Newspaper Page Text
KUHKS810NAL CONTENTION.
Democracy of Ihc Third
aional District ot Georgia,
presented by delegates, will meet
34* convention, in Amcricus, Ga.,
nt Um Opera House, on
■MediMda)’, August«, Ism
'nt 2 o’clock p. m., for the pnrpo.se
t placing in nomination a camli-
to represent said District in
'Congress, to appoint an Executive
Committee for the ensuing term
and to tranasot such other business
- as may be considered to-be tothel
? Interest of the party.
* The oonnlies composing said
district are as follows, and are ic.
apectivcly-entitled to the number
of delegates set opposite their
JsOeflee ... .... .2 Montgomery,.
/•Dodge, 2 PuiaBki,
.Dooly, 2 Schley,
' Dons ton,.... .4 Stewart,
Irwin, 2 Sumter,t
'-Dee, 2 Telfair,
Laurens, 2 -Wobptor,
“Isoon 2 Wileox,
■ order Of Executive Committee.
J. B. ITlNKLE, Cll’m.
£0. B. Murrell, Secy.
tMlBiros, Ga., Juno 24, 1884.
Ill'papers in this district are re-
I to copy. ''
- is food for ’ reflection
402 eieotorial votes this
dost 3G9 in 1880. Am
'.is 102. Of tho cleclorinl
-948 are in tho North and
if. the South, Mr. Blaine can
York and New Jersey,
be wholo South, and still
) votes. But if lie should
i and New .York, and
BEMfBthorn States, he would
ftilnd with 197 votes. It
■ olose work.”
non are trying to
HESweekly, Puck
|^irk Times, in Ohio.
sful libel suit,
‘ that can happen to
jjto have one political
never to read it
Ifs calls tho special alien-
nr factions to the papers,
BKjftfolvors seldom carry
esol.ution, but.buy the
aper and read it behind
roirculation is largely
i VV. Williams,
pOhlo Legislature,
ney of Boston,
|kt!ng Blaine, and
pagbt to fight him
\ Civil Rights bill
Ml,' I. think, aro
warrant me in
bile bis general
ksuch that a par-
tim cannot expect
I believo tho Repuli-
I on its last legs. 1
j it will eleot another
It has aceompllshcd
| and will pass from the
jPvtlijK parties have done.”
. U1HD THE EXPOSITION.
jhtfcU issue wo publish an ad-
i to the people Of Georgia by
i Baoon, the State Commission,
ffvgingbur people to take sucli
i as will secure Georgia a prop-
presentalion in tho Now Or-
i Exposition. As tho work has
Qllytded into Congressional
s, and eaob district must
out for Itself, we hope the
i of this district will aid Capt.
, our commissioner, in mak-
i exhibit that will reflect cred
itor section and aid in uiak-
ersditable display for the
THE TAMMANY NUISANCE.
On Wednesday of Irst week the
Recordeb, in speaking of John
Kelly and the Tammany organiza
tion, said:
It is nnlorlunatc that the Demo
cratic party should be under obli
gations to such a roan ns Kelly,
and wc have long thought that the
Democratic party should transfer
the light, from the East to the West
and let John Kelly severely alone.
With the right kind of a platform
Democracy can win without New
York, and can thus free itself from
the dictation of the corrupt rings
of New York. John Kelly is a
Democrat only in the name, and
cares very little which side wins,
so long as lie can manipulate affairs
in New York city.
On tho Friday following, under
tho heading of “The Tammany
Nuisance," tho Atlanta Constitu
tion concludes a lung editorial with
the following paragraph:
The Democratic party owes to it
self and to the country to put an
end to the confusion that Tammany
imports into the organization every
four years. Kelly has announced
time and again that he is independ
ent of the dcmocraticparty; let the
democratic partv show that it is
independent of Kelly. If the party
Is to go before the country crying,
“Turn the rascals out,” let it dem
onstrate its earnestness by turning
such rascals as Kelly out. In our
opinion this is the one road to sue
cess. To conciliate Tammany is
to invite the opposition of honest
men.
Considering tiiat Tammany affects
to be a Democratic organization, it
may be wondered at by the general
public that Tammany has for many
years been such a stumbling block
in the way of Democratic bucccss.
Toe fact is, that Tammany is not
now, and has not been for ninny
years, a Democratic organization;
but is simply an organization of
shrewd and unscrupulous politi
cians of both parlies for the pur
pose of controlling public patron
age and enriching themselves.
The editor of the Recorder, iu
1867 8 was employed upon a paper
in Now York city whose proprietor
was a Grand Sachem of Turn many
and had bceii a member of the
organization for forty years.
This gentleman gave us the
names of prominent politi
cians- who controlled the pub
lic offices in New York, both fedcr
nl, stale and city, and to our sur
prise wc found that they compris
ed prominent representatives of
both parties, one of the prominent
members of Tammany being nt
that time chairman of the Republi
can executive committee of New
York city. It wns little won
der, when the lenders of both par
ties were members of Tammany,
Hint tho Tammany nominees for
city offices wero successful, and wo
have every reason to beliovo that
Republican trcachcty to the party
In city elections was rewarded by
Democratic treachery to the party-
in national contests. It was by
this double treachery that Repub
licans obtained office uuder tho
To the People or Georgia.
At a conference held to-day in
the rooms of tho State Department
of Agriculture, between_Uf8.Com
missioner DeWitt C. Bacon, the
Commissioners from the various
Congressional Districts, and a large
number of gentlemen interested in
the State’s display at New Orleans,
it was unanimously resolved tbAt it
was the duty of the Commissioners
to issue the following address to
the people of the State of Georgia:
This great wo-Id’s fair has been
projected upon a scale of compre
hensiveness never before attempt
ed, not even by the splendid Phila
delphia Centennial. The Exposi
tion company has at its disposal
millions of dollars, and the city of
New Orleans, and the State of
Louisiana are stirring themselves
to the very core that this great
Southern unde: taking shall show
to the world that the Southern
States intend to step permanently
to the front..
The amount of available floor
space will probably exceed two and
a hall million square feet. The
main building will cover, under one
roof, forty acres of ground. Besides
this, there will he less extensive
buildings, agricultural, horticultu
ral and art balls, but each gigantic
in its owu proportions. Then there
will be the building for the dis
plays of thediflercnt Stales,model
ed after the plan of the main build-
iug, and in the center of wiiich will
he placed the grand Federal gov
ernment display, for which Con
gress lias appropriated $588,000,
in addition to the former appropri
ation of $1,000,000. Tho scheme
is immeusc, the money is in the
hands of the Exposition Company.
The success of the tiling is assured,
and wc must bestir ourselves.
The question now is, shall the
natural resources of Georgia be
shown to the world by the side of
those of her sister States, or shull
wc allow this great opportunity to
pass 1 Ilow do wc ever expect to
people our immense surplus of
farming lands, to render uvnilakle
hundreds of thousands of acres of
timber lands, water powers sur
passed no where, and our import-
nut undeveloped, unknown mineral
features which dot the State,from
Augusta and Columbus to the Ten
nessee and North Carolinn line?
The time has come when to hold
our own we must move in such
matters us our sister Slutos are
moving. North Carolina has al
ready received a million dollars in
tnlncril land investments, the re
sult of $17,000 put into a mineral
display at Roston last Inll. Hy
similar displays at Philadelphia,
Louisville and Roston, Alabama is
building hor Birmingham, her An
niston, her Sheffield, her Leeds.
city government and Democrats
obtained positions under tho Fed
eral government. Unless the sys
tem has been changed within a
few years, it will he found that
about an uqnat number of Demo
crats and Republicans are to-day
holding appointive offices in the
city hall, park, waterworks,custom
house, poslolilcc and other depart
ments, all of them being active
members of the Tauimany organi
zation.
Is it any wonder, then, iu view
of these facts, that the Democratic
parly, depending upon Tammany
and the electoral vote ot New York,
lias failed for so many yeuis to
elect a president! It is true that
Tildcn carried New York, but it is
also true that Mr. Tiidcn’s great
popularity was gained in lighting
Tammany and its coriupting influ
ences under the Tweed regime.
For these reasons we believe the
Democracy will act wisely to regard
John Kelly and Tammany as out
side tlie parly organization and
is political flops
if the 'probibi-
f Maine. lie
itlon nomina-
Blaiuc, who,
ided on toad- troal lho "’ “coordingly
ion cause. It
fjrtdio Republican
lered bis once
sentiments
ional politics.
io hasn’t, just
think will se-
WiU be dumb
a this himself,
dl bold him up
but not
of the
WIIAT OTHER STATES ABE 1101 NO.
Spurred on by what these Staten
have already gained, let us sec wluit
our neighboring States arc going
to do at New Orleans. The Legis
latures of South Carolina and Ala
bama have each appropriated $10,-
000, and the Commissioners are
successfully pushing apian to raise
$10,000 more. North Carolina
starts in with her handsome cabin
ets already collected at Raleigh,
and she has an addition of $50,-
000 at tho disposal of hor Commis
sioner, to be used in making furth
er collections illustrative of her
natural advantages. Tennessee lias
$20,000 with which to illustrate
herself; Mississippi, a Legislative
appropriation of $12,500, with an
organized board now raising by
subscription $10,000 more. Louisi
ana h is a Legislative appropriation
of $100,000; Virginia, $50,000;
Texas, one of $20,000. Not satis-
lied witli this appropriation, the
ladies of Texas arc pushing vari
ous plans to augment the amount.
The Commissioner reports several
thousand already collected by sub
scription. Florida lias paid up al
ready $27,000, and tho Dlsston
Land Company have beaded a sub-
scription with $1,000 cash and $2,-
000 in collections representing
South Florida. Wc sen here a de
termined effort on tho part of every
Southern State to show herself to
to the world at New Orleans.
Georgia has not Ihc appropriation
ol n dollar, and the question
now is, what aro wc going to do
about it?
To accomplish the desired end,
money must lie raised in sonic way.
All enterprises of this magnitude
cannot he successfully carried
through to the liulsii without sub
stantial financial aid from some
quarter, and the people of the
Stale must determine how this is
to be accomplished. It is neces
sary to have stands, mineral cabin
ets and fixtures of like character
upon which to exhibit the resour
ces of our State. Wc must show
tborongli discussion ae to the best
manner of getting together Geor
gia’s varied resources, have deter,
minqd that the most satisfactory
plan, of operation is to put each
Congressional district in the state
upon Its own .resources. Funds
raised in all of the various ways
that might lie suggested should be
used by the District Commissioners
in their various districts to secure
a good display from each. It is
not advisable or fair to use money
subscribed In one to get up tho dis
play ih another. It is believed that
every district in the State will np
prove of this plan. Let each make
use of its own funds, and the’dis
plays gathered in tills way will be
shown at the Slate Fair in Macon,
each district making an exhibition
separately.
Articles of any character secured
for the exhibition will be forward-
cd to Macon free of charge, if de
livered along tho line of the nearest
railroad. At the close of the State
Fair, the displays representing the
ten districts in Georgia will be
packed up and shipped to New Or
leans, and there shown under one
head as the exhibit from the State
of Georgia.
It will be necessary, in tho case
of the geological and mincralogical
cabinets, to place tho selection an I
arrangement in lho hands of an ex-
pert at the Atlanta headquarters.
Specimens from the various coun
ties should be got out in quantities
not less than 20-40 pounds, and
made ready for shipment hereafter
small samples have been approved
at this office. They will be analyz
ed, classed and arranged here prior
to packing and shipment to Macon,
and it is hoped and expected that
correspondence relative to these
features will bo prompt and effect
ive.
THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE’S BEAUT1FUL
• TEN-PICTURE OF THE ORA
TOR AND STATESMAN.
I.ET AI.L COME FORWARD.
To secure a full, handsome and
creditable display, tho result can
only be reached through the per
sonal energy of every Georgian.
The people must lay aside formali
ties and come will: a nu ll to tile
assistance of the Commissioners,
It must be rcinombcrcl that wc arc
without funds. Wc have up to the
present day given a great deal of
our time to the work, and will con
tinuc to do so until the object
which is si,tight to be accomplished
is secured beyond the possibility of
a doubt. Our people are proud of
our State, and they have every rea
son to be so. Will this pride take
a hack scat at this important time,
and allow the grand opportunity
that is offered us through the me
dium of the World’s Industrial and
Cotton Centennial Exposition to
he lost? We think not. We know
too well how thy interest of every
Georgian is roused for the prosperi
ty of the Stale, and, wc ate satis
fied, nil that,is accessary is to null
the attention of the people to tho
importance and scope ol the work
before us.
When this is dono wc will feel
that more than half lias been ac
complished. The undertaking now
commanding cur attention is one of
which every resident and well-
wisher of the State should feel a
deep interest. Let us all as one
man combine our energies and show
to tho world that Georgia is in
reality, as well as name, the Em
pire State of the Sunny South. It
can he done if every man will do
his part. Concerted action will
win at nil times. We have the
will, the enterprise nnd the pluck
to place Georgia in the front rank
of the States of the Union. With
our energy, our varied resources
and the opportunity that is afford
ed us, there is nothing to pre
vent tho State doing credit to
herself and to her people. Give us
the assistance that wc ask, and
none of us will ever regret the out
lay.
DeWitt C. Bacon, Atlanta,
U. S. Commissioner for Georgia.
S W. Postell, Secretary.
John Kelly for Bayard.
.WahiikUiton, June 26 In a pri
vate letter to a prominent Demo
cratic Congressman John Kelly de
clares that lie is earnestly for Bay
ard, because he regards him ns the
strongest man the Democrats can
nominate. Mr. Bayard lias been
assured by influential members of
the New York delegation to Chi
cago that he has a huge support in
that State, and it is predicted that
in tlie event that Cleveland is drop
ped Bayard will be taken up as
the choice of tlie Empire State.
Intimate friends of the Delaware
Senator said to day tiiat Bayard
iiad received hundreds ot letters
Now York Tribune, .Tiln 15. 1W
Pranced there in upon the arena
of the great debate, like a trick
mule in n circus, or a spavined
nightmare upon the track of a beau
tiful dream—Logan, of Illinois.
There was a vision of mustaches,
eyebrows and Imir piled on each
other in arches; a large brandishing
of arms, a pose and strldulous war-
hoop; and much ns though a pic
ture of tlie Deerfield massacre had
stepped out from tho pages of our
early history, Logan look the
American Senate by its large capa
cious ear. And then lie went for
Ids nio'her’s tongue, lie smote it
right and left, hip and thigh, and
shoved no merer. Swinging the
great broad ax of his logic high in
the air. he turned it eie it 5 II, ami
with the hammer side struck the
the language of 60,000,000 ol peo
ple fairly in Lhe face, ami maslied
it beyond recognition. Uuder his
stroke the floor of tho American
Senate was spattered with the
remnants of a once proud vocabu
lary, and messengers, doorkeepers
and pages were covered from head
to foot with the spray. In the
fearfnltwo hours which followed tho
first roar of his oration, nil the
parts of speech wire routed and
put Jto flight. There were orphaned
adjectives and widowed nouns;
bachelor verbs driven to polvgumy,
and polygamous” orbs left’lonely;
conjunctions dissevered, preposi
tions scattered, adverbs disheveled
and distorted, and syntax flung
into wild disorder. It was a great
day lor Logan.
He set bis teeth into the lan
guage as the untamed tiger of the
jungles takes between his mouth
and paw tlie wearing apparel ol
the wayfarer, and the ripping of it
was heard through all tho forest
depths. It reverberated to tho
other end ol tlie Capitol, and slug,
gisli Representatives lilted up
their cars nnd listened to tlie roar
with terrified awe. Sunni started
for tlie scene; but upon being told
the cause of the disturbance in the
brief comiiiunication,‘'Logan’8 up,”
turned back, with full assurance
that they could bear from that end
of the cnpitol all that' was worth
hearing. So through two hours Lo
gan swung his beautiful arms over
the heads of the Senate like tho
booms ol a government derrick,
while his chin churned the language
like a pile-driver in a heavy sea, and
tlie hnflled reporters made wild
plunges with their pencils to gath
er up his regurgitations for the
printer.
Alii Logan is a great, man; a
statesman. When no throws his
intellect into a question, whether
it is of finance or self-government,
or of sticking to tlie ship, some
thing has gnt to come. And you
may always know where to find him;
lo-wit, where he lias always been,
drawing pay from tlie government
in some capacity. Ho lacks only
(lftcen or twenty things of being
nn orator. He has lungs.
Our frionds in Southwestern
Georgia should not lie discouraged
in boring artesian wells. In El
mira, N. Y., Thomas I’orry, a well-
known oil and salt well driller, con
tracted with the Warsaw Salt com
pany to drill it a well nt Warsaw,
some mouths ago, for $3,500. The
work was only completed a few
days ago, owing to the extraordi
nary character and thickness of
tho strata encountered., The drill
passed through seventeen feet of
clay, 300 feet of shale, in which a
stream of ficsh water like an un
derground river was struck, 650
feet of slnto. 148 feel of extremely j Hr.-, and mailed ter
hard coniferous limestone, seventy--1
one feet of pure flint, 354 feet of
Heidcllmrg limestone nnd ninety I
feet of mixed silt and shale, lit fare
the salt vein was readied—a total
depth of 1,699 feet. Thu vein it
self wns sixty-four feet thick and
almost as transparent as crystal.
The drilling of the well cost tlie
contractor $11,500, ns much ns the
work on three ordinary wells would j
cost, and involving a loss to him
of $8,000.—Macon Telegraph.
A Good Story or Commodore Garrison.
Concerning the sa'eto Jay Gould
of tlie Missouri Paciflo railroad by
Commodore Garrison, who^tlien
owned it outright there is a..story
which is t eminently . characteristic
of ’ Comodoro Garrison’s ’ well
known determination nnd grit. The
commodore had bought the prop
erty for $800,000 at a foreclosure
sale, when it was in a very unprom
ising and bankrupt condition.
When Mr. Gould wanted to buy
the road lie sent Russell Sage to
make the negotiations with the
comromodorc. Thelattev.wassmart'
enough to know that Mr. Gould
wan.ed the Missouri PaCtflc very
badly.
“I want $2,000,000 for 'll” said
he biufl commodore. { t( .
“Deal- me, commodore,” said
Mr, Sage, insinuatingly; “and you
only paid $800,000 for it yourself.”
“The price to you is $2,000,000.”
“That is too much,” said the
frugal Mr. Sage.
“Good day,’’said tlie commodore.
Next day Mr. Sago, after con
sulting with Mr. Gould, came again
to see the commodore.
“I think we’ll take the road at
your price, commodore,” said he.
“What price?”
“Why, $2,000,000.”
“That was yesterday's price.
T i-day I want $3,000,000.”
“Good graiious, Commodore;
you said yourself that you would
sell for $2,000,000.”
“So I would if you hod taken it
thou. Now I want $3,000,000. If
you will take it now you can have
if for that. If not it will cost you
more.”
The good Mr. Sago was greatly
perplexed, and said lie would have
to consult Mr. Gould again. He
begged the Commodore to wait un
til the next day, and net make
another raise in tlie price. But the
shrewd old gentleman would not
promise.
On the following day Mr. Gould
himselfeameto see the Commodore,
it was diamond cut diamond. The
groat operator was willing to give
$3,000,000 hut tlie Commodore had
advanced the figure again to $4,-
000,000. This Mr. Gould positive
ly refused to pay: whereupon the
Commodore quietly announced his
intention of extending the line of
the Missouri l’aoilie so ns to make
it run parallel with some oi ,\lr.
Gould’s western roads and lake
•-.way the business of tho latter
Then Mr. Gould came down and
paid the $4,000,000.
ATTENTION!
LIQUORS,
BEERS,
CIGARS.
Etc., DEStc.
I havo and alwny* keep on hand a full supply
Imparted and Domestic Liquor*, lleeis, cham.
pngne, Cigars, etc., 'etc., which I atn Milling ,1
LOWEST MAUKET P1UCKS. AUol.n Fr*L
Acaorted Stock of
TILL AT HER OLD STAND.
Fresh Cincinnati’Beer on Draught!
Always on hand at 5* per glsa#.
Free Lone! from 10:30 A. H. lo2P.lt
, j ; I have added tony place a gaud
Billiard and Pool Table
From now until the end of the *e«f»on I wll{|kp<>i>
Fnll Supply of (cc on hand.
JAKE ISRAELS,
Elam Johnson, Son & Go.,
ATLANTA, GA.
WSCOZjBSAXjXI
mission
IS OPENING HER STOCK
OF NEW
01.11 SIAM) 0\ JACKSON STREET
1 l'alin s olft'i'H her sincere thanks t
cmhentoflhefliv department, hy whose noble
■aved from serious loss during the
her friend* at the
>laoe where they have ho long been accustomed
to lind her. npriMtt
)
Respectfnlly Solids Consignment* of
MELONS, CANTALOUPES, HONEY,
And Country Produce Generally.
L1h*», Orders for Anything tlio- Atlanta
'** -‘ Market Affords.
june23tf > : i : V
BARGAINS INREAI. E8T1B.
MUST BE SOLD.
The following property, located within tb«’C«r-
1 .orato limit* of AnderHonrille, must U> a"ld, auJ
u fstrgaln ia offered.
Two a-tea of land, with four room hnuee, kttcb*
on, smokehouse, stable, two corn cribs and Hue
garden.
IhisInexH house, n good »tand, doing a good hu>!*
new In general merchandise.
61 acres of land, about twelve acrcii iu cult!**
ttfln. ‘ •
One Home, 4 Hogs, 1 Cow, Flow Tool#, 1 Bur*
gy and Ifarneae, 1 Wagon and Harness, 250 bn«.
of Corn nnd Kotldcr In tho Held, 100 bu*. of IVsi
in the field.
Amicmonville will In a few month*haveaiwdi-
cr railroad, which will naturally Increase it# bii*i-
nea.1 and make this property more valuable.
For farther in formation apply to the KkookhbR
office. tf
A BUREAU AGENCY
John Kelly, the real, chief ol the
Tammany society, is not the nom
inal licati, but is one of tlie thir
teen subordinate sachems. Kelly,
although a self-made man, is well
educated. He is well-posted in
history and is very fond of Sliaks-
peare, lie is not an Irishman,but
was born in New York, lie lias'
from prominent Germans of the j been alderman, controller, sheriff
country, proffering tbolr support, and member of congress. Kelly j
«!«snv hum; jimim.
ftTiilM l#’to certify tl:at we have had our Cotton
ttl!«• ffhnrpencd with the O'KKILL GIN HAW
FILING MACH INK for which we paid 12 1-2
cent* per $aw; and, oficr making a thorough ex-
niiiitiution of tld* Machine and iu work done up*»
on our Gin*, we take pleasure in announcing to
nil Ginner* and G|n»owtieni that It put* a (Jin In
hotter condition than any other process of *harp<
enlnqf weaver saw. It leave* n hoantlfal round
needle point t»dh an l round and ainootb 1a the
Ihront. SMITH DAVKNPOKT,
.1. H. BLACK,
1>. H. DORN,
The work for lhe#e gentlemen ua* done hy It.
L JOHNSON, agent, Magnolia Sprint;*, Ho, who
will respond readily to auy call made upon him
for gin filing, . , •* *■
*nv further Information can be obtained from
Wr It. Hie * '
He lias on every occasion opposed
Since an excellent brandy can | these products to thu world In tlie sumptuary legislation, and it is
lie made out of watermelons, the
Savannah News suggests that some
body will probably patcut an in
vention whereby the stuggor juice
may be jugged in its native rind
for shipment to tlie prohibition
counties.
The average income is Kams-
clialka in $4 per year, and when a
man loses a cent in that country
lie immediately goes into bankrupt
cy.
most attractive, pleasing and ar
tistic manner possible, so ns to ar
rest tho attention of every one.
The services ot competent assist-
ants must be secured to take charge
of these exhibits, and to explain to
visitors the values, uses and pur
poses of each article in tho display.
All of this important work cannot
be accomplished without a suffici
ency of funds to meet' the neces
sary cost.
tue best method.
The Commissioners, alter a
claimed that this would briug him
many German voles in States that
are cIobc.
Travelers will be pleased to learn
that at the last national convention
of baggage agents it was resolved
that ii a "trunk didn’t burst open
after being bounced end over end
four times, nnd tumbled out of lhe
car on tlie platform, it should he
Newspapers, Etc., Etc.
I am now located tetnporarl'y In D*w#on, hav#
Ing boon obliged to do *o on account of the rapidly
falling health of my mother, who ne**l» “t
time* my peraonal attention, 1 will open a bureau
f r ho collection of debt*, icaldoa I am n|ent
all popular hook*, aiul will receive •u1***’ri|»tl<*** 4
on newspaper*. GfUce In court house.
W. K. P1L8BLKY.
Dawson, Gin., April 4, 1884. tf
¥ ¥
Awnings. Awnings.
1 am now prepared teJtlF nil order* for L'Mb
A wiling*, Tenia, -r.pt TU0, Trunk Vovn, -
i-w. Frio low and »»tl.r»clIon gnuuM-L
order, loft ol tbe .bop of June. Alorand.i-cowr
.mnr nnd Hamilton Strerto. and J. V. Harr.. *
t.'o., head of Oottoa Avennw will i, etv.prompl
utlantiou. Order, (or 8igTl!. to'Ult.'L
C. C. KVASS,
juntfin.l Amerlou,. 0.-
Is worth at lonst $1,000,000, and as ! £S«aiT
lie is public spirited and liberal lie
lias naturally drawn around him a
large following. For years past
lie has been tlie head ami front of
Tammany, and lias given the or
ganized democracy not a Utile
trouble. Whcu be dies it is pre
dicted that Tammany will go to
pieces.
— , . I s.tins ohi:at uoxAHcnma ot
. . ! the Ancient Kaatern World. Bv GEORGE
An Indian chief lias married a ' “Whotistuoi^TKKiunLJt
Washington washerwoman. She j e!vi wiutcouid*” ha
pruifiv**. Frio*
aU/vrtWTrfc E. J. KNOWLTON, Ann Arbor. Mich.
Weigl t fifteen pounds. Adjustable.
FOR PHYSICIANS AND FAMILIES
Neatest, Cheapest, Beat.
“Cleanliness is next to Godliness.”
octlMy
WAR. BOOKS.
delivered to Its owner in its normal I never expects to touch soap again,' ESS
condition, tiaffgage agents aro but will undoubtedly have plenty 1 Not torn hy dealer#; price* too low.
condition. Baggage agents aro I hut will undoubtedly
not so destructive o§ some imagine, j of outdoor exercise.
Jomk B. AvVry'PullIikerTfl Ve»«y St.,N. Y.
FresM Meats
—AND—
COUNTRY PRODUCE!
1 *m now prepared to furnl*h the f ut»li«*
•kolco meat*, *uch a* B«of, Pork, Mutton, -‘D 1
Kid- I also have ou Iruul at all time*
and Kgg< Cum* around and Irymc. 8ou.h*i'
Cotton Avon up, next door to P.
Junclltf
W. F. HARK-
J. E. CRAWFORD,
I, GA.
amkii
Work .alru.lrd to m« will b« *>»• n "£