The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, December 01, 1885, Image 4

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THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1885.-TWELVE PAGES. THE TELEGRAPH, •uoLtfcHrn avrar day in th» tm and wuet, BY THM T.-Irgraph find Messenger Publishing Co., 9T Mulberry Street. Muon, On. The Pally in drllTetvu uj carriers in the etty or ■untied foots** free to nibneribera, for II per month, |9.So for three luonthn, $S for *1* months, or flOayear. Thk Wkkkt.t in mailed to anbnerihen, po«ta*e free, at $1.2* n year and 7.1 cento for nix months. Transient adTortinemcnto will he taken for tho Daily at |1 per aqnare of 10 linen or lean for the And insertion, and SO centa fot oach subsequent in- eertlon, ud for the Weekly at |1 for each Insertion. Notice* of dcatty, tuners!*, marringen and births, *1. Rejected communications will not be returned. Correspondence containing important news and diaounnion* of living topics is solicited, hot mnnt be brief and uritten upou hut one sldo of the paper to have attention. Remittances should be made by express, postal note, money order or registered loiter. Atlanta Bureau 17H Peaclitreo street. All coniln unications should be addressed to THE TELEGRAPH, Macon, Ga Money order*, checks. cte„ should be made pays- yt 0 to H. 0. Hanson, Manager. Look out for a crtmde on tobacco by the Ptugwuinps. Tub ‘‘negro preacher" had his way and a»y, in Atlanta. This was the agent with which Mahoue debauched Virginia. Bishop Turner renewed tho tactics with which he was wont to carry tho county of Bibb in reconstruction days. Ip anything should happen to Cleveland, under a republican President-pro lem, the country would go into a thirty days’ cam paign. And the Republicans would start with the baching of three-fourths of office holders in the country. Tub cotton crop in Central Asia has been unusually good this year. Many owners of cotton mills in Russia seem to prefer Cen tral Asian to American cotton, and have cs taMishcd direct relations with the planters of Rolihara, Tashkcnd and Khiva. Puksidknt Clhyelahd is to start the machinery of the American Exhibition to be held in I .on don next year. Do will touch a button in Washington City, and the throb that goes out will cross the ocean and accomplish its mission 3,000 miles away. It is an age of wonders. Tub prohibition victory in Atlanta has mollified the Atlanta Constitution. It be comes su humble follower of the once despised Tammany,as witness this: “It is now said that Tammany will practically nnccs - absmb the county. Very well. This means •Democratic harmony." High License. The Christian Union, in a well considered artielo upon the question which to-day is watched with such interest in Georgia, un dertakes to show the effect of high license in Illinois, taking as a basis the official re ports. The editorial passes over “certuin very honest temperance men whose aim is to sueuro such legislation ns will relieve them of all responsibility for tho liquor traifio," and is addressed to the "vast ma jority of temperance thinkers and workers, who ore not particular to embody in the statute book their own notions on tho sub ject of temperance; who desire, before everything, to secure such legislation as will be practioiilly most effective in reducing the drink traffic." The license,” says the Union, “is fixed by what is known as the Harper law, at $300. In the city of Chicago this law has increased the revenue to the city from 8200,000 to $1,500,000, and reduced the sa loons from 4,000 to 3,300. In Hyde Park, a suburb of Chicago, thongh the population has increased, the saloons have been re duced nearly one-half ; while the income and consequent reduction of taxation haa been multiplied tenfold. What is more significant is a redaction in the number of arrests from 1,895 to 678, In Springfield, the capital of Illinois, the saloons have been reduced 30 per cent, in number, nnd the revenue from them has been increased 231 per cent. In Peoria the saloons havo been reduced nearly one- half, tho revenue has been trebled. These arc reports from the larger cities. In the smaller towns similar effects havo been pro duced. In some of them no licenses aro granted, and prohibition is secured by local option. In nearly, if not quito all the others, the number of saloons has been somew-hnt reduced, the nrnount of revenue to the State largely increased, and tho amount of drunkenness and disorder notably diminished. From six columns of reports that lie before us, we take some specimen reports at haphazard: Cairo, Hi.—Increase of revenue, 60 per cent; decrease of saloons, nearly 50 per cent; decrease of notable intemperance, 30 per cent. Quincy—Increase bf revenue, nearly 40 per cent; decrease of saloons, 30 per cent. Tolono—Revenue doubled; business of police courts diminished 90 per cent. Toledo—All tho low groggerios shut up. Vandalia—No decrease of saloons; in crease of revenae, sixty-six per cent.; fewer cases of drunkennoss, and fewer disturb- order to meet his request the Attorney- General bad to order the district uttemey, Mr. Hill, to commence the suit. There is nothing private in all this. It directly in terests the people of Georgia, and became a legitimate piece of news to any newspaper man with sufficient enterprise to look it up. Onr correspondent mnkes no statement to the discredit of Marshal Fitzaimons, but states what others in authority have told him, and what he has gotten from tho record. And all of this is capable of a full and sat isfactory explanation by n judicial investiga tion, which Marshal Fitzsimons himself has rcqnested. That it shall be fall and com pleto the Comptroller of tho Treasury da- vcntilate their own opinions, will bo asked to be brief, respectful and responsible in cash for the space used. IIow the News Was Spread. To-day the Telegraph presents a com plete exhibit of the great contest in Atlanta, made np from special - reports of corres pondents who were upon the ground, and communicating with this office by special wire every fow minutes. Tho bulletins sent by our reporters were posted in front of this office and were read by orowds all day long. Throughout tho his face by itinerant peddlers. It is per haps needless to say he did not buy any. —Sir John MacDonald's hasty fiight from Cannda to England, it is said, was caused by fears of bodily injury from French-Cans (linns, friends of Kiel. It is said be will remain in England ns Canadian High Com missioner. —M. de Rrnzza, reduced to n living skele ton, is exhibiting to Parisians the deplora ble results of n brief residence in tho Congo country, which ho says is worthless for purposes of emigration and i* likely to be so for yearn. —Mr. Gladstone is not allowing cam paign fictions to distnrb him. lie lias day the office force was kept busy at the made it a rule when any are grave enough , . , . 1 , | to call for an answer to demand those who __ _ telephone answering inquiries, nnd sending . circulate tho fictions to produce their au- clfneB to grant tho withdrawal of any letters I answere tbrougU both telegraph offices thority. Ho never hears any more about or papers * to points about in the State, them. \v.! Z „l„i t n „„„ oil The news gathered by the Atlanta depart- —The Paris correspondent of the London We repeat that we fail to see that m all * TE.Eonrn was earned to An- Tim “ sa >' 8 thnt w ^ en Resident Gravy ♦ Liu nnv niniline Vina lvnv.n /I nnn f/i \f n r_ III till OE Ulc X EI.KOBIII nlln G&l AlfXX lO AH I _, nn r a i n A .1,1 n f ,„ nn <*,1,I, n of this any injustice has been done to Mar- wants to get rid of a man whom he consiil- htiol Fitaimmous by the Telbobaph or its S’ 1 * 1 ® uver a xpc-ial wire and copies of our crs n dangerous rival he appoints him pre- A Watch Free! We will mall a (Nickel-Silver Watcrbury Watch of the style represented in the cut bulow to any one who will send ua a club of ten new aubMrlbeta to Tiir Weekly Teleooapu at one dollar oach. Tlita will enable each subscriber to secure tho paper at the lowest club rate, and at the same timo compen sate the club agent for IiIm trouble. Only new subscmdeiu—that i*. thoso whose names aro not now and have not been within air. months previous to tho receipt of tho ordor on our books, WILL WE COUNTED. These watches aro not toys, but accurate and serviceable tlme-keepors. They are simple, dura ble and neat. Tho cases always wear bright. Tens of thousands of them are carried by people of all classes throughout the United States. “The Waterbury.” correspondent. I bulletins were there displayed simnltnne-1 mier, because there is no situation which it It is not clear tons whether the epithet 1°^ ™ th tho f p “ stod in thU cit /‘ ** C I prSatTSm! * C “‘ Udat0 for tb ° “unprincipled meddler" is meant for onr P-*'’ Pe °££ ? b -John C. Eno, who is in Windsor, Cab- correspondent or the party from whom he 1 ud “any points throughout ou. temtory adfti j g described in the Detroit Trilmne ss received his information. But, in his be- were lnformcl ‘ 88 *° tbo detalls > “Oiuenie coming to tbo ferry nnd looking across to half, we desire to say that tho term cannot 81 " 1 re8ult o£ tht ' moat remarkable con- the American shore with wistful eyes that ■» -m appisd to vim. j* • <*■» ™. ssaE-avssr.ajh: He has been selected by the TELEGBAPn 80r,lce was frW! to 811 8t tUe ex P en8u of the I nnd black linir tinned with ernv. to represent it in Atlanta, nnd to furnish its I Teleobapb. In its wide scope, in D readers with facts of public interest thnt its correctness, m its rapidity, it marks an “perfect fright," it seems. At the opening may occur there. We pay him for this ser- cra in Georgia journalism, and sustains the of the new bridge at BaUater. Scotland, a .J. wii..-h s. ILw to.. Mil I •'-»»“» n- ""1 -as* jffi.’SSSK”. iSi*5 to our numerous readers. As to the case Irom tlie 08 P W8 *‘ green and bronze. This, ns Truth in point, we have not used all of tho facts But aU our Mends have not been able to was ■ 'quite a triproph of bad taste." placed in our possession “ vail themselves of yesterday's »»rvicc. —Gov. Sherman, o£ Iowa, is in receipt of A few goner,d remarks may not bo out of ™ K “orning's Teleouatu, which is praeti- S®, U place in fbis connection. His to the ia J cally a second edition so far „ the election I ^ousVy'iuZte terest of the people of -Georgia that they 18 concerne «» S oe8 ou ^ ™ 10 wholo natod with cold upon a cardinal red back- should bo furnished with n full nnd true mattcr RUmmed »P- 11 will bo dropped in ground of fine silk. The autograph is a federal unploj. . . .. n —Schaefer, the billiardist, when playing, For many years they have been debarred Cftrner8 “ ave tl10 at wears full evoning dress. He has a^ fine from this enjoyment, so necessary to the I beyond Atlanta it will go side by side with diamond stud in his shirt. Maurice Vig- health of parties and the conduct of good tUo carlie8t edition o£ tho Constitution. It nanx also wears a full dress suit His dia- govemment. We are making a determined ^ SchTef ercarries ^00“, ‘ in f^en°sack effort to supply them with the necessary r l mr * A and points upon tho Macon ftn( * , vn d a piece of chalk in one of his vest pock- anil interesting information, and our An R uata rolu, i an<1 sbaro the honor ets. Vignaux carries his jointed stick in a readers nnd patrons have demonstrated in a Wood Harnett on the Georgia road. It leather case. marked manner their gratification. There "ill beat all competitors to Fort Valley, 1 are some people who do not like this, and Manh allvtUe, Montezuma, Americas, Al- have given token of dissitisfnction in more ban >'* E,lfanU 8nd a11 P ointa on ‘b« Soa ‘b- wnys than one. western and Muscogee roads. It will carry We cannot be deterred from the prosecn- lha new8 flrst to a11 P° int8 bctweon Uacou tion of tho good work. Wo have a right to imd Je8n P on lbe Eaat Tennessee. Virginia look into tke official conduct of those who and Geor « ia road b " low Macon and flr8t to aro clothed with public trusts, and when wo l ,oinU 0,1 the 8ame road h* 1 * 0011 Macon and Atlanta. detnil a man of character and capacity to this duty we propose to stand by him. If a journal had been as thoroughly The Deadly Itody Cost. Though the physical vigor of Sir. nen equipped and appointed to this work years I drinks had been giving away before the ail-1 l’uobla de Nuestra Senora La Ucina de Los ago os the Teliobafii is now, Georgiu vance of years, nnd he wun subject to fre would have been saved much of disgrace, qnent attacks of more or less severity, it humiliation and dobauchmont. and would I ‘ould a^artbat tboBbockwbicUbast-1 ^b^kr^^^ ““ nt Du. Shaw, writing to the Medical Times (rum Water Gap, where poisonous snakes slsmnd, says that during the past six years in which bo has followed out a method of enre for snnke bite, he ha. not lost a cose. Uu gives sixty minims'of aromatic spirits of ammonia hypodermically and an oupce of whisky every two hours. A large poultice of bruised raw onions is applied to the wo'ind and renewed every hour. The whis ky and onions aro oontinned until a cure is effected, which is usually on the third day. Says the Sun: “The statistics laid before tho National Rutter, Cheese and Egg Asso ciation at its lato meeting in Chicago must have made its members feel that they were something more important than flies on the country's coachwheel. It was asserted in those statistics that the annual value of dairy products in this country was $100,- 000,000 greater than that of the entire wheat crop, and $120,030,000 greater than that of tin cotton crop; while the amount of capi tal invested in oows was said to be greater l>y $10,000,000 than that invested in bunk slocks. have been in a much better condition in all I ened his death may be directly charged to respects to-day than she is. If an exposure what is known as a body coat, or more fa- Chesapeake terrapins cause $1,500,000 a of devions ways nnd dubious practices, a milinrly a claw hammer or swallow tail, stern opposition to bad men, and a vigilant I Ho bad put off heavy clothing for a dress . observation of public official, can help her suit to attend an evening reception. The *2555^38?HghSffifeToffaH co,»“ reputation and public service, she shall change gave lum a cold and precipitated his are brought within speaking distance of tho have thorn in the future. | death. liras is s specimen ot the way in which lb) carpet-bagger, developed the South ; “Tho Arkansas Central railroad, narrow gmge, cost, for the forty-eight mile* con. struct*'.I end equipped, less than $10,000 a mile. From the oounties and cities along its lino the owners obtained bonds snd grants to the amount of nearly $500,000. The State gave it $160,000 for arranging that the lied could lie utilized for levee purposes, and lent it $1,350,000 worth of State bonds. Th" rood was then bonded for $3,500,000, wi'l a considerable amount of stock certiff cat 's was issued. Then the road made de- fault iu payment of its interest, and a re ceiver was appointed, who mode a liberal is~uv of certificates for completing nml re pairing it. Then it was sold at suction, and bought in for $ >0,000 -in receiver's cer tificate*, p- rohased at a heavy discount icalone in this regard. "In Boveral small towns in this county tho high license law has practically resulted in prohibition, there being no une in tbesa places willing to pay the required fee.” In tho reports before ns we do not find a single town or county which indicates unfavorable results. The disadvantage of a Htato prohibitory system is that it is not enforced in the great citiee, whether iu Maine, Vermont, Kansas, or Iowa. The advantage of a high tax or a high license system is that it eon be and is st once enforced in the cities, whether in the State of Illinois or Mis souri; that it shuts up, if not tho worst saloons, certainly those which ore most productive of disorder and of crime, while it lias a tendency to shut np all saloons in the smaller villages, un i, if accompanied by local option, gives the people in the rural districts absolute power to close them. At all events, we think these definite reports from tho various counties of Illinois are juito conclusive as to one fact; tbit a high license or a high tax, whatever may be thought 01 it in theory, does practically bare the effect to limit tho liquor traffic an. I diminish the evils which flow from it. Those who oppose this method of dealing with the drink triffle must either shut their Die Rattxbsok, a distinguished Western cl. rgymsn, promulgates some sensible View* nu prohibition, as follows; "it is riot true that tho toleration and restriction of uu evil which it is not pa:.sible to prevent by prohibitory legislation involves the sanc- tiou of it. The putting away of wives for other causes than adultery wus tolerated by Muses, with tho restriction that in such oa»cs tho man was required to give a bill of divorcement for the protection of the womou. In our own country the civil to! oration of acridly reading, conversation and visiting, and neglect of public worship <>u the .Sabbath, is not regarded even by the must Pharisaical as implying any •auction of Sabbath-breaking, provided open violations of the Lord's day Mi.h forms as distort) the peace and quiet of tue people be forbidden and punished. It is said, indeed, that tixes or the price lk..nst» collected from liquor sellera is the . price of blood received into the public treas ury. Bui this is no more true than ft that fines collected for assault and battery are the price ot violence and bloodshed, li'ense is a penalty (though unhappily muueil) where entire prevention is deemed impracticable; and no nun who pays for liigh license thinks that his business (auctioned by public authority. The same is also true of a tax. It is not a sanction, and it is so stigmatised only by the aup- ji ni of » party. WELL WORTH READING. Tns milkman merrily windeth hta horn, And he feeleth M fine .. silk, A. he flllrth the neile by the pump et morn With hie beautiful iky-blue milk. Oh, whet to tho Joy th.t Ml. bis cup. And why doth he daily cavort? Becauae the price of the ltuld'e gone up ‘Bout a penny or two a quart. The Evening Cyclone is the name of a new paper in Texas. A t.ABonATonr costing $100,600 is to be built at the Johns Hopkins University. The full name of Los Angeles, Cal., is La Angeles. An Indian nnd a Chinaman are partners FOR $8.50 we will send The Weekly Tklxojumi one j^r and one of the abovo described wateboa to any ad- dresa. This proportion ia open to our subscribe ni wf*!l aa tlione who are not. .Act Promptly. The eboTe propoelUone will be kept open for a limited time only and partite who wish to toko od< vantage of either ehould do to at once. •s't'uleiM otherwtee directed we will eend the watehee by wail, packed in a etont peatehoard box, and our reepooeibiUty for them will end when they arc depoelted in the po«t-offlco. They can be regie, tend for ten cents end parties who wlnb thia done ehould lucloee this unonnt, or we will eend them by express, the chargee to be fetid when thoy ere delivered. Addle.ee TUB TELEOR.U'U. Mecon, Georgia. Make money onion, checks, etc., payable to U. C. HANSON. Manager. Nebraska. Tbet are diamond backs, indeed. Tbo year to jinglo in the pockets of the Mary- landers. Morris—Saloons reduced from twenty- four to sixteen; revenue increased from $2,400 to $8,000. We need not, perknps, continue these re ports. The general result is expressed by tbo facts that in the State at large tbc reve nues of the State have been increased from $700,000 to over $>,500,000, the number of saloons has beon reduced from 13,000 to less than 9,000, the best elements of both parties unite in supporting and enforcing the law, and disregard of it apparently finds little sanction from either tho people of their nntnral representatives, the coarts, the sheriffs and the juries. More over, in connty after county, in small villa- . ges, the high lioense has had the effect to 8nd 180 ambition uf the pobtician. 1 ufford to tnko such cbnncou. Now and close up all liquor shops. The report from lh “Crin^ner.^K55* £ H “ ““ ~ like ““ I b X Fayette county may bo regarded oh a typ- ^ . Hamlin, who can afford to treat »uch com- Amcric inized to cut off hie queue, heaigbit relish after reading the reports that in* fort , M toeUi underpin. »nd overcoats for scenes Celestial. Ki i. riih, having ai>- Tim First Act Only. Atlanta has witnessed the first act only in Many men who have passed tho meridian mainland. Youno men who aspire to lie tho glass of ot life contribute to their deaths in a similar exact fashion do not button tho lowest fast- „ .way. A young and vigorous man may doff | t . h .“ r „„7“ Utooat "’ and thalr the-prohibition drama. Success has grati-1 h for . ,j bt one> ipcn a the lied tho consistent nen and women. It has • ,,, . 1 -—, -—ri'r'.V ——; night in dancing and feasting and escape 1 Francisco by Mr. De Young, tho owner of alro enoouraged and nerved the fanatics of I iUj a aUKht colJi or< >t wor st, a sharp the Chronicle, has Moorish decorations both colors, and lisa excited the cupidity ntUlck rf influ bllt old me n cannot throughout The drop curtain represent nnd tho ambition of the politician. I .“.1, „b v „„ | ing a Moorish scene, in “a work of art.” Ki, the body servant of Senator Stanford, town located in the South the color line bad | been broken by monoy sent from the North. with disdain, bnt the instances are rare. sorbed gold dnst from long contact with I the free-handed family of his Cnesns. “Or the wealth of tho world," says a fan The demands of Washington society are Politic, is the armed man hidden in the I j2T!ta wtoto»*MtoM. e “of°WMhtoS I “ft ‘ ftK^Macksy.MIV belly of the Grecian horse, not only m the u , Bl)0minable . wben ttn obl Con . 060,006; Rothschild, $206,000,000; Vendor- section, inimical to the South but nearer m and «nbealthy On yesterday morning there appeared in h “ f""" 8 ^ “r "T , nte U * 25 ' W ** 8 “ ad $7 the Atlanta Canitol this trom a nreminent " eK l “ Rarn,,intS ° f * >0n ° B beaU ’ and The Crematory Association in St. LonU the A lanta Cnpitol, this trom a prominent to t e thaler or a reception, ho is i< in trouble. They hare been granted per- i>roliiltiii(m lnfulnr. air. Amlnninn? I ... ... ..... prohibition leador, Mr. Andorson: PlcsM call 1 pec 1.1 attention to the importance of miaaion to erect a building, but the city or- taking very short chances upon his life. , „ ■ . . Last winter so many men died from colds d,ni ” ice8 8re 88 »'•«><>'> that they will not • full regtotrstlon of the friend, ot temperance I , . , .. 1 *# be nble to cremate human bodies unless thi for the City elecUon. contracted by standing uncovered at faner-1 j aw | H changed. The present counnilme# Atlanta is shortly to hare a municipal *** * n ? atl80s P'“ Lre . B . . ... , ... , traded attention and disonssion. contest, anil the men who won on Wednes day propose to repeat the victory by simi lor agencies. From this tho step is easy I “ e,p "! “ uo, ““ ” ,U ‘“.T ‘I I with tbn head ' ol “"'“f 8 ™* 8 . ^Rc.'.'ireil the and short to State and Federal election* | JjJJ £*** “ W0U,d ° ffer Warmth “ J | ‘ d 1 8 | al* in s freezing atmosphere, that it at- j seem to be averse to making any change. A sroBt is circulating in the French p.v The death of Mr. Hendricks ought to I P«™.tbat one day the Khali of Persia, on help to abolish th. body cost or to make it | SSStti No one but a prohibitionist is to be put on guard, none bat the faithful to enjoy offices of honor and profit. Disclaimers will not avail in the presence I !T„ V” VY .. . u , . . , * habits or health, of facts. Swelled np by victory, a move ment will bo made in Macon. istic. He summoned the nrtist, and in bis At forty-six the constitution of the average presence took bis sword and chopped off a , : . ... , slave s head, which he then bade the artist man begins to deteriorate. After that pe- exam j ne . HO that be might bo better inform, riod be cannot afford to triffle with his | ed in future. The Aftietli performance ol Jnliet, by The Utter may be preserved for yean by Mins Margaret Mather, at the Union Square I Theater, N. Y., will occur on December I The experience of Atlanta haa demon-1 et cWroin I Tbe CU8tom of ^^K*ving sourenira will not be strated that good men mid women, bigots, ‘ on * “ “* V? “ d T^ e " protectcd fr °” flowed onilu. oc-avion, but on Christ- . . " 1XAl . , „ ^ ilr.in^hts and climatic cluingeN. fanatics and pobtician* of Ml colon | Mncb of fatal pleuri , y and pnetimonia and conditions will be joined in the movement. What was intended a* may he justly charged to the account of the eyes to the facts, or oppose the system on some other ground than tho ossoveration that a high tax increases the evil which it is intended to reduce. This, it would seem, ought to he conclu sive ns to the effect of high lioense. The question arises, would not even better re sults bare beau obtained, itad the Harper Uw placed the figures at $1,0(10 instead of $500, os suggested by the New York Church Temperenco Society? There k a limit to the usefulness of high license; a point be yond which to go wnntd involve the tern' perance cause in tho difficulties which meet the prohibitionist*. To find this (mint should be the aim of practicM reformers. moral qnestion, to bo quietly settled I bod ^ Colonel Fltx.liuon* anil Kx-Mar.lial Fits- 1 .Imons, Wo give in another column the communi cation of Colonel Fitzaimons, who haa been for yean the United States marshal of Georgia. We cannot see that any injury or injustice has been done him by onr Atlanta correspondent. He was and i* a public official until hia ac counts ore settled with tho government. As such he was deMt with by our corres pondent, and we propose in those comments to keep the officer and the indiridoM separ ate and distinct. It is agreed that a salt baa been com menced against the bondsmen of Marshal Fitzsimons, both set*. He asked for this suit, as appears by the letter of the Comptroller of the Treasury. In by tho peoplo of every locatity, has been woven into a political movement, demand ing immunity under the garb of religion, TALK ABOUT PEOPLE. —Col. Ingersoll's hair is turning gray. —Lord Eldon, the great English choncel- wiiile threatening personal rights nn.i I lox . delighted in fried pig's liver and bacon. . -Uiairiiul tovernmtrit. , I has n passion for bric-a-brac and antique I The modern rity ia sometime* called Trifc We should not like to seethe scenes of i farnlt ‘ ure . ditzo. It is meanly built, but contain, Atlanta re-enacted here. We do not be- Well* Goodwin and bis wife, of New- tllirt T moHqnee and ten churches. Greet. liere that this community could be wrought bnry. Vt., recently celebrated tbo sixty- nnd Uomau Catholic archbishop* Ur* there. ... .. . . I - 1 1. . * I It.* nfiSof itnliiktrv is (tin ..tit. —Ex-Assistant Postmaster-General lirndy mss night, when will occur the seventy- fifth performance, photographs and auto graphs of Mist Mather are to distributed to the sndience. An extra performance will be given at the house on Thaukgirini day. Bom, or Sophia (pmnonnceil So-fee-a, with tho accent on the second syllable), b. lha capital of Bulgaria, and haa a population of about 21,000. The city was built by Jus tinian, on the ruins of ancient Surdici into a frenzy with so many disgraceful ac- I sixth anniversary of Iheirmarrisge. companinieata. The Teleoeapu takes to soy that it will not invite Its chief industry is the manufacture of silk and woolens. Thebe is another gentleman also loomini The Science of Life, Only $1. By Mall Post-Paid. KNOW THYSELF.* A GREAT MEDICAL WORK OS MANHOOD. Exhausted Vitality, Nonrona and Phyalral Debill tjr. Premature decline In Man. Error* of youth, and the untold mlaerlea reuniting from lndUcrotlon or exceaaes. A book for etery man. young, middle* aged and old. It contains 1M preecriptlono for all •cute and chronic dtaeaaee. each one of which to invaluable. Bo found by the author, wboee expe rience for twenty-three yearn Uauch aa probably never before fell to the lot of any ph)Rii ian. 30U page*, bound Ik beautiful French M iualin. emboeaed coven, full gilt, guaranteed to be r finer work In every $enae—mechanical, literary and professional —than anv other work In this country cold for $3.60. or the money will be refunded in every in stance. Price only SI by mall, poet-paid: Illustra tive sample, 7b cent.. Send now. Gold medal awarded the author by the National Medical Asso ciation, to the president of which, the lion. P. A. Hiaeell, and aeeoetate offloera of the board, the reader* are respectfully referred. The Hcleuce of Life ahould be read by tho young for in’itruction and by the afflicted for relief. It will benefit all.—London Lancet There ia no member of aoclefty to whom the sci ence of Life will not be uaeful, whother youth, parent, guardian, instructor or clergyman.—Argo- Vddreae the Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W. 11. Parker, No. 4. Uulfincb atrect, Ito«ton, Maas., who may be consulted on aU dlucaac* n tjnirlng •kill and experience. Chronic and olwtlnate dte- that have baffled the $•>. i ! I \ I .M otherpbyalrtaneaBpeclalty. s 11 I *.\ L t:« ed aucceaehtUy without an In- ; I V < I.’ I 1/ ktanre of failure. W* I 11 1 ^ I. I * I • paper. EIGHTEEN SIZES AMDS ALL PURCHASERS CAH RE SUITED y an cr acre kid by Isaac A.Sheppard d Co. .Baltimore, Md. AND FOll KALB UY —Joe Dion, though removed to tbc this euriv occasion i Bloomingilalo asylum, still imagines he is I 11,88818lu, ' r . BJRMamM also looming *T y “ pkying billianli and in the mr attempt* “P “ 8 P™ bab '* Gnl«matortal candidate, nU •nen a move- ^ intricate ahoU. wwl HhouM ho finally drUriuinn on ent-r- ““ "” Ul “ “"I ^g!igS!*-Sii effri? —A number of th. ritizen* of Santa Fe, ship, and the chief duct of the politic il N. M , h*ro sent Gen. Fiti Lc« a bexutiful pu.ldk hole.-Kaufman (I'.taa) Sun/ little silver sabra in token of their appreria- T __ „u.„ .u., i. , , tion of the Ute Democratic victory m Vir-1 j^aVal'^'. p^.U oratory^!? ()*- w uu *' I borne ia far advanced toward completion. PlUt ita readers. These it stands prepared to re peat and maintain whenever occasion may aeem to require. There ia nothing new to be aoid in the way of debate on either aide of the question. A* has be«n remarked of the clerical and Uy oratory in Atlanta, it waa but a reproduction of debating society eloquence of an hundred yean ago. When the contest cornea, the Tzijoaipn will hare a corps of trained and intelligent reporters to give a truthful account of it from day to day, but it does not intend to surrender ita coinmna to the exclusion of news and read ing matter, which ita patrons hare a right to expect, that prohibitionists and their opponents may dispky bod temper and manners and bring discredit upon churches and religion. Those who wish to use the Telco Ban* to ■—The bridal toilette* of the Princess Its subject is Christ in the garden fin linu Marie of Orleans and the Princess Char- the three disciple* asieen «nr! it- iotta de U TiemoilU were notable for the I tie is “VigiUUet Orataf" It t* tobontared absence of jewels, orange blossoms being I over the prayer deak, between two otln r the only ornaments. I picture*, replicas of larger m.rks, entit). I —Ex-Congressman Belfonl, of Colorado, I reapectiTely "The Good Shepherd" and who haa been reduced to the verge of the I “The Man «f Borrows." The threet » S ire by intemperance, haa entirely re- that form in effect a triptych, though tloy rmed and is once more on his feet with ■ will not be actually joined. rt 8 i u „ wpr * cu ;r-s, , N rn^=sri... gir^o^^h^M”.te. w g; an interview be said Hut the commerce of I «Ke *>uftMor,t V fUt»rtt. forii .. .j- ij r i;.-r «, i the Congo region required the building of a V ''*■ railway for ita accommodation. Sszptkn^flnEm 'TT^i rMtaa p —Mr. E. R. Roe narrate* thnt in a recent I rulrantoei. jteitakta viaitto Canada be hardly bad ctoa^d th# 1 jS i ZL™2** horde* before hia ova books were throat in Mt Co. uuh. 4li * c IVSIMIB2H3SSSS STHORNS'ii™. FLESH