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Vol. IS.
JgK IN TROUBLE.
1 secreta
^jeii r rrv Eusk, ’ our to be
ears m
j-ofagn*: peck 0 1 trouble.^ been Some preferred very
i i e b-/ ] iave Coffee,
? a tiM Major a
gainst lun .. , j a g r icultu
orifle1 ' 6 niient.
jlilepait; • wr ttt en Uncle
® aJ0r nlain business-like
erry a veU n,.v i ua >
phis letter turned Major out Coffee of office says
at he was that I am a dem
lithe L and reason for no other reason
Lrtlie Lthe sun, but ami you the did manli- not
L courage the
to say that was reason.
i Afaior Coffee’s second charge is
more serious He says
ut the secretary allows the o±
Icial crop reports to be given
w to certain speculators before
,
lev are received in his depart
„ e „tor given to the press.
"fk amount of money the spec
Wors pay the secretary and
lose who kelp him to work the
Auk: for the advance sheets of
ie official crop reports is not
fated. Coffee offers to furnish
i Bjositivo Major proof of these charges,
E Eeifrom says that the same can be ob
the department itself.
■ Oilier charges are also made
Eilist Estants, Secretary Rusk and from his
as will be seen
tracts from Major Coffee s let
■ Bsseem The serious nature of the charg
to demand a speedy Li¬
tigation. tele If Rusk they should are true, be
Bounced Jerry delay. The
Entry without
should not tolerate such
■rottenness and such reckless
Bisregard of the people’s money.
B Ie quality of the blood de
tii- much upon good or bad di
Elion and assimilation; to make
He blood rich in life and strength
Eng constituents, use Dr. Cordial J. H.
■clean's Strengthening
Hi Blood Purifier; it will nourish
Be properties of the blood from
Hicii the elements of vitality are
Hrawn. 81.00 per bottle.
I Major Belknap has resigned his
■position He as general manager of
Central railroad of Georgia,
■ order to connect himself with a
Hbanking pajorBelknap’s institution in Mexico,
friends in Geor¬
gia regret to see him leave the
ihte, hut wish him success in his.
pw field.
I As a people we are growing
ph at an enormous rate. In 1850
H wealth returned for taxation
Ptliis country was only $7,000,
■00,000. In had risen to $16,000,
PjOOOin 1870, in spite of the war,
ivas 830,000,000,000. The cen
pof 1880 put it at $43,000,000,
P. Now it is estimated at $55,
P,000,000. and the next census
N probably show that it is
rye those figures. This show¬
ed is enough to make the effete
Niarchies of Europe realize how
they are getting left.
I Le dank and decaying vegeta
tio 1 01 re Sj° ns newly cleared of
r 'v 1 '- exposed to the rays of the
r Vir "lcLean u i' e Rreed malaria. Dr.
k ■ V s Chills and Fever
mild and gentle action
r, We. radical! y cure. 50 cents a
>—1 » perpetrators of the East
,
I Ji ‘ it 0 Grages should be made
J * for their crimes. The
G’ Georgia must be enforced,
i
courts should make an ex
‘ttple 01 the F niton county bul
: 3E lerdiouur animous.
V 5JL ult ^I’ttggists,
iiectfio Ei' ’ 1 recommend Bippus
Ll ' can
teraedt fiven Lr ^ ers as bottle tlie very sold best has
^i.,/ S!X . ln b every °ttles, case. and One
ture.J nf r>i was
etandinL of years’
hntuS 1 ?? medicine 20 years' I ha ve
Ws ft Ctric Sitters.” experi
UtimoL 0thei , ha Thou
: s ; v e added their
fiSariim.,,the ^eareall hat EIectric verdict Bitters is
Kjil 1 ( r hs«ases of the Liver,
*i?Wi ‘sKSSfi?- aev Blood ' 0n] w y a a half Leo
-
■—tiu “ oot good f a t for waking anything es-
A'.
ilPs *
1/ i T?t 4L T>f" === iBSt 5 - —- ---- ■S: ili Ir-
1 P Si 1 SO mum Ssp .y.i. 5 ^ III I .igry 'JTi 5 a
A i ,r
/in-- fw c»
CONYERS, GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER 24, 1889.
HOW GEORGE RAN AWAY.
The story that Alice was read
ing was “Whittington and liis
hard Cat." when George thought it rather
his mamma asked him
to put it by to do something for
her. I am afraid he> was naughty;
for all the time he kept thinking
how nice it would be to do just as
he pleased. After a while he said:
“Mamma I think I’ll run away.”
“I do not understand you, dear,”
she answered.
“Well, I don’t like to be both¬
ered,” he said, “and I want to be
like “Very Whittington.”
well, you may go if you
plied are not happy mother. in your home,” re¬
the “I will help
you to get ready. You need not
run Then away.” she tied his cloth¬
some of
es in a large handkerchief, and
put the bundle on a stick, over
his shoulder, like the picture of
Whittington. She kissed him
good-by wliPn she opened George the
street door for him.
looked pretty solemn as he went
down the steps. In a minute ha
went back and rang the bell.
Mary let him in, and he ran into
his mamma’s room.
“May I sleep on the back porch
to-night? he asked. His lips
trembled a little.
“No, dear; your papa doesn’t
like to have tramps sleeping on
the porch,” she replied. the stable
“Then I can stay in
with John?”
“Oh, no! You had better run
away at once, a long way off,
where you can do as you please.”
Poor George was in tears now.
“0 mamma, mamma!” throwing
himself in her arms, “I do love
you so, and I don’t want to run
away. I hate to do as I please, live?”
May I come home again to glad
“Dear little boy! Mamma is
you have learned your lesson with
so little heartache,” answered the
mother, as she took her sobbing
boy in her loving arms. wanted to
George again.—Nursery. never run
away
Sick headache, and a sensation
of oppression and dullness in the
head, are very commonly produced
by indigestion; morbid despop 1
dency, irritability and over sensi¬
tiveness of the nerves may m a
majority of cases, be traced to the
same cause. Dr. J. H. McLeans
Liver and Kidney Balm and Fill¬
ets will positively cure.
People who abuse newspapers
don’t know how they would feel
if they could not get them, Once
in awhile experience demonstrates
tho value of these brief chronicles
of the time. Atlantic City was
cut off from the outside world by
the flood last week and the first
newspaper which got through
was sold for $2.50 to a man who
thought lie got it cheap. The
regular price of the paper w r as 2
cents.
The “Life of the flesh is the
blood thereof;” pure blood means
healthy functional actimty and
this bears with it thacertainty 01
quick restoration CordSl from sick^ss or
Strengthening and Blood
Purifier gives pure rich blood,
and vitalizes and strengthens the
whole body. $1.00 per bottle.
Mrs. Tom Clay, of Cobb county
has sohl 229 dozen eggs, 150 fry
mg chickens and thirty three
hens up to date this year, and will
ourvUiomPTif supplement this this splendid spiena record
before the j eai ^
sales. She supplied her own
family in the meantime with cluck
ens and aude e^s in abundance.
The most delicuie r(institution ‘
■
DixJ.H. McLeans . .
can safely use Lung Balm; it is a sure
Tar Wine coughs loss of voice,;
remedy for lung diseabes
and all throat and 'i
It is eaJd said tli°t ^ of 01 all the colored
people who were employed at me he
white house while Mr. Cleveland
was President, Albert Hawkins, j
flm driver is the only one who is
’ Harrison
there now. President :
and his wife, being d - r e - T inbli- 1!
c ^f
cans, believe that be colo ,
people should vote the
can,ticket, lmt that they shoulcln
be Deempiov employed at the white house,
See teshmonmm in this . issue . Q f
see Qae tw yQVirself,
STARTLING FIGURES.
Last week our readers
given a short sketch of an effort
being made in C„ ye * to organ
ize a joint company .for the pur
pose of manufacturing the famous
A. Q. C. upon an extensive scale,
Little more need be said if the
following ( lt • article , from , an exchange I
is correct m its figures:
“Twelve years ago Tom Swift
was stewing roots and herbs in a
wash pot and selling it as Swift’s
Rankin Specific. and A Mr. few Swift days ago offer- Dr.
were
ed $1,200,000 for the Swift Specific
patent twelve and copyright. have In paid the past out
years $1,000,000 they in advertis
more than
ing that medicine, and it has made
as much more in dividends. It
now sells all over the American
continent, and is established as a
standard article big jump—from in England,
That is a pretty a
wash kettle and old negro woman
in twelve years, is it not? Few
men know the value of patent
medicines. A month ago Mr.
Warner of Rochester sold his rem
ediesto an English company. The
published price was $5,000,000, but
private advices are that $3,000,000
was the price actually paid. The
transfer was to be made about
Sept. 1. Ten days prior to that
Mr. Warner telegraphed in the every
reputable druggist country
offering his goods at a cut rate
provided a quantity was purchas
ed, and stating would that after Sept. It 1
the price be advanced.
is said that he sold $800,000 worth
of goods in ten days under this
offer, on which there was a goods, profit
of perhaps $500,000. The
of course, went on the shelves of
the druggists in America, and the
advertising necessary to sell them
must, of course, be done by the
new company. The same English
company that bought Warner was
the company that offered to buy
the Swift Specific Company. It
has a capital of $200,000,000, and
an executive committee that trav¬
els through America looking after
investments of any kind that
promise well. It invested $16,
000,000 in Chicago.
Coughs and colds come uninvi¬
ted, but you can quickly get rid of
these, with a few doses of Dr. J.
II. McLean’s Tar Wine Lugn
Balm.
The Atlanta Journal takes a
hopeful view of the educational
outlook in Georgia. It says:
“We believe the time will come
when our state can offer to her
children a perfect system of edu
cation, commencing Vvitli ten
months of common school, in¬
eluding a first-class normal
school, two technological schools,
one for girls and one for boys,
and ending with a university well
supported.” This is a cheerful
p i c fc urej but it is not overdrawn,
;fre Buffering with weak
i)jfkmed or granulated kly cured
can be quic H McLeans
^ j .
Strengthening Eye Salve. 25
cents a box.
Henry Watterson, editor of the
Louisville Courier-Journal, is al
most blind in one eye, and sees
very badly out of the other. Ho
uses a magnifying glass when
reading, and does much of his
writing mi . through ^ an amanuensis;
ggists him iu his
work. V lien l lie P writes v rites himself himself
he uses thick, glazed paper and a
quill pen. He writes a scrawl
almost as hard to read as Horace
Preelv’s Greely s When V lc ’ n he C works he
g 0es at it with a vim, taking
Ligcoat androllill g U p his sleeves.!
Some times for days he does not j
ite a line but amuses himself
chatting with w t h his ms friends menus. He
en j oys a good dinner. lias lectuieu, He ^ ias | .
b een i n congress,
written a book or tw o, and in
early life was ambitious to ie a ;
novelist.
Rheumatism is caused by and a
in the blood
ie ids to A yers seemed Pills. chronic Many ens- aad
eg which comnlately;
hopeless, have been
cured bv this medicine.it will
but iittie to try w hat effect
yonr
pretuei
AS TO JURY LAW'S.
The conclusion Chicago Herald lyis trials come
to the that jury
~
competent be found. to serve on juries intel- can
ligent They, will be too Herald
for jury duty, the
sa 3' s - The Herald thinks that in
order to preserve the trial by jury
8ystem , it will become necessary
to raise men up from infancy “prefer- to
act as jurors. It says a
ence should be given to such as
display but a small degree of nat
intelligence and give little
" being able to
study promise profession, of ever learn trade,
a a
or to become efficient kept day laborers, isolated
They should be
from all bright boys, and should
not be allowed to listen to the
conversation They should be of superior most persons. of the
kept seclusion,
time in a state of as
persons are after they have been
selected to serve on a jury. Their
mental education must be entirely
neglected, as this would incapaci
tate them. They should have a
severe physical training, tlieir however,
in order to develop powers
of endurance. It might be well
to teach them to play poker, take as
they will have occasion to a
hand in this game as often as they
are called upon to perform duty.” Her
There is some gum in the
aid’s sarcastic suggestions. Trial
by jury is often a farce. There
are a plenty of good, honest and
true men who are capable of serv¬
ing as jurors; yet, in many cases
where criminal cases are to be
tried, it is next to an imposibility
to get a jury, owing to the pecu- laws,
liar formation of our jury Wool
Such was the case with the
folk trial at Macon, and Chicago
is now having a similar experience
over the Cronin case,
"HUNGEB IS THE BEST SAUCE.”
As a rule, a person who has a
good appetite has good health.
Rut how many there are who en¬
joy nothing they eat, and sit down
to meals only as an unpleasant for this
duty. Nature’s antidotes
condition are so happily combined
in Hood’s Sarsaparilla that it soon
restores good digestion, creates and
an appetite, and renovates
vitalizes the blood so that the ben¬
eficial effect of good food is im¬
parted to tho whole body. Truly
hunger is the best sauce, and
Hood’s Sarsaparilla induces hun¬
ger.
A writer says that “only a
woman understands the higher
use of flowers.” Tho writer
aforesaid has evidently had his
view of the stage obstructed by a
female hat garnished with a
boquet a foot high.
Impurities of the blood often
cause great annoyance at this
season; Hood’s Sarsaparilla all such pu¬
rifies the blood, and cures
affections.
Many Persons
Are broken down from overwork or household
cares Brown’s Iron Bitters
rebuilds the svsteiu, aids digestion, the removes ex¬
cess of bile, ainl cures malaria. (Jet genuine.
T ThnOHoll The Odell
I Vpr WRTTT7
I I I J_j VVlAil *
--
$ - { , b r- wi iJ buy the ODELL
TYPE WRITER
Warranteed to do as good work
as any $100 machine.
It combines simplicity wit DU
bawlity speed, ease of opera-
1I0N —wears longer without cost
o{ repairs thananyot he r machine,
has no ink ribbon to bother the
operator. It is neat, substantial,
mckle .plated-perfect, and adapt
ed to all kind of type Avnting.
Like a prmtmg press, it produces Manu
Clean, Legible
sc ripts. Two to ten copies can
be made at one writing Editors,
lawyers, ministers, bankers, mer
manufacturers, business
men , etc., cannot make a better
investment for $15. Any intelli
gent person in a week can become
a good operator, or a rapil> oxe
in two months.
$ 1,000 offered any operator
who can do better wotk wi 1 a
Tyde A Wnler and^al^e? ‘ U-jtgKHtawg
e nto Wanted.
l^p^p^givingentloreemento tinppial inducements to Dealers.
Bor i ainpieW
Ac acmress ug T ING CO.,
DAVIS’ ROMANCE.
The first marriage somewhat of Jefferson
Davis was of a roman
aTWestYofnt ho ™
Fort Crawford, at Prairie du Chi
eu, "Wis., the post then command
ed by Colonel Zachary Taylor,
The daughter of the latter, Miss
Same Knox I ay lor, at once fell
desperately in love with the hand
some and intellectual young lieu
tenant. The rash pair eloped one
night and were married. Colonel
Taylor was enraged, and declared,
with an oatli as strong as ever
used, that under no circumstances
would he reconciled ever forgive his Davis daugli- or
become to
ter’s disobedience.
But sixteen years passed. “Old
Zacli” was in command of the
United States army in Mexico
and serving under him was Col
Jefferson Davis at the head of the
famous battle First of Mississppi Rifles,
At the Buena V ista this
regiment Davis, while covered leading itself with glory, of its
one
charges at a critical moment, fell
severely wounded. and, it was He supposed,
mortally was borne
from the held. That evening
General Taylor, mounted on
“Old Whitey,” paid him a visit.
Dismounting, colonel’s lie and stepped extended to his
cot
^“Jeff” lie said* “you have saved
Let the day bygones with your glorious rifles. Knox
(the by be which bygones. he always
name
called his daughter), knew your
worth and mettle better than I
did.”
They shook hands. From and that
moment, deed through the war, President in¬
until the death of
Taylor, existed the warmest friendship York
between them.—New
Star.
Take one of Dr. J. H. McLean’s
Little Liver and Kidney Fillets at
night before you go to bed and
you will be surprised how buoyant
and vigorous you will feel the
next day. Only 25 cents a vial.
While in Lexington a few days
ago, Dr. Nunnaliy mentioned as
one of the needs of Mercer Uni¬
versity of Macon a new cottage
on the campus. The matter was
hardly discussed, but there was a
general recognition of tho fact
on a bare statement from the doc¬
tor, and a subscription started,
headed by Col. John Gibson for
a good round sum. In a very
short time there was money
enough subscribed and
Wednesday the contract was let
for the cottage. The cottage
will be known as the Gibson cot¬
tage.
BUCKLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.
The Best Salve in the world for
Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter,
Chapped Hands, Chilblains Corns,
and all Skin Eruptions, and posi¬
tively cures Piles, or no pay give re¬
quired. satisfaction, It is guaranteed to
perfect funded. Price cents or money box. re¬
25 per
For sale by Dr. W. H. Lee A Son.
He had just come from pond, a day’s and
fishing in the perch
waH j n the a ®f °, f
Xn his kite closing the O
w hi c h she had been reading, said:
“Oh! it’s you, George, dear. I’m
gj ad see you back. It was
duU wit h you away that I took
up the Bible to pass the time, and
wa s reading the Book of Revela
tiong as you camo in< That's a
wonderful book. And just think,
it ‘All liars shall have their
‘ t iu the lake which burnetii
vith Hrc and brimstone.’ Have
L vou cauirht anythin* 9 ” “No, Ma
^thing, " he answered. “I didn't catch
a but I thought, as I went
t to get h s h, we might as well
ha ve a string, so I called at the
fish store andbou glad'to Hit these.” She
sa id g he was get the fish,
and talked to him with much
cheerfulness; but he w r as scarcely gloomy
aud pre-occupied, and
sa - d a word j n reply, and, in a
s hort time, giving the excuse that
he w« tired, went off to bed.
1 fellow!
Life will acquire new zest, and
cheerfulness return if you will ira
pel your liver and kidneys to the
k performance of their functions
J. H. McLeans Inver
WORDS TO FRIENDS:
t/oJ work solicited and satisfac¬
tion gvaranteed.
1 tellable attention given advertis¬
ing.
'TEEMS liKA&ONA BLR'
No. 31
GROWTH OE THE SOUTH.
Almost every day gives evidence
of the rapid growth of industrial
iho *»> advantages f* of this ,
superior
section for manufactures of van
ous kinds have boon demonstra
ted by actual experience. Capi- 1
tal . j ™ • • , , se ? k , tl,e . most
promising holds and it’s coming to
the South now as it never came
before. Several cotton mills have
been moved from Now Eno-lnn/l
°
10 , ,, fcoutii q f i witlim .-.i • the present
.
year, ami it is announced that the
owners of a great steel plant near
Pittsburg, which has recently
7“ „ 11 t0 R “ ^ n f (r llsh i- i. s \“ tl1
-
.
ta ( lh P°®°< 1 because they
were convinced that they could
put tlieir capital to better use in
the same business in the South.
The statistics of the cotton year
which closed Sept. 1, 1889, show
the manufactures of that staple
are increasing in the South. Of
the crop of 1887-’H8 the Northern
... consumed . , 1, <87,121 bales ,
1111 s
ftU( I the Southern mills 448,373
Of the crop of 1888-’89
the Northern mills took 1,780,-
48(5 1>illes aml llie Soutllcrn mill «
486,603. In other words, during
the year the consumption of tho
Northern mills fell off 6,635 bales,
or 4 per cent., while the consump¬
tion of the Southern mills increas¬
ed 43,236 hales or 10 per cent.
In the cotton year 1887-’88 the
South did 16.8 per cent, of tho
cotton manufacturing business of
the country, and in the year
which closed the first of this
month its proportion had risen to
21.5.
The latest and most roliablo
figures show that Georgia maiu
tians a handsome lead in cotton
manufacture in the South. Tho
total number of mills in the South
is 259. They have 1,344,576 spin¬
dles and 31,435 looms. A year
ago there wore in the South only
235 mills, with 1,177,901 spindles
and 27,566 looms. The census of
1880 gave tho South only 194
cotton mills, with an aggregate
of only 561,360 spindles and 12;-
329 looms.
Georgia now has fifty-five mills,
with a total of 388,342 spindles
and 9,420 looms. North Carolina
comes second in tlie list of South¬
ern states, having 93 mills, 288,-
706 spindles and 6,424 looms.
South Carolina is third, with 35
mills, 278,000 spindles and 6,280
looms. These figures include
only the spindles and looms in
operation. There are very few
spindles in the South idle except
those that are old and useless.
This showing is very gratifying
and cannot fail to increase tho
attractiveness of the South as the
best field for cotton manufactures.
—Macon Telegraph.
Neuralgic Per nous
And those troubled with nervousness resulting
from fare or overwork will be relieved by taking
Brown’s Iron Bitters. Genuine
has trade mark and crossed red lines on wrawer.
There are many accidents and
diseases which affect Stock and
cause serious inconvenience and
loss to the farmer in his remedied work,
which mav J be quickly l/ McLean’s
by the us of Dr J
Volciiuic Oil Liniment.
The preachers, like everybody | j
else, need a summer vacation,
and the preacher’s Lw vacation, like
evc ‘U tlim , i; • e must Lv comp ‘ to an
o >
eU(L Pret ty soon the . usual ordm
of things will be resumed m tlio
churches,
- -
VIGOR AND VITALITY
Are auieklv given to every part of
the body by Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
That tired feeling is entirely purified, over
come j, The blood is en
Stb’inntend - j and vitalized, and carries
of disease to every
organ. The stomach is toned and
strengthened, kidney the and appetite liver re
stored The are
roused and invigorated. The
brain is refreshed, the mind made
clear and ready for work, hj it.