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The Great jiganh,, Industrial and Stock;
Journal of the South ,
ONE YEAR FOR $2.75
CASH IN ADYANCR.
Sample copies of tjie. Southern Gulti
yator •will be mailed FREE on applica
tion to Jas. P. Harrison & Co., Drawer
8, Atlanta, Ga. : , ' '
Circuit; in Alacon end
and in the Federal Cot
PEKBY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER15,1888
Tribute of Respect to the Memo-
ry of Airs, B. C. Kendrtcfe.
New life, new joyeomes with the morrow;
Glorious city! Home at last!” i
Surely sUch a life cannot be lost j
; to the living who are left behind. I
“Not a prayer shall be forgottei,
Wise Words.
Americans Snubbed in London.
Monroe Advertiser. j KuOW thyself.
"What the life of a family isatj One feast,-one house, one hap-
New York Snn.
“The only drawback to a trip
abroad,” said Comedian Francis
Wilson yesterday, “lies in the fact
The committee appointed by the
merintendent of the Henderson
B EING members of the “WHOLESALE GEOGEES’ NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION,” We buy Groceries as Low as any Firm "in - the
World, and are the ONLY HOUSE IN MIDDLE GEORGIA SELL*
ING DIBECT TO THE PLANTERS AT WHOLESALE PRICES.
WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF—- , ...
W, B. & Oi 6. SPARKS,
GOTT0N FACTORS;
CHIf-i A
HC-USEKEE
ASP]
WEDDING, BIRTHDAY
"When in Alacon call and see the lai
cured
Takeni
Absolute!
He Does Exclusively d Cotton ‘
HE IS A SELLER, NOT A BUYER OF CO]
ff l ALWAYS GETS THE HIGHEST MARKET PEICE. B
Handle Bagging, Ties, Guano or Groceries. Ho devotes his
; ■ SALE OF COTTON
HE- LOANS MONEY IN THE SPBENG AT A LOW KATE
around in the hope
come out, but he
R?5S-V-
jf? ■
-
ONE YEAR FOR
JOB WOBE1
'jjBATLY: ISXl'TEC'TJTKI)
AT THIS OFFICE.—-
Att<
(Office over Dow I
-n 2* . ? iv i •
-J Cue?;
—The Home
fice is fully prepared to
kind of Commercial
may- be needed. All
ded, and at prices that will
pete with any city. Call and loc
at our samples and get our
Sabbath ^school, respectfully sub
mit the following preamble and
resolutions;
A dispensation of our Heavenly
Father has removed to her home
in Heaven our beloved sister, Mrs.
| B. C. Kendrick, and by his (to us)
inscrutible, yet unerring Provi
dence, taken the best and dearest
of our number, and because He
has taken the best and dearest, we
know that His visitation was in
mercy, and not in wrath; because
it is in brokenness of bereavement
the heart finds the great Healer;
only through the glooiii of deso
late earthly homes that we see the
glory of the home eternal, to which
our loved one has gone. God has
thus gathered to Himself, from
the heat and burden of the day,
our beloved friend and recent co-
laborer. It is seldom that the pen
of the eulogist or the promptings
of affection finds a subject e£ such
rare loveliness to engage its truth
or enlist its sympathies; indeed,
no eulogy of words in. admiration
of her many excellencies of char
acter, can be regarded by those
who knew her well as fulsome
praise. “To know her was to love
her,” finds a truthful and emphat
ic application to her in all the re
lations of life, whether in the
home circle, the highways of life,
or the sanctuary of God—in all she
was the same loving, charitable,
God-fearing woman. Her natural
amiability, artless grace of man
ners and cultivated intellect, like
a magnet, attracted and retained
all in the closest friendship, and
reverent esteem. Her ambition
was to do gopd, and that she did
as opportunity offered. Yea, she
sought objects and occasions for
her kind" ministrations of love.
Her religion was not an emotional
Impulse, but a fixed, living princi
ple of beautiful consistency, shin
ing steadily, and seen of all. Loy
al, yet liberal and catholic in spir
it, bound by no creeds, she re
joiced imthe prosperity of all who
bore the name of ohr Lord Jesus
Christ.
You of the Sunday school need
not be reminded of how faithfully,
punctually and affectionately, and
with what untiring effort she la
bored for the Master’s cause. She
was a partaker of all the vicissi
tudes of our experience—sunshine
or shade. Her heroic devo
tion (let it not be forgotten), in
supplying the place of the Super
intendent when he was absent;
yea, her loving ministration w.as
the talisman of hope and success
to you who. Sabbath after Sab
bath,- met with her class. The pu
rity of her life was a light to our
pathway, and her genial compan
ionship a benediction to all. No
need that you be reminded of her
earnestness as she taught in Bible-
class, or with what spiritual devo
tion- she led in the Songs df Zion.
How the. melody of her sweet
voice (she loved to sing,) still lin
gers with us. The cherished songs
are left ns; but the sweet singer
is gone.. The voice is nbw. raised
to higher strains among the choral
hosts in Heaven," and her .mncli-
loved prayerful lay, “Nearer, My
God, to Thee!” is dissolved in the
ecstacy of Hallelujuah to the
Lamb.
, The memory of her virtues will
ever linger as A sweet perfume,
She lived in the sunshine; behold
ing the good, and beautiful of
earth; she died ini sight of Heaven.
)Vhen she approached the end, no
rayless gloom settled over the si-
ient tomb. Her vision
held the shining presence of her
Saviour, whose rod and staff wer.e
to comfort and accompany’ her to
the realms of light, and coura
geously, lastingly, and with great
’ calmness, she .passed the portals
death, whose grim skeleton had
110 terrors for her.
Breathing incense on the air;
But in all the hearts that love her,
She -will be ever living still.”
Therefore, resolved, That while
we deeply feel the great loss in the
death of our sainted friend; we
bow in submission to the will of
Providence, commending the be
reaved and smitten hearts to Him
who alone can apply the healing
balm, and praying that her man
tle may soon fall to a worthy suc
cessor.
Resolved, That we, as a Sunday
school, wear the usual badge of
mourning for thirty days, and that
a page be inscribed to her memo-
17 in the minutes of our school.
J. T. Coleman,
Mbs. M. L. Tucker,
Mbs. R, D. Beown,-
Comfhittee.
Henderson, Nov. 4th, 1888.
A Highly Abnormal Case.
Oh a Baker street car the other
day a man who had taken a car
ticket from his wallet dropped the
“leather” on the floor at his feet
in trying to replace it in his pock
et. Three oi 1 four passengers saw
the transaction, but no one had
said a word when the loser dis
covered his loss, and started up
and sat down in disgust.
“Auything wrong?” asked a
passenger.
“Yes, wallet is gone.”’
“Probably picked out df your
pocket!”
“No, I guess not.”
“Don’t you suspect some one in
this car?”
“Oh, no, I probably dropped it
on the street.”
“Probabably contained $100
didn’t it?”
“No.”
“As much as $40] then?”
' “No; I guess it had about $1 in
it.”
“But you will stand off your gas
bill and water tax aDd your grocer
on account of it, of course?”
“No; sir; I shall pay everything
to-day?”
. “Well, gosh diirn to gum, if you
ain’t a mighty queer man, and
here’s your wallet! Say, folks,
let’s present him-a tokeii bf our
utter amazement;”
. And they chipped in and
bought him sii car tickets, and
offered to run him for mayor.—
Detroit Free Prees.
j home will be evidenced by the
j fruits df the family when brought
j in contact with the world. Home
I is the place where children drink
I in the lessons that Usually poipt in
j life. It is the cradle of the family;
j the nursery of children and should
be .the best school they enter.
Home is where those example les
sons are taught, that "children nev-
I er forget. Here is where the child
j receives its first impress, where, it
I learns its first lesson] .where the
I young tendrils of childish heart
first begin to reach out and cling
around objects of affection. How
careful then should the rules of ev
ery home be as to life in that home.
On this subject, we clip the follow
ing from an address recently de
livered at a family reunion:
“Home life is the basis of na
tional life. Fathers and mothers
live for home. Make it, if you can,
a fit emblem of our eternal home,
across whose threshold dis'eord
never comes and all is peace and
love. Train your children to be
stroDg-minded men and women; to
battle for the right when in your
graves; men and wqmen who, m
after years, will wander back with
memory sweet o’er the hills and
vales of the past to childshood’s
home and sing of a truth, ‘home
sweet home, there is no place like
home;’ and who amid their daily
toils, will now ancl then at least get
dream-like views of an eternal
home towards which they are tend
ing, of which these earthly homes
at beit are only emblems. To do
this you must throw around your
home the "charms of true lives.
You must not be shams. That lit
tle girl Who looked up to her moth
er and said,‘mam a]yOu are the best-
est and be'autifulest of all,’paid the
highest compliment a mother ever
received. Be good and true, and
your children will try to be like
you. And then when your eyes
are old and their sense of light is
almost extinguished, if yoj^ have
reared your children right, your
oyal, ioving sons and daughters
will soothe and comfort you, and
when the shadow and gloom of
death settle around your dying
couch, there- will be no greedy, cov
etous looks, but anxious, weeping
eyes which will shine to Warm
your freezing life and lighten the
burden of dbata.”
“Age Cannot Wither Her,”
remarked an old gentleman, as he
gatod fondly UpoD tile comely lit
tle woman by his side; “but frank
ly,” he continued, “at one time I
Was afraid cosmetics would.” The
silly little woman, in order to ap
pear youthful, plastered her face
with different varieties of white
wash, yclept “balms,” “creams,”
“iotions,” etc. “Yes,” interrupted
the little woman, “I did, Until my
skin became like parchmqpt, and
so pimply and coarse.” “Well,”
Maid the listener, “What do you use
now?” “Use,” was . the reply,,
“why nothing but common sense
and Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical
Discovery. Common sense told
me that if my blood was pure;"
liver regulated, appetite good, the
outward woman would take on the
hue of health. The ‘Discovery’
diet all these things, and actually
rejuvenated me.”
Its thousands of cures are the,
best advertisement for Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy.
When a woman falls from the
throne of virtue the fall is so great
she can never rise again, and thB
doors of society are closed, and her
lot is to forever remain oii the out
side. And the man. who' would
pull her down from that high plane
is worse than the devil,, and hell is
too good for him, though. society
often fondles him as a petted child,
and seems say to him, “You have
acted your- part well, continue in
the work!” and the work will con
tinue as long as society tolerates
such brutes.
The. Baltimore Manufacturers’
Record states that the new enter
prises started in the South during
the first six mouths of 1888 , num
ber 2023, against 1885 for the cor
responding time last year. The
amount of capital and capital
stock represented by the list of
new enterprises and the enlarge
ment of old plants for the first six
montos of 1888 is $81,208,000.
pmess.
Praise undeserved is satire in
disguis'd.
Wit is folly,. unless a wise man
has the keeping of it.
The reward of one duty is the
power to fulfill another;
Fidelity in trifles is the ladder
which leads to greatness.
Cultivate forbearance till your
heart yields a fine crop of it.
If we still love those we lose,
can we altogather lose those we
love?
There is no courage but in inno
cence, no constancy but in an hon
est cause.
Time is . never more misspent
than while we disclaim against the
want of it.
Agitation is the marshaling of
the conscience of a nation to mold
its laws.
Men love to hear of their power,
but, have an extreme disrelish to be
told of their duty.
Of great riches there is no real
use, except it be in the distribu
tion; the rest is but conceit.
We are never made so ridicu
lous by the qualities we have, as
by those we affect to have.
Knowledge without discretion is
like force without direction—never
useful but by accident. ■?
Doing is the great thing. For,
if resolutely, people do what is
right, in time they come to like do
ing it.
Reason requires culture to ex-
expand. It resembles the fire con
cealed in the flint, which only
shows itself when struck with the
steel.
A Memphis Laweb created a
seusatich by saying in his speech;
“You can’t get me between Skilly
aDd Carripeus.” He is probably
related to the Texas who orator fer
vently said: “If I depart frond these
principles may my tongue forget
its cunning and my right hand
cleave to the roof of my mouth.”
At Central City, Col., the other
day; a retort containing $40,000 in
gold was placed in a bank for safe
keeping. The gold was all pro
duced in a single day by one mine.
The amount is the greatest ever
taken from one mine 'in the same
length of time.
that a man has to endure so many
slurs on his country in England.
The condescension and patronage
of Londoners grows harder to
bear with me every year. I think
the most unpleasant experience I
ever had occurred just before I
sailed this time on the City of
New York. I went down to Bond
street, to buy a ring for my wife.
It had attracted ndy attention du
ring one of my window gazing
walks. I entered the shop, and
pointed out the ring to the man
behind the counter.
“Do you wish to purchase it?”
he asked super’cilliously..
“If it suits me,” I "said.
“He went to the window, took it
out, and half tossed it toward me.
I was aware that the manner, of
the shopkeeper was offensive] but
I was interested in the ring at the
time, and did not pay much atteu-
tion to it. A moment later, I ask
ed him to show-me a ring in which
the stones were more firmly set.
For a moment he did not move,
and then he said, slowly:
“You are an American,* I be
lieve?”
“I looked at bind inquiringly,
and he said;
“The fact is, we don’t care much
for Americans, you know. They
go shopping ancl fussing about,
cause us a great deal of trouble
In showing goods," and then go off
without mating any purchases, so
that it is exceedingly tiresome
waiting upon them,”
“For an instant I felt like
smashing him,” Mr. "Wilson said,
‘but I recalled the fact that I was
in.Eondon. I had the money in my
pocket to buy the ring--and it was
rather an expensive one—I threw
it oevr the showcase to the man
and said:
“I am aware that ther are many
class distinctions in England,, and
abundant provision for the hogs of
your nation, but there is no niche
in all the social plan in which you
will fit.”
“Then Twent out brooding over
it; and waited
that he would
didn’t.”
RODGERS; WORSHAM k CO,;.. v
MACON, GA.
Nos. 420>nd 422 THIRD STREET,
—SEND US YOUR ORDERS FOR-—-
BaggiDg and Ties, Bacon, Lard, Grain, Floiir :
Tobacco, Syrup, Gheese, Etc., Etc.
— ALSO,—
and Texas Seed Oats, Rye
SELLING TO ALLIANCE, CLUBS',
aud have sold every one which has thus far been to see us.
Look!
FRESH-AND
, MILLER &
There are only two Factories in this country matin
MAL BONE FERTILIZERS:—Of these we sell H.
CO.’S, by far the most ' : -
Superior Fertilizer on the Market! «
It is the only Fertilizer equalling Peruvian in analysis and- soil tests]*
so far as reported. In a few days this firm will send fisra large Ipt ? of
very handsome Pocket Books to be given to Planters. Call and get Qn'e*
We manufacture 6 ¥L0WB0Y’S BRAND,’’ the highest grade
Guano, made from Charleston rock by Georgia chemists’ analysis, W4
also control SOLUBLE BONE DUST, the best chemical offered
for composting. - ... . ^
We Import our own German i£ainit End
. Muriate of Potash.
We control the COTTON SEED MEAL PRODUCT of the Macon
Oil and Fertilizer Co., in Middle Georgia. We handle only
THE EBESTJFEKTILIZEitS, , ,. ,, ; , f .
and buying in very large lots, can safely promise to save - money' tor
every farmer the coming season of 1889. We have made the best
trades of our lives in this line. Write or call to see us.
RODGERS- WORSHAM & CQ- y
420 aiid 422 Third StteetyHaSODj-Gebrgia.-
shif Yowm aoTTom
WILLIS in. PRICE
7\
COTTON FACTOR-
MACON, GEORGIA.
He
Business’
COTTON.^8- r *
HE DOES t NOT
his whole time tc
It is said that the first thing a
Washington territory Indian buys
is a large trank. Then if he has
money enough he •. fills it. This
trunk acts as a Storehouse for trink
ets as long as the lock holds good,
then it is turned into a cradle, and
when the owner dies’ he is buried
in it.
Probably no one thing has
caused; such a revivival in trade at
the drug stores as their giving
away to their custoniers-of so many
free trial bottles of Dr. King’s
New Discovery. Their trade is
simply enormous in this very val
uable article from the fact that-, it
always cures and never disaap-
points; Coughs, colds]: asthma]
bronchitis,- croup; and all throat
and lung diseases quickly cured.
You can test it before^ buying by
getting a trial bottle free, large
size, $1. Every bottle warrant
ed.
Nos. 409 and 411
A cbank Cossack ; was arrested
in Southern Russia for hunting
the Czar with a pocketful of dyna
mite bombs.
The tale of a sparrow enmeshed
in the web of a spider, is related
by the New York Evening Sun.
V "ltf dost as tho sparrow was about, to
02 ana e- ^ eak awayj the reporter relates,
the spider darted out and stung
her in the neck. .The sparrow
made a desperate effort and fell to
fhe ground. It was living, but
appeared to have been badly poi
soned by the sting..
The Cincinnati Price Current
makes the wheat crop of t he Uni
ted States 400,000,000 measured
bushels aud 872,-000^000 by weight.
Consider the chickens, my son;
study their ways and be wise.
Whenever they take to drinking
their bills go up] and by keeping
their bills down they find enough
to eat.—Fuck.
’, reached the holy city/
s long journey now is o’er;
with loved ones there united,
ln " 3 rejoicing evermore".
1 ^ on Ser night, no grief or sorrow;
3 cumbered with the past;
CONSUMPTION SUEELY CURED.
■Tothr Editok—Please. Inform your read
ers that I have a positiveretoedyfor the above
named disease. By its timely use thousands of
hopeless cases have been permanently cured.
I shall be glad to send two bottles of my reme
dy free to any of your readers who have con
sumption if they,, will send me their express
Dr, Moffett's TEETH® (TeeiWsg Fesiers)
Allays Irritation, AldsDlcerUon, Eegclatesthc
Bowels, Strengthens the Child,mekes Teething
Easy and Costs only 25 Cents. Teethina cures
Emotions and Sores, and nothing eqnals It for
the Summer troubles of Children cfaayaga. II'
is safe and sure. Try it and you will never be
A man who .has practiced medi
cine fog 40 years ought to know
salt from sugar; read what he
says: •
Toledo, G. Jan. 10,1887.
Messrs. J. F._ Cheney & Co.—
Gentlemen:—I have been, in the
general practice. of .medicine for
most 40 years, and would say that
in all my practice and experience,
have never seen a preparation that
I could ^prescribe with as much
confidence of success as I can
Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by youV Have prescribed it a
great many times, and its effect is
wonderful; and would, say in con
clusion that I have yet to .find a
case of catarrh that it would pot
cure,if they woald take it according
to directions. *- ,
, Yours truly;
L. L. Gobstjch, M. D.,
- - Office.215 Summit St...
We will give $100 for any ^.cn
of cfiiarrli.-tliat cannot be
•with Halts Catarrh Cure.
The Detroit Free Press says that
North Carolina is caring for. .1000
negroes afflicted with insanjly
and every other Southern State ha s
its hands full. In almost every-
ease it is the lighthearted lazy
fellow who Iqses his mind, ..while-
the hard workers grow brigtof
each year.
MACON, GA.
- " ——O—w - , j
Consignments of Cotton Respectfully .Solicited. Libera:
Advances Made orr Cotton in Store.
■■ .....
Tb.eir
Business
Booming
mmrnmm
fWV*
' • ' ' ...I..,..-
tS" Pull Supply of Groceries, Plan tars’ Supplies and-Bagging and Ties always
on hand.
=32—
m
.
GED EEADQUAEE
riY* c
4_--
without TEETHE* A as Ion?as there are child-
tea in the House. Ask your L)nudist
Hox-tzotaw & Gilbert, Perry," Ga.
—Syrup Kettles cheap. ; internally. .
C. H. Moobe. ! J- F - Cheney & Co., Props., , .
— m . .. ir - Toledo, o. ;S'
Renew your subscription now. gSTSold by druggists,] 75d