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THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY. DECEMBER 29, 1885.-TWELVE PAGES.
THE TELEGRAPH,
PUBLISHED KTEBT DAT IN TUT TEAS AXD WEEKLY,
BY THE
Telegraph and Messenger Publishing Co.,
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ble to H. C. Hanson, Manager.
Why They Don't On. I There was a pause, Tbe correspondent of the great
In this immediate section, the most per- 1 Democratic newspaper did not know whether to
tineut nn.l interesting issue for these lw * u or 10 wWI ’ t ““ ‘ blrd °*
.. , C stood at an angle simply silent and crushed.
many months, h.s been the retention ot , M) tUere ” . Mlm4 „ ot . d
~Af the bath becomes the remedy fob
rabies, the dog-bitten tramp will be stared
in the face by ruin, turn where he will.
The Republican newspapers still con
tinue to quote Toombs as saying that he
would live to caU tho roll of his slaves at
the foot of Bunker Hill, although it has
been proven by Toombs’s own testimony
and others, that he made ose of no such re
mark. The chief objection most people
have to Republican newspapers is that to
such a good lie is far more charming
than a plain truth.
Ir anything happens to Mr. Cleveland,
and John Shennan becomes president,
every Democrat iu the House who has failed
to press the succession bill ought to be
taken out by a committee composed of fifty
from each Democratic State and decorated
with a coat «>f tar and feathers. Such sc-
pineness and supreme indifference to a great
duty has never before been witnessed
among public servants.
A whiter in the London Truth says: “I
wonder what Lord Wolsley would have re
ceived had the military promenade in Bur-
mah been personally conducted by him.
He received a peerage and £40,000 for the
absurd “battle” of Tel-el-Kebir, and
was subsequently made a Viscount for
helplessly drifting in the direction of Khar
toum and arriving too late. Either he got
too much or Gen. Prendergast, who has
only been made a K. 0. B., gets too little.
Tue Nashville American is not pleased
with all compliments to Democrats, as wit
ness the following: * ‘Harper’s Weekly says
of Speaker Carlisle that ‘the Speaker of the
Uonso is n dignified, able and impartial pre
siding officer, who commands tbe respect
and confidence of the country as much as a
Republican. r As much, as if he were a Re
publican! Great God! Speaker Carlisle
must feel complimented. Think of tbe list
of Republican Speakers of the House since
tho war—Colfax, Blaine, Koifer!”
The Boston Record tells this story of the
recent mayoralty election: A friend of the
historian met a “worker” of his acquaint
ance who had evidently undergone consid
erable exhilaration other than that arising
from the inspiring spectacle of the noise
less ballot registering the freeman's will
“Ah,” said tls friend, “I thought the rum-
shops were closed to-day?" The worker
smiled a large but demoralized smile. “If
you wnz't look at tlie rum-shops,” said
he, “you would think they wuz closed; but
’( you wuz’t look at mo you wo aid think
they wuzn’t”
Bats the Chicago Living Church: “A
preacher at a c imp meeting fervidly sold,
when a proposition was mado to shut the
gates on Sunday: ‘Brethren, there are souls
that will be damned if you don't hold ever
Sunday. They are almost persuaded b\
Saturday. Sunday will bring their convic
tion to n crisis. Oh, brethren, let us save
them! Thousands, too, will come then that
will come at no other time.’ The Christian
Advocate makes the report, and its editor
adds that by personal investigation he fonnd
that the urgent speaker owned the refresh
ment stand.”
The staj ing qualities of u lie are thus il-
lustruted by the New York World : “On hi
seventy-fifth birthday the Jnte Robert
Toombs, of Georgia, t -!d a World corre
pondent that be never made the declaration
about adling’ the roil of his slave* at the
foot of Bunker Hill Monument so often nt
tributed to him. Mr. Toombs, during hi:
life, made sever..! attempts to (fll-ene© this
bit of political thunder, but he was ne
able to make himself hoard. That alleged
Assertioc^h'i > rswsed into bhfery ah ng miih
Justice Tincy*s alleged rrm.rK alvn
negro ^having no lights that a whit<
was bound to respect.' Thejndro "p<
great part of hi* life tryi;to correct
falsehood, b it he nevtr made the slightest
impression on il It bsjust as vigorous to
day as it was the day it started on its jour
ney through tbe centuries.
A Richmond »>pc<
of the United States Attorney and Marshal
for tho Southern District of Georgia.
Tbe Washington correspondent of the
Savannah Times has been investigating the
subject with tb»s result. He says:
Several member* of the Georgia delegation re
cently called upon the President and also the Attor
ney-General. relative to the appointment* of United
States Marshal for tbe Southern District of Georgia
and the District Attorney for the same State. Con
gressman H. G. Turner says so far aa he is able to
learn, Mr. Lamar appears to be tbe favorite for the
marshalship, while applicants for the district at
torneyship have appeared from various localities.
Mr. Blount would doubtless be pleased to see his
friend Mr. Guerry appointed, aud Mr. Crisp is also
anxious to secure the appointment of Mr. Berner.
There are several other applicants, Mr. Wooten, of
Savannah, and Messrs. Atkinson and Carroll.
Congressman Crisp says he has visited the White
House and the Department of Justice during the
past week, but there seems to be no desire on tho
part of tho appointing parties to act in these mat
ters until all or roost of the recess nominations have
been passed upon in tho Senate.
Tho most important point in the matter,
in that tho authorities do not seem disposed
to make any change. When in this connec
tion it is remembered, that the announce
ment has been made, that Mr. Cleveland is
very much infatuated with Colquitt, and
that the latter is permitted to pick up any
thing he desires about the White House and
the departments, tbo disgust and disap
pointment of honest Georgia Democrats will
not be considered surprising. It would
further appear, that several of the Congress
men are training their favorites for the dis
trict attorneyship. Mr. Blount, it seems,
desires that Mr. Guerry shall bo rewarded
with this plum in consideration of the trick
l»y which he defeated and subverted the ex
pressed will of the people of the Stato in a
gubernatorial ennventiou.
As we have before stated, it is not to bo
wondered at that Mr. Cleveland has been
“deceived and imposed npon” as to real
Georgia Democrats, but it is amazing that
there iu no one in the Georgia delegation
with courage sufficient to afford him reli
able information.
Tbo tirno is not very far distant, if indica
tions may l>e relied upon, when tho admin
istration will need all the friends it can sum
mon of intelligence and character, and
who are not nu-roly seeking after spoils.
Commenting on tho increased power
given the Shaker under the change of rules,
the Tribune-fays:
Mr. Carlisle will remember that his great power
brings with it great responsibility, llo is about to
appoint a committee on coinage, for instance. If
he moans to defeat tbe President’s recommends-
tlou. and to make the President as nearly power
less in his party as possible, ho will take care to
put bfcck Mr. Bland, whoobstiuately refused to re
port any bill for the suspension of sliver
coinage at the last session, and thns made
necessary for Mr. Cleveland's friends
offer, through Mr. Randall, a rider on
an appropriation bill. But neither Mr. Randall nor
anybody else will have power to get at tho matter
in that way this year, general legislation In a pro-
prlation bills having been prohibited. This is but
ono of many questions on which the will of Mr.
Carlisle, whether favorable or unfavorable to the
President, must be disclosed by his selection of
committees. He will certainly remember that the
welfare ot the country, and the future of the Dem
ocratic party, depend in great measure npon the
wisdom of the policy for which hts choice of com
mittees may prepare the way.
In a
minute or two there was a sound as of a dummy
engine driving up grade. The door was flung open,
and the veteran with the snowy top-knot and the
red protuberance fairly shouted : "The Secretary
doesn't know you—never heard of you—and doesn't
want to see you l How dare you come in here pre-
tendiug you know the Secretary? You know the
Secretary! It's very amusing to you. I suppose—
amusing, indeed i”
My friend was a little nettled, though it waa, to
say the truth, amusing, for there are some out
bursts of incivility so wanton and unprovoked that
they pass all bounds and miss their mark, and this
was one of them. Bnt he held his temper, and
still keeping the chair, he said: “Will you have the
goodness to tell me your name?"
••What?" thundered the veteran.
“Your name," insisted the visitor.
"Lee, sir, Lee!" screamed the now infuriated
keoper of the great man, “and I'd thank you to get
out of that chair," which the visitor, wishing to
escape bodily violence, proceeded to do instanter.
This is a literal and unexaggerated account of an
actual occurrence. That the Secretary of War. who
is all my friend describes him to be, a most ac
complished man and an equally undoubted Demo
crat, wo“.ld permit a discourtesy to be put by one
of his servants upon the humblest of his callero is
not to be conceived for a moment. Yet, with such
regulations and such a retinue of lackeys as guard
most of the entrances to tho various offices,
such scenes—in a leas flagrant degree, of course-
are not merely possible, but are not uncommon.
This incident I am relating came to the knowl
edge of Judge Endicott, who waa prompt to make
a needless disavowal, for no ono who knows him
could suspect him of any kind of conscious inciv
ility. But the President and the cabinet should
take a serious look into this whole matter. They
will And iv all that it is pictured hero, and they owe
it to themselves to put no sentinels on guard who
do not unite to good manners, good judgment. At
their best, officials are prone to an ultralsm of ex
clusiveness, born in a mistaken sense of dignity,
and dandled by dignity’s foster mother, tho affecta
tion of over-work. “Damn a man," said Andrew
Jobuaon to a friend on a certain occasion, "who is
so great he is tit for nothing," I will damn no one,
but I must doubt tbo real efficiency of the official
who Is so busy he can never be seen. The Presi
dent himself is tho mott accessible and hard-work
ing man in Washington.
#
It looks
nal *ap>: “ILoma* -J. ( iu. -i
confined ia jail under *. aUi
tho murder of Fannie Liili&i
awaiting the action of the
npon an iqipeaf from the e
Dustings Court, ia quite sic
attacked with a chill yol-rd
He ii infforing with a li»n
Jane Tunstall, who has been
eeverol week* end visited I
Baltimore jour
'll*;*, who is now
£pce of death for
iiin Madison, ami
: Snp re mo Court
•oof tho
Shreds ami Patches.
if Gladstone and Parnell were prepar
ing to clasp hands across the Irish Channel.—New
York Times.
There Is a noisy milliner in St. Paul who recently
made such a bustle that it was noticed by a deaf
and dumb girl.—St. Paul Herald.
Tbe long-tailed oven-oats worn by young men
are known as tbe dado's blessing. They hide a
multitude of thin and crooked legs.—New Orleans
Picayune.
Senator Plumb, of Kunsas, is trying to find some
means of abolishing gambling in the army. It
might be done, perhaps, by abolishing the army.—
Philadelphia Press.
Miss Cleveland has been elected President of tbo
Christmas Club of Washington. This is not the
club which her brother keeps for the reception of
office-seekers.—Boston Record.
John A. Logan now announces that he will re
serve his Are npon tbo President until after New
Yeat's, which leads tho malicious to surmise that
tho Konator will employ Christmas week iu loading
up.—Now York World.
PERSONAL.
NO NEED Or IT.
The maid expects
Her beau to-night.
And fills the stove
With anthracite.
Because the air
Is raw and damp,
But quite forgets
To fill the lamp.
—Mme. Judio, now in San Francisco,
lias been ill for several days.
—Deacon Daniel Ileed, of East Madison,
Me., was 101 years old Monday.
—Bob Burdette says: ‘ Nothing goes into
print the way a man writes it.”
—Mrs. Hendricks, the widow of the Vice-
President, is stopping at a hotel in Chicago.
—Ex-Senator Tabor, of Colorado, is to
bnild a -1,000,060 dwelling-house in Wash
ington.
—Mr. Blaine is within fifty pages of the
end of his history, “Twenty Years in Con
gress.
—The late B. Gratz Brown, of national
fame, left eight children, but one of whom
is of age.
—The Empress of Austria is Raid to be
tho “most beautiful great-grandmother in
Europe.”
—Prof. Hitchcock is take a party of Dart
mouth boys on a Christinas trip through
the South.
The Buffalo Commercial Advertiser (Re
publican) says:
The New York Tribune's Washington correspond
ent might 1m- doing better than sneering at tbe
“crutch" carried by Hens tor-elect John Warwick
Daniel, of Virginia. He waa a gallant Confederate
officer, who held high rank lu the Confederate
forces before ho waa of age. In one of the battles
around Richmond his thigh was crushed by a ball,
ami bis leg now hangs almost useless. A braver
soldier did not enlist on that side during the war,
and there is nothing to be gaiued by depreciating
Uls courage or Intimating that the "crutch' Is
carried for the “effect” it may ptoUuco.
Mr. Daniel has the best blood of Vir
ginia in bis wins. Proud he may well be, for his
fellow-citizen* have rapidly promoted Miu politi
cally. Conceited he It not, for ho It made in alto
gether too flue a mold for that. In private charac
ter he is irreproachable; In talent conspicuous, in
industry-U:don:ltubb'. Ue bad attained at tho bar
In Lyuchburg. Vs., and iu old Virginia, a prominent:
position ;vm a very joung man. It is to be regretted
that Mr. Dsutel's sym;stUii-a aro will: the Bourbons
politically; but tbo South 1* honored in such a rep
resentative; and when ho was elected to the Senate
tho public service gained an active, an honest, and
Excess of Women Over'Men In knguTmlT"
Girl Gossip, in London Truth.
Are you aware, my dear, of the appalling
fast that there are 918,000more women than
men in Great Britain? At least there was
this very awful disparity*of numbers at the
liust census, and I don't suppose thnt the
disproportion h«s decreased since then. In
fact, it seems that it is likely to become
greater and greater, for more girls aro born
than boys, and men do not, as a rule, live
so long as women. This immense fact
means, perhups, very iit.loto married wo
men, unless they are mothers of a large and
expensive family of daughters; but to the
unnpprop;iated among us it is fraught with
the direst meaning. We are all taught
from our nursery days upward to look for
ward to the time when we shall be married
“and live happy ever after.” Do *rot all
the nursery stores and fairy tales end with
wedding-bells? And I supposed that it is
natural for a woman to like to lmve a home
of her own and a husband and children.
There aro women who would despise us for
making such a confession; but do you not
think with me that unsnared life seems
incomplete Well, Ilear, in the face
of all this are those dreadful six fig
ures, tho female overplus of 948,000. It is
therefore quiie apparent that several hun
dred toonsand of us must remain single,
uud we may as wcjl look the matter straight
in tho face, and, wbih we hope for the best,
prepare for the worst. Marriage to the
great majority of women means a provision,
ratling in this, they must provide for them
selves. So evero girl should be brought up
to Homo occupation that would bring her in
sufficient for her maintenance. Father,
ought to see that their daughters areusc ire-
fully trained with u view to self-support
their sons are.
Henry Watxxus
ton, says;
A very funny thin •
the other at to moon.
him to the fecreti
riling lr« >m W ashing-
sued to a friend of mins
ns* posting through cue
ir dtq artmsut with taro
Though Doa<l, Arm.it Men Guard Him.
Tho millionaire Vondcrlnlt, when alive
and lit yoraeairion of hmt.!rv>i» of million.-,
felt the need of no apodal pr*e ration for
his personal safety. lint <W!, a. ,1 not the
•f a single cent, it u thought to
iy to keep »guard of armed mm
con-tent!}- ot his tomb. Every nint.t ot li
L no
—“I thiuk I was horn with a headache,"
said Mr. Whittier, tho poet, to a visitor a
few days ago.
—Mme. Pauline Lucca, who has been
making a concert tour in Russia, is seriously
ill at Charkoff.
—Mr. Irving’s Brocken scene in ‘•Faust”
is to surpass in beauty anything ever seen
at the London Lyceum.
-Ex-Governor Packard, of Louisiana,
has bought two farms in Marshall county,
Iowa, and will make his home there.
—Mr. Vanderbilt’a public bequests,
though ove * $1,000,000 in amount, are but
one-half of 1 per cent, of his fortune.
—When the Frinco of Wales and Glad
stone were in Norway last summer it was
Gladstone who received the attention.
—Bowel), tho pedestrian, is coming to this
country again to engage in a walking match.
As usual, this is to he his "lost appearance”
here.
—Ex-Senator Stewart, of Nevada, intends
to elevate a gold-mounted lightningrod on
the &no residence which he is building nt
Carson.
—M. Adolph Belot and M. Gabriel Carro
are writing a three-act comedy for the Va
rieties, Paris, entitled “Le Consentement
Mutuel.”
—Mr. Whistler has fonnd n new word for
his pictures. They are “notes" in violet
green nnd violet or flesh-color and gray,
while one is coiled n “caprice in red.”
—William H. Hunt’s frescoes in the Al
bany, N. V., Capitol, which cost many
thonsands ot dollare, hnvo been seriously
damaged by leakage nnd other causes.
—Paul Pbilippotcnni, a Frenchman, who
with freo stroko and broad brush paints
battle scenes for cycloramas and things of
that sort, has planted his vine and fig tree
in St. Joe county, Ind.
—Four Queens live in Spain nt present.
They nre Isabella, mother of Alfonso; Marie,
wife of ex-King Amadeo, predecessor of
Alfonso; Christine, widow u£ Alfonso, and
Mercedes, infant of Alfonso.
—Clark Hassell, who string* his sen
yams thnt smolis delightfully of oakum, is
about to skim the Southern seas again. He
sails this week for the Cape of Good Hope.
In bis kit is a package of pencils.
—James Russell Lowell recently gave to
tho Massachusetts Historical Society an an-
a h letter of Robert Burns, dated at
ries, 21st of May, 1793, which he
received from the widow of Barry Cornwall.
-The widow nnd children of the late
James Thomas, the millionaire tobacconist
of Richmond, Vo., who died abont two
years since, have donated ten thousand
dollars to the Richmond College, aa a me
morial of him,
—Three stono statues have lately been
found under the London Law Courts.
They are supposed to hnve been statues of
Charles I., Elizabeth nnd Edward VI.
They arc said to have been preserved in
excellent condition.
—JUrs. John Jacob Astor's favorite jewels
are n pair of ruby and dinmoud ear-rings,
which she wears almost constantly. They
are very large and of an unusual pattern, a
magnificent square-cut ruby farming the
centre and a large dinmond being placed at
each corner.
—!‘My lettere nvernge twenty-flvo nnd
thirty ii day," says Mr. Whittier, tho poet,
“and when I'm sick they accumulate, and
then when I got well I make tnyself nick
again trying to catch up with my answers
to them--too many, it is feared, being re
quests for autographs.
—Robert Browning lias great fear thnt
fnture biographers of the poet will deal too
freely with i i> family nlfairs, nnd to pre
vent this ns far at possible ho has just de
stroyed nil the letters to his father and
tho fatuity from various friends andlitero-
ry people, which his father had carefully
preserved for many years.
—“You have no iitea,” nays Robert G.
IngefBoll, “how many,men are spoiled by
lucatton. For the most part, col)
tic. Her castle is no “castle in Spain,”
bnt n real castle in Wales. “Our home
there," she says, “is so soothing. It is so
sweet to feuther nicely a nest for one’s fam
ily and friends. We aro now engaged in
building a tower, from the summit of which
wit shall enjoy a magnificent view and in
which there will be a large billiard room. I
take a pride in my greenhouses and kitchen
gimlen. All the time I don't spend at
Craig-y-nos seems to mo time lost. I should
not givo a Bnnp of my finger for my bril
liant career had it not procured me a deli
cious country retreat nnd the kind of un-
chorage that exactly suite me.”
TOES AND TRIGGERS.
A Louisiana Lawyer’s Peculiar Method of
Committing Butrtde.
New Orloane Special.
Hon. Fnv S. Goode, district judge of the
Nineteen Judicial District of this State, and
quite a prominent politician in southern
1 'ouisinnu, committed suicide Monday on
his plantation at Uidgeland, near Houma,
in Terre Bonne parish. Upon rising in the
morning Judge Goode procured a double-
barreled shot-gun, to tho triggers of which
henttnehod two twine strings. These he tied
to his two big toes. Then lying back on
the bed he pulled tho triggers with his toes,
discharging both barrels of tho gun. Only
one, however, took effect, tho bullet pene
trating the brain and causing instant death.
Judge Goode was 68 yeais of age and a na
tive of Alabama. Ho wan prominent in
political life in Louisiana, had been a mem
ber of the Legislature, presidential elector,
district judge and held numerous other offi
ces. Ho was a Democrat until tho lulit elec
tion when he joined the Redublican party
on the tori If question. He was interested
in soveral large sugar plantations.
A Watch Free!
We will mall a [Nickel-Silver Waterbmy Watch ot
the atyle represented In the cut below to any ona
who will send us a club of ten »sw subscribers to
Tnz WMxtTTkLioaArn at ono dollar each. Thu
will enable each subscriber to aecnro the paper at
the lowest club rate, and at tbe same time comp a-
sate the club agent for hia trouble.
Oklt mew sobsceibees—that la. those whu^
names aro not now and have not teen within 7i!
months previous to tho receipt of tho order on out
books, WILL BE COUNTED.
Theao watches aro not toys, but accurate and
serviceable time-keepers. They are simple, durv
ble and nest. The cases always wear bright Tent
of thousandaof them are carried by people of all
classes throughout the United States.
il
The Waierhury.”
SCK0EUL00S
Sores ami Glandular Swellings
Cured by Cutlcura.
Emm* Boynton, 857 Washington street. Boston*
■ays: “I have been afflicted for one year and nine
months with what, the doctors called rupia. 1 was
taken with dreadful pains in the head and body,
my feet became ao swolen that I was perfectly help
less, sores broke oat on my body and face, my ap
petite left me, I could not sleep nights, I lost flesh
and toon became so wretched that 1 longed to die.
Physicians failed to help me. My disease daily grew
worse, my suffering became terrible*. The erup
tions increased to great burrowing, fowl-smelling
sores, from vrh^li a reddish mutter constantly
poured, forming crusts of great thicknoss. Other
sores appeared on various parts ot my body, and 1
become ao weak that I could not learo my bed. In
this condition and by advice of a well-known phy
sician. I began to use the (Juticura Remedies, and
in twelve weeks was perfectly cured.
SCROFULOUS ULCERS.
James E. Richardson. Custom Honso. New Or
leans, on oath, save: "In 1S70 scrofulous ulcers
broke out on my body until I was a mass of corrup
tion. Everything known to the modical was tried
in vain. I became a mere wreck. At times could
not lift ray hands to my head, could not turn in
bed: was In constant pain, and looked upon Ufs aa
a curse. No rollef or cure In ten years. In 18801
beard of the Cutlcura Remedies, used them and
was perfectly cured."
Bwom to before United Commissioner J. D.
Crawford.
BAD BLOOD,“SCROFULOUS,
inherited and contagions hnraors, with loss of hair,
glandular swellings, ulcerous patches in the throat
and month, abscesses, tumors,carbuncles, blotches,
sores, scurvy, wasting of tbe kidneys and urinary
organa, dropsy, emsmla, debility, chronic rhouma-
constipation and piles sud most diseases aris
ing from an impure or Impoverished condition of
the blood, are speodlly cured by tbe Cutlcura Re
solvent, the new blood purifier. Internally, assisted
by Cutlcura, the great skin * “
i exquisite skin bcai
Cutlcura Remedies are sold everywhere. Prices;
Cutlcura. 5<)c.: Resolvent, $1; Hoap, 25c. Prepared
by the Potter Dkuu and Chemical Co., Boston,
Send for “How to Cure Skin Diseases. 1
pTlTPLES, Blackheads.Skin Blemishes and Baby
1 1J1 Humors, use Cutlcura Soap.
. NO ACHE, OR PAIN OR BRUISE,
; or strain, or muscular weakness, but
| yields to the new, original and infaUtble
alleviating properties of the Cutlcura
Anti-Iain Plaster. A curative wonder. At
drogglsU, 25c.
Capital Prize $75,000.
Tickets Only $5.00. Shares in Proportion.
Louisiana Stato Lottery Co.
“We do hereby certify that we supervise the ar
rangements for all the Monthly and Quarterly
Drawings of tha Louisiana State Lottery Company,
and In parson manage and and control the Draw
lugs themselves, and that tlie aarao are conducted
with honesty, fairness and in good faith toward all
parties, and we authorize the comi»any to nse this
certificate, with fnc similes of our signatures at
tached In ita advertisements."
pine
diamond* arc
N*»w York Ht
“will l»y polii
his t<mra r in
chbl
wo posts ii <
1." This lew
diet thrtGol. It
\ ami
Is the
ertioll
FOR 6B3.5Q*
we wUl send Tns Weekly Telegraph one year
and one of the above described watches to any ad.
dress. This propoetion is open to. our subscribers
m well as those who are cot.
Jk-Ct Promptly.
Tbe above propositions wiU be kept open for a
limited time only and parties who wish to take ad
vantage of either should do so at once.
X7"Unless otherwise directed we will send ths
watches by mall, packed in a stout pasteboard box,
and our responsibility for them will end when they
are deposited in the post-office. They can be regis
tered for ten cents and parties who wish this dons
should inclose this amount, or we will send then
by expross, the charges to be paid when they art
delivered. Address THE TELEGRAPH,
Macon. Georgia.
Make money orders, checks, etc., payable to
H. C. HANSON. Manager.
REYNOLDS’ IRON WORKS.
Iron nml I!rnss Foundries ami
Machine Shops.
Iron Railings, Cane Mills, 8yrnp Kettles, Steam
Engines, Saw Mills, Iron Fronts for buildings of all
kinds, machinery of all ‘kinds. Grist Mills. Re
pairing engines and machinery a siaclaltv.
Iron and b.* »n castings of every description. In
fact any aa * jverything that is mads or kept In first
class iron works.
The proprietor has had an experience of over
forty years in the Iron bminess.
jRTWe guarantee to sell you Cane Mills cheaper
han anybody, and that they will give perfect saHs
taction.
* A. REYNOLDS, Proprietor,
Cor. Fifth and Hawthorne streets, Macon, Ga.
oct27-w-tf
C00KST0VES
AMYKSATISFACTORY
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND MS
ALL PURCHASERS CM BZ SUITED
MANUFACTURED nr
Isaac Iffleppaid & Co. .Baltimore,!!!
AND I’OU HALE IIY
Conimtoftonera.
Wn, tho undorfignod Banks and Pinker*. wiL
pay all Prize* drawn in The Louisiana State Lot
terries which may be presented at our counters.
J, If. OGLESBY. President LanMitnn National Bank.
S. 1!. EKNNKBY. J’r. -idl 'd Hist.- National Hank.
A. BALDWIN, President N. 0. NuUuiul Hank.
In*
c<l in 1V<
.2* 7?
i* Legi.fi
u fund t
fl WEAK t
■ I ft Cti*
» C iir
OCfiAW-tll
UvJ Qjto |» ;
^VLESl
ran on guard*—"I wish b
i-crcUry
ana c<
Veteran iwiifi <li,‘uit$')—“Yci '.la B<vro
tary, sir, ’
YLtitor—“Could you not taka hlin my card?"
Veteran—“No, sir. it Is altar Lmtra; the Secre
tary is busy ami duesu’i want loses anyLody."
Visitor(pcraUicut hut ladttcj— 1 “Could you not
lake my card loan 1 *ei blub tbJjudge of that?"
Veteran— N D«# j«u know the .v-crrtxryr'
Vt-Itor—“Why, yes, a lilt!.', and I h.\^ antmpres-
l. n that bs will hsglad to see in?. 1 *
Veteran (digbtly toofirawl)—'Hav# yon sty boat-
r—
aixi-etin
^ aunt,
i the world, except P»J my rt-
lhr*j fcmlemso."
starv'd again)— 1 “Oh, you want fo
t little Mu; Lt.. at| -“Why, ye*. I
dr. the rule*, and this
ruing UD tl>« department, but,
»w the SccrMary— you arc sure
I will take your card."
■board and waddled off with it.
ii ono of uauii
n iu tlte Danis-’
aiM&fei cooln
To-day I pa-
fork into a chi '.
'.iy Jrf
m«Ur fell r till ftDihi r. A G«
di vot h! to runiiir, tqxj:*
natic *in!micry at “masquer^
lie “remnant* of Ler once ri
t Cologne. hourcYor, Ui > popn
) rose to the old pitch i.nd c>
lie fcongftlrch* for the ptevic
body jomped ; xouia cr
tho'dixti, nnd bo?#?
novtrsaw ho much c
cruted ao much ctcik
ui-#. Now, if they b.v
a chair, as they fi-e-J i
liavcjuaiicd on t ic t
Bret IT.
toil at G1
he wo* banlljr over at but post, !>ti
! Li* time in London and other p'.ao
tha < ffice o £
n the ground th .t
it, hnt up
a
dcLUtj
r than he could •
HOLMES' HU HE CUltB
j Mouth Wash nml Dentifrice
Jferv
You im allow*
us* ot Dr. PjWi
permanent curs
ins, IK*bllitat«*«| SVen
I a free triil of thirty
i had to
nl, for h
M. A. HAiri'iiiir,
;REWARD!
many «
healtli, i
fncarrsd.
has, terras,
3eiir:< '*
£S5uI3aa totaaSiW‘'IteTte, ampunnoliterature, he think., to more Make P. O. Mener Order* Pn^te 4 PRIZE. .is-cl. fcepo..^,,
other tlitvaac*. C .soj etc r»-**t*>rati n to advaLtau’C tbfcl* lit: CaU li» T •. J t?lC llltfl ivl/jHIKH i.’it<.T«‘i| Lf*t- ' 1 cooiU i n - T ,« \ ki ,
i. ran*! manhood ♦<-*••!. Nortakk' .. », »*, l.rr.l . I tcrM to 1 L, n ' l - of - : •. -
■ad. Illustrated pamphlet, with fall inform*- ' —Mme. I .ittt wooH rathe, bro 1 aA i ibi, JT./rU a, “\ t * ! ‘* :i ' : ^ * 1 "’
erraa, ita-., mailed free bj 4.idrw*»m* Voltaic •*;. ak than “unn-? down th" Irar.M;. Iu* M W OR1EYXS NATIOXALBANK, j n i a ’ 1 ’ 9 '* * ! duis
o. Mat shall Mich. | get* to t*e more and more dome*-1 <b:l5wtih»uw jiev Or. ran s La. J wly :n ** fwikta, .Vu.w*u,