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jEUc (fouhigton £tav.
ANDEHgON & WALLIS, rEOPKiETORS.
tk>;W->, Sd-.H) A A EAR IN AI'VAN’CK,
Id.UO When Not Paid in Advance.
©•access is Cur Aim.
JV column* of Die Star are almtjf* of open all
lc ,l lr fair and dignified discussion
pustlousof public interest ; but com mu men
Don* adi’Oi'iUing the individual claim* of any
jertea far am/ political position nr portiaihr
thing is regarded a* personal matter, am1
mutt be paid for In secure iJs publication responsible m
thete column*. The editor t* not
for Die view* of correspondents, and no com¬
munication mil be published unless the name
of the writer i* known to the editor.
COVINGTON, GA., OCT. 21, 1885.
USA L ED 1C AT IO N.
The legislature lias spent |iu unus¬
ually long session, and has quibbled,
filibustered, and prated about every
.thing Jtlmost, {indyet it Ins adjourn¬
ed without touching tbe most impor
tant question of this or any • other
country, and -that is the education
of tbo masses. Not until the great
Blass of unknowing and indifferent
people have been lead into the light
by popular and universal education,
can we ever make rapid progress
in anything with which they have
io do. It is an irrefutable fact
which o\ir every-day experience
am! observation overwhelmingly
demonstrates, that fanaticism su
persli lion, grumbling, cavil in; g,grow
ling, narrow-mindedness, and aver¬
sion to progress, ncedlu!, expeditious,
'boneficial innovation and renovation,
and.a th >n* r nd other petty annoy¬
ances and retardations, are chiefly
.found among the uninformed.—
Therefore, we say, let us have an
univoi>«l education.
The lending of newspapers for
Reading £ oelns to bo illegal in Pai ls.
Jt appears that hitherto many
newsvendors made an addition. !
.source of income by knling out
.newspapers. Some of the newspa¬
per publishers took umbrage at ih
and brought the matter under the
notice of the minister of the interior,
,who there upon issued instructions
ihat any newsvendor lending out
papers in future should forfeit his
trading license.
The North Central and South
American Exposition, will open at
New Orleans on November the 10th
-HrtWitMfcwVbriW'W tire
.subject of ‘‘Peace and Good Will ’
between states, sections and nations
at the opening.
The London Tabernacle, of which
Rev. C. II. Spurgeon is pastor, is a
live church. It maintains more
than forty prayer meetings in differ
cut parts of the city.
Jt is said that ex»Governor and
Railroad Commissioner Smith is
very sore because Governor McDan¬
iel did not see fit to reappoint him
jto hia autocratic office. His to be
hoped this is not true. Governor
Smith was greatly surprised when
Jie .w.as appointed Commissioner,
and now he is surprised at not being
oppointo 1. He has nothing to com
plainabout.
Didn’t we tell you that the times
were drifting towards the better?
Wo notice with pleasure that the
fraternities of the state university
have held a meeting and formally
pledged themselves not to enter in
to any cliques, cabals, or trudes in
college politics and affairs generally.
TJjey propose to act conscientiously
and t© vote and do all things with
regard to merit. Thus little by lit
He are groat things accomplished.—
Keep her agoing, boys, keep ber
0 in¬
Alarming Newspaper.
Kill Nye in the Laramie Boomerang.
The newspaper of to-day is a li
brary. It is an encyclopedia, a po¬
em, a biography, a history, a prohe*
cy, a dictionary, a timetable, a ro.
mance, a cook book, a guide, a ho¬
roscope, an art critic, a political re¬
sumo, a ground plan of t ic civilized
world, a low-priced multum in pare
vo. It is a sermon, a song, a circus,
an obituary, a panic, a shipreck, a
symphony jn solid brevier, a medley,
of life and death, a grand aggrega¬
tion of man’s glory and his shatr.e.
It is, in fact, a bird’s eye view of
glj tpe magnanimity and meanness,
the joys olid griefs, t^e births and
deaths, the pride and poverty of the
world, and all for two cents—some¬
times less.
lu the last twenty-five years the
Methodists have increased the value
of their church property by about
$60, 000.
Editor Hutcheson, of the Jonesbo-i
roNews, carries the biggest nose of
pny member of the Georgia pr ess.—
lie nose a lots.
RAP-JACKET.
Four Colored Youths Buggy-Whip
tine Another.
Marietta Journal.
A social gathering was held at Mr.
Taylor George’s ° residence .the other
j night, - . near the corporate units oi
the town on Atlanta street. The
young men patronized Mr ('Luck
Anderson’s livery stable very liber
ally, and while they were in lire eles
gitnl parlor of Mr. George, enjoyiii*.
the festivities of the occasion, lour
negro imys, whoso ages range from
17 to 2D, concluded that they would
have a side and they unhitched the
horses harnessed to tlm buggies, and
drove all over towr. at a dashing
style, A colored man found out
what tln v had done and made them
carry the horses and buggies back
to Mr. George’s, Mr. Anderson got
wind of theniatterand on last Tues
day morning had Constable Miller
Walker to arrest them with a view to
criminal prosecution. They were
Tom Reagan, Will Patterson, Bay
li.-s Towns and Jim Johnson. Mr.
Anderson told them if they were
willing to give themselves a good
whipping with a buggy whip ho
wouldn’t prosecute them, otherwise
they m'ght take the consequences
for stealing his horses and abusing
them ly lust driving. They all
agreed to take the whipping, and as
stnibiod at Mr. Anderson’s office at
his stable with their coats off', their
abut- only intervening between their
skin and the whip. Will
fat her said liis boy shouldn’t be whip
pcd. M r. Anderson said, “All
I don’t want him whipped, but Car..
stable Walker there Can take charge
of him.” The boy spoke up and
said: ‘‘i’ll take the whipping
scale it."
Ho cl ose for himself the punish¬
ment inflicted, as did all the rest, ns
they did not want to go to the chain
gan.ff
The first one to step forward into
the m’ddSc of the room to take It’s
whipping was Jim John- s> ( a black,
s lapping young fellow, while Will
Patterson, a stout mulatto, his com¬
panion in the crime, wielded the
buggy whip. Patterson laid it on
pretty severely. Some one counted,
one, two, three up to fifteen, when
Mr. Anderson said, ‘‘That will do,”
although they agreed to take thirty
lashes apiece. Then Patterson ex'
changed placoswilh Johnson, who in
turn plied the whip to his back.—
■BwdiWv «nfheiV'ffftne h\Y 1 tthffe
for the next round, and Tom Regan
a lull, spare-made mulatto began to
wield the whip, Towns intimidated
him by telling him, “If you hit me
hard 1 11 give you sbeol when it
comes my lime to whip you,’ am
when ho exchanged placoswilh Rea¬
gan ho lashed him with a vim.—
Reagan squirmed and drew up his
shoulders each timo the lash fell,
but not a tear trickled.
When the whipping was over, Mr
Anderson smilingly gave them a
quarter with the parting injunction:
“Now, go and get seme cigars and
smoke on your way back to the
square, r J hey departed for cigar
a
store and when lust seen were puff¬
ing away as if they were glad that
they had consented to the lash, rath¬
er (ban take thethanccs of going
io I lie chain gang.
A large crowd was attracted by
the novelty of tlie affair and witness¬
ed these young “coons” punish them,
solves for their malicious mischief.
There is no question if there was
a whipping post to punish for petty
offenses, it would lessen tho number
of crimes committed and prove a sa
lulary lesson to the young ‘bucks”
who are being raised without family
discipline or restraint and given full
liberty to run at Urge and do as they
please.
Robert Bonner is past 60, and
worth ?5,000,000 or 86 , 000 , 000
.
No man i-better satisfied with his
paper, his fortune, bis Presbyterian®
ism, liis horses and himself. And
he ought to be, having begun as a
type-setter, without friends or in¬
fluence, and having achieved his
present position by unflagging en
ergy and perseverance.
The Roman Catholic cathedral in
the city of .Mexico is said to be the
finest chinch building on the conn
nent.
ihisv to See Through.
Iiow can a watch—no matter how cost¬
ly—be expected to go when the main¬
spring won’t operate? How ean anyone
be well when his stomach, liver or kid
ney s are out of order ? Of course you
say, “He cannot” Yet thousands of
peoplt drag along miserably in that con
dition ; not sick abed, but not able to
work with comfort and energy. How
foolish, when a bottle or two of Parker’s
Tonic would set them all right Try it,
and get back your health and spirits *im.
The autumn leaf craze is not so
exleosivo this year as usual.
What boys Think they Should Learn.
According to ttie ideas of i Im rising
generation, a young man should
learn
To lie.
To flirt.
To cbea*.
To swe ar.
To drink.
To dance.
To smoke.
I " gum hie.
To be uoeli si e
l’o play billiards.
To be a masher.
To despise religion.
To dress like a du le.
To wear pointed shoes.
In swagger on.the streets.
To live without b .rd work.
To hold honor in contempt.
To be insolent to working girls.
To ogle every pretty go I he .meets.
To treat bis chiefs with disre¬
spect.
To talk loud in the presence of
others.
To put on sly It—whether he can
afford it or not.
To boast of the feminine con¬
quests lie lias made.
To have every slang term at his
tongue’s end.
To go dressed well if he Has to
beat Ins faiher to do it.
To lounge about saloons and oilier
public resorts.
To gossip with his chums about
; h't> lady acquaintances.
To attract ail the attention to bim-
8c.t that he possibly can.
To walk like a loafer and a fop in
stead of like a quiet and sensible
m n.
To call h - father the old man, and
his mother the obi lady,
To hive a a-t h >r-e if he can gel
il—-and a fas - , woman at ail events.
To th nk idly of every woman he
sees, and to speak ill of her every
chance he gets.
To turn Uji his nose at those quiet,
sober i, dustrious young men that
■Jo not train in li is crowd.
Here is your picture, fits t young
man, true to life. Look at it. How
do you like it? What have these
characteristics made of you! Anti
what will they do for you?
What has the future in store for
you? Unless you change you I"
course most radically Hunt, _j 1 On j i).
cy Journal.
J. R. Jones, who lives near Brooks
Station, is one of the successful -mall
cTini : nuiii*t v
than must of those who work oii a
more extensive so.ile. lie Iihh only
a one horse farm, hut this year he
made three hundred and fif y bush¬
els of corn, five bales of cotton, one
hundred bu-hels ot pea-, twenly-five
hundred bundles ot fodd r, fifty
bushels o! oats, and tlnriy.five biisl,
els ol wheat. The corn was all
made on six acres, tieing nearly
sixty bushels to the acre; and such
corn ! Half a duz n ears of it lie on
our table as we write, and no Kansas
or Ohio corn field over produced
their superior, They are eleven in
dies long and nine inches around
and compactly filled with large,
white and well matured grains; the
six ears weighing eight and a quur
lor pounds. They <!o oui* eyes
good, and we propose to keep them
toshowtoiho.se i.i who i say that , this
country is only til. for raising cotton
with which to buy the damaged h and
-
immalure gram of the . west.—[Grif
tin Nows.
Twenty-two of tho accomplices
in the lynching of Culbreath, in
Edgefield, Soul b Carolina, are in jail.
MOTHERS’ FRIEND.
Applied according to directions 3 or 4
months before confinement, its effect is
wonderfully beneficial and gratifying.—
The delicate organs and parts directly
involved are relaxed and softened and
lose their rigidity without imparing their
power, while its lubricating qualities act
like a charm, thus assuring a quick and
almost painless delivery without physi¬
cal exhaustion, anu death agonies of
many hours duration are entirely avoid
ed.
It not only shortens the time of
labor and lessens the intensity of pain,
hut, better than all, it greatly diminish¬
es child, the danger to life of both mother and
and leaves the mother in a condit¬
ion highly far favorable to speedy recovery
and less liable to flooding, convul¬
sions, and other alarming symptoms in¬
cident to lingering and painful labor.—
Its truly wonderful efficacy in this res
P®et entitle- Mothers Friend to be rank¬
ed as one of tbe life-saving appliances
given to tbe world by the discoveries of
modern science.
THIS TRULY GREAT PREPAR V
TION,
while really such an inestimable boon
to child-bearing women, is one in regard
to which. in due deference to female
modesty, certificates cannot be publisli
ed ; for, as was remarked by a distin
guished member of the legal profession
in Atlanta, when purchasing a bottle of
it, “Its superior merits cun only be
made known by word of month.”
Ladies interested in the above, by ad¬
dressing the Bradfield Regulator Co.,
Atlanta, Ga., can have a Book mailed
them free of c ■ost, containing full par'
ticulars. ltn.
WARD'S WOES.
Just twenty-seven miles from the clas¬
sic citv of Athens, is located the thnv
ing little townof Maxey's, the residence
of Mr. Robert Ward, who has justibee.i predica¬
released from a mi st of perilous which he has
ment, the particulars public- He
consented t > give to the
writes it; follows : -Ga.
MaxeVs. Oglethorpe Co.,
Jnly 9th, I««5
.For twelve or fourteen years I have
been a great sufferer from a terrible
form of blood po son which ran into the
and t nally it was pronounc¬
ed a terti r. I rn .i My head, face and
shimmers becalm ■ almost a mass of cor
ruptioe, nr.it finally the di-ease c< m
inencci ! eating away my skull bones. I
became so horribly repulsive that lor
three years ,1 absolutely refused to let
people see me. 1 used large quant’ties of
•post noted • blood remedies and applied
tp nearly all physicians near me, but
my condition continued to grow worse,
and all said that I must surely die. -
My hones became the seal of excruciat¬
ing aches and pains; my nights were
passi a in luiserv; 1 wi 8 reduced i» if ' ■
and tie;.. ill; uiy uidney- were terriniy
derainc d, and in. became a burden to
me.
1 chanced to see an advertisement i f
lb B. B , and sent one d /.lar to D . (..
Birehmore & Co., inerch.ntsofour place,
and they procured one luittfe forme. If
was used with decided benefit, and when
eight or ten bo;ties had been used I was
pronounced sound and well.
Hundreds of seurs cart now he seen
on me, looking like a man who hud
been burned and then restored, Mv
case was well known in this county, am!
for tbe bem fit or other- who may be
similarly affected, I tlfpuk i! my duty to
give the fads k> toe public, and to cx
tend im lie.,r felt tii..a f .]■ so v luaide
a rente 1 1 have been well over twelve
moiilii-. and no re.urn of tne disease
has occurred.
ROBERT WARD.
Maxey’s Ga., July 1, 1885—We, tbe
undersigned, know Mr. Robert Ward,
and lake pieasurein saying that tlie facts
above stated by him are true, and that
his was one of the worst cases of Blood
Poison ne ever knew in otir county,
and that he has been cured by the use
of B. B. B—Botanic Blond Balm.
A. T. Brightwell, Merchant.
IV. (’. Birclnii .re & Co., Mer.
J. II. Brightwell, M. D.
John T. Hart.
W. Ga., B. July Campbell. 1885.—M T
Atlanta, It), Brightwell e and are
acquainted W. Birehmore with A. T. whose
C. & (Jo., name
appear above, and take pleasure in say¬
ing that they are gentlemen of undoubt¬
ed veracity and worthy of confidence in
any assertion they may make.
HOWARD* CANDLER, Ga.
Wholesale Druggists, Atlanta,
Sold everywhere.
REMARKS.
If B. 15. B. will cure such terrible
as the above, is it not reasonable to sup
pose that any and all eases of Blood Dis¬
eases can be curei We do not un¬
nomice the cure of a man while he is at
home groaning and suffVriua with the
disease, but all of our cei li icates are
words of truth from those who h ive
been cured and can look you squarely
in the face and say so. We cure in a
shorter time, with 1 \-s money and
mediciac than ever before known,
We will mail r.r “Book of
free to any one tided with more ustouml
ing home evidence than ever before pub
li-lied. Uuii on your dri.ggist, or
dress
BLOOD B MAI CO. Atlanta, (la.
;_
It 1 IM) TiiiS
,
Those are the words Mr. David (
ot Dekalb coumy, employed j a render¬
ing his testimony.
READ WHAT HE SAYS.
H Eight years ago, while living in Cow
eta county, my my wife, wile, a strong, healthy
woman, strained herself from overlift
ing. aud brought on what
termed falling of the womb.”
eo lnplicatml vviih other female troubles
she w s reduced at the time J speak of!
to almost a shadow. I had tried all the
physians and nearly all the patent tned
icuics I could hear of, but she did
inprove at all: kept getting worse, and
in a fit ot desperation, and, luckily fur
her, it was
BRADFIELB'S FEMALE REGULATOR.
In one week’s time she was relieved
and by continued use of it she cured
sound and well. She has since become
the mother of two strong, healthy chil¬
dren. Now, after a lapse of five years
of uninterrupted health, by her impru¬
dence in lilting, she lias brought on the
old again, but, strange as it may seem,
sue does not look unon it with ini^ht fh-t -enc/>
of loathing and horror m
P e( ‘ te < 1 > for wl ‘e savs it will not take your
cur e ! ! er - an 1 *>'<? I
suggested getting a physician, . she , indig
nantly replied that as long as she could
get
BRADFIELD’S FEMALE REGULATOR,
She needed no other doctor, lor, having
saved her life one e, she knew it would
cure her now.
Gratefully your-,
Edwardsville, DAVID CARR.
Ga, Jail. 20, 1885.
Send f.rotir Treatise on the “Health
and Happiness of Women,” mailed free
to an y a. id n s-.
THE BRAItElEM) KKUFMTDR CO.,
fii'x is, Atlanta, Oh.
__
TUTTS
fen in* 11 mill* li ii | »
- Vi 8£ A
‘,1 Bn ^
fc wpaa MBMMBai BiiM
Is compo*G*l ot ileibal and Mucfiiigmoua prod
Qf ts, which pci mcato. th« substance of the
Iaung*, cxpoctoratM the acrid mnttet
Unto wdecM in it'** i>tonckmt ’iuiie*, nndiorm#*
•oothlng rltattcn coatincr, alxicU relieves the tv*
cue the cough. It clcauaes
the lungs of a il Impurities, sUenethriv
theiki vrlicjs onfeeblod by dieeaeeJlnvim
»t©« khe cuculsti 'a of tlie bi<xPUj and traces
neruu* tu'-m. Slight ecldi often end hi
MiMiuufiiinn, it &.« dangerous to uealeot
inem. A^iply the rmtUy piompily. A
leAtor uchiiy vogfs irsrrsnte the a#*t«#riion that
no remedy has *• ver been found that Is
I.ifiimiuatiu*.and v.» ,i y cur „ th , rao ^
O') A pi cm dial, .MU
•Lvo, In# a hiHsMe irf ** -Y ? . •hou'.f ' “Hr- Jain For Croup fumilr. it t*
'll Bottles. *vt>ry 7
—
la a
PILLS
ur.*H*a'“i-r*?"'
‘ ■ * F,,, -I ipill.t bst-time atimal.iMt*.
.
•Tjr*'-, OT-Wnnt I rk-olUr ro» n Vnr r . T 5 M m tK*’ r
Tntv* M4kUAL FRt£.
s Indian Vegetable Pills
fob tub
LIVER
all Bilious Complaints
PRECAUTION!
CHOLERA DOGGERS'
j mfssr
j southern remedy
j jhe Great
: FOR
BOWEL TROUBLES, CHILDREN TECTHIN8, DIARRHEA,
DYSENTERY AND CRANIP COUC.
TUGGERS’ HUCKLEBERRY CORDIAL should be kept in every household.
D r efficacious remed.es there is for summer com
p,ain«L ItK one of the most pleasant and violent »"^udden ticks
How necessary it is, a. a season of the year when *
bowels frequent, you should have some speedy relief at hand. It will save
of the are so well large doctor bills. The weaned mother, losing sleep
much oain and anxiety, as as suffering such drainage upon its ■**»£«»
night after night in nursing the little one a
the effects of teething, should use this invaluable medicine. For sale by all druggist*
»t 5° -nts a bottle. ' BSTSend «. stam^forRigle ^
HUNNiCUTT & BELLINSRATH,
JOBBERS ANI) DEALERS IN
Cooking and Heating Stoves,
Ranges, Furnaces, Mantels, Grates, Iron Pipes,
3(> and 3S, Corner Peachtree and Walton Sts.,
A.TIjJSL'JSTrr A.. GA.
•o—
We offer io the trade the largest and best selected stock of Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces
Grates, Slate and Iron Mantel, Wood Mantels, Cherry, Mahogony and Walnut of the
latest and most approved Designs in the market, Bird Cages, Water Coolers, Re¬
frige rators, Ice Cream Freezers, Tubs, Buckets, Brooms, Brushes Steam Pipe and
Fittings, Plumbers’ Brass Goods, Marble Slabs, Wash Basins, Water Closets, Bath
Tubs, Chandeliers, Pendants and Brockets, Plain and Stamped Tinware, in fact eve¬
rything kept by first class House Furnishing dealers. Agents for Knowls’ Steam
Pump and Hancock’s Inspirator, manufact uiers of Concrete Sewer Pipe and Orna¬
mental Galvanized Iron cornice, door and window heads, in fact everything you
wish. Come and see us.
HUNNICUTT & BELLIXGRATH,
aug26t f 36 and 38 Peachtree street, Atlanta,
The Only House in Atlanta
WHERE yOU CAN BUY
FURNITURE AND CARPETS
"XVO G- JjJT* JEX E.R,
And Save Ten Per Cent.
ANDREW J. MILLER.
44 PEACHTREE STREET, ATLANTA, GA.
OWNERS OF ENGINES
The Korting Injector,
la the best Boill^Feeder made. It works warm or cold water, and will taka from a well or tank
Over 4,000 now in use,
~V m ' tiu.* OS, iJ«A jK.'*——
v«.*_j v T~i
Arc tla> best Tank Pumps made: Will wor* i lonr or muddy water. Satislaition guaranteed,
pacity from 100 to 20,(JOC gallon's per hour. Price, $7 to $75. Send for circulars.
Geo. $ 2 , Lombard & Go.,
FOUNDRY, MACHINE AND BOILER WORKS,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA,
W* keep on hand a large stock of i_
And alt kinds of ENGINES _ _
Killings, lowest and MILLS. Piping ai IftU h 3 [Hi III
anil Mill at prices. Special ••itieiii Pm i , Kug . I Jlll?L^rJrUy f 1
work. With first class tool- and m n,
prepared to ;‘o all kinds of Iron Work in the b st nan- ■ ^
ner. Repairing promptly done, klfebly
NOTICE TH
FARMERS
IF YOU WANT TO PURCHASE A
COTTON SLED OIL MILL
A Cotton Gin, A Cotton Feeder
A Cotton Press, A Cotton Condenser
OR A
S -A- "W MILL
1 alleys, Shafting, Hangers, anh MILL WORK.
Write to "* f ° r PRlCES anti DISCOUNTS. We make
INTEREST to buy direct from can it TO YOUR
us. (
14 VAX WINKLE & CO,
T0 [Manufacturers, Atlanta, Ca
TIIE TRADE—We give Discounts to tbe Trade
may ldulnovl t
TO USERS OF BOILERS
Look to Your Interest—I Have what you need.
THE UNION INJECTOR
The simplest and best Boiler Feeder made l
J also keep a supply of Piping, Valves, Whistles. Steam
d am prepared to do all kinds of renal r •auges. ’ Oils, Belting, & c
.
in the very best manner. to
UHARLES F. LOMBARD
Pendleton Foundry proprietor,
and Machine Works
--- 1'' ^ __ 015 and 527 K °l!°ck Street, Augusta, Ga.
TIIEO. MARK WALTER’S
Marble and Granite Work $
AUWsiTA marble Dome.tif&^,®£f- GEOrS a
53 •» V»Vj, WORK.
' If. 'Vi'.:' AT LCV PRICES.
Ifv GEORGIA & SOUTH CAROLINA flBiui.p.,.. GRANITEUMONUMf lYUnfCIfin NTJk
made ,
'BJ a specialty.
A large selection of MARBLE and GRANITE WORK
hand, ready for LETTERING aud DELIVERY. always ' on
GEORGIA JtAJUKUU)
STONE MOUNTAIN**,,*
GEORGIA RAILROaI. «f«u«
C ommencing sunday *’ V N
will b* the operated following Pas**,, *
:
JFAST LINE.
NO. 27 \WKSff iDAJLT.
Leaye August*..*,.. -7#
Leave Athens.....*, Hi,* »*
Leave tCovington.. '•v —
Arrive Atlanta.... •••11 38, #
NCL 28 XASX 1<K| H
Hm T
Leave Atlanta.^....*, 8 40
Arrive Athens.,*,..... «35 PR
Arrive Covington... PR.
Arrive Augusta..... »io,: Pi
„ 2 • V *
NO. BAST DAILY. HO. Au,,*, 1 w*»t „
Lv. Atli*ta..800am Lv 1 '^
“ Gainesville 5,55 a* -» *| *on , .
Ar “ Covng’n Athens—520pm 9 43 a in “ “ Miled’v^'aal Wa»hir’n 4 *
Washg’n 2 20pm “ Athej "
(« Miled’ve .
4 26 p m Ar. Cow, g ’ n "-i at •
Ar. Macon...6 25p m GainmilU AtffiJjV/ P* 1
“ Augusta 3 35 p xu ’’
ATLANTA ACCOMMODATION’ **
LvCoyingt’n (Daily 5 except Sunday*)
40 am 1 Lv Atlanta 550
Ar Atlanta 7.5o am— Ar Covings 1A® *.
.
NO. 4 KAST DAILY. No. 3 W*# T
Lv. Atlanta..8 15 p mjLv. Atmuit* Hit
“ Ar. Cov’gt’n Augusta 10 5 21 50a pu,|Ar. “ Atlanta....^ C'ovVt'ii 11 ,^ **
in; *»,
Train No. 28 will stop at Lithoni » but
not at Berzelia.
No connection for Gainesville ®n Kbj.
day. Trains
no.’s 27 and 28 will *toi, ia a.
cm ve passengers to uml from the full,' t
stations Thomson, only, Grovetoii, Berxeliu »*,. j,J? •
Cauiak, Cr«*f W(
Union l”t Greenslmro Madison Kutld*
Social Circle Covington Uuitym mT,
Mountain and Decatur. Then* 1
close m: v"
..lake connections for all point,
and Southeast, West Southws»t N 0 „l
and Northwest aud earry ThrousliSl,
ers between Atlanta and Uharltitoii *
JOHN W. GREEN, Gan. Mma,.,
E. R. DORSEY, Gen. 1‘asseiiver G’l
loe W. White, G. T. P. A. Auvuit.Ui
dec20-tf
Henry Gaither, M. D., A. C. Pirry, ff a
W. W. Evans, M. D.
Drs. Perry & Evans
Have formed a co-partn«r»liip
C ractice of medicine and in c-wllatetil
ranches, in Covington, Oxford iu4
eiiiity.
A. Messages W right’s for one or both lift »t Dr. J
Dr. Evans’s drug store, in Covingto* vill'n. «'
ceive residence, in Oxford,
prompt and faithful attention.
Calls can be passed over tin wiree#t
the Oxford and Covington telegriph C«|.
pany at any hour, day or night.
Dr. Henry Gaither, of Oxford, connk.
tng surgeon and physician. d«2(
Home Treatment I
For
Cancer, Catarrh, Neuralgia ty
ilepsy and all Blood
or Skin DiMaae*
PILES AND FISTULA,
Treated lucees-fully wilhoit U>*
knife.
Nervous Debility.
I off.-r >..* .uualliiiv Rtianvi wi
rent successlully pud Muiffifii ullf .
preparing my own mcdieUiM. J put
all the above disease* at
35.00 Per Month.
With the exception ot Cancer aid
Fistula.
M. T. SALTER, M. D.,
Reform Dispensatory,
Corner Broad and Walton Sti„
18mnr Atlanta, Gt.
UEOIICLA 1 AILR0A1) M
AND
Gainesville, Jefferson & South’ll J |
Railroad Company,
Office General Freight Ajf*nt,
Augusta, Ga., September 1, IMS- I
Police to Shipper* and Consignee*:
The Insurance Policies issued to th#
bout Georgia and the Gainesville, JefferwiA
hern Railroad Companies, this ###•
son, the Railroad cover COTTON to the extent thd !
mon carriers, Companies are liabl* s# com- ii ] !
discharged from only. the After Die Cotton ofllwi#
companies, cars, liability
Agents will as notify eonmion carriers, intereftnl ceatei
and distiibute all parties
and these cireular* to all ship
perB consignees at their station#.
Usept4t E. R. DORSEY,
General Freight Ag«nt.
READ THIS.
Oossypium Phospho.
It being impossible for me to apend
much of my time in Covington, I h*v#
arranged with Mr. J. G. Lester toaid»«
in collecting for Gossypiuui PhosphosalM
at Covington. All notes of the preterit
year, year, as as well well as as past past due due pape papers, are in hi#
hands, hands, except except those those taken taken bt by Mr. Jan>*»
'V right and Mr. S. D. Hight, who will col¬
lect their own sales.
My friends will oblige me by calling on
Uol. Lester at his office in the court horn#,
w “_f A'! n they ® are ready to pav.
facilities, e . rm I having largely increased fumish their
all friends expert to be able to
mv with a full supply of Go*
►ypium for the next crop, on favoralilt
te r. r ! 1 K ' ^ >•<>» have not already received
* i 886, “!oeat , please and Oats Premium Circnlsr f#»
call on Col. Lester and get onfc
lmoct7 H. V. HARDWICK.
Fence Notice.
Newton Court of Ordinary,
At Chambers, Sept. 26 1885.
I hereby ,
signed by fifteen give notice that a petition of tb*
463d freeholder*
has district, G. M., in Newton county,
been filed in my office, asking tb*t
an election be ordered in said dietrict,
submitting to the voters thereof Stock th*
que8 ion oi <t For Fence or
Law.” I shall, therefore, alter tb#
21st day of October, 1885, order #*iJ
in said district, aa prayed tor,
E. F. EDWARDS, Ordinary.
I A*ND| for sale.
I Offer for sale 130 acres of land, nioi»
less, comprising a part of what l#
as the Brick Store place, io Nee*
count >'-. I will sell at private sale, bot
not ®°ld before, will sell at public out
on the first Tuesday in November
The place will b* aold subject to
mortaage for $500 00, in favor of W
mortgage duj in 188a Terms Half
balance from tus£ to folk ymn, st *
6>«pt. cent 8 interest T. P. KNOX-
1885.