The Home journal. (Perry, GA.) 1877-1889, December 09, 1886, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

' ~ r P~'Ci : “^e'r'5 **— A£'V£HTISIMU RATES. focal Notices 10ceut»p.er linosaah insertion. ■ K*gai».- t?u*Soe** iilvertlsdmchts'firelinsertiori *'..08potineh.—eacbaubBcquentiasettiohSU cents' per molt. CONTRACT AOVSiRTISINC 8p»»a. 44imo. | siao. | 6mo. : | 12 mo.. One I neb * | ^fO J 5. 5.00 I 8.00 . 8,00 1.2.00 h-2.00 18:00 ; I 15.00 1 25.00 1 23:00 1 40.00 .( j 4*6.00 . 00.00 " LECAL ADVERTISING. AlUdvertisemefctseritinatlngfrbm publicofflces .-7ill bo sharped for In strict accord’snco with an act ■ jr tho General Assembly of Georgia—76 cent* for hsadred'wordsfor eachor'the firatfoiirinsertiban jiad 85 couta per 10(1 words for each subsequent insertion. .The sash mustaccpmpany copy ot each: ti»»rtis»aieat,iiulesedisr»ran tarraagements have- 'neon made. XVI. PERRY, GEORGIA. THURSDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1886. NO. 49. CV.S'l.l-Ssrt tM.%Xt‘lS I 'ofr.**! ►*•»*!/?».1 it*, s tri/s» u) ctrr* »! ** j .t>x.i,;5 trAriat »1> tte*irvi2 from »s ^ [ Ar. tla.'/.T- tjZ aAvUftt-fc. * olaU*} . >hc t oluXUlA* ul %b * Ho.v « J • > H: .• J >* *1/ b9 a) * st• o^fcXl U> 1 tread4.. • cUs*k-Uu aUu*uS>jrcU'>tixdUiig ibo gantTAl w#i ; i»rt oiritir^Gplt- orcouzilrj. tntfci* concactla* i thr-iSittjrna^Vt^ufcevi^saof oorreapondt* t mukibahci-Ufu^'ins.-; fru:u Mr own, unlett h i :xfiv6Bl}t}ui^c!f(if i vftb'thei^. Tbeeditoffttrtka ; claim u the riglitoT btjiiJgtbMUprtrinfJndga ©f it | wortblTir»i»olnii.c«Tiu2iiuiifcjitli*ijfctti «nt®tthe of i umu* t»i hits paj-cr ;ht ^ ilJ takb i Bruts vritb % c©rr4 4 j vvuubi'iwbezer&zthziiubJbL’l'calUforflucbactJ©"» I ‘ Articles of pei *in a > CLuYactor will b a r*J#c#a« j uiil^Br entirn]j uao^cctionabluJ A'ny'attlcla 4dt# | rstiiij;* person usual V* paid f*r *t t4 ’ rattd**tbj»cba'lfc al(hc. -.- < KCCGU10S. A!)Aoeon^U. tor dnbp.crlption, Advertlainj. r } Job Wnrk. ore dus'od demand’,* unless etbsrwls 1 providad Tor by apecfalcoatract:' r j Commercial Job Work Satisfactorily HMIts I and Lt gal Biankskoptornsiantlyon' band - THE CENTRAL CITY BAZAAR, 103 CHERRY STREET, ' . . •. ' ’ ’SJBLACONt ' 2RLG-3U9l. HEAIMJU ARTEKS FOJtt CH1MA, CROCKERY, GLASSWARE,&T?NWARE' : WOOD- few-WAfcte, WILLOW-WARE, SILVERWARE, NOTIONS, FANCYfCOCDS, DOLLS, TOYS AND HOLIDAY GOODS, UNDOUBTEDLY Mi President Worship. Block oil Georgia Farms. Hovr Fork World. ; gcfeihsrn Cultivator. The&eaf h of Chester A. Arthur j There is no practice in our removes the last of our ex-Fresi-1 farming more short-sighted than SentB, with the eseeption of Ruth-. alloMng stock to %ramp the wet • a money crop. The seed may be erford B. Hayes. Since the acces- ‘fields during winter. Pretty planted in Aril and May, the crop Broom-Corn as a Money Crop', nbuthsra CulU^or. Broom-corn has this special fea ture to recommend its adoption as sion of the Republican party to power in 1861 ten Presidents or ex-Presidents have died: Van Bu- iren apd Tyler in 18&2, Lincpln in In 18$5. Buchanan in 1868, Pierce much everything of value as food has been gleaned already; the stock will get little or nothing, but they frill damage the land greatly. The land is entitled to all the> de- i£ii yott eome to Ma&oli*, don’t fail to biako Vis a call, if duly for-an iiispectioii; iloiie conipelled to buy*. We carry the largest and most complete line of the abovb class or goods, and at prices to suit everybody, froin the lowest priced warfe) to thie best*. "CT 1 TT 1 wJLwJL— aCj CITY BAZAAR! 103 CHERtiY SrBEET 1 , i -s‘ SL4CON-, GE0Biiii. FRIED & HECHT, PrSprietSrs. W. A. DAVIS. mr; c. baLkcobi. DAVIS A BALECOMi , cs , x"r©a^r Pii.caoi3s ASB DEALERS IS SROCERlEt m PLANTATION SUPPLllBj €5, 07 and 09 Mulberry Street, V S • MACON, GEOBGlAi Nov WarAhdusS with ail inbd&rh and necessary. cSbyenienoes. Insurance on I’otton Rt very lowest figures. Make liberal allowances cin Cotton in £3tore,.. tsr wm seii bagging lnd ties at lowest wsakket PRICES. . .. , .. .. Keep constantly k first-class Stock of GRODERIEB and COUNTRY PRODUCE and FARM*SUPPLIES. Aug 12—6in ~ . About twenty years ago i discovered a Uttie Sore id iny eheebjpad the doctors' pro. 'fioa&eed lt cancer: 1 have tried a number of physicians, but without receiving any perma. neut benefit. Among the numbs? were one or-two specialists, the medlclno they applied was like fire to the sore, causing Intense pain. I saw a statement In the papers telling what S; 8-S. had done for others similarly afflicted: I procured some at once.. Before I had Used the second bottle the neighbors could notice that my cancer, was healing up. My general health had been bad for iwo or three years—1 had a hacking Cough’ and spit blood contin ually. X hod a severe pain In my breast^ After taklngi|Ix.bottlesof S. E. S. zny cough.tott mo and I grew stouter than / had been for several years. My cancer has healed over all' but a Uttio spot about the sire of a half dime, andltis rapidly disappearing. I would advise every one with cancer to give S.S; 6. a fair trial. ,. - •- Has. KASeX J. HcCOMAtTGUEV, Ashe Grove, Slppecanoe Co., Ind. W Feb. ISi 1836. . - Swift's Speclfie Is entirely vegetable, and seems to cure cancers by forcing out tba Impurities from the blood. ^ a ^ 0 g^l?|fg?c D ^Dmw«t AUanta. GA . ' Vn 1369, Silimorei ii 1874, Johnson j bris of -tlie, crop, fion’t be so ^ M shorf-sightDii as to-fey to get pv-* erytliiug out of it at once. Re member the sfcbry of the goose that laid the golden egg. More over, ft is true economy, as well as kindness to stock, t-0 keep them oat of the cold rains.. The little 1 Jn 1875, Garfield in 1881, Grant in 1885 and Arthur in 1836. The fatality among the Republi can Presidents has been remarka ble. Lincoln’s death Was the work of ah ai&sa&sin. Andrew Johnson lived only six years after the, ex piration bf bis.tetm of office. Gar field was murdered. Grant lived f6r eight years after his retirement from the Presidency, Arthur dies hue year and eight months af jfcer nis return to private life. Yet hone of the Republican Presidents had attained old age. Lincoln WaS elected whSnhe was fifty-one years ’old, Johnson at the age of fifty-six, Grant at forty-six, Garfield at for- ty-eighfq and Arthur at fifty. To what are we to attribute this lingular mortality among oiir eX- Presidents? Why is it that there is only a single parson now living who has retired from that dignity, although all odr refient Presidents nave-been elected while yet young men, and the term of office is only four, or at most, after a re-election, eight years? Can it be that the bodily health is affected by the mind, and that the sensitive mind frets and worries over the sudden loss of that adulation of which our Presidents are made the recipients in a degree inconsistent with all idea of a republican government. We are d nation of President worshipper!,for all bur democratic principles'. No sooner is a man, Who may have been a very humble and ordinary citizen, invested with the office of Chief Executive, than people are found ready to exalt him to the very pinhacle of hero ism, grdhdeiir and statesmanship. Flatterers surrodnd him who shat dui front His ears all unpldasant sounds, and do their Best to ini- press him with the belief that he is a being superior to the drdihary run of riiankindi Orgahs extol all his acts, and supplement the ndon- archial idea that the Ring can do no wrong with the modern repub lican theory that a President catl- not make a mistake. Office-seek ers pay court to him With a syco phancy not often.' surpassed in a regal palacejand the words of hon est truth seldom sound in His ears. Instead of being treated Us the representative of the people, ini vested by them for a brief period with a trust to be wielded subject to their wishes, and filled with fi delity to their interest, he is made to believe that he is a ruler over the people rather, than trustee. What follows? As soon asTiis term ends and his successor is ih- ahgdrated he sinks into utter in significance- His worshippers are bedding the knee before another idol. His organs dre. rolling forth tributes to the rising sun, dot to the settiifg sud. From being the most persistently praised man id the nation the eX-President sinks into th’e insignificant position of a private citizen. Hoes not this’ sud den and ! mortifying change have Something to do. With shortening th£'lifesof ex-Presidehts? . Is it not calculated to fret and Worry a sensitive Man whenjbe makes the discovery that he has been ..courted gleanings they get will not pro dace more animal heat than that Which exposure to cold raine will take from their bodies. In-other words, the animals will gain noth ing,-the fields will lose tlimir Vege table matter and the soil its fria bility. In all the more thickly settled portions of the country we have passed beyond the mixed pas- tdral and farming state, and have reached the farming state proper. Our policy now is to provide the special pastures and to iaise food, for all tlie stock kept oh the farm. This must become, as much as any other, an organized, well- developed part of our farm econo my. See how vapidly and. Ouickly it assunies this shape oh the stock farms scattered over the country. Owhers of Jerseys—who attach Valde to their stock—very soon have good pastures and unlimited supplies of forage. It only re- 4uires that one shoiild niake .. up his mind to have them. With Bermuda grass, red, white and burr clovers, lucerne and Spanish clover, orchard, herds and blue grasses, barley, rye, German mil let, sorghum, pea vines and drilled corn; why should orie ever be at a loss in providing for his stock? With so many available Crdps, supplemented by an unlimited supply of cotton seed and a mild) genial, climate super-added, Why should not southern farmers raise more stdek? Why should a mule dr a horse ever be brought from the north side of the Ohio river? Why should hundreds of tons of butter and oleomargarine frond the north be sold in the south every yCar? Why Work ourselves to death to raise cotton to buy horses, mules, bacon, flour,. lard, meal, glucose dr starch syrtip, when ev ery one of these, except the glii- Cose, which can only be supplanted by sorghum syriip, can be raised at Home without the slightest diffi culty? Why play into tide hands Of middlemen, railroads,- banks, speculators, etc., to say nothing of the dependence upon the unsteady, Unreliable laborers in our midst? You say Cotton is always salable/ always brings the cash. So does first-class butter, so does bacon, so does lard* so does a good mule or horse. Jersey butter finds ready sale simply because it is a good butter. The owners of such stock make butter in a business-like way; they liave good milk-hpUses and proper arrangements for cool ing and keeping m'ilkf water-power or some other mechanical device for churning. They do not lose, and- praised not for himself, not for j patience in cold weather and pour harvested in July and immediately sold at home for the cash. The whole period from seed time tp money-in-the-pocket is effibraCad in three months. The crop is easily'cultivated, requires no ex pensive machinery. Broom-corn belongs to the same genus with Chinese and other sorghums, and wall prodvqe a- good yield of brush wherever the other members of the genus do well. Moreover, broom- eoin will yield a second crop frem the same stalks. Mr. Frank Lo gan, President of the Logan Broom Works, in Atlanta, says the Geor- broom corn is superior in quality tp that produced, in. Illinois and o%her western states, Where the crop is well established as a staple. Fortunes have been made in a few years growing]bropm-corn in Hli- nois and Kansas; why not Georgia and other cotton states? The factory already mentioned buys nearly all the raw material (broom-corn) in Chicago and Cin cinnati, from which points the freights are very heavy, and yet the Company is making money. The Illinois farmer grow? broom- corn on land Worth from S75 to 3100 per, acre, and yet makes nioney and grows rich. The Geor gia farmer can make nearly, if not quite/ as large a yield, t onland worth less than one-fourth as much. The Illinois farmer fre quently relies entirely on his broom-corn as an income crop, and —grows rich. The Georgia farm er oftener relies entirely on his cot ton crop for money and nearly ev erything else, and—grows poorer. Acabrding to a Constantinople correspondent, the Sultan of Tur key is in fearful dread of assassi nation; The Russian proclivities of the Sultan have brought down On his head the wrath of the. high government and palace officials. Bairani Aga, the chief eunuch, was recently requested to point oUt to his maj’esty that TUrkey was in the way of becoming a second Persia; and he gently reminded Kis majes ty of the “deposition” of the, late Abdul Aziz because of his loaning towards Russian ideas. The word deposition is an exquisite euphem- isiri for assassination. Best Cotton' Press.- Best Gin G6ar. lV*t Grist Mill/ Best Horse Power/ Best Settle/ . Best Evaporator.' Best Sugar Mill—2to 3 roll ers. Wrought Shaft aMWoPden or BabbitBoxes/ Engines, Pipes/ Cocks, Etc. * 33-. CEOC±BTfj July :19. 6m/ t SELL tsnd MAKE EVERY THING MATTE rif IRON BRASS, At HIS WORKS, MACONV lacon, Oa, Best Grist-Mill. Bfest Saw Mfll--frdii? §175 to §80T)/ Pinest ShaHifigjPuileys' and Gearing made, 'Valve, Steam and' Wa= ter Pittings/ Last Add Best of - ail; Send 5 to the best mhii' his own merits, not for any good qualities he possesses, But simply because of the position be has held and the vpoWer he has had for a brief period to paj? for adulation with powef and' patronage?. May not many a strong; prohd man break down tender^ -tins., neglect whbn 4 hfe,se43 those Re regarded as his. sin^fere frien^ ; fall fromhlih and.giye hint no further recbgm- tifoh? I , | gHH; President worship'is the facitof the day. It spoils' the best of offi cer s,f it spoils a free people., It. ought to oease. Thhrp shield be le^ preqidenlt worship' whiie . a. Cldhf ;Magisti»te.6t ifienation Ja m~io^y^;and. tfiM' there ehohld' be less hegledt and more honor to those wliobhave filled that high position,' when thfey resume their places among” the private citizens of the Republic who mike _ Presi- for pii'CcS ttlid' circulars. , dents and pay them'for their ser- a lady in -South Carolina. lotil dodge of ’the, prdtectionigts to conceal their fears of an attack upon monopoly. hot water into the churn; they know that slow churning makes the most and the best butter. They know that large feeds of cotton seed spoil butter and they feed something else. If ail our farm ers handled’ their milk and butter m'Uke manner; northern butter [ average man is m would soon be driven^ out of. .the —.h., market Let every farmer arrange to make sonib butter for market— handle it properly, nfake its quali ty good and' its appearance attract ive, and he Will always find ready sale at good prices. -*-4h Apropos ,of th§ 63,000 votes polled for Henry Heorge on Nov. 2, it is very significant that sonie of the most respectable journals of the country shoiild assert that this vote should be taken as a warning by the wealthy classes; whose grasping selfishness, is hot sur passed by any aristocratic element ih the rotten and effete society of the Old World. . Happiiy at the sohth wealth and poverty hdve not quite such a Hiatus between them as in the larger cities df the north. j -i ; 4 1 ,•, Tariff reform is not free trade, although interested protectionists would endeavor to convince the country.that the tariff reformers, are aimnig at, it ; Tariff reform means the redactibn of .needless taxes, and excessive, revenues—a tariff for revenue Witli a due re gard to the interests of our gen eral productive industries; The howl about free trade is a ridicu- Hohie Evidence 1 r So other preparitlon has won tur«c« it home equal to Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Ih -Lowell, Mass., where 1t Is 'made, h U now, ,asit has beea lor years, the leading laedjcloi lor purifying the blood, ; au'd luaiag aod strengthening the system. . Tills “ good name at home" Is “a tower of-strength abroad." It would require a Tolume People -to piiut all Lowell -peopla _ have, said in favor of Hood's Of Sarsaparilla. Mr. Albert a n w _ 11 -Estes, liying at 23 East fit* . *• u Street, Lowell,- for 15 years ■employed as boss carpenter by J.*W. Bennett, •president of the Erie Telephone compaoy. __ iad a largo running; sore come on his leg, which troubled him a year, when be begad to .take Hood's Sarsaparilla. - The sore soon grew less In size, and in a short time disappeared. . Jos. Dunphy,214 Cen- ; tral Street, Lowell, had ■ PraiSO . ewelltngs and lumps /on his face_ and neck, PI O Q O 8 ^ which Hood's sarsapa- Sarsaparillffi lilla completely enred.: ^ Mrs. 'C. W,; Marriott,, wife of the First ilstanV. Eire Engineer of Lowell, says that lor IG years, she; was troubled with stomaelt disorder and.'sick headache, which nothing relieved. The attacks came on every fort night, when she was.obliged to take her bed; and was unable to endure any noise. She took Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and after a time the attacks ceased entirely. Many more might be given had we room. On the recommendation of -people of Lowell, who know us, we ask you to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggist*, gl; a!rfor£5. Prepared oalj by C. I. HOOD <& CO., Apothecaries. Lowell, Mi» IOO Doses One Dollar r; % ART. Hi Stronger After Ilian Before Confinement, labor shorter and gainful than orf two former lions;'.physicians astonished; [ thank you, for Mother’s Friend, viceE; Darker' * A neglected cold or eongh may lead to mewBonia,Consumption or other fatal ■ diseaks. Strong'# Pectoral Pills will cure a • trouble, ; Address the Bradheld -1 Oo./Ariaiita, Ga. that the doubt about what a mugwump is. A mug wump, it says, is a man who sits in political judgment oa other fel lows, a sort of a kicker who thinks He^kaows it all and is bettec. than anybody else; The definition ridoldbe compiete if it, h^d said that he is a sort of sanctimonioas., hypocritical puss, who, instead cf kicking; ought to be kicked ; , . '-7—:—;»,«■« Baby falls and bumps its head, , Baby bawls, they think it’s dead*' Mammhgets St. Jacobi Oil, Rubs the baby; stops turmoiL A clear conscience can bear any * : ce- Madison, Go., w-iil sooiVbu'ihr a ■■■ ■ -■ : - - ■ Au American Princess, It is said that the oldest son of the Prince of Wales is to marry an American lady; The stock of princesses in Europe is playing out, and the royal family of Eng land has decided that it is well to form an alliance with America. Town Topics, a New York society paper, Says: “Lord Beaconsfield was jibe first t5 suggest that the Queen’s.eldest grandson should take,an-American wife. The wily old gentleman had, in his lifetime, seen so many social prejudices Broken down, so many apparently insuperable barriers removed, that He foretold the day when the Eng lish monarchy and . the American republic should finally join hands. Every marriage of an English peer or a peer’s son to an Ameri can has brought this day nearer; the favor with which American peeresses are received,! their pharma of person and intellect, their easy supremacy in the high est . 'dra\ticg-rt>dnis..,qf . .London, proved to careful watchers of the times that the ultimate result was inevitable. In the innermost cir cles of the court it was rnmored nearly a year ago that the Prince of Wales would look to the United States for a wife for his eldest son.” If there is any truth in the story, this accounts for for the fact that the Prince of Wales, and . hi3 wife, have been unusually sweet on American girls lately. >- • «<. —— About Boys. Too many feed make.their boys feel that they are of little or no account while they are boys. Lay responsibility on a boy, and He will meet it in a manful spirit, On no account ignore their dispo- tion to investigate. Help them to linderstarid things. Entourage them to know what they are about We are tod apt to treat a bdy’s Seeking after knowledge as mere idle curiosity. “Hon’t ask. ques tions,.” is poor advice to boys. If yon don’t explain puzzling things to them you oblige them to make niany experiments before they find them offi, ?pd though experiment al knowledge is best, in one sense, ih another it is not, for that which can be explained clearly does not need experimenting with. , If, the principle involved -is understood, there is no further trouble, and the boy can go ahead intelligent- l y- f . /- : I)o not wait fdr a bdy, tp_ grow Up before you begin to treat him as an eqhal. A proper amount of confidence, pnd words of. ; enconr-, agementand advice, and giving him to understand that you trust him in many ways, hqlps tq make a man of Kim long before he is fe man in either statue or years. ' Some of the Indiana Congress; men want the official scalp qf Third Assistant Postmaster General. Ha- zen. They say that,he is guilty, of, “perriicipus activity,” because, he furnished campaign, literature, tp the Indiana Republicans daring the last campaign... It begins tp look as if the President were going to be troobied as much by/‘perni cious activity” as he was by “offen sive partisanslnp.”. ; : 6 1» 4, . One of the impossible things in. this world is, for one person to ig= hore another; it cannot be done. You may be angry with a man, and decide never 5 to s peak to him again; bqt yori will find thai it re quires more thought and ,effort to pass that man, once without npeak- ing, than.it wpulcf to; salute him forty times. This is because,tb ere . is no provision made in nature for Hatred . _ # -sH—f ' ~— ‘ J »’ Sxo ®^ en t 'have^sacttaji opportamty as is now' t*7- J. J. Atkins, Chief of Police,'fe red them in the sale ohtLisJiopk, »cd Rnoxvillft,; Tenia./ ,writes: -‘‘My desire to make m6r^nioj5i.j ; n family ^nd I arer .benefiemries of in thtfrnvefwm alp^ijf^ j^our most excellent medicine, Br. ing for further/information. are ' King’s NeW_ Discovery^ for con- spfcial reaso3S3for<theimnit >>f >-aleg of sumption/having found it to he which'oannot-be in ’ - - ' ’ • " *f <desire to ^^^^.Dntvrtlbe.fully explain-: , ... , A#-!:- «3on apphoaticii. Earnest,- intelL'cerf testify to its wirtue. My friends, men and.women, who meau business anri tq whom I have recommended it want to make money rapidly, -without praise it at every opportunitv.” ijwasSE&it, nr& requested to Dr,Km ? > r N«v D«=o.,efv Sor Consumption 13 guaranteed to Address.-.i- / ;' 1 cure Coughs- . Colds, Bronchitis,! Asthma, Croup and every affection of Throat, Chest and Lungs. «r o w . Trial bottles Free at Matffiws & N katlt kXECUT7Z Wrights drug store, Fort Valley ! Ga; Large size $1,00, i rAT THIS OFFICE. MUSIC and l ^ajs r ^ Want to are yotE iii'fut. have got ansnethlng ia. portant to say yon.’and not owning thi* cntlr* p#‘ pei.in pct'boinf; limited !>; the centir'mahly and good-nAtureiT-puhliilier to It) inches space, we sm- not ne;rin to say all we want to, or shonld. in jae* tice to the-smei wo have-'for yo’n’r Inspection. li wi'l nut otily delight yon t«>colno iuid see our be»m‘ tiftfl Temploof Mnsi> amt,Ari.bnt It will pay yo*'. Still v.-e knovr T hCw iiritnrt>aible It is for everybody to come to Savannah, -ahd to thoaei;whoic»iJ*BV come, all we e*f ia wriio- ns, arul we will do all we ain foryou by deriding you complete' descriptive catalogue □ of tho goods von may wish to knew about. : ;■ ’ Here -they'are, eliypn of?them. Tori win and lull description:: of irilgooda under''different' heads and prices, win he found lower than any beret*, foro heard, of-- - Catalogue no. 1. pianos. CATALOGUE No. 2. Ocoaks. CATALOGCE Hp. 3. SOnoc. CATALOGUE'S o i. BiriD IrisrxcwxaTri. CATALOGUE No. 6.. B.-.MD asu OgcmiSB Sfcsib. r ' ‘ CATALOGUE No. 6. Automatic Iysnnixnm CATALOGUE No. 7. Smati. iKB-cBUMSKTe. CATALOGUE No. ft Stkinge. CATALOGUE No. 9. Piano Stools and Covona. CATALOGUE No. 10. Aetist’sMaterials. CATALOGUE No. 11. Fbahes. f ’ • Piccre indicate by number the Catalogue that yon wish. ’ V?-' ’ "Pril'rir.a Chic&ering,.Mason A Hamlin. "Math- riailOb. ushek. Bent A Arion, 82UU to (1.009. -■ $25 cash and $10 a month. ' fii'iejnc Mason A Hamlin, Biy Strite AlPscA.' KJl s ri. $27 lo $500. S5 rash and |( per month. .. r >y- 11 Sheet published.-2c. a copy np. • •• Music Beolcs! gSoo^^?^ iihd Home Uce. , ; . . '■ • ■ ; Hand Imstniments; World’s best Factory, us^d by sll the leading bands of the south. Kr sure and’snnd fbr prices/ Band Music! |H pieces received askoon as published, and ni cuatomerc furnished at-lowest prices. T , Mnmcnl Onr stock is Complete la .lUUMUU ^ ajuau goods,' rind el MercHandisc cko self at' prices that ease bluiuuist . ble us to claim the largest salits hi the South. Buying direct from the last gest manufacturers iu the world.Ve can sell at prices that aefj competitlcfn. oilr goods fally guaranteed, and will be found exactly ss rear*, sentert.., ' J anin't A rtfst ’« 8 * ce P o - efything needed X3 ~\ to- 1 , Trofe.7oionalB and Amatepre^ae Mofpi'ielft' furnish all- materials used ia , atcl painting on canvass, doth, break, glass 01; china. ?>• ... j. Picllll'68 andiargest aesorfane*t A IblufTOj ever shown in ilm Souih. If will P a f ^rospedtive purchhaers tb cohie to HavarinaA if for nothing else thari to Icok throngh onr lm- merise stuck. We lari Paintings. Engravings; Pastels, Oleographs, ihtotlrits, Artotypes. Chr*. mos^bkeiches, Drawir.gs, ets».,etc. Ttif'-fniVi We carry a -llttick of the 8n*t£ X lCi-Ul C mohtdjng mhnufaatured. over JCC Frames d^rent patteiue. Have a ' 'pleu maunfaciory. complete wIU ttelaect und aniit improrrd machinery, and matifactnre the fibprt Trames that can be made. Olfr pricea the jowest. > . - , Wpaiftug Department, .^inery andftho beet dase TT ' rot Workmen {hat sro io be' WI.-J for tepsiringand over, hauling Piapnp, Orgiris. Violin*. Guitar*, han- jus, Accordeoris, OrfisinottoK Flute*, or any L-- sttnmimt made.; dur pricee will b# reasonable' ROS/TJ'ORGBT PIANOS and^SAKS SSandtlO a Neath,’ ^0 sfiliPiADOsafid Organs 1 on"osfy tcriai at lowest prices 1 o2hrj?d by any fc*usein' th* XS. **’ Pianos offered at 425 cash anrl $10 per month. Or-t gnu8 for $5 cash, and $5 "per in.mttr. All h*wi». stramenfe, fully guaranteed* and can be retnmed ^ ^ fifteen days trial. LuddeU & 3>a,*Ai\ Soiti4fti Hnslc Shut, .... SAVANNAH, GEOBGIA. FOB THE PebsokLl Mehoies GEN.‘ ROBERli^,. LEE, l.cadcr af tfie Confederate Armlet In the War.Bctwcen tlie State*. It is dhly paae-in a lifetime that agent*-