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THE MACON WfliiKLY TELEGRAPH: TUESDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 20, 183T-TW LVE PAGES,
THE TELEGRAPH.
1 OILIIUD «T*»t DAT IT TBE VXAS AVD WWXLT
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THE i El KGBAPR.
Macon, Qa.
Announcement#
Office Macon Telegraph, December 11,
1887.—From snd after this date the pries
of the Teuegbap3 will be as follows:
Pally, one month . 75ite.
Pally, three months $2.00
Pally, six months, 4
Paily, one year 7.00
Weekly, one 100
Terms: Cash in advaneo.
Present subscribers may continue on the
old basis for twelve months, ot take cash
discount, at their option.
J. H. Campbell, Manager,
An Agwrre.lvo Campaign.
Tbo prsviousness of the Republican poll
tieians in claming victciy in advance is not
ns excessive as it was a week ago. They
begin to soa some thing* th6y did not Wee,
and to hear from seme ot their own men
that bad before been silent.
They tee, first of all, that they have got to
back egairst a man who is considered in ell
business circles both honest snd conserve
tive—in a word, "salt;" a qian who o in be
trusted to do nothing that will disturb the
basinets of the country. Tnis feeling of
security goes a long w»y, with men who ate
fall of their o #n affairs. Snob men always
dread a change. The brilliant Mr. Blsiae,
with bis aky-rocketty foreign policy, will
bear from snob people It he beoomea a c*n-
didate. ,
Then again, Mr. Cleveland's statesman
ship has clesriy pat the R tpnblioans on the
defensive, snd dttensive campaigns invaii-
sbly look enthusiasm and other feslnrts
of snooess. The next Presidential canvass
will, beyond the shadow of a doubt, tarn
upon eoonomio questions, and the It spub
licana will bo compelled to defend the pres
ent tariff, to explain away the surplus, and
in general to aoeoont for the burdens of
ttxstlon that; rest upon all containers.
Their own legislation will be on trial, and
they are defendants. Not only meat they
defend the tariff they nude, bat they mast
explain the land-grabbing they permitted
in the West, snd the privileges they
freely granted to monopolistic cor.
potations in all pula ot the country.
In no respeot are they or wiU they be in a
position to be aggretiive. In no way have
they put the administration on lha defem
slve. In no reipeot have they lcsiened the
confidence of the people in the President or
his advisers. Ko one aoomes them of dis
honest) ; no one considers them Incompe
tent. The Republicans have, in s word, no
issue that commands popnlsr support.
On the other hand, the meuage of the
President pnta the D. moerata on the much.
The attack npon tho war tanff and all other
monopolise has began, and if It i. well
maintained thtre can be little doubt of the
result. To fioubl it is to doubt the intelli
gence ot people f*hn whose pockets money
is unlawfully extracted day by day to fill the
pooketa ot the savored fo». bush people
can be trusted, now that they see s gleam
Of Justice end fairness, to make their ballots
effective ntxt November.
This will undoubted!) bo theouein New
York, New Jersey and Connecticut, where
in almost every city and county and in ab
most every hamlet people see snd feel the
effects of governmental It jus.icoand favor
itism. The operation ot making the mill
owner richer and the cp> ratlve poorer goes
on before their eyes. The mugwumps in
these States in 1884 were, almost without
exoeptlon, tariff reformers. They will stiok
iu Mr. Cleveland, and will *>• handsomely
reinforced. The tariff Is emphatically an
issue in the three Butoa named, end it will
grow in importance right np to election day,
Congressman Fitch, of the Harlem district,
s Republican, and ex Bacrelai) Uogh Mo-
Outlook are straws that tbow which way
the wind is blowing in tbe>o contested
States. The coddled Btate of Pennsylvania
la, ot conns, a horse of onothir color.
Bat tnere is also front le in the 'qrotec
lion” ranks in the Northwest. Minnesota,
loss, N.brsaka, Kinsss, Wisconsin and Ill.
inoit ue aU threats log to kick against the
vu miff. The Ghioago T eibune snd snob
strong men like Mr. Wo* blnrn, of Hinne
•jgolis ora no longer silent Wisconsin his
a* le at become a doubtful State, snd too
mnch protection In tbeRipobtte»n platform
may rovolntionfxs Illinois also Tte Re
publicans in all parts of tts North wist us
btoomit g dlsasUafled. They ue tired of
onriehirig the factory bosses ot the East,
They are compelled to pay heavily, and get
nothing in retnrn, for Liverpool names lbs
prices of tbeir farm products, not Pittsburg
or Fail River.
An aggressive miff reform snd anti-mo-
.nopoly campaign Uwbit tbs country needs,
end the Democratic party Is in an admirable
position io furubh it. In Otov-t Cleve
land that party fortunately has a leader who
has the conn ge of his col victims.
WaauncoTox at last has newtpapers
which ua enterprising. She waited a long
time for them.
A Great Political Sinner.
Mr. Janies O. Blaine is a frightful ex
ample of the downward oenrse of tin. It
la not exactly known when be began to go
wrong, bnt that he began early and kept
np the lick persistently, U notto be doubted.
He wes far down tbe broad and easy path
when he accepted protectionUm, for bis In.
telligonco and his conscience bad become so
warped that he was able to reject without a
pang tbe oonititntion that had proteoted
him in his deucst rights. Thai instru
ment limits tbo power cf national taxation
to tbe payment of debts and to prov sion
for the common defence and general wel
fare of the United S'atcs. Mr Blaino has
loDg supported tariff rates that pnt no
'money in the treasury—that operato simply
to take money from cne man's pocket and
pat it_ in the pockets of another, bnt no
more deserving citizen—that enable the one
to pnrohaae steam yeebts and build pslaoes,
while to tbe other falls the grime and sweat
of unceasing toil. All this in the name of
the people, although the making of coun
terfeit ojin it not more outside the spirit
snd letter ot the authority from which Con
gress derives its powers thanue prohibitive
duties. "
Bnt Mr. Blaine does not think so, and has
not thought so these many years, and now
he is prepared to take another plnnge Into
tbe abyss of iojustioe, taking his version of
the constitution t long with him.
In order to relain all the taxes that the
tariff monopolists demand, hesolimnly and
deliberately preposes to ooileot the whisky
tax as at preeeni, and distribute the pro-
oeeds among the States in order to lessen
tbe taxation of real estate. He dees not
merely propose to distribute ail aociueniai
surplus, as was doQe in 1836, bnt he pro
poses tocicalc an annual surplus by con
tinuing a branch ot taxation to meet a par.
lionlar Btate matter. Even school children
know that euch a scheme would be
unconstiluti.nal. And yet its
tbor is a candidate for the
highest piece in the gift of the people. He
seeks the place through the party that
claim3 a monopoly of the virtue and patri
otiiru of the land, bnt fortunately for ua all,
it has no monopoly of its votes.
But he should Income their candidate.
The party that has, ev-r since its organisa
tion, construed the constitution to salt Us
own purposes, no matter how temporary
they were, ebonld have Mr. Bldne, of
Maine. The man and the party are well
met. It is not a case of equate pegs in
roand holes, for esoh is ready to cast tbe
ooDatltntiou to tho winds, at the demand of
the tariff'monopolists, who in turn aro ex-
peoted to roll np a campaign fund that will
oreate pubho sentiment where It dots not
natnrslly exist. It is monopoly and money
against just and fair taxation.
pauper pension ir a weak reliance. The i Hajd«n, Lang. Pfrry. Aduat, Lodge, Barnet; and |
gentlemen who are anxious to devour the | Belmont are the gmlaatM pot Htrrard ICollrge Ini
surplus and keep up tbe present outrageous th< ’ '■«*••!>Oosgrew. Taa achxUr la polities i. a <
rate of taxation do not put all their egg. in ! **?
... * mcncfeb* * u , According to th« Baltlmira American,’
one basket. They want to give
anythiog from $100,000000 to $500,000,003
for coast defences. Failing this they would
like to cocstraot a navy.. 'It would take
tea years to bnild a navy, and by the time
it was complete it would not only be ont of
style, bnt It wonld be praotloally useless
for aggressive or defensive war..
The Blair ednoational bill is favored by
many of those spendthrifts cf the people’s
money. It wonld dispose cf $10,000,000 a
year, and that wonld do something to
bolster the tottering fabrio of protection.
But tbeir latest and meanest attack is on
tbo poor little two-oent postage stamp.
The great party of protection is now
engaged in an organ : z?d campaign
against our inoffanalve green letter stamp.
The stamp has never done anything to pro
voke this assault It has behaved itself
well under all oiroamstanoea. It has stuok
where it was placed, and has industriously
carried millions ot messages for tbe poople.
Tho plot against oar reliable two-oent
stamp is thus explained by the New York
Evening World:
Wltblu a short tlma It will ba poaalbla to reduce
latter postage to one coat an ouuoo without Involv
ing a serious lota to tbe government.
To moke the change now wonld probably create
dcAdency of some $10,000,000 a year.
The champions of a perpetual was tariS ««In
this another opportunity to tpend the aarpluo, ead
theref. reeomc of them favor a redaction In pos
tage at once.
If the government wilt take from the taxpayers
no more money then it floods, they eon pay the
present retee at pot tag) without tronbla until an oh
time aa a cheaper rate uau Le et7«0*u6d.
We can wait a little while for a rsduotion
of postage. It will inevitably coma btforo
long. Bat we cannot watt for a redaction
tho taxes on the necessaries of life. That
will never oome if the iron and wool barons
can prevent it.
It will cost $350 to see Sullivan fight an
Esgl abmin. If thoy wilt premise to keep
the creators in England we will eheerfully
isoribe for ten tickets.
Not Freo Trade.
The Nashville Ameriosn, which is, or has
been, a promotion Journal, is very mneh
distressed because certain Democratic
newspapers, among whioh it names the
TsLEouaru, wish .the tariff revised without
reference to tbe Intcreata of American labor
and mannfaoinrers. Tho Ameriosn bad no
warrant in anything whioh has appeared In
tbe Tklkobapb for the oseriptton to It ot
euoh a desire, and we believe it is almost
equally unjntt to the other journals whioh
it nsmes. The Txi.roturn believes the
President’s messsgs to be direotly In line
with the Demoorstio platform
adopted in 1884 at Chicago,
and has supported it heartily for that rea
son. That platform does not demand the
repeal ot the internal revenue texts, but on
tbe eontiary expresses tlfe opinion that
they should be devoted to the payment of
pensions—a drain on the treasury which
will oontloue for a century. The hardships
worked by cxocssively high and badly ad.
jaited tariff taxes are denounced as vigor-
oaslyMn the platform aaln the message.
Tbs line of polioy advocated In both ia the
same, and in both sedulous care of the in-
tsresta of labor and manufacturers is rec
ommended.
The Txliosapii has not looked npon the
meitage as a "now departure on the road to
free trade," nnleei any rednotion of the
tan iris to be looked npon in that light by
protectionists like the American. On the
contrary, the Txlxquavb sees in the plan
ot revenue rednotion proposed by the plat
form and the message the only final tattle
ment of a long vexed question.
The tax on whisky is easl’y borne, its re
peal Is not desired by prodnoen, it enhan
cts the pries of an article which nobody
wishis to be cheap, and la in no proper
tense a bnrden on the people. It oomes
nearer being a popular tax than any other
laid by government The revenue from
this sonree will not bs sufficient to meet
tbe yearly pension payments, and the man
ey necessary for the genersl expenses of
the government, to pay the
interest cn an immense
debt snd to provide for its final extinc
tion must come from the custom houses.
While this greet tariff revenue must be
raised, to talk ot free trade is folly. Ia
whatever way it ir laid it will stfird pro
tection, and the Democratic party is pledged
to ears for tbs Interests of labor sod man
nfactnrera in its adjustment. There
no oanae for alarm.
The American says that all Democratic
protectionists ask is protection to the ex
tent of Uta Chicsgo platform. All that
tariff reformers want is reform to the ex
tent of that platform. Under these cir
cumstances, there ought not to -be any
trouble about reaching an agreement
Another Device of PrfKWttawIMa,
The protectionists bsvs been so thor
oughly beaten In Ute trguun.it on tariff rs
duotion that they a/e driven to desperate
expedients. They are now buying their
brains sritb schemes for the expenditure of
the surplus. One ot these is the pauper
pentlon bill which will cost from $100,000,-
000 to $2X1,000,000 a ) ear. President Cleve
land has vetoed this bill once snd he will
veto it aa many times as it may be passed
during his administration. Therefore the
Tax alleged History ot Ltuooln by Nice-
l .y and Hay,which ia now trudging thr mgh
eucoeaeivs numbers of the Gentnry, grows
worse and worse. Its literary obaraoter ia
had, while for aecuraoy and reliability it huB
no character at all. TheOeutury is too good
magazine to palm eff such stuff on the
public. .
Mb. Rakdall ts too good a man to lay
himself m the pathway of his party’s duty.
If he should do so, however, somebody
will suffer; and it wilt not be the Demo
cratic party.
When the tanff editor of the Atlanta
Constitution getsoornered in an argument
beexolaimt: “tio to. Ido perceive that
thou art a member ot the wicked whisky
ring.” £ .
Colonel
Donn Piatt startsd the void /‘creak" ft* applied to
eccentric people. Be was writing ret ft famooi
journalist,now deed, and compared him ti a men
CftiryloR aronad a coffee-mill to gr*nd ont hi*» bob*
biee. The allu*l«n wa* instantly *elz -d npon and
grew teto national use.
The Gjrdon memorial window presents 1 to Man •
cheater Cathedral conslat* of five light* and tracery,
and In In unrnory of Gordon** last day* at Khar*
toum. Gordon 1* tbe central flfaro of ;the compo
sition, and i* *urrounded by hi* fellow sufferers,
who look appealing 1 ! to him; whilst his own gaze
1* turned to the desert and tho Nile, fseeking vainly
a *iga of human aid. Above and around are acgela
bearirg palm* and crown*.
fecretary Bayard ftLd Attorney-General Garland
occupied tbe same pew In Epiphany Church, Wash
ington, Sunday morning. Thor are both Episco
palians. Dr. Glesy, the pastor, delivered la p lit!-
co-econotsic sermon. He ajsertod that, while the
people’* money was Using hoarded in j tho national
Treasury, hunger and want wore prev Ailing through
out the country. The cabinet official* listened at
tentively a* tbe speaker related aoveral personal
experience* he had had recently with person* In
starch of work.
NT TESTS.
Mb Oabnkoib says Blame don't want to
be Heaident. In this negative longing tbe
pec pie of tbe United States are in hetrty
aywpath) with Jimmy.
SllltEDS AND PATCHES.
Thera is a prevailing fear that there will be an L
ot a time in the Llh Congress -The Nashville Ran-
Dr. Book, of Detroit, ha* been brought to book
and Mr*. Book ba* a d.vorce. Dr, Book should
turn over a new leaf.—Troy Times.
A lazy man at the btate election sent over to a
South Boston foundry to lee if th*y could not cast
hi* bis vote for him.—Boeton Bulletin,
Pape," asked little Bob&y Mc^wUllgao, "whst
la a railroad pool?" “A railroad pool, Johnny,** re
plied McSwllligan, “Is where they water the stock."
—Manufacturers Gazette.
It'a a poor hors*-trainer that will work nowadays
for lose than 910,000 a year, while these er of sonle
struggles along dependent. In many cases, on “do
nation parties."—St. Paul Pioneer Pree*.
i suppose you And time* pretty hard," eald a
kind hearted old lady to a tramp, "and often don't
getenough to sat?" “It's worse than that, mum,"
was the candid reply. "In these dsye U le bard to
get enough to drink, let alone to tat.—Judge.
Among the luxuries now in tbe New York mariet
are strawberries at |1J per quart; Uarbrosa grapes,
94 per pound; tomatoes 00 cents each; GeUfornla
peaches, 93 per doxen; Tangerln and Mandarin
oranges, 91.35 per dozen, and plum*, 01.31 per
doeen.—Pittebn g Dispatch.
A number of young people recently decided to
put todding cake under their pillows at night, and
we are Informed that they dreamed of the follow
ing: 1, of her grandm ther;; 9, of a snake
ewallowlog' a man; 3, of an elephant skipping
rope; 4, of a runaway team; 9, of a railroad acci
dent; 0, of a murder; T, of a Aght between male
caU.-Atchl*on Globe.
One of the beet whist players in the city is a
blind North lids doctor. He plays a good deal fn
th* youcs aet which belongs to the U nlon and the
University Clubs; and. can. U le said, win against
anybody who has so far set in with him. Ue car
riea two pack* of cards ot hi* own. They do not
Aider so far as aa ordinary glance would discover,
from ordinary sets, bnt they are In fact ^ ricked
so that the doctor can tell from the touch which he
hold*,—Chicago Herald.
An Editorial Opinion.-Of all the beastly, out
rageous, disgusting, unnatural, degenerate, de
formed. ill-gotten, misconceived, unlawful, illegiti
mate, diabolical, hypcchondrtaoal, incongruous,
erratl al, nonsensical heterogeneous heUrocliti-
cal. d .ugh-head d, brain-spavined, idiotic snldlsh.
Incomprehensible conglomeration of typographical
bulla ever perpetrated npon an Innocent and un-
cffaudlng public the loUacribAbJa mass appearlrg
in "Ihe Boise City B.epub lean" of a recent date,
taka. th. oil. .Boh, C itj EonrprlM.
rKR-S' S AL8.
Suitor folqallt will apaeU Chrlttmii at horn*.
Sion Arthur, son of th. lota .x Praalii.at, 1. trav.
.tin, to r«ri>t.
Mr. Lamar’s eoatraatloa i, a forefoot conclu
sion. Only a law aorebmUi will vote icalsst his.
Mr. Landoll hoc th. font, tbouj'x h. n.r.r waa a
hldhllrer. llu farort'c dlan.r I. trip, and cam
FARMERS AN1) TAXATION.
A Practical View of coo Tariff Situation.
Savoyard to Courier-Journal.
"Wh-iu we consider that the theory of
our lnsiitutions guarantees to eveiy citizen
he fall ei j <ymeut of all the fruits of his
industry anil enterprise, with on,y such de
duction as may be his share toward tho
c ireful and eocuomioal mtintonano« of the
government whioh protects aim, it is plain
that the enotion of more than this is inde
fensible extortion, and a culpable betrayal
cf American fairness and justice. Tola
wrong irtliatcd upon lhose who beat the
burden ot national taxation, like other
wrongs, multiplies a brood o. evil conue-
queocea. The publio treasury, which
shouldpnly exist as a commit convoying
tbe people’s tribute to its legitimate objects
of expenditure, becomes a boarding plaoe
for money needles.,ly withdrawn from trade
and the people's use, thus crippling oar
national energies, suspending our country's
development, preventing investment in
productive enterprise, threatening financial
disturbance and inviting sehomes of puo-
lio plunder.
this condition of oar treasury is not al
together new; and it baa more than once of
late been enbmitted to the people's repre-
sentnliv. s in the Congress, who alone oan ap
ply a remedy. And yet >ha situation still
continues, w ith aggravated Incidents, more
than tvir pree ging financial ounvaisim
and widespread disaster.”—Mr. Cleve
land’s Message.
There ia not an intelligent and honest
man in thi. country who does not believe
every word cf the above extrsot is true.
We bsve an cveiflowing tresamy, aa ener-
getio, an industrious, an enterprising and
intelligent population ot 60,100,(100, ai d the
one question that now controots Ameriosn
politics is, how shall we tedaosour turplus
revenues?
Two modes are suggested. One is that
of a very small number of our people who
favor the pn s-nt rate ot taxation, both in
ternal and tariff, and the expenditure ot the
enrplns in pensions, coast defenses, pnbilo
buildings In every oounty, pcstal tele
graphs and tbe improvement of rtnoll
creeks. The huger clo t, both Demounts
and Republioaos, favor a rednotion of taxa
tion, _
Of those who favor a reduction of taxes
the great body ot the Democrats wonld con
done the tax on wbitky, beor and tobacoo,
and icduoe Ihe tariff duty on tho nec ss.-
ries of life, a oh aa blankets, clothing, iron,
steel, islt, lumber, hardware ana so on,
while a few Demoorata and a majority of
the Republicans, would give ns free whisky,
beer and tobacco and continue the taxes on
tbo necessaries cf life.
Tbe President opposes the views of those
who would repeal tbe Internal taxes. He
thinks whisky, beer and tobeooo luxuries
and the taxes paid npon them voluntary,
bathe earnestly appeals to Congress to
rednoe tbe tariff dntiee npon all articles
that tbe people are bonnd to have. His
message la the ablest argnment yet pre
sented by the tanff reformer!, and ahonld
be ooretnlly reed and studiously pondered
b; every farmer in Amt rioa. If yon have
not got it, lend a postal card to yonr mem
ber of Congiese, whether ho be Democrat
or Republican, requesting him to trend it to
you, aud It you have no; time to read it
during the day, and oannot see to n-ad It
at night, mak. yonr boy or girl tew. it to
yon.
Tbismessagebnricatbabloodyshlrt. The
RipnbUoAu platform of next year may
wave it a little, but that will be tor| eupho
ny and to please such email po!itio<ana as
tba little Oov< rnor • f Ohio, and at lent the
nigger is out ci American polities. The
question next year le, are you imedom
enongh to behave that this oounery is lull
g o vn enengh to enter into tbe race for na
tional prosperity, commercial tnnrcmacy
and modern progress writ every o^her na
tioL? With oar 60,(KU,UUi) of population,
the best on earth—with machinery that, I
have seen estimated, a. capable of doing
the work of (rom 12,040,000 to lOO.tOO.OOU
men, with oar incomparable olimato with
onr vut territory, washed by innmr arable
navigable streams and traversed by 160>)t
miles cf railroad, a (Oil almoat virgin nnd
woolly unsurpassed, mneh of the farm, op-
• rations performed by laber-taviug msohin •
cry, with tree institutions, a written cut-
■Illation, self-government and free trade
among tbe Btaus, we had heat go out of
ti&ainese if wo cannot compete with si 1 the
paupers east of London and weatot Hung
Kong.
All Blaine’s talk abont gold leaving ns if
Congress should past aueb a tariff bill as
Mr. Cleveland teoommends is bosh. Sup
pose It does? We are not going to give it
away, we will get lon.ekoicg for it. But it
is not going to leave ns. Wo heard in 1687
that goTl would leave us and not an oone.
remain with ue it Congress remonetized ait
ver, bnt Congress dit that veiy thtog over
the veto that John B icnntn male U yes
send to the Democratic Bouse, uhd guld
has been coming to us evi ry day since, and
there it more ot U in Amer ea now than
everbtfnys, Give us a tariff for revenue
C.uiy and inch a wave ot pr.sperity wonld
•line that c tliioni upon millions cf g .td
wonld follow that that but come elate D. ni
ce raey gave us the dollar of the dads ten
veers ago.
The Royal Baking Powder Beclarct
Superior to all others.
The fact that Royal Baking Powder is, in all respects,!
the best baking powder offered to the public has been
established beyond question.
Prof. H. A. Mott, when employed by the U. S. Govern-1
ment to analyze the various baking powders of the market I
to determine which was the best and most economics 1 , after!
an extended investigation, reported in favor of the Royal f
and it was adopted for government use.
Prof. Mott has continued his examinations of baking |
powders sold at the present day, and now affirms it as his |
deliberate judgment, arrived at after most thorough research I
and a careful examination of the principal brands of the!
market, that the Royal is undoubtedly the purest and most!
reliable baking powder offered to the public. Prof. Mott, in I
his recent report, says:
“The Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure, for 11
have so found it in many tests made both for that company [
and the U. S. Government.
“I will go still further and state that, because of tho I
facilities that company have for obtaining perfectly pure |
cream of tartar, and for other reasons dependent upon tho |
proper proportions of the same, and the method of its I
preparation, the Royal Baking Powder is undoubtedly the |
purest and most reliable baking powder pffered to tha|
public.' Dr. HENRY A. MOTT, Pn.D.”
LaU U. 8. Government Chenitt,
rOPUL.lQ HONG —
"Tba letter tint no longed for uef
cams. “—Life
Catarrh Cur <1.
A clarayman, after year* of sa*trliin from that
lost Lao Lin it I joss*, catarrh, and vainly try lag every
known rsmsdy, at 1 si found a nreacriotiou which
comidfltely cnr. d and s%v*d him tr in daath. Any
suffers* from this dreadful diaeatte »o<idla a *<df
uld'ese*d :Um ed envelope to Prof. J. A
Lawrence, 3! I Past b street, bew York, will re-
celve recipe free of w barge.
CENT!
Par Bushel ($12.00 per ton) paid J
GOOD
Cotton Seet
Delivered in Car Load Lots tl
SHE.
A wonderful acoiunt of the tn'tet M'ouadlns se
ries of adveutarx* ever recorded aa liapneultur In
an nr.kno*QU*id to %cl tll«d <uau, wboat Iwt ei-
capee from h ing “Hot Pottei" In the inytterlons
country ev*r which tbe beaxtiful and youthful _
SIIE
Ha* ruled for two thousand year*. Everybody,
>or. *1 end old. grave and f(ay. ehoul» read d.ls rr-
u .»liable anu fASoinatlag story. Finely printed
and hand* »m*ly bound i. cloth and *uld Oal.
91UU post paid. Ad>tre*4 W. B. JONES 0"J
To wall ne, Erie county. New jfurk, deci-iwtt
Z 1 EOU rl\. C UWfOUD iou.s Y.-In obed eECM
»T toan o ddrnf theCort of Ordinary of eald
county pea-td at Ocbrtnr term 1*87. 1 will, oo the
A.st luer.Jay In January, 1H8«, sell before thit court
hcuBri d< ortu tbe 'owu of Knoxville, 1 >ta of l«nd|
rumbereCl andtiJtctne Mxth district of raid
count*, Held aa property of estate of E. W. Tur-
ne-. u»c Asad, foe payment of ex >enee* and dis
tribution. Terms easb. November 38. 1187.
11. H. lUHNfrU, Adm’r
nov33 41 .of estate of E. W. Turner.
SAVANNAH, GA„
ATL\NTA, GA-,
COLUMBIA, S. 0.
Prion sib] sot to change unlaai notiS'J
aooeptanou lor oorUin quantity to beih'ri
by a (ntnre date. Address nearest Mil
ahova, ji-16'4
nEoBAii, duwroiio orsrr.-Mra. raa.i#
\J .4 Lt/.g, Olmlutai’atrli <>( Jacob M Lana, d.
row.!, hmug Mad dm application tat di,al>,la.
(ion rerinit, ibli, t ..reror., |« to clto and «d.
moul'h slip, room at Int.rret to >how car.., if ter
t'lavaan, a, .a. Ilamh t.rm of <1,.refold tioort of
O: llaary, reby ui>l k's .nu )f. Long, odmlulotro-
trlx. ihuuld not ba dtamti ctl ai prajMt f >r. Wit-
tires mr haul and nfflclxl xiguitnr. to. a>.v«mb«r
IU. 1007. OBJ. L. HaWVKh,
dtcldreft Ordinary.
O 'lPIHABY'i OFHOE. JONK8 fOUK.Y, f.goi-
au—XoTSHtrer id. 18-7.—Nulled !• htitar
given tint ihd report of ccniio i.lorif re 1011,1 L-
"re Mn. M. M. *uii.a..
and rSlldran from lb. es iuor J im F. Wuiumd,
dreeiroit, Id now )D Old in tbli < nice, .us m le—.
tom. 1.8*1 can*. b« *bowo t. lb. comr-nr. I relit
pMd apon and ..prev. dame on Bret Monday In
Joi.urej next. Wilntu my band (ffl.-irily,
decd.lt K T. BUais Uidin.ry.
CHHISTMAJ
The olearost head is’joftrn ponied i
it oomss to the selection of s uwtol |
strpropriata Christmu pre»nL
li<t below and call in time to gel k I
selection;
Btylleh Hale, Mrgsnt Neckwear, £ui
ders, Glove -, Hosiery, *8'lk Ir*
Linen Handkerchiefs, Mofflen,
Cnff and Collar BallotL
E, A W Collars
and Cnff*.
“GOLD” AND "SILVER"
Ovorablria,
Embroidered Bbirts,
Car 'igan J-ckela, Drfei
C,*’a and Vesta to
Rubber Clothing, Boys Ssilt
Overuoats, and Kilt Baits in tbt
Among tbe giftssant to tba Pop. are fifty ikoaa-
asd bottle, of chaapHBW a kind of win. h. doM
a A drink.
When Ur. OUrrioad is thrangb with th. Fre.1-1
■Uatloleach, will nold. ia Wublngura. Tba |
comntrf k*. a >1.0 on Mr. Clrreland, bow.ver, no-
U1 Muck 4th, list.
buntary Ileyard «»n that Mlablre D.nbj ba-
Ulorared him that thocoDcmtas. k> the Barker
•yadkalahav. brentvrsltodkytk. Chtoaaa goy-
e.-nmrnL Coast MUkloMcka nld m bti ehtraln
th. franchise In gxod time.
Fonalore Bear and Fimo and BiprewntatlvM
Meeting of Par.lain.at.
London, Dsoemhor 18.-Parliament Will
meet on February 9tb.
/ "nornn on pn.i:tt.»
Why suffer Piles! immctliate relief and
com pfet' i ure guaranteed. Ask for "Hough
on Piles.” fiuro cure for itching, protrud
ing, bleeding, or any form of Piles. 50c.
| Druggists or mail. E. 8. Wells, Jersey City.
_ 8KINNYBIBN.
Wells "Health Rcnewer” restores health
A vigor, cures Dyspepsia, Impotence, Men
tal andNervouslhliillty. ForWeakMen,
Delicate Women, lilekur children. *1.
WEI.lV HAIM IIALSASr.
If gray, restores to originaicolor. An el*,
pnt dressing goftetis and beautifies. No
rrtl nor grease. A tonic Restorative. Stops
hair coming ont; strengthens, cleansed,
braid scalp, eradicated dandruff. 50c.
—(o)
WINSHIP A CALLiWAY,
368 Second 8twt4|
oet2tA*-3m M*o«n.
EsrauLI.IIXU U* IMS.
1 ho Eiclim ml Ire motive i
Machine Work?.
RICHMOND. VIRGINS.
iVCCKASOW To
TBE TASXER A BlLiNBT IS 6,n l
Light Lo*)irot|»re. »*gl«s«.
auA Bre»y Machinery, *•*<! tQt
Estlmstee.
G MOUOM, ( ItvwFold CoU.NlY.-Wberess, ap*
a r »l^-rs luiy aiipolntw 1 » » s-it aput ai.d •«■ a/ *
tuMn. Mary r. llArrt*«D, wllo-rot K. H. U4rr»uii,
a ys.r’a aupport from the e-tite of »t-r tieceaurtl
huaiAiitl. t.avri tbttr r«,»ort In. Iht*, tUtrctur*-, Is
to clU? and ajlmnu.ah all i>xni»s at lnt^ri *t to *bow
cau*# before ms on tbe brat Monday lu
i cst* why the return or >al<1 ap^r*i«ere stiouid uut t OEOBOIk.CUiWrOBD C -UNi i -
bwaadeUtH tud fluent ot the Court cf Ordlna t y> 1 b»fu«w tba court h o*ed«crln j>e *»
November 39. 1887, UiO. L b*Wy 1 — *. — - T|
Orduurv.
Ci aw fold County
sheriff's'
Will I
ft BOBOlk. CRAWFORD CoUNTf -S hr leu. W.
II F Ului gam., MmlaUtr*. r of th- ret. 1* of
h n E B y •. d-c.aa.id, has Sled his application
tat l«»ro 10 0*11 tha land b.1 ingtng in uld wtsta.
Thus th«r*fore It re dio and asm mlah all parttw
at latarest tu *bnw cauu at >na ant Jann.rr tare,
of Uearv of Ordlnarj for raid county, why laara
rborekl no.' hr granud ai pray*a f.M- No..mb*rl»,
1SS7, OLO. L. HaWykH,
doedreH Qnnauy.
riKDINtRT'j 1 in VICE. caairTottj c< D .»■
' ' treorgus Wlm re**. •PPr*u.rednly*ppnL,i*di»
•*t span sad uiiga re a. * f .f- Mnlu a you *
support mi «f is. urmrertv ooutoorh r da.
caued buibandT y ; ririlK, ““1”. 1*U of uld
couaty, t:*f* mod. ta«dr ret rj XblalalocliaaU
parhac at ln-.-rui >a shore cans*. If u *> «»“. rn or
h)foraih.»»tM.p‘ via jitwy n--'’
ton of apptolMia sk-ald not h. credo u'« J»Ag-
UMIdfiMMan. Witn-umy hand a.d niR-'lal
atsoakaw this Du.mb«r 1.1 v; 1
dltrelt oto L .awTEk, Ordinary
\ya>ito-kr a l*uy or aXTkuaL. ikckd
11 and *ltb Ushlgbut uhIomi*!*.
aaltuatMn u toachu. Addru* -dll**." thUcB a.
• u.cauriu u"-— u
vll -. s*id remnly. on “• ,t« I- .
t*’XC .1 bio tba IwaHHMm «^ “J^dreH
d-.crib*d proprety. •f**" * •?£, .p* Ireul
( 3 ) octsa of nnd, of W rnlnw' IJ j,
in in. Srt <il-l Irtof oaH e-ttaff. •“ „
Lad lathd on *» «b» lij br »l«
and holey k clallam t
ninrtgu* H. la. l-*u>dfrom re*™* ,,,
■old count, In f.vnnf *• **TH* »i
wuiailnm and N*ne/ McOaJ»*L _ |
Mib 18)7. " A -
*t—1« Cia«i<«i£
jMMROi). cH*wr..RD otJO V[I.
out of tb* relate of trer hubaait' 7 , , ,
and I will pwa WP*
o i »®2 b £/sc*;
»if«i i- e-‘—• *;, MWt of J- 1 ” ,
Ham*, •du.lnlstr*® 1 * • i.*tsia
d^*:^ ha. ap.M "UTSS .t.
•aid e*ui*. 1 *, g* .%crt
JanuAfT 7tr.il. nexh « u *' * E-
January l.r-n*
band wffiebWfj