Newspaper Page Text
be of service to them as a pastor
d preacher.
As is the custom with our people,
last Wednesday, a number of la
*s, accompanied by Bro. A. J.
ivf. paid the parsonage a visit end
ve us an immense poundin . “
•t we have been pounded for the
month l.y , almost , visitor. .
t every
r all these kind favors, my wife,
self and little ones take this
tliod of expressing our thanks,
,1 of assuring the . people . of c a Catau- .
-bruit of our love for them and
.
iuterst in them.
!y the blessings of a kind Prov
ice, 1 am able to get about on
lies. I went to my appointment
\ ( rday for the first time since I
hurt.* It will be some time be
i. I am fully recovered, but I
Imp * to be able to meet all my
hutments.
IT. C. Brewton.
uirv 7, 1889.
> e r
( ntmiln Thai.
r. Abe McLeroy and family
moved t> Mulucuy Grove.
ir. James McDaniel, has moved
e Atlanta.
is. Durham Giier was m our
last week, virniing friends.
rs. Edison and Miss
■ : ' fierslie were in our town
i
rs. S. C. Floyd, of Troup conn
is on a visit to her parents,
Mrs. J. B. Pate.
Summers Spear is back
lilS hi *nds after art absence
year in Mississippi.
i Felix Kimbrough has gone
.
u Yoik to attend a commercial
. 1 .
rs. Charley Turner, of Atlanta,
i several weeks in our
ntly the guest of her parents,
and Mrs. Clayton Hines.
v J. W. Wilson has declined
n V- to Ilanyilton owing to the
file health of his wife.
Married at the residence of Rev.
j YV. Wilson, Miss Mary McDaniel,
Mr. Howard, of Mulberry Grove,
; > . *mher 3 ist Rev. J. W. Wilson
; ;imined the ceremony in the pres
of a few friends, Miss Georgia
gfetler and Mr. Joe Herjing
’ umlauts.
u* patrons of Oak Grove acad
are making an effort to get up
school for this year. They
procured the services of Mr.
k Gore, near Whitesville, to
i for them the ensuing year,
v lack only a small amount
»R h« *»'"> a»‘l hope they
succeed as he is said to be
teacher and a ripe scholar. A
1 school is essential to every
! munity, and all ought to put
' shouu.ers to the wheel and they
succeed.
liss Maggie Fly, of Atlanta,
ried Dec. 26 th at 2 o’clock P.
to Mr. j. W. Brooks, of Molena,
Gardener, of Molena officiating.
T here were only u few invited guests
to witness the ceremony and the
couple left on the train for Molena.
They had an elegant receptihn given
Item by Mr. Brooks’ parents. The
* was reared in our county
and all her friends join me in wishing 5 r
her a happj life.
The ladies of Catania circuit
pounded their pastor Rev H
C. Ilrewton, las week, and
filled his pantry with such things as
were needed for the tal.le. Would
it not oe good idea for the gentle
me(J , 0 pound him wi(h a fevv do |, ars
to buy a horse? His horse died
several weeks ago ar.d he has been
using Capt. Tom Nimbiough’s. Now
gentlemen do not let the ladies excel
in every good work.
Owing to sickness I 1 have
failed^ to offer my chat to
our readers for several weeks past,
j hut beginning with the new year 1 !
hope to make amends for my long
siler ce. J make this explanation
because the. Journal, askeu last
week what had become of me.
I wish our editor and staff, and all
the readers of the Journal, a happy
slew Year. God has spared us to
see another new veir. arid F think
it ought to be the seniinumt ul every
Christian, ‘’Bless the Lord O my
soul, and forget not alt bis benefits.”
My old cook has left after staying
with me seventeen years.. Of course
I 1 shed a fevv tears, f>r it was
puling with a member <ff my family
and she was a goo-1 and fiithfm ser¬
vant. 1 am fully prep ired t<> ;ym
‘thize vvith Bffl Arp when his cook
left him several years ago. But such
is life, f id of disappointments.
"W .g > <• «
< bl.i’ty r.ocnls.
A prosperous new year t > alb
Prof. W. O. Johnson opened the
exercises of his school Monday lllOl'll
ing with a good attendance.
Mrs. W. I). Wisdom lias returned
from an extensive visit to Barnesville.
Mrs. (). I). Tucker spent last week
J with relatives in Greenville.
Capt. L. L. Hardy went to La
Gramm ° Tuesday \ on "business *
Fredrick Moore, who has perman
entlv located here, is a very fin rz
sign writer. He does all class o m -.
painting. 1 lie sign painted . for J. H.
Hogan is a daisy. He is certainly *
widl in) in his trade
Mr. Geo. F. Jenkins left a few
days ago for the Technological school
in Atlanta. He is well pleased with
the training he is getting there.
Rev J. H. Fakes arrived at this
pinct nhre last, last Thursday xmusaay. lit He win was rm coi
dially received at the rented parson
age formerly occupied by Bro. Bell.
A nuv supper was prepare,1 in rea,li
^ ss an ^ t,u ' pantiles v. eie filled.
^h*. Fakes filled liis first appointment
in this circuit at Whitesvllle Sunday.
| N«t sabbath is his day here. Of
course every one is anxious to near
the new minister and a large audi-
1 ence will be the result.
-
A number of citizens went down to
! Hamilton Monday to attend the
;
rn
dist parsonage at this place have pur
chased the residence now occupied by
Mr. R. L. Burks. This is a very
suitable location and a splendid house
and lot.
For drugs, chemicals, toilet soap, ]
perfumery, 1 paints, oil, putty ’ window i
glass, , &c., o GotoChipley . rn - i ri Ding bto-e. Ce™
The rapid progress of Chipley is
being scored by the numerous new
and handsome dwellings recently
built.
Any little item of interest handed
to your reporter will be greatly
appreciated.
State OF OHIO, CITY OE TOLEDO, 1
GUCAS T CO UN T ir t\, , o e
o. o. )
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that
he is the senior partner of the firm of
F. I. ClIENEY &Co., doing business
in the City of Toledo, County and
State atoresaib, and that said firm
will pay the sum of one hundred dol*
lars for each and every case of Ca
tarrh that caanot be cured by the use
of hall's catarrh cure.
Frank L Cheney,
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in in/ presence, this the 6 th day of
Decembea, A. I). ‘86
f I A. W. Gleason.
i _j Notary public.
<
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is lakeb inter¬
nally anti acts directly upon the blood
and mucus surfaces of the system.
Bend lot testimonials,free.
F. J.Chkney&Co Toiedo, O.
ad Le Druggist, 75 Cento.
HE SALUTES YOU.
. w \\ , hecaasisaasalwAnndcnisdgdsdctbe . r _
l
eddcOesdcttrfoaeeddcdlsiiiiiisbeoioeoi
siieeibeh kleeearF tan orrgcrataasMasai
esdheenblsohffiosfa9eeDeoselieeotrteg
HTdws9tdBdntee8theerhheaacrsitr9a
Mhias • b ]i, ektscai-fiseoe • r- sffaa3flesoioigii nr oh . . ..
» S
liObeewdchtTtbdeecneesqeieheanddRa
ouLteditduihggedeeiddnncbcrcdsrbiae , , .
ffieeTnhAneisieeeiecbdfrneaeeelObeiss
C sMleipdsddfianfreeeerlso2eerotiwsT
doiossecxeeiiifieieateroiiintiicnwiagd2
it . eedicds,ird-iciritrei .........
8
-uch in plain English means.*
TK* foil cto.T- 1 of ?\ r* T?
, n , , i .7'
• ^ , i , handsomest , display ,
t1 ’ 1S
ol title clothin<J ^ to be found in
tile SOlltn. It has been select
ed with very *re°guaranteed °'l'eat care and
the prices a to
< like the rlotlii'Q rln_Hint
, .
—.
. . rr i
a[ Wa\S perfectly. it affords
US pleasure to call your atten
tlOil l to these u"u goods and to sa
ufe * if t-. TKnmoc
vni] m n Den n ° 0 i— 1 h ° maS ’
tne clothier, . and .
to invite you
to tv call r*dl at it the tnc umponum, Fmnnrinm
,1 ,hs raxk-is.-
Kleptomania -Is Increasing.
A wave of kleptomania is passing vertise- oyer
New York city. Every -5ay the ad
ments cry aloud for the ,; lady and umbrella” gentle¬
man who took a gold be<oded
who from borrowed one of the theatres, blind or for in “the one eye,’ lady
a canary, dry goods
from a bird shop. The stores
arc ‘ l the scene of them of most become of public,’ these jfflferings said the
ow
^ # , of a leading house, “and we suf
fer low losses in the end.”
“How do you avoid them?”
11 To begin with, almost every real klep¬
tomaniac in the city is known to us.
Many of them move in the best society.
Wc instruct our girls to keep a strict
watch on them, and if they take anything
from the counters, we send a bill for it to
their friends.”
< 4 Why should not their friends return
the articles?”
“Sometimes they do. As a rule, how
evei , q 1gv p a y anc i say nothing about, it.”
“Do you meet with any serious cases?”
“I know a lady who iu church is liable
! to purloin even the ornaments of the al
“othmg'more to*
' gy p pockets with bread
| scen to er
crumbs.”
| ‘‘What do kleptomaniacs n'sttiTdmw usually thcSaT j^eal?^
: the
j vs
tention. Photographs, too, have much
j the same influence. We have sometimes
missed an entire stock of some actor or
actress, for whom there was no particu¬
lar demand, and have found it long after¬
wards in the possession of a klcptoma
i niac.
«i Is kleptomania more* common at one
season than another?”
I ‘•We generally look for it in the fall.
It is like any other form of lunacy.” of
“Yes,” said a physician, “it is a kind
lunacy, and a much abused kind of lunacy
too. Epileptics are subject to it. Per-
1 sons with abnormally shaped hands oro
* subject to it. dome maniacs who are he¬
yond reproach in their lucid moments
h«„ve the impulse to secrete their food or
I to steal small objects in the asylum. I
have read of a man who would not eat
unless his food, was stolen; of a doctor
who could not help stealing from his
patients; of- a clergyman who delighted in
purloining bits of candle, and oF a man
who, at {'ho pc; :;t of death, stele the snuff
box of his confessor."
‘“Can there be an epidemic of hleptoma
nie?
“Certainly. If you go to an asylum
you will find that ono year is noted for
I religious madness, another for -criminal
i madness. Lunacy has cycles of its own.”
—New York Graphic.
A Gfb-glins Cossack Hamlet.
If there exists a more superbly situated
village than the Altai station I am ready^
to cross three oceans to see it. The station
itself is a raere Cossack outpost witg
seventy or eighty log houses, with wide,
• clean streets between them and with a
quaint wooden church at one end; but to
a traveler just from the hot, arid plains
Cossack ? hamlet Tas its^pecufiar^Sm!
n front of every house in the settlement
is a little i.nclosure, or front yard, filled,
with young birches, silver leafed aspens
these yards, down each side of every
street, runs old a tinkling, gurgling stream
of c!car - <i water from the melting
The whole village, therefore, go where
you will, is filled with the murmur of
fallil1 ^ v'ater; and how pleasant that
sound is, you must travel for a month in
the parched, dust smothered, sun scorched
valley of the Irtish fully to understand.
through wto'th^a^they^^in the settlement, the fresh, 0 “SI
cool
atmosphere of the high peaks where they
were born two hours before; and although
i;°;;ot l and m uTedfr trysts ^statements
are so persistently, so confidently, so
bllariousI v controverted by the joyous
-
voice of the strentif under your window,
' v ith its half expressed suggestions of
snow and glacifrs and cooling spray, that
i tion your accepts reason is t|fc jOenced story and of the your imagina¬ born
snow