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)TT -TREATS UPON NERVOUS AND PHYSICAL
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THE PENSION BILL
Senator Vest's Ringing Speech
on the Measure. .
Consideration of the dependent pension bill
was then resumed.
Mr. Berry moved an amendment a Ming and
other sent, nee to the ( tfon. which
was finally adopted, after having-been several
times amended on motion of different sena
tors. As finally agreed to, it reads: ■
And v. ho arc without otiicr adequate means of: e‘s
support.
in suggesting one of the nindideationsof Mr.
Berry’s amendment, Mr. Blair said that the
committee on pensions had tried to do, as
nearly as posiible, what the Grand Army of
the Republic desired, so as to get around, or
under, or out side of the president's veto It
was undoubtedly a service pension bill; but
tlie amendment offered by the senator from
Arkansas, would bring the bill directly within
the purview of the president’s veto last con
gress.
Mr. Plumb moved to strike out the word
“Totally” before the word “Incapacitated,”
and gave notice that if his motion prevailed
he would move to amend further by providing
that the pension should be from-St to sl2 a
month, according to tlie degree of incapacity.
Mr. Berry argued that tlie striking out of
tlie word “totally” would make the bill sim
ply a service pension bill and would practically
open all doors to all who had served in the
union army, and who were not now on the
pension rolls.
After a long discussion Mr, Plumb’s motion
was agreed to, and the word “totally” was
stricken out.
In the course of debate it was developed
that under the bill, as it stands there caii be
no grading of pensions according to tlie degree
i of disability, but all alike, its beneficiaries
will receive sl2 per month.
Mr. Plumb also moved to insert tho fol
lowing :
“All pensions granted to widows under this or
any other general law shall take eilcct from the
death of the husbands of such widows, respectively,
but not dating back of tlie pas-age of this act.”
Agreed to without division.
Mr. (. all moved an amendment to make the
bill apply to those who served in tlie Florida
war: but accepted a modification of it, moved
by Mr. Morgan, by making it apply to those
who served in the war witli Mexico, and for
thirty days (in wars with Indian tribes.)
Without disposing of this amendment the
bill was laid aside, and Mr. Blair proposed an
amendment in order to have it printed, pro
viding for a service pension at tho rate of $lO
a month.
Tho senate then resumed consideration of
the bill granting pensions io ex-soldiers and
sailors who are incapacitated from the per
formance of manual labor, and providing for
pensions to dependent relatives of deceased
soldiers and sailors, the question being on the
adoption of-Mr. Call’s amendment making the
bill apply also to those who served in the war
witli Mexico or for thirty days in any of tho
Indian wars.
The amendment was agreed to.
Mr. Blair offered a resolution changing the
phraseology of the second section, and, in ex
plaining it, he said that the construction given
in tho debate yesterday to the word “incapac
itated,” would make tlie bill one of the most
far-reaching of any pension bill yet passed;
inasmuch as tho minimum pension for the
slightest incapacity would be sl2 a month.
He did not believe with that the construction
given to it, bill would ever -cross successfully
the wide waste lying between the senate and
the statute book. He thought that tho senate
ought to hesitate before inserting in the bill
provisions for Indian and other wars, and
should provide in it exclusively for ex-soldiers
of the war of rebellion.
Mr. Davis, who has charge of tho bill, coin
cided with Mr. Manderson in the opinion that
all of the amendments adopted yesterday
should be struck out, and the bill left as re
ported unanimously from the committee on
pensions. It had been prepared, he said, by- a
committee representing -100,000 members of
tile Grand Army of the Republic, who knew
wants to be remedied and needs to be supplied.
They had said: “We will be content with this.
We ask no more for the present. We trust to
the futv.ro for tho further relief to which we
are entitled.”
Mr. Plumb intimated that there was s -mo
thing of a “juggle” concealed in tho bill. Tlie
effort seemed to bo to get up a bill not to meet
the wishes of congress, but to meet the wishes
of somebody else. He repeated his belief that
the Grand Army of the Republic did not indorse
the bill as it stood, but whether it did or not, he
was in the senate to legislate and to consider
what was due to ex-soldiers of the union and
to an enlightened public opinion.
Under the call of states, a large number of
bills and resolutions were introduced and re
ferred, among them several bills increasing
the amount of pension granted under the ex
isting law for various degrees of disability:
also one by Mr. Brower, of North Carolina,
granting amnesty for all offenses against in
terna] revenue laws, committed prior to Feb
ruary 22, 1888.
By Mr. Crain, of Texas, a joint resolution,
proposing an amendment to the constitution,
extending the president's term of office until
April 30, and changing the time for the meet
ing of congress to December 31.
After disposing of several local bills, Mr.
Wilson, of West Virginia, offered the follow
ing minute:
Tills being the day set apart for tlie consideration
of business relating to the District of Columbia, this
house deems it not inappropriate to place on record
a testimonial of te-.pe< t lor tlie memory of that emi
nent citizen of tlie district, the late W. W. Corcoran,
who as a munificent patron of art, science and mam
public and private charities, both in tlie national
capital and in the country at large, has left a mem
ory that deserves to be gratefully cherished, not
only by residents of Uio District of Columbia, but bv
the people of the country of the workings of whose
institutions he was a conspicuous illustration.
The speaker pro tern —“The present occu
pant of the chair has known the eminent man
who has been this afternoon buried for nearly i
thirty years, and enjoyed his friendship as a
jewel of great price. His urbanity, his probity
and large-hearted benevolence were exhibited
in all departments of human art and enter
prise. This proceeding would be fitting for
any day'of our session, but it is peculiarly
fitting for the day dedicated to the district iii
which he lived so long and within whose pre
cincts bis temple of art and home of charity
will perpetuate his name and fame forever.”
Mr. Faulkner, a member of that committee,
said that after a careful analysis ami examina
tion of the bill, he had given it his support in
tlie committee and would give it his support in
the senate unless the amendments now in it
were retained. If these amendments were re
tained he would voteagainst the passage of the
bill. He declared that if the bill passed witli
the amendment of the senator irom Kansas,
striking out the word “totally” before the
word “incapacitated” the annual pension list
would exceed 150,000. If the bill was defeat
ed the responsibility would not rest on the
democratic side of tlie chamber. It would rest
on those senators who had put the amendments
into the bill with the certain knowledge of its
being vetoed ; who had done it with their eyes
open and with the understanding that not only
consistency, but a conscious sentiment of duty,
oven although an election was coming on this
year, would require the same to bo done now
as was done last session with a like bill.
Mr. Plum!) asked -Mr. Faulkner whether,
under the bill as reported by the committee, a
pensioner who could perform any manual la- i
hot would be entitled to its benefit.
Mr. Faulkner replied iu the negative.
Mr. Plumb inquired whether there would bo
any grading of pensions under the bill?
*lr. Faulkner again replied in the negative. ■
Mr. Plumb asked whether he believed the i
president would veto the bill ?
Hie presiding officer (Ingalls) here inter
fered and said that it bad been always held i
to be a breach of ord'r to refer in debate to I
the action of the executive.
Mu Plumb said that he hail understood the
senator fiom West Virginia to say that consis
tency if not prin iiile, “even it "there was an
election i t naing” (whatever Ik* might have
meant l>y that; would require the bill to lie
vetoed and that there lia<l been an effort to
get a bill v. hi' h tlie nresident would sign, oth
erwise tlie bill would never get a tote on the
other ide of tl.o chain!)' r. "And to t i.it
complexion it had conic at Inst." The repub
lican side of the ei.nnil.' r i.ad been to! I that
it was to trike the responsibility of legislation
that might not meet the vi'.v.s <>f the pn i
dent. If that was not tho compictesubordi
na.ti-n of tlm 1 gislative to tho c.wcntive, to
authority, he did not see how it could be made
any more so. H the nat<-w:u; willing to put
it- if inthat nt itudehelmd nool.jection. H<
proposed to d, CHS', tl.eqm-lloi: on its merits
not considoringwhat the pre-nient might thmk
about it. 'i'lii Ipresident was in regard to till:
tho bill in its present stage a private eitizen
uo more, no less. 11. s opinion aught be g'»>d,
TH E WEEKLY CONSTITCTION. ATLANTA, GA., TUESDAY, MAkCII 6.1883.
or bad. but he could only express it in tho way
in-ovidedby tho foiistitljtiqn and laws. At all
jvents tlie senators were not put themselves
' pr. ne on their fronts, ami asked the president
m advance whether he was going to sign an act.
Mr. Teller protested against the seriate being
threatened with an veto. He had
never heard of such a thing before in the sen-,
i ate, and he hoped ho. would never hear it
: ag:<i:i. It seemed to him to bo great dentoral-
■ ization to the senate fora senator to stand up
I and say that he proposed to be governed in bis
veto by what the executive thought, or felt,
j or wanted. It had been hoped that the sena
■ torl'.om Colorado would tell the senate with
tho thought of speech of the senator from
Nebraska (Manderson) as to the action of
the Grand Army of the R public—the bene
ficiaries under the bill —as io what their lodges
and posts had determined that the senate
should do: and how far that was legitinfato.
Mr. Blackburn said ho deprecated the viola
tion of that very rule which prohibited a sen
ator or representative from undertaking to in
tluenco legislative action by reference to the
presumed course of the executive, lie had
heard that tho rule had been violated by three
senators —Davis, Manderson and Blair." These
senators all said tlio bill had to bo framed and
fashioned to avoid a veto message at the hands
of the executive. Ho did not know tho
authority they had for the statement, but he
did know that there was but one political
organization in the country today which was
in marching order, ready to take the Hold with
knapsacks packed, and all things ready. It
was the Grand Army of Republic which
represented the only efficiently organized poli
tical system on tho continent today. Tho
senator from Nebraska, who ably championed
tho bill, had told the senate and country that
the bill was a demand made by tho Grand
Army of the Republic, and had "protested. :üb
stanlially against any material amendment,
because that organization had formulated —
what? Not its petition to an American con
gress ; but its demand on an American congress
for legislation, in which (as his colleague had
said) it was itself to be the beneficiary. If tho
senator from Nebraska was to bo accepted as
authority, the bill was not a petition, but a de
mand sent to congress by a great and well or-,
ganized, and perfectly systematized, political
agency, that proposed to remove the trouble
which environed both houses to do away with
revenue bills and tariff' revisations ami
abolitions of internal revenue taxation
ami dispose of the treasury surplus by such
bills as this. And that was to bo tlie only prac
tical solution to be offered by the republican
party for tho financial difficulties in which tlie
country was involved. Ho denied that a sena
tor from Minnesota, Nebraska or Now Hamp
shire, or any other senator had any right or au
thoritv*to charge, or to intimate, that tlie pres
ident had made up his mind to veto tho hill,
if it went to him in one shape or in another
shape.
Mr. Wilson, of lowa, moved an amendment
to insert tho words “from infirmities of age,”
so as to pension all ex-soldiers suffering “from
infirmities of age,” or from mental or physical
disability.
In the debate which took place on the
amendment, Mr. Plumb delivered an eloquent
eulogy on the army, refering particularly to
the fact that when the war closed, the army
could have placed one of its leaders at the head
of the government and could have dictated its
own terms, but had asked nothing except to be
permitted to disband and return to peaceful
feelings. He did not believe that any patriotic
man; any mau who looked with patriotic
fervor on that portion of tlie country’s history,
when two million men sprang to arms to main
tain the government, would ever be willing to
oppose the enactment of any law whereby
any of the men should be drawn from
the brand of povertv and given
at least a decent livelihood. The bill, as it
came from the committee, was perhaps a step
in tho right direction. It was not what it
ought to be, ami he had sought to make it bet
ter. There was, too, ho said, no insinuation
in the senate or elsewhere that union soldiers
were to be beneficiaries under the bill in the
sense of being supplicants or unworthy per
sons. He did not think that partisanship
would go that far, and if it did he believed
that the American people would refute it.
Congress was not now dealing with slender
resources, but was dealing with abundance..
Less than Hie pending bill would not be just
more was not asked for.
Mr. Vest said that ho bad nothadtho slight
est idea when he spoke to tlie Wilson amend
ment of producing such a burst of patriotic,
fervid 010 iuence, which tho senhtc had just
listened to. They had heard a good deal about
almshouses and veteran soldiers. In the state
of Missouri there were no federal soldiers in
Hie alms houses and he was proud to say there
were no confederate soldiers in the almshouses
either. When General Leo surrehdered at
Appomatox there was but eight thousand out
of a million left of that splendid army which
had fought and which had been tattered and
beaten back by overwhelming numbers. Out
of the companies which had gene into that
terrible struggle, from 125 to 180 men strong,
only ten had gone back to their kindred and
their homes. The south today was covered
with maimed and crippled soldiers, who had
been shot and shelled,and sabre-struck, for their
honest convictions, and they asked no pension,
and would not take it, God be blessed. They
were not in almshouses and none of them had
ever been seen begging for bread. Whence,
then, came the talk of federal soldiers in
almshouses? They were not there. He was
tired and sick of tlie insinuations of robbery
and pretense and hypocrisy, in the name of
tho ti no and gallant soldiersof the union. He
had personal friends among them, and (as he
said before) ho. would give to every disabled or
dependent soldier of the federal army ami the
widows and orphans of those who had. lost
their lives in the service the last acre of laud
and the last dollar. He would have done the
same for tho confederate soldiers, “if God had
blessed our cause.”
Why talk that congress had not done
enough for the union soldiers, when tlie conn
try had paid out since 1865, eight hundred and
I eighty-three million dollars for pensions a
liberality unparalleled in the history of the
world. It has been said in tho senate today
that the country owed the soldiers a debt of
eternal gratitude because they‘had not with
mailed hand, seized the government. Tlie
great military and political organization, the
Grand Army of the Republic, had thrown it ,
lance into the debates of congress, and had
s nt bills to their senators for the purpose of
being enacted. When the president of the
United States had honestly and bravely dis
charged his executive duty ami vetoed an en
• actment which he considered improper,
he had been threatened by officers
of that organization with insult if
he dared make his presence known in the city
where it held its annual meeting. There was
a limit to human endurance. lie had voted
for pension bills, coerced by his position be
cause he bad been a confederate ami because
he was honestly anxious for the honor and
glory of his country. He had voted for them
became he wanted to evidence to the world
that the men with whom he had fought in the
unfortunate strife were respected as fair and
gallant, and were willing to give them even
more than they demanded, but (lie repeated
with strong emphasis) “there is a limit, and 1
have reached it. 1 will be driven no farther
by claim agents and plunderers in the garb of
soldiers. For the honest and brave, and real
soldiers of the union, J am willing to vote any
amount of pensions. In this city is a corps
of men engaged in inventing legislation to
; take more money ont of the federal treasury.
I Report oi commissioner ot pensions .shows that
| when the series of pensions of 187!) was passed
there was some 30,<MX) applications for pensions
■ pending. Tho very next year the number of
i applications jumped to HO.WD. Claim agents
' invented that law and put tlie limitation on it,
' and the number of applications for pen: ions
jumped from 30,<XX) to 110,000, ami the amount
i <>t disbuiseinciits from thirty millions to Ijty
-1 seven millions.”
Mr. Vest v.'< nt oil to say that of the 2,.'XX)/XX)
: men enrolled as soldiers during t)>e four years
' of the war, these were applications from I.2<x>,-
! (MX) for pensioim on ai'Connt of disability. Much ;
rnililaiy execution, he said, had never been j
■ known in the history of the wliote world. The j
i confederates had tlionght that they bad poor '
j owiler and ordinance Hor-s ami yet, inatciug
due ullo'vaiK ■ for th<- effect of climate in pro- 1
<!u< 'm: dis-'.bllitv, it would appear that one I
confederate robin r, half-clot bed ami hidf-fed. I
had di ediled tine- of his adversarie-. There !
had l>ei n no a, b destruction in niil’tiny an
nals sin e tie' childred of I r.wl marched
through tlie w ilderness, destroying whole na
i lions in a single day.
Tho inarksinanxliip of the I'ereian prince
in tlie "Arabian nights,” whose arrowsrr<'--e<i
I mountains ami rivers and demised -pan in
. their Hight, had lieen nothing to that of tlie
■ confederate soldier. His bullet mn-t have
I slain two or more at the same time, and str -tk
where it was i.ol aintfd. I :ftv per . -nt o. th<i
| host of the uuiuu army were applicants for
pensions on account ofj d ability. Who, ho
asked, believed that they wore honest appli
cants. Who believed that these pension bills
had not degenerated into political abusp.which
cried aloud in the laces ot all honest men for
redress? He had great regard for many of his
friends on the opposite side of the
chamber, and in the words which
he had spoken he had wished to
give an opportunity to some of them who had
lurked back in the contest over the bill to
shove this-shining lance among the “confed
erate Inigudiers.” and try to carry off a repub
lican for the presidency,
The recent dispatch from Baris had caused
political candidates to become as thick as
“leaves in an Valambrosa.” Before that dis
patch had come under the yeasty waves of the
ocean, the republican party had been in tlie
comjjtion of the man who, having gone home
some hours before his usual time in the morn
ing, and having been asked why he had gone
home so soon, replied that every other place in
town was shut up. The doors of the republi
can party were now open and presidential can
didates were coming to the front w ithout limit
as to quantity or locality. Tho senate has been
engaged for some days past in a political auc
tion for the soldi-r vote. First had come his
friend from Nebraska (Manderson,) backed by
the Grand Army ot the Republic, and he (Vest)
had listened with real gratification to his dul
cet and modulated voice from tho beginning
to the end of his speech. Eventhat senator's
flings at the president of tho United States
had not detracted from the general merit of
his bid for tho soldier vote; and when he re
ceived a floral tribute as a token of regard
from his admiring constituents behind him ho
(I est) had but one single suggestion to make
and that was that lilies should have been em
broidered over the portals of tho white house.
That was tlie object of all debate, of all bid
ding for the soldier vote of the country in tho
coming contest. Whou the senator from Ne
braska took bis seat ho (Vest) had thought
that tho bid was in his favor; but that the
present occupant of the chair, the senator from
Maine (Frye) had caught tho eye of tlie auc
tioneer —the Grand Army of the Republic—
ami had “gone one better." That sen
ator was prepared to veto a pension
to every man who had served a
day in the federal army. He (Vest) was about
to knock down the prize to the senator from
Maine, when his friend from Kansas (Plumb)
came to the front and outbid the senator from
Maine by an amendment to the bill which
would increase tlie expenditure under it fifty
or seventy-five million dollars. He (Vest) hail
then been strongly of the opinion that the auc
tion should close and the prize lai given to tho
senator from Kansas. But then tlie senator
from Illinois (Cullom) had come to tho front
ami made a bid from that prairie state which
bad staggered his (Vest’s) conviction as to the ■
propriety of closing the sale. Since that time
be had been iu a condition of anxiety waiting
to hear from other bidders in the great
national auction. The senate had not yet
heard from his dulcet-toned friend from lowa
(Allison), who had kept his scat ami merely
nodded acquiescence to the most extreme
propositions for tlie benefit of soldiers. Nor had
the senate yet heard from tho distinguished
senator from Ohio (Sherman), who, in such a
contest, ought certainly to come to the front
and bid something for" tho vote which, the
candidates thought, was to determine the con
test. Neither had the senate yet heard from
the presiding officer (Ingalls), who had been
nominated by tho District of Columbia, and
every one knew that Hie District of Columbia
acted from tlie most disinterested and unsel
fish motives. Ho (Vest) would rather have a
nomination from the Districtof Columbia than
any state in the union, because, as every one
knew, it came from the heart and never from
the pocket. No man, woman or child in the
district hail any other object than the promo
tion of national honor ami prosperity; and so,
when ho read in a democratic (Hiper of Wash
ington last Sundav—before attending church—
that the presiding officer of the senate was the
nominee of tlie District of Columbia, lie said:
“Eureka, wo have found the man at last and
the question is finally settled.”
The whole of Mr. Vest's speech was listened
to with the closest attention by tho senators
and by tho audience, and his felicitious sketch
of republican candidates and their sup
posed respective bids for the soldier vote
seemed to be enjoyed with equal zest on both
sides of the chamber. In conclusion Mr. Vest
said:
"Partisan or non-partisan, my conviction re
quires mo to vote against the bill, ami I say
here now that 1 hope it may ‘die tho death’ in
the other branch of the national congress, and
if not there, at the hands of tho executive—if
that is unparliamentary, make the most of it.”
After further brief speeches from Messrs.
Teller and Plumb, Mr. Wilson, of Maryland, a
member of the committee on pensions, de
clared himself opposed to the bill as it now
stood amended, lie gave the figures of tho
enormous amount paid in pensions, and
thought that the people were opposed to any
further extension of the pension system. It
was time to call a halt. The hill as originally
reported would make the pension list amount
to one hundred millions. With the amend
ment put to it, the amount expended would
bo $125,000,000 and probably more.
T. 1. N. C. is not a cure-all, but a quarter of
a century of constant use lias demonstrated
that Tanner’s Infallible Neuralgia Cure is tho
only infallible cure for all kinds of neuralgia
and for nervous headache. 50 cents per box.
Rangum Root Med. Co., Na-hvillo, Tenn. At
wholesale by j\. G. Candler & Co., Atlanta,
Ga., and D. W. Curry, Rome, Ga. Retail at
Jacobs' Pharmacy, Atlanta, Ga.
—— —♦- • - ■ --
Promising Opening of the Season.
From the Buffalo Express.
Moses Swartz, a fanner of Rochester, went
to his bam to water the stock last Sundav night
about 9 o’clock. Re was gone so long that his wife
became alarmed and went to search for him. To
her horror she found him hanging by the neck
from a beam in the bam. Mrs. Swartz ran shriek
ing to a neighbor’s. When help came, it was dis
covered that Instead of having banged himself
with a halter, as was at first supposed, jMr. Swartz
was the victim of an enormous black snake that
had dropped part of its length from the beam and
taken a turn around the farmer’s neck. Mr.
Swartz, though unconscious, was still alive, and
soon recovered. The snake was over eleven Sect
long.
My friend, look hero! you know how weak
and nervous your wife is, and you know' t hat
Carter's Iron Pillswill relieve her; now why
not be fair about it and buy her a box?
FOB IRELAND.
Speeches of Sir Thomas Etmxmde and Mr.
Henry W. Grady.
A crowded house greeted Sir Thomas Grat
ton Esrnondo at the Irish Home Rule meeting,
Wednesday night. The guest of the evening,
after being introduced by Judge George Hill
yer, spoke at considerable length, setting forth
in detail the condition of Ireland and the ob
jects of tin* Horne Rule party. He nredlcted
that Ireland would secure home rule within
two years. The speech was received with ap
plause.
Mr. Grady, responding to calls, said the audi
ence could not have been more surprised or dis
appointed than he was, wlwn his name was
announced for a speech. He had had no inti
mation of such announcement, and wdiile walk
ing from the back of the hall to tho stand re
flected that his “walk would be longer than
his talk.’’ In paying his respects to the
speaker, he said it “was good to see the grand
son of Henry Grattan championing the cause
of human liberty, and to know that that trans
mitted name, though honored with a title,
holds all untarnished too tlie higlier glory of
the great commoner’s life am! example.” He
then discussed tlie assertion of Matthew Arnold
that the south did not sympathize with the
Irish struggle for home rule, ami said that in
no section of any country was there such un
broken agreement that the largest local govern
ment was best as in the south. In closing, he
said io Sir Thomas Esmonde.
“Now,sir, you leave us tonight. You go
back to your liome, and to. in all chance, a
long ami useful career. Look about you before
you go, on this assemblage that Jias so h< ai
tily welcomed you. Carry the memory of it
with you, and carry this message witli you:
Tell \our people whenever ami wherever
they give you audience, that tho civil war in |
America -and I sneak in tlie presence of the i
older men Who bored their breeete to its
storm, ami of we younger men who hold the I
precious heritage of their valor- -within the I
walls rich with the pictures of Georgia's lion- 1
ored dead, who for fifty years, in tlie ablest
parliament oi this century maintained the
rights of the states - that the south fought this
Vi fi/r the sovereignty of hxiai gover-imeni.
ami not for the perpetuation of
slavery.” [lmmense applause.] “hay
that diis message was deli voted to you
their pivMjucc, uuUiuiivngcd and amid
Ask For Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla, anil be sure you get it,
when you want the best blood-purifier.
1 With its forty years
I of unexampled suo-
/ ][ ccss fl’ o Dire of
/ Blood Diseases, you
•zT" vi can ula ' <o no ” I ' 3 ”
'iLzf-lLj take in preferring
Or fri Ayer ’ 8
|Ow-Z Sarsaparilla
■ : to nny other. The
I fore-runner of mod-
J 1 e * n blood medicines,
T ** Ayer's Sarsaparilla
y'J is s,ill tl,e Ulost POP*
I—ular, 1 — ular, being in great
er demand than all
«—3 SI jg. others combined.
“ Ayer's Sarsaparilla is selling faster
than ever before. 1 never hesitate to
recommend it.”—George W. Whitman,
Druggist, Albany, Ind.
‘ I am safe iu saying that mv sales of
Ayer's Sarsaparilla far excel those of
any oilier, and it gives thorough satisfac
tion.”— L IL Bush, Des Moines, lowa.
“Ayer’s Sarsaparilla and Ayer’s Bills
are the best selling medicines in my
store I can recommend them conscien
tiously.”— C. Bickhaus, Pharmacist,
Roseland, Hl.
“ We have sold Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
here for over thirty years ami always
recommend it when asked to name the
best blood-purifier.” W. T. McLean,
Druggist, Augusta, Ohio.
“I have sold your medicines for the
last seventeen years, and always keep
them in stock, as they are staples.
* There is nothing so good for tlie youth
ful blood’ as Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.”
R. L. Parker, Fox Lake, Wis.
“Ayer’s Sarsaparilla gives the best
satisfaction of any medicine I have in
stock 1 recommend it, or, as the
Doctors say, ‘ I prescribe it over the
counter.’ It never fails to meet the
eases for wbiih I recommend it, even
where the doctors' prescriptions have
been of no avail.”—C. F. Calhoun,
Monmouth, Kansas.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla,
PREPARED BV
Or. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Price $1; six bottle., $5. Worth $5 a bottle.
applause, and that yielding finally and forever
all that was settled by the sword, wo realize
perfectly tb it our happiness and prosperity iu
tho future depends on checking the swift
and menacing federation of tho powers of the
government. From this place then—from the
historic battlefield of the republic—from this
old commonwealth, whoso sons pledged with
Washington ami Adams “their lives, their
property and their sacred honor” to winning
ami maintaining tho right of local self-govern
ment, and who in the century since have never
hesitated to risk all or either when in their
opinion tho right was threatened —take God’s
greeting and God's speed to your countrymen
—to your leaders in parliament and to your
women and children Striving in merciless evic
tion—to Gladstone and I’arnoll—ami to every
heart, be it Celtic or Saxon, Catholic or
Protestant, that beats in sympathy with
them.” [Great applause.]
Depemi upon It, blot tiers. Mrs. Winslow’s
SOOTHING SYRUP, for all diseases of chil
dren. 25 cents a bottle.
—•—
Old pill boxes are spread over tho land by
tho thousands after having been emptied by
suffering humanity. What a mass of sicken
ing, disgusting medicine tlie poor stomach has
to contend with. Too much strong medicine.
Prickly Ash Bit tore ik ronidly and surely
taking the place of all this Class of drugs, and
in curing al! the ills arising front a disordered
condition of the liver, kidneys, stomach and
bowels.
HELPS FOB PLAYEHS AM) SINGERS.
In audition to a large Instruction Bo >k
such as the
New England Ccnservatory Method.
(for tho piano), $3.00, every pupil needs a great deal
of easy music for pxvllce. This is found in a very
cheap and convenient form in
Clarke’s Dollar liLstructor for Piano, - 00
Beliak’s Analytical Method for I’iano, 75
Winner’s Ideal Method for Piano, - 50
Fairy Fingers. (Becht), - - - 100
Os collections of SI udies and Exercises for Piano.
w«- publish do IvK-i than Two Hundred and Thirty!
Please send for lists and catalogues.
Handy Books for Music Learners are:
Construction, Tuning and Care of tho
Piano, ------ go
5,000 Musical Terms, (Adams), - - 75
A compact Dictionary.
KinkePs Copy Book, - 75 ’
Very useful musical writing book,
Stainer’s Dictionary (or Cyclopoxlia), 4 00
Profusely illustrated.
First-Class and Very SncceMful Collections
of Plano Music are:
Classical T’ianist, 42 fine pieces, - $1 00
Piano Classics, 41 pieces, - - -1 (X)
Young People’s Classics, 53 Piano pieces, 1 00
MAILED FOR RETAIL PRICE.
Oliver Ditson & Co., Boston.
C. H. DITSON & CO., 807 Broadway New York
j p I Send 3 two cent stamps for
I 11 1 T | I samples of finest Foreign
1 JI II 111 I American writing paper* rep-
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Mail rates 16c. per lb: torsos 80-t ;N Bond, and
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AK ¥ CAN Pt/,y
mUS9G PJjtfO AHO D3QM ril’i;
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Inatuiilitneoua Gtiidv to the key h No previous
knowledge of nitr-ic whatever required, rend for
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A NEW HOOK J ul! of new ideas and
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o i n n 1 r\ V Although a< : uili worth
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CELERY: j , -
ISAAC Til i. INC. If AST,
fcbo-dMavklut I'i Fluuitj Luck’u Cu., I’a.
THE COTTON MARKET!). ,
CONSTITUTION OFFICR, '
Ati.akta, March 8,13’8.
Net receipts for I rtsy 11,337 bales, against 0.0(r»
bales last yoar; exports 17,163 I,ales; last year 31,365
bales; stock 793,178 bales; last year 757,967' bales.
Below wc give tlie opening and closing quotations
oi cotiou futures iu New York today:
~ , Opening. . (losing.
Marcia
Apr l ' 10.31 M JO-ll'i 10.31
i u , n ” 10.52® 10.17W10.13
■' u *y.. 10-"84. ...... 10.19<710.59
August 10..M<a> 1U.51«U). r . 2
September 10.05® 10.01®10 08
October 9.77,® 9.x.0
November.... l).7t>t® .... 9.70@ 9 71
December 9.i)9@ D.’t'® 9'72
Innaury 9.76@. 9.78® 9.33
Closed easy; sales 137.300ba1e5.
Local—Cotton dull; middling 99-16 x
NEW YORK, March 4 The following is tho
comparative cotton ciutement for tlie week eudlna
today:
Ner receipts at al! United States ports 01 694
Same time tat year 79 ~5,
Showing a decrease 15 357
Total receipts L.'.'.."., 4.913'225
Same time last year . .”a'Bl6’:is.9
Showing an increase 9<i'kl2
Exports for the week " 'is'seg
Same time last year J"'"™ 1251ig)
Showings decrease 39'062
Total exports to date g 4'ri'to3
Same time tat year '.'.'.'.'.UAOejw
Showing a decrease i# qjm
Stock at all United Stales twits ' 804*11
Same time tat your.. 78<'|I5
Showing an increase 'ic.'zut
Stock at interior towns i6' "tl
Same time last year ’ 1' o’4
Showing an increase U sc6
Stock at Liverpool ’ 871 ’< 'DO
Same time last your " yio'ixy.
Showing a decrease .77 ’59'000
American cotton alloat for Groat Britain ics'ooo
Same time last year 211 003
Showing a decrease '77
NEW YORK, Marell s—Tho total visible snp
plyof cotioufor tlie world is 2,865,063ba1e5, ofv. lileli
2.324.7,18 bales are American, against 3 058.768 batea
and 2,648,368 bales respectively last year. Receipts
at all interior towns 32,410 hales. Receipts from plan
tations 39,586 bales. Crop in sight 6,231,680 bales.
Mlscellatioous.
Flour—Best patent 85.50; extra fanev 85 '5
OS—; fancy 81.75; extra family S0,00@81.5o'; choice
family 81.25& 80.00; lamlly 84.00 a W. 00: extra
83.50. Wheat-New Tennessee, 'Jix.K'.Ue- new
Georgia 85?. Com—Choice white, 74c; No. 2 white,
Tennessee. 72: No. 2 white, mixed. 70e. Corn meal
—75. Oats-ISitsOO. Hay—Choice timothy, largo
bales, SI.10; choice timotny. small bales. 81.10; No 1
largo bales 81.10; No. 1 small bales, 81.10. Peas 31.10.
Wheat oran, 81.10. Wheat straw, 80c. Grits 83 25
WS3.soS>bbl. Coffee—Rt<).22fo(.il2.l l a c 7bl ,1; obi gov
ernment .lava 25c. Sugar—Standard granulatedKc
standard A, 7’ ,<■; wlnt.- extra C, 7. vellow c, (ih.o
Lemons-Si.so@iH.Cl) v l«>x. Horse siloes SI.2V<»
84.50; mule shoes 5'>.25@85.50; horseshoe nulls r>.®
20c. Iron bound humesS3.so. Trace chains 3_’m>7oc.
Ames’ shovels 89.00; spades 81>.00@,510.00. Axes
87.00@10.00 9) dozen. Cotton cards. 83.00@8500i
Wclibucketss:l.s<i,..st.i>o.Cott<>ii ropet.V. Swedes iron
se: rolled or merchant bar 2'rate. < tat-steel 10@12c.
Nails 83.50, Glidden lauhed wire, aalvanized.
lie {) 16; painted 7'ie. Powder Rifle. S\oo. blasting,
53.15. Bur lead 7c; snot, 81,60, Leather, ; V'u. |>
20@25C; I', D., 20@23c; nest 25@28c; white oak sole’
4l)c: harness leather. 30@3t0; black up]>er, 35@40.
Eggs 23c. Butter strictly choice ’Jersey.
20028 c; strictly choice Tennessee. 21)t022V7: other
grades, Uo@lse. Poultry—young chicken's, lom>
I5o; hens, 120025 c, Sweet iiotatoes, 70071 c.
Honey—strained, 6(kßc; in comb, lO.wllc. I>rt<-<t
fruit—Sun dried apples. o@B;sun dried peaches 60S
sun dried, pealed, 12c. I'ennuts—Tennessee, 6c;
North Carolina, 6c; Virginia, 6'/e.
Meat—C. R. aide- S’,: B.C. ' hams. 12]40UWc.
Lardr-Uerces,o <■: • 1 loaf okj, reline 8’ 9c.
Fruits r,' 1 Confectioneries.
ATLANTA, jMarcii 3 Apples 81.75085.00 >
bb), Lemons—33.7so 81.25. Oranges—Bß.2s6>>B.l.sO.
Cocoanuts—6c. Pineapples—S-’.OO p doz. Bananas
Selected 5L75082.W); grniei 87.50 3’ Kinel.
Figs EiftJSc. Uaisins New London 53.25;
JJ boxes 81.75; V boxes 90c. Currants—7’ .6tac.
Leghorn citron-27c. Almonds—l9c. I’ccans—loo
14c. Brazil—lo(®llc. Filberts—l2L,c. Walnut*--
13c. Dried Fruit —Sumlrlcd apples
peaches 8%010c; suiulricd wacbes pealed Ila
11 urcl ware.
BATLANTA,'March 3 Market steady. Horse*
shoes Sl.‘-‘s(<is4.so; mule shoos 85.2j@55.50; horseshoe
nails 12020 c. IronboundhamesS3.so. Trace-chains
32070 c. Amos'shovels 69.00. Similes 510.00. Woil
buckcts 83.506) 81.50. Cotton rope 15010 c. Sweed iron
6c; rolled or merchant bar 2k;c rale, s asl sleol 10 <6
12c. Nails, Iron, 82.1)0; steel 82.60. Glidden IjarboJ
wire, galvanized, 9* lb 505%c. Powder, rule 85.00 s
btallug 82.15. Bai had 7c. Shot St.6o.
Country Produce.
ATLANTA, March ;l —*Ei;gs —|t2>.;a Butter—
Gilt edge 20022'70,' choice Tennessee 3602 kg
othesgrades 10015 c. Poultry—Hens2s «■: «>:■ young
chickens largo l>o2Pe; Irish Potatoes—B3.ool® k>W.
Sweet Potatoes— ‘s-aTOc. Honey—Strained o#Sßc;
in the comb We. 0ni0u5—*4.00031.25. Cabbage-1
03C.
Live Stock.
ATLANTA. March J —-SPiug 365090;
good drive 315008200; drivers *12508140; iineß2Wo
83ui). Mules—l4l4 to 15 bands *11508121; 15 to 15U
hands Sl:k)6«8160.
CINCINNATI. March 3 —llogs quiet and ste -dv;
common and light 8I.OO08\3O; packing and butch
ers Jj. A'oSs.i>O.
B-'sms-i wsuwirnrrny
101 ©to G Kniffht’a (Knalinh) Stool anti
9 S Em W* Pennyroyal Pills for
M MW HIH II a I * ttr <n°nthi.y purioiia.are muFh.
M m olTeetual and the only gon
ninu Sent uny where <»n receipt of 3) 04 by Ai.rnKD
WSQi* Knkhit, Ui’u^iot.^-UMState Street. Chlcaffo. IU.
E? C ET H IIIIPI.KR. Rl*|tant hidden nurno cards
r II KC* No Domain. P. o. BOX N«w Vtirk.
For Lovern. I»rlvato advice for the an
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Securely sealed. 10 ate. L. Box 282. Chtcago, 111.
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'ft MY A /*-£? St Evary nntnbvr contniut tivsrly 300 ad ver
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Largo Book, Richly Illuatrated.
▼ Free with every order.
Name this paper. lovs wkytf
500.000 CRAPE VINES
OVER 100 KINDS.”' S?
Aga warn, Salem. Wilder, Jefferson,Vergennes. Early
Victor, Empire State. Niagara. Jewel, Woodruff, Red,
Moore's. Diamond. Worden. Downing, Eaton, Ac.,
Lucretia. Dewberry, Fay’s Prolific Currant. Rnsp
berrles.&c, Splendid block. Low prices. Catalogues
free. OEO. W- (AMPHELL, Delaware, O.
Name th spiipcr. fcb2l-wkyit
I EARN BH< »R Til AM • ;iml tnli- | OSIUOD. A inof
j complete school of shorthand. Special terms txj
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HI O I fi K K ffl Uor,,uul Remedy. Sample
149 ■■ I»B■B ■1 B ■ package and lx>ok for 4
InHtunipS. E« H. Mod leal Co.j Ea>t Hiunpluu.C'juu.
this p:> !>••!. sej
m nMSHßfa'i' lll Tumors cured. Now
2* Sa Sa a N B a. m>n*‘thod No k nife.Hook free,
la ESI >’«•», Me LeHh<fc Weber.
Wrila Whl 112'4 John B>.Cincinnati Ohio.
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Son 1 ! 7c. for hnudtom* o'** <!«<•*
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_Name tliH l>apen.
®EaUi:noaial Paper.
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