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About The Weekly banner-watchman. (Athens, Ga.) 1886-1889 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 11, 1888)
A CALL FOR ASSISTANCE- Up to the present the citizens of Jacksonville have declined all assist ance from abroad; but their resources have at last been exhausted, and with the spread of the fever, they find themselves in need of assistance from those not afflicted with such dire dis- Journal as saving? t r ,-ss. The following card has Wen iM( er b«i!«5' portage 1s*ued and needs no comment It will ' . ,, I (... r. ol asure as well as a Christian OF I ,j jty *fcr those in Athens and other sections to contribute to the extent of their ability l BANXEB . WATCHMAN r« TAril *s»^o t«?t. -3AILI S U«3AY 8 W_EEHK »>V * Vl-r l'lionUi, sl.ester three mont- 1 THE PHYSICIANS. At the annual banquet of the At lanta Society of Medicine Dr. J..S. Todd made an eloquent speech in _ reply to the toast— 1 “The Ph/sicians.” ! ™ E RE ^ EI 1 EN _ D ^™ R Among other things lie is reported by j tlie . Atlanta Medical and Surgical la the' great final’ reckoning I h»-l rather be A. W. Cslboun than-Julias j Cmsar. Tbo one will be we'corosd, gar- ! Iande<!, crowned and glorified by the ! thousands to whom while living he gratu- tously gave or restored sight, hearing AT THE TABERNACLE. "A* the Kuvt I'bbMih AlUr tbs Wafer Sk* Pnnteth 21 j Su>:l After Tiice, <> <;ptl M -A RnT'bR f.usS***ro by n V sit to Atllroodaek'. BluJoun, Sept. S».—great organ, Jm:»rt.vvtt and erJargec. rolitti oui witb long meter dcxoivgy ut Saranac, !n- which the mountains of ; ^’esred in n>y natural temperament, God's eternal strength look down and ^ _ T family, blessed in my , men their shadows. As for your physi cal disorders, the .worst strychnine you can eake is fr . tfulaess. and the best med- ici’vs is religion. I know people who we re only a little disordered, yet have fretted themselves into complete valetu- oneortuaitics, blessed in a comfortablo liVelihood, bietseel in the hope that my soul will go to Heaven through the par doning mercy of. God, and my bony, un less it be lost at sea or cremated in some conflagration, will lie down in the gar- diaarianism, while tthers put their trust i Jen, of Crrenwrod luiiorc my kinumt in God ai: i came tin from the very j f r ; La ds. tome already gt)ne end others RIB l’ltKSiPENT: GROVER .CLEVELAND, ’ of XKW VO UK. roil \ hietuTestdeot: ALLEN (tJTHURMAN. IUKiN, hsdow of fit ail, and h :ve lived com- crtr.bly tvre>.ty-fivo yc.’is will-. one vg. A • •••;],; lui.g, but Ood Veftcr off Unit a > ]*r gs. Somo you liave i long tirvie srelicg urou::<l Cape to Jmvo Icon fail- r_<- Livod yyfifQ, Do not > nfc<?ad. The deer will to come after me. Life to many has been a disappointment, but lo u.e it has lyx-it a plvitet ut surprise, ami yet a ue- rtaro that if 1 did rot-feel that God was ujiv my friend and ever present hero, I s..ou!d he wretched and terror struct, tint X v. am more of him. I have thought over this text and preached sermon to myself until with all li ROYAL LEADS ALL. Comoarative Worth of Baking Powders. [NOTE.—A counterfeit of the following illustration is being used to alvei- tise an adulterated baking powder. As so used, however, it illustrates a fraud, as the names of baking powders attached in the counterfeit advertise ment, with two exceptions, as well 'as the pretended United States and Canadian Government endorsements, are purely bogus.] !!. rAH of Chill :,I.yr..icT .TON, •1VS. il. IA Mi, Of Oconee. il! ItK.l’lt'-KKNTATlVE: UEXUY C. TUCK. i not mournfully into tlie past, u-. not hacK avail i ; y un|>rovt- the present, nine; , . r h lo mi nt the kliadnwy future nit f. ar ami with a manly hear •Tlfft TRUEST OF ALL GOSPELS ■Of■ NEWS) IS Tiffs; BAT A I.IK s Mil 1.(1 NO PROsl’RK.” ngagemclt of nurses or for numerous other demands upon us; and, whereas, owing to the absence of ail business, mauy of the most liberal citizens rre unable Vo furnish further funds, we r.o.y think we are justified in accept ing many w illing offers received from you. therefore, wish onr fellow- citizens of the United States to know that we will gratefully receive the aid they have offered, and that any con tributions will he used for the benefit of those in need and where they will effect the greatest good. We request that any such contributions may be forwarded to .lames M. Schumakcr, president of the First National Bank and chzimian of our finance com mittee. Neal Mitchell, President of the Duval County Board of Health. IX T. Gerow, Acting Mayor of the City, and 1*. McQuaid, Acting President Citizens’ Auxiliary Association, Jacksonville, Fla. General Secretary I.iehman is be ing denounced by the Knights of Bailor for his support of protection Th« workingmen of this country won't cheap food and clotldng and not a protection which gives them ••trust” 1 tosses. which Cavenlon and Pelletier used to rob cinchona of its quinine than the bloodstained swords of Charlemagne or Napoleon. J had rather be, in the rges | with its horns. oi;; which lie has spoK.ni in mauy porta of the country, and slial.cn hands, he says, with about a hundred thousand people, il.; clss. -1 his lour by a visit to . ^ r ^ the wilderness in upper New York state, 1 can see ^tlurty, ann there a ™ I -Ms- and spending some time among tli< tha ton fretL family by tlie greatest of navigators, u-uumous. j By vaccination tens of thousands are j ,j li0 preacher said: David, who must sometime have seen mute witii its swift feet than : moused energies of my body, mind and soul, and I can cry out: “As the hart I saw whole chains of lakes hi the] panteth after the water brooks, so pantetli Adirondack's, and from ono height you m y soul after thee, O God.” Through ) said to be- Jesus Christ make this God your Godaud rescue 1 yearly from the most painful lioseoe Conkling said in 1886; Mr. Cleveland is making an excellent pio- sident. He is proving himself an aide, honest, fearless man. He seems to place his idea of duty high above political advantage, lie vd] go down in history as one of our great presi dents. 1 ill-1 ..hi River railroad tunnel com- pull) states tli it there are good i>ros- )..<t nf the t snnel work l>ein“ re- Mlliw .1 nt all < Illy day. A loan of IO.imui 1ms l.raotically tieen nego- « 1 in ling nnd. and tliu first in- stall neu: "f til • laj.ifal is expected. 1: tlie state ir. t ions Vermont goo* i:.|. jMh’un by ;, reduced majority of uUtv l J<..UOO. Ark;iiw;is marches in t Ilf .lllU of tl e 1 leinocracy with a lit v of 2r .iliHI ,,\, r tile combined f 1.0 s.j the lafniiblirun, the Labor 1 11 .11 mill tlie Wheeler parties. Sin etc, the Lnlxtr l uion nominee tor the presidency, lives in Arkansas and made a canvass of parts of tl Slate in the interests of his local cm didates. stag making for the water. The fasci nating animal called in my text the hart, is the same animal that in sacred and and loathsome of all deaths. T be find- j £ deer hunt, points us here to a hunted ing of the two Americas entailed upon ... . ... . *the aborigines slavery or extermination. The writings of Hippocrates and Galen have done more to make life tolerable than the combined books of Homer, Virgil, Confucius, Plato and all the other ancient authors, if you will—with, among the moderns, Darwin, Huxley, Tindal. Mill and Buckle thrown in. If of W. V. Westmoreland and L. A. Dugas it is not written that they M loved the Lotd,” then I am sure the recording angel wdl plead before a merciful tribu nal the fact that their works bear mute testimony to the truth of his chronicle, “ they loved their fellow men.” bright, refreshing lakes; each promise a lake, a very slmrt carry be tween them, end though for ages tlie pursued have been drinking out of tbcm, tlfey are full up to tlie top of the given bunks, and tbo same David de- profano flleralureTs ^dUsTtlio tlm^The i V' e!a ,' °", d ' !le F.5° m V ear ^ ! and Umu"shall' glorify me.”' O Chris- roehuck, the hind, tlie gazelle. tlioTein- ! gctb<‘ r t ‘„ ia ‘, i ')_ t *^° different places he | tian nH . n ond women, pursued of u tlonacial panic, vvbon a Chris tain mer chant was ashed if he did not fear ho would brnak, answered: “Yes, I shall break when tho fifteenth Psalm breaks in tho fifteenth verse: ‘Call upon mo in tho clay of trouble; I will deliver thco deer. In cenT^ si'ria^ Kbirtim« I Speaks of then) as a continuous river there were whole pasture fields of them, I saying: ‘There is a nyer the rtnytms 1 • - - i whereof shall make glad the city or God;’ EQUAL RIGHTS OF MAN. Deports from London announce gerinus disaffection, bordering on mu tiny, among the Metropolitan police of that great city. The trouble : nc- eastoned by the petty tyrannies of the Chief Commissioner, Sir Cliarles Warren, whose title and lineage : a no doubt nobler than his treatment of his sui ordinates. Like most appointments of impor tance in the English realn^.ffrrs'one is made more as a nenj^Uif aneestry than of li'tness.tfo the office or de- served. ^vt,motion. The old idea of IT'-tfTvme right, of kings is not yet ""divorced from tlie mind of nolde Britons who deem an inherited title 1 and a wealth of ancestry greatly supe rior to individual worth at.d manly excellence. Between this lordly chief and his subordinates, there is not that sympathy of kindred feeling so es- serltial lo harmony and perfect obe dience. Tlie English ignore the nobler traits of human nature in thinking, that to command respect the chief of this and other departments must have breathed the air asid been fed upon the fruitso :;u ancestral home, extending back to the time “whereof the memory of man runneth not to the contrary.” Ilow much better, how much more in spiring, the system in our own free America, a country of “equal rights and happy men ” w here the equality of all men is recognized, and where the liutnble cottager is inspirited with tlie thought that his offspring may sit in the highest place in tho nation. The trouble among the London police an doubt arises from local and direct causes, hut it can hut he regard ed as an oinen of the future, when Britons wdl assert this equal right of man; when place and fame will be based, not on the achievements of generatious long dead, hut on manly efforts and individual excellence. OUR GOLDEN FUTURE- Every night the wires are hot with dashes of glad tidings of good news for our southern country. Every day adds its quota to the bright promise of a golden period of development for our section. The soil above and the earth beneath are developing bound less resources of wealth. The forecasts of sages, who lived and died during a time when our land was unknown and misrepresented arc being more than realized and tin South will soon not only clothe tins world, hut will furnish coal to warm it, woods and minerals to cover it and iron to weld it together, following the organization of a company head ed by Governor Gordon, with millions of capital, to develop the exhauslless mineral resources ill and around Bock- mart, comes the announcement that many of the furnaces in the iron regions of Pennsylvania are looking southward for more profitable fields for their furnaces. Alabama and Georgia, twin sisters, are developing into such beauty of form and wealth of hidden treasures as to dazzle the eye and tempt the cupidity of the money kings of the country. Nor are the farmers of our section asleep—they too have caught the in spiration of the hour, and are aroused to a realization of their importance as the producers of the most valu able staple in the world. The- recent trouble, occasioned by the trust in bagging, has touched into new life the great agricultural interests of the South, and the time is not far distant when the price of this indispensable article of commerce will he deterinin- OUR CITY GOVERNMENT. As the time for the election of city officials draws nearer it is pertinent for the public to know something of the policy those who are asking for office shall pursue. This is as important in municipal as in state or national affairs. The public demand an ag gressive policy for the incoming council; not a foolish or extravagant expenditure of the city’s finances, necessitating increased taxation, hut such expenditure as the needed im provements for our city shall require. We want better streets, better lights, I ettcr organization in our police force, improved sanitary' regulations with perhaps the laying of a system of sewers. The voters would like to have tin expression from tlie candidates for city offices on these and other matters of general interest. There is no doulit that public sentiment favors a strong and aggressive city govern ment, and the men who come out squarely on this line will he endorsed and elected. ed by the cotton planter of the South. Then will cotton ls‘ King indeed and The old State capitol is to he sold. Much interest is felt as to its future, It cost nlwut §350,000 and is a good building now, hut the State has no use for it. The capitol committee has directed W. H. Harrison to insert advertisements in the four leading dailies of the State for bids. llie bids are to be sealed. It will be sold for all cash or one-third cash and the remainder in one and two years. A certified check for §1,000, to accom pany each bid as an evidence of good faith. H. I. Kimball thinks that the city of Atlanta ought to buy it and build a magnificent city hall. o l’rof. Hauser, of Germany, has,jy- the producer wiil he the power h_elunyU^|tfj^*tft2<lo a remark.cf c archa-ologi- the throne. Thefupet^tiffge is being chanted iATV'DaTopen grave of sectional pre judice and tho South, d(Hiked in the glory of her true nature, is command ing the admiration and attracting the wealth of Northern millionaries and English peers. We, of the South, liavc every reason for hope,and though financial depression still lingers with some, the country, in the aggregate, is on tho high tide of progress. DOWN WITH TRUSTS. “Death to monopolies” is the watchword of the farmers in the pres ent trouble about bagging. Southern farmers have not often combined, hut once or twice, within the hundred years of our existence, it has become necessary, and then they astonished the world with the strength of their resolve and the fearlessness of their nature; with their patience m suffer ing and their indifference to death in the defense of their rights. That spirit of resistance to oppression still lives and is aroused to action by the tyranny of the bagging “ trust.” From Virginia to Texas cotton planters are devising expedients to avoid the use of new bagging and tln'rcbv crush to death tlie “ trust/ All of the old bagging is being bought from the factories in the South, .and will be used over again. Thousands and thousands of hales will be wrap ped in cotton cloth which has been officially recognised by the Liverpool exchange as ai acceptable shape. Large quantities, for local factories, will be covered with paper, supported with oak or nine strips. It seems nnur nnitn fffrt&in that a large part of •ul discovery uTa remarkable way. He noticed that a corn field near Al- tenburg varied in color, and declared that the variation in color was due to the existence of a buried amphithe atre, tlie corn ripening more slowly over the buried walls. An excavation proved that this audacious theory was correct, and a large theatre was dis covered from which a paved road leads to the camp of Caruuntum, previous ly discovered by the professor. The iron posts that mark our north ern boundary line between the United States and Eastern Canada are at every cross road that lea*Is into Canada, and designate, as the inhabi tants say, u Jjine 45.” They stand above the ground about three feet, and have four sides, on which appear the following inscriptions: 1, Bound ary, August 9,1842. 2. Albert Smith, United States commissioner. 3. Treaty of Washington. 4. Lieut Coi. I. li. li. Estcourt, H. B. M. commissioner. as Solomon suggests when he says: “I charge you by the (finds of the field. ” Their antlers juttod from tho long grass as tliev lay down. No hunter who lias been long in “John Brown’s track” will wonder tl»at in tlie Bible they were classed among clean animals, for tlie dews, tho s! towers, tho lakes washed them os clean us the sky. When Jacob, the patriarch, longed for venison, Esau shot and brought home a roebuck. Isaiah compare's tlie sprightli- aess of the restored cripple of millennial times to the long and quick jump of the stag, saying: “The lame shall leap £S a hart.*' Solomon expressed his disgust at a hunter who, liaving shot a deer, is too lazy to cook it. saying: “The slothful man roasteth not that which he took in hunting.” But one day David, while far from tlie home from which he had been driven, and sitting near the door of a lor.ely cuvo where he laid lodged, and on the hanks of a pond or river, hears a pack of hounds in swift pursuit. Bee:.me of the prei- vicus »ilence' of the forest the clangor startles him, and he says to himself: “1 wonder what thoe dogs are after.” The:, there is a crackling in the brush wool, and the loud breathing of some rusliii g wonder of the woods, and tho nr tiers of a o*er rend the leaves of the thicket, at <1 by an instinct which all hunters recog nize, plunges into a^xmd or lake or river to cool its thirst, and at the san.o time by its capacity for swifter and longer swim- 1 ming. to got away from the foaming liar- ! riers. David says to himself: “Aha. | that is myself I Saul after me, Absalom j after me, enemies without number after j me. 1 am chased, their bloody muzzles i at my heels, barking at my good name. ! barking after my body, barking after my | souk Ob, tho hounds, the hounds! But look there,” says David, “that reindeer has splashed into tho water. It puts its hot lips and nostrils into tho cool wave that washes the lathered Hunks, nnd it 6wims away from tho fiery canines, and it is free at last. Oh, that I might find in the deep, wide lake of God's mercy and consolation escape from my'pursuers! Oh, for the waters of life and rescue! As tho heart panteth after the water brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God. ” I liave just como from tho Adiron- dacks and tho breath cf the balsam and spruco and pino is still on me. The Adirondacks ore now populous with hunters, and the deer aro beingjdai^-Ay'* the score. Talking a /^V’-cfciys "ingo with ' a hunter /—(nought I would like ocf see whether ray text was accurate In its allusion, and as 1 heard tho dogs baying a little way off and supposed they wero on the track of a reindeer, and 1 said to tho hunter in rough corduroy, “Do the deer always make for tho water when they aro pursued?” lie said, “O, yes, mister; you see, they are a hot and thirsty animal, and they know where the water is, and when they hear danger in the distance they lift their antlers and miu 17 tin* breeze and start for tho Rac quet, or Loon, or Saranac, ami wo get into our cedar shell boat or stand by tho •runaway' with rifle loaded ready to blaze away.” My friends, this Is ono reason why I like tlie Bible so much— its allusion's are so truo to nature. Its partridges r.io real partridges, its ostriches, real ostriches, imd its reindeer, real reiudeer. 1 do not wonder that this antlered glorv of the text makes the hun ter’s eye spat kle and his cheek glow auu his respiration quicken. To ray nothing of its usefulness, although it is the inoet useful of all game, its floli delicious, its skin turned into human apparel, its sinews fashioned into bow strings, its an tlers putting handles on cutlery, and the sluivings of its herns used as a restora tive, taken from tho name cf the hart and called hartshorn. But putting aside THE PRESIDENTIAL TERM Tlie Evening Journal, which is both conservative and wise, comes out in a strong leader advocating an ex tension of tlie presidential term from four to six years. By instancing tlie present dilatory and partisan course of legislation in Congress the Journal shows that Cleveland’s maxim, “public office a publ !c t>..it” in liciiig sulivcrtcd and, Jn^nrilluiss of tlie interests of the country, partisan ollice-liolders in the Senate particularly are sacrificing all to party ends. A llepublican Senate not only obstructs an honest effect on tlie part of Democrats to effect a just .reduction of the tariff, which the \ whole obuntry clamors for and which own leaders have heretofore ad- f vocated, hut declines to offer a substi- tuto hoping thereby to misrepresent the Democrats in the National elec tion and gain strength for their party. Further, the Be publicans in the Senate proved faithless to their own —— aenstitwencies and left it for a Demo cratic President to uphold the rights of American fishermen: in the hope chat Cleveland’s resources would bo put to too severe a test and his in ability to meet the emergency would weaken his popularity. How sadly they mistook Cleveland’* statesman ship, and how they writhe under the piercing of a weapon put into his hands by themselves! Not satisfied ,‘et with ignoring the will of the people in tho matter of a red wit ion of the tariff, with having proven false to their owu party in the mucli fisheries bill, these noble Uenublican ^ Senators thirst to imperil the honor of America^Ly passing a bill to re strict Chinese immigration in dis- regard/of existing treaty agree- nts, hoping thereby to counteract : Harrison’s record on the Chinese ion and gain strength on the c Slope. credit to tho Democrats (Endeavoring to ontwit in this matter and by a sacrifice of li ,1 America. Is arise out of the especially during ft pm- to the real welfare of rrelice of these four Gen. Jolu^B. Gordon, Governor of Georgia, is announced to delivered an address at the Belknap county fair at Laconia, N. H.., Sept. 5th, and Hon. A. O. Bacon sf Macon, has been secured by the National Democratic Committee to make a series of speeches throughout the North. They are both superb orators, and in the visit of these distinguished Georgians and Southern leaders the people of the North will have a rare treat and the party will undoubtedly be benefitted by tbeir service. , now quite certain that a large part c the present supply of bagging will have to be carried over by the “trust and that it will profit but little by the ipeculathm. We applaud this effort on the part pf tho farmers to crush oppression, and while we would be glad if they could avoid using a single yard of ne w lagging and if possible, bold tlie bulk of their crop until they see fit to sell, yet we would urge upon them the great importance of meeting their obligations promptly with their merch ants and factors. We trust they will be able to do this by other means than by the use of jute bagging, but where it is necessary to meet an honest debt the farmer should use it and not allow his best friend, the merchant, to suffer and t.iereby injure his own credit.- WOOD AND IRON- The Manufacturers’ Kccord is doing some fine work for the development of the South. In writing of the increase in the car bfiilding industry in our section, the Beeonl has this to say of our great wealth of woods and iron: « Tlie two chiet items—lumber and iron—that enter into the construction of a car can be had at a lower price in the South than at any other point in the country. In fact, Northern and Western car builders are compelled to draw immense supplies of lumber and iron from the South, paying heavy freight charges, while well located Southern works, in some cases, have both iron. and lumber almost at their very doors, thus saving the expense of long transportation. The saving in these two items is immense, and a car plant which con sumes, say, 5,000,000 feet ofTumber. a year would save on this item alone §40,000 to §50,000 a year, or 8 to 10 per cent, on a capital of §500,000. In iron the saving is also very heavy, being about 25 per cent, according to these figures. Moreover, in building oars for Southern roads, there is a very large saving aa compared with Western works, because, afthr freight is pud on the lumber and Iron ship ped West, another freight* must be paid on the finished car-when it is shipped South to tho purchasing Dr. H. H. Tucker, Jr., who has al ready achieved considerable reputa tion as a long distance pedestrian, is anxious to walk from Atlanta to San Francisco, Cal. He says lie will glad ly undertake the walk provided he can get some friend to accompany him. Thus far no one has indicated a will ingness to join him in the long tramp. Mr. Tucker save he would rather walk to California than to ride all the way in a palace car. The most remarkable figure on the stump this full will be Anna Dickin son. She has been engaged to make four speeches a week for Harrison and Morton. She will receive §200 for each 'speech and travelling ex penses. Elijah D. Hooper, a fireman on the Covington and Macon, his brought suit against tlint road for §1,000 for the loss of a finger. He bruised and burnt it while feeding tlie engine with wood, the supply of cool having been exhausted, amputation became necessary later. Tlie outlook for the farmers in the united kiugdom, especially in Ireland, is anything hut encouraging this year. Tlie wheat crop is not likely to be over 50,000,000 bushels, .10,000,000, less than last year. its usefulness, tiiis enchanting creature I press their seems made out of gracefulness and das- the Barone tieity. Wlut aa eye, with a liquid long life: brightness as if gathered up from a bun- Woul dred lakes of sunset! The horns, a corona) brandling into every possible curve, and utter it seems done, advancing into other projections of exquisiteness, a tree of jioiished bone, uplifted in pride, or swung down for awful combat. It is velocity embodied. Timidity impersonated. The enchant ment of the woods. Eye lustrous in life and pathetic in death. Tlie splendid ani mal a complete rhythm of muscle, aud bone, and color, and attitude, nnd loco motion, whether couched in the grass among the sliadows, or a living bolt shot through tlie forest, or turning at hay to attack tho hounds, or rearing fur its last fall under the buckshot of tlie trapper. Is is a splendid appearance that tho iTliou shnlt i lake them drink of tho rivers of thy pleasures;” “Thou greatly enridlest it with tho river of God which is full of water.” But many of you have turned your back on that supply, and confront your trouble, and you are soured with your circumstances, and you are fighting so ciety, nnd you are 'fighting a pursuing world, anil troubles instead of driving you into the cool lake of heavenly com fort. have made you 6top and turn round and lower your head, nnd it is simply antler against tooth. I do not blame you. Probably under the same circumstances I would have done worse. But you are all wrong. You need to do as tho .rein deer does in February and March—it sheds its horns. Tho Rabbinical writers allude to this resignation of antlers by tbo stag when they say of a man who ventures his money in risky enterprises, he lias hung it on the stag’s liorns; and a proverb in the far cast tclb a man who has foolishly lost his fortune to go aud find, whero the deer died her horns. My brother, quit the antagonism of your circumstances, quit misanthropy, quit complaint, quit pitching into your pur suers, be as wise as, next spring, will be all tho reindeer of the Adirondacks. Shed your horns. But very many of you are wronged of the world—and if in any assembly between Bandy Hook, New York, and Golden Gate! San Franchco, it \wrc asked that ail those that Jual been sometimes badly treated should raise both their hands, and, full response should lie made, there would be twice as many hands lifted as persons present—I say many of you would declare: “We have always done the Lost wo could and tried to be useful, and xAiy we should become the victims of inaiignmeut, or invalidism, or mishap, is Inscrutable.” Why do you r.ot know that tho finer a deer, and the more elegant its proportions, and the more beautiful its bearing, tlie more anxious tbo hunters and the hounds aro to capture it. Had that roebuck a ragged fur and broken hoofs and an obliterated eye and a limping gait the hunters would have said: “Pshaw! don’t let us waste our ammunition on a 6ick deer.” Aud tho hounds would have given a few snilfs of tho track and then darted oft in another direction for better game. But when they sqe n jdeer jreftT ajftfcrs iitteif"m“ mighty challenge to earth and sky, and the sleefc hide looks as if it had been smoothed by invisible hands, and tho fat sides inclose the richest pasture that could be nibbled from tho bonk of rills so clear they soern to have dropped out of heaven, aud tha stamp of its foot defies the jack shooting lantern and the rifle, the horn and tho hound, that deer they will have if they must needs break their nock in the rapids. So if there wore no noble stulT in -your make up, if you were a bifurcated nothing, if you were a for lorn failure, you would bo allowed to go undisturbed; but the fact that tho whole pack is. in full cry after you is proof pos itive that you aro splendid game and worth capturing. Therefore sarcasm draws on you its “finest bead.” There fore tlie world goes gunning for you with its best Maynard breech loader. Highest compliment is it to your talent, or your virtue, or your usefulness. You will bo assailed in proportion to your great achievements. The best and the mightiest being tho world ever saw, had set after him all the hounds, terrestrial and diabolic, and they lapped his blood after the Calvarean massacre. The world paid nothing to its Redeemer but a bramble and a cross. Mauy who have done their best to make the world better have had such a rough time of it that all their pleasure is in anticipation of the next world, and thev could ex annovance3 and exasperations, remember, that this hunt, whether a still hunt or a hunt in full cry, will soon be over. If p^t a whelp looks ashamed and ready to slink out of sight it is when in tho Adirondacks a deer by one long, tremen dous plungo Into Big Tuppcr lake gets away from him. The disappointed canine swims in a little way, but, defeated, swims out again and cringes with humili ated yawn at the feet of liis master. And how abashed and ashamed will all your earthly troubles In? when you have dashed into the river from under the throne of God. and the heights and depths of heaven are between you and your pursuers. We are told in Revelation xxii, 15: “Without are dogs,” bv which l conclude there is a whole kennel of hounds outside the gate o£„heaven. or, as when a master goes in a door his dog Lies on the steps waiting for him to come out, so the troubles of this life‘may follow us to the sinning door, but they cannot get in. •‘Without v'Q dogs!” I have seen dogs and owned dogs that I would not bo J chagrined to nee in the heaveMly city. Some of the grand old watch dogs who are the constabulary of tho homes in sol- | itary places, aud for yeais have been the only protection of wife and child; some of the shepherd dogs that drive Kick the wolves and bark away tho flocks from going too near the precipice; and some of tlie dogs whose neck and paw Landseer, the painter, lias made immortal, would not find mo shut ting them out from the gate of shining pearl. Some of those old St. Bernard dogs that have lifted perishing travelers out of tho Alpine snow; the dog that John Brown, the Scotch essayist, saw ready to spring at tho surgeon lest, in removing the cancer, ho too much hurt the poor woman whom the dog felt bound to protect; nnd dogs that we caressed in our childhood days, or tiiat in later time lay down on the rug in 6eeming sympathy when our homes were desolated. I say, if some soul entering'heaven should happen to leave tho gato ajar and these faithful creatures should quietly walk in, it would not at all disturb my heaven. But all those human or brutal hounds that have chased and torn and lacerated the world; yea, all that now bite or worry or tear to pieces, shall 1x3 prohibited. ROYAL (Absolutely Pure).-| GRANT’S (AlumPowder) BUMFOBD’S, When fresh.. | / HANFORD’S, when frevi.... REDHEAD'S CHARM (AlumPowder) AMAZON (Alum Powder) *.. - CLEVELAND’Sishortwt.ios.: PIONEER (SanFrancisco).... CZAR HR. PRICE’S I SNOW FLAKE (Groff’s) LEWIS’ PEARL (Andrews & Co.) HECKER’S GILLErS ANDREWS & CO. “ Regal’’#■■■ Milwaukee, (Contains Aiwa.) BULK (Powder sold loose) HI RUJIFOBD’Sjwbea cot treatBS REPORTS OF GOVERNMENT CHEMISTS . As to Purity and Wholesomeness of the Royal Baking Powder. “I have tested a package of Royal Baking Powder, which I purchased in the open market., and find it con posed of pure and wholesome ingredients. It is a cream of tartar powder of a high degree of merit, and does not contain either alum or phosphates, or other injurious substances. E. G. Love, l’h.D. “It is a scientific fact that the Royal Baking Powder is absolutely pure. The Royal Baking Powder is undoubtedly the purest and most reliable baking powder offered to the public. H. A. Mott, l’h.D. “ The Royal Baking Powder is purest in quality and highest in strength of any baking powder of which I havo knowledge. Wa. UcMcetkie, l’h.D. " The Royal Baking Powder received the highest award over all competitors at tjio Vienna World’s Exposition, 1873; at the Centennial, Philadelphia, 1876; at the American Institute, New York, and at State Fairs throughout the country. No other article of human food has ever received rah high, emphatic, and universal endorsement from eminent chemists, physicians, scientists, and Boards of Health all over the world. Note.—Tho above Diagram illustrates the comparative worth of various Baking Powders, as shown by Chemical Analysis and experiments made by Prof. Schedler. A pound can oi each powder was taken, the total leavening power or volume of gas, in each can calculated, the result being as indicated. This practical test for worth by Prof. Schedler only proves what every observant consumer of the Royal Baking Powder knows by practical experience, that, while it costs a few cents per pound more than ordinary kinds, it is far more economical, besides affording the advantage of better work. A single trial of the Royal Baking Powder will convince any fair minded person of these facts. . " * While the diagram shows some of the alum powders to be of a comparatively high decree of strength, it is not to be taken us indicating that they have any value. AU alum powders, no mutter how high their strength, are to be avoided as dangerous. mi feelings in tlie words oi . of Nairn at tlie close of her ou be young a Tain fio tvor,14 not l; Ono tear of ijwaiory given, Oatrani 1 11 hio; Life's ilar!; vravo f onloil o'er. Ail but ut res: on shore; 8ay, would you plungo oneo more, With home so uigb? If you might, would you now Retrace your way! Wan dor through stormy wilds. Faint and olray 1 Night's gloomy watcher fled, Sloruiag ull beaming red, Hope s smile around us shod. Heavenward, away! Yes; for some people in this world there scorns no let up. They aro pursued from youth to manhood, and from man- hood into old age. Very distinguished are Lord Stafford’s hounds, and Earl oi painter's pencil laili to sketch and only | szrro enrooru s nounos. ana «wi o a hunter's dream on a pillow of hemlock Yarborough s hounds, and the Duke ol at the foot of SLRegds is able topict- ! Ru,la " J and , < J? een V “ tona ( When, twenty °mUes from any * Caterpillars liave invaded every neighborhood in Western Georgia, as high np as Pntnam, Marion county. They will damage late cotton very seriously, both iu quality andquantity. An outbreak is feared among the Navajo Indians in New Mexico, as the result of soldiers attempting to arrest whisky peddlers whom Indians are defending. In a paper read before the British association at Bath De Lesscps de clares that he expects to complete the Panama canal by 1890. Partridge hunter* say the bird crop will be very short in many sections. £1,032 lias been sent by Archbishop Kenan, to -tlie National League from America, Australia aiul New /eland | to aid evicted tenants iu lilland- Mr. Nat Arnold, of Oglethorpe, has sold twenty-two bales of new cotton. Lort er Wallock, the actor, is dead settlement, it comes down at cv.ntido to the lake's edge t» drink among tho lily pods, and. with its sharp edged hoof, shatters tho crystal of Long hike, it is very picturesque. But only when, after luiles of pursuit, with lieaving sides and lolling longue and eyes swimming in death the stag leaps from the cliff into Upper Saranac, can you realize how much David had suffered from uls troubles cad how much he wanted God wbcu he expressed himself in tlie words of the text: “As the hart panteth after tlie wale; brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God.” Well now, let all those who have com ing after them the lean hounds of pov erty or the block hounds of persecution or the spotted hounds of vicissitude or tho pole hounds of death or who are in any wise pursued, fly to tlie wide, deep, glorious lake at divine solace and rescue. Tho most of the met, and w-otnen whom I hnpjien to know at different times, it not now have bad trouble after tliem, sharp muzzled troubles, swift troubles, all devouring troubles. Many of you have made the mistake of trying to fight them. Some body meanly attacked you, and you at tacked them; they depreciated you. you depreciated them; or they overreached you in a bargain, and you tried, in Wall street parlance, to get a corner on them; or you have had a bereavement, and in stead of being submissive, you are fighting that bereavement; you charge on the doctors who failed to effect a cure; or you charge ou Uio carelessness of the railroad company through which the ac cident occurred; or you are a chronic invalid, and you fret and worry and scold and wander why you can not be well like other people, and you angrily charge ou the neuralgia or the laryngitis or the ague or the sick headache. The fact la you ore a deer at hay. Instead of running to tho waters of divine consolation, and slaking' your thirst and cooling your body and soul in the good cheer of the Gospel, and swim ming away into the mighty deeps of God ’a lore, you are fighting a whole kenneffof harriers. A few days ago 1 saw in the Adirondacks a dog lying across tho road, and he seemed unable to get up. and I said to some hunters near bv: “What is the matter with tiiat dog I" Thev an swered: “A deer h art him.’ And I saw hi had a great swollen paw and a bat tered head, showing where tlie sutlers struck him. And the probability is That some of you might give atnighty clip to your pursuers, you might damago their business, you might worry them into ill health, you might hurt them as mucli as they have hurt you. but. after aljL it “Without aro dogs I" Nominee there for luirsh criucs aftiaeitCiters oV'uEi^.'-'iouisiana State Lottery Co. ers^of .A'sj-feputation of others. Down * with you to the kennels of darkness and despair! Tlie hart has reached tlie eter nal water brooks, and the panting of tho long chase is quieted iu still pastures, and “There shall be nothing to hunt or destroy in all God’s holy mount.” Oh, when some of you get there it will be like what a hunter tells of when ho was pushing his conoo far up north iu the winter and amid tlie ice floes, and a hundred miles, ns ho thought, from any other human beings. He was startlod one day as he heard a stepping on tho ice, and ho cocked tlie riflo ready to meet anything tiiat came near. Ho found a man, barefooted aud insane from long exposure, approaching him. Taking him into his canoo ar.d kindling fires to warm him, ho restored him and found out whero ho had lived, and’took him to his homo and found ull tho village in great excitement A hundred men wero searching for this lost man, and his family and friends rushed out to meet him, and, os had been agTeed, at his first appearance bells were rung and guns were discharged and banquets spread, and tlie rescuer loaded with presents. Well, when some at you step out of this wilderness, where you have been chilled and torn nnd sometimes lost amid the icebergs, into the warm greetings of all tlie villages of the glorified, and your friend. rush out to give you welcoming a kiss, the news tiiat there is another soul forever saved will call the caterers of heaven to spread the banquet, ond the bell men to lay hold of the rope in tho tower, and while the chalices click at the feast, and tho bells clang from tho towers, it will be a sceno so uplifting I pray God I may be there to take part in the celestial merriment. And now do you not think the prayer in Solomon’s song, where he compared Christ to a rein deer coming down in tho night to pasture on tho plains, would make an exquisitely appropriate peroration to my sermon: “Until the day break and the shadows flee away, be thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of Bether.” rational xnil Charitable purpoaea, and its Iran- chise made a part of the preaent State Cbuatitu- tioa, in laty, bj an overwhelming popular vote. Ita Grand Single Humber Drawings taka place monthly, ana the Grand Quarterly Dr a wing a regularly every three months March, June September and December). Capital Prize, $300,000. “We <?■» hereby certify that we su pervise the arrangements for all the Monthly and Quarterly Drawings of the Louisiana State lottery company, and in len-on manage and control the Draw ings themselves, and that the same are conducted with honestv, iairuess and in jood faith toward all parties, and we au thorize the Company to use this certiti- tate, with fac-similes of onr signatures tttachcd in its advertisements.” A Physician from lows Dr. II. Munk, Nevada, Iowa, states: Have been practicing medicine fifteen years, and of all the medicines I have ever seen for the bowels, Dr. Digger’s Huckleberry Cordial is by far the best ?,l, ‘ Ibuckliounds. But all of them put to gether do not equal in number, or speed, or power to hum down, the great ken nel of hounds of which sin and trouble are owner and master. E-at what is a relief for all those pur suits of trouble, and annoyance, and pain, nnd bereavement? My text gives it to you in a word of three letters, but each letter is a chariot if you would triumph, or a throno if you want to be crowned, or a lake if you would slake your thirst—yea, a chain of three letters —G-o-d, the one for whom David longed, and tho one whom David found. You might as well meet a stag which, after its sixth mile of ruuniug at the top most speed through thicket and gorge, and with the breath of tho dogs on its heels, lias come in l’ull .sight of Scroon lake and tried to cool its projecting and blistered tongue with a drop of dew from a blade of grass, as to attempt to satisfy an immortal sou, when flying from trouble and sin, with anything less deep, and high, and broad, and immense, and iufiuite, and eternal thau God. Vti. comfort, why it embosoms all distress. His arm, it wrenches off ull bondage. His hand, it wipe* away ull tears. His Christiv atonement, it makes us ull right with the post, and all right with the future, and all right with God, all right with man, and oil right forever. Lamartine tells ns that King Nimrod said to his throe sons: “Here are three vases, and ono is of clay, another of amber, and another of gold. Choose now which you will have." The eldest son, having tho first choice, chose the vase of gold, on which was written tlie word “empire," and when opened it was found to contain human blood. Tbo second son, making the next choice, chose tho vase of amber, in scribed with the ward “glory,” and when opened it contained tlie asbes of those who were once called great The tliird 6on took the vase of clay, and opening it found it empty, but on the bottom of it was inscribed the name of God. King Nimrod asked his courtiers which vase they thought weighed the most The avaricious men of liis court said the vase of gold. The poets said the one of am ber. But tbe wisest men sold tlie empty vase, because one letter of tho name of God outweighed a universe. For liiin I thirst; for liis grace I beg; on ills promise I build my alL Without him I cannot be happy. I have tried the world, and it dqes well'enough os far as it goes, but it is too uncertain a wojjd, ; too evanescent a world. I am not prejudiced witness. I have nothing against this world. I have been ono of tho most fortunate, or, to use a moro Christian word, one of the most blessed of men, blessed in mv uareuts. blessed in tlie On account of high water we could not got our paper from Athens in time this week, and we were delayed in publication. \Ye trust that such will not he the case again.—Daninels- ville Monitor. TO OUK HEADERS- Malaria or Ague Surely Cured ! In thirbroad assertion, we speak not falsely, but state positively, that these and all miasmatic poisons, can be radi cal:- driven from the system, and a per- mnent euro guaranteed. Thousands of chronic cases, whose testimonials bear evidence, have been cured by our infal lible remedy, which contains neither qui nine, arsenic, or anything injurious. Full treatment free by old physician of highest standing, also trial remedy sent on receipt of address, to ASAIIEL M ED ICAL BUREAU, 21)1 Broadway, N. Y mayDldly. M’s Pills will utc the dmeptie from many day* of miser j. ond enable him to cat whatever he wishes. They prevent Siek Headache, runs. til. food touMlmllute mud nor lull tli. body, give keen appetite, oi Develop Flesh and solid mnsele. Elegantly sugar coated. Price, Meta, per box. SOLD EVERYWHERE. NORTH EAST GEORGIA FAIR ■■-.ASSOCIATION ATHENS, GA. NOVEMBER 6TH--10TH. Commissioners. We tho undersigned banks a ad bankers G EORGIA. CLARKE COUNTY.—^Whereas Mi- uerva racon applies to roe in terms of tlie law for letters of administration on tlie estate of lto- 'Vill pay all Prize* drawn in the Lou 1 si- bertBacon, late ofsaid county .deceased. These am T ntr*>rir>vz nro are therefore to cite and notify all concerned to ana btatc Botrenes w inch may be pre sho ^ cause at regu Ur term of the(court of rented at our counters. *' - * * — * - * * R. M. W ALMS LEY, Pres. Louisiana Nut. Bk. PLERItB LANAvJX, 1‘ies. State National Hank. A. BALllWIN'sPrea. New Orleans National Bank CARL HO BN, Pres. Union National Bank. Grand Monthly Drawing i the Academy f Music. Vew Orleans, Tuasday, (it9 '$C8. Capital Prize, $300,000. 100,000 Ticket a at Twenty JDollura Each. Halves SIO: tiua*rtcr« Tenths $2; Twentieths SI. 1 PR1ZK OF »30u,000 ia...™ ... *30<\0‘0 1 PRIZE OF 1W.0CC u .... 1(0,010 1 PRIZE OF 50,000 lSmnHM £0,CCO 1 PRIZE OF 25,000 1s 25,0) 2 PRIZES OF 10.00*1 ara.... 20,UtO 5 PKIZtfH OF 5,000 are .»•« P.. .21.3 ‘F l «'00 are * PRIZES “F 5»j a.-e_ _ i pjtUZl^S OF 3.‘i; are 5PRTZB*i OF ~0 aro ordinary to be held in and for said county on the lirst Monday in September next why such let ters should uot be granted. Given under my bund aud official signature, this 2nd day of uly 16*8, Asa m, JACKS jN, Ordinary. July 10 4w 1888. John W. Wier aud nai"vey Archer, execu- without the State of Georgia. , tors of Natlum Hoyt Wier, deceased, bavin* It further appearing tiiat the Si Voo M, ooo 6*J 700 100/00 APPROXIMATION PRIZES. ' 100 Frlies of f'rt.0 approximating to $3 0,00) I rise are 100 l‘r zis of $ 00 approximating to ♦lOo.ux) Priae aro ~ ' of g.'OO approximating to Piize aie 1KRM1NAL PRIZES 1,0 0 Prizes cf $10j decided b> $300,000 Pila.* ofo 50,000 SO 000 10,000 100,000 io:,ooo 1,130 Prizes amounting to 510 A.cOO For Cub Kates, or any farther !ni< nnaiion apply to tho undrrsb-nod. Your Icnlsrt' nj must he ui«ilnct and Signature p.air. More rap d »eturr* mall delivery a ill bo i nured i y your enclosing au.Luveiope bvar.ik^ )uur iuu addreaa Band postal Notes, Express Money Orders, or Set York Exchange In ordinary letter Cur rency by Express av our expense address*! to X A DAUPHIN NtwOrlaani, La or X A Dauphin Waihlngton, D C; Address registered Letters to NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK, Nzw 0 EL KAN 8, La. General* Beauregerd ind Early, who ere tn charge of the drawings, Is s (oanuitoo of absolute fairness end Integrity, that the chances tie all equal, end that no one den possibly divine what number will draw a Mae. REMEMBER that the payment of el I Prti • GUARANTEED BY rt>UR NATIONAL BANKS of New Orleans, end the Tickets are signed by the President oi an Institution, wkone chartered lights are recognised in the highest Cnartn; therefore, beware ef nay Imitation or wed&sun-d-w O l c The BUY1HS’ GUIDE U lined March and Sept, i each year. It is an oncy< lelopedla at useful inter. filiation for all who par. chase the luxuries or the necessities of life. We can olothb you and ternhih yon with ell ‘ the necessary and unnecessary appliance! to ride, walk, dance, sleep, eat. flah, hunt, work, go to church, or stay at home, and in various sues, styles and quantities. Inst figure out X2i«S.ffSfS" d i odoth «» toings COMFORTABLY, and you can make afUr a.ttmateof the value of tho BUYERS’ QUIDS, which will be sent upon reoelpt of 10 cents to pay postage. MONTGOMERY WARD & CO. Ill-lid Michigan Avenue, Chicago, HL G .ASSES : FITTED SCIENTIFICALLYjl With the latest, 'improved instru ments. If you cannot see distinctly or your eyes pain, call at the $250 offered for the best county display. $100 for the Second. $50 for the Tliird. Liberal premiums for exhibits of all kinds. For particulars address SYLVNUS MORRIS. Secretary, Athens, 0, GANN & RE VES, I V8. | The Northeastern R.11 t o. i The Richmond & Danville | . Railroad company. i 1 The riedmout & West | Point Terminal Railway i and Warehouse i o.aud the | < eutral Trust company vi) jjuity ’A Cfck J superior 0*1 femlants In the above suited, ■ 1 - - ■ ■" >' —-—. 1 ■— i inond & West Point Terminal K.'0»*' a ) \ EORGIA—CLARKE COUNTY : lu the i house Company, *ud the t'eninii ’ Conrt of Ordinary of said county, July term, uyof New York arc jj unity li i to aw i i m tioyt Wier are nou-residents of tills aud appear in ptrson or bv .ittortiej aiwg .1 State to-wit: Samuel Alexander, of Moutgome- term or the Superior court "t »Lake cuW | ry, Ala . Sampson Bridgemui and the children “ * - — • - ” " of Sampson and. Priscilla J Bridgeman, the number and names of whom are unknown, of Pikeville,Tenn It is ordered by the court that said non-residents be served by the publication of this notice ouce a weex for four weeks in the Weekly Banner-watchman, of Clarke county, Ga.. aud the said Samuel Alexander, Sampson Bridgeman »nd the children of Sampson and Priscilla J Bridge man are hereby uotitled to show cause at the Septeu ber term, 1888, of. the court of Urinary of Clarke county, Ga., why the said will of Nathan Hoyt W .cr,deceased, .Lould udt be probated lu solemn form. ASA M. JACKSON, Ordinary Clarke county*, Ga. aiwg; r court rjlfS ■* Georgia to be beta on tin* Second . vember 1888, then aud i .ere to defense to the bill filed by ibe c«*ni|»Lm» any defense they nave. . . i Ordered further that this <-nier bep“ -jl twice a month for two month* l i of Court iu tlie weekly ^ j? a newspaper published in said loiiBtjw^T j aud that thereupon senice «*f saldljUgjj , poena shall be considered as lull} ptnte said defendant f. At Chamfers this August | " R 27th 1888. rKVfrMi N. L, llCTCHINS I J; A; Judge Superior Court W <■ 1 L. k Liy - of Georgia ’/ urZb-1 A true extract from the minutes oi - 1 perio.. Court, This 30thday,i»j G eorgia—Clark*co >»T\ |g p Rutli, administrator of the ',-1 liArt, late of s .ld county, oec 10 rneia loruis oi ihc Dw, mr it* rthl csuiio b.ljnjing to ihe e*uMi ol ^ t cd. Thcto are t .cretore to cite concerned to show c*u»u v* n** | .Griffith, Administrate r of Lemuel Swann, deceased applies for leave to sell all die real estate belonging to the estate of said deceased, consisting mainly of six hundred and forty acres of land ly mg mostly in Clarke county and partly in Jackson county, aud one house aud lot in Athens, ou Broad street. These are therefore notified and cite all con- W m, ;c .uv. cerucd to sho * cause at the regular te in of the regute.r urm of the court of ordiuary to be held in and for said I in v-U ioriud t t unty county of < larke on the first Mouday in October o. }U »M>r next ’ next why said leave should uot be grunted. Given uuder my Land ct office tills 24th August 1888. Atix m. Jackson, Ordinary. GUARDIAN’S SALE. P URSUANT to an order by His Honor, Judge Joseph Ashmore, Ordinary ol liberty county, ueorgla, ou the 3rd day o( July 1888, and alter due aud legal notice and publication, outlie ap plication ot Annie L Barnard, guardian of Mattie M, Barrard minor, (both of said county of Lib erty,) will be solp on tbe first Tuesday in Octo ber next, within the legal hours of sale, before tbe court house door, in the county of ularac, State of Georgia, anjt.city of Athens, latpubllc outcry aud te the highest bidder, aU the right., title and interest of the said Mattie M. Barnard, la and to the following property’ to wit: A cer tain lot of land situated iu said -State ai d county of Clarke, and city ot Athena, containing two and one-halt acres, more or less, and mete particularly desc tbed, at follows: Flouting north on Prince avenue, bounded west by lauds of A. H. Hodgson, south by lauds of C. H Cban- dler’s estate,,ano east by chase street and lot of R. E. Linup.lu, being the lot known os Uie “Old brrukrd Mace." The interest of said Mat- tie M. Barnard, minor, therein being a one fourth undtvldeu Interest. Terms cash. AVNU L. BARXaRDs Guardian of Mattie H Barnard. AaaM.JACKru.N M. L.Armer. 1 Libel for Divorce In Bank's vs. 5 Superior Court, March term William Aimer) tsss. „ It appearing to the Court by tlie return of tho Sherin lu theab.ve stated ease that the defend ant does not reside hi said county and it tunites appearing that he does not rtsiuc in this statu? it is therefore ordered by Uie court tiiat service be perfected on the .le.emlant by the publica tion of this order twice a mouth lor two months before the next term of this court lu the Bau- ner-Wutcbuiau, a uewspaper published lu Clarke vounty.Gk r. w. Row .runs, N X. Ho-remxs, retltltlouers At’y. 1 hereby certify that the above order is a tnie extract from tho minutes of Bank’s superior Court. Witness my hand and seal of said county, this July aali.issa, ■vat L N. Tube, Uerk- GEORGIA CLxaxa ooosrr: .' WSS^ u 7S«,%.V w »in 0 J & dteeued, appraisers were by me appointed to ip* Sft^SffiSSk xSSS&S; P«oSJ‘ 0 romS?*d* l S.“a cite and admonish aU Sn!?* ho J , „e»oaoat my office *2 ** Sojtember tags, shy *hould P nottK^antc<L* ClT ° “ 0DU “ ■ "W"» wmSfTy ttnder my Land at office this 16th Aug. ASX 51* J a CKSON, Ordinary, -V OUtinguifshed Guest. ^ • Hft Sims, ex-Lieutenant Gover nor of Mississippi, who has been spend ing some time with friends in Lexington, Will remain a few days at the home of Mr. S. Upson, on Prince avenue, on his return to hi* home in Columbus, Miss. ■xnxaxH xuiaueiiu w .iu ri . L , u [ar sqw-5 ot said county, passed at Hit rij. l(rfyrt § term of said court., will «* court house door of saul count)-. • N . day in October next, dunus sale, the following pn»i»j. ‘ l >\ U* , L ,ujj3f*5| shares of the Georgia pany, tob«*sold uspreiert) if,* late of Mrs Annie h Reave-*. deceased. Terms of sole j. September. 1868. sep* 4w ATLANTA Nl EDIC&L COLLfll’l Atlanta, Georgia- The thirty-first Annual Coo^ turns will commence ® n . ,bosl» October 3, 1688, and w>" first of March, 1S3I 1 . ^ The Trustees end r ‘ ca ‘^w#J| stitationin offemg '}» tBhse desirous of secur ' n ? h * ir ucation, feel assured of “ present inducements un q , a of any other medical South. FACULTY- A. W. Griggs, M.D.i ' v '®’ M. D.; A. W. Calhoun, Miller, M. D.. LLD.; W * Mango pi<* le at & Crawford's.