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CorrespoadSneccontaiiilcgitemE <
cal news ( briefly told,is csmcslydci
Ho J«fc JotrasALWiU bo alvfays open
cussionoi anyanUjccitouclung the
fare of our people orcotmtry. Inth
thb oditomsEfertftliattha vievrWbf co
mublboheldasdisticct froaihis-os
ixprcsslycoincideEWithtliein. Tub I
claims the rightolbeingthesuprem
ident
Unfe Inch
TWO Inches
Fnarinches
Q«5r. tlol.
Half dpi.
One Goh J
•LEGAL A DVEPTI3INC.
A.iiadvortisementsominatingf£om pnblicoflices
<fill bbehargedforin strict accordance withanact
Dvthc Senaral Assembly of -ieorgia—76 cents for
Hdndroi.'vprdsl’or each of the first four insertions,
and SB cents per 100 words for each subsequent
insertion. The cash mast accompany copy of each
.lAsertiser.iorit.unlessdifferontarraugements hare
been made.
ACCOUNTS.
All Accounts, tor Subscription, Adrerttsdsi^. f
Job Work, are due on demand, unless otharwia
provided fob byrpeclaltpntract. ;
Commercial Job WCrk Satisfactorily execute
and Legal Blanhsheptconstantl ton -hand- -y
[SiaCSrgy roil
Kaffir Corii.
A Look Akeatk
From Demorest’s Monthly for February.
: it. To sum up its advantages, l S
: think it will make more grain and j
The following is from a comma-. fodder than anything I have ever j
cation from Ur. VV atkihs, pub-' seen, and the quality, X think, is! , In a general way Americans nn-
lished in the Southern Agriritil- : not excelled by anything; again, it derstand that their country is
turalisfc, February i886: is affected less by dry weather making marvelous progress in
“Kaffir corn, is alluded to as l a than anything I ever saw grow- • population and wealth. But they
new grain and forage plant that is j ing. j will never quite realize the fall
being milch written about,’ and as[■- “Orir gardens, Cotton, and all force of the facts until the census
I have steadily grown it for eight. late corn are parched up, but my of 18§0 is taken. It will then be
j years, and carefully compared it j “Kaffir” is green from the ground found that in no previous decade
up. The few rows tbSlTl have is ha sthere been any such progress as
all that I know of in this part of between 1880 and 1890. The three
the country, but everybody that | sections of the country which will
has seen it say they are going toj show the most Remarkable devel-
plant largely of it another year. I; opmfenfs ffi'e the South, the West,
intend having a little ground into j and the Pacific coast. As to the
flour just to try it, and if it is good Southern States, the dhaiige there
This powder never varies. A marvel of purita
strength and whclesomcncss. More economic}-
than tlic ordinary klffdg, and cannot be sold^n
.competition with the multitude of low test, short
.weight, alum anti phosphaie powders. Bold only
Hi cans. hoVAi. Baking I’owdeii Co , 106 Wall
Street, .N. Y.
TE'ScNiECET
-----wrrrt-
* A. fe. SMALL,.
MACON, - - - - GA-3
DEALER IN ‘
'J
Bespectfiilly solicits the patron
age of liis friends in Houston
county.
Dec; 30—tf.
HEADQUARTERS;
FOE
Si
AND
GFSTS 1 fllBpI GOODS,
91 Cherry Street,
MACON. GEORGIA
We recently purchased in the northern
and eastern markets the largest stock of
Ulothing ever brought to this city, and
they are marked to sell at Living prices.
A first-Glas3'£u3ines3 Sait, ' All-Wool,- $8.
Wo can suit the boys and children ex
actly, and our stock of Gents’ Furnishing
Gooods ehallanges the admiration of all.
We sell the celebrated
jflAMOMD SHIRT, -
and -will make shirts to order, guarantee
ing a perfect fit. Our stock of Hats em
braces all the newest styles. Call on iis.
We know wo can suit you.
CHARLES MITEL h GOO,,
91 Cherry Street, Macon, Ga.
stimulates the torpid liver, strength*
ens the digestive organs, regulates thO
bonels, and are uuecjualecl as aii
ANTI-BILBOUS MEDICINE.
Jta malarial districts their virtues are
Widely recognized, as they possess pec*
nliar properties in freeing: thesystem
from that poition. Elegantly sugar
coated. Dose small. Price, 25cts.
Sold Everywhere,
©ffice, 44 Murray St., New Toi&t
TO ADYE -TitiERB!
For a chcfcV for $2 ; ' we will print a ten-line ad
vertisement in One .Million issues of leading Amei-
l.%.n Newspapers- ibis is at the rate of only ore-
fifth of a ce:.t a line, for 1.000 circulation! The ad
vertisement will bp p!act:d bt fore One Million dif
ferent newspaper purchasers;—or Five Mi-lion
headers. Ten lines will accommodate about 75
words. Address with copy of rdv. and ctr^ck, or
send 30 cents tor Book of 176 pages. GEORGE P.'
ROWELL kCO., 10 Spruce Street, Xew York.
ONLY TRUE
TONIC
Will
£$33
the
KIDNEY
and
the
Restore the HEALTH:
OR of YOUTH.
of Appetite,
on .Lack of
Strength
Feeling ab-
and
Bolately
cured:
Cfo9
and
receive
Enlivens the mind
force.
Brainpower.
and supplies
from
LADIES
find in DR,
7 TONXCtf
harto
HARTER’S IRON
jQllittempts^a^count^rf eitin g onlyadds to its i
larity. Do not experiment—£et Original and Best
■ Headache. Sample .Hose and Dream Book*
Amalled. on receipt ol two eenta In poatage. JF
tliEDR. HMIEB MEMCIHE CO.. ST. LOWS, MB.
The Hoad to w ealth!
Is in having good printing. We make a
.specialty of all kinds of Live Stock,
Poultry, Pets, Dogs, Small Fruits, Plants,
Flowers, and every other kind of Print
ing. We have new and handsome cuts
by the hundred with which to' illustrate.
In Home bills we cannot be beat The
Best line of horse cuts in Amejrfca.-
Prices so low that you cannot help or
dering from us. Send for samples, extra
low prices, and proofs of cute. When
you want printing of any kind, write to
the
r QO o WasSaitf* Sms-
jib every respect with all other
i known plants of the same family,
j I would like to gay a few words to
j your army of readers in reference
j thereto.
“Let me say, then, that it is pot
| milio inaize (rural branching
sorghum, bf Brazilian wheat) nor
Egyptian wheat (ivory or diamond
wheat, chicken corn), nor Dhoura
corn, (Egyptian corn, goose heck
corn), but that it is a distinct type
of the sorghum family of corns,
known as Kaffir, and is in every
respect superior to any of the fore
going plants. It is a native of
South Africa, and has proven it
self to be adapted profitably to
these soils and dry climates. It
is no humbug, as your readers
will know when they havd posted
themselves, and tried it. When
they have done this they will not
vote it a humbug or an imposter.
I have no seed fot sale, but I see
them advertised in your paper by
a reliable party, whose stock is
from the genuine original Kaffir
corn.
The truth has been aimed at,
in all that has been said of Kaffir,
in the articles that have been so
largely copied in the last few
months. It is bread, as .well as a
forage plant. Bread mads from
it has the flavor of wheat bread
with more sweetness, and the
grain in bulk emits the odor of
wheat. Therefore; it is no liumi
bug to say that it may become a
substitute for wheat in many sec
tions of our domain; It is unsur
passed for soiling purposes and
for forage. The yield is great, 15
to 100 bushels per aeie, and it is
very early;”
Editor Home and Earm:
“Seeing a great deal said about
Kaffir corn in different agricultu
ral papers last winter and spring, I
concluded to try a little. I plant
ed it June 1st, about the centre of
a small peice of second year’s new
ground; the rest of the field I
planted in common' Corn the same
day, which, until it commenced to
silk, bid fail’ to fhake twenty-five
bushels to the acre, but a drouth
of six weeks struck it then (which
still continues), and if I get eight
bushels now I will be glad, while
it is very different with the Kaffir.
The drouth has never seemed to
affect it all; not a parched or burnt
blade on it. By the 15th of Au
gust one-third of it was fully ma
tured, and now (24th of August)
it is ready to harvest, except a
head here and there that is too
green. I have never seen anything
that comes as . near making good
every claim made for it by varioas
writers. It is the prettiest grain I
ever sa1v grow, all along from the
time it is knee high until it is ful
ly matured, when it is prettier
than ever;
“The directioni for planting
were: drop three or four grains
twelve or fourteen inches apart, if
the land is good let it all stand,
and if poor, thin out to one stalk.
The heads are from four to ten
inches long, and Several of my
neighbors who have seen it, say
that two average heads will equal
one large ear of corn, and, accord
ing to the best estimate we could
make, there are eight average
heads where one good ear of corn
would grow; besides,- if the heads
are cut off when matured, thefe
will come out a new crop,- which,
if it rain's* will be equally as heavy
as the first The stalk grows
about six feef*high,- and has more
fodder on it than anything of the
kind I have ever seen.
“Wanting as much grain as pos^
sible, I have nofce'dtany stalks, but
pulled an arinful of fodder to
see if my cattle liked it, and I
I will report. J. A. D.”
Choctaw County, Ala.
The Tide of Travel.
Thwesident correspondent of the
Charleston News and Courier at
Savannah writes as follows iii
Sunday’s issue of that paper, and
he knbfrs what he is writing
about:
The Jacksonville press has been
raising a rumpus over the report
that the tourist is giving Florida
the go by this winter. So far as
Jacksonville is concerned the re
port is not wholly without founda
tion. There may be as many tour
ists scattered about through the
State as there were last year, but
I have it on good authority that
Jacksonville is not crowded as it
was a year ago. It is significant,
too, that the Plant system has had
its best passenger agent, Mr. W.
L. Adams, in the North a good
while working up the business
more systematically than it was
ever done before. It is possible;
too, to get a front room iff a Thom-
asville hotel, traveling people say,
without engaging it ahead. The
fact is (and the truth might just
as well be admitted because it is
almost too late now to check the
boycott) that the Western rail
road companies got ahead of the
Southern lines last fall and work
ed a big California excursion
boom. Those who do come down
say they could have made the trip
to California froth the North for
the same figure they are charged to
come Sbtith.
The fault, though, is not so
much upon our home Companies
as upon their northern connections,
which would not give a competi-
fife rate. Railroad men here
blame the Pennsylvania Central
system, which insists on $6.50 fare
between New York and Washing
ton, going and goiff'ihg, no matter
whethei Washington or Jackson
ville is the objective point. The
rate is controlled if not made at
the initial point, they say. The
Northern lifrffs with Southern
connections are reported to have
refused to allow their agents a
commission on Ehe excursion tick
ets sold for Southern points, while
the roads connecting with the
Western lines granted a percent
age. Health and pleasure seekers
are' hot apt, however, to visit Cal
ifornia two consecutive winters
when Florida, with just as fine or
ange groves, as delightful climate,
newer and better hotels and with
the bull fighting Havana annex as
an extra attraction, lies one-third
nearer.
is not so much in the additions tti
the population as in its material
development; in other words, the
enhancement of its wealth, present
and prospective. In the olden
times, cotton raising was the main
source of income. It now repre
sents only one-third of the money-
producing industries of that sec
tion. The benificent change has
been brought about by manufac
turing enterprises and the conse
quent diversification of employ
ments. Instead of employing
themselves in raising cotton alone,
and getting their tools, clothing,
and even their food from the
North, they now manufacture for
themselves and raise their own
corn and pork. It is the products
of coal and iron which hav& en
riched modern nations, and it is
the working of these two minerals
which is changing the whole face
of Southern society. What may
be termed the middle zone of the
South, extending from Norfolk
due west to Northern Mississippi,
with a width of say four hundred
tniles, will be found a region in
which is some of the "finest coal
and iron in the world. The mines
are being worked for all they are
worth, and hence there is a prodi
gious development in Southern in
dustries.
-The colonics of Australia and
the neighboring islands havffsome
twenty scientific societies, with a
membership of between 2500 and
3000. These organizations are to
meet in 1883 for the. purpose of
forming an Autralian association
for the advancement of science,
similar to the important associa
tions now existing in England/
France and the United States.
When Georgiana was three, she
said suddenly one day, after a long
efuieti '‘Mamma,- where do the to
days go when they get to be yes
terdays?”
Tlie Mother’s Prletidi
Not only shortens labor and
lessens pain/but it greatly dimin
ishes the danger fc life to both
have never seen them eat any- j mother and child if used a few
thing so greedily. The grain ismonths before confinement. Write
said to make a splendid flour, and!to The BradfiehT Eegidat5f Co.,
from its appearance I do not doubt : Atlanta ,Ga.
What isFarmiug?
It is something more than stay
ing on a farm. It is something
more than skimming the soil. It
is more than selling hay or pota
toes, and bulky crops unanimal-
ized. Fkrming is a business, a
profession, a practical and scien
tific operation. The process of
nature must be understood^ and
worked in harmony with the chem
istry of the earth and air. (the
process of nature must be under
stood, if not in their technical terms
and language, in that sensible un
derstanding, that Common sense
sense way, that their own advan
tages and capabilities may be
turned to the best account. The
lawyer works by law and preced
ent, tiie physician works by sytdp-
tons and indications, the merchant
rules and observations;' the ma-
chanic by measures and capacities.
The farmer must work by all—by
rules, laws, observation and ex
periment. He must be a skilled
workman in the productive* opera
tive and commercial circles in
which his business lies and his
sphere of circulation extends.—
McKinney (Texas) Jourffal.
The Saltan of Morocco is fond
of tricycling, but too lazy to work
the pedals himself, so he has had
a gorgeous machine constructed,
propelled by slave labor. He sits
cross-legged trpori an embossed
couch, curtained and canopied
with silk and silver and .gold. At
his right hand is a dock and at
left is a compass, in order ' that
when beyond the reach of the
: muezzin’s Call the faithful Mo
hammedan may observe the exact
hour of prayer and the exact di
rection in which his orisons are to
be addressed
A thousand years ago? nearly all
the working people of England,
plowmen, carpenters, shepherds,
cooks and dairymaids, were slaves,
There was a regular slave market
in Bristol which Went on for hun
dreds of years.
A genius for statistics has fig
ured out that 1,000,000 dollar bills
weigh 2,'841 pounds.
A Sweet tliat Isn’t Sugar-
ffemorest’s Magazine for Fcbralr*.
One of the most surprising and
probably useful elements found in
j petroleum is a chemical compound,
; balled saccharin. It was disebv-
ered by the merest chance, by &
couple of chemists who were
making experiments with mineral
oil. Siigar, it will be remember
ed, is a hydrocarbon, and so is oil:
Yet although chemically the same
components, sugar is not oil.
Saccharin, though not a sugar,
may replace the cffiie and the grap§
for sweetening purposes. It is
now a very dear siibstance, but a
few grains haye as much sweeten
ing value aS hfive ounces of sugaf.
The process of making it will iff
time become cheap, and then the
growing of sugar '"cane, so largely
doiie by slave and contract labor,
may be dispensed with. The new
substance will have a medicinal
value also, for diabetics; wlio Can
not use sugar, may sweeten theif
tea and coffee with saccharin,
without injury. The chief value
of the discovery, however, is, that
it adds to the number of organic
subslancesjvhich ban bg made ar
tificially by man. Time was when
it was supposed that nature alone
supplied organic materials fit for
food; but if a sweetening substance
can be produced . artificially, why
not all the other life-sustaining
foods which form the dietary of
our tables? Science has worked
marvels in the world outside of
man, but*its greatest triumphs will
be when it is applied tojman him-
A Good That Fruit Does.
It is as a febrifuge that fruit li&s
its highest value, with both old
and youn§. With the approach of
what the poet calls the ilielancholy
days of the year, our bodies, if not
keyed up to the highest pitch of
health, are sensitive to the changes
of temperature, especially if the
air is surcharged with heavy mois
ture. At such s time we are lia
ble to fever and to chills, which,
from a neglected condition of the
body and from consequent low vi
tality, may easily change to a con
gestive and dangerous form. In
this case the value of the acid of
fresh fruit is easily indicated, and
the result of its use is speedily
shown in the breaking np of the
morbid conditions, the brightening
of that physical barometer—the
face, and the elasticity given to
the step; , y
As is well known' our .habits of
eating and drinking tend contin
ually to super-excitement of the
brain and blood, and to the devel
opment and exhibition of the pure
ly animal part of us. Too many
of our foods are admittedly pre
pared for the stimulation of our
passions, and as for alcoholic
drinks, none will deny that they
are used, even when pure, beyond
all reason or safety. As the doc
tor well says, the substitution of
fruit for stimulants, would relieve
much of the need for: restraint on
wrong doers. This is certain, for
our heads would be clearer, our
blood cooler, 6ur nerves steadier,
our impulses more subject to rea
son, and life would be 100 per
cent better than it is to-day.—The
Coisine.-
Resolutions Adopted by tbe N.
A. Poultry Association.
After transacting the regular
business, the question of Hatch
ing Chickens Artificially by Incu
bators, was thoroughly discussed,
and the following facts substantial
ly established, and reSolbtions
adopted:
1. Thai; chickens cannot be
hatched in winter, for early mar
ket, successfully, without the use
of incubators.
2. That by the use of incuba
tors chickens may be hatched at
any time, and in as great numbers
as may be desired.
3. That by the u£e of an incu
bator 20 chickens can be raised to
market size in a room 15 feet
square, and that incubator chick
ens from eight to teii weeks old,
will, in February, March, April
and May, sell at 30 to 75 cts. a
pound.
4. That any iady or gentleman,
although quite infirm, caff attend
to an incubator; affd with only the
room afforded by a town lot, can
clear from four to six hundred dol
lars a year.
5. That a good incubator can
be made at homd by any person
of ordinary genius, and that our
Secretary shall have printed at
once, directions and illustrations
for making a good, cheap incuba
tor.
6. That any person in the state
that will write to the Secretary;
inclosing stamps for return post
age, will fgeeive free, full and
complete illustrated directions for
making an incubator that will hold
300 eggs, and will hatch 80 per
cent of them; you can make the
incubator yourself, at a cost of
from four to six dollars; so make
your incubator now, and try it be
fore batehingHime.
7. That.the Secretary shall at
any time give all possible informa
tion and assistance to those start
ing in the poultry business;
At the next meeting the subject
How, When and Where to Market
Poultry most profitably* will be
considered, and a report again
sent to the press of the state.
Henry Griffith, Asst. Sec.,
Augusta, Ga.
—Hard Drink*
One of the most admired per
formers in a sensational drama re
cently produced in Cincinnati was
a big bulldog, that at a critical
point in. the play came bounding
out, and, seizing the villain by the
throat; or thereabouts, hung on
like grim death, amid uproarious
applause. The. other night he
grabbed his man a3 usual,- but
something gave way, and the dog
fell near the footlights, and then
he stood there and calmly ate a
big piece of liver, which had been
fastened under the villain’s throat,
and had hitherto been the incefft-
ive for the dog’s exertion.
5lr; .Gearge W: Childs, the Phil
adelphia newspaper proprietor,
millionaire and- philanthropist,
seems to have been more seriously
injured by his recent fall on the
ice than was reported. At the
suggestion of his physician he has
gone to his, country home, so as to
avoid tie noise and excitement of
the city.
- . •
A few weeks ago; a well known
manager of’ theatrical enterprises
took a small troupe of variety per
formers, ^mostly•• young women,
into the Black Hills connfry, and
before he could turn around all
the girls were married. He has
since dome oat for another sup
ply-
Banger! A neglected cold.or cough may
lead to .Pneumonia,Consumption or other fatal
disease. Strong’* PectoralKlla will cure a
cold a* by magic. Best thine for dyspepsia.tn-
thgutiso, aics&eaOacbe as thoosantijlestify.
Astronomers tell us in their
own simple, intelligible way, that
the gradual lengthening of the
-days is duff to the “obliquity of the
eliptic of the terrffstriaf horizon,
This ought to set at rest the fool
ish idea that the days are longer,
because the sufi rises earlier end
sets later/ * .
Interesting Experiences
Hiram-Cameron, furniture.deal
er, of Columbus, Ga., tells his ex
perience thus: “For three years
have tried every remedy o^ the
market for stomach and kidney;
troubles, but got no relief until I
used Electric Bitters. Took five
bottles ami., *&S£ .pow cured, and
think’ Electric Bmers : the best A
blood purifier, in the vorlcL”
Major A. B. .Heed/of-West Liber
ty, Ky-, used; Electric Bitters for
an aid standing kidney affection/
and says.:-. ^‘Nothing has ever done
me as much good as Electric Bit- ,, - . . , .
ters.” sold at fifty, e'eirfs a bottle,; the stomach, for years before
by Mathews & Wright, Fort Val- j using Hr. Harter’s Iron
ley, Ga. which finally cured her.
Out of the 772,444 words,, com
posing the revised Bible, 721,672
are the same as found in the re
vised edition issued in 1611. Only
9. per. ffeni—70,772--have ^ been
changed; 66,508 having been ex
cluded - .
Lady’s "gfiifor
enc
Was thal of one of our acqnaint-
Fa»t Uvlss—U cf!;!rss Sc;i as
In*—Poor Siiej.its—Social Jczlanax-7
PolUicaJ —Violent Passions
The Ksiu far Slosej;
The alarming disease
country is nervous debility and
prostration. It goes under
many names but it is essen
tially the same complaint.
Hospitals and private institu->
tions for nervous patients ara r
crowded. The average of lifel
in the United Stales is de
creasing . every year. Sadden
deaths from neryoSS coiLi£s?t
among our business, profess-;
ional and public men are sq
frequent as scarcely to excite,
remark. Thb majority of sui-.
cides, committed without apt
parent reason, or under so-called,
“depression of spirits,” are,
really prompted ' by nervouq
prostration, which is a fruitful,
source of insanity and crime
wit h all their grief and horror.
... Tliese facts are startling.'
They threaten the very lifepf
the iiatibil:. They assa.il the
springs of its power And pros-,
parity. They wreck manhood’s,
strength and woman’s useful
ness and beauty. t
Every one should know the
causes. What are they ? The
answer is easy and terribly
S lain: Our vicious personal
abits; our careless andlawlesg.
eating and drinking; the in-j
tense mental and physical straiil-
arising from our niad race after
money, position and influence/,
the fears and struggles of pov
erty; the use of narcotics ,and !
■stimulants; puf fashion ofi
turning day into night and
night iiitd day; and; briefly^
our I desperate willingness to.
pay any price for an hour’a
pleasure or success*. So we
burn life’s candle’ at both ends ;
and fill the lunatic asylums
and the graveyards.
The disease from which we
suffer and die is, in plain Eng
lish, Nervous Dyspepsia, as it
is seated in the Nerves and in!
the organs of Digestion^ Assim
ilation and Nutrition. Healthy,
digestion being impeded or des
troyed, the whole body, nervea
included, is literally starved;.
even when there .is fid emaci
ation to tell the sad story. . . ^
Nervous prostration sends,
out its warnings:—headache
in the morning; a persistent,
dull heaviness or aching at the
base of the brain; wakef iilnCSsf.
loss of appetite and disgust with
food; loss of mental energy and
interest in ordinary duties and!
business; restlessness and anx-,
iety without any assignable
reason; eructations; bad,
breath; foul mucous on,Jfie
teeth; occasional giddiness;,
palpitation of the heart; sal-
lownesss d£ the skin; coated'
tongue and gradual, failure of
strength and ambitiPn. '
The remedy is a total aban
donment of the habits and cus-,
tom§ which, cahlfe the disease,
in each individual case, and the.
use of Shaker Extract.of Boots,
(Scigel’s Syrup) to tonrP the.
inischief already done, y This.
g reat remedy, prepared by the.
linker Community of Mt. Leb-.
finon, Nj Y-viStespeeiallyadapts,
ed to eradicate Nervous Dys-
pepsia. To do this it acts,
directly and gently but power-,
fully upon the disordered stom--.
ach, liver and kidneys, res toft,
ing their tone and .vigor, pro-,
moling the secretion o£ bile, ex-,
pelling waste matters freon: the
system,and purifying the blood..
Upon the nervous, system.
acts as a safe and wholesome-
anodyne without the slightest.. *
narcotic effect, and then leaves,
the nerves to. regain thwr nat-.
ural tQne and si
wondp.rful
ITS
advertising rates.
LocalXotlces 10centsper linoeachInsertion.
Regular business idvertieemfents flrsilnsertion
1.00 perincli.—eacheubseqnentinsertioz.SO cents
per inch.
CONTRACT ADVERTISING.
2.50
| 5.00
8.0C
| 12.00
1.00
{ 8,00
12.00
18.00
6.00
12.00
18.00
21.1,0
7:00
1 15.00
25.00
1 10.00
l-i.co
1 23.00
10.00
1 60.00
18.00
j 10.00
00.00
109.U0
DfeVoted to Home Interests and Culture.
vol. xvn.
■ '-I'.,.
PERRY, GEORGIA, THtTRStiAT, tEhRUAflY 3, j§8?.
v’Vi. P ■ .. iTT ' nr i ifi- nriSV -.1—■ i i ■—■
J OH.N U. HODGES, Profirietdr.
TWO DOLLARS A Year in Advance.