Bulloch times. (Statesboro, Ga.) 1893-1917, November 15, 1894, Image 1

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TRY AN AD. IN THE TIMES! A Bio \r W ’.l Sell You Goons: It attrac's ne customers and holds the old ones. People will forget you and your goods if you don't constantly “jog their memory.” A Little A » Will Bring hack your stray animal, find a and purchase! buggy, for your house and lot, horse or anything else. TRY AN AD. IN TEE TIMMS! Buy the Best! I desire to call the attention of ginners to the only genuine Davis yea-island Cotton Gin, manufactured and for sale by W. I). DAVIS, • Statesboro, Ga. BM! BRICK! We fake pleasure in announeeing to public that we are now manufacturing the finest Brick ever placed on the mar ket in this part of Georgia ut prices that defy competition. When in need of any Brick we would be glad to furnish you and guarantee satisfaction. Rocky Ford Brick Company, ■ROCKY F0UI), GA. 11 : G. IL SC i All B0 no, —DEALER IN— Fancy Groceries, Confectioneries, Cigars and Tobacco. Fresh Apples, Oranges and Lemons always on hand. Oysters Sewed on Public Days. OYSTERS!OYSTERS! Hot Oyster Stews Thursday and Saturday evenings and ! night, at the Palace Market. tfe#” Best Mnin Street. The Mslioro Barter Shop j S. W. Hutton, Proprietor. Hair Cut, 25 cents; Shi:vo, If) cents. kuY Everything done in first-class style and satisfaction guaranteed. Give u a call at the old stand. WM. HUGGINS, Practical BM Lap. STATESBORO GA. ' . Estimates made on all kinds ot ihic, work and satisfaction gnraateed. is Lee Hotel, i. Statesboro, Georgia, Mrs. MARGARET LEE, Proprietress. Tables supplied with the best the morke' affords. Good board by the month at reti sonable rates. Respectfully invite my friends from the country, and the public generally t< stop with me when in town. blood fd Cat tle. I offer to the people of t his sect ion som* choice Jersey milch cows, at prices to suit the times. Will take in exchange nativ. beef cattle. Call at my lot in Stat.esbon and select your choice. S. S. Sasser. Statesboro. Aug. 9,1894.—Bm Headstones and Monuments, 1 am now prepared to furnish H<*adston< h and Monuments at lowest posible prices. 0. f. MOCK, apltf BELKNAP, GA. DYtliKS CLD CLOTHES. . . . 1 am prepared to serve the. people in dyeing goods. Will give almost any color, and guarantee s itisfaction. Give me a trial. R. J. Bridoeus, iunlT.vt. Htgtesboro, Ga. S. J. GOLDEN h:t,. BAXc H • ir> Fresh Pier.Cukes. Buns are 4 Rods cooked daily- ... ummm 0a Suiuh Mnin. ORGANS. MID-SUM MER BARGAINS. special Sale Summer 1894. The time to buy Cheap and Easy. Sue Special Summer Offers that beat the record. $50 saved every Piano purchaser. $ro to $20 on every Organ. Six Spec'll Offers on our Popular Mid¬ summer Plan. Buy In August, .September and October, and pay wfceu Cotton ootne* In. Spot Cash Prices. No Interest. Only a Small Cash Payment required, $25 on a Piano, $10 ou Organ, balance next Noyem tier 15th. Longer time It wanted. Payments to suit all. Pianos $5 to $10 monthly. Organa $2 to $5. Our Mid-Summer Offers save big money on all plans ot payment. New Fall Leaders ready. Beautl fnl and Cheap. Tempting Bargains. Of Write at once for Mid-Summer Ter*, flood only until November 1. Don't wait. UDOEN & BATES E8N MUSIC HOUSE, SAVANNAH, GA. Vol. III. Trying ToWed A Child. Lexington, Ky., Nov. 12.—All Ken lacky is watching; with bated breath, the efforts of General Cassius M. Clay, aged 84, to marry his 15-year-old finau cee, Dora Richardson. The aged lover procured a license for t he marriage one day last week and the ceremony was to have been performed Saturday, but at last accounts received today it had not occurred. In fact, the doughty general is encountering great difficulty in his effort to wed his child sweetheart. The general's children, the most prom¬ inent of whom arc Mrs. Laura Clay, of this city, president, of the Kentucky Equal Rights Association, and Brutus Clay, of Madison county, the best known politi¬ cian in the mountain section of Kentucky, strenuously object to the match and no magistrate can be found to perform the ceremony. It is possible that the old man and his infant financee will have to elope. Jo in cur the ill will of the general's children would mean political suicide, and hence Squire Million this morniug declined the invitation to perform the ceremony. The general is reported to be iu a rage at his home, and the neighbors aie afraid to go near. General Clay has been acting with un¬ usual eccentricity for two years, and has lately placed an armed guard around White Hull. He fancies that he is being pursued by enemies, and lias picketed and garrisoned his place to be prepared for their coming. The knowledge of this and General Clay's reputation for cour¬ age has effectually shielded him from in¬ trusion for some time. General Clay is exactly 84 years old. He retains much of his physical and men¬ tal powers, except that he has grown very eccentric. The girl # whoro he arranged to marry is tin orphan girl named Dora Ricliard son. She is barely fifteen years old and has no relatives except two brothers. f er mother was run over and killed a '•ear ngo near White Hall by a railroad rain, and since then Generel Clay has aken care ot the daughter. He has been ending her to a neighboring school, and It was known that lie intended to Educate er. No one dreamed that he thought of carriage. Miss Richardson is said to be . rather [iretty country lass of ordinary ental attainments. Her parents were erv poor. The old home of the Clay' family is a plendid blue grass estate, ten miles from tichrnond. It was bought from the Li¬ lians by General Clay’s grandfather, and no other man outside of the Clay family ins ever lived on it. Until two years ago General Clay still rook an active part in politics and made •e publican speech-s. Since then be has occupied himself ia writing an occasion il letter to the newspapers. The fierce spirit he showed when he became the first ibolitiouist of Kentucky and took his life in his hands to go upon the stump is inehanged. He once was minister to tussia. * Rudy’s Pile Suppository isguaranteed to cure Piles and Constipation, or money refunded. Per box. 50 cents,_ Send stamp for circular and free sample to Martin Rudy, Lancaster, Pa, For sale by all first-class druggists. Lippman Bros.. Wholesale Agents, Savannah. ly • — YVhitecaps On Trial. Atlanta, Ga., Nov. 12.—W. II. Morri¬ son, A. P. Duncan, J. W. Redd, J.T.Mor¬ rison and J. M. Morrison, all hardy look ng mountaineers from Murray county, vere arraigned for trial in the United States court before Judge William T. Cowman today. They are under indict¬ ment for conspiracy in one of the most remarkable whitecap eases on record in Georgia. One night about a year ago Will Roper, a stalwart young mountaineer, 25 years of age, was surprised in his bed by a par¬ ty of masked men. lie had been a wit¬ ness in several revenue cases for the gov¬ ernment and the whitecappers had sworn vengeance upon his head. After being dragged out of bed he was bound, hand uid foot, thrown across a mule and Car¬ rie 1 several miles into the head of the f'ohutta mountains to an old copper shaft, which pierced the mountain side to a depth of sixty feet. Roper was taken from the mule and after each of his cap tors had shot a bullet into his body be was thrown into the copper pit to rot. After five days he was found by a mountaineer who was searching-tor stray cattle. He was still alive and today ap pears in court. After being resiiued, Ro re ne’ thVu in’ who’Stmht attending hs'life Over UW wRnwses aI *In frdm Murray county, and the ease bids fair to last two weeks. Great excitement has the case and the t.ial, IS* whicU to"X. unou es SS tne m m ?h^ that ,,e, n ' tton'S3S tlan ’ ,M 1,01 ' VatCt,Wl " ltn Cne utmost interest. Notice. I have connected myself with Messrs. ' U ->1 n Mcljcan A Co.. ; Savannah, Ga., Fm-tore and Commission Mer -*i. i n r m. and would be pteaeed to receive consignments of Sea slaud and upland •often, ou which will make liberal ad. Vances “’"Vonncrl^' W. T. TmiHraMI. witli Stubbs, Two, & Co. BULLOCH TIMES. Statesboro, Bulloch County. Georgia, Thursday, Nov. 15,1894. GEORGIA NEWS. Items Culled from Georgia For The Times’ Readers. A mad horse created much in Clinch county Sunday by running party of men out of a field, trj mg to persons along the road, and putting flight a Methodist congregation killed. church. The horse was finally * « * William McKinnon, a your.g white chanic of Athens, committed suicide day night. He was in love with Hattie Sailors, a pretty young lady, refused his offers of marriage. He two ounces of laudanum, went to house and fell prostrate upon the door steps, where he (Ted shortly after¬ wards. # * * Senator Broughton has introduced a bill in the Senate that will go far toward solving the State reformatory question. The bill gives various benevolent institu¬ tions which have for their object the cart' of children and young girls a part of the school fund, and also vests such institu¬ tion with the power of guardianship over all who become inmates of them. * # * The visit of the legislature to the Macon fair caused some of them to hold up their bands in holy horror at the revelations of the naughty Midway Plaisance. Mr. Jones, of Dougherty, one of those who was so horrified, has introduced a bill to make the “muscle dance” as giveu at the fair, a misdemeanor in Georgia. This is the same dance that created such a dis¬ turbance at Chicago during the W oriel’s Fair. # * # The trial of Will Meyers, for the mur¬ der of Forest Crowley in Atlanta, Hept. 18th, was begun Monday. The murder was one of the most foul, as well as mys¬ terious, on record. The task of the jury will virtually be to decide wl ether or not young Meyers made certain tracks in the sand near the murdered man, which are so far the only clue. The case excites much interest and will continue for a week or more. * # A fatal accident occurred in the Mt. Zion neighborhood, in Wilkes county, last Saturday. Little Goldbert McCar¬ thy, not more than 6 or 7 years old, was following along with a party that was out hunting, when a gun that was in the hands of a negro boy, was accidentally fired. Little Goldbert was so badly wounded that lie died the next day. One hand was shot off and the load lodged in his thigh. The negro boy is nearly craz¬ ed with grief at the fearful accident. * * * Gus Miller, a 12-year-old white boy of Savannah, was lodged in the barracks Tuesday night, charged with shooting a little colored ^irl named Irene Richard¬ son, with a pistol. The shooting occur¬ red Monday afternoon out on theOgee ehee road, near Battery park. accidental, The boy claims that the shooting was but the girl’s father claims it was inten¬ tional, and he had Miller arrested by of¬ ficer McCabe. The ball struck the girl in the leg, making a slight wound. * * Charley Cobb, sou of Pink Cobb, of Cal¬ houn, was the victim of a very painful and peculiar accident. While picking cotton a cockle burr lodged on his sleeve, and iu attempting to pull it out with his leeth, he sucked ituowuhis throat, it lodged in his windpipe. The little fel¬ low suffered intensely, and was unable to speak above a whisper. Dr. Perry locat¬ ed the burr, but was unable to remove it without an operation being performed. The boy was accordingly taken to At¬ lanta. • * Maj. W. L. Glessner, immigration com¬ missioner of the Georgia .Southern and Florida, left this week for the North to bring down with him more prospectors. He spent last week at Tifton and other points in South Georgia in company with his party of Ohio and Pennsylvania prospectors, all of whom, he says, were well pleased with the section visited. The Ohioans were especially well pleased with thrifty young Tifton and the fine fruit lands around it. Col. W. O. Tift kept the party busy for several days, showing them the magnificent vineyards and truck farms. This is the particular busi¬ ness in which most of the Ohioans are en¬ gaged, or wish to engage in after coming South, and many of them have about made np their minds to locate at or near Tifton. A bold “green goods” game was play wl ,Ml "! 1 Monttnnwrv ” ‘ ' county is out o l»oc e ? •* • ' the money to a maautmed baiter to go ® bring him #1,W® of counterfit mon The man has forgotten to return Salter is said to e rom near l >n. - - brot ,W ^ ^ r nS was a i m ,!2 t«l J1ST States 1 H detective, “*‘-1 and had written him that Halter was un der hond i»ond on on tll0 11 chaw g. 0 f counterfeiting. - but the evidence was not quite clear en ouob to convict him. His brother, be ; said, had written him that if he won -1 , buy m \ h.!' r ,ii 1 sfateHSirt £ would'receive «1.000* He rue* had "nmelint* wBh NaBe., hjw.n an I *, ; engagement he would pnrehaw? to^thiminfsotdele, ?l,o00 In counterfeit re bill.. So Sorry For Mr. Hill. Fred Holmes, is a democrat, so much of a democrat, that he broke his pledge on Tuesday night, drank all the whiskey in sight, and finally, when the last elec¬ tion returns were at band, shifted his di inks to Paris green and water and ca’ bolic acid. As a result there was a good ileal of post election trouble yesterday in the household of Mr. Holmes at 274 Spring street. By a bare scratch the vote of the head of the iainily was pre¬ served for another election. Holmes is a hard working longshore¬ man at the Morgan line pier. lie leaves his wife and two children at 0 o’clock in the morning and returns at G p. m,, to stay at his home until the next day. He drinks only ©n election days when he hears that the democrats are wiping up the ground with the enemy. Aside from domestic enjoyments, Holmes finds his only relaxation in the general rejoicing oVier democratic victories. He was in a state of nervous anxiety on Tuesday evening when Tobn McGorman of 278 Spring Street came along where Holmes was standing in the doorway of 274. “Hello,” said McGorman, “1 hear that there ain’t enough left of the republicans to put in a tin cup.” “Is that so? Let’s tave a drink,” said Holmes. That was a starter for a drink was pleasant enough and until Holmes went down to Printing House square and read the returns. There was not enough whis¬ key in town to dull the shock. He went back to Spring street and drank at differ¬ ent saloons. Early yesterday morning 1 e went to several drug stores and paint shops in the neighborhood, and at 9 o’clock returned to bis family, who live on the fifth floor of an apartment house. Mrs. Holmes was sitting in a rocking chair with a baby in her arms. “Hill is gone to the devil, and 1 am go¬ ing to join him,” said Holmes, “and I am going tq do it with this.” He threw' a package on the table in the center of the room and dropped over on a chair. Mrs. Holmes jumped from the rocking chair, with her child in one arm, and reached for the package, but her husband grasped her by the hand. The baby fell to the floor, afid Holmes and wife fought for the possesrion Of the package. Hrs. Holmes is a stout Irish woman, and her husband was weak from the effects of liquor, and after a short, sharp fight, in which the parents and the baby were rolled over and over on the floor, he was finally forc¬ ed to give in. Mrs. Holmes brought her fist down on his arm, and he released her left hand, which held the package. Mrs. Holmes got to her fret, picked up the package and threw it in the stove. A blue'flame shot upward. Holmes dropped overon the sofa again and whined: / “Why didn’t you let me have it—Hill is beaten.” “Never mind,dear,” saidhis wife. “Just have a good rest now. There will be an¬ other election next year.” “But they beat Hill,” moaned Holmes, “and I want to die.” Dr. John P. Nolan of 41 Charlton street was called and prescribed the usual rem¬ edies for post-election paralysis. Holmes went to sleep and his wife returned to her household work. While she was iu an¬ other room he sneaked out and returned an hour later. “Well, Mary, I guess L fooled you this time,” he said. “Of course you did, Fred,” she answer Ml. “Now do sit down. Maybe the dein oerats will win next time.” “1 am sorry, Mary, but I can’t stay long, I have just taken a big dose of car bolic acid,” Holmes said ia a pleasant ^ on( , The shrieks of Mrs. Holmes brought in a dozen neighbors', who were sent out for the priest and the doctor. When the doctor had arrived, Holmes had derided life was worth living. “Take care of me; I don’t want to die!” lie cried. Holmes was a bit sick, but ho was able t„ walk to the M«,legal ttmt pdife Station, where he told the seigeant that he had taken a dose of Paris green and a few swallows of carbolic acid, all because ‘""Ml ™ »>»’» "«• ” • Holmes was taken to St. Vincent’s hos P ita! - He will recover.-Sav. N ews. A Household Treasure. p yy. Fuller, of (’tnajohurie. N Y., HflVH that he always keeps Dr. King's New p mcove ,-y the hons* and his fa.r.M.i has always foundthe very be.t results fo low its' DrugiisS; < H N. Y., says that Dr. King’s New remedy that he has used in his family Tf for right years, and it has never failed to do «>» that is claimed for it « hy not try a mnmlv so long ot^eo. tried afnl tested. 1 rial hottl)> » frw> Rd.se & Uo.’s Drug Store. Regalnr sizes 5<k' and $1.00 —— -------— NOTICE. All parti-s due me, either by note orac " i!I as l am compelled to coRwt m.v money. John Campuell, ■ ..... b-au . Nn 0. OS -O. READ AND REFLECT. A Column of Paragraphs, Some of Which May Make You Smile. An editor who has been pounding a w^y at. his delinquent subscribers for some time, finally brought them to a sense of their duty with the following poetical parody: “Lives of great men oft remind us honest toil don’t stand a chance—more we toil we leave behind us bigger patches or. our punts. On our pants once new and glossy, now arc patches of many a hue, all because subscribers linger, and won’t pay up what they’re due. Then let all be up and doing: send your mite, be it e’er so small, lest when the frosts of winter strike us, we shall have no pants at all.” * * From Bulloch County comes the story of an old fellow who got jealous because his wife went to a ball with a good look¬ ing fellow, and staid out until the broud day-light. The old chap went to a justice of the peace and told him his story, wind¬ ing up with, “1 want you to help mo, for that'ere thing has been going on about long enough.” “Well,” says the justice, “you can write down to Statesborcf nud see if someof the lawyers can’t get you a divorce.” “Divorce!” roared the angry man. “Who the dickens wants a divorce?” The justice began to get wruthy. “If you don’t wun’t a divorce, what the dickens brought you here?” “Why, I want un injunction John to stop F. further Meyers. proceedings.”—From • A quack, having invented a wonderful hair-invigorating fluid, applied to a pro¬ fessional man for a testimonial. Hegave it in these terms, calculated, we should think, to convince the most skeptical: “A little applied totheinkstandhasgiven it a coat of bristles, making it a splendid penwiper at little cost. We applied some to a ten penny nail, and the nail is now the handsomest lather brush you ever saw, with beaiitifulsoffchairgrowingfrom the end of it, some two or tliri'e inches in length. Applied to the door stones it does away with the use of the mat; ap¬ plied to the floor it will enuse to grow therefrom hair sufficient for a Brussels carpet. A little weak lather sprinkled wind, over a barn makes it impervious inside to min or cold. It. is good to put make of children’s cradles, or any where to a soft resting place. It produces the effect iu ten minutes.” # # # ft is pleasant to become a parent; twice os pleasant, perhaps, to be blessed with twins; but when it comes to triplets, we are a little dubious. Now, there dwells in Screven county a worthy German who a few years ago was presented by his wife with a sou. Fritz said to her, “Katrine, dot ish goot.” A couple of years later thegood woman placed before his astonished gaze a bouncing pair of twins. “Veil,” said Fritz, “dot ish petter ash der oder dimes. I tricks more ash ten class peer on dot.” But the good woman next time gave birth to triplets, and that made him “spoke mib his inont shut a leedle.” “Mine Gott, Katrine, vot ish de madder on you? Better you stop dish jiisiiess fore dero come more ash a village full. I gots nuff init such foolishness!” No late returns have been received.— From John F. Meyers. This is the way the editor feels when he does up his sentiments in blank verse: “1 would fly from the city’s rule and law—from its fashions and forms cut loose—and go where the straw ten,} fi^ows on its straw and the gooseberry «™ws on its goose; where the catn.p tree 1H climbed by the cat as she clutches for her prey— the guileless, unsuspectmg rat on the ratan bush at play. I will catch at ease the saffron cow and the cowlet in thrir £ 1ee > UH tlie - v tefl P in from bough to bough on the top of f a cowslip tree, and list while the partridge drums hi* (lrum - and the wood-chuck chucks hm wood, and the dog devours the dogwood pl “ohTiS me drink from Smoasgrown pump that won kewn from the pumpkin rural tree! Eat mush and milk from a ” ni | k f milkweed sweet—with nd , {rom t ie pineapple from the pine. And then to the whitewashed dairy I’ll turn, where ''i"rn milk of her butter flies; and I’ll rise morn with the earliest bird, to the fra EK te™ s™ K o“ gras^bopil-TS out to Did You Ever T rv Electric Bitters as a bottle* remedy for your jf not, get a now and „,. t ,,, u , f> This m-dicine has been found t° bo nsraHarty f dA-ptedto «id ^"dnd'erfnl direct* Influence "'iii* giving ,...d touo to tl.e orero..- fc^FninSK^ k HVP i ofW „f \pnetite. Constipation, oJ aU sirepless Excitable, Melancholy or ITttJ^tTh* flI « troubled with Dizzv Snells {2ft Elretric HrnRh ami strength are guaranteed,by its use. Large bo*ties only fifty eentil at George Reese & Co.’s Drug Stow. $ j M 00 toToan At?Ter Cent improved J town or farm lamia. Loans COURU IIlnated in , mI „ ten to Williams. fifteen day*, Geo. ” W. Stat.Mmro Ga THK TIMES JOB OFFICE Is prepared to print Letter Heads, Packet Heads, Bill Heads and Also— Statements, Envelopes, Etc. ('ai ds, Tickets, Programs, Wedding thing Invitations, Party Invitations, or any* you want in that line. Satisfaction guaranteed at THE TIMES JOB OFFICE. A WEEK IN WASHINGTON. President Cleveland is quietly attend¬ ing to his official duties just as though there had never been such a thing as an election. He hasn’t said a word on the subject to anyone who had authority to male it public, but it is certain that he has been doing a lob of thinking, and those able to read between the lines will be able to form a pretty good idea of the trend of his thoughts when, in a few weeks, his annual message to congress shall be made public. While be has said nothing publicly, bis closest personal friends have left the impression upon those with whom they have talked that the President does not consider himself in any way respon¬ sible for the unexpected democratic de¬ feat. While few democrats of any consequence to be personally quoted on the sub¬ ject of the elections, every one with whom correspondent has come in contact agrees that the greatest single source of democratic troubles bus been the lack of harmony within the party, which was made so painfully apparent during the last session of congress. The result of the election is merely an application of the proverb—“United we stand, divided we fall,” and the lesson must be taken to and profited by if the party is to into the campaign of '00 with a rea¬ chance to win. “A house divided itself must fall.” Senator Faulkner, Chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign committee: rises from the wreck to say a few words, which are both explanatory ard wise. He says: “The history of poli¬ tics will show that every land-slide is the of a dissatisfaction, discontent and want of confidence in the members of the majority party, whose action produces the result that surprises and astonishes the people—not by voting the opposite ticket, but slinpl.v by remaining away from the polls. The result of thiselection when ascertained will, I am sure, verify this conclusion. We have os many voters in the country hr we had in ’02, who be¬ lieve in the principles of the democratic party, but the recent business paralysis, financial string“nc.v, economical legisla¬ tion—the benefits of which have uot been developed—party dissentions, crimina¬ tions and recriminations resulted in such apathy ns to cause the stay-at-home vote to produce the surprising result. That is my honest judgment. If we hope for success iu '00 we should maintain with fearlessness and determination the atti¬ tude assumed iu ’02; let personal and party bickerings of the past bury their and unite in an earnest effort to harmonize those differences which have seriously affected onr organization.” gulling enough to democrats in Washing¬ ton, but there was another tiling con¬ nected therewith that was evenmoregall ing to democrats. That was, that some of the loudest cheers from the crowds which surrounded the newspaper bulletins with all the eagerness of a Presidential election, when the news was favorable ,to the republicans, cuine from the mouths of republicans who bold office under the democratic administration. The friends of Reed, Harrison and Mc¬ Kinley are very much alarmed at the prominence of Morton as a Presidential candidate. They know that Tom Platt intended when he nominated Morton for governor of Now York to push him for the Presidential nomination of his party, if he succeeded in getting him elected gov¬ ernor, and they know that Morton's bar¬ rel will be on top at the next republican national convention, and they fear it. The Washington democrats, who all belong to the never-say-dio family, think they are playing in hard luck indeed, this wee k, They stood up under the election returns with all the stoicism with which they have in the pust received a long Ht ring oI national defeats, comforting themselves with the reflection “we’ll lick ’ em ti “ e ” bn * they h “ v * ■ hea I d something since that has caused them to use words not at all appropriate for an to a Sunday School cla-. Ale. days ago a man born in Washington, and who has been a democrat all his life, was appointed postmaster, the term of rapublican!nc»mb OT t As he will be the first postmaster the lo democrats save had . since . the .. war, it ( ' a ‘ was perfectly natural that some of his democratic friends should entertain the hope of succeeding some of the numerous republicanemployesofthepostofficeaf ter the democratic postmaster takes hold, and just as natural that he should look forward witU pleasure to appointing thpm rt may be imagined thenhow they felt when iuformed that a new order, til through th. ,-public, . dp.net tns civil service commission lnni * <Hl the patreuage ol We postmasrer I to, the appointment of about ten men. . Bucklen’S Arnica Salve. The best salvo in the world for Cats, Bruises^Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum. Fever tiveiy’currs fiffiSiSSot gimmntee.1 Piles, or no nerieet pay required.. satisfaction It is to give or money refuwlwl. Price as cents per to. Fir «l. sale bv Geo. Rt«ae & Co.