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TITK TELEGRAPH AND MESSENGER: FRIDAY. JULY 24.1885,
The Rival*.
Ulne!
The slender form and the tender face,
The blUsful llpa and the wistful eyes,
The heart's quick beat In the Iona embrace;
Oh! perfect and passionate flit Of grace,
No rival may seek my prise.
Ebe Is mine alone to be clasped and kissed,
To be held and loosed, to be loved for are;
Though the Kina of Terror* my right resist,
I will hold him forever at bay.
Thon hast the fair, sweet form to hold, to
To fold within thy harsh emb**c *, and this
For thee forever-tievermore for me—
Thine, thlue, O Death! through all eternity!
Thine? Mine! , , 14W
Yes, mine not thine, if she loved not thee;
If love be lacking thou canst not own;
Thou hast the flesh, but the soul is free,
And that loved me. and P»r me alone
Did it light the eyes, did it flush the face.
Flood the llpa witn kisses at love’s decree.
Did it thrill the form in ray close embrace,
But never, O Death! for thee.
Then abe la not thine, and I claim her still
By the royal right of her own sweet whl.
By the memories clinging about me here.
By the hope and the Heaven that men hold
dear,
By the promise that, after the toil and the
IahaSse r
—Homer Greene, in the Critic.
MARCH OF THE tA HITE MAN.
Ha la Fast Becoming tho Master of thla
Clobs.
London Spectator.
Among the little noticed bnt most
imporUnt facts in the history of the
world is the enormous recent increase
ility from the Aryan to inflict it on the
Turanian, seema to be stronger than
he.
Thia world ii the heritage of the
white man—that U the first lesson ol
Mr. Giffen’i figures; but there is an*
other also which Englishmen will do
well to think over patiently and, if they
can, without hatred in their hearts.
in the number of white men in it. It They have no right to anger with the
o: Was It I, or Was It You?
Oh 1 ni It I, or wss It jou
That broke the ,ubtle chain that ran
Between us two, between ue two,
Oh! was It I, or was It you?
Not very ttrons the chain at heat,
Not quite complete from span to span;
I never thou,lit 'twoula stand tha wit
Of Kitted commonplace, at beak
The little, petty, worldly race!
Why couldn't we hate atood the test—
The ltule tan ol commonplace—
And kept the glory and the frees
Of that tweet time when lint we met?
Oh! w.e It I, or was It you
That dropped the golden llnka and 1st
The Utile rift, end doubt, and fret
Creep fn and break that enbtle chain?
Oh! wai it I, or we. It you?
Still ever yet and yet again
Old parted friend, will oak with pain.
—Nora Parry.
M (til rote Highland,, Mas,.
The Wneel Goes Round.
Here from the brow of the hill 1 look
Through lattice of bought and leave.
On the old kray mill, with Its gambrel roof,
And the inois on ha rotting eaves.
J hear the clatter that Jam Ue watls,
And the rushlngwiten' sound;
And 1 ,ee the black floats rise end fall
As Iho wheel goes slowly round.
I rode there oltcn when I was young,
With my grit on the hone be-ore,
And ulkcd with b.llle, the miller's girl.
As 1 welted my turn at the door.
And while she tossed her ringlets brown
And flirted and chatted eo free.
The wheel might stop or the wheel might
go—
It wss all tho same to me.
Tts twenty years since but I stood
On the .pot whero 1 stand to-day,
And Nellie is wed, and tha miller Is dead,
And the mill and 1 are ,ray.
Bnt both, till we fall Into ruin and wreck.
To our fortune ol toll are bound;
And the man goes and the stnam flows,
And tho wheel moves slowly round.
—Tbomai Dunn English.
A Raley Dor.
On it day like this, wheu thestroetsare wet
When tho skies ore gray and the rain Is fall
tog:
How t ail yon binder an old regret
Bor a Joy long dead, and a hope long set
From rising out of Its grove and calling?
Calling to you with a voice so shrill.
That li testes the reason and stun- the will.
On a day like this, when the inn Is hid,
And jou aud your heart are boosed to
gether;
if memories como to you allunbid.
And something suddenly wets your lid,
Llko a gust of tho outdoor weather,
wi>v. - ' - in fault bnt the dim old day,
Too antk for labor, too dull for ploy.
On a day like this, that lsblurred and gray.
When the rain Grips down lh a
fashion;
If adresm that you banished and pnt sway
Conte, back to stare In ronr face and say
Flute eloquent words ol passion—
11 tbe whom vast ttulveraa seems amiss—
Why, who can help lt-s day Ilka this?
-Ilia Wheeler Wilcox.
Mable's Hair.
■ You will And anntbrown hair.
What fond mem'rlea It awakens
Of tha days ere «• were wed.
When upon mr fine coat collar
■ in the happy days ions by:
Now 1 strike them every meal
Hlu the butler or the pie.
time
We Mnr Nevar tee Ir.
Cincinnati Enqnlrer.
John Bosch in the act of returning
money to the United States govern
ment would bo a spectacle to move the
Waters.
Hondls's Prospects.
Washington Pott
li Judge Ilosdly should lie renomi
nated (or Governor ol Ohio this (all
lie would probably, almost certainly,
bo defeated.
is barely two centuries (1683) since those
races, though even then the most ener
getic of mankind, formed bnt a small
fraction in the total humanity—proba
bly 10 per cent. o( the whole—and
were by no means certain that they
could defend themselves against the
remainder. Tbe atream of Asiatic con
quest had not stopped, for the Turks
were at the gates of Vienna; an Afri-
cfa fleet was dominant in the Mediter
ranean; Asia knew nothing of the
whites except in one or two tolerated
eettlementa on the coast friege of
India; AXrica belonged ex
clusively to Africans; ami though
the whites bad mastered South Ameri
ca, where, read in the light of subse
quent history, their conquests were in
credibly rapid, most part of North
Armerica still felt Indian wars to be
terrible and even formidable events.
Even a hundred years later the white
people, though under the operation of
the still unexplained law which at one
time fosters and at another time re
stricts tbe growth of a people, were in
creasing slowly, and were still only i
hundred and fifty millions, or probably
a seventh of the population of the
globe. They had, indeed, annexed the
two Americas and Northern Asia, thus
quintupling the area of their estate up
on the planet,and probably multiplying
their fixed wealth by at least twenty
fold—a country being always the larg
est item item in the wealth of any race
or nation—but they had only begun lo
settle in the Western continent; they
had bnt commenced to conquer in
Southern Asia; they had visited, bnt
not occupied, Australia, and in East
ern Europe and Western Asia they
were oniy slaves to an Asiatic horde.
The century, however, ending in 1884
has been marked by an advance so
rapid and so unbroken as
to be scarcely creditble land pre
sent one of the most startling facts in
history. The white races in and ont of
Kurojw, under the influence of some
still mysteiious call npon their energies,
have multiplied nearly threefold,and are
to-day, as Mr. R. Gillen has shown in
bis recent address to tbe statistical so
ciety, 420,000,000. As there is no evi
dence of any corresponding increase
in the dark races, and as, indeed, such
increase lias been, outside India, nearly
impossible, the white men are now, by
the beat calculations, one-third of the
entire imputation of the world, instead
of being, aa they were only two cen
turies ago, a little more than 10 per
cent. They have, moreover, if any
thing, increased in physical strength,
and nave so develojted in brain and
consequent power of organization, that
it may be doubted it the whole remain
der of mankind, even if all were re
duced toeqnal weapons, conld seriously
injure the white third, which, again, it
it chose to act together and employ
without pity the weapons its intern-
;enco has enabled it lo construct,could
n a few years reduce the remainder of
the world to an oninhabited desert.
Except in the South Pacific, where by
one means or another, they kill out the
darker men, the white races show no
tendency of that kind—though,we take
it, in the dawn ot history they extermi
nated pretty freely, especially in India
—bnt they do show a strong disposi
tion to take possession of the whole
earth and govern it as they please. The
Chinese are the only great race remain
ing which can be said to be
truly independent and free from
the predominating influence, more
or less directly exercised, of the ener-
•et'c white men, who pour in increas-
ng streams over the remainder of the
earth’s surface. The Chinese keep a
few ships, and a few small vessels
manned by dark sailors, mostly pirates
or slavers, or pilgrim carriers, still
hang about the coasts of Southern Asia
or Eastern Africa, bnt the fighting na
vies ol the world, and its great trans
port ships, and its mercantile marine,
are all alike white. No dark race could
bombard a white harbor, or transport
an army acrosa a hundred miles of sea
in the face of a prohibition from white
men, who now exclusively occupy
Europe, except the corner on
which Constantinople stands; who
occupy ■ two-thirds of North
America, and dominate over
North and Sooth America down to
Unanswerable.
Rehobotb Bandar Herald.
Discussion between a wise child and
itB tutor; “That star you see np there
it bigger than the world.” “No, it
isn’t.” “Yes, it is.” “Then why
don’t it keep the rain off!”
How Hard a Hurricane Blow*.
Boiton Bulletin.
A Western man uys it iaeaiytodi*
tinguish between n tornado and a gale,
hut tho explanation is not so clear as
that of the British sailor who defined
the difference between a hurricane and
a typhoon. “In a hurricane;” said
Jack, “the wind blows as bard aa it
can, bnt in a typhoon it blows as hard
aa it can and then gives a jerk.”
f The Only Crar.ke.
Poe t-Dli pitch.
“Tlius will the Empire break,” said
a poor German the other day, as he
flnng a fragile flower pot at the Empe
ror's carriage. He was arrested as a
crazy man, but he may yet be quoted
as a'propbet. The read cranks of Ger
many are those who cling to the super
stition that emperors,kings and princes
only are capable of \
well.
ruling wisely and
A 8uiidcz.r ProDOias to Oo Into Court.
New Orleans Time.*Democrat. ■■
Mr. Meade lias denied the falsehood]
invented by the Cincinnati Commer-
dal-Gazette, that he was the man who
wM Matthews. He informs aa now
that lie intends to follow this np and
an# iprUbal Ute paper that made this
i, a , i.,u»ly false statement concerning
Mm. In such a suit be has the right
to sympathy ami assistance, as the at
tack made on him was an attack made
on all tl-e jieoplo of Mfaaiaaippi; and in
vindicating himself against this parti
san and malignant attack he U vindi
cating them. lie should not be allowed
to U-ar all the burdens of this expen
sive litigation.
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visible will of God. I! Mr. Giflen’s fig
ures are correct—and, subject to some
arrest of existing law, they most be as
correct as if they were merely unap
plied calculations—there is but one race
on earth with whom it behooves tbe
Teuton in ail his branches to keep
friends. Thia supremacy of the white
man will in the end—and,recollect, chil
dren may he born to-day who will see
tho end, and then be younger titan Sir
Moses Monteflore—bo the joint su-
iremacy of the Teuton and the Slav.
nl9c4,when the world contains 1,-
000,000,000 white faces, 000,000,000 of
these will be English and Germans,
and 300,000,000 will be Slav. There
will practically be noother white races,
the French not increasing, the Span
iards increasing slowly if, indeed, as
in Mexico, they do not rather suffer
absorption into a dark people; the
Scandinavian having stopped absolute
ly; and the .Irishman, true to his des
tiny, helping only to swell the
power of the race he professes to
detest. If the Teuton and the
81av can keep friends the world is
theirs, and if not there will be the
most terrible struggle recorded in his
tory since the white barbarians fought
the white Romans and their darker
allies. We are not sure that an ngree
ment is possible until a great fight has
taken place, for Slav and Teuton seem
unwilling to comprehend each other,
though there is not between them the
internecine hatred sometimes ob
served in history; bnt if their
statesmen conld arrange terms
on which the conflict could be perma
nently avoided a huge mass of misery
might be saved to our immediate de
scendants. To avoid tbe quarrel will be
difficult, for the Slav .is just now
strangled, and to reach the open wa
ter and so take his natural part in the
greater movement of mankind he must
pitch himself on somebody, be it on
Turkey, or England, or China; but tho
means of avoidance are worth the
atndy and patience of years. MankimL
is not very likely to be happy when nlPi
is done, for in all this movement is no
cure for sin, or pain, or poverty; anxie
ty increases os fast as intelligence, and
sympathy—which means suffering—
faster than strength: bnt one grand
condition of even moderate well
being is that Slav and Teuton should
learn how to live in peace. If not the
Teuton may some day—in less than a
century—find that every third white
man is a foe, and that the third white
man has tho power of ranging behind
him the da rker races of mankind. The
Teuton has the art of dommance.but the
Slav has gained a strong hold wherever
helhos ruled, and can do at least one
thing we cannot—he can conquer the
Turanian without rousing his un
quenchable hate. Now, the Tu
ranian is tbe only race not white which
should in 11)84 be strong.
Patagonia; who have taken possession
of Australia and New Zealand, and
most of the larger isles of tho South
Pacific; who claim, if they do not pos
sess, the whole of Northern Asia from
the Ural to tbe Yellow sea, and who
dominate the whole of India, Indo-
China and the Delta of tbe Nile. They
have lately taken to conquering Africa,
and are entering It at a hundred points
at once; seizing almost silently, cer
tainly without serious effort, huge
slices like French Afrit*, South Africa,
Madagascar, the vast valley of the
Niger, and the still more extensive re
gion drained by the system of rivers
called the Congo. Noria there much
reason to believe that the process will
loon be checked, for the white men
are urged forward by ah irresis
tible spur over which they
have no control. The increase of the
yellow race, which must once have been
so Incredibly fast, has stopped, and
tnat of the dark races of India, which
for a century has been amazing, is being
checked by recurrent famine*; bnt that
of the white peoples goes on so fast
that tlie transport of a huge army every
year across the Atlantic makes no im
pression on their numbers and at their
present rate of increase they will in 1984
be a thousand millions, or much more
than half of then existing mankind,
The Chinese have recently shown some
resisting power; the English have ap
parently—it may prove only appar
ently-halted, indecisive, in their
march up the valley of the Nile;
but the general movement sweeps
ever forward, and within the century
in seems more than probable that every
corner of the earth will be rated by
white men, and that tbe “audax Iaptti
peniM,” a* Horace perceived them to
be, will be the only independent race
within tbe planet, which their tireless
enterprise will then have rendered
S uite visible and very small. Not even
iternal war arresta tbe rash, still less
human volition. Because Germans
and Frenchmen fought, France is in
Tonqnin, Tania, and Madagascar; and
in spite of Mr. Gladstone Englishmen
are reaching the Zambesi, are
encamped in Egypt, have gain'
ed foil footing in Borneo, are
legally reigning on the Niger, and are
looking with greedy eyes on ail the re
maining lands of the Sooth Pacific. It
fa difficult to read such a record with
out feeling that the qnarreis of old
Europe, of which we make to much,
are not rather petty affairs, or without
doubting whether after all Prince Bin-
tnarck does very greatly affect tha for-
CENERSL JACKSON IN MEXICO.
Hla Speech at the Fourth of July Banquet
In the Capital Cits.
New York World.
City or Mexico, July 0.—When tbe
recently appointed American minister,
General Jackson, arrived last month a
commutes of Americans called to ask him
to appoint a day for a formal leception,
tendering him a henqnet. General Jack-
eon, with admirable delicacy, ni J: “As
the anniversary of oar oouatry's freedom
Is so near, It would be better to postpone
tbe banquet, or rather for us to meet on
that day." Ue wu Informed tbit the
colony desired Ibis reception to be so ee-
I'ciai welcome to him, but be adhered to
It original ides, end bis wishes were re-
Brat Harts and Hie Coneulsh'p.
Washington Correspondence of New York Sun
Bret Harte, as everybody knows, is
to lose bis consulate for inattention to
dnty. He has made a great struggle
to keep bis place, hot lie must go.
Here is a story that illustrates the way
he ran the office, which is both true
and good:
One day an American visiting Glas
gow tried to find the consulate, and,
after some trouble, succeeding in dis
covering a burly Scotchman who held
the office. Tbe visitor asked if Mr.
Ilarte was in.
Oh,” said the burly Scotchman,
31 r. Harte is never here. He lives in
London, and devotes himself to litera
ture.”
“Ah,” said the stranger, “then I
will leave my card,” and, saying this,
he gave the pasteboard to the attend
ant, who took it and read: “Alvey A.
Adee, assistant secretary of state,
Washington, U. S. A.”
“Confound it!” exclaimed tho em
barrassed Scotchman, "why didn’t you
tell me who you were? Then I’d tele
graphed Mr. Harte, and he’d been here
to-morrow morning.”
Tee Advantage ol Being a Blond*.
, Chlcafo Neva.
Every year we get the cry from tosh'
ion able writers “blondes are no longei
in style; they have been superseded by
their darker listen,,’ etc. Now that's
all bosh. You can’t do away with tbe
blonde, and you can’t do away with
frizzled-banged hair. Pre-eminently
the blonde Is the bfcauty of civilization.
She is among us to stay aa such, and
yon can’t drive her away. A brunette
now and then may rise supreme
over her by reason of wonder
ful loveliness, hot I’m speaking
collectively. A woman can dress
more effectively with blonde hair than
with dark. It lights op better and is
more youthful. A well kept blonde
has ten years’ advantage in point of
youthful looks with the average bru
nette. 31ind you, once in a lifetime or
ao there arises a miraculous brunette
who completely surpasses her, bnt for
steady going, ordinary good looka that
makes no pretentions of great beanty
the blonde carries the palm. Yon
can’t expunge her in favor of the bru
nette even in literature. In the novels
turned out during tbe past year there
have been 372 blondes to each 100 bru
nettes.
hit oriel
•prated.
Frisson o( official business preventei
Gen. Dies, tbe Frtsldeut, from accep tag
theinvitaiion seat Mm, but the secretary
ot State. Hon. Ignacio Uorlacai, sad tbree
other ctbioet ministers, were present, -ten
tbe entire diplomatic corps, at weil aa
many Mexicans ills lngnlabed to govern-
meni, literary and scientific circles.
Geo. Jackson, having earnestly thanked
tbe Aniencsn colonists for their cordial
welcome, tbe cabinet ministers for nonor.
tag him by their presence, sad tbe dlpio
matio corps for proving by tbelr atten
dance the respect they entertained for
tbe government ol tbe United States, said:
• Ills proper on this nuuiversary lust
Americans should turn towards their
country in patriotic brotherhood. No two
men are alias, nor can they think alike.
Therefore let universal charity be the
creed of man. Some of us are Republi
cans, Democrats, Federal and Confeder
ate, but ail say as did Webster, “Thank
God t tm sn American I" Are we nolkim
dred ? Where is the uifierence between ■la
ter States of tbe North American R.pnb
lie and States of the eisterbood of all
America? Our con,tuitions are alike.
No constellation is perfect without stars
of dtfierent msgnl’udes. Palsied be the
bond which wouid strike a ainale stsrfrom
the American galaxy! Tne Mexican edi.
tors now in the United States see that in
all that land notblng bnt tbs kindliest feel
ings exist towards Mexico. May these
sentiments only increase with time. May
the bond of brotherhood never be broken!
Long live Mexico! ’
The tisusl toasts were given, some of the
resporiKt being made by foreign diplomats,
others by American colonists. To tbe
second, “Tbe Republic of Mexico; May
the bonds cf Political and 8 jcial Sympa
thy which Unite the Two Republics Com
tlnne to Grow Stronger with Koch Return
ing Anniversary I" benor Msriscal. secre
tary of state, responded, bidding General
JacSson a warm wtlcome to Mexico.
The orator of the day was the retiring
American Consul-General. General Stroth
er, of Virginia, an ex officer of tbe Federal
army, and so well known by middle-aged
people at home as “Porte Crayon.’’ He
u sue sn elaborate addiess, concluding ns
follows;
“Now. after the day we celebrate and
its relations and retails, we tarn to tbe
pertontl representative of our country and
tne honored guest of this banquet. Ia
vonr names, my friends and coui.trymeu,
I bid him welcome. He comes to as pre
ceded by a reputation that gratified our
national pride—poet, orator, jurist *tates
man, soldier and dtplcmat. Yet in
his personal Intercourse wu are
made to forget tbeee distinguished
gilts and accomplisbments, to gracefully
are they veiled In the simple, genial nun
tiers ot tbe “grand o'd Southern gentle
man, all of the olden time,” In your name
1 bid him welcome personally and poli i-
eally, for his presence here Is an earnest
that tbe more perlect anion to which our
fatbere looked as the safeguard of oar free
institutions bet been firmly established not
only in law Fat in tbe hearts cf onr
people—tbit the noble sich of our
politfcAl structure stands solid y without t
crack or ■ loots joint; that tbe ability,
valor aud patriotism of onr sixty millions
of freemen—North, South, Esst and \Ve»i
—without fear or reseivatiou. sre all and
everywhere at tbe command of onr gov
ernment. That from tbe fct Lawrence to
tbe Rio Graode, from tbs Atlantia to tbe
Pacific Gcean, oar native land is free and
united ander tbe star spsrgled emblem ol
onr past glory, our present prosperity and
our future hope.”
iiticirra
infantile Skin Bcautificrs-Appeal to
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For cleansing the skin of b'lrtb hnniora, for
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for curios the first symptoms of erzeme, pso
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an exquisite sklu beautlfler, externally, and
Cutlcura Resolvent, the new blood purlflerOn*
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Mr.and Mr*. Everett Rtebblos, Belchortown,
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Cutlcura Remedies, which gradually cured
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Wm. Gordon, 87 Arlington avenue, Charles
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Cutlcura Remedies. From the
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Send for M How to Cure Skin Diseases.**
BABY
“THE SEWING MACHINE." tbotpl.gu.ot
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* tbouiand. of delicate females .ut
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kidney and liver palus. Sciatica,
che.t peine, weakness, loreucis,
tameness, stratus and pains no
remedy lu medicine Is so speedy, elegant and
efficient as tha Cutlcura floater. Eapecielly
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and gentle medical action. Atdruggtste,
route, live forll.00, malted free. Potter Li
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Not Intense., but Indigestion.
London Truth.
What a farce ia this “Crasatle against
Noise,” to which tome of my con*em-
orsriet have opened their columns,
'or my part, I have little sympathy
with these htli-baked men, these
“brain-workers,” aa they delight to
call themselves, whose brains won’t
work if a sparrow chirps on the roof or
an organ grinds in the next parish.
To my thinking it is possible to do a
very decent amount of brain work in
the midst of a good deal of noise. De
pend upon it' these “brain-workera”
eat too much and don’t walk it off.
A Wonderful Discovery.
Consumptive* and all. who sailer from
any effecuon of the Throat and Langs,
con find a certain cure in Dr. King's New
Diacovsry for Consumption. Thousands
of permanent eatss verily the troth of this
statement. No medicine can show such a
record of wonderful cons. Thousands of
once bopelete soOerera now gratefully pro
claim Utev owe tbelr live* to this New Dis
covery. It will eoet yon nothing to give it
e trial. Free triel bottles st Lamer, Ran
kin A Lunar's drag store. Large sre |1.
A Sunday-school Picnic.
“Well, Johnny,” said his mother,
“did yon hare a pleasant time at the
Sunday-school picnic?”
“Naw,” Johnny growled; “I didn’t
get nothin’ to eat, bnt a aan'wh ch an’
a couple of dry cookie* with red sand
sprinkled on top.”
‘•Why, what became of the beautiful
chocolate cake and chicken salad that
tones of tbe human race. The ultimate I gave yon to contribute?”
law-giver, who scatters the nations “Thse operintandent and the
and who baa taken off tbe ban of iter I era eat'em.”
teach-
1 he Wotklng of Prohibition In luwa.
Philadelphia Record.
Tbe Davenport (Iowa) Democrat bee
made inquirle* of the mouwipei officers o(
every town ot importance in tbe State to
determine bow aacctaifal the prohibitory
amendment baa been during lte first ye.r,
which ended July 3J. In four-flltae of the
towns the mayors answered tne questions,
and tn tbe rest the city clerks. Of the
twenty-eignt most prominent towns,
tu fourteen tbe ifflners confess
tbst liquor li openly eold, and In the other*
thee lay that there tea large clandestine
traffic. The total number ut liquor saloon,
bos not diminished lu tbe larger tos u.
and lo some there bee bran a greet In
creese; tor example: in Clinton the nun,
br r of i.loone has Increased iron, 37 to HO,
In Bonne, from 1010 16; in Keokuk, from
29io 37; In Lvons. from 30 to 41; In Dav
enport, from 130 lo 130; ia Burliniton. from
68 to 106: in Ottanrws, from S2toll0; m
Council Butte, f-out SO to 73, end In Cedar
Rapid* from 40 to 30. The cuuclnaion
warranted by tries answers to these inqui
ries la that In tbe country and in many
small towns prohibition hsa been iurce-a-
ful, but In tbs larger towns the amount ol
liquor eold Is probably greater than before,
and tbs number of arrette for druukennrsi
if not less. Municipal revenue, mean
while, has bean to Uisentd by tbs loss ol
license fees that ten cttiee have Increased
their tax levy, and fifteen mere have Im
pending financial difficulty.
The Dargere cf Delay to the Democracy.
81. Lout* Republican.
The great danger of a policy under
which nearly all the Federal offices are
left in posseiaion of the Republicans
lies not only in the probability of gen
eral Democratic revolt from it ultimate
ly, bnt equally in the self-evident fact
that delay in making appointments un
til the terms of the present incumbents
expire will protract dissensions Inevita
bly resulting from making new appoint
ments until the effect will be felt in the
campaign in 1888.
Mothsf!
If the little darling la spending such
sleepless nights, slowly and pitifully wast
ing away Ira tbe drainage npon its system
from tha effect of tretblog, procare a bot
tle of Dr. Riggers' Huckleberry Cordial,
the Great Southern Remedy, and find
wbst many other mothers have by Its nee,
a complete cure, a. it will tn sit bowel af
fections tn hoik young and old. For sale
by all druggists at S3 cents a bottle.
TUTT’S
PILLS
Pi
P
P3
O
EXCELSIOR COTTON GIN
EH
52=4
r—I
m
p
p
m
EH
§
fca
§
H
>-
CH
Eh
a
GO
U STILL MANUFACTURED BY
Massey Oot ton «in ‘Worlds
_ _ _ NBAR MACON. GF.ORGIA. uriiH,
Feeders aud Conifen»rs always oo hand. Old (Jins renal,.A
cheap. Send for circulars and prices to ”””>os repaired at short notice aud
Massey <lottou Gin Works,
jnn7«nn<%wfln?
Macon, Georgia.
BUFFALO STANDARD SCALES
FOB BALE BY
A.B. FARQUHAR & GO., MACON. CA
CORDIAL
FORTHE
BOWELS & CHILDREN TEETHING
Uia tho great Southern Remedy for the
bowels. II Is one of the most pleasant
and efficacious remedies
summer complaints. At _
when Tlolent attacks of the bowels are so
frequent, some speedy relief should be a hand.
The wearied mother, loalog sleep lu uuralujr
by the United 8tates Government and their reputation is world-wide. These Scale
are made of the beet material by tbe moat skillful workmen, and for accuracy.dnrabil-
ity and beauty of finish, excel all o'hers. We keep an assortment of them on hand
and are prepared to fill orders promptly.
Every Scale ia warranted to give entire satisfaction.3$end for .Illustrated Cata’
locue and Price List.
POBTABLE AND STATIONARY STEAM ENGINES,
Reapers and Mowers, Horse Rakes, Grain Cradles,
Threshing Machines, Farquhar Separators, General Hard
ware. Write for prices.
A. B. FARQUHAR & Go., Macon,Ga
the little one leethli
cine. fiOc
A. Taylor.
lie one teething, should use this medi
ate. a bottle, bend 2c sump to Walter
lor. Atlanta. Ga.. tor Riddle Book.
mfiur • wtiifusee
Cum and Mullein will
and Consumption. PrU
Price 23c. aud 91 a bottle.
1NDH
I suffered for more than lira yean with In-
digestion, scarcely able to Mam the elmpiett
food on my etomoch. The bunting eenetUon
wu almost Intolerable, and my whole tyetem
wu deranged. Iwu wakeful and conld not
•tup, and eonieqaenUy more or loss nervoun
all tbs time. I declined In flesh and suffered
all tha usual depreoalon attendant upon Util
terribla dleeou. In a word, I wu mUerabla.
At tut, falling to And relief In anything else,
I commenced the ur of Bwlft’s Bpeciflc.
began to Improve at once. The medlelno
toned op the stomach, strengthened the diges
tive organs aud toon all that burning oeued,
and could retain food without difficulty. Now
ij health la good, and can ut anything In
the .hop*oI food, and digest It without the
slightest difficulty. I mo-t cheerfully bear
thia testimony, become them are huadicdi
tufftrlng u 1 war, an? 1 am sure they can be
u readily helled. Take the preeeriped dou
after eating. Inileaiof before.
JAMES MANN, No. U Ivy Street.
Atlanta, On, May U.1SS3,
Free From Malaria
Inthatollofimtlwu taken with a cere ol
malarial fever which prostrated me both bods
end mind. 1 wu dr-ued after tne old tub-
Ion with mercury and other mineral mlxlaru
-bat with no good walls. My health wu
•haltered and my energy gone. My lea and
foot would swell and had what
thought wu dropsy. Thru symptoms alarmed
me, ud I wu rea-Iy to snap at any remedy
eusgeeted. A friend advised ms try Kwill's
menced lu ure. Tha i
re taken tbe Urn.
• e perftet care, sod 1 feel tits a lew
I today. Than never wu a more mertto-
medicine offered to suffering humanity, r
hu wrought wonders for me.
. _ . WILU8 JONES.
Treaties on Blood and 8kln Disease, mailed
tree.
THE BWIFT SPECIFIC CO,
Drawer X Atlanta. Oa.
25 YEARS IN USE.
Tbt Greatest Medical Trianph of tho Ags!
SYMPTOMS OF A
TORPID LIVER.
Loss of appetite* liotvel* costive* Pain la
the head* with a dull aeosatlon In tha
hack part* l*aln under tho sfcsillsf
blade* rnlloaaa after entitle. wlthMls*
Inclination (• exertion of bod/ ormlaA*
Irritability of temper* Low spirits* with
ss feeling of having ne elec teil aomedntr*
Weariness, Dlzzlneie, fluttering at tha
Heart. Dota before the eyes* lleadneha
•▼•r th* right eye, Restlessness* with
fltfaldrenrase Highly colored
- CONSTIPATION.
' TTTTS FILLS sre ejpeeielly adapted
to inch cues, ooo doao effect* nob a
chantre of feeling as to aaton Is h the sufferer#
They Increase the Appetite,and“■*—“**“
l v «>
body u> Take on tbe m
nourished, ar. 1 by their Tonic Aetl«
t tf Ortfami.llvjf tilar Stool* »rs
i v. ~r--?. |*M ftXIc. «ti Slurra/M...**.¥•
TUTT’S EXTRACT SARSAPARILLA
Renovate* the body. Baku bulthy Hath,
Ln2,ta^arii
uryn E 41 .■’iurraySt., Never York-
Health is Wealth
JOHNSON & LANE.
Wo are agents for
TL^lic Oelel>rate<l Pratt Oin.
With and without Feeders uul Condensers.
The Thomas Harrow
for the cultivation of Corn, Cotton and small grain.
Tlie iiosw Plow,
the best aud cheapest plow made. We keep ■ full line of Cast and Steel Tlows,
Hardware, Iron, Steel, Rubber and Leather Belting, Wagon and Carriage Ma
terial, Guns, Pistols and a lull line of Cartridges, Ammunition and Sporting
Goods, Send for catalogues.
JOHNSON
jun30daw2m
& T^aVIVIC,
107 and 109 THIRD STREET.
SCHOFIELD’S IRON WORKi
W |
MACON,
GEORGIA.
T*
J. S. Schofield & Sun, Proprieto
Manufacturei* antLdealersiin EverylVariety ot.Machinery,
SCHOFIELD’S PREMIUM COTTON PRESSED
To Pack by Horae, Hand.; Water or Steam Pom *
Sciiufield’t Empire Enginet and Boilers and Circular Saw Miiii,
Cans Mills and Kettles and Outings and Machinery of Kverj Klli
“Shafting,” “Pulley*” and “Hanger*'' a Specialty.
Ennunt Fxokftlt FcvruHkD lira Uoinieroxbucs Boucitu.
WK keep In stock MUi, Machinists' and Kai.aay hum .hu Iron t'lna and ftttlaat,
Arteoion Wall f—’ ” ' " ' r -
Belli ■ M
7BBVH _
Coring and Machinery, Valve., Vrhlatie., Lubricator, i'aaiiis
filing, Files, OUg, Bawl,Wrenches, etc., etc.
Cali on or write nr. Band for onr new Illa.tr.ted Catalov-.e and Frloe LleL
Da. E C. Wire's Nisvo arm BunTun
I* 1 * 7 ' * knaranleeJ loeclflc tor Hysteria. Dir
tinaas, Convnlatooi, ftu, Nervoae Neuralgia
ffaada«ha,lla»v*ae>»~^railon cured hr tin
l«0 Ot alcohol ev tobacco, Wak.Iuiuera, Jiao
tol Depree.lqn, Hottenlng of the brain rraall
mlaery, decay
Barienut*.
j.unlarr l*^*rt
'.a! Ile|.r...; , ... |
. lit .. ... ... 1 n,;
and death, mature Oil Are,
i.». o!.-Inrimeri«x,Lira
and Bpermaloirhcea cured ltUH
ol tbe brain, wll-ibate and over-lndnlgsuotl
K*. (.Oi.La'ui mm e treatment
11.00 a buz, arsta boxee tor l&OO, sent by mol
p repaid on receipt ol price.
ran otfARANtaa six aoxsa
Tp gore any cose. With each order receives
ty c. lor *ix bezel, a-oomp.nled with -iOC
wewfilMnltbcenrcbuer oar writtengnae
enteetorsfnnd the money If Ibe treetuenl
does not effect s care. 3nartnteee lessee
sag A-lAwLf
WINSH'P & CALLAWAY
Will now dear oat their stock of
CLOTHING AND HATS I
at greatly replaced prices to mike room for a new sell Rtcck. Bargiins cxn be hxd.