Waycross weekly herald. (Waycross, Ga.) 1893-190?, July 29, 1893, Image 2

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* 2 THE WAYCROSS HERALD, SATURDAY, JULY 29, 1S93. When Atlanta can't get up a new j Governor Waite hasn’t declared sensation she revives an old one. i war for a day or two. Waite says Atlanta will never be left on sensa- he will ride in blood up to the bits of MB. TLEXER’S CANDIDACY* AMOlftr OUR 'EXCHANGES. Lightning struck a Terrel county I uegro the other day, knocked him herald publish iso oojfPANY. j Atlanta win never oe leit on sensa- | ne win nue in oioou up to me oils of We Do Not Fear An Untimely Frost, j The cotto “ caterpillar has made its j about fif toen feet an( j burnt Qut tbe A?p."pra"i*S!'} Ed,u, "* ,,dp " ,,u,h " , i ti0nS - : his bridle or have all the silver coin- The W.ycross Herald places ,he \ a Pl ,earance in West Dougherty. seat of his pants, but the negro came ; -. “r ~- : t "r: j Murders, suicides, outrages, lynch- I ed that can be dug out of the mines I name of Henry G. Turner at its mast- i -X be d spring factory has been es- to in an hour and though a little dis- PubH,hed gJT* W OB,c * | iugs, bank failures, financial troubles j of Colorado. I head as their ‘candidate for the U. S. | tablished at Cuthbert. Diversity | figured was still in the ring. Subscription $1.00 per annum. j and hot weather. • The papers are j If the South Carolina people would 1 Senate. better man so far, has been • adds interest to the scene. j t j 9 one tbe i neX p bcab j e full of it. ! do without whiskey it would settle j na,ned * or tbe Pi ace > n our opinionthan ! The Darien Gazette is one of the ; of the Negro character that thev In Kansas City, Mo., persons who the liquor trobles in that State with- I Congressman Turner, but the election is | cleanest and best papers that reaches hesitate iu dividing their time and THE HERALD- Our authorirrd *:gr.pd by the Mai lUihority, duly Purely j SATURDAY, JULY 21», 1893. EDITORIAL SHORT STOPS. ; fail to vote at an election are fined i out further aigument, m be i $7 50. Who said this was a free iu by j country? ,-i His said that the tail of the new | comet is so thin that you can see the The Govern- so far off’we think it will be Colorado i* still in the Uuion. Rape means rope and no new trial. The weather in Georgia never gets ' vea ched too hot for politics and picnics. As times grow brighter the calam ity howler grows sadder. Public confidence in the silver dol lar is not yet at 10 per cent, discount. It is not thought that the Colorado rebellion will effect Pike’s Peak. stars through it. That kind of a tail wouldn’t do much good in fly time. Tom Watson has taken a ioug, running start. He is certain to be “broken-winded before the goal is for further developments i fore rushing men into the r gentries are very likely to the election that may serf, raw the pi i politics be- ! this office. money between a string of mullet, a The. Ocala Capitol says “an active watermelon, a road cart and Texas -ise before ■ duue bu S down a girl’s back will pony. And always will be no doubt, islv embar- S ,ve ber the clearest idea of what an The editor of tire Albany Herald didate who earthquake is like.” is so ungallant as to say : “It is said ed to Gov. Tillman’s partisan- regard him as a sort of demi-god. IIis opponents now regard him as a demi-john—Atlanta Journal. The banks of Georgia have weath ered the financial storm in line style. They are among the solid institutions or and the bars and the blind tigers would all go out of business. At Waco, Texas, Tom Roe, a truck farmer, entered bis horse lot and his horse rushed at him with | come* out too early—Fort Valley Mir- open mouth. Roe leaped aside as : r*>r. the horse raised and struck him on Mr. Turner will shirk no duty for the neck with his fist, killing the political preferment or personal pop- horse instantly. ularity. His record will be as un- TUe full title of the Indian prince sullied two years hence as it is to-day, , ened with destruction by the catter at present being lionized in New York and upon it he will stand or fall, j pillar in Doughery county. Mcln- is the ltajab Jagatjiet Singh Alwalia. There is no safer man in the United i tosh’s prayer is being answered. That would he a tough name for his States than IL G. Turner, and the q c „ # Henry R. Jackson, of Savau- highness to pronounce in case he got Herald is willing to risk his judg- ! nab ba9 tm application for a The Marietta Journal says that that a rule has been adopted in the North Georgia is .going to name the j woman’s department of the World’s next governor of Georgia and that I Fair limiting discussion to live miu- he will hail from that section. It is reported that cotton is tlireat- utes. there said.’ If they had made it five hours would have been something Commissisner Mount is coming ! of this great country, home! He sailed last Tuesday. The man who never had any mon- Yellow fever has put in an appear- cy should not cut up about hard a nee on the Pacific coast of Mexico. Arizona will ask to he admitted in to the Union when Congress'meets. Miss Winnie Davis is reported ill at Narragansett Pier. If silver can’t be used for money what will we do with it? The Mobile Register has been placed in the hands of a receiver. Rev. Sam Jones is carrying on a big meeting out in Indiana. times. This view of the case will rule a majority of Georgia editors out of the debate. It is said that women are more su perstition** than men. Women are j so much belter than men that their little idiosynracies should be ovef- l looked. diglit jagat jeet with the boy: —Telegram. it looks as if Charleston had st out to make life a burden to Goven or Tillman. Just now he is maki.i it a burden to some people i Charleston. There’s a rockv ment upon every political issue that j pension for agitates the land. That the fires of j tbe Mexicai political strife and discord will burn with vigor during the next two years there can he no doubt, and Turner will be in the hottest of the battle, oad When duty calls lie' will be found rendered during ahead of Tillman ; there both rock and rye in Thomasville Times. A late lloston dispatch announces the shutting down for August, of the Amoskeag Cotton Mill. This is is, in fact, ready to meet every emergency, with- the road.— out fear, favor or affection, lie may make some enemies, but the masses will recognize* his honesty, his pa triotism and his superb statesman ship, and his course will be applaud- “Samivel. bevare of the vidders,” j j t employs 8,000 operatives; uses the advice given by the elder IV eller j gj x million pounds of cotton per to his son Sammy, was not heed- j week, and pays 822.500 per month . ed by Congressman Rrekemidge, of! ; n wa<res Chebalis county, Washington,, lias , Kentuck He married a widow. ... V 30.000,000 feet of standing timber. fBt , , ' *^ ewarK J-' 11 * ha*» lnt on a no\el loo many other engagements and ex- way to decide the claim* of three lovers. I lie extra session of Congress I c jt emenls have caused the country to ! Mie set a lien on three ejrg-, each mark- bids fair to he long and loud. j loose sig | lt of the hool , skirts. But \ ed with the name of one" of the .wains, It is no more the “rebel south it we never loose sight of the women ! and the first egg to hatch will bear the is the glorious sunny South, and li- | who might have worn ’em. name of her choice.” nancially, the solid South. j Thc Herald has about made up its ! r,1,lei ' tlle circumstances it is reas- And now they deny that the \ mind to refer this whole ipiestion of ! onable t0 suppose that the husband World's fair was ever open on Sun- I finance and the tariff to the United i wil1 1,0 henpecked, day. ' i a te,.-dollar gold , the largest cotton mill in the United ec1 aml a PP rovcd - If ’ fls °" 1 ' c . onte . m ; States, aud probably in the world. Bill Arp says in the Constitution of last Sunday, “that lvnehings will not stop until the outrages are stop ped.” In the same paper aud in the same article he says* “these statis tics show that the negroes in tin' schools are not getting that moral training that makes good citizens. The negro teachers fail to teach them honesty, truth, charity, obedience to law and other cardinal virtues.” “Twenty years ago Florida was looked upon by many as being the tail end of no where. Now she is the bright, particular star iii the galaxy reat many people think that : of SontIlern s t:l tc.s-IIanio„, in the Ocala Capitol.” And this from a Georgian ! I low circumstances do alter cases. And after all, it’s a poor dog that won’t wag his tail to the bridge that carries him safely over. Even the press feels the hard times, judging from the following paragraph from the Albany Herald : There The Savannah Telegram lias uot yet made its appearance at this office. Why have we been neglected, gentle men of Jhe Telegram? The body of Sam Watson, a white man, was recently found in the canal near Augusta. Accidental drown ing was the verdict of the jury. A Yon inn States put England down for a Aimus when that Siamese plunder • t in almost And in in every town in the State^ nv of them openly. big si is. divided. What a pity these delightful Way- -cross evening breezes can’t he sent to our Nortlien; friends. The country is indeed passing through the deep waters of financial j village at the fair, is said to be 112 distress. . y ears old, has a son of 73, whose The watermelon season wanes and daughter 59, has a son 41, who has a the average Georgian is returning to I grandchild aged 2 years, polities as the next best thing. j Col. C. C. Jones, who died at Au- Thore is no more indications of a | gusta day before yesterday, was the swallo the It l.xlg captured, ; . had stolen attempted to rder to escape is throat, ami ‘•dry spell” in South Carolina at present than there was before. China will support Siam as against thc French. China wakes up oeca- Prohihition in Iowa is not a glit- tering success. Notwithstanding the ^ ^ stringency of the law, liquor is sold a ,i ri ,, r « tort » *’ The negro doubtless ,tho(ight that it was better to be gasping for breath lull, head of the Lapland j than to be without money. The same papers that make reas suring announcements daily under the heading, “The Crisis Passed,” tell of bank suspensions. Somehow, the crisis seems to pass very leisure ly. When confidence has been fully restored the crisis in the money stringency will be a thing of the past, j and not until then.—Albany Herald. The decline iu the price of cotton has frequently placed the masses of the Southern people in far more dis tressing circumstances than those which now surround the people of Colorado and adjoining States. The South has suffered, but never yet have her people put up the plea3 and threats that drif to our ears from Cougress should hold the extra ses sion at the Iveely Institute as the gold porary intimates, men are to he tried j cme ^ be old N salvation for the in a fiery furnace, we predict that ■ cou, R r y- Albany Herald. H. G. Turner will come forth un- The residence of W. R. Shadman, ; scathed. ou St. Simon’s Island, was destroyed For reasons already stated, we ; by fire on Saturday morning last, contend that Mr. Turners’ Candida- ! Loss 815,000. It was one of the i cy is not ill-timed or ill-advised, and j oldest houses on the coast. that future developments will prove ( Ocala has been selected as the ! may be plenty of money in the coun- ; the correctness of our position we do : pi ace for the Florida State encamp- j try as is claimed by Comptroller of not doubt. ment. whereupon the Capitol opens j the Currency Eckels and the finau- N<»t Afraid ol‘Hell. U P its gentle voice and crows most j ciers of the Uuion League Club, of Some newspaper men are terrible j lustily ' j Xew Vork ’ l, " t llle ™ a J orit y of prevaricators. One lately wrote about Wl,ile stocks :md a ' <> some- • 'be common people of the country ! a cyclone, saying it hail turned a well wl,at shak J’> il is 1'leasant to notice have a very sens,hie feeling of the that matrimonial bonds me above | fact that they are short of their share. South Georgia papers should not let up in the agitation of Henry G. Turner Tor the United Slates Senate. Albany News. lie can’t get,on the slate unless his upside down in Mississippi; turned a celler inside out in Wisconsin ; moved j J )ar rtu< ^ s * lou ® u upward tendency. ,a town line in Nevada ; blew all the j ^ us ls a o°°dsign.%-1horn. limes, staves out of a barrel in Iowa and You can make a pretty good fiddle left the bunghole; changed the day °nt of a corn-stalk, and out of the ■Of the week in Ohio ; killed an honest corn you can make a juice that will first aud only President of the Con federate Survivors’ Association. The old soldiers will pav tribute to his memory., sionnllv. ! Roundtree and Westmoreland have The city of Paris has twelve more j both S iven bon(1 aud P eace rei S ns in dailies than New York, Philadelphia I Atlanta once more. Judging them and Boston combined. i b ? wllat wc ima g ine ' Toub > ba our If the farmers of the South will > ow “ feelin S 9 ' «c do not doubt that solve the meat and bread problem, the money question will solve itself. ... _ * . i sixty-one attempts to wreck trains Lynclungs for the usual crime are . , . , . , _ , getting so common lhat they have . C :' 5t! ‘- eS Canada j over the western plains. .. .. . . _ j during the past six months. None- ~ — ceased to excite the usual amount ot , . , . In Ttrnnkw Pnnntr .... ! count was kept upon the roads them- 111 BrooK tonnty. comment by the press. j se)ves j A recent short visit to the glorious It may be that thc European pow- „„ . . _ j old eountv of Brook* has convinced ers are on the verge of a great war. j . lt? ant . ° UD *. 1Ce j more surely than ever that next to Ware, Thev have certainly been preparing l 1S a « am e oie tie 1C * l * Brooks is the best county in the State, for it long enough. ‘ j Westmorland seems to be pushing j <5ood f rion(ls uml neigh bors, true and The office-seekers are still com- | the boys both feel better. The Railroad Gazette chronicles Indian agent in the West’; blew the cause the fiddler to swear it is a gen- hair off a baldheaded man in Texas; \ nine Cremona - Capitol, killed a truthful lawyer in Illinois; Some one has said that “The blew the mortgage off a farm in j prdper study of mankind is man.” Kansas; scared a redheaded woman j This has been changed since woman in Michigan; blew the, hide off a bull | has come to the front, and the prop- ill Kentucky and awakened the con-1 er study of mankind is, not man, but ... - , . . . . tba ^ somebody must fight or back welcome and chicken-pie awaited u.*. plaining that the crust of the pie is d nv *n , — , 1 P , , , , 1 ao vn ’ I and even the very abundant, but the plums arc exceedingly scarce. The railroads have discovered that they must trim their rates to a reas onable size before the crowds will set their heads Cliicagowards. South Georgia wants a new deck of cards, a new shuffle and deal and new bands all around. The indica tions are that she will get it all. There are now fifteen crematories in the United States and they are all doing a good business. The crema tion idea is becoming popular. The crash of the Denver banks is causing consternation throughout the West. Where will it end ? is the question asked ou all sides. Congress will find itself in a very trying position when it meets in ex tra sessiou. It will be compelled to do something, hit or miss. It begins to look as if Gov. Til- hildren and the dog* Miss Catharine Larsb is dead at J came to meet u.*. No matter where our Muucie, Ind ., at the age of ninety- | future lot may be cast, tenderest memories three. She formed a dislike to her i will go back to the old home, (rod ble*.* father when a child and never after- ! old Brooks and her people. ward would have anything to do with j The Rates Are Being Cut. The rates to the World’s Fair are being cut and the Herald hopes in a science of a Louisiana politician.— ■ Ocala Capital.* Triplett to the Reseue. The following is from the Thomas ville Times of the 20th inst; Per ham, of the Waycross Herald, in a ringing editorial nails the name of Henry G. Turner to his masthead as a candidate for the United Slates senate. Turner would fill any man’s shoes in that august body. He would find in the senate a wider field for the broad statesmanship which he has shown in the house. Yes, Henry G. Turner would ably represent Georgia in the senate of the United States. Southern Banks. Richmond State : All this bank ing strength iu the South has been readily accounted for on the ground of conservatism. The South has ac cumulated wealth in the past fifteen years and the financial forces in this section can never be panicked. The public appreciate the solid condition of southern affairs. Hence the ab- short time to be able to announce a low excursion rate from Waycross. As soon as our arrangement.* are perfected the public will be notified. We hope, how ever, to have everything in working order by the middle of August. men. Some writer fires this solid shot : The only thing that will bring pros perity to our people is to quit run ning after the rainbow scenes of py rotechnic orators and come down to square, solid business and stick to it like grim death to a nigger. The country is about to enter a j ^ fal 77^Take n : ^Uh a kind of season of magnificent ,K>ssibilities for i 6UQJraer complaiDt , accompan ie<l with a the burglrrs. Tile people every- j w <mderful diarrhoea, tioon after my where are withdrawing their money wife , s sister> who lives with us , was ta . from the bank* and hiding it around k en \ n the same way. We used almost in old stockings and suck like. The i everything without benefit. Then I said burglars will soon be “onto this j let us try Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera racket” in fine style. ; and Diarrlicea Remedy, which we did, The Fort Worth Gazette thus ar- aa<1 ,hat cared “ s ri S ht a * a S'- 1 ,hink woman.—Thomasville Times Gallaut Ben Russell will go back to Congress from the Second when thc election is held next year. The people down here appreciate a hust ler like Ben Russell.—Darien Ga zette. The Howard Academy, a colored school building at Ocala, Fla., was burned on the ivaht of the 20th inst. The building com SO,000 and was in sured for $3,00*> The lire is sup posed to have !».- ;i incendiary. The Blacksbear canning factory is now putting up peaches, pears and tomatoes in large quantities. We predict that the enterprise will be a good thing for its owners and great help to the entire community. The municipal election of Jackson ville was held under the mpdified Australian ballot system, last week, and the experiment proved so satis factory that the Democratic papers of Florida want to put the law to work throughout the State. “Everything seems to be short, \ solute confience in southern banks, j even the tail of the new comet is Hence, too, the prestige that the j vei ? raucb abbreviated.”—Thomas- southern banks have with the banks j vibe Times. Comets may have short of New York. j tails and money may be short, but one thing certain/ there’s nothing gues the financial question : “If you man would hold Charleston’s nose j had oats and the other fellow bad and make her take her drench.—Sav. i wheat, would you de-eatize wheat?” ^ ews * | No, gentle Texan, nor would we al- Congressman Breckenridge, of j low* the other fellow to de-oatify oats Kentucky, lias married Mrs. Wing, j if pistols and bowie knives siill re- Not satisfied with a “rib” the ambi- j tain their suasive power.—Macon tions Kentnckian takes a Wing. ( News. much of it, a* it did for me what it was recommended to do. John Hertzler, Bethel, Berk* Co., Pa. Jt'y and 50 cent bottle* for sale at Ctfsb Drug .Store. Constipation and sick headache .per manently cured and piles prevented by Japanese Liver Pellets; especially adap ted to children’s use.. Sold by B. J. Smith. Roundtree and Westmoreland Funder Bond. Atlanta, Ga. July 22—Dr. West moreland has been placed under a a five thousand dollar bond to keep the peace. He will give the bond. Roundtree was placed urder a sim ilar bond and for the present the hostilities are at an end. Will Stand His Trial. Harry Hill has returned to Atlanta, and will stand his trial. His appear ance in Atlanta has caused much sur prise. He says he is ready to make bond. Rev. W. H/Thomas says: “I have tried your 'Wonderful Life Preserver and find it an excellent remedy for Coughs and Colds, it is also a good appetizer and I am satisfied it is the best I have ever used.” Sold by all Drug gists. may 19—1 y. • short about the democracy of the Thomasville Times. The really brave man, aud es pecially the really brave young man, is the one who is not afraid to do right. He is the one who dares to follow the dictates of his conscience when it exposes him to the scorn or to the ridicule of those whose favor he values. —Sunday School Revival. The man who sits and watches the thermometer is usually a little warm er than he would be otherwise. It is a good scheme not to have a ther mometer about you at all, these warm days.—Ocala Capital. If imagination can keep you cool it can certainly keep you-warm. We advise editor Hanlon to do without fire this winter and depend upon* his imagination for heat. geographical disabilities are removed. Macon News. But Mr. Turner’s name aud fame goes far beyond the geographical limits which put disabilities upon the section in which he lives. The peo ple must and will rise aud smash the slate.—Valdosta Times. A Close Shave. Recently, says the Atlanta Consti tution, Camille Flammarion, the noted French astronomer, foretold in a series of magazine articles the speedy destruction of the world by a comet. Within the past few days the new comet now visible has come nearer to us than any other comet of modern times. It was less than 38,000,000 miles distant from the earth, the other day, when it wheeled about aud began to travel in another direction. The seientistists regard this as a close shave, although the average reader will think that 38,000,000 miles is a safe distance. It should be recollected, however, that this ce lestial strsnger travels at the rate of 3,000,000 miles a day. If it had uot changed its course it would have struck our globe with a dull thud next Sunday and there is no telling what would have been the result. It may be that a comet is not equipped for destruction, but nobody cares to risk a collision. Flamma rion may be right and the earth may some day be destroyed, in the man ner he points out. The astronomers have conflicting theories on the sub ject, and as we know so little about the matter, everybody will feel re lieved to know that the new luminary is going away from us. TheLittle Leaks, Young man, it is the small expeuses that keep your pocket book*so lean. Ten cents for cigars, liquids and the thousand and one other trifles, runs up in twelve months to many dollars. It fs false pride, a wrong deference to a wrong, that forbids any econo mizing in small matters. ; It is the little leak that always empties the barrel; it is the small expenses run ning up into hundreds of dollars in a year that bankrupts the majority of men. It is the trimming of a dress that makes the bill so heavy. It is the little wastes that keep thousands of noses to the grindstone and sends many to .the poor bouse.