Newspaper Page Text
)URNAL.
—
ft. BURTON, .... Editor.
Official Organ of Dodge Cotetj.
NnlMcrinlloa Male*.
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Three month*...................... 50
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One Inch one Insertion.............. $1 00
Each subsequent Insertion.......... 50
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One inch, six month*................ 7 00
One Inch, twelve month............ 10 oo
One quarter column, one month.... *5 &
One quarter column twelve months 35
One halt half column, column one month 10 oo
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All bills for advertising are
due at any time upon presenta¬
tion after*first appearance oi
advertisement.
Address all letters to the BUKTON, Dodge County
Journal or R. 8.
Editor.
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 23, 1887.
44 UNADULTERATED GALL.”
*“Tho now fa*t mail for the South
began last Sunday. The larger cities
will receive great benefits thereby.
Congressman Blount, of the Sixth
district, is tho prime mover of this
fast moil project, and to him many
thanks arc due.”’
“Our neighbor, the Dodge County
Journal, has been sadly imposed
upon by some one. Congressman
Blount has steadily opjiosed every ef¬
fort to give Macon and Middle Geor¬
gia a fast mail service, as tho Con¬
gressional Record and tho files of this
paper will establish. Moreover, ho has
occupied the positiou ol chairman of
tho lions© committee on post-offices
aud post-roads for two years, and
eouhl with ease at almost any mo¬
ment during that time havo secured
for this section mail faciltics enjoyed
by other business centers and com¬
peting points.
“Macon and middle Georgia owe to
Congressman Blount’s opposition to a
fast mail three years discrimination
by which Florida and the Georgia
coast section have enjoyed from six to
tem lronrs advantage in business with
the North.
“The service now promised is the
result of newspaper showings and de¬
mands. If Congressman Blount ha»
been driven into an acquiescence with
what could not havo decently been
postponed longer,, wc are glad to re¬
cord the fact. Tho claim that he was
“the prime mover in this fast mail
project” is a piece of gall that seems to
have overwhelmed a country editor,
but no one else up to date.”
Now, Bro. Telegraph, wo object to
being dealt witli in this patronizing,
exasperating manner.
*ru neither our fault nor our mis¬
fortune that wo occupy the humble
position of a country cdiior, who
modestly relates tho news of the day,
Father than that of tho prominent
Ishmaelitc, against every man, with
every man’s hand against him, and
from tho stinging venom of whose
malignant pen no one is safo; whose
whole being, soured and embittered
against mankind, has resolved itself
intc one vast vinegar cruet to be emp¬
tied forth indiscriminately upon an un¬
protected world ; whose sneering sar¬
casm abounds on every hand, aud
whose caustic remarks are applied to
the commendable efforts of every one
with whom lie disagrees \ who never
acknowledges an error; who invaria¬
bly buys on tho wrong side of the
market, and ties to it, until it has be¬
come proverbial that “ho, who differs
with tho Macon Telegraph, is usually
correct, and the world at large re¬
quires no stronger evidence that he is
traveling in proper paths,” conse¬
quently, the bare assertion that Mr.
Blount or anyone else has been forced
to alter his course by the showing of
“this paper” is a most fearful judg¬
ment to pass, and although the coun¬
try editor, whose tender and suscepti¬
ble heart is filled with the milk of hu¬
man kindness, is not insensible to the
Effictions of the unfortunate, still it !*
not his purpose to fly to the roscuo of
Mr. Blount, he is perfectly able to
take care of himself, and needs no
support. However, with all due def¬
erence to tho city editor, seated on
the pinnacle of notoriety—in the ab
soneo of fame—wo would remark, by
way of parentheses,that Che Congress¬
ional Record docs not show any such
eouditiou of affairs as is intimated in
the foregoing article, and as to what
*the file# of this paper will establish,”
Indicates uothing. It is related that
on a cortalu occasion, in open court,
au attorney, whose case was defaulted
for nou-appcarauco of counsel, gave
as au excuse for abseucc, that ho had
noticed the caso in the Macon Tele¬
graph, as set tor a later day than that
for which It was marked on the cal¬
endar. The learned and kind-hearted
judge beamed benlgnantly on the de¬
linquent, expressed his pity for the
mental coudltion of anyone who
sought facts from the columns of this
sheet, and reopened the case on the
ground of sympathy for tho lawyers
intellectual weakness.
Again, Bro. Telegraph, w© protest
against your sliuging these intolerant
lordly airs around our ears; wo are
not “overwhelmed” with anyone. It
is quito possible that yon have been
blowing your own praises about tho
greatness and goodness of your paper,
until you now regard it as a trucism,
aud actually believe it yourself, aud
bccomc 40 Impressed with your
importance that you have ac¬
cepted the self-imposed task of regu¬
lating tho world by your own crcay
timepiece, If so, for God sake, spare
the simple unsophlstocated country
editor, whose remoteness from Pas¬
tier, causes him to dread your dead¬
ly bite.
THE HERMIT
OF THE
AUCHEE-HATCHEE.
BY “QUINCY.”
[Wo are kindly permitted by the
author to publish the advance sheets
of the following South original Georgia local story,
written for the Immi¬
grant:—E d.]
Truth, it is said, is sometimes stran¬
ger than fiction. A parallelism'of
thought leads me to say that we arc
often next door to a romance or a trag¬
edy, if wc only knew it. In fact, as
life is more or less what our experi¬
ences make it, and as one individual
will pass through scenes and incidents
full of vividness and thrill, and feel
neither, whilst another will appreciate
the same in the intensity of feeling,
we arc almost justified in concluding
that there is a faculty cultivated or
dormant, in all of us, of realization.—
Whoever reads this recital will belong
to one of these classes. If I knew to
which you belonged, gentle reader,’ I
would tell you whether to go on, or
to read something else. As it is, you
must take the risk.
I had been confined to my room in
that dearest ol towns to me, Quincy.
Ills.; our good old doctor had visited
me daily for a fortnight, and I had
taken his potions faithfully. He said
I had a “ bronchial difficulty”'—I don’t
know what that is, but since then 1
have met a great many people who
said their physicians said they had
i the same. They cough a great deal.
I did. The doctor said I would get
no better there at home, and that he
was going to send me “to the pines.”
I was packed into a slecping-car,
and in three days thereafter found
myself one morning in a vast hotel in
the centre of tho wiregrass belt of
Georgia. Here fortune favored me
at least, in bringing in the interest of
his wile’s health to the same place,
Prof. Redmond. He hold no such ti¬
tled position as Professor in any
school or institution, but this was the
prefix we all gave him—the why for
so doing will appear further on.
Coming ©tit on tho verandah, 1
heard him call my name. “Here I
am,” was the reply, “and ready lor a
tramp.” He was well, nay, robust;
and being much improved of the
“bronchial” fuss, the only trouble, we
did long fail to tire of lawn-tennis,
croquet, bil'iiards, and that common
pastime of people who have their time
on their hands at health resorts, of
saying the same platitudes about the
weather, to say nothing of that ques¬
tionable habit of comparing symp¬
toms.
Day after day we had gone forth on
the different roads leading to the brisk
little town, and becoming familiar
with these, extended our incursions up
and down the neighborhood routes;
became familiar with tho farming pop¬
ulation and their modes of husband¬
ry ; beheld the working of the great
lumber manufactories adjacent, and
studied in its details the art of mak¬
ing, in vast quantities, that familiar
and useful article, the oil of turpen¬
tine. With increasing experience we
gained self-confidence, and lost much
of what afflicts and limits tho recrea¬
of tho average tourist in the
South—tho fear of getting lost. Red¬
mond, who had spent much of his life
the White Mountains studying ge¬
ology, had tho spirit of an explorer
and with a mutual inclination our ex
ploratioii8 became daily more extend¬
ed. At first wc made our trips and got
in by the dinner hour of 3 p. m., but
lately we went with luncheon- in our
satchels; he with an ironwood
that he prized very highly, and I with
a light sporting rifle, wo now often
mado our entrance at the threshold
the hotel at deep twilight, or the
hour later tea time.
In the study of the fauna and flora,
Redmond found in me a helpful co¬
worker. Oft times I winged for him
a radiant plumaged songster and
brought it to his eager hands, alive,
and capable, under good bird surgery,
of recovery. Again, when tho shot
was fatal, ho brought to boar tho pa¬
tient skill of the taxidermist, that he
might add another specimen to his
collection at his far away home. Thus
employed, wc had been attracted more
than once to the woods and waters
a large creek, which was, at the point
nearest us, almost a small river. Here
apon cloan and lcaf-eovercd sand
drifts, beautiful forests’of evergreens,
oaks, laurels, old-man’s-beard, and
magnolias—royal ir» their wealth of
beauty and freshness, broke in strik¬
ing contrast upon tho everlasting mo¬
notony ot the pines.
Of course we were inquisitive, anu
“low-land or high-land,” who, under
the stars and stripes, is not? We
found responsive listeners toourmany
questions, especially from tho wonder
loving people “in black.” From time
to time we heard snatches of a
queer story of an old man who lived
iu a secluded hammock upon the banks
of this quaint and sluggish stream;
who was the conservator of a tradi¬
tion that explained the origin of the
romantic Indian name given by the
map-makers to it, aud much more of
ji teres t to the lover* of the wild end
With this clue, whet could be
engaging than to go, with such
as Redmond, on some
pleasant day, search and find the her*
mit, and from his own withered lip*,
and in his quaint vernacular, hear his
.story, and return in triumph to repeat
it to the habitues of the house at our
“morning report.”
TUB EXCURSION.
Finally on a lovely day in April we
sallied forth, starting early aud ex¬
pecting to return by nightfall.
Three miles of brisk walking
brought the color to our cheeks, and
our feet to the bridge that spanned
the creek. Here wc crossed and turned
our steps upward and westward.—
Filled with tho healthful inspiration
that comes from breathing the dry
and bracing air of this blessed clime,
enhanced by the excitement that ever
attends adventurous change, we went
on exulting; buoyant anddr earning
not of disaster, until pur road grew*
dim, uncertain, and finally lost and
traceless. Some time had been spent
in the capture of one or two rare spec¬
imens of the feathered tribe, and (he
inevitable comment on the genus and
species of which it might b© a proba¬
ble representative, by my naturalistic
companion.
It was our intention to follow the
course of the stream towards its
source; for a range shepherd had told
us that if wc kept up stream that we
would certainly cross at right angles
a path, which, taking it to the left,
wonld lead us in the vicinity of the
hermit’s cabin. That we might know
we were going right we would cross
a lagoon on a foot-log, and that this
was the boundary on one side of his
“island-home.” As we traveled far¬
ther and farther from the habitations
of man, game became more and more
abundant; and with the prospect of
adding to the regimen of the Sanita¬
rium the trophies of the chase—wild
turkey and gray squirrel,—all thought
of time and space was temporarily
lost. Our watehes and our keen ap¬
petites now reminded us that the bet¬
ter part of the day was gone, and its
work only fairly begun.
By reason of anoccasianal tributary
the stream of which the meandering*
we were trying to pursue, wc had lost
our reckoning; for their swamps were
dense and impassable near their en¬
trance into tho main stream, and re¬
quired us to go far to the northward
to pass them. The middle of the af¬
ternoon found ns still wandering in
an unknown country.
“Well, let’s cat and try it again;”
exclaimed Redmond in a tone the least
bit fretful.
While wo w'ere at luncheon the
friendly face of a shepherd dog greet¬
ed us. Soon wc ncard the footsteps
of a horse, and a man in search of his
lambs gazed with startled look upon
us. He told us wc had passed the
route that led into the hermit’s hut.
Once more we received explicit in¬
structions how to find it, aud, failing
in this, how to get back to the public
road. He gave us the good advice,
however, to abandon the enterprise
entirely for the present. This whole¬
some counsel wc did not take, though,
for the spirit of adventure was still
dominant.
Alas, for us! “Tho best laid plans
of men and mice oft gang aglec.”
An hour later wc siw the sun de¬
clining behind the western horizon,
and realized for the first time that we
were lost. For once our thirst for
something sensationial was appealed.
We had been for weeks in a moder¬
ately enthusiastic search for adven¬
tures. The prospect of going to bod
without our suppers In these solitudes,
and not even the poor cheer of a pine
knot fire, was a grain too much for
our philosophy. I felt a thrill of deep
anxiety in my breast, and the Profes¬
sor’s faoc was unmistakably a little
care-worn. What a furor our non
appearance would create at the Hotel,
where a few dames generally playing
chaperon to some youthful guest or
patient, were ever on the alert for
something to generate a commotion.—
Tragic ondings of bright and promis¬
ing lives in the Alps, or White Moun¬
tains of our owncountrj', of which I
had known under circumstances some¬
what similar, passed iu review.
In emergencies tho ruling passion
comes forth in great strength. Red¬
mond drew upon his acquaintance
with natural phenomena at once.
Said he, I have observed that the
aerial currents when in motion at the
hotel are generally from tho north¬
west. He held up a piece ot tissue
paper and it floated away to the south¬
east. It is the same here. At
the dipper is to our right hand—
there it is pointing 6kyward—now
with the points of the compass made
out, and knowing also, that at this
point the stream runs from west to
east, it is too evident that we cannot
reach the public road by going this
way, for of course it is in the opposite
direction, and thither we will turn
our steps. After this council of safe¬
ty, in which by tacit consent the Pro¬
fessor was chairman, we both felt bet¬
ter; and the pleasant consciousness of
having done the best available that
always comes of organized effort.
(CONTINUED NEXT WEEK.)
The Great Eastern, the largest ship
in the world, was sold a few days ago,
and brought only $130,OCX),or le-ath: s
half of what it cost to launch her.—
Though answering every expectation
of its designer, it proved a financial
failure, and uever paid expenses.
WATERMELONS.
As a matter of possible interest to
a man who contemplates residing and
farming in this partof our country, we
remark that there is no crop more easi¬
ly made or more likely to hit well than
watermelons.
A piece of new ground, or an old
field, cither, will answer. An acre
will make enough for any family, and
a treat now and then to all their neigh¬
bors. This, too, be it understood,
takes into the calculation that they are
to be eaten in old-fashion Southern
style; each person is to have half a
melon, lengthwise—no slicing. No!
in the name of our most precious tra¬
ditions, don’t ask us to eat melons with
you, and then go to slicing.
The ground being thoroughly, deep¬
ly broken, lay off the rows ten feet
each way, and excavate a hole at the
crossing about ten inches deep aud
three feet square. Into this pnt a half
bushel of stable or lot manure, mixed,
or not, with cotton seed, or a pint of
commercial fertilizer. Earth over this
three inches deep, and leave the hole
nicely rounded. In the first week of
April, having soaked your seed for a
night, plant four seed to the hill, by
pushing each seed down with your
finger and filling up the hole left by
the finger. As soon as they arc two or
three leaves large, plow the ground,
after the sun is up and the young vines
are dry. Don’t dust aud dirt a melon
vine when the dew is on it.
In two weeks sweep around them
again with a common sweep plow, and
after each plowing hoe all the spaces
around the plants left by the plow',
earthing up and widening the hills.—
Avoid handling the vines or throwing
dirt on them with the plow'.
By this time the vines arc too long
to plow any more, but yon may hoe the
spaces left until the vines arc so thick
that there arc no spaces left. There are
a great many plantings that arc earlier
than w'e have mentioned, but the mel¬
ons are always inferior in taste to thoso
planted later. The w'atermclon revels
in hot weather; it stands moderate
drought well; does badly in very wet
weather.
Planted thus, they come off in the
latter part of July and August. They
do well also planted later, and it is
better to plant some part of the crop
later, for the longer you cat them the
more you wish for them, and it is
healthful to eat them any time when
you are w armer than is perfectly com¬
fortable. Strange as it may seem, to
careless observers, the full advent of
the melon season diminishes the num¬
ber of eases of dysentery in this sec¬
tion. w T hilc it may be true at the same
time that the excessive eating of them
may produce a harmless and painless
diarrhoea; though this latter is less
and less observed as the season ad¬
vances.
A certain amount of experience
seems to bo necessary to make a finan¬
cial success of raising melons to sell
in large quantities for Northern mar¬
kets. We have men along this road
who know' how to plant and ship by
the car-load, and when and where, to
make money. They never fail to eome
out ahead. Others scarcely get back
the freight expenses.
In our immediate tow'n and vicinity
there is a ready market for all the sur¬
plus of the small patches. A nice
looking melon brings from 10 cents to
35 cents from the cart on the street—
according to the season and the abund¬
ance on hand.
Everybody eats them, at all times of
the day, and some every day from the
time they become plentiful till they
cannot be had any longer. They are
good for all, but a luxury that the
poorest in this land can afford to in¬
dulge, in the most prodigal style.
Harris Fisher.
Eastman, Ga., March 14,1887.
THE SOUTHERN PEOPLE.
Of the Southern people, Georgians
are regarded as the most practical and
enterprising. They really possess
many of the good elements of both
North and South. As an example wc
point to our well-known author and
humorist, “Bill Arp,” who is a compo¬
nent of Massachusetts and South Car¬
olina—his father coming from Massa¬
chusetts and his mother from South
Carolina, and Major Smith is known
to be a good man, and a genial, clever
Georgian.
The Georgian has much common
sense, and power of adaptation to cir¬
cumstances. His speculative view's
yield readily to the practical; put him
on his mettle, and he is apt to succeed.
There is a good deal of candor in his
composition, and he is generally sen¬
sible, observant, energetic.
Georgians, in the general aspect of
all qualities combined, are unsurpass¬
ed. They may be lacking in some qual¬
ities possessed by others, but they have
a just and balanced character; and
their judgment of men and conduct is
excellent.
Gn the whole, the English are not to
be surpassed for manliness. Iu the
United States, no finer type of Eng¬
lish manhood is to be found than in
Virginia. Her statesmen and people
have evinced this in many ways. They
have a just, honest character—manly,
noble, generous and able. Their man¬
ners are natural, expressing their true
character; not 6harp, nor narrow, but
broad, open, collected, practical and
thoughful. The dominant element of
the population aud civilization of
Georgia was derived from Virginia.
Our public men have had this bias.—
Public honesty w as untarnished; dur-
ing the present century up to the end
of the war, there were no defalcations
in office, was little public debt and no
peculation.
Any account of the character of
Georgians would be greatly lacking
in individuality which did not refer
to a somewhat rude and blunt inde
pendence, persistent perseverance and
self-reliance, which characterizes them
peculiarly, They are content with
iheir own convictions, with little re¬
gard to authority or precedents, and
proceed to pttt them into action.
A Lesson In Exchange.
San Francisco Chronicle.
It was in the days of the early rail¬
road, when it was yet new; tho days
when the journey to New York was
less of a little journey than it is now ;
when greenbacks were not popular in
California. One summer morning a
man, walking in happy, but feverish
haste, with wild excitement beaming
o -er his face, stepped into the office
of a well-known banker.
“I want exchange for this |on New
York.”
“All right. What is it?”
The man looked fearfully around
him, and then brought out a package.
“ It’s $25,000 in greenbacks.”
“I guess I can do it. Going cast ?”
“Yes; I’m going to-morrow. I don't
want to carry all this with me. Could
not do it. Sure to get robbed. So let
me have a draft. How much ?”
“Oh, seeing it’s jou, one per cent;
1250-”
“It goes.”
So the banker made out a draft on
New York and took the money.
“You arc going to-morrow, are you ?”
“Yes.”
“Would you mind taking a small
parcel for me and handing it to my
brother ?”
“Certainly. I’ll do it with pleasure.’
The banker went into the other
room and presently came back with
the parcel.
“Don’t lose it, please. Put it in your
valise, will you ?**
“I’ll take the best care of it.”
“Thank you. Good-by. Pleasant
trip.”
Arriving in New York, the Califor¬
nian went to the address and deliver¬
ed tho package. Then he presented
his draft. The man opened the pack¬
age and gave him the identical $35,
000 in greenbacks he had in San Fran¬
cisco. Ac had carried them all the
way himself.
Very Glad t. See William.
W. J. Cooper left his wife on his
farm in Yell county, Ark., in 1863,and
joined the Confederate army. Shortly
afterward he was captured by the
Union forces, and sent to Illinois, but
he escaped and returned to Yell coun¬
ty to see his wife.
She had left the farm about two
months after her husband joined the
army, and gone no one knew where.
Cooper then became a tramp, and he
has since visited most every country
on this continent. One day last week
ho wandered into Shiloh, Ark., where
he was surprised by seeing his wife
standing on the steps of one of the
houses beckoning h»m to come to her.
Subsequently he learned that his wife
had ventured upon the sea of matri¬
mony threo times since she left the
farm in Yell county. The first two
husbands died, and she secured a di¬
vorce Irom the third. She was very
glad to sec William.
The First on Record!
•o
I am now running a first-class’ grocery
from a second-class stock. And why? Be¬
cause I am continually bought out from
body town knows ana country. where to. Why? find Because anything every¬ they
want in
FANCY GROCERIES,
and at the right place • Who wants good
full grain rice 20 lbs. for $1.00. Whs wants
granulated In sugar, 12 lbs for $1.00—lower
$6.25 grades proportion. obi.—as grades. Flour from Anything $4.75 to
per to
else that is wanted can be found at the
I.aalie House Fancy Grocery
Store, Channcey, Ha. Mch.23-tf.
U. w. EASTERLING,
Practical Jeweler & Watchmaker,
EASTMAN, GEORGIA.
Work solicited and satisfaction i guaran
teed. Office on country road. fet) I6~3m
Ira J. Lamb
Will continue to run a
BLACKSMITH,
-:Carriage and Wheelwright:
SHOP
— IN THE TOWN OF —
LHAIINCEY,
and promises to give satisfaction both in
good substantial work2and|low prices for
the cash.
I will ask the public to let me say this to
them: ahead to I have not business got any with. surplus'capital I
run my am com¬
pelled to run upon if I what I can make from
day work to dav, will and don’t get the cash for
my I have to quit. I have made
a new rule from.: the first day of January,
1887, ask to run for no credit, more accounts. Please do
not me as you see from what
I have scud above, I am compelled to stop
credit.
I thank the public for past patronage
and hope they will continue their favors.
Ira J. Lamb,
January 5 3-m,
A. L. H a ($* V .
y and FamiljGroc .
Eastman, «LS <••• Georgia.
TT XXAVING
just opened lip in the Prince Pe Unit’s building, a first-class Fancy
Family Grocery, 1 resnectfully solicit at the hands of the good people of Eastman
and neighborhood a share of tneir patronage. It shall be may aim to keep at all :
times in stock nothing but iiio
Best and Freshest Goods
and my patrons may always rest assured of Down Weight and Full Measure.
Give me a call, examine my goods and prices and be convinced tbr yourselves tha>
I am prepared to make it to your interest to patronize me. [feb2-3m
A. L. HOBBS.
Best Water Wheel in America.
Sets inside or outside of water house. Price below all competition—In reach o
every small mill and gin in the country. Write for large catalogues and state all tho
particulars about your power. Iron cases for wheels to set inside or outside— 1’nicss
West Portable Corn Mill In the Market. Took first premium at tho
Georgia, the Alabama and South Carolina state fairs over thirteen competitors. Ground
best meal and more of it.
1'he (lent Siiw Mill. Pony Mill with the latest and best improvements, vnrf-
able friction teed that beats them all and no mistake. Ratchet set works, etc. com¬
plete except saw to cut 5000 feet per dav for onlv $200. It is warranted to cut 2,000 feet
per day with SIX HORSE POWER ENGINE. JUST THINK OF THIS! Larger mills
made to order.
Millstones for all purposes. The largest stock in the South, Send for prices. Mill
Gearing of all kinds, shafting, pulleys, etc. Don’t buy any kind of mill or machine*
without first getting our prices.
A. A. l>cLoach& llr©., Founders and Machinists,
Atlanta, Georgia.
T- W_ BOND,
BAR AND RESTAURANT
5 1010 Ml J
ALWAYS OUST UAL 1ST 3D.
The restaurant is always supplied with the choicest delicacies.
Bedding Free to Customers .
Morgan’s Corner, MACON, CA.
Filling Jugs a Specialty.
Mch2,87-3m
g<V j
£
i PARSONS’o“i:PjLLS Then* pill* xrpnderful discovery. Ho like them In Win
were • others the world. poettlTelr cure or
reUerejul pllle. Find manner out mbout of disease. them and The yon Information will always around be thankful. eaoh box is One worth pill ten dose. times Illustrated the oo*t or pamphlet a box of
free. 8old by mail for ttflo. a
Sneridan’s everywhere, Condition or sent in stomps. Dr, LB. JOH NSON St CO.. SS C.H. 8t.,Boetop.
Fowder is absolutely!! mm on earth
pure and highly oon-| will like make hen* lay
cantrated. Oneounoe It. It ovrea
is worth pound of i ohloken oholera and
a all disease* of hen*.
eny other kind. It is Is worth Its weight
ftrtotly a mediolne to In Bold, Illustrated
fe riven with food. — —~ . —— hook by mail free.
Sold Six everywhere, by or prepaid, Bent by mail for !«.00> for 85 oeato tix etampe. S1-4 ■bSSrtEJasShFitSffllWiiS’
eana express,
PflSIN * ■ ■ ffi PtSTILLER’S LONG LEY, GARLICK & C0. WESTS. Cincinnati, Ohio.
■
Unequaled Jfcrk.CIM5II3Srfilm f
facilities for handling Inspectors’ Certificatss fur¬
nished. Being Receivers, dealing direct with the Consumers, Shippers realize full prices.
^CONSIGNMENTS AND CORRESPONDENCE SOLICITED.*™
JOHN D. ASHTON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
SWAINSBORO, GA.
Practices in Middle, Augusta ,and Occo
nee Courts. Circuits; in the Supreme and Federal
may 5, ’86—ly.
DR. J.M. BUCHAN&50N
Physicians and Druggists,
KANT MAN, GA,,
AFFEB V_A their Professional services to
the people of this immediate and sur¬
rounding counties. One or the other can
be found at their office at any time. All
calls promptly attended day or night,
Patients at a distance visited by special
contract.
All chronia and private diseases, either of
male or female, If a specialty. by Nocharge for
consultation. letter send stamp for
immediate reply. All consultations and
letters private. A good supply of drugs
of are kept constantly on hand, including al
the new remedies. mch!2tf
Geo. S. Jones. Geo. Bright.
GEO. S. JONES & CO.,
WHOLESALE
GROCERS
—AND—
GENERAL
COMMISSION] MERCHANTS,
AND DEALER8 IN
Produce , Provisions ,
Lime, Plaster, Cement, Laths.
Cor. Cotton Ave. and Cbqrry St.,
Nov. 17. 6m. MACON, GA.
INGRAM HOUSE,
COCHRAN, GA.
J, A. INGRAM, Proprietor,
Meals, 85 cents.
Lodging, 25 ”
The patronage of the public solic¬
ited.
Nov. 18-tf.
BLACKSMITH
—:and:—
WHEELWRIGHT SHOP
A, W, Bean & Co., Props.
Eastman, Georgia.
The public is hereby informed that wo
have at considerablo expense built and
equipped wheelwright a shop first-class in the blacksmith of Eastman and
for town
the accommodation of the public.
With first-class workmen, the best of
material and a full knowledge of the
wants of the people, we flatter ourselves
that we can meet their every want as re¬
gards good work and charges therefor.
We respectfully solicit the public patron
age. Mch2-3m. A. W. DEAN & CO.
Dr. W. L. Smith,
DENTIST.
IIawkinsville, Ga.
Office in Pulaski House. mcli2-tf.
E. D. GRAHAM, Jr.,
ATTORNEY AT L A Yf
AND
SOLICITOR IN EQUITY.
BAXLEY, GA.
Aptil 28, ’86-ly.