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CRAWFORD V ILLE J )EM< n'HXl n . o
By Edward Young & Co.
WONDERFUL BARGAINS.
TO ALL WHO ARB IN WANT OF
fubnituse.
:o:
Our HANDSOME, WELL SELECTED STOCK and LOW PRICES gives
the advantage over other dealers. 4 1! 1 he Latest Styles and greatest variety
us
in the city. Stock, and all say we offer the
Every one who calls upon us admires cur
Greatest Bargains
They have ever seen. Think of Parlor Sets from $-7 to *300; Chamber
Sets from *15 to *‘>00. All ask lsatrial. . ,
It' will call or send for prices we will convince you. we
vou York, Philadelphia or
We will duplicate any retail hill b msrtit in New
Baltimore.
All Goods packed and shipped free of charge,
COME AND SEE US.
R. €. HEGG 1 E & CO.,
839 BROAD STREET, AUGUSTA. GA.
Dec.17,’81, ly- __________________________________
_ _
CARPET8-743 Broad St. EsTABUSHEI) 1*50. GROG ERIKS Broad St.
Georg© A. Bailie?
--TIIE LIVE—
Carpet and Grocery Healer
OFFERS A full LINE of the FOLLOWING GOODS,LOW FOR cash 01 ,tS XlQtfTVALBNT’
Octor-pot Dopartmont
nruiv 5™ R-nssp' i Car lets Tapestry IrussoU Carpets. Heavy 3-Plv Carpets. Scotch
All-tV.. 111 Garp,m*. ration *,,d and Wool Carpets Stair Carpets and Rods. Strip l Ven -
. s Mats. Cocoa and « unton Mattings. Floor
V te Door Kagsand Mats Win
O ' M’IW’: i v V Oil Cloths, all widths. Oil ClytlJ Re,n,
d l *1 z ■ Rustic. Shades. Paper Shades. Store Shades, any Size
“ uw ,‘ ‘ ............ins cheap and fine. Curtain Loops aad Baiius. V\ inflow
Cornier- "waMPap. rs a: m Borders. Fire Screens, Room Centers. Picture Frames.
Beautiful t hromos. Mosquito Nets.
i vlQCEEY DEPARTMENT.
Ferris’ Hum*. Magnolia U.im*. Country Hams Fe.rrisAir.'akfa-t Bacon. I'Vr- |
ris’Simik"d B’i’f. Geo. A lb e’s Best Flour. Baker s idioiee flour. Milk ciaek
crs.
S
M\ MOJIU. u ", . , ■, iMM.-rs AND OIL CLOTHS MADE AND
Sales and Sum 1 1 * ,, ^
p sh vDES HL NG AT SHORT NOTICE.
• ' ‘ AUGUSTA, GA.
MASONIC " hall BUILDING,
Dec.17,’81 .ty.
____
l? n uriuitur© 300m,
We bare just received TWO CAR LOADS of
ELEGANT CHAMBER & PARLOR
FurniturB,
,t„„ i|.,u there been such a Slock in Augusta, and we bought them to sell not
have Stock ■ we ’ have the handsomest and most .
ti STYLISH keep. All who seen our agree
they have eyen seen South, and as cheap as they can be bad in the
East, Fast West West or or North North We never misrepresent goods—everything sold on its
merits. Satisfaction guaranteed. Our Stock is complete in every particular.
Everything in idie Furniture line you will find here.
Agents for the Best and Cheapest BED SPRING ever sold, every oue guar¬
anteed for Ten Years. Write for prices if you cannot come.
J. L. Bowles Co.,
717 Broad St., Augusta, Ga.
Dec.l7,’81,ly.
Fin© Opera Glasses f
BRONZED JEWELRY,
EXQUISITE IVORY GOODS, FINE DIAMONDS, WATCHES and
JEWELRY.
BIGGEST and COSTLIEST STOCK ever on the Augusta Market.
For Tlie Holidays
ELEGANT SILVER SERVICE, GOLD HEADED CANES.
FANCY FRENCH FANS, SATUARY, PEARLS,
F. A. BRAHE, Jeweler.
Dec. 17,’81. ly
M YERS & MARCUS,
JOBBERS IN
DRY GOODS,
Notionsand Hosiei-y *
BOOTS, SHOES. HATS AND CLOTHING.
*^«.hD?«nt pe a e nrjof ure f , ir our eq business n al | ,n>ya is the s 1 y th establishment ^, h e\ eTer ^"brought of a to this market. A
T ^'T IOIjEISAIjE
T)AAD' Iff I I Si! C 1 T1 \11 A 4 wttx \ IH-T TT \ a T ,n TrrtTr rrnTTCI -J
ADVUljOIlUrjiiJ M 1/ Uxl 1 IlUliM
L ,
wrn\ad ston^flbefomdrt!!! ^aml^rnTfeed sati^e^ D , y th^ < ¥?2*5 b? w"f Notions ite*t? *5 and other ^ Departments, » AT ^ Jr, our ha n v
before*piucha.'; 1 "e
our stock ug elsewhere^ 1 £ ° ‘ iut * rest ut l )urtf,:l ' ‘ ‘
September 9, MYERS & MARCUS.
18sl.—yl. 230 and 288 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga
ORAWFORDVILLE, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1881.
Georgia ~_ Railroad
AND _
Banking Co.
-
Office Uenk&m. Manager, )
/Commencing Acocsta, Ga., December 10. 1881. >
sun da v, nth instant,
I the following passenger schedule will
j Oeoperated :
j so . l west—dailt. ajmiLv. NO. Atlanta 2 EAST— DAILT.
Lv. Augusta 10:30. SdWa m
: Macon 7:10 aiml a m 1 “ Athens 9:30.a;m
: Milledg'U 9:05 “C’wf’d’U 1:10 pm
: W’sh'i'n il:20.a|iuj Ar. Wash'g’2:55,p ni
Ar. C’f’dr'll l:12:pun “ Milledg'll 4:49 p m
Athens 4:50 p mj“ Macon 6:45 p m
Atlanta 5:45 D m “ Augusta 4:06 p m
NO. 3 WEST—DAILT. NO. 4 EAST—DAILY.
Lv. Augusta5:53 p m Lv. Atlanta 8:30 p.m
Lv. Ar. Cr'f’v’ll Atlanta 9:52 5:00 p aim mjAr.C Ar. f'dv’ll 2:83 6:30 aim
Augusta a m
JOHN W. GREEN, E. R. DORSET
General Manager. Gen. Pas s'g er A gen
1,000 MILES TICKETS
Gf.orgia Railroad Compant, \
OfficeGexfkal Passenger Agent.
/COMMENCING Augusta, MONDAY, April 5th, 7th 1879.
inst.,
V this Company TICKETS, will sell ONE THOUS¬
AND MILE good over main
line and branches, at TWENTY-FIVE
DOLLARS each. These tickets will be
issued to individuals, firms or families, but
not to firms and families combined.
E. R. DORSEY,
Mav9.1879. Genera 1 Passenger Agent
UEBUCE1) RATES!
VIA THE
GEORGIA RAILROAD
To the Atlanta
COTTON EXPOSITION!
Commencing Monday, November 14,
1881, The following special arrange¬
ments will be inaugurated, and contin¬
ue in forco until December 31st, proxi¬
mo. calculated one way, which is Less
than one fare for round trip. Tickets
must be procured from the Company’s
Agents, and will he good to return for
Three (3) Days from and including
data of issue. No extension of time
will be grunted.
SUllEIKf^lO OF DAYS ALLOTTED AND
TERRITORY :
Mondays—Embraces all UtaUons be
tweel , , t „a including Augusta and
.....
Wednesdays—Embraces "T : all , Z stations
between and including Netwoob and
Wash ngton.
Thursdays—Embraces Orawfordville all stations be
tweeu and including and
Athens.
V \ otoye,- »tl el st ioaz hr. ,
tween and' including Grecnesboro auu
Alcovy.
Saturdays—Embraces Covington all stations be¬
tween and including and
Decatur.*
The service will be performed by the
passenger trains leaving Augusta, Ma¬
con, Washington and Athens, on the
morning schedules, arriving at Atlanta
A will 5.45 only p. ni. sell By all live other [5] t rains limited agent*
the day
ticket, [lUj at day five limited faj cents ticket, per mile; or the [ft]
ten at six
cents per mile. No tickets sold on the
trains. Be sure and obtain your ticket
prior to entering the cars.
John IE. Green, General Manager..
E. R. Dorsey, Gen. Passenger Agt.
THE PIEDMONT AIR-LINE.
The Shrt and Direct Route North.
Schedule in effect May 15, last, upon
the Richmond and Danville railroad—At¬
lanta, Charlotte and Richmond division*:
U. S. Mail! N.Y. U, 8.
Northward. | lExpress, Mail,
No. 43 No. 47 No. 49.
Lv. “ Lula Atlanta; 4:00 6:46 pm 13:15 6:00 pui] pnd 6:30 9.07 pin
i am pinU0:17 *un
“ Toccoa ! 8:15 am 7:30 pill
“Seneca Greeny’)[10:29 ■ 9:2t am S-.41 pm: 11:2 pm
“ am !10:22 ami 1:05 am
■‘Spartn’g 12:15 pm 11:42 pm 6:Is 2:12 am
“ Charl’te 4:15 pm 4:05 am jam
“ “ Salisb'y Danville 10:09 6:07 pm pm 10:21 5:56 am 11:31 7:50 am
am am
Ar.Ilchm’d 7:2S am 4:18 pm 4:43 pm
“ Washt’n 1:00 pm 9:30 pmi pm111:26 9:3f pm
“ Baltimo’l 3:25 pm ill:25 pin
“ Pliiladel 6:50 pm | : 3:25 am 3:25 cm
“ New Y ’k 10:05 pin i 6:50 am 6:50 am
Southward. U S. Mail pNr Y . U . % Kart
No. 42 ; Express, No. Mail,
4s_ ‘No.no
Lv.New Yk s 30 am 10 00 pm , Mo ant
“ Philrdnlpill 40 am 1 06 am 7 05 am
“ Baltimre 1 3 20 pm 5 05 am »45 am
•’ Washt’n 5 00 pm 7 00 ain It 10 am
“ Richm’d to 45 pm 12 00 am 2 55 pm
“ Danville 7 27 am !l0 ; 6 18 pm 7 91 pm
“ Salisb’ry 11 16 am S3 pm 'll 05 pm
“ “ Charlote|12 Spart’bg 3.50 80 pm |12 4 05 20 am i* 2.53 to am
"Greenv’I: pm am am
5 07 pm 5 18 am 4 05 aui
•‘Seneca j 6 51 pm | 7 02 am *05 am
“ Toccoa 8 01 pm i 8 15 am k« 30 am
“ Lula ! 9 16 pm 9 31 am i 7 39 am
Ar. At1 anta |12 6.5 am 12 20 pm 30 00 pm
Close connections made at al'Llunctions
or terminal points herein named; with ar
riving and departing trains of other Li ncs.
Sleeping Macon car 011 train Xos. 42 ami 43 be
tween and Atlanta.
Puilman Sleeping Car service daily,
without change, between Atlanta and
I New York, on trains Nos. 47 and 48.
Tickets sold and baggage cheeked from
and to ail points North, South and West
A. POPE, Gen 3 Pass Agent'
dpi /"v Outfit furnished free, With full in
and learn, plain, and our that instructions',ie so'.simple
profits from the any one can make great
! very me^Lt'and^girts start... No one can
as succe^fui aT
can ,b earn b, larg. -um;- Many haw made at
**. , J • I,< ' ^ hui«j«ed Mlai
? the'ease w^k. rapidity‘with Nothing like i5l tt • -r known Ire
and Uncy Y^ iohCmv crL^e
’<> >-ke c.,:
in t.s . -im Aning yo . par- ••
.. «
'
who need ready money, a hob' 1 write to u
at once. All furnished five. Addr<
Trce & Co., Augusta, Maine
Pllks l x ^i ,s AI>V,CE
“TO ALL WHOM IT CONCKRNH.’’
** is Glad season
°t presents for loved ones there
* ** no dearth ;
T; , lel none *»• forgotten—relation
. or
‘ e •
T , la , i may the holidays happier spend.
t meres Nellie, poor child I far at
some school, away
" ' i0 cannot come home—’tis, she writes,
I here's gainst the rule.
of home, Cltarlie at college, now thinking
T.lough seeming absorbed in some old
4 classic tome.
AaiJ both for your presence now lovingly
As yearn, homeward the
fjnuiy eyes of their hearts
turn.
Ail things considered, Love’s impulse
1 think i’acuib;. that
disturb, you'd best not Uieii studies
»
E: posuic; and traveling oft many tils
Now thing; Puck's
tiling counsel heed—'tis a capital
* :
lor Charlie, go purchase the handsomest
A. suit,
1 sorts of confections, cigars and CUB
_ ned fruit
And Nellie must have a rich navy-blue
dress,
Which secure they'll get by the Southern
Andyour Express. darling
old Grandma, you must
not forget,
Put send her of seal-skin the handsomest
set.
Arddear, ' aged Grandpa, that needs so
much care,
Tou can sweetly surprise with an invalid's
chair.
No fears for their transit your mind need
i'«r distress, tiiev’(l
safely go by (he Southern Ex¬
iNere’s press.
tle pet! Aunt Carrie’s baby—the dear Ht-
8hg think’s strange that no present’s been
sent for it yet;
Then buy an embroidered robe, kerchief
and tab,
And crib. with them, the prettiest latest-style
vat , suyli costly gifts will risk, 1
you COll
'f th fess, not sent by the Southern
y are Ex¬
And press.
while you are sending your rich pres¬
ents forth.
Don't forget all your friends and acquaint¬
ances North.
Tor though freighted their orchards with
fruits soiiH tinies rare.
They have naught with our bright orange
We’ve groyesto compare •
the pineapple, fig, golden lemon
and lime.,
The beauty and bloom of the tropical
Dime, .
But delay would soon spoil all such pres
, enW, unless
They Express. are speedily shipped by the Southern
.\b‘w (me emir.sel more and said counsel
•y^ItUt y Jjfp jjri, the poor—be to thorn e’er a
1 “• ^ ^ .
» iitt!,. you’ll (JiVC, wYll glffr hi
leresf accrue,
r or God is their voucher—you II sure get
your due their
And ere hearts thanks unto vou
'they’ve confessed, '
.... HwVen
Extuess." y
Matt O B.
Vilvmbut, Ga., D r., I88i.
GENERAL NEWS
AN GI.I.AM'.I) Kim.ll TEJA'-GKAMf
AN II LETTERS.
Being the latent Inlormatlnli ns Con*
denned from the Newspaper*—A Uriel
Review of What tile Country Is At,
Culled tor the Reuders ot the Demo¬
crat.
—Small-pox still rages in Now York.
—The pecan nut crop of Texas is val¬
ued at $2,090,000.
—Small-pox still seems to hold the fort
at Covington, Ky.
—Nashville lias grown from 17,000 in
i860 to 75,ooo at present.
—Kentucky state grange meets at
Bairdstown, December 13.
—The last rail on the New Orleans Pa¬
cific railroad has been laid.
—Jefferson Davis will be 74 in January,
but is as active as a mail of 50.
—There were several earthquake shocks
in North Carolina the other day.
—A woman is to be banged at Pittsboro,
North Carolina, on the 23d instant.
—Three negroes are to he hung in Rock¬
ingham, Ya., (,.. the 13tli of January.
— Dr. Sauuiei O, Green, republican, lias
been elected mayor of Boston By 500 ma¬
jority.
—The Cedar Key fishermen caught at
Clean Water Harbor last Wednesday
40,090 mullet.
—Mrs. David Brown, of Logan county,
Ky., aged 80 years old, has just cut a full
set of teeth.
—A colored woman of Antioch, Ala.,
has just given birth to three infants—two
boys and a girl.
—The council of Richmond, Vm, lias
purchased forty acres of land for small
pox hospital purposes.
—Considerable numbers of emigrants
are leaving middle and East Tennessee
tor Texas and elsewhere.
—The annual winter exhibition of the
agricultural society of South Carolina will
''‘‘"'eanors have been placed on the docket
of the criminal court at Nashville.
. —Mr. Lambert Chambliss, across the
r ‘ m trom Montgomery, made 400 gallons
of S U U P on less than an acre of laud.
—Mr. B. H. Greer, who lives in Ander
s ,.„ county, South Carolina, makes a char
1,roflt 01 8,0 “ >'" ar •>* his c ' ,w -
1 •»• •' M«.-hy, of Virginia,
■■ hen he r-turn, from Ch.na, will marry a
i WeU Otic k * ,0W firm ‘' in tartv ^ with Alexandria,
— Kentucky houses at
Laris and Fteuinlngburg, have dressed
,
1 and shipped this too.ooo turkeys,
season
— Miss Leonora Hern, of Peru,
ha, 1ms a head of hair 68 inches in length,
She has ret used $500 for the treasure.
—A Jefferson county, Florida, farmer,
recently sold six hundred hales of cotton,
and now has 3,000 bushels of corn for sale.
—Members of the Kentucky legislature
are each allowed $20 for stationery N, ui e
of them pocket the money and sponge the
stationary.
— sA Mr, Marshall, who has been boring
for otl on Otter creek, Ky., struck a five
barrel lead Friday of excellent lubricating
petroleum.
—Miss Harris, daughter of the late SCO
retary of Harvard college, is to have
charge of the secretary's office during the
coming year.
—A O’Connell, of Helena, Mon ana,
met with an accident that is perhaps
without a parallel. While sneezing he
fractured one of his ribs.
—A young lady in Hillsborough county,
Florida, recently shot and wounded a
large deer, and then to make life extinct,
struck it on the head with an axe.
—In a runaway accident at Brighton,
Mich., John Duffer was caught under the
hox and a bag of flour in the wagon was
thrown over his head and pressed down by
the box so that he was sinothored to death.
—The railroad offices in Austria employ
upward of 3,000 women. They receive :i
salary of from five to thirty dollars per
month. Invariably they are the near rel
ntives ot dead or active male employes of
the different roads. '
—William Allen, of Kckford, Midi.,
died from the b te of a weasel. The ani¬
mal was robbing a hen's nest, and in try¬
ing to eateli it hlr.'Allen was bitten on
the hand. The bite caused a painful Ill¬
ness, which terminated In death.
—Miss Mary l ope, of Muscatine county,
Iowa, aged 16 years, lost her life by wip¬
ing her mouth with her apron upon which
sumo strychnine had accidentally been
spilled, She was taken sk'k the same day
and died at night in great agony.
—A dispatch from Brunswick, N. J.,
says: Thomas Walsh, aged 40, went to
bed Monday night with Ills pipe in his
month. He was found this morning his
body being burned to a crisp. Ills wife
and children were away from home.
—The store of Bussell A Bradford, Gal¬
veston, Texas, was entered by burglars,
the safe blown open anil several thousand
dollars worth of valuable papers and $500
In cash were taken. No clue lias been
found by which to discover the robbers.
_a special from the City of Mexico
•»» ttat In the conflict in Guadalajara,
during politico,t e.Uictton on Humbiy between
the . i. H j c t.-el el. e
tions was wounded. Chnraiw muon
of , the interference of tederai troops.
Disturbances in other sections of Jalleo
are re|anted.
-A dispatch from Richmond, Vn.. says
that, a caucus of readjuster members of
the general assembly, to night nominated
ltiddlelierger as their candidate for Uni¬
ted (Stales senator to succeed Senator
Johnston. Every readjuster member was
present except two, Uiddleberger liimself
mid one delegate, Kiddlcbcrgcr received
the unanimous vote, 110 other candidate
being mentioned.
—The federal authorities In Dalliia
Texas, have levied on the property of the
train robbers \tilliain and Henry Cellins,
members of tin: Hal Boss gang of 187s, for
$50,900. Collins jumped their ball and
lied and were afterwards shot and killed
by the officers in attempting to arrest
them. The bondsmen consider themselves
released from their obligations and W j|l
attempt to stop the sale of their property
by an Injunction.
—Miss Rebecca Bates died the other day
Senate, Mass., aged ss years. Miss Bates
and her cousin Abbiu were heroines of
tlie Brittisli “scare" in 1812, when two
girls hidden behind rocks on the bench
witli life and drum, sounded the roll-call
and put, to flight several boat loads ol
troops from the Brittisli men-of-war, who
were obout to make a landing. Mi s
Bates’s cousin Alibi* is still living am! is
eighty years old.
—The State senate, of Virginia, with its
readjuster majority, has begun work in
earnest in the mutter of displacing the
official* In one executive or secret ses¬
sion a large number of nominations were
rejected, including those of Dr. Thoma
Pallard, the commissioner of agriculture,
the hoard of visitors of Blacksburg col
lege, sundry inspectors of tobacco at Pc
tershurg and ftfty-four country and city
school superintendents, among the latter
being the superintendent of public
icll0 “ l# ' 111 JVil 5b Richmond. At
t, ' r Uus ll, ' st “ f January next a new up
pointing power will eouie in and new nom
lnatlons wil1 msde.
ROUNDABOUT IN GEORGIA,
____
—Charles McLane, of Griffin was
drowned on last Sunday, wl.Ue m.-..,im*
Flint "
river.
— Mr. J c kson Trout, one of the oldest
^ ......
-The Industrial Mamifaettrrina Com
pany, of Augusta, has been incorporated
’
Capital stock So00 Sph-rs,' 000 ■ *
-Mr. James of fiery county,
was relieved of •'•2114 wldle attending Urn
}■; po-ition la-t Friday.
'I'he Jjlte ( ielietK} > ft shout
57.50. Win in ca h, stock u,J * . an/! real
c ’at, to I, codr.-n...... divide’ » widow
and four
—Mr. -Jo-daa A r.riy.vn. of Uh
.
died in that city las s Saturtlav, of
sis in the sixtj-sixth ar ot his ago. j| e
was ail old rasi<b*nt.
Yol. 5.—No. 50.
—It is gem rellv reported that Col. S.
K. Johnson, of Augf sta, has cleared over
$200,000 this year in fortunate stock *p.-. -
ulations, He made $96,(too on one trsnsa i •
tion.
— l’he Telegraph A Messenger, Macen,
has changed bands. Colonel Albert I
.
Lamar, now has charge of the editoritl
department, lie is a finished agd f> Ri les*
writer. We look for great improvement*
in the Messenger.
—Mr. V. J. Cox, proprietor of the Ueg.
ister. at Abbeville, Ala., while at the Et
positiou hired a priuter by the name of
Reagan. The two boarded the Central
train for Macon on Friday night. Mr.
Cox reached M.ieon, but Kajan and bis
money, amounting to $200. were missing.
—Near Hampton on the .Central road, a
thief who had been shadowing a gentle¬
man from Augusta with valuable honda
and money aggregating $ 1000*1 In a
valise, while the owner was looking oat
of the window, quietly slipped t he rail,*
from his side and boldly walked up and
pulled the danger signal, stopping tha
train, and stepped off and took up tha
track at a rapid pace The alarm waa
given and pursuit made, ami finding him¬
self so closely pressed, being in a long cat,
the thief dropped the valise and made his
escape.
AT WAftHINGTMN.
Nows Gossip Around and About the Na—
Gou’s Capital.
1 lie national bank notes received
loi Voile nipt ion Wednesday amounted
to $2:24,000.
charge —Secretary LTelinghuysen will 1 «An
of the state department NLoyduy
- The set '.re’ary of the treaaurjr has.
accepted *<•>,0D0, ot bonds under tha.
lOCt 1 1 call.
—The roeoirds from internal revnnue
S\ ednusuay were 87rAl.Utl.u8, and from,
customs, *557.671.43,
During fiie week ending.Drccmbtt,
In, J.i.i,4S7 standard silver tfiMlnra were
put into circulation against 485,4|HJ.for
the corresponding week of List year,
I he president has not decided HOC
to appoint wo., vu to olli, e, as lias been
stated 111 the special dispute lies, a lady
postmaster being among the noiniua
tions sunt in,
- It is learned at the treasury de¬
partment that ex-Seuutor l’addoek, of
Nebraska, will succeed Assittant-Sec
retury Upton, who letireci from the
treasury Wednesday.
—Public Printer Defrees’a report for
the year ending June 3D, 1881, shows
that the entire expnndltnies in |,Ih
' ni'" o w f*' *4’!,$i5«n!*?eT. tHi.a'lh.i:,
was turned into the treasury as uuex
p onied hainneu.
The co 'it of claims nn.t Tuesday
morning, all the members h, mg pres¬
ent. A motion to dismiss the petition
in the case of the Green executors was
argued and submitted. The court will
now hold oaily sessions.
Somewhat of a seination was cre¬
ated in Washington by a man who rep
iv 1 nted liimself as the ‘'member from.
Alaska.” He was flying around
am mg the doorkecia-is showing them
his credautials, ami Imtton.holing eve¬
ry pitsHcr by who had tlm slightest ap
peantuco of being a repoblioau.
—The sunate committee on naval
affairs Wednesday held their a rat meet¬
ing of the present session, and distrib¬
uted to sun-committees the most of
the business tints far referred to them.
The mouth nomination of Pay-Director Wartl
as paymaster-general of the
navy was, however, laid asiclu for con¬
sideration hereafter by full committee.
— Mi. Plumb, of Kansas, has intro¬
duced a Dill authorizing the president
that whenever in his judgment exigen¬
cies of frontier service require it to add
2,500 enlisted men to the army to serve
during such exigency, and not longer
than one year. Rcfeirr'd to Ilia com¬
mitter on military affairs.
The president sent the following
nominations to the senate Wednesday :
Navy Oouimndnies George II. Coiqier
and John O. Beaumont, to lie rtiar ad
minis . Captains Oscar O. B. Adger
and Stephen B. Luce to lie coiutno
doies.
—Senator Edmunds introduced on
Monday a bill to punish polygamy in.
Utbab. The bill provides that any
woman or innn who is married ami
marries another, unless divorced
shall lie punished by a fine of
i 8b'> ( 1 and impi isoiiuient. And further
that it will, in the drawing of juries, lie
'''use sufficient that lie lias been living
11 utny or believes tiro practice of
1 t is right.
An Awiuj Responsibility,
Kvcrybod; has • omething to say about
consumption. UY all deplore its‘terrible
ravages, but only a few of q, a em to have
........non «< sen • eooiigh to tajfe the proper
means pieve«tiuglt. It b a fact as easy
of 1 roof as : two and two an- Com Unit
Honey of Iforelioundand Tar.taken
u n ' n "" :y eiwiglw, n 4d: A flic .Jt
thing, horsi.ri.-s. or any oth<r iff tho
’’ "iptom " id-i.. d w.-,,. paw- the way
“ v, '‘ l “ : '' *" v ’ I'nowr: ? thi»,
negh et, n, t ... 1 to 1 m- 1 -p,.rifle under
| such circumstances, ass.ni • a fyar/utl re-
1 Sold by dne t
. Ticket ot liCktve Mhi*
This j»!i ‘ntl'i / :• > ty will he pro*
cliieed hy the t firv. DranirUies on
next Wed fay* evening. "
TJie play has
been t ■ 4i ;< h ; • * 4 hihI the new
a u Tie
add n,... \ l>v»*ryouc si h mu I iit
tend