Newspaper Page Text
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I Another instai c* * ( "btenlirig t «roro
the lax pavers ihrirtuh ihe medium of
Ihc pt’DM«!i' »rtlin: *■« ojhj** *o bgh*.
A Dfgrii wytiun • Iivn g just »in»vc
Allan’a has b.-to »hc Tvcip’cni of jhc
government’*' bouniy fur a long »*u«n-
ber of years, drawing money to which
she had not even iHe shadow .of a
till;. Speaking of ihis case lhe Sa
vannah Telegram »i)i :
“A colored woman who has nearly'
rounded op her hall century, and who
has been married ter the last nineteen
years, nol content with obtaining a
minor’s arrearage of pension amount
ing to $2,000 has been drawirg $8
each month, with charming regularity,
ever since. Her father enlisted dur
ing the Sherman invasion of Georgia,
at a time when the girl was 19 years
of age, and was entitled to but two
years ot arrears of pension. That
she should ha/e been permitted to
draw a pension for so many years as a
minor and nineteen years alter her
martiage shows how loosely the pen
sion department has b^e 1 conducted,
and how profl gate and'wasteful have
been the pens on payments.”
Of courr.e the woman’s pension as a
minor ceased when she became 21
years old, and then aga’n 11 ceased
when she wav married. There are no
doubt thousands and thousands of
similar instances; and yet the republi
cans raise a howl when democrats
talk* about, i ivcstiga’ing the pensio
rolls. Let them howl, and let the
investigation proceed.
SKeaSeFCffSp's’Spsech*
Mit hi. roimmiiMii •» 'ui.aTtiurii
f r i*|H?itk*T ti'fc gui.ht-<l (Jis r-
gimn tieture h« caucu.-* aad
apokaiui lidluwi:
“The extraordinary canditiua of
aQain throughout lhe country baa
uecenitaicd our meeting In extraor
dinary .ration. In no far aa thnt con
dition ia attributable to existing laws,
we ore in no »ise rrapomibbs tberefor.
Now. lor the first time in more than
ir. .We
39 yearn we are in lullpowei
can rejieal tad law* and we can ma^<
good ones. The people hare trustee
ns with that power, and expect us to
exercue it fpr their benefit. 'Our
financial eyatem should be revised ltd
reformed. The strictest economy in
public experrdiuuve should be ob*
•erred, and.taxation should be <<]uaN
ixrd and greatly ndwwd. Tu iIheo
pnrpusn are we ttaroogWy eommitted.
W<f mot redeem oar piedgM: Let
us begin work at once. Let tia lay
aside every other consideration than
the public good, and endeavor to die-
A good many clever and well mean
ing peop'e in ’ these United States, 1
both North and Sou'll, are giving
themselves much unnecessary trouble
over what has become kno.vn as ‘‘the
Negro Problem.’’
The “Negro problem,” 10 far as its
being a source of trouble is concerned,
is marc imaginary than rea', and'what
there is of it is fast solving itself.
Here in Southwest Georgia, where
the negroes s
are an>whir<
trouble. To
: ab«
are
and a while mar.
as they have aiwa
will be, as lor th t
of God’s country.
•ut as thick as they
L" S. mb, thtre is no
i>e- and the whites
negro is a negro,
a white man, just
s been, and always
matter, in this part,
And the negroes
and white people u-. derstand each
other thoroughly. 'Hie negroes who
are here can get along with no other
people so well as ihey can with their
former masters and their descendants
They find no oth« r people on the face
of the c irth who will treat them half
so well or who will make so much
allowance for their instinctive and
inherent foibles.—Albany Herald.
A good deal has beer said about the
criticisms of Governor Norihen on .the
convention of judges The governor
is out in a card to.the A’laWa Journal
on th - subject. He rayr: s
\ I have read with pain, an. inttrview
reported in the Journal, in which I am
represented as making severe criticisms
upon the recent convention of superior
court judges held in this city.
.Such criticisms were not warranted
by the fact*, and nothing was further
from my purpose or my opinion,
. Lthank'your reporter for .saying,
‘/the governor has some very impor
tank views on tl^e^object of reform in
the courts, and it is.jo be hoped that
he will find ajray to have them prop
erly considered.”
1 deeply regret,'however, that he
understood ~and represented me
critidsing the judges as “figureheads”
and the convention ’a* a “failure
| cannot recall any s’atemert made
by mp lhxt would warrant such fc con>
elusion. I ceriaioly did not think of
or intend such a con3truc*ion of the
charge the duties assigned us es to re v interview.
store confidence, promote prosperity,
and advance the general welfare* of jail
classes of o*r : people, Sincerely
grateful for ydur confidence an! es
teem I pledge myself hi devote V* the
discharge of. the duties ot the respons
sibie position you have assigned me
all the energy, and ability I poa-css.”
__This communication wou’d have
been fnrnishe.d the issue immediately
ucceeding the publirhed interview if I
had Qot been absent from the city. "
\V. J. tyORTIIEN.
Speaking of the new cotton crop
the Savannah Press says:
During the month of August, if the
weather continn® go-xi for picking!
from 15,000 to 20,000 bides ot new
cotton may be received at this port.
A factor this morning received
word frofti Montezuma that probab-y
1,500 bales would be shipped to Sa
vannah from that point by the end of
the month.
It was reported thi* morning that
sales bad been made to day below the
market quotations. With mills clcs
ing down and the probability of
small demand until the latter part ot
September or early in October prices
may be expected to go off. This will
have a tendency to hold back cotton
the interior as much as the fiuau
cial condition of the farmers
will permit.
Wfc ARY THE WAITING.
!*y-
ThrreYassd&to all Wiling
. West da*\ ✓
(Bat it’s weary the jvaitsn^, wearvi)
There’s a harbor somewhere in a peaceful
h*) .
Wl.e*ttl>e>a!!s will be futjed ami the ship
ill Uy~ ' .
At anchor—somewhere in the far away—
(But It’s weary the waiting, weary!)
There's nn end to the tronblc3-of souls op-
p'M,
(Butit's weary tKe. waiting, weary!)*
Some rime ia the future wlt-n Gol thinks'
Wt,
Hell lay ns tenderly down
And ro-ws’l: bloom from the the ms in the
birast, _
(But it’s’ weary the waiting, wcnnl)
Thery’s an end to the world
frown, *
(.But it's weary the wuitin/, weary!)
There’* n light somewhere -that no dark caff
- drown, -
And where life's sad burdens are all laid
d«»T
A crown—thank God!—for each cross—a
crown; —
(Butii't weary the wsitiog. weary!)
Fbabk L. Stanton.
New York, Aug. o.—Wall street
was fairly jubilant yesterday. Nearly
every slip that the news agencies
distributed to their customers
tained au auuoutscrtiicut of gold
secured in Loudon for shipment to
the United Stales. Long l».*fure the
close of business the various consign
ments reported footed uj> $G,700,000.
The greater part of this will be
shipped on steamers sailing for this
port to-morrow. JLaiiltk, $2,000,000
were secured last week, which is now
in transit. There is, therefore, nearly
$9,000,000 of go'd under way which
will be added to the reserve of the
New York banks lielween now an*l
the eud of next «\eek. The amount
that will bo shipped fr-jm London
to day is so large that it is now per
fectly plain that the return movement
of (he gold taken by Europe from
this country is well under way.
Speaking of the geographical dis
tribution of state pap, the Macou
Evening News says:
“The slate has boycotted the entire
territory soutji of a line drawn from
Augusta through Macon to Columbus.
It the slate can help is none of the
big offices willever be filled by men
from that section.”
Our Macon contemporary goes on
to intimate that this section may con
clude to straighten things out. Very
likely it with And this reminds us
that there is a disposition creeping out
atnoDg politicians to- claim sort of
citizenship down in the wiregiass.
Why, they say: "I am one of you; I
own a lot of wilfl land in Ware and
keep a pack of hounds in Dooly. Ot
course I am one of yon.”
Speaking of Hon. H. G. Turner
passing through Savannah on his way
to Washington on Thursday night,
the Press says:
He came in very quietly on the
Savannah, Florida and WVslem rail
way from Quitman, acd left almost
unobserved on the Charleston and Sa
vannah and Atlantic Coast line.
Mr. Turner was not inclioed to be
interviewed. He was close-mouti ed
about coming legislation. He be-
lievi s in bimetalic currency and is
disposed to do what he can to main
tain silver at a fair ratio, but not at
the expense o* the currency or busi
ness of tho whole country. Mr. Tur
ner is e’ear-headed and conservative,
and will doubtless take his place again
on the ways and means committee of
the house.
“Mr. Turner, are you in the ince
for the United States senate next
time?”
You must excuse me. I have
not time to look ahead into that ques
tion. Too many vital matters *fcon-
front us now.”
The bell rang then, and one of the
vital matters confronting Mr. Turner
just then was to gel on the train.
* And this, too, occurred up North
A dispatch from Darby, Penn., raj
“Excitement ran high here lust
night, and more than- one good citi
zen turned out with his gun to run
down a negro fiend, who attempted
brutal outrage upon Mi-s Mary
Feather. William ' Dicksoi’,' who
claims to have Ik cn working at Ninth
and Lombard streets, Philadelphia,
was captured and taken to jail quickly
to avoid a p'*a*iblo shooting This
crime, fallowing seven of a similar
kind that have occurred in Chester
County witKiu, three months, has
stirred up the people of this viciuity^
who ihreaten to lynch, without cere
mony, the next iieud caught.”
Well, we shou’d think that seven
such crimes perpetrated in a county
within threo months would cause
something ot a commotion.
An exchange re r erring to the fall
ing of! of the taxable property of the
state says:
So far the decrease in tax values in
various parts of the state as reported
to the comptroller general amounts
to $0,072,000.
If the present ratio continues the
total lAx values iu the state, accord
ing to the digests received, will dc
crease $12,000,000 since lest year’
return.
This amount will not be sufficient
to causa any change in the tax rate.
West Chester,
Two farmers, each
gun, scourtd the w<
Mackey’s houxe 1
township, yestejd..
fiendish negro, wh
rage Mackey’s In: I
fiend was driven fr.
but he kept to far
sho^ else he would
minious corpse.
This reads very
dent had occurred in the South; but it
didn’t, it occitired up >0 I’cnnsylvania.
Human nature is pretty much, alter
all, the same ih
Pa , August 1.—
rmed with a shot-
ods near Horace
London Grove
•, in search of a
ha J tried 10 out*
: iluughur. The
n pi ice to pi
n advance to be
now be an igno-
Here’s a plank taken from the plat
form adopted by the third party
Virginia, which has a strong sub-
treasury aroma about it:
“A national currenoy issued by the
general government and distributed
directly to the people on the security
of their property ”
What would the real value be ot a
currency based on the indiscriminate
property of the people. Some broken
down merchant would want the gov
eminent to iesue money to the amount
of thousands on a moth-eaten lot of
cheap clothing, while some thrifiltss'
farmer would want a hundred or so in
greenbacks issued oh an old mule.
uch like the 1
Washington, Aug. 4 —Treasury
officials state that the treasury is pre*
pared to supply all the small currency
wanted, and the lack of such currency
in certain sections of the country is
accounted for by the supposition that
small money is scarce, or that the
banks have failed to procure bf the
treasury the small nctes needed for
home consumption.
The nmim r in winch th- banks
and banking-bou ts ol the South have
stood the severe s ? .ra;n ot the past
three months should dispel the last
vestiges of doubt as to the stability of
the South, ar.d shou'd forever remove
the lingering suspicion ia the minds
ol many that the growth of the South
in late years has largely been fictitious
and ephemeral. There cou'd be no
more striking demonstration of the
soundness of southern financial institu
tions than is furnished by their record
While all this talk is goibg on
about more silver it is. interesting to
stop aud think that we have now five
hundred million of the white dollars,
and that very nearly four hundred
million of these dollars are locked up
in the vaults at Washington, and in
the various sub-treasuries of the coun
try. Every effort has been made to
push this great pile of metal into
active circulation. ■ *
of the last three months.—Times-Re-
corder, Ameritus.
The new rule of tho Superior Court
Judges limiting the speeches of law
yers to 30 minuiea on any crinttnal
case below felony is likely to be re
garded by tho youthful sprigs of the
profession as a direct blow to their
rights. There is probably not a brand
new limb of the law in tbe State but
could, and would, like to talk for
thirty minutes without touching the
case at issue at aU. Do the Judges
BKfln to dam the flow ot eloquence at
the very’fountain head?'
The Atlanta paperi* without intend
ing to do, recently put Colquitt coun
ty in a bad light before the country.
The Constitution makes the amende
in tbe following:
The land frauds reported some time
ago are in Coffee and not' Colquitt as
stated. The information came from
Colquitt, thep county seat of Coffee.
The information has been placed in
tho hands of the solicitor general of
the circuit.
The London Truth has been put in
the bands of a receiver. Things must
be getting in pretty bad shape when
- the truth has to be put in the bands
of a receiver. Give Truth a fair shosr-
ing. It will corns out all right in the
end.
The Mr. Pierce who made the
fierce onslaught on Cleveland in Chi
cago the other day, was a . candidate
for congress from Tennessee at the
last election. He ran on the third
party platform and got gloriously
left. He has the cheek ‘now *to say
that Cleveland is no democrat Well,
he is a very different democrat to
Pierce. We axe thaakfol for that
What has beoome of that fellow
who promised to have a flying
chine ready for the World’s fair?
Atlanta, Ga , Aug. (> —Osm n
Pasha Mayer aud J. Piucetou, rcpri
sentatives ot the Egyptian govern-
meat, are now in Oglethorpe county
visitiDg the great pla-ttalicu of Col.
Jim Smith, who uses convicts ou his
farm. Col. Smith is one of the most
successful planters iu the sou' h, aud
the F.gyj itiuu commLsionerg came es
pscially to study his methods, they
having been recommended to do so by
Speaker Crisp.
Here is what Bradstreet says about
the commercial outlook at the South
in his report yesterdsy:
‘‘Good crop prospects in the South
tend to produce a hopeful feeling at
Nashville, Atlanta, New Orleans
Little Rock, Houston and Galveston.
No - currency scarcity is noted
Charleston or Mobile. The banks at
Memphis, Galveston, New Orleans,
Birmingham aad Richmond appear
to regard the new national bank cur
rency issue as a promising relief.”
John Temple Graves and Mr. Cal
houn are disputing as to the credit of
originating the idea of colonizing the
negroes in a state by themselves,
is. an empty honoi; for the reason that
the plan will never work. The negro
a free citizon, and he will live
wherever his inclinations lead him.
The great majority of them are better
off right where they are. And they
know it.
The governors of all the states have
been invited to attend the centennial
celebration of the laying of the corner
stone of the capital buildir.gat Wash
ington city. This interesting event
will take place on the 18th of Sep
tember next, and President Cleveland
will introduce 'the orator of the day,
Wm. Wirt Henry, of Virginia, a de
scendant of Patrick Henry.
Chicago, August 4.—Florida has
been ousted from the horticultural
building at Jackson Park. The State
commissioners have shown no dispo
sition to maintain a crecitable ex-
hibitand Chief Samuels, after giving
them several warnings, decided yes
terday to take away Florida’s space
and divide it among the other states
which are anxious to make a good
display.
“E. W. B.,” writing from Washing
ton yesterday, says: “The reports
made to the comptroller of currency
showiog the condition of the Georgia
banks was given cut to day. It shows
the average reserve held by the banks
to be 25.52 per cent. This is higher
that? the average from the North and
West.” This makes a good showing
for the southern banks.
The young men of Aiuericus, as a
rule, visit on Frid «y evenings. 'The
Times-Recorder notes the fact, but
is unable to explaiu v.by this is true.
Well, it shows that the young people
of that growing city are not supersti
tions. Au engagement made on Fri
day will turn out all right.
A Woman Defends the First Man
From Charges of Cowardic-.
Au-i ti e L id said : “ * * * Ha>t \
thou eaten ot the trea whereof I com*
niaudedlhee thou shouldst not oat?”
The man srid: -l‘The woman wbotu
thou gav* »l to be with me she gave
me of the tree‘and I did eat ” This
it has been held, for ceuturiis, was
A lap//' great eio, for which lie was
driven out«*f »ha gard •:*, and his
decendants, e.veu to the - prueut gen
eration, compelled to woi k for a liv
ing. . In addition to bearingYhe con<
sequences of his eir«r Adam has been
denounced through all the succeeding
centuries for his oowardice and lack
of gallantry iu Jrying to throw tKe
bhimu upon the w-.rusu **!••• bad b
given to, be .with him—‘HJds tii8\
best gift to. man.” We are gad,
therefore, that even after G 000 years
of unmerited conderauaii*»n which tl«
memory of our great progenitor has
had to bear there has arisen one per
son who durca.to speak for him. And
it is oil the more fortuuate that that
pen-on is a woman—:a member of the
sex whom Adam’s words, by a wrong
interpretation, were held to have
maligned.- This penon is;Mis. Car
oline F. Oorbhi, a dUtingished
authorefS. In her last b *>k -he says
of Ada mV plea: *
• this is not the exprersion of cow«
a-die-?, but of the innocent and native
belief that anything which this lovely
b ling, fresh from GbdVhand, proposed
must be right, and, right or wrong,
must be done. It is a trait which has
ome down in unbroken continuity
of inh< ritance to the latest boru of
Adttiu’s 8*'!IH.”
Tho 1 bought is a new oue, but there
is nut a man aliyo and capable of ap
preciating Mrs. Corbin’s argument
who will not indorse it. Where is
thtrj a man today, barring a few
crusty old bachelors, who would nol
have done the same thing under like
circumstances? The woman was beau
tiful, the apple was good, and Adam
was an unsophisticated, ingenuous
y jung man, unaccustomed to the little
social arts and deceptions that tie
daughters of Mother Eve have learned
from her example.
We insist that Adam Is vindicated,
aad that Mark Twain’s tears over his
grave were a deserved tribute. Now
Lt the building of his mjuumout pro
ceed. And let it be recorded there
on that “he was a kind, loving and
obedient husband.”
© - iW T w . .
r Ojfi:' i>** a W a
'-*£> In«raj Bgfxiy i*
L .fp cf Mother fiitl Chll f.
!
Alabama Midland Railway
TlioEQ.a,sv-ille ZE2c-u.teto E’loixd.a
SCI! KIIULE TAhl.Nl! EH fcCT JAN. 22,1893.
••'fiOTHER'S FRIEND "
__ 2o5a Ccsfintmeni of Ut
Pain, Horror mndlUab,
■' r ‘ --vtfrs nmr bottle of *• 31 el her* e VriMd” X
in—.4* -..uf. HUM Iij.iu.uml Ul. 1 u< < t-x p-srl-uco Hi it
JZs. a^UtWBXd IMUftl la KOCH UMk-Xn.
.UK. L1UU, Nil. Jm. ISU. ML
I'lAriJElDBEGULATOlt CO.,
ATLANTIC A.
: J 9CU> SZ AU. ,
• J;a<t a malignant breaking oat on my 1
-. li e knee, and was cared Board amt v:i
, 't-.-s, and » lialf botUca of CfSiy'S’.'
V.-rbtikxI mo>Uc!ccs bad failed (£5bE«L •
> uu'uo any ji.nl. (Till ('. Umt: .
GOING WEST-KKAD DOWN.
D COam
9 13am
9 37am
» Siam
v ulam
s (7am
8 3j a m
. a 7 oo*n
i 6 -.7 a m
’ RBSSbam
” S 48*~
a * rlaiu
ftbTn
4 Isa
v .
I was troubled fromcluldhcyxl with nn
Oar conk on Wood and Skin Diseases mailed
3wift Spermo Co., Atlanta, Ga.
W. L« DOUGLAS
^ 83 SHOE mm*.
Bllbe wur (hem? Wfcen serf !• ttti bj » »s!f.
Best in the w.rld.
.4500.
>4.01
•3.51
12.50
(12.25
$2.00
43.00
\tZ50
SSL
42.00
*1.75
FOR 10V*
4R
No.0.
7 00 pm
>8 »Spm
ot Jfi pm
*»pia
£7 37 p m
•4 40p w
No. 'il.
8 40 p i
S.
a5 07 pm
si 39pm
S8 P m* ** P “
83 wpm rsTTpm
KSOOpmiG OOpra
82 41 pm 13 82p —
m aop
luapn 84 67 pm
BU4Spm 14 40p■
2 15pm si 23pm
0 60am t3 40pi
STATIONS.
Train
No. 98.
... Montgomery ,Dp
...Way sc. Yard .Dp
Demand tT 47 am«7 lOapa
fT6J»m *
Sot*'™
Sprasub June.
.......Grady
(8 22 a m
VZb: ;*•
Bruadxidg*
.....TennUoLT.
Arioeto.,
Dillards
.... .^...Ozark
Newtun
...........Puxcknrd
.Midland Uty
......... Do tli au
.Qumru
AshforU
bT St at
s7 63 a
»«a»_
sS 82am
....
Safiold
....... Dona) son vtlle.....
BaisbrUf* -*izo7 pm
.....Tbomasrllle Ar alUOpm
p .T." JacksonTiiie..l...V.Ar. 71
a'J 3 J a m
dUWMb
110 63
sll IS
" 38
Warn
nix to pin
suiaprn
Si 90 pm
al iu pm
8310 pm
tU SO
8144
83 33 pm
83 38 pm
84 10 pm
"8” Indicates train stops, **F” indicates train stops o
Train loaves Montgomery for LuTeme
Luverneats 43 a. m. I^avo Luveraeat3 i
and*27 carry Pullman Vestibti
WaycroM aad JackaunriUe.
gomery 10310am.
Tralas-TSand 27 carry Pullman Vestibule Sleepers between ClnclnnaU aud Tampa, Flo* via
TtMAOiTtllO, Waycrom and JockeuatiUe. Train 78 connects at Tkomasvllle with s. V. A W. trail*
78 for Savannah. Cfcarlwitcm. Bichmonn, Baltimore, PhUadelphlu and Now York, carrying PtUl
sleeparfrcm Wajrcroes to NewYork. without c*-
connactlons at Montgomery 6
X. DAVIDSON, G. P. A.
JacksouTllle. Fla.
furaU western
USE MCLENDON, ▲. D. P.
Montgomery, Ala,
Savannah, Florida and Western Railway
. don’t pay $6 to $8, try my .
$5 Shoe. They ft eqoal to custom mads ud Mt asd
wear » well. If you with to ecoaomlzt !s your footvstr,
do so by purchasing W. L Douglas Shoes. Name sad
prioscUmped s« tho bottom, look far it whsaymbsy.
W«Iw DOUGLAS. Brockton, Mass. Sold by
Cnrtright Daniel.
S:!0 pm * :'J* *«ul C.10 am Lr SavKuaah. Ar ItMi ,
1030 pm am 1 8.0*1 nni Ar Jeaup I.v ki;7h
1230 ami It 1* am! SU-lain Ar.s...Waycro*
And now that fel’ow Hickn alirs up
swelteriug humanity by predicting
that the hottest days this year will be
between the 8th and 12th of this
month. We can uot see where any
earthly good can result from theec
harrowing predictions. Down with
Hicks.
You can just put it down as a fact
that a South Carolina Colonel is
mighty mad at somebody when he
refuses to drink at one of Tilman’i
dispensaries. The irate Colonel
would prefer paying two prices for a
good swig iu a blind tiger establish
ment.
Lawyer—What change did you
first .notice in the patient as a result
of bis acquiring the cigarette and
morphine habit ?
Witness—Well at first be began to
talk incoherently and then be took to
wearing pink shirts.—Chicago Rec
ord.
New York, Aug. 4,—Dun’s re
view of the state of trado will say:
’'The demoralization in the speculi
tive markets has been followed by a
more healthy tone and heavy imports
of gold inspire hope that the monetary
troubles may abate.
It was about the tenth of August
when the first case of cholcrp. appeared
in Hamburg last year. There is
time yet for the epidemic to start, but
tbe chances are that good sanitation
has made au epidemic this year im
possible.
It is a mighty slim specimen of a
politician who hacu’r a remedy to
prescribe for the fioaccial ills of the
country. And every oue is guaran
teed to work a sudden and radical
care.
The democrats while grappling with
the tangled finances, leifc 03*“ a legacy
to the country by the republicans,
will not forget the iniquitous McKin
ley tariff. In fact the two reforms,
financial and tariff, go hand in hand.
Tillman says he is going to arm his
spies and instruct them to shoot. He
seema to have trouble in running the
dram shops in that state. Let us
hope that the days of Tillmanlsm
Germany and Russia are fighting
over a tariff^ That’s better than
shooting at each other. Why/we’ve
been fighting over the tariff in this
country and the only man killed but-
Mrs. Nellie GrantSartoris, daughter
of Gen. Grant, has returned to this
country from England. Her husband
is dead and it is Thought that she will
reside here in the future.
P.P.P.
Hbusiou Horae-Jourail: N it miny
years ago Houston farmers bought
i. meat and other farm supp'ies
trona the merchants. This year the
farmers have sold corn, meal, lard
and meat to the merchants and other
town people. This places the balance
of trade on the right side, and all
panics interested will be better satis
fied in every parli- ular. Affors are
in correct shape when our tanners
bring their wagons to town loaded and
carry them home empty,—with the
exception of the dry goods and luxu
ries they may see fit to buy.
The Georg'a delegation, with two
exceptions, voted for Hurt, the suc
cessful candidate for door keeper of
the house. The door keeper has
great deal of patronage at his disposal
and Georgians will be apt tn * get their
share ot it. They generally do.
QJRE5 ALL 5KIN
AND
BLOOD DISEASES.
N*. 208
i) tralus stop
No. 19 leaves Savannah dolly, ojeept Sunday, 3.55 p m, arrives Jcsup
leaves Jesup dally, except Sunday, *.25 a m, arrives Savannah 8.35 am. 1
aU stations between Savannah and Jesup.
BLEEPING CAB SERVICE AND CONNECTIONS.
Trains Nos. 35 and 14 carry Tollman Sleeping Cars between New York, Savannah and Port
npo. No23 carrlee Pullman Bleepers Care waycross to Aashvllh-, Louisville and Chicago
in 78 carries Pullman Sleeping Cars between New York and Jacksonville. Nne.saud e
carries Pullman Sleeping Cars between Bavonnab and JackeonviHe. and on Wednesdays and
Saturdays Ho. 3 carries Pullman Bleeper to Suwannee Spring*, and ou Tuuradays and Sundays
the sleeper returns from Suwannee Springs.
Train No. 3 connects at Jesop for Mace**, Atlanta and the we-*t. Train No. 23 connects at
Waycross for Montgomery, New Orleans. Nashville, Cincinnati, St. Louis and Chicago Through
Pnlhnon Bleeper Waycross to Chicago. Train CJ connects with Alabama Midland railway for
■" ltgomcry aad tbe southwest.
Tickets sold to all points and sleeping
T. M. VAXDVKX, City Ticket Agent.
P. P. P.
Cures rheumatism
P. P. P.
Cures dyspepsiA
There wiH have to be some c'onces*
sions all around or a dead lock on
financial legislation will be the result.
This latter wou’d be very deplorable.
Tbe country expects 'prompt and
practical legislation at the hands of
congress and'il should come
Ed Barrett writes up an interesting
resume of the history of- lha various
speakers of the house of rep-esenta-
ttves since the foundation of the gov
ernment, in the Sunday issue of the
Constitution.
There »re thirteen third party men
in congress. They must be mighty
lonesome. They doubtlesq mis3 Tom
Watson. But they have Sockless
Jerry, of Kansas, on hand.
To congress: Get squarely down to
business, gentlemen. That’s what
tho country wants and expects.
Monkeying with grave questions will
not bo tolerated.
Some men are born great, some
achieve greatness and others have the
big head, but you can’t keep a work
ing man down, says the Sunday Ma-*
con News.
It costs only fifty cents to make a
revolution in tho great Ferris wheel
at Chicago. This is a little less than
the usual cost of a revolution in South
America. _
Give the country enough currency
to meet the demands of commerce,
and let every dollar, whether it be
gold, silver or paper, 1)3 worth one
hundred cents.
Tom Reed, the czar, received the
empty honor of being nominated for
speaker at the hands ot his defeated
party.
For the twelfth time in the history
of tke government, congress was con
vened fn extra Cession yesterday.
The famous Cherokee Strip will be
thrown open to settlement oB the 1st
of Sept. Already hundreds are
camping along tho border ready for
It., will bd several days before the
speaker will be able to announce the
various com mi ttces of the home.
Hon. H. G.. Turner placed Mr.
LIPPHAN BBQS-t Proprietor!,
icuniu, Uprmm’n Block. sSS, (U.
REVOKE.
This standard bid stalUm will
make the present season at the Ken
tucky Stables, at tbe low price ot
$15 THE SEASON
Invariably ir. Advanco.
PEDIGREE:
WAVUpOBH SHORT LINK TtMK CARD
SCHEDULE OF THROUGH TBAlNttTO FLORIDA AM- SOUHtNKN GEORGIA.
GOING SOUTH—READ DOWN.
COB. TO JULY 2
Ar .. .
5.33 pm
10.2-1. pm
11.00 pm
3.33 pm
ii.w
E«-
3.25 pm
8.40 pm
7.35 am
r....tii<tuswick..
Albany
Sanford
Ar -Tam,m Lv
At Purl Tampa....Lv
Ar Lire Oak Lv
Ar.... OainesviUe Lv
Ar Valdosta Lv
Ar....Tbooiaavlile—Lv
Ar MondceUo Lv
Ar.. .ttainbrtdge Lv
Ar.. Chsttahoochee.. .Lv
Ar Macon Lv
Ar Columbus Lv
Ar Atlanta Lv
‘ lontfcomery.... Lv
...MobUe Lv
v Orleans Lv
*i2taa
8:2(1 am
l8«a«
3 .-(JO pm
t;23pm
7:25 pm
4-J0 pm
3:13 pm
3.4>pm
io.4'< pm
tt.Ma-u
7.03 pm
B. G. FLEMING, Superintendent
r births m cured at passen
W. U. DA < ID HON. G*,u«
d T vwanirer Airent.
a. nsrzErw route
BETWEEN—
QEOEG-1^,
AND
Brunswick, ThomasYille and Jacksonville.
VIA
E. T. V. & G„ G. M. & G., C. S., B. & \V„ ‘S. F. & W. RY’4
JUNE 4th, 1823.
45 pm
__ 08 pm
11 07 pm
I 15 am
II 60 am
409 pn
6 43 pn
McDonou<b..
Columbus—
Richland
T. v. & G
■ M, & G.
c. a.
Arrive Thomaavtllo.
8. F. & W.
D runs wick B. & W.
Jacksonville | 8. F. A W. !
NOKTU BOUND
t Dally, t Daily Except Sunday.
Close connection made in Onion Depot, Atlanta, lor all points, North, East and West.
CECIL GABBBTr, Gen’l. Mang’r
MTB.UEREXCUBS10X TICKET^
— * - -—.jo. Limited to Oct. —
IER BESOBTA
from
.er to
via Sb-nandoiS TuncUon
s, hotel*, etc- eheeVf
if inquiry answered in detail
Hen
fi--berth ...... . .. . —.
^FRANK M l('U.Y,Dis«. P»o. Ayt.^S^W^ t
i iWashinrton via Slwnando. 1 Tun.
•fmnvj Limiud r*U* **ji: *-? \\
s,'.V’a
REVOKE is by King Rene, lie by
Belmont (sire of Nutwood, 2:18^£;
and of Wcducwcci, 2:19) be by
Alexander’s Abdallah, (sire of Gold
smith’s Maid). Revoke’s first dam
was Rosewood, by Blackwood, («ire
of Fortine,'2 ;10>4 ; second dam by
Paul Murphy, third dam by Cock-
spur, fourth dam by Sir Wallace.
v. RICHEY.
ANY
BICYCLES ON INSTALLMENTS.
STYLE AND MAKE.
THOMASYILLE GUN WORKS
td Street.
Board in the Country.
A few persons desiring a sojourn in tto
aroma of the pines, and
where they will be made to “feel at home,”
can be accommodated at Jersey Farm
Location high and healthy, rooms new and
femfortabh
pat* milk.
GOOD MILK/
Parties desiring good milk ^ can be sop-
plied by addressing Jersey Fakm. An in-
tariff bift.
the rush.
Crisp in nomination for speaker.
IBtf
A' ‘
Central R. R. of Georgia}
IN EFFECT JANUARY STB, 1S93.
Schedules from ThomasvlUe to Macon. At
lanta, Montgomery, Asheville, Hot Springs, etc
Leave ThomasvlUe, B. F. A W,...
Arrive Albany, *• ......
** Macon, 0. B. B. .—
“ Atlaao, “
Connections ore modelaAtlonU with B. k D.
tralas tor the North and East.
Leave ThomasvlUe, B.T. k W....
Arrive Albany, “
“ Eafaala, C It.IL
Montgomery “
. 10 40 an
... 4 33pn
... T 23 p n
Loavo ThomasvlUe, 8. F. W..
Arrive Savannah,
Leave Savannah, Q.B.R.
Arrive Augusta,
“ Sparranburg, ”
Asheville. ~ * “
..... 1 28 p
.... 8 45 p
_ » *0 a _
2 60 p m
......... 10 10 p m
THpm
J. C. HAILE, Oen
W. F. SHELLMAN, Traflo Manager,
LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors,
Dragqtsts, Uppc&n'r Block, SAVANNAH. GA.
EuiTn,!a.Ha.ILl!
THE CINCINNATI AND FLORIDA LIMIT
ED FROM THOMASYILLE, QA.
Leave Thomasville, S. F A W 12:31 boon
Arrive Waycrosa, “ 4:00 p m
Leave Waycross, “ (limited).. 4:35 p m
SOLID YESTlBt’LED TRAINS FROM WAY*
CROSS TO CINCINNATI.
Arrive Jesup, S. F. A W C.-00 p ■
Leave Jusup, E. T., Y. A Q &10 p m
Arrive Macon “ ..11:32 pm
Arrive.Atlanta, “ • 2:40 am
Leave Atlanta, “ 2:55 a a
Arrive Rome, “ 5:35 a a '
Arrive Dalton, *• 6:43 a m
“ Chattanooga, “ 8:00 a m
Leave Chattanooga Q. A C 8:20 a as
Arrive Cincinnati, “ 7*20 a m
Pullman Cars Thomasville to Way crow,
•nd solid traina from Waycross to Cincin
nati, via Macon, Atlanta and Chattanooga.
J B.W. WRENN,
Gen, Pas. k Ticket Agent.
fcwofific
n of wiy fciantlBe paper th tha
y illuitrated. No IntelUffS
BasaaBiHi