Newspaper Page Text
11
THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH. TUESDAY MARCH 9. 1880.—TWELVE PAGES.
THE TELEG11APH, be nc valid objection, to the fact that these j
ttTBLIS’iKD EVERY DAY IN THE YFAR AND WEEKLY
BY THE
Telegraph and Messenger Publishing Co.,
97 Mulberry Street, Macon, (la.
The Daily U delivered by carriers in the city or
muled postage free to subscribers, for $1 per
month, f2.80 for three month*, (5 for six months,
or $10 a year.
Tuh Weekly la mailed to subscribers, postage
frea, at $1.25 a year and 76 cents for six mouths.
Transient advertisement* will be taken for ♦>>«
Dally at $1 per s.ju&re of 10 linos or less for the
flrat insertion, and 60 cents for each snbse>pient in*
tertian, and for the Weekly at $1 for each insertion.
Notices of deaths, funerals, marriages and births,
Rejected communications will not be returned.
Correspondence containing Important news and
discussions of living topics is solicited, but must be
brief and written upon but one side of the paper to
have attention.
Remittances should be made by express, postal
Dote, money order or registered letter.
Atlanta Bureau 17% Peachtree street.
All communications should he addressed to
THE TELEGRAPH,
Macon, Ga.
Money orders, checks, etc., should be made paya
ble to H. C. JIaxrox, Manager.
gentleman entertain this desire.
Hut if Macon is to put up the bonus to
enable Ihe Agriculurol Society to bold fairs
bore, in order to make money to invest in
fair grounds at Atlanta, the matter should
be fully understood before the hat starts on
its rounds.
The Agriceltural Society lias in its treas
ury, some six or eight thousand dollars.
With its opportunities it should have
double that amount. A well managed fair,
will give a large increase l) this fund.
If Atlanta is to reap the real and lasting
benefit from this it will be wise in Macon,
to look for a more profitable investment of
her money.
ishin nt one half. This vindicates the > Pennsylvania, this afternoon. "After the
The recent labor troubles in Chicago
have induced the Times of that city to utter
this strong and timely language; ‘‘Some,
if not all, of the workingmen’s organiza
tions in this country are setting up preten
sions which amount to a claim of the right
on their part to exercise a more complete
and intolerable despotism than any that ex
ists to-day on the face of the globe. Prob
ably not more than one in a thousand of
the men connected with these organizations
knows this, hut it is so. Many more than
one in a thousand must know that many of
the things they assume to do under the
guidance of their leaders are wrong and in
defensible, but it is proper as well as charit
able to presume that they do not realize the
trnn nature and tendency of these things.
They do not realize that they are practically
setting up a claim to the right to control
the property and the actions of others, and
trample their rights under foot. They do
not see that if they succeed in establishing
their claims they will be masters of society,
and all others will be their slaves. But it
is so. They do not see the depotism to
ward which their conduct tends is one to
which society will not submit. But that
also in so. The right of men to form or
ganizations of a social, benevolent, or oth
erwise beneficial character is freely ad
mitted. But that does not carry with it the
right to rile. A large number of men or-
ganiz-td under the name of a trades union,
or trades assembly, or Knights of Labor do
not by organ zing acquire any rights not
bolonging to them individually. Thoy
have no more right collectively than
thoy have each for himself to con
trol ' the property or conduct o!
otners, or to injure others in person, busi
ness or estate. Iu like manner the right of
a hundred or a thousand men to cense work
in a body is freely admitted, though that
right may fairly be said to be subject to
limitations. For instance, it xuny fairly bo
questioned whether mon employed in oper
ating railroads have n right to bring the
entiro railroad system to n standstill, thus
indicting not only great loss, but great dis
tress, upon multitudes of people. But fully
conceding the right, It docs not carry with
it tho right to prevent others from working
by intimidation and violence. Tho right of
others to work is quite os sacred us their
right not to work, and generally tho oxer-
ciso of the right to work is far more praise
worthy than the exercise of the right not to
work. When a number of mon stop work
iu a body, and prevent others from working
by intimidation and violence, they not only
violate tho just aud righteous laws of tho
land, but they strike down the rights of
others which are quite as sacred as their
own rights and exercise a monstrous tyr
anny.
The Grand Army of the Republic.
This organization, which, since the war,
has been the right wing of tho ltepublican
part}’, has exhibited great activity within
the lust year. Tho yearly distribution of
millions of dollars of pensions among the
men composing this organization, has made
the work of forming new posts and ar
ranging more reunions, an easy and pleas
ant occupation. The ex-Federal soldiers,
scattered throughout the South, have been
invited to the work aud have responded
with promptitude.
There can be no objection to the soldiers
on either side coming together in the inter
vals between business seasons to keep alive
pleasant comradeship and to "fight their
battles o’er,” but the Grand Army of the
Republic is disposed to meddle with mat
ters beyond this. Iu Sew York, it has de
manded that soldiers have tho preference in
civil appointments. Tho Grand Army of
tho Republic, by virtue of a protest,
almost scared the President from his
determination to appoint a collector
in the State of Virginia. Tho Grand Army
of tho Republic proposes to dictate how
army promotions shall be made. In fact,
in tho millions of pension money, the
Grand Army of the Republic may become a
very powerful and mischievous political or
ganization. The Grand Army of the Re
public made very severe threats against
the exhibition of a picture of tho second
battlo of Manassas, in Washington City.
The picture has been put upon exhibition
nevertheless. It is said to have been
painted by tho sarno person who painted
the panorama of tho scigo of Paris, but it
falls far below that picturo in fidelity to
history nnd in correctness of detail.
The Union forces are represented as
charging in companies, one behind the
other, upon Jackson’s position. There are
no . regimental or brigade charges nt this
point of tho field and nothing that could
be fairly called a lino of battle. Tho ex
hibitor elucidated tho situation by prnising
tho valor of thoao soldiers nnd said they
wero repulsed because of the overwhelming
forces opposed to them.
Illcko overwhelming forces in tho picture
consist of • a dozen general officers in nice
uniforms, two or three privates and a very
rcspectublo forest. The invisible invinci-
blcs nro left to tho imagination of tho spec
tator. There are not enough Confederates
at this pnrt of tho line for tho Grand Army
to make a fuss over.
On the other sido of tho panorama thero
is quito an extensive movement of Confed
erate forces, but who they woro charging
and proposing to attack is not disclosed by
tho picturo. According to history they got
there all tho same.
There is quite a coincidence in tho time
between the representation of tho pano
rama at Washington and the organized raid
of peusion agents and lobbyists upon the
Federal treasury.
A smiling face l turn towai\l Fate,
A willing band to toil I lend,
I bar no beggar from my gate,
Mv strength I freely spend.
And yet a little hoard I bide.
And j atiently my time I bide.
Tbe Hun beats d«
Footsore 1 press the journey
An arrow to ita mark hr.
And all my f<
head;
Episcopal Church, and it is hoped will have first cull for 75,000 men the rushing was not
a salut try effect upon the unhappy man 1 violent. Conscription was resorted to. If
who has been sentenced. Any thing short of my memory serves me, the United States
this wonM have failed to meet the demands marshals had 11 do most of the "rushing.”
of justice and the requirements of an intel- Among my acquaintances quite a* many Be-
ligent public opinion. The hot words of publicans hired substitutes or went to
partisans, even the formal resolutions of , Canada as Democrats.’ And the gray war
churchmen, cannot relieve Dr. Armstrong, Governor smiled clear across his face."
bnt%s his punishment must bo shared by Surely there is no danger that a Southern
innocent ones, to a great extent, the sym- I school-book can say anything damaging
pathy of his friends, if it be real, friends about an army, raised by the methods de-1 wa8 a p ear i j» 0 id necklace,
whose intemperate speeh and counsels have j scribed by "The Great War Governor." —Senator Gorman is said to receive more
damaged Ida ease, may find substantial ex- \ T „. „ f „ ln A *1 0 .0001 c “ ,lellt thuu ““J otUer “ ,in in the Senate ’.
pressiou at this period in a monetary
shape.
GOSS’I* ABOUT PEOPLE.
HEMORRHOID]
Blind, ItlC-lllllKiinil Itcliln® „
Itlvely Cured by Ciiti",,?**
down;
The crescent hope my heart held tant
Round* to a golden sphere at last.
—Thomas A. Edison’s present to his bride
A warm bath with Cut leu ra Hotp
Skin Beau tiller, and a single application 0 fr ^
the great Skin Cure, will instantly allav ti-n^
itching of the most aggravated case of j,,.! ‘f
Thin treatment, combined with small il
insolvent, tbe new blood puritier oV' lj
ilay. to regulate and strengthen V ** *
roue constipation and remove ti p
cure Blind. Bleeding nnd Itching Pi', Ji" -!
other remedies and even physicians fall.
As for him, the coming five years will be
worse than lost if they do not fix upon his
memory that "he who would make atone
ment for the past must woo the angel Vir
tue in the future."
The appointment of a negro to a $10,000 ■ . ...... .
... • . . . . n , .. lk —The Prince of Wales has in contempla-
position m the District of Columbia. Demo- ^ ft TUt to CwMdo anil the United States.
crat though he be, is indefensible, l’resi- „ Johu Cuthbertson is compiling a glos-
denl Cleveland seems to go out of his way S(irv to the poetry and prose of Robert
to avoid putting in office white Democrats. Burns.
We look for an Indian next, and then a —Mrs. Hancock’s friends in Washington
Chinese are talking of presenting l)er a house in
that city.
Thu Stale Fair.
As before stated in these columns, the
management of tho fair of the Btato Agri
cultural Society has not been such as to
create tho desire that Macon should he
selected as the permanent location of fnturs
exhibitions. LaHt year the twenty-live hun
dred dollars demanded by the Agricultural
Society iu addition to the use of the grounds
and the city police, were not raised readily.
That the Agricultural Society has appre
ciated the difficulties aud embarrassments
by w hich it is surrounded, was made mani
fest at the late meeting of the executive
committee iu this city. A change of officers
and superintendents of departments was
made, and assurance was held out, that the
mistakes of the past would he corrected.
It was settled, that a fair would he held
here during the coming full. The city had
already tendered our unrivalled fair grounds
and the police. The Agricultural Society,
demanded the usual twenty-five hundred
dollais, and at a meeting of the board of
trade, an implied, if not, an expressed as.
sent was made to this demand.
Before this amount is collected from our
citizens and merchants there should he
some further and distinct understanding.
dust now, after a visit from some mem
bers of the executive committee, Atlants is
making some motions towards holding the
fair of 1887 in that city, and all succeeding
fairs. Tbe proposition is to raise a stock
company for the purpose. Of course it will
1)C expected that the Agricultural
Society will become a large,, t if not
the largest stockholder. If this is a legiti
mate movement, there is uo objection to it.
If Atlanta is prepared to pay many millions
of dollars to purchase “precious dirt" suffi
cient to prepare suitable fair grounds, she
is entitled to the fair in perpetuity. But if
this is a mere play, instigated by the Agri
cultural Society to make our people disgorge
twenty-five hundred dollars, then the whole
matter requires farther and serious consul
eration.
There is a very strong suspicion that
some of the prominent members of the
Agricultural Society desire the permanent
Slandering Ueorgla.
Sam Jones says that it is aa.much as a
man’s life is worth in Georgia to talk pro
hibition. This from an evangelist! Evi
dently Cincinnati has converted Mr. Jones.
The facts as to this alleged violonce in
Georgia nro these: tho prohibitionists have
carried something like a hundrod counties,
and tho first bloodshed occurred tho
other day in n community thut was peacea
bly inclined before Jones visited it. The
damage done to Jones’ house by the alleged
explosion was less than $7, and it is al
together a matter of gnoss work that an
attempt was made to injuro anybody.
On the other hand there is the Salvation
Army up North, with a history marked by
freepient outrage; an army that has hard
word to dotlgo missies from the mobs, nnd
avoid the poor house without encountering
tbe jail.
But then Sam is just now talking to
Republican Ulinois and there’s money in
it.
The Successor of Fred Douglass.
Tho reception of the appointment of the
New York negro Matthew to succeed Fred
Douglass lias not been such ns to gratify
the President and Secretary Manning. We
iuclude Mr. Manning, for it is declared that
he is really responsible for this nppoint-
ment. It is stated that he used Matthew
iu Now York politics, nnd the fact that he
had him at the Chicago convention lends
strength to the statement.
Tho Washington Star, which is n Very
staunch supporter of Mr. Cleveland, says:
The announcement of the appointment of
James C. Matthew, a colored citizen of Al
bany, New York, to bo recorder of deeds in
placo of Frederick Douglass was received
with surprise, and, to put it mildly, with
dissatisfaction. While tho appointment is
generally distasteful, tho most decided ob
jections to it come from the property holders
and others having business to transact at
the recorder’s office. It had been hoped,
when a change was made, that the
office would be given to some
citizen of energy and business capacity
who would as a matter of personal
pride, undertake to reform the defective
system of record in voguo thero, and bring
it up to tho standard of modem usage. It
is not alleged that the employes of the office
have not given faithful attention to their
duties, but tho systeu. under which they
work is hopelessly deficient and behind the
times, belonging to tho date of 17911 instead
of 1880. As tbe bnsiuess nnd emoluments
of the office are altogether local it was not
unreasonable to expect that it should he
filled by some citizen satisfactory to tho
people of Washington.”
A very prominent Democrat of the dis.
triot, who was even more prominent at tho
inauguration of Mr, Cleveland, says
“ ‘On tho 4th of March a year ago I was
one of the marshals of the procession that
inaugurated a Democratic President. For
twenty years I bad been spending my
money nnd time to bring about this result.
I theu rode a prancing stallion, nnd felt os
proud ns tho horse. I believed I was a ver
itable Marshal Ney ns I pranced along Penn
sylvania avenue. To-day I feel as though I
was riding n jackass, and I am studying to
see which is the biggost jackass—tho brute
or the ridor.’
“This exactly expresses tho feeling of the
local Democracy."
These extracts very clearly and strongly
set forth the true feeling in Washington,
and it may bo said that tho country at
large responds to it, and sympathizes with
it. No doubt tho administration thinks
this is a masterly stroke of policy, and
that at the proper timo the negroes will be
arrayed alongside of the Mugwumps.
The negro ia a Republican by birth and
education. He has been very ahabhily
treated by the Republican party, and has
grown tired of broken promises, but still
he is a Republican.
Here and there may exist an exception,
but whenever a nogro announces himself as
Democrat it is for revenue only.
Thero would he no special objection if
Mr. Cleveland could find a “public trust"
for Matthew in New York. The South just
now nnd with the present surronndiugs
must look upon any special codling of tbe
negro by Mr. Cleveland with suspicion, we
may add with apprehension.
" F «* NK Hatton ventures the prediction _ Xelson D ewey> Wisconsin’s first Gover-
that it will not he very long before Roscoe D 0rt a t tlie age of seventy-two, is plaintiff
Conkling is again at tho head of the Reput- | in a divorce suit.
lican party, not only in New’ York, but in
the nation." This should stop the proceed
— Mme. Greville says: "An editorial is
more effective than half a dozen novels, let
. ... . _ .. them be as pure and moral as may be."
ings o! sundry editors who nro attempting | —Empress Elizabeth, of Austria, is still
in poor health, aud has been compelled
to make M’ Lnd a great Democratic leader.
Gov. Lee, of Virginia, in answer to the to abandon her much loved equestrian and
, , ... . z, , i *• sword exercises,
demands upon him to veto the local option
, .... . . . T • i —Mr. Hamilton DUston, or Philadelphia,
bill recently passed by the \ irgiurn Legis- j s ga j t j u ie moB t heavily insured mau
laturc, replies: "The bill (local option) iu America, haviug policies aggregating
passed six days ago. Being agreed to I $475,000 on his life,
by a decisive majority of tho party, and be- —John Drew, tho father of the young
1 clergyman to whom Miss Alary Gladstone
was married, is one of the most active Con
servatives in Devonshire.
ing in the party platform, it would hav
been unwise to veto it, and it has been
signed. Personally I agree with Horatio I _ x> a uiine Lucca writes to friends in Lon
Seymour, when he said, ns Governor of don that her heulth is completely restored,
New York: ‘All experience shows that and that she will resume the duties of her
temperance, like other virtues, ia not pro-1 P r ° fe “ io “ iu Berlin in ApriL
Itching Piles.
taken for the first time in my life-
Piles, bo severe that Iconic! hardly keep », n —<
J1 1 rayf*
various remedies for three weeks
! Itching
By advice of a
worse. . „_ iu
Cuticura. ’ One application relieved tlie i* t H
an»oon cured. I wish to tell tl...
es of ItcUlDK Piles the price of the c u j •
account. Frotuau unsolicited tpmrter. *1
Kim!
Concord, N. H.
Itching Piles.
I began the use of your Cuticura Beniej^ (
you first put them on the market,
wes of itching Piles tint have been
»o at my suggestion, of these retnedit
Virdnn, 111. F. S. Mai
All thut You Clniui
I have tried your Cuticura Remedies
theiu all that y u claim, and the dtmand
in this section is great.
Iliggston. Oa. AUGUSTUS \V. (
Splendid Satisfaction.
Cuticura Remedies have given splendid «,
tion to those of my customers who have Ltd?
sion to use them. 11ENRY GERMANS bn, 1
Quincy, ill.
Cuticura Remedies are a positive cure f, r
form of Skin aud Blood Diseases, from h tt
Scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price: cu
cents; Soap. 25 cents: Resolvent, fl.oo.
by tho Potter Drug and Chemical Co., Uo»ii, n «
Send for "How to Cure Skin Diseases.”
CU" TV Blemishes. Pimples, Blackheads and I
Plbiil Humors, use Cuticura Soap.
daced by law-makers, but by the intluence
of education, morality and religion.’"
—Chief Justice Chase’s mausion, at the
corner of Sixth and E streets, Washington
is now’ a boarding house, and tho title of
Governor Sprague to it is in litigation.
Jackson J. Hill, of St. Paul, Minn., is
said to own the finest collection of dia
monds in the United States. His friends
TIHKI) MUSCLES strenfl]
’ Pain Annihilated, Inflammation i U _
i and Malarial aud Epidemic DincM,1
vented by that infallible antidote tel
and inflammation, the Cuticura Attl
Plaster. 26c.
Maklug Amentia.
About two weeks ago the Cincinnati En
quirer published a letter in which a certain
Congressman and his landlady, in Wash
ington City, wero written up in a manner
calculated to irretrievably ruin the reputa
tions of both.
The letter was spicy. It was something
worse, for it was filled with falsehoods,
slanders and vile insinuations from begin
ning to end. Fortunately the lady had
friends. They rallied in her defense, and
on Thursday lost the Enquirer made au
editorial apology. It stated that its corres
pondent "was imposed upon by a woman
keeping a rival hoarding house," and that
after due investigation it was clearly appa
rent that tho lady was "above reproach.
The Enquirer deserves credit for its en
deavor to repair the injury done to a help
less woman. But when the extent of the
mischief is considered, the reparation seems
hopelessly inadequate.—Atlanta Uonstitu
tion.
Neither the Constitution or the Enquirer
has mode reparation to the ladies and gen
tlemen of this community cruelly aspersed,
more than a year since.
Shreds nnd Patches#
The two ears of civilization—pion-eer;
front-ier.—Merchant Traveller.
A backward spring brings nt least one I speak of him as the "Jack of Diamonds,
comfort. It keeps organ grinders housed —Besides Miss Van Vechten, Miss Clove-
up a little longer than usual.—Philadelphia land has visiting, at tho White House, Mrs.
Herald Kinney, of Hartford. Nearly every day
. * . 4t . ... . . .. they may he seen driving ou Pennsylvania
An invention that this country badly ave nne, in the President’s carriage,
needs is something that will hatch Easter —jj. r fhaddeus Jones, a young Irish ar-
bonnets from liens’ eggs.—Philadelphia I tist, well known in the American colony in
Herald Paris, has just completed n portrait of the
Tho Washington Critic refers to ono style P«Pe- H« « the first artist who has been
, b , ... permitted to paint his Holiness from life,
of evening dress as tho "Lo! and behold! .. n . . .
„„ h A ...... .. . —Mr.llay Goulds daughter is given an ah
There are some strange sights at the capital. I Jowance of $5,000 a year for her wardrobe,
—New Orleans Picayune. but last year she did not spend over two-
Sophrouia asks : "Did people in olden thirds of that amount. She is very fond of
i. v. a pretty dresses, made in a simple, girlish
times know au>thing of sleighing . Yes, an dhas fewer silk or satin gowns
the ancient warriors used to go out slaying than one would suppose,
in their chariots.--Boston Courier. —When Senator Fair visited Virginia
Senator Evarts is going to write some City, says the Virginia City Chronicle, a
poetry. This may bo all right, but we well f known rounder called upon him nnd
, . ... . , ; modestly requested the loau of $4,000 "to
ilonbt !f Colonel Evarts has any grievance opBrBte ' rlth > H e dUoloaixl to tbe alien-
which justifies tho use of any such means tive Senator a system ho had "dropped on”
of redress.—Philadelphia Press. to break ail the faro games on the American
General Sharman ia out with another big continent. Tbe Senator regretted not
, A . . . . . .. „ . having that amount of silver in his vest
and tiresome batch of “war correspond- pock( £ but bim(le(l tUe applicant a *20
cuco. A retiring bill that did not retire the piece, remarking thut if ho conld break all
general’s pen together with his sword was the games on the continent with $4,000,
not Mich a measure oh tho public bad a wular f cnon K U •*““*»
.... 1 lie-in with. All of tbe faro games are still
right to expect.—Chicago Times. I r „uning.
Our attention has boon called to another _ A Rociety wom(m recently returned
dreadful crime in Vermont. A man walked from abroad says of Princess Beatrice,
deliberately into the railroad library room I whom she saw in London: "She is a
in St Albans the other day and took the “Lir^ St anda
life of Macaulay. Tho wretch hiiB so far beautiful figure. Herpicturesnreveryun-
escaped, hut it is suspected that he has gone like her and do her great injustice. Her
to Reading.—St. Albans Messenger. bico in repose is rather sad, but when she
Bobby—“Papa, I asked mamma why you
wero so bald, and all I could get out of her ft very winsome smile. She has less of the
was mat she was your fourth wife." Papa— heavy German make-up about her than
“Did she say that, Bobby?” Bobby-“Yes, “»• »* ot! > er members of her family,
... u and her manner is far more pleasing than
indeed papa. Say, papa, what difference ^ of Ae uu#d udie ,‘’ I
does a Wth wife make in a bald head?" _ Krank Burr writes as follows of Bartley
Papa—"No difference, Bobby."—Tid-Bits. Campbell: For several months past there
Tramp—"Are you a Grand Army man?" have been strange rumors floating ubant ns
Gentleman—“Yes." Tmmp-"Could , 0 « {«»>li mental condition Imt most people
. , ... . . . r . . , .. have only thought that ho was embarrassed
help a poor fellow who lost a leg during the ou nccou „t „f b i„ ventures as a metropoli-
war?” Gentleman (giving him ten cents)— tan manager. It is generally conceded,
What regiment did you belong to?" | however, that Mr. Campbell is fairly well to
TANNER & EELAM
Engine Company,|
MANUFACTURERS OF
Strictly Relialil
MACIIIIIERY.
The Story off a War Governor.
Such was the energy and activity dis
played at the commencement of tbe late
war, by Governor Cnrtin of Pennsylvania,
now a member of Congress, that he has
since borne the soubriquet of “The Great
War Governor." The man who had won
snch a title by services so unquestionable,
moat be accepted as authority ou the war,
by his own people.
Daring the recent debate on the Blair
bill in the Senate, Senator Plumb took oc
casion to denounce books used in Southern
schools as containing infamous slanders
upon the Northern army.
The North has really furnished the books
from which Southern school children have,
in a great measure, received their rudi
mentnry education. How much damage
has resulted from this fact, it is impossible
to overeatimate. But ahame upon Southern
Senators. There was not one to rise to re
buke the man from “bloody Kansas. ’
A little more than a year since and the
editor of the “Southern Historical Paper"
exposed in several searching and caustic
articles a school history in use in Sonthera
schools, filled with slander and misrepre
sentations of Southern history and South
ern men.
The senior Senator of Georgia sat dumb
under the assault of Senator Plumb,
though the president of a school system.
The junior Senator was perhaps absent,
engaged in laying the pipes for a presidential
Engines and Boilcis, i
proved Saw Mills, Grist )ii|
Pole Road, Narrow Guinea
Tramway Locomotives, Shi
ing, Hangers and Pulleys,]
Machinery.
For special catalogue j
prices, address
ThE TANNER i- DELA
ENGINE COMPANY,
MACON, l
Office and Warehouses Comer!
and Poplar Streets.
8. 8. PEGItAM, Mnng
Janim
SMITHS
Tramp—“Not any. sir. I wns run down do - a ?‘* not j? “Y immediate danger of the
, * , . ...... poor honsc; therefore, there ia a growing
by a beer wagon a day or two after the bat- suspicion that overwork has, for the roo
tle of Fair Oaks. Those were gloomy dayr, ment, left him with mental depression,
sir N Y San 'Ibis suggestion is half verified to-day by
Ethclberta--I want a pair of slippers for I ^ , • i,,
,, , . , , ... i property. Ernest lfarvicr was this after
pa. Number tens, please, and—squeaky, noon placed in charge of all Mr. Campbell's
Genial shoemaker—"Squeaky, miss? I'm estate, and is expected to look nfter it until
afraid we haven’t uny of that kind.” Ethel-1 the judicial power Is again invoked to put
bertu—“I am so sorry. Couldn’t you make mXT.
him a squeak) pait. There is a certain nian who has struggled from nothing to n
young gentleman who visits me frequently, good position to find, when lie reaches the
und-andit would be very convenient for notch nt which ho should he comfortable,
i-* c —a.--
Philadelphia Call.
We have called Rev. Dr. Blank to onr Years Teach More Than Hooks,
church next,ear” “You don’t mean Ut
I never heard of him. ^ hat chnrch has he I Pierce's "Guillen Medical Discovery” lias been the
I..1, I prince of liver correctives and blood purifiers, being
ever had. Is he a famous preacher. I t j, e household physician of the poor mas. and tho
/-VURE Biliousness; Sick Headache lnF‘-i
\6) On e do se rt l lc v es_N e u r alg I a. ^ T
prevent Chills > Fever, Sour SbrK*|
Jrealh. Cloar Ihe Skin, Tone tho jf
.lie Vigor to (he aystem. Doset ONt-P
Try them once and you will never be
Price, 26 cents per bottle. Sold by Dr.?
Medicine Dealers generally. Sent on r
FARM
"Famous preacher? Should say he was I *hle <* ( >u*ultin# physician to tha rich patient, aud
... , . *. . , , . . ’ praised by all for ita ma«nlflcent sendee and efflea*
He has been indicted by a grand jnry twice, I c *y in all diseases of a chronic nature, as malarial
and waa three times suspended from the SAME'S 1
ministry m four years. I expect we shall I use of an alterative remedy u indicated,
have to buildsn addition to our chnrch in 0 „ th „ 4t h of July loot W. E. Hcrmance
six months. —Pack. | started from Livingston, Montana, in n
canoe, to paddle to New Orleans. His
brother, 11. P. Hcrmance, joined him at
Hhe Never Cornea In L»te Now.
Chicago News.
Manager McConnell, of the Columbia I . K j' D “’' ^ an '' °“ birthday
Theatre, says there is one lady in this city !*° xm’'
who, when she visits tho theatre, always J
cornea before the audience is seated. She ? wslun, \?* iC NIiKsonrr “-rDl the Mississippi
used to have a had habit of waiting until " v . ere - » d ‘“‘ Hnce of 4 ‘ 0,w mllls . >“ » <»““«
t .i. ui.i... .■ I fifteen feet long.
everybody else wua settled for the evening,
and then coming in and raising a commo
tion in getting to her seat. One evening
Cheap and Inferior Pornas Planter*
she c&nie in as usual, and after standing in I wU1 inevitably disappoint you, and aie not worth
the aisle Jong enough to show m elegant |
The Armstrong Tom.
AU people, outside of Atlanta, who have
taken paina to inform then.selves as to the
Armstrong ease, wUl acquiesce fully in the
finding of the court.
Bishop Beckwith has exercised a brood
location of tbe fair in Atlanta. There can i leniency in catting down the term of pun-
Anumg tho
... JT~ n-—- | numeruun porous plsiitrrs olTerfd for rale Rcuson's
new cloak, disturbed a whole row of people, I r»|K in«* Pi*»tcrM alone merit implicit confidence
who had to move to let her pass to her seat. I They have won their great popularity with tbe i»eo-
Iwhen she was comfortably seated, and >’1*. «nJ clued the voluntary lndonemmt of tli.
ever,hotly was quiet, a little woman In Ut. | ZSTlSfciZJS.
your ipurd a«ain*»t worthier* imitations undi
R adius name*, nuk as "Cap«kin,“ •Tan#
lout that portion of the house: "Poor thins! r-Uapuiin." ••Capsidne," etc., as certain huckster
I s’nose tb. v made her kIav ami An in * druiwisU nut* try to palm them oft on you in
i s pose mo m»ue ner may ana ao up the pii* vt the g *n«lne. it U better to deal with none
supper uishes. I bm reputable at d honorable dnitttata. Ask for
T . Benson’s and see that it beam Die "Three He*la"
P * no a nrowv, trade mark and baa the word Cspctne cut in tbe
Brown’s Bronchial Trochee’’ acts directly on centre.
tlie organs of the voice. They have an extraordi
nary effect in alldi-order» of the throat.
prohibition ..ampaign, or rehearsing U. | aMSS' 1
atertoroua eloquence and turgid rhetoric be- Johnannea for histrionic honors and Lad
Tiie Roeudalis Remedy
Is the Great Southern Remedy for tbe cure of
^ has” set tied down"' in”"l)et roit aa "a I * n,a ' an ‘
practising physician. He waa married the re* 0 * 1, 0o,lr '- Con.um,Uon. Bnmchlti.. Nervous
other day in Cincinnati to Miss Edna I'ow- u * 1 “ u, b Mrtarta. aud all lists, arums from an
fore some Dorcas society in New England.
But about the same time Governor Curtin,
in the cloak-room of the Itonse, waa quietly e n Q ( Bon, ini' Thedoctor ia fiftv-1 l “P nr * condition of Uu blood. CwtttratM can u
answering the onslaught of Senator Flnmb: i six, and well preserved. 1 pmented from
many ladle, pbjiirtaao, miela-
' Much of this oratory about the mem-
. ..... ... _ ... i Brown', bronchial Troche.,
ben of the Republican part, rushing to the j for mU([h , „ d C „,, U; -i io Boi m bo , „ „ ^i.
Wu<* Will iniMt «•!.« , ft nt
edvcrtUlnf. a scheme Is ladle** ^
Icr. and head, of .families throoaboet lb. Koolh.
ou. bundrad and fifty tir.. -
roti‘>r»tnE IR>MA!)AI.I.S in hi^hmt terms.
srv constantly in receipt of certtflmtee of cures |
front and saving the country u qnito hu-: }• | !S, B to U ^^2d «'m^d?7i
morons,' reiunrkcd cx-Governor Curtin, of I I Ih ..-um .»f the th..«e di^*. _
J. F. SMITH Si CO.,
Manufacturer! and Soli Prop;.. ST. W
feb25-3Uwswly
MON E
LOANED ON
Apply to
ELLIOTT ESTE
144 Second street, tIAC0\
feldHJaff
1IFTP wanted. »xoawhJ
IlElJl jirtt-.'- paid. Valuable ■' - f
llculatv free. 1. P. HILL k L'd.,
lan 1'J.w.tTt
mm! 1
NERVOUSI
DEBILITATED
Too are allowed a fret
one of Dr. Dye’s Celebrated ' ,.*1*1
Fleetrtc huspensory Appllen
relief and permanentcure «»f
of Vitality sn.t JfaeAo.-f.snd
Also for many other lilEews^*.
tion to Health. Vigor and Mss^bM
No risk 'e lncurre.1. Ulu^trut* «>
mvtkipt malli-l free, br aj^n--^'J
V01TA10 BEIT CO., X*
in thn-est-swim
i^VERTISIMg'^
[e^papeR:
mumamsof the
The adv.rtUer who want, to J
m It the Information he rv|“ r
who will luveet one bundled*
snsai
alr toOEO. P. ROWELL k ,J
VERTUIN3 BEREAII. W kt™*jA
Bona, Sq ), Jiv Tort.
Jk_-
■-i fold.' *
V rr ~’ I