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The Hamiltor Journal a Year and a Dozen Packages of Buist s
Fresh Garden Seeds, all for Only a DOLLAR.
J
F
[ A MMM0N Williams C J0ORML-.
VOL. XVII.
TAKE Torpid Liver,
Biliousness,
S ick I!ea rfach e ,
HOOD’S SS; ort ’
Indigestion,
Sour Stomach ,
j 11/ vj w R g Dyspepsia
Balpita
Sick Stow
ach ,
Chi i s <{• Fever ,
for General'hPbllU,}
Depressed feel in <j
Hood’* Eureka i.- wi'hout «,rival in the
treatment of all these » Cvctioc*. Snch i*
our cm fiicnoe in 'he preparation that we
challenge »!i .-ompeiit! is to compound
anything < qual to if. Wherever tried if
has given unbounded satisfaction,and onr
challenge is founded ui on the • xpefierce
intelligent pa'ron*.
No remedy ae's :-o del ; ght fully e* d fffec
*. u d y a s a \ O iir'l 'w] nme ty
a t ^ 's En #*k f.
Dr., Hoot? —Dear Sir.— I h-iyu been usirg four your
Euseka in my lamily far die la^t three or years,
a->il I regard it ns a very efficacious medieine. It
has often effected almost imme Gate to our children
.^hen cidental they have the be n sufieriug We hum i-rimj>hiints without it, in
to young. are never as
we desTrie to have it always on hand in case of need.
Yours truly, 1 hos. Gilbert.
nies'sh Hood’s M, D. Eureka Hood Liver & Co. Medicine Gcntkenm well,and - 1 have I
tried mediceue have
unhesitatingly pronounce it the best I
* ever used. So invaluable d> 1 regard it that I keep
it on hand all the time. I heartily recommend it all
as a most efficient, reliable and satisfactory house¬
hold rnddiafte. Mayor
Cliff B. Grimes,
b!en S seirng DrAlooit eureka i it has given Ikver M^dhdne universal
since its manufacture, an 1 with has increased
satisfaction. The deman us so
we are now buying it in ten gross lots. We com¬
mend it to all who are troubled with disease ior
which it is specially reccomipend-'d. CARsON,
Yours truly, BRANNON Sc
Nos. xo and 131 Broad st., Columbus, Ga.
Put, lip in 1 quu! ail<! dry and kiM
l v all drnggi't at 25, 50 and $1 a botile
PATTERSON & THOMAS , E Mfrs,
Columbus, Georgia.
inr- .™
>
COLD
m SAYFEVER^I & m *
head. m v c r ^H'
3 -'~. m
■■
jOtmmmmmu mm
Try the Cure u.sjr.l
CIJ Flv’« ^VivaillWWlii< Cream Balm
Cleanses theNa,salPassages. Al
lays Inflammation. Heals the Sores,
Restores the Senses of Taste, Smell
end Hearing.
applied _ into •ach no*tril . and %
A parttcl© is t>y
la agreeable. PriceSOc. at Druggists or
eaai*. ELY BROTHERS,56 Wsrrenk.t..^ew xoA»
JOSEPH L.DENNIS
PROPRIETOR.
ANNOUNCEMENT.
I have accepted a position in At
lanfca under Collector Crenshaw, and
will leave in a few days to enter up¬
on the discharge of its duties. My
absence will in no way interfere with
the publication of the Journal.
The management will be left in the
hands of Airs. M. B. Newman, a ladv
• d
wl,08c worth and “WKties are too well
known to our readers to need anv er.
comium at our hands. I shall render
her all the editorial assistance that I
can and the readers of the Journal
may rely upon its being maintained
fully up to the highest standard of
excellence.
The year just closed has been the
most prosperous in the history of the
journal T aiul , it . enters upon the . New XT
Year With lllOl’e friends and mtrons 1
than it has ever before had. For the
new management, if srch it can be
called, I shall ask confidently a con¬
tinuance of the favors that have ever
been so kindly extended to me. My
absence Will he Ollly temporary and
no ^ interfere with the excellence
of the Journal. Very truly.
Jos. L. Dennis.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
The Butler Herald seems to lean
to Brer Harrison very kindly. If
the Herald preferred principals to
men, it would be a good enough re
publican paper for anybody..
President Cleveland, after igno
ring Senator Ingalls at the cabinet
dinner last week, has included him
in the invitations extended to the su¬
preme court and congress to a dinner
at the white house Januaty 31st. It
is thought that the Kansan will a.
" dl fi » d «»«<■•••
pleasure in watching the clash of
; x * i
these an er agonisLc spn its, vhuh can- f . nll
be entirely .‘ hidden under the veil
of po i iie aes S
_____ _ _
•
number of prominent alliance-
HAMILTON, GA„ JANUAt 18 , 1889 .
men met in Columbus last Tuesday,
for the purpose of' considering the
district alliance store and warehouse.
Nobody has yet offered to furnish
the $25(t,000 for which the alliance
men have been advertising and per¬
haps nobody will. When alliance
men generally raise more of home
crops and are in a position to do
without money, if necessary, they
will find all the capitalists ready to
lend to them. Money is one sort of
a tiling that when you most need it,
it is hardest to get, and when you
can do without it, everybody wants
to lend you some.
A surveygin corps is in the field
between Columbus and Louvale, the
present nothern terminus of the A.
P. & L. railroad, making a survey
looking to the extension of that road
to Columbus. This would give that
city another outlet to deen water and
seems to us a very desirable connec¬
tion. With the Columbus Southern
and the Buena Vista extension both
building, the A. P. & L. and the C.
K. & C. both surveying routes and
the extension of the C. & R. assured
as soon as the Terminal Company
gets out of court, Columbus bids fair
to become one of the most important
railroad centers in the south. She
has a brilliant future assured.
The presence of the negro here
undoubtedly has a depressing effect
upon the value of farm lands. In
every community where the white
population value is largely predominant the
' of lands is notably higher than ,
where . 'be , . 1
,n communities negro is j
in the ascendancy. We are not
among those who believe that the
former times were better than these,
nor do we believe the negro race is,
as a whole, retrograding in morality
or industry, hut the “negro problem”
as il is caUed ™ d <>ul>tedly prevents
man y thrift y P eo I de froni 8ettlin B in
*“• -fr whoare ^°“r
natural advantages and would make
good *» citizens. We believe there are
hundreds of . Harris county
negroes in
. who would improve their condition if
they emigrate to the rich lands
the west, and do not , believe the
we
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR,
STRICTLY IN AOVANCE.
county would suffer from their
loss. As they grow in intelligence^
and they are growing, they will see
this. Negro labor is so cheap tha t
too many lazy white men try to live
on the profits of it. Fewer negroes
would insure more white laborers
among the small farm holders and
these, work ingH hem are Ives, instead of
relying upon others, the cultivation
would be closer and crops better, aifd
this would have a good effect upon
the price of lands. Upon the whole,
We think the state would do better to
offer a premium for emigration
agents, than it does to impose a tax.
on them.
<'ii(itiiIn Clint.
Capt. T. II. Kimbrough went to
Atlanta this week.
The school at Oak Grove academy
opened Monday with an average
att<yi< lance. ^
Mrs. Mattie Floyd returned home
a few days ago, having spQfvt several
weeks in our community.
1 am in a great dilemma as our
Chipley correspondent seemed to be
last week; no news ,J\.s l\e has called
on the Chipleyites to help him out by
sending news items, f^aiout 1* Htlso beg ho
Cataul&ites to help by giving
me any items ol intfffekt occuring in
our district. t, <
Mr. J. W. Brpq|fs and lady, nee
Miss Maggie l$y. and Miss Lizzie
Brooks, an aceoinplised young lady
of Moiena, visited our community
wee j c> t h e guests ot Mrs. S. C.
Lynch.
Died Saturday night, the infant
dan «| ,ter of Mr * “ nd Mrs ’ J ‘ ,e \ h ""’
•‘ge live weeks. , It was interred at
the family burying ground at Mr.
p#t WeU<m>4 Sumlay even i„ g .
Mr. p. J. Thoraaston has in his
po session a coffee mill that has been
in use fifty years, His grandfather
used it a long time at his death Mr.
Thomaston went to housekeeping,
which was over twenty years ago.
He fell heir to the mill and has been
using it ever since. Come, corres¬
pondents, can you beat that?
— — -
SHI r . lkve
cmu P , Whooping Cough and Bronchitis.
‘ hackmetack, a lasting and fra K ram per.
fume. Bnce 25 and 5 o cents.
are you MADE miserable by indigestion. "
THE REV. GEO. H. THAYER, of Bom bon,
In<l., s iy*«: “Bo’ll mvself and Wife owe our I ves to
sHii,oir.s conscmptiox n Hi
NO.