The Covington star. (Covington, Ga.) 1874-1902, September 16, 1885, Image 2

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$Txc <Couin0tou ANDERSON & WALLIS, ffiRMs, $1,50 a Yeah in Advance, $ 2.00 When Not Paid in Advance. Success is Oxir The columns of the Star are always to the fair awl dignified discussion of questions of public interest; but commuuica tians advocating the individual claims of any jersoa ( or any political position or particular thing, is regarded as personal matter, and must be pifi-l for to secure its publication in •h'*f columns. The editor is not responsible for tie vines of correspondents, awl no corn trttut ierdion will be published unless the name if the writer is known to the editor. COVINGTON, GA., SEPT. 1 G, 1885. edi to iiiaJ7pa¥a(.i;a PIES. Sweet poet Tennyson will publish another volume of poems, so it is rumored. Attorney General Garland lias goie to Arkansas to spend his va¬ cation. The caterpillars are greatly dama¬ ging the late cotton crop in some see tiona of Pulaski county. 1 h • venerable Jefferson Davis, who bag agood deal of time for reading. regards Bulweras the beet of the British novelists, and Byron first among English pools, Edward Everett Hale takes five meals r> day, his amanuensis two, and then he leaves the Cold pic for his boss. Tins same man Hale says three h< ijrs of brain work per day is ft!I the first class work you can get fr< m a man. Small brain that, don’t you think ? John B. Gough, th t great temper¬ ance lecturer, is sixtyseigbt years old, and is failing in health very fast. Mr. Gough, it is said, rarely ever reads a book, lie takes the world for a study, and draws his apt and forcible illustrations therefrom. Mi-s Rose Cleveland has made •5II.0WI out of her book. tbU S „ ii.ileli as her brother’s yearly salary , and she lias been in tho White House pnly five Rjonths. Ex-Senator Kernnn, ’ of New York, ’ doesn't «' a lit the place of govern ment director of the Union Pacific railroad. Ho is not tllO sort of a man that works without pav, and as for honors be don’t . hink the diree tpr-lpp . , . would • , add j. anything ,, . , to ,. those the Ins already enjoj ed. Some of 1 be papers, in sponki —° ng of and Covington ,, . railroad 77 ------ This is WMMig. It is Charteiod as the Cov iliglon and Macon railroad. It is a Covington road, and not a Macon enterprise. Therefore, Covington comes firs’, in the title, and must be ao recognized. In other words, Cov¬ ington is on top in this railroad en«. terprise. Mr. Connell, tiio well known member of the legislature who crea¬ ted -ueh an excitement about his “Bachelor’s Bill,” seems to have in. fused the pulpit to some extent.— 4t least, the pulpit has opened np its batteries upon the “Young Americas” who manifest such stolid indifference to matrimonial alliance. Sometime ago, Fat ter Kirsh, a Cath¬ olic minister of Atlanta, preached a very powerful sermon op matrimo¬ ny. lie put in a lot of good points, explaining the marital reiati- ps be¬ tween Lusband and wife. He thinks the reason tho young men of America are so loath to marry, is owing to a morbid and inordinate desire to hoard wealth. Yoong is noth¬ ing on the earth more conducive to huppinew* than 'a “homo sweet h nn-i,” presided overby a culture ' practical and domestic wife. If Cleveland wants a second term ho will have to marry. The Am r ican people may forgive celibacy to a president during his first teim, in consideration of his other good qual¬ ities, but they have toodeep a lever; enoc for the instituiion of matrimo¬ ny, not on!/ its a reliable means for perpetual ing presidential viilm-a in a hoci mmI generation, but as a favor¬ ite and popular method of absorbing our growing surpius of unmarried females, to ovor confer the honor of tho Chief Magistracy a second time upon n man who shows liim self so hrutariy obtuse to the charms of bis countrywomen and their fa¬ vorite institution. We sincerely trust that our Chief Magistrate has caught something besides a lew fish and a had e rid in the Atiirondacks, and that the outcome of the affair will he that Miss Cleveland must imn r......... a.- m >Ue.-s .. ot *'"! the W hue House, That wild pbuso loves belongs to a married itn. j man babies better (ban bpoka.— [Augusta Evening News. The governor ban aignee the Slone Mountain circuit bill, and it in, there tore, a law. Hon. liebard A Clarke, ot Atlanta,hag heeieleet ud jinli.e and Cub ii. t.J lies, <•! f Ii catur, son nor. 7- AN ADDRESS. Delivered before the Smyrna blub, of llockd te comity, on Saturday, September 12,1885, bv Mr. Hunky J. : Wau.is, of Covington, on tire question, , “Does the Digni y of lire Farmer's <e sion entitle iiiin to Social Recogni¬ tion with that of the other sions ?” Ladies and Gentlemen It affords me pecul¬ iar pleasure to be with you to-day. Both cause 1 feel as if I had just returned home, and cause I feel honored by the privilege of address¬ ing you, on this occasion, cm this great, grand, and profound subject which you propose discuss¬ ing here to-day. If there is a class of people in the world whom 1 honor, respect, congratu - late, felicitate, and love, it is the tiller of the soil. And I am not speaking in studied and su^ar coated phrases. As Mark Antony says, “lama plain blunt man,’’ and do but speak right out what I know. Those of you that know me fand I trust you all do) know nothing to the contrary. Yes, gentlemen, I congratulate and felicitate you because your profession is the honestest, needful est, happiest, the freest from care and the health iest, simplest, and the least ceremonious. When I meet the tawny and sun-browned farmer who takes me by the hand and gives that hand a soulful clasp that sends a hearty thrill of joy, friendship, cordiality, generosity, ma^nan imity, frankness, and honesty straight-way up the arm and thence down into the depths of the heart, it does me good all over, so to speak. I know there is something solid there. I know there is merit there, I knm.v there is integrity and independence there. 1 know there is one whom you may count on jn adversity as well as in prosperity, in season and out of season, when the clouds ,<>f adversity are lowering aud throw around your pathway their darkest and most fear fu’ shadow as well as when life is a mere hey-day arl the present is brimful of joy and the past has no bitter memories and the prospect for the future is sunshiny, blissful, and exhiiaratiug. Then to see his soulful eyes and beaming coun tenance as he is shaking and still holding you by the hand. Hear his warm words of welcome when he bids you “come to see us.” How hos¬ pitably he entertains you when you visit him.— How much he and his family exert themselves to make your stay a pleasant one. How much good it does him and how much good it does you. Can we do without the farmer? Ask me ifw ecan do without sunshine, rain, and the air we breathe ? He is the nucleus around which a, ' other professions ««flustered. If, fancifully STSSSST. 7Z£ pro - is farming the chief diamond in the centre of that cluster. If you should bring togethera few representatives of all professions and arrange ^ 1 say ““f let the farmer “ g t0 he placed e [ ev on * tion the ’ then highest ^ el ld evation. My little observation in this world has taught me that the fitrmer is the happiest man in the world. As regards food for the physical and ui nerman » which vve all must have, the farmer’s arethe fireateSf - Here in mit,dIe whcre every variety of vegetable product ca „bemade, the opportunity for luxurious living is at its maximum. He who has a good home w ‘" ^ lxcd U P> a beautiful flower yard, a good or -1 vineyard, fat horses, fat cows. frt various other things that we farmer, need not envy the king on throne. But, I’ll tell you what’s a fact, the 8 may and does envy him. II is the Amplest and freest from care. To well, knowingly, systematically, and easily, must be thoroughly educated. But aside that there is the least care and the most pleasure in agriculture of any profession the face of the earth. The multiplicity and and “vexation of spirit” of thecount room, of the shop, of the office, is appalling, have tried them and know where of 1 speak.— me the open air in which I can move with freedom of the bird that “waves its wings the ciear blue sky.” Give me the sparkling water that gushes from its fountains in hill sides and the mountains, in which I can as the fish, as on and on it ripples and and eddies and dabbles and babtiles and and splashes and foams and roams and and struggles through valley, through over meadow, over marsh, till it reaches ocean. Give me broad fields thickly studied its stalks of corn bowed earthward by its drooping ears ; broad acres covered with grain that looks like a sea of molten gold it is fanned by the summer zephyrs; extensive covered with giant trees among which I roam, free as the little squirrel that nimbly from bough to bough ; and there let me and muse, poet and philosopher-like, and “sweet communion” with nature and na nature’s God : there let me sit and 1 st to»the mellifluous piping of nature’s songsters and lie regaled by sweeter sounds and sweeter music than ever came from a Rosadale or a Jenny Lind. Give me the firm of my boy¬ hood and the freedom and rollicking joy that went with that boyhood. Carry me back to the old homestead and let me view the scenes “so oft seen before,” L the cry from all classes, fr¬ om ail corners of the globe, from all grades of socie¬ ty, and from all professions. Then how superb ly happy ought the farmer to be. Health is a great consideration, and I know of no profession more conducive to it than that of farming. The variety of farm work, exer cise in the pure air and sunshine, the inhalation of mountain breezes, perfumed by the violet and alt of nature’s vegetation, as they dart hither and thither over the land, undoubtedly invigorate the system, tone up the whole being, increase one’s spirits and energy, and lend enchantment, exhilaration, and eestacy to the human soul._ The sprightly and rosy-cheeked girls, the buoy¬ ant, vexing, teasing, hardy, and rollicking boys that we meet with on the farm, irrefutably dem one.rate that farming is the healthiest of profes s ms. It is the least ceremonious. The pomp aud splendor of city life, it is true, we do not see on the farm. We do not wish to see it, for that is “vanity of vanities.” The stiff and rigid cere m«ny and punctiliousness of the palace or king’s court, we do not meet with on the farm. We no not desire to meet with it, for that is man’s see there. We do not wish to see it, for naught that is good has, will, or can ever come out of it. Hie freedom, ease, tidiness, show, and esthetic luxuriance, sought for by those of long bank ac¬ counts and extremely ignorant of common prac life, may not be found there. We do not want or expect it, for we prefer to fall heir to the things of a higher and betler world. Intrinsic value, then, is the right standatd by judge of ones fitness for society._ Merit, then, and merit only, should l*e one’s into society. Weha e tried to l "int | out and define some of the prominent features of the farmer’s profession, which, hy par excel¬ lence, entitle him to the highest social recogni¬ tion. We hold, therefore, that the affirmative of the proposition is true. I ween that sometime in the misty future, I know not how long, nor do I care, that is no concern of mine, when we hear that promised trumpet sound that wilt sum mons all of us to appear at His throne, to be judged “according to the deeds done in the body,” a full representation of you farmers will he there, perhaps yiu and I will see each other face to face there. Then, I trust, as the Great Judge assigns the worthy to an eteroal dwelling place on 11 is right and the unworthy to an eter na’t abode on his left, a full measure of you farm¬ ers, by virtue of your excellencies, will be direc¬ ted to take a seaton the right with the plaudit, “well done thou good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joys of thy Lord.” Farmers here to-day, the representatives of the noblest profes¬ sion on earth, if no more here, we will meet again there, and I hope our eternal dwelling places will be on Ilis right hand. WHAT THS PAPiliS SAY Of 03. Mr. Henry J. Wall’s, of Rockdale county, is now associated with tho Covington 8tar. Success to the Star.—[Jasper County News. Mr. Henry J. Wallis, a wflll post¬ ed young gentleman of Rockdale county, purchased a half interest in th) Covington Star, and hencefor¬ ward that popular paper will bo more than over sought after.—[Au¬ gusta Evening News, Mr. Henry J. Wallis, well-known to several of'our citizens, has pur¬ chased an interest in the Covington Stau. lie is a young man of talent and will doubtless prove a valuab'p acquisition to the journalist ie ranks. Success to him.—-[Marietta Journal. Mr. llenrv J. Wallis, son of our esteemed fellow-county man, ’Squire Rich it’d Wallis, lias purchased art interest in the Covington Star.— Henry is a young man of ability, and has never been found wanting in any position filled by him. May the Star continue to shine.—[Jones¬ boro News. It affords us pleasure to state that Mr. Wallis’ introduction info the newspaper brotherhood lias been hailed by the state press in very complimentary language. The Cov¬ ington Enterprise welcomed him o that place in very tender and kindly terms. Wo wish for our friend un¬ measured success.—[Conyers Solid South. 1 Don’t Feel Like Work, It makes no difference what business [ireacher, a merchant, a mechanic, a lawyer ora common 11 borer, you can’t do your work well while .you are half sick. Thousands try to, but all in vain. How much better to keep your organs in good order by taking Parker’s Tonic when you feel “a little out of sorls.” It. would be money in youv pocket, One hour of good, rejoicing health is worth a dozen hours of full of languor and pain. lnt. MOTHERS’ FRIEND. Applied according to directions 3 or 4 months before confinement, its effect is wonderfully beneficial and gratifying.— The delicate organs aipl parts directly involved are relaxed and softened and lose their rigidity without imparing their power, while its lubricating qualities act like a charm, thus assuring a quick and almost painless delivery without physi¬ cal exhaustion, and death agonies of many hours duration are entirely avoid ed. It not only shortens the time of labor and lessens the intensity of pain, , but, , better than all, it greatly diminish¬ es the danger to life of both mother and child, and leaves the mother in a condit¬ ion favorable to ami far less liable to flooding, convul¬ sions, and other alarming symptoms in¬ cident to lingering and painful labor.— Its truly wonderful efficacy in this res¬ pect entitles Mothers Friend to be rank¬ ed as one of the life-saving appliances given modern to the world hy the discoveries of science. THIS TRULY GREAT PREPARA¬ TION, while really such an inestimable boon to child-bearing women, is one in regard to which, in due deference to female modesty, certificates cannot be publish¬ ed ; for, as was remarked by a distin¬ guished member of the legal profession iu Atlanta, when purchasing a bottieof it, “Its superior merits can only be made known " by word of mouth.” Ladies interested in the above, by ad¬ dressing the Bradfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga., can liaye a Book mailed them free of cost, containing full par ticulars. bn. Official. Ordinary's Office, ) Newton County, Sept. 14, 1885. j At an election held in the 1247th Militia District of said county. known Gum Creek district, on tho 10th day of September, 1885, to(k-teimine question of “For Fence or Stock Law.” the retun s having been filed 1,1 my 0m ' c - und °P f " » x: mii.nl on the same, I find the following re> F - *•«. 29 votes; For Stock- 88 votes. T1 us nu-kii. g a ma¬ in favor oi “Stock Law,’’ot 59 K F. EDWARDS, Ordin tuy. PRECAUTION! CHOLERA DR. BIGGER? j m "sr I THE GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY KQI* BOWEL TROUBLES, CHILDREN TEETHINfi, DIARRHffA, DYSENTERY AND CRAMP COLIC. TUOGFRT HUCKLEBERRY CORDIAL should be kept in every household, 0 It is one of the most it pleasant is, at and season efficacious of the year remedies when violent there i* "^ for "udden summer a co^ a s plaints. How necessary a speedy relief at hand. « vrdl save of the bowels are so frequent, you should have some mother, losing sleep nabi and anxiety as well as large doctor bills. The weaned nieht after night in nursing the little pne suffering such medicine. a drainage For upon sale by its all system_ dr ggr the effects of teething, should use this invaluable at 50 cents a bottle. iSrSend ic, .um^Rrddle 2^^*. Atlanta. Oa, HUNHIGUTT & BELUNGSATH, JOBBERS AND DEALERS IN Cooking and Heating Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces, Mantels, Grates, Iron Pipes, 3b and 38, Comer Peachtree and Walton Sts., ATL-aKTTA.. 13-^. ——o We offer to tlie trade the largest and best selected stock of Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces Gra(t , s> g Iate anJ j ron Mantel, Wood Mantels, Cherry, Mahogony and Walnut of the ’ latest .mu mint oppi Designs b in the market. Bird Cages, e Water Coolers, Re Tubs, Buckets, Brooms, Brushes, Steum I . frigerators, lee Cream Freezers. ipe ant Fittings, Plumbers’Brass Goods, Marble Slabs, Wash Basins, Water Closets, Bath T . ’ Vliaiidcliers ’ Pendants and Brackets, Plain and Stamped Tinware, in fact eve rything kept by first class House Furnishing dealers. Agents for Knowls’ Steam Pump and Hancock’s Inspirator, ntanufaetuiers of Concrete Sewer Pipe and Orna¬ mental Galvanized Iron cornice, door and window heads, in fact everything you wish. Come and see us. HUNNICUTT A BELLINGRATH, aug26tf 36 and 68 Peachtree street, Atlanta, HOME COMFORT ! YOU CAN GET IT! piigf RANGE Matchless Ranges O now being sold by the Wrought Iron Range Company, 1 good cooking, easy cooking and 'l nice cooking, they cannot be ZTvPjt *■ excelled. For durability, econ o • .....DTfly TTY time, fuel, and labhr, y. their equal has never yet been W; q l known. Every Range m warrant ed. \ 1 P^fjGEklu good Salesmen citizen will call upon every of the country and .MouiS.j^J S ive all an opportunty to exam p ine for themsclves> WhOUGHT IRON RANGE COMPANY, NOTICE TS IFARMERS IP YOU WANT TO PURCHASE A COTTON SEED OIL MILL, A Cotton Gin, A Cotton Feeder A Cotton Press, A Cotton Condenser OR A SAW MTT. T. Pulleys, Shafting, Hangers, nnh MILL WORK. Write to U8 for PRICES and DISCOUNTS, We make it TO INTEREST can Y r OUR to buy direct from us./ E. VAN WINKLE & CO., ^a “, T0 Manufacturers, THE Atlanta, Ca ' TRADE - We ei ” TO USERS OF BOILERS Look to Your Interest-1 Have what you need. THE UNION INJECTOR The simplest and best Boiler Feeder made J/r °;h *’“”*• **■ have your orders. New work done in the very best ' V ° Uld be P lea ^ed to CHARLES manner F.LOMBARD PendletonFoundry and Machine Works m; ‘ anJ 527 Kolloek Street, Augusta, Ga. Proprietors cfintml Planing S Mill ATLANTA, GA. Manufacturers of and a****in TVirvrc - Q oe R Blinds, Frames Hamsters, Moulding Newels Tm„w ^ i a* 8 ^ Hardware, etc ’ s iffilf . before buying ! \ P noes elscw here. ’ actorv and yards, 68 Decatur street Atlanta ’ n I.H | J flui ^ t SH . « TIIE ZIG-ZAG METlfOI.~JrOI.YED By MEBC’ENARVm It is a notable fact that t iple of Atlanta and elsewhere art t>eginiii\4 be thoroughly convinced that worthless oJ"»unds become “shaky” at all new lnnovatf. whi 'e an Uon est preparation never feari'o°sition. We do not propose to "wipe out” h»rs, as the field for operation is large, and a ccord to one and all tin* same privileges we C' >’ ■ We are not so far lost to business princes as to denounce any other remedy as a :r .ui >r imitation, or as eont&ining a vegetable pdVn, the effects of which are horrible to template, Tbs alarm need not be sounded. S’ there is ample room for ail declining ami-p»uh. pine-top slop water compounds. If one bottle of I*. B. B. imore valuable in effects than half a dozen <c|ny other prepara¬ tion. we won't get mad aboit. If ten bottles of B. B. B. cures a case of bod poison which others could not cure at all, only proves that B. B. B. is far the best medfee. 20,000 BOT^S living in¬ of B. B B. have been sold nparties side the corporation of A.nta since it was started two years ago ! Why this wonderful sale of. new remedy In so short a time with so littletevertising. It must be confessed that il ibecause B. B. B. has proven Usalf to possessjfiTit in the cure of blood, .-kin and kidney dUtses, Hundred of home certificates a test theivt of oujr claim that in Atlanta and many othr points 11. B B are “on top," and will stay the;. Many persons desire to kno-y how 3. '1 H. ao oil the system By entering the circulation, nidifies the vitta ted hi-.><> i A ’bales, inmases te ed eorpuseles, untai; imcs nil poison, vitalfe and regenara’ea the tlaurfins forces, furnishes he pabulum for rich, new blood, eliminate- a poison through the secretions, and inches te Appetite, while by its wonderful octuiu unai the pores of the skin, tlm kidneys, liver mil -.niduliir system, all effete an i impure mattcr-ls peedlly condue ted from the body, leavingthedood pure, fresh and healthy. By its magical alterative payers, 11 B. It. un¬ loads ihe blood of ull impuii.es. unlocks the jiver, arouses all secretion*, es-ores nature to Its normal condition, uneloids the troubled brain, clears and beautifies tlie complexion, cheers the despondent, streprthens the feeble, calms the disturbed nerves, nd induces quiet and peaceful slumbers. It hi< been in use over twenty-five years as a pr .y D prescription in the south. It is no far-fetC.uj l, foreigi-f'Hin 1 ordream discovered su bterra fioan wonlcr, but is a scien¬ tific and happy combination >f recognized veg¬ etable blood poison agents* effected after many years of constant use and experiment in the treatment of thousands of some of the most appalling cases ol scrofulous syphilitic and taneous bit) >i poisons ever known in the state, resulting iu complete and unparalled cures pronounced incurable cases. Send to Blood Balm, Atlanta, Oa., for a o' their Book of Wonders,* Jrn%, tiled with formation about BKod and Skin D seasc*, ney, Complaints, &cv U i i DO Tibs . wq.U.Ti Those are the words Mr. David nl DeK ilb county, employed iu render ing Ins lostimony. read WIIAT IIE .SAYS. “ B'ght years ago, while living in eta county, my wife, a strong, woman, strained herself from ing. and brought on wli.it termed “fairing of the womb.”' emnprieafod with other female troubles she was reduced at the time I speak to almost a shadow. I had tried all pbysians and nearly all the patent med¬ icines I could hear oi; but she did improve atall: kept goitnig worse, ami ill her, a fit it of desperation, and, luckily for was BRADPIELD’S F3MALE REGULATOR. In one week's time she was relieved and l>y eon inned use of it. she cured sound and well She has since become the mother of two strong, healthy ch l riren. Now, after a lapse of five of uninterrupted health, by her impru fletiee in lilting, nl,e lias brought on the old again, but, strange as it may seem she does not look upon it with that sense ot loathing and horror as might be ex¬ pected, for she says it will not take your remedy long to cure her, and when I suggested getting a physician, she indig¬ nantly replied that as long as she could get BRADFIELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR, She needed no oilier doctor, for, her oi ce, she knew it would cure now. Gratefully yours, r Edward, , DAVID CARR. , vdle, Ga., Jan.2o, 1SS5. Son,! f r our Treatise on the “Health find to any Happiness nudrt-sF. of Women,” mailed free THE Bit A WIELD REGULATOR CO., Box 28, Atlanta, Ga. EraooBE-ggjHK » \ Cs V °°5^4 cz X>^CP TSl • m —o . A BIT TSOI i TONIC t < v fc. nerves Enlivens reculve the newVorct _ mind anti LAD IE S ?remi«fit re * b t te G,Te ™n* s * a *t clear, counterfeiting healthy complexion. only add i’, 0 T Ula , r! ry Of the original. Bo nit ex n.rim perlmeut—get . the Original and Bcst. LIVFR HARTER’S Only Anti CootTiPATiM Pll I Q oil Of strsa«B and useful loformetion. J JR in the IJne of Nature Then is nothingin ! the line of Ma.. - mi sters about that popular L ' l !’, r>r f U met i,-i, tier’s Tinic. is tiaipli the ' ir ' most scientific combination Dossil,^ and tie essential principles of those U | curatives which aet powerful). W’get*. the stomach, liver, and di. o.n kidn le y» But there neither is, and nor "'ill l*, a.\y successful imitation of it. tinni ever getting curing well. those For who had despaired*^ ^ yourself, wifi. la. GEORGIA! RAILROAD STONE MOUNTAIN ROUTP GEORGIA RAILROAD COMPANY Office General Augusta, Manager o'lk 1 /COMMENCING Sept \J the following SUNDAY, Passenger fW Nri,'i® , 1 1 * will be operated : ■“ )( H . FAST LINE. WO. 27 WEST daily. Leaye Augusta... - 7 40 Leave Athens.,... ......... 7 45 BBSS Leave Covington Atlanta......... ...11 38 Arrive 1 00 ••• NO. 28 EAST DAILY. Leave Atlanta-.................. 3 40 35n2 Arrive Athens.................. 8 Arrive Covington................ 4 c, 111 }^ * Arrive Augusta.,.,.............y 10 NO. 2 EAST DAILY. no. 1 west daily _ Lv. AtUnta..800 . , „, inlLv AugustalOhii a “I “ Gainesville 5,55 “ Macon ...7 b “ Do u4Samj “ Miled’v’^y’s! 4 u, m vug 11 WasW’nmoL m Ar Allions....5 20 p prul tu “ .“ “ IVashg’n M ilcd ’ 2 2 20 ? ir. “ Atheiir qiiu^® Ar. Macon...b v ® ■! 2o 1 - iu *n " Gainesville Covng’n 3 .K " “ p y -5 Augusta :i 35 p nil *1SODATION. Atlaig-. .a 35*, ATLANTA At. (Daily except Sundays.) LvCovingt’n 5 40 »m I Lv Atlarta 55 fl PU Ar Atlanta . r.55 am—Ar Coving 810 PH NO. 4 EAST DAILY. NO. 3 WEST DAILY, Lv. “ Cov’gRn AtlautaJS 10 15 21 p m Lv. Augusta 945 „* j! p m Ar. C’ov’gt’n 4 37 Ar. Augusta 5 50 a tu “ Atlanta....G 45 * a Train No. 28 will stop at Lithonm but not at Berzelia. ' No connection for Gainesville on Sun¬ day. Trains no.’s 27 and 28 will stop and re ceive and . passengers to from the toll, wm, stations Thomson, onlj-, -Groveton, Beizelia Hail™ Camak, Urawfordvill, Union Ft, Greensboro Madison Hutlfd,., Social Circle Covington Comers stona Mountain and Decatur. These trainu make close connections lor all points Last and Southeast, West Southwest, Non! and Northwest aud carry Through Sleet, ers between Atlanta ami Charleston r JOHN \V. GREEN, Gen. .Manaver E. R. DORSEY, Gen, Passenger Av'i Joe W. White, G. T. 1>. A. AugustaGa (iee 20 tf Advertising Hates. First insertion (per inch space) 41 DO Each subsequent insertion....! 1 A liberal discount allowed those advtr tising Card of for lowest a longer period than one month contract rates can be l,a on Local application to the Proprietor. Notices 10c. per line. Announcements same as oflier advtr rising. Henry Gaither, >1. D„ A. V. Perry, 11, If W. \V. Eyans, M. D. Drs. Perry & Evans Have formed a co-partnership fqrtlie practice of medicine aud its cvliatenl br; riches in Covington, Oxford ami yi-l cimty. A. Messages IVright’s for one or botli left at br.J. Dr. Evans’s drug store, in Covington, oi residence, in Oxford, will re¬ ceive prompt aiid faithful attention. ' Ualls can be passed over the wiresol the Oxford and Covington telegraph com Pany at any hour, day or night. Dr. Henry (iaither, of Oxford, consult¬ ing surgeon and physician. det‘24 Home Treatment. For Cancer, Catarrh, Neuralgia. Ep ilepsy, and all Blood or Skin Diseases PILES A AD FISTULA, 'I reated succcs.-fully without tba knife. Nervous Debility. I offer no swindling Recipes, but treat successfully and scientifically all preparing my own medicines. I treat the above diseases at 85.00 Per Month, With the exception of Cancer auu Fistula. . M. T. SALTER, M. D., Ttefoi m Dispensatory, Corner Broad and Walton Si*., 18mar f — A fAe-nta ft* Anderson & Hunter HAVE The Cheapest Store in Coving ton. dress Special Bargains in Ladies goods, boots, shoes, do¬ mestics, notions, hardware and groceries. All at Rock Bottom Prices. Large stock of everything you need. All new and fresh goods. Everybody invited to call and examine our goods and prices. Remember the Old Reliable Cheap Store. ANDERSON & HIP TER Ijrpotwv, Or*nnI e WeskneM. 4i«Dorrh<r«, SypkUHIe snd tod Mercurial Affection*. Scientific trestment; b»J« «ure remedies. Dcrontiitfes TrMUcd. Call or write for U*t < * questions to be answered by those desirinfi treatment by f 7* nd ,e * rn MniHhlag vine fro* to Roptor^ their .hostd aeurt It tb«ir is addr^l admntaire. Aestml f * L - l«»ARCK. PmUtsd I*hy.lcl»« Is****** l» Med. * Hnru. lutltsM,»*0 l^en-t at- ttL buccewu*- to Dr. ButU’Dispensary. ’'sUbltohfi *® Stenhenson House; fronting, the pabk, covingtoD, Ga. btephenson, Proprietrew. l l .t:5ir i r2'i.K well far ~ lr k'c sample rooms. Bed rooms hack Good tables. F’ree LOVK’K 8 TKPH HNiOA,