Newspaper Page Text
The Cordele Sentinel.
•I. \V. Riving. W. A.snow.
BIVINS »V SNOW.
fSditor* - ami - Pulillsficrs.
TtiPMS OP SUBSCRIPTION.
On*Year s
Six Months s
.
Thre« months s
Friday, July 14, 1890.
Idal Organ cf City of Ccrdsle.
OSdal Organ of the County cf Dool?.
Mr. A. J. Tison is authorized to
solicit and collect subscriptions,
advertisements and job work for
The Sentinel.
The Hornet is quite tame these
The “Plain Dealer” is a new
newspaper printed at Lyons. The
editor is Mr. G. (4. Wafers; the busJ
ness manager is Mr. C. J. Hendry.
Success to the Plain Dealer and its
propellers.
There are one or two papers- the
Telfair Enterprise is one we notice—
that are not content with a very
quiet, peacefulness at home, but
takes (he liberty to push a finger
into the Cordele wrangle that oc
curred between the Hornet and The
Sentinel. But probably the editor
of tho Enterprise is alike to many
other people—if a sensation never
exists at home he delights to reach
out for somthing of (hat nature.
An exchange correctly says that
business nowadays is a competition
of the severest kind. There is no
place for the laggard, for the man
who is not keen witted above his
fellows. The dull plodder goes to
(bewail. Industry is well enough
in its way, but industry is far from
being everything in the struggle for
mastery that modern business has
become. The man who would suc
ceed must be progressive, must keep
awake to the movement of the times,
must adapt himself to the current
and swim with it.
The Montgomery Monitor, pub
lished at Mt. Vernon, says: “Noth
*° ' wl ’A ,e about because politics
i–* not hot ? The weather is hot
enough to make up for the Jack of
political heat, and as for us, old
Montgomery is growing in material
and industrial prosperity so fast that
we would go to sleep at a political
meeting.” Well, there’s a difference
lie tween the towns, Mt. Vernon and
and the counties, Mont
gomery and Dooly. Prosperity is
noticeable in Cordele and throughout
Dooly county, but oh, my ! the office
holders, the office seekers, and the
.
yioliticians generally, have coals of
fire heaped upon their heads. No
use denying the fact—wo are warm
members.
At a recent public meeting in
Houston county 300 negroes assem
bled to discuss the race problem,
pledged themselves to aid the white
• people in the enforcement of law and
irdcr. The action of representative
.legroes should command the consid
■ eration of the entire race. The so
ution of the feature of the race,
out of the crimes commit
by the younger generation
rests in the hands of the
>etter element of the race. It
mins • t for , tins 1 • element , ,, to take , , steps ,
.
1 the matter of weeding out the
'
ires , from _____. 10 g their . number, and
<
1 do this, no better way is open
inn to discountenance crime and
ssist in the punishment of the
-iminals. If the negro race would
ake it. . rule to either lynch
a or
I"ting to justice everv one of their
imber who commits a nameless
dine, we believe that nameless
imes would cease to occur.-Monroe
Ivertiser. \
Editorial Squibs.
Chick Niles, of Georgia newspaper
fame, is dead.
Ten negroes broke jail from Fflir
buru Sunday evening.
Heavy rains at Manila are making
it tough on the soldiers.
Politicians in Alabama seem to bo
rubbing up for a warm fight.
Six of one family were killed Sun
day at a railroad crossing in Ohio.
A dog fight in Augusta Saturday
caused the killing of a policeman.
A can of cheap oil exploded in Sa
vannah Monday and killed a girl.
The Association of Ordinaries will
convene in Atlunta on July 20 fch.
Tlie average weekly shipment of
beer to Cuba is 1,800,000 bot tles.
Uncle Sain is to present Dewey
with u sword on Lis arrival home.
The Asliburn Advance wants Hen
ry McIntosh to be our next governor.
R. I’. Dykes, of Worth county, has
lost his mind from the effect of a lick
on the head.
The colored Sunday school conven
tion of Georgia has condemned
Of course!
A woman in Augusta mistook htr
neighbor’s house for her own and
was shot for a burgler.
The lirmen of Macon have a bed in
which four men have slept and died.
It now goes unoccupied.
Cuba may bo an inviting field, but
those who are acquainted with it are
slow to accept the invitation.
Spanish capital is said to be leaving
Cuba. English is free to invest
while the American dollar is timid.
Chas. A. Graham, authur of “Two
Little Girls in Blue.” died penniless
in a New York hospital He got only
$10 for that popular song.
Commissioner O. B. Stevens has
ordered that no more kerosene oil un
der t he legal test be sold in this state,
and 200 000 gallons has been seized.
,
They tried ro lynch a negro in Kan
sas Sunday, but lie just hung there
by the neck till somebody come
along and took him down alive.
One little negro in Athens loaded a
cigar with powder and gave it to an
other to smoke. One little negro is
in jail and another is nursing ft face.
Since Dr. Broughton preached on
the mayor of Atlanta and had him
tried rof drunkenness he has bet n
prevailed upon to run for council.
Editor Frank lloldor, of the For
syth Chronicle, and Miss Carrie Rob
erts were married Monday and left
immediately for the Georgia Weekly
Press Association.
They just couldn’t stand it any lon
gre without men in it: They have
changed the name of the National
Congress of Mothers, to the National
Congress of Parents and Teachers.
Georgia not only holds the cham
pion rifle team of the United States,
but the championship of the world in
revolver shooting, having scored 25
successive bull’s eyes.
As a result of t he protracted meet
ing held at Deep Creek by Revs. Ben
Raney and Ben Pate there were 20
accessions to the church—two by let
ter and 18 by baptism last Sunday.
—Asliburn Advance.
Miss Henrietta Crapp got mad, in
love or deranged and stole away from
home in Atlanta and was gone 27
hours before she was located. She
lost her chestnut curls and refuses to
tell where she spent the time.
Mrs. Inger?oll, who.kidnapped lit
tle Gerald Lapiner in Pineville, Ohio,
was taken to Joilet penitentiary Mon
day. She fought like a tigress and
required three men to take her from
the cell to the cab in the jail yard.
When the jail office was reached she
threw herself on the floor, screamed
and kicked frantically, pulled
of hair from her head and tore her
Mis Life Was Saved.
Mr. J. K. Lilly, '1 prominent ciri
zen of Hannibal, Mo., lately hud
wonderful deliverance from a fright
b'l death. In telling of it he says:
“I was taken with Typhoid Fever,
ran into Pneumonia. My lungs
became hardened. I was so weak I
couldn’t even sit up in bed. Noth
ing helped me. I expected to soon
die of Consumption, when I heard
^ j! 1 ’’ s ^ew Discovery. One
bottle gave great relief. I continued
to use it. and now am well and
strong. ,1 can’t This say marvelous too much medicine in its
praise. is the surest and quickest
cure in
the world for all Throat and Lung
Trouble. Regular sizes 50c and $L
Trial bottles free at all drug stores.
*
Every bottle guaranteed. •>
clothes half off. She twisted loose
from the handcuffs, landed a blow on
the jailer’s face, planted her heel in
a man’s beast and buried her teeth
in another’s arm as she rent the air
with screams. She was finally over
powered, cariied out bodily and held
by main force on the ride to the
depot.
Wm. J. Bryan went up on Pike’s
Peak in Colorado the other day. The
grade *■ 1 to 1(5, it took hard pulling
to get to the top, but he landed safely
and could see Denver and Pueblo, 150
miles away. Moral: The road to
the White House is 16 to 1, it •will
take hard pulling to get there, but if
he lands safely he can see the repub
lican party 150 miles behind.
The children of Mr. Doc Dunn, 6
miles from Macon, were playing in
the yard Satuday night when little
Ruth hid in the wood pile for the
others to find her. An older brother
went out for wood, mistook her little
form for a piece of log and stuck an
axe in her breast, killing her ins*,
staritly.
Atchison Globe :—The world is
the _
getting better for women.
can buy everything cooked, every
thing ready-made, and men are be
coming more subdued every day.
RAW AS BEEF
FROM ECZEMA!
No Torture Equal to the first Not symptoms much attention of Eczema, is often but it paid is not to Ion the I
before the little redness begins to itch an
Itching and Burning of durable. burn. lead to This suffering It is but and the torture beginning, almost and regard unen- will
is a common mistake to
This Fearful Disease. merely a roughness a local and irritation; redness it is of but the an skin indica- as
tion of a humor in the blood—of terrible
Eczema—which is more than skin-deep, and can not be reached by local appli
cations of ointments, salves, etc., applied to tho surface. The disease itself,
the real cause of the trouble, is in the blood, although all suffering is produced
through the skin; the only way to reach the disease, therefore, is through
the blood.
Mr. Phil T. Jones, of Mixersville, Ind. k writes: ■p
“I had Eczema thirty years, and after a great deal
of treatment my leg was so raw and sore that it gave me
constant began pain. It finally broke into a running sore, and
to spread and grow worse. For the past five or ,
six years I have suffered untold agony and had given up >
all hope of ever being free from the disease, as I have % mi y
been treated bv some of the best physicians and have j –
taken many blood medicines, all in vain. With little 1 i
faith left I began to take S. 8 . S., and it apparently
made the Eczema worse, but I knew that this was the j
way the remedy got rid of the poison. Continuing I
8 . 8 . S., the sore healed up entirely, the skin became '■
clear and smooth, and I was cured perfectly.”
Eczema is an obstinate disease and can not be cured by a remedy whieh is
only a tonic. Swift’s Specific—
S. S. S. FOR THE BLOOD
—is superior to other blood remedies because it cures diseases which they oan
not reach. It goes to the bottom—to the cause of the disease—and will care
the worst case of Eczema, no matter what other treatment has failed. It ia
the only mineral, blood remedy guaranteed fails to be free from potash, mercury or any
other and never to cure Eczema, Scrofula, Contagiou* Blood
Poison, Cancer, Tetter, Rheumatism, Open Sores, Ulcers, Boils, ete. 0- Insist
upon 8 . S. S.; nothing can take its place. i
• Books on these diseases will be mailed free to any address by Swift Spa
rine Company, Atlanta, Georgia. Ob*
You Want
The Best
Groceries
That you can buy. And I sell
the kind you want. Instead of
being a burden, it is a delight
for the cook to prepare the goods
1 sell for the table. Any of my
old customers will tell you this
is a fact.
L. J. Bush.
When Prices
Are Cut
Wages are often reduced and
business demoralized. Fair prices
mean prosperity. Your grocery
bill will be more satisfactory if
you deal with a grocer who offers
no baits, but charges fair,
form prices for all goods. I sell
the very best goods, and if you
will take the trouble and time to
look around you’ll find my prices
just as low as other grocers.
L.J.BUsh.
WE MANUFACTURE and sell ^
!T ii Lngines,
1 Boilers,
Cotton Presses,
I Seed Cotton
gj/fm j Elevators,
mkM m :fp Grist Hills,
V trljgUg ifm-- " : Saw Mills,
-3
r SMMfc And Everything in the
Machinery Line.
Get our prices
before buying.
VVE OPERATE Machine Shops i? Foundry. '
we handle Full Line MILL Supplies.
MALLARY BROS. – CO.
n^zEacton., G-eoxg:ia.
Gen. Joe Wheeler is to sail for Ma - 1
nila July 20.
A dude has e>ued the city of Atlanta
for $5,000 to cover a hole in the pave
ment that threw him from a bicycle.
You must now get permission from j
the mayor to preach on the streets
of Atlanta.
The President has notified all con
cerned that in the volunteer force be
ing raised for service in the Philip
pines, no complete organization will
be accepted; that ho will appoint of
ficers himself from records made in
the war with Spain. Meantime he
will keep an eye on things political.
Treasury of the Comptroller Department, of )
Office
Currency )
Washington, D. C.. Apr. 5,1899
Notice is hereby given to all per
sons who may have claims against
“The First National Bank of Cordele,
Georgia,” that the same must be
presented to James McDowell, Re
ceiver, with the legal proof thereof,
within three months from this date,
or they may be disallowed.
Charles G. Dawes,
Comptroller of the Currency.
! Probably love is electric—it is so
8 h oc kin^.
In spite of the drought, Florida
truck farms have made money,
Do Yon Trade
At ray Store, H
If not, Why Not?
I sell the very best and Freshest
Fancy and Family Groceries,
Glassware and Crockery: Hay
and Grain. Be glad to have you
call and see me and let me show
you what 1 have in stock: or
you can telephone L. me.
J. Bush.
Everything
Delivered Free. v?
I deliver goods, purchased at
my store, to any part of the
city free of charge. All you
have to do is to call me up over
the "phone, say what you want,
and I'll do the rest.
L. J. Bush.
I
My Friends and Acquaintances.
My stock is complete now. Having bought a full line, I now propose
to sell the people what they want at prices to suit the times.
I will sav 0 *you money on-,
Meat, Meal, Flour, Coffee, Sugar, Rice – Tobacco.
Come and get prices and be convinced that you can buy
goods from me cheaper than you can elsewhere.
/ WILL BARTER OR PAY CAS// FOR ALL KlNOS OF COUNTRY PRObUCE.
When you are in town' come and make my store headquarters.
Under Tommey Hotel,.........
At Hamilton – McDonald’s Old Stand.
YOURS TO PLEASE,
Bennett Scarborough.
You are invited to visit
THE BEST EQUIPPED IN THE SOUTH.
Leaders in High=Class
4 Dentistry ♦
And Low Prices.
Gold Crowns ctnd Bridges, $1^.00 per Tooth,
Cold Fillings, $1.50. Silver Fillings, To Cents.
Set of Teeth on Rose Pearl Plate , $ 8 . 00 ..
Set of Teeth on Rubber Plate ............... $5.00.,
Drs. Young – hartier.
410 Second St., Corner Cherry St., Macon, Ga.
Teeth Extracted Without Charge and Without Pain.
MALLARY BROS M 9
manufacturers agents for
5 ill ai Mm
SUPPLIES.
We Handle the Complete Cotton Ginning
and Baling System, Manufactured by F. H. Lummus Sons
Co., including the Celebrated Latest Improved Lummus
Combination Cotton Gin. Special Attention is Called to
the Star Sickle and Tool Grinders which we can supply
promptly from Stock. These Grinders are indispensable to
X Mowing Machine Operators, Farmers and Machanics.
GrUTS/t© H3©/X© Any Lenght and Style; for any
kind of fuel and at prices lower than can be made by local
foundenes.
We carry in stock a Complete Assortment of
Injectors, Ejectors, Jet Pumps, Fire Plugs, Sight Feed Lu
bricators, Butter-fly or Sawyer’s Valves, Steam Gauges,
Glass Water Gauges, Beltings, Lace Leather, Babbitt, Steam
and Garden Hose, Packings, including Genuine Garlock
Packings of all kinds. Mowing Machines and Rakes. Re
member we represent the Factory direct on Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills, Grist Mills, Wind Mills, and Harvesting Ma
ceinery. Prompt Attention to Mail Orders.
MALLARY BROS., Mfgr’s. Agts,
92 Broad St., ALBANY, GEORGIA.
2 GO TO THE
CITI DIG STORE
For Pure Drugs, Patent ITedicines, Toilet Articles,
Rubber Goods, Tobacco, Cigars Stationery,
Glass, Putty and everything kept in an
up=to=date Drug Store.
PRESCRIPTIONS ACCURATELY COMPOUNDED —BY—
Dr. W. S. Virgin.
A graduate in both medicine and pharmacy. We guarantee no
-mistakes in this department.
Garden Seed just arrived.
C. R. SMITH, Proprietor.
janl7-tf.
The “Exclusive Liquor House.
Fine Liquors For Family and Medicinal Purposes.
Red Cross uye per gallon,
“ “ 2 00
MonpoieuiyeV.'..' .....
2.25
CaliforniaRye....... 2.50
Silver BuVIf/e,' 3.00
Sour Mash 3.00
Old Baber Rye............... 4.00
8^? y a I^I 0 Rye“ ash .. 4.00 5.00 1.50
Western Corn................ 2.00
North Carolina Corn........
Old North Carolina Corn . 2.60
White Bye.................... 2.00
: White Eye................... 2.50
Holland Gin.................. 2.00
Imported Cognac Brandy, Gin, Porj, Sherry Wines, etc.
All money sent me by Express, Money Order or Registered Letter will have my prompt
attention. H. SOLOMON, Agent.
North Broad Street. Albany, Ga.
j Holland Gin .... per gallon, $2.50
Tom Gin............... ....- “ 2.00
| I Rose Rock Gin............... and Rye......... ... “ “ 2.00 2.00
! Peach and Honey...... 2.00
| Apple Brandy . 2.00
j Apple Peach Brandy........ Brandy.......... 2.50 SSkSSkSS
1
i Peach Brandy.........
j Cognac Cherry Brandy...... Brandy.......
.
i ! New England England Rum....
New Rum.
; Jamaica Rum........
i Jamaica Rum.........