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Ailvertiising Btito*.
•Bowlin 2in 4in 1 t’l } f’l lei
w'k $ ICO 200 350 400 700 13 50
j. .* 150 :tOl 500 (100 000 15 00
4'• 225 40 ) 025 850 1100 23 00
8*• 350 525 750 975 1800 30 00
3 inoa 500 720 1000 14 50 25 00 44 00
0 •• 8751300 10 00 23 75 40 00 80 00
2 •• 12 50 18 75 3200 3800 70 00 180 00
Vtr- DouOle udvertinemonta will bo charged
25 per oenL oa these rates.
tV Local or Reading Notices will lie insert
ed at 20 cents a line for tin* first insertion, and
10 cents a line lor each additional insertion.
Cash is adcancf. will be reqnired on all
contract* for a less time than 8 week*. Contracts
running over two months and under one year
;a ust be paid for at the end of the first mouth.
Yearly contrauts to be paid quarterly.
jeß" Is so instance Will these rates and rules
be departed from.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
~~~j7 M. MATHEWS,
A ttor ne y n t Ijr vv 9
TALBOI TON, GEORGIA.
Will practice in nil the Oonrts of the Chatta
hoochee Circuit, Federal Court at Savannah,and
Supreme Court of the State. mchl9- tf.
~j7T7" martin,
Attorn y t La w .
TALBOTTON, - - GEORGIA.
1&T Prompt attention given to tlie collection
at all claims placed in my hands. Office ovsr
Ragland Kimbrough's Building. eep3o-ly
” dr."e. l. bard well,
Talt>o tton, ( * oorgia.
Teuders his professional services to the citi
zens of the town and vicinity.
JB#- Resilience south side of the Public
Square. top3o-tf
w. f. tignerT
DENTIST,
COLUMBUS,
JtANPOLPH STREET,
[Office 3 doors east of S. A A. Telgegrtph Office. ]
.159- Offers his profesaional services to tlie
citizens of Tulbot County. R' p3O-ly
wTe. mumford,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
TALBOTTON, - - GEORGIA.
Sir* Will give diligent a'Umtion to all busi
ness entrust*' ! to him. Collections and the
oviminnl side of the Court given spe- id notice.
Office up-stairs in the Standard Building.
GOOD HOTELS.
RANKIN HOUSE,
J. W. RYAN,
Cloimißns. Gcorgisi.
FRANK OOLPKN, Clerk.
liruwnN Hot? I.
E. E. Brown A S s, Pioprictors of this pop
niar Hotel, would inform vh*ir numerous triends
that bh and after the first day of September the
rates of fcbti fl Tel will be reduced U* I HULL
DOLLARS Per Day. The proprietors would
respectfully return thpir grateful thunks fur the
very liberal patronage extended tau house lu
near twenty years and assure tlu ir many friends
that we will use our bent endeavors lor the fu
ture to give the >ame sati.-faction that we have
in the past. Evtry attention given to ladies and
families visiting Macon. Lirg© r <>ms and
every facility furnished commercial travellers
visiting Maoou.
(f K. E. Brown dr Son
PUBLIC BOARDING HOUSE!
I —KEPT BT-
Mrs. Id. .J . I downs,
Talbotton, Georgia.
Terms: Staple meal. 50cts.; Board and Lodg
ing, (transient eustom) $1.50 per day. Special
inducement* offered to permanent boarders.
September 1674. tf.
C. WEST & SONS,
ALADDIN * o i L 1 7 y
THE BEST OIL IN USE.
VYarranfe<l 150 Dcerecs Tire T,ist.
WATER WHITE IN COLOR.
FULLY DEODORIZED.
And it -will not Explode.
It burns in all Coal Oil and Kerosene Lamps.
TRY IT. Ask for “Aladdin Security," and
no other. C. WEST A SONS,
113 Allß W. Lombard St., Baltimnte, Md.
" GILBERT’S
Printing Office
AND
BOOK BINDERY,
opposn sew postoffice building,
CO TTM n UM* G rV.
THIS BBTAI LISHM AT is complete, and
facilities compl*' *to <1 > all styles of work,
from a Visiting Card to t B- "r. and front a
Receipt Book to a Uovnl Led*. r, or a large
Quarto Volum
Having an immense quantity and large assort
ment ot Typ , a number ot Br :ss*s run by
Steam Power, and one ot the most extensive
stocks of Paper. Bill and Letter Heads, Cards,
Tags. <Jbc. ever brought to Columbus, no delay
can occur, fir satisfaction fail to ue given, both
in Price and Quality ot Work.
Gapßoix Court k Justices Blanks, ot
most every description, kept in stock, for sale at
$1 per quire.
Court Records, Minuter. Dockets. fcc.,
made to order at short notice. Magazines, Mu
sic, &c., handsomely and substantially bound.
We confidently refer to the many orders filled
of this class of work, and satisfaction given.
Pries and specimens of work furnished
on application.
THUS. GILBERT,
Cotnni bus.
GEORGIA -Talbot Co,tntt :
Whereas Benjamin R. Williams as Adminis
trator of Thom is Braddy, represents by his pe
tition, that hs has fully adm nistered said estate
and prays to be dismissed therefrom. In <w there,
for*, ali per'ns concerned, are hereby cited
and requested, to show cause if any they have,
within the time prescribed h\ law. why said
Administrator should not be discharged. Given
under my Official Signature, this 2nd November,
1874. GEO. N. FORBES,
nov4-3m. Ordinary.
POK I ER S. ill l ill FOR I), Proprietors.
VOLUME VI—NO. 9.
TALBOTTON STANDARD.
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 24. 1875.
A Revolting Scaffold Scene!
Ou the 12th of June, 1854, a wealthy
gardener, in Rostock, the principal sea
pott of the Grand Ducliy of Mecklen
burg, Schwerin,made a startling discov
ery in a large yard behind his house,—
He had (hero an old manure pile, which
he intended shortly to remove to the
garden. Upon looking at it he noticed
that two large hogs were trying to push
their snouts into it as far as possible,
Suddenly one of the animals uttered
a grunt of satisfaction, and when it with
drew its head from the manure the
gardener saw that it had something in
its mouth.
Upon looking closely at the object, he
found, to his horror,that it was a child's
leg in an advanced state of decomposi
tion. The other hog likewise secured
something in the manure; it was a child's
arm. The gardener immediately snatch
ed the two limbs from the animals, and
sent for the police.
The latter appeared, with an official
physician: the manure was at once re
moved, and underneath it were found
the remaining portions of a human
corpse—evidently that of a bov,perhaps
three or fours years old. 'I he face had
been entirely eaten by maggots, and
there was no possibility of recognizing
it by its features.
The gardener was childless and a wid
ower. Ho had two old servant girls in
the house, but no one suspected them of
any connection with the crime to which
the poor child had evidently fallen a vic
tim .for the skull was broken, apparently
by a blow with a bludgeon or a very
blunt weapon.
There were several children in the ad
jacent house, but none of them had dis
appeared. /lie manure pile had been
on the spot for nearly a year,and it had
apparently not been recently disturbed.
Who, then, had killed the poor child ?
Access to the yard was easy,because the
back gate was never locked. For several
hours tlie police, as well as the citizens,
of whom a great many flocked to the
gardener’s house and inspected the gluts!
ly remains, were utterly at a loss to find
a clue to the horrible mystery, until a
quick-witted old lady, named Driefuss,
said : ‘Tlie only hoy that has left this
neighborhood for a year past, was .So
phia Kindermann's son, John.'
.Sophia Kindcrmann had been a young
and decidedly prepossessing seamstress,
.vlio had been engaged to a young car
penter, William Ilein, who had left Ros
tock to seek his fortune in America,and
who had promised, as soon as he was
able, to sond his sweetheart money, so
that she might follow him to the United
States. He had been absent five years
without sending her a line, and she had
long given him up for lost.
In her dispair, she had become reck
less, commenced drinking, and once,
while in a state of intoxication, fallen a
pray to a libertine, who had ruined her.
The fellow was rich and influential,
and his seduced victim was minified to
obtain anv redress from him. In course
of time she had given birth to a littl°
boy, to whom she seen el to be most
tender y attached. John (that was his
name) was an unusually bright child.
All the neighbois became fond of him.
7hey pitied his mother, and helped her
along.
One day the postman came to Sophia's
room, and brought her a letter. It bore
the zlmarican post stamp and was from
her long-lost bethrothed!
The young mother fainted away upon
realizing tnat Philip Rein had not for
gotten her.
When she re-awoke to conciousness,
she tore open the envelope—it contain
ed a letter from Wiliam Rein,and a draft
for SIOO. He wrote that he had had a
hard time oi it in the United States, and
for years had been hardly able to make
a living; but for some time past he had
been prosperous, and now if she still
c ired for him, he wanted her to make
haste and rejoin him in the New World.
Alas! the poor woman loved Rein
dearly still, but her son, John Would,
not William liei.i spurn her when he
should learn that she bad strayed from
the paths of virtue. This idea began to
prey dreadfully upon her mind. She
thought of it day and night; it frenzied
her, ami she sought consolation in the
intoxicating cup.
One night her brain was on fire. She
seized a hatchet, and smashed the skull
of her sleeping child. Siie sank down
in a long swoon upon the floor by the
A COUNTRY NEWSPAPER FOR THE MASSES —DEVOTED TO CIVILIZATION AND MONEY-MAKING.
TALBOTTON, GA., WEDNESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 24,1875.
bedside of the murdered boy. When
she became conscious again it was broad
daylight. Someone knocked at ths
door. Hurriedly covering the child's
corpse with a blanket, she opened the
door.
It was a broker who had heard that
she had received a draft from America.
He wanted to buy it. She drove him
impatiently from her presence. Ho left
her, shaking his head, because her sud
den burst of fury seemed inexplicable to
him.
The same day Sophia Kindermann
told the neighbors she intended to go
to Hambuig with her soil, and embark
from thence to Now York.
In fact, she left by the early train,but
alone. This was not noticed by any one,
and people were not long in forgetting
her, until, about four months after her
departure, the horrible discovery which
we have related above, was made.
?he police were not long in ascertain
ing that Sophia Kindermann had left
Rostock alone. She had bought a tick
et for Hamburg, and the same night a
detective followed her thither. Provi
dence seemed to have interposed to pre
vent the murderss from eluding the con
sequences of her crime. On the day
after her arrival in Hamburg she had
been taken dangerously ill A raging
fever had brought her to the verge of
tlie grave. For weeks she had been in
an almost helpless condition. At length
Mlie began slowly to recover. She was
still a convalescent at the 6’itv Hospital.
There the Rostock detective found her.
She knew the officer* by sight. Upon
beholding him she turned deadly pale,
and then burst into tears.
‘You have come forme,' she said.
'Yes.'
‘Why ?'
‘What have you done with your son.
Sophia ?'
She hurried her face in her hands
and sobbed.
Two days after she was in a cell in
the Rostock Jail, and from thence was
removed to the criminal prison in But
zow. There she was subjected to ul,
the tortures and terrors of the secret
mode of procedure then still prevalent
in Mecklenburg.
She refused to confess. She even
looked with entire unconcern at the
skeleton boy.
‘I don't know what has become of
John,' she said. ‘He left me in Ham
burg.'
For nearly two years she held out.—
Without a full confession from her sen
tence of death cculd not be pronounced
upon her. Thejuge d'imUrnotion a ve
ry cruel man,left no stone unturned to
make her confess.
At last,believing that she would ob
tain a mitigation of her fate by admitt
ing the charge made against her, she
said ;
‘Yes, I killed the boy, but I was out
o my mind.'
The consequence was that she was sen
tenced to be beheaded with the sword.
Her despair knew no bounds when this
dreadful sentence was communicated to
her. For days she filled the gloomy pri
son with her wails. She applied to the
Grand Duke for mercy. He commute 1
her sentence to decapitation by the axe.
On the 18th of September, 1850, she
was led out to execution ; no, not led
out but dragged out,for she refused to
walk to the block upon which she was
to lose her head, and the executioner
and his assistants had to use violonce
in order to get her there.
The spectacle was so disgusting that
averal strong men Sainted—the more so
as the unfortunate woman rent the air
with her yells of anguish. Her head was
fastened to the block,and the execution
er struck—but oh, horror ! he had aim
ed badly and hit her too low. She burst
into almost a piercing yell, to which a
second and more successful blow put an
end.
It was one of the most sickening exe
cutions that had ever taken place in
Mecklenburg.
Girls don't look behind to see if the
‘young fellows' are watching them any
more ; they have got over that. 7t is a
new invention and consists of a little
round looking glass,the size of a half
dollar. Every once in a while they ad
just a stray curl and see if he “really is
looking.'
‘Mamma,where do the cows get the
milk ¥' asked Willie.looking up from the
foaming pan oi huik which ho had been
intently regarding. ‘Where do you get
your tears?' was the answer. After a
thoughtful silence he again broke silt:
“.Ifamma.do the cows have to be spank
ed ?'
The Death of a wife.
j In comparison with the loss of a bo
| loved wife,what are other bereavements?
The wife ! she who lills so large a space
iin the domestic lmaVeils,she who is so
; busied,so unwearied—-bitter,bitter is the
tear that falls upon her grave. You
stand beside her tomb,and think of the
past ; fain would the soul linger there.
No thorns arc remembered above that
sweet clay,save that year own hand
may have unwillingly or unkindly plant
ed. Her noble, tender heart lies open
to your inmost sight. You think of her
as all goodness,all purity, and truth.
But she is dead. The dear head so of
ten laid upon your bosom,now rests up
on a pillow of clay. Tlieliands that min
istered so untiringly are folded, white
and cold,beneath the gloomy portals.
The heart whose every beat measured
an eternity of love,lies under your feet,
zlnd there is no white arm over your
shoulder now—no speaking face to look
up into the eye of love—no tremblinS
lips to murmur ‘Oh, it is so sad !' There
is so strange a luihli in every room !
No smile to greet you at nightfall—and
the clock strikes and ticks and strikes.
It was sweet music when you could
count the hours with her— when she
conid hear it 1 Now it seem, only the
hours through which you watch the
i shadows of death gather upon her dear
! face. But mauy a tale it tells of joys
past,sorrows shared,mid beautiful words
and deeds registered above. You feel
that the grave cannot keep her. You
know that she is in a happier world,bill
still you feel that she is oiten by your
side—an i ngel presence.
Cherish these emotions. They will make
you happier. let her holy presence
boas a charm to keep you from evil.
1 i all new and pleasant connection*
give her a place in your heart. Never
forget what she has done for you—that
she has lowd you. Be tender of her
memory.
To how many bereaved hearts will
these BtMitouo.es collie, who will look
| 'lack upon the past with mingled KC fi-
I lections of sorrow and joy--perhaps
j penitence. ‘So should live husbands
and wives,' says an old English worthy,
; Mlat a lien cii her dies,the spirits of both
may mingle.'
Zc Name of zc Street.
A Frenchman,a stranger in New York
stopped a lad in the street,and politely
asked :
‘Mon fren,what’s ze name of '/is ’ere
street ?'
! ‘Well,who said it wasn't?' replied the
i boy.
‘What you call zis street?'
‘Of course,we do.’
‘Pardouuez? I have not ze name;
what you call him?
‘Yes. Watts,we call it.‘
‘ZiH street ?’
‘Watts street,old fellow ; and don't
you go to make game of mo ’
‘Nacre moil de Lieu ! I ask you one,
two dree,several times,often,will you tell
me ze name of ze street,eh ?‘
‘Watt street, I told you. You’re
drunk, aint you ?
‘Mon leotle fren.vero you live eh ?‘
‘ln Vitndan street. 1
‘Ke bein ! You live in von dam street,
and you is von dam fool!‘
And they parted,entertaining a mutual
dislike.
An EilHcr’s C'uiitcssion.
Report. 7 'imes.
Been asked to drink 11,5392
Drank 11,5592
Requested to retract 417
Didn’t retract 417
Invited to parties, receptions,
presentations, etc., ect.,
by people, 55 ,55 555
Took the hint 5355
Didn’t take the hint 55.5300
Threatened to be whipped 174
Been whipped 0
Whipped the other fellow 4
Didn’t come to time 170
Been promised bottles af cham
pagne, whiskey, gin, bit
ters, boxes of cigars, etc.,
if lie would go after
them 3,075
Been after them 0
Going again 0
Been asked ‘what's the news? 300,000
Told 13
Didn’t know 200,000
Lied about it 99,987
Been to church 2
Changed politics 82
Expect to change still 530
Gave for charity $5,00
Gave for a terrier dog $23,00
f Cash on hand SO,OO
Wliilt l Do Win'll lou Are in i
Trouble.
Don’t try to quench your sorrow iri J
rumor narcotics. If you begin this, j
you must keep right on with it till it J
leads you to ruin; or, if you pause, you j
must add physical pain and the con
scientiousness of degredation to the
sorrow you seek to escape. Of all I
wretched men. his condition is the most
pitiful who having sought to drown his j
grief in drink awakes from his debauch J
with shattered nerves, aching head, and j
depressed mind,to face the same trouble |
again. That which was at first painful j
to contemplate with, after dri ik. Seems
unbearable. Ten to one the fatal drink
will ho again sought,till its victims sinks
a pitiful wreck.
Work is your true remedy. If mis
fortune hits you hard,hit you something
else hard; pitch into something with a
will. There’s nothing like good., solid
absorbing,exhausting work to euro trou
ble. If you have met with losses, you
don’t want to lie awake thinking about
them. You want, sweet, calm, sound
s e :p, and to cat your dinner with appe
tite. But you can’t unless you work.
It you don't feel liko work, and go a
loafing all day to tell Tom, Dick and
Harry the story of your woes, you’ll lie
awake and keep your wife awake by your
tossings, spoil her temper ami your own
breakfast the next morning, and begin
to-morrow feeling ten times worse than
you do to day.
There are some great troubles that on
ly time heals,and perhaps some that can
j never be helped at all ; but all can be
helped by the great panacea, work. 7r;
it, you who are afflicted. It is not a
patient medicine. It has proved its ef
ficacy since first Adam and Eve left be
hind them with weeping their beautiful
Eilen. It is an official remedy. All
gi od physicians in regular standing pre
scribe it in cases of mental and moral
diseases. It operates kindly and well,
leaving no disagreeable) sequelae. Ii will
J cure more complaints than any nostrum
j in the mat'‘rid medica, and comes nearer
|to being a ‘cure-all' tlmi any drug or
! compound of drugs in the market, and
j it will not sicken yon if you do not take
i it sugar-coated.— Selected.
-V4-4
A SnVnll Boy's Composition.
Tobacco grows like cabbages, but I
never saw none of it boiled, although /
hive eaten boiled cabbage with vinegar
on it ; and I have heard men say that
the cigars that was given them on elec
tion day for nothing was cabbage leaves.
Tobacco stores are mostly kept by wood
en Injuns,who stand at the door lo try j
to fool little boys by offering them a
bunch of cigars,which is glued to the l
/njiin'H hands,and made of wood also.
Hogs do not like tobacco,neither do 1.
1 tried to smoke a cigar once,and it made
me feel like Epsom salts. Tobacco was
invented by a man named Walter Ral
eigh. When the people saw him smok
ing they thought it was a steamboat, i
and as they had never seen such a steam- |
boat they was frightened. My sister
Nancy is a girl,l don't know whether I
she likes tobacco or not. 7hore is a I
young man named Leroy, He was
standing on the steps one night, and lie
had a cigar in his mouth,and he said he
didn't know us she would like it, and
she said :
‘Leroy,the perfume is agreeable.*
But the next morning when my big
brother ’Com lighted his pipe. Nancy
said ;
‘Go out of the house you horrid creat
ure,the smell of tobacco makes me sick. 1
j Snuff is Injun meal made out of to
bacco. f took a little snuff once and
then t sneezed.
-
Forty girls will run after a snob with
a gold-headed cane,where one will shy
puto a fellow with sound horse sense.
A negro barber in Cincinnati refused
to shave a darkey,who indignantly ask
ed : ‘Now, look u*yeah—hain't my
money jist as good as many body else's
money ?
A Mississippi boatman,with immense
feet,stopping at a public house on the
levee,asked the porter for a bootjack to
pull off his boots. The colored gentle
man,after examing the stranger's feet,
broke out with, ‘No jack here big miff
for dem feets. Jackas couldn't pull 'em
off. mussa, without fracturin' de leg. i
Yuse better go back about tree miles to
de forks in de road an pull em off dar.‘
The <7ardener‘s [Jfaine] Journal says ,
i that there is a store in that place in j
which a skull is kept,marked ;‘This man
was a drummer. Beware!'
TERMS, £g.OO a Year in Advance.
WHOLE NUMBER, 260,
EDUCATIONAL.
LeVert Fr( ’nuile ole
TAKIJt >TToN.UA.
Aft. r tlif> nsiijil intor.nis.sion, the exorcises ot
LeVi-rt Oollu 'o will lo resumed on 'Tuesday tho
sth, of January, 1875.
For 50118 having daughters or wards to be ed
uca ed, can find her.- every advantage necessary
to thorough mental training. Tli'6 oourse of study
is equal to that ot any College in the State.
H tf€*s per Term of Twenty Weeks
Rati’.N per term ot 2t> weeKs, board, includ
ing everything hut washing, $75. Tuition in
Primary Department., (embracing Spelling.
Beading, Oral Arithmetic.) $5.00. In Acad':
ic Department (embracing Spoiling, Rending,
Writing, Arithmetic, Georaphy k Gramma.
SIO.OO. CollegeOlftsseH $25.00. Nochirg t--i
French, Latin, Elementary Drawing, or Vocal
Mutfic.
Ministers 1 daughters rec- ivrd tree of < lmrge
lor regular tuition.
Any amount which mry be received, tho
Public School Fund lor paying' k upi Iff, will be
cruditeu on jpi.*yv *'•< ••unL.
Catalog’.’'.• . ill tie sen* i! np; lied for.
Ely. V. ii. Manoet President,
jar.O-ly. 'Talbotton. (Ja.
Coliinsvvorth Institute, 1875.
Tn that t on, in: \.
Spring 'Term, begin* January 18. h. chines
•July 2ml. Fall l-nii, begins AiigiiHt 2nd,
clom’H Nov<‘inuer 19* h.
I I'm in: $2, >L and $5 per month, It con.
triiclcd foi I’tc Term,and paid monthly in adcanr- :
Ton per cent deducted it paid in advunc. lor the
Term : 'liventy iter cent added, it not *eitUd by
the close of the Term.
Board $13.00 per month.
N B. No pupils deaired whose tuition bills
foe pivvinm terms remain unpaid. For further
information apply to
joii.s T. McLaughlin, a. m.,
decl6-ly Principal and Proprietor.
Bowery Academy,
5 OUATKD light miles west of 'Talbotton ou
fjiheioi l thence to Columbus. The e?er
j oi*es ot this S hool for 1875 will commence on
: the First Monday * f January.
Hate of Tuition :
Euh pupil wid be required n pay $lO upon
| nti.’.m o. At ihe cio-col six months $lO more.
I I his will settle tuition tor the first Term,
i Board can h- hid in good tainilies lor $12.50
1 r month. Everything tiirnishcd exc.t-pt lights.
! Ihe Principal teN gveuwul 1 r :ln; wry liber
| and p.’r.inrt>e which he hn • cnjo\ed during
i Twenty-Vw i Yi i;s. 'That his energies have
I not relaxed, his m inr-j\.us par nn in twelve
counti .s f)l Georgia will testify.
Believing that udlgim the theory of a science is
acquired in connection ith tin- reason upon
which it is basts! is soon lest, the undersigned
adheres to the “Why and Wh-rei.osystem.
Ilis primary object is the deY-d pniMnt of
Thought. Hard Btml\ and clone th.’ikm haves
made, ore making, and will in ike (as Png /s
litre atv any) (he practical, useful and ucccoh
li.il men ot the world.
II wtt I k over this country, and through our
marts of trade.wo see that by far the Tirgt-r part
of our business prases through the hand * oi
I those whose school days consisted lat least
Ten Hoorn each, while the pilots of evan.-sront
• ntiTpnsc.s and “hair-hraind ’ projects are the
fruits of Four and Six hour day schools. There
fore, the Spring Venn at Bowtry a ill continue
through One Hundred and ‘ weniy Scholastic
du\ cf Ten Hours each.
Such boys and gills as arc too delicate forclOoO
mental discipline are not solicited ut Bowery.
Any patron who will visit the school regularly
during ;i term,and feels at its clofi* Hint the pu
pil in \horn he or she is interest 'd has not re
ceived full value of the tuition charged, will be
recipfed gratis.
'Tuition in Music S4 p:r month, in advance.
Address the undersigned at Talbotton. Ga.
J. \ I II OI N.
Bow urn Academy, Oct. 28th, 1874.
WE WILL GIVE
SIO,OO $1000!
TO ANY I’ERSON
Who can prove by Authentic Records that, the
ESTEY ORGAN
Manufactur’g Company
do not MAKE and SELL
More Organs than any other
Manufactory
IN THE WORLD!
GUILFORD WOOD & CO.,
.MAI ON .t A l LANTA, - - GFOKOIA.
CHICKERING & SONS,
GUILD, CHURCH &. CO.,
CUILFORD & WOOD
P I A. IST O S !
Sold at i lie most Reasonable Prices and on easy
! terms of payment.
jsS£f** Catalogues and Trice Lists sent frise
on application.
tot
PUBLISHERS OF THE
GEORGIA MUSICAL ECLECTIC.
Now is the Time to Subscribe !
We have a large lot of slightly Railed, and
therefore unsal il-b’. Munir, consisting of Dance
Music, Fai tasies, Variations, Overtures, Sona
tas, Songs, Duetts, Quartettes, etc., both popu
lar and standard, which we propose to distrib
ute among our subscribers. We will, until
April first, to each subscriber Three Dollars
worth ot this music. As this music is nil cata
logued, we will endeavor to supply parties with
any desired piece; but its sill good music, and
only unsalable from being soiled.
Subscribers will please send ten cents addi
tional, to pay the postage on the music. Send
in your names.
(iTILFOKi), WOOD CO.,
febll-ly. Macon & Atlanta.
C. SCIIOMUURG ,
PRACTICAL WATCH MAKER & JEWELER j
[.Vm/vwsjw to L. Outowftky,]
105 Broad Street, - - Ufiuinbiis, GeoV-ia. j
r.MV ly.
NubMorfptiou Tet mw.
One copy 1 year, if paid in advance $ f> 00
One copy 1 year, on time 2 •
One copy ft mouths, in advance \ no
One copy*6 months, on nme \2b
One copy J months, in advance,
One copy li mouths, -n tiiu \ o 0
rr** These terms will he carried out to the
letter. No discrimination l
/■fIFTV* We offer the following
club imtlm:
Two copies to one address $ H 75
Five copies, (jo
I on copies 17 00
Twenty copies, 32 00
Thirty copies, 40
fid 'These terms are, of course, cash in ah
vanck I Wo send a copy to tl:e gsttei-up ot tho
club, GRATIS !
fiiV' Address all orders for Ruberpfton and
advertising to POKTJE.U A MUMFOItD.
tPH" We do all kinds of Jon Fhinttvo.
MEDICINES
Road this column while wll ami thus pre
pare for SICKNESS!
1 The Bioilif Homo Remedy.
'This m.i ivftlieo Medicine is v arvantod not t*
! cuntnin a in.de pnrtich* of Myiu oky, or any ia-
I injurious mimuaJ substance, but iR
mil I.Y VEUETAIIE,
i eoiituiuhifc; those Southern Roots and ITerbs,
which nn all-wise Providence has pku*d in coun
tries where Liver Discuses most pn \ail. It will
j cure all dih* ftMs caus'd bv Doiungemuni ot the
i LiVer and Bowels.
EiffiElOliS' 11TFK REGULATOR!
In eminently a Kami \ M dicme: and bv being
krpt ready tor ii medi. t< resort will suvo ina ty
0 dollr.r in time :.i.d doeim's hills.
riftcr ovfc-r Foj v Yewis’ trial i‘ is still reoeiv
ing the in l *t ui , inldit and tes imonials to its vir
tues from per* •* * t tho ) igl .si character and
responsibility. I'm:: pin>.i- iaiis e* im#nnJ
! it ns the most
! EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC
For Dy rr iiicisestion.
Armed with, tun* .vniidote, all climates e.ml
. 1 ini 'es ..1 Wu.; i .r and lend u n\ be faced with
[ "iti 1 *!\r. An a on p \ in Malarious Fkvbbs,
1 Mo A 'l. ' •“VU'I.AINTN, UksTI.BnS-NBSS, Jal>d>b
Nausea.
It 1I:ih no Ktjual.
It is the cheapest. Purest r ud Bent Family Mrd-
L ille in the World !
Is manufactured only bv
J ii zu'T.tn x a,.
Macon, Georgia, and rbiliadclphiA.
Trice. SI.OO Bold by all Druggists.
KEARNEY’S
FLUID EXTRACT
B DCII U !
The onlv known remedy for
BRIGHT’S D SEASE
And n positive remedy for
GOUT. GI; WE:., STUB fUTtI-X DIABKTTh,
DYSPEPSIA. NFRVOps DEBILITY,
Drops t,
| Nuu-ro tout ion or Inc6titta*not of Urine, Irrita
tion, InflHTnailun oi Ulceration of the
BLABDIS APD KIDNEYS,
SPLRMATORIiHOSA,
LeuchonTo-a or Whites. Lib*as e IhePrtHrtr.'d
Gland. Stono in the l'dad.Ur,
Calculus, Gravel or Brickdnst Deposit and M#-
cu or Milky Discharges.
KEAltiVifit’S
Extract Buchu 1
Permanently Cures nil Diseases of the
BLADDKIi, KIDNEYS. AND DROPSICAL
swelling#
Existing in Men, W< ra- u and Children,
filer NO MATTER WH AT THE AGE !
Prof. Steele says: “One bottle of Kearney's
fluid Extract Buchu is worth more thnnnlTotl -
1 vr Htichus combined.”
Price. Oim Dolkir per Bottle, or Six BottUw
for Five Dollars. Sold by all Druggists,
j Depot, 104 Duane Street, New York.
A Physic inn in attendance to answer corres-
I poudonce ami give advice gmtis.
Afend stamp for Phamphlets, free.
TO THE
Nervous and Debilitated
OF ROTH SEXES I
AV) Charge for Advice or CdnxultaHov.
I Dr. J. ll Dvott. gnulnAte of Jefft-raon Mo3i •
I cal College, Philadelphia, author of several val
uable works, can be consulted on all disenHcs of
the Sexual or Urinary Organs, which he bun
made an especial study) either in male or hmale
no matter from what cause originating or of how
long stunding. A practice of 30 jeers enaWen
him to treat diseases with success. Cures guar
anteed. Charges reaonabte. 'J hose at a distance
can forward letter describing symptoms
and enclosing stamp to pro-pay postage.
Sond for the Guide to Health. Price 10c.
J. B. DYOTT, M. D.,
Physician A* Surgeon, 104 Duane .St., N. Y.
fi-jfr- Foi Stale by J. Watbhman, Talbotton.
; march 11-tf.
H. Middlebrook,
0 4 lti-on.l kt., Calumlm*.
[WRV.BMHnXD IN 1835.1
MANUFACTURER AND DEALER IN
fSnclrllt-ss, Harness, ArJi
liKCS, r l’|-|lllkK.
Has on hand a large and w li selected stock of
every style and quality, from the
cheapest to the bvst
J /
Harness Leather, ihiddle Leather, Oik and
Hemlock Sole Leather, French r. id American
Gaß Skins. Lirjing Skins, Pad Skins,
Leather, Kip Skins. Shoe Thread, Shoe Mahers
Tools, Pegs, Lasts, Ac.
13 ell in g .
Leather and Rubber Belting. Lace Leather, En
amel L* at her, Patent Pndi Leather, f Patent
Skirting Leather, Eu;imd Cloths, ;dl quantifier;
Saddlers and Ilamew. Makers Trimmings, n,i
kinds and qualities ; Collars, ILimcs, Mhij'S,
Blind Bridles, Back Bunds. I race Chain* Buck
its, Bitis,Tanners and Curriers’ Tools, Tanners'
Oil.
Repairin'? and New Work done ut tho
shortest notice and in the best manner.
one k Sides-.oft Small Pi-<fiiH is niy mot to
fcri.i . Kfiii'ily ash. n vtl tu