Newspaper Page Text
Tmm
PEICE,$1.50 A TEAS, IK ADVANCE.□
Published Every Thursday- Horning.
Jno.H. HODGES, Editor and Publisher
Perry, Thursday, November 17.
Editorial Opinions.
Now let the legislature give us a
general registration law.—Cath-
bert Liberal-Enterprise.
SELECT CLIPPINGS.
Prejudice is bias independent of
the facts.
Choese Mating in Georgia.
If is a small word, but a huge
obstacle.
The Ishmaelite is in favor of ta
king the election of judges and so
licitors out of the bauds of the
legislature.—Sparta Ishmaelite.
The election of judges and solic
itors general. should be taken out
of the hands of the legislature. Let
that body act in this matter at once.
—Darien Gazette.
There is a wide spread demand
for the repeal of the tax-equaliza
tion law. It is a good law, and it
ought to stand; but the howl
against it will no doubt prevail.—
Sparta Ishmaelite.
Prom the way the boys are bus
tling around with petitions, there
must be fall confidence not only
in Cleveland’s election, but iu his
intention to “turn the rascals out.”
—Macon Telegraph.
It may be against the letter of
the law to burn barrels on election
night, but for all that it’s about
the most innocent use made of the
barrel in this country’s politics.—
Philadelphia Times.
Our readers have just seen his
tory made right before their eyes,
Some of them have seen parties go
to pieces, but none of them has ev
er seen a party smashed before.
Atlanta Constitution.
Sny what you may of it, this le
islature is a working one. When
the fifty days allotted it have roll
ed by it will have done something
if it keeps up the lick it started
out on.—Oglethorpe Ocho.
There is a growing sentiment
among the people of Georgia
against the election of judges of
the Superior courts and solicitors
general by the legislature.—Efawk-
insville Dispatch and News.
The g. o. p. will be out of a job
on the 4th of March next. It will
rather strain the capacity of Salt
river to accommodate the whole
concern, but the thing will have to
be done.-Columbus Enquirer-Su n.
The work of the general assem
bly is now well under way, and we
have every reason to believe that
it will be a busy session and one
full of practical and beneficial re
sults.—Greenesboro Herald-Jour,
nal.
Your Uncle JBenDie Harrison
doesn’t seenf'-to be talking through
“grandfather’s hat” so much as he
“use ter was.” They do say be is
like the boy the mule kicked, “not
qnite so pretty, but knows a darned
sight more.”—Macon Telegraph
“He Slowed Fust.”
The following is one of the sto
ries told on the stump by Col. H.
W. J. Ham at a recent campaign
meeting:
Babe Boston’s mule wus sick and
a neighbor advised him to admin
ister calomel.
“How will I get it to bim?”Babe
asked.
“Put it in a quill, put the quill
in his mouth and blow it down his
throat,” responded the neighbor.
The neighbor met him two or
three days afterward. Babe was as
thin as a rail, looked right green
and was all dQubled up.
“What’s the matter with you?”
asked the neighbor.
Babe placed his hands patheti
cally over his stomach, gave a sigh
like a blacksmith’s bellows with a
hole in it, and said:
“The durn mule blowed fust.’
He who cafes not to return may
go anywhere. •
Heart’s ease is a flower that
grows on the grave of desire.
He who deserves nothing has
no right to complain of anything
Suspicion, envy, revenge and re
morse are the four vultures of the
heart.
The apt use of symbols is the
great art for ruling the ope: ations
of human brains.
He has an ignoble soul who is
unwilling to serve a royal cause
unless first decked in its livery.
Watches were first made in Nu-
reinburg in 1477, and were popu
larly called “Nuremburg Animated
Eggs.”
The merely surprising surprises
but a few times; the intrinsically
admirable is ever more and more
admired.
Be not pliant wax for outward
circumstance to seal. Make your
own thqpght the mould, your own
will the stamp of your life.
In exceptionally cold years the
whole of the Baltic Sea has been
frozen over, and crossed by tempo
rary highways of commerce.
The mace of the House of Repre
sentatives consists of a bundle of
thirteen ebony rods entwined and
bound together with silver bands.
Everything else of time melts
into eternity without resistance or
complaint. Why does not man?
Only because he is sinful and dis
cordant.
Iu undergjouud Loudon there
are 3,000 miles of sewers, 34,000
miles of telegraph wires, 3,200
miles of gaSpipes, and 4,500 miles,
of water mains.
1:A bill posting machine, which
sticks bills on walls even as high
as fifty feet without the aid of a
ladderjor paste pot, is doing suc
cessful work in Paris.
It is a terrible misfortune or a
horrid retribution for a man to
have a face of such fixed inexpres-
siveuess that it merely serves as a
figurehead to his body.
The British general elections are
never held on one and same day,
because an elector has the right
to cast a ballot in every district in
which lie owns property.
Would yon make conquest of a
tman? Win his heart and you will
take his mind. Would you mak
conquest of a woman? Take he
mind and you will win her heart.
An insane female patient iu th
asylum at Elgin, 111., was discover
ed recently hiding under the stairs,
She is said to have been there for
260 hours without food or water.
BY HON. R. T. NESBITT, COMMISSIONER
OF AGRICULTURE OF GEORGIA.
From the Southern Cultivator.
On a recent visit to Griffin, while at
tending the meeting of the hoard of
directors of the experiment station, I
was very mnch interested in examining
into the details of the cheese-making
experiment now being tried there. This
industry has never been thoroughly
tested in Georgia. Indeed, it has been
supposed heretofore that the difficulties,
climatic and otherwise, here surround
ing successful and profitable cheese
making, were too numerous to he easily
overcome. But a careful review of
these difficulties, and a somewhat ex
tended study of the farm experiment,
has convinced me that the beginning of
this industry will open another source
of income to our farmers, and its bene
fits will be felt, not only in the actual
cash it may bring in, bnt in the improve
ment of our stock and lands as well.
The establishment of cheese factories
and creameries in every neighborhood
where they can he supported means a
steady and reliable market for milk,
mnch of which is now wasted. It also
means more and better stock, and in the
natural sequence of farm economy there
follows more green crops, more and bet
ter home manure, and, crowning ad
vantage of all, improved and iiaprcrving
lands.
The arrangements for a cheese factory,
unlike some other of the smaller indus
tries, do not require any considerable
outlay of capital, and while neatness
and care are essential, the conditions
When a cheese becomes Hpe7orready
for eating, and it is desired to hold it for
a better market, it must he kept in a
cool room—if summer time in “cold
storage.”
• At the last meeting of the hoard of
He whose equable nature make:
him contented with the days of
peace is much happier than he
whose impetuous temperament
hurries him to the moments of
rapture.
Human life is a play, consisting
of many different scenes; and those
who are in the world as spectators
often understand the plot and the
characters better than those who
are there as actors.
In the twenty-four hours from 5
a. m. .July 26 to 5 a. m. July 27
the-rainfall at Minneapolis, Minn.,
was 7.80 inches—the greatest fall
of water ever recorded by the
Weather Bureau, and probably the
heaviest ever known there.
There is a big hotel in San
Francisco, says the Colorado Sun,
that pays delicate attention to its
guests, aud also gets some valua
ble advertising for itself, by its
liberal use of flowers among the
guests. There, when a man and
wife arrive and are ushered into
that most cheerless of human hab
itations, a hotel bed-room, the des
olation is soon relieved by a bell
boy coming with a basket of flow
ers, which he says “Mr. , the
manager of the house, sends to
Mrs. , with his compliments.”
This little attention has made the
hotel famous.
BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.
' The Best Salve in the world"
for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers,
Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter^
Chapped Hands, Chilblains, Cornss
and ail Skin Eruptions, and.posi-
tively cures 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
Now is the time to subscribe for
the Home Journal.
Bipans Tabules arc always ready.
A great man moves over his
country and time with the fertiliz
ing influences of his example, like
a cloud which pours its treasures
on the fields and as it retires first
shows the rainbow of fame on its
rear and then dissolves into the
azure of oblivion.
When the creative pattern
woven in its fulness by the creation,
all the experiences-of history col
lected and adjusted in their mutual
relations, and the harmonized
whole unveiled in the conscious
nes of every creature, that illumi
nated aud all-justifying crisis will
be the true judgment day which
set a solidarity of time in the sol
idarity of space.
2.228,672.
These figures represent the num
ber of bottles of Dr.King’s New Dis
covery for Consumption, Coughs,
and Colds, which were sold in the
United States from March, ’91 to
March, ’92. Two Million, Two
Hundred and Twenty-Eight Thou
sand, Two Hundred and Seventy-
Two bottles sold in one year, and
ea’ch and every bottle was sold on
a positive guarantee that money
would be refunded if satisfactory
results did not follow its use. The
secret of its success is plain. It
never -disappoints and can always
be depeudecLoii as the very best
remedy for Coughs, Colds,
& Gilbert’s Drugstore.
IF YOUR MACK At; 11 ICS
Or yea ere all worn oat, really good for nothing:
it is general debiiitv. Trv
r.Htt If X?S 11! O X ItI TTfjJtS.
It will cure you, and give a good appetite. Sold
by all dealers in medicine.
are such that cheese of excellent qual
ity can he successfully made at far less
risk than where the milk is sent any
distance to market, or where butter is
the product. In the first case, that is
where the milk is marketed at any dis
tance, there is the danger of souring,
particularly in mid summer. In the
second, that is, where the product is to
he butter, the variations of the cream
as to quality and quantity, owing some
times to weather conditions, or other
circumstances equally beyond control,
often cause disappointment. In keep
ing cows for cheese-making, the factory
being established, the farmer sells milk
at so mnch the pound, which is returned
to him either in money or cheese. The
price is fixed; the market is at his door;
his only care is to produce the milk in
sufficient quantities to pay him for the
outlay. This being done he has not
only added to his income, hut has an
other wholesome and nutritious items
among his family supplimi. In almost
every thickly settled neighborhood, one
of the factories might he started on the
co-operative plan, several farmers com
bining, and one of their number thor
oughly posting himself in all the neces
sary details of the work. At the Ex
periment station the factory is in daily
operation, and any one wishing instruc
tion will he welcomed and given every
facility for learning the business. There
is nothing complicated in the process,
and any man or woman of ordinary in
telligence can, in thirty days, learn
everything necessary for carrying on
the work. To give some idea of the re
quirements I quote from some notes
which were kindly furnished me by
Captain Redding, the director, in re
sponse to some questions which I had
asked. I also give his letter, hearing
directly on this subject:
Experiment, Ga., Aug. 27,1892.
Hon. R. T. Nesbitt, Commissioner of
Agriculture, Atlanta, Ga.:
My Dear Sir—In response to yours of
the 25th, I enclose “Notes on Cheese
making in Georgia,” which -you may
find useful.
You may add that the cheese made
the present summer at the station dairy
has been in great request, selling readily
at the dairy at to cents per pound—the
whole cheese. Wherever it has been
tested it has given satisfaction. Mr.
Wing says that the conditions here in
Georgia for cheesemaking, are more
favorable than in Ohio, where he has.
been making cheese all his life. Very
truly, R. J. Redding, Director.
NOTES ON CHEESE-MAKING IN GEORGIA.
1. Character and cost of building:
Any cheap outbuilding, or mere shed,
will answer all purposes for making
cheese. It is only necessary to he dry
and comfortable for' the operator. Bnt
the curing room should be tight and
close, yet capable of ventilation. A
good 8x10 pantry, or storeroom, such as
may he found in most well-built farm
houses, would answer.
2. Fixtures, machinery, etc,
A cheese vat, consisting of a wooden
box lined with tin, with a small fur
nace underneath; a press with one or
more screws similar to a cider-press
screw; a few tin cheese hoops of differ
ent sizes;’ curd knives, strainers, dipper
and a thermometer. The entire outfit
.for a dairy of twenty-five cows will cost
less than $100.
3. The process of cheesemaking is,
briefly, as follows:
The night’s milk is kept in a cool
place until morning, when it is mixed
with the morning’s milk and all poured
into the chee' ■' vat and heated up to a
temperature of eighty-four degrees. A
small quantity of prepared rennet (ren-
netine) is then added and the milk is
constantly bnt gently stirred (to prevent
the cream from rising) until it com
mences to thicken. In about forty min
utes the milk will become solid, it cur
dles (yon would call it clabber, or sweet
curds). When thecurd has become
pretty firm it is cut Into small cubes—
about the size and shape of dice—by
means of the curd knives, which is done
in a few moments. The heat is then in
creased until the curds show a tempera
ture of ninety-six to ninety-eight de
grees by the thermometer. This heating
is to cause the pieces of curd to con
tract, thereby expelling the whey. The
whey is then drained away, and is used
to feed pigs, young calves, etc., being
fattening food. •
The curd is now salted at the rate of
one-half ounce of salt to the pound of
curd, and the 'latter is enclosed in a
press cloth and put into the cheese hoop
and pressed until the whey is all ex
pelled, which will he in about twenty
minutes. The cheese is now removed
from the press hoop, the press cloth re
moved, and the permanent cloth “ban
dage” put on, and then returned to the
hoops and press, where it is pressed with
the full force of the press screw and a
three-foot lever—the firmer the better.
The cheese usually remains in the
or say eighteen
directors of the Experiment Station, it
was determined that at the state fair to
be held in Macon in the coming Octo
ber, the station cheese factory snail be
in daily operation. Many persons who
could not otherwise have an opportunity
of witnessing the practical working of
such a factory, can there study every
item of labor, experience, etc. The
field is open to any enterprising person,
and I trust such will take hold and
make it remunerative to themselves and
to the farmers. Every enterprise which
opens new avenues of work and fur
nishes fresh • sources of income, is a
blessing, and we need all the help which
such combinations may afford ns.
TUree Breeds of Swine."
A recent bulletin issued by the Louis
iana Experiment Station gives the fol
lowing results of their experiments with
three hreds of swine:
There has been more demand for red
Jerseys than for either of the other two.
The Berkshire and Essex seem to he in
about equal favor. The red Jerseys are
great consumers with rapid growth and
great consumers witn rapid growth and
mil development in flesh and fat food
consumed. They are hardy, good rust
lers and prolific, raising as high as three
litters per annum. With an abundance
of food they are rapid pork makers.
They, are, however, omniverous, and
will eat a chicken, lamb or kid, when
ever permitted. This is a serious ob
jection to the small farmer and his good
housewife. The Berkshires share wirii
the red Jerseys many of their excellent
qualities. They are excellent foragers,
and when crossed on the natiye give,
perhaps, the best range hog in the world.
They are healhty and prolific, and fur
nish the finest “marbleized” hams. For
a general stock hog they can hardly be
surpassed. They, too, are inclined to
be carnivorous, and should not he
brought into too intimate relations with
young fowls, lambs and kids. Thg Es
sex are emphatically lot hogs. They am
slow and uncertain breeders. They are
somewhat sluggish, and always fat.
They are gentle, kind and indisposed to
extensive foraging. They can easily be
made to weigh 150 to 250 pounds when
one year old, a size admirably adapted
to the table wants of a farmer on a small
scale.
CAREFULLY CALCULATED.
Notes Gathered from Reliable Sources and
Condensed for Hurried Headers.
The chanceB are good that Kansas will
give 30,000 plurality for Weaver and Field
electors.
George Sont.ag, the only one of the
hree California train robbers captured,
press until next' day, u. oag cigm^cu
hours, when it is marked with date of
Price 50c. and §1.00. At Holtzclaw of 316 required to make one'ponnd
making and placed on a shelf in the cur
ing room to he turned over every day
and rubbed with the hand. The curing
room should be kept at about the tem
perature of seventy or seventy-five de
grees by opening windows and doors at
night and closing up during the day.
The cheesePwill he ready for use in
from three weeks to several months, as
may he determined by the maker during
the process of making.
4. In the south the months of March,
April, May, June, August, September
and October are the best cheese making
months, hut cheese may he made at any 4
season. Usually cheese is made in
spring, summer and fall, and butter in
winter, because butter-making requires
a cool temperature which cannot he se
cured in summer without the aid of ice
—which is too expensive and incon
venient.
5. How to disposqof milk when not
made into cheese:
It is generally more profitable to sell
milk than either butter or cheese; hut
milk will keep only a few hours, and
cannot he sent long distances. There
fore the milk market is easily glutted.
Butter-making is the better way where
a large number of cows is kept and the
local market not reliable ' for mfllr.
Generally cheese-making will he found-
more profitable than either when
operating with a good sized herd.
6. In Georgia nine and one-half pounds
of cured cheese. ;
7. As before stated the"curds may be
manipulated as to make a long keeping
or short keeping cheese—say from three
to four weeks to six months may inter
vene between making and-marketing,
three
has been convicted.
W. W. Taylor, said to be one of the
most famous bunko steerers in the world,
was arrested at Om-iha.
The Boston police raided a gang of
counterfeiters who claim they have passed
30,000 bogus silver dollars in that city.
Monroe County, Alabama, has lynched
the fifth negro within two weeks. Four
were murderers and the last was a fire-:
bug.
William Higleyman, formerly of Seda-
lia, but recently employed as a civil en
gineer at Chicago, has mysteriously dis
appeared from the latter city.
The registration at New York gives
reason for believing that the city will be
so overwhelmingly Democratic that the
state will bi sure for Cleveland.
Iowa Is registering an unusually heavy
voting list, and as there are thousands of
deserters from the Republican ranks the
state is reckoned sure for Cleveland.
Thomas Hill, a cousin of the late Gen
eral A. P. Hill of Confederate fame, died
at New York from the effects of whisky.
His home was at Hillsborough, N. C.
The steamer Puritan, on her trip to
Long Island Sound, ran int(Vh row boat
containing four men. One was drowned
and the other three seriously injured.
The first Russian steerage passenger to
reach this country since the cholera quar
antine arrived at New York on the An-
cboria from Glasgow. They are well, but
will be detained.
The Socialists at Ciiicago have adopted
resolutions condemning the World’s Fair
management for discriminating against
labor, by closing on Sunday and at 7
o’clock in the evenin,
The American Agriculturalist, New
York, figures out the Unite! States wheat
yield for 1S92 at 4‘J4,434,00U bushels and
the cotton crop at B,50J,000 bales off an
acreage of 18,644,000.
Joseph Fournier, a saloonkeeper and
politician of Toledo, O., shot 'and fatally
wounded James Coggins, a gimUar. The
trouble grew out of Coggins alleged
macy with Fournier’.; wife.
At Sau'Juaij, Mexico, 12 brigands were
looting a store when they ware attacked
by soldiers. Three robbers were shot
down and three captured,, the others es
caping with the plunder. Four soldiers
were shot.
Through the action of tax collectors in
Florida in refusing to receive poll tax,
and subsequent action of Governor Flem
ing in removing one of them, a contest is
MENSTRUATION
off in due time without pain or dis
comfort; but when'she approaches this
crisis MONTHLY with a nail constitu
tion and feeble health she endangers
both her physical and mental powers.
BRADFIELD’S
■ FEMALES
REGULATOR
if taken a few days before the monthly
sickness sets in and continued untill
nature performs her functions, has no
equal as a SPECIFIC for Painnil, Pro
fuse, Scanty, Suppressed and Irregular
COTTON.
We beg to announce to the farmers of Houston and adjoining counties that- our
facilities for handling cotton are unsurpassed. Our arrangements for placing it in
the controlling markets to the best advantage are complete.
We solicit a share of the? cotton business, promising to handle the same to the
best of out skill and ability.
2=3 AL. <3- G-1I 3- aon.3. T I IE S
Always on hand at the LOWEST market price.
MENSTRUATION
Book to “ WOMAN ” mailed free.
BRADF1ELD REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
Sold bjf all Druggist*.
LiTTLI
LIVER
PILLS
BO NOT fcSIPE E03 SICKEN.
Sure cure for SICK. HEAD*
ACHE, impidred digestion, consti
pation, turpid fjiiioda. They crons©
bill ons nervous
order?. Ejtahllsh rot
und daily Action.
Beautify complexion
blood. Purely Vegetable.
The
purifying
dose is nicely adjusted to pu»t case, as one pill can
betoo much. Each vial contains 42, carried in vest
pocket., like lend pencIL Business man's ;
,— —_ —, 1*8 great
convenience. Taken easier than sugar. Sold every
where. All genuine goods bear “Crescent.”
»goode 1
Send 2-cent stamp. Youget 22 page book -withBmpIc.
OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. St. Louis, Ha,
Humphreys’
thirty years used
cilic is a special cure for the disease named.
These Specifics cure without drugging, purg
ing or reducing the system, aud are lia faet and
deed the sovereign remedies of the World.
SCOTTON SEED COTTON SEES!
Wc want 100 car loads of COTTON SEED, for which we will
pay the highest cash price.
We will be glad to serve all who may favor us with their business.
VERY RESPECTFULLY,
M* m mMmBI
FORT -VALLEY GEORGIA
The Morning News.
The Great Democratic Newspa
per of the Southeast.
It Contains All The News,
Telegraphic, Local and State.
CAREFULLY EDITED AND
Systematical.* Arranged.
ITS COMMERCIAL AND FINANCIAL
REPORTS
Are unrivalled by that of any oth
er paper in the South.
J. M. GRAY. - - . c. G. GRAY.
C3- Tl It z IB JR, O S
fWNR IMI
-AND-
C0MMISSI0N MERCHANTS.
FORT VALLEY, - - GEORGIA.
Fort Talley lias two banks with plenty money to pay for all cotton that comes,
competing railroads, through freight rates, export buyers; and is the best cotton
market in Southwest Georgia- We have a
5 Dysentery* Griping, Bilious Colic.... ,2i
6 Cholera Morbus, vomiting 2.
, 'oothache, Faceache
Headaches, Sick Headache, Vertigo .25
__ l)yspcpsia, Bilious Stomach 25
11 Suppressed or Painful Periods. .25
12 Whites, too Profuse Periods .25
- - — -- 25
25
25.
lfi Fever and Ague, Chills,Malaria 50
17 Piles, Blind or Bleeding 50
19 Catarx*h, Influenza, Cold in the Head .50
20 Wboopinar Cough, Violent Coughs. .50
24 General Debility .Physical Weakness .50
27 Kidney Disease 50
28 Nervous Debility 1.00
30 Urinary Weakness, Wetting Bed. .50
32 Diseases of theHeart,Palpitation 1.00
Sold by Drussis
Du. Humphreys’ Manual,
and cold, mailed free.
HUMPHREYS* 3IKD. €0.,
i receipt «f price.
! 1 k II3 WIHinmSi., SawYorb.
Specifics
IF YOU WANT
TO BUILD A HOUSE
—ON—
i inti-
threatened which may result in the reiec-
!ll
tion of Elorida’s vote for presidential elec
tors.
Foreign Notes.
The dowager queen of Wurtembergis
dead.
Count Westerlo has been appointed
minister for foreign affairs in the Belgian
cabinet.
The cholera record for the whole of
Holland shows two new case3 and one
death Sunday.
Twelve new cases of cholera and four
deaths were reported to the health officials
of Buda Pesth Sunday. '
Jam es Rogers, a New York merchant,
fell downstairs in the hotel, Imperial at
Edinburgh and was killed.
Although there have been few cholera
cases and 'no deaths from cholera sine:
Friday, Hamburg will not be declare:
free from the epidemic for some time.
The Observer announces that it has
learned on the best of the authority that
at the last cabinet meeting it was defi
nitely decided not to retire from Uganda.
Baroness Burdett-Coutts has ordered
the contractor for the fishery schools in
Baltimore; Ireland, to prepare for the
Chicago’s World’s Fair a model of the
schools.
Tennyson Memorial Services.
New York, Nov. 2.—A Tennyson
memorial service was held at the brick
Presbyterian church, at Fifth avenue
and Thirty-Ninth streets, Sunday mean
ing, by the Rev. Henry Van Dyke. The
edifice was crowded to the doors. The
pastor, who was a warm personal friend
of the late poet laureate, and spent last
summer at his home at Aldworin,
preached a tonching memorial sefffldS.
The Night Stick in Brooklyn.
Brooklyn, Nov. 2.—Police Commis
sioner Hayden, on being asked whether
he proposed to abolish the use of the
night stick by members of the patrol
force as was done in New York, said h|
would not unless recommended by £He
superintendent, inspectors and veteran
captains. There were times, he thOUghl.
when an officer was only Sftfd witn a
night stick.
__ 'N
I had a malignant breaking out on mv leg
below the knee, and was cured sound and well
with two and a half bottles of KSKSSB
Other blood medicines had failed QHSi
to do me any rood. "Will C. Beat*,
- Yorkrille, S. C
*
I was troubled from childhood with ana
id case of Tetter, and three bottles
cored me permanently.
Wallace Mabn.^
Onr book on Blood and Skin Diseases i
free. 8miT Srxcma Co., Atlanta, ea.
exr
-(> K-
SECT7I3E
First-class
Investment
53-ON-
Thc Installment Plan,
STAKE STOCK
- IN-
Till INTER-SIAT*
Building and Ma§
ASSOCIATION,
Columbus,
Ga.
For oarticulras, apply - to
JOHN H. HO DEES, Agt.,
Ferry, Georgia.
OO Q Q Q O O O O O o Q
Op Falling Sickness can
® ' ''"“ remedy
be cured. Our ___
after all others
ST
,04 4.4.4. 4Ji -4..4.S 4
4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 1
That you may try it
without expense we
willsend youonebot-
tle free. All CHAEGL5 FEE-
PAH). Give Age, Post
Office and State. Him
Hall Chemical Co.,
WEST FHHiAi PA.
h h o o o .o o o o o a o
FIRE-PROOF BRICK WAREHOUSE,
Fifteen years experience, competent assistants, and will handle your cotton for
50 Cents a Bale, and Guarantee Satisfaction.
m Fqwm
acudl TEI§ at L©wast dapfe©t Ppta©.
THE SCHOOL OF fife SOUTH.
Open Day and Night the Entire Year.
SUCCESS UNPABALLELLED.
Three Distinct Departments —Com
mercial, Stenograph, Telegraph—cover
ing 6,500 feet of space, all under direc
tion of distinguished specialists. Text
books discarded! scholarships and board
cheaper than other institutions. Grad
uates assisted to positions through our
employment agency—not one idle. Send
for handsome catalogue to
WYATT & MARTIN,
Macou, - - Georgia.
COMMERCIAL COLLEGE OF ONTO UNIVERSITY,
LEXINGTON, KENTUCKY.
taping and General J
and Foreign
on i°^I £a ^&L retired at World's Exposition, tor System of Book-
tral Business EdtO^unu 1000 students in attendance the past year from 30 States
Countries. 10,000 Graduates in business. 15 Teachers employed. jBusiness
Course consists of Book-keeping, Business Arithmetic, Penmanship. Commercial Law, Merchandising.
Joint Stock, Manufacturing, Lectures, Business Practice, Mercantile Correspondence, dec.
US-Cost of Full Business Course• including Tuition, Stationery and Board in a nice
fcunUy, aboi# $90. Shorthand, Type-Writing and Telegraphy are Special-
ties, having special teachers and rooms, and can be taken alone or with the Business Course.
The Morning News is an impersonal
newspaper. It has no enemies to punish.
It is democratic for the reason that the
principles of that party are the best for
the prosperity of the whole country. It
believes that tariff reform is more neces
sary now than ever.
For professional and business men,
whether in city or country’, farmers and
all others who desire a daily or weekly
newspaper for themselves or their fami
lies, The Daily Morning News and
The Savannah Weekly News are un
rivalled.
Daily News, one year, S10’ six months.
§5; three months, $2.50.
Weekly News, one year, $1.25; six
months, 75 cents.
—ADDRESS—
THE MORNING NEWS.
Savannah, - - Georgia.
BOYS ano girls
Have Vou Seen
Southern Sunbeams
That beautiful magazine for Southern
Boys and Girls. It is the handsomest
Young People’s Magazine in America. It
has become a welcome visitor to thous
ands of Southern Homes. No pains or
expense is spared tef make it attractive
Each number contains a volume of inter
esting reading for young folks. Short and
continued stories, out-door sports, new
games, and in fact everything to interest
boys and girls. Twenty-eight pages and
cover, each page is handsomely illustra
ted. Tt is “The Qneen of the Sonth,”
“The Pet of every Home Circle,” and no
boy or. gi.l can afford to be without it.
To see it is to want it, and to have it
for six months or a year is a continual
efijoyment for all the family. We want
every boy and girl who has not seen this
charming magazine to send ns seven one-
cent stamps at once for a sample copy;
or, better still, if you will send ns One
Dollar we will send you “Southern
Sunbeams” for one year and make you a
present of “Cooper’s Feather Stocking
Tales.” Five great works in one large
volume free of all cost.
—ADDRESS—
SOUTHERN SUNBEAMS,
Box 363, - Atlanta, Ga.
THE TELEGRAPH
A SOUND DEMOC! AT!C
NEWSPAPER
For News from Middle, South
west, Southeast and South
Georgia it is Unex
CELLED.
□The Telegraph carries the largest and
most expensive press reports of any pa
per m Georgia. Supplemented as there
reports are by specials from hundreds of
correspondents, it offers a newsservice
second to none.
I gives the fnll reports and decisions of
the Supreme Court of Georgia by special
contract with the Supreme Court- report
ers, and fully covers all important trials
in the state.
For nearly three-fonrtbs of a century
he elegraph has g iar 1.1 and protect
ed the interests of Georgians’, and it pro
poses to continue the good woik. It is
Democratic to the core, and can always
be relied upon to nphol.i an honest gov
ernment, whether local, state or national
- - Business Course.
No charge for proenr-
WILD UJl It. SMITH, Pres., hexington, Hy*
JerLtra.1 lESsbllxosbd. of <3-eoigrisi_
H. M. COMER, Receiver.
TIME TABLE IN EFFECT OCTOBER 23rd, 1892.
Subscribe for your home paper; flien,
if you want a good, newsy daily or week
ly, send for The Telegraph.
(Standard Time, 90th Meridian.)
No. 3 |
am |
No. 5 |
8:35
8;5n
8:56
9:02
9:20
9:29
I 11:1-0 I Leave
j 11:35 I Leave
| 11:22 | Leave
| 11:28 j Leave
| 31:46 | Leave
Macon
Wiso
Rutland
Walden
Byron
Arrive
Arrive
rrive
Arr,ve
Arrive
7:15
9:47
8:52
3:45
3:29
3:20
3:03
7:00
6:53
6:47
6:29
6:19
.6:00
| 8:00
I 7:45
I 7:41
1 7:35
| 7:22
7:35
j 7:00
i m
3.30 p. m.[ 12.15 a. m.
4.35 p. m.| 1.20 a.m.
Leave Fort Valley Arrive
Arrive Perry Leave
5.50 a. m 2.55 p. m.
4.45 a. in 1.50 p. m.
BETWEEN FORT VALLEY AND COLUMBUS.
No. 3 |
a m
No. 4
pm
8.25
Lv
Fort Valiev
Ar
7.00
8.39
Everett’s
u
6.47
8.52
t. y.
Reynolds
“
6.35
9.10
*•
Butler
I 6.20
9.23
“
Seotts
6.07
9.37
Howard
“
5.53
9.50
Bostick
u
5.40
10.04
Geneva
5.29
10.15
“
Juniper
“
5.20
10.23
u
Box Spring
u
5.12
10.39
“
Upatoi
“
4.57
11.02
"
Schatnlga
4.35
II.I9
Muscogee
"
4.17
U.25
At
Columbus
Lv
4.10
Read Up.
Route.
Mad
down
P. M
A. M
P. 2d
A. M
10 55
10 00
Ar. * Palaika. .Lv
G. S. & F.
4 45
4 43
9 22
8 22
Hampton
6 SO
6 24
8 ro
6 55
Lain City
8 <0
7 4"
5 48
Jasner
9 H-
8 4 •
5 3d
4 26
Valdosta
10 15
A.ai.
9 50
3 47
2 50
Tiftou
12 10
11 31
2 15
AM.
1 18
P, 31.
Cord tie
1 46
1 <9
11 4<0
7 20
10 35
7 10
A.M.
Macon
Atlanta
C. B. B.
4 3*
7 45
P. M
4 10
7 85
31
1 56
P. M
12 51
Chattanooga
W. & A.
1 45
12 53
9 05
7 30
Nashville
N C & St L
7 30
A. M
6 25
1 30
P. M
Evansville
KtX
1 CO
4 00
Lv..Chicago. Ar
C. & E. I.
1J 40
m I
I pm
Sleeping cars on night trains between Atlanta. Macon, Savannah and Angus
For further particularsrelative to ticket rates, schedules, best routes,etc, write
to or call upon E M Fuller, Ag’t, Perry, Ga. W P Dawson, Pass. Ag’t, Macon, Ga.
GEO. DOLE WaDLEY, General Superintendent; J. C. HAILE, General Passenger Agent!
W. F. SHELLM'N, Traffic Manager, Savannah, Gcoigia.
JOB WORK.
We Have a C omplete Stock and
Full Assortment of Commercial
Stationery, and duplicate Macon or
Atlanta pnees |n liis class of work
Satisfaction guaranteed.
GIVE US J 1 RIAL ORDER
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
Daily and Sunday, one year S7.00
Daily, without Sunday, one year 6.00
Sunday, one year 2.00
Weekly, one year 1.00
Invariably in advance.
Address THE TELEGRAPH
Macon, Ga.
Georgia Southern & Florida R,
Snwanee River Bo ate to Florida.
Schedule in Effect Aug. 21, IS92.
SHORT LINE TO WORLD'S FAIR.
Sleeping Car Palatke to Macon.
Tollman Sleeping-Car Atlanta to St. Louis
without chat ge.
Connections in Union Depot at Msccn with M &
IT.. Ga. R. R,. C. L. li. and S. IV. R. R.. ,.oi 1b *r.d
south; and in Union Depot at PaktLa v.iti, ail
trains from points in Florida, east, wotanri rlmIi.
H BURNS. a C KNAPK
Trav Pass Agt. 1 rrfilc 1’aug’r,
- Macon, Ga. Macon. C.a.
Passenger Schedule
ATLANTA AND FLORIDA RAILROAD
|No. 2.
[No. 6.
3X0 p m
3.13 p m
4.13 pm
5.03 pm
6.20 jyn
6.53 p m
7.30 pm
“ E. T.& V.&G.Junc
Arrive Fayetteville
“ Williamson
“ Cnlloden
Knoxville
“ Fort Valley
8.00 am
10.27 a m
12.27 am
3.12 p m
4.17 pm
5.40 pm
NORTHBOUND.
No. 1.
No. 5.
Leave Fort Valley....
Arrive Knoxville.
“ Cnlloden
“ Williamson
Fayetteville
- “ E.T.V.&G.Jnn
“ Atlanta
5.45 a m
6.24 am
6.45 am
8.15 a m
9.05 am
10.05 am
10.20am
8.30 a m
10.37 am
11.47 a m
2.25pm
4.13 p m
6.05 pm
Nos. 1- and 2 daily, and make cornice-
tion with C. R. B. at Fort Valley for
points in southwest Georgia. Departs
and arrives at E.T. Y. &G. passenger
depot in Atlanta.
Nos. 5 and 6 daily, except Sunday. Pas
sengers arrive and depart from E. T. V.
& G. Junction at end of Pryor street
dummy line.
T. W. Garrett, Geo. P. Howard,
Superintendant, Gen’l.Pasa.Ag’t.
Atlanta, Ga.
Ripans Tabules: a family remedy.
SUBSCRIBE
ADVERTISE
IN
THEHOMEJOUKJVAL
•v -
.
Wm