Newspaper Page Text
Volume XXXYIL—No. 48.
ALU ANY. GA.. P ' r,vfT
r CRD AY. AUGUST 18. 1883.
Price $2.00 Per Year.
i tie Albaxr Ntws, established 18*5,The Al-
4-tXY ApVKKTlSKK.tifltabliffbed 1877.l-'ODSOl-
•dated Sept. M. 18*0.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
l’AILT NKW8 AXOAOmrumi publish-
t >*verv tnormiip' ; Monday excepted/.
• Weekly News axi* AnvriTii‘if«.*-r«7
a»*tr*iav moraine.
WKEK1.T ADVERTISING RATES.
The consolidated circulation of the N kwh asp
Aoi ear dock gives our weekly the largest
circulation of say newspaper in South
west! Georgia. Our books are open for In
spection. The following rates or advertising
therefor are (iroportionately lower than those o!
any other paper, and will tie strictly oh erred:
i \\ , z^vTvV
l M . 2 U j :fM jttM jlTti
.... |1 UO $2 00!$:; 00 $8 50;$5 50 V 00*10 $15
2 0«»i 3 50| 5 CHI 25: 9 25-1 20o' IS j 25
a ..- 9 00i 5 25! 7 M> <4 00! 12 00'15 SO• 22 j 82
4 4 ool 6 60 8 50! y 73 15 00 10 00 28 ; 39
6 j 5 00 7 75110 00 11 50 18 0O 22 50 24 • 40
6 ...» 6 OOf 9 00.11 50|J3 25 21 00 28 00 40 J 53
I 00! 10 25 : 18 00! IS 00 24 00,29 50
*4 «JO( 8 (
>, co. 12:
I col i Itf 00 22 S0<28 7
C co 12 50j 17 25 21 73i25 50|41 00:50 SOj SO | 102
* •' ' '-*873 34 25,61 50|08 00* ltS| 137
Transient advertisements iuual be paid for in
stance.
All advertisement* muattake the run ortbe pa
per unleM otherwise stipulated by contrert, aud
then tbe following additional cbsr**s will be re
quired:
l/ifllde,generally, : : 10 jM-r cent
Inside, next to readiug matter 2 » **
In Local reading coinn as : : 30 " "
Editorial not Ices other than calling attention
to new advertisements and local dodgers, 20 cents
i«er line for tirat i nsertiou sod 12f4 for t ach sub
equent.
Hills •'•-at vert Ling are due on tbe lir.i appear-
anceui auvcrtis«ment,or when prescuietl, except
■4 he it otherwise contracted for.
11 M. Mt INTOSH A <*<».
The Central railroad has scooped in
the Augusta and Knoxville road.
The Kay feitilizer bill was lost
the Senate Saturday by a vole of 20
to 6.
“My bill is dead,” said Mr. Rav,
‘‘My bill is dead,” I cannot play.
—Augusta Chronicle.
The indications are that the capito
bill Will pass the House. Then-serins
to be little doubt about the Senate
passing it.
The House will hereafter hold after
noon sessions for the consideration of
local and special bills favorably re
ported by committees.
DKRKSKD POM HRETINR.
See u*y pretty ruffled dreg*!
See rav tleutv locket!
’.specie Pm most a lady now.
’Cause I've got » pocket.
These down here are my new gl«<rj
That I walks mv feet in.
Course it wouldn't do to wear
C«»P|ier-loes to meetm’.
see rav picture hankerfnst.
Sunday days I lots it;
I can blow a noise in church
Most like papa does it.
Papa’s hitchiu’ Jack aud Gray,
An’ they keep a prancin’:
Horace don’t wear Sunday clothe■* -
They don’t know they’ie dancin’.
Grandpa used t« k° with us,
Now he's gone to Heaven;
Guess hVa at the ingel church,
t'p where God is livin'.
I don’t take no cake with me—
Never think of eat in’;
Han't you want a nice dean ki-*n,
’Fore w** go to meetin’V
-A //. P.*.
It appears that the striker* have
about struck rock bottom at la-4. They
will 'now, many of them, no doubt,
have to choose between a-half loifand
no bread at all^
Atlanta trannot afl'ord to wait long
for a new hotel. Site needs it and
loum have »L There is capital ami
enterprise there, and vve soon expect
te hear that a company has been or
ganized.
A ba^k bam. nine compo-ed of 1 Hila
ries has been organized in Washing-
-ton.—Savgnnah Times.
Some people will think that it was
j xupeiditous to btate the material of;
which this particular club tra- com- ;
posed.
A Mormon eltler says that one \
great advantage of polygamy is ihtt i
THE LAST8UN DASCB.
An Ordeal IVI.lrli the loung Sioux
Braves Pan to Pay their Votn
Rom-bud Indian* Agency, Dakota, letter.
The Sioux Indians of this reserva
tion have just finished the last sun
dance which they will probably be
ever permitted by the interior de
partment to enjoy. An attempt to
dissuade them from this year's per
formance caused old Swilt Bear fo
&av in the council: **Vou had Christ
die upon tbe cross for you, and you
talk much about that. But we do
something you dare not do. We tie
ourselves up to the cross of our Cod
and suffer with him ; you are afraid
to do that!” Yet the old custom
has lost much of its early severity
and popularity’. To dance was
one time compulsory on young
braves; it is now entirely voluntary,
the redemption of a vow made io
Wakaortaoka, the Great Spirit. A
warrior may have promised that if a
neck of Hie horse. The auiinai was I
hit. anil tos»ed its head, and !hu« the
j instrument of torture was drawn! two
our. Several men who did not dance
had hits of flesh cut from tlieij*arms,
as did some squaws, either lit make
the amount of torture dne from their
husbands le.-s or to satisfy vows of
their own. The dancers were a
shocking sight, tottering ab nr, their
whistles still clinging to their dry
lips. Not a single one of them liad
fi ONDE11FFL WELL.
ALEXANDER El. STEPHENS.
of Different Water
Flowing fiom the Same Well.
fai.ed in tbe oideal. however, which, separate streams of water, as differ
c -a-ed at sundown. N tone had cried
out for relief or made a sign t.f
distress. If he had he would have
lost his price among the warriors
forever. He would have be*»w rank
ed with the equaws, air! even they
would have de*pi-ed him.
Sit'u Tiints.
Selma can beast of what is perhaps
the rnoxi wonderful well in the
world. Tlii3 sounds like a startling
»ia!eruent. btilii i* nut an inacurate
one. There is a well in this city,
out of which constantly flows two
The History or the Great States
man^ Life—When It Will he Out,
and How It Will. be.Sold.
“i
«jnt in all re^jjecis as if they were
from openings far apart.
In fact, liter# are two wells in one.
One s:r» aiu runs about twenty gallons
per min ite, and is cold, freestone
| wate r Thej-ecnml is impregnated
with suiph .r and iron, while its tern-
j perature ,is warm a* compared with
| iu twin. Tbe streams arc entirely
i separate and distinct, do not mix
A simple Loudon Explanation or with each other in the least, and any
the Periodical Demand f.«r Them, I one can readily observe ami taste the
esscutial differences above noted.
CONFEDERATE BONDS.
Cablegram New York Here'J.
I had :t lengtliv interview with a
sick child or friend recover from a gent email connected with the Stock
dangerous illness, he will dance in j Exchange, who livid many years in
ihe heat of the sun at the next sun j the South aud Is particularly well
(lance, or he mav have been himself i acquainted with the views of Lon-
iu a light place, or ha ve asked for j flou, Herman, hutch and Paris bank-
success anti achieved it in some con- j era. I abked him io give his opinion
feinplated raid. with reference to the syndicate anti
They are easily manifest to the eye
and taste.
But how can such a* pa radix exist?
Well, it is like the story told in one
of Mark Twain’s sketches, in which a
sailor explains many of tae maracu-
lous accounts totd in the Bible. It
is perfectly simple if yon will just
set your head to work to think it out.
A runner, clothed in buffalo skins, iho possibility of a settle meutnf the J It can be easily explained by ail ap-
tnnonm:c the time and place of the hood debt ot the former (Jonfederato plication of familiar na'ural science
various^ bands. The j States. He answered. “I will try j laws. In this instance tbe following
event io tli t _ ^
camp, winch was not far from the ; j 0 explain the mailer ut the lowest | facts make the apparent impossibility
agency, contained this year 10,000 possible words. Ever >iuce Uie col- ' an easily ‘conceived actuality.
Indians, and made a cirtile live in j lapse of the Confederate States cer-
circttinference. In front of the tent; tain European speculators, more
where the sun dancers were await- J particularly the I bitch bankers and
mg their ordeal, Uy a whitened buf- ; brokers, liave hottghl Confederate
f#l«» skull on a hit null of wild gra«. j bonds a a mere song from former
On some mysterious slicks inside : planters in the South, from English-
rested Hie scored medicine pipe. ! men and from everybody else who
Atlanta, Ga., August 9,1883.
JSditjr yews and Advertiser:
In answer to many inquiries from
various sections of the conntry con-
cerniog the forthcoming edition of
the life of Mr. Stephens, written by.
Colmel Bichard M. Johnston and
Dr. William Hand Browne, allow
me to stale through your columns
that it will bo published in a few
weeks, and will be sold by subscrip
tion. The management of its sale
will be in my hand*, and persons de
siring copies or wishing to canrass I
TUB TRUTH OR IT.
another Little War Reminiscence
Emphatically Contradicted.
Geo. Jubal A. Early iu tbe Lynch bur, Kewa.
I find in your paper of this moring a
paragraph which is credited to theBich-
mnud State, in which is this statement:
“On. one occasion Lee received this
devout dispatch front one flank: ‘By
the grace of God we have beaten them
on tlie right,’ and on die other wiug,
‘By d—n hard fighting we have whipped
them on the left.’ One lieutenant was
Jackson the other Ewell.’’
General Ewell was incapable of such
disrespect to Gen. Lee as sending the
dispatch attribnted to him, and I don’t
think that there was any officer of rank
in the army of Northern .Virginia who
would have exhibited such disregard of
for it should at once write to me at j military propriety. But the fact is that
Atlanta. The character and value ! «en Ewell up to the time of General
of this work are such as to reauire : Jackson’s death, fought m no battle
?L, „ * J h „, “ ™ „f umllieence whatever in which he did not light as
that none but persons, of •"“lligenee, ; (}en Jackson , s suborfinate . Th ” ou |y
mdustry and.reli.bility in every way teule8 , n which he fought (Illrin<; that
should act ns agents for tt. . All a P- t i, U e, in whiclt Gen. Lee was pnsent
plications for agencies^ must, there- j i^mnuinilfug, were the seven days' bat-
fore, be accompanied with satisfacto- ar ound Kichmond, and then fought
GEORfilA NKWi.
—The bill establishing u branch
cnllege ut Way cross failed io pass.
—An Athens colored woman moth
ered three girls a day or two a*p>.
—Alf Doyal, the Griflin murderer.
Inis been sentenced to hang on the
14th of September.
—The building o( the Irwin court
Oil Friday a scouting party ivas i niusidered these bond* hs nothing
it out io discover a suitable pole j better Ilian wall-paper. Especially
it does away with the necessity of j for the center of the dancing circle, j aid-the Amstenlaht dealers invest in
hiring servant girls. He will not he And the nex* day the pole, a lall elm. j tl,e.-e bonds, it being n rale of the
ihat ' vas , ‘ ,,t **>’ tt . n oonHe - | Amsterdam Bourse to buy all such
crated to ibis office mid not allow- • stull iu expectation that every dt»g
i *-d to marry. Her name is Here ; |, Jls j,is day, or that by a clever rig-
: Ripe, anti she is a neice of Standing j gingof the market they themselves
‘ Bear. Wlieii the pole had been trim- j ( > ut ilit make that day, should it not
likely to catch many birds with
kind of chaff
The United States Deputy Quarter
master at Philadelphia has just ad
vertised for 30,000 pairs of suspen
ders, anti as there are only 25.000 men
in the army, the conundrum to be an-
j .swered is, “What is wanted with those
j 5,000 odd suspenders?*'
It is predicted by certain sem-alion-
j alists in the far West that an effort
| will he made by the Indians or bands
; of robbers to capture President Ar
med ami placed iu position, then
came the “charge on the pole.*’ A
thousand warrior* on a thousand
horses pell melt down the hi.I and
around the camp. They had their
horses were decked with green
branches. These were the men who
come by itself. These speculators
have, for mauy years, been buying
these bonds at prices varying from
halt's dollar to $2 50 per $1000. and
sometimes at three-eighths of a dol
lar
For the first few years after the
circled around Custers little baud. ! collapse of the .Southern Slates these
aud many rmle iu saddles that be- : speculators knew that the idea of re-
longed to tli'il command. A povil payment of Confederate bonds by
ion ol boughs was built about the j die I'niied Slates would be consider-
pole, and by Sunday evening smooth j el j absolute folly and madness which
1 I thur, oarrv him otf into the mountains j with peculiar ceremony, and all was J n 0 persons in America would dare to
house was contracted by Mr. Ship- j a||| | | |0 ] ( | j,; m f or ;l ransom. Now r0a ‘*. v * ad vise or even think of, and as far as
ley at $1,085. It was the only bid.
—Ail Oxford youth named Doug
las has been put in Newton jail lor
attempting to shoot a young lady
who refused to marry him.
— Ainerictis Jlecordcr: Beef cattle
are becoming very scarce, and the
butchers are having a hard lime to
keep their customers supplied with
meal.
—Atlanta Constitution: Yester
day Governor McDaniel issued an
order granting the petition id’ Lockett
Sc Co., to he allowed to move their
convict camp from Daugherty coun
ty to the camp at the Chattahoochee
river. This is a good move for the
convicts and brings the whole of
that part of the penitentiary to Ful
ton comity.
—A ease against the Western
Union, growing out of the telegraph-
ie strike, has been instituted in Wal
ton county by Mr. .lames A. Bay, for
failing to forward to him a message
telling him of the dangerous illness
of his wife. By the delay he failed
to reach her until after her death.
His lawyers say lie has a good case,
anti that heavy damages will he re
covered.
—Dalton Argus: Brother MtGhee,
while preaeliii g at Subligna, a few
days silica, was called on to solem
nize the nuptials between a Gretna anions.
Green couple. He hesitated, but
judge of his surprise, when they
country tremble ami I In
(tame up the
lit teen in all,
their Various
.lust :i> the luoon
dancers to the Min,
entered to fuTill
oaths.
They were Follow-a- Woman,
LivtM-in-ihe Air Plenty Hole, White
Calf, Point-ai-Three, He-Dog, Little
Li tile-Boy, llollcnr Horn.
Eigie, Shed, Two Eagle, Yellow.
Poor Dog, anil Troublesome Hawk.
They were naked to the waist, and
why don’t tlr
army march?
Mark Twain, being called upon by
the Chicago yews for his oi^jnion of
the Arthur administration, replied:
“Dear sir, I am but one in the 55.000,- ! Day,
000, still, in the opinion of this one
fifty-five-milhonth of rite country's
population, it would he hard indeed to ; W ore skins made of red plaid shawls,
better President Arthur’s administra- : Panels oi blue hung from their belts
lion. But don’t decide until you hear 1 >»» front anil behind. < >u their heads
. . . ’ i were horns of bunches of sweet
from the_resL j jr r as-. Over their chests were repre-
Xow that the cotton crop is nearly j seiilations to the sun, anil from their
at hand, every planter should hear in j wrists hung totem* ol families,
mind the importance of poperljr pre- |
paring his cotton for
thereby assure to himself the be-t j rued with the rare feather of the
market price. Cotton will sell low j “medicine bird,*’and b gan to hop
The
beat the
, drum. The dancers put to Ihejr
market, and j t j ie goose bom* whistle, trim-
•dgners began lo howl aud
the coming season, but the planter 11 1 <ov n * , .
® „ ed I hey were io wluMle, and thev
should see to it that Ins cotton is fret* 1 ■
to dance until the next sun-
of dill and trash, each grade ia sepnr- ! down. Some women, to hupplu-
att* bales and each hale properly and j mem the inn-m, began t*» “hi-i-y
securely packed,.
the repayment by the Southern Staten
themselves, iu their individual capa
city as S’ateK or as former members
of the Confederacy, was concerned,
the Dutch or English speculators
themselves knew that those S atea
were notoriously too poor for some
years after the war to in ike even the
slightest investment. Only ihe cler
gymen and widows believed that
it was possible for them lo pay a
debt which legally they were not
hound to discharge. The Southern
States had ou several occasions alter
the war shown that they would not
even pay their legal public debts, and
one repudiation after another had
" tfifr-the-ttpecAriutors-h* 11
it all their own way. They got the
Confederate- bonds for a - slice of
bread and butter.
But when corruption grew ram-
- - , pant in all branches of the United
As long a* they (lane- ^ttates Government some years ago
ehre wd Eu ropean
hide
/•brill k«*\. and to beat
| spread upon me gr»*uu*l.
Tub telegraph strikers and ihe com- ; There was not •• light in the en-
paniesare still engaged in saying th.-y ; closure.- The pole. Hollering with
are all right. One day the companies banners, jnood ou^ijn the moonlight.
will publish_tlie news that they are
abb* to transact business—that they
are independent. Next day the strik-
near its top was hound a bundle of.
willow twigs, which gave it some
aesembl nee to Ihe Christian cress.
J A figure of a buffalo and of an lit
er* will publish an etiualamount of in- j dtan, made t*l hide, dangled fioin
. , ! tli is One repreMjntcd the sun; the
dependent, and so it goes. We ain j o|her whj|| .„„„ blllt . k on
inclinad to :liir»k, however, that the | t |, 0 ol h<.r, the good and had spirit.
trikers are weakening, except in largo
itie^jwhere they are Kicked by labor
It is getting monotonous, and
time for the end to come.
tAdvertiser is hot after
blushingly entered io beseech ivk’^hoseTour dozj£h legislators who voted
clerical service, to find l/w groom, ■ against localfoption. The Advertiser
Wm. Low Allen, agecl , «55, and the i seems to Jihink that the petition o
charming bride. Miss Susie Stoe, aged 60;000 cit«ens should have been suf-
40. The brides’ pa objected, and ! fleient pressure to bias them. Perhaps
flight was the only solace for their jh a t four/lozen were considering the
bright dreams. They were tied. other thousands that didn’t sign; or
—The Waverlv plantation, of seven ; perhaps they saw something else in
thousand acres, in Camden county., the-' bill bo objeclionable that even
U nl&t: 'motlflft arnnld not nutweich the (
on the South Georgia coast, is otiet - ’TOO,000 would not outweigh the objec-
ed lor sale. On the plantation is re
markably fine phosphate bed. TTi*
present owners purchased fro»n
Thomas Butler King, of South Car
olina, Ihe once famous United Slates
Minister to the court of Russia, and
he purchased from tliC&rt-nl (’has.
Cotes wo rtli Pinckney *1 others,who
controlled the property alter the
death, long over fifty
of its famous owner.
Iwo-
tiou. The whisky question
sided, like all others.
The old ship New Orleans is soon
to be sold at auction. The house
which was built over it at Sackett’s
harbor, at the close of the war of 1812
was blown down thrte years ago.
Since then the vessel ha9 been the
sport of storms. To-day it stauds a
years ago, sap, weather-beaten object, awaiting
lolin Middle- j destruction at the fall of the
ton, of .South Carolina. It is said
that Mr. King once cleared $1(X),000 !
oil*the place in one year.
—We mentioned yesterday that a
negro school teacher, named Dan
Cornelius, had reported to the po
lice that he had been viriled at his
house near the Twiggs county line,
at Nelson’s Mills, by ten masked
men, who warned him to letvc the
country, and giving no reason tor it.
We learned yesterday that he was
visited ai stated, but he was tohl the
fioneer’if-*hainmer. Many of its
bers have walked off in (he shape
3on^.which was that he was Uold-
fcniber of secret meetings at
for the purpose of raising
trouble"\ mong l,,e farm ,Hl) ° ,cra *
They W eri 4 * eman ^ “GG’C wages,
■ ml thoJ'who rented were to get
laud — easier lerina, and that slrong
measures would be used to bring
about this change. As this was con
sidered incendiary, he was to:d firm
ly, but quietly, to leave —J/dco/)
Telegraph.
—W. E. Myers has a very pretty
farm and vineyard situated just out
side (he Marietta limits- This-vine
yard at present consists of 100 vines
of the six leading varieties planted
to cover about one acre. The vines
were set out in the fall of 1881, and
are now hearing for the first lime.
The production was greatly reduced
this spring to prevent overbearing,
it being nnressary lo cut off hun
dreds of bunches of green fruit.
About 400 pounds of marketable
fruit will be realized this year and
next year lie experts to realize ten
times this amount. Both grapes and
hunches are very large and are per-
fecily free from insects or cobwebs.
He also lias a poultry (arm, and
makes a specially of Dark Brahmas
and Plymouth Bock chickeiis. lie
ships birds and eggs to all parls of
this State and into Tennessee, Flori
da and Alabama, and finds it to be a
very profitable business.
of canes. The ship wsf-built in sixty
days from the tidux the timber
in Hie forests, ani /would haW". i_.
launched in tliirtpdaya more had not
peace been declared. All the rigging
was conveyed at great expense and stand upon our feet to give oar flesh
■' __ fnii $Yinlr 113. ut nnr wires
At! night the dniicin.- never Hugged.
While the moon wu* up the lace- ol
tile dancers were turned and their
dark arms outstretched to it, hut
when Gheezis, the sun, came, they
turned toward him and prayed earn
estly. They faced him all day. It
one showed signs of breaking down
he was taken to the shade, and took
a.pull at a pipe, or a pinch of wild
sage to encourage saliva.
The Indians look on indifferently,
and eat hard bread and boiled dog,
which the sqnaws have brought in
dirty kettlets. Outside, Hie little
hoys are playing tricks on each other,
the older ones making love by catch
ing some duskey maiden and stand
ing with her, wrapped in the same
olanket, for hours in full view. Pa
pooses are brought into the arena to
have their ears pierced, a ceremony
wh ch admits them into Sioux fel
lowship. The operation is not ac
tually performed there, but at home,
and a great amount of calico and a
pony have to be give away for the
privilage. During this week be
tween 600 and 700 ponies have been
given awav in a sort of communistic
distribution by the Indians.
About noon the chief medicine
man began to paint the dancers who
were to be tied to the pole. This
done, their guide led them to the
four points of the compass, and,
with his arms extended in a wavy
Tuotton, blew hia whistle softly. At
the pole Ihia prayer was offered in
Dakota: “God, we arc come to ob
serve the day You give ns. We
, . , —— . , m to vuu. Look at us, at our wives,
difficulties from New York. There : ^ chn 4rcu. our friends,
were no railroads, and the government an( j | ie |p ns t0 bear this trail.’’
road that ran out of aud into Sackelt’s
Harbor was a very rude affair. The
anchor chain of the New Orleans,
weighing from GOOO to S000 ponnds,
was carried from Utica on the should
ers of 300 men, who traced their way
by means of blazed trees. The New
Orleans was built as a counter-march
ou Lake Ontario for the Britisli ship
St. Lawrence.
Tbe most general object of interest
just now at West Point, says a corres
pondent, is the drill of the cadets.
Young ladies get up at the sacriligious
hour of 5 o'clock to see the exercises,
and linger through the morning hours
Then Follow-a-Woman, the first
to suffer, was thrown on the
ground, aud the mediciuc man skil
fully made two incisions with a
sharp knife over each breast, in the
vicinity of the pectoral muscles.
The flesh was lifted and a hard wood
skewer was thiust under and fast
ened by sinews to the rope which
hung from Ihe pole. Already weak
ened bv fifteen hours of exertion,
thirst and hunger, the young brave
was to strain off the rope until he
broke loose by tearing out his own
flesh. It did not take tong. In five
minutes he was dancing with the
others as if nothing had happened.
The patasoi which some one then
allowed h<m would have made him a
to view the cadets as they go through ridiculous figure had not the red
blood been seen conraing down his
tlie exercises. Battery practice, rifle
practice, cavalry practice, are all inter
esting. Hundreds of people occupy
a line of camp-stools under the trees
that skirt the camp during the morn
ing and evening drills. At night,
when the moon steals up over the
trees and looks down upon the white
tents and bright dresses of the young
ladies, a bit of romance is added to the
scene. At 9:45 o'clock the band ap
pears upon the drill-ground: It
passes before the tents playing a mar
tial air. At the head the pompous,
graceful, unruffled drum major
walks and wields a ponderous baton,
t’be cadets come out; the roll is called;
the night guard goes on duty; back
to the tents the cadets are marched.
At 10 o’clock every light is ont; ail go
to bed and silence reigns supreme
The young ladies and sight-seers walk
slowly back to the cottages over the
moon-lit plain.
body.
Livea-in-the-Air was next. He
tore out one stick iu ten minutes,
and was then released from tearing
out the other by the gift of three po
nies. Poor Dog had a dog’s luck,
lie struggled and pulled, then gave
the rope slack aud danced about the
unbending pole until, suddenly jerk
ing bask, the flesh wonld stand out
two or three inches from the breast
The squaws who came near to throw
clothes and calicoes at hia feet or on
the roap as gifts to the poor, turned
back crying. Twenty minutes of this
agony and no outcry. A fiend came
up, and catching this man around
the waist gave a tremenduons poll.
Even this did not break the integu
ment, aud it was not until half an
hour had passed that the brave
dancer fell back upon the earth,
panting and weak with two great
wounds in bis breast.
One more exhibition remained.
Yellow was cut in the shoulder and
and a skewer was inserted, from
which a rope was passed around the
the shrewd European speculators
thought there might be a chance for
them. They might, perhaps, he able
to bribe somebody to mention the
debt of the former Confederate Stales
either in the House of Bepfcsenta-
tives in Washington or ill the Senate.
They rightly concluded tli I ihe mere
inenti in of these bonds in IVrshing-
lon would electrify the inLi'ket tor
them, as people would be found ready
lo buy' at tliree-eighihs, one-ciglilli or
one even, a bund which slood a
chance of being repaid by the United
Slates. Furthermore, when a few
years ,-go the e eel ions in Ihe States
went Ileuiocralic, and when a Dem
ocratic majority in Washington was
almost a certainty, the speculators
again drew a hreath. Now they
caused to be written in tlicir papers
that a Democratic majority in Con
gress would recognize tlie Confeder
ate debt, and again the market was
rigged.
Some Democratic members were
induced lo mention, either in their
stump speeches or in writing, the
Confederate debt, and as soon as a
speech came across the Atlantic up
went the Confederate bonds. This
continued for some time nntil tbe
bubble burst and these worthless
bonds returned to their level. This
game of up and down has been played
several times daring the past fen
years. Tbe speculators always suc
ceeded in inducing by such malice-
uvers other speculators lo buy when
the good news arrived from America.
As soon as the whole amount had
been obsorbed by the public the
possibility of the accomplishment or
the dream of repayment vanished.
The poor, bamboozled purchasers
saw that the price fell every day and
they held out to save tlieniselves from,
the loss of their entire investment.
This trick was performed several
times during (he last, ten years,
shrewd speculators baying and sell
ing several times over the whole
Confederate debt, always buying
when the news concerning the bonds
was worst, and inducing tbe pnblic
to purchase from them when the ru
mor of possible repayment had ar
rived from America, and buying back
again from the public when the sim
pletons had discovered that the re
payment of the Confederated bonds
were an idle dream.”
“Why is there at present a revival
of Ihe Confederate bond scheme?’
“Yon see, the thing is this. After
Ihe last revival of Confederate bond
dealings in London and Amsterdam
two years ago, the speculators who
had sold to the public these bonds at
say from 42 to $2.50 and (3, and bad,
after the collapse of tbe repayment
dodge, bought them back again at
say trom $1 down to three-eighths of
a dollar, came to the conclusion that
the next time they, would have to
try a new plan. So they invented
the idea that the Southern States, if
they were not incliued out of their
own tree will or out of honesty to
pay the Confederate bonds, could be
made to come to a settlement.
The woiidi rftil well can he seen at
the Central City Oil Mill-. A few
years ago the proprietors ha I bored
an artesi in well lo supply a cistern
for boiler and gin purposes. This
summer, when an enlargement of the
mill’s capacity was made, ii was de
cided lieu more water was necessary
ami that the -flow ol ihe well mast he
increased. Accordingly Mr. E. A.
Jackson, the noted artesian well
borer, was engage I to execute the
la-k. Tne existing w II was bored on
the old pian. It was about foup
inches in diameter and four hundrda
feel deep. Mr. Jackson set up his
apparatus to deepen litis well, and
bored downward from the bottom.
This second drill, on the new plan,
was tilled as ii went downward with
a two inch pipe. This boring was
continued to a depth of over seven
hundred lee*, when ilic usual bold
stream of sulphur iron waicr at that
depth in this city was struck. Il ia
forced out lo a height of twenty-five
feet above t lie surface, and it dis
charges fully -sixty gallons pec min
ute. Tims the paradox is made reas
onable. There is simply a well with
in a well, a stream .ivilhin a stream,
a two inch pipe within a lour inch
bore. r l he outer stream comes from
a source of supply four hundred feet
deep, lias no mineral qualities and is
cold; the inner stream comes from a
depth of seven hundred feel, perhaps
from the iion hills of Ihe northern
part of the State, and is of the higher
temperature invariably found in the
water trom greater depths. Such is
the story of Selma’s most wonderful
well, a course outline of the condi
tions of which is more mysterious
than a fairy laic.
Why Men Smoke.
A cigar is a great arbitrator. It
helps to break the ice, it bridges over
the gulf of embarrassment in meet
ing unexpected or undesirable par
ties, it is a sort of passport to good
fellowship and kind treatment. It
tides over that awkwaru first few
minntes when yon sit down to a
business confab with strangers or
men that yon are a little shy of, abd
fills up the odd moments when you
are waiting to see which way the cat
will jump. By the attention which
yon must give'your cigar you gain
time for deliberation, id it somehow
gives an appearance of fortitude ard
composure which yon don’t feel in
the least. Why, let two men light
cigars and sit down to make a con
tract, and we will guarantee they’ll
get five per cent better terms ench
side than if they nervously whistled
and drummed upon the table between
spells. So, in a business way, we
think it is olten an advantage to
smoke.
A Student's Duel.
A correspondent of the Richmond
Dispatch, writing from Heidelberg,
describes one ol the recent-duels be
tween students: “lienring that there
was to he a student's duel, we plan
ned lo gratify our curiosity in seeing
what lias been so much written
about. Taking a carriage, wo rode
across the river, up the side of a
mountain, and down n narrow gorge
to a public Itousu. We went in and
ordered some refreshments and chat
ted for half an hour, when a white-
capped student passed. I accosted
him andearneslly made known our
wants in tile language of Goethe and
Schiller, lie gave me a I >ug and
earnest answer, not a word of which
could 1 understand. AI last a wait
er who spoke English came, and we
sought her kind offices, rilte agreed
t-> take us in ten minutes to a room
where we rnu111 see the combat
through a window. We waited an
hour, and as our patience was about
exhausted she retimed. Through
tbe window we could see two men
confronting each other, with their
right hands extended straight over
Iheir heads. Their left arms were
tied behind their backs and goggles
over their eyes. The men were pad
ded everywhere except their heads,
which was left nncoverea. At the
appointed signal they began cutting
at each other with lightning-like rap
idity. Neither seemed to try to ward
off the blows of his opponent. As
soon as one was cut the seconds ran
between them and knocked up the
swords. The doctor examined the
wounds, staunched the blood and the
fight was resumed, and went on until
the doctor decided that further fight
ing would endanger lite. It was
the most beastly.tom-foolery I ever
saw. The hurt inflicted was not
enough to satisfy a man seeking re
dress for a real or fancied iusult, but
was too severe for play. I could see
no display of skill nor any particu
lar manifestation of courage.’’
rv written indorsement, not refer
ences merely, as to these qualities,
in order to insure attention. The de
sire for a correct biography of the
great statesman is not confined jo
his native State. It is gene!
throughout the South, and extends
indeed to tlie remotest borders of the
Union, and I wish to supply this de
maud through active, reliable agents
iu every quarter. Ot the book itself
f can not now say more than Id
quote the following expressions from
leading papers:
The Baltimore Situ says:_“It is
one of the best of modern biogra
phies. It is both a study and a reve
lation in American public and pri
vate life.’’
The Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle says:
“It is a really precious volume. To
all Americans it should be singular
ly valuabla as the life-record of one
of the most eminent of men, as well
as one of the most patriotic of sages.’’
The Atlanta Constitution says:
“It is one of the most charming biog
raphies it has ever been our pleas
ure to read. It is not only an en
tertaining history of a typical Amer
ican career, but i: is a graphic histo
ry of tlie most important political
period of the country. The history
of that wonderful life ought to be a
great stimulus to all that is worthy in
the rising generation. No biogra
phy of Mr. Stephens that has been or
may he written can compare with iL”
The Baltimore Bulletin says: “Sel
dom has a story been belter told,
with greater simplicity or stronger
effect. That eflect comes in part
from the fact that we have here a
complete revelation of the’ inner
lite of one of our greatest pjiblic
men. We see the dark side of the
moon at the same time that we study
the bright side. The style is just
admirable; the narrative flows on
with an easy grace and limpid sim
plicity that are full of beauty un
adorned. The book has all the
charm of a novel founded upon the
history of one almost worthy to be
the hero of an American epic. It
may be stnied with benefit by every
American.”
It wijl be published in very hand
some and substantial style, and will
have the best portrait in existence
of Mr. Stephens as lie looked in the
last years of his life.
T. K. Oglesby.
A TRIO OF tBlPIIBS..'
A Woman who Bore Nine Children
at Three Births.
Philadelphia Beconl.
A number of charitable ladies from
Philadelphia and New York, spend
ing the summer at Island Heights, a
lovely summer resort on Tom’s river
N. J., are actively engaged in raising
donations of money and clothing for
a Mrs. Johnson, residing in a small
cottage at that place, who has just
given birth to the third set of trip
lets. The latest arrivals are .three
chubby, crowing children, the very
pictures of health, and al< girls. The
only way that they are distinguished
from each other is by their clothing,
which some of the ladies had mis
chievously marked “Faith,” “Hope”
■thd “Charity.” The parents are
both large and well formed per
sons, and Mr. Johnson is employed
as a laborer on a neighboring farm.
The six other children of Mr. and
Mrs. Johnson are all stout and
healthy, and are all under eight years
of age.
The cottagers and hoarders in the
neighborhood have given parlor
entertainments, taken up collections
slid have resorted to various other
neans ot relieving the family, who
are poor in circumstances. A large
purse has already been raised.
The Deacon Demanded an Explana
tion.
Tbe circumstances were such that
young Mr. Tawraas and Deacon
Rich, whose daughter he hoped to
marry, was caught by night in a
storm and compelled to stop at a farm
house, where only one bed was to be
obtained. So they slept together.
Somehow Tawmus' got to dreaming
during the night of one of those
squeaking tubes which connect the
rooms ill all first-class hotels with the
office. Being in imagination at one
of those tubes, he got Deacon Biclt
by the ear, pat Ills Ups close to it and
yelled in stentorian tones which
nearly split tlie old gentleman’s head:
“Bring me a gin cocktail, D. Q.l”
That awakened Deacon Rich and lie
awakened bis young companion and
demanded an explanation, which Mr.
Twamua found it very difficult to
make and which he feels sure was nol
satisfactory.
spcct-
V’an-
The Aatora and Vanderbilts.
Chicago Time*.
There are two distinct social sets
at Newport, which are led res;
ively by the Astors and the
derbilts. “The Astorset,” a corres
pondent says, “represents the landed
gentry; it "is solidly American, and
doesn't care a trade dollar for insig
nia and flummery.’’ The Vander
bilt coterie, according to the same
authority, “has poshed the Presi
dent’s English almost to the point ot
dropping the h’s. It never rides, it
•drives.’ It always goes ap to town,
don’t you know. It wears ‘top
coats,’ and the women hare given up
dresses for ‘gowns.’ It has got to
calling its baggage ‘traps,’ and pre
tends to like rather foggy weather.
It has also got the English supercil
iousness down very fine; the blank,
dull stare of vacancy is worked ad
mirably; it shows equipoise of char
acter, and it affects a slight contempt
for everything American, that com
mands something like awe.” How
old Cornelius Vanderbilt, who never
lost the flavor of his early career with
scowboats and Stateu Island “garden
a,’’ would open his ey“s at such
dnde-like foolishness!
I have seen and U3ed Anodyne Oil,
and will say the medicine acted splen
didly. JXO. L. CCCII RAN',
j 14-21 Camilla Ga.
On the programme of an after
noon’s frolic at Presido del Norte,
Texas, was a grand “gander pulling”
match, in which everybody partici
pated. The gander, a very venera
ble bird, purchased from a poen, was
hung from a tall pole by bis legs, so.
that when fully extended his head
could easily be reached by a horse
man riding under the pole. The
feathers were first carefully removed
from his neck, and when rendered
perfectly bare*the vertebral elonga
tion was literally smeared with grease.
The “pollers” were ranged in line,
aud at a given signal the leader
spurred forward his horse and
dashc-d under the pole from which
dangled the patriarchal bird at a
mad gallop. As he passed be clutcn-
ed at the slippery neck of the bird
and missed it. The next nt&n did no
better, neither did the third, nor the
fourth, - nor the fifth. One after
another the riders essayed to grasp
the slippery prize, but all signally
failed. Finally Mustang Joe, tbe
last man in line, galloped forward.
As he neared the pole he raised him-,
self in the stirrups, and, although his
horse passed nnder like a flash, lie
seized the gander’s neck with a firm
hand and tore ic from the body.
What is that Person .doing in the
Telegraph Office? That is the Man-
iger, and he has a Right to be there.
But why is he removing all those
Dispatches from the Hooks? Be
cause there is more Business than his
Plugs cau get away with and be is
Preparing to Mail the rest of the Dis
patches to their Addresses. Is it a
Sharp Trick? Yea, pretty Sharp. It
Enables him to sit down and Tele
graph all over the conntry: “Hooks
all clear in Detroit ’’ But won’t the
People be Mad at the Delay of their
Telegrams? Yes, my Child, but what
are they going to Do About it?
Who is that man with the' White
Hat? He is a Commission Merchant,
my Child. But see how Mad he is!
He is Bed in the Face. He Swears.
He beats tbe Air with his Fists. Has
Anybody come the String Game on
him ? No, my Child. He has just re
ceived a Telegram from one of his
conntry customers, saying: “Car a
you Nevertheless Yesterday Bushels
chagrin Therefore Suddenly.” And
He Won’t Have It That Way? No;
he can’t Make ont Whether the Man
has sent him Potatoes or wants to
know the Price of Oats. Hence his
Cuss Words. Hence his Desire to
Plug tbe Plug Operator. Hence his
Love for the W. U. T.—Detroit Free
Press.
Every family onght to have a bottle
of Anodyne Oil. It cares Rheuma
tism, Neuralgia, all Pains, Braises,
Cuts, Diarrhcea, Cholera Morbus. It
keeps off Rheumatism, Colds, floarse-
n-*s, etc. jull4-2mw
The Power ut tlie Press.
San Frandsco Poet.
A burglar, while attempting to
rob a bloated bondholder ol Marys
ville, by mistake got into tbe bn'nt-
ble residence of an editor next door.
After unsuccessfully fumbling
around for suitable assets for some
time, he was disgusted to observe the
tenant of the house sitting up in bed
and laughing at him.
“Ain’t yon old Skinderson, the cap
italist?” inquired the .housebreak
er.
“Nary time,” chocked the journa
list; “I’m the editor of the Scream
ing Eagle:’ ■
“Great Scott I” said the burglar,
looking at his stem-winder, “and
here I’ve been wasting four bloom
ing hours on this branch almshouse.
I say, old quilldriver, von never poke
fun at your subscribers, do you?”
“Not Ihe cash ones.”
•‘Exactly,’’ said the burgnlar, tak
ing out his wallet; “here’s six
mun'hs’ subscription to call litis
thing square. If there’s one thing
on eatth I can’t stand it’s satire.”
Saratoga'* Colored"IIude.
Albany Argus.
I have thus far seen but three dudes
at Saratoga, ami the greatest of these
was a negro. He is still here. He is
as gaudy as a circus wagon and twice
as handsome. He condescends to
act as a waiter ut one of the large
hotels for a few hours each day, but
during the Urge leisure of that class,
and while his fellows are playing
base ball ou South Broadway, or
pitching quoits ou hack streets, he
clothes himself in all his wardrobe’s
glory, aud promenades Broadway.
No pains and but little expense is
spared in his get up. Ilis natural
color is as brilliant as that of a new
rubber shoe. His mouth is as hand
some as a gash iu an over-ripe water
melon. His necktie is the reddest of
of the red, his gloves are while kids,
ind the tops or his gaiters are dove-
colored. During bis triumphal
murch the hackmen cease from
troubling and the 'busmen are at rest;
,ihe little - dogs laugh to see the sport,
and the tally-ho guard hath not
where to blow his horn.
The town of Torre del Greco, the
destruction of which is now threat
ened by the eruption of Mount Ves
uvius, was once before submeiged by
lava from this natural furnace. That
occured in Juoe, 1794, when a stream
of moulten matter thought to contain
46,000,000 cubic feet swept over the
town and poured into the sea in a
mass 1,200 feet wide and 15 feet high,
the loss of life was by the thonsands.
Since the town was rebuilt it bus
been a favorite resort from Naples,
of which it is a suburb. Mount Ve
suvius is one of the greatest volca
noes in the world, and has a height
varying from 1,600 to 1,900 feet, erup
tions making a great difference in its
altitude. Its lust outburst was June
1876; but as the eruption had been
piedicted, the people in the radius of
the discharge had ample time to seke
safer quarters. Perhaps its first re
markable erup ion was iu 1779, when
stones, scoria, and ashes were pro
jected to a height of 1,000 feet, and
the fire shot three rimes as high as
the mountain. The first eruption of
which there is any record was in A
D. 79, when Herculaneum and Pom
peii were destroyed.
under the immediate command of Gen.
Jackson, to whom any dispatch or re
port by him would have been sent, and
not to Gen. Lee. Geu. Ewell lost his
leg at second Manassas on the 28th of
August, 1862, before the arrival of Gen.
Lee, and did not return to tlie army
until after Gen. Jackson’s death. He
then came back as the commander of
Jackson’s old corps, having been ap
pointed to the position, as is under
stood, iu accordance with the wish of
Gen. Jackson, expressed on his death
bed. • He came back as a member of
the church, and remained a consistent
Christian until his death, years after
the war. Gen. Ewell himself is be
yond the reach of detraction or the
mortification of seeing in print such
t houghtless stories as the above; but lie
has near relatives and mauy friends, to
whom tlie circulation of such stories
l It rough the papers cannot fail to be of
fensive. I may remark here that many
Southern papers are very inconsistent in
publishing stories in regard to the war,
often the ottspriiig of Yankee invention,
merely because they are sensational.
Some of these stories are such as would
provoke a saint, and, not being a saint
myself, I am often tempted very sorely
to* express myself in very emphatic
language, especially in regard to the
Southern papers which reproduce them,
which i am sure would meet the fate of
Uncle Toby’s oath.
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Thl» powrier never vanes. A marvel of mire
irength and ^holesorueness. More economical
lhan the ordinary kinds, end cknnot be told in
competition with the n uitlrude ol low 'it,short
weight, alum or phosphate powders, otd onty In
emu.
ROYAL BAKING roWDER CO..
nov4-dwiv Xkw York.
New Orleans, August i, 18 8.
TO THE PUBLIC.
investigate FOR YOURSELVES!
Postmaster-General Grethman having pub-
llsheil a wilful timl msliciou falsehood in re
gard to the character of The Loa'aiaua State
Lottery Company, the fo lowing f cts are
given to the public to prove his statement,
lhat we are engaged in a fraudulent business,
to be fatso aad untrue:
Amount of prizes paid by The Louisiana
State Lotter> Conpany from January 1st,
1879,.to present date:
Paid to Southern Express Co. New
» .Vf ,e ? *'• '‘-Wescoat, Manager.fr.SCKSOh
Paid to Izmi-iMna National i-ai.k,
Joe. H. Oglesby i resident
Paid to L ui«iana State National
n.i 8 fce»nedy. President.
Paid to New Orleans National Bank,
_ A. Baldwin, President
Paid to Union Natl- nal Bank,
S. Charlar-n. Cashier
Pal to Citiz. ns’Bank,
LLCarriere, Cashier. ....
Paid to Germania Nntional Bnnk,
.. Jol** CaeaqrtV re-ident
Paid to Hibernia National Bank.
‘ has. Pnlfrey, Cashier . ^
Paid.to Canal Bank,
Ed. Toby. Cash’er
Paid to Mutual National Bnnk.
Joe Mitchell, C shier......
463.9 0
123,1'0
63. 5 J
64,450
57,(0C
80, 00
87.G00T-
1?, ?5"
8,00
„ ■ J'*** 1 paid as above $ ,253,850
Paid in sums *fu tier $l/00»t the
various offices of the Company
thioughout the United St tes 2,027.4 0
Chickens Hatched by Heir.
London Society.
The author of “La Chas3e Pra
tique” mentions the feat performed
oy one ot his cousins, who, tiighi
ind day, for a dozen days, kept five
quails’ eggs at the proper tempera-
iure, and brought out five healthy
young ones. Examples of personal
incubation by amateurs might be
multiplied, without citing the wicked
Dey of Algiers who, when his pi
rates brought him Christian cap
tives, set them as task-work to hatch
liens’ eggs. At Rheims, Monsieur
0., a passionate lover of birds, con
tinued lor several days the incuba
tion of a silting of silver pheasant’.*
eggs (which an idle and good-for-
nothing hen had shamelv abandoned),
with perlect success.
Monsieur Leroy relates that one
of his friends, a middle-aged man and
a fanatic fowl-funcier, found one
summer morniug a sitting hen, to
whom he was carrying her break
last, dead ou the nest. Three chick
ens had just burst the shell; seven
eggs remained to be safelj brought
to the hatching point. An immedi
ate decision had to be taken.
“I will* do it myself,’’ he said.
After introducing the three chicks to
a nurring ben, who fortunately did
not refuse to adopt them, he put the
eggs into a perforated cardboard box
iiued with cotton-wool, drew on his
night-cap, jumped into bed, placed
ine box where it would get most of
iiis natural warmth,, and drew the
eiderdown coverlid over all. In
this situation he remained tweni3’-
four hours without being able to clo-e
m eyelid. The chirping of the chick
ens in their shells and bis attempt to
answer them, and to play the part of
a sitting hen, kept him incessantly on
the alert. It was heavy work, but
received its recompense in seven live
ly chickens.
| Total paid by all * $4,‘8 ,0uo
For the truth of the abo**e t cU we rel r th>?
public to the officers of the above named cor
porations, and for nnr legality and sta-'di g
to tlie Mayor and Officers «.f the *;ity of N-.w
Orleans, to the State authorities of Louisiana,
and a?so to ihe U.8. Officials of Louisiana
We claim to be loxal, honest and correct in
all our transactions, as much so .s any b si-
ness in the conntry. Our standing is tine ti
ed br all who will inv- stigato, and our slock
has for years been fold at onr Board of Brok
era, and owned by many of onr be»t known
and respected citizens.
H. A. DAUPHIN, President.
^-CAPITAL PRIZE,$75,OOO.^tT
^ kkets only $5. Shares In propor
tion.
as
Lniiim Slits leltsiy Cs.
“ We do hereby certify that we supervise
the arrangements for all the Monthly and
Semi-Annual Drawings of The Louisiana
State Lottery Company, and in
person manage and control the Drawings
themselves, and that the same are conducted
with bounty, fairness, and in good faith to
wards all parties, and we authorize the Com
pany to use this certificate, with facsimiles
of our signatures attached, tn -ts advertise
ments.»»
Commissioners
*!• orpoiatod in 1868 'or » years by the Leg
islature for Educational and t bam. Me pur
poses—with a capital of fl,eo ,c«i tow* ich a
added 6 * UDd of over haa since been
K?Z. an over wheIming popular vote its fran-
of the present 8tote
- — - tr—- v. present
Lo^stlmtion adopted December 2d. a. D.,
The only Lottery c
ptDpU of any State
’ voted on and endorsed by lh>
It never scales or postpones
f«b!-i* nd Slmtle Number Drawing*
take piece m n*hly.
A »Pi.BND D OPPORTUNITY TO
£SttT^riKr mb "' 1 , ’ 1883 - ,Bu,h
CAPITAL PEIZE, $75,000.
100,000 tickets at Five Dollars Fach.
F actions, in Fifths 1* proportion.
LIST or PBIZKS.
1 CAPITAL PRIZE
1 * do
do ..
1 do
do
•2 PRIZES
OF 6000
5 ...»
20 0..
10 do
pro..
20 do
6*0 .
no do
2 0
300 do
160..
oo do
50..
1009 do
2 V
b0....Y.Y.V.'..
APPROXIMATION PBlxXS.
9 Approximation Prizes of $7*0 ..
• . go do NO .
9 do do 250...
.... $75 00
*3,0 0
....
.. 12.N10
10, 00
10. 00
i ,0 0
.... 21*.000
8 .100
—2 ,n
25.060
6,750
4.0
2 »
1967 Prizes, amounting to yus,*'
Application for rates to clubs sho .Id be
X?wO?°efnt ttC °““ ° Co ‘ n P«”J- “
i„ Fo S ;? rI 5« r InfonnaliOD write Hearty, pir-
f “ 11 "WreM- M.ke P. O. Honey Or
ders payable, and address Begfetered Letters
NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK
New Orleans, La.
Ordinary letters by Matt or Express to
M. *. DAUPHIN.
New Orleans, La.
irtn. A. DAUPHIN,
607Seventh street,
Wasblncion, D. C.
10-d-WiOt5w-w6t
JOB OFFICE
k'.prppared; to;comprte with any.establishment ia
the State in
JOB PRINTING !
In AH Ite Branches.
We keep op with tbe time, and hire s> .killed
workmen sod u good presae* u m be Ibjoi
lo tbe SUU, end guarantee aatistketlou i.
who f«T0r on with their ordeii. L..U line o!
PBISTERS’STiTIflKERY
Always on hand, and those who will call- si oar
office esn make their selections from a larze as
sortment. Just received, a new stock of paper
Or
Letter Heads,
Bill Heads,
Note Heads,
Statements.
Account Sales,
Etc., Etc.
Also a genera assortment of
ENVELOPES
BUSINESS CARDS
Orders by mail promptly attended to.
11. M. INcINTOMH Sc CO.
^A.003nT
C0MHIA1
COLLEGE,
MACON, GA.
A First-class
Business Schoo
I to any North orScair
Send for Circular? free
W. McKAY, - P. cicipsl.
5-TOM
i *“ xw.w.w, o.rei o-innri. Bru
JOTES. «E PATS THE
h riJ on trial. WarrinU 4 Ttan,
For&«e book, Mdrea*
JONES OF BIMIUITM,
■UUUKTOX, s7t.
INDISTINCT PRINT