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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION". ATLANTA, GA* TUESDAY MARCH 16 1886
>
•< Away with «U“
'■‘Wr'""
“And don't liny"
ivthing bare-
“after out"
M-WABNEtt’S-w
SAFE YEAST
10c. a Box.—Tan Caban#
OF ALL GROCERS.
HaaUb-Preaorvlnfi',
Pure end Wholesome
M #>riw Tdrf*"* 1 keep It, order It by mall of
Waraer-sfimf# Yens! Co., llutalf N- V.
Mention this piper.
If your
frit w by t c arm
Georgians Say I
Hlmmons Liver Regulator ha* liecn used (nror
family for many 3-car* with great success. . I regafe
ft aa au INVALUABLE I
ithgre— .
FAMILY MEDICINE, and
,ake plenum In recommending It to thepumlc.
REV. J. RUFUS FELDER,
Houston county, Ga.
I have fused Bimmons l.lvcr Reg*
tilaior for CONSTIPATION*, and
always with decided benefit.
HIRAM WARNER.
Chief Justice of the State of Georgia.
There been troubled with liver complaint, kid
ney filH-aw. and bsd blood for a long lime. 1 bare
tued Ktmmonx Liver Regulator. and It base done
me more good than all the medicine I ever took*
I would not be witbout.lt. .... .
GKO, . PBRATT,
U. H Deputy^Collcctor Sccotnl District, Georgia.
Regulator for
would «ay to
have found it to
V8PEPSIA.
all other treatment had failed.
p Himmoti* Liver Re*-
ator, ard I finite you will t>e abb* looxnosnall
fraud* and imltaliomof your valuable medicine.
J. LLOYD,
Macon, Ga.
may!?—why lyn r m no
EXCELSIOR
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY
Eighteen Sizes and Kinds
ALL PURCHASERS CAN BE SUITED
XAMUrAOTURID IIV
hut 1 Slipped i Co, Minor*, Hi
AMU MOB HALM HI
HUNHICUTT & BELUNGRATH,
ALABAMA’S CAMPAIGN.
Th« Prf««at State Cami<*ifn~A Beriew of tUe
Imum in the Hace-Oovernor O'.Veat After
Senator Morgan‘a Scalp-Th* Caugrea-
•tonal Status - Personal Ooeelp.
tod are now being sold by the university t
toes at fair price*. This will increase the
dowment fund, which is now $300,000, $*200,-
000 acre, making it half a million in sll. The
agricultural college at Auburn has an endow-
enf*~
%VA 000.
HO nsAB AND VET SO FAB.
A visit to the office of the state treasurer,
Kmw. #u« rloor of the vault was thrown open,
ana inside were seen two immense safes. The
treasurer, applying the combination, the great
iron door opened, and Inside were to !>e seen
greenbacks without number.
“Examine for yourself," said he.
A close inspection showed that greenLa<
were thero In every denomination and
greatest profusion.
“flow much is there," he waa asked.
“Only $320,000," waa the reply.
A Jong and anxious look upon an immcusc
fortune was as near as the correspondent could
get to it.
N AIabama," said the treasurer, “is ready
vucet her obligations on presentation."
On top ot the safe was seen a package
greenbacks of probably $5,000.
was a remittance from a county
treasurer, which waa found to be one
hundred dollars short of a fair count. Asa
consequence, It waa entitled to no place in the
safe, but was kept in the vault, subject to the
officer's correction.
"This is Vincent’s safe,” said the treasurer,
as ho pointed to a rustj-lftoklng receptacle.
The safe had been so long unlocked when
Vincent left, that Its hinges would uot work.
‘ Vincent left in a hurry, and without prepara
tion," was the information volunteered. "He
left in that safe $132,000, which ho could
easily have carried off with him if he had
meant villainy from the start. There wero
three $2,000 gold bends, whch be could have
shoved in his vest pocket. The
fact is, he did not need to run away for a year.
There was-in the safe $000,000 of horseshoe
money, which had been called In by an issue
of bonds, and which had not yet been cancel*
cd. If Vincent had deliberated crime against
the state he con Id have run this money out
again without detection, for a year at least,
and thus have gained time for a more complete
sweep of the state's funds.
THE HOOK THAT H.WIS KMMKH.
“flore is an object of interest," said the gen
tUman, as he lifted a huge volume, aud car
riedjt out into the light. It was a large fam
Montgomery, Ala., March 13.—[Special.]
Alabama is juitnow tossed in apolitical whirl
pool, out of which it is bard to catch a straw
pointing t<* the future. TUo state has
iitical chief—no political leader whoso position
is commanding enough to enable him to map
out a course for others to follow; and yet
most every county has a favorite son whose
claims to preferment are pressed with xeal,
and who feels that he Is the equal of any other
in the state. The re is the Tennessee valley sec
tion, tlie great agricultural region of the stato,
which rany be ssid to he an empire unto itielf.
The valley, however, is not clamorous at pres
ent. ns it has held the executive office for four
years through the present governor,
Hon. K. A. O'Kcallr a citizen
Florence. The next section
to claim attention is the black belt, tho seven
teen cotton, couuties, including Montgomery,
which, in years past, lias controlled tho desti
nies of Alabama, and which may bo held re*
sponsible for the secession of the state from
the union. South of the cotton holt lies the
timbcT region, with Mobile as its metropolis
Tbc Tennessee valley and tho cotton belt hare
often combined, to tho chagrin of tho Mobile
politicians, thus placiug the latter city in much
tho fame situation that has frequently been
forced upon Satanuah in Georgia. There is a
now force in tho state, however, which threat
ens disaster to tho old combinations. Tho hill
country, lying betwecu the Tcnueraeo valley
and tlie cottou belt, with Birmingham as its
headquarters, has, within tho last ten years,
made such headway that it will hereafter have
to he consulted. Birmingham is uot satisfied
with being one of the cities of Alabama, but
aspires to bo the chief city, and even has de
signs upon the state c.ipitol. Mobile has no
hope of ever being tho political hub of the
state, but docs look forward to her old-time
omniercia! importance. Tho people of llis
cotton belt are free traders; the people of the
hill country aro naturally tariff advocates.
Tbc tariff people are in, tho best position to
barter for liberal appropriations.to rivers and
harbors,
Feme two years ago, when Governor O'Neal
,n to vindicate himself, on account of having
been elected on the same ticket with Vinccu£
lion. John M. McKIcroy, a prominent lawyer
of Kufaula, came out in opposition, but retired
from the race before the delegates vvero elected,
it Is said that Mr. McKIcroy from that day to
this has kept up a still huut, visiting every
county in the state. In south Alabama Judge
If. I>. Flayton, a fellow-countryman of Mc
KIcroy. has been actively at work. Ho claims
that he can carry Harbour, and oilers, if he
docs not, to decliuo to go before the state con
ventiou. McKIcroy*s friends, Ibr reasons sat
ijfatlory to themselves, decline to accept this
banter.
Your correspondent found Mr. gcKloroy
in his iilllfi.
"I have the ambition,"ho said, "to servo my
fellow-citizens as governor, aud if I should ha
so called by them 1 will strive to advance the
interests of the state in overv possible way.
* no issues in the field to create per-
Atlanta, Georgia.
janeA~wkyttt eow
DRUNKENNESS
or the Manor Habit maturely cured by administer
lug Dr. Haines' Golden NMOlJic. It cun bo given In
a cup of coffee or tea without the knowledge or the
person takingR; la absolutely harmless, and wlU
effect a permanent and speedy cure, whether the
patient la a moderate dtlnkcror an alcoholic wreck.
It haa been given In thonaand* of cases, and in
evary Instance a perfect cure haa followed, it
nmr falls. The system once impregnated with
the BpectBO, it becomes an impossibility for lha
liquor appetite to exist. For circular* and tostlmo
dials address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO..
oetKwktr IftaiUe* St.. Cincinnati. Ohio.
Mention tho Oonstltntioa.febm-wkvl-'tt
f WILBOB'S COMPOUND OF
PURE COD LIVER
L OIL AND LIME. J
To C«n»wnpilvM-M»«jr Imvr been happy
to give thrir testimony tn favor of the use of "Wll-
liors l*ure Cod-Liver Oil and Lime." Experience
ha* proved it to bo a valuable remedy for Consump
tion. asthma, diphtheria, and all diseases of the
Name UiU paper.
There nro no issues in the fie
ronnl bitterness hctwocu tho candidates, and
tho campaign will l>o void of sensation in that
particular. Tho rotation* between the races
are harmonious; and the relations between
tho htatonnd tho federal government aro with
out tho strain which existed years ago. There
arc questions, however, which will cuter into
tho legislative race."
"What aro they?'
“Tlio disposition of our convict labor is u
source of great concern. Almost every plan
is hedged with difficulties. That row
ncmsnrv is generally admitted, but how to get
at it will rrquiro caro and study. Then thnro
Are the public roads to ho looked after. Tho
prohibit!
ion question does not enter yot into
state politics, though it is gaining ground.
The diaj»o*ition of cur people is to keep that
question out of politics.
Geuerni W.M. Hragg. a nephew of Braxton
Bmpg. is likely to creato tho sensation of tho
nal
render of the papers of CampboII Wallace, of
" * * • tahe
Georgia, uuil liecamo distinguished for his ex
to control r
of the pcotdc until it was clothed with the pie-
usry power enjoyed by tho Georgia commis
■Jon. The railroad managers resolved to get
Biaggoutof the way. Whuu Ilragg's term
expired. Governor O'Neal failed to renorni-
par week selling M.
and Fleet.** or (he Illustrated
Id.’’ 7a Colored tllustra-
Publishing On., Detroit,:
tr. wkyfC
nate him. and thus gave tho railroads „
victory, over which they have made much
ado. The result was. however, to
make Hragg tho center of tho anti-railroad,
nnU-monopoly element—in fact, It constituted
him tlie Dr. Felton, of Alabama. Hragg is now
in tbo field for governor, aud is likely, if bo
pushes the enuvasa with vigor in the rural
retlona, to nlny havoc with the hope* of tho
othor candidates.
Tho candidates all stand pledged to reform
in tho management of tho convicts, though
what shape that reform will take la hard to
say. Tho complalut does uot come so much
from the Urge camns as from the small ones.
Under the laws of Atabsms every county is
allowed to dispose of its prisoners by tho sale
of their labor. They are uot restricted to em
ploying them within tboir own limits, but may
leoso them out to parties iu any part of tho
state. Urge farmers, aud sometimes syndi
cates of small farmers, will combino in tho
lease of s county's quota of prisoners. It is in
such camps as these, where the desire exists to
make tho most of their human traffic in the
shortest time, nnd whore there is poor provis*
ion for shelter uud food, that tho cruelties com-
nlaincd of aro chiefly found. Recent cases
have been brought to light of such a scandal-
oosnatuTo that the governor feU constrain
ed to interpose the panloulug power. One oft
tho beuctivtarie* In the profit of this camp waa
a lady well known in her section.
Governor O'Neal is a man of military bear
ing; atauds erect, notwithstanding his years:
has whito hair and a bristling gray moustache,
* th ” *
and talks upon current topics with sll the on-
Ihusia'tn of a young mau.
‘ God has iudeed blessed my state," said
be. eettling himself In his great arm chsirf
•The republicans increased the stats debt
from fVJTiO.UOO, during the dark, sod and
gloomy days of their ascendency, to $33,000,-
O0U, and was ouly then retrained because tho
statu** credit was completely destroyed. When
the democrats came into power it was their
task to rehabilitate the Mate. The convention
of ItCft provided for the reduction of tho state
expenses from $1,500,000 to less than $1,000.-
tkJO. Kvery salary nnd every item was cot to
the bottom. We laid before the bondholders
Southern Medical College.
ATLANTA, GA.
lecture.,
ir -., Arecthoq-—
ttanwdral management of tbo.
2 arterial abundant.
• ot any lufcnuUoa addrem,
UR- WM. PKK1UX MCHOIXIN.DIMN.
P.O.Box 231
Office CONSTITUTION BUILDING,
- Mention this paper- ftVi—wky.'a cow
Improved Chester i
IkylantfCB Jtass febJ marhtaprlt m*7'
the Adi story of our litiaaces. An honorable
comntomi&c was reached by vrhu h new bouds
for MMW0.000 took up the entire stato dobt.
Since that time tho seml anuual interest has
been promptly met; all the bonds have gone
above par, the six per ceutt bclug uow quoted
at ISO, Tho last legislature-reduced the rate
of taxation, aud so favorable hu been our
pregrns that the next legislature will have to
make a further reduction.
The State is rich in every clement
which goes to make up a great country. Great
as tbo success has been at Hiriuingham, it is
but the edge of tho iron aud coal region, aud
the real wealth of the country has not becu
touched. The possibilities of the timber re
ion arc without limit. A Mr. Sullivan who
cion ai
died in
rcnsacola last summer, made a fortune
nine in square loj
s fortunate might
mentioned. The state It in a pro-porous
condition, and is risiug rapidly.”
"Speaking of *cntlmcnul things/’ contin
ued the gotcruor, •’there is rapidly springing
up a state pride not surpassed even by the
sons of old Virginia. Of our schools, our uui-
Yeisity nodour agricultural college we are all
proud. The M -gan bill, pitted by congress,
gave to the it. e of Alabama 17,Odd seres of
land, with the proceeds of which to rebuild
the university i (Hiding in Tuscaloosa. Those
lands have been located, the patent* Issued.
the
iiy Bible, printed by the American Bible society
' •'••*- rli * * “■
in 1851,' and bearing an inscription which
declared It to be tho property of the state of
Alabama, with the date “1853.” Upon that
book every governor of Alabama, from 1853 to
the present time, has been sworn Into office.
It derives its great valne from the following,
written in a clear, bold hand:
The oath of office, as first president of the pro
visional government of the confederate states of
America was lulminirtered
this Bible, by Howell Gobb,
visional congress, a‘ “ • *
tal, in Montgomery
i the DUu day of February.
A.D. 18CI
On the opjK)site fly-leaf is tho attest of Sec
reftiry of State Ellis Fhelau, that tho forego
ing entry was in the handwriting of hit
father. Judge John D. Phelan, who, as clerk
of the fciiprf-me court of Alabama at that time,
bad custody of the book. On the following
rage is pasted a page of lettor
paper containing the original autograph,
"Jefferson Davis, 8th April, 1885," writteu by
Mr. Davis for preservation in tho book.
There aro frequent callers from the north to
»ce this book. Many of them, after rending
the inscription, will sit down and read from
various pages, closing it with the remark :
“Why, it s just like any other Bible."
I'BEfllHSrCT DA VIS'S FIRST ORDER.
"Tbo first order ever writteu by President
Davis was to me,” said Captain C.tlviu I,.
Hay re. "I bad just resigned a first Heutonantcy
in tho marine corps. Mr. Davis's first act, as
he re-entered the capitol building aftcT mak
ing his speech, was to sign my commission as
captain in the adjutant-general’s office. As
such I immediately raised tho first
confederate flag over the capitol. He
tlion ordered mo at onco to Texas;
us tho l»enrcr of two orders,
one of which contained a colonel’s commis-
for Hen McCulloch, tho great Indian fighter."
"thk iiKAn iinr.mrRii ni- *rn»* uta» "
‘the dead SOLDIERS OF THE WAR.
MayorJI’ecac, tho popular chief officer of
Montgomery, who inaugurated the project for
thousand dollar moi
the erection of a fifty thousand dollar monu
ment to tho confederate dead, to be located
near tho spot wbero Davis made Jiis insugnra
tion speech, listened to all this with deep in
tcrest.
'Mr. Davis will npimar ou that spot once
more,” he said. “X havo just made g personal
visit to him for the purposo of inducing him
to lecture hero for the benefit of the monu
ment.
‘"I havo quit public lifo entirely/said Mr.
Davis, ‘but the appeal you make
in behalf of the dead soldiers
who sealed their sincerity with their lives, is
too strong to be resisted. As s mark of my
regard for the dead, I will speak for you/ ”
This announcement was received
via should consent to stand once more
where he stood upon that fateful February
day In lbfll, will be an event only second to
tho day Itself, having for his audience, instead
of tho thousands who thronged Dexter
street, the shadowy forms of tho brave men
whoso Ijves went out on the battle fields of tho
confederacy. P*a Jay.
McCLVXG, THE DFELLIST.
A Mau VYlio Was Heaily to Fight at the Drop
of a Hat.
From the Washington Post.
Being detached from my immediate com
mand st the battle of Monterey, Mexico. I encoun
tered the tall form of colonel McClung muttering
cunes upon some one who would not advance in
the mauner and direction indicated by him. "My
son,” raid be (I was but a youth at the time), “are
you afraid to go with me on yonder heights?' (
I snswervd “No, sir.'*
"Then go with me.”
I followed, Joining tbs advancing column, but
ronrcM that after being in the midst of shall and
shot that "hailed in deadly drifts of fiery spray."
•nd see tug McClung. twice wounded, still standing
Id* ground, I was not sorry when, after we had
stormed tho towers of Monterey, I had the oppor
tunity to return to my command. This clrcum-
Xew
Bitting ... „
Orleans, one evening over a bottle „
*•**•” 1»»W to him: "Colonel, I have never un
derstood, and you have never informed me why
i,,u « ,ue
"Ah," h* *ald, ‘‘i owe yon au apology for that
request which I have ucglcctedto otter. 1 did
wrong, Ui consideration or your youth, and crave
your pardon. To be candid with you. I had been
engaged in so many personal broils aud had killed
many men. at the recollection of which my soul
tolled, that I was determined to get killed
officers dr my regiment.
advanced to tbc front and sought) stranger to
w ituess the killing. Hence I s-ked you to go along
with ine. Rut th? d-r? t nesse^ aUkmSk «5r
hit ms twice, could not kill me."
In conversation with him on another occasion,
sitting In his room at Hewitt s hotel, putting his
band under the pllkm of hfci bed. drawing out a
Pistol, cocking aud pointing it directly at me, his
f° Id , l J?J'. < ‘.l.V ‘ ook[u * * lon * ih * gleaming barrel,
—“\N iU, arc you s coward"’
asked,
anythingskintocowardice, I answered: ‘‘No, l
fear no man living.” ^
*i believe you,' hs continued, "but ifl thought
you were a coward, although my friend, I would
send a bullet throngli your brain, as it Is my self-
imposed duty to help to rid the world of eowsrds."
--U pointing the pistol upward.a beautiful saw-
udic. hair trigger derringer, he pulled the trig-
". the ball lodging lu the veiling.
feet in height, uot impressively handsome, but
had an atq>earance commanding and attraefive at
““-t sight, with a personality too potent in its calm
a win- mau to hraxw iu storm. He hod aid-
Sc”
, upon the object of his vU-
and fell before no mortal man. They could
* without blinking at the sun and spy a sail in
distant horizon. Peculiar, If uot impure in-
tlucmc* hovered around him from the cradle
Notwithstanding hU love for the duello and hi'
fcarlera demeanor toward all men. ha waz at time*
S rntle a* a woman. Educated, culluml, a fair
ffiile speaker, uot an ludtffered poet, and an e»-
e duel! x
The Leading Paper of the south.
Mr. N. A. Christopher, of Toney Creek. 8. C..
writes: "I thtnk Tltc (usstnrnott the leading
paper of the south, and do not thiaklconld da
without It."
TOPICS OF THE WEEK,
The sudden disappearance of the Apschei
when pursued by our soldiers U accounted ' “
for
by the statement that they have a hiding
place in the beautiful valley in CJiihaabua, tho
placem me ocauiuui vsuoy »u v-muiwuua,
entrance to which is known only to themselves.
Lieutenant Davis, of the United State* army,
accidentally caught a glimpse of the valley,
short lime ago. The description given
Davis sounds like a story of fitlry land:
Those who have looked upon ^Mexican moun
tain scenery a* it is visible from the railway con-
the mouth oflhelnfiermllo down into the valley
of Mtltrata, nestling 6,000 feet below, with the
vegetation of a hundred latitudes grouped ;In “
single coup d'u-iJ. and the gaunt, gray peaks
Orizaba and her giant sisters losing themselves .
eternal ice scarce three mUct from the riotous
green of the tropics, tangling and intertwining a
their feet—whoso has seen this sight wil
not wonder at the failure of thi
shrewdest pen to reproduce it. Lieutenant Davis
rays that hu fairy valley in. Chihuahua J*' ever
more exquisite. The elevation is Jess than that o
the City of Mexico, being between 4,600 and G,OX
feet, nor are tho mountains which hem la tht
more northern plateau comparable In height wilt
Orizaba, Popocatapetl or Vxtazihuatl; but for th(
loveJIners that can be wrought by prairie anc
forest and water, Lieutenant Davis claims that Iff
valley has no peer on earth. Next day our discov
erer extended hi* field of observation. He found
in the valley primeval forests of live oak and
pine, without undergrowth, and opening out on
every Md« in avenues and vistas carpeted w ith
turf. He (bund vast reaches of open country, cov
ered waist deep with sweet grasses, which tho
horstsate ravenously. There were clear brooks
filled with tront, ana, far away, a splendid water
fall, feeding the valley from a mountain gorge
gleaming broadly like some tilauic prism iu tin
radiant sun. He found the ruins of a prehistoric
cave dwellings of some later but equally vanli
BBS
underfill enamel, the art v
‘ The sword," says the Boston Advertiser,
‘has been beaten into a plowshare and the
apear Into a reaping hook.’ 1 Even this is not
ail. The knapsacks have been cut up into
stuffing for mattresses, and tho canteen is used
as a prohibition argument.
Th* old-time Virginians wore a proud set.
There onco lived in Henrico county a Sir Pat
rick Coutta, who was a regular “blood.” Some
distance from him lived another “blood,” one
Colonel William Byrd. It chanced that both
fell sick, and daily expected death. Colonel
l®(l nu<l uoiljr UVBIlU. VUIVUOI
Byrd dispatched an outridcr to Sir Patrick
ready.” In reply Sir Patrick said:
Colonel Byrd that when Patrick Coutta gets
ready he waits for no man.” Coutts died the
next day, aud Byrd soon followed.
McLean continues to nmmunco that Hal
stead is a thief and n bJaca^uard, and Hal-
vertlsing McLean as a scoundrel of the deepest
dye. Alter awhile the whole country will
know tho Cincinnati editors pretty well.
The most curious thing about the Holland trial
wa.« not so much his acquittal os his high standing
in Ids own ststc, 1'cxav. He had in court a great
in Ids own ststc, Texa«. He had in court a great
bundle of testimonials from leading clttzensof that
com in u idly, all of which the court refused to hare
read, but one from the governor was read. One
gets from them a very odd impression of Texsu
MClCtf C
In {oumcm'lt momy in New York, and to kill
h]m If ncraMry in the attempt, would havo had to
back titty year, at lcaat lu ordor to carry with
n In bli entcrprlre tho loving admiration and
anxloly of his btothor Texan,. But It scorn, that
~ now, in tssn, ho 1, a hero In thoeyvsof bta
fellow-aitf/ou,, mid they nro looking for tils return
ably take notice of It when he comes. He may be.
The surprise of tho New Yorkers is natural.
tho Texans at the popularity
In New York
irpriso i
Tho surprise of
and rcsjmctnhlllty of certain men
who, in Texas, would be sent to thochalngang,
is ako natural,
Kknatok PLUNlt'8 attack upon school books
written by southerners provokes the Nashville
Union to remark that some of the vilest litera
ture of the age is to be found in tho school
readers used at tho north. In these readers
children are taught that the southern people
are murderers, robbers and rebels. In some
Instances these books havo been forced upon
sonthern schools. And yet the pcoplo of this
that the truth of history wunid Anally prevail.
About the last place in tho world for sectional'
Istn (s a text hook.
A tkitotal lecturer in New York, iu an
attempt to demonstrate the need for more vig
orous measures against drinking, said: "When
John B. Hough comtucneod his work la the
temperance cause, forty-four years ago, there
were CO,000,000 gallons of liquor consumed In
this conn try, a per capita allowance of three
gallons. In the year ending June 30, 1831,
y,
there were 700,000,000 gallons consumed—
It Is not uncommon to hear of parents mur-
VVUlle Sells, of
dering their children, but little
Osage Mission, Kansas, has shown that a small
boy~can surpass cyan the most expert batch
- ther night WUile took a big knife
era. The other nighL
and ilxnghtered his father, mother, broth -r-
and sister in their beds. The youngster's me-,
tivels unknown, hut it Is tnspMtea that ha
had been reading dime novels.
with (tod's lairs, end have not offleen to en
force them, you have anarchy already began.
If yon have not a eentiment In the city to sus
tain the otllccn, then yea have commanlxtlo
kindling already prepared.”
TRADINO FOR*THB WOMAN.
Sybacou, N. Y., March 14.—Seventeen
yean sgo Kurus Warren Nye, of Wayne conn-,
i y, married Miss Olive Booe. They have one
- After living together s few years Nyo
hoy. aiib: min. h.cuic[ » lun
deserted hit home, and until Saturday neither
... ... — — - tut]:
hit
beard
Nye,
wife nor eny of bit relatives had
■' anything of him. and
i supposed to be dead.
after many wanderings, has et list turned
irday '* * - “
up. On Saturday the almost forgotten man.
and hie brother, whom he had previously dis
covered, arrived at the house of H. M. Fowler,
whose family ate relatives of thtNyes. Nya’.
. now abona seventeen years or age, went
his mother's (now Mrs. Kens) homo
.... J told her that hit fsthor had cmne back.
Mrs. Nye-Kerns went to Fowler-e and then,
met her long abtent hntband v A reconclUa-
and
had i
Kerns would relinquish all Main
Kerns left forBoAklo. and today word was
received at Bodos that Nye, his wife and «on,
had reached EastBeglnaw, Mich, where they
areto settle.
Mr
A DmgfUr- Mery.
Isaac C. Chapman, Druggist, Newhurg,,
veers sold several gross of DA-'-'-"-
llAM.’S BALSAM FOB THE LUMW. lean
of it wluit 1 canuot my of say other modi.
I have never heart! a customer speak of
to praise its virtues in thg highest mu-
I havo recommeudetl it in a groat many
rafti-H-of Whooping Cough, vHh the happiest
effeits. I have used it in uijr oara family for
years in fact, always have a l*lU« m
malirine closet ready for use.”
hut t
SAM JONES.
8ain Jones Hears From s Lady Who
Teaching Her Pastor tho Game,
From the Chicago News.
The big Casino skating rink waa fairly
filled with people last night, listening to the
preaching of 8am Jones.
The Rev. Dr. Joyce of Cincinnati, lu whose
church Mr. Jones began his rerival work, said that
there were no prophets of evil in Chicago—they
were all in Cincinnati. It had been said that nc
preacher could draw a crowd iu Cincinnati suffi
cient to fill any one of the churches. He told how
Mr. Jones bad filled the Cincinnati music hall for
twenty-seven nights. Mr. Jones had preached
200,000 of the 300.000 people in Cincinnati. Dr.
Joyce said he was a "red-hot Metkodbt preacher.”
At this all the brothers on the rostrum cried, "Yes,
Lord!" and “Amen!" Mr. Jones said that he pro-
posed to talk on a line that would do all the audi
ence good. He would tala on "He that Is uot with
Me is against Me." He dared to assert that tho
cause of Christ suffered more in the hand* of His
friends than In .the hands of Ills enemies, and
added:
Judas Iscariot, Jesus's professed friend, sold Him
for thirty pieces of silver: Pilate, His professed
friend, who said "I find no fault In Him/' signed
name and cameoi
to do that. You that art on the lord’s side, come
over here. You that are on the devil's side, stay
over there: and we will win by the grace of God!
We go through thb.couutry singing: "Surely the
captain can depend on me." It scares me to hear
tolkfc ring that. If I could hear the people of Chi
cago sing that with all their hearts 1 would giv
the deviljust three weeks to get out of town.
What do you think of a .letter like this from
aame spirit that you sing, “Surely the captalucati-
depend on me.”
Mr. Jones read a letter from a Chicago lady, who
raid that she was glad'ho came, hut that she did
not like what he had said about progressive
euchre, because she played It, and was learning
her pastor how to play It. The Rev. Jones contin
ued:
"I think as many preachers go to hall as anybody
c-H-. in proportion. \Vhen I go to preach anything
not in my Bible, I will have honesty enough to
and honor, says that this _
revival Chicago ever heard. A minister down In
H. Joseph says he cau't mix up with ine because I
am vulgar. I can't hug that brother. Rut 1 cau
ug Brother H wing.
Give us a tbeaterJesa, a cardie's, a Holy Ghost
re you
Titlels-
„ Jioly
Christianity that all mett cau embrace, ai
with us or against us? Are you praying or ci
. „ ' - —“ aud
ing? I left a tick wife to come up autT help you,
and can't you help me?
Tlite city is dominated by tbc wont Influences of
a best mau on earth i
mistaken.
Blr. Jones compared tbc church of Chicago to
ftunson with his locks cut off and his eyes burned
out. But Sampson had asked God to give him
strength once more, and God did, and Samson
killed more of hia enemies in his death than in his
life. The speaker cried to God to give the church
strength once more, “while our enemies aro scoff
ing aud sneering, and if we die, O Lord, let ns kill
more in our death than we hare In our life.
Sara Joncs’a second week in Chicago opened
with a congregation of 7,000 people.
The preacher said:
I never have asked what Chicago pays evangel
ists, and I don’t believe anybody asked me except
a|reporter for one of the newspapers, i Laughter.
I could have contracted iu mock and white for
96,000 somewhere ehc. I have no idea you would
pay a preacher that much. I have enough moue;
to pay my way home. You can’t do me rauci
damage. I'll get home, anyway, f Laugh ter.]
>Ve want to begin with tho prayer- and efforts
People don't sec
_ would shun him as a pestilence. I would.
In a city of 600,000 people Pr. so-and-so has his 2-70
•* every Sunday morning And Sunday night
minute. {Laughter. 1~ Ho°cn ,
Sam Jones’s compassion saved him one..
can tell bis people that
1 say atthta point of the moetiag-and I'm talk
ing this way to get closer to you aud get you closer
to roe—I am. by the grace or God. living the gospel
• preach it, and I defy earth and
everyday like! preach it, and I defy earti
. ry i , .... ,
lcll to show the contrary. If I lire the truth I am
timetable. The truth i
mVkhces before 0,000 people and tnke it back with
that shall honor Gi
generations to come.
The teal wav. "For the grace of God that bring-
cth salvation hath appeared unto all men.” Ou
this Mr. Jones said;
I like tho term grace. There Is a graclousncai to
e»t, commonest meaning, give* us about tins idea
The pure, unmerited, undeserved iavor aud good
ness of God. IVe arc not only redeemed by grace,
but we arc born by grace, and we are preserved by
grace, and wo shall be raised from the dead by grace,
and we shall bo introduced into the kingdom of
everlasting peace by grace. It U grace that laid
t he foundation, ana grace la the chief capstone. It
dying hero who, as
covering
Ob, precious
ilel lit bad
all mjr works into one' buudlr, oral I'm
casting them overboard and trjlnf to Iasi
to tbe plank of free (nee, nnd hope to
glory on It.” Hell you, brother, there *
I believe the elect are thi
‘ e whoever-
ilievcthecl
non-elect are tbe
1 believe If-
In heaven no
K whocrer-wllU and the
tbe whoever-wont's, | Applause. |
I oar loot at last there win he a era
bead shall et
ton so band shall ever wave, a batp over
■flings no hand nhall ran forever. If lam
tastUwtU ha because I woiildnot he oared.
~ used to hear tbo old hardohello In our otate
here; taking an old hirdeoed, mean, rusty sinner
nnd making him no decent and clever a nun as
them u In town.
like a tooyel that will make a man disgorge,
ana thrown up si hen it ought to come
■ at thli '
igorge and throw It up «
t. [Applause. 1 1 hind a shot
re the other crenlng.'aod I hit the little flee ox
'oor mat. Didn't yon hear hint bark:
hear him howl tut be Evening Journal?
applied lor admuoton to that club. The mean lit-
tie fallow ! let everybody tote their own iktllet.
Let every one atand up tod be a man tn thUttibt.
blackball8tin8moil ondltfwe
tothttelnb. The mean lit-
Thta grece that brtnfeth aalvaUon haa appeared
in Chleoto. Win yon atand op tad do your pout?
1 understand Mr. Hontoon haa hod hisJubilee In
Sprtnedcld over hit thonaand. Done had his jubl-
over Mi thousand. Done 1
going to turn my Jubilee orer to the
onsets, sad I hope be tore this thing l. over the
angels will rejoice In heaven over 100,000 oared.
8am Joaea Semi. Them Wear.
Chicago, March 14.—Daring the Bov, Sam
Joneo'a engagement ht Cincinnati, a young man
who listened tooneof hlo sermons went lntothe
inquiry room at Us coacluitoa While there he
eras converted. He told the pastors that hu name
wttHeor|r CBoyd, that ^ho had not only been a
give
asked I
--I do not Uke thee, Dr. Fell,
thu oft quoted doctor eras in. Torn prebably
because he. beleg one of the old-school doctors,
made up pllb aa largo os bullata,whlch nothing
but an ostrich could bolt without nausea.
Hence the dislike. Dr. B. V. Pitree's “Ph
Purgative Pellets'’ are sugar.coated and no
larger than
_ bird-lhot,aui ore quick to do their
work. For all denngemenU ot the tirer,
bowels and etomach they are speciiic.
Tne middle or the
Now, more than in the put, ere buyers be
coming more cnretnl, because of tho adultera
tions and imitatloni offered in food nnd drink.
A good cup of coffee combining strength with
Davor, c<mcs in antoug the indispensable.
The cede* he.ro imported and prepared by K.
Levering A Co., of B.,lum»r, meets the mints
‘ the moat ts.ttdiosis.
NOT MUCH COFFEE.
THE BLOOD—ITS DISEASES--HOW
CURED.
The most wonderful blood poison remedy eves
compounded Is B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm.) the
bciUng qualities qf which are truly phenomenal.
Scientific research hat fhUed so for to produce lu
equal. There U uo data that tht ingredients of
this grest remedy are new; on the contrary, iu
component porta are all and favorably known to
the medical world In their separate uses, but tbe
combination of these ingredlenu were never at
tempted until the formula of B.B. B. was made.
For Scrofula, Blood Poison, Bheumntlim, Catarrh,
Kidney Troubles, Female Complaints, etc.. It is
simply unepptoacheble, end.ee a true tonic It Is
unequaled. We do not expeetthe reader to belters
all ire say as to the unprecedented meriu of this
remedy, for there are so many able, yet unscrapu-
lous advertisers that It wonldjuot be safe to regard
everything said In on adrertlaement os true. Soma
of those column, double-column and whole page
ad-a remind tu of a long-ago friend who traveled
a great deal; that was before there were many
railroads; and as ill travelers those days had to do
so he hod to put np at night wherever night caught
him. Consequently, sometimes ho had to stop at
places where the accommodations were not of the
veD' best. He wua a grew lover of coffee, and cot-
fee he would have; but, said he, in a very sotemn
lone, 1 have sometimes to drink u gallon of water
o get a taste of coffee. In an ad page there is ns*
tialiy about as much genuine truth ns coffee In our
friend’s gallon of hot water. For our part we would
take the grain or coffee tn the small French cup
and have It well creamed. Give usquallty and not
quantity, and not ovtr-much aweetened, especially
with sorghum syrup (the productions of a prolific,
motbid brain). Who con .find n needle In t hay.
stack: much lea troth In some page ads I Won
derful times these; breed ernes of the Sahara with-
out an oasis. Give us the acre that wilt produce
three bales, or a hundred and forty bushels of
wheat Instead. Yet this does not prove that every
remedy is not as represented.
We only ask a trial betore a doubting publip,
feeling conOdentthat one bottle will establish tta
intrinsic value as a blood-purifier. We can only
present n few certificates within tilts limited space,
but In our "Book of Wonders” will be found more
than enough to convince the moot skeptical, and if
then not satisfied we can show the original certid-
cates, and also an unlimited number of persons who
have been cured of some of the most noted coses ot
blood poison, etc., on record, by the use of B. B. B,
Wherever this remedy Is known It takes the lead.
A Doctor’s Woes.
CnAUToitDviu.E, Go., June U, ls«.-For tea jeers
have been suffering with muscular rheumatism.
Patent medicines stud physicians’ prescriptions
tailed to give relief. Last summer I commenced
the use of B. B. B., and experienced partial relief
before using one bottle. I continued its use and
gladly confess that lifts the best and quickest med
icine for rheumatism s hare ever tried aud I cheer-
fully recommend It to the public.
J.W. It IIODES, A. M„ M.D.
B. B. B, can be hail at the following places; Hall
A lluckcl, New York; J. W, Holman, Denver, Col.;
John D. Park A Son, Cincinnati; Crowdus Drug Co.,
Dallas, Tex.; A. Kclfer A Co„ Indianapolis, Ind.<
Woodward, Fsxon A Co„ Kansas CUy, Mo.; Lord,
Owens ACo., Chicago, Ills.; Richardson Drag Co.,
St. Louis; J. B. Wilder A Co., Louisville, Ky„ and
of all southern druggists.
nook or Wonders Free.
By addressing Blood Bata Co , Atlanta, Ga, any
one cau secure free one of tho prettiest and moot
valuable 32-page books now out. It tells all about
the blood, lta diseases and remedies: SrrofliU, Di
cers, Rheumatism, Kidney Affections, Shlnltn.
mors, etc. Drop postal or It st once.
SMS ANTES Lo-fi''* *i"l Gsntlemon to take
Hererenao SlTo ta’a'Yav*va'i'lr 1 ”*^!'
(■■ Work rent l.ym'iT. bocaoviulhg'nisiiilv'ltib:
niovmont Pornlob.-.l. AU,trs,a tvii , orann, S'lttlSnr
sx-tro. VO.* sm Vine MS., VluetaKuU, sanin
-hlo imoom/v* and Ladles' Dyopepoi.'t I’iiis (prifv
Scents)br rnolU BBOO DSUO00., Qsvington,tf.
Name tht* paper.roarliLekrfitoonr
mvrx? Pack Fan Cards. New Sample book and
UlliJ complete outfit, 4 cents. Star Card Co.
EnttcIdTOhto. mart—wtyet'
Gulnn-a Pioneer Blood Renewer Cures When
the Doctors nnd Hot Springs Palled.
Macon Medicine Co.—Yon ask tr I have ever scon
any symptoms of the case of Syphilis yon cared on
me J>ver a year ago. I will state that I am os sound
■ a (liver dollar. When I commenced taking
tmiM'a Bums Rcrxwxit. yon know my condition.
. had the res# over three yeanand was on my war
to Hot Krirlngs, Arkansas, when a friend of rata*,
who had been tn tbe same fix. told me to go to
Griffin indir Guixx’a Pioxm Blood Rstrewmt
did not cure mo ho would pay my expenses while
there. I went befbre thoooctors ofyour city, by
—. was seven days alter 1 eom-
that I had no sores on me, every one
rort time stated. lean send yon some
of other portlet In my neighborhood,
at bed a condition aa myself, and who
who was lull B I I _ JB. ■
are O. K. at this time. May you lire one thoitsan
yean and continue tocurethooeafilicted andwtt.
were In my condition. JAMES EDWARDS.
Penoifl, Go.
For fail Information oor tree pamphlet on Blood
and Skin Disease* will he AmUxhed on application
to the MACON MEDICINE CO., Macon, Ga. wkr
TREATED FREE.
EPILEPSY (HIS). POWnVKI.Y CURED.
DR. H. H. GREEN & SONS.
Specialists for 13 Years Fast.
Have treated Dropoy and iu coetpUaaUoas
with tbe moot wonderful ouceeso; uoe vegetable
remedies, entirely, barmlooo. Remove alC.ymp
toms of drooey In eight to twenty doye. .
Cum patients pronounced hopeless by. the b»H
’’‘ifrenn tluffint dose the symptoms rapid,y diua-
pear, and tn tea dara at least twothltds of all
symptoms art removed.
florae may cry humbug without knoiria* tay-
thtag about it. Remember,li dots not cost you any
thin* to realize the merits of our tresUaeat for
IsiH^Uhepifi, rrefular, the urinary < _
made to dbefaerge their full doty, sleep is leetoted,
th) SYreUlD) all or nearly gone, tbe strength in
creased end appetite made good. We are constant-,
ly curing esses of long stand lag—cases r w “* “—-
II. IZ. GREEN’ dr SO .VS. M. !>*..
sHUJt mm it, *s—njn
sn-why me to, a-eprM)3T.