Newspaper Page Text
THR WKEKLY TELEGRAPH! TITPSDAY JULY 17..—TWFLVE PAGES.
mission work.
! ities for (rnttinj? information from tho out-
I aide world than tlrey have heretofore en-
'joyed.
GREAT FORTUNES.
to i,.g Sessions of: Woman’s il'.X'TI S °« e Men Wealthier than
Mission jry Conference. j cotton warehouse the coming ^season." Kc- A. T. Stewart.
fxt meeting in
I cotton warehouse the coming season. Ac.
cording to pres, nt prospects there will be a
I largo increase in receipts of the (leecy sta-
MONTEZUMA M P 1 e liere ‘ l ‘ i8 I n « t 1 ??f on - . .
Rev. Mr. J. T. Rider, who has been on a
! visit to relatives in Bibb county, lhas re-
..ickinsvilie Hn^chaD Club to Piny at turned home and taken charge of his
,ftWK ... _ Mltledzeville Notes- ... 6
- Aime.lsevlll. Notes-
OiHps Growing in Worth
County.
Mj , bs hallvillb, July 9.—The services
,‘die Womens’ Missionary Conference in-
^ j„ interest. On Saturday afternoon
- )i{a.thews, the district secretary, met
• i- u....ioiv nf tlie nhim h nnri
churclics here and in -tumner.
A little child of Mr. and Mrs. John F.
Johnson died Sunday morning after a long
and severe illness.
HAWKINSVII.I.K.
Ilawklnsville to Ploy at Kastman—Person
at Notes.
IIawkikbvili.e, July 9.—Mr. Hugh
attwv—7 , f Igh
, ?S Hi vpnlie' Society of the church,' and ' M. Fleetwood, commonly known as “Bud,”
l, e Juten . i t 'of the mammoth shoe house of Taylor &
liry will no * 8000 ® . Fleetwood, Brunswick, Ga,, is in the city
01 ds of encouragement. Interesting leaf- - - * ~ ™ *
were rea d by Misses Dorene and Clara
5iwi» and Kale Edwards. On Saturday
h( a varied programme was presented.
.'The Silver Piate” was pleasingly spoken
by Master Boy
Danghte
THE LUXURIES OP CHEAT WEALTH.
Jotin Jacob An tor I. tho Richest Mon in
America, but there Are Ottier New
Yorkers Who Have more than
Twenty Millions.
Goodwin. “Chirete’s
' waa beautifully recited by Miss
the . urst of Dr. W. N. Fleetwood, on
Broad street,
Charles W. Lamar, of Valdosta, and
handsome Gene Willis, of Oglethorpe, are
visiting friends in the city.
The Hawkinsville baseball club will go
down to Eastman next Wednesday and do
I’em up. P.tes’ curves will puzzle the
tho best amateur pitcher in the State, hav
ing struck out sixteen men in one game,
the second best on record.
Miss Lula Bowen will letve Thursday
for Cumberland Island, where she will
spend the next two weeks.
Miss Lula Murphey, after spending a
week very pleasantly with Miss Nettie
Taylor, on Merritt street, left for her
home in H Uaville last Saturday, to the re
gret of her many admirers.
MONT1CKLLO.
Hop In Honor of Visiting Y tang Ladles In
the t tty.
Monticello, July 9.—The most enjoy
able event of the social season in Monti
cello was a hop at the Meriwether Honse
last Friday night, given by our young
men in honor,of their visiting lady friends.
Miss Belle Atkinson, of Madison; Miss
Ada Gould, of Maclien; Miss L la Hodges,
of Butts county, ami the Misses Lily and
Ada Frobel, of Atlauta, graced the occa
sion with their fascinating smiies, while
Messrs. Chnuncey Palmer, of Macon, and
Joe Pitman, oi But s county, assisted our
young men in making the evening pass
pleasantly. Kessler’s orchestra, of Macon,
were in attendance and surpassed them
selves.
At 12 refreshments of lemonade, ioe
cream and cake were served, and then the
dance 'was resumed until approaching
dawn warned the gay revellers to disperse.
Much of the pleasure of the evening was
due to the efforts of M s. Meriwether, who
warmly seconded the young men in their
endeavors to make the dance a success.
lighter was ' ' I Dodge county boys, while Sam Kufferman
£va Kitwarls, of Marshall , d M will cateh him ‘just aB easy.” Joe Pate is
Kate Martin, who represents the Tochie -• * *
Jlteli m il Society of Mulberry Church in
charming manner, recited the poem,
«VVh*t of the Night?”
i. interesting paper was read by Miss
Matthew*, which gave a summary of the
M ' A, snowing the rapid growth of
y enterprise in foreign fields and
the urgent weds of more workers and
«Tn r^nt paper on Indian work was
Jd bvMrs. (Liver Of Perry A letter
Miss M ittie Jones, of Brazil, was
“-Mrs. Mai hews, of Fort Valley,
•D(l all instructive article on mission
work by Mrs. A.J3. Bales. Theexeicises
were concluded with a heiutiful recitation
and song, called “ I he Missionary Hymn,”
rendered by Mlcse- Zeulali hikI Alice Slap-
pe, and Me.-.-rs, Frank Murphy and iee
Edwards. . , , ,
On Sunday morning, the church was
crowded to oveillow n-g to hear the mis-
aionary seimon by K v. F. A. Branch, hut
he Imd been called home by a tel. gram
the night before. His plucewns weiitilleo
hy Prof. Gletio, of Maiou, who delivered
in instructive discourse, anil succeeded so
well in taking up a missionary collection
that SI 10 was subscribed, mostly by the
various delegates for their respective eo-
cieties.
Sunday night Prof. Glenn again de
lighted a large audience with an address
onthe “The Spirit of Missions, The Christ
Spirit.”
A beautiful recitation, “The Missionary
Clock,” was rendered hy Misses Edwards,
Rawls, Keese, Marten, Pharr and Slappy,
and Messrs. Walker, Keily, Edwards,
Murpii, Piutrc and Martin.
The closing session was held this (Mon
day) morning. Reports of committees weie
received and discussed.
Montezuma was selected as the place
lor holding tke next District Conference.
Everybody is delighted that this bodv
oi earnest workers met here, and it is
hu|wd that the benedictions of Heaven
will abide upon their work, and that
great good may be the result.
GAINESVILLE.
A Pleasant Vlatt to the Homo of a Success
tut Former.
Gainesville, July 9.—Mr.C. B.Thomp-
lon is one of Hall county’s model farmers,
and his pleasant home is situated about
four miles from Gainesville on the Chatta
hoochee. The land is suitable for corn,
coiton and other Southern products, and
the success of this man shows what can he
done at farming in t hi- secti. n. Yester
day your correspondent, in company with
ten others, accepted an invhation to dine
st this hospitable home, ltd a more pleas-
ant day has nut b,«n spent in some tint ?.
The drive Irom here was a good r ad and
the scenery was picturesque in 'the ex
Intne. The towering peeks of the Blue
Bulge in the distance only m nie the fertile
valleys of the Ulatlaliooch- e more attrac
tire to an observant eye, and the luxuriant
fields of corn were admired by all. Crops
were looking well, and our farmers say
they have the brightest -prospects for a
good and plentiful harvest that they have
ever hsd.
When thisJolly party arrived at their
dretinatiou they were mit and given
hearty welcome by Mr. and Mrs. Tltomp
JM, and everyone nt once felt at home.
The dwelling is situated in a large oak
grove on the slope of a hill that gives a
panoramic view for miles on either Bide,
burroumling the house are large flourish-
log orchards and vineyards that are a
•ourcc of profit to the owner, and the
jauie of T hompson’s vineyard is
. i°i W11 i (hrouglwut this section. The
table that was placed before us was jui
j up, „.... ...
excellent hostess it was one of beauty and
911,1 Imt’Sfy party from the
, - aw !’* e justice to the occasion.
At 5 o'clock Camp Bros.’ handsome bus,
wiln four large, fine horses, nvaa driven
round to the gate in readiness to take the
{*.”!>' ^ a > k to the city. It was reluctantly
•oat all left, and many pleasant memories
oi uic day spent at (hat successful and
oppy home wi 1 Jong be cherished by
every une of that party,
the party consisted cf
The
Hon. Howard
miwon and iany. Mr. W. D. Whclchel
' lady, Mi-s Bailie Clark, of Monroe
.only; Dr. C. A. Ryder, Mr. A. B. Cbris-
rr;r. Mr . c. L Daniel, Mr. C. A. Smith
' "a"? Bell and Mr. J. T. Smith, and
*“fetum thanks to Mr. and Mrs. O. B,
Th.
in[mou who showered their kindness*
Ciuiia iii ituiiti,
Towamga, July 9.—Farmers are about
done dork. They will have about two
montl.a’ leisure time and I guess they will
enjoy it, as they have to work abont ten
months in the year nnd only get two to loaf
around in. Crops / in old Butts county are
as fine as could be expected. What, as a
general thing, turned out very well, as we
hear from Mr. G. W. Taylor, who was the
only one that ran a thresher in this section
Mldvllle Items.
Midyille, July 9.—Mr. F. J. Holoemb
shipped three car loads of very fine water
melons North one day last week an«i is
nuking another shipment to-day.
The health of our little town was never
better for this season of the year)
The river is in good fishing order.
Get the Host Cotton Gin.
If yon are going to buy ft cotton gin this year
don't fell to write to the Brown-Cotton Gin Co.,
New London, Conn., I»r their pried and test!.
moDlaleof the thousands who have used them
There are a great many at them In this Stole
lotting Forbidden Fruit.
Robert Louts Steveuson in Scribner’s Magnilne
1 was brought up on Cassell’s Family
Paper: but the lady who was kind enough
to read the tales aloud to me was subject
to sit .rp attacks of conscience. She took
the Family Paper on confidence: the talcs
it contained being Family Tales, not
novels. But every now and then some
thing would occur to alarm her liner sense;
s>-e would express a wall-grounded fear
that the current fictiorl was “going to
turn out a Regular Nov. 1and the 1am-
ily paper, with my pious approval, would
be dropped. Yet neither shejner 1 were
wholly stoical; and when Saturday came
round, we would study the windows ol the
stationer and try to fish out of subsequent
woodcuts and their legends the further
adventures of out favorttts. Many points
re here suggested for the casuist; defini
tions of the regular novel land the family
tale are to be desired; and quite a paper
might be written on the relative merit of
reading a fiction outright and lusting after
it at the stationer's window. ' The experi
ence at least hsd a great effect upon my
jlei
•brir as only a successful planter knows childhood. This inexpensive pleasure
how fc> fix up, anil with the taste of out mastered me. Each new Saturday I would
go lrom one newsvenders win
dow to another, till I was
master of the weekly gallery and had thor
oughly digested "The Baronet Unmasked,
‘•So and ao approaching the Mysterious
House," “The Discovery of the Dead Body
in the Blue Marl Pit,” “Dr. Vargas^Re
moving the Senseless Body of Fair Lilias,
and whatever other snatch of unknown
story and glimpse of unknown characters
that gallery afforded. I do not know that
I ever enjoyed fiction more; those books
that we have (in such a way) avoided
reading, are all so excellently written!
Ain! in e*rly yearn we take s bonk for its
material, and'ae as our own artist, keenly
realizing that which pleases us, leaving the
rest aside.
11 port them.
Tvir.
fortyTliousonil Poniulsof Grapes—Cheap
^ ttlumtnai Ion-Notes.
' ~J v i Ha., July 9.—Just to show that
0 ‘ r W orth county lands are good, and
** 1 l’ r< «luce any and everything that will
P"* in our beautiful Southland, I was in-
tliL'Lr a K’liahJe gentleman to-day
,i • ,• C- G. McHbail had gathered and
l»M t roni his vinyard ol nine acres of
.Y ort I thousand pounds of the finest
no.r? t0 !« ra I’ e «. f *r which he received
Pauls of two thousand dollars. And
aim! *'/ ma *° "Pother showing of what
of I? 0 * our P‘°pl* "re doing in the way
of '“ no !“.v and reirencbment in the way
of Y Uuc “» expenma, I will slate that one
P e * r . neighbors has a lamp, the
which they have been birning
“f our years, with good prospects oi its
Tl * ‘"“"Kh ‘he fifth.
H*T* r ?t» n °w ruining f'-m Ty-Ty
nr f r 'V *»®i-weekly n ail t istwillgi'
‘ol-iuit county neighbo.s oetter * “
llurkleii’s Arnlcu Salve.
The best salve in the world for cuts, bruises,
sores, ulrers, sell rbetim, fever sores, tetter,
cbspiie-1 bends, ehilhltlni, corns end etl syn
eruptions and positively cures piles, or no pay
required. It Is guaranteed to give perfect satis
faction or money refuuded. Price as ceuu pel
box. For sele by H. J. lanisr A Soa.
General Ueltelenry Hill.
Washington, July 10.—The general defi
ciency appropriation bill, the last but one of
the regular appropriation Mils remaining to
be reported to the House, has been com-
nieteil by the appropriations committee. It
Sake* a total appropriation of *3,036,771,
including provisions ior tbs French spolia
tion claims and Court oi Claims judgment
amounting to *741,606.
Itond Purchases.
Washington, July 10.—The amount of
bonde offered to the treesury to-day wee
*683.000, of which *1,000 in regietered bonde
at 1*7 and *2,000 in roistered 4M an 107,
capons, were accepted.
Asheville to he Sewered.
Ashktillr, N. C., July 10— By a nnsn-
t° imona vote of 1,400, Asheville voted to-day
ilfgive' to put a thorough system of a sewerage at a
facilr- coat of one hundred thousand dollars.
From the Chicago Herald.
The information asked for in this letter
will probably be of general interest:
“In speaking of the fortune of the late
A. T. Stewart you say that it was vastly
inferior to that of Messrs. Astor, Vander
bilt, Gould and Taylor, and “besides
these there are now several estates and for
tunes in New York which are greater than
his," which you estimate very properly, 1
think, at $20,000,000.
“Willyou please state whose estates and
fortunes these are, as 1 am at a loss to re
member any one baviag more or as much
as $20,000,000.”
Our correspondent’s knowledge aB to the
subject must be very limited, for the names
of several possessors of such fortunes at
once occur to us, replies the New York
Sun. The Goelet estate as a whole
must much exceed $20,000,000. Then
there are the Standard Oil
fortunes of the two Rockefellers and Mr.
Flagler, each of which can safely be esti
mated now at more than that sum, and
they. are rapidly increasing. Heber R.
Bishop can be set down a worth more,
and prebsbiy D. O. Miiis aiso. Pierpont
Morgan’s fortune is supposed by those best
informed as to sueli matters to be greater
than a 6core of millions, and Mrs. Hetty
Green is not forced to the rigid economy
she practices, for yloubtless she has more
than the sura at which we estimated the
Stewart estate. Then there are Mcsfrs.
Amos R. Eno, Anilr.w Carnegie, Percy B.
Pyne, Charles P. Pratt, Jabez A. Bostwick
and Herman O. Armour, each of whom is
reported to have $20,000,000 and over.
These by no means complete the lists,
and if we were to include the fortunes be
tween $10,000,000 and $20,000,000, and
which are inceasing at a rapid rate, like make
that of Austin Corbin and that of Henry guard
H. Rodgers, it would be long, while if we
took on those between five nnd ten mill
ions, nnd also sleadily accumulating, it
would he surprisingly’ great to men who
are so ignorant as to the subject as our
corresjiondenLseema to he. Probably, too,
some if not many of the names would be
utterly unknown to him, for there are pos
sessors of such fortunes in New York
whose reputation in that respect does not
extend beyond a very limited circle, be
cause the comparative seclusion in which
they live, and which euables them with
out notoriety to add largely to their accu
mulations every year.
There arc men in New York with for
tunes of from five millions to twenty mil
lions whose annual expenses for living do
not exceed a tenth or twentieth part of
their annual incomes. It is easy to see
how rapidly they mutt be piling up
money. Even when they keep up a more
costly state aud maintain establishments
that are relatively extraragfint, according
to our American standards, they do not
lay out on them a great aum of money
comparatively to their income*. After
elegant comfoit his been secured it does
not take them many thousand dollars a
year to odd what seems to the public lav-
ish-display.
A man who spends $50,000 a year solely
on his living nnd the keeping up of his
estahlisbinent becomes conspicuous in New
York for the grandevr of his state as a so
cial character. Of course, many families
may spend much more in the buying of
costly pictures and other articles of rarity,
hut these are of the nature of investments,
undare not a pail of the cost of living!
Others, too, njay keep yachts, maintained
at un enormous expenditure, according to
the nverage estimate, and the improvement
of country places may eat up a vast
amount of money, so that they get rid of
twice as much, hut the first is outside of
their ordinary living expenses, and the
second counts only as an investment. If a
man cornea to New York able and pi
pared to expend on his household alone
$50,000 a year, he can ent a great figure so
far as his mere expenditures go, though
socially he may remain so insignificant
that he will throw hismeuey away.
Therefore ' it is that American estates
grow ao rapidly, especially as is so often
the case where they are accumulated by
men of modest social pretensions nr no so
cial ambition whatever. Even if they have
the ambition, and gratify it at the coat it
entails, they do not make heavy inroads
into the income from mi lions of dollars.
John Jacob Astor is by far the richest man
in America, and yet the expenses of his
actual living cannot much exceed the sum
we have named as enough for an elegant
household. Hence he is yearly investing,
aud investing with great 'sagacity, all be
yond a very insignificant part of his in-
ootne. His expenditures arejhardly enough
to count, hut his investments inland, for
whose development and productiveness the
Astors can afford to wait, and in securities
are enormous and continuous.
The Vanderbilts and the Goeleta spend
much more of their incomes proportion
ately, but niter ail, only a small part of
them, anti Mr. Gould, reputed (o be now
richer thau ever in substantial property,
!tvr.s on a scale which requires nr.lv an in
significant Bum, as compared with jtis rev
enues from investments and speculation.
The same applies to the very rich men of
New York generally. VVlia't they are ex-
A llOHltOlt Ht-JCALLKU.
Desecration of John Scott Ilarrison’H
Grave.
From the Cincinnati Kuo Hirer.
The nomination-of lion. Benjamin Ifar-
risog for President on the Republican
ticket recalls his last notable visit to this
city on May 30 1878 He eante then on »
most horri de errand. The body of lilts
father, John Scott Harrison, who' died at
I- is home in North Bend, on the 27tli of
May, 1878, had been stolen hy body-
snatchers and carried to the dissecting
room of the Ohio Medical College in this
city. The affair caused a tremendous sen
sation, and was the direct cause of the pas
sage of a law by the Ohio Legislature to
prevent body-snatfhing by allowing the
medical colleges to have all the uncluuned
dead in hospitals and public institutions.
The part played by Gen. Ben Harrison in
that dreadful matter was quite conspicu
ous, and he did everything possible to fer
ret out and punish tne ghouls, but without
success.
HON. JOHN SCOTT HARRISON
was one of the most respected citizens of
Hamilton county, a son of President Wil
liam Henry Harrison, the hero of Tippe
canoe. On Saturday, May 25, the vener
able man was found dead in the bed roouA
of his home at North Bend, upon the his
toric farm, which was the gift of his illus
trious father. He had died suddenly of
some mysteridus disease, and curiosity
was so much excited among the medical
fraternity that the grave robbers deter
mined to desecrate the grave. On the fol
lowing Wednesday the remains were buried
in the cemetery trader the shadow of the
monument of Tippecanoe. There were
many eminent Cincinnatians pre'cnt at the
funeral, which was held in the village
church, where the 6erraon was preached by
Rev. Horace Bushnell, the blind Presby
terian clergyman. Standing at the grave
were the relatives of the deceased, includ
ing Gen. Ben Harrison. At the time of
the obsequies there were rumors that
grave robbers had recently visited HMt
vicinity, and the neighborhood was greatly
disturbed thereby. Every precaution had
been taken to prevent anything of tho
kind. The ceremonies had been guarded,
the suspected purties watched. To stilt
further guard against disturbance, the
grave of John Scott Harrison was dug to
an unusual depth, carefully walled with
brick, aud when partially filled a large
stone, the weight of which required the
united strength of sixteen men to over
come, was placed over the metallic case to
prevent intrusion or violation, and the
whole covered with cement. Then to
assurance doubly sure,
was stationed at the
grave. This watch was to he kept up for
thirty days at least, and the relatives of
the honored dead e ngratulated themselves
that their sad duty was performed. Scarce
ly nad this task been accomplished when l
was discovered that another^ grave had
been rifled, and one but a few feet from
tho place to which the Itouored and be
loved one had been consigned. It was the
srrave of Auzust Devin*, a young man
who had resid d in the vicinity, and who
had died of consumption but a few days
previous. The discovery being fully veri
tied by further investigation, John Harri
son, a sou of the lamented John Scott Har
rison, and > .eorge Eaton, a grandson, came
to the city to search for Devins’ body, sup
posing it t;»ii been brought to one of the
medical colleges. The first pointer obtain
ed waa from
A PARAGRAPH JN THE ENQUIRER,
which called attention to the fact that
baggy bad been driven intu the alley hack
of the medical college, and something
white was taken out and smuggled into
the college. Having obtained the neces
sary search warrant, Mr. Harrison and his
companion secured the services of Detec
tive Tom Snelbaker, who has since died,
and mocumpanied by Constable Walter
Lacv nnd Deputy Constable Cullen, they
proceeded to the Ohio Medical College.
They insisted every room nnd peered into
every ante-room from the first floor to th«.
dissecting room. The suspicious actions of
the janitor of the building, a man named
Marshall, attracted the attention of the
keen witted Sneluaker, who found that the
janitor, who left ostensibly to ask the offi
cers of the college to he present during the
search, had gone upstairs to the dead room
but, finding ho was watched, re
turned. They proceeded to the dissecting
room, and attention was directed to a
windlass and rape which ran down through
a square hole in the floor and through the
wall from the upper floor to the chute in
the cellar. Regarding this whh suspicion,
Col. Bnelbaker telt the rope, and it was
taut. This convinced Colonel. “Here is
somebody,” lie said, and seizing the crank
he began to turning the windlass. Little
did the eon and grandson suspect as they
stood there awaiting what was to be
brought to their view by this terrible pro
cess. Nearer and nearer it came to the
surface, and soon it came in sight, ft was
a naked body except the head and should-
era. The ghouls had robbed the corpse of
its grave clothes, only covering the face
with an old tattered shirt for the purpose
of avoiding deteclion'should the body be
seen. “It is not the man,”
said Mr. Harrison, little thinking that
it was the body of one nearer and
dearer to him than the one which he
sought. “It is not the man for whom I
am looking; he died of consumption and
was more emaciated than this one.” And
he waa preparing to give tip the search in
this direction when Colonel Snelbaker
urged him to look at the face, which was
still covered with the cloth which had
been thrown over it. “You had better
look at the face,” be said. “Yon might be
mistaken, and you’ll never forgive your
self it you allow any doubtful poiui to
K iss.” “It is hardly necissary,” said Mr.
arrison hesita-inglv, aud evidently de-
siriug tv rcircsi, ӣiii:, since you insist
upon it, I will do to.” The body was
then raised out of the well, the’ trap
dropped beneath it and the body towered
upon it. As the head leaned foreard
blood streamed from an incisiou in the
and sank almost unconscious into the ariiin
of his attendants. Only an hour before he
had detailed to Col. Snelbaker the care
taken to prevent the possibility of robbing
his father’s grave, and now, without the
slightest warning or expectation, he was
confronted with the mutilated body of his
father.
The moment was a terrible one, and one
which could not be described. Only twen
ty-four hours before lie had 6een the loved
father laid in the grave very near to that
of his honored ancestor, whose memory
the United States is proud to respect.
Now the body lay before him mutilated,
disfigured, robbed of its habiliments, dis
honored. The first shock over, Mr. Har
rison prepared for the removal of the body,
which was taken to the undertaker’s estab
lishment. Later in the day Mr Carter
Harrison arrived in the city with the in-
formatisn that the grave had been robbed,
and was preparing for a search when lie-
was met at the d- pot hy his brother and
nephew with the intelligence that the body
had been found. Gen. Ben Harrison was
at his home in Indiunapolis .when a dis
patch from Cincinnati informed him of
the desecration of his father’s grave.
Without Beeiug a sister, who was danger
ously sick, he left Indian-poliB immedi
ately, accompauied by lm wife, and at 10
o’clock on the night of the discovery of the
body he joined his brother in this city,hut
first he learned the particulars of the af
fair at the Enquirer office. He was very
determined that not only the perpetrators
but the aiders and abettors in the sucri-
lege were found out and punished.
The General telegraphed before leaving
home to the leading cities for the best de
tectives that could he produced, and he re
mained here several days dire ting oper
ations. Marshall, the janitor, and his
brother-in-law were arrested, hut were
subsequently dismissed. The matter was
brought to the attention of the.grand jury
hy Lewis W. Irwin, who was then pros
ecuting attorney, but desecralors were
never naught. The facility of the colleiro
expressed great regret that the affair bail
occurred, hut blamed it on the laws of
Ohio, which have since been satisfactorily
amended, aud gra< e robbing in this State
no longer exists. The remains of .John
Scott Harrison were reinterred in the orig
inal grave, and no rude hands have since
j stnrhed his peaceful sleep.
hCTJEBm
BILIOUSNESS, SICK headachb;
iji:ai:t::ik:;, ;niu(,fstion,
DXSTRFSIA, COAIFLAINT, JAUNDICE,
BY USING THE GENUINE
SR'C.&icLArJE’sni
—CELEBRATED——
SQHLIVER PILLS!
PREPARED ONI.Y BY
FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa.
treeBewareetCoCKTsamia made in Si. Louis.-*,*
lUH’l ED ATTlUtmOAl
Louisiana State Lottery Co
Incorporated by tho Legislature in 1868, fo
Educational and Charitable purpose, and it'
IzatcbiNc was made a part of the present btst"
cor stitutiou in 1879, by an overwhelming pop
ular vote.
ItH Grand Single Number Drawings tak
K lace monthly, and the Grand {Junrtnl
'rowings, regularly every three month
(March, June, September aud December;
"We do hereby certify that we sunerviae tht
arrangements for all the Monthly and Quarterly
Drawings of the Louisiana State Lottery Com
pany, aud in person manage and control ttui
Drawings themselves, and that the tame art
conducted with honesty, fairness, ana in good
faith toward all parties, and we authorise the
Company to use this eertiflcatOj with fiuvsimllo#
of ' • signatures attached, in its auvtruMr
menta.’*
TH r
BEST TUNIC.
This medicine combines Iron with pare vegetablt
tonics, nnd to invaluable for Dtasaani peculiar to
Women* and ail who lead sedeutanr lives. I t Un*
richer* and Puiiliew the lliiiud, Stimulates
the Appetite, Mrenptlicn* the .Hum lee and
Nerven—in fact, thoroughly Inviaorntea.
Clears the complexion, and makes the akin smooth.
It does nut blacken the teeth, cause headache. a»
produce oanatipation—all other /rot, mrdicinit do.
Mas. Elizabeth Baird. 71 Firwell Ave.. Mil wan*
kee. Wfiu under date of Dec. Ml tb^l:
“ 1 have uaed Bruvo'i Iron BitU*rm, and it haarewn
more than a doctor to me. having cured rue of the
woakneea Indict* have in life. Atop cured nte of Liv
er Complaint.and now mv complexion to clear and
good, lias atoo been bene tidal to my children.”
Mbs. Louisa O. Bbaodon. Eaat Lockport. N. Y. t
says: '’Ihave •offered untold mtwsry fr«>ra Female
Complaint*, and could obtain relief from nothing
exoept Brown's Iron Bittere.”
Genuine baa above Trade Mark and creased 11lncO
on wrapper. Tnhr no other. Mndaoutybjr
UUOWN CHEMICAL CO.. JIA'-TlMOllE. MU
POTHER’S
If I FRIEND
Commissioners
We, the undersigned, Banks and Bankers will
pay all prizes drawn in The Louisiana State Lot
teries which may be presented at our counters.
K. M. WALMKLEY, Pres. Louisiana Nut. Bh.
PIKRRK 1.ANAIJX, X'res. State Nnt’l Its.
A. BALDWIN, Pres. New Orleans Nut'l Bn*
CAUL KOHN, Pres. Union National Dank.
GRAND MONTHLY DRAWING IN THE
ACADEMY OF MUSH , NEW ORLEANS, TUES
DAY, August 7,
Capital Prize, $300,000.
100,000 Tickets at Twenty DcUars Enels
Halves, 110; Quarters, (15; Tenths,
8*::; Twentieths, «1.
LIST OF PK1>E8.
t&O.bOO is 1800,000
L 0,000 is 100.000
ho.nnils 6U.O1O
26.U00 is
10,000 are...
5,000 are...-
1,0 0 are-..
600 are....
800-are...
1 PRIZE OF
1 PRIZE OF
1 PRiZKOF
1 PRIZE OF
2 PRIZES OF
5 PRIZES OF
25 PRIZES OF
100 PRIZES OF
200 PRIZES OF
500 PRIZES OF
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prizes of 500 approximating to
t .00,00 Prize are
100 Prizes of two approximating to
1100,00 Prize are
100 Prizes of 1200 approximating to
$50,000 Prize are
TERMINAL PRIZES,
Prizes of $100 decided by...$300,000
25,000
20,COO
25,000
25,f00
60,000
60,000
Prizes are.K
.* WO.OUO
50,000
80,000
20,000
09,000
09,006
4so4 for book M Te Mstsumi.** acdlsd frso.
Kaumns Bxmtuvm Os Idw
ARBUCKIES’
namo on a paokoge of COFFEE Is a
guarantoo of excellence-
ARIOSA
COFFEE is kept in all first-class
stores from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
COFFEE
is never good when exposed to the air.
Always buy this brand in hermetically
W..10H OVF POUND PACKAGES.
8.IS6 Prizes, amounting to ll,o64,SfO
Note Ticket* drawing capital prize, are not
entitled to terminal prize*.
For Uub Kates, or any further Information
ayply to tbo unucrilgucd. Your handwriting
&iu*i be distinct and signature plain. More
rapid re urn mall delivery will be assured by
your vncloting an envelope bearing your (nu
address.
bend fostAL NOTES, Express, Hooky
Orders, or New York Exchange in ordinary let*
ter. Currency by Express (at our expense) ad
dressed
M. A. DAUPHIN,
Now Orleans, La.,
or M. A. DAUPHIN,
Washington, D. G.
INS NATIONAL HANK,
New Orleans, La.
That the presence of Generals
Beauregard and Early, who are
rge ol the drawings, Isaguaranleeof abso
lute (sinless and Integrity, that tbo chances are
all equal, and that no one cap possibly divine
what number will draw's Prise;
BESIEMIIKK that the payment of all Prises
Is GUAKANTKKlt 1IY FOlIIl NATIONAL
HANKS of New Orleans, and tbo Tickets ars
signed by the President of an Institution, whose
chartered rights arc recognised In the highest
Courts; therefore, beware ol any Imitations or
anonymous scheme*.
$500 Reward.
I will pay Five Hundred Dollars for any
case of Cancer 1 undertake and do not suc
ceed in effecting it perfect and noetiverure.
I don’t use the knife and get through with
a case in short order. Call at Ilerver A
Subers’ store, No. 214 Cotton avenue, where
l have established one of ray offices.
PBN B. THORNTON, of Texa*;
ju-w-lm P pec taut.
pet ding ha trifle by the side of what they
are recetv tug and making. It is al o to be | c lt. The light from the windows direct
remembered Chat profuse expenditure it* no ■
guarantee of solid wea th, and modest liv
ing does not always Imply ita absence.
Accordingly the number of the many
times millionaires in New York, whither
the richest men from all parts of the new
wor d more and more tend, is so constantly
increasing that our correspondent will need
a loqg sheet of paper to write the list npon
as the year* go by
Collapse of a Theatre.
• El Paso, Tex., July 9.—The Myers Opera
Iluuie in this city, one of the most beauti
ful buildings in the Southwest, is in ruins.
At tt o’clock Saturday night the lloor in one
of the stores on the first flooro( the building he seemed about
gave way and brought down into the cellar door. “What h the
ly above
SHONE ON THE HEAD AND SHOULDERS.
When Mr. Harrison raised the covering
from the face of the dead it revealed the
features of an old man with fu 1 white
bean], cut squarely off an inch below the
chin; white hair, cloeely cut at the back;
r gged from the grave.. 5lir*nt'mrr<"''> 1 / 1
“An old man," remarked aonte one, and i ,r«uss*a<i * i
Mr. Harrison atoopeg down to take a part- *<a>rinnmnwRis«4.
ing look :<t the face, when suddenly a j U.6.IH»OT,3I^..I«31e«rit.t.Newrk 0 rk
chsn
hi.
tangecame over his countenance, the
loud “
lied
face,
topped quickly
$ and
fall to the
.mtter Mr. S. aaid,
to Ids relief. StUl
nt, hi* blanched face
* tth eyes starting from
nd upon the face of the
owned h>* him. supporting himself eenta and a
n* C«t shot* n P° n ,he *T“ of }}•': Jftc li ve, until finally ; wr i te to
EUREKA HO.
The great Tennessee Remedy for choltra
in hogs; alwaya a cure or money refunded.
I will give $50 for a case it will not
cure when initructions are followed. Une
dollar given for every hog that dies. Fill)
cents and $1 tier box. Ask vonrdcsltr,
rbolssaie grocery. The building cost abont ■»""» “' c "IT “‘gj ——I write to DR. E. W. THOMPSON,
60,000 and will probably be a total loss. | recovering 1 - 1 rate he gasped, “It’s father” | tprll-wediwly Jordama, TeLO,
gave way am _
several iron pil.ar» and girders which sup- as he .
ported the proscenium slid octagon dome. Mr. H
This caused the hou*e (o collapse by piece- growing peter
meal at different times since. The aicbilect tl.--.irt- hr
toy* the floor ws» broken by a pile of about ‘ man befori
fifteen toqs of beans in aackt owned by a dtaa ,,,an 1 ‘ " r
wholesale grocery. The building co*t about
aoTjri-
EMORY COLLEGE,
OXFORD, GA.
The institution enters npon Ita flltj-flrataes-
•lon October 12,1887, with emerged faculty and
increased facilities.
For Cxtaloguca and Information, write to
acpl3tf ISAACS. HOI KINS, President
. DR. J. J. SUBERS,
I’ermsnently located in the speoihlty of
venereal. 1 use no mercury. Lost man
hood fully restored. Female irregularities,
extrema and poison oak. Cures guaranteed.
Address in confidence with stamp 514
Fourth street, Macon, Gs. ju13wly
Georgia Farmers’ Alliance
Advocate for 25 Cents,
Bend the above amount and get ihe
paper three months* on trial. Address
ADVOCATE, Montezuma, Ga. junl7w3t
oa. a. a eas»
Minas***
kX uwi MkArwfitiu, tetran torn
!<• Tie*too nt UM IfMshWt
NATIONAL HOTEL,
Corner Fourth and Poplar Bta., MACON, GA.
MRS. G. L. REEVES, Proprietoreas.
Tunas- f to II60 per day.
Hotel, Macon. Ga.,you gel -
higher-priced hotels, and i
dsy.
At the National
nail the comforts ot
save from It to 8. per
msy29-w2m.
MONEY LOANED
ON FARMS and TOWN PROPERTY
In Bibb and Adjoining Counties.
ELLOITT ESTES.
el4-ly 105 Second street, Macon, G. i
nn A MONTH can bo tnaile
wv , w „JUU work ID* tor ux. Amenta pre~
/erred woo can furniab their own hoesM tto
sits their wnole time to the business. Fpare
momenta maybe proutablyem ploy cl also, a
few vacancies In towns andcitlea. B. F. Jon.*-
•OH A Co.. 1009 Main street, Richmond, \ a.
maj25dawixno