Newspaper Page Text
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£|g>.
Tliirfcy-five years ago a fanner
bnilt a log cabin in St. Lotus coun
ty, Missouri, for lass thanf $200,
and a short while ago the house
was sold, without the land, for $5,-
000.
| The' farmer who built the cabin
with his own hands, and the help
of a few neighbors, "was Ulyses S.
Grant.. At that time he saw. noth
ing before him but a life of toil
and poverty, and yet in after years
he became^ the general of tKear-
Iny, the " president 1 of ‘the nation,
and stood before kings.
Many an American. President—
many ah -American millionaire—
has begun life in a log cabin. In
factj this humble 'home seems to
stand at thedkginning of every ty
pical American’s career.
After Grant had reached all the
rewards and honors-of success, he
bought the old log cabin. In the
white house—in his stately man
sion—in the palaces of kings and
emperors, this silent man of desti
ny was always looking back to
days when he cut and newed the
logs that were to shelter his loved
ones, and make a home" for them
while he cheerfully toiled for their
support. He was proud of his old
farming days in the backwoods,
and fortune’s favors never made
him ashamed of honest labor.
As an object lesson the old log
cabin that Grant bijilfc is richly
worth $5,000, and much more.
When American jboysi look at it
they will see that in this country a
man’s snccess- and position do not
depend upon an., advantageous
start in life. The. fact'.that a boy
is cradled in the lap-of luxury does
not assure a' bright future. The
farmer's boy earning his bread by
the sweat of his brow is, if any
thing," more likely to admire great
ness than.the curled darling who
is born injhe palace of a pluto
crat. -
There can be no faithful picture
of American life without the . old
log cabin. It is the nursery of the
good and great men and women
whose heads and hearts stamp,
their work upon our laws, our lit
erature, our civilization add our
national progress. ~
When we honor the old log cab
in we exalt the American home!
New York World.
While a young man’s fancy, is
lightly turning to thoughts of love,
a young woman’s fancy is turning
to thoughts of an engagement
ring.
‘ What shall be the material,what
the style, what tha emblem and
what the design of this, the band
which is to mark her betrothal fin
ger? -The heart-shaped designs
which were the pride and the de
light of our grandparents have
come in again with all the vehe
mence of which the spring season
of 1891 is capable. Yet there is a;
certain design for an engagement
ring, which is in delicacy of con
ception so much above and beyond
the merely ornamental heart-
sliaped ring that the latter has
shrank into insignificance by the
side of it
The new design is this: A large,
perfectly clear, somewhat flat dia
mond is- selected, and underneath
it is- placed tbe likeness of the
dearest boy on earth. Around the
face, as it sparkles forth from the
depths of the diamond, is a row of
tiny emeralds. The.choice of
stones to -surround the diamonds
is purely arbitrary. Just now em
eralds are chosen because they are
dearer than turquoise, pearls or
any other gems, save diamonds
themselves.
To get quite even with htr young
man for this reckless and lavish
expenditure, and also to carry out
the law which regulates the gener
al fitness and equality of things,
the young woman sends thp young
man a jeweled likeness of herself
And this is the way she does it
In the end of a gold lead, pencil
she has a diamond set~similar to
that in her ring, and, underneath
it, goes her own fair- face. The
young man fastens the pencil upon
his watch ohaitC and both of the
twain—the ardent , lover and the
maiden fair—are ready for any
and all emergencies, for each bears
a talisman that will exorcise all
evils save those of the grip.
How Rice Paper Is Made.
“Celebrated authors sometimes
forget their own work,” said an
eminent physician the other day:
“This is usually one of the effects
of disease or old age. As Walter
Scott grew old he became a victim'
to this kind of forgetfulness. Fre
quently when one of his own po
ems was read to him he would ask
who was the author. ‘Ivanhoe’
was dictated during a painfull ill
ness, aud published before its' au
thor had quit his bed. When
Scott had become convalescent he
had no recollection of the story.
Toward the-elese of his life Linne
found great pleasure in reading
' his own works. Forgetful that he
was himself the author, he would
frequently exclaim,' as he read:
.‘Beautiful? ‘Magnificent!’ ‘I wish
I, had | written tbit!’' Macaulay,
■the historian, had a friend whose
memory had once been’ exceeding
ly strong! Old age made it ex-
■ceedidgly weak.' If’ahything bril
liant was said or-read to him in the
evening he would’" imagine next
morning that she brilliant ideas
heard the night, before were his
own,—It was his custom to’write
them out and show them to his
friends as. original-matter.”
The great festival of the English
milkmaids and chimney-sweeps of
ithe first of May dates its origin
iback to the Romans, who were
-wont to commemorate the festival
of Flora, the goddess of flowers,
for several days in May. May
poles, were forbidden to be erected
by Parliament in 1644, but they
Were restored again at the restora
tion of-Charles IL, and in. 1661
rthe Maypole in the Strand- was
reared with much ceremony and
rejoicing.
Bankok has beeiTthe capital of
Siam since 1769. The palaces and
temples are gorgeously ornament
ed.. The spires, and in some cases
the - whble edifices, are covered
with gilding or snowy-colored mo-
siacs. There- are upward of one
hundred temples in the city and
suburbs. The palace of the First
King is very striking Mid' rich in
its ornamentation. In one of the
temples is a-famotrs -Jasper statue
oT-Buddim. “
■y Little C
New York Telegram.
The so-called rice paper is not
made of rice, as its name implies,
but from, the snow-white pith of-a
small tree7helpnging:a to the genus
Araliajia. genus represented in the
United States 'by <thft common sar-
saparilla 3 and tlie spikenam. The
tree grows in Formosa, and, So far
as is known, nowhere else. The.
stems are transported to China,
and there the rice paper is made,
which is. used by native artists for
water color drawings, or dyed of
various colors and made into arti
ficial flowers. I was invited to
visit * worker in pith and accepted
the invitation.' On arriving at the
hpusfi I was ushered into a badly
lighted room where a man was sit
ting at A table-with his tools in
front of him. These consisted of
a smooth stone about a foot square,
and a large knife, or hatchet, with
a short wooden handle. Placing a
piece o£^cylindrical pith on the
stone and his left hand on the top
he rolled the pith backward and:
forward for a moment until he got'
if into the required position. Then,:
seizing the . knife with his right
hand, he held the edge of the
blade, after a feint or two, close to
the pith, whichi he kept rollibg to
the left with his left hand until
nothing remained to unroll; for the
pith had,, by the application of the
knife, been pared into a square
white sheet of uniform thickness;
All that remained to be done was
to square the edges. A steady
hand and clear eye are reqairedfor
the work, and, hence, it is that the
rice paper is manufactured only at
night, when the city is asleep, and
the makers are not liable to be
disturbed.
. Buckle*"s Arnica Salvo.
The Best Salve in the world
for Colds, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers,
SaltRhenm, Fever . Sores, Tetter,
Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Corns
and all Skin Eruptions,-and posi
tively cares Piles or no pay re
quired.’ It is guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction or money re
funded. Price 25 cents per box
For sale by Holtzclaw & Gilbert.
m .
Mr. nnd Mrs. Loren Trescott are
keepers or Gov. - Lighthouse ^-at
Sand Beach, Mich., and are bless-
a daughter,'four years old.
t April - she was taken down
measles, followed with
/dreadful Cough and' turning into a
Fever. Doctors at home_ and at
Detroit treated her, but in vain, contrivances have become §o pop r - ;
- .she grew worse rapidly, ■•'until she
was a mere “handful of bones.”—
Dr. King's New
was
Then she
trie
lies was completely
cured. .They say Dr. King’s New
Discovery is worth its weight in
rrold, yet you may g§t atrial bottle
free at Holtzclaw A: Gilbert’s Drug
Store.
-A great scarcity, of ten-cent
pieces has been .noticed through
out the country. The United
States treasury was called on re
peatedly to supply tbs • want;
Where had the dimes disappeared
so suddenly? The question could
not be answered until somebody
happened to remember tbe new
pateut dime sayings bank. This
bank admits only a dime. It is
arranged go the nickel-in-the-slot
principle. When exactly fifty ten-
cent piece.-, have been slipped into
the box it opens automatically, *ud
the owner has before him five dol
lars in dimes.' These ingenious
ul'nr that they have actually locked
up enough of the fractional enr-
i ency of the country for the wai
to be felt.
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
Cures JndigestiGp, Biliousness, Dyspepsia, Mala*
ria, Nervousness, antlGsLaral Debility. Physi
cians recommend‘it. Ali deoil* r£ seli U, Genuine
has trade mark and crossed red lines cu wrfipjjgr
The flute is the oldest of musi
cal instruments.
The Romans etched their public
records on brass.
There are said to be thirty thou
sand promises in theJBible.
The Chinese do not permit their
women to be photographed. '
By a new seoeret-process figs are
largely used to adulterate opinm.
A home for .broken-down bache
lors has been founded in StTLouis.
It is claimed that docking a
horse’s tail iinproves_the animal’s
gait.
The first theater m the United
States was at Williamsburg, Va.,
in 1752.-
English girls are said to be
growing taller and the men short
er.
Geronimj,' the Apache Chief, is
teaching a-Snnday school class in
Alabama.
Celluloid in solution is said to
make a fine lacquer for metal and
a good wood varnish.
If the sun were a hollow air ball
it would take 1,331,000 globes the
size of the earth to fill it.
In order to preserve wire rope
it should be covered with raw lin
seed oil mixed with vegetable tar.
- The most unalterable of water
colors has been found to be yellow
ochre, terra sienna,sepia and blues.
A man has been arrested in Gate
City, Washington, for stealing
saw mill and carting it twenty
miles.
A knitting mill in Cohoes, N. Y.,
has a steam whistle that plays
“The Roast Beef of-Old England”
at noon and tbe doxology at night.
The effect Of removing tassels
from corn is to turn the strength
of the plant to the ovaries, and so
produce a larger amount of grain.
An expert electrician insists
that an electric train, making 125
miles an hour, would require 7,000
feet in which to come to a stand
still.
The longest railway iD the world
is the great Russian line across
Siberia, now in course of construc
tion. It will reach from Miask to
Vladivostock, a distance of 4,785
miles.
Sufferers from insomnia are rec-
ommended to try chewiDg dande
lion leaves. An English physician
prescribes this simple remedy as a
very effectual one,
A new theory in j relation to the
moon has lately been advanced, to
the effect that the lights and shad
ows of the moon are inc.unpatiable
of the theery of its spherical shape.
One of the highest priced stamps
in the philatalie market is the 500
ceutorOs-issue of Bolivia, issued in
1868. The value of the stamp un-
caueelled is $4, but it sells readily
at $10.
The White House at- Washing
ton is a copy of the palace of the
Duke of Leister at Dublin, with
the addition of a large porch
the northjfront, which was added
daring Andrew Jackspn’s adminis-
llration.
W. A. DAVIS & CO.,
COTTOJST FACTOES,
-AMD DEALEES HSt-
G-eneral Groceries and Plantation Supplies,
Nos. 405 and 407 POPLAR STREET,
MACON,
GEORGIA.
Highest Grade Guanos, Phosphates and Cotton Seed Meal.always on hand. We
T^rpUTro^de fira^plass Mules. We sell all Supplies for CASH at LOW-
J- irxtluJio, or ON TIME, with, good paper.
KA&iSS* WmWAM * f|f
WHOLESALE OKOCERS, '
XvXa,eoEL, - - - - n-eoigla.
Do the largest lousiness of any Rouse in Middle Georgia
who deal
/ DIRECTLY WITH THE PEOPLE.
Saving largely increased our uaoital, we are determined
during the season of1891, to sell on a closer margin and
do even more business f
BOTH FOR CASH AND ON .TIME,
Than we have ever done before.
Send your orders, and call to see us at
-i^IlIa/ELce
420 and 422 ThirdJStreet, - - Macon, Gfa.
-mui% w%msm ■ ■
Write for Special Prices to‘Alliance Clubs.
•W
“@8
GKEQ. "W_ CASE,
MARBLE AND GRANITE WORKS-
MONUMENTS, IRON FENCES, ETC-,
464 PLUM STREET, - - MACON, GA.
Manufacturer and Importer of the best grades of Italian and American Marble
and the following noted Granites:
BAI.EE, CONCORD, '
QUINCY, RED BEECH,
WESTERLY, BAY FUNBAY,
CLARK,S ISLAND, flDICE.
— Satisfaction guaranteed. No money till work is complete. Correspondence and
work prompt. Don’t buy your monuments until you write me. I will save you
A large 8-page weekly, devoted to al
liance -news, agriculture, borticulttire,
stock-raising, literary and general news.
Send-for ^sample cony.
Address the ALLIANCE RECORD,
— • Montezuma, Ga.
The Home J.-ubnad and the Alliance
Record will be sent to one address ono
year for $2.30, strictly in advance.
MAC02T' CE:i2T^
IMPORTER AND DEALER IN.
CHINA,
GbORGIA’S^PRIDE THE OLE) RELIABLE
Injts native habit the shell of
the oyster is always a little open,
and microscopic, waving hairs set
up Currents which carry the. 'food
plants to its month, where they are
engulfed antTafterward digested.
A three-year-old corpse is car
ried around the country in a zinc-
lined case by a Chicago drammer,
and shown to undertakers as an
evidence of tbe excellent quality
of the embalming flnid used to pre
serve it, of;which he is the agent.
- In prehistoric times the Ohio
Valley was a great inland sea ex
tending from the site of Pitts
burg to the Indiana line. The
hump of Allegheny -and the hills
separating the East End from
Pittsburg proper were probably
islands,
L, A. Digs »
Needing: a tonic, or children that want building
up. should take
BKpWS’i I KiJSf ;
A Wiscasgat (Me.) hq undiscov
ered a big gash in his boot where
he had cut his foot, while in tbe
woods and just managed to get
home, "feeling himself growing
fainter from loss of blood all the
way, when somebody discovered
that the gash : only * went through
his. boot, and the red color was not
blood, but a woolen stocking.
——
Two Papers Abjit ©»pP psp,
And both of them good ones. Will
send the Georgia Farmers’ Alli
ance -gecord and the Home
Joubnal one year for only
Address this office.
k A YBAIT! I nadrrtake'fo bKefiy
I teach any fairly jmm.u of either
c, who c-n recti and Write. nud who,
eriustruciHur.will work industriously-.
ADVERTISE
SUBSCRIBE
FOR. IN .
■jche home JO ubnal
2,000 References.^ Name this paper when you write.
W. J. ROSS & GO.,
Wholesale Manufacturing aud Retail Dealers in
Carriages, Buggies, Warn,
ROAD CARTS,
HARNESS, WHIPS, ROBES, BABY CARRIAGES, ETC.
CORNER COTTON AVENUE and CHERRY ST., MACON, GA
V. E. WALTON.
BYRON,
C. L. BATEMAN.
Ga.
-DEALERS II?-
Dry Goods, Groceries, Earn; Supplies,
' Gents’ Furnishings, Stacie and Fancy
Articles.
BEST GRADES OF GUANO A SPECIALTY.
JOB WOHKl
We Havea OmnpIeteStock and
Full Assortment of Coinmercial
Stationery, and duplicate Macon or
A tlanta pi eces in this class of work
Satisfaction guaranteed,
aiYF/JTS .4 'lRIAL OHMS -
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
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ie©i,
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AiNEWSPAPES POE THE MASSES.
Founded December 1st, 1887.
Circulation over 100,00o copies
DAILY.
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pulls no wires; has no animosities to
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points.
The Pbess Sunday Edition is a
splendid 20 page paper, c ivering every
current topic of interest.
The Peess Weekly Edition contains
all the good things of the Daily and Sun-
dpj r editions. '
For those who cannot afford the Daily
or are prevented by distance, from early
receiving it, the Weekly is a splendid
substitute.
AS AN ADVERTISING MEDIUM
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^ THE PRESS,
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THE PRESS,
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Glassware, Siiveware, Woodenware,
"Fable and Poeket Cuflery, Lamps,
CHANDELIERS, OIL STOVES, TINWARE,Etc
ARTISTIC POTTERY, HOUSEKEEPERS’ NOVELTIES. I
| jSole agents for City of Macon for the Celebrated Buck’s Brilliut |
Cooking Stoves and Ranges.
3()o Second Street, 164 & 166 Cotton Avenne,
a « a
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—YA 1ST JD
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Passenger Schedule
ATLANTA AND FLORIDA RAILROAD-
. In effect Jan. 27th, 1801.
SOUTH BOUND,
Leave Atlanta..
“ E. T.&y.&G.Junc
Arrive Fayetteville
Williamson
Oulloden
Knoxville
Fort Valley
No. 2/
8.00 pm
3 J.3 p m
4.13 pm"
5.03 p m
6.20 pm
6.53 pm
7.30 p m
No. 6.
8.00am
10.27 am
12.27am
3,12 p m
4.17 p m
5.40 p
NORTH BOUND.
Leave Fort Valley....
Arrive Knoxville. .....
“ Culloden..
“ Williamson ,
“ Fayetteville
E.T. V.&G. Jnn
Atlant.a........
ff
No. I.
5.45 am
6.24 am
6.45 a m
8.15 a m
9.05 a m
10.05 a m
10.20 a m
No. 5.
8.30a
10.37 a m
11.47 am
2.25 p_
4.13pm
6.05 p
Nos. 1 and 2 daily,, and make connec
tion with C. R. R. "at Fort Valley for
points in southwest Georgia. Departs
ana arrives at SB V. & G. passenger
depot in Atlanta.
• and 6 daily, e?cept'Bunday. Pas
sengers arrive and depart from E. I. y.
& G. Junction at end. of Pryor street
dummy line.
cash will' secure the
Southern Cultivator and the Home
JOTJKNAL pne year.
Passenger Schedule
GEORGIA SOUTHERN & FtOM RAILROAD
-STTWATSTEE K1YER ROUTE TO ELORIDA.
Taking effect March 22d, 1891. Standard Time, 90th Meridian.
GOlN-j SOUTH.
O 1510 aNUKIH.
2:15 p. in.
6:15 p. m.
6:30 p. m.
9:Gti p. m.
L0:35 p. m.
12:08 a. m.
4:15 a. m
7:10 a. in.
10:45 a. m.
I1:U0 a. m*
1^5 p.m.
3:25 p. m.
4:54 p. m.
6:53 p. m.
Ililfi
..Atlanta
. .Macon
...Macon......
..Cordele.
...Tift on
.. Valdosta...;.
..Lake City
.Arrive
Leave
.Arrive
. Arrive
—Arrive
-.Arrive
..Leave
loioo p. m
6:10 p.m.
5:55 p. xu.
3.-23 p. m.
1:36 p.m.
12:01p.m.
9:55 a.m.
10:5.t a. m.
6:50 a. m.
6:35 a- m.
4:07 a. m.
2:45 a. m.
12:23 a. m.
9:17 v. jm
9:15p.m | Arrive.
Jacksonville..
..Leave | 7:COa,xn.
8:15 a. m.
10:10 pm
Arrive
.-Palalka
l T-nn«- M
ui
LO.dot.m.
Arrive, ft.
St Angnatine.'
. .Leave
2:30 p. m.
depots" J8cteoS? art frC “ nni ° n ^ potain Macon and Palalka and T.C.tt \
Pullman sleeping cars on night trains.
tra^dElT. V. r &G?Raflr“i E ° Uth a made «-^on with trains of C.»- |
’ J-^Hogb, L.J.Habbis,
H.„,a£S"K'r. A. H„. aSSKHr 1 '
— Macon, Ga.
I 'p nnN^l JP " Solicitin ff Agent, 6 Kimball Block, Atlanta,Ga.
L. C. Conova, R.T. Richard, - W.P. Laws**
Palatka e Fl t,Uni0Il3Dep0t: ' T.P.A
Jambs Mbnzibs, Southeastern Agent, 98 West street. Jacksonville, Fla.
wen-txaJ. of G-eorgrlsi
— a ^
0 . (Southwestern Division.)
bcliedule went into effect April I2th, 1891
-(Standard Time, 90th Meridian.)
BETWEEN MACON AND FORT VALLEY.
3:05
3:19
3:23
3 -30. I
3:43
8:52
4:10 |
4:00
- 4:15
4.-2U
•4:27
4:45
4^3
5:10
Ho. 7 | Ho. 5 I
pm I am |
6:40
6^7
7;03
7:15
7:28
7:37
7^6
. 10^0 | Leave
| 10:42 | Leave
j 10:47 {Leave
| 10 ^>3 j Leave
I, lijroni ...
J- HSJ. J Ppwersvme Arrive
( f Arrive Fort YaUey Leave
Macon Arr*>o { 11^5
" 1BO Arrive» 11:41
Arrive l 11^5
Arr.ve} 11^9
Atriv. | 31:15
-rw —between fort valley AND PEBKY.
jgo|rg:ii2:4l a a :5: j tl
BETWEEN FOHT VAT.T.Ey ATvm COLUMBUS.
rio.3 | Ho,l
am- | pm
1 | No. 4 | No. 2.
4.10 1-5.10
^35 \ 5.25
4.38 | 5.38
! 5.55
7 6.07
5-38 | 6.17
5-30 | 6.28
5.42 | 6.55
| 5.51 | 7.05
5,5? | 7.13
6.i2 m
6,32 j 7.48
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10.50 J 9.8U
1055 ! 9.14
10.22 | 9.02
10.05 1 8.45
9A8 | 8.33
9.40 | 822
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9.05 i 7.36
8J57 1 7.80
8.43 i 7J8
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For fnrUier ° P Macon Fort -Vally except at PowenriU*-
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E - T > OH4RLTON, Gen’l. Pas. Agent, Savannah. 0t-