth of the story, but to be prepared for any ergenc^Gen Fite qrdcred the Nash ville militia companies to be prepared to move at an hour’s notice. ighout the tioa meets >g support. Ausun, Tex., April 17.—Gov. Hogg his issued a prod mutton quar- an:icing all vessels or persons from infccied ports to go into eff^c* May Qjaramsne is declared against persons wall cholera, yellow fever or similar diseases. Thu borders of the s'.ate 1 be watched by an efficeut corps ot physicians under Mate Health Officer Swearingen, and every effort g nude to keep cholera out of Texas this summer. ,- let Georgia and Florida follow la fact the entire seaboard shou'd be very vigilant this year. There is gteat danger of cholera get- a foot hold in this country this summer. Sid I cw.s, of the Sparta Ishmael te, has not “made up” with Tom. Watson yet, as the following will show : And so Watson wouldn 1 be satis fied ft the democrats were to carry out every principle of every paragraph of their platform. Of course not. the very nature of the case, a hoi ing professional kicker must bye m state of dissatisfac'io . If Wats satisfied, his occupation a howler would be gone. , On the first of May the time tor deporting the securities of tho Central road will expire. While the p-an of reorganizaiioc liar bee.n* hampered and fought at every step, it looks as if 11 would go through. Tho people are tired oi the seemingly intermina ble iroubles surrounding that sys and they will gladly hail any pUn which promises to Li annate them Give the old Central a chance to get The hoodlums of Savannah have drawn first bWI in Uio sreat battle of base ball thb year. They knocked Umpire,Uarrioston out on tho first round. And Herrington saya that Savannah policemen stood around ~nd never said a word. ' ^ M ' ' rJhk A petition has been tigued by all the business men and post masters of Moultrie, Dot, McDonald au-J I’i*l- ccck, asking for the dhconlinuance of the mail route trom/fliomasville to Moultrie, which is a daily mail and at present carried by horseback, aud to establish a new route in its stead, from Pidcock to Moultrie over the Boston and Albany railroad This will greatly improve the mail facilities. Stant in, iri Atlauta Oo'nstitutioi. ; And now, parson,” said the editor, “ will you ask a blessing before wo dine?” “Good Lord,” said the parson, “have mercy upon this man and open his eyes that lie may see and under stand that greens are not greens with out bacon, and that grace without- grits is dead.” In retaliation for the mobbing of Umpire Harrington, Charleston threatens to “do up” the , Savannah c’.ub, when they come to Charleston. If these umpires and base ballists, who are receiving fancy salaries, were put in the cotton field, they would eanuheir money. Washington, April 18 —The President and his cabinet ministers held an important meeting to day at which it was determined that so soon as the gold reserve in the treasury vaults touched the $100,000,000 mark order would be issued stopping the redemption in gold of treasury notes authorized by the act of 1890. Tbo Wall street speculations have had their day. It will be seen how they tako their portion of the democratic medicine from now on. Mr. Carlisle may live to distinguish himself as minister oj finance. He has made bra ye start and he may yet becomes president of these United States. “The Nile.” says a scientist, ‘ has fall of b’it ms inches to the 1000 Yes. The overflow commences in June every year aud continues until August, attaining an elevation of from twenty-four to twenty-six feet above low water mark, and flowing through the “V a!if of Egypt” turbulent body twelve miles wide During the last. 1000 years-there has been but one sudden rise of the .Nile, that of 1829. when 30 000 people diowned *’ At Covington, Ky., a girl has won a prize for this essay on the kind of man to marry: “If I w'sbed to marry, which of course 1 do not-, I would desire a man too nob'e to com mit a mean act, but generous enough to forgive one. A man as gentle as a woman, as manly a3 a man; one who does not talk scandal or tell disagree able truths. A man whose name I would be proud to bear, to whom 1 would carry my doubts and perplex! ties and with whom 1 would find sympathy aud jov.” Georgia H just full and running ;er with lots of such men. ‘ John Bull,” the first engine which er pulled a tram in America, it was 1831.1s on its way to Chicago pulling two quaint little passenger coaches The coaches are lighted, they were in the early thirties, with tallow candles. The little engine goes tooting along at the rate of twelve miles per hour. The Constitution says: “The cot ton picker invented by J. W. Wallis, of Memphis, Tenn., has been tried and worked successfully.” When a cotton picking machine works successfully, perpetual motion will be the next thiDg and then the milleuiura will be ushered in.—TV aycroas Herald. According to Redwine, as detailed to JackSpalding^Tom Cobb Jackson swamped $90,000 ol the Gale City Bank’s money. Tom Cobb Jackson, it will be remembered, shot. himself the day after the shortage was dis covered. Ex-Senator Joseph E. Brown cele brated his 72nd birthday last week. He ha3 been a prominent figure in Georgia politic? many yeare. REVOKE. This standard bid stallim will make the present season at the Ken tucky Stublvs, nt the low price of $15 THE SEASON Invariably in Advance. PEDIGREE: REVOKE is by King Relief be *1 j - Belmont (/ire of Nutwood, and of .Walarewcod, 2:19) he by Alexander’s Abdallah, O.ru of Gold smith’s Maid). Revoke’s first dam was Rosewood, by Blackwood, (sire of Portiuo, 2 ;10*4 , fceconc dam by Paul Murphy, third dam by Cock- ;% fourth dam by Sir Wallace. S. F’CIIKY. Cleveland, O., April 17.—A heavy and blinding .snowstorm has prevailed throughout northwestern Ohio since early last evening. This morning the snow has reached six inches and is still filing. In this city street car traffic is impeded to some extent. Mrs. Hammond, who has figured as Redwine’s lady friend, has been re leased from jail. She claimed, at or.e time, that Redwine had given her $40,000. Washington, April 19.—Secretary Herbert is confined to bis room by grip and is unable to come to the navyMepartineut to-day. Steve Ryan knocked out a Boston drummer in Atlanta yesterday outlie first. The Boston drummer bad been talking about Steve’s failu: Savannah wants the Spanish vels at her May week. And S;i nah generally gets whatever she Fat offices are last disappear Washington, and the colony of Gcor gi i Colonels is very much depressed. ■ T:reived Fresh Every Week The Way cross Herald reraak- ‘Defeated office seekers have still two avenues open to them iu the South, i. e., the lectuve platform and the ottou patch.” Let them take to the cottoa patch by all means. Spare us the lectures The remains of the late president of the Confederacy will pass through Atlanta.oa the way t > Richmond, on the 29di of May. They will lie state in the State Capitol for several hours. Georgia will pay proper trb ute to the leader ot the “Lost Cause.” St. Louis Republic: But let in dare'deny to the Tennesseeans who d:i.d a: Smloh or to the Virgin ians who fell in the wi’derness in re bellion ai d treason against the United States the name of patriots. Every man ot them, *ho, wi bout pay,_ip :r, coid and nakedness, went out to die in front of his own home and the home of his lithvr, was a patriot il he were a hundred times a rebel and a thousand times a traitor. St. I’eter—Euler. Why do you hesitate? New Spirit.—I doidt see any usher. “We have no ushers here. Sit down where you please.” ‘‘Dear nit! how different heaven is from our church”—Texas Sittings The commission of a crime is fortunate and the existence of a senti ment in favor of lynching is also un fortunate. Let the majesty and the’ supremacy of the laud be everywhere maintained. Iu this course lies the safely of life aud property. The burning of thirty thousand barrels of old Bourbon in Kentucky recently, came very near causing a’ panic among the Kentucky colonels. Several of them had to fall back on water temporarily. This was pretty 1iard on the colone’s. New York, April 19.—Edwin Booth, the tragedian, is lying at the Players’ Club, 16 Gram mercy park suffering from paralysis. It is feared that this secoud paralytic stroke with which the famous actor has been stricken, will prove fatal. Atlanta, Ga , April 18 —The sub stance of Redwinc’s statement made to Jack Spalding, and repeated by him before the grar.d jury, is understood to be that Tom Cobb Jackson ob tained from him upward ol $90, Cleveland will receive the great naval parade in New York har bor, on the 27th. It will be the grand est naval display the wor’.d has # ever seen. Almost every nation in the world will have their finest warships in line. The report comes from Atlanta that a farmer has found a pure diamond in White county as large us a hen egg. It wiU be sent, according to the same authority, to the World's fair.' This diamond and the Kolb Gems will illustrate Georgia at the great fair Sam Jones agreed to convert a lot of sinners in Bowling Green, Ky-, fo 1- $2,300. It is said that 2,500 joined the church under his preaching. The converts.lt will be seen, didn’t cost quite a do'lar each„ The McShane bell foundry, of Bal timore, is preparing drawings for _the largest bell on the American cqnti nent. It will be named “Ihe Great- Bell of America,^ end will weigh 44,000 pounds, looo-for each s’ate of the union. Tt ii said that 1609 guns wid greet tbs President on his trip up the Hud son Jon Naval Review day. M the rainmakers theory be correct, such a detonation should bring down a smart April shower. The honor of being the second on the list of the. oldest postmasters in the United States is claimid for Sidney C* Pra len, ot Eitontoa, Ga., who was apj ointed under President Van Buren in 1840. Tho Brunswick Daily Times is doing splendid work lor “Brunswick by the sea.” It is both bright and newsy aod always has something good to say .for its town. Bald* Company U to twopantal and for the purpoBt-a aforesaid toe profit. BlOCk oi wuu five thousand do! DYO UUIUUiu the umo to any amount— majority ot the board of director „ lority of the etockholdare until the reached ame.OCO, (five hundre d thoint: Inrs.) but In no etent shall auld etocc f< Peutfc^» P ?Srther thow tb*t they ihclro thut the itock bo dlyldod Into scares of JU0.J0. ane hundred dollar* each. Petitioners further enow that 121,000. (twenty- ono thousand dollars bvn het-u actually paid in. Tour petitioners hereby ask that they shall be Uabjp to toe extent of thoiy iinpald stock ° Tour petitioner* pray Uio pawing of un order hy this court granting this their application, and that they and their associates be incorpo rated for and during the term of twenty years, with the privilege of ronowal at tho expiration of the egid twenty years, for,the purpoac* OI tno fcWWU.J IOTTOS. . Petitioner's Att. ruoys. Bead and confirmed. Let this petiUon be. filed and advertised as required by law. Aj ril W-* a 8!J&C.S.G, I Is Sure! Safe! Inf1ammatfon ( Congestion and - Falling of the Womb, Profuse, Difficult, Sensible! It Always Cures! Laceration of the Cervix, Ulcoratlon and Tumors, Anteverslon, Retroversion, Dropsy of the Womb.. Irregular Menstruation, And Lcuchdrrhoea. •, .. .. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. "artSJjIW* Dr, C. McQill A Co., 344 Panorama Placo, Chicago, hi,