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Advertise*"' ««»•
For ihe information and guidance of Ordinaries’
leriffs, Clerks, Executors, Administrators, ua
;ahs and others, we publish the following, (a rule
, no event to be departed from:)
Sheriff’s Sales are required by law to be published
eekly for four weeks, and the charge per lvvy, o
I lines or less, will be $2 50.
Ilortgag'ft Sales, eight weeks, per square $5.
iitations for letters of administration and gu r
msbip, - •
■Omission from administration, monthly for six
lismission from guardianship forty days, $5.
I,plications for leave to sell land, sixty days $6
Fdininist'.'ators’ sales of land, forty days, per
Lies of perishable property, per square $3.
fotices to debtors and creditors, forty days $5.
Is tray notices, thirty days, per square $4.
.fob Work.
very description of Job Printing executed in a
c which, tor neatness, cannot be surpassed in
th western Georgia.
sity
'I MPING & UUTiIEUFORD, Attorneys at Law,
IViinbridge. Georgia.
;over drug store of C. 0. King, .Tr., & Cos.
v fully |>rcp ired to take charge of all cases aris
1 under the iUnkmot La\Vi
f ilin'. 2t , t$G7. * 13 ts
p *“’-**'
r IFJ, GATNSY k CO., DEALERS in cloth
I I\ T (I, Furnishing Gooils for men wear. Staple
r Goods, Harness and Saddlery, Water Street
inbridge, Georgia. [June 10-t
~ MEDIAL CARD.
l’t. E J. MORGAN, having
neatly located in the city of
ge, tenders liis professional services to ¥» SF
piiblid, and respectfully solicits a share
Till be found at his office in Bower’s Block <htr
the day, and ut his residence oil Broughton
let at night.
.11 calls promptly attended.
iibi bridge. March 11, 1869. 46 ly.
I MEDICAL CARD.
’s. FARRAR & JONES
VING associated themselves togethei
Gie practice of Medicine, tender their pro
jtiiil services to the citizens of Bainbridge JyjS,
L-\cin»ty. Office upstairs oVer E. H. Smith &
iStore. Dr Jones can be found ut night at the
■ when not professionally engaged; and Dr.
Lr at his residence on Shotwell street, opposite
Baptist Church
Irch 11th, 1869. 46-ly.
. ALLEN, . G. VT. HINEi-
ALLIvI & HINES)
Attorneys at law
ANT)
JUCITORS IN EQUITY
BA.INBRIDGE, GSOI GIA.
r ill give their prompt attention to ail business
‘listed to their cine in the following counties:
iunty. Town.
P c, * ur ' Bainbridge.
Colquitt,
"■’y- B.lahel^
Now ton.
Lche ". Camilla.
. Thomaaville
, 'viii also practice in the Supreme Courts of
and Lnited States Court for the Southern
lit of Georgia. Office upstairs over J P.
mson XCo s.. Confectionery. [ApB 40 tff
VACCINE MATTER!
I V\ E just received a »o£ of VACCINE M \TTER
nich [ know to lie reliable Those Wishing to
Accmated had better call at ones
»reh ath. 1869. W! - J ' A
1
and Slock Cattle for Sale.
iK Subscriber has for sale in
ui and Liberty Counties, Florida.gglEffr
r K klSn? HEAI) ■'* beef and
NDRI-'h m"’ can be hud abouY ON l 5
the reo, AN ? FIK ’ 1T HKa EGF BEFF CATfLE
lv to ‘‘'“der SIOCK. Foi further particulars
F s ?,I‘Quincy. Florida, oi to
December 23,
B►CI , VJ
CA , ~ ” ’ ■'.!
!^PV' V 0 STOR V STOLE HOUSE, situ
*• Fortems°ap;, r y t f oClark 0 Clark and Bron * hton
■**2Bth, 1869 T ‘ ° R LG - BRADW £ L k
IMB ftfjPflPl J ‘ •B| Mffi Hfl HM BSS SlEgi i pH M/' 8H B ■■ I. HI HHL
Devotod Particularly to tAe Interests offSoutlrern and. Sontita.western Oeorgla.
VOL. IY.
JAMES WATT,
PRACTICAL GUN SMITH,
BAINBRIDGE, GA.
ViiimnM Satisfactory.
ALWAYS o a hand, a fine lot of Deuble and Sin
gle Barreled Shot Guns, Rifles, Colt’s Repeaters,
Smith & Wesson's Cartridge Shooters, Powder
Flasks, Shot Pouches, Cartridges, Caps, &c., Ac. In
fact, anything to be had in a first-class Guu Store.
Also a fine assortment of Fishing Tackles.
July 15, 1868.
— — — t - .I call, j
T|m. > -isvie’ll see them j
o. jf jP w
. c ..ntß, as to the stable they
AdvertisementsN ,
No advance chargt j f - t too k evory cent
All leading Newps- j ~ ■ ,
Information as to Cue 4he puityfjirnjahed.
All Ordes receive car
Inquiries by Mail an.,, Quincy t.o-dav
Complete Pinted Lists v , apers for sale*
Special Lists prepaed so! 1 Customers.
Advertisements Written and Notices secured.
Orders from Business Mey g pecially solicited.
40 P ark ß?«M
Sept. , BnbridgeGaj. ai 2. 1868. 22 ts
I. X. L.LINIMENT!
Is an infeJible cute for Toothache, Soie-thioat
Coughs and Colds, Piles, Bites of Insects, &c. Try
a bottle, if it does not give satisfaction, the money
will be refunded. G. D. GRIFFIN,
Proprietor,
Bainbridge, Georgia.
Feb. 25th, ’69. 44 ~ tf -
SILK and STRAW GOODS,
JUST RECEIVED a fine assortment of Ladies and
Childrens Straw. Felt and Plush, also, Ribbcn
Trimmings, Velvet Braids, Artificial I'lo eis &,o
for sale Very low by ■
' T. B. HUN NEWELL & CO.
W estcott H.Coleman
PLAIN AND FANCY
Shop Corner of Broad and Broughton Streets,
BAIN BRIDGE, GA.
HAVING permanently located, .and being desiv
oiis of identifying himself with the interests
of the city, respectfully asks at the hands of a gen
t rous public only such encouragement as bis work
entitles him to expect. He will afso execute
SIGN WRITING
in all its varied phases and styles; E ALSO MININ 1 ,
PAPE*I HANGING, FRESCOING, &fc.
Feb, 11th, 1869. 42-3 m.
PARK HOTEL,
on the \mm m European plan,
Cor. BEEKMAW and NASSAU STS,
Hear City Hall Park, HEW YORK.
GfiiOSlGC WIGHT) Proprietor.
N. B.— Located in the very heart of the whole
sale business, this is one of the most C’oiivefnbntly
located Hotels for Merchants, Business men and
others visiting the city.
Dec 10, ’OB. till June 16, ’69.-6m.
1, X. L. UMMFKT
The best Medicine in the word. Will affect more,
in a shorter time than any one compound ever
offered to the public.
It will cure in from one to twenty minutes,
Headache, Earach, Pains in Back, Chills, Neuralgia,
Palpitation of the Heart, Enlarged Spleen, and
many other diseases not mentioned above.
Frice from 50 cents to $1 50 per bottle.
t. .
Liberal deductions made to dealers.
Address G. D. GRIFFIN, Bainbridge, Ga:,
or L. H. Peacock, Attapulgus, Ga.
Feb. 25th, ’69. 44-ts.
c. g. campbelt,, .o. g. guoley
CAMPBELL k GURLEY,
ATTO NEYS
AND
COUNSELORS AT LAW,
AND
¥ lUcit m ,
BAINB TOGE, GEORGIA.
Feb. Uth, ’69. 42-ly.
OFFER EiIbAORDIMBY ?
Nearly Six HHadrecLlPaps of/tbe Choicest Reading
* for §0 cents.
. V ’ «>
In order to give thcrpeoplc an opportunity to
become butter acquainted with their magazine.
‘‘QXCE A MONTH." the publishers will send the
'ftm six numbprs of this year for 50 cents. Each
number of ‘HYnce aT Month” contains 06 dbtrble
column pages of the best stories unit entertaining
and instructive reading to bfe found in any maga
zine in the country. The subscription price is $2 a
year. Its typographical beauty is not excelled.
Send 50cents, and you will get tins Ilea'lltifill
magaz-ne from January to June of this year, con
taining 576 pages of choice reading.
Address T. S. ARTHUR & SONS,
809 & 811 Chesnut Street Phil,
april 6. 1869. *‘ tw -
BAINBRIDGE, GA., THURSDAY, JUNE 3, 1869,
f ....
' -
IY ' KRFUMERIg
< ~ ... , ’*»••• i • . .1
THE suhscrihers’-rt'pectfiilly call the attention of their friends and the..p'jitjlic geperally to their
selected Stock, and solicit a continuance of the generous patronage heretofore extended to their House
They keep constantly on hand a complete stock of
DRUGS, MEDICINES. CHEMICALS,, PHARMACEUTICAL PREPARATIONS,
SURGICAL INSTRUME'fttS, PAINTS;
OILS, PAINT-BRUSHES; tARNISHES,
Fancy and Toilet Articles, Perfumery
of every variety—HAlß BRUSHES, TOOTH BRUSHES;
FINE LIQUOR,
BRANDIES, WINES, WHISKIES, ALE, PORTER, BITTERS, SCHNAPPS,
FI SEEMS, HWI El SUE TOBACCO, PIPE,
FISHING TACKLE, GF ALL KINDS,
s rwr tt at <u mo- ei xr asr 9
BANKBOOKS, FLVE AND FANCY ENVELOPES, NOTE, LETTER, CAP AND BILL PAPER
KEROSENE LAMPS,
Os various styles, Kerosene Oil Lamp Chimneys,
and every other article appertaining to the business. The reputation of the house is a sufficient guarantee
that ail biders entrusted to it will be idled to entire satisfaction.
PHYSICIANS’ PRESCPdPfONS.
Carefully and accurately compounded at all hours, day or night..
Bainbridge; Q-a., Feb. 20th, 1869.
Jfahy year£ ago, the writer of these lines and an invalid physician, while visiting the
Island of St. Croix for their health, experienced and witnessed many surprising and
beneficial effects of the Bum there produced upon many of the invalids who were (like
ourselves) seeking health; and, upon influiry tod investigation, obtained a full history
of its medicinal virtues. He was delighted and surprised, and after his own
which soon Occurred, determined, if possible, to procure the sole light to manufacture
and sell it in the United States. ‘ , r , „ ~
The result of his labors was .a gldricus success for himself tod suffering humanity
for the celebrated PLANTATION BITTEBS was thus made known to the world. PLAN
TATION BITTEBS being an article of real merit, founded upon new principles, and
relying wholly Upon ihe vegetable world for its medicinal effects, worked a rapid wrote?
tion in the history of medicine, and became as a household .tford all over the civmzed'
world. The cabalistic S. T.-1860-i was a talisman of health, and the demand for
the PLANTATION BITTEBS soon far exceeded the abilities of the proprietors to supply.
Notwithstanding the large importation of St. Croix Burn, made expressly for the com
pounding of these Bitters, the quantity was inadequate. It therefore became necessary
that arrangements upon an extensive scale abroad should at once be made, and an agent
was dispatched to St. Thomas fbr that'purpose. He was fortunate in securing tod
testing several plantations on some of the largest and most productive estates^ on the
island. Houses, stills and presses were erected as if by magic, which utterly l aston
ished the natives. ” The services of experienced men and natives of the island werejpro
cured, and very soon the proprietors of the PLANTATION BITTEBS were in a position
to supply their laboratory with all the perfectly pure St. Croix Bum needed m manufac
turing the GBEAT DYSPEPTIC TONIC AND INYICCBATOB. . The above cut repre^ts
As an antidote to Fever and Ague, Intermittent and Malarious Fevers, Dyspepsia, and
other kindred diseases, the use of the PLANTATION BITTEBS is unsurpassed in the
history of the world. Over five million bottle *?e disposed of annually. They are
adapted to old and young, male and female. They are agreeable in taste, and always
produce an immediate beneficial result, 1
Dcccmbci 9, 1868 Se ~ ly '
BACHELOR’S HALL.
*ROSt THE HUSH OF BILL* o’rOUBKB.
ilaohelor’s Hall What a, queer looking place It is!
Kajid me ftom'Bucli ail the days of my life;
Sure but I think what a burning disgrace it is,
Never at all to be getting a wife.
fflH&e old bachelor, glootriy a,nd sad enough,
Placing hfs tea-kettle over tile fire;
Soon it slips over; Saint Patrick! he’s mad enottgn,
(If he were present) to fight with the squire.
Noto like a hog in a mortar bed wallowing,
(Awliwatci enough) see him kneadiug his dough,
Troth! if the bread he could ate without swallowing,
How it would favor his palate you kri ow.
The dish-cloth is missing* the pigs are devouring it,
In the pursuit he has battered his shin;
A plate wanted washing, grimalkin is scouring it,
Thunder and turf what a pickle he’s in!
Pots, dishes and pans, and crazy commodities,
Ashes and pratie skins kiver the floor;
His cupboard’s a storehouse of commical oddities,
Things that had never been neighbors before.
His metil being o’er the table left sitting so,
Dishes take care of yourselves if you CEtri!
But hunger returns; then he’s fuming and fretting so
Och! let him alone for the baste 01 a man!
Late in the night he goes to bed shiverin’,
Never the bit is the bed made at all; .
He creeps like a terrapin under hi 3 kiverin’—
Bad luck to the picture of Bachelor’s Hall!
Sill Lovcngood at a Candy Pulling.
1 had a heep of trouble lastcrismas and
I’le tell you how it happened. Deken J one’s
gals give a candy puliin, and I got a stool;
as they say in North Karlinri, an so over I
goes. Sister Poll and me went together*
and when we got to the'house
was chuck ful. Dog my cats es there toas
roorri to lUrn around. Thare was SuzeHar
kins, shese as big as a skinned hoss, and
sixty other Harkinses, and all the Scrogiu
ses, and Williiitriscg; dud Simmonses, and
Pedigrews, and the scool master and his
gal, besides tlie old Deken and the Dekeness
and enough of little Dekenses to set up a
half dozen young folks in the famili busi
ness. (
Well ijimebey the £>ot began to bile; and
and Uteri the ftiii begun. We all got our*
plates reddy, and put dour on ohr hands to
keep the candy from stickin, and then we
pitched intu puliin. Wozent it fun? I never
saw sich 1 tiffin and cuttin up iri all my
born daze. I made a candy bird for Ern
Simmons. Her and me eitpecks to trot in
double harness one of these da£e. She
made a candy goose for me. Then we got.
to throwing candy balls intu one another’s
hair, and ii rrinniri from one side of the
house to tother; and out intu the kitchen,
till everything on the place was all over
gommed with candy; I sot on a pine bench]
and Em Simmons sot close to me. Suzr
Harkins, confound tier pibter; tlirowd a
candy half sock ifitii ofie of bl|" ifo. 1 made
bulge to run ater her arid heefd snmtin rip.
My stars alive! Wosent I pickled? 1 look
ed aroiirid; and tliar was tHf? gabel end of
my bran new britches a stickin to the pine
bench. I backed up against the wall,
sorter crawfish like and grinned.
“Sul” ses sifter Poll. the mat
ter?”
‘Shet up,’says I.
“Sot,’* says Em * , corh l e awfi .frotii that
iviill, you’ll git all over greasy.”
“£ici tier grease j says i, anti I sot down
on a wash bold, that was lying across a
tub feeding worse than, an old maid at a
wedVien. Party soon, I felt sonitbing hurt,
and purty soon it hurt again. Ice—W \u& 1
1 jurppt ten feet high', lacked over the tub;
out flu old Joneses Crist in us ttirftey, &»d
you ought to seed me git, I cut for tab
f.irhbbr how jurnpt Staked and fen**
ces and smashed down brush like a fima
vvay lieriean till Igo home and Went to
bed. and sfade there two daze.
El old dekiu Joneses barn burns down
next winter; and feue arrested for it and
enybody peers as a witness agin me* i!e
bust his doggoned hod l Them’s my sen.,
tirnents. SUT LOVENoOOD:
. ' '■» .. I -r .
The Spare Bed.—One night, a judge; a
military officer and minister all applied foi
a lodging at an inn where , there was but
one spa rf*‘ feed, and* I b'ft landlord was called
upon to decide which had the best claim of
ihe three :
“1 have laifi fifteen years in the garrfeon
at- " —,” said the officer.
“I have sat as fudge twenty years in
R said the judge. ,
“With your leave, gentlemen. I have
stood in the pulpit twenty-fi?ve at
M— -—V
“That settles Ihe dispute,” said the land
lord. You, Mr Captain, have fain fifteen
years, you Mi, Judge, have sat twenty
years, while this old fellow lias beeh stand
ing up for the last twenty-five years; so ne
certainly the best right to the bed.
, [From the Plan ter & Farmer].
Distemper In Cuttle—Preventative.
Messrs Editors:— Having seen it stated
the past yfear that the distemper prevailed
amongst the cattle around Richmond, as
also in some other places. I feel disposed
to re-publish the substance of a communis
cation of mine irf the Southern Plriritar for
1854, which a sa preventative, 1 haVe uetrer
yet known to fail.
Aboitt the first Week iri May pidfcure a'
trough to correspond in fciie with the' nurti
ber of cattle; place it wlfefe they ttte pen
ned, and bore a hole fhforigli tWe botb’fti to
let off the surplus water atjtor it rflifi; Fill
it nearly still of red clay, then pffl Oil it 4L
beral quantity of salt; arid toheb the
are penned at night, they will \HVaHalffS
go io the irohjjh aild lick to jJUeir satilfcn.
tion. The first rain that fait the iialt vfil
saturate the clay and the battle will etKftlt
ate the whole of If. This remedy must be
contihiied until the.first hard frost.
iiy father was iiltj first that l
adopted # this treattrieht, lie having
'lPrd that battte afflicted, with distcuibfcr
trild been kno ton red fclaV and
get Weil; lie; i suppose, recollecting that
nature often preformed a cure beyond fUrf
power of art, salted Kis cattle sortie two of
three times a week on a red galled spot and
although his neigh bobs’ battle toefe dfdiig
rapidly around (iim, arid that for several
years, yet he never had a solitary cutti
amongst his stock. For sortie twd or tiifbh
years he kept therii in lilt} eiicloshres, liUfc
after this, in consequneb of ah
fence, his cattle Would go on an adjoining
common and roaHi *rith his neighbors’ des
tempered cattle froiH Week to toeek,
they eritifyiy escaped this infectidos dia
base. These facts sperik sot ihethSeiVei;
and go to show that my father’s reniedy
a specific to stay tliis fatal malady.
An nncle of mine told me years ago, that
the distemper beiHg Hhnmgst liis cattle, oue
of his riiilcH co&s was taken toltH thecliieafie;
toeiii off; rind when fob rid; wrts Uta gulled
eating red-clay, and got well;
One of my soils at brie time lost ait jus
cattle except one milch cow, and when ta
ken with disease, she weHt off*, gone
several days, and when found was in a gift'
iy eating red-clay, and she got weifc
Here we have the itistin&l of foalHfh
beautifully aebbriipushed; and we indy add;
the dog, when sick, seeks relief frodi lifetbs;
and the guayakil, wheri bltthn Ity ii sfcf-petitJ
fi,, dß dri atidote iH a cerUiri
In the Southern Planter for ’45, ilfnie
water is rccorhmended as a soveieign cure
for distemper even in the last stages oftfJid
disease, and by the way, this is said t ii be
the beat known remedy sos distemper fit
Horses;
The late Dr. Wm. S. Morton] in a hoHlv
rnunication to the Southern P.anter iri ’64’
<m distemper in cattle* said: I strongly
sukpeCt that what we Call distbmpef; IS tile
bloody M.u rfiiirj. of Sbdtiahd] tilid olhef
parts of Great Britain] anil tlidf it &as bnfc
ried to North Carolina liy Sbdtish ein bib
grants.’’ f J he above suggestion I have
reason to believe is correct, as t once lived
in ftrirtii Carolina, and horinl authentic in;
formation, I learned that the first Case
distemper occiii-i ; ed in that State
Fayetteville, which was settled principally
by, the Scotch. Hence the new name—•*
“Carolina distemper.”
W. H; HA+ckETf;
°Half bris’libl of Water to a peck of iim,*, fee* M
irtarid rioti) tlie water is clear, then poyrpff
water, and drench it witli a quart twice a,day, un
til the animal recovers] Three or four
generally sufficient s
NO. 6.
A Traveller in Arkansas found the foly
lowing notice iituck oil tfee fcnyilldJa doat
at Cache river, l j^ofis—£f iihubp
curns hear ater liker of to git akross if/e
River,Jth'ey ges blow (jus bear horn; aiid ol
I dout cunt When my Betsy up at the Hotijib
bears the fe'orn bio Wirt, sfref6 6’iiru doWff
sell them the ticker, or set them akrooa UiA
river, if ime away from Imam j*6liiV wihkuV.
M B tjfies» that can,t rede will
the Rous arter Betsy taih't but a huff 4
mile thar.”
A young lady gives the followin'/ c*ifj
logiie of different kinds of “Thjf
sweetest, a mother's love} 6 tlie longest a
brother’s love, tile stfbiVgeat a woinan’s
love* 1 lie dearest a man’s loye; and
sweetest,* longest, strongest, dourest 1 Idtfty
a IbVe of a botiliel.”
"'' n i» i ■ ■ m
Staggers Among Hods.—'fife o{ie iea*
spoonful of sweet nil for any good oilj; anil
half the Quantity of spirits of
mix and shake ilie oil arid turpentine m>ll
together then lay the hog down iHfe’
affected erir up; and pottr this tniltifre ifitß
htsoaf bolding him iff tliSt siuUtl jfj t mi*-*
irioht or two; untii it gets well into t?f£
beadi No further attention .»$ necessaryi
t never lost a case thus treated for suHiW
teen years; ,
, 1 •; 7"
To Cußfs Blind' Staggers;— -The. following
for the. “Blind Staggers,” is spid, by geu*-
erai ftutitjpkonf to be in’fall liable). . ,
“Measure a stick from the nostril to tfee
inner corner of the eye #■> as not liafe
to6‘ long j sharpen ifell aflcf ftih it iik .jtfei
nostril twisting it around once or twice, Stt
as to make the nose bleed freely, ancl i V
will give instant relief.'* This remedy is
so si.rnpfe—the rifatefial being always UH
hand—that we consider it invaluable to
farmers and horsemen.”