Newspaper Page Text
IDE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH: MONDAY. OCTOBER 2. 1893
STEWART ON
Cleveland
The President's Words in a Speech
Taken as an Affront to
the Senate,
CAMERON AGAINST REPEAL
lie Which HeThlnlu
Will Mend the Monetary Situa
tion-The Home Doee Very
Little Iluitncis.
ample. of great presidents who had | more token. The sovereign power to
Washington, Sept. 25.—The senate
net today at 11 o’clock with an unusu
ally small attendance. The resolution
offered last Saturday by Senator Stew
art as to the co-ordinate departments
of the government was laid before the
senate. Here is its text:
’’Resolved, That the independence of
the co-ordinate departments of the gov*
eminent, the legislative, the executive
anil the Judicial must tie maitained,
and that the use of the power and in
fluence of one department to control
the action of another is in violation of
the constitution and destructive of our
forjl ot goverunicui."
jJSenator Stewart began to address the
Emata on the resolution. He had only
spoken a few sentences, however, when
be was Interrupted by Senator Mander-
son with the remark that the resolu
tion was a most important one and
that undoubtedly the speech that was
about to be made was one that should
be heard by a full senate. He sug
gested that there was no quotum pres
ent.
The roll was called and forty-four
senators, one more than a quorum, re
sponded.
Senator Stewart then went on with
Ills speech. He began with a citation
from President Cleveland's speech last
Monday on the occasion of commem
orating the one hundredth anniversa
ry of laying the corner stone of the
capltol. This speech had been made by
u president having more than one hun
dred federal offices to dispose of and
with veto powers which bad been de
signed only for extraordinary occa
sions, backed by concentrated capital
and encouraged and tlartpred by the
venal press. He described Cleveland
on that occasion ns turning his face
toward the senate wing of the capltol
and in anger and menacing tones us
ing the following language:
’’If the representatives who here as
semble to make iawa for their fellow
countrymen forget the duty of broad
and disinterested patriotism and leg
islate in prejudice and passion or in
behalf of sectional or selfish Interests,
the time when flic corner stone of the
capltol was f»ld and the clrcnmstarifts
surrounding it will not be worthy ’ of
commemorating.’’
CO.\STUPED AS A KEtltJKE.
This declaration. Senator Stewart
aald, had been cheered and encouraged
by a thoughtless multitude und con
strued by a venal pres* ns a relmke
from the president of the United Staten
to the aeaare. The struggle for ronstl-
tutlonal liberty; he continued, of the
Anglo-Saxon race, which had tieen
long, arduous and attended with many
sacrifices, had lnsted now for nearly
n thousand years. He went on to
quote at great length from the history
of England ns to the parliamentary
struggle with the Stuart kings.
Coming back to the present time,
Stewart (-burred that the president, in
disregard of his oath of office to execute
the laws, had permitted the secretary
of the treasury to violate the law of
January 14, 1880, which made the pur
chase of 4,500,000 ounces ot silver bull
ion per month mandatory. In proof of
this he cited the short purchase* of sli
ver by the treasury during July and
August. He could not conceive how this
could be Justified in view of the soar-
city of currency, which should have
been Increased by the issue of treasury
certificates for stiver bullion. He knew
that an excuse wss made that silver
bullion was not purchased because the
holders asked more than the market
price, but he Insisted, that the market
price of property was that at which
the owner was willing to sell. However
much, he said, some senators might
deprecate the law of July 14, 1830. us
King James had deprecated the laws
on 'the RtgMsh astute book, all, botji
high and low. had to obey the law if
civil liberty was to be maintained and
tf constitutional government w
exist. The president’s oath of Office
commanded him to see that. the laws
were faithfully executed; but here was
a plain mandatory law that, had been
disregarded. tVns tt not time, h<
asked, to sound the alarm? if constl
tutional liberty waa of any value, it
seemed: to him that all, friends and
foes, should stand up and tay to the
president of the United fitntei: ’’You
have overstepped the mark. We cannot
afford to have the laws of congress
disregarded.
Stewart then drifted to the nntl-Chl
neoe law, and asked whether the exec
utive had enforced It. Whatever might
be said of that law, tt wan In force,
and If the executive might Violate one
law, be might violate another. Waa
the president, be asked, to have the
option to obey or refuse to obey en-
set men ts?
GREW VBRY PERSONAL.
Stewart quoted remarks made by
Cleveland at different times, some of
them hi what purported to he Inter
views, which he construed to Indicate
that Cleveland held congress In rather
low estimation; that he aaeemed that
oongrees waa Ignorant. This assump
tion led Stewart to Inquire where and
how the president had learned all that
he knew. Where hid he had this oppor
tunity of possessing himself of the
science of money and economies?
Where and when and In what school
had he studied tt? He believed that
Cleveland was the only president of the
United 8tales who had not possessed
n liberal education, either In some col
lege or on a farm, where he communed
with nature and learned nature’s Iawa
He did not believe that the ed-icatl
of a clerk, or oil lawyer without
iwtor liberal education In eotlegr, I
without a liberal education In study
ing the works of nature, fitted a man
to preside over the destinies of this
country. The president of the United
SJatee Is required to take ■ wider view
or Use laws of money and nature than
could be obtained In a lawyer’s office
or in a ShertfTa office or In the office
of a mayor, or any other such ran-
warned place, where the groat book of
not are was dosed.
Washington. Jackson and Lincoln
1<r » adduced by fcuaart os great t*.
now had collegiate educations, but had
acquired their extensive knowledge of
government by ebae contact with the
people.
WITHOUT EDUCATION.
“But unfortunately,'* ho continued,
“our rre>»iden» was denied both a col
legiate education and that grander und
better education, communion with the
pioneers of the West, communion with
those who are the bone and sinew of
the country. If he had that knowledge
which Washington had and had known
the people as Washington knew them,
und ns Jackson, he would not have
uttered the remark* which I have rend
and would not have talked about the
ignorance of congress. But his environ
ments nave been peculiar."
Stewart then read from the congres
sional directory of the present session
the president's biography, making
Amusing or sarcastic comments upon
it as he rend. When ho reached the
sentence that Cleveland had, when 16
years old, become a clerk and assistant
teacher of the blind In New York city,
his comment was that Cleveland had
not entirely gotten over that habit yet.
(Laughter.)
Stewart read an artcle from the New
York Poet of June 20 last. The dispatch
alluded. Incidentally, to the fact that
Voorheee had got a "plum” in the ap
pointment of n candidate <>f his to the
office of fourth auditor of the treasury.
"VVhnt in that?” Voorheex aalted when
ha realized that the dispaioii Lid used
his name Then he got the paper from
the clerk’s desk, read it and returned
to his seat without making a remark.
Stewart, however, offered an apology,
stating that he did not have the dls-
patch retd for the purpose of reflect*
ing upon the senator from Indiana.
WENT ON WITH HIS SPEECH.
At 1 o’clock the vide president an
nounced the unfinished business—the
repeal bill—but Stewart askd tbe privi
lege of going on with hl« apecch.
"I have t» objection on my part,
said Senator Voonhee*. "to the sena-
tcr’s setsg o" end finishing h!« speech."
"What Ts the senator's request/ ' me
Vice president lnqulrd.
"To proceed with my speech, Sena
tor Stewart rcpiieu. „
"With the regular order pending,
was Voorhce.s’ addition to the request.
coin these metnl, into money resided
in the Independent states and wss by
them the answered specific, and was
by them answered by specific grant to
their, agent, the congress; nnd that
power wiik not to coin money from
gold nor silver, but from gold and ell-
ver. In regard to the legal tender
quality of coin he said that the propo
sition Hint congress could deny to one
metal a legal tender quality, while
the states under the constitution were
required to recognize both, was
unwarranted.
Senator Bate then took tip the his
tory of the origin of our money, hold
ing to the fundamental proposition that
the stiver dollar and not the gold coin
lind been mads the unit of value. By
the legislation of 1792, he snld, it was
thus Intended that the dollar should
always bo 3711-4 grains of pure silver.
Just us the yard stick was t-> bo thirty-
six inches ion*. This measure of value
remained whether the coin that rep
resented It was of stiver or g:id. green
backs, national bank note or individual
checks. It was fixed, no matter what
the pricp, with no regard to ratio, and
remained so until altered by unhal
lowed hands in 1873. Although the
coin dollar varied with the rates, the
dollar of accounts remained fixed and
permanent. The legislation which re
peated this wise work of Hamilton and
Jefferson was o.! dark ar.d devious char-
ncter nnd by circuitous and st.sp clous
proceedings.
No grenter crime, it it was designed,
nnd no greater error. If It waa from
Ignorance, was ever committed in leg
islation.
SHE REFUSED TO
MARRY HIM
So John Thomas Johnson Made
Corpse of Hannah Reed at
Tifton.
<^=Q
HE FIRED ONLY TWO SHOTS
Hut With Those Two lie Sent the
Woman Into Et«rnltj , s-Kx})ec(a>
tlon of Foul Play—The Mur
derer Closely Guaniidl.
Tifton, Ga„ Sept. 25.-(Speclal.)-A
negro by the name of John Thomas
Johnson shot and killed Hannah Iteed,
also colored, hero last night on account
ot the womuu'e it-fun.,1 marry him.
Johnson fired two shots at the wo-
5 do not care what is pending, said
Senator Stewart. ”1 can speak oil the
bill or on the resolution: but I want
to have the resolution acted upon."
After "erne colloquy and nn objection
by Senator Washburn to a proposition
not to .send the rcsotntlon to the cal
endar. Senator Stewart proceeded with
his speech.
After talking more than two hours
and n half. Senator Stewart paused,
and said that he would now like to
yield the floor to the senator from
Pennsylvania (Cameron), but he would
go on with his speech whenever the
senate would let him He had not'got
to the main part of it yet.
CAMERON AGAINST REPEAL
Senator Cameron then took the floor
and addressed the senate in opposition
to the bill. He read his speech from
manuscript, rapidly and in n low tone
of voice. Senators from both aides of
the chamber, who felt much curiosity
and interest in the position which Sen
ator Cameron occupied, got chairs In
his Immediate neighborhood *und lis
tened to him with close attention.
He began by calling attention to
Gladstone's speech In the house of com
mons on February 23 last. In that
spceoli Gladstone said that England
was the greatest creditor country in the
world; that her foreign investments
increased largely every year; thut
1,000.000,000 of pounds would bo an ex
tremely low estimate of English cred
its, and that under the circumstances It
waa rather n aeriotui matter t > ask
that country to consider whether they
were going to perform this act of aeif-
Ve.i •••111 ohiAVi’a 4Vs-.lt "tills
sacrifice. You will observe that "the
supreme net of self-sacrifice” which
Gladstone considers to be contrary to
the tntorest of England nn a creditor
of the countries of the world le the
attempt to maintain or restore to sli
ver the function of serving as money.
"I was tempted to sit down nnd leave
this speech of Gladstone to stood alone
ns the ground for the vote I etvall have
on the bill now before us. It la ground
enough, to my mind; It aarrics convic
tion as to the true course of an Ameri
can. The official avowed policy of Eng
land ts to prevent the restoration of
silver to Us funotlon' as money, be
en uio the money regulations of Eng
land require a monometallic gold stand
ard. I have at-vted the cane with great
moderation, and have passed not a
word of blame on * Gladstone, who
merely presents a policy which Eng
land ho* always followed and avowed.
Any further measure which tend* to
discredit stiver is at least for the mo
ment n furtherance of British bolley—
it tends to support a muvometallut
gold standard.
HIS REMEDY.
In conclusion, he stated hla remedial
propositions thus:
"We nil agree that, with Europe and
Asia in their present critical sate of
equilibrium, apy -stiver dr paper cur
rency needs a larger guarantee than
usual. For that purpse 1 propose a gold
loan of so many million dollars, as con
gress may decide, to be bought at the
market orate and held .in the treasury
as tbe gold reserve, as held tn the Bank
of France and by the governmenta of
the Latin union.
”X propose to open our mints to the
free coinage of American silver. I pro
pose, further, for the benefit of the
poorer and weaker states, especially In
the South, to repeal the tax on state
bank circulation—a measure which is
Intended to give them a free hand in
moving their -mm crops, developing
thetr resources and relieving them from
their servitude to the great capitalist
cities. I look to no effect, or little,
from this step as far as the North Is
concerned. I would also press once
mire for action In favor of our ship
ping. The bill for that purpose la known
to you. and neither Its object nor Its
methods should be a matter ot party
division. To meet. In pari, the deficit
of our income for next year I would
Impose a duty of 3 cent* a pound on
sugar and repeal the bounty. Then I
would welt a year to see bow the sys
tem worked, and how far wo were af
fected by foreign Influence. As for »ur
foreign exchanges, they will take care
ot themselves under any system. They
have done so when we had no cur
rency at all. when we hid gold, when
we had irredeemable paper and When
we had Oliver. If Europe want* our
gold, let her have It If she can pay for
it, ail except the gold In our tmiurr.
No general or special legislation la likely
to paaa in this country unless It la com
prehensive enough to command prac
tically universal consent. To that Ob
ject I have addressed myself. If any
other senator brings forward a scheme
more comprehensive, more liberal, con
ceived in a spirit of wider or more gen
erous union, I will give him my sup
port.’’
BATE OPPOSES THE BILL.
Senator Bate than spoke fnopposi-
tlon to the bill. He began his speech
by referring to one of the sententious
sentences used by Cleveland s few
yean ago, adapting tt to the situation
today and asserting that ’he country
was now confronted with both a theory
and a condition which were barring
the way to a great end pressing re
form. A congested condition of trade
demanded immediate relief, business
confidence prayed for restoration; the
one precious metal left to orr currency
by unwise legislation came end went
like tbe ebti and flow of the tide. Un
der the constitution, ha said that there
was no discrimination again*! silver as
a metal and the constitution dkt not
authorise congress to hold to the pew-
dons metal and to make the other a
HISTORY OF DEMONETIZATION.
Mr. Bate then gave n history of tho
demonetisation of silver, which,' he
said, was first made public through the
resumption act of 1873. The outcry
against It continued from that day to
the present, and found expression in
the Bland bill In 1876 and the proposed
demonetization of the silver dollar of
412 1-2 grains in 1877, both of which
measures passed the house, but wero
ic*» in the senate. The agitation was
kept up until the passage of tlio Blnnd-
Aillson act, which, unfortunately, did
not restore the definition of tho dollar,
but left it iiabie to uviitract sr expand
with the rise or fall of the price of
sliver bullion. This popular demand for
silver, he said, was not less now than
it was twenty years ago. When con
gress, by law. made bold the angle
standard, as was contemplated by this
repeal, It restricted -silver as a debased
token, which paid the wages of labor
in a debased currency, while the profits
of capital were reaped tn gold. Bate
declared that it waa because congress
was bound by a consideration of public
equity, as well as those ot national In
terest. to restore the money measure
to what It was before 1873; that the
platform of the political parties de
clared emphatically for the free coin
age of silver and the maintenance of
the parity between gold nnd silver. Ill*
people were for free silver, nnd In
speaking an he did he believed that he
but voiced their sentiment*. Ail laws
that demonetized silver or forbade Its
coinage as freely ns gold were, in his
opinion, unconstitutional. It was not
any particular section of the Sherman
law that had been denounced. by the
Democrnts In convention as a "make
shift,” but the law In its entirety, and
now it wan proposed tn repeal the only
section that in any way commended It
to the people. The general cause of the
depression and business stagnation
Bate found to be due to the apprecia
tion of gold consequent upon ita inade
quacy to do the business of the world.
Touching another branch of the sub
ject. Senator Bate said the moat poten
tial factor In ths real causes which
brought about tbe present panic was
the Republican tariff. The reform of
that system of fiscal legislation -was
the real issue ot the last presidential
election and wo* the main subject set
tled In the last popular triumph of the
party. It should, ho thought, trave been
taken up and pushed with as much
vigor In the house as. they have mani
fested In pushing on the stump and In
the pres* as the real cause of the
trouble, and now It had been relegated
to the renr, awaiting a more convenient
season. It wsa a serious disappointment
to the people to learn that the party
that they had honored with their votes
preferred gold to tbe tariff, and that
tiie wealth of the rich was of. para
mount importance to the poverty of the
poor. The men who manufactured tho
present pinto to frighten congress to
adopt the gold standard were preparing
to fan another panic Into flame against
any cut in the tariff."
After criticising the national hanking
system and predicting the recovery <'f
the country from the distress that
overtook It. the storm of which, he Mild.
It was even now weathering, Mr. Bnte
concluded with a brilliant apostrophe
to gold and silver.
At the clcse of Senator Date’s speech
(4 p. m.) Senator Stewart resumed the
floor, and. after his two hours’ rest,
went on with his remarks In the same
vein that marked his utterances earlier
In the day.
Senator Voorhee* Interposed with n
motion for executive business, remark
ing that the agreement fir a seven
hours' sc--Ion dally contemplated gave
a short time to that business.
Tho senate, at 5:4t, adjourned until
tomorrow at 11 a. m.
THE HOUSE SESSION.
Very few aeaib n were present when
the be use came to order this morning.
The roll call could not have been re
sponded to by more than half a hun
dred represent.atiw*. Several leave* ..f
absence were granted, among them one
of which provoked some merriment. As
end by the clerk tt waa t rie, merely
mqrtac: “Mr. Tursney requests leave of
sheenco for one week: Word's Fair."
The house proceed <1 to the considera
tion of tbe report of tbe commut e on
aicoount* granting the committee -i
navel affairs an addition'll clerk. Only
143 v«es were recorded, no quorum,
-and on motion of itr. Cummim:. of
New York a coil of the house was or
dered. A quorum wo* thus obtained
and the report agreed to.
Mr. Hudson, Populist, of Karras
asked consent for the immediate con-
e LI (-ration of a resolution for the hi-
polntmeut ot & committee of ttv mem-
bars to Investigate the recent kilt.ug
of setUara of the Cherokee strip by
Unued State* troops and eppropr it'.r.g
31.000 for the purpose ot the investi
gation.
Mr. Dockery objected and the resolu-
tkxi was referred.
The printing bill was then token up
An amendment was offered pro
tKvt 18., :l
breast Slie was killed instantly.
Johnson and tbe woman bad been
living together for two year* past.
An armed guard was placed around
the Jail last night os there was great
excitement and open threats of lynch
ing wero made. Marshal Schrlver pre
pared to make a desperate resistance
prisoner from the officers.
w
In either of these.
. . ... —. Then (?) the eace
of it doesn t affect you so much. But the quickness the
thoroughness and the economy of it does. The less ’time
that’s spent on your clothes, the less it costs you—it’s money
in your pocket every time they’re saved from the wearing
rub, rub, rub of the old way. But the water doesn’t make
any difference. Use what’s handiest. Hot or cold hard or
soft, salt or fresh, rain or shire it’s all the same/if you have
man, one of which took effect in the, Pearline. When you doiit have it—then there is a HifWnJ
abdomen and the other In the left ^ ,.. , c a aiiierence,
/aiT7n I: Mlereandsomcvimcnipulousoroceri will tell von, - th 5
W/J or “ tha same os Pcarline." IT’S FALSE
.77^ , , V V «’*•>-' 1 carliiiB is never peddled, and if your grocer lend,
thing tn place of TcarUr.;. be honest—send it tack. Ml JAMES PYLE,New York*
THAT MACON COUNTY ELECTION.
Another Voice in Defense of Ogle
thorpe’s Action
Fort Valley, Sept. 23.—Editor Tele
graph: In Justice to Ogu-thorpe I usk
you to give space In the Telegraph for
this communication in defense of Ogle
thorpe In iter noble nnd manly fight
against corruption and trickery to re
main the county site of Macon county.
Oglethorpe was willing to tako the
result nnd go ahead without nny bad
feeling or any chatges of corruption
nnd bribery being claimed against
Montezuma, but since your correspond
ent at the latter place has aeen fit to
claim that a majority 'of tho county's
best citizen* are with them, and If
brought to a contest thev would get
the coyrt house. In Justice to Ogle
thorpe nnd her fair name. I will state
that a very conservative estimate put*
it that for every illegal vole that was
cost for Oglethorpe 100 were cast for
Montezuma. Your correspondent says
tho result may be attributed to two
or three cause*, chief of which was
the fact mat several hundred default
ers recently had their taxes paid by
both aides and the number of tliegnt
votes cast at Oglethorpe tytd English-
vllle precincts by Sumter 'anu Schley
county negroes.
Now. for the first part of this state:
ment the county treasurer will sign an
affidavit that the only defaulter*’ taxes
paid were paid by Montezuma, and not
one was paid by Oglethorpe. Ogle
thorpe denies that she voted any but
legal votes of Macon county, and she
affirms that of the legal votes cast tn
tha county on Friday Oglethorpe polled
u. majority of same.
Your correspondent doe* not *ay any
thing about the Illegal voles polled at
Montezuma by negroes from Houston.
Schley. Sumter, Dooly. Taylor ' and
Monroe counties, and by boya of 14
and II years living in and near Monte
zuma. One of tbe men the sent to
Marshailville is a defaulter to the
county for over 32,200, and bis vote
was marked Illegal.
Mr. DeVaugn, Mr. Patrick and Mr.
Robinson all said that the election
in Oglethorpe was the fairest ever
known. What did Oglethorpe's repre
sentatives say of Montezuma's elec
tion? The rottenest ever known since
or before the war.
Mr. E. D. Lewis, one of Montczu
mafii citizens, remarked to one of Ogle
thorpe's citizens: “We voted every
thing* we could." One negro whs heard
to ask another one: "Has you voted?"
“Yes. I done voted twice."
A Fort Valley man saw two negrora
from his father's place up in Monroe
county In Fort Valley Baturday and
■ iikcd them what they were doing
down here. "IVo bc-n to Montezuma
to vote." Now you will see from this
how absurd is Montezuma’s claim about
EnglUbviUr* heavy vote Tho table
repre.-,-nt» the Inst state election, which
wai the hottest ever kn
rihouse
Last.
Oglethorpe 3oo
Montezuma 194
Mar-hnllvllle 206
Garden Valley 143
Grangr-rvllle 154
EnzlShvllle 60
Election
1.386
llic
Total.
.1.13’
2,8'
she
As H-en from th
Oglethorpe precincts gained 288, ’
in Montezuma'* prei-inet. It r:
1.1,7. UTl.-l ■’ Is ttl" iller-.ll v.
Oglethorpe will always remember
ehalville anti EngtlohrlUe nn ! wll
-let them, while th> Ir fri . :1s tn
other parts of the county who rent,
tn" to Justice amt right. e will
remember. MontcziSsc’s Richi
must remember that ,m was def:
for coroner in the r>e:nocrati - primary
three years ago and lay low.
Justice.
ever
&P
for Infants and Children.
“Ctstorla Ifsowfll adapted tochCdrm that
I recommend It cs superior to any prescription
known to me." II. A. Artcnrn, M. D.,
Ill So. Oxford Cl ( trooU!; a, N. Y.
“Tho use of 'Caatoria Is so tnirerr.nl and
Ita merits to well known that It oocmo a work
of supererogation to endorse it. Tew ore tho
intelligent fair Him who do not keep Castor in
within easy reach."
Glux* Uxa.vm, D. D.,
Kcw York Citj.
Tn* Ccnim Courm,
Cant or la cures Coll?, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Lmetation,
Ellis Worm*, gives sleep, and promotes a
section.
Without injurious medication.
“For several yearn I have recommcaW
your 'Cactorla,* and ehsil always continue to
do w> as it has invariably produced bose&U
result!."
EoTO F. Tassss, IL D.,
123th Street and 7th Are., 2«cw York CU7.
* Mhuut Knurr, Nnr Yotx Cirr.
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•• • addre5S • • •
' SMITH & HALL, M '"
C.U’T. BAILEY A LAWYER.
1 Yesterday in Opnn Court
Other 1 ir.tti:t NYw<.
I Griffin, !
| David J. B:i
r.pri—’ntatl
th-. nftrrno
that the public printer snail pay
im atcc price than M cent* per hour r-v
tima mark to printers and bookbin iem
ffi <*>• Itenit Is -to cent* ixt
w®r.) Tha amendment was lost 1* was
o£ao another Axing tha limit to C tents.
Mr. Mars* took advantage of the 1 «-*-
itude tULmed in ttn committee of the
whole to make some derogatory re
marks on the pri-»-nt conduct of the
poae.oa bureau. Wrima dii - • UK '.f
the bill the houie, at 4:20. adjourned.
cmmimptlon ga.llyCured.
To tbe Editor: I': az- inform jour
nadirs that 1 hate a positive rasaady
far abort sarstd disease. By Us
era tkoasaada of bopetoae caeca bare
Leo permanently i „:ed. 1 .ball u n.ad
t< t- ..| two L:'.t:,-- ciy r. .V Ir. .
to any of your retd- n who ha
saaptloD, If they wtU send u.-.r
azpaoM and nottoffico addnaw*. Ke
if tfidiy, T. A. SI/)BUJf M D.
1.-’ Prarl • • ' v York.
opt. 2.3.—(Spori.il.)—Hon.
ley, Jr., Spalding's popular
c in the legislature, was
n admitted to tho bar In
c-|H-n court (.’apt. Bailey
an excellent examination.
Joe Dudley, colored, an ex-convict,
wu* arrested tonight, charged with
banting «:apt. J. J. C.unpV barn at
Orchard Hill li-r w--k.
Superior eourt convened hen- today
with Judge MoWborter pit - ding. Civil
vlll be devoted to
dml
Next we
HANCOCK’S NEW TREASURER.
Sparta. On.. Sept. K.-rtpeclal.)-At
lie Democratic nomination for trean*
r r Hanro k county held last Friday
Birdsong won by 44-) ma-
CCtiOD
>.
• '
wilt be elected,
iding tVatsor. Is trying to
drd party here to put out
a Sir. Birdsong belonci to
.very highly respected
and hi.r past
this
BUY TOUR WEDDINO PRS :r.NTS
Wh*ra you gel tha bast value f -r your
money. The entire stock of diamond*,
watch*-1 Jewelry, silverware, cl - ;
etc., to thrown on tbe market to be
.aertfleed for what it will bring. The
time !» short, so don’t mtoa Utto golden
opportunity, at the Lazarus Jewelry
store, 138 Cherry street.
nd In
'•Mhful dt-
7he Foremost
Standard
COTTON
GIN
'iitftitei of tho k/or/i.
HIGHEST AWARD
'AFANESR
^ 13* 5 JUE
€5 LIRE
^ • • < > | 0 ' ■> y/' V T ® n6U •
'.0»d»*Uj our* sr./’oust. V !l l . r
r-r» 4...1 y t t-T t\ ! «t.l \)J KU'.'l.
Will r>r«*r y.T'.OW r li
JtlDNI.V^. ', ,
•}JJ{t .’iij•eJJ 1 ’
il*
LIDIKi
••!".!'!.’.to--' 1 '
OR. MITER KtCtCISt CO., it- L " C ‘'’*
Hi van of Nf
champion. 1 L
;* «t Jiu»
v.w vti.i >-r.
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