Newspaper Page Text
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HE IV AS
RIGUT-IIE
KNOW.
DIDN’T
The Constitution presents an Inter
view with Hon. S. G. McLendon of
Thomasvllle, In regard to the situation
in the Second, which is a remarkable
well of knowledge for a man, who, as
he confesses, had kept up so little with
politics that he knew very little about
“our peouliar state of political agita
tion in the Second.”
In the course of the interview Mr.
McLendon goes on to say:
“I have kept up so little with poli
tics,” said he, “t hat I do not know what
has nlrcady been said in the public
prints concerning our peculiar state
of political agitation in the Second,
but it strikes me that the Stevens men
and the nnti-Stevensmen in the Demo
cratic party have been striving to pre
serve Democratic harmony nnd pro
mote Democratic success, but unfortu
nately there is a possibility of some
body's destroying both.
“The conservative and soundly
Democratic element in the Allinnce
wishing, as I have good reason to be
lieve, to preserve the Alliance and the
integrity and solidity of the Domocrtic
pnrty and to put both beyond the bland
ishments of the Third Pnrty and its
high priests, concluded early in tha
year that it would be wise to agree
upon a man for Congress whose name
should be presented to the entire De
mocracy of the district to be voted for
at the primaries in the several counties
as these might be ordered by the prop
erly constituted authorities of tho
^ “In pursuance of this desire to pre
serve both their own order nnd the
Democratic, party nnd Allinnce con
vention was held at Cuthbert on the
25th of February.
“Many ballots were said to have been
taken and finally, after remaining in
session late into the night, all sides
agreed to compromise on Hon. O. 11.
Stevens.”
Mr. MoLendon, who has “kept up so
little with politics,” then continues to
explain how this convention of the Al
liance political machine recommended
Mr. Stevens to the Democratic party
as their candidate fob Congress, and
what dissatisfaction the notion of the
Democratic Executive Committee
which met in April, nnd appointed
July 80th as tho regular day for the
primaries, gave to this Dlstrlot Alli
ance, which has endeavored to const!
tute a local party within itself, entirely
ignoringthe action of the Democratic
Executive Committee. He further
states that every oonnty which has
noted thus far has eleoted delegates
instructed to vote for StevenB, nnd
then makes a practical admission that
this was not the will nor the action of
the Democratic party, in that ho says
there will he contesting delegations
eleoted on July 80th, whioh is the reg
ular day set apart for the action of the
only Democrats in their primaries.
Mr. MoLendon who knows so little
about the situation in the Second ends
this remarknble interview of his with
these words:
“Stevens is nn open nnd pronounced
Democrat, and so declares himself
everywhere.
“Mr. Stevens, I think, will be nomi
nated, and if he is nominated, he will
be elected."
It was well for Mr. McLendon to
have made the statement he did In re
gard to keeping up so little with the
political situation In the Second. Can
dor is a good thing sometimes, and
here it was necessary to an under
standing of Mr. McLendon’s pusition.
He seems to disregard the fact that
the convention at Cuthbert, nnd Its ac
tion, was the forestalling of the action
of the Democratic party by the Alli
ance political maehine of the district,
many of the principles of whioh are
entirely distinot from those of true
Democracy.
It was well too that he added, after
saying that all the counties which have
aoted thus far were for Stevens, that
there would be contesting delegations
to the distriot convention on August
17th. Of course there will be contest
ing delegations, and they will be the
only legitimate delegations, for they
will be lawfully chosen through Demo
cratic primaries appointed to be held
by the District Executive Committee
on July 80th. To Democratic delega
tions all other delegations must give
way, in a convention of Democrats.
As for Mr. McLendon’s statement in
regard to Stevens being an open and
pronounced Democrat, we simply refer
his record to the voters in the district,
as it has been aired in these columhs,
and those of other loyal Democratic
papers. July 30th will disprove Mr.
MoLendon’s statement in regard to
the certainty of his nomination.
Evidently Mr. MoLendon was right
when he inferred that he didn’t know
much about the situation in the Second.
Mb. Stevenson and his family have
accepted an invitation to visit Mr.
Cleveland at Gray Gables.
Mobs rain has fallen in Dougherty
county within the last forty-five days
than in the six months or more pre
ceding.
Col. Peek has had his pick of the
State offices, and he now wears the
appearance of a lost Third Party
feather fluttering around in the whirl
wind of Democracy.
Col. Bbanch says of the Omaha
platform: “It is so plain and simple
that the blind can read it and the deaf
can hear it read.” Tes, the blind and
the deaf are about the only class who
can’t see the folly of it. Only blind
unreasoning voters will support it.
THE WEST.
Written fov the lUtttM ti.
The vigor of the West in politics
lias always and wisely been recog
nized by the Itepublican party. Every
Presidential standard-bearer of the
party has come from tho West, save
Blaine, and he seems fated to defeat.
Fremont, the first nominee, was only
run for sentiment, success being out of
the question. He was also run to get
the machine set up for its first oiling.
It has been bo constantly nnd faith
fully oiled ever since that it seems to
run of itself, and has only failed once
—the Blaine campaign.
The Democrats have not gone West
for a candidate since they went under
with Douglass nnd Breckinridge.
Two candidates to n party ns are as
valueless as a cat with two tails, who,
bewildered with the extra attachment,
failed even as a rat-catcher, ns the
fable goes.
It Is timo the Democracy looked
West for candidates. The West is full
of vigor nnd freedom of thought and
enterprise. It is in sympathy with
expansion, nnd may be said to be the
domain of expansion itself.
There was one man who determined
the last choice of the Democracy, and
Ids name is Hill.
Hill’s snap convention nnd treat
ment of the Presidency ns merely a
lnrger Governorship made Cleveland’s
nomination a sentiment which crys-
talized intoa necessity—the outgrowth
of the’loglo of events. Senator Hill’s
effort to dwnrf Cleveland was resented
by every Democratic State, llis strad
dles for ambition illy contrasted with
even Cleveland’s honest blunders, and
brought the latter nearer to the peo.
pie's hearts. Hill's blunders outshone
Cleveland's. They were the blunders
of the politician seeking preferment,
while Cleveland’s were the blunders of.
an honest man's first essay Into a
wider statesmanship, into which with
time he has fully grown, with capacity
to learn, sincerity to correot nnd cour
age to confess. The greatness of
Cleveland lies in the fact that hois
very thoroughly a man, and the Amer
ican people love fair play. Hence
Cleveland from the standpoint of
Hill’s course.
But another element in the canvass
appeared when Harrison was nomi
nated. This clinched tho demand for
Cleveland. Some timid ones say they
measured swords before and Cleveland
fell, but the field is more than a per
sonal one, my friends.
Republicans must fight for Harri
son’s administration if they would
elect Hnrrison. That is the logio of
the situation. The Harrison adminiS'
tratlon is the issue; its measures,
policies, plans. Republican success is
endorsement of the last four years of
Republican rule; the election of Cleve
land its severest condemnation.
Surely our political history of late Is
not lame, but vitally warm nnd inter
esting. The tyranny that lurks in nn
attempted force bill, defended by liar
risen and endorsed by the Republican
platform, revives, renews the old light
between centralism or concentration
of power on the one hand, and on the
other the division of power so nenrly
in the people’s hands ns to assure them
their safety against all usurpations.
The Simon-pure Republican advocat
ing a centralized power, is not a true
Republican, but a monarchist dls-
guised, and to himself concealed as In
nocetit, perhaps, as a new-born babe,
which is the worse for himself, his
country and mankind. The flglit now
on is between local rights and central
ization, between economy and extrav
agance, between people nnd corpora
tions, between riches and poverty, each
contending for its own by govern
ment hands on, or by government
hands off, between sectionalism and
patriotism, between the bonds upon
the liberty of the buyer nnd the seller
and the unshackelled people in the
markets of the country and the world.
Harrison represents the one side, and
Cleveland the other. Their respective
administrations are up for the people’s
endorsement, and which shall be en
dorsed? Indeed, a great fight is upon
us—one worthy of the age; The old
idea of despotism still lurks beneath
the slimy, shining fold of the Republi
can party policy. You who do not
now strike it down at the ballot box,
may live to linger victims of its pois
onous fangs. If you have inherited,
from the days of Mogua Charta, in
your blood and brains this liberty-lov
ing principle, strike now, with the bal
lot, against a doctrine destructive of
rights accorded our race centuries ago,
and vote for Cleveland for honest gov
ernment, economy, local rights, tariff
reform. Dkmocbat.
ALL OVER THE STATE.
Governor Northen will investigate
the charges that Treasurer (Harde
man’s bondsman is insolvent; The
matter doesn’t seem to be creating muoli
excitement among the people of the
State, and, in all probability, the stoiy
was more fake than fact.
*** i
The appointment of Mr. H. M.
Comer as receiver of the Central sys
tem, has been confirmed, and a thor
ough system of reorganization will be
begun in short order; It is probable
that tho Central will be on its feet
again before many mouths.
The tirade against the high kicking
in tlie Gate City is about at its height.
But the tables have been turned, and
now everybody is jumping square onto
sanctimonious Police Commissioner
Laird, nnd denouncing llis oou'rse ns
foolish in the extreme. It seems, from
all appearances, that the summer opera
girls will continue to kick as high as
they please.
* *»
##
Pnrty leaders in the Fourth district
say that Hon. C. L. Moses will un
doubtedly be his own successor, Cow
eta, Carroll, Troup and Marion have
already instructed for him, nnd the
other counties will soon fall into line.
Meriwether, nfter casting a compli
mentary vote for her beloved son,
Wurner III11, will move to make Moses’
nomination unanimous.
There will be a big*Democratic meet
ing in Bainbridge on July 23. Judge
Mershon, of Brunswiok, Capt. IV. M,
Hammond and Hon. F. G. duBignon
are among the speakers selected for
tho occasion.
»*»
Every county in the Eighth district
that has aoted has instructed for Tlios.
G. Lawson, whose reoord in the Fifty-
second Congress was such as won the
respect and admiration of his entire
distriot, whioh will return him unani
mously.
•“»
The city council of Atlanta Is try
ing to close up news stnnds, cigar
stands and soda water fountains on
Sunday. Several members of that
body ridiculed the proposition to suoli
an extent that it was gabled.
WHAT 1'LEASES A WOMAN.
Music nnd Drama.
It pleases her to be called a well-
dressed woman.
It pleases her to be tbld that she is
dangerously fasolnating.
It pleases her to be told that she im
proves a man by her companionship.
It pleaseB her to dependon some mnn
and pretend she is ruling him.
It pleases her to be treated courte
ously and with respect, and be talked
to reasonably.
It pleases her to be treated sensibly
nnd honestly, to be consulted and ques
tioned and not to be treated as a but
terfly, with no head, no heart.
It pleases her to be loved and ad
mired by a man who is strong enough
to rule and subdue her, make his way
her way, and to lead her and take
care of her.
Tub grapes that are grown in the
country immediately around Albany
seem to be, without exception, the
finest that are brought to this market.
The Niagaras, those large white fel
lows that come in such large clusters,
seem especially adapted to this soil
and climate, and they grow to a state
of perfection that we have seldom
seen equaled and never excelled. The
Delawares and Concords, too, mature
perfectly on the vine, and they are as
fine fruit as a person can desire, both
in looks and quality. We feel safe in
predicting that every year grape cul
ture will claim more and more of the
attention of Southwest Georgia plant
ers, and that the orop will come to be
one of the prinoipal ones of this sec
tion. Coming in July and August,
when no other orop has to be gathered,
the grapes can be given the attention
that is necessary to their perfect de
velopment^
Chauncby M. Dxpew is said to be
the only man who ever declined the
office of Secretary of State.
IT KOOKS BAD FOB STEVENS.
The fight on contingent fees seems
to have narrowed down to a good hard
tussle between the two prominent At
lanta dailies.
The fights whioh Mr. Whitelaw Reid
has made on organized labor will very
much weaken the Republican ticket
with that contingent of the voting
population;
The Hebald received to-day an ele
gant basket of Niagara grapes from
the Sand Hill fruit farm, belonging to
the estate of Col. Nelson Tift. The
grapes are of an excellent quality, and
about 4,000 pounds of them have been
shipped daily from the farm, for the
past two weeks.
A PLEA FOR MOTHERS.
An Amendment OlTsi .a to tlie Advlco of
n Women Locturer.
A few evenings ago a Boston woman
lournnlist, who writes the essays nbout
raokmarks, gluten bread, dress reform
corsets und the like for the woman’s
mlumn of a Sunday paper, read a lec
ture to * parlor full of Harlem women.
Her subject was 'How to Bring Up
children."
One thing that she Insisted on was
that children should be taught to ■■do
things," to bo prepared for emergencies.
For example," said she, “I would
teach a child what to do in cose of a
fainting fit. I say to my girls:
Girls, I am not much of a hand at
fainting, but if I do take a notion to
faint some day when you ore about, got
me somo water. Pour it on my head
and face. Cold water, girls, not but
water.'
“I'm sure that if tho unexpected
comes, nnd I fall in a fainting fit some
fine morning, tho girls, if they happen
to bo near, will know wliat to do and
will do it promptly."
May 1 interrupt you for a moment?"
asked a little brown liuired woman, 'Who
looked to be about fifty.
Why, certainly," answered the loo-
turer.
“Well, whnt I wish to do," said till)
brown haired woman, "is to tuko issue
with you on this proposition of yours
that it Is tho proper thing to instruct
children whnt to do to tlieir mothers
when thoy faint. On other points I have
nothing to. say. Mnybo you arc right in
the general proposition that children
should be tanght to do tilings, but as to
this matter I wish to ntter a warning
word, to offer un amendment, so to
speak.
“I used to think os yon do. 1 remem
ber as well as can bo liow I used to tell
my girls to do tbo very thing that yon
say yon told yours t6 do. I thought as
yon do, that it would be a shame to
leavo any person who should faint in
the presence of my girls go without
iroper care. So I used to say-. ’Kemein-
jer, girls, to use water. That’s the
thing when a baby faints.’
“Well, one day some one came to my
honse and told me that a little boy had
been hurt in the next yard. I was al
most ill at the time, but just the »aine 1
rushed out to the scene. The little chap
was badly hurt, and it took me qnito
awhile to get him in such a way that 1
could safely leave him. But the time
came at last, and I started for home.
“When I was within about a rod, of
my own house I grew dizzy and saw
stars and then fell in a heap in tho
gutter.
“A conple of Irishmen pioked mo up,
each taking an arm, and dragged mo
np my front stepB and laid me out on
the piazza. Then they rang the boll,
and when my daughter Isabelle came to
the door one of them pointed at me and
said:
Good avenin, miss, an is that yer
mother thero, lyin oil in a haps dead
fainted away?’
“Isabelle gave one look and then
called out to her two sisters, ‘Quick,
girls, ms's fainted.’
“ 'After that the delnge.’ Yes, that
tells the story. Isabelle got tho ice
pitcher, Mary a foot tnb and Kate a ten
quart tin pail. I consider it almost a
miracle that I'm alive today.
"Of course I’m telling all this from
hearsay. I didn't know anything from
the time that I fainted until I heard
Kate frantically crying out: ‘Water!
More waterl Quick, Isabelle, more wa
ter? and just after that one of the Irish
men saying, ‘Be aisy, darlint, or ye'll be
after drownln yer ould mother!'
“Wet! Well, that doesn’t begin to tell
the story. I was soaked, and great
streams of water were running off the
piazza and down the stairs.
" ‘Yon did just right girls,’ I said as
soon as I could speak. ’Yon did just
what your mother told yon to do, bnt
don’t do it again.’
"Then I got down on my knees and
wrqng out my skirts as well a». I could
and while I was in that position I could
hardly keep myself from saying, ‘Oh
Lord, I thank thee that they didn’t call
out the fire department.’
"Now, I’ve taken up lots of your time!
but I wished to make an amendment to
yonr proposition. What I would pro
pose is that every mother save her own
self from tho danger of drowning by
Baying to her girls when she bids them
pour water on ‘fainters,’ 'Be sure my
dears to try the remedy for the first
time on somebody else than yonr own
dear mamma,’ ’’—New York Times.
THE WIN0'8 SUMMONS.
The Wind came whining to my door.
Across the uplands from tho sea,
With plaintive burden o’er nod o'er,
“Oh. wilt ye roam tho world with mo?”
The wintry sklos wero all too chill.
The wlutry lands too stark and gray.
I would not do tho wild Wlud’s wills
I barred tho door and said him nay.
But wbon the Night cropt, vast and black,
Up the long valleys from tho sea,
Tho cold Wind followed in his track.
And swift and stealthy followed he.
The mad Wind olamorod at my doort . .
His volco was like tho angry sea
That breaks In thunder on the shore.
And still ho cried, "Come forth lo met"
Tho easements shook and shuddered sore.
He ranged the high walls round am) round:
My chamber wicked from viwd to Horn
And all the darkness thrnl.aetl with suand.
Tbo wintry dawn rose faint anil slow.
Ho turned him lo tho frown lea,
AntUiyo he moaned and mnlloruii low
Along the iiplanila In llis sea.
Sullen und slow the Sea Wind sped;
"Oh, never doubt, the day shall ho
When 1 shall uimiu again," ho said.
'.'And you emus forth and follow me.
"The lair of Night shall ho your bod.
And fust end fur your ghost shall line.
When you urn one with nil thn Demi
That roam thn wide world round with Ino."
tirahnui It. Tnmsou in Atlantic.
TheRaoe for Attorney Gel
getting very warm. Two ver;
and popular men arc pitted
eaoh other, and they aro liavln
times on the stump throughoui
State. Bill Glenn and Joe Tel
well known In every section
are good men. “You pays yonr
and takes your oliolce.”
HW«ntli«r nml l.ongovlty.
The southern states can show os
many people, in proportion to popu
lation. * who have passed the three
score nnd ten mile post ns can those
of New England The oldest mnn 1
ever saw had lived all bis life in
southern Arizona He was whnt is
;wpularlj\known as a greaser—one-
: third Spaniard, one-third Indian and
the remainder euyote. He claimed
to be 140 years old, and could prove
up 132 years by tho missionary
records. He was totally blind, bent
np like a jackknife and the color of
leather. He was a pretty good fac
simile of the mummy of RameBbs HI.
As I looked at him I thought of those
unfortunate people described by
Dean Swift as unable to die, and
wondered if the flying islands had
not landed Gulliver in Arizona.—St,
Louis Globe-Democrat.
The Hebald is advised by private
letter'(please note the fact that when
we make use of suoh information we
have the original) that the County Al
liance of Terrell county, at a meeting
of the County Alliance at Pleasant
Hill, refused to adopt a resolution en
dorsing O. B. Stevens and the Demo
cratic platform.
And yet these samo Alliancemen
lmd previously indorsed O. B. Stevens,
and had elected delegates to the Con
gressional convention favorable to his
nomination.
This was on the Ocaia platform idea.
But the Ocala platform and the St.
Louis platform don’t seem to latch,
and one side of Candidate Steven’s
constituents stand on one side and one,
on the other.
The trouble with Candidate Stqvens
seems to-be that be is called upon to
stand upon too many platforms.
The truth is the sensible people of
the distriot are becoming disgusted
with Mr. Stevens and his methods,
and are fast Forsaking him. His name
is Dennis.
Telling About It#
An old lady is said to have been asked
how to tell good indigo. “Pofrder the
indigo,” said she, "sprinkle it upon cold
water, and if it is good it will either
sink or swim, I have forgotten which.”
It was the same with Annt Charity's
eggs.
"Jest take a dozen of’em—no, a half
a dozen of ’em—no, it's a dozen—well,
raaly, I can't say, hut it’s either a dozen
or a half dozen—and you pnt’em in a
pailful—no, a half pailful—part full-
no, it’s a pailful—no—well, well, it’s
either a pailful or a half pailfni of
water—and the good eggs will swim
on top—no, the good eggs will sink
to the bottom—no, that's not it—
the good eggs will swim—no, no, 1
delare, I don’t raaly know, hut, anyway,
the good eggs will either sink or swim.”
—Housekeeper.
Pe»th from m Horsefly *■ Bite*
The sad death of Mr. F. J. Wooda,
Mr. Balfour’s private secretary, from
erysipelas supervening on the bite of
gadfly, is announced. The bite of gad
flies is not usually considered poisonous,
and it is supposed that the ons who at
tacked Mr. Woods had been on a dis
eased animal. The most common spe
cies is Tabanus bovinus, and they ore
very troublesome to horses and cattle in
the fields, especially in warm weather.
Albany is well represented at the
Newton political rally to-day.
In tlie river is :the most pleasant
place to spend the warm days.
Tbo Deepest Cnnl Mines*.
While the average depth of French
collieries is 1,078 feet, that of the
coal mines in the Hainault district of
Belgium is 1,800 feet. In the Mons
1 basin the mineral is at present
being obtained 3,030 feet beneath the
surface, and another colliery in tho
same basin, now abandoned, was
worked to a depth of 8,800 feet. In
April, 1891, in a mine in the Flenu
district called "St. Henriette des
Produits," a rich vein of coal was
struck at the extraordinary depth of
4,180 feet. This is beyond doubt the
greatest depth at which coal has
ever been obtained.—St. Louis Re
public.
Filtering; Electricity.
The idea of filtration of the elec
trio fluid is not altogether new. A
consumer called some weeks ago at
the station of the Notting Hill Eleo-
trio Supply company and complained
that, although the quality of the
electricity purveyed to him was very
good on the whole, it sometimes
came through in lumps. He was as
sured that this could not be the cose,
os special provision had been made
to guard against it by the use of two
sets of flfty-six Crompton-Howoll fil
ters, which he was invited to ex
amine.—London Electrician.
Reuben Green's Accommodating Well.
Reuben Green of Carr townshl]
has a well on bis premises whlcl
during the months of May, June, and
July supplies the family and sur
rounding neighbors with water that
savors strongly of lemonade. Dur
ing the remaining months the water
returns to its natural taste.—Cor. In.
dianapolis Sentinel.
Getting Awmf from Motqultoes*
There is a tribe of South American
savages who live in tree tops near
Venezuela, and their singular mpde
of existence gave the name to that
province. The villages of these peo
ple are built over the bosom of a
great fresh water lake—to escape
from the mosquitoes. —Boston Globe,
Am Insinuation#
Miss Pinkerly—You not as if you
were uncomfortable, Mr. Tatter.
Tutter—Yes, Miss Pinkerly, the
fact is, I have never been able to get
a dress suit to fit me.
Miss Pinkerly—Perhaps you don’t
get there early enough.—Clothier
and Furnisher.
Satan*. 8l#n manual.
A Bates county farmer saw a bolt of
lightning strike in the center of one
of his fields, and being ourious to see
the effecte of the stroke visited the spot.
He found the subtle fluid had left its
mark in the shape of an enormous "D r
of an angry red color, and had no donbt
that it was the sign manual of the arch
fiend himself.—Kansas City Journal.
Bedewing Old Straw Hat*.
“Don’t throw away yonr straw hat
because it is discolored by rain,” said
Scrul
hatter this morning.
then hang it np for
ib it with
wet commeal, and
few minutes in snlphur smoke. It will
come ont as white as a brand new one.
—Cincinnati Times-Star.
Blaudyte is the name given to the new
material made of Trinidad asphalt and
waste rubber. It resists the heat of
high pressure steam and lasts well in
the presence of oil and grease.
Tnx Central road is gradually re
covering from its shaky flnanoial con
ditlon, and it is said that under the
management of Receiver Comer it will
be on the road to success in six months’
time.
HjjMBtuMHHHijgHHHmlHHHHi
THROUGH THE
and b
Hon. Ben. E. Bussell, Capt. IVin
Hammond and Col. C. B. Wooten
address the Democrats of
county at Morgan on the 98th.
**«
Tliero will be a grand, Demo
rally at Dallas, Ga., on July sstli,
at which Gov. W. J. Nortben,
John W. Maddox, Hon. R. W. Ev_
Ilon. W. Y. Atkinson, ohairnm
State Democratic Executive commit
Hon.'L. F. Livingston, Hon. J. M. :
Bride, Hon. A. H. Clay and other
tingnislied Democratic speakers
expected to be present.
.**
Jasper county has live candidnit
for tlie legislature—four DemC
and one Third Party.
***
Tlie contingent fee fight beta
the two Atlanta dailies is geti
warmer every day. The Journal i
“If tho Constitution meant that
Journal or any one connected with
Journal has been party to the dis
table practices whioh it has do _
in connection with the cmploytne
bailiffs, the Constitution lied.”
very stroiig language, and to
pearances, everything is ripe fo
in oamp.
Sam Hall,of Atlanta,who is tlie o
of Southern Life, is having
trouble with that publication,
men he has employed to publish i
fuse to give it up, and lie 1ms fl
petition for it In tlie Superior Con
the ground that It has not been 1
erijimanaged, and that the pub
are losing money.
#*#
A Thomasvllle oonduotor inis <
several hundred dollars sprciili
melons tills season. Return
days ago show that one car t
bought on the track and sold
him over $200.
The Negroes oh I.ownde
have agreed to support Gov’
for re-election. They declare t
Republicans, but think Gov.
Iins made on excellent govet
ADVERTISED I.HTJ'I!
■ —
List of letters remaining ir
offloo nt Albany, Ga., for
ending July 20, 1892.
for in fifteen days will bo i
Dead Letter office:
A—Miss Sarah Adams.
B—George Barron, A. W. :
S. H. Brown, Miss Lit
C—Miss Ella Carr (2), Abe (
D. Coley.
D—Mrs. Frank Davis, :
Davis, Mrs. Sarah Di
nnd Botsey Davis.
F—Miss Hattie Facon,
Field.
H—Miss Nettle Hicks,
Holt, T. R. Hall
J—MisB Charlotte Jame
M-
son, Daniel Jones. Mi
den, Miss Isabella
Ann Jordan.
-Miss Anna Martan
MoGeary, Miss
Millie McCrary,
nndie, Miss Reb
James B. Meynadie, J
Willis Moore, Mil
Gus Morris, Beatrice ]
O—Mrs. Hattie Oliver.
P—Dave Paulk, L. F.
Sarah Pringle.
R—W. T. Reynolds, Mrs.
Mrs. Sarah Robinson.
S—Miss Linnle Scott, R. 1
Rachel Sims, Henry f
T—Miss Fannie Tift,
Mrs. W. P. Tuoker,
Tyson.
W—James Walton, Miss ]
ing, Harry WtUUu
Hams, Mrs. Sharlo*
Wynn.
In oalling for above letl
say “advertised" and give
B.F.
Mt. Etna, in Sicily, is ii
violent eruption.
It was reported yesterday
steamer would take a party
Newton this morning, but(
decided that he nouldn’t m
quick enough, and it was t
Mb. Jno. C. Chase, tlie i
superintendent, is in the c:
his personal attention
struction of the system. ’
now progressing very
and few people know he
is going on. The over:
understand their bnsin
A lot of bees that
from their hive by i
gregated on a limb of
of the Sans Souoi sail
Mr. C. Coffey was ver;
them, and worked f
awhile with tin
paraphernalia as
such cases.
Tiios. F. Gil
Tammany,
whioh ho
Cleveland,
organiz: