Newspaper Page Text
T» ■?
£ *v ret iRife
as SY'J* ilii®
&
VOL II.
THE LAST EAR OF COHN.
Yes, neighbor, I am purely now,
Jane, my wife you know.
1b gettiu' pale nughty ’peaked feeble, sho'. too,
an
J sometimes see too cormier of
litt'e threadbare shawl
A steal in’ upward to her fail; eyes to
ketch lire tears that
I see them, an’ I whistle, but
lump within my throat,
In spite of all my efforts, puts a
quaver in the note.
You know that to be merry, with
five little mouths to feed,
A-knowiu’ they haitfit half enough,
is pretty hard, indeed,
Fur what I’m tedia’ you is true, as
shore as you are born,
The bailiff’s leveled on an’ tuk the
last ye.u' of my corn.
Jest letnmo _ , nave your hnneabit, ,
an
puss think, your phig o’ Weed,
An’then I perhaps, I may
find courage to perCeod.
You richeriect that mule 1 bought,
an’ give tny mte b istdes?
Well, in the busiest plowin’ time,
the critter up’n died:
So then we hud to scuffle roun’, an’
break my Jimmie’s steer,
A if make out jest the best wo could
the balance of the year.
5 he drouth, hit. cut the corn crap off,
not bait a ii crap was made.
It set. in then to rainin’ like as if ii
bad been pa d,
Tell what with drouth an’ drowndia’
an’ bad luck of every sort,
The cotton shedded half its fruit, an’
turned out pow’ful short.
J promised two bales fur the rent.
an’ fur the mule two more,
An’ iowei to git my eight or nine,
fa but barely the gathered four,
consequeij.be cotton went to
pay them what 1 ow d,
Which leg me nary cent to sp. ed us
down the New Year's road.
Yet, I'll not grumble, neighbor, not
withstandin' of this thorn,
Fur God lie gave the harvest tho’ the
baiHil' took the corn.
’
Yet, 'aa’ pardner when the buffiff
tuk Unit corn away.
it was the saddest, saddest time I’ve
seen in many a day;
Fur’twas the on y grub we bad, an'
when twus sacked an tied.
Fivtrehuaren knew just wnat .
meant, an’ ail sot down an’ cried.
Misfortunes never singly opme, J.
think I’ve licetd it said;
We’d been a livin’ thou ten meat,now
we were thouten bread,
So w hat was left for me to do bu ;
kill ptro faithful Ball,
Who’c made our crap iu summer
time, an’ hauled it in the full:
Who’d plow, his tongue a Rangin’
out, jest like a horse we said,
An’ pick Ins livm’ after night when
we were snug in b id,
To kill that gentle tittle hard. beast, that
worked for us so
1 tell you 'twas the ungodUeat task
life ever set me, pard; alius
But poverty an’ sentiment, they
ill agree,
An’ so I stayed that little steer mos'
like a child to me.
The children cried again, at fust,
then laughed that we forlorn,
Had now enough of meat, altho’ the
bailin'Lad the corn.
My wife had sot Irer heart upon a
But she bran will new hatter Sunday gown, the old
wear so
frazz'ed, thin an’ brown:
An’ Santy Ciaus, the children
thought would come Christmas Eve,
To fill with gimcracks all their
socks before he tuk his leave;
But Santy is a restererat, he is, fur
sartin shove,
A humpin’ ’long to see t
ekipprn’ all the pore.
Sore disappmted were th n 1, an’ I
among the rest,
Because I could not shoe them all,
nor have them warmly dressed.
My credit, it had given out down
An’ yonder paid at the store, I’d had,
till I for what
Fur they’d let me have balance no more; stood,
ginst journals me yet a
their to adorn, the’d
A notwiihstandiu’ of the fact’,
sent and got ray corn.
God knows I worked the blessed
year, an’ ’twas no fault of mine
That craps fell short an’ notes come
due an’ I come out behioe;
’Tie hut the same old problem tried,
thun solved these many years,
The landlord thrives upon the rent
wet with his tenants tears:
An’ tenants they grow shiftless, pard,
despair, and try no more,
£ ‘OC R AMBITION IS TO MAKE A VERACIOUS WORK, RELIABLE
IN ITS STATEMENTS, CANDID IN ITS CONCLUSIONS, AND JUST IN ITS VIEWS.”
Who.! Poverty forever stands a
g^rdm ol their door.
Ac ° in thpm •)« has t ii mv t
be •' ’
owed'it, ?r ho o-i-u ip--'••t ui
I but tJwv mwhfer mixed
some Ii 1 .!; with their /rail:
Fur these in ad times, as shore as
we are set tin’ on this 1. nee,
‘ “"“m- S'Si ml I!-md omits. °
How I shai'i feed my little chaps, an’
trifc along t his y ear,
Is sonietmiv I have thunk erbout,
but can’t make very clear;
But, yet, I ll trust the l.ord of all
who doth the sparrow see,
Au* if we’re cot too cuss* d mean,
He'll keer f-.tr mine au’ me;
Au’ then, perhaps, some day, He’ll
take us to a better work,
An’lead us rouu’ the guiding street-',
an’ tin o’the gates of pearl,
Whar Gabriel stands a shiuin, thar
an’bio win’of his horn,
An’bailiffs never ootne to take the
last year of your corn,
Montieello, G a. — W. T, Dumas.
_____________
It is said that a arm who was cy
erloaded with ‘’the orphan maker”
asked a hotel waiter hero the other
night “if the marshal had been
there since supper?” The waiter
him ‘yes.’ Whereupon the
tipsy fellow whispered to the wail
er “Was he by himself, or did he
have mo with him? and if so, he’s
lo-tnie, of I’ve lost him.”—Coving
Enterprise.
Tbe Perry Journal combats the
idea that eveay man can be a farmer
”Auy man,” the Journal says, ’’can
plant and cultivate the soil, in some
way, but he is not a farmer in the
true sen e of the term who
Jy fails to gather more that enough
».&ch year to supply the bare neces
sities for himself and those depend
cut upon lim, Every day of the year
ou the farm there is oc—
ccsion to pxerciso judgment, based
Tir ° n in - clH S- nt observation. Much
depends upon the method of pro
paring dm laud, applying the
manure.’pitching” tho crops,
eui.ivaiiog and harvesting. The
successful farmer is busy all the time,
auu a 118 m - WlUgenee . ... ... is • lire ... eu
‘
and used -
A good joke is told on a certain
official of Greene couuty, who was
once upon.?, time a farmer. When
commercial fertilizers were fuot put
on tho market, agents went to the
farmers direct and sold them. One
day an ageut tackled the young
farmer above mentioned and
induced him to buy a few sacks of
fertilizer. ’These were shipped to the
nearest railroad station and one
(Saturday the ycung fanner drove
over for them. They were piled in
in the wagon and the farmer started
home. A short way out from town
he pitched everyone of the sacks in
to„a gully, and reaching home wrote
the agent as follows: ’,You’ll find
your old guano m a a gully near the
depot. I wouldn’t receive it, for when
it got here the durn stuff was spiled
,o bud a man couldn’t get in half a
mile of it.” The agent lot him off
from payment.
The Southern Farm, Mr. Henry
W. Grady’s farmers’ magazine for
is out and is a superb book
of sixty pages. Mr, Grady states iri
^iiiblc-kade l 1 editorial that the
of the South depends on her
iculture—that a farmers’ maga
gets closer to h;m than any
paper, and that The Southern
Farm shall do more to solve the j
problem than ,, other ,,
farmers any pa
p°r published. Dr. Vv, L. Jones, is
and among the contributors
are tup Am Mark W. Johnson, W.
I, t. Onne, r <j. ■ H. tt Miller M -n and < s ■ ’' m-f, orc ® a of I
well known writers. I^e
hand of.Mr. Grady, himself, is seen
in much of the work, and The Farm
admirable all through. One
called “Dm knowledge page’
has as much information a3 ordi
nary magazines, 'i he I arm is sent
$1.00 a year, or 81.65 with the
Send for it.
GRAY, GEORGIA, SATURDAY. FEBRUARY 2, 1889.
j LEG A L ADVERTISEMENTS
——*----------------
Ordinary’s Office, Jones Co., On,
January 29th 1889.
Whereas, \V, P. Clover the admin
istr..tor on Estate of John J. Glover
deco d. appues to me tor Dismission
from 8aid ^ministration. Tne.se are
therefore to cite and admonish all
persons concerned to show cause at
this office, if any they have to thecon
trary on or by the first Monday iu
May next. Witness my hand offiei
ally. R. T. ROSA Ordinary,
ordinary’s Office, Junes Co., Ga.
January 29th 1889.
Whereas, W, P, Glover applies to
me for administration with the will
annexed Glover deck), on Estate said of Nathaniel These! S.j
of county.
are * * ■*—“ a " rr 1
concerned to show cause at this
fiee if any they have to the contrary^
on or by the first Monday in March
next. Witness ray hand officially, f
11. T. ROSS’. Ordinary. ■ :
Ordinary’s Office, Jones Co., Gu. i
January 29th 1889.
Whereas, John F. Anderson AdmV
on Estate of Martin R. Mulone rleo’d,
applh-s to me for Dismission from
raid Estate. These are to" cite and
a sho I monish all at persons this office concerned if they vj
w cause any
have to the contrary on or by tic
first Monday in May next.
Witness, my hand officially,
R. T. ROSS, Ordinary;
Ordinary’s Office, Jones Co., Ga.
January S9th
Whereas,W.* 1. McKay ap
plies to me for administration on
Estate of Hugh D. McKay, Jr. da~
ceased ^iteaii^d late of Jones admoii county, isH 11 Tl|ejte
j ^ 4P j* P«W«
concerned to snow cause a# trtV» ex
^ Ce H any they have to the contrary
on or by the first Monday in March
next. Witness my hand officially.
It. T. ROSS, Ordinary.
Ordinary’s Office, Jonet Co , Ga.
Nov. 17th 1888.
Whereas, Pleasant R. Bird, Exe
cutor ot Estate John W. Bird de
ceased, applies to mo for Dismis
sion. These are to cite a'd persons
concerned to show cause if any
they have to the contrary at this
office on or by the first Monday
in March next.
Witness my hand officially,
It, T. ItOSS, Ordinary,
BJ9
Jones County Sharif’s Sale.
G E< > KG IA—J ones County.
MIL I: bo sold before the Court
house in Clinton during the legal
hours of sale on the first Tuesday in
February next at public outcry four
mules to-wit; one black mine mule,
one black horse mule, one sorrel
horse mule and one sorrel mare mule
as the property of R. J Turner to
satisfy one (i fa in Jones Superior
Court in favor of A. H Stephens vs.
Thos. J Miller Principal and S. T
Bragg and II. J Turner Sureties.
Said mules found in the po-sesion of
Ji, J Turner. This the 3rd day of
Jan 1889. W, W. BARRON.
Sheriff Jone3 County.
GEORGIA— Jones County.
WILL be sold before theCourt
Imuse at Clinton Ga., during the
legal sale hours, on the first Tues
dayin F , bl . uary 1880 at public out
cr y ninety five acres of land more or
less in Hammonds Dist. said State
and county, bounded by lands of H.
B- Rioley, G W Waynard and others
known as the W T Childs place and
now in hi 3 posne-ion, Jevierl on as ihe
property of said W T Childs by vir
tu ■ of one fi fa from Jones Superior
Court in favor of W B. & O. (L
Sparks vg W, T Childs and W. A
Malone. Written notice served on
d. I Childs tenant in possession,
IV. W. BARRON,
Jan 3rd 1889. Sheriff Jones Co v
GEORGIA-Jones County.
”1(1 T .„ i tie sold ,, , beioie , the Court
floute door in Clinton during t he
h^iLli-onrs of sale on the first Tnes
■ J I” 0) Y uoxt pul l;c outcry
SiufuctuJed , Xy Z FarqS*
B
t 0 , one rubber bolt and engine fix
turog as too property of 11. J. Mar
|hall Superior to s disfy one in ti fit from Jones
Court favor of John 8.
fjiewnrt & Son for use &c vs R. E
li. llnthingb, J shall. I’li ii Said lip Hutchings and
Mai property found
in possession of and pointed out by
suid H. J. Marshall. Jan. 2ud 1889.
VV. W. BARRON,
Sheriff Jonoa Co.
EXECUTOR’S SALE.
GEORGIA—Jones County.
Will bo sold before the Court
Hou80 door > in the town of Clinton
] hofl) ;s&r.£ ot HCll0) t ’ ho ss. followinjc J
lega . s
wild lands, belonging to the estate
of John deceased. 8. Walker, late of said
county
Lot No, 3G3—8th of Ware. Lot
221—9th of Ware, Lot No 41—
14th of Decatur, Lot No. 247—27th
Decatur, Lots No’s 172 and 173—
1st of Lee. Lots Nu’e 260 and 21)1—
12th of Wilcox, Lot No 39—I3th ot
Habersham, Lot No 90—4th of
Carroll, Lot No 61—27th 2nd of
Gilmer, Lot No 112—!2t,h 1st of
Lumpkin, Fannin, Lot Lot No No 2-40—1st 284—7th 4th 1st of of
Polk, Lot No 118—3rd 2nd of
Cherokee and half interest in Lot
No 285—12th 4th of Walker. Sold by
authority of the last will and testa
ment of the said John S. Walker,
dec’d, for divisions among the heirs,
Terms Cash. Jan. 3rd 1889.
F. J. WALKER,
J.H. WALKER.
Executors.
CovinPton & Macon R. R.
TIME TABLE, No. 1,
T<> atl'aftt at. 7:00 a. in. Monday
December 10th, 1888.
jlETVv Ml.N .MAGON and ATJiENB
(North Bound.)
r>. •A. 1
STAllONS. Loci’! l*Vt.
Aceoin. only. Daily fell!).
Sun. X
Lv MACON! 0 00 a m 7.00am
Van Massey lSureiib Mil !) 0 42 Z4 7:10 7:10
.,.
Roberts.... 7:22
Morton..... 7 did
Grays...... 7:42
Franks..... II 12 7 :lfi
Rarrons.... I! 24 7:54
Wayside. ... 11 .‘SO 7:57
Round Oak. i L 48 8:05 ,
Hillsboro. • 12 2s j) ru X:l!)
Grassftold. . 12 62 K-27
Minneta.... 1 22 8;42
M onticello.. 1 18 8:48
Macber,..... 2 12 Sl'ltJ
Marco...... 8 00 0:32
Godfrey.... 8 00 0:42
M adison... 4 55 p m — W 10 55
10 05
Florence.... 5 49 11 2J
Farmington 0 31 1 41
Gould .. ... 050 150
Wulkinsville 7 08 1159
While Hull.. 7 14 12 17 l>
Ar. Athens.,, 8 20 p tn Til 12 :i5m
BETWEEN MACON & ATHENS
(South Bound)
2 . t. o
STATIONS Fast Lc’l Ft Acconi.
Mail. Daily Sunday
Daily x Fun only.
Ar MACON (i p m <100 p in
5 45
Van Horen 0 5 35
Roberts. ., JO 5 24
Morton ... 5 5 54
G rites...... 5 4 38
Franks.... 5 4 12
Wayside... Barrens ■ (5 1.5 4 3 00 34
Round Hillsboro.. Oakj5 5 3 3 00 39
Grass Hold 1 2:«
Minneta... 4 2 00
Montieello I 1 48
Mac,dten.... 1 12 52
Marco-.. 12 28
Godfrey ... 10
Madison... Tr 10 35 a m
Florence 0 57 057
0 32 9 32
Wutkinnville', Gould ... j J 9 21 9 21
36 9 10 C 7 i'i’3
White Hall l 18 8 SO XX
LvATHKNiS 1 100pm 8 80pm p ni
A G. Craig,
Gen. Pass Agt*
A. J. MoEVOY, Supcrintendant.
Loans Negotiated
On Farms & Town Property
IS BIBB AND ADJOINING COUNTIES.
ELLIOTT ESTES & 00
318 Second St. j - Macon Ga
NO, 12.
m HEEL l C .
am ins. SB ® hits.
Correct and Latest Style
THE LOWEST PRICES.
Send us your orders and come to see us when in Macon.
Goods sent C. O. D. unless city reference is given.
EADS, NEEL & CO,
557CHEURY ST
T. W. BOND’S
we 1811 Hill
Beds Free to Customers.
?®5T °F WifT? HQW
jliQARp AND JoBACCOg
--AT THE BAR,
FILLING JUGS AND BOTTLES A SPECIALTY.
Come once and you’ll conic again.
Morgans Corner, Macon, Ga
9-8—if.
SHIP YOUR COTTON TO
V. F. PRICE, HUM, MM, Si
—, does strictly a
COTTON BUSINESS
And will get highest market price for cotton.
XI15 LENDS
MONEY
In Spring at low rate of interest.—w-ii-9-20-3m.
W. T. WOMACK.
DHAUEB IN
Farmer’s Supplies and
General Merchandise,
Such as are kept in first-class houses, I am also prepared to pay
highest market prices for cotton as I do the work my sell and save
usual warehouse expenses. Cotton shipped to me will receive my
al attention.
All cotton in store fullly protected by insurance.
BiUHS Am TIES
Constantly on hand at the lowest prices, and orders for same and
shipments of cotton solicited, Very Respectfully,
W. T. WOMAGK,
9-—8 —3 1&~~~ 1888. EAST MACONjGA.