Newspaper Page Text
Devoted Exclusively
■TO TI1K
Interest of the Public.
./. D. STOKES , Proprietor,
GKO- G. FOLSOM, Editor.
VOL. 2 NO. 33 .
HOW’S THIS?
0*
¥ s?l * Ct^
A 11 ■
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A’-i .
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Biictii ApM Hiili Prices,
I I yards—yard wide Bleaching for $1.00.
20 yards best white Homespun for $1.00.
20 yards best Checks for $1.00.
25 yards Calico for $1.00.
14 yards—yard wide Sea-Island for $1.00.
25 yards Beautiful Ghallie for $1.00.
20 yards Bed Ticking for $1.00.
Groceries-
14 pounds GRANULATED SUGAR for $1.00.
5 pounds of COFFEE for $1.00.
Millinery, Millinery !
Ladies Trimmed llats at $1.00, xvorth $2.00.
1 am selling more Ladies Hats than all the town.
Ladies Corsets at OOc., worth 50c.
Trunks, Fiirnituro 9 Tin Toilets, Etc.,
Trunks from 50c. up.
Handsomely Decorated Tin Toilet Sets at $F75.
Bedsteads, Chairs, TQ^.Afat tresses.
Bedsteads, Chairs, Mattresses.
Bedsteads, Chairs, Mattresses.
STO I ES, GUMS, LAMPS, BISK F TS,
STOI ES, GUMS, LAMPS, BUCKETS, TUBS.
STO 1 ‘ES, GUMS, LAMPS. BUCKETS, TUBS,
-<b
School Books al Macon Prices.
Hand Saws at 7o "... worth SI.do.
Stocks op GLASS 11 'ARE 1<x* rheap to mention.
Winchester Repeating Shot Guns
AT FAFTOHY PKICKSL
My Now (» 0 G<]sim(l Low Prices arc Aston- 4 4^.1
isliins; Everybody.
: : « WYNNE.
TUi* ««lire&e»ent will change next week* Read il.
m
__
THE mr o. fi — 1 . —
s u
II n 'J 1
-• L_ Jl. y n J
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
DR. C. J. CLARKE,
Physician and Ui jrgeon
Chaurtcey, - Ga.
Avg. -- 1 y.
E. H. BA,CON
OFFICE IX II. FISHER’S Ditt o
STOKE.
REAL ESTATE AGENT.
Represents tlie -Etna Fire Insurance
Co., ami the Southern Home Builil
■ ng aml Loan Association of Atlanta.
Ga. auglo-ly.
PHYSICIANS AM) SIFGKONS.
jTii7cates7
nEJ\*TlST
Otlice over Herrman & l>ro..
Store.
EASTMAN, GA.
April 15.—1890.
JAS, R. MOOD, M- D
PIjySICIAN AND SURGEON
Office in basement rear of Masonie
Lodge, formerly oecupieil by Dr. < . T.
Latimer, Kesidenee south side ot Court
House Square. to dec. 10.
“dr. w. l. smith,
DZHUSTTIST
HAWK INS VILLE, - GA.
Utiee in I’ulaski House
]2-1-88-1 y.
HARRIS FISHER. M. D„
Physician, Surgeon and Accoucheur.
EASTMAN, GEORGIA,
sg-iisjg
DR. T, F. ROBERSON,
ORAL SURGEON DENTIST.
SA VANN AII GA,
__
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
G. K. WAKKKN
PATE & WARREN,
•lifomtef s iti If.
Jlawkinsvillc, G:i. ij6ja.’kson St.,
Will practice in the........tics of Fu
laski, l»ooiy, Wilcox, Irwin, Tw iir^s.
-mUn^ rs mUnc'-Gl contract"
ami t nitc-il Slate.-' < 'mil l-. Ma.v 1 st!.,
StlS-fAIL 411 4T H ^ F i 4* X T V'i 1 *: il T 1 ? C
’
Attorneys at Law,
—o—
EASTMAN, GEORGIA
XST" Ofllce over MrAitliiii's Land
Office. 7-5-1 y tile.
\V. L. C1.AKKK, KOBT. K. NO’tMAN.
CLA11KE& NORMAN
ATTORNEYS AT LA W,
I — 1
IVfcr. Vernon, Gkogia.
Avill practice In nil States aiul
Fiidcial Courts. Xov. 29 188-1 v.
DeLACY (j- BISHOP,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW
Eastman, . . . Ceorgla
Will practice in all the court-of the
State. Attention given to Conveyancing,
tec.-, Partnerships, Collet-Tons, Con
tracts. Criminal Law and all other
hranches of _UUU"' practice. 0#i f #t
U oil<e - •
—' W. li. COFFEE,
A TTORNEY A T LA 11'.
EASTMAN. ■ • (; K< )U( ; IA
office overs. Ilerr,nanAbr , os st ore.
. HERRMAN,
ATTORNEY A T LA If
.
EA STMAN, - - y GEORGIA.
J. E. WOOTEN.
A TTORXEY A T LA If.
EASTMAN, - - - GEORGIA,
< )ffice at Court House
_ Lumber . . Advancing. ,, .
is
Saw Wills, Steam Eng nes,
Single Mills, Hay Presses, Etc.
if voti want a First-Cla— SAA' MILL
-ffiitl L’r Catalogue to
A> B, Farquliat Co., (Ltd.,) A'ork, I’a
Boot and Shoe-Maker.
8.1. 111! ’
s° 0T ^hoe-maker *
, ,, *-In^uVrant^ en that‘ U al'| l ,
«“ill | «nv work
■ uroT-aUtaelorv.
When in need
liaepairot hoots <" <>■'
YIY SHOE ON COUNTY RGAD
STREET.
1 make a ^jundalty of fir-t-t la— Be
, patriug. WIk-u in tm* ti ot anyti.ii.g .n
line give me s *»li. B< ie< niiver
1 good work and good maierlal i- >»>
lllHU).
R.M. DANIELLV,
.Successor to R. L. Gary
EASTMAN, GA., FEIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1890.
BILL ARP.
■IE DISPENSES THE PRESENT PO
UTICA!, t'CITATION.
If the threatened boycott did no
other good it certainly waked up
; he nation. Thousands of people
vho i n ay nothing of the Lodge
bill and cared less, waked up and
inquired what all this racket was
ibout. The newspapers ventilated
it freely, and while the northern
press denounced the boycott, most
of them denounced the Lodge bill,
too; and so it is all rigat.|
When the devil comes at us with
a torch, we must light him with
lire, but when he puts down Hi'
weapons we will put down outs—
for we are not hunting for another
furht. We are the friendliest peo
pic n ]p on on the lilt fare late of Ol the int earth tdiiiJ, hut uui
i he north can’t make us trade with
them by force or threats. Vo
won’t even trade with our own peo
pie unless they are civil and polite
and tote fair. Everybody claims
the rght to gratify their prefer¬
ences and ]>rejudices. You can
I lead a horse to water but you can’t
make him drink. We are more or
less clanish. Nine times out of
ten a Baptist will trade at a B;tp
tist’s store, and so of the other de
! nominations, The lawyers stick
together, and so do the doctors,
and have their fee bills like a trust,
and if they sue you for professional
service the whole fraternity will
swear to it. Labor unions put a
trust on their wages and will strike
and boycott to enforce them. The
farmers would put a trust on cot¬
ton if they could, and make the
world pay lifteen cents a pound for
it. They are running the political
machine and have boycotted all
other trades and professions. They
| won't play with us any more. They
are playing with Zach Hargrove,
the high arch-republican of tins
] district, but they won’t play with
me. There are lots of republicans
in tlie alliance and some of them
were delegates to tiie convention
that nominated our members to
the legislature, and they’ve got
tilings mixed up so that I don't
know where I am nor whom I be
loi! " to - 1 feel like 1 am
ninic about loose dihI no Ijeli c
If somebody don't bell me I'll get
lost sure. Zach is a iriend of mine,
ail< ^ me the other day to he
quiet and raise no rumpus and ev
( rvthing would work out all right.
Zach lias the Home postoffice, and
is running the alliance, but where
am 1 \ An old farmer told me t he
other day in a whisper that the
democracy had captured Zach and
Palmer and a whole lot of repub¬
licans, and it was done on the sly
through the alliance, and they’d
get them all before long and the
niggers too, and burst that party
wide open ; but for the life of me
I can't tell ivhether the alliance
has cuught Zach or Zach caught
the alliance Zach sa>s it is all
«ould all he li^tit it we we outside out. itit.,
democrats would behave, hut some
I r'—’ 1 good I
chinery. I’m behaving just as
' ' , ' ' but I’m not <-ilin ‘ j -mdse
iene - /ack winks . , , one e at . me _
and says “ he quiet,' and Living
ston winks the other and says “ be
quiet,” and I am quiet, hut I don t
know what I have done to any
body to he left out in the cold. I
don't see how they can turn me
out of my party for nothing.
One time my old darkey aaIio
Avas a Methodist and was given
to falling from grace was oA'er
taken by a fault in 1 he shape of a
bottie ot whiskey, and he went to
sleep on the sidewalk and Avoke up
in the calabooSe. lie sent for me
and I asked him Avliat lie had been
s
' Xollims-uolhmn at all, Mas
William—'fore God I ain .
-Well, Jeff,' a'J I, ‘‘lliey can’t
>ii. tliis r. (an i" !,T t ilo tiiat. ffr"”"*'"'
UatarinAri up (or » »•»»«
and then looked round at the pns
on Avails and said:
“But. Mas William, I is in here
-I is in licre right no« -’[oroUo,l
I is.”
“That’s my fix. 1 ain’t done
nothin!!, hut I feel like I'm in the
calaboose. I writ to Jtld Clemons
help , , , but . he said • j 1 he
to me our. „ ^
couldn t. for li9 was m tliC soup
himself. I writ to Everett and he
said "he quiet." 1 wrote to Stew
art and lie said “pray without ceas
. .. Q eorge Karnes telegraphed
me me - Hound's pounds of ot SAmpainj, -vmralllV, and an.
Grimes enclosed me a few lines of
poetry, beginning:
Old Grime* i- dead—that good old man.
He jdanned. but (tod di-po-e-:
Harris he knew and Gorman, too,
But did not know oue Mo-es.
I asked a farmer where he found
Moses, and he said, “ in the hull
j rushes." Rut it don’t matter
they found him, I'll bet he is a
good man, for they say he has been
t school teacher for ten years, and
had the biggest and best school in
the county. That’s a good sign.—
A man who can manage and con¬
trol ]50 children is no sardine.
Hurrah for Moses 1
On the whole I don't feel so very
oad. . . m, the - armors’ , Alliance or
r
Louisiana lias choked off (lie lot
lore, and II,uf. a good aign. The
aivvers wouldn’t doit, nor the
hankers, and Sam Jones save the
preachers wouldn’t. Hurrah for
the farmers! Old bother llaynie
says fie lives they are the not road going that to I hurt used me. to j
on
travel, and his well is in the front j
yard, and that’s a good sign—he j |
ion’, hide his water. Old man
Phelps was the friendliest man I ! I
ever saw sa'\, and ana his ms well weu was was close cio^e (
to the front gate, and lie had a j
trough outside so that you could
water your horse, and his apple
orchard was close by, and he didn't i
like if you didn't stop and drink
and eat and water your horse.
Father llaynie says if I had stuck
to the farm they would have ele¬
vated me about this time. Yes, I
reckon they would. They made
me overseer of the public road
while I was a fanner. He says if
I will move back they’ll elect me ;
constable, i , hanks. i
Blit tile skies are brightening— "
the , clouds . . clearing . . ... It
are away.
we can make peace 1 With the north
it will beat everything else. I
won’t care a cent about party if we
can have peace and be friends. 1
would be willing to sleep two in a
bed with a republican if lie was
friendly to us. They write me all
sorts of letteas from up there, and
I believe they are getting friendly.
I got three letters to-day—one
from a New York democrat, who
says we made a great mistake in
threatening the boycott, for it has
defeated the Lodge bill with its
bayonet clause; that we should
have let 1 hem pass it, and that it
would have killed tlie republican
party so dead it wouldn't even have
a P siliost.
'Another letter is from an Indi
ana man w ho says: “God bless
Bill Arp. His philosophy is cut
t uig but it is gouiul. The force bill
is an infamous outrage and we do
not l,] ain e von for the threatened
i> o yc 0 tt. I am a northern man and
;l .republican, but I say God bless
' V0U Hit them again.”
qq, e third letter was from a ne
gro—a colored man- -and lie writes
just like while folks. He writes
from Markham, Ya., and says:
•T speak for myself and my peo¬
ple. We desire our white friends
of the south to know that we want
no force bill thrust upon us. It
will prove our greatest curse, for
it will stir up strife and our race
... ,
wilt lie me mcuihs. ui
friends are the southern whites.
There w no race problem between
fl)em U s. and never will he if
| ,I,e ltive north Jong since wiU found ,et usalon r»ut- that f’ ^ th e
, r nothin-^ for us. We
i„ ....... st ,v, are
1 oin wt ,, winf ‘ is ° -mod for the
” '
white people of the south is good
for the negro, and if it takes a hoy
^ (o ki] , (he force billj our peo .
wjl] j oia you in it . Your ohe
*
' Veil, , f •J L Saunders.”
I reckon the force hill is
^ |>ut the animiIS , (he malice.
fhe venom that inspired it is not
dead. They that Blaine .
say gave
a black eye, and that he kicked
jj ie tarill’ hill in the pit of the
s t 0 inacln and we say hurrah for
n].,j lie . I'll hurrah lor anybody
who proA’es liimself a friend and
an honest statesman, I don’t care
wlqit party he belongs to. The
fact is I haven'tgot any party S
H,! 1 w.
- tat e r p a(c h. but Ton, I,™„
Sy, -avs that won't let me in. H e
I ............ ..........
file ‘^Fm™u,^r e b,!!s
Ainpjon Zachariah saA's it is all right
M yl please it I, allrkl.t tell If
i behave. Now, me
how long an outsider must behave
before he can get his naturaliza
tion paper, and Ik •omebody.^
.naiaru M ana , itrnkcu-Dowii nrokcu Foii-titn
lion.
AN a across, Ga.
Dr. W II Whitehead :
SlB _ Atfyour r( ., 1(1 ,.st I will
mv case. vears ago I con
-nlted variyu- phy.-ieians'and took imm
j.^.tiW-or’inore lifte a mother-in-law',
............... Sn.ul,. ,; and While here
trie(| r< , me(lll . s . i(l to cure
, nft j ar i.,, a „d it -till stuck to me, an 1
h"wlJn*! «“«. C t!.7u!
j^ing v mir P I* P (I’rickly Ash.
Poke Root and Potassium), and I im
,, rove d rapidlv, and am to-dav in as
g,md hsaltlt a* 1 ever was—in fact, bet
tor. A- a remedy for a broken-down
constitution it
j T P Cottle.
ALLIANCE NEWS.
PARAGRAPHS OP INTEREST TO
THE ALLIANCE FRATERNITY.
The State alliance of Missouri
refuses t0 endorse the sub-treasury ’
p] ail
We predict for Cheatham's Tasteless
U1 T :; U k ‘ ;U1 *'"l>reeeyU nteA sueo-s,.
Hie well . known reputation of its maim
'*«•“•» «* '“"ll 1 ” S'™ '"'
........ ' ' ‘
*
Southern farmers get ho benefit
fro,,, ,|,e rennhlicans The,In,von
ties is to be raised, l oot
ton fiee( ] 0 ji j s to be taxed out of
existence—all because republican
congressmen can be bought.
‘
v 0 intcd Chill'Tonic reasons whv
Cheatham’s Tasteless will
pleasant to the taste as honev: an abso
l, ,toa,1(1 "< i y<7'- fai,i, \ 2r cure for ? n ,U;,la
rioiis<*on»plamt.s. . Guaranteed tot-ure.
What more co«m you ask 2 For sale
Uerrman * Kveritt.
Hancock county seems to have
a full quota of sensible men. It was
a Hancock delegate to the recent
State agricultural society, who, in
replying to-an argument in favor
of tite sub treasury bill, said that
what the farmers wanted was the
means of making more cotton;
1 could take caie of it easy .
enough alter it was made.
Summei- ci.metb on apace, am] S4„m
will the granger lie engaged m Ins ail
mini struggle with chills and fev-r.
Lake time by tlie forelock ami lay ill a
supply of ( hentham s lasteless (mil
Tonic'that your days in the land may
he many. F.r sale by Hern.mu & Ev
eritt.
At the agricultural convention
in Lad range q novel contest was
proposed lor the State fair by S I)
Bradwell, of Liberty comity. It
was for the incoming and outgoing
Governors to engage in a plowing
match on the grounds. The sug
gestion was received by tlie con
ventionwith wild cheers,and efforts
will be made to have the contest
carried out. Gordon and Northern
plowing side by side would doubt
less be a drawing card.
Shiloh's Cure will iminciliiitely reiiev
raoup whooping ,rough amt broiiehitis .
lliM'rmnii A Eviuitt, ilruggists.
The followingifem shows the ab¬
solute necessity for organization
among farmers: In New York
State the farmers’ alliances have
united with the fanners’ league.
The special and immediate object
of the farmers’ league is to secure
an equal t».\ law, so that the per¬
sonal property which now escapes
taxation may bear its just propor¬
tion of the public burden. The
amount of such property which
escapes taxation is stated to be
over six billions of dollars, equal
to more than two-thirds of the n<
tual amount of property that is
taxed. It is held that if this prop
was fairly taxed, the farmers’
taxes would be reduced nearly two
t bird's.
Tiie Rev. Geo. It. Thayer, of Rourbcn,
says: “Both iny-clf mill wife owe
our lives to Shiloh’s ronsnniptiuit Cure
Hcinnan & Ilumiian, clriigsrists.
At. the recent meeting of the
State Agricultural Society the fol
Iowi “g resolution was adopted:
Itesoved, That the farmers of
Georgia desire and demand an effi
cl«,t ,h. 1.II<’ of o.„
less than six months m each year,
and that we are willing to hear our
s ], are of reasonable and equitable
t axation for t hat purpose.
In adopting this resolution the
farmers have shown that they have
awakened to (lie importance of an
efficient public school system. I n
der the piesent system Ave liasc
virtually no schools, and the I arm -
er is often forced to move to town
in order to give his children an ed
ucation. This movement of the
farmers to the towns has the effect
of destroying toa large extent in >r
a ] society. It lias made country
jjfe less desirable and lias retarded
the development of I lie highest
degree ot agriculture. With good
woulil Ik- robbaff ol ,ls ,m
e n' unpleasant tea ,.n - ,iim a
: ™v. .»« •
j “Hackinetavk,’* *i la-ting am) fi-.igrant
I KSTEdST^SK!""" "
Siiatcln'd From flu* Grave.
In hi-testimonial nttustingttw virtiM—
of RaiGinV Microbe Killer. AJr. M. < .
Battey. well and popularl}' Lnvvvti from
Ins connection wiUi the tpieen and 1 ’n—
cent Rail mad, present- a picture "f Ho
result-of tdood-poi- nin^ wlii li can- Hal
not but hare its weight with evenly
ineed mind-. Blond poisoning conn
to the sufferer in such an insidious Hiape
that it i- only dN-over d ,h -.
ordinal \ ciiLmn'..iiD it i* •l • late t
S^t #1^
verifahU’ «>stehed rn.in the grave L>
zr PYtE ttwv'u ld hi'- Vaith’in i'-".--a
cure for tdood noi-.oin.r w], tie other -
tell Of. t a- having e , !i v.t them -I .......
-umption and kindred d.
1 For sale by Dr. l J Buchan.
1 i Sixty teams are now pulling dirt
OU the Hawkinsville an<l GrOvania
division of the Empire and Dublin
rall roa<l.
, For Corns. Marts and Btinion
: Hue only Abbott's East Indian Gorri
| Paint.
GIRCUJSLTES
iu tie C* cut it s < r I’iuo. lTt.fk
Lanrres, Johnson, MonLm'ierv. To!,
fair, Wilcox, Mnyiie and Irwin ar.d
has subscribers from Mi lne to Texas,
send i on sample copy.
UASTM AX TlMl’S V •
DOLH.K COUNTY JOI HN.M .
SPUING HILL CAMP MI-laTNC.
The Coming: Religions Feast at This
Delightful Resort.
Mi s ns. Editors— 1 learn that
vou v >i-h an article on some .
. .
| of public interest from Spring llill
■ or publication in your \;diuib!o
‘ r> After milch thought l de
-
1,11 ,llal '," , '*!’*.....•
"" e 3 “ 10 1
~*** 1 i!l
.
«*••*«; “l«*>"
"
'^ioher fill, and continue „„„l ll»
morning of the 10th, is. or should
be, of greatest interest to the largest
number.
T , “ •..... * "l a \ < !‘ ,, t ;!l! ______ . u ,
‘ '
tabernacles is by far , toe most cn
^ <Us 1 ~ a *
The God of Heaven lias, through
( i . v j lt f i - b ai \ 1 , n •
u‘‘ l ’ h
wonderful means of grace. The
i Vi!S * multitudes who have been
-
brought to a knowledge of the
'ruth at these meetings, and who
have “crossed over the river and
are n0 ' v feeing under the shade oi
trees,” and (he large number
who now are found in every branch
*9 '<od s militant chttivli, battlim:
for the right, attest the value of
these annual convocations of Hod’s
sacramental hosts as a means of
!’ grace.
i’ll© obiect the writer Ins '' in view
'
is to urge the people all over the
nrosidine ’‘ ^lm 0 elder's ehtu s (V'slri- ci ; sttl t t, in 111 which
tins camp ground is located, to re
member that tliis is not a local in
terest, but one in which the whole
district is equally interested, it isa
district cam]) meeting, hence those
who may reside at the most re
mote-points are equally interested
wit li those who may reside within
a stone’s throw of the beautiful
tabernacle.
1 The district high school, located
at this point, has through its hoard
of (rustees^off'ered a lot, in feesim
])le, without money or price, of
B)() feet square, (o anyone vho
w j]] ])u( (linig.S thereon that
'will ,,, be , worth $200; and two lots
to any one that will put double
that amount oj improvements on
I a lot or lots. The object of the
trustees is to thereby build up both
the interests of the camp ground
and tlie school, believing that there
may invest thus largely for the
one will feel deeply interested and
take slock in the other.
They also propose to furnish
land, free of cost, to those who
may wish to put up cheap wooden
tents, or a place for those who may
wish to stretch a cloth tent, and
guarantee the place to the pav'ies
i 1S long as they may wish to use it
for camp meeting purposes.
This camp meeting is run entire¬
ly upon the self-sustaining plan—!
that is, every one who may attend
• M\pv.<.tul , . 10 tome pi palul to
v
feed and sleep himself, or pav
others to do / =o for him It will
tll( ,. pfor , , ( (() ffi.o a-i vanta m of 1
ovei . von „ who can do so to either j
build a good house, that will serve
his purpose for years to come, or
put up a temporary tent or secure
a Goth ten, lm nm.,i i. ,.u 1 lamil.,. .....
i no citizens of the viilnv* are ex
ceedinHy anxious for many to av -1
range to he on (lie ground prepared
to tu ] ;e care of themselves, fami
j- eg and f 1 .f el ) ( Js
The writer would respectfully
suggest that different committee
wit bin the district and section ,s ad
joining unite and build good tents,
and let them he known as the tent
of their respective committees—
say, for instance, tin* Eastman,
McRae, Jacksonville, iMt. Ver
non, etc., etc. There is, you know,
strength in union. If this can’t be
done, then let there be individual
or family tents in baVve lame numbers.
T!ie !illH , p ,| 10rt ho pc for
-om;- .., 1 ,,,i
Wlvecl , lllis alllI9( |, <([
Your A o- a uniritn adv.nf r <
of y«,r rarity an,I frienfi, *.
mauds early and prompt action in
»»"«• «« <’
diute thouglit. J. D. Anthony.
McRae Enterprise, Mt. Vernon
Monitor, and other papers that
circulate within the hounds inter
J. D. A.
D W::D- Lit?!.- I’ii.rly iti- r-. Only
pUl to eu: t sick headache ai.d regulate
l„ !»,, r. . jsold I> v Dr. 'i', .f. Buchan.
P-atae in Fieri la.
From ait Atlanta rtriimairr.
M t:. A. K. IT a \v K e, All mtu, G a.:
iJcar Sir—Vou doiioti.
Hi* • sretflnsr a of von nearly hr
• I had tie f?i ven , all
}; at>ii tt» n-a-t
i three i*V r. With the
nr giit
wo ;lcrfiil!v, 1 «i, an.i I liav
enabled to tfreat »le;»! of rea
; ii * fiis: ! I •on * ii IV ) V
th }
t*r y
nojit too
Your
,. C. < r. v w t v,
AA'iffgMoore, Marsh A: Do
aii cv« m and- gu ante, .1 In
i Herrman & Kver tt, i i-tn an. Ga.
T or ppY S
!u wt § n L. ; ; a $ m f* \\ iu
Ls au in rut liable remedy j. >}•
SICS . t HE/iDACcE, „ TORPlD
! UVER, DYSPEPSIA, PILES,
: MALARIA, COSTIVENESS,
AND ,, ALL » BIUOuS DISEASES.
Sold Everywhere.
I NOTICE;
,
•o
Having embarked in the pro#
out business with a full determina¬
tion to succeed, if polite attention
and pure goods can eom'mand sue
cess, the I am now prepared to oiler
o
Public, iny Patrons
and Friends
gW~ AS FINE A LINE Ob'
ALL KINDS OF
GBOCIHiES, CAN
GOODS, FRUITS,
CONFECTION E
BISS ETC
As were ever offered in tliis
Market, ;:l pri.’e ■ to nil every one.
s call particular at t<c ut ion to my
stock of
Tobaccos a ml Cigars.
Which are the finest. Give mo
a call or send orders to me
g-'T' At Tim I’ost-Oi-ticj; Buiumno
J. A. 1 WW ONI).
SUHKM’LK.
mm ii 1
M
THE FINEST SI FETING GAI!
SEBY1GK IN THE SOI Til.
Till; SUOKTKST,
(jnCKI-NT AM' Bkst
Hos tk to all Points,
East and North.
■
lr :
V*'
HH .. T _
■ f
■ : J®
T hrongii s leeping car s between,
(' IN < INN ATI AND JACKEON
YII.ME.
ATi.AN I'A AND BRPNSWIGh
T.OMK INI) W \MIIXCTON.
'V 1 "” 11 * yuange. ® 01 ai 'J hilotma
lion, write to, or call on
( T THUS. I\ A.
G. N. >
Atlanta, T. Ga
B. W. Wrenn, G. B. A. A.
Knoxville, Tenn.
Xom 2 m m ", m No. m" 7 a ' m.
DuItilYitlH K&hUh 1
EXCURSION RATES i
I ■
per mile traveled.
Tickets good TO
C M m ► RETUffN
SALE UNTII4
2 srov.
IZ-ia, 1st.
v
No iron clad tickets to annoy
families traveling* without male
esuorts.* The most liberal ar¬
rangements ever offered.
For information apply tC
a««ib e.t.v. & a luiim, '
’ „
1* TO 11.«. IMI5M*
Gladstone”
E IrAMP’
fh« lamp fR the
It rjv( - pore f moft t brilli-
5 aat w liiie f g li t oi SifiH rtuia
r ou er. Furerjt). lighter
% Vo tban electric Cheerful gaslight; light softer — m< than
'V k \ than cither.
I ordinary A KtartehiiM lamn Hqht oil front
'I /
v n Seeing C.MAM is Believing l U:£
CU-MA Bff ptrimm ng, never 1
ItSF FS;
it*
i'f -V. ’ ’ * > *
' •' 1
:■
Aulkjti j.
Thrt Gladstone Extension Study f -an p
for Prof Clergymen. I-awycrs, Tiiys Pfinlenls, TeaelieiR,
bus am! other
1>: ofcS iiunjil men.
’Hie Gladstone Rnnftnct Larnpk.
The Gladstone Pl&ao r.nnipp.
Fend for price list. Single lamps at tthl ole
nCr jrrice, and went safely l y »*xpr<
tJr'Get our prices. cemy l
GLADSTOXi: I.A.T1P < ..
Tl Park Place, Nt rr i orio
19M M I'.Ai
» CZ*. nrf raddtwstoE.WA
'
nia f <:< .a I
*r»d h« trii* fftli ,'~*V J •.4BumX& , , 6 i.... ...... ti-— * — iQ _
il&d. yjilzzi: i a‘4,