The Thomasville times-enterprise. (Thomasville, Ga.) 1889-1904, June 17, 1893, Image 2

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Tto Weekly Timss-Enterprise. TUOilASVILLE, GA„ ! ; ' ■ , Join Triplett, Editor and Manager. Saiusday, Junk _i 7, 1893. Furope is in a stale o( armed pcacr. THE FIRST CARLOfD-OF MELQt-S Where and How It Was Loaded— Diamond Cuts Diamond. I fv " ; Sam Jones wants to hang all the bar keepers in Atlanta. . They are running Chicago "wide open,” Sunday included. Brunswick is pulling herself together. Bruaswick will be all right. The Georgia *• watermill jun” is on the move- It carries both consola tion and colic within its rind. Georgia bankers demand the repeal of the Sherman-law. And about everybody else does also. It will be a wonder if the responsi bility for the collapse of Ford’s opera house is fixed upon any one person. Harry Hill’s bond has been fixed at $12,000. Some people think that Harry is safer in ja-1 than he would be Mrs. Frank Leslie is now in a po sition to write feelingly and knowing ly on the subject: Is Marriage a Failure? Somehow the fisu liars do not ap pear to be so numerous this year as usual. They must be in Washington fishing for an office. Geaeral Gordon, will, by tnvitation, deliver a lecture on the closing scenes of the war at Appoma-tox, and the characters of Lee a«.d Grant in New York at an ear y day. “What sort ot a girl is she?” "Oh, she is a mi.-a -villi a mission.” “Ah!” “And her mission is seeking a man with a mansion.’’—Brooklyn Lite. , :-‘b 3 They tsfcis at Kcras.” I The repo ts from all Ex Mayor Hull, of Macon, writes a salty card in the Evening News to editors Allen and l’rice of the Tele graph. Somebody will get hurt if this loolishness is not f-topped. Georgia is getting to be the leading fruit state in the union. She already , ranks highest of the whole sisterhood of states in the matter of raising and shipping melons. Great is Georgia. Every pubic building in Washing ton is now being inspected. Some say that even the capitol is insecure. That collapse of Ford’s opera house has stirred things up in Washington. The Hartwell Sun toys: "We’ve got six infantas at our house with picnic appetites, and it costs like forty, but we get up a reception for them infantas three tim3s every day, and we are not cutting up about it.” The defense in the Lizzie Borden case scored a strong poi.vt when the court ruled out the stenographic notes of Miss Borden’s statement made at the inquest. It looks as if Ex-Governor Robinson would c his client. tt is said that the railroads are dis appointed with the pe .pie about the small numbers going to the World’s fair. It is iu order to add, that the people are disappointed with the railroads in reference to the high rates charged. Mr. Fessenden, of Connecticut, member of the republican national executive committee, gives the latest explanation as to what caused the defeat ot the republican party iu the last campaign. lie says it was “dry rot.’* That's about the beat cxplana tion we have heard. Some exciting scenes occurred while the inquest to investigate me death oi clerks in Ford’s opera house was being held in Washington yesterday. Col. Ainsworth, chief of the bureau, was loudly denounced. “Hang h.ra,’' was shouted by hundreds of clerks. Ai is- worth was present, but never flinched. A noteworthy feature t f ihe opening of the trial of L ; zz e Borden for mur der at Fall Rtver, Mass., the other day, was the offering of a prayer by local pastor, in which he asked “that innocence might be revealed and guilt exposed, for the gbrv ot the Almighty name and well-being of this world.’ —Ex. The Atlanta Journal quotes a South Georgia paper as follow*: It was really interesting to an out sider to watch the scramble for the first oar of melons. At four o’clock p. 111. on Saturday last * caucus of melon growers, buyers and . railroad solicting agents was held in Pelham and it was decided then to ship a car Tuesday* but all is fair in love a^d- waY and the melon business, so MiScra- Wilkes aud Nelson decided • to sica’ march on the boys and load a car by daylight Monday morning. The unusual stir iu the melon 11 near Meigs Monday morning l)-„lure daylight caused Hon. James Vtek smell a very large sized rat, to be mounted his hor*e, which probably bad previously belonged to a news paper office, as he had the impression of several styles of largo tyi>o 1 anatomy, and into Pelbaui bo caiue with the speed of the wiad to his associates of the AUauta route of what was going on and to n rangements to rout© the car t tination over the Central ol Georgia, Western and Atlantic, and Nashville, Chattanooga and St. L mis. His coming into towu so early anus’* ed suspicion in the minds ol the oppo si tion so when J. R. Forrest* r J,., ol the Atlanta route, lett Meigs with 1 flags out McDonald fo iow.d wit gray and Professor Kynn with lvd, and wilh break-neck pted they wtn iuio the Sapp turn ;u. and got Mr John Sapp to load u car. Iu - ik< meaulime Mr. McDonald, local slick ing agent lor the Alabama Midland wired Captain Ward aud Mr. Lc Mcljendon that three cars ot melon were being loaded on the C. divis.oi aud to send a special to get them. At the time for the arrival u the passenger train Monday morula] Messrs. Wilkes & Nelson only v.ante< two wagon loads to fiohh loadiiv their car, which was loaded and s I- for 8250 before 0:30 a. in. Soon a fie dinner time the Alabama Midlan- ipccial lrorn Thomasville arrived i Pelham, and fiudiug no melons ther went to Sapp’s turnout and got the car ot melons there and started it to its destination with growers, buyers and soliciting agents on lop of the er With J. H. Ryan as standard bearer they proposed to make the boys Meigs feel sick. So with banncis and yells Ibating in the breeze they went through Meigs at a forty mile rate. Bat the smoke of the locomoli'.e was too much for the boys, and so they decided to get ofl the top of the car and go into the cab. Ail succeed ed in doing this but Professor J. il. Ryan, who got only to the bottom ol the ladder which was o‘n the aide of the car. He looked at the prospect from both sides as wed as he could, hangiug on to the car, and decided that the melon business needed h:s services too badly for him to risk jus neck in an effort to'iid himseit ot the evil effect of the smoke, eo back i:e went on top of the car aud a&i him down on the root ot the car to medi tate on the uncertainties of iite and the trials of a melon man. But he says that he is satified with the result. ‘So mote it be.” The first car load ed went up by way of Albany und was rigged out with flags and bore the inscription on both sides of the car, which might be read for a mi e, 'First Car Georgia Melons,” from J. Ii Forrester, Jr, & Co., Pelham, Ga , to William Fischer, S ms A C<*. Columbus, Ohio, via Central of Geor gia, Western and Atlantic und Nash ville, Chattanooga and Sc. Louis railroad. "he ssfclitntnjLcf this old, but tvu jijtv/ . song, has touched aod made ten d** many beasts. At the commence ment/cf the Girls High School in At lanta, cue"of tlie pupils recited *Wist ; comb Riley's verses on this song There jj a rural flayer about them which will raoislcn the eyes of som«rwho perhaps heat J them in the long ago, at aime !oj school house. Here are the'lines: Vs 1I13 canonist thing in creation, WJ'Ct.cv< r I hear that old song, Da They. V, iss Ms at Home” I’m so-bothered, My lilt' re- ms ns«slio:t asdt’s long!— 'or er’ry.ilcug 'pears llko adxackly ' Ifpcarcd in the years past and gone,— Vyhen I slatted out sparkin’ at twenty, And had my first necserclier on! Though l!*n » riukelder, older and grayer Ki^lu u )\r than my parents were then, You {trike up that song, “Do They MissMe,"' A* d I’m jtfst a youngster again I I ’ui a t taming hack lhar in the lurries A-wicbtn’ for evening to come, And a-w hisperin’ over and over them Words “Do They Miss Me at llomtf” Vou tee Martha Ellen she sung it, The first time I heard it, and so, As she was my very first sweetheart, It reminds me of her don’t you know— flow her face ost to look in the twilight As I tuck her to spellin'; and she •> Hep* a-hum min’ that song tel I ast her, riao-blauk, ef she ever missed mel * I can shut my eyes now as you say it, And hear nci low answeiing words; And then the glad chirp Of the. crickets, As clear as the twitter of birdr, And the dust iu tt-e road like velvet. Auu the ragweed an i fennel and the grass Is us1 sweet ns tho scent of the lillies Of Eden ol old, as we pass* •‘Dj Th.-y Miss Moat Home?” Singitlawcr— Aud so ter—and sweet as the breeze rvowiered our path with the snowy h'.to bloom of the old locos’ tree*! lh.* whippoorwill he’p you sing it. rid the echoes 'way over the hlHJ 'iu moon boolges oat in a chorus Ra< The original manuscript of “Sweet Bye aod Bye,” just as it was penciled off in 1861, at Elkton, Wis., by S. Filmore Bennett, has been framed fox exhibition {ft the World’s fair. An affidavit as to its genuineness, signed by Mr. Bennett, goes with it.—Augus ta Evening News. Sam Jones carries a level head. He thus refers to the pittance doled out to the judges of Georgia for their sup port : It is an outrage on the motto of the State, ‘‘Wisdom, Justice ?nd Modera tion,” that a faithful judge shall work almost the whole year round for the pitiful sum of two thousand dollars. I wouldn't take their place for three times the salary if 1 was hard up for a job. General Toombs may have saved Georgia a tew thousand dollars by his poor-it-back in-ihojug argument on the official salaries of our state, but the grand old man did an everlasting Injustice to our over worked and un* der-paid judicary and officials from tbe governor down.^. aud c s still. Bui t‘li! The/d a cord iu the music Th-u’a lu'.joC-d when her voice is away i\.o 1 iistca from midnight tel morning, Aud at daw a tel the dusk of the day! And I i-rnpe through the dark lookin’ up’ards Aud on through the heavenly dome. Wuli iay longin’ soul singiu’ and Bobbin’ ik. »vo.d«, ‘-Do They Miss Me at Home?” Ih-iyni jg to discriminations against the iiegro ut the north, the Constitu- iLn i-doles a recent instance ia Illi- “N.*w, let us l.>ok into the Lemont h.i-Uujt. ■ 'i he white laborers on the u. .i canal struck, ar.d their places v. . . 0 £ applied in part by negroes im* peTied irorn the south. The strikers fc;iT* d about the camp in a threateu- !;:g manner and the negroes and *.J or employes fired upon • them, ki'/r.g r. vk*z;n or more. The next (!.:y s.'x negroes were walking the tM.cl.- of Lemont, when a mob of .■*:'.riletmade a rush for them. The tight of a black skin enraged these mul the negroes were barely iilild to save themselves by seeking refuge in the jail aud iu a militia cauip. Then, the mayor solved the problem by ordering the negroes to keep out of Lemont. ‘ It U unnecessary to say that we have no such race wars in tbe south. I11 every southern state whites u: d blacks work side by side, f-LmutiiiKS white workmen are discharged and negroes take .r place. Tbe situation is quietly irpteii iu cucb cases. There is no .'otii'g on either side, and the black laborers come and go without being mobbed We give ibe story as a part of the hiitory of the times. It speaks for it elf.” quaiteis o£ the South show that the crops are in appended condition. ;Tb"e fruit, crop wiflVraw mi’licRS of . outside casb .doivn tliid wav ihroqgH Ibe summer months, and.the. diverei fied product of our buay a^fcnKjfiyr ists wbl jdeld the hus^udra-.m his reward in the fall-. Wo are going to. have p»culy to cat in this -region, and the economy oi the farmers during the past two years, and their prudent avoidance of .debt will cause them to have' nft> e spend ing money this fall and winter than they have had in'several years. When everything 13 cond3ercd it must be said that the South Fas good reason to rejoico over th4-Outlook. Our people cannot pt*srilm' suffer from any speculative panic.-and their cconoipy, forced upmi them by tho dejrrestion of the past two years, has placed them in a position whfie they cau more than bold~ their owu.—Con stitution. Among the Southern states, Geor gia, and her imlu3tries, rank foremost. Her bankers, business men, manu facturer? and farmers are conserva tive and have learned tbe hard lesson of economy. This experience is valus able now. Within tho past year six'.y new cot ton mill companies have been formed in the South, a number of which al ready have their factories in operation, while others are building. The cotton manufacturing irdustry h the South is rapidly growing, and the record for the past year surpasses »he record of any previous > car. At this rate the day is near at hand when ail cheap manu factured cotton Will be done near by where the staple is produced, tut it must be remembered lint the big money is in the production of the finer grades of good*', and we to be making investments in that d recticn! —Americas Tiiies-Ereorder. • No where ir; ihe soudi * staple be manufactured at a profit than right lure in Geor^ Washington, June 13 statement concerning the i.pt t the Sherman silver Avs, Mterctary Carlisle *aid to-day i/ui under liii act there have been coined 829,308, 401, which makes the total coinage c silver dollars uruh r a 1 tho ncls siucc 1878 8419,294,83.), or more il.au fifty times as much as was coined during the. previous peiiod of eighty-' years. The Secretary of tho Treasury has purchased under Ilia act of July 14, 1890, aud now holds in the treas- ury*124,292,532 fine ounces of silver bullion, which cost the people of ihe United States 8114,293,920. and Is worth to-day at the market price of silver, §103,411,380, thus show loss of 810,888,530. WHEN (Vrom tf.o Xcl>rb*fc.a .-date Journal.) ' When Lease is.prc.-i lent IIow fc ip'p.f we shall \iy A heme fur every ns dent Will grow oi every tree; Wlipn i illy PopoiisUcjLU hold An ofiice-worth its weight in »ruld - And all the rest are in the co!d, llow happy \vp shaU be. , When the Gorerument the railroads rent llow happy we shall be; When money’s loaned at two per cent, - -How happy we shall t* ;. When men are jerked from ruin’s brink By added time^o read and think, , ^ Aud longer hoars to spoke aud drink, How happy.we shell be. When the miEeninm breaks forth How happy we shall bif; With a united South and North How happy-we shall be; , W hen wealth comes to ns while we wait, No mortgage swipes our real estate And Uncle Sammy pay4-the freight, How hippy wc shall ,be. ' Washington, June 13.—The fi nancial condition of the country as viewed from the treasury standpoint shows general improvement. Banks and commercial failures are fewer, Europe is buying our grain'iu greater quantities, gold shipments have ceased, at least for the present, con fidence is being restored and money is not so tight. The treasury’s net gold has iucreased from $89,000,000 to 891,300,000 and the demand for small money in the West will have the effect to further increase the treasury, gold. Tbe rate of exchange is suffi ciently high to warrant the shipment of gold abroad, but the fact that commercial paper is for sale in Lon don has a deterrent effect. There is a general feeling that the worst is passed, the weaker financial institu tions and business firms having suc cumbed, while those that passed through so far unscathed are the stronger for having weathered v the financial storm. - -1 u T MB'- 1 ini Ha I f r •jo i «♦:- «.-«v? oU.^o-Crarkc, Tom Wingsie, MiJn/Sr; j . . 'Charles Ji'huvra, Uartte So-wood. .;= oAaBaA.aE.-Btp.' I I Deltymi la lMmssiliQ. .* - - ,^2*7 _ . • «lffr i. ;<•- ut ‘’Aid lUalug ■ i6ala<Pr!c33: • ^ rr. - >nr.pctft( innwil *tSwrkh« itiuu 1010 aid tho sick, bury tu.dUl Mrs Campbell Wallace, ihe aged aud beloved wife ot Major Campbell Wallace, died in Atlanta on Monday. Hke was eighty years old, and had been married sixty odd years. A pure Christian woman has gone to her reward. Her husba »d is eighty- years of age. He, t o, will soon plaut his tired feet on tbe other side ot Jordan. A Chicago dispatch sa; s that East ern railway lines will to morrow put tbe rate to the Columbian Exposition at one fare for the round trip, and on the lGth the Monon will bo the first Southern line to make the same rate If the Southern lines will follow the example, and we hope they thousands will go. It will pay the roads to lower the rates. The New York Times says: “At a recent dinner hi this city a prominent Southern woman present remarked in the course of a conversation touching upon the famous statemtn*. ihat it ‘was almost wicked in Charles Sumner to have married. He was so deep'y iu love with himself,’ she continued wit tily, ‘‘that his marriage was little short ot bigamy.” ; - Editor Allen and Hon. W. A. Huff, beth of Macon, may meet on the field of -‘honahAlien denounced Huff as a liar, and the latter and his two sons invaded the sanctum of the Tel egraph with pistols, and denounced Allen and roaoaging t-dtor Price. There are great dots of blood oq the moon. K:’.e Field, one of the,foremost women journalists in the country, is making a persistent fight for lower raus to the World’s lair. Speaking of the fair she says: ‘;ise more I see of the Dream City wlibh b?s been wrought out of brain anl muscle and the iron and word, • he more I want it made possible for every man, woman and child in the Uni'cd Staves to come and praise God for the divine revelations ot Jackson park. Never belora has the divinity of man bc-cn so powerfully demons, tra'cd, and I believe it is a solemn duty of every one whose eyes have seen the glory of tho coming of the Lord to -labor uuceasiDg’y toward bringing our peop'e within the reach of this beneficent spectacle.’’ Cu'.Ikkr: Liberal-Enterprise : We want to r.p:at, and keep on repeating thus, thrcc-feuribs of the money of G^crg a goes away from h^rae for maufjctured. articles. Not more than one fcur.ii of it goes for meat and bread. • O ir cq*.temporary is right. Geor gia ought no: only to manufacture more, bu: she should keep that “one- fourth* 5 spem for bacon and bread at home. Port Tampa, Via., June 13.—Tne Louisiana State Lottery Company has bought property at Port Tampa, Fla., and will build a cable and put on steamers to Honduras, where they will probably remove from New Or leans. The charter ot the Louisiana Lot tery Company expires this year. I seems they are going to locate about' as near as possible to the ^United States. The further .they get away, the bitter it will be for the public. Georgia is, not making much of a show at the World’s fair. For fame she depends entirely upon Hoke Smith and her .30,000 acres of water melons.—Chicago Inter-Occan. Hoke Smith and the Georgia water melons are all right. If the Inter* Ocean wil hold down the hoodlums and keep ia check the anarchists in Chicago, Georgia will keep things straight down in this section. Shinny on your o.rn side, geutle men.. Col. W. Y. Atkinson h liable to go abroad. Then there would be a scramble for tbe speakership of the house of representatives. Strange as it may seem Mr. Ingalls’ recent tirade against the negro met with the severest ciiticism from the Southern press.—Iudianopolis News, Nothing strange abont it at! all. The Southern press and the white people of the South are tbe best and only real friends the negro has in this country, and may be depended upon to defend him when maligned and persecuted by ‘ those - whei* have no interest in him outside of politics.— Albany Herald. Here’s a good alliteration. Some ouc calia. Hoke Smith a “pension purger.”' Pension purgeris good. mi A I'icOictioo t Lizzie Borden will be acquitted. Another prediction : Harry : Hill wdl be convicted. ' . ... become mu-oo- belueo-pcrGWd un- Generation that the object _ . . - , .. . oftHett fo n'tc.-Btlou if* to aia the sick, bury the Tnrrnp seed crap, 1803, per'P-u y\ . i-r t oe_ti, atvi en-11 other in distress, and half pohnd 15c;. »<*r nnnrtea noon-.’ ’Ox:. * «:oT.4 iarrslcd' with <vr;oml nu fmn Fl.tf n.itf’ionl 11 • I ;<‘«Hlvcii.jnatlocs, ..make purchases 0*184# Imp, Flat Datea a-,*l J_.oa.-o eA |z-«-c«Uinmiormoirealty btdi«rso«MiH*. Cabbage, per lb §2 02, per halt iu v- .0i, p r «* mj- r.«jl bt* d. pnforeo nister, and oo* quarter lb 60c. *«■'-va.me of i:UotvMnl by laws oa Boiat's Erimtium : Flat &uic!v and Ds>ua ■ iuSlS'ito head Cabbage, per lb§1.50, rer li;lf , . ,.ot r- r ih-1 arpo-ict* *>rand prout, l*«: fer per quarter lb 40c. ' . tir > -1 j.r.»i.i-ai:-K u.n • Buist’s Florida Header a-jr, re»'-lh. ! - $2.25, per half ,1b $1.23-, Dure, blood Turnip Be Long Sc*rlet Radish.; - And all oilier scasoua' low pricis. As we me sliip.-'og « ville this season semi youc v us and youjvill get true. ; r.*>'. in our SEALED CAi’ilK), S only 8*u:o wiy to buy Bv;'.: . At'ininislralor’s Sale. I>avis btables on Jackson street,. . . aAvvile, Oa., rronting.TO feet on Jackson street auu running back let feet. Soldaatko PJOP- e ty of Geo. R. ftni th, deceased, late of Waa an la, Co., Fla. • GEORGE B. SMITH. Jnli.aB. Everltt, feuardlaufor James B. Aina worth, applies to rue for letters -of dismission from said gnardiaasliip. and 1 will pass upon bis application on the first Monday In Jane next, 1803, at my office. Jo.-*, a. Mj.niULL. Ordinary. Mny Oth, 1603. BAltTllUFF Sc YAM A11SBA Protluic Ct inaisrS It may not be generally known, but there is one desirable office waiting for an applicant in Georgia. It is in Taylor county. The Butler Herald says: “Iu the clamor for offices why don’t some one apply for the place of post master at 1’liilraon? There one will find the beit of neighbors, plenty of shade, good water, plum orchard, blackberry patch uear by, aud creek handy; in fact, anything eLe he might want to keep up the inter est. Somebody is going to miss a good thing.” Lincoln was shot on Friday in Ford’s Theatre by John Wilkes Booth. Ford’s Theatre fell down on Friday, killing or injuring nearly hundred people, aud Edwin Booth was buried on Friday. Nevertheless! L’olumbus discovered America on Friday and Grover Cleveland was inaugurated as President oa Friday, 1885.—Brooklyn Eagle. Some writer says: “It requires no eloquence to persuade ones mother.” Nomitter how erring that boy is, his mother condones, instead of derans, and forgives—but neycr for gets her boy. Horae, heaven and nioih-1—and the dearest of. these is mother—are tbe sweetest words ever spoken. It U curious that New York society didn't know whether to get down its all-fours before tho infanta, cr whether to squat on the floor aud wag its head from side to side. Not since a newspaper alluded to old man Astor as a hide pe idler hassociety perspired- so freely iu public.—Constitution. Sparta Iahmaelite: There could be no wiser, no more economical u^j of public money than spending it in the making of good permanent p.ub'ic roads. There is no man who would fail to be benefited by good, solid roads far more than tbe construction oi such roads would cozi him. The old road system of Georgia ii penuri ous, slovenly, cxpei si vc and discredi table. It is a disgrace to the civiliza tion of the age. Tho Herald, in giving au account of a man’s death, rai l ho had been suffering for six mouths with ‘‘liabili ties.” We have never lit aid 0! a maa dying from that cause-before, but if they have got to hiding folks now, you may.look out for au epidem ic this summer.—Covington Star. Be cartful what you write on a pos tal card. Rev. T. tl. Agucw, a Methodist preacher in Illinois has been fined $5 for calling another preacher a “tobac co worm” on a postal card The worm, it seems, turned and •sturg ihe author. A goodly portion of Thomasville’s population are listening to what the wild waves are saying down on St. Simons Island to-day. Some one suggests that Harry Bill und Lewis Red wine go into business together. They would make a fine pair. - That appears to be a close race be-’ tween Trammell and Clements for collector cf internal revenue. Tram mell seems to be ia on the ground floor, but Turner is working hard for Clements. When a girl goes to stay all night* with another girl, and gets her. bead on the same piliow, that settles it; there is nolhiog- she knows that she will not tell before morning—Atchi son Globe. • 'Ihe chicken pie is running short in Washington. Well, Georgia has had her finger in it several times. The Weekly Press Association will meet in Brunswick on the 11th of July. Lower the rates to the big fair,” is heard all along the line. - Eulalie, after taking in the World’s fair, has gone to Niagaia Falls. Goi respondents eay there is no ex tortion ia Chicago. ' No blood has flowed in Macon yet Wiggins, the weather prophet, has retired from business. It would be more correct, perhaps, to say that the business had retired from Wiggins. The question. of closing the fair ojb Sunday >tilj .drags along. Jt will probably be decided &t|e the fair is oyer. That’s time enough. _ {' ■' :;c '.-.ic ii n cjv;*r- i i< -• > • To «; —; . I r.r-! :»!r !o grow art h t : H h:! Veen f :!‘jng ent by tS ? _uL AL_r trying many physicians ’ ’. k - * 1 , r ;n *° J*ap]>y 10 find a cure in Lr i. O. IT. Etni-icr, Galveston,Tex. S CUtaesSsteSEBSSt fci cutlreljr vegmabio and harmless. Tseatiao on mood and Skta matted Tree. ^ Swift Erncmo Co..Atlanta, Qa. ; •' dates named :<>r the p»v tax returns for the ytvr l: ‘. :j; Ways, Monday n.u. b, : n.r M McDonald, Monday M-y .. Mnrphey, TuesCnv May .<t Ochlockout*c, Wed . i . y '! ;. *. • Meigs, Thursday May »i. . . Spence, Friday May 5.!: Cairo, Saturday May u : Bostou, Monday M ty • Glasgow, Tuosauv Metcalfe, Wednesuav . .• 1 Duncanville, Thm •’ ■ n-.\v ? it!:. Ways, Holiday M- : . . * Murpbeys, Tues ' .. jl y Ochiockouee, Wvlau*«!:.y M.-y Meigs, Thursday May -,VL Spence, Friday'May ictb, Boston, Monday May 20th. Glasgow, Tuesday 3‘.’i'u. Metcalfe, Wednesday May 3ij». Duncanville, Thursday.Juno Cairo, Friday June 2nd. I will be in TbonusvUi' at ’.- ik office, after my thirl rouiui, on Vbcrsday Friday and Saturday, during tSc .nonta i Jure. The Boatou Wot Id and the-Stutl west Georgian, nleasocopy. Jas F. sr.-t’ANV, Tat Rc-iiier,T.€. mm 2. AS MELONS AND CANTAUS3PES NORTHWEST. Sf. Ccr. Slate, CAR LOTS A SRi-fTALTY. CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. \ 'TjC.nia Charlott Mc<jAccn '._EUi Edward MoQuoen ) To Edward McQueen tob* and appear at tlu third Monday in Oetotx to answer the llboi for i Charlott McQueen va pending In said-court, ’ held more than three iv Witness tho honorable ichsftlJ cuurtwll H. lZanaclj, Goorj ushet ted this, the 18th day ot J J. W. Gbooveb, Clerk, Moses Isaac admluist John Drake, deceased, has applied mho £c letters of dismtsslod from said adminialraUot and I will pass upon said applic.dion ut ru office on the first Monday in Angc-et. M'3, • Mkkiull, Ordinary. -SBDE3- FOR THE NEXT eo DAYS WE WILL. GIVE #1.00 FOR EMPTY SSiSZKOSEIfcTZE; OIL BARRELS l)i livciVhl a,, our store UiatJiavc no’broken .siavc« or clr’mos ambperfect bung holes. &GG.. : • • • -T,^ •i‘- TUOMASCOUXTY. ' y»n p* r*j j . OttDiXABVsOlFiCEArrll li, 1.23, i rj H U W ' 'fl f. Clifford, administrator on tau ta.ata It Li M . ! ;M. Earnest, Jr., Into cf said coautv,! f H fl h i I « i,haa applied to me for te^tew of B U. |j UI f c at James M, deceased, hi missions from said nda-iaiett pass upon said apidlcatioii a 1 rat Monday iu'July ircxt i> “ci Jus. MSithiu.. OnH'iaz GEORGiA— ntoMAS Co*.-at/. . ouniNAars onicr, May l>. iwj. D. 8. Brandon has n:q lied hi dun foiin to -the nnderslgend for i crmtn-i.t Jetu-r. oi al ministration on.the estate i f Haa let L- Mrstf- don, late ot said county, deceased, uud 1 pass upon said opi» i*!a.hJu army oflho on first Monday in Juno next, i«>:«. Jos. S. MfrbecL ■ OMInai ' he Cervix, «ho Is Sure! Safe! Sensible! Inflammation, Congestion and FaHing ortho Womb. Profuso, B ifflcult, Antoverslon Irrosular Monstruatlon, Retrevorslon c Dropsy of tho Womb. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. BailoatoonyoddMjB Or. J, O. NleCIU A Co.,3X4 P! vnorama Place, Chicago^ III. il