Albany weekly herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1892-19??, April 30, 1892, Image 4

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BANV HERAT,! - «| 23. 189*. ' { HERALD. i, frlUTOSB, SdiU? wi Praprijtop. H. M. Eel slow. FARTV LEADER. Who. la the leader of the Third Party In Georgia?. AN ALLIANCE COUNCIL. COLLEGE MEN AT A DISCOUNT K.lHnr. r morning cmo|>i anudsy. “irwoai Jiymidi,po.imre null, nr tle- t carrier 10 conu .1 week nr 15 ujllu a Throe month! - I 55 11 ■ ubEsrlptloni psyshle In wlviinco; no ox- roptlou to thla rulo In favor of •nybody. AOVKaTi-iiKO Ram BKaw.Kani.a, anil mado known on application. Omci up atalro, wrot ildq of Waahlngton clalBank. t Albany, (la., aa •Croat, appoalte the Commercial Entered at the poatofflee at , aeoond-elaaa mall matter. SATURDAY,- APRIL 80, 1893. Tn* New York Sun la (till lighting Cleveland. It la the aecret enemy that la doing the moat harm to the Democratic party in Georgia. Tua Demoorata will run Col. C. C. Black, of Auguata, against Tom Wat- eon for Congreaa. Juixia Kmorv Spbbr la not a mere ■machine." Whenhetakea hold of a caae he ffoea through It with glovea off. m An aggreaaive oampaign ja neeea- aary to Democratic aucoeaa In the Seo- ond Oongreaalonal dlatrlot thla year. Shall we have Itt ' How. Joseph K. Brown oelebrated hia aeventy-llrat birthday with hie chtldron and grandohlldren at hla home in Atlanta laatweek. Ei Tbb Democratic party la more than b century old, and Ita mission will not be fulfilled nor Ita day of uaefulneaa paat an long na the Republican party is In exl ate nee. Tun Tlllmanitea and the antl-TIll- inaultes are going to have another live- ly'campalgn In South Carolina thla year Tho white men of the Palmetto State are becoming dangerously divided. OAi'T. Hohhh waan’t seeking compli ments from the Third Partyltea when he Isaueft Ida addreaa to the Democracy of the Scoond dlatrlot, and doca not wince under the criticisms of their organa. Juook John IV. Mad pox and Hon. Seaborn Wright are mentioned as probable candidates who will contest the Demooratlo nomination with Con- greasman Everett In tho old Seventh dlatrlot. hi*. Thi»b Partyism has preoiaoly tho ■ame effect na Republicanism, so far ns the Demooratlo party la concerned, and that la why those who have expe rienced the.evils of Republican domi nation in Georgia have no patience with It. . Tint Cuthbert Liberal-Enterprise and the llalubrldgu Globe, Stephens supporters, jump on, Capt, Hobbs’s ad dress tn the district Kxecutive Com mittee with both’feet; but none oltlie other papers of the district appear to be unduly exerolBed oyer It. It seems that tile newspapers are going to continue to resurrect and re vamp that old chestnut about Blaine's willingness and availability nsa Pres idential candidate regularly once a week until after tho Republican con vention at Minneapolis has met. A wuitkr In Sunday's Atlanta Con stitution contributes an Interesting article on the aubjeo of Amerienn millionaires, and allows that there are more rich people I11 this country than In the whole of Europe. It Is also shown that the rich arc dally growing rloher. meet- Hon. H. G. Tuhnkh has been ing tho people of the Elevontli dlatrlot tape to faceatid talking old-time Demo cracy va.Ocalnlsm mid Third Partylsm to them, and hns Abdul whipped the fight. We tplil you so. True Peino- crafffc principles, when presented mid represented l>y such men ns Mr. Tur ner will carry tho'dny every time in Georgia. C. C. Post Is his name. He Is chair man of the party In Georgia. Who is C. C. Post? Inn speech at Lithia Springs, not long ago, lion. J. S. James, whom the Herald knows to be an honorable and respected oltlseii of Douglass county, gave an interesting review of Post’s political oareer. Leaving off all elab oration, tbe leading points In his reoord are given, condensed from Mr. James’s speech, as follows by the Au gusta Chronicle. It should be read by .every Demoorat In Gedrgla; ' “Post is a disbeliever in God and the Christian religion. "Post was born and reared a Repub lican, and was an earnest advocate of Its bitterest teachings against tbe Bouth. “Post, on. various oecaslons, de nounced the people of tbe Bouth, and tried to arouse Northern and Republi can passions and prejudices by refer ring to the Bouth as dominated by ex- Confederate soldiers. "Post claimed to leave the Republi can party and Join the Greenback party, but he was nothing more than a tool of the Republicans to defeat the Democrats, as he made speech after speech denouncing Tilden and his Southern followers, and attempted to divide the New York Knights of La bor, so that the Republicans might oarry the State against .Samuel J. TI1- den. “Post supported J. B. Weaver for President in IMHO, and In the cam* -paign constantly abused the Demo cratic pnrty and denounced their can didate, Gen. W. S. Hancock, and the people of the Soul h as traitors to the Union. “Post supported BenJ. F. Butler for President In 1881. He denounced Grover’Clevolnm! and the -Democrats, and praised Ben Butler as the ex emplar of nil that was noble, honest and true. • “Post supported A. J. Streeter iu 1888, who was alsonu advocate of the force hill.' “Post will support, In 1892, whoever the Third Party nominates, being ani mated In tills campaign, ns In nil others, by the hope that ho onn erente Riifllolent Democratic disorganization to Insure Republican victory. ‘T.ost. hns ndvoented iu nearly nil of Ills ninny plntfornis, since 1870, the pensioning of Union soldiers and pay ing them the difference between de preciated muney and gold; the gov ernment ownership of telegraph, tele phones and rnilronilH; woman suffrage, etc,, and being on the platform com mittee in the recent St. Louis conven tion It- was natural tlmt he should have Incorporated three things in tho Peo ple's Party platform. “Post Is animated to-dny by the same hatred of the' South that he has manifested all Ills life, and the state ment tit St. Leuls tlint tlielr object was to get in nn entering wedge In Geor gia and burst up the Solid South, while It- tuny not have emanated from him, perfectly Illustrates his feelings and voices Ins hopes. “Tills is the man for whom Georgians are now throwing up tlielr hats. Tins Is the man who Is the leader of the Third Party tn Georgia. “Is it not a pathetic, a pitiable spec tacle, when Georgians desert Gordon, Colquitt, Nortlien, Turner, Blount, Lawson, Black, Atkinson, Reese, Girard, duBighon, Hammond, and ninny other such true and tried Dem ocrats, to follow such n political rene gade ns C. C. Post?” COTTON SUED Oil.. On Friday the Senate, was seized with nil outburst of- pension generos ity. The passage of a bill was secured j that -provided for $1 per month in- j crease to the $8 per nionlli already j received by the Ml'xleilii war veteran, provided' lie be dlsablAl from physi cal labor. It limy lie'iitl right and commendable In tlie putted States government. The "additional cost is trilling, only about $1,000,000 per ycur. C. C. Post,tho Third-' Party lender, has never been 11 Democrat: but his record shows tlmt he was a 'Republican and consistent South loiter for twenty years. ‘ Georgians should think twice before committing themselves to a movement or party that is being led by one who lias never had a kind word or deed for tlieui until lie oainh 11s ah eily-tongued • emissary of tlte'i? f > old enemy, the Republican party. ' —rj It* la now confldcutly asserted; tlmt the Pope is a Democrat. . This piece of news should not escape .the attention of the opponents of Democracy. The ■Philadelphia Record calls attention to the Pope’s polities : for the purpose of suggesting that there is no further terror in the Cobden-Club-Brltlsh- JS Gold bogr, and now that the redness has faded out of the bloody shirt, it ’ would see in to be a good time to start ■once more the ery of “No Popery.” There are still fools tube folded in this rantry. In view of t-lp> fact that the most of tho “olive oil” that we use iu this country is nothing else than refined cotton seed oil, It is Interesting to know tlmt a French .chemist named Hegroot Ims discovered an improved process'd'redoing cotton seed oil that promises excellent results, il has heretofore been found impossible to remove from the oil certain gummy or resinous qualities which restricted its use for various purposes. This diffi culty Ims liceII economically overcome. At a cost less than the expense of re doing by the present methods, M..ne groid turns ojit an oil of remarkable purity equal In its lubricant quality to lard oil. The product is so free from odor tlmt the objection hereto fore made to its use for' cooking pur poses is said to Have been completely removed. The value of this .discovery receives continuation from the an nouncement in l.!u- 'New Orleans Tlnies-Democrnt of late date that a company has been chartered to rettne the oil by tile new process, ami will begin active operations on tile 1st of May. There would hardly he a limit to the use of cotton seed oil asn lubricant and for household purposes if it could be sold cheaper than lard oil, olive oil, peanut oil or other oils now used for such purposes. Tile superior purity and cleanliness of a vegetable product would recommend it for culinary pur poses in all parts of the world. The discovery is also most welcome as promising to give an added value to the rotten crop, which is now so sadly depressed in consequence of low prioes. Tub Central Railroad still manages to furnish a sensational rumor daily for the Atlanta, Savannah and Macon papers. A MEETING AT BIRMINGHAM ON THE 3D OF NAY. Caacen •( AcUaa The TUa/ Desired. [ Frank AO view from. * Sensible Stater j Aided One Young Fellow to Get a Start. | He was n college bred’ youth, add ! after graduation camo the question ■ of Low he wrs to make his living. Ho iiiul the right stuff in him, though A Washington press dispatch (lafed yesterday says that the Post of to-day will print s circular calling a council ot the presidents and members of the executive committees of the State Far mers Alliances at Birmingham, Ala., on Tuesday, the 8rd of May. The oiroular says that this is the most orittesl period in the history of the osder. Never bss there been suob a universal and loud orjrfrom the or der to the officers for directions how to conduot the local fights. Neyer has there been so -little concert of action among the officers of the different States and sections. This, .If allowed to oontinuc, the circular <says, must be fatal. Concert of autlon Is impera tive, and success eannot be SQbleved without It. The political contest threatens destruction to the order. The oiroular explai ns that the expenses attending national councils Of this character is too great to be borne with convenience, hence the preaent method of a meeting of the offloera is pro posed. Great stress Is laid upon the Impor tance of meeting, and the necessity for full and free councils by all executive officers Is said to be greater than at any time in the history of the move ment. The meeting will be strictly secret, with none but properly accredi ted persons admitted. The officers named of the following State Allian ces have been Invited to attend : Vir ginia, West Virginia, Maryland, North Carolina, Bouth Carolina, Florida, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Louis iana, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, Ken tucky, and Tennessee. Also the offi cers of the Alliance in the territory of Oklahoma. STICK TO THE HII.D. This Is the good sound advice given by the Home Tribune. It does seem tlmt any limit with a grain of percep tion could see to-day, If lie hns the slightest Idea of nntionnl politics, thnt but two parties will cut any figure in the Presidential or any other election —the Democratic and Republican. -Every blow against the Democratic party Is one I11 favor of Republican tri umph, and the loss of votes by the noble pnrty thnt hns stood between the Bouth and venal Republican ha tred, Will be equivalent to their gnln by our enemies, whether they afe cast for tho People's pnrty or Republican ticket. How can n sensible Southerner leave the folds of a party that has stood our friend for so many years, through thick and thin, through the throes of reconstruction down to the present era of hope, where we have had the deso lation of despair; how can a Southern er, we repeat, desert the ranks of the friend of our greatest extremity', Just at a time when the rainbow of h«pe has taken the place of the frowns of our arch enemies—rapid, partisan ra dicals I This is no time for division, nor Is It time for any Democrat to go after un tried lenders, who propose to seek un tried ends. The farmers of Georgia cannot af ford to follow the leadership of a mob of disgruntled cranks, professional turncoats and political mountebanks and frauds. Suohnstepcan onlymenn grent disaster, suolt as has never been known. There is no possible chance for the Third Party In Georgia or any other Stiife, nnd those who go oft’ after it nrc onlycutting their own throats and helping to lead on to Republican vic tory nnd min. Farmers, stop and think title-, if not thrice. God pity—we repent, God pity—tile South If our people follow Hie leadership of the Republican hcnrlmicn who conceived the idea of the People's parly. Many of the Republican papers, of the country, tlmt don’t) like the idea of another term of llarrisonism, per sist iu alluding, to the possibility of Mr,'Blaine's becomingn candidate, de spite his repented protestations. A Harrisburg special to tile New York- World ought to set all tlie rumors about, the probable candidacy of the Secretary of Slate at rest. According to this dispatch, Chris Magee was in Washington this week amf called upon Mr. Blaine. Magee is quoted ns say ing that the question of Secretary Blaine’s candidacy for the presidency was brought up and Mr. Blaine de clared that if the nomination was brought to lTim oil a silver salver he would not accept it. Mr. Blaine is said to have added: “I feel so seriously upon the question that even in the impassible event of my being nomi nated and elected against my wish I would not take the oatli of office.” at first it was pretty well hidden by " be held of his own the'high opinion capacity. A farmer's son, with no influential friends to assist him in obtaining a situation, he found himself alone in Boston. He presented himself at business offices, wrote letters in an swer to advertisement, nought inter views with men prominent in com mercial and banking circles, bnt was everywhere met-with refusal. At last he began to grow despondent and to wonder what a college educa tion was good for. anyhow. He now sought the advice of an old maid sister, his senior by many years, whose experiences in the world had made her thoroughly prac tical. She questioned him closely as to how he inode application for a position, how he approached on em ployer, what he said of himself, etc. When the young man had answered, shosaid: "It’s just as I supposed, John. You didn’t ask for a place as an employee at all. Your method is more like de manding that the employer turn over his entire business to you. You’ll have to go about the thing different ly. Don’t attach so much impor tance to your college acquirements. Collegians nowadays are as thick as huckleberries down east, and some of them are working for a mere song, “Don’t say to a man from whom you expect a situation, ‘My dear sir, if there Ib an existing vacancy in your establishment I shall be glad to HR it. being assured that my qualifi cations will enable me to assume any position you may have to offer.’ Just believe that there ore a few things left which you don’t know, andmako your application accordingly.” John was sensible, and sow the force of bis sister’s remarks. His next roquest for a situation was couched in more modest terms than the others, and his college training was not mentioned until the vory last part of tho interview, when it was drawn out by tho employer’s own questions. Ho got that situation aftor a few days without further trouble. That was several years ago, and today he holds a much better position in the same establishment. Only the other day John repeated hia sister’s advice to a recent gradu ate from his alma mater, at the same timo relating his own experience.— Boston Herald. Electricity tn Modern Warships. In modern warships electricity is playing a very important part. The commanding officer, who nits in his conning tower,-hits nt his disposal every electrical device known, and by the pressure of a button can make his wishes known to every part of tho vessel, ns well ns direct its move ments mechanically. Now. by a new application, the fighters 011 the Miantonomoh can Mow away tlie Semite from their eyes, and ii may not l.o long ere Bomb invention is patented by which they may blow this smoko into tho eyes of their en emies.—Electricty. BeueStjt ot Reading Circle*. Beading circles seem to be ail the rage now among young people of every class. Their multiplication, Unlike many other successful institu tions, is not duo altogether to the fact that the idea is a fashionable one, for fashion and study hardly go Band in hand They are horses of different breed, - different color and different proportions, and it is sel dom that they can, from a compara tive standpoint, he made to labor to gether. The necessity of education which is daily Impressing itself more and more upon the youth of our times is the cause responsible for their existence. Tbe benefit that the studious one derives from them 1b obviously great. A man reads a book and carries out of it a certain number of ideas. His knowledge of that hook is not tut great os if he re ceived the ideas of thirty readers of it, each of whom views it differently to some degree. This is the argument the young people make in favor of this pros perous institution, and a little reflec tion will show that it is not a bad one. I dropped in during the exercises of one of these circles during the week. Young men and women, the maxi mum age of whom was twenty-three, were laboring industriously over the French rebellion,\nd the way that they arranged the facts, throwing in detail while keeping clear and upper most the main ideas, was something marvelous. They had been colabor ing for just one year and had in that time reviewed and studied American history and a dozen works of differ ent standard authors. —Brooklyn Eagle. Hardy Meat Eater*. Many races of men live entirely on animal foqd, and these are the most hardy, and from all I have been able to gather on the subject tbe most freo from diseases of all kinds. Sir Francis Head says of the Pampas In dians: “They ore all horsemen, or rather pasB their lives on horseback Tn spite of the climate, which is burn ing hot in summer and freezing in winter, these brave men, who have never yet been subdued, ore entirely naked, and have not even a covering for their head. They live together in tribes, each of which is governed by a cacique, but they have no fixed place of residence. Where the pas turn is good they are to be fqund un til it is consumed by their liafses, and they then instantly move to a more verdant spot. They have neither bread, fruit nor vegetables, but they subsist entirely on the flesh of their mares,”—Gentleman's Magazine. Wan Wellington Surprised? Tho generally received notion that the Duke of Wellington was surprised receives full confirmation in many pages of "Waterloo Letters." and per haps most markedly in n letter from Sir William Napier, the historian. Napier gives the following account from the duke’s own mouth: He found tho Prince of Orango at the Duchess of Richmond's boll on the evening of the 16th. Ho was surprised to see him because he had placed him at Binche, an important outpost, for tho purpose of observing and giving notice of the movements of the enemy. He went up to him and asked if there was any news. “No, nothing but that the French have crossed tho Sombre and had a brush with the Prussians. Have you heard of it?” This was news. So he told him quietly that he had better go back to his post, and then by - de grees he got tho principal officers away from the ball and sent them to their troops. This was done, I think ho said, about 11 o’clock. ' He then went to his quarters and found Muf fling there, coming from Blucher with the news; he ought to have ar rived long before, but said the duke to me. “I cannot tell the world that Blucher picked the fattest man in his army to ride with nn express to me, uud tlmt ho took thirty hours to go thirty miles. ’’—London Academy. Proaorvlng Unby’a Voice. The phonograph has in its cylinder great possibilities of comfort, as more and more persons are beginning to discover. A New England father, whoso business makes compulsory long periods of absence from home, has a dear little daughter of four years. The child is, alas I mother less, and tho father writes thus to a friend: “When 1 next return east I shall take Baby to the phonograph makers and have an instrument made for her which will preserve her quuint utterances and her sweet voice. 1 shall take it with me al ways, and when I am weary and longing for homo I shall set it in op eration and listen to the muific of her loving prattle. "-Hor Point of View in New York Times. lion .‘.hurl:* C[tr. I onto hooked u shark about five feet long, which fought longer than usual, nnd when brought to gaff ho was found to lie hooked in a side fin. so that ho retained his full, powers. So also with the hammerhead. The sliovotnose shark I have found to be the most active of them; The nurse shark lies On the bottom, and its bite is not felt or its presence known to tho angler till he raises his rod, then tjio fish comes up like a log, without resistance. — Forest und Stream. • —Men’s furnishing stores are show ing Indies’ shirts of colored cotton, with the starchiest of white linen col lars attached. Only to look nt them is enough to give a woman a stiff neck for a week. "—Persons who are now “under the weather” are expected to come out with a rise in the temperature. The Onty Way. Mrs. Youngmother (with tones ele vated above baby’s screams)—Don’t sing to tbe child. Edward, for mer cy’s sake: he'll never go to sleep if you do. Edward (who has an execrable voico mid known it) -Yea he will, ray love: he’ll do it in self defense.— Kate Field's Washington. Logic mill Love. Dejected Suitor—If you intended to say “no" why did you let me pro pose! Sweet Girt—Why. how could I say :uo" if yon didn't: -New York . A I'omurltublo Record. Tlie statistician of the Delaware and Hudson Gar.nl company railroad points with pride to the remarkable fact thnt on tbe Pennsylvania branch of this railroad not a single passen ger has been killed since the road went into operation, twenty years ago. "It is also a mutter of con gratulat’imt," ho says, “that daring that time four children have neon bora on the trains of that division two of theni twins.” All four are alive, and one of them is an em ployee of the, company.—Yankee Blade. Tlio Only Thing Tlioy Ever Did. It is not generally known that John Bright’s powers of sarcasm were almost .unrivaled. Some of his sharpest utterances have been against members of tho nobility. When boasts bad been made of tho antiquity of a prominent family, that their ances tore came over with the Conqueror, his reply was prompt, "I never heard that they did anything else.”—San Francisco Argonaut. Cuuho for Com pigeonry. Wee Daughter (admiringly) - You’re such a darling, sweet mam ma! So pretty and stylish Pm so glad that - Mamma—Well, dear, go on. Wee Daughter (patronizingly) — Well, Fin ever so glad you reamed into’our family.—Pittsburg»BuUetin. Tho Trouble^ "What is the hardest part of joke writing. Wittix?" “Punctuation. That's the reason so many jokes lack points.”—New York Epoch. OVER IH WORTH. Budget if latertstbax New. Items Fro hi Oar Oerreepeadeal. H Isabella, April 25,1892. Special Correspondence of tbe HBBALD. The Isabella Sunday-schools are an ticipating a grand pionlo sometime about the 1st of June. There are sev eral pretty sites for one in this vioin- Ity, and May-haws will be ripe abont that time. An enjoyable oooaslon mur be expected. The 3-year-old .olilld of Mr, N. J. Mott died this morning of inflamma tion of tbe bowels. Superior Court Just nt this seasnn is rather a hardship on farmers, they be ing all busy in their orops, and a day ’ lost now counting .trebly against them in the summer. Editor Allen wears his high hat to every other city but Albany. Albany, should know the wherewithal of th{$.4 Mr. Milo Bull, successor to the firm j of Bull & Burghardt, of Sylvester, has * completed a mule tram-road extending several miles out from his mill, and is adding several needed Improvements to his mill and machinery. There are a few cases of fever and a good many of aggravated la grippe in and around Isabella. If there is anybody who don’t think the Herald made a-hit in changing to an evening paper, it Is because he al ready thought, the Herald so good that a change could not Improve It. Superior Court convenes here ts!p day. Judge Bower will find a full docket nnd large attendance nwnlting him. Albanians are notified that Worth will hold her annual Sunday-school oelcbratlon on Friday, May 6, at the Tabernacle In Ponlnn. About 1,000 people will be there, and all the Sun day-schools of the county will be lep- resented. There will be Hits singing contest for the banner, addresses and lectures by some of the foremost Sun-, day-school workers In Georgia, nndg one of Hie best basket dinners that any people in tbe universe can furnish. Everybody Is invited to nttend. One feature of tills nnnunl celebration is thnt It has been going on for ten yenrs now, nnd there has never yet been one of them nt which there wns not enough 1 edibles to feed nil that were there nnd as many more had they been there. The resolution of the Second Dis trict Democratic Executive Committee ^ thqt the qualification for voters in the Democratic primaries should be alleg iance to the Demooratlo platform is a wise one. It is hardly fair to read men out of the Democratic pnrty bedbuse t hey believe In some of the’Ocala de mands, yet no one should bo allowed to voto who does not emphatically In dorse the whole of Hie Democratic platform. Mrs. Martha Cobb, of Asliburn, lias * been visiting friends In Isabella dur ing the pnst week. Two sons of Mr. J. J. McDowell, our A olever clerk, found a five-pound trouttM/l in n shallow branch near Ills house one day last week. The trout was making Ills way up stream, and, ns the water wns only a few Inches deep, was easily scoured. J. L. H. V: S Ml i ITIIE NEW ORLEANS AFFAIR. Of the final settlement of the difll- culty with Italy, a London paper, the Standard, says: “The difficulty has ended in a way that is creditable to both, but it illustrates, in a striking manner the very slight confidence the citizens of Louisiana repose in the ex ecution of the lows they made.” The London Graphic alludes to the settlement thus: “There lias been no diplomatic triumph for Italy, or humil iation for America. The latter proved herself strong enough to refuse re- * dress, and has now proved herself still stronger by spontaneously offering reparation. No sane mail can doubt that the offer was dictated solely by a sensed/right,” The. Democrats of Thomas: county called a meeting for (lie purpose of organizing a Democratic campaign dill), in Thomasville, on Wednesday, and, strange to say, they were met by gentlemen heretofore active as Demo crats, and who have been honored by tlie Democratic party, us opponents of the movement. Although the Ocala platform heretics are at work in Thomas and the seeds of Third Party- ism are being sown in the county and throughout the Second Congressional district, these milk-nnd-cider, Sally- Tom Democrats could see no necessity for Democratic organization and Dem ocratic work, and therefore advised against it. But Col. R. O. Mitchell and Jliat tried and true Democrat of the “Old Confed” variety, Editor John Triplett, went to the rescue of the little band of Simon-pure, working Demo crats, and the organization was ef fected. Col. Mitchell made a telling speech which gave courage to the faithful, and Tlie Central Democratic Campaign Ciubof Thomas County was organized. Good for Bob Mitchell and John Triplett and the balance, of the boys in Thomas who are in line with them! —In gloves, castor and drab shades are being largely worn. —In giving the devil his due you are liable to give yourself away, f BjaPOMSi • : = ••• •