Newspaper Page Text
Strawberry Crates,
Peach Baskets, Etc.
CAE LOAD LOTS ONLY
MILLS AT- MORGAN LAKE, '
DOOTOBTOWN, GA.
Mouldings, Tamed Scroll Work.
The nnttelrb'Mte deafen* will be fnlthfal
I r ud oorwtijr tncMM. W* Ub«
bM» «q«jpps4 mills, mm carry uw Imsm
MociUMMoMditater in Muara dm
d*. Parti wtmum lomber will sera mowy
First Qiass Whoeiwright.
Mr t«| sarvami
atratumiiMir IM »**■ W vara
whlaCy yriam aft* he ar^« oHsteMN. '
Ha pair«i mi w Marr rvi«MM 3M all
ant rfiwl aa" |TM(t *al a
NMul m»j&»
hwmy with the high hat nuisance; for
what dear creature will advertise that
■he is within half a decade of forty
years of age? Oh, cruel, but clever
framer of the bill. “
orange, increases the latter’s intensi
ty, and vice versa.
When two colors accord badly to
gether it is always advantageous to
to separate them by white.
Red and blue accord passably, es
pecially if the red inclines rather to a
scarlet than a crimson.
Green and violet, especially when
light, form a combination preferable
to green and blue.
Orange and greetedo not accord
well. Orange and violet accord pas
sably, yet not so well aa orange and
green.
While gray never produces exactly
a bad effect in its association with
two luminous colors, yet, in common
cases, its assortments are dull.
Red and yellow accord pretty weD,
especially if the red be a purple-red,
rather than scarlet, and if the yellow
is rather greenish than orange.
Yellow and green form an agree-
posed, and that it can bt shorn of
most of its terrors if taken in hand in
season.
“I have had the yellow fever twice,”
said he to the other, “and I certainly
did not die of it. It is generally
caught from exposure to night air,
when the moisture saturates the cloth
ing, and the microbes thus get into
the system. Precautions against
such exposure can readily be taken.
If, however, the disease attacks a
man he ought to be taken in hand at
once. The symptoms, are unmistak
able, Your legs go out from under
you and pains run up the back of
your neck and bead. When I have
sound waves run together that three or
four words are recorded upon one inch
of surfaoe of the wax cylinder, end it
takes a very strong magnifying glass
to mako them out.
The Samoan Disaster.. ’
The news that the American and
German fleets had been wrecked in
the harbor of Apia is confirmed by
a dispatch from Admiral Kimberly.
A.W.DEELE
CONNECTICUT
-Boston Gazette-
Mrs. Grant's Donation.
New York, March 14.—Secretary
Oliver Downing, ofthe New York
Citizen's Committee to aid the Na
tional Confederate Soldier’s Home at
Austin, Tex., has received a letter
from General Alfred Pleasanton en
closing money, and another letter
from Mrs. Grant enclosing a check
for$a 5 . The letter is as follows:
Oliver Downing. Secretary, etc.
Dear Sir: Gen. Gnat’s kindly fed-
ing toward the Southern people,
Yellow Pine Lumber.
This Xorznal mad Industrial School Is
conducted by the
Am. Visionary Association
*Pnr ijtrfml itnfjm- J «*i«
M AtfCPACTI’BSBS Of-
fortbe eotoredjpople, h to give s thor-
English Education
though they were bis enemies, is
Mrs. Grant’s reasons for rending the
check. She wishes you success' in
your efforts. Fun D. Cuxr,
For Mrs. Gjuxt.
Despite the &ct that women last,
wear thin show, and expor thex
health in a dosm other wijs, the ay-
erage longevity of the female rex is ia-
ereasing. It 11 doubtless dne to their
cbstiaancy.
right to bed end givea a tumbler of
hot gin and water and fifteen grains
of calomel Then he is corered up.
This treatment will generally 1«W>
perspiration in a few hours. If you
can get up a perspiration wiihin six
or eight hours the patient is saved. I
He will be sick for two weeks and be
esa avafl to reader that brief apes of
tiate sufieient for the heavy Memi-
WEties «ith which it is weighed.
Tee loath will rejoice at the rqx-
tion of Murat Halstead, as Minister to
Genoa it. He ka, never missed aa
opportunity to malign and .lander this
section.
....
able combination. The arrange
ment of yellow end blue is more
agreeable than that of yellow and
AFRICAN EX-
PLORER.
weak, but will recover. Before 1
entered the navy I was in command
of vessels in the West Indian trade,
and on one occasion I had twenty -
eight men down with the fever, but I
carried them all through safely and
didn’t have any doctor on board,
either. But I took them in h‘and £t
the very .first indication ofthe dis
ease.”— New York Press.
A Real Farmer.
Cuming ioto town early this week,
ws passed two wagons containing three
bales, cash, of clean looking oottoa.
Th^ wagons were in £iat-c ! «ss order,
ani t-.oy were pulled by f*t mules.
The entire lay-cut was the property of
Billy Dickson, who lives at home. and
farms at the cane place. He doesn’t
know the flavor of Western food pro
ducts. Instead of getting the mtr-
Going Home to Die.
[ List Y» T edeesday morniDg mei ages
wtri fliiihcd over the S. F. & W. rail
road to clear the track fora special that
was to leave ThotnaavUe at 0 o’clock.
This special was n train which had
non interference is the American j
policy. The dark skinned islanders
are at liberty to fight as much as
they please, as the Germans who
saved themselves from the wreck
baldly took time io carry arms or
munitions of war ashore.
The loss ofthe best vessels ofthe
old navy before the construction of
the new, has more than fairly begun
WHAT A SOUXD LOOKS LIKE.
A Peep at the Cylinder of One
of Edison's Phonographs.
From, tbo Boston Globe.
So many queer things have been
dono by Bcience id recent, years, say* *
Now York World writi-r, that the pub-
* Ho mind is prepared for almost anything
—meu fljiog about in the air, people
Spring
Emin's Career in Equatorial
Africa—Stanley’s .Search
for Him.
Paine’s if®®
Celery Compound
From tbe New York Tribune-
Emin Pacba is an Austrian by
birth. He'was educated as a .physi-
cian, and was one of Mahdt’s advis
ing engagement with his on tea to
dn that ft him, in ooauderziioo of
honest and ia'.ei i zret treatment bring
given it, and neither ho nor it hon
«v r violated the understanding. The
result is, that to is never oot of hone-
—mbs used joat na pleases him. He
can off rl eto reap bin Segno at ths
Gotten mi oil true and ths bagging
trust, because the cotton tbit ho raises
belongs to him. When nil the Han-
exk farmers stand upon Ms platform a
large measure cf prosperity will return
to' the county. This is the tree sad
the living way, and the wise will walk
in i-. It is agricultural gcapoL Hoar
it, ye mortgaged sinners.—Sparta Iah-
maelite.
health is wealth.
Dr. E. 0. West's Nerve and Drain Treatment,
a guarantor a specific for Hysteria. PI ill ness.
Convulsion*. TtU, Herrons Neuralgia, Head
ache. Nervoua ProstraUon caused by the nee
of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulnesa. Mental
Depression, Softening of tbs brain resulting
in Insanity ahd leading to misery, decay and
death, premature old age. bafremnoea. lose of
power In either sex. Involuntary looses and
Spermatorrhoea caused by ovnr-exertlun ut
gciauus «uw.
wire and sleep done away with as a
waste of time. .These dreams have not
y yet been realised, but recent cL-cov-
ery has enabled uj to'' see a sound
Through the phonograph, looking down
the throat of the machine, you can see
a laugh, a cry, a whistle, a strain, ot
music, tho ring of a bell, the bark of a
dog, thunder and the whistle of a boat
on the North river. Tfcefo it is all
recordei on a sheet of wax, in a series
of little dents or holes nude by tho
point of a needle, andwithout the use
of a powerful magnifying glass you
cannot distinguish any differenca be
tween t he sounds as recorded in the
phonog 'tpb. Nobody—not even a
Ecientisi—would hive tbought such a
thing possibD fifteen years ago, and
that is why it was discovered by acci
dent, and not &s a result of a long se
ries of logical scientific deduction?, and
after it was discovered and perfected,
science has stepped in and famished an
-explanation of its phenomena.
Mr. Edison was, one day, expert
men ting with a telephone, and,
ing the regular beat of tho thin iron
diaphragm in harmony with the sounds
of words, he wondered if these could
not bo recorded. To the diaphragm
whieh performs the samo function in
tho telephone as the drum docs in the
ear, he fixed a little arm with a needle
point in its end, and when this
going by seme stood it marked its
progress on a sheet, of tinfoil or wax
* whieh passed constantly before
When the sound oeased and the wax
or tinfoil again passed under the
' die, setting it and tho diaphrag
motion, tho procets was reversed, and
the original sounds n\v< duicd.
This explains the mcchaniea! prin
ciple of the machine,bat doesn't enlight
en anybody as to the nature of a s
and why it should make a aerie;
dots rather than a long, undu 1
scratch on the wax. Here conic
the theory of scund wave'-, upon which
tho telephone is* bunded. Accordin'
to this theory, u scund of any kind
from the gentle breathe of a babe to
the report of a cannot—is no'hing
more or less than an auitatio
air whieh sets a lot of little i
in motion, just ns a pebble thrown into
a still sheet of still water creates
cetsive ring waves, which widen
they reach the thorp. The sound
waves are like the waves in the ocean,
and can undergo but two changes, i
being larger or smaller, or far apart c
close together, and out of these 6imp!
elements is made the infinite sound
known to life, so delicate is the mechan
ism of tho ear in detecting their varia
tions. Many of the people think the
phonograph writes short-hand, probab
ly because that is called phonography,
and is a system of scund wriiioj
Short-band, however, is not true phi
nograpby, as it docs not write all
sounds, but only some sound*, and i.
really a system of making rapid piot
urea of the dozen or more elemental
letters, which form tho skeletons of
words. The phonograph, on the other
ha^d, can take anything.
It oatohts some words better than
others. Tho most difficult
words containing tho letter It, because
that letter makes more soued waves
than any other letter. All the vowels
mako fower sound waves than the
sonants. Curiously enough, loud nois
es do not disturb the air and mako so
many waves as somo quieter ones,
tho only differecca being that they
stronger waves, a difference of quality
rather than quantity. A sound having
a certain number and kind of-waves
atmospheric disturbances agitates tbe
diaphragm of the phonographs, and
this littlo plate is so delicate that they
catch every one of them. When the
machine is turned back, and it is set in
motion from tho other side by the
needle dropping into tha holes
already made, the samo motion of the
diaphragm takes place, and it in turn
creates 6cuna waves exactly similar to
the original ones, and which strike the
ear in the same way. If you put your
ear to a drum in a room where there is
any noise you will get the same re-pro-
duotion of a sound. So closely do the
is a serious matter to me uu»cu
States. The loss of the Trenton,
Vandalia ane Nipsic and the forced
sale of another ship in Chinese wa
ters this year, because she was una
ble to come home, reduced by al
most half the number of vessels
available for foreigh service. Until
some of the ships of modern type
now in course of construction are
completed American.citizens in half
savage countries will have to depend
upon their own resources or the kind
offers of friendly European officers
for the protection of their interests
when assailed by violence, as was
lately done in China.—Telegraph
A New Virtue in Peanuts.
Under date of Raleigh, March 19,
Rev. Dr. Theodore B. Lyman, Epis-
opal bishop ol North Carolina, has
written the following lettor to the
Raleigh Daily News and Courier:
I think I have made a very valu
able discovery, and I am anxious
that others should also enjoy the
benefit of it For nearly two years
I have been suffering greatly from
sleeplessness at night, and frequently
have not been able to sleep more
than one or two hours during the
night. I have tried a great number
ot proposed remedies, some of which
have helped me a little, but not for
any length of time. A little more
than a fortnight aeo, while staying at
the house of a friend in the country,
my pood hostess brought into the
parlor, quite late in the evening,
bountiful of freshly roasted peanuts.
As I am very fond of them, when they
are not too much cooked, 1 ate quite
freely of them, and soon alter retired
to bed. I found the next morning
that I had enjoyed the best sleep
had experienced for over a month
I attributed this at once to the pe;
nuts, and determined to try them
again the following evening. I did
, and also drank a glass of fresh
sweet milk after I had finished tfc
peanuts. That night I slept still
better, and now, for a fortnight,
hait partaken of the peanuts and the
milk every night, and have not only
slept remarkably well, but have also
fully recovered from a slight attack
of indigestion which had troubled me
before. I now find that peanuts,
carefully roasted and not overdone
so as to be .at all burnt, are surely
remedy for sleeplessness and also for
that form of indigestion which
of the producing causes of sleepless
ness.
“There is a popular impression
that peanuts are indigestible, but
have never found them so, unless
they were too much roasted, or had
been roasted many days before.
When too much cooked, or when
stale, they certainly are indigestible^
but when carefully roasted and fresh
they promote digestion. They should
be eaten shortly before going to bed,
and not more than a half pint should
be taken. They should be roasted
before they are shelled, and shelled
only as they are eaten. A half pint
of shelled nuts would be too many.
I commend this remedy, with great
confidence, to those who are afflicted
with insomnia, particularly if indiges
tion is in part the cause of it. The
peanut is a very valuable article of
food when carefully roasted and par
taken ot in moderation. I hope
none of my readers will imagine that
I have started a peanut farm, and
am wishing to cieate a boom in that
article but I shall be rejoiced if what
I have written should be the means
of bestowing on any others the great
benefit which I have derived from
this simple agency.”
Where Lent is Kept in Ear
nest.
From tlio St. Louis Republican.
Nowhere in Europe is Lont kept as
rigidly as it is in Russia. There,
the faithful cat oeither meat, eggs,
nor butler during tbe entire forty days.
Even ia cooking, oil is used instead of
baiter or Urd, and not even the child
ren tre allowed to drink milk. Oq the
day before Easter nothing is eaten, and
just before midnight the people all 'go
to church, bearing with them provis
ions of every variety. At the stroke
of twelve the church, which has been
previously kept in darkness, is sudden
ly illuminated, and then, after the food
has bc-cn blessed, the eating begins and
ihe people satisfy their hunger before
leaving the sacred edifice. Oo Easter
Sunday, everybody has the privelegeof
saluting whoev« r he may chance to
meet, with three ki-scs on tho check.
Even the emperor himself is not ex
empt frem this custom, and it was the
custom in former years for the ezir to
walk abroad on that day to receive the
embraces of his people, bnt this custom
has been discontinued by the present
Emperor Alexander, who is a/raid of
being killed by tho nihilists,and does’nt
oare to court pubiibity in such a mac-
Colors That Harmonize.
Red and violet do not accord
well.
Black never produces a bad effect
when it is associated with two 'lumi
nous colors.
Green and blue produce an indif
ferent effect, but better when the col
ors are deep.
Blue, when placed by the side of
Legislation Against the High
Hat.
California appears to bo resolved to
ti da away with the high-
hat nuisaccj in her theatres, for u
read that before the legislature there,
bill has been iatrodneed, which opens
thus Eummarily: “Section 1. It
shall be unlawful for any spectator in
aoy public place of amusement to wear
a covering for the head which shall
reach more than three inohes above the
head or more than three inches beyond
the circumference of the head; and
any person wearing such covering for
the head shall be gnilty of a misde
meanor and shall be fined in a sum
not less than five dollars, or more than
t3n dollars, or be imprisoned in the
county jail not less than two days,
more than six days; provided that this
act shall not apply to females over thir
ty-five years of age.” It is hard to be
lieve that this U serious, bnt it ia so
given in print However, it affords
lovely woman an opportunity to have
her own way still, by paying ten dol
lars for the privilege, and if lovely
woman wants to wear a bat after her
own heart, the fine will not stand in
the way of her gratifying herself.
The fact that women over thirty-five
years of age are exempted from the
provision of the act is a deep strobe
founded on a knowledge of woman's
human nature, and this will be more
effective than any money fine, in doing
prime minister was dismissed on the
eve of the outbreak of the last Rus
so-Tuikish war, Emin took refuge in
Asia, and finally made his way, by
way of Soaknn, with a caravan, to
Khartoum, where be arrived in very
reduced circumstances. Gen. Gor
don made him a storekeeper, and he
served some time at Lada. After
1877 he became surgeon-in-chiel on
Gordon’s staff, serving , about four
years. He kept himself busy all the
time attending to his routine busi
ness, accumulating scientific .collec
tions,' writing elaborate papers for
European societies and undertaking
delicate "missions to Uganda and
Unyore. He is an expert linguist,
Turkish, Arabic, German, French,
Italian and English being familiar
languages to him, as well as many of
the African dialects. When Gordon
became governor-general of the Sou
dan he sent Emin to rule over the
equatorial provinces. Ip three years’
time he drove out the slave traders
from a populous region and convert
ed a deficiency of revenue iuto a sur
plus. He conducted the govern
ment on the lines marked out by
Gen. Gordon, and was equally mod
est, disinterested and conscientious.
When the Mahdi’s rebellion broke
out a governor-general of another
stamp was at Khartoum. Emin’s
warning from the remote south passed
unheeded and disasters followed,
ending in Gordon’s death. Emin
remained at his post, neglected and
almost forgotten. No continuous
narrative of Emin’s hardships and
adventures in all these years in the
eqi^toVial provinces has been received
in any quarter, It is known that he
had 4,009 troops at the. outset, that
he organized auxiliary forces of na
tive soldiers, that he was constantly
engaged in warfare with surrounding
tribes, that his ammunition and money
ran low and that in the face of many
difficulties he maintained his posi
tion and governed the country well.
The last European who visited him
before Stanley’s arrival last year was
Dr. Junker, who parted from him at
Wadelai on Jan. 1,1886. Since then
communications from him have been
irregular and unsatisfactory, and
about the last was dated Dec 2, 1887,
at which time Stanley had not reached
him.
Stanley started on his expedition
to relieve Emin early in 1887, but
it was not until June that he was able
to reach the Aruwimi. His journey
thence to Wadelai was a gallant
struggle against seemingly insuper
able obstacles, and it was not until
some time in January, 1888, that he
succeeded in reaching Emin
found Emin and his party in a fairly
goed position and determined to
resist the Mahdi’s demand that he
evacuate the provinces. Stanley,
about the middle ot April, left Wade
lai to return to his rear guard, from
which he had had no news, and he
urged Emin to accompany him. The
latter would not leave, however, so
long as the country was threatened
by the Mahdi. Soon after Stanley’s
return to the Aruwhim in August,
x888, he again made preparations
for rejoining Emin, and when las
heard from he was on the return
march with a new relief column.
Since then there have been conflict-
Grady in Albany.
Every one speaks in glowing terms
of Henry Grady’s address before the
Albany Chautauqua 00 Thursday.
The News and Adveriser pays him
a high compliment in its notice of
ihe address. Speaking of Georgia,
Mr. Grady, said:
••My friends, what wc need it seems
to me is to love Georgia, not .to love
the name, but to love the soil; to pin
our faith to' the old red hills and love
the soil, the dead body of our old
mother, to love the mountains that
are her springing breasts, the acres
that hold her treasures, the dimpled
valleys in which her beauty rests, the
rivers that bind her about as a silver
girdle, the brooks which ring her
happy laughter, the winds that sing'
her songs of lullaby and of peace.”
Referring tojhe fidelity of the
slaves during the war, he said that
this had never been understood. He
spoke feelingly of the slgjre who
nightly slept at the door of his moth
ers chamber to protect the home of
his master who was fighting for his
bondage and slavery. His allu
sions to the tender love of
his old black mammy wfib
rocked him ia his cradle and drew him
o’, so to her bosom to steal from bia in-
faccy its cares and troubles. Chasing
hi* tears into smiles was peculiarly pa
thctic and eloquent. The b'qck boy
wh j grew up by his tide, and whose
love for his young master was of that
pure, sincere type, elicited his warm
sympathy as he sees him going through
in a sbiftle.-s, sbamblibg manner.
Progress of the Alabama Mid
land.
Last Friday the temporary bridge
was completed across the Flint at
this city, and Saturday morning the
construction traia of ihe Alabama
Midland railroad crossed over, lay
ing track as it proceeded. Thus^for
the first time since the foundation of
the world did a locomotive engine
and train of cars, awake the slumber
ing echoes in the western portion of
Decatur county.
By sundown on Saturday a mile of
ir^c had been laid, and tc-day the
whistle of the locomotive is heard
seven miles west of Bainbridge in
the direction of Montgomery,
the middle of next month the road
will have been completed to Gor
don, Ala; on the CWlttahoochee—a
distance of thirty miles. The track
laying is done by Henry 0. Griffin &
Co. This firm consists of men who
were raised in Bainbridge.
James M. Brown & Co., general
contractor for the building of the en
tire road, are to be congratulated
upon the rapid progress they are
making with their great work,
of their sub contractors are live,
ergetic men who delight in pushing
the work forward. Upwards of 2,
000 men are at work along the line,
and the construction is going on ev
erywhere between this city and Troy.
Brown & Co., have built railroads
all portion^ ot the United States,
having been many years in the busi
ness, and it goes without saying that
the Alabama Midland will be one
the best they ever constructed.—
Bainbridge Democrat.
The Future American Empire.
•Queen Victoria, in her speech at
the opening of parliament, said:
‘I have consented to take part in
conference with Germany and
America, at Berlin, upon the Samoan
question.” 'Here is a curious exam
pie of the complete surrender, which
has been made to this country of the
word America. It is now applied
to (he people of other nations only
to the great Union of American
states. To be an American, there
fore, one must be a citizen of the
most powerful republic that ever ex
isted. No one thinks of calling a
resident of Canada or Mexico an
American. The people of the Uni
ted States, 'by their achievements,
have made themselves stand 1or the
entire continent. Perhaps, this is an
unconscious admission ou the part of
the rest of the world that it is the
manifest destiny ot this country to
rule all the territory, from the pole to
the isthmus and from ocean to ocean.
—Chicago America.
Between Sentence and Execu
tion.
ing reports concerning both Emin* ^ rom Blackwood’s Magazine.
and Stanley. The latest news tends
to confirm the reports received late
m February, which % stated that Emin
had defeated the dervishes with heavy
loss in the Bahr-el-Gazel province,
which is on the north of Emin’s prov-
ince. This victory was gained some
time last summer, probably before
Stanley had made much headway on
his return journey. Early this month
it was reported from Zanzibar that
Stanley was marching rapidly toward
the east coast of Africa.
Treatment for Yellow Fever.
Capt. Rockwell of the Yantic,
which is soon to sail into Haytian
waters, says that yellow fever is not
The rule in Ragland, even in cases
where there is no doubt that tbe sen
tence will be carried out, allows three
Sundays only to intervene between tbe
trial and the execution, to that if a man
is tried on a Saturday he haa very little
more than a fortnight allowed to pre
pare; but where there is hope of
reprieve, the delay of the announcement
that the man is to die till within a few
hours of his execution, not only adds
m torturing element to his punishment,
whieh he has not legally incurred, but
it limits the time of his real pre
paration to the one last agitating day,
when friends come to take a final leave
of him. The matter is not one of minor
importance, as was I
YOUR HOME
IS NOT FURNISHED
WITHOUT ONE.
MTANXAII.i
, ThMIMld H4»«i
p wtik lw iMraiurnt* >*YO»
Each boa contains on* month'* treatment,
or si 1 boxes for
receipt of pile*.
WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES
any ca**. With each order received
•r*lx boxes, accompanied with $5, we
.1 t>>a purchaser oar written gusran-
the money If the treatment doe*
Guarantee* issued only by
. Sole
Elderly gent—I am eighty' years
old, young man, and I don’t recol
lect ever telling a lie. The young
man—Well, you can’t expect your
memory to be reliable at that age.-
New York Sun.
THE BEST
Direct Route!
New Fast Mail,
MONOW ROUTE
Universally and dceerredly popular.
OHN B.CAMqX, Vice-preset and Oen'I Uyr
W. H. KCDOEL, Oen’I Traffic Manager,
B. O. MoOO&MICK. Ocn.l Pasoenfer iff
B. W. GLAD I NO. Pasoencer and Freight Aft.,
158 Broad St.. Thomaarllla Go.
liai late lit. Go.
J. A. TATTERSON k SONS,
Managers.
iE°BdWooi Mr
Shingles,
Pickets,
Orange Boxes.
Pear Crates.
STATE OF GEORGIA—Count, of Ttiumi
o the IIonobable Tiic SrrEBioa Cor
ok 8aii> Coi’xty :
The petition of W. II. 1’srkins^ William
Jennings, Alice Jennings, K. W. Ulsding
snd George Fesrn, respectfully showetb
tbst they, with such persons as may be
hereafter associated with them, desire to be
incorporated under the name of “Jennings
Nursery Co.,"with a c&ptlal stock of Twenty
Thousand Dollars (f20,000.00), to be divided
into sbsres of One Hundred Dollars each;
with tbe privilege of hereafter increasing
the same to Fifty Thousand Dollars ($M),
9.00), snd with the right to hare snd u«
comtnpn seal, to acquire, sell snd lest
in the county of Tbomsi
real property in the county of Tbotnaa, i
said State, or elsewhere. Said incorporatic
» P«i ...
years, with the privilege of renewing tbe
liration of said term “*
at tbe
corporation
plac< *'
Btat
i’etitioners further show, that the busi
ness intended to be carried on by said A»
sociation, is that of propagating, cultivating
and selling fruit trees, fruits, dowers,
„,i;
nlng fruits, vegetables and berries. And
tbe more cflcctuslly to carry on and trans
act said business, I’etitioners pray that
they bo authorised and empowered to creel
warehouses, storage roonja, dyyiog
box sad crate factories, tramways and such
other appliances and machinery as mav ‘ -
necessary to tbe proper conduct of said be
ness in the town of Tbomasviile or elsewh<
in said state. Petitioners further pray that
corporation „
ate loads .execute mortgages, to Issue bond'
to auch amounts for such periods of timi
and with such condition* of redemption a
majority of the stockholder io said corpo-
itinm ■trip hereafter determine. Petition-
era further show that of the capital atock
of twenty thousand dollars (120,000 ) si ready
subscribed, f|0,000 baa been paid ir
and is now available fur the purposes c
said corporation. IleapectfulSr aubnjUjed,
Alice Jkbbixus,
Clkbk'a Office, Sir
Petitioners
. . , ...... Cottr,
Thomas Co., Ga.,Mab. 4, lSb9.(
I, J. W. Groover, Clerk of tbe Superior
Court in and for said county, hereby ccrcti-
fy tbst lb« above and foregoing ir - *-- -
ectract
copy of the original petitfor incorpora'
tion of file in this office, and a true eslrsci
from the minates of this court.
Witness my hand and seal.
J. W. GROOVER, C. ». C
Fife & Beverly
MEIGS, GEORGIA.
—DtkLZSM 1%
General Merchandise,
ABO ALL S!BM*OV
Builders’ 8 applies,
Lumber, etc,
W* am prepared to famish amjttnog » m
ed in the Lcxxm List, "
Dev. I.
Mslhrru iloi
“TCu’.. . .
5,000 lienee and OrssM sold InM sear.
JooOMrmark fee tbU rear. l-*wrr rHcenl
Baum Instruments! Raaler Terns* and
■adornments will ant- ne thin to-
• f II.ut,. Tfi t.u..ri4lrJ
Itu tuisst >~1», *- tgtaa**
h ear cosy «*t im IIIs.1.
CAHI1 tansy dewr- —ot nerded. IV* have
AWANkM^kh. IVITHort **• *»»•**
e—er— obtain mm Instrument
nr Price, in—kina rlthrr MONTHLY,
QTARTXBI i nr YP.AKI.Y PAYMENT**
•Mil paid for. meanwhile <-e)«)lsi t
N* cBtertlntatr price*. NsliWl. No Par*
■Hare nf alltmah paid If Idee-llmcaucmw.
•at h* pmaii t!y paid. Pestrurt perfectly
FAIR and ltqi7ITABI.lt. pr«t«wtlnw par*
hnncrafrwm mil Impaslllea er toes.
Write an aad ere will tmlut —t .the wrap la
l a 8a* Inelmmmt
Meet VPo—drrfhl hnmwln* f*r Knit IWBg.
Better than any before
Largely Bedneed. Notice three MPKt'lAlf
Upright Piano o*i» 9200
7S Odavo*—Overgrows iV*ie-Thraa
String*—Rosa wood—Fully
—dwocl Tone. Cktoi-gw lltce.WHMl.
Parlor Organ o«*‘* 9BB
Four Beta Boeds-M ****~2™t*M^*
llondautoo Uuo. OiiaU*<K 1‘rlcc, §909.
Stool,Oovor, Inwtruotor.Wlutlo *ooh
and oil Freight Paid.
Other AprtMi Offers jtui u Urptti matk
South to choo* /roes. TES iiKASD UJk KHM.
80(1 Different Nfyfe*. Om sail all hvjrrs. Writs
(or catalogues, circulars, and «>»?!; «ur rn#
paper "Sharjfs and Flats," pftinj/JW! and ntnuMf
or it low riuoBi.
OCR EASY TJUUtS.
O.MC PHP K OILV.
tiAftowmis mrrriTd.
mat lanTHCMBsm
AU. Fit RIGHT PAID,
IS DAYS' TIIIAI*
MOSKY BAA *» ALL.
LUDDEN& BATES
SOUTKM BUSK! MlUJf. IHMMN, M.
Robert Bearden
MOUI.TltlK, CA.,
Dry Goods, Groceries, Shoes
Hats, Hardware,
AND Al.l. hlMH OK
Farmers 9 Supplies,
bn ugh i lnt»
rone!
highest j.rb
produce.
KRISMUS.
WHEEL W RIGH1
•.—AND
BLACKKSMITH
A~ MoDou.gaJ.ci
daring disputed *« h» (Mere* In tin n*om*«
Mavrfiran'i, has wyamd aefcvpaa Madmen *t {
next to rnUreml, wh* • L* >• yrej4i« to
Any and all Kinds of Work