The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, April 13, 1886, Image 9

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3 HOUSEHOLD HINTS. I , v u\TTHtS KOI'. WIVES _ .net Yoar ,,u *‘ 1bM«b—* or ■ nd AbOUt ■ _l'.eful lleclpe*. . .err old dime. , s -S5sSs fcw#,i jjyfflffi.. IS old Udy'could drink, be never drink«lo r . .....iooed blur »nd While' Tod.be lived S^kWfcwWtothUJ^r. your Hu.band’s Confidence, the fiuie of the globe is Mued and respected aa in onr i • looked upon and acknowledged mnion, in many things, of man. foot no other country can com- ° e men of our own in surround- wires and fimihes with comforts, end woman advancing step by , p %„ positions of pro* an5 re; THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY APRIL 13, 188G.—TWELVE PAGES. K««P country booore ttwilh credit to herself and satis- Lr employer. Vet in the midst , nods to make life desirable, sur- ; tb every luxury that money can .L, e is a mistaken kindness on 0 husbands that at times leads to ,U consciences the lack of mil- ith reference to the: nsmtss In fact, wives are at all ’ouch excluded front aparticipa- i, husbands' affairs. Men look „..n m the weaker sex. The way T. 0B m strong is to make her a in all that concerns the family. No ill have cause to regret such pnrt- andif mi-fottnno overtakes him he kid wife tqoal to the emergency, a be few things more cruel in the L that mistskon kindness which me of tbs knowledge of affairs in , oe has a right to shale. Every in-ami there are thousands such that in promoting her husband’s »hc is increasing her own hnppi- there was more oonlidence placed a s ability as an adviser and coun- l[e would be fewer orphans and (eft a prey to the hard and crnel Mrs. 11. A. Ititchie, Philadelphia. I lovely TVIodow (Jordan*. ! are the 1-kVclifst of all Ir’isdour cultivation and require There i» an indescribable 1 tie tine, with its dinging, tender l,| soft shadows. Pictures, plaques I. everything decorating the wall- laced by the caress of a string of | There'are certain varieties of f reo- I trailers that thrive excellently if |ts are placed in water. A large- t of hyacinth glass is useful ■purpose. Vat a piece of charcoal little to keep the water pure; as the laporates add more, hut nover re- |l at ouce, as the roots in the gloss In chilled, or perhaps wounded, kere la not room for pots this is an lly convenient uud cleanly way to jw. The brackets and pockets of khich appear in such great variety Ishcpa may ho tilled with water Ith hue effect. English ivy will fester, but so slowly that it Is bet- p it ia earth, where it will climb adgrow luxuriantly. Periwinkle Mow grower in water. Trades- *pider-worl i» the fastest runner | water vines. The T. repens vit- Vpmtica, T. xebrina and T. multi- r the best (or in door cultivation, k terns (wpodiatra cypems)' thrive I eases watct-6Ued. Sweet potato k ornamenLd and require hut little “ conditions of childhood, individual health, family health, college conditions ana conditions since gradual io D , can not fail to be of the greatest service to parents and teachers, and especially Rhould ft ho n source of information to physicians and others whose experience and observation have lea them to different conclusions. \o statistical returns, however favorable, <‘an ever remove the necessity for prudence and moderation in college work; hut the results obtained from the hygienic methods hereto fore pursned offer certainly the greatest en couragement to efforts toward still latter results.—Philadelphia Press. A Few Seasonable Word*. “Every one of thesj doors creaks so hor- nbly that it nlinoHt acts me wild," exclaimed a tired housekeeper who was trying to rest a little after the labors of a wearisome day Now, this was not the first, perhaps it was the twentieth, time she had made the same or a similar remark, about the creaking oi the doors, when, with the aid of a bottle of oil and a feather, she might have made them swing noiselessly and saved herself all the annoyance sho had suffered. It is a great deal easier to make sugges tions than to follow them, but it seems to me that tho “golden rule" for housekeepers “jfiht be this: “if anything goes wrong for which there is a remedy, apply it as soon as possible: if there is absolutely no remedy do not fret, but rnako the host of it. ” I believe that often it is not the work that makes us feel so thoronghly weary at the end of the week as worrying over it. I re member of fretting a good deal over some Thanksgiving pies, oomplaiuing that I al ways spoiled them by putting in too much of one thing or another, when my Hister quietly remarked that perhaps I put too much anxiety into them. I sow the best I coaid with my cooking nnd worried less over the results. Of course I had afterward better success and far more peace of mind. There are days iu tho experience of every housekeeper when everything seems deter mined to go wrong, and a perfect avalanche of little troubles and perplexities seem to overwhelm one. Then indeed is she that ruleth her spirit “better than hethnt taketh a city." But how often at the close of such a day have we looked back and seen that all came right at last in spite of o,ir forebodings, and we have wished so milch that we could have been self-controlled and sweet-tempered through it all. It is so natural to magnify little troubles iustend of remembering that they are not worth fretting about. If at breakfast the bnscuits are a little too yellow and the steal: a trifle overdone, in almost every ease no one will be troubled about it if yon are not. If t ie cotiee i* not just exactly light no one will notice it unless yon call attention to it by some disparaging remark. Especi ally should we guard against a habit of fretting because of the discomfort it causes those about us, and the had influence it has upon them. If the housekeeper frets the children do the same, and tho servants also, for nothing is more contagious, and we have anything hut a happy household. However badly things may go nothing is gained by worrying over them, and if we cannot be always bright and cheerful we can nt least endure patiently till tho storm passes over and the snnshino returns, as it surely will due time.—Hood Housekeeping. A Few Recipe*. Stewed Fowt.—Cut an old hen, tough fowl of any age, in pieces, singe and wash carefully and put into a covered or saucepan, pepper well and ponr on hot water enough to cover well, let it stow slowly on the hack of tho etove all day, tilling up with water when needed; even the gristle is tender. It is better to put in a whole onion with the fowl, as it stews away and adds richness to the gravy, but this can be omitted. Next day carefully re move all the fat from the surface of the gravy, add some chopped celery, or a tea spoon of celery salt; common salt enough to make it pidutuhle, ami two grates of nut meg to tho gravy uod when it is hot thicken it with a heaped tnblespoonful of flour lie *dvuilig(s d( a great city is a ide]iendencc which we enjoy, says rubbed in one of butter tifl smooth: pat in n (loud Housekeeping. Tho rules the chicken when the gravy is thick and hot, and bent it throngb. Serve very hot. Baked Toast. —Fare the ernst from slices I or ciwtom *te not so severe. It MR inei|ierieneed people who liny must have the latest stylo and paper, anj remake their side into box plcutiugs when that is '•“is. In fact, a little change from iltng custom i* considered origi- ntlitr alairetl, unless too outro. ce, the other day a friend of mine I to see all her acquaintances and T social calls- She accordingly i fr ..rotting cards with “Oid- ha written under tho engraved t in iha comer opposite the ad- ct i rom Four to Seven." L’sck parlor the tabic was simply sandwiches, tho most do- , '““‘I 6 by hor mother, who r ‘hat particular cake, cookies, i on *’ also home-made sponge a beet and cheese. Two young | Punretl tea and chocolate ant refreshment* on old family china, oough to form the nucleus of a u a needless to say that even- .ulwas delighted. There was J^hop confectionery nor dishes I i,.,, i uor tinmen iMUn tiated and tasted, again M turning: “Oh, how good it I eulauiation Which your e l Unil > echoed.-Baltimore good corres- Snn. * k * f '‘'''a Who Study C vermneh. bt0 »Kht against col *Mt their students are , e“* » or U physically unfitted , r “ ens home and society, a t and refuted j n Ilmn _ w J jMaprmtsnd in private eonrer- ™ t.J, ,n the nature iif snch r- sill,.t n .produced that can at f. . , ° '“portanee and con- «statistical research recently ■ me Association of Collegiate » j.'“ ,ael *ted upo D ; u a recent mil ■' A tcw worJ » further gfc 1 , m !*y he ia order. A : ,« ( "'M-eight |ieges, it contains t-inv2r C<> appointed to t0 8*U»« with the H, i U ; ol r<”l by Colonel Carroll ..fUol. ahtssachusetts hureuu of rpore,] »i,a\if eric * of fort y 'l Ufs * Uto ft, ‘“V 1 " "‘Host care, was lu.U.1 the twelve . *0 the association, and * of r. .o' v . r “ m »'»mun, the fy c Jj ," r T. ,HU R ,4bov *‘ ‘be aver- .ich ’i ’’totistical methods, sdaiwl”. 111 c,,1, rge training, retlncesthe r-rv.n i f r r*-l per cent of the Parted “excellent" “good" Mth i .I ,re “ nt state of ’•mi’JrTf , 17 ‘ rob (i . r ' of ( atr health; while ^.•““o.rtnilSBU were he- \ (vrt ' college. Van- » htr sbtreof criti- .'OO ,h un , on the gnbj€ct 0 , til. t T reoponaea to the forty ' m nnii.1 ' ^“biatcs were not InT.l’" thui ‘boss from the ter reM >how P" '"iprovement in i.la-rai. * l "h « aa great aa Similar statia- UmM ,n rhe report, giving women in gSwnS ■f stule broad and toast quickly. As each is done, scrape off every sign of burn or scorch, dip in u pan of boiling salted water and lay iu a deep dish that will bear tho tire without Injury. When all are in pour lifioii tlie toast a quart of hot milk (half cicuiu if you cau get it) in which has boon dissolved u heaping taldcspoonful of butter and a tahlespoonful of salt Set the dish iu a dripping pan of hot wator and tbia place i n the oven. Bake covered for half an lour, and then let llio top layer brown very slightly. Shotdd the milk he all ab- sorued before the time is np, add a little, boiling hot. Toast thus prepared has a rich creamy flavor tho ordinary “dip toast" never aennirea. Broiled Chicken. Do not attempt to broil an old or full-grown fowl; take a young chicken, spfit it down the back always, wipe the inside dry after removing tho gib lets, and place it on the gridiron with the inside down; keep it so till it begins to grow very brown, then turn it, lint the moment the skin threatens to burn, reverse it again. To find out how it is cooking; insert a sharp knife into the thickest breast, if the flesh is J ilnk at all, return it to the tire; when well lone itnd browned, lay it on a platter, in side down; hotter, salt and serve. Broilisl Shad. - Make your marketman split the shad down the lielly; this brings the thickest port over tho greatest heat of the fire, and it is nicer to help served in this manner, l’ut it on a well-greased grid iron, and turn quite often; to know when it is done, separate tho flakes of the thick part with a knife, and if it is at all pink or translucent, return it hi the tire. When done lay on a hot platter, skin side down; strew with salt only, put on hits of softened butter and serve. Veal Cutlets with Butter Sauce.—Dipeach ntlit in n lieuten egg, then in peppered and salted cracker dnat, and fry in hot drip- ling to a rich golden brown. Lay each as t ia done on paper to absorb the grease. Arrange on a hot dish and put on every ent- let a generous spoonful of snacc. Make it by heating two talilespoonfuls of butter to a cream wutU a talilespounfu! of lemon juice and a tahlospoonful of miuocd parsley. Baked Halibut.—Buy a piece of halibut . ut square and thick, not in slices, put it on tho wire frame for roasting in the drip ping-pan, and pour a pint of well-salted wa ter into the pan, lay the halibut on the cut side, and on the other or upper side lay enough slices of thinly-cnt salt pork to cov er over the fish; bake till the fish is thor oughly done, half an honr at least, occa sionally hasting it with the salted hominy. Hominy. Soak a cup of small hominy, for two hours In enough cold water to cover it Drain, pnt over the fire in a funna ket tle, with a quart of warm water slightly salted, and cook for half an hour after it reaches tho boil. If it has not soaked up all the water,pour it off and supply the place with a cup of warm milk Bring it to a boil. Eat with sugar and cream. Farsnip fritters.—IScnqie anl boil tender, rub through a colander to get rid of the tough and atringy portions, heat in an egg, a Ublespooufnl of milk, a teaapoon jhrep- ing) of prepared flout, with a little p*TO*r and salt; make into am all, flatenke* flour and fry in good dripping or lari. labor saving machinery. IU Invention a Orest lloneflt to the Work- logmen. Charleston New* and Courier. It is not encouraging to the friends of the workingmen, or to intelligent working men themselves, to find the spokesman of one of the most powerful labor organiza tions in Now York talking nonsense and laying down false principles as a rule of conduct, immediately after the signal vic tory won by tho Knights of Labor in that city last week. Air. Robert, Blisscrl, who, we are told, is one of the leaders in tho Central Labor Union of New York, and himself a hard working man, asserts his belief to he “that most of the misery of to-day is produced by overproduction; in other words, thnt aa, with the aid cf machinery, one man can do the work of two, the second man starves." Finding nearly one-fifth of New York’R workingmen out of work through no fault of their own, and suffering in conse quence, Sir. Blissert turns upon “inven tions" and “machinery," and declares that to the use of machinery is attributable the existence of the evils which the union was formed to combat and correct. Iu order that there might be no mistake as to his meaning, Sir. Blissert stnted that ho knowamenwho “have been entirely de prived of work by machinery,” and cited tho caae of 6tKJ box-makers, “whoso trade has been destroyed' by an invention which enables one boy to do as much work now as five men could have done ten years ago. Every now invention, it was asserted, “throws a few more workmen into the streets," nnd these several beliefs nnd opin ions, Sir. Blissert declared, are held by the wen whom he represents. It is difficult to nnderstand how working men anywhere, and particularly working men in a great manufacturing city, can so easily allow therasclvea to be mislead ns to the conditions of their own welfare. The explanation probably ia that the several gronp of workingmen stndy causes only ns they operate in their own narrow sphere, nnd not regard their effectn in ameliorating the condition of the working class as n whole. The box-makers of New York, for in stance, see 500 of their number deprived of employment by tho introduction of box making machines, whence it is readily nrgned that nil machines are inimical to the interests of nil workingmen. The dissatis fied box-makers wear lints, clothes nnd shoes that have been vastly cheapened by the use of labor-saving machines; their homes are furnished with the products of other such machines h'ut for which they would have ta dispense with many eoinfi or pay double prices for them: food is ml cheaper uud is obtainable in greater variel even luxuries are iirought within tha reach; the purchasing power of their wages is greatly increased- all of which- benefits and blessings arc directly duo to the use of machines in other callings: but the fact is forgotten, and the workman regards only tho single machine which threatens to cheapen the article which he makes or helps to make. What sensible workingman anywhere would vote to abolish the nse of machines for making shi es alone? Doubtless many thousands of shoemakers have been driven to seek employment in other callings in con- Eeqttence of the invention of shuemnking machines; but hundreds of thousands of workingmen can now buy two pairs of shoes for their wives and children where they could have bought but one pair if these machines had not been invented and employed; and for every shoemaker who has lost work on their account perhaps ten or ono hundred workingmen have been given employment in making snch ma chines and in running them to supply the vastly increased demand for shoes which tho fall in their price has caused. The cotton-gin, however, nffnrds perhaps tho host illustration that conld lie given of the effect of machinery in benefiting the laboring clnsses. Before its invention cot ton was separated from the seed by hand. The day's task of the laborer who was em ployed to perform this operation was, we believe, to fill one of his own shoes with tho seed thus separated. Tho process, so conducted, would undoubtedly give eur ployment to a large number of working, men and workingwomen uud children, and if it were now in vogue Mr. Blissert might consistently oppose the introduction of the Whitney gin because of its tendency to throw so many labor ers out of employment. But what lias this single machine accomplished for worUng people in general; who can measure its value nnd benefits to the m? The gin was invented in 171)3, but, instead of destroying the value of labor, it multi plied the chief products of labor in the South a thousand-fold within one genera tion, and linn made employment for mill ions of working people in all parts of the civilized world, btruugely enough, in the face ef this striking record the working men employed in cotton factories—men whose employment was due to the inven tion of the cotton-gin, of the steam engine and the loom have opposed nearly every new machine that has been invented to THE SUNKEN STEAMSHIP. There an two Mm to all cbea]ien the manufacture of cotton goods or extend that manufacture in new direc tions. That the increase of machinery actually multiplies the opportunities for employ ment has been fully demonstrated by ex haustive statistics collected with great care nnd covering long periods of time. During the period from 1850 to 1808, for instance, greatly improved machinery was intro duced into the cotton nnd woolen factories of Oreat Britain, lint it was found that the greater the number of looms a man conld operate the greater the demand for opera tives, nnd that a falling off in tho use of machinery was accompanied by a corres ponding decrease in the number of persons employed. Tho disuse of 120,ODD power looms in cotton manufactures between lht'.l and 1808 caused 50,000 persons to lose their work and wages, and forced them to seek a livelihood in some other occupation. Similar results have been observed in the United States, and columns might he filled witii figures and examples illustrating the general law. One or two prominent illus trations, mast suffice. Between 1850 and 1870. the period covering the general intro duction of labor-saving machines in agri culture, the farming popoulation nsing these machines increased from 1,301,803 to 2,(Ml,830. In the same period the number of hands employed in general manufactures increased from 057,053 to 2,053 t '.r,s», and the amount paid in wages increased from *2:18,705,000 to *775,581,000. These striking figures make it very plain that Mr. Blissert has not studied the sub ject of the effects of machinery upon labor as thoroughly as a leader of workingmen should study them, and thnt be is in effect a blind leader of the liand. if the organiza tion for which lie assumes to speak is guid ed by his opinions. There is no proposi tion better established than that machinery benefitathe tailoring classes more than any other, and that ita benefits are most plainly exerted in furnishing mote employment oral better wages, and supplying the necessaries of life at cheaper ratei —Beriah Brown, who ia a candidate for the Governorship of Washington Territory, wss editing a paper in Ban 1 ran cisco when Homier was find upon. Hi* Southern sym pathies were so strong that his office was mobbed and the editor fled to Mexico. The Part of the Schooner In the ollHIoa— Iteclalming Wreckage. New York TImoa. Pilot* ntjtl shipping me n rre strongly of the opinion tbut tho sclioooer whose three mustsb .vt* l ot n ston sticking out cf the water southwest of Shinnecock light is the Charles H. Morse, and thnt this is the ves sel that came in collision with the Oregon. The wrecks of the steamship nnd schooner are sixteen and a half miles apart, the schooner tying southwest of the itsamsliip. At the point where the masts were seen there are twenty-three f ithoms of water or ono hundred and thirty-eight feet. The masts of the Morse would hardly show above water if she lay on the bottom. An explanation of this is offered by the theory thut she may have caught on a ledge or that the masts may be wrenched from their far^ tellings, nud are now hanging by the shrouds. Lieutenant Field, of the hydrographic office, who has been taking bearings of the wrecked steamer and schooner, has con sulted every pilot whom he conld find to learn what clianca there might be that the Oregon was sunk by the Hylton Castle. These two wrecks are now twenty miles apart, and, taking tho extreme reports abont the position of the Oregon before the col lision and the Hylton Castle’s position, he concludes that when they were closest the distance between them was nine miles. If the projecting masts of the schooner belong to the Morse nine lives were lost when she went down, as follows: Capt. Alonzo Wildes of Bath, Me.; Capt. Alfred Manson, Jr., who formerly commanded the Morse, but was a passenger on this trip; Mate F. Blaisdel of Pbippsburg, Me.; A*d- ward McMahonof Georgetown, Me., a sailor, and live other sailois, all foreigners. The wrecking steamer Rescue and the schooner Post, of the Mcrrit Wrecking Company, came to the city yesterday, bringing with them a few pieces of baggage and treight which they picked up near the Oregon during last week. The things were taken to the Union Stores, at Brooklyn. A sole leather stat3-room trank, with “E. D. M./* iu black letters on one end, wus the only ono of tho recovered articles that was marked. Thu other articles consisted of three black valises, two trunks, a tan color ed valise, flvo packages of rubber, tin case about the size of n Saratoga trunk full of dressed kid, a tin box. nnd several blankets and mnttressos nnd a red plush cushion, largo packing case contained odd articles that were boxed by the wreckers. An un marked barrel covered with a burlap and n Brussels carpet were among the things brought iu. The pilot boat Lunhat brought in four packing oases market B. A L. The divers on Capt. Merritt’s boats bad only about a half a day for work out of tho ten days they lay near the wreck. All the rest of the lime the water was too rough. One of them went down part way to the steam ship. He said he conld seo the deck. It was so badly wrecked that he thought it not unlikely that the ship had been nearly cut in two. Nino bags of mail were received Sunday from lliu Oregon by tho Coast AVrouking Company's schooner Edwin l’ost and taken to Stapleton, Staten Island, from whence they were yesterday sent to the post office in tliia city. This* moil consisted of two closed bags from London, one being for New York and the other for Canada. The hag for New York contained three registered hags from London; that for Canada one let ter bag each for Montreal and Hamilton, Canada. There was also oae dispatch hag for the Department of State, Washington, nnd six hags of newspaper mail, two of these being from London for New York, one from London for Montreal, ono from Glasgow for Kingston, Canada, one from Dublin for San Francisco. The total number of huge now received is 237. A Little lllack ltascal. A negro hoy about nine yenrs old just on the Titdiaforro side of Little river in the Sandy Cross neighborhood, whose business it war to nurse u negro child, concluded lost week that it was n tiresome business, sad decided to strike at ouce. Eluding it impossible to quiet the baby,he took a flint rock about an inch and a half square an I, opening the child's month, shoved it into lug throat. Blood commenced flowing freely from the baby’s throat and the nurse became alarmed, lie took the hnby in his arms anil hurried to the mother, who gave the alarm at one-. The rock was finally pulled out, and the baby lingered from Monduy until Satnrday, when it died. The verdict of the Coroners jury was that death resulted from pneumonia, caused by the severe wound. It is believed thut tho grand jury will lie asked to inyestigate the cuse.— Washington Chronicle. Knglncsr Let's Luck. The passenger train going cast hud a nar row escape on Tuesday morning. Wbcu the train neared the trestle at Carr’s station. Engineer Lee looked out to sec if everything was right Tho water woe running high up on tho trestle, hut it was in position and he pulled on iL When the engine struck the frame ho felt it give way. There was uo help for it but to put on steam and hasten across. He did this, and when the last car was lately over the trestle rose np and floated away. The etructure hod been undermined by the water and was held together only by the iron and upper timbers.—Sparta Ishmaelito. “Don't I ail to See Me” If You Need Anything inMy Line. I ami prepared to Furnish CARRIAGES! Buggies. Wagons, Haniess, BABY CARRIAGES, LAP ROBES, WHIPS, IIORSE BLANKETS, PLOW GEAR, Etc., Cheaper than, they have Ever been Sold. I. L. HARRIS, ItS and 100 Cherry St., Macon, Ga., Is the place to look for or write to when you need anything in the above line. Don’t buy from small dealers who charge high prices, but send to me, or call in person before purchas ing, and I will convince you that money can be saved by trading at headquarters. It won’t cost you a cent to bo shown through my establishment. If you can’t come, write for prices. I. L. HARRIS, ire** 08 and 100 Cherry St., Macon, Ga. GROCERIES! o Tho undersigned have opened a large and complete stock of Grocrios at l'ii Tliinl Street, and respectfnlly invito all in need of Supplies, to call on teem before purchasing elsewhere. The stock iucludos all tho ataplee used by farmers, und has been selected with special reference to their wants. It has been marked at PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES, and planters will find It to their interest to commit thorn. WRIGHT & HILL, Improving ths Inrerust Iteveons System, Wssuixorox, April 5. — Representative] Henderson, of North Carolina, to-day intro duced a hill to ameliorate some of the worst] features of ths internal rerenue system.! The hill provides that criminal intent must] be set out iu the indictment in cases of al leged violations of the internal revenue laws, and must be proved as an independent Ifuct. Oases arising under the internal rev enue laws shall be prosecuted only by in dictment, and warrants shall issue only upon the oath of a reputable person that the facts are within bis own knowledge. Federal Aid [or tbs Destitute in Alabama.] WiMiixoTox. April 5. Representative [Herbert to-day introduced u resolution to appropriate *30U,(KID 'to he immediately available, to be expended under the direc-J tion of the Secretary of War in the purl chase and distribntion of subsistence stores; and other necessary articles to siil in the relief of destitute persons in the overflowed districts of Alabama. The resolution slsoj authorizes the Secretary of War to use govl eminent vessels in transporting and dis I tribntiug food to the sufferers and appro priates money sufficient to defray any exi penses so incurred. Four Trains Collide In a Fog. Bki oit, Wisconsin, April 5.—This moral ing four wild trams on the Chicago and] Northwestern railway came into collision in the outskirts of this city. Three of the | trains consulted simply ef engines and ca boose*. All were going north, and the three last-named engines ran into the cabooses in quick succession. A. W. Squire, a conduc tor. and M. Kenyon, a brakeman, were hedly injured, Squire probably fatally. * dense fog prevailed at the tune. —Ludwig Bernay, the German sctoi after n very successful tow In Rossis, wag presented by the Czar with the gold medal to be worn on tke ribbon of the Order of Ht. janl7i'.ltA»f,iu 121 Third Street. COOK STOVES UWAVKSATISFACTORY EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS ALL PDRCHASERS CAN BE SUITED MANUFACTURED ST Isaac A.Sbeppard & Co. .Baltimore,K<L AND FO** -* ‘ -K BY higiPH BKxitn i.i.ixiii .'ci-crjiir; . v&izx, iWtk MfeCa*. rUrtiMeUta. LIST OF DIKFAtnCft ALWAYS CURABLE BY USCTO MEXICAN MUSTANG LINIMENT. OP ISIMUSw Hmuhffl, Horcs and Gall«? H paris, Cracks, Screw Worn* Grab, W—t Rot, Us#r All, Laaicsrss, Swiss?, Foasdsrs, Hpralas, Straits, Kragtleae. Here Feet, Freer Biles, Hilgae**, and all external dlmaml. sad .very taut or aeeldeBt. fee greets! me to tsmlly. wshlesndsmekysid.lt D TIIE BEHT OF ALL or nnui run. Rheumatism, Berea and Mealds. Hrtsgaead Bices, Cels and Braises, K.raise 4c Hiltekes, Contracted Masclee. HcIflTJalats. Georgia Chill Remedy ChlUe and fever* bare for years effected thou sands, and wUI cnnUnne lo do so until tbo menu, of If all s Georgia Chill Kerned? become known, Thl, Is uo patent humbug no*tram, but the result of tt.a experience of a quarter of e century In compound ing and manufecturin drug In onr Houthern cU- mata. I have cured myself and thooaeoda of oth er* of chronic chills aft* Hhey had for a long lima resisted the efforts of etilo physician* end an Inina ■ reeled to have any effect, one bottle in all i of leee then *lx month, standing willefriet a permanent core. In that time * sufferer would spend double the smountforquinine end ret not ha cured. I sppend a few rartlffealan showing what it ha* accomplished—thousand* could be obtained U Judgei Thomas J. Simmons, Judge of the Raperttr Court of the Macon circuit, wee cued of chllU aad favor bythauaeot Boll's Georgia chill r Macon, On. October i. l»J._Tbi heat chill reme dy I ever saw. Cau. II. rnznaxs. Macon, Oe.. October K. issi.-i consider Hairs Georgia Chill Karoedy the beat chill remedy lever ••w. o. L. O'Gnsuav. of theffrmof J. W. Bleed Co. Mr. Oeorge B. Plant, of Bouton county, Oa.oaja ha hu never known It to fall. Mr. Henry 8. Faagls, another | LAMAR, BAXKH * LAMAR. Macon, Go. OPIUM >Me.g.U.iiV\>; w n (k •....m. uZtSS A brizk. f\ goml* which will kelp *11. of either sex. In „ , m 2” “"“f right away than anything alas la U.U world, rottasei await too workers absolutely eure. Term* mailed free. Tuva A Co., Augusta. 1*1 I .It'S Instant relief. Filial cure In It dayssnd never returns. So puns nosuppoallory. Sufferers will learn ef a simple remedy Free by sddrassleg C. J. MASON. t» Xsuau streeot, X. V. docZlwIv LINIMENTS HKF.P WANTED. «u> AtVLKK end ex- .. T* . r® a *ee paid. Valuable outat and dealer* free. J. FTuIL Ian lt.w.171 - IIILL k CO., Auguste, UK W ANTE - An Active Minor Wo- ’ A *-* • man lo erriy county lo uU hue Kood*. Salary f 73 per Month and Lx- p-nsx-s. Canvassing outat and particular* from!STossaas Sixvanwann Oo„ Boston, Mia*. 8 octTTsem A DIG OFFKH.-To ini OIV* AWAY 1.000 8. Macdinra. If yon wan „ name, p. o. sad eipnsa To introduce them v* wCI *-1 repenting Washing sending REWARD! Hon of K-bool TVJ «F+—. Brad Hum tor (5 SCHOOL AGENCY. IrtBontk C Ol. M. B. We was! ail klndj cf tad Bead*. Kotroabbvor