Americus times-recorder. (Americus, Ga.) 1891-1902, May 22, 1891, Image 4

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4 THE AMERICDS WEEKLY TIMES-RECORDER: FRIDAY, MAY 22, 1891. THE TIMES-RECORDER. Daily and Weekly. The Americas Recorder Estaiiliahki The Ameuicith Times Established isyo. Consolidated, April, it®!. SUBSCRIPTION: Daily, One Year, Daily, One Month, Weekly, One Year, - l Weekly, Six Months, For advertising rates address Basoom Myrick. Editor and Manager, THE TIMES PURLISHINO COMI'AN /, Americas, Oa. Americus, Ga., May 22, 1891. The good die young. The others be come oldest inhabitants and lie about the weather, their age and everything else.—.Yew York Herald. Mashaciii setts is to be redistricted so as to give the Democrats seven and Republicans only six congressmen. The legislature is now at work on the bill, aud t if they will only lix it so that Henry Cabot Lodge will be left at home the country will he thankful. John Yoi ng Hiiow.v will be the uexl governor of Kentucky. The state con vention which meet in Louisville Wed nesday, after a most harmonious session, gave him the democratic nomination on the eleventh ballot, and lie will have an easy victory over any one whom the re publicans can put in the licld against him. The Boston Herald says: “Missis sippi will unveil a monument to Jeffer son. Davis next month. It has been pushed through by the women of the state who undertook the work and have not sulfered it to lag since its inception. It is rather hard to match the energy and determination of the women of the south when they once get to work.” It is not infrequently the case that a man's public spirit is in inverse ratio to the ability of his pocketbook. The Au gusta Chronicle gives an illustration of this as follows: Capt J. Rice Smith's speech Monday nl^ht was full of bright sayings. Here is one of them: If I was rich I would give fitoihe Exposition, but as I am a poor man, Mr. Chairman, you can put me down for fi). Col. John Tkiiilett never misses an opportunity to announce a marriage in the columns of the Times-Knterprise, and yet, poor fellow, ho knows very lit tle about such affairs. The veteran bachelor of the Georgia press may yet be persuaded by some fair damsel to do for himself what he has donb for so many others—announce his own matri monial alliance. THE GROWTH OF THE SOUTH, Statistics are said to be dull and stupid. That may be true as a general thing, but when you take an inventory of your property and find that you are worth just three times as much as you w ere ten years ago then figures become more fascinating than poetry ami more thrilling than oratory. The south will back us up in these statements. When it pulled itself to gether after the war it found that it had t,l ° United States senate . . . , , . , , * ™ cr #wd like the Kansan, nothing but bankruptcy and pluck as j capital in trade. Its motto was, “The I whlle the brilliancy, eloquence and past is nowhere; the future Is every- talent of Ingalls are undisputed, the where,” and it drew its hell one hole above comparison is almost too strongly INGALLS AND HIS MODELS. . The Constitution of yesterday says: Ex-senator John James Ingalls, of Kan sas, who has recently signed a contract with Major Pond to lecture throughout the Unt ted .States, will make At an u one of his poin s. It Dneedless to say that he will draw an audience equal to any of Scott Thornton’s, I» galls is the most eloquent ml pictur esque orator among Iving Americans. He Is an actor equal to Booth and a word paint er superior to Ingersoll No man ever sat in ho could draw a tighter and started in the race. ! drawn. No living American on the The statistics which represent its pro- ] s kage or off is Booth’s equal as an actor, gross are as exhilarating and cheering as an ^ on *y Irving, Forrest, Macready, Sal- >ld wine. Its coal output twenty years ago was about two million tons; now it is nearly eighteen million tons. In 18H0 it thought it was rushing along at a breakneck speed because it bad erected vini and Junius Brutus Booth have ever contested the palm with him in the world in modern times. Asa word painter, no man who ever spoke or wrote English ever surpassed This is what the Atlanta Constitution has to say in compliment of The Times- Recorder and its work for Americas, and her prospective speaker: Tuk Americas Times-Recorder Is put ting In Homo ext client work for Speaker Crisp—to he. And In this connection it may be reinarrkrd that the tine h«ud of Hascom Myrick Is plainly visible In the editorial col umns of our Amerlcus contem|»orary. It goes without saying that Amerlcus now has .the best paper she has ever had. A bill has been introduced iti the Florida senate amending the railroad -commission law of that state so as to make the ofllcos of railroad commission ers elective by the people, instead of ap pointed by the governor as at present, and the Times-Union of Jacksonville, •thinks that It will meet with much favor from the people. The oflico of railroad commissioner is a very important one, and there is no good reason why the people should not elect them. The Republic of Columbia is to bo well represented at the Columbian ox- position at Chicago. The Columbian government has appointed ns commis sioners two of its most distinguished citizens, and the building to bo put up by our sister republic will be on of tho great attractions of Chicago in 1893. Thus far the responses from American nations to the invitations to the fair have est continental American exhibit ever made in the world. Senator Blackburn, of Kentucky, in a ringing speech before tho state con vention at Louisville, declares for the free coinage of silver, and says it must not bo straddled by the Democrats in ’02. The Republicans are entirely responsible for the deminitization of silver, and to the Democrats belongs the credit of bringing silver up to the standard of gold. The silver question and the tariff must come along togotberand with both, the senator think'*, the Demoeiats will march on to victory. President H arrison has returned to Washington. There was no demonstra tion upon his arrival there, only his grandchildren and the usual crowd about the depot being present. The nearer to tho white house Mr. Harrisou got, the less the desire on the part of the people tqsee him. That he is a very small fish has been fully demonstrated from the beginning, and this was plainly shown when he left Mr. Blaine at home, for t'ear that the latter would knock the shine oil of the man with the big bar, Instead of approaching an end the Florida senatorial contest seems farther from settlement as each day passes. The fight shows new phases every twenty-four hours, which increases the bitterness of the opposing factions, and drives them farther and farther from -each other, and it now seems impossible that either of the candidates before the caucus will ever leceive the nomination. No one can receive the necessary two- thirds vote, and tho best thing that can he done is to abolish that undemocratic jneanure, nominate Call and go home. mills on its streams and manufactured j Ingersoll, and it is the highest merit of 180,000 bales of the cotton it had raised, but in 1800, only ten years later, it man ufactured 500,000 hales and made con tracts for more mills. Before the war the sleepy negro lay in the sun on top of iron mines whoso val ue was only suspected. Agriculture ab sorbed the people’s attention, ami they let the negro sleep on. Now the mines are worked, tho bonanza has been un covered, dreams of wealth have become an inspiration; the roar of tho forgo, tho hum of machinery are heard everywhere, and old Pennsylvania is beginning to tremblo in her boots as she surveys her vigorous and daring rival. The south has rolled up its sleeves and proposes to be rich again—iichor than ever. It has all the natural re sources which attract capital and enter prise. Young men from the north on the lookout for a career are making in vestments there, helping to develop the country, and they always receive a warm w elcome. The tides of population, kept apart so long, are mingling their waters, and unless the politicians raise a row there won’t bo any north or any south twenty years from now, and in their s*ead we shall have a united, contented and prosperous country. Therefore, hang tho politician and let the good work go on.—X. Y. Herald. no exemptions. The Times-Recorder feels free to say that tho jury system as managed in many of our largo cities is a farce, and oft times produces travesties on justice instead of promoting it, and tho larger the city the worse tho system. It is nigh time, that with tho rapid advance of civilization and tho more complicated relations of socioty and business, tho crudities of a system originated by our semi-barbarous ances tors should bo eliminated, and tho sug gestion that the legislature take up this question this summer is a very oppor tune one. The higher our enlightonmont, tho lower the average scale of jury intelli gence is dropping, and the remedy is to bo begun in abolishing jury exemptions in to to. The Times-Recorder commends to every citizen who loves his country tho following sensible thoughts from the Columbus Enquirer-Sun: There will l>e a fine opportunity at the Hum mer session of tho Georgia legislature for some member to do a great public service by doing wvay with a crying evil In the laws »e latlng to the administration of Justice In this state. Let him introduce a bill repeal ing and abolishing all jury exemptions. The law 1« such now tint in every commuui* m iny or tin molt Intelligent, upright and ccessful citizens a^e relieved from Ju-y service. Thu time has come In Georgia, as It ha* lu other slates, w.ien tho service* of this class of citizens arc Imperatively needed li tho Jury box. In every countv in Georgia Jury exemptions have grown to be a great evil, and tae demand Is increasing, from the bench and fr »m the people, for relief. A law should be passed abolishing all Jury exemp tions, und vesting In the discrimination of the Judges in each case tne excusing of Ju- bcen very cordial, and promise the great- ror * on 1,10 Krotinii of a K e * Mn«w, peculiar occupation, urgent business or other condi tions which might appeal to the court. Tiie Democatie state convention of Kentucky completed its work Saturday evening, and tho following is the full ticket: Governor, John Young Brown; lieutenant governor, M. C. Alford, Lex ington’s attorney general, W. L. Hen dricks, Flemingsburg; auditor, L. C. Norman, Frankfort; treasurer, II. 8. Ilale; register of the land otlice, G. B. Swango, Compton; superintendent of public instruction, E. Porter Thompson, Owenton; clerk of tho court of appeals, A. Adams, Cynthiana. Just at the close a resolution endorsing Grover Cleveland and .John G. Carlisle and naming Cleve land for president was offered by J. 1*. T.arvin, of Clinton, but the delegates were in no humor to delay and tho mo tion to adjourn was carried, defeating the motion. lx the United States court at Charles ton W. Va., on Thursday, Warren M. Frame, of Raleigh county, was con victed of violating the lottery law by sending letters through the United States mail to the Louisiana lottery, and was fined $25 and costs by Judge Jack- son. This is the first conviction for the offense known to have been made in the United States. Ingalls that he is a close and success ful imitator of the great Agnostic, whose beautiful periods are the w'onder of his admirers and tho despair of his imita tors. But for his heterodoxy, which causes him to be feared and denounced by Christians, ho would, by common consent, rank facilo princeps among the greatest orators and writers of ancient or modern times. The results Iugcrsoll could have achieved, if he had been lighting under the banner of the cross instead of against it, would be surpassed by no man that ever lived; and could be com pared only to the military successes of the great Napoleon sweeping the plains of Europe during the first years of his unparalleled career. Ingalls is a wonderful man, but he is not the equal of either Booth or Inger soll. Ho lacks the sincerity which car ries conviction with the words they ut ter; his words are only words, not senti ments; and beneath the gilding of Us ornate sentences the baser metal of in sincerity can too often be detected. What he says would carry more weight if the public were convinced that he himself felt as he talked; but his record is not consistent, and too often has he sacrificed truth to point an epigram, and sincerity,to launch an oratorical thunder bolt. A FINE DISTINCTION. Tho Now York Herald calls attention to the fact that the Judges of tho queen’s bench In London have Just decided that it is no vio lation of the lottery and tutting laws for a newspaper to offer and psy a prize or sum of money to the person first miming the winner In a mining horse race. One of the Judges said that it was not like a lottery, nor was It a wag«*r. It was a mere question of guessing the names of winning horses. It was a lawful cn’erprlre on the part of the newspaper and lawful competition the part of Its readers. The Herald takes tho position that the English decision will hold good under ou lottery and betting laws.—Con-tltutlon. It is difficult to perceive how tho win ner of a guess differs, in a moral and legal point of view, from the man who wins by straigh told-fashionod betting. This nico distinction could have only originated in the mind of an English man,bent on protecting the national sport of horse racing from any inroads of law or gospel that might interfere with its full and free exercise by every Briton under tho sun. This shows too the power of the press. A great and good editor can offer a prize to tho man who will guess tho winning horse, and it will bo all right, but should a man ignore tho agency of the good and great editor, and buy pools on a horse race, or bet with another on the result, it is gambling pure and simple. Now this proves that a great and good editor sanctities whatever he touches, and can make good out of evil. Those who have been slandering the press will now have a chance to repent of their wickedness, and admit that the editor is a great moral reformer, at least in tho eyo of tho law. “Go to the editor, thou gambler, consider his ways, ami be come wise.” COTTON STATEMENT. From the Commercial and Financial Chronicle’s cotton article of May lrttb the following facts are gathered relative to the movement of the crop of the past week: For the week ending Friday evening, May 8th, the total receipts reached 52,519 bales against 44,772 bales last week, and 59,5:10 bales tho previous week, making the total receipts since September 1, 1890, 0,075,044 bales against 5,728,882 bales for the same pe riod of 1889-90, showing an increase since September 1, 1890, of 940,102 bales. The receipts of all the interior towi for the week were 20,302 bales. Last year the receipts of the same week were 5,071 bales. Among the interior towns the receipts at Macon for the week were 150 hales, Last year the receipts for the week were 10 bales. The old interior stocks decreased 21,900 bales during the week, and are 122,448 bales more than at tho same pe riod last year. The recepts at the same towns have been 10,080 bales more than tho same week last year, and since Sept. 1, the receipts at all the towns are 580,845 bales more than for the same time in 1089-90. Although the receipts at the outports the past week were 50,519 bales, the actual movement from plantations was 28,400 bales. Last year tho receipts from the plantations for the same week were bales, and for 1889 they were 5,001 bales. The above statement shows that the total receipts from the plantations since September 1,1890, are 0,837,100 bales; in 1889-90 were 5,700,007 bales; in 1888-89 were 5,480,312 bales. Those figures indicate an increase in the cotton in sight of 741,223 bales, as compared with the same date of 1890, an increase of 920,90L bales as compared with the corresponding date of 1889, and an increase of 800,928 bales as com pared with 1888. Noting the success of the Evening News since it secured a Georgia editor, Mr. Shaver, the Chattanooga Times has followed suit and captured Branham, the only original of Brunswick and Rome, and now since both the News and Times have able Georgia men on their staff, the Chattanooga papers will sparkle with a new lustre. The Virginia State colored Baptist convention developed one sensible ne gro. In reply to the suggestion that five thousand dollars be raised by the Ameri can Baptist Home Missionary Society for the purpose of establishing colored semi naries in the South, ho said: “I am op posed to any more such help from the North. I would say to tho home missiou board, of New York, put your money somewhere else and let us help ourselves. If we are ever to stand alone, now is the time to do so; but as long as our North ern brethren rock the cradle for us, we will be children, and forty years hence we shall be as dependent on Northern help as now.” The latest and most liberal estimate of tho total cost of construction of the Nicaragua canal is $100,(XX),000. That is a big sura, but it would be a really pal try outlay for the accomplishment of such a magnificent and very important enterprise, and there is no doubt that the commerce passing through the canal would be sufficient to pay a handsome dividend on such an amount. No amount of money is too great to expend in ac complishing such a commercial necessi ty as this canal. The only question is its practicability. Jay Gould claims that instead of be ing an annoyance to invalids his elevated roads are a real benefit. He says that in whizzing by the trains cause a commo tion in the air which purifies it and makes it healthier for the people to breathe. The wizard is hard to turn down. MISSISSIPPI STARTS THE HALL. The big event of the Mississippi cam paign, which has been waxing quite warm of late, will come off on Saturday the 23rd instant, at Kosciusko. Senator George and Major Ethel Barksdale are billed to meet at that time and place and discuss tho sub-treasury scheme, the former attacking and the latter defend ing tho measure. This will be tho first of a number of joint appointments that have been ar ranged between tho two. Both are good speakers and men of character and force who have been for a long while be fore the Mississippi public. Tho result of the contest will be felt throughout the south, and the discus sion will bo watched from all quarters. There are very few people who under stand tho sub-treasury scheme, except tho picture of an immense warehouse which looms up in their imagination, where the farmers can store cotton and corn, wheat, oats, etc., and draw a big pile of money from the government, and this discussion may throw the needed light upon the scheme. It is to be hoped that tho speakers will maintain a friendly feeling toward each other and thus keep down anything like a division in the democratic ranks of that state A good humored discussion will enlighten the people, but should ill feeling arise between the speakers it will be imparted to the people and pr jbably be the cause of a great deal of harm. Gentlemen, keep cool. THE TARIFF 18 THE ISSUE. In a recent interview Senator Colquitt declares that the democrats will display great folly If they allow the silver ques tion to be overshadowed by the tariff, and he expresses tho opinion that if the democracy does not nominate a free coinage man for the presidency they can not hope to win. The ablest leaders of the democratic party, however, while recognizing the importance of the silver question do not entertain the same views as Senator Colquitt. They are cognizant of the fact tl.ai the republicans are do ing all they canto agitate the silver ques tion in the ranks of the democracy in order, if possible, to keep the tariff issue in the background. The success of tho democratic party in tho next campaign depends on it keeping the tariff issue, upon which it has alieady won a glorious victory, square to the front from the beginning to the end of tlie presidential fight. While the democrats all over the coun try are a unit in favor of tariff reform, they are divided on tho silver question, consequently the prominent men of the party north and south appreciate the fact that defeat awaits the democrats if on the eve of tho presidential contest an issue is put forward which will cause dissension in the party ranks. The democracy is not on record as being opposed to the free coinage of sil ver, but as it is not a party question, but on the contrary a matter upon which opinions differ widely, the thoughful leaders of {the democratic party have suggested, and wo think wisely, that free silver is a question which should bo fought out in the congressional elections, and in this way it will be made a subor dinate issue in the national convention and tho danger of it causing a rupture in the party will bo .avoided. This is the plan suggested by the thinking men of the democracy and there is every reason to believe that it will be adopted. ; QcB l* e "plef PENSION FRAUDS. The next house, says the Loui**™ Courier-Journal, will have no duty t perform more imperative than the vestigation of the pension burea The pension list has grown t enormous proportions that the who have it to pay, demand some assu r ance that it is honest. Even the republican journals begin u] see the fraudulent character whole business, and are demanding vision. The following paragraph h takJ for illustration from the Chicago tJ bune: The abuses of the pension system lustrated by the manner In which l liUDdred-day men from Ohio have been stated on the rolls. Their scheme to» a pension was carefully organized, and th»»| succeeded In getting on sometime ago. Fro ^ evidence furnished him, Gen. Black ordered! these claims held up pending an 1 nvestLI gatloa, which was still pending when CorJ noral Tanner came Into office, result of the investigation they flnaliyl were dropped, but now they have manag'd! by some kind of Influence to get buck on thJ roils again. They are to uraw pensions for! the rest of their lives for one hundred darfl play In Washington. In which they never! tired a shot and nover saw a rebel, and ial which not one of them was even Mok. By] fraud and deceit they got on the rolls origin.! ally. Then they were hung up and rejected! and now here they are again In some myncl | rlous manner grubbing from the treasuryto| j pay them for their hundred-day picnic. Theyl are patriots for revenue only. It is just sachl outrages as this which have brought scandal] on the pensloo business. If the rolls were] investigated and cleaned up undei construction of the law, fully one-fourth tht| names would be taken off as having no legal] right there. Gen. Black was a democrat appointed! by Mr. Cleveland; Corporal Tanner wyl appointed by Mr. Harrison, with the ii junction “be liberal with the boys ’ Mr. Cleveland vetoed the pauper pen] sion bill; Mr- Harrison signed it. Revise the pension list I SUSTAINED HIS RULINGS. The college of bishops of the Method ist Episcopal church south in session at Nashville rendered a decision in tho matter of the append from the ruling of Bishop Hargrove on a point of law' raised in tho Tennesse conference in the pro ceedings in the case of Rev. I). C. Kolley, D. I)., who, at the last session, was sus pended from tho ministry for six months on the ground that ho had left his charge _ ,, _ without proper authority to make thej lar 8 est Ba P tis4 assembly ever! canvass for tho governorship on the pro- j held tllat " tc P 9 " er ° takon to celebrat fl hibition ticket. ! tho centennia 1 of 41,6 « reat movement! Ur. Kelley denied ids guilt. The con-1 inau « llrated in England, ferenco voted by an overwhelming ma-1 jority that a trial was not necessary, A REMARKABLE COINCIDENCE. Dr. Pickard, in his sermon at the! First Baptist church Sunday night, no! ted a coincidence in the history of misJ sionary w’ork instituted by the BaptiitJ denomination that is quito remarkable.! It was ninety-nine years ago at a great! meeting in Birmingham, England, held! under tho auspices of such noted IiapJ tists of that day as Messrs. Cary, Fuller,I et al, that the first steps of this grand! missionary movement were consumf mated. It was recently in Birmingham, Ala.,| but Bishop Hargrove appointed a com mittee to try the case. Friends of Dr. Kelley denied the right of the bishop to appoint this committee, aud the consti tutionality of the law on this point has been the subject of much newspaper discussion pro and con. The appeal to tho college of bishops was from Bishop Hargrove’s ruling on point of law. This appeal was offered by Revs. B. B. Haynes and T. II. Han son at tho Tennessee conference. At a meeting of the college of bishops tho appeal was considered with tho reatest care, and tho collego sustained every ruling made by Bishop Hargrove with the exception of one, tho college holding in this case that the conference should not have been denied the right to appoint a trial committee. A deal which was made by the last Republican governor of Massachusetts with a Washington claim agent, who now claims that ho was to bo paid a cer tain amount for engineering through congress Massachusetts’ share of the di rect tax bill, has boon repudiated by the present Democratic executive of that state, who refuses to recognize any such deal or to pay any sum to the agent. According to this agent, whose name is Davis, he is a member of an association of claim agents or lobbyists, who “cre ated and kept alive” in congress “the sentiment that it was proper and wise to return this tax to tho states.” This bill, which is one of the many to enrich the North at the expense of tho South, it now seems was forced through congress by the use of money, and if tho truth was known more states than Massachu setts had paid agents in the lobby. The Nashville American suggests: “The most brilliant idea yet credited to tho administration is the proposition to make Senator Blair superintendent of immigration. His exclusive ideas would show to lino advantage in tliat office. It only remains to give him headquarters at New Orleans, in close proximity to tlie Mafia colony, and his proper niche in the goveanment will be filled, to say nothing of the probable occupancy later on of a quieter niche out on the Spanish Fort road.” Mr. A. E. Lassiter, a hotel keeper of Valdosta, committed suicide the other day by taking morphine, because his son, a lad of fifteen years of age, had stolen money from some of his boarders. It would have been better if ho had given the morphine to the boy, it might have saved him from further trouble. Maioii W. L. Glkssnkr, who return ed from Chicago Sunday evening, has a nico trip lixed up for the Georgia press boys, and in speaking of tho program says: “I have arranged for compliment ary transportation over all the roads, and we shall carry tho boys first to Chicago, where a couple of days will bo spent as guests of the World’s fair managers. Then we shall take a steam er for a trip round through tho great lakes. We shall spend one day at De troit, and then go down to Put-in-bay, where wo will bo entertained by the Ohio Press club. From thence we go to Sandusky, tho center of the Ohio wine country, and back via Cincinnati. Alto gether the trip will consume about six teen days, and the actual expenses of the boys will no exceed $50 each. We shall travel in special Pullman cars and go to the best hotels. No ladies will be expected on this trip.” Wadlky, Ga., has recently had a sensation in an attempted suicide. A youug lady of that placo was eugaged to four young men, and each had obtained the necessary license for the marriage. One of the young men caugut on to the racket and proceeded to tho home of his fair affianced, armed with his document and insisted upon an immediate cere mony. The young lady could not quite consent to this, as she was not fully de cided, whereupon the ardent youth pro duced a vial of laudanum and drained the contents to the bottom. Prompt medical aid was procured and the young man will probably live to see tho girl married to one of the other three who is blessed with a little more brains. Green B. Raum, Jr., son of the com missioner of pensions, has resigned his position as chief clerk of the pension bureau because he was caught stealing money. There is no harm in a Republi can stealing from tho government— Raum’s crime consisted of Being caught. Having failed in their efforts to get up a naval combat between the United States and Italy, tho newspapers have turned their attention to the insurgents of Chili and arejitching for a row between the Charleston and Esmeralda out in the broad Pacific, but they will hardly be gratified as the insurgents’ gun boat will need all the shot and shell she can gath er further down the coast. There a few sailor editors and the boys feel safe in getting up a row on the water. Tho two Birminghams have therefore! figured quite conspicuously in the histo-l ry of this great work of the Baptists,T and it is really ramarkable that this! should ha» e been so without any pre-| concerted intention to bring it about. And it may bo also remarked as a incidence worthy of note that thecom l ing year will mark tho celebration of! this Baptist centennial, as well as the! quadri-centennlal of tho discovery of] America.—Birmingham Age-Herald. It is a noteworthy fact that at the! election of last November every one of! the thirteen original states of the fed-f oral union was carried by the democrats.I Ten of those states now have democratic! governors, namely, New York, Pennsyl l vania, New' Jersey, Massachusetts, I North Carolina, Virginia, Delaware.I Maryland, South Carolina and Georgia.1 Two of the three remaining states, Con-f nectlcut and Rhode Island, were carried! by the democracy on the popular vote! and would have democratic governors! bnt for the majority clause in their re-1 spective constitutions. Tho remaining! state, Now Hampshire, although demoT cratic on tho vote for congress, was car- f ried by the republicans for governor by| the slender plurality of ninety-three| votes in a total poll of 89,000. Mayor Suakesaeare, of Yew0r-| leans, is determined to root out the nest I of Italians in that city and is beginning! with Consul Corte, who is perhaps as I deep in the dye as any of them. In W* V letter to Governor Nichols, requesting | that Corte bo recalled, he says: I f Corte has ever had any usefulness here! as consul be lias outlived it and become I through his own act not only an unaccept*-1 hie person, hut an element of danger tot community In that by his uttei auces, he cites his Inflammable people to riot or I opposition to the laws *nd customs oft | country they have sought as an a*: Being a deposition, as te confesses him** ! | of criminal secrets relating to Individual his race rcaldent among us, he ret uses to (D up information he has and thereby the danger to the community from criminals. The Georgia, Carolina aud Yorthefltj railroad runs near old Appall ce | church, In Ben Smith’s district, lD | Gwinnett county. In front it takes p al of the land set apart for church l ,ur l H) * cs. In order to arrive at the dam&fe I sustained, assessors wero appoint* I the usual way. Tho Lawronceville H* r aid says that after investigation theI sessors allowed the church ten do I for damagp to tho land and | spiritual damage.” A I.ove Song In M Flat. “My modest, matehless Madeff D j* oa ^ ; Mark my me.odlou*midnight im> Much may my melting music uu» modulated monotones. My un This young man stayed out <®o J serenading his lady love. He ca 8 , cold, which developed Into c 1 ata ‘j r J ar ri he cured it with Dr. Sage s Remedy, a sovereign specific >orrj cases, “Cold in the Head, Headache. It correct* the . I breath, stops the offensive disc# j* I heals the irritated throat and nose, I ing the head eiear, and smell ana . I unimpared. It costs but 60 ccn'^p the proprietors offer in good (or a case they cannot cure.