The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, March 16, 1886, Image 4

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r THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY, MARCH 1G, 1886.-TWELVE PAGES. Till.S TELEGRAPH, #UUL’fcHED LtEBr DAY IN THE TKAB AXD WEEKLY BT Tni Telegraph and Messenger Publishing Co., - ,7 Mulberry Street, Macon, (la. The Dally la delivered by carrier! In the city or, mailed pottage free to eutweribera, for |1 per month, $1.60 for three montha, $5 tor alx month., or $10 a year. Tua Wkezlt la mailed to aubacribera, postage tree, at $1.26 ayear and 76 centa for .lx montha. Tranalent advcrtleementa will be taken for the Dally at $1 per square of 10 linea or leea for the firat luaertion, and 60 centa for each anbeoquent in- .ertlon, and for the Weekly at $1 for each ineertlon. Notice, of deatlxa, f uuerala, marriage, and birth., Selected communication! will not be returned. Correspondence containing Important newa and ftlacuaaiona of llrlng toptca la eollcited, but muat be brief and written upon but one aide of the paper to havo attention. Remittance, .hould be made by expreae, poata) Bote, money order or,regletercd letter. Atlanta Bureau 17!, Peachtree street All cominunlcatloua ahould bo addreaeed to Tan TKUiORAPH, Macon, 0a. Money order., checks, etc., ahould be mado paya ble to B. C. UaseoK, Manager. General W. T. Sherman Buys in a recent letter that he pays $200 school tax in St. Louis. The New York Sun investigates and finds that he pays $125. Bnt belter men than Sherman lie about thoir taxes. The prompt and triumphant becking of Mr. Cleveland's negro policy by Senator Brown's organ is significant. YA lien it comes to a coalition of negroes and mug wumps to put the white folks down, the administration will find your uncle Joey on invaluable man, on account of his enlarged experience. Buell's dissection of Grant and Sher man's military glory at Shiloh in . the last Century is scientific and complete. Ho proves from Sherman’s own map and figures that the division commanded by him was utterly routed, and that Grant's famous charge consisted in his following two regi ments that doublcquicked to a position barely within gunshot of the Confederates, The Northern press takes frequent occa sions to lecture the South for the lynching of negroes who assault white women. But a little while since a negro brute murdered a Pennsylvania farmer. His trial is now pending. Ti e Philadelphia lleeord says: "If the negro Johnson does not hang for the muider of Mr. Sharpless it will he because of tho almost universal difficulty encountered by white men in dis- tingnisliing negroes, casually observed, one from another. In such cases identity is hard to establish." It is mailer of indiffer- once to Johnson ns to tho verdict of the jury. Mb. IUndall writes to tho Chronicle, from Washington, of the appointment of the negro Matthew: "The people of ' n the District, wliito and black preferred resident of Washington. Some of them de sired a white man. Others wero indifferent as to complexion, Tlicro was and is, how ever, a practically unanimont hostility: to a carpet-bagger. Of course, the race question enters into the controversy. It will not down, especially when mixed schools aro agitated here, and when the President, a Puritan free-soiler, hob-nobs socially with Fred Douglas, and appoints as his successor in office n so-called colored Democrat who incarnates what it consul- • ered an odious and dangerous principle. Certainly Mr. Cleveland did not expect to please anybody at the Boutb by this selec tion. The white Democrats will not sanc tion or applaud it. Colored men there hare no special interest to aukserre. Men who are in office under tho administration lay, with bated breath, that these things are hard to bear, hut we must endure them sileutly and uphold the President. Bnt people do not keep dumb upon such circumstances, and, if thoy did, the Meed wonld speak for itself, as the poor Irish man’s rags were eloquent for him. I asked a staunch Democratic friend his opinion, and he condensed it thus: ‘This country is composed politically of two great parties. One is tkeparty of Plunderers and the other is the party of BlnndcrerB. If the Plunder era return to power it will lsrgely be be cause the. Blunderers helped them to accom plish their purpose.’" The Charleston News and Cornier says "The suggestion nude by the Macon Tele orai-m that the people of the South should contribute to the fund for the relief of Mrs. Hancock, tho widow of the late Gen. Han. cock, will meet with hearty approval throughout the Southern States, we have reason to hope and believe. It is true that there are many families in the South now living in RTeat destitution, in consequence of the loss of members who sacrificed their tiv.w upon the altar of their country; it also true that there aro thousands of graves of Confederate heroes that are still un marked by any memorial atone. But the people of the South aro generous people, and they will chcrfally pay this tribute the memory of the great-hearted soldier who fought against them so bravely and honorably, but who, when the war was over and the South was under the yoke of political and militaiy despotism, stood forth firmly in its defence, asserting the constitutional rights of its people, to his own hnrt and in defiance of the bitterest prejudices and passions of the people of his own section. It would be a generous and kindly deed for the people of the Booth to testify their appreciation of the manly eourag;, the high character and true pa' otism of Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock, 1 helping to protect the gentle and lovable woman who so worthily bears bis honored name. Such an appeal has not been made before in any case, and cannot be made again. There was bnt one Hancock in the Federal army; and if his claims to their gratitude should be, indeed, ignored by the people of tue North, liia title to the honor and admiration of the people of the South should win for liia widow a welcome and tioipf timing them.” Thu Striked. To every man who has a stake in tho community, or a thought for the general welfare, tho labor strikes throughout the country which appear to have taken on an epidemic form, must give some concern. Some of these outbreaks lack even the pretense of justification, and must be at tributed to tho contagiousness of all ex citements. That in some sections thoy are compli cated with political movements only inten sifies the danger and trouble to be expected. Heretofore the Sonth has teen compara tively free from these troubles, more par ticularly as connected with the negroes who compose the larger portion of her la boring population. llut the negro is nothing if not imitative, and we have had fearful examples of tho ease with which ho can ho arrayed by de signing men against his own interest* and his best friends. Let tho negroes strike duriug the season for gathering the cotton crop, tho price of which has already dropped below the cost of production, and the Southern planter would be ruined. His fato would involve all those whose busi ness and trades depend upon his product ive capacity. The stoppage of railroads and steamship lines, the great arteries of commerce, must sovercly affect business all over the world. Idle laborers, whose families must be fed and clothed, hut add burdens to every community. Congress, now in session, should proceed at once to ascertain the causes of these troubles, and if possible, apply just and efficacious remedies. During the last summer and fall a Con gressional committee traveled over the country armed and equipped with power to inquire into the condition of labor and wages. That committee has submitted a voluminous report. What its real value may bo has not yet been determined, and tho criticisms upon it aro not reassuring. Hut a prompt and persistent effort should be made to adjust tho differences between lubor and capital, and to givo equal protec tion to him who works for his daily bread, and the man who gives employment and dovelopos the resources of the country with his brain and capital. Two years ago and the tinkers with the tariff unsettled business by the introduc tion and support of a horizontal tariff bill. The same men have learned nothing from experience, but, under the tlimsy guise of “revenue reform,” have again alarmed in dustry nnd unsettled business. The corri dors of the capitol are now crowded with men from all sections protesting against the ruinous cuts contemplated in Mr. Mor rison’s tariff bill. Labor is discontented, capital is alarmed, but a squad of politicians, blind and deaf to all but their own purposes, propose to diminish the public revenues, when it is more than doubtful if the treusury can re- ■pond to all the demands being mode upon The country demands moro business and less politics to insure it quiet and suc cess. where. But if they come to preach mis cegenation, thereby endangering tbe homes of our people and the safety of our women, they may expect to ornament convenient telegraph poles or lamp-posts, as the case may be. The white race here will defend itself, even at the expense of losing the “wealth and enterprise and immigration of tho North.” The Telborapb is not in the habit of misrepresenting its constituents nor of mincing its words, nnd the Times may rely upon it that in this matter it is backed by every respectable white man in Georgia. There are a few, and some of them are high in office, for whom we do not speak. These are the men who seem willing, in return for benefits enjoyed through social and political affiliations with the black race, to engraft up*n posterity tho blood of Africa. liean, if it is only to quarrel with a Demo cratic President.—Philadelphia Times. A young lady in Grant'file is curiously and amusingly gifted. Her toes are so supple that she can snap the great and George William Curtis, chief tho kitchen cabinet, says: “Tho three mistakes to be designated in the first year of Mr. Cleveland's administration are the changes in the civil service without legitimate cause, although the number is much smaller than under any other administration; the con tinuance of the Attorney-General in the cabinet, and the refusal to make public the reasons for removal.” Mr. Edmunds will say nothing worse than this when he un loads his battery. died of “the gold fever.” It was overwork for money, in other words. —Mrs. Hendricks, widow of the lat< Vice- President, has been chosed a director in a Montana mining company. —The richest two women in America are third too of either foot with as sharp and Mrs. A. T. Stewart and Mrs. Mark Hopkins. clear a report us the average man makes I Each is worth about $30,000,000. when he snaps his thumb and finger. She —King Humbert cf Italy, in an economic diffident about exhibiting her peculiar “ood-has giren A . * . . r . . , enjoining it from drinking the high-pncea accomplishment, but her intimate friends w j neH assert that she is quite an adept, and can _Mrs. Jenny Lind Goldschmidt con- keep good timo to a lively jig.—Hawthorne fesses that she has kept her vocal organs in (Nev.) Bulletin. tune for twenty-five years by yelling at her Amid a general complaint of the corrup-1 children. -> r^i 8s»%2fi®!2£ society in Washington was collectively the aU9piceR 0 f the Woman’s Christian Tem- shocked over the public rending by Mrs. J. perance Union. Brown Potter of “’Ostler Joe,” individual fragments of society paying modesty the —Joseph Frick fell dead at bis home in Evansville, Ind., his death having been has- .»*« a. bat p, ““ heard of such a heroic protest against the degeneracy of the age since the lady inBos- —When Mine. Greville was in Boston nearly every woman whom sho met palled A Drummer In Uc6r$la." The New York Times uses a column of voidable space to publish a lecture far tho benefit of the Georgia people. The text chosen is found in the adventures of a drummer who went to Gainesville, took part in a prohibition campaign, advocated tho employment of a negro Biahop *ho had been brought there to teach the people morality, and finally preached miscegenation. According to the Times this tramp said in expressing hia admiration for the Bishop, that ‘‘ho would rathor have his daughter marry snch a negro than an ignorant white man." After standing tbia sort of thing for some time tho people of Gainesville prepared to mob the drummer, and he only escaped by swallowing hia worda and vacating tho town. Tho Times concludes its lengthy articles aa follows ‘The people of Gainesville In particular, in common with the people of Georgia in general, are no donbt given to wondering why the natural advantages of the South era States do not attract wealth and enter prise and immigration from the North. If they will reflect upon it they will aee that their practice of bullying and mobbing, and in extreme cases of murdering, strangers whose opinions Upon any subject differ from their own, and who do not care to conceal their opinions, may have the cf- feat of deterring intending settlers. The local chronicler of this affecting tale of the drummer gleefully remarks of his hero that he will probably steer clear of Gainesville for the futnre.’ Men who like to live where they can say what they think with out fear of beiug mobbed will bo apt to steer clear of Gainesville; and the South, for all the advances it has made, yet con tains a large number of small communities animated by the spirit of Gainesville, Go.” There is for less bullying, mobbing and murdering in Georgia than in New York. YVe cannot understand why the Times shonid pay so much attention to this sec tion at a time when it took seven hundred and fifty policemen to rnn a street car over tho ronte guaranteed it by law in New York. It does seem as though the metrop. ohs was just then furnishing a very fair ex- rnple of bullying and mobbing. We worn tbe Times that the circumstances will not warrant any Georgian in going to New York to engago in the atreet car business if this thing continues. The Sooth, especially Georgia, is a little nauseated with this alleged -‘wealth and enterprise and immigration from the North.’’ The Sonth has been bnilt up as far oa it is built mainly through the pluck and entr r- priseef her own people. If the "wealth and enterprise and immigration from the North" want employment in Georgia and the men who represent it come pre pared to observe the laws of the State and of aociety, yes and the laws of God aa to race, ibay will be wel comed and guaranteed in la many rights and privileges as they could have else- Tue Washington cor espondent of tho New York World writes that- in that city “society has had recently a notable addi tiou in the shape of an Indian princess of the Zulu tribe. This is Princess Wawa. She is the guest of tho wife of Colonel Ste venson, of the Geological Survey. Princess Wawa goes about everywhere at all the re ceptions and teas of Washington wearing her native dress. The princess has a very large, round, heavy face. Her black, thick, long hair is parted upon tho side and combed with a statesmanlike carelessness across her brood, brown brow. The prin cess's dress is made of gay red blanket stuff trimmtd with beads. From under neath her short skirts are seen stout aukles and small feet, covered with buckskin leg gings and moccasins. Tho general style of tho' princess is massive. Her broad face, her stern features nnd the peculiar parting of her hair givo her a masculine look among the pale-faced society ladies. One prominent society lady the other day, who saw tho Princess for the first time, was charmed because the Prin cess gave her a sweet smile nnd a low bow without the formality of nn intijfuctiou. Sho said to u friend: -I ulways knew that these Indian chieftains wero remarkable for their taste.' She was quite disgusted when she found that the ‘chieftain’ wawf member of the other sex. The princess held a regular levee at the house of the handsome Mrs. David Porter Heap tho other day. Mrs. Heap, who is one of the most attractive ladies in Washington, suddenly found her self deserted on account of the rival charms of tho Indian Princess. The ladies crowded about tbe Princess Wawa, and amused themselves endlessly in attempting converse with her by signs and broken English. The princess can speak but very little English. The princess is an eccentric child of na ture. Although sho is moving at present iu tho hightst circles of Washington and is the pet guest of Mrs. Stevenson, she has lapses from the conventionalities of life and goes back to the freer action of on the plains. During tho Into heavy snowfall the princess heard the Htevensons talking about the heavy load ot snow on the roof of their house. It was just beginning to thaw, and they were fearful that the water would get through the roof. Boiuo way or other through their signa she seemed to understand. A few moments afterward she disappeared and could not bo found. A little later a heavy rash on the roof end then a fall of snow in front of the house in dicated where the princesa was. She was found on tho ridge pole hard at work clearing off the roof. Tho work was full of peril, but tbe princess would not como down until she had completed it." ton put pantalettes on the legs of her piano, from her pocket or hand-bag a poem or an -Post-Dispatch. essay composed in her honor. The capital I is rather more conspicuous, —Dr. Hamilton Griffin, Mary Anderson s .. . . . . ww I vigilant stepfather, says that at (he close of if anything, in this message than in Mr. ^ p re <j en t season the Kentucky actress Cleveland's previous contributions to cur- w gj ret ; re f or tw0 j e ars to gain much rent political literature, and this is saying needed rest. a good deal. "I suppose," “I consider," —“Mr. Hawcis," says the St. James Ga- “X regard," "lam unable,” "I am con- j zette, “who is partial to collecting exhibi strained," “My executive nets, interposed my advice and direction, am wholly responsible,” “Am I to submit to this?" “The exercise of my exclusive dis. MOST PERFECT MADE Prepared with *peclal regard to health. No Ammonia, Llmo or Alum. PRICE mm POWER CO., CHICAGO, ST, Lc'tiJ, out vx/oa- i — I , .. , ” . „ | tiona in hit* vestry for after-service lnsnec- „ tion, advertised landscapes by A. Macallum etion, “I j as an attraction for last Sunday evening. —Mrs. W. H. Vanderbilt has counted down thirty-five clinking gold eagles, and ~ ' Lodging Ho cretion," "My duty to the people, ’ -The seven boys at the Boys Lodging House in . ir ,,. r . ‘ „„„ New York ore running about on artificial pledges I have made, The way 1 am con- leg3 g0 kimUy 1)ought tliem b MrB v vinced leads me to better government -it _ HRmi lton Fish thinks that $1,000,000 is is almost Andrew Jackson and My Policy too lnrf;e a sum to try to raise fortlie Grant como again.— Hartford Conront. memorial in New Y'ork, and that the hun dred thousand odd dollars already obtained will he sufficient to erect a suitable monu ment. High License or No License. Al.vre-de-Onwe (Md.) Republican There are two classes of temperance MOST PERFECT MADE Lemon, Oioi.sc., Almond. Kot*,et*., iTavor aa dellcawi? and naturally oa tho fruit. cuiuuo. Price Bakins Powder Co. si. Lons declfisradthurfrlsunly GLiNCMAN’S Nltreda amt Patch* a. Fencing may he a manly art, but not one farmer’s son in a dozen takes to it kindly.— St Alban's Messenger. A man liable to heart disease and fearful of undue excitement, should not stand about when a game of cheka is going on.— Picsyune. Traces of tho bean have been discovered by recent excavations in Egypt. It may yet turn ont that the Pyramids were built by the Bostonians.—Philadelphia Pres*. The task of holding the administration on its feet and keeping it from being kicked over tho ropes appears to have been nod dled upon Senator l’ugb, of Alabama.— Philadelphia Press. Mapleson's ballet provoked a storm of clerical disapproval in St. Paul. Seeing that the ballet contained only six members, the denunciation seems to be folly de served.—Philadelphia Press. “Who ent down that cherry tree?" than dered YVashington pore. “Father,” said truthful George as he uncorked a small bottle of milk, “1 cannot tell a lie; I don' remember.”—New York Sun. -'Em as free as tho wind that fans my marble brow," said a Kentucky legislator in hi. opposing speech; hut when a railroad pass was thrust under the marble brow, he was lisppy as the clam which marks tbe high tide of u land trodden by no slave.— Boston lleeord. Will some one be kind'enough to explain wby a tracked mob which drives out tbe Chinese is any less tratal than was a mask ed mob in the Kn Klox days in the Sonth? Y'et voices which cried cut against the lat ter ate silent while outragei go on in tbe Pecific States—Exchange. Pity the sorrows of a poor old Senator. They are making it hot for him up in Ver mont and he is like the fellow on a stormy sea who had to do something religions, if it was only to take np s collection. Mr. Ed munds is obliged to do something ltepub- Thereere two classes of temnernneo peo- _ Senn tor Ingalls, of Kansas, is quotedas pie in this country One class demands full dining Senator Evarts as a “political nrclv and absolute prolubitory legislation, the I -|, 0 i og j s t who ba8 ma ,i Q subtle explorations other.clans demands that the use and gale of j n to the subterranean recesses of the consti- lntoxicants bei regulated by license laws, tution nnd the iuner consciousness of the The best men differ on this question, which founders.” arc the better temperance men? The pro- ’a xr w , , . 1A hihitionists assume to possess ail the virtue, Mr. and Mrs, W. K. Vanderbilt, says philanthropy and humanity, and, ns a co- °. n ? 80« S1 P»* have found it advis- rollary, are the only proper guardians and to W°T!? e * ome car ^ hibles that will protectors of public morals; but the facts no f P® r *o*t the people who come^ to their fail to support such arrogant assumptions. PO** er P a . r * le ,'J **tcal from ench others We find among high-licenso advocates men P ll ° cLl P 8 * of high moral integrity, and quite as vir- —Thomas V. Canby, the successful Balti- tuous, honest nnd humane and better prac- moro merchant nnd banker who died on ticable temperance men. Thursday, used to live in Philadelphia, The vital question is: Does prohibition having come hither from fiuck\ county, prohibit? Truth utters an emphatic no! He was a Friend, and sat in meeting till the The next important question is: Is high day of his death. license, that regulates tho use nnd salo of — Onontnyoh (Beautiful Mountain), a intoxicants and curtails tho evils of intern- full-blooded Indian, graduated at the Buffalo perance, preferable to to tho free, prornis- Medical College last week. His uncle, ciious use and sale with no license, as is Oronvetekba (Burning Sky), who graduated now the case right hero at homo and iu dis- ft t Oxford, England, is now a successful tant localities, under prohibitory laws. All practitioner at London, experience teaches that as long os mankind _ Prof . Jolm Averv o£ ]!owdoin College, fBl"? » unvote of Amherst in 1881, who is V are governed by the laws of their be- niiliar with many langnagoa, is compiling a mg- they will indulge their passions and diutionary of a language existing in the ilunth ot with which, it is said, no temperance is one of tho chief evils that othl!r An»*ri«In familUr afflict tho race, and also, outside of its per- olhtt r , , „ * t sonnl victims, the most costly to the state, ~ r , . j 0 ' the chief espada or hnii-fighter nnd ns it is evident it cannot be banished, 0 Madrid, is employed there during the let us deal with it not in a visionary, ideal, s T m !F.wl R .™ W 0 ? n<l be miide an- sentimentul manner, hut practically by °*.b cr M0,000 in the provinces during the regulating the solo of liquor within proper Winter. He claims to have killed 31o bolls bounds nnd restraints, uud make it con- without being personally injured, tributo its full shure to tho revenne and I —Tennyson has written another open hoar, in part at least, its own expense, letter to his many unauthorized correspond- Higb license is certainly better than no ents,informing them that their letters cannot license under the present rule uud temper I be answered. Hundreds of such epistles of public sentiment. I are daily delivered at his home, only to be damped into the waste-basket unread. —Tho Inst portrait of Queen Victoria, lately painted by Herr von Angeli, repre sents her standing at the front of the throne. She is richly dressodin black satin trimmed with enniue, and wears a diamond cruwn. Her face is almost in profile. —Mrs. Eglantine Itnndolph, who died at Washington a few days ago, was the widow of Lieutenant It. B. Itnndolph, the man who pulled General Hickory Jackson’s nose at the Alexandria (Vu.) wharf, thus scandaliz ing the worshippers of the hero of New Or leans. Secretary YVhitncy is a nephew of the inventor of the cotton gin The widow ot another nephew is a resident of Washing ton. She is a direct descendant of tbe Wollatonrcmft family, one of whom, her grandaunt, was tho second wife of the poet Shelley. —When Henry Wntterson reads he uses a magnifying glass. When he works he take, off his coat nnd goes at it with a vim. He is a bundle of nervons activity. He thinks fast, goes on the trot nnd steps linnl. He has fits of laziness in which he writes nothing. —Albert Wolff, of the Figaro, although he is no Socialist, has a genuine admiration for Lonise Michel. He says that if he were asked to name the most interesting public character in connection with tho third re- pub'.ie he wonld reply without hesitation, “Louise Michel." —Lord Cairns, whom the American, Miss Grant, is to marry, in preparation for the balnUle <Ui flmra at the Nice carnival, lias ordered 10,1X10 white camellias, snd has hired two elephants .to draw one of the boats Taking llabj'i Picture. HL Nicholas. l'ht to'jraphrr: "Camus? Four dollar*. Hit (or tbl* *1U. The** will i>lea»e you boat, 1 think. I’ll bo ready In a moment. And we'll take hint, in a wink Drlnii in baby. Will you bold him Kitting in your lap, and No? Ab! 1 **•?—'Then we'll arrango him In thU little high chair.—Ho! — There, that'* ea$»y •Uriyht>, baby. it fiin;) /.» take a little riite! Irani to wi the ftrrtty Untie* (‘When I'm ready «tep one vide.'') Mamma: •'Now, my BeMle, do not whlapcr; We mu*t *1111 a* *tatue* be. * If we *peak, tho baby'll aurely Turn hi* bead and look at me." Phitngrapher: (••Now, good Nurse, please raise him up A little—then*!) 7tear birdie timaf (Little more!)—^'Where <i the birdie.*> (That’s taght!)—‘What thatl .Xurtry briny*’ iTry to clo«* hi* mouth!)—^•Come, birdie.* (Now hi* bead i* up too high,— Easy—there!)—^•(’hirp. chirp,—//ear birdie*’ •/laby tee Lint by an’ byV (That'* right—keep him so!)—'Good baby,’— (Steady!)— 1 ’/taby wouldn’t cry>’— (Now, then!)—‘L<k)k! *kk! iikuk'h munis" 'Caught him, first time on the fly'! THE CLISGHAH TOBACCO 0IHTME5T Vlli: MOST KFFM'TIVK PHKIMUA. I ION <*n tti.umrk.-t for Pile*. A SC 111) ( | HI! toe liciiimr Has never rnili d to (iu prompt relief. Will itue Anr-l Ulcers Al.*w-* rbtiila. Tetter. Silt Rheum Barber’* Itch, ihn*- w. rn.s. Pimple*, Sons and Boil*. Price oilcU. THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO CAKE OWN lU.UKr-V, Core* -a Cut*. Briinea, Fornirs, Erysipe'nr It.il>, C.7$ri.$»nob*i, lion* K»| me Ulcer*, here*. Sorr h-«. H • A Thro*t.ilani>>n* Curn.*. iNii-jralgU Uh.'um >t .-a, Ur-'Wlh, G**it. Kheuniatio Goat. Cold*. Cuakt l*f tuhiti*. Milk W.Hnakn and Bite* Sum o» »0««w ta, Ac. In Cart *l!ijrs ell local Irritation »;4 l'»»ii»intnatt'.>nfnim while*.* cause. Prtcrlf.jeK WE CLINGMAN TOBACCOiPLASTER IVypnred nrcordinu to the utortt sclenilfir Hie 1*1 Itl ST *KI»ATIV: yM; RkIME.NTjS compounded with the ptuwi r 4,*cco Floor, and 1* eperblly recommended far! t <*oup Weed or Cake of the Ilren jt. and tor that cbw I V? hrtUnt or Inflammatory maladies Arbea »sd I Pun* where, from too delicate a state of the ►>•*.*«. I lli? p*t.ent tonn*h!etohearth«>trntigcrai>phcatk« I of ihe IobaccaCake. For llead.Tcbo or otlitr Acbw I •r.d Pr.ina. it la invaluable. Price l.'r rt*. I A».k yourdrugiriat for tb*-**) remedies. o»writ* I CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO DURHAM, N..C., U. S. A oct2fldetn-awly‘J PAPER Advertising A book of ino p*«m. Til bout book for an *•!«! titer to consult, f experienced or l wise. It contain*’ L ntwapaper* and estimates of the coet of advertise The advertiser who wanta to speud one dollar, in It tho Information he require#, while forlfl who will Invest one hundred thousand dolkoi advertising, s scheme is Indicated which will ■ hie every requirement, or can be made to doici slight change* easily arrived at by corre*poci!«» One hundrtd and fifty-three edition* have l«*ifl sued. Knit, post-paid, to any address for 10c. m tll.O. P. ROWELL * CO.. NKWrtPAFKIifl HINli BUREAU, 10 Kpmce 8L (I'rcf Rouse H-i.). New York. j*n7T-'l»^ “Yet, It's good. 1 know you’ll like 1L I'll have proof* without delay. Can’t 1*) better. Finished?—Friday. Very much obliged. Good day!" GOSSIP ABOUT PEOPLE. Marchl—A cloudy stream is flowing, And a hard steel blast 1* blowing; Bitterer now than 1 remember Ever to have felt or seen. In the depth of drear December, When the white doth tide the green; Not a trembl .ng weed ui»-peereth From its dark home underground; Violet now nor primrose heareth In her sleep a single sound, All In wintry torpor bound; Not a sparrow on tue spray. Not a lark to greet the day! —Barry Cornwall. —King Tbobaw is player. WANTED. 9A0 A WEEK uij ien«ee paid. Valuable outfit tit ulars free. J. F. RILL 4 CO., Augusta, *4 lan lJ,w,17t HELP, expirt of li!a yacht to be orrangi'i fir tbe day of the ilowery warfare. —The Chicago Herald waraa Sam Small, the evangelist, who amokea cigaretta, that “no cigaretta rmoker, with breath tike a poker-1 joss-house, with clothing acented tike a I atabliman, and fingers and teeth stained -General Simon Cameron has rounded * ith . offensive uiiotine, can hope to do his 87th year. muoh B 00<1 ln Chicago. -Dom Pedro is to found a big fine arts ,..~“ Co “ nt Dism&rck,”>ay>LondonTrath, acodemv at Rio. “is now the w orking man in the Foreign . r ,' ..... , , , I Office at Berlin, anil he is to remain there, k”* 8 ° no 1 I trailer the supervision of his father, in or- Cannes, 1 runte for his health. ,tir that he may be qualified to take the en- —Senator Dolph, of Oregon, beard and I tire charge of this important department all, looks tike "old John Brown.” whenever the Chancellor dies or retires.” —Matt Morgan’s art pottery place in Cin- —An interesting relic of the Duke of ciuuati has been sold out by the sheriff. j Marlborough hua just been sold in Paris—tili - Senator Edmunds is said to be pe- Bohemian gloss goblet out of which the fu- culiarly sensitive to newspaper criticism. nions general drank on the night of the -M. Melssonier, the artist, is honored in Malploqnet. Ho spent the night the naming of tho line Meissonier, Paris. m *, hc « ,1! » iron . ti «‘ r MalpUqnet, ww xr v .. ........ ana until now the owners of the chateau wnrk'tnVwf/.inn 0 ' e ' lv ^ ! n * t - ** b £P, n have religiously preserved the goblet as a work in OmrUiton, 8. C. t on tho 11th mat. memento of tho renowned chief. —Mrs. Langtry will soon give a private theatrical performance before Queen Y’ic- •'*‘he Jewish Hetigman-Wormsie wed- toriu. ding, in New York, u princess might have „ envied the display of gifts. They filled a Baron llothsclnlil has given Londoners i Br ^ c room,included, beside nny nrnonnt of a surprise by donning the blue nbbon of | #i i” tr wtl ,. br i, - - abstinence. C00KJT0W mmsaimwi EIGHTEEN SIZES AND Iff All PURCHASERS CM BE I MANUFACTURED BT Isaac LSieppaid 4 Co.,Baltimore! AND F(>»» ■"’.$! BV silver and jewels, bronzes,marbles,embroid- —Bishop Lnrges«, of Illinois, traveling i Y’crmont the other day, left $115 with pickpocket. I father were. $150,000 in 'government bonds —Mrs. Langtry now bohls deeds and j *nd diamonds. The groom’s father gave a mortgages on New York real eatato to the large block of government bonds, also a value ot $150,000. | complete liabranr of standard works and a nil niano. Mr. tiimon YVormaie, tbe nn- tho proceeds of four months’ sale 0 ( I ci0 «f '-ride was the most royal and gave Huckleberry Finn.” complete iemwi of solid Miter, *lao klini *#.» Cnr Laa written Cvvitm lhfC * V0,a#We dUhefl pUTchlAed it .7[at the C< nt. nni.l. The bride’* suiter gave } U * ddej her a $I(>.000 bronze statue ot Hercules, w. . . I Ai’h'llfcs and Cersbua, and the brothers of —WlUiiim Heath, the big New \ork stock I the groom a fine rosewood billiard table broker who, off tbe stre et, waa a man of | and a parlor pipa organ. The other tw> most admitab'e qualities, is said to have I tr-five gifts were of tba same character. lUSTJM iSfirmloftMfej |A MMIIT MKMCin TBIT Cl* H1LUUN8 DCfitXU Si ltiSB >6 balm ron evert wors#q SIA.X AXD BEAST I [iTha GUtet & Best U«H AVER *tAtiF. Id AUKi-i^O- BALES LARQERTEAH Tli© Mexican Mnsftnf Llaisj ■been known tOC mmsIMSW^.- (yeats na tlm beat of all Lln.i^ gJ Ilian a:id Beast. Its sale* llar^er than crer. It cure* Sothers fall, and p«’netrat**»k»‘*- eM land ln-.f-r'e, to tbo very aevcrywucro.