The weekly telegraph. (Macon, Ga.) 1885-1899, June 28, 1887, Image 2

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THB M»rny; WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE 28. 1867.-TW ELY S3 PAGES. 1HE TELEGRAPH, The Convict Sjctem 1 Lecturing on Liberty In Fanaell Hall. I« under * searching investigation at A eoggestiou in tiuaa column* some a*ys I present in the city of Atlanta. It is hoped I since to the effect that Jefferson Davis ktx> an( j expected, notwithstanding the fierce mlRht yet bo invited to deliver a lecture in tarwfc and Mrr-nr- Publishing Co., j fight the leasees ate nuking to hold to their I Fan.til Hull on liberty excited the rUiblli- ” g,Maa*mj Bit*.-, aacc&.Oa. richness, that tt* costing session of tbo I ties of somo and the anger of other North- I Legislature will meet publio demands in a j ern contemporaries. Cut we were not al ike sally li delivered by carriers In the city or reformation of the abases of the Intern, together so wide of the mark. This conn- gelled poetage tree to tnbecriber*. for SI P*r I particularly tho political part of it. As the j try has produced no man moro thoroughly OTtk, SJ.ee cr three month*, SS for etimontht. I oiItjon c( the Tklkqiiaph is fully under- and unselfishly devoted to tho liberties of w«»ru mailed to robeeriber.. pottage stood l«ther comment on this point may the people than John 0. Calhoun. The ■ M. it Sl-se * year and IS cent, for alx month*. I not be legitimate until the report of the memory of John 0. Calhonn has no more Transient advertteementa will be taken for the committee. In thie connection, however, it I devoted admirer than John Randolph Bally at St per square of 10 line* or Ires for the I may no t be amiss to giro expression to tho I Tucker, of Virginia. Mr. Tucker knew Mr. ini insertion, and so oenta toreach esboeqnent in b jj 0 g rft t,a ca tion at the clearing up in a Calhonn and has been a profound student L££. C end birth.,' saliafaetory manner of the horrible report of his works. ! of the camp in Oglethorpe county. I He baa recently delivered a speech on mi acted communication* will noth* returned. I By reason of her prominence in many I Calhoun, under the very shadow of Fan- OtrreeponJence containing important nawa and I W aya Georgia has suffered greatly in the as-1 ueil Hall. In the oonrse of his remarks he THE LETTER WAS FORGED. MR. DAVLS ON THK CAPTURED CON FEDERATE FLAGS. The Letter Printed by the Chicago Inter- Ocean a Forgery, and Falne In IU Representation of Ills Views on the Subject. Naw Orleans, June 26—Tho following note from Mr. Davis was published this morning: “Beaovoib, Mies., June 21—Managing Editor New Orleans Pioayuno— Dear tjir: In your issue of this morning there is copied from ‘.he Chicago Inter-Ocean wbat imports to be a letter written by me to Ool. i’hoclan Howe, Danville, I1L, from Beau- ford, Mies., June 20. Tbo letter above de- 1 «>■»»£ through the | told of an intei^Vw held 'irfU, M» *|ho« ?oVbS • tilt and written upon bare attention. management of her convict system. This by a lady friend and bimaelf shortly before kinMMsiiii ' ehonld b* mad* by aipreti, poetal I is well illnstrated in a leading journal now the death of the great statesman. Ills, money orderor regletared letter. Atlanta'Unrein UK Peachtree street dll eornmnnlcatlone ikonld be addreeeed to TUX TKLEORAPH, kfacon Q«. ■ laiyord.ri ekntteto ikonld bo made paya- i« HO. a Anon kfanage before us. The Chicago Inter-Ocean says: i Bald the lady. “1 fear. Mr. Calhonn, yon aUow Georgia, tho vary center of Mr. Oradj'e "new T0 ur feelloga to become too much excited by pa b- Booth." eende colored men to the penitentiary for UoaHalra.” BerapUed: “No. not excited; only steaUng an article valued at ten oenta, and let. go I intense.” Then, laying her band gently on hi* free white men who murder netroee. J Arm, ee It reetetkon hte chair, ah* earnestly naked: There are several grievous errors in a sen-1 ••Hr. Calhoun, can nothing bo done to eara the Un- tenee so brief. In fact It wonld be difficult ] ion?" The play of hie feature, oeaeed-they be- An Abenrellty. The Galveston News says: The Macon TxLxoaArn persists In Its foolish assertion thit Speaker CarllUe could not her* to oompress more in the spsoe given. Oeoi- 8 ** 88 ®* 84 oloom - “'“hr., , hA AartteT r.f I aatfedonhis face. Hie eyaalooked out Into tho gia is not only “ ot lb8 •**•* ,, I future with that tad and eol.mu expreielon eope- Mr. Grady s ‘New Soath, but Mr. Grady s I cnltar to him, and which then seen I can never for- t then seen I can never for- "New South,” if snob n plaoe exists outride I get. He said, la enbetanc*: "You know, madam, bora”ejected*"speaker' except" for having pledged I of his florid imagination is, terra incognita 11 hove Always told you that tnere hlmeelf to give full opportunity to Southern repre- to Georgia. She knows nothing about HI'*** n0 taaltng stronger than eentatlve* to move e repeal of the Internal revenue I a jj d nlUjrly conteInni it> Ba t Gecrgis 'rCf a' U ‘* 8 ° tt ^ Uxee. In view of the feet that he was flrwt nomln-I. , ... ., I to protect It* eoclal loetltntlone from danger end m«u in cMuiw 076s determined eppesitlea cf l* 188 no *®W8 which will permit j vtAl»»a*. N Rh* fh»n mv»«< with inc?*!i*cd -rrisij S^^emoertu/ c^ngreMmen who Stored tho I Imprisonment of ft man in the peniten-1 la her tone. "Mr. Calhoun can’t the MUeouricom- rwpeul of thoee taxea aa a mtmn for preventing tiary for the atoftliog of ten oente. We were I promUe «ate It?" I shall never forget the deepaln tbe reduction of Urtff Uxee. the sUtemeet of the impressed with the oonvlotion that eome I c#ritJr of hiaexprswalveconnUnxnce.M with solemn Txnxax.ru is flagrantly absurd. I noirnarded and nnfortnnato expresaione of B 1 ” lp * 1 ** 1 “* mv - Tvt cnAipn never indulged in !*■* _ . , , . , . I ▼•rbe): **Wlth my constitutional objections I could The Macon T*L*oRxrH^ver Indulged m Qovernor Qor don, or a clerk in his office, Bot vota for u# but , would to .eve the absurdity referred, and consequently, I Ytco j\ upon the State. It may be that I this Union." cannot and does not persist in it. It wblt8 meQ and black men charged with the This is valuable, as showing the strong has not charged that Mr. Carlisle crime Q{ mntder h »ve been acquitted. The patriotism of Mr. Calhoun, and his keen promised to give opportunity to ScmUwn charg# itaelf doM not oarry guilt as a oon- foresight as to the troublous times that representatives to move “a repeal of the I c ] nlion an y more in Georgia than in I1U-1 were then approaching. It is well for Bos internal revenue. nois. Onr Governor says that there are ton to leam something of the truth about But it has repeatedly charged, and now mjmy men Jn th6 pBniteIlt i ar , w ho ought to Hr. Calhonn. It wonld also be well for reiterates that Mr. Carlisle, either person- ba oa t, and he U turning them out as fast Boaton if it could learn and appreciate tho ally or throng- —s msncgtns .ricn_s,. M fie can. The common belief is that there truth about Jefferson Davis. nwnred Southern Democratic represent* „„ many ont wbo ought lo ^ in . Thi , ■„ tlves, that they should bavo full opportunity tho fen , t o{ Qnr -, „ stem> perhaps, but it A New Element In Georgia Politics, to move a reduction of the Ux upon tobacoo b Wr , 0 preaam# , nd to goy , b A t tb e laws I ,v * eek *8° and tho Madison Madisonian and; fruit brandlee, and that this pledge ^ q^Ja, m to all persons, are quite as I eententionaly announced in terms, that the was violated. Upon Its faith Mr. Carlisle ri a nd impartially executed as thoee of preBent condiUonof Georgia politioa wonld reoeived the votes of representatives who j|| illoi3 not be changed. There was a time not otherwise wonld not have voted for him, | | long since when this assertion wonld havo and who have regretted that they did so. I The Ameri ^Hecmde’rdMWs this picture I becn ie “ lvtd witU few dU * e,iUn K *““*■ Whenever Mr. Gotlisle shall feel disposed Qt Geor - m pobt j ca . 1 I b nt that time has past. There is r~ to deny tbeso staUmenls over his own sig- a few of the leaCtag r"’ 1 "-’— and agriMltm- “ Ncw 8ooth '’ ,n Georgia, bnt there are Datnre, we shall be prepared to substantiate uu to Atlanta, when the proper Urns comes for great many Georgians, with now ideas and I electing officers of the Btat*. get together, III up a | convictions, slate. Inform their henchmen in dlflennt parts of them by proof. An ungenerous slur. i ewe. imonn men- uenenmen m um.icci p *n. oi i Within the last year there h»s been Bays tho Savannah Times: tbe Bute, and tho quiMlon li eettled-the people, t ab ii sbed j n AGonta a journal devoted to , . .. , having none other candidates to veto for, vote and ,, , , ... Mr. Lamar la about <o *«•«>• «btn,t for fh. ,„ 0| ft , claaaM , of ft . rtng , „ a 10 a,. m , tUr the cause of laboring men. It haa grown, bench, if reports are to be credited. It la not known ^ presents a handsomo and prosperous ap- buVthr^U* l, v^ , ^a‘ur^iat'Si^ U U » oorreot P iolnro in deUU - flnd pearanc *‘ “ d U #d,Ud with foto »* direot - town where he can brmh op auch patchcof legal I not a pleasant one to contemplate. The I ness and ability. Notioing the declaration erncition as may ba garolahlng hi. Intellectual ont-1 Rtoorder ought to be fully posted, for it is I cf the Madison Madisonian, the "Working known that of the many subordinate lodges I World’’ thus rejoins: Beyond the statement of Washington cor-1 0 f tbo Atlanta ting, one of tho strongest I Yet wsvlUbet* ginger cake that this assertion respondents we bavo nothing of the lnten-1 ftnd m0l t active is located In Americas. I will not prove true In mors than on* particular, tion of ths President to raiso Mr. Lamar I Tbo qguoBArn has been a vigilant I Buppoeo that brother Grady ahould determine to to the bench. If, however, he Intends to do Ln d * open opponent of this omlnesg, | so, wo snbmiUhat it is neither kind or jnst and has never ceased its endeavor niatne'e Ucket or the bead of the prohtbiuon tlcketr to atUmpt to discrcditthe appointment in Up divorce the sgricnHnral part Uvhst would happen If E.P. Howell ehonld decide advance among the people of Mr, Lamar. I 0 ( the oonoem from the political. The 11° !>• sovernoit Then again, whet wonld bath* It is highly probablo that the young gen. Recorder may not discover tho signs, but con "'l° enc « « u ‘» and Knight, of Labor tleman who prerides over the Time. know. thoJ lte ^ plkin to , bo TiLxoiupn that, P« t <>«* ( «^ b ck.t«d.l«t-»U..ym»do-th. nothing ot Mr. Lamar’s legal attainments, [ D the (aogaage of a dlstiDgnished Georgian The next governor of Georgia has not been named since he conld not have been ont of his » t ho make which has its head in Atlanta, I by the Mtduonlan. swaddling clothes when Mr. Lamar had at- and its tail in every oonnty in the Btate,” is The wsger suggested is not heavy, bnttho tainod a diitingnished position, both at tho I about to be disjointed, and in such way as I suggestions which follow may beconaidered bar ot ths States ot Georgia and Mississippi. 1 10 under the prooegs ot cementing simply weighty. Of coarse there can be amall Civil Service. I impossible. Governor Gordon has given I chance, if any, that Blaine wonld bo willing There was an urgent demand in tho early | many indications that ho intends not only | to handicap himself with Colqaitt, bnt 8t. part of the list Congress that the Bepubll-1 to be Governor, bnt the Governor of tho I John might. It wonld be decidedly refresh en clerks in office ehonld be subjected to I whole people. Under such an administra* I Jog if tbo partners should become political civil service examinations. This was earn-1 tion, and in the face of tho political changes I rivals. What the Working Wprld says is eitly and successfully resisted, and Mr. I that are rapidly taking place In the country, I worthy cf serious consideration upon the Cox, of North Carolina, the chidrman of I no ring in Georgia will last, it is to be hoped, I part of tho Madison Msdiionian and several tho civil service committee of tho Honse, | until the next election. | others. It Is evident that the organ cf tho lost his seat inconsequence of hispersontl fraudulent purpose by learning from persons in the neighborhood of DAnvillo, from which piece it appears he wrote, such facts as might have enabled him to make his fic tion lees palpably inoredible. Please give this a plaoe in yonr next issue and send a marked copy to the Inter-Ocean, that the imposition practiced upon it may be ex posed where it was pnt in circulation. "Yonis, respectfully, ‘‘JkTTERBON Davis." Mr. Davis stated in formal conversation with a representative of the Picayune, and not for pnblioation, that the views express- ed in this spnrions letter are precisely the reverse of thoso actually entertained by him. The troops in the Union army were all mustered into the Federal service. The States, as snob, had no troops in the war, and consequently all military stores and and trophies captured became the property of the general government, and snbjoot to the control aid disposition cf Congress only. Confederate flogs had from time to time been returned to Southern States by Northern legislatures and various military associations. There was in reality no authority nnder law for these acts of courtesy, bat tho matter was con sidered of no material importance and the question was never raised until the issuance of the recent order by Mr. Cleveland. Mr. Davis declared that he had resisted all of tbo attempts of newspapers to interview him on this subject, and wonld have remained silent bnt for this remarkable and nniqne sttindle, which he denounced, over end over, in general and detail, as falee In every respeot. A REPLY TO TAX PAYER. Ex-Governor Bullock Points Oat Errors In Ills Statements. Editor TBLEMiArn: Yonr paper of the 231 contains another communication from •Tax payer," in which the bond question is abandoned entirely, and a line of personal attack on me is substituted. If I did not have yonr editorial assurance of the r,.l: tbit “T.tx-I ayer" wiu "one cf the most gifted writers and purest patriots in Georgia" there wonld bo no jnstifloation for me in taking notice of this lost effusion of your correspondent. No fair-minded person would expect me to notice the stars of a correspondent wbo is without the eonr- ago to subscribe bis own proper name, and it is only in deference to the high character yen announce for him that I cow stop to point ont one ot two instances in his com munication of misquotation and unsup ported assertion. “Tax-payer” says; “He (referring to me) may take oomfort in the fact that preceding officials signed bonds illegally, therefore be followed their example.” I have made no snob statement, and do not thns take oom fort. I There toay be some reader who ie de luded by the silly talk, “an outraged people to resene their bnsintss from tbo bands of those who had followed With Governor Bol lock’s crowd fattening on the rich drip- ninnj ** To an«k n wnarla* If ft-i.vn aha Civil Rights. ' YI "'n"h- WMcllh ' Sanity, j.„. - ta’ C by, JOlmnSr Be !ghbor, , ? And passed the time Hitched Mi i a "' t V d * T WUh *M lit. m I *kw tuk his uiaal cheer la 1 Proa, | And chawed, end chawed, and chawed •pit aud I ever stirred, a ‘ ™ ><<■, I And thank, and grunted tviccdor thrf-.v v. tered ner' a word: lot , TW< ’hl. fi i n i , p lTh< ” P ' t * tKi, " rftl1 *** *hd , otk „. AB V2£fc;r' he ’ b *« ‘*0in., : , I I‘va Jnat been over to the e,«l«‘, »• newt: ‘"wnooft^i htn °ncivil right, u girln' B ,, do look like them Yankeev Is the enflon™. a They wUl make trouble Jeetu eure u "'ll yon well “ , ™“*»liru t4 J l«‘l*** atartln’ out to learn toUke‘«n K; ,| 4n4 WbIn“” 0t “ T* u>b ’*' rtgkl altar J r ings," To such a reader, if there be one, wuh to say that the "rich drippings” were not during my administration. Geor gia has repudiated her promises, something "rlfth" hffij* ftrinnnd frnm in that Ann. ■taw®!!' ““ mj ^ And bnrotm;mT'* •And atola my watch, and moles, and hoi«A ...I my cotton and my corn, ^ •**1 And left my ^>oor old Jane and me, about u «,! ■ay, 'twee monatroni bard, right after -u ,v_ I tOlnce wee done. J I EKHOUKCING THE JUBILEE. A Sensational Anti-Royalty Article In a London Xt-w-yayrr. The Pall Mall Gazette, In a long leader on •The Jubilee; its Effects and its Lessons,” wstt-g indignant over the absurdity of ooo tinning the rigidity of royal etiquette and observing the pretentions forms of a cen tury ago in tbo face of tho rising tide of democracy and the fact that the conditions which generations ago mado these things seeru necessary or desirable have passed away, happily never to return. The func tions of the throne, the Gazette contends, are positively farcical, and tbe sp.ct .ole of millions ot EoglUhmcn howling themselves hoarse over the oompletlon of the fiftieth year of tho reign ot a sovereign who does not rale, hat is ruled, nauseating. Ik a me, uut w » movi, unuaenuu^. While Qnen Victoria lives the monarchy will, in all probability, linger aa a plotur- eeqoe lnstitnUoD, pot teasing a certain do- K se of nsetalceas cf a low order, bnt the ys of the traditional pomp, glory and grandiose display, hitherto tolerated by conservative and patriotic people, are rap idly drawing to a close, and new forma and Son* six years ago Mr. Henry Seybert, a laborin 8 »«“ d «« 8 Bot e*P«otto take ahand activity aa a reaister. Tho civil serrioe weallbyci tizen of Philadelpbia, on dying I ln pulnnctory politics, and dots txptot commission hss been forced to ytttd to this I U£t a 6Qm 0 , moD „ to b8 , xpended in the tbat tbe poetical condltlone in Georgia wUl honest and just demand, and tne result i* i n ,e»UgaUon of tho phenomena nsnaUy b# chaB G® d - In many respects they can bo as was expected. In tho one department I known M .-spiritnalUm." Somo three I chunged, much to the benefit of honest cit- already pnt through tho prooeae, a large oommluion cf eitiiena, seviral lzeDI1 “ d ^o* 8 wbo b ® ar tbe real burdens number ot clerks were found gro»l, tgnor- J f ^ conneclod wllb the UulT ;„ Uy ol of the government on — ~ a * ti ‘"‘ 8d ‘ hla P br ‘ Crop. TW. Ye., anl Next. the Democratic party • P 0 ** »* follows: Horse. Howard Fnrness, | The seMona so far have been propltlons observances ccmmenaurato to tbo altered oondllion of tbe eoolal and political ritna- tion of the eonntty mns . of necessity soon ba adopted. The Homo of Commons, too, is in a sick ening condition ot col'.apee throngh similar eaneos, and the Tory government, thorn- selves tho exponents of the divinity of sov ereigns Mtd tho exaltation ot useless for mality and display over the eobtr simplicity demanded by the present state ot thing*, havo done more within the last three months to pall tbe walls down npon their holds than the maehlnery of progress hss aooomplHhed within tbe last five years in bringing England to a realization of the neeeeeity for a change. With all the en thusiasm, real and simulated, which pre- vailed throughout Great Britain yes terday tho Gazette has no donbt that a general election held to-mor row wonld show that tbe eleotore are by luge majority in favOr ot so rc-comtrnctii.g tho government as to make a repetition o such scene* impossible. Mote and more the people art oomlng to believe tbat De mo* is king, and the day is not far distant when he will be enthroned. The Uszntte'a article has oreated a sensa tion and aronaed mneb indignant oemment among the Tory element, bnt the number cf persons whose view* It reflects Is very Urge, and the knowledge of this fact nnde- niably accounts for much ot the dennneia- tion the Conservative, indulge in. ‘rich” has dripped from her in tbat oon, lieotlon. The general expenses of my ad ministration, with all the costs inoident to reoonf traction added, was five thousand dol lars per month less than those of my Demo cratic predecessor. The expenses of theLeg- ialatore which inaugurated repudiation was one thcosand two hundred and twenty-five dollars and nlnety-seven cents greater per day thoA no expenses of tbe Republican predecessor. “Tax Poyer” says, referring tome, “He tell* yonr readers it was more agreeable for family reasons to spend as much time as possible in New York State, therefore be resigned.’’ What I did say, as you Hr. edi tor know, was tbat after my resignation it wbb moro agreeable for me to spend si luueh time a* possible in New York State. I did not give that as a reason for my resig. nation and my language is not bob eeptible of tbat construction. The reasons for my resignation were givin in a letter to the pnblio published at the time. Those reasons were well founded, sndtl have no disposition to now change the opinion then expressed. I retired from tho exeentive office to defeat. political conspir acy for tho grasping of political power by revolutionary methods, and waa in a meas ure successful. Bnt I do not desire to re vive any of theso old political i&>aes. There was nothing in them to my discredit, and they are eternally dead. It is true tbat Governor Smith sent his official nqn sition throngh Colonel Fitz- sommons and it was to this I referred as being "Offloially requested to reepond to my oases Ino jurt" It is also true that I had previously met Governor Smith, Attor ney-General Hammond, Dr. Bozeman, Ool. Sneed and Cal. Kibbee, at their request in New York oily. It is still further trno that the ^requisition conld have boon legally set aside and that I had the oportunity of taking that oonn*. I preferred, however, to oome to Georgia, believing that tbe offi cial requisition was equivalent to an official amnrocoo that I wonld at onoe be accorded a hearing in oourt. Taxpayer” soya: The trial In Atlanta waa a farce, for everybody petted the result and nobody waa illupix lnled. ara painfully familiar alth eucb pat-up Jobe, ami are never surprised. W* have bs.1 a serirs of such trials end acqnlttsle. Like certain Uonsraaalonil Invaetleatlona It waatm- poealbl* to nnoover a corrupt Republican without exposing on* or more rotten Democrat* behind him. things wee done. To tore them men. Uy BUI—eh—he—he- "Bnt then I tried to ee* tt right allowin' aU ila.. They saw ther aide ae wo law our'n, and both waa wrong. 1 I Shakipearian scholar; Dr. William Pepper, | and prominlng for a good crop, but it is e* Trias still seems to be some doubt about I provost of the university; Joseph Leidy, I tabtiehed fact that the season* have to be the President's tour. The Atlanta Oonati-1 anatomist; George A- Koenig, professor of I supplemented by the sotive end unwearied tutioneayi: I chemistry in the university; I exertions of the farmers. If we are to judge The formal invitation for Pmldent and Mrs. I George 8. Fullerton, professor of b y the newspaper appointments of the Cleveland to attend the expotUloa la now batrg j moral philosophy; Robert E Thomp- Grangers there is Being to be tunoh Idle- prepared and will be presented br the president 1 , : I “ o' “■» v Lnd vice-prmldent of the uMoclatton, Beoator Col-1 " <3D| P tofeeaot ot ki»tory and Engllah | ness, at a lima when the grass grows, and qnttt and two or thraa tne tuber* ot the directory. I lderature; Coletnan bellerg, civil engineer; the plow* should be running. Of the iveeldentCleveland haa Ions ego eceepted the in- I Jimee W. White, dentist; Dr. Calvin B. I farmer* encampment to be held in Spartan* formal lavitstloo to vi.lt the exposition aad haa I Kneer, and Dr. & Weir Mitchell. After bnn( t be chuleaton Nawa and Courier aave: ‘^Colonel'L* mont’writMr > noia < commit> I B ** 1 ^ l brco S ftn ot invtatigation thl* com- j ^ .mber^.tarivro etth. eo«mpu£, » lt * | mbeion, which i* pmUbly as able as could | from lira of tha Soulhara Btatee: lira men. man *** • j b ave been expected, has announced its con- j whs have made mosey by farming, who have teat- - El ff l ‘ U, *„“*!‘* 1 .? D ■ Vr - hU,it011 ’ JB V_ *■!’ - ,, * T .r 1 clarions In « book of ISO pages, W* fanvo tha prednetlv. eapmdty of verted Mite, who The lion. Caleb B. Denny, major. Indianapolis, I . , - , , , ,, 1 have mad* experiments ln seeds. In methods of lnd.—Dear glr: ThePrreldent dlrocts me to thwk I not ** 8 ° 018 "P 0 '** bnt It i» eUted that i( I (.nulling. In the aeoaomlri ot harvaeUno to the you for tho courtesy of your letter, which he dude embodies tbe generslsnnonncement that iU wol i»pro«d agrlcnltnnl Implement.;' to the upon blaiemio to Washington, wherein yon are 1 the “mxnifeetationn" presented for obeer-1 control ot labor, ln the growing ot new crops. In a good enough to u ’Y* bl *» tc, r‘ene*of th# Invito- V aR cn and examination by the eommiaaion thousand different thing* connected with ths farm tion, heretofore presented, to visit Indianapolis all. .a-..--/ ■ the time of tho Bute fair. In September next, end “° " d . ^ . wiu reu wnu utey arrow aoour ranntng. ana leech and that they are not enfficlenUy matured to enable him to lend not different In quality or degree from the t00i mtkt mom#y hj faming. Th* op- you any deHulte reply. Very respectfully. D. O. I jugglers and Other practitioners of the arts portaalUes for a satisfactory comparison cf meffi- Lamont, Private Becretery. of alright of band. | ode and r-enlts, at Bperianburg wUl ba waU plgb Bat the Mgdsm who is likely todirect the _ — — — , tour is quoted thns: Tb * *P* 8 “'»U a R officers in Clnein Mrr. Ctevelatd .aid. In Aurora, H. T„ that she “ U “ 8 to h* be,d 10 * bar P acc<J,lnt - Th® tne xhaoe tibia. In addition to this Commissioner Hen- wonld probably bo nbl* to acceptthe inviuttoVto I Timee-Star says: "The directors of the I der,ob P ro poets to have a ramp meeting of visit eome Michigan friend, when th* President Fidelity National will not be able to shirk 1“ Atlanta for several days. Sack gore to t|. loots next September, she explained their responsibility by pleading their lgno- dlatta ot men from the fields at a time when that eh* had been deatrooa of vUttlag her relative. I panes of the crime which their vlee-pretl. cr0 P 8 *° ,ktd ^ eupetintended, in JMkwn for along tlma and wonld Uve doa# I s ’ 11,1 I . ... . .7. . *o la the President** cenpsnj soms for the Uci that ths Utter's rsUUont ssnutiT* O'Donnell wonld m*k* sochs ekU rsther I imistiog that he VTM^igQorftnt of any _ nnpleaunL Bhe ^id that th.y would enrely go lo I againet burglary. They are j net as liable 1,8 K”** 1 ? damaged by the withdrawal of m jmVo fot thelr o£ oBil ** ion « a « tat ^ w * “• “ nred “■* th * P 00 * fam “* and th-n vo^tth-.-' they win vtett Detroit, Grand tbo8e of commission, and they will probe- wtU **• tau 8 ht how to I 8 ™ 1 ' “ d *** la ^ Chks4», Hu%ffiuhs« and * f*w othsr wmi- I bly ^ bo hoM‘iu law. The devilment has I next 7**** m *7 prodigious re- r (Mm, • I bet-n done in an iuslitatioo which wu, or j ThereU nothing In ell of this looking to-1 ought to have been, controlled by men of I O** greet fict seems not to be contid w&rds Georgi*. | money; it is more than likely that they are ered by the Republican pertiitnj, end that uck ittautc Qi lbo imfl wbicb lbeir vic^-Drcai-1 eao sopennienaeOg M tl«'L^ d8n ‘ “ d hUUentenanU were perpetrating, U « j rtain, r calcnU “ d '“P“ r «> 8 b »"'s‘- a with Bept*-1 80 J more than the burglar can escape by I J* 1 * 1 *' u comforting, therefore, to be h a visit rather I inriiting that he wasjigncrant of any Uw ,bal though the present crop may A Watch rm. financially responsible and will be go held is that the vast wealth now centreing In the , Yon can get an improved Waterbary to the extent of thelaet dollar of their for-) Honlh will control public opinion. There Watch, with a chain, and the Wxkxlt tune.. It U a eorry plight for Mr. Briggs would have been no war had the owncrahh. ! 088 Y 88 *. for *3- For particn- Swift and Mr. Chatfield et al., but they are of the staves been vested in the North; and l * a '‘’ rU ^ c ” :IU el^ub. re in thj in it, and to w.y [^ars for Ibem to get every doltar .pent by that .ecti.n this eide 1 out except to pay out.” ' the l’otomao is a ballot east for peace. l’olnt. About llattlcenakee. Uoatgomery Advertiser. A gentleman wbobasbadeomscxperience with rattieenakes was speaking a day or two ego abont the habits of the reptile. "Few jeople,” raid the gentleman, "understand be habits of rattlesnake*, consequently there is a good de. 1 of nnneocssary fear re garding them. In the first plaoe, a rattle snake will not rime yon, and ln the aecond place, it will not attack yon unless yon come npon it in euoh a way that it oannot escape without attack The Hon. N. J. Hammond was Attorney- General of Georgia when I presented myself here for trial. Does "Tax-payer"—yonr "purest patriot’’—mean to charge that I put op a "job” with Gob Hammond to post pone tbe trial?. Bril wainamedat the highest figure permitted by the law, and tbo case waa put over on motion ol the State’s attor ney. Thi* postponement continued, not withstanding my regular demand f ^r a hear ing at cash term of the court, until Attor ney General Ely came into office Doe* yonr "purost patriot” mean to inainnate that this "put-up job” lasted through Got. Hammond * term of office, or that be wse a "rotten Democrat?” When Col. Ely oonaentedto let tho oases be heard, he was assisted in their prosecution by tbe tato Judge Hawkins, of Ameiion*, and Col. D. P. HiU. Will this "purest patriot” of yours, Mr. Editor, daro aaxert that I "pnt np a job” with these dtatingntahed and hon ored jurists and that they were "rotten Democrats?" When my oases were finally tried the Hon. George Hltljer presided in tbe Snperior Conn as judge, and in each of the thre e cases juries were bad composed of Gtorgians of uniupeaebed character, all white men and Democrats, many of whom are still living. Does yonr valued corres pondent dare ehaige that all these, or any of them, were "rotten Democrats,” and that my acquittal and vindication was "put up jo*'." No, Mr. Editor, yonr corrsapendent will not dare to charge this even behind the safe refnge of a fictitious notn de plnmt>. My appreciative thanks, I suppose, should be tendered to yonr correspondent for his offer ol permlttion tor me "to pur ine my private easiness in Georgia,” sub ject to bis conditions. Bat I will venture to snggest, however, tbat this right is guar- anteea to me independent of bis will, end tbat I do not forfeit this right cither by ■I dbln't want no war at fart; bnt when ithed t>| noipoldueorgfi for 1 nst'eUy eouldnotituta "Ho tot of mortal man •' boldin' bar ln bu. .1 strain!; -| So. J- eme, mjr ekln la tolnbble white, bnl. Hr -. 1 liver ain't! 'I Ujr blood la red—1 am * mu—I love old Gt:-.-1 •ays to do, that thing r a | true, And wbat tbo Onv 1 gwlno to do. Bnt now, aa I was sayin', when I Jut had com ol im a •Whan avtry nigger's son la schooled (t peril' al For not a mother's ion of 'em hu mot* tbu’eml tlior back*;, * •And when they crowds ud etlnke me off froal gttttn’ to tb* polls, r I While Congress grind! thergrind, aa ’twin 'th«t I takln'ot no tolls; And when I stands aside ud watte, ud hopes tin I things will mend, I Here oome* th e civil Bights ud rajs, thu tin I •han't have no sad I ■Hit seems ee er.Jaet when the water's ronihen I here ot late, I Them Yanks bad throwed ns overboard from cdlie 1 Ship of Bute. "Yea throwed ns both—both black ud white-Into 1 the ragin' sea, ] With but one rot-en pluk; while they, all saleudl free. "Stands on tho dr oka, ud nuna their handr lob I their pockets tight, j And laughs to see we both most drown, or lire if I tuskin' Sfhtl For, Joema whet In this mortal world of tree fit I kin ba dona? They'vo made tble Southern pluk eo rotten, tt sill I not bear but oner Thu Uncle Johnny riz, ud singly walked tewsrii I the gate, I And swung tt powerfnl slow, like he was lutti' oil I weight; Then give a anddu grant, and epryly hleledankh max’; And sot, ud hilt hi* right hud up, high np lab of tu catn't Boat." •How, atl'm drowned, I'd like to know who'll ftlh-1 or In my grain, And feed my gala ud cam for wife—my dear old (And bora I’ll say I've knowed him now for Mj you or more. And novtr heard him eweu. nor ones a ilogl* can before): I tell yon. Jeeme, I kin not holp It—maybe II I • I •In; f By Ood 1 ef they don't Sing a rope, 1'U peak ttr nigger In I —Sidney Lalkr. 1IE, SHE AND IT. Jng. It » rattlesnake U distorted it “horrifying MlintV w by naUiuR prinuS oscftil j sounds its rattle aud makes eff, but Jooum»uU io members of tne legislature '.f von oome upon it auddeoly and it has to fight, it will ooil itself np, poise its head and ■trike at yon downward. The fang is turned np nnder tha upper jaw, and as it strikes this is thrown ont and cute into the flesh. It is u sharp as a razor, and goes throngh a thin boot like a steel blade. What hi the best antidote? Whisky, The man who is bitten by a rattleenake ehonld have whisky poured into him until he is too drank to stand end be •hoold be kept drank for two or three days. The one poi- eon counteracts the other. If he can't be made drank there is little hope for him. I have seen tt stated that a bottle ot turpentine turned npon the bite will draw the poison ont in th* shape of a greenish riot that will float np into th* white fluid, bnt I have never seen a test made of that Live flesh will also draw ont tbe poison, it is said, and I know that in some places, when a person U bitten by a rattlesnake, tbe first thing done U to kiU a chicken, cat it in half, and while the flesh is still quiver ing put it warm upon the bites” Low's Long-lone Day. Each rose before the eon ud uw the seen A slender golden curvature eubret On the green Eastern iky. which brightened soon TUI In Its crimson wavelets the wu test. And to be*so a perfect dvy of June. The river eparkled, birds voiced, breeiee tcet A lengblrs world efdowere; bine shadow! croet Tho tnnthlne ot the long, warm afternoon. Bat who inherited this wondr ns day? Two happy lovers It wu made fer them. Of uu.e not mounted by the moon or ton. Both felt that It would never pen away. And now, when music In the duek wu done. King Lore nad all tha stare for diadem The members of the present L gia- lature are not blinded by mistaken prejudice*, nor are they warped by partisan fervor, and they will carefully consider in the interest of Georgia whatever may be brought before them. They appreciate th* foil tone ot the great French miniatat'e laying, "Nation* do not Uve by polities, bnt by hnsinosg,” and if there be one among their nnmberjwho feed* npon the scraps of a past in which the heat wa* too great for his personal participation, (bin monel of eomtort will not be denied to him. Let him dig and anail. Berra B. Bollock. AllenJane 23, lhb7. A Reward for Michigan Jumpers, The manager* of Bellevue Park, at Pitta- bnrg, recently bought seven fine deer in Michigan, and had them shipped to the K k, where a nice big yard, with a eeiea- t fence, was waiting for them. Tbe boxes were earefnlly placed in the yard and opened end the animals came ont one by one. Then the biggest deer turned her targe, dreamy eyee toward tha aevan-foot fence, and in a moment made for it, fol lowed by tbe other six. Those who were present vers wining to swear that th* draemy-eyed animal leaped twenty-five feat high over the fence if ib* cleared it at all, and she certainly cleared it, as did the other eix. A reward is uow offered for the Michigan jumpers. President Cleveland ie said tj be Hrisff | 135,000 per annum ont cf hie salary. Adjntant-General Dram, who bag raliri I •nob a bobbery abont the flags was a Blaise man in 1884. Ths New National Liberal Club of Lon don haa 5.000 members and the finest dab house in the world. It ooet $750)000. Miss A. Staton, of Aagnsta, wu ehoebed ' by lightning Monday ao aeverely that aba ■ conld not apeak for three days and suffered from frequent spasms. A Washington milliner bu inceeufulll introduced a new style of summer hat which she has named Dorothy Whitney, Is honor of tho Naval Secretary 1 * baby gt?l Mr. Lewis Morris, the assistant poet lau reate for the jubilee occasion, ie tbe author of tbe "Epio of Hades." He owes hit ele vation to tho partiality of the Prince el Wale*. Phil Armour, it is stated, wilt be the next millionaire owner of a traveling eteemaf. He talks of having a yacht built similar I* Lord Brassey's Sunbeam and for tha umt purpose, a voyage ronnd the world. Rembrandt's famous etching of "Chriit Haedi g the Sick" baa been brought by th* British Musses fsr $6,609, There si* *>at eight impression* of this etebing in eiiit- ence, and tbe last, which came on th* mar ket to 1867, bronght 0.400. , M. Yallin, a French chemist, haa invaot' ed an Improved kind ot cement, poMMawf durability end the cold appearance of mar ble, eo tbat a well eet with it not only oome* impermeable to moisture, bnt cen W polished and made beantifnh Lord Rochester, oldest son of the Earl oj Carnarvon, comes of tge this week »M inherits tbe Chesterfield estates. When hil father dice be will be one of the wealth!**! of peers, as bta income will exceed fiotttOW annually. He was in Philadelphia e ft* months ago. Mr. T. Uoutacge, one of the chief eh** 1 neera on the Panama canal, wbo ba* r* - turned to this country on account of **•' neaa, aaya tbat the company has onlymonST enough to coolinne tha work for tov months, and that the death-rate among the laboring men haa avenged 60 per oenL Jake Sharp fornlsbea very good picking 1 for the lawyers. His lawyer*— Stiekney, Fullerton anil Netaon—•«* $36,000; and other expense*, so far, “rirs np hi* biU to $77,000. As .Sharp mean* » fight all along the line of court*, hi* ** knnement will increase like compoun?* 1 interest. —Leeamaa'i Masarias. Two million postal cards are printed daily at present. P. T. Baranm is to be immortalired by a bronze statue now bring cast in Florence. Tbe etatoe ie a mark of esteem tendered by hia partners in the show bnvin.ee Mr" Hiraum be* stipulated tbat It aheU not be erected or til after hi* death. Men's tnhnnULltr to w. meu makis thocvinde mourn. »an 1.1 be ea afpltest!» re"-'" taf of Pope's line, ln view of the lodt/r. *">‘‘7 snff-rej and peine undergone et tne bends or ■- •kUKatphjatclu.. end •; eckv. Xali.rellr —*TI Bhevnff-reoa until L.t —1 u. consults t : p j regarding ecme lemeie difficulty ebuh •— kr.owau eetvlng h«r etr.mnt. AUlhUeffitereT meutcan b- elided eoJ a cure t*J br tag IIt. ICc-e Is, , Itu Freecr'.'^uon-e«PT drn«,.l, end taking ea dmecled. Price re • •