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te I i to SiiT
— VVBSiS YOU KEEP —
ufip, Nicips, ( apJcji Seed?,
Fancy and toilet
AR'JTCLBS, STATIONERY,
GRASS, OlL:>, &n..
in fact, anything carried in stock in
a first class mum stork. Do not
fad to call on us before buying. We
keep none hut the rkst qua i.itv or
EVERYTHING, and ill price URi'Y COM
PETITION. Wo have been engaged
in the drug business for a period of
inure than 25 years and point to our
pust record as a guarantee lor flic
future. When in Macon do not fail
to call and see us
" RANKIN&&2CO ■»
Mulberry and Third Sts.,
Near Wadloy Monument and New
Government Building. u4-3m
ssms*.
PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING
AT GRAY’S STATION, GEORGIA,
—BY T. It. PENN.—
Subscription Rates—111 Advance.
One Year. SI.00
Six Months. 50
Three Month. 3(1
Entered at the Postoflieo al Gray’s Sta
tion, Ga., as second class mail matter.
Postoliice orders, drafts, etc., should be
made payable to T. It. Penn.
Kates for advertising made known on
application.
Communications for individual benefit, the or
of a personal advertisements. character, charged for
same as
Marriage and obituary notices, not ex
ceeding one square, inserted without for charge
—over one square will be charged same
as advertisements. responsible for
opinions’ Correspondents expressed alone tiy them are through these
columns.
TOWN AND COUNTY.
Mrs. E, G. HARDEMAN, Local Editress.
We now write it 1888.
What has become of our corres
pond cuts ?
Fiend us One Dollar ami get the
Headlight for all this year.
It is claimed as a fact that the
Piedmont exposition cleaved 858,000.
Tom Wooli'olk lias been taken
back to the Macon jail for
meat.
Mr. Eugene Morgan reiurnetl last
Monday from a visit with relatives
at, Montirello.
There wore 80 arrowtl ar drunk
enttess . and disorderly conduct, in
Atlanta, Christmas.
Miss Lula Hurst,, the wonderful
electric girg of this state, has aban
doned the stage forever. 8he is
now Mrs. Paul Atkinson, ami lives
in Chattanooga, Tenn.
Mayor Cooper, of Atlanta, par
doned 60 convicts out of the city
chain gang, on Christmas morning.
He made a clean 'weep oftho gang,
and they wove all made happy.
Three colored prisoners escaped
from. Covington jail on Saturday
night. They were all in for minor
offenses, and their escape leaves • the
empty.
The family of Mr. T. W. Dim mock
of Carrollton, has a part of a china
tea set that is over three hundred
years old. It has been handed
down from generation to genera
tion through Mr. Dimmoch’s moth
er’s family.
The Century Magazine is exclud
ed from Russia because of its re
cent articles on the horrors of Rus
sian prisoners. It seems to us this
is very bad policy. A man who
has read these articles is likely to
be an exemplary citizen for fear 01
getting into one ot the horrible
places described.—Macon Telegraph
Both the marshals of Conyers
were severely cut, by a trioofdrunk
en negroes, on Christmas eve, and
have since been in a very critical
,-condition. Two of of the negroes
.iiive been arrested and lodged in
jail, but the other succeeded in
making his escape. The negroes
were drinking ard boistrous on the
streets, and tho marsiiail asked
them to be quiet, when they set up
Oil turn and stabbed him severely.
The deputy marshal seeing the
the marshal was having trouble
with the negroes, rushed to his as
sistanee, when he was likewise set
upon by the negroes and severely
ent. They have since been suffering
greatly from their wounds, but it is
recover.
v LlA f’Ok IOvALK.
Oapt. R. T doss is quite, sick will,
pneumonia at his in, me.
Wasn’t New Year’s day a gloomy
one? But the 2nd dawned beauli
fully, and continues so.
Rev. J. >S, Lewis of the Jefferson
ville Circuit held s rvroes at the
school house on the night of Bee.
25th.
Tuesday was regular sale day, hut
the dullest over known. There has
been so much property sold by
Sheriff's sale heretofore this fall,
it is lime for'a quietus.
Shorriff W. W. Barron has bought
the house and lot of Mrs. P. M.
Parks in Clinton, and moved Tues
day. There are three vacant bous
es only in the village now.
Dr. S. C. Purstly, o: Clinton, and
Di. Ohio Gibson, of James Station,
were presented with girl-babies as
New Years presents, and. are con
g’atulal ed accordingly.
Farmers are busy contracting and
arranging for a coming crop. The
farm hands and house servants in
and around Clinlon"areexeeptionul'
ly faithful, taken as a whole.
Aleck Anderson (the Swede) who
lias lived in the county for sixteen
years or more, removed with his
children to Brunswick Ga., on the
5th. We believe this will leave no
Swede in the county.
ft- bert H. Kingman, who is in
business with Campbell & Jones, of
Macon,| was in town Wednesday
lie reported his firm as having re
ceived about*,1800 Jor 2''00”hales ot
cotton from the fanners of Jones ot
the crop’87, says the farmers us a
general thing have met their drafts
with more promptness than for
years.
The Macon Telegraph has donned
a New Years gown and comes to us
ever so nice, with print and appear
ance greatly improved. By the bye
we receive no exchange more sub
stantially interesting, and contain
ing all the pure and best news of
tne day, than the^&U'ar.nah Jtorn
ingNu^’s. "•"Ft is a magnificent pa
per. Editor Estill ranks high in
Georgia.
Clinton circuit lias been reduced
to four different churches by last
Conference, withrone minister, Rev.
M. A. Phillips, whereas last j ear we
had two ministers serving eight
churches. Bro, Phillips preaches in
Clinton on the 1st Sabbath, Hound
Oak the 2nd Sabbath, Pitts Chapel
the 3rd Sabbath and Fortville the
4th Sabbath in each month this year.
Those churches have good Sabbath
Schools connected with them.
Mrs. J. It. Chiles is the champion
butter maker and housewife of this
county, and there canJbe found more
substantial housekeepers in Jones
than anywhere in Middle Georgia)
Mrs. Chiles has made and sold one
hundred dollars worth of butter
since the 1st of October, besides
having used all the family needed
at home, and divided with neighbors
and friends also. She has not Jer
seys either, but believes in good
feeding and close attention to dai
rying.
The Angora goat seems to be
raised in great perfection in Texas.
A skin of the most beautiful de
scription came from the' ranch of
tho Messrs Arnold, in Uvalde coun
ty. The hair is brilliantly white,
and very long and silky. They also
possess the art down there of di ess
ing these skins in a manner to make
them as useful for rugs as they are
agreeable to look at.
A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY FOR
INVESTMENT.
I am offering the finest Custom
mill and ginnery in the County for
sale. Situated in Clinton. Consist
ing of a STATIONERY ENGINE
With Locomotive boiler, one new fif
ty saw PRATT COTTON GIN, Con•
denser and Feeder ant! one 40 saw
cotton gin with condenser, a
SPLENDID GRIST MILL 44 in.
rock, including gin house, mill
house, cotton press, shafting, pul
leys. etc., with a regular Custom of
10,000 Hu. Corn per annum and 300
to 500 Bales during a season. Will
sell CHE A P FO R CASH. Call and
look at it or write me at Clinton, Ga.
R. V. HARDEMAN.
'REMINISCENCES OF JONES COUNTY.
EV S!tlS. k u. n.
A MYSTERIOUS MURDER.
“When winter nights grow ’.mg,
And winter winds blow cold,
We sit in a ring round tho warm
wood fire,
And listen to stories old.”
Many long years ago Rwas an
oft-Umo thing to see at any time a
peddler, with pack strapped to his
back, trudging the roads and by
paths of old Jones. Those wander
ing Bohemians were mostly from
the North-east, and were dubbed by
our Southern people as Yankee ped
dlers. Their packs contained a gen
eral mixture of every thing in de
mand by a country housewife or
vain country lassie—sort of a hab
erdasher establishment on a minute
scale. There was usually to be
found in them one or two table
cloths, several patterns of dress
goods, a calico bedspread or two,
toilet soap, needles, pins, spool cot
ton, cheap huie, handkerchiefs, ho
siery, “piochbuck” jewelry, some
cigars and a few plugs of tobacco
perhaps. These Yankee peddlers
were never patronized by the bet
ter, but the poorer class of whites
and negro slaves. Buying cheap
goods they were said to “coin mon
ey’’ as they always sold at exorbi
tant rates, and were considered to
have plenty of mottev.
One bright day in late Autumn,
more than 40 years ago, there was
seen on tho busy streets of Clinton
a peculiar looking top wagon, drawn
by two sturdy horses and contain
ing only the driver, a regular
•‘down Easter Yankee.” No one
noticed the turn-out closely, though
a country man standing iu a crowd
remarked : “That is a Yankee ped
dler, who has been around the
neighborhood for several days, he
seems to be better off than those
who have preceded him, navvies a
finer assortment of goods, and goes
about in grander style.’’
He drove from tho town Arid was
entirely forgotten by’ every one, un
til by a strange and horrible uis
eovery ho was brought to mind
several months afterwards.
Foui miles from Clinton fa situated
a grist mill, run by tho waters of
Walnut Creek. This mill has been
run for years. About the times oi
which we write the miller lived near
the mill with his family. In this
family was one daughter, a poor
thing, with blunted intellectual
faculties, whoso mind was almost a
blank. She had the sympathies ol
the family and being entirely harm
less was allowed to take cure of
herself, wandering around the fields
and woods alone, troubling no one,
nor molested by any. The Spring
had already thrown her mantle on
the budding woodlan 1 surrounding 1
the mill, the banks of the creek
were thick with tho bright green
undergrowth and the half-witted
was tho woods as usual
when she noticed a hog busily en
joying a meal, of what looked
strangely to her. Going closer she
found it was eating part of a human
body, which it had pulb d from a de
cayed log, in the loneliest part of
the wood. Frightened greatly, she
ran to tho mill and the miller with
others on going to the place found,
it but true that it was a man’s
body, greatly decomposed, and al
most flesh less upon which the hog
was feeding. Who and what was
he? a wad silence revealed not.
The hair and beard indicated a
white person, but there had been no
person in the neighborhood missed
Closer search revealed a faded
pice'* of gay calico in which, it
seemed, tho body had once been
wrapt. Some one recognized it as
a piece of bedspread prints, of an
unusual pattern and color that a
Yankee peddler (who was In tho
vicinity several months before) had
carried in his pack. Soon after this
discovery tho pack, broken and
weather beaten, but recognizable,
was found near by, rifled of course
of its contents. The remains were
then identified as those oftho ped
dler, who drove tho top
through Clinton almost six months
before. TI10 poor murdered nn
kr.ovvn was buried near where he
was found , , and , »t .. , has always , noon
a mys-oryas to who committed the
foal crime of taking an innocent
life. '>-r paltry S ain and what dh
ait ion was made oftho her- es ami
cui'voyanco.
To the half witted girl, un i u
bright bit, nl cotton prints was left
the discovery of the body, bat. a
grim silent Past reserves to herself
nil traces of the crime and the
murderers.
II fff
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•
iHf f
IfH
ms -M AM
I 3
W
imn
Absolutely Pore*
This powder never varies. A. ma r
vel of purity, strength ::nd whote
someness. * More economical than the
ordinary in competition kinds, with and cannot the multitudes be gold
low test, short weight, ahimn orphos
pha'e pnwdero. Sold only in cant 1
ROYAL BAKING POWDFKCO
106 Wall Street, New York.
I\a£LI^Q’ 4D fipB T^BLS.
COVINGTON & MACON R. R.
Fvjm and after Tuesday. Nov.
1st 18SJ, trains on the Covington
& Macon Railroad will be run by the
following schedule:
GOING NORTH—MAIL THAIS.
Lv Macon...... : ....4 30 p m
ML; ssev’s Mill.. i .... 4 45 p m
Roberta........ : .... 5 00 p m
Morton........... .... 5 25 p in
G rays........... : .... 5 33 p m
Bradley .... : .... 5 43 p rr.
Wayside........ : . .. 5 53 p m
Round Oak....... .... 0 13 p m
Hillsboro ....... .... (5 20 p m
Ad;ato........... : . .. Q 38 j' -in
Alin net a.......... : ..... 0 59 j> rn
4 r Mouticellf).J .... 7 11 p m
GOING SOUTH—MAIL TRAIN.
Lv Mon tied lo f l*- 00 a m
.fttinneta/.^ l> 13 a m
Adgate...... t- 34 a rn
Hillsboro ... 4G a m
Round Oak X 08 a in
Wayside ... X 21 a in
Grays....... Bradley...... x- 32 a rr,
x- 41 n in
M- rten...... co 53 a in
Roberts..... oaC5 00 a n>.
Massey’s Mill. 22 a m
Ar Macon...... 40 a m
GOING yORTH—ITlEiaiiX Tit A T N.
Lv. Macon...... 7 30 a m
Lv. Grays........ 9 tri a m
Ar. Mouticello.. .. 12 in
GOING SOUTH—FREIGHT TRAIN.
Lv. Monticollo... .. 12 30 p m
J.v, Grays......... ... 5 00 p rn
-rr. Macon..... .. ti 30 p m
S. Refj> Stoney, | f Ree’ers.
A. OitAia Palmku.
Tiie Morning
steam PHnmira house
Printing, Lithographing, Binding, Engrav
ing, Store typing, Book
and Blank Book Manu
facturing.
TtiC Largos* Concern
oi Use Kind SJoniJi
Thoroughly equipped and com
plete within itself; tiic latest ma
chinery and the mo.-t skillful
workmen.
Corporations, Manufac
turers, Banks and Bankers,
County Merchants, Officer-, Mechanics Farruera and
BBSISUSS GJJSKffiAMiY.
About placing orders for any
thing in the above line, from a visit
ing card to a mammoth poster, or
from a memorandum book to a mam
moth ledger, trial. are requested to give
this house a
J. II. Estill, Prop ri of or,
3 Whitaker St., - - Savannah, Ga
‘fi’J!!!™ 5 1 !*
IO e> nxt ±® tirjy‘- a
JPL J!*- J’OTffia®
RESIDENT DENTIST,
Having pcrmanohtly located at.
MontiowiJ.’> is prepared to do your
work lit I’.EA'OSAULB KATK.S. f>tt’ l.«
, ?Baru „tt.ed. A liberal por
tion of ibe public patronage s«lie
Rod. Offiao up stairs over Di. Do
zier s drug itore.
tfrl have csfr.hhshcd a branch
ofe ,. a „ t (J . rf , Sut ;„ n md -•
weJk s K tfeat p | aoc -2- ,.
in each wouth, 111
”V"V1 I- | ps ft r,p|»a
"I"* »». JL Xj 4 0b«/ Jsu lk3 Xm. &J UU Vi ,1
w,> have this day contracted with Messrs. JOHN MERRY .MAN & CO.
to soil, at nil stations on the & iVf, Railroad, their
-celebrated brand? of guano—
a i J a Bones,
arryman iJ a I t»
ierrvman’s j GEORGIA TEST
■a e can say without any four of contradiction that Merry man’s Fer
tilizi vs are to-day, as they have been for 29 years, at the very top in
excellence, and the perfect sittisfncti >n they give to planters.
V, bile most of the popular brands on the market in past 3'ears havo
changed tho grade ot their goods by lowering their grade, Merrymuu
has c.-.'-ntinnally improved. We do not make these statements at random.
We refer to any planter in Jones and Jasper counties who havo used
dayman's Guano, and will stake our input a: ion on tho result.
— WE ALSO handle —
SQiH.t3P23i2.-a sostjai rraSST
lor composting, which ' s the higho.it grade acid on the market. Wo sell
cheaper acid phosphates; also Kain t, and are agonts for the Macon Oil
& Fertilizer Company for the side of their Cotton Seed Meal.
Wo can give Sow prices on these goods, and arc roady. to deliver now.
Our Agents will call on tho good people of Jones and Jasper coun
ties, and wo will trustivccivc their orders.
MBS, WllSffi ’4 GO.,
429 AND 422 THIRD STREET,
NOVEMBER lfrm, 1887. [Ll] mJSkttwwt oa
W 12 WAR® a a, mm ran
Hs3.iL tli© I*©w Fs»i©©s»
:o:
FULL PATENT FLOUR, per barrel, 85 50
25 POUNDS PATENT FLOUR, 70
1-2 PATENT FLOUR, per barrel, 4 50
25 POUND SACK, GO
FAMILY FLOUR, per barrel, 4 35
25 POUND SACK, 50
13 POUNDS GRANULATED SUGAR, I 00
4J FOUNDS FINEST COFFEE, 1 00
SALT IN WHITE SACKS,
tTATi.VJiT GRITS, per peek, w«
BEST UNCAiUHSSKD HAMS,
BEST N. O. SYRfJP' (icy gal on, i S
25 BOXES MATCHES, '*c 3
1 DOZEN PAPER BOXES MATCHES' 490s - 45
Stay The way to make money iu to save it. Como and trade with
us and wo will save you money.
WAHS ate
380 P^cof!, Qea^qiA.
Jeff ©a?i§ IS 0
----AND
BSRG
Invjteh Everybody to the EXPOSITION STORE, 114 MULBERRY
STREET. MACON, GA.
With a business eye to the fact that time 1 are hard, and hard cash
scarce, prices of cotton low, our buyer has visited tho Eastern markets,
supplied with hard cash, nml at last has returned tyith a large and elegant
Stock of Dry Goods, Clothing,
SHOES, BOOTH, HATH, CAPS, NOTIONS,
TRUNKS, VALISES, Ladik.,’ and (Hints’
FURNISHING GOODS, RUBBER GOODS,
UMBRELLAS and an elegant lino of
—rsr—
Tbeso goo hi have been bought direct from the factories for hard
cash and at the lowest cash i*uigk*. I to also has attended tho largo
sheriff sales and bought from under the atsolioneer’s hammer at his own
price a large ipianGiy of goods which enables ns to offer our goods at
lower prices to the. consumer than even other merchants have to pay
lor thorn.
LOOK AT OUR EXTREME LOW PRICES!
Prints ........... _____2j'; per yard
Standard Skints . lie per yard
Brown Shorting........4£n per yard
4 4 Brown Sheeting......60 per yard
Rod Linen Table Dutnar-k 30e pr
White 1!aukereluo!<*...25c }su‘ dozen
All Wool Red Flannel... 1 ie per
7-8 Bleaching............“Ie per yard
1-1 Bioaehing............5-i« per yard
Ail Wool Red Worsting...7c per vd
LadiohfcJernei h .................25« up
Wo have also the largest line of Ladies’ Mis-rf .and Childrens’
CLOAKS, WALKING JACKETS AND WRAPS,
Jn«t received from the Eastern markets, at prk lo V'-r than tho
lowest.. Also just iveeiveo 150 cases of Men’s, Ladies',_ Aiis;.-‘;>’ and Chil
dren's SHOES, direct from the Eantorn Factories, which wo offer at 25
per cent, less than any house in tho oily.
MONARCH SHIRT, tho Best Shirt in tho World, at 75 Gents.
* All goods at ruinons reduction i he short times. Bo
to k-i 1, t on p
Sure to Cnii before making your purchases t Is.-where, for it is ho trouble
to i-!iov»- goods. Gome one, come at!, be convinced and save your money
by buying your goods at tho
IS zk. jp <0 m 11 :l o 3TJ 1 Si t o jc o eo
PIS* M« EB'JESSlI?r©5M*3
4i4 Mulberry Street, near tho Fair Store,
2V£«,c023. Ocorgln
OTIS CO. TER wi! be pleased to wuitt ti you. lwe
J runs....... ......... 1 Oe per yard
All Woo! Kentucky Jeuns 25e pr yd
Ladies' mid gents’ Undershirts 25o
All V.’oni Scarlet UnUorshirts....60ij
Good Working Muiis ............ S3 up
Business Suits from ............ It up
All Woo! (.lussimure Suits .... Sfi up
Dress Suits......................$6.50 up
Overcoats from ...............11.75 up
1 diildreii’a Suit;,. ............$1.35 up
Tailors'Opera Flannel'S 30e, w’th 0U0