The Advocate-Democrat. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 1893-current, December 04, 1896, Image 2
Tie Aflmats-Djml rUBMtllfcD BVKKY PKIIMV »> CLEM G MOOKE. Official Organ T jaf bo toilufK. A poet in the Chicago fut<»r-0 •« an ttlng*. “1 love my little m Hi the writer canm f 'I a hay fork from a * tom a oh pump. JVifdniaMrr Mcheod give* notice that he will redeem all {*»*(office lock box key* .or 50 cent* and re issue them for cent*. Tbe holder niiiKt prewnf receipt for payment of de|M«*it, * r present affidavit with ap plication. Mr. Kobeit Ganthony, the English entertainer, oi>» e gav»- a performance at the twlch hunatic aHvlurn. Tin* inmate* took hi* diverting monologue vety well rt (h.i, but when he eame to the portion ( f the l*?rfornmree in who h he ImperarMi* hU** a testy 1 Id inagi*t.rate «,f SH) mm* mer* a woman rose with vehemence and ahouted, “Fancy ims bung left here while that man la left to run loose.” Fully half of the grown up jieople of France believe the old story that Napoleon Bonapiute put a check fir 100,000 franca in a silver five, franc piece and that the cc in Is yet In cir¬ culation. Tht-y say tin*; the jxuqde did not want the five fraiu* piece, and that in order to oeate a demand for It Napoleon iciorted to the device mentioned. The <*l»e<*k < r l»'eaeury order, it i* said, was w lit ten upon n best us paper and iiurlor* I In the met¬ al at the time ttyc <*< iu was ma<h*. Thousands of five fianc pii < an* annually broken ofs*n and haw been so iuMiMM’hNl since the story t.f the check was fir»t circulated. A Bo*tonb.n says In the Boston Journal: “Musicians tell me that If it were not for tin* lb brews in New York, open* and orchestrrl concert* would drug out a feeble existence, or )x-r$Mh utterly. It i« tin* sonic story in Berlin. Ho when I hear Mil* fool ish talk about the corrupting in fin enee of the Hebrew mush, 1 am In¬ clined t4» shake my bead. They are n wonderfully musical |»eople, and the remark of a dhtiingubhed pratio shows no little knowledge of history: ‘Would that 1 bad a rich drop of Bebiew blood in my vein*! In o|H*ra it outweigh* the proud in heifitatice of a New England eon *4*ienee,’ ** A ring exhibited ut the Antwerp exhibition wa* the ml miration of diamond cutter* and treicbanta, be l" / tbr first (iiir^diifill alien pt U* cut it ring out of * single stone. Then* nrr a great ninny difficulties In this method of cutting dhutumd*. a* the *tone* hate a certain edenvagt* mid jwirtieular teins all of \%hich hate to la* can fully studied In order to preterit splittlr g just hm success seme* within reach. After sevi ml tin sueccssfu) i tteinpls and tht< years labor the ft'ftt has been accomplished by the patience m d skill of M. An bdne, one if the best kmw.i la pi daries of Antwerp. The »icg I* abmit six-eighth* «rf an Inch In diameter. Ill the MiiillHitougli ciildi ct there Is * ring cut out of one entire and per¬ fect Niipphire. Dream* are eurloti* things. About s week ago « West 1‘hilmh Iphin girl dreniiied that she lost her wi tch, ami in the morning she Junked in the pls4'e where *l»e always put her tints* piece, to discover that it was gone. This, of course, I«hI her t4» believe that Mometmc hail actually stolen It, and that she was not dreaming, but was merely iti a half sleep. with thi* dt*h«*M. teiilng •us.icioi) the crestfallen young woman told her brother of the affair. The brother had to visit various p«* vnshops and stnUon houses, give n caieful ilescrip tion of the costly n.ii \ \ and was kept hur tling stout d a 1 suit three or four days, vainly sndssvoiirg to get s clue. But he finally abandoned all hopes of rscovettcg the to, t tieasur *. In the evening of the vety day that her brother dheontimietl the search the fair loser of the timepiece had another dream. This time she dream¬ ed that before retiring she had hid¬ den her watch lu a shoe in the bot¬ tom of a closet. After rising next morning, merely out cf cut! slty, *bc went to the place designated In her dream, and to her amaxement their beheld the iunoceut timepiece. Tenuv*ott wan d«*vt»t4*d t<» hi* "iff*, but like « man ot true to*W\ he wrote very little about hi* true feeling 1 »r her. That l»e«utif tl dedi¬ cation beginning, “!Va*% in \r and true."is that bit if hi* writing uhbh " lie tiHkKt often mimiriaioi wNh her name She wo* a cewd cri tit* t*f her hu*lft*inF* work. T n \ •,,*!! Iw been uteuieti of SBiljty lii (i i m tbr dlffrmit portic of • bvng |nwm, and thr difffivmY in trtylr Ivl #w»i “The Oomltig of Arthur" tl *Thr FaxKitig tf Arthur * ami thr othrr of thr King” ha* h##n rltrtl itt illuMrvticn. (\mwrnii\p thi> <lif ferriitv lafttlv Trtin.vao» sold to hrr non only twt dry* Ivfort* hrr drath, “Hr Kaid *Yhr t n ig tA Nithm' an* •The IWitg tf Arth an* pur|* ly simpler in style thin tin ot her idyII* as dealing with the nwful uftm of birth and death ” acd l<* w itkfd titia atatrincut of I f*«rt to l»c (Hit mi ratxini in her >iiV iMograjdiy *»f hi* father. It is noteworthy that though eseh of the American crematoricH more men than women have been cremated the movement abroad was practically bfgun by women. Ladv Dllke of England and a German woman having been cremated at Dresden. When effort* were made In the years 1873*4 on the continent of Europe, in England, and in the Unit* ,.,l Slates in favor of the cremation of Hie dea,|. Lady itose Mary < rawshaw va* one of its prominent advocates, \ number of well known women in thin •• '» mi try have ex pressed them* five* decidedly in favor of crema¬ tion. Among them are Olive Thorne Miller, Mr*. Uppimott, Mr*. J. C . (roly. Mr* Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Mr*. Mice D. he I'loi geon, the late Kate Field, Hose Eli/.c tad h Cleveland and Edith Thom a*. At a publii* meeting Mr*, fiallington Booth referred to the time when her IkhIv should !*• carried to the crematory. The total number of cremation* in the United States from |S7« wh-o the first ere miit.ny was established, to Hit- close of Jvn' was repot led to la* ' fif7. The number of men cremated ill New York is more than double the nuiw is-r < f women. “One of the in oat honest men who ever lived waa •Judge Arthur Shield ” fab! C. It. Markham of ( byei * (*. win on the beoch in the early days < f Kansu*, hi l I w.i* one </ the lawyers who p actlced In his com t I* ii one occasion I wo* cot do* ting n t me in whl h I had pi-rf -cl confidence when the trial be¬ gan, bat hefote It bad prog reused far tin* evid 'nee against my client’* side of the con trover y was so strong and o uncxpeeti d that 1 saw' the <*hhc W!l hope les* I fully believed the w»tnci M*s Ii d, but could not rhake thru h cri ms r xarninntfoil, and it baiked as though my client w mid lose his property. Judge Shields hod decided eveiy cpieHtlon with |M*rfect fairness, and it < auld m t Is* seen that lit* was In any way interested until sudcidy be called t4i an ntl ir m\y, *Mr. Black, take th:* bench for the rest i f this care;* then, tinning to im . he said; ‘Have me *woui us a witness. I will not see^n man rob In-41 in this court in matter* of which I am personally cognizant,* He tis*k the land, and his testimony saved the case for me. The other side up jieuled. but the judge wu* sustained, tin* only case of the kind hi the lit Kiks.” K< eping 8h p in the South. Few t »uthi*rn farim*r* realize the imnicitNc advai t *ge* they posseM* in their din ' t This is such us to en able them to produce the moil valu¬ able of e*« j h * f lh« tu «th and the** that are e j*eeially edapUnl to the xiHtib, Art! as t » live . lock they en ■^*y Lr g'-eafirr f«4*ilit »ck for mailing profit tin ** the north#, a farmer* ever can. A year-round mlldne s cf eliiiMit • inukcH ov*-door f *c4lii>g p »* Hi$»lc the whole year. The greater list of feeding crops that may 1** grown ho cheaply cfinh) *n the sheep to be fed, at tin* mod, m l more than 25 cent a year, com Hog in this the whole coi l of pr aiucing the f«cd and an mhquute pn fit 1 niilwr, This in elude* Atom * hat d feeding, which in many ease* aid h alitie* is unneces *a ry The southern fanner giow* too HHich ci (ton. The overplus every year kecj * the pi lee down to kiarely the « o*l < f the ptx duct, a* 1 it serin* tuipov ilde for any kind of general effort to avoid I hi* to succeed. But if the southern farmer would keep *h»ep and grow pasture for them on their *ui plus land. u*itig their tioi¬ lier lands ns n summer range, nml raise such feeding crop* a* rweet jh> t«t<s*v. which may 1** grown for five <ents a bushel.crimson clover or win¬ ter oats, or rye, ft»r winter feeding t*ic\ might Im* able to put the lamia into the northern markets for one* fourth the mom y needed to pay the * hepherd in the north Of course the price obtained would pay a big prof¬ it on the business if the right way were taken. I would recommend, sny* a south¬ ern farmer in Amerlcsji Sheep Bn»ed er. the Merino ewes fi»r the fi«»ek and • Southdown t»r a Shropshire ram for the sire. There i» no fatter or plump¬ er market lamb than thiN cros*. ajhI the black face* will make them most iiceeptrlde to the butchers, It 1. quite posible t » get these lamb* into the northern market* iu th * season, either alive or d.eased, without any difficulty on the fast train* on any of the railroads. Million* of acres of cheap land are readily available, pure water from the abundant streuti# flow* everywhere,the n 'Idness of the t Innate »* just what i* wanted for the perfect health of the thx a, and noth¬ ing ttands in th* way bet th* apathy cf iht.se concerned. One-foui th less cotton wtmltl then \h* gtown, biing ing the price to an Immediate profit aide |* ii i l*he w«h 1 finds w home market, for the facilities for mantt fnetuting are n* wl»e»e tietter over the win * tact of this bioad eonti iieet. Mv tiev row *etit a bn ad would l«* kept *t home and more would l>e til ought in, making the whcl * south rich In « few years. Kx. Tabtoot in Miaitee (ktatj. \V. K Trimbh of Braidentown "im a wrlrome caller at the Time* office this n jf. and brought ei» informal hm of the inaug¬ uration of a valuable ne" tmlustrft tn our *»Ktrr county vt M uiatce^ the inauguration of the Manatee ToU«x>* comjitiBV, limited, to grow cigar to ftxun I'tilwiit a g ed , he (xmijaiiv "a* organire«l a* the mult of the efforts of Mr. Trimble, but who had hearty assistance from the board of trade. Mr. Trimble owns a nursery near Ft. Meade, and when the Cuban Tobacco Growers' com pany, limited, wr.s organized there h* became deeply interested in the subject of the culture of fine cigar tobacco, As the company’s opera- ; ttoto* progressed he became con vine-; ed that the claims of the experienced Cuban growers will be realized and that there is big mon-y in the bu*i upkk. During the Hummer he went to the Manatee river flection with the viewof locating there, and after care* ful in vextigation decided that there i* a grunt deal of land in that section excellently ad a j ed to tobacco farm¬ ing. He took up the matter with the tmard of trad«* and leading buaineaa men 4ti«<! HiteeeciUsd in arouafrig a hearty interest. Becoming acquaint¬ ed with .1. W. Teaaley, of thin city, w ho ha* had much experience in to¬ bacco culture in Kentucky and Vir¬ gin'!' and hi* dtwontt.rted on a Kiunl! Kcaie. here in Tampa that he run grow and cure the Cuban cigar tobacco hk well an the Cuban expert*, the two gertlemen made an inspec¬ tion of tin land* in the vicinity of the town* of Manatee and Braidentown with the view of cele ing that liewt (ul»| "<1 t i th - bin 'nend. Mr. Teasley announced thet there was a largi* area < f Jb ht bamn' x k a* fine aw any in the woi 01 , r the celtuie of t>obac co, and M . T.iwbl* then proceeded fo org;u i/a* a company to cairy out Ida plant. The company was organized aw above stated under the name of the Maurice T bnoev> Grower*’ company, limited, with the following officers* Hr. b. K. Warien, prewident; .Ionian Gab'*, vi<« preside! t; O. L. Stuart, treaauier; VV. K. Trimble, oocretary; b. C. I la r»<lu ll, 11. VV. Fuller and Ii. Gillespie, flirectorw. The capital at4 m* k was fixer! at $15,000 150 shares at $100 each. A conatitutiou and by laws were arlnpb*<l, and application has been made to the secretary of state for letters patent. The object of the company is com¬ prehensively explained by sect ion five if the cormtitution, as follows: “This association is organized for the pur jsme of iu (pill ing lands, by lease or piirchas*, upon which to grow tobac¬ co, or other crops; also of acquirlng buildings, sheds, barns, and machin¬ ery, either by erection, purchase or lease, necessary to grow, cure, han¬ dle and manufacture the said tobac¬ co and other crops; and for such oth er purposes as are authorised by law and to the best interests of the asso claUpn.” The company has engaged Mr. Tensley to intend the planting and curirg of the tobacco, and the first crop will be planted on a tract of twenty aere* about a mile south emit of the town of Manatee, The couipury has also secured sixty acre* in addition to thin, which wilt be utilize^ as rapidly as pasihic. The offices of the company will be established in Dr. VVaiieu’h fine new business block In III aider)town. The purpose if Mr. Tiimble’s visit to Tampa ttshiy is to secure seed, in the furtherance of which the ’rimes was glad to Is* of service. He will return to 11.aldentown tomorrow or Mon day. Tampa Times. Nitrogen, Phosphoric Acid and Potash. F.vciy farmer known without being told, that hi* soil is utterly tttmh'e to bear the ero|>* that it did years ago, without the use of fertilizers in winn? for or other. The virgin soils tht our fore fathers tilled are now roll lied of most of tlieir original fertility. Ke «eiit cx|h*i iuieiits carried on in the state* of Iowa, Missouri, Minesot i ami the Dakota* have shown that in a period of twelve years by the sys¬ tem of farming there carried on the soil lias been depleted nearly 47 |»er cent of it* original fertility. It .* fair to *up|x*e that in the old *r states the loss itf much greater. It is an umteiiiabtc fact that the old sys¬ tem of taking everything away and putting nothing track must l>e dis¬ continued. and right away. The ques¬ tion then comes up, how can we best accomplish our pnijH « of bringing our soil* back to a fruitful condi¬ tion? We art* told that while It is necessary to have about fourteen dif¬ ferent clement* in the soil in inter to make a plant grow, that bv con¬ tinued cropping the soil sutY« is from the loss of but alnnit three < f these elements. These are nitrogen, phos¬ phoric acid amt potash. In other words, most .m>ils now calie<l |*x>r or run out, by the application of one or more of these element*, viz., potash, phosphoric acid and nitrogen, tuay la* made to bear ** me or all of the farm crops. The most expensive of these eIntents is nitrogen, which when bought In a commercial form ab ut 17 cents \ .*r |H iind, Next in ct»*t to this is phesphofie acid, which costs aU.mt seven cents, and cheit) est of all is p* ta>l» which eo*ts on an average »U>ut five cent# per t*>und How U g.t the. * elements in to the l»«*st form in the most econont) eal way is the great pn Idem lor the farmer to solvd. \,iw. while nitrogen is the mist e\j**i si>e when Imught in the form <>f lomtiH ■ il fertilisers, it really nee*.! ..'.I a farmer least cf all, for he ran manufaeture it tight at home j his own farm, while p! sphorfc I and potash must be brought j from a distance. We are tokl that I f.mr-tifths of thr air we bteathe is J triHrcu Why hny »> e\fwnsi,e sn j article when we have so mueh of it j The trouble is how to re it. There are no means yet -d for appropriating it for our use directly from !ne air; but science has sl own us ihat clovers, peas, beans and other leguminous plants have the power f, catching and ste¬ similatiug tins valuable product in their growth, am thus we indirectly get our nitrogen apply from the air, when these crops »re fed to animals or plowed into he soil. The very f?ie! that clover h- the power to cap tore nitrogen frog the air makes it unnecessary to apj.b. nitrogen to the soil in »hape ,,t bran manure* or Czommerciai frrtih/rrs. In fact, high¬ ly nitrogenou# fertilijcerK arc poinon ou» to the crop, except in it* first Hfage of growfh. After it get* fairly well started it dfaw« all the m*ce« *ary nitrogen frnn the air. When wc find a piece of land that won’t grow f'lover, it \y baeauae it is too ri<*h in nitrogen* or lacks the we bac¬ teria. The latter can be inoculated to the new field by hauling earth on it from a field known to contain them. While the clover crop drawn large quantities of nitrogen from the air, it requires large quantities of phosphoric aebl and potash to ma¬ ture a crop, anc these all come from the writ. A trop of clover, which when cured tut *-a>' weighs two tons, will remove frojo the soil sixty-six pounds of (x»ta h and altout fifteen (Huinds of phosphoric acid. The roots from thin write crop will contain utxMlt tweuly-f j^bt pCUfldS of potash and fifteen pounds of phosphoric acid. Hut while* these elements must Is* in the soil in order for the crop to grow, they afoe not removed when the crop is filowtd under. But when the hay is sold r in any way remov¬ ed from the field, cf course we take ail the potash, etc., except what re¬ mains in the rooDv and is plowed un Her. It will hedteen that while clover enriches the soil in nitrogen, it adds nothing in the shape of potash or phosphoric aetd, and these must be purchas'd and applied to the soil in order to (>roduc« g<KKl crojw of clover. In fact, unless they are applied the soil soon become* “clover sick.” In the exjierhuewt^ carried on to ascer tain liovv nitrogen i« taken from the air by clover, pure sand containing no nitrogeiion- matter was used. To this was applied potash and phos¬ phoric acid, lime, etc., but no nitro¬ gen. The clovers grew to perfection, showing cone! naively where the plant obtains its supply of nitrogen. Profiting by Ibis, the farmer need supply nothing but potash, phos¬ phoric acid and lime to his fields de¬ voted to clover and let nature supply the most expensive, nitrogen. As I Kbit «<1 tie fore, “"most crops need but the three elements in excess of the amounts already existing in the soil, but clover require* large quantities of lime, about 100 pounds in a two ton crop of hay, root* and all. This can lie applied hi the form of gyp¬ sum <W ’ 'aater ojr in kainlf, which contains not only gypsum but a good per cent of potash and com¬ mon salt. We all know that salt is valuable to conserve moisture and rid the soil of worms and grubs. The supply of wood ashes is so limited and their value so uncertain that it is better to rely on the German salts for our supply of potash. These can he obtained of fertilizer firms in the form of kaiiiit, muriate and sulphate of potash. The phosphoric* acid can Is* purchased in aacidulated South Carolina rock or in bone meal, etc. With the cheapness cf these materi¬ als and Hie sureness of success fol¬ lowing their us**, there reed lie no reason why a farmer t hould not try to do something to bring back the fertility of his soil. L. J. Farmer iu Indiana Farmer. Ornamental Planting. The subject given me for this re |s>rt, "Oriuim* I’fiils," so f:tr ns it means the culture of cl -si.able trees, shrntw and flowers, the making of tine law ns, u the surrounding of our h inns with nirrl beauty, shculil re¬ ceive far moi attention by horticul¬ turists that has often been given it. The Is-nuty of any rural heme de |H>nds, to a larg, 1 extent, on the num Ucv and ar range nent of shade and ornamental trees. H is net my province to give a lengthy disxeriation on landscape gardening, or Instructions on the prr|DratioD of rht‘ soil, and the prop¬ er meth .Is at transplanting trees. I>ut let me say that whatever is worth doing in the preparation and transplanting of trees, shrubs, or plants, is worth doing well, so that they may make a good healthy start from the beginning. Though this is a timbered country, haw few there are that build in the midst c.f < ham mock, or take advantage of the orig¬ inal trees as Friend Bn .-on of No. 9 did selecting and retaining inch as are pleasing to the eye, and conven¬ ient far rlutih? As most of onr homes are on high pine lands, we are a* privileged to select location for the \ariety of the trees we plant, as though we were In a prairie eoun try. Persons with small plates, or with tunited means should not at- ; tempt Ux> mueh Attempt only the I simple nml the natural, awl the sure way to ;eeure this is by employing as lea ling features only trees ami grass. A few rarest or ornamental well griMi|H*ql and so arranged as to Wave the moat pleasing views unobstructed, hut hiding anything unsightly not t<a> mueh crowded, a* most new beginners are apt to get them, give universal pleasure. They contain in themaalve* the basis of all our pleasing sensations in house adornments, and they are the most enduring sources of enjoyment in *»v pUce. There is no need of the street* and our ibavr-vaols ta-iug cot- ered with the naked sand, for there is some grass that will make a fairly good lawn in every part of oar state. At our place. Grove Park. !*. rmudi grass makes as good a turf, and as fine, velvety streets, as blue grass does in the north, and is green most of the year, and when brown in mid¬ winter, still covers the nakedness ot the soil. As for trees, the freeze or the past winter, added to our past experience, has taught us not to de¬ pend too much on exotics; for tree from the north, as a general rule, do but poorly here, and trees from :i more tropical country well, they are frozen—and even Hie beautiful camphor tree, more hardy than file orange, after passing unscathed through the December freeze, was mostly ruined in February. Mrs. \V. 11. Holdridge before the Florida State Horticultural Society. SI’ATEOF < iK< >l’<HA. News Notes From the Empire State of tl e Sou b 9 Improvement, Devdupnif'Ut a«»<I Pro Krexx—IteraiM About Tlihigt* Traii** plrliig fu our own t*r«*at State, f rom #Cx<-haM!d.4 » and Otli / «u« f *• The Georgia Mills and Elevator Company cf Macon is pieparing to add $50,000 woith cf improvements to its plant. Since the first of the month in the neighborbood cf 7,000,000 feet of tim¬ ber eame in to Darien. Only about 1,5000,000 feet were measured at the public boom. Most all of it was sawn timber. Hon. R. U. Hardeman, ex-treasurer of the state and at present the repre sentative of Newton county in the lower branch of the general asscin bly, is confined to his home at Ox bird, two miles from Covington, stif fering with pneumonia. Foster Young, eldest son of An drew J. Young, deputy sheriff and a prominent farmer of Oglethorpe county, died Saturday. While super¬ intending his ginery Friday his arm was caught in the saws, mangling it so Iwidly that amputation was neees sary. There are now over fifty miles of public roads in Fulton county lead ing into Atlanta that have been put In first-class condition for any kind of travel. The system is such also that these roads will be kept in con¬ dition and not lie allowed to run down or become impassible. Mayor Price of Macon has issued an order that is intended to prevent ai) objectionable characters in future from making themselves conspicuous on the streets. The order has special reference to certain gaudy vehicles that have recently made their ,ip [rearanee on the streets, and warns the owners not to lie seen in them again. The stables, buggy house, horse aud buggy lielonging to T. J. Ware of Macon were burned Saturday morning. The stable was on the premises adjoining Mr. Ware’s resi- 1 ri # T« / jX s' zsS - : r -;. : \ Wk t m <L- \\ -o 'Q A ii v tr N 'i % M mm- /* mm 08 i ) I i ■S’, * 9 rnffisrs# it * Superior To All Sarsaparillas. Down in Georgia, over fifty wears a^o, a marvelous riedicine was discovered. It wa* what 13 now known as P. P. P., (Ltppmcn's Great Jxcfuedy), and its fame and reputation ha 3 bees growing with the years. For Rheumatism, Blood poisoning. Pain in the side, wrists, shoulders, back and joints Dyspepsia, Malaria, Scrofula, and all N .j.i and Ski a Diseases, :t has never been equalled. 7 Pam is subjugated, Health Renewed, Appetile restored and sleepless nights banished by , its wonderful influence. V) P. P. P. is a wonderful tonic and strengtheuer. Weak women should always take P* P. P. H builds them up. It has the universal corn*nendation of medical men throughout the country, because we publish Ifie f< ruiulu on every bottle, and one trial will convince the moat skeptical that it is a genuine health restorer Read lhe Truth And Be Convinced. A Wondo-fful Core. l wti ft tr.irtvr to muse ,:*r rh?v. : -’. :n f >r thirty years; tr.r ! all medicines . • t t! 3 v;:b ; v -r mancot re:iet. I was tdvj before I had finished two L ao X was able to work, i vC ur years, and am confident c f. . ■ - ; ee J- S. UVl’i liri*. I.'eiv^juvill.. F*a. Toatimony from tho flavor. l««ffered with Rheumatisu. . r .. IU ' *.i-d •U the so-called aoecifcs. Let t u* >-y grandson got me a bottle of i* R i*, l i.tl iik . a aew man W. H. wn.DCR. M f A.bany. From Two Well-known Physician®. We are having a bit: -a e for your and W«prescribe it ina greatntany C4*sek, au»l uud . „i ; cx~ The above letters are fatten fr< many rece ived by as. P. P., (Lif'pman't Great Remedy,) is medicine # a v tn s are tn rj» frmi th P. P. P. begins its tv r V '' f ■ i, which is the source . ___________ of all life, and does not cease until a pci tv*. . n: rc cure is effected. The mortifying erupts as th ; • A xion, the tired feeling that pre gents thorough accompli, .met::.- t - , sleepless nights, loss of appetite, Irritabihty of disposition, All ;'.n m it ot the svstem consequent from impure blood, which can end wi .1 Lv cured by p. p. p. P. P* P. {/-•//" •'« ■ : /. is cv'itce".’.cd by physicians and the people to be the Greatest Blood Purifier cf tie Age It positively and permanently cttrM * » or by drnggrsts or d.r._t trout us ; price (i a bottle, six bottles for fj. LiPPHIX BROS., mnirm Ul Lir.pman Bljck, SAVAWWAK. 6A. DR. HATHAWAY & CO. aSSfflBgBSBgSggggBgggh cmMhiimI. Cuuuttstloft Prw ax a ffix xirnrnn^ii wv w Am,t * n m "^’'^eminjJVVeaknessandS«xualDeWHtv urn .Vferooo toKKletf lost ot wxoal powtt. tem of mm sood eu eur»4 for Me We ma .top nlfht enUtf* hum. »»• ««»!• »rea*tfco« Miami nook power, re»ior» oerr. snd test* power. bVpn ^vrtivifiT 111S, ’ihit^krTbtetflowoS tn *U Stic tu torn, O Ue sad Olcwo.»wei- «•<«• rnre! te f 9r tlf« Blood Poieoalng. PrtvMe o ee nweampuMt , lln® Sores.Oosorrhaa « Gleet. »*<! ronos of Mo \ StTldUr€ .... pertr .r.tty c'lreS w.lOout rsuellc or cuuln*. bat. psla, V OQ erpoearo. Pet* J eea toe 9* tmtseot U DaUlCo, I oriioa -« owe ttae delicate dumue* pMoltu Many to jewutn eurea azier ■K your own hoin* wjibout Instruments. Rheumatlsm A SUMS CURE. Tb. faw pmMdWme- dOMa Of tc lb, amah of nedlotoe One do« give, relief: a rosovo fwvar ant Mia ta total*—a ear* 1* positd to ute ptaca Send natataeai « the awd r, ■ p. r Mao, 04 parse, wttb f a it deaertpuoa of above dieeaaee. oMeou oov* MSBSSSSKSiSSeS^ TeTST ttOHESTY ! 2»H DR. Sourr HATHAWAY “*mo*o STwrcT. ATLANTA. & CO. O*. SKILL clence, on Oglethorpe street. The fire was of ineendiary origin. It is high ly probable that an arrest will be made, as Mr. Ware has suspicions as to who the guilty party is. All reports to the contrary Maj. .McKinley will arrive in Thomasville about .Tan. 1. The Hanna home at Thomasvilie is now undergoing thor ring}! renovation, fences are being nev.lv painted, the law stables, always in good shape, are *>eing put in “apple pie” order for the arival of the now celebrated owner and his famous guest. The election for congressman in the Third district, to succeed the late Judge Crisp, will lie held on Dec. 16, the same day that the new supreme court judges are elected. Gov. Atkiu son has issued his proclamation to that effect. Charles Crisp, the son of the distinguished ex-member, will be chosen to succeed him without oppo sition for the unexpired term. Pursuant to notice published a ii’.eetiiig was held at the court house s . ltllr( j av for the purpose of iudor.s ing or condemning the city court of this county. A large number of citi¬ zens. irrespective of party, met and passed resolutions instructing Hon. J. R. Baggett, representative, to use In's utmost efforts to have the court abolished.- Dublin * correspondence in Morning News, Richard Wilson, son of ex-Tax Col hM-tor J. D. Wilson, of Fulton county, died Saturday morning from the ef¬ fects of a blow he received Friday in a runaway. He was using a Cnta way harrow, with two horses attach ed to ii. on his father’s farm on the ( battulmochcc river, when the horses became frightened and' ran away. They became unmanageable, and trying to get them under control, he lost his scat and was thrown in front of the harrow’ and the team passed over him. His skull was crushed either by a blow from the horses’ fvet or some part of the machinery, and he never regained consciousness *’ rom the time of his injury until he died. He was 17 years of age. Senator Yancey Carter will intro ce : nt thine- We handle about one deaten tmftl— q WCV’i. In* J. M A M. T. RICHARDSON. Piedmonl, 8. C Hot Springs Surpassed. A L-cf i . 1. P.. has done me ruore good tkoa Hir e ::ii - tr< . • int iit ct the Hot Springs, Ark. ’ .1 Mii5 M. b'VTON. Abcrde-n. Brown Ca, d. P.a-. lcs, Seres and Eruptions Cured. -real f-leasurr m testifying to the efficient Lr r. i - _ ar niciiicinc for skin disease# . i’ i suffered fer several years with 0: . v.: . rccable eruption on my face. • v? ^ » iu accordance with' direo Uu’-\ . .. —i t cu. Capt. ). D. JOHNSTON, PaV3(3 iar.. Ga. cf Johnston A Cat „:!(f a bill to change the tax law so as to prevent double-taxing land sold on bonds for title. When a man buys land and makes a partial payment, and gives his notes for the Ixalance, he has to pay tax on the full value 0 j- j a [,,] f roIJ1 the time the trade is made, though he may own but a small interest in it. At the same time the veiH ] er }, a . s to pay tax- on the T! otes given by the buyer and the val ( _ e rt .presented by the notes is double t . lxe(K This law is general, but has 1><>en c hailgef ] | n some states so that the payer and seller are taxer! only as their interests may appear. If a man has paid $500 on-&*$2,000 farm, he is taxed on $500 and the vendor, who still holds the title, is taxed on $1,500, the amount of his interest in Die property.—Atlanta Journal. j. R. Lawrence, the young Cedar Bluff, Ala., merchant, who was charged with obtaining goods from W. Tedcastle & Co., under false pretences, has returned to Home un¬ der the care of Sheriff McConnell. The amount involved is $149. Law¬ rence sold out his store and went to Mobile to attend a medical college and was traced to that point. He was tried before Justice Walter Har ris and bound over in the sum of $200. The question was raised as to the right to trial in Georgia or Ala¬ bama. A point was cited where a man shot another across a state line. the courts held that the trial must take place in the state where the injured party received his wound, and the case of Lawrence being anal ogus, he will be tried in Home. It is claimed he gave the representative of the ’Ledcastle & Co., a false .state¬ ment about his financial standing, ^ this re(>n . se , ltati „„ secured ^ )iU1 of _ ltome Tribune, “To give the cold shoulder” is said to have originated in a practice once common in France, and during Nor¬ man days in England also. When a g we ,»I outstajd his welyome, in stead of (he haunch of mutton or venison usually served at dinner, a cold shoulder of mutton was placed before his as a hint that he had bel¬ r 8*°*