The Jackson argus. (Jackson, Ga.) 189?-1915, October 25, 1894, Image 2

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Tie Jackson Arps. JACKSON, GEORGIA. PROFESSIONAL CARDS, W W.Asdehsqn. Frank Z. Curkv. ANDJHISON&; CURRY. ATTORNEYS AT LAW. j Negotiates loans on re*t Estate. Office up stairs over the \ eliow store, Jackson, Georgia. M. M. MILLS, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Office 1n court house , Jackson, Georgia. M. V. M KIBBEN, Attorney at Law, JACKSON, GEORGIA. STOP AT THE Morrison House. E VER Y THING NE W DFIRST- CLA SS. Conveniently Located, Free Hack to Depot, C. VV. Ruehanan, Proprietor. Dr.O. H. Cantrell. DENTIST, JACKSON, GEORGIA. fiefi.ti. M. and A. Colleo, (A Department of the University of Georgia,) Will begin its 15tii fear September 3d. Rest Equipped College in Georgia for Roys, Full Literary and Scientific Course, Thorough Business and Com mercial Course. Unequaled Military and Physical Cosu r se, All cadets board in barracks un der military discipline day and night. Board $9.50 per month. Tu ition fjree, For Catalogue address, J, C, WOODWARD, tot, Milledgeville, Ga. tWhat Nerve Berries have done for others OF M E N Easily, Quickly and Permanently Restored, 3oth day, Dfh < il'itv Ve n C n,i e n f n r . a , U . w^ akn ess<M, Nervousness, neoiiit} and all their train of evils rr-sultinJ o7oierwopU re lVi. THI laU ' r pxt ' pssps : the result nnrt worry, etc. Develops mm a " d to the srxual or- Kiinj. Stop, unnatural lo*.es or niKbUy CPwivl'm 1 ’. 0 K l,y .votifhfal error, or ex whlrh load ‘ . lo,>acpo - “Plum and liquor, wnicn lean to ronati nipt ion and insanfitr IMO P mi, B !'t; ° ws tm m edi at ei m pro v eme nt. Accept *n> Imitation. Insist upon having the genuine Nerve Berriec no other. Conven ■”V * T 7p. tent to carry In vest poeket. 1 rice, SI.OO per hox, slz hoxes/one full ® URran, “tl torureany rase. v,J f mali kopt l,y >* ou r druggist we will send them ' “E?“. J Ol ' 61 ! 11 of price, in plain wrap iamriii Mrmr. d l! r S all n >'l orders to AUkBICAN MFDICAL CO., Cincinnati, O. For sale by Dr W L Carmichael _ THE STAMP ARP. | i DURANG’S j IRheumatic Remedil ♦ Hus sustained its reputation for 18 years + ♦ os. being toe standard remedy for the + ♦ quick an 1 permanent cure of Rhetima- i ♦ lism. Gout. Sciatica, etc., in oil its forms. A ♦ It is endorsed by thousands of I’hysi- 4 Sf cians. Publishers and Patients It is 6 ♦ purely vegetable and builds up from the + ♦ lirst dose It never fails to cure. • ♦ Price is one dollar a bottle, or six + ♦ bottles for live dollars. Our 10 page Pam- + ♦ phlet s ut Free by Mail. Address. ♦ lOurang's Rheumatic Remedy Cos. ♦ 1310 L Street,Washington, D. C. ♦ Durn>,<i‘* Lii'cr I’illsA re tlie best on J earth. Taey act with an ease that makes ▼ them a housebol 1 bl ssing. ; a price :s cts PEa box. or b boxei ror. $1 J T TOR SALE BY PRUGGIST3. T ♦♦♦ Habits of the Walrus. Although the walrus is a formi dable-looking animal,especially when he rears his huge head and gleaming tusks out of the water within a few feet of your boat. Mr. Elliott says he is not only timid, harmless, and in offensive. but not even given to light ing in his own family. His which vary in length from twenty to thirty inches, and in weight average from six to eight pounds each, were given him to dig clams with, and are of precious little use to him either in fighting or defending himself from attack. He sleeps comfortably in the open sea, floating bolt upright in the water, with his nostrils out and his .hind flippers hanging a dozen feet below. [Nature purposely built him in the shape of a buoy, so that when sleeping or resting at sea the buoy ancy of his huge, blubber-cased fore quarters bring his nostrils out of the water without the slightest effort on his part. He grunts and bellows a great deal, solely for his own amuse ;ment, apparently, and many a time liave vessels been warned off danger ous rocks in thick, fogg'* weather by the grunting of the walrus b'ing upon them.—[September St. Nicholas. A Paper Mill Combination. The Raleigh, N.C., Paper Company, whose mills are at the falls of Neuse, has purchased the plant of the South Fork paper mills, at Lincolnton, and ” W MI b® at one® brought here, making Rftlvigh siUlt taosg the IwrgMt in FROM WASHINGTON. NEWSY ITEMS PICKED UP AT THE NATIONAL CAPITOL. Sayings and Doings bf the Official Head* of the Government. The presidential party, including the president and. family, Airs. Perrin, Mie R'osc Cleveland and the three de tectives who have been at Buzzard’S Bay, Mass., all summen left that place for New York Tuesday by special train* with a director’s car attached for their personal use. Senator Gorman has disposed of all doubt as to his participation in the present campaign by stating that he had no intelltioh of making any speeches and would not make ahy. He had not been in good health, he said* and was spending the congressional vacation season in resting. The postmaster geneVAl Saturday wired the Jackstfii, Miss., postmaster that the ’'order against the Co-opera tive Loan and Investment Company, of Mississippi covers only regis tered matter and money ofdets. You will deliver ail Ordinary matter addressed to the company.” While the Indian officials at. one time showed a desire to appoint civil ians as Indian agents in place of army officers, where army officers have been . relieved, it has new beCh determined to fill such VaCahcies with army offi cers. The war department has been asked to designate army officers to fill vacancies in each case. An additional exchange of through registered mail pouches hats bgefi or dered between Jacksonville, Fla., and New York city. The pouches will leave New York at 9 o’clock p. m. via the New York and Washington railway postoffice, and Jacksonville at 3120 o’clock p m. Via the Charleston and Jacksonville railway postoffice. Secretary Herbert has modified the orders which were issued to Com mander Davis, of the Montgomery, to leave Norfolk November 6th and visit Mobile, Ala., not later than November 15th, on account of an exposition which iB to be held in Montgomery November 19th. The departure of the Montgomery will be postponed a week. The secretary of the interior has re quested the secretary of war to send troops into the Indian territory to sup press lawless bands which have been operating there and in the adjacent country. Accompanying the request was a communication which was re ceived from the Indian territory, de tailing a deplorable condition of affairs there. At the present ratio existing be tween the treasury receipts and ex penditures, the indications point to a deficit for the month of October of seven millions in ordinary expenses and of five millions in interest or a total of $12,000,000 for the month over and above receipts. This will bring the excess of expenditures over receipts for the current fiscal year to about $13,000,000. For the same period of last year the excess was $29,000,000. The postoffice department was noti fied Tuesday from Wilmington, N. C., of the theft of many thousands of stamps, but as yet nothing is known as to where they were taken from. The dispatch from Wilmington said that the thieves tried to ship them by ex press to New York, but a postoffice de tective seized the stamps as govern ment property. The names of the par ties implicated have been ascertained, and warrants issued for their arrest. It is expected that the robbers will be apprehended within twenty-four hours. On motion by Calderon Carlisle, counsel for Madalene Pollard in the case of Pollard vs. W. C. P. Breckin ridge, of Kentucky, the court of ap peals of the District of Columbia or dered the appeal which had been ask ed for in this case stricken from the docket of the court on the ground that it had not been entered within the statutory time. This ends the litiga tion as far as the courts of the District of Columbia are concerned and leaves the plaintiff free to collect her judg ment of $15,000 and costs from the colonel when and how she can. The plans of the government build ing at the Atlanta exposition, are now only waiting approval of the postmaster general and secretary of the interior. No material change from the prepared plans is contemplated. The plans were drawn after full consultation by the architect with members of the gov ernment board, who gave him details of the exact space each department desired. Each member of the board has expressed approval of the plans and is satisfied with the division of space. In the entrance extentions on the two fronts will be the offices and reception rooms of the board. Orders have been issued to the Montgomery, directing that the vessel reach Mobile, Ala., on the 20th of November. She will afterwards cruise in the waters of the gulf for the pur pose of testing coal mined in the south ern states. The department intends to make Key West a coaling sta tion sufficiently large to accomodate the ships cruising in its vicin ity. Coaling in the Caribbean sea is expensive, and it is Secretary Herbert’s intention hereafter to have our ships take coal as far as possible at Key West. He has notified the south ern coal companies that a test of all coal that may be delivered free at Mobile, Pensacola or Key West, in quantities not less than one hundred tons, will be made by the Montgomery. Maxwell’s Bouncing Proclivities. A comparison of figures showing the number of removals and appointments under the first Cleveland, the Harri son and the present administration, has been given out. From March 4, 1885, to March 26, 1886, there were ap pointed I,lßspresidential postmasters; from March 4, 1889,t0 March 26,1890, 1,765 presidential postmasters were ap pointed, and from March 4, 1893, to Mar0h26,1894,1,806 were appointed. It is thus seen that in a corresponding time Mr. Bissell appointed 661 more postmasters than Mr. Vilas, and 41 more than Mr. Wanamakef. Under the first sixteen months of the first Cleveland administration 80,881 fottrlh-eUes poetteMteve wer# ed; under the first sixteen months of the Harrison administration 20,645, and under the first twelve mouths of the present administration 22,012 fourth-class offices passed iuto the con trol of democrats, The Stamp Robbers Caught. William A. Beach and H. Clay Sin sabaugh, who are charged with being accomplices in the recent stamp rob bery in Washington, were arrested at Columbia, S. C., Monday night; THE LATEST BY WIRE GIVING THE NEWS UP TO THE HOUR OF GOING TO PRESS. Brief Mention Of Daily Happenings throughout tile World. TTfoodky night four men robbed the postoffice and every store in the vil lage of Watova, Ark., a station on the Kansas and Arkamfti Vulley railroad. A dispatch to the London iWfes from Tieh-’Tsih, that tile ChinbsM officials report that a battle occurred near Yi-Chow Monday and that the Japanese were repulsed southward, with a loss of three thousand men on each side. V. W, Johnson, cashier and eonfl dbbtiftl man for Warren Springer, the Chicago millionaire, is missing, and with him $5,000 of Mr. Springer’s cash. Johnson drew the money from the bank to meet the pay roll. He has left many creditors. Hector D. Ltahe; donifiiissidtibr of agriculture of Alabama, has issued a call for a meeting of southern cotton growers, to convene at Montgomery, Ala., November 13th, to discuss the causes leading to the present depressed condition of the cotton market. The Cologne Gazette prints a dis patch from St. Petersburg, saying that, immediately upon the arrival of Princess Alix at Livadia, the final ceremonies of her reception into the orthodox church will take place, and her marriage to the czarowitz will then at once be quietly celebrated. Hon. Thomas F. Bayard, the United States ambassador to Great Britain, addressed 1,200 of his fellow citizens at Dover, Del., Tuesday night upon the issue of the campaign. It was the first of the three political addresses— from a democratic standpoint, which Mr. Bayard will deliver in his native state. A wedding recently occurred near Murphy, N. C., that is puzzling a great many people. Last spring Mr. Steve Miller’s wife died, leaving him with several small children. Last Sunday he married his mother in-law, Which now makes him his own father in-law and a grandfather to his own children. The residence of Casimer Werk, in Westwood, 0., seven miles from Cin cinnati was burned Tuesday morning. Mr. Werk, deemiug the house fire proof, shut the room up and waited for the fire to burn out, refusing to admit the firemen. Instead,the whole house was soon destroyed and nothing saved. According to Commodore Chadwick, chief of the bureau of naval equip ment, the coal bills of the navy are steadily increasing, owing to the great er consumption of coal by modern ves sels. The annual report of the bureau shows that there will be a deficiency of $30,000 in the appropriation for equip ment, owing to the fact that $191,291 more was expended for coal in the past year than in the year previous. The thirty-fourth annual state fair of North Carolina opened at Raleigh Tuesday under most auspicious cir cumstances with perfect weather and by far the largest and most meritorious exhibits ever made in North Carolina. Governor Carr formally opened the fair after an introduction by Julian S. Carr, president of the State Agricul tural Society. Afterwards Dr. J. L. M. Curry delivered an able address. A head-end collision occurred on the Southern Pacific near Walker Sta tion, Tex., just west of San Antonio, Monday night, between a passenger and a freight train, resulting in the killing of Conductor Hess and Brake man Soonbug. Four other persons were injured. Both engines, the bag gage and mail car and three freight cars were wrecked. The accident is alleged to be due to the negligence of the telegraph operator at Stafford. The Rome railroad, of Georgia, known to the railroad world as the “Riverside route,” has changed hands. It is now the property of the Nash ville. Chattanooga and St. Louis, and after the Ist of November will be op erated by this sy tern under full control. The Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis has bought nearly every dollar of the stock of the road and comes into absolute control of the property, there being only seven shares out of the 2,- 500 that do not belong. A sensation in political circles in Kentucky has been created by the democrats at Winchester, endorsing the democratic ticket in the eighth district of Kentucky and the county of Clark, drawing up resolutions calling upon the members of the next legisla ture from Elliott and Carter counties to vote for Breckinridge for United States seuator. Captain B. A. Tracy, in introducing Breckinridge, presented him as the “next United States senator from Kentucky.” Charles J. Searcy, the Acquia Creek train robber, has made a confession which was taken down, put into type writing and is now in the hands of the proper authorities. There were but two men concerned in the robbery, Morgaufield and Searcy. They had known each other before and had talked of a scheme of that sort, but Searcy for some time refused to go into it. They finally met in Washing ton and there agreed to rob a triaD, but fixed on no particular one. Deeds of violence which character ized the recent great railroad strike were repeated at Chicago Tuesday night at Grand Crossing and South Chicago by a gang of hoodlums. An Illinois Central suburban train was boarded by a crowd of toughs, who abused the eteW; calling them “scabs,” They were fmaljy ejeeted. When the . tVrtin reached W ildwotHl the dapot was txirning and whiln ?unu*en devoted themselves to extinguishing the flames the miscreants set fire to a train of box cars on a side track. For several months negotiations have been pending at Meridian, Miss., ldokiiig td the locatioii of fi large iron manufacturing concern which em braces, consolidated, the Ivans facturing Company, of New Orleans, and the Hudnut Iron Company, of Big Rapids, Mich., which will be known as the Interstate Iron Works Company, capitalized at $50,000. This new en terprise Will manufacture. Compress ( pulleys, rope, lead, dredges, etc., and; will give employment to a large force ! of skilled labor. + GROWTH OF THE SOUTH. The Industrial Situation as Reported frt the iVsfc Week, Yhß report On Ibe ilidtistiiil condition of tlie south fot the.hast wefck says: The output of pig fion continues ou a large scale, and prices {lre fifirly wbll ihaUitaihed; While iicf largo transact aih fepoiteu, tlie,, aggregate of medium ana snia’i orders is sufficient to pre vent accumulation of stocks in the yards. The Soutnern coal operators aie doing a satisfac tory amount of business. The lumber market is slowing improving as to prices, and the pood effee‘3 of ansceiations of manufacturers are bfegiiliiing t 1 be seen. Low priced cat ton is pfevCnting tin increase in the Volume of filet* Calitile busifieSs. Money is easy, but collections afb liffineWhAt . Thirty-eight new itidiisil'ieg kerfe'. inCotpomlcd or established during the week, among which are: The l.’oanoke Rapids Power Cos. of North Carolina, capital $2.000 000; a S2OO 000 brewery at Jacksonville. Fia.; a 500 barrel tl uring mill, i.OO barrel corn mill, eleva tor, etc. at Houston, Tex., and a SIOO,OOO fer tilise • f >elory,&t Spartanburg, S. C. Car works with SIOO,OOO cipital are reported at Fort Wor ! li, Texas; a $30,000 medicine co’iffpariy at Il.llsboro, Texas; a $25,000 lumber company at Stuttgart, Ark.; one with $20,000 capital at Taylor, Tex.; cotton mills at Carrollton, Ga., and Morgan tun, N. C., and a SIO,OOO tannery at Bufo and. Ga. , Prick works are to be established at Kinston, N. (J.. an electriS 1 1 pl itlt at Greenup, Ky., fl >ur and prist mills at Huntlmd and Eettlß Milk, Tam) . ami foundries and machine shops at Elbeit >n. Ga.. Alexandria. La., and Hunting ton W. V.i ; ice .factories will he built at Jack soi.v 11: and Lakeland, Fla, and Patterson, La.; ml mi !s at Alexander City, Ala, and Morrilton. Aft.. and woodworking plants at Glendon and Jcmis n, Ala., Tamp i, l"la.. TaVftpooaa,. Ga-, H gh Point and Flat Rock, N. C., HattieSbtifg; Miss., Jacks m Tenn. Taylor, Tex., and M mndsville, W. Va. Waterworks are to be built at Abbeville, Au custa and Dawson, Ga., Lexington, Ky., and Brenh .m. Texts. The ne v buildings for the week, as reported, include a SBO,O 0 business house at Danville, Ya ; one b> cost $19,000 at Lon sville, Ky., and o hers at Tampa. Fla., Winchester, Ky.. and Huntington, W. Va ; a market lioUSe at Talitp hassee. Fla ; residences at LouisvilL, Ky., and Asheville, N s 0., and a warehouse at Louis* vill ■, Ky. —Ttad small fChattanooga, Ten 11. 3 Tlic Women Will Vote. The registration of women in Den ver is almost as large as that of men. The total number of names entered on the books which are now closed is 61,- 500. The registration in the county will exceed 70,000. Should 70 per cent of these registered votes be cast at the next election, it will be consid erably more than twice as great as it was two years ago, when the total vote Was 22,975; A Whole Family Cremated. At an early hour Saturday morning the house of Silas Jones, Knoxville, In,, xyas destroyed by fire, and Mrs, Jones and her two children, a boy and a rrirl. were cremated. The Czar Dying. It is announced at St. Petersburg that the condition of the czar has per ceptibly changed for the worse, nis symptoms of general debility and weakness of the heart are more pro nounced. An Interesting Monument. Under the direction of the Boun dary Survey Commission the old marble monument which, since 1849, has marked the dividing line between the United States and Mexico at the coast has been brought to the city to be dressed up. For years that mon ument has been a point of interest, and has been visited by thousands of citizens and strangers. Each has ap parently felt that no one would be lieve he or she had been there if some portion of the slab were not carried away to be offered in evi dence on all occasions. The result has been that the mar ble has been chipped and defaced until its original form is almost lost. It. is because of all this that the.slab was brought to the city. To work out the effacements the surface would have to be worked down two inches. When redressed the stone will again be placed in position, but this time it will be protected by a fence of steel pickets. The inclosure will be twelve feet square. The pick ets will be eight feet high, the tops sharply pointed and leaning inward, after the device of some rat traps. So that while it might be possible for an active person to climb in, it would require a first-class acrobat to climb out of those curving pickets. Be sides this, anew law makes it a penal offense to mutilate the monu ments. At Tia Juana a similar slab will be erected on the old brick foundation in National avenue, which has long been a landmark there. The Tia .1 li ana monument will be of granite, in stead of marble, and it will be in closed with steel pickets, like the one at the coast line.—[San Diego (Cal.) Sud. A Wonderful Hog. Oscar Andreen, who lives at Lex ington, Mo., was in town to-day. Mr. Andreen has just returned from Texas, and while he was rusticating in the country near Sherman, a farmer friend invited him out to see a trained hog kill l’attle snakes. The farmer drove the hog out among the many rocks back of his house, and in less than half an hour the porker had slaughtered twenty big snakes. The hog caught thin rattlers back of the neck and tore them to pieces with his front feet. The farmer paid 1150 for the hog and bought him exclu sively for snake-killing purposes. He hunts snakes like dogs do rabbits— throws his whole soul into the work, as it were. Mr. Andreen exhibited the tail of a snake having thirteen rattles and a button which he saw the hog catch and kill. The farmer told Air, Anderson that since he owned the hog it had killed for himself and neighbors more than 1,000 rattle snakes. The hog is a t hin, razor-back hazel-splitter, and when you say “snakes! ” to him ho will jump over n ktitke-nufbridcted fence utul go af ter them; Great hog.-|.M*lco (Mo,) teSill ! BLOOD BALM. I 8 A household remedy for all Blood 9t*& ■ Skin diseases. Cures without fail, Scrof- n Af ula.l'lcers, Rheumatism, Catarrh. Salt llheum 1 ■ * and every form of Blood Disease from the ■ I simplest pimple to the foulest Ulcer. Fifty I S years’ use with unvarying success, dem- S R onstrates its paramount healing, purify- I gins: and building up virtues. One bottie I ■l* lias fHHffi ebraiiVe virtue than a dozen of M A any other kitid, I* .builds Up the health i •g and strength from the first I WHITE for Book of Wotl- 1 I aerfnl Cures, sent free on a ppll (cation. ! Ilf not kept by your local druggist, send | 11,00 for a large bottle, or $5.00 for six bot- j, ties, and medicine will be sent, freight g, paid, by BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, 6a.! J, J. Thornton. — — FEED, SHE AND LtVERY STABLES. Fine Turnouts at All Times. Jaekson, : : Georgia A YETERAfTSIERDICT, The War is Ovei'. A Well-khQWr Sob clier, Correspondent and Journal'’ ist MaLes a Disclosure. Indiana contributed her thousands of brava soldiers to the war, and no state bears a bet' tor record in that respect than It does. In literature it ia rapidly acquiring an enviable place. In war and literature .Solomon Ye Well, well known at) ft writer as “Sol,” lias won an honorable position. Dur ing the late war ho was a member of Cos. M, 2d. N. Y. Cavalry* and of the 19th Indiana In fantry Volunteers. Regarding an important circumstance he writes as follows; “Several of us old veterans here are using Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine, Heart Cure and Nerve and Liver Pills, all of them giving splendid satisfaclion. In fact, we have never used remedies that compar'd with them. Of the Pills v e must say they are the best, com bination of the qualities required in a prep :i rat ion of their nature we nave ever known. We have none but words of praise for them. They are the outgrowth of anew principle in medicine, and tone up the sy r stem wonder fully. We say to all, try these remedies." —Solomon Yewell, Marion, Ind., Dec. 5,1892. These remedies are sold by all druggists on /: positive guarantee, or sent direct by the Dr. Miles Medical Cos., Elkhart, Ind., on re ceipt of price, Si per bottle, six bottles $5, ex press preuaid. They positively contain neither opiates nor dangerous drugs. For Sale by W. L. CARMICHAEL and R. G. BRYANS & CO. Is as safe and harmless as a Has seed poultice. It acts like a poul tice, drawing out fever and pain, and curing all diseases peculiar to ladies. “Orange Blossom” is a pas tile, easily used at any time; it is applied right to the parts. Every lady can treat herself with it. Mailed to any address upon re ceipt of si. Dr. Jo A. McGill & Cos. 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, 111. Sold l>y DR. W. L. CARMICHEAL. SR. HATHAWAY & CO .^SPECIALISTS-^ (Regular Graduates.) Are thv. lead'ng and most successful specialists and will give you help. to guarantee to all patients. If they can possibly be restored, our own exclusive treatment Trill afford a cure. TVO>I F.S! Don’t you want to get cured of thw yreakne.s with a treatment that you enn use a home without Instruments? Our wonderful tre*f ment lias cured others. Why not you? Try it. CATARRH, and diseases of the Skin, Bloo<i. Heart, Liver and Kidneys. NTPHILIS-'The most rapid, safe and effective remedy. A complete Caro Guaranteed. SKITT BISEABF.B of all kinds cured whe’-j many othcis have failed. rJHCATTBAL DISCHARGES promptly cured in a few davs. Quick, sure and safe. This Includes Gleet and Gonorhcea. TRUTH AND FACTS. We have cured cases of Chronic Dlaeaaes tb*‘ have failed to get cured at the hands of other spec.V- Ists and medical Institutes. —AH EM nmnt that there la hope for You. Consult no other, as you may waste valuable time. Obtain our treatment at once. Beware of free and cheap treatments. We give the best and most scientific treatment at moderate prices a low as can be done for safe and skillful treatment. FREE consultation at the office or by mall. Thorough examination and careful diag nosis. A home treatment can he given In a majority of cases. Send for Symptom Blank No. lforMen; No. 2 for Women: No. 3 for Bktn Diseases. All corre spondence answore.i promptly. Business strictly con fidential. Entire treatment sent free from observa tion, Iturer to our patterns, banks and business men. Address or call on DR. HATHAWAY & CO., M l. Srwl Mr-t| *TU!f 4, Jackson Buggies! FOR THE FALL TRADE, to supply any Reasonable demand from my Numerous Customers. So it you want an Extension Leather Top Phaeton or Surrey Canopy Top Phaeton or Buggy, In fact, if you want any kind of a vehicle ranging in price from , $35.00 to $250.00, call on me at the JACKSON CARRIAGE FATORA and bs supplied. Just received, a large shipment of Old Hickory and Tennessee Two-Horse wagons. Respectfully, J. R. Carmichael. MALLARY BROTHERS & CO. IMlacozo. G-eorgia REMEMBER AVE ARE STILE HEADQUARTERS FOB Engines, Mbs, Sin Ills, Won Cits, Pressss, AND EVERYTHING ELSE IN THE MACHINERY LINE. Please do not be persuaded into buying anything in our line before writing us for prices. MALLARY BROS. & Cos, MACON, GA. Fancy Groceries! E. G-GILMOREIThENCELY, Third Street, Black Front, at Hanes, the Jeweler’s. Everything kept fresh, neat and clean, and the ladies are especially invited to call on us. We keep country raised potatoes and onions, in fact, all kindstof country raised Vegetables. We deliver all goods free, and orders are promptly filled in a business-like manner. Ice cold, non-intoxicating drinks of all kinds on hand at all times Pure coacocolaon hand all the summer, as good as can be found. Our country friends are also invited to give us their trade and we guarantee to please them. GILMORE & HENCELY. Jackson, Ga., Eeb. 8. 1894. JACKSON . INSTTIDTI • Jackson, : : : Georgia. Fall Tam Baps Tnesflay, September 4tb, 1894, Each years-work of this school completely Justifies its claims to being rue of the best in the state. A healthful climate, a pure, moral atmosphere, and excelent social influences commend the school to pupils of all parts of the tate. The school has made a reputation for thoroughness such as few schools in the state can boast. Pho course of study is broad and comprehesive and is arranged according to most approved plans of the best educators of the country. Tuition in First Three Grades 4.50 Fall Term. Tuition in Other Grades : 6.50 Fall Term. Music, Instrumental or Vocal, 3.00 per Month. Art * - : : : 3.00 per Month. For further information send for Catalogue, or address J. C. Blasingame, President, i Capital Female College. ATLANTA, - GA., For liiber Education Of Girls And You Ladies. t very department complete. Beet selected faculty in state. Broad corriculum in classics, mathematics, English and Science. Uusurpas-:ed advantages in elocution, art, French and German Exclusively conservatory methods in music,—Piano, Vo cal Violin and other stringed instruments. Pieparatory department also perfectly equipped and thorough, Hoarding department select and limited. Rate—s3lo.oo r,, r nee****,* Cerj-fspundflUC!? invkd. for and othc? Mtiioul.r., rfdnu) tfn, Uofif'ii* Hieft NtlMtfK