The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, February 23, 1886, Image 6

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0 THEMACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH. TUESDAY FEBRUARY 1886.—TWELVE PAGES. tjte telegraph, The Atlanta l'o»t mastership. The fact that 'Jr. Cleveland baa appointed »P»U«8U> etebt DAT in THK yeab ajij wx*alt John W. llenfroe, postmaster at Atlanta, »t tbs | will create no Hurprine. The wonder is that Tdltyffaph and Messenger Publishing Co.,! bo baa dallied BO long over a matter that W Mulberry Street, Macon, Ga. The Dally la delivered by carrier* in the city or Bailed postage free to subscribers, for SI pur Month, $2.50 for three month*, $6 for six month*, or $10 a year. v Tan Weekly la mailed to anbecribera, postage free, at $1.25 a year and 75 centa for six month*. Transient advertisements will be taken for the Daily at $1 per square of 10 line* or less for the tnt insertion, and 50 centa for each subsequent in sertion, end for the Weekly at $1 for each insertion. Notice* of death*, funeral*, marriages and birth*. $1. Rejected communications will not be returned. Correspondence containing Important news and diacussiona of living topic* is solicited, but must be brief and written upon bnt one aide of tbe paper to have attention. Remittances should be made by express, postal note, money order or registered letter. Atlanta Bureau 17 X Peachtree street. AH communications should be addressed to THE TELEGRAPH, Macon, Oa. Money orders, checks, etc., should be made paya ble to H. C. Hanson. Manager. The Issue Joined. Senator Edmonds and hit associates have prepared and issued their challenge to the Administration tin to the offices. The iaxae will he fully joined when Senator Pngh and •hi* ttHHociaittH shall have formulated a reply within the next ton days. The Republican SenetoTB demand that Mr. Cleveland Hhall give up all papers connected with the re moval of officials. Mr. Cleveland refuses to do this, and tho ltepublican Senators say, we will not confirm your appointments in certain cases. In order to strengthen ibeir position aud to secure tho sympathy and support of the soldier element, tho ltrpuhlicann contend that Federal soldiers shall not be deprived of offices held by them. Nearly every Re publican office-holder in the South was a hanger-on of tho Federal army in some shape—from a sutler to that of a bummer. There's to be a very lively and lengthy debate over this in the Senate, while the House shall bo engaged in a discussion of Mr. Morrison*! tariff bill. The session of Oongiess now very dull and uninteresting will become quite lively and heated in the early spring. How is this thing going to end? is tho question. Tho conntry will not uphold the Senate in a rejection of such appoint ment* of Mr. Cleveland as are clean and competent If the Senato will pick out such as are manifestly improper (HAy like that of Renfroe) and rejoct them in behalf of the purity of tho public service, it will soore a strong point. Tho strugglo now is fer the vantage ground in 1883. The Democratic party must back and support the administration. The Republicans will rally behind Mr. Edmunds. At present it looks like a quarrel between man and wifo, in which one sAys, I will, aud the other I won't, and the contest ends, when and how, nobody knows. It will iJe in order after a little, to look af ter tbe dead and wounded. In the mean tiure, Messieurs! salute and proceed. The Tariff Hill. After three months of incubation Mr. Morrison has batched a tariff hill. It Si very unlike his pet, horizontal measure, but it has been received with the same chorus of curses, ridicule and criticism accorded that untimoly measure. Mr. Morrison does not appear to lie par ticularly happy at hatching tariif bill-*, and it is freely predicted that he will not be able to get this one through the II rate, an l th it he hitnself will not recognize it when it emerges, if it ever does, from the commit tee of the whole. . Pennsylvania Democrat* are prepared to strike in behalf of their iron interests, and R mthern Democrats can never consent to indorse its provisions as to sugar and rice. Bnt Mr. Morrison’s tariff bill will have other opponents to meet beyond those mentioned. The Republican pirty of the House and Renata will Hook to slaughter it. This expression from tho Globe-Democrat may be considered to embody the position of the Republican party towards Mr. Mor rison's bill: ••The fact that free trade Is the ultimate object of Morrison and his associates can not be disputed. They take little trouble, in fact, to conceal it. If they dared do so, they would openly proclaim such a pur pose, and wage a square and determined fight to that end; bnt discretion com pels them to seek by degrees and in an indi rect nuinner that which they know it i iin- poft«ible to accomplish at once and by straightforward means. This is of itself enough to justify rcawtance to any plan was settled, *o soon as mentioned. We have no quarrel with Mr. Renfroe over his ap pointment, but we should be recreant in duty to a largo portion of the people of Georgia, if we could permit tho occasion to pass without recording in their behalf an in dignant protest. There can he no plea of deception and im position in this matter, since from the ear liest movement towards this appointment up to ita consummation Representative Hammond had endeavored to cover, both the administration and the people of Georgia. The record was laid before Mr. Cleveland, reciting that the pcoplo of Georgia, found fraud and corruption existing in their State government. In the effort made by the represenativea of the people to ferret . t the wrong doers and to mete out to t M cin propoT punish merit, it heenme necessary to prefer articles of impouchment against Mr. Renfroe, forun unlawful uso of the people's money. Mr. Renfroe himself acknowledged tho justice of the charge and offered to refund the money he had unlawfully made, if tho prosecution were abandoned. This propo sition was refused, aud the prosecution pro- reeded before a high court of impeachment, and resulted in the technical acquittal of Mr. Renfroe, backed by powerful social and political influences and able counsel. Prominent in nil of these proceedings, was tho present Governor of the State. Realizing tlio fact that a failure convict under such circumstances, as untatUfsctory Mr. Renfroe Houglit further vindication from the hands of the people, and was overwhelming ly defeated. These facts were presented to the President by Representative Hammond in behalf of the people of Georgia who had suffered by Mr. Renfroe. That the evi dence of the impeachment trial was not also presented, hns very recently trauspired under a Legislative investigation. One of of the men most powerful in con trolling the action of tho President in this matter, had misdirected the fnnds appropriated by the Legislature of Georgia for publishing this evidence, and it is forever lost to tho state. A happy circuni- stance, perhaps, for Senator Colquitt and Mr. Renfroe. We nso the word perhaps advisedly, for it nppoars that Mr. Cleveland would not hesitate to do tho people of Georgia any injustico or wrong demanded by tho junior Senator from Georgia to gratify his malice,and to further his politi cal fortunes. But what can bo said in favor of a Presi dent who, in tho foco of such a record, und in defiinuco of the protest of an eminent representative, would do such un act? Mr. Cleveland assumes to be the leader of tho Democratic party. lie assumes more, lie presumes to teach it honesty of purpose and action, aud to reform the abuses which have grown as an excrescence on the body politic. He has been vociferous in his protesta tion of devotion to cleauly methods, and tho selection of tho best men for official stations, until in the minds of an admiring few, he has appeared as tho incarnation of that spirit of reform which it to speedily cover the country with the glories of political luilleninm. The young, inexperienced and the un thinking, taking his glowing periods, may imagine him n stalwart knight with targe, buckler, and broad-sword going forth on bis iron-clad charger, seoking to slay tho persecutor** of the people and tho wrong doer everywhere. In the prosence of this appointment and ita surroundings, he Ap pears no more formidable than Calico Jack, who writh pasteboard helmet and gaudy ribbons and rags, rides about the streets at the head of tho fantsatics, a feature and creature of a popular festival. . Perhaps in due season, Mr. Cleveland con find a-“public trust'" for one Washing ton Goldsmith, whose misfortune seems to be that he was tried first, and consequently convicted. From this apponitment the peo ple of Georgia may learn and under stand,that the much needed reform in their Btste government must come from their own brave and nnited action, and without sympathy or aid from abroad. of mines, and even the tonnage of freights offered for transportation. Wbile the ques tion of subsistence, os well os the laying up of money for a rainy day confronts every laborer, just as it does other men, neither the necessities nor wants of labor can be provided for by employers beyond the point justified by the profits of their business. The highest rates of wages do not always assure the greatest amount of comfort to labor. Neither are the lowest rates of wages a guarantee always of better or even os good profits to producers as are often obtained under high wages. What an employer can afford to pay is determined by the price of hit* products, and what labor can afford to work for should be determined by tbe profit realized by his employer upon his work and the purchasing power of his own wages. It roust remain optional with men who employ labor to determino tho prices they can afford to pry and with men who labor to accept or reject tho terms upon which employment is offered. Any attempt to take away this privilege and right from cither and to transfer tho same by legisla tion to arbitrators,will and ought to provoko revolution. The plan of boycotting men or establish ments that do not yield prompt obedience to labor organizations is of recent origin. It was first tried as a remedy for evils claimed by the Irish to exist under the sys tem of land renting in Ireland. Without stopping to discuss the genuineness of the evil complained of, or tho justice of the remedy applied we may say that if the former justified tho latter in Ireland, no such conditions as are com plained of in that unfortnnnte conntry are in existence here, and hence the Attempt to bully and overawe a whole community into support of the demands of ths Knights of Labor and the Typographical UiHod, of Richmond, or other guilds or labor unions elsewhere, has its origin in a species of lawlessness and tyranny, to which tho country cannot afford to yield. Inspired to enthusiasm by the promises and representations of emmissaries of these organizations, the labor of the country is led to believe that a golden era is just at hand, when faithful service to employers and a just regard for their rights and the rights of labor are no longer to constitute the basis of wages, or tho mutual friendship and de pendence of capital and labor. They sup- poso that money hereafter, instead of meas uring tho value of service Tendered is to he arded upon the edicts of organizations, which confident of power, ignore tho con ditions npon which all useful, profitable or permanent employment is based. It may take long seasons of idleness, hardship aud suffering to demonstrate the fact that honest labor must pay the eventual cost of that disorganization, turbulence aud loss which are sure to come when cap ital is forced to organize, a* organize it will for its own protection. This lesson has been often taught, and it seems aa often disregarded and forgotten, bnt indldatiohs point to the fact that this conntry Is ap proaching a crisis which will demonstrate that excessive demands upon employers will force the dosing up of a large number of onr industrial establishments; for while they may be prevented from running at a profit they cannot be forced to do busi ness at a loss. Chicago's Only Nightingale. Chicago News. There is but oue nightingale in Chicago. It is owned by Mr. Modler, of *217 Fremont avenue. Tbe bird was brought over from' Germany lost September by Mr. Moeller, who incidentally learned that there was not a single specimen of this bird in New York and probably not half a dozen in this coun try. Tbe reason for this, tho bird fanciers explain, is that it is almost impossible to get these birds across the ocean alive, and even when a successful shipment is made the birds almost invariably die in the course of acclimatization. An Appetite for (ilass. l'hilsnelphia Reconl. Mr. Wm. Jones, a gentleman of color, who claims Texas as his home, and who to outward appearance is not unlike the ordi nary denizen of Lombard street, startled a little company in room No. 42 of the Girard House last night by his astonish ing appetite for glass. Lifting a lamp chimney to his mouth lie bit oft good-sized mouthful which he chewed and swallowed with ns much relish as if it had been the choicest food. A chain pugne glass followed the lamp-chimney down Mr. Jones’ copper-lined gullet, and was washed down with a little Pommery. “A special weakness of mine," said Mr. JoUt-n, “is a sandwich of a hit of window- pane glass between slices of bread, and 1 am also very fond of crushed glass in ice cream or with cake. The glass nover cuts my mouth nor hurts my stomach. I con tracted the habit about thirty yearn ago by eating a thin piece of glass which I had mistaken for ice. I have kept it up ever since, and have eaten os many as twenty- five or thirty glasses in a day." GGS.SIP ABOUT PEOPLE. K«nw Tiiyhelv by reading the "Science of Life, the twet medical work ever published for yonng and middle-aged men. Dr. It. <>• Cotter, permanently located in Macon. 12ftV, Second atreet Disrates of the eye. our. throat and n<W. * ormer ly assistant for four yearn to Dr. A. M. Calhoun, At- aula. DENTISTRY—DR- H- B. BARFIELD. No. Mulberry Street, Macon. Georgia, office hours—9 a- m. to ftp. m -Apply to T. F.. Blacikabear, Tboma.vllle, Ga., for genuine Le Conte and Kuffce pear treea. HAPPY mYEAR] —1886. Do ynn lmar a Mg noise way f ,ff M j A Standard Medical Work. FOIl YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN ! Oulu $1 hi) Mail, PottfpaM. Illustrative Sample Free to All. [wi.[.le ? Tliafii us. phontintr Happy ^ Your! to our Ton Thnuswnl 1‘aTi^ ^l TVxiis. Ark.. La.. Miss ._Aln,. Teim.. v a ~y S. C, Gu„ ami Fla., from our I Elf TEMPLE OF 11 llnycottlng. Tho dangerous spirit iiu.l tendency of thin process, tint adopted in Ireland to meet conditiona that d • not exiat in thia country, ia fully illuatrnted by the following Asso- eiated I’rett, account of the manner iu which tbe Knight* of Labor and the Typographi cal Union of Kichmund, Virginia, in con vention with the business men of that city Urey may propone. The intereata of Ameii-1 have met tho com of a publishing tirtu can labor and enterprise are not to be which refuse* to accede to the demand* of promoted by tbe adoption of any of tbe the Typographical Union: condition* of free trade. We owe onr 1 “Kiciiuond,February 111. —Theconference proeperity of tbe teat twenty yean very j of the business men of lliclimond with the Largely to tho benefit, of protection, and Knight* of Labor and Typographical Union common cense teaches that a doctrine ; No. 90 waa held to-night After sorno dis- which ha* aerved n* no adrautageonaly in , cus-ion, a resolution waa adopted to en- the p*»t ahould not be exchanged for the 1 deavor to have an act passed by the General opposite way of doing hnaineaa, particu- j Aaaembly to require all difference, between larly when it, also, waa once tested and employes and employer* to be aubmitted proved fallacious aud disastrous. There ia j to arbitration.” not a nation on earth to day which having ’ The proposition to force either employer a protective tariff, i* disposed to try free or employes to submit the question of trade. The uniform tendency, on the con-1 wages for which the one must work and trary, ia to extend the meaanre of protec- the other mu.l pay, to arbitration, ia tion in each countries, while in countries , outrage npon the natural and inalienable committed to free trade—notably Great! rights of both. That this proposition Britain—there is a pronounced end grow- j should receive the sanction of tbe Knigbu ing sentiment in favor of the American ! of Labor and tbe Typographical Union, a* method. In faee of aneh admonition*, we S well as tbe business men of Richmond, surely her* poor res on to reverse tbe ! an evidrnre of the dangerous influence of course that w* have found to be so practi- i these and kindred organization* npon mer eat and profitable.” j chant* anil other*, who, in their anxiety to Bnt Mr. Morrison ia a hard-headed man promote their own inure, ta, forget the end will ptub hi* bill to certain deatrnc- principle* that innat prevail and the ra tion. In the debate which will precede lation.hip* that ahould be maintained ba ntu- Waa No ItaUroai! Man. New Yurk Mall and Express. ••A civil engiueer, i* liej” sold Mr*. Par- vetinu to her daughter, who wna telling of n gentleman who paid her marked atten tion; “well, 1'iu glad he waa polite, but I don't wan't you to marry into u railroad family!” Knglnmr. lolest Cariosity. 8k Jame'a Ourtts. A white gorilla I* now on view at tbe Iloyul Aquarium nt Westminster. Whether the animul is * true specie* or n highly de veloped croKH-brced, is a question for the natumliaU, Ita height ia about twenty-six inches, and it* age probably three or fonr year*. The whole of it* body and limbs, both nrm* and leg*, tro almost free from hair, aud it baa no mil. The auimkl ia very gentle and affectionate, cla.ping ita Leper round the neck und kissing him like a child It drink* from a tumbler, uud ha* a most intelligent manner. It i* lionaed in a Urge, handsome cage or chamber, with an enure glues front. Wltat Widows fan Do. Rprlngfteld llt-publlcoD. The right of a widow in her husband'd tate take* on new and important featnies from a recent decision of tile full bench of the Massachusetts Supreme Court nt Bos- ton. A man died and willed hi* wifi among other thing*, $'2,000 in money, lcav mg bis farm to an only non by hi* first wifo. lli* penonal property, however, faihd to liquidate hi* debt*, and hU widow'* (2,000 could uot he paid unless the farm was Hold to do it. The son resisted this, hat the court order* the txeentor to sell the Und and pay the legacy in full to the widow with intercut on it from the date of herhus- baud'* death. thia. the Democratic party moat be'; and the danger i* that it will aharw j ween employer and employed. Labor, like wheat or cotton, U regulated th* fate in th* naxt popular election surely | in price by supply and demand. The ■*—- •waiting Mr. Monriaon'a tariff bill. | U boa of manufactured good-, the prodacU Lite on a Torpedo Hoot. All th. Year Round. The officer* anil men in charge of tbe torpedo bouts have no pleasant time of it. The ateel plate* of which a fint-cUas torpe do bout in built arc only no eighth of on inch thick, Home of the smaller one* ore only a sixteenth of an inch, aud the conse quent Weakness of structure, with their great leugth iu proportion to bre.-.dth, make* tho strain of rising anil falling in a short sea apt to break their back*. In such a sea, therefore, it i* dangerous to drive them at less than eight or tin mile* an boar, when they go through tho ware* in stead of over them. At ubont this speed in wont boat* tho vibration* of the engine* and the vibration* of the boat synchronize, and the combined oacilUtions make th- how and item of the boat wave up and down till they nod at each other. Men w ho are etanding on deck astern jump np and down like marionette*. Even m absolutely smooth water, when you *it in the small cabin and try to «L your knife and fork cUtter on your pUtu like autanette*. Th* water •weeps clean orer the deck, which, after awhile, the vibration make* to leak like a sieve, ao that everything below— clothes, bed*, etc.—U .wet through Truly service in a torpedo boat U not one of pleasure. Aboct 150,000 cop!.-* Of Hawthorne's —Mr. Morley, of the British Cabinet, | jumped from nn income of notkiug into £4400 a year. —William Beach Lawrence paid $15,000 for tho Ochre Point Farm at Newport. It has yielded hi* estate $050,000. —Edwin Booth'* Newport place, “Booth- den,” i* for sale, Mr. Booth is goiug on a long tour, possibly ns fur ns Australia. —Mile. Louise Michel *ays she is “dis gusted with France and is going bock to New Caledonia, there to live in exile." —Eugene Field, “Bill Nyo” and James Whitcomb lleilly are going “on tho road” together, giving readings from their own works, —Stuart Itobson has been elected an honorary member of the Cook county Democratic Club of Ohio. Crane, the other Dromio, is a Republican. —Mis* Katherine Lorillard Wolfe has added $75,900 to her gift to the Episcopal Diocese of New York; and the money is to bo used for the erection of a clergy house. —The late B. F. Greene, millionaire manufacturer of Rhode Island, died because of exposure in a snow blockade in Kansas, lie was on tho way to the Las Vegas Uot .Springs. —Mr. Labouchcre mnkes bold to coin a word. Says be: “An interview with tbe name of the interviewee (the word requiros coining in these days) loft out is rather poor reading.” —Miss Clotelle Palms, to whom Senator Jones, of Florida, is paying conrt, is the daughter of Francis Palms, the Cncaus of Michigan. She is about JO years old and the heiress to some $10,000,000. —Major Eugene llslfor, a well known Now Orleans journalist, is also a composer of |M>pulsr music. He has recently prepared l or publication 100 compositions, and is now writing a thrce-act romantic open founded on tbe poem “Evangeline.” —General nnncock was the only honor- ary member of tbe Pickwick Club of Nek Orleans. On one occasion the clab wanted to givo tho general a reception, and, in order to make him their guest, suspended the rules for tho once, and elected him a mem her, —Carl ltosa lias secured a decision from a Liverpool court to tho < Sect that admur aiou can he refused to person* who are known to havo the habit of talking during the music. This may be English, you kuow, bnt it is a bit of law that will bear transplanting. — French politeness expressed the age of a sexagenarian us follows: They were talk ing the other day of a lady who by coquet- ish demeanor tried in vain to conceal the date of her birth. "In a word, how old houhl you say she is, exactly?” “Twice aa old as un actress.” —Dr. Kueeland, in a lecture at Boston the other night, gave the latest prices for wives among tho Kanthal people. If the woman is young and pretty, the hnsband must pay to her relatives from $U to $5. Divorced women are quoted at about $1.5U, aud widows ut 75 cent* each. —Mine. Daniel Wilson, President Grcvy 1 daughter, presides at grutnl social gather ings at tbe Elysee with quite the air of a Prince** Royal, seldom laying aside her haughtiness save when music or urt come under discussion. Then her enthusiasm gets the better of her dignity. —It is said that Beldeti, the icnlptor, who carved aotue of the bas-relief work in the Vanderbilt mansion in New York has given up urt and gone to raising cabbages nnd other vegetable* on a truck farm near New Orleans. The latter occupation isles* esthetic, but perhaps quite »s healthful and remunerative. —Gen. Lew Wallace tells with great gus to the story of a At-rman who opened u beer saloon in Constantinople. Of coarse Ma hometans do not drink strong liquor. But when they saw tho foaming lager they said: “By the beard of the Prophet! That does not look like wine. But by the way the Giours drink it, it mast be good. Let ns try iti” They did try it; numerously; Wal KflOW THYSELF.j A Grout Medical Work on Mnniiood. Exhausted Vitality. Nervous and rhyslcal Debtti tv. Premature decline in Man, Error* of youth, and the untold miseries resulting from indiscretion oi expense*. A book for every man, young, middle- aged and old. It contemn 125 itrencrlptionB for ali acute and chronic disease*, each one of which is invaluable. Ho found by tbe author, whoso expe rience for twenty-five yearn in such an probably never before fell 'to tlio lot of any physician. UuO pagen, bound In beautiful French muslin, embonaed covers, full gilt, guaranteed to be a finer work in every' sense than any other work sold in this country for $2.60, or the money will lie refunded In every in stance. Price only $1 by mull, pout-paid; Illustra tive sample, free to anvbody.Hend now. Gold medal awarded the author by the National Medical Asso nation, to the president of which, the Hou. P. A Burnell, and annotriale officers cf the beard, th* readers are respectfully referred. The Science of Life should bo read by the yonng for instruction and by the sfi'ictod for relief. It will benefit all.—London Lancet. There in no member of society to whom the Sci ence of Life will not be uneful, whether youth, parent, guardian, Instructor or clergyman.—Argo naut. Address the Peabody Medical Institute, or Dr. W. II. Parker, No. 4. Dulflnch street. Ronton, Mass., who may be consulted on all dincanes requiring skill and experience. Chronic and obstinate dts- eanes that havo battled the skill of all other physi cians a specialty. Such treated successfully without an instance of failure. Mention this paper. tnch5-8fi. which wc are just settled in afler three I months of moving mid regulating. Ilsllcliijnh! Anchored nt last in a Man. j moth Building, exactly suited to our dipJi | and immense luisiues*. Just whet we bn, I wanted for ten long years, but couldn't get I A MsgnUlceut Pontile Store. Four Stories u , I Basement. 6'J Feet Front. 100 Feet Deep. ' ■ The Largest, Finest and MosA Complete I Music House in lim A fact. If wo do say it ourselves. Visit New York I Boston, Cincinnati, Chicago, Ht. Louis, New Orion 1 or any city ou this continent, and you will nut tJ: its equal iu size, imposing api*earanee, tasteful i ran geiueut, elegant fitting or stock carried. Chills and fevers have for years affected thou sands, and will continue to do so until the merits ol Hall's Georgia Chili Remedy become known, Thi» > patent humbug nostrum, but tho result of the rience of a quarter of a century In compound ing and mauufseturih drug in our Southern cli mate. 1 have cured myself aud thomtands of oth ers of chronic chills afte ithey had for a long time resisted tho efforts of able physicians and quinine hod ceased to have any effect. One bottle in all ca*es of loss than six months standing will effect * permanent cure. In that time a sufferer would *l*>nd double the amount for quinine and yot not be cured. I append a few certificates showing what it has accomplished—thousands could bo obtained 11 desired. Judge Thomas J. Hlmmons. judge of the Superior Court of the Macon circuit, was cured of chills aud fever by the use of Ball's Georgia Chill Remedy. Macon, Ga., October 5,1883.—The best chill rein* dy I ever saw. Chas. II. Fbkkman. Macon. Ga.. October *15, 1HX4.—1 consider fiall'f Georgia Chill Remedy the best chill remedy 1 ever aaw. C. L. 0*Gobmam, of the firm of J. W. Rice k Co. Mr. George H. riant, of Houston county, Ga..aay« he has never known it to fall. Mr. Henry H. Fcagln. another prominent citizen of the eame county, endorses it above every other preparation in the world. LAMAR, RANKIN k LAMAR. 1 by all druggists. Macon, Oa. iigV7 sunhwly BUSINESS. And now, with this Grand New Music Temple, it 1 fording every facility fur the extension of our bin ncHs: with our $200,000 cash capital, our $100 u| stock of musical wares, our eight brsucli In.m^l army of employes, and o«| . . tn*hful cxiwrieiTf, we sre p*l pared to servo our patrons far better than e\ ' " fore, and givo them greater advantages than < had elsewhere. North or South. This is what we are living for, and we shall driwl ir business from now on with tenfold energy. With heart.' and sincere thunk* to all ]wttun«.._ their good will and liberal support, we wi»h thia I all a Happy New Year. TiUDDEX Jc KATES, Southern Music IloiwJ SAVANNAH, GA. .— If any one slmul I happen to want a Pirn I Organ,Violin, Ban]o, Accerdeou, Band Iimtrmuetil Brum, Strings or any small Musical Instrument orl Sheet Music. Music Book, l*i. turu Frame, SUtusn.l Art Goods or Artists' Materials, WE KELP 8Ul| THINGS, mud will tell you all about them if vo-.l will write us. L. & B. S. M. El THE FAIR, No. AO Mulberry street, I hare tbe largest slock of Notions, Toys, Novelties anil Housekeepers' Goods in Macon, and I am prepared to sell them at prices wkicb cannot be duplicated in th* South. Do not fail to see me before you buy. It. /’. SMirir, Proprietor. deoSlwtf COOKST0YES fltWmSATISFACTORY EIGHTEEN SIZES AND MS ALL PURCHASERS CAH BE SUITED MANvrAonmip nr Isaac LSheppard &Co.,Baltimore,Vi ANI> FI» m E BY Dr. J. M. Buchan cfc Son J EASTMAN. GEORGIA. Private and chronic diseases a aneciallt7. dreds of certificates of cures. Will visit *d! counties. Consultation free. Medicine by msilcrl express. Jan2»wlyr | A Watch Free We will mall a ^Nickel-Silver Waterbury Watch d| the style represented in the cot below to any a who will send us a club of ten mew subscribe* ti Tub Wkkkly TrueuiiArii at one dollar each, will enable each subscriber to secure the paper ^ tbe lowest club rate, and at the eame time comp aate the club agent for his trouble. OKI.Y xkw subscsibkhs—that la, those wh< name* are not now and have not been within i months previous to the receipt of tho order on o books. WILL US COITNTBD. These watches are not toys, bnt accumt* i serviceable time-keepers. They are simple, t ble and neat. The cases always wear bright. ’ of thousands of them are carried by people of 4 classes throughout the United 8tales. “The Waterbury. 11 l\afER8Y£i f NN UAS-j iTon 188G. *2 Win testate PUKE Mill ihU-uu. sa4 ucsm—ursef Un *Mr without M4«rUi« it. It cMiaist steal ISO mom, •niltaMmfcas.p'tMa, tewriMtets so* fsUtMi 41m—m fcrtltatiu all urwMi J TKUETABLR e*4 I'LOwVk ftfcgjM, BULKS, eu. Ufki.tete U all. c$i~ itiit u Mukti Uot • H#ti4 »>r U. O. M. FERRY A CO., Datrolt, Michigan. deed, multitudinouidy. And Gen. Wallace says tbe enterprising man from Vienna is making »n independent fortune from good Mahometan patronage. — The ancestral home of tbe Seymour family was Litchfield, Conn., teutons for ita fine scenery, aristocratic society and distinguished sons. Among them were the Wolcott*, the Till true lee*, the Mamins, tbe Sedgwick*, tbe Phrponts and the Kirbys. Tbe story is told of a woman, remarkable for her beauty and elegance in the early day, of the republic, that the French min- iater, wishing to pay her a profound com pliment, remarked to one of tlio Connecti cut Senator, that she would be admired in Paris or London. “Sir,” was tbe Senator’* haughty reply, “sbo is admired on Litch field HUL” - Here's bine Moral for yon. It is claimed that Mr. Parnell, the Irish chieftain, is a lined descendant of Warwick, “the king maker," Th* king-maker of the fifteenth century left a .laughter, who married the Duke of Clarence. Their daughter, the ill- fated Count. *a of Kalisbnry. married Sir Richard Pole, whose sou. Lord Mcntacu, a was beheaded, like his o.nther. lie hated daughter, who married the Karl of Hunt- in -too, the great grandfather of the Earl of Pmerbomughf who wm impeached for trea son nnder William and Mary, and who was the great, gnat, gnat grandfather of Sir MUSTANG] Survival of tlie Fittest.! i FxMiit iir.tiirtxE in it n \x bmuu>| lllLUJM MT.IM; 35 1 Cl list fflICMipiM.1 A BALM Ton EVERY XVOl'.YD OF| MAX AND BEAST t The Oldest ft Best Liniment! EVLH KADB Iff AMERICA. SALES LABOER THAW EVER. - The Mexican Mustang Liniment hasL jm n known for more than thirty-Orel (years as the best of all Liniments, (orl k“nn ar.*l Ueaat. Ita sales toalar are! J larger than ever. It cure* when alll iothera fall, and |>rnetratra skin, tendon! L i. 1 nwuis to Um wary bone. leretywhara. FOR $8.50 we will -end Ths Wzkkly Teuco saps on# 1* and on© of the above described watches to aa? »l i. This propostion is open to onr subscribe as well as those who are not. A.ct Promptly- The above propositions will be kept open** limited time only and parties who wish to Ul' 1 * vantage of either should do so at once. a#-Unle*N otherwise directed we wtl^ * watch©* by mall, packed in a stont pasteboard H and our responsibility for them will end eltfB* 1 are deposited in the poet-office. They can he tered for ten cent* and parties who wish thl» k* should Inclose this amount, or we will »*n«l by express, the chargee to be paid when tb*J * delivered. Address THE TkXEGBAPH- Macon. Make money orders, checks, etc., jayahl* to II. C. HASSON. Mate** Advice to Mothers. Mr*. Winslow's Soothing Syrup should •***£* nod for children teething. It sooth©* tbs ^ softens the gums, allays all pain, cure* u*®' 1 ^ and is the beet remedy for dterrhtre. *i^- * Jj24wly . >«* BEST IB OMAAPERY-' Z&iWEWBBSS. *>nitc4teell SFruona • Wrttote •”4hte»lsT>e4sluMat2ailwt^ ~ —— W ASTE J free. Htaelae© Hilveewabs Oil, Boete*. octt7w*m “feartet Letter” hav, been issued. Th, JohiTPaiBeil. the”grand! Uher nf t'u'kbmt “House of Seven Gobles -lid not reach half — weak aEBaweaBs 0P|U!&®?4-C £ |§ srwick s * {Ether, who Burned tbe daogh- n«*nv>4 t it«. I wtu mb4 re* ereusabletmuiM?e»i,e I MjLijT Ur of "Irotuides," ths kin«-fighter. I