Newspaper Page Text
THE JOURNAL.
J. D. HOYL, F.OITOR.
DAWSOiI, (>i:OKIA:
- —> > —II
THURSDAY MtRNING, March, 14,78
I I I ll
A VISIT TO ALBANY
Her Coming Fair.
As we strcngly suspected that our
young friend, Jesse Weston, of the
Alln.ny Fetes, ns editors often do, whs
“stretching the hlaoket” a little in Ins
glowing description, of the pieparat on
being made 1 y the Southwest Georgia
Industrial Assocutin lor their coin
ing fairs in that city, we went over
last week to see about it. Soon Blt r
our arr'vul, we were driven out to the
grounds by the Jesse aforesaid be
hind a dashing team. Much to cur
gratification we found that all thut we
had read and heard about tiio big
preparation going on w .s true.
\\ e found a large uumbei of hands
busily engaged in laying the tounda.
tion loi the mainTuilding, which is to he
c mpleted in time for the first fair in May
nest The building will cost over
#2,600, and require 80.000 feet of
lumber in its construction. Oilier
l.iborers were setting out tree*, flowers
and shrubbery, grading walks, dri
ves etc. About 1,000 trees hav H
been set out, and ihedriv a and walks
are fringed with flowers. The grounds
are each sed with a substantial fence
and (tables for stock arealready built.
The drive aluug the liver bank is a
very pretty one. There is a stretch of
river t Mt least a mile long iu full view
from the grounds, affording and txcij
1 nt track for boat racing. Our young
friends, Weston and Wilder, both a
lean nud lank as ever Cassius was,
hare organized a boating club which
they have presumptuously named the
“Fat Men’s Ciuh,” and will euter for
the p:ize offered for the fastest boat.
The fact of twj such spindle-shanks
c intending in the athletic sport of
boating will, no doubt, attract atten
tion, and, wh<u thay pull the oars,
may to see.
The managers of the Southwest
Georgia Industrial Associatien are
evidently m earnest, and intend to
“make a spoon or spoil a horn.”
They are Jspeuding a great deal of
money, and we hope that their most
sanguine expectation may be mure
than realized. One thing is certain,
they are going to have one ot the beat
fair grouuds iu the st ile, and if the
people of this section don't sustain
them, they (’he people) will miss one
of the best opportunities they have
ever bad to advance their own inter
eats.
Much desire is manifested at Albany
t.* have Terrell couoty take an active
interest in the fain. Those posted is
tbe matter say that Terrell has more
hue stock than Dougherty, and they
are very anxious to have some of out
fine hoiees, mu’es, h< gs and cattle on
exhibition at their fairs.
We met many friends during onr
s’ay in Albany who treated us well
aud often. Not the least of whom was
Mr. Merrick Barnes, of the Barnes
House, at whose hospitable board we
fared sumptuously every day, and
were gratified to see that his constant
attention to the comfort of his guest
is rewarded with a liberal patronage
Mclntosh, of the Advertiser, regaled
us for awhile with some very inter* st
ing gossip in his comfortable sanctum
Evans, of the Hews, had just returned
from the court of Rex. at New Or
leans, and was looking rather battered
and dilapidated after the long trip.—
The elder Weston was down the B.
& A. R R. e< itirg his sawmill.
PKI Boyd, of Leary, was on bis way
home from a pleasure trip up the St.
Johns, with a pocket full of polished
sea beans,—said he enjoyed thj trip
very much, but that Florida was a
better place to spend money thau to
make it. Rev. W, M. Russell, an old
veteran oi the Georgia press, was pre
paring to start a paper in Orlando,
Floiida. The merchants w°re busily
engaged sifting cut the few customers
that had a little cash from large num
ber who wished to buy on a credit. —
Anij thus ende*h eur tup to Albany.
Ihc Morin.
The wind storm of last Sunday
seems to have prevailed pretty gener
ally throughout the state. In Atlanta
a small Episcopal church was blown
down and a few poisons who wers tt
it at the time slightly injured. The
roofs were blown from other
buildings in the ei y. Some damage
is also reported at other places.
Gold s now worth only one cent in the
dJlar more than greenbacks.
Major Genera! Winfield Seed Han
cock reviewed the U. 8 soldiers station
cd at Atlanta, a few days ago.
Are there any old Soldiers
among ie> T
Co'gross has just passed a hilt
granting a pension of eight dollar*
permonth toa l surviving soldiers who
served in the army or navy fo. 14 day*
in the war of 1812, aud the surviving
widows of the same. Also restoring
to the pension lolls the names of al|
those who may have heeu dropped
from the buds in constquer.ee of par
ticipation iu the rebellion. Those who
ser.ed in any of the Indian wars are
also entitled to pensions under the
bid. The bill allows nc back pay
but on'y a pension fioro the time of its
passage to the death of the benefit - /
aiy.
There may be some oMjindian fighters
among us who are euiiiled to the ben
efit of the bill. We have a copy on
baud and will give iulermation to
th se wishing it. Call iu, old vets, aud
let’s see if you are eutitled tc a peu
sion.
Suppose we have an editor Govern
or next time? What say you broth
rer ? There’s Major Jones Thompson.
H. H J. Aunt Martin, of Girard,
Charley Willingham, Weston, Han
cock, ltandli C.rieton, Pat Walsh,
Mike Dwinell, Howell, and Deacon
Shivers of the o'der sect, and Pin
dloton, Giatibeirv, Hoyle, Martin,
Mffmford, Pat Wood*, Dorae Alexan
der, Caliriess, Park*, Christopher,
Anthony, Grubb, Waterman, Christy,
Harty Mclntosh. Hansell, Si
Hawkins, aud Sister Anderson, of
Convington, of the younger sect, not
•o sneak of bachelor Triplett, Count
Goriuatine, Brick'.op, Baron Sczodont,
of Griffiu, an I old Giizzly, of the
Rome Tribune. Let’s have an editor
Governor. Old Capital,
Well, that is e"ough to elect any
man governor. We propose that the
name of Eugenial Speer, of the Old
Capital , be added to the list, and that
we draw straws at the next meeting of
the press association to decide which
one of us shall sacrifice himself for
the good of thestatb. Brother Euge
uial, in our opinion, would stand a
good chance for the place on his own
merits, if lie did not persist in hiding so
much of his ma(ive, pleasant and
intelligent forehead from the public
gaze under an odious beaver a world
two large for him. Como out of that
hat, gentle Eugenial! If the State
does not know you aie in there, she
strongly suspects it.
The Romance of Rockville. —Mr'
J. C. Harris of the Atlanta Constitution
is soon t > commence a story in the
weekly edition of that paper under
the above title. Mr. Htrris is the
genrleman who, as compiler of the
•‘Georgia news” column of the Sa
vannah Fetes, and later as one of ibe
editors of the Constitution, has achie
ved distinction as a writer of humor
ous peices. Iu hit line he hat uo
superior in the state, and wedonbt not
that the‘‘Romance of Rocfcviiie” will
be worth reading, which it a darned
sight more than we are willing to say
of most newspaper stories.
Several papers are making nomina
tion for tha office of Governor to sue.
ceed the present incumbent. Among
these nominated are Gen. Toombs
Col. Hardeman, Senator Lester, Mr.
Malntyre, Ex-senator Norwood, and
others. Somebody must be very anx
ious ‘ote <he first toname a governor.
We have no such ambition.
A sad story comes from Texas. A
Miss Moore was preparing for marri
age and invited a friend, Mies Wil
liams, to assist her. In rumaging
through a drawer an old pistol was
carelessly handled by Miss Williams,
resulting in the shooting and instant
death of Miss Moore. Bhe was bu
ried on the day that was to have
been her wedding day, and Miss Wil
liams has become insane.
Kevins vr Appeabances.—A De
troit widow owns aud occupies a co'-
tage under the shadow of a church
steeple, which is supposed to be in
anger of felling when a high wind
blows. At midnight, a tew nights ago,
when the wild winds t>!e-v fiercely, she
got up and dressed, called tbe children
up and dressed them, and folded her
arms with the remark • “Now, then if
that steeple falls and kills u, people
will know that we were a respectable
family, anyhow. George, you brush
up your hair a little more; and,
Sarah, you take your leet off the
stove-hearth and pin your collar
more to the left.”
■ ■ -■ '
Cuthbert Appeal-. A family with
two ox teams aod seveal head of ock
passed through our town ac Wednes
day last, on their way to Worth coun
ty from Texas. When they emigrated
to the West they did not sell out their
land in Georgia, fearing that they
might wish to return, and now they
have gone back to tbe old homestead,
resolved to remain chere. They have
been ten weeks on the rip, thus far.
Moral: If you will go to Texas or nay
other far off locality, leave something
behind to fall back on. Moral No
-2; Don’t leave “Old Georgia” at all'
Ex Gov. Bullock is now treasurer of
tbe Allan’s cotton factory company.
Tin; Philanthropist.
“Does ny ofde goni’len understan
what felantiopy inemis?” akd Bi oth
er Gardner ia tie rose anil folded is
alines acinus bis noble l.ieast It
*a* a bug time before I'elix I'mea.l
lifted bis (Midy and replied : “I spool
data for lan heipist am a pus-on dat
feels a heap Sony for da pour an is
al eig wantin’ to better de conditi* n
of his nayburs.” “You is mu dan
six-fifih* kerru.t,” continued the Pres
ident. “Do felanterpist sits dowu
befo’ a rousin good fire on a
cold day an’ wi-hes dat everybody
else had such afire. He doan’ take
money out’u his pocket to huy wood
an’ coal for de poor, but he figures up
imie blh Die by which all de money
au’ ail de po’ folks is to tie devided up
somehow so dat eleiy dollar will bat>
a man an’ ebery man a dollar. It
be b’ars dat any one starved to death,
lie figures up the amount tib de grain
crop devides de bushel* by the num
ber o’ poperlation an’ makes it plain
dat ebeiy pussnn is ’titled to ober
thiity bu"hels oti wheat dis y’ar.—
De ferlant'iierpist wishes dat de po’
cbil’en had clothes, but he doan’ buy
’em eny. He wishes dat all de bad
folks would reform, but he dosn’
walk ’ruun’ among deni for fear of
gittin’ de shine otFn his boots. He
adveikutes homes for crippled nu’
aiged an’ unfor.una'e, an’ nex’ day
signs a petisbuin to flow a one-aruied
soldier nul’ii a posisbun paying * dol
| lar a day. Geui’leo, de cull’d raee
am graded down, even below de
Turk, but I is ob de solum opinyuu
data good square nigger am forty
rods abed of a ferlantherpist ui’
gainin’ at ebeiy jump-” Detroit Free
Press.
A Sinoulak Accideet. —A singular
and fatal accident oecuredon Tuesday,
to a laborer named Cavenaugh, at
Lexington. A faithful farm hoi so, uam
ed Billy, that bad done doty about
the premises for upward of twemy
years, haviDg become old and worth
less, this man and another were given
orders to kill and buiy it. The grave
had been dug, the carcass drawn along
side, aud they were in the act of roll
ing it in, when somehow one of the
horse’s feet caught iu the frock ot
Cavmaugh aud rolled him in too. As
he weut down his head struck on the
side of the trench and oroke histieck
He died instantly, a'most without a
gasp. Just befoie he was caught,
while they were rolling in the carcass,
he called to his iellow-work-u.an,
“Here goes your last roll, old Bill.”
—Loiorence (Mass.) Eagle.
The residence of Colonel Herbert
Fielder accideDtly caught fire in the
roof, and Miss Lula Fielder ran up
stairs to the second story, out on the
piazza roof, thence to the main roof by
a ladder, up the slant to the comb,
and brushed away the sparks and
soot until the danger was passed, and
then descended to the ground in safe
ly, Such prompt 'action and such
presence of mind is seldom displayed,
and thbre was about this inoideiT. a
cast of heroism not often met in every
day life.— Cuthbert Appeal.
■■ ■ -
There was a duel, the other day in
Eberton. Ga-, between a newspaper
man and a countryman It was a sham
duel on the part ot the former, but
stern reality to the latter. The coun
tryman fired first, and to his untutor
ed e}e his antagonist fell dead. “Foul
play,” shouted ore second ot the quil
driver; “Murdei,” cried the other, “let
me kill the scoundrel,” and he seized
a shot gun and fired its two blank
cat fridges at him. The countryman
took to hie heels and ran six miles in
forty mi: utes.
A Sight thatDbove a Woman Mad.
Hugh Finnegan, of No 402, E.
23d street, died in Bellevue Hospital
ou the 4th of December f pneumonia,
and a post mortem examination was
made. His wife learned of bis death,
and while wandering about tbe dead
house looking for his body, entered
tbe operating room, and fainted on
seeing her husband’s corps, that was
still bloody. She was taken home by
friends and has constantly been haunt
ed by tbe spectacle that her husband’s
body presented. Yesterday she be
came a raving maniac and was locked
up in a padded cell in Bellevue Hospit
al.— N. Y. World, 2d.
An English clergymen relates that
two English sisters bad an audience
with the late Pope Pius IX , and as
they were withdrawing one of them
liugered. The Pope asked her what
she wished, and she, being a convert
to the Roman Cathode faith, answer
ed • “The prayers of your Holiness,
so that we may not be separated alter
death/’ The Pope placing his hand
upon her clasped hands as she knelt,
answered; “Daughter, those who love
God will not be separated in the next
world.”— Few Yokr Sun.
A Big Lg.
A stick of timber 84 feet long and
squaring 22 inches at tne little end,
was cut by Mr Z T. Knight and
others, on his father’s placo in this
county, last week. Sixteen mules were
required to transport it to tbe river, a
distance of six hundred yards. It is
to be floated down to Drew’s mill A
pretty huge log we call it. Quitman
Free Press.
■■■
A Love Tbaoedi,— John Gum
brioger and Maggie Lydia occupied a
room at theLindell House at St-Louis
on Monday nigbt, and yesterday
morning they were both found dead.
He had shot bis companion and then
himself. GumLringer was in the em
ploy of the girl’s fa:her who had re
futed to allow them to get married-
Qcebt: —“Why will men smoko coin
mon tobacco, when they can buy Mar
burg Bros. 'Seal of Forth Carolina,' at
the same pries?”
Hytlis are but frymboHof
Truth.
As the scholar sops in the vain hut
beautiful mythologies of the ancients
the embodied expiessions of the hun
gry hun,no sonl, blindly grouping f-1
tar the Infinite, so the pbysic.an sees
in that popular myth of the six
teenth cen:ury the fountain of per
petual health and youth—sn express
ion of the longings ofsuffering humtni- j
ty for a remedy that should forever ■
prevent the iurutsion of disease - The
wilds ol Europe were ransacked for
this wonderful fountain, asd Pone de
Leon sought for it in the cypress
swamps and tangled everglades of our
sunny Fioiida. Men have searched
for it everywhere and anywhere but
where it really is-in the human body
itself. The blood is the real fountain
of perpetual health and youth' When
this source is oorr upted, the painful
and 60now-pioducing effects are visi
ble in many shapes. The multifari
ous fotms ia winch u manifests it
self would l’orm subjects upon which
I might write volumes. But as all
the varied forms of disease which de
peud upon bad blood are cured, or
best treated. I y such medicines as
take up from this fluid and excrete
from the system the noxious ele
ments, it is not of practical importance
that I should describe each. For
instance, medical authors describe
abcut fifty varieties of skin disease,
but as they all require for their cure
veiy similar tieatment, it is of ho
prac ical utility to know just what
name to apply to a certain foim of
skin disease, so you know how best
lo cure it. Then again, I might go
on and desciibe various kiuds of
scrofulous sores, fever sores, white
swellings, enlarged glands, andulceis
ol varying appea, ance; might describe
fiow virulent poison may show its If
iu vati jus forms of eruptions, ulcers,
sore throat, bony tumors, etc., but as
ad these various-appearing manifesta
tions of bad blood are cured by a
uniform means, j deem such a course
unnecessary. Thoroughly cleanse the
blood, whiuh is the great fountain ol
life, and good digestion, a fair skin,
buoyant spirit, vital s'rangtb, and
soundness of constitution, will all re
turn to us. For this purpose Dr.
Pieice’s Golden Medical Discovery
and Purgative Pelletsare pre-eminent
ly the articles needed. They are war
ranted to cure tetter, saltrheum,
scald head, St. Anthony’s fire rose
rash orerysiplas,ring-worms, pimples,
blotches, spots, eruptions, pustules,
boils, carbuncles, sore eyes, rough
skin, scurf, scrofulous sores and swel
lings, fever soies, white swellings,
tumors, old sores or swellings, affec
tions ot the skin, throat and boner,
and ulcers ot the liver, stomach, kid
neys. and lungs.
Nellie has a four year-old sister
Ma y, who complained to her mama
that her ’button ahneswere hurting.’
‘Why, Mattie, you’ve put them on the
wrong feet. Puzzled aud ready to
cry, she made answer,‘What’ll I do,
mama? Tbey’s all the feet I’ve got.’
A colored man at Vicksburg feel
from the deck of a steamboat tbe oth
er day, was sucked under a coal barge,
came up in time to catch his breath
before he slid under a raft a mile long,
and finally scrambled ashore down at
Warreaton. about seven miles below,
with the remark, “No use tryiu,’ ye
kaint drown a deep ua er Babtist!”
Our Govsmor, Colquitt, recently
went to Washington. They pro
nounced him a five looking mao, and
said he wore the neatest boot iu the
city.
How Watches are Made.
It will be apparent to any one, who will ex>
amine a Solid Gold Watch, that aside from
the necessary thickness for engraving and
polishing, the large proportion of the precioas
metal used, ia needed onljato stiffen and bold
the engraved portions in place, and supply
the necessary solidity and strength. Tbe
surplus gold ia actually needless, so far as
UTiLrfT and beauty are concerned. In
JAMES BOSS’ Patent Stiffened Oold Watch
Cases, tbie waste of precious mete I is over
come, iDd tbe same solidity and strength
produced at horns one-third to one-half of
the usual east of solid oases. This process
is of the most simple nature, as follows : A
plate oi composition metal, specially adapted
to the purpose, has two plates of solid gold
soldered one on each side. The three ate
tbeo passed between polished steel rollers,
and the result is a strip of heavily plated
oompo-i i on, fiom which the cases, backs,
centres, bezels, Ac., are cut and shaped by
suitable die* and formers. The gold in these
cases is sufficiently thick to admit of all
kinds of chasing, engraving and enamelling;
and engraved cases have been carried un
til worn perfectly smooth by lime and use
without removing the gold. These cases are
for *ale by ail jeweler*, and a r e guaranteed
bv .Special Certificate to wear for 20 years.
If your jeweler does not keep them, send to
Haost<zA Taocrie, Ledger Building, Pb ila-*
dulphia, for illustrated catalogue.
The Weekly Telegraph.
W* desire to call of readers to
jur weekly edition especially. The Weekly
Telegraph and Messenger is a mammoth oc
tavo sheet, carrying sixty four columns o<
almost wholly reading matter. It is issued
by a convenient arrangement, both early
and late in each week ao as to meet subscri
bers having only one marl a week, with the
latest possible new*. If his weekly mail
leaves Macon ia tbe early part of tbe week,
lie gets the early edition. If on Thursday,
Friday or Saturday, be ge'a tbe late edition,
in either case gaining the latest news possi
ble iu a weekly paper.
Tbe cooteuta of this p per form a complete
resume of the events and gossip of the pre
vious seven days, and the reading matter of
each number would constitute a large vol- I
ume, giving valuable information on all auh- I
jecta.
This magnificent paper ia furnished, pos
tage paid, at Only Two Dollars a Tsar.
The Semi-Weekly Telegraph and Messen
ger is lurnisbed at three dollars a year.
The Daily Telegraph and Messenger at
Ten Dollars a year.
OT Terms cash in all cases.
These are among the oldest and best es
tablished publications in the state of Geor
gia, representing a patronage scarcely equal
ed—certainly not excelled—'.n extent, intel
ligence and worth iD the State. We rec
cummend them with confidence that they
will gain new friends wherever introduced.
Advertisements in tbe Weekly, one dollar
per square of ten lines, each publication.
CLI3BT, JONES A KEEsE
Next Town.
Ahead where they lean you a dol
lar and chalk it down till to-morrow,
fra bottle of Mkbuf.u.’b Bkpatine
tnr the Liver. The en< rnious expense
of importing the ingredients of this
great liver medicine imo this country,
i* why our Druggists, Da J R Janes,
sells but one semple bottle to the same
person for ten cents; Out as the e are
fifty dos s in the large size bottles, it
is cheap enough af'er all at two cents
per dose, for a medicine that has
never hewn known to fail in the cure
of dyspepsia and all diseases of the
bver. It has never failed in the cure
of liver oompia nt when taken as
directed, no matter of how longstand
ing the disease. It cures Chills and
Fever, Constipation of the Bowels,
Dyspepsia and Liver Complain*.
Sample Bottles ten cents; regular
siap, fifty dtsos, *I.OO.
Grampton’s Imperial Soap
IS TIIE BEST!
Crompton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crompton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crompton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crompton s Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crompton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crainpton‘B Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crompton's Imperial Soap is the Best.
Crompton's Imperial Soap is the Beet.
THIS SOAP is manufactured from pure
materials; and as it contains a large per
centage of Vegetine Oil, is warrantee fully
equal to the impor ed Castile Soap, and at
the same time contains all the washing and
clensiug properties of the celebrated German
and
French
.Laundry Soaps.
It is therefore recom
mended for use in the
Laundry, Kitchen & Bath Room,
and tor general household purpo-es;
also for Printers, Painters, Engineers,
and Machinists, as it will remove spots of ink
Grease, Tar, Oil, Paint, etc , from the hands.
The Huntingdon Monitor of April sth,
1871, pronounces this Soap the best in the
market, as follows r
Readier, we don't want too to suppose
that this is ad advertisemeift, and pass it
over uuheeded. Read it. We want to direct
yonr attention to the advertisement of
“Crompton's Imperial Soap*." Having used
it la cur office for the past year, we can re
commend it as the best quality of w*p in
use. It i a rare thing to get a Soap that will
thoroughly dense printing ink from the
hands, as also from,linen; bnt Crompton* -
laundry soap will do it, and we know where
of we speak. It is especially adapted for
printers, painters, engineers and machinists,
as it will remove grease t f all descriptions
from the hands as well as clothes, with little
labor. For general household purposes it
cannot be excelled.
Manufactured only by
CRAMPTON BROTHERS,
Nos. 2,4, 6,8, and 10, Rutgers Place, and
No. S3 and 36 Jefferson Street, New Fork.
For sale by • i
J. B. CRin,
ug 23, tf Dawson, Ga
ESTABLISHED 1846.
USE
■%
HARRISON’S
WRITING INKS
AND MUCILAGE.
BEST IJT THE W'OBLB.
Jet Black School Ink A Specially.
Fot Sale by all Leading Stationers and
H.tRRISOA KIIK CO..
• Marray S., IV. V.
PERFECTION
ATTAINED AT LAST!
■VtIAL will INSURE ITS POPULARITY
EVERYWHERE.
m ssmmiiuDL
When once need will retain Ha
place forever.
¥S EXCHANGE MACHINES.
Send yonr old-fashioned, cumbersome,
lieuvy-running, woman-killing machine
to on, >ud we will allow yon its for it,
us p..rt payment for one of onrs.
IT IS CELEBRATED FOR ITS ADVANTAGES.
IN THAT IT IS ONE OF THE LARGEST SEWINti
MACHINES MANUFACTURED,—ADAPTED ALIKE
TO THE USE CF THE FAMILY OR THE WORK
SHOP. IT HA-. THE LARGEST SHUTTLE, WITH
A BOBBIN THAT HOLDS ALMOST A SPOOL OF
THREAD. #
THE SHUTTLE TENSION IS ADJUSTABLE
WITHOUT REMOVING THE SHUTTLE FROM THE
MACHINE.
THIS MACHINE IS SO CONSTRUCTED
THAT THE POWER IS APPLIED DIRECTLY
OVER THE NEEDLE, THUS ENABLING IT TO
SEW THE HEAVIEST MATERIAL WITH UN
EQUALEO EASE. IT IS VERY SIMPLE IN ITS
CONSTRUCTION, DURABLE AS IRON AND
STFF.L CAN MAKE IT, ALL ITS WEARING
PARTS CASE HARDENED OB STEEL AND
INGENIOUSLY FROVIDED WITH MEANS FOR
TAKING UP LOST MOTION, SO WE ARE JUS
TIFIED IN
Vfarranting Every Machine for 3 Years.
IT IS THE LIGHTEST AND EASIEST-RUNNING
MACHINEIN THE MARKET. IT IS, ALSO.THE
MOST ELABORATELY ORNAMENTED AND
PRETTIEST MACHINE EVER PRODUCED
WITH ALL THESE ADVANTAGES. IT IS SOLD
FROM $1 5 TO $25 LESS THAN OTHER FIRST
CLASS MACHINES.
EXCLUSIVE CONTROL OF TERRITORY GIVEN
TO A3ENTS.
r^l X J? Aoßo,,ffl,?Y INDUCEMENTS OFFERED
FOR CASH OR ON CREDIT.
SEND FOB CIRCULARS AND TERMS TO
Ms Sewing Mins Cos,,
358 Euclid Avenue, I
£S?i:j CLEVELAND, 0.
SPEIGHT BALDWIN,
NORTH SIDS OF THE RAIL ROAD,
DAWSON, - GEORGIA.
The public ara requested to note that I have a Fist Clasa stock of
lancy Family Groceries ,
INCLUDING
C anned Goods, Pickles. Hams, Flour, Coffee
SUGAR, BACON, LARD, ETC.
A FULL LINE OF TOBACCO & CIGARS.
dry goods.
In this line I will keep constaatly on haßd a complete stock of Osnaburgs, Sheetings qi,-
ings, Kerseys, Flannels, PRINTS of all description* and a large lot of Ready Made Cloth! '
which will be sold at prices to suit the times. Also, a full stock of Boots and Shoes l *’
on hand. I shall keep no “shoddy goods,” but everything will be faithfully rep.esented'to
- •
WAREHOUSE!
Id connection with my store, I have a commodious and well arranged warehouse and
am piepared to Store, Sell or Snip C tton, on easy terms, sod to the best advantage ’ °
Your patronage respectfully solicited. SPEIGHT BALDWIN.
1878. 187a
THE
Dawson Weekly Journal,
,J. D. HOYL & CO., Proprietors.
I
I
TERMS, $9.00 A YEAR 111 ADVANCE.
BETOTED TO
News, Literature, Agriculture and especially to
laOCAI* AFFAIR®*
Democratic in Politics!
The proprietors will spare no pains to make the Journal interesting
valuable to its patsons. They fry lo make it a live and apfigritly p®l|® r '*
mitting nothing into its columns that is dull, flat ard commonplace. twi
give special attention to the Local News, and be, st all times, watchful o
iuterosts of its subscribers. j • fi sd
The Journ*!*ia now in the thirteenth year of its existence, and isV,
permanent, p-osperous and profitable institution. In its “bright fesi
“there is no such word as fail.” It has a large and constantly increasing c
culetiou in five or six of the best
Agricultural Counties
of the State of Georgis, and is, consequently, an excello&t
ADVERTISING MEDIUM
For those wishing to reach a large number of intelligent Farmers, Pla n ■ ,,
and tetail Meichants. Ita rates for advertising are low, to suit the tiuei
t
■-—• ■ -
(0 lii D U X*
In connection with the paper, is a well appointed Job Office, just *®lPj
with a lot of new material, and prepared to do oidinajy Job Printing,
BILL and LETTER HEADS,
NOTE HEADS, ENVELOPES,
ORTGAGE3. LIENS,
and all sorts if Local and Cogmmerciul Printing, in as g°°d ® t 3'* e an
LOW RAT’SS as it
Can Be Done In The State*
CPI and examine our wotk Rid prices before bending e'sewhei*.