Newspaper Page Text
06
IMS
“Our Ambition is to make a Yeraeions Work, Reliable in its
VOL. I.
ROBERT COLE-MAM- JOHN N. BIRCH. BOLIVAR H. RAY,
COLEMAN, BAY & CO.
C0TTO1X Macon, fS3 FA.O'fQMl Qsij
Groceries, Planters’ Supplies, ,
Dealers in
*
„ TIES.
OAGGIMGr AND
After announce" 0131)}’ years' practical experience Georgia that in handling and selling Cotton,
we to the Planters ol wo are now ready for
coming season, with every facility and convenience for satisfactory hand
ling of all Cotton that may be entrusted to us. Without any favorites
among the buyers, but treating all alike, we make it our special aim to get
the very highest market price for each Planter, selling to the very best ad
vantage each individual bale of Cotton. For the convenience of our
friends in the country ,we have in connection with our warehouse a store
supplied with a full stock of Groceries, Provisions and Bagging and Ties,
which we will sell as cheap as any one. In season we have a full supply of
Mules, which we will sell for cash or on time. We also handle Guano of
the best grade, which we will be gltul to furnish to all wishing it for cash
or on time. We thank our many friends of the past years for their liberal
patronage and to a'l new ones we guarantee satisfaction. We solicit your
Cottou aud trade. RespectiuHy,
NH. 25—3m. COLEMAN, RAY & CO.
aitg
GREAT SACRIFICE
•OF
Hiilti V......
-AT-*—
1 AT SEMIS, 1 III CHERRY STREET,
Macon Georgia,
M Special Offers to the Public.
I offer as inducements from now until Jan. 1st 1889, to advertise my gooda
Best Band Sewed Shoes $3.50 Former Price, ¥6.00
“ Machine “ Calf “ 2.50. *< r 3,50.
2nd Grade “ « “ « 1.75. « - 2.50.
Ladies Sewed Button Shoes 2.50 E r 4.00.
M “ a “ 1.25 £ •t 1.75.
Calf Skin Lace « 1.25 £ 4< 2 . 00 .
Best Boots for Men 2.00 u 3,00.
“ Brogans 1,00 and 1.25 « 1.50 and 1.75.
Children Shoes and Hats at your First own Class price and
All of these goods I guarantee to be strictly
everything waranted to be as represented, we respectfully
invite you to give us a call. Remember the place.
Schells No 513 Cherry St,
MACON, GEORGIA
iN H—8-25—3 in. .. i
F. S. JOHNSON. JEFF LANE
JOHNSON & LANE.
■Co)---
MACON «1 M G A*
Hardware, Building Material, Belting p
Cutlery, Wagon Material.
•< -:o:
Guns, Pistols and
Ammunition.
11 j) §| % ililffli
y
451,453 AhiD 455 mulberry st. macon ga.
Just received, One Car Load Dixie and Ludlow Bagging,
ii <C it li “ Arrow Ties.
it u Two “ “ Flour.
We also , keep Seed ,, , Oats, ~ , Rye, -r, xr Meat, i. n Lorn ___ and. flrmvTrthi'utf everytning
else kept in a First Class Grocery Business. Can give you
Bottom figures on such goods.
DAVIS & BALKC0M,
•fe-25-t 451, 453 and 455 MULBE RRY ST., MACON, GA.
COUNTY
lu a
If MAC. j
Ns
\
GRAY, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1888-
HOUSEHOLD MATTERS.
Whitening Linen with Potatoes.
A French laundryman has discovered
a linen very without ingenious method of cleaning
soap. He uses no soap,
substances nor lye. nor chlorine, but replaces these
which by boiled potatoes, with
he rubs the linen. This curious
process, it appears, is much superior to
Zff «\ilk
this method are made whiter than they
could be by the use of an alkali. Besides,
the method has the advantage that
brushes can be dispensed with aud well
water be used.—-A ha York World.
A Nice Way to Mix Mustard,
It is quite a convenience to have mus
t:ml mixed ready for daily use. If made
according to these directions it will
fresh some time. Take three table
granulated“ then beat gar^nd mfx SSgethS,
an egg very smooth, to’the and add
it with a teacupful vinegar mus
tard and sugar, putting in a little only
at F a bined. M 1110 ’ until Place the it whole then is thoroughly the
om on stove
cooYtheTTnutes 0 , st°inTu| coSintly
or it will curdle. When it thickens
remove it and add cither a teaspoonful
of olive oil or the same amount of melted
butter. Unless olive oil is perfectly
fresh, it is always better to use butter in
its place, as stale oil will spoil whatever
it is used on .—Prairie Farm r.
The Effect, of Yin ajar on Meat.
There are methods for making tough
meat tender; the operation is purely me
chanical. Good meat is sometimes
tough owing to hardness of fiber. It then
remains to soften the fibers in order to
make meat tender, or easy to masticate;
there are two ways known to experienced
cooks; or.eby the action of vinegar upon
the uncooked fibers of (le.-h, the other
the prolonged simmering of the meat iu
an unsalted sauce, or in enough water,
also unsalted, to just cover the meat and
supply it with the requisite Quantity of
moisture. The pounding of meat to
make it tender is reprehensible to the last
degree. the When meat is made tender by
dred application acid of vinegar, or any kin
to the uncooked fiesh, it may
subsequently method, be cooked after any desired
Several although dishes it is usually stewed.
excellent based upon this
principle ,the of of cookery the may be made. As
in.- use acid with uncooked
meat tic. writer's experiments have beeu
variously made-witi—iis widen •'cra.r and lemon
or lime juice, and cider marly
become vinegar, and they have a similar
effect; as they are less rapid in action
they f re preferable for those meats which
are to be stewed, braised, or baked in a
sauce or gravy made from the wine or
cider .—The /iuusewife.
Recipes.
bacon Cabbage three Soup. -Boil two pounds add oi
in quarts of water; a
turnip, one half head of cabbage, three
onions, two stalks of celery seasoned and
chopped tender. fine; stew uutil the vegetables
are
Cream Pie. —Into one pint of thick
sweet flour, cream stir one tablespoonful of
one-haif cup of sugar, a pinch of
salt, and the white of one egg beaten
stiff. Flavor to taste, bake in a single
crust, as for custard pie.
Vermicelli Pudding. —Boil a pint
of milk with a few bitter almonds and
a little cinnamon, pour over one-quarter
of a pound of vermicelli that has been
softened in water; sweeten to taste and
add three beaten eggs; bake or boil.
Corned Beef. —Boil until soft
enough to remove the bones; put in
earthen disband pour over it the water
it was boiled in. Place a plate on it and
a heavy weight ; have sufficient water, so
that when the weight is on it will come
to the top of the meat. Let it stand un
til cold, then cut in slices.
Squash. —Cut the squash in quarters, with
remove the seeds and skin, cover
salted boiling water and boil until done.
When cooked mash the squash and add
one ounce of butter for each small one.
Moisten with gravy or broth and put in
little pans or dishes; cover with bread
crumbs, place tiny bits of butter on the
top, and bake a delicate brown in a brisk
oven.
Marble Cake. —Light part: Two
cups of white sugar, one cup of butter,
one-half cup of sweet milk, whites of
four eggs, two and a half teaspoons of
baking powder, two cups of flour. Dark
part: One cup of brown sugar, one-half
cup of molasses, one cup of butter, one
fourth cup of sour milk, half a teaspoon flour to
of soda, yolks of four eggs,
thicken, and flavor.
Peas with Mutton. —Take any part of
the mutton most convenient; take half
a dozen chops, put them on in cold water
and boil until well done; remove the
chops from the soup into an earthen dish,
let it stand until the next day; then re
move all the /at, which has hardened
into a cake on the top; have ready a
quart of shelled peas, put them into a
kettle with the soup, and cook onehour.
Add a few potatoes
A Venerable Turtle.
It seems that in 1810 Henry Mogul,
father of the present Treasurer of High
land County, Ohio, caught a turtle on
his farm in Center Township, that
county, and cut into its back the initials,
“H. M., 1810.” He let the turtle go,
but related the circumstance to his son.
Decently the County Treasurer was out
walking over the old. farm, when he
accidentally came across the identical
old turtle upon which his lather had
carved his initials turtle seventy-eight and years
before. The was alive, as
i"SST
first made .—Cincinnati Enquirer.
Blessing are strewed like flowers in
our pathway; carefully it rests with us to by. gather
them up or pass them
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Statements, Candid in its Conclusions, and Just in its Views."
AS SHE COMES DOWN THE LANS.
Along the fields the shadows full,
The stin is hanging low,
And on the ivy-mantled wall
The soft lights come and go,
A zephyr wafted from above,
Drifts o’er the waving grain;.
Ny heart goes out to meet my lovA
As she comes down the lane.
I lean upon the moss grown bar^
As ‘long the path she fares,
My gracious queen, no blemish mart
The coronet she wears.
The sceptre in her woman’s hand
Will banish care and pain.
For I am lord of all the land
When she comes down the lane.
Soft breezes play about her now,
And lift her shiniug hair,
The sunset glow is on her brow,
To make her passing fair.
Her beauteous face, her mod
To picture thorn were vain.
And she is mine, my bonny qir
As she comes down the lane.
The daisies nod as she goes by,
The wild rose blushes pink,
Sweet song-birds round her pathway fly,
And sing the praise they think.
She lifts her head, her eyes so clear,
Smile into mine again;
My heart cries out: “God bless you, dear,"
As she comes down the lane.
—Mail and Express,
PITH AND POINT.
The healer is supposed to be well
heeled.
lations. Stuttering men have the most poor/e
The real question of the hour—What
tin e is it?
director’s. A flourishing business—The musical
A burglar who was recently prostrated
with lockjaw cured himself by jacking
the lock.
In a small Dakota town the following
Bign is displayed: ‘‘Heads sowed np
while you wait .”—Li e.
It is a prudent landlady who feeds her
boarders watermelon because her son is a
doctor.— Merchant- True. hr.
The wound Boulanger received seems
to have drawn the swelling from his head
to his neck .—New York Telegram.
“What becomes of theoid moons, pa?”
“The old moons, my sou? Why, they
die of newmonia, to he sure .”—Lynn
Item,
\ is the buttermilk made?” asks
a city reader, her .v ~, rirnlvihlv, Detroit at
tending to business.— v <...
Pres.
The man who took the stand in his
own behalf brought it back again to ex
change for a full sized table .—Detroit
Free Press.
The man who can’t sing and won’t
sing deserves the eternal gratitude .—Journal of all of
his friends aud neighbors
Education .
The folks of old said: “Love is blind.”
Tell us, wo pray you, sages much kind,
Is that why he depends so
Upon the magic sense ot touch?
—Life.
Mrs. Plantagenet, who is strong in
ceramics, wants to know where she can
see the .f 10,000 pitcher of the Boston
nine aud of what ware it is made. — Com
mircial Advertiser.
NEVER TOO HOT.
Though men perspire and the sun’s a-flre,
It And the atmosphere hot, by allame, long, long shot
is never too a
For the great American game.
—Boston Courier.
“I cannot give you a definite answer
to-night, Mr. Paperwate,” said the girl,
softly; “you must give me a month to
think it over.” “Very well,” was the
young man’s response, “and in the mean
time I can think it over myself.— Life.
“What did you learn about that new
go . erness, .ToIid?” “All that your friend, “And
Mrs. Clodpoll, coukl tell me.”
what was that, pray?” “I’ve either quite that for- she
gotten now, but it was
was seventeen years old and lived in One
Hundred and Twenty-secdnd and street, lived or in
that she was 122 years old
Seventeeth street.”
Tho Boston girl—when Sol begins to glow,
And days are inconveniently warm— wants to
Who how you stand the weather
know, question in its vulgar form.
Puts not the
Ad justing, in her fascinating that way, assist her
The gold-rimined glasses
view, “Is caloric, sir, to day
She asks: there youi”
Builieient in the atmosphere for Courier.
—Boston
Black beard, the Pirate.
Not far from St. Simon’s, Ga., is an
island called Blackboard. The name, it
is said, originated from a pirate called
Blackboard, who long ago inhabited it
with his crew of desperate men.. waist, Along,
black beard, flowing to his gave
the pirate his name. When the govern
ment dispatched vessels laden with
money to pay off the men sent to colonize
the State, these pirates would lie in wait
to secure the treasure at any cost. Some
years since a colored man was plowing turned
on this island, when his plowshare gold. A crafty
out $40Cu in Spanish
white man told him it was too old to be
good, and that he would give him $150
for it. The offer was accepted, and
when it was beyond recall, the poor fel
low found out that he had been swindled,
Even now on the neighboring island of
Jeckyl the trees are often found notched,
and the people suppose that these marks
denote the place where the treasure
booty of the old pirate istturied. Black
heard did not live to be very old. A
vessel coming by was attacked by the
killed him .—Chicago Herald.
Four or five of the head porters n tha
leading Chicago hotels are colie tlvely
worth oyer half a million dollars.
T
e« rw HTMATT ON 9
--DEALER IN
Shot Guns Rifles, Pis
Fishing —Jp70\.s1 tols, Cut
Tackle and - lery, Gun
Sporting and Lock
Goods. Smith,
Repairing Promptly Done.
410 Cherry Street
MACON, m m m GA
NII—8-25—3m.
E. L. BURDICK, Agt.,
Dealer So
Corn, Meat, Flour, Hay, Outs, Meal, Wheat
Bran, Sugar, Coffee, Laid, Syrup, Salt,
Tobacco, Bagghig and l ies, etc.
When you come to Macon, call and sec me and get my prices.
E. L. BURDICK, ACT.;
452 POPLAR ST., MACON, GA #
N H—8—25—3m.
Popular--Reliable
la| TFSOTZINCERl
—DEALER DX AND MANUFACTURER OF—
PRINTERS’ SUPPLIES J
32 W. MITCHELI* ST.,
Atlanta, - Georgia.
Deal with the Manufacturer and Oct
the iMTi/eni Viscount* t
fc uuiu«p,t<i<» With Every Sale I
Half Case Labur-Sating » c $ct,
no. a.
In this case, which
is tho samo in size
as the half labor
saving Furniture
case, an equal space
fH is given to four
Mi ■ raj kinds of lleglct—
[1 BswsawM Bi Nonpariei, j’ieu and brevier,
aHBsjBffijll; Great
tifiill; i’rimer, which are
NraffiflN cut in lengths of
SHsIflHBEffl 10 > 15 > ao > a 'V i0 >
40 and 50 riea.
I There are 758 pieces
of Brevier, Nonpariei, 587 of
878 of Pica
and 252 of Great
Primer, or 1,053 $lO. in
all. I'flee,
No. 7 (the full size case), lias double fchu
luantitv of the half case. Price. SIS.
"A
Peerless Quoins,
P.,i feet, Solid Bearings. Do Not Tilt.
T. F. BLITZING Eli, Agent,
Dealer iu Printers’ Supplies,
b:t W. SlrrcuKU St., ATLANTA, GA
Campball Cylinder Presses,
Rollers and Roller Composition,
Press Repairs of all Kinds,
Every Style and Make of Typo.
T. F. SEITZINGEH, Aobkt,
Dealer in Printers’ Supplies,
S3 VV. Mitchell 8t.. A’ilamta. Ga.
v
m V,
unfair
--ffA
Jewel Job fVe^e^
T. F. SEITZINGEB, Agent,
Dealer in Printers’ Supplies,
13 W. Mitchell St.. ATLANTA, GA.
NO. 49.
lu
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;.
t
t ■f is**
JSHf. m $ i
■*JE®£L w . nm paper cotter .
LEADS, SLUGS AND GALLEYS.
Few Second-hand Job and News
paper Presses. Will be Sold Cheap.
WILL TRADE NEW PRESSES FOR OLD.
T. F. SEITZINGEH, Agent,
Dealer in Printers’ Supplies,
82 W. Mitchell St.. ATLANTA, OA,
.HUS. F. SHTZISGEH,
Printer*’ Exchange,
MANurxornnFn ani> uku.f.i: iv
POINTERS’ 82 \V. UIm IicII SI., SUPPLIES, iTJ.ANTA, U,\.
’i
UV U fsw'..' % Wmm
:■■■ ■■■?■!■ -S
liixs-kMssi&ifP
Vitek *e Wl'rli -!V c ■ 1.1*1.
6Inch......... $ .78 | Hindi,. ....SI .-A
8 “ . .81 1 Hi “ . .... 1,1*
. 1.00 |!8“ .... I.'il
. 1.15 1 19 “ .... 1.75
PBSNTEBS’ LAMP BRACKETS:
(Improved)
With Thumb-Screwv.
:
A
J asssmssBs v
_ I
.
r ~ Bk
.
Si
.
■
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CHASES OF ALL KINDS,
Steel Chases Blade to Order.
T. F. SE1TZINGER, Agent,
Dealer in Printers’ Supplied
W MiTcaxuL Sr., ATLANTA, GA*