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NO RECOUNTFORNEW YORK.
SECRETARY NOBLE GIVES HIS FINAL
ANSWER TO GRANT.
lie Dorll;e« to order * Kr-rnuinrra-
tlon ef the Clt j and Gives III* Ken.
* on * * n * Very Spicy Docti-
WignntoTOJf, Nov. 0.—Secretary No*
Ti 0 x? na ,. y rejected the application of
the New \ork city authorities for a rc-
count of the population. Briefly stated
the reaiona for the rejection are: No
cause of action and the various delays
° JL te * 0W York cit - v authorities.
The Secretary’s decision is a lone
document, the first half of which i*
devoted to a review of the circumstances
attending the efforts previous to the last
one made by the New York officials to
secure a recount. Grant ie charged
with allowing ceventy dav. to slap,,
belore any .tens were taken to correct
the census. He is also criticised for the
failure to take advantage of the oppor
tunity offered hint by Chief Clerk Cli'lds,
then acting superintendent, to present a
specific case for investigation and for
appealing to the secret >ry upon Childs'
actions upon insutlicient ground*
NO NEW FACTS PRESENTED,
The secretary conclude, this port or
his decision as follows: “Again, it is
quite obvious that it would liavo been
most unjust if cot absolute!.- illegal for
tlie secretary to bavo considered any
other state of forts than those that tlie
superintendent had already on opportu
nity to considor and on which he had
based Ilia action. The mayor must have
known this as lie did not call the atten
tion more than he had retted his ease
upon.
"the office of the superintendent is
not only of groat responsibility hut nl»o
of great dignity. He is appointed by the
1 resident by unit with the uuvice and
consent of the ten ate. His intelligence,
jurgment, integrity ar.d personal qualili-
cations entitle hint not only to fuir hut
most liberal treatment at the hands of
the secretary. To undertake to overrule)
him on facta ho hna not had the opjw
tunity to consider would bo harsh as
well as unauthorized. The toe rotary
w-as, tlicrorore, by all consideration!
idicable to it botinel to act upon the „
before him aud not upon some other
factv not presented or offered, llo did so
decide it, and gave hie reasons at
length.”
TUB APPLICATION WJIONO.
Tlie secretary then continued: “Tho
present application niLht, however,
have been entertained sufficiently by the
secretary to learn what the cnee was
res.ing on now. ]f ho did not feel jus
tified in acting upon it himself, he might
have d-Aiiied it such as ho might to io-
fer back to the superintendent for con
sideration ly him. To have command d
such action by the secretary would have
required a full representation of all the
professions of the applicants.
But that Ins not been the offer mado
or the action taken bv the tnnvnr, Th«
applicants were elected to suit himself’
five out of 917 enumeration districts and
the proposed cases to l»o disposed of on
un investigation of the books relating
A Pica. It
From the
Once u
little b]».
and sole
May I! >we
beau.iful
holding
who hast
them, “Lo
Queen of
year 1819
changed
prince**
sovereigns
honor in
which,
Anthem.
THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 12. 1890,'
QLKCIV “AT IIO.VIE.*!
Picture of Queen Victo
rs Domestic Habits.
■o IMustre.
» time there Was a charming
prince*, with large blue eyes
tresses, who was known as
because she was born in that
’ring month; and her father,
ud before the lords and ladier,
■d to see the babv, said to
at her well, for s&e will be
.-land!” The spring of the
ar off now; the May rose has
the Christmas rose; the little
become the doyenne of the
Europe, and her people
• half a century of a reign
,-e words of tne National
h« been “happy and glorious,”
and disungi btd by ber majesty’s great
uionug, Ut(I ber majesty's great
virtues am devotion to the public weal.
A * t ® r softened by tbe joys and
griefs o. her owned romance, th* public
J® ner * t * 8 grandmother wno, from the
tbrone. has 4 le the nation admire senti
ments whichlre most dear to it. History
alone will I. able to do justice to Queen
> ictona s ii it*. Simple and upright,
*^n* re< * Wl i intelligence and tirui
vsul, very c « as to ber rights atd duties,
she has nevej icrificed than for the sake
of effect—c t une conscience et un
caractere.
'1 he one pli . where the queen is never
wk / ou ““ k er good town of London.
THE ALLIANCE IN POLITICS.
THE DANGERS WITH WHICH IT
threatens the south.
A Strong and Manly Letter From
Capt. It, K, Park In Declining
to 9lake the Itace For the
LegUIature.
The following correspondence, which
explain? itself, ia reprinted from tho
Telegraph of July 22 by request:
Capt. R. E. Park, Macon Go.—Dear
Sir: The undersigned, representing a
largo tody of tho Farmers' Alliance of
Bibb county, as well as others not con
nected witu that i»ody. respectfully ask
the use of your name in the democratic
nomination to re, rerent Bibb county in
the next legislature.
Hoping to have this request granted,
we are truly jour Iri- nds.
J. L. Gifford,
IL A. Nl BIT,
W. II, Cason,
D. G. Ill'OiiES,
S. S. Sweet,
R. F. OU.-LKY,
R A. Johnston,
Aud others.
Messrs. Gufford, II ghes'. N.sbot, Qua*
bweet aud oitiein—Gentlemen:
thereto.
THOSE POLICE COUNT RECORDS,
At the same timo these enumeration
hooka do not include tho population that
was returned by tho police enumera
tors. Io nave find possession of these
acknowledged; imperfect “records to
V u co T m ! w,red *hern with t*o schedules
of the United States enumerator in Ids
own department under the law that
authorized copies only to bo furnished
municipalities for inspection, to havo
given entiro freedom of action in tho
preuiiiivi w lihuut supervision was the
Jeast that could have been offered the
Whether it bt hat Buckingham Palace ia ! hate ncciv. d your invitation to allow
displeasing t her majesty—as it might D, . v home to go before the derm
well be—or . ther the air and noiae of 1 of Bibb couutv for nomimtiou to
the capitol injurious to her health, I represent them iu the legislature of
one thing is ct sin—that she avoids Lon-1 Georgit,
oon like the pestilence, leaving to her ! 1 ho gratification which this mark of
charming daoj tpr-in-Iaw, the Princess of j ? our confidence ond respect givea me is
Wales, and :o t * extremely popular heir K really increased by tho fact that the
.u-j. , representing her on ***Kge#tlon of iiiy name in this conncc-
Young ar d b-auti- i l * OM originated with iny friends among
i Princess of Wales ' lho nit-tubers of our counts Farmerr
1 Alliance, and has ieen gracious!v sec-
; ondoJ by many merchants belonging to
tho Board of Tradu of Macon, as wed as
by mcmboia of the Knights of Labor of
our city.
Under different circumstances from
those which surround our political sit
uation, I would perhaps deem it my
duty to accept sucu a nomination, ni
if elected to devoto all my faculties ..
the promotion of the best and highest in
t*rests of the city and county, wliic.i in
teivtts are, in my opinion, closely iden
tified with the welfare ana honor of the
entiro commonwealth of Georgi
construined, however, by a deep cone,
for tin,so interests to decline ycur invita
tion,
1 was the first accepted member of the
fhst sub-ad lance formed in this county,
and have given to it my unwavering and
loyal aupforfi The Alliance has been
throughout the statu of the highest
service to tho agricultural interestt of
the people of Georgia. It object*
nounce.f when organized, and as ad
hered to up to a very recent period,
whilst having reference more particu
larly to tho improvement of the agricul
tural condition of tho people, w»re in
entire harmony and co-operation with all
tho other great concerns of the com
munity, whether mercantile, manufac-
tuiicg or mechanical industries, or per-
taming to legal, literary or other profes-
political support and suffrage, and which A Dike County Farmer ilobbed aiul
scheme has been condemned by tl a most { JBeoten by n Negro,
enlightened and purest statesmen of the Griffin, Nov. G. — (Special.]— Thi*
whole country, and has not the sanction j morning a farmer named Bock Carden,
of a single man of eminence as a peliti- j living about twelve miles from here, in
cal thinker, or large experience as a leg-1 Pike, tho adjoiuing county, presented
islator, and which fact should, of itself. 1 himself at police headquarters in a bruised
make i s noisy advocates more modest if and battered conditiou, ond gave the fol-
w 4*7 of representing her on
ail official occa un*. Young ar>d~b?auti-
ful, however, H the Princess of Wales
may be, she wi find it difficult to rival
majestic bear! her atigint tnetber-i
law. With hei our feet eight iuches and
her sufficiently trong frame, the queen,
when she tak her place in same cere
monious procea n or oilier, walks and
acknowledges tl saluialion of tho ej ecta-
T * n . al »^olu |y regal fashion. Since
the liincess a trice’s marriage, aud
especially sines the extraoidin.iry mani
festations whicl marked her jubilee, the
queen has shot i herreif a little more to
her liege subject • • • There is also
more animstioi in the palabe. Her
nisjfstj has com nnded artistes to appear
at court, sad h. encouraged her entour-
age to get up i nateur thtatricsls. The
fact is that■ Print s Beatrice has married
a rrincs Charmi r, from whom one wishes
to banish all eo ui; and, as he cannot he
sent over to Uc many to hunt and shoot
every week, the omeatic hearth is made
as p nib!*.
With the cxc ption of a few weeks
spent at aomt Ifcalth re*crt, the queen
divides her time almost «quolv between
Windsor, OsbornaWnd Balmoral. Wind-
tor, the immmeosel feudal palace oPWill-
and Edward III., is
lidence of the queen,
north had a more stately
they nere less ignorant, I am compelled
to most respectfully decline your flatter
ing request to uso my name’ as a candi
date for nomination. Very truly your
friend. Robert E. Pack.
PUACTICAL HENBVOLINt B.
A Great Schenie Io lift the Helpless
Classes Out of llio Allrr.
From the Baltimore Bun.
Gen. Booth, tlie leader of the Salva
tion Army, and whom Lord Wol-eley has
declared to be the greatest organizing
geniu* of our time, has written a book,
to which he has given the title “In Ban
es t Lngland and tho Way Out.” The
darkest England, according to Gen.
BooJi, consists of the lowest strain of
the povt rtj -stricken poor, the people who
haunt tiie slums of groat cities, and
whom no all the exhortations of the
Salvation Army hav- btou able to reach.
book hua nut been published in tiiis
country, but an idta of Gen. U oth's
plan, with some of its details, is given in
it- He view of Reviews.
Strange and tautavtical as the doings
•he Salvation Army, with it-* semi
military organization, its brass hands i i
flags bearing in-criptious, its inarching
tons and its re igious exhortath n*. uj-
peir to us, wiiere it lias met with less
micccss than in any other country. Lut iu
Englaud, the greatest of oil, there is
abundance of teatiinony ; a to the actual
good it has done and to tho order and
o edience it bas t een able to enfurco
among its followers. The woik that
Gen. Booth and the wife, who died but
a few weeks og<*. have accomplished is
best shown m the fact that the annual
subscripthn s to the Salvation Army
amount to Cu,SO<),OUO. By methods
which to decorous church-goers appear
whimsical and gro.caque. they have
tarn the Conquet
the actual official
and never has mo ..,. u „
home. It is to Wrsdfor thst ber majesty
invites those whom she wishes to enter
tain. Tne invitations areumallytodin-
tiiue P»drMs *.k* C *'u e Bion ** ^ coinmend# f itself to tin
sk.*., ’ ftD ^ *P® n ^ D f the night at spect, confldenco and aupiH>rt of every
the castle.
1 he queen’s day begins a little liter
now than formerly, the rheumatic affec
tion from which she suffers having dimln-
ished her strength, although she still
woiks very hard. Rising between 8 and 9
o clock, she breakfasts iu her own apart
ments, but occndnnalI* invites Princess
Beatrice or soa’c other member of the
royal family. Often, In fine weather, she
drivei to brogmore, and when it is warm
enough she breakfasts in a tent erected in
the gardens. From 10 to 2 her Majesty
» V *^® m ^ n ^lors is always at
-•sc;., MUt the queen asidorn j resoles over
*°me very cxcvpiicn.il
tiona were all tjm fierier byesi*' l^mce^k'lllert u*ed to aav ^J^j ***^ ^iprocal anlsgomsm’which
• But on up,.ficntion by tho secretary to lhequeen ought to be the best informed uttitudo ox reciprovy » t
hnvo tho books, incomplete ue they are, perfc0|1 ln u, e realm. “Minhtera go out—
dtlivcred at tho deportment upon un h(f „ „ m , inI) M .aid1 tho prince. ildi” I't con
II«r moj..ty 1»». WtMol to tho ”, „ U ,|, nom.lv, mt.rnol
-eighty programme which mow'd the i io „ „ t , tr among whoso people
Emperor hapolcon M., end MjaredlythL.m ..ntimont, unity oi pur-
principal secretary, Hir Henry Ponsoocy, I i»>'mon> I
has anvthing but a sinecure, vvh.n th«
queen has been working at Fi
officUl nceipt. bo w». infunm-d hy tho
custodian* oi thorn that tho instruction,
ol tho mayor were Io tho contrary and
that ho (tho custodian) must be constant-
Ir present with tho .sectary whrn b.
wu examining tho book, or comparing
thorn with tho United state, cen.u. re
turn. and that tho result could not bo
anything but right.
MONEY EOtt *TA It VINE IIIEI-AND
Dillon and o’llrlen Mare oil - Kills
flt.HiS in J*lill»Uelplilu.
PH1L4DEU-UM, Nor. ft—Dillon and
O’Brien, tbe Irish leaders, w;oro given
their first public reception in America at
th. Academy ot Jlusio in this city to
night, s largo and enthusiastic crowd
"^The^ narty consists of John Billoo,
wTlhanfo Scion and wife. T. D. -Sulli
van. editor ot tho Dublin, Nation and
wife T. P. O'Connor, editor ot the Lon
don Slur, T. P. Gill. »nd Tiiuotby liar-
rington, secretary of the Irish Nations!
''coi. 8 jib K McClure editor of th. Phil-
adelpliia Timt», prealdod and John Helds,
nostmaster, »ctc«l as treasurer, /lho
acaalemv wasdccormted with the natlonsl
colors of America anil Ireland. On each
aid* of the stag© were large oil portrait*
of Gladstone and ParnelL Conspicuous
among the decorations were pictures of
Irish heroes. , .. .
The IrUh-American club paraded in a
body and eacorted tho guevta from tueir
hotel to tho academy. Tho immense
building wh crowded. Ou tb. .tag.
u-prii iiinnv nroaiinent citizeneof 1 liila-
class hy the enunci.ilion of iu purpose to
abstain from ail political combmutiona,
intrigu*• and factions
Tho tendency to convert (or I might
sny pervert) such a noble organization
into an enginery of political power mnl
the self-seeking of aspirants for | olitical
office is, in my judgnien , a iad diiiei-
vice to the interesla of the stule, and ea-
pecialiy those of tho farming clu»s
Iu the fi-plnco its inevitable effect,
if not i s avowed purj)ose. as stated by
some of its lend*r*. is to segregate the
agriculiural i ln-e; to sever iu connection
with nil other classee, and to claim for
iteoif the
v. .eciprocal antagonism which
provo u»ore foiniidablo and con-
*g than is r ow imagined by the
were many proninent citizen*
del phis. Archbishop Ryan occupied a
private box and Mrs. Parnell, mother of
th. Irisb leader, wn. also pre.L-nt.
All tbe members of tho party made ad
dre.se., tho | rincipal spceche. beiug
made hy Dillou and O Ur in. who gave
vivid accounts of tlio .uttering in Ire-
land .lid described tho vigorous coercion
ue.aurta ia operation there.
'Hie call for pecuniary old from tho
friend, of Ireland resulted m tho produc
tion hy Mr. Field ot a subscription list
which footed upJ.S.C-S. The MnouncJ
ment of this amount produced great en
thusiasm. At lho do,oof 'ho s|*ech-
ranking, a recep'iun naa held on the
stag hy the viators, and hundred* of
pcopu preraed forward and iliook them
'A other mc-ting will be held at the
iievue.uy 10-morrow night at which Gov
eruoi Ue.r.r wid pttrtdfc
OOMhen ou Hi. Cil.d.lonUus.
IvrSDON, Nov. 6.—Gorchen, choncvllor
ol lho exebequei. .pc,king ut U-hlax
to-night, denied that the vault oi tne
bv elections proved th it conservatism
failing, the lilad.lcml .ns, he taid,
r' nibUd udverilsiiig quack., promising
relief for every k.»d ol human ailment.
Tho unionists would do their Usi to tin l
enuiue remedy for the existing evil*.
Ill Jra» confident that the , ; , od utiiMH.i
..juutry would approve honeet
,1„ , ol MCialand political progre.
to trusting to tho guidance
. r gar More Afraid.
■ i cbo Nov.- A—The police
,t nil the imperial palaces
„ ,No loiterer* ar t
,|.J ... inity of Anchkotf,
*•,1 ce Tne railroad stations
rv .'i*burg End Qs'-dt
queen ha* hten wording mi r rogtnor*i yon
tee her return to Windsor, bulging back
the precious dbpstch boxes in llic car-
ritge. Then Bir Henry l'ou-oby takes
poistsalon ol them, sor.s the contents and
iorwards the dispmtcbn to their destina
tions. At a o’clock come* lunch with
ihuie members oi the royal family who
happen to be nl the ca.tlf. Her majesty
lias ae embarras de onoix, ior ol the fifty
children and grandchildren that I’rori.
deuce lisa granted her—wilhctt counling
the lourrh generation, which tread* u(»on
tha heels oi the others—there re-nsin
forty-two. As, besides, Ih. queen is allied
more or le*a cloaely to all who reign, hare
reigned or will reign in Europe, one will
ingly abstains from attempting to elasstly
those related to her majesty. For Die
queen, howerer, the disentangling proces*
is * pastime: her msjesty never gels con
fined over it, and good-humoredly pie
lends to be .urpriied th.t everybody is not
so clever si bets II. After lunch mere is
t short walk, and »t J o’clock, no m.tler
what the weather may be, tbe queen goy*
ior t drirr, generally iccompanhd by
Princes* Beattie., the lady-in-waiting and
■onto other fair inrit.e Dinner is »t 9
o'clock. Bhcnld a reigning prince b.
prrsent, the qu*en ukv* hit arm; il not,
Th- walk, into th. dioieg room alone.
Before her msjsaty eomre down the gra-
tlem.n*in-w»tling ocqu.loU .11 the male
t'uest* with th. name of the lady they are
t> take in. During the day there u com
plete liberty ior all, yea there is none o!
that sociability which characttris e Eng-
linh oounlrt bouse life. The eveninK has
never been a time of much |»W»rt
palace. Charles GrevilU found U *l<ff**7
dull.” The queen u*el to seat herself at
a large rouud table, and the ®® BV ® r,al !? n
became more or lee* animated. Now the
queen gore from one to the other, ad-
tireftius to each a few words almabba et
ban*!®? and retire# at 11 o’clock. When
only meinbtri of the ruyil fanJily are pres
ent there is often music. Like all her
children, excepting the Princeof \\ ale,
the queen is an excellent musician, and
lAmaUsus sits down to the piano with the
• i vumm and concert of nition hsa now
When the (| M al „ n) . olll e r become »
matter not oi prmctp.o alone, nor o(
|K»hcy nlone, nut of uctual self-prcacrva-
touciicd anti l»t nulitc I multitudes
apparently could not have been reached
in any otl.or way.
But Gt-n. Booth has felt that there aro
two clufceeM ot the ;>uverty siricktn po|>-
ulation U|K>n whom the cnthusiusUm of
tiiu Salvation Army predu ed noeii'ect.
They could not be induced to join in tin
devotional exercises of Gen. Booth’)
column# of soldiery. One of these cia-sei
wants bread more than religion, and
the otiicr is sunk so low that no ap, enis
could rouse them to a eenso of their
degradutiou. It ia to these two eludes
Gtu. Booth piopo6es to “show trie
way out” of the mire into which they
have fallen. Tho one class oL. whom he
ia the moat hopeful is that of the large
boiy of |K>or peoplo who are beyond or
below tho potter of helping themselves.
The second class comprises tho-u who
will not work any will 10: o >ey. These
latter, in his opinion, “should be re
garded as moral incurables, and ah uld
be isolated under comfortable conditiors
und prevented from having childieti. If
signs of improvement are seen, they aro
to have more liberty and a treatment ad
justed to their moral condition.” To tlie
class iiist mentioned ho would furnish
k, food sad lodging, lie would
found a “city colony,” a “form colony”
and a “colony over tiie tea,” to which
tin 8*i who have been taught to work and
have become telf-dependent he would
scud abroad in vessels inauued by seamen
he has rescued
But for all those whom ho proposes to
catlier tneethnr. tho n.w* rfKentta! condi
tion is that they must work; that they
must submit to the plan of organization
an;l, ns in the Salvation Army, must yield
implicit obedience to order?. There nro
to be imluttrial refuges or salvation fac-
toriee, where the first lesson* ot solf-
dvpvudrnce are to b« learned. After ward
lowing information:
lie came to Griffin yesterday to sell
cotton and make purchases and made an
nil-day stay. He invested liberally in all
sorts of ware, including a large quantity
of “John Barleycorn," About G o'clock
he was ready to get into his w agon and
drive home, but his liquor had the best
of him, and, after gon g a few blocks,
being unable to drive, he landed his wagon
agMtmt an electric light p et. A negro
came to his assistance and offered to
drive him home. ( Hi* services wero ac
cepted aud the journey w»a mado for
about seven miles in safety.
Carden any# that in his drunken
(tupor he fell aeleep and did
not wake until 1 o’clock tin's
morning, w hen he found his face »ud
shoulders covered with blood and an
ugly go*h in his head.
And investigation revealed that the
negro was musing and with him had
g no all i f tbe grocer es and dry goods
with which Cardin’* wagon was loaded,
$•*5 in morey and a flue watch and
chain.
The police did not take long to locate
the negro, who was arrested und lodged
in jail. No money or any tiling wan
lound upon his iieiaon that would con
vict him, but he h:ts mnde three different .. , , -
statements of bia whereabouts last night walleii lh ® word from England
nnd ail of them have been p oven false. «t»ack u* with the utim.st
Hi* name is Oscnr Sims, anu he is known P‘ eB ' uw *nd ferocity,
as a desperate und daring fellow.
A ICItAP OF Ills roll!'.
The Kcal fCcaion Wliy Alailti
Fiirrlinard from Ituosln.
From tho Denver News.
“Dj you know the real inwardness of
(he purchase of Alaska from Russia by
tlie United States?” asked a prominent
Eastern hcntlemnnofa circle of friends
at the Windsor the other evening.
Everybody gave it up,
“Well, then, 1*11 tell you. It’s a singu
lar fact that this remarkable piece of
hiRtory, though it is a matter of record,
jb »o little known, even a *.ong the i-e t
posted men. Probably no one in 100.000
knows the real truth of tho matter. Lur
ing the war 1 held an official position
under the government that gave mo ac
cess to this and many other curious
fragments of historical information.
You see. along about the latter
i art of 1802 or the beginning of 1803
England and France were just on the
verge of recognizing the South ns an in
dependent nation nnd Germany was
wavering. Th** accomplishment of this
step would perhaps have made the South
victorious. But by means of some of
the most wonderful diplomacy the world
has ever known, Mr. bewarJ avert d the
crisis, and let me say rigli here, gentle-
*‘ii, that Secretary Howard will never
t.’iis world receive one-half tl.o credit
really due him f<>r his matchless conduct
of the State Department during the war.
I well reiuemi er with what lute and ill-
concealed longing to te nt them we
saw tlie English men-of-wnr lying in
the offing, ior we Well knew they
Officers are now out at his home mak
ing a search of liia house and surround-
inga.
Gov. Gordon font in ii ten tlie Death
Senirnrc of I'.mlly Ifoone,
Atlanta, Nov. 6.— [Special, j—Emily
lion und existence.
In the second place, even if iucccee-
ful, tho success which, at the most, will
bti .ltort l.vtnl, tit. principle upon wlucli
wouM be l a »I is fi' 1 ' 0 “t" 1 vtctoOE Tit.
tstt-ulUl characteristics of . republican
coTtrnnunt is that politic, asutb-rt.v
must lw Brawn front tho whole too.* I “
litic: all pane mubt contribute to thul
author l). The .xclusicn oi »uy i«riion
from the power that ought to la MUt-
tnon to ,lh and the appropriation of th.t
pow ar to on. class alone is not liberty.
Sot democracy, but the T.ry rerence of
'’in lire third place, I do not share in
the distrust and jealousy of o hor high
ond nolde vocations, such a# our mer
chants, lawyers, banker*, city tihy*iciun»
and othera, which i# sought to be exerted
and spread among our people.
In read ng a recent vpeecli of the most
activo leader of this movement againfct a
lawyer as a proper represenlotiv# in con-
grcb* by reason of his non identification
eilh the farming interests, 1 am fur my
remindtd ot tho glow in. Ir hut. paid by
Edm„nd lturfce in tlrellrlllili parliament
to the service* rendered to the cause of iu-
dependence by tue great.American plant-
^ . -1 . ...... _.i .,1,*■ mi-is.ri/iniy the
ar. of that usy, and chuntcttriiinn th.
combination of two such eia.-re*. «n in-
vincible lactor in tho cuso of Anrerteart
hljortr. And 1 am also reminded of the
etforl'tbst w». once made in O-orfla to
.limit:ato Alexnn, er 11. Stephen. Irani
our nuuontd represent, tion in constrre
because Ire was a lawyer. W hat a bright
pace in tire liistory . f pur auto would
bate teen expunged had that appeal to
their prejudice* not }**•“ ie_
jeoted. I would rejoic. il tire np-
ceuls now being . made to tire
aiute prejudices of tile former,
of Georgia shall meet the same fat.
Who would obliterate from the history
of Georgia lire record* of her great lxw-
v ,. r ,—erswfurd, Herrien, Ben Hill, Cobh
and oil.er*—names wldilt history «ll
not let die? Nor can 1 forget in tuts cen
nectioa th. great law reform iu Georgia
instituted t-y the great joriaW ol tire
Such, UieBy, k the plan of fl«n ttooll,
to deal with tire lowest nnd most help
less classes of tire English (>op"laUon.
lie o*lt* to start with i 190,000, or *500,-
000 of our money, nnd he warn*, ir tire
plan promises to bo successful, n grant
or io.uiW.lHHJ, He has already been en
couraged to go on with the work, und
centrii.utions to Itelp his campaign
against destitution have lecn promised
hint. It is a tremendous work ire has
undertaken, nnd tho pragma ol the ex
periment will be watched overywh.to
witlt interest.
How firm srdstleh Drought Down a
■tunulna uurn,
from tbe Mempbl* Avalaochc.
Mil John F. Sedutck, oi Waco,Texas,
is visiting her brother, Msj. Georgo M.
Holm, of Ho nt station. Mis*. Tit. major
iatomewliutof a a|uitainan, and likes
nothing let er tl:an to take dogs and gun
and sally forth in search of whatever
game, big or entail, he can bag. Ho U a
good shot, but hiiiister is equally expert,
and sit. i» at once the wonder ond admi
ration of Wa-h ngton cour.ty for hor
prowess witlt the breech-loader.
r p)*y after day bird-ahuo ing pnrttee
were organized tiuring lur visit, and at
the close of each day s sjk rt the lady h»d
inv*riably more birds to her credit than
her brother, the major, or any of hU
friend*, and she gained them If naslly,
for. liko n true sportsman or snorUwo-
man, the teorncu to lako them other tlmn
on the wing. , ,.
On Monday last a grand deer hunt to
which many of tire neiglu oring gentry
sm,rumen all of tl .al, were inri.nl, wus
organized. Alter breakfast ttre gay
p rty .tarted out big wph expcctanoy
Lnd determined not to return without
tome token of their proweis. The cane-
brak.s reached, the dogs were turned
looac- 'he various hunters took
their respective ••.land." at poinu wlrere
tho deer would naturally .wktoM.ape
tlie drive, end wr.ltnl in patient..
H on tlie hayint! of tire hounds an
nouuced that game had been .tarted,
and tit* hunters concealed themoelves,
awaiting with tlmt tuppreased eagerness
know 11 only to the sport-man for a sight
As luck would have it tho
Boon**, the mvre3* wlio poison*d a fam
ily of tcu after repeated attempts, ia
Gordon county toiue months ago, will
not hang st Calhoun to-morrow.
Gov, Gordon to-day commuted her
sentence to life imprisonment nnd or
dered the execution stayed by uiro
Thi! is probably tiie last exercise of
ecutive clemency that will come from
Gordon before his term expires.
The commutatit n <eems the result of
the sentiment which has always pre
vailed iu Georgia against tbo bunging of
a woman. Only oue wzs ever hung in
the state and she was white. Susan
Eberhardt was her nrnne. She tmirdeied
a Mis. .S| arm in Webster county und
was executed during Gov. Smith’s ad
ministration,
Emily Boone's crime was a peculiarly
atn clous one nnd yi-t the community 11
which tbs Jived seems to tie a unit in
wishing lu r to etcape tbe gallows.
A negro man named Joe Talley was
the head of the faratlv she attempted to
exterminate. Ilia wife nnd a child of
six jenre succumbed to the effects of tho
deadly draught administered, und Talley
himself and two other children only
partially rallied, having swallowoi
enough to make them hojclcis paralytica.
The CiiNsetM Hold llurncd.
Cuss XT a, Ga., Nov. a—(Special]—At
o’clock this morning the hotel here was
discovered to bo on lire, and it looked for
a while as if the entiro town would te
burned. The hotel was a large two-story
building un I just across the streets from
nnd within a few feet of tho store houses
of Dr. C. N. How.rd uud of Wynn & Ar
mor, both of th»a* liotiftoM nught fire, Lut
by the heroic efforts of the citizens wero
extinguished. Had the effort in this di
rect ou not been successful the entire
town would hnvo been burned.
W hen the imnntca of the hotel were
iwakened tho luiuling was just to
-II in, »!u. t »■)
it,.,11, .'I >ir». Man,it "I .smell' »•«
AMSStCC*. N=r. 3—iln-
W&tren aud to-day. Site was probably
th-oldest lady In he city, boittg nhout
CO. bit. was the wito of Judgo irett K or-
rt n who sit a prominent lawyor nnd
jari-tinthis ra tion forty years ago.
Shu was tho mother of Sir*. Dr, Haro
wick ol this city nnd of tho into Judge I.
P. D. War to of Albany.
Another *ad dentil occurred nt Magno
lia Springs In .his county. Mis, Maud
Meed, the btautiful daughter of Mr. J. A.
Heed, died. She was just 17, the idol oi
her patents and lho favorito iu Iter circle
of friend*. ________
ahot fora Maraudsr.
Atlanta, Nov. 0.—(Special.]—Last
night wlille George Mo i.lgan, a boy
about 18 vtars old, was psistag througi
tho Georgia Pacific yarus, bo wot roil
taken by tire watchman Ior a marauder
and sliot ab Tito shot Irak effect in tho
calf of tho leg, inllicling a painful
though not eerious, wound.
s-ed.r Keys’ Notorious Ex-M.yor
shot Dead In Momsomrry.
MoNTUOMr.nY, Ala., Nor. 0—". «.
Coltieil. ex-ntaror of Cedar Kejt, Fla.,
has teen on a protract. 1 spreo in this
citjy ond yesterday waa arrestod hy the
lX Tfii» morning It wo* reported to Chief
of Pol ce Gerruld that l ottroll hod
threatened to kill him on sight and a ll
con netted with th. arr.at. About 11
o'clock Cottrell drove op to tho polic
beadqua.trr. end as he left tire carriag.
Ge raid shot him witlt a ahot gun. tie
waa shot in tire head and Lrcast and
iosiatiUy killed. . _ . .
The body is ot an undertaken and
will t. sent to his I ottre
county, about twenty-fly, mile. Iroro
tide c.ty.
. .. All their eallore
und usrinets when they came ashore
uore a scornful and supercilious sir ilia*
v eli nigh drove us to liesjieration. Ah,
gcntleuien, little you, even those among
you who er rried a musket, know of the
awful trial* ami anxieties born * and sure
mouuU'd i y the men oil the in*ide of af
fairs With traitois in our midst in all
the xYorthern ci in plotline internal dis
ruption, and treachriou* fri-nds on
=rcur^. 1 i-S|?
ern science'll na a remarkable il-
lustration Jxtreme nicety of the
balance of i
BEL AND SC1F.NCE.
Alfred c.* on t0,inlct
l n il Tlicnii
From tbe At ’-evtew.
Ml ne\^». whether concerning
nature or r God, must be prepared
to tlnow c heir gage, and be ready
to do battik all comers before toey
can be rec i nto h° n>re< * com ’
pany of aded truths. I do not ev« n
know tht would be wise to *y,
would it % >therwise! But If there
be fault, t Jli w a fault of human
nature, n rely of religious nature.
Religious treat scientists no woreo
than rb*v t relizioue men, nor, let
me add, t eienti-ts treat each other.
Man is s o learn tt.at coercion i o
poor min >t truth, just as a man i«
£l.wt 0 b> that BU p-rsecutio i for
opinion, ** or social, Is ill-advised.
.deration is » virtue ot
growth! Alas, that
..xxxuvu. opinion is a doctrine
moro tr itly t-reachcd than prac
ticed! I ion calmly and carefully
it science ie, nnd what re*
they wifi speedily come to
conflict l»ctwooa religion
ind hciei s. Irk- bo m my great ware,
he rear, mlaundvrs'-n Science
s uot ni ?, science ia ’.he product of
lie but mind considering nature.
’he di-t ion ii iroportanf. God cra
tes n e; man cr ate! tcience.
icionce Ian's interpretation of nature,
mture i vin; in origin; • i* nee is hu-
itless, in endeavoring to ac-
0u tint h t-lf, by obsorvaiion and ex-
perimeut d thought, with llio fact*
and laws nature, lho man of science
enduring to^ rethink
Aius, il
suih
freedom
aider
iigion is,
iee that
long.ngfor the word to sj ring | divine ughti embodiwl^^m^^na^
upon us. and a valiant enemy to
Southern borders, never were men more
sorely tried or a nation more nearly
vt recked.”
“You wonder what all this hat to do
with the purchase of Alaska in 1801?
.Much more than you think, perhaps.
I'm toming to that in a moment. As I
wus saying, in the dark days of 18G2-03
England and Fiance were ready to ac
knowledge the South, and t>ermuny
would have followed their lead. Rus*sia
was appealed to by the powers to ,o u
them in recognizing the Confederate
States. But ltus»u peremtorily ro.used
and cast her allegiance once and for all
on the Ride of tiie Nortlu Fearing an
attack on tiie North by Eaglish veaieh,
Rushia sent her finest naval fleet, sixteen
magnificent vessels of the most powerful
type, to this country ami tendered them
t • the government at Washington with
the czar’# compliments. They cast anchor
first at Fortre*s Monroe, and theie tbe
Butsian bear faced her hereditary foe,
tho British lion, ready to spring upon
and rend him at a word from Washing-
ion. FvUUuuieiy, iluoI fortunately,
that word was never neces-ary. For
months the Russian fleet remained in
our waters under orders from the United
States Secretary of the Navy, and not
until the supremacy of tht North was
thoroughly o>sured did they turn their
prow forward homo.
“While they wero her© Admiral Farra-
gut immer allzed himself byhisuniar-
ullelcd victories at New Orleans and Mo
bile, nnd in honor of tho gaiinnt saiior
and the nation they had como to protect,
thejiutsians adopted a new naval flag
signal, to be used only in action us a sort
ofrudjing battle cry: •Roihember Far*
ragut at New Orleans!’ That signal is
Jbifrdrar
nctrer* know" than then saoto Suasion
office:* .
„w,|'. I must get on with my story.
When the wsr wts over on. of tho first
considerations oi tho government w*.
tire subject of mak ng sonre odequato
recomp.0'. to Kussla ior th.ononnnus
cxpoi>«» she had incurred in our bohalfi
It would never do to muk. a atralghtout
payment ot monoy to reimburse tire
Hum*ion treasury for thio ac. of unaelliah
friend-hip, fir such an act would have
immediately precipitated dluloruatlo
troub e* abroad that would have involt od
Husaia in very serious difficulties. If not
war itself. Heme other plan must ho
hit upon. At last it a os lound. Russia
didn't wont Alailo, hut the did noid
money. Wo didn't w»nt Alaata r«ti£
ularly, hut we owed Russia a bkuUU ho
•he matter was quietly arranged between
tiio two governments, und the util wns
introduced. Do you iememberthatnt
that time every body wanted to know,
•Where in Alaska? What does) the gov.
eminent roraa by
nren-o sum fer a altceof *!>• A«tt® c0 »*J>
when we are so dteply in debt? Dm
the government knew what It was doing,
and If you look up th* record* you w,n
see that in March, 1876, tho bill or the
purchase ot Ababa for t7.U0U.0x' pEsmal
both house* without a d saei.th.g toicfc
And it waa a ptelty g <*I bargain, don t
you thins? However, th.t that lire real
history of tire transaction, an 1 tire gov
ernment an hive, will subataatratoovery
word of ih"
i;i:M(:y nlCUOBHV
TIi. War Ther tt.ee "'V*
don. B.eiDI In HninEUlti »• .must.
Front the Ne*rc»*U. ChroalcUv
c;lv . Ti e revolution! of the microscope as to
Ti e preliminary trial of Chief ot lUo rX ^Unc# of myriad* of muTohcs in
* . . I..I _ — « '..t.rx.ll Ittta . ... .11 •• 1,1 nil f t it UD t .11
ture; mltiielen?, man’
mm rethiukiug.
facts nu a provides _«nun construe*#
the scion Al,
3 and fungi, moeseeand
, I)
COPYRIGHT ixs6
All on one stVfe—
the offer that’s made by tho pro
prietors of Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy. It’s $500 reward for
• an incurable case of Catarrh, no
matter how bad, or of how long
standing. They mean what they
say ; they’re responsible, and the
offer has been made for years.
It’s all on your side—-you lose
your catarrh, or you’re paid 8500
for keeping it. But it’s safe for
them, too—they know you’ll be
cured.
Dr. Sage’s Remedy produces
perfect and permanent cures of
Chronic Catarrh in the Head, as,
thousands can testify. “ Cold in
the Head ** is cured with a few
applications. Catarrhal Head
ache is relieved and cured as if
by magic. It removes offensive
breath, loss or impairment of the
sense of taste, smell or hearing,
watering or weak eyes, and im
paired memory, when caused hy
tho violence of Catarrh, as they
all frequently are. Remedy sol'd
by druggists. 50 cents.
DrowfllueM. Difltrrfl* afw
file. Ac While thrirmo*!
hM l.ern shown la curttf
ferns, ho -tails und lycopoda, acrog* ns, ■ |ff&RTFn*Sl
enilogem id oxogena of many kind* ex-1 I ,
ist in nat e; man oi*»erve# and cl.iMluea
these fac of vegetation, und constitutes
thb Bcien of botany. Tiio habits and
inktin ts d structure of man, tlie wMe
world o\ , nnd « p*n in nature to oooer-
vaion; lerefore man built up tue
sekme t anthropology. Science, then,
ia hoi na re: science results when man
colii.ier return. Now wlret Is religion.
Kdffiion not theology. Again the dio-
tinction important. Religiun proridM
thi fs.:t' rom which m m makes theol-
oft. Tl ology is the product of the
hutnan mind considering religion.
In fact, theology is to religion what
scichfo is to nature. Nature is the
suije:t-hatter of science; religion is the
sut»je:t-itmttcr of theology. Religion,
like ratfire, belongs to tlie domain of
facts, not ot the interpretation of fact*;
tbJoWgy. like science, fitlongs to the
(ioBisia uf the interpretation of
Like nature, religion is divine in source,
thtoDgy, like science, hoi a human
origin. Just as the mental character
istics of man aro open to the observer,
whence man makes the scienre of
pstchologv, so, similarly, tlie religious
characteristics of man are open to tlie
observer, snd ho construct* therefrom
tho bcitnco of theology. As nature
afford* the material for science,
religion afford* tha materials
theology. Scienco U nature
observed and systematized; the
ology is religion observed and
av.tetkUtiziMl* Kvltslan must hei no
:,r'::'.". , ' r,i s m tire *Wi
ssrwiSiBgwsSig
.tltnubu. Ih. tiwr end r«xuUiL« lb* bortt
Sven it ter rair """•J
Actl. Ihsv would b. almost pneetra to Er—
iho .uftrr from tht. dWrSrejeo-iyeg
but fonuMl*lrtl»lr »oodn«s d*«»J™
bore, and thoso who on*, try lawn wa rns
tjirw, little pill* Tslusbl. In so ms'o w*:' 0 - 1
thor will not bo wtlbn, Io do without tbra
But after all ifckhMd
R! a*aa
sssswasW
!• reJigl<i
• sitfla 1
lark or, to (te morn ,* > ° c,n on the “8kr. i
Hl U a./ CEE Do
maf"' «"“gioa i, ft°. U V a
mot coordination ,.r ,c *snca {,
ouot concluMion i? And 1
•t’fi’ cannot rightlv Ko^ * 100 “"J
r-o'iklon i. r a c t J ,'U conliicL
lotion ot fact , J l c ‘° nc0 '» <ho
" 'vor aireci
3 ui fi aro comnelld , 1,1 oil in-
h,r of thing* S“f-'°,' l «uino the
canj* iupoo ed J!! 1 ? c ‘«>t of fact.
lias** 5 ®
Rjpjwn re igion a rut an - r ran-
“Mlifot Iwtwolf. „‘ t,c »ra is very
°. r 4’ a took an,?~ " ,, '“ i •
lo, '4 '* boon ^f H C0 «" , a.ant. bo.
h.twra n n U S C * ,,lf ™
Dni “““ennui C °fl,‘ren r * t,on
ft^l‘h°oJo*y a „j on, «gon-
3SF" ; ='»es-.w:
Police Ueiraid lor kil iP? Cottrell bo*
teen postponed until to murrow. Ger-
raid is iu churge of the ther iff.
A Frsmtneni yilesourlen Killed.
Sekalia, Slo.. Nov. (k—GoU TMwim
B Price, president of the Gazette l rmt*
ing Company, of this city, owner of
tliti Vondale farm and one of the best
of their t rey. A* luclt wouiu t.avo u mo t| ie \ undaie farm an » «i»w ‘ ’
dcirH l»a*d startod a line buck, which known men In Missouri, was shot and
« uiriit to esc* e, running toward the | mortally w. nnded Ihb. afternoon by
stand guard'd i>y Mrs. Sedwick and iter I judge John Higgins of tlie Pitts county
sometimes sits down
Princes* Beatrice, or wre
Vntore has endowed her majesty wnn a ; insuiuiw* V", »h*
* Mur* Thrn.i or fodsb I |U| f. HH> j gullibility atd pt.Judicn of
If Buffered to progress, often result, in u,, people. Tti. socevra of the*, men
•■- — — !“““* W i|| U oi lv umiot.ry aud their do»n-
fall will be’io th. oad cont;.l«te aud hu-
Irothcr. Oo he c.mu raiind.ug j coll „.
Ivars living freiii tlie visiblu andaudiblo
f, rs in th. rear, i'll nnconaciou* oi tiio
hidden danger in front A hint. „
Coolly, with no sign of -bunk agur.
and without a tumor uf
tho lady. I,ringing I*
lion, t ok quit' "
incurable throat or lung trouble.
• *Brown’a Bronchial Trochee Rive in*
etant relief. _
Lost Art.
From the Covington Star.
The old-fashioned corn shucking,
which waa formerly such * festive and
pi. us int occasion, is now * lost art in
middle Georgia.
Beecham’s i*i» s cure «ck headache.
It came. It svw, it conquered. Dr.
Bull’s Cough Syrup, the people’s remedy.
25 cent*
•tun*
.. _ ajioa into \x>-
but steuay aim. Tbe
major, albeit his sccomphebed siater,
had demoDstisiea
Price was a grand-on of the lato .Stcr*
i in* price, of ion federate tame, and s n
of the Iv.etien. Thomis Price, who rep
resented a MUouri district in Congress.
GbPirotmiii Price of Louisiana i» bis
brother.
our t o 'is*, as n.U'aa to all H>*1 « ««
and drink, has causvd timid p»o|l.mucb
anxious wonderment na to why
crea.ures are not more injurious nad de
structive lhan they actually oto. Writ
ing m tlie Speaker, hir H»nry I:u ®«" •*!
plain, l ow it i, that oven the deadliest ol
tliv.-o microbe* may I o found In tho
mouth or other porta ef th. body,
vet their host I* perfectly health). Tbe
question is not on. of th. tntre prea.no.
of .u,-so organisms in tha system, hut
entirely ou. as to whether or not they
will find their way into th. hlrad. W
thiy do not, ail 1* w.lls if they do, tho
most serious troubi, follows.
Working with th. micro,copo in »
FaxteuFs laLoratory in I’ntit, a Kuasfsn
. , : n ;. n tl. MsUclilolkotf. ha* teen
.hooter, doubting hvr aUhty to bring
down the no ler gnme, got ready LH
wealKio. hu- before lie lonld bring it to
bear Mr*. Hwiwick pul.d tho trigger,
there wn. * poll of smoke, a report, and
tlie magnificent four-po.nt buck, »*Ht
one leap in the air, fell de,d.
Tiie shot was the signal that brought
together tho sxttttred hunters,
day'* boot ‘
game —
wo. declared over. fh~
... taken home, .irvoed n d
oaten nt . mi*:y <•••« gi'-n iu the I cr
mitiating. , .
I mean no olTenc. to »ny man, but
when in tlii* cri.i* of our attain* 1 hear a
man n* n reekrr for office attempt to
foment dl coni in our slate, and to array
one claa. against arnth.r, 1 cannot re-
t,re*a tlie suspicion that he is not tit.
iriend of either class, bat the enemy of
^Entertaining the*, view* as to th, iro- _ . .
portancc of union ond harmony among Mnny Persona are broken
Lur tKoth-, und differing a. 1 do front 4,1.0 from
' . 0.1 tri.n.ls in th. Al'htnoj IlroWD’E Iron Blfieri gerafltoto.
I.nrgs Tob.cco Combines.
lot isviu e. Nov, tk—White. Dicker,
son i Co., warebouto men, h*»» with
drawn from th. tobacco coinhinotton
ettocted In rj a tew darn ago for tbo con-
trol of III* Ion.trills ond Llncinn* I
makets. They do :t. eavy Lu,ine«. A
siiui ar combination lis* liven formed to
cootr l the tUyavtilo and I'adnvEh ma ■
k>t ', wbtra conatdirxblo lewf tobocco is
Ti 0sold os.ry j,*r.
Itlsaatruu*Inccndlarr Fire,
TEL'CKKt. CaL, Nor. R-Stqlle'. brew
ery wa* set on lira by an incendiary
ml Ui
node oi
•j G.i.eli.na — — 1 m . nT c r U iv grad frim.l* In tho Alliance lira*
„ minutest Mhy spend fitty cenu torelie*-looth-. msny or my g th. tui>trea*ury I •>.-.*».
every rout, ache when SalraUcnOtl wiU cur. it for j M w Iih.,. • ^ # COQ j iU(m •at car
ine'i honor. The lady modestly here tho .i,, r ,iy after midnight. A hurricane"**
congratulation* rhowered npoo lur, snd b | o ,| 0 g un ,| the fir* *,.re.vl so that about
the major 1* at proud of his relative* a» (orlv i )U ildinj* were burned, including
though she w. ro . 1 the roy.I Lira hj'nd 1 , ht - en , in , busines, portion of tlw lown.
to *L. is—of tiio royal blood of Amerlcsn A ^ G [ the wind was oil that saved
womanhood. • | j tbe re.Hone, po tion of tbo town.
Itch cured in ib rly minute. b> Wcol-
rd’s .'auitary Lotioa. Never ret ». Eo.d
, Kni Hags tX Co., and all druggist*, Mi
pliysictan, M. MettcUfotkoff, bai
able io dMM-Over Hie recret of . the »*»po-
t.-nce of tiie utlcrobe to you“J®
tlie blood. Tueae mo»i
t.on* show that there are -veruim cjrtU
cui tnino i in the bluO<l of »U il»® higher
blood animals, termed phRg«- yus. and
identical with the wcll-kno*n white
blood corpuscles, which are rsaoww
with tho |*ower of indep ndent m>
aud not only wsnd.r inside, but
make their way outside the tioaui
pursue, devour and digest any l
whether gobonou* or not. 1
th**y come in contact nt ' lm
the true buttle of 1
hitherto unktO'vn
iu-tuntly Roinx on within tue
Thsse phagocyte, —^»-«-* —
ful t;ua diii' « of thi
nilulaie the bocili
trate the blood ti
jgcas
tKtiMnrw.:.. OBEenibirin.il ...
The Cod
Tirol Help, t 0 Cuf0
The Co!d.
"“°".>h.tw. a l ? r I
-T ti.c, v ,“ ** U|.
trd ior \or'io b !?i
*»d n.trefoor jS
ttto t i I'hro-
"'“ r fiypoilics'i^jjj
”“*r*’*r*®* r ®** r i-w.
— j, ^rrapraiEij-Qo-.
deter; 1 ‘'^lay thot ho
“ ' ".‘Tit .wL* •Pp’fntmentE
titxnl' T axwrted th.t u7
b, f:rt i ; JoLr,, ^»onld
tie
Jr?*
UMtJB-f'Md * oil <1®/
5° , m| '*!
stfimOd Thi* i»»3n** rTB I
•“ilvaSStefl
. ? rg'tt&vs
disagreeable
msfe of (he
jOD LiVER OIL
d >KipaIed in
on nttb l
realllv
which, thougl
unobserved, is
>>• ,
inchnre tl.c w-a'Cli-
<i.tv, stuck and an
. rl- they cun | tsr-
PPI S go long a,- tl.oy
remain on guard tit. tesiy >* ,ru :::
attack, but ihoul.i t .ey iiom any cao*u
relax their vigilance, ti ratio tnvEOtog
muj> of paruitcs would ptw. into In.
ThTSS^y° “pa.
«*aa wostirtf,it a*.i,• f'rftet rmmhUm. I
, ^-^wrrr. ink,Mother }
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