Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, March 29, 1895, Image 3

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I-OCAL NEWS. ’Gardening has been begun in earnest. Mr. T itus Richards spent Friday in Augusta. Mi-s Jones accompanied by her beauti¬ ful daughter, Mina (iertrude, came up Gou, Harkmt last Thursday to see her father, Judge Roberts, who is ill this 've* J S,, 0 hay returned home Monday, — ^?rs, II. A. Tjegiven is visiting her daughter in Harlem this week. Register now before it is too late. -Mr. II atkius, of Rutledge, spent Bun dey in the village. He s'e^med especially pleased with the Stephens monument, and spent ft vvhole evening admiring «(?>. Messrs. Dug Andrews, J. F. Holden •7uid I)r. R. C. niiius attended the Gihnorc Band concert in Augusta Friday. Mr. C. J. Mann moved to Norwood last week. Mr. Mann is now night-watchman at N'orwood. Men o rial services were lull at the Baptist church Sunday over the death of Prof V. T. Sanford. Dr. Hum mack snd Mr. John Kenney, of Washington, spent Sunday in the city. Borne one suggested that the editor is going crazy. In these hard times that would be a mighty nice way to go, it •teems. IV'e hope that we may bo fortu¬ nate enough to meet some of our de¬ linquent subscribers on the roadside and get a little revenge, as that is all we will ever be able to get. The “Sear” of Crawford villa says: “It takes brains, brass and money to run a newspaper, and this one is run without either.” Take notice, friends; fork up a Httle cash, and possibly wo can have a better paper. Register oiul prepare for the special election. Too much stress cannot b e laid on this point. Dr. Stokes is in town this week attend¬ ing to dental work for soaiu of our citi¬ zens. Mr. J. P. Hubert, of Burnett, came iip Tuesday to see UK s on, Mr. Will Hubert. Meinoiial d p .y is drawing nigh. Glean —- °h your squares in the cemetery. A WRITTEN HE A RANT EE Of Phofitabk K.uim.ov.uicnt for Emor r.BTtc Young Men. There are ninny excellent young men in this vicinity whom wo happen to know have l.ean idle for months past by reason 'ol their inability to procure employment. It is a matter of pleasure to us, there fn.e, to now assure them that the Geor - gia Business College nt Macon, On., is prepared to give them a written gunrau t ‘ e ol good positions r.t fixed salaries, and wants thorn tu write nt once. r l his is the largest institution of the kind in the So'ich ; and for three year. has been unqualifiedly endorsed by the business ,orld ns thoroughly sound and entirely reliable in every way. F. Buben’s Weekly Letter. 1 can save you 50 cents on the dollar In a 1 ’, cash purchases. .Sfieeiul attention mill be. paid to buying of our stock. 'Gash will be paid for everything, conse -4tunnti.r >tt| j • reducfii.m for CDs!.. N H.e follow- V< f '75 cent iluihrertv.i a,.^ cents. '$2.00 men’s hats for $1.25. 75 cent ladies’ slippers 50 cents. Laces from 5 to 8 cents per yard. Good molasses selling for only 15 cents tier gallon. Good syrup 35 eeuts Large stock of spring goods to arrive in m fmv days. Lome in and see before buy ing. Uespecft u lly, F. HE BEN. Remarkable Will. — Count Victor Bawarowski, of Lem¬ berg, who committed suicide in his study about three weeks iigo, lias, the Vienna correspondent of the London News tells us, left a remarkable will. He declares that his brother is not to inherit anything from him. His solo heir is to be Galicia, but his fortune is to be left untouched until it amounts in value to 20,000,000 flor¬ ins, when it is to be devoted to the foundation of literary academies, schools of pain ing, etc., in Cracow, WParnapol and Lemberg. If there is ■ anything to prevent these institutions ■ from being founded, the property is * to be divided equally between the British Museum in London and tho Institute in Paris. The Count died worth about 6,000,000 florins in .i^cney and land. Seven Years Disappeared. Seven years ago Miss Jennie Mor¬ gan disappeared from her home in l’ittsburg, I’enna., and nothing was ikonwn by her family of her where aibouts. Five months ago her father went into court and asked to be appointed administrator of iier estate, as it was known that she had about .$1,509 in a local savings bank. The other day there was a hearing jn tiie matter, but further proceedings were stopped by the appearance in court of the young lady herself. During these seven years she had been employed as a domes¬ tic in an East end family and had .kept her identity concealed. She gave as a resaon for her action that Jier father had ill treated her. A Wilmington Firm Fails. Davis & Zoeller, dealers in dry goods, notions, carpels, etc,, at Wil¬ mington, N. C., have assigned. Pref ! erences about 56,200, of which $5,000 if to local creditors. FINE POSITIONS At Good Salaries GUARANTEED BV THE Georgia Business College Immediately ou completion of single coarse at one half the expense of other colleges. Must have RFTY MEN IN NEXT SIXTY DAYS j-ite or wire immediately to GEORHI.t ’ i;rSi'.!;.S8 rul.Ljy-ji K Maoot). lia. AGRICULTURAL TOPICS OF INTEREST RELATIVE TO FARM AND GARDEN. when sulk is richest. It has been found that a cow se¬ cretes quite regularly one-twenty‘ which fourth remains of a day’s yield per hour, That for many hours in the Udder losses its fat and is poor in fat. When the time bteweeu milkings is Shorter by day than by night, the flight’s milk is richest in fat, if all other conditions are equal.—New York World, FEEDING YOUNG LAMBS. Young lambs coming into the world will need great care during the first few days of their lives, and until the sunny days come. Then they will enjoy themselves very much in the sunshine. It _s best to feed lambs through the ewes by giving these some additional food, preferably bran and buckwheat ground coarsely to¬ gether. advantage. Rye may be added to it with The grains Bhonld be only crushed or cracked, and not made into flour which will not be so digesti¬ ble as the coarsely-ground feed, as it will be apt to ball in tho stomach. A ewe should hare one pound a day of this feed, which is the best tor making good and abundant milk. Corn is fiot very desirable for ewes rearing lambs. Two pounds of the finest clover hay—rowan or the aftermath is the best—may be given per day, with what oat straw or corn fodder will be eaten.—New York Times. A SUGAR BARREL FEED CHEST. Sugar barrels are much larger than the ordinary flour barrels and because of the fact that sugar is a heavy com¬ modity—tho barrel bolds about 300 pounds—are more substantially made. The accompanying illustration shows one of these barrels converted into a very convenient and useiul feed chest for stablo use. Such a barrel is also handy in the poultry house for a ■ —••• ______ a apffiiildliuMmi'e' maxh. m - -S' 52 ■' i.—« INEXPENSIVE FEED CHEST. similar purpose. Where one lias room, it is well to arrange several barrels in this way, each for a differ ent kind of feed, which makes it con venient for indulging the horses or cattle with occasional changes in their bill of fare—a change which is always gratefully appreciated by them. These receptacles keep tire feeds free from dust and dirt, and vermin cannot eas ily effect an entrance save by gnawin'* through.—American Agriculturist. HOW TO CARKT FOWLS. “There are things in the world that have to be done that may seem cruel and heartless. For these there is, of course, some time honored excuse or reason for their being,” said a man who is interested in the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Society, “For some time I have been annoyed at the practice, so common in many lo¬ calities, oi carrying fowls by their feet. It is no unusual thing to seo a marketman or boy carrying a number of fowls in this way, the poor things struggling in vain to get their heads up so that they can breathe. Everyone that I have spoken to about it seems to think that is a necessary method, but with this idea 1 do not agree. All birds should be carried in baskets or boxes, and never with all the blood of their bodies pouring into their heads. The conditions of health are all vio¬ lated by this practice, and I would not eat a chicken that had been brought from market in such a posi¬ tion. “Many persons when purchasing fowls to keep, will tie a number of them together in this way, and it is almost always the case that they are disappointed in the quality of their purchase. The hens will not lay, or they are sick, or droop around and amount to nothing. Then the pur¬ chaser fancies himself cheated and makes a fuss. If he would for a mo¬ ment take into consideration that these creatures have had their lives put in peril and their entire systems upset by the unnatural position in which they have been carried, they might account for unsatisfactory re * u ^ 8 - “Certainly, r .if the health ' of the fowls had notiling to do with the case, the practice is unnecessary, cruel and thoughtless in the ex treme.”—New York Ledger. THE COW-TAIL HOLDER. Persons whose avocation lies partly in milking cows are well aware of the great annoyance caused by the animal switching her tail about promised ously, notably in fly time. The an noyance is multiplied in case the tail is dirty,or wet,which is very often the case. The end of the tail either takes the milker in the face or neck or flirts into the milk pail; perhaps both events happen. is The present device, which here illustrated, has been patented by Mr. Joseph Cooper, of Racine, Wis. It is the most rationally constructed de vice for the purpose that has yet been contrived, being effective and con venient to a great degree. It is also very simple to manufacture. A strip of elastic sheet metal is bent to form a circle, the meeting extremities being rounded ep.„ W torn, «»J conttcl fdecef .re ”r«t°(Tto‘tV ciicol.r clasp, the free ends projecting to form handies, the compression of which within the hand cra«p opens the clasp points well apart and allows the de vice to be slipped on the tail, and then the rounded parts are allowed to close within the deep recesses of the ga«L>?d >iat, where the tase se cure hold. Tho operation is very easy, and will effectually confine the tail during the milking operation. i COW-TAIL HOLDER. This device should sell on sight if put on the market.—World’s Prog¬ ress. THE DUCK RAISING BUSINESS. Tbo duck-raising business is tin doubtodly still in its infancy, though it must be admitted to have made great strides within the past few years. Or¬ iginally confined to only a few, it has spread rapidly through many parts of the East and is extending into tho West as farmers understand better the details of the business and the satis¬ factory returns it makes. Nobody denies that there is money in chickens if skillfully mauaged and marketed; but those who have tried it find there is much more in ducks. Tho latter require less care, are much freer from disease and insects than chickens, and their quick maturity enables the rapid turning over of money. In ad¬ dition to these must he noted the higher market price. Although ducks will lay an occa¬ sional egg during the winter months, yet they do not regularly start in un¬ til February. They will then continue to lay for about five months, with a few brief intermissions, 150 eggs per annum being a good average. In mating, one drake to six ducks is suf¬ ficient. As they lay for a long time before becoming broody, incubator it is neces¬ sary to employ au or a lieu for the earliest broods. For that mat¬ ter, many duck-raisers employ hens exclusively for this part of the busi¬ ness, as they make better mothers than ducks and are less clumsy in their movements. Duck eggs require twenty eight days for hatching. The young ducks should not be fed until they are twenty-four hours old. Their first meal should consist of hard boiled eggs mixed with oatmeal, or stale bread crumbs soaked in milk. After a few days they may be given scalded cornmeal or mashed boiled potatoes fed warm. Grass, clover and other green food should also be fed, os well as kitchen waste. Greens of some kind are an absolute necessity to ducks. Dampness is particularly fatal to young ducks and must be carefully guarded against. Plenty of fresh water must be supplied them for drinking purposes, but in such a ves¬ sel as to prevent their getting wet. They Bhould be kept away from all ponds until fully fledged. After this access t° water promotes cleanliness and health, DuckB of all a 8 es are m “ ch heartier uaf eIS than chickens, . but theil gain is proportion, and they are ready for market long before, so that the cost of production per pound is no more They and tho returns are more rapid. are litfcle troubled with lice, if proper oaro ka8 been taken to keep the mother hon free from these pests, T b eir chief troubles are cramps, leg weakness and indigestion. The first two are due to damp quarters or over¬ feeding, while the indigestion, which shows itself by froth in the eyes, pur¬ ple mandibles, etc., result from too much uncooked grain. Sudden death is usually attributed to large lice. Ducks require no roosts, but the floor of their houses should be well covered with cut straw and the litter frequently renewed. The droppings of the ducks make excellent manure. Many people object to duck-raising on the plea that they make everything m.udciy and filthy. While there is some truth in this tho birds them¬ selves are much cleaner than chickens and the work of caring for them is lighter and less offensive. Those who have once gone into the business stay in it and generally do less grumbling than other folks. I am not advising everybody to quit chickeu-raising and go in for ducks; but I do think every farmer should keep a few, and after ho has gained experience and found his market he can start in on a more extended scale if the prospect is encouraging, as it generally is. But to make money in these days it is essential to stop all leaks, to learn the quickest and cheap¬ est method of doing effective work and to cut down expenses to the mini¬ mum. These points are as necessary for the duck-raiser to remember and observe as they are for the manufac¬ turer or merchant.—New York World. FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. Tliere is nothing better than leaves for a mulch. Feed regularly and give the heaviest feeding at night. Rub the horses dry after they have been 0 , jt in the co)d rain . o xen and sheep fatten better in company than when kept alone, A cracked hoof will spoil a good horse quicker than anything else. In curing citron about eighty pounds of sugar are required to 100 pounds of fruit. It is not the large turkey that sells the most readily, but the ono of me¬ dium size. If you wish eggs do not overfeed the poultry and giveas great a variety as possible. Regular feeding of just the right quantity to each animal will insure ° good health and condition. Chopped clover bav given the fowls in small amounts daily will be greedi [y eaten and will furnish more lime f^j. er ,„ shells than anv kind of ° „j U j D except wheat. .* , , , , prodLd^a twenty’per J i *> of . . ceut , ' g reate r 1D ^ , , wu ™ like number A Oerm.u horseman, -H> ta. «ov the past year in the - uited States studying the methods of American trainers, attributes much of their cus eess with trotters and pacers to their knowledge of foot-balancing, or shoeing in such a way as to bring out the best speed of which a horse is capable, * ARMY FOOD. WHAT THE SOLDIERS OF THE MIKADO LIVE ON. Rations of the Private In the United States and the Quantity of the Food—1 merest* ing Comparison I T is interesting" United lo compare States Army the rations of the at present with these allowed to 4 the Japanese soldiers who are inarching victoriously through Chinn. In respect to quantity no difference is observable, though it would be diffi¬ cult to draw a line ontbi» point owing to the fact that the Japanese are iur nished with food in kind altogether dissimilar. The staple of their diet is rice, which, for the sake of con¬ venience, is made up into bftlls. It is first cooked aud then compressed by means of appliances shaped operated somewhat like lemon-squeezers, and on a like principle. Thus a considerable amount of the vegetable is condensed into comparatively Bniftll compass. soldiers in This rice is eaton by the various ways. Most commonly it is put into a pot with hot water and thus snbjeoted to a process it .of recook¬ ing, in the course of which expands to perhaps lour times its compressed bulk. The balls, which aro about as big as one’s two fists, are sometimes cut into slices, and the latter are roasted. When there is »o Rro at hand, or time is short, the Hoe balls may be cut up and consumed without further preparation, being already cooked and in wholesome condition. While ou the moroh, the Japanese soldiers subsist almost wholly on rice, dried fish and canned filled meat. ord<?r Recently for a Chicago packer an 'beef an to immense quantity of oanned supply the invading army ict China. The soldiers of Japan all eat meat regularly, though the diet of the people at large is vegetariap At every garrison town in Japans beeves are the slaughtered soldiers. On at stated that accoualL internals for¬ for eigners traveling in the dominions of the Mikado find it convenient tO_ be at or near a town where troop s are stationed, for otherwise they maj? have difficulty in obtaining meat fot' their tables. The dried fish furnished to tie sol diers there are 18 no of iack severeUpecies. of nsh, the rIV la *l jfpan seas abounding in finny game. More prized than any other perhaps f t.ie tai, which resembles the whib fhh m our great iakes The common > q« d or cuttlefish, which supplies the < na of commerce, as well as bone: canary birds to sharpen their bills upon, is regarded as a delicacy of the first order. The Japanese can lb> >r own salmon, which have flesh than those of the Columbia R.ver and these fishes are brought ahvfl *o Tokio in tanks for sale. Canned salmon is a very satisfy ng food and serves well for ration s. it it is furnished to the soldiers olal.V when they are at home. he m. remark probably applies to pick!. ■ The Jap&puse are extremely picklcfl, which eerye utt rehsiiett W •., - theuri fcfti.i Oi tun shape of a radish length of more than three fee. pickled in iho proper way itsu„, so horribly it/ that no foreigner wouM touch Nevertheless, the Japan, o are extremely dainty as to their * ing. They will not touch mutton d uu. The ration for a soldier in the Uni¬ ted States Army considerably exceeds what is necessary for the support of a man. It consists for each day of twelve ounces of pork, or bacon, or canned beef, and eighteen ounces of soft bread or flour. Instead of tl.e meat allowances mentioned, the ;!>l dier may have twenty ounces of fresh beef, or twenty-two ounces of salt beef. In place of the bread or flour, he may have twenty ounces of corn meal or sixteen ounces of hard brekd. But this is not nil. For every VKl men Uncle Ham allows daily fifteen pounds of beans or peas, eight pounds of roasted coffee, fifteen pounds of sugar, four quarts of vine gar, four pounds of soap, four pounds of salt, four ounces of pepper am? a pound and a half of candles. If iho ferred, ten pounds of green coffee tray bo had instead of eight pounds of roasted coffee, or two pounds of tea afford another alternative. The ration for troops in tho field is the same, with the addition of four pounds 1 of yeast powder to each 100 rations of Hour. The best tbafc can be made of this in a very s rnple , met. . , But , Uncle t, , u—. Ham » soldiers have a good many luxuries for the table without expense to them selves. These they procure chiefly in two ways. As a rule they do not draw from tho commissary department nearly all of the rations allowed. What is left over is bought back by the Government. This means that the men get the money value of the stuff instead, and with this cash they buy whatever they want in the way of de¬ licacies for the mess. Whereas one man, or two or three together, might easily use up the whole of tho rations allowed, the expenditure per man is greatly diminished when a whole com pany has a mess together, and the *v ing is proportionate. The case re bate above referred to is termed “com pany savings.” The other way in which the soldiers get money to spend on delicacn is through the post “canteen.” This is a sort of club, managed by the officers of the post for the benefit of the men. It is a restaurant aud also a shop at wfcich mau J things are sold, though ‘he chief sale is that of beer. The War Department would prefer that the sol diers should not drink beer, but they are bound to drink something, and beer is much less harmful than whi-ikv. P rofit » of the “^nteen” arc ,sed lor the soldiers in various way 1 -, part * the money being appropriat- i for the P nrchase * f table supplies. — Wash » “• B«»lt. .1 Solitur, A Solitary conhnment is calculated, doctors state, to produce melancholia, suicidal mania and loss of ret son. Nine months of absolute solitary con finement are almost cer am to r -ult in the mental rmn of the coamt.— Chicago Tiwts, Spitted ou an Iron Rod. “Because he is alive and well to¬ day,” said an operator in the northers district of the Pennsylvania oil Held, “Henry J. Button is a greater wonder to the oil country than a 25,000-barrel spouting well would be. Lutton is an oil well derrick builder. About three months ago he was putting up a der¬ rick for Frank Rockwell, one of tho biggest operators in our district, at Clarendon. The derrick stood ou a hillside. Lutton was at work at the foot of the derrick, and stood ou au elevation four feet or so above tho ground. In some way an iron bar or rod, three-quarters of an iueh thick and over twenty feet long, a part of tho mechanism of an oil well rig, fell from tho top of the derrick, seventy five feot above the ground. One end of this long iron struck Lutton ou the right side of the neck. Passing be¬ tween his jugular vein and bis wind¬ pipe, it plowed its way diagonally through the flesh ou Lntton’s elicit and came out below tho left nipple. Striking his left leg just below the groin, the rod shot, downward beneath the flosli, emerging again above the knee joiut. Ou its further way down tho rod severed Lntton’s left middle toe and carried it. along with it nearly a foot into the ground. “Lutton is a six-footer aud over, and naturally "’ell covered with flesh. That the heavy iron, when it struck him ou the neck, did not knock him down shows what strength the man had. Nearly ten feet of the rod passed through him in its course, ft foot and a half of it being through his neck and body, and about two feet, through his log. When Lutton found himself thus spitted by the iron and pinned to tlio ground ho actually slid down tho rod from where he stood to the ground and shouted to a follow workman, who ran to his aid and pulled the rod out, a feat of strength which is a wonder and mystery not only to him, but to everybody else, too. Lutton was car¬ ried home, where he lay nearer dead than alive for six weeks. Then ho be¬ gan to mend, and in throe weeks more was ablo to be arouuJ. He says ho will bo as good as new in a couple of weeks. And that’s why Henry J. Lot ton is to-day a bigger wonder to tho oil country than a 25,000-barrel gush¬ er would be.”—New York Bun. «l'ow(Iei‘ Piny” in Morocco. (loaen or so hom , H ar(! drawu up into )iue „ t oa0 Gnd of the p]aiUi the riders, by means of bit and stirrup, u theil . nnimftl , iuto a ferment exoi tement, writes a traveler from Morocco TheD at IV gi ven signal, ]ong “ . ba rreled guns are waved in h<# ai nd the troop 8e ts forward at uulo nu)vu tluvu v . ld i ; , which iu M th J prooee ,i, waving their | ftnd sftl uting tho while, until it eoome8 ft fimoU8 gftUop . Drought Suddenl ^ t(l0 WCMpoUH nre to the gho deri hold witU bo th hands, ^ e]boW8 rRi>ed to the levol of their shoulders, and tho next moment the of , lorsoraou ; s i ost to » euve l„p 0 d m the clouds of white R ok0 whl , h tbu flint-lock guns and inferior native powder produce, only j u their showy trap ingrs, reining in tho with nil K^uffren^Ui of their ii m wrists, uu |ph. are brougn rtl a si- .5 RB i i mlt i i ,°? but i as ll Ul<J , he natives , ■ „ a ' * when performed m numbers; . but this ls not Illw y s the case and at times tm " 11111,1 aloue : W1 1 ?® tbrou * 11 tbo manumvre, introducing some new system ot his own—lying back in tho saddle and firing behind him, for in¬ stance, or under his Horse's body.-— Blackwood’s Magazine. Mex ean Public Schools, I kave it from pretty^ good author ity, . says a recent traveler in Mexico, 18 1<J P’G’P 08 '* °f Gm Mexican Government, within four or live years, to establish a complete system ol pub be schools, reaching into every eor uer republic. lhe lenohers therefor cannot lie obtamed here, nor for years to come. I his will make a demand for probably ten or fifteen thousand teachers. In view of this it be seen how important it is for those who have an tdoa of teaching to study the Hpanish language, so as to I at,1 ° ftvftl themselves ol the op portnnities which will thus be opened, j R ansa ? City has tnready moved in ^* 8 direction by making Hpanish a l >ar ^ her common school course, students of Mexico are now i “head of this question, they us on recognize that English is the rival **Dgu«ge ot the continent, and they go to colleges in the United States for the sole purpose of adding English to ■ their literary f stock in trade. Mexico ifi developil J g 8cho ] ars who can hold theJr 0 vit h any f on the continent, They / are delving ^ nt o jibc/al-mindcd. every research, an ftre wc . ll . refl aIld The literature of Mexico is now quite extensive, covering the field of history, biography, political economy, science and poetry.—New York Advertiser. The, Onion oi 1 he Crnsa'.era. The baskets of shallots ou the buck sters’ stalls in our great markets are taken by tho average marketer to l.e ordinary onions. No doubt many a worthy person has wondered why imir ketmen sold red onions by the quart basket like strawberries. The shallot, however, though a near cousin to tho onion, is not au onion, but much more valuable vegetable, selling for about five times as much as a regular onion, and it is so excellent for certain sauces that all that are brought to market find ready sale. The shallot has a : mild onion flavor peculiar to itself. It is the onion of Palestine, which was introduced into Europe by the Crusa ders, who found it growing on the plains of Ascalon— whence tl.e name of “atcalot” or “~ ‘escalot,” which has been shortened to shallot. The deed* of the Crusaders are forgotten, says an enthusiast, but the little ‘^ lives forever.—New York Tribune. -___ Maryland’* Four Hundred. A dluu ,, l.e.nu r.W I. f^ he Ug .fw Maryland 8 \ i T four »-»«dred JrctP’^ by v their bravery saved the Amer.ean army under Washington at a cr.tical mo meut. The site has not yet been de tc-rmined, but it w ill probaWy be somewhere near Prospect l ark, Brook lyu.—Chicago Herald, GEORGIA RAILROAD SCHEDULES. OFFICE GENERAL MANAGER. Commencing Dec. 23rd, 1894, the following schedules will be operated. All trains run by 90th Meridian Time. The schedules are subject to change without notice to the public, READ DOWN, READ UP.__ Train No. S.INo. 1. Train Train No. 2. No. 4. Train No. 11 N’tKxp Day m’1 No. 27 STATIONS. No. 28 Day m’1 N’t Bip No. 12 ^ v 10 30p 11 30a 7 15a Lv Augusta Ar 8 30p 1 OOp 5 15a 7 48a g *t: 10 58p 12 54a Belair 12 36p 4 48a 7 14a g *2 11 09p 12 04p 7 45a Grovetown 8 OOp 12 27p 4 37a 7 00a 5 36p 11 21 p 12 Hip Berzelia 12 16p 4 25a 6 47a 5 45p 11 29 P |12 24p 8 00a Harlem ^ 7 7 43p 28p 12 OOp 4 16a 6 36ft’ 5 54p 11 38p 12 34p 8 06a Dearing 7 20p 12 m 4 07a 6 28a 6 12p 11 58p 12 52p 8 19a Thomson 7 05p 11 44a 3 50a 6 12a 6 6 32p 24p 12 12 08aj 16a| 1 1 04p 12p 8 35a Mesena Cftimvk ..... 6 50p 11 11 33a 26a 3 3 38a 28a 6 5 Ola 55a 6 41p 12 25a 1 1 2Op 8 40a Norwood 6 41p 11 19a 3 20a 5 48a 6 54p 12 42a 1 36p 8 53a Barnett 6 28p11 05a 3 04a 5 34a 7 05p 12 56a 1 50p 9 04a Cruwfordviilo 6 17p 10 54a 2 48a 5 22a 7 25p 1 22a 2 15p br ' Union Point 5 55p 10 34a 2 21a 5 00a 2 3Op 9 25a Lv. 21a 2 04n...... 1 38a 2 44p 9 38a Greensboro 5 42p 10 37a 2 05a 3 lOplO 00a Buekliead 5 20p 10 00a 1 ..... 2 22a 3 23p 10 12a Madison 5 OOp 9 45a 1 20a...... 2 41a 3 40p 10 28a Rutledge 4 50p 9 26a 1 Ola...... 2 66a 3 56p 10 40a Social Circle 4 38p 9 12 22al...... 45ai...... 3 19a 4 20p 10 58a Covington 4 20p 8 12 3 41a 4 45p 1115a Conyers 4 02p 8 3 54a 5 OOp 11 26a Litliouia 3 52p 8 13a111 45p 4 15a 5 21p 11 42a Stono Mountain 3 36p 7 54a 11 24p 4 28a 5 34p 11 51a Clarkston 3 28p 7 43 m 11 lip 4 39a 5 45p12 m Decatur 3 20p l 7 34 i 11 00p 5 00 a 6 OOp 12 1 5p_________________ Ar Atlanta Lv 3 05p 7 15ft 10 45p 1 15a 1 15p 8 40a Lv Caniak Ar 6 50p ll 2.”m 12 15,1 1 31a 1 24p 8 47 r War teuton 6 43p 11 17ft 12 03ft 2 06a 1 44].......I Mayfield 6 27p 11 01a 11 36p 2 30a 1 56p...... Oulverton 6 16p 10 49a11 18p 2 50a 2 07p 9 22a Sparta 6 08p 10 2fla|l0 40a 11 02p 3 22a 2 24p...... Devereux 5 5ip 10 38p 3 37a 2 83p 9 43a Carrs 5 40p 10 18a10 25p 4 16a 2 55p 10 00a Milledgevillo 5 29p10 00a 9 54p 4 48a 3 18p...... Browns 5 14p 9 46a 9 30p 5 07a 3 24]. 10 24a Haddocks 5 05p 9 37a 9 14p 5 28a 3 85p 10 82a James 4 57]. 9 28a 9 00p 6 30a 4 05p 11 00a Ar Macon Lv 4 25p 9 00a 8 15p 6 55p 11 08a 2 OOp Lv Barnett Ar 1 8 60a 6 25p 7 05j. 11 20a 2 12p Sharon 1 8 87a 6 lip 7 12p 11 30a 2 20p Hillman 1 8 27a 6 04). 7 43p 12 03a 4 29p Ar Washington Lv 7 55ft 5 32p Hup 6 15p 2~35p|Lv Union Point Ar 9 20a 5 6 27]> 2 46p Woodvillo 9 08a 6 40|> 6 82p 2 50p Bairdstown 9 04a 5 35 p 6 45p 3 01 p Maxeys 8 Ola 5 22p 6 52p 3 08p Stephens 8 44a 5 16p 7 05]. 3 19p Crawford 8 30a 5 03p 7 22p 8 35p Dunlap 8 12a 4 4Op 7 27p 3 39]. Winters 8 07a 4 42p 7 44p 3 55]. Ar Athens Lv 7 50a 4 25p 10 40a Lv Union Point Ar ..... 2 05 p..... ..... 11 30a Siloain ..... 1 42 p..... ..... 11 50a Ar White Plains Lv ..... 1 20 p..... ..... All al.ovn trains ruu daily, except 11 aud 111 which do not run on Sunday • No. t dinner at Union Point; No 28 tapper at llarlem. Sleeping Cara l.ofwoon Atlanta and Charleston, August', and Atlanta, Augusta and Macon, on night express. Sleeping cars between Macon and New York on train 27, stul train loaviog Macon a< 11 o'clock, a. m. THOS. K. SCOTT i JOE \V. WHITE, A. 0. JACKSON, General Manager. Traveling Pasaen ;or Agont. General Freight and Paty Agent. AtifiustA, Ua, HARDWICK, J. W. KIRKLAND, W. W. Puss. Agt., Atlanta, Go. Pass. Agt., Maeon, Ga. THE HDT01L LIEE IHSOEAHCR COMPANY OF NEW YORK PICKARD A. McCUtlDY President. 6XATEMENT 'or tho year cading Dtcem 1 ' 31 1894. Income f . DlFhnrHeinciits WMaVK-l'l) “ jiiloHinciitN, JliviilumlNA - $11.929,791 01 J* i t. l or all other iiceountM • 3 >so,h;m,h(H 2fl Assets United biafe* Bonds and other _ 10 ,000 (17 Securities - - • ts:i, 1 ) ilr uJit-m-'V 11 ""-"" 1 : ""' 1 11 " .' 7I.1UUMI5 »2 . . Loftj.H Mori. I : lid Honda 2 1 1 1 ,mm,inn 01 ) 1 711$ at) tieul Nuio - - - , , ,'uali In liniikaami Trtwt Com- lim ... , ...... Accrued Iftle.e'st, Deferred I’ro- C,«I. .«I‘> 07 i.iinins Ac. - - • 1 $■_>(.i,titts,jsii ini He»«*rvo fur PoIIcIph iinil oflwr (ompnny’H i Hlaii- (flit is-' 10 ( 1 47,11 14 iliiiU, Aiuprliua |»«r . Surplus • ln.su ran re mid A n i» Mil f.7.>0,2110,077 07 nssninctl and ruiiowrd luHLranuu »ml AnnullifiHln 42 torco December Ul 1801 ’ 207 ’ 778 Increase la Total Income - $0,007,724 20 InercaM. i . I'reniluiii Income 2,7.28,^.. 84 Increase I.! s.irptu,' . ' . ' - LW,?!? 01 Increase i t' iiiHiiriinrn and 929 00 !) 00 Aunuilics la Force - - 1 . 1 , , l li.ivc rarrfuHy rvafniiiuil tint f )ic;'oiii , » Si.itr i mr.it ami iia l t'.c ,amc to l>c conrrt 7\iulitOC OlAUf.KS A. I'lM l.i.l K t'r<,iu the Kurplft'i a dividend will 1 npi.-rlioncd JiSi USU aI, ROBERT A. GHANNI53 V »-.Pi l £eiOft.T Wai.tkk R. GlI.IKTTI! ( irncr.il M.jn.'ig'er l !+ I '. I .1.0YD l vir-i’r. i 9„t HI/HHfC OoMWr r.L Trcii-.urer ioHY McCLlHtOtK 1 -i . i-.I.A. Acinary K I’. 8HF.DDFN, Gmii. Southern Agent Atlanta, Ga. So Simple . 1 Nine times out of ten whenwe are out of sorts our trou¬ bles can be removed by that old re¬ liable medicine, Brown’s Iron Bitters, which for more than 20 years has been curing many people of Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Ma¬ laria, Impure Blood, Neural¬ gia, I leadache, Liver and Kid¬ ney troubles. It’s the peculiar combination of iron, the great Strenuth-HIVCT, _ With selected vegetable remedies of true I value Pi that 'dies i Hrown • S t Iron ! Hitters SO good for Strengthen- the ing and Specially purifying good for System. ! ft fa women and children—it makes them | Strong and rOS). Brown’s Iron Bitters is pleasant to takf, and it will net *t*m i' e teeth nor rause constipation See the crossed r**n lines on the wrapper. Our book, ' Ht !»W tO Lire a !i tundna VcxrSt” tell| all abo >Ut it; free fur * fiaoVtf* CHHKl' AC (- 9.1 Hai. 4 iMelti, MO Sheriff s Sales, Taliaferro Co., Georgia. Will be sold at public oratory for cash to the highest bidder, within the legal I hours of sale, before the '• mrt house fordviUe.on the ti ft: ' lying f^being In Tai fafe vwlHjwfty x Leorgla, on tl.e waters of the Ogeecheo river, and bounded on tile north by the lands of the late Hau.ucl by W. the Chap¬ pufi man, deceased; on the east ]j,. highway or roar I connecting Craw fordvlllo witi. Powelton, in Hancock county,and the White Plains, in Greene county; south by lands of l)r. K. J. Reid; west by the north prong of the Ogeechee river. Levied on ami to he sold, with all the improvements there on, as the property of Louisa Darden, deceased, in the hands of Jesse K. Dar dan, administrator on estate of said Louisa Darden, to be by him adminis¬ tered according to law, to satisfy a fl. fa- to execute a judgment or decree from the August term of the Superior of court, 1894, of said county, in favor Mrs. 14. 15. Smith, guardian, administrator etc., vs. Jesse 15. Darden, on estate of said Louisa Darden, deceased. Property pointed described out by said plaintiff fi. fa- s attorney and in Hnd ,|,. cn .e; a nd found in pos-cssior. of Levi Young, noon whom written notice of levy and sale was served in person. q’hlg the 0th day of March, 1895. D. It IlKNHY, Sheriff Taliaferro Connty. Sharifl’s Sale, Taliaferro Co Georgia GEORGIA 'I’Ai.iAFEBKO County: Will be sold In front of the door of l lic Court House of said county, to the high test l.idder, for east., on the first Tuesday in April next, within the parcel legal hours of sale, all that tract or of land lying in one body, containing eighty-two and three-fourths acres more or less, situated in the 804th dis¬ trict, O. M., in said county, Portwood, adjoining J. S. lands formerly of T. J. Acre, F. N. Brown, H. Al. Holden and others, now of W. A. Legwen, Allen Edwards, Tim Stewart and others. Said land levied on as the property of Martha tion issued R. from Brown the to satisfy Superior an Court execu- of said county in favor of Sallio A. Far tner, as executrix of the last will and testament of 8. J. Farmer, deceased, and In herown right, against said Mar¬ tha R. Brown, this Rth day of March, 1895. D. V. Henry, Sheriff Taliaferro County. March B, 1895. J£- Boilers. WTGet our |»i it«" Atlas and Krie Kngines, Tanks, Sacks, Htand I’i|icK and Sheet-Iron Work ; Shafc ing, Pulleys, Gearing, Boxes, Hangers, etc. < '(.mjilctc Cotton, Saw, Grist, Oil and Fc tilizer Mill outfits; also Gin, Press, Cai.a Mill and 8hingle outfits. Building, Bridge, Factory, Furnace and Railroad ( ..'lings; Railroad, Mill, Ma¬ chinists’ and Factory injectors, Supplies. Pipe l ilting*, Belting Packing, Haws, j- iies, (filers, etc. Citst every <lay . \v< k 1 -jO a&utlr; Lombard Iron Works and Supply Go., Above AUGUSTA, CA. Messenger Dcyot ’ORDERS BY MAIL. We make mail handle tUrs them a Rfjft-U1 »t sfactoriiy study. That vrt* csn stid»eom»rai<-a 5/ is proved. Knough said here. <if ple«se«J rustotner. Crtta’o * Doors. Sash, Write t<* us Cur orfc,«&c Eli.-ids, JluiiJdi itiil W AUGUSTA LUMBER CO., fitty of (tit Augutta, 0*.