Newspaper Page Text
BROWN'S
IRON
BITTERS
WILL CURE
HEADACHE
indigestion
BILIOUSNESS
DYSPEPSIA
NERVOUS PROSTRATION
MALARIA
CHILLS and FEVERS
TIRED FEELING
GENERAL DEBILITY
PAIN in the BACK & S.DEb
IMPURE BLOOD
femaleInfirmities
rheumatism
NEURALGIA
kidney and liver
troubles
fof sale by all DRUGGISTS
has Trade Mark and crossed Red
do
do
The Genuine
Lines ca jvrappcr.
TAKE
NO OTHER.
39 cw ly.
Official Organ of City and County.
CITY AND COUNTY.
Council Proceedings.
Council Chamber, >
April 6th, 1886.)
Regular Meeting.
Present, His Honor S. Walker, May
or.
Present Aldermen Whilden, Bell
and Harris.
Absent Aldermen Carr, Case and
Hendrix.
The minutes of the last meeting
were read and confirmed.
Aldermen Case and Hendrix came
in and took their seats.
The application of Jack Dixon to
rent one acre of city land in his en
closure on the North common having
been referred to the Land Committee,
they report as follows:
We, the Land Committee, recom
mend that the application be granted
upon liis paying five dollars in ad
vance for the*present year.
1. L. Harris, Chm’n.
On motion rhe report was received
and adopted.
The following was read:
To the Hon. Mayor A Aldermen.
Gents:—Some of the land purchas
ed of you at $40.05 per acre by survey
ing the Ker Boyce land they take
about one-third of an acre. If you
will allow me twenty dollars and the
same quantity of land west of my
premises free, I will move the fence
and go to all expense in putting up
the same. Respectfully,
G. W. Sanford.
The above having been referred to j
the Land committee, they report as !
follows:
The committee to whom this appli- J
cation was referred, recommend tnat j
the same amount of land belonging to
the city, that he has enclosed of the
Ker Boyce estate be given him upon
the west of liis home; that he be al- j
lowed actual expense of removing
and putting up the fencing upon the
laud furnished him.
1. L. Harris, Chm’n.
On motion the report was received
and adopted.
Aid. Carr came in and took his seat.
The petition of the merchants of the
city asking Council to annul the tax
ordinance on iocal brokers was read
and not granted.
Aid. Harris was excused and retired.
On motion the Clerk was directed
to republish by posters the ordinance
in regard to horses and mules running
at large. j
On motion the pump used at the
Artesian well was directed sold pro
vided it will bring one hundred and
twenty-five dollars.
The following accounts were passed
and ordered paid:
W. S. McComb, $50.00; A. Dunn
$50.00; W. J. Owens, $50.00;* McMillan
A Ailing, $40.50; Whitfield A Allen,
$75.00; T. L. McComb, $25.00; Stevens
Bros. A Co., 2 accounts, $20.20; Coop
er A Perry, 2 accounts, $5.15; The
Gutta percha Rubber Manufacturing
Co., lor hose, $898.84; Boston Woven
Wire Company for suction hose, «*s.00;
F. Hang, $4.25; C. E. Hogue, '$1.70;
E- Shaw, $18 38; E. Crittendon, 75c;
Frank Bell, 55c.
The Clerk's report was examined
Cash.
March 18, By amount paid McMillan
A^AIIing, ac’t passed 38 45
do T. J. Fairfield, ac’t passed, 62 K>
t w U°* ue * straps to engine. 1 7J
. i , Bu, ' ke * 9°-* ac,t passed, 1 60
do Postal note and stamp, 5
do G. Key, work in Cemetery 5 00
do 24. F. M. Gobert, 2 da\s police
duty, 4 00
do H. W. Bass, 2 days police duty, 4 00
do J. R. Harbuck, 2 “ “ •• 4 nn
do 25, C.R. It. freight on hose,
do C. R. R. freight on piping,
L. Hernandez, 1 day police
duty, 3 00
J. R. Bagiev, 1 day police duty, 2 on
G. Key, work in Oraet<*rv t * 4 00
J. Edwin Davis, draft m, j .
Staley, suction hose, ' 68 ns
Exchange. 2 5
do 31, E. Crittendon, work on axes, 75
do F. Bell, work on engine, 55
April 1, J. L. White, 1 day police duty, 2 on
do F Hang, for le drier for engine, 4 25
do 3, G. Key, work in Cemetery, 4 00
5, E.Shaw, part onweil con
tract, 13 75
do
do
do
do
do
do
do
4 00
4 98
3 42
Cash on hand to'balance,
239 85
3,258 84
S3,489 69
Approved April 6th, 1886.
Geo. D. Case, Chm’n. Fin. Com.
S. WALKER, Mayor..
Agricultural Experiment Stations.
Gen’l. S. D. Lee, President of the
Agricultural and Mechanical College
of Mississippi has written a letter to
Gen. D. H. Hill, President of the Mid
dle Georgia Military and Agricultural
College, in this city, calling his atten
tion to a Bill now before congress to
establish Agricultural Experiment
Stations, at the several Agricultural
and Mechanical Colleges in the differ
ent States.
It is unnecessary to mention the
great benefits to be derived by our
respective colleges, and through them,
the great benefits conferred ou our
Agriculture, in having such stations
supported by the General Govern
ment. The Bill has been favorably
reported by committee, and it is hoped
the Georgia delegation will use then-
influence to secure its passage. The
following is the Bill:
A BILL
To establish agricultural experiment
stations in connection with the col
leges established in the several
States under the provisions of an
act approved July second, eighteen
hundred and sixty-two, and of the
acts supplementary thereto.
Be it enacted by the Senate and
House of Representatives of the Uni
ted States of America in Congress as
sembled, That in order to aid the De
partment of Agriculture in acquiring
and diffusing among the people of the
United States useful and practical in
formation on subjects connected with
agriculture, and to promote scientific
investigation and experiment respect
ing the principles and applications of
agricultural science, there shall be es
tablished, in connection with the col
lege or colleges in each State estab
lished, or which may hereafter be es
tablished, in accordance with thepro-
visions of an act approved J uly second
eighteen hundred and sixty-two, en
titled “An act donating public lands
to the several States and Territories
which may provide colleges for the
benefit of agriculture and the mechan
ic arts,’ 1 or any of the supplements to
said act, a department to be known
and designated as an “agricultural ex
periment station:’ 1 Provided, That
in any State in which two such col
leges have been or may be so estab
lished the appropriation hereinafter
made to such State shall be equally
divided between such colleges, unless
the legislature of such State shall oth
erwise direct.
Sec. 2. That it shall be the object
and duty of said experiment stations
to conduct original researches or veri
fy experiments on the physiology of
plants and animals; the diseases to
which they are severally subject, with
the remedies for the same; the chemi
cal composition of useful plants at
their'different stages of growth; the
comparative advantages of rotative
cropping as pursued under a varying
series of crops; the capacity of new
plants or trees for acclimation within
the isothermal limits represented by
the climate of the several stations and
their vicinity; the analysis of soils and
water; the chemical composition of
manures, natural or artificial, with ex
periments designed to test their com
parative effects on Jcrops of different
kinds; the adaptation and value of
grasses and forage plants; the compo
sition and digestibility of the different
kinds of food for domestic animals:
and ;ound correct and on motion was
approved and passed.
On motion, council adjourned.
G. W. Carakkr, Clerk.
G. W. Carakei
■ City Council
anti D1 sbursoinents
April 5th, inclusive.
Clerk, in .account with tin:
of Milledgeville. Receipts
roiu March 16th to
.8.
1386. ^ Cash. Dm
March 16, To cash on hand from last
report., S3,007 02
By bee A Hodgkins sale of
stock, S1200.00 worth,
P. M. Con if) ton A Son, sales
S. V. alker, for lumber anti
brick,
W T. CoV.n A Co., sale of
goods for 1S86.
McMillan A Ailing part con
tractors tux,
W. H. Roberts, sales,
Pound A Walker, horse and
mule dealers,
So. Express Company,
1 -Edwards and wife, tax,
"• M. Edwards, public gm,
dr, o n A - tax »
Q -0, Julia Had, part on land sold
dr, 00 t "and. Cora,,
04’Crittendon, tax ’85.
do O5’ K-’nn n ^D'or’s court,
do court,
do 26, A \ValkS?,Tcards' wood
do SO, Jul ja HajJ bif.'SS Ed sold
do a. T.lbteS’lS
do M. F. Davis, tax ’85 ‘ ’
April 1, One load wood, ’
H. W. Bass, 1 cord wood
T. T. Windsor, Ins. tax ’
W. Pritchard, l cord wood
Fine in Mayor’s court,
5, E, Shaw, tax,
do
dr>
do
ciu
do:
do
do
do 19.
do
do
do
12 00
34 UU
80
175.00
12 50
8 12
25 00
50 00
20 75
25 00
2 50
4 00
3 00
10 00
10 00
1 17
6 IX)
do
do
do
do
do
1 00
6 86
0 00
75
1 50
2 47
1 50
2 00
3 75
$3,48960
the scientific anrl economic questions
involved in the production of butter
and cheese; and such other researches
or experiments bearing directly on
the agricultural industry of the Uni
ted States as may in each case be
deemed advisable, having due re
gard to the varying conditions and
needs of the respective States.
Sec. 3. That the said experiment sta
tions shall be under the direction and
i control of the trustees or other gov-
| erning body of such colleges, who
, shall have power to appoint a direc-
1 tor and such assistants as may in each
! case be necessary.
Sec. 4. That in order to secure, as
far as practicable, uniformity of
' methods and results in the work of
I said stations, it shall be the duty of
j the United States Commissioner of
Agriculture to determine annually a
standard of valuation of the ingredi-
I ents of commercial fertilizers, upon
which the analvsis of such fertilizers,
as far as made by said stations, shall
be based ; to furnish forms, as far as
practicable, for the tabulation of re
sults of investigation or experiments ;
to indicate, from' time to time, such
lines of inquiry as to him shall seam
most important; and, in general, to
furnish such advice and assistance as
will best promote the purposes of this
but nothing herein contained
receipts and expenditures, a copy of
which report shall he sent to each of
said stations, to the said Commissioner
of Agriculture, and to the Secretary
of the Treasury of the United States.
Skc. 5. That in order to make the
results of the work of said stations
immediately useful, they shall publish
at least once in every three months
bulletins or reports of progress, one
copy of which shall he sent to each
newspaper in the States in which they
are respectively located, and to such
individuals actually engaged in farm
ing as may request the same, as far as
the means of the station will permit.
Such bulletins or reports and the an
nual reports of said stations shall be
transmitted in the mails of the United
States free of charge for postage, un
der such regulations as the Postmas
ter-General may from time to time
prescribe.
Sec. 6. That for the purpose of pav
ing the salaries and wages of the di
rector and other employees of said
stations, and the necessary expenses
of conducting investigations and ex
periments and printing and distribu
ting the results as hereinfore prescrib
ed. tlve sum of fifteen thousand dol
lars per annum is hereby appropria
ted to each State, to be paid in equal
quarterly payments, on the first day
of January, April, July, and October
in each year, to the treasurer or other
officer duly appointed by the aforesaid
boards of trustees to receive the
same, the first payment to be made
on the first day of July, eighteen hun
dred and eighty-six; but no such
payment shall be made to any station
until the trustees or other governing
body ol the college at which such sta
tion is located shall have executed,
under their corporate seal, and filed
with the Secretary of the Treasury,
an agreement to expend all moneys
received under this act for the sole
and exclusive purpose and in the man
ner herein directed, and to maintain
a farm of at least twenty-five acres in
connection with such college, and
shall also have executed and filed with
said Secretary their bond, in the penal
sum of fifteen thousand dollars, with
two sufficient securities, approved by
the clerk of a court of record in such
State, conditioned on the faithful ex
penditure of and accounting for all
moneys so received: Provided, how
ever, That out of the first annual ap
propriation so received by any station
an amount not exceeding one-fifth
may be expended in the erection, en
largement, or repair of a building or
buildings necessary for carrying on
the work of such station; and there
after an amount not exceeding five
per centum of such annual appropri
ation may be so expended.
Skc. 7. That whenever it shall ap
pear to the Secretary of the Treasury
from the annual statement of receipts
and expenditures of any of said sta
tions that a portion of the preceding
annual appropriation remains unex
pended, such amount shall be deduct
ed from the next succeeding annual
appropriation to such station, in order
that the amount of money appropria
ted to any station shall not exceed
the amount actually and necessarily
required for its maintenance and sup
port.
Sec. 8. That nothing in this act
shall be construed to impair or modi
fy the legal relation existing between
any of the said colleges and the gov- ’
eminent of the States in which they
are respectively located.
A Mother in Israei i3 Fallen.
Departed this life on the 14th of
March, 1836, at the residence of her
son-in-law, Mr. Wm. Thornton, in
Hancock county, da., Mrs. Mary
Mullins, in the eighty-third year of
her age. In early life, sister Mullins
gave her heart to God, and united
with the church at “Island Creek 11 .
By a pious walk and consecrated life,
she became endeared to all with
whom she came in contact. Her life
abounded in good works. She sought
and visited the sick, and kept fond
vigil at their bedside, as long as her
services were of any avail. She dis
charged faithfully every duty of life.
A few days before death touched her
with his icy fingers, she felt that the
end was near and stated that she was
ready and waiting and willing to go,
and be with her Savior. In the death
of this noble Christian woman, a large
circle of relatives are left to mourn
her loss, and the church loses one of
its brightest ornaments.
“Yet again we hope to meet thee,
When the day of iife is lied,
Then in Heaven with joy to greet thee,
Where no farewell tear is shed. 11
Carr's Station, Apr. 8, 1886. W.
A NEW RAILROAD.
A large and enthusiastic meeting of
tee citizens of Eatonton and of the
county of Putnam assembled at the
Court House On the 8th inst, to give
expression to their views in relation
to the proposed construction of a
railroad from Atlanta to some point
on the seaboard. Hon. W. F. Jenkins
was called to the chair and I. H. Ad
ams requested to act as Secretary.
On motion of Judge J. S. Turner, the
following resolution was submitted
and adopted: “That the chair ap
point a delegation of ten gentlemen to
collect the business statistics of the
county, and such other information
as may be necessary. That they go
to Atlanta and lay before the commit
tees appoidted, there these facts, as
sure them of our hearty co-operation
in the proposed enterprise, and if pos
sible induce them to build the propos
ed route via Eatonton. 11
Committee: J. S. Turner, Frank
Leverett, E. B. Ezell, E. M. Brown,
C. D. Leonard, T. C. Spivey, J. T.
Dennis, R. B. Nisb'et, ,T. Q." Adams,
L H. Adams, Sr., W. F. Jenkins.
In a remarkably short time the
meeting, speaking for itself and allow
ing others to speak when the oppor
tunity offered, declared that it wanted
the road $12,000 worth. Twelve thou
sand dollars voluntary—mind you,
voluntary—subscriptions, made at a
meeting that gathered on a few hours 1
notice, and at which only tln'ee or
four citizens outside of Eatonton were
present, would seem to be a st rong in
dication that we will get the road if
such a thing is possible; and no doubt
Atlanta, the big, go-ahead Atlanta, will
smile upon us and say we have done
pretty well. But we are going to do
better.—Eatonton Messenger.
The ladies will find the prettiest
Millinery in the city, at W. H. Carr’s.
We commend to the Ladies Dr. Bel
lamy's Gossypium advertised in our
columns. It is considered by very
many who have tried it, as the best
female remedy known. Circulars giv
ing particulars can be had at Dr. Ke
nan's new drug store where the med
icine is for sale. As the formula is on
the bottle, Doctors prescribe it freely.
Mr. Risdon R. Collins has three
plantations and is sometimes awav
from home. When he leaves home
his wife has a double-barrel shot-gun
loaded with fifteen buckshot, at "the
head of her bed, and she knows how
to use it. He forbids any person from
coming inside his enclosure after
night.
Cure for Files.
Piles are frequently preceded by a
sense of weight in the hack, loins and
lower part of the abdomen, causing
the patient to suppose he has some
affection of the kidneys or neighbor
ing organs. At times, symptoms of
indigestion are present, flatulency,
uneasiness of the stomach, etc. A
moisture like perspiration, producing
a very disagreeable itching, after get
ting warm, is a common atte ulant.
Blind, Bleeding, and Itching Piles
yield at once to the application of
Dr. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which
acts directly upon the part affected,
absorbing the Tumors, allaying the
intense itching, and effecting a per
manent cure. Price 50 cents. Ad
dress The’Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co.,
Piqua, (). Sold bv T. H. Kenan
Milledgeville, Ga. [36 ly.
Hats for ladies,
dren in all styles
lowest prices, at W.
Misses andChil-
and shapes with
H. Carr's.
Backlen's Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for
Cuts, Bruises, Sores Ulcers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles,
or no pay required/ It is guaranteed
to give perfect satisfaction, or money
refunded. Price 25 cents per box.
FOR SALE BY C. L. CASE.
July 21st, 1885. 2 ly.
Miss Fannie Price can now be found
at the Millinery establishment of W.
H. Carr. Miss Price will still carry on
her dress making and will be glad to
see all her old customers and as many
new ones as will favor her -with their
patronage. Prices to suit the times
and satisfaction guaranteed.
LOCAL AND BUSINESS NOTICES*
Evadorated Peaches, for making
Tarts, Dumplings and Peaches ami
Milk. Try them.
21 tf j ‘ L. H. WOOD & CO.
Smoke 'Wood's Legal Seal Cigars.
Two car loads of Texas Rust Proof
Oats, just received at
W. T. Cons & Co’s.
1435 Plugs Tobacco, 10 inches long,
for 0 cents a piece at L. H. Wood &
Co's. [36 4t.
Call on D. W. Brown, at Brown’s
Crossing for Gossypium Guano. [33tf
If you want the finest Cigar in the
citv. Call at the new drug store of
Dr! T. H. Kenan.
For high grade fertilizers call on D.
W. Brown, at Brown’s Crossing. 33tf
Stamping for all kinds of Embroid
ers*, done by Mrs. Mary Mouse.
35 3t.]
Notice of Dissolution.
T HE partnership heretofore exist
ing under the firm name of Hall
& Bass is this day dissolved by mutu
al consent, W. H. Bass retiring from
the firm. F. A. Hall assumes all the
obligations of the firm, and will con
tinue the business at his old stand,
No 29 Hancock street.
F. A. Hall,
W. H. Bass.
April 1st, 1886.
Thankful to the public for the lib
eral patronage extended to me iti the
past, a continuance of the same is re
spectfully solicited. F. A. Had,.
Milledgeville, April 1st, 1886. [39 lm.
Some pretty
Wood A Co's.
Buy Punch
W ood A Co.
Syrup very
and Judy (
cheap, at
49 2t.
igars from
40 4t.
CHATHAM ARTILLERY
CENT
T'7
-AT—
savannah, g:
Notice!
State of Georgia, Baldwin Conn*v
wm t Court of OrdinaryV
t /UUuV- u " l J ers ’ A I )ril the 3rd, 188*6.,'
W CREAS,tby virtue of tin* provL-
VV ions Of a Bill, entitled an Act to
provide for preventing the evils of in
temperance by local option in anv
in *5i S State,.’approved Sept,
the 18th, I880, an election was held
on the 22nd day of March, lss*;. at a p
the precincts in said county. Now J
Daniel B. Sanford, Ordinary of said
county, do hereby declare, that upon
carefully investigating and consolida
ting the returns, the following is the
result, to-wit: The entire vote at the
precinct at Brown's Crossing in tlm
319th District, G. M. of said countv
and that at the precinct at Butts in
the 115th District, G. M., of said conn
tv, are rejected and not counted, for
the reason that the returns made
from said two precincts are pot in
compliance with the law, and fatally
defective, thus leaving only the vote
of the two other precincts to consider,
and the following is the result, to-wit
Against the sale, ■ 560 legal vote-.
I or the Sale, 279 legal votes.
Maj. against the sale. 281 legal vote-.
Which will fully appear by refer-
ence to the official returns in said elec
tion on file in the Ordinary's office.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture, this April the 3rd, 1886.
DANIEL B. SANFORD, Ordinary.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County.
Court of Ordinary,)
At Chambers, April 3rd, 183*6. >
TT is ordered that the foregoing <lec
1 laration be published once a week
for four weeks in the Union & Re
corder and that said act take effect
in said county as soon as said publi
cation has been made the time pre
scribed as the statute provides.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture this April the 3rd, 1886.
DANIEL B. SANFORD, Ordinary.
w
Baldwin Sheriff’s Sale.
TILL be sold before the Court
House door in the City of Mil
ledgeville, during legal sale hours on
the first Tuesday in May. 18S6, the
following property to-wit:
All that tract or parcel of land ly
ing on the north-west commons of the
City of Milledgeville, containing thirty
two and one-half acres more or less,
levied on as the property of J. T.
Temples to satisfy two Justice court
fi fas in favorof L. N. Callaway, Admr.
of W. M. Sawyer, tlec’d., vs. .J. T,
Temples. Levy made by T. S. Hag-
lev, Const., and returned to me this
April the 3d, 1886.
39 tde. C. W. ENNIS, Sheriff.
For Sale—Land.
d
Flour Pots, for sale, at Roberts'.
Choice Seed Ground Peas, at Roberts'.
LIST OF ADVERTISED LETTERS
Toryism in England is playing into
the hands of revolution.
It puts me in mind of an Irishman
who eat too much colcannon on a No
vember night; he had to call his sons
to put a rope about his body to keep
him from bursting. They pulled and
pulled and he was getting no relief
and he then said: “Ain faush ella nee
beshive gon aher.' 1 One pull more or
you’ll be without a father.
If Russia gets one pull more at
England the grizzly bear will squeeze
the entrails out of the British lion.
England won’t have France as an
ally this time. Tip.
Remaining in the Post-Office at Mil
ledgeville, Baldwin county, Ga., April
10th, 1886. If not called for within 30
days, they will be sent to the Dead
Letter office.
Kianter, Annie
Mon fort. Ella G.
Posey, D.
Rushion, James
Stanley, Fannie
Shuttles Bob
Williams Ella
Wilson, Lucinda
Wallace, George
Worsham, E. C.
Office Hours.—General delivery
window will be open from 9 A. M., un
til 5 p. M. Money Order window will
be open from 9 A. M. to 4 P. XI.
J. G. Fowler, P. M.
Corsets, Gloves, Hosiery, Handker
chiefs, and an endless variety of No
tions, just received, at W. H. Carr’s.
Arnold, Mrs. Oba-
diah
Brown, Mira
Butts, L. M\
Callaway, Nancy
Cary, Leahna
Franklin, Geo. T.
Freeman, Rachel
Huff, William
Jones, Mary, R.
CORGIA,
May 3 to May 8,1836,
INCLUSIVE.
Round Trip Tickets
VIA
Georgia Railroad!
Sale of Tickets Commences
April 28tli and continues until
May 3, good for return passage
10 DAYS
From date of Sale—From the fol
lowing Stations at Rates named
below:
TO SAVANNAH and RETURN.
act;
sfiall
all be construed to authorize said
Commissioner to control or direct the
work or management of any such sta
tion except as to the standard of val
uation of commercial fertilizers. It
shall be the duty of each of said sta
tions, annually, on or before the first
day of February, to make to the gov
ernor of the State in which it is loca
ted a full ard detailed report of its
operations, including a statement of
No farmer in the State of Georgia
should be without the monthly visits
of the Southern Cultivator. It is
the oldest and leading agricultural
publication in the South, and is
worth many times the price of sub
scription to any household. We will
send the Union & Recorder and
Southern Cultivator one year for
$2.50 in advance.
BILE BEANS! What a funny name
for medicine! Nevertheless it is very
significant as applied to the article.
Bile, according to Webster, is “a yel
lowish bitter, viscid nausceous fluid,
secreted by tne liver/’ Whenever the
liver does not act properly this fluid is
retained in the blood anti poisons the
whole system, and sallowness and misery
is the result. SMITH’S BILE BEANS
is a sure cure for biliousness and fiver
complaint. Price, 25 cents per bottle.
April 6th, 1886. > [33 lm
White Goods. A large stock at the
lowest prices, at W. H. Carr's.
We learn that the anti-prohibition
ists have determined to contest the :
late election and that they have ob-|
tained a sufficient number of names j
to a petition to the Judge of the Su-|
perior court, to meet the legal re-j
quirements for that purpose. One-
tenth of the votes that were cast at the
election is the number required.
Leading.men of the wet party were
putting their heads together yester
day, if we mistake not, and Col. Sam
Jemison, of Macon, who was in the
city, was, we presume, in consultation
with them. _
An elegant line of Millinery goods
just opened at W. H. Carr’s.
Five
Milledgeville
, $5 45
Carrs,
5 15
Devereaux,
5 00
Sparta,
4 80
Culvert on,
4 65
Mayfield,
4 45
W arrenton,
4 20
Thousand
Dollars
GEORGIA Baldwin County.
U NDER and by virtue of a d
made by H. F. Newton and i. C.
Newton, of said county, on tin* 24th of
Feburarv, 1885, to secure their certain
promissory note of the same date, and
payable Feb’v., 1st, 1886, for the prin
cipal sum of two hundred and eighty
dollars, to the undersigned, which
said deed has been duly recorded in
the Clerk’s office of said county, and
which was executed and delivered in
conformity with sections 1969 1970.
and 1971 of the code of Georgia for
1882, and by the authority therein
conveyed'and given, I will sell on
the First Tuesday in May, iss>>, be
fore the Court House cloor in said
county, the following tracts or par
cels of land—to wit—that tract or
parcel of land lying, situate, and be
ing in the 322nd Dist., G. M., of said
county known and distinguished in
the plan of said District, (it having
been original ly the 5 th Dist., of Wilkin
son county,) as part of lot No. 13,
containing Fifty acres, more or less,
also, all that tract or parcel of land
containing sixty five acres, more or
less, lying and being in the 322nd
Dist., G. M., of Baldwin county,
Georgia, bounded north by lands of
I. C. Newton, on the east, by high
water mark on the east side of Turkey
creek, west by lot No. 12, it being in
the north-west of corner lot 25, in the
old land District. Said lands will b<-
sokl to pay the principal and interest
due on said note, and attorneys' fees
this proeeedin
2nd 1886.
SAM’L WALK
Whitfield & Allen.
and the costs of
sale. This Apri
Att’ys at Law.
ER.
Its
IN PRIZES.
Buy* your Easter cards of Miss S. E.
Bearden.
Cotton Market
Corrected Weekly by C. II. Wright A Son.
The following is the Market Report
of April 12th, 1886:
Savannah.—Middlings, 8$.
Charleston.—Middlings, 8£.
Augusta.—Middlings, 8£.
Milledgeville.—Middlings, 8.
Liverpool.—Middlings, 5d.
New York.—Middlings, 9 3-16.
Gold par.
Calhoun and Gravely are the best
brands of tobacco, and you can al-
wavs find them at the new drug store
of Dr. T. H. Kenan. [35 tf
Grandest Military Gathering
ever held at the South.
Magnificent Inter-State Drill
and Tournament.
Seventy-five Best Drilled Mili
tary Companies in the Country
Infantry, Artillery and Zouave
Drills.
Magnificent Cavalry Tourna
ment.
Largest Military Encampment
held at the South since the War
T.
FAD!
LEiiiiJ!
All Qualities.
ST. LOUIS,
LOUISVILLE,
EASTERN,
WESTERN
or any other manufacture you want.
Boiied Linseed Oil,
Raw Linseed Oil,
TURPENTINE.
For stiffness and and soreness of the
muscles and joints of the body, rheu
matism, neuralgia—in fact any ache
ache or pain of the body—nothing
equals Salvation Oil. Sold by all
druggists. Price 25 cts.
Companies from all Parts of
the Union.
Grand Display of Eire Works.
Unveiling of Monument to Gen.
Nathaniel Greene, of Revolution
ary Fame.
Drill Grounds and Encamp
ment within city limits. Easy ac
cess from Railroads.
Review and Inspection of
Troops by the Governors of
States and their Staffs.
Grounds Open Daily at 9 a. in.
Drills Begin Daily at.........10 a. m.
Brigade Dress Parade Daily at 6 p. m.
■f'tf'Tor further information write to
either of the undersigned:
E. R. DORSEY,
General Passenger Agent.
JOE. W. WHITE,
Traveling Passenger Agent,
Augusta, Georgia.
April 13tb, 1886. 40 3t
ALABASTINE
KALSOMINE,
Colors of
^ All colors.
All Kinds.
PAINT AND KALSOMINK
BRUSHES!
Or any other article used in painting
houses, kept constantly on hand and
sold
Very Cheap,
—BY-
JOHN M. CLARK,
Druggist and Pharmacist.
Milledgeville, Ga., March 30, 18?6.
For Sale.—Pure Plymouth Rock
Eggs for sale from select hens. $1.00
per setting of 13 eggs. Apply to
35 tf] W. A. Cook.
Calhoun and Gravely are the best
brands of tobacco, and you can al
ways find them at the new drug
store of Dr. T. H. Kenan. [35 tf