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NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS.
Energy, Experience and Hard Cash Win Once More.
THE &RAND SUCCESS OF THE SEASON.
OPENING OF OCR SURPKISIXGI.Y LOW PRIJED AND VERY COMPLETE NEW STOCK
DRY GOODS CARPETPS,
BOOTS AND SHOFS.
Prices Unequalled. Styles Unsurpassed. Assortment the Best
TRADE WITH US—IT MEANS SUCCESS.
In Securing for Yourselves the Widest Bang.: for Selection. The Latest Styles. The Most
Bcliable Goods. Hr far the Lowest Price. These are Facts—Our Goods
and Prices Prove Them. come and See'
CHAMBERLIN, JOHNSON &CO.
Agents for Buttrick’s Patterns. Fancy Work ATT.AIS T A (J A.
and Stamping a Specialty *’ ’
CATCH 01 TO THIS!
LOOK HERE NOW.
TEN MINUTES IS NOT A LONG TIME, BUT IS SUFFICIENT
FOB ME TO CONVINCE YOU THAT
MY PRICES ABE A
TERROR
TO MY COMPETITORS
ivry
T.* Burnell Green,
Means Good Goods at the Lowest Prices. That my prices are so low is
a surprise to all who visit my store, and will result in your
INVESTIGATION,
ADMIRATION,
NEGOTIATION
GRATIFICATION
A PBIZE WILL BE SECUBED, BECAUSE AN
Investigation
Of My Bargains will Excite your
Axlmiration
And Lead to a •
Negotiation
And Beault in Your Immense
Gratification.
Now if the time to buy. My stock is on tlc market regacdless of cost.
Bargains every day at
T BUR WELL GREEJN’S.
COME ONE!
COME ALL!
. SAVE MONEY BY BUYING YOCIt GOODS FROM
O’NEILL & BRO.,
"West Side of Public Square, WASHINGTON, GA.
Wi Keep Cont*llr on Hand a Larne Block of
1Y GOODS, IMS, BOOTS, SHOES,
And HATS.
Fancy Groceries & Plantation Supplies
OF ALL ECX3ST3DS
LADIES', GENTS’ AND CHILDRENS’ SHOES
Cheaper than Anywhere Else in Town.
We Have Jut Opened a Large Assortment of
READY - MADE CLOTHING
Bought lor the Cash, and which we sell Lew for the CASH.
Harness, Saddles, Whips, Hardware,
Tinware, Crockery and Glassware
AT BOTTOM FIGURES-
Don’t fail to visit the new store, where you can get anything you want
at Lowest Cash Prices. 46-lf
O’NEILL Ac BRO.
Mothers.
If you are failing, broken, worn out
and nervous, use "Wells’ Health Ro
newer.” sl. Druggists.
lif Preserver,
If you are losing your grip on life,
try “Wells’ Health Benewer.” Goes
din c to weak spots.
“Hough on Tunlbaclle.*’
Instant relief for Neuralgia, Tooth
ache, Faccache. Ask for “Bough on
Toothache.” 15 anil2s cents.
o* .
Cutar linl Tlirout directions,
Hacking, irritating Coughs, Colds,
Soro Throat, cured by “Bough on
Coughs.” Torches,lse. Liquid 25e.
“Koilgh on I tell.**
“Bough on Itch” euros humors,
eruptions, ring-worm, tetter, salt
rheum, frosted feet, chilblains.
The Hope or the Nation,
Children, sow in development, puny
scrawny, agd delicate, uso “Wells’
Health Benewer.”
Holmes Sure Curo Mouth Wash
and Dcnlfrice is an infallible euro for
Ulcerated Soro Throat, Bleeding
Gums, Sore Month and Ulcers. Clean
the Teeth and keeps the Gums healthy
and purifies the breath. Prepared
solely by Drs. J. P. & W. It. Holmes,
Dentists, Macon, Georgia. Usod and
■■.*ii■■..in..■■ ■■ - tsmmrrg • gtHtlßlf.
For Sale by Dr. If. B. Kcminc, Wash
ington, Ga., and all Druggists ami
Dentists. 3U-t
Pretty Women
Ladies who would retain freshness
iid vivacity. Don’t fail totry “Wells
[{caltli Rencwer.”
“Jtougk on Corns. 99
Ask for Wells’“Rough on Corns
15c. Quick, complete euro. Hard or
soft corns, warts, bunions.
Wood k .Jackson can serve you
with as elegant and satistaetoiy turn
outs as you could wish to drive.
Irvin, Callan Sa Cos will sell you
the best blankets at cost. I-2t
Tiinbcsl horses and the finest hug
gies always on hand ut the extensive
stables of Wood & Jackson.
■ -m • m
Luck in Blue Gras, to Hoberley.
The happiest man in New Orleans
yesterday, was Mr. John M. Hober
ley, Asst. Cashier of the Mercer Na
tional Bank, Harrodsborg, Ky., who
was the holder of one fifth ticket No.
68,980, which won the cipilal prize of
<75,000 in tbe drawing of the Louis
iana State Lottery on Tuesday last,
when he arrived and proceeded to
draw <15,000 in money at the hands
of M. A. Dauphin, personally. He
is a nephew of Gov. Jno. Magoffin,
who made himself famous
by his refusal to president Lincoln
when he called upon tho State of
Kentucky for men and money.—New
Orleans (La.) Picayune, Nov. 10.
Y’oung men wishing to learn a clear
idea of Bookkeeping, Business Cor
respondence, rapid Mathematical
Calculations, easy movement for wri
ting, will find a splendid opportunity
at Ware’s Business Institute, Sharon
tia. 45-3 m.
B. B. B.
This is tiic concentrated Blood Puri
fier that saves time and money by its
use—because it cures Blood Poisons in
tiie quickest time on record. It cures
Scrofula in thirty days ;tbe kidneys re
lieved by one bottle; Hereditary Taint
of children removed with one bottle;
Skin Diseases and Eruptions cured
wi'li two bottles. Syphillis of all
stages cured under sixty days. Each
bottle proves its wouderful value.
Large bottles, <l. Druggisst sell it.
11.00 spent ror Kinch will curo any
case of G. and G. within forty-eight
hours, without loss of time, change of
diet or auy internal remedy, jan.
“Sold." rtnslncfc
t‘*Gatli.“]
Th( word “guide,” which has coma
into j leral use, like many slang words,
menu more than the nearest English
word ) its meaning. There is tlio word
“sno( ” from the provincial English,
whicl menus “sly, cunning,” and is do
rived rom the word “snood,” used in
fishin 'tackle and in the way artful
yonnj misses tie up their hair so as to
tie th young man's heart within. The
word ‘schnde,” from Pennsylvania
Dutcl means the cut as applied to a
tailor, who is cnllod “sohnuler,” and
probal y cuts the doth too short.
“Bni 0 1 ’ is now applied to almost
everyt ing manufactured which is uuder
qualitjL. A “snide” buggy is one loosely
constri 3tod and painted up to look weil
but on of which the spokes will fly driv
ing ur< iTii the sharp turns. A “snide”
piano i oie which has a well-varnished
case at and b:ass fixings, hut with a harp
like t)u t it. Tara's halls and it will soon
bo mul).
Thert isscarcely a line of business in
New Yorl which lias not its "snide”
devotees. You see an advertisement
for tho stle of furniture in a private
house, all scribed. Y'ou go there, and
by carefully'"'provided lights of gas or
day you tee what sooms beautiful, hut
when you have bought it you are sur
prised to iud tho next day another ad
vertisement, and going them you will
find knottor set of furniture iiko yours.
Tho sellit l } of ltorses is another "snide”
business ‘.ere; you advertise for a pair
of horsos of certain age, height and
style, an i an answer cones from "a
gentlemai” who wants to dispose of his
horses biforc going to Europe or to
Florida,
Yon arc taken to a stable, apparently
a private stable, standing among certain
others lelonging to gentlemen, and
when the horses arc brought out of the
half-light there you aro asked to get
in before the doors aro opened, mid
when the doors are opened tlio horses
are touehod up with the whip and they
go to the park in style. But when yon
return tuo doors aro closed immediately.
These horses, many of them, have their
toetli filed to bring them down to ago.
A few days after you have bought them
if youj go back to tho same stable you
will find another “elegant pair” ready
to be worked elf on an unsuspecting
public.
Xlie .Sun's Supply uf Heat*
[The Olltury [
How is this heat maintained? Not by
tho miracle of a perpetual self-sustained
flame, We may bo sure. But then, by
what fuel is such a fire fed? There can
bo no question of simple burning, like
that of coal in the grate, for there is ny
source of supply adequate to tho do
mand.
Tlio state of Pennsylvania, for in
stance, is underlaid by one of tho richest
coal-fields of the world, eapablo of sup
plying the consumption of tho whole
country at its present rate for more than
1,000 years to come. If tho source of
the solar heat (whatever that is) wore
withdrawn, and we wore enabled to
carry this coal thert: and shoot it into
tfco KnowuTcatsupj'i) “so‘tfiat“tfcTsofa, r
radiation would go on at just its actual
rate,.tho time which this coal would last
is easily calculable. It would not last
days or hours, but the wholo of these
coal-beds would demonstrably be used
up in rather less than one ono-thou
suudth of a second!
We find by similar calculation that if
tho sun were itself one solid block of
coal, it would have burned out to the
last cinder in less time than man has
certainly been on tho earth. But dur
ing prehistoric timos there has as surely
been 119 noticeable diminution of the
sun’s heat, for the olive and tlio vino
grow just us they did !i,OOO years ago,
and the hypothesis of an actual burning
becomes untonablo. It has been sup
posed by some that meteors striking the
solar surfaco might generate heat by
their impact, just as a cannon ball fired
against an armor-plate causes a flush of
light, und a heat so sudden and intense
as to partly melt the ball at tho instant
of coneussio*. This is probably a real
source of heat supply so far as it goes,
but it can not go very far; mid, indeed,
if our whole world should fall upon tho
solar surfaco like an immense—pro
jectile, gathering speed as it fell, and
finally striking (as it would) with the
force due to a rate of over 300 miles a
second, tlio heat developed would sup
ply the sun for but little more than
sixty years.
America’* Wine Production,
[Chicago Herald.]
America promises to become the
greatest wine-producing country in the
world. Ten years from oow our annual
wine product will probauly amount to
100,000,1)00 gallons. Even then tho in
dustry wiH be only in its infancy. Cal
ifornia is A great wine Btate, but as yet
she has cultivated very little of her
grape an a. There are three great wine
centers in this country. The first is the
Pacific slope, the second is the Piedmont
region, or table lands between the Alle
ghanics and the Blue Ridge, including
Virginia, tbe Carolinas, Georgia and
parts of Kentucky and Tennessee, the
Indian territory, with large parts of
New Mexico, Arizona, Arkansas, Kan
sas, Texas, Missouri, Ohio and New
York. We have 100 acres adapted to
grapes for every one acre that France
can show.
What Distance DM Ho Travel.
(New York Journal.]
An army of men twenty-five miles in
length starts to walk fifty miles. At
the moment of starting an orderly starts
from his place at the extreme rear of the
cotumn, with dispatches to the com
manding officer, who is at the head of
the column. He delivers the dispatches,
and starts back to his place in the rear
again, and reaches thro just as the
army has completed its march of Uie
fifty miles. It is understood that the
orderly travels at a uniform rate of
speed. What distance did the orderly
travel in all?
Shrewd Mongol*.
When some American capitalists woro
endeavoring to get the consent of the
Chinese inardarins to develop the coal
fields of China, the answer was, at least,
not without diplomatic skill:
“No, we cannot permit it. First, it
will displace the center of gravity and
the world will tumble over; second, if it
is a good thing for you it is good for us.”
Warren Leland,
whom everybody knows as tlio successful
manager of tlio
Largest Hotel Enterprises
of America, says that while a passenger from
New York on board a ship going around Cupe
Horn, in the early days of emigration to Cal
ifornia, ho learned that one of the officer's of
the vease) had cured himself, during the voy
age, of an obstinate disease by tho use of
Ayers Sarsaparilla.
Since then Mr. Lvlakd has recommended
Ater’s Sarsaparilla In many similar
cases, and ho has never yet heard of its f&il
uro to etfect a radical cure.
Somo years ago ono of Mr. Lblakd’S farm
laborers bruised his leg. Owing to the bad
state of his blood, an ugly scrofulous swelling
or lump appeared on the injured limb. Hor
rible itching of tbo skin, with burning and
darting pains through the lump, made lifo
almost intolerable. The leg became enor
mously enlarged, and running ulcers formed,
discharging great quantities of extremely
Offensive matter. No treatment was of any
avail until tho man, by Mr. Lklaxd's direc
tion, was supplied with Ayer's Sarsapa
rilla, which allayed tho paiu and irritation,
Lealod the sores, removed tlio swelling, and
completely restored the limb to uso.
Mr. Leland has personally used
Ayers Sarsaparilla
for Rheumatism, with entire success; and,
after careful observation, declares that, in
liis belief, there is no medicine in the world
equal to it for the cure of Liver Disorders,
flout, tho effects of high living. Salt
Rheum, Sores, Eruptions, and all Uie
various forma of blood diseases.
Wo have Mr. Leland’s permission to invite
all who may desire further evidence in regurd
to tho extraordinary curative powers of
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla to soo him person
ally cither at his mammoth Ocean Hotel,
Long Branch, or at tho popular Leland Hold,
Broadway, 27th and 28th Streets, Now York.
Mr. Lklakd’b extensive knowledge of tho
good done by this unequalled eradlcator of
blood poisons enables him to give inquirers
much valuable information.
PREPARED BY
Dr. J.C. Ayer & Cos., Lowell, y ass.
Sold by all Druggists; sl, six bottles for 95,
Citation for Letters of Dismission.
GKOItGIA, WII.KES COUNTY.
WHEREAS, H. Cly Smith amt J. A.
Bull, Executors of Thus. El’iott, rep
resent to tho Court in theia petition, duly
pled, Ac., that they have fully administered
Thoa.Elliott’s estate. ThisUtherefore toche
all persons concerned, heirs and creditors to
show cause, if any they can, why the said ex
ecutors thould not bo discharged from their
administration, and receive letters of diF
tmsslon on the Ist Monday in February, 1885,
This Oct Bth, 1884. GKO.
41t3m Ordinary W. C.
Citation for Letters Administration,
GEORGIA, wilkes county.
T M k ™/ijti
me for permanent letters of'administration
on the estate of George W r . Terry, lale of
said county, deceased, this is to cite all und
singular the creditors and next of kin of
said George W. Terry, to be and appear at my
office within t*.e time allowed by law, and
show cause, if any they can, why permanent
administration should not be granted to
Mrs. Sally Terry on George YV. Terry’s
••state. Witness my official signature, this
Dec- 2, 1884. GKO. DYSON,
4-4 t Ordinary W. C.
Notice for Leave to Sell Land.
tIEOROU, WILKES COUNTV.
APPLICATION will bn mndo to tbo Court of Or
dinary ot Wilke* county. Ga., ut tho flrat reg
ular term after expiration of 30 daye from this no
tice, for leave to poll the land* belonging to the es
tate of Ankow ( hnmiult, late of paid county, do
oeaaed, for tho benefit of the heir* and rxvdltoSs of
said deceased. C. It. RAMSEY,
404 t Adni’r of Askew Chcuault.
ADMINISTRATOR’S SALE
BY VIRTUE an order from the Court of Ordlna
-17 jf Oglethorpe county, will be add before
the Court houne door in Lexington, between legal
hour* of pale, on the flrt. Tuesday iu January
next, a tract of 'und In Wilke* county, near the
line of Oglethorpe, containing one hundred and
fifty-three acroa, more or lohb, and adjoining land*
of N D Arnold, Tom Arnold and other*. Sold as
the property of the eatate of H C Arnold. Term*
caeh. Dec. 2, 1884. W T BROOKS, Adra’r. .
THE GREATEST AND THIS JiICSTi
The Large double Weekly
Religious and Secular.
New York Observer
[VBTABLIBURB 18V8.)
Undenominational,
Unoectarian,
Evangelical,
And National.
No paper in the cotntry lias a more EXPE*
RIENOEJD AND ABLE CORPS OF ED
ITORS.
Besides the regular editors,tbo Observer
has a host of paid contributors and corre
spondents all oyer the world, including home
and foreign missionnries, travelers, scholars,
divines, poets, and literary men ind women.
The Departments of Agriculture,Business,
Sunday school teaching and religious work
are rouducted by experts, who writs clearly
and to the point. The Observer does not fl(l
its column with long essays and sermons.
The New York Observer is
A LIVE NEWSPAPER.
Furnishing each week
A Religious Sheet,
full of instruction, encouragement and truth;
and
A SECULAR SHEET
containing all the news.
Price 13.15 a year. Special terms
Cos Clergymen. *
Specimen Copies Free.
Andress,
NEW YORK OIISFRVER,
New York.
ff bight s Indian Vegetable Pills
FOB THB
LIVER
And all Bilious Complaints
Georgia Railroad Company.
OIFKJE GENERAL MANAGER, \
Avgusta, Ga., Jan. 4. 1885. j
COMMENCING Sunday, 4th lnt„ Washington
Branch Trams will run jut ollows daily.
Trains run by 80th meridian time, 22 minutes
slower thau Atlanta time*.
-- -f i cT" p a'" rtf
I 1! i s
5 it Ci
U, >3 3 (*,
Lv Washington 7.55 am 11.20 am 4.10 pm
LvFicltlou 8.22 am 11.47 uin 4.87 pm
Lv ltaytown /. 8.50 am 12.12 pm 5.05 pm
Ar Barnett 0.05 am 12.80 pm 5.20 pm
Ar Athens 12 25pin! 4.4opm]
Ar Atlanta I.oopm 5.40 pm
Ar Gainesville B.2opuj| 8 20pin
Ar Milledgeville ■—j 4.4Bpmj
Ar Macon I 6.46 pm --
Ar Augusta ] 8.85 pm 8.15 pm
Lv Augusta 7.40 am ; 10.50 am I
Lv Macon 7,25 am
Lv Milludgeville 0.10 am ————
Lv Atlanta 8.00 am I 2.45 pm
Lv Gainesville 5.65anil
Lv Athens 9.80 am 2.65 pm
Lv Barnett 9.30 am 1.10 pm 0.10 pm
Lv Raytown 0.40 am I.29pin 6.29 pm
Lv Fieklen 10.00 am ].49pml 6.49 pm
Ar j|piahiugton......... lQ.4oaiu 2.20 pm 7.23 pm
Trains connect at Atlanta and Augusta for all
points West. Northwest, East and Southwest.
E. It. DORSEY, JOHN W. GREEN.
Gen. Pass. Agent. General Manager.
~~ 1886.
HARPEU’S MAGAZINE.
ILLUSTRATED
With the new volume, beginning in December,
Harper's Magazine will conclude its thirty-filth
year. Tbo oldest periodical of its type, it jb yet in
each now volume, u new magazine, nut simply be
cause it presents froKh subject* and now pictures,
but also, and chiefly, because it steadily ad
vances in tho method of magazine making. In a
word, the Mags zinc becomes more and more tha
uithtul mirror t.f current life and movement. Leatl
-11 g feature* in tho irogrnmine tor 1885 are: new
serial novels by Constance Fenimore NVoolsou and
W D Howells: a now novel entitled “At the Ivctl
Glove;’’ descri tive illustrated papers by F. D. Mil
let, R. Swain Gifiord, E. A . Abbey, 11. Gibson and
others; Goldsmith's ‘‘She stoops to Conquer. ,y il
lustrated bv Abbey; important papers on Art
Science, etc.
HARPER’S PERIODICALS.
Per Year;:
HARPER’S MAGAZINE t A 00
HARPER’S WEEKLY 4 00
HARPER’S BAZAR 4 00
HARPER’S YOUNG PEOPLE 2 00
HARPER’S FRANKLIN SQUARE LIBRARY,
One Year (52 Numbers) 10 00
Postage Free to all subscribers in the United
States or Canuda.
The volumes of tho Magazine begin with tho
Numbers for Juno and December of each year.
When no time Is specified, it will be understood
that tho subscriber wishes to begin with the cur
runt Number.
The last Eleven ftemi-iwinunl Volumes of Harper*
Magazine, in neat cloth binding, will be sent by
niuil, postpaid, on receipt of {3.00 par volumo.
Cloth Cases, ibr binding, 60 cents each—by snails
postpaid.
Index to Harper’s Magazine, Alphabetical Ana
lytical, and Classified, for Volumes 1 to 60, inclu
sive, iron Juno, 1850, to June 1380, one vol., Bve,
Cloth. $4.00.
Remittances should be made by Post-Office Mon
ey Order or Draft, to avoid chance of loss.
Newspapers aro not to copy this advertlsanxa.aA
without the express order of Harper k Brothers.
Address HaRPER k BROTHERS, New York.
tny
An Independent Newspaper of Dem
ocratic Principles, but not Controlled by
any Set of Politicians or Manipulators;
Devoted to Collecting and Publishing all
the News of the Day in the most Inter
esting Shape and with the greatest pos
sible Promptness, Accuracy and Impar
tiality ; and to the Promotion of Demo
cratic Ideas and Policy in the affairs of
Government, Society and Industry,
Rates, by Mail, Postpaid:
OAILY, per Year 46 00
DAILY, per Month 50
BUNDAY, per Year 00
DAiLY and SUNDAY per Year - • • 700
WEEKLY, per Year 1 00
Addreu, TUB SUIT, Km York Oily.
WOMAN"
Her Health and Happiness are Matters of Gre
Concern to All Mankind.
Marietta Ga.
Bpm# mouths ago I bought a botllo of Dr. J.Brad
fleld’s Female Regulator, and used It iu my family
with great satisfaction. I bav© recommended it to
three families, and they have found it to be just
what is claimed for it. The females who have used
it are now in pel feet health and able to attend to
their household duties. Rev. H. B. JOHNbON.
State ok Georgia, Troup County.
I have exarninod tho recipe of Dr. Josiah Bradfield
and prouounce it to be a combination of medicines
of great merit in the treatment of all diseases-of
females for which he recommends it.
WM. P. BEASLEY M.T).
Sum no meld, xnnr.
Du. J. Bn/.DFIKLD Dear Sir—My daughter baa
been suffering for many years with that droadfal
affliction known aw Female Disease, which has cost
tne many dollars, and notwithstanding I had the
best medical attendance, could not find relief. I
have used many other kinds of jedl4ino without
any effect. I had juet about given' her up, was out
of heart, but happened iu tbo store of W.W.Kckler
several weeks since, and he.kuowing of my daugh
ter’s affliction, persuaded me to buy a bottle of
your Female Regulator. She began to improve to
once. I was ho delighted with it* effects that I
bought several more bottles of it; and, knowing
what I do about It, if to-day one of my family was
suffering with that awful disease, I would hava it ft
it cost SSO a bottle, for I can truthfully say it has
cured my daughter sound and Well, and mysMf on<l
wife do most heartily recommend your Female
Regulator to be Just what it is represented to be.
Respectfully, H. V. FKATHBBBTON.
Treatise on the Health andHappincss of Womans
mailed frea.
The Bbadkieldßeoulaiob Cos.,
BRICK!
BRICK!
*BRICK
——l Have Just Completed a Kiln of
First Class Tempered Brick
YVhiifh I offer for -a lc at prices so
low that you can build brick houses
cheaper than wooden ones. My brick
maker is one of ffie best in the South
and you can always rely on jieltiujf
as (rood an article of brick as can be
made in Georjria, and at lower fig
ures. I will deliver brick to partite
iuade the corporate limits. 15-ly
1 B- 2vl A. G4XJXB.B