The Weekly news and advertiser. (Albany, Ga.) 1880-1???, November 01, 1890, Image 1

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I a Price $1.00 Per Year. No honest man need apply. This is ‘ the motto to erect on Georgia’s coat of arm* if Gordon is defeated for Senator. A rax iu Scranton, Pa., sold bis %ile for $11,500 the other day. This is positive proof that all the fools are not yet encased in wooden overcoats. : vV 02CJ5 EXJOYS -Both the method and results ■when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant I'ovi.k, tli* Re|>n:ic*n candidate for and refreshing to the taste, and acts 1 ^ ,,r ^endy yet promptly on the Kidneys, j s°re throat. -*i v er and Bowels, cleanses the sys* November the soreness tern effectually, dispels colds, head- j throughout hi- anatomy, aches and fever3 and cores habitual j in which it is right ieft. constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- \,. . duced, pleasing to the taste and ao-1 bivcagslo.-Maeune gang are scheming Correspondence.]—The main attrac- About six thousand people turned fion in Atlanta this week has been the j out iu Chic*go the other day to listen Piedmont Exposition. I to fc poliii.-al harrangue by a crank { This was military week and on Sat- J named Reed, sometimes called “Boss urday mgbi last the crowds and com. Bred.” panics began to pour in. They filled the city and packed it until standing room was at a premium, but Atianta New York Pre«. m Kobers who entered the Ohio farm er's house in the dead of night made him give up his gold watch and $200 in g«ld at the point of a pistol. The [ „ gold was hidden, but was produced : Atlanta. Ga., Oct. 25, IS90.-[Staff : fear bti!U Wlled b , t ; :e Ailnala i U'taSerfal Exhibit*, Sli««- »*»* (tie nuaficivrixf Bxlcrfruc •f ibrGrai(Gale City— 1 The Barn- The Wild West—Great Atumctiaa*. Stie* cf aa Orniiklo-ini'a Onrrra- « *a—The skylark’* Baht a &nd ClaaeSiiady of .n ighlia|aiM A :• ferrtits Concert. and refreshing to the taste, and acts I Congress in (he First, is troubled with gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, | *»re throat. Before the 4th day of was 011 tne altrl aud ** ve « ver y one Li v er and Bowels, cleanses tiie rtp- I November the soreness will extend M,,oca,I,e a K°°d comfortable berth His is a ease i a " d 1 ‘ l<jn, - r t0 cst AUanIa never tails j to care for her v 2 tutors and just now | exerting herself lo make every one Those who refuse to telirve that the (comfortable who comes. I spent the past week in visiting the ceptable to the stomach, prompt iJT^r the overthrow of the Democratic j grounds and studying the exhibits it* action and truly beneficial in its P art J> regretful;}' awaken erelong made there. Xo ooe can visit the ex- effects, prepared only from the most A,,d lind themselves the worst deluded position without being impressed with healthy and agreeable substance its j rooruis in the United States. Lite creditable nature of tii* many at- many exccllertt qualities commend i T is whi pefed* rhdt the A diances * trac!,on8 - Tt, e thini annual display 0 all ana have made it Lie 2S>«fc j vote Wl!1 concentrate on Gov. Norther? of the Piedmont Exposition Company 1 1 ra for U. 8. Senator, and that in the event i li not creditable to the Piedmont mTblf; Sltegi^ lo » Cul - ^ W IH bi* ttic -ection, but to tlie entire state. With Figs J by gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any odo who wishes to try it. l>o not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. .. SAH FMUC12C0, CAL ■iOUISVIU£. XV. HEW YORK. A'.f. Thl* iMinnlur remedy never fails to effectually cu:e Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick Headache, Biliousness And al! disease* arising from a Torpid Liverand Bad Digestion. The natural rtrnalt l.tgrood Rnnetlte *“d *r.ll«l r itih. Doc* cnull; ele^uah 1/ *uur i-OBici] anti cm; to shallow. SOLD EYESYWHEd,E. next gov. rnor. This sounds much iike Light Uei.d Harry. If Gordon is defeated for theu in all truth may we say, ‘Damn every year the exhibits become larger and more attractive and the exposition, iike the growth of a tree, becomes .Senator , | ar g erj grander and greater every year. Georgia’s enterprise is here well die- Democracy, down with Georgians, i 1>!sJed . 1 walked through the halls h irruh for Macune and other Rcpub j a „a on every hand I saw the evidence lican scaliawa£8, and may the people oi j of Georgia thrift and Georgia pro- G. org.ii sink into the bottomless pits of j greas. p-.rti.don. Just to give the public an idea of The Alliauccinau who w'-iiid vote Georgia’s great progress I will name for U. S. Matters m against Mr. Turn- t ;i {t-w txhiblt* that caught my attention er, simply because he advocates the ' and made an impression on me. sub-treasury plan, is unworthy the re-j Eirsi I noticed the exhibit ot the spect of decent people, and yet thi E - VAX whvklb a boyd gin Xbws and Advertiser is afraid there m:itJe by the E. Van Winkle Gin Corn- are Allluncetaen not very far from Al- P an y r *g ,lt 1)ere * u Atlanta. They not bany who will do this thing. I only have their gins on exhibit, but in : r~ ; operation. In tbe main building can 1 H* congressional election occurs on, be .„ een one of their , argB8t and ^ lucsday, November 4th. There is From the Few York FvenlDg Fost. Lucerne .Switzerland, Sept. 21.—The robbers. Here is a pointer for iin.tr.- I , kv , ark SDd u . e ll!( { fca „^ „ ciers. They have been wonderin- ,„ y mank-in i.arefledonfc why money gets tightier and tighter, , ll 3 may easily be learned at first hand, although more aud more of U has been ,„ r6othb|l dB Bre comraol) ^ constantly put Into ein njation by *e llaunts snd wideiy dfatrihuted in En- government. Ol the / ,4 per?<*ns : , engage^l in agriculture ih this country j r0 P e - D may a.so be learned from the about4,500,000 are farmers and plant- testimony of more than oue European er.—property owners. II i,000,o00 oi naturalist. Tet, even iu Europe, the these have each stowed away as much gold a*» this Ohio farmer $30,000,000 i s withdrawn from circulation ami hid den away in old stockings, tin cups, china teapots, and other t*dd recepta cles, where it no longer performs 0* proper iuuction as a medium of ex ...... change. While one swallow dries nor j w " , * e sin K l,, « 1S :it a poitjt sufficiently make a summer, what this or.e farmer : above the earth's suifuce to render did is very apt to be an example of Mai ip visible to the naked eye. His what others have done also. It Is not : , } rt v chimerical rn believe that a va-. In “* “ fr&ul hoaVen ltae)l - awni of money is thus hoarded. It' ^balfengtng the admiration of the is “snyed for a rainy day.” It is not! densest clodhopj»cr, and lifting thecul- pnt in the banks because of dis;rust < tured soul to dizzv higbts of sentiment, engendered by bank failures and) rp. . . , .. swindles, if it extends through al! ec- . . •'J * K » indeed, the cupations we have a partial ixplana- habit of Pinging on the wing, and tion of the recent alleged money stringency. A few robUe- raids like that in Ohio will send this money back into bank vaults, where it can be mil ized as a medium of exchange. That certainly prefers to be within easy op- would be a public gain and new piouf that it is an ill wind that blows nobody good. danger ahead, and only a solid Dem ocratic vote can avert it. Go to the polls and support the nominee, lion. II. G. Turner, than whom there is not a purer or abler statesman in Georgia. 1Mb DESKS—2G0 Nc„ „_1L •Tv- r?:„ R0YAT WRITER Ca'.BINZTS TP ht .-2- c ^AIE8. 200X CASES, Ac..at IUdueed Raw "intc. Catalogcs for 1SOO now reads Book fr»;®; Pentane 10c. K COUNTERS. and Sp< 130 pagfe*. Ill uitrat. TTLElT EA? | i-,n*ll ., f . r s/ , |r A f. rteet w', rk uf Art . * TTLEB- oesK C, •ST »■«! Priev. llln.traU>l la Col-. « P»F' Hook Frrr; Po.Uff* J5 t , . BT. LOUIS, M0., U.R A men, which is known all over the country. The factory of the company is right here in Atlanta, and the Matterson is the Standard-bearer of Cooper is fast taking rank as one of he scallawags iu ihe Second Congres- i the most popular make oi instruments, sional dis’rict. lie claims to be the! They furnished the first piano that Alliance candidate, which is a false- ever went into a parlor car—the parlor hood out of the whole cloth. There is car belonging to the special train n«'L a self itspei'ling Allianceman in which conveyed the Atlanta Rifles to the < Uti .ct who would fail so low as ' Kansas City l»st spring. Their exhibit to vote for such a creature. ( is OUC of tfieaftractiong of the Exposi What .1..I1 the liervi-c bv? I.nti c tlon ’ a "'' is thro "g«Tdaily with mu«lc democrats of Georgia make the an- ! * ov ln« j*e°ple. swer a glorious one.— Atlanta Const!- itk v.oyij asi> baxvf.r n'KKnvn com- tUli0n ‘ ^ | PANY'S ‘Met tlie exhibit is one w orthy of commenda tion. Their factory is another Atlanta It Don’t Vaj. From T exas Farm and l<a ch. To purchase commercial and allow tons of stable manure to re main idle in the barnyard, and have all its valuable properties leeched out by rains aud burned out bj the sun. To put off the preparation of land for a few days becau-e the plows or; w, ^ en ft careless listener—having in the har? ess need repairing, or tTie ' ,R ’ n d the lark of liciicn—believes him teams are tired and worn out. Kcpj I ro ’ >e 01,1 s: l5^ in the sky, be is io things iu ship shape aud take time by ' ue found in some favorite spot a-perch. tbe foretop. The lark possesses a voice of medio- gius grinding out the fleecy staple. ! To turn your stock out to winter be- ore quality, and produces a song far in- thk cooper piano coxpany. cause you have no work for them to do. j tvrior ro those cf many othei birds. At In the main buiiding is an exhibit! Always have enough work lor animals ; ben b5S _ uiw * ir j a canary-like; at worst m&de by a firm composed of Atlanta I to keep them out of mita-hief and pay ! ^ positively insect:k*. Distance does ■" f°r two square meals a Jay, and see [ t^y'/’thr’fanher away^be^inging that tliey get it. j biid, the harsher and shriller his*per- To sit by a rcaiing fire in freezingjtormai.ee. weather while your cattle shiver in the j . ,,u ^ ^ do justice. He fence corners and the hogs squeal ir. get under each po pa \mr saying, “The niglttingale never lepeaas himself,” may be said to be louittfad at least upon fact. nearly ihr* e Hours I sat under rUKKKVMiiK \‘BTBEim3ttT.|tbe laees of bt. Germain, and there wa-* oo diminiitiou hi tlie number and the songs about me. But at ten minutes to8 o’eiuek I noticed that the chcrus was ueirher s<i loud nor k> simtatued as before, and that the nigatifigale were not more per sistent than their fellow-performers. Soon but one ol them was singing at a unit- _ A few minutes more, aud there intervals during wnfeh n<*ue were ro he heard. It was not a quarter past 7 o’clock when the ljc*t song of the evening concert was brought to a close. Now and then thereafter I heard a subdued call-note from some bird set tling id niseif for the night, and a dis cordant cry from a chouette, but at 8:30 all the birds within hearing were silent, and absolute stillness itigned iu the wood». V>L twenty minutes—half an hour passed, and not a nightingale lifted up tiis voice. Nine o’clock, I saw by the flash of a taper. A bugler blew a call in the neighboring town. It was an swered by the yelp ol a dog and the cry of a child. f Ihen silence again, broken at intervals by a snarl from tbe dissatisfied dliouette. past nine o’clock—ten. Still much as a single note from a nightingale. My eyelids begnn to grow heavy. The soft moist air of the torest, and its perfect quiet, were fast approaching me to dreamland. I gut upon my feet, and strolled aloug tbe alley toward the town. 1 had gone, perhaps, half a mile, when the song of a nightingale arose in the woods behind me. Unmarred by any other sound, ringing out with eveery note clear aud full, its effect was singularly impressive. But it ivas the £aine song I had heard many times before—no richer, no sweeter, no more impassioned. 1 had male the acquain tance of the nightingale of fact. kr- wii than the birds themselves. The skylark of fiction, it may be well to state, is a song«ter of surpass ing ability, who-e habitual station -TF IRK ALl IAUE « OBSIICIXT OEISSl f». Thefbarsctrr **f M mpUu'izrd io Org-tniuM* *f liar , doubt ! es3 he sometimes mounts high enough to become visible; there is good evidence to that effect. But he tieal range. Though I do not myseit profess to have acquired a perfect fa miliarity with bis habits, I have stud- lied him in many parts of Europe; 1 have watchird him patiently, sympa- ferlilizers j :}| * tical.’y, hopefully, for hoars at time, and never have I known him to leach an altitude at which he could not be seen plainly by any normal eye. Moie than this, he delights to sing upon the ground. Very often, indeed, And you might have added Democratic legislators answer by th unanimous election of Gen. Gordon to he United States Senate, whole hog,” neighbor. institution, which is one of the best 'J Biood Purifier Cures Boils, Old 5or?srSerofa1ou‘? deers, Scrof ulous Sores, Scrofulous Huuior nml^all scrofulous diseases. **riiunry. Secoml.iry ami Tertiary Cou- Ugeous Blood f*oi «m. rieerous Si res diseases o« the Scalp. Salt Kheum. n.otches. I t- uks, l'imp- les. Ilch.Tetter.su n /worm a.Sculd-Hcn. t. Kczema, KheumiUism, Cou->iitutional 111'hkI l’oisou. Mer curial Rheumatism, Iiisea. esuf ' •'•e Hones. <ieu- eml Debility au-taU d ; «‘i*s«sarisinf» from impure Blood or Hereditary Taint. S. id l»y retail drug gists. J. per bottle. Roy Remedy Co., Atlanta. B G 1 O THE BEST KNOWN REMEDY. 1I.G.C.” (hires Gqnorhoea anti Gleet in 1 to.1Er.ys, without fain, its Stricture, t’.mtnlna no >»• poisonous snbstanees, nml Is punnuittvd th.iolttti ly hurmless. Is prescribed, by physicians and recouiontled l»y arupf,*i ! ts. Price 81. Sold by druggists. Itrivnre of Sub- stltnteH..\rTTioCiieni.Go.I.td..N.O.TA FOR 8AI.E BY >«TL?MAN, VUAU CO..JAI.BANY SivIN DISEASESSatf^ jJTrna, Tetter iao od . c • 1 . GUI OINTMENT. stnrure o. IP • < >.\ A CO., WHAT ts CAR30LINEUM AVEMARILS? lttc*«*lfrr.l] It la r- Wood Hnd Stono Preserving Com pound Oil •stain, npplitHl with an ordinary brush, it is guaranteed to preserve any kinc. of wood, above or tiuder the ground t*r water, tor at least fifteen years, and keep otrull kinds of insects. It is used by the U. S. aud almost all foreign Governments; Teiegraph, Telephone, Railroad, and other !:irj;e •"orporntions, us well as all Real Estate Owners, where it is kept for sale. For further information und Circulars ok-«uie address or call on Ull SMAN ft AGAR CO.. Albany.Ga. ^WFov LOST cr FAILING SIAh'noCB .. A sad NEKV'L:; PEL’LlTY Body ar.c Utcti JJii- f Error*., er Exe-juu ia Old or Y, ur.». • y.faV.j i;-- J.iS. |>DK-VUIPl l>*":. •* '• . "*UTo v.F {.ur>7. •afui'a^ l.i-as rUSATBOS.'—!!•• -ft, !. a Axr. tC ““I * ‘ uanUI. Writ. lh,»_ t. rxfliu.atlnn J rc:Ct . mrai-i) Im. BRIE Pf.EP-CAL CO., E?_ 'FAiO p E_NQ^™ j^-ATALOSL’S "USK ttHMI iSbLLEaH & OSViKSR.^yil COX, Pres. LauRahge.Sa. FUSE SHOWCASES. O'.Vsk for catalogue. TERRY M’F’G CC . NAeHvu.LE.TEHN. There was a time when the south swore vengeance against sea 11awags ‘‘ini carpet-baggers, but now the time lias come when a few men have com bined to deliver us ever into the hands of carpet-baggers. The only safe way OUl 1-f lilic LI Vnblu to v>r Cirtl ODIIII It. Gordon to tne Senate and save country against such a fate. Go the equipped of its kind in the entire I country. They manufacture ail grades i ot furniture from the cheapest to tbe most elaborate. Their display is a the ; feature of great attraction to the ladies who have an tje to usefulness as well as ornamentation. MOTOR SEWING MACHINES. ThefiMvfrm 1 I . n l„.,U--i.!-. U , rt „ and also the Brosious Motor, Atlanta j inventions which have brought their inventors in already ample for- Jons B. Gohdon is a scyophai.tk old soldier if one is to judge by his I trading the attention of the thousands letters and speeches —Early county j who pa68 lUroogh the hall. The merits I of these inventions have already been recogniz 1 as a Godsend ami a blessing U'vnnhai.ti:' ! t News. The young man would entertain a different opiulon of oue ot the grandest men the South ever produced had he carried a musket over the bloody bat tlefields of Virginia and witnessed the herui-m and devotion to duty of the man about whom he now writes will: so iiule regard for truth or justice. ( by hundreds of faithful housewifes i and 8cumstrc5ses w ho have availed ' themselves of the relief they offer over ; tlie old style pedal machine which | has proven the physical ruin of so I many women. The Clayton Motor can be applied to any machine, but the Livingston, Folk and Macune are fighting tlie Democratic party iu Geor gia through Gen. Gordt n. They know j that he is the leader of tne party and I that if they can succeed in defeating j him for U. S. Senator, the party will j Brosious Motor works only on the Brosious machine. 1PK ATLANTA UMBRELLA FACTORY presents tlie unique attraction ot show ing the minutia of the manufacture of these protectors from the sun and the rain. This is the only umbrella factory in the South, and it is doing a bo alincst hopelessly divided and the j p a yj R g business, chances for destroying it vastly in-j * ^ other exhibits. creased. Democrats, stand by your | Among other exhibits to which my true and tried leader! attention was attracted, was three suits _ . —”—T7Z~~ T—“ T , of furniture exhibited by P. H. Snook, ; It is noticed that no such white Rt~ , va i u *v t i R t $3,500 One of the suits is a * publicans as Mr. Putney and Dr. Ar- ( parlor suit worth $1,500 and is an ex- j nold aud others took any part in tlie j act copy of a suit in a famous ParDan Matterson convention. Major B. F. tormar.e But let me do th is one of tiie most cherry and indefati gable of bird singers. 'Be it lair or u.iil, be it sultry or i-hill, his stridu- ious notes may be heard from morning until night in the season. I have seen him exulting ov«t snow-covered fields in Swi-z-rhiml, when June had sud denly produced a day with the char acteristics uf December, as heartily and persL-toKly as if he had looked ‘town upon me greeue*t meadows and the gayest flowers. Sucn thorough r :xr ,nd co,,i " fiB,e *'^ “"-I ,,, r * . .. , , . 1 r-rova! and nlea*«re, in -r>ite of hi* lo refuse to provide the hoI»!.,cme 1 ‘ or m* comforts of life lor the family, and j then complain about the bills of the! doctor and the undertaker when dis- j ease ami death result. their frantic efforts to other. To pitch more tillage crops than you ( can cultivate well, while your cows need the grass that might be grown on 1 tbe surplus acreage. To pay close utteufiou to the comfort of your horses amt cattle and hogs, j while you are working all the spir t Out *.»f the wi r c and children. To seli trie b?st of everything to the prova! and pleasure, mrrical deficiencies. Keed it. be said thn*; the nightingale ot fiction i= the incoiitp-trable songster, who thiough all ihe hours ot daylight js?iss! itt-sss. szsssssi s iie paik \ mceunes, with an eve to the where to be had To pitch a crop without making any allowance for bad weather when no field work can be cl«-n«, and r» pent the folly when two weeks of rain occur. To kt e*» more dogs than sheep, ca'u^eyour ^y r aulit;unc J r : aia ana ‘pfhs- pered. To spend your time monkeying w ith scrub stock because that sort can live on wind and shelter themselves behind a rail fence. To let stock get poor because grass runs low. If you can’t leed properly sell. To spend your spare liuie for any other tiim ) at a grog shop. To do so is as bad a? a drouth, boil worms and chinch hugs. To expect your boys to stay on the farm and help you when tliey aie large enough to do g<»otl work, simply from a previously enforced habit ot drudgery. Buys don’t do that way in these days. L tliey can’t haw pleasure at home they will go for it elsewhere. To spend precious time it; grumbling at fate that might be devoted to gening the ground in good fix for the next crop. To wear out your life in drudgery when y«n have seu-^e enough to ae- compih h more in half the lime. That is the wav fouls do. To buy a demijohn of wliDkv for Christinas when limes are ready so hard yon can’t afford to take a good agricultuial paper. birds. Xor far from the old chateau I was brought to n tiop by a loud hrnsh-iike song, which came from a thicket at a distance of half a dwz *n paces. 1 did not ‘.now the sons'. »•.*•' and took up a position behind the near est free in the hope of identifying the musician. JLIis strain was at o.ice re peated. I noted that it was quite com plicated, and mat. ir. was delivered with much boldne-s aud decision; but it did not impress me as being of un usual excellence. Yet a moment later, as the singer descended to the ground just before me to secure a tidbit that i t aught hi» eyes, I discovered that I had been li-reniiig to a nightingale. The bird saw’ me at the same instant, and, with a short, guttural note of alarm, disappeared in his thicket. I waited attendance upon hi* pleasure for some lime af erwards, but in vain; he neither showed himself again noi favored me with another soug. I walked many kilometres about Vincennes that day, and 1 found sev eral other nightingales within it> houndaries, all ot them more or less tuneful, no one of them the accom plished sing:-r I was prepared to hear I’wo days imPt I h id a similar experi ence at at. Cloud. But l !oh> rnysei. that I most hear the bird at night be- tore I should be coui|>eteut to pas- judgment upon bis abilities, and on I ihe 7«b of May I went out from Paris j to th« forest of St. Germa n en Laye Othat end. salon, li is massive, rich and bcauti- „ . . . . r m „ . . lui, and nothing like it was ever seen Bnraberry, brim full ot Tom Retd before in the South. J. II. Mo .re and and the election force bill, ran ihe McKenzie and Riley both have very whole thiDg. There is money in it to i creditable exl’.ibits. Mr. Moore shows the mnior. He is morefurious againu ! ( : and McKinzie and Riley have a pair ot ' slippers with a gold buckle set with southern democrats than Reed himself and will h .ve to whoop up the negroes, j diamonds valued at $5 000. who seem ro be much nr re conserva tive than ilicii loader.—Camilla Clar ion. FOUR years a*t»i -.tie*. v*«»rn«»u want ed to be Gov rnor he iitid ihe people for him and the politicians against, him. The people won. Now he wants to be Senator, the people are against him and t l ic politicians for hiui. The people will win again.—Early County News. Yes, such men as Matterson, Ma cune, Livingston, Folk and their de luded followers are against him. but, thank God, they do not constitute the p rop’c. The people will place John B. Gordon iu the United States Senate, and this unvarnished fact will (1) to paste in the hat of the young man of the E irly County Xows, who seems to draw his inspiration from Light Head Ilarry, the great “fixer” Alcohol and Childhood. From the Rrkifch Medical Journal. Profleesor Demme, of Berne, nt the recent international alcohol congress at Christianna, presented an interest ing report of an investigation which be j had made as to the influence of alcohol upon children. Having unusual op- bide shows, some of them of excep tional merit, are here in profusion. The b«st of these attractions are Galo- tca, Fairy Fountain and Joan of Arc. The Wild West museum shows a fine collection of Indian relics, etc. The Wild West show is better than usual, and is again under the management of Piwn.ee Bill, (Xlaj. W. G. Lillie), whose wife, Al.-s. May Lillie, is t«ic champion lsdy rifle shot of the world. One of her recent feats was s iooting a ball through Bruffey’s hat while the tile gracefully sat to one side on his massive head. The famous reporter w»a as calm aud collected in th"* manit* station of Miss LillieV skill as he would have been at a high fc-s or while interviewing Rube Bur- r>‘\vs. G::e of the new features of tlie Wild West is Don Zoanno, 14 montle* old, who, while being held in his father's hands as he rides a broncho at breakneck speed, pinks up a hand kerchief from the ground. THE EXPOSITION A SUCCESS. The exposition is a great success, and Atlanta is proud of it. This has been Military Week and companies from Texas, Arkansas aud Tennessee have been participators in the maneu ■ " * * * , 1 It ws* a line morning and a hot one rinat .Shall lie r.a<» upon which 1 entered the forest. At From Farmer’s Voice. | high noon, when 1 firat heard the song If we are thin, let u* eat plenty of : ,»f i>aullas lusciuia, the local therniom- vegetables (particularly potatoes), j eter must have indicated a temperature fruits, grains, butter and cream, and I ot ab J ,ut J® degrees in :;»e shade. Nev , . , . e tholes-* that same first song was one drink fresli iuiIk and coiu Hater. ±i 0 c r j |e [ have ever hoard prodoc- d too fleshy, we should avoid the article. t»y any nightingale under any circutn- i just named, drinking very little, ami | fitaacta—a really delightful outpour- living «hi« fly ou acid fruits, gluten craekers, waters and bread, loan meat and those articles of toed ihat have lit tle or no starch or sugar iu them. What shall we eat? is a*ked very fre quently. Let us eat the things that, wiii give us the most strength and do us the most good. Who. mothers ban- i-h rich gravie.s greasy food from their tables, or at any rate tem ii their chil dren that it is uiiwholes.cue and wrong to put St into their little stomachs. Children should nv>t be given any kind ot meat betore they reach the age ot five or six years, and then the less they eat the better for them and all others. Meat makes children hard to manage. Feed them on plenty of ruilk, grains, fruits and simple foods. Above ail, do uot give them coffee or lea, for they w ill kooii learn to depend upon it, and it will make them nervous, hollow, eyed, sallow and irritable. I know ol several young people who were hired not to even taste of tea or coffee until they reached the age of 21, and al though several years have passed since then they have no desire to drink or oven taste either. Eiting between meals is a bad habit that should be dis couraged. It is very injurious, and brings on many set ions troubles, vres, and have been handsomely enter- i There are many medical works on the rained and cordially received by tbe Georgia boys. The coining weok will no doubt bring a larger number of visitors thau ; have poured into Atlanta this week. port unities for this study from his po- • despite the disagreeable weather. Tbe it ion as superintendent of a hospital , signs indicate a season of blue skies rTS 1 ? »' . -5:J H - si 3(71:8 ASu. 10) :3»>.« 1." V'SC* i! -SO, ! 58' ! sunshine, which means a great deal for the success of shows of this kind. O. C. T. The Astonished Gambler. St. Pad Pioneer Press There is a gambler in St. Paul who will not try to do up another telegraph PATSlTESASu. tor children, lie selected two groups of ten families each, under similar exter nal environment. One group of fifty- seven was manifestly affected more or j le-s by alcohol; the other of sixty-on* was unaffected, or at least very little affected. Of the fifty-seven who ex hibited the affects of a'cohoiism. twenty bad inebiite fathers, tbe . mothers and grandparents bring { operator in a hurry. A night operator minlemie drinkeis. Only 45 per cent. in one a f ( be big railroad offices has quite*loci reputation as a poker- ’ r tions; thu tv-oue had inebriate fathers i 1 , * " sjj and grandfathers, but temper- player, and as poker was also the fa- ’V -^5l ate mothers and granduioth- i vorite game of the gambler, they ar- ;:*c^-jers. Oulv two of these, or » little j mnjred to have a friendly game. It Y-ccSij**' 3 OVer 15 1***“ S Yyh-.uAlrn j dren had jj-^! * s: temperate _ i terer from fpilcptic seizures. In n>- • on duty. For the first time in his life ' * ' I markable contrast is Use state of the | the gambler’s luck did not come to his ■ * w u'C'c, w. * utm■: ranged to have a fnendiv game. It l*;oi.e of liicae survive/ a si.1- ' else being present except tbe operator ;• v:s. y,n two oi wiese, or ja_ijnie j ranged to have a friendly game. aanas -x«xt vo y a faus *v pi LOTrtp tfev li pt.. I. "n. sixty-one children belonging to tent- aid, and his opponent won on nearly nit j. . - l r ’■Cr .. j perafe families, S3 percent, of whom j every hand, or else laid dowH when * <B,, 0'i^FLKJCKCBKLT&X: ^ ,; joy good health, three have died awl the gam! ler had good cards. Finally v ^TiforABros*iw£f!fc'~r- JLou"zip, eight are in had health. Protessor ! the gambler had tour kings, made a ; Deu-.me also reported the results of an j •small bet, and the operator refused to j experiment on several children, from call. The action had become so mo- j u hum all intoxicants were kept during j notonous that the gambler reached I eight month 4 , and to whom the usual j over and ran the cards that the opera- ; allowance ot wine and water was | tor had laid down. TP his surprise civeu during the remaining months ot j they were three queens and a pair ot ; the year. These children were re-j teus. “What in did you lay that i ported to have s ept more soundly and i down on a $2 bet for?” be exclaimed, ith Ur. longer, and to have appeared in better adding, “I guess I’ve got enough.” -tr»u-t 5 y: r j^ more active, during tlie lop- The secret o» the operator’s luck was wbere had t'ject of “eating for strength” that are full of good ideas and very helpful to all who read them. Our complexion and general health depend largely on what we eat. Gentleroaniiue‘s. Kindly feeling, quick sympathies ami geutle manners, joined with true self-respect forms the basis of that geutlemanliness which is so natur ally admired and coveted. Vulgarity, which is so much dreaded and so much misunderstood , consists in the absence of one or all of these qualiues. It is not vulgar to w ear a coarse coat or a cheap gown : but it is esseutia.ly so to dress in fine cloth or costly silk at the expense of one’s creditors or one’s piece of mind. It is uo: vulgar to make a mistake in the laws of eti- etaucca—a iug, ri\ailing in i.s ardor the love songs of the bobolink and the purple finch. It was an admirable perform ance, but it was not by any means a matchless one. I felt that it was rich ly worth bearing again. It was not repeated, however. And during the next few hours and a half, though I tramped about persistently, I heard only occasional distant arid fragmen tary songs by the nightingale. I be gan to feel ai; lo.-t that the Forest of rit. Germain might not stand high in his favor. But toward 5 o’clock in the afternoon, as i was taking a moment’s rest by the side of a shady alley, I was saluted by a tentative song close at nand. it arose from a Lhicaet which I it a-1 carefully explore 1 a quarter of an hour beiore without seeing a leather or hearing a ca-t-nete. Alter a short pau=;e it ro?e again, louder and at greater length. An answer came from a sapling on my right, near that its sudden ring ing out fairly starlted me. For a few moments thereafter the evening chorns of the woods contin ued without an audible note from the nightingale. Then a bird in the woods behind me supplied the missing tones. IIis strain was not complete before tbe first singtT began again: and wi'iiin ten minutes from thac time the three were singing almost contin- uo sly. So continuous, indeed, were their song', and so loud and long, that, added to tnose of other wood-birds, they rendered itdifli.-ult for me to form au opinion ot the nightingale’s nan- b^rs farther away. Occasionally, how- tver, during a lull in its music, I could hear parts or more distant strains, which gained to a mark extent by their remoteness. r l he attempt has often been made to indicate by syllabication the character of the nightingale’s song, but never w ith success, me judice. He executes so rapidly, so audaciously, and with such frequent variation of theme, that a listener must be clever indeed to out line in the crudest manner any one of his longer airs; and no arrangement of syllables, however accurate, can con vey an idea of the peculiar, clarinet- On Old Age. I was a little over twenty years old when I wrote the lines which some of you inay have met with, for they have been often reprinted: The ir.osey marbles rest On the bps mat be has prest In their bloom. And the nainca he loved to hear Have bden carved lor many a year On the tomb. The world was a garden to me then ; it is a churchyard now. “T thought you were one of those who looked upon old age cheerfully, and welcomed it as a s*-asof pea: e and contented enjoyment. 1 I am oue of those who so regard r. Those are not bitter or scalding teaiS that fall from my eyes upon “the mossy marbles.” The young who left my ride early in my life’s journey are still with me in the unchanged fresh ness and beauty of youth. Those who have long kept company with me live on after their seeming departure, were it only by the mere force of habit; their images are all around me as if every surface had been a sensitize form that photographed them; their voices echo about me as if they had been recorded on those uoforgetting cylinders whi- h bring back to us the tones and accents that i*»ve irupi iined iliem, as the ex tinct aniiiiftjs^£ on tlie hardened sands. The meiaucuulf of old age has a divine tenderness in it which only the sad experience* of life can lend a human soul. But there is a *ower level—iliatol tranquil content ment and easy acquiescence in the con ditions in which we find ourselves; a lower level in which old age trudges patiently when it is not using its wings I say its wings, for no period of life i? so Imaginative a« that which looks to younger people the mod prosaic. The atmosphere of memory is <«ne in which imagination flies more easily an 1 feels itself more at home than in the thinner ether of youtiiful THE TRUE PURPOSES i ‘ Amerietjg F!a*e». A gentleman who was aa Intimate friend of Fattier Ryan, the poet iaa- — rcate of tbe South, has furnished tbe the Purpoir* F«Hy j Times with the following poem, which u>-.* i nudiw’i aiai ' has never before appeared in priot. rgiiaisaiiba. ! Beautiiul in thought and conception, as are all of the songs of tbe sad-eyed From A-’vaawI Shaets of tbe Southern Cold- 500 °f th e South, none ot them surpass Tatt>r - i in pathos this one. It Is well worth the calm aud onbi- The circurvstances under which it aseed attention of every lover ot hi- 1 j was written, gives the poem an addi- couutry, aud the perpetuity of h.s en- u ^ ^ . tightened government, uv consider tbe I ,,, • true object and work oi tiie Farmers’' ifac y were w ”Ueu U> bs recited by Alliance. i a son of tbe Emerald Isle on his return What was tiie originating cause ot ; home after thirty years in America, the movement, and the work to be ac- : , k . coinplished by it? That Agriculture is and he su PP osed to Ending on depressed admits of uo dispute. It w a f he desk ot tlie steamer, whose prow patent fact. Impelled by a desire to | was pointed to the Green Island, with rid themselves ot unnecessary burdens land just come in sight, the farmers united to dt-cuss the evils I . ... under which they are suffering and de-i ihe heart of every Irishman will vi«ed a remedy. This , e their unquts- ^und within him a«* he recites “The Honed right. Their declaration of the ! Top of the Mornin' . iu (lie proper the science of goyer: Bft Your From the New York Ledger. What talismanic virtfTe is there in the three brief words, “Beg your par don !” You dig your elbow iuto a gen tleman’s ribs in making your way through a crowd, and as he turns, irate to administer the “upper cut,” you utter the magic phra e e in deprecating tones. Down drops his arm, his honor is satisfied, aud notwithstanding the blue markon his intercostal region, he grins hurriblv n ghastly smile and bowish head as if in acknowledgment of an act cf courtesy. Passing along the avenue of knees in a stre«-i car, in obedience to the “move up” os the packing agent of oue of those xicUl Black Marias, you come •low u with maddening emphasis on an mi-iu ed corn The furious excla mation h h’eh follows the deed as nat- urnllv *> foam from the drawn cork of a bottle of champagne Is arrested in the middle of an obsequious “begyour pardon!'’ and the expletive never reaches heaven’s chancery to trouble the eyes of the recording angel. You tread on the “trail” of a lady and “r-r-r-ip go the gathers, in trem ulous semitones, plaintive as the “last righ of the Moor,” you solicit forgive ness; «!fd she—no, beg pardon, she does uot forgive you, but, with a scowl ’hut reminds you of the most vindic tive of ’he Don’s tormentors, she pares <>n. thinking daggers, but Saying noth ing. If yon wish to insult a man **ithont imperiling your personal safety, dis arm him in advance with this saving clause, a* lb ii-: “Beg jour pardon, sir. but what you say can riot be the fact;it is utterle impossible.” The deprecatory prefix is like a whiff of clorofortu before the pulling of a tooth. Under the influence of a full do-e of it wo have known a regular fire-eater to endure the lie circumstantial and even the Be direct without wincing. “It” is a go-Mi plain-killer in 6ouiec*ses, but you may throw any quality of moral vitriol in tlie face of a person you dis like, with perfect impunity, if you ac company tlie aspersion w ith pleuty ol ••beg-your-pardons.” The pardoning power is the «no»t royal of human pre rogatives. It tickles’one’s vanity to exercise it. youriiful ‘ u ? 5 7 Jh. fi bringing ail togett^-r fc ~ and mkh! will. * : in^ to^rfy^not theirs to breed dissension and sow dis- rd atno ig the people; hoc theirs to enter the political arena and disrupt all parties thac u<*w parties maybe <• rear- purposes oi fcl.a organization is as clear ! as the ounliglit ami commend ii;ose: purposes ro the good will of all. Here j they are: 1. To labor for the education cf the agricultural class in the science of! economical government iu n .-trirrly j non-partisan spirit. 2. To endorse tbe motto. 3. To develop a better .-tale, meu- j tally, morally, socially and liuaucially. I 4. To create a better understanding for sustaining civil officers iu main taining law and order. 5. To costantly strive to seen re en tire harmony and guod will among all mankind, and brotherly love among ourselves. 0. To suppress personal, local, sec tional anu national prejudices, nil un healthy rivalry and seifi-h ambition. 7. The brightest jewels which it gar ners «re the tears of widows and or phans, and its imperative uomuiaud- are to visit the homes where lacerated hearts are bleeding; to assuage tne suf ferings of a brother or sister; bury the dead; care for the widows and educate the orphans; exercise charity towards offenders; to construe words and deeds iu their most favorable fight, granting honesty of purpose and inten tions to others; and to protect ihe principles of the Alliance unto death. Its laws arc reason and equity ; its cardinal doctrines inspire purity of thought ami life; its intentions is peace on earth aud'good will towards men 1” Let us analyze their purposes. Non partisan, non-polilicai, non-sectarian, non-sectional! The character of the*, purposes was fully emphasized in the fundamental organi.-m of the organization. The honor and integrity of the order was pledged to each member that there should he no conflict with their politi cal or religions views. The base of the organization was to render the lives of farmers ami laborers more attractive, country life less lonely and more so cial, and to better their financial con dition. There are two theories as to the cause of agricultural depression. One theory, (held by politicians largely) i- that the deprureioii is due m t<* legislation, and to remetiv ihe '.-v*i. legislation must be conuoiittd, t. i i ?». copofoHegisiaiioL, the farmers must form a political paKv. - 'l he other theory is that Pie depres- sion is caused by bad legisla tion by tie: political part ms on one side, and want of economy cu the part ot the fanners on the other, and that the remedy lies in reform on both sides moving in parallel lines. The last theory is the foundation stone of the Alliance movement. Their work lies iu educating the farmeis in the e *cnomlcal conduct of their own Ac-a-mon diesl Bat there, ft is Dawn on the hills of Ireland; God’s angels are lilting nigu.’ v !:cV y**il O'er the dear, sweet face of my sireleod. Ocb. Ireland, isn’t it good yon look* Like a bride in a rich adornin’, An’ with all the pent up love of my heart I bid you the top of the mornin’. This one short hour pays lavishly back For many a year of mournin’. Shurc, I’d almost venture another flight, There’s so math joy in returnin’. Watching out for this hallowed ehure, All other attractions scornin’, Oeh, Ireland, can’t you hear me shout? I bid you tbe top of the mornin’. Ocb, kindly, generous Irish land, fco leal and jet so loving, No wonder the wandering Celt should think And aream of ye in his roamin’. The alien land may have gems and gold, Nc shallow may e’er have gloomed it, But the heart will sigh for that absent land Where the love-light first illumed it. See there, on Clanna’s shelvin’ strand. The snrges are grandly beating; And Kerry is pushing her headland oat To give us tbe kinaly greetin’. Into the shore the seabirds fly On pinions that know no droopin’. And from the cliffs, with surges charged, A million waves come trooping. A nd disen’t anld Cove look charming there, Watchm 5 tbe wild waves motion, Le.tnin’ her back up agin the bills W ith the ups of her toes in the ocean. Sbure, it’s a wonder I don’t hear Shandon’s bells Ah. may be their cbtming’s over, For its many a day since I began The life of a western rover. For thirty 6ummere, or more, Macbree, These scenes I now feast my eyes on Ne’ermet my vision, save when they rose In memory’s dim horizon. E’en then ’twas grand and fair they seemed As the landscape spread before me. But drn-'ms are dreams, and my eyes would ojie. With the Texas skies still o’er me. And many a night, on the Texas plain, When the day and the chase was over. My thoughts would fly o’er these weary waves And on the coast-line hover. And tlie prayer would rise that some future day All danger, and doublin’, scornin’, I’d lire towiu for my native land - Ofrifiiiilg See, nearer, and fairer the coast-line sho! 5 ^ Was e’ajriticere so tfHandid? I feci the breath of the munstar Thank God, my exiled end’s! Quid scenes, < u d songs, culd friends agin The vale; the cot I was born in! Och Ireland, from my heart of hearts I bid ye the top of the mornin’. A RAID OX CHINA. HE WAS THERE. CMBKJJL W.S. WALKER TiL|N AROl'T GOKDDPf. Va Osa'i Beileva Thai Gcarglaaa Will Defrat Sacha Iks Me PstriM Haw Oca. Lee Helled aa Bias— Garden la Chicage. Tbe Idler In Atlanta Journal: “I will believe It when I see it.” The Speaker was the gallant General W. T. Walker, and as he uttered the words his gray eyes glittered, his thin, firm lips quivered, his clear, rich voice trembled. I glanced down at his unsteady leg, shattered in heroic defense of the South and her people. Believe what, general ?” That a Georgia legislatnre will de feat John B. Gordon for the United States Senate.” Why, sir,” he went on in elo quent strain, “I tell yon that the peo ple of Georgia and the south have nevn er yet fully grasped the grandeur of tbe character of this noble and extra ordinary man—and wher he is dtad and gone—when his martial form shall rest in “dull, cold marble” and the fu ture historian shall record in living letters, the glorious deeds of his won derful career, his countrymen will be prouder than words can tell of this hero, patriot, Christian and sage! “How strange it seems that any Georgian can deny John B. Gordon auy honor which he may wish at the hands of his people. Surely some have forgotten the splendor of his services to his state and section. How, how can we find it in our heart to fight him who never failed to fight for us ail. And how grandly he fought! “At the first sound ot the tocsin he sprang to their defence. Through all those desperate struggles he stood in the very forefront, save when torn and bleeding he was borne from the field, and even then his great heart sorrowed that for the time his brave spirit could stand no more the shock of battle for the lives, the property and the princi ples of those he loved so well. Beat John B. Gordon for the Sen ate! I will believe it when I see it. POWDER Absolutely Pure. or: fW7 '’•’’'ia* iwlcr. Highest Ai; Wholesale i-y Wight, Wisloskv & Browx, Albany, (J a . ttt, BEAL ESTATE fra Takes l bn Were la Xew 'for.K. October 22.—The police raided Chinatown last night and cap- tured nearly three scores of white wo men smoking opium. When the raid p. m., nineteen girls were then held by the guards at the “How well I remember when the clouds hung darkest, when the fortunes of our people hung in the balance, that the great and good Robert K. Lee turned to John B. Gordon, aud from among all Ilia tried and valiant mar shals, selected him to perforin the two most importantduties of those terrible times. THE SIGHT ATTACK. Yes, sir; at the request of the great Virginian, John B. Gordon led the night attack by making a partial flank movement upon the lorces of Grant near Fort Steadman, which attack had for its object the cutting off of Grant’s lines. HE LED THE LAST ATTACK. But this was not all. Lee looked to him again in the last dark hour and at bis instauce John B. Gordon led the last attack, just before the surrender, upon the enemy’s lines. He feii upon Sheridan’s legions and brushed them away like leaves before the blast, and was stopped only by the solid wall of Grant’s innumerable intmntry, which would have battered down out for the I!*?!* of men - HIS CHICAGO SPEECH. "But thia ie ag »H. General John B. Gordon has t X®? 1 ? sto «l nobly by tbe people of tie £outh through all their after disasters, W h « d “ * hat no other son thorn tbhP b*ve done. He made b: Chl£*fc° B08t remarkable speech since iilMKEUEITS, ALSAftY, - GEORGIA. HOUSES FOB KENT. A new 8-room cottage, w»th kitchen, iu* completed an<i cow ready for tenant.on Weu- brook avenue. Mrs. Annie Nelson’s new brick dwelling cm flint street, near Jackson. House contains S rooms and is constructed with a 1 1 modem im- ' an( * C °D wati r in each room. W ill be ready for tenant November 1st. List of City Property For Sale. A half acre lot with good 8-room dwelling “T, alLnecessary out-buildings,on east side of Jackson »treet in north- rn part of the city. Can be had at a bargain. Six acres in Southern part of the city,'de sirable for tenement houses. Easy Desirable Building Lots on I erms. We now offer 82 desirable bvtiding lots in southeur-t rn part of the city, at prices and Upon terms that should induce all who want building lute for homes or tenement hou-cs to invest at once. These lots Me netween the cemetery and the river, fronting on Wash- ngton and Front Rtreets, and on two new treets crossing I’lantcrs street, running north and south from Mercer street to southern limits of the city. Favorable terms to good parties. Call at my office and see plat or the entire 82 lots. These are positively the cheap est lots now on the market inside the city limits. “In xbftt t, sides were ’ Farm and Timbered Lands For Sale. A farm of 4. r >’.J acres n m l* and a half from Albany, in god state of cultivation. Them is a live-acre pear orchard on the place, and houses sufficient for a family. A ten-acre farm, in a high state of cultiva tion, two iuuch -outh of the city. The Joiies-Mcrcer place, nt Palmyra 8tu- tion.on the Uolumbue southern H* si load, four miles from Albany, containing i02? 2 a'-res of cleared land. There is no better farming laud in Southwest Georg a. A good investment for $2,5 .u. Until Oct. 1st, we offer at $2 per ac**c. Lots 154. 207 and 208 in the Second district of Dougherty county. This land belongs to the estate of the late Hon. Lewis arnheim, and will b- taken oil the market if not Bold before Oct. 1st. 216 acres, being the east half of lot 189 in Worth county, four miles from Sumner and also within 4 miles 'l Poulan. Tbe timber oa.- re****"*. e<l- Higher! XoMer! Grantler! ,\t<- oea3ed ahout .j the aims of the Alliance. Write in letters of living light, this quocalion from their declaration of ptirpore?: junction of Dovers and Pell streets. Its laws are reason and equity ; its! seventeen more at Doyers and the cardinal doctrines inspire purity of j Bowery, and twenty-one at Peli street thought aud life; iu intention is : and tbe Bowery, fifty-seven in all. At ‘Peace on earth and good will towards ! the word ot command the two guards men.” He who would prevert ihis ! near the Bowery moved forward to purpose, would degrade Use orgarfiza- ' Pell and Doyers streets, and joined tion by destroying the honor «:id in- j the guards there, tegritv of the brotherhood solemnly So far as possible each policeman had pledged to each member. Brothers I two prisoners. They formed in line in let us “protect th** principles of the I the middle of the street and inarched Alliance unto death.” Allunckmax. A FEW bXILES. Large Silver lips are s:ill n * ;J for canes, umbrellas and hotel waiters.— Yonkers iSt; smau. a’her, ir is. Crce-<u=—This is bracing w Isn’t it? Poor Friend—Indte; Lend me a “V,” will you? There i3 nothing about a woman that takes a man’s eye so quickly as her umbrella —Boston Builciiu. The concave mirror is not exactly a humorist, but it make some very amus ing relleciions.—Elmira Gazette. They have discovered a chaik mine out west. There will be quartz in it for the milkmen.—Boston Bulletin. ‘ I may be just asse«*dy as you are,” said the cantaloupe to the watermelon, “but I am uot m ar so green.”—Light. Tbe roller skating mai-i* has just broken out in London agmn. it is good fall amusement. —^Yonkers .-States man. ‘Americans » ant no kir.g,’ an exchange. Jr might have addtn “except when the}’ ha\ the >■■■'• queen, jack and ten spot.”—Danviih Breeze. RXJPTUB SLEGTfiiC BELT m TRUSS f coMsrare. DR. ISRAEL’S ELECTRO-GALYAS I D <hHi|»jp«etrigy.i A ** ate.*.: tr tk« LI Axes ca Lujum. mo. Beau-window) fliit. ■The eyes of a pretty j picked up, thus enabling the player know how to play the game. quette;^ bat it is to sneer atone who j like richness of tlie bird’s voice. It makes it, to ridicule ignorance, to b? might be the voice of an oriole, rude to the aged, to seem honest fru-; or of a mocking-thrush—per- galitv. A true gentleman may h*‘ j hap= of a wagtail (Seiurrus); poor or rich, but will be neither a *oroe of its tones are reproduced at miser or a sqanderer; he may be rien- by our common cardinal red- derly or thoroughly educated but he J h ird; yet it has a distinct individuality, will be neither envious uor superciii- j. Jacks pathos and sweetness. The ous; he may speak a provincial dialect,; ^ongs of the hermit thrush, tbe grass- but will not use slang; he may be re-; the ruby-crowneil kinglet, and served, but will not be cunning; ha j winter wren—to seek no further— may be known or nnknuwn to j jj aV e these qualities in a far higher de- fame, but will be known to fame, but; zree tj !an the nightingale’s. In fact, wi.l ,e neither obsiquious nor con- , , t j 8 only in the variety of his musical tempt no ns. productions that he excels at all. He “*■ i' a singer of many methods of expres- A man’s credit innst be awful poorjsion. Perhaps it is on this account who can’t even borrow triable with- that he seldom renders any one of his out giving security.—Danville Breeze, j arias superlatively well, and often • ^ — seems to be merely extemporizing The hen is useful as an article of There is always, to be sure, one of a food, as a destroyer of insects, a« a j few charaetenstlc themes present in layer of eggs, et set-ter-y.—Washing-s his muse, but so embefished, accord- ton Port. Useful Notes. w Powdered borax mixed with a little _ powdered suggar and scattered about in spots will prove sure death to cock roaches and to ants, and if that is not handy, a few drops of spirits of tur pentine sprinkled here and there will be as effective in the case of these nuisances as in the case of moths. To clean corsets, take out the steels at front and sides, then scrub them thoroughly with tepid lather of white ctslUe soap, using a very sma'l scrub bing brush. Do not lay them io water. When quite clean let cold water run on them freely from the faucet, to rinse out the soap thoroughly. Dry them without ironing (after pulling lengthwise till they are straight and shapely) In a cool place. To make tins shine, wash in hot soapsuds, dip a dampened cloth in fine sifted coal ashe3, theu polish with dry ashes. Common salt will clean and open a drain pipe. A lew cups full should be placed in such pipes at least twice a month. Coffee and tea pots become discolored on the interior In a very short while. To prevent this—about every two weeks, put into them a teaspoonful of soda, and fill them two-tbirds full of water; let boil two hours. Wash and rii *.e wellbefore usiug. Iu th is way they willjalways be sweet and clean. To remove ants from a closet, the most efficacious method is to grease a tin plate with lard, and place it on the closet floor under the shelves. The ants win seek the lard in preference to anything else, and in a little while the plate will be covered with them, when they can be destroyed and the plate re turned for another capture. Buy fine copper wire by the pound for hanging pictures. It does not cost half wh&t a twisted wire or cord does aud looks much better. Paste light manilla paper over the back of jhe picture frame not already proti as It effectually prevents dtufi reaching the pictures. Virito Hom : I m-r.-iy « —Goo-i : Va vb which c.< doctois i Phi lade; Who is that or v:r=-- on j'.r ;» .:i-*kc il up to Mott street and through Bayard to Elizabeth street. When the girls nil got in there was hardly any space to move around in the outer room. ic took about two hours to take all their pedigre-ts. After they were lock ed up they kept singing and shouting until the captain of the police threat ened to turn the ho6e on them. To-day the prisoners were arraigned in the Toombs police court on the charge of being disorderly persona aud inmates of disorderly houses. Long before the arrival ot the priso ners at the Toombs police court this morning the dingy old place was crowded. Every seat was taken, and the audience filled the aisle. The prisoners were Anally packed ' sardine fashion in a little pen at one end of the court room, where they sat on the floor, laughed, smoked cigar ettes and chewed Chiuess gum while Justice Murray disposed of the “morn ing watch*” They were then lined up beiore the desk. Delrich Chrystal ap peared as complainant and charged each woman with being disorderly. They were Cora and Blanche and Pan sy and Daisy, Lad is and Lillie and here and there a plain Bridget and a shouts i Mary Ann. a.iiivil ; Some were arrayed in costly wraps ot plush astrachan and furs; many were Mother Hubbard wrappers and Nelly Bly caps. All denied the charge, a id claimed to be ladies from all parts of the country, who were in the city visiting friends. Several were dis charged, but many who were old in crime, and regular at court, got off with three months. •Z7 f* l.' Hi Rich eh? ! atch.— The Perfect Home. The most perfect home I ever saw was a little house in the sweet incense of whose fires went no costly things. A thousand dollars served as a year’s living for father, mother and three children. But the mother was the iiU i~eugir. The man who can write love-letters without making an ass of himself has kept the matter very quiet.—Ram’s Horn. “You don’t catch me ever getting drunk again.” “Why not?” “Be cause while on my last spree 1 paid all \ creator of a home; her relations with iny debts.”—Fliegende Blatter. tbe children were tbe mo*t beautiful I There never vrae a man’s prayer that I !> ave eT .* r 8 f n ; Every Inmate ot the did not have himself in it, nor a v„-\ ,ousa Involuntarily looked into her man’s that did not refer to either a man i i f ce or E * ie keynote of the day, and n or a child.—Atchison Globe. al ' Ta 5- e rang clear From the rosebud or clover leaf, which, in spite of her St. Louis is nearly satisfied w :;h hor ! hard house v/ork, she always found late census. It has made her seem time to put beside our plates at break- larger than Baltimore and feel bigger , last, down to the story she had in her than Chicago.—New Orleans Picay- | band to read in the evening, there was uue. ; no intermission of her influence. She We are expecting everyday to hear '^.always been and will always be the Free Fret say that ling lan! would i ?! a '“°' her ’. an<1 } Mme ' be mueh cheaper if there was no duty ! !p a ^ ar * 10 he , r quick brain, loviug on pig iron.-Detroit Tribune. heart and exquisite last* had been r n added tbe appliance of wealth and en- It is curious, but there are agnostics j largernents of wide culture, her’s who claim, simply because they know j would have been absolutely the ideal nothing, that they must necessarily ) home. As it is, it was the best I have know more than anybody else.—Judge, ever seen.—Helen Hunt Jackson. A close observation is likely to lead j to tbe conclusion Ihat what tlie human j mind most craves is some light pretext j for going crazy.—Washington Post. If men in ahother world can look up The Chemical Analysis of Man. j An emiuent physician and surgeon ! of Loudon has lately analyzed a man for to this earth and see things, tbe pn£ r ^ e * >en *^ t of class in chemistry iished pictures of Rube Burrow* should j The body operated upon weighed 154.- 4 pounds. The lecture exhibited upon the platform 23.1 pounds of carbon, 2 2 pounds of lime, 23.3 ounces of phosphates, and about one ounce each of sodium, iron, potassium, magnes ium, and silicon. Besides this solid I pictures r. reconcile him to health.—New Orleans Picayune. “What is Ihe difference, papa, be tween a tour aud a junket?” “A num- : ber of our own party makes a tour. A junket D the trio of a number of the opposition.”—New York Herald.; . , . . . residuum, Dr. Lancaster, the analy- “Fritz, why do you always play gt> estimated that there were 5505cubic f ? ne .‘ „„ C ^ OU t an ^ r ! ttie i feet oxygen, weighing 15.4 pounds; friends. Oh, yes, uncle, I have : ant j fif t y_ two cubic feet of nitrogen, in ptenty of friends, but then, you see I i |he raau , g body . AH of lhefJe el V m ents < ^ OD j t them vef y touch. Tlie- ; combined in the following: One hun- gende Biatter. , aa( j twentv-one pounds of water, Absolute Security.—Citizen : Yes, 1C.5 pounds of'gelatine, 132 pounds ! I have an umbrella that needs meud- of-fat, 8 6 pounds of fibrin aud albu- ing, but if I let you have it, how am I men, and 7.7 pounds of phosphate of £o know that you will bring it back ? lime and other minerals.—Demorest. mbrella mender: Haf no fear, I al-• ys sbarge more for mending dan 1 Lovers of tinsel will have beads and embroideries for garnishing their rai ments next winter. | to tbe caprice of the moment, that the coining wraps - LouisXV., plush coats, wil embroidered vests, revere, Jarj ets, and cuffs, are amoung tbe sell Weekly. umbrella for.—New lips he fully justified the chJv people in the late conflict—not only winning unstinted applause in that hotbed of unionism—but so charmed were the people of the Northwest with his manliness that they actually beg ged him to leave Georgia and live with them. “So wonderful was the impression which he made that, lost in admiration, a federal general said : 'The iike was never seen in the his tory of the world. What would hav** been thought of Hannibal, if alter his famous invasion of Italy, one of his generals had gone to Rome, anu in a speech to the people justified Hanni bal’s attack on the Eternal city. “Beat John B. Gordon indeed ! I’ll believe it when I see it. “It is beyond belief that Georgians will do this thing.” Falling Hair. Hcafl a Pitiable 8i|ht. Hair Came Out In rmrerfols, Cared by Cuticura Remedies. In November, 1888, there came a bald «rot on Ihe back of iny bead. In January, IN'®, this commenced to grovr larger, and other spots came, until the back of my head whs almost destitute of hair. My head was a pitiable sight, tne hair came out by the flngerful*. and seemed entirely dead. I consulted your book, “How to Cure Skin Diseases.” and found that I had “Alopecia.” I immediately began the use of the Ccticcba Kemedixs The hair stopped failing ont, but at first I despaired or ever having any more hair I persevered in the use ol tbe Cmcm Remedies, however, and m three months’ time a light, downy growth of hair came out, which turned dark and became c jarae. Now my bead ia entirely well and covered with hair. C. M. MANNING, bunsburg, N. C. LITTLE BABY’S SKIN CUBED. When ray baby was about one month old, a skin disease made its appearance on his fore head, atd continued growing worse until it covered nearly his whole /way. A physician pronounced it eczema, and first prescribed potassium, and afterwards a solution of arse nic. but no good results followed. I purchased your CVTUIUBA Remedies, and the first lot took away almost en'irelv all signs of eczema. Tbe second lot removed ail signB of the disease, and the child is now perfectly well and has a cure of my child. J. D. CALL1HAN, Magruder, N. C. CITICUBA RESOLVENT, The new Blood and Skin Purifier and greatest of Humor Remedies, internally, cleanses the blood of all imparities and poisonous ele ments, while Crncraa, tbe greet Skin Cure, and CCTICUXA soar, an exquisite Skin Puri- flerand Beautiflet. externally, clear the skm of every trace of disease. Hence the Ct'Ti- ccba Remedies cure every species of itching, burning, scaly, and pimply diseases and hu mors of tbe skin,scalp ana blood, without loss of hair, from infancy lo age, from pimples to scrofula. Sold everywhere. Price, Crncni, COc.; Soar, 25c.; Resolvent, $1. Prepawl by the Potte* Dkco and Chemical coBroBATioN, Boston. £V»Sendfor “How to Cure Skin Diseases.” M pages. 60 illustrations, and 100 testimonials. T IWfflLIEST, Whitest, Clearest Skin and Soft- MlVfi eat Hands produced by Cuticuea Soap WeakJPainful Kidneys Jf y. Mi hav^ hou-e for rent. You will do well focal! on us. Social attention given to renting houses and collecting ren'*. Statement with remittance made to land lords promptly every month. HTSX7RA1TOB. Give ns a trial when you want insurance. We represent come os good companies as any doing Business in tbe State. .UrUVrONH A LOCKETT. Albany, Ga., Sept. 5.1««0. jzlV OLD AND EXPERI ENCED DRUGGIST■ J. I Has opened a new Drug Store next door to Reich ft Geiger, on the South Birt ® street, aud lias now in stock * complete line of Drugs and Medicines, together with a fun line of such fancy articles as ore usually kept in a first-class drug store. Mr. O. P. Lunday. so well known to every body in Albany as a competent and reliable Druggist, will be found in charge 1 ?”£ scription department, and will be glad to wait on all who call. _ My stock of Drugs is. almort^ntirely new, and everything that is dispensed by u* ia P»ar an teed fresh and pnre. I solicit a share of the public patronage. J. R. deGraffenri«d. Albany, Ga- April 13. UM. HOBBS & TflCKER Baa leers* ALE ANT, GEORGIA. V0 A QSSEUAL BAXTIlfO BVSIXBBS. Discount approved time P»P« r -^ Receive Deposit - : " With their weary, dull, aching, life- less, all-gone sensation, relieved I Dec.lT-d*w y. . in ««»»«■ ttinutebytheCntlcuru I . Ami-Pain Planter,tbe only pain-killing plaster. iWIPT’B SPECIFIC- A troublesome skin disease I caused me to scratch for ten ' months, and has been cured by a lew days use of S. 8. 8. M. H. Wolff, Upper Marlboro, Md. Swift (^pecific. I was cured several Tears ago of white swelling in my leg oy the use of 8. 8. 8., and have had no symptoms of j any return of the disease. Many prom inent physicians attended me and all j failed, but S. 8. 8. did the work. Paul W. Kirkpatrick, Johnson City, Ten. Treatise on Blood Skin Disease ( mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga- S ONLY 100 3ewinjr Machlue man, U Kllmg Hundred SINGEB Sniie ■ This »s marvelous, bo* TO WEAK Jlf f a Shipment of 100! I 7: ^gutnia, Si“|{ er I Brand New, , latest --