Newspaper Page Text
Ti ? »ct»a»p t
Tue gs&FSkli'
TM'<n
Ado
circufl
west (
•pedBfli — r
tberefor'ye projxj
*ny othi*FpafM;r. 4
iWtttThcA 1 ;-
0 J87r,C’ousoI-
TiskR.every
1 “AXES,
r the Kkws aSD
- **t
ed’tobiai; <?^30&fcfj|£ GREAT jug tavern
The Augusta Chronicle and Con- | DOCTOR.
stilulionalist contains a notice of the ‘
death in bis 60th year of Dr. James B.
Walker, Otie-of the eldest citizens and
residents of that citv.
for Id-
advertbing
i those of
erred:
‘ than
rxjrs
U um jh.fi
Tnmsiuut advertised
advance.
All advertisements.
per aniens otherwise
then the following
qfired:
Inside, generally.
Inside, next to res
I n Local reading <
Editorial notices other|
•o new advertisements i
per line for first lusertior
■equent.
Hills *'»* tdvertiaing
' *«ice Of an *«rt Isement, _.
when otherwise contract
II
u oo
ISO*.
15 50
19 00
22 50
20 00
29 50
So 56
08 <10
t be paid for in-
the run oi the pa-
1 by contract, and
charge* will be re-
10 per cent
r 25 “
: 30 “ **
calling attention
J dodgers, 20 cents
12% for each sub
tbe first appear
'd presented, except
r
1KTQHK & CO.
Tub work on the Georgia Pacific
between Golnmbtis, Mis,., end Bir
mingham, A la., continues night and
day. Tracklaying progresses at the
rate of a mile per (lay.
Thb New Orleans Cntfon Kzchange
will not, as a body, subscribe to the
proposed’ Centennial Cotton Exposi
tion of 1884 by helping the cily to
raise $500,000 required to secure it
for Sew Orleans.
Albeaa Baoner.Wstchman.
Atlasta, Ga., Dec. 15—During
the late catnpa'gn I received a ec-
--- vere blistering from the Micon Tele
graph, and upon tbe advice of Henrv
-- • - ■ srarr
In ord^r to belter l
of Southwest iirorgi *1
elegant esisblishnn n|
103 Stiiii Si
Wbert will I
llTClEi
. our many customer*
have just fitud up an
•I
L the finest htor lc of
p—AND ■ •
SILVIRWARE
In that city,
of Newton, «»
icpm, ami will
and examine of
r. J. H. WIIsI.lt HIS,
s iUterehUU in tine es abnah
pirated to have li is friet tail
ELEGAIT STOCK !
I at prices much lowt r than - has
J. P. Jtevens & Co..
/JEWELERS.
BOTHERS AGAIN.
tVher#rceno mid Washington
FoiJit bv»ach other** *i«ie;
Wheifnuthron unti Northman
On «*or ili« other ;
Oh, wfwore >: r -ihers tli-n!
Lera shall we be again?
Win/ Adam flung the glove
Ft) in the-iaceof wrong;
W lift‘Henry’s soul divine
Viced its limnortal song;
Oil ke wre brothers then!
Bothers shall we beng in?
Chwging with 1’tttnaiit bold
...»3L*rec • own Hie cragay glen;
Miit t»*e untrodden woo is
kmp<rig"wit'i-Marlou*s men;
Supdint* by Mo ■•(trie’s fort,
leering on J <sper brave;
Keeling on Bunker Hill,
•epingoVr Warren’s grave;
re wen* brothers then!
there shal^ we be again?
tV/(on we »tYaU y Forgo
Jb’rezp. lathe b ttorweather;
<*T on the IM-lnwaj'O.
c u er«* aturviug uige her;
Ob we Vrere • • Others then!
tinall we be brot era a gab;?
Should* r touching sh udder.
Guns gb nniing out in line,
lleartfdij^ting ’gainst a brother,
t e-;l ng his beat to mine;
Aiidb' tbe bivoh*e fire
Laying us down at night;
tVatehii g the one theo I»« r
Waiting the morm ir light;
Oh, we'were brothers then!
Brothers s. all vy*e be again?
’Alongdea'h’aspectral shadows
Wbe . silent pic • t keeping;
In some lonely grav* yard
The Bift'luug s umber si eping;
.Oh, wc wer-.bixiUi*ni then!
Brothers we shall be again.
ANSEL B. C
St. Ldrtl8,Oot"bor 2 1 ,
■>
GOLDEN GATE NABOBS.
Something A boat the PohuMsors or
Great Fortunes Bade on the Pa-
clfle<»nwt.
£an Franchc j Litter in tue Globe* D.inomt,
The biggest fortunes «»u the Pa
cific const are iho*»«. of I he CVnlral
Pacific Railroad iiHguatcs, ami cx-
Oovernor Sum ford is ih<* richest oi
the wroup. liis wealth is otiiu-iti:<l
el »1»75,00U.0v)H; tlial is, his yearly in
come is equal io the interest on Mich
U capital, and hi< propofty is lucres*-
in*r in value. He mvib more h in
$5000,000 alone in Sm Fr iuei-eu in
real -estate, t-i u\ tint mi«» uf his
farms vineyard-, hreetlni- ranches.
Clc. The eX-C* »\ernor l.a- but oe«
child, Lehmd, .Ir, a lad of almu
15. The richest widow on the P--
citic coast, or iu the country for thai
matter, with the possible exception
of Mrs. Cornelia Stewart, i* Mr-.
Mark Hopkins, widow of oneot' the
Central Pacific syndicate. H«-r jj«>-
band’s estate proved
000, 4luxL4dlii-GK+r two m«*n m Cali-
aifnia wlu» could ja’-tify on ih«-
f widow's bond as executrix wer* v
f Lelaiid ^fumiTord aad Charles Crork-
er, two of her husband’s hu-incss as
sociates. They were compt lh <l pi
justify in twice the amount of the
estate and each swore that he \va>
worth *$4(5.000,000. Mrs. Hopkins is
an elderly woman. They imil no
children, but had adopted a son.
whom Mrs. Hopkins has just mar
ried lo a Miss Crittenden, a protege
of hers, providingiin* with the dot
of a princess. There are ottier heirs
to the estate, but the pdopted sou,
Tim, will «ret the bulk of it.
The richest young and unmarried
woman on the Pacific- coast is Miss
Jennie Flood, only daughter of the
bonanza kiu*;. The richest pros
pectiv&.lieijT-s in California is Mi s
Hattie Crocker, tue ynlv daughter of
Chat les Crocker,-another of the rail
road syiidic ite. She, also, isa charm
ing girl, and. like Miss Flood, is ratti
er plain iu appearance. She is noted
for her charities ami domestic vir
tues. The.,, w hole value of Uncle
Billy P'Dricn’s e-nue was a little,
over $4000,000" After the legacies
were paid the residue was turned
over to Mr O’Brien's two sUters,
Mrs. Co cmau and Mrs. Joseph Mc
Donough. The two ladies inherited
$3,500,000 each.
The public domain of Texas is
rapidly 'bcin»f wound up, passing
from the control of the State, and
will s&Hi cause to be a source of
revenue. The annual report of tiie
Commissioner of the Laud Office
jshpws the following eertiticat*>s were
■ TMiVed* from September 31, 1SS0, to
August 31. 1S82: Railroad compa
nies, 9,<j00,5S0 acres: veterans, 888,-
320 acres; total number *>f werea to
railroad companies, etc.. 2.520,650
acres, including alternate surveys for
the State; number of acres patented
to railroads, 943,445; pre-emptions,
224,456’acres; counties, 49,001 acies;
donations, 90 396; university, 13,-
263; school lands, 173,888; a<yHim- t
14,581;. public domain, 255.559;
miscellaneoits script, 379,784;
capital lauds, 500,000; rail
roads, -4761,001; total number <4
acres patented, 6,962,042. But nearly
all the^e lands are “for s*Ie low * for
cash asprodnee in the fall/ 7 They
are not: vyithdraw'ii from the market,
and in fact are-more on the market
than ever, for they are generally
passing info the hands of corpora
tions and men who do not wish to
- - "r- 2 tliem, but bring immigrants
S. H. JemI'OK was elected city at
torney hy the Macon city' council !a.**t
Tuesday."night over X. E. Harris.
Few safer legal advisers and counsel
ors than Mr. Harris, the defeated can
didate, could have bten found in the
State.
Pleasants, the colored collector of
internal revenue at Savannah, is still
on the anxious seaf, : and* the latest
news from Washington indicates ..his"
removal at an early day. Radur find
Folger both favor, his removal, and
the President’s request alone cm
save him.
The news service of she New' Or
leans Times-Democrat now extends
overall parts of the South and South
west. Mexico, Nicaragua and the
principal c?tn*.4 of South America.
Very few papers in t.»u country liav*
such a widely extended corps of cor
respondents.
One of the'needs' of'the time is a
cotton picking machine. The total
cotton crop is picked by band at a cost
at $50000,060 Nothing h is yet been
invented t<* do . the work, but a* New
Hampshire Yankee now living in
South Carolina, thinks he has got
something which may be improved so
:is to do the work of 15 or 20 men in
this wav.
The Atlanta Constitatior publishes
the maiden speech of Georgia’s new
Senator, Mr. Pope B-irrowy on civil
service reform. In our opiuioti Mr.
Barrow had an excellent opportunity
to have displayed a little independ
ence i s well as originality, which he
lost by following in the wake of his
senior colleague by his advocacy of
the spoils system.
Savannah JIowing News: Edi
tors and publishers should be in a par
ticularly good humor with the Post
master ftenernl, now that be recom
mends and argues so strongly for
abolishing the prepaid postpnge on
their newspapers. He says it does
not seem just, and iT not just it capnot
be wise,, to charge for carrying some
newspapers and others - : free. In >he
8ame spirit, lie: desires to “emphasize’’
his objection to charging three cents
per half ounce for carrying messages
from one Post Office to another, and
yet transporting merchandise from one
side of the continent to the other for
one cent an ounce. His head seems
to be.k j V*d on these questions.
In view of the fact thn* Albany’s
cotton seed oil milL will soon be in
operahnn, the following, from the
Christian at IFork, is. worth thd ai-
tention ol Dougherty county farmer®,
witn a number of whom more alten-
Ji«»n i- being p «id to th' ir cutlle than
hereto'ore : -Tn comm* tiling upon
tin* fact, upwai ds of »f8 COO’OOO a or«IT
of cotton seed meal is annually im
pel t<d it to Gnat Britain to feed cat
tle. English agriculture authorities
stilc it the be t food imported, admit
ting ihut only by it- u-e can Eogli-h
graziers compete with 'he American's
It might be profitable for our cattle
ra sera to take this hint and feed
proper rations of cotton seed meal.”
It is -*stimnt< d that ther** are 35.000
p •• p|e in New York city and Brookl\ai
who»e biisiites- requires them to turn
niuht it.to day, A partial list i>:
Newspaper writers and printeis, tele
graphers, apothecaries, policemen and
private watchmen, street-car feinph y
ees, wholesale butchers, bakers, en
gineers and firemen of steam supply
Companies, ferry hands, waiters and
bar coders iu all night restaurants
•ami saloons’ I mi t, oyster and clam
venders, the street cleaning force and
workmen who lay sewers, gas main*,
etc. On the other hat’d New York is
the n* iciest city in the world, and the
night workeis generally have to live
outside of the city to get day sleep.
Thk Charleston y'eics and Courier
(Dein.) has the following timely bit of
reflection on the late speech of our
senior Senator'on Mr. Pendleton’s
civil service bill. The impolicy, to
say no more, of committing a great
party to so pernicious a doctrine as
that advocated by our Senator is - be
coming m.»rc .and more apparent:
“Senator Brown, as we have said, i< a
practical politician, and we know no
bet er way of disgusting the people
with the Democratic party and of as
suring its deteat in 1884, than would
be furnished hr any general Demo
cratic approval of the. .degrading and
pernicious doctrine which he has had
the frankness to declare. It is a good
enough a doctrine for him, perhaps,
in his own sphere; but it is not big
enough or broad enough fora national
party or for he United States.’’
One of the best And newsiest of oor
exchanges is the Atlanta Post-Ap
peal. Since it was first started as a
new venture in the field of Atlanta
journali-m the paper has shown a
steady and gradual improvement, un
til it now compares favorably with
any of the State’s great dalles. The
persistence a net pluck exhibited "by
its proprietor; Col. Thoi3iton, in the
face of a thousand adverse influences,
have been remarkable,.aud clearly en
titles him to the signal success he has
acheived for his paper. We could
never sympathize . with.(he illiberal
spirit that has all along so persisteut-
1/ sought to crush him out by the in-
-discriminate use of those two ^potent
weapons—abuse and ridicule..As
sometimes happens, however,
Tli» ’’llollans People” Again.
J/r. Editor:—In as much as you
! have published an article from the
: Constitution, u hich places a targe
;-number cf good men and women of
the Methodist and other religious
: deiiMinitiatiuns iu a false and ridicti-
Grady I bddJht fbolHi Ar'ii;J , ftl| | v publish the
Bush’s Burn Medicine. After a lew j . . , ,
applications it not only thoroughly ! article, which appeared as
cured my wounds but l believe sc- j • 1!l editorial, iu The Wag of Life,
cured ray nomination by tbe Demo- | j»ubii-i»* d at Milletigeville especially
cratic convention.
fSigned. J
Alex. H. Stephens,
Governor.
Macon, Ga*, Oct. 30.—This is to
certify that during my late difficulty
with CaphE. P. Howell, at the advice
of my second I bought a bottle ol
Mrs. Bush’s Burn Medicine. It In-
•tantiy took all the fire trom my sys
tem and this doubtless saved the life
•if that eminent journalist.
[Signed.] A lbert R. Lamar, j
Atlanta, Ga., Dec. 10.—Dr. Wylie j
Bush: In my late electioneering j
tour over the State, I carried a bottle ]
nt your Buru^ Medicine along io
sprinktewer the ^diej^^ v0tS u
lectures smelt
brin'i stone. Its<
•clow you fifty cent** for which send
a bottle of Mrs. Bush's Burn Medi
cine to Gen. Gordon,who will doubt
less need it to quench the fire of in- j
diguation at bis fruitless mission to j
Yurup.
[Signed.] A. H. Colqlitt.
U. S. Senator, j
for the promotion of the doctrine of
entire sautificaliou, as taught by' tbe
founders of Methodism. Knowing
your character lor fairness as a jour
nalist I atn the more free to ask this
act of justice at your hands.
Respectfully,
Methodist,
bishop piekce.
We regret to learn that some of
the advocates of our church are cir
culating the rumor that some holi
ness people j*rop*»M»«l lo pray tor tne j
conversion of Bishop Fierce. We
want to say :
We con hi have up.-jeon;
prayejSiJof su*y fttfe
propositi ah Tiiiey jfr<c
1 v— t heiaiotiBniy \)jgb
t‘ihc lit^p^^lc^'
ion, but show their need of common
sense. And no good man, holy or
otherwise, could tolerate any such
performance. Thai there have been
tools, fanatics, and bad men iu tbe
church and among every ciars of pro-
Detroit Fne Press. .
It was twenty 1 rcais ago, and yet
when the thought springs . to. my
mind I feel for a mbmem as if some
one fiad stabbed mc^
1
mg
done, ,
khich has bumbled ine a thousaud
times in the presence of men. ,.-- L
If was Christmas eye, and the city
wihyrn excitement. ' IA seemed: a?; M
every human being hi the . big *!city ;
who had money to buy with:-and-a
friend to buy for was to- contribute
to the joy -of ti»-Bw>riow. I had
money and a wife and Children. I
was warmly clad and in the best of
healths The bitter cold was* nothing•
(o me, aud those at home had every
Comfort. - * : o
1 halted with the crowd before a
grand show-window, and there/ go^
ueintill I -could have"
rags, ftns dud: of my viciiiiis.
ullman Clty, which I visited last
Sunday, is soon’ ter have a format
dedicatioir : fc4feh -: the tbeatfe- - and
Tibfary aTe tO’he thrown oj>eri. •' ‘II is
probably theonly model city rn the
world,, an d^ has. co^.t; $6,000,000, which
already pays six: per nenL on eyefy;
element of iti: There are 3,500acres
of laud^l costing $800,000; the. town;
proper is bnilt on 500 acres, all that
by law conld be-tan appurtenance of
a manafacturing c<m»pahjr.' l! Tt/fs in
idea* a' dir manufactory - sorroanded
by a cjty for the "operative^ and fof*
an Ideal.mechanical life^he whole
ALBA2TY, GA r ,
.ectioos ana nil. ncMiir ppsincs.?, Practice
* in all^he courts. j- -» - •*
a Office over Soutfie n Express
.{ite^oorttHoMf^ »H it*.
ing. out fifteen cfirs a,*day, wUh a
jnigbty tower of brick200 feet high
to distribute the. sewage;:while the
" byrthe great
Washington, D. O., Nov. 22—L>»*.
iYylie Bush: It affords me gre^t
pleasure to add my testimonial about
yuur valuable medicine. You know
thut shortly after the war I was
badly scorch d by standing too close
to tbe Radical party, and received
injuries that I feared would follow
me through life. I saw the adver
tisement of your great medicine iu
the Constitution and bought a bottle
This gave me such relief that--U-H»-
stantly ordered out a case, which I
have been using for seventeen * ears.
It not only drew' the Republican fire
from my system, but tbe wound?
were so nicely healed that 1 can pass
anywhere for a staunch Democrat
without fear of detection.
[.Signed.] Joseph E. Brown.
Washington, G a , Dec. 7.—Thanks
to the Georgia Legislature and Mrs.
Bu-h’s Burn Medicine, the Joe Brown
donation t«> the Slate University has
bej*n refused ! Let the Agrieujfturai
Department now call on i&ejkm a
turn qf^seGdtvvkeat. tfWhq^ikircs :for
expensed?' | $ V * s §
Macon, Ga., Nov. 9.—For fifty
years I have been hankering (.-omwt-* 1
tic**, and it was only aft**r I had freely
greased rov-elf with Mrs Bush’-
Burn Medicine
slipping
be-ttiling*to the Geofgli Agricul
tural Society.
[Signed.]” Tom Hardeman.
OT CLa\l -i a
• Augusta, Ga., Dec. 3.—It afford
me pleasure, Di. Bush, to
certificate as ^tb the good
3* our. "Burn
t bat ft?i i:icliguui ion .
ITel«l In lHi*-s -S “
I rubbed our candidaTe,
May, down a few times with your
preparation, and- it re>u\\
completevimlicaticm. IlhrifetAredfe*P
Mr. Stovall to write you up a hand
some notice.
[Signed.] Patrick Walsii.
had ihe look of some hunted animal*
' saw all this at a glaiiCe.and:-turned
way. YYhat was it to me whether
he wore filk or rxigs? Why should
care wlniifier she was penniless or
ad plenty? WasitmyJbusihess to.
•ask whether she h:ul fyod or fire—-
j whether she was. wife pr widow—
! whether childreu waited for her in
some wretched room, or whether she
! bred alone and bad:money hoarded
I «P- - ;
! You wouldn’t have asked. Not
fessionai Christians, from the begin- 1 one map in teii thoiisaud. would have
ning till now, every body who knows cared. What is one poor old woman
' ‘ r - more or less _ to the . cro wds who
surged up and down the busy streets
was a woman of 50, gaunt, pinched, (engine-whichd^ove the’-machinery
a --- *'- 1 —’ u: “ K 'at the OntefmfaD«MbitioiL AXThe
Attorneys
V. T. JONES, JESSE W. WALTERS
JONES & WALTERS,
Attorneys at Law,
] aebanV. ga.
’ QticBOTflr Oeatirf SMlraiid Bank. ~
»"••rtf ■ ■ .. .-.I- ■
James Callaway,
•Attorn ©v at Law
; ragged. utd.Kr«AAjjU«l;.eycs which
h ' ‘ ' * ‘
I
anvlh'.iig of the history of Christ!
• tiiiy is H'tll aware, and tlml sucli
IM
En- ROCTE TO \V%§ItHf6 i rt3'N, lfov>3
j people do not speak with authority*.
2ml. That correspondents and
editors of religiou- pavers arcengag-
! ed in a very ***nall bu-iness who use
1 their time, brain and opportunities
! in gathering up ami giving cicula-
I lion if» such trash ami slander. No
good can possibly come of such
worn to anybody. And what is
more, good is not the object sought,
iris n effort id bnTig ltiio Tl^repute
one class of the best people iu the
Church, and lo parahze a movement
that is (loing at least as much as ally
other for the promotion of spiritual
C .ri-tianity. It cotues from those,
people who are accustomed to make
flings and to >neer at an«l__ ridicule
holiness. To all such Wo would sug
gest that possibly a more suitable
occasion for such diversion would be
the dying hour.
3d We don't believe that any
such thing was ever done, proposed,
or even thoUglfVbf i>\* the holy pOQ-
We believe it is .s.inply another
ibob s*aii d. and tme foolii
idgs Starteddiy sod
religi^^jpp _
Tules rninisters, and handed from
one to another in social conversation,
rirpyiluted thsough the press, and
published from the pulpit with the
air of absolute truth.
4t.ii- 'i'11e,‘^ioli.iiiJe,” hs iIky
rn call, H ifteijiiigure Tiivorably wiih
any rl issof our uiembership in piety,
loyalty to the* Church, fidelity io
duhv liberaUty, usefulness, ami in
kveconstaiiVv-cff their joy in the Lord.
5th. That Bishop Pierce is c* eem-
«:d by all our people as a gcea* aud
good man. And that altbeugK fie jfo!
doiJMinaJ^tciSiUof . Uie j-ubject
a
yet we’are agreed as to the experi
ence and life of holiness. lie be
iieves assironrfu a&Jiny man in be
lieves as strongly as-any man in be-
4ngHrt#iri - trg^a holy, life, and
claims not to have committed a con
scious wil/ful sin jit • hi r iy yea is.; anu
timMS*16 1 1fiiol«ni against a- peo-
pi*: compost'd of Mime of the be>t ot
birirJCrilicirli-li/>ail ages of her his
r». it*, i. !»., i . u ' .1 . ' torv—among. theni^.oiir- veneraole,
— D<. W \ lie Bush : riea.-C liVlLd lllp^ • nr-ct
at onci* 1jy t-legr.pl.
Bush’s Burn Medicine.,^ J was fettyr
full\i buruuil yestcKbiy i/id'
cracy of the Ninth distnet, and if
»iir great uiedictue can’t my
nod.*. 1 am gtmp/«ii
junction twinetb; flvidiAhe
tue and keep your eye on Mr**. 1’iiik
ham.
[Higucd.] Emoi:v ; ^jp»r.
Ex-Coiigl*e>*diian.
of a busy city?. - ^ ^
I was'going home with presents
for alt—•with bright auljcipations—
with gratitude in my heart that-I had
some otte to love, wheu tirit woman
met me face to face. [ Snowflakes
were lading on the'old shawl cover*
ing her -bead, and they face which,
hunger had .pinched- was- pinched
again, with tbe cold. Her ..great,
fear-haunted--eyes looked squarely
into milie us she holdout her hand.
She did r.of speak. That bare arni
—the skeleton finget s—tbe rags were
enough. * . V J
Then I committed a foul. crime.
I did not strike her, nor brtish her
a-ide, iior cur-e her, I read her pov
erty* and her suffering in ; a single
glancri^andX turned away and passed
on. She was a beggar. • Perhaps
she was a drunkard as wed. How
did I know that she had not been re
leased Ironi the workhousethit Tery
jgftcriittoirt ? * If hhe was oid and p6ot
and friendless her place was in the
i^udgpootyhouse. , ; f ', . 7; ]
I looked back over my shoulder
oftj ^and there sb6 stood, hand outstretch-
^ed towards me as If shp were pray-:
ing tuGod to soften »niy heart, and
biing. nic back, and had faith’ that
He would answer her prayer; •
But! did iiotihalL . I felt a- slab,
but 1 conquered it and said to my
jjccusing conscience: “Be still ! yon
uiight give every dollar }'ou possess
to the pom* and you would receive
no tbabksF’ . / >.
That night, when alF tlie little
-tockjngs had been filled, aud wife
and jihad expressed our gratitude
blessings of life and the ^ood
heajtli which had been oars for years
>Lept to dream. I dreamed of the
’aunt woman who* had asked for
alms I dreamed of a .hovel in which
there was neither food nor fire nor
lamp. I dreamed that T followed
her home and heard moans and
Pi-hop s ijlnstrous father, Dr Lovick
Pferruf^wi 1 Tjintaif. wilU Signal fail
ure.
- - - -i»e New Code Ittuddle.
b»bv f«»i* i, I r " -i-s..:! rtie v ->baY'the n^W. Jo ie <»t
r txcorgia has been found defective,
but this fact does not s»top il< sale * i
ilLtiibiiiir»y^n,- r 4u.K been reported
Oflier codes’suflercd _from Kimilai
i- defects yet tliev were n»>ttliscafded.
* n ' Ar\ rr>t • 1 IIOil.' WaltCT B. Hill, of MaCO|»,
W asitixGTON. DeC-, -0—TJjis is to^ gi(,^v>ung lawyer and one of the
certify that I l*»-t uUmt $800 by * -
ling on “Our Emory.” To soothe
ih«* aching void in my pocket-book
I bought a bottle of
Burn Medicine. I am iu-uay me t |, at j ut L, e
h . 1 , |.icPU!ia“ in Un.cjo Sam’s real tu>. C0 ,I C „„a mi,.ply any
’ “ T A Honrsov ! ana correct auy errors, a.
i. a. hodgson. jifl. exiirmaMjT;ih‘e conrjiiler.
compilers of tbe code, althougb
_ no way responsible for the errors of
pocKot-oooK ftU assoqiate coaijMler, came before
Mr-. " u , -ifii r aI.AS'Otnblyantlai*i*auged
to-itay me u, a t Judge Bleckley should careful-
Gainesville, Nov., 7.—To Mrs.
Bush's Burn Medicine, narrowgange
railroads, that injunction and “My
Dear Mni” do I ywe .niy .'eleerioii.
[Signed]; Allen D., Candler.
±*. fci.—1 used the the-Burii Medi
cine as a riistulcciaiU when 1 Lad to
occupy a house used by -Mr . Speer
the day before. ' A. D. C.
White IIou-e, Nov. 8.—Dr. Wiley
Bush:—Tbe Republican party will
take all ihe Burn Medicine that you
can manufacture between now and
1884. We have been fearfully sing
ed by the Democracy, and must use
every exertion io heal our wounds.
[Signed] Chester A Arthur,
President U. S. A.
Lynn, Mass., Dec. 15.—My Dear
Dr. Bush:—I would like to exchange
photographs with von. You can
can clip mine from any of the news
papers. We gretit-peapteimrs’-yariTp
together. Arc you a married man ?
[Signed] Lydia E. Pinkham.
Athens, Ga., Dec. 5.—Mr. W. A.
Jestei and myself were both candi
dates for Mayor of this city, and each
bought a gross of Mr*. Bush’s Burn
Medicine. Mr. Jester used up his
supply to fry o>fliers with; I used
mine to rub the chafed places ou the
late Speer supporters. As a conse
quence I was chosen and Jester got
left. You can use this certificate if
you wish.
[Signed] |Y| Dr Q’F.
world of compensation, like ours, his Hades, Deo. 1.-
tradueere appear to have over-fleaqhV If ^on I
ed themselves for once, ami the Port^ fwLy Q>l
Appeal appears to he none tiie vr
off for sb vast an atnoffnt of gratiiil
advertising. '
Augusta,
frequently
placing myself too often of late in
the hands of my friends! Send me
a dozen vials of Mr-. Bn-It's Bum
Medicine by express C. O- D. I
think Dr. Pliiuizy also needs a sup
ply.
[Signed] J. C. C. Black,
Standing Committee.
Atlasta, Ga., Dec. 10.—X am in
duced now lo slate, since my deleal,
that mv successful opponent
may profit by my unappreciated
wisdom, that my plan of running ihe
city oi Atlanta without taxation tvas
by -prinkiing Iho street. yEniAi-iiMWa.
ing with Mrs. Bu-h’s Burn Medicine.
Yon see we could thus do without in
surance and the fire dcpariment,
which saving would pay ail of our
necessary expenses and in ten years
clear the indebtedness. Lamar,
Bankin & Lamar, agents for tlifs
great medicine, heartily endorse my
scheme.
[Signed] Johx II. Seals,
Proprietor Sunny South.
When tills -hall have been done,
and the addenda furnished to suit
scribcrs, they will possess tlie best
code of Geotgia that has ever.been
prepared. Jlr. iliil’s work has been
carefully aud critically performed,
••iiid itis a source of-deep regret to
his many :rieuds that errors should
liaVecrept in to' tile departments overt
which he had no supervision.
Neither the -date, the publishers
nor tlie compilers could afford to
throw aside a volume that lias cost
such an immense stun, and it is grat
ifying to know that a simple adden
da will prevent any such sacrifice.
Slate officials and subscribers will
be furnished this addenda without
cost as soon as it comes from the
press.
A Republican Palace.
Ttmes-Democrat.
Washington, Dec. 20.—The par-
totn-aswi eofvidcwt uf -the White
House, which have been recently
decorated aud refurnished, were
opened to-day for inspection by mem
bers of the press. The designs of
blending colors present a right royal
appearance, and all of the fading
features of Ihe old rooms have been
entirely obliterated by beautiful
and changing effects. The East
room is covered by an Axmiu-t« T
Eugli-h carpet of simple de-ign aud
effect, and is otherwise the same as
before. Tile octagonal Blue room
presents an oriental appearance,
flic yraitey ceiling, furnitiii e ai
irts nice'of pain him
A-laiisJ
The JlMprooin'is
rmin&t mirrurs-itymo-aie tlesi;
red gtirtienrelvefturimtire, gold an
copper star designed for the ceiling,
amt terra cotta walls, with a piano
of the same hue. Tlie State dining
room adjoining is finished in ever
green, and a door ha- been added
leading to the* conservatory. The
hall approaching the Blue room is
fini-hed in gold and olive, with bril
liant gold alcoves and colos-al pots
of palms. The effects are numerous
and beyond di-cr<ptiou.
A Palpable lilt.
Frva ch Paper.
Lawyer: “Hurrah,let me congrat-
~ ' ' “Sis -r
UHUICTUlt. ThlTBfg me .lUhkTTst of
mortals. Embrace ine.” They em
brace, and the client ventures io ask
the cause of so much emotion.
“Thanks to my skill, v replied the
lawyer, “1 have obtained judgment
iu the Supreme Court.” “After nine
long years.” “But, my dear fellow,
better late than never.’’ “Howmuch
do I get?” asked the client anxious
ly. “The court decrees that yon
shall receive $2,000. The cost and
fee will only amount to $3,500,
11 yon will have
center andotfter v end;»re tlie“plaza
and town, hafl-bf brick, with nearly
10,000 inhabitants,'half a mile from
lake JliCtftgin j n an artificiaiL lake
comes into the jilaka, on which are
the arcade, hotel (caoedllprence for
Mrs. PdllmanV daughter), serpentine
Gothic cnnrch, maTket hauee. rail-
way station and Pullman railrpad ta
girt the greater lake ofu Calumet,
which Mix Pitllman. saya wHl.be the’
manufacturing center of the western
wartdanS greatest lake port:-’
In this little city, where the Doke
of Weimar might : have brbiight
Schiller and Goethe ;;io'. live, the
houke rent from $11 a month to $60,
the latter for the mercliants. Every
lease can be broken at.two. weeks’
notice on either sideV There, is no
other- political government hot the
Pullman corporation.,;/which is
George M. Pullman, Yet there is
not the least interference,withv any
inhabitant, Uiongh not a town: lot is
sold-, not even to the Catholic church,
which is building jnst over the town
line. - The scavenger matterls fed'to
a drove of 600 : hogs, which tbtf cor
poration . kept till a private specula
tor leased that feature,, A school
for mechanical art is to be main
tained and a school of design. Tt«
Arcade, 250 feet longby 150, confaihs
a library of 10,000 .volnme% and [.a
theater bardly equalled in' eieganpe
in America, which seats l,000pcrsons.
Here an. artist, and author wonld.
feel as much at home as a mechanic.,
Outlyitig property has gone op: from
’$200 an acre to $500 a lot- ■ The'mo
tive was to transform the sleeping
car company from a dependent ton
creating, corporation, which .shall
build’ anything, and be beyond 1 ihe
rweti ,0f jealousy, covetousness.'..Or.
rumors. - On lhestone terrace before,
the shops stands .the Detroit, the
oldcst PuBman car. W*hen it was
built no car in.: America had cost
a$ove $4,000;now there are Pullman
ears that cost:$30,000. Tlie master
of this vision of glass and ebony now
gliding like phantom ^skaters over
the world from the Mediterranian
Sea to t*uge t Sou n d; • was thirty years
ago a; poor boy : at the little town
of Albion,' NV Y:, and he drew-his
idea of the Pullman Arcade from;
the neighboring Arcada’qf Bocfies-'
ter, N. Xn where He. nsed- to. take
shelter, from the min. .
Xol'.r to liiirry.
I had often read-of the slow: speed
made by Southern' rtulroad trains,
hot noticed“nothing -annsnaL -until
sobs and prayers as. 1 iislcncd at thvi reaching Macon.--The train pulled
door. I tried to'opcn it, but it-woutd oat at fifteen miles an hour,slowed
.not yield. I tried to'ery out that 1
had come lo help her, -but the words
would not come.- 1wanted to give
her money, and tell her that I’ had
hii-juged her and wott.d help to
make it happy. (Jliri-stinas by sending
food and..furl, hut witijc l struggled
to speak ti form stole past nte info
the wretched abode and whispered :
“it is loci late!’’
When- the -'morning dawned:!
colli-i not rest. I. harried oat and
n nlkqd the streets, scanning .every,
lace anil ligtire, and-h,oping..against,
h'npe that 1 would meet my victim,
l could uni find her. Then I Teft the
streets and journeyed through the
alleys where I had seen The pale'
faces of the poor peering through
-battered panes. By and by J came
to a time-beaten, desolate-looking,
hove* half buried under the snow.
Frost covered the panes and snow
had drifted over the doorstep. " l
looked for smoke from he Chimney,
liut none came forth. I listened for
sounds of human voice, but I listen
ed in vain.
Then 1 felt myself a criminal, and
trembled as if the law had Ij
CAMILLA, GA
feb'iS.
Trowbridge & Hollinhad
STS,
- GEOBGIA.
I>EIVT
.Teeth-extracted without: pain. All work
. arrauted. Terms moderate. Will go any-
here on B. & A. and & F. k W. Railroads
aplS-12m
/s-
:^Z.,J.ODOMr
Attorney-at-Law,
(Office.in the Court House)
ALBANY, GA.
^yiiiL ^ represent -• clleuta in 'the Albany dr-
•Collections a specialty.
decfrdltwr^
THE ALBANY HOUSE!
Herrick Barnes,Proprietor
Albany, Georgia.
r Jlhis House is well furnished and in ev-
ery way prepared for the accommo
dation of the
kveling public: Entire sat-
tslaction guaranteed. The table is sup
plied with the best the country affords,
and the servants are unsurpassed in.po-
dteness and. attention to the wants ol
guests.. Omnibuses convey passengers tc
uid from the different railroads prompt
ly; free of chaise. Charges to suit th€
imes.. .ti . . sep29ti
Hare now on lrind Ibr the coming season, a complete stock of
JPLOWS,
r oi rttui soloedhum* --rfi nl u v-f: '^ri^-iA.;
One and Two-Horse ? .
ll ' * ’ 1 • Wltb tiff thft atttaChfcrot*. »re itto agent*Yor thd
Unit l BH FIRM CUTMTS
CELEBRATED BRANDS,
EAR for the MILLION
Foo Choo's Balsam of M's Oil,
Positively Restores the Rearing, and is the
Only Absolute Cure for
ness Known.
This Oil is abstracted from peculiar species of
small Wlille Shark, caught in the yellow
Aa, known as £*kchabodo» Kondeletii. Ev
ery Chinese fisherman knows it. Its rirtneS as a
restorative of heaxing weae discovered hy * Budd
hist Priest about the year IK 0 Its cures were so
numerous and many so seemingly mlrao
Ions, that the remedy was'offidaily proclaimed
over the entire Empire. Its use became so uni-
vcrsal that for over300 years no OrafoMl
has evicted among: the Chinese people.
•Bent, chargta piepaicL -to -sny address at-$1 per
iKT-Hied t noiifnr s
Hear Vi hat Hie Deaf Say
It has pe*f<msed s miracle in iny cass.
t have -no unearthly noises in my head and
Mar much better.
: JL havebeea; greatly benefitted..
My deafness helped'a great .teal—think another
-1£W VfBl?
“Its virtues are UnouesftonaWe and its Curative
ftaracter absolute, as He writer ampersonally testify,
from exoeriehce and dsenation. Write at once
to Hatzocx d Jwwst, 7 Dey Btn et, New Yprk,
5100, and you will receive by return a
ill enable — ~ *
. remedy that will enahle you to bear like anybody
else, and whose curative effects will .bepermanent,
•yen will never regret doing so”—Editor qf Mer^
canlile Titrinr.
• ;-49r*T0 avoid loss in ttafe Mills, please send
money.by.Begisteral Lett*.,
tlowit to twelve, and the • waits were
long and tediousl Sotne of the crowd
.didn’t aeeqkt^ tjire. if; we!hevei: got
there,:h'utthedrumtneEfdi:a > PliDa-
delphia. Itonso took- .ou ,tert:iBly.
He tvas, blasting :tway when the
conductor come along and-inquired
wh&t ailed him, i
iii 1 ®®®
aqa 1
tlnini;
“Let’ssee? Yongo toThomasville;
“You change cars at Smithvtlle ?’’
“I ought to/, hot the train wlll be
one.”" . !,<g< m ,.
.. “N’ot'a hit of it That train iS'at- -
wavs two hours behind timei’’
“Well, I’d rather wait in Smith-,
ville.’’ , , • .
“You couldn’t wait, in, that town
two hours, without -being:- asked to
drink-some oft he .Worst whisky aver
made, and if yon refused you’d have
'tofighti”-tat.:■:! odl girfrot amUIi
:i“I coiild go to tlie fibte!.” ’ -
I “Thett you’d havc to walk a niiie
•the sand,. “No ! ’bus comes do wi
until our tram whistles^ ‘ : A/"
“I might drum npaenstomer.’’
IjCd Cits | “You couldn’t drum noihihg, 'Tlie
hand.O|.on me. I would hafej^ii. [jaSf Northern drummer‘.iii[;Smith-
Hjvay, but some strange power pre- r***-
waited and urged me neare.itTI- [
knocked- at the door.
1 tapped oil the window,
silent"
Jfo answer.
A.11 was
: -yW -i.
Then I opened the door and step
ped ip. I bad committed murder,
and like other murderers,.had been
drawn back to the s.cehe by some
strange fascination- In ■ a chair—the
only one in the hovel—-at the. woman
who had held her hand-dot- ; to me.
Her face was held in her hands, and
-he seemed „to -have shriveled up.
On the bed—on the rags and straw-
covered with rags and locked in each
other’s arms, were the children—a
girl ol 9 and a boy of 12. Ou the
wall nearby wgre two stockings—,
taded and ragged and worn, but
hung there for Santa Claus.
The stockings ' were empty. I
touched tlie woman ;and ctillcd:
“Good-morning!” bjt she did not
move. 5,
I bent oyer the children ant.
ed “Merry . Christinas !” bn
did not awake. 10 1 tJO
They weredead! In my dream Ihad
seen a spectre’pass me and eiiter. It
was the spectre of Death.' Hanger
and cold and sickness and despair
had invited him in.
And I—where is my defense? I
could have given, and did not ^ine
single coin would have given them
bread that night. The hundredth
part of the contents of my purse
would have lighted and warmed and
fed them and placed tokens of a
mol Iter’s love in the ragged etock-
ings.
That was my crime. It 'accnsesj
me by day anil comes to me in my
dreams by night. I give and give;
but tliat voice is ever whispering:
It is too late!’’
Jnst About the size of It.
I'hnsdelphtm Prw. ' "
General Longslreet says there-is
no Republican party in Georgia:
The General is somewhat behind
-chedule time witly his stai
formation.'- As
last month people, who read ;the-pa-
pers grasped the fact that the Repub
lican party of Georgia had either
moved out of Ihe State or gone into
tht mountains to arrest that portion
of the Democracy engaged in build:
ing crooked-whisky. Longstreethim-,
self appears to be about the only Re
publican party of any magnitndo in
Georgia, r. : ■ : .
MB
Not long since a pious .T. P. in
this couDty was called upon to marry
, a couple of negroes. One of the
me is i waiters went home and said to her
'“ J * 1 “Missus, I tell yon that
knows how to disjoin
he smga’ahd’pritpSjf
on have gained j and says, ‘what God has joined
't expect, to gaitu apart let no man pat over and
,-isr.' ’’—Oglethorpe Echo.
ville had to fly for hia life!”
“Couldn’t I wait on the platform?”
“No, air. There is no; platform to
wait on, and if, there wady yon’dbe
stfspected of wanting to Start a tur
pentine fire.” pnodq >1 •’ t*i «i
, -“Well; ifs atVful'slow.’’ aril tab
“lYhnt of it. The othfer - train is
still slower; no dinftcr call he .had'
until weget there; there is nothing
Hje in the towa plays pokeryon
can’t find a decent cigar, there, arid,
from whafc .i, know- of Smitltvillc I
can assure you that ithas : at,least
thirty citizens who; would take a pop
at you on general principles witltin
six minutes of vour iaiiding there.”
. ,Soom after otir speed was reduced
Igjten’^tniles an’h'Our/biffthfe'drum 1
mer had nothing more to sar.
O " "
IVliy Tbe Dlalnes iH'lko^^toniav.
' ''Washington society never foigave
Mrs. Blaine , for the .arrogant, rules
she made during her byieftenure of
office. It has alyavs been customary
for the wives, of the cabinet officers
to return!.general visits nhiil Mrs.
Blaine became Mrs. Secretary.! 4 !,8he!
then announced that, like the iady oi
the White House;.she would, return
no visits. ,Her; next move was to
raise !!lhe, questibn, : . whether tlie
daughter of the Bntis.i ruimster, a
young girl of eighteen, aq'd just ar
rived in this country, sboujd he Re
ceived into society, bii ; the ground
of some 'ehr'onigue ‘,,jtcaridaleuse
status was wholly due' to the-
The Blaines were relegated to tlie
back pirt of the top shelf, and there,
they ar» Jo this day. Mrs. Blaine
goes to Europe soon, it is said* to bny
furniture foe their new house, and
aim to visit her daughter, in Parlsej! .:.
Tlie Central Railroad. '
StTumab Times. , ( JezSOD
The. Central Railroad operates, and .
corntiols 60 engines on.ihe Savannah
ivision, 57 on the Sonthwestern, aud
2 on the Atlanta, section, making in
ali l49 engines. ! It has 2,095 cars in
operation ^and- i! under its control.
; Wf Hay lock & Jenney
\y.n: ■ (L«UJBaxiacxACa)
Sole Agents for Ate erica. _. 7 Dey SI..N.Y
ATLANTA, GA.
ISSi, \rith. a corps of i experienced teachers.
Tbe objectfdf this' institution Iff to afford the
advantages of a thorough education embrace
ine Primary, Intermediate, Academic and
CMlegiate: ^Departments: Special .attention
given to the-study of Mosic. Model. Lan-
paaRes, -Belles-Lettres and-art. -Native
h.xnd German, teachers.art:, employed.,
ilc department is nnder the able man*
AlfredOHarili^ For tircuf
BAI ; 4RD, PrmcipjLL:
-xgvuicntof 1*. of.A
juifft—dlt-6m\r..
Rcih.’ttiacr th»f rtamiM;' Tltat' entrgri
; battles-:against the causes of disease and
death, is . the grand safeguard of health.
It is the garrnon: oPths. banwln fortress,
:uid when it waxe» weak, the true policy
is to throir in reinforcements.- In 6ti}er
3SSsgtKSS9 SSSSZ SSSt
utrs
toe MriU matter
——Hat Tnbissy andflusts w l
soothlug coating, winds relieves the Ir
ritation. thai esuaes, iLo cough. ; It cleanses
theluagsof all imparities, strengthens
tiiem when enfeebled by tlUease, luvi-or-
ates the circulation of the blend, and Brace*the
MToassystem., 8ffi||
xaaott—»«r y—
prompt iuiUeftctsjis TIHTS EXPECTORANT
A single dose zsUei tire vhleina, subdues
inflAnmation.and its eve Vpeedilr cnres them'o*t
obstinate eocgk. A pleasant cordial, chil
dren take it readily. ; JF©r Cronp it in
invaluable arid should "be in ♦very family.
In arir. Al)
TUT1
d 9t 1 Itotties.
FILLS
ACT DIRECTLY OK THE LIVER.
a 500.” ihpaven-! and I ‘ mistrals: “Mis:
tst JoseVmy money beridcs.* 5 <4 Of. man, Mr.-T., kn
conyse :lo?e your immey, but folks togelher;
Cares Cliills and Jc'tvcr, dyspepsia,
Sick Headache, Bilious Colic, Conslljiu-
tlon. Rheumatism,P” - *
the Heart, Dizziness,
Female Irregularities.
Eighty-nine Box cars, of 22 ton capa- j
city were built in Savannah, 40 csts ‘ « unTCD niUlMP CAVCi
of'thp ^ame capacity were built in A HU 11II U1 ¥1H £. dfifO,
vr o- '*. ' Dlitlirnc ond 4n ■ D*. Tcxt:—Lear Sin 1 or years 1 Lav-
Macon, 2o in Co-uaibus, and 40 by . I>ees a martyr to Dyspepsia, C'-a-upation and
the Port Soval'and Augusta Railway • Plies. Last spring;, our pills were rteonunendt-d
divicinn n,irint» tome; Insedtheia (but with little faith). I eni
IOr the Savannah division. 111 ® now a well run,have gocxl appetite, direstion
the vear there were repaired at shops _ perfect, xe?uii.r stools, piles gone, and I ham
in Savannah LI66 cars, which give a
faint idea of the vait amount of roll- eev.ilL.snrpsox,Lmumi!t, jr r .
un- i ng stock controlled by the great cor- "
y porstion. > '
and Muzzle
LOADING SHOT GUNS.
Brass and Paper Shells
Always in stock st lowest prices.
-Uysipril
BROAD STREET. ABB AST, GA.
irr-Ji*
i, UMBRELLAS, Etc,
We take pJefaare ic ftniottndng to the dUzens of Albany sad sanoundhig country, that we have
SAT HOUSE !
aod solicit a portion nf their patronage. Wo shall keep constantly on hand !h
1 of tbs latest and mast approved styles for Ladles and Gentlemen, Misses and
asweUaatba
STOGA BOOTS AND HEAVY BBGSANS !
PolkriBafilhs?M«^ingtchans. Hh W. NT. KEY, assisted by Mr. N. J. CBUGEB,
will be fo-charge, of.-this branch , of nir business, and, as our aim Is to please, we guarantee satlslac
non to all who may fkror os with their patronage. t
mmi & to.
aMliM
FINE MEAL, OBITS AND CHOPS.
MW REPAIRING AND MACHINE WORK,
New and Second-Hand Engines.
Steam Jet Pomps.
Piping, Pipe Connections,
team Gauges, Water Gauges,
Globe Valves, Check Valves,
Rubber Packing, Hemp Sacking,
Steam Whistles, Belting.
0- LESS AND POTIPS FOK TCItPJENTINE STILLS.^}
: O. W. TIFT & GO.
JiT, .'GUNNIS0H,
K Harenlazged.his l»ratneaa,land Is.nowjopening the largest stock of
Hardware, Crockery, Stoves,
. HOUSEFURNISHING GOODS, ETC.
His has ever bad daring his long business career In Albany. Call and, see the handsome ne
CHINA,
signs in
GLASSWARE,
ETC., ETC
AGENT FOR TALBOTT & SON’S STEAM ENCINES, BOY DIXIE PLOW.
PLOW, MIAMI POWDER CO., AND JOHN VAN’S
WROUGHT IRON RANCE.
at Wit. <5»- Ans. 25.1«M4v!»w3m
s. w.
GUHITIS OXT r
Wawlilngton. Street.
U. Fj TIFT,
S. D. RVlN
TIFT & IRVIN,
ALBANY, - . . - GEORGIA.
—DEALERS IK-
Sash, vjjCemext,
Doors, Lime,
Blinds, Hair,
Laths,
Plaster
Pari&,
Office. 35 Murray St., IVcw York.
»K. TCTT»8.MAWUAlTofVeZinl
1 BSMlpu FB££ on application.
And Builder’s Supplies.
AGENTS I OR
Western Paint and Roofing Co.’s Non-
Corosive Paint,
wel2m WHICH WE SELL UNDER A STRICT GUARANTEE