Weekly telegraph and messenger. (Macon, Ga.) 188?-1885, August 01, 1884, Image 6

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— THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH AND MESSENGER, FRIDAY, AUGUST 1, 1884. FROM ATLANTA. Politics In the Fifth—How It Looks Now —Colonel Mynatt Withdraws—The Fulton Election—A Sudden Death—Personal Items. [triCIAL CORUUrONDKItt'E. j Atlanta, July 23.--'The greatest struggle ot the campaign in the fifth Congressional district will come off next Wednesday, when Folton county elects delegates to the convention. The Idea has prevailed here, and does, that Fulton would dime the next Congressman, and while the cam paign which has been carried on in the other counties is In many respects remark able, showing that the candidates have left nothing undone to cover the whole field, the real fight has been carried on here. An old politician said this morning thnt he had Been many a dose, hard- 1 fought political campaign in Fulton, but there had never been suen a contest overs Congressional nomination. His opinion of it Is about correct. What the Fulton county politician does not know about elections, political methods and the work ing tllbreof, will not be picked up in this neighborhood. He knows a wire when he see* it and understands just how to pull it. He has a thorough appreciation of the "sinews of war," anil brings them into service as a general marshals his troops for battle. And that which counts up in any canvass, work, is really his strong point, and he can be relied on day and night, early and late. He is working this campaign and is doing it thoroughly. The wateos have been so muddied here tofore that It baa been very difficult to see very far below the surface or to tell just where the bottom was. It is now, how ever, coming in sighb As the struggle draws to a close the fight grows more bitter and the friends of the candidates more determined. It will be a relief to evei; body, except perhaps the de feated, when it is all over. The campaign has been largely a personal one. in which there has been much abuse, many charges circulated of a very personal character, and report has It that there has also cir culated to a very large extent both money and whisky. Captain Jackson, who has mode a vigorous campaign, got his bands S uite full when ho entered the lists, and is difficulties be had to contend with seemed to grow every week. He has made an aggressive campaign, and at the same time nas been kept more thoroughly on the defense, perhaps, than anv candidate who ever aspired to Congressional honors in this State. If he succeeds in whipping the fight it will |be very remarku'ole. He said tho other night in a speech, that if half the Charges made against him were true, he ought to have been in the penitentiary ten years ago, or he meant that it would have put him in Congress ten years ugo. It has come to be a standing jest that a man really needs fewer qualifiCAtlons of that sort to get into the penitentiary than to break into Congress. COL. MYNATT fKODAHLY OUT. * Col. Mynatt has been one of the most hopeful of the candidates, and until re cently was apparently of the opinion that he would havo something in the nature of a walk-over. Ho Is a good man, a quiet but strong worker, and has strong friends back ol him. Ho went into the fight wi tli very little chance ot success, and has dis covered It late in the day. Of all the cam paign charges that havo been circulated ugalust the candidates, I believe the only nna mida nninaf I'nl Mvnnli la tliat l«> lion. James hongstreet, of Hall: first dis trict. IL W. Fuller; second district, I>. F. llurkett; third district. W. H. Beats; fourth district, R. I. O’Kelly; flftlidis- trict. J. C. Jenkins; sixth district, Henry 8. Glover; seventh district. Miles G. Dob bins ; eighth district, W. H. McWhorter; ninth district. C. A FJlington; tenth dis trict, T. M. Berrien. roe HAMMOND. At the election for delegates to the Con gressional convention to-day in Spalding and Heckdale Hammond delegates were cfcr sen. Col. Hammond made a speech in Walton to-day. and returned here this evening in good spirits over his prospects there. Al'OCSTA WINS AOAIN. In the baseball match this afternoon be tween the Browns, of Augusta, and the Athletic, of Atlanta, the score was 13 to J, in favoF of the Browns. . . , „ The physicians did not probe for the ball in Mr. Arch Ornie’s head this afternoon, but will do so on Monday. Dr. Ridley thinks the ball is definitely located and that it can be extracted without difficulty or danger. The new electric light company turned on the light in six lamps on top of their seventy foot tower pole to-nigbt. The poie is at the corner of reachtreo and Marietta. one made against Col. Mynatt is that he bailed from East Tennessee. Of course, that is a very grave charge, and it is difficult to telijust the extent it affected his political fortunes. It Is one of those things that move with a subtle, mysteri ous Influence and capable of inflicting great damage. However. Col. Mynatt has survived the charge so far. Yesterday It was understood that Col. Mynatt was considering whether be would draw out entirely. To-day be has been having a conference with a number of friends on that subject, but with what mult la not known. I shall not be surprised to see his withdraw al announced, very soon. Ooh Hammond's friends are doing the beal work they have yet done. They seem to realise the crisis Is on band. They claim today, gentlemen whose judgment Is reliable, that Hammond will carryVulton by tbrea to five hundred ma jority. They have no lack ot confidence on that score. Hammond's chances seem very much better than they have been, and unless there la some very material change he will not be badly lelt when the return i Arc in. APeachtree supporter ot Cot. Ham mond said lids morning that hla street (or a mile and a half was solid (or bis candidate. He farther tolled a list of railroad shops and factories where Hammond bad a majority of the voters. It lias been claimed that Jackson would poll the workingmen of Atlanta, but that 1* laughed at by the other aide, who claim that Hammond will nearly if not quite di vide that vole, aud out of the city limits In the county districts bo will get three to Richelieu's Hand, The greatest minister France ever pro- duced was Richelieu. He was at once Car dinal, Duka and Peer, Commander of the Ordei of the Salct-Esprit, general of three monastic orders, Grand Master and Super intendent of Marine and Commerce, I.ieu- tenimt-Gcneral ot Britanny and First Min ister of the Kingdom. When ill ho crossed France in royal state and the towns broke large breaches in their walls to allow free passage to his pallet, which was carried by eighteen bearskin-hatted guards. The peo ple had surnamed him the "King of the King,” and when his task was fulfilled, when he had crushed the uobility, dis armed the Protestants, levelled the house of Austria, founded the French Academy, raised up the Sorbonnc, built the Cardinal palace and the Richelieu castle, the two first museums of the seventeenth century; when be bad built up the financial reputa tion of his country,created her navy, given to France Canada, San Domingo, Guyana and Senegal, he Iny down in the midst ot his glory and slept, worn out, under the vaults of the Sorbonne. One day, more than eighteen years ago, the mayor of a small village in Brittany obtained an audience with the Emperor, Napoleon III. He carried under his arm a smalt case, which he proceeded to open, and carefully withdrew a neatly wrapped- up parcel frani it. This he unfolded, dis closing a human head, whose skin was dry and wrinkled, its large eyes deeply sunk in their huge orbits, its mouth contracted and teeth intact; the Liard, mustaches, eyebrows and a few hairs still remained, the whole covered with a yellowish varnish like nil anatomical model. ‘‘This, sire,” said he. "is all that to-day remains ol Richelieu." Through what strange means had this relic fallen into his hands? In December of ’U3 citizens Dubois, He bert ami Uiainconrt, with a neighboring hosier named Cheval, one of the most ar dent patriots of the Thone district, were ordered to pillage the tombs of the church of the Sotbonne. The work la,ted five days; the vaults were opened and the bones tiken out and thrown pell-mell on the ground. While this was going on the church was invsded by the soldiery, who threatened to destroy the famous mauso leum of the Cardinal, when Alexander Re noir, not without great difficulty. Interfered and eticceeded in saving the rhr/d'ttuvrt of Girardon. not, however, till ho had re ceived a bayonet wound in so doing. One of the soldiers got into the vault. The tomb of the Cardinal was open, but the body re mained intact; the head, severed after death to f acilitate the process of embalment, had been returned to its original position. .Seizing the skull, he returned to the church holding It up In triumph, making believe— which opinion Renoir held—that be had hlmsell cut off the head of the Cardinal. The skull hsd been replaced when Citlxen Cheval seized upon the Idea of appropria ting IL Tba bosirfr wished to have bis share of the spoil, and did not understand that pillage should take place without join- WILD PANIC IN A 810 TENT. A Cyclone Strikes Barnum'a Circus at Cortland, N. Y, New York Times. Cortland, N. Y., July 23.—During the afternoon performance of the Barnum, Bailey A Hutchinson circus to-day a cy clone struck the main tent and destroyed it In less than three minutes. At least eight thousand persons were in the aud ience and were thrown in the wildest con fusion. The tents bad been pitched in the suburbs of the town, near the depot of the Elmira, Cortland and Northern Railway,la large field, surrounded on three sides by low hills. Toward the west the coun try is flat and thunder showers easily assume a cyclone shape on entering the enclosed space. All day long thousands of people flocked in from the surrounding country, and when the twrformance began there was no indica tion of any storm, except that the day was sultry. About half-past three there were indications of a moderate blow. As sistant manager Hyatt saw the danger and quietly gave orders to prepare the tent for the emergency.. The four peaks were lowered rud aii tho stays were tightened while the last act of the circus proper, the performing elephants,” was being erformed. Mr. Hyatt, fearing trouble from the elephants, hastily brought their drill to a close and called for the hippo drome performance. ' DIMOLISHXD BX A CYCLONE. Just as the lust elephant was leaving the tent and the horses were about to score, the rain began to fall in torrents. Sudden ly a terrible crash was heard and the audi ence, to a man, rose in their seats. A cy clone had struck the tent near the dressing rooms. In a second the stays and braces were torn from the ground and were flying in a wild, confused mass above the heads ot the terrified audience. About each of the main poles were a dozen or more at taches, trying to keep them in position. The anlmsls in the menagerie tent howled and cried fearfully,while the panic-stricken crowd, blinded by the rain and wind, ran in all directions. To add to the COTTON FROM CINDER. The Curious Substance Blown From Fur nace Slag by a Steam Jet, Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. A process for utilizing the slag or cinder from blast furnaces, recently discovered, is nowjuudergoing experi ments at the Isabella furnaces, Sliarps- bnrg. The product obtained is in ap pearance similar to third-grade cotton but in weight is about eighty per cent, heavier. Tho method of producing the slag fibre is as follows: About thir ty feet from the furnace is a tight en closure ; from this enclosure .to within two feet of the gutter, into which the slag from the furnace is ordinarily tapped, is a tunnel constructed of sheet-iron and wood. At the end of the gutter farthest from the tap hole is a steam pipe so plaoed that when steam is turned on it strikes against one side of the hot flowing Blag. The operation blows the slag in to innumerable spar’.s aud into tho tunnel, where they :r..0 about half way between the ends of tbs tunnel by a second steam jet which forces the disintegrated slag into the enelosure. When it gets there it is transformed into the substance hereto fore described. The process can be conducted only daring tho flow of hot slag, which lasts, for from fifteen to twenty minutes and in this time about fifty pounds of the light cotton-like substance is produced. Superintendent H. Kennedy was asked regarding the E rocess and the uses of the product, ut he said that the scientists had not yet got to the bottom of the matter. He took a handful and wrapped it around a red hot poker without the slightest effect on the material, though npon placing the iron into a strong fire it would not burn in the least. A handful of the fibre thrown into a hot fire is not affected. uo The manufacture of tho substance, confusion the elephants began t 0 which is known ae mineral wool, was trumpet, and for a time it seemed as if tried at the Lucy Furnace some two or nothing could prevent them joining the three years since, and an establishment Stampede. The Hying quarter poles were is operated by a New York firm, in whirled about like Bags and were continu- which \V. P. Shinn, of this city, is in- ally striking the ground in their mad whir- <| ceste d, where it is made. The uses liKig. Hopeleis confusion and constema* I i,„ anniimi ,. n -!„ nn tion reigned everywhere. The two teams »• JPP}*®® oi four horses each, which were in readi- af }‘\ 118 lt J 8 practically incombustible it ness for the chariot race, became unman- will eventually take the place of asbes- ngeable and ran over dozens of persons, tos. It has also been used for deaden* Tlie kitchen tent was overthrown and the ing tho sound and reducing tlie danger implements were sent living with the mass, from fire in sleeping and ordinary rail- rnnna nn^lTu W coaches, and has been tried by up- Sie en ri& r h°oM d iSIKSSSS: fusion, was indescribable, and In less than wsy car seats. It hoe been tried as an three minutes the tent was in shreds and inside filling lor partitions and joists in no vestige except the shattered seats re- dwelling houses, not only as a protec- rnained. I tion against tlie spread of fire, nut for The superior discipline of the employes deadening sound, but the process of was evident. Every man was at his post manufacture Is still in its infancy, and and did his utmost to stop the riot. Many c, of them were thrown down, but strange to £*■ " ot i U< J n ly , an X say, none were seriously injured. It seems J 11 ® 81 * 3, It has, however, been found miraculous that no one was killed. The to he an excellent polishing agent, and number of those seriously wounded will is used extensively at tlie Oliver & probably reach seventy-five. Inasmuch Roberts wire trill, South Side, to pol es the majority ol the audience was from ish wire rods and wire fencing, the surrounding towns, many were taken 1 directly to their hornet in the wagons in i .jSSI] which they came. Mr. Hutchison and his g , „ Anmnioi.iiiit. assistants procured immediate medical at- , . s *“ Antonio LtgliL ■ ■ tendance for all the wounded they conld I . An .esteemed contributor sends tho The New Democratic Boos. Cleveland Leader. Manning was. yon know, the manager of the Cleveland movement at Chicago. He is editor of the Albany Argut, and he has been, more than any one else, the maker of Cleveland. He Is of the same age as Cleveland, and the two are remark ably alike. They weigh about the same, and their tastes and habits are similar enough for them to have been twins. In Albany Manning is often taken for Cleve land, and they are known as the .two Dromios of the city. Manning is to Cleveland what Thurlow Weed was to Seward. Dan Manning Is a reticent fellow with F. S. JOHNSON. JEFF LANE, JOHNSON & LANE • i 07 and 109 Third St„ Macon, Ga. * find and gave orders that nothing should [ following interesting communication to be spared for their comfort. I the Light: “Jack was found in tho clearing AWAY tits wbeck. woods near Lytle Station, on the inter- lid ml national, •<>“th of San Antonio, some panmeut»^ called ^ana thiuttnd*. Mr V'iTlfolw/ rushed to tho scene. In a few minutes that gentleman to Mr. E. S. Bellamy, tho rain ceased, but it took several hours agent for the International atthatata- to clear the ground ol the wreck. In the I tion. I will keen you in suspense no town there was no whirlwind at all. There longer. The lldn.' Jack is neither was nothing more than an ordinary show-1 more nor less than a javelin or young er. No blame can be Relied to the I w ud hog. Mr. Bellamy had tlie cu- “nUrifTfc thJ°I*£!tota23ton“ the' ^Xridll m on .Ml tents. The damage U estimated at least faMnyg skill on Mm, and on apphea- at 110,000, but tha exact amount I tion lie found him an apt scholar, cannot be known for soma days. It is I persevered, and at tho end of fortunate that tha elephants were out of I month not only was ho an efficient the tent, for had they joined in the ntam-1 body-guard by day. but a faithful senti- ^sa'sb-jsssss gjaiigag 1 I giff.Xr.SE Mass ot tha shroud, and. notwithstanding the 1 destroyed. The others remained ab-1 you will find Jack at hla heels, and ho protest ol hta .wife, who Db|*G**d I eolutely fait. No euch accident has hap-1 will allow no one to come between ltim sagacious man, and has not a great amount ot inventive genius, but if the facta are put before him, his judgment is almost infalli ble as to the best course to be pursued. Manning started life as a reporter on the Albany Argut, and he soon became one of the reporters ot the Legislature. He made some men y and put it into Argut stock. He kept on buying, and when Wil liam Cassidy died liesteppedinto his shoes, and with Sirs. Cassidy and he now own a controlling Intercut in the paper. He is worth about 1150,000 and the Argut pays him from fifteen to twenty per cent, on a capital ol $100,000. He is a wlndower, and the story Is that he lt about to marry a young lady in Alba ns- Ho is rather luxurious in his tastes, anu does not care much for political office. Ho spends his winters In the Bermudas. If Cleveland Is elected he will be the chlet power behind the throne. Mr- Tildon’s Summorings. New York Rotter to Bi. Louis Spectator. To one who sees him ior the first time he seems to be a helpless Invalid who ought to be in bed. or at most in a chair made especially for sick people. I shall not attempt to describe him. The mind of the man Is so stalwart and so well pre served that is it not a pleasant thing to tell the truth about his poor, palsied frame. You do not see much about him to en courage yon to say anything except his eve; that is clear and full of life, and through that yon seem to get into the inner chamber of the man rather than through anything ho may audibly say. He talks in a whisper, and has a chair a little lower than hu own npon whloh one who hears him most sit. By that means he gets hta face close to your ear, and it you are very stilt and patient you can soon catch the line ot his thought To be so frail in appearance and so weak In voice the activity of Mr. Ttldeo is remark able. He goes out every fair day and gets into his hired yacht or takes a ride In' one of his carriages. He pays $2,000 a month for the use of the yacht he has this sum mer. Last summer he paid $2,500 a month for one that was a little finer. Why he does not own one himself I do not know. Perhaps he thinks it Is hardly good econo my to buy one for so short a time as he wonld probably use it. He keeps fifteen horses and eight different sorts of road vehicles, but he has ceased to ride horse back. Too Creat a 8acrlflca. Somerville Journal. “Ethelinda Jana.” be said, in deep, pas-1 sionatc tones, “will yon be mine?" “If—UI thought you loved me,” she fal tered. "loveyou!” he exclaimed wildly. “I adore you. I would wander this wide world over for your sake.” "Then I will be yours,” said the maiden, "but only on one condition.” “What is the condition?” he said, In a iroxysm of joy; "name it, name It, and f * it was to snatch the burning sun from th cerulean firmament I would agree to it." "It Is not so difficult as that,” she said calmly; “It is simply this, that you will solemnly swear you will neveraay after we are married that I can’t cook as well as your mother," The young man shook his head and de parted very aorrowfully; the sacrifice was too greaL After tha Swag. Atlanta Letter to Augusta News It ta reported upon good authority that 1 some sanguine Democrats here are already WE ARE AGENTS FOR TIEE PRATT COTTON GIN ! Sold with or Without Feeders and Condensers and EVERY GIN GUARANTEED. We have in stock a full line ol HARDWARE,GUNS, SPORTING GOODS CIDER MTCT.SI, Steam Engines and Boilers! Colton Presses, Cotton Gins, Cane Mills, Sjrup Kettles, ,0 end Of o 1 ™ Saw Mills, Roller Lumber Gages, Mill Gear- hay* heard that Hoke Smith would mak* I ing, Shafting, Pulleys and Hangers, Steam Pumps; Iron snugiv occup , ieS r b)°Emory 1 Hprer| : an<f uiat Pipe and Pipe Fittings, Engine Fittings and Brass Goods. cpLAV. a Huff would again take his | General Machine Work promptly done. All makes r _ r, i r ^.1.1 I„ LI. L..L. I HUIIUCIJ 11U iulu owiuciu um um\r- i nm wiun vuu tv wine uvutccu tutu nswoomer.hid it In a cupboard in his back pcned to Mr iumtun sines 1871, when the and his body. aVi went well till th* Ninth Therm'dor-1 7J*' 1 } **“.* V!“ }>“njed down In Chicago. “When seated at tho desk he Ues then the heroic hoslergraw frightened; hd wflPl k^Xhilren^ST down Wf"*’ 7 1 } 1 , *?°T opinions were known in the district; he I 1 ' aeepan xueir eu K *geu*cme. 1 nQ one to t ouc h him. At night Jack had shown his glorioua spoil to some of hist tux injured. I fellows Mr. B. to his bedside, and Iflie friends; perhaps they would arrest him. I As far as obtainable the following are I cannot manage by stealth or otherwise He confided hla anxieties to a c ient. the the names of the wounded: Dal Farbel, t0 (he ^ he w!ll <] own Abbe Nicholas Armey, begging him tore- McGrawville, severescalp wounds ;Moreon , V ,i 1B ui an d there remain aniet lieve him ot ao compromising an orna-1 B. Hurlbnrt, head injured and chest I ana . * qn .‘ et ment. | crushed; Elijah Harvey, skull fractared; I until morning, unless some intruder The abbe agreed and to avoid any fresh daughter of tav. George Adams, of Cort- "tops into the room, when ho will dart profanation cairied the tkull off to Brit- land, Internal injuries; J. D. Brown, ol at him with all the ferocity of his wild hiny, and gave It to his brother, an inhabl-1 Cortland, three ribs broken; Lyman Olm- nature, l-'our who intrude on him font ol IMouriro, on the Colee du Nord. I stead. Mellon, fractured skull; Lloyd 1 unwittingly once ever wish to Alt was not over. One fine day the new Richardson. Cortland, scalp wounds; Mos- try their hand a second proprietor discovered that the Insects were I ger Hkerumn, Cortland, slight internal In-1 , mo i n ,i c j i,n la eattug away the Hesh. Advice must be had I juries; Cornelius Brown, Marathon, three I ,}* a ,, u „ i?i .,5-Jf It Is thought the vote here next Wednes- at once; a chemist whom hs consulted I ribs broken and intaroal injuries; M. B. I pericctlygentle. At the table he stands diiv wiil be very heavy, probably as high could not advise any better plan than to Congar, McGrawville, Internal Injuries; I at hlsmaafors side and receives a por- a- V .j wtre. It la pretty certain that cover lt over with a yellow varnlah. as he Ed. Billleon. Cortland, back of head n-1 tion of anything he eats, and he is not voting Democrat In tha county will waa accustomed to do in natural history jured: Orrin Hicks, tojflbrook. shoulder particular what it U. Ho la a veritable i-e the great American prerogative. cases. The unhappy waif was once more I dislocated- J. Krench, hellawog, internal I tippler, and likes his whisky and beer Hnalding and Rockdale counties hold rescued, but for how long?. Its future waa | injuries and skull fractured. 1 anil other strong drink. After drinking elrcticns t, day, and willprobaUj be a set- not frontedJWttfr-bJjSKf j, to | . wWakv he will .mack hi. lips and give 1 signs tor more. Any person who lias CoL W. A. Huff would again take hla chances upon the marshal's office, the | . „ , _ ■■ w - - - - - . . „ place which might hare been his but ior 1 of Engine and Boiler Repairing a Specialty. Try us. Sat- Senator John S tofaction guaranteed. * ' ' thirty persons are also willing to take chargt of tha post-office. They are already “too numerous to mention.” 1 I was afflicted with Kidney disease, tnd suffered Intensely. I was Induced to try Hnrr's I Kidney and Liver] Rimidy, and before I had need two bottles 1 was entire- tv cured. Richmond Hensbaw, Providence IL 1. oil to the mult lu Henry and Douglas, Hpalding Is sure for Hammond. Inueed Jackson has never made any contest there, A SUDDEN DEATH | The Infant child of Mr. 8igmond Sellg did yesterday, at No. 27 Brotkerton street, hona and Col. tlma—EITorts to Patoh up a Peace. meu jewiuw. •> *--• -. —■ ,H—t, m. >n i..m, «nn ,v m r, wiki iisu ...iikii. i W s.blustua Star. Uiuli4 rather singular circumstances. The mother placed the little one, which was fast a-l«p. on a bed and engaged her self about household matters. From time to « lm « she looked at the baba, which was still apparently sleeping soundly. Altera few hours she went to take it up and discovered that it was lifeless. Her cries summoned in the neighborhood to the sad scene. A physician waa called In, who at ooca pronounced the child dead. Mr. Bellg was In Macon and waa dispatch- ed for. and la expected here today. Coroner HUbum waa considering this morning whether it would be proper to hold an lnquesL That, however, wonld hardly be necessary. arras the ball. I understand that Dr. Ridley and Dr. Westmoreland have determined this after noon to make an effort to extract tlie ball Ipfigeti in M- A »— 1 ■«* ,h h?rpmWBWW_ m _ will sacoeed. Mr. Orme has almost ton of both hemispheres drew np a pre- J take, for M Chicago eeveral delegates re- scription. which wss published, for the 1 fused to obey commands and declared, for they will aaeceeo. .ur. urine nas almost entirely recovered, and If the halt is suc cessfully extracted will probably soon be qj ^rell os ever. At the new Kimball House building, the mavor of'piouriro^ He. after eeveral' ap-1 Trouble Reported Between Senator Ma- ] ever aecn a javelin can imajfine what a peals from archi.-ological societies tor Its 1 1 “ “ ’ ~ r ‘ u — possession ended by deciding on the most sensible course to pursue. He decided to w. i go to Paris, and it wae h* who had sought I Wa.bliwtoa star. I icjj ut % 11 ; t j |roe coyot,* !£..adi«e«.with the Emperer to offerup It.ppear. that the anUgonl.m between cam0 „„ , he lat(orm fc , t the „ tatl y n in the skull of the gn* Cardinal, "WW theStralghtouta and Coalitionists, or, ssl u „ 0 / t h„ n f„| lt . jumped ‘ lie uu *' «*“ “**""*" UP ami stood between hi. master and On December 15, Ison, the Archbishop o( I Republicans, In Virginia, la not the only I the coyotes and kept them at bay until Paris received the precious deposit rellgt-1 trouble in that camp. A (end exists be-1 one o? the transportation men woks oualy developed In a casket, at the 8or- e. atUr Mahoue and one of his up and naked what was the matter, bonne,audit wureplaced wl.kgreatpomp |which, so far. ha, I Mr. B. said that it waa only.coyotes. ‘ n, and again. riv»remeht.Uie^clergr, tim r rKb^Acaoe-1 w(nt to , bi ntUona i Republican I Sdo^thT'baby" ITe “^1;^ Us tace previously begged (or and been allowed to convention an open and avowed I and then Ur down beside it and kept take a cast otibe remarkable bead. 1 supporter of President Arthur. lie I the flies off. Jack has many tricks, »». I had said he would take-a solid Arthur I hut the moot important thing that A Cholara Remedy- I delegation to Chicago, and, no doubt, be I strikes the observer U the strong at- New Orleans Picayune. 1 fully expected to doeo. At tbs HUte con-1 tachment he has lor hU master.” More than forty yean ago, when it was I v *u%", 1 1 »»» found that prevention for the AsUUc cho- {^L^'pUy^lSkbSfiUL bStS^ft Fumigating In Paris, lent was easier than core, tha learned doe-1 “enfo!“Swever! demonstrated his W I ^ Morning News. present rapid rate of progreaa the building ought to be completed in a few monthi. Ma] ,r Tom Burney.of the Tele ,urn. made his appearance here to-day, and Is viewing the surroondlngs from an Atlanta point of view. HU friends aaem to bequlte as numerous here as elsewhere, and they are always glad to see him. Later. COTv MYHATT'a CA1D. As a result ol the conioltation with hla friends and supporters Unlay. Col. My- Halt has definitely withdrawn from the i .j:ii-rr -dontl race In this district. He has taken ttds step at the suggestion and npon t!i>- ipi\ >ce of his friends. He srill publish a pirmslcard to-morrow morning making this announcement. I understand tha Card ill reference to the candidates left in ti.r Bel! will be thoroughly non-committal. N-,-withstandingthis attitude the friends of i id. Hammond this afternoon seemed to lie in a state ot mind and spirits border ing on j . Jan*. BLAINE WHIPS. Th* “Whig Republicans'' made another gasp for life today by putting oat a Blaine electoral ticket. A meeting ot the execu tive committee was held here today for that purpose. Hon. James C. Freeman predilrd over the deliberations of these able siAtasmeu anti patriots. The follow- ing electoral ticket was made oat for Bfeme and 1-oganr At large, Hon. Joshua HiU of A BICCER MAN THAN MAHONE. Any one arriving from Toulon or Marseilles st the Paris station of the woriring people. In the New York' San, and Blaine. Colonel \V R 81m. who holda a G ure de Lyon will be conducted Into took the name of the "San cholera the floor of whiqh is covered lore." Our conttuiDorinr never lent it* 1 led the revolt uanone. mm* was V i : ^'toteW^fr&eM feJ BUhi 0U A‘ ^ad° Influence srith will, ’lime and salts clipper, mid in j.e,Ungtbrooph-iffith ? riEth.to 7 ,Atth. to ooasunt are foe nrerly two «o?s yam?, up#MM. commanded. wWch ri^ ^ c^trimng a m^- In constant use foe nearly two aeon yaare, several delegates, asanone commsnoea. jrZZTZjr 1 and found it to ba tb* best remedv (or I threatened and exhorted, all srithont ef. I tare winch gives off enough nitrous looseaeee of the bowels ever yet devised, feet Sims remained firm and vtHed for I acid to effect disinfection without im- It is to be commented for several seasons. I Blaine. For this act, It la said, Mahons 1 pedlng respiration. Sufferers while It la not to be mixed with liquor, and there-1 read Bimf the "riot act, and, as a result, I spending the prescribed bait hour in the two have aot spoken since thaconven- chunberbf horrors will have the Jfi*tlie common people, and It will have no 1 Senator Mahone, soCol. Slma’s friends I rd prejudloe to combat; eath of the materials I say, called at Republican beadqaartsn In I JJJjJN “all stifled pursuant to s law of Ls in equal proportion to the others, and 1 New York city and notified the committee I lrbO and to an order of the consols of may therefore be compounded without 1 that If they recognized Situ In any man-1 the Twelfth Mesaidor, year VIII. They professional skill; and, as the dote la so 1 nerbafMahooet would not raise hiihands I will also understand much more clearly very small, it may be carried la a tiny vial I in the canvass. ooL Sims next called upon than heretofore the meaning of the fog,. waMcOtf pocket, and be always at Um.“‘.^F <*• Terror” „ applied to TincL opii, Capsid, Rhcico., Menthplp., Utiontsta bad joined with him. He soon 1 " 1 ““ mustered aU of the partv loaders In Vir ginia who were dissatisfied with Mahone inclined to rebel against bis auto- Mix the abovsjn eaual parts; dose, ten I cr *fl*,"!j|-I We bava orders from Macon for flva healthfolly' rtlmuUta - the ’ kidneys to thirty drops. In plain terms, take equal I “"'T I hundred of Saturday's issue, and six bun- Madder, and enriches as trail ta purifies parte tucture of opium, red pepper, rhut 1 *{ly acquiesced ln hls riewi I (Itr> papers of Sunday's Issue. This the blood. When overcome by fstigue. Grt>, peppermint and cixanipfior. ami nix ^Tb? shows, ws think, that theOre.litul.oe h * * diem for use. In care of dlarrh . s, take a «• l*w«»g dafly not only la tha eonnty ^tebiSMteSw'Ste?* !»o«~to ■""* M —v bos by him, and It in time will I **®®a that Mahone s Irienda have become | _ * u T n, ‘T m T; recipe will be widely publUbed. Even throw of Mahone's rule of the parte waa The best salva in the worid for cute, when no cholera la anticipated, it U an ex- aimed at. For tha past two days friends { brulees, iotas, ulcers, salt rheum, fever | Tha Prudent Housewives or Maoon Pre pare for the Carpet-Laying Season. cedent remedy for ordinary summer com- This remedy was carried around by Captain B. F. Day, L'alted States Navy, foemmty years ani urel with good ef- of the Senator have been earnestly talking I sores, tetter, chapped bands, chilblains, with <’atone! Sbns bare in Washington, be-1 corns and all skloerupttooa. and positie*. seeching him to concent to a treaty of I ly cores piles or no pay required. I tie peace srith Mahoue. A Virginia Repukll-1 guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction - - can eaid today thaf Mabooe bad found I mooey refunded, rriee 25 cents per be , Sims to be a Mggsr man than himself. I For sate bT Lamar Banklfi A l.smar. .. . AYER’S A. B. FARQUHAR & CO. Central City Iron Works, Macon, Ga. SCHOFIELD’S I RON WORKS, MAOON. - - GEORGIA. A erne Cure I J' S' Schofield & Son, Proprietors & ^ ’ Manufacturers of and Dealers in Every Variety Agricultural Machinery. * SCHOFIELD’S PREjVHUWf^COTTON PRESSES, | To Paok by Horso, Hand. Water or 8toam Power. Schofield's Empire Engines and Boilers and Circular Saw Mills, I ' Cano Mills anil Kettles and Castings and Machinery ol Every Kind. “Shafting,” “Pulleys” and “Hangers” s Specialty. contain, nn antidote tor all malarial tilt- order* which, ao far u known, fa used In no >tker remedy. It contain* do Quinine, nor any mineral nor dele ter lou* autaUnce what ever, and consequantly produce* no lujnrlou* effect upon tha constitution, lint leave* tha •yat«w u* Iwjollhy as It wm Wore tha attack. WE WARRAHT AYER'S A0UE CURE to cure every case of Fever and Ague, Inter* mlttent or Chill Fever, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague, Bilious Fever, and Liver Com plaint eaused by malaria. In case of failure, after due trial, dealers are authorized, by our EoTUCATKS i CoMPTLY FCftVUHtD ASP Cok ohdkxck Solicited. ritrefo, dated JMy to. I money. Dr. J.C.Ayer&Co., Lowell,Mass, SoUbyaUDtUfgiifo. I Belting, Files, Oils, Baws, \Vrenchea, etc.’ etc. ’ U ° Call on or writ* us. Bend for our new Illustrated Catalogue Lubricator*, Pac'dng, SITTERS THOUSANDS LOST. Don’t waste your money on cheap Ma chinery. Thousands lost every year by buying third-class goods. Como and see or write and get prices. Five Leading Engines and Saw Mills, Three Best Gins. Two Best Grist Mills. Superior 3-Roller Cane Mill. Best Mowers, Davis’s Water Wheel. J These goods took | Iranians at Atlan- ■ta and Louisville over the largest display of Engines nml Machnnery ever made in tlio United States. Buggii s and Wagons from the lea-Ting markets bought by the hundred. Rubber Belting—largi-t line of any house | in Georgia. Terms easy. Long time. M. J. HATftHER & GO,, C&neral Agents, Comer Fourth and Poplar Streets, Macon, Ga. Toths needs of the tourist, commercial T. B. ARTOPE, 1 1 ? 8 Second Street < Macon, Georgia. braS^tphvxicaflm^fos to°unheiithfui Marble, Granite and Limestone Works, Wrought Iron of every description. Best Force Pump In the m*r wtottof^entiU'« drbUitaled find It a reliable sonic* of re newed strength and comfort For late by all druggists and dealers g<n*ralljr. ket. Plans, prices and estimates given novUhnrAsuAwlx COLi'GE, MACON, Ct. A First-class "OHMERCIMJ Business Sctiool lluarlteSwM •d lwOkm)ifi|fHii MOIN XJM KI\TN! J AM manttfactaren' agent for Crystal aud .'■ooteh Oranitn, Vanuoi Marble and Whit* Bronx* Monument*. Agent for K. T. Bamomt I Fencing. Vsare and Fouala-na. lam brti- r pre;,ami nowthanev-r t class wurkat reasonabteprices, atul -ill I.v. ihi.na in ., ,1.. ties wanting only fint-dau work. Call on or write to ■ tb* unw togit >. P. I lentil.