The Weekly banner-watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1886-1889, September 07, 1886, Image 2

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THE MACON* ATHENSEAILROAD. It seems to our people that At lanta is evidently trying to• strangle the projected railroad trom Macoc to Athens, from the manner Nvia which it seizes upon every idle re' port that sgleen or self-interest puts in circulation."There Kave"'lateTy been published in the papers of that city more than one article cal culated to shako public confidence in and cripple the prospects ot this road, that upon investigation have proven to be groundlessly false. This was most unfair to an import ant enterprise for the development season, and an occasional echo tol- ! of our state, and also to the cities lowing Tuesday night’s shock may j and sections to be benefited by the be expected. Wetake itthatitisthc J proposed road. You never see Let our people understand that ia no imminent danger from ^hese earth-tremors. The suffering in Charleston is a repetition of what has often taken place at the sea- coast, this time in a milder form. The news from Charleston is bad enough and the loss is a fearful follower of the cyclones of last year, but there is no reason why the peo- pte of this rock-ribbed inhrior should feel continued alarm. The Banner-Watciiman has intima ted that these disturbances are most frequent during the equinoctual adjustment of the earth’s crust in its new position; not necessarily a sign ol fresh disturbance. The earthquake is nothing new, however novel it may be here. History has recorded them in every century, and scientists this minute, are revelling in the opportunity of studying the earth’s surface and classifying the forces of the interior. These shocks may create a revolu tion in housebuilding, especially near the seacoast. It may bring down the seven story structures to a safe medium and strengthen the architecture of th future. It may • shake faith in terra firms as an im movable base, put nervous people to fright and make thoughtful men grave. The earthquake is not an b unmixed evil, however, and the readjustments of the earth under our feet may not prove in the long run to be unwholesome. GKX. JACKSONS UKSIliXATION. It is stated quite positively that Gen. Jackson’s resignation as Min ister to Mexico will take effect about Sept. 15. It has been on tile in the State Department since July 12. The reasons for Gen. Jackson’s : -:signation have already been sta ted. He likes the country and the social life of the Mexican capital, but he hasn't found everything to his liking. He is an active, aggressive man, and in his position there isn’t any call for activity or aggressive ness. The State Department is quite conservative in its policy, and is not disposed to step outside of '.he beaten paths. It has also been stated, and very correctly, that Mrs. Jackson prefers Savannah to Mexico. She went to Mexico rather reluctantly and, the impression is, has always desired Gen. Jackson to resign the mission. It is probable that Gen. Jackson had -made up his mind to resign when he was in this city last spring. There was certainly no surprise among his friends when the report of his resignation was first circulated. There is a rumor that Assistant Secretary of State Porter will be his successor. It may be that Mr. Porter has been in the Stale De partment long enough to learn something of diplomacy. It i« net certain, however, that knowledge ot that sort is deemed a necessary qualification to fill foreign missions. Savannah News. such haste to give publicity to un favorable news when it will afle~t Atlanta enterprises by the papers of that city—so it really looks as if there is a studied design there to prevent the building of the Macon & Athens road. We are surprised that such ft paper as the Constitu tion should publish these unfounded reports without investigating them first. It is just as great a wrong to slander a corporation as it is an in dividual, and to injure the credit of one by false charges should be held as criminal as to injure the standing of the other. The M. & A. road will be built and the cars running into our city by next Christmas. All the papers have been signed 1 the rolling stock and iron bought, and the money to pay for grading in hand. We do not ask A tlanta to help us build this road, and we think it is as little as she can do to keep her hands ofT and mind her own business. THE RAILROAD THROUGH RABUN GAP. ♦ V District Assembly No. 1, Knights of Labor, of Philadelphia, which embraces a membership of 100,000 persons, proposes to start a co op erative cigar factory and hat facto ry. Contributions will be levied among these 100,000 members for the capital necessary to start t'ncen- terprises. Each man will be ex pected to comribute $1 in assess ments of 10 cents per week for ten weeks towards each enterprise, and this fund will then aggregate $200,000. Each member will re ceive one shire of stock. The h^t factory will be the first to be put into operation, and a large building for its use has already been secured. All workers tvho are thrown out of employment fc-r any unreasonable cause will be r>j*. eived into the fac tories. The Tv-miy ninth Senatorial district, compost 1 of the connties of Wilkes, Mil jffic, Lincoln and Columbia, held a convention yes terday at Sroi'f Mills, and nomi nated Col, S. ( Lampkin for State Senator. Electric-' Jtcr street railways are now in suu- >.*fjl operation in Bal timore, bid Windsor, Can., South Bend, Ind., Montgomery, Ala., and Minneopoh Minn. The Mex -in plan ol making sol diers of the convicts has not been fully conaii ered in this country. It was tried on a small scale during the war, but the convicts could rarely be relied on in a fight. The public will ring the “chest- nut bells' on Jim Blaine if he isn’t a ittle more circumspect. PKNNSft LVANIA PROHIBITION, The prohibitionists of Pennsylv nia held a large *nd enthusiastic convention at Harrisburg last week, and nominated Charles S. Wolfe for Governor. This gentleman has hetetofore acted with the republi can party. The Philadelphia Times, in speaking of this conven tion, remarks: “Unless some un expected questions of foreign poli cy shall sweep everything else be fore it, the temperance problem cannot be ignored two years ironr. now. As the republican party grew out ol the whig, the third parly may yet force the republicans out of business at the old stand. It is not improbable that the prohibition ists may hold the balonce of power in the next presidential campaign and carry with it the inevitable dis ruption of party tiea later on. It is these possibilities that make the proceeding! at Harrisburg of more than ordinary importance.” The T mes has this to say of Mr. Wolfe “The prohibitionists have wanted leaders. In Wolfe they will have one. There is no breath of suspi cion against him. He has had the training of practical politics, but there is no stain upon his career. He is without doubt the strongest man in the party with which he ha« chosen to form an alliance. He bat the advantage of a wide personal acquaintance all over the state, and will take the stump and make !t most aggressive campaign. It wili be interesting to watch the result. Franklin (N. C.) 1’resr. Messrs. Editors:—Sometime ago we noticed in your columns a suggestion in connection with the proposed Rabun Gap Short Line Railroad, to which at the time we could give no altention, but on which our present leisure allows us to comment briefly at will, and in connection with which we wish to consider a recent telegram to the Atlanta Constitution, and copied in your issue of last week, to the ef fect that “dirt will be broken on the line between Tallulah Falls and Knoxville next year, and by 18SS trains will be running through from Athens to the latter point, the money being ready to build and equip the road.” We do not know whether the purport of the tele gram is to follow the proposed Ra bun Gap Short Line, or adopt the already projected line from Mari etta. Ga., via Mnrphy, and connect with Knoxville, but the latter cbtt- elusion is most probable, we think, especially when we consider the above in connection with the-fact ihat it’s already a foregone conclu sion in the minds of the Richmond & Danville spndicate to extend their connections from some availa ble point on the great W. N. C. road, (now owned and controlled by them) through to Knoxville, and t iat they have by an unfavorable decision—unfavorable, we think, to the better interests of Western North Carolina, and in the mean time quite unfavoranle in the end to the general interests of this great and powerful corporation—centered on Paint Rock as their tangent point. However,' we will not an ticipate any legitimate conclusion, nor would we in any way affect the role of adviser to great railroad cor porations moneyed influences and powers, so absolutely and indispen sably necessary to the construction of railroads and great enterprises, nut there are cei tain considerations ind influences inseparably connec ted with the outlay ot large means, ind the wise and judicious invest ment of railroad capital, which we think are not without their due im portance. Like it is in every other avenue, of the commercial world, one of the first questions to ask in connection with any great railroad construction is, will it pay? In this enlightened age "of civilization and general development, the cost mould always be carelully estima- >ed before building. That great philanthropic period lias passed—if it ever existed—when railroad syn- licates, corporations or companies construct expensive lines for the mere accommodation of disconnec ted sections, or develop the materi al interests of great common wealths without some pretty well lefii.cd ideas of private remunera tion. Still it i* one of the fixed principles, interwoven into the very nature a nd existence ot things—;he laws of trade espe cially—for capital to seek profitable fields lor investment—fields whose proper development and vigorous prosecution will always insure large, or at least paying dividends upon .the amounts expended. In order the more certainly to do this, and thus lurrish a more satisfactory so lution to the above question, it i« often a matter of the first impor tance to weigh well and consider truly the ground to be taken in all of its phases and relations, as well is the situation to be gained, and the position to be occupied. We think the grouno most cer tainly to be taken, and the line to pay the largest investment lor the construction of such a railroad pro ject as this great enterprise by which the cities of Athens and Knoxville are to be so closely con nected—because they are to be one ■n p ogress and destiny—or to speak still more plainly,' the line above all others to be chosen for the development of this great moun tain section—East Tennessee, Northeast Georgia and th’s thrill— ng land of the sky, Western North Carolina, are all meant here—sand is a connecting link between the multitudinous Louisville & Nash ville system and the great Southern Air-Line and its connections, is un questionably the Rabun Gap Short Line, and should the Richmond & Danville syndicate see fit to reverse ns decision and xtend its connec tion direct from Chaileston OTNan- ahala to Knoxville, such an order would not only form a very auspi cious crisis in its own history, as well as make a most brilliant his- ory for East Tennessee, Northeast Georgia and Western North' Caro- lina, but would give an immediate md thorough connection between the £&at aystema connecting the commercial and social interests of the North and South, and bind hem with the same glorious desti- vy as the East ana West. This would fix the certainty of the early completion of the R. G> S. L. R. R., thus establishing a tremendous ine Of trade, and. commei'tffcljMd -octal infe. course between these great sections, the profits' of .whose msiness could -be approximated oh- ly by the extent of its rapid devel opment and vigorous prosecution, ■or the abundance of the products, 10th mineral and otherwise to be which this road is destined sooner, or later to pask,’ its outlet and inlet together withj itS;*oi and many natural advantages, mi all peculiarly favorable for tht 001 straction ot srffch aflt enterprfse.Ms fact too well authenticated to ad mit of any doubt whatever, or even 4V%s a- iiuM ...tn discuss here—one, too, that forms a very important desideratum in favor of its adoption. Ipdeed Na ture seems tol have had an eye on the powerful advantages her chil dren would derive from such a con nection of interests, and she boa lin gered in the formation of this section tojn«ke,an easy ionatruction be tween the two great sections. To mix, mingle and connect the cap ital, energy and enterprise of the one, with the brain,' muscle and re sources of the other, would bring about the profoundest state df har monious feeling between the two, and the united effort over a line of commercial and social intercourse would polish this great interjacent section, develop its inexaustible and diversified resources, and make it truly “blossom as the rose.” In view of the foregoing conclu sions, our surrounding circumstances and the condition interests, it would seem that there is only one course left for our next Legislators —es pecially those from Western North Carolina to pursue—i. e., bend eve ry energy in the direction of the early completion 01 this great Ra bun Gap Short Line, and remove the appalling cloud thst overhangs the vital interests of this portion of the State, as well as important sec tions of other States, in eparably connected with our own. If noth ing can be done, a division of the convict labor of the State would soon complete the line from the W. N. -C. R. R. at Nantahala to the Georgia line, at which point there is every reason to suppose - we would be met. For all time nntpast, now is the time for immediate action and well directed effort, which in our railroad vernacular means victory. Following the suggestion, we chime in with the chorus, Let not the opinions ofCoLWm. H.Thom as, that wise railroad schemer and sagacious servant of his country's good, be longer trodden under foot. Yours, respectfully, W.J. Jenkins. The Land Slide. iple crawled further out upon nd crouched cl ts. Friday nig a~iS?vero ri. .-which dreamed.of liverince and-Security once more. The dream dwindled and disappear- formed, was proud of the only geo- ical evidence which Richmond «fty afforded • of the great ' uake. I ; belief that the intervening land between the Hill and the city has sunk, is itself displaced. It is WS-TmuWirreelre-fra-thrcT«a}efn3racceprermt~sdmel>od^BS' of the deep again. Spectres gloam- land. find, . The ^xset ‘rtionsl is'stnalL A MM dozen buildings already unhinged, were wrecked. Two or three ven turesome bodies who had sought their dwellings, met death. But the blow to the reviving spirits of the people has been great—so great 'etmbgU to fcave le veiled anything. *1 j! id! i**. ISTHE COAST WORKING TOWARD THE SEA? Shocks and Tremors* CHARLESTON AND AUGUSTA SHA RING THE SHOCKS. AR THERE ANY MORE! The Banner Reporter Sleeping in the Open Air. the been cutting down trees and open- the vie w ■ which was. ured before. ‘ ‘ After all, ax has done more th^ff* tfie no in altering the face of the me citizens of Augusta believe that Tuesday’s shock was hard Augusta, Ga., Sept. 4.—[Spe cial.] -The cities of Charleston and Augufta are vast tent grounds. The beautiful streets of these beautiful towns.resemble the wards of long encampments, as if a shattered army had fallen in bivouac before an insatiate foe. These two are the storm pivots of the earth quake. Charleston of course suf fers most; next to Charleston Au. gusts, has fared incomparably the worst. You can have no idea of the wild unrest of the people unless you were here. Men meet on the street and greet each other with long faces and lugubrious talk. Oc casionally, mirth will show itself when the ludicrous sprouts out be neath the ghastly, but the times tell too plainly that “There’s not a (trine attuned to mirth But has its chord In ■•lancholr,” The situation may be expressed'in the word “disjointed,” All the homes in Charleston and matiy in Augusla are jarred and uncertain. Man resembles his abandoned habi tation—his nerves unstrung; his apprehension in hot blast, and his reason in too many instances trembling in its place. Nothing like it has been known in this South land. War means resistance;storm means protection; pestilence means remedy and flight But the earth quake! Who can tell where the stratum will give way and when the land will shake? It is the most entangible, the most all-pervading enemy of man. Where shall our feet be planted! scene of suffering. Charleston is a scene ot suffering. Beyond this it is a meeting place of scribes and scientists. Photography, pen painting, seismic tests, geologi cal soundings are the regular occu. potions,in that city .beyond the prop ping of the walls and the hurrying away to the trembling graveyard of the quivering dead. Rest is hardly assaied beyond the grave. charleston’s homes. It is hard to think of those proud old homes on the Battery, where life was high pitched and hospital ity exclusive but friendly; where brick walls and iron gates shut out the inquisitive; where storms had spent themselves -and shells had been defied—all ’ dismantled and disjointed. Pride and power tot tering in the chasm of the *ea; high and low crawling to the public parks, falling upon willing knees, or lying upon restless beds. Suf fering is a leveller ot every station. The Banner-Watchman kept brief but accurate newt of the daily occurrences. How fifty human beings perished in Charleston at the first rumble and fifty thousand peo ple ran IrigLtened from their homes. How the lofty spires and the lowly cottage had. been toppled, the open ing business of a great seaport bad beenbtuelly crushed, and a blow given a fair city which threatens' its future prosperity—even its present existence. All these' things onr readers know. A SET BACK; On Friday the city ^a* more ai.- sured. Something wearing the plated armor of confidence emerged from the ruins and rallied the fright-. ened people. Friday night another . .. .aUtH* ^confidence 'cow led over tins line It^li^^ ere d. The brick anon did not re new* his work of repair. The' tired dweller in the parks- saw his hope of returning home waver, and •>y their extended variety' and hh-^ bounded resources. That' the lo 1 -' ili ty and formation of the beauti ful Tennessee valley, througq that it will take another promise from heaven to induce them' to be hopeful soon. ^Volcanoes! , Landslide! Returning tidal wave!. Shelving finally iuto.the seal.. ; All these things flitted acrutfj dis torted visions, and all seemed' pos sible—imminent. 1 . Bnt the truth is that Charleston has probably seen the worst and suffered’ most. The oozing mud and sand through cracked fissures mean that the earth has been jam med up and the underlying clay lorcetDont. The ground especially arounaaummerville, S. C., is un certain. Railroad trucks crawl along and little ponds belch up— but nothing volcanic has come to light. No signs of a tidal wave curling like the crest ot a sea-ser pent at Lisbon, to engulf the town. No evidences of a land slide to slip Carolina as it did the hills of Jer sey, into the ocean. The sum of tiie Charleston disaster is falling walls and steeples, toppling chimneys, cracking plastering, interrupted business and a demoralized popu lace. This is bad enough; but i might be worse; the signs are that it will hot be. “Charleston is ruined;” so re marked an Augusta man, Friday night “How so?” answered another. “Why, commercially, of course.” “I don’t believe it Only today I received a telegiam saying that the bank had resumed business. For a monied consideration or a busi ness opening I would move to Charleston tomorrow.” THE DAMAGE TO AUGUSTA. The coloring must be subdued in speaking of Augusta; but were it not for'Charleston, Augusta would be au object of absorbing interest Next to -Charleston, Augusta has suffered roost. One half of Augus ta is.- sleeping ,out,of 'doon. The other half aits uneasily .in the front piazza and nods. The poople are busy ic the day reading earthquake reports and threading rumor*. At night they are deciphering tremors and making tent*. Greene and Broad streets present unusual scenes. Dry goods boxes are wheeled to the middle ot the broad streets, and invariably hold some., sort of humanity. Delivery carts, omnibuses, wagons and'ear- riages line the avenues and whole families are ensconsed out of the way of falling chimneys, and crumbling coping. In the lower part of Broad and Green, little beds dot the green with spreading tees- ters and Bill flown nets, while the bed room lamp and family Bible* can be found near by upon the lit tie stand. It is a curious but a sug gestive sight. In some instances groups of young men have char tered box cars, which are drawn out into some clear spot in the cot ton yards, and made into bed rooms. On the Sand Hills, the families have camped upon the sloping lawns since Tuesday. Snmmer- ville shook from its sandy parapet* and nodded to Augusta, while the town heave in response. The damage in Summerville, as with its Carolina namesake, was greater in proportion, than in Augusta. Be sides the wrecking of the officers’ headquarters at the U. S. Arsenal, nearft every private house lost its .chilnney or parted its ceiling. Nearly every front yard has its tent spread at twilight, and your correspondent has' not slept in a bed room since be left Athens. The fear is from fall ing ceiling and cr-icking chimneys, and the people prefer to take the chances in the open air. The well known sociability of the Hill is maintained. In one night thirty of the neighbors joined one lamily and camped about in tents and Ham mocks. After a shock is telt par ties go from house to house to offer assistance. FEVER TRAPS . The tenting feature ia not one of the most assuring of the quaking season. The cool air of September nights is not the beat for out door sleeping, and * types oi malarial fever are apt to follow this prac tice. But people prefer to face fever rather than encounter plaster ing. Besides, an earth-shock is.mild compared with a “houtequake.' Friday night many parties sought their rooms, but the feaior of ten- thirty forced them to the starlight again. Fortunately, the w.ather has. been clear. An equinoctial gale would force an unpleasant di lemma in many minds, and I do not doubt that some would atilt brave the elements in the open air. If Prof. McGhee’s theory be true, Augusta and Columbia are both in the tragmenta) or coastal plain, which, in this movement, has shift- ed seaward over the slide-rock. Athena is in the granite region or “Piedmont escarpment,” and while we did not share in the sea ward drift, frit the force of the dis placement. We stili. have “reac tionary tremors,' which are hard enough as Northeast Georgia can testify. - ’ twcibifinrs. I visited Augusta’s only fissures yesterday. It was a narrow crack of i$ feet in the quicksand forma tion around -thn ,oWs Turknett spring; - It was said to be large enough on Wednesday to admit of a finger. On Friday it looked like clean mole-track. Old Jerry Greene, in whose garden the fissure ‘ ,Tbc people Jiere are pot crippled pecuniarily, nor art they mentally despondent; bht "are awfully hope and fear, and iu the meantime, are, getting used to occasion*!- tre mors. An incident in the shake roqst go popular young citizen, and U Diver sity of Georgia graduate, was floun dering in the bath tub when the quake came on. Jumping fropi his narrow fissure, be had the presence of mind to slap on his hat and fled precipitately down Greene street The stampedeof people may now be explained. I find, even as the fear is subsi ding, a sober and a serious, feeling settling upon the people. The churches to morrow will be better filled than for many a year- Prayers will be said by people who have left the church hells and the preachers to do their worshipping before. Men and women who nave heen surrounded by danger and threateued with death are feeling their own insignificance asbeings and realizing their entire ’depen dence upon high Power. I know of no better comfort than the words of an old colored woman in Sum merville, repeated yesterday. “The Lord won’t put more upon us than we can bear.” • P. A. S. T CHIROPODISTS. 'W THE TREATMENT THEY GIVE FOR CORNS AND BUNION& ” A ClMkt with On* of the Oora-Curlng Fro* Wnilty—Valuable Information for Saf- Virietle* ot Corns* Soft and excuse 1 Is the! which not believe&hnt there is one ot them who has not anome and some person who Miunstairtifi ~ them, however, are wayward naturally, or hare been made so by evil associations In their extreme youth, while others—and qu (reatest' number, it is to be feared- art. knowingly sent oat to tke Ufa of- de moralization and vice that la Inevitable by the very. persona who should most. carefully have guarded,them from such a fate. There are, of course, some tew ex ception In the case* of girls who go out to sell paper* with their mothers who have established stands, and though forced by poverty to employ their children’s aid in the battle of life, etrive in so doing to shield them from evil by keeping them as closely as possible to the maternal apron strings. Even then, it ia rare that their daughters escape contamination from the thoroughly corrupt girls of their own age with whom they are brought in contact daily. * 1 . The great body ot the newsgiris run ning wild on the street have acquired a knowledge ot and proficiency in vice be fore they have grown old enough to rec ognize its degradation and the Inevitable ruinous consequences. The older ones educate the younger In vice: the youngest strive to emulate in all of which they should be innocent. A large proportion of them are Italians, and many are very pretty while they are very young. In fact, a newsgirl has little hope ot success If ahe is not pretty and soon finds herself forced out of competition to other walks in life where good looks are not bo essential.— New York Sun. Starvation tn Egypt- A fellow-mania makes ns wondrous kind, and the chief creditor ot the castle building crank of HoheqsehwaDgau now turns ont to be the castle-building ex- khedlve. During the fourteen years ot his administration the viceroy of Egypt built away some 201X000,000 francs, wrung from the life-blood of starving toilers. Nine-tenths ol the population of Egypt are, in the most liberal sense, subsisting •upon the bare necessities of the vital pro cess; a little rice, a little dnrrha corn, baked Into hard cakes, aod washed down with a draught of ditch-water. Professor Exllnger, on his recent survey of Tim- bald, was for miles followed by a barefoot boy, who every now and then approached the wagon and watched the workings of the instrument with haggard eyes. Ascribing his persistence to an impulse of scientific curiosity, the professor asked his dragoman to hand him a telescope and Invite him to take a peep at the distant mountains. “He’s after something else, I guess,” laughed the interpreter, and a short conversation sufficed 'to confirm that theory. “There is some corn spilt in your wagon,” said the dragoman, “and this youngster aske your -permission to eat a handful ot U.P The corn—hard, dry, maize corn—was swiftly absorbed by the youthful son of the desert, who, with the same promptitude, devoured a quart of dried fruit and a lot of fluid butter, bat took to his heels like a deer when the dragoman handed him a paper full of mustard pickles and yelled at him for dropping them after the first bite.—Dr. Felix L. Oswald. * Chiropodists have of late years become necessary to residents of cities. It it bnt recently that the art has been taught in the medical colleges. Unlike dentistry the student is not obliged to pass an ex amination in anatomy, bnt can simply bring bis mind exclusively to bear on learning how to treat and care for the feet. Formerly Brooklynites were com pelled to patronize New York chiropo dists or else attend to their own p*dal ex tremities. Within a few yean past, how ever, a dozen or mere individuals who make a specialty of wrestling with hard shelled corns, or alleviating the sufferings of those who have big or little bunions, have signified their readiness to attend to the feet of suffering residents. I called recently at the office of a local chiropodist and found him busily engaged in com pounding a mixture, which he guarantees to cure all manner of dleeeses of the feet. He said: CHIEF CAUSES OF CORNS. “One of the chief causes of corns, bun ions, etc., is tight shoes. The majority of my customers are ladies. Corns come in two varieties, sofa ead hard.. Tbs soft corn is formed by the acid perspiration of the feet and first appears in the shape ot a white blister, whose edges easily peel off. Ladies, who wear shoes targe enough for them, seldom, if ever, suffer with corns. Stumpy or short shoes cause corns to form easily. Ihava frequently known cases where a soft corn would affect the whole foot and ankle. I have many patients who have corns which have festered into the bone. Bonions areottea mistaken for bard corns. A bunion forms usually on the side of the foot or between the toes. A bunion is nothing more or less than a •trained joint canted by a short or nar row shoe. French heeled boot* and shoes have been the cause of untold misery ts ladle*. and 1 have noticed since Die com mon tense shoe has become fashionable, the wearers of them have had fewer cams. Narrow dancing pumps are also Vf 77 Inju rious to the feet Operations on- fibrous and nerve corns are extremely difficult “At what age does a corn begin to growf” 1 •**' It . “I have known children whose mothers would Insist upon having them wear tight shoes to have corns at the ago otS years. Many children havo ingrowing Balls and are suffering from coma” ^Talking about manicures my informant “Manicure is a nsw innovation and now practiced by all chiropodists. The most expert manicures are young girls, who have been thoroughly drilled In the business. It Is now the custom to engage young women to do this work, and the paring and beautifying of nails Is usually performed amid elegant surroundings. In New York many fashionable young men have their nails polished twice a week.” EXFLAUHKO THE METHODS. The doctor with whom I talked, ex plained the methods nsedtn treating ban- ions, which may be of service to all who perform tbelr own ehlrqpothy. First, the bunion is softened wltt> a camel’s hair brush to destroy soreness, and then th* hard callous Is removed by means of a double edged knife. At this point in the operation the fibers ot the bunion are killed and a targe ring of lamb’s wool ap plied. From appearances it would denote that the covering of lamb’s wool wo old make it impossible to get on th* shoe. The latter, however, easily slips on and the patient walk* with oomparittva freedom. Double edged knives and scissors, targe and email, are used by chiropodists in their work. *1 have extracted twenty-five corns from both feet at on* lady,” continued my informant. “Large shoes have the ■am* effect as email ones.- One to be per fectly free from corns must wear a neat fitting shoe which must be neither too •mall nor too targe. Ingrowing nails are difficult to treat, and are always accom panied with fnngps growth or proud flesh. Lwgaor big. toes often have Ingrowing nails. Disease cfthaiwaatgdands or per spiring feet, which emit an add «™«ii, can be cured, bat the treatment most be both internal and local. The disease of ths sweat-glands originates tn a disord ered system, sc in weak and diseased wganic function*. In the disease men tioned gnat can should be need in the etyto pf the hoes worn. Only (he cheap Uass of hosiery have seams on the sides. These should be avoided and only »~-v. •orn which have seams In ths bottom.— •S- f. J.*ln Brooklyn Eagle. A Texas Jeoraal’e Quarters.. ajattmrato t« four, dressing-room, sane- *2™ and business office all combined, and au incited la four box style walla which wmpowi aetata room twelve by sixteen test. Thiele the aianafrctory of those natjapaper pellets which we inae weekly undsr th* label of Th* Bulletin. Th* edi torial chair is an inverted plneweod box. ornamented with an artistically engraved duomo, beneath which is the suggestive laMsfptton: “Wily wants a cracker,• while our writing desk to a single abort hoard laid across th* west end ol anover- fftowa Saratoga trunk. Is it any wonder j*”*—«» » T*ry praceptlbl* vein of to- becUllty running through onr editorial and local pagetf-Balllnga (Tex.) 1 Bulte - ’ -- - From last week’s Echo We learn that it is feared by some that Dr. Carlton will bare opposition. We have heard of nothing of the kind nor. can yre believe that a respecta ble democrat can be found m tbe district who can be persuaded to antagonize him. If so/just let him show hi* heae and it will be cooi- pletely smashed into smithereus, that he nor his friends who-pre vailed upon>him to make the ven ture, will be able to recognize it. The Eighth congressional district furnishes no soil adapted to the cultivation of independent candi dates.—Madisonian, Advantage of Color Blindness. It might surprise you to know that oc casionally total color blindness has proven a decided advantage. All colors appear ing to soch on one as shades of gray, or black, or white. An engraver thus af fected would possess a keener ability to discern fine tinea A clerk in a mourning goods department of a targe dry goods store received extra compensation for hta acute eye for shade*, when it was found to depend on total color blindness. Such cases are exceptional as can' be imagined when railroad men are discharged for in ability to distinguish a red from a green lantern. Fostofflce clerks have run short in their cash accounts through selling stamps of the wrong denomination, the differently colored sheets getting into the wrong drawers.—Lithographer and Printer. TT' irm j Simple Ways ofOreat Millionaire*. -ya of great.mUlionalrea.are sot pie. Th^day af * the Becond son late' jr. H.,- ” ,000, went to Parf*, I happen passing hta superb house when a friend ot mine who is In a banking office 1 'across the street came towards me hurriedly. Tm going up to read that paper on WUUe K.’a door. Tbe whole office hoe been wondering what it was all day.” We went up the magnificent marble steps, between two mighty stone griffins and to an oaken door broad enough for a doable track railway. On it was a bit of torn envelope fastened by a crooked Pin. Roughly tracefi.across It In pencil was this: “I have gone to Europe.—W. K. Vander bilt.” A halfpenny sign on a house that oast half a million. This particular, soh of the late railroad king la the amusing member ot the famUy. They are aU plain, matter- of-fact and thy ot display but William K. He went down to WaU street once and thought he wonld speculate. A few weeks later “the old man” went down there, settled $7,000,000 worth of debts and made a few general remarks that William K. is not likely to forget. Then William K. devoted his energies to wearing a single glass and accumulating an English accent which at present is positively the most overwhelming, eerie and amazing thing I ever heard. He has social aspira tions, bnt he ia not successful despite his great wealth. Not satisfied with the “pilling” he received when be put his name ap for membership in some of the clubs here, he has tried to get into the Jockey clnb in Paris. The cable says he was blackballed with great alacrity and heartiness. There was, however, something ex tremely amusing to me about the sim plicity and coyness of that message on his door.—Blakely HaU in FhUadelphia Press Chins No Place for Foreigner*. There is oply one thing which should ever make a man think ot going to China, and that is some weU-paid certainty. You might as weU go to sheol as go to China sight-seeking. See what 100,000 Chinese do in San Francisco and then reckon up what chances an ordinary man has against 400,000,000 ot them on their native ground, where they can Uve comfortably on ?3 a month. They can do everything that a white man does and now that they ore finishing with us as go-betweens, and to take our ideas from us, they really want us for nothing. A good many people say “when the country is given up to the railroads there will be great chances for foreigners.” But even supposing at first that the Chinese kill a million or two in railway accidents it will be reckoned as a much more desirable experience than employing the hated “foreign devil.” There are tele graphs all through the country now, and yet not a white man ts employed on them. What white men are in the country now simply exist as the pnppets of the Chineso You may think perhaps that there are great chances for American inventions and machinery in the country, but a people who takk to bed with them a flea trap, and who have had a silk-weaving loom running for the laat 2,000 years which no modern machinery can compete with, don’t want so very much from any one. But to talk of going to China now is ridic ulous, when the Chinese are slowly but surely edging out the few foreigners that are there.—Shanghai Cor. San Francisco Chronicle. * Views of the City. A standard business in every targe city now Is the sale of photographic albums of the principal buildings, parks and public resorts ot the city. For many years this business was confined to European cities. Gradually the album came in vogue in New York, and Washington city; but now the perfection-to which photo-lithographs have been rqduced makes their publica tion a matter of such slight cost, that every city has its publications of views, and few travelers pass through a city of any note without possesing themselves of one of these cheap and Interesting souv enirs of the visit. Formerly each an al bum of St. Louis views as now sells for to cento wonld have been cheap at A— “G. C.” In Globe-Democrat. ‘ Failure of th* Phonograph. Phonograph* have never become more than a toy, although great things were predicted of tt Edison did nothing more with it and turned his attention to the more profitable work of perfecting the system of incandescent’lighting that has sines been each a success. - The trouble with the phonograph was that the tin foil was not soft enough to take the im pression of the sound-waves deep enough to make the machinery talk loudly- when Its time cam* to talk. In fact the phono graph was a very good listener, bnt a poor repeater ot conversations. Whet a pity it ia that humanity Is not bnilt more on the basis of the phonograph.—Detroit Free Press. Wages of an Organist. -The Boston Post says that a salary of 1350 a year la deemed an ample return in one of the richest churches In Boston for the services of an organist of the very ■first grade. It also says that recently one of the foremost organists In America was offered *000 a year to play the organ tn rich New York church, and be replied, that, white he could earn as much as that driving a street car, he wonld not degrade hie calling by accepting the offor.—Ex change. r Freezing Necessary to Germination. A number of European botanists have had reason to believe that the seeds of many New Zealand plants will not ger minate readily until attar they have been frozen The same curious observation has been made in relation to the Himalayan seeds.—Boston Budget. Knows AU About Them. The editor of a morning paper knows all about the nights of tabor.—Boston Bulletin. Vermont proposes to establish a a Institution tor the criminally Insane. Patrick J. Monroe, of Boston, was arraigned in court, Thursday morn ing, tor ringing a “chestnut” bell at the Boston Theatre- performance. He was fined $10 and costs. Mahoue will retire from politics, but.it is doubtful if be will repent. C LARKE SHERIFF’S SAt.E.—Wlllbssold.bc- foieihecourt bouse door la the city of Ath ens, Cla-ks county, Georgia, on the first Tuesday Id October next, between the legal home of sale, the following pren**1y, u-wlt : One house sad lot ln lhe eftp ef A- eons, uoanded ss fellows : North by HlUsUeet. Last b* If % R K Dolooy. South bi vacant lol,(cn'<ed the Haste-- lot) West by Harris street, bein'- toe place now occupied erTt-Ottver,contain or one and three-qns'ter some, mors or less. lasted oa and tabs sold as tli* property o( 2. W. Murrell, under aed bv vlr- tue of three J usUce COurc- fl fas, T-ued -“oat the lashes Court of th* 21 <ha diet. G M„ Cla-keco., oneof taem being la favordt R M Stnftn A CO. vs IW Murrell, and tboother two being in lavorof Mrs. M. M, Bishop, extent lx, Ac., vs J. W. Mur rell. Levies made by hi. W. i-ane., Uw.'ul con- sUblsoftus2!Said l st„and turned overt* sue tor advertisement and ta'e. ' Wr'tten notice served ua tenant la posse talon. Levy mad* this August r/th.mac. - john w7wfg«,sh.if. Iron, Steel, Nails, Gins, Pistols, Cutlery, Mill I'indiurr^ Agricultural Implements/Gifcttlar Saws, Barbed Wire Fencing, Show cases, etc. Sole Agents For FAIRBANKS SFANDARD SCALES, Watt’f Plows, Dexter Coru Shelter and Feed Cutters Champion Reapers and Mowers, Lippincutt Axes ' ’ Oullstt Light Draft Magnolia Gins, Feoders and Condensers. Cuqont’s Snorting and Blasting Powders. L on Front Store, cor. Broad and Thomas sts Athe 1 ns William Waldorf Astor and Wife. Mr. William Waldorf Astor is, in ap- pearance, the ideal of a prosperous young business man—stocky, wide-awake, and commonplace looking, with nothing to Indicate that he knows anything outside of real estate matters. He is the only Astor who has ventured into any other field than,business. As a politician, young Mr. Astor was disastrously defeated at the polls; as minister to Italy he was buried, und as an author he is far from being successful. Now he is at work on a play. It is not generally believed that he will be the long-looked-for American dramat ist He is the sole male representative of the family, and it is no secret that the elders view his excursions into art, litera ture, politics, and the drama with scant favor. They argue that with $200,000,000 and 37,000 houses to look after he has all that he needs to occupy his mind; but young William Waldorf goes on with his artistic efforts just the same. He has a charmingly unaffected and direct manner, and a beautiful wife, whom he loved and married in Philadelphia.—New York Cor respondent Philadelphia Press, Tricks of the Chinese Thief. It is sold that of late bed clothing has been taken to Chinatown in targe quanti ties. Armed with a bamboo stick about four feet long, which may be readily lengthened to fifteen or twenty feet by a telescopic slide, the Mongolian hoodlum makes his way about dusk to a back or side window, which has been left open at the top for ventilation. The pole is stuck through the window, being stretched out as it is Inserted, and by means of a small hook at the end bedspreads, blankets, sheets, and pillows are pulled through the opening It bis sometimes occurred that bed clothing has thus been removed while the bed contained an occupant, who was sleeping soundly. In the case of an alarm the pole is dropped, and, being on the outside of the building, the hoodlum easily makes his escape.—Gan Francisco- Chronicle. Superstition of Gen. 8kobeIe(L Vassill Vereschagin, the celebrated Russian painter, contributes an article ot personal recollections of the late Gen. Skobeleff to the current number of Mme. Adam’s Nouvelle Revue. Vereschagin accompanied Skobeleff during tbe latter’s early life in Turkestan. The anecdotes and exploits of the daring general, as related by Vereschagin, would be deemed inventions were they not contemporary tacts and well authenticated. Skobelell’s courage was surpassed by only one thiug, says Vereschagin—his superstition. He would charge <ffi a whole horde of Tur comans single-handed for the fan ot the thing or as an example to his soldiers, bnt he wonld leap np from the table pale with fear if the salt stand happened to be upset, and he would swim his horse across the Danube to show that it could be done, but he would not dare enter a room where three candles were lighted at the same time.—Chicago Tribune. Awkwardness of Wale’s Oldest Son. It is a pity that Prince Albert Victor does not indulge in a few lessons in de portment and dancing. His partners com plain terribly of torn gowns and trodden toes, and iu Ireland his reputation for general clumsiness is supreme—London World. a EORGTA CLARKE COttliTY -Oidiosry si’ - tins for oou-ity purposes, 6th SEPTEMBER 1, 6: Upon the pe.iUon of va lons cltlze a at r'd county* to hove on elec Jo i p> etcict wtab- i (Pur toot • District) I a oldcvi .ty* cod* v au- election Pied ct be, aMehee.-ne is hereby es- the Weekly Bass sb-Wstcbji an once a week for lour weeks A4A M. JACKSON, Ordinary- 8*p»7-w4wkv nEORGIABANKS COUNTY.—Thol. M. Coffee jsaagsassgg .. . f’. - v. minims’ lata of sal fere to rite and _ _ ofSaVconn«*u> tmbuiMsn too HjtitMoadsy, In October n-xt why said letters should not be granted. Given sudor mv-hand at office, -this *tkd.r.«A. g o. A ^ JACKk)s _ Ordinary. ’ < r< EORGIA, BANKS CpUNTYr-To *11 »hom It xn*r concern: Mncn* IrCok h*i ing ia due I# rra applied to the undersigned for the suardl* amhip of the pers>mi *od fc propertjr o** Mary B, Jor. E. Cox, W, A.Cox.‘ John ) X- B > ''J, .Ii*Hie Cox, J Cox’and Ellfe Cox, tainnrchUdreno* Y>* A. Cox. Ute of sute of* Tex**, decM. N’otfco (’hereby given tbathls '•prllcuUou will be bc-trd at my office on the first Monday ia October nsii, G4v* •fl under my hand and official hignatutoAug 25, 1886. T. F. HUL, Old'y. * MACHINERY ENGINES Steam i Water BUiLERS Pipe 8 Fittings SAW MILLS Brass Valves GRISTMILLS SAWS Gotton Presses FILS SHAFTING, INJECTORS PULLEYS PUMPS HUNGERS WaterWheels COTTON GINS CASTINGS AR1NGS Brass and Iron BELTING. PACKING & nit.. aTbotWmTMceS D IN 8T0CK FOB i PromptJDelivery! -j, ACUL.3ia.ua. ABOVE PASSENGER DEPOT. M ARY VINSON vs. E. C. VINSON.-D.vorce in Clark* 3n parlor Court, April torn 1886 r posrlnr to the court by sattiOtclory evidence tn.t tho defendant E, O. Vinson resides without iy In Oc sen, sod thataervlraot thUotder be perfected open toe Defendant by publication there-v once a month fer four owetba In the Banosr-Wafen. *ka Newspaper, prior tothe next term of the /■'I "EORGIA CLARKE COUNTS?.—Whereas. Date \XHamllton and James W. Fulcher l sdm<nt <tra* tors with the will annexed of James Fulchjr, late of said county decesead.has applied to me in terms of the law for a discharge from said adml v Dtration. These are therefore to cite and akiuum* 1 i all concerned to show cause at . tne regular term of the Court o? Ordinary, of *ald county, to be helden the tint Monday in December next why said discharge should not be granted. O veu umlermy hand and official aign&ture, at office, this in day of Auguit, 18S6 ASA M JACKSON, Ordinary Thrown togethor anu enileo Tin wore. butg»t MADDREY & JONES’ BRASS ST A MI’ TINWARE. other. dlt UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA. P. H. MELL. D. D., LL D.. Cb ' I lor. The ,^th Sei-sionof D^]»aitni’.tit i itegip Wednc-tlay, Gih Oct'-oei . . .'nil com 8C» of Mtudv iu Letters an t -• i • urn sin t-nrine- ring, Aer. uiur •. i i y»i«»au « hfini* ry Tl T TK.N .'III: -. l-..r«at.l .gti'’ ami info inatitin a-ldrees thv ?\\ ,. m Aih en«. I.tw .Scho'il opens Ht ,i Kttrinio 1 nii-tlon ad’lM-M* Prof ofO. IH'PLr.Y j'if< MAh Athene. (i«. l.AMAlt (.'OH*'. . •<•. -'’'uird o Trustee*, Athena. Ga. Au,;., 1 dtVwlm HAND-POWER Baling Cotton Presses, I have a lumber of the above Tresse-s on band, i which I dehirc to el'”* out at gre tlv reduced 1 prices. They are strong, dmaole ind vaiilr ; w. irked. Price f80.i 0 delivered in Allien--. GLO. \V. 21 * KbWICK, 731 Hey mild’St.. aeptf> dr,, writ Augusta. Ga. ! What Can Be Done. By trying again an keeping up course, many tilings seemingly impossible ma, lie attained. Hun-tlr-ds of hopeless C4S ., uf Kidney and Liver Coiuplint havs been cured Im Electric liiitera, , m „. everylhing else liiid been tried in v bo. dont’t think therein no cure furvuu’ but try Electric Bitters. There ii n ; medicine Ml safe, so cu’e, nod so perfect a Blood Purifier. Electric Buters w i cureD.H, e.isia'niahetesami all I) isea, ol Stomaidneys. I m!, i , , n Urinarcli and Liver, and oven- ni aii’yfiOctv Difficulties. Large Hoi,,,, os. at A. An Entezprl8ing, Reliable House. A. B. Long cun ai«a>. In- relied uw , n not only to curry ia sirek the l est <,f everything, but to w-cure il lt . Agei„- V for such articles as have well-knewi. merit, und are popular wiih the people Thereby su-taining the reputst () „ being always enterprising, aim ever re liable. Having secured toe agency for till-celebrated l)r. King’* New UiHcoverr for Consumption, will sell it „n a i,, . . tive guarantee. It will surely cn.. anil every affection o. the throat, h,“e7 and client, and to show o :r cotili l,nee we it*vi e you to cell ah I Bottle Free. any li i d Tired nod l.ti How many worn Iheat igUM* Uompff m ti- re are of . gone j irosti i apse?, ] o\t<w i 8tflv« I W!.l. i r'ttfk- a ul i ex 5 TON WAGON SCALES, S60‘ and - bt— for fra# • paper a EOKUI. t OCuNfcE and In confor.tuly i« mentof Marshall M rih deed. Will be Koid, at the Watkinavtile Oconee e mmy. G Tuesdav in Noveinl>er next, wi ..ours of nale, .ie follow ... All of the right, title, cla m « r ii ft 1 rest, it being the reminder and tquit> of redi upiion «h cc Marshall 31. She .t«. dec’d. now has or may have had. *r may nerex..er have: in und to »'i that troctof lard .situnte. l^ingaid bein^on the head waters of Hose creek. *n Ocoikc cmu. tv, nod con taining five hu- dred acres, more or less ano ad . house dom i.. on hr thin tbo Ilvi i g properly. •d. T T io'Uia the laud* «t the Fulton.- Ghana, er and A Few P\V Hutcheson on tin Kudotis M Campbell and North. It being the name tract lamias dexir*’ bed in the deed 'on Ma-phnll M T*nr**.w *t> J 1C O 'herwood, dated oo tue Sist of uclober, : • ltd d ,d lor said land, being now held by L.id J KG Cnerwood.to secure tu-r r ymertot * note of Raidbheata for $1-V i, dated « n the ;><ht October. 1«H2, and due latof Decembei. J. with fnic r n!t at H per cent, per annum aod payable aiiuumIIj. And said bhea hold*c the hoi.d of said J K. r Sherwood to reconvey sa<d land on the payment olar-ddebt. TP«t iotenst on said note ou the 3Ut November, 15*6, will be |2!i*.60 f*ild laid will be told subject 10 said dee»i at:d lien on Mi d laud. And all oi tbeiJ bt, ti*l . claim or Inter- ear; it being the remain rror equuyof redemp tion, which Marshall MSbe.it>, < J t — or may have had, or may beresi to apart of .be tract of l^d fiiacribed. *• Id, laid psrt ot ha’d trpet of land containing n‘ ety-iixaccp.and lying West of »he Colth*m Fe v ro id in Oconee coou.y, and bounded on the Fau; by s id Go 1 * him ferrv road, ou (he Xoilh end Fast by Undeo- KudoJa M ('am >bell on the W- "tby VnlPaw jEwii'aed ihe Lo ot P W Hu cbeion, and oo tue South by Thonns Rober son’# old place, now occupied by chaod'ei. Said land wi’l be sold subject to two oori^e'.ei» in fa vor of 8 P Thurmond a^ainut saul Marshall M 8he%t* t one dated on tbe 1 :tn day or M rcb, 1K85, Hnd to secure a note .or $ln:». and due 1st iiec'r, issi>, «nd ibe other datea 27ih Dec’r, ISM, and to secure two noU*. one or $1S2 6S, dHttd ’-LM^Aug., 18*4, find due 1st November, jlim toe other for tl:», daied 27 Dec’r, 1884, and uue 12 months after date, at 8 percent, interest. Said propeity sold»• Ihe properiyof Marshall A.ldronn M cheats, fateolaaid county, dee d for Ihe bene- ine fit of the heirs and erfedi . . . - tjt Ann t> a i cash. WTLl s of said dec’d. Terms I.LIAMP CAMPBELL. Ext of Marshall M, Sheat*. dhc-’a. G EmRCIA, GLaRKK COUNrY,—Wherery K I. Bloomfield, Executor of Mary A Veith, late of said county, deceased, has applied iu tonne of tho law *or a discharge from said executorship. These ere therefore to cite and admonish hit concerned to show causo at the regular term of the court or Ordinary to be held on the first Mon day in November next*why maid discharge should not be granted. Given uiutar my hand and effii- dal signature tb‘.a Juiy x2,1*86. A. P UENLY.C. C.C. G eorgia, banks county—Admanisu‘&to**s Sale. Agreoabie to an ordffTsfigm the court f ordinary of ff»id connty gmuea at the July -r n, 18*6, will beaold at auction nt the court u>e door of Mid coaitUr, »n the first Tuesday M ctober next, between the legal Hours ot sale rc.s or tola of lan.t a l)o ttitig U ud« of Mrj. *\ E.Sheppard. John Scoggins. James Jone> and r°h rs, within :t mile* of Harmony Grove ou the nd leading to ('arnesville, to- wit: Lot No. 1, i D taidii’g acres, more or le«-s oi which there ik»dwelMug house and outbuilding* ami about 15 acres In cultivation, 4 acres ia good bottom*, remainder in old field pine and origiLal foreoi. Lot.No. 2 coni ;iniug*J2 acre*, more or less* with 15 acres in a high state of cultivation. G acres of good bottom laud and tOaorce «.f pine field, re mainder in origin* 1 forest, well timbered and watered. I<ot No. :i, contaiuinv -Nt acr.* more or less, with 16 acre* pine field, remainder in original forest,well timbered and watered. Also H shafts Georgia rail nut stock. .Ml sold *s the day of 'll. l! *Mc\VHOKTfell, Aug 21, IS' *-. Adm’rs John N. Prickett, dec. of John Caud-ll, deceased, has In due form, ap plied to the undersigned for leave to *cll the land belonging to the estate of Mid deceased, and said application will be heard on tbe first Monday iu October next. This Aug. 27th, lfisfi * T. F, 1ULL, Ordinary. G 1CRG1A, Bank ecuuty. To whom It gay concern.—Thcwoun of Jos-iaV Murray, de ceived. ha» applied tidowie Lave a year’s sup port set a»ide to hero me the estate of said de* ceaaed. Tuis U therefore to cite and admonish all concerned toahow e use, If any they have, at mjr offief, on th • 15th d^y September next when said a -plication shall be granted, and the years’ support allow d aa fixed by the return of the ap- apriters for that purpose. Aug. 13, 1H7G. T.F. tli -air, O • na-iry. GEORGIA, Oconee county.—Medoia A. Greene v*. Ramie 8. Greene. — ibel for divorce in Oco nee superior court, July term, 188% H appear ing to»ne court by the return of tu* sheritrthat the dfeendent does not reside in said county, and ts Blither appearing that bo dees not reside in the said state of Georgia. It .ia therefore dered by the court that *ei vice be perfected „ tbe defendant by the publication of this order oucc a month lor four montba. before the next term ol this court, tn the weekly Banner-W«tch- man, a paper pul Whed in Clarke county, Ga, N. I*. HUTCHINS, Judge s. 0. * B.B. TRASIJER, Petitlinet's Attorney. A true extrfict from tile minutes of said court thta Aaf.2lst,1886. JNO. W. JOnNSON, Clerk. RIOTICE to Debtors and Creditors.—All per«on* M having demands against the estate of Br loa hereby notified to render tn Iheir demand# tr undersigned according to law, and all peraoua indebted to said c4Ute are required to make im mediate payment. Aug. ig. 1886. JOHN wTllISIfOP, Exec e A. BIvHOI* Rot only shortens tho timo ofl.bor an-1 -lessenstke rain, unt-'terrcstlydlmlnUhes favorable !> *pecdr recovei j.«.TUea* lia ble to" flooding, convulsion , and other alarming ivmntoms. Its efficacy In this re*p*ct entifle* it to be callled Tn<e Motc- *.j*Frixnd, and to rank as one of the e saving remedies of the nineteenth . century. We cannot publish certificate* concern ing this rcmcHtjr without woundiug tlio delicacy of the writers. Yet we havo hundreds on file. Sen for o ur book “To Moteor*,’’ mailed free. Brad held Regulator Co.. Atlanta Ga. iwhlch affilct asakbil see nkfc- A UR, Most af tbe diastase •flyeeoeed bye disordered oowditJoo of the Ll VEB- For all oanpUteta of this kiad. each m Toipid**yo« the liver. BMoaaneeff, Nervous Dyepriwte. Jin Heartbeat. *”— Swta tloody RaS. Chills sad fee, Braskbcn. Exhaostiou briers or sttee Fatses. Ch»e»d° I, y rbajs. leas at ApnsUfe, Headache InwiUritla boUdUl to FsaudM.-BeerinC'd^* fe Invaluable. It u note panacea toriS br.t Aline all dl.eas.soltb. Will yUtfE STOMACH sad BOWELS; changes tba complexion from a tins*, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely low. gloomy spirit*. It is one of the BEST TERATIVES and PUmFirtBS OF THE BLOOD, end le A VALUABLE T0W c< STADICER’S AURANTII VwHfelvaUDnunfea. Price S 1.00 psrbod 1 *- C. F. STADICER, Proprietor, <«a SO. FRONT »T„ WillndelpMa* *»■ t.f vvlt.-u, uutils are true: “They f m ami Uiwl, liaiilJy sl.lt to !. v ,- lr •igiit on their fet-j, the Mown all -out their cheeks, irratabk- nn.l itlioui uieanitti: to be, nm rorrieil.uitn theehihlren, trttte tit- thir.”«, a burden to thcvu ami vet with no scute disease pity It 18. But a few b'litlr-s o b Tonic will ive all ibis jvtav ievei.be tr.wt t sj.culia-wt lB We Have -tried it. “At. 1 would have .I ii the o-ts: was ten t tttes w hat it I-, pay.- rnttn-. ladies l*h • have psed Tile .ilothet’a frvnil I*. fore niititmetit. Write Tin- B aiiiioid Ke^u-aiwCo., Atlanta, Gw. for ill -iat- lieutat a. The puckesi tun. ou re com ! ral- Kin of it- w ur.-t ij pc, i-.ir-c i. v • no d.i* of SMI i ll’S BILE BKAfth n, i, ouiuUe to four hour-, a- many who lia'e tried it cao testify, it does neein rtraii'e list sensible people will, suffer uiiu his w. uwm..tiifl «.T. wiwai I terrible di-ra-c when speedv relief cn ISUEBSWfc ! wwly '*• foun«l in (his 8iiiipli» safe Z ''T>UNI V -Hr"vlTtu • of I ine *P e;w, . v remedy. 25 cun*. For Mile by thwiaat will acd lest*, all Grli^ifitgauil deal era iu medicide, or ltte of said cyu tv„5 se'it any where on receipt of price in * ” ' tamps . Excitement la Texas Groat excitement hu* been caused ia the vicinity of Tex, by the remar kable recovery of Mr. J. K. Corley, who was so helpless he could not turn in bed, 6r raise his head; everybody said ht* wa.« _ . dying oi Consumption. A trial bottle of intne couth. »ne be«r of I)r. King’s New Discovery was sent him. nd e ilenrv Hard g'eeou tbe Finding relief, h« bought a large bottle, and a box of Dr. King's New Life I'. 11s; tiy .he time he had taken tx*v OTXitfb# Pills and two bottles of the. Discovery, he was welland had gained in (lesii thirty-six pounds. Trial llottles of this Great Discovery or Consumption free nt Long Co. Says an Eminent PbyricUn, “Have used for twenty y ear* ihe prepc araiiop known a Bradiiehi’s Fenul- ed, now ha* Hegulator. It is the tn.il combination have, iu uml known f< r telltale di.-ea^es. For partj afore- culars write The Brad Held Itegulato- Co. t Atlanta, Ga. A BAT} FIX. Thousands of men and women all over our couutry are silently iniserab*', while the outside world think you have no cguse to grieve. But, ah! We pronounce no auathemns againt any other remey, bat we as ert that one single bottle of B B. B. will do more in the cure of any case of blood poisn than twelve bottles of any other. Our book is free ind it tells BLOOD BALM CO- Atlanta, Ga. HIS BONES PROTRUDED THROUGH THE FLESH A prominent Alabama physician said ,*A patient who was almost dying from the effects of Tertiary Syphillis and who had been treated by sevr^u noted physi cians without benefit, used a dozen bot tles of B. B. B. and waa entirely cured. He had ulcers on his arms, and the bones heotrudd through rhe flesh and skin a til ow, and d eatk seemed inevitable.' Magnificent Water Power for Sale The wrll kiioeti water pofiverrx:low t&e comicne of the North eno South Oconee Kiver known a* Cartieu SIioaIf. 9 or 10 mdea from Athens. 4; t Kim Watkins ville, ano 8 irom Wintervjllr. ou the Georgia Radrod The dirt roa i to the j*n>- perty is level. Tfie shoal* are very fine, he fall i* ,“1 4-10 feet the volume ot water I s 4.V*** The shoals are l^u than one tails lung The sur vey and map were made by I’m! Bat row ol ihe riiate University hence can b relieu upon. There is attached lo the shoals2U) nets oi laud uniiuole for a villege for opperauv<«. A sireitu iuu» utmv the laud and rift* nigh enough ou th-- bil' to inrow it* being u*ed to to roa water »*> gra'llf through any tuiildinas ani couldbe used fl-e and lor other purport. The coiuciuj Uu-J Railroad born Athens S.utn will run only a ft-* mi\«a fiomtbe pioperty, for mabuiaclunug pur posed thia property baa no superior For panvu- •** #r> -lv i • J. M. Veal Kx, near the property of the unv:reigned. J. S. WILLIFORD. K. E- A.Q Piles are. * eqnentiy preceded bv sense C'* vvel it In the back, lo ng und lower parto the abdomen, causing the parent to nuppose he has some aflectira of the kidneys or neighboring organs Attin.es, symptoms of indigestion arc present, flatulency, uneasiness of tin st Jinacii etc. A moist Are like perspira tion, producing a a very disagreeable tching, after getting warm, as a common attendant. Blind, Bleetling and Itching PiVgyield at once to the apphcs^tion cf Dr. Bosarko’s °ife Bemady, which «ct« directly upon the pai .*» afl'cctcd, alx<o r b ng the Tumorb, allaying the intense- nulling, aiKketfeoting a permanent cure. Price 50 cent. Address Theljr. Bosoanko Medicine Co., ‘Piqua. O. Sold byK.S. T yndom •Pd’Bur 1 ' Arnold.