Newspaper Page Text
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ALBANY. GA„ SATURDAY. APRIL 25, 1891
of ii little wire-Uke worn, aud on ot>er parts of fate
body bad aorta came and remained till I procured
the Cctictba iCCMEiur-s. For aome time I naed
p and calve without a blood medicine, but
j not do co well aa when all were tsced to
ll has now been neat!/ a year eince the
d I very much feared ft
„— ... je warm weather of this year,
but the cummer la passed and net one core has
MSS. A. M. WALKEP
Cartonvi
Sore from Waist Down
I had three of the best physicians in Paducah,
and they did me no pood. 1 rased your Ctniccas
llExtoiu, and they have cured roe sound and
well. I wae core from my waist down with ec
zema. They have cured roe with no sign of return.
1 owe my life to Cuticcba, for without a doubt, I
•would hare been In my gravo had it not been for
youi remedies. Allow roe to return ray siocereat
* W. H.QUALLS, Paducah, Ky.
Cuticura Remedies
If the thousands of little babies who ha»c been
cnrwlxof auoaizinjf, itcJiinst, burning, bleed!
'■•mJy, and biolciiy sJdn apd scalp disease* co
•write, wiwt a tocrof lettfra would be received by
the proprietors of the Ccnctnu llrxznizs. Few
can appreciate the a irony the/e little ones suffer,
and when th*-*e great remedies relieve in a single
application the most distressing eczemas and itch-
in t ' and heroins f kin disease, and point to a speedy
and permanent enre, it is positively inhuman not
to See them without a moment’s delay.
Sold everywhere. Price, Cmcm, 50c.; Soap,
2 h .; flUHOLVEST, $1. Prepared by the Porrr*
ltiivo xsit CHEiticAXCoBroBATlon, Boston. Mess.
tCa' 8«*nd tor “ How to Care Skin Diseases.
plpV’O Skin and Scalp puritied and beautified
I J.. D I 0 by CtmcTJU, Soap. Absolutely pare.
HOW m SIDE ACHES!
Aching Sides and Back. Hip, Kidney,
nnd Uterine Pains, ana lioennintifm
relieved in one in I nu to, by the Cotf>
,.J curs Antl-Pnln I’lsiter. The first
end only instantaneous paln killiug plaster.
ecJi/iie I*, f. n. a
*nd ft with frrst lor Ib» enr, of
all torn'* mil ,iifH e( Prti.nr/. Scwtfwr end Tntl'n,
!*■»<»» lit Swillfr.^,, id.orr.otl.D, JI»Uri*. eld
Chronic l’f»y« lhrt in»o n-.H-d ell trnlm/pl. CUarrfc.
CURES
S»*o UiaMsj KMBk Chnals
tsU Poiw»,Trtw, WJ Head,
t,.«nitroil frr»Vil-.rlti«* a
Price $1.00 Per Year
EDITORIAL.
The Italian EmbroelK
Now that Secretary Blaine’s reply to
tbe Italian government concerning its
:Uimi for indemnity for tbe killing ot
tbe Italians In New Orleans on March
tbe llth last, has been given to the
public, It appears that our government
has maintained its dignity in a mannei
which excites tbe com mend at L2p o*
every patriotic American, arid the
shifts which were hurled at S eretari
Blaine in consequence of hl< letter L-
Governor Nlcoll, which at the liov
seemed to imply that he was txtreraelj
anxious to appease the wrath of Itah.
are very much neutxalizVd If not en
tirely overcome in his final reply tr
that government.
Mr. Blaine makes a most excellent
point In his reply when In subatanc*
he says that our government H no In
surance company for tbe lives of tire
subjects of It?ay or any other country
If they come here and obey the law*
they have the same showing befor*
' the courts that the ritaym of 4bl
country have, b it this govern men
cannot guarantee them against danger
t» which its own citizens are liable.
“Where the jnjery inflicted upon
foreign resident is not the act of thv
government, or of Us officer?, but o:
an individual or of a mob,” no j isi
cl dm can be made for indemity unless
it can be shown that the officers of tbe
law have connived at the commission
of an unlawful ect. Unless such show
ing can be made this government does
iiot hold Itself bound to consider any
question of recoupment or indemity
which may be made. The government
does not hold itself responsible for the
malice of an individual or the mad
fury of a uiob.
The entire reply of the Secretary
breathes a dignified defiance to tire
presumptuous and bluffing course of
the Italian premier, which having been
inspire 1 to strengthen hi* hold on pop
ular favor, and is now so beautifully
checkmated, leaves h*m an object of
ridicule to the diplomatic world.
FACING BANKRUPTCY,!
MAKING GLOBES-
ITALIAN IMMIGRATION.
TICKETS TO WEDDUWS.
| A Dovv'pil-i
Mpbe t
i »f llawG *;r*p^lriil
Irf (’■■•!ran «l
i3 of the
Car C. i
Ei v? ui*
■ try ui Fr
-• laflax Ini* !
Oaly InviirS Prr»i ■« *
*• fl'i am .«
Be Allawcrf
C If RES MSP EPS l A
LIP PM AH PROS., Proprietors,
Drogffbu, Llppnan'e Block, SAVANNAH, GA,
wralgiaHM(8E£'
f fAYloNS OIL^LF^ iSAN 0®
CIRMAH jlHIMEflTSBpHS S^ijsjukkfjC I
T/PPMAN BROS, savannah. Ga~
I« Sole Agents in Tile U. 3. ss [
Is the strongest
Some-indorsed
SSedieins
jba the world.
shewsstrentiit by rvv.-nUjv-
dusniltiiHof »U tin? bloou
without realizing any «ty , ,,,
using Wooldridge's N’t endertu* Cu»«s n
►«uM
\ erfcxl
oletocara. I unUesltat-
• it bloodjrwrtftereyer
. A.O. acQEHK2.
“ Coiumbus, Gu-. Sijxcli Zk *s?s.
MAStTACTVnKD Et
IVC0LD319GE WONDERFUL CURE CO.,
v-'clumbuei' Sa.
roir SALK BY A ’-.L DUUC3RIST*
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleans’, rnd b.-suUfics the hair.
I'n-tiK'lca a hisuriant growth.
Never Ffci’s to Sestorw Onqr
Hair to ii» VouUir ’ —
Cure* *oilp dunue* * I
^V.euidO'.'^U Draixhtt
;CONSU!ViPT!V E
A KeformDion Needed.
Under the opera ion* of the present
system or public schools, the educa
tion of the children and youth of
Georgia and tiie South is accomplished
through text books furnished from
publication home-* at the North and
prepared by Norther* authors.
The Nkws and Advertiser rises to
ask is tnelr not enough native intelli
gence and enterprise in Georgia and the
South |to change; this condition of
affairs f
It also rises to enter its protests
against a continuation on this line, be
cause it believes it is hurtful to the
traditions ot the South and places tbe
children of thusejwho fought its battles
in the late war iu a position where
they are liable to Teceive false impres-
*ions of the principle which made the
basis for their struggle.
The readers which the school chil
Iren of Georgia are daily holding in
their hands are full cf articles describ
ing iu vivid colors, events connected
with the late war, which, having been
written by Northen writers, are neces
sarily full of Northcn sentiment.
And another feature about these
books is that no article is admitted
within their pages that hints at the
least of a Southern view of things or a
Southern sentiment. They have been
cirefully edited with this end In view,
an i no doubt that if this is allowed to go
on it wilt have the 'perfectly nat
ural effect of not only placing the South
in a false light to the outside world, but
wi<1 inculcate into the minds of South
ern children anything but ieveren<e
for her traditions and the glory of her
p »st history.
“Southern literature and Southern
biography ought to be encouraged as a
moans to thts end,” says the Augusta
Chronicle, and the News and Advkr
tiser earnestly urges that no better
dace for such encouragement c»n b°
found titan in the school rooms of
Georgia and the South.
BUT TTILL FIGHT FOR TIIE RE-
T0SESSION OF ALSACE
AND lOfitilNE.
TfceFren h fir.- flat Knisaeti 1* Gtr
»aay*N PearaitiafTliat Territory
and Wi 1 Nat Clive Kt Up Wiikeet a
Hi. uc;l3 13 Hie Hirer Eel.
Taris, April 13.-Apropos ot the
f uture increase of the effective force ot
tin French army, and of the minister
of war’s demand on the budget com
mittee of tbe Chamber of Deputies for
further appropriations, Senator Barth-
sieuy St. Hiilare, ex-minister of for
eign affairs, said to an Associated
Prefs correspondent:
*‘It becomes mor- and mr>re evil!
that France Is on the high road
uai.krap'cy. We often hear it said
that France is one cf the richest coun
tries in Europe. This Is quite true.
So, too, we would call a man rich who
nad an income of T 000.000 francs year
ly. but suppose he-pent yearly 1,600,-
000 francs, and* suppose be kept on do-
lug so year alter year, what would his
wealth amount to under such circum
stances? And yet this U jnst what
Frame is doing, and has been do
ing for a very long time. Tbe upshot
01 the whole thing mast be that we
-hall have u> repudiate oar debt, as we
did .in the first revolution, and start
alresh.
ADMIRES THE UNITED STATES.
# “I greatly, admire the manner In
which the United States has gone on
irnying « ff its tremendous debt cen-
.racted during the gigantic civil war.
tVe ought to imitate iu a modest way
the American example, but several
circumstances oppose this. In the
first place the wastefulness of our
ting ro emigration which at
tention. 3!r. DIngly studied Europe
an emigration tin the «j»ot and g ! ves a
■va i t amount of useful information in
regard to it.
Picturing a scene at N iplrs in the
spring 1S90, a steamboat loaded with
emigrants about to sail tor New York,
he says: It is an ex Him, no: of politi
cal or of religious per:
*Iy the go-pel of thN movemet
in those half-led faces is the gosrel oi
want. ’There never was
\ r-r.arev.tced Cure for Piles of whatever
rind or degree—External, Internal, Blind
r Bleeding, Itching, Chronic, Recent or
Hereditary. $100 a box: 6 boxes. $5.00
'lent by mail, prepaid, on receipt of prioo
We guarantee to cure any casu of Pi’ss
Guaranteed and sold oaly by
HILSMAN & AC.Alt CO.,
Wh-ritnle ami Retail Druggists, Albany. Ga.
Simple* free.
1
ONE SS«W USES.
y-Ask for cataloimc.
TERRYM’F’G CC .Nashville.Toil*.
Mine Celt-a* Figure*.
The sho^iug iu population that
Dougherty county and the city of Ai-
oany have made during the past de
cade is very gratifying indeed. Here
ire a few figures that you will do well
co remember.
In 1880 the population of Dougherty
' Oiinty was 12,022; in 1S!K) it was 12,-
219; a decrease in population in the
county ol 403. In 1830 Albany’s pnpu
latioi was 4,500; in 1890,
0,850; an increase of 2,350.
This abolishes the conclusion o
a great many people that Albany’s In
crease in populat'ou came from the
co mtry. It shows further that th*
great influx to the city from the coun
try is oa the decrease and that the far
iner is content, with that Lee, easy and
independent life that rural habitation
is so conducive to; a state of affairs
liat tiie press ‘d tbe South has advo
cated for more than twenty-five years
The*above figures will no doubt be a
pleasant surprise to many of our citi
zens, and well It may, for it is a source
of much congratulation that such a fim
showing cm be made.
Mr. Wicklivfe, one of the leaders
iu tiie slaughter of the Italians at New
Orleans, is a delegate to the Cmnraer-
ial Congress now in session at Kansas
City, Mo., and in his speech on the
subject of “i in migration, and the Set
tlement of Vacant Lands,” said
in commencing, “lYe have
been told that this land
broad enough for- all, bm
l submit that the countries of the
old world have made it the dumping
ground for their paupers and criminal
classes, and I believe I speak for the
whole American people when I saj
that the time lias come when that mus:
top.” Exactly. As long as Mr.
tftckllffe tticks to this text the Amer
ican people are with him. This coun
try was never intended to be run on
the European plan.
Thk Chronicle has often been asked
—*.he authorship of that exquisite poem
** There is No D.'&th. The verses have
been pnMi-bed in this paper, but never
until now have we been able to find
the name of the author, it is from the
pen of J. L. McCiverv. By the way
who is J. L. AIcCrcery ?—Augusta
Chronicle.
According to the Chronicle be is the
author of “There is No Death,” but
the Chronicle Is very badly mistaken
The author of that superb effusion was
E. Balwer Lyttoh.
The treaty between the United
States and Spain, looking to a partial
reciprocity with Cuba, has been signed
by tbe latter country.
In tbe UniUnl States annually about
2,500 personT are tried for murder,
with an average of about 100 legal ex-
*—
great departments of goverment
•omething frightful. While it cannot
be said there is any outright stealing of
public funds, the extravagance U
tremendous, aud no government dares
incur the anger of politicians in dean
ing out this Augean stable. Then,
again, our military system Is so ex
pensive, and keeps on growing more
60 every day, that it seems an almost
hopeless ta>-k to try to stop this suicidal
financial policy.
WANT THEIR TERRITORY.
We cannot reduce our army, for
there stands at Al*aee-I/»rraine a diffi
culty still undecided, Whatau unpar
donable sin it was for Germany to take
those provinces. We wou'd willingly
have paid many more millions of-
francs could we have preserved onr
territory intact. But Franco will
never abandon A'saee- Lorraine with
out a struggle, which, when it comes
will he a deadly one.
France must win or be effaced from
the map of Europe like Poland. She
will fight to the last man, for she will
see that her very, existence as a nation
depends on victoiy; and if she comes
••ff victor’ in what an exhaustive state
she will probably be left. 'Then the
ordinary financial sit nation, rendered
•‘till more oppressive by the Increased,
expenditures or a supreme struggle,
\ftjll weigh down UDon the bleeding
nation, and bankruptcy will then be
inevitable,”
IT KILLS AT FITE MILES.
Treuuid'm I ffld «ry or tbe New
Dries*- Sctn edit r Gun.
From tho Baltimore Snn.
Inside the walls of the Colt factory
at Hartford, Conn.,, has recently been
completed and tested the flrstof the
Drlggs-Sohroeder rapid-fire guns
which the government has pundiased
for use in the army. By “rapid fire’
it Is not meant that the new gun will
••end buliets with tbe rapidity of the fa
mous Gatling guq, but it will send
hebi of rauib larger size and with
rapidity heretofore nneqnaled in such
projectiles. The Drigg-t-Schroeder gun
fires project Pes weighing from one to
eight pounds.
The first gun of this type to be com
pleted and to euj'iy protection and
ownership by tbe United Sta»es Gov
ernment is a six-pounder; that i>, It
sends a six pound prej-cti'e a distance
of at least five miles. The projectile
is coue- c haped and i« made of hardened
“feel, and so great is its velocity when
fired-from the gun that it will perfo
rate a fix-inch el plate at one mi’e
without flattening or otherwise damag
ing itself. Although the new gun'
weigh". S4S pounds, so skillfully Is It
mounted arri balanced that the meres*
touch of a Anger set* it revolving about
its axis. In this way the borfzonta!
aim is seemed High or low range is
only a matter of the gentlest touch on
the’breech in a vertical plane. All
this is so si nple that a gunner can fire
the piece in all four points of the com-
oass jnst as qulck’y and perhaps more
accurately than he could fire a self-
c H’king revolver in the same direction.
A six-DOtind proj -ctile can be sent
whirling toward the north, and Im
mediately another can be sent toward
the 'smith long before the fir«t has
readied It 1 * destination.
The mechauisra of the gnu proper 1-
as simple as that of the monuti. g an
•aritus The firing is effected dn
m *ans of a trigger no larger than that
of an ordinary revolver. There are
two extractors, e>*ch working inde
pendently of the other, so that if one
becomes disabled the empty case will
he safely and surely ejected by the
other. Tim mechanical, parts of the
gun are completelv covered by a steei
band, so that it. is impossible for dirt to
get Into th** breech opening. The gun
was Inven ed bv Lieu*. W. H. Drlggs,
of the United Mat**s Navy, who, with
Lieut. Seaton Schroeder, patented his
invention and resigned from the service
*n order to devote himself to its manu
facture.
Teaching the LUUe Ones.
Many young pareuts are eager to
teach their children, especially by tbe
alphabet. They drum tbe letter a at
them day aftei day until they have
learned it, and then they take b, and
so on until the whole twenty-six have
been mechanically learned. This is
most unattractive to the little
whose little minds are not strong
enough to comprehend ideas separated
from the objects. Begin with the ob
ject. talk about the cow when yon are
out milking of a morning or evening.
The cidld is greatly interested in'old
bossy aud some day call tbe little fel
low up aud?* v: “What do you call
this, John!??” “A cow,” the little
bov will answer, and then yon take ont
your account book and wrl e the word
“a cow” upon it and tell the little bo*
you have Iit«t wrlt»eu the words he
said. He will want to see what he has
said and you can show l»*ra; you can
ask him what he said, again, and then
what is written there and you can
write it again for him. From that
t>me on. \ou can surprise him by
writing the word In different place*
and asking him what It is. Sometimes
you can hi le the word and tell him so
and the little fellow will have great
sport banting it. Mamma can sur
prise him some day by priming the
word in the pie crust and placing the
pie before his plate. By and by you
can urge him to write it; he may ’fail
many times but he will do it after a
time.' He c*n be led to boot the word
out in papers-and book' an i v-rv
shortly yon can give him more words.
Adding a few verbs now and then he
can soon read and write sentences.
Boston Transcript
The fi<i*t prresa is to cover th»*
model witn a thick !a\er of pasteboard
in a moist state. When it is dry e
sharp knife U passed around it so is to
separate the pasteboard coat into two
hetnf-pbpribal shells, which are tbpn
taken «ff the model and united at th«*
cut edges with g’ue.. The Loilcw
sphere thus formed U the skeleton of
the globe that 13 to be.
The next thing is to cover it wi h 2
coating of white enamel ab uit one-
jeigirth of an inch in thickne? 3 . When
tills is done tbe ball is turned into per
fect roughness with a msebine. The
iron rod running through the center of
the original model and pr* jecting at
both ends through the surface, has left j
holes in the new globe which serve for .
the north and south poles, and through j ra& *“ B countries
these a metal axis is run to" represent
the axis of the earth.
Then the surface is marked off.with
pencil lines iuto mathematical seg-
menfr corresponding precisely in shape
w ith tiie sections of map that are to be
i>asied on. These map sections are
m *de Ifom copper plates In jnst the
sizes aud shapes required to fit the
globe they are made for. one set, of &
course, covering the the ernire surface
of a sphere. They are primed, many
of them, like dress parterre, on sheets j grants to RO anywhere
of the finest linen paper, and are cut
ont carefully with a si arp-po iited
koife.
When they have been pasted on, the
by |Savannah
frr w the Youth's Ccrn. aj jcn.
Avery interest!? g report made by j Savannah New
Mr. Frank J, Dinglv to the depart- An order from Bishop Becker on
tnent of state S«»gge8t3 a r.tw fact rela- carriages was read in the cathedral
yesterday morning, and caused con
siderable comment and discussion in
Catholic circles.
After expressing disapproval ot
afternoon marriages the bishop con
cluded by giving notice that hereafter
no persons will he allowed to attend
marriages in the cathedral except those
holding cards «*t invitation.
; obvi- This, Vicar General Cafferty said,
it seen reading the order, is to prevent the
gathering ot crowds of sightseers at
church during such ceremonies.
OPENING AN IDIOT’S SKULL
TIIE FINEST ON EARTH.
: The Elegant Tra'i l>ea Whirl*
Ereii^et lUtrUrn tti'ITran I.
Highest of all In Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Food Report.
(OllERX SCIEXCE HAKE* ROOM
FOR SUPPRESSED BBA1XS.
-o I tic- so th'
itter.” ' T L
ranch bread and very little butter.” j I’he church holds marriage to be
Trie fact to which <ve prefer is rhst I sacrament, and it does not consider it
the collapse of the finances of South l’ r< >per for people to gather around and
airno.-t stopped
| the movement of Italians to the Argen
tine Repub.ic and that the stream ol
emigration h now wholly diverted to
the United States.
In 1SSS and 1SS9 South America re- always desirous of witnessing the
different count l-s are tinted by hand
with water colors. There is no special
role for this, except that contrasts are
sought to help the eye. Finally the
whole is overlaid with abriiliMit white
varnish, which fc aimos-t of metal It*
hardness, and it wtll wear indefinitely
without scratching and without lo-ing
Its brightness.
If I lYe-w Yon* 3Iy;Dear.
From the La lies 1 Horae Journal.
I wouldn’t turn my head to look
after fine frocks, of impertinent men.
1 wouldn’t forget to sew the braJd
around the. bottom of my skirt, qr the
but'ou ou uiy shoe.
1 wouldn’t conclude that every man
who said sometiii Jg pleasant to me,
nad fallen iu love with me.
1 wouldn't teel that l was an ill-
treated personage because, though 1
cuutd p'ay pleasantly, my mends
didn’t count me a modern Moz irt.
i would not, when 1 could only have
one Lock, choose a couspicunus one
Chat woum mark me as the girl in the
red plaid.
1 would not, because I was tired and
nervous, give snappy , Ill-natured re
plies to questions asked me by those
who really cared for me.
i would nut get iu the habU ol
speaki.-g in a familiar way of the ine*<
1 know. When you make them Tom,
Dick or harry they are apt to consider
you as Kate, Nell or Molly. .
I would uot permit auy girl friend to
complain 10 me of her mother, it Is
like iL-teuing to blasphemy.
i would nut when 1 brush the dus
off my hat forget the cobwebs of dis
trust and ausp clou iu my brala.
1 would uot tell my private affairs
to my* most intimate girl friend, uor
would 1 a*k her iinperienet questions.
J would not write silly letters to
youug mett or penult them to be fa
miliar with me.
1 would not grow weary in well do
ing—instead, Y would keep on encour
aging my sell by trying to live up to
my*ideal of a woman, aud tiie very
lact of tryiug'So hard would make
me achieve that which I wished,
* eived lour times as many Italian emi
grant# as came to this country; The
passion foremigration h*s now become
;eneral that there is ’ikely to be no
cessation of the movement; and *
there is no-little inducement lor em
exe
United States they will all come here.
fining of hearts ami hands, consider
it a trespass on their lime honored
rights.
the attention oi our
importance of takingwneasurcs to reg
ulate and control Immigration,
if seems to be time to shut the doors.
S*ve>«l I unarm mf D-Hrate *n
Mrry W fc cli M Ii •**• I hr Prr g —« bm §f
Mnl cal
Philadelphia Inquirer.
During the past two months the sur
geons attached to the Hahnemann Hos
pital have performed some wonderful
and successful operations in head
gery, a branch of the profession
which cases of fatal issue much out-
weight those that are successful. The
Washington. April 13.—The presi- j
| dential special train, which will carry
the White House party’ across the con
1 tlnent and return, is standing side
! tracked in the yard of tiie Pennsylva
nia railroad company, and i* an object
J ot much admiration. It represents
tiie highest skill and igenuity of the
best car manufacturer in tiie world,
and in its appearance and appoint
ments combines in the highest degree
elegance, good taste and luxurious ^ IhicSHmattga Fnrti.npment,
comfort. The train consists of live General Ivcll and Captain j
" coaches besides the engine and tender. G-torge Forbes have practically com-
Tbe forward coach, tbe combination P , for the State,
baggage aud smoking ear, “Azrtlan,” at Chick:,mauga ;
* * * I park m June.
last operation was performed yester-
laugh and talk in the ed'fice during the
celebration.
The order is an innovation on an old
custom in Savannah, and is not taken
kindly to. The Judies especially, who
'Discretion in a .n«*u ana Terror.
Flora the Detroit Free Pre9s.
Among the passengers who landed
pc to the] j 0 xjetrnit from a Western train the
, other morning was a young man wear-
1 his circumstance forces anew upon ing & 0*-^ },„
. _ - * at, a bearskin overcoat,
pun ic men tbe tiie claw of a grizzly bear as a breast
pin, ami other outward tokens of being
a terror from the far West. As he
hung around to make some inquiries,
Officer Button queried of him:
“From Colorado?”
“No, from Montana.*?
“You can shoot, throw the lasso and
Scm?body Lied*
He passed down the aisle of the rar
to the seat occupied only by a man
wearing a weed on his bat, and there j » s ® the bowie knife. 1 suppose?”
halted and sat down, says the *New .
Bun,
The Faras, Mre and Son.
Washingtjn Letter to Philadelphia Record.
Baron Fava did not want to be re
moved. He was very proud of beiu£
the deau of the diplomatic corps and
very fond of Washington society. He
lived (with hi< wite wheushe was here
occa-iouallj) iu a modest apartment In
a email hou.«e ou Eighteenth strtc,
just north of Pennsylvania avenue, the
equally modest legation office being
over h confectionery on Connecticut
avenue, lie did uot attempt to enter-
but, he tveut out a great deal,
never being at home whcti lie wa*
wanted, and was regarded as one of
1 he “swells” among the diplomats
He nas a line figure, whether iu court
dr&s or *tr*-et dress—uuusually tall,
but unusually grucetuL for so thin a
man, aud- with a very sprightly car
riage and a jaunty manner, which de
clared his white hair and white whis
kers to be prematurely aged, ile was
always well dr* seed and tfeuully wore
an orchid in his buttU”hule. 1 do 1101
know why 1 am writing about him ii.
the t>asl teu&e as though he were dead
and gone. For the tact Is I saw hin
on Pennsylvania avenue to-day looking
as tail oi life aud as. debonair as evet
from his eye glasses to his patent
leathers. “Look at the old dude,”
sal-1 the rude old Irishwoman who.-eli.-
the evening papers, so belligerently, a-
he passed her on h*s way up Fifteenth
street. But to most spectators he
simply seemed a Very elegant oid ex-
qui-ite.
Baron de Fava, for that Is the way
to put It, has a fine son, who Is a
great contrast to his distinguished
father. He H a young architect and
civil engineer, the head of the firm ot
Francis R. Fava, Jr., & Co., architects
and consulting engim ers, ol this city,
and burns the niidiftghtnll over charts
and p'autt while his father Is treading
e primrose path-, of pleasure in the
t «•(? »».f die West End. Young
vii, thiowh boro of an old family of
nouii ry •»:•*! educated in aristocratic
schools iu Ker 'pe, has become a
naturalized and Very good American
citizen, aud whether hi- father goes or
stays, will remain in Washington.
He ha? lliorotreii -. i feutified himsell
w Itb tiie hie of tiiis city, lecturing on
his subjects at tile Scientific .School ot
Colombia University, joining the
local board of trade as well as the
national societies of architects and en
gineers, and is largely ernplcyed iu de
veloping the suburbs and neighboring
town-in Virginia and Maryland. lie
goes out into society when he can, bnt
that is not oftenVf»u he is as busy as a
prosp rous Chicago real estate agent
aud gets very little lime for the fri/oli
ties of the fafthtdnahfc world. He has
already made a broad and deep mark
here for a«» young a man and will
doubtless broaden and deepen It still
further. He has his father’s bight,
hut looks more like tiie typical round-
shouldered ascetic scholar than like a
gallant society beau.
The relations between Baron de Fava
and his son have-been^strained ever
York S'un, and every passenger
thought it a.fanny thing that two men,
each a widower, should ilius be
brought together. At least one of ihe
widowers also thought it funny, for
after a bit he turned aud queried:
VYour wife dead?”
“Yes.” .
“So’smine. Yonr’s die of fever?”
“Yes.”
“So did mine. Loving, faithful and
economical?”
“Yes.”
“So was mine. Broke you up didn’t
it?”
“Yes.”
“So it did me. Couldn’t eat nothing
for half a day. Have a big funeral
procession ?”
“Yes.”
“So did I. Counted thirty-one bug
gies and wagons. Got a gravestone up
yet?”
“No.”
“Neither have I. Death is an awful
sad thing, ain’t it?”
“Yes.”
“Bnt we must make the best of it.
We cannot help the dead hy mourning.
Got yonr eye on a second wife?”
“No, sir I” was the indignant reply.
“Uow long’s your wHe been dead?”
“A year.”
The other picked up hi* valislo from
the ll*»nr, vacated Ills seat, and as he
started for the car ahead he
Killed you m»n?”
“Three of ’em.”
“Going to stop over?”
“Yea. for a lew hours. I’ve heard a
good deal about Detroit and want to
see the town.”
“Yes* Let me give you a pointer.
We’ve got a little bit of a sawed-off
man in town who bad one of his ears
sliced off bv a Western tough. He
does nothing but walk HTonnd nnd look
♦or chaps of vour build. When he
finds one he lights right on to him, and
It’s Bood-by tough.”
“No!”
“Sr,re s>* shooting. He’s done up
seven or eight in a month. If you go
up town leave all those things in the
package room. Tf von don’t if he
catches sight of that hat or overcoat or
bear's claw, vnn’11 >*e a goner.”
“Do the authorities allow’ ‘him to
hop on to peoole that way?”
“They can’t help themselves. I’m
giving you a friendly tip. Look out
for sawed-off.”
The man sat down to think it over.
cam* 1 to a decision after a while, and
got Into a seat in a corner of the room
and sat there five long hour3 before he
got his train further East.
BVESUM’S LAST WILT.
day arternoou. It wasacaseof micro-
cephalus, or small head, and was the
fourth operation of the kind ever per
formed. The first two go to the credit
of Dr. La nolog, of Paris. The third
esse was successluliy operated upon
by Dr. V. W. Keen, of this cirv. Tuc
Hahnemann case was that of a girl
four years of age, whose head had not
increased in size since the sge of five
months. Otherwise the child was well
developed. She was admitted to the
hospital as an idiot, unable to walk,
talk or help herself in any way.
Brain growth had been arrested by
the closing of the skull sutures and It
was to relieve the braiu and give it
chance for growth that the operation
yesterday was performed. An incision
was made though the lung diameter ot
tbe scalp from front to back. A half
inch trephine was applied and a button
about the size of a ten cent piece re
moved, after which, with a mallet and
a chisel and a pair of Keen’s forceps,
the skull was removed for a distance
of four and one-half inches and five-
eighths of an inch wide. The object
is !o give the brain a chance to ex-
ABSOLUTELY PURE
bears on its panels in letters of go! 1
' Ihe inscription, “Presidential Special.
The smoking compartment of this cj
is upholstered in olive plush, and the
„ J The encampment will commence on j
ie 15th of June and last four weeks, .
of the four battalions being given !
dial rs and sofa are of the same color.
desks and a libraiy of choice
books, from which all political litera- j
ture lias been excluded, complete the
equipment of the cases. The harl 6
shop and bath room occupy the rear
end of the “Azarian,” and the electric
dynamos and baggage occupy ihe for
ward end.
The dining car “Coranado” is a
tb'ng of beauty. The curtains are oi
green plush, and lamps and fittings are
of silver shade, and all the appoint
ments are as elegant as those of a first-
class restaurant. The President’s car
“New Zealand” is next to the dining
car. The general effect of its decora
tions is most pleasing. The main part
of the car is upholstered in blue plush,
with white curtains, but the double
drawing room set aside for the sleep
ing apartments of the President and
Mrs. Harrison looks as dainty us a
bridal chamber in its white and gold
woodwork, relieved by plush of a rich
terra cotta eolor.
“The other sleeping car “Ideal” is
made up of six drawing rooms, all
one week.
There will be fifty-nine companies
iu all at Chickaraauga, while the other
j ten companies will enter the encamp
ment at Savannah, commencing on tiie
character ensued. These I tends to a point even with tbe plat-1
convulsions lasted from five to eight I form, so that when it becomes neces- j
minutes and she had as many as seven Sftr - V to address an audience in the rain
How me (.real shorn
-Vloner.
mn Left 111*
Bridgeport, Conn., April 14.—The
■will of the late P. T. Barnum was read
at Maranna, !mmediately after the fun
eral, in the presence of tiie family
and representatives of the press. The
wealth of the great showman is rgti-
“btranger, I thought we was two of J mated to amount to over $5,000,000.
a kiud, but I dbWvtt that I’m wrong
iu my figgers. One of us tells the
truth, and the other is a gaui darned
liar, if I d»e for it p Good daj :”
Slia'ukes.
Agnes Bailey Ormsbee in Harpers Bcxaar.
The frequency with which the
average mortal makes mistakes is so
great that when the moralist has on
his blue glasses he can see hat little
else. Mistakes loom up at every turn.
From those earl^days when we com
mitted the web-nigh immortal blunder
of “getting ouf ot bed wrong,” to the
latest years of life, be they ever so
long tiie pessimist sees mistakes affer
mistake, im-rearing in uumber, and
self-increasing like the ctdfdivnV
snowballs made feoin the sofr, adhes
ive springtime snow. Mistakes of af
fection, and mistakes of se.li-hness.
each and nIL, are continu.-Ply knocking
at humanity’s elbow’, n ud even tiie
wiset-t admit first one and then an
other, until the garant of mi-fortune is
repeated over and over again. From
the moment wheu humani y begins to
think and.to reason, i»s blunders be
gin. Even father back than that i.*» a
poor mortal handicapped, a man in
herits his tendency to make mistakes
as surely as he lulieii’shis personality.
From one ancestor he inherits the vi-
-ual angle, from another the mental
angle; another contributes the spirit
ual, aud yet another the physical
angle; and thus harep-red, each hu
man being e ideavors to iocu- hi-
1 nu * varin
* leave
• ju*r g r:lV (
The will Was written bv Mr. Bar-
nbm in ISrf, since which eight codicils
have been added at various times.
By codicil dared Jul}% 1S90, he gives
ids wife $100,000 absolutely, and $40,-
1)00 annuity; He bequeathed to the
First University church. 01 this city,
$15,000 for providing preaching and
other services recognized by the United
States convention, as in conformity to
the faith of UnTvprtal&m.
He bequeaths Caroline (\ Thomp
son, of New York, $100,000; to Clin
ton II. Seeley, his gr*udson, $34,000.
In the same codicil he states that he
lias no male heir named Barrum,and
provides that if Clinton H. Seeley will
change Ids name to tTin’on Barnum
Seeley he will give him $25,000 more
The contract between Baruutn and
Bally Khali he enlorced. and 3 percent,
of hi« share in the show’ shall be given
»n Clinton Barnum Seely, provided he
w ill d<>vote SLfikient time in the inter
est of tbesiiow to car»y it on success
fully. If tiie sum reaches over $10,000
a yea** the balance goes to the estate.
To Mrs. Uenrv Buehtelle, Denver,
(•pi., he gives 705 acres of valuable
land in Denver.
'To Treasurer Fi-h f 0 f the great
show, he bequeaths 2 per cent, of the
profirs, providing he remains at. the
end of five year®, in addition to hi*
present salary. The residurry estate,
after the payment of bequegt*, Is di
vided among his children and grand-
cliil Iren.
To Tuf « college lie inqueaths $40-.
000. To Univereaiists societies and in-
ititntions. to hospitals and asylums in
various cites, about $30 000 is left. Hr
$8 0t.K)iora statue of himself at
room decorted in a distictive tone from
that of the others. One is salmon and
white, another saffron, the third sea
27th of April.
The programme has been arranged
as follows:
First Week—First regiment, in com
mand of Coi. George A. Mercer;
Seventh battalion, in command of Col
E. L. Wight, of Albany, and perhaps
the Chatham artillery.
Second Week—Second regiment, in
command of Colonel Wiley, of Macon.
Third Week—Ninth regiment,
command ol Colonel W. F. .rones, cf
Washington.
Fourth Week—Third battalion, Col
Garrard, of Savannah; Fourth lattal-
ion, Col. Calhoun, of Atlanta; First
battalion of Georgia cavalry. Col. Mil-
iedge, Atlanta Artillery and Richmond
Huzzars.
The State has appropriated $25,000
tor the encampment. One dollar
day will be allowed lor rations ler
eaeh man, and 3G cents for each horse
The Savannah encampment on the
27th of April, lasting one week, is
provided for in the State appropria-
pand, and it is expected the operation i tinely furnished, and each drawing
will be successful. The child w*s un
der the knife forty-eight minutes
Saturday last two operations in head green and
surgery were performed and both pa
tients are iu a fair way of recovery.
Case No. 1 was a young woman, twen
ty-four pears of age, who for the past
ten years ha 1 “
from a pop!
patient was lourteen years of we .lie j ?,7r tl, e members of the Presidential,
received a violent blow on the left side ! party to view the immense stretch of Captain Forbes, of Atlanta, and Col.
of the head from a fall. Imrnr diattly 1 country through which they travel be-
thereafter the conrulslonsset iu. They I 'V® reaching:Washington a*iln. The
, * I teature of this, car, however, is the
g y came on at night, and from , open air end, especially adapted for
being trivial at first increased i *
he others strawberry olive i t ,on *
and electric blue. " The advisory board will be in at-
Tbe “^aeona,” which is the last tendance, It consists ot Colonel Kell,
coach of the train, combines the double ^
ad van tape of tiie library anti observa- ion el Mercerand Colonel Garrard,
lion car. It is upholstered in blue,! Atlanta; Colonel Wiley, of Macon;
s has suffered exerutiailngly and all the metal is of highly pol- Captain Sims, of Macon; Captain Gil-
pleticconvulsions. When tiie is . hetl . brass. The great plate. bert, of Columbus; Captain Clark, of
,, , , glass window will be a favorite place . 4 , , , w _ ...
me ... .jAugnsta; Colonel West, of Atlanta;
adapted
_ viru-1 public speaking from the train. The.
lence until five weeks ago, when the j platform is seven teet long by nine for next vear.
attack was so violent that pa tial mania - a ' eti ?' d ®> rubber-floored, and fenced
- - v 1 m with bass and bronze. Hie roof ex-j
Walton, of Rome.
Copt. Forbes says the colored troops
will not participate In the encamp
ment this time, but will be provided
of a homicidal t
Take Care of Lillie Things.
It is the eavlng of little things that
accumulates much. And it is equally
In a single uieht. Alter ca'cii attm-t I tlle 'President does not necessariiy have tru « t!l “ they, w ho do not save the
the narif nr was reft- *•» -f 1 to expose himself-to the elements. little things will never have much: for
the patient was left much exhausted, Ail illumination on tiie train, even I the most mssterlv incomes rhmn.h
and her mind, which was originally th the exterior lambs will be electric. r ' ^
bright and active, became much im- ln addition to the electric lights there }. of care may waste away to noth-
paired. ' s * n am P le supply of oil lamps to be * n K*
? bouU1 tf» curent give out. Each fragment oftiine thrown away
Ihe sufferer was admitted to the hos Ekctric fans throughout the train as- In jjj eue pg or inaunronriareiMs a Hrti«
pital four weeks ago, and a careful sure l he party of relief should the ..,. . * *
study was made of the disease Finally ,ieat be oppressive on tiie great nlains 1 lln *» but a number of these fragments
the seat of the malady was' localized' I of t!,e Sout,l "' t ' st - I PUt tOSe ‘. he . r wil1 mca3Hr0 the s P ace of
and on Saturday preparations weft Mothe'r" Work i “ f ar ' w hen we fail to take of prop-
«*-7
P | lire, and gets my breakfast and sends j are ta j{i n g f rom our possible accumu-
tiem’s hair was removed ami the
cleanly, shaven, after which Ic
washed and enveloped in bandages she gets my fath
„ and girls,
. 1 . , . 1 *- - - l, P» ant ^ & e * s hi 8 yea, how many grown up people are
teeped in an antiseptic solution. The (breakfast and send* him off Thpn 3 * - • f. . v
naripnr «•« pihoriT <i. „ .. r X t , . aenus mm off. lbeu permitting opportunities for improve-
patient was etherized by II. L. Nor- she gives the other children their! meot and
throp, M. D., ai teroetizer ot the hos- breakfast and sends them to school;
pital. The lesion was located by Drs. 1 then she and the baby have their break-
O. Bartlett and D. Bailey, and the ©
“How old is the baby?” asked the
U^lv^i^ j fobe'cnto'ff! C0Dle3Lant of the wl11 1
The last coflicil, dateil March 30th
ed out an undeniab'e
I know’ its a mistake and 1 made it;
but I always make new mistakes 1” it
is depressing to make the same mistake
repeatedly; bat when we try to learn
can citizen acd weut into business,
both being contrary to his father’s de
sires. It was not strange that they
differed, for they are entirely different
men.
ROMANCE IN* HEAL LIFE.
A Tc ia«- Rrinnrricft II 1 Diro:c d
U if t after Killing Her Faraiuoar.
which is the hope of humanity; for
‘men can build on stepping stones oi
their dead selves to better thiDgs.”
IF Tut-Si HA.I K' zt St s,
Oi you ;:re Sit vuaoww rx-«!iy c\»-l fornoth-
la& is Kx.:;or*ldcbilirr. try
lijuni.s * nlTTKi.S.
cure r->=- Cteaw y .t:r liver, and sive
■ r»v- ■'"Wile.
A “trainer,” who has had thirty
years’experience ol serving lad- and An Eldora Neb.) man claims to
training, deedares running in have a uachiue that will make bli
the open air to be the best of all t xer- jug twine out ol common prairie grass
Dallas, Texas, April 13.—In tbe
case of W.C.Cash, on trial here for tbe
murder of E S Young, the jury ren
dered a verdict of acquittal. This
case has caused great interest in the
South. It is alleged that Young had
been criminally intimate with ilre. tt Piftshur
Cash. Cash followed Young through _ ^ 0U T ^ a IttBOUr,
several States, until he overtook him at tvOCDGStGI', iJliplCX, Ol’
Da’las. Here Cash shot Young on the ! ^tlldflllt Lamp ?
street. In the meantime, Mr*. Cash j Do tllCJ WOl’k
nd her husband had been divorced, j LoitIy * 1
The divorced wife, however, came to
and to prospect his results Small
wonder, then, that many a di^courgrd
soul finds life Itself but a mistake.
But the Creator has implanted the
tiny 6eed ot ne’p, tbe somce of hope,
the means to untangle the farefiri
r*kein Li each heart The savin
capscitv or learning from
given to even the hublen. __ ..
hidden powers of growth which
fold in uireet proportion to the
stancy • ith which we n e thf*rapacity.
What a hopeful fact it i? ro know t h a
•Jai’y, hourly, we mn balance our in
tentions and onr ..eta against nur mb*-
takei, and find out the lack-freight!
Whar a j *y it !■* to know* rliat ours
pos.-e *es. the magic power be*'
mg stronger with each act of weigh
ing, and that our own perception ol
balance grows daily firer, and th*t tiie
weights, the abilities and the powers
of our nature grow* daily better fitted
to our skilled use!
A famous journalist and philosopher
IS'Jl, provides that his • xecutor* shall
complete the new historical and scien
tific society building in this city, tire
j atne to cost $125,000. William B
Hincas, treasurer of the City- Saviugh
. bank, and treasurer Fith are named a^
-taKes 1- executors to serve without bonds.
In it are
this is i’KEason.
become fewer, and we soon to begin
feel that optimistic courage, which
since young Fava became an Ameri- the outcome of' consciou","'but new I ! he P rLloMrE; aml 5hou,J fuch » »»hig
mistakes. A German aphorist ex
presses this idea of development from
our blunders a little differently, but
wi h the same courageous, hopeful
spirit:
fool who loses himself in his mistakes.
We may never live one day free from
blunders, but if we lose not our per- derer triumphs and finds an advocate
not w
A JVfir Yor’-c Italian f Sltcr’a Exprel*
kit n « ■ tke lt>»litin Embrojli*,
New York, April IS.—The Eco cl*
Italian, thi» morning, pri its tl e fol
lowing :
No one a r ter the blaughter at New
Orleans doubted that the murderers
would be allowed to walk freely about
the streets; no one thought, however,
once rep’ied to a critic who had ferret- from the cabinet at Washington
blunder. “Yes, w*ould have been sent out such stupid
and dishonest pleas, attempting to save
the murderers from the hands of tiie
hangman. No honest and civilized na-
Irom past blunder?, repeated mistake? turn would have allowed a bloodthirsty
mob to attack the prison and murder
have happened through tiie careleas-
nes of the office!s a civilized nation
would have prosecuted and punched
thejjuilty parties. Before giving satis
faction to Italy the United States ought
to give it to themselves. The mar-
ception of what we have said, or do
beeorue bewildered in the maze of our
motives, or astray iu the result of our
deeds, we have no need to be cast
down. When we can find oursel
amid the debris which our mistak»
have pulled down and over us we
know we are growing, and typifying
. fast!'
sultant was Charles 5!. Thomas, M. I>.
Dr. William Is. Van Lettnep was the j reporter,
operator, and he was assisted by Drs. “OU, she is ’most two, but she can
C. \ iseller and Walter Strong. The ) talk ami walk as well as any of us.”
above physicians officiated also in the “Areyon well paid?”
other oj»erations. j g et tvvo dollars a week and father
After the patient first mentioned j g e t 3 jjy e dollars a day.”
was properly etherized, she was re-j “How much does your mother get?”
moved to the operating-room, and alter With a bewildered look the boy said,
carefully cleanring th'e head, an incis- “Mother! why she don’t work for
ion was made about four and one-half anybody.”
luches long on a line with the ear, and “X thought you saiu she worked for
about three inches above it. .Thescalp j :l u of you.”
was dissected back a di-tance of two J “Oh, yes, for us she does; but there
inches aud a three-fourth inch trephine ain’t no money in ic.”
applied. The skull was unusually *
thick, measuring three-eighths of an *
inch, and atter the first opening wa
rn ide it was found necessary to remove
two similiar “buttons” />! bone, In all
one by two Incite*. The brain could
be seen pulsating, and the blood ves
sels of the dura mater were found
much congested. Tiie Uur:i mater was
picked up by a pair of delicate forceps
and and incised, (xposing the brain
substance itself. A small galvanic
battery was now brought into use and
4tiuy brain electrode with very slen
der needles was introduced into tbe
brain. When the electrode was ap* w ^' D o^*
Ten Golden Rules.
1. Never put oft' till to-morrow what
ought to be done to-day.
2. Never trouble others for what you
can do yourself.
3. Never spend your money before a 8 ancea
you have it.
4. Never huy what you don’t want
because it is cheap.
5. Pride costs us more than hunger,
thirst or cold.
G. We never repent of having eaten
too little.
Nothing is troublesome that we
study to pass unheeded,
which opportunities If rightly utilized
will make them a power for good
among their fellow’s.
A dime is a small thing, but if ten
of them are spent for that which we do
not need and out of which no profit
cau come, then is a dollar chunked
away in squandering, and in cultiva
ting the spirit of the spendthrift.
in this way wasteful habits grow
upon people. Failing to take prudent
care of the small amounts of money
that come into our hands will soon ed
ucate us into spendthrift habits that
bind us like fetters of iron.
Little extravagances and little use
less expenditures of money seem tritles
In themselves, but they constitute the
leaks through which pass away tiie
hard earnings of thousands. And
right at this point in which stress
and poverty come upon many people.
They fail to take of these little extrav-
Ayer’a
Sarsaparilla
The Best
Blood Medicine
So sotj Leading Physician0
and Oruffffists, and their opin
ion in indorsed hy thousandm
cured by it of Scrofula, Ec
zema, Erysipelas, and other
diseases of the blood•
“Ayrr’s Sarsaparilla has won iu repu
tation by years of valuable service to tin
community, it it the bett.”— Jt. 8. bang.
Druggist, l'12 Merrimack st.. Lowell, J
Dr. W. I*. Wright, Paw Paw Fonl,
says: “In my practice, 1 invariably pre
scribe Ayer's Sarsaparilla for chronic dis
eases of Ihe blood.”
Dr. Jt. Jt. Boyle, Third and Oxford st*..
Philadelphia, Pa., writes: “For two year*
I have prescribed Ayer's Sarsaparilla in
numerous instances, ami I find it higldy
efficacious in the treatment of alt disorders
of the blond.**
L. AI. Robinson, Pharmacist, Sabina, O.,
certifies: “Ayer’s Sarsaparilla has always
been a great seller. My customers think
there is no hlood-purifler equal to it.”
“For many years I was afflicted with
scrofulous running sores, which, at last be
came so had the doctors advised amputating
one of my legs to save my life. I begat*
taking Ayer's Sarsaparilla ami soon saw an
improvement. After using ulwmi two dozen
bottles the sores were healed. 1 continue !«•
take a few’ bottles of this medicine eaeh
year, for my blood, ami am m* longer trou
bled with sores. I have tried other reputed
Mood-puritlers. but none does s<> much good
as Ayer's Sarsaparilla.*’-D. a. Kobhison,
Neal, Kansas.
Don’t fall to get
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
Prep.ircd by Dr. ,T. <£ Ayer & Co., Lowell. Uw
Sold by all Dragghfk Price it; six bottle*.* •
Cures others, will cure you
McIntosh IS Lockett
REAL ESTATE
^.nsrzD
p’leJ to the suspected area of brain,
tbe patient was attacked with the cus
tomary convulsions.
Repeated te-ts with the electrode
dually determined the exact area of-
the diseased portion of the brain,when,
with a delicate ]>dr ofM-I-sois, a three-
fourth inch cube of tiie btaiu aub-j
Stance was cut a wav.
Tbe surrounding urea was th
tested with the e tr rode and found
nealthy. Aft* r controlling in
ant hemorrhage, which was very
slight, tire dura mater was drawn to
gether and stirched wirii catgut,
which the scalp wound was stitched
8. How much pain have those evils
cost us which never happened.
9. Take tilings always hy the smooth
handles.
10. When angry, count ten before
you speak: if very angry, count a hun-
The gratification of little fancies,
wheu isolated, that involve expense, is
a small thing, but its repetition soon
grows into a burden grievous to bear.
Each slight neglect to do what should
always be done in the present is seem
ingly a very small thing, but each one
widens tiie g.tp of waste.
In almost everywhere many be seen
waste growing A>ut of a want of care
tor the little things.
Las! of the Jersey Lily.
Black Milk From a Cow.
Rupert Hansborough, of the firm of
Crowley, Hansborough & Co., mer
chants, of Chillicotlue, Ohio, is the
I possessor o:
FI INSURMflEEC,
ALBANY, - GEORGIA.
HOUSES FOB BENT.
A new 1-room bouse with kitchen. South
eastern part of the city.
The Masli place, corner Society and J act
ion ttreeta.
A new 3-room cottage with store room
South street.
List of Cltj Property For Sols.
A bnif acre lot with good 6-room dwelling
and all necessary out-buildinga, on eut aid*
of .Jackson street in northern part of tt* city.
Can l»e hod at a bargain.
Six acres in Southern part of 'h« eity, de
sirable for tenement bouse*.
A choice building lot, 70x140 feet. In good
neighborhood on Monroe street, oetween
Broad and Commerce.
A desirable lot for residence t-oxsio feet, on
Commerce street.
SOUTHSIDE,
the Annex of the Albany Brick M’f g Co^ on
str- et rar line. Washington and Jaekaou
street extension and between. All laid off in
conformity to cnginal survey of'the city.
Choice lots for busiuess or residences. ▲
complete map of Sonthside can be seen at ou
office.
.a XMp
lots In
and
Desirable Building Lets
Terns.
We now offer 82 desirable bvil.
southeastern part of the city, at
upon terms that should induce all
building lots for liomes or twenentilih/ w to
invest at c”ce. These lots He uetween Uu
cemetery an.l tbe river, liiinllin nlD'WtSh
ngton ai-d Front streets, and .On txn
treats crossingrianters street, running 1
and south irom Mercer street to !*“*
limits of the city. Favorable terms
parties. Call ot my office and see pi
— 1—- — positively Uts cheap*
rket inside She- city
entire 82 lots. Theie arc t
est lota now on the marti
Farm and Timbered La ads for Me,
stage of the Jersey Lily episode. 1:
result- l,as ^ een an l,n savcry Thing from the
beginning, when the woman appealed
to the curlo-ity of theatre-goers in
after England and America solely as a beau
tiful animal from the Prince of Wales’
and the usual auti-eptic dressing ap- P rivate collection. Although she sub-
plifd. The operation lasted over two
hoars, and it was nearly ten hours be- rudimentary notions of dramatic art,
fore the effects of the ether passed
away. Yesterday the patient was able
to converse with the attendants and
will recover.
A Colored Ex-Confederate.
Cdumbu- Ec»iuirer- S un.
A touching incident that occurred in
New Orleans one night last week is in
striking contrast with the reserve ex-
exbibited by tbe white G. A. R. posts
of North towards the colored posts of
that origination, made up of colored
troops which were mustered Into the
Union army. The Washington Artil-
S-*cretary Blaine, and the civiliza
tion of America, so often boasted, !.*«
been proven to be a bluff—a humbug.
A government which approves such a u r *C*u* zlt ‘°u is still maintained, and a
course betrays its own country and
calls upon all civilized nations to send
their guns to teach it how Internationa
each time that spiritual resnmetion )a w and rights should be respected.
English Spavin Liniment re
moves ail Hard, Soft or Cal loosed
Lumps and Blemishes from hone*,
o, Blood Spavin, Curbs, Splints, Bing
u i Bone, Sweeney, Strides, Sprains, 8ore
4 and Swollen' Throat, Coughs, etc.
; Save $50 by use of one bottle. War-
qtisfac ranted the most wonderful btemfob
sure ever known Sold by Hilsman A
Dallas during the trial of her husband,
and last evening, after the rdeas* of
Cash from custody, the former hu:
band and wife were remarried at
hotel.
Do yonr lamp chimneys
break-' 3Tou get the wrong
A great spring medicine is r. p. :
the greatest blood purifier in the world,
as hosts of people in this city, where n
manufactured, can testify.
Agar Co., Druggists. Albany, Ga.
rt!
The
<: PearI
right ones are
Glass.” made
Geo. A. Macbeth & Co'., ^ h “* oit *
A man in Astoria, Ore., laid c!*!cq
> j to a piece of property worth $7,000.
i He had trouble in proving certain legal
the ! u °til he found In ao oid newep*-
Jjy j ger file just the proof required and he
its last meeting something out of the _
usual order trauspired. After the busi- treatment of other physicians,
ness of the meeting was over, Col. C.
L. C. Dupuy, commander of the
veteran company, introduced Bill
A farm ot 4acres a mile and a half frost
Albany, in g<*xl state of cultivation. There
is a live-acre pear orchard an the place, 0*4
t \ T Q\ ' ' unarm*, ui iviiuacoHiie, unto, is tnc houses auQicient for a family. *
j. a natural curiosity In the | ,&IS£5S2SS£& SRfif *
j shape of x cow which gives black milk, Lot* so,tiT,i«ami«s,iatDe Htl district «f
Lcrnlon CorrespondenceNcir York Time.. j says the New York Star. She is on i ta, J18, sit, m, m,m* m
' acreaof 279, seven miles south of Albaay.
It looks as if we had reached tbe last \ Hanaborough’s model farm, situ
ated a few miles out of town, and can
be seen any time grazing in his past
ure, aud at milking time her singular
yield will be shown any one desiring
to behold ic. Of mixed breed, Jersey
and Durham, with a strain of Aryshire,
requently learned some ot the more
this continued to be her chief stock i
trade, and she made a great deal of
money our of it: but London at last is
utterly nick of her. She tried an un
paralleled exposure of her mature
charms in “Cleopatra” last winter to
small purpose. She was a dead failure
in CogliJan’s “Lady Barter,” and last 3
night her laresr. venture, “Linda
Gray,” one of Sir Charles Young’s
posthumous plays, w’as hissed
Vew Rcihod of TreaUnc Ptaeaocs.
What are they ? There is a new de
parture in the treatment of disease. It
consists in the collection of the
speeches used by uoted specialists of
Europe and America, and bringing
lery was one of the most noted com- them within the reach of ail. For in-
mands in the Confederate service. Its
stance the treatment pursued by
special physicians who treat indiges
tion, stomach and liver troubles only,
was obtained and prepared. The
cele
brated for curing catarrh was procured
and so on till these incomparable cures
now include disease of tbe lungs, kid- ute it to seme unique coloring pigment
n«*vs, female weakness, rheumatism
Fowles, a colored man, who served the and nervous debility.
Washington Artillery faithfully during
tho war. Fowles had gone into the
Confederate army as the body servant
of his yonng master, William Fowles,
This new method of “one remedy for
one disease” must appeal to tiie com
mon sense of all sutterers, many ol
whom have experienced tiie ill effects,
and thoroughly realize the absurdity
and was made a prisoner at Sharpsburg of tflc e,a ‘ tns of patent medicines which
_ _ jtr*. tvn»rtt.nfp**n f/» ciirp pvptp ill mir n(
Pittsburg,
A soft of Marshal Bazine is an ad
jutant in the Mexican army.
makers of the
celebrated “Pearl-top”
lamp chimney, which have
'given universal satisfaction. ,; um >
A fact worth knowing is that blood
diseases which ail other medicinal fail
to care yield slowly bat sarely to tjie
blrvod cleansing properties of r. r. r.
(Prickly A>b, Poke Boot an ‘'
In the corpuscles ot her blood.
A fyrln JlcSktinc,
Nothing fo efficacious as j\ v i*. fot
a spring medicine at the season, arm
for toning up, invigorating, aud as >•
strengtbener and appetizer take p. i*
, ... - P. It will throw the malaria, and put
*nd Gerrabur*. ar6 . ^“renieed to cure every ill out o/ yoll fn gn ,, condition. r. e. |„ it.r
Tbe neero bent bv the weivhr of * * D ,*.f S?®’ H ”' the USe ,°|. wh irb. [>.„[ .print: medicine in the world fot
Tbe negro, bent by the we.ght oi a. statist,C8 prove naa ruined more the different ailments tbe ayrtem b lia-
— •"■ 4 - t-o. .... atomacha than alcboi. A circular (,| e to in the aprlu K .
desertemg these new remedies is sent
free on receipt of stamp to pay postage
by Hospital BemenyCompany. 1 Toronto,
Canada, sole proprietors- Reliable
agents wanted.
yaars, and with tailing eyesight, then
stepped forward and addressed tiie
command. An effort will be made by
the bettalllon to have old Bill sent to
tbe Confederate Soldiers’ Home.
Massachusetts discovers that some
member* of her legislature “have
charged tbe State for cigars assumed
to have been smoked while la tbe pub-
tie service, mod have been paid for rbe
she was calved on the farm and was
the second born to her mother, whose
milk presented no peculiarity, aud
whose first calf, a heiter, still gives nn
abundance of natural tinted milk.
Mollie, as she is called, is a pretty
little cow with nothing unusual in her
appearance, and has already borne fiv
young ones, which have thriven well
on her black milk. It produces a fair
amount of cream, which is a tritfe
lighter in color, and which when
churned, makc3 butter resembling coal
tar, but as palatable as though of gold
en yellow. Mr. Hansborough -ay
that at li?at they were afraid to drink
or use her milk in any way, but over
coming their prejudice, now enjoy itat-
auy other.
Chemist* in Richmond and Wash
ington who have analyzed tiie milk
both fre»h and when Into butter, de
clare that they can detect nothing to
account for its sable coior, but attrib
(jNDSTINCT PRINT"*
Ex-Senator Ingalls will soon start a
stock ranch a few miles south of bis
home at Atchison, Kas.
- A MassBCliasettes man frightened a
woman with a toy snake, and a jury
•tys he was wrong$168 worth.
A four-winged duck was hatched
short time ago at Bar Harbor, Me.
If you want to bur real estate,
if you want to i>efl real estate.
Jf you want to rent a htmae.
If you have a house for rent.
You will dn well to call on B*.
Sj>eeial attention given to reatiag Item
and col'ertin* ren»a.
statement with remittance mada to load-
lords promptly every month.
XCTSTTXlAaraB.
We represent the following ir*t-claM Fire
fr»urauee Compani**:
The H'.r.bcrn Assurance Company.
1 he Macon Fire insurance Company.
The Westchester Ftre Insuraros Company*
The Guardian Assurance Company.
T he Greenwich Insurance Company.'
He IM TOM ■ Sc I.«IC1
AlWany, Ga., Feb. 2*. 1SS1.
Humphreys*
Dx_ —■ —r—r ■iiinlsaiigl—jj aaffi
Mrefuliy prepared yemcxiyOomSt —SSwiiang
years In private practice a fmrepBaMffiaSStreear
thirty years used by the a
rifle Is a special care for
Specifics core
rylag Cel
|Kfan(V
4Aea4aekes.HU
!TrsKVMa,PIU>M
Haaareaaed ae Palm
Wkitesi too Procase Mi
feasacBsafa:
| Few ana
t Pile*, Pile -
affisSKSssaas
smFMMMtv MWtnotmm do_ •
Cor. Wiliiam arndJsOrnmijm Mew Tartu
specif rcsT
Many Persons m broken
down from overwork or household care*
Brown’s Iron Bittern Rebuilds the
cyatem, aide digestion, removes excem of bDe,
and cares malaria. Get the genuine.
TU ooanty jail as Somerville, N. J.,
waa entered by burglars tbe other
oiglttsml spoekeCboofcstota).
Hugo Robinson,
Physician and Sarge-1,
ALBANT, s M
S2ZEFSU
- - - : • r ' - -
B9B08