Newspaper Page Text
T b e i d a j,
Loath, of William W. Carnes.
This gentleman died at Montezuma,
on the 2Glb instant, after a protract
ed sickness occasioned from loug con
finement, as a piisoner of war af er
\\ e trust we violate no propriety in
giving this private letter to the public.
Mr. Oimc, Jun’r would say to Mr.
Hicks, in reply, he need feel no regret
in parting with the Recorder, if be will
new advertisements;
post ornca.
Mii.ledgitille, Jan. 18, 1872.
From ami after this date, Mails will cl 08 e as
follows :
the surrender, at the age of forty-four, do us the honor to be its reader the bal
ance of his days, as be will be most bap-
leaving a mother, sister, wife, daughter,
and large circle of friends and relatives
to mourn their loss. Burn and reared
in Milledgeville, in early
A LUXURY OF THE PERIOD.
py to furnish it to him. At a conveni
ent opportunity the requested photo-
Mm!s for Atlanta and Augusta and all point* migrated to South-west'Georeia where
beyono. going North nnd West, will close at 8 1 . ° 1 " co *' weor g*a, wnere
o'clock a. in
Mails for Macon and Southwestern Road and
points beyond, going Southwest close* at 5
o'clock p. nr.
Mails for Savannah and Florida close* at
2; 15 p. m.
Eatonton and Monticello mail closes at S;45
p. ro.
Office hours from 7 a. m. until G:30 p. m.
Office opens on Sundays from 8 until 9:30
a. m. Money Orders obtained iron 7 a. m. uh-
til 5 p.m.
manhood be f> ra ph be cheerfully sent. Such an
expression of affection is very grateful
the remainder of bis life was spent. Mr. from one of the oldest patrons of the
&itn Qicecton).
ClTY GOVERNMENT.
Mayor—Samuel Walker.
Board ol Aldermen—F B Mapp, E Trice,
T A Caraker, Jacob Caraker, J H McCowb]
Henry Temple.
Clerk and Treasurer—Peter Fair.
Marshal—J B Fair. Policeman—T Tuttle.
Deputy Marshal and Street Overseer—Peter
Ferrell.
Sexton—F Beeland.
City Surveyor—C T Bayne.
City Auctioneer—S J Kidd.
Finance Committee—T A Caraker, Temples.
Mapp.
Street Committee—J Caraker, Trice, Mc-
Coaib. a
Land Committee—MeComb, J Caraker,
Trice.
Cemetery Committee—Temples, Mapp, T A
Caraker,
Board meets 1st and 3d Wednesday nights
in each month.
j Carnes, was, for a number of years, a
member of the Baptist Church, and am- I
pie is the testimony to his active, con
sistent and zealous piety. With cheer
ful resignation ho received the final
summons to a blissful immortality.
The Springtime Cometh The
flight of the Kimball’s and other birds
of passage, towards Canada, is noted in
the At.anta papers. We hear of no re
grets. Jolm alone remains. Good-bye,
John
Recorder.
Wrightsvii.le, Ga. Jau 18, ’72.
Messrs. Harrison Orme.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
.Judge M R Bell, Ordinary, office in Masonic
Hull.
PL Fair, Clerk Sup’r Court, office ia Ma
sonic Hall.
Obadiah Arnold, Sheriff, office in the Mason
ic Hall.
0 1’ Bonner, Deputy Sheriff, lives in the
country.
Josias Marshall, Rec’r Tax Returns—at
Lost Office.
L N Callaway, Tax Collsctor, office at his
store,
11 Temples, County Treasury,office at his
store.
Isaac Cushing. Coroner, re* on Wilksonst,
John (j entry, Constable, rss on Wayne tt,
near the Factory.
CIIUCII DI RECTORY.
BAPTIST CHURCII.
Service 1st and 3d Sundays in each month,
at 11 o'clock a m and 7 pm.
Sabbath school at 9| o’clock a m. S N
Boughten.supl, Rev D E Bvti.icr, Pastor.
METHODIST CHURCH
Hours of service on Sunday: 11 o’ clock, a
in, and 7 p m.
Sunday school 3 o’clock p m—W E Frauk-
land, superintendent.
Prayer meeting; every Wednesday at 7
a m. Rev A J Jarrell, Pastor.
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCII
Services every Sabbath (except the second
in each month) at 11 a ni and 7 p m.
Sabbath school at 9 1-2 am T T Windsor
superintendent.
Prayer meeting every Friday at 4 o’clock
a m.
Prayer meeting every Wednesday at 4 p m.
Rev C W Lane, Pastor.
The Epiaopal Church has no Pastor At
present.
MASONIC
Benevolent Lodge, No. 3, F A M, meets
first and second Saturday nights of each month
at Masonic Hall- J C SHEA, W # M #
O D Case, secretary.
Temple Chapter meets the second and
fourth Saturday nights in each month.
S G WHITE, H # P,
G D Case, secretary.
Milledgeville Lodge of Perfection, A A S R
meets every Monday night.
SAMUEL G WHITE, S # P, G„ M #
Geo D Cask.Exc Grand £ec’y.
The Snow, the Snow, the beautiful
Snow. Well, it snowed like forty, in
these diggins, last Thursday, and the
boy8 snow-balled like forty, and the
next day it rained like forty and d/ied
up the snow, i e the rain did it. To us,
seated by a good fire and gazing through
the window, it looked beautiful, indeed,
as it reclined, in glistening sheen, on
the bosom of the earth, enveloping all
the face of nature, except the most prom- I
inont fcautures.
A B'l/icose Ethiop.—James Scallen-
ger, of equatorial descent, did not relish
the snow balls thrown at him by some
white boys, last Thursday, retaliated
with brickbats, one of which badly cut
the chin of a little boy, In default of
a two hundred dollar bond, Jeeraes pino 8
in jail, awaiting the grand assizes.
♦ -sO- ♦
Goon Templars. — Milledga v i 11 o
Lodge, last Friday night, elected the
following corps of officers for the ensu
ing quarter, after initiating four new
members and electing eight :
W. W. Williamson, W. C. T.
Miss Annie Orme, W. Y. T.
T. T. Windsor, W. C.
E. P. Laue, W. S.
Ed. Bayne, W. F, S.
G. W. Caraker, W. T.
0. E. Ringland, W. M.
D. S. House, I. G.
C. T. Wall, O. G.
The Lodge is in a flourishing condi
tion and enlarging its borders, despite
the hostility of the G. W. C. T.
Gentlemen : I inclose you two dok
lars to pay for the Southern Recorder for
one yeai. I had ordered my paper dis
continued, and it had been discontinued
sometime before the time for which I had
paid expired. Vou recommenced send
ing it to me about this time last year,
without orders. I havo been taking and
reading the Recorder since 1S24, and it
is not because of any dissatisfaction on
m 7 P ar C that J now cease to take it.
My time and means admonish me to
letiench in ail my expenditures of time
and money. You will therefore please
discontinue my paper.
Respectfully, yours,
JAMES HICKS.
P. S. I said I had taken the Record
er and read it since 1S24. I took it in
company with another person in 1S24,
and went IS miles to the Post Office to
get it. In 1S25 we made up a club and
took several papers. In JS29 or ’30, ,
the Southron was sent to mo and the !
SOL
PACIFIC
U B L E
(SUil
o.
J.
Hie Great Southern Tonic
—AND—
Universally Popular Stomachic and
Appetizer.
BETTER TONIC THAN QUININE
Popularity is a pretty good guarantee of
merit ill this scrutinizing and intelligent age.
and tried by this criterion SUMTER BIT
TERS stands fiist among the invigorating and
regulating medicines of the present day.
OLD PREJUDICES ARE DYING OUT.
Everybody says SUMTER BITTERS
Cure* Dyspepsia,
Prevents Chills and Fever,
Creates Appetite,
Restores the Nerves,
Cures Debility,
Purifies the Blood,
Restores Tone to the Stomach,
Pleasant to the Taste,
Exhilarating to the Body,
And is the most
POPULAR BITTERS
r°7 U[Ul1 V s seni l0 “ e the For 6a i e by L< W. HUNT & CO
Reeoider was discontinued for a month Milledgeville, Ga.
ot so Since that time, I have been a I For sale bv A FT TURD^OVr A-
regular subscriber and reader of the na-i CO a.?,,*. rL ' BIRDSONG &.
- the pa
per. ^ regret parting with it. It seems
like a second separation from my old
friend, the late lamented R. M. Orme,
Seu’r. I would say to Mr. Onne, Juu’r,’
I have an album in which I put the
photographs of some of the old worthies
of my acquaintance, and would be very
much pleased to have one of his father’s
photographs, and assure him it shall be
placed in good company—such as (he
late Judge Wm. W. Holt, Gen. Eli
Dairen, Gen. R. F. Lee, Stonewall
Jackson, and others of like
This is some consolation
the friends of long ago.
notoriety,
for the loss of
J. H.
CO., Sparta, Ga.
jan29—r p
O. MATHEWSON,
fox* fixe Company.
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
PRICE REDUCED!
$48 Per Ton Cash; $55 Without Interest on time, No Charge for Drayage.
This GUANO is well known in the fntt™ f, • ... .
For specific lerms, apply !o“ *•“«• *romporfUcn ..e ,..m,„ ,u, i„ elof „, a .
JOHN S. REESE & CO., General Agents, Bahiraore, Md * ’ Agen,> A " g " s,a - G<1 -
FOUND AT LAST !
An Antidote for
Fever & Ague.
I. 0. G. T.
Milledgeville Lodge, No 115. meets in the
Senate Chamber at the State House on every
Friday evening at 7 o’clock.
C P Crawford, W C T
E P Lane, secretary.
Cold Water Templars meet at the State-
House every Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock.
Portrait Painting.—We are to have a
Portrait Painter among us. Mr. F. J.
Fisher, the accomplished Southern Por
trait and Landscape painter, is now on
the seacoast of Georgia engaged in
making a great historical painting of
GEN. R. E. LEE at the tomb of his fath
er—truly representing an actual occur
rence at Dungeness, Georgia, in the
Spring of 1S70. Thence, Mr. Fisher
will come to our city for a brief sojonm.
His arrival will be duly announced.
Elegantly accomplished in his art by
long practice and European study, lie
will afford to onr citizens a rare opportu
nity of procuring portraits in oil colors
of themselves and their friends.
A Good Thing—The publishers of
Our Satukdav Night, Macon, Ga..
write tlie names of their new subscribers
upon a slip of paper and put them in a
box, and every Friday draw one name
out and present the lucky person with
S5 in greenbacks. They publish the
name drawing in their paper the next
day. As the subscription price is only
$2 a yaar in advance, this plan affords
many the privilege of getting a good
family paper for oue year and $5 be-
"i*.ill:
*/i
PACIFIC GUANO COMPANY’S
Compound Acid Phosphate of Lime,
For Composting with Cotton Seed.
PREPARED UNDER THE SUPERINTENDENCE OF DR. Si. JULIES RAVENEL, Charleston, S. C.
Pr ice Reduced!
This article as above stated, is prepared tor Composting with Cotton seed
necessary m to°make it effective?'* ^ vvei °^ lt of article and cottonseed, furm sires the cotton sooJ with the Soluble Phosphate, which i 3
applied at fro P m J00to U 600p^n d d e sperawe r oJmore. Week8befOreplant!n?tirae,in * rder ^ ha,rdecom PO s i t,onma y take place, and should be
General experience for two years has shown Hie . . ,
This acid Phosphate is now put into market at the low price of *30 Defton* 101 "! 1 ’* « e % ctire Fertilizer for Cotton and Cord,
rate every, planter can snpply himself with a first class FertUizer aJ t minimon oatlay $ p« acre ’ ^ ( "° dra ^ e) at whi ° h
For specific terms apply to
A Full supply of Peruvian Guano, Ground Bone and L A f !'t! Vific G -"° Cornpa’ny,' Ws™, Ga.
and secure a
sides. It emit at once
chance at a good thing.
Address Links, Wing & Smith,
Macon, Ga.
SAMUEL A. COOK.
Grocery and Provision Market.
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
Bacon, Flour, Sugar, Coffee, Fine Teas, Sy
rup, Hams, Pickled Beef, Beef Tongues,
Breakfast Bacon, Lard, Butter, Cheese, Crack
ers (of all kinds.) Soaps, Starch, Soda, Can
dles, Brooms, Buckets, Baskets, Tubs. &c.,
&e. Next door to the Hotel. Give ns a call,
TERMS CASH.
j». - i9i3m.
Bonham’s Drawing Boom Entertain
ment
Of last night will be repeated, with
change of programme, to-night, at New
ell’s Hall. Mr. B. is an artist of very
decided talent. His selections arc made
with excellent taste and their rendition
is superb. His perception and persona-
atiou of the ludicrous, are delicate, re
fined, exquisite—his singing truly pa- ■
thetic. And better than all, you feel
that you are entertained by a gentle
man as well as an artist. ’There is no
coarse buffoonery, or pandering to de
praved taste, even the drollest rusticity.
The “manipulation of his featuies” is
in keeping with his acting, tiuly mirth-
compelling. What more can we say ?
e went, we saw, we heard, we laughed
internally, externally—yea, verily, aloud,
for which latter indiscretion we are ex
cusable, as wo could not help it, though
the weather was cold enough to freeze
the mercury iu the thermometer, nearly.
ie, that have spent all the winter, out
o’nights, at very indifferent shows, go to
Newell's Hall to-night and you will get
the worth of your money, truly,
A worthy Kentucky farmer in trying
to accouut for the ease with which he
plowed Lis land with a Collins Steel
Flow, said “he believed there must be an
oil in the steel, which oozed oat and
greased the surfaces, thereby making the
pLw run easier thau any other kind.”
Through the Bible ix GO Hours.
A Connecticut clergyman recently an
nounced from the pulpit that he had
heard a man say that he had read the
Bible through in sixty hours. Deters
mined to ascertain whether the individ
ual told the truth, he set about it him
self, and read the whole of it aloud to
his wife in fifty-nine bouts and some
thing ovor thirty minutes. He read
sometimes an hour and sometimes two
houas a day, keeping the exact time,
with the result indicated—Exchange.
How many hereabouts have never
read through the Bible, because of the
seeming vastness of the undertaking ?
One hour a day, just before bed time,
will accomplish it every two months, six
times a year. Try it.
•‘There was a frog wh o lived in a *pring,
He caught such a cold that he could not sing.”
Poor, unfortunate Batruchiau ! In
what a sad plight he must have been.
And yet his misfortune .was one that of
ten befalls singers. Many a once tune
ful voice among those who belong to the
‘‘genus homo” is utterly spoiled ly “cold j
iu the head,” or cn the lungs, or both
combined. For the abovo mentioned
“croaker” wa are not aware that any
remedy was ever devised ; but we re
juice to know that all human singers may
keep their head clear and their throats
in tune by a timely »se of Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy, and Dr. Pierce’s Gol
den Medical Discovery, both of which
are sold by druggists.
A Stable Institution.—Just at the
period when all stable-men where com
plaining that the horse-ointments of the
day were nnstable remedies, the Mus
tang Liniment made its entree in
I Missouri, without any flourish of truui-
! pets, and within oue year, became the
favorite embrocation for the external
distempers and injuries of horses and
cattle in all the Western and Southern
States. From that time to this, it has
never had a rival in the estimation of ac
complished horsemen ; nor is its house
hold reputation as a cure for rheuma
tism, neuralgia, sore nipples and caked
breasts, tumors, mumps, sore throat, ear
ache, toothache, brui»e3, hums, wounds
and sprains, a whit behind its celebrity
as a horse Liniment. The Mothers of
America know its value, and apply it
promptly to the external injuries of the
“rising generation,” and in fact there is
not a city or township in the United
States where the Mustang Liniment is
not iegarded by both sexes aud every
class, asa blessing to the connnauify.
rp It.
A valuable Agnr.ultural Journal, Sent
Three Months FREE. We have made
arrangements with the publishers of the
American Stock Journal to send three
monihly numbers gratis and post paid
to all cur subscribers who apply for them.
I 1 armers and Stock Breeders should
avail themselves of this generous offer,
as the three numbers contain Lear 100
pages of choice original articles, on Ve
terinary Science, Farming, Stock Breed
ing, Dairying, Poultry Breeding, etc.,
etc., handsomely illustrated with en
gravings. Also a great number of valu
able recipes for the cure of various dis
eases to which Horses, Cattle, Sheep,
Swine, Poultry. &c., are liable. Ad
dress N. P. BOYER & Co., Publishers,
Parkesburg, Pa.
Kingst)ee, S. G., Dec. 31, 1869.
MR. B. F. MOISE :—Dear Sir: I deem
il lDj- duty and only au act of justice to your
self, that I should make t he following state
ment, coming as it does from one who for
many year* had no faith in “ Patent Medi
cines,’ and I have persistenty refused to use
them for any purpose whatever, I must say
that I have used your Fever and Ague Pills in
my practice this Fall, and hare never in the
first instanea failed to relieve my patients. I
have now frequent call* in my drug store for
your Fever and Ague Pills. I am averse to
giving large quantities of quinine,or continuing
its use long, aud I can safely gey that M oise’s
Fever and Ague Pills fills it place and leave*
the patient uo unpleasant symptoms. I wish
that you may have the satisfaction of knowing
that your “Fever and Ague Pills” have re
lieved many under my treatment when other
medicines that I have tried have failed to do.
Yours respectfully,
J. S. BROCKINTON, M. D.
For sale by L. W. HUNT & CO.,
Milledgeville, Ga.
For gale by A. H. BIRDSONG &
CO., Sparta, Ga.
jan29-Gm—r p
HOME INDUSTRY.
T H. PARKER having associated himsell
■ with Mr. M. A, Collins, in the Carriage
Making business, respectfully informs the citi
zens of Milledgeville and surrounding country
that he is fully prepared with material, and
the best of Workmen to execute all kinds of
work in a superior manner, not surpassed
North or South. The public are requested to
call and examine his work. Anion# which
will be found Sarvens’ Patent Wheels, famous
for their durability and adaptation to our
roads* and which in the end is the cheapest
and the best wheel that is now in use or made,
lie also will do all kinds of plantation work
with neatness, cheapness and durability.
Give us a trial, and you will not be disap
pointed. All work guaranteed to give satisfac
tion- PARKER & COLLINS.
Jan.2 ly r
J- O. MATHEWSON,
,iany, Au<
id Plaster, on hand at all Times, dec 16 pr 2m
OLIVER, DOUGLASS & CO.,
Wholesale Manufacturers of Tiniva’e,
DEALERS IN
Stoves, Sheet Iron, Block Tin, Tin Plate, d'c.,
\\ e know that for cleaning paint, windows
china and glassware ; for polishing knives,
tin, iron brass and copper wares, and for re
moving stains from marble and porcelain, and
rust from machinery, Enoch Morgan’s Sons
Sapohois the best thing in use. rpnr4w
“Low prices seldom command a good arti
cle,” but in the case of Sumter Bitters the ex
ception proves the rule—it is the best tonic
known.
Cotton Food.
A FERTILIZER specially for COTTON.
Send for circular before purchasing.
Buy it. Try it, and you will never regret
it- A. F. SKINNER,
Agent Milledgeville.
F. W. Sims, General Agents,
janl 6-3m r Savannah, Ga.
OA.
42 THIRD STREET. mr a
Stove Emporium.
tendedTo^’ Looiiitl £ GiasseB ’ pressed and pi
iHILLEDGEVILLG HOTEL
BAR AND
* in !L 0 L_? on8e Furnishing Goods, Y> ood^^l 1
am Tin Ware to the trade. All orders promptly
rNov, 21 I87J.tf.
For removing mildew from clothing, uee-
Darby's Prophylactic Fluid diluted with water.
Lager
Beer Saloon.
No more Gray Hair. Nature's Hair Resto
ratitc brings hack the origins color. It is not
a dye, and clear as crystal. Contain* nothing
injurious; See advertisement.
W A N D o
FERTILIZER!
FOR
Cotton, Corn, Wheat, Tobacco.
PRICE:
CASH, 150 per 2000 llts., at Factory.
TIME. *55 per 2000 lbs., at Factory, payable "Nov- 1st, 1872.
WITHOUT INTEREST. V 1
Factory East end Hasel St.; Mines on Ashley River.
WAND#
Acid Phosphate of Lime!
FOR
COMPOSTING WITH COTTON SEED.
PJRICE.
CASH, S-30 per 2000 lbs., at Factory.
TIME, $35 per 2000 lbs., at Factory, payable
Nov- 1st, 1872, Without Interest.
WM. C. DUKES & CO.,
GENERAL AGENTS,
No. 1 South Atlantic Wharf, Charleston, S- C-
T.T. WINDSOR.
JanlO* rp&n 3m A«ent at Milledueville. Ga.
/ E have got it. What ? The best of
Whiskies, Brandies, Gin, Rum, VVines,
Lager Beer, Cigars, and everything found in
a first-class bar. My terms are cash, but for
15 cents you can get a good drink. I am
mixer. Give me a trial.
janl6-3m G. W. HOLDER.
Choice Ealing and Planting
Potatoes.
100 Barrels pure Early Rose.
50 barrels pure Early Goodrich.
100 barrels Jackson White’s.
50 barrels Pink Eyes.
100 barrel Peach Blooms.
50 barrels Western Reds.
The above Potatoes were selected with gr*.t
care. Are engaged genuine pure seed.
JAMES G. BAILEY & BRO,
jan!6-4t 205 Broad street, Augusta, Ga.
Manhood; How Lost, How Restored.
Am
Just published a new
edition of DR. CUL-
VERWELL’S Cele
brated Essay cn the
radical cure (without
medicine) of Sfexa
torrhok, or Seminal Weakness, Involuntary
Seminal Losses, Impotency, Mental and
Physical Incapacity, Impediments to Marriage,
etc., also, Consumption, Epilepsy, and Fits,
induced byielf-indalgence or sexual extrava
gance.
EF“Price, in a sealed envelope, only 6 cents
The celebrated author, in this admirable es
say, clearly demonstrates from a thirty years’
successful practice, that the alarming conse
quence of self-abuse may he radically cured
without the dangerous use of internal medicine
or the application of the knife; pointing out a
mode of cure at once simple, certain, and ef
fectual, by means of which every sufferer, no
matter what his condition may be, may cure
himself himself cheaply; privately, and radi-
cally.
BP" This Lecture should be in the hands of
every youth and every man in the land.
Sent under seal, in a plain envelope, to any
address, postpaid on receipt of six cents, or two
poet stamps.
Also, DR. CULVERWELL’S “Marriage
Guide,” price 25 cents.
Address the publisher*,
CHAS.J. C. KLINE & CO.,
127 Bowery,N. Y , Poet Office Box 4,580.
jau p 13 r 23 tf
Grocery!
J. H. HOLDER has removed to Mr.
Leikens’ Old Stand, where he will be pleased
to Bee his old friends and customers, and all
new ones. He has a fine assortment of Wines,
Brandies. Whiskies, Cigars, Flour, Sugar, Cof
fee, Candles, etc. Prices as low as the lowest.
My motto is TO LIVE AND LET LIVE.
jati9 3t J, H. HOLDER.
A. HOPSON &
received this day a choice
the Latest styles of
LADIES’, MISSES’ AND, CHILDRENS SUITS.
SWISS OVERSKIRTS, ^ DRF^SINP quidto
CORSFT rnvFRQ LtitLfcMJNG SKIRTS,
LUKfcLT COVERS, PIQUE WRAPPERS,
T ^ COMPLETE ASSORTMENT of
B*’c.71 Feb. 14,18
tf.
S. A. MUG RATH,
Hollingsworth Block,
CAN SUPPLY
MACON, GjN.
V 0 0 ALL WITH
COUNT,
BACON,
LiARD,
FLOUR,
MEAL
RICE,
SUGAR,
COFFEE,
SYRUP,
MOLASSES,
tobacco,
WHISKY,
T M // Jl; rmS are 7 Cash > or such Paper as can be used to raise Cash and
I will Sell you as It to at anybody.
r June 6, i67i. M15GRATH, Macon, Ga.
22. ly
G. II. REMSHART, -
DEALER IN
BOORS,
WBWBLL POSTS BTC.,
Nos. 182 and 184 3 north side Bay st. 5 foot of Barnard,
SAVANNAH GEORGIA.
rNov.7 S 44 3m a n r 4?27 a 3 b m L ° USe Satisfaction gn«*ateed.
H. & J. WEED,
IMPORTERS AND
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Iron, Steel, Tin Plate and Hardware, Rub
ber Belting and Carriage Material.
rfs SL 115
6 A-
oct 111 1871 r ^ a 6m.
Irfrautjlilun git.
SAVANNAH,