Newspaper Page Text
THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH. TUESDAY FEBRUARY 23, 188C.—TWELVE PAGES.
THE TELEGRAPH,
fCELIH'.lD imi DAT in Til ISA* AVD WEEKLY
IT THE
telegraph and Messenger Publishing Co.,
17 Mulberry Stmt. Micod, Os.
Ths Dill; 1s delivered by carrion In tha city or
nulled postage free to enbecrlbere, for $1 per
Month, $3.30 for three monthe, $5 for six monthe,
•r *10 a year.
Tna Woult la mailed to anbacribera, pottage
free, at $1.16 ayear and 76 centa for alx months.
Transient advertisements will be taken for tha
Dally at 11 per square of 10 llnea or less for the
first Inanition, end AO cents for each subsequent In
sertion, and for the Weekly at $1 for each luaertloo.
notices of deaths, funerals, marriages and births,
*1-
Rejacted communication! will not be returned.
Oorreepeedsnoa containing Important news and
dnscnaetona of living topics la solicited, but must be
brief and written upon but one aids of the paper to
Bemlttancaa should be made by express, postal
Bote, money order or registered tetter.
Atlanta Bureau 17X Peachtree street
fill communications should be addressed to
THE TtLEOIUPH,
Macon, On.
Money orders, checks, etc., should be made paya
ble to H. C. lies sou. Manager.
Inn Boston Herald opposes the proposi
tion to take two hundred and fifty thou
•and from the United States treasury to
Build a monument to Grant. This would
4>e considered disloyal and treasonable in a
Southern journal.
ATToaisiT-GcnixaL Garland is prepar
ing to unload his Pan-Klectric stock. It is
now in order for General Johnston and
Mr. Atkins, employes of the government,
4o drop their blocks also.
Cbarubtor's reception of the Boston
Iianccrs was of that variety so charac
teristic of that grand old "City By
the 8eo." The Macon Vulnnteeni have
"been there' 1 and know what is to get tang
led np with the wagon-train of the Charles
ton militia.
“Tim greatest ourse of the Sonth in the
past and to-day is the laziness of the white
min,” says the Philadelphia Press. Oar
opinion is that the greatest cnrse in the
past was the earpot-hagger, bnt, as to-day
well the shot strikes pretty near the middle
of the bull's-eye.
Amono the negroes of Norfolk, Va,, there
hits boon organized a society, ,tbe eupho
nious title of which is "The Union State
Grand Tabernacle of the Imperial Order of
Oallilean Fishermen.” "The Sons and
.Daughter, of tha Bine Jerusalem" is the
Beet Macon oando.
"JmiST gosh, Mans,this is what la called
look.” said a grisly conntryman, diving out
of a train at the depot the other day and
trotting towards the diningroom where the
bell waa ohoerfully summoning the pnbiie,
“two hours behind time, and breakfns' jus'
ready I Git yer Cain's nu' rack eriong.”
Tna tender hearted American pnblic la
azkod by oable to sympathize with the
poor Englishmen who have been swindled
in Florida land and are now howling them
•elves hoarse. Wo positively declino to
sympathize. The man who buys land of
nn agent three thousand miles away with-
overseeing either, ought to be aUowed to
howl on for the benefit of the other fools.
Tns Judges of onr Supreme Court are
paraded, as the first signers of Mr. Ben
froe's petition for office. Even the supreme
judges cannot reverse a decision of the high
court of the people, and it is not pleasant
to see them thus manipulated by scheming
politicians. It would be prudent and
deooruus in onr suprems judges, to confine
their signature* to letters to their wives,
and judicial opinions, mainly. A supreme
judge oannot keep himself too far aloof
.from politics -especially partisan politics.
A DmocmiT, writing from Washington
City, says: “Well, the great Democratic
party has been in power nearly twelve
months, and to-day not five per cent, of the
•employes of tha government are Demo
crats. Onr triends and leaders are disgust
ed, and the question here is. have we any
thing to be particularly hilarious about?"
We are not engaged,in answering eonun-
dnuns, bnt we should say that the aitna-
tion would searoely justify a bonfire, or ex
travagance in red paint.
fhciAToa Vbht la seriously siok in Wash
ington. The trouble is confined almost en
tirely to the brain. There is a constant
pressure upon the top of the head, bnt the
roal seat of the disease is the base of the
brain. Bathing with chloroform has been
resorted to ontil the fumes have driven the
patient temporarily blind. Fly blisters bars
been applied to the back of the neck, but
none of the remedies afford the relief anti
cipated. The attack seems to be very rrnch
Hke that from whioh Mr. Henry Watterson,
the editor of Conrier-Jonrnal, is suffering.
The Senator himself has got the impression
that Ur. Watterson and be are suffering
from the same ailment, and he inquires
frequently as to the editor’s condition. One
fit the worst features about the case la the
nervousness and despondency under which
Mr. Vest labors. Friends end attendants
bars to exert themselves to counteract the
patient’s depression, and they meet with
only partial suocees.
Tub New York Commercial Bulletin, a
journal of decided free-trade tendsodeo,
■ays: "It is tha merest waste of tiras or of
words to be disonssing a tariff revision, re
daction of taxation, or any other measure
looking to the relief of the commerce and
industry of the oountry, as long as sweep
ing appropriations are demanded for the
amended arrearages of pension bills, costly
ships of war, ooaet fortifications, riven and
harbors, and naw pnbiie buildings in all
parts of the ooontry. These things will
not only swallow np what surplus revenue
there may but will assuredly entail ad
ditional taxation. From the prtavnt drift
of things at Washington, we are inclined
to think moat of the big money jobs will be
pushed through, and that measures that
contemplate the relief of industry and
ira U are to be in<l«4mu-ly postponed.'’
Kim pin Hut Slums.
Within a few days two illustrious Ameri
cans, whose names will liveinhistory, Lave
been laid away without funeral pomp,
though the servicea and character of both
could have made the bugles bray and long
lines of mnsqnetry gleam in tho straggling
sunlight. They both despised the out
ward trappings of woe, the hired mates,
the nodding plumes, .the muffled drams,
ami the curious crowds. - Nature ponred
forth torrents of tears, as the little band of
real monrnera followed Hancock, tho sol
dier, to hia grave.
llespectful, silent, sorrowful neighbors
nd friends gathered about the place where,
Seymonr, the civilian, waa laid to rest
This touching incident of the funeral of
Mr. Seymonr, simple in its tenderness, is
stronger than the eloquence of eulogy, or
the granite foundation of an imposing mon
ument: "On either side of the east drive
were formed sixty orphan girls, with four
Sisters of Charity, and the same number of
boys from St. Vincent’s Protectory. The
girls wore white knithoods, with black ro
settes and black jackets; and the boys black
ronnd caps, sailor jackets, blue knicker
bockers and stockings, and crape badges on
their left arm. Thoy had previously passed
beside the casket that contained the friend
who had added very many happy hoars to
their little lives. When the hearse passed
A woman in Bradford, Pa., while sewing
a button on her husband's vest, was in
stantly killed by a lamp explosion. Still
we think it is a woman's dnty to tew but
tons on her husband's vest.—Norristown
Herald.
"Mother, what is an angel?" “My dear,
it is a little girl with wings, who files."
"But I heard papa telling the governess yes
terday that she wes an angel. Will she
fly?" “Yea, my dear, she will fly away the
first thing to-morrow.—Vanity Fair.
The question whether it is proper to say
’Thanlm” or “I thank you," is at present
troubling aome of the great minds in West
ern journalism. The great difficulty has
always been to get the average Western man
to say either the one thing or the other.—
Philadelphia ltecord.
It is a little cations that the men who
hold the poetofflees should be called upon
to hold a national convention to ventilate
their grievances. What business have thty
to have any grievances at all? The men
with real grievances are those that haven't
been allowed to held postoffices.—Chicago
Times.
A young lsdy of Buffalo who has a camera
that she knows how to employ very skiil-
fully is in great demand at lunch parties,
and has photographed many pleasant
groups moat successfully; but she has never
been able to photograph the pickles, it is
PUBLIC PRICTING-PUBHC LAWS.
Necessity for Regulation—Some Defects in
Ue l'nlntril Out.
In the code of 188$, section 3, beading
“Statutes When to Take Effect," may be
found the following provision of laws:
"Public laws, winch In themselves pre
scribe specifically that they are In take effect
‘from and after their passage,’ shall not be
obligatory on the inhabitants until publish
ed, and three days shall he allowed from
the date of publication for every one hun
dred miles distance from the capital before
a knowledge of the law shall be presumed
against the inhabitants.''
1'nor to the act of February 25, 187G,
such laws weie not obligatory until Dub
lin tied in a public gazette, bnt aa there wus on
provision f or such pnbliction, by whom and
by what gazette, so much of section 3 of the
code us required this mode of publication
■vas repealed by tho act mentioned, and
since that date the only proviso os to publi
cation is us heretofore stated.
Section 7 of the Code of 1882 provides
that ' ‘laws after promulgation shall he ob
ligatory upon the inhabitants of this State.
Section 11)10 (d) directs (amongst other
things) "That the laws shall he completed
and delivered in the office of the librarian
of the State, at the capitol, within thirty
days from the adjournment of eaeh session
of the Legislature," and section lotfi pro
vides that "After the laws and journals ore
tied, printed, hound and delivered to
DEATH DEALING MTS!
the ravages of a terri
ble (JURSE,
the orphans the little hoys raised their hats B ajd, because her camera is not worked by
in spite of the sharp, keen cold winds that u, # instantaneous method. — Harper'
prevailed. As the cortege was passing the f Weekly.
boye and girls marched down John street us | jt will be time enough to call for Attor-
far as Bleecker, where they again stood in ney-General Garland's resignation when an
respectful attitudes until the last carriage investigation shall show that he has dono
had gone by them." anything that should cause him to leave the
In the bosome of two great States of the cabinet. The Democratic party is jealous
Republic, rest the remains of these two I of tll6 reputation of its leaders, hut it is also
men, representatives of the civil and rnili- fairi &Q j it U not disposed to condemn any
tnry power of the country, and tha tramp m&n a cue 0 j gu ut has been proven
of tho armed sentinel diatnrbs not the against him.—Boston Bepnblio.
silenco about their graves. They were An anthropological exhibition la to be
simple and strong in the lives, and it would held at Berlin, at which live specimens of
he a mockery to detail a part of the army a ll the known varieties of humanity ore to
to guard their graves. be collected. An exhibition of this interoat-
Th. Pofttniattcr-cieneral ing character will doubtless lead to the
Has not succeeded in making a good im- long-needed scientific classification of tke
prAsion upon those who are thrown in con- n ' u B* rnm P Hie mtgnelic statesman. It
took with him in the oonrso of pnblic busi-1 won '<l b® W ®M> *>y Uts way, to put George
ness. For a small man, he is said to carry William Curtis and James G. Blaine in se-
a very heavy load of hantenr, which ho nn- P ttrat ® cages.—Chicago Times,
dertakes to air whenever approsched. Bilffet Cars, without change of liquor,
It is now admitted by most people that run tb « way through Georgla.-New
the “official purtissn" dodge so strenuously Orleans Picayune,
insisted upon by Mr. Vilas, was a great "A man never loses anything by poBte-
mistoke, and that Mr. Cleveland will bo How about his seat in a street ear?
likely to suffer from it, in the pending con-1 —Burlington Free Press.
test with the Senate. Mr. Vilas is farther
supposed to entertain a very tendor and af
fectionate regard for negro office-holders.
The latest charge against him on this ac
count is that ho was requested to remove
No man is allowed to join the Boston
Lancers if bis parents,do not cultivate their
own beans.—Courier-Journal.
Obviously the man who quoted Talmage
a( saying "flirtation is devilish” mule a
his negro Republican messenger to make s#r * on * omission. The word "nice” was
way for a white Democrat. This request *® ft off end ol the sentence.-l’hlladel-
can searoely be‘considered an unreasonable 1l 1 ' 1 '* F rt **-
“Papa, I guess there ain’t any plumbers
in heaven,” said the six-year-old youngster
of Mr. Sieve, the plumber, one rainy day.
gtily. Hia ref usal'niay' not be unreason-1 “ wh y nol ‘ “7 “>»»" "‘Canss the sky
able. The negro despite his politics, may ®®* m * *°kte ®° eaay.-New York Journal
one, aince Mr. Vilas is la office by aid of
Democratic votes alone.
He refused, very promptly, and very an
, printed,
the State librarian he shall, nnder the su
pervision of the governor, canse them to be
distributed to the several counties of this
State."
Under tho act of February 2fith, 1877, it
is mude the duty of the public priDter in
compiling the laws to observe certain regu
lations: First, to distinguish in their classi
fication the public laws from those that ore
local or private, aud to arrango the former
under their appropriate heads.
2. “To provide for publication, side and
head notes for reference,” and to observe
other requirements not necessary to be
mentioned for the purposes desired in this
communication.
It is truo that the office of Public Printer
eo nomine, has been discontinued. Bnt aa
Judge Bleckley justly observes in his re
port on the code of 1882. “The service
here provided seems still appropriate, and
tho same together with tho compensation
may possibly devolve by operation of law
upon the contractor under the present
law."
The General Assembly of tho State re
cognizing perhaps the fact that the require
ments of the law as to the compiling, de
livery, etc., of all the laws to the State li
brarian, within thirty days from the ad
journment of each session of the Legisla
ture, Ijpvo not boon observed; have re
peatedly by resointion provided for the pub
lication of ita acts by private citizens (gen
erally aome clerk or attache o the Legis-
latnrn)and withal compelling tho State con
tractor, whose duty ills to publish its acts,
and that, too, in a specified time, have au
thorized the Governor to purchase sundry
copies of this pamphlet tuns issued (this
result ot a private nature), and pay for the
same from the treasury of the State. •
By resointion, the pnblic aota of 1884-85
were tha* authorized to be printed. Six
hundred copieswere directed tobe purchased
by the State, the State librarian directed to
send a copy each to the members of the
General Assembly, and tothepublic officers
of the State, and the price of the pamphlet
fixed at fifty oeuta, and the sum necesttry
to pay for these pamphlets appropriated in
tbs same resolution.
I do not underestimate the value of these
advanced publications. With the loo*# and
ill-defined fixation of time when certain
pnblio laws shall be obligatory upon the
Thai Clalms'It* Victims hg Ihous
awls—The Horrors Unearthed
Among a Few of the Unfortu
nates of Atlanta, the Home of the
Patent Medicine Man.
Atlanta Constitution.
Atlanta, although in many respects re
garded a healthy city, ia not unlike all
other inhabitable portions of the with, in
claiming her rhare of victims of the mon*
arch of all dreaded ailments—blood poison.
A Constitution man waa delegated to inves
tigate aome of the moat notable cases in At
lanta, and in his rounds made the following
appalling discoveries:
suffering
WOMEN.
Kciul Wliat the Great MetliodUt
Divine and Eminent PUy-
clan Says of
DR. J, MRADFIELD’S
Female Regulator /
ATLANTA, OA.. February 34.18S|.
Dr. J. Brsdfleld—Door Sir: Bum. fifteen yeti,
ago I examined the recipe of Female Regulator,mj
carefully .tudied authorities la regard to it. o
make an exceptionally satisfactory messen
ger to Mr. Vilas. He may be very com-
A banker says that a great deal is dpn?
for nothing In banks. This is trne. On*
the really reliable remedial vegetable .gent, know*
to .deuce to act directly on tha womb aud uterine
organa and the organa and parts ey tnpntblxlng dp
redly with three parta; and! therefore, providing
a specific remedy for all diaaaaaa of tha womb, and
of the adjacent organa and parta. Torn* truly,
JESSE BORING, M. D.. 15. D.
hiE
flT/l
I Itic
|itz 1
gisl
|ate <
f the
red
fithii
lliile
Its!
Miss Chapman Interviewed.
"My name is Mary Chapman, and I live
at 'he corner of Williams and Cox street*.
I have been a dreadful sufferer from scrof
ula and running, eating scrofulous ulcers
for six years. Have been waited upon dur
ing the time by seven Atlanta physicians,
also used various advertised remedies, with
out the least benefit. The eating sorea on
nty neck were a mass of corruption almost
down to the hones. My throat became so
ranch affected that I could scarcely swallow,
ray food lodging in a portion of my throat.
I was reduced to 90 pounds weight—being
a mere skeleton. In this condttiou I com
menced the use of I). B. B., and found great
relief in the first bottle.
"When 1 had used five bottles my health
had so much improved that the ulcers had
ail healed, the swelling subeided, my appe
tite returned, my skin became active, my
strength returned, and I gained 44 pounds
of flesh. I am now healthy, fat and hearty,
and am able to do as mnch work as any wo
man, and feel as happy aa a lark.”
c^ojTioisr.
everything—even Female Com-
. We say to you. If you value your life, be.
ware of all such.
Bradfleld’s Female Regulator I
is a purely vegetable compound, and Is only
tended for the M- MALt bkX. For their peculiar
diseases it is an absolute
SPECIFIC.
8old by all druggists. Send for treatise on ths
Health and Happiness of women mailed free, which
gives all particulars.
BOX 2ft. ATLANTA, OA.
Miss Wallace Questioned.
Miss Minnie Wallace resides with Mrs.
George Fickland, 41 McAffee street, and
from her own lips the reporter learned the
following appall ng story:
Several months ago she became almost
totsly blind and deaf. Her bones became
the seat of intense pain, her joints were
swollen and painful, and eventually her
whole body and limba became covered with
splotches and small sores. Her appetite
failed, and she gradually lost flesh and
strength, and had but tittle nse of bersolf,
as her limbs and muscles were paralyzed
To the reporter she said: "I had blood
poison and rheumatism aud before one bot
tle of B. B. B. bad been taken I began to
Bee and hear. When I hod completed the
nse of six bottles my eyesight and bearing
was folly restored, sense of taste returned
ail splotches disappeared, soreness all
healed, and my strength and flesh restored."
TANNER & DELANY,
Engine Company,
MANUFACTURER# OF
Strictly Reliable
MACIIIHERY.
Send to Blood BalmCo., Atlanta, Ga., for
their Book of Wonders, free.
jan22-(ti-»unAw
panlonable to tho Postmaster General, and | Hie most arduous duties of a man in a
may greatly admits and enjoy his Uuteur, b * nk “ ^e identification of old citizens who
bnt there waa nothing in the request to ex- °°“® ln * itb checks to be ca»hed.-Courier-
cite anger, rudeness of speech and bad J°umal
manners, in the servant of the public, who Twelve lawyers stood at the windows In
bnt a short time ago, waa not known bo- Hie Circuit Court room this morning wntch-
yond a small bailiwick of Wisconsin. in B» ■parrow-hawk plucking tbe feathers
If halt what it reported of the manners **““ » sparrow which he bad captured for
andspecohof Mr. Postmaster General Vilas, W» breakfast. The scene was very inter-
to tbe representatives of the people be true, I rating to the attorneys.-Wsrrenton (Va.)
then they need reform qnite as urgently as Herald.
any branch of the civil eervice. Tbs startling statement is made that Now
Yorker* pay $10,000,(101) a year for bogus
Around tho World In IKK4, butter. By putting a little hair into bogus
la ths title to a work issued this year by butter, and adding something that wUl
the Southern Methodist Publishing House, I make it rancid in a few hours, tha villain-
NashviUe, Tenn The author is Col. John ona mannraetnrers are able to deceive even
B. Gorman, formerly editor of the Talbot- the experts.—Conrier-Jonrnal.
ton Steudard and known wherever the I Court officer (whispering in magistrate's
Georgia language is spoken. .. I ear)—A conple outside want yon to join
Tho book is described in ita title. Col. them. Magiatrate-Bh! Tell ’em 1'li be
Gorman made the tour in six months. His I around the corner in five minutes. Court
roots was New York, Liverpool, London, I officer—It's s young couple, sir, as want to
Faria, Home, Naples, Messina, Alexandria, J get married. Magistrate -Ohl Tell 'em
Jappa, Port Said, Jaffa, Jerusalem, Bom- they'll have to wait until the court is ad-
bay, Delhi, Cashmere, Benares, Allahabad, jonrned.—Boston Herald.
Lucknow, the Ganges, Calcutta, Ceylon, A certain divine who had wandered in
Madras, Siugapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai. I the coarse of his travels beyond the oon-
Japan, Hen Francisco, and across the plains venienees of tha railroad waa obliged to
to home, to say nothing of expcdilona to take a horse. Being unaccustomed to riding,
the right and left. Wbat be did not see it I he said to hia host: "I hope yon are not so
is true might fill volumes, but what be did I unregeoerated in these parts that you would
see is recorded in a volume that will grace | give me a hone who would throw a good
any library and interest any reader. Col.
Gorman's work la unconventional. It is
also not a guide book. Ho pictures every-
thi g just aa it appeared to an hungry and
eager Middle Georgia eye and gives the im
Presbyterian minister?" "Wall, I dunuo,
the reply, "we believe in spreading tha
gospel.'’—Independent
I Don't Want Itvilrf, bnt Curr,'
[a tha cicUmUod of lb<na*&ila mlTniiiff from n-
preaaione fresh from an impressionable and I <arrb. To sit inch av u>-. catarrh ren be cured
I hw llr iUus'a I'ataM
. , a 5. . , . , I by Dr. Hoge'e Catarrh Haetedr. It has bean dona la
appreciative mind. Swayed by hia editorial | thnuaamla of core.; why not in yaorat Your danger
instinct h* dwells upon "the news'
and famishes a vast amount of interesting I thta dtaaaaa.
information about the manner, people and
enstoma of tha countries leas often des
cribed. At one reads his reports upon Je
rusalem, Indio, China and other eastern lo
calities and the by play cf travel, it is easy
to imagine him present, hia face lit np with
enthusiasm, and bia big black hat in his
left hand awuug inexpressive semi-circles.
The work is thoroughly natural, well illus
trated, and ought to sell. We hop* it will.
Tbs tiu|il; Neat.
Wa found it la tha a| eta tiaa.
Torn from tha Lough where It asad to twins.
Softly rocking Ita hahiaa threa,
rivalled unutl tha molhtre'a sing.
Thta la a leaf, all ahrivalad and dry.
That once wit a canopy overhand;
All tha blrdtee have Sown aw
Don't you hope they ’ll corn* bock aoma day?
Kaam wlthoat bird lea are loaaaoma UUnga.
what lawn have been pained. Bnt why the
necessity for all this delay in completing
aud delivering the laws (not the public laws
only, but the local and private also) as re-
2 aired under section 11)40 of the code? Is
te time therein fixed too short? Then ex
tend it; at any rate enforce it so long as it
is this law.
The laws have not yet been bound and
delivered, certainly not delivered. Not
twenty days ago s local registration law af
fecting the citizens of seven or more conn-
ties and which provided specifically that it
waa to taka effect from aud attar ita pas
sage, could ouly be peenred by a visit to
Atlanta, and the procurement of a certified
copy from the office of the Secretary of
State. When was this law obligatory upon
the citizen* cf tha oouutiea affected thereby.
It was not published iu the pamphlet of
public laws, and it lua not been published
anywhere, so far aa the citizens of on* of
these oounties are nd vised.
Do local laws which prescribe specifically
that they are to take effect “from and after
their passage” become obligatory upon the
citizens affected by such set, uuder the
same conditions that public laws affect them
to-wit: publication? If so, ought there not
be aome provision for an earner publica
tion of thvu than now exists?
The fact is, complications are continually
arising, growing out ot the delay in keeping Mn hMd
the public informed of such matters aa it is
tbe State's duty, it should have speedy
knowledge of. The decision of the Supreme
Coart rendered at the February term, 1884,
have only recently been published. Over
three months have elapsed since the ad
journment of tbe last Legislature, and yet
peine* at interest can only secure informa
tion aa to the measures affecting their coun
ties by appb ing to the Department of State
or trust to the recollection of their repre
sentatives as to the contents of the bill.
I write in no censorious or fault-finding
manner. My attention lisa been cal ed to
the difficulties which result from the delay
in publishing local laws of the character
mentioned, by a recent etection held in the
county of Pulaski, wherein a local registra
tion law might have occasioned serious le
gal complications, bat for the thoughtful-
neas and precaution in securing a copy of
tbe act at private expense, which ahoold
nnder the law have been in the hands of
the officers of the county nearly or unite
sixty days. H.
Engines and Boilers, Im
proved Saw Mills, Grist Mills,
Pole Road, Narrow Gauge and
Tramway Locomotives, Shaft-
SCALL-HEAD ing, Hangers and Pulleys, Gas
Machinery.
For special catalogue and
prices, address
THE TANNER A DELANEY
HhrrS* sad l'ati hr*.
A pnblio man is tike an old book. When I
he gets out of print ha la forgotten.— ]
Pi cays n*.
Allen G. Thurman la having a real hearty j
ovation in Washington. Tha fart la, Mr.
Thurman i. m ixnrel <4**l nf * p—;.|. n , | y 1 "™* w * ,ul -t a*ai a. la m»**4 a mttltr.
i Dorman u a good AMI of ft rrrciuefit, I ind • bou»«, ot mmtet+i » follow mu, te m u»-
wilAi ■Wffiuiu lunih
Fur h|M otAj qutvw tad tett* ot} *urt;
Bui bird* Btul 1 j, or tbit wuuMa’l I
»!*»#■•
—Kmuf H. Minor Id •‘Our lattte Quo.**
An Important Arrrst.
Tbw trrMt of • Mtopickmr ckArucur npoukte
•r»l u>o*tUMtite or cuts run IomKi*
without wiMtef uil kt Am robWl » triti ir,
•Yen iu priTftto life.—Albany Times.
function of e ehrewd detective.
Lectors(10 tuftoeger)—Are the ecooeUc I cfcwrtad. vtn UioimJ Amu*;*h«B*« ufo. *+•
properties o your hall good?” Matter- 2®*'SSRfe-YCSt'SS£T*S£
Excellent, air, excellent. I'll . have I «>■»«" t*. *rt ra^k ,>r p*i*,«i*ry mu
th* property man to gat 'em out and I 7,fot.
J — 1 •— • *- -«-*• " — ■ - l ty tnasa
dost 'anx for yon to-night"—Tid Bits.
“Madam,”aaid aahiveriog tramp, “w-will I ( %**‘S°«Ta ***a» tare, it • re. it pint ti
y-you gi»* . |>-poor fallow a chanoa to gat 2^U
w-warm!” "Certainly,” replUdthnwoman.
kindly "you **u aaiiy in that ton of coal, Jj^whtrkwre a-4 .»la It StMariltii v, (re*
hat don't barn yonnalt”—New Ycrt But. I —tare
Milk Crust, Daiulruir, Eczcina
and all Hcalp Humors Cured
by Cutlcura.
Lett Vovrmbvr my Util* boy* atpd threa yean,
fell wlMt the eteve white he w&a ruauleg. end cot
hie heed, end, right after that, ha bruka out all ovar
hia head, face and and left ear. I had a good doc
tor, Dr. , to attend him, but ba got worae. and
tha doctor could not cure him. Hia whole bead,
face, and late tar ware ln a fearful elate, and ha
aufferad terribly. I caught tha dlaaaaa from him,
and It spread all ovar my fara and nack and area
got into my ayaa. Nobody thought wa would ovar
gat batter. I fait aura we ware dlaftgured for life.
I heard of tha Cutlcura Hemedlee, and procured a
buttle of Cutlcura It ‘solvent, a box of Cutlcura. and
a cake of Cutlcura Soap, and uaad them eonnUnUv
day and nteht After tiling two bottlee of Resol
vent, four botee of Csttcurw and four cakce of Boep,
wo are perfectly cured without aecer. My tray s
skin la now like eatln. .
S7I (irand street. UI.L1M XFT1NO.
Jeraey City. N. J.
Sworn to before mo this 37th day of If ait h. 1M|.
Oilbert P. hoaiaeoa, i. P.
THE WORST~SORE HEAD.
Hava bean ln tha drug and medicine business
twenty-flva yean. Have been telling tour Cutlcura
Remedies Blues they came West They lead all
others in their line. We could not write nor could
you print all wa have beard said in favor of U»»
Cutlcura Homed Ice. One year ago tha Cutlcura and
Boep cured a little girt in our house of the worst
■ore head we ever saw. and tha Resolvent and Cu
tlcura are now curings young gentleman of a tore
teg. white the pbyetrune are try log to have It ampu
tated. It will save hia teg. and perhaps bia Ufa.
Too mnch cannot bo aaid iu *
ENGINE COMPANY.
MACON, GEORGIA.
Office and Warehouses Comer Fourth
and Poplar Streets.
8. 8. PEGRAM, HniffW.
■ “ iwd*.
Manhood Restored
Bswauv raa*.-A ... tin.I j-utiitol lavreu-mt
Itackten's Arnica Salve.
Thstxairelv. la th. world for Cnte. .
tores. tJlrecv, Salt Bli-am, Parer tons Tmim
Ohtpv-J UaaiU, CktlMatua, Coras, ami til Hkla
Ereptioa*. tail ixMlUvet* cure 1-Ure, ot aa par re.
faired. It la guaiaataad to |lre prefect aattafirettoa,
« mreav refit* Ire. Pries 3i casts par to*. Par
,tl. by taaax. tuokla * Laretr
Bannov I ear.-a vktimof yuatnfol iwpradfwl
Nutif Preraataro Decay. Nervowe Debility. Dote
Maabwtd, A a*, having trledia vain everrbwowa
veeMdy.hMdiMovere«aeieiplaaeff-enra»whkh be
will send KBKK. to bta follww-emJforenT Addrea*
J. 1L BiBVBn.O Chatham 0U, Hew YarkCuy-
gacHfa-thu-aun-awly
★ M
A FRIEND IN NEED.
Dr. Sweet’s Infallible Liniment.
Prepared from th. receipt of Dr. fltaphre Swwt
of Connocttcnt, Um itreat natural Boa. Hatter. «»
- been uaed foe more than SO veam. and la tha beet
to orata. BpMjvvrvataiejPrire: Cattnu*. Me.-, known remtoy forRtreom»tt»ra!N«r»HU. HpretM.
Konn Me-: H-o reot. |1 Prepared by lilt Potter BruUre, CnU. Dare,, wound, and nil eitunal In-
Dnif and Cbvmienl. Os., Boston. Uui
Send for
Skin
How to Cure
Diseases.”
CL'IV Dlemlahtt, Ptmpten, Blatckbreda and
OIVlIv Baby ttumore. areCntlcnre gonp.
t’L'LL up ACHES AND PAIRS which no
tmna aktU retina nbl, to nltovlnta It
.the, condition ot thounnd, who u y«t
know notbtnt ot that new and elegant
antidote to pstn and Inflammation, tha
Caticura Anti-Pain Ptnater. Me.
J. O. McCrary vt. Michael Hlnebtv. Is acuity in
Bibb superior Court
IT appearing to tha eoert that tha defendant,
hMichael Hlncbey. U a non-reetdent and cannot be
swvad hv the ordinary procaaa of tha court. It la
ordarto by tha mart that earvlc* ha pttfocted upon
him by pohllcaUoo tn accordant* with las, ead
that h* be required to tnssar told bill by th* sail
April term of thta eoert
T. J. SIMMONS, J. A a
A true extract from the miaatea.
Jans lemon D. H. ADAMS, Deputy Clerk.
NERVOUS
DEBILITATED MEN.
Electric taepcaearp appliance*, foe tto »*cccx
■^VOLTAiTbeLt cori'ordtati, KiA
tn thaaatawfia
Oa Tt .today eight, aa th* train waa raaatnx
Broawnod .tetlon.*)®* below. SmlthrilUTtai
glate wtmrnaaeon tii. engine buret, and slanted
Mr. Bos Ptoumoy. who woe oa Ute aagtn*. B*
- bosk apoa a stick of wood wkU k turned
■ kte tea
As Thoy ( annul Poaalblp
remt te ta pnat that sf to* greats*, sod. whoa
ty'—'r •$!•»•*. aoaaS Uks a Pot sxaeapte.
ltiw»e-t;..i»a o. i. Aet f.r
»aw* n-dre* aad took f-r Ua -Thta* Urate"
jteSeteam. and tea wood -ihgrlae." sklak te eatte
taareote. e( of Ik* (vaiUae, re
Money for Farmers.
A farmer who know* what farmer* lifted, comm to the reacue. The great noefttioo Is
ljbor and fertilizers. THE MERCER CULTIVATOR settles tLe labor q»«»
tion. It ban off and dirta np the cotton at ona furrow to tha row, doing four time* •*
-chwork-tits old way. Try it, and If J^ot satiafied, you* money wUl berafondod
STANDARD FERTILIZERS at from 10 to 90 per cent, leas than yon bsv*
evw bought them. Tho Soluble Pacific la especially recommended. Add PbosphaW*
and Kaunt in any quantity. Besides the above A. 15. SMALL keeps on hand *«
times, on* of th* best salectad stocks of
GROCERIES AND PROVI&+l,A~
to thta market, stub a* Bacon and Bulk meets, FUmr. Lard, Sugar, Coffee, Tobacco, naA
Potato**, Mackerel, Wbita Fish, Ob Mat, eta., for cash or on time. A large lot of T«u* r**d
OataL also a targa lot of Georgia Cane Syrap. I moon bttrdni k*. Don’t f*U to eend yo«
erdtn, or call in parson on
A. B. SMALL,
d**16d*mAw4m 141 and 143 Third aUeet, Macon, G*.