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TITE TELEGRAPH AXD MESSENGER, FRIDAY, DECEMBER r>. IRS*.
^RAHD jury PRESENTMENTS,
October Term Bibb Superior Court,
tie Orsnd Jury, duly Impaneled at this,
O^wber. term ot Bibb Superior Court, sub-
2f,?be foUowto* general preaentmenU:
<“ county omcsas.
Thmnah oommltteea we haveCXamlned th«
l '5J?fd record. ol the Super or Court, the
b00f**J; County Court, Tax Collector, Be-
oSrer’of'Tax Returns end County Commta-
offlee ol the County Commissioners
weinJlull and explicit reoordi ot all the
U wc^d ?be°'bSb. wS'reeorda ot the Clerk
suocrior Court, the Ordinary and the
of l®® ■O-.,.. ha, * i(. n neat and bu*luo*»*llkc
minutely all the proceed-
SI mAe’e ollleea Aa our attentlou bad boen
largo number ot undetermined
S the cffminal docket of the County
°' e Veit it our duty to look cloiely Into
oSbmdneMot that court. Wo find tho bual-
“S.ol the court, aa well up aa can bo reason*
M. eiolcfed. in view ot tho character el moat
criminal catca usual y entered on
i&iSJkeL There la a large number ot caaea
SataMied ot in the court but they are caaea
?°ihKh no arreata hart been made under
b U 2r-^w“ 0 ^ mini? there U*no
of complaint on thla point agalnat tho
hfc'fln “bVbSiki of tho tax collector and
receiver of tax retuma In exceUontahapo and
^ J.. wa ran see. these officers ate. faith-
, 0 f the peace wore submitted to to us
lorexsmlnsUonu D. H. Adams, E.O.aranni.s,
i a Daraour. Sterling Tucker. W. D. U.
Johnson, W. X. I‘oe, W. L. Higgins, M. R.
^We'tmd'the records tdufoa. official. kepi In
accord.nee with the law except thatwetklnk
when the law speaks ol separate dockets for
Criminal and clrll cases It meana two hooka
andoM merely separate records in tho same
^idWhSo^a-n. Darla kept
In itricl accordance with the law which re-
aolre* balcbcra to keep a record of the num-
Ser Sd description of ell cattle purchased for
Saalkler, together with the name and color
of the party from whom they arc purchased.
Tha other books submitted to ns ore deficient
Si this respect. We bellere there are Other
lastlces of the peace and batchers In the coun-
ir whose bools hare not been submitted, and
«e recommend that the proper authorities
furnish the names of these to tho next grand
jury that they may he dealt with 09 tho law
g, moADS amd nairxiEs.
Wc learn from the superintendent of the
ebsin-gang that all tho roads in the county,
except those in Warrior, Oodfrey and apart ol
Hasurd district havo been worked and are ia
fair condition. ..
The chain-gang Is at present In the city. The
prisoners are In good quarters, comfortably
olsd and In good health.
The bridges are all in good condition. We
think, however, the commisslouers should
hare the Iron bridges pointed at least once a
year and tho bolts frequently examined and
tightened.
POM Lie BUILDINGS.
We find the public bnlldlogs all In good con
dition and well cared for. Tho board of
oounty commissioner* are now erecting a
handsome and commodious Jail building,
which relievos ns from the painful duty of
condemning tho former butldlug occupied by
the county for jail purposes.
JAILS AMD HOSPITALS.
In the matter of the complaint that prison
ers remain In loll without trial through ncgll-
genoe of officials, we bcllevo the samo to be
without good foundation. In the few cases la
which there seemed to bo unnecessary delay,
the sheriff furnished explanations entirely
satisfactory to os, showing there was no Just
ground of complaint. W<*flnd tho affairs of
* efficiently managed, bat tho
^ vrerecemmend
so as to render
- . tho superintend
ent's salary be Increased la a manner com-
mensu -ate with his duties.
We r commend that W. A. Cherry heap-
E lated notary public and ex-officlo Justice of
9 peace for the l(*Hh district O. If. to fill the
▼aesney occasioned by the expiration of his
term of office.
llshed In the TaLtowArH amd Meweboeb.
In conclusion, wo retarn our thanks to his
Honor, Judge Hutchins, presiding, aud So
licitor Hardeman for courtesies extended.
W. C. SiMGLxroM. Foreman;
Richard P. Burden, A. B. Hraail,
W. A. Juhan, N. It. llodcklui,
the hospital
J. W. Cabanlss.
YT. H. Man a field,
It. 8. s kulabury,
L. A. Jordan,
Alex Reynolds,
J. J. Nottingham,
Felix Corput,
A. P. Collins.
0. D. H<1 wards,
A. L. Wootl,
T. 0. Burke. .
Ueorye W. Morgan, J. o. Wilbarn, Bec’y.
Ordered, that the pm-entments bo published
In the Tilxosapu amd Mbssrmqik, as re*
qgestCd. J. L. llAkDIMAM,
Bollcltor-Generid.
0o ordered* N. L. HcTcnixs,
J. 8. C\, W. 0.
AUTOGRAPH LETTERS.
The Pros!dent«Ilect Acknowledge the
Receipt of Souvenirs
The clerks at The Empire Store art Just the
proudest set In town.
Yesterday they received a genuine auto-
graph letter from tho President-elect of the
United States, and this Is the wsy it came
about
city on the night of the llth Inst, la honor of
the election of Cleveland and Hendricks, wss
the cartoon dlspltred by The Empire Store. It
was conspicuous for Us stse and the unique-
ness of its design. The Idea was taken from
the celebrated cartoon, by McDoarall, that
appeared in tho New York WorUrs Issue
wh, ch wu one of the
^rlklng caricatures of tho campaign.
L“ l ? e .? 0 . r ** r - und °* picture stood Clove-
8S l jSS hlch wen » tne front Above
ft® tne words—‘‘Liberty, equal-
ttr and honcere." twin. mM ... ■«« -w,.
wss contpicnously dlaplajad and attracted
much attention. 1 1
. £’if, u * # J™onitratlon had pasted it wti
tk* Jflndows whare It bad been
«“*£«* ktttpowrilr. neatly packed and for-
f2.Oorernor CI«T«l»ua at Albany, sc-i
co ,!y*5}l l1 by tha lolUnriat note:
Tia..™b°*-. *? Te » 1 >*rll l um -Dun a*d
““ToarD Kin: We lake the liberty ol aen llnx
Too by to-day*! axpMafehartea paid) a apeef-
Bf cartoon axbenalTcly nacd In the docora-
Uonot^towwindowi ot the principal busl-
ST* °* the city ofaUacon, <icor,la,
tka occaaloa ot the xreat
political danonatratlonoatS llth ImUut In
HJJS the election of yoonelf and Hr.
Hendricka to the ufflcea ot 1'reildent and
Vlce freildtpt ol tbo United Statea ol Amor-
.ila!SS5® , * b,,Uon fu *k* “O'* t»*oolnf and
on account .of its sup-
Posed artistic merit, but as an evT-
”)*• Potruptloo and utrarafinco, which kaa
“ywndkglaid our political hulo.-y lor the
. W. do »ow dwaitly treat that yoorllfa and
",^*j‘k“»y bo Touch,.led, and at tha_appolct-
oqr liberties, rei
upon the M Jars of honor, virtue end prosper!
r ; bul 5V “or* w tTTel
ernmentto personal ends or political ambl-
V yoqf ob+dient servants, |
J. IY. Green,
iksast--"-
H. M 0f Mckay,
If. T V. C \VrI|fit.
J. W. Rountree, ^ ^
reload replied a
Alb amt, Nor, 8, Uoi
£• ft TimberUke,
Kmplro Store a cartoon used at the celebration
In Macon on tha llth last.
I regard It quite a curiosity, and If your re-
jolclng was on the same scale It must hare
been Immense. Yours very truly,
Gbqvbb Cleveland,
It will be remembered that the committee
on transparencies also sent to Governor
Cleveland the largo transparency used as a
float In the procession In wnlch Cleveland and
Headricks were seated In a carriage drawn by
four horse* representing Ne w York, Now Jer-
ser. Connecticut and Indiana. Mr. It. B.
hSl chairman ot J*»e torchlight committee.
gjjSrday received tiiP following autograph
e *'Executive Mamiiom. Albany* November
23, 1681.-R. B. Hall., Esq., Chulrm^n. ejc.-
Dbar Sir: I have received from yoaf com
mittee a transparency lately carried In tiiC
procession In the city of Macon. I shall pro-
serve It as a token of the Joy of the citizens of
Macon upon the result of the late election, as
well as of their loyalty aud patriotism.
"Thanking the committee for their thought-
fullness in sending the transparency, la~
yours very truly, Grover Cleveland."
A Coincidence.
Thanksgiving services wero held In the
Presbyterian church on Thursday for tho first
time In nluetcen years. The paster, Rev. A.
W. CUsby, selected for his text the 137th
psalm, the same as read on Thanksgiving
Day 1865. Rev. David Wells was pastor at that
time, end the notorious General Wilson with
his army bad possession of the city. The
church was filled with Federal soldiers, and
the day bad been appointed for Thanksgiving
by Governor Johnson, the provisional Gov
ernor. As may be Imagined, our people took
but little stock In the services.
Rev. F. R. Goldin*, the autt xr ot Young
Marc one. s, quickly grasped the situation and
*>tcn furnl
TotheMambers of the Executive Com
mittee of the Demooratlo Party
of Bibb County.
You are requested to meet at the court
house on Saturday, the 21th Inst., at 12
o'clock, to consider the queitlon of the time
and manner of selecting candidates for the
various county offices to be elected In Janaa
ry, and to transact such other business as may
cume before the committee.
Root. A. Nisbmt, Chairman.
W. A. Davis, Secretary.
Personating n Legislator.
On Conductor Rencau's train from Atlanta,
yesterday evening, a man on board tried to
pass himself off as Mr. Peeples, member of
the Legislature from Murray couaty. A pas
senger who Uvea la Murray county and who
kuowq Mr. Peeples and the man who en
deavored to personate him. says tho man's
name la Lee Cobh, of Gilmer county. He
failed to pass and Capt. Reneau made him pay
his fare. He dl l not display Mr. People's
pass to the conductor, but tried to get a free
ride by claiming to be another man.
Farmore' Loans.
Editors Telegraph and Messenger: Since
I calledffittention through the Telegraph
amd Mbssemgeb to the mortgaging of Geor
gia farms to Eastern and foreign capital
ists, the sabjeot has been discussed in a
number*of papers throughout the 8tate.
called attention to these loans because I
believed they wonld resalt disastrously to
the agricultural interests of the 6iate, up
on tho prosperity of which depends directly
or indirectly the prosperity of every other
interest Those who have not investigated
this subject have no idea of the magnitude
of the suma offered to loan on Southern
farms. One agent Informs me that in lit
tle over a year be has loaned 12.000,000. I
learn that an agent in Atlanta has 10,000,-
000 to be loaned. These are small figures
compared with the aggregate amount, by
which oar farmers are to be hopelessly en
cumbered.
It is said these cipl'alists do not want
the land. Certainly they do not as long
as they can get twice the interest On
the capital that it would yield if invested
in their own section. But the Northern
people begin to realize that Southern in
vestments are safe, and they will not ob
ject to become land owners here on terms
so favorable to themselves.
Take an exampla: For a loon of $800 on
a $3,000 farm, the farmer agrees to pay In
five years, principal and Interest, $1,400.
II he does not pav he loses his form. The
grounds upon which I oppose these loons,
briefly stated, are:
1st, Itocaaa.thlaappxr.ntly«aay method
ot raising monay will induce oar fxrmera
to oTtr burden thrmselrea: .nd,
2d. Hectare the termi ot the loam .re
too high, yii., 11 to 18 per cent., end the
time too long, lire to ten jtira; and,
3d. Bectuae the pnuiae who gel the
mortgager, the intereat, and (virtually) in
any .rent tha farmt, art non-resident...
I am by no meant alone in my position.
X <leor«u piper eald a few days since:
“Outalda capitalists now largely own onr
corporate enterprises, anil II they gat their
Ongen on onr termi there will be little
prospect of that independence and pros
perity we hare all seen in the distance but
havo never completely enjoyed." An
other writeriaye: “when moat of these
loan, mature wo will see wholeeale eyio-
tiooi, which in their accompanying dis
tress will remind n, of Ireland.’’ And I
And In Ihe Charleston Ntwa and Cburfsr a
comment more apt than elegant: “Whan
these foreign loam begin to fall dna thera
will bah—lto pay in South Carolina,”
and tha same may ba aaid of Georgia. If
thase yfawa are right the Legiaiatnre should
impose snob a tax on tha agent, of these
non-resident capitalists as srill check this
wholesale mortgage bnalnesa. Very re
spectfully, Booh V. Wasamorog.
Criticising nn Appointment.
Waibixotom, November 38.—Friends of
Sergeant Braineru cuuUu'd. to he very
angry with President Arthur for declin
ing to appoint the sergeant to one ot the
two lleatenandes In the army Ailed yes
terday. They criticise the eeiection of
Attorney-General (Brewster's adopted
son for one of the vacancies, bat they ere
especially severe In their comments on tha
appointment of William W. Wright, of
New Jersey. In thla, they declare,
the President violated the spirit
ot the lew, although not its letter.
Young Wright was made a cadet at the
West Point academy In 1882, and Joined
in July of that year. At the aeml-annnal
examination In ihe following January, he
was found deficient in hie stndlee, but wae
allowed to resign, thus avoiding a recoin-
memdatioo for his discharge by tha aca
demic board. Sergeant Bratnerd'e friends
point to theas circumstance* and then re
fer to aeotion 1323 of tha revised statutes,
which ia at follows:
“No cadet who is reported asdeAdent in
either conduct or studies and recom-
mended to ba discharged from lb* academy
•hall, unless upon the recommendation of
tha academic board, be returned or reap
pointed or appointed to any place In the
•rmy before nil class ehall have left the
academy and received their commtstlooa."
Sergeant Brainerd, say hia friends, made
a brilliant record as a member of tb* Oree-
ly expedition and receives no recognition.
Lieutenant Wright waa unable to keep np
with hia class, bat nowgoss into tbs army
at a time when be will oat-rank the mem-
ben of that clan aa well aa the class which
grsduates next year.
Lord Churohlll Favors Protection,
Loxdox, November 27.—Lord Randolph
Churchill, In an interview, declared him
self In favor of a revision ot tha tarlQ and
tha adoption of protective dotiea, even ax-
tfndlnit to tb# tax on corn. He ioM that
in domsitlc policy th* government should
follow Bismarck's principles. The stats
of socialism in Ireland, the reform at tb*
castle, the great expenditure of money for
public works end the foreign poller of the
British empire were above party or tha
federation of th* colonies.
Twine In Connecticut.
Budossok, November 27.—'The returns
made to Um registrar of births, marriages
•nd deaths, show an on aurally large num
ber of birth] of twlna. Almost arery phy
sician baa reported a number of cues, and
one Bbysician baa had aa many as twelve.
The physicians ceil it the twin year. On*
iBridgtpon man became tha father of a
healthy pair of twins on* day last weak,
|and the next day he faded in bnaineis.
“l Hava Bean AflUetsd
With an enaction of th* throat from child
hood, canted by diphtheria, end have used
rations remedies, hot have oarer found
Ln^f '- raquai to Brown's Bronchial Tro-
rc.<;.Jf. t\ JIampUn, Pittltn, Ay.
AIM OF THE INQUISITION.
Tho Princely Jury of the Church Catholic.
New York Timet.
“Not s single lectors that I have given
In the United Sta'es has been attended
with nearly ns mnch responsibility ns my
subject to-night." said Mgr. Capel last
evening at bL Vincent Ferrer Church,
where ns bad been announced to apeak on
“The Inquisition and Toleration in
Religion.'^ “If any members ol the
press be present," he continued,
“may I be permitted to sek them to spare
me and to spare os Catholics anything
like nn inaccurate report? It is not passi
ble that the press of the country should be
sufficiently interested in this subject to
£hre it a large amount of apace. But I do
with that what wo teach bo represented
faithful'y .1° the public. I stand here with
the permission of his Eminence, I stand
here with the permiaMon of the Dominican
Fathers, to exercise th Jt authority which
comes from the Holy See.
‘•There is not a lather here present,” be
gan Hgr. Capel, ‘“there ia not a widowed
mother in this building, there is not an
orphan brother with ns who does not with
to protect Uie home in which boor she
may live against every iniquity without.
This Is a proposition which no Catholic,
no Protestant, or no non-believer can deny.
For it is the duty of each to save
his household from the iniqui
tous teachings of the world iu
which we live. Are thore any here so de
graded as to tell me that abominations
maybs read in their households? Are
there any here who will tell me that the
iniquities of the world shall be doecribid in
newspapers or novels? If ao, let them
leave the church.”
Mgr. Capel paused, but no one mored.
“The Catholic Cbnrch has always endeav
ored to protect her members. She has
said, 'My children, exposed to danger that
m»y bring you misery, I must bo your
mother. I must teach you that certain
books are wrong and must not be read. I
must teach you that companionship with
auch and inch people must be attended
srith evil effects/ What would be the most
effective way for the father of a family to
protect his aear ones from Insults? Itap-
poss eighty oat of one hundred men would
•ey. 'Kick the fellow out who
would interfere fn this way.’
The other twenty would say,
‘Well, we must be thonuhtful, and not act
hastily.’ I am with the eighty, if you
8 lease. I may be wrong theologically,hut
lat’s mv opinion. Now, I will make a
statement, which I shall ask the raembera
of the press to take down. It ia thla:
Whatever the world does at the period In
which we lire to protect property, what
ever the world does at thla minute to pro-
tect honor, a fortiori it is to protect the
purity and the truth of the Catholic clnTrch.
Whatever ia done for the protection of
a man's life, fa all that and more
(or the take ot his parity. If yon imprison
a man for damaging properly, if you hang
n man for taking the life of another, I will
imprison and I srill hang tha man who
takes from me my faith. Give me for my
faith precisely that which yon give for other
interests. The Interest of property is one
end the lowest. The Intereat of honor is two.
The intereat of life la three. The Interest of
faith is four and above all. Who of
you will aay a word against this? Iam
here to listen to objections. Let him who
objects stand np and say so.” No one
rose to Mgr. Cepel's suggestion. “All of
this of which I have spoken,” heresnmed,
“was the principle npon which the Inqui
sition wae founded. It is a repetition of the
E ower cf father and mother oyer their
ouaehold. Thai It was in the baodaof
the saintly Dominican and his order.
luaxo u auucuii-u, *uh.u * '
my memory may fall me. The Inquisi
tion exists at this moment jnat salt existed
in the dayaof Saint Dominick. The In
quisition baa its center in Home, and Its
name ia written in golden letters. Yon
enter the building and are met by tender
frionda and kindly faces, with an amount
ot politeness which, were Amerioa to
possess its one-mililonth part, wonld
make every American a gentleman or a
lady. And that inquisition, bearing its
own honored name, bat a name that those
witbont would (eln destroy, standi thero
on its own gronnd-a model inatltatlon.
Twelve cerdmsls—princes of the church—
hire since 1312 composed its corporate
body. An emissary discharges lie
functions aa judge ordinary. A
counsellor is one ot the auperln
Icndenta. A oonauttator aelAted by
the l’opo himself from among the most
tainted theologians and oan tnlsti, consti
tutes Use defenaorship of those gnilty.
Qualiffcatora are appointed to give their
opinion an questions submitted to them,
and an a vocal is charged with tha defense
of parsooa aocnaed. Subordinate officials
constitute tho completion ot this congre
gation. So eonatitoted, the;examinera are
presided over by the Tope, end no judg
ment o! that inquisition can be given ex
cept by the Fops himself.
“My dear friend], you who on thla aids
ot tha Atlantic, and I who on the other,
boast of a Jury, here la a jury of twelve
Princes—men of renown in learning, in
goodness, and in influence—who have
been selected among the 200,000,000 of tin
man beings who constitnte tho Church
Catholic. Twelve aboe-makeri and twelva
butchers may pair their opinion! hare, and
men are proud to say they are acquitted.
Bat to bw judged by Cardinals, by those
poaaereed of jedgment—that Is the Inqui
sition. Now,” continued Monselgnor, “It
U the custom to turn back and aay, ‘Look
at the past.’ Nothing ao provokaa ms aa
to hear intelligent men always talking ot the
past. For God’a sake give me the present
I didn't live 300 years ago. Why talk
nonsense and rubbish colored like that of
the paai? Soa'ttbisk that I are affrighted
by referenco to It. however. 'Look at tha
horrora of the luqnliitioo: people say.
Now, what are those people? whet do they
know of It? Have those who talk
o( tbs Inqnlaitioo read an original
book? Not a bit o( It. What do they
read? Some Protestant writer's transla
tions. The Inquisition did Ita duty like
Ferdinand and Isabella to call in a tribu
nal to aavs children and that tribunal an
serted Its own power, that wu not the
Catholio Church. It waa an engine of
King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella that
wade the people suffer, u it waa uaed fur
political purposes. Tha I'upe wrote
•gainst it article after article, and the
cbnrch a poke ol the cruelties exercised by
tha Spanish government under the plot
of protecting Its subjects. The principle
of the Inquisition wu, however, no false
“Now?''' concluded the lecturer, “we live
in the nineteenth century, bat u regards
toleration don't 1st ns make a mistake.
Ths nineteenth century to pretty well the
same u twenty centuries ago. i have
watcbcJ pretty closely yoor election. Yon
have called each other liars, rascals and
thieves, end you hare said it and accepted
It u II it war* a favor. A great and nobis
people! Good. I tarn back to the pages
of Levi, who wrote the history of Home,
and I find tha urns speeches almost to a
word. I fled the same kind of dema
gogues. who, while they say to all the peo
pie, 'Be u free u the air,' add ‘you must
follow me. I’m a Blaineite, or a Cleveland-
lie, or a Mrs. Bella 8omtbodyite, or a BL
Johnlto.' I look with extraordinary in
ternet at the repetition of the story of the
old Roman Republic, in tin days of which
wc lire. On the ground of friendship I
a heap, by a good big fire, eat the lut hit
of flesh well cooked and (MI that you bays
got them.’ No, that ia not true. The
Catholic Church ia tha most cbsritabl* in
stitution. We uk no favor. Olya us fair
play. Let us etata our troths. Every hu
man being who acta according to hia con
science, sriso bu no doubt about his por
tion, let him continue in his way and the
God of mercy will give him his reward.”
Dulce at Decorum Ect Pro Patrta MorL
Boston PosL
Thus far sixty good Democrats hays
sen killed and over 200 have been
wounded in celebrating tb* gnat Demo
cratic victory.
Burnett's Coeoaln*
Saltern th* hair whan harsh and dry.
Soot bee th* irritated scalp.
Affords th* richest lustre.
Prevents tha hair front falling off.
Promotes its htalthy, yfflcrona
growth.
A Word of Comfort.
Auguste Chronicle and Constitutionalist.
Some of our fellosr-cltigens had fhesliaci-
ow of death to fall upon their households
yesterday, bat thrv need not ruouru as
those without hone. The least melan
choly thing fa all this world is *h« transla
tion of a little child. What coma parents
do in kindness (or their innocent offspring
compared with what God has done?
The Mormon Wot.
Argonaut.
“My dear,” said a Mormon wife to her
husband, “I should think you wonld be
ashamed of yourself flirting with that Miss
B. as you did to-day.”
“Flirting with her? ’ ho replied in aa-
tonlahment. “Why, we have been engaged
for more than three months. It's all oyer
(own."
“Oa, beg your pardon," said hia wife,
ndiflerently. “If you are engaged to her
suppose It ia all right. When does tha
appy event occur?”
He Was n Philosopher.
Williamsport Paper.
A young Williamsport dude was visiting
hia miserly old uncle in Ihe country last
rummer and every time he wonld lights
cigarette he would strike a fresh match.
“You shouldn’t ba sowaatafol, yonng
man," said the old man; i'don't you kuow
that matchaa cost money? Now, I haven’t
used e match in ten years.”
“Bnt, uncle, how do you light your
Arcs?" ttsked tnedudo.
“Oh I I keep them burning ail the time
to save matches."
“But wood coats more than matches,”
persisted the dude.
“Oh! but I steal the wood. Don't talk
to me, yonng man. I'm a philosopher.”
He Needed n New Watch.
Merchant Traveler.
“Mary," remarked old man Crosseam
to his wife at breakfast yesterday morn
ing, “was Will Trimble here to see Katie
last night?”
“Yes, my dear.”
“What time did he leave?”
"I heard him say it was U o'clock by
bis watch as he went oaL”
“What kind of a watch does he carry?”
“A patent lever, he told Katie."
"A patentlever, eh? Well, you tell him,
with my compliments, that if be wants to
remain healthy he bad better ebango that
patent to a 10 o’clock leave her. I was
young once myself, and know what time
of night 11 o'clock la by thou patent lever
watchee.”
A Lesson In Astronomy.
The Hatcheb
They were young and romantic, and al
though the mlnnte band was pointing to
12 o'clock they sat npon the porch gaxtng
at the stare.
“That’s Jnpiter, • dear, ian’t it?" she
monnorred.
“Yea, yea, and that's Siring,” ha said,
pointing to another star.
“Are yon Siriaal" aha cooed.
He kissed her several times. Then he
pointed npward and laid:
“That’* Mara, doro."
"And that’s pa’a,” she whispered, as a
footstep sounded Inside, and it the yonng
man hadn’t acooted he would have seen
more (tars than he ever dreamed ol. Her
pa wean a number twelve and a half with
a brass toe.
Roller-Skatlns Flirtation.
Norristown Herald.
Lying on the right side, “My heart it at
your feeL”
^ Ljring on the left side, "I hare money in
Standing on yoor nose, “I have no ob
jection to a mother-in-law."
Jumping on your skates, "I’m afraid I
can't trust yon.”
Lying on yonr back, “Assist me."
One (eg In the air meana, “Catch me.”
Two legs in the air means, “Mashed.”
One skate in yoor mouth, "Crashed
again.”
Hitting the back of yonr head with yonr
heel, “I am gone."
Suddenly placing yonr legs horiaontally
on the Boor like the letter V indicates,‘ I
am paralysed.”
Punching yoor neighbor in the stomach
with jrour left foot, “I'm onto yonr little
* A backward Sip of the heels and sadden
cohesion of the knees on the 8oor indi
cates, “May I skate the next mnsio with
yon?"
Hendxear, Footgear nad Such
Fashion Columns.
A terra-cotta pokt bonnet is lined srith
old gold satin. Waves of creamy lace and
birda of iridescent plumage form the trim
ming.
A while cloth capote, with pleated crown,
bound with wide brown velvet woven with
tiny gold loope, has large pompsua ol
rephyr wool.
Choice sprsys of shaded velvet Sowers
appear npon soma of tha moat elegant Ut
ile opera bonnets from Faria.
Gloves are black, white, drab, fasrn and
tan. The Seeds is still the moet popular
and handaeme.
Gray and black ostrich feathers are
sprckled with white, as If sprinkled with
snow.
Bronze slippers and royal cardinal silk
hose ore popular for afternoon wear at
A band of beaver or otter makes a coro
net for a velvet felt bonneL
Bonnet strings a- e quite aborL
doing In the Mornlnx.
These touching words, suggested by
the death of a child, were penned some
years since by B. F. Xayior, oi ihe
Chicaga Tribune
He went in the morning, a bright and
radiant morning. Many went yesterday,
more to-day, and there are daws to hashed
for the departurei of to-morrow. And
can It b* wonderful that nleuant, radiant
mornings should beguile them into going?
Is it a marvel that they do not wait for the
burden and the noon, bnt follow the lark
and hear hia tong over the rain of (be rain
bow? That those words to beautiful they
should make so true, “and joy cometh in
the iDorning?''
“Going in the morning," a glorloni mom-
Ing-when tha aky la au in beauty and tha
world ia all bllae. era tha dears
have gone to heaven or tha
stars have gone to God. when the birds
are tinging and the oool winds are blow
ing, and the flowers are oat that will be
that at noon, and the clonds that are
never rent in rain, and shadows inlaid
with crimson Ua away to tha west Wa
have wondered what there was (or tears in
anch agoing in the early morning from
home to home-like fair white doves srith
downy wing* emerging from nether night
and fluttering for entrance at the windows
of Heaven. Never waa there a hand
wanting to take the wanderer
tn and that out darkness and
storm. Upon these little (tees it
never seemed tone that death could place
his great seal; than to no thoughQol char
nel bonse in those yonng liatanera to that
invitation whose acceptance ire an bonnd
not to forbid. Then abonil be morning
songs and not aigba; no tears nor clonds,
but brigbtdasn and bright dawnings to
gether.
Fold np the white robes, lay aside tbs
forgotten toy, smooth the little impressed
pillow and gently smile as yon think of
the garment, of the hero of gold and
of the fair br-w srith the diadem of
light; smile aa yon think no years can
THE PENALTIES OF FAME,
n:n Nye Telia How Ho Suffers Under
Them.
Dispatch;
Bomoyears ago, when I was younger, I
was easily approached by strangert, eape-
ciaUy is S*ey intimated they had heard of
me before. The most down-lrodden atm
offensive human failure oould borrow my
watch and eha!n then, and it was a cold
day when I wasn’t called upon to feed
•ome “great admirer" of mine who bad
footed it through from Boston to tba coast
in order to shake hands with mo.
I am not ao much that way now. I
wonld rather ho famed for pants than pant
for fame (smaU fed humor.) When a
pale eyed tramp takes me by (he hand
nowadays aud tells me bee journeyed
front Nova Scotia to see me I perpetrate
a little coup d'etat on him by asking him
If he has a dollar in his old clothing that
I could borrow till next week. After that
there ia a luU in the conversation that you
could cut with a knife.
Many yean ago tnere was a red headed
conductor running No. 7 over thefShcrman
hill, whose name wss Boils—at least that'i
near encash. No. 7 warn't r.ally a train
of “varnlshrd can." It was nn emigrant
train; but it bad a comfortable caboose
-on behind with leather covered eeata and
an observatory on ton and oil paintings
in it painted by Michael Angelo Prang,
and I used to ride over the monntaln with
Bolls in this caboose quite frequently.
One night there were several oi us com
ing oyer the hill and we were havln:
make that memory old. An eternal guilt/
less child waiting about tha threahmd of
paradise for coming friends from home.
UnlliiMtaiiMMM
guish, the
and gray, tna^nng^l
bnt the re, changeless as the atara and young
as th* last new morning.
The poet Mila of a green bongh rent by
the tempest from the tree and swept rude
ly along the breast of an angry river, and
a mother bird srith cries of grief flattering
beside it, for her neat and nestlings wero
there. Ah, better to be wafted away from
I the earth than (fans that they should drift
aroand the srorld In s storm.
B Tn x glory of men is his strength. If you
are weakened down through erceeelro
•tody, or by early IndlsentEna, ‘Allan'*
Brain Food will permanently restore all
kwt vigor, and etronethen all tha mnaclaa
lo< brain and body.ll; 6forL5. At drug
gists, or by mall from J. H. Allen, SU
First as- :; • v i orkCity,
pub..»M«»
in tlie French press, it resulted that the
conduct of the Marquise waaof a nature to
conetftnte an injury of tho gravest charac
ter as regards her husband; seeing that
Abe fact thua stgnallied aa against the Mar-
extenuated
e an yaux, sar irom being extenuated
t the lapse of time, has ind>: ing perpet-
id been aggravated, so that her demand
quise de Uaux, far from bet:
with t' ‘
oated __
cannot upon any ground be accepted; see.
Ingtbat it follows, ou the contrary, from
what precedes, that the demand of the
Marquis de Can* ia justified In every re*
apeot, it being besides undisputed that the
Judgment of August 3. 1877. has become
definite, and that the separation baa lasted
Jt‘Sd U T.ir.v«aS a tim ,, e W .SSkinV‘^.; "Sft&wSSuSs tribunal dedans
Soeiiaa’acKd^ng'^a,^? °^'&TZo£SSZ
And, granting canso to the Msrqnia de
. - olgers end telling stories as we
poked along up the heavy grade of the
Union Paciflc road from Cheyenne west.
After awhile Bella went tnrough the train,
with a seif cocking punch, and made the
usual assessment. Then be camo back
■nd told me that there waa a lady in one
of use care ahead who had heard in soma
way that I waa aboard and waa very anx
ious tom at me. Ho said he would go
forward and introduce me ii I wished. I
rose majcdically, felt of my mustache, to
aeeif itwe eatlll there, and then went
Into the other car, where Bolls introduce.!
me to a corpulent woman about 03 years of
age, whose teeth were made for some one
else. Bhe couldn't hear very well, either.
The train made some noise and so, when
the wanted very severely to hear what I
•aid, the would lean over on my shoulder,
with tha cold and somewhat soiled rim of
her ear dose to my face, an that abe could
catch my worda as they fell.
She said abe was juat returning from the
centennial.
talh,” I said, "where do yon go to oele-
brate yonr centennials nowadays?”
“Oh, down to Pbiladelpby,” aha said, aa
soon aa aha had collected my question Into
her Jumbo ears.
“I should think yon wonld go to the
Acropolis,” I aaid, getting a little weary of
my companion, "or to Pompeii, where
yon could have a kind of reunion of ralna.”
"Yea, we went to Injlnopolli, too,” ebe
replied.
And ao we chatted along op the hill,
while ihe boys back in the caboose were
having a nice, joyinl time, I waa there
yelling playful little bon mots and such
tilings aa that into tbo dark receasea of an
old emigrant's ear, who, I afterwards
learned, thought I waa a foreign mis-
denary on my way to my charge via
’Frisco.
Finally, I asked her io excuse me, ea I
had to go back to the rear oar to attend to
a friend who wu dying. It took roe a
long lime to work this palpablt falsehood
through the neglected labyrinths to her
mmil, bnt finally aha seemed to grapple
with it all right.
Then the wanted to go, too, I told her
no; It wonld cettninly hasten the end.
How I wanted to get hold of Bolla and
bring him to a head 1 At lut I got away
from the eged conversationalist and went
back to the caboose.
Itwu locked!
I atood out on the platform in tha oold
all the wey down the west side of tbs hill
to Laramie,where we arrived at a Utile put
midnight, u tbs train wu late.
I never felt anywhere neu even with
Boils until a year or so afterward, when
tha gtnernl superintendent wrote and
ukea him if he wouldn't be kind enoogh
to resign, so u to give the stockholders s
chance. He told Boils that if he wonld
resign and get a job on a rival road, and
be as economcal about taming in cuh
fares u hn hud been with him, the com
pany wonld promt him with n gold
headed cane.
THE PATTI DIVORCE CASE.
Text Of the Decision Crnntlns n Dlvoice
to ller Husband.
Pitrli Morning New, Nor. 14.
The following ia the text of the judgment
of tho first chamber of the Civil Tribunal
Of the Seine deu;;„ g i' ne principal demand
of iluio. Patti In her divorce case, and
granting the crou ililt oi ha husband,the
Marquis de Canx
20 Years of Agony
Endcd---Tlio Cuticura
Triumphant.
Remedies
I have been ai
nn obstinate ski
D/B pso. Intis, n
in* on at ncnlj.
-•**» the nelp ot
11 In -pit’: <• i
f D # MarqolB and Bfnr^uUe alowlrbni *. ** ^^Sr^nUru 1 j, r
da Oaux demaml reciprocally (he cony,-r ■ * ™ ' -
slon of tho judgment of separation pro
nounced by this chamber August 3, 1877,
ntj a judgment of divorce; seeing that
the judgment of August 3, 1878, rejected
tne application tor a separation in her
favor, which waa then introduced
by desire of the Mirquiae de Caux,
on tho ground that from the
document* introduced on tha trial, and
auu,granuDgcauso io we Marquis de
Caux, declares tho judgment of the first
chamber of this tribunal of August 3,1877,
which pronounced the separation between
him and tho Marquise do Caux, converted
into a judgment of divorce; condemn* the
Uarqmao de Caux to all tho cxpenacs.
A Practical Joker Shot.
Ralsiuu. November 27.-In Btateiville,
l rank Jenkins and a friend attempted to
play a practical joke on a yonng police*
by suddenly jamping from behind a
into hia path and demanding hi* sur
er. The policeman stood hia ground
and qnickly fired, seriously, If not fatally,
wounding Jenkins.
Rowell Gives Up tho Race.
Lowdo.v, November 27.—Ia tho walking
roatcli at the Aquarium to-day Rowell
tiaaliv rt tired from the track on account
of a blistered foot, af (or completing 233
miles. The victory of Littlewood is now
assured, os he ia 23 miles Ahead of Mason.
The contest has lost its intereat.
Just Like tr.e Whlaky.
Richmond Dispatch.
No, we do not want Conkling in the Sen
ate. We like our Democracy straight, not
curled.
-r :# —I some ( ( thorn
Jinji salargeastho envelope conuii.iugihu
In the latter part of winter my»klncom-
mcnoed cracking open. I tiled svotouhZ
.thought of, wlthootsBr
relief. The 12th of June I started W«L m
hopes I could reach tho Ho: gprii
u i*r m 1/iusing, _ _
■liter living. One Dr. treated me about
t vo weeks, but ^ <1 mo no good. AS thought
I had but a n rt tlr -.- to live. I earnestly
prayed to dte. Cracked throerartaeMmaL
over my back, across roy ribs, arms, hands,
limbs, feet badly swollen, toenails came off.
(lRger-nalla deal and hard aa bone, halrd>*v!
dry and lifelesa as old straw. Oh, my God'
how I did auffer.
My iliter had a amaU part of a boxofCutf-
curaln tho house. Hho wouldn't give up;
•aid! "Wewill try Cuticura." Somewm*aaK,
plied on one hand and arm. Eureka! thero
waa relief .•‘stopped tho terrible burning sensa
tion from the word go. They ImmtdUtely got
the Cnticnra Resolvent, Cuucnra and CmleuA
X
— — -J
_ JBBBH and Cm leu-*
raSoap. I commenced by taking onetable-
■poonful ot Reaolrent tbree times n day;
had a bath once n day, water about blood heat.
used Cuticura Soap freely; applied Cuticura
morning and evening. Kctult, returned to mr
homo In just six week* from time I left, an<l
my tkln as smooth as this sh^et of t>npcr.
HIRAM K. CAUi'KN TKR,
Henderson, Jefferson Co., N. Y.
Sworn to before me, this loth d ft r of Janu
ary, 15M. A. M. LEFFIKGWRLI*
Justice of iho l vaoe,
Cuticura Heiolvent, the new blood purifier.
Internally, aud Cuticura an 1 Cuticura Soap,
the great akin cures, externally,clear the com-
f dexfon. cleonie the skin a-id tcalp, and parl-
y tho blood of orery ipeclesof Itr-dag, scaly,
j iinp'y. • >■ ' rial n .-rom
bunion and akin tortures when physician*,
boipltali, an<l all other mcAu<i fail. h.>1<1
j ve ry u here.^ JJrlee—Cuticura, 50c.; Soap 25c.;
Potter Drug and Chemlcnl Co., Boaton]
RF A 11 rY’Q 1 i i'ha mkc
DL.MU I I Oxcis.u. and Toilet hoai*.
Lovely Cigarette Smoker*.
Nsw Havo, Coxa., November M.-On
one of tbe trains bonnd for New York,
passing through this city a little afternoon
to-day, was a crowd of gsria. They were
evidently from eome college or boarding
school near Boston, as they occupied two
Boston end Albany carj, which they bad
all to themselves. Thar* wm a crowd of
YaleitodenU at tha itation who left on the
•ametrain. Moat ot them were looking tor a
smoking car, and when they saw dainty
donds of amoks pour through thewiu-
(Iowa of these cars they naturally thought
they were smoking rare. When they tried
(he doora and found they wero locked they
wondered, aud their wooder waa increased
to Interne cariosity when they taw there
waa nobody but girls in tb* cars, and that
several of them were smoking cigarettes.
A crowd ol tha etndtnta clustered on
th* platform and looked longingly Into
windows of tha ctrt where they would
like to be. That tho gtrli wero from
•ome college we* made farther evident
became many oi ia«m wore owrieiy im».
and theappearanto of tba crowd was that
peculiar to college boys except that tbaaa
wore drestee. Several were playing canto
bnt non* were drinking, at least anlnqjU-
lllve reporter who was attracted by the
eight ana who rode on the platform of one
ot the cars to Bridgeport saw no bottles.
Indulgence in the emaller vices could
not be attributed to the
whole crowd, as out of fifty orao girls fn
the car not more than tan, who were In the
«°™f. were indulging in these scholarly
troita. Cigarettes were tbeooly thing, the
girls smoked. They had neither cigira
nor pipe*. Severaf ot them had dainty
dgantta holders, end a couple oi them
were evidently menchsnme, and had seen
tue as the daintv light brown coloring
•kowed. The girle teemed to be having a
<i“l*t enjoyable smoke in a quiet, dig
nified Boston aort of wey. Kona
of the nen-smoken ecemed to think
1* *!,. , ■** °°* °* *ke way
for their companions to smoke.
AU wero yonng looking, and if
there were any teachers in Ihe crowd they
ffid not look IL Tha wbola thing looked,
through the window, Uko amildcaricatnre
of codecs men on their way home. In the
forward pert of the taro cere, occupied an-
•'"•Jr b 7 *ke girts, aU the livelier and j ollier
•pints in the school had apparently geth-
Wiwd to bmw« an eDjoyaUe trip t j New
> ork. College men looked on with enor
mous eyroeml the eeata In the regular
smoker held many a youth who would
much have preferred to be In the car play,
ing whlet with the girle. r
E tt,n hr n Highland Moccatln.
PHaixiub, n c November 2C.-Ciande
lVrklneon, who live about elx mil, i f, om
here, In company with a negro boy, went
opossum_ hunting on Saturday night last
and his dogs halted at tho footu? a pine
Tree which bad been blown down. AamtU
kola was found ari l the opossums could bo
aeon, but the dogs could not get fn
and bring out the game, l'erkinson was
uclted, aril without thinking, ran his
right hand through the hole Intend-
*"A ‘o poll the opossum out
Before he reached the opossum he
felt something e'rike his forefinger, and at
lonce commen.ed to withdraw hie hand,
when he felt another blow, an J, on pulling
hie hand out, he brought, hung to his On-
ger. ahlghland moccasin four let: long
,end three inches in circumference. Pbr-
kins caught the snake in a running noose
and started for home, which was about .
Imile dietanL Onthewey he drank a pint
ofwblaky. When he reached home he
Iwta brought to this place and d.-ink an
other pint of liquor while on Use way. By
- .gh he wae nn- 1
nonedoos and remained eo tor twelve —
koo«. and, then gradually h.gan t„ i m . I, 1 ”’' !,'■ »■»•- “
riir snake is here nx'
. a glees ton, and t M ‘'V, n ft.
— * ' - ■ -jen o’ people, J taiereble boots,''
Causa loves to toll a good story, but be
is shy, end always forgets the names of
people, things and places. “That reminds
ms of a good thing," hesafd tha other day.
Er—ahem—or -there's really noacconnt-
Ing fov tastes 1 For lnetanco, there’s an
old fr.end of mine, a well-known man,
called—er—hia name escapes mo jut now
—anyhow he's by profession —a—a—I
don t recollect at present the precise na
ture of his occupation—but hu office or
his place of buslnesj or—er—er—whereas
his private residence Is near—near—dear
met What Is the name of the square?
I va got It on the tip of my tongue Well,
at ail events. It struck me as very odd in
that kind of is man, his business being
what and where it is, that he himself
should reside—er—sr—where he docs, yon
know!”
—Mr. Cleveland will be an impor
tant man in theeyes of the army. Ac
cording to the Washington Capitol he will
have the appointment ol two major-gen-
•ralaand alx brigadier-generals. Briga
dier-General Augur, who now commands
tha department of (he Missouri, retires
next July, and ii will depend wholly on
the personal wish ot the President, nttor
being advised by the Becietary ef War
and the Lieutenant-General, what colonel
should succeed him. A year later will oc
cur tho retirement of Usneral Pope, and
then the question will be whether General
Terry or General Howard Khali bathe
lUM major-general. Whoever Is pro
moted there will be a v»n»"*
generalcy. MajorGonaroJ Hanrofk will
**kre ia February, 1883, opening the way
joth^romoiionof atlffanotherbrlgsdTo *
A FACTonT lto.] just been opened at
Danbury. Conn,, for the mannfseture of
wooden ehoes. The proprietor is a Ger
man, and for some time has supplied the
brewere In New York with wooden ebocs
for their employee, and Ihe demand baa
now become ao exteneive aa to require
much greater facilities an 1 the aid of
steam power. The ahooe hero tho ap-
proved curved round toe of tho old Dutch
style and are heelless. They are made
wholly of the wood of the butternut tree,
and. while tmperrious to water, are also
nflf. o 1 f ' i tS. h V a keen introduced
Into allThe hatehops for tha protection of
the. feet of operatives from tho wet floors,
sm/rest the feotf “ r ° VCry
. - p .°P« XIII will, before tho
close ol theyesr, confer the order of the
Golden Rose npon French ladles who have
»!.^r U k D ,? Ui3!,U b *
BlaWa Democratic cousin,
Gen. Thomas Ewing, says that Dlafne will
be the nomlnae ot hls party In 1883. and
qnlta a nnmbn ol ardent organa era al-
p ! :oteet^$ufvigor. ara, lhlD * " hUa
"Oh, might I kiss those eyci or lire.
Ten thousand scarce would quench desire,
BAH would I steep my llp« in bllsi,
And dwell an sgs on every kUs."|
That yonng dude needs something for his
blsod; be Is utterly too fr.ih. 11. B. B. Is tho
best thing for blm, beesnss oao bottle will
cure hiss. Bet the dode la not ell alone in bis
terra.Del glory—not by e “Jog folL" Many
others ere considerably “rattled" just now
•boot that blood poison business, bnt B. B. B.
wUl care tor the least money and in tbs short
est tint. Tbs beom is coming. Purify, pu
rify.
Next to a walking match was Mr. IL B. Stul
tar's walking fifteen miles In one dey, fishing
and bunting. Us lives at Athens, Os., it7t
years old, baa had a running tore on his lag to
years—ont half a century—and previous to
that day bad not walked over ball a mil* aday
tor 30 y-art. Mr. Bsalter, Use BenneMVatch -
seen and Bav, Dr. Calvin Johnson aay that B.
B. B. cared this .ulcer end restored him
to health.
Wu It s faith curst II# wss aa blind tea
bet, btld bstded, bis neck a horrid mass of
putrid corruption, appetite goo*, fceblo and
emaciated,'tb* picture of a starved skats ton,
and only tlx years old. For three years doc
tors and medicine made no impression on the
complaint. • • • A few months at-
terwsrd bis ayes sparkled in gladness, Saab
ragests
Capital Prize, $150,000.
“We do hereby certify t h it w e sapcrrlxc tb*
arranxementa of all tbo Monthly and rx'in.1-
annual Drawinqi of the Louisiana
tary Ooanpsny, and In parson manage h:.i] con
trol tba drawings them as Ires, and mat the
same aw conduatad srith bon, -ly.i.iriu»«-and
tngoodianh toward all parties, amt ... au-
tliurire tho company to Use this c.:rtlUc»U),wtUl
fao similes Ot <"ir signatures attached, In US
advertisements."
Go m mission ere.
O NPHECEDENTED ATTRACTIONS.
Over Half a Million Distributed.
Louisiana State Lottery Compaay.
Incorporated In ISM for 38 year, by tbo leg
islature tor odnoaUonr.l and Charitable nur-
pssss with sespltallqtMJWi,on -u.,. hum a
reserve fund olover i r q5,oto has Unco been
By an overwhelmin'; ynpnlar vote Its Iran-
wa. i . . , parlid th ■ pn*..nU'i- COO-
stltnflon adopted December:.], A. J)., WO.
Its Crnnd Slnr.'* Number Drnwlnfca wlffi
take place monthly. It ncror ti< uh>Korpoit-
• i ’ ■ ' n* attribution:
I7.r<q Orand Monthly
AND TBS
tuivhm
(nth* Aoadom/ of Muilo, Now Orisnns,
Tuesday, DeowmlMr 10, 1034.
Under U° peneoel Saperrlnloa and inan«*e-
Gen.G.T. BEAUREGARD, of Louis-
; ana,and Gcn.JUBAL A. EARLY, of
Virginia.
Capital Prize, $150,000.
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OP 1150,000 X1SO00B
1 PRANI) PKI/.K OF • <tojS
ill AND PRIZE OP
a LARGE PRIRB8 OP
4 LARGE PRIZES OP
20 1‘RIZKJ OP
2279 Prlxcf, amotmtflf ta , r ►>
0 A p ;: llc * l ! 0,, J or {***• to club* thouM be mi
>f further laformatloa write clcarlr, string
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0 M. A DAUPHIN,
007 Sayonth 8t.« Waahlnaton. D. CJ
Miko I*. (). Monoy orloni payhblo aud ad*
dreM KezUtcrod Letter* to
M0NEY_ LOANED
QN ImproTed Farms «-.d City Property
For terms apply to
R. F. LAWTON,
JUAN KICK,
GREENBACKS!
EASILY MADE
NO Hard WORK. *
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