Newspaper Page Text
|lrtri$ attdyifrfrtfefr.
^ij>snixi£±i£L 2t-
L
INDISTINCT PRINT
ABOSTON METAPHYSICIAN'S THEORY
THE SHADY SIDE OF PARIS.
T.-rrttlT^ ■*** tO. IBS
OF flAKl’W
L* 51B.
I.ITTLE
Ut _ h -,i * little »ht*p »•. CT
Uu 2i St^Zinr*”*'***
comprehensive
car it troited
iofshort mod retire
u ^Sa^SfSmSBS it SjudW the
* hirer* off a mil-
where, on rainy day « or »«.
UU SSSSS. SS.'SSJSSwj^i'
ISf’jrSjs“SSff•£’* that matte
sweet."
a (Mmo Mocks, and then,
1 ihbok iSw^o/horees'feel and carriage
■ Jr’KX.ilSTmfc <hi-F »*>«*-
It* Climate Not Agreeable, Its Healthful-
Two Storekeeper* Tbe ClerrjTo.n Who „„ , H umho«. If Comfort. Few.
Draw*—Effects of Eril Thought*. c ,, , __ .
_ , *. . ©tinny r ranct- is not often sunnr. Ram
In a Boston course of metaphysics f a!]s the _ , m a one-third of
which I am now tmdergomt the chief , aII ^ d;iv . in , he A ,, d the aa _
metaphysickerasks of Ins class questions tives aI T,. particUarlv sensitive to
like these: “Why, when two stores are | „- ( „ th o r . A shower or a flurry
BILL NYE ON CREMATION.
all moo, hut fln.ll) Oesan totliiok ake’tl
me II oe’er »*»!».
»l,e dor nor us* her W e purse amt weot to
bar -mu meat, aod l« mmemmsaaetMt
"be bo0»bt .be found her darting', turf.
SO mom tb It little will ban the Ioobm
off the d«Mir, «»r ramliol on tn . pleasant
green, or follow a* of yore.
in rooked, it* rare i* run. its life Ha*
" SXedJnend.' and ajl that Marv has ol
it t* in l»er Urtctan bend.
!HKW MCTHODIHT BISHOPS.
I'aarProwinmi Jliuislera Fleeted
io the IliNtoepric at ibeMatfe.
Tlie principal event* of the Genentl
Conference of the Metlwwlbt Episco
pal Church South. iiow in session In
Richmond, ha* lieen the selection ol
four new Bishop to nil vacancies anti
the growing •‘pliere or labor Tor the*-
Episcopal heads of tlie -Method!*!
C'lnirclt South.
The general administration of tlie
spiritual affair* of the rhurrh is en
trusted to the College of Bishop*. of
which the distinguished and venerable
Dr. McTyeire I* now Senior Blah p.
t«hice the decease of Bishop Pierce.
The four new Bishop* elected lastafter-
nooti by tlie Ge teral Conference, are:
Rev. Win. Wallace Diiikmii, of .South
Carolina; Rev. Dr.Clia*. B.Galloway,
ol Mississippi: Rev. Dr. Eugene Ku*-
hell Hendrix, of Missouri, awl Rev. Dr.
Joseph Stanton Key. of Georgia.
Dr. Duncan I- the President of Wof
ford College in Spartanburg, and is
one of ihe ablest and wisest ministers
of the chinch. He I* a brother of the
Dr. Duneafi whom it wan intended to
make a Biidiop several year* ago r 1ml
wIiuh* death preventeil the honor and
elevation.
Dr. Hendrix Is one of the lights ol
the chinch not only in Missouri hut in
the who.e South. He was a great
friend of the late Bishop Merviu.
whom he accompanied to China uml
around tlie world.
Dr. Key Is well-known all over Geor
gia, where he is a universal favorite
and an eminent preacher. He is a son
of the late Rev. C. W. Key, of Augus
ta, and a brother of Airs. Wui. B?
Young, of this city. He Is tlfty-uiu
years old, but is as full of vigor and
strength as any yon-ig man under
forty. He is a splendid *|>eciuicn of
munliiHxl, tall and handsome, and Ills
selection gives greatest pleasure to
Cieorgia Methodist*. His friends and
admirers extend their congratulation?
to Idm and his familv.atid hail Ids ele
vation to the highci-t office in the gill
of the church with j«»y. He will tak<
his place worthily In the College
ol
Bishop- as the successor of the lament
ed Pierce, and will lie a power in tin
church at large. Dr. Key is now sta
tioned at the First Methodist church In
Columbus, but lie i- reg nlcd and
claimed as an Augusta man. He passed
through this city on I is way to the
General Conference and the Kreuiiuj
Xetcit at that time in commenting up<
his |Hiwerfiil sermon alluded to Ids
probable <*eieclioii as one of the Bish
ops of the < duirch.
Dr. Galloway has not such an ex
tended reputation as the others, hut he
is a mail of iiithieuc>* ail I due repute
hi his section, and all the new Bishops
are di-iingtii-hcd Ibr piety, ability and
peculiar Ihuess tor their elevated
duties.
Tbe l*resb) leriam Assembly.
Mu rann till New,
Very general interest Is felt in the
Southern Preshy^friau General As
sembly npw in session in Augusta.
There does not appear to lx* any greater
desire among the Presbyterian* of the
Southern brunch of rids deuoini a Ion
to lx* united with the Northern branch
than there is among the Southern
Methodists to etfeel a union lietWecii
the Northern and Southern branches of
the Meihodi-t church.
The Southern Presbyterian* are
growing in iiumhers steadily. They
now have 2 I Oil churches, a I tout 1,050
ministers ami communicants.
They are strong in all the Southern
States.
The report on foreign mission* which
was read betore the General Assembly
on Friday shows that the Southern
branch of the Presbyterian church
now sends missionaries to Kttro|ie,
Asia, South America and other coun
tries, and i» making the gospel
known to tens of thousands. The re
ceipts for missionary pltrjioses from all
sources during the past year were
$711,170.27. Tid*» sum is slightly larger
than that of uist year. Churches aiid
individuals gave $58,028.14; Sutidav
school-$7.487.74.ai d)a ‘!es’ misslot ary
inuiluf Iko 4 111 kii a 1... S... •
societies $10.0*1.1.80. the interests
foreign missions U apparently as stfong
as ever.
Due of the ipiestlous w hich tlie Gen
eral Assembly will discuss probably i-
that which Involves the evolution the
ory, of which Rev. Dr. Woodrow is an
advocate. The question ha« alreadv
attracted wide aUi*iitiau auioag .Stiuth-
ern Presbyterians.
Huron’* ICraigitat i->n.
This is Bacon's ow n staleuieiit hi Ids
Sparta sjmvcIi of his resignation u-
adjutant of the Uth Georein ivd-
< me lit: **
A
Joom an<l dullness. Its vaunted fas
cination dej>ends on the barometer and
thermometer. Its climate will not com
pare with that of -New York.
It is very healthful, too, we are
“Why, when two stores are
opened on the same street, and noar each j empty the bonlevnria. A
other, and both alike as to qial^ «* gk>-ora ritr windwfflinetantorpl
goods kept, does one succeed an.l the j cit V, tuntingii fn.ni radian, ea.id
other fail? Why will one be crowdtxl *
with customers and the other be liare of
them?*’ Thus lie answers: “Because
one storekeeper has an inviting mind and
the other hasn't Because, separate and
apart from business, one storekeeper
really likes to see people and be agreeable
to them for tlie sake of making them
feel pleasant, and the ether doesn’t. Be
cause customers feel the thought of the
inviting mind agreeably, and that of the
uninviting mind disagreeably.
“Because, according to the present
school of Boston metaphysics, thoughts
are things, like many other things that
can’t l»e seen or touched, but neverthe
less they are very fine, impalpable, in
tangible, airy, subtile things, and all of
us have within ns an almost unknown
and certainly unnamed sense that feels
tilings as they come from the people
i snow
cloudy
iOs** the
. It- ArfTut»|w If Ckwpt H» Objects tm
Hm lm HliSkeUton Hanging Around.
The Mibject of what we shall do with aar-
•etvea after death is one that should be duly
con-id* rnd at an early date. In all serious-
n* 1 —. the soul is not the only thing to be looked
FIRESIDE CHAT
Notices.
DOnGHERTY COUNTY,
MOTHERS
Often neglect and delay in giving prop-
oally told. But it is not, nor h> there ! flicker out of life with the applause of a great
any reason why it should be. Any irain- j pc«>pfe >tQl ringing in the ears, is a good
her of diseases prevail there, particularly ! Hiing: but man that is bom of a woman, and
consumption, rheumatism, neuralgia, i ***** ,ua J°rit7 ol them are that way, are too
fevers, every kind of .flection of tlie I IT** L> linger °n this nde at el nity nnlfl
liver kidneys, and bladder, all aacribable
to local causes. Consumption slays
•thousands annually, and the sufferers
from rheumatism and neuralgia may not
be enumerated. These, partially due to
aft»*r. either during life or after death. We er attention to their children who have
are too j rone to neglect our health during life ; become unhealthy, Place your sickly
and thm bequeath our accumulated microbes j daughter upon the use of B. B. B. j
and other results of a long and perhaps crooked | as a tonic and general regulator; give
career to some sightly cemetery, set on a hill j it to your weak and feeble children; ;
. like a city that cannot be hid. • prescribe it to your husba.td and sons
Longevity is a good thing, though I have ■ as a general tonic and appetizer before
, known public men to overdo it. To die at ; breakfast, and they will never have
I the proper moment and leave a good impres- ; anv use for whisky'bitters.
I sion on liistory is one of the lost arts. To j
WE DESIRE TO EXPRESS OUR THANKS TO OUR FRIENDS FOR
■CITATION.
p EOllUIA, Dol'd!turv CorxTT.—To all
U whom it may concern: Mrs. Ada Beall
ferH||Wyn$erTora applied tb me for per
manent Letters of A'lraini.-iration on- the es
tate of James 'A. Beall, late of the City of
New York in the State ■ of New Tort, this D
to cite all and singular the creditors aa4 next
of kin of sa:d JTames A. Beall, ur be and ap
pear at my office on the first Monday in Jane,
ISM, and show cause, if any they can. why
administration should sot be
rBeaU*
Central l Southwestern E. E.
i f All trains of this system are rtm br
! aril (90) Meridian time, which fa w 1
to Mrs. Ada Bead on 3 ames A.T3
i tLt-y have done some little thing u t is never
j properly explained on their tombstones.
Bat sifter death what shall we do with our-
i wives.' In this brief treatine I dare not at-
| tinrpt tobetKorough. or even lucid. Leav-
j ing others who know all about it to state ex- ;
BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION.
Thousand of single and married
THAT STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE AND HONESTY FOR WHICH
WE HAVE GAINED SO FLATTERING A REPUTATION. OUR STOCK ,
' ..... . - > f
6th «:ay of S
ray8-td
hand and official signature, this
»y. 1SS6. . Z.J. ODOM,
Ordinary Dougherty Co., Ga.
Compound Fluid Extract
climate, are aLso engendered bv the pov- j m My what disposition will be made of our
eny or pareimony of the people. Tia-y I “ look **»_*■ ““*r wta * •»
art —-illiug to upend for show bat not j jjjjj *' on f J?!* 6 1
for omifnrt ' | notv «y will not be regarded ^ flippant, for
1 ... .°, . . . i tilts is ro place for flippancy, but allow me to
Etrea indoors are not seen, therefore j qMdrpWnly of it, as I would on anv other
they who might afford them go without, I onbjvct concerning our health,
atatu. ua,«o. oo. .wuog.iu “vogoje- , ^ they ^ penalty in disordered Death has some very peculiar characteris-
able or disagreeable according to the j Jungs, muscles, and nerves, fevers, ; tits. For instance, it will wake np the dor-
nature of the thought tejt. The store- •,-specially typhoid, come from bad air, 1 nu Jut old crank who has never missed a
inside, who j j^-k of ventilation, want of drainage. fun "*l for silty years. He goes for miles to
a JIa Qf the |wst ^ ^ with odors; i ** "■><a«sedL- It hi his holiday. It is the
most of the apartments ache for oxygen, j ^^25 “7TsS“
flic Parisian is a natural enemy of fresh wotnan
air and cold water; he fears the one and Jhe thought that the time will come some
avoids the other. A complete bath is a ] day when this man wgi put on his funereal B
solemnity, an ordeal he seldom braves. • clothes and come to i ay funeral makes my * * " '
The city has magnificent sewers, hut jhah* ris® np on end. He cannot gloat
they seem to be kept for exhibition: they | ov «* »». tut the day may come when I
are of small benefit to the close, noxious j instead of lying otherwise, as I
keeper who feds
doesn't care a straw whether you are
suited or not, or who only cares to suit
yon for tlie sake of the custom lie mar
fftt of you, won't make you feel and
can’t make you feed as peasant as the
one who, with all the desue to draw cus
tom, has a genuine wish that the ham,
butter and eggs you bay of him will do
you good, and rather than they should
not would at heart prefer you should buy
them elsewhere, though he lose your
custom.”
But our metaphysican goes further,
much further. Indeed, I dare scarcely
tell Ih>w far he does go. He says that
clergymen are pojmlar and draw for the
same reason that the storekeeper does.
Tliat is, if the minister be really glad to
see his flock, be they few or many, he
send** out to them from liis pulpit agree-
able thought. If lie be a perfunctoiy,
mechanical sort of preacher, who lias in
reality no interest in his calling, and is
only in it because, being an “apt scholar”
and able to load his memory heavily
with so-called facts and figures, his pa
concluded he should go into one of the
"learned professions,** or thought that
for the honor and renown of the family
one of the boys should shine (or try to)
in the pulpit, and therefore put him
through a perfunctory course of divinity,
when the boy would rather luvve been a
.blacksmith, or a blackleg, or something
Of the sort, why, then, as the metaphys
ical or rather natural result, he can only
when in the pulpit send out a black
smith, or blackleg, or otherwise order of
thought, no matter how much he may
try to cover it up with-good words and
sentiments.
He says also tliat our thoughts can
reach )>eople a long way off, and so may
tlirirs reach us and make us feel pleasant
or unpleasant, as they are good or other
wise, and that any amount of this sort of
unconscious telegraphing is constantly
going on about us. Say tliat a person is
jealous or envious or otherwise down on
you, aud doesn't want you to succeed in
any enterprise, then you will feel that
thought: it will depress you; you won’t
know wiiv or wherefore. It’s just the
same as though one of those dialxdical
so-called friends ever stood in front of
you while engaged in some undertaking,
saying: “You'll fail. It*H all nonsense
you're trying to do that. You ain’t got
it in you!” And the possible misfortune
is that the thought of friend or enemy
may at last discourage you and blind you
to your real ability. Because a
current of thought tliat you live much
amongst, or even a current that Is di
rected on you, may make you see and
judge things exactly as the person send
ing it sees and judges them. Say you
live or associate among people who are
hostile or prejuditvd against some par
ticular friend of your own who is absent
—one whom you know to be square and
honest. Do your best you may find your
view of tliat friend more or less colored
by their prejudice; and his or her possible
little failings or peculiarities so magni
fied and exaggerated that yon will find
yourself at last seeing him or her in the
same light and with the same prejudice,
though in the depths of your soul you
feel or fear you may be wrong.
So says our metaphysician. He says
also tliat thousands of people give way
before the constaut pressure and fretting
of envious, jealous or otherwise ugly
thoughts directed on them by another or
others and get so discouraged by it as to
be at last able to make no further effi
cient effort in what they want to accom
plish, but that there’s no need of their
being so flattened out by it, for tlie rea
son tliat if they did but even sus^wet the
cause and resist it and set their miuds
against it. this resistance would turn the
evil thought current aside. Hejsays also
that an ugly thought poisons the 1>I«mn1
of the person that thinks it and is tlie
real cause of disease, and tluit the cleaner
a person’s thoughts the purer will lie
their blood, aud tliat there is for human
beings a condition attainable in which no
disease could affect them.—Prentice
Mulford's Letter in San Francisco Chron
icle.
ladies are using various cosmetics, in
order io improve their complexion, and
to hide the many faults and imperfec
tions of the face, neck and bands.
These local applications are only tem
porary, and leave the skin a worse
condition.
An internal preparation is now be
ing Used, operating through the blood,
which renders the skin as smooth and
soft as au ir font’s, and imparting a
beautiful alahaster complexion, so
much admired by the elite. The rem
edy casts off all impurities from the
blood, removes all bumps, blotches
and splotches from the face, neck and
hands, aud tinges the cheek with the
os eate hues oi nature.
Tlie article alluded to is B. B. B., a
blood purifier and general family tonic,
whicn never fails to give entire satis
faction. No female should fail to use
it. To be beautiful you must be heal
thy, and to be healthy, you should use
dwellings, where typhus lurks to seize its
predestined victims. Paris is the home
of typhoid fever; few persons stay there
auy length of time without contracting
it. The water of the city, coming from
the Seine, is very unwholesome on ac
count of its limestone properties, which
produce any number of serious disorders,
mostly of a nephritic diameter, and from
which Parisians are great sufferers. For
do now; and he may outlive me and come to
»■*.* me property buried. Then he will enjoy
him**! Ah, what a blessed relief it would
be could I J _ ‘
comes, and hear my footman announce to the
i*l vulture that he "is a little late, as Mr.
Nye was put in the kiln half ah hour ago. r
I could suffer a good deal through life if I
kn-w that I could at last bead off the funeral
Head—the man who wouldn’t loan me a dol
lar when I was struggling tor grub, but who
rlirerfuHy visits my funeral and shows his
WONDERFUL ULCERS.
EMBRACES EVERY NEED OF THE HOUSEHOLD OR PLANTATION;: irPLlt iTiov
SO MUCH SO THAT IT IS A COMMON SAYING, “GO TO TIFT’S TO 1 .
FIND ANYTHING YOU WANT.” 1 — ~—
TO SELL LASDS.
Doccbektt CmCXTT-
LOKG1A—DOVCHEUTV CoCXTT-T«
; v* whom It may concern: W. II. Walters,
idaiiktmor ol J. J. Gitlion, diseased, tun
applied to taefior leayeto sell the lands of said
deceased, whiek application will be heard o
the first Monday in June next.
15th day of April. :S86. Z. J. ODOM,
w-to ui} S Oidinary Dougherty Co- Ga.
rtV desire .to call your attention to onr Favorite Brand* of
Guano! Guano! Guano!
WE KEEP ONLY THE HIGHEST GUADKS AND HAVE ESTABLISHED A TKADS
SIMPLY ON THE MERITS or OUR GOODS. WHICH I1A3 INCREASED LARGELY.
Our Guano Never Fails to Give Satisfaction.
Atlanta, Ga. June 5, ]
Io 1878 .there came on i
this reasons cheap wine—vin ordinaire— ( fa every way.
in almost universally drank; but it does i mu-t say in all candor there are
not sen e, because the wine usually con- ! many attractive features about cremation,
tains a large proportion of water. The 11 *m sure that when cremation is placed
Flench capital does not deserve its rep- j the reach of all it will probably be-
utation lor healUifuluess. Almost the i con * u P°P?** r '
ouly disease not common there is dvs- ; tie first place, If fha spare bet«uai fife
.I.;..i.p. i * ‘ ™»d
pepsin, which French cooking claims par
ricularly to prevent.
Tlie French live out of doors. They
liave few of tlie home- comforts we de
mand; nor would they have them, for
they cost money and make no outside
l*h ysical annihilation could be
a» narrow as possible, it would be far
cheerful to consider.' Death itself is cruel
enough, but to add to. it * hippodrome of »
imhlie funeral and turn our parlors into a
gaudy morgue, and then repoee in a crowded
i-nietwy till the city wants the ground for a
show. The cooking is exceptionally ! ! mr * £ * 8W * then to pick up our crumbling
good, of course, but not equal to its rep- j move away to a new grave, is not
iitation. Tru, «o one ta.*, W*
..e la eating, ixirt.cnlarly at the cheajar ot mty or might bo written on-
restaurants;* I »ut, if he likes it, perhaps j the title of “Recollections of Reeurree-
lie should not be too curious. Good food, ' tion: or, the Diary of a Body.” It be
nicely prepared, is nearly as dear as at i made to teach os a valuable lesson. Po-
A friend called on me one day, Mr.
A. J. VanDuzec, and recommended
B. B. B., and was certain it would
cure me.
home, and often not better tluui ours.—
Junius Ileuri Browne in Chicago Times.
Life on Board a Torpedo Boat.
The ollicers and men in charge of the
torpedo boats liave no pleafemt time of
it Tlie steel plates *ff which a first-clase
torpedo boat is built are only an eighth
of an inch thick, some of tlie smaller
ones are only one-sixteenth of an inch,
and the consequent weakness of
structure, with their great length in pro-
litically I am pledged to genuine natinw)
reform. Let the nation try it, and if it
works all right on the nation I win try it
myself. Then I am committed to the un
limited coinage of a fanw dollar, one Hint
you can steal np behind and put salt on its
tail: not the evasive and ingneous fatuous
dollar of the present. Next I am in favor
of cremation at living prices. At present
the price is too high, and the poor man is
left to decay and fill the sofl with poisonous
£asps. which the poor, as well as the rich
rimy indulge in after death.
Death should end our career, so far as
portion to bremlth, makes tlie strain of .
rising and falling in a short sea apt to ; l ‘ a,tu >' aff ® irs E°» but with the embarrassing
break tluMr laa-ks. In wU a *■», tb<-re- j
fore, it Is dangerous to drive them at ~
less than eight io ten miles an hour, when
they go through the waves instead of
over them.
chimes of being boiled by the janitor erf a
j medical college and our skeletons wired to-
j | etlier and hung in a museum, and the oppor
tunity, if we escape the first two, of being
tipped out of our graves by a flood, earth-
At about this speed in most boats the qn**ke. or the act of the common council, it is
vibrations of the engines and the vibra- m wonder that people cling to life,
tions of the boat synchronize, and the j , * thought that for centuries after my
combined oscillations make the bow aud debase my l°^g butqynunetoical skeleton
r „oft.:boat,va ? «pa,u.downt.u rSESSSLTS2££ir5
they nod at each other. Men who are * compound cyclonic fracture of the tibia, I
standing on the deck astern jump up and i wouldn’t be able to sleep nights,
down like marionets. Even in absolutely Bill Ntl
smooth water, when you sit in the small Shoe. V7na«i in tv.
cabin and try to eat, your knife and fork '
clatter ou your plat.- like east,me®. The i There “ t f m “ ch f° w for °” ***
water sweejie . over the .leek, which, : ^ our n 7', uf * Ctured . m
after awhi.e, tl.e vibrate,,, mak« to leak : lh « I*opleba^ e goOQ-«xed,c,vilu*lfeet
like a sieve, so tlmt evervtlflhe below- 1 and tl.qrproduce^or« fatherthan they
clothes, I teds, etc.,-Wwet through. I Kaat - ^ » *«-
Truly service in a torpedo fa not^e I
of pleasure.—AU tlie Year Round. trom skm8 01 natlTe
mals, and as long as the lat-
what
aught to be a carbuncle, w hich
run its course several months,'broke,
aud finally healed. The next spring
knots, or nodes, came on my anus,
which were thought to be rheumatic,
and 1 took gallons of medicine from
the best physicians In G’uthbert, Ga.,
where 1 then resided.
About this time my left limb below
the knee commenced swelling at a fear-
fid rate, and finally came to a head aud
broke. Both arms were sore, and l
could hardly bear my weight standing,
and hardly know now i managed to
live through it all. About this time
we moved from Cuthbert to Atlanta.
1 begautb despair of ever getting well;
the salmon my limb was a regular eat
ing ulcer, now about three inches in
lengtu, two. inches iu width, seeming
to be down to the bone, and discharg
ing about a cupfulof pus (matter) per
day;<my arms still running, my sleep
disturbed, and I sometimes thought i
would lose my reason.
called
In a short time I got my son to get
mjtwi ‘ “ * '
two bottles, and 1 saw the improve
ment from the very first. 1 have now
taken 8 or IThottle*, aud my arms are
entirely well, and . the large ulcer ou
my limb has healed. I now leel like a
new person,' thanks to your noble rem
edy, B. B. B. Mbs. Fannie Hall.
100 West Baker fit., Atlanta, Ga.
AH ATLANTA DRUGGIST.
Atlanta, June 12,1885.
Daring the past few months I have
giVeu B. B. B. severe tests iu the cure
of Blood Diseases, and unhesitatingly
pronounce it a safe, sure,. harmlessand
speedy Blood Purifier, fully meriting
-tifdiS) “
confidence of tlie public.' My cus-
touilers are delighted with its effects,
and the demand lias so wonderfully in
creased tliat 1 have been compelled io
buy by the gross, as. it is the best sell
ing blood remedy I bundle.
W. A. Graham, Druggist.
D. Howells’ Habits of Work.
“Csri»** in Cleveland Leaden
Mr. Howells was very modest in
speaking of his work and told me he did
not believe in the word genius. He
ONE TRIAL WILL CONVINCE YOU.
NOTICE TO JIEKCHANT*.
QHBfiE or ORDINARY.^ Dsugtorty
’ Countv, Albany Georgia. May J,
tire L*» hereby given to all person* eoncern-
Notice in hereby given to all persons
cd that the standards of Weights and Meas-
ure-. requireii by iaw to be kept in this office
have been procured.
Witness iny hand and dffieial signature.
al signature.
_____ Z.J. ODOM,
mayl-2ni Ordinary of aald County.
F.TTF.US OF ADMINISTRATION.
G W..G1 A. DOUGHERTY COUNTY:
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:
A. C. Westbnvik having. In proper form, ap
plied t«* me for Permanent Letters of Admin
istration on the estate of James A. BealL L
Near York.*
of the State and county 'of
this is to cite all aud singular, the
creditors and next of kin of said Janies
A. I trail to be and appear at my office on the
first Monday in June. LSSS, and show cause, if
any they can. why-permanent admin w ration
should not be granted to A. C. Westbrook on
James Beall’s estate.
Witness my hand and official signature this
gTih dav of April, 18*6.
Z J. ODOM.
mayl-lm. Ordinary Dougherty County.
Plows, Fan Tools anfl Gen’l Hardware.
BradMd’s
s Hue we carry the largest Stock in this section. We are agents for the
BOY DIXIE AND OLIVER CHILLED PLOWS.
Dow Law Cotton Planter
We are Sole Agent* here for this, tlie only PLANTER which has stood the
test of years and still leads all others.
Our Stock of Groceries, tuple Dry Goods,
Boots and Shoes, Ac., &c., at
Prices Below Competition.
Au infallible and abso
lute specific for all the
diseases peculiar to the
female sex. A trial means
a cure.
ESPICIALLY FOR
Oiseases of the Kid
neys. Bladder Uri
nary Organs and
Nervous Sys
tem.
FEMALE
You can Save Money by Trading with Us.
N&A.F TIFT & CO
thought, he said, that he had a natural
beat to’
. wards literature and that his
■success Lad lieen doe to hard work. He
does not believe that long terms of In
tellectual Inactivity are beneficial, and
/$ that they are I jurious to the
writer. He works right along the year
round, and prefers to take his rest day
* u ier than in tt lump.
How Dead Folk* are Photographed. iter hold Out, Constll Griffin doesn’t
Photographing dead people is a com-j any market for us. The skin of the kan-
moner thing nowadays than one would J garpo is much used, but the Australians
supjMise, when photographs from life ■ do not discriminate and carve up
may be had so cheaply; hut folks go their native bears, or ruthlessly destroy
pig)
to my resigning - as adjutant
[ general oi the Ninth Georgia, for sixty
\ days just before the war, 1 was ill wiiTi
j typhoid lever, wlii^li t«eneral Gordon
knows was>u tatai to my family ances
try, and progeny, too, (toil help me!
U lien I spoke of going to the war, all
my trie mis said it was sheer folly; that
1 wa- loudly unequal to the hard .-I dps.
in my Mxiueeil eouditiou froui Unit de
vastating disease of typhoid.. I was a
nieiiilierot aii Atlanta company. Irdhi
not gi*t oIVmkx, enough to tin*'front for
me.* I lie Ninth Georgia wrfs l ecrnh-
mg there, and, in my eageri e>s to
-erve my lonnlry, I Jeff tnv own eom-
•any. anil j«» mat it. .\fter M-rving
hrough two eanipdgns the lx*>t phv-
ician- of the army sai I 1 was unfit tor
s*i vice. I coulil then have returned
tome for the i->i o» tlie war; initeagei
o serve in any capacity, i Sought an
qiening ill several liranehe* ol iheser-
• lee, as ^ General G« r ou |h*miiuiiIv
«iiow », fur applications went Uireugii
uni, 1 hen 1 cntciail the commissary
lepartuieiitas the only o|x*iiing to one
incajsaeitated physical y as inv.self
Jut if au\one says tliat there was a
luie when I would uotelieerfiillv liave
acrificeil property and life lor m v m*o-
peaks falsely.
The Colorluj- Matter In Cochineal.
Ex]x?rinu*nts liave been made by Lieb-
ermann, who states tliat cochineal does
not contain more than 10 per cent, ol
pure coloriug matter. Cochineal car
mine is a kind of lake-very similar to
turkey red lake, and contains * a large
amount of olumnia and lime combined
with nitrogenous matter. A commer
cial sample of very good quality was
found to contain 17 per cent water, 90
per cent, nitrogenous matter, 7 per ce
ash, and 56 per cent, coloring matter.
—Scientific Journal.
de he >
The agrd .Hade Mroug.
Westmoreland's Cali say a Tonic can
•e used by the most tender infant, bv
1 nature manhood, or by the aged and
• mini! without injt.rv, anti hi even
as. with the hum beneficial results.
It is especially adapted to weak and
chente females,
1 ! f r»'' *'«* * 'Ititirul sou has to mv:
\ irKiuia.TeiinesseeA (ieorgiaK.K..
AReut. Atlanta tia..
ulv 18, 1884. Mess. Westlnonflaml
57r , .£ we "l?^' S - C.-Gentleiuen!
mr or i’i" s tllL ' i ''»hty-se*eiml
l,HS •»«* hiateriallv
-rwijttbeufd ami o-lievv. I'ruin sufli-r-
!oi '•!!' x <>'ie bottle of vour
fSV* Atwlc l loos,, torwartl to bis
Itlress iJouat t. W elsh, High Point,
• y -.j six bottles o| cite same ami
md hill for ilk* amount S me. •
Sun*hl.ve Fat to an Odd Um.
Sunlight lias been put to odd use at
Brussels. Falling on a small shaft the rap
cause an upward draught of air wliicl:
sets a fan in motion, and tliat in tun
starts machinery tliat winds a clock.
—Exchange
IJout. (irwly** Tribute to vVli* Thaxter.
Concerning A'clia Tliaxters poem, ~A
Tryst.” which Lieut . Greeiysavs his men
were so fond of reading during their
Arctic exile, a writer in The Philadelphia
Press relates that, in the summer of 1884,
Greely, who was seeking rest and health
at Portsmouth, N. H., went ovfcr to the
Isles of Shoals one day.to visit Mrs.
Thaxter. As he reached the porch of
her house the poet came forward and ex
tended her hand. Greely took it,
dropjied on one knee, and kissed it, “I
have come,” he said in Jiis husky, t' *mb-
iiug voice, “on a pilgrimage to thank the
jioet for the lines tliat have lightened
many a weary day and night for a hand
ful of men who never expected to see
tlieir home and friends again.” Here he
had to pause, and, raised by the kind,
motherly woman, sank into an anncliair.
Among those who witnessed tlie scene
there was not a dry eye. After be bad
rested a little, and had told of the many
times lie liad read aloud the poem “in the
desolation of the north,” he asked her
how she could liave written it and if she
ever seen an iceberg. “No,” she re
plied, “but I have ever lived by the sea,
in summer and winter, and I suppose
imagination has done the rest.” “Won
derful!” was all that the pilgrim could
reply.—Cl licago Tribune.
along from day t«> day putting off the
taking of their pictures, or they forget it,
mitil sickness reaches «»ut aud gets them
and tiie next thing their friends knott
they are dead. A few hours lief ore con
signing tlieir remains to the grave the
relatives recall the fact that there is no
picture of tlie dead ami they ru&h out f»*r
for a photographer.
A picture taken under such conditions
as those found in the corpse-room can
not l»e the l**st in the world. Tlie casket
must be uprighted, and we have to do as
well as circumstances will permit in the
matter of light. Sometimes the eyes are
pushed o{**n, but usually the remains are
photographed as they apjM*ar in death,
and from tliat picture a life picture must
be worked out by our crayon artist. 1
have made many portraits of dead ]ieo-
ple in that way, and. as a rule, a photog
rapher who knows . his business gets a
good portrait. The charge usually made
for photographing a corpse is $30, which
of course does not include the cost of the
crayon portrait.—J. C. Strauss iu Globe-
Democrat.
or the
Japsunte 1‘asfllou fur Tattooing.
The Japanese have acquired such a
passion for licing tattooed tliat a law has
been passed forbidding the marking of
natives. TW law does not apply to for
eigners. It Is quite tlie thing non* to be
tattooed, and elaborate designs are traced
on many travelers as an indelible rem-
iniscen re ol their sojourn in the east.
Tlie sons of the prince of Wales, when
here a few years ago, jvere tattooed, and
several Russian dukes ’ami sprigs of no
bility have undergone the process. The
son of Longfellow recently submitted to
a very elaliorate tartoo decoration, and
for more than three months was in the
hands of the tattooer. who did an amount
of work on him during tills time tliat is
usually spread over a jiergxl of three oi
four years. This caused of course, a se
vere nervous shock, which he was ouly
able to witlistand by tlie application oi
application of hypodermic injections ol
morphine.—Yokohama Letter.
*yry respectfully,
M. M. IVklsh. ’Wttt. Ap.
j«-iin fnm£
l-r- -I thifih*a M * luan
I I think tunnel* »r« anfttllv
. „ ui, Li ..
v, r ;!!; , C ri ^v u ' of H,,r *
I •for nuuv
I Inhere- t r nyuusie,
IrSf : aluiiist nne.i-
lirahle and «»»«n*sr uneu-
In, Inw^vuW^He
Biuere a„a relief
^*“8 ’mottles, a™
1 in flrsl,
“ be
Scart-lty of Wood in Italy.
Wood is so scarce in “sunny Italy”
that it is actually sold by the pound; and
yet it is almost the only fuel used by the
common people. In Venice we saw
steaming-hot boiled potatoes and other
odffi^a food for sale In the groceries.
Every device ■» resortcj to to save fuel.
American tree-murderers ought, by all
means, to see Italy as a warning of what
a corn,try- stripped of wood may become.
The climate of southern and middle
Italy iu summer appears to ns tourists
very like that of America. There is the
same brilliant sunlight and fierce heat.
The dust is blinding. Mountain and Tal
ley ate as parched and brown as the
Ohio river clay hill-side in August. TVe
have now journeyed over half of Italy in
one direction and another and I liave'yvt
to see the tint good-abed tree. They are
t, dried-up tilings such as
farmer would chop down
away. There are not very
of tliat king.—Foreign Let-
d '
Another Veteran Drop* Out of the Rank*.
Pierre Solidor Miion, who was 98 years
old last November, claims to be one of
the seven survivors of the wars of tin
first Xapoleoti. His papers show tliat lie
enlisted in 1806, was in the French army
for ten years and nine months, rose from
the ranks to the grade of lieutenant, and
was made a chevalier of the Legion of
Honor. He is the father of sixteen chil
dren, and has lived in Philadelphia since
1880, supporting himself by playing the
violin in orchestras and giving music le»
sons.—Ex*' , ""*«*
the bandicoot (the
dingo or native dog, so that all
mar lie suited in leather. The fashion
able slippers are made from the skins at
the platypus, and are highly prized. Hie
people in New Zealand don’t go much
upon style. Their feet are large and un
shapely, and peggedixxtfs are considered
just the thing. In South New Zealand
brass rivets aroused to fasten the soles to
the uppers.
The good people of Japan do not show
any desire to cultivate American leather
or shoes. All the noble subjects of the
Mikado hanker after European fashions,
ami spend some of their incomes in wear
ing French shoes. The young women
iu Japan are not much behind our own.
They catch on to all the new fashions
European dress, ape the manners and
customs of Europeans, and take savage
delight is showing their pretty feet and
•ilk stockings. They don’t want any
shoes of American manufacture, and the
bulk of the natives are satisfied to go
tlirough life, wearing a sandal
wooden clog. Consul Patton does not
tuink there is any field for American
manufactures in the Japanese empire.—
New Yord Mail and Express.
art
“Does jour sou affect any particular Softool
of artr asked the visitor.
“No—yt-s—well he's painting a Belladonna
for the religious art gallery,” replied the fond
mother.
The visitor left—Hartford Journal
AX AUCTIONEER IX AUSTRALIA.
Auctioneer—Now gentlemen, what shall I
say for this magnificent and authentic Paul
Yeryoni asy: Come, start it at something.
Old gontietnan—Don't me the painter's
name to it. anywhere, mister.
Auctioneer—Of course not A picture like
that doesn't want signing; it stands on its
rits- No Udr Pass it in, John, and bring
out the next Now, gentlemen, here is a
superb Landseer by the same hand.—Tab
leau.—Melbourne Punch.
Candy Shops of Other Isnli.
In the matter of Confectiono, by the
way, New* York, speaking after the man
ner of men beats the world. They hardly
know what candy is in London, where
still obtains the antique and exploded
j .q»erstition that it is a sort of pap pecu
liar!}' suited to and designed for infancy.
A country where ioe cream is a rare and
novel compound, sold at fabulous prices
mil by the wine-glass full, presents to
’'lie American imagination difficulties in
:ie way of courtship and marriage which
might be expected to seriously check the
: jtural increase of the population; bat
t:ie untraveled Englishman has never yet
Fumed that sweets to the sweet is the
;roper method of bombarding maiden
toarts, and he seems to get the necessary
preliminaries settled some way in a
,ot«dly number of cases unassisted by any
.jfter gastronomic influences than are
lied by his own indigestible plum pud-
ling.
The candy shops there are small and
amble places where the proprietor
ladly exchanges a portion of his simple
;oods for a penny, or even a fraction
hereof, instead of refusing, as do our
rilliant and lordly confectioners, tone-
,ofiate for less than half a pound of com
pounds ranging from 50 cents to $1 a
jound. The idea of such airs in such a
business would be laughed to aoorn. In
Paris they an* in these respects somewhat
more civilized, and indeed it was from
Paris that we learned our early lessons in
die worship of sugar, but we have now
rar outstripped our teachers both in the
number and splendor of the shops and in
the expensiveness and variety of our con
fections.—New York Graphic.
mm
been
of Crockery
»-are
lively Philadelphia inventor.
had it [ giar&thon, thus making a tight and im-
tl* object being jo
hy! F
How th» Bride** Veil Come To Be.
It was mice the custom for the bride at
her wedding to wear ber hair unbraided
and hanging over her shoulders. At the
celebration of her'marriage with the
Palatine. Elizabeth Stuart wore -her
hair disheveled and hanging down her
shoulders.- It has been suggested that
the brides veil, winch of late years has
become one of tin; most conspicuous
features of iter custuiuc. may be nothing
store than a milliner s substitute, which,
in old. times, conce ded hot a Tew of the
bride's personal at: i act ions, and covered
her fare when -hi knelt at the altar.
Boston li'i'icel.
One Garment That Chance. Nat.
There is one garment which is sacred
from the craze fur change that attacks
tailors and those who :n;
fashions, and that is the dress
body coat,
and tlie blouse all change
is, but the
Problem of a Commercial Pole.
Chief Engineer Melville, in
lecture, described the Arctic outfits nec
essary for explorer* and the mistaken
made in making them too lieavy. He
said: “I have slept comfortably on top
Of a sled in a sleeping bag with the ther
mometer 100 degrees below the freezing
point of water."
The Arctic sleeping bags, he explained.
It was the_only for
Jotliing worn that way.
che very idea of unlimited" appropr
by congress cat'sed an Arctic ex-
pedition to be loaded down with
the worthless rubbage of every crank
in' the land. His sleeping bag weighed
eleven pounds. The Greely expedition
bags weighed
by day rather
In response to questions as to his
habits of work Mr. Howells saUl: “I
devote my mornings to writing. I rise
at about 7, breakfast at 8, and then go
to work. I eat the usual American
breakfast, and don’t find that a good
hearty meal disagrees with my labors.
I did not think atone time when I came
back from Europe that I would keep up
theToreign custom of a light breakfast
of coffee and rolls. Bnt I dropped it
after a time. It is not adapted to our
climate, and it is not suited to onr
habits, with tlie children going to
school so early and nothing but a lunch
at noon. After breakfast I sit down
down and begin to write, and I work
away for three or four hours until the
fa nily lunch time. v 1 then drop my
work for the (lay and spend tlie remain
der of the time m’chatting, walking,
driving, or doing whatever conies up
permost. I have written somewhat in
thq afternoon, and, indeed, at all times
of 1 the day during a pressure. But 1
think my best work is done in the
morning,'a ml I consider it the best time
for literary work.”
A SHepard-Boy’a Prayer.
A little lad.was keeping his sheep one
Sunday mdruing. The bells'were ring
ing for church, and the people were
going over the fields, when the little fel
low began to think that he too would
like*to pray to God. But what could
he say ? For he had never learned any
prayer. So he knelt down and com
menced the alphabet A, B, C, D, and
so ou to Z. A gentleman happened to
pass on the other side of the hedge,
heard the lad’s voice, and looking
through the bushes saw the little fel
low kneeling, with folded hands and
closed eyes, saying “A, B, C.”
“IV hat are you doing, my little
man ?”
The lad looked up. “Please, sir.
was praying.”
“Bat what were you saying your
letters for?”
“Why, I didn’t know any prayer,
only I felt that l wanted God to take
care of me.and help.me take care of the
sheep. So I thought if I said all I
knew he would put it together and
spell all I wanted.”
“Bless your heart, my little man!
be will, he will, he will. When the
heart speaks right, the lips can’t say
wrong.”
^^CHALF A MILLION GARDENS*^#-
Our Seed Warehouse*, the Hugest in II
Slew York, an fitted up with every *p-V(
for the prompt and careful's
Onr Green-house Establishment at
/Jersey City is the most extensive fa
America. Annual Sales, 2#
Plant*. '
Catalogue for 1886. of 140 pages, containing cobred plates, desa
of the NEWEST. BEST sad RAREST SEEDS and PLANTS, will
6 cts. (la stamps) to cover
PETER
TS, will be mailed on receipt of
Z fill 35 & 37 CorUandt Sf. f
ML Ulfa NEW YORK.
Latlie* suffering from
trouble* jK*culiar to their >
sex, lio matter what kind, |
can find relief and cure j
in a !mttlc*of Bradfleld’s *
Female Regulator.
Regulator!
MENO
^1- •»..toi
ffiffiBWnwreinrc tvw't u fuil irwa; «
were restored to htalth by u.se of 1
1. SEMINAL PASTILLES J
alCnrefor Nervous Debility, Orpudo*
m_andPhy»lc*IJPecaylB Youna or Mid
Avoid tbs imposition ot prrtcaU&tij
Landfall ManlyRtrenrthund ViwouVlil
loso-whofiu^cr frcia Cm nr*ny obscurodi
by Indloetwtioa. Ei'Ksan, Over-«PP
Work, or too free Iodalmtice, ore *dc that you amdoi
gags^gaBL'ggeassaaaag'
k whose only aim ittoblosd «beirvi»
ltfaiu. Take a S CUL BtatOT thoinAS
JCrOEIJ tbouaunU. docs not Interfere
f wiih aitenUm to business, or c
_ or iocntiveniciMe in any vrsy.
foni srirntifle mcdicul pr!r>c!ploe. By dhcct
Wioato the srat ot diiwuc it* saecifls
y- nnniwwsli felt without delay. The natural
—jxa-*' - nmclicnaofthe hamonotyeiiUmreWored. The
WMedsaimatlng tlmesti of life are given hack, thepstimt
becomescheerfhisad rapidlyyainq both mreagOx swibssUh
TREATMENT.—0u JCosO, J3. In HttSS. Haw. V
Um Chemist^
KARRIS REMEDY CO., ,
Tt.Ttm'-83tl^Q.aT.LOtriB.lIO.
IBLEY’S SEEDS
for Al-!* CKO
’Sir***-***'
and best method-1
— _ JddCT Cwa*. Trr« «
. An>unl Catalog** s*d Prie* IAU of
_ KlEB.
SIBLEY & CO. Rochester,N.Y. Chicago,III.
ronsnos.
JilllMilE
Sen-t for our book containing valuable in
fimuation for women. If' will be mailed free
to applicant* AiMre-*
TIIK ItK %I>KIELP KKiU LAToK CO^
lk»xZSy Atlanta. Ga.
Sold by all Druggi'iL-.
rOOH ISON’S
Wth, to say address. lUustratas and lists
every thl nr for Lsdles*. OeBts*. Chlidrmis*
1 Goods, at prieeT^er 1
l bouse In the United
^«EXTS \YANTKD FOB
Hon. S. S. Coi’s Great National Wort
“THREE DECADES
OF
Federal Legislation.”
.1 IlMory of Onr Otcn Country
ami Our Otcn Times.
offered ageniri. >tnmgly «>»iumended bythV
pri***!* without regiinl io political proclivities'.
Preside * — * —*
mmmm
MAKE
NEW. BIOS
■I BLOOD-
, p,n. nre tTOteftljnranr. B, otaera Ilk, them la th. world. Win pcmvelr cur. or
all manner of disease. The inftmnatioa around Saab bar is worth ten times ths eost of a box of
.....
B. Johnson > Co^ Boston,
PILLS
Pills. Wad oar about them and you will always be thankfolT^
Vasa 8old crc-Twhcrg. orsentby mail tbrgSc. tn stamps. Dr. LB.
-thenilan*! bsailttiena—
Binwitlo
W. W. Reed, druggist, of Winches
ter, Ind., writes: ‘-One of tuy custom
ers, Mrs. Louisa Pike, Bartonia, Ran
dolph county, IntL, was a long sufferer
sumption, and begun buying it of
be walked to this
SUPERIOR
GRADES
SAWS
FOUR
FIRST
f* PRIZES
New Orleans.
Send for Cat* oyue and I‘r er* to
E. C. ATKINS & CO., Indianapolis, Ind.
PEHSIITS BROS., Agents. Atlanta, Ga.
In six months’ time she
city, a distance of six miles, and is now
-•* much improved sh*» hn« qnit u»in«r
I. She leels site owe?* her life to if.’*
F ree Trial Bottle^ at Lauiar, nankin 1
dl IramsrV Drug titore.
lANDRETHS’msEEDimGATALOGUE
“CARDENERS! COMPANION.”
«» Cleveland, saj*. “I con-
scw»tit>u-l,v cumu i'Dil it U> my -fellow-riti-
xens.” flou. JameN G. Blaine, way*.
“It written in clear and graphic stvle and
extn*mcl> ciitcrtaining." Ex-Frehideni
Hmyewy »ny«. *-ft will l»e a valuable- addi
tion to our ht»t«*ry.” Speaker Carlisle,
sajs“l 'vt»n!d rommend this work to tlie
people of tb.- United States.” lion. A brain
K. He win, *»uy«, *‘I i iterating «» a ro-
tiianee ” IIi:mlrvd-» of agents are meeting
with great r-urcess—making from |P0 .to 4ion
per mouth Agents without former experi
ence are doing grandly with it, while experi
enced canvasser* fln«lit a perfect bonanza
We want an agent in every township in the
United States not now occupied. Previous
experience, while desirable, not absolutely re
quired. as we give all necessary instructions
for success. Book* now ready for delivery. tt
unemployed or you desire to better your con
dition, write ns for terms to agents. Address,
J. A. &R.A.B1ED,
Providence, K. I.
Diabetes. UrigliUs Diseases. Scanty anti Pain
ful Urinating, Deposits iu the Unne, Pains in
the Back, Nervous Debility or Female Weak
ness, Nou-retention or lucontiuence of Urine.
Irritation, Inflammation or Ulceration of tht
and Kidneys, Diseases of tlie Prostratf
Stone iu the Bladder and Calculus.
Gravel or Brickdust Deposit, Mucus or Milk*
Discharges and all Diseases and affections ol
the llladtler and Kidneys aod Dropsical
Swelling in men. women and children.
Bucbn was long used by the Hottentots iu a
variety of diseases. From these rude prac
titioners, _the remedy was borrowed by the
“ '1 Dutch physicians
resident English ami
whose recommendation it was employed in
Europe, and has since come into general use.
Combined with Juniper and other desirable
ingredients, as in this preparation it is a rehn
able remedv for the above diseases.
This article lias now been before the nubli*
foi seventeen years and its sale has and is con
stantly increasing—and that with very littli
advertising, which proves it to be an article oi
merit. We have testimonials from some ol
the leading pbysiicans of Georgia, South Caro-
Flqriaa, and other States in regan!
na and
11 its reliability as a diuretic, and a reined'
f *rthe diseases for which it is recommended.
We class the above medicine among th*
best we ever made and tlie si fferers of Kid
ney and Bladder affections wo.ild be im
mensely more beiiefilted by the ns • of it than
by taking the various worthless r.-iuedies now
being extensively advertised. A gentleman
was in to see us a few days ago who had taken
six ltortles of one of the extensive!* advertised
medicines without benefit, and one liottle of
Rankin’s Buchu and Juuiper cured him. It is
only mHTSflar; to tr>* the medicine we manu
facture to be «ouvinced of their efficacy.
Mnron, Atlanta mid Albany, Ga.
LAMAR’S L1VIR PILLS
Price, 10 Cents a Box.
— Passenger — _
South western Railroads and branches will run
astuUows:
kk ad nowy.
ix> ' r *-
.Nu.a.
From Savannah.
No,«.
9:40 am lv.
.......Savannah..,., lv 8j4fpm
12ffi0a m ar.
. . MUledgeviUe.
...ur 10:11'a m
Eatonton ...
ar liflOpm
No. 18.
From Augusta.
No. 20.
dm a m lv.
UffiO p m ar.
Savannah...
- - Hr gjo pui
.. ar 02)0 a ir
ILjO p mar
1:50 a in ar.
ii'OOam ar
Atlanta ..
Coluuilms....
.Emaula
Albany....
Milledirevillc..
■***!.*!'
.Eatonton
No. 54.
From Macon.
No. 52.
100am lv..
6 30 a mar.
.Macon.
Augusta....
MUledgeviUe.
r atonton
t«eM«ecc
'*e atr-c t*
SHBEE
No. L.
From Macon.
No,'a.
1000am lv..
4 37 p mar.
320 p m ar
Macon
...lv 8 00pm
.Albany
.. ar 12 00am
No. 5.
From Macon.
No. 19.
940a m lv..
Macon
. lv 5 55 p m
No. 1. From Macon. No.
61. No. 53.
8 30a ui iv..
12 25 p in ar
..Macon lv 600pm 3 57am
. Atlanta..ar 9 50p m 730am
No. 23.
From Fort Valley. Np. 21.
9 20 p in lv..
. u)06puiar.
, ... Fort .Valley ...
Ferry
...lv 1120 am
ar 12 05 p m
No. 2. From Atlanta. No. 54. No. 63.
3 40 p m lv..
7 40 p ni ar.
Atlanta , lv a 10 p m 3 55 a in
.. .Macon . nr 11 45 p m 7 35 a m
Columbus.. ar 2 4u p m
Milledgev’e.. ar lo 19 a in
............ — Augusta, ar— 3 45 p m
. Savannah.. ar 630 am 8 30 p ni
No.6.
From Columbus.
No. 20
2-Op in Iv
.... Columbus ...
. .lv
9 5o p in ur.
Atlanta... .
ar..
12 00 a in ar.
Albany
MiUeUgeville..
— ar.
.. .ar—.. ..
6 30a iu ar..
Augusta .. .
Savannah
— ar....’.
No. 2.
From E ufa ula.
No. 4.
3 20 p 111 ar.
Albany
1 50 a ui ar.
9 50 p iu ar.
Columbus
. ..MilledgeviUe..
.. ...Eatonton
ar
Savannah
No.26. From Albany. No.
38. No. 4.
12 40 p m Iv.
4 37 p ui ar.
Albany
Eulaula
Macon . ...
....Columbus
.. Iv 4 in a in
..ar ..
. . .ar s lo a m
...ar 2 4(iptu
.. MilledgeviUe
.....Eatonton
\ugusta
ar 10 U> a m
..ar 12 20 p 111
..ar 3 45 pin
. .Savannah nr y :Ki p ir
_No., 36. From Eaton ton amt Mllletlgeville.
ISOp in Iv. Ealoutoii
2 ii p iu Iv MiUcdgeviilc .
5 2S p iu ar.. -Macon
12 a m ar. .olumhus ...
Kufaula
i2 ‘ a iu ar Albany
#50 p in ar .Atlanta
A ugusta .. .
6 30 a in ar Savannah
No. 24.
0 45 a iu ar...
From Perry.
Perry . . . ...
....Fort Valley
Iv 2 55pm
ar 24, p m
FIFTEEN PILL81 X EAVfl UOX.
The £est LIVER PILL
Now Made and the
Most Popular.
Lamar, Rankin&Lamar
Macon. Atlanta and Albany, Ga.
LL
On and after Sunday, Sept. i:s. 1885. Pas-
.ax . r
8;oo p m
10:45 p in
113* pm
ISWani
8:10 a m
12:2.5 p m
0^0 |ilt
S220 a n>
GAM8ATI & FAMBROUGH,
DENTISTS,
'T’END ER their professional services to the
I _ citizens of Albany, Dougherty and ad
joining counties.
OFFii * “
CE: In Willingham’s BnDding, Broad
*” jnll
Street, Albany, Git.
illlwty
WANTED IN ALBANY.
An energetic bnsidess woman to
solicii and take orders for The
MADAME GRISWOLD
PuteutSKirt Supporting
sy Cornets. These corsen have
7 lieen extensively advertis'd and
sold by lady canvassers the past
ten years, which, with their
superiority, has created a
large demand for them
throuzliont the Uuited States,
and any lady who gives her time
and energy to canvass for them can soon build
np a permanent and profitable busi
ness. They arc not solid bj^njerphants, ami we
S ire exclusive territory, thereby giv-
g the agent the entire control of these mu*
K rior corse tn in the territory assigned
r. We have a large number of agents who
are making a grand success selliug these jpoth-
and We desire snch in ever- town. Adi..
31 .TIE. LJISUOLDA CO.
myl-lm 923 15’divuy, New York
Chain of Settle oiS.W.Sf.
Albany. Nov 14. lSt>5.
PA!U.fG effect on and after SUNDAY,
1 M/~ *
MAY v, 1880.
^AY PASSENGER TRAIN
Daily.
Leave Ainany lor Macon and Mont-
12:00 m
—A younff man in a n*sunrant laie- j
... ■ »»vcrht*anl the following converaa- j
rion lietweeh two rattier rou^h look-
ig. hut evidently quick-witted young
men who catne in to get a lunch.* Hello
l »ic*k.” said the first one. “whnt> your f
tiroattietlupfor?'* ••Qtifuay.” ‘*Quin-i
ey, Mass.?” “No, Qoincy, III.”
S PSICE IO CENTS. Thesmsteomr-etoscd b-Ii<«Titly cnifiUliihe i ?*eed I’ntnlwgae ever
■ - . - -w-. flitcen cents. Ihs erode rn Market UaiTler.iug under 4.loss is worth
mestSsprira Tin* briar OUR OSB 11UNDSJ.DT.1 Yi'Ai:. ™ pnksh this
ate (.side for Garden and Firm. To a l seedis rn* TE*i CENTS in stamp*
I we mail a ropy, sod on uxvler« tor Seed will five credi: for that truonnL Addrem
k LANDRETH & SONS« Seed Growers. Lock Box.Phila.Pa.
gomery
Lrnve at Albany from ilacon a:
Montgomery »
EXTENSION TRAIN.
Daily except Sunday.
Leave Biakel* far Albany...
'■ri*' •'r':-.«nT , .!rk«’!r
L.v« Albany for IKskcly
imvc WnLi-ii .. n:-3p m
4 At'ON AM* * * U * ' • GUT EA
GER TRAIN.
8.ooam
sen per trains on this road will run as toUows:
No. a.
Mail and Express.
Leave Brunswick
Arrive Way cross
Leave Waycrusa
Arrive Allmny
Arrive Moron
.Virive Atlanta
Arrive Chattanooga ..
Arrive Cincinnati . ..
No. 5.
Accommodation.
Leave Brunswick
Arrive Waycruss
Arrive Jacksonville (via 8. F. & W.) 12*0 n’n
Connects far Pensacola, Mobile and New
Orleans.
Arrive Albany 7:30
No. 4.
Mail and Express.
Leave Cincinnati lO.ui p
Leave Chattanooga 0:20am
Leave Atlanta 2:45 pm
Leave Macon ff:45 pm
Leave A!baby 10:50 a m
4 * rt ”52ESrSiii -**-
Local Sleeping Cars on all night trains lx-.
tween Savunnnh and Augusta, .savannah an.l
Macon, Savuuuah ami Atianta.
lONXKCrUlXS.
The Milledgeville and Eatonton train runs
daily (except Monday! between Gordon and
Eatonton, aud daily (except Sunday} between
Eatonton and Goruou.
Train No. 53, leaving Savannah at 8:45 p m,
will not stop (except op Sundavs) to put off
passengers at statiousbetween savannah and
No. 4 ! -j.
Enfanla train eounerthut Cuthliert for Fort
uaine.4 daily (exeept Sundn*,.
The Perry accommodation train between
Fort Valley and Perry runs daily (except Sun-
T*he Allmuy and Blakely accommodation
train runs daily (exceptSunday) between Al
bany aud Blake] j.
At Savannah with Savannah. Florida and
Western Railway; at Augusta with all lines to
North and East; at Atlanta with Air-Line ami
Keuuesaw Routes to all points North, East and
Tickets for all |*>int- and keeping car berths
.m sale at City Office, No. 2 Ball Street.
A. IVaiHUEAli, 1VM. ROGERS,
Gen. Pass. Agt. Gen Sunt. Savannah.
J. C. SHAW, W. F. SH ELLMAN,
Gen. Trav. Agt. Traffic Mattagfir,
Savannah. Ga
iiniHitWiitinl';.
4ffi0 a i
9fi50ai
Arrive J
720am
625am
SfiJO a in
2:56 p m
8:25 p in
82)0p m
6:30 a iu
6ff»p m
Arrive at Brunswick ..
No. 6.
Accommodation.
Leave Albany
Arrive Waycrow
Arrive Savannah
Arrive Jacksonville
No. 7.
Leaves Brunswick on Snnday at
Arrives Albany **
No. 8.
Leaves Albany on Sunday at 6:40 a m
Arrives Brunswick ** 6:12pm
For Macor., American. Montgomery. Allan
ta, Birmingham, Anni 0 ‘on, Chattanooga and
Cincinnati, take Train No. 3, leaving Bruns
wick at 8 p m. daily. This train also connects
at Way cross with trains for Gainesville,
Thoinusville and intermediate points. South.
S. F. * W. Railway, and Tor Savannah. ^
For Jacksonville. Savannah, Thomaaville,
Pensacola, Mobile, New Orleans and interme
diate Stations, take Train No. 5, leaving
Brunswick at4:80 am.
Pullman Buffet Sleeping Canon trains Nos.
3 and 4 between Jacksonville and Cincinnati.
J. A. MCDUFFIE*
A. A. GA DDIS, G. PTa.
V. P.and General Manager.
LumberYard
THE UNDERSIGNED desires to inform his
a friends and the Dublic that he h««
purchased
public that be has
LH.Willjngham’s LumberYard
Whw-e he has a large stock of Lumber on
band and for sale at reasonable figure*. He is
also prepare** *" **’ —. .
tice, and by
rtso prepared to fill special orders at short n£
I.. *y promptness and elese attention to
the wishes »f customers, hopes to deserve and
A PERFECT
»BEAUTIFUL.
SAFE, and
RELIABLE.
jant things to sleep in, but death to those
rho attempted to carry them.” In —^
ais knowk-d^e, bora of experience, be
dxpcctedjrt some future day to conduct
“ ty to the. Arctic regions.
and to fin.I a grand, public spirited man
of vast means wlio would aid him in
solving the problem of a commercial
pole. Hie road was one of trial and
but the object was attainable
entitle world would not be
it was reached.—Phiiade 1 -
are said to have
but tram whAC cause
Ifnvr it Was That Fir- Porilam!-
er* Get *15,000.
Portland (Mr.) Argu.-. April -1.
3fr. Rufus, F. Bacon bel«l onc-fiith !
A the ticket which drew tlie capital’
irizt- ot $75/fD0in Tlie i^oiiisfana Statr
Isitterr Drawing of April 13tii. Some j
iffrln iriemte suggeste»J that they pnr- J
di:u*e some tickets iu The Ixuiisiaii.i
>tate [Lottery. They ptirchasei! one-
Utii of ceu different tickets, paying
hcrefor, $10. When tiler got the
icfcets. caeh selected two rickets liaji- j
mzanl. atsl irdthti* ticket drew', t-iej
uuouurwx-to he divided between them
di. Ou Weilnesdav Ja«t a telegram j
was received, j-taring tliat tiqket No. :
25.244 liad drawn one firth of the capi- \
t3i prize Of
the Break caeeeaadileved by the RED “f"
OR. made by the KED **C*” OIL Maantac-
luring <’<».. of BalUmnie. bar indnred taiathnr.
GET THE GENUINE
II is made of the be4 selected crude i^fiolcun-
br family nse. It had never been know u t« cauM-
an aividenL and hence can 1* entrusted to the
use of any member of the household. It bum*
vilh a pure white and brilliant flame, fv^not
smoke nor crust the wick. Has no toil mkw
Dan be used in asy Kero-cne Lamp. Ask y v
cocekeeper far it, ax»d see that he gas *:
THE BLATOHIEY
pympi
BUY THE BEST.
FOtJTZ’S
•OR3E AND CAT* LE POWBERC
BLATCIILEV’S
TRIPLE ENAMEL
PORCEUtiFMiHED
and cl.sp attention to
Ortc *•••- "I1WT1 "I tiUBUmicia, hot
a J! If receive a shore of the trade.
Am ready t«» furnish rliqive fencing and have
the same put up promptly and at reasonable
rates.
■ . are Know lor AllaT.V'.Ui.Iy .... 7:10 p m ! *5.' 1 jreMhtrta’artl"* on
\mv. MtaMjr imm MnV..„ J . . - 1 : ■> t-m “flw LiXind^SLSw’S^
raver All-an* lor Mac a-a - ... 5 40am: Lauw *”“ JioaMlnga.
\rrve* at Macon from Afbanv 0 4 > a i&
FLORIDA AND V, KStKRN EXPRESS
-re’vW'i JSSSBSgt“ T - ! CATOOSA LIME.
. | Rarisassasirss
— J AS. K-P. KEATON,
Feb.T-w6m.
'ping cars to and from Savannah and
ace sleeping cars to and from Savannah and
Jacksonville,Savannah and Gainesville, Jack
sonville a art Louisville via Thomaaville, Al
bany and Montgomerv. Pullman buffet sleep
ing care Jacksunvil a to Washington.
CONNECTIONS.
At SAVANNAH for Charleston at 7:10 a m*
l*-40 p m autU£81> ro; for Augusta aaU*At7an’-
“ * and 8:10 pm; with steamships
ta at 8:40 am
ter New York, Sunday, ueaday ami TridMY'
for Boston, Thursday; lor Baltimore
weekly.
JESUP
seiui-
At JESUP for Brunswick at 2:30 a m and
6:20 am; for Macon 2:30 aud 8.40 a m.
At WAYcRObs for Brunswick at 4:10am
and 10:40 a ro; for Albany at 5 p m and 12:45 a
At G ALLAH AN lor tVriiKudiun at »:lo m ui
nd s:«5j» m texecpi .Minnau, r Waldo,
tartar Key, t>cala,ru^ jit lJ^u am and 7ffi5
p ro
At JACKSONVII
lines diven '
AGENT FOB THE
iMirv %. I**vi*.
SEAMLESS TUBE
COPPER-LINED
PUMP
Do not be t
—A mSJtiou aud w half Bibles
Tmtaatcnbi printed last. year by
r a . —r-— : r — year to rang* »«.
Jusiou the chief engineer said that with Bible >©ciety alone—yet skeptics aver Toeur* Pm
. - , j __ «. ,.r : t Pihln i^ P-illiixr i• 1 Tti <fOM tRUlR
tiie
rwrtt
i in the .
C. cT&LATCKLEY.Manurr,
300 MARKET ST.. Philati’a.
Write to fer noire i-* tezreot Agent
Mortgages, Crop Liens,
! .
Land Deeds,
. .. ^ w, *b rail and steamer
nes dircrgiug.
At LIVE OaK ter 31 ad iron, ZaUabassee^
eu-^ai 10-Atfam.
At GAlNk^VILl.K for Oro]o,Ta veres. pem>
bertoo s Ferry. Br>M*knvi2le and Tatnim ui
11:2b am; for Cellar Kej at 3:3U pm (exeept
iy).
At CHATTAHOOCHEE for Pensacola. 3Io.
ft.li. an. ■ If. I . *
bU..»«rOtiaM.; trill, PaopleVlSM^u;
OT.ilrertidDisto Irar. f„r Apsl^hirolo at
'*>•'" L-mirwI.j, and II :.w i, m Satunlat
,s ”
r. A ~”‘
TUTT’S
tlu.* Bible i-« falling into desiie-j
IB core sad arerretH
srffi prcvfin Gan* re Fowls
will IncTfa f the qmsWr of tdb
b twenty per eent- and make the boucr
for prevent
n t»side are
startling But Xrne.
* "Wills Point, Tkxap. I>ec. 1. 1883.;
After ctiffering lor uiure than thn*c .
vp:ir- with tiMne of the throat ami :
lung?'. I got 5o low XaA spring 1 tva.-
.■ntirely unable to ilo anytliiug. and
inv cough was so bad I aouvely efept
:usy at night. My Druggist Mr. 11. *
F. Goodnight, seul me a triai bottle of
DK. BGSANKO’S COUGH AND
LUXG tiYRUP. I found relief, and
after u-iiig ?lx $1.00 ltottiee. I was en
tirely cured. J. M. WKI.l>EN*.
Sold b) IfAURtr. Bankin Sc l.aaiar. i
COLLEGE.
MACON. CA. W. HcXAV
A'First-class
I AND ALL STANDARD FORMS OF LEGAL
BL.iNkr-.FoR SALE AT THE
mifeii|88S3Sst Sshaq! {Hews ind AdvertiserTffice.
i» fassy North crSoaf- i
D, M. F
-==y 2^£WETABU
.BULKS, ace. IsralooMs
f St CO., Dstrolt^MkJhliite
NOTICE.
F ROM thl- date, all baeineea of the ertate of
M. < . Ball will be attended to by mveelf
or my son. A. W. Ball. ■ -
MRS. 8. M. BA IX. Gnardian.
Tbomaeville, feai Marrb 17,18s6.-2m.
ml fisCinr'*’*
I
II P| r. f, r ^oriu»E people- Semi »
g^|^||puetage,fml we win mail yi
npic. >t'na iv crsie
win maU yun free, u
sample bnxorgnuda
i in u»e way of mak-
W.IE. HILSMAN
The Mirror
irtmuM
NERVOUS
is no flatterer. Would you _ _____
make it tell a sweeter tale? DEBILITATED MEN*
Magnolia Halm is the charm
er that almost cheats the
looking-glass.
I 4f!i
K>
Ton are allowed a free trial of thirty day* ot the
ot In. Dye's Celebrated Voltafcjgelt^witn
J
J-lectric Scrpensory AvplUpree, for the rpeedy
rel -'f aod permanent cure of ServoutBeMlltg.teas
• f Vitality and Mcnhcod, and all kindred trouble*.
Also tor many other diseases. Complete restora-
tioa to Health. Vigor asd Manhood rusranteed.
Vo risk la Incurred. IB not rated pamphlet Instated
€ mailed free broddreiialna
V0LTA10 BELT CO., BniillW
Ike
_ srmpTowis of a
TORPID LIVER.
Lossofappetite, Bowels costive, Pain in
the bend, with a doll sensation In che
back part. Pain under the shoulder-
blade, Fullness nfter eating, with ndls-
Inclinailon to exertion of body or mind,
Ir rit*hiliry of temper, Low spirits, with
a feeling of having neglected some daty,
vi emriness, Dizziness, Flattering at the
“cart. Dots before the eyes, Headache
•vex th© right eye, Kestlessness, with
fitfal drenins. Highly colored Urine, and
CONSTIPATION.
TUTT’S PILLS arc especially adapted
to such eases, one dose effects such u
change of feeli ng as to astnn i s Ii tlie sufferer. -
They Increase the Appetite,anrt cause the
body to Take on Ple*li«tlme the eyttem is
Bonrisheri.and i.y their Tonic Action on
tee Digestive Orcans.lt *ic*»inr >4 tool -tare
—- I t Murray 8t..S.T.
ILLS'
Mpovaies. Gie body, makes heaitl.y flesh,
srreugtaeos the weak, rejunrs Um* wbjsUs :(
the systeui with jnire blood unJ Imrd munch:;
tones tlie nervous system, invigoratert the
^in,^anrt impart^ the vigor of m,
rfflt'E '44 Murray St., New York-
\
\All trains of Huh ronrt nre run bv Centra
.90) Meridian time which is 86 minutes slov. at
than SavniMiali Time.]
O N and after Sunday Mav 2,1885. Pasren-
trerTiaiiid on this rooii will run as fol
lows:
FAST MAIL.
UEAI* IKIWN. HHXU IT.
7^)1 a in Iv Snvauuah arT^dpm
a in 1 v Jeaup ar 6:15 p m
’JUU a m Iv Blackshear ar 5:17 p iu
9:50 a in ar Wavcroas Iv5:u0pm
llri7 a id ar Callahan Iv 2:45 p in
12:00 noou ar Jacksonville.... Iv 2:00 p iu
7:85 a ui Iv .Jacksonville ....ar 7fiJO p ui
8:18 a m Iv Cahaliau ar 6:50 p ui
io:25 a m Iv Waycrons ar4:40 p ui
U:loamiv. .. llouierville Iv:t:51pni
11:30 a in ur... . Dupout Iv :ta.5 p ui
12:18 p m Iv Valdosta Iv 2:52 p m
12:5«) p m Iv Guitiuau iv 22» p in
ISTpmar .. Thouisaaville Iv 1:40 p m
2:35 puiar ... Buinbrid^e Ivll:25um
4:04 p ui Chattahoochee Iv UffiO a iu
Stojis ouly at statiour* named, aud all regular
jtatiuuti between Dupout awl Gaineavilie, and
1’homa.svillc amt ChaUnluNadiee. Pullman
buffet sleeping cars Wat-liingtou to Jack^.u-
vilie, Jacksonville to New Y ork, and tound
from Jacksonville and New Orlcan> via. Pen
sacola and Mobile, Pull mini palace sluepina
■•are Jacksonville to St. Louis via. Savanuah!
* flnnf.n. Viuilitfillu ntnl u .-«n..
Atlanta, Nashville and Evuusvilie.
EAST FLORIDA EXPRESS.
4:39 p m Iv Jacksonville ar 11:30 a in
5:14 p ulv Callahan. ../ arl0:46au
7:30 p ui Ivm.—Wa/cnws ar 8:25 a u
7:50 p in Iv—.G leu more iv 8fi)2a m
8:17 p m Iv Argyle lv ; :45 a m
8:32 p m lv Jloniervillc , 7^2 a ni
8:52 p iu ar Uui*out lv 7:15 a in
3:45 p ui lv Lake City ar
3:50 p m Iv Gainesville ar.
7:10puilv Live Oak ar
93X> p m lv l»uj*out. ar 7:10 a n
0:48 p m lv Valdosta iv 6:20 a u
10:20 p m lv Quitman iv 5:*6 a u
ll;loamar Thomasville ... lv 4:55 an
12:38 a mar Camilla Iv3:l4au
1:80 a mar Albany Iv2:i0pu
Stops only at stations named. Pulimau buf
fet sleeping care Washington to Jacksonville
Pull man palace sleeping care to aud from
Jacksonville and Louisville, and GainesvilW
aud Montgomery, via Thomasviie and Al
bany.
ALBANY EXPRESS.
8:45 p m lv Savannah..., ar 0:15 a n
ll^L p m lv Jesup jy 3:z5 a u
2:20 a m ur Waycross ]v l:lu a ir
7:05 a m ar Callahan lv 10:20 p in
8:05 a mai Jacksonville lv 9:30 pro
.S2»»“}v Jacksonville^..ar b.-oSaw
16:2-j p ni lv Callahan ar 7:05 a iu
2:45a mlv Waycross....; ar 12:00nbt
4 :lo a m ar Dupont, lv iojjo p m-i
6:15 a m ar Live Oak lv 7:10 p m
9:35amar. Gainesville lv 3:50pm
10:00 a mar ..LakeC'lty ... lv 3:45 pm
4:4u a mlv Dupont.... ...ar 9:45 pm
5:50 a m lv Valdosta iv 820 pm
6:42 a mlv Quitman .... lv 7:35 pm
7:50a mar ... Thomasville lv p ro
11:50 a m ar Albany j v saupm
Stops-at all regular stations. Pullman pal-
t sleepi”" - — — ...f #.jim ii... . * .
4
I
l
' u
**