The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, May 11, 1886, Image 6

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THE MACON WEEKLY TELEGRAPH; TUESDAY, MAY II, 1886.—TWELVE PAGES. THE TELE GRAPH, mwa itut bit at tbs tub a»d wexilt IT TBS Telegraph and il avenger Publishing Co., 57 Mulberry Street, Muon. Ga. • The Daily la delivered by carriers In the city or milled pottage tree to subscriber*. for $1 per month, I l.w fee three monthe, 55 for six month*, or *10* r«*r. Th« Wxxxlt la mailed to subecriber*. postage tree, at 51,15 a year and 55 cent* for ala month*. Transient adTerttaementa will be taken for the Dally at *1 per square of 10 line* or lee* for the tret Insertion, and 50 cent* for each subsequent In- tertlon, and for the Weekly at >1 for each Insertion. Mottoes of death*, funeral*, marriage* and birth*, 51. Rejected communication* will not be returned, Oorreapondence containing Important new* and dlaooaelon* of tiring topto* la solicited, but must be brief and written upon but one *lde of the paper to hare attention. Bemlttanoea abould be made by express, postal *ote, money order or registered letter. Atlanta Bureau 1TK Peachtree street. dll oommunlcatlons should be addressed to THE TELEGRAPH. Macon, Oa. Money orders, checks etc., abould be made paya ble to H. 0. Hasson. Manager. Ilosuon of horrors. Frequently repeated in the Congressional Globe is tho statement Uut, after its holy lubor of landing l’uri- tanism on Plymouth rock, the Mayflower, instead of going into immediate apotheosis, continued to do business in a thrifty and money-making way by devoting tie rest of its exifltonco to the slave trado. Now, that it is alleged Senator Brown has written a letter, deelaringthat Gordon ought to be the next Governor of Georgia, won’t Marshall Nelms give out that letter that he recently proposed to have from the Senator, saying that he would positively tako no in tercet in the Gubernatorial race, and adris ing the Marshall to hold hands off/ Tim Atlanta Constitution, which informed the oountry that Mr. Davis would not come to Maoon, says of tho reception here: "Miss Winnie Davis and Mr. Howell Cobb walked through the inner gates and ascended the grand stairway." This is enterprising jour nalism. Howell Cobb has been dead these many years, and more's the pity for Georgis. Ir Jofforaon Davis had fought on the field he would have been ae silent as Grant and Lee. Bullets sometimes change a man's alylo of thought. —Philadelphia Times. Lee was silent and oomposed. Grant was is garrulous as a parrot. As to the bullet bumnoss, Jefferson Davis was a gallant and distinguished soldier before either of these, and bears upon his body honorable -scare of wounds received in defense of this country, Op Senator Hoar's senatorial prospects, thoNowTork Sun says: "Like his cousin, Mr. Bvarts, and like Mr. Edmunds, he is virtually disabled and disqualified by his participation in the detestable conspiracy and fraud by which Hayes was dnmpcd into tbo White House. Fraud vitiates ail it touches, and Frishie Hoar, mem bar of the infamons eight of the com mission to promote fraud, will not eacape punishment if he ever goee before the American people. Ho appears venerable, pious and sanctimonious)'but no semblance or realty of sabeeqnent good oondnet can induce forgiveness of hit ([Wat offence. He is perpetually disqualified for the presidency, Tun Mobile Register eounds this note warning: “Ur. Davis will visit Mobile some time this month. The General and the Major and the Captain will please take notice of this awful fact, and also that he coining in the internet of the movement erect a monument to the “pirate" Semmes. In this connection we are reminded that our Northern friends who profited by the Ge neva award ought to help ui build this monument, for they got for the most part more money than their ships and cargoes were worth. At any rate they made a pretty good thing out of it” Hama, there! Hello! Friends of the Grand Army of the Bepnblie, yon who scented tho battle afar off and shouted ha, ha, aa you jumped tho bounty; you pensioners and politicians, tako your heads from un der the oovsr. We will not let Jeff Davis hart you. He is armed with a sword made of white rosebuds, bat he shall not stick you. Come out from under the political wood-pile and walk right np and draw yonr pensions. Don’t be afraid. Come ont; the boys shall not “pop a cap," and yon can stop your ears while we explode the old anvil. The Confederate yell may be scary to fellow* of weak nerves, bat it don't ooet the government a cent. Tux representative of the Montgomery Advertiser may be set down as a “flippant paragraphia t." Of the Atlanta hurrah ho writes: “Thus ended the grandest occa sion, so far as sixe and display aro con. oemed, Ur. Davis has been honond with since the war, but when said as much to Miss Divio, she replidd: ‘Yea, but don't com pare it with the beat,' meaning Montgom ery's outpouring of heart and souL Atlan ta’s demonstration has astounded the eyi of sD, but Montgomery’s complete suapem sion of business and devotion in paying a tribute of love aclipsed the mere outward ovation of the Gate City. Thus are Mont gomery’s deeds the grander." Emron Dams is not always grim and sar donic. Nothing broadar ha* been written abont this attempt to raise a row over Jeff Davis than this extract from a leader in the New York Sun: “It seems to ns that there are braver and more magnanimous things to do than to wage war with a harmless old man, and nobler policies for a political party than to try and distort an intereating and not unworthy sentiment into a revival ofhoatility to the Union. The Booth cannot with any self-respectforget how much was glorious in a cause which wss still well lost cor is she lose true to tha Union bees nourishes the fading memories of futile aspirations stoutly straggled for. lint the The Red Flax Files. How puerile and eontemptible is the whine of oertain Northern politicians, as compared to the bloody bulletins which come from Chicago and other points in the West. In the great oity of the West, builded by the capital of Eastern bondholders, sixty- five thousand laborers are idle, discontented, dangerous, and tho wives and children of these men are suffering, in some instances tarving. Sixty officers of the law are laid in newly made graves, or are stretched upon cote in the surgeons’ ward of hospitals, victims to the deadly dy oamite bomb of the an irehist, while attempting to uphold the law and to prelect life and property. This report from St. Petersburg, tbe headquarters of despotism, might not cre ate surprise, but it oomes from Chicago, the loyal city of Chicago in a land of, lib erty. And Chieago can hear the rattle of the guns of the military of neighboring States in the opening battles of the war of the poor man against the rich man. It will be said thnt this outbreak comes from foreigners. Perhaps so. Three for eigners were bought and imported, and turned looso to rapine, robbery and murder tbe South. There are moro of theso men who may come, who will come, not to raid the South, but to wreck tbe rich men of the North. A cablegram from Vienna says: The plants, various coal an t petroleum mini have been burned. In the night marauding band* asvage *nd half-starved men paraded tbe street* and highway*, demanding aim* and plundering auch victims ae did nut comply with their demand*. Store* were looted, and barns and farm houses were rilled of their grain. Htrunge men with wild faces and wilder talk harangued a great meeting of thou- aanda of peasants, and workmen assembled In tbe open air, and with their bldeone figures made more weird by countless torch Ughte. There men preached absolute equality, and told the peasants that they were the equals, and If nnltcd, the superiors of the rich proprietor*, landlord* and noblemen who lived In luxury around them. The result of such teach* log* were demonstrations hgatnst the noblemen wbfeh caused them to flee in terror to Vienna bringing the earliest trustworthy newa of the revolt. I* the day of retribution dawning for the North? Are the bloodhounds about to rend their masters? We recall cow the sober words of a wise man, just as Georgia threw herself into re sistance against an aggressive North. Said he: “We shall have war, a bloody war, and this land of onra will be ravaged. I know this and feel it, but a joourngoona resistance ii nobler, better than a cowardly surrender. There is nothing to be feared from the abolitionists of the East. We can whip them." l’rophetio words! Our friend idl ed bis devotion by death in one of the earli est battles in Virginia, and in two years Horace Greely and his followers were yell- ing for peace, and willing to let the South go. “But,” continued thii wise man, “tho West is settled by men from tho continent of Europe, trained soldiers, fugitives from military service, and refugees from the Involution of 1848. Thore is no remedy to them for real or fancied grievances save violence." Shrewd politicians will gather this ele ment together and preoipitato it upon the South, upon her rear, while she is engaged in the front of battle. They came, and the march to the tea is historical. Tbe South wss crushed. There's no South to crush now. She is too poor to invite the effort. The value of her slaves hat gone into the bonds of the rich men of the North, and the imported Hessian has turned ujon the men who hired him to beoome a murderer and a robber. No man in this oountry who has a hopo for its future can look upon its pressnt con- dilion without fearful forebodings. Capital and labor, the one frightened, the other maddened, confront each other. A con- narrative Northern journal, tbe Philadelphia Record, warns tbe strikers in these words: Capital Is timorous. It casho! ba taken by the throat and mail* to yield at the command ot Labor. be flrtrea Into a place of a*rely, however; and thh la precisely what an oteorelv* agitation of the labor qnwtloa will resalt In. And the anarchists defiantly reply*. "Anarchy la th* oily way for worklnimtn break th* chain* of ala vary In which Urey are bound by capitalists. It I* yotur only way to freedom— freedom. I sty. with n revolver in on* bud ud yonr knife In the other, nnd bomb* In you pock et*, much on to revoluUon ud freedom. Every workingmen moat aland together and light together for hi* right*." Men of ths North, Jefferson Davis rides through the South, over beds of weloomed by the shouts, the tears, the blessings of bis friends. There is nothing in this that should arouse the resentment of s single soul governed by honeat convictions. Yonr taunts and jibes and jeers are Irritating, bat they are harmless as tho holiday in which we are now engaged. But there is blood in yonr streets, and hanger and violence stand with threatening eyes end clenched hands yonr gateways Boom* and Boomerangs, The plain and honest people of this State ue not up to tbo “ways that are dark and the tricks that are vain” of the politicians. When they hear a boom they hear it; when they see one they see it, and ue in as bliss ful ignorance of how it is made as of the reo) formula of a patent medicine warranted to bring worms, cure fits, end forever ban ish “all the ills that flesh is heir to.” They have been told there was a boom coming, but beyond n brass band or two and a vast amount of spring oratory, they have neither heard or Been it. Perhaps it is not yet ready for dress parade. The hip podrome is still on wheels, if we may be permitted to nso a rathe; wild expression. But the boom iB on the road, we may say on several roads, dirt and iron. We have had faint echoes from it in sev- oral quarters. But our correspondent at West Point, Go.,has treed it. Andhereitis: Ox*. John B. Oobihhi, Atlanta—Dew Sir: Occa sion* *ometlmes wire when the throbbing of a great people's heart can be plainly felt. Ita gratifi cation becomes at once an net of duty ud or lofty patriotism. Hnch an occasion we are assured ha* arisen with reference to yourself, and we respect- fully ask that you will suffer ue to place yonr name before tbe people of Oenrgia In response to their wish aa a candidate for nomination for Governor. Being mainly buaineia men, our action has nothing to do with pollUcat managing and combination*. We know you to be a tree, honeat mu, devoted to the proiperlty of Georgia and loyal In every aspire tlon of your soul and to our entire oountvy. Your name ud your feme belong to the people. You have always been IdenUfied with them. Ft reaaon* we beg tha you will gi SHREDS AND PATCHES. So on* can know what a fifteen-dollar • peaking trumpet coat* until he beoome* a lire company, ud ha* one given to him.—Picayune. "There are two things which I positively will not eat for enpper." said Gubbtn*. "And what are they?" asked hi* friend. "Breakfast and dinner," wa* the reply.—Danville Breese. President Cleveland knows how to sympathize with Senator Jones of Florida. He might truly aay, *i the old maid remarked: "1 no wot the pug* of luv 1*. I hev boon thar myself.”—Phils. Press. Rachel, my tear, I prlng yon a vino engagement ring." ‘-But. Isaac, lt*t a bearl, nnd bearli are on- lucky, ain't It?" "Don't aay a vord. Rachel. I thought of dot, nnd so I tako me u Imitation von out of stock."—Chicago Rambler. The lHble does not contribute mnch aid to tbe prohibitionists, taking Its text on Its face, bnt Ita sanction of the enp would probably have boon withheld if the liqnor had been a* had In thore days a* It la in these.—Chicago Times. A Boycott wandering In a wood came suddenly face to face with a Blackmail. Each started back in astonishment at seeing his own Feature* repro duced in the Conntenuce of the other. After mu- tual inquiries each rolled up hi* sleeve ud tbe Strawberry Marita on the arms were found to he IdenUcal. The Boycott proved to be the Black mail's loug-loet Brother from Abroad.—Chicago Tribune. "I want some preserve* on my bread." whined a boy to bn mother. "You musn't have it, Johnny," coaxed hts mother. "That nice hatter and sugar n Just the thing for little hoys." "Wow, wow," he intense howled, "I won't have it. Taln*t nothing bnt glu-1 »“«“ f « uu0 “ D “. ul 1 cowtuspdoleomargarine. T men it In a ne.apaper | <’ vad6<1 anBUrerin K th ® fl nc «‘ ion - Oimmt preserve* If For tbeae I c05WM<V oleomargarine, tUUmornlng, and it’s pizen Concerning the great nge of Emperor - A Little Sufferer Remedies. It Afford* me ^leamire to <riv*> . i the cure of our lluie gnmdSnV k J tt '* ^pon - Bonedle*. When »u month* 2m?. ^02151 E i to .veil and had il. We poult.ced It, botaUtolS* 1 * I five month* after It became tnSP^h AbS I other lore* termed. He then hi*. * •ore. K - each hand, and aa hta bloS'bii* 0 °»tb*£* more impure It took le«„ time ‘S' ?,»'■* <■»■“« <'n tho chin, teneit?. * ‘ml 1 lip, which was very offensive Hi.” **» n.2 I Mild .cab, discharging , JJ£t *2Z f * "JV* 011 tefnty-two monlhttS* -P* *»kl h^waa alitUe°r “»««r hl'^'-'sfi I tion (scrofula c but could not n move when In bed, - hivlig no I Immediately commenced with tboemS “«4., j die., using the Ctttlcura ud Outlc,n“ r * **** I ud when hohsdteken one bottte S .^* 1 ‘ f, «l? I Resolvent, hi. head wu comp>£(, i I wa* Improved In every way. Wo w.™ 1 *- Milk, I em-ouregofi ,„d continue,i the u«."f ih.'n' 1 “ri I for a year ud a half, ono sore after -Lan I a bony matter forming In each oe.“« l J^! h “i* I deep ones Jmtbetore healing whnu? °* (ktestw I grow looaeud were UsSSout" «*5| heal rapidly. One of theae ugly bon, *2*5 *«5I preservod. After taking a dozen andVZ?,*?'“l I he was completely cored, ud 1* Sw JoS bo " 1 » I Mi year, a atrong and healthy child Th." ** * I hla band* mast alwsy* remain- hi. a e I •g** though we once feared he' "*1 able teuee them. All thatthy,lcla« du did him no good. All who aaw thi -V.i* 1 J f,r h* I * R the f’nticura Remodtre ,‘d ™ I **>»*'achml appeared toht*grandmother, who, hetegwmtfel ovory day. lx came accustomed to the Shine*** I Rules for Keeping Health The Ladle** Sanitary Association of London gives tha following simple rules for keeping health A—* soon aa yon are up shake blukrt ud iheet; Ii-etter be without ihoea than sit with wet feet; C—blldreu, If heslthy, ere actlvst not still; D—sm ji bed ud damp clothes will both make yon E—alslo’wly ud always chtw your food well; F—resheo the air In the honae where you dwell; O—arments must never be made too tight; H—omes must bo healthy, airy and light; I— f you wish to do well, as you do I’ve DO doubt, J—ust open the windows before you go out; K—eep tbo rooms always tidy and clean; L—et dust on tho furniture never be seen; M—neb Illness Is caused by the wsotof fresh air, N—ow. to open the windows be ever yonr care; O—Id rags and old rubbish should never be kept; P—eoplo should see tbst their floors are well swept; q—nick movements in children are healthy ud right; B—omrmber the young cannot thrive without light; 8—eo that the cistern Is full to the brim; T—ake care that your dresa la all Udy ud elsu; II— ae your nose to Audit there bo a bad drain; V—ery sad are the favore that come in Ita train; W—alk aa much aa you can without feeling fatigue; X—erxes could walk full many a league; Y—our health la your wealth which your wisdom unit keep; Z-eat will help a good cause, and the good you will reap. PROMINENT PEOPLE. Judge Haskins, says s Washington corre spondent, tells me that though Brigham Young left over $1,000,1)00, his children are fast going through it. Many of the girls have not tnrned out well, and in his opinion, none of the children have the ability of their father. I came across a curious fact in con nection with Brigham Yoaog the other day, noil that is that his children acted in the consider Its wonderful cure. If theabo».v U t*™l Salt Lake Theatre when it was first started. of ny “*• ? ou - 5° M ** ’. lb ?Hy to use tw® I Tho Mormons ore not proud of this, and when I asked Mr. Caine about it one day he Railroad Matters. In certain quarters the position of Macon towards the Macon and Covington road has been industriously misrepresented In another column we produce the origi nal agreement between the city and the Macon and Covington authorities, by which it will ceieen that all Macon has demanded Uaa been a fair eompliance with the terma of that agreement. We also publish a statement from Mayor Price and Samuel T. Coleman, Esq., reference to conversations held by them with John T. Stubbs, Esq. A careful reading of the matter referred to will exhibit the fact that Macon has neither been gnaping or unjuat in her dealings with the projected road from Jeffersonville to Macon. Taa railroads have played a very import* ant part in the week's festivities of the South, end yet the small politician and pet* tifogger has packed hia grip sack and goes West Point is on the border of Alabama and our correspondent relates that Alabam ians were catching on to it. It also appears that many business men at that point de clined to appertain. It is strange that “the throbbing of a great people's heart can he plainly felt” only throngh tho medium of pe titions. A great people’s heart onght really to throb with tbe force and noise of a trip hammer. Another peculiarity abont this boom is that it is not a boom, nntil the pe titions come in to headquarters, signed by “mainly business men.” The politicians do not appear on paper. Perhaps they may be behind the boom. But while this boom is dancing about the border line of Georgia and Alabama, there's a boomerang flying around the regions of Savannah threatening to knock somebody down flatter and qnicker than punch a la mililaire. Among the people taking in the centennial are several very keen nnd ob servant representatives of the Northern press. They have seen and heard many things within a week or ten days, besides tbe old time Confederate yell. They have an idea thnt there has been a collapse in a boom or two. . They are writing some very interesting letters homo, and from one to tho New York Times we make this extract: A review of th* pleas on which Mr. Davis was in duced to leave Mississippi Is necessary to givo *n understanding ot th* present situation. In tho first place, It Is duo to film to state that he was avetae the whole proceeding, and that even when he left hta home be had no idea either of extending hi- trip or of making any speeches. Six months ego the widow ot Senator Util ot this Stats Induced him consent to attend the unveiUng of her husband' statue at Atlanta. It was understood then, and he expressly stipulated, that he was manly to lend hta presence to the occasion, and was not to speak. Hie coming began to be noised about, and waa seized on by Mayor Reese of'Montgomery. Ala., so an opportunity to Inflate hi* gubernatorial boom. Ho began to pull the wine to get him to come Montgomery to lay the coraer-stom of Confederate monument, funds tor which at once began to collsct. He made a dozen Jour ney* to Beauvoir, and Anally Induced Ur. Davis to attend, oa the promise, however, that he would not ask him to speak. With thsss conditions tho Jour* ney wss begun. But s man who wants to ba Gov ernor of his State never gats Into the chow btulneas except to work It for all that it la worth. Mayor Reese Is not an exception. Ho was ready to lay tho corner atone of a flfty thaussnd doUar monument with only 14,000 on hand. He decorated the city profusely at the public expense, hoodwinked tho people Into supporting him, got tho railroad to run excursion trains, and altogether worked up a Davis boom throughout his on Stats and tho Sooth that Is unparalleled oven In the history of circus adver tising. Its expected that the mantle of grwalacu would at once acute upon hi* own shoulders, and hta pathway to tho governorship with ono great swoop be cleared of ths thorns of opposition with which public opinion has strewn it. There is a suspicion abroad that a sec tion of this boom was sublet for a matinee or two in Georgia. Of the Georgia people the same correspondent writes: There an ne more politic people In ths world than thoee below Maeon and Dixon's lino. The octanes of government was their only occupation la slavery day*. Many families of generation* have been nothing bnt politicians. Their Inclina tions etill drift in tho same channel. Naturally they are asking themselves how all this la going to end, and net on* to whom your correspondent has thus tar spoken, except Gen. Gerdau, expresses anything hut regret that Mr. Davis ever undertook tho trip. Henry Wmtterson. Mr. Wstterson recuperates slowly from his recent lllnecs. He is nearing 40, the period at which the constitution of tho avenge man begins to deteriorate. Once restored to health, he will have to watch it for the future. In a few days he goes to Earope, and in common with all of his friends, we hope he will come bock folly restored. We haTe not always agreed with him as to pnbUo measures and public men, but have admired his brilliant qualities and the firmness of his Demooratic faith. The Democratic party will have to fight during the coming fall for its supremacy in the lower house of Congress, and while the contest in Kentucky and Georgia can create no anxieties beyond tho selection of good men, we recognize the fact that Democrats elsewhere may mis* the impetuous charges of this cuirassier when the battle rages fiercest and tbe danger is most imminent. you-duo t want your little boy todle." The boy got I William the following is of interest: “Only the preserve#,"—Washington Critic. * * ew fnvore d ones nre enabled to geo flvo ■ ■ — - generations great-grandparents, grandpa- "Let me see »mo of your black kid gtovee,” said rents, parent s, children, grandchildren. Mrs. Hnsgge to a clerk at a Fifth annuo store. I The Emperor has known seven generations, --Th*** *e* not the latest etvle. are they?" she teked who comprise a period of 158 years from the when the glevee were produced. "Yea, madam," birth of the oldest np to to-day. Tbe Em- replied the clerk. "We have bad them tn stock peror was 21 yean of age when his great- only two daye." "I dlda't think they were, heesnse grandmother, Langraviss Luise, died March the fashion paper lays that black klda have ton 11, 1818, at the age of 00 yean." stitebee and vice vena. 1 see the ton stitches, bnt I Bryant Water, who was a drummer boy- net the vice versa." The clerk explained that vice I in 1812, has called on the President. He versa waa French for Mvenbnttone, andMrs.Snaggs has lived forty-four years in a North Caro- bought the gloves.—Pittsburg Chronicle. lina swamp, generally regarded ns unhealthy, I bnt has never been sick a day, though he GUBERNATORIAL GOSSIP. complains that bis eye-sight is failing-that some signlllcant "comment* of th. sule | sea the pension that he ought Henry of Bnttenberg announces his in- Wbii* “i ,,,. I tention to set np a four-in-hand which may While our esteemed contemporary, the driye out _ not outdrive-other now fosh- Grcenesboro Home Journal, disagrees with ionaMe four-in-hand turnouts in London, ns in onr preference for Hon. Seab lteeso s while will be {orced to , foI lhe r vi n iuAte. < b2!!S e tb 8 room more than Henry used to get os a are glad to know that it docs agree with us a ub-lieutenant in the German army, in wishing Hon. A. O. Bacon s nomination _. , .. . 3 , . for Governor. The truth ia, so unanimous j ® “JJj* °* ^ oahington »re great ad- ie the preafl of Georgia in favor of Major ® irerg of i J ena i® r ? ol P, h Bacon's nomination and election to the ex- H*ey regard as the handsomest man in the ecutive office, that there is scarcely a ripple *»“- broad-shouldered, of opposition obaervablo. lie is undoubt- “Pcsss with a rich deep basso voice and edly tho man above all others for this ex- wesxra a laxanrertt full beard, whtch falls to alted trust, and if the wishes cf the party as middle of his waistcoat, refleeted by tho press is respected, ho I J. Sterling Morton of Nebraska was the will bo nominated with a unanimity as I originator, ten years ago, of what is called gratifying to him as desired. Tho Democ- Arbor Day, devoted to tree-planting now in racy of Geoigia demand this of tho next eleven States. In gome of tho remaining convention, and they will do well to respect States there is an eager looking for laws this demand. In saying this we do not | that will preserve the trees planted more yield to any ono in our admiration of Gen. I than half a century ago, Gordon, nor eon we be tempted to say anght The President is said to be worried over npairmt him# Uut he has been honored, we I his increasing flesh, and tho increneo has think, fully enough in the past to stand nothing to do with tho 130 extra pounds or aside and let Major Bacon, who is oqually BO which he proposes to take to himself in tut worthy and competent, to which his a month or two. The matter seems to bo admiring constituency are anxious to eall serious, snd he should consult a physician him. Gen. Gordon, of his own election, I without delay SSjeg* !A r X‘ C .relwi‘'honestW^L he J “ mcs K Mnr *>«V «>® «"*tor, now ex- SSirtlnlttolikiiiSi?I tot * attention m a hale, hearty gentleman S? otl *> with facultii, living in a SfhSfUVil* 11 WnImvA MtainriWRi" H P leu 4 W bomein Cincinnati, where ho re- 25? ceivea many visitors and likes to talk over ab*Il*oontSue ^support™ m P nnti “e £Mi“ nd pro,p<!oUof th ° Amer ' convention meeta and passes upon his can-1 „ didacy I l hilhps Brooks of Boston has at last core From, the Hartwell 8uo. sonted to sit for a photograph, bnt solely AVe aro for Bacon for next Governor of on «mdi«<m Hiat no picture* shall be nut Georgia— I ou *»nd he submitted to the sitting 1st. Because he is capablo snd well worthy. °nly npori the earnest solicitation of Har- 2d. Because be wants tbe position snd v * r ( J “Rio", who are to have copies of the has tbe manliness to say so, without using I Pictures. . _ , .... any hypocritical subterfuge. I ^ Cattolica, of Tunn, denies the aa. Because he wss manifestly the choice *, u ‘« nle “ t of ®? rt “ n A , n ,','? uan , newspaper* of the people in tho Ust Gubernatorial cam-1 mat a New York publisher haa been in poign, but wa* intrigned ont of his rights I wj 1 * 1 the 'sticsn for tho transUtion by dog-in-the-manger politician*, who “ d E “Bg ah \ nJ the publication foisted upon the people a dark hone candi-1 °* ***• Momoini of Pope Loo XHI. date, who np to the time of his nomination Aline. Henri Greville was boycotted in was unknown in the race. ThU without Montreal by the clerical French press for reflection upon the present incumbent, I . „®^P r ®**®“ her wbo baa matte an excellent executive. 1 Manual D Instruction. They were instrn- 4th. Because tho majority of the peonle jnept* 1 in causing the audiences at her ■till want him. lectures to be unusually small. 5th. Because he will be elected "dead Congreseman James A. Loutltt of Califor- suro,” and we want to be on tho winning I “ ia ho**t» that be wo* born in a stable in 'de this year. 1 New Orleans and was brought np in a block- 0th. BECAUSE! I smith shop and wa* elncated in a common From th. ltom* Courier. J™}*.?™ l * w J er ’ hut can still For some time past there hav* been inU-| cure Marts say,: ^M^TUden and I - —e diiMNue. Cutfcura Remedies are aoUeverrahere^^cj?* I ra, the nreat sun Cure, M eta.; Cuilcur*' nS^ 1 ! exquisite Skin Beautlller, 35 eta.; Concur* out. the lieu Blood Purifier, ii.Oo ' the Potter Drag and Chemical Co., lloaton?”* *t| Send for "How to Cure Skin Dmum" | *°“ Havea l’erfoct night,~ _ when you demand a Benson ■ Cat-clue Pla*t»«/.l druggist, to expect to receive one. Yet there ■ we regret to MV. a few drugginta of the Cheap J variety who will try to persuade you to accew», worthier .ubeUtuto with a .imiUr •ouoduSu^l each as "Capeloln,” ••Cap.loum." ••C.pucln.-^il ■iclne, etc., prefixed nometlme* with the niil "Burton,” or "Benton.” Cheap John will oSer « ■ one of theee wretched imitations for half the 1 of the genuine, m he can well afford to do ita value being nothing, and 1U coet but little Benson ■ are the only poroue plasters that teak depended upon to cure every ailment subject to a ternal treatment They ate prompt, sure si ‘ ough. Protect yourself against deception hi of reliable druggists only. The genuine b "Three Heals” trade mark and has tbewoiifi cine” cut in the centre. S» l Ufe(iubUc*a pony will mi« be satisfied, into the rant districts to tally th* people whatever the South does. Abuse and die- j against th* “monetere of iniquity ami op- trust ot the Sooth are th* principal remain- j priori on." An election ia in front and ris ing saecto of that concern,'' , ce* are to be parceled out New York and Ueorgla. Captain Sanders ot New York, a member of the “Old Guard" and a gueet of the Sa vannah centennial, touched off tbe enthn ■hum for ^Jefferaon Davis at the Chatham Artillery banquet On the night preceding, at a Grand Army meeting in Brooklyn, a Mr. Higgins colled for three cheers for Jefferson Devi*. It took four poUeemut to subdue him, and it will require a much larger fore* to handle Captain Senders on hi* return home Let ns have peace. AURAHTIII lloslof thsdls—ss which afflict msnVfadfiwk* I •UysaussdbiudlsordsrsdsoBdKIoaofthsLIVIti 1 Vkv sD somWbSs of (hto kted, mb m VnliM I IhsIivsftlHHn—ism.WsrvousDyspspms, I tiaa,Intcul*rttyaf thsBowsla.Oooltipstka.Vfcto' I Isocy, SrastaUoos sad Bnnriug ci ths flMsa*l (soomtimss ssllsd Hstftbva), lfissms. MMI Blsody Ylox, OhiDs sad VWvsr, Bmkkm Tkx I Kshs—lios hsfsss or ate Fsrsn, Chn»k Dir-1 vImm, Loss sf I ppst If. itsodiflhs^ Fool hsfil Insgulast&s MMhl to fisulsx Dswisr to I STftDIGERS AURA " is Invaluable. It bnotspsnsooafarsQd ID IT oil diseases ft! > LIV£», I STOMACH A l l BOWELS. I B shsugss ths •omplszki fins s waxy, jd*I fifttosnddy, bsahhysotor. iisstMrnsAl lav. sbsmy mUHTum wm sf ihs IOTTWW TERATIVES nnd PURIFIERS OF THE 1 BLOOD, and Is A VALUABLE TONIC, r STADICER’S AURAHTIll Fw soletyallDrusilsto. IMc.ti.O0l*Wto| C. F.STADICER, Proprietor, •40 SO. FRONT ST.. PhlladelpMs, Fa | marlldemAw 5m mations that certain parties contemplated b .. e : 0 i n ,i_ j , * STriling tbemrelve. or 1 th.occreionjf the ^o^h^udy ri ni“re ^to.r <££ unveillug of ths status to Senator Hili, Ute | de „ can ^ im , lgine4 w.^Teieerart disease except CUNCtVlAN’S rOBACCOl 1 REMEDIES ■SVFVSBWSVI *• I SSuSTJ “ r L i( . -sute ho dmlop*, da. Hi, ... could be carted ouL It waa so manifestly connected with the staff of the Washington improper and reprchen»ible that we did | BennhHran weemugwn not think tho good Bcnso of the people \'r lLv-C the ansrehiaL would permit it. We are glad to know ] e ' i {tom ’ on f V u ”°' ff? that there was no snoh demonstration, and cb-ttuber of 1 Dcnntlea ^ « If! r ^ FtJSSFA «-J>Pp^on ri 1M made in blbllf 'of Tien, offi gJSjf The sucocreful candidate wo, M. firinn‘!o a on!.U0M t oT Th ® I > oblc9t ,toman «* all, ex-Seno- which 4 coS“rt° Gen^oZn fo wHh' “® hold hU sanction^from such a SSSfertSkTMhS T that time and under existing circumstances. 4 mnn 8 * now * ed 8® of human na- It must also have* been painful to ifr. iJsris. U t ® pnritohU that.tha to. who went to Atlanta solely to pay a tribute ' rUI enta ® **» reeetor tha-American cup. to the memory of his dead friend, to wit- To Thauk Gladstone ness tho perversion of the assembly which Wasmkotox. May 6.-The noose com- his presanee had attracted into a gathering miltM on forelBn atln to-day had a reso- for the promoUon of the poUtiral aspire- fotion Introduced by RspresenuUra O'Neill Rons of men who had antagonUed Mr. UtU oj Miswuri thanking Gjadsfone for his ef- whUe heUved and whose combinations for fort, to secure Home Rule for Ireland; nn- ruling the Bute would have found in him der discussion. No action wa* token, and a sturdy opponent if still in life. I discussion indicated a disposition on xaith to the farmer or the editor: ‘Friend of I mv soul, rest thyself and take thy pleasure Orane.mm Frepsrlnc for Rebellion, for the ncxtrixteenhoura;cightho«s'work u enough for thee. If anybody has been continue preparations for fighting. Prom- talking in this style he has not been beard I ises of help have been received from Hug- in tNi. section. It takes the newspaper loud and Scotland. It is alleged that 1£- man twenty-five hours a day to make a I 0U,, * roo P® ** raised in Ireland, newspaper, and the farmer thirteen months Comumptlou Cured, in tbo year to make a cotton crop, and they j hiui iiiMtlblbtobudi^in^K*4thdkBiiMiwj5 get eight hours' wages for both. jTJSftSy.j* ^g® b !s —pfr Amalsn.nrat or New York Aldermen. ,' SSrfjSira. N«w You, May A Aldermen isrley, I detoutrsed all aereoea rotoptalata. after Lanas Wendel, MeQnsde, Duffy and Cleary, who tested ita w.eolerfsl caraUv,povera la tkoaaaads ri are indicted tor bribery in connection with jSiSe tbe Broadway railroad franebise, were ar- rsUgntd in court to-day and pleaded not clurf. to aB wkOfl—tra it tkto rwwty^moz puilty to indictment. Alderman Fo)!mff ?*** f>n .. 4t . ff>rtl *y 1 ™ ‘“t^ro. anJ ”* **1 V* I 1 THE CLiKGMAK TOBACCO OISTIWI TIIA JSMTCKlTHjlFA'K »I4uU, T**ll5*r. H&lt lUitam B*rb^» I wonnR. Punv>l««, Sovm xnd Boil*. Frlce 40^ I THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO GAR£ NYTIIItK’s p\VM niMnY. QS’tfl KsrhTbrorit-bGm.me.Cum-4. >aoril«i*.Bf*J!^Z I :l.E CLINGMAN T0BACC0*PLAST£s p; » ■’ ^onuot A»k jour dnunttot forIbaM nemrttid*.<* - CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURECO DURHAM, N. C.. U. S. A octtf'firin xwly COMPOUND Of COD LlVfl Afn) LIME. TO OSE ASD AU ABF. YOC fromaCoa|h.Cold.Aithmi > air; ti* yhiimery tmui F-rr rof Brea kltta. tt.t ~ inne«* IivseOOeadIitoe>e«e5*edd i*i»*5**5S to ae quack SX-l-aratlou. LutU r.---..* ? ; - by the aediral faculty Mae- 1 '* fK,*: ■*' A. h. WILDOB. ChetotaL •eelra. *•**.” "