The Weekly banner-watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1886-1889, February 19, 1889, Image 5
I oiHii eiice.! taking Ayer • Fils. ■ S brneflte.1 me at once. I took tl " nla.lv for a few n.ontl.s, and »n>rmnnletely restored.” | The Reason I . r . r t s Villa aro so popular is, that Lvilile always reliable as a cathartic Lrflcinc, they never leave any ill I fleets This is because they are purely ,-table, an.l entirely free from calo- or n „y other dangerous drug. In j „ ca scs, therefore, whether the patient j J e 0 id or young, they may be confl- I dently administered. In the Southern and Western States, ihcre derangements of the liver are so i Tencral Aver’s Pills have proved an in- estimable blessing. V. W. Paine, Kew perne, N. C., writes: “ i suffered a long time xntli stomach I „„,i liver troubles. I tried various rein- 111,1,1 "'hut received no benefit until 1 . pills. These I took them my ij ralti; was completely Throughout New England, next to ull(! diseases, Stomach and Bowel ;oI „plaints are the most prevalent. Dyspepsia nnd Constipation arc almost universal, jilr. Gallacher, a practical chemist, of lloxlmry, Mass., who was long troubled jjfltli Dyspepsia, writes: ,< \ friend induced me to try Ayer’s Pills ami, after taking one box without ,U benefit, I was disposed to quit l enr but he urged perseverance, and, ; i had finished the second box, I to experience relief. I continued JakiriK them, at intervals, until I had l-sed eleven boxes. Suflice it to say, liiat I am now a well man, and grateful your chemistry, which outstrips . ue.” The head and stomach are always in ivmpathv ; hence the catise of most of [iiose distressing headaches, to which to manv, especially women, are subject. Ir rs Harriet A. Marble, of Poughkeep- le N Y., writes that for years she was martyr to l.eadaclie, and never found nyli.ing to give lier more than tem- orarv relief, until she began taking ver’s Pills, since which she lias been i tie enjoyment of perfect health. Ayer’s Pills, PREPARED BY j. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Druggists. _ . SOME BOSTON NOTES. I Our Special Correspondent Takes a Trip to the Hub. udviee to th.© Aged* cc brings infirmities,sncli us sing, h bowels, weak kidneys and bind- r and torpid liver. rtfs Pills re a specific effect on these organs, jnalating the bowels, givingnatnr» [discharges without straining or l>ing, and MPARTING VIGOR Itho kidneys, bladder and liver, ly are adapted to old * ryonng. SOLD EVERYWHERE. war of doctors is going on in ssachusotts between the regular Insed physicians on one side and llers of all other schools on the r. The attack is directed espec- against the Christian Scientists, Faith-cure people. The quacks (employed lawyers and propose; [lawis passed against them, to in the United States Supreme |rt the right of the State to pre- them from curing people. i Charleston, S. C., there are over colored tax payers on the munic- hooks, who pay nearly §15,000 ps on real and personal property jssed at $700,485. This is ex- |i”e of colored people who own I estate just outside of the city idary line, numbering least The number of colored owners ouses shows a gratifying increase year. . good deal of curiosity is being Iced in certain quarters ‘as to ther Mr. and Mrs Cleveland will hmttedto the select society of York’s Four Hundred. That [depend upon the amount of good ion sense there is in the said Hundred; but whatever may be apinion of New York Upper Ten- | Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland will be y the admiration and respect of American people. If they find Imittauce into the charmed ci. the Four Hundred they will lonored members of the Sixty- Million. INTERESTING NEWS CONCERN ING THE BLAINES. James G„ Jr., May Still Claim Bis Wife and Child—A Mnch Changed Tenth In Appearance—Bostonians are Expert Ad vertisers — A Banqnet to a Theatrical Manager—A Chat with Gen. Butler. Boston, Feb. 16.—There is probably no large city under the sun that is s> persistently, thoroughly and universally advertised as Boston, and nine times out of ten it is this that awakens the jeal ousies of the average New York -r. He fails to appreciate the “fine, Ita’ian hand” of the native. The Bostonian, however, only practices clap trap abroad, and in his own modest glass house is far enough from any unwarranted assump tions. ‘.Boston” shops, “Boston” leans. “Boston” waltzes, • Boston” gowns, and a hundred other things which have no more connection with Boston than the latter has with the planet of Jupiter, contribute their quota towards the cod dling of certain popular delusions. For my own part I have been unable to dis cover mo e general erudition or polish than in any other town of i s size. In deed, I was more than once impress d by the memory of that pungent little narrative told my friend and fellow Gothamite, Chaunctiy Depew, relating to the learned New Yorker on his first visit to the Hub. Entering the city hall the latter accosted an alderman and a shining lo.al light, to whom he addressed a few choice phrases of inquiry, winding up by requesting the gentleman to direct him to tire mansion of the noted Holmes. “Holmes, Holmes?” returned the per plexed Bostonian. "Begorra, sor I wud be glad, but—be his name Michael or Patrick?” It is but justice to add that fc e foregoing has al.eady been pro nounced a deep and cowardly libel upon the fair fame of the direct descendants of the PuriUms. * * * Young Jimmy Blaine, whose appren ticeship in a machine shop was so glibly herald -d by the newspapers a few weeks ago, was in town yesterday. It is reallv too bad to thrust notoriety upon a you h who is as determined not to court it, as I believe young Blaine is. No man could help believing if he watched him slink across Washington street into the, alley which leads up to a famous Boston ho ;telry ,that remorse had not touched the prodigal. Instead of the windy trousers, the l.a-hy gaiters, the stout British alking-stick and the al itudinous neck wear, tnere was a quietly, almost se verely dressed young fellow as much diiferent f.om the J. G. Biaine, jr., of a year ago, as could well be imagined. Apropos of this I am told by a gentle man intimately acquainted, with thr Blaines, that it is doubtful if young Mrs. Blaine ever signs with Mr. Irohmant I jo on the road, as the work of c< ncili *- uion between the Blaine and Nevins fam lies is slowly progressing, and the up slot of the whole will be a reunion of the couple. Now that the elder Blaine has fully regained his health ar.d spirits in a contemplation of a long j erioi of Washington life, he has decided, no doubt, that it would be better policy to over-ride the wishes of his better half, and make friends with his daughter in law. Perhaps this visit of Jimmy to the New England capital may have something to do with the matter. kindness, marks of e teem, etc., in the good, old stereotyped way. The illusiou of Bardwell Slote had impressed the au dience, and it seemed impossible that a character so impudent ana so garrulous could be downed by such a trivial inci dent. But Ilorencestopped, turned verv red, fidgeted vainly with the bottom of his waistcoat in si’ence for a few mo- men s, muml-led a few inarticulate syl lables. and was finally obliged to proceed with his part. The rest of the com] any pretended to be overcome by the awk wardness and timidity of the star’, but I venture to say the best of them wou d have made the same “holy show” of him or herself. * * * The action of a Boston woman with whom I have become acquainted will striue & cruel blow to the female suffrage cranks over the country.- The eyes of the latter have been turned very wish fully toward, this settlement in the last month or two. but I think it is abo..t de cided that Massachusetts, ar.d especially Massachusetts women, does not want any ballot in Tiers. The Hub's golden- domed statehouse has echoed with some very choice arguments pro anl con female suffrage, and while some of ti e ladies whose names have almost become synonymous with prohibition ar.d d ess reform have demonstated their ability to make tl'e plaster quake on the ceiling of the (enate chamber as it never dd un der 1 hillips and Sumner, it is but justi-e to say that the best and mest convincing* came from tie con 6ide of the case. The lady just alluded to is Mrs. Clara T. Leonard, one of the two or three women who have held offices under the 6tate government. Mrs. Leonard was several years a member of the .Massachusetts bcai d of 1 nacy and charity, and her let ter to the suffrage committee went a long way and made several converts among the ardent and chivalrous legis lators. I should like to state her reasons for oppo ing the movement if the sub ject were not already so rent. 1 make mention of it—Well, simply because I happen to be in Boston. r *** I called on Gen. Butler Thursday morn ing. _ “Hallo, King-Hall or Tom-Karl,” he .-aid as he shook hands. “I’ll swear I cunt keep track of you newspaper fel lows—es, ecially when you gechyphe i- ated,” he aeded. Ben must be edging alon' towards seventy in spite of his A GRAND CEREMONY CRISPLY CONDENSED. Preparations for the Great In auguration Completed. A PROCESSION IN BLOCKS FIVE THOUSAND. OF Realistic Tales Taken From Dally IJfts and .Jotted Down Hastily. W. L. Porter, ex-treasurer of Vermil ion county, .ndiana, is said to be $12,000 short. W. W, Hussong, a merchant at St. I ouis. was warned by White Caps to leave the city. It is reported at Indianapolis that Sen ator Teller, of Colorado, is slated for the interior department. Mike Keegan, of Cincinnati, slipped into a vat of oiling water in a slaughter house and was terribly Molded. Miss Emily E. Grandgirard, principal of the Highland female institute at Hills boro, O., died on the 18th insc. A man whose racks; is lo stop young girls in the street, whip out a pair of shears and clip off their hair, Is now working C ncinna i. Two cases have been reported to the police. The negroes congregated at Goldsboro, N. O., who were reported two or three days ago to be stopped there for the wautqf transportation, have betn sent on their way to Mississippi. Rioting at Pesth, Hungary, on acoount of popular opposition to the army bill, still contn. e i. There is also considera ble excitement aqd di order in the diet in the consideration of the bill. Two tramps who broke into the house of G. A. Cobb, near Kockwood, Tenn., while the family were absent, made a big tire in tha kitchen and cooked a meat. The house was tired by their carelessness and burned. Lo;3 about $2,500. Secretary Ci lman, of the new agricul tural department, received his cornmis- Decorations and Fireworks, Music, Re freshments, Carriages, Etc,, will Bat op the Appropriation—The Republicans will literally March by Telegraph—Cleve land trill send Harrison his Carriage. Washington, Feb. 12.—If appear ances, enthusiasm and promises coun for anything, and in tins case they cer tainly do, the ceremonies attending the inauguration of t en. Harrison will be the most elaborate in the history of the capital. The arrangements for the inau guration, now nearly completed, hav« re juired the Constant attention of Chair man Britten, an executive committee composed of thirty-two of the leading citizens of the District of Columbia, twenty one sub-committees, the aggre gate mem ership of which is l,6t)0, and a corps of clerks continuously since last November. The expense of the inauguration ball will be at least $50,000, and there is now to the credit of the inaugural committe in ons of the Washington banks all but $5,000 or $6,000 of this amount. The I 8 - on from the president and immediately wiU have to settle are $10,000 for decorating department of agriculture, in the pres and illuminating the great hall of the ence of chiefs of divisions and others, pensiv n building, in which the inaugural The fourth drawing of the Panama ball will be held: $3,500 for the music I ca “ al lot el T bonds of 1888 has taken fur that occasion, $6,000 for the supper, $7,000 for engraving and printing inau gural souveni^js, $3,000 for miscellaneous ! printing, $5,000 for fireworks and street illumination, $1,000 for carriages, $l,o00 to be awa ded to members of the prize dri 1. and $1,50J for clerk hire and sta-, tionery. It is expected that the ex place in P aris. There was a large public attendance. M. Brunet explained that owing to the pos'tion of the company it was necessary to suspend the drawings of other issues. The best prizes fell to the company. , A dispatch from Ch’cago says: It now teems probable that the inter state com merce railway association agreement years, for when I asked h ; m w.at he thought of the two million dollar Ct-urt House which is rearing itself opposite quarters, in Pemberton s .uare. he i owned and said something about the old one being good enough for petti- fo g rs in his day. But, after all, Ben min mav be only soured by remorse, t sterns plausible. Robert Cade Gaul. Perhaps the greatest guration day will be :he parade. There will be nearly 50,000 in line. The com niittee on mi itary organization has been notified th it it may expec: some sixty military organ izat ons, representing 15*,- 0'JO men, and the committee on civic organi at ions has on Us roster the names of more than 100 civic organiz;itio..s representing 20,000 men, which ‘ plied fof positions in the line. BE OF GOOD CHEER.- J To the honest inquirer after truth, wh<V troubled with some contagious blood dis ease, seeks a remedy which will com. pletely eradicate from his system every germ ot blood poison, that the ones he loves—his wife and his children—may be saved, the experience of others comes as a mighty revelation. Common sense tells him actual results are the only sure proof of curative virtue. Read the following true testimony: Twelve years ago I contracted a terri ble case of blood poisoning. My afflic tion was truly hornble. I had no appe tite, did not sleep well at night, my diges tion was impaired, my throat was full o£ ulcers. and in fact I was a total wreck. I had been under the treatment of several of the leading physicians of Atlanta; tried nearly every blood remedy adver tised ; went to Hot Springs, where I re mained several months, receiving no ben efit whatever—the dread disease still dung to me. Three years ago I was laid up with rheumatism. My knees were drawn up in such a position that I could not leave my bed for months. Last summer the disease seemed to re new its attack upon me with all the rav ages of death. My life was a lingering torture, and I had despaired of ever get ting well when a friend of mine recom mended B. B. B. I began to use It at once, and find myself permanently cured. I refer to Rev. C. C. Davis, Dr. John G. Westmorland, Dr. Knott, Garrett & Bra, and numerous others who know of my case. I cheerfully recommend B. B. for I really believe it is the best medicine for the blood in the world. Jas. L. Bosworth, Atlanta, Ga. During the month of February I bought one bottle of B. B. B for my four-year old boy, who had what doctors term heredi tary blood poison, and to my utter aston ishment one bottle cured him. In Feb ruary tny elder son, twelve years of age, was literally covered with ugly sores on his legs, and a terrible eruption on his head. He was cured with two bottles of B. B.B. As a quick blood cleanser it has no equal. James Hill, Atlanta, Ga. WEIGHS FIFTY POUNDS. Hood’s arsapariila cullar medicine, and is carefully pro >y competent pharmacists. The com- on and proportion of Sarsaparilla, Daa. ’ Mandrake, Yellow Dock, and other Bial agents Is exclusively peculiar to [^Sarsaparilla, giving it strength and power superior to other prepa* A trial will convince you of Its I medicinal value. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Purifies the Biood f aml sharpens the appetite, stimulates Ugestlon, and gives strength to every |oj the body, it cures the most severe of Scrofula, Salt Rheum, Boils, Pimples, other affections ’caused by impure Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Headache^ rand Liver Complaints, Catarrh, Rhetv ‘i and that extreme tired feeling. •Vs Sarsaparilla has helped me more rrh and impure blood than anything | ever used.” A. Ball, Syracuse, N. Y. Creates an Appetite jtsed Hood’s Sarsaparilla to cleanse my land tone up my system. It gave me a jppetito and seemed to build me over.” [ILale. Lima, Ohio, ook Hood’s Sarsaparilla for cancerous , nnd It began to act Uhlilte anything it cured the humor, and seemed to the whole body and give me new k®* NfXOjr, Cambridge; lOi-t, Mass, or book giving statements of cures. >od’s Sarsaparilla *?*”«**• gl;elxforf5. Prepared only i_ 0D * CO., Apothecaries,Lowell, Mass Doses One Dollar Yesterday I attended a banquet in honor of Mr. R. M. Field, one of Amer lea’s old-rime theatrical managers. As he is directly responsible for the great and unique success attending the Boston Museum for the past twenty-five years it was thought meet thac Mr. 1 ield should be tendered something fittingly commemorative of the anniversary. Many notables were present, including Gov. Ames, ex-Gov: Rice. W. W. Clapp, three or four ex-mayors, and the pre.ent head of the m nic'.pal government, Mr. Hart. That they, gave the venerable manager a rattling Bend-off was to have been expected of a people who appre ciate good, pure theatricals, and the man who has so generonly provided them. It tvas at this playhouse that some of the greatest stars on our Amer lean stage received theirfi. sc plaudits, and their descendants and successors were not slow to express what was in their minds. More than one tough skinned Thespian, in his earl.er career, more used to the buffets of the world than its caresses, owes his success to the kindness and generosity of Mr. field. Many members of his present stock com pany, I rightly wot, drawing good sala ries for little exert'on,would h ive a ha: d ■job if they ever went on the road. Several however, are first-class a tors, and would make a reputation anywhere. But i'll, from h'gheot to lowest, did their very best to than 1 ; Mr. Field for the ex cellent wa-' he had managed them since ther connection with his house, and making allowances for the little defer ences- in eate And oratory displayed by each, I think they all were in downright earnest. And. by the way, isn’t it a little queer how all-important it is to actors or ac tresses whether t!:ey are speaking their own lines or that of the plavright’s. I suppose bntli Hud on and Wilson, the very clever comedians, had their little speeches carefully prepared, ready to fling in the. faces of the assembled guests with a volubility and grace ^hich A Remarkable Head Carried by a J.ittle New Hampshire Child. Hat'Ovep, N. H.. Feb. 16.—The Dart mouth m.di al college has found a re markable case of chronic liv drocepliahis, or water on the brain. The : ubject is a child which has just died, aged thirty- two months. At birth the child’s head was of normal s-ize. but in about two weeks it began to enlarge. When twen ty-e'g'nt months old tn? cli Id weighed fifty-two pounds, and the head was e.ti mated to weigh forty-to fifty pounds. The dim nsions of the head were as fol lows: following the longitud nal sinus from the root of the Lose to occipital protuberance, forty-two inches; outer canthus to top of frontal bone, seven inches; to ver ex, twelve inches; from one ear to the other o er vertex, twenty- seven and cne-half inches; from n -ck to top of occipital b ne, fifteen inches; dis- tance bet we n temporal bones across an terior fontanel, ten aim one half inches. No treatment is possible in such cases except tapping tne accumulation of liquid in the cerebrum, and this would ha-e been fatal. The child was never weaned, and after the first two weeks o. swelling was unable to support the tre mendous weight alone or hold its head erect. The only symptoms of intelligence given in the litt'e sufferer was after the head had so enlarge 1 as to draw up the lower lids and almost clo e the eyes, when it would lift its hand and attempt to draw down the tightened skin. RESCUED HER BOY. A Mother's Heroism Saves Her Son From a Watery. Death. Beatrice, Neb., Feb. 16.—Everybody here is talking about the heroi m of Mrs; C. W. Jackson, who sv.ed her 1 ttle Loy from drowning in the Blue river yester day. The child, which is 5 years old, walked out on the soft ice, when it gave way and he went under. Mrs. Jackson saw the accident and rushed out. but when she had almost reached the child the ice gave way and the fell into the water, which is about 10 feet deep at that point. As she was sinking she soized h Id of the ice and managed to struggle to her feet. Just as the child was about to sink for the second time she got the I oy in her arms and ran a short distance, wlie.i the ice gave way a second time. Again she kept i im out of the water with ouehaud and with the aid of the other succeeded in rea hing the shore, where she fell un consc’ous, and was taken care of by neighbors. BRITISHERS IN MEXICO. They are Securing Valuable Franchises by Forming: Large Syndicates. El Paso, Texas, Feb. J6.—C. S. Green, manager of the 2,000,000 acre Hacienda de Istro, iu Chihuahua, recently secured by an Engl sh syndicate, has arrived here on his way to England Green has secured from the Mexican government the’ exclusive right to have artesi -n wells in the states of Durango, Chihuahua and would wring the applause from the. coahulla. and gees home to get capital withered palms of an assemblage o’ | to push tne enterprise. Vast mining districts are in the states named, which can be developed with water, and it is believed by mining men here that Americans and other foreign ers, as well as natives who have valua ble claims, will p.etest against f-uch a monopoly. It is clear that water will never be obtained except from artesian weUs. Americans have obtained valua ble conces ions from the Mexican gov ernment lately, but crowds of wealthy Englishmen are on hand arid are not getting lefri^ Pat Hawks, charged with shooting a man named Weston near Hopkinsville, Ky-, a year ago, war arrested at Gar- rettafours, Ky., on the 13th imt, . mummied centenarians. But you can never get an actor to a-‘i away from his familiar footlights—the affair is unreal to him, and he is tormented with an ab normal consciousness that he is making an ass of him elf. There is n >t one actor in a hundred that can make an im promptu speech even cn the stage, and some rimes his gaucherie is p ainful :o behold. I once remember seeing Flor ence, whom, ps everybody knows, is per haps the most \e satile living a tor. stopped short in. his part bv some friends in the audience and begged for a speech. Some presentatio .1 or other has been made, and it seemed to me the easiest thing in the world to make a brief and fitting reply, thanking bi&friends in a few words for their the largest representat o.i of mi.itia promises to be f.om Pennsylvania, fco ; e of the (ivic organizations will bring with th.m 1,50a men, and .others 1,000 The number irom New York state will be more than 5,000. Pennsylvania will proba ly send the next largest civic delegation, and New Jersey will rank tli'rd Uov rnor Beaver, the grand marshal of the parade, lias decided to divide the lh.e into six divisions, as follows: First d vision, United States tr ops and the National Gu .rds of t e District of Co- lumi ia, numbering about 500 men; sec- on 1 division, b,(M>u 1 e nsvltunia troops under the (omuian l of* ex-tioverncr Har raft; third division, the remaining military organi'a ions, represented b 1 ‘,000 m. n; fourth division, veterans of the Gra :d Army .- nd their sons, mar shaled by Gen. W lliam V a ner of Mis souri, the commande;-in chi f of the order: nnd fifth and sixth divi ions, civil organizations. 1 o quo e Chairman Britton, this great body of m .n “will be run by el.nurieit Seven temporary telegrapli stations will be establi-hed along Pennsylvania ave nue one the line of march. Over the wires connecting them orders will be flashed from the chief marshal to the division commanders. By this means instant communication with the various p iats along the route will be possible, and it is believe 1 that the 50,0 .’0 men in the ranks can thus be made to move as a *nit. Gen. Harrison and Viee President-elect Morton will; top at the Arlington,within sight of the White House, if President Cleveland fol ows the prece lent he will ser.d his carri.-.g j for G< n. Harrison and es.ort him from the White House to the capitol.' Gen. Harris, n Mill beaccom- n i d by his old regiment, the Seventh iana. two companies of cavalry, two batteri.-s of arti lerv, and two companies of mil tia of the bistrict of v olumbia. After the oath of office has bi en admin isiered o i the steps of the capitol Fr si- den Harrison wiit be driven back to the Wh te Hou-e. occupying a place in the prove-. ion directly behind the grand marsha and h.s staff, aud will thus be able to reach the gr. nd stand erected for him in front of the executive mansion in timetoteview the entire parade, 'the committee on f-tivet decorations reports that the sto.e and houses along the entire .ine of march will be elaborately de orated. The events of the evening will be the inaugural ball, the display of fireworks and the ; rize drill of the liarubeau clubs. The arr. ngements for the supper are well p anned to insure prompt service a d prevent confusion. A temporar. kitchen will be erected at a cost of $1,000 on the north .ri ie of the building. The music ;or the pr-.mtn ide concert will be furnished by the marine band under the directorship of Prof. Sousa. The dan ;e music M-ili he furnished b/Beck’s or chestra. of Philadelphia. The opening S‘. lection m i,l be Prof. Sousa’s “The Pres idential Polonaise,” written for the occa sion. 'i he pyrotechnical programme prom ises the g andest and most costly display of fireworks ever seen in thir country, It will i egin at 7:45 o’clock with a presi dentin! sa ule, rockets exploding at a height of 300 feet. An hour and a half later the exhibition will clo e with a simultaneous discharge of 5,500 Tockets the largest flight of rockets ever fired in the Uni ed States. If Gen. Gr<.ely dis charges his duties as to the w. at her as well as the committees have discharged theirs as to the ceremony the next ad- m’nistrati n will commence in a g:eat b!a-.e of giory. proposes to cover—the Chicago, Burling ton and Quiucy rtad having signed the agreement. The sheriff of Alleghany county. Pa., has levied on t’iree tow boats of the _ ...... „ « an l th ®7 < eruption all over'my body aneffimbs, with (.rested state that , Il’acYichTgo'? debil have ap- the firm will exceed $2U0, and may reach j ty emaciatfon fallme off of^mv hair sore For several years I have been suffering from a constitutional blood poison, which has resisted the treatment of our best physicians, and the use of the most noted medicines. I was covered with a copper-colored istence for twen.y-live years, and in the op nion of the coal men and business men of Pittsburg, was considered one of the mo -t relia le of any doing busi ness on the Ohio river. In the legislature of West Virginia Saturday, when a ballot was about to be taken for senator, Pre ident Carr, of the senate, announced upon the floor of the and great incredulous, but being told that B. B. B. was a sure enough blood purifier and that it did not require a patient to use a gross before he was cured, I commenced its use. Within two weeks’ time I felt im proved. I have taken about teit bottles and feel as well and sprightly as any man. My appetite and Strength have returned and my hair does not fall out. I do not house that he would from now cast his ! witZ to R R B h« n for fiotr for TTniferi “esfiate to say that B. B. B. has no equal vote for Gen. Goff for United States sen ator. Kirk, who has cast votes for some laborite heretofore, also declared him self for Goff. Horr, the oiher union la borite, cast his vote for Kennu, and will remain wi h hiiu hereafter. Dorr still refuses to vote jor Kenna. Toe ballot stood : Goff, 42; Kenna, 42; W. Three, 1; whole number of votes, 85; nece.-sary-to a choice, -UC The election of senator now hangs on Dorr, who is a democrat, but who ii bitter against Kenna. Gen.. Gilman Marston has been ten dered and accepted the appointment of United States senator from New Hamp shire by Governor Sawyer, from the 4th of March until the legislature in June provides for the next six years’ term. His political career began in 1845, w*hen he was chosen to the legislature, and he was three times re-elected. In 1865 he was elected to a second term in congress. Since 1672 his services in the legislature have been almost continuous, and he has been a leader on t..e republican side. M’indom Smyu 86. Toledo, O., Feb. 16.—That ex-Senator Windom will be the next secretary of the treasury seems to be assured with an interview with Judge Devinof Mount Vernon, O. Mr. Windom and Judge Devins studied law together under Judge Hurd, father of Frank H. Hurd. The judge says he has received a telegram from Senator W indom announcing his acceptance of the secretaryship of the treasury, tendered by President-elect Harrison. Daily Cabinet Slate.. iHDIAMAFOl I •, Feb. 18. Secrete:y o’ Stete—James G. Blaine. Secretary ot the Treasury—John C. New. Secretary of War—Jeremiah Rusk. Secret ry of t e Navy—Jo in War a uaker. Secrete y of the Interior—Estee. Postmaster General—FJley. Attorney General—E-. a-U. Secretary of Agri u t .ra—Warner Mlllsr. Indications for Sunday, Feb. 17. RAIN. Washington, D. C. t Feb. 16. — Indicate n i for South Carolina and Ge. rgia : Rain, warmer, southerly w inds. DAILY MARKET REPORTS. [SFKC1AU.X REPORTED BV MEADOR a GROTTO.] “ Atlanta. Ga.,February 18. Opening Closing January ».«.... 9.5tf(& v.8t February 9.76@ 9.81 >2> 882 March #.84tt 0.85 April 9.1?8a 9.80.... 8 AKA EOS May 9.97A 0.:0.... OOS-i* 0.W June liue® 10.08.... 1006A .... July 10.11® 10.11010. 2 August. 10.17®10.18. .. 10.17® 10.18 September 9.70© 077a 0.78 October 0.58 <& ... November <0, & ... December ..... © © ••• Closed steady. Sales 71.900. Spots — mid dlingp, 10 1-10; receipts 15,173; expo.ti SO,028; stock 869,025. Chicago Market. A Bevy of Dead Infants Found. Boston, Mas-., Feb. 12.—Within the last fortnight the bodies cf six infants have be n found in and about thi south bay. a semi sewer in the southern por tion* of he city. The police are. of ihe opinion that they furnish evidence of the e. istence of a flourishing-baby farm somewhere in that vicinity. The little bodies bore no marks of violence, and died, apparently, from lack of nourish meut anl clothing. Chicago, HI, February 13- Opening Closing .L05 1.07 l.OSVi . 1.09 l.Olji 1.05 SO Wheat. February . May January . Corn. February.. March May ....... Pork. SSK!Sr.*.”™uUtt.. :.:..:......n^ Huy. n.» W.Mg Lard. February — Starch *- 23 *£- K Mhrch “ Hay 6-00 ... nnin^nlcers on one leg, and r, and felt greatly prostrated. as a general blood purifier, and any one who will use only one bottle will be con vinced that it has no equal in these parts. 1 still continue its use, as it is a splendid tonic and keeps my system in a fine con dition. You have the liberty td direct any sufferer tO:me in person. K. P. B. Jones, Atlanta, Ga. I had 24 running 6on the other, . . I believe I actually swallowed a barrel of medicine in vain efforts to cure the dis ease. With little hope, I finally acted on the urgent advice of a friend, and got a bottle of B. B. B. 1 experienced a change and my despondency was somewhat dis pelled. I kept using it until I had taken sixteen bottles, and all the ulcers, rheuma tism, and other horrors of blood poison have disappeared, and at last I am sound and well again, after an experience o£ twenty years of torture. A. P. Brunson, Atlanta, Ga. Kennesaw, Ga., Sept 11,1687. B. B. B. Company—My Dear Sir: I take great pleasure in acknowledging the great benefit my wife has derived from, yonr great and wonderful medicine, B. B. B. F or two years she was a great suf ferer from Scrofula, or some blood dis ease which had lain dormant all her life. We had attention from some of the most skillful physicians in the country, but all to no effect, until we had all despaired of her ever recovering. Her mouth was one solid ulcer, and lor two months or more her body was broken out with sores until she lost a beautiful head of hair, also eye lashes and eye-brows; in fact, she seemed to be a complete wreck. Now comes the great secret which I want all the world to know: That three bottles of Blood Balm medicine has done the work which would sound incredible to any one who did not know it to be so. To-day my wife is perfectly healthy and clear from any scrofulous taint, and she now has a three-month-old babe, also per fectly healthy. Very respectfully Hi L. CassSdt. Glen Alpine Station, N.. C. > February 13th, 1888. y This is to certify that three years ago I had my left leg amputated four inches below the knee, caused by blood poison and bone affection. After it w^s. ampu tated there came a running ulcer on the end of it that measured 3% inches one way and 4)4 inches the other, and con tinued growing worse every day until a short time ago. I was given up to die by the best doctors in Charlotte. I heard of the wonderful B. B. B. 1 resolved to try that. My weight at the time 1 com- irenced B. B. B. was 120 pounds;. When I had taken three bottles. I gained 87 pounds in weight; when 1 had taken twelve bottles I was sound and well, but continued taking until I had taken, fifteen bottles. J now weigh-180 pounds and measure five feet and three inches high. I contend that your medicine has no equal as a blood purifier. It certainly worked like a charm. (12> UR. WiLSOV. Sewimr.Martlnel ‘ — .To at cnee cstablUbi trade in all parts, by I placing our machincsi " good* where tbe people can tea them, we will send free to one person in each locality,the very best lewinp-macbine made la world,with all the attachment*. Wo will alao send free a coroplcto [line of our coatly and valuable art [samples. In return we ask that you Tshow wbat we send, to those who may call at your home, and after & .months all shall become your own S rty. This trrand machine ia after the Slliecr patenta. rhlch have run out: before patents run out it sold for SUa, with the [attachments, and now aella foe llcst, atromrest, most uso- ‘flil machine in the world. All i»- .free. No capital required. Flain, brief instructions triven. Those who write to us at once can te. eure lire.; the best acwinsr-machine ia the world, and the finest lineofVorks of inch art ever shown together in America. TRUE Os CO., ltox 74.0, Auguatu. Maine*.