Newspaper Page Text
The Journal.
j'" D. HOYL. EDITOR.
1> VWSON, CGOKG 1 A,
Thursday, March 27, 1870.
Congress.
The first session of the forty sixth
Congress, though an irregular one,
opens lively anil interesting. The
Democrats in the Senate seem to step
a little high in rejoicing over their ac
cession to power after being so long in
the minority, and, to confess the truth,
we are proud to notice that none of
them seem to play “Dig Ike” more
gracefully than our own rather head
strong and wayward Senator Hill. Ilill
is, really, a bad big boy; lie is a regu
lar Georgia ‘Sliawb'cck,” and, except
Dlocker, he is the worst abused man in
the state. Georgia feeds her delicate
little tootsie pootsie good-boy Gordon
on sugar plums all the time, while she
spanks Hill with a rough and heavy
ha rd. A fond parent often feels a se
cret pride in the wayward tricks and
antics of his bad boy while rebuking him
for them, and often inwardly smiles in
admiration at the lurking devil that is
in h'm while pretending to try to beat
it out of him; so we think Georgia,
even while lacking and cuffing Mr.
Hill all round the circle, still has a
high admiration for his natural, brilli
ant, impudent and ineradicable cusscd
iies>. Mr. Hill has already, in the
short session, had a “bout” with the
big radicals in the Senate in which he
gave them some pretty plain talk. The
big rads had charged the democrats
with bad faith and revolutionary pur
poses, in wishing to unseat Mr. Ilayes,
notwithstanding the decision of the
c'ectmal commission. In closing a
spedh on the subject .Mr. Ilill said :
“The Senator from New York has
informed this body that when he came
here these seats occupied by Southern
Senators were empty. I think we have
heard this before. lie also informed
us that these seats are now filled by
Southern men. I think we knew that
already. We return to them, and like
a revolution that thus ends where the
departure began. The return brought
peace and prosperity once more. You
raise the cay of revolution so that you
may have eighteen more years of power:
but your chances will not return. Y'es,
these seats are filled by Southern iep
resentative men, and they will so re
main. That is all. Let, then, the
past go. We are opposed to revolution
ary purposes and revolutionary schemes,
We made nothing by revolution; the
Republicans made eighteen years of
p >wer by it, and that is the reason they
are always talking about revolution.”
Dr. Key,” a coloicd gentleman
from Tennessee, is traveling about the
State selling remarkable horse liniment,
w rich is said to he no humbug. He
c irries along with him a regular min
s rel troupe to attract attention to his
wares and amuse the public while he
sells them. IJ e is represented as be
ing really a worthy colored man, for
merly owned by a third cousin of the
present Postmaster General, and who
h.s contributed largely to the support
of his aged mistress, still living in Ten
nessee.—Savannah News.
A Mrs. Peter .Miller of Helena, Ark ,
has arrived in Louisville, and though
but four feet six inches high, is assert
ed to weigh 403 pounds. She measur
es three feet nine inches across the
back, and is thus nearly as broad as
sue is long. Her age is GS. She mar
ried at IG, and then weighed but 100
pounds.
-
Andrew Johnson, Jr., son of ti e
late ex-President Andrew Johnson, died
Thursday last at his home, near Union
Depot, East Tennessee. He was edu
cated at Georgetown college, and has
lately been engaged in editing a paper
at Greenville, Term.
'
On last Friday, a Mr. Herron, living
n Wilkes county, near the edge of
Taliarerro, committed suicide, by bang
ing himself with a buggy line tied In
the stair railing. Says the Crawford
■ville Democrat: ‘"Mr. Herron was an
old man, and completely demented.
He was, we believe, originally from
South Carolina, but came from Bel-rir,
on the Georgia Railroad, to this sec
tion.”
Atlanta (constitution: “Recently
the Justices of the Peace have commit
ted and bound over several parties for
carrying concealed weapons. Most of
the accused have been uegroes, who, it
seems, are imitating this vice of their
white friends. The police are taking
an active hand in this matter* and have
done some good work. Public opinion
is more seriously set against this prac
tice now than ever before. The grand
jury will have their hands full when
the Superior Court meets, and the Judge
has already talked plainly about this
barbarous custom. All these signs are
indicative of a gradual suppression of
this habit which is justly becoming to
be looked on as a relic of barbarism.
We want no more walking arsenals.
Gentlemen never need pistols, and the
day is coming when gentlemen will not
carry them.”
MAGNOLIA sTIIVY.
John C. 1 lurch, of Nashville, Ten
nessee, editor of the Union and Amer
ican, was elected Secretary of the U.
S. Senate A cyclone passed over
j Milledgevillo last Saturday evening,
! about the time we had the severe blow
1 hero, several houses were blown down,
: the Oconee bridge was destroyed and
one or two persons killed There
were one or two severe freezes in At
lanta last week, but it is thought that
the fruit is not killed A policeman
of Macon named O'Conner, has been
sentenced to state prison for two years
for killing a negro whom he had arrest
ed. Tho killing was evidently not in
tentional. The policeman struck the
negro a light blow with his club from
which blow ho died The walking
mania is extending southward. Ma
con and Albany are turning their at-
tention to their legs Mrs. Mary
W. Towns, wife of the late Gov. Towns,
Georgia, has just died in Knoxville,
Tenuessee. The Mayor of Macon
fined Shakespear’s wife for singing too
long and loud Dlocker is practising
leapfrog so as to get himself in condi
tion for his contemplated fights at the
press meeting. His fighting length is
just six feet and a half. Many children
are dying with measles all over the
state; none in Dawson yet A rich
old bachelor who recently died in Eng
land willed all his property to thirty
women who had rejected his offers of
marriage, for, he said, to their refusal
to marry him he attributed all his hap
piness in life. We expect to entail
our upper plantation in just tho same
way... ...Simon Cameron, ex-United
States Senator from Pensylvania, is on
ti ial at Washington for breach of prom
ise. If he promised to marry such a
woman as the widow Oliver, his accus
er, has been proved to be. his a Sim
ple Simon indeed A desperado nam
ed Currie, shot two actors m Marshall,
Texas, killing one of them and badly
wounding the other, Currie is in jail —..
The new four per. cent bonds are cir
culating freely, as currency in Atlanta
The Darien Timber Gazette says :
“Dr. J. 1). Hoyl, of the Dawson Jour
nal, is one of the cleverest men in
Georgia, and gets out one of the best
papers in tho state. We like Hoyl.”
Bullie for you, brother Grubb, we will
leg for you in your fight with Dlocker,
next May, at Cartersvillo A Texas
paper calls Gen. Sherman “Hell’s own
black spider” Geo. P. Woods, edi
tor of the llawkinsville Dispatch, has
four children. lie calls them Long
Primer, Brevier, Pica and Small Pica-
Wonder if they are wood type 1
Quoth the Berrien County News :
“The Dawson Journal is an interest
ing sheet, and we are alw T ays glad to
advance upon it with our scissors.”
You’re another, Brother Hanlon!
Sawtell, of the Cuthbert Appeal, wants
Dawson and Cuthbert to unite and es
tablish a wagon train to the Chatta
hoochee river. He says we can get
freight to and from New York by such
a rou+e cheaper than over Wadley’s
roads Tom Roberson, convicted of
the killing of an old man in DeKalb
County, has been sentenced to the pen
itentiary for seven years H. Moore,
of Jacksonville, Fla., committed sui
cide by shooting himself, in Savannah,
last week An old bachelor in Lee
county says be will marry any woman
that don’t leave the water standing in
the bowl after she has washed her face
and hands The courts and newspa
pers are all coming down heavy on the
carrying of concealed pistols. Some
of them think that concealed cork-screws
are great prompters of the pistols
Paul Boyton, the great swimmer, is
floating down the Mississippi river from
Pittsburg, Penn., to New Orleans, La
deliver a Sunday-School address at the
Thomasville fair In a running match
in New York, in which several meu
contested, the winner ran 10 miles in
one hour and 50 seconds,...*.A Mrs.
Kicklighter got a verdict against the
Georgia railroad fir $’2,500 for killing
her husband. Not a very light kick
that The Bainbridge cotton factory
is to be started again One of the
editors of the Berrien County News
won’t marry because the blackberry
crop is too uncertain . ...The editorial
arm of Triplett, of the Thomasville
Times has just seven year’s pith
Weatherfoolish people say that we will
have frost about the 6th of April
Hugh Dunning, a farmer living near
Atlanta, was found last Sunday morn
ing severely beaten. It is supposed he
had been robbed According to the
Macon Telegraph, a Jew living in one
of the middle Georgia towns, having
lost his wife, ordered another one, like
he did his other goods, from New York.
The woman whom \ie had ordered arriv
ed in Macon where he met her for the
purpose of marriage. When the cere
mony was about to be performed, the
woman declined to marry the Jew un
less he would agree to live in a city.
This he declined and the wedding was
postponed. The Jew ufterwards back
ed out and the woman returned to New
York.
THE CONDITION OF COX.
What IDs Physician Thinks of
His Kecovory.
During the past few days frequent
inquiries have been made relative to
the present condition of Mr. Ed. Cox,
who is confined in Fulton county jail to
await trial for the killing of Colonel
Robert A. Alston. It will he remem
bered that in the difficulty Mr. Cox re
el ived two painful wounds, one in the
face and the other iu the hand. The
wound in the face was of such a serious
character as to cause a good deal of
anxiety to be felt for him by his many
friends in this section of the state.
Yesterday a reporter of The Consti
tution called upon Colonel W. S.
Thomson, one of the attorneys of Mr.
Cox, to learn in what condition his
client was. Colonel Thomson refused
to say anything. He said that lie did
not wish to speak upon the matter in
any way whatever.
The reporter then called upon Dr.
F. F. Taber, at his office, on Decatur
street. He was pleasantly received,
and was given all of the particulars re
lative to the condition of Mr. Cox.
Dr. Taber says that Mr. fox is recov
ering from his injuries as rapidly as he
would wish, but that lie is improving
gradually and as quickly as it could be
expected. Dr. Taber visits his patient
at the jail everv day and notes every
change in his condition. He says dur
ing the past few days that a great deal
of the inflammation in Mr. Cox’s face
has gone down, and that now it is look
ing more natural. Dr. Taber says that
the face has been swollen so much from
the wound that lie has not been able to ful
ly examine the extent of the injuries. To
day, however, provided the weather is
fine, he proposes to examine the wound
and see if there are any pieces of bro
ken bone to be removed. While at
the prison yesterday morning lie inform
ed Mr. fox of his intention to examine
the wound thoroughly on the following
day.
Mr. Cox is confined in a cell on the
first floor of the jail. His quarters are
made as comfortable as it is possible
for them to be under the circumstances.
He is allowed all of the comforts that
can be extended to a man in his situa
tion. His wife and family, also liis
sister, spend every day with him, com
ing to the jail in the morning and going
away in the afternoon. He has also
other visitors, some of whom call to
see him in relation to his business af
fairs.
Dr. Taber says that if bis case is
called in the superior court at the com
ing session, it will be impossible for it
to De tried, as Mr. Cox will not be in a
condition by that time to stand the ex
citement of the trial, neither will he be
able to make a statement of the sad af
fair in vindication of his action.
Dr. Taber ’bases this statement on
the present condition of the wounds of
his patient. lie thinks that Mr. Cox
would recover more rapidly if his mind
could be drawn away from his business
affairs whioh, be says, are causing him
much active thought. As Mr. Cox
continues to improve we will give our
readers anything new that can be had
relative to his condition. —Atlanta
Constitution.
Alter Eighteen Years.
St. Louis Republican.
Looking back over the struggle of
eighteen years democrats can iudeed
“thank God and take courage.” Their
party has demonstrated not only its
right to live, but its right to rule. Had
it not been firmly rooted in indestructi
ble political truth, it would have per
ished long ago. It has servived “malice
domestic and foreign levy,” because it
lias steadily adhered to those fundamen
tal ideas of popular liberty and law
which are the very life of the republic.
And if it clings to these as faithfully
in the future as in the past, the demo
cratic party will stand as long as the
republic stands.
Geo. P. Jewett, son of Rev. ‘C. R.
Jewett, deceased, of South Georgia con
ference, of Wadley, is 19 years old,
and has made three valuable inventions.
The first is a stump puller, which has
proved a success. The second is a
simple contrivance to graze stock of any
kind, so that they cannot become en
tangled in the rope. It is a light, cheap
thing, can be sold for three dollars, and
moved from place to place by a twelve
year old boy, and will allow a circle
from thirty to sixty feet of grazing.
The other is an ingenious device to de
tach a horse from a buggy in case he
attempts to run, or at any time one
wants to unhitch him, which one can do
without getting out of the buggy, and
in a second.
The commissioner of pat
ents highly complimented him, saying
it was the simplest thing he ever saw
for the work it does. lie sold §9,000
rights of the two last before patents
were received.
General Gordon lias not yet been
sworn in as a member of the present
Senate. He is sick with rheumatism.
Wade Hampton has not yet gone to
Washington.
Sail Affliction.
<)n Wednesday the 12th inst., Mrs.
Robert Faison was suddenly stricken
blind while superintending tho pre
paration of breakfast. The blindness
was not exactly to! al and wasunaccom
panied by pain. Soon however sight
was almost entirely lost and pain set
in, which became very severe. Dr.
T. M. Mclntosh was called in and lias
been treating the case. AVe arc glad
to be able to state that at present tlie
pain is but slight and the sight great
ly improved, with fair prospects for
a final and full restoration —Thomas
ville Enterprise.
A r aldosta Times : Last Sunday Mas
ter Charlie Wells and Mrs. Joyce, an
old lady, were crossing Frank’s Creek
in a buggy, and the water being deep
er than was supposed, the horse began
to swim and floated down the run. The
creek was narrow and the banks high,
and by a desperate effort both parties
got out safe, but could not rescue tho
horse and buggy.—Charlie managed to
tie the horse’s head up out of the water
and ran back a mile to Mr. Reiner
Young’s and got J. R Young to assist
him.
The horse was cut loose and rescued
and the buggy pulled out, but a num
ber of little articles in the foot of the
buggy were lost.
The turnout belonged to Messrs. B.
P. Jones & Co’s livery stable. Their
loss was a set of harness pretty badly
cut up.
Moral: Keep out of deep water.
A member of the coroner’s jury
gives the cause of the Alston murder
thus: A r. Walters bad been in cor
respondence with Gen. Gordon about
the purchase of his portion of the
lease. Col. Alston had offered it to
Mr. Walters, but lie bad hesitated or
declined, and in the meantime a trade
was made with Mr. C. B. Howard, of
Taylor county for §4,000 Mr. Wal
ters then offered §6,000, He was to
pay Mr. Cox $3,500 for his share, and
§1,500 per annum for him to run the
business for him. It will thus be
seen the cause of Cox’s anxiety to
have the, trade consummated that
way. The most of that evidence,
however, was excluded from the cor
orner’s inquest, and the witness con
fined to the facts of the killing.
Female Tramps.—Albany Adver
tiser : “The two female tramps who
have been so extensively advertised by
the press of the State, arrived in this
city on 4\ r ednesday night last, and put
up at the Bogen House. They came in
on the Gulf evening train, and intelli
gence reached the city ahead of them
that they had been “doing’’ Thomasville
and Camilla. They hired a phaeton
and took a drive around the city on
Thursday, and seem to be playing the
role ot ladies of elegant leisure rather
than that of common tramps or beggars.”
A Georgia colored minister preach
ed this docterlne to his people : “But
’(ain’t no use to trabble along that
narrer path ’less you carry, folded up
in your creed, a good recom’endation
from yer creditors. Hebben ain’t no
place for men who lias to dodge roun’
a corner fur feer of meetin’ someone
who’ll ask fordat little bill Hat nebber
was paid.”
A correspondent of the Augusta
Sentinel is of the opinion that Geor
gia society will not be what it should
be until the practice of carrying con
cealed corkscrews is entirely done
away with.
* •
Tbe-Hirfl’-Park case at Macon has
been settled at last.
Mrs. Julia Shaw of Americus is dead.
Suffering fora Eite Time.
Persons afflicted with rheumatism
often suffer for a life time, their tos
tures being almost without remission.
The joints and muscles of such un
fortunates are m most cases shocking
ly contorted and drawn out of shape.
To afford them even temporary relief,
the ordinary remedies otteu prove ut
terly useless. Hostettei’s Stomach
bitters, on the other fiend, is avouch
ed by persons who have used it, to be a
genuine source of relief. It keeps
the blood cool by promoting a regu
lar habit of body, and removes from
it impurities which, in the opinion of
all rational pathologists, originate this
agonizing complaint aud its kindred
malady, the gout. Besides this the
Bitters remedy disorders of the stom
ach, liver and netves, prevent aud
eradicate intermittent and remittent
fevers, promote appetite aud sleep,
and are highly recommended by phy
sicians as a desirable medicinal stim
ulant and tonic.
Coussens’ Compound nooev of Tar
has been so long und favorably known
that it needs noencoiuiutn. For coughs,
cclds, sore throat, hoarseness, etc., it
affords speedy relief, and is a most
pleasant Rnd efficacious remedy, honey
and tar being two of its ingredients.
The skill of the chemist, and the
knowledge of a physician were united
in its preparation, the result being a
compound which is the favorite reuie
'y in this severe climate, and has no
equal as a cure for coughs, colds,
hoarseness, bronchitis, croup, etc.
Use Coussens’ Honey of Tar, Pi ice
50 cents. For sale by J. R. Jakes &
Son.
TUTT’S
'■saror ■s^sssxmmsam^m
.
INTRODUCED, 1335.
A TCRPTD - iIVER
is the fruitful sonrce of many diseases, promi
nent, among which are
DYSPEPSIA, SICK-HEADACHE, COSTIVENESS,
DYSENTERY, BILIOUS FEVER, AGUE AND FEVER,
JAUNDICE, PILES, RHEUMATISM, KIDNEY COM
PLAINT, COLIC, ETC.
SYMPTOMS CF A
TORPID LIVER.
Loss of Appetite and Nausea, the bowels
are costive, but sometimes alternate with
looseness, Pain in the Head , accompanied
with a L) ull sensationin the back part,Pam
in the riKbt side and under the
blade, fullness after ea-timr, with a disin
clination to exertion of body crmind, Irri
tabi’i'y of temper, Low spirits, Less of
memory, v. it’s a fee line of hnvinft neKlectcd
some duty, General weariness; Dteranees,
Fluttering at, the Heart. Hots refers the
eyes, Yeliow Skin, Headache gens ally
over the right eye, lies' ies.:r.as3 at night
with fitful dreams, liighly colcred Urine.
IP THESIS WASHINGS ASE UNHEEDED,
SERIOUS DISEASES WILL SCON Bt DEVELOPED.
TJ3TPQ P3HQ
gif i 3 w h
are especially adapted to such
cases, a single cicae effects
ouch a change of fe&iing as to
astonisSi the et.ii'fsror'.
TiiTf’S Pi!IS
coni pounded froiu 3nl>Btunoc’B tliut arc
£Ve: u.iiy proyerlkalh it cau iiij:: rc
the niuS tleLh'iuc They
.Search, Cleans?, i’u ii'y, auu ItivS^oi-:it o
the entire Wystwm. By relhtina - tb
(forced Lirur; they cleanse the I) 100 cl
fi'oiti poUonoiisluiiHQiH, ami thus Impart
health ttntl vitality to the body, cn;;ai:i#
the bowels to act iißtKrrJlyi without
which no ©:;e can feel well.
A Noted Divine says:
Dr. TUTT: - Dear Sir; For ten years T hove been
c martyr to Dyspepsia, Constipate-n ;•>:! Piles. L-rt
your Pills v.oro roc-'uunondrd to me; l used
thorn ( but with litt-te faith'. Ift now a well man,
havoco' and appetite. digvstior per; rut,: -ul • r Htools,
piles gone, mj 3 rtjrpouudSßOliclftoM.
I'Uey aro worth their weight n noid.
Rev. R. L. SIMPSON, Lmisvdle, Ky.
TUTT’S PILLS.
Theirf.rst effect is to 3^••**si? the Appetite,
and canee the body to Taku on 1 icwh, thus me
system is nourished, and by their Tonic Ac
tion on the Digestive Organa, ileg,u!ar
Stuois are produced.
DR. J. F. HAYWOOD,
OF NEW YORK, GAYS:-
**Few diseases exist that cannot be relieved by ro
§tonn*c the Jhvcr to its n mini fam ; ions, npl Ur
this purpose no remedy h * ever b son ii nted til it
has as hupny an effect as TUTT’o PILLS.”
SOLD EVERYWHERE, PRICE 25 CENTS.
ORro 35 Murray Street, New York.
&r Dr. TUTT’S MANUAL of Valuable Infor
mation ami Uaeiul Receipts” will be mailed free
on application.
fuTfsHTK
Gray Hair or Whiskers cliar.jrsd to a Glossy
Black by a single appiicaii -n of Li* Dyk- lc im
parts a Natural Color, acts inOiTFanemsly, find is
as Harmleirs s. spring v ter. Sold by Druggists, or
sent by esprecs on receipt of sl.
Office, 35 Murray St., New York.
This important origan weighs Vut rl'a-it three
a pounds, and all the blood in a living person (about
gfl three gallons) passes through it at least once every
half hour, to have the biie and other impurities
strained or filtered from it. Bile is the natural
purgative of the bowels, and if the Liver becomes
p&f torpid it is net separated from the blood, but car
j_ ried through the veins to all parts of the system,
gti-j and in trying to escape through the pores of tne
• £ ‘skin, causes it to turn yellow or a dirty brown
color. The stomach becomes diseased, and Dys-
Jwg pepsia, Indigestion, Obstipation, Headache, Bili
**• jousness, Jaundice, Chiils, Malarial Fevers, Piles,
j Sick and Sour Stomach, and general debility fol
j low. M err a ll's Hepati nr, the great vegetable
discovery for torpidity, causes the Liver to throw
off from one to two ounces of bile each time the
blood passes through it. as long as there is an ex-
cess of bile; and the effect of even a few doses
upon yellow complexion or a brown dirty looking
skin, will astonish all who try it—they being the
II first symptoms to disappear. The cure of all bili
ous diseases and Liver complaint is made certain
I by taking Hepatinii in accordance with directions.
Headache is generally cured in twenty minutes,
and no disease that arises from the Liver can exist
’A ' if a fair trial is riven.
| SOLD AS A SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS
| BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
r< iTVi™ flf-viT? ?. f'H
1#
The fatality cf Consumption or Throat and
ft*?' Lung Diseases, which sweep to the grave at least
Pone-third of all death's victims, arises from the
Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu
-1 Defies as the work of and :ath goes on. £io,*oo will
be paid if Opium or Morphine, <v..nn y preparation
; of Opium, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be found
|3( in the Globe Flower Cough Syrup, which has
M cured people who are living to-day with but one
jf* remaining lung. No greater wrong can be done
j than to say that Consumption is incurable. The
Globe Flower Cough Syrup will cure it when
i all other means have failed. Also, Colds, Cough,
. V Asthma, Bronchitis, and all diseases of toe throat
;and lungs. Read the tor-timer.’ 1 ;s of ti e Hon.
Alexander 11. Stephens. Gov. Smith and Lx-Oov.
i Brown of Ga., Hen. Geo. Peabody, as well as
S3 these of other remarkable cures in our book—free
to all at the s—and be convinced, that if
* -1 you wish to be cured you can be by tailing the
Glopb Flower Cough Syrup.
Take no Troches or Lozenges for Sore Throat,
H when you can get Globs F lower Syrup at same
price. For sale by all Druggists
] jPrics 25 Gents and SIOO
IW% H Ifi
y &'£Js MM
Grave mistakes are made in the treatment of all
diseases that arise from poison in the blood. Not
one case of Scrofula, Syphilis, White Swelling,
. Ulcerous Sores and Skin Disease, in a thousand,
(uj is treated without the use of Mercury in some form.
l_ Mercury rots the bones, and the diseases it pro
! duces are worse than any other kind of blood or
cj ;kin disease can b;-. Du. I : ; :.:i;i:rtgn’sStillin-
GIA or Queen’s Delight is the only medicine
upon whi ii a hope of recovery from Scrofula, Sy-
pnilis and Mercurial diseases in all stages, can be
5H reasonably founded, and that will cure Cancer.
Ir<4 5i0,c00 vii be paid by the proprietors if Mercury,
H| or any ingredient not purely vegetable and harm
less can be found in it.
rf\ Price by all Druggists $i .00.
™ Globe Flower Cough Syrup and Mep.pell's
IHbpatine for the Liver L r sale by all Drug
gists in 25 cent and £I.OO bottles. r,
L P. iIEESPIL li CO., Proprietors,
PHILADELPHIA, PA.
BOOKS&MH.LION
RVvJJNVTJTTVS A liiuce to Wtdiock,
V l''r f ~ lth Cha |' !er * OD ’ A competent Wow
tmi cnhood, Evidences ot Virginity. Steri-
MR lity in women. Advice to Bridegroom,
and Wile. Celebaty ami
Matrimony compared. Impediments
Bfc&lifctiAi. ■; -w? Marc :t ? e * Conguga duties, Science
ot Reproduction, Law or Marriage, Law of Divorce, Legal
rights of married w nun, etc. also on Dic'eases of Women,
their c.v r.> and Cure. A Confidential work ol 320
pap**,with full l iate Engraving*, rent for 60 centf. ‘*Tht
Private Medical Adviser,” on th* results of im.
pure asociat on*. *c.. b io on the secret habits of vouth
and their effect* on after l:te, causing Varicocele, Seminal
Emission*, Nervous debility. Less of 6- 1 xuai rower, etc.
making marriage improper or unhappy, giving many valu
able receipts for the cure of private oicfascs , rente sire ove
60]ltr>,eonnu. "Medical Advice. " ici-tan on
manhood and wortmneed, 10 cei.u ; i.r all three
f hey contain 000 pagee and over UK) liluatraticua em
bracing everythin? on the generative system that is worth
knowing,and much that is not published in ocv other work
gent in tingle \o;u:: . or ccmplet# .u cue. fur Price in
Stamps, Silver or Currency (The author invite* ccnsu'ta-
Pom and letter* are promptly answered w ithout charge )
Andress: Or. Butt* Dispensary. No. 12North8tU>P
St. Louis, Mo. (Lstablifefced 1647 )
4 I tam-niy s<k p< rsons sufft: g fnm R T TTTREX
1 t.. send me their names and addrts?, they will learn B
to their advantage. Net a Trun./
Facts for young men!
Actual Business, Students on
’Change, The Business World
in Miniature, at MOORE'S BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY, ATLANTA, GA. The
Best Pract: ;ai Business School in the ecu itry.
Send for Cir- alurs, Terms, Etc.
DAWSON CARRIAGE WORKS!
T. J. HAIiT, Proprietor.
Manuft ic t ures
Good Material ‘Cisecl,,
AMD ALL WORK WARRANTED.
FARM T D AVPIGOuST REPAIRING.
HOKSK A SPECIALTY.
PbaetomSf
TOP BUGGIES, NO-TOP BUGGIES,
aiif l AVAVG OIST S lol* one <fe two hordes’
REP AIRIUg
WILL BE WELL ANT) PROMPTLY BONIS by skillful sud reliable workmen who
liavp been in his employ for a number of years.
jrWOall and examine his stock of vehicles, as announced above. a 25;(
’ll - " 1 1111 I 111 in-
ROBERT H. MAY & CO.,
Manufacturors and Dealers in
rm> W WWi
KliyyillN anti ,/ v _ ) Whips, Valisw.
wmm, trunks,
SjBSIir.ES, fI.tthVNSS, SOLE, UPPER & Harness Leather
FRENCH AND AMERICAN CALF SKINS,
IjSico LcatkctS Shoo ml IBsarncss Fiiulings,
MACON, GEORGIA.
fgjj"Repoftitoiiep, 206 B r ond Pfrort, An^ni c f, Ga . and 98 Cherry Street, Macon,
We have also for sale the IMPROVED TENNESSEE WA G ON. apri!2s !
NELSON F l . TIFT,
DEALER IN
Sash, Blinds,
Guilders Supplies ,
Doors, Mantels,
-A-HSTID
ALBASY GEORGIA.
MR- MnanmtTiwiirn - mum &UA .X'.. . awr .mrsK. "*
i Tom B. Artope,
£% ■‘ J DEAI.ER IN I
11 3<v. d'
I : .1 MARBLE & GRANITE WORK,
jaojrtrjuEjrrs, hw stotbs,
J Pox Tombs, Vases, Iron Railing?
COPINGS, BUILDING 'YORK, Etc-
Conner Second and Pohia Sts., opposite J. IV. Burke & Co.’s, rear of Ross & Colcma
MACON, - GEORGIA
Orders solicited A. J EA EDWIN, Agent -t ■
IgTWiiMFIVENTji
& %S?s£'■ r TMS WORLD RENOWN e.D
WILSON SEWING MAtlJJjj
in workmanship is equaS to a Chronometer reC eived
as e!eganti}i finished as a first-class an °’ „; 3 | Expo*
the highest awards at the Vienna and Ceinen,. * hef
sitions. ST SEWS CfiE-FOU3?TH FASrtR tnan
machines, its capacity is unlimited. _ f li cvntes
WILSON MACH2NES oo!d in the
the combined sales cf all tiia others. f Da jrrng‘
ATTACHWIEfIT fordoing all kmdsoi • hine ,
WBTHOUT PATCHING, given FREE with eacn
saiWILSON SEWING MACHINE®®'
&27 & 829 Broadway, York; r d£; s co f Cal*
Cor. Stated Madison Sts., Chicago, Ills.; and San r
For Sale 5?/ all First' Class
rrar E L epho EB.§j M
pi|ri ■fgg&ySpcsiaf Offer.
* < hn " *i> t - her. V. e uiii - r.d to one audr. JTT
'vY u V nio ?hoa’-v wMP.r.t ;cro* iii-D o0 * , . UU j5 in .-‘> r f’f l - 1- *,** 1 ‘
\' r> Vv. ‘>:s, ♦r il .M trui. ( nlfi. I.ll* oftx r 1 * j „ Seiran J;
i'H *A\ V. i'-. iv t in:;. <1 wo our io*ruiiKU: -hey n' A, *tSTe5S K'
r tofcillthroweh thetnMJw.and • , > T r -rt:orn r**] 1 *
ti-v retail prie. Any pereon ofordinarv rut them cpby f.* * * * 1 <*‘ :l r .. k'A*" j
eo!d during the last three months nearly lftOO ~tthecin t-oment*. *E!L'J*u fl rA that w' 1 ’' ’^,
par* onhe countrv. We rtiaruiYf e * Ir-t-uniruU lew. Forfar it.r.- ,- c a r r°* K! r> . tic#*’ 81
money nt,d par oii e uTrjer, a k-v Com .oread Acwrr. *rA
. -VC. bbiluv' i:
m