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I)crote<I Even's!vpTy
-TO THK
Iu’oreL'i ol the Public.
•/. D. STOKES, Prop
CEO. C. FOLSOM. 101 ilor.
VOL. 2 NO. 20.
t-ROFEKS’ONAL CARDS.
1 HYSIC1ASB AM) St’RfiEONS.
CT.± 3 l. cats
Office over Herrman A Pro.
Btore
JiA i MA X. GA.
April 15.—1 -!>0.
JAS. R. MOOD, M- D
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
- 4 —
< Mill in basement i , roar of \ da-onn f
Uo i;cformerly occupied by Ur. < . I'.
I.iUiiiii-i', lic.-iiii-nci- south side Of < otirf
11 jiisc Siinarc. toii -c.lO.
PR. W. L. SMITH,
DENTIST
HAW KINSVILLE ,-i
jf£x *< Hi'k-c in Pulaski House
1-2 1 -
HARRIS FISHER, M, D.,
Pii/miin, Surgsos and Accouclieur.
EAsT.M AN, GEORGIA,
iiRji ■ :i( ivt-gi-i'ci I) i"u lt Stun-, corni-r
of i'oiii !)i Av.'iia:! :i:nl Coniit v J{o:ul St.
Ri i,coiner l-'iltli uvi-mie anil
l hi:-!i : rcct. .! ni. 11 ! -U.—ly.
DU. T, F. ROBERSON,
ORAL suit; EON DEN'I SST.
KAMMAN, iv <>A. < - x
- -
£iiP*Ofiire over Sol Ilcri-num S: Hro.’s , ,
Sion-. •inly H'-iy.
ATTGP.N5Y AT LAW.
A. . P. A It RUN
PATE A W'AIcRFN,
c'lt :z i>z'ut.efits a$ Sjfm\
1 lawKinsvillc, G:t. 136 J;iri.: >n St.,
iviit |))-.-u-i!<•<• in till- conntU s of I’m
l.i .i, U-.nlv, XViiri,:., Irwin, !
V.-iriiiv. Moiitgonu-ry. anil Law
i-i-tis, am! any othersl»y special Maylslly cunti-act,
and United States Coiirls.
5 iii v r ji. & < r on t a - 5
Attorneys at Law,
EASTMAN, GEORGIA
fX?' omen ox’ev stoi*c of a. u. I’ea
( (Il k cV ( G. 7 —*»— 1 y lot*.
XV. ! ( \H KM, KOUT. H ION MAN.
{ ,, [ 1 , \ f n vah \(l v \ \ a xt A
i I... 1 ..UJ ■, ■ u iv n .,.i x • ..Oi
ATTOK.VEYS AT LAD,
Mx. \ klxox, 1 i;aci
Will practice in all States and
I'cilci :! f ( Ourt s. Nov. 20 ISS-ly.
Del.. 1C)' S BISHOP,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
L nstrrsan, . . Georgia
Will practice in all the courts ,f tin
Mate. Attention given to < 'onv.-yauch.g,
Examination «f Title* to Laud I urnoh
in;:' Absi rads of Title. Exccittors,
tec-. Partnerships, Coiluc io:;>, t’on
trart-s. Criminal Law and all other
branches of practice. Oliii 2—1—1 i- at ti Court
lions.-. tne.
W. It. COl-’FEE,
A TTOHSEY A T LA II .
EASTMAN, - - GEORGIA
I-----svH . I IKK UTS AN,
J
.( I TO USE i A T I. A II _
EASTMAN, - - - GEORGIA.
J. K. WOOTEN,
A TTOUSE S' .1 T LA 11.
EASTMAN, - GEORGIA
Office at Court House,
TuNSOi.XL ARTIST.
1 Mlttlipi* -"e flLK«iWLy. kfllfCSTPilSfi
---
r F-rliiis, Steam ing rtes,
Shingle Mills, Kay Presses, Fte.
If you want a Flr-c-Class SAW MILL
scud f-'-r Catalogue to
A. 6, Farqakar C’o., Ltd.. York, l’.i
Koot ami Shoo-Maker.
wuuib: Iff Sa»p»TTrw«ii5 Vx«a»safl«a^ I ''“-(j era T TT ']
V ft \ 7:
vciw.] i. 5
i ... a 5
___
BOOT & SHOE-MAKER.
will prove sarist.-ictory. A hen in need
of a fine pair of boots oi shoes cr.ii on
me at my
MY SHOD ON COUNTY ROAD
tsTREKT.
!.ri\ a -HH-iat.y ,.f first-.-ln- K-
i;:; V uN Z::\ nem .
giKHl work au.: go Hi material u my
1?.M. DAN'IKLLY,
MU-.-l ■r so K. L. «.ary.
NOTICE.
Notice is herei.v given that no
per-on ixeep’ omWdves or VV V
IU.rioi.. a;,i : o^o < t
i’ 1 (Agile-' dV • (!. . ,,^ ; - . ,.f will \y
]’ Gu-' nr; F Har-eli
also negotiate sales of land for
Mrs. (>gden: ali trades to be ratified
by Mrs. Ogden before they are
binding upon her.
DeLacy iV Bishop,
Attorneys for Mrs. Ogden,
rp IJjJ 1 II la.%. H
-f
^ JL.
AR ' S RHI -• ; 4 OSOPII V
Two hundred million dollars a
year for pensions! That much a
a reward for whipping us, a id they
make us pay a third of it, and
don t give a dollar back nor sa.
Since the war the
paid over three hundred
million of that pension money, and
her part xvill be sixty-; i : millions
a year from now on world wit bout
e.td. When xvill this tiling stop:
it a tad t!ui( nor ,hern p nsion
...... never diet One year a°-o “
t . iere were 4*0 , n ti thousand ..,„i «,„i and noxx
Him* .;,v Irj:, Ihmisan.l.
-m,thicker, more denser." ns
C-ibe savs There are over 4(0
thousand invalid soldiers who have
survived the las) war. They must
b;> a sicklv set, or else our boys
hurl, tli in mighty bad. I thought
f (hat in twenty-five years most of
taem would eitiier die or get
bid i!kv are-lhe out-livinm-t rol
'
1 1 , :irdo1 , , .... lllr> tlal , es i
rs t!Vi ' r ‘ K ‘ - xvhiie'ihe > *
i thing about it is, that
number of the men inoease so
dies tlu* number of the xxddows.
I How is that! Nobody dies,
I yet there are 116 thousand widows
I on the rolls. Eight thousand more
widows than there were a year ago.
Z zsz
m Illinois I,- last , . rear, and i a n ,.,;u x\Hi i. be a
i doubled i ,, , under the late big ,„ n i
\o W onder the north is rich. No
wonder they have millions lying
i idle in the banks. No wonder they
are coming down here to invest it.
| and no wonder our people are poor
and hard run. That two
millions xvill be distributed annu
I ally among forty millions of peo
! .,| <|ia( is five dollars apiece
1 0
1
jto every man and woman and ,
j A town of ten thousand
people xvill get fifty thousand do!
would get seyenti Ml thousand doi
j !ars if justice xvas done. Just
j think of it. Contemplate the beau
lifiil picture. We would get thal
j much lor nothing. It would just
i ;ike
come pouring m every ver.i
of hopper. We xxouki i -
meal out, a
all . et rich, , and build hue .. school . i i
-
houses and churches, and pay I lie
, aiaries, , and , i DiiLd
p:v;;t iK»r irooa .
a court , .house . and , Pu e ,i
new v
sidewalks, and our young lolks
xvotild have something to marry
o:i.
But all tins is a delusive dream.
We haven't got hardly anybody to
pension. Our veterans either
or get xveil, and there xvere only a
; little over half a million, all told
from beginning to tne , end , ol the ,
xvar. Our northern brethren had
nearly three millions—about five
j soldiers to every one of ours. It
is astonishing hoxv bad we did hurt
’em. for they have noxv got about
as many invalids on the rolls as xve
had soldiers. Every rebel must
have made one yankce sick, be¬
sides xvhat he killed in battle. If
i was a yankee 1 xvould never brag
I any more, 1 xvould be ashamed.
j Two hundred millions a year, oh,
. ,
see hoxv the govern
ment can pay thal much. Where
is t'-e iiionov to come from * Talk
about ' free plnln -u ar or free anythin"
else. Tin- 1 mill i- the policy
of the party is to have no surplus
in the treasury, and then tney xvill
be oijii d t0 j iaYe a protectixe
tariff, ... a hnrh ... tariff that xvill , •
fy the northern manufacturers and
wool-growers. The pensions are
to catch the voted of the common
neopl and the protective tariff
to catch the manufacturers, and
■ I >v- it vi-01 rn-.f -nl Bi.or xvn.S’nmii
about '! i, tue taull t at It n xxi.l n noxx It take ‘.I
.
As: hundred millions to run the
;'ovci'um'’nl. ;imi =.11 ..tilmi.exvep,
the tax on Whiskey and tobacco.
xx ill have to come through
loS Vw
alliance can’t do anything, for all
tlie northern alliances are howling
for.l.osK-noy. Somclime,
| tIiiii 1c it xvould be best ror the
southern democracy to cut loose
from the whole concern and throw
tn the sponge ami tell the repub
lic ins to take the government and
i( Mavbe if they had all the
and* all the offices they
vcotiDl be satisfied, tud would let
US and the negroes alone. Maybe
, hex- would. (hie t king xve can do
if xve xvill—■we can buy less of their
>’s and make more of onr own,
and keep J our money at home, and
th . y will Have' to pay their
0%V11 j H , n «j ons and bounties and
gr i’) alls.
But f reckon xve will have to
run xvith the machine awhile
| 0 . uer jf t i H - southern democracy
don't save the count rx* it xvill
1,, Tlie smitiierii den.oem
cy must be kept alive for its own
^ke—for its past record—for
southern tone and spirit and
P-* ervation of southern manhood.
1 was ruminating over this when
I read that Tom Hardeman was in
the field for Governor. The grand
old man has put on his war paint
and is before the people. I don't
know what the young men will do,
but the old ones will nearly all go
for him. I served with him in the
last white man's legislature and 1
know him. All the old men re
member his services in the dark
i da vs of reconstruction.
-
of 1866 xvas the last
.-'"tc-pu'e rn ,.„ .lute,
and luni Ilan ennin x.as speakei
the level-headed adviser and coun
and along with Ben Hill and
Stephens and - en um> am ' 0 "
M,M an;! < o >-u l'»iolei k <-°' m
; !l, P 01 >,at £ Sllc>1 -' 1 ,,OUfi ‘ * K
; ,1,a ' n j’ om aiuiman ie
-
1,l ' ! “ * R ,un ^ j a 1 1,1 ie
h tois ^ e h,,n Mr . '
..uillien war smoa came'out. enough tor
untii Hardeman The
Brunswick Times savs it is lor
Northern but not a“line shall be
xvrif ten that xvill dishonor the name
or tarnish the fame of Tom I far
deman. That is right. Let us all
do that xvay. For one time let us
have a clean and an honorable
«■**%»• < ^ -®
iored if either is elected. It you
can’t conscientiously - xote lor lorn
then vote for Bill, and vice versa,
They are both old Georgia's sons,
and have served us faithfully in
every position to which they have
been called.
Well, I am just obliged to vote
I for Hardeman, for my wife, Mrs.
; Arp, says his folks are akin to her
! ! folks away round in some tangled
up xvay. 1 think that his step-moth¬
• grandfather’s
er’s aunt married her
uncle in-laxv, or some such xvay,
and that is near enough for the old
Holt stock that she came from to
| claim kin with. They stick like
xvax to the remotest generation.
j 1 wonder what is the matter xvith
j the Atlanta papers. If they have
made any sign 1 haven't seen it.
Evan Howell knows right now hoxv
: the cat . to jump, . . but . he .
; is going " '
tell. I xvouder , Atlanta , .
t won t u is
. Torn Gleen tor dark ,
-grooming a
; horse. ,■ I don t care. He ... is another
lorn xvhom the people . xxilldeliglit ... . . .
J
.
• *
day—later on, perhaps, but some
day. I asked a friend to-day whom
! iie was for for governor, and he
i said : “I really don’t know, and it
troubles me. I was content with
Northen until Old Tom came out,
land now if I knew xvhich one
wanted the office the xvorst I xvoukl
i go for him.”
] We want Old Tom to come up
to Cartersville and stand up before
| our people and shake those grizzly
Hocks and talk democracy, pure
and simple. And we xvant Northen
to come, too, and I will invite them
to my house and we xvill all break
bread together, and wind up the
dav xvith music and good xvill.
Bud Taylor and his brother
I did that xvay when they xvere run
ning against ench other for Gov
ernor of Tennessee. In fact, it
would be a good law that the
didates should room together xvliile
sleep in the same bed they
«« Imvdtag ai'ou.ri o„ the
campaign. Bill Arp.
Tliat liackimr Shiloh’s -.-ongh can in- so i|uick
ly enj-cd by Cure. Wc giuu-ana
tee it lien-man & Lventt, druggist
_______________
ZlfTTEIt FKOif McK VK.
--
McRae. June SO.-McRae is on
a boon. The census shows 897 in
habitants, and still they come.
lh- T . J.M. t -»r .-h-cdI ’ r vi .nnJ. ,.i„ Ohud
; n ^ sln P to North Laiolma Hwt
vvesk. He says lie found the crops
in j) ol i ffe and Telfair counties
much bellerihan in Nortli
( ., 10]iua
On last Tuesday your correspon
dent xvas treated to some very hue
music by Miss .same Sikes the
accomplished and beautiful daugh
ter of Mr. C. II. Siices.
T!,e ^ f r f no ; v "oloadiug car
) loads , of brick _ e\ery day at Helena
for the alliance^ warehouse. Hie
S ’ A ' M * roa, ! Wl1 ! , " nl<1 a ; their
°' vtl ex / ense oar the accomodation
of the tarmei>o. leltair,Montgom
Bodge and Laurens counties
''hen the building is completed
| heiv l! l to be a ” rand barbecue 1,1
Lo:ior of tne , occas,on -
A company of old veterans will
go to Chattanooga to attend the
soldiers convention on the 4th ot
July. Your correspondent will
be among the number and x\e
earnestly hope that maux of our
j Dodge county friends will join us
at Eastman. X. \. Z.
Stiitoh's Vitatizeri- what yon need for
constipation, loss of appetite, dizziness,
j Kverntt, druggist.
EASTMAN, GA., FRIDAY JULY 4, 1890.
GEORGIA NEWS,
Items of Interest From Our Ex¬
changes
There are five candidates for the
legislature in Macon county.
The barbers of Macon have con
rented to close their shops on Sun
da\.
Cedar Shoals, near Covington,
will hereafter be known as Porter
dale.
The Ocm ul gee Brick Company,
a f Abbeville, makes 70,000 brick
i day. ,
per
The new barrel factory at Cor
dele already has orders beyond its
capacity.
As last year was noted for the
deaths of great men. so will this
year be noted for office seekers.
j 8 rumored that the Republi
think of nominating General
Lomrstreet for Governor.
i A s ff uad of ‘Salvation Army
reached Fairburn this xveek and
| opened a summer campaign,
1 Brunswick is making great pre
parat ions to receive and entertain
the State superior court clerks and
sheriffs, whose convention meets
there on July 9th.
o.«. u.*,* . ........
i Hill, n has cut and saved ox'er one
hundred tons of hay during 7 the
‘
past two weeks. , It . would ,, be to .
the interest of the farmers of
Dodge to make a note of this,
The time for the meeting of the
Georgia Weekly Press Association
ii close at hand, and the editors
are starching their dusters and
xvhetting their knives for the oc
casion.
There is a “nigger” in Pulaski’s
political “xvood j>ile," and he states
that he is in for the season. Jack
Miller, a negro field hand, is the
man, and he wants to go to the
legislature.
The country between Quitman
and Albany is building up rapidly.
'File melon outlook is excellent.
Mitchell and Dougherty counties
show 111 > a large acreage along the
road, and the vines are vigorous.
Improvements are visible on every
hand, and new settlements are
numerous.
The people of Brunswick are in¬
dignant over the false report re¬
cently circulated that a case of
genuine yelloxv fex'er existed in
that city. They have traced up the
originator and found him to he
one Herman Rowe, who reported
it to Hie Louisville (Ky.) Times,
and that paper reported it to the
New York Times. It is probable
that Rowe xvill hear much from
Brunswick yet, as that is one sub
j^ct, upon which they aie a little
" toucheous.
The first general reunion of the
Confederate-veterans, which will
be held at Chattanooga on July 3,
4 and 5, xvill be a great event for
the South. It will bring together
the South’s heroes of the war,
comrades who fought side by side,
and xvho have not met since they
| parted on the battlefield. The
ranks of the veterans in Georgia,
J and all the olhei Confedeiate
States, have been considerably
thinned by «e.tli, >nd, ... -loubt.
it will be a source of great pleas
ure to them to meet ogain.
A large and substantial addition
" ill ««. be made to the Academy
for the Blind at Macon. The new
building is to be 70x45 in size and
will be four stories high, of stone
and pressed brick. It is expected
to cost $17,000. The new struct
ure xvill be set J apart exclusively
„ se of n e whi »
1 ^ re .
s ’ ?rved lortlie gnls. . 1 he first st
" r '«;« "ill be lilted up w.lb
a gymnasium, swimming baths,
e f c In the second store will be lo
cated the miJsic haI1 *.] apg rc0 ms
anJ goJ1|e (lormitories . The re
maining stories will be occupied
with lodKing apartmenfs for the
pupils . T he new building will be
s ; ((iated about thirty feet distant
f rom the present one, but the two
be 00 nnected by a covered
passage way. For years the acad
emv has not been able to aceom
modate all xvho applied, and re
eiltly a i arge number have had
to be turned away. The plans
ready for contractors, and it is ex
pected that work will begin on the
buildings within thirty days, or less
time.
DNnensiaand Indigestion. ^
^ f _ g „ y ^
MM . r>f r _ j._ P< if you are debilitated
a nd run down or if you need a tonic to
regahl flesh and lost appetite strength
and vigor, take 1*. P. P. and you «ill be
strong and heathy. For shattereil eon
jtitutioii# and lost manhood P. P. P.
is the kins of all medicines. F. P. P.
is tin-greatest blood purilier in the world
j For sale by all druggists.
WOTS FltOM DEXTER.
Farm Notes—Personal Points—
Educational Items, Etc.
June 24 .—Saturday last we had
the heaxiest rainfall of the season.
washing our lands and doing con
siderable damage to the present
™l»m» crop. Corn that was not
“laved by" was blown down and
tangled up so badly that the boys
couid not do much plowing it.
Dexter now lias a hotel that is
sufficient to make the boarders and
traveling public feel giatified, both
as to appetite and home.
One of Mr. Louis . Metts daugh
ter , ^ amitbIe v0 „„„ w
e „,.|] cllUeac h e r ’ isspendina some
time with relatives and friends in
Dexter.
Miss Emma Winham has returned
to her home, carrying our best
wishes, together with some of our
young men’s kindest affections.
Cgnye again, Miss Emma.
We notice that your correspond¬
ent from Antioch and Linxvood
anticipated paying “Cornfield Joe’’
a visit. He came, but not know¬
ing us, xx’ent to (he home of my
brother. Come again, my friend,
and if you do not know us then, we
xvill tip our beaver to you as a
sign.
From what xve can see and hear,
our fanners xvill make over an av¬
erage crop of corn tin's year. The
sugar cane crop is fine.
Hie citizens of Dexter are mak¬
ing ready to bu 1 ! a school house,
with a vexv of tendering the use of
it to the preachers. Our people
ileligh' in good society. That’s a
step in the right direction.
Mr. D. E. Green opened a fine
school here Monday. He is just
from our college at Cochran, and
bids fair to make a teacher of some
prominence.
Tell Iloe Handle xve like to read
his letters; and xve delight in the
productions of Axe Handle,’too.
We can’t xvrite much this time,
for the census (don’t misspell the
word) man has been to our house.
Cornfield Joe.
Tlie Hugging of This Year.
Wo clip the following timely
| article from the Atlanta Journal of
a recent date :
i 'k<'YhLj are the southern mills
doing towards furnishing a suffi¬
cient supply l The Alliance may
know, but the general public, in¬
cluding the majority of cotton
planters, certainly do not knoxv.
We see it stated that the Sibley
jnills. of Augusta, will not make
any cotton bagging this year, hence
the Alliances are not xviliing to
pay for the expense of its manu¬
facture. Does this signify that the
Alliance are “going back to the
llesli jiots of Egypt ?” We hope
not. We cherish the belief that
they have either found mills that
will make the cotton bagging at a
satisfactory price or that they have
assurances that they can get cheap
er bagging made’ of some other
material—perhaps pine straw, or
the bark of the cotton plant, xvith
both of xvhich, it is said, satisfac
tory arrangements have been
made.
“It would be lamentable if, after
th. galla.t fight made under
v< rsi circumstances against
bagging trust last year, the Alii
ai.cjs and the cotton planters
Aould give up the tight aud place
; themselves again at the mercy ot
an exacting monopoly We cannot
believe that they xx-.ll do so. But,
in a case ol this kind, persever
ance, even a a little sacrifice
money and laboi, is needed to xx in
lt,e %ht. A good beginning
i wards independence was made last
: considerin'^ the condition
< , »
much experience ™** xx as . ^une.i , '".j ,
sacrifice all because the trust may
grant a little better terms for
year, would be most
and xve shall not believe that will
1 be done until there is no
! room for a hope to the country.
Concerning Home Patronage.
j No paper can be published xvith
j out home patronage, and every one
U interested in keeping up a home
paper. If a railroad or factory is
■ wanted, tne newspapers are ex
pected to work for it. If a public
meeting is wanted for any purpose
the newspaper is called upon for a
f ree notice. If any of the societies
,
have a supper or reception of
kind, the newspaper is expected
give the necessary notice. News
papers must puff the schools, and
everything else to advance thc in¬
terests of the place, and gix'e them
a handsome notice when they pass
aw And x’et some men do noth
ing to keep up a home paper.—Ex.
f’ronp, whooping cough and
; s inini -.Han-ly relieved by
Cure. Ilerruian & Everritt,
EASTMAN GROWS!
UNTOLD WEALTH WAITING TO Hi
DEVELOPED!
Our Forests <*<>it 1 tl lie Made a
Source of Immense Itex enue
lo the City, and the Coin
nierce of Eastman
l nereased’
The steady growth of Kastman
is very gratifying to her citizens
One has only to go through tin
city and inspect its streets, to find
w j la ^ a general improvement has
been made in our architecture—
The past few years has wrought ;
wonderful change. Just think:
only six years ago there xvere but
six or eight brick stores in Kast¬
man, and to-day there are fifteen
or twenty, besides, hundreds ol
handsome residences have been
erected and occupied. But it is
not in Eastman alone, that this
improvement is going on, but all
through Dodge county new indus¬
tries are being started, the farms
beautified and improved, and pro
perty values doubled. Lots in
Eastman that could have been
bought five years ago for $ 100 . 00 ,
are to-day xvorth from eight bun
dred to one thousand dollars, and
the end is not yet!
I)o you ask how to continue this
growth.
Jt is for our people to do what
others are doing—convert the val¬
uable woods of our dense forests
into household uses!
To make furniture out of our
native xvoods, xvill open up new
avenues of employment, and bring
more men and capital into our
midst.
There are noxv on exhibition, at
the Eastman Furniture Store, spe¬
cimens of furniture manufactured
in this city, and in one single arti
cle there are ten different varieties
of native wood used, xvood that is
now growing in less than live miles
of (lie city. Noxv, xve should en
courage all such home industry,
and endeavor to get men xvith
capital to establish factories, and
other woodworking plants here;
and before xvc are aware of it,
other nexv business will spring up
among us.
We learn tliat more than ninety
per cent, of our native woods en
ter into commerce, “ bile more
than a thousand varieties can bo
used in various lines of manufae
ture. Our hickory is in great f;
with wagon-makers; white
oak is now being extensively used
by barrel-makers, all over the
country; ash is in great demand
for the manufacture of cheap and
medium grade furniture; sweet
gum is eminently adapted for cab
inet purposes, being susceptible of
a most elegant satin polish, and is
superior, in some respects, to black
walnut. Cincinnati, and other
western cities, we learn, are using
grea ( qualities* of this xvood for
desks ’ tables, etc. Cvpress is one
of our m0K t important woods, ar.d
besi(]eg thc flne s ] !in „ les made
f {t it is exfensivelv used
: inanufadurini refrigerators, water
,
j bucketjJj tubsdc and „ made from aH our
jGe0Igia cypriis sent over
! the world.
j Besides the above, xvhich are
0 „, a teWr u .ere are older valua
b]g and u8eful woodsin our
j j and gwampa> w hich extend lor
m . my mj]es ar0llU(1 ua
]f „„ |t m p . mil , snil .
J for s . ‘ xwill ,, } .. ini W00 ,^ all j
bad ^ by capit al, she ]
^ inoney out of the
foregts adjacent to U8 .
j ^ ^ ^
f hue*-*.. »huve. . d„ . you ».»■
der that Eastman grows ?
•-----
HSJ.lff.'.'r'r'.l'.f will you suttV-r m ’SSSHTJUS. itli ilysix-j.-ip
-
^
j __
• Ar » enfe an(l Potss!, Three Times a
Day for Tw nty-ilve i ears.
a id i have feel .t to be taking mv duty to state N^itic. us re
j -«cs Z
v> L -Le'li>■'<•«I of their suil'.-riii^. I h.-ul
«nfferu>l for a long, longtime xvith x-.-hat
j the doctors . iHed U rpi-, - s o
J,[ bd| * y ! l n ;ShU^ri'a^u.v. '* n.-'i-r
^ aJvice of „ !iv .;,. i ,„g j took ®> limps
of Fowler’s solution of Ars.-nie i*v,-.-y
<u y for 23 years b, -id- ...any oth< ;'
kinds of medicine-, xxitaouta cum.
“ ! ’ ond^h^e^ontim’.
ni ptloII , havc iH^^arN,
{ am continuing it to completely root it
out of my blood, which 1
it will do: and w lun it has dom-n.r m.
< - ^ * W,k -
are thousands of such nil over thc
|country wieh resist all other treatment
j (, av ,, h v *»d liere in nay pr - ut basim
for 22 year-, K. I!. Korsr,
Dealer in Machinery,
31 and 33 West Maryland street,
Indianopolis, Indiana.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Disc mailed
free. SWIFT’S SPECIFIC CO.,
AlUata. Oi.
CIRCULATES
in II («iiths <,r 1'it’te, Full V
Laurens, Johnson, Montgomery, Tel¬
fair, IViloox, Wayne and Irwin and,
has subscribers from Mi lne to Texas.
SEMI I'OIl SAMPLE COPY.
dSdok cocntyj on! n al* %f .! ' o n *o.uuud me
ALLIANCE NEWS
items Of Interest To Our
Farmers.
Nearly 500 farmers in the eight
; counties contiguous toGriffin, Ga.,
Ime organized the Farmers’Bank
Ing Company. These farmers are
Hhe most substantial men intha ‘
section, and , xvill constitute a very
‘
strong institution.
The Alliance of Kansas numbei s
100,000 members. Nearly all the
famers are in it, and they declare
their intention to take poli.ics into
their own hands. They
to elect a Governor favoring their
views and are pressing their de¬
mands upon the congressional del
agates from that State.
If the farmers of the State xvill
only stand by Col. Northern who
is in every xvay worthy of their
confidence and support as an lion
est and intelligent representative
of their interests, lie is certain to
bo the next Governor of Georgia.
With the united support of the
farmers the Democratic convention
is bound to nominate Gol. Northern
which means his election.
The Alliance of Houston county
has boycotted Mr. Kersh and
paper, the Fort Valley Enterprise.
It xvas all about a speckled rooster,
which the Alliance people took as
a caricature of (heir county presi
dent. Between the Alliance and
the street raws Editor Kersh ap¬
pears to hare had a good deal of
fun. One of the Alliance men xvho
is kicking against the editor is pub¬
licly asked to call and settle an old
ten dollar account.—Montezuma
Record.
A correspondent from Griffin
writing to the Atlanta Constitution
says: “Without either a continued
drouth or a heavy storm, Spalding
county xvill have the finest crops
this year that have grown on its
soil for years, not excepting the
fine crops of last year. The sea¬
sons have been very propitious,
and the present out look is that this
year xvill see Spalding county far¬
mers out of debt and their credit
on a firmer basis than they have
ever before known since the xvar.
Every available acre of land
around the city of Griffin has been
planted hi cotton or coni.”
The grocery man xvants eggs, f lie
hotel man xvants eggs, everybody
in t oxvn are h u ngry for eggs. Twen -
t v-five good hens are more valua¬
ble than a coxv, and much less
trouble. A cow costs as much as
a hundred hens and eats more. We
would not deride the family cow,
but make a idea for the domestic
hen. Give her a place worthy of
her valuable product. Let’s look
after the small tilings and pay
more attention to poultry. Fix up
the hen house and make good xva
t r-proof coops, anil separate runs
| ■ for the little chickens. poultry and Let’s f«y read and
n P ,noro 0,1
; improve Ihe Faying qualities of our
1 0 1 ie "° ,nen ove lH 1:,Ne ‘ l
fl . ." e , , ! ° l '' ^ns a iou
\\ ‘‘J Xw^too of’eS 0 totake'V^cd tow^and
r ~,. to
• home , , UUW ., ■
■ r "'~ X
t.iXSlte-l . f ] Iwigs giie
| “ .r ’ and
tlie , i towJs , more atteu .. i01K
Hon. Martin V. Calvin, chairman
»; "'c jutfeiary commits of the
Georgia Nate Alliance, writes a
timely letter to the Southern Alii
mice farmer on the nnportance ol
prompt and regular attendance on
Alliance meetings. He says:
“ The object 4v had in view, at this
tim e, i. n word.Owu on Ihe
question of attendance upon Alii
ance meetings. The thought thriving! came
, 0 me while visiting a
^ >" «>»»'?• 1
,t there xvere any lodges n. the State
whose meetings are slimly attend
ed because of the crops or the warm
J Tff r * w-.s held Je arj'Jfc Lid oc? i^m
(] the bret}i n sisters came
j rU( jj, ing U p t]i r0ll g h thp lieat, joy
1 ^ of countenance and full of zeal
!Lic'o « mm.th^Anafter
a innulh devoted to
Alliance work xvill prove an invest
;:lorit of inestimable value to evt
>7 "' 1 V e ;" b ! an ° i memlier b ’^snaml from a
N o can miss a !
iiieetin L 0 f the Alliance with, u’
staining a positive loss. I am (
,hat we n f ed al °'j r re « u
£ ^ ^ . ‘ iJ Zu£\v°£ ,
So the’benefits far wy have bad
bu mi inklingof which
^ J’.oxv into every country home
through the Alliance agency. We
ure grappling great questions difficult
attempting the solution of
problems. It is the cultivation of
!lie principles, xvhich underlie the
inner xvorkings of each lodge that
will enable every AHianeeman to
quip himself like a man in every
contest in which the order en
gages.
NOTICE.
O
Having embarked in the pres¬
ent business with a full determina*
tion and to succeed, goods if polite command attention
pure can sue
‘-esg, I am now prepared to offer
to the
Public, my Patrons
' *
E11011 ,
0110. US
1HNF A LINK nk d
ALL KINDS OF
GR0CIR1ES, CAN
QQQQJ ’ FRUITS *
CONFECTIONE
RIES ETC.
As were ever offered in this
Market, at prices to suit every one.
s call particular atttenlion to my
stock of
Tobaccos ami Cigars.
Which are the finest. Give me
j a call At or The send Lost orders Office to me Bi
! ildino
.J. A. BOND.
SCKEDl’LK.
! ~
\Wa
\
I
THE FINEST SLEEPING CAR
SERVICE IN THE SOUTH.
Thk Shortest,
QncKKST AM) Best
Route to au. Points,
East and North.
'wsF-»m ia
ymimr imS -w'sH
$ - Aii'
mm. .. v ..... ....
N:;X
Through sleeping cars betxveen,
CINCINNATI and JACKSON
VI LEE.
ATLANTA AND BRUNSWICK
ROME AND WASHINUTON.
without change. For any informa
lion, xvrite to. or call on
T. C. Sturgis. 7. P. A.
O. N. Kight, A. G. J’. A
Atlanta, Ga
B. W. W'henn, G. P. & T. A.
Knoxville, Tenn.
Oo. 11 T,v 11 34 11 )ii No. 1! Lv, 12 37 a rn
\n. 12 Lv. 2 18 p 111 Ko. 14 f.v. 4 38 a in.
I SUMMER RESORTS,
EXCURSION RATES,
OMGY
per mile traveled.
TICKETS GOOD TO
ON am! RETURN
| SALE UNTIL.
^- A -' y ill 3STOV.
10 th. 1st.
1 No iron c1ad ticketS t0 anno y
families traveling without male
nr t= “ The mnst liberal ar
'
ran 8 emen,s PV er ° offered ’
Lor information apply t<?
Agents E.T.V. & G. Railway
stem ^ or to
fl. . W. , p nigl, {fl ^ WWiHUB, j, p IM
Gladstone*
V * Wp
I. ill, flnc.t l.mp In thf world.
—-__ It sire, .pare, »ofl, hi l.rlll 1 -
apt white Ftirferand l‘*nt«'t '-.mil*
pox*«r. light: brighter than
Uuui gtm rtfter
/ eleciria light — morn
ebaerfot than •tthor.
A wvintthu* Hqhtfun*
I ordinary lamp Oil 1
J Saclng A "wonderful !c Believing lamp™
it is Indeed. >f*tver
n#oil»trixmn)ug. breaks never
smokes nor
chimney*, never “wnells
of the oil;’* no flicker¬
ing, no climbing of «tie ol
flame, no annoyance
any kind, end can¬
not explode. clear, Ami
hi-*idee iipM-en 10 a )Hf
white light, k brllliam Hi f
times »ixe
\ of any tirdiniirij bait
f 9 laa»p/rimshediiieiU.e< Nickt-i. (ioi I ot
jfiHhd.
Antique Rronxe. Al^»
Tlic Oladxlonc Exlcn.loii Sludy I.Rinp
for ClPrcyn.en, F^litors. Rli.ilenlc, Teacl.rrs,
Vraff'xsn rs, I.aivyers, l'iiyuicluus ami ctl.ir
professional men.
Tlie Olad.tonc Banijnet I.atnp*.
Xlie Gladstone Plano I,amps.
Send for prlr-e list. SIncle lamps at v-hote
tale uric*. 1k.x»' 1 and senl safely Ly expresa.
ty-Get our price*. “ Seeing U believing."
GLADSTONE I.X Tl I* f <).,
7 1 Park Place, New V.rk.
The “Correct” Last.
^.hoM inadr on the “CO 14*
HK T" La-l Ir-.t e-li-lly,
in.nr, o-mf-Tl, fit llw tef
we -MJ, ...'I we»r longer than any
.Iks nix'le. Either Congreie or L«*.
■
r il.i .ithoattip*. een-t tJ, « eiee
. ,.t
iSj __ H t .hai-e of your foot .'"1 *111
3 = A iim'i you s j>sir f*. r
Tlie regular price it $5.00 but to
you t = try . pair — »*“
tail you » pair pcatag* 5 frw fiMt
a m nf Dalsimer & Co.
14 N. I2ih St., Philad'a, Pa.
SOMETHING NICE FREE.
Send youraddre*. lo B. W.Wrron, Gen. Paw. Afrtt,
E.axt Venn Virjrin:a 4 Gt«Kia Un». KncanH*.
Tsno.. and he anil send you a handsome Ubofrapn*
sup, postage pai*