Newspaper Page Text
PATENTS
Obtained and all PATENT BUSINESS at
tended to lor MODES,ATE FEES:.
Our office is opposite the U. S. Patent
Office, and we can obtain Patents in less
time than those remote from WASHING
TON.
Send MODEL OK DRAWING. We ad
vise as to patentability free of charge; and
we make NO CHARGE UNLESS PATENT
IS SECURED.
We refer, here, to the Postmaster, the
Supt. of Money Order Div,, ana to officials
of the U. S. Patent Office. For circular, ad
vice, terms and references to actual clients
in vour own State of County, write to
C. A. SNOW & CO.
Opposite Patent Office, Washington. D. C.
Nov. 18th, 1884. 19 tf.
£. E. BROWN.
FILLMORE BROWN
EDGERTON HOUSE,
Opposite General Passenger Depot, Ad-
• joining Brown’s Hotel,
- - Groorgia,
Macon,
E. E.
BROWN & SON,,
Owners and Proprietors.
For, Sale.
O NE suburban ’ country
^ mile from town. Fruit of all
kinds in abundance. House new,
fences good and surroundings pleas
ing to the eye.
CYNE house anc^ lot on Wayne street
W in the heart of town.
\J in the heart of town.
T street, near the old factory site.
NE house and lot on Green street
HREE houses and lots on Wayne
T HREE small 2 room houses on
Montgomery street^ near Mrs.
Brooks’, with half acre of ground at
tached.
O NE house and lot Jefferson street
containing one afcre of ground-
splendid well of water.
This elegant new Hotel, with modern
improvements, newly furnished from top
to bottom, is open to the public, lne
rooms are large, airy and comfortable,
and the table furnished with the very best
Macon’s excellent market affords, ltims
S2 per day. . Oct.lG,
’83. 14 tf.
BE IT REMEMBERED!
—THAT AT THE—**
GEORIG A MUSIC HOUSE,
E. D. IRYINE, Manager,
Macon, Gra v
You can buy the best Piano made for
only $10 per month, until paid l? l > ani ^ no
interest charged. Thinh of buying a su
perb $10 per month, bo
gradually and easily will the purchase be
rnaclo that no inconvenience willfelt
and in a short time you will possess a
niece of property which will add to the
joy of your household; tor
Musical Homes are Happy Homes.
AGAIN!
We sell Organs at $3.50 per month—no
interest. Pianos rented, and where par
ties conclude to purchase, the rent paid
will be considered part payment on the
instrument. This places lianoa and Or
gans within reach of almost any one
Now why be without a nice Piano Oj.
Organ? ■
ONLY THINK OF IT!
Pianos sold on payment of $10.00 monthly.
(Wans “ •' 3.50
Pianos Rented “ “ 3.50 “
Old Pianos received in part payment for
ae Doffitonly think, but take advantage
of the opportunity, and possess a superb
instrument.
We Lead In Low Prices
AND EASY TEEMS!
Other houses pretend to follow, but they
don’t—let them figure and prove it.
In conclusion we would respectfully say
that in buying from us, you run no nsk.
J^usefif you desire the Instrument
soe^if ^tea-s ^represented’, before a dollar
fs naid Is this not fair? Who has tne ad
vantage upon these conditions. You oi
the Georgia Music House'
n ]
U college,
ground.
0
containing one acre of
NE vacant lot back of college, con
taining one acre.
frZTAll the above property can be
brought cheap for cash, or half cash,
and balance on time with interest
Applv to
BETHUNE & MOORE,
Real Estate Agents.
Milledgeville, Ga., June 1, ’80.
Plantation for Sale,
PLANTATION 17 miles from Mil
ledgeville, 10 miles from Sanders-
A
ville and 11 miles from Devereaux
Station, is offered for sale, on easy
terms—300 or 400 acres swamp land
yjith the privilege of 1,250. Settle
ment one mile from swamp, in a
healthy location with good water.
This place is particularly desirable as
a stock farm. Apply to
BETHUNE & MOORE.
Fori Sale.—The tyt opposite the
residence of the late Jerry Beall. This
is one of the prettiest building lots in
the city. Call on Bethune & Moore.
and -
Sb 5 ?KWmgus“'ab”ad-n;rv,ft is enient A
^ I> Tr < SiSv s yS“ : iS d tK'5ti e i s ^
Valuable to us, not to receive our cartful
protection, for herein is the key oi o i
SU Bccaus-, a friend made is a customer
gpined We are determined to make noth-
irfg butfriends,so any representation made
by us you can put down <.s a ..olid Fact,
•ind covern vourselt accordingly.
Because, we will pay freight^ i ^ay
if the instrument is not as represented,
ana it Sistaetory. ^ P^reiSh to your
home—anvwhere in the South, lias any
other-house made a more liberal offer than
tll ^i'Send for oui* catalogue of 10c
Music. You will be surprised to see
that we can sell the best music for 10c.
Dec. 8th, 1885. 3b ly.
OUICKEST TIME!
WITH
THROUGH PULLMAN BUFFET CAR
ATLANTA TO NEW YORK
VIA
East Tenn. & Shenandoah Valley
Routes.
N. Y. EXPRESS. ROUTE.
Leave Macon, E. T., V. & G. daily 2 15 p n.
Leave Atlanta “ “ 5 40 pm
Arrive Rome “ “ 835 pm
Arrive Dalton “ “ 9 50pm
Arrive Knoxville “ “ 140 am
Arrive Bristol “ “615am
Arrive Roanoke X. & IV. “1145am
Arrive Sheu. Jane ... .S'. V. R. II. “ 8 38 p m
Arrive Washington...B. A O. R. R. “ 10 30 p m
Arrive Baltimore B. & P. R. R. “ 11 30 p m
Arrive Philadelphia,. .Penn. R, it. “ 3 30 a m
Arrive New York.— “ “ 700 am
Virginia Springs all open—at low rates.
Excursion rates lower than ever/ ~
For further particulars write to or call upon
.1. F. Norris, TicKfet Agent, Macon; Jack Johnson.
Ticket Agent, Atlanta; or Chas. N. Kight, Dis
trict Passenger Agent, Atlanta.
B. W. WRENN,
General Passenger Agent,
Knoxville, Tenn.
SHOW CASES. CEDAR CHESTS
ASK FOR ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLET
TERRY SHOW CASE CO
NASHVILLE TENN' G
Jam 12, 1G86.
27 ly.
J. II. ESTILL.
A. E. SHOLES
Georgia State Gazetteer,
Business and Planters’iDirec-
tory.
VOLUME XV., 1886-7.
O N or about October 1st, 188t>, the fourth vol
ume of the GEORGIA state Gazetteer
will be issued from the Morning News press of
Savannah.
It will contain over l,ooo pages octavo, will
be printed in excellent style, and solidly and
handsomely bound.
It will give for every city, town, village and
hamlet in the State
let Complete shipping, express, money
order post office and telegraph directions.
‘>nd Population, educational and church
facilities principal products and shipments, and
in fact everything Of interest or importance rela-
rive^to every poiQt^ bnsiness aml professional
mCU 4th. C A careMly'prepared list, with post oilice
‘uidress of responsible farmers throughout the
State, SiS exhibit of taxable property.
5th. A complete classifled Business and
Prol'otisional Directoij.
6th. county Directory, giving area, census,
products, valuation, officers and po^t offices
of the 137 counties of Georgia. •
7th. Court Guide, giving time and place of
meeting of all courts, with officers oi sanfe.
8th. Railroad Directory, with record of
officers, stations, distances, etc.
9th. Directory of the State Government. list
of officials, roster of the General Assembly.
^ 10 *
10th. A New Map of Georgiy, revised ami
corrected expressly for this volume.
The entire management of the work will be
in the hands of Mil. A. E. SHOLES, V'liose xe-
. m-.i for more than ten years with the Director
ies and Gazetteers of tlus and other Southern
st u es is sufficient guarantee that the utmost
( ire will be given to making this Fourth Volume
a credit to the State and an improvement, on all
precee ding ones. rTVV ...... ,,,,,
Subscription price ■’ rv .. OOLLAL. .
rates of advertising proportionately low.
A. E. SHOLES. Manager,
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA.
May 19th, 188G. MO 2m
SHOLMES’ SURE CUBES
MOUTH • WASH and DENTIFRICE
Cures Bleeding Gums, Ulcers, Sore Mouth, Sore
Throat, Cleanses the Teeth and Purifies the Breath ;
uaed and recommend “<1 by l«adinj <ienti«.s. Pre
pared hy Dhs. J. P. .V W. It. Boi.mks.-Dentists. Macon,
Ga. For Sale by all druggists and dentists.
Aug: 5th, 1885. 4 ly.
ONE UNIFORM PRICE!
The Moller Organ.
c>
$
and
Ad-
a
S3
CD
*—*
CD
S3s
Cl
S3
•-I
<
H-s
CD
0S
THE MOLLER ORGAN
Comes before the public this year with
New and Valuable Improvements
—making it—
BETTER, FINER AND MORE VALUABLE
than ever before. An examination of its
merits will convince you that it is the
Finest Organ
of the day. They are incomparable in
workmanship and matchless in tone. The
prices are the VERY" LOWEST* at which
instruments of the highest standard can be
sold. To prove the above facts we will
send an Organ to any reliable person on
inspection. xt> will be to your interest to
aid us in the sale of the MOLLER ORGAN.
We retail and wholesale direct from fac
tory,—
sS50
HENRY’S
CARBOLIC SALVE.
The most Powerful Healing
Ointment ever Discovered.
_ Henry's Carbolic Salve cures
Sores.
_ Henry's Carbolic Salve allays
Burns.
Henry’s Carbolic Salve heals
I m pies•
Henry’s Carbolic Salve cures
Piles)
Henry’s Carbolic Salve heals
Cuts.
Ask for Henry’s—Take No Other*
tS*BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS.
Price 25 cts., mail prepaid 30 cts.
JOHN r. HENBY & CO.. New York.
fcg^Write for Illuminated Book.
April 20, 1880.
41 cw ly
CLINCNIAN’S
TOBACCO
' irrnrrr~i rnnn ■■■■■■■ i n'lim r
REMEDIES
* i
s £
THE CLiNGHAN TOBACCO OINTMENT
rilE MOST EFFECTIVE PRKPAKA-
i JON on the market for Piles. A SURE I'l llE
l'or Ifcliiiicr Piles. Has never failed to give
prompt relief. Will cure Anal Ulcers, Absuess,
iistula, Tetter, Salt Rheum Barber’s Itch, Ring-
la.niis, Pimples, Sores and Bails. Price 50 cts.
THE CLKGMAN TOBACCO CAKE
VATUifE’S OWN REMEDY, Cures all
Wounds. Cuts. Bruises, Sprains, Erysipelas, Boils,
Carbuncles, Bone Felons, Ulcers, Sores. Sore Eyes,
Sore Throat.Buni<ms,Corns, Neuralgia,Rheumatism,
Orchitis, Gout, Rheumatic Gout. Colds, Coughs,
Bronchitis, Milk Leg, Snake and Dog Bites. Stings
of Insects, Ac. In fact allays all local Irritation and
Inflammation from whatever cause. Price *25 cts.
THE CLSNGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER
Prepared accordinir to the most scientific
principles, ©1’ the 'PUREST SEDATIVE
I .ND REI> I ENTS, compounded with the purest
Tobacco Flour, and is specially recommended for
Croup.Weed or Cake of the Breast, and for that class
of irritant or inflammatory maladies, Aches and
Pains where, from too delicate a state of the system,
the patient is unable to bear the stronger application
of the Tobacco Cake. For Headache or other Aches
and Pains, it is invaluable. Price 15 cts.
Ask your druggist for these remedies, or write to the
CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO.
DURHAM. N.:C., U. S. A.
Oot. 12,1885. 14 ly
Dentistry.
DR. H M/CLARKE-
W ORK of any kind performed in ac
cordance with the latest and most im
proved methods.
«fS>Officein Callaway’s New Building.
Milledgeville, Ga., May 15th, 1883. 44
• TJJE WILL OF A JILTED LOVER.
CASH AND A MONUMENT FOR THE GIRL
. . HE LOVED.
Red Bank, N. J., July 26.—For sev
eral years John Henderson, a youth
possessing .$10,000 in his own right,
has been courting Miss Ryerson, who
lives on the Middletown side of the
Shrewsbury river. Some time ago
“ e young couple had a quarrel and
all the efforts of friends could not
bring about a reconciliation. Finally
Henderson, as a final appeal, wrote ta
Miss Ryerson requesting to know if
there was a chance of ever regaining
her affection. The young woman
answered: -‘No! never again can I
love you.” The despondent lover did
not attempt to do any of the rash
things that despondent lovers 9o, but
came to Red Bank and had a will
drawn up giving $1,000 in cash to Miss
Ryerson, to be received at his death,
and setting aside $5,000 to erect a
monument to the memory of the
young woman when she died. This
will was drawn up on Monday last.
After signing it the testator said that
it was his intention to spend the re
mainder of his little fortune in drown-
ing his sorrow’s in drink. A few days
later, however, he had the xvill de
stroyed and another instrument was
drawn up by which $2,000 was left to
the young woman at his death, while
another $1,000 was divided up among
.a few’ friends. Henderson remarking
at the time that the^$l,000 he had left
would suffice to drown liis sorrow's.
It is said that the young man has no
relatives, and that the will as devised
will stand good in law’.
A COAL OPERATOR,
With a Thousand Dollar ExpeBi-
. ENCE.
What Heflty WAtterson fhinks of
Englishmen.
MR.
The Milledgeville Banking Co.
Of Milledgeville, Ga.
A General Banking Business Transacted.
• L. N.Callaway, President.
B. T. Bethune, Cashier.
Directors.—W. T. Conn, I). B. Sanford,
.d. B. Hendrix, G. X. Wiedenman, L. N.
Callaway, T. L. McComb, C. M. Wright.
Milledgeville, Ga., Oct. 21st, ’85. 15 ly
AGENTS
WANTED
Fast
Fast
Fast
Sell in?
Sell inir
Selling
Look?.
Hooks.
Books.
Salary and Commission.
Salary and Commission.
Salary anti Commission.
For full particulars and terms, address
ATLANTA PUBLISHING COMPANY,
No. 8 Sbuth Broad Street, Atlanta, Ga.
April 27, 1886. * 42 3m
JONES*
SERMONS.
AfiENTS WANTED.
Sam Jones condensed
Over 500 pp. Illustrated
Only subscription edition
authorized hv Mr. Jonos
Steel portrait and fn«*.
Jones’ card dr»l
nounctnjf pirate editions.
Address Mr. Jones
Tame Indian Monkeys.
• It is amusing to watch the queer
freaks and half human w r avs of apes.
The monkey home of a zoological gar
den always contains an interesting
group of spectators. But; if is inter
esting to watch their antics in confine
ment, it certainly is a gratification to
see them tamed and allowed their
freedom. There is something so w-ell
nigh human in their actions as to
arouse a peculiar sympathy.
“My acquaintance,” says a zoologi
cal writer in India, “with two apes,
Mahmoud and Eblis, w T as made soon
after my arrival at the bungalow (na
tive Indian house.) I saw them tied
f to the veranda rails by long ropes.
‘The big one, Mahmoud, is over
four feet high and very strong; and
the little one, Eblis, is not above 20
inches.
After a time I heard a cry, and
saw that Mahmoud had 1 snatched up
a stout Melacca cane, and dragging
Eblis near him, was beating him un
mercifully, the cries of the little semi
human creature being most pathetic.
' The case being, clearly one of mur
derous assault, I rushed at the rope
which tied Eblis to the veranda, and
cut it, which so startled the big fellow
that he let him go, and Eblis, beaten,
I feared, to a jelly, jumped upon my
shoulder, .and flung his arms around
my throat with a grip of terror. As
I bore Eblis away, Mahmoud threw
the cane either at him or me.
I carried him to my easy chair,
and he laid down confidingly on my
arm, looking up with a bewitching,
pathetic face, and murmuring, ‘Ouf,
ouf.’
“As I write, he sometimes sits on
the table watching me attentively, or
takes a pen, dips it in the ink. and
scribbles on a sheet of paper. Occa
sionally he turns over the leaves of a
book; once he took liis master’s offi
cial correspondence, envelope by en
velope, out of the rack, opened each,
took out the .letters and held them as
if reading, but always replaced them.
Sometimes he gently takes my pen
from my hand, puts it aside and lays
his dainty hand in mine, and puts one
long arm around my throat; and occa
sionally his small, antique, pathetic
rface rubs softly against mine, and he
utters the monosyliable, ‘Ouf, ouf, 7
which is capable of remarkable varia
tion in tone and meaning.”—Youth’s
Companion.
*—•—■—
THE DEMOCRATIC NOMINEE,
vm
P. JOHNSON, .
Whose picture adorns the. head of
this column, is an extensive coal and
wood dealer, at
?o.
36 N. Broad St.,
Ushers. CBAN -ON A STOWK. CinciunaU "a
WWjTEDOT; SCQTTr ’
Coi
• ’IK
'.inU-
et>;
HdI Clectri
ISatuple free to 1». on
iNo risk, quick anirt.. Ttrrit
jtr^SatDfactionK’-'J.mntw-■ . M r ,
DR. SCOTT* 842 Broadway, NEW
April 20, 1886. 59 lm.
MACHINERY.
engines ISteam&Water
BOILERS I Pipe & Fitting
SAWMILLS
GRIST MILLS
Atlanta, Ga.
He said lately in presence of a re
porter : “My business necessitates a
good deal of exposure upon me, and
last winter, owing to this fact, I was
attacked with a very severe case of
inflammatory rheumatism.
“What I-suffered from this dread
disease can better be imagined than
described. •
“I did everything I could to cure
myself. I tried every means in my
power and every remedy left me as
bad or worse than I was before. I
could not raise my%and to my head,
and it looked as if, even if I were rid
of the disease, its effects would
CRIPPLF, ME FOR LIFE.
“About four weeks ago I was per
suaded to try Hunnicutt’s Rheumatic
Cure, and my relief wap almost in
stantaneous. I am now on my fourth
bottle, and I am^is sound a man as
there is in Georgia.
“Have 1 any objection to Ahe pub
lication-of these facts? Not the least
in the world, and I only hope they
will meet the eye of every person suf
fering as 1 was, and that they will be
lieve,' try, and be cured; and I xvant
to say right here that I would not, for
one thousand dollars, be in the condi
tion I was, when I began using the
remedy which made me whole again
—Hunnicutt’s Rheumatic Cure.
I also have been a great sufferer
They are hospitable to the’last de
gree, but their hospitality is much in
their own conceit and lacks the sweet
aroma of true generosity, which is at
once welcoming and -unconscious.
They have a winning way of making
themselves disagypeable. It comes
natural to them and they prefer
it. They are an honest people and
a bravfi people with big bones
and sinews and appetites. The
brute is strong within them. They
love to eat and drink, to argue and
browbeat, to swagger and bully. Bea-
consfield, who was a Jew and a* gen
tleman, understood them’perfectly,
and when he started a policy of jingo
ism lie knew that he was representing
a nation of jingoes. The lines—
“We do not want to fight, but, by
jingo, if we do,
We’ve got the ships, we’ve got the
men, we’vfe got the money too,”
tells the whole story’, and leaves little
more to be said.
I truly believe that in a single-liand-
sd contest, England could whip any
other nation, the United States alone
excepted, and, as matters stand, she
could batter down and burn all our
seaport cities before we could fairly
take the field. Her resources, save
only as to food, are enormous. On
the land and on the sea, she is equip
ped for every manner of enterprise,
either of war or of peace, and she is
our enemy and rival. Lord Ran
dolph Churchill, Vho is personally a
blatherskite and blackguard, derives
iiq little of his undeniable popularity
from his outspoken abuse of the
Americans.
BRODIE’S GREAT LEAP.
HOW HE MADE THE TERRIBLE JUMP
FROM THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE.
New York World: For the love of
glory and an idle life, Steve Brodie, a
hatchet-faced, bead eyed boot black
of the Fourth Ward, dropped from
the big bridge into the East River, a
distance of 120 feet, this afternoon.
He struck the waves near where poor
Bob Odium met his death last year.
Brodie w^s taken ashore in a boat,
drank too glasses of whiskey, walked
like a bantam cock, offered to dance a
hornpipe, and threatened to thrash a
policeman. He was locked up in the
^ w Oak street station, arraigned in a po-
from indigestion and stomach troubles) Tombs,
dyspepsia, in fait—a,nd since I be-' 0 " w “° ”
gan the use of the Cure this has en
tirely left me, and I have as good and
sound digestion and appetite as I ev*.
er had.”
This wonderful remedy for th© cure
of all kinds of Rheumatism and all
Blood and Kidney Diseases, is now
sold at $1.00 a bottlf by all druggists.
Manufactured by J. M. Hunnicutt &
Co., Atlanta, Georgia.
It is worth remembering that no
body enjoys the nicest surroundings
if in bad health. There are miserable
people about to-day with one foot in
the grave, to whom a bottle of Par
ker’s Tonic would «lo more good than
all the doctors and medicines they
have ever used. 52 lm.
New Advertisements.
*=4
■D.J.REUA.Y & Co.
PRINTERSROLLERS
Cotton Presses
Brass Yalves
SAWS
FILES
SHAFTING
PULLEYS
HAPjGERS
a»cft«GSR3 sa -xAiAMuuach»
COTTON SINS
INJECTORS
PUMPS
Water Wheels
CASTINGS
Organs $25
WIRE,
Bethune Ss
BEAL ESTATE AGENTS.
Milledgeville, Ga.
■pROMPT ATTENTION will be {
J en to the purchase and sale
Real Estate ill Baldwin County
Milledgeville, Ga., Jarj. l~th, U&o.
iv-
of
ill upwards, Pia
Catalogue free. Address
Hi]'I
M. P. MOLLEK,
Manufacturer of Pipe and Iteed Organs,
ILigorstown. Mil.
May 14th, 1886. [45 5ms
Stamping for all kinds of Embroid
er}’, done by Mrs. Mary Morse.
35 3t.]
A fell stock of Suites, cheap & gMi,
BELTIW6, PACKING and OIL.
w-r.^ «»*-*:.- ;nTr% aAP-yOT -
at BOTTOM PRICES
•\!VD IN STOCK FOR
PROPv:P-T pELIYBRY.
CIT Repairs- 1 Promptly Dose.
“V-, -I»-I
ISMBARQ'& 00.
A Foundry, Machine and Boiler
Works, AUGUSTA, G?A.
| ABOVE PASSENGER DEPOT.
‘tk&msa&iBambmsiksk ssBES&Bm®
June 8, 1S3G.
ere, e.
Gen\ John B. Gordon, having been
overwhelmingly nominated for Gov
ernor of Georgia by a Democratic Con
vention, has become the candidate of
the party, and will her supported* ac
cordingly. The Chronicle cordially
and squarely endorses the action of
the convention, and will strive m
zealously for the election of Gen. Gor
don as it did for the nomination of
Major Bacon before the people. The
voice of 'the convention is the voice
of the Soverign rulers of the State. It
is our voice. ’ We accept the nomina
tion without reserve. The people of
Georgia have, with singular unanimi
ty, called upon Gen. Gordon to be
th<?ir Chief Magistrate, and lie will
certainly be elected to that high and
honorable position. We believe that
General Gordon is a patriot, and that
liis administration will be shaped for
the greater glory of Georgia. He has
every incentive to make a useful, bril
liant and distinguished Governor.
His fame, won on many fields of war,
and in the forum of peace, will not
be dimmed by his new career. It
would seem to be one of the revenges
of time, a notable,example of poetic
justice, that, after many years, the
victor in a most memorable political
campaign, he should be elected to an
office out of which he was once unfair
ly counted.
All past differences forgotten. The
Chronicle, as becomes its staunch de
votion to party usage, accepts the
verdict of a Democratic majority and
welcomes the gallant, the illustrious
and patriotic John B. Gordon as the
party nominee for Governor of this
grand old Commonwealth.— Augusta
Chronicle.
Bucklcn s Arnica Salve.
The Best Salvu 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, of money
refunded. Price 25 cents per box.
FOR SALE BY C. L. CASE.
Julv 21st. 1885. 2 ly.
324and 326 Pearl St., New York.
SEND FOR CIRCULAR.
DO NO MORE WHITEWASHING
NOT WHEN
PLASTIC PAINT
Can be had so cheap. Send for pamphlet and
color card, and learn its merits.
MAXWELL, HAZUETT & CO.
109 McEhlerry 7 8 Wharf, Baltimore-, Md., and
#)§ Washington Ave., Philadelphia, Pa.
Parker’s Tonic
ft
A Pore Family Medicine that Never Intoiicates.
IT von "are a lawyer, minister or business man
exhausted by mental strain or anxious cares or
not take intoxicating stimulants, . but use
Pahkeb’9 Tomic.
SZSCOX A CO., ^
163 William Street, New York.
Sold by all Druggists in large bottles at One Dol
lar.
Newspaper Advertising.
""^TSuchy A CO.,
21 Park Place end 21-26 Mutsj St., New Fork.
Make lowest rates on all newspapers in the
U. S., and Canada. Establishdt 1867.
SPECIAL OFFER. “Eg
tisement one month in our selected list oi JJ5
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POPULAR LOCAL USTS
of 1,130 Daily and Weekly newspapers
No patent list papers are included.
for $6oo
patent
July tth, 1336
fi lm.
Wheat Bran. ' Wheat Bran.
. _ LBS. just received and for
12,000 sale cheap, by
1 C. H. WEIGHT & SOX.
Milledgeville, June 8th, 1886. 48 tf.
A.'
V AL U A BL E PL ANT ATI ()N FO R
SALE. 500 acres, 50 acres bermuda
grass, between 50 and 75 acres of creek
and river bottom, good neighborhood
S V miles from Ratonton, 1 mile from a
good grist mill. Made on place last
year 28 bales cotton, and 300 bushels
corn with two plows. Good dwelling
G rooms, barn, kitchen, smoke house,
double pantries, ironing house, tmd 5
good cabins, well watered. Apply to
• BETHUNE & MOORE.
Miiledgevilie, Ga.
Legal blanks for sale at this office.
and was generally glorified in the
Fourth Ward last night as a hero.
Men have perished nobly on the
field of battle without getting one-
thousandth part of the celebrity which
came to Brodie. Once he was known
as a pedestrian. Ever since he lay
down in his tights surrounded by flo
ral horseshoes in Madison Square Gar
den and listened to the waves of ap
plause washing against the four walls,
Brodie has been famishing for notori
ety. His principal occupation con
sisted of lounging about Frankfort
street with a few lazy printers. He
is a witty youth of 23 years, with a
long neck, low brQw and hair black
and straight like an Indian, He has
a wife and three children.
For two weeks Brodie has had the
big bridge in hisiiead. He has read
all about Odium, Sam Patch and Cap
tain Webb, To his friends, the Frank
fort street printers, he confided the
fact that he would jump from the
bridge if it cost him liis life. Last
Sunday afternoon, he jumped from
tlffi high bridge into Harlem river
‘4just for practice” he said. Then he
went into training.
DRESSED FOR THE JUMP.
At 1 o’clock the hero of the occa
sion made his appearance. He wore
a pair of dark trousers, a duck jacket,
a blue yachting shirt, a small black
slouch hat and a pair of patent leath
er pumps that had seen many a Sat
urday night hop in the fourth ward.
Under his trousers he wore a pair of
brilliant scarlet tights. The trousers
were tied at the bottom with tight
strings. Brodie had stuffed cotton
waste inside of his shirt and trousers
and had swathed his body especially
about the stomach, with tight band
ages and wads of rags. * * *
DROPPING THROUGH THE AIR.
The boat containing his friends was
in the middle of the river. His face
looked toward Governor’s Island. A
shriek yrent U P from somebody on the
dock below. Then Brodie let go.
His arms, at first stretched rigidly
above him, sunk down to his side.
Then they rose again and fell to a
position about at right angles to his
body, with the elbows bent and the
fists clenched. His eyes were shut,
and his feet were parted #nd he seem
ed to be trying to get them together
Again.
It looked as if the air was forcing
one leg from the other. As heshotlike
an arrow through the air his hat was.
swept from his head and floated up
the river.
He was three seconds in falling.
Then, with his face slightly inclined
towards the water, he struck feet first
and disappeared in a fountain of
spray. The three men in the boat
reached the spot just as Brodie's
ghastly upturned face appeared on
the surface of theVater. He made a
feeble signal for assistance, and turn
ing on his back began to swim toward
the boat, apparently with vigor. His*
shirt was burst open at the breast ex
posing his'chest, and three or four big
blue bruises could be seen on the right
side below the nipple. As a glass of
whiskey was forced down his throat,
he was rowed to the dock under tin
tower foundation.
A charge of attempted suicide was
made against him and In- was held for
examination. The p^ . hy for Bro
die’s crime is mipn-■ nment for a
term not exceeedihg t ’.vo years, or ’
a fine """ ,wv
not exceeding $1,000,
For Sale—house and lot in
city—cheap. Can be made
bio residence at small cost.
Bethune & Moore, Real
Agents.
itreof
]esira-
>lv to
is tat e
If you want the
city. Cp.ll at the
Dr! T. H. Kenan.
finest Cigar in the
new drug store of