Newspaper Page Text
treet,
RELi.
AT BO'i
WTRY.
^ARFIELD, D. D. S.
irCLBEBRy STREET, MACON. GA.
1 onice hours from 8 a. ru. to Cp. m
A »Jl2 ’81 ly
»■ ees
(Late .R»iHta^3WWM^j|ien*tg it .
'*■ WARNER A'ClCfA11} i. ut Law
Warner Buiidint,-, Waehington,
ttentlou Kivcn-to Patent ami Mini,
»ls 1’eiiniojjH, BoUaLOH aail ilnvpi-nmri
motion prom )t. charges tn./derate,
h stamp. Refer to Members of Co?
•ids of Government Departments.
M. Ih IMG
ORNEY MJtvu, '
^BYTIOM. GrA
* "Settee in th« courts of
jnhiK couutie*.
Wnil't attention to all businessei.
HOS, WoOD,
TO LANIER HOUSE, MACON, GA,
DEALER IN
aerials and In- ; rr*r ,
i large and full 1 “ ese Can be s
, Gold of all kinds, store and purchasing
ol all kinds, janly Figures. I sell cone bout
constantly on Laud a full stock ol
Fancy and Family
consisting in part
FLOUR MEAL
bacon, larl. .. s,
^Vtajtereli Saidines, 1 von* I
SUftAR OF ALL CJ?AD.
TEA,'- DFFEE, CANNED GOOD^J
FRUi r.ONFEC 1’IONARIES, -
N O L * v O NS, TOBACCO,
n i M A R S * E T c -
In fact everytfHt in the Grocery line that can be
In additton my
. W- „ } ( 1 ( J !
AN fATION, BITTERS,
*.R£*tt£& RYE, ETC,.
v purity. I have an ex
; aliy adapted lor family
patronage in the past,
•MjBpectfully ask lor
nisi
a ii cl
NEW STORE!
URN | T D R E stock of Goods
1 nave (ijieLnl a select -tuck
F amily Groceries
i tin- :iodise l it i.v imom -e-LL
us i furnour, st.'te, s
nil
Fn
CARPETS
SPRING BEDS, GHfliHS
WINDOW SHADES AND MATTINGS
CERy.,,
Fort
EHEDHF”
Neuralgia, Sc/at/fa, Luma
Backache, 0 f {fag
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat,
*'■ ings and Sprains, Burns
Scalds, General Bod'
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headacht
Feet and Ears, and a’
Pains and Ach
No Preparation on earth equal-.
' a Knft’t sit re f simple and c
H iijfdy A trial entails but the
’iding outlay of 50 Cents, and evet
ilu pain can have cheap and positi« v ...
'r.inia.
Directions in Eleven Languages.
.;LD all DEUGGISTB AMD I
Ullwli i-
Men voters-
urt a willing *s
* with this adiiitir
.ation? ll so, go to
)ie “no fence If ilu,
of
ston
mr-
of
aud
le
jit
IT?—
—ELEGANT LOT OF —
Metal Cases and Caskets.
Also Cases, Cofniisg.ii'J 0 sU.-t-i. io
ail woods. Orders by telegraph
promptly attended to
Nov3m3.
J. N. TOIL 15.
W. G ML! y
TUTTLE & RILEY.
■ FERRY, GEORG! V
dealers in
Dry Ouods, ; oihisitr.
too IS .SHOES. HATS. I LI NK...
lNCY & PAM1 LY CROC Rif 5,
HaxhMvaBL it LElti Etc.
TUTTLE & RILEY.
ew Harness Slop.
etc.
',■* v
Pal-
Harness, M -tr
RSts !
I KG A SP'
.oiirl _
: ns r.Y & co
PKC ).VIM()
r *>.Y Expiej,^,
ipi • f price tTSMdi-e
E. A. Hall . f
rm.v 2811.11 Lute J
FI.
fee.
Fi-fh
gar-
r'.-i
ir.
cbiisisting in part oi
Moil, BaCon. Laid Sugar. (1,. -
•• lined Goods. Mai-ker-l. Fi<-
i m j ..nou. F lions t ob iceo. ( i-
Fte. .
i ■ 3 Dt\s Each \V. ek
■■ Mir -'ii' <i SH ! 'he i i
, i WTu K
Giv. ■
• tist
R
J SMITH.
Eo- . ■
veuiidren. Thousands yet entitled. Pension".
*r loss- f finger.toe.eyc orrui»tnrc.varic«*sc .
: nny Uiscudc. Thousand* of pensioner?
•Idlers entitled to INCREASE ar.d BOUM
PATENTS procured for Inventors. Suit!
•nd warrants procured, bought and sold. Sold'
l «nd heirs apply for vour rights at once. Sent-
) tamps for **Tne Citizen-Soldier.** and Pens'
and Bounty laws, blanks and instructions. W.
ii refer to thousands of Pensioners and Client ;.
UtS.
v sild up
e cunui..
cal thereto, i. g j
, We cannoi adopt this
a hold the scale in even bul-
x am t.vihiur to ahuudon tlio
•.that has so long safely Harried
for one li »s safe and f
v state some of tlijSp
n m_> tears are pre^ *
^nange would have a d; f
tea,. i drive a great deal
in--: ant tuo.s > ffici<-ht labor from the
<• uutry; v.h.eh i—al;. ady tro scarce for
w ue.lKst. It winild also result in a geu-
^ '^^■^Vullii.g tiff in stock raising—a
jr'.- t tfel qaif agricultural industry already
.yirloriduM^neglecttd. And as a luiturul
m. ;x x -
oi sn In Mann & GiLgy-i PerryAaf. ComTeiit would result in a still
rjy- - y, , , ^ -J u^thcPeuUivatinu of cotton—already
\"o l' ok/ extensiveiyf^iultivated. In short,
' 1 -'“Ife
sick an •
konk ct
■ adv<-i'tts* -
ii-e-'. Noj-r
o t -e Safi
'• Ex. i.-si
n I U.-. ; . and
•v stor>.
it: ii.:: i.K •
2f>
;,1.Y oF J N£s £ c -
IRtHfIR’S LUNG RESTORER,
The OnlvRejhable Aeent Known for *he
CURE of CONSUMPTION.
No mi ire Hemorrhages from the Lunge
alt’-r using the First Bottle.
Walter A. Taylor, of Atlauta, says: I have been
liushiug the sale of Brewer’s Lung Restorer, and
selling it at every opportunity, and am satisfied
that I vrUl establish a good sale for it. I do not re-
menioer of a single instance where I sold one bot
tle nut what the party did not return greatly beue-
fitted, to get he second bottle. I will expect to.
sell it i apidly in the fall and winter.
Yours truly, WALTER A. T. XLOR,
Druggist, At auta, Ga.
tel Commission Merchant
' AND DEAD Kit J.i
pbc-ouge, m.
N o. 68 Poplar Street,
MACON - CEORCIA,
OPDE«!!i SSOLICXTED.
UlWCyTfl A2 address EDSO-N BROS.. At-
jj'lVCII I (Iilu torueys-at-lawand Patent So-
•i-itnrs, Washington, D. C.. fot re.erenres and ad-
Ij^.scut HtEE We attend exclusively to Patent
«iaos». Reasontibte terms. Reissues, Imerfer-, r ... . .
ta *», and eases rejeeteed iit ntlicr hands a spec al- ' him in the least. Ifad hnt little appetite and since
Cairab, suliritcd. e'ead inodel, nr sketch and he began the use.of Rreiver^sLung Restorer has
-'-oriotiou for opinion as to patentability, mmt of | slept weB and hisappctite is very much better. I
tt-iaoE. We refer to the Commissioner of Patents. | haye peyei seen anytbing.act so promptly and ef-
j feet a cure in ao short a time. Wishing you great
success and hoping the above may influence others
i to try Brewer’s Lung-Restorer where they, need a
I medicine to strengthen amf restore the lungs,to a
healthy condition, I am Very RespectfnUy,.
j MRS. E. J. WILLIAMS,
! 75 Washington Avenue, near W. F. College.
i We are yet to hear of any one who has not been
.benefited by the use of Brewer’s Lung Restorer,
but on (lio other hand who tried one bottle
come back to get from thrgS to fix bottles, saying
they had received great benefit fro a- its use. We
have a letter from a gentleman at Toombsboro, 6a.,
saying: “I have had long disease four or five years,
using .during the time many different remedies.but
have debited more real benefit from this one
bottle of Brewer’s Luxe Rest, her than from
ut. the ttit.inte put together. I want air more
bottles, which please send at once,.as i wish toget
them byxhe time the bottle I now have gives out.”
Sign, d H.H, IVATKDiS.
Cast Your Optics flier This.
OHBIS l>WAS IS COMING."
AND SO IS NEW YEARS,
LIKEWISE Atli OF T DLY.
will you
Wife, Son, Dnuar'st r, Sister, Bc-’tlier,
Mother, F.’.ther,Friend orSweetlieart!
Search the wide woild over from pole topole,vis ; t
thetra le marts of Europe and America, explore the
palaces of the Crowned Herfis, and naught cah be
found that will give ench lasting joy as an elegant
PIANO OR AN ORGAN.
Gentlemm: A member of my family whom I feared
had Consumption lias been entirely cured by the
use of Brewer’s Lung Hestorer. His condition was
very alarming to us and we did everything we
could think of-to benefit lnm, without success, un
til I got.kiin a bottle of your Lung Restorer. He
began to improve after the first dose, and before he
hid taken two bottles was entirely cur d, where I
feared no cure was possible, and I most cheerfully
recommend it to all who have any affections of the
Lungs, ife was coughing and spitting all the time,
so in -.es8antlv that it prevented his. sleeping at
night and what little sleep he got did not refresh
* J0 t0 Lx-Connnissiouers. Established lSfiG.
"TARVER ft'CO,
GROOPlIi 3
* AND
Commission me ghauts.
B ^ tTER and GHEfiSE s?E£?ALnE3.
60 Poplai* Street,
^ CO:Kr ’ - ---- - GA
THESE ARE THE BEST.
CHICK'S RING, MATHTJSHSKj
SOUTHERN GEM, ARION,
MASON tZ HAMLIN, SHONINGEK
Nix Grand Makers. One Hundred Styles. All
Grades. All prices. Largest selection of "irst-
Class Instruments offered by any House North or
South. . >'one but first-class makers. No competi
tion with cheap makers. No economy in cheap in-
etramenis. They will neither wear nor please.—
Tine economy lies m the purchase of first-class and
reliable Instruments, cost what teet mat. Oth
ers may humbug buyers with cheap Pianos at $125,
$145, and Organs at $30, £40, $SU, in finer Cases,
with numberless Stops, but
SMALL FARM F0R SALE,
IIU- U H m aa, uaxiu.ut.
We are also in receipt of an order from J. F.
Brown, whi) is President of the Brawn Gin Compw-
1 uy New London, Conn., who says he has been
of 100 acres of excellent pine land, told of the cures mafia by Brewer’s'Lung Restorer,
acres in cuRiyahon, 25_or 3o ofwbjch la InXrequests”us to send" him six’ijptBesT Wepm-
f°°k room co . m f°rf»ble four-room dwelling with „ v , t eC n the fact before the people that Brey-
«B "fit buildings, plenty of excel- rung Restorer gives satif faction in every in-
ffiis 4c ; 1 ii miles froth Powerevillo.SK at aine..-
J? 111 Byron, and 1 nile from public road
rKtSeriSr Fort Valley (o Macon. Schools end L\MAB, RANKIN LAMAR.
MlioN'GEORGIA.
^ ^ 1 or t -n thor pa.ticulars ft le rvyr an ilfaoturers.
«once t o ' C. M. LnPREE, I
Byron, Ga, iiblOly
JPor sale by HAHH QTTiBRBf.
Ludden & Bates won’t
Run any such schedule, or practice any sech impo
sition. lliey have done business thirteen long
.years, and sold more Pianos and Organs than all
other Southern Dealers together, and it’s too late
in the day for them to co back on their record, and
take to selling Stained Whitewood Pianos an d imi
tation 'Walnut* Oreans. But
TUrfYir-'
Ludden & Bates Will
Sell Strictly Reliable Pianos and Organs from best
Makers' only, al Maxcfactubeb’s Factobt PriCE*,
and far less money than can Lc bad elsewhere in
America. This we .auxBASTjE, Write at once
for crtalogues. Prides and tetjns. Magnificent
Stock for Epliday Trade. We can suit aU reasoa-
oble, commouscuse buyers who ifion’t expect Gold
Dollars for Fifty Cents. Address
Ludden & Ife, 1 Savannah,Oa.
Wliosale Piano and Organ Sealed s-
liii- c’ciuut- is means ripe for
suck ;i change. 'the more densely
l/otJulated states of ihe North, the peo-
y|e nave nji foiiiid ii necessary to
clamor for these “no fence” humbugs,
ij- vih^loiust, n t,. virgin forest,they
h.ive ky ..tone fences as far as they
Coni- . . . at opted the plan of
diie.iing an-, hedging, and are supple
menting ruese with barbed wire feuc-
lug — indeed, thuusauds of acres of the
bes and mosi ieniie lauds, upon whicii
a tree never grew, are securely fenced
with barbed wire. Now, why cannot
recomse be hud to llie.se things ill this
counir\ ? Bu a stfl. urea • r and more
glarit.g evil than any I nave enumera
ted pi e-ients i self to my mind, and I
cannot retrain fioui stating it. I can
bu. regard 'his whole scheme as politi
cally wrong and unconstitutional, be-
Caust it s-auds antagonized with the
eonect science oi a purely democratic
government. It is an-infraction upon
tue legal civil rights of the whole peo
ple, whether landowners or non-land
owners. It is hd infraction upon the
ieg-ti rights of the farmer, in that it
abridges the right of eminent domain,
individually applied. (I use the term
•eminent domain ’ iu the absence of a
belter one. and mean simply the free
exercise of a man’s rignts upon his own
domain, untrammelled by a mere “gag”
law which undertakes to prescribe the
terms and conditions u.-on which these
rights may be exercised.) It is an in
fraction upon the legal, private, do
mestic riguis o£ the latter iu that it
subjects him unconditionally to the ab
solute wit! or a lordly dictatorship, and
denies him the right of having and
owning stocs, except upon such terms
and conditions as may be granted him
by the land owner, We recollect very
distinctly that this same question was
up before the people a few years ago,
and fell still-born a the ballot box.—
Since then its more strennons advocate.-’
have managed to engraft upon it the in
fluence of a powerful monied monopo
ly, viz: the influence of railroad com
panies. Now, we think that railroad
companies, being creatures of the gov
ernment, find not primary constituent
elements thereof, instead of clamoring
for the passage of a law likely to para
lyze the .agricultural interests of the
country, should be content with such
chartered rights and prileges as have
from time to tfine been granted them
bv the government. Now, a wurfi
ahonc liie law nself. and we will con
clude. Were v.a in favor of a “no
An Awkward Faint.
women never can fnint in the
■nuer nor at the rignt time.
Juan cannot bring about
y combination of time sind
.lid swoon, she had better get
without swooning. Now. Imre
two weeks ago one Sabbath eve-
at Bradford, Pennsylvania, the
behaved and most thoroughly
town in-the whole country, a city
oven to fainting or other unseemly
plays during religions services, the
Methodist Episcopal Conference was
in session anu its ministers were con
ducting services, just after the ordina-
ton of deacons a woman iu the gallery
fainted. Now, while the ordinatiou of
deacons is a most holy, solemn, and
deeply impressive ceremony, it is not
..wildly thrilling and exc’ting like the
2tiion scenes iu the Sons of Malta,
and it is nothing to faint over. But
this woman fainted, and a beautiful
faint she madeoi it. It seems that she
was sitting in ilie trout seat ot he gal
lery, and slid straight forward on to the
floor, thrust her unconscious L feet
right through the gallery rail.
They must have been a startling pair
(if feet to view, for the moment they
worshippers, they raised the cry thaf
the gallery was giving way, evidently-
mistaking the swaying feet for dis
placed columns or bracket biaces. In
the most^woridly manner the congrega-
M ' a rush for the doors, and iu
-c the saints trod the sinners un-
ot, and the sinners walked along
on the backs of the saints, according
to the respective size of saint and sin
ner, all being animated by the desire
t) get out from uuder the threatening
shadow of those overhanging feet. In
the midst of the confusion and terror,
one of those ucconfined lunatics whose
mission is to s-y and do the most idi
otic things under the guise of sauit-y,
sprung through a window and shouted
tire, and unfortunately escaped ajtve.
That brought the tire department and a'
miscellaneous crowd of a lew thousapd
men and boys swarming around- the
church, and althingh Chaplain "YlcC»bei
began ringing a hymn at the top oi his
iatlier penetrating voice, the panic
could not be stayed, and the people
got out, but 4 i here wasn’t a fall bonnet
in the congregatiod worth looking
at.
And how badly tbi$ woman most
have felt when she realize*: how great
a ruin she had wrought by fainting in
that ridiculous manner,sticking through
the gallery rail like a siwbuck hanging
on a picket fence. And how the women
with ruined hats will glare at her, es
pecially those women who can’t alibi'd
to buy new ones. A woman who is
given to lainting ought aiwuvs to pick
out a suitable place deioie she lets go;
and- no woman whose feet are suffi
ciently star thug in their development
to throw a congregation of worshippers
: nto a panic, has »uy right to faint at
all.—Burdette.
■y , ment. # atute of this
., says j -W, wAuld be a start-
innovation npnn onr theory of
■■ment. In foreign countries,
t is held that the occupant of
one rules by divine authority,
s nothing inconsistent or unttsu-
'ding him guilty of treason and
of death who only shoots at the
tth intent to murder. Bat in
^public, where every citizen is the
equal of every other citizen, there is
not the slightest difference at law be
tween the killing of the President of
the UiiiteiF.' States, and the humblest
citizen, who, by his labor of the day,
earns his right to sleep peacefully at
night, t Once wo begin to discriminate
between tu.e murder of one man or an
other in this country, the way will be
cleared for legal conclusion that a
peculiarjfc&pciity attaches to the petson
of him who, by favor of the people, is
for the time being chosen the Chief
among the public servauts. The next
step will be to override the Constitu
tion, and to declare it treason to at
tempt to kill the Chief Magistrate of
the country. Again: Congress has
the right only to prescribe the punish
ment for such offenses as violate the
laws of the United States. If any offi
cer of the Federal Government, from
President down, should be feloniously
killed just over the Potomac, no other
power save the Slate of Virginia could
indict the offender for murder, aud
1? ^^5 jjprty
neclicut. Mtlhlet?
■bf the third cottgre-* 5
_, of New Jersey. spd;
.uurth aud hftb congreafy
•fui,. .Ore Sedgwick, of Massachnseti
was speaker for the sixth coucress; ?
thaniel Macon, of North daroliua, for
the seventh, eighth and ninth; Joseph
B. Yarn urn, of Massachusetts, for the
tenth and eleventh: Henry Clay, of
Kentucky, for the twelfth, part of th«?
thirteenth, fourteenth, fifteenth, and
part of the sixteenth and eighteenth;
Laugdou Cheves, of South Carolina,for
the second session of the thirteenth,
and John W. Taylor, oi New York, for
the second sessiou of the sixteenth;
Philip P: Barbour, oi Virginia, for tho
seventeenth; John W. Taylor, of New
York, for the nineteenth; Andrew Ste
venson, of Virginia, for the twentieth,
twenty-first, twenty-second, and tho
first session of the twenty-third; John
Bell, of Tennessee, for tho second ses
sion of the twenty-third Congress;-
James K. Polk, of Tennessee, for the
twenty-fourth and twenty-tiftb; Robert
M. T. Hunter, of Virginia, for the-
twenty-sixth; John White,of Kentucky,-
for the twenty-seventh; John W. Jone«v
of Virginia, for the twenty-eighth;John
W. Davis, of Iudiana, for the twenty-
ninth; Robert C. Wiutbrop, of Massa
chusetts. for the thirtieth; Howell Cobb,,
of Georgia, for the thirty-first; Linn
Boyd, of Kentucky, thirty-second and
thirty-third; Nathaniel P. Banks, of-
Massachusetts, thiity-fourth; JamesLv
Orr, of South Carolina, thirty-fifth;
William PeJhicgton, of New Jersey,
thirty-sixth; tiaiushu A. Grow,of Penn
sylvania, thirty-seventh; Schuyler Col-
tax, of Iudiana, thirty-eighth, thirty-
.uinth and fortieth congresses: James
G. Blaine, of Maine, forty-first, foriy-
second aud forty-third; Micheal C.
Kerr, oi iudiana, first session of the
puuishmear would be meted
cordauce wjith the laws of ti);
wealth aud none other, H
Mr. Laphauu, or uay other Senator
a unanimous Cougres^ declari
shall be the punishment for an assault
upon tlje.life of any man,- committed
within the limits-of a State? Will the
penalty be meted out by a State court
iustead of the punishment prescribed
Ijy i$a bwn statutes, or will the United,.
ijUjies assume.to. try such cases for th$
sake'’ of enforcing the^penulties laid
down in the Unite j States statutes? To
were observed by tbe panic-stricken , ail y tkjj least of it, Senator Lapham’s
bill is a decided innovation
more respects than one.
in many
The editor of a mining camp news
paper went to Denver to hear Emma
Abbott siug, and in a lengthy review of
the Opera, says: “As a singer she can
just wallop the hoss off anything that
ever waggefta jaw on the boards,—
From her clear,^ bird-like upper notes
she would counter away down on the
bass racket anthen cushion buck to
a sort'of spiritual trebble which made
every man'in the audience imagine ev
ery hair ..on his beqdL was the golden
string of a celes^aFBarp, over which
angelic fingers were sweeping in the
inspiring old tune of “Sally put the
ket.le on.” Here she would rest
awhile, triliiug like an enchanted bird,
and then hop in among the upper
uotes with a git-up-aud-git vivacity
that jingled the glass pendants on the
chandeliers and elicited a whoop of
pleosuie front every galoot in the
mob.”
It is tbe bemht-h of folly to wait un
til you are in bed with disease you
may not get over for months, when
you cm be cured during the early symp
tom by Parkers Ginger Tonic. We
have known the sickliest families made
tiie healthiest by a timely use of this
pure medicine—Observer.
Women are not half so shy as men.
A woman will go to a diy gcx-ds store
and buy all sorts of toggery of male
clerks, but not one man iu a thousand
will buy anything bat visible attire of
a female clerk.
It is hard to tell which is the most
ridiculous, the young fool or old 'fo-d;
but the old fool has this advantage; He
will never be a yonug fool, whereas the
young foul miy some day beau 0L1
fooL
Comptroller Knox estimates onr eu-
iire currency—papet, gold and silver—
at one billion four hundred and fifty
five million dollars. Tbe annual busi
ness of the country is estimated to
have reached the sum of eighty billion.
If the whole currency were employed
in any transaclion at a ratio of five per
cent, the It tai transaction would be
about twenty-nine billions. It would
appear then that during the year the
whole of the currency was employed
three time--. Tne vast-amount of busi
ness conducted by checks, drafts, bills,
etc,, which cannot be fully determined,
renders it probable that the entire cur
rency may have been oftener employed.
—Savannah News.
Cause and Effect-
The main cause of nervousness is in
digestion, and that is caused by weak
ness of tbe stomach. No one can have"
sound nerves and good health without
using Hop Bitters to .strengthen the
stomuch, purify the blood, and keep , the
liver and kidneys active, to carry off
tbe poisonous and wnbte matter of the
system.—Ad vance.
Workmen engaged in excavating an
embankment at the foot of lime-alley,
on Commercial street, Bo3tOD, unearth
ed an ancient tombstone bearing the
^-fourth congress; Samuel J. Rnn-
Penusyivania, second sessiou of
fourth congress, and the forty-
aud forty-sixth. Gen. Keifer is
he 2l)ih speaker, aud the first from
Ohio,
’ ———*-•-<
Mr. Morrill’s tariff bili^proyides that
the commission shall consist ot nine
persons, appointed by tire President,
with the consent of tho Senate. Each
Commissioner is to receive 310 a day
and his expenses. The duties of the
commission ate defined in the bill us
follows: “1'otake into consideration
and to thoroughly investigate all the
various questions relating to the agri
cultural, commercial, mercantile, man
ufacturing, mining and industrial in
terests of the United States, so far aa
the same may be necessary to the es
tablishment of a judicious tariff or a
re visit n of the existing tariff und the
existing system of internal revenue laws
upon a scale of justice to all interests.”
The commission is empowered to visit
any part of the country, and is required
to report to Congress the results and
the testimony taken from time to time,
and make a final report not filter than
the first Monday in January, 1883.
The uoclaimed money orders amount
to §2,000.000. In 1872 they amounted
to half a million. These could all have
been paid if presented or hud duplicates
been obtained. It is stated that orders
are often paid years after their issue,
having been lost or mislaid by their
owners. Postmaster General James
suggests that the money be turned into
the Treasury for Jhe benefit of tbe Post
office Department. It is thought that
fiatf of the orders will never be called
for. When one recalls that the money
orders of the year represent nearly fif
ty-seven millions of doilars.the amount
unclaimed is surprisingly srnttil.
Another crank turned np in Wash
ington last week, und expressed a desire
to testify in the Gniteau case. He
called liimseJf the “trne Messiah,” and,
in a letter to Judge Cox, stated that if
pat upon the stand he would tell the
court “where and how to find this aw
ful Deity of the republican party.” This
latest representative of the orank fami
ly was secured by the police and sent
to an insane asylum.
A photographic counterfeit fiva-dol-
iar note, purporting to be issued by
the Boy is ton National Bank, Massachu-. z
setts, has Deen discovered. The face of/,
the note is a good imitation, but tbe:
green border an the back skow&crude -
printing and engraving. A pen-made
counterfeit ten-doliar silver certificate
has been received at the Treasury De
partment.
D serving articles are always appre
ciated. ‘ The exceptional. cleanliness of
Parker’s Hair Balsam makes it popu
lar. Cray hairs are impossible with its
occasional use. <
Clothes lines should be well wiped
. .. . „ - and taken donn after each wash. Gut-
followmginscnption: ‘‘Elizabe th, Boon J ta . percba Jines are th . ; besL
a-.ed 2 years dyed y October JB77.”— I *-*-*
This is said to be the second oldest! Failures are becoming firequmt al)
stone in the city. * {over the state,
,a