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A GEORGIA IEW. The Curous Comments of some People on the Dicharge of mackwood (From the Atlanta Constitution.) The governor has as yet received no ap- t plication for a requisition for F. A. Black wood, the much-fought-over forger wno is now under arrest in Aiken county. Souit-h Carolina. It will be remembered that whnen Black wood's application for a writ of liabeas t corpus was decided in his favor, instead of t being turned loose, he was pacet upon South Carolina soil. but. by a strange coi.1 cidence. right within reach of some South Carolina constables. who had warr.ats fr hisarrest. It was supposed that im.ediately after his arrest application for a requisitlon r would be made by the Auguta atherme. But so far there are no evidencs ot ay i such action. The decisiou of Judge loney in ti::'. case seems to amuse a good many miember- of the profession in Atlanta. They say that the only question before the cuu:t was the - legality of the arrest of the prisoner, and that that question could not have been t made by the prisoner. That has been the t universal decision. So Judge Roney must have released the prisoner because he found that his arrest was illegal and iihat the sov ereign-that is the State of South Carolina t -was demanding his release. There is no C law on the face of the earth to sustain him t in this position. It is not comity nor ex tradition nor anything else. But the most amusing fact connectcd with the whole affair was that Blackwood was not released. If entitled to his liberty he ought to have walked out of the court house a free man. t But it seems that while declaring that he ought to be released, the judge did not re- t lease him, but instead put him in custody of I the sheriff to carry hin back to South Car- I olina. The sheriff didn't carry him back to South Carolina, but carried him down below Augusta to Sand Bar Ferry, and put I him in a boat and carried him over to the South Carolina coast on Beach Island. where two South Carolina olicers stood ready to arrest him. t "Who sent them to that particular point I on the river*" asked a prominent attorney t who was discussing the question yesterday. "Who sent the sheriff with his prisoner I several miles down the river when there 1 was a broad 'bridge by which they could have crossed to Carolia? Where did Judge Roney find his authority for releas ing a prisoner on habeas corpus and still holding him in custody? Who sent the C sheriff down the river' All this may be very adroit management. but it isn't law. Such a decision will be ridiculed on both - sides of the river." This is a sample of the queries put by different members >f the bar when discuss- I ing the Blackwood matter. The prepon derance of opinion seems to be that Judge Roney's decision is not good law, but while they criticise his decision. all join in paying the highest tribute to his character as a man and in expressing the belief that he has I acted conscientiously throughout. t MORE OF BLACKWOOD. t - Efforts to Bring About a Compromise in the Interests of Stone and McNally. (From the Atlanta constitution.) The friends of Stone and MIcNally. the two men charged with having kid napped the forger blackwood, are making a strong effort to bring about some compro mise by which these men may escape trial upon the charge hanging over .their heads. For some days the officers here have been expecting to receive an application for a requisition for Blackwood, but no such ap plication has as yet been received. Jt will be remembered that when the habeas corpus case was decided in favor of Blackwood the court, instead of ordering his release, turned him over to Ihie custody *of the sheriff of Richmond county, with in structions to "place hinm back upon South I Carolina soil." This was done, but it was done in a way which indicates that there must have been some previous understand- 1 ing between the authorities of Richmondi t county and those of Aiken county, S. C. A broad bridge joins Augusta and I1am burg, and had the prisoner been released. and he should have been under the decision of the court, he would undoubtedly have 1 made straight for that bridge as the short- C est path to safety. It is natural to suppose, too, that the sheriff would ordinarily have taken Blackwood to South Carolina by this< route. - Did he do this? Hardly. MIr. Sheriff evi- t dently has a fondness for water routes, anda to gratify this fondness takes his prisoner( several miles down the river, where a row ] boat is obotained, and together they arc landed on the South Carolina bank of the - river. By a strange coincidence, several A&iken county constables happen to be at the same point at the same time and the re sult is Blackwood's ride to liberty is noth ing more - than a transfer from a jail in Georgia to one in South Carolina. Blackwood is supposed to be held until a requisition can be issued for him, but he is, I in reality, being held until some sort of an agreement can be brought about. Stone and MIcNally are considerably1 averse to being tried in South Carolina for kidnapping, and if they can effect some ara rangement by which the wounded honor ( of the State of South Carolina can be ap-a peased they will gladly do so. As the< matter now stands they are to be turned - over to the authorities of Aiken county, S. C., as soon as the cases pending in Georgia courts are decided. -It is stated upon good authority that their attorneys have made a proposition to , drop the prosecution against Blackwood in case the same is done with the eases against Stone and 3IcNally. This is the same proposition that wasI made by their friends before the habea., corpus case was decided. The South Car olina authorities ref used to entertain it then, and it does not seem likely that they will. Ao so now. If this fails, a compromise will be s,ght on some other basis. t In the meantime Blackwood languishes1 - in jail. -__ __ __ A Woman Kills Her Child. *Effie and Jane Shaller, colored, living or the plantation of M1r. Barnes Plyler, jtust over the State line, were arrested on Satuir- I dylast, charged with murdering an infamns cid of the former. Efie Shallers is the I mother of foui- children, all of them, how ever, were said to have been still born. Ons Saturday last her fourth child was born.c No one was present wvith her but her moth t -er, Jane Shaller. It was regarded as a sus-e picious circumstance. in the neighborhood, that all her children should have been born dead, so a physician was sent for and ar examination was made of the child. The physician removed one of the lungs of the child and placing it iti water found th it it tioated, which showed that the child h'?d ~ once breathed. On further examination its neck and shoulders were found to be brokt . The women both persisted that the child was born dead. Warrants were taken out e for them and they were held for trial on bond of $2,000 each.-Lancaster- Ledger. J A Bargain in Corner Lotst Is what most men desire, but to keel from tilling a grave in a cemeter-y lot ere half your days are numbered, ahv ays kee;-t a supply of Dr. Pierce's " Golden MIedical Discovery' by you. W hen the tirst symip toms of consumpnltion. appearc lose no time in putting yourn-elf under the treatment of this invaluable medicine. It cures when nothing else wvill. Possessing, as it does, t ten times the virtue of the best cod liver e oil, it is not only the cheapest but far the pleasantest to take. It purifies and en riches the blood, strengthens the system. b. cures blotches, pimples, eruptionls an'd other humors. By druggists. It is better to give than to receive. This i. annlies particularly to advice.L WHAT THE PAPERS SAV. The Pardon of Anaker. (Aiderson Intelligencer.) The Kees and Courier criticises the aC ion of Governot Richardson in commu in- the sentence of an Orangeburg mur erer from death to imprisonment for life lie rv reconunended the prisoner t< aercy. the Judge recommended the com autation of the sentence to a term of year es than the life time of the prisoner, an( hle So]licitor recommended the comniuta ion. Every one, therefore. officially con eeted with the cas, who heard the trhil ulg. .ury, Solicitor, an-l prominent citi reconmnended a conlutation. W ecli;ee in a riitid enforcement of the law i1 1 se but it des strike us as a little un w to (riticise a Governor for om outnu'd a sentence under these circum tanc s. To hiave refused, would har 'een bi'dthirsty and inhuman on th art of the Governor. liuman life. evei ta criminal. should only be taken il xtene cases, and the Covernor has hee :iven the connuting and pardoning powe c correct those cases in which the penal ies prescribed by law are too rigorous fo he circumstances of the case. or in whiel rror is m:de to appear. All the officer epresenting the State expressed the opir a that the punrsiment was too..re to he circumstances of the case. and the Gov rnor was right, we think, in conimutin; he death penalty to imprisonment for life A Backslidint Contenporary. (Newberry Observer.) The Nm and Courer nominates Hon it. Sitnonton, of Charleston. JIudgI.e c he United States District Court of Soutl :arolina. as the successor of Associate Ju ice Woods. deceased, and irgcs. amion he reasons why the President should af oint him, that Judge Sitnonton has beel 'a )enocrnt from his youth up." Jue SimItrontOU is worthy of all thi >raIM our conitemporary bestows upon hill worhv and coipetent to till the pc ition in the United States Supreme Court rdeed. South ('arolina has no worthier so! han &iharles H1. Simonton, and his appoint neut would be gratifying to the people c lie State. All this is true. as every one knows wli anows Mr. Simonton, either personally o ir repuanton. But it grieves us beyond measure to se ur esteemed contempe ary come dow] rom. its lofty and unpartisan pinnacle o ivil service and advocate the appointmen 4a man because he is "a Democrat" at all nd it grieves tis most of all that it evei dvoeates one because he is not only )cnicrat," but has been "a Democrat frov is youth up." We fear our contemporary has fallei ron its grand elevation down into the mir nd dirt of partisan politics among the re f us poor spoilsmen. About the Lecaidature. CNewberry Herald and News., We think it would be a good idea for th aw to be so changed that the members o he Legislature be elected for a term o our years and have only one session evel, wo veurs. We have too much legislation 00 iuch making and unmaking of laws oo much of our legislation is hurried: one, but to be undone at the next sesslo >f the Legislature. The Legislature shoul< acet only once in two years, and shoul tay in session until matters needing atten ion were carefully and deliberately con idered and acted upon, then there woul< >e very little, or at least much less, need o onstantly amending and changing the law ire:;ly made. There is too much special legislatioi egislation for localities or districts o ouuties. Has Polities In It. (Edgefield Monitor.) 3Ir. Tiliman now admits that the "fari rs' movement" has politics in it, And s< re have contended all the time. And t< tave politics we must have politicians tndt politicians arc about the same thi mord over-the outs arc all patriots an< he ins are anything but .what they ough o be. Girant's Orders to Sherrtln. In connection with the criticisms madi >v General iRosecrans on General Sheri an's ravages in the valley of 'Virgini: uring the war, a number of dispatche ent by General Grant to General Sheri [an, from August to November, 1864 iave been made public, which show tha he devastation wrought by Sherida: ras committed partly under Genera i'rant's orders. Under date of Augus 6, 18th, General Grant directed Sheri Ian to send a division of cavalry througl '.ondon county to "destroy and carr: >ff crops, animals negroes and all mei mnder fifty years of age capable of bear ng arms. In this way you will ge nany of Mosby's men." Under date o Lugust 26, (.e'neral Grant ordere< sheridan to "do all the damage to rail oads and crops that you can, carry of tock of all descriptions and negroes,s< as to prevent further planting. If th< var is to last another year we want th< ;hnanldoah Valley to remain a barre: vaste." In November he suggested t< 1eneral Sheridan that it would be ad isible to "notify all citizens living eas f the Blue Ridge to move north of thi Potomae all their stock, grain and pro isions of every description." "Ther< s no doubt," General Grant continued 'about the necessity' of cleaning out tha :ountry so that it will not suppor dosby's gang. So long as the war last hese people must be prevented fron aising another crop, both there and a igh up the valley as we can control." The- Cotton Movement. The New York Financial Chronicle, n ts weekly cotton review, says that fo: he week ending Friday evening, the 13th nst., the total receipts have reached 12, 6 bales, against 13,077 bales last week 5,141 bales the previous week, and 14, 22 bales three weeks smece; making the otal receipts since the 1st of September 880, 5,147,897 bales, against 5,11:3,10: ales for the same period of 1885'-6 howing an increase since September 1 886, of 34,795 bales. The exports for the week ending th< ame time reach a total of 13,773 bales f which 9,149 were to Great Britain, :2 o France, and 4,597 to the rest of th< ontinent. The imports into continental porta or the same period~ have been 39,0( males. There was an increase in the cottor a sight, Fri day night, of 32,729 bale s compared with the same date o SG, an increase of 104,123 bales as com ared with the corresponding date o: .385, and a decrease of 206,271 bales a omared with 1884. The old interior stocks have deecased urm'.g the week 12,336 bales, and wer< riday night 127,268~ bales less than al lie samte period last year. The receipt the same towns have been 9,892 bale: ss thtan the same week last year, and ice September 1 the receipts at all th< wvns are 6,661 bales more than for the mine time in 1885-t;. The total sales for forward deliver' o the wee~k are 102,800 bales. For im idiate delivery the total sales foot ui: iis week :3,959 bales, including 100 fo: port, :3,859 for consumption. The will of Wmn. C. Decpauw was pro ated Thursday. It bequeaths $3,000.00Cl >his famiily, and the residue of his estate, stimated at $5,00000,U is devoted to ben. volent and educational purposes, includ ga bequest of $1,025,000 to Depauw GENERAL NEWS NOTES. Item; o Iiterent Gathered from '%arioum Quarters. The President has appointed George IL - NolI to be postmaster at New Orleans. smoke from forest fires is still making naviga1 ion perilous on Lake Superior. The Frankfort zae~c confirms the re port of the discovery of a plot at Nova tcherkask to kill the Czar. A Republican Congressman, Mr. Gros venor. of Ohio, thinks 'Mr. Cleveland will be renomioinated by acclamation. - 'The President has appointed Major J. SRatiboie, of California, to be Consul Gen Seral at Paris Police returns show that on Sunday last cleVen persons in Berlin cominitted or at teipted suicide. The (ate City Guards have decided to no 'o Europe ~only as a party of citizen tourists, and not uniformed as a company. TJack Holbrook. a carpenter, was stabbed r and killed at Grenada. Miss., Monday. by - E. J. Lowenstein, a restaurant keeper. r Cause unknown. Governor Gordon has received papers S asking for Blackwood's requisition. It was issued at once and returned to the Augusta r authorities. The London Standard says it transpires that Russia claims a wider expanse of ter ritory in Afghanistan than the part already disputed. In the joint session of the Florida Legis lature Thursday, Pasco was elected United f States :enator over Goodrich, Republican, Sby vote of 64 to 17. The Comptroller of the Currency has au thorized the Third National Bank of Knox ville, Tenn., to begin business with a capi tal of $220,000. The joint Democratic Senatorial caucus at Talasihsee. Fla.. nominated Paso, on Wednesdav night, on the first ballot by a vote of 55, thus breaking the deadlock. 2 A erlin telegram to the Brussels lJk Penflence tIye says that the police at Novo f Teherkask have unearthed a plot to kill the Czar, and that 30 arrests have been made. ) The Inter-State Commerce Commission r has received a petition from a committee of citizens of Newnan. Ga.. protesting against a the suspension of the 4th section. I George E. Reed, for two years past City Treasurer of Bisniarck, Dakota. is missing. It is believed that he has gone to Canada. His accounts are said to be $9,000 short. Wm. O'Brien, the Irish editor has been i received with a great popular ovation in Canada,. At Toronto 20,000 people gath ered to hear him speak. e The President has received an invitation t to attend the North Carolina Teachers' As sembly at Morehead City, from June 14 to 29. He fears he cannot attend.i A Nationalist outdoor meeting at Dun a gannon, Ireland, Thursday, was dispersed f by the police. The Nationalists afterward f met in a hall. Indoors an Orange meeting was also held. The President of the Irish National League of America promises 3r. Glad stone, the great Englishman, a cordial wel come to our short s when he visits this coun I try. At Nananaimo, B. C., the bodies of 17 more victims have been brought up out of the mie and six white men and eleven Chinamen are yet to be found. The bodies were badly burned. T1.e l'irginia Beach railroad and water ing place hotel property, on the ocean. sev , enteen miles from Norfolk, were sold at auction for $170.000, toa syndicate headed by Char:es W. Mackey, of Franklin, Pa. The East Tennessee Farmers'Association - has adopted resolutions endorsing the inter State conmerce law, and expressing the > belief that it will result in relief to the . agricultural chaoses. 3A tire in San Francisco on Tuesday night ldestroyed sonme of the largest slaughter thouse-s and packing establishments. A large number of sheep, hogs and horses were burned to death. Loss $100,000. - The State of Virginia h-as paid to the Kendali Bank Note Company, of New York, a judgmient obtained in 1882 for $30, 000 aind interest, for engraving andl print Sing the Riddleberger bonds. s wh, ot oriotus negro, Albert Taborn, woitwill -be remembered attempted to 'commita heinous c-rime in Gratnville tcounty, N. C., last 3March. was Thursday s.entenl(cd to be hung on .June 10, at Ox 1 fordl, N. C. It seems that MIiss Cleveland is really to be associated with Mrs. MIartha J. Lamb in 1conduclting the )fagatne ofj Aimer-ican llis I tory. She will probably take charge of a 1 specinic department under her own signa - ture. 6 John L. Sullivan has agreed to iight i Jake Killian for $5,000, The light will i take place in some park or public building, -and the winner is to take two-thirds of the F gate receipts, not more than six rounds to >be fought. 3 The Court of Claims has decided in favor 3 of the State of Alabama for $18,28-> and of 1 Mississippi for $41,454. under the recent >decision of the Court in the Louisiana ease, -that the Government cansnot set off the pro t ceeds of sale of swamp lands against the Sdirect State tax. -According to a statement made by IHenry SS. Ives, the consolidation of the Baltimore ,and Ohio Telegraph with the roalu and tother independent lines is to be made, the t consolidation taking the form of a new Scompany, thle Baltimore and Ohio having a controlling interest. 3Col. J1. W. Paramore, founder of the Cotton Compress Company, of St. Louis, and projector and active organizer of what is now the St. Louis, Arkansas and Texas R-ailrt-ad system, died at St. Louis on Tues i day night of pheumonia after a short ill e ness. 1 The Irish envoy aintl a par-ty of three or -foulr friends were set tupon by a mnob of a ,thouan'd roughs- a1t Toronto, A New Yor-k -rpor ter was knocked senseless. The po lice rfuse~'d to intr, and a numaber of persons~ were injured. An attempilt was mnade. to mturder 0 Brien, bill it faik-d. Adv ices by thle steaer Zealandia, from Iloniuitu and~ Sy'dey wich arrive-d at San F raincico Thaursday, says thatt the bodies Sof 85 victims of the B~ulli Colliery disaster near Sydnter. New South Wanles, haud been reIcovered. The inquest resulted in a verdiet that the explosion w'as (Inc to disre gardinig the rule prohibiting miners fromi -working where gas existed. A Repuiblican newspaper, the Signal, published at Raleigh. N. C., attacks Bishop Trheodore B. Lyman, of that diocese, charging that dturing the session of the Episcopal Convention he invited all thiedel egates to a social reception at his private -residence, and that colored members at tended on a footius of perfect social Sequality. At IBayne, La., on MIonday, Joseph Col lins shot and killed Adrien Chapman. a colored man. Collins came to town with a : douible-b~arrieledl shiotrun loaded with buckshot, and told his friends lie intended -to kill Chaipman. Collins walked up~ to his victimn at the depot and tired a charge into his heal and breast, killing hhm in -stantly. The murderer was ar rested. -A special to the San Francisco CMW from Ilermosillo, 3Mexico, says: A courier sent to investigate tihe eairthquake distutrbianeA -in the Sierra 3Madre iountains birigs a1 letter to Governor T1orres, stating that in the pueblo of Bahispe City four persons were killed and 1'. injured. In Oputa nine were killed. Both pueblos were destroyed. A panic existed everywhere and a number Lof women died from friight. A wide terri tory is seamed with crevices and immense chasms. andl the earth has sunk in many places and is flooded with water, makingt swamps where there never was water be BRIC-A-BRAC. "The world rolls on," he said, "And bears us to our fates." She- cared not how the world rolled on, She rolled on roller skates. Too thin-Shadow soup. "Let me rellect," said the mirror. Cut on the bias-The guillotine. Standard goods-Silk and bunting. Up in arms-The squalling infant at mid night. Iighest approbation-Applause from the gallery. A countersign-"This lot marked down below cost." Sword-fishery-Striving for promotion in the armv. Can a butcher's shop be called a joint concern ! England wants peace-a piece of all the world. The proper dessert for an undertaker Eerry pie. The average longevity in Russsia is only 20 years. A pror i'Ang young man-One who get his clothing on credit. It is the manufacturing chemist who al ways has a retort ready. In some parts of China the missionaries travel in wheelbarrows. Only the sublimity of cheek can rise to the grandeur of luck. If silence is golden, what a bonanza a deaf and dumb asylum must be. It is somewhat paradoxical that the man who does the least talking in Congress Is called the Speaker. A young man can run through his prop erty very quickly if it is only a common house-lot. A poor, thoughtless old gentleman sat down, the other day, on the spur of the moment. iis screams were frightful. Dry toast may be well enough for break fast. but dinner toasts should be buttered with fine words. When a miner has been eaten by a griz zly the Western people speak of him as be ing admitted to the b'ar. A lady, joking about her nose, said, "I had nothing to do with shaping it. It was a birth-day present." Father-I never imagined your studies would cost me so much money. Student Yes. and I don't study much either. A correspondent wants to know If bees ever lose their temper. We can't say, but we are positive their stings don't. A little boy said he would rather have the earache than the toothach.c, because he wasn't compelled to have his ear pulled. Steaming white wood and submitting it to an end pressure renders it so tough, it is said. as to require a cold chisel to split it. Heaven is a very big place, else it would be crowded by hanged men who have gone there directly from the gallows. The happy man who is blest with a nu merous wife and daughters knows what is meant by the sweet buy and buy. The sting of the bee is only one thirty second of an inch long; it is said to be only imagination that makes it seem as long as a hce-handle. A contemporary mentions a case beyond the ordinary oculist. It is that of a young lady who, instead of a pupil, has a profes sor in her eye. The fellow who thinks his girl a perfect jewel discovers some flaws in her after marriage, even if it's only false-hair or cold feet. It seems no more than right that men ishould seize Time by the forelock, for the rude old fellow sooner or later pulls all their hair out. The man who was hugged by a grizzly remarked, on being rescued, that he had never had such a tremenduous pressure brought to bear upon him before. It has been discovered why a man going fishing always carrios a bottle with him. It is in order that he may have the cork to use as a float for his lines. Loaded to the muzzle. "What is this man charged with " asked the Mayor. "With whisky, yer Honor," replied the sententious policeman. "I hear.' said Mrs. Fishwhacker, "that Mr. Willow's son took the diploma at Yale last year. I always said that Yale was an unhealthy city!" Why is the chain of evidence in favor of the Evolution theory thought to be hardly strong enough as yet? Probably because of the missing link. In Burmah editors receive elephants in payment for subscription. In this country the paper itself is about all the elephant the editor cares to keep in stock. A red-nosed gentleman asked a wit whether he believed in spirits. "Ay, sir," replied he, looking him full in the face, "I see too much evidence before me to doubt that." You will seldom see a sadder face than the face of him who wears the anxious look of one who has loaned a lead'pencil and is momentarily expecting that it will not be returned. Oce of the illiterate who "had a call to preach" recently set his congregation on the broad grin, at the close of a hammer and-tongs sermon, by requesting them to "smng the Sockdologer!" "Don't look at your boy when he is speaking," writes a father. "It embar rasses him when he is explaining how he happened to be in school and out playing ball at the same time." "How is business to-night?" was the ques tion asked at the box oflice of a theatre. "'Weil," was the reply, "the house is half full, the stage manag~er half full, and the leading comedian is full to overflowing." A plate has been discovered on which a ie can ha baked without burning while the mii-tress oif the house is linishing her noveli and the cook is having a few last words with the policeman. The force of habit is fully illustrated in the c:?sa of a retired milkman, who says lie neveri sees a can of water without having anahnost irresistible desire to put some A New York business man gives it as b'is dlelberate conclusion that "to be In business is to be out of society." Certainly a goo'd many men who arc in society are ouit of business. First boy-They say you are a coward, a lia:r, a-a-a-- Second boy-Do you know what they call you? First boy What ? Second boy-They don't call, they just whistle. T ell us not in mournful numbers Sorrow came by eating apples; 'Tis the man who eats cucumbers Who with keenest anguish grapples. A good country priest said to a dying drunnard, "3Iy son, y ou must be reconciledl to your enemies." "Then,"' groaned the poor wretch, 'give me a glass of water." Since it has been discovered that tea im proves by being subjected to light, it is im porte d into England in chests of which one side is made of glass. Very suggestive of a pania in the chest. We readl in our exchange of a young hidy having be-en made crazy by a sudden kiss. 'This should teach young ladies to be constantly expecting something of that kind, and to be prepared for it when it comes. The younger Dumnas says, "Poverty de stroys pride. It is difficult for an empty bag to standl uprigrht." It would be jutas logical to say'. "Poverty makes no abate meat in pride. An empty cask will stand up) as straight as a full one." "The singer." says an exchange, "who is apt to be a successful artist." The singer whose favorite song is, "Won't Go IHome Till Morning," uses cloves and cardanions to manage his breath. A magazinc writer asks: "How iiall we utilize the Indians*" This is a dillicult tunm tion to answer, but perhaps the- be-i pln would be to petrify them and sell them for cigar-store signs. This idea is worthy of consideration, anyhow. "My little boy," said a gentlem-1m. nn ought not to eat those green apples. y are not good for little boys." "Thes hain't, eh?" the boy replied, wiih his noutlb full. "Guess you don't know. much about 'em. mister. Three of these apples '] keep me out of school for a week. A good wig of white hair, says rn An,: ican tonsorial artist, costs about 40. bm (and this is a secret of the trade ond can only be told in whispers) the material of, which these wigs are made is clipped fro'. the festive goat. and never from the iuian head. A peculiarly soft, silky kind )I snow-white hair originates on the A-. rabbit. A St. Petersburg cablegram says: i.,t Ing is reportbd from Narva, to which place troops have been sent. It is the result of embittered disputes between the peanau 1s and landowners regarding the ownersip of certain woods. Eight villages in the v cinity of Narva are concerned in the quar rel. It is known that the peasants have attacked the landowners, but nothing fur ther Is known abou the riot. A. S. Abell, founder of the Bahimore Sun, who has just celebrated the 50th an niversary of his management of that jour nal, received, in his private of lice, many prominent citizens. who called to offer their congratulations, and telegrams and letters of congratulation poured in throughout t he day. Among them was a ness:- rnm President Cleveland. saying: "Accept my congratulations upon the 5Ath anniversary of your management of thre Baltiuiore Son. with hope that your influence for good may long continue to guide its course." THE DLUE AND THE GR 1. "With Malice Toward None, With Charity for (From the Nev York Herald) The brave Southerners who took part in Pickett's brilliant charge at Gettysburg, have been looking forward to July with high anticipations. They hoped to meet their Northern opponents on that famous and fateful day, to rehearse the events which were big with historic significance and to recount to each other innumerable adventures and hairbreadth escapes. They were also to take with them a mon ument, commemorative of the splendid courage of their comrades, and to erect it on the furthert point reached within the union lines. The plan is approved by the survivors of the union forces which re pulsed and drove them back. There scems no harm in marking the spot where the Northern forces were temporarily broken. and if a monument to Southern courage stands close to a moaument of Northern pluck, what of it!' The brave men on both sides crossed their swords there, and the spot will forever have a painful interest for every American. But the Gettysburg Battlefield Memorial Association say "No," politely. yet decided ly. The are willing to have the monument built at Pickett's starting point, but not within the lines of the Northern army. They object, also, to the inscription on the base of the moument, two lines written in pencil by General Lee and found in his army satchel after Appomattox: Glorious is his fate and envied is his lot Who for his country fights and for it dies. This strikes us a very mean and small business. So it will strike cvery' soldier who won honor on that field. The brave man is always ready to give deserved praise to his opponent. It was an awful day, that day of Pickett's -charge, and stern Southern stuff was met by stern sttuff from the North. If those magnificent armies could meet in July, 1887, they would "pre sent arms'' to each other. If the cause of the North was victorious it was not because the South lacked courage, and we may well be grateful that after 2-> years the survi vors, Northern and Sotuthern, shake hands as citizens of a united country. The dead of both sides may properly he honored. The South shoruld be invited to build as many monuments as they please. and on any spot to which their dash and valor give them claim. Those heroes lih side by side in neighboring graves, and if the monuments of North and South touch each other they are simply typical of the two forces which during the charge were close enough to cross bayonets. A New Telephone. Dr. Cornelius Herz has invented a tele phone which can be made for 62;1 cents. Wherever the electric button can be used, Herz's telephone can be applied. It is es pecially adapted to use in hotels and resi dences. With it one can speak as well as ring. The people will welcome all inven tions of the kind. They add to the conve nences we now enjoy. Fre long the rate on the Bell telephone will be reduced, and it will be placed within reach of hundreds who are denied the use of it by the unreasonable and exorbitant rental which is demanded by the company. Illinois proposes that the rental in that State shall not exceed $:36 per annu~m for each instrument. New York is canvassing the question. The price ought to be re duced by the company itself.-Au'guta Chronide. The sprague Fam~ly. The complicated domestic affairs of the Sprague family have long held an undue share of public attention. It will be re membered that ex-Governor Spraigue. of Rhode Island, after being divorced from the daughter of Chief Justice Chase, ma.r ried a girl at Staunton, Va., and that his son Willie further illustrated the f'amiy tendency to peculiar matrimonial perform ances by marrying his step-mother's sister and becommng by that operation his own uncle-in-law. The boy has now further proved his devotion to the paternal exam ple by applying for a divorce from his wife on the ground that he was not of legal age when married. "Work, Work, Work." How many women there are wo:king to day in various branches of inudustry'-to say nothing of the thousands of p~atienIt housewives whose lives are an unceaing round of toil-who are martyrs to those complaints to which the weaker sex is lia ble. Their tasks are rendered doubly hard and irksome and their lives shortened, yet hard necessity compels them to keep on. To such Dr. Pierce's "Favorite P'rescrip tion" offers a sure means relief. For all femae'weaknesses it is a certain cure. Alt druggists. Suicide ofran .illl~amor. One day last week a negro man. wa-e fishing in the IlodchodJkee creek , cau .Jht an alligator six feet long on h's set li - The alligator got the harg ie - wim - around his throat and was niearlycho- -- death when the fisherman cagh imh.. Whether his death was acr idental r h p meditated suicide is hard to deteran -e. The negro held a post mortem~ exam.iai and found the usual lightwood k"not inr the 'gater's fish basket. Ie sohl the hd and secured seven pounds of aligator steak~ fr-r his Sunday din ner.-L upijkin, Ga., ImhU pendenit. Fifty mounted men have left An tini. Texas, by train for 3IcNeil, ten miles away. near which point a big robbery of tire 5eventy-Nine Snakes and ---- Martin Diet, while at work on a piece )f ground near the residence of Joseph Puper, Garden City Park, found a nest of black snakes, about ti-irty in all, which he killkd'in a few minutes. The following dia he found a batch of forty nine niore, uear the same place, v, hieh his two dogs killed. The snakes were evidently hibernating, not having awak ened from their winter's lethargy, and so became easy victims to the farmel and his two logs. The largest snakE rucasured lve foeet seven inces. The capture of a large 'possum, with sih young 'possui, by Alfred Cornell, al Mineola, the other da, caused quite stir in colored socity circleCs, with whun: 1ahed 'possum has become much of luxury o late VeUr. J An In.1., wh purchased the i::iul n r1-. ' 1: muel to V-i.f isc neighbors. e to eitier ay t Sell any of t e.-New YurL lierial. ABensation!~ Why i.s it tha~'ttre.eotles of I. U. are soi :i At' anta to one of an of. he: blood remedy, and twice as much con sumed in the State of Gjeorgia as au: other p!parati.n? -No one need tak our word, but s'Ampiv ask the druggists Ask the people. They are corcpten witne ~Six houes i: Al cta er buying E. 3.'- in 'ive and t!g% lots, and sotm o theira buy as onean a every two months. Why these unpre cedented sales here at home with so littl< advertising? Modesty forbids us makin; a reply. Had B. B. B. been before th< public a quarter or half a century, i would not be neCessary to be bolsteret up with crutches of page advertiscment new. Merit will conquer and Jowi monoy. $1.00 WORTH1 $5O0.O0 For four years I have been a suffere from a terrible form of Rheumatism which rc(luce me so low that all hop of recovery was given up. I have sarr ed the most excruciating pain day an< night, and often while writhing in agon: have wished I could die. I have trie< everything known for that disease, bu nothing did me any good, and have ha( some of the finest physicians of thi State to work on me, but all to no efect I have spent over .S00 without findia1 relief. I am now proud to say that afte: using only one bottle of B. B. B. I an enabled to walk around and attend tt business, and I would not take .500 fo: the benefit received from one single bot tlc of B. B. B. I refer to all merchant: and business men of this town. Yours most truly, E. 0. GAR-A. Waverly. Walker county, Tein. Demonstrated Me-rit SPARTA, GA., May 15, 1680.3 BLOOD BAtnix Co: You will please shil us per first freight one gross B. B. B. It gives us pleasure to report a gvoi trade for this preparation. Indeed it ha far eclipsed all other blood remedies both in demonstarted merit and rapii sale with us. ROZIER ARDEMI.N. .A1 who deire full inuormlation abont thi ause sot :ure of :lood roisons, Scrofulaant scrofulou.' swelliug, Licers, sores, liheuma tiint, Kidley Complaints, CtILarrh, etc , cat secure by iunail. free, a copy our 3Z2 patge Illus tr..ted 10UoA (f Wonders, iled with the mo., woderfui and sta1rtling proof ever belor known. .addresS, LtoL) BA LM Co., Atlanta, Ga. TEE~ ONLY TRUE will purify the BLOOD regulate the LIVER and KIDNEYS and RESTOREt the HEALTH andVIG RofYOUTH. D~yspepsia.wanit of Appetite. Indicestion.Lack of Strength and Tired Feelirng ab solutely cured: Bones. mus. cles and nerves receive new force. Enlivens the mind and supplies Brain Power. su!Yering' from complnists LADIES 2rfAST rOna TONI a safe and speedy cure. Gives aclear, heal. thy complexion. Frequent attempts at counterfeit. ing only add to the popularity of the origial. Do not experiment-ret the 01uoIaLnut- BF.ST. ( Dr. HARTER'S LIVER PILLS Cure Constipationl.Liver Comolaint and Sick Honadache. Sample. Dfose and Dream Book1 mailed on receipt ofi two cents in postage. THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE COMPANY. St. Louis, Mo . CHAR LOTTE FMiAL INSTITUTR TO INSTrITUTfE for TOU NG I LDE in te Suthhas advantag'es supe ror to thuose offered here in every depart menit-Collegiate, Art and 31u-c. On1' experieed and accomupied t'achers Te building is lighted with gas, warmehlC with the best wrought-tronit' funaces, ha: hot and cold water baths, and firs-a s apontiets as a Boarin col ii11)11 every respect-no school inl the South ha: supenoar. For 1%ard andl Tuition in everything in full Collegiatte chourse, t'ludintg ancient antd moderni languages, per session1 of :0 weeks...........1( lhede:.i.-n for two or m~re froum same famyv or neighiborhood. Pupils charged :umiN fromt date of' entruance. Yor Cat3hiue, with fait partieuirs, adi .ress Rnv. W31. 1R. AT'i' NSf 'N. Charlette. IN. C. PITTS CARMUINATI VE TELETING CIIL D UEIN. An insbui relief for colic of linfauts. [nm-esa or etery, Diarrhoea, ~Cholera [ft orany diseases of the stomach mad bowels. Makes the critical period >f Teething safe and easy. Is a safe and peasant tonic. For sale by all druggists, md for wholesale by Howaca, WILLET : Co., Augusta, Ga. M ECZEMA E taker Swiftts tic. I a. ben Sob andI I -ot wr:. It:-obreRdm ~eae cure of a breakin m:e y l they Treatise on 13 oc ..d hkia Disecases ms cIMVs ALL HUMNORS, Z. 0)!oImn Uloteh, or Eruption, vorst scroFula. Salt-rheum, " Fever - %orc," Scaly or Rough -;,! in short. ill diseases caused by bad . 1 a'r lcn.r by this powerful, puri ind in,:iA'or::ting medicine. Great -ai''r Ilcers rapidly heal under its be 'n miu Ence. Epicvially has it manifested tcit-y in [urin,_, Tetter, Rose Rash, i!e, Carbun cl,, Sore Eyes, Scrof ilou)s Sore and Swellings Hip ioij~st DiseasVe. WIShite Stwdlings, i;.,it re, or Thick Neck, and Enlarged G1ad11-. Seiid ten iints in stamps for a 1: .r triti--. with colored plates, on Skin )has . or th- same' amount for a treatise on $nt:: oroo A lftc'tiontS. "TiH 10D IS THE LIFE." Thoroiir!y elm:sIIe it by using Dr. Pieree's Golden ilEedical DiLcovery, and good d igestion. a fair Nc ia, buoyant spir its, and vital strem ngth, will be established. CONSUMPTION, eh:i~ Is Serof ula of the Lungs, Is ar iad curod by this remedy, if taken be II. last -tages"of the disease are reached. 1 n int.arv lou s oower over this terribly * I 0 di'.. whin titt oTering this now . rterneto it th. public. Dr. PIERCE ously or caling it his "Con. si5a3.piio. Cure," but abandoned that .: m is too limit'd for a medicine which, Sit., -,,derri coi.4ination of tonic, or rrarme mI-. atoratire. or blood-eleansing, ::i-bi.ious -. -.ton. A initritive proper. isu p::l.d not nf as a remed for .onumpt ion, but fur alil Chronic Dis. C ,scs Of t-;,. Liver, Blo2d, and Lungs. I? You feel <hAll, drowsy, debilitated, have callow color of skin or yellowish-brown spots on face or. t reqiuient headache or dizzi nev, bad t't in miouth, internal heat or tin with hot flushes, low spirits ainwh din irregular appetite, mi coatel TonuI you are suffering from I .:.idie o Dy0fl -spcp-ia, and Torpid Liter, Ir % iliousness.91 In many s oulv r-rt of the se symptoms are expe, a r'i for all such cases, Dr. P r (olden 31edical Dis covery it unuri(e For w".enicr Lunzs, Spitting of Mood, Sh ortuc--. f reath, Bron citi;-, As!thna, Severe Coughs, and ijndred afections, it is an eflicient remedy. SohT Dmu'cmm'. t $1.00, or SlX P 4TTLES for $5.00. Sid tn cents in stat is for Dr. Pierce's i l on Consumption. Address. World' Di-pcnsary Medical Asso. cIation, 6';; Main treet, BUFFALO, N. Y. L $500 REWARD i3 offered by the proprietors of Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remed lor a case of catarrh whic ther eannot cure. If you ha'I a discharge from the nose. offimsive or otherwise, partial loss of mnwll, tate, or hearing, weak eyes, dull pain or prcs-sure in head. you have Catarrh. Thou sands of eases terminate in consumption. Dr. Sage's CATA ItliI R EMIEDY cures the worst cases of Catarrh, "Cold in the Head,'5 and Catarrhai Headache. 50 cents. PANOS and ORGANS From the World's Best Nakers, AT FACTORY PRICES. Easiest Terms of Payment. Eight Grand Makers, and OTer Thre Rundred tyles to elect Prom. PIANOS: Chickering, mon A H=a n,1 Kathushek, Bent and Aron. ORGANS: Nason & Hamli, Orchestral and Bay State. 1,ano nd Organs deiv freight erial,ang Fright Paid Beth Ways, if not satisuactory. Ordet, and tess the Instruments Ia your Own flomes. COLUMBIA MUSIC HOUSE1 3rach of LUDDEN & BATES' SOUTHErmN MUSIC HOUSE. flIQIS AND TZBXB THE SAME N. W. TEUMP.~ Xanagem, Not only shouctns the time of labor and .essens the pain, but it greatly dimintishes the danger to life of botn Inother and chill, and leaves the mother ina condition more favorablO to speedy recovery, and less liable to Flooding, Convuisions, ana other alarmIng symptoms. Its efficacy in tisl respect entitles 1t to be called TB3 MoTHER's FRIEND, and to ranlk as one of the 11'e-sav~ng remedies of the nIneteenth century. We cannot publish certifcates con cerning this remedy without wound ing the delicacy of the writers. Yet we have hundredls on fie. Eendl for ot~r book, "To Mothers," malled fre BRADFIELD REGULrAI'oR Co., Atlanta, Ga. Eaderm COR ALLt? by Engases .Mechanicsandal $$$ Farmers. 9' A perfet Levelig Instr TERRACING, ment for Railrsad Eng DITCHING, o an GRADING, 4Jgdan.W eo ,..solutely g'u. - . anted.Asic $7.00 fo irculan. aUTotsATIc LEVEL Co., NAS My LLE, TE E ADICATED. ik m ntreywe. if~ e"e' after having made a..L.ar. ;.. .we::: awa v and u; at lea,: i: t I::y m:: mf rood condmi:::on ty mn care of ek'1 h. :i:he, and Inaude a perfect ar old dat.:hter las: "ariuer. Ituuv. JAMES V. M. M!OItS. ied free.