The Atlanta constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1885-19??, April 13, 1886, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION. ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY APRIL 13, 168ft' (EXTRACTS [mosyperfsct MADE rarest and strongest Nature). Fruit, FL.vnrn. it- PRICE BAKINB POWDER CO., emcAco. v it. loua ODESSA, . TEXAS. W>'oir Tatra. New County.-B» Delight (til climate. Cheep lands. Superior Wheat and fruit diitrict Liberal prOTtston for college and ipnblie llorary. Wnte for circulars, man. and excursion rotes. K. U.SAI1IN, 131 Vine St., Cincinnati, Ohio. Mention thU paper. m arSO trie It TO PAKESTS. Many halting powders are rery perelcloos to health, and white eroty one recants l.ls own, ha should also liar, a can for the tender osee-the little children. SEA FOAM contains none of tho bod qualities of having sjo v.h'cs-soda or eelcrntua It contains no hurtful is gradient—no alum or ammonia. SCIENTIFIC. All Chemists who ham annbjtd Sea Foam eommoudie. Housekeepers who haro used!t will have no other. Cooks, whoee best efforts here fallod with other powders, are Jubilant overSeaFoam. Baveelists,savaelabor,savsa For caleh OA2TTZ, JONES & CO., 170 Duane St., ff, K ^ - ■** fciaris-dm wgd 4 wkf.ttt. V. it - WANTED IN ATLANTA An energetic business women to fU solicit end take onion for Tlio f£ rasa Ma»AM* ahihwold m —n skirt Supporting Gor- sets. 1 These corsets haro been o*• tensively adrertUed and cold by lady canvassers the put ten yean, Which, with their superiority, has created a laiwe demand for them throughout tho United States, and any ladr who gives her time and energy to eanrasOnc for them can Boon build up a permanent and profitable bust* ness. They are not sold by merchants, and wo give exclusive territory, thereby giving tho agonten* tire control of these superior ooraeta in the terri tory assigned her. We have a large number of agents who are making a grand snooeas selling these goods, and we desire such in ovcrr town. Address WMK. GRISWOLD A CO., 033 Ilroiul- way, yew York, Mention this paper. apiS-wklm P»Y17 ■ W HAVE BAD B HO COFFEE WHEN BY usnro LEVERINC’S ' Yos Will Alnp Han It Good. GROCERS 8ELL IT. * IE, LEVEIUNQ A CO„ BALTIMORE. MD. ■ Mention this ptptr. mms-th iu ftwkytwnrm “The Cheapest Furniture House in Georgia.” GEM^SOUTH' SPECIFICS. 3S5BS555F3SS^. 'msilt-dlytuclbasun w*ky *>>imoot BILL ARP. HB TALKSS:oF RAILROADS AND THINGS IN GENERAL. Cout and the Benefits to b* Derived Ttin. from-Bone Oood Advlceto the Enlcbts M Labor-Other Interesting Topic. There seem, to be quite* commotion iu th commercial elements. Our Georgia cities .re teak lug up to their own dragon rad Hem de termined to do Mmetbing. Atlanta lost tho Georgia Midland ud hu just disoorored Mu can’t control the nOrood. th.t centor (here, and now die It hunting for deep water of her own. Well, the doe. need deep water mighty bad end m.ybe It hr bettor to Ukeltotlong ttw than not have It *t all. She will get her own shop. if tho gett nothing elto, and tho Armert along the line will bo accommodated rad maybe Darien will be revived or Hawk- inanille get on n boom or tome point on the Savannah river ho built up. Bail roads do help the country and I wish there was a depot with in a hundred yard, of my houn. Atlanta la mad because Chattaaoega ships plows and other things to Washington, in Wilkes county, for the tiao figures she ships them to Atlanta. Titers ia some good reason for that, I reckon— and the reason it competing lines. St. Louts ships flonr to Savannah for four cents less a barrel than she ships It to Atlanta rad yet It goes right through At lanta to get there. Competition from Balti more by deep wator docs that. So' it la com petition that we all want—competition and no pooling. Tho big towns hare gobbled up the little ones long enough. I am glad that tho good old town of Washing ton era nil plows to her farmen as cheap as they could bny them in Atlanta. We want railroads everywhere. Augu.ta Is going to build one to Chattanoow* that will help the country and hclj too, aud then Wathington will get cheaper .till. Athens seems to bo boycotted, which is a pity, fo- worked hard to mako herself a oommerolsl crater. Amerlctu is hunting deep water, too, sad expects to find it at Brunswick, and this makes Brunswick happy. T# a man up a tree It is curious to uolo then visionary calcnla- tlona .Some years ago Borne got np a boom to - to Mobile, and plows likely have the Coosa river opened Mobilo wn equally excited, ana is so nap. pened that a big meeting wn held In each town on the same day. The mayor of Borne made a speech, in which ho said that corn was forty cents a bushel at Itome. and with an open river could be shipped to Mobilo at ten centa a buahel. ud than ho read from a Mobila paper the price current of corn, ud it waa one dollar and a quarter a bnahel. “There ia nventy-flva centa a bushel profit on onr corn," said he. The mayor of Mobile was making his speech, ud told hts people “they coaid go to Berne and bay corn at forty cents a bushel, aud lay It down at home at a coat of fifty centa, still both towns would people along tho Une. roads we can get, ud we onght to encourage the men of money and onterprln to build them. Railroads have contributed more to the advancement of our state than all other- erases combined. Some have made reasonable! profits for their atockholdcrs, and nme havo made nothing. There la not a prosperous’ merchant who has not made twice as much.olT his capital as ray railroad in the state. Whoa I remember ail that tho Control ’ and the Georgia railroad and the West Point hero dona for as in the last forty yean, it mortifies me to! hear ray man of petition or influence de nounce them ngrlnding monopolies whoop.; ile. Lawyers enoourage suits press the people. Lawyers enoourage sui against them, ud prcjndico tho jurymen wll infiamatory speeches, and nothing but the *u- preme court prevents their ntterbankrantev from outrageous verdicts. If a Brick falls off a building rad kills a man, It la the act of Sod, and la called an accident and nobody la responsi ble ; but if a car Jumps a broken rail there is five, ten, or twenty thousand dollars to pay.' It Is a hard bargain, and It la a wonder shat capitalists will build railroads Here la a freshet that hu damaged them Immensely, and nobody cares except thoso who aro delayed in freight or pswage. There la the little Borne road, that ia jpst nineteen miles ud 478 yards and two fnt and •lx Inches ud a half long, that mads Itome jnit what she is, and daring this last freshet she had elaven hundred miles of her track under water. At least they say that her prut- dent said eleven or eleven hundred, they wen not certain which. That road has bean the best friend that Berne ever hod or ever will have, ud she has long since quit declar ing dividends, for It takes all her earnings to knp up with ths freshets, and yet than an ma lignant people to to found In Borne who will talk venomously about tho oppressive freights of that monopoly. When the Central reaches out for mon territory she la doing no mere than onr cities an doing. Sagacity, far-seeing sagacity la what builds up ray enterprise or ray town. Charletton has dnp water, and Imagined she needed nothing else. The troth la that commercial centon have no aoenrity of being perpetual If they rely on rail ways or deep rater alone. Beth together will not tnfllce, but It la manufactures that cities rant. Atlanta la about taking one hand red thousand dollars in a wagon factory. Ten etmilar enterprises will ba worth more to her permanent prosperity than any one railroad. Bailroad canton are very lively, bat they are not secure, other cantors loom np and cut off trade. Chatta nooga has nnn railroads and more deep wa ter than she wants, but sho made no progress until she became a great manufacturing centor. Anniston la • ray station, bat her mannfac. torero hers ballt her np the model city of tho south, Jnttto with Birmingham. Oolnmbna, without her manufactories would hardly keep n postofllcc. I wonder why onr people don't (tre more attention to small enterprises of this kind? They all seem to make money when well managed. That chair factory at Marietta baa made Mr. Brumby rich. Colonel Jones, of onr town, hu made lota of money competing with northern buggies and wagons. Balireaa* do nothing but carry. They produce nothing, mwnlhctnre nothing. What the aenth wants la manufactures of all kinds, little ones rad big ones. Bat if then Knights of Labor, then trade unions, or whatever they are, don’t hold np a little ud coma to rum ud common nnaa, the west wanted them. Jay Oenld ranted them. New, let them keep them, I had a long letter the other day from a man in Chattanooga, abating me for reflecting on then atrikee, rad ha wound np with a bitter denunciation of Joe Brown as the tyrant and bloodsucker, etc. And the nme day 1 ceivrd one from Mississippi abusing me for saying that It waa almost an Impossibility tor a mu to make a million dollars in his life time ud mako It honestly. So I am between two Urea, rad reckon I am - about right. There no necessity for labor ana capital to be at war, and when they are both aro to blame In most cases. Seme capitalists can get along with laborers and hare not only their respect, but love. Bat capital la generally hard-hearted ud vronld enslave men If -It could. One ex treme provokes another, and so the Innocent and unoffendiugmuat suffer with the lawless and desperate. There la ajmlddlc ground some where. Jay Gould never earned his two hun dred millions fairly. Moat every dollar ha hu rat waa earned by labor—earned and lost. There are ono hundred men to New York who are worth ono thousand millions, and they never produced it There are mtlltoi of toilers who aro producing every day, and are worth nothing—no home of their own, no comforts, no sccnrlty for old ago or sickness, or fire or flood, or epidemic—no, nothing but a scanty living from any to day, aed a despair ing hope for the future. Who does nut pity them ? We can almost hear them siag: ' '• 8111! on To'dr* si eomesn and cat the lean, Instead of the fst or the earth; To make such bumble meals As honest labor era. A bone and a crust, with grace to Cod, And Uttle thanks to man. And who does not feel a bitter contempt for the inbnmanity and nlflshnen of thou her oresent method!. The lews ol must bo respected. Then where is the reme dy, and bow shall labor secure its just reward? Ask the wisdom of tho nation now assembled in Wssblngton, They wrangle over the tariff, and commerce, and education, rad appoint ments to office, rad a thousand things, bat they do nothing to pacify or encourago the toilets whose sweat ia mingled with every fabric, every edifice, every industry In all this broad land, It looks like tho members of eongrem are under the dominion of capital, and yet they fear tho power of labor and will coquette with both os long as they can, I hear that they whisper to each other and shake their heads omnioasly rad any: “Thou poor fellows can vote rad we have got to go alow.” Well, let them vote. Let them organise everywhere for protection according to law. Let them have a Parnell in every dlstalct ud elect him; but let them respect persons and property all tho time, and the; PROHIBITION POINTS. Mitchell county will vote on prohibition on the second Tuesday In May. held by Gilliam A Co., of Maxoys, expired on Tues day, and the county Is now entirely dry. Judge Daniol Fowlor, who was so tong ordi nary of Dawson county, bos tho honor of being tho lint ordinary In Georgia to refuie the Issuance of license to sell liquor. Sol Barrett, of Mllledgsville, recatvod a f " earem from * gralleuuui In New York which .... thorlmd the prohibitionists, or Baldwin, to draw on him to the tuno or fourteen hundred dollars In ease tho antis contested Judge Hanford's decision end funds are needed. Bavs the Bandersville Mercury: The 20 counties that still suffer the plague of bar rooms, aro out by ons working to fall into line with the grand army of prohibitionists, that casHl week, at an lyday. T „ llyandaa noble 111 already tcrrtllro, law-abiding, and church-going people of the counties, but this element, the palladium of our 1IU rile*, mult be triumphed over for the present In some cnuutle*. by whlaky rings tnf linns of political tricksters and whisky but the handwriting Is on the wall. Morgan county was anxious to have an iity was election on prohibition, bat there appears to be a fatal bitch in the way. In tha enumera tion of counties In the registration bill the name of Morgan Is omitted, though it appears In the head notes. The comptroller-general baa replied to enquiries to theeffnt that there there won’t ho ray money put In anything, for tho capitalists won't ruk lb They would rather invest in state or national bauds, even at two per cent interest. I an that Ohio hu recently placed soma bonds at three and a half, ud tha reason given laths lnueurity of money to ventures controlled by labor. The world U on the aids of labor, but not to tha extant that labor la now damuding. They havsa right to S uit and strike for higher wager and shorter Ime, but when they go to boycotting It la time to atop. I We sea that 3,000 shoemakers in Lynn, Massachusetts, have not only struck for higher wages, but will not let a manufacturer bny his family supplies In " “* ' id to tha — > me who I should hire rad who I should not hire to work on ray form, or ahonld mako asy hlreUoga quit wars when the crop was In ths gross, ud, If I did not coma to their terms, ahonld atop my team on the road to town ud torn it book empty. What Is the difference between that and the preeent strikes? What is this country coming to when capital has to submit to such erections? This Is what I coll the beginning of anarchy, sad I rejoice that ft hu not begun here. I have consideration for labor and its societies, for corporation rad protection, but not tier defiance of law and wilful destruction of thair em ployers’ property. It ia not an American idea, tad I can't believe that Americana are at tha bottom of it. I rejoice that this part of tbs noth hu not anceeeded ia iadndag Immigra tion frost Castle (tardea. “Set a horseback, and ha will ride to tha jaatn there ala thousands of miserable people from aB reentries land tag o« oar shorn who Cera not God nu regard sun, rad thay are giving trouble at tha north Tha north ud la no registration law for Moi TJ ’ now irgan. Tha lhtwaon Journal says that the stragglo . — •- — rater on In Georgia between artesian WL and Ttd liquor U being narrowed down to a fine point. From tho Cnthbert Appeal It la Iearnod that leme lively scenes have been enacted In Calhoun county. Near tbs c-dgcof ltsndolph Professor Wlko Ivey bu a place where the ardent la on tap. On Monday night a party or disguised nun visited hts place of business sometime oner he bod closed the rear end of the barrels rested. They were ele vated, however, upon a frame, ud the party, or parties, miscalculating tho height, shot under neath. Tfcaltobjcct, evidently, wu to empty tha contents upon Ilia door. A (tar amusing Ihctatulrca In this way for soma time, they drew the prolessor's picture, with a rope around his neck, and a warn ing written underneath to abandon tho business In thirty derm. Ths Grceruboro Herald sere that the mu who originated local option stilt lives In Warren coun ty, rad cannot write hts name. He Is a man of line native sense and Is an enthusiast on temper •Doantorm. Boms ware ago ho was •lutedto the legislature from Wanes and he aavehla whole Uma and study and effort toward the accomplish ment of cue end—securing local option for the lownofWarrenton. He thought of little else. For Ibis he planned and worked. Like moot men of one Iden though without tnllneooo and locking the power of oratory, ho succeeded In his pet schema Tho bill passed; It became law. Local option thus went Into force. This was the origin or w hat hu since overspread state*. Tha antfior of It Is still living to enjoy the fruits of bis victory, snd Is yol astroog temperance advocate. Though tween a moderate drinker and a drunkard. QuIcL as lightning ha "ashed hack, -Ihasaitredlir.Mwnn there Is between* plgond sho*. A pig will baa ho* If yon giro him time. Tho umlcrato drinker will be a drunkard If you'll only welt." , ••WHAT WAIT I FOR ? •• The Hnldect of Ham Jones's Sariison. Look here, brother. In ths first place, yon don’t be) lev* what yon any about this. If there ia anybody that onght to b# happy and ebur- ful ud enjoy themselves, It ia the Christian I Isn’t tbatn? And tbes* old follows yon an mumbling and moaning about ths church— that ain't religion. It ia llrar disease that’s got hold of ’em. There's many n fallow thinks ha’s got bout religion, and thorn's nothing tha matter with him except liver complaint. That's n! I've been that way myulf. I know how it is. r can laugh and I can enjoy any thing. If that’s whaf you think, yon needn't come to the altar to tna tonight. Yon gat Simmons Liver Brgnlator, that’s what cured It's the little tblnp that teU—especially the lluic brother! and aisle rs.-BurUngton wee Brew. Liebig Co's Coca Real Tattle. “Xy patient* derived marked and decided twee- fit from It.” my* Profcmor J. M. CARKOCHAS, M. D„ Professor Surgery, New York Medical College. For b*d tuts In toe month, had breath, heartburn, pain In stomach and bowels, flatulency, constipa tion (*ympu»s of djipepala and broken downdl gution.) it U Invaluable. Also in blUIouauasa, malaria debitor. Uver complain!, slek headache. R Isn’t much of a dog that can’t make a man po mad by biting Msa. IIORSFOBD’H ACID PHOSPHATE, Forgfck Headache. Dr. N. 8. BriD, Chicago, say* “I think It ia a remedy of the highest vain# In many form* of mental and nervana exhaustion; attended or tftk headache, dyspepsia and diminished vi tality.” There U some hope toste* dudes at lost. "A Sac ramento mu hu Invented a ealf-weaner. Forty yean of constant use ud still mote valued than ever—Dr. Bairs Ceugh Syrup. THE FORGED WILL. THU STORY OF MRS. EVANS. AoooMd of rorvtnt the Will of Ifn. X/n Cleric# O#ln#o—Bora in Luxury. Boorel la Afiotaoo. Married la Boyal Stylo, and Finally Reduced to Machine Poverty. New Orleans,!.*., April 10.—'Tha arroit of! Mrs. Marie P. Evans, and her incarceration In! prison underk bond of $20,000, hu erased a, sensation in the aristacretlc circle of which ■ho waa a member. The charge upon which •he waa arrested waa that of forging tho will, which purported to convoy all ths property of I the late Marta dark Gaines to hamlf. It wll be remembered that whan Mrs. Gaines died; two wills were presented for proof. By ono - of then wills she disposed of her property to - her lawful hairs, her grandchildren, creating; her son-in-law radW. H. Wilder, hor long time attorney ud agent, the execu tors of her trill. This wu a nan cupativo will, drawn by a notary public and attested by tho regular number of witnesses It was essentially de fective In form ud conld not bo admitted In offored for probata, in tbo olographic form, purporting to bo signed by tho decetsed on the day before her decease. That will beqnesthed tho bulk of her estate to Mrs. Mane Brans, with a lsrgo legacy to her mother, Mrs. Perk ins. This was pronounced by the opposing parties a forgery. The can baa been decided advene to M's- Evans, but is now under ap peal. A STOEY or OLD LOUISIANA LIFE. Mary Perkins Linton Erana wu thirty years ago. the greatly admired rad mueh courted dangbter of Dr. Jehu Perkins, who, with his twin brother—also a Dr. Perkins—cultivated the largest sugar plantation in But Baton Bongo, ud were greatly esteemed through the Florida parishes for tho princely hospitali ty which they dispenud, as well sa for thair great enterprise. Intelligence and success in the lint successful experiment to cultivate cane on a large scale on the highlands. On their plan tation—Bichland it was called—they employed •bent ono hundred and fifty slaves, and their sugar mill wu ono of the most costly struct- nrestJn which had been collected all the mod ern improvements In machinery for tho refin ing of sugar. Tho brothers Perkins were natives of In- diuaj had emigrated fifty years ago to Louis- isaa; settled In Bayou Bara, and praotioed medicine with great success. Having aceumu- lated some means, they purchaaod tho Bichland place, with a largo stock of slaves, rad prose cuted the culturo of tho plantation with gnat success, establishing a largo credit and wide reputation for their energy nnd skill. 80 great was tha esteem in which thay ware hold by tho parishioners that tho brothers wore fro- 1 trust and of political responsibility Perkins marrying Miss adlng family ana duty. Dr. John Perkins mat In that pariah, became the fstbor of Maria She wu their only child, and wu fondled Md reared amid unboundod luxury and in dulgence by tbo twin brothers.' As she stated In her testimony, her wishes wore always an ticipated, ud she emerged into womanhood without ever experiencing n care or unsatis fied aspiration. With a bright intellect, and through the instruction rad training or tho best instructors money could command, she became an accomplished young lady, especially lnmutlo rad tbo languages. Begsrdcdus rich heiress, she commanded the deration of a largotraln of suitors and admirers. Her saga* clou and prudent parents and gnardlau were very canniland observant of hor relation! to her numerous suitors lost sho might mako a tbo northern part of tho state, of ono of tho famous artistocracy of Notches, upon whom both parents and tha young lady fixed tholr choice u suitable mato. TSE LOVES FOUND, This wu yonnx Duncan Linton, the hoir of a very wealthy planter, who had retired from this city, after a very tnecsotfUl career u amorobant. Thors wu a brilliant woddlng, and the young couplo departed for Parlt, with latter* or credit for unlimited amounts. Here they act np in splendid apartments, and lad a gay, luxurious and expaulve life, mingling In tho boat society, tho lady giving muoh study to tho culture of mule rad tha society of great operatic artists. Tho husband, hoireve-, cul tivated othor tastes, frequontod tho clubs, the ran grounds, and participated largely and deeply in all tha amusements and diaripatlons of wealthy youDgrr ceeded thirty or foi which haandhia wil hud. When tho clot the horison tho Lintou adopted tha counsel of their friends rad returned to Louisiana to look after their large Intonate, bringing with them tha equipment of a largo establishment, which they nt up on Boyal street, ud kepi open houn, Mia Linton giving numerous balls, musleal soirees and other entertainment*. Her husband In tha meantime had repaired to hi* plan tat lou In tha northern part of tho atate, collecting his cotton ud alavea In a lo cality as far removed u possible from tho ap prehended seat of war. With this burden of care and labor tha health of Linton broke down, and ho again retired to hl< old haunt* In Paris. Here his ailment developed into n fetal form, rad after a lingering sickness he departed this life. * DisrrUEBgD nv war. forte thousand dollars a year, i win expended with slavish cloud of civil war lowered in costly furniture, ornaments, library ud other equipment of her household, ud oonrayed them to a friend’s establishment at Tangipa hoa, on tho Jackson railroad. The cotton of her husband had been transpoitod to what wu believed to baa safa place In tho Interior, where it did not, however, eaeapo tho general ravage of tho state by tbo cotton tbievea, who, following the federal army, or profiting by their protection, managed to deraitato tha wbolo cotton regiou of tha south. It wu tha aeixnro rad robbery of this oot- upon which tha widow of l.lnton based her claim against a bank of this city ud tha federal government, whieh aha hu bow en gaged for several years in prosaeating with gnat sealj aud persistency, spending muoh time in Washington, whan aha formed a clou intimacy with Mrs. Oaiaaa whoso quail tie* of isnlstcBey rad indomitable will In th* pursuit of what aha believed to bo bar Just rights, won her sympathy. This intimate hoemmo verytoidlal and confi dential. mueh to tha annoyance rad apprehen sion pf Mrs. Oaten's natural hair*. It oon tin ned until shortly before Mra Gaines'* death. 'or# that avant theta war* written proofs that this intimacy wu disturbed by very capricious abuUUons on the peri of Mrs. Gaines in Uttar* to Mra. Linton ud her mother, expressing th* meat sincere affection for . and contdaaea in them, ud of tha tamo data writing to hor lawful heirs and attorneys that »bs had lost all con fidence In them. Her second husband la visit ing Fiance to look after her huabend'a effect*. Mrs. Linton returned to the United States, and whll* sojourning In Philadelphia accepted the band of a young gentleman named Evais. of a rery reapretaM* family, and wn married to Mm. Pnrehaateg a small farm In Joflkrsoo began heuaaknpli pariah, thay t dog in a modest and fregai way, the husband obtaining employ- u a clerk or bookkeper in a mercantile . A few peers ago they moved tarn in this cite, to Mobile, wIwt* they ware" again estab lished la n suburban .arm, and th* has- band aa a *Urk in tho city. ThU marriage proved to baa happy and congenial and a re markably productive one, aa th* lady hu base th* happy mother of several twin* aad even ^Thecare* of household and family could naver withdraw Mra. Evaaafroaa, th* nalana preneatlan other claim* against ths bank and th* goveraasant or from ovary effort to realise tha hopes which Mia. Galon bad n oftrn excited of paritataaftog ia th* Urge for- Use which weald result from tbo aucceas of hat long HHgattan. RIDES THAT COST. Stylo la about th* most expensive thing go teg In this country. A rich New Yorker wHl spend a snug Uttle fortune every yew for hit rides and driven The most expensive frunlUes In Atlanta do not spend over ten or fifteen thousand a year, all told. A New York money king will spend RSfttoO for a stable of hones and then spend forty thousand a ynr to keep It up. There are a number of stable* In New York that coat from 150,000 to 1200,000, and that require from $10,000 to 130.000 yearly for ex- pansea. The stables, grounds, horse* ud vehicles of the late William II. Vanderbilt were valued at 0300.000. Maud 8. once occupied quar tart In this stable. Her room was 18x12 feet, aud Is now occupied by “Aldlne.’’ When Cornelius Vanderbilt erected hit present residence he de cided that a stable waa not a nice thing to have near hit own abode. He therefore purchased two brown stone fronts In the mlddlo of an elegaat row of private reridonces on FIftr-ellhth street snd pul hts stables there. Ills said tea remarks made by tbs neighbors ware not fit for publication, but tbe stable stayed there aU tee tame. Than are eight horses In the stable, and four greotns look after them. Robert Renner has a modest stable, but ha kups within Us walla 0200,000 worth of honca A correspondent describ ing Ure stable, saya; In tee first stall on the left stands the veteran Dexter, who will he 2S yean old hta next birthday, lie seems ooutenled In hit old ua and nrmlnatsa placidly on hla 2.17!record, which was for so many years Impregnable, and seems to share the wonder of his biped mends at tee number of hones who have beaten it of talo yean. Mr. Bunner tits s number of 11 no horses. Naxtto Dexter stands Keene Jim, who has a record of 2.10, butwbobaa done 2.11 In private. On the other tide are Picket, who trota In 218: Ranis, whoso record is 213, and Edwin Forest, who hu done 213 to wagon ud 211K to sulky. In tee lut stall on tbe right Is tee queen often turf, Maud 8. The same correspondent who speaks of Dexter says of Maud 8. rlra stands In her box as modestly as If the was not tea wonder of tha world, llartusposillon, un- Uko most tut bones, Is perfect, (lentlo and play- frit u a kitten and Aa altbctlonaU u a dog, shell beloved of more than ray woman in ten world. When her glossy nock is stroked she rubs hor R rt lty face against yoursleeve and acknowledges ic attention with pretty gratitude. Mr. Donner'i horses are valued u follows: Dex ter, 820,300; Maud 8., 840,000; Pocahontas, s.u.000; llsrus, SC.OOO; Keene Jim, ft 1,000, and Picket 88,000, a grand total of 8187,000. In Frank Work's stable, which Is really a hone palace, are Edward and Dick 8wlvcU*r whose re cord ol 2 : lo pole utooishod the .sporting world. There are few residences more elegantly filled up tlrau this stable. The following Is a description of that part of (ho stable not Intended for the honoc On entering a doorway at tho left of the ooach- nonio s private r— — “ **■■ — »ring i 'ho In rich?dark Axmui5«r”oarpenrI Or o lint a Isrgc drawing-room, a dfi itlor's pantry, a bed-chamber and b ' 1 id all, Is of solid wild cherry , end all tho furniture U rondo iperbflrapltee In the drawing- to correspond. A super room contains a pslr of .m , fire dogs, which iho servant assured me wore 330 years old. A piano is In one' ! comer and luxurious divans and couches all about. A great cherry wins locker f« built in one side of tho room, and la woll stored w ith choice violates and fragrant weeds. or communicates with the kltoncn, which Is < w indow aro deftly concealed by elaborate brass gratings. The gssoHcri contain glass candles In quaint hrau brackets, and a button at the bead of hla bed enables the owner lo Instantly light the wholo sidle of apartments at will, Haro Ur. Work can rest or spend tea night If a vnluublo koras needs watching, and here ha can ontertaln M lav- Irhly u ho chooses. Thera la a card table large enough for flvo to alt at, with a curious little brus-bouod sill In tee center opening Into a draw er beneath. Fifteen years ago Ron Tweed built what wuat that tlms the handsomest stablo In New York. It hu an attractive front of light-colored itono with piste-glass windows, and Is toUdlyfinUhnlTnsldo, though, of courco, it I wki tho novelties In docora- .Ion and mechanical appUancea which uower fl ; r ..,..- r tw«-Ou-rrursll ul lire ring chieftain It pasted lnio tho hanihsu' Aldch B. HtockwcH,- of l’aclllo Mall tamo. Mr. Block- well's career wu brilliantly meteoric and lament ably brief, rad bo occupied it but a short Itms be fore It wu purchased by Mr. Febnostock, of Jay Cook A Co., who now occupies It. It contains ten Italia and a box, all occupied by valuable stock, and Is in charge of John Heckctt, who employ! six assistants to aid in th* duties of hla position. It tnkca from 820,000 to 840,000 to keep up the es tablishments that have been described, besides Interest on tee Investments. psic BOOKS. terpolnt. ($■-), an 4 lUcliter’n l u C ue, (£j), aro three Main!anl book# on composition, by an emi nent German Harmonist. Operas. Tha best and most complete editions. Alda, (1*2), Bells of Oornerlle ; and .many others, complete, of no operas, f lltlou*, 15 cents each. rnviu iw/i Vffniuni (92)! YatlnltK* (82) | fsaktue i&iSsf.®' * w ‘ n "5 Libretti*, foil l centa each, Opap editions, Easter Music, In quantity. Send for Lists. On furnished when desired. leal M«ii . fatnrroi and really good chesj^ Metli cbulrfal parts Winner's Ideal Methods, (each 7* eta ), an — "’laljB, Bln son's Plano Technics (8230), ere eonotantly Increasing tn favor, as most raluablo aids to prac tice. Allieachera should oso them. Any book mailed for retell prioe. Oliver Ditson & Co., Boston. C. H. Dmow A Co , 1. K. birsow ft Oa. htn Broadway, New York 1228 CbestnutgL, Thus, marawkytf Henry A. Mott, Jr., Ph.D„ F.C.8., Prof. Chemistry Now York Medical Collego, and lata Government Chemist, oayr “My Investi gation of Allcock’s Porous Plaster shows It to contain valuable and aountial ingredients not present in any other plaster. Thau Ingredi ents are u perfectly proportioned that tha All- cock's Porous Plaster will not cause blisters or excessive irritation; ud I find it superior to and more efficient than any other plaster." Im itations ud counterfoils of this valuable rem edy are being offored for ask, to whan purchas ing AUeock's Porous Piasters do not fail to au that tbo registered trtde-mark stamp la on each plaster, aa none la genuine without it. Near Courtney, Tex., Ned CaldwaU wu kUled by June* Bentord. ••As Good as Now.” are the wards used by a lady, who wu at on* time given np by tbo most eminent physicians, udlafttodl*. Reduced to n mere akolcton, pale and haggard, not able to laav* her bad. from all thou dfstraoaing diseases peculiar to •offering females, such u displacement, leu- taking Dr. Ptorea’a * Favorite PreaeriptlWL' and ib using tha lout treatments recom mended by him, and Is now,>he says, “ u good aa new. Pries reduced to one dollar. By dreggiata.'’ ' Monroe, atL ______ Corrxx la a necoaaitr, and paapl* will have _ good artiel*. How to got it at all time* Cctfea of uniform quality, la a problem which all housekeeper* have to solvw, to uttl* this important qaeattea, use Lavertag's Boasted Cone# and you will always seearo tha baat quality. It salts everybody. It era be had of your grocer. Trytt. rriren and floods lo lira sooth Reports of ris continue to bon Throw Away Trass**, when ournewinstead is guaranteed toparma- nently cure tbe wont of rapture, without tho uu of the knife. Send 10 centa in stamp* for pamphlet and references. World’s Dispensary Medical Association, 083 Main Street, Buffklo, ftW-CAMTAL VBBEK ETfiffOErE* Tickets Only If, Shares la FanpawMaa] , 00XM18310NSS& *Z&8 J. w. Kilbmth. Prea’t State Matt rial Bank. A. Baldwin, PreFt Now Orleans Nat't BE, yurebyteoleglMa. » rSmo°fSn!a of ^^mnuuiokv Its Grand Blncla Number Dm# place monthly, andtheKxtraordli In*# regularly erery three month# Instead of Marrh^ 1 RHfl. ** h#r#lofor# » a Splendid opportunity to win a foe* TUNIC. FIFTH GRAND DRAWING, CLASS K # INTITB-ACADKMY OF MUSIC, NBW ORLEANS, Tuemlar, Map II, ltfM—10*d Monthly Drawing. CAPITAL PRIZE* »75,000. 100,000 Ticket# at Fire Dollars Each* Fra«« tlon#, In Fifth#, In Proportion* list or r&izxs. 1 CAPITAL PRIZE. dO ara.uaas.aae.' Or If. A. dauphin; 4 #j uauriiin, New Orleans* tn* a A* UAUrilUf, Washington* D. O* . Mika P. 0. Money Ordertp*y*bl« and id drew Rsfflttared Letter* to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL HANK, tatwrdwhynrm Naw Orlaans, Is#. One Million Men 'It Is raid by competent Judg- neby from tlmo to Malaria Is In fact a simple •orpin* ofpoison In tho blood, rad this surplus apcdmOUMj simply because tbo bowola and Urer,through temporary weak- — -—tea by exposure or ;, ctunot remove tbo Schenck's Mandrake Pills. | aorll—tf iuq wed fri wkf n r a It ..n our freo pamphlet on BUxx -—KEY8T0HB MALT WHISKY I Spool ally Distilled for Mediati not ran THE BEST TONIC! Unsq noted for OonmmpUae: 'sating dlseisoa.ud General eWllty. PERFECTSDIGESTION BEWAILS OF IMITATIONS JOS. JACOBS, Druggist, Atlanta, Ga. !noT 14-d #at wy IMPOTENT HER ■ And iboaatola of Cue of affrroru dcMiitf, ottmk, mmm prcAUiUM NERYIT A-' A trtol packets onresalpt of twain seals urngw BTHTSggg Elmpson. Wosbluxwn, p. ir asked for patent onttl oW- Invaulofs Gai-ls. sprt-wkjMtt.