Newspaper Page Text
phe political meetings and
1 unfavorable weather hav
ing kept the Ladies
from shopping last
week, we have con
cluded to con
tinue
OUR EXTRA
argain Sale!
ONE WEEK,
(Jut. Positively No Longer.
REMEMBER,
ALL .
1 SUMMER GOODS
IN EVERY DEPARTMENT,
MILKS,
DBEM8 COODIII,
l^PABAUOU,
I Mr A
^ ALL GOODS FOR MEN’S WEAR
IjACBM,
RIBBONS,
VEILINflN,
MATTING*,
-A Nil
DON’T PAIL TO SEE OUR
43-CENT CHINA SILKS,
Reduced from SB cents.
& JONES,
Palace Building,
17 & 19 N. Washington.
f
a.
in
in
o
Worth comity will not desert the
Democratic ranks, not tills year at any
rate.
Thk Third Party ghost is so thill
tlint one can see tlirougii it with the
undressed eye.
Thomas county Democrats are or
ganizing a Young Men’s Democratic
Campaign Club.
Thk cotton receipts are getting a
little better every day, but prices don’t
seem to advance.
Pat Calhocn and the Richmond
Terminal are having a little milllon-
dollnr sipialddc.
Ai.l the Counties in the State have
fallen iifco line, and are organizing
Democratic clubs.
To the Democrats of the Sec
ond District.
URDER MOST FOUL.
A IIA B.1II.
AMMAM91
E8ROI.D NEGRO WOMAN
MMAMMNATED LA4T NIGl
Shot Down While StnuilluK in Ilvr
t'nbin Door—Two Arreola, But
No PoNltlre €liie.
Sknatoh Colquitt’s physician says
that, lie will pet well. This Is good
news to all Georgia.
Lion Black has entered the arena,
and now has GladlatoV Watsnii dis
armed and in his power.
Thk State press still continues to
praise, in lofty terms, the able Congres
sional candidate of the Second.
As thk Republicans have no State
ticket in the Held, votes will he offered'
way below par at the fall elections.
Conohkrrman Kvkkktt says the Fif
ty-Second Congress was the soberest
body of men in* ever saw together.
Whitki.aw ltKin is now out West
preaching the doctrine which makes
the rich man richer, and the poor man
poorer.
Thk weather prophets, or those of
them who go by the moon, say that, we
will continue to have rain until “new
moon.”
Ji’IKiK Mkksiion, of Brunswick, went to Al
bany, lie Haiti, to »cu the death of the Third
Party.—Savannah pro**.
And he saw if, too.
It Is said that Mr, Joe Pottle, the
Third Party candidate fdr Congress in
the Sixth, will retire from the race.
Joe says he has got enough.
Hox. Flkmino jhjBionon, of Savan
nah, is going to do some good work In
tile national campaign. He is booked
for (tump speeches in Maine and )Xew
York, ' -
Nearly all the nominations for
State oltlcers have been made now, and
the politicians are taking.a little rest
Just before they begin active cam
paigning.
The St. Louis Globe-Democrat (Rep.)
stigmatizes Clarkson, Quay and Platt
as “a desperate and; unscrupulous
band uf political pirates.” It (is in a
position to know.
Ellington says the Alliance must
receive nothing but Third Party doc
trine. He again proves traitor, this
time to the Alliance, which lie prom
ised to keep non-partisan if in his
power.
The Third Party in Georgia now
has a golden opportunity to make
itself famous by coming back into
Democratic ranks. Tills is about the
only thing of a golden nature they
will ever have.
,\ Timely and Conservative Letter
to Those Who Supported
Mr. Stevens in His Race
For Congress.
Ami ii Ktrnux A ppm 1 For I.oynllv (o
(hr ISctuorrtillc Parly.
( OlTlCH OK O. 1). STKVI'NS, \
, Dawson, Ga., Aug. 24, 1S92. 1
. ibo Kiiu.tr uf ilit* .\lbaiiy IIkuai.i*.
At your request I have written, ami
Special Carrrsiuiudimootif the Hkilu.h.
Isabella, August 25,1802.
Bella Jackson, an aged Negro woman
at. Sylvester, was shot and instantly
killed while standing in the door of
her cabin at about 8 o’olook Inst night.
J Tile shot was llreil by nil assassin
wlio must have been standing outside
of the yard fence, about ten steps from
I rile door. The shot used were small
j No. 4,'about 200 of them striking her,
| penetrating her eyes, brain and heart.
Iter death was instantaneous.
A jury was summoned mid, nfter in
vestigating the matter for nearly ten
hours, could find no evidence against
Have you been trying to get the best
out. of existence without Health In
your family? Have you been wearing
out your life from the effects of Dys
pepsia, Liver Complaint and Indiges
tion? A re you sleepless at night?
a you awake in the morning feeling
languid, with coated tongue and sal
low, haggard looks? Don’t do it. A
shout In the camp lells how Aunt
Fanny’s Health Restorer lins cured
others; it will cure you. Trial pack
age free. Large size 50c, at J. R.
deGraffchried & Co.
SUCCKS)
herewith enclose, a letter for publication. 1 ftn >' one particular, but caused Joe
1 Clements and Sam McLane, both
Negroes, to be arrested on suspicion.
The murder was a most cold-blooded
and cowardly one, the old woman be-
’<> llu* (Uannciutio Party <>r the second Con-
KVCrfMiniud District.
I'KM.ow-ClTizKNS:—In bowing to the
authorities of nty party, ami retiring
from the race for Congress, which I
luve done, a decent respect to the opin
ions of those who have honored me with
their support, demands that I should
make known the reasons which have
forced this conclusion.
Reaching this decision caused me
much unrest, for I felt I would be se-
erely criticized by many friends who do
not realize the difficulties that would
have been to overcome with two candi
dates seeking the same position in the
same party. My only hope of success
would be iu a thorough canvass by my
self and friends of the district, in which
the issues involved could be discussed,
and the Democratic party aroused to a
proper sense of its duty.
It is evident to all thinking men, who
have analyzed the past canvass, that it
was purely and simply the fanners’ fight
against all other trades and professions
not iu full sympathy with their views
and purposes for reform. A contest of
this nature, ii persisted in and curled
to its legitimate conclusion, would have
created strife and division among our
people, and divided our political organi
zation into warring classes. Such a re
sult no one would deplore mote than
myself, or would make greater sacrifices
to avert. The state of society in our
sister States at present, resulting from a.
struggle of like character, the bitterness,
the strife, and it might be the disruption
of the Democratic party, warn me
agaiust being a party to such a state ot
Thk Republican corruption fund is
being piled up by the millionaire pro<
tectionists of the North, but the Aus
tralian ballot system used in many of
the doubtful States will prevent its
use to a great extent. There will be
no more blooks of five.
Col. Pkkk’s campaign lies are like
the sands of the sea, but they are just
about as easily blown about by the
hurricane of refutation with which
they are being met. The fact that
Peek told them is sufficient disproof.
Pkkk said the other day in his speech
at Clarksville that Livingston and
Northen had gone square back on the
farmers. He was mistaken. He meant
the Third Party, and the farmers are
not all in the Third Party, not by a
good large majority.
The County Court opened this morn
ing with Judge W. T. Jones on the
bench. Solicitor S. J. Jones received
his commission this morning, and is
now duly installed in office. But very
little work was accomplished this
morning, as some time was consumed
in organizing and swearing a jury.
Only two misdemeanor c^ses were dis
posed of.
One Hundred Dollars
Will buy my pony, cart and harness
complete. [8-28-tf] T. P. Green.
1 ■ * -L- • ■ ■ al ^g 251m
Ammonia.
No household should be without
bottle of ammonia. . Nothing will
clean lamps, lamp chimneys, looking
glasses and window panes like am'
monia. In using it on colored cloth,
first test it on a sample to see that it
does not spot. When a stain is pro
duced by lemon Juice or any other
acid, nothing is' so effectual as am
monia in neutralizingandtbuB remov
ing it.
Far Beat.
A seven-room dwelling just com
pleted. Large, airy rooms with French
late mirror mantels, with grates and
' • tiling,
somelj
the highest and
thiest point in the pit;
neigliborhoo
healtli
lug industrious and harmless, and not
supposed to have
world.
an enemy
A n OUTUt ORGANIZATION.
To Promote the Indii.lrinl nail nlgher
Kilurittfoti or Wan hr Young Women.
political and social disorganization in
mv own district aiul in Georgia. To
have divisions, iu tile face of impending
dangers to the South from Federal legis
lation, would be disastrous to every liv
ing interest of our Southern people. It
is better to submit to the evils tlint have
been heaped upon us than to create, by
heated contests, a division in the Demo
cratic ranks. For to that party we must,
after all, look for relief from our griev
ances and deliverance from the burdens
that oppress our people.
I am for pure, undefileil Democracy,
such ns was handed down to us by our
forefathers, and, as I understand it, it
consists in this: The supremacy of the
counties and States in the management
of their own local affairs, and determ
ined distrust of all centralization, the
fearless reform of the tariff, equal jus
tice to all sections and classes, taxation
for purposes of revenue only, the honest
expenditure of the public money, eter
nal enmity to all monopoly, a currency
sufficient to do tbe business of the coun
try upon a cash basis.
Such a party, with such a set of prin
ciples, can not be defeated. I hope that
your wisdom and patriotism may pre
serve and protect these great principles
of a pure and honest government which
are embodied in the Democratic party.
To my former friends and brethren in
the Alliance, you wlio have conferred
upon me honor and distinction, and for
whose success I have worked that your
interest might have representation, I
feel it is a duty I owe you to hoist the
danger signal. The principles of the
Alliance and its purposes commend
themselves to my judgment and support,
and no member will strike harder blows
in their defense than myself; but let us
do so inside of the ranks of the Demo
cratic party. I rejoice to know that the
farmers of our country have conceived
the idea of acting and thinking for
themselves, and much good must come
of it—social, intellectual, agricultural
and financial, both to the material inter
est of the country, and I might say, amd
will say, that the great awaking of
our agricultural citizenship will preserve
the principles of the party which has
protected this great and glorious Com
monwealth of ours.
To my friends in all parts of the dis
trict who have by word and letter given
me assurances of sympathy and support;
to the press who have noticed my candi
dacy in complimentary terms, I feebly
express the acknowledgments of a grate
ful heart and give them assurance that I
shall never be direlict in duty to my
party, my people or my country. Your
fellow-citizen, O. B. Stevens.
—Buttermilk and seltzer is a new
combination in thirst - quenching
health beverages.
—“Here, get a move on you,” as the
landlord remarked to the tenant who
The Herald Iiiis been advised that
there is a movement on foot to organ
ize in Dougherty county what is
known as an Industrial Loan Associa
tion.
Tlie object of the association will be
to promote the industrial and higher
education of worthy but needy young
women, and the movement is headed
by Mrs. A. W. Cosby, who Is a member
of the Advisory Board of the Georgia
Industrial and Normal College at Mil-
ledgeville, mid a strong advocate uf
the higher education of her sex.
It is designed to ussooiate twenty,
thirty or more ohariable people in An
association who will pay in $10 oaoh,
to be employed In defraying the ex
pense of bright ami promising girls at
some good, reliable Institution of
learning. Tills fund is not to be given
ns charity, but to be loaned, the young
lady to give tier note for what is used,
and to pay it back as soon ns is prac
ticable.
It is to be hoped that a sufficient
number will be Induced to subscribe to
keep one or more young ladles from
this county at some good school all the
time.- Subscription of $10 will make
any one a life member, but any one
may become associated in this benev
olent undertaking by the payment of
25 cents dr more monthly.
The proposed organization is a
worthy one, and should be encouraged.
The Cleveland budge, showing the
Presidential oliair with Grover In it, is
the latest thing in politios.
COTTON REPORT.
tt reel ills nnd Shipments—T—Any’i mar
ket Queuillene.
2 p.m.
7.01
7.02
0.96
7.15
7.01
7.24
7.20
7.31
Fine Watch Repairing—20
years experience—all work
guaranteed.
Spectacles and Eyeglasses
accurately fitted at moderate
W. W. Pace. I couldn’t pay his rent. charges,
-—:——-—If* *********
J. W. JOINER,
JEWELER,
Washington 8t.£Offoutz Commercial Bare
Watches, Diamonds, Sil
verware, Musical Instruments
and Table and Pocket cutlery,
Fancy Goods, etc. Reliable
Goods, Fair Dealing, Bottom
Prices.'
Elegant Silk Puff Shirts,
former price $51.00; now $2.00,
at Mi-sk it Cox's.
Plain White Silk Puff Shirts,
former nri.ee $2.50; now $1.75,
at
Muse & Cox’s.
Our entire stock of Puff
Shirts at below cost, for eioht
days only, at Muse & Cox’s.
Nothing tends more to the advancement
of any enterprise than doing what
is to be done iu a correct and
BUSINESS WAY
We work for the interest and pleasure
of our customers just as sincerely as for
our own behalf. It is a fact that our
Steady Increase
in business is entirely due to the low
prices and our endeavor to satisfy
those who favor us. No one
Will Refuse
to acknowledge that, taking into con
sideration squaVe and honest weights,
and measures, pure, reliable goods, and
our
frnsi ii Mining,
that they save, always, a good per ceht.
by their trading with as.
j Pi g :
WE INVITE A TRIJ
i-i.
irom those who wish to decrease
monthly accounts, believing we
cqmpHth all we claim.
Very Truly,
-jif-t it,J ViVUifi-iir
$4.00 Straw Hats, now $2.25.
$8.50 Straw llatj, now $2.00.
$8.00 Straw Hats, now $1,75,
$2.60 Straw Hats, now $1.50,
$2.00 Straw Hats, now $1.00.
$1.60 Straw Hats, now .76.' •
$1.00 Straw Ilats, now .60.
The above prices hold good
until September 1.
Tube & Cox.
I
*4 -
Albany, Ga., August 25,-1892.
Stock on hand August 20,1892 1,189
Received yesterday—
y wag
By rail.
Reeived previously 1,802
{Total ...1,850
Shipped yesterday 0
Stock on hand 1,856
Our market to-day was easier, and
demand mostly for the better grades.
Middling. 0j|
Low Middling 6
Good Ordinary b%
Savannah, August 25.—Cotton dull;
Middling 6%c, Low Middling OJ^o,
Good Ordinary 60.
New' York, August 24—2 p.tn.
Contracts opened quiet firm nnd
closed barely steady at the following
prices.
Opened
August 7.01
September 7.02
October 7.15
November 7.24
December,
Spots quiet. Mid. 7J^.
Liverpool opened and closed steady,
Middling 4d
-AND OUR-
r 1 >
Look at our 26-cent window
of Neckwear, former prices 60
and 76c, for two says only.
Muse & Cox.
Mo« are Cons
SEE HERE, LADIES!
Preparatory to removing from our
present quarters to the store owned by
Mrs. M. A. Randall, on Broad street, we
will sell our entire stock of
MILLINERY
AT NEW YORK COST.
We have in ^tock all the latest styles
in Millinery and Fancy Goods. Don’t
buy elsewhere until yon have seen and
priced our goods.
MAX CASSEL & SISTER.
mhlB
THE PALACE SALOON
WASHINGTON 8TREET,
Under
That they are saving more money
purchasing their good from us, a
Invite others to take advantage c
low prices, and they will also I
customers.
OUR SALES INCREASE D1
I
We are underselling all of our
petitors In a|ll grades of goods,
can and do save our customers i
15 to 25 per cent, on all goods t
purchase from us. Call and t
vinced, and compare onr goo
prices with other merchants’ and ;
will be compelled to trade with us 1
your own Interest.
We still continue to give coup
which entitle you to 5 per cent, off 1
your cash purchases. This means an
inducement for cash trade.
OUR STOCK
Imported Black Hosier
RECEIVED.
MORRIS ROSENTHAL
Respectfully announces to his friends
and the public generally that he now has
charge of the Palace Saloon, on Wash
ington street, and will keep always on
hand the
r»ut of Wian, Liquori. Cigui, Eto.
BILLIARD AND POOL TABLES.
LUNCHES at all hours. Warm lunch
to on customers daily from to tola
o’clock.
We study to please, and gentlemen can
always find something good to eat, drink
nose i
,! -DP;
100 doz. Ladies’ Fast Black Hose-at;
25c, worth 50c.
60 doz. Gent’s Fast Blaok X
25c, worth 50o,
25 doz. Boys’ Fast Blaok Hose, 1
25c, worth 60c.
60 doz. Misses’ Fast Black :
10c, worth 20o.
All these goods
smut or fade.
and
on us,
myu-
lys nnd something good to eat,di
smoke at the Palace Saloon. 1
is. MORRIS ROSENTHAL.