Newspaper Page Text
$115,000,000. called surplus revenue, that i», living'.' Why, a great many of tht i go to
Uxe» ^llecttd from the people beyond tiie town and , e kind o( handierafU h at
nece**in*s of the eoveran'ent H«inc? per.« . 1
r .1 <ii • . ° . -it . frirrr nan
domestic servants,
doing
JUDGE THURMAN.
. « n * fectly idle in the vault of the Treasury of H c 7. . c * n » De coining dom<
Old Roman’s Speech at the United States, of no service to any !j 1 ? ckiD *,
ne '-' AVA r i, .. , . . . . . things of that kind. < ut in thecountrv the
Port Huron. human.being drawing no interest, earning , negr0 nlakes wllp . t h ' e , eU b cuU i V ating the
r0rL X1UlU * i no profits, but taken from the pockets of the ea * b throuehout the b who f e goath . ] Iow
! i , w ' 1 lere they property belong, ami , does he cultivate it? Why, he either has
mrr nllCOTinM ABIV 14 ‘ Mm Cn "'i ?' wer ® not , t,0 “‘f IK ^ 9 j bought some land, and some of them have
\i TARIFF QUESTION ABLY HANDLED £**$$*"»*£ t!iSys& 0 ™ h 2id I &" 1 w a he,C d r* e or he m,!s
G ISSUER’S CAR-
A State Fair in Miniature on
Wheels,
e from iufectii
itj bt
uune Made Up Between HigL Tnxa-
* n oU ,l Bensounbl© Wnxatiou-A
1 “* -juousand Million In Bounties
to Manufacturers.
STARTING OUT ON ITS JOURNEY,
pout Huron, Mich., August 22,-The
hurtnan party, after dinner at Grosse Point
lerday, crossed Lake St. Clair in a still
and arrived at the Oakland House, St.
kir Springs, at 1 o’clock in the morning.
. Thurman stond the trip well, al-
* eh some of his companions were sea-
tt*while crossing the lake, and everybody
. 0 ] e (, t he cabin on the passage was thor-
uhly drenched.
The yacht started from St. Clair Springs
112:30 and arrived at Port Huron at 2
clock. An immense crowd blucked the
reets and filled up the windows and hal
ves along the way. Port Huron’s twelve
iousand people were out in a body and to
:e regular population had been added sev-
r »l thousand more from all parts of the
tate. At the wharf a passage was forced
hrough the dense crowd and Judge Thur-
1W an d his party were escorted to
uriages by the Port Huron reception
ouunittee. 'I'be procession was then
nriued and marched througli the principal
r «ts ol the city. Over the streets and in
rout of the houses along the way were flags,
Uuers, pictures and other expressions ot
rod will and the political views of the peo-
1 in Pine Grove, a beautiful park that
between Port Huron and Fort Gratiot, a
Makers’ stand hud been erected, about
Udell a large crowd awaited the exercises of
he slternoon. Fully three thousand people,
loidy men, were present when the chairman
ailed the meeting to order, but several bun
ded more came up during the Bpeech of
lodge Thurman and all united in the ap-
danse that was given the speech and the
*0. G- O’Neill, of Port Huron, intro-
luced Judge Thurman, and in doing so made
inest comparison between the ‘‘grand old
nan" oi England and the "old Homan” of
America. ......
Judge Thurman was greeted with a burst
j| applause from the big crowd. His speech
tas listened to with the closest attention,
and the good points were promply recog-
uiaed and applauded. Judge Thurmau
ipoke easily, his voice being clear and strong
and hia carriage erect and firm. He was
taaily heard throughout the entire speech
at the outermost edge of the crowd, as well
u cioie to the stand. He spoke off-hand,
using notes simply for greater accuracy in
jiving figures and making quotations.
TIIE BANDANNA APPLAUDED.
Early in his speech the speaker had occa-
don to use his handkerchief and the ap
pearance of the now famous bandanna called
lor heartv cheers, which was echoed and re-
echoed bv the crowd. The speech lasted
iorone hour and twenty-live minutes and
vai almost entirely devoted to discussion of
die tariff issue.
Congressman Hatch, oF Missouri, was the
lecomf speaker of the afternoon and lie ably
continued the discussiun on the tariff ques
tion, especially devoting himself to the effect
oi the tariff on the agricultural interests.
The facilities oi the Western Union Tele.
graph at Port Huron for handling the euor-
moos volume of Associated Press and other
dispatches, made necessary by this import
ant occasion, were found to bo wholly inad
equate. To insnre prompt service the Asso
ciated Press stenographers hoarded a s ccial
Irsin which awaited them, and started for
Detroit. While traveling at an average rate
cinity miles an hour, they ir.u.uiiutu a
large | ort oil of tile 8,000 word speech and
v m. « their destination was reached^
trails,, nil it to the leased Wires oi Uie As-
lociateil i’ress.
The plan for the future is to spend Thurs
day at Port Hurou and iluronia Beach, and
on Friday morning a special ear will ho At
tached to tiie regular train and the trip to
Chicago begun. A speech will be delivered
probably at South Bend, and other place i
along the way will ho prepared with wel
comes.
TIIE SPEECH.
The following ore extracts from Judge
Thurman's speech here to-day:
I know that your people are taking the
deepest interest in the questions that are be
ing discuslied this year. In the brief time
that I shall speak I will occupy myself
mainly with one of those questions. I shall
doso became it is that in which so much
interest is now taken and of which so much
u now being said by speakers, by writers
tnd through the public press. It Is not
necessary for me before I proceed to take up
•he subject to epenk of the Pres
ident of the United States and hi* adminls-
•nfion, more than a very few words. I defy
**y man who has a regard for truth to say
“>*t Urover Cleveland lias not made a good
■’resident of the United States. [Applause.]
•A brave, intelligent, level-headed, noble
mnn, he has had a clear anil upright and
•nccessful administration. [Applause, and
• voice, “hurrah for Cleveland!’] Four
years ago he was elected. In the canvass
preceded his election his opponents
predicted all manner of evil in
i* 3 ' he should succeed. He did
,0 'ne*d' and, pray, what has became of their
prediction? where is tiie ruin that was to
■ollow the election of Grover Cleveland?
“ere i, the disgrace that was to follow his
•tection? On the contrary, the country lias
C been more quiet, more peaceful, more pros-
rous thsn it has been for many years that
ve gone before. [Applause.] Now, I
»»ow the man, and know him well, and I
“U you, my fellow citirens, that a more up-
“ght and wise man I do not believe dwells
•Bmp the limits of the United States.
WtaM*.] And he haa a noble hand of
"issellors around him, and not the least
~°ug them is tke distinguished citizen of
°« State, Ur. Dickinson. [Great
PPIsuse.] Cleveland knows not only how
to ml. Mm.;!; within the term: s! the ean-
«^on, hut he knows full well how to
Phase] *°°^ con,, ‘ l<lt * ono * advisors. [Ap-
WHAT THE TAR1EP IS.
-Now, my friends, having this much said
• out the administration, let me proceed to
11 question to which I have alluded, com-
“only called the tariff question. I presume
m* re “ Hot a person within the sound of
^ oe> not hnow what is meant
/ uie tariff, and yet it needed to-day that I
fu * * ?J*ar and preoise definition of what
.v Un , Tariff, my friends, is nothing in
trnm ^ a levied by the gor-
^jnent upon every article of commerce
is ii» C0n ! e8 . lnto the United States and that
*hi h *: ^ or ia ^ e w iihin her borders and
th«p C f ‘ n **®*ntaliy f raises the price and
tr/ eIore . becomes a tax or burden upon
r.t.p article of domestic manufacture of n
nature with those wiiich pay the tariff
in * w ® have at this moment, accord-
.-gjo the last advices I have seen, about
kustang liniment
Mexican hcstano ijnieent shonu *i-
h® kept l-i Uocaw, hTisu ami Factory.
put them to good use and improve their con
dition and prosperity.
Now, the Democratic party says that this
is a wrong condition of affairs; that that
money ought not to be like the taieuts of the
man we are told of in the Scriptures, buried
in the ground. That this is a very poor use
to make of the money of the people; and,
therefore, the Democratic party 6ayB that
this surplus revenue, which is produced in
the main by those tariff' taxes, ought to be
reduced so that this surplus should not con
tinue to increase. [Applause.]
the issue.
Our opponents, on tiie other hand, say that
it is better to let surplus accumulate, it is
better to take mouey from the pockets of the
people, it is better to pile it up in the vaults
of the treasury department, although it does
no good whatever—and it is a great harm—,
it is better to do that than to touch the tariff
laws of the United States. We say, on the
contrary, to relieve the over-taxed people is
to reduce the taxes; we say that the way to
treat the people honestly, fairly and wisely
is to take no more taxes out of their poikcts
than tiie government actually needs for its
expenditures. [Applause].
The issue, thtn, is fairly made up between
high taxation on the one hand and reasona
ble taxation on the other; it is between tak
ing the money of the people out of their ow n
control, out cf their own pockets, nd bury
ing it in tiie cellar of :he Treasury Depart
ment; or it is between leaving the money
where it belongs, in the pockets of the peo
ple, to be used by them as their wants re-
quire ami their intelligence and honesty di
rect. Now, my friends, in the long political
life that I have led I hare heard a great
many false pretenses preached to the peo
ple,'a great many intended to deceive
and delude them, but in all my life I have
never witnessed such audacity as I have
noticed this year on the part of the advocates
of a high protective tariff never before. And
there seems to he a singular disregard of the
truth that has suddenly afflicted then. I do
not intend to call people hard names. I
have all my life endeavored to keep a civil
tongue ill my head, and 1 mean to keep it as
long os I live, but I do say that some people
sometimes seem to lose their senses so that
they cannot see the truth; and often, unfor
tunately, cannot speak it. [Applause.]
tariff and riches.
Now, just think of it for a minute. We
are told that a high tariff makes the country
richer,as if it were possible to make a country
rich by oppressively taxing its people. [Ap
plause.] Ain’t that a new way to make a
man rich? To run your hand into his pocket
and take out what you find there, and that
without anv just reason whatever for doing
so? Is not that a singular way to make any
body rich? [Applause.] And yet, that is
precisely the plan that these people tell us
is the plan to adopt to enrich this country,
that this country is to he made wealthy by
means of high taxation. Again, they have
the audacity to say that this tariff tax is not
paid by the consumers of the article which
is taxed. Why, if the consumers of these
ariicies do noi pay the tax I would like to
know who does? Do these protectionist
orators pay it? Do manufacturers pay it?
Who pays it if the people who consume the
articles that are taxed do not pay it? .
After stating what he called a curious fact,
and oue of the worst tilings about this tariff
tax, that, while tbo government
gets one dollar resulting from
the tax, the domestic manufacturer gets
five dollars, as per estimate, that never goes
into the treasury at all. Mr. Thurmau went
on to say that the amount of goods imported
into the United States—of dutiable goods—
in the year 1887, the last year of which we
have any returuB, were, in value, $453,225/
322. Thejariff duties collected were $212,-
gle year taxes levied on the United States
States by the operation oi thin tariff law,
*312/ 32,424-«inch went iuvo the l.easary oi
the United Slates, hut that, as I have told
you, was tiie least part of the bur-
den. The domestic manufactures of
the same kind o? ssmmsfiittM amounted,
that year to $5,389,6S9,191; that is, in other
words, to live thousand three hundred anil
sixty-nine million dollars, and as tiie price
of these goods was raised by the tariff" in
nearly equal proportions to the price of
goods that were imported into this country,
the amount which the people paid In these
high prices of what they had to buy and hnd
to use, amounted to about one thousand
millions of dollars, or to about five times as
much ns the tax received by the government
for tiie use of the government.
Well, that is precisely what the Democrats
are striving to do; that 1* precisely what the
Mills hill, os it is called, attempts to do; and
yet these gentlemen who are howiing around
about the benefits of protection and the ruin
that tiie Democrats are bringing on the coun
try, and tell you that this thing
which President Arthur recommended only
so lately, is nothing in the world hut free
trade. They are more afraid of free trade
than they ore of a rattlesneke. [Laughter
and applouse.] They are terribly alarmed
lest they should be bitten by free trade.
[Renewed laughter.] Well, now, so far
from thU being free trade.
THE MILLS BILL.
The most striking ihiug about the Mills
bill is that it is tiie most moderate reduction
of tariff duties that has ever been attempted
in this country.
Discussing the doctrine that a protective
tariff'will benefit labor by raising Its wages,
Mr. Thurmau said: I would like to know
how that can be: I would like to know how
taxing the laboring man on everything from
the crown of his head to the sole of ins foot,
is going to enrich him. [Laughter mid ap
plause.] Yet this es exactly what they say
this tariff'does. As to wages, Mr. Thurmau
conceded that a high tariff eimgled the man
ufacturer of protected goods to pay higher
wages, but he did not do it.
“Did you ever know him to do itr
he asked. [Applause and cries of
“No.”] The tariff lias been raised again and
again since 1861, yet in all that time I never
have been able to find n manufacturer or
ranitalist who, upon a raising of tiie tariff
lias increased the price paid to his lauureu.
If there was such a case it lias escaped the
attention of everybody, even of those dim-
gent newspaper men who gather up
all the news, and sometimes a great
ileal that is no news at all. [Merriment.]
But there Is one class of laborers,
my friend , said Mr- 1 liuruian, tijsi
I want to call your attention to especially.
There is one class of laborers in this country
who have been, according to the claims of
the aboliti nists in the country, an.i of the
Republicans, their especial wards, especially
under their guardianship, and for whose
interests they feel a most peculiar and ear
nest solicitude, and these are the negroes.
Now, tiie result of the war was to free about
4,000,000 negroes, and I am very glad they
were freed, and they have increased now to
nboutsix or seven millions, for the negro is
a prolific animal. [Great laughter and ap
plause.]
THE NKOBO AND TIIETABtPF,
Now, how do these negroes make their
cultivates
own land or rents it, the
crops that he gets tor it are the re
munerations he receives for liis toil. Now,
that crop in the main consists of cotton,
some corn and some little wheat, hut mainly
all cotton. Now, how can a high protective
tariff' benefit that negro who raises cotton
and has for bis share of crop three or five
bales of cotton each year? Why, gentlemen,
there is no tariff at Hil un cuttou. It comrs
in free as air. I believe that lam quite
right in snying that, ain’t I? (turning to Mr.
Outhwaite).
Mr. Outhwaite—Yes, sir.
Judge Thurman—It comes in as free as
air. The price of cotton therefore is not
raised as they say, or le sened by this tariff
tax, and yet here is all that the ’ negro has
for his labor. He can't get a cent more (or
liis cotton by reason of any high protective
tariff, and he don’t get perhaps a cent less.
He has to sell liis cotton and to sell it at a
price that is made by af creign market. The
price in Liverpool oii n London, to which
the cotton is exported from the United
States. It is there that the price of liis cot
on is fixed and for that price he has to sell-
it, tariff' or no tariff.
But how is it on the other hand? The
negro, although he iB living in a pretty
warm climate in some places, still wants to
be decent and wants to be comfortable and
wants his wife and children to be comforta
ble, and they do need clothing as well as
other people, but upon every single thing
that lie buys to clothe himself, to
clothe ilia family, to clothe his little
pickaninnies, to get a blanket, to get a tool
or implements of any kind, he is taxed by
this high protective tariff' and lie is com
pelled to pay a higher price than lie would
otherwise; so that, so far as he is concerned,
there can be no pretense whatsoever that
tiie tariff is anything but an unmit
igated injury to' him. He has nothing
to Eell which is benefitted by it, lie performs
no labor that the tariff, by any kind of argu
ment, can be said to benefit him. He sells
his c.llon in a price fixed by :l foreign mar
ket, because he can’t sell for any other
price and upon everything that be consumes,
upon everything that he purchases for his
consump'ion, he has to pay an increased
price and is thereby injured. Now
In oilier words, the whole country was
taxed about oue thousand million dollars for
till- benefit of comparatively a anmll portion
of the country. And that is said tone jus
tice! that is said to be fair playi that is said
In he fur the benefit of American people!
Judge Thurman then gave his heare-s
some homely i,lustrations of how this same
principle might w»rk if appliet to persons
engaged in pursuits not protected by the
tariff'. Why not tnx the people directly for
the benefit of lawyers or doctors, whose
practice does not enrich them as fast as they
desire. I know, he said, that there are a
few coses, but they nre very few and ex
ceptional and not of sufficient
importance to unike it necessary for me to
speak of them to-day in the limited time I
have to speak, in which the duty of tin-
tariff tax is not all paid by the consumer,
but they arc so trifling in amount and so in
significant that it is not necessary that I
should occupy your time with them. The
The principal general fact is, that this tax
(lie e the speaker was interrupted by cheer
ing nnd applause, which followed liis pro
ducing the Bandanna handkerchief). Well,
gentlemen, this is a good, honest handker
chief, and I could have bought it a good deal
cheaper if it had not been for the tariff' tax
[Great laughter and prolonged cheering.
ADAMS AND AKTHCB.
Judge Thurman here quoted from a report
made hjaJnhn Quincy Adams in 1832 as
chairman of the committee on manufactur.
ers in the House of Representatives as fol
lows: “The doctrine that the duties of im
port Bcem to cheapen the price of articles
on which they arc levied, seems to conflict
with the first dictates of common sense. The
i of arlieles in the market. It is
rilled Wttn Sped
Tom nil Ovt
hat Are to Show theWeetei
Wliat tieorgin Can liaise
anil -EuUe.
While the inerensc of new cases naturally
initkcs ilic people nervous, it was expected
by Hie authorities, who have not by any
given up the hope of controlling the
or materially cheeking its ravages.
di
Indeed, confidence
It lias been recommended that su
a ii a hi i nrr
ibl
eillHii
.be maintained over travel from the South to Kt UR no reel."' bm
intercept persons from infected parts nnd condition, and you will keen m 'tine wo
tllO hnnrrl of laanltk k» into. ..il._ .- 1 you can f TtOTO r rrLi. ijr
IScut of
using these rarer failing
Commissioner Glessner arrived in Macon
yesterday afternoon with his beautiful car,
and this morning at 6 o'clock starts out
upon his trip through the West. He took
supper at the Edgar ton Hotel last night,
and while tkero said his car was nearly
ready for the trip. At Atlanta, where he
stops for three hours, he takes on some
specimens of woods that have been worked
up into proper shape; at Marietta some
specimens of Georgia marble, and at Kings
ton some exhibits from Floyd county. The
ar will then proceed on the route marked
out, as follows:
Mansfield, Ohio—District fair, August
28-30.
Fort Wayne, Indiana—Inter-State fair,
September 4-7.
Jackson, Michigan—State fair, Septem
ber 10-17.
Indianapolis, Indiana—State fair, Sep
tember 17-22.
Sidney Ohio—District fair, September
Newark, Ohio—District fair, October 2-6.
Mr. Glessner says he has the articles
packed upon the shelves of the car and in
chests, and these will be exhibited at the
fairs named in the North. The car con
tains specimens in groups as follows:
In cotton there will be the plant with
its open bolls, seed cotton, lint cotton, cot
ton seed hulls, cotton seed oil (crude and
refined), cotton yarn, sheeting, shirting,
cottonades, checks, ginghams, blankets,
quilts, towels, hosiery and other goods
manufactured from cotton, the exhibit be
ing capped with a suit of clothes woven
from Georgia cotton and made by Georgia
tailors.
In the way of grain will be shown a
number of varieties of corn, wheat, oats,
rye, barley, buckwheat and rice. Cane
will be shown which was planted after rye
and oats were cut off from the same
ground. Corn meal and flour made from
this year's corn and wheat will be also
shown.
In the way of forage will be shown
clover, timothy, crab and ^row-foot, Ber
muda, blue grass, Johnso^ grass, Munro
grass, swamp grass, lucerne, corn fodder,
Kaffir corn, ivory corn, German and cat
tail millet, sorghum cane, swamp cane,
Spanish ground pea and other plants.
The turpentine and rosin exhibit will
consist of a section of pine tree bored and
scored for turpentine, with tools for doing
the same, samples of different grades ol
rosin, turpentine and pitch-pine. The
window-gla^s or virgin rosin is shown in
small vases with pictures and reading at
the bottom, which can be seen as plainly
as through a glass.
In ores there are samples of gold, silver,
iron, lead, graphites, mica, ochre, kaolin,
talc, manganese, and several others.
The marble exhibit, furnished by the
American Marble Company^ will show a
number of the finest specimens oi phos
phate, rock, granite, limestone, etc.
All the principal manufacturing woods
will be shown in such a shape as to show
their grain, susceptibility to polish and
adaptability for manufacturing.
In fruits there will be pears, apples
peaches, Jaoanese persimmons and other
whole
in id upon articles <>f,do»nMti(*
manufacture am well a» upoif that’ orf^elgtt
production. Fpou oue it is a boun
ty, upon the other a burden,
and the repeal of tbe^ tax nufst
price of an article, whether foreign or do
mestic. We say, so long as importation con
tinues, the duty must be paid by the pur
chaser of tho article. The general and per
manent effect must he to increase the price
of the article io the extent of the additional
duty, and it is then paid by the
consumer. If it were not so, if
the general effect of adding to the duty
was to reduce the price of the article
upon which it is levied the converse of the
proposition would also be true, and the
operation for increasing the price of the do
mestic article would be to repeal the duty
on the same article imported, au experi
ment which the friends of oar internal in
dustry will not be desirous of making. We
cannot subscribe, therefore, to the doctrine
that duties on imports, protective of our own
manufactures, are paid by foreign merchants
or manufactures.
ne also quoted from President Arthur’s
annual message to Congress in 1882-3. Ar
thur said: “I recommend an enlargement
of the free list; that is, of goods that pay no
duty, so as to include within it numerous
artie'es which yield an inconsiderable reve-
me; simplification of the complex and
inconsistent schedule of duties upon certain
manufactures, particularly those of cotton,
iron nnd steel, and a substantial reduction
of the duties upon those articles, and upon
sugar, molasses, wool and woolen goods.
the board of health baa taken action accord-
ingly. It is not believed that there hnv
pet been Any pnscg of yellow fever
through my v.- rk to-dr.y? I fed miserable, boo4*
achy, tired, pain in iny bsuk,my food won’t digest,
~ * 'ler. Wo answer
broken down
_ „ worse unfe»
LIVER. This important organ
find you must euro it by promptly
. . Aioy
point in Florida except this city, Manatee,
l’iant City nnd Tampa, which last place is
now reported free from the disease.
Order liy Gov. Gordon.
Atlanta, August 22.—[Special.]—Gov
Dr. C. McLane’s Celebrated Liver Pills.
They will rcstoro you and give vigor and health to
your wholo system, mokinp you strong and well,
Dnly 25 cunts a box,nnd tnoymayaavo your M%>
Ask your druggist for tho genuine
X)r. O. MoZjANTB’S
Gordon issued the following this afternoon: QELEBRA TED LIVER PILLS
A PROCLAMATION. —MADE BY—
By John B Gordon, Governor of Georgia.' FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa. '
—Whereas, Surgeon-General Aamilton, of w .i^ OTt for Cotnma^nra made inBt Lon^
the marine hospital service, in discharge of
of the duties devolved upen him by the Pres
ident of the Unittd States, lias established
quarantine stations at Waycross, Dupont and :
other points within this State, to prevent
and suppress the spread of yellow fever from
localities in Florida where this fever exists, I
and 1
Whereas, the Executive of Georgia is au
thorized by statute to give such orders to
prevent the spread of contagious or infec
tion diseases within the State, and to umke
such appointments and regulations concern-
i g the same as shall by him be deemed
proper, now therefore
Ij John II. Gordon, Governor of Georgia,
do issue this, my proclamation, hereby des-
USE IY0RY POLISH teeth?
PERFUMES THE BREATH.
fi]|i
Louisiana State Lottery Co
Efiucatfonal and' Charitable purposes, and its
f franchise was mado a part of the present State
igoating ani appointing the officers of the ! ^BBtltutlon in 1879, by an overwhelming pop-
11..1 A-—.: i i uiar vote.
Will never trouble with thel
The man who trusts in Pierce’s Pills.
Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets—
vegetable, harmless, painles*, sure!
Things Lost In Traveling.
From the London Daily Verna.
Thirteen thousand boxes gone nut ray,
13,000 umbrellas left in railway carring* s, I
67,000 different itema of property lost on I t ... ..
.lL ,*#•»,. TTnhJt K'Ire.Only Eight
vanmaeq. lucre win aibu wG SSS
plav ol wines and cordials.
i4#*T*rfeWilts there will he Irish and
sweet potatoes, egg plants, squashes,
onions, field peas, okra, tomatoes ami other
varieties.
There will lx> a mirious and novel dis
play of gourds and all shapes and sizes
some of them bronzed and painted.
Fear, pencil, anple and mulberry trees
will be shown so as to exhibit the growth
mado in one year.
Sugar canc, pslmetto, sea oats, holly,
grey moss, magnolia leaves and cones will
give a semi-tropiba! appearance to tho ex-
liihit.
A handsome display of ozier willow
twigs and baskets will be an attractive
feature.
A scooter plow and harness, with bark
collar will show our Northern farmers
witii what primitive implements big crops
can be made.
Oue group will exhibit various grades
of leather mid shoes.
A number of small articles will go to fill
up the space between.
There will be thousands of pamphlets,
papers and circulars descriptive of Geor
gia, which will he freely distributed.
Macon supplies among other things
reve- epccimens of Mr. I. C. Plant’s osier wil
lows from the growing twigs to the manu
factured baskets.
The car is sent out under tiie auspices of
tiie Georgia State Agricultural Society
and will he an advertisement of what the
Empire State ot the South cau make and
grow. Mr. Glessner knows the people and
products of the Slate and will be a talking
advertisement of the fair and the Stale
DOtil about the 1 Ith of October when he
will ictum to .Macon.
be Joyful.
fire to mortals given with much
: of Leuven,” as for example,
via, amt tiie like. One bottle
t-uds them lienee. Oh! tel us
PACTS ABOUT THE EKVEK.
the railways of the United King
ing the single month of August, 18871 Tim
numbers are almost inconceivable, but
they are given by the Kailway News from
the reports ot the Railway Clearing nouse,
through which the bull: of the articles
were restored to their owners. It is not
every one who knows that at 57 Drummond
street, Euston Square, N. W., there exists
an organization tor the recovery of such
tilings. Our contemporary ha* therefore
done good service to the traveling public
by a timely reminder which may save
many of them from the lo‘S)» which too
frequently mar the holidays. Railway
trawlers mus: be very careless of their be
longings, but when we see the number of
packages with which they start on an ex
pedition, and the way in which they strew
them over the racks and tinder tiie seats of
a railway carriage, perhaps tiie wonder is,
not that so many are left behind, but that
to few are forgotten. It is a mistake in
holiday travel to burden yourself with the
care ol anything that can not be packed in
boxes or portmanteaus.
INiHIKn ONViSflk
MUSTANG LINIMENT
I HEALS INFLAMMATION, OLD SORES,
QAKg.n BREASTS * INSECT BITES!
tilt* tn All—Four Centers of
Infection Quarantine.
Jacksonville, August 22.—There have
been nine new cases of yellow fever daring
the lastiwcuiy-four hours, lour firemen being
among the new cases. There have been no
deathh for thirty-six hours and none of the
patients now under trealment are reported
dangerously ill. six of the eight deaths
which have occurred w*re of persons ad
dicted to tiie excessive of intoxicating
liquors and tiie other two were already in
poor health from oilier diseases when at
tacked by jhe fever. AU eases are now
promptly isolated and sanitation and disin
fection carefully looked after. It is intended
to keep the tight against the epidemic with
every means known to science. A thousand
pounds of bi-chloride of mercury has been
received from Fh'dadelphia. This, with
other disinfectants, will be used on the
streets, in house-*, etc. The citizens com
mittee on sanitation is going over the city a
second time with several hundred scav
engers.
There are now about four centres of infec
tion, the greater part of the rity being ;i|
* ho have been as- iu Grand Extraordinary Drawings take
quarantine stations and pIace semi-annually, (June and December),
J±EL^r“ rtf/S 8 '. t0 “S . wul,out ind its Grand Single Number Drawings takJ
entlna nftiMal.- ‘ nN A, 1 i'l® 08 on each of the other ten months in the
,, d rT\ rl "f, that , ‘H I year, and are all drawn in public, at the
resptttdLroieyed^iJrif firt^er'^era: i ' ACa, ‘ e, “ y ° f ^
as appointees of this department.
Given under my hand and the seal of the
executive department at ths capitol, in
the city of Atlanta, this the twenty-second
day August, A. D., 1888. J. li, Gordon,
By the governor: Governor.
James T. Nisbkt,
Sec. Executive Dept.
“We do hereby certify that we supervise tto
arrangements for all tho Monthly and 8 -mi an
nual Ilr&wiDgs of the Louisiana State Lottery
Uou pany, ami in person manage and control He
Drawings themselves, and that the same ar«
conducted with honesty, fairness, and in good
faith toward all parties, and we authorise the
Company to uso this certificate, with fao-simlletf
of onr signatures attached, in its advents*
meats."
CommiAslorinra.
THE FAK31EILS* ALLIANCE.
Resolutions Condemning the Vngglug
Trust—Also of Thanks.
From Thursday's Edition.
The State Farmers’ Alliance is still in
session nnd will remain over todav.
As lias been stated the sessions are held
with closed doors, the order being a Bccret
one, and all that can be learned of the
proceedings is that which tho Alliance
furnish for publication. The members
have nothing to say, because they are not
permitted to do so if they weroso inclined,
and all that can he gathered from tiiem is
that much work is being dono and all for
the good of the order.
Yesterday an election was held for
president of the Alliance and Hon. R. W.
Jackson was rc-elected.
The following resolution was adopted.
It was offered by A. T. Pope, of Ogle
thorpe county:
■\Vhereas the Bagging Trust which is now
seeking to so wickedly oppress the farmers
of the cotton StateB in the article uf bag
ging and other articles of consumption,
Georgia, ho’d their cotton in the seed so
far as practicable until the oppression
sought to be put upon them is broken and
urge all cotton farmers and Alliance men
of other htates, and other parties that are
being oppressed by this combination to
unite with ub against these combinations
and trusts that are so wickedly oppress
ing 118.
Resolved, That tlieseresolutionsbegiven
to the press for publication.
The following resolutions offered by L. cn ^^ t ^^ r p a r |fv"furthcr Information
r. Livingstan, of Isewton, were adopted desire d.wrlto legibly to ilia undersigned, dearly
anti telegraphed to all the leading papers: stating your residence,withState. County, Street
Resolved. That the thanks of this, the rt !A'. 1 .1V 1 r „'_..* r St* 1 wnl
Georgia omie Alliance ue, aim are neieuy velnpc bearing your *iuii address,
tendered the Hon. Breckinridge, of Ar- Hcud POSTAL NOTES, Express, Money
kunsas, Morgan, of Mississippi, Simmons,' ?">«■• or Now £*$ *££*“*• *“
v Ii l- j xl 1 1 • ter. Currency by Express (at our expense)**!*
oi INortn Carolina, and others now moving Pressed
in our national Congress looking to the
relief of cotton planters from the oppres
sion “lid wicked enmlnnt nf th« hnt'eriner
trust.
Wc, the undersigned, Banks and Bonkers will*
pay all prizes drawn in The Louisiana State Lot
teries which may be presented at our counter;,
K. M. WALMSLKV, Fres. Louisiana Nat. Ilk.
1’IKHKK LANAUX, Pres. State Nat'i Kt.
A. 11 ALU WIN, Pres. Now Orleans Nat'i Ilk,
CARL KOUN, Pres. Union National Hank,
GRAND MONTHLY DRAWING IN TVK
ACADEMY OF MUSIC, NEW ORLEANS, TUES
DAY, Sept. 11, 1»RR.
Capital Prize, $300,00a
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars Knob
Halves, 910; Quarters, MR; Tenths,
•IS; Twentieths, *L
LIST OF FRIZES.
1 PRIZE OF 1300,000 is 8300,010
1 PRIZE OF ICO,000 is 100.* 0
1 PRIZE OF 50,000 is 50,000
1 PRIZE OF 25.000 is 26,000
2 PRIZES OF 10,000 are...» 20,000
6 FKiZbo OF u,vCS »rs.m 26,‘.Y'0
25 PRIZES OF 1,000 are 26,0f0
100 PRIZES OF 500 are 50,000
200 PRIZES OF 300 are Go,000
500 PRIZES OK 200 are..*... 100,000
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
loo Prizes of 8- r >(X) arc 50,000
100 Prizes of are 80,000
1(A) Prizes of 8-0*1 are 20,000
TERMINAL PRIZES.
533 Prizes o' COO are- 99,903
yjy Prizes of fioo are 90,000
New Orleuns, 1
Waahlnrtiin. D. fl.
r M. A. DAUPHIN,
Address Registered I.otters to
NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL RANH,
New Orleans, La
That tho
Telephone Etiquette.
From the New Orleaus Picayune.
A soldier who was seen to take off liis }
cap while using the telephone informed a I
questioner that lie did so because lie wan in charge of the drawings, is a guarantee of ab .0*
talking to his superior officer.—[Philadel- lute fairness and integrity, that the chances sr
I’'-<' r "-i •*-» -
goeia long way by telephone. Arealgen- kk.mkmiii:k that tae psjm.nt ot all
tletmiu will not shout “Hallo 1” to the ex- 2!4m JP, f'ouit H-*-
tuton.
excuse me, Mist; but will you be kind „
enough to connect-me with tho Royal la tho hlghoi Courts; therefore, beware of any
Flush Club, don’t yer know, and then take Imitation, r auouymous scheme..
SOUTHERN FEMALE
your ear opt of the circuit, don’t yer know.”
The Hunihug of the Age.
From the Philadelphia Record.
Although Senator Morgan saw fit yes
terday to characterize Mr. Blaine on the
floor of the Senate as the “Chief Humbug
of the Age, ' none of the Republican Sen
ators appeared to be especially eager to '
(Cox’s) COLLEGR.
defend the “Plumed Knight” of the trusts.
Hasour uncrowned AmericanCtesar, then,
so few friends in the House of monopoly?
Or did Edmunds, Sherman, Hancock,.
Hoar and the other leading lights of the
r
J
Hoar and the other leading lights ol the • n oLLEGE OF letters, SCIENCE ami art
grand old party chucKie in secret amuse- j Twenty-one Offieera; high standard of
ment over Mr. Morgan’s oratorical veho- scholarship. Among the equipment, are 11-
„ ° : Lrary. reading room, museum, mounted tele
mence I
brary, reading room, m
SCOP*, complete apparatus, gymnasium, nor,
mal courises in literary ami music departments*
I Hractli’iil brunchch; book keeping, telegraphy.
’ type writing, drew-making, etc. Elocution and
fne Art arc attractions. In Manic arth-t*,
with the MiriAea Cox directors, and ladies' or-
ehcftra; n ■ -la-n of 111 last neuron. Over 1UQ
hoarders fruin twelve Mato the past terra.
| Homelike lnlluenct>. Hoard and tuition fJA.
1 School begins .September 20. Send for illus
trated catalogue.
.Mr*. I. F. Cox, Frrialilnijt,
July 15stin.thurAw5w la Grange. Qa.
MONEY LOANED
ON FARMS and TOWN PROPERTY
In Bibb and Adjoining Counties.
ELLOITT ESTES.
1-1-ly 10) SjcotI sire.)t, Mscou, G.a
"OTHER’S
DR. J. J. SUBERS,
Permanently located in the specialty of
venereal. I use no mercury. Lost man
hood fully restored. Female irrt gulariliec, 1
exczema and poison oak. Cures guaranteed, j
Address in confidence with stamp 514'
Fourth utreet. Macon. Os. fulSwlv
W
ESLEYAN FEMALE INSJIJPIL
STAUNTON. VA Open* .Sept, io, its*. Ons ol the most ittractivs Schists
Sr YounQ Ltdies In the Union. All Departments Thorsufh. Buildings Elegant; Steam
heat:Gae light;Situation beautiful; Climate•plendld, PujpllBfrom >ineteenbtal«^
Terms among the lowest in the Union. For the LI6EFUL TERMS of this CELEBRATES
0L0 VIRGINIA SCHOOL, write for a catalogue to ttK. a. riARKIh. Pres t, Staunton. V*.
MUSTANG LINIMENT MUSTANG LINIMENT MUSTANG LINIMENT
CCRE.S HOLLO'WHORN, CAKED BAGfL
GRUB & HOOF DIHKAHE IN CATTLE 1
SHOULD ALWAYS BE KEPT IN CHOP, FOR MAN A BEAST. PENETRATES
KITCHEN. bTABLJ AND »ACTOR V. MUSCLE 4t P IBK£ TO THE VERY BOMB.