Newspaper Page Text
r
AINBR
TERMS---S 2 A YEAR,
BAINBRIDGE, GA„ THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 10,1884.
VOL XIII--NO. 12.
ijUUM ILiillillA i WEST’S R. R.
EDITORIAL NOTES.
II „i tnis road arc run by Csu-
, \;.. n 'hh time, which is 86 mln-
^jjrrthan Savannah time]
sri’MllNTKN[iFN'T’8 OIFICF. )
s*vi.\n*.h, duo. ci, lhsa, f
y IS!) A FT E it SlJNDAl. DEO. 9,
a -. i-r Trains on this Road
fact mail.
,11 iiaiiy at
iei'*-
D‘ ,f
Ar-' 1 " 5
A-’ r
,-s dail;
lUmU <1
8:80 a. hi
10:14 a. m
11 ;50 p m
at 1 .’85 p. in
lie daily at. ,2:£0p. m
Arriic *t Dul'ont dady at 12 50 a m
irr Ttit Suarannoe da i/ at C *0 P w
An vt
AtiAe <i i
a.-mvc»' N
Bradford <
Arn - f s :
Va! Ju3la
:>,i‘y at
ai
. C 1!) p m
...6 30 p in
dly at..
. .7 4 r > p m
.. 1 p in
i
. .2 22 p la
iy at....
..8 25 p ra
y »• ...
*i)v at
.. 6 3G a m
at ...
.11 16 a in
t
11 30 p m
it
.1 35 p m
.. 2 25 a m
. .2 59 p ni
at.
.9 09 p m
.10 16 a m
L*
10 40 a in
. 3 a m
L
Arr.itu U ‘‘>'t*an t
irr; „H iiiomasvi
A;tiT» at liaiubi idye dully at
Art,"*' Chattahoochee ’ ”
j^eOuiiahuocheedai
[j,t» Iliiiibridge tlai'y at
L *„Tiiua.v,..il<' daily 1
1/it*OuitBiM?) daiiy at....
U,„ Vaidu»ia daily at
1*ti .V« Rradfcrd daily
Inn Lise ().» daily at.
| li»it Suvraunee daily at
1^,,^*. l)i:I’or.t daily at....,
!
(allilan daily at 3 1c, pm
irrittat V.'ay. rosH daily at 5 05 p m
jmn at Jr»ap daily at C SO p ui
Arrim at Savaunah daily at 8 17 p m
Bftceeu .'■’avaunah and V/aycross this
I Itiia ttapa only at Fleming, Jobnstnn's,
La, iud llU'-Vhliear. Between Wayoross
ud Jaakson'villa stops only at Folkston and
Ullaham. Between Waycro*3 and ChUu-
knclue slops only at telegraph stations and
„ iijnil at regular stations.
Pustugeia tor Feruaudina take this
| Mil.
PMHtngevs for Brunswick via Way cross
| taka this train
Pineugert for Madison, Monficello,
I’i lium and all Middle Florida points
I taka tkit train.
, Clow ooanrc.iou at Jacksonville daily
jAai'layi eacepted) Green Cove Springs,
Ifk luguavins. I'alatka, Enterprise, Sanford
I lit ill laauinRS on St. John's river.
Pull*»n i'arlor cars between Savannah
| tvl Jirki.iiville.
Pullman Buffet and sleeping cars on this
Iiraia ta Savannah Pensacola, Mobile and
| St. Orlcie.
taainia ,.snoots at New Branford with
KMe«r Cadlu Belle, leaving for Cedar
I Kit iu4 snvanuee river p.jt.ts every
Ihiiy laorr.iag 4:00 o’clock arvivirg at
llkoar It.yi the s«n,c afternoon. F.eiurn-
|is(. leaves Cedar Keys Monday morning
v.il of Tampa steamships.
| P.iungrrs for Pensacola, Mobile, New
hmts, Trias, and trails .Mississippi points
:m close connections at Chattahoochee
«'y with trains ol Pensacola aril .Atlantic
iarriviugat Pensacola at 11:45 in.,
|hki!« it 4.-J0 a. ui , New Orleans at 9:50
EXPRESS.
mi Savannah daily at ,3 20 P in
uw Jesup doily st ,.5 30 p m
Ml it Waycress daily at 7 05 p m
|amv« at t’ailahnni daily at 9 15 Win
• It Jacksonville dr.ily at. .1000 a an
• Jacksonville daily at 8 00 a m
(Caliilista daily at 8 47 p m
IU»I Wiyrrc.'S dr.dy at 10 40 p in
|tniv(itJ«.up dailyat 1213 pm
t st Siv.anah daily at, 2 20 a n
, This train s:,-r>s at nil stations between
*R-i .'irfcsoaville.
IVuiiiii ,. cars on this train Savan
ts to Jickuuuvilie.
P««irers tor Waldo, Gainesville,
fstlr lily, Ocala, Wildwood and all Bta-
a Florida Transit and Peninsula
i lake this train.
Caancctioi.s at Savannah daily with
i Savuuuah Railway for all
£•••’’ ut and Central llailioad
ft*,, points best and Northwest,
ALBANY El
tusnali daily
l Jesup dsily at
• 11 it crow .tail yat
to! ,i fnoniau, i
“>"! »t Ai .any a;
. : .n « • ■
15&
KPKE3S.
.
at.
...8 40 p m
.11 05 a m
...2 85 8 m
y at .. ..
...5 8-5 a m
taiiy at..
. 7 00 r *u
iaiiy ai...
.. 3 20 a •:
at
, t 7 la a ra
..11 15 p m
; at
...4 i-5 a rn
..11 00 p ra
ly at ....
...9 30 p m
it :
M0 17 p m
ilj at ...
.. 12 20 a in
c t
. .2 55 a iu
ly At
. . 5 25 ft m
sleeping cars Saraunsli
pJ. ico bv Yet and sleeping cars
ij. ; o Jacksoarille.
L, ,!, A*rsfor Bruswick, via Jesup, take
p* *fiia.
L 1 "".
Macon take this train,
L Citatc;
isft*
Si
lb
Si
tc. 1
t'i I
lor Fcruandinn. Waldo,
for lUy Ocala, Wildwood
«*tiu,s ca Florida Transit and
Rai.i.isd take this tiuiin.
it Jacksonville daily (Sun-
ce pt«v. tor Green Cove Spring, St.
;3! *a. Enter pise, Sanford and
Ch,”' aohn’s River
- ‘font w Albany daily with
iruic loth nays on SoHthwesterD
jj 13 , 1 h. tn Macon. Eufaula, Mouta
• °“iie. Now Orleans, etc.
Savannah daily with
*nd 's aniiali Railway for all
.h*nd Last.
^^,eaai savannah daily with cen-
t °* J for points West and North.
sold and Sleeping Car
i05j Ua “ u ^ at t' ns secured at Bren’s
- : tt 0 . *2 Bull street, and at the
'fovpu fcol of Liberty Street
uttj ® 5:a ' urai ‘t and l unch Counter
' n ! *! fl elation at Waycross;
*■ lln ie will be allowed for meals
( “Set trains,
*c* G ; Jas. L, Taylor.
^ Gen. Pass. Agent.
SUESCIBE fob
Rh,
vN
^I> e
mocrat,
COv
|<jfi
pr (’
onn ty Paper S2aYaar
A spirit of buoyant hopefulness
seems to perrade the entire state
as reflected by the representative
press. Evidently the country is
returning to first principles.
After fretting and fuming a
good deal the State press have
accepted the situation over the
speakership matter, and now
seem about as content as if Mr.
Randall had been elected. The
Georgia Press is solid when a
matt vr of any considerable nation
al interest is involved.
Twenty-eight cents was th« per
capita proportion of the national
debt in 1853. In 1865 the cest of
war had swollen the per capita to
more than seventy-eight dollars
and the annual interest per capita
was four dollars and twenty-nine
cents. Then the payment of the
debt began, and on the 1st of July
last the per capita principal was
about twenty-eight dollars, show
ing an average reduction of near
ly three dollars per capita for
each of the last eighteen j’ears.
The interest charge per capita is
now ninety-five cents.
In on# editorial the New York
Herald predict# Democratic suc
cess next year on a platform ®f
revenue reform. Ia the game i«-
sue of the paper another editorial
concludes thus:, “One very good
idea has got into the Democratic
■kull—the idea of revenue reform;
and that, to be sure, i# a vaet
change from the previous vacancv.
But the question datarves con
sideration by Democratic politi
cians whether, after all, the peo
ple are going to be satisfied to
displace the Republicans from
power for the sake of substitut
ing men who confess that they
are incapable of entertaining two
good ideas at once.”
Spirit s? the Press-
Several Georgia exchanges
notably the Macon Telegraph and
Messenger, Savannah Morning
News, and Albany News and
Advertiser, are making war on
tiie Georgia Railroad Commission
system, and express the fear that
it will cripple the railroad interests
of the state. They all pressat
some very pretty theories on this
line, but they are only theories—
theories too that the railroad?
themselves advanced whan the
system was being organized.
It is a notable fact in this con
nection, that the stocks of the
very Railroads which appear to
apprehend the most Serious
trouble from the system, are worth
more by a fourth to one half than
before the system was organized ;
with their dividends correspond
ingly large. It is also a notable
fact that most of these lines are al
so extending themselves to new
territory ; laying their tracks with
steel rails, building new depots,
putting on new rolling stock, buy
ing new and more expensive
engines etc., and showing more
real evidences of prosperity than
aver within their past histories.
It is also a notable fact the rail
roads have more money then any
one else in the country—as well
a* less regard for the rights im
munities and privileges guaran
teed every free born American
citizen- And this iast notable
fact is the one to which the exis
tence of the commission is attrib
utable.
It is also notable that the
thinking people ot the country
have so seen and recognized this
last fact, to such an extent that it
is among the hoped lor probabili
ties that Congress will—taking
our own Georgia system for a
pattern—organize a National
Commission. That it is needed,
we think, does not admit of argu
ment. That it i# necessary the
growing spirit of communistic
devilment all over the country
attests—a spirit, too—we may as
well remark in passing—that owes
its existance in this country to
that centralism toward' which
corporations during the past de
cade have tended, in their com
bined influence.
F#ni#n’# Eermala,
“Take thirty bushels of well rot
ted stable manure or well rotted
organic matter as leaves muck,
etc, and scatter it about three
inches thick upon a piece ®f
ground so situated that water will
not stand on it, but shed off. in
every direction. The thirty bush
els will weigh about nine hun
dred pounds. Take two hundred
pounds of good acid phosphate,
which cost me 322,50 per ton,
delivered, making the two hun
dred pounds cost $2.25, and one
hundred pounds kainit, which cost
me, by the ton, §14, delivered, or
seventy cents for one hundred
pounds, and mix the acid phos
phsto and kainit thoroughly, then
scatter evenly on the manure.
Take next thirty bushels of green
cotton seed and distribute evenly
over the piles and wet them
thoroughly; take again two hun
dred pounds acid phosphate and
one hundred pounds kainit, mix
and spread over the seed, begin
agaia on the manure and keep on
that way, building up your heap
layer by layer, until you gel it as
high as convenient. Then cover
with six inches of rich earth from
fence corners, and leave at least
six weeks; wh#n ready to haul to
the field cut with a spade or pick
axe squar# down and mix as thor
oughly as possible. Now we have
thirty bushels of manure weighing
nine hundred pounds of chemical
in the second layer, and these two
layers combined form the perfect
compost. You perceive the
weight is 2,400 pounds.
Florida Trade.
New Orleans Timat-Demoerat :
The war which has been wag
ing for the trade of the Chattahoo
ehee and Apalachicola section of
Florida and Georgia, and where
rival railreads are fighting in the
interest of New Orleans and
Savannah, Hill continues—is in
deed growing hotter than ever.
There are now' four steamboats
running oil the Chattahoochee,
Flint and Apalachicola rivers, and
such is the rivalry between them
that freight rates have taken a
tumble, and fi ju!- is now handled
and carried a distance #f 400 miles
for ten cents, while the transpor
tation ®f a bale of cotton is worth
only fwenty-tive cents.
These Georgia and Florida
rivers are somewhat low just now,
but as soon as the water gets high
er we may expect a still more
vigorous contest, as is is proposed
to reduce cotton to ten cents a
bale.
The fight is of considerable in
terest to New Orleans, which is
the most favorable port to this
section, and ought to secure most
of its trade. If our merchants
will but co-operate with the efforts
being made to free the people of
Western Georgia and Central
Flerida from the dominion and
control of the Georgia Central
Railroad, which has had a mono
poly of this trade for many years
it will prove of great commercial
advantage to this city.
BILL i.KP’3 CHAT.
The Da wills* ofthe New Year
tl»e Waiting World.
I’pcn
LOOKING ALL OVER THE WORLD FOR
EVIDENCES OF PEACE—THE COMING
CONTEST FOR THE PRESIDENCY AND
THE QUARRELS IT WILL ENGENDER
—TIIE IMPORTANCE OF A COMMIT
TEE.
From the Constitntior.
I believe there is peace most
everywhere now. Folks have
stopped killing folks for a little
while and the new year will dawn
span the world in brotherly love.
Not so much love either I reckon,
but they ara not mad enough to
fight. Egppt has had a time of it
policy, neither can the republican
party unite on a protection tariff.
There are too maay conflicting
interests at stake among the man
ufacturers and their laborers on
the one hand and the consumers
on the other. There are lots of
mills idle now, and lots of labor
ers out of employment, and lots
more working at reduced wages.
There are millions of capital in-
vest«d, aud there are millions of
women and children concerned,
and it won’t do for a party to
make a blunder in this business.
Let the democracy go slow. There
is no room in thiir platform for a
tree trade plank. Let them faver
a tariff reform .’’.ud whittle down
somethings as low as they will
for the past few years, but Lgypt; an( ] ;up somethings, but
The South nod the Committees.
Th# objection made in some
quarters to the make-up of Mr.
Carlisle's committees, that leading
places on them were given in too
large number to Southern Re
presentatives, is well answered
bv the New York Times, which
says: “As a large proportion of
the Democratic members of the
House were elected from the
South, it was to have been ex
pected that the S®uth woald get a
share of the committee work
commensuate with its share oi
the membership ” The Times
might have’ added, also, that a
larger proportion of the Southern
than of the Northern Democrats
were members of former Congress
and therefore better fitted for the
work of legislation, which re
quires information and experience
to be acquired in no other way
than by the perlormance at Wash-’
inston for a session or two of
actual Congressional werk.
has about fought herself to death
and is obliged to quit. There is
no nation of any consequence that
is now making a business of kill
ing folks, and I was thinking what
a blessed thing it would be if man
kind wonld quit it altogether.
Some historians say that war is a
necessary evil. That no govern
ment can stand very long without
a war, for war strengthens a
a government and unites the peo
ple. If they don’t get up a for
eign war the people will get to
quarreling among tkemsejz»s andr
overturn their own government.
I read the other day that the em
peror aad the nobility of Russigi
are plotting a foreign war to put
down the nihilists at home. Some
of our stuteemen say that the
north and south will never be
reconciled until some other nation
knocks the chip off ©four national
hat and then we will all join
hands and make friends
and pilch into the furriners—
maybe so, maybe so—war is a
miglry bad thing, but if we are
obliged to have it I want them
fcdlers, wh® abuse us so much to
have a fair chance. Give ’em the
post of honor, which is tho post of
danger, nnd if per chance they
fall let ’em fall in dust and glory.
I was ruminating over the com
ing contest for the next president.
There won’t be a fight I reckon,
but the contest is going to be very
bitter and the quantity of lies snd
slander most a mazing. Both sides
are getting ready n ri w laying in
stock. Our side will do the Ge»t
they can I reckon, but they have
neither the capital nor the exper
ience of them fellers already in of
fice. Our lio factories and slander
mills are on a limited scale and
have been declaring such poor di
vidends for the past twenty years
that we have sorter l<»3t confidence
in the business. When, we do
make anything them other fellers
swindle us out of it and I reckon
they will do it again. Thera seems
to be a powerful rumpus going on
about Mr. Carlisle’s election, and
the way ho has fixed up his com
mittees. Well, I never could see
any difference between Mr. Car
lisle aud Mr. Randall about mak
ing a president. I can't see what
the tariff committee has got to do
with it. If Mr. Carlisle puts free
trade men on the committee what
does that amount to if the majori
ty of congress are opposed to free
trade. I know that these com
mittees have great influence if
they are able men and good men,
but it they arejust schemers and
politicians their reports don't have
much weight, and congress won't
be bound nor gagged by them.
When did the speaker get to be a
man of such consequeuce and
such power ? How does it hap
pen that a committee is such a big
thing, that the whole csnntry is
afraid of it. Ain’t congress a big
ger thing than a committee ? Can
thirteen men control 300 ? If a
majority of members believs that
protective is right caa't they pas*
a law to that effect ? Of course
they can and so I don’t see what
all the preliminary fuss is about.
The people are going to have
something to say about all these
great questions, and the people
will speak through the press and
the press will be heard.
One thing is certain. The dem
ocracy-can’t unite on a free' trade
do noting for the sake of party. The
wants and necessities of the hum
ble people of this land are of
greater moment than any party.
We can’t whip them fellers on
any tariff issue. We can’t unite
the south upon it much leas the
northern democracy. Times are
changing, capital is coming south
every day to be invested in man
ufactures that need protection
and can’t live without it, and we
want it to come. Let it come, our
iron and coal and timber and cot-
tjsrTSfriiare now looming
pip into view. Our mills are mak
ing money while theirs’ up north
are languishing. They have just
found it out, but hardly believe it
and ever accuse us of making false
reports of dividends and profits.
Things are working all right down
here now and maybe we had bet
ter let things alone awhile. The
prosperity of the south is of more
consequence to us than the elec
tion of a president, I want the
Democracy to ^succeed and turu
out them fellers, and I want it
bad, but when Mrs. Arp asks me
what a Democratic President is
going to do for me or for her and
the children, I’m sorter bothered
to explain. It takes too long.
W« don’t want but one plank in
our platform and that is we want
them fellow’s to step down and
out, because they have stolen
enough. That is platform suffi
cient and it is all the better, be
cause it is the truth. Truth is
"ill prevail. Tiutli
crushed to earth will rise again.
It has been a pewerful long time
rising and prevailing, I know,
but we live m hope, hope springs
eternal in the human breast.
Hope has been springing for
twenty-five, long years in the
Democratic breast and is spring
ing still, though, I don't think the
spring is as bold and strong as it
used to be.
Nevertheless, let us all hail the
new yea^ with as much hope and
faith as possible. If Uncle Sammy
Tilden is superanuated let us hunt
around for some other man. There
are plenty of them. I don’t see
that we are obliged to take a man
from New York or Ohio. If the
best man lives in Rhode Island,
lets take him. The people are
tired of being tied to New York.
If the democracy of New York
are sound they will go as strong
for a man from Missouri if he is a
good man and a statesman.
“Westward the tide of empire
takes its way.” But you needent
talk to me about putting a south
ern man on the ticket for Vice
President, I’ve seen Joe Brown
mentioned and Colquitt, and
Blount. Why I had just as leave
take Dr. Carlton with his plat
form oi pay for our niggers, for
the effect would be all the same.
The New York Tribune could by
itself make 200,000 people believe
it was the ent ring wedge to get
pay for our niggers. Now, there
is nothing wrong in wanting pay
for ©ar niggers. . A man can’t
help wanting it, and I don’t know
anybody right now who wonldent
take it if they could get it, but
that debt is sorter like a debt that
has been paid, by a fellow taking
th® benefit of the bankrupt law.
You dident get anything, and you
never will get anything^ but still
you can’t help feeling like the
fellow owned it and ought to pay
it if he could, notwithstanding his
discharge. Wilberforc® spent a
life time trying get England to
free her niggers and he succeeded
but England paid lhe owners of
the slaves for their value and it
cost her 60 millions of pounds to
do it. But our folks are net them
sort of folks and so we don't ex
pect anything. I haven't got
any record ®f my niggers, Confed
erate bond woke up uoin the dead
somehow and got to be worth a
little money but my confidence in
niggers is powerful weak. If any
body wants to buy my claim I'll
sell it at five cents in the dollar
and take it in counterfeit money.
Blessed is he who expects little,
and knowing them feHers up
yonder as well as I do I expect to
remain blessed the balance of my
days. Bill Arp.
Profsstien&i Cards.
DANIEL McGILL,
Atbrnsy and Caunssilcr at Law
BAINBRIDffE, GEORGIA,.
Will practice In tha of th« Albany
Ciseni. anJ elsewhere b/speoial wontraat.
July SB, 18S3.—ly
CHASLES C. BUSH,
Alter.noy at Law,
COLQUITT. SA.
Fr*«pt sttaaMen plyes to »!1 ba^Beea tn»
trar?»I t* ei,
From Colquitt.
Messrs Editors :—Miller has
suffered more for the want of rain
than I ever knew of for the last
ten weeks.
The people can hardly get
enough water to driiik ; and as for
stock such as cattle, sheep and
hogs, they are rzally dying for
want of water. Hence the stock
men this winter will greatly feel
the effectthe drought.
Last Friday we had a very nice
little rain which gave new life and
zeal to the people, and which
wound up with a very cold spell.
Farmers are on a stand s till on
account of the earth being so dry.
There is not a man I know of in
my section that has plowed in his
oat crop yet; which is good evi
dence that the oat crop will be a
short one for next year.
“Plow boy” in Eciriy County
News says: “The way to improve
intellectually, socially, religiously
is to advertise our grass covered
land’s at an estimate of some
value; stay at home, read and
study hard, speak not evil cne of
an other.” He is right,
Hovfever if that's the way Col
quitt expects an improvement I
am fearful it will be left on the
unimproved list.
Hog killing was the go on last
Saturday. I suppose Jim viu^g
his four hundrea pounder.
We think Judge G Boykin has
taken in hand, the completion of
the Colquitt Academy. He is
good one provided he don’t
sneeze too much.
We will soon have plenty of
candidates for th© Legislature and
all think they will get elected;
get any how a majority over
eleven.
Dec. 27th, 1883 Bunk.
Since his induction into th#
office of Chief Magistrate of the
State, Governor McDaniel has
made a model Governor. V e
have seen but one unfavorable
criticism Irom the State press
concerning him, and that was by
a disappointed applicant for
place. We have no doubt Gover
nor McDaniel wiil his own suc
cessor.
Killer Sheriff’s Sale,
GEORG IY—Killer County :
Will be sold before the court bouse
door in tho Town of Colquitt Miller
countyJGa. between the lejtai hour* of
naif on the firat Tuesday ia February next
the follow! nit described property tO'Wit;
Nine-two acraaot land off of lot No 393
in the 12th district of said county—the
same being the west half of said l«t—less
thirty-three and one-third acres—snu
leried on as the property of Emiline Cook
—formerly Emiiins Fen a—to satisfy one
Justice Court fi fit in faror'of A W Troxwell
vs said Emilihe -Cook—formerly Emilinc
Fenn. Levy made and returned to me by
a Constable. Pec 24,1883.
J. A. J. KEMBREL,
Sheri IT Miller County,
Miller Sheriff’s Sale.
GEORGIA, Miller County:
Will be sold before the conrt house door
in the town of Colquitt, Miller county,
Georgia, between the legal hoars of sale on
the irst Tuesday in January next the fo].
lowing described property to-wit :
One Dan’l Pratt Cotton Gin,- levied on
as the property of John Davis to satisfy
one Miller Superior Court Fi Fa in favor
of the-Daniel Pratt Cotton Gin Co vs said
John Davis. This January 1st 1884-
J, A- J, Kimbrsl,
Jan 8, 4f, Sheriff'
Shriaer’s Indian Vermifuge will destroy
end expel worms It is reliable. It is
cheep. Only ZSeeate c hettis.
JKQ. E. DSHALSON, .
Atisrr.sy srd Ccsineelcr at L*w.
OSee over Hind’s store. Will practice
in Decnter and adjoining counties, and
elsswhsre by special contract.
Feb'y 16, 185S.
HASTGN O’NEAL,
Attorney at Law,
BAINBRIDGE, GA.
Will practice in all the State Courts.
Epeoie] attention given tc iho investig*,'
tion of land claims.
foisi® m saswjj,
A TT0RHEY AT LAW,
BAINBRIDGE, GA.
Will prseties in tho eonrts of the Albany
Circuit. Office in Democrat Office
- Collections and Land claims speeiaL
ties.
HEBICAL CARD.
Sr. E. j.
Ha* rsmoved bis office to the drug ster#
formerly oscupisd by Pr, Harrell. Reel
dense en West street, eeath of Shot well,
where calls at night will reach him.
' BERTilTJUY. ~
J . C . ii r r y , 1^.
Cen he four d daily at hie efflea em Send#
Bread etreet. up etch's, in I. Jehnsea’s
bedding, where he is rsady to attend to the
wants ef the public at reasonable rate*.
dee-Mf
DOCTOR M. L. BATTL1
Dentist.
Office ever Hinds Store, Weal eU®
ceert house. Has fine dental engine, ud
will have everything to make his efle«
fir»t'Clas*. Terra* ctfh. Offiee henrs t
a. m. to 4 p. m. jen.lftfaf
DR. L. H. PEACOCK,
Beepeet fully tenders bis pvofeeeioMl i
ieea to the people of Bainbridge and 1
tj-
OSce over store of W. 0. Sreom k O#.
Resideuco oa West euu of Bj-oagkt#*
street, where he can be found at nighL
April?, 1881—
JBrr. D. TAT.SX2T. WH. M. HAMUttK
TALBERT & HARRELL.
Attcrntys and Counselors at Law,
BAINBRIDGE, UA.
haTS f0M ^ -u.rtnsr.hta
under the firm name of (albert as u-_Im
for the practice of levr. Will praetuV ir
ell the courts of the Albany Circuit. Qfie®
over Barnett's store.
August lfo, 1882.
SEiTflttS’S BARBER PA8LQR,
SHARON HOUSE BLOCK,
BAINBRIDGE, ... - GEOXSIA.
Steps sharp raxors, clean towels, elegeat
room, first-class sober barbers. A shave;
ahanipeo or hair cut is here a luxury that
costs yon no more thsn at a sesosd-elaeu
shop. *
«HIFF1X & DECVBESBJ,
Proprietors
TO SSSY HAEY
Patrons ami Friends!
In spelling my Ware bonnet bis season t
do so in full confidence that roy effort* te
please aad accommodate you in the past
have been fuily appreciated. This is tee
well assured by the more than hoped for
X'A-TnOEi’ju&Sa
which you hove bsstowad upon ms during
my eight years of bus : ne*s te admit ef
comment. Allow me to ray that this year
N0THIK8:wii! ba LEFT USS€!3E
that will in any way accommodate my pat
rons. There will be many addi'iens wade,
to my Wagon Yard aad Steak Aeeommodn-
tions. I claim cottons ia my warehouse ta
he safer against fire than any other ware
house in Baicbridg«; as.all
will b9 kept fully <
iasursd At Ny Own Expoms
for the owners. This I kavedon* ever tines
I have been in the business. 1 pretaet my
patrons against all risk of fire whatavar.
All eetftas becomes insured as soon aa
thrown on my platform.
BEWARE
sf all who look to- their own inter,
eat and let their parroua suffer. This an#
best be avoided by bringing your sot tan
to.my warehouse. I have full eontrel ef the
Scale*, myself, allowing no iaaxperisnasdl
person to weigh any cotton.. Ta thane whe
have heretofore foiled/ti> bring me their
cotton 1 ask a trial, feeling eonfi4*mt that
they will continue to do so. A fall lias at
the Old Reliable Inprcved ->
Ttr.nesseo & Siudebaker Wsgffl*
alwas on Laud aud at lowest figures.
m Your* Truly.
W W. WRIGHT.
Ang. 38, 1883,