Albany weekly herald. (Albany, Ga.) 1892-19??, June 04, 1892, Image 4

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TURDAY JUNK 4. HERALD. — ■ , . ■ ~ _ __ rytor ud Propriiior. if. M. McImtomii, - • f • •' - • • Editor. Every momIiir rxrupt Momlny. tiunw.TUWi”* : Hy limit, pofttmeo |»«M, or <Io* ivere l ln*eirrlur III u*ut« k \n*ck nr 15 oeiiM * cnomh— SSiE==E'!l All snbscrlpthint iiriyiililu In advance: no ox* •cepllou to this ruK* in favor of nnytsidy. AiivkhtimN'i Ha Tin nxABmuni.r., amt made (known on application. OrricK up Main, west olitu of Washington street, op|HMlto the Commercial Hank. Entered at tlm pnstofilre at Allamy, (la., lu ■neond-dnss mail matter. SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1892. Thr Maine boom Itna reaolivtl the (point where President Hnrrlson has deemed It necessary to have himself ilnterviewed. Haaihy Kdhnkhh, the English earloa-, turim, since- his return to Londqn, tells ibis 'friends that “the Yankee natlou •will fiefk all oreatlon In the World’s Fair bmfines*.” Right you are, sir; go to tile head. A sPKOiai. train of Pullman vesti bule oars Jins been arranged for to starry the Georgia delegation to the NiManul Democratic Convention at Chicago. It will leave Atlanta over the W. & A. at 4 o’clock Friday, June IS, and the route, will be from Chatta- atooga to I.oulavllle over the I,. & N, and by the Pennsylvania to Chicago. A special from Thomasvllle to the Atlanta Constitution says t Pine Itlll .fth-A11 Inner, nr.thin county, ha* Rime Into the rank* of the Third Party. The member- met and decided nn tliln move. We have also seen It stated some where that three of the aub-Alliancet of Thomas eounty have gone over to the Third Party.- Now we want to ask Editor Winter, of the Thomasvllle News, how many of these Third Partyltes were in the mass-meeting that wanted to read Capt. John Triplett out of the Demo cratic partyf Were any of them In It, brother Winter? Tho Han.w.n asks because It wants to know and because It believes the Demoorats of the Second district would like to know. Verily, It nppears that Democracy is at a low ebb down In Thomas. people of the second diatrlct ihepartieulam of " » tty Tint noma op annik i.aurik. Tor Daily Prohibitionist has made Its-appearanco In Augusta. The IIkii- ai.d hasn't seen a copy of it, but some of our exchanges that have seem to think that if the cause of prohibition In Augusta Is no stronger than Ita organ there Is no cause for serious alarm among those who don't want their tippling habits interfered with. Gkoiiiiia should go Into the pop corn business. It is calculated that the pop corn privilege will net the ■World's Fair about $200,000 profit. Georgia soil yields a splendid variety ■of tills palate-tlekllngnereal,and there is no reason why she should not coma In for her share of the business that la oxpeoted to not a proflt of $200,000 in one year. Some Interesting Information has recently been brought out about the home of Annie Laurie at Cralgdar- rocli, Scotland. Few other songs have stood the test or long years’ Binging, and still sound always sweet and touching, as has “Annie Laurie.” The world never will tire of flint sweet, tender love song, with Its quaint pa thetic air. Some tourists, who devlato from the well-worn paths of travel to And something uf interest In historical spots thatesoape the notice of the mass of people, give us the following infor mation of the home of Annie Laurie: “It tics deep In the shady recesses of a vale near Dumfries, and doubtless the band never plays there. As the house Is very anolent. It Is easy to credit the statement that ‘the view from a distance Is must beautiful.' In the house are fully a thousand enre- fully treasured relics of the fair Annie, and her grent-grent-grnnd. daughter la atill living, fur Annie bore several children to the rich laird of Craigdarrooh, for whom she slighted the tender and true William Douglas.” In tho debate In the Rouse of Rep- ireeeutatlves, on Thursday last, upon itlie appropriation for the World’s Fair,* member from Iowa proposed to jirohtUf tho exhibition of pictures or astatiies .if tho nude or partially nude. .Jkud this reminds tho Chicago Inter Ocean of a* lint Bouguereau said when he heard that some one had tried to ■mash his painting of a nymph at the Omitha KxHIUtlon with a chair i “Zero .mes more xnn one dam phool In xe Aumrique.” aiisa AnnaEucxinson's suit against the nepublloan National Committee ■dfMM|,:to iranmmra balance of $1,250 atlegetSolve due (or speeches made dinting the 1‘reiilOeiitlal campaign tit that pwar, the payment of whloh was ooifdiigeat'iipon ittM election of Mr. Harnkiwi, lias been dismissed by Judge Truro, of New York. The Court held tkfltithe contract on whloh she had baaed Iter ault was void,because it was •contrary to the statmte whloh declares It'to be JinlawiMt (or ono person to promise mmitiier money or anything •else tonlid In the election of a candi date for publlo office. A contingent /fee carries a haxard of payment. Pol- fiMosA workers; especially when deal ing with tlie Republican party, should M.. ft:. I >•, • • m M. .'apt. Ilolils.' tnitt from the Democratic party (ouryearsagor Itseilltoris familiar with the whole affair. If Brother Mac.has forgiHtcn thr particulars Col. Wallen eaa refresh hi* mera- ory.—Cnthhert Lilsral-Knlerpi l^ 1 . To thr Ai.danv IIkualo: Wu Atateil cor- really tho particulars o( iniUlna Ul<'linr.| (lollin' In,It from the ttemocratlo p irty lom- year* ago. tillin', wet Now, honor bright. do you believe the man who. to rrnllfv |n*r* mat s IT'TI against lirother sttomry. w.oilit h ire turned Dongh- erty county orer to the Negroes—do yon ta-licvo such n mnn competent, At—worthy to ho** ihc Iluinucrnts of the Second district. Honor bright. Brother Mac!—Cuthbert Liberal-Kntur- prlsc. The Liberal-Enterprise and the Thomasvllle News have both had a good deal to say about Capt. Hobbs bolting the Democratic nomination for the Legislature in this eounty four years ago, nnd this week tile Liberal- Enterprise is full of such paragraphs as the above. The object of these Stevens organs is, uf course, to break the force of the stand taken in the present Congres sional campnlgn by the Democratic Executive Committee, of which Capt. Ilubbs Is chajrman. Tills “mare’s nest” was found by the Stevens organs two or three weeks ngo, and because the Hrhald hasn’t seen fit to take any notice of their caokllng over It they seem to think they have us embar rassed, nnd that they can “do It some utore.” We are free to admit that it Is un pleasant to have to resurrect an old personal feud between prominent fcl- low-citlxens nnd Democrats, who are now on friendly terms and working in harmony for the success of the Demo cratic party; but wo linve nothing to dread in doing so, and since the Lib eral-Enterprise has gone so far ns to Inin! go by with mi umbrella over nUUrfss its taunts upon this subject homl was na good nn u cimw to AMERICAN RRMTLRMNNKM. Imreafter have tho recompense for ithelr labor clearly nominated in a band, nit'll solvent indorsers; other wise (they may meet with the fate of poor Anna Dloklnaon. Qer. Nohtiikn made a speech at Warretitou on Saturday, and before proceeding to discuss tho political issues of the day, he took oocasion to •newer the oard of C. C. Post, whloh fintmmde Its appearance in the Peo ples Party Paper in Atlanta and has since Ibeen extensively published throughout the State. The Governor met MM personal Issue squarely, and, instead of retracting any of the asser tions made I n his Sparta speech, which called forth (Post’s salty card, took them up one ift-a time and submitted .proofs to sustain them. He had sev eral telegrams from Douglasvllle, adhere Post and Ibis wife resided when they 'first camp -to Georgia, and all of them assured'lihn that the statements he had made about them could be sub stantiated by affidavits if they were wanted. After submitting Ills proofs .-and reading the telegrams, the Gov ernor said ho dismissed Post to the contempt of the people of the State. Thr chairmanship of the Georgia .delegation to the Chicago Convention Is beginning to receive the attention of the newspapers. The Savannah Press says: “The Macon Telegraph mentions Hon. I.. F. Garrard as possi ble chairman of the Georgia delega tion, and the Amerlous Times sug gests him as a possible member of the .pkliform committee. It now looks as ifiOtetham would be given the chair manship of the delegation at Chicago, an.d that a square out tariff reformer w*qld he plaoed on the platform com- And the Maoon Telegraph furtber-aaya: “The Cleveland men in MHgia delegation to Chicago will probably wash to make Mercer, of Chatiuun r ohadrman at the delegation, and'the Hill contingent will doubtless ---— v Ga«an|,.«f Mnecogee.” A young American woman nf keen Intellect and close observance, in a recent pnper, draws a picture of the ph aaea of American restlessness, tlie reality of which will be readily ac knowledged: “The restless drive,” she says, “la creating a new variety of men and women, to be reeognixed wherever met—and where over all the face of the earth, are they not sure to be met? The mental unrest Is pass ing Into the physique. How many women do yop know who oan sit per fectly itlll or stand perfectly motion less? With how many do you talk who will allow you to Unlsli a sentence without Interrupting? How many have the grace of only walking quietly, or of speaking slowly and placidly so that It. (■ a delight to listen? How many whose eyes are uot constantly rovlug? How many who are not always in a hurry, and complaining that everything comes at the same time with everything else? To how many houses—so-called homes —oan you go aa into a haven of rest, where everything breathes quietness anti repose? How many tnen can even croas the ferry from New York to Brooklyn without reading vigor ously every one of the few minutes of the transit, and then crowding to jump off the boat before she la fast, with one eye still on the open news, papar? How many can let one street, oar go past without running to catch It, though there are six others behind within a quarter of a mile? How many can wait for a train without reading a few lines in every one of the newspapers laid out on the news stands, or carefully examining all the cartoons tacked up on the wall?” Thx fruit crop of the North has been nearly ruined by the hard beating rains and the late frosts. Tttx prohibition tight is on in Au gusta, and the Daily Prohibitionist, edited by Rev. W. IV. Wadsworth, has made its appearance. Arras gathering their crops, 500 Mormon families will move from Utah to Mexico. Mexico Is welcome to them, and we wish her Joy of the lot. India. Otiot.Kita is still raging in At Seriongor, a city of 58,000 Inhab itants, 500 deaths daily are occurring. There are fears that the city will be totally depopulated. Govkhnok Nohthkn ought to an swer that card of C. C. Post’s with two-year-old hickory stick. The Gov ernor Is a Christian gentleman, but— well, “there’s a time for all things,” and this Is one of ’em. Amkhica boasts the only six-track railroad in the world, and that is the Illinois Central out of Chicago for ten miles. The talk is that another traok will be laid. There are but few things in which America does not come to the front. Wlu. the Albany IIkbai ii pleat* give the Why Iteanla K**n, A recruit in the mt-ilii M n u. been sent forth with liwirtu'tlmiM to initiate the oecupautu of a couple of double deckers in the delights of properly upplied vaccine virus. Things rail smoothly until he en countered a suspicious Irishwoman, who- dwelt with her shockheaded children in the lordly heights of the seventh floor. The doctor pounced upon the eldest boy and was preparing to make the initial scratch, when his mother stopped him. “Is it vacciuatiu thot is?” she queried. “Yes, madam,” answered the doc tor. “Well, it’s divil a bit av It ye’ll do to my bye Dennis." “Why. it preserves life nnd health’’ “Go ’long wid ye. Tliut’s what they told Dooney McCann when his bye Willie had It two weeks ngo.” “Well?” “They desaved him. Vacciuntin and all, Willie is dead, Lord cist hiu sowl!" “What killed hint?” “He fell down the back ethnics nv Brogan’s tiniuiint an broke bis neck, an lie tit’ shamrocks of Bally Mul ligan. if vnednatin can’t stop things Ioike thnt phwat sort av n loife pro snrver is it?"—Now York Cummer ciol Advertiser. Denying Cnisaa “The observance of Old World anal- versaries and customs is rapidly becom ing less marked in this country,” said an old New Yorker. “It seems a little lingular, too. that the more the immi gration the qnicker anil more thorough* ly the amalgamation. 1 remember the time when St. Patrick’s Day was made the occasion of the greatest street dem onstrations ever seen in New York from one year's end to another. Tho entire city puriieipated in u measure, anil the streets were scenes of turbuleuco uud wild hilarity from early looming till lute at night. A good many now living remember the big rows thut oc curred ill those days. Of recent years all thut sort of thing boa disappeared. “The annual St. Patrick’s Day parade bus dwindled down here to mure formal ities uud lacks the element of enthu siasm. lu many American cities it is uo longer even formally observed by the mass of Irishmen. In other respects the same thing may lie said of other nation alities. A few dozen persons will tnuke a pretext uf the queens birthday or the Bustile day. or something of that kind, to help out a pleasant evening, but there Is no longer any seriousness to it. All we usually see is some signs of a holiday umong the Chinese, the Italians, the French or some other nationality, most ly confined to their resjiective neighbor hoods. The fact is this country is get ting too big ami too iiiqKirtaut for such things,’’—New York Herald. Tkf Ssaflssct. Hero Is an Interesting Hem f|t>n “across the pond” about the sutiilow*, ■ re it whloh grows to perfection herd hi Southwest Georgia. The item is taken from the English Mechanic: “The sunflower Is found to be.of great service In Southern Russia, where It has for some time been ex-' tenslvely cultivated. It Is grown irinclpally for the bright yellow, odor, ess anil tnsteless oil yielded by Its seeds. The oil Is said to be superseding olive oils throughout Southern Russia for domestic purposes. The prrased seeds and the boiled leaves (the latter mixed with clay) serve as onttle food, the stalks ns fuel. Like the eucalyptus, the sunflower possesses the property of drying marshy soils and counter acts the development of malaria germs. begins Figured India Mulls at only 10c. per yard. Great Bargain. A ' oSMAYKii ifc Jonhs. Thr Third Party in the Seoond Conf Tli* Will* Uinlirrll*. It was told of one distant corner of Scotland thnt umbrellas Were sported ouly by the laird mid the minister, ami were looked upon by the 'turn- moil class of. people os perfect phe nomena. To see the minister or the dlreutly to the Hkiiai.o anil its editor, we rise. The facts upon whloh tho assertion is made thnt Capt. Hobbs bolted the Democratic nomination III this county In 1888 arc these: Hon. Lewis Aril- helm, now dead, poor fellow, was re nominated for tho Legislature after having served his first term, lie was, or had been, the law partner of Mon. J. W. Walters. The latter gentleman an nounced himself ns n candidate fur the Uircuit Judgeship, and his personnl friend and former partner naturally looked upon Ills candidacy with favor. Capt. Hobbs and perhaps one or two other members of the Albany Bar did not, for reasons which were, so far ns we know, entirely personal. Meantime, Gen. Henry Morgan had oome out ns an independent candidate against Mr. Arnheim on an entirely local issue that was pending on the “fence" and “no fence” law. Being opposed to the eleatlon of Mr. Walters to the Judge ship, Capt. ilubbs and at least" une other prominent lawyer of the city, de termined to support Gen. Morgan, or some one else who wuuld not vote for Mr. Walters in the Legislature, but Capt. Hobbs had never conferred with Gen. Morgan on the subject nor com mitted himself to him. Mr. Arnheim called a conference of his friends, and the writer waa delegated to confer with Capt. Hobbs and the other prom inent attorney with the view of bringing about a reconciliation. It was learned that the threatened op position to Mr. Arnheim was due solely to his favoring the candidacy of Mr. Walters, and that It was so de termined that a reconciliation could not be effected. Being advised of this, Mr. Walters magnanimously retired from the race for the Judgeship, the opposition to Mr. Arnheim was satis fied, and harmony in the DeinoCratio party of the county was restored, re sulting in Mr. Arnhelm’s election by a good majority. Now, ye Stevens organs, here are the facts in the alleged bolt made by Capt. Hobbs against the Democratic nomi nee in this county in 1888. Make the most you oan out of them, but aa you were so eager to get them please do us the kindness and Capt. Hobbs the justice to publish them just as they are given. You wilt probably be dis appointed in getting tills unreserved and unequivocal response to your re peated calls for the “particulars of Capt. Hobbs’ bolt,” but you can’t hon orably ignore them or refuse to pub lish them. We have given the facts as we recollect them without attempting to shield Capt. Hobbs In the least, and those who have been using this per sonal difference between Mr. Walters and Capt. Ilobbs in the past to try to make it appear that the latter has ever bolted a Democratic nomination and is therefore unworthy, ss Chairman of the Demooratio Executive Committee, to sit in judgment upon those who, as members of a secret organization, are seeking to forestall the action of the tlu* email 1>i>vh of the village One day Daniel MoPhoinon called u;k)ii the laird to pay his rent. Ah he waa about to leave a hard ahower came on. and Daniel, lining a well to do man and much "respected," till! laird politely offered him the use of an mnhi'ollu. Daniel proudly ac cepted the loan, anil much elated walked off with his head hold several inches higher than usual. Ho had not been gone many uitn-| utes, however, when, to the laird’s surprise, ho sees Daniel posting buck with all possible haste, the umhrelln still held firmly over his head. "Hne. hue. koniel," he eallcd out "this'll never do! There's nae a door in a' my house that'll tnk' it in! My verra bam door wimut tnk' it in I" Poor Daniel’s head had not yet grasped the idea that the umbrella must be shut up liefore he tided to take it hi the door. —Harper’s Young People. Engllnh liny* mid tho Publlo School. In England, while a hoy is still in the unreasoning age of childhood, good na tural people will ask him playfully what he is going to ho. At a little later stage the inquiry takes another und more serious form— "What school ure yon going to':" There is uo playfulness in the question now. Hereby lmugs a Wjhole social history. lu ono family the tradition is for Eton, in another for Rugby: uml to these traditions father and son are as a rule absolutely loyal, except under especial emergencies of typhoid or scarlet fever, lu ul'ter life he meets with tho question, "Wlmt school were you at?" And here again he Is apt to feel nt a disadvantage if lie cannot fasten upon oue of tb» important public schools the credit or hlume of his youthful training. It matters nothing that ho was only there for half a year, that he never rose above the lowest form, that he was Hogged half a dozen times ill us many weeks, that lie was promptly expelled for ontrugeoha insubordination—he was at a public school, lie has the cachet of an English gentleman. To huve been at the university is as nothiug compared with this. Many a man is compelled hy army examinations or by business opportunities to forego tho-pleasures of the alnin mater. With the publlo school it is otherwise; to this they must all some. -Hurpor’B. gressionnl district has called a con vention at Camilla oil the 8th of June, to elect delegates to the Third Party convention at Omaha on the 4th day of July. A subscriber in an adjoining count-v has sent the Hkkai.d one of the Circulars sent out from Third Party headquarters nt Atlanta urging the attendance of delegates front all the counties of the district. On the letter head on which the circular is printed the names of I. H. Hand and G. W. Forrester nppenr ns the meinbcr^pf the “State Temporary Executive Com mittee” from the Second district. What little there was of the Third Party in this part of the moral vine yard has about- petered out, ami the convention nt Camilla will not amount to much. A Drniini miuI Tlilrtniwi. Bishop Burnet in his story of tho conversion uml (loath of tho fimimiH Earl of Rochester is particularly in teresting. Ho states that his lord ship told hint of an odd presage Ills chaplain hod of his approaching death in the house of the eurl's mother-in-law. the Lady Wnire. Tills chaplain had dreamed that such u day he nKould die. but being by all the family put out of the belief of it he had almost forgot it till thu evening liefore nt supper, there be ing thirteen at table, according to a fond uonceit that one of these must soon die. one of the young ladies pointed to him thut he was to die. He. remembering his dream, fell into some disorder, nnd the Lndy Warre reproving him for his super stition ho said he was confident he wns to die before morning, but ho being in -perfect health it wns uot much minded. It was Saturday night, and he was to preach the next day. He went to his chamber and sat up late, as appeared by tho burn ing of his candle, and he had been preparing his notes for his sermon, but was found dead in his bed the next morning. Democratic party of the Second Con- [istricl Ir Editor Winter, of the Thomas- ville News, continues to get hot in the collar over the political altuation In the Second Congressional district, and Alllanoeman Massey and Parson Stevenson, et sequeutes, continue to contribute campaign oards to hla col umns, he will have to get out an extra. 1 grcssional district in convention duly assembled, are weloome to use them— Hie facts, we mean—for all they are worth. In conclusion, we want to say to the Liberal-Enterprise that its persistence in pressing a false issue, of an entirely personal and local nature, against Capt. Hobbs in his capacity as chair man of the Democratic Executive Committee of the district is, in our opinion, a very small and oonteraptl- >1« -» ■”« *- - ’ ble piece of business. No man in thla Congressional district has done more to keep the Democratic party together, or been more active for the success or the Demooratio nominees than Capt. Hobbs, and the Liberal-Enterprise’s insinuations about his readiness to “turn Dougherty county over to the Negroes" Isps onjust as it is untrue. Profit from Peris Refuse. The total proflt drawn by the Paris ragpickers directly from the refuse of Paris averages 71,400 francs, or not far short of $15,000 a day. An inevitable but not uninstructive comparison here suggests itself. Tho refuse of London, which must bo worth considerably more than double that of Paris, is almost absolutely wasted. Every place labeled “Rub bish shot here” illustrates the fact. A striking incident recently occurred in the making of a railway embank ment in a Loudon suburb. A good deal of it consisted of truckloads of refuse brought down from town- such refuse os the Paris chiffonier, with his orange peel and scraps of paper, hardly dreams of. Out of that London rubbish heap he could have drawn in a single afternoon more than he would make at home in a month.—London Saturday Review. Just So. “Oh,” she sighed, “what lovely- sleigh rides we had when you used to drive with one hand I I wish they could have lasted all summer I" “We’ll have them again," he said tenderly as he looked giddily into the dangerous depths of her lovely eyes. “You know, dear, to borrow a poet's simile, it’s always sleighing sum mer.” And then the beating of their own hearts was all (he sound they heard.—Detroit Free Press. AppuHlml to HU Vanity* During the agrarian riots, which dis turbed Engl- ml in 1882, a mob of rick hunters and ttmehinu breakers appeared at the old mansion of two elderly maiden ladies. The walls of the hall were deco rated with suits nf armor and antique weapons—pikes, halberds swords and battleaxes. Tho mob clamored for the weapons. The ladles rernsod their de mauds, and whott the mob seemed ready to resort to violence Alisa Hetty, the elder of the ladies, went np to the lead er. a hideous looking limn, and said: “You, too. of nil the people in the world': I'm not surprised at these poor misguided creatures. But that such a good looking, intelligent man as you should attack two defenseless women does astonish me! You are the man 1 should have looked to for protection. But you are not the man 1 took you fori Never again will 1 trust to good looks!” There was no standing np against that compliment. The man took off his hat. and said: "Como, old lady, we aint so bad as all thatl We would not harm a hair of your liandl” “No: I know that,” retorted Miss Betty. “You can’t; 1 wear a wig!" The mob roared with laughter and re tired without another word.—Youth's Companion. Tlie Krenrh ami Thirteen at Table. Among the French every precaution is taken to avoid the seating of thirteen at a dinner. In many cases the host has been known to dispatch messengers to bring in a fourteenth friend to dispel the supposed fatal charm, when by some inadvertence or accident the original number of invited guests was reduced to thirteen. As an instance of the hold this super stition lias on onr Gallic friends it is re lated that several yours ago a dinner was given by a fashionable club in New York to the officers of a French frigate lying in the harbor. Upcftt sitting down tothe table it was discovered that the company numbered but thirteen. Another person was vainly sought after to break the spell. Thereupon one of the officers arose and left the room, thus leaving his friends in the security of a safe dozen, althongb denying himself a most enjoy able and tempting repast.—Detroit Free Press. m —When :i young liinn begins to know that lie doesn’t know us much as he thinks he knows, then lie begins to know something. i THK OtVI.V ONE EVER PRINTED, l'n> V*m Find Ik* Word? There is a 8-inch display advertise ment in this paper, this week, which has no two words alike except one, word. The same is true of each newj one appearing each week, from the T Dr. Harter Medicine Co. This house plnces a “Crescent” on everything they make and publish. Look for it, send them the name of the word, gnu will return you book. '•i •Mt n they THE PALACE SALOON WASHINGTON STREET, Under New MORRIS ROSENTHAL Respectfully announces to his friends and the public generally that he now has Saloon, on Wash- charge of the Palace . . ington street, and will keep always on hand the riant of Winn. Liquors. Cigui, Gto. BILLIARD AND POOL TABLES. LUNCHES at all hours. Warm lunch to our customers daily from 10 to 12 o'clock. 1 We study to please, and gentlemen can A always find something good to eat, drink\ and smoke at the Palace Saloon. Call ^ MORRIS ROSENTHAL. mvia-.vn Manager. BUSINESS INSTITUTE* G. W.H. STANLEY, 129 Broad street, Thomasvllle, Ga. 1-80-8111. CITATION. Alauaiitntor'i Lotton Siiminion. STATK OF GEORGIA, DoroHKKTY Countv, To All Whom It May Concern: J. W. Johnson, administrator estate of W. W. * nnnsnn lain nf n.,1,1 .) 1 .. .Johnson, late of said county, deceased, applies MIA fnM Vn)ln.. . n ff dt«Ml..l" ... — . . n * , drain- to me tor letters of dismission from said admin- istration, and I will pass iqnn his applieation on me first Monday in July next, at my office in said county. All persons having ohleetlons are hereby notified to file same on or before that date In this office. O 1 *™ under my hand and official signature this tth day of April, ISM. ' SAMUBL IV. SMITH, apfi-jyl Ordinary Dougherty County, Ga. POWER OF ATTORNEY’!, BALE. Georgia. DoronERTY County: By virtue of u power of attorney, irrevocable, made nnd executed by Margaret Murray, nn the 80th day of March, 1SB5, by which tho said Margaret Murray nythorlxcd nnd empowered the undersigned to sell nt public outcry the lots nnd parcels of land hereinafter set forth, before the Court House door of Dongherty countv, I wilt sell on the first Tuesday In June next, liefore the Court House door of said county of Dougherty, the following lot or parcel of land, to-wit: Plenty on Hand. “Have you any K., T. & O.?' shouted a broker through tho telephone to a friend, another broker. “What'/” ivua the answer. “K., T. & o.r “What’s that?' "Stock, man," naming it in full. “What do yon think it ia':" “Say. but this la a grocery here,” waa the answer. “Oh, sugar!” cried the broker, dis gusted at getting the wrong connection "Why, yea,” yelled the other imw. “Lots of it. What kind do yon want?” —New York Tribune. ttafortunat* llrldg*t. “Bridget is engaged to the post- said Mrs. Bronson: “but it can’t last. Bridget breaks everything ■be goes near.”—Harper's Bazar. Tit* Tax Qawtlsa. Newspaper Reporter (to president of company)—Has your company taken any steps to pay ita taxes? President—Why certainly, air. We have made two protests against the oon- atitntionnlity of the law.—Texas Sift ings. Alt thnt lot or parcel of land lying nnd being in the First district of tlie county ot Duughertv nnd Stnto nf Georgia, und known* as four (4) ncresof lot or hind (number not known) in the said First district, described ns follows: Com mencing on the southwest corner of the lot formerly owned and occupied by Willis IbHar. ns, nnd owned In Febninry, 1870, hy Alntin C. Westbrook; snld lot running enst and south from the almvo southwest corner, until the said four acres are included, and being known as the lot lying on the east side of the rend run ning south ot the city of Albany, nnd sold bv Alalia C. Westbrook to Enoch L. Hudson and purchased by said Margaret Murray from aaid Enoch Hudson. Terms cash. CORNELIUS COFFEY. Albany. Ga. April 8.1891. apSO-td ((•TICK. All persons indebted to me on account or otherwise, are earnestly requested to settle. During my absence either Mr! John D. „ Pop* Threlkeld are authorised to receipt ae- counts for me. 8. w. GUNNISON. Albany, Ga, May SI. 1891 Sl-dStwl INDSTINCT PRINT J