Newspaper Page Text
;•; - - - - • - ■
JOHN H. HODGES, Proprietor,
DEVOTED TO HOME INTERESTS, PROGRESS AND CULTURE.
PRICE: TWO DOLLARS A. Year.
■
—
VOL. XX.
PEEEYj HOUSTON COUNTY, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23,1890.
NO. 43.
WILLINGHAM’S WAREHOUSE.
CL Mi "W rZL0L,±3^(3-S-AJIuE,
mmm, Georgia.
{Good Facilities, CInse Attention to Business, Liberal and
Square Dealing. Money Loaned to those who Deal with
Me at 8 per cent Per Annum.
Sen.d. “STo-mx Cotton..
C. B. WILLING H AM.
BALKCOM, HAY & DINKIER*
450 MULBERRY STREET, MACON, GEORGIA.
’ WHOLSALE DEALERS IN
torn., Oats, Hay, Bran, Meat; Sugar; Coffee
3Ba,g’gri:n-g' &n.dL lies,
AND A GENERAL ASSORTMENT OP CANNED GOODS.
(gT Write to ns, or call at the store,and we will guarantee satisfaction in every
particular.
Guardian’s Sale.
Agreeably to on order from tho Court
if Ordinary of Houston county, will be
old at auction at the court house door
jf laid county, on the first Tuesday in
Hovambor. 1890, within the legal hoursof
ale, the following property, to-wit: All
if that ono'-half undivided interest in lot
§j ■ |
of land No. (53) fifty-three; also that un-
dirided ono-half interest in east one-
hird undividedinterestinlot of land No.
30) thirty. All of said land lying in the
!$h district of Houston county, Ga. Sold
|u the property of Hattie A. Wimberly,
Iminor. Terms, one-third cash, one-third
I in twelvemonths, and one-third in' twen-
Ity-four months from day of sale. The
I preferred payments bearing 8 per cent
I interest. per annum. SjMbA ,,
1 LUCIA A. WIMBERLY,
Guardian of Hattie A.|Wimberly.
Georgia—Houston County:
James A. Smith, administrator of J.R.
Hancock, has applied for leave to sell tho
lands in Crawford county belonging to
the estate of said deceased:
This i s therefore to cite all personscon-
cemed to appear at theNovemberterm,
1890 ofthe court of Ordinary of saidcoun-
tr, and show cause, if any they have, why
•aid application should not be granted.
Witness my official signature this Oct.
g 1890. J. H. HOUSER,
Ordinary,
GEORGIA—Houston County:
J. L. Lowry, guardian of Annie 0.
jowry ahd Humphrey Marshall, has ap-
llisCl lfll v J-11 lnnH Violnrimrirr
plied far leave to sell the land belonging
to the estate of said wards.
Thin is therefore to cite allpersonscon-
oerned to appear at the November term,
1890,of the couftof Ordinary of saidcoun-
ly, and show cause, if any they have, why
iaid application should not be granted.
Witness my official signature this
October tod, 1890.
J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
Mrs. Lena G. Bassett has applied for
letters of administration on the estate of
E. G. Bassett, of said county, deceased:
> This is, therefore, to cite aR persons
concerned to appear at November term,
1890 of the Court of Ordinary of said
county and show cause, if any they have,
why said application should not be
granted.
25,1890.
J. H. HOUSEB, Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale.
By virtue of an order from the Court
os Ordinary of Monroe county, will be
sold before the court house door in
Perry, Houston county, Georgia, on the
first Tuesday in November, 1890, four
teen hundred acres, more or less, of land
known as the “Slocumb place,” this year
rented byL. G. Bvrd, and consisting of
lots 169,171,172 and 193, and parts of
5 :h dis
lots 167,168,173 and 194 in the
trict, and part of lot 193 in the 10th dis
trict-all in sail county of Houston.
Will be divided and sold in lots and parts
of lots. Terms, one-third cash, and bal
ance in one and two years at 8 per cent
interest on deferred payments. Sold as
the property of J. S. Slocumb, to
pay debts and for distribution among
heirs. O.H.B.BLOODWOBTH,
Oct. 2,1890. Administrator
FOR SALE OR RENT.
The house and one acre lot in Perry,
south east of and near depot, owned by
Mrs. Lizzie A. Hemmingway and Mrs.
Ludie G.
G. Hemmingway.
terms &c. address
Wilson Hemming way,
Findlay, Ga.
FAVORABLE LOANS ON REAL ESTATE
Negotiated upon most reasonable
terms. Interest payable annually at 8
and 7 per cent. Commissions low.
Apply to
H. A. MATHEWS,
Fort Talley, Ga.
6>p 0 H. M.
DBWTIST,
28^4 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga,
SPECIALIST. CROWNS AND BRIDGES.
MONEY LOANS
On Houston farms procured at the law.
est possible rates of interest. As low, if
not lower than tho lowest. Apply to
W. D. Nottingham,
tf Macon. Ga.
MONEY TO LOAN.
In sums of $300.00 and upwards, to be
secured by first liens on improved farms.
Longtime, low rates and easy payments.
Apply to O. 0. DUNCAN,
Nov. 20th, 1889.—tf Perry* Ga.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
O. W. Felder, administrator de bonis
non of the estate of Samuel Felder, of
said county deceased, has applied for
leave to sell all the realty belonging to
the estate of said deceased:
This is therefore to cite all persons
concernedto’appenr at Novemberterm,
1890, of the Court of Ordinary of Hous
ton oonnty, and'show cause, if any they
have, why said application should not be
^Witness my official signature this
Sept. 25,1890.
j. H. HOUSER, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Houston County:
T. O. Skellie administrator of the es
tate of Miss J. O. Kellogg, of said coun
ty, deceased, has applied for letters of
dismission from his trust:
This is therefore to cite all
concerned to appear at December terra,
1890, of the Court of Ordinary of saicl
county, and show cause, if any thoy have
why said application should not be
^Witness my official signature this
August 28, 1890.
■T-H-’hOUSER, Ordinary.
JEO
,-IA—Houston County:
a. Johnson, administrator of
, decS-'lms
jnds belonging to said estate:
therefore to cite all persons con-
'd to appear attheNovembei term,
ofthe Court of Ordinary of sard
tv, and show cause.if any they have,
said application should not ne
toess my official signature this
25 1890.'
’ J. H. HOUSER, Ordinary.
mm fieei
J. B. EDGE,
Physician and Surgeon,
Perry, Georgia.
Office adjoining Perry Hotel. Can be
found at office during the day, and at
Hotel at night. All calls promptly an
swered day or night.
Attorney at Law,
Office: 510 MuxiBehby Stbeet,
MACON, GEORGIA.
• Special attention given to business in
BUT
Y0UB SHOES FROM
ROFF " SIMS & BRO.,- 406 Third Street, Macon, Ga,
A STIRRING APPEAL
Xo Democratic Voters of Tho Xliiril
Congressional District.
Houston county.
m Mo.
Attorney atLaw.
Perry, - Ga.
. Will practice in all the Courts of
this cirrcnit.
Z. SIMS,
TI9T,
PERRY, GEORGIA.
^“Office on Main street, lately occn-
FirshdasswMk^P^ces moderate^ Pat
ronage solicited.
apl281y
IIV PRESENTS
, be given to the Subscribers of
I for particulars and sample copy.
m m
TD E1TTX ST ,
Perry, Georgia.
Office on Main Street, Bong house.
: m* & MIMMF,
Attorney at Lavr,
Judge of Houston County Court,
Pebry, Georgia.
Win practice in all the Courts of this
Circuit except the County Court.
jfxiT Hardeman, W.D. Nottingham.
HARDEMAN & NOTTINGHAM,
Attorneys at Law,
v-s. mix. - - - Georgia.
| TO GET SOMETHING FOR NOTHING.
At a session of the democratic
executive committee ofthe third
congressional district, held in
Hawkinsville, Ga., the following
resolution was unanimously pass
ed:
Resolved, That the chairman of
the democratic executive commit
tee of the third congressional, dis
trict be requested . toTwrite and
have published in the;, papers of
the district an address to the vo
ters, urging upon them the impor
tance of voting for congressman at
the election to be held on the first
Tuesday in November next, and
that he impress upon them the im
portance of their turning ont in
full force and casting their votes
for the democratic nominee.
It would seem that from the out
rageous acts of the republican par
ty in turning out Mr: Tnrpin, a
democrat from Alabama, who was
elected by a majority of more than
thirteen thousand votes, to make
room for McDuffie, a republican,
and in the case of the Hon. C. R.
Breckenridge, of ths state of Ar
kansas, wtich, together with the
fraudulently seating of two ne
groes, the one from Sonth Caroli
na, and the other from Virginia,
would be enough to stire the forty
thousand voters of this congres
sional district to the very great im
portance of giving the Hon. Chas.
F. Crisp, the democratic nominee
of this eongressionol district, the
full vote without fail. It has been
continually charged upon our Hon.
congressman, because there has
been such a slight opposition to
him, and because there has been
such a slight vote polled in his fa
vor, that his party practiced fraud
and intimidation. The republi
cans have endeavored to make cap
ital out of the small vote, and are
ready at ail times to make all man
ner of unfounded charges against
our people and congressman in
consequence of it.
The Hon. Chas. F. Crisp has
dared to stand and fight Boss Reed
and his gang against odds, and
therefore he has been singled out
as a special mark for . their malice
and hate. He, no doubt, will suf
fer and feel all the darts of malice
and political venom that the inge
nuity of the cohorts of republican
ism can invent, and on the slight
est pretence they would not hesi
tate to perpetrate upon him the
same wronge they have perpetra
ted upon Breckenridge and Tart
pin, should the least occasion offer
itself. The republican majority
the national house of represen
tatives has passed the infamous
Lodge bill, by which the majority
seek, masquerading under the
guise of free ballot and fair count,
‘ perpetuate ' their power by as
siduously destroying the liberty of
American citizens. Its nefarious
purpose is to establish a suprema
cy of ignorance over intelligence in
the southern states, and thereby
engender race antagonism and sec
tional animosity. The passage of
this bill in the house, and its de
feat, for the present, in. the senate
by only strenuous efforts, clearly
demonstrates the animus of Reed
and his minions. This bill, should
it become a law, will usurp the leg
islative functions of the state, gov
ernment, and will bring federal
machinery into interminable con
flict and collision with the statuto
ry efforts of the people of the vari
ous commonwealths of onr union
to institute a general, practical and
permanent Teform. This species
of federal interference in the reg
istration of their sovereign will by
the, people is despotic, centraliztng
in its tendency, dangerous to tha
peace and prosperity of the people,
revolutionary in its nature, and in
direct contravention of .the govern
ment as bequeathed to us by our fa
thers- The republican party has
imposed unequal and oppressive
burdens upon the people.
We have seen how the speaker
in the ' house of - representatives,
with an arbitrary disregard of all
parliamentary rules and prece
dents, has sought by a tyrannical,
flagrant depredation to prostitute
the position intended only for pa
triots and statesmen. We have
ssen with what shamelesg servility
the majority of the last house of
eepresentatives displayed in yield-
er’s despotic rulings.. We have
seen how the treasury has been de
pleted, in schemes gotten up to
pension soldiers, I giving millions
of dollars to northern men who
never fought a battle or even smelt
the smoke of one. We have seen,
too, how our honored representa
tive has stood, at times single-
handed, and fought with courage
and manliness these iniquitous re
publican measures. We also have
seen the efforts made by his oppo
nents to crush him.
| Will the 'democrats -• of this seer
tion lie still and send Judge Crisp
back to congress by a sleuder vote
and cause him to take the chances
of being unseated by a partisan
and unscrupulous majority in the
next house, and run the risk of hav
ing him counted ont becanse no
more votes were polled for him?
The oatlook is, perhaps, that the
democrats will have the majority in
the next congress, but this is by
no means certain. The party can
not afford to lose, or run the risk
of losing, the services of as valua
ble a man as our honored represen
tative. If the democrats should
have the majority in the next
house of representatives, the
friends of Judge Crisp will no
doubt urge his name for speaker of
the house. His chances are the
best.
Will the democrats of this dis
trict be lethargic and fail to do
their duty on the 4th day of No
vember, and thus miss so great an
opportunity to see one of Geor
gia’s noblest sons so proudly honor
ed?
No: My fellow countrymen, let
not the aspersion again be flung at
onr honored representative, that
ont of forty thousand votes in this
district, only nine thousand favor
ed him. For the grand old party
that we love, and for the grand
principles of constitutional liber
ties which we cherish, and for the
devotion which we bear to them
and to the Hon. Chas. F. Crisp, let
us with one accord exert our ut
most to have a large vote polled on
that day.
The cohorts of republicanism
are actively at work against our
honored representative. There is
a duty, and a sacred duty, for eve
ry voter of this district. Let us
not forget to perform that duty as
a pleasure and Id honor ofthe
grand principles which onr fathers
have fought for; and for which the
democratic party has so long con
tended. Your obedient servant,
J. E. D. Shipp.
Chairman Dem.- Ex. Committee,
Third District of Georgia.
Cordele, Oct. 14,1890.
Is Tlie Censns a Fraud?
Atlanta Constitution.
Columbia, Tenn., March 28,1890.
Radam’s Microbe Eiller Co.,
. Nashville, Tenn - :
Gentlemen—I will say in behalf
of Microbe Killer that my sales, as
you know, are increasing every
day, and with the large amount I
have sold, notone person has been
dissatisfied nor said that your med
icine has not done what it is rec
ommended to do. It simply works
miracles. It has cured patients
that the doctors have given up to
die. It has, to my certain knowl
edge, cured, consumption, dropsy,
catarrh, dyspepsia, rheumatism,
asthma, scrofula, kidney trouble,
and bronchial trouble. I will send
you any amount of testimonials if
you want them. I think it is the
greatest medicine on earth.
Respectfully,
Algernon A. Hodge.
For sale by HoltzolawA Gilbert,
sole agents, Perry, Ga.
A cotton picking machine has
been invented, and the inventor,A.
Campbell, of Chicago, says - it will
save .90 per cent: in'' the present
cost of picking. A company for
the manufacture of machines has
been incorporated under the laws
of Illinois with §5,000,000 capital.
The New York World’s charges
of fraud in connection with the
census returns are so positively
made that a re-enumeration will
doubtless be ordered in many lo
calities, and some of the officials
concerned may, have to stand an in
vestigation.
It is alleged that a congressman
and two leading politicians in
Brooklyn, besides half a dozen
clerks in the census office, are mix
ed up in the fraud upon the peo
ple, and it is claimed that other
prominent persons will be impli
cated when the facts are brought to
light.
Briefly summarized, The World’s
charges are ns follows: In order
to retain a republican congression
al majority the leaders of the dom
inant party induced certain un
scrupulous officials to defraud many
states out of their lawful congres
sional representation. In a secret
office in Washington a number of
trusted clerks were set to work to
alter the true census returns, by
scaling down or increasing totals
so as to make dishonest reports of
the growth of democratic states.
One result of the conspiracy was
to scale down the population of
New York city 133,000!
But the worst part of the story
is to come. An order was g ; vee to
an official in the census office, with
or without the approval of high au
thorities, to reduce the true census
of New York state 300,000 souls!
It was also a part of the scheme
to take the state of New Hamp.
shire, which has lost population,
and change the returns so that the
present congressioonl representa
tion shall not be decreased. Illi
nois, Iowa, Wisconsin, Maine aDd
Minnesota, were ordered to be"vei y
liberally counted.” It was order
ed that the southern states should
be scaled down to the extent of
from 14 to 16 per cent where the
growth was largest.
This fraudulent work was deci
ded upon in June. The men en
gaged in it became alarmed, and to
avoid discovery removed their of
fice from Washington to Balti
more. Enough evidence exists, it
is claimed, to discredit the whole
census, independent of the expo
sures in New York city. The
names of many of the conspirators
have been obtained, and the matter
will not be allowed to rest until it
has been thoroughly sifted.
If these charges are true; even
in part, a crime almost without a
parallel has been committed against
the states, the people and the re
public. For months there has been
an uneasy feeling in many quarters
of the union that the census re
turns had been tampered with. In
some instances such vigorous pro
tests were made that re-counts
were' ordered. ' So far from subsid
ing, public suspicion has been
fanned into a flame during the past
few weeks, and the whole census
work is now regarded with distrust.
It may be that the rumors of fraud
have only a slight foundation, but
force and fraud have been such ac
tive governmantal factors under
the present administration that
even the most conservative are dis
posed to believe that where there
is so much smoke there must be
some- fire.
The investigation, already begun
in an unofficial way, should pro
ceed. The rising south cannot af
ford to be robbed of her rightful
representation in congress for the
benefit of the republican states in
the north and west. Let us get at
the whole truth. If any officials
in the censns office, or in any de
partment of the government, are
guilty of these charges they should
be exposed, disgraced and punish
ed. ■ The people of this country
have submitted to many wrongs
A Change Mast Come.
Alliance Becord.
Many farmers in the south' have
become thoroughly disheartened
their slavish efforts to make cot
ton, and find themselves with no
profits at the end of the year.
Now they are disposed
give 'fruit, vegetables and stock
raising a fair trial. Most business
men when they give a certain line
of trade a fair trial and it fails to
pan ont, they quit at once and en
gage in some other business that
promises better pay, bat the cotton
planter hangs on to cotton until he
is dead broke and then he will not
turn loose. Georgia, and all south,
ern farmers will have to change by
force of dire necessity, their pres
ent mode of farming. A truckman
can make more on ten acres
strawberries, cabbages, cucumbers
and fruits than a cotton planter
can on one hundred acres of cotton
In making cotton the labor re
quired to produce and gather it
takes all or nearly all the cotton
brings in the market, and the
planter has little or nothing left.
In raising stock very little labor
is required, but that little must be
intelligent labor. Right here we
would like to divert a little and say
that one among the greatest curses
of the south to-day is the large
amount of ignorant and cheap la
bor. Our people want more intel
ligent labor at a higher "price. Of
course any fool can pick cotton,
but a man Who raises fine stock
does not want to be bothered one
second with a laborer who only
has sense enough to do such com
mon work, he wants help with
sense, judgement and discretion,
It is nonsense to say that stocK
raising does not pay. JUBt watch
the thousands of dollars that will
flow out of Georgia between now
and the first of February for horses
and mules that could be raised at
home just as well as not. The
time is coming—mark well the
prediction—and is near at hand,
when the farmers will not be able
to get hands to make cotton, and
the sooner the time comes the bet
ter.
We read in an exchange the oth
er day where an old man, known
in his section of Hlinois as an old
crank, simply becanse he made it
a point to buy every old blind
mare he could lay his hands on.
With one fine stallion and two
Spanish jacks, thiB old Illinois
crank, as he is called, is making a
little fortune almost every year on
a forty acre farm. He raiseB noth
ing but for&ge and something to
eat at home and clears more mon
ey than fifty average Georgia cot
ton producers. Why is it onr peo
ple can’t see the necessity for a
change? It is bound to come and
the man who goes at it first will
come ont on top.
Messrs. Wallace O’Leary & Co.,
Agents Radam’B Hircrbe Killer,
Houston, Texas:
It gives me pleasure to write
you that my wife and my sister,
wife qf Contractor Kon6on, used
Radam’s Microbe Killer -and was
entirely cured by it.
Yours truly,
John Repsdobph,
No. 128 Main St., Houston, Texas.
For ss'foby Holtzclaw & Gilbert,
so’e agents, Perry, Ga.
The Houston County Resolutions
Atlanta Journal.
The Houston County Alliance
has passed resolations in which its
member’s “endorse the sub-treas
ury bill now pending in the feder
al congress, or something substan
tially the same, or something bet
ter if possible.”
We commend the sensible coarse
of this Alliance to the careful con
sideration of every Alliance in
Georgia, and also to the considera
tion of democrats outside of the
Alliance.
There is scarcely a man any
where who has thought upon the
Bnbject who does not feel that fi
nancial reform is needed to meet
the demands for money occasioned
by the gathering of the agricultu
ral products—products which sud
denly come into a market, and to
handle which an enormous amount
of money is required.
The Houston County Alliance
practically says it likes the sub-
treasury bill best, bet that it is
willing to obtain relief in whatever
way possible. It says in effect
that, while its members have their
own peenliar views, they propose
to join hands with all democrats
outside of the Alliance, to obtain
the very best measures that can be
secured.
Should not all other Alliancs
take the same course? And should
not all democrats outside of the
Alliance, while they may not be
able to approve the particular
measure suggested by the farmers,
hold themselves ready to unite in
solid democratic ranks, in support
of the best measure that can be de
vised?
In this way we can get together
on the financial question, and it is
only by getting together that any
thing will be passed.
With the democratic party
squarely backing tariff reform and
financial reform, and also earnest
ly supporting additional legislation
for the complete regulation of
freight rates, both local and inter
state, our agricultural interests
will receive just profits from their
products, and onr country will be
enormously enriched.
The interests of all the people of
Georgia are the same. Let us have
sense enough to not war among
ourselves, but to stand together,
and by united action, accomplish
the ends that all are striving for.
Pets of Famous People.
In England they look upon
strawberries very much as Califor
nians do on nuggets of gold. The
“fruiters” sell them for about §2
a pound.
An Old Sore Healed.
Hon. John Temple Graves has from the party in power but they
entered the employment of the Ma-b”^ never submit to a fraudulent of a friend who was cared
con Construction company, to write j ceDffas ‘ |simi ar ron e, oo . . .,
up the section of country through *
which the Georgia Southern and j
Bncklcn'SLArnica Salve.
I had a painful, annoying sore
on my leg, near the knee, that
troubled me for over two years. I
tried various remedies, but the
sore, instead of healing up, con
tinued to grow larger, and to cause
me more pain until I began to look
for a crutch. Through the advice
of a
and
! in a few weeks was cured entirely,
! The sore healed up, and there is
Florida; the Macon e ^g?f-l {or Sores, Ulcers, j place .
ham, and the Macon and Atlantic. g a jj. jy le uin, Fever Sores, Tetter,j 1
railroads run.
The Best Salve in the world no t even a scar left to mark the
j Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns |
I and all Skin Eruptions, and posi- J
Chaeles A. Sumner,
Mt. Yernon, Ohio.
May 10, 1S90.
Ex-President Hayes iB devoted
poultry.
The British queen makes pets of
Jersey cows.
Henry Irving’s constant attend"
ant is a fox hound. •
Stoddard, the poet, is devoted to
little blind terrier.
Gladstone wept like a child when
his famous parrot died.
Julian Hawthorne has a pet cow
and a hawk that dwell in harmony
together.
The late Henry Grady, of Geor
gia, had an exceeding fondness for
Newfoundland dogs.
Sam Johnson, Goldsmith, Leigh
Hunt and Hick Washington were
all very fond of cats.
Addison confessed to a love for
birds, and so did Victor Hugo;
George Erancis Train feeds spar
rows.
Modjeska used to carry two pet
alligators with her, andSara Bern
hardt became devoted to a tiger
whelp.
Father Prout petted chickens
and John Wilson doted on the
horse; James Hogg had always a
dog with him, and so did Hogarth
and Bubens.
When he was a tailor in Tennes
see Andy Johnson made much of a
pet chon, and Gen. Grant’s favorite
was a stanch saddle horse.—Chica
go News.
No Success Without Push.
Marietta Journal.
Success is a big word, and one
that may be variously defined. It
mears one tbi ig to o ie man and
another iui--'g to soother. In one
walk of life its ioterpretatioais en
tirely dlffe'diii from that in some
oi'aer, aod wbafc is success fr om one
polafc of view is almost failure from
pdother. Brt Ihe-.-e is ibis in com
mon to all k' ?ds of srccess, it
comes as the •esulcoftffoii. What
ever fall's at oie’s f eec, whatever is
received by inheritance, whatever
is natural endowment, or comes
by bequest is not scccess, howev
er much of good the - e may be
about it. Sr cce3s is 'hat which is
striven for—that which come3 as a
victory to the warrio - , or that
which is as a lau-el on the poet’B
brow. To achieve success, there
fore, effort mrst be put forth.
Very generally it must be persist
ent, aggressive persevering effort,
that kind of effort that is so happily
summed up in the little word
“push.” To be an acceptable clerk
or bookkeeper requires “push” and
to be really useful in any' walk of
life, from the most exalted to the
most common place, requires
“push.” “Push” is a word also
with as many different shades of
meaning ns there are persons to
wjiom it may be applied. It is
wonderfully classic, but in all its
defi iitiothe - e is this idea about
To d ive forward. Strength
and energy of whatever kind the
individual may possess, are to be
used as he is able to use them and
circumstances permit, to drive
something forward. Very gener
ally this something is the work or
dr.'y in hand, or the business ven-
re upon which he was engaged,
the social project he basin view.
To be unsuccessful in this world—
for failuie may come however hard
we may strive—commands pity,
but to be without “pash” is to be
contemptible. When we want to
say something extremely severe
about a yorngnuan, when we want
condemn him unconditionally,
when we want to convey the idea
that he will never achieve success
be of any particular usefulness
the world anywhere, we say .ho
has ro “push” about him. 'With
out “push” one floats with the tide, »
drive i hither and- thither by the
wind and currents. He may get
into port, but the chances are that
he does accidentallj drift that
way he will not be able to anchor
as to remain there. With
‘pash” one is like a steamship with
ull complement of machinery uu-
■be guidance of a captain; the
•i is reached i i spite of wind
and tide, the anchor is cast and
success is achieved and held.
tu.
71
de
P?
Isn’t it a t rifle harden old Thomas
Jeffei'so 3 La label every outbreak
of i jdepe idecrism in Georgia with
bis honored name? What with
“Jeffersonian democrats,” Alliance
derroc-ats,” “regular democrats,”
and “straigblout democrats,” an
ord’rary, plain, every day demo
at will soon be looked on as au
old fogy in Georgia.—Macon Tele
graph-
Many a poor little sickly child
has been saved from the grave by
kird mother giving it Dr.
Bull’s Worm Destroyers, which the
little one thought wa3 candy.
M.s. Oscar Wilde is one of th
pa! ocesses of a children's dress-
makl jg establishment in London,
TIic Deaf Hear-
ETOEPSY.
That sou nds miraculous, and yet
one may become temporarily deaf
o i accou. it of b’ood poison settling
in the ear, and then find quick re
lief by using B. B. B. (Botanic
Blood Balnf.)
Jobn W. Weeks, Decatur, Ga.,
This is what you ought to have, writes: “Six months ago I had a
in fact, yon must have it, to fully j pain is my ears nrd in a few days
enjoy Lite. Thousands are search-j jt disena'ged matter. Tnen I grew
ing for it daily, and mourning be- j de „ £ „ d co , lld rot bear at a]1 . 1
cause they find it not. Thousands , , e -n t> t> in
upon thousands of dollars are I be S a i tl,e nse of B- B- B- and the
spent annually by our people in! run ji ig of my ear scon ceased and
the hope that they may attain this. I dow hear, while my health is
boon. And yet it may be had by j much improved and I feel. full of
all We guarantee that Electric,; titnde to God and to the propri-
Bitters, if used according to di- ; ” , . , „
norciaforl Ln 1 etors of so good a remedy.”
Ih.^jera.M i„. | «gg ■ E 0 ,g§J|j§| wnte , ;
will bring you Good Digestion and,
oust the demon Dyspepsia and in- j “B. B. B. cured me of most stub-
, iT • Cl --Z. TJ7- 1 1 T 1..J .1 l J
be for the Home Journal.
II. coIrtl P OfficT ing ready obedience to the speak- ( tise, Lewisport, Ky.
I have used Bull s Sarsaparilla 1 jj ve ]y cures • Biles/or no pay re-j _ uuai. me „ UUJUU ^ r ^ B
in skin diseases of long ^standing, paired. It is guaranteed to give. Treatise on Blood and SkinDis- stall instead Eupepsy. We recoin-! born eczema. I had doctored* it
whieh demanded a thorough change perfect satisfaction or money re- ma n e d free. J mend Electric Bitters for Dyspep-1 wit bout success for twelve years.”
ofthe fluids of the body, and any funded. Pnce2o cents per box ’ tttf Swift Specific Co isia and all diseases of Liver,- W. H. Davis, San Marc— m
physician knowing its composition saIe Holtzclaw & Gilbert. Stomach and Kidneys. Sold at; writes: “I am rapidly i
will admit its value.—W. T. Pren- Now is the time to subscribe for — %—’— a , n ^ fk°*4 e , by, from blood poiaon y use of
The Home Jotjenal. Subscribe for the Home Journal, j Holhtclaw & Gilbert, Druggists, j B.
MmWm
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