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lysS i!>Ie but B °t
[>f0b a ^ e
is going to have a
wili soon be a
£re Knoxville to
* irom
:uenr is fleshing up
dernett has lost
j r y Joe Lrby
Politics, Church,
l| fling ot the
|j s got hansome, Ben
Lont U laughing,
Ljnks quit
of moving to
Ube Bryant is expect-
,couth of hair on top
oon, Rob Smith is go-
[ the Wellor.s Law and has go large to
L at his Saturday
Lii \q McAfee is thinking
New York, Seab also
epingin his cave, Zack
Rummers, Bart Daw*
it drinking whiskey f
t rrys hair and beard is
k TroOD Houred has
’ *■
I |ig the cat. puit clearing
Ight. has
brand gone to sneezing.
h, will hang or. Wednesday
Jin rei’-y. jiubliciy in public
[ Hire has secuefl aposltian
bill D. J. Bare, and will
niJiidav. Bare lias ruabe
L e , and v, e Wish Crawfoid
I population is still increasing
val Wednesday evening (bat
to stay Mr. z. T. Laris
nbit is a girl.
hoxville Alliance
quested to meet in the
)use Saturday Evening at
ick P.M. Bu siness of im',
to be transacted.
R.H.Culverhouse.
President.
Burglars.
ars ontrod Ilai.ison SaiFer<
^■oieat -fWO Ma.ella lastweeka.nl
^ from their unlocked
captured tin-1 feves and got
. [>.
c several noivsey sifidos Fora
i indent 11.at we cant get in this
o r tie • ant ofti me and ice
Mrs.C. J Avra.
nursday and was buried to
11 o'clock at Salem churc:n.
li been confined to her bed
prai months. She has passed
sv het rest, leaving a devoted
d and Seven dutiful children
man irreparad'e loss-
loraid tenders it cotidoier.ee
trt-felt sympathies.
i k ^ tlOINSSop
ti SREAr
J
I
SCIKTO-*®
hi, OYAL GERMETUER
3 v, !s * thousandargruments,
JJ.r <,hy Gurraetuer demon-
1 r - v U> ther thatUtamaklB* wtdlcal Preparation more
’ °
h“ won, 1
& h 7o»Mr.c.Jora a8erlou * ca3eof a n. stomnoh»nJ
*ii tnn.M
Atlanta.wM«»d
KSfyXumatVm' au hn CHnt 'on, 1 y ' eai8 at., ’ ciu,<:
Moffiruii ® ’ w*s
rrh frte froL t W’
d bet this areadiui
Atlanta
^riTMe^wT^ViMjgwa Atianta TV^l/unS Ga had
rten^oTVotontaryinifSt y ‘°
yal
fe«- ”*f t ^tw^theneArMMd^n?ires n5fi®, 5w^pKS!*ilSSS' < KoSd
!W*’ \-°aM t i *A h0 Honoan-ii «f‘in nm~
’■ 1 st
;'»r
.f-y »«i* WgT P*?' at'Asta. - _ *
1 ’' ' ' oa.
-'
THE. Li TTl .E RQ 8 £ OF 6 HAN&.
I saw a little rose bad
As I went down the lane,
Not yet abloom. I Ba id I'll wait
Till I coxae hack again.
To-morrow, or perhaps some day.
The sunshine and the rain
Slay open out Use bud upcurled,
An I ! will c£.i) my nn -
TV? r -»a whit® net a? all the xsi Id,
The little rose of duane.
To-bbowow I wont beck the way.
And heeded not the rain
Tnat shimmered in the white, white su«
A shuit, athwart the lane.
It was the softest, 3>.-«jteat«un,
The swcfiteBi, softest rein,
y ■’ I hut beard the vthif porioga,
That came akin to pain,
I'sum up the glebe where I had left
Tbs little rc.. e of Shane.
There waa a millwheel by the way;
I staked th® :j tiller’s swain
If he ati^ht tell mo aught that happed
Since I earno down the laaa
I did but hear his answer
In tho millwheel’s sad refrain.
In the dripping c r jth e water
As it helped to fill the main—
Something ivldn to tears
In their ecstasy of pain—
”Ali me!” S',;no ono had ta’en awey
T he little rose of Sbane.
—William Page Carter.
Difference i:s Etiquette.
Au American would never think
of removing his hat prior to speak¬
ing to any man on the street.
In Holland, before speaking
the most humble individual out
of doors a man uncovers. In liol-
land, too, men and women rarely pur-
chase at the same stores, but in cases
where they do, if a woman discovert
that men are assembled inside she re¬
treats until they leave. A live Amer¬
ican storekeeper would probably soon
change this feature of Dutch eti¬
quette. The Americans, English,-Ger¬
mans and Russians shake hands with
a man in bidding him welcome. An
Arab’s greeting is to rub his cheek
against that of the person he salutes
and kiss him. A Frenchman wel¬
comes a friend by embracing and kiss¬
ing.him, though by slow degrees this
custom is being superseded.—Philada&
phia Press.
A Funeral Otto from Horace.
A gentleman named Underwood condition left
£b,000 to his sister on that
she had him buried in a particular
fashion. Six gentlemen were appoint¬
ed to follow him to tho grave, where
they were to sing the last stanza of the
twentieth odo of the second book of
Horace. Mourning was forbidden to
be worn; no bell hud to be tolled, and
no relation was to follow the corpse.
The six choseu gentlemen were to be
the only mourners. The coffin was
painted green, and tho deceased was
buried with his clothes on. Three
eopi<^s of Horace were placed in tho
grave with him, together with Bent¬
ley’s Milton and a Greek .Testament.
After supper the six mourners sang
the ode—all being in strict accordance
with the will cf the deceased.*- -Cas-
self's Journal.
Fovted on Scripture.
Wood'd little cousdn Jennie vras
making him a'visit, anti tlie two'small
bodies reveled in goodftimes together,
tb.eir < special playground being a lit¬
tle rocky nest not f .r from tlie house,
where housekeeping went on from
morning till night. Ona afternoon
Wood’s mother called him into the
house. It w*s in the midst of u thriv¬
ing “tea party,” and the little host
and hostess looks*! grave enough at
the summons. “L*’s don’t go, Wood.
It’ll spoil ail our beautiful time,” ar-
gwod Jennie. But stout little Wood,
with a prophetic instinct born of ex¬
perience, answered back, “No, Jennie,
’cause the way of the transgressors h
dreiile*Hard. ”—Exchange,
Fur m-rrowto* s'aCs.
After shaking in hot w ^ r, the nails
s-.iouidflx? tuinned by scraping, onu if
very painful a flaxseed poultice mil
bnng relief. After the irritation has
sullicieutiyyub'-.idod, soft cotton should
be pressed between the flesh ami toe
nail, and after tout if- done it s no aid
bo saturated with tincture of iodine,
find the npplicat.’Oii repeated severs
days, after wlncu the tenderness will
thsappear 1 may be necessary to lift
tan end v* f tli© mm, and thus can be
by pressing cotton between Hand
the toe. This treatment rs usually cf-
fectivo, mid is attended with as little
H U '
----
California has a fruit pes« m the
^ bunet far worse and more dam-
a STing'to fruit raisers than toe English
s P an " LGomo means me not sy*
hiniaticaHy and inethodicaily adopted
to ° x< ’ Ul '\ bll a AV ^
V( ry ,ltt,y !:ml ! t 1,1 f ' ru T nM '” 5ir -V*
'
those sections where deciduous fruits
^ exclusively produced. Some have
aversion to deploying tuts or any
oU 5 p bird, but then it t.i*.- s i.m.ions
f ?• >lhll,S ^. Sl i®^ a
luxury, j Ins oird i» . >. e.y fastidious,
it takes the best fruit, hence its sup-
port comes fiwn the otherwise PF^’d
o£ ll,e orchards.-New \ort Tele-
---“
THE STANDARD OF FRANCE.
Explanation of t ho Color of tho Koy*5
Slug of the 1'honch Klng.u
Iittre defined it as u small silk stand
ard, of whieh the color was reel, verg¬
ing probably On orange. Ducange
said, under the low Latin worn auri-
ilanima, that it was the flag itself that
was the auriflamme, and that it was
a gonfalon with three tails of a ver¬
meil color, and was attached to a
lance; or, again, that it was a glaive
entirely gilt, to which was attached a
vermeil banuer. The word glaive here
must refer simply to the biado of the
lance; the gliding probably to its pole
also. In the Fourteenth century, r.c
cording to Guiart, it was of reddish, or
rather of reddening (roujoifuit) silk
sluti. quite uniform and self colored,
and without the representation of any¬
thing else ou its red ground (simple,
sans pourtruiture d’autre afidre), like
the Chinese eben.
That vermeil was a red. and that
that particular red # was tho Roman
purple red, is pointed to by Bicilk, the
herald of Alphonsus the Wise, of Ar-
ragon, in his Fifteenth century ‘"Her¬
aldry of Colors,” where he says the
“rod or vermeil color” is of great es¬
tate and dignity, as the auriliamme
standard of l ed silk, miraculously sent
from heaven to the Gaulish kings,
well shows. Here we have again the
“divine” or sacred character which
was imparted to the Chinese war flag
by the tacrifical blood.
As to the word itself, we find auri-
damme, orift flam be (where oi’ie ia cer¬
tainly goldon), oriflambe, oriflamble,
oriflan, oriflaride, oi’iilor, oriflour and
even a low Latin olliflamma, which
recalls the eastern word olifant, the
earliest firm of elephant, which seems
to have a like origin with the Hebrew
aleph^ an ox. The word oriliAmmo,
clearly as the name and of straight!y tho plain^^d golden flag, flame is
simply.
The adjective golden arijes equally
clearly fi’Om tb.e goldon red of the ver¬
meil color of the name itself; the ex¬
pression “the red gold” is a common
old English one, and the laureate’s
“brow bound with burning gold” will
not soon leave the language. The
explanation of golden in oriflamme
from the gildingof the pole of the flag
is an utterly inadmissible pn& There
is one other possible explanation, bow-
ever. The flag of Ali has what M. de
Beaumont, in his faaefnating “Origin©
du Blazon,” calls golden “flames” on
the red: ground, and ho also says that
the ) French flag exhibits similar
’flames.” But tha tfct seems tome
io be tongues, and the ^>cond flowors
(the fleur da which would ac¬
count for the names oriflour, oireiior,
just mentioned. In any case this will
not apply to the self colored oriflamme
flag,, which all ought to ba agreed was
the original otie. - Go.-itlo^u_n’s Mfiga-
zine.
tStonry Irv’-iig aad Wilson Kn-rjv.tt.
The knowledges very general Jealousy that
there exists a fealing of be¬
tween the two noted English actors,
Henry Irving and Wilson Barrett.
When tho latter first resolved U> como
to this country it is stated that
i: y on the part of Irving grow very
strong, and, meeting Barrett ou the
Etraud one day, he said in his halting
tones:
• 'Bo—eh—Barrett, i—oh -hear you
are—-eh—going to America."
Earrett replied, in bis highly dra¬
matic voice: “Well, I Lad thought of
so doing, living.” is a—eh—
“Well—ah—America
young conniry; good—eh—yon know,
but you—eh—must discriminate.’*
“So I bare a-heard.”
“What do YOU- oh—propose to in-
flici on __ e h~-tlrem, Rarreit?”
“Weil, 1 had a-flrst thought of play-
f Olaudian, and then, a-perehance,
them Hamlet”
••Handet? Why I — eh — have
plaveti Hamlet there.”
This was said with such an rir of
superior ; ty Barrett was nettled,
and ho scapp ed out angrily: “Well,
confo^d you, do you a-think yon are
^ only man that can play HamletG-
t ^ol no! But I-eh-thiuk you-
ch _ are too only man that can’t.”-
^ Ua • ~ afi ° TTnmld
_
Two remarkable medical ca^s were
reported from the City hospital. The
by i>. Joseph Ransohoff, who per-
forme d the difficult task of transplant-
j n „ a new nose on the features of
a 'Voman who ha- lost that organ
through disease.
The si coud cii.se was that of au in-
font which V. 38 bom with its liver ab-
nonua n y enlarged and out of place,
^mg situated over the stomach, which
held only a fluid ounce instead of hav-
jag. half a pintcapacity. The liver itself
weighed a pound instead of three or
fo>ir ounces The child was brought
{rom Duyton ttnd operated upon for
au arti h cia i exi t. Thir was a success.
Then emaciation set it and the child
A post mortem was held, which
disclosed tlie fact that tho liver lay di-
a.gouallv across the stomach, it is the
Mc^.of kindou
Centra! Georgia Maiiee .
,
** * -i
WAREHOUSE.
Cotton Received, Stored and Handled at Lowest Prices.
OUR MOTTO:
■tot W e nee 9 i Uw n UO mt b
J&H v
R. W. 11CNNER. Managir. Macon, Ga*
ALLARD BAS.WVFLL, Salesman-
es
Dealers in Corn, Meat; Flour, Hay, Oats, Meal, Wheat, Bran, kngar,
Coffea, Larb Syruy, Salt, Tobacco, Bogging, Ties, lilc.
t\ HEX’ YOU COME TO MACOx CALL AX'D hEE ME AND GET MY
PRICE s. E. L BUROsK Agent
4:52 Poplar Street, Macon. Georgia.
Dealers in Dry Goods Of Finos! Qualities,
Groceries Hardware and Clothing of cvry uuality style end price.
r ' r" nearly J ^
We also sell wagons buggies and sewing machines, in fact ev*.
erylhing to de found in either a city cr country store,
We have established a dranch store at Culloden for the accommoda¬
tion of our many ensto mers, and are now doing a genera 1 , snpply
busihes?.
We have an extensive ginnery with all modern convcucies.
Will g i n an a buy ail ihh cotton brought us without deLy and guar-
entec satisfaction.
We so J isit your patronage and corpiaUy cr.vite you to give us a triaL
HBaman & Fincher Bros. Rob’ey, Ga.
Qh re0 -
original
the ^
m£.mr I I "xt ;
*£&
bioih a.i>. M d«.-»*»»»»»«■•«. ^2
uSST BTSf^TS!
ru-M to ,• u. »h*'
*«’•!. 2£Si*. -
jJSSM «J^i8 ^-1%
JCTS
n« ft 7*! ^
oS^ttSSCSraBSt 11 " 'S
35^»^flWSBgSg2« •-
flK Lx Cv ||t| A W|| « Pa t? .-*»•
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GEORGIA Ci,*A\v"i>>n> t i>i nty—B y
v j'lue ofLn oniei gu nu d i.v the Court of
Ordinaly of Bib!) C iuiifv said State,
i will 1 11 at pulJic autfl .» before the
court house door in the City of Macon,,
on the lir a 'flues 1-v in November 8100
btrwce.i the legal hams,of 8. | Ad that
tract oi land shunted in .-.aid CiawfonL
County and seventh (7) district
(hereof, being tile r;i>t 1 1 x.i oi jUiid lot
ii'anber two (^) Containing ore hundred
ilOO) acres more or mid b-iag the
--anie coav yid
by A. R Small to Alfred We’bom.b/
elated -t!i Aug • 1S82.1U 1 ercardcf in
( hi clerks Ofrb-e ofl said. Craw 5? c
Count v ^juperbiv c»i"i >iudcd at t ino
of »aid couve/cne , X<J! 1 1 a id E ist t> %"
iamb; of Vince X’u-kle? E.v 1 - Heath ' by
lands of Roher nrjanl. «■ ■»«; West by We
st it ilf ot’ said lot iMimbct rv*' 0 ,-OY r ucd
b}’ Bid 1>,in. Sr id lands to be sold tie
<u <ls ol L-t.tte ,<e «t of aU a .iui cd wabom w nu >ui to io pay p.iy
etch is of ssdd Est-fcj Turns, cash.
! lieu L. Jones, Administrator a. wiidom.
¥ ^ ( C ; T. J'fT* ®
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