Newspaper Page Text
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Education.
who is warmly my personal
friend, is t!io Vice-President of the
Foard. rim other leading members of
th. (H ii ;y hero were generally present,
i .vo of thv ir daughters, with your niece,
(who ;. ,i very bright girl,) divided
th first honor. They are all my
t : Did 1 had no motive to offend
t ; if 1 had not undos stood the
j»r-i-v of the occasion. The sub
stance ot hit remarks by me was this:
'That st is only its (.Christian countries
where women the position they
an> just A entitled to, and in Christian
communities they sue the companions of
their husbands and equal in social posi
tion and in other important respects. In
Pagan countries, in Mohammedan coun
tries, for instance, they are slaves rather
than companions, and have hut few
rights tli.it are recognized by their hus
bands or by men generally. 1 was not
drawing a contrast between any particu
lar religious, but 1 was drawing a con
trast between the status of woman in a
Christian country' and her station in a
community not Christian. For instance,
Jewish women in the United States, a
Christian country, occupy an infinitely
higher position socially and otherwise
than the Jewish women in Turkey—a
Mohammedan country. And, after re
torting to those advantages, I stated that
they all ought to feel | roud that they
were born in a Christian country, and
that remark applied to all females
who enjoyed the privileges of a Chris
tian country as contrasted with the privi
leges of a Pagan country or a Moham
medan country. All intelligent people
who were present understood my re
in irks and my meaning perfectly, and
no exception was taken whatever that I
heard of. After the dispatch was pub
lished and had returned to Atlanta in
some of the papers, Mr. Mayer called at
my house to see me in reference to ir,
ami assured me he had not heard a single
Jew who was in the slightest partic
ular displeased ar the remarks to which
the disp t.cji referred. Ymi have there
for*. judged correctly of ray motives and
my sense of propriety w hen you penned
\i nr editorial and 1 cordially thank you
lor it.”
It is.a pleasure to us to make the state
ment clearer than we made it last week,
by this extract from Senator Brown him
t*dt, tor sometimes a strong prejudice is
excited by matters of this sort, which, if
unexplained, tlo injury to all who are
concerned. We print the dispatch mere
ly to emphasize the correction and to
give an example ot how great a fire a
jjuie matter kindleth.
T v^JisV'V’ l -
: , >,' !■■. 1 !; :n
--'■■'••■ ' a !"i!!'!y 11:".\ a
HHjKucr to the lost mute.
never occupied the pigeou-
HHrcinec tliut day, except ns a feeding
As tlie time comes around to feed
chickens and turkeys, he darts into
his lonely shelter for his bite. No mat
ter how quiet you may be, he will come
with a rush and a flutter for the morsel
he knows he will get. He has a keen
sense of humor, too. It an old hen with
a young brood is turned loose, he will
circle around and above her, darting
about like a hawk, to see her squall
and light.
lie is devoted to the turkeys, roosts
with them, goes with them and comes
back with them, but for all that, he can’t
resist the tun of playing hawk, to see the
young ones dart and hide. During the
long, no’] winter, pigeon would he
1 found hoveling dose to a friend!v old
*■
turkev hr; , < ; r::e lee side of her, when
the st> rm v. ■ : f aging iml to her praise
be it said, th pidgeon would alight from
the limb next day dry and comfortable,
while her own feathers would he crusted
with ice and show. If it became too fa-
miliar in its attentions, sfie would peek
and squ.dk occasionally, but the pigeon
understood her old-fashioned ways, and
in due time would draw nigh quietly
and get the shelter he wished. Some
tunes we get uneasy lest he has left us,
but suddenly there is a whir and a flutter
and pigeon is at its little window, wait
ing for us and the bread crumbs.
Its little humble life is a constant les
son to us. It is so cheerful, so nice and
tidy with its frequent baths, and the
careful placing of its jaunty feathers af
terward. It has no kith or kin to bright
en its existence, but it is content with
it- surroundings, grateful for attention,
ievcted to its friends, and every day acts
out a lesson of contentment and duty
that is very refreshing.
We cannot wonder that the doye of the
Bible was made to symbolize the holy,
the true, the confiding, the faithful.
Even the Spirit of the Most High alight
ed on John the Baptist in the guise of a
modest, humble little dove, and Almighty
God was “well pleased” to make it a
messenger, a bearer of good tidings, to
the man in the wilderness whom the
multitude came out to see. What other
fowl of the air was so honored, and what
other was ever so deserving?
Cartersville, Ga., July fth, ISSS.
Editors Corn ant : My attention has just been
called to another article by Brutus in the Car
tcrsville American of this week, and, by way of
reply. 1 make this proposition: If Brutus will
write one more article and sign his own name to
it in order that the pc*ople may know who he is,
I will shake hands with him across the bloody
oil asm, and will admit that with a little more
venom, a little more political aspirations, and a
little more pecuniary inducement, he might have
done better. Yours respectfully,
A. W. Fit*.
f/IEE SPHERE AXD HER WORK.
caption of an article we
Index, signed, and
by i idy. The ar
>f the liiptbt
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r y'i ‘Qglfo■ 3"?V ■V fU f With the
‘ your father'd’
\Cl*ltjli_£>VSx 5 like the !it
is to try it on your
do not, and never ex-
for Woman's Rights, we
propose to be dismissed from
business or accountability by any
such plea as this, nor do vve suppose
you could find a church in Georgia that
would dare to establish such a code, in
dealing with the female members of the
church.
As before stated, we take the high
ground that woman has work enough of
her own to do in tins world without as
suming that which she has no need to
undertake, hut should a necessity arise
for her services, we are very sure she
could handle every dollar of church
money with as much security to ail con
cerned as any man on the roll of mem
bership, and in our opinion, she would
greatly improve matters if her business
sense was oftener applied to the tangles
and difficulties that oftentimes harrass
and impede church progress. Suppose
women should decline to assist in raising
money for church purposes, the male
members would most iikely understand
the difference very soon, and it is a ques
tion as to how much she ought to under
take under such hindrances as are un
ceremoniously applied by some of her
own sex.
■ .i SWISS SOLDI Eli AI. !FX YS TO
In the first issue of the Atlanta Capi
tal we find these words :
“Representative Felton, of Bartow
county, is opposed to enacting a law to
compel the return of property at its true
value.”
We are not apprised as to the real
source of this falsehood, therefore we
charge it on the editor. Where has he
the evidence that Representative Felton
opposes the return of property at its
true value ? Foint out the spot and the
words.
Representative Felton is as anxious to
have the property of the people returned
at its true value as any other honest man
in the State, but to arrive at that value,
he prefers to take the oath of the men
who own it rather thaw the exactions of
a lot of petty officials who are more in
terested in getting their own per diem
out of the returns than in doing justice
either to the owner, or to the State.
Unfortunately for our State, many of
its had laws ami much of its unjust taxa
tion and unfair legislation is attributa
ble to the fact that public opinion is
largely controlled by tue hirelings of
corrupt political bosses and the supple
tools of unscrupulous speculators.
Georgia has been unfortunate in keep
ing to the front a squad of writers who
are always found on the side of extor
tion and monopoly, and who turn up on
one side as rapidly they turn their coats to
the other side whenever profit and pecun
iar)' promotion leans from one side to the
other in the jostle of events. Represen
tative Felton has made no effort to pro
tect dishonest tax returns, the “Swiss
soldier always to let,” to the contrary
notwithstanding.
Proper Treatment for Coughs.
That the reader may fully understand
what constitutes a good Cough and Lung
Syrup, we will say that tar and Wild
Cherry is the basis of the best remedies
vet discovered. These ingredients with
several others equalit r as efficacious, en
ter largely into fjr. Bosanko’s Cough and
Lung Syrup, thus making it one ot the
most reliable now on the market. Price
50 eta. and SI.OO. Sold by D. W. Curry.
does it pa rr
Under the rules the article on “Does
Farming Pay,” from brother Green, of
Muscogee Grange, goes to the agricultu
ral department in this issue. We are al
ways glad to bear from any one who
thinks fanning pays. We have been
considerably mixed in our belief on that
subject of late vears. but keep on trying
to see “pay” in it. May it come to every
farmer. —Southern Cultivator.
A 3 we scanned the columns of the
one of our most valued ex
above caught our eve like
..>f ring chick**..-
derm.:'. if
:: ■ r v
;;
'
the
i he farnv r
for labm
ho 1 >l.2Ti to wc. ■it
a Icash.' The cotton
HHK fertilized and the drouth
A bale to 1 acres was eon-
lucky, and many a poor man did
Wot make one to seven, and even higher
Ah an that in some very dry localities,
where a bale to two acres was the small
est return expected when the seed were
planted. Out of that poor yield taxes
had to come, guano bills were paid, and
the little left was dribbled out to the mer
chants who had taken the risk on the
crop, jointly with the farmer. The man
who had worked, watched and suffered
all the year, had nothing, if you take
out the fact that he lived under a shelter
and picked up a scanty subsistence,
much like his poor mules and cows did,
around and about.
While the drought was at its height,
one farmer of our acquaintance made an
effort, raised some cash, bought a lot of
rust proof oats and put them in, with
hired labor—a big crop ior the farm and
his finances. The seed came up well,
and were fine grazing in November. A
January freeze killed the last sprout.
The money, seed, were all gone —not a
seed left. Here was industry, economy,
good judgment and money, and here was
the result. Not dismayed, the poor far
mer put his teams to hauling wood in
the hard weather, worked hard, paid a
dollar a day to the teamsters, and gath
ered a little money to put in another
cotton and corn crop. He harvested his
little crop of wheat in Jline, 1881 (spared
by the disastrous freeze), between show
ers, and when it was threshed he was
offered, as a favor, GO cents ( ?) a bushel
for it.
lie worked that crop of cotton and
corn assiduously. Every dollar ha could
raise or his wife could raise by her but
ter, chickens, etc., went to pay for the
extra hoeing. In July the drought came,
and you all know the result—simply
nothing. To add to these disasters, his
tine stock of hogs that the farmer’s wife
had raised on milk (and vve have a feel
ing recollection of how ieavy the buck
ets were) took the cholera in September
literally vanished from the face of the
earth, except two peer old dilapidated
sows, who emerged from the deadly epi
demic, minus hair, minus flesh, and mi
nus hearing, and of course he could make
no meat at home. Here was no lack of
industry, economy, good judgment, but
the money was absorbed, all gone on the
farm, and fatally and finally disappear
ed. 'fi xes were still to pay, guano had
to be paid for, supplies had to be paid
for, and there was no recourse but the
bank and its regular per cent, monthly to
start another crop.
Now, when some dandy in a city turns
up his nose at the farmer and sends a
communication to a newspaper to “assess
that land, make it pay more tax, that
farmer has perjured himself,” don’t you
know there is one woman could see him
follow a plow a spell and not feel sorry
for him ?
When you see a crop growing on a
piece of land, don’t set that down as a
profit until you find out what has to be
paid out of it before it even belongs to
the owner himself. Cotton at nine cents
a pound will pay nobody that expects to
settle his honest debts. There is a screw
loose somewhere and it must be tighten
ed, or the machine will break up. When
a farmer’s stuff is plentiful he gets noth
ing for it, when it is scarce he gets no
more, but if he has to buy, because of no
fault of his own, won’t he, to use a hun
ter's phrase, “smell the patching!”
But, says one, you should not write
this way, you discourage farmers. You
would have us then tell a dying man he
is on the sure road to physic ; 1 healrh, or
we must try to convince a poor frighten
ed child that puliing a tooth don’t hurt,
or any other fiction that is simply intend
ed to cover up the truth and veil a false
hood, It is just such prevarications that
are disgusting cur boys with farm life.
They read the farm accounts on paper,
they try it, and try it honestly, and they
are disgusted vvith the farm and the
falsehoods, and the people who tell them.
No, boys, there is no fun in such efforts,
and it is just only this that keeps some
folks at the business, viz: It is better to
struggle, to suffer and to continue to try,
rather than do worse—just as it is more
honorable to be a very plain, honest poor
man. rather than be a well-dressed rogue
and dead-beat on society.
STOSS.VAX'S a A ID IX ISC!,.
We were attracted to an article in the
Atlanta Constitution ot last Monday with
the above heading and read it through
with unabated interest —for it was spici
ly written —only to find Stoneman made
a feint and did not get to the writer at
all. We had an experience similar in
many respects, except it differed in one
particular, he got to us, and the
of ins arrival will endure
memory lasts.
close of July, 1864, was an omi
■ious, threatening time. The fighting
Eu’ound Atlanta had been heavy and des
■perate. Joe Johnston had carried his
trmy safely into entrenchments and v is
t-eady to give battle whenever opportu
nity offered. To we refugees, rfear the
■ity of Macon, everything was uncer
tain and unreliable as to news. During
■he last week id July, the conscript offi
cers had visited our place and drafted the
Rycrsoer. It seemed to be about the last
K 1 that could be made, unless they took
» the boys under sixteen and the old
In their dotage. lint we were
to believe that a large force was
for home defense, and as there
lull'in the iijV.iug around Atlanta
began to hope we woulu be ablo to
the enemy. On Friday evening
■vo discussed matters and things with a
! lot of neiglibor ladies who came over to
hear our latest news. We had sent a
servant woman over to the city to bring
their mail and ours, and were all very
easy in mind for aforesaid reasons, when
the messenger rushed in breathless, and
evidently in great fright. As soon as
speech was restored and her agitation
subsided, she told of a courier rushing
past her on the covered railroad bridge
(the other bridge was gone), crying out
to all he met or overtook, “Run —the
Yankees will soon be on you!” It is
still fresh in our minds how we laughed
at that poor darkey’s fright, assuring her
there was not a Yankee south of Atlanta,
while our territory was brimful of gal
lant Confederate soldiers who stood for
our security and defense, and so well
had the newspapers impressed us with
the belief that we were entirely honest
in our statements.
Our neighbors returned home.
We ate an early supper and retired to
rest without a single thought of a Yan
kee raid. The night was hot and sultry.
The house was without a pane of glass
and we slept with the big, heavy shut
ters open, because fresh air was a neces
sity in those hot dog days in the heated
term. The short night was quickly
spent and our liege lord arose with the
dawn to get the doors open and enjoy
the early morning air. The mil Ker pro
ceeded to the cowpen to attend the cows,
followed by her sou, a lad of twelve or
thirteen, whose business in life it was to
flourish a whip and keep the calves in
subjection while his mother did the
milking.
In a few minutes the boy came flying
back to the house, his eye-balls strained
and his whole body in a tremor. As he
and Ids mother approached the cowpen
they found it full of Yankee soldiers,
who had tethered their horses in the en
closure while they slept on the outside
and who were now strapping on their
saddles to swoop down on Macon, four
miles distant. Before the boy became
composed enough to tell the story, the
cavalry came rushing down the road,
sabres jingling and canteens rattling
against their pistol cases and other ac
coutrements. With a word of command
added to an expietive, our better-half
was ordered to the gate to give directions
as to the roads to and from Macon, the
number of troops in the city, where
horses could be found, etc., etc.
The questions were answerd and off
they dashed, and our heart sank within
us. A hasty toilet and a hastier break
fast made the beginning of a memorable
day to us. The woods were soon swarm
ing with the blue-coats and about nine
o’clock the cannonoding began. The
musket shots became as frequent as fire
crackers, and the drunken marauders
were very annoying. Those Jones
county people had a weakness
for peach brandy in ante-bel
lum times, and the soldiers added terror
to our former dismay by becoming very
drunken, noisy and boisterous with each
other. Such oaths, such brutal lan
guage, and such reckless handling of
pistols we never seen before !
Finally, one mode decent than the
rest, spoke to us in a guarded tone of
voice, “I’ll play guard for you to-day:
our men are dog 3 and might do you mis
chief.’’ All day long he marched up
and down the hali, and to this day we
feel that God sent him to us, a present
help in time of trouble. Late in the
afternoon, while a squad of soldiers were
seated on the fence reading and com
menting on a package of old letters cap
tured at a neighbor’s house, the firing
seemed to draw nearer to us. The ap
proach became more marked and dis
tinct, until one asked another, “What
does that mean?” In a second an officer
dashed up on a horse covered with foam,
crying, “Men to your horses, for your
lives!” In less time than we can tell it,
the stillness of the grave settled down
on a scene of the wildest, noisest confu
sion that had prevailed all day. Might
came on but no one appeared to speak a
word of cheer, and the “creek bottom”
was glowing with a thousand camp fires
all deserted, but where the enemy was,
or who was pursuing, or what had be
fallen Macon, was unknown to us. All
night long we kept watch, l’he wives
uni children of our neighbors lay
on pallets made over all the floors.
They had crept in after nightfall for
sympathy and protection, or more prcp
erly to be with us and each other after a
long lay of intolerable suspense and
mental suffering.
About nine or ten o’clock next day,
a Yankee officer, as we judged him to be,
on a horse dashed through the woods,
soon followed by a soldier in a different
uniform on foot. The latter crept
stealthily towards the house, sometimes
behind a tree, then darting to another
oak ahead of him. The Confederates
were told, as we afterwards understood,
that our valley land was full of Stone
man’s men who were throwing up breast
works for a battle, and this foot soldier
was recounoitering to find out their po
sition and numbers.
All that day the home guards passed
and repassed the house, while the boom
of cannon and roar of musketry from
the engagement of Gen. Iverson’s troops
with the enemy could be distinctly
heard. Next day, Monday, about 2
o'clock p. m., the captured Federal
troops, with Stoneman, passed down the
road from Clinton to Macon,and tiie cel
ebrated raid was over. Except the chick
ens, fruit, eatables, etc., and a fine horse,
we lost nothing, but such a time of sus
pense and mental dread words will never
be able to describe.
♦ ♦
RXi’KRIMRXTAL FARMS.
Cf.ment, Ga, July 4, ’SS.
Mr. Editor: Two propositions
are beyond all cavil—first, that upon our
agriculture we must depend for exist
ence, our wealth and consequently our
power and influence, and secondly, that
great, vital interest is not, by very far, as
prosperous as it might me and should be.
If this is true, or even in a great measure
true, then is there wrapped up in the
foregoing sentence a portentous truth
that should stir the energies of our peo
ple aid call into active play all the pa
triotic concern of our leaders and the in
stinct of self-preservation of our entire
population. YVe sKsfcrrWlt stop to discuss
the proposition or pay even passing in
spect to the argument so often hea-d,
“that farming does not pay, and cannot
be made to pay.” Let the share of the
farmer’s toils that falls to his lot be what
it may, nothing can be more self-evident
than the fact that the world is living on
his surplus, and without it must perish.
With this fact staring us in the face,
why the farmer’s calling is not more
highly honored and esteemed, why his
interests are so disregarded by statesmen
and those charged with ttie common weal
will always be a mystery. Every eliort
that provident and earnest minded men
in our iand have made to advance our
agriculture has met with sneers and op
postlion. It is a standing jest with mem
bers of our congress that we have a de
partment of agriculture, and to exalt
that department to the dignity of a cabi
net appointment is treated with utter
contempt.
Here in Georgia we, too, find much of
this slight and want of recognition. In
stead of finding our own department re
cognizod and fostered, vve often hear un
friendly feelings, and menaces, and as
much honor as the labors of that depart
ment have conferred on the state in the
opinion of judges out of our borders, vve
are mortified to see a certain backward
ness on the part of so many of our own
people in giving a helping hand to the
very agency of all others in our economy
that will most subserve the best interest
of the commonwealth. This indifferent
or unfriendly spirit must be changed lor
one ol active sympathy and co-operation.
As the farmers labors arc most valuable
and indispensable, and our stake in them
greater than in that of any other, it would
seem that common sense and natural
self-interest and self-protection, would
wake on our part an earnest zeal in be
half of those labors. The problem is,
how can we best support and subserve
the fortunes of our agriculture. The an
swer is ready: By the ascertainment
and the dissemination of valuable pro
cesses and facts vve expect to see the far
mers interests and avocation advanced.
No one doubts that in our tillage present
processes are defective, and that there
are hundreds of problems of vital inter
est awaiting solution that involve mate
rial and primarv results to the value of
millions.
What can be said in excuse of the fact
that it requires three acres and a half of
land in Georgia to produce a bale of cot
ton, that our yield of wheat is less than
seyen bushels to the acre, our beggarly
crop of corn is only about ten bushels an
acre, and that we must blush as we re
cord the crop of oats at about nine bush
els an acre.
Where neighborhoods in Georgia have
had the spirit and enterprise to read
books, organize agricultural societie\imd
maintain these organizations as they
should be, such a sad and sickening
showing as the census makes for us in
the staples mentioned are laughed at.
Why should not the same better plans
which some fe w of our farming neighbor
hoods have adopted, be general, and bless
the 3tate throughout our borders with
improved results. One great and con
trolling cause for this disparity in the
results of farm enterprise and labor, is
the want of light.
Poor men who must use, and use stren
uously, all the information they have to
meet the necessities of their families and
conduct them. Every day labors cannot
pause to hunt for the better way. When
the grass is threatening to overwhelm
the crop, the plow cannot stand still in
mid furrow to let the toiler conduct an
experiment. This is the wish of the
thinker, the painstaking searcher after
truth, who thoug.i foiled in its pursuit
time again, returns to the search till suc
cess is reached. While thi3 noble work
is progressing, the mind which grasps it
must not be distracted or paralyzed by
fears of failure and loss. It takes money,
too, that the masses have not to risk
spare. The liberal and enlightened course
of foreign governments teach us how
valuable the results have proved of field
experimentation. The good that Liebig,
Bouccieauit and especially that great
man, M. Georges Ville, of France, have
conferred on the world by their labors,
exceed in benefit, ahd should exceed in
honor, the proudest achievements of the
blood-stained warric-r-of their day. We
must follow, even i; at a gn-a’ lisumcc,
the noble example ?ct us by be-<* i ■ ’
and tiie governments bat kept them at
their grand work A a plai fa: me
proud of hi- horn- and lab- in the
country, with no hope or a-pi :i n bey
ond what springs from Ids < ' acres.
[ would bog my brother farm* > unite
in demanding from our state ;1 id that
is so essential in th preset-. Tpress*
condition of our tillage . G- v ,>
we need and must have is
experimental -outt-om !n . dm- -4 r »
body of patriot - * Un-
Georgia State Agrii-.u: u.u - have
appointed a commit’ « a .
rialize 'lie legislatur- to ’ mob » j
station,
They modestly ask a fraction, j.nd only
a small fraction, of the fund tint rais
ed exclusively m : a - ; ■■...■■ ' ‘ >ss
taxation.
iiiey, and they may, will , • ■ nr
treasury this year fully jso.-.d >, which
comes of a tax on the fertilizer- v .: they
are compelled to use on their crops.'-. A
small part of this money they .. a :o hue
loaned to them for the estabb- me.; of
an experimental statson, win -e labors
will repay the amount a hundred n lv
In five years after such a help -h>mid be
supplied to us, vve have noA( doubt th: r
bv the additional light tSr would
furnished our farmers wif would - ■ a
difference of at least fifty milk.-im in
results of our cropping for a single ye.tr.
We have carefully' made the e-.ii it ,
based on the most reasoned le rid m. <;•, t
data, and have not a do hut that the profit
would reach a far higher figure. It is
impossible, Mr. Editor, in tiie compass
of a single communication, to make a fair
exhibit of the great good that would be
secured to our agriculture by the estab
lishment by tli state, of a p •at agricul
tural experimental station. The good of
such afnimpts everywhere, when fairly
made, has been great and indlsput ible.
Let your humble correspondent appeal,
and earnestly, fr you to lend your in
tluenee and that, of you - journal to this
indispensable i;iea- i-, re.
Bartow.
THE NEW I’OSTAL LAW.
The following is th.; new postal law
which took effect the first of July :
1. Sealed letters to go anywhere in the
United States for two cents on each full
ounce or fraction thereof. Th full ounce
weight applies to drop letters delivered
to anv one where the carrier system is
not in operation.
2. Registered newspapers sent by pub
lishers or news dealers, one cent per
pound, to include regular aim specimen
copies. Other papers sent for each four
ounces or fraction thereof.
3. Articles in newspaper,; may be
marked with pen or pencil to all atten
tion to them, but no words or igures can
be used. This is not allowed to pub
lishers sending papers by pound rates.
4. A special stamp costin . ten cent 3
and put upon a letter going to any place
having 4,000 population accor ling to the
United States census, and to other places
that may hereafter be special!/ designed
by the department, will be immediately
delivered by a special mes uger, pro
vided the recipient lives within one mile
Of the poster;cc O! its static, in largo
cities. Letters arriving after midnight
not tlum: delivered.
* *
Churchlira Canvas*.
London, June 27. —The efforts to de
feat her husband in the com a ;h • 1 ’urlia
ment in Woodstock have* so v.orkc ' in on
the feelings of Lady Randolph Church
hill that she has declared her intention
of making a thorough canvm of ‘lie
borough herself in person. T.w :. offish
people, for the dr. t time ii in hi dory
of their country, will have an opportun
ity of hearing an American lady expound
the politics of the nation. Lady Church
hill arrived to-night, and drove a tandem
through the town. .She was enthimio ti
cally cheered by the populace, and nt
several points the crowd became so thick
that it was with difficulty that tiie driver
managed to keep from running people
down. Lady Churchill was formerly
Miss Jennie Jerome, the daughter of
Mr. Leonard Jerome, of New York.
Lord Randolph Churchill personally
is doing little or nothing to promote his
election, but is devoting hi - lime mostly
to posting himself as to his duties as Sec
retary of State for India.
fnOYALPoWIV) }>
Va
lhis powder never varies. Ama el of purity,
strength and whole.-omeness. Mo.*• ».■•• m-iiiiifal
than the ordinary kinds, and ran. *t he old in
competition wltli tlie multitude ol i vto hurt
weight, alum or : - :> '■■ <• e powd< '1 only
in cans. ROYAF, RAKIKG. i’OY, ,EK CO .
june 4-ly lOri V T all St., N. V.
CUKE FOR FILE
Piles are frequently preceded hy a ■■ ■ c of
weight iti the back, loins and low r part of the
j,4paomen, causing the patient 'to • - ppose he has
, some auection of the kidneys or ne .•.lAjriug or
gana. At times symptoms of ; i---r - r, are
present, flatulency, uneasiness of the -to-uacli,
etc. A moisture, like perspiratioi . codia r,g a
very disagreeable itching, after gating warm,
Is a common attendant. Blind, Bit -ding and
Itching Piles yield at once to the app lie. item of
I>r. 80-ant o's i»;i c Remedy, whir . :ts ; ctly
upon the parts effected, absorbing the Tumors,
allaying the intense itching, and niVct'n- a pet
manent cure*. Price 50 cents. Address, i'he
Bosanko Medicine Co., I'l-jua, O. M l.y I». W,
Cuir.y may >-ly