The Dublin post. (Dublin, Ga.) 1878-1894, November 03, 1886, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

wm C / 4 VOLUME IX s - riff* —. — DUBLIN, GEORGIA, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 3, 1886. NUMBER XVIII. Professional Cards. W. T. PARK, M. D. H Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga, Celebrated many years for his cures of the worst forms of stomach, liver, bowel, kid ney and bladder discares, dropsy, heart and lung troubles, catarrh, etc., all blood diseases, nerve disorders, nervousness neuralgia, rheumatism, debility, female complaints, opium and whisky habits fe*5? 8 \ 6 ® xual weakness,' etc. Furnishes medical advice, medicine, etc.. i medical advice, to the afflicted at their homes through mail, express, or otherwise or takes them personal care in Atlanta. Call on or write to him giving a history and statement of jour affliction, symptom*, i for reply. THE FARMER’S BOY. I know my face and hands are brown, But I ain strong aud spry; You can not And in all the town A happier boy than I. ” |[h health, with hearty nppetite, With nothing to annoy, 1 ' 1 ‘oliir It is a sweet and true delight To be a farmer’s boy. M y l )j mts ore patched, my cap is torn, There’s smut upon my nose; My muddy shoes .are badly worn— They laugh at both the toes. age, sex, etc.,' enclosing postage for reply Dr. T. F. WILLIAMS) IDEZnTTIS ?. fcSP^OKk'o at Ills ..eside ce Simms’ Building. First door below tlie Court House. «pr21.’8G,ly. Dr. J.P. HOLMES, PRAcTJTIONEr?, CONDOR, - . GEORGIA. C ALLS ATTENDED TO AT ALL houis. (Histories a specialty. Office Residence. mUi24. 7m -Dr. T. A. WOOD, IF > z?a,ot3± - b±oxL©z?, COOL SPKIXU8, GA. QALLS ATTENDED TO AT ALL hours. Obst." iea a specialty. Offlco Residence. meh24, tf. Dr. P. M. JOHNSON, PRACTITIONER, Lovett,. - - tieorgia. £ULLS ATTENDED TO AT ALL U hours. Day and Night. inch'AS if. Dr. J. X>. UNDER, [SIX MID S NOU'III OF DUM.IN.J OFFERS his services to the public at large. Calls promptly attended to, day or night. Office at residence, aug 20, ’84 ly. CHARLES HICKS, M. D., PRACTITIONER. Dublin, - Georgia. jc20, ly DR. C. F. GREEN, PRACTITIONER. Dublin, - Georgia. NALLS ATTENDED TO AT ALL Obstetrics a specialty. (-.hours. _ Residence Office T. L. CRINER, attorney & COUNSELLOR AT LAW, Dublin - Georgia. muy 21 tf. FELDER & SANDERS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Dublin. - - Georgia. My mother makes a suit for me -- T1 ' _'lmt I can soon destroy, But it ia always fun to be A lively farmer’s boy ! I love the mountains grand and stoep, They make me think of God; Tlie hillside pastures, where the sheep Browse on the fresh, green sod; ^ The spreading beech aud maple trees, The squirrels, cute and coy, The birds, the butterflies, the bees— 1 am a farmer’s boyl 1 can with a jack-knife carve a ship, Or make a whistle shrill; Can stones upon the river skip. Down by tlie old red hull; The tuilest trees can nimbi., climb, Cau sing, can shout with with joy. Cuu have a splendid, jolly time, And be a farmer's boy I tn Chi —Eugene J. JJaU, tn Chicago Inter-Ocean. Will practice in the. courts of th<» Oco nee, Ocmulgee and Middle circuits, and the Supreme court of Georgia, and else where by special contract. Will negotiate loans on improved farm inglnnd8,. b. 18th. 1885.-6m. N OTICE M0*$ILE*W88! 25000 Acres improved farm land in 50 dif ferent places from 1 to 12 miles from Dublin. Terms easy 4 Store Houses and Lots on Jackson and Washington Streets. 15 Building and Business lots in and a- • und Dublin. 3 Dwelling Houses well located in Dublin. 2 mall 2 room Dwelling Houses. (1 Building^and Business lots at Bruton Station, D. & . R. R. ’• K) Acre place, Sow Mill Bonanza, Bruton Station. D. & . R. R. . «00 Acre place i n 8 settlements 11 miles west of Dublin. Bargain Lands Bought and 8old a Specialty. 28 Shares D. A . I Li. nk. Cneaj Patronage Solicited. Buyers anted. Prompt attention given to all Business. 1’AttMt.Rs Vi antkd— Arno . Julius A. Burney, General Beal state and (ol lecting Agency. SSHT*Life insurance on good terms Send in your ngouud got ostimato of Widow CiiiUu’m Club. A well-known gentleman called on the Widow Guilia. During an interesting conversation—interesting because the widow hud reason* f„r suspecting that the gentleman was •‘bout to propose—Mrs. (Jullin’s lit tle boy entered the room. ••Davy,” said the widow, “can’t you speak?” “Gan if I want to.” “Speak to Mr. Gray.” “Don't want, to right now; will after awhile,” “You are a fine little man,’* said the visitor; “how old are you?” “Five years old.” “Oh, you are not that old,” said tlie widow, with an air of embarrass ment. “Tlmt’s what yon said, any how.” “Davy!” “Said it some time ago ” “David!” “Before he got to coming here.” ••Oh, you are such a young pest. Mr. Gray, please excuse me a mo incut,. I must go out und give io structions about dinner.” IThen the widow had gone the hoy turned to the visitor and uskod: “Did. you como to see oiy maw?” “Well, er— that is, my little man, I came to seo both of you.” “How old are you*” “Oh, not very old.” “Olderti’ my paw?” “How long has your father been dead?” ‘Ain’t dead.” ‘What?” “I say he ain’t dead. Paw and maw fight, on’ paw went away, und one day maw add me not to call him paw any more, lint I do, all the same. How much money have you got?” “Not much.” “Yes you have.” “liow do yon know?” “Aluw told Mrs. Buck that you hud u bushel of mouuy. Are you goi ig to umrry my maw?” •‘You must uot ask such question," Mid the visitor, coloring deeply. “Uuve you got any sen*e? ’ W hy of course. What makes you ask?” “I know.” “Well tell me.” ‘.‘You might git mad.” “Oh, no i won’t.” “Sho ’null?” “Yes.” “Well, mu told Mrs. Buck that you uidn’t have uo sense, hut said she didn’t cure.” The widow entered. “Davy, have you been a guml boy ? \\ by, M r. Gray, you ure noi going io -eavw us?” “Yes madam, I must go.” “Oh, do wuit until *Ler din ner.” “I am not hungry. Good day.” In the evening, when thu katydids begin to file thoir saws, the lonely widow wonder* why Mr. Gray doc* not como to her. Gmv knows. He is paying Ins conrt to an old maid. —Arkansaw Traveler. Do you see the Butcher’s parade? asked the Snake Editor of a casual caller yesterday afternoon. ‘Yes.’ ‘Well, I never sausage a thing be fore.’ •Ha, ha, protty gnodl 1*1 surprise my wife with that when I get When the casual caller arrived at home he said to his wife: ‘My deur, in the Butcher’s parade to day there was a man throwing sausages at the spectators.’ ‘Was there?’ Yes, uud I never saw anything done like that before.’ •Neither did I.’ He waited live minutes for Ins wife to liitigh. and then went out to Wonder how he lost the combination. Pittsburg Chronicle. A young professor in un Illinois university was engaged to bo married to the daughter of u wealthy funner living in one of ine eastern counties of that Slate. On the day of tin wedding the bridegroom was driven in a buggy through a country road in the direction of his prospective faiher in-laws house. Not being fa miliar with the neighborhood he stepped in front of a dilapidated log cubin and i iqtii<e I of a lank man who vvus laming against mil fence; •Is this the way to Mr. Pod der’s?” ‘Yes. That's where the doin’s is to-night; his darter’s going to be hitched.” “Yes.” “Who’s she goiu’ to git.” ‘ A man- named Tompkins,” said the blushiug bridegroom. “is he any good?” “Pretty good stick. I’ve been told. “Has lie got any style?” “Not much.” “Well,” said the old man, with a sign of relief, “I’m glad tie’s such a poor shout., for my gals has got an invite to 11)3 weddm’, an’ I houid nobody could go that couldn’t eat wim forks, but I reckon I’ll let eui go.—Fodder’s two miles straigh aueud.”—Terre Haute Express. . Blaine Not a et teamin'* Two republican leaders who ar< very close to Mr. Blame are reported as having said that he is not a cundi date for the Presidency, and that his name will not he presented to the next national convention of his party unless there is such u demand for his nomination that it would nor be wise to resist it. It will be ditfi cult to make any one believe that Mr. Blaine is uot now doing all that he can to make it impossible for his party to nominate anyone else. His aim is to keep himself prominently before the country, so that when the time for making a nomination comes the rank -and hie of his party will fa vor him. Mr. Blaine is uot a statesman in any sense of the word, hut he is an Able, brilliant man, and an ext-er-ding ly adroit pulitici m. He has succeed ed in pushing Imm-elf to the front, Where men who have a much bettor cluiui to be considered statesmen Have been pma u d by utmost unno ticed. Mr. Blaine’s admirers, of course, consider that ho is a states man, but they would be puzzled to point to anything that ho has over suggested or done which indicates the possession oi statesmanlike quali ties. When he was in Congress in- made smart speeches, hut lie proposed no great measure, and when ho was in the Cabinet he proposed a foreign policy which tickled the fancy of a few. bm wnicl was regarded ns im practicable by tho really ablu men of his party, and which, perhaps, he never meant should be curried into effect. Since ho has been in private lire he has written a loiter proposing that the surplus in the Treasury shall bo distributed among the States. It does not command tho serious uttontion of anybody, either in or out of Congress. When it is said that Mr. Blaine is a fine orator and a orilliant and mag netio man, evervthiug is said for him that can be said. That ho is not a man of great breadth of thought, and that he is so much of a demagogue thut lie is ready to distort facts to ■strongtheh ins arguments, his speech es in Pennsylvania plainly show* His statesments respecting the wages of negro luborers at the South have been proven to be without founda tiofT, and yet he keeps on repealing them. Doubtless he has known all along that they were not correct, [’hey answer his^urpose, however, because they alarm the white went ingmen at the North, und tend to make them believe that their only way to save themselves from grinding poverty is io give the Re- publican parly their united uud en thusiastic support. If Mr. Blaine does not ruiieh tlie Presidency it will uot be because he has not tried to by every avenue which Ins ingenuity could suggest.—Savaunuh News race of stomuehs with legs und arms The legs will lie needed to carry tho stomachs to the trough and the arms to fill It up.—Brooklyn Eaglo. . Men who dew enter publio life, cannot hide under a bush. A fierce light bentsupou their orowns whet he 'hey like it or not, und every hair of their heads gets numbered. In preparing for ibis rnou they should think think, how conspicuous they will become; how tho shape of thoir finger nails uud tho cut of their mustache will bo criticised and luuntioued along with their moral and finuuciur worth, from ono end of the country to tho other.— Boston Herald. Changing tho Subjeot.—Miss Clara —Do you not thigk. Mr. Featherly. tbut Miss iSm th, whom wo met lust evening, is a very plain person? Mr. Featherly—Yes, indeed; i think she is the homeliest girl I over saw, present uon.puny, of course, always ex—er— urn—that is—Yes, she is certuinly a very plain person Are you luwn-tennising any thi season, Miss Clara? Just Like xUaminn. If mothers could always rculize the ideals they represent to thoir children they would ho greatly to encourage in their arduous duties. A lady ruling upon a street car saw a litile boy whom she knew. *8o you have a sistor, Willie,” she remarked pleasantly, “is she a pi city baby?” “She looks Inst like muinmn,” was ihe smiling answer. “What do you cull her,” asked the lady. pirn’s named after mamma answered tho little fellow prompt ly. Everybody was smiling, and to relieve the lady’s embarrassment her friend inquired tho color of the ha by’s hair. ‘It’s the same color as mamma’s,’ he leApouded timidly. A gentleman who had been amused by tlie dialogue asked the wee man if the uew little sister was a good bnby. “Yes, sir,” was the prompt reply 'She is like mamma.” How to Keacli the Massea. How shall we reach the masses? asks a religions paper. Dear broth er, yon cun best roach them with i spoon. Go for thorn with a knife and fork. Hnmanitys tender points is its paunch. Tho conscience of man may bo seared as with a hot iron, but his maw is evor open to impressions. His intellect may bo stunted, but his appotito is a giant. Take him to tho concert or tho thea tre uud he comes away to seek the nearest feeding pliio-j, whore ho may gorge himself before lie sleeps. Tho little struggling church tbut bank rupts itself still furthor bv venturing on a lecture course, finally lifts us- self clear out of debt by a series of support. A man who will not pay fifty cents for a boog, will dump a MftO worth of dinner into his system. A picnic without ton ports of feed to one part of baud, is a flut failure. When we receive a distin guished guest, we feud him; when wo say good byo to an eminent citizen, we give him something to eat. We havo a feast for the wed ding guests, lunch for (he watchers, and a light collation for tho mourners. There ure a thousand restnurunts to one library, yes, more. By and by. if tho principles of orolution are true, this world will bo pooplud by a The Donkey und tho Piano. A Donkey having Heard tho Piano loudly playod and tho pluyor greatly Applauded, became Jealous of his rights and set up u horrible Bmy. “You Infernal Beast, but what do you call that?” doiuuuded us ho rushed forth. Why I intended it for music. Thou lake that!, und that! and that! for your ignumneo, shouted the man, as lie fell upon the Bruyer •with a hoe hundio. moral: A Fox, who found the Beaten Donkey hanging his insulted head in the Fields, asked for und received an explanation, and LheL said: My Frioud, there wusnot so much difference in tho aoiso, but a very great difference in who made it.— Detroit Free Press. A now South has developed since tho close of the civil war, and no bettei proof of t ho fact can bo had than a glance at tho oensus in sorer al parts of the country. The South is becoming a manufacturing dis • riot, is becoming very wealthy, and is increasing in population in the newly-founded inanuinoturing P luces ut a rate that wo A Id surprise t-ven Westerners. Slavery plaAod the Smith far behind tho rest of thu country, but if tho present tremen dous strides wo continued, sho wtll soon dead the world.’ Soul horn newspapers anil pooplo uro very proud of this advancement, and justly so. Thoir power in tho lund ib becoming greater evory day, uud with ouuh day the prospects that it wii] be well usod are also increasing. Wo rimy therefore pardon tho South- ornerB if they arc a little boastful; most pooplo who become rapidly prosperous are so. Tho Northerners were; the Westerners are; tho Southerners will be.—Times, Bruns wick, N. Y. JndgeJ. S. Hook who has been un aspirant for tho judgeship of the Augusta circuit withdraws from the race, und requests his friends to support Judge Kor.oy, the presout incumbent. At u social gathering u few niglus since, says an exehunge, some ono proposod this question: “What shall wo teaeli our daughters?” in a few minutes the following replies were handed in: Touch her that one hundred cents make a uoilur. Teach hor to say “No,” and mean it or say “Yes,’ and stick to it. Touch hor how to weur a calico dress, und wear it like a queen. Teach her to dress for health and com foi l as well an appearance. Touch hor to regurd the morals and httbita, and not money, in se lecting her associates, Teach her thut musio, drawing and intuiting are real accomplish ments in the homo, and ure not to bv neglected, if there ho time and money for their use. Touch her that a good steady, church going mechanic, clerk or teuchor, without a coat, is worth more than forty Joufers in broad cloth. Teach hor this important tiuism: Hiat the more sho livos within her husband’s income, the more mono) they will save and tho further they will bo from thepoorhuiuo. Cotton Beed. There is a heated discussion in the southwest ubout cotton soed. It ap pears that an oil mill monopoly bos fastened its fangs upon that section aud tho farmers aro kicking against it. A lovol-bcaded newspaper man suggests that the planters can control the matter by applying tho seed to the land insleud of selling it to the monopoly. They will thus bo .inde pendent of the price of cotton Med. The Pioayuno shows how it was an unmixed good when it was discover ed that cotton seed could bo muds into oil which could bo put to many uses and be sold at a good price. Tho. farmors at once began to deny their lands tho valuable aid to regenera tion which tho seed can yield. An other oditor says that numbers of plan tat ions in his immediate knowl edge have been almost ruined by tne suicidal polio? of selling the cottqn seed. There was borne excuse for it r he admits, when the seed soM> foir *12 to *16 a ten* but now thorir n* none. The plkwter can only net about 92 a ton for his seed, whereas tf put on the laud it is worth *10 at to at. Why may noc pluntors in associa tion do with thoir cotton seed what Mr. Edward Atkinson recommended tl On to do with their cotton ginning Why lhey do not reulizo tho seed for oil and fertilizers on thoir own no- oount? Tho South is losing much of her legitimate profit, by ignorance of do- mualic ad vantages or failure to prac tically apply them. Strangers got our surplus by superior knowledge aud diligence.—Augusta Chroni cle. Cast GKum. Halls. Friedrich Siomons, of Dtosdeo,. has succeeded in casting glass in tho same way as metal is cast, and ob taining an article corresponding to east medal. The oast glass is hard, not daror in production than cast iron, and has tho advantage of trans parency, so that all flaws can bo detected before it is appliod\to«proc- tical use. I; will bo much less ex posed to injury from atmosphere in* lluencos than iron. The process of production is not diflloutt, tho chief feature being rapid cooling. Thee hardness and resisting power of llnr east glass are so great that experi ments aro being just now carried out at the Siemens gluss foundry at Dresdon with tho purpose of ascer taining whether the material could bo employed for rails on rail ways. A sample of ehoso glass sleepers recently tested at the Anderson Foun dry Company (Limited), Glascow, resisted a fulling weight of 3f cwt., fulling upon a rail placep upon tho sleeper set in sand ballast, commenc ing at 6 inches aud rising by suc ceeding increments of 6 inches up to 9 feet 6 inches—tho maximum elovution to which tho test ram could bo elevatod—without effect until the blow had been repeated for the sixth time. Cast iron sleepers ntj expected to withstand a similar test up to7 feet only. The cost of gla*s sleepers wdl be considerably less than that of either oast iron or steel, while the material is practica ble imperishable us regatds climatic changes and influence*, or tho rava« ges of such insects ae the white ant.—Scientific American. Tho motamorphosis undergone by eastern newspaper report* traveling west is ugaiu illustrated. A Buffalo journal having another that h public clook wus to be put up in that town) the dock grew bigger and bigger as the report travelled toward the Rocky mountains until now wo learn from Arizona that Buffalo is to kuro a clock 76 feel Ml diameter and elevated 0OO)fvot above the street, with fignres eight foot in length and a steam engiuo to wind it up, and it is believed that pooplo in Cincinnati will be able to tell the tiiuo by it with ll* aid of telclcopes.