Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-1902, May 01, 1891, Image 4

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THE AMERICUS WEEKLY TIMES-RECORDER: FRIDAY, MAY 1, 189i. THE TIMES-RECORDER. I>atly nnd Weekly. Thk Amekicim Rrcokhf.k Establish ki The Amf.rkmis Timem Ksmulihiikk 1*90. CoNHOLlDATKU, AFUIL, 1*91. SUBSCRIPTION: Daily, Oxk Year, Daily, One Month, I Weekly, One Year, - !•< Weekly, Six Months, I For advertising rates address JUsi om Mybigk, Editor and Manager, THK TIMES PUIILISHINO COMPANY, AmericuH, Oa. 18 IT 8PKAKKH CRISP? The Constitution of yesterday contains a special from Washington touching the speakership question, that so nearly a {Tecta Judge Crisp’s chances that it is reproduced below. While the matter is not necessarily settled, the probabilities are very strong that by some turn Mr. Mill will be out of the race, and the Held virtually open to Georgia's favorite son. Reports received by prominent Demo cratic politicians from Texas indicate OUR INCONSISTENT PRESIDENT. When President Harrison passed through Memphis, the mayor who wel comed him alluded to the determination of the people to maintain Anglo-Saxon supremacy in the South. The president saw the point and dodged it. He stated in his reply that he recognized the em- barassrnents in particular cases, but in sisted that the government could not ex- VON MOLTKE DEAD. '1 be second of the great German trio has passed into history. Emperor Wil liam I. V>*n Moltke .and Bismarck, three names such as are seldom vouchsafed to one age much less to one nation. General Von Moltke died on Friday night very suddenly of heart failure, at OSBOIiN WILL HANG. Charles Osborn, who shot and killed I. M. Bradley, in the latter's store, in Atlanta last year, will pay the penalty of his rashness on the gallows. He has just had a hearing before the supreme court which sustained the verdict of the court below, and it now only remains for ist without “a profound respect for the i present generation, and his achievements will of the majority expressed by the in the Austrian campaign of 18M, anil the age of PI. His death removes the Judge Clarke to re-sentence the prisoner most conspicuous military figure of the voters.” This remark has occasioned that a big deal is in progress, which if more criticism than anything the presi- Americus, Ga., May 1, 1891. is | consummated, will completely change the aspect of the speakership fight The rumored deal contemplates the resignation of Senator Reagan from the | senate, to accept the presidency of the on * [ new railroad commission created by the | present legislature, and the appointment Joe Mri.iiatton, the famous liar insane in Chicago. Tiik railroad depot at Terry was c sumed by fire Tuesday night. “M Quad,” of the Detroit Free Tress, \ of Roger Q.(Mills to succeed him in the lias gone to the New York World at a salary of $200 per week. It pays to be funny. Orr of 700,000 men employed by the railways in the United States, it is esti mated that 105,000 will be suspended because of slack work for the next 90 to 100 days. In his tour across the continent Tresi- dent Harrison and his party did not meet congenial political company until they reached California, hut the gather ings in that far away state were regular love feasts. Tjik grand jury at Waco, Texas, has adjourned after a searching Investiga tion of the alleged election frauds. Thirty-four indictments were returned against prominent citizens. A sensation is the result. Uncle Sam’s cash in the United .States treasury will he counted to-mor row, and turned over to the new treas urer Nebeker. It will not take long to accomplish the work in the present depleted condition of the treasury. It remains to be seen whether the strikers in the coal regions of Tennsyl- vania and other places will continue to support the party which is responsible for the present condition of affairs throughout the country. The French newspapers, in their ed itorial notices of the death of Count Von Moltke, recognize the military go- nius which the great Held marshal pos sessed, but reproach him for his advoca cy of the annexation of Metz by Ger many. “Jack the Ripper” lias committed one of his Whitechapel murders in New York, and his victim is a woman. It is safe to say that crimes of this character cannot he practiced so extensively in this country^as in England, and the per petrator will soon be caught and brought to justice. Bill McKinley is preparing to say farewell to Washington, and will leave that city early next month. His pres ence there has helped to put a heavy burden upon the country, and the peo ple of this section would willingly say farewell to Billie and bis bill too if it were possible. The late King Kalakaua, of Hawaii, was a member of the American Legion of Honor.In 1881 a council of the Legion was formed in Honolulu, and the King became a beneficial member. It is be lieved that this is the only case on rec ord of a king being insured in an Ameri can beneficiary organization. DoroI.ashviLi,k has a sensation in the disappearance of two of its prominent citizens—a man and a woman—the former a husband and the latter a widow. They have been tracked to Jacksonville, F’.a , and lost, but their friends aic still on the trail, and hope that matters will turn up a little better than gossip would have it. The application of the Georgia Saw mill Association for a JO per cent reduc tion of rates on lumber was to have been heard some time ago, 3ut the case was postponed ut.the request of the sawmill men by the commission. It was set for hearing yesterday, and will bo vigorous ly fought by the railroads who claim that the rate is unprofitable as it now is. Tom Wathon need not be afraid of the Democracy of Charles F. Crisp. Tom is a clever, sharp, well meaning fellow, but his constituents will have cause to feel surprisingly proud of him if, during his term in Congress, he should show half the zeal, ability and faithfulness of devotion to Democratic principles that have characterized Charley Crisp. Tom has made a big mistake.—Ishmaelitc. The evidence on both sides in the famous Martin case at Birmingham was concluded Friday evening, and nothing new or sensational has developed since the statement of the prisoner. Yester day was consumed in argument and able speeches were made on both sides. The sympathy of the people of Birmingham seerm to be with flu; fair defendant, and public sentiment cannot fail to effect the jury. r., —:—: — . i Somehohy put up a joke on the Daw- Thk SI. Louis Republic, the great I .... , ,,, , .. _ . son, Ga., military company by sending D.'mocrU.e d’ltivof the west, some time • . , .. v J ... j them a telegram over Governor Nor- then’s signature, telling them to hold senate. Reagan is one of the picturesque char acters of the upper house. He is known about the capitol as the “Last relic of the Confederacy.” Of late years he lias lost his grip on Texas politics, and, realizing that his re- election to the senate is an impossibility, it is said that he was only too glad to he come a party to a deal by which he could he let down easily into the presi dency of the railroad commission of his native state, a five-year oflice worth *0,000 per annum. The work is to his liking, as lie has always taken agreat in terest in railroad affairs, being a mem ber of the committee which framed and reported the present interstate com merce act. His explanation of his fail ure to vote on the occasion when that bill passed the senate is one of the pleas ant memories of the forty-eighth con gross. He explained that when the votfe was taken he was “down stairs taking a bath, a thing he had never done before in his life.” Of course, he meant that lie was never before absent on such an important vote, but his friends insisted m “guying” him about his admission that he had never bathed except on that occasion. It is known that Mr. Mill's heart is set on Reagan's seat, and this will be his last term in the house, whether he ob tains the senatorsliip or not. Indeed,he has very recently stated as much in a public interview. Moreover, ho has made a pretty thorough canvas of the Democratic members of the next house, and is discouraged at the prospect of re alizing his speakership ambitions. He and his friends, therefore, have gotten up this deal, which will let Reagan down into a soft berth, put Mills into the senate and save him the mortification of being defeated in his speakership can didacy. With Mills out of the race, Judge 0'risp, of Georgia, will liavo a walk over. Some of the Texans scout the idea of the rumored deal. They do not pretend to have direct information on the subject, but arguing from what they know of the political situation In Texas, they say It is highly improbable. The weak point in the program, they say, is the appointment of Roagan on the rail road commission. That appointment, they say, would have to be made by Governor Hogg, who was a violent anti- prohibitionist during the famous Texas prohibition campaign, and Reagan was equally as violent the other way. The feeling between the two men became ex tremely bitter, and Hogg's friends say that he would not sign any commission with Reagan's name upon it. In 1880 the census showed the lumber, shingles and other forest products of the Southern States to be valued at $40,077,000, while in 1800 the value for the same products has swollen to $102,- 122,000, threo hundred per cent, in crease. Southern pine lands during the same period have increased from about $1.25 to prices ranging from $5 to $10 per .acre. It is predicted that the in crease will be greater in the next de cade, and that no better investment can be found than southern pine lands. Capital is beginning to learn that all in- vestments in this section are safe and sure, ami investors are putting their money in industries and real estate here. An interesting rumor came yosterday, through a well informed gentleman, to the effect that the Macon Construction Company had raised the money to pay its debts, and the Georgia Southern would come out of the receiver's hands. Supplementary to this report was the statement that the Georgia Carolina and Northern had renewed negotiations for the building of the Macon and North eastern —Constitution. The methods prevalent in the late lamented American congress seem to have become so contagious across the water that oven the venerable and smooth tempered Gladstone lost his temper and called an opponent, Mr. Rus sel, a liar. Arc American polities des-, tined to set the type for the world to , follow? dent has uttered since he left Washing ton. The reply shows a narrow and perverted conception of our government. If there is one thing which the constitu tion of the United .States did not estab lish, it was a government of mere ma jorities. In providing for the election of pres ident, the electoral system was adopted in order to overcome the rule of sheer majority. In establishing the senate of the United States the power of the majority was overruled and each state was given equal repre sentation regardless of numbers. The right to abridge and regulate suffrage was left with each state, in order to in sure a harmonious and homogeneous constituency. This government is not now’ and never has been built upon the rule of majorities. But if President Harrison accepts this theory why does he not act upon it ? When the national election came off last November a Democratic congress of 143 members in majority was returned. The Democratic majority was over 1,000,- 000. In the face of this decisive and overwhelming verdict,why did President Harrison continue to insist upon the pro visions of the McKinley bill and the force bill ? The president's annual mes sage, just one month after the election, urged the passage of these pernicious measures in spite of the fact that they had been repudiated by an overwhelm ing majority of the people. The truth is, the southern people have preserved a republican form of govern ment in spite of the presence and pre ponderance of an ignorant class, unfitted by training or tradition to exercise the suffrage. They have maintained their loca» governments pure, have kept their own houses in order. This may not. bo strictly according to President Harri son's theory that masses shall prevail, instead of virtue and intelligence, but it lias been the salvation of home rule in the south. Thk friends of Mr. Cleveland say that he has borne with great patienco the at tacks made upon him by Editor Dana of the New York Sun, but that patience has ceased to be a virtue, and conse quently tbo ex-president does not now lose an opportunity to bit back with all the vigor he possesses. It has been ob served that in nearly all of his late speeches he has something to say about the traitors skulking in the Democratic camp, and this has come to bo accepted os a reference to the editor of the Sun whose Democracy to say the least is de cidedly erratic, and whose support of Ben Butler In 1884 caused him to lose all the influence he might have possessed in the couuclls of the party. Mr. Cleve land Is a very strong and positive man, and it Is safe to say that if he gets fully aroused he will spur Dana in a way that will cause him to regret having attacked the ex-president. A word of praise from Editor Sid Lewis of the Islunaelite means a great deal, for he never hesitates to say just what he thinks, be it favorable or other wise. Hence Thf. Timeh-Rkcordkh ap preciates the compliment paid it by the Islunaelite, knowing so thoroughly the fearlessness that has always character ized the opinions of this brilliant jour nalist. The editor of Thk Timks-Rk- cokdkk has known Editor Lewis for twenty-three years, as well as all his kith and kin, and thinks candor and lovo of truth is no less conspicuous tliau their ability. Long may Editor Lewis continue to his sledge hammer blows to ail kiut> of crookedness, gam mon and hypocrisy. Thk American Tract Society held its annual meeting Sunday in the First Con gregational church, at Washington, 1). C., ex-Justice William Strong, LL. I)., president of the society, presided. It is estimated that there are to-day in the United States at least tw enty millions of people who are not reached by the ex isting organized denominational agen cies. the Franco-Prussian w ar of 1870-71 rank him among the most famous warriors of modern times. While there were conditions that made his career in 1871 more successful than it might have been had Frarce's armies been properly led, there is still no ques- and set a day for the execution. In handing down the decision the su preme court expresses its views of the case as follows: The evidence discloses that an atrocious, unprovoked and d liberate murder was committed by the defendant. The ver Jiot flndlug him guilty and Imposing upon him the penalty of death, in »ur opinion, renders exact and substantial Justice. After a thorough, careful and anxious examination „ ... . . . . , . of the entire record we are fully convinced tion of hi. great genius us a strategist j thnl the judgment of the court below should and a leader of armies. stund. It Is well Known that Juries are re* He possessed all those elements of j luctant to take away by their verdicts the character which go to constitute a great j 1 ve * ° r the,r fellow-creatures, and wh®n ... , ... good men, in the faithful and conscientious military man, combining as lie did some j discharge of a painful duty, enforce and vln- Oa the characteristics of Napoleon, Wel-|dic«te the law as thf Jury in this case un lington, Grant, Lee and Jackson. j doub edlydid, we do not leel authorized tj History will, without dispute, assign d, ** coura K e them and others who may try to him a place in the very first rank of modern military men, for so signal was h casual in future bv setting aside a verdict whl'-h Is manifestly right It is the first time in a number of the display of his ability in the great j years that a plain verdict of murder has campaigns that even his enemies, if he i beeu rendered in Fulton county, as in had any, could not fail to' recognize the hand of a master in the planning and execution of those movements that not only changed the map of Europe, but made of France and Austria second class powers, while the German Empire, consolidated by the military success for which he w'as entitled to the chief cred it, forged to the front as the peer of any European power, with the possible ex ception of Russia. In the rauks of Germany's generals, there Is none who can handle his sword; and with his death the last of the great leaders of modern warfare passes from the stage. Flohida is now getting a dose of the two-thirds rule, and the leading papers are calling vigorously for the legislature to break the deadlock. The Times- Union says: For nearly two weeks the people of Flor ida have been watching the political drama now being enacted at Tallahassee, and the spectacle has not been an edifying one. They see a small minority of the Democratic members of the legislature attempting to dictate to a strong majority In the matter of a nomination for United states senator—a minority which has no idea that Its own can didate can Lm elected, but which Is directing all Its efforts toward prolonging the present dead ock in the hope that It can ny this means defeat the re-election of Wilkinson Call. This line of ac ion does not suli the Demrcratic masses of Floridu. and they are ! ju-tawakeningf. a full compr.hen»lo.i of L, OU g re i lcction . The convention ad- I he auoii-a'ous position of this minority and ! , , , „ , . ,, Ihe enormity of It. offense. Thl. .lorn, of dreaaed by Koraker <s a thoroughly rep. most cases the juries have been lenient, and attached the recommendation of mercy. But this case should bo a les son to all “pistol toters.” Osborn was mad and no doubt prepared for a fuss before lie left his own place of business. He did not collect the amount in dis pute, but he succeeded In blighting two happy homes, and bringing his own neck to the hangman's noose. At thk Republican league convention in session in Cincinnati, Ex-governor J. . , , , , „ B. Koraker made a decided sensation by bl * N ” he d f larcd * Cleveland ban. UNRESTRICTED IMMIGRATION. The Republicans of the northwest have to draw it very mild to keep from hurting the feelings of the sensitive bummers, anarchists and murderers who exercise the rights of American citizens in that section of the Republic. The Republican league club in session in Cincinnati among other questions, dis cussed unrestricted immigration, and the following was a paragraph, worthy of special note, in the resolutions intro duced: * Recent events have made more appar- ent than ever the necessity for exercising the sovereign right Inherent In our nation, as in all others,to use discrimination in the admission of forelgnersas residents In this country. We, therefore, recommend such changes In our laws as will effectually pro hibit the Immigration of paupers and crim inals, and of people so alien from us In their ideas and haolts of thought that th**y can not be esslmllaled in the body politic." A foreign born delegate objected to this language, because,as be said, while the meaning of the words might be all right, they would be distorted by the enemy with telling effect on the foreign born Republican vote of the northwest. They bad bad experience and wanted no more. The debate grew hot. The Malia was denounced. One delegate asked where the line could be drawn to define who was not fit to assimilate with the body politic. Another retorted that in Now Orleans the line was drawn on the lamp post. Finally it was m’ved to strike out all after the word “criminals" and this was done, and the resolutions adopted. John P Gbken, the colored lawyer and orator, does not like the new term, “Afro-American," for the people of his race. “I like the word ‘negro,’ with a exalting Secretary Blaine at the expense of Mr. Harrison. The response was spontaneous and overwhelming. Blaino was ranked with Lincoln and Grant, nnd given all the credit for whatever success the Harrison administration lias attained. It is no wonder the few friends of Harrison in the convention were much disgruntled, nor is it any wonder that the friends of Koraker and Blaine at tempted to smootho matters over by trying to create the impression that the orator did not intend to refer to Blaine as the ruling spirit of the administration. Tiie fact should not he lost sight of, however, that the clamorous approval af Koraker’s remarks by the convention is even more significant than the remarks themselves, and it is this fact that is likely to give Mr. narrison food for so- indlgiuttlon In nweeplngnverlheeotlre mate. By another wee. It will have so thundered 11. appeal. In the ear.of the ob.tru tins ml noilly that yielding to the popular will mu.t t>e Inevitable. No body of men—no matter how bitter and how determined It may b . In Its contest lor Ihe con.umraatlon of it. own plans—can long refuse to listen to the voice ofthe people. If It delays this seceding to the popular will, retribution I. lure to follow with the most dl.astrouselfects. Among the the other qualifications of Secretary Foster he is something of a wag. With a solemn faco he ropcats his opinion expressed some weeks ago, that lie did not think there would he a sur plus in the treasury next year. Fc’l str ing the squandering of a thousand mil lion dollars by the late congress this piece of wit may he denominated ghastly. Tiik dearth of news among the news papers is fully illustrated by the fact that when Doctor Talmadg side whiskers, leading metropolitan jour- rials write it up in elaborate style. In fact ii appears to be more of a sensation than tiie revolution of a .'south American It bas been a puzzling question for sometime as to how the Allianco of the west and south can sufficiently reconcile their conflicting interests upon economi cal political questions to enable the or ganizations of the two sections to agree upon a party platform. It looks impos sible for them to do It. Now significant mutterings are already heard, and the alllancemen of the west are threatening to go back to the Republican party if southern allianccmen refuse to join them in the new party movement, and this they can never do, hecauso the princi ples of the Democracy are nearer in touch with their desires and their per sonal benefit.—Montgomery Advertiser. With the month of May the Sunny South enters upon its eighteenth vol ume, and, in order to give the anniver sary appropriate celebration, a banquet, complimentary to the press of Georgia, will ho given at tiie homo of the Sunny South, Atlanta, May 1st, at S o'clock p. III. Tills banquet is tendered by the editor and proprietor, Mr. John II. Seals, and will doubtless he largely at tended by the editors of the state. Tiik only decent thing that has been said by tho press, anent the late imagina ry episode in the domestic circle of Mary Anderson Navarro, is tho following from Editor Branham: Why not let Mrs. Navarro, formerly Mary Anderson, alone? She has ceased to be a public character, and she certainly does not deserve to he made tue object of unpleasant and untruthful gossip In the newspapers. resentative body of Republicans, and the enthusiastic attitude of these men to wards Blaine allows that he is still the real leader of tho party. Mr. Harrison may hold down his secretary of state, but lie cannot control Blaine's friends. Si-eakkb Rkki> has had a number of imitators, hut the speaker of the Con necticut house stands at the head of tho class, and could give even Mr. Reed a few pointers on how to run things. He counted the hats in the cloak room to make a quorum. All that is now neces sary to constitute a Connecticut Repub lican house of representatives is a speak er and an assorted lot of hats. Heads or brains are not at all needed.—Jack- sonville Times-Union. An Italian editor in New York wants Count Rudini to call a congress of the European powers to join in a demand that the United States shall remodel its constitution so as to afford protection to foreign subjects living in this country. Tho thing that is needed, however, is f ir the United Siates to protect itself against these self-same foreign subjects. Mit. K. Inukksoi.l Waiik, who now occupies the editorial chair of the bright pression wa and newsy Athens Evening Ledger, is | party. liti Tiik reconciliation between Major McKinley and ex-Govemor Forakcr, which was begun by tiie lattor's eulogy on the former at the Cincinnati conven tion last Tuesday, will probably bo com pleted when the State Republican Con. vention assembles hero on June lfitli It is announced that tho ex-governor will presont tho name of tho ex-congress- man to the convention and ask that lie he unanimously nominated for governor. The deadly two-thirds rule lias got in its work in Florida, and Sunator Call is just a few votes bolow high water mark, though lie got a clear majority in the caucus. It is doubtful whether he can over gain enough votes to he elected, and the plum may go to a dark horse. Ed. Hammond, formerly of Atlanta, and a brother of Judge IV. R. Hammond, is favorably mentioned for the position. An Iniianai'olis travelling salesman refused to pay 10 cents extra fare for not having purchased a ticket, and was ejected from the train. Ho has just won a $2,000 damage suit against tho Lake Erie and Western railroad, which ejected him. This case was regarded as a test of the rule adopted by railway compa nies to compel people to buy tickets or pay extra. quet recently. Sensible man. Why should a negro bo ashamed of his proper designation, any more than a Chinee, a Jap, a Hindoo or an Indian? A pure blooded negro ought always to insist upon being called a negro with a big X not “colored,” for that means the va rious shades between the block and white, which miscegenation has dis graced the puro blooded race with. When negroes learn to be proud of being negroes, and their natural color they will make better citizens, than when they are ashamed of being called what they were created, negroes with a big N. Tiik New York Herald on last Sunday put on special Sunday trains throughout New England to deliver - the papers that day, in place of letting tho papers wait for Monday's mail. The Herald calls this enterprise, but tho Atlanta Herald and the Constitution ran enginos over Georgia a dozen years ago every day in the week to supplement the slow mail scrvico by regular trains. As great as the Herald iB it can get a few dots from Georgia newspapers. Tiik city authorities of Savannah are after the Oglethorpe Club of that city, and in an elaborate opinion the city at torney says that the club is liable for the regular license for running a bar. The club did not commence operations until the United States revenue was duly paid, and bow they arc liable for the one tax without the other is a mystery to the attorney. They have been ope rating for several ycare without the city license, and now propose to tight it out in tho courts. United States Sknatob Gkobok opened the political campaign in Missis sippi Wednesday, in a threo hours’ speech at West 1‘oint. Ho announced his opposition to tile sub-treasury scheme, and said tiie only reliof farmers would ever get from their present op. through tiie Democratic The great pow-wow of the Republican league at Cincinnati had not been in ses sion moro than an hour when the fact was established that Secretary Blaine is to day tho most popular man in the Repub lican party, and that ho will ho olfered tiie presidential nomination in 1HH2, and hescochcd to accept It on tho ground that his strong personality is required to load the party to victory. When a rotten orange struck Seott Thornton the other night while playing Richelieu i.. Atlanta, the audience quoted Shakespeare on him, and said in the language of Hamlet: “A hit, a pal- p ble hit!” Scott, liowover, understood this quotation as alluding to the render ing of tho play by himself and not to the presenco of oranges and other vegetables. Ex-Joubnalist Sam Smai.i. in a re - cent speech in Philadelphia counted the press as among the first agencies against the Sabbath. Sam is nothing if not a crank. Because lie was an unmitigated sinner while a journalist, he should not condom the press generally. Very fe' r newspaper men are as wicked as Sam was when ho was one of the fraternity. Since General Fremont’s death a doc ument has boon found that entitles bit heirs to an island in San Francisco bay worth $10,000,000. Whllo tho old gener al was fixing up documents covering ten million dollar islands, why didn t he include San Francisco, or even -' e York? Who will now liavo tho temerity 1 say that China is not a highly enlighten cil country? The latest proof of th’ fact is her indignation at the app"' n I one of the youngest managing cditois in M „ ... ,. , „ - ., ... . , I mctlt of that mouthsome crank, lb" - utsolf his tll0 state. ’ His work, though, slum. I T ‘ C ’° f M ’* b “ e ’ W,th 'V. Blair, as United States nun.-’ iliat lie is euterpiising ami thoroughly v;.: able. 1 accustomed energy is urging a “pine her court. i voting contest to name tho t .vo most popular clergymen in .St. Louis, agreeing to send them on an tended trip through Europe. The Globe- Democrat, the Republican paper,institu ted a similar scheme to name the two most popular bar-keepers in that city, promising to send them over the same route. This circumstance shows the moral fendi ncies of the two parlies in that vltf. themselves iu readiness to keep out of the way of King Humbert’s licet of Ital ian ironclads that would he menacing the coast of Georgia in a feu days. A fikim k newspaper war is now raging between tiie Gainesville Register and the republii Tin: i i the pi pie oft h< Mlt} ' I»r both part it lent's spe is that Ik ition < ament of tho the whole of Fulton c as part of that city, square miles in her Jiti siting-1 doe e peo ple the proj 1 r has been publicly announced that j | Editor IV. 3f. Kersh, of the Fort Valley f Atlanta wants mty incorporated ,’hieago has 172 is, and Atlanta •t left when it of claiming the arth. Ex-Stna rojt Hi..wit say that the mis take of his life lias been too much talk. Isn't it rather strange that tho venerable statesman lias just question palace” to illustrate the timber resources i of the south at the Chicago exposition, j Such a palace can he made a veritable thing of beauty. In view of the death »»f Barrett and the retirement of Booth, it has been sug- j sted that the recent brilliant The Bird of Wisdom. t in a hickory ( tr ‘‘‘J; inor , I h« -Goble , i OV elv old '>9‘V, Golden Medical Dis,«|$ gested that the recen t,nil,.,,,1 success | Wiirl , llUt(1 ,„ ngi liver and bWJ of fceott lhornton in Richelieu m Atlau- j remedy, a powerful tonic and alterau ^ ta in a i ks him as the successor of these and a reliable vitalizerfor weak pe^' ‘ eminent tragedians. Carnesvillc Aribune, and between the j Enterprise, w ill lie married on the 2i*th I perpetual mod Tribunc-of- Rome and the Atlauta Jour-j ot May to Miss Lizzie .Snead, daughter j now made a discovery known to nal. of Col. Claibourn Snead, of Augusta. J body else in the United States years ago? . ent cl -ciTiioe Gam. is still leading in the Florida • contains no alcohol, ami is a ^ just senatorial contest, but he may he sacti- without a peer. There is no risk i»' ^ every- liced to break the deadlock in the pres- iug a guaranteed article. Your 11 ' panacea for scrofula, hip-pdu ikcs, fe»er-sores. swellings ami ,u alcohol, and is a pres- j iug i back if it don't benefit or cure.