The Waycross herald. (Waycross, Ga.) 18??-1893, April 02, 1892, Image 1

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OR anything kept in A FIRST CLASS DRUG STORE, AT.TAin PRICES* CO TO B. J. SMITH, Druggist, ■ ; Brad -Watson & Co's Lcadipg. pty. Store. I New Spring and Sdxbmt Goods. r ^«riT~ii'Ji! i*!M vol. xm. WAYCROSS, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1892. NO. 18. OFFICERS OF WARE COUNT V. WmmWl-orftoJ W M. Wil»*i—<l<rk ». f. RiUer—St*<-riir»n.l J«U..r J. i. WUkirnon—T«« Reftivei WStfBmSrUyner^tt'.-V cm OFFICERS, WAVCROSS, OA. Arthur M. K..l«ht, Mayor. A1 W A XrXid, W. \\ . Sharp. J. II J Q. Justice, H. II. Morphy. W. D. Hamilton. Clerk of City < fl \V. F. Parker. City AMcv*oraml ' Warren Jeolt, City Trw*“rrr. J th. Mir rat, Qtf Attorney. John P. Caaoo. City Mawhal W. M HommilW. Ottv Engineer. The Wayero* Herald, Official »* Organ. ■OIROOK F.Dt'OATIOV. M. Mar-hall, JL&"Tv’ J.cSSaCl. Johpun. 8. WSSEfc. II. P. Brew*.*. J."iJj'mcmili •tSJWf.mtal lligh Heiue.1 l.uU.liiil! •4JMTARV A WATKRWORKt* fOX'B, II. Muiphy.'l.m W.M Wilroi M. Alhert-.ii W \V A 0. Hun.ll' ln-nt John* II W H.-S II, K* off.,Clerk. ^AKlH 6 POWDER Absolutely Pure. A cream of tarter leaking powder. Highest of all in leavening Htrenglh. - 1/Ue*t l\ S. (,'orrrinnnit Fontl Hr/iort. IfoT.U. lt\Kia<; powhkHC.i.. IWWstll St N.Y. Kx Offlei K. »Rd* uieetn 2*1 and 4lh WednedayH at A 1- Kiwlhl.. \V M W M *. ▼file, Heoretary. ULA« KHIIKAH t HAKfEH MO. «. »*• A. j Meat* at Mn*onl« Hall, Plant Awnue, 1-t , Friday ui each mcmtli at 7:»» P- ni. : Comp. XV. W. Sharp**, II I 1»* r.x. ««>»'!• W. M. Somerville. Secretary. W AKKKIK1.U UIDUK M». H. «• uf j Meets every Monday night at 7;>»«•'« l«a-k Fred Pickett, C.C.; Lowthcr. K. U. an.l >• ; BMOTIIKHIIOOO MWOMOTW’K KM- , >< 2 0 X cl m & FROM THE LOVELY SHORES OP TAMPA BAY. The Place Where They Keep Balmy Breezes “on Draught,” Sunshine by the Yard, Good Cheer Lying Around Loose anil Fish, Flowers and Fruit Thrown In for Good Measure. Editor Hr fit hi ; We think your readers have once be^ fore heard of St, Petersburg, the metro}** oils of t!ie' l ‘L.frtfc* "Peninsula” that di vides the waters of the Gulf from those of Tampa Bav. Two mile, from thl» plucu und u h . lf Uf. u»r «h, mental fr* m Brothirh. block. IXTKMXATIOMA1. AWO. i»t hail. It's-t naciiikimtm. w X H day * nthly Drill nights I'm-.la; 'Mima mm, Rates One Dollar Per Day. MRS. M. A. CAMPBELL, Prop. I rhursdny VV A VC*«<MW IAHHJK I. ». «>. I .Meets every Monday evening «»t 7:71** «> J A. Joins. N. U.; D. Williams, Seen*. AMONG THE CHFKCHES. isk the p i public, fortulK-.* u *°“ r ‘ ,U fi!) > S |S5m J OHNSON’S RESTAURANT FflKMUYTKItlAX 4’IICRCII. Wlldains Stivet. lh ' Services on ever: first, at II o'clock Prayer meeting Tl o'clock. Sabbath v Sunday. Tire Kmi Wed i its dnesday aftern. Christian Knd. WHACK WWCOPAL ’endlctoii and M J. It. Hi. knell. I! a 11 "■ m. ami 7:0.1 AhiHil ‘J a. m. ■AFTiirr cur Albany »\*rn«r Pendleton and Mary Mm Servlet Preaching every Snbbatfi Hu p. m. Sunday School every Sabi Prayer Meeting every Thurs*lay Waycross, Ga. IN YOUMANS’ BLOCK | One Minute Walk from Union Depot. J. W. Strickland, ■>«. mile hack from Point Pinellasa, Spanish word, tm-uning |*oint of pines—on the shore** of » pretty lake, is a picturesque little church, built by the English for u small settlement of their countrymen mtar by. In front of the church sloping to the waters of the lake, are grand old oaks; in the rear stands a spectre-like guerden of spruce pines that stretch llieir many arms draped with hang ing nuns, Hwayiug in the gentle sea- breeze* that find their way through the thicker foliage near the water. They like ghosts of the world beyond, beckoning us to enter the temple, alw.ve which they tower, an.l hear of Last night ii Y. M. Johnson Block, Tl: open wtyk days 8 <A V A SN AII AI >\ KUTlSEM ENTS. Sunday* 4 t:> p. EDWARD LOVELL'S SONS, SAVANNAH, GEORGIA. Tt»r Only One I There Is n 3-inch di-play ndvertisoiu. this paper, this week, which has iu words alike except **ne wool. Tlio mi trueofcWi h new one upncarinv ca* h ' from the Dr Harter MwlUim- Co. honsc places a ••Cn-s.vnt" on every they make and imblish. l.*s»k for it, v*i them the name of the wonl, and they w i return you Book, Beautiful Lithograph* i Samples Free. jan'JS-ly Hardware. Tinware, Plows, This : Turjamtine Manufaetmers' Supplies, liar. Band an.l Flo,*}. IRON. Wheels, Axles and Wagon Material, I Guns, Pistols and Ammunition. d!9-ly & Adams. Udle* r they Jrrn»‘ «ntn*ls the . u* function*, with the many ills of womankind ily^RWey * j DEALERS IN n*i thm* i-ombats i Phints. Oils. Doors. Sash and Blinds, Terra Cotta and Sewer Pipes, %• dru»i»t ha* not p.t it I i BUILDERS HARDWARE, luphlet. with ditectk •in many ladies who have used it j t *ay enough in fav*.r of KL-ley's 1 mrI2-ly WUI You Da It t t Averill Paint, and paint but oiwe. In a lotQt period, or use somctliiiu: "said ’ to aa pood, and ivpaint every year or two ? Avi rill Point is the best. It is the haieUmi «*t; on other has so brilliant a gloss. If is chauper than any otliet at any price, U-- vauaa it outwear* all others. It lasted »• y«ara on the bouaca of K. H. Forbes. Win «h«*ter, N. Y12 rearvon bouses of \V. F Keynoids, Croton l ake, N. Y . 14 year* on bouacaor Mrs W. E i.'Oie, Mi Vernon, X. * • AvartU Paint has lieen in use 25 years and D guaranteed. If you ate urged t<> buv oUttxjMdnu demand proof the-- ' * ‘ Itf. Thaqr * • n-1. Hair an.l Cement. Corner (V>ngrr6 and Whitaker .<t*.. Savannah, : : Georgia. Sole A cent* for A*lamant Plaster. l>est prenarati*>n in the worl.l f.»r plastering waft* and ivilitijn. Write f..r eitvufnnt. dec 19-ly Tin: mmi H. N. FISH’S European Hotel i*eautiful and im- iok }*lace in this church, the Right Rev. Bishop Weed being present, on his annual visit to ad minister the rite of confirmation and look after the interests of the little flock. Miss Mary Singlehurst, Miss Susie Rob erts, a last years pupil of the Waycross High School; Mr. Frank Singlehurst, of St. Petersburg and Master Harry Stan ton, of I«akevieu, weie confirmed, after a abort hut eloquent sermon from the Bishop and a prayerful exhortation to the newly confirmed to be earnest and diligent in their faith and good works. He pictured in stirring, eloquent words, the capture of Babylon, the feast of Bel shazzar ami the handwritingou the wall, the translation of the mysterious writing, a warning to Belshazzar that In; would l*e slain mid his kingdom divided among the Medes and Persians, not because he had displeased the Lord by being a wicked man, but because he had been found wanting, because of what he had not done. The Bishop finds many Belshazzars in the world to-day. The pastor of the church, Rev. Noyle, returns soon to his mother country, Eng land, much to the regret of his congre gation. The Bishop has intimated that St. Petersburg, with her rapid growth, has need of a resident minister, and his people ardently hope that his wish will soon he realized, as they already hav» church building which would suffice f*>r the present. Chicago and Knoxville, Team, a: presented here among our wint. i, their proverbial spirit of aggran dizement sending them in search of new orld's to conquer, more trophies to bear to their curio-loving people. Our beautiful, magnetic sunshine loosens the relentless clutch of grippe, the warm lovely hay disperses rheumatics of limb and body. They go lack to their frozen climes exhilarated, magnetized, their trunks and boxes filled with beautiful shells that abound here and on the Keys, a few hours sail down the bay, their senses delighted ith the lienuty of our magnificent flora and foliage and laud and water scapes, their restless spirits soothed with the warm sea breezes. A whole avenue uf handsome houses has been erected during the past two mouths for winter homes for these people and many more are building. But there is a recommendation for our little growing city that few places South can give; it i- even a finer summer resort than winter, if that were (KMsible. At that time we are rarely without a cool breeze from either the gulf on the the eai*», the penin- Th* Tha question w not "What i« the tint T but "How lone will it U»t ?' ’ |k-*u ‘ sample *arJ U feahkmaMc J.ukwtorin- « • i FREE! | 4tt> one ending n« a card with .same and ad-in** «Ui Kveivc ty mail > j «aa|*lr our Bio**4 INmtl r . • YYashlnxkn, D. O.. Scpt^wUr 25. lv*l. a'on a ttent a Cowr m. Gentlemen U*l epriity 1 hxd twenty ’ Ktcn toils. 1 unfit for work 1 Ji.td a : SSjEa*^. 1 iTSr, J is \ awtd to liquid furtu, an.l after il*e un- >4 , RESTAURANT, t-uviinmili, v : eocgl i BQTELER. nomui* NatLmal E.'on.*t»f-t Capital Chemical Co., t Wajhinftcn. D. C A MAN £2X8460 HIS NEIGHBOR l: u LUDOtK S BATES, SinnU.Gi. g^jartcstarJtaHg; iWawt«iiwr»tsriTmopinia.i OI R GF0R6U POST. “Same* mtm DmFrwkL win utm;n i— 0mm■ ■ ■» Qat«r Our AiirtWR Poets being bora, not made, no un toward circuhiatncal, out prevent their genius from finding,«xpra*ion. Want of etlucation puts no eeal on the lips of the poet, whose hcaatilul fancies shape themselves into soag while the hand is the plow and thw’ feci in the Barrow. Burn*, if he marked the course of his plow-point with the farmer’* eye, saw also with a poet’s heart and soul the modest crimson-tipped flowi it rv unjum uuusuH-uyjiw uun “ and iiniaortalired it In a poem not only election. He reached the presidency of rare sweetneas, Hut of life’* pathoa and philosophy. Neither the statesman’s anxious cares, and physical turmoil* of an editor sufficient to daunt the soul of the poet, when Nature has put her seal of genius i him. And thus our beautiful human song sters come to us often from the waste- places of the cartb, their songs ail the truer for the knowledge of the woe that lies at the bottom of human life, and sweeter for the sympathy learned through suffering. We have a Georgia poet, not yet in the tueredian'of life, who a few years ago was the ohscure^editor of a little weekly paper published in Bmithville, Ga., a town of '400 inhabitants. With the publication of Sung* of a Dag, Frank L. Stanton takes his rank, no longer as a writer of poems, but as a poet. Among the poems that first gained him recognition outside of our own Htate are the verses with the sad refrain “Weary the Waiting, Weary/’ WKXMY TH* WAtTllttf. There’s an end to all toiling soma day—sweet day, (But it's weary the waiting, weary 0- Thcre’s a harbor somewhere in a peaceful Where the sails will be furled and tlie ship will lay . -hor—somewhere in the far-away— (But it's weary the waiting; weary f) There’s an end to the troubles of souls op- prest. (But it’s weary the waiting, weary!) Some time in the Arturo when (Jod thi beat, lie’ll Uy ns tenderly down to rest, hlnks (But it's weary the waiting, weary I) There’s an end to the world w ith Its stoi frown, t it’s weary the vraitiua, weary I) ’s a light somewhere that no dark d burdens are All laid And who OF PERSONS PLACES AND THINGS, Mixed With Judgment, We Hope, Spiced With Variety and Seasoned With Good-wlU. President Diaz lias already served three terms as chief executive of the Re public of Mexico, and is likely to l*e chosen to succeed himself in the edming through a revolutionary movement very similar to tlrnt of the ill-starred Garza, except in that it was successful. By his exhibition of good statesmanship, his know ledge of political science and hi* keen perception of business principles applied to the commercial advancement of Mexico,-_he'made himself so necessary to his country as to cause the annul ment, during the term of office of his successor, Manuel Gonzales, of the one term statute, and he non bids fair to serve his country for lite. The greut Mexican railways have been built under his administration.- He is a progressive man, therefore is opposed by the church power, which lias been cru elly oppressive and exacting in Mexico, and he is popular with the masses of the people whom he is liberating,by the lib erality of his administration, from many kinds of tyranny. It i due to his (But itV weary the waiting, weary-fl There are »o many pleasing ones, “Way worn,” Thy face,” Her beauti ful hands,” “When Jim was dead,” and a recent one, not yet incorporated in the l>ook collection, that reminds us of Alice Cary’s most exquiaiu heart- touches. Wc give it to our readers: FALLS? A*1£ST. Only a little dust— So small that • rose might hide it; in God—or l try to treat, * bwide It. When i kneel in dork I kneel the dark and say: 1 only dream that I weep; She would not leave me and go away— ihe has only fallen asleep. west or the bay etila being here only four miles wide. We have neither musquitoes nor flies summer. We have abundance of the finest of fish and plentiful fruits. For nearly a half mile out bay is a shallow stretch of water that is She ht 'aueft asleep, as oft She climbed to my heart to rest, Her white arms twining my neck, as i down on a dove’s sweet breast And kLs*ed her there * ie twin That lead to the morning light. .And that she will wake I km I wake I know, And smite at A grief like this; It could not be she would leave fostering care that much American cap ital has been invested in Mexico, where it is said to be quite as safe to the in vestor as in bis own country. l>iaz maintains u distinctly friendly attitude towards Americans, and wo are certainly bound to hope for his success .it Ihe ,„,|K Mr. Keiman’s recent lectures in At lanta, and elsewhere, on the subject of his life-work, the investigation into, and exposure of, the Russian system of penal servitude and other Russian barbarities, excited the intensest interest of an indig nant; kind. But it is a feature of the age that the two sides of a question are sure to lie heard, and Mr. Harry de Windt, Russian traveller and investiga tor, gives quite a rosy view of that great dark land we have been calling the blot on our ninteenth century civilization. Possibly Mr. Kennan’it book, published aonte years ago, has Wen the happy it struinent in bringing al*out the bctt< etate of things Mr. Windt finds and re A Tale or tbe Period. “You do lova nte, then V* ‘ Yea, with all my soul.” “Am I the only woraau y “Yes ' “Do swear it 7 “Yet, I swear it!” “Will you never love another?” “No, never—never !” “Did you never kiss any lips but mine ?’* “No.” Do yon swear it ?” I swear it,” You never had your arms about other woman, thus ?” J ".WILLIAMS. Attorney at Law. MAYCR088, «... GEORGIA. “No.” told another that you loved her, and looked into her luring eyei, and allowed her head t "No/ eight, ami never knew what it is to love ami be loved ?” “Yes, I swear it, Angela." She looks at him a long time in silent astonishment, and then; “Charlie,” she says, “you’re either the greatest liar or the greatest chuiup in New York. Where have you been all these years ? Life must have been a dreary waste. There! go»*d night. ’re too good for me—too good for earth, in fact; Heaven is your home. Suppose we break the engagement. I’m running a kindergarten.’’ - The t >1*1 ie Columbus Enquirer-Sun gives interesting information uliout the great Okefcnokee swamp, that is almost Jons .McDonald, Attorney and Counselor at ... Law. tV A\ CROSS, . 1IE0R01A Omciupstah^h, WtbMi Bio,*. JQ A. WILSON, “ Attorney at Law, WAYCROSS, . . OEOKUIA. J~ • I- THOMAS, Attorney at Law, WARMS noRo. . GEORGIA J} C. CANNON, " - Attorney at Law, WAYCROSS, . . OKOROIA. Om<-i up stair, ip Wilson BliK,. Will practice In the Rrutuwiol:Circuitutd sett here by spe, ial contract. Nov 15- SW-ly. J. X-m. OR.AXA7T.my ATTORNEY AT LAW. WAYCROSS, GEORGIA. Under the terms of the legislative act >f sale, the syndicate is required to re- elaiin the Okefenokee territory, uml that work is now progressing rapidly. Three They have all kinds of inventiv cranks out West—it is a big country in which a man’s vagaries have abundance of room to expand. One James Watson, of Kansas, has been writing our Secreta ry of War to get permission to put be fore him an invention he claims will put an end to war. It is not a patented peace offering, by any means, but a bomb filled with gas so deadly that when dropped from a balloon into the enemy’s ranks will produce instant and general asphyxiation. Our secretary of war cannot l>e blamed for preferring this bomb inventor to remain on his Kansas prairies. His theory is that war, by the use of his invention, would be made so terrible os to cause nations to abandon it for arbitration of their difficulties. or four huudred hands are now constant ly employed, and the great coital, which is to drain the swamp into the St. Ma ry’s, au*l afterwards to be used to Hoat out the millions of cypress timber is al most completed, a work representing au outlay of $100,000. The entire cost of can-ving out the plans of the syndicate is estimated at $250,000. An immense profit is anticipated iu marketing the forests of cypress and long leaf Georgia pine. The swamp, said the Captain, is literally the paradise of sportsmen. The waters are alive with fish, and especially black bass, running to sixteen and twen ty }*ounders, which the Okefenokee na tives take in great quantities with the ordinary bow and arrow. The place abounds with ducks, mallard and teal, and this sport »h splendid. The deer is « common game, and bear is plentiful. There have beeu found also four or five Indian mounds, as yet in tact, and it is expected the contents will be found of great interest, and perhaps of value In relation to the early history of the In dian in Georgia. Captain Jackson takes a trip to the swamp every month or two, generally carrying a party of friends for the sport. He expecta to go there from here, where he will be joined by Mrs. Jackson, Miss Jackson and a number of friends from Savannah, for a few day' outing in the swamp. With never a goodnight kiss! :o 1 kneel in the dark and say: 1 only dream tlut I weep; She would not leave n While many of his poems have a ca dence of sadness through them, he strike* a happy, cheery vein in his “Songs of the Soil,” which are after the style, somewhat, of James Whitcomb Rily and Will Oarleton, in their dialect verses. “On tho beach at . Cumberland,” “The ole pine box,” and “Summer-time in Georgia,” are among these popular pro ductions of his pen. Aa a lair exposi tion of this style of his work, we close with “The Lightning Age.” The Dakota divorce law should be re pealed. It is becoming a national scan dal, and Dakota a Mecca for those who find a matrimonial harness chafing them. Marriage the same day the parties are divorced, to parties better loved, are lie- coming quite common. tux Lijaraiao a sc. What's the world »-cornin' to, a frlWr’d like to know. When they’re uuldu’ ice' to order an’ man u&cturin’ snow t An’ now. as if to vex ns, another thing w hear. They're matin’ rain-In Texas without word o’ prayer; ., h« rittesgthsr’rejPteeoot o k «fcLt, it ’pears For %Sn they bare • cloudy night they l the stars by steam I - Vs th# clainfln’ r And here’s th* Ughtnlo’. with a song, pto- the delight of women and children, for j *„• ct^tbestreetcaie skfmain’ ’long with, there they can, with perfect safety, bathe, ■ - out a mol* or b«w! row, learn to swim and gather shells to | jj,- that ringU.’ telephone. whUh their heart’s content. The railroad pier j is nearly a mile long, running out to j £2 "»*. '“Hf* »»*■« An’ hSvTtt* WWd bath house, a dancing paviihon, area-! mates your menu... taurant, where vou can cat ovatea and An’, like a woman. wWi) warn talk, fcetgu *• ■ - ' nuDitt. 1 , out of the water, ‘ Ikin’ sol ires m cna "pESnTgreft, wl **▼*!». _ , rbich tub but s fish packing house, landings for steam- ! Lord ^how the wprid^nmvtg* cp, beneath 1W n « fim- It.it,!; r«uu,.„i «a . i 1 » ihk I-IUUIAU. 1IM !* ; JAAIM 1 number of elegant houses with fine, airy ^ Bat when X rooms to l«-t, furnished. In there,' with ; _ be In 1 the wont like fitosy in Unvn l.rtintl tL, air anti nalM niJifr-jiv : . y ** on, in* (till thry eitais. .omfoiubly on . ; ... .~T~ Gnthaai tractor, an-1 orauiw. Do« ’ Wc ’’ *W*. which ^ raham crackers and orange?. Doe ’ not safest that possibly we hast her; Ik k«n MOS*>* *r*n of nmth. IdnnrtaR'te doubl, the mooSy. M. P. Temcal A Cb., Chrem Bfai, Mrs. Briskie: “Johnny, did the doc tor call while I was out ?” Little John ny, (stopping his play): “Yes. He felt my pulse, an’ looked at my tongue, and shook his head, and said it was a serious case, and he left this perscription and said he would call again before night.” Mrs. Briskic: “Gracious It wasu’t you 1 sent hint to see. It the Jiaby.” The two newest missionary enterprises Chicago are the work for the evangel ization of the police, in care of Miss Catherine Gurney, of England, and the coffee wagon, a temperance saloon on wheels which goes from place to place where working men are congregate*! at the noon hour, dispensing its cheering and unintoxicating beverage. The coffee is given free, which makes us fear the movement is founded in a rather danger ous sentiment which may not last long. But we welcome its benefits, whether long or short-lived. We must strive to develop the health and well-being of every individual. Ever}* questiou ultimately becomes a moral question, and will finally have be settled upon an ethical basis. It will have to be settled by thought, for thought rules the world. Improvement is possible, but no sudden transforma tion, involving change in the constitu tion of man, is possible.—B. F. Under wood. " Carnegie says that he who dim pos sessed of millions of available wealth, which was free to him to administer du ring his lifetime, dies disgraced. Surplus wealth, he says, is a trust which a is bound to administer for the good of the people from whom that wealth c PROFESSIONAL flAWTv^ xdw. a. uxme*. Stvox W HtTCM »w. e.«! HITCH & MYERS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, *'P SUir, Wilson’, Block. WAYCROSS, GEORGIA. J *•• SWEAT, ~ ’ Attorney at Law. . - - 0K0RU1A. 1,1 Brans wick and South- <ff §3«22ft5SS •"* NOV. 15-’90-Iy Oflic t the Wilson Building. WALLACE MATHEWS, 1. D., PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. \VA YCKUSS, : : : : GKORG1A. DR.1E. W. SMITH. Office at B. J. SMITH'S DRUG STORK. Residence Hicks .Street. WAYCROSS, - GEORGIA. J^R. .4. P. ENGLISH, Physician and Surgeon, WAYCROSS - GEORGIA. iP All calls promptly attended. *^t JJK. I>. E. .MrMASTER, “ ’ Physician and Surgeon, WAYCROSS, - - . GEORGIA. * All cells promptly attended to. Yocm ans’ Jewelry store. Office hour* from y to 10x. Can be found at my residence, corner Pendleton street and Brunswick av enue, when not professionally engaged. Jnly 4, 1WH—ly. * C ^ KB ’ DR. RICHARD B. NEW. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Office at Miss Remshart'e, WAYCROSS, : GEORGIA. jan 30-6in JJH. «. P. FOLKS, ' Orricx and Residence on Gulf Street. WAY’CROSS. GEORGIA. DR. T. A. BAILEY, DENTIST, Office over Bank, On Plant Avenue, WAYCROSS, : GEORGIA. A. 1IOLLIN.8HEAD, Dentist, WAYCROSS. r - - GEORGIA. Ornca over South Georgia Bank. J R.DEDGE, . DENTIST, WAYCROSS, - - - GEORGIA Orricx up stairs in the Folka Block. D ,R. JAS. C. RIPPARD, Physician and Surgeon, (late of Pennsylvania.) Special attention given to Genito Urina- Snrgen ~ ry Surgery. Can alt B. Goodrich’s Drag store. April 14-1C Can always be fimnd at Dr. E. WARREN LOTT. Fire, Life and Accident In surance Agent, WAYCROSS. - - - GEORGIA. ■Nothing hut first-class companies repre- Time Tried and Fire Tested Husband, impatiently to wile: “I told you I only wanted half a cup of tea and, aa usual, you’ve filled it to the top. Don’t you know what halt full is?” Mother-in-law, grimly: “She ought to by this time. • ;— The oldest folks’ dance on record came | “If you are tbe girl I take you for,” began young Mr. Dinwiddle, in the i course of a conversation with Miss j Singles. "But bow do you take me ?” interrup- ; ted the girl, with a leap year look in her eyes. “How do you take me—for better The Poisonous Arid* off recently near $appington, Mo. The J j u ih e blood, should ba taken up and dance was led by Mr. and Mrs. Parke, removed by the Liver and Kidneys, but aged, respectively, seventy-nine sn«l sev- j these organs get out of order—fall to do enty-eighl years, and the youngest dancer ! ih e i r trorfc, a nd the result is Rheuma- in tbe ret was Mm Mary Parke, a merry j ti si„. There are a thousand remedies young maid of fifty. The music was i fv, r the Liver and Kidneys, but there is furnished by Prof. Erick \V ells, aged j on ]y one cure for Rheumatism, and that seventy-five, wb<s« fiddle was made by |Dr. Drummond’s Lightning Remedy, hts great-grandfather, and the tunes ( A large bottle may be had at the drug- played were older than the fiddle. j gists, or will be seat by express to any r * — address on receipt of $5. That is the price of a cure, and any one who is hav- All 1 ask on butter and cheese is a trial. These goods I sell on their own merits, aa thev speak for thamsalres. W. a Tate-. * ing an argument with tbe Rheumatism, vul feel folly repaid by the first dose. Drummond Medicine Ca, 4ft-50 Maiden Lane, New York. Agents wanted. 18-2i Fire, Life and Accident Insurance Com panies, and REAL ESTATE OFFICE, KNIGHT & ALLEN, mr *9 ty , Waycross. ga. J.M. JENKINS & CO., W. A. WRIGHT, Justice of the Peace, (Post-office Building—Plant Avenue,) WAYCROSS. - - GEORGIA. —Special attention given to tbe collection of all claims. Ornca bouts £ 12 m.. and from 2 r s from 8 a. u. to . aowaoruxu ROVBOTHAM & MORPHY. Architecta and Builder*. WAYCROSS. - - - GEORGIA. Fluu nrf S^cUntkn FuibM. CHEWACLA LIVE. WALTERTOWN BRICK. Faktrtf. ■numfiS IsaBiiiaMMKSMwBi — ymm