Newspaper Page Text
THE V.ACCiS WEEKLY TF.LEGRAFB. TUESDAY, AUGUST 24, 1886.—TWELVE PAGES.
THE TELEGRAPH,
Atlanta and Prohlbltlo
In yesterday's Atlanta report a fall ac-
BitltHO ST1RT DAT IN TUB TEAS AND WEEKLY
BY THS
flliffimph and Messenger Publishing Co.,
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iu
Be;ecled commnnlcatlon. will not b. returned.
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Clirn.ilona of living topic, la aoUclted, but muitbe
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Atlanta 11 arena 17H Peachtree street.
All oommonlcatlon. ahonld be addreued to
THE TELEGRAPH,
Macon, Oa.
Donay ordere, checks, etc., ahonld be made paya
ble to n. 0. Baxaon, Manager.
Tag mutiny spreads. It is said that Mr.
VT. H. Mcroor, of Webster county, will run
as an independent candidate for the Legis
lature against Hon. D. It. Harrell, the
Democratic nominee.
count of the proceedings of a meeting of his more proiperons neighbor.
the people of Atlanta with reference to the
prohibition law was set forth. It is evident
that her leading citizens, many of them
heretofore strong advocates of prohibition,
are now thoroughly convinced that the
movement was a mistake, and that great
harm has come, not only to the city itself,
but to the cause of temperance also.
It did not need this meeting to prove the
fact stated. From time to time accnrate
reports of the workings of the new law have
been laid before the publio, together with
the condition of Atlanta's trade and real
estate values. These were sufficient to con
vince any reasonable man that the law was
unwise, and the sooner the people secured
a modification of it, the better. The me; ting
described expressed the crystallized opinion
of the publio and foreshadows the end of a
mischievous and dangerous faroe. Atlanta
will substitute high license.
The circulation and patronage enjoyed
by the Telegraph in Atlanta has long since
justified the establishment there of a local
bureau.
Although powerless at thetimeto stem the
tide of public opinion in favor of prohibi
trees of the small farmer will be as valua
ble, in proportion, as the large orchards of
Lotts', new cottage coat $36,000. Tlie poor thing
oonldn’t afford a house.—Cambridge Chronicle.
There is no finer fruit country on the
continent than is found in Georgia. It
will pay our farmers to keep up their or
chards and varieties. The day will come,
it has come to many already, when the
profits therefrom will justify all the labor
thus bestowed and all the years of waiting.
Ot grapes, it may be said that they are
now cultivated in every section and in
many varieties. While a large share of the
crop is sold at home and abroad, more goes
into wine, for which, at seventy-five cents
and one dollar per gallon, there is a good
demand. The day will come when the
curing of these into raisins will open up
hero in Georgia another profitable business
and afford a new outlet for some of tho crop.
We regard it as a cheering sign that in
creased attention is being paid on all sides
to the cultivation of fruits, and tho best va
rieties of fruits. Whatever increases the
housewife's funds helps trade.
'For Impudence you take the palm!
•aid to the dude when she .Upped lil. face.—Yon-
ken Gazette.
"Thl. 1. something I have Just dulled off,” ..Id Monday, and was interviewed by a repre-
the firmer*, wife as she took the butter from the I sentative of tho Sun:
chum.—Boaton Bulletin. “What is the drift of publio sentiment in
Woman', gre.te.1 flory U her hair, and .he England? Is there any general recognition
ahonld be very economical ,, when ah. U cook-1
log.—Somerville Journal.
•Do you favor home rule, Corrigan?’* “No, but I j D g jn England. You are probably aware
r wife doee.” **8o?” “Yee; her home rule is, I that a recent conference of the EngliHh
•Locked out after 11/ ’’—Rambler. | Chambers of Commerce, at which delegates
Society at Slog Convict—Say, Mike,
my dipper tasks. If youll -wap Ill get you the hnm thftt Bilv(?r ghould be ftt 0D *
appointment of city librarian uhen I get out remonetized, was adopted by twenty-
Judg# * I eight votes to fifteen. Two vears since
A down-town grocer has a sign in hta window: 11 don’t suppose the “silver men’’ would
Picnics Supplied.” He woa a little taken aback the I have secured five votea. A requisition
other day when a young fellow came In and ordered I such as this will have to he fully consider-
one girl.—Philadelphia Call. | ed by the government of the day. The
■She fondly kle.ed him under the .tan," write, f° ct5 . 8 - t ^ «P“chea of Senator Beck ami
v—' u-A Senator Teller, of Messrs. Symes, of Colo-
N.w^rtnov.l^,''andh.kU«dh.r b a ; k7 The rad Jone8 and othera ■> y} MhlDloa
V-ehaped cut of dnnea admlt of rech culatto* ^U«t the propoaed suspension of ailver
it istruei but think of the powder-baht „„„„
The 1UU Campbell Pear,
A correspondent of the Augusta Evening
Hews his been describing a now pear which
promises to become a rival of the famous
Le Conte pear. This extract will furnish
tlou, which was swelled by the local press iM history „ 0 far as known
The Delaware Democraoy bid this to say
of Mr. Cleveland: “The Democracy of Del
aware, in common with the people of the
whole country, recognize in President
Cleveland au honest and patriotic chief
magistrate, anxious to secure the proper
of the capital city, the people who earnestly
desired temperance and were misled into
joining this movement to obtain it, by the
fanatics, cranks and timeservers, the Tele-
obapb steadily gained in strength, keeping
always before the people the truth as it was
developed and the impossibility of inforc
ing, without confiscation, the extreme ideas
that had prevailed It is certainly a tri
umph of journalism, that not only haa it at
administration of public affairs, and entitled , Mt 8ecnred ^ indor8( . meD tof the Atlanta
to tho confidence and support of the Ameri
can people.”
pnblic, bnt a pnblic admission of tho wis
dom of its position from the leading editors
who ridiculed it.
High license will go into effect in Atlanta,
in our judgment, within six months, if the
expressed will of the majority is reflected;
and once achieved, the city's retrogade
movement«ill ceaae and values in all de
partment. look up. It is certainly the duty
oi the Legislature to cure an evil which is
apparent and which threatens to ruin so
large e number of the citizens of tho com
monwealth
In the meantime .the Telegraph will
stand ready to lend its best endeavors in
behalf of true temperance and real reform,
Ma. Cleveland goes fishing in style. He
goes in a special car provided by the Delaware
and Hudson Railroad Company, and accord
ing to tho description givon of the carriage,
it is more gorgeous and lnxnrions than aDy
similar conveyanee ever supplied for travel
ling queens or emperors. It is a mahogany
paiaoe, mounted on twelve paper wheels of
the newest pattern, whioh travel noiselessly
over tho iron rails. The berths when shut
into tho sides ot the car take the place of
richly gilded panelled mirrors. In a spa
cious bedroom stands the presidential couch
placed across the car; a handsomely orna
mented and throne-like piooe of furniture, I giving along with these the best Atlanta
made of highly polished and frosted brass newg published any whero.
intermixed, and snrmounted by an elabo- jt j s evident to a close observer that
rate'y carved coronet. The chair, of richly prohibition in Georgia has reached
embossed green leather, os soft as velvet, “high water mark,” and is giving place to
are mado to extend into sofas, and the our I couHervetism. A few months since it
talus aro of oxpenslvo heavy silk anil real I seemed as though a prohibition wave would
laoe. “Tho crushed-raspberry stained- sweep the Bute. How tho counties in
glass windows," we are told, “filter tho w hi 0 b the isane is made rejectit in the pro
light and fill the cor with a^oft, sumptuous portion of nine to one. In Mitchell,
radiance that isveryqnietingto overworked Lowndes, Brooks and Thomaa the majori-
nerves." ties were so great as to make it difficult to
Ma. Cleveland appears to beat advan-1 understand why a vote was sought. In
tage as a penaion vetoer: “Hi. tea-1 many of the counties that have agreed to
sons (or not approving a hill ap-1 the demands o( the extremists, the farce
propriating $200 for the relief of Fran- that haa disgraced AtlanU haa been re
ds \V. Uoideman, who, In 1862, when peated, From all sections come
a lad of twelve, attached himself to various I reports that the peoplo
Ohio regiments and performed variou. disappointed and tired of a law that at one
dutioa connected with the army until the and the aame time yields whisky, prohibi-
ondoflBfit, are thni tersely stated: ‘Of lion and freedom from lioense. It remains
contse he nover enlisted and never was I to be teen if the high license law will not
regularly attached to nay regiment. What be made more dlfflonlt and the canseof real
kind of arms this boy, twelve yean of age, temperance greatly delayed by experiment,
armed himself with is not >Uted, and it it | that began with extremes,
qnito evident that hit military service
could nut have amounted to much more
thau t)|| Indulgence c f „ boyish freak am
The treea ore the property ot William Campbell,
a thrifty colored man, who owiia a plantation of
several hundred acres within a mile of Loachapo-
ka. William says that when he waa clearing away
the virgin foreatjaat In the rear of hU neat little
cottage, several yean ago, he found a small pear
tree growlna under the shade of a large oak. He
dug it up, and aa it ftrked near the gronnd he split
through the roots, making two trees, which he
out in his garden. In a few yean the trees be
gan to bear, and the frnit excited the admiration of
theoountry round. People came from coniid
enble dlstancee to see the wonder. A planter not
from Aubnrn gave Bill forty dollan for
handfal of switches to graft on other
trees, and ' a nnreeryman of Nashville
offered $300 for the two trees. Strange to say, no
body has ever seen peon jnst like BUI Campbell's.
The trees an rather small, but are so heavily laden
with fruit that it is necessary to set props under
many of the limbs. The pears an yet green and
growing. They ripen the latter part of September.
We weighed several assorted sizes and found that
the present avenge weight is something over ten
onneet. When fully grown some of them weigh
pound and a half. They do not perfect seed,
which seems to Indicate that the tree Is not a nat
ive of this country. There Is little or no con
the frnit The flavor Is delicious, excelling that
any pear In this country. BUI haa bed many large
orden for trees, bnt he cannot furnish them. He
has grafted a few, bnt says It is dlfflonlt to get
stocks on which to graft
The above will be intensely interesting
fruit-growers. It is a singular fact that
frnit of such qualities should have been
found in a virgin forest, bat it may bo that
the Yankee army left it there, just as the
sheep clover was left.
Campbell's discovery is likely to prove
fortune to him, and to make him famous,
The V*uturn of Fruits In Georgia.
Middle and Southern Georgia within the
t w , a « a*. . > ,atvi decade will supply to the world a very
'^o proportion ol the evaporated pram
whom ha wreaeaod.te.l Thereto a pleas- d ,^uT bj . ^ ^ The nnmb cr of
ant .er.tin.ent connected with thi. dtoplay treH , ct onl ud now approaching
S' “ d ° blWi * b “lliUry ardor. ^ bl . arl ta ,, mo . t b. J0Dd tmltof. It
and it to not a matter of .urprire that h. ^ tUo ,„ t montU
ahonld, a. It ta elated b, the committee, thonttnd , ^ bMn lold , n M800D »l on( ,
have woeived honorable mention by name 0n ^ — ,,, 8tclion , of ^
n the history of hta wgiment, but »hen it ftonj ^ Une w h „
U propoaed, t.enty-two year, after hi. own lbriye we „ LeConte o{ mon ot
on. year a experience with troop* to pay Je „„ fonn(t w , h8 „ ytt
him a aum nearly, if not equal, to the pa,- k ‘ ^ not tbtiTed undcr
of a aoldier who fought and .nffered all the J “
danger, and privation, of a aoldier’. life, I K France 0 f thi. puflcnlar frnit from
am oonatnuned to dtaent. . handful of cutUog. in twenty yearn.
The Le Conte pear bears tho name of
gentleman distinguished in tho world
.dense. The Campbell pesr, if it shall tnrn
ont to be what is olaimed for it, will bear
the name o( an Alabama negro farmer.
If this shanid meet tho eye of any ofio
with a tree of Campbell pears, let ns have
Bnmple or ao.
B1IKEDS AND PATCHES.
STRIKING VIEWS ABOUT SILVER.
Suvpenfllon of Silver Coinage the Destruc
tion of American Export Trades,
tkeju. | j* ew York 8un,
Mr. Moreton Frewen, Mr, Leonard Je
rome’s son-in-law, arrived from England on
I tional settlement of the silver question?”
“I In lit v.- tli.tt public opinion is awaken-
statement tabulated by one of
statistical authoriti-s, Mr.
for the Royal Trade Commiasion . ' : ' V; a
ting. Mr. Palgrave says: "Bv
this table it appears that, speAkiiw
ally, every 11 uetoutir„, 1
rate f ex,-hang,- is e.p.iv,; ' '{
tion of seventeen pence 134 ‘ .**»
Belling price of the quarter (8 bnshl?
wheat in England."
“Your anti-silver newspaper, h .. B .
appear to question this statement „f
consi rinutf <1.* 01
enormons consequent d< predation
farm, rs crops in Dakota and 1 ,
th-.'l'Ml 1 Ml-I. ai. ,1 la tl.,. .■ ‘H
ers.-l the S-uith; l,„| U,,., tl \
"'•'ll ‘‘"Mill, III, it \ should l„, t ' l„. , 4
millions of dollars a month—that!.
lour in11 ion doll.reayear—fortb./ 11 !
«•' |'r.»lm‘.-rH..f wli.'at ai, I ' 1
this is not a fair way of consideriiu.nl
question, because it does not take intn, J
sideralion the immense savini? seen^i^
tbo general taxpayer in the shape d,
cheaper cost ot the bread he eats '
“Remember that tho reduction In n,
pnee of wheat is not only the refiucti J;
forty cents per bushel on vs
coinage have forced npon pnblic opinion
LouUa M. Alcott has written a .eqnel to "LltUe in Europe n recognition of the forces which
Men." W« know not what IU title U to b«. bnt It U I ore anpporting silver in this country,
universally agreed that Urge woman are tho natural | "Oniy a year ago onr leading newspapers
omplicoenk of little men.—Lowell Citizen.
used to declare that Bland and his follow
er* were merely the representatives of the
Oentlemon (outside the Polo grounds)-Sonny, is I silver miners of Nevada and Colorado, and
there a game going on Inside? Small Boy—Yesilr. I were concerned only to to secure a special
Gentleman—Are you certain? I don't hear any market for their silver.”
howls, or hoots, or hisses. Small Boy—Dst’s ’cause “What is the opinion in English tinan
Sullivan's emplrln' de game. cialcUcivS as to the coarse we ought to
_ . adopt in own onr interest*?”
air. B. (S prominent polltlclanl-Cncle Baatua. 11 ,.J tbink tho opinion of those who redly
want you to oom, up to mybouao and v.ndlcata nmleretend the question is, that Mr. Bland
tho kitchen celling. Uncle Itaatua-W-wha' dat bas been quite right from flret to last, oud
■ah—vindicate de collin'7 Mr. B.-No, no. I don’t | that the country would do well to follow wfir ,i , n( . , ■ ,
mean vindicate, i mean wnitewaan tne coifing.—i him. In 1878 you were commencing to re- ' .. .A i;?. ' “
New York Time*. ' - ■- l farmer 18 l,T#
forty cents per bashel on the 75 OOo i.
bushels yon export to England i,
oilnniinn nn ♦ V.« .uvi ml, " *
equal reduction on the 250,U00,000 bn?!,
you consume at home. In other word.
tax payer, ia taxed to the nmonnt of tw^ll
four millioos n year by tho Bland act i
yet saves eighty millions a year bv'i
lower cost of bread. Wheat is even now J
low, owing to cheap eilv er , that v on ,
exhausting tbo tertihty of your vim,
wheat soils to no purpose and no profil f
nt present prices your wheat farm,!
— losing money. And as to *
railroad interest in this aneetiom
things are, how is it possible that earair!
can be sustained? Tho produce which th
roads should be carrying to the seahoal
for export to Europe is not comieg u
...„i - -I-—, are nlao so low that if t
freight rates mnit itiU c
First Editor—“Been after any of the fashionable
resort* tbla year?" Second Editor—“Well, no, not I
exactly: was out three days bill collecting, though. I , -
Have you been anywheret” Tint Edltor-"Not ex- “^.”7 I the expense of Am.rica. It is 'ihT.“h“J
«Uy. do; hut Tv. read ^veuty-thre. .u,.m.r hotel woald ' ba ^ h aiJ tba ' c!ill hbdincl owing (o 3Bgr
'you wholly in silver.. But aa it K the 7“°^^ J 0 ? 8 "
circulars."—Omaha World.
Colonel Fred Grant haa written hie remlnUcence* I Bland bill has enabled you to accumulate a ^ ere ^ * re ® c °i na g e - The British goverf
the .lege of Vicksburg- H. could writ, much magnificent SnppT ot ^hT ^d SlTvLd r !f„ T, Ind , / , a r *Vn D T R7 J r0 ?,J h ^ H 'S
trnnwlnnlv .h.remlul.a.n™rv# $1,. T>.1™ I A. vwvwa ZeZsZ. .11— I railroads ia Indit, in 1872 $15,000,011
jive such support to silver {n 1RH9 .
House in Chicago. Fred hoe not been a great sol- that you have been ablo to keep that „ ^
dler, though he has worn ont several pairs of pants I metal from actual discredit, whill giving ■ , "* °®f
while on detached eervlce,-Picayune. time to Europe to re ognize tho danger, to ^ S «H
which her gold procliviti.s were committing „ r J .. ' P .„T th ' 1
" her. 1 am convinced that when to history is ,? ni J 1 *
era In to the prlaoneri, elrT Turnkey-Yee, mem; I comm i ttud tho unbiased judgment of thia I q , 1 inceaBant ^ inthe Eoatern excl
m.mi.v M an'plckpock.Uwl..b.gUdt o g.,'.m. | monetary criri* it will be recognized that | “^ on ^ gather from thi, why, abov.J
They dote, on flowers. But there ain't no murder- your timely and judicious legislation in L,l„ ’7.^7 • T ’
ere In now, mem. The last one was pardoned out 1878 saved the world nod yourselves from i8
yeetorday. Young Lady—Ob, I'm eo aorry.—N. Y. I incalculable troubles. The Blond net did
Time*.
so Tlt4
one.. , neither too much nor toi“rttleTprotoc^ I
DoB.gg.-1'm s wretched mae. Bagley. 1 * m »»• l° f hoitfle TeihflnUon in other nation ' Sh ® tant to otber*co"ntn1
Meted with lneomnta and life la getting to bo a bur- about $10,000,000,000, and the ioterea ™
deu. Bagley—Noneoue# 7 Uiere are pUuqr of cure. | Au^* 7°™. \ th..ta.T».ment, which aggreg. e. 1
for that DsBaggs (despairingly,—Yes,
there are, but I’ve tried them all Without <
go to church regularly, and oven there I can't go to | u^irj" .„~T -lTv,.lTI lowtr tho P rice to which _ ailr, r fall, t!
■leep.—Philadelphia Colt
1 U “li , th.re^o d t U th?§^« now that there|‘ 0 8h “ d , °* J 6 K!*^
' ^JS ^1* .■‘l!” Ot Pri p^ gt TnLuy td"
greater is tne vnlneof British gold ao J Bn
"Wliat la tho Imperative I coinage Germany and France may sell us I h,« BD
4 h th ° 1,1 I l“ nn0 ' ’ '''“N^toa^e^emllVunifkelv 118 Look nt ^W. 000 . 000 of interest. The efoie
eher. -rhank you!' mur-1 No. that is extremely unlikely. Look nt 1Jritj8h K tales loan, snch as Mr She
Got—A Texas school teacher lost one of ibis
scholar* vary suddenly and unexpectedly. The class | was i
woe parsing a sentence. *'
of the verb to go?" asked t
“Oo!" shouted the teacher. -inanE you: mur-i iiu. iunnoc»ncuioi/uuuiie»jr. ajuu* u$, i x,- tj . no Mr Kk.«r
mnred the lad, as he shot out of the door before tbe present bullion value of silver. If Ger- fevr i M1Q g 8i „ bt ' 0 f tbe piri jvsif tU L
MmuM h " 00014 Pr ’ PMhU Te ‘ om *^- T,I “ I STnU fn ,r»7.l^“ 0 "’ h r.„ W n°."i I overtaken onr home industrire, indie. 1
An alleged bu.lu^ man; IuqublUve - . .. ..
os a nation rather than the reverse.
lose 30 cent* in the dollar by the tronsao- ♦ Vl Y» i *1 >
•Pap* what doe. the word 'alleged' mean, which I tatio of 1 to 15J. Ills not to b« thought
need to much?" Editor-’*Wsll, it meono-hem | n ? thnt o#rm«nv will >«11 « An Q1 nnns n .
la an alleged business man, for Instance?”
legtd business man, my son, la a man who doeen'
advertise.’’—Philadelphia Call.
of
A letter to the N«w York Journal of I something wonderful tdcontemplate. It
Commerce, from Moscow, Russia, gives alao the beat advertisement that conkl
thi. acconnt of tome await baaa Ringers: dtsired for the tree, when it ta remembered
“The ordinary base voice ta often little bet- that this enormons propagation haa been
tor than a growl or huikineu of the throat, accomplished by thousande of people of
Ho one thinks ot calling it musical. But I classes and degrees of intelligence, without
never heard tenors that thrilled end experience generally, and in the face of two
charmed me more than the baaaee at the winters and several dr vntha that have
Temple of the Saviour. Thi. ta, perhaps, spread ruin in other departments of horti
the coetiieet end most splendid church in culture throughout the length end breadth
all tba Busies. Its outside ta marble and of the land. Evidently the LeConte ta tbe
gold. Its inside ta a lavish display of the safest pear for Georgia,
preeion. metals thickly set with gems. Tbe question arises, What will become
Every quarry in the empire has eontrib- tbe vast output of frnit which mn.t result
uted its beat to oom pose the tessetated from this rut growth in a few yeere? We
lloor, the wainscoting and the columns of l*Ueve that the proper answer haa been in
the marvellous structure. It was Irailt to dlcated in our opening lines. It does not
oominemorate the defeat of tbe French in- seem possible that the demand for pears
ravion of 1812, and was only recently com- will cover tbe Georgia crop ten or even
plated alter forty-six year, of eonsecutive I seven yean from now, althongh there are
work. Aa one walks about thi. stupendous I those who note the feet that a similar pro
church and transfers his auiulratiun from pheey concerning the Florida orange hex
one object of beauty to another, hta atten-1 been kept standing for twelve yean and ta
lion ta suddenly drawn from everything by I to-day no nearer fulfilled than when record-
a bunt of musical thunder. It floods the ed, end who confidently expect that there
interior like the crash of a great organ. He will always be a ready demand for the
looks all around and cannot see what censes | fruit itself. Holing the tendency
tt. Somewhere in an elevated and hidden | of invention Tmd its ready adaptation,
choir or behind the masaire gold altar piece it occurs to ns that the time ta not far dta-
are the singers. The voioes are all baaaee. tant when every neighborhood will have its
There are three or four distinct “parts," 1 pnblic evaporator, just as many hare pnb-
rome pitched so orach higher than others I lie ginneries end threshing machines, end
that they seem relatively to be tenon, that tbe money made in the near future
Each note+even the lowest-is clear and from the LeConte pear will be derived
firm. It has the sweetness ot a Ante with | therefrom. We are informed that evapora-
the sonorous volume of a bassoon. The ted pears lead all other dried fruits in the
concealed performers are ottering response market, and that the demand ta practically
to the gorgeotuly-atlued priests, whose inexhaustible. It will be a great day for
own voices are deep and melodious and | Georgia and a triumph for the men who
Ulll Newman ami Ills Organ.
The Atlanta Conatitnlion says, among
other stuff: “The attempt of the Maoon
Telegraph to make it appear that Judge
Hewman is a sort of ward politician, who
owes his appointment to bis political chi
canery, ta a very .mall piece of business."
The Macon Teleoeath haa attempted
nothing in relation to Bill Hewman. It
oopied a paragraph from the Atlanta cor
respondent of the Augusta Chroniclo to the
client that Bill was a worker of the Atlanta
ring, and that he was such on expert at the
business that he did not make a ripple on
the surface. This authority ahonld be good,
a lucubration of this eoneepondent hks
had the honor of appearing in that boudoir
of belles-lettres, the “ConititutionaT col
nmu.
Bill'e indorsements, backed by the Ring,
can never convinoe tbe intelligent people
of Georgia of hta anperiority in any respect
to Judges William Montgomery, James
Brown, John I. Hall, Joel Branham and
James 8. Hook, from whom a choice might
have been made.
The new baby had proved Itself the poesreeoeu.. d j
extreordlsarx vocal power*, and had eurcired them ‘
much to Johnny’s annoyance. One
his mother: “My little brother came
didn't her “Yea, dear." Johnny
some time, and then be wanton
It, Johnny 7" “I don't blame the sdroM tor I which, foUowtag stall oYw'ms. nud’prict”! I noL°and tons the b^ l L°ce’of W t ride ^ulna
bouucing him, do jour- -Merchant Travtler. haa brought other countries tesidts Ireland ?__*’_!! / M*. 0 ! 0 ** b* 1800 * ot . tf8d * “V 1 ”
■peakiii of Ihs fscUhsTth. Chlnaae aIwsjs ore “ d E^ls^^ ra ^ dra^ng^^n^
boxes for shipping their merchandise and never JPj T °^Ubina and Chili. For these reason* it
nee coupenge. Tom Bseee says the reason U that !22Sh JlnESV LTJSL^Ti# I**™ rao that Mr. Bland * proposal
TTaZIi,", 1 !;”' 0 .Ur*d lnC h m^ba , 1 i 8 , a tof 8 tre folio permUted to manipn Zuflm ‘.^‘.Ure^TrJitUn'cemS"
owing to Iho fact that ttwa. nawj foe .Chios- ,„?e and contract the world's currencies a. ™
msu lo (.t iaslde to held the heed up while sc-1 i h ov oltoso and when they plea*, thus 7 P ^,“‘7.
, bf debt by doubling P ^
, they pltnao and when
other wre outside doing th. nalltnx. Urn. lagumoajoabflng tho burden c.f ueu. oy uououug i .
a Chinaman for evrey barrel, th. govnamrat the value of the currency mediumr gndjproatablsjiegta.^ ; .
■topped lt-LouUrlU. fret “Does It not aeem fair:under all the dr- L. ^tartSSl?iiinttonl
Tlmreare pnrtj hard oa this route, and don't ?*■*•“?**■ ‘A 8 * ^“ 8 d °A tn° helnf^ 8 * I trndo to bo made a footbslUor AalaUe cob
jo»forg.tlV'«ddaprire p«k W p^dUr<m . ^" 8 ^" lb “ 8b " iot * in h(1 P lD B 08 I petition, stimulated by th. cheep «!•<
Western railroad th. oth.r dsj. “Aren't aalea I f,v». «„.t I halt... .t,„ j , I which yon will produce and won’t ootuuml,
good!" was asked. ToUrebljrfair,buttlutrouhtol. , At .iim! I m Ira t.AA ; " Hicuuso certain doctrinaire economiaU w3
Jim them Boston millionaire, retaraln, from Call- that EnriLX snSn Jtoe^oo^ ll ’ ed «««? >'««• decided th.
fornrn. Er.ryon. -hohujeama^atpack^^u ,C r .t^d«d^re“gho^ vref^rhtt nud " »“*>? eondhlon. of »
U, s-U me pru. Uch to m. few a dells, red a half, gj? em^ In Iudffi .U7plO sil to
red If 1 refuse they threaten to buyup all me V cr hasbeen and is still immet.ie,^ From 1800 Tura?. on^Jhrrel
stock, rsorgulxa me road red leave ms out «o to 18«7 Indio tuok silver at the rate of $75.- “.A So^n.htoo
sure.. I Wish I had s place with s circus to sell 000,0UI annually, more than tbe whole veur- !L b ““ ld ^“ J h3
ptak Umonads, Nabobs cua't bluff you there."— ly produce of silver at that time. Even IJJ}!? it? fUTlSs'mnffin hnatols^o 75*
Wall HUMt Nava. I now F.noland In her Tr.Hi. ,1„,„l„l nn . I. ««»•“ 106,«»,OUO bUlbelS W IJ.J
Trx Earl ot Dufferln has rebuked ms provost
marshal at Mandalay, who turned hie camera on
the condemned Burmese red took photogrephe of
them at ihe preclre moment they were being exe
cuted.— Philadelphia Record.
Yet Stanton hud Mrs. Surratt and her
companions photographed on tho gallows
and R number ol United 8Uttei officers aro
embraeed in the horrible picture.
It is not strange that Hew England peo
ple can be fonnd to declare that they have
aeon tbe sew serpent, A hundred years
ago many of them—good people in their
way, were positive that at some time in
their Uvea they had seen the devil, hoof,
horns, tail and all.
As to Moore's Lynching.
Harrison, Ga., August 19.—Editors Tel
egraph: 1 see in several papers through
the 8late article! condemning the action of
Macon with reference to the lynching of
Moore.
My opinion ta that Macon ta better in
formed about matters connected with
Moore's crime than Favannah, Columbus,
Augusta or any other town in the State can
possibly be; and that her peoplo were the
right ones to judge whether the course she
pursued wee an “outrage to taw end order"
or not Ho malice waahorne toward Moore
previous to hta crime, and Mist Little waa
an insignificant personage. Bo it waa whol
ly from motives originating in the pres
ent affair that tha people of Macon were
prompted to take tbe steps they did.
Tbe character of MIjis Little had no hear-
orthy to take port in this noble choral
service. I wait for half an boor, hoping
that the singera will execute some long and
• formal piece. Bat they do not end I re
tire, having learned fur tba first time of
wb.t a baaa votes ta eapabb in sacred
music."
have pressed this fruit if the final result
should be neighborhood machinery that
wiU be available in utilizing the peach
and apple crops also. At present there
ta money in these for those only who are
■o situated aa to command a home market
With evaporation at hand the half dozen
ing in the matter ao far as principle was
concerned. And Moore's crime was no Ices
great on account of her character.
Moore’s punishment wee only too good
for him, and rather than being a slur to
the fair name of Macon ta an honor to her,
and will, besides preserving compliance
with the taw hereafter, show to the outside
world that died* of go dark a nature can
not be perpetrated at Mscon without speedy
and severe punishment.
8o tat us honor Macon for tha steps she
haa taken in this matter, and may i
always be re quick to resent insult and
r dy to snpprewe crime in the (utnra
baa been in this
G. G. D.
oi that Germany will sell to you 21 ounces I - lh ^ 6 ,°“ be , no . donbt wh " c
-•reported.' -pretended,' wnppoMd to W red th. of b( , r silver for nn ounce of gold, when nt ‘“in.?"rar morlfthtn m'
tike.” "But I don't uaderatred, papa. Now. what homo she is receiving 151 ounces of this ? r ~7 * L u?”/ l V? u- P f rt .' L
la re all.gtd bnalnssa mu. for inatreco?" "An at- same ailver in payment of all debts and taxes .'£7 wioW LA
« “ tteequlvatant ol the ounce of gold The “A “ d u ‘ b f § b^tbe^elS™,
tb0 cash v<5?^d: yourVxportS, red to.
•xercuedthem »>!»« to enpreclute goli uud ag- ^‘to'draw! ‘The* “fianceT’ the"?
cam. from taavre. en ud bondholders, ta at the aame time re- T0T tb V ?°°. P™ .teen ex^orting la
any wu rllretfor 81 , on8ib i 0 for tbo geueral depression of in- t“|““ ao low Inrtm ^1^1. wifi?
: "Bay, ma." What I dnHtr y nn d for tho general discontent be L D8 “ i 0 *’ ! h
profit I
now England in her India dominions talmavissi -kii. v.al.’. in ,„
A very rellxlou. old darky broueht tea pound, rilOTt M mud> gUvtf ye«flyM you fro ^ .^boo.UUO to more tl.an 40.O».ttX»|
f *»«• Baltimore to sell, and jwunderthe operation of tlis MmL And it U tb« qaoUtl price in London of f
the buyer found them of such excellent quality "J? . lt . f ^ unfortunate | Mllver OQQCu vhioh determines also wbeth
that Uo Mid: "Cncla Bouboa, U you will promlao I •
not to mix any h«.' freUmre In I'U agree lo buy thU matu
all tha $mm fMthan you ere bring mo." * 1
can't 'racily promise o
hesitating reply,
la my houM'
gocao-fulbcre i
feather, to git mixed into tha hag to make up I American pri
. BaaVen vnn'.l tiallae 'tamlnu 4m ban efnrw I .t. A 1 a
If vrtn wan A^esA a "**vor ouocu wuicu uci^rmiocx Uiso ,
or i°. U retion of tt*
'V^-.I h * I ta-o» Of the "dtamal scirace" that L
acts. It ii no qm Ulkinir
wilshL Reckon you'd hotter 'umluo de t«g afore I about wheat itocks in light being .mill, L - v 1*'"
** *°? 1 “ bb * r b ° 5,, » “P * | end about the diminishing area ot Arneri | "
Sam Ksodsll's Honesty.
QUIPS, QU1UKM, AND QUIBBLES.
can wheat field.. All that will not avail to L A °.Af p ‘aS
keep the pries of wheat steady If silver into tbaajb* that CongreMmaa KAr
- & commtaaion »»rUUdeldhi^ whf?,"" 88 ^.*^
cjuuuuu iu uui. The royal comm ihs ion i r—» r——rilT.'i- ^rrltudH
now sitting in London, af.er a careful pie- for campaign pnrpo«s , “g
liniinary invetigation, hu retaMistud .““ut ho via poor and could not p.^ty it- “
the fact that prices in India have not l8re P°f* cd “«)‘ D B: M
riaen, notwithstanding the greet taR l pita ta Just $.W0. I can give you that. 1 "
I in tbe value fthe oold v duet of I uo more.” the story mar 1* *™'>
1 the rupee; and what to** thta mean? “** J*»“Y*. >> n * ‘ ha « f 8 n d „°° l ri
! 808 That a bushel of wheat to-day in Indiads ‘ b »‘ Ur > Kredull, despite all opportreiM
1 worth a rupee, aa of old; but whereas ten “ d ‘**up»»Uon» in but Congr.MU.nal “
. rupees oonld form.rly be bought for a eov- re , m ? ,D8 • "I > *’ or ,,at tl0L ' ’ l , r
larxMt paper Ur Um State, a Triplett shut. ertign, now aixteen repcew can he boURht ^ I>*‘l 1 ticiarx rf that atamp ta
VTere ot “or statesman am In lore with the Bell I for thi* warm- anvart it-n Tii<r.-fnru the re- ! ^.r-'-r und scarcer every soaaoa. K «
tephone than with uy other girl on the turf. I ault of the full in the price of silver ta, that I '“hoi"*! that there will never 1* *
Won't aomobody writ, a scug on 'Tbo Ont bale 11 can buy not ten hut sixteen btuheta of I ‘*“ Dr< > ol the crop,
of cotton," ud Mt It to tho air of "Baby's Oot a I Indian wheat with u sovereign And thin
Tooth." depreciation of eilver accounts also for tho
Tbww ta not much diflkreoeo In gtattag away with I constant ahrinkage in tha value of cotton,
The Mexican, of Chihuahua,
Heem vary anxious for huahua,
' But tb.rU audit la luaiua,
Aa w. have remarked beiauhva.
One's kinfolks aro apt to bo on.', tola folks.
Tho girls of Macon hart such sweat
th. teeth of nearly re of thorn decay early;
bachelor dentist iMurei the Tnjuaari.
Tha Thornes vllle (Os.) Tlmee ought to h. th. I rupees could formerly
Beat HU Wife to Heath. ^
Three u not much aisereeeo tngremgaway wita i wuereue Ninusigq m ute value or cotton, | Charleston, August 19-"®°|*f'f—
umpire red gotttug the amptre away. T7u Uttre. maize, hide*, and other ateplew which you colored, near l roapenty in th -
however. U ^.r. 8nd «!“* to F.urep., including but htaI wits to death
How could Cleveland get out of appointing New ”°PP <r - *■ to copper, silver prices in Her neck wee broken end her. kuii
an Lotted State, ludae ia AUreu*.h.n the old I ^ India, are atitl maintained at I J'.louay w« the cause. --
man. Jadge MeCar, U dead! theta former level, and thus the Chilian ex-1 .. _
JTJ2S? to your Notice tl) UebtOFS 811(1 Cl«U^
ca r_!r .L Hr v w “ I copper exporters. Trus. lbs Chilian ex- Oaomou. Joins Cocntt.-aU 51^.
tadonlBf Um litah National coDiistion. I L.. IT vuu “t* , clalu. ■ a^aicst tba ««UU uf thaUlaichn
Bob Taylor, Derewratt. K
I buy. thirty per cent more silver, which ia I end re lartme who owe ea
■ tho ‘Sddlw. tbe currency of hta country Make MtUoeunt with tho >
wthrettraw^iMlrairoftt^JB
H I Mid rem»yw_reg*g
JAMLi h. TASBURKN, Ex* - *
there Who due. unit pay the “fiddlre." I Uw currency of hta country.'
rrore a eaaemlwg ap of the erUreee taken before I .... , . . .. tap. Auguetn. IRH.
£*2 - Sr^onT** on “^-•^ofVtotaun^tnreTco”
*T^tzr^r^Th* d,. Cter teteygte. rxTT aBW .
vorere; wife, WM Ulaitm‘ed In ntttbu, UU. week aiver wouldJtSdSJ^mJTu^to\b5j{ 0*SiZH^ireSlre'SSS’
5 ‘,p* n “‘,p«' b8 i*W5; IJa £
W* 4ls*s«s4 wlfs vkoa bs bd ilsstrlsl it Russia. I silver had risen to &! Deuce Dfr oaits din til* is ibis offlf. ••• ^•.fSTSs
ad doMrtsd is Russia. I Silver hsti risen to tii penes per oaace tbe I oAm, OMi^iias
‘“wt" Whm lttd * W ““ U collapsed.
1 eight White relrep. wh.ta your own fanner, in Dakota and I re
maloI llir.nea ta would secure a rise of furtv M idayle) t-,Uraeat.tfre '" trfd-'
1. rent* on every l!:,hel cf ub-at they pro- n^^»«dh.th.oma^ihj)"^*^ift
mi I uticed. r I eoert. «Itness my band cnumiy_»y. vjwtt y.
This I* u tid^revemeut oa Ihe policeman who I Minnesota would
sleep ud don't patrol tholr baste at .U; but what UI cents e
Bkott Baedad uooir dij fortfBBMsti Is yollttsus I dtlced*
who win patrol thter but. at night white awake. ' "To bo quite exact I will quote yoo toe