Newspaper Page Text
- .
II. iIODGwh, -Proprietor.
DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS AND CULTURE.
PRICE: TWO DOEL-VRS A Year.
OL. XX.
PERKY, HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA,*THURSDAY, MARCH 27,1890.
NO. 13.
iMI
J The “Memo-
Jjji rial Yolums”
now being pre
pare.l by the Rev. J. Wb. Jones,-with the
j approval o£ Mrs. Davis, will be authen-
j tie, charmingly written, beautifully illus-
|t rated and bound—in every way worthy
* of the subject. Agents wanted. Complete
outfit SI. Satisfaction guaranteed or
I mono • rafnnded, Order ' now. First
come,"first served. Address
1 B. F. JOHNSON & CO.,
1009 Alain Street,Richmond, Va.
Georgia—Houston County:
Charles L Bateman has applied for
letters of guardianship for Lilian Taylor,
minor of Kinchen Taylor, of said county,
deceased.
Tins is therefore to' cite all persons
concerned to appear at the April-
term, 1899, of the Court of Ordinary of
said county, and show cause, if any they
Pave, why said application should not
ho granted:
Witnoss my official signature this
March 6th, 1890.
J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary.
, Georgia—Houston County:
Susannah Barnes, widow, has applied
for a 12 months support from the estate
of March Barnes, deceased, and the re
turn of the appraisers having been filed
in this office:
This is therefore to cite all jiersons
concerned to appear at the April
term, 1899, of the Court of Ordinary of
K anl county, and show cause, if any they
have, why said return should not bo re
ceived and made the judgment of this
court-.
Witness! my official signature this
March 6, 1890. J.H. HOUSER,
lm. Ordinary.
County Bailiff’s Sales.
Will bo sold before the court house
door in the town of Perry, Houston
countv, G a., between the legal hours of
salo, on the first Tuesday in Ap-il,
[ 1890, tho following property, to-wit:
. jOne 1-horso wagon. Levied on as the
property of H. J. Fountain, to satisfy a
distress warrant from Houston County
Court iii favor of R. M. Patterson vs. H.
J. Fountain.
Feb. 27,1890.
J. N. TUTTLE, C.B.
Germany’s Royal Children.
The yonng Emperor of Germa
ny, William LL, has five little boys.
The eldest is seven years old. He
is the Crown Prince and the heir
to the throne. He will some day
be Emperor of Germany. He is a
fine, manly little fellow.
Germany is a very military
country, and the Emperor William
is such a thorough soldier that
strict military discipline is the or
der of the day in the nurseries of
his little people. As soon as pet
ticoats are left off, the tiny "boys
are dressed in baby uniforms, and
the young Crown Prince looks quite
like a little soldier.
When their father visits them
in their own quarters, as I sup
pose I ought to call such a milita
ry nursery, the Crown Prince
commands his military brothers to
“fall in.” Then Frederick and
Albert, who are scarcely more than
babies, “fall in.” Little Prince
Albert is such a little mite that he
is not able to keep his position for
"Will Power.
Monroe Advertiser.
It is a conceded fact that man’s
will is his mainspring of action
and the driving wheel to his suc
cess on any line and any under
taking.
It is also an admitted fact that
when a person says “I will” at
tain a certain end, that end is half
attained. When a person says I
may, I can, 1 ought to do a certain
thing, or accomplish a certain
purpose, we regard his declaration
lightly, if at all; but when the pow
er of the will asserts itself, and he
declares “I will,” then it is that ex
pectation in us is begotten, and the
Alliauce. Political Measure. Jolwi Bull Scoops the Cotton. Old Woll’s Penciled Speech.
The Southern Alliance Farmer
says candidates for office in Geor
gia will be asked the following
questions, and by their answers
will they judged. No man will be
supported by the alliancemen who
does not fill the political measure
of the order:
Our alliance questions are: Will
you support the sub-treasury bill
now before congress, and in case
of its defeat continue to support
the principles therein expressed,
etnving to put into force some
such laAv for the relief of this
debt, and monopoly-ridden peo^
pie?
Atlanta Constitution.
The Farmers’ Grievance.
Atlanta Journal.
fir trl Se0f „ 8nCCeSSiSgiVeD -. I Will you vote for, and work for j raised > audthe American manu-
When the will power asserts its an j ncrease j n the volume of cur- i faefcurers naturally supposed that
The Seattle Press says in talk- I
The Courier-Journal refers to a. ing about Indians and their native I In the adjustment of affairs, in
queer situation in the cotton mar ; eloquence, John Fairfield, the law- the relation of the government to
ket that has already been fore- yer, said he saw Old Wolf, the the people, the, farmers, it is said
shadowed in the Constitution’s Cheyenne chief,' make an effective: have been forgotten,
commercial articles—namely, that speech with a lead pencil during a! They have not been forgotten;
the American cotton manufactu- visit by Bishop Brundel at Ash- i they have been slighted, passed
rers have been caught napping by j land, Mon., about a year ago. Old 1 0Y er, because, from the nature of
British buyers and will now have; Wolf took the pencil and drew a j their occupation, they are scatter-
to pay dearly for their snooze. straight line, and said: “Cheyenne j e d, unable to act in concert, una-
The American cotton manufact
urers have waited too long before
laying in their supplies, and yet
their course has all the justifica
tion business wisdom can give it.
The cotton crop of last year was
the largest that has ever been
sway, self-confidence is engender-
ed, and effort is put forth, and man
progresses right onward to the ac
complishment of his purpose.
This power stoops not to difficul
ties, stumbles not at obstacles, fal
ters not at reverses, but overcom
ing the one, removing the other,
rency, so that the amount in cir- j ' die martlet would take its usual
culation shall be equal to the de-; course, and that they would be able
Georgia—Houston County:
Mi's. M. A. E. Simmons, widow of |W.
P Simmons, of said county, deceased,
has applied for a 12 months sup
port out of tho estate of said do-
coasod, and the return of tho appraisers
having boen filed in this office:
This is theroforo to cite all persons
concerned to appear at tho April term,
1891), of tho Court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause if any they have,
why said return should not be received
and made tho judgment of this court
Witness my official signature tins 1 eb.
27, R90; J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary
GEORGIA—Houston County-
Charles D. Dennard has applied for
permanent letters of administration upon
tho estato of Patrick Smith, of said coun
ty, docoaacd:
This'is therefore to cito all persons
concerned to appear at tho April
term, 1890, of the Court of Ordinary of
said county, and show cause, if any they
have, why said application shouJd not bo
"ranted. •
° Witness my official signature thisFeb.
27, 1S90. p ^ HOUSER, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
Robert O. Johnson has applied for
ponnanont letters of administration upon
■ the ostato of W- P. Simmons, of said
oounty, deceased:.
This is thorofore to cite all persons
concerned to appear at tho April term,
1390, of the Court of Ordinary of said
county, anil show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not be
"ranted.
Witness my official signature this
Fob. 27, 1890.
J.H.HOUSER, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
E. S. Wellons, administrator of the es
tate of John Tharp, of said county, de
ceased, has applied for dismission from
his trust:
This is therefore to cite all persons con-
corned to appear at tho May term,
1890,of tho court of Ordinary of said coun
ty, and show cause, if any they have, why
said application should not be granted.
Witness my official signature this
February 6,1890. J. H. HOUSER,
Ordinary.
Gdoegia—Houston County:
T. N. White, administrator of the es
tate of D A King, has applied for dismis
sion from his trust:
This is therefore to citeall persons con
cerned to' appear at the April Term,
1S90, of the Court of Ordinary of said
county, and show cause, if any they
have, why said application should notbe
granted, . . .
■ Wiuoss my official signature this Jau.
2nd, 1890.
JH HOUSER, Ordinary.
life and death
long, and he soon trots away to his i and turning the third to profitable
account, prosecutes its purpose
with unrelenting vigor.
A man may have the covetous
desire to possess what others have
attained, and may have the abili
ty, but unless he calls into requisi
tion the will power that prompts
to zealous effort, he will never rise
above the covetous level.
How often do we hear persons
say they wish for certain things,
and yet make no apparent effort to
obtain the things wished for. Do
these persons really mean what
they say when they express such a
wish? Or do they mean to pub
lish the sad fact that they would be
glad to have the things-wished for
provided they can attain them
without effort? Such peisons nev
er have, and never can push the
car of progress forward. They
have suffered their will power to
become dormant, and to that ex
tent have placed themselves in
bondage to indolence.
A person may spend the whole
of life in wishing for a certain end
and never attain it, but the man
that wills determines at once with
in himself to use the power and
means at command, and in using
these, goes forward to the consum
mation of his purpose.
How many people are to-day
homeless, how many thousands are
thriftless in a comparative sense,
simply for the reason that they do
not assert their will power and
reach out after those things that,
to them, are possible of attain
ment. Too many of ns have per
mitted our will power to fall asleep,
and are contenting ourselves with
what the tide brings to us, and
with living on a level that gives
birth to no profitable results.
This is one grand reason why so
many of the human family fail to
have the desired comforts of life,
and that so few ever accomplished
the good results that are within
their possible reach.
A man may have every other in
gredient needful to success, but
without will power he is, in point
of progress, a stationery machine.
Hence if we would succeed in any
calling, in any profession, in any
undertaking, we must first will to
do it.
JEFFERSON DAVIS.
Tho first and only one in the field. It
is a complete history of the life and
death of Mr. Davis, containing 2o6 pages,
and is handsomely illustrated and con-
. tauis the fnnerel services, comments of
tho press, etc. It will have a big .sale.
GO per cent discount to live agents.
Price, paper cover, 25cents; cloth bound,
81.00. Mailed to any address on receipt
of price. If yon want to be an agent,
, send 25 cents for Prospectus book and
Circulars, and go to work at once. You
can sell250 copies in your own town.
Address J. S. OGILVIE, Publisher, o7
Roso Street, New Fork.
gf You Have
83MSUMPTI0N j G0U0H OR COLD
BROfaCH1TIS Throat Affection
SCROFULA I Wasting of Flesh
Or an y Disease where the Throat and lungs
am Inflamed, Zach of Strength or Sens
Power, you can he relieved and Cured by
OF
3 U'RE COB LIVER OIL
Yith. Hypophosphltes.
STABLE AS MILK.
f Ash'for Scott's Emulsion, and let 910 eav
plandtion' of solicitation. induce you to
accept a substitute* ■
Sold by all Druggists.
8C0TT & BOWNE,Chemists, N.Y*
nurses side. But the Crown
Prince and Prince Frederick stand
stiff and starched like real sol-
diers till tbeir father returns their
salute in proper fashion.
When the little Crown Prince
was six years .old he was given a
bedroom to himself, instead of
sleeping in the nursery with the
others. He was very much
pleased, and said: “Oh, that is
nice; now I need not be with the
children any more.
In the summer of 1888 all five
boys had a charming holiday with
their mother at the beautiful cas
tle of Oberhof, in the forest of
Thuringia. Their father was
away. A little fort was built for
them in the corner of the garden,
with a tent and two small cannon.
The three eldest, dressed in offi
cers’ uniforms^ paraded in front of
the fort. Then while the Crown
Prince beat the drum, an old sol
dier showed the other two how to
attack and defend the fort. Little
Prince Augustus William, who
was only a year and a half old, was
dressed in white and-wore a tiny
helmet. He looked on and clap
ped his hands. In Germany every
boy, whether he is the son of the
Emperor or of a peasant, has
some day to be a soldier.
The Emperor is very fond of
his five boys. Almost his first
question is, when he returns home,
“How are the boys?”
A New York newspaper asked a
number of public men what, in
their opinion, was the chief cause
of poverty in this country. Edward
Atkinson said ignorance and inca
pacity; Channcey M. Depew and
Henry Clews said rum. Dr. Wil
liam A. Hammond’s ideas are in
teresting enough to quote entire.
He said: “In my opinion the chief
cause of poverty at the present
time is civilization. Poverty nev
er exists among utter barbarians.
But with refinement and educa
tion differentation begins, and then
poverty makes its appearance.
At first it is physical force that
makes one richer than his neigh
bor. He takes what he finds vi et
armis, but as he becomes more re
fined he uses intellect to obtain
his objects, and skill, tact, cun
ning and knowledge bring him to
the front. As iong as men have
more brains and more muscle than
other men, poverty will exist. To
get rid of it we should have to re
turn to that period of the world’s
history when man bagahto emerge
from a lower form.”
In New York a life insurance
company has lent §120,000 to a
church, andjthe church has had
the lives of a number of its mem
bers insured in favor of itself.
The life insurance company agrees
that every time one of the members
who is thus insured dies, it will re
duce the debt of the church by the
amount of his policy. Every
time the church has a funeral of
one of these it tops off a slice of the
debt; in other words, members and
debt disappear together.
mands of production and of legiti
mate commerce?
Will you support the policy of
the National Alliance for the con
trol of railways and the enforce
ment of just and equitable rrtes,
for the protection of the people?
In your state govermeni,wil lyou
work for the interests of the peo
ple, supporting and strengthening
your railroad commission, and de
manding of them protection against
discrimination in favor of large
cities and competitive points while
the small towns and rural districts
are crushed out and killed?
Will yoa give to the rural dis
tricts better schools and for longer
terms?
Will you endeavor to legislate
for the whole people and not for
the few?
If you want to be governor, will
yon see that this kind of legisla
tion is recommended?
Have you the grit to veto bad
laws?
When legislatures meet and
throw away time at the state’s ex
pense,''Vill yoa tell them either to
do what they were elected to do, or
quit and go home?
If a railroad commissioner has
to be appointed, will that one be
chosen for you by the people, the
cities, or the railroads?
If a commission fails to do its
duty, will you see that they do | it,
or are impeached?
These questions must be an
swered, and candidates may as well
be preparing for it.
to procure their supplies at a sea
son when money was easy and the
price of cotton lower.
That season has not yet arrived,
and there is now no likelihood that
it will. Great Britain lias been
buying heavily of American cotton,
and as a result prices have been
gradually advancing. The stock
in Liverpool amounts to 1,075,000
bales, 316,000 more bales than for
the same period last year.
The figures show that there is
not enough cotton iu this country
to supply the demands of the
American mills, and the probabil
ity is that they will have to buy
their supplies in Great Britain and
have them shipped back here.
It is a cold day when John Bull
outwits Jonathan, but it will be re
membered that we have been hav
ing some peculiar weather lately.
Not Mixing’.
Shrewdly Gone.
A book gotten up in imitation of
Burke’s Peerage, and giving all
the attainable facts and figures
about American girls who have
married foreigners, is having a
very large and rapid sale in New
York. A sequel describing the in
sults, snubs and general unhappi
ness, would be more fitting and
useful.
uaddsiAvuo saunpoj possoia pus^ABOi-apsxi rrq
aintraeo -amoq rod am II <!»=( *»I»P IIY
■jipnannuoaai snspiBiqj
•wajJia’noflt «*a
VI63gJBA<r HOJ
-Subscribe for the Home Joubxal. s
Thinkers Will Heed This.
Not one physician in a thousand,
has ever sncceeded in relieving a
person suffering from weak and
wasting or consumptive kidneys,
yet they continue to experiment,
and after the death of the patient
ask for their fee. The kidney is a
delicate organ, and yet good health
in a large measure depends upon
its proper action. Let the kidneys
become sore or inactive, and uric
acid is eliminated from the effete
matter that passes too slowly out
of the system. From this cause
arises many mysterious pains in
the back, side, shoulder, joints and
limbs. A feeling of ennui comes
over the victim. The world seems
dark and gloomy. The nerves
shattered; suicide is contemplated,
and one’s condition is most pitia-
Here is a bit of clever work that
was accomplished over-night by a
smart Pennsylvania housebuilder.
A dispatch from Wilkesbarre, Pa,
says: “A singular exploit was per
formed at Pleasant Talley, a small
town near Pittston, Saturday in
the secret removal of a dwelling
house from one lot to another
without disturbing the slumbers of
the inmates. John McLaughlin
had the house built a year ago by
Andrew Frolinger, a Scranton con
tractor. He gave Mr. Frolinger to
understand that the lot was his,
and that he would pay him for
the house as soon as finished.
When the building was done,
McLaughlin refused to pay, and
Frolinger discovered that he
didn’t own the lot, and never had
owned it. He was unable, there
fore, to legally seize the building,
but went about it in another way.
He bought a vacant lot next door,
and Saturday evening came to
Pleasant Talley with a force of
twenty-five men. The house was
a frame, and they jacked it up, put
rollers .under it and moved it to
Frolinger’s lot, a distance of twen
ty-five feet, without waking the
family inside. The house was oc
cupied by a man named Canfield
and his family, to whom McLaugh
lin had rented. Having got the
house on his lot, Frolinger noti
fied Canfield to pay the rent to him
or vacate. He has decided to va
cate.
There are lew general plans of
work but what are open to more or
less objection, or that if better in
one locality, or under certain con
ditions, may not always prove so
in different surroundings. This
accounts iu a large degree for the
difference in plans of management.
To a considerable extent one of the
best plans of managing the farm
manure is to haul direct from the
stables or sheds in feed lots to the
fields, scattering as fast as it is
hauled. It saves loss in several
ways, and the per cent, of waste
can, with good management, be
made very scarce.
The necessary work of prepar
ing the aoil and seeding or plant
ing, is to work well into the soil.
One of the advantages in thor-
ougly rotting the manure before
hauling out and applying, is, with
a little care that from the different
kinds of stock can all be mixed to
gether, while if hauled di.iect from
the stables it will to a considera
ble extent, at least, be applied sep
arate. The quality of the manure
can be improved, to some extent,
by mixing that from the horse
stables, the cow and sheep-sheds,
and the hog-pens all together; and
then applying. Each possesses el
ements in a large proportion that
may be much smaller in others,
and by combining together a bet
ter proportion of all is secured.
This, with the fact that by rotting
it-can be more easily used and can
he more thoroughly incorporated
with'the soil, and be more readily
taken up and used by the growing
plants, are the- principal advan
tages in piling up the manure and
rotting it thoroughly before apply
ing.
hi some localities and under cer
tain conditions there is no ques
tion but that this plan will prove |
the best. Bnt in a great many
cases there is not enough of gain
to pay for the extra work; and a
question of this kind can easily be
answered correctly by each farmer
for himself, and in many cases if
determined correctly, a careful
trial should be made..—Prairie
Farmer.
straight.”
Then he drew another straight
line, and' said: “Black robe
straight,” meaning the Indian had
nothing to say against the Catholic
missionaries.
Then a third straight line was
drawn, and Old Wolf said: “White
house straight.” By this he did
not mean the executive 'man
sion, but the little white school
conducted by the sisters of chari
ty, which was known far and near
among the Indians as the “white
house.”
Next a straight line was drawn
part way across the page, and from
one end he made a number of very
crooked lines, so that the diagram
looked like a cat-o’-nine-tails. This
was explained by the chief as
“Washington straight, bat all
things coming from Washington
very crooked.”
Then a line was drawn straight
part of the way, then crooked, then
straight, and so on across the page.
“Indian agent straight, crooked,
straight, crooked, straight, crook
ed,” was the laconic explanation.
“Crow fly round, round, round,”
was the sarcastic way he illustrated
the characteristics of the Crow In
dians by a series of loops across
the page. But the climax of thi3
speech was reached when Old
Wolf drew across the paper a very
crooked line and remarked with
manifest contempt: .
“Sioux crooked, always crook
ed.”
of
Of the individuals, firms and
corporations rated by Bradstreet’s
agency in the United States and
Canada in 1889,1.27 per cent., or
13,337, failed,and it is'worth noting
that 91 per cent., of these failures
represented concerns with a capital
of less than S20,000 each. The great
est number of failures occurred
among firms having less than 85,-
000 capital each. Only a fraction
more than 4 per cent, of the total
failures were of firms having from
§20,000 to §50,000 capital each, and
only one-ninth of 1 per cent,
among those having a capital of
§1,000,000 or more each. The agen
cy is now directing its attention to
determining the number of fail
ures resulting from incompetence,
inexperience, undue competition,
unfavorable circumstances, fraud
ulent disposition, etc.
ble even to learn what those
their own class are suffering or do
ing, and equally nnable to ascer
tain what great wrong lies at the
bottom of their distress. This ig
norance has been encouraged by
politicians and monopolists, who
have found it profitable to them
selves that the farmers should
know little, and bear their wrongs
without murmuring.
Laterly, however, the fanners
have made themselves a power in
the laud. They have forced poli
ticians and that part of the public
press that has ignored them, to
give them and their wrongs a fall,
if not cordial, recognition. Lead
ing papers of the country have
suddenly taken up the cause of the
farmer with “a late remorse of
love” that may suggest a desire to
cenciliate rather than to aid in
solving the vast agrarian problem
of the age.
The New York Globe says that
the distress of the farmers is due to
“the rninous taxation upon the
farm and farmer, and his clear in
ability, under present arrange
ments, to reimburse himself in the
prices of his on n commodities.’
The whole system of American tax
ation, federal and state, it goes so
far to say, “has been devised to
plunder farms and farmers,” and
relief must be had.
The St. Paul Pioneer thinks that
the whole agricultural interest is
distressed, and that the “best we
can do is to relieve the struggling
farmer of some of the weights by
which he is handicapped,” and
again points oat the fact that be
cause of the miserable policy of
protection the farmer is forced to
sell in the cheapest market and
buy in the highest.
With the press and politicians
alive to the wrongs of the farmers,
and the eight million farmers press
ing their own claims for^ justice,
something may be accomplished
to relieve the distress of one-half
the nation.
SECOND ANNUAL SESSION
Georgia Chatauqua!
AT
ALBANY, GA.
A PERMANENT CHATAUQUA.
Mareh 10-31. Special Musical, Physical and Com.
mercial Scnools, reepectively under Dr. H. R-
Palmer, Dr. W. M. 6. Anderson, and Prof. C. R.
West, all from Parent Chautauqua.
March 23 ... Annual Sermon.
March 24, • - Opening of Second Assembly.
March 26, ..... aih«hpa Day,
Marsh 27, ..... National Day
March 28, Governor's Day
Mar’ll 29, - . - - - - Children’s Day.
March 30, . Sermon and Grady Memorial Day.
Postmaster-General Wanamaker,
though a high protectionist, has
several times brought suit against
the government for the recovery
of duties paid by his house on
goods imported. He beat the gov
ernment, a year ago, in a notable
suit for the recovery of duties paid
on ribbons. Bat the treasury de
partment has jnst overruled his
appeal for a remission of duty, at
the rate of 35 per cent ad valorem,
on certain linen imported by him
at Philadelphia and rewarehonsed
at New York. In both these cases,
no doubt, the duty had been added
in fixing the price at which the
goods were sold, and the pur
chasers from Wanamaker thus
paid the duty.
The biggest sugar manufactur
ing project ever proposed in Kan
sas has originated at Newton. The
Kansas Central Sugar Company
been organized there. It is pro
posed to build four sugar mills in
the county, each to cost §1000,000.
It is stated that W. W. Dudley
and Assistant Postmaster General
Clarkson have agreed that Presi
dent Harrison must not be renom-
.. . -r, 1,, c. -n inated in 1892, and that they are
ble. Dr. Ball s Sarsaparilla con- . ’ ,, v
trying to work up an Alger boom,
tarns such herbal j cnees. as weak>| T / 0 f_ A1 u &
kidneys demand. It has relieved
and cured many cases that doctors
gave up as hopeless. It checks
decay, and aids the kidneys in the
performance of their natural func
tion.
The income of the As tor family
is $100,000 per month. They can
afford to take rooms at a first-class
modern hotel.
If Gen. Alger is nominated, it is
pretty safe to say that Dudley will
have plenty of money with which
to practice his “blocks-of-five”
methods.
T have used Dr. Bull’s Sarsapa
rilla in my family with excellent
satisfactionior rheumatism, asth
ma, weak kidneys, and general de
bility. I know of others who have
used it for consumption with good
results.—Thos. H. Bentley, Ross-
ville, HI.
Tlieir Business Booming.
Probably no one thing has caused
such a revival in trade at the drng
store of Holtzclaw & Gilbert as giv
ing to their customers so many
free trial bottles of Dr. King’s
New Discovery.' Their trade is
simply enormous in this very val
uable article from the fact that it
always cures and never disaap-
points. Coughs, colds, asthma,
bronchitis, croup, and all throat
and lung diseases quickly cured.
You can test it before buying by
getting a trial bottle free,, large
size, SI. Every bottle warrant
ed.
It required an act of the Italian
Parliament to psrmit the burial of
the poet Browning beside his wife
id Florence.
A Georgia negro, Henry Snffold,
of Greene county, draws a pension
of §25 a month from the national
goverment. Henry went into the
army as the servant of a union sol
dier, and contracted a disease
which incapacitates him for work.
The application for a pension was
Rooked after by Congressman Carl
ton, who, after two years’ Work, off
and on, succeeded in getting it
granted.
“In the spring-time” comes W. W. C-
as a tonic and a boon.
The old maids of Elberton, and
they are remarkably few, are to
give a quilting party, the quilt to
be presented to the first yong man
who addresses any of their number.
Neuralgic Parsons
And those troubled with nervousness resulting
rorkwill Ve relieved by taiing
Iron Bitters. Genuine
: sad crosses rod 1 ines on rt rapper.
' X;
Hind Words of Cheer.
When a proprietor knows he has
a grand and good remedy for the
many ills that flesh and blood are
heir to, it pleases him exceedingly
to receive such evidences of appre
ciation as follows:
W. F. Miles, Milesville, N. C.,
writes: “I have used Botanic Blood
Balm and find it to be all that it is
recommended to be.”
D. C. Blanton, Thomasville, Ga-,
writes: “I have used Botanic Blood
Balm in my family as a tonic and
blood purifier with highest satis
factory results.”
F. O. Hoffman, editor Times,
Rocky Mount, Va., writes: “I am
pleased to say that Botanic Blood
Balm is the best appetizer and
tonic for delicate people I ever
saw. It acted like a charm in my
case.”
F. H. Hickey, 1,208 Main street,
Lynchburg, Va., writes: “I was
broke out all over with sores, and
my hair was falling out. After
using a few bottles of Botanic
Blood Balm my hair quit falling
out and the sores got well.”
JnliaE. Johnson, Stafford’s P.
O., S. C., writes: “I had suffered
13 years with eczema and was at
times confined to my bed. The
itching was terrible. My son-in-
law got me one-half dozen bottles
of Botanic Blood Balm, which en
tirely cured me, and I ask you to
publish this for the benefit of oth
ers suffering in like manner.”
Augusta A. Klages, 810 St.
Charles street, Baltimore, McL,
writes: “From my youth I suf
fered from a poisonous taint in my
blood. My face and body was con
tinually affected with eruptions
and sores. I am now 42 years of
age and had been treated both in
.Germany and America, but no
remedy overcame the trouble until
I nsed Botanic Blood Balm. I
have used about j twenty bottles,
and now my skin is clear, smooth
and healty, and T consider the poi.
son permanently driven from my
blood. I eonsider.it as tho best
blood remedy.”
Door fastenings have knobby
decorations.
A sure Liver medicine, sfri
lengthening
Special Trains on S. W. B. It, as follows;
Lv. Fort Valley 6 a. m., Ar. Albany, 9:15 a. m.
Lv. Albany 4:50 p. m., Ar.Fort Valley, 8:15 p. m.
Trains ran from 26th to 29th inclusive, at half
fare.
W. A. DTJNOAK. )
A, E. DUNNING, / Sup'ts of Instruction.
. NELSON TIFT, Pres.
J. S. DAVIS, Ass’t. Sup't. of Ins.
J. D. WESTON, Sec’y and Sup’t.
MONEY TO LOAN.
In sums of $300.00 and upwards, to be
secured by first liens on improved farms.
Longtime, low-rates and easy payments.
Apply to C.C, DUNCAN,
Nov. 20th, 1889.—tf Peny‘ Ga.
MONEY LOANS
On Houston farms procured at the low
est possible rates of interest. As low, if
not lower than the lowest. Apply to
W. D. NOTTXKGHAJf,
tf Macon. Ga.
m. i wm&mim,
Attorn eyjat Law,
Pebey, Ga.
■Will practice in all the Courts of
this cirrcuit.
If e. IiT&mp.
Attorney at Law,
Judge of.Houston County Couet,
Pebby, Geobgia.
WiU practice in all the Courts of this
Circuit except the .County Court.
J. L. Hardeman, W.D. Nottingham,
HAEDEHAN & NOTTINGHAM,
Attor neys at Law,
Macon, ... Ceokcjia.
WiU practice in the State and Federal
Courts. Office 306 Second Street.
Z. SIMS,
DENTIST,
PERRY, GEORGIA.
i3?“Office on Main street, lately occu
pied by Dr. W. M. Havis.
Fust-class work. Prices moderate. Pat
ronage solicited. apl281y
Wn M mwMM 9
DE1TTIST „
Perry, Georgia.
Office on Main Street, King house.
giving more ir
of value to advertisers
| than any other publics-
, tloneveriasned. It gives
1 the name of every i
paper published,
ing a circulation r
with the coat per *
une oi advertising in tnem. A list of the best pa>
pere of local dreurtion in every city and town of
more than 5,000 population with prices by the
inch, for one month. Special lists 'of daily, conn*
try, village and class papers. Bargain offers of
value to .small advertisers or. those wishing to ex
periment judiciously with a small amount of mon
ey. Shows conclusively “how to get the most
service for the money,” etc. Sent postpaid to
any address for 30 cents. Address Geo. P. Rowell
& Oo., Publishers and General Advertising Agent?,
1J Sprn'Ce Street, New York-City.
*Esffl£r,i££S2SB
e*. The«o samples, u wsU
ire free. All the work yoa
need dob to show what we Mad yon to these who call—your .
friends and naljhboia and those about you—that always results
In valuable trade fertu. which holds foryear* when once started,
IF YOU WANT
FIRST-CLASS
GROCERIES,
11
Hats, Shoes,
CONFECTIONERIES,
Fruits in Season, Ci
gars, Tobacco, Etc..
Examine my stock before purchasing.
Besides a full stock of
STANDARD GOODS,
I will always have on hand some
Specialties,
at remarkably low figures.
2f?“Lbokout for changes in this ad
vertisement.
S.L. SPEIGHT,
PERRY, GA.
m
: - j
—This is the best time of the
year to subscribe for the]
/vttoxt.l.