Newspaper Page Text
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THE TELEGRAPH AND MESSENGER: FRIDAY, MAY I, 18S5.
Mr. Randall to be Degraded. I A telegram to the Hun, dated New
The Washington correspondent ol Orleans, April 23d, gives these (acts:
the New York Sun says that the free Governor frelanfrand hit itaff and a large
traders and horizontal tariff men arc P»rty of Ttzao., who have been here celebra-
irauers ana norizonva. tlnfTcza.dajatlheKxpo.Ulon, visited Jcffer-
preparing to punish Mr. Handall. ib* |M d».u to day at his home at Beauvoir,
correspondent savs: I uin. Several ipeeche. were made. Ooremor
The, enemies of Randall openly threaten to Ireland, speakinf lor iheTeztsparty, declared
degrade him from his position a. chairman of that the object of their vUlt was to eeo and
the committee on appropriation., the election shake hands with one of thegr«nde«tof statca-
of Carlisle being by them set down as certain, men, noblest of men and purest of patriots.
Hence the necessity of making a Speaker who I To this Mr. Davie responded, urging all to be
has not Mr. Randall's punishment aabliob- good and true cltlteus of our common country,
jcetlve point hi cherish sentiments worthy of citizens of a
„ , , ...» republican government and genuine ropubll-
Before the adjournment of the c » n lort itutlon.. to see to It that these prlncl-
session of Congress, Mr. Randall an- pies are founded in JusUce, and that the truth
nounced his determination not to enter of hlitory be preserved, whether written for
the race for the Speakership. Quite I schools or the library,
recently this announcement has been I If it be treason to urge people to be
more emphatically made in a leading “good and true citizens of ourcom-
fburnal of Mr. Randall's State. This mon country, to cherish sentiments
ordinarily would leave the way open worthy of citizens of a republican
and uninterrupted to Mr. Carlisle, to government and genuine republican
which no objection has been raised, institutions, to see to it that these
If, however. Mr. Carlisle's success principles are founded in justice and
Mr. Randall’s degradation then that the truth of history be pre-
tbeea will and should be opposition served,” then is Davis a traitor and
-tree and formidable. unworthy of citizenship. If they do
Mr. Randall, by reason of his long not constitute treason, bat are founded
service, hit ripe experience and his in wisdom and patriotism, then is he
An enterprising individual bss Maud 1 psriiaaaer.tarr power, should be at the as worthy of citizenship aa every man
IS any- Seeded the leading committee of the who wore the gray, for none have ad-
Hccse. lie should be the leader on vanced in patriotism further than Mr.
the door. The country and the Demo-1 Davis by his languago would have
erotic party expects and demands this. I them go.
Mare, the Democratic party will hare | What a picture is here presented.
On the one hand, an old man, bowed
If Mr. Carlisle is not willing to con-|<lown and defensolesa, bidding his
cede it. a Speaker can and will be countrymen uphold the institutions
ejected who can and will do so. and the principles of their common
When it is recalled that Mr. Randall country. On the other, a narrow
tal tbore who aided him to oppose and minded, slanderous coterie of bigots,
Atfieat the free traders, and thus to mouthy warriors, seeking to stir lip
THE TELEGRAPH A MESSENGER.
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write for term..
AU communication, .bourn be
Thz TzLzuazrn isr "
leeka
u.c.
Cotton Statement.
The Chronicle’, cotton article of April
24tb furnishes the following facts rela
tive to the movement of the crop for the
past week:
For the week ending this evening
(April 2d), the total recelpta have reached
19,122 bales, against 23,723 bales list week,
21,808 bales the prevloua week and 28,111
bales three weeks alnce; making the total
receipt! einco the let of September, 1881,
,013.910 bales, against d.093,266 bales for
the same period ot 1883-81, showing a da.
crease alnce September 1,1881, of 30,328
bales.
The recelpta at all the Interior towne (Or
the week have been 8.078 bales, sines
September 1st, 2,550,822 bales. The re
ceipts at the same towns have been 15,838
bales less than the eame week last year,
and since September 1st, the recelpta at
all the towns are 220,228 bales less than
for the same time in 1883.
Hanson
the market In limberger
body want* car place in that
In and take It.
It begins to look veiy much re tb:-ch
the dissolution of the cendideteo ail. take
place out In Illinois before the dteotstwm
of the Legislature.
A New Yo«x girl neglected to tend on
invitation to a jilts! 1 over end daring the
wedding festivities he came to the vsdv
and shot her through the leg.
esteemed Fioride errhstges , IVc. .-viatic victory, were read Hie passions and the prejudices of the
.ot twilight: ' A„„ rf ^ forma, this threat I rabble against one whom they have
O.vx olotir
says of a recent
crept along the west." very : tK'y on. kebv the San may not be as I singled out to bear the responsibility
was Rutherford going to eire* thv im. af j, g n t appear. for a war that bravo men fought and
house door.
Father Htrentan dove art «nwn»
the administration about hit rximsM.
snatching an sxtrm shirt.thst looks hie ti*
canvass of Baraum's dreoa. gore to beat
ing Japanese plamt.
‘‘We cannot stomach the oppototsMct
of Ur. Plllefcury," says the Mogwasy
• Yea,” tald Faddy to tha doctor.-Ires
tnelmmetlo.bat, begone, it wouldn't lay
(n me ithomack et all."
Jakes Whitcomb Riliy, the Hooaltr
poet, emphatleaPy denies that be Is about
to marry. James Is doabtleis aware that
the Uute generally shies off from e mar
ried woman's domicil*.
The wiaky ring has a defeat to | try to forget,
aemtpe- It mar gtill hope to turn de
feat iau victory.
Quite recently Sir. Cox has charged
OmDerosa recently sent Grant hit ctrd,
on which was written: 1 Vfllh respecltul
tympathy and bast wishes for a speedy re
covery and a long and nsafal life.” Tears
came into Gen. Grant's eyes when he retd
it.
Thk Galveston News think that ''for
generating and maintaining suspense In
the minds of patriots enilous to serve their
country In an official capacity, this coun
try nevrr produced the equal of Grover
Cleveland.
Forestry Faots.
An interesting pamphlet from the
thre he w« deprived oVhia position on I Department of the Interior, entl^gd
committee*, and on the board of the plantin « Tre e" m Bch<>o1 Grounus
Smithsonian Institute by the Speaker U"d the Celebration of Arbor Day,”
of the House. Mr. Cox waa one of the has ^ lald u P on our tabIe - » em '
opponents of Mr. Carlisle. Mr. Carlisle I brac< * " ome B enoral upon the
is a tnon pliable in the hands of men of P lantin K of trees, a history of the Ohio
more audacity snd self-assertion than 8tale p °rostry Association and much
himself. He may bo used for the pur- * ha * a interesting concerning the
pose indicated. He cannot be mode effects of forests and tlieir destruction.
Speaker again save by the votea of Thl9 P am P blel K ives *° m0 valuable
Sonthern men. It U quite safe to ssy 'e" 0 " 1 ' fr ° m hi8t °7- weU » orlb
that many of these votes cannot be « ,nalde « d . an< . "S"™ 8 rcla '
used to bolster any man or plan look- rtv0 to , the timber reserve and
to the punishment and degradation of consumption In the Untied States. The
statement is made that the destruction
Mr. Randall.
A HOCIVTT journal noticing Mr. C’levc
land’s conduct at church, saya: "He prays
in an audible undertone, and (lags In a
cIcai baritone volce.”Oae man usually dors
all the audible praying at Hr. Cleveland's
church- The audience Is permitted to
join the choir in the chorus.
J. Calvin Caui, the editor of the Bee
has been dismltsed from his clerkship of
class one In the Adjutant General's office,
War deportment, on the ground o( Incom
pe'ency. J. Celvlo Chose Is enegro poli
tician of the wont strip*. How did he
pass hit incompetency through e civil
vice .lamination. Civil service reform
need* reforming.
ezirrmaa Is not allowed In Central
Perk New York. 8omt months ego Puck
said that the following elgoe might be
found In the park: “Keep off the grass,'
"Keep bQ the beds,” “Keep off Hie
botches," “Keep off the welke,” and
" Keep out the Park.'' The park at present
is mooopollssd by the police and George
Francis Train,
Tuc Mugwump ought to remtmber that
this Is a Democratic administration, and
be content with a moderate amount of
hspnlneiv. If the Mugwump 1* tomonop-
olise ell the hilarity, It la dlffleult to under
stand where the Democrat la to come In.
The appointment of Plllabury, Chase and
Troup was an intentional ast on Clave-
laud's part, and it la not expected that
everybody win bt suited,
Jbe Tribune la still haunted by the ter
rible fear that the Black Horse cavalry Is
threatening Washington, and calls upon
Beerttiry Vllts to resign. There will be
another uprieing In Poland, t Napoleon
will role Franc., end Pneraoh's drecend-
anta will Mbn Egypt before the South
again goes to war with ths North. Ilot a
tusn conducting a Republican newspaper
cannot afford It admit this Fortunately,
it matter* little whether he does or not.
We must take ell the things now bttog
•aid shout Grant, good, bad and lndifltr-
enL He Is reported re follows about the
beginning of the war:
“The South has rescind to soeeds,” sold
lohnson. "and have chosen Jefferson Darts
for provision at President." |
-wbet'e that yon »ey f“ asked Capt Grant,
who was engaged at the Urn. stowing away
goodi on a top shelf.
Mr. Jobreen repeated whot he bad prsTtoes-
ly «*ld, whereupon Grant turned around and
Addressing bis informant, replied savagely:
“Davis and the whole gang ot theasooght
to be hungl"
Yet, Jefferson Davis saved Orant from
disgrace.
A ojaaE.roxDgrr ot the New York
Times, referring to the proposed lew to
preve t the sale of sneivnt canned goods,
rays: I remember making a trip through
the canning district of Delaware a half
deem year* or so ego. I haven’t eaten any
1 am told by e gentleman who bid n tetter
from him lest week that he eigne himself
•Henry O. Flipper, Colonel, Mexican Vol
unteers.’ Hit friend ea‘d to me: ‘Flipper
is an exceptionally blight colored man.
. He la a vorectooe render and hit letter to
me wM to ask about broke. After bis
r , rt mtrtlal and dismissal for Irreguliri-
h. went to Mexico, where color is not
e.n obstacle to advancement, and bow has
a high position In the Mexican army, with
• baudioae salary. He matt be twenty.
• ht or twenty-nine years of age. He
wrote an autobiography In 1878, which Is
The Democratic party will not repeat of Pale * Une forests by the Venetians
the folly of the last session of Congress. | and Genoese has made tiro lands
barren and the once bold streams Inslg-
• „ , , , I nifieant; that tree-planting redeemed
Thirty-odd years ago Kngland and (ie a „ ( , ^ * rovtac# ol Daben
Russia were arming as they are to-day. L thllt 0ne 4 in , of tho VMt
Tennyson then wu in l.i. pnme. The , ateau ]an( , of g , g gterile #nd
hlo<Kl danced in his veins, far pictures l fit f(jr icnUur# ^ o[ the
and sweet strain, ot music floated de , ltuctbn 0 , Ule (oregU whUc nn()lher
through hia dreams. When the Light thlrJ on , as a scantv pasture
Brigade swept the v.l ey at Balaklava for ' that the Komftng ruineU tlie
he caught the spirit of the charge, and oncc fert| , e eaitcrn ghoreof theA(lrI .
t burst from him in line, that must bo I Ucbycuttil)(? awgy thg tlmber( and
immortal. 1 sidly j n the same way; that the fertility
How changed to-day. A generation and the climate of the Pyrenees were
has passed. England and Russia mined by the destruction of the for-
sgain are arming. Perhaps on the! l 5 ta; that the Roman Campagna, once
morrow the valor and the etror of Bala- La healthful resort of the wealthy,
klava may be repeated at Herat, or in| owe( it. malignant fevers totheremov-
some vale of distant Afghanistan. But a ) 0 ( the forests in thoApennine and
the fire of war, the thrill of victory,the g a b!nian range. The effect of tree cul-
songs and the iweet strains that sound tiv.tion and tree destruction, it is
in youth when skies are bluest, the I c i a i me d, is shown in the Islands of Ae-
flowera fairest and Ufa fall of pulse end 1 pension, Ceylon, St. Helena, Santa
hope, will come no more to the poet fc m , st. Jago and Ternate, which hav-
who once voiced them so well. ing fl ne water, fertility and health, loat
Where is the genius that gave us I tbem w lth the forests, or having them
“Maud,” "The Light Brigade,” I no t, gained them all by judicious tree
"Locltsley Hall” and a score of other I planting.
masterpieces? Dead, say some, hut j t u stated that southern Ohio can
rashly. South’s fire, manhood’s vlg-1 no longor g TOW p^hes; that In Ken-
or, may he, are dead, but his genius is tucky Itr esms dry up, springs have
complete. It is not a subject for ridl- (alled and w | n ters extended because of
cnle. The picture is not laughter-pro- die destruction ot forests,|and that,
yoking. The greyhaired sires who sit with i n the recollection of Caseins M.
b/ the firesides must have their say clay. Prof. Sargent, of Harvard, lays
and be heard in silence the world over; I ti, a t the spring in Massachusetts is
snd we do not think of heaping upon I j a t er| the summers drier and autumns
them scorn because their words wan- Iongcr t han when the forests were
tier and their counsels bear no wisdom, standing; that peaches, once a profit-
Is Tennyson less than one of these ? a bi e crop, have to be brought from New
Oar Tennyson liee upon tho study j erioy . Mr. Rotho says that the upper
PEOPLE AND COSSIB
date, these < onuined 18,519,172 acres. Since
that time tb ere has been mode from these old
counties thirty-three new counties. As per I —Lord Tennyson receives on an aver-
the comptroller general's report for the yesr »g« *7,5(0 a year on royalties,
ending 30th ol September ism, there were —Dr. Mary Walker is one of tha
within these ilxty-one counties W.SW,270 acres feeding attractions at a dime museum in
ot Unproved land. This amount substracted Chicago.
from tho total amount within tho foe bolt -Beethoven’s favorite violin la now
will leave 3,109,acres ol wUd land. in the possessloh ol an English^gentleman
Having no dots U> estimate the number el named Ktrmoe d.
wild fend returned (u auch) for taxation, -The length of Secretary Lamar’s
which have been depleted of Its timber along dally pedestrian tonra la said to appall the
tha 1,000 mllei ol railroads that pass other members o! the cabinet,
through this pine belt, or the quantity bor-1 —Phoche Vanderbilt, a slater of the
derlng upon the river* and other places j late Commodore and aunt of WUuant H
where the timber upon the lend It of the is dead in Now York at the age of 75. '*
hardwood growth, it would not be far wrong —Arthur thus describes liis own ill-
to estimate It fully one-half ot the 1,109,«70 ne»: ‘Tam suffering from a touch ot
acres, whloh would leave 1,554,938 acres. It malaria, but shall be all right in a day or
will be aeon that there li but llttteoverone| tw0-
end e belt million of scree of pine timber fend —The most picturesquely named
within the pine belt that la not now in proceai I piece in North Carolina, or perhaps in
of being denuded of Its timber. Admitting *”? State, is “Malden's Bojom,” Swain
tbit it will require an average of 100,(00 acres couat y-
each year to aupply the demand abroad for —When William II. Vanderbilt was
the timber, lumber snd naval store*, tbit In a J°“ n ? man he both chewed tobacco and
Among tho Interior towns, Macon la Slleenyearstheiupplywillbeoomeextiauited. 5?}?, a ° l u,etl tlie weed In hit
In view of the fact that It takes 50 to 100 year. ,0, “ ,n ‘ Wrty , J
for a forest pine tree to obtain a else suitable L„T^ 0 °)£ f be8a days the mighty
for lumber purpose., it le well that the alarm | P “ii 1 . 0 n W . 1 “, r l ,a T l?.*
has been sounded," woodman,spare that tree. 1
Macon.
credited with 21 boles for the week and
with 48,228 for the season. Last year the
receipts for the week were 60, and for the
season 50,875 bales. These figure! show
decrease for the week, ea compared with
that period, of 29 bales, and a falling ofi
for the season of 11,650 bale*.
The total recelpta from the plantations
•incc September 1, 1884, were 4,733,708
bales; In 1883-84 were 4.731.901 bales; in
1882 83 were 6,785,230 bales.
Although the total recelpta at the oat-
porta the past week were 19,122 bales, the
actual movement from plantations was
8282 bales, the balance being taken from
stocks at the interior towns. Last year th-
recelpts from the plantations for the eame
week were 12,757 bales, and for 1883 they
were 40,005 bales.
The receipt* since September 1 np to to
night nra 42,756 bales less than they
were at the eame day of the month In 1881
and 938,128 bales less than they were to
the same day of the month In 1883.
The exports of cotton from the United
States the past week, aa per latest mall re
turns, have reached 30,871 bales.
The Chronicle has the following to aa;
of the market flnctaationa for the week
under review:
The epecnlstlon In cotton for future delivery
at tbit market hat been comparatively quiet
for the week under review, and prices show
some decline from the figures of last Friday,
The reports by cable, regarding the relations
between Russia and Orest Britain have been
very warlike. The demand of Mr, Gladstone
for a larger credit than had been anticipated
was regarded as leaving but slight hopes for
the preservation of peace. A moderate telling
movement In cotton was therefore sufficient
to cans* prices to (leeway sharply on Monday
and Wednesday. Another element ot weak
ness has been the better weather for the new
crop. But on Ihnrsday the Impression that
the war will glvs an Impulse to trade and In
crease the demand for goods In countries
where they have been dull, sad the small
stocks of the raw material caused some de
mand to cover contracts, and la a measure re
stored tbs confidence of holders, bat did not
give any activity to tho dealings or buoyancy
to values. To day dull and unsatisfactory ac
counts from Liverpool censed a fresh decline
and the clot* wu at abont tb* lowest figures
of tb* week. Cotton on the spot hu been
dull, but toward the clou some bust
ness wu reported for export. Quotations
wore reduced Vfi. on Wednesday. To-day the
market la dull et 10Ko. for middling uplands.
Pine Forests of Ceorgla.
A writer in the Savannah Times,
elsewhere quoted, estimates upon given
authority the acreage ot long leaf or
pitch pine In Georgia at 1,554,938, and
aays that at the present rate of con
sumption the forests will lie exhausted
in abont fifteen yean. We hope eoon
to be able to present a statement of the
shipments made from Georgia during
the last year, in order that the data
bearing upon this subject may be
strongly presented.
Years ago the Tsliosafii called at
tention to the waste of Georgia pine,
soon to lserome a scarce article in the
market, and has from time to time re
peated it. Ere long the timber upon
the pine lands of Southern Georgia will
bring ten times the valne of the land,
Those who have control of the pine
forests should consider theae facts;
SPRINO.
raita roan raox roncxx academy.
Gone from the lap of Spring la Winter;
Thermometers score ninety In the ibade;
The gay seductive soda fount begin* to
Flax, and radiant la plnkl-monade.
The straw hat In tho sunlight dances,
sudden and swift end to the man who alts
cross-legged in the street care.
—Oliver Wendell Holmes recently
wrote to a friend that thirty yean
ago he considered himself “a very old
men”—older then be does to-day.
—Paul H. Hayno, the Sonthern poet,
I la filly five years old. U* linearly six feet
1 tall, slender, with dark, dreamy eyes, deli
| cate features and alow, musical laugh.
—M. B. Curtig, of "Sam’lo’ Posen
Fat light ’ood here" no more the small fame, who played with Lotte eeventeen
moke cries, yurt ego, says she “looks j ust as young u
But “reddlthu'' and "tnranpgreens" u he I.hut he'll bet a hel’f a dollar aha
advances. * 1 *'" *
Next week he'll come wl h stuff for pies.
The merry J Ingle ofthelcecream barrow,
The wild, weird enmmone of the lc* men'e
horn,
The frtntle battlu of the Zngtlih sparrow—
All wun us that another eeuon 'a bom,
And.«-H, ha! along tho fen. futs'klm-^, rC^sMy.^Mhu 0 !
mug, and only rational way of entertaining,
Suspendera loose, barefooted, hat In hand, Balls ha despite*. He is deyoted to the
The schoolboy speeds. He'll go In swimming I opera.
And dry hlmulf on towels made of tend. —Garfielil’e estate netted »30,000.
And yonder neeth the willows a bamboo up Hla life waa insured for 350 000. The rich
Ung people subscribed 5312,000: Mrs. Garfield
Is held by gray-hatred nig, “the nation'! has therefore nearly a naif million well in
ward," Tested, besides a pension of 15.000 per an-
And spreading circlet show the modcat's “ the wldow °* aD ex-Preaident.
grappling I —Miss Constance Edgar, of B<i-
Wlth book that jerkshlm heavenward. ™ or *: * 1,b *he TeU of the O--
Fair lathe face of old Dam* Nature emlUng- *
Bat then, ud heart, esna't thou forget thy I Jer0 T n b e ^llonapute aKreU^rlnddrogh.
.. c * r * — ... ter of Daniel Webster and was born and
there in thfe iweet eeen* anght thee be educated In Parle.
-SH - «•*
wh6rc ’ I Jackson, is talked of among the earlv
events of spring. She will wed a Mr. Chrii
tlan, of Richmond. Thl* marriage will
r 1 attract more attention than any other
will be aent to any one who will fiend a eyent of the year In the minde ol follower*
club of ten new subocribera to the Jjjj^ admirers of the great Confederate
WxikLY Telegraph. See advertise- | “
—A romantic scribe thus describes
Conca^HiHo one of Cleveland’s appoint
ment* that hu been unsatisfactory to the
Magenmpt, the Boston Globe lays: “The
trouble with Eben F. PUlebnry la thfe
He has always been a Democrat and hu
always proodlyacknowledged allegiance
the Democratic parly, and in doing eohaa
fongbt tha Republican party early and
late. That U the ground of the opposition
_ t to him on the part of our uteemed and
table*, the rottage .helves mid withte iMtafeilp^"^ iuTribotarie* TZ JZ.1
the pslscs -luiAim me world over, j lost half their depth of water, and tho
Grown old in labor tho other ilta by I climate haa been affected. Arizona,
hit fireside in England. His compan-Evidently once inhabited by an igii-
iona are rained energies; Ids warrior*, ca Hnral people, is a desert.
ain’t.'
—Capt. James A. Walton, one of tho
best known sea captains in tnls country,
died a few daya since In New York city.
One ot hie daughters is the widow of Com.
DeLong, of the Ill-fated Jeannette.
—Henry Clews hu a collection of
the new prayer book.
:me of the Chargee Made DrtheEn ,
copal Ccnventlon.
The revised Book of Prayer of the P, 0 ,.
Client Eplecopa! church has just been i,
•ned. The edition contains a akekh oi :h,
work of the “joint committee of twentv
?r.o ted byth8 ~~t.onfe
1SS0 to consider and report whether the
changed conditions of national life do not
demand certain alteratlone In the Book ol
Common Pra-, er In tho direction of fitor*
cel enrichment and Increased ll-xibllitv^i
u-e Tbo remits of the laboraof ffSSj!
raltieo were presented to the conventi™
held In Pniladelphie, October ImV'tk 3
reault lathe present volume ' lht
B. 1 * mad* optional with the eelebr*m
whether the entire morning service sh?n
be repeated in the evening end wheti,^
communion ehall be celebrated aioftmu
prelent. A new feast— the Tran, fi-nrs
Won of Chrirt-lt isi to be added to the cm
endar. to bo celebrated August a
movable feuta the ancient ecclesiastical
““P“ l » Uo ? making the full moon Thi
14th of the luoar monih le to be ursd o,
stead of the real full moo“. d2Eta
place of the present alternative “declars
ttonofabmlution” the following formttfo
Jesua Christ our Lord. Amen. ' thron,l ‘ -
Instead of "He descended into Hel 1 " in
the Aportlee Creed, cbnrcbes n hv uh- 1 he
JHfe V.Hjwrattolo the placeolLparted
*'and the word again M is insprtffi
alter the words “He !©•*'• Th« fEJS 1
tadee are introduced as a impESnSSl-
fen e«*vlc e . nl , n OT y '^- In ll ,e eomrnun.
n h doI ° ogy Is omitted from
the Lord s Prayer \ slteht clmn ee is
made in the lorrn of the baptismal wrira
' indl "* h " t tor the solemnlz mon of matrl®
to”n Holy 8Sptare!" P * U1
omtileJ? r * ,er < r imprl,ontd defers is
For the Litany prayer fertile President
the following la given:
1 to endue him with wUdom.'true rtehi'se*!;
is anil hrtllna.a Ilf,. nip.,. ..
That it msy
Thv s
and U „ _
meu and hollnees
r..r *hc L'cniTril prayer fir the P rm’.U nX
s5tuted in anthori1 ^ lhe lol ‘ owill « ia »ub-
Almighty Ood . whose kiiiKdom is evotfa**-
in 5 f nt ? P® wer inflmto, turn* in« rc j urw
whole Uad, and so ruu- n..- u> »r - ,,i i T«,.
Vann* the President of the United siatei the
Governor ol thl* State and ell others hi
thortty, that they, knowing who-u minS'.cri
they ere, may above all thing* seek 1 Mae
honor and ilory. and that we rim all the ho-
pie, duly consltkriiie wh s.* Ruthorlty tiur
f.cRr, iiiRj fiithfully and obediently honor
them, In Theo and (or Tla-e, accords to Thy
bleeeed Wor l I\n<l or'liiirin. .-; u.roack Jmu
ChrUt, oar Lord, who with Thee end the Ho’.r
<*host llveth mid icSgiieth, ever one Goi
world without end. Amtn,
♦ I the first kiss of a newly-wedded couple:
„ ' Up the perfume-swept avenue of love and
OF interest. I nnder the roseate archway of hymen they
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
There wav a young fellow named Vlstalle,
Who tried to dfeacct a toy platalle;
. _ hyme
passed into the joy-lit realm, of that high*')
and holier existence where soul meets soul
on limpid waves ot ecatatlo feeling, and
hearts touch hearts through the blended
channel ot Ups in raptnre linked."
THE CREOLES.
Turns have been nine wars in Eu
rope within the lest thirty yeara.
In the German village of Danker I Ironical Thanks Returned for Unlnten
there died quite recently tb« organist and tlonnl Compliment* to the Race,
teacher, Dahlnoff, the last ot a lung line of vew Orleans Snectai
predecessors to the office, whichfdnrlng _ , f ' ew Orieans speclal.
216 yeara, had uninterruptedly gone from The lecture entitled the “Creolsa of
father to eon In the lime family, Romance and the Creoles of History,” de-
Many citizens of Philadelphia who llvered last evening at Tulana University,
Schuyfetilrirarrem.Xsfflrap! by “"L” ,h# h,,t ° ri * n
pfe hluled from sprfrgvnearVhe Unee of ,nd i a ri>t,h.vfeg aroused ra much die-
railway some distance from the city. The canton and become the subject ol ra mnch
leading restaurants also use spring water. 1 comment, and owing alio to tbs intrinsic
A little old woman waa picked np merit of the theme, It le believed a brief
I »ynopel* will be ol Interest.
_____ Judge Gayerre. after explaining the or-
Dwight, who helped* Horace Greeiev get I Igln of the word Creole—from the Spanish
out the first copy of the Tribune. Bh* ii word “criar,” to create—and stating that
destitute and wlthont friends. ltricUy u meant a of pgre wbIte
•a?- 'he,Mount Shasta region, about b'ood, went Into the history of theeaUb-
to r 'a". S?”Icecave/oomalning'huge «“>“«“°>">• Creole rra.In Lou.s.raaby
vclumeeof Ice, chsmberi of Im and lee I IberTlCe and Bienville. He quoted ble-
henging from the oeillng like blades of nol* tory extensively to show that toe early
ISm.o'jrii 1 to.”. 1 . 0 !?.! nn o' ">« P*»ricl.n and prole-
•apply ol loe from tkafe cave. * terlan rlais and the wive* of the eoldlers
Bsooxlyn Is to have female clerka In hM f* n f«>»r*Uy »«»ted and
Its municipal offices, a decided Innovation b* l . l,T * d ' hooe# of oorrecllort women, bnl
on fbt practice to moat citlea. in reoom-1 Indnatrloos anti virtuous girls of the same
mending It, Corporation Counsel Taylor r»?k asi their fuluie hutbands.
asya“lbat no great hardehip can arise I In 1731 It becente neeeseary to define toe
from placing on the salary list a few of lhe rtatiuof toe white and black race*, and
class of femalee from whose monsy, col- Gov. Blenville promulgsted tbe black code,
lected through the tax office, we nre con- laminar, to Mr. Cable * reiderein tbeetory
atently paying the salaries ol metes." °{ ' B . r »» Coupe, which remained to foroe
D,-„tv,i * reeant Imll^n .a^n.lnn alter Louisiana be sms of the sisterhood
vice.bureau at Philadelphia, a gentleman | any relations between them, except of
halting purposes. He may yet hear
the bugle’s "wild echoes flying," and
see the rush of the horsemen with
"cannon to right of them, cannon to
left of them,” but never again may he
reply. Let him depart in peace wheat
the time comes, honored as one of the
sweetest singers the world has ever
A Pardon for Jefferoon Davis.
Recently a Mississippi editor filed
with the President a petition nnmer-
onaly signed asking that a pardon be
extended to Jefleraon Davis, late Presi
dent ot the Southern Confederacy, and
that he be restored to citizenship. This
action has again drawn the fire of the
partisan press upon Mr. Da via, and a
deluge ol invective haa been rolled over
hla defenseless head, albeit the peti
tion was made wlthont hla knowledge
and consent.
There ia no earthly reason why
Jefferoon Davis should not be restored
to the enjoyment of all the privileges
possessed by those who went with him
through the civil war aa Confederates,
Davis was not the cause of nor the
original leader in the secession move
ment. He became chief by a mere
election, and waa bnt a icceuionlst
elevated to office, no better, no worse,
and holding view* not different from
those beneath him. He fought the
war through aa a brave man
should, and accepted the result Where
in does he differ from the Confederate
generals who volunteered and fought
the Union armies for four yean? In
nothing, except that since 18C5 be haa
vataaMt addition, though a somewhat made no effort to enter politics, direct
erode one, to tlie history of tb* oolond 1 public opinion nor interfere in the legie-
1 latino ot the hoar.
Of the countries that have been
largely benefited by a forestry depart
ment, Germany, Hanover, Saxony,
Austria, Switzerland, France, Italy and
Denmark are most prominent.
Some idea may be gained ot the
amount of timber that la being taken
from our soil, by consulting the census
of 1880. During the year ending May
31, 1880, the number of persona who
used wood tot fuel waa 32,375,074. To
tal number of cords uaed for all pur
poses, 210,787,100, the value of which
waa $327,000,000. To this moat be
added the wood used in lumber, tlie
valne of which waa $233,367,729.
In a prevloua issue we allowed that
the pine in Georgia would he exhausted
in fifteen yean, llow long will it take
to exhaust tho timber of the whole
country at the rate indicated ? In a
recent article on the condition of our
forests and their effect upon the floods
of 1883 and 1884, Dr. Hough saya
"let at no* eee bow these forest rap-
y’.Ics stand, and bow the future promises,
with regard totkefr continuance In to* I'elted
Stales. We have as out only date to* census
of different periods; end tbs returns of 1*10
show tha', of oar HUtee fnd Territories, nlno
hod reduced their woodlands to below to per
cent; fire, to between loto 39 per cent: eight,
to from to 1031 par coat: eleven, to from 30 to
40 par coat; end four, to from 40 to 50 per
cenl when tbit census wee taken. Ie tea
Stales of the South end South weeL the pro
portion wee to per cent or more, tnd tn tbo
whole rolled Rule* to* woodland* occupied
35 pet eoet ol tM wbolo reported an*.
eta him ei the devil bates holy water.
Tim* end again he haa pnbllabcd their
raicalittes in tot Blete of Maine.” If tola
be true, it matters little how much the
Mugwumps may kick.
Thi Carol RtuaJa saya he will pawn
his crown Jewels baton be will submit to
England's dictation. W* admire toe fel
low’s plnek; bat if toe Czar baa any auch
buaineu mature to arrange ht should har
ry np, or be wU find tbs rood to to* prin
cipal pawn ebdb* blockaded.
OH! MY BACK
The TxLioiarH recently commented
upon toe alleged dlegaet of an unnamed
Southern member of the Democratic na
tional committee in Washington upon
finding himself tnd friends Ignored by toe
President, to which tire Newt and Courier
responds: "Our Macon contemporary aays
that thfe Incident 'raises * suspicion as to
Capt. Dawaon and Col. Walsh. Both of
thee* gentlemen are members ot the no
tional committee. Both were In Waahiog-
ton at the Inauguration and subsequently,
end neither hat been quite eo exuberant
about Cleveland and tb* administration
line*.’ The suspicion la entirely withoat
fonndatloaln Capt. Dawson's cue, and,
for obvious re axons, toe Sun cannot allade
to Col. Walsh, who would be toe lait per
son in Georgia to propcs* to bis frteoda to
solace themielvea In the way described.
Doubtless there vrae some member of the
national committee who was disappointed
la the way Indicated; hot be wu not from
Georgia or 8ouU> Carolina, and we hardly
think that itwai the member from Florida
or Alabama. Mott probably the hero of
the (tory woe e Western Democrat. When
It la difficult to fix to* local habitation o(
to* hero of a fsoclfnl itery It la usually
cocaidared aafe to go West”
The Forests of Ceorgla.
Savannah Tlmee.
Editob Daily Tints: A- line drawn upon
to*-nap of lb* But* comaenrtng a! Augusta
oath*seat, thence to MllledgevUle. Macon,
and to Colamhni on the week would describe
the northern boundary ol whet vru keowa ea
the pin* belt, which eateeded to the Florida
tin* on the south. This tree embraced e Uttte
over one-hell of the Riate. The limbec chiefly
•ie the loan leef yellow or pitch pie*. Bor
dering upoo the rivers, large stream of water,
sod In some places wtthle this belt the fends
were coveted withe growth of oak, hickory
one oi s large loresi nre, ragiDg m me jer- trar} . punishment the court*
SSSiSSSSSS 8onWJ h . , ht»th b . 0r .S > y , .r. 0, p&?;
Th.VVZ'.II'feln u‘od2r ^toSlmmShSi m,rr “ d P *" 0n ' °‘ <U, ‘
8,br *®' of loiftl, s desre* wu promulgated that
to* signal oorpo, Washington. j gnT Frenchman ao Infamous A* tn
The Fitegisuia ere the lowest human | a black alar* for tb* pprpoe* of Inducing
being In the scale of existence. Their him or her to lead a scandalous life, than
language ooutelne do word for *Dy number I be whipped by the public executioner, and
ehof* three; they ere unable todistinguiah without mercy be sentenced to the gilieyi
on* color fro.u another; they here no re- for life. Thau thloga, uld Mr. Oeytrr*.
tigfeo and no (antral rites, and they pot-1 do not look like encouraging or aliening
«e«e neither chlefa nor slave*. Their only to* commingling ol to* blood of toe two
weapons ore bone pointed ■ pear■ end aa I races.
they grow neither frail* nor vegetable* and The lecturer paid e high compliment to
tbelr country Is naturally barren, they er* j the ureole* of the early days ot Louisiana,
obliged to live entirely on animal food, and cited tb* feet that moet of tha gover-
eociat virtue*. Ihey are not eanutbale;
they ill-treat neither women north* old,
tod they are monogamous.
A ogXTLEMAX, ecientilic.illy inclined,
restntlr captured a fptder, and by careful
estimate, mode by meant of actually
weighing It and then confining it In a cage,
he found that It ate lour limes its weight
for breakfast, nearly nine times Its weight
for dinner, thirteen timet III weight for
rapper, flnmhlng np with an onne*. sod at
8 p. m., when be was releued, ran off in
search ol food. At thl* rate, a man weigh
ing 109 pounds would require the whole of
a lit s'eer for breakfatt, the dou repeated
with the addition of a half dozen well-
failed sheep for dinner, and two bullocks,
eight sheep sod foarhcgi for rapper, end
then. *• a lav ch before going to nle club
buqnet, be would Indulge to about fonr
barrels of fresh fiah.
Jddoi Rogers, of Chicago, hu de
cided a rather novel suit against the Writ-
era Union Telegraph Company to recover
damaeee for (ending a menage erroneous
ly. W. C. Wright, a Texas gentleman,
who brought tot salt, wu not, as it
usually toe case, the tender ol toe
message, hot the receiver, and
the Taw in many of tb* States la hanlly yet
settled In favor ol to* right of the receiver
of e outrage to recover damage* for error
to lb* Irenemlaaton. For e long time the
court* held that there] way no privity o<
contract between toe company and tha re
ceiver of e message, bat Use manifest in
equity of thl* ruling led to the more recent
line ol decisions that where to* meetag*
was sent for to* benefit of to* receiver of
it he bed a right of action against the ooos-
P»ny for mistakes made in the transmit-
»feo. Wright shipped cattle to Chicago at
a fora on wrong quotations sent him by
telegraph, end to* jury awarded him Um
amount lost.
Catarrh Cured.
A efergy»*n, altera
K?t.
ok! ffporto# tht coaptroller general it thit
toefy* the receipt tn* of charge.
from Hpaln married .idles born In the col
ony, a populatl m whose best men, accord
ing to t high literary authority, were
hollies, knaves ud foil*, end woo** brat
women were not raperlor in uy respect
to the colored bastard Issue of liber
tinism. The natlrae of Louisiana, who for
more than 100 j earl showed inch hostility
to any assimilation to people of African
descent, cannot be supposed by Intelligent
•leto have uy taint of the despised
.1 tnemseivee. Liussst, In IMS, In n
dispatch to France, describes theCr.olei
»1 ‘worthy descendants o! the French,doc
ile, gentle ud hot touchy, proud am'
braves"
The speaker passed to a eulogy of th<
Creole women since Louisiana had been a
State, referring to their beauty, grace and
intelligence and the alliance they had
formed with distinguished European* and
Americans—men who would not ally
themselves with thoee of mlxe 1 blood or
with minds clonded by raperetltfen. Tae
fash fee able places of the North ud West
have been crowded for eighty yeara by
Creole ladles, who never left the impres
sion that they were Inferior to others of
their sex, or red any taint of their b ood.
Creole men b*ve been distinguished both
in this country and In Europe as states
men, authors, scientists and artiste. Abb*
Viela Audubra, Anbert Dnbavet, Bronter
Ue Clout, Daunoy, Millamil, Defpii, Pan;
Morphy ind Gottscba’k were tome of (be
production* of lols proud race, the enev %•
tors of some of whom fought as cruiadrrs
on the fields of Palestine.
Lgsulelin* has always been toe moat
democratic State In the U mon. TheCieol*
has always locked self assertion, not to
•ay brass. In the days o! his greatest pros-
perity, there was never displayed on hit
carriage a coal-of-ar.-ns, notwith
standing hi* nndispnted • right
to advertise bit noble lineage.
The poorest peddler never was rsfuaed a
«e*t at the table of the wealthiest planter.
In nocoostty was there leseof tire puffed
arrogance of wealth and the foolish prhla
of birth, and this is the jpopuletion which
on* bora In its boom, ami claiming, by
T.rto* of that accident, the right toa.-sk
into* naneof Lottiafer.a and the whole
Booth, represents as tittle better than „ , * a
Gulliver’* Yahoo*. 1 ..i
HI DIDN'T TAKE THE HINT.
Boston Transcript.
“Ah, cood morning, Mr. Wzzimnnn!”
exclaimed the affable bore, sitting down
by Bizdminn's elbow and elevating h s feet
to tbe top of lilzzhnann'a table; 'glad to see
yon; fint day.”
“Ye*,” replied Rizzlmann, sadly, “a fine
day to be oat, sir."
“Ja»t po,” replied tlie alible bore, the
hint falling from his thick hid** like a
cbild’a arrow from h crocodile’s *kln;
just BO, should think you'd die aiding
here all day; bat then you have lots of
friends dropping in now and then, no
doubt.”
'No, no; my friends ere all basy attend
ing to their own Mlitir*.”
“Are they ? Well, tnat’R too badP*
‘‘Yea; but then I wou'dn’t ask anybody
The Force of Habit.
Now York Sun.
A clerk In a shoe store berime ired of
tbe buaineu, and obtained n situation in a
hardwire store. His fir«»t customer, a
farmer's wile, came in and called for mule
tbOM.
Yes, madam,” he said; "what size do
you wear?”
vlfeii now trying to g*t back Intj the
shoe line.
Vary Ramnrkablo Recovery.
Mr. Oeo. V. Willing, of Manchester,
Mich., writes: “My w lfe hn* b en almost
helpless for five ye*rs, so helpless that she
could not turn over in b**« n!o e. She used
two bottles of Electrlo Hitters, and ii so
mu'll i jij.rove * thnt ahe 11 now a v >!»* t" do
her ow.i home,work.”
Electric Hitter* will do all that fa claimed
for them. Hundreds of tcatimoniVi attest
tlieir gren i urativ** p<.war«. <> ly fifty
cents a bottle at Lamar, itankln dc La-
mar’s.
Notice of Intention to Apply
for Charter.
The nnder«lirne<1.together with their variotia
i«‘»cIau-«, having on the l .*Ui day of Mari b.
. I)., 1885, formed an a...* lailon In due form
! law, uudar the uamo of 1 tit- Mi»t ..uan<i
ublin Railroad Company, for the purp* *t; of
■ i.-strut :ln„’ maintaining «nd (.pi rating a
diroad from the city of Macon to tlie town of
■iMln, oaMlng through thecountlea of Bibb,
wigK’.Wllktnaoaand Ijiurena. Hutc ofriejr
• K c it hereby siren tha
of thirty daya from the
i e they will apply for
pany. a* by statute pro
a'otif.
:,n
SI Il'iKbea,
M Mubba,
lushes.
S. S. P4RMELEE
< arrlea the largest and n^oned ;*tock
Of
Carriages, Busies, Wagons Stddles,
c
Hn.lVv Whip*. HyW H .r-c Blanket*.
". -v i'A KMI.LKK
W'