Newspaper Page Text
MANURING LAND.—PROFIT.
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomeness. More
economical than the ordinary kinds, and
cannot be sold in competition with the
multitude of low test, short weight, alum
or phosphate powders. Sold only in cans,
Royal Baking Powder Co., 106 Wall St.
New York. 15 11m
Agricultural -Department.
Turnips.—Many have been taking
advantage of the good season for sow
ing turnips. Two or three sowings
between the middle of August and
the last of September is the best plan.
It is good policy too, to sow some
from the first to the middle of Octo
ber. They will afford a good spring
supply.
The idea that sheep at pasture will
live and thrive without water to drink
is a serious and costly delusion to
many farmers. By eating when dew
is on the grass they can get long with
little water, but that little they require
as absolutely as any other stock, or
poor condition and poor wool will tell
the story of their deprivation.
Veal and Ham Cutlets.—Cut gen
erous slices of cold boiled ham and
fry them in their own fat, remove to a
hot chafing dish, and in the same fat;
adding a little lard, cook the cutlets
when you have beaten them flat with
the broadside of a hatchet, salted and
peppered, then dip them in eggs and
cracker crumbs. Lay them in over
lapping alternately on a hot dish.
Farmers sometimes wish to make
accurate experiments on a small scale.
We prepare the following statement
to enable them to do this with but
little trouble.
One acre contains 160 square rods.
This is 4,840 square yards or 43,500
square feet. One rod is 5£ yards, and
a square rod is 30 square yards, and
25-100 of another square yard. If
therefore one wishes to experiment
with a square rod, he will lay off his
land 30 yards each way and 25-100 of
another square yard. But he can dis
pense with the fraction and experi
ment with a plot 30 yards each way.
The square rod is 275 square feet and
35-100 of another square foot.
One acre is 208 square feet and 71-100
of another square foot. A half acre
leaving out a very small fraction,
147 square feet. A fourth, of an acre
leaving out a small fraction, is 105
square feet, and the 8th of an acre
leaving out a small fraction in
square feet. Sometimes a farmer may
wish to use one or the other of these
plats, and if he will preserve this, he
can always in a few minutes lay off
the requisite quantity of land with
which he may wish to experiment
It is very useful in dividing up the
land of his garden. Knowing the
quantity of land in it, by the forego
ing formulas, he may readily see how
much he may appropriate to cab
bages, to Irish potatoes, to peas or
beans, or any other vegetable crop
We are at the trouble to make out
this table believing it will be useful
as one may appropriate the land ex
actly in accordance with his prefer
ence in the kind and character which
he cultivates, and it enables a farmer
to conduct, accurately, such experi
ments as he might desire to make in
estimating the value of various pro
ductions from a given quantity of
land. This accurate system of experi
ments would, also, tend to show* what
cultivation would be attended with
the greatest profit.
COW PEAS.
TURNIPS.
In the season of harvest farmers are
often prone to think they have no
time to do anything except crowd the
storing of their crops—no time to
read, no time to think and converse,
and enjoy other rational and restful
recreations indulged in other seasons.
This is neither natural, profitable nor
right. Mind and body need rest and
refreshment in harvest as well as at
other times.—National Stockman and
Farmer.
The following are given as the food
equivalents of a pound of flesh: If you
want a pound of flesh matter intro
duced into an animal, you can get it,
says the Stockman, from 3 pounds de
corticated cotton cake, or from 4
pounds linseed cake, from 4 pounds
rape cake, from 4£ pounds beans, from
54 pounds undecorticated cotton cake,
from 44 pounds oats, from 8 pounds
corn, from 8 pounds locust beans,
from 45 pounds potatoes, and from 130
pounds turnips.
As to grass, 1 pound of flesh will be
secured from 30 pounds clover, and
from 8 to 10 pounds hay.
The idea that the shade of weeds in
hoed crops saves the soil from drying
up is not so prevalent as it once was.
It i- sometimes urged even now, but
only ms a pretext for shirking, and
should rank with the objections that
Solomon puts in the mouth of the
sluggard against doing necessary
work, really based on his disinclina
tion to do the work required. A weed
uprooted serves as a mulch, but it is
not advisable to let it get large enough
for this use. It will do the soil more
good to bury a weed as soon as large
enough to be seen than to wait for
larger growth. In the soil the moist
ure it has drawn from it will again
become available for growing crops.
White Soup.—Three pounds of a
“knuckle" of veal, bones broken and
meat minced, one half cup of raw rice,
three quarts of water, two tablespoon
fuls of butter, rubbed in flour, half
an onion chopped, three eggs, one
cup of milk, two tablespoonfuls of
minced parsley, salt and pepper to
taste. Put water, meat, bones, rice,
and onion over the fire and boil very
slowly for four hours. Strain, pick
out meat and bones and rub the rice
through a fine colander. Season, re
turn to the fire, boil up, skim well,
and put in parsley and butter. Heat
the milk in a saucepan, pour upon the
beaten eggs and stir into the soup, re
moving the latter from the fire as soon
as they are fairly mixed together.
Corn meal Cup Cake.—Two even
eups of white Indian meal, half a cup
of wheat flour, four tablespoonfuls of
powdered sugar, four beaten eggs, one
tablespoonful of butter, ha>lf tea
spoonful of soda, twice as much cream
of tartar, and one teaspoonful of salt
sifted with meal and flour, one-half
teaspoonful mixed mace and cinna
mon, one quart of boiling milk. Stir
flour, meal, salt, soda, cream tartar
into the hot milk: heat for fifteen min (
utes in a farina kettle surrounded
with boiling water, stirring all the
time: add the butter, turn out and
beat hard; let the mixture get cold be
fore beating in the eggs, whipped
light with ’ sugar and spice; stir
hard and bake in buttered patty
pans; turn out and eat warm with
butter.
Some experienced farmers say, they
have found from practical experience
that for all working animals, a pound
of pea meal, mixed in feeding with a
pound of corn, is worth a good deal
more than two pounds of corn. They
say, also, that a horse fed in this way
is healthier and able to do more work
than if fed all corn. The opinion has
gained with many who have tried it,
that horses, fed with peas or oats,
with corn, are much more abundant
in muscle, healthier and stronger than
if fed in the usual way with all corn
and fodder or hay. Agricultural
chemists favor this idea, or, at least,
the great value of feeding leguminous
plants, beans and peas to animals.
They contain the elements of the pro
tine compounds so valuable as food
for animals. Some of the agricultur
al chemical writers go so far as to say
that the legumen of bean and peas
give them more nutrative value than
corn. If that be true, it goes far to
sustain the opinion heretofore alluded
to, and as they are more easily and
and abundantly’ grown, it would sus
tain the idea of thoge who commend
their use with corn as food for horses.
SENSIBLE FARMERS.
The resolutions of practical value
adopted by’ the convention of South
Carolina farmers as summarized by the
Charleston News and Courier, were as
follows: “1. The general depression of
the farming interest throughout the
the Southern States is not the
result of bad State legislation or un
wise administration, but is directly
traceable to our unwise system of
raising all cotton and buying every
thing we use in foreign markets. 2.
The present improverished condition
of the farmers of the State is attribu
table to the following causes: First,
a false idea of the profits of cotton
qrops; ‘second, a ruinous system of ten
antry; third, a ruinous system of farm
ing without care for the* preservation
of the fertility of thesoil: fourth, care
less and willful giving away of hard-
earned money for worthless commercial
fertilizers; filth, the shameful neglect
to raise the necessary supplies for
home consumption; sixth, the careless
and unbusinesslike manner of manag
ing, of financiering, and of contract
ing debts; seventh, the great want of
practical fellowship among farmers;
eighth, the neglect to raise stock suffi
cient to supply the farm.” These re
solutions it will be well for the far
mers of South Carolina to ponder
and act upon. They are the deliber
ate conclusions of practical agricultur
ists, not of theorists, they are the
views of farmers of the .day, familiar
with all existing difficulties and em
barrassments.
Fried chicken is always relished,
and is especially’ nice with a cream
sauce. Clean a young chicken, divide
it in quarters, season the pieces with
salt and pepper and sprinkle with
flour: place two ounces of butter in a
frying-pan on the fire, and, when
quite hot, put in the pieces of chicken
and fry a golden brown; arrange the
pieces on a dish, pour around them a
sauce made as follows, and serve hot:
Mix a tablespoonful of flour smoothly*
with a gill of cold milk, and add half
a pint of warm milk; melt one ounce
of butter and season it with a little
salt and pepper; turn the milk into
the butter, beating all the time, and
as soon as it is thick, pour it around
the chicken.
Fortunate, are those farmers whose
poultry yard is not exposed to preda
tory excursions by lawless bipeds in
tent on plunder. This is one of the
drawbacks to success in many cases
where otherwise all the conditions
are favorable. There are no meaner
pilferers than those who steal chick
ens, and since so many have made
poultry* breeding a business, this sort
of petty’ larceny becomes meaner than
ever. Poultry, which used to be only
an incident in farming, has become
with many their entire avocation.
Whenever caught the chicken thief
should be given the full penalty of
the law,
The season for sowing turnips is at
hand. To prepare the land fdr this
important crop, it should be plowed
and cross plowed until it is thorough
ly pulverized. The old time plan was
to cow-pen the] land and depend al
most entirely upon that, but many
use some of the guanos at the rate of
about 250 pounds per acre. If well
cow-penned "for weeks, or months,
the use of guano is unnecessary. The
finest turnips the writer ever saw was
upon land that had been cow-penned
for at least two months by a large
stock of cattle. No other manure
was used. Some sow the seed broad
cast and that is as good a plan as any,
if the soil was thoroughly filled with
the droppings from the cattle. Other
wise with an insufficiency of that, it
is better to sow in furrows using the
manure freely and giving the crop
two plo wings. We recently referred
to this crop and need not enlarge up
on the culture. Where it may be
convenient it would be the better
plan to have three sowings at inter
vals of from 10 days to two weeks. In
case of the destruction of the plants
by insects, it may be necessary 7 to
have additional sowings. As food for
stock, the Rutabaga is generally con
sidered the best, but the large white
Globe is much used for stock as well
as the table.
1
CAUTION.
Potash Victim.
Cured bv S. S.. S.
| Consumers should not confuse our Specific
* icith the numerous imitations, substitutes,
| potash and mercury mixtures which are <jot-
| tin up to yell. >-o' on lheir own merit, but on
j the inertl of our remedy. An imitation is
| a!ways a fraud and a cheat, and they thrive
only a-i they can stealf rom the article imitated.
Tr< alise cm Blood and Shin Diseases mailed
free. For sale by all druggists.
t:ie swift specific co„
Drawer 3. Atlanta, Ga.
Esse
ESKisSSi
S. S. S. vs. POTASH.
I have had blood poison for ten years. I know I have taken one hundred bottles of
iodide of potash in that time, but it did me no -rood. Last summer my face, neck, body
and limbs were covered with sores, and I could scarcely use my anus on account of rheu
matism in my shoulders. I took s. S. S.. and it b«s done me mere good than all other medi
cines I have taken. My face, body and neck are perfectly clear and clean, and my rheu
matism is entirely pone. I weiphed 11b ftoniuJ- when I bepau the medicine, and I now weiph
152 pounds. My first bottle helped me preatly. and pave rne an appetite like u strong man.
I would not oe without S. S. S. for several times its weight in pold.
V. E. MITCHELL, W. 23d St Ferry, New York.
June 22, 1886.
50 cw ly.
The farmer is a national benefactor
when he makes two blades of grass
grow where one grew before. This
saying has passed into an aphorism.
But its truth depends on circum
stances. The two blades may be
made to cost so much that either one
will be dearer than one alone original
ly was. In that case neither the
world nor the land owner is benefited
by the labor, and capital invested in
the improvement for both would have
produced more if employed elsewhere.
Thus the homely test of profit become
the criterion before which thousands
of examples of fancy farming go down.
Innumerable instances have occurred
where wealthy men made farming
their hobby and lavished money like
water, but without any direct, per
ceptible benefit to the great mass of
farmers. It is a hard truth to utter,
but only as the expensive experiments
fail can they help those for whose
benefit they were designed. When
the fancy farmer abandons the busi
ness in disgust, what he has done falls
into the hands of those capable of us
ing it more wisely. Probably even
the} 7 will not make it pay, for money
spilled upon the ground is as hard to
gather again as milk. The successors
of the fancy farmer will perhaps de
rive some good from the experiments
that had better nevj
Lucky for them and
if the disastrous failure does not re
sult in poorer farming in the entire
neighborhood.—American Cultivator,
Lucy Hinton Tobacco
FOR SALE BY
L. H. WOOD & CO.,
At 12^ cents a Plug.
Central and Southwestern Railroads.
trains of this system are run by
Standard (90) Meridian time, which is ^6
minutes siower than time kept by City.J
Savannah, Ga., Nov. 15, 1885.
this date, PAS-
1 SmithwSifkb 1 rains on the Central and
! run a S fSlSw n s? ailr0adS and branches
j GOING north.
Leave No. 51. No. 53.
8.40 a.m.. D 8.10 pm
No. 53.
H 6.15 am
. D 3.20 a m
9 35 pm... D 7,32 a m
Kprrv it l 1 u oYr a In u D 2.15 pm
Fort Giines . . . P m g £ « M-g P w
Eufaula. VY..... p “
Albany D 10.45 pm.. D 2.45 pS
Montgomery.. D 70*;:™
Milledgeviile DES 5.49 pm. P m
Eatonton ....DES 7.40 p m. |!*.**‘/.*
Connections at Terminal Points
At Augusta—Trains 51 and 53 eon-
nect with outgoing trains of Georgia
baihoad, Columbia, Charlotte and Augus
ts Railroad, and South Carolina Railroad,
xrain 53 connects with outgoing train on
Augusta and Knoxville Railroad. Train 51
connects with trains for Sylvania, Wrights-
ville and Louisville. *
AUanta—Trains 51 and 53 connect
with Air Line and Kenneeaw routes to all
points North and East, and with all di
verging roads for local stations.
COMING SOUTH.
Savannah,.’ fi
Arrive No.* 51.
A^usta d 3.45 pm.
“ aco ? D 4.20pm’
Atlanta D
Columbus D
Perry DES
Fort Gaines ,, „
v:.::::de8 74**5
Leave—Nos.
Augusta.. 18 D
Macon 52 D
Atlanta....52 D
Columbus 20 D
Nos.
9.30 am..20 D 9.30pm
a m.. 54 D 10.50 p m
6.00 am..54 D 6.50 pm
9.00pm.. 6 D 11.10am
SUGAR! SUGAR! SUGAR!
We are selling Sugar very Low and those who want it for Canning
Fruit or other purposes, will find it to their interest to get our fig
ures before buying.
rp
tl
r been made,
heir neighbors
OUR STOCK OF
Staple and Fancy Groceries!
Is large, and knowing that money is not abundant at this season
of the year, we have determined to put prices low, in order to make
t to the consumer’s interest to spend their cash with us. A cordial
welcome extended to all.
L. H. WOOD & CO.,
No. 18 S. Wayne Street, Milledgeyille, Ga.
June 15, 1886. ‘ 31 l*r
It 1ms been thought that the carp
is a purely vegetable feeder. This is
to some extend an error. It subsists
not only upon the vegetation to be
found in the pond, but also takes in
sect life as it comes to it in the form of
flies, larvte, etc. A little cracked
grain of any kind boiled and thrown
in is greedily eaten. Boiled corn-
meal is excellent; boiled potatoes are
good. These things, if to domesticate
as we have said, for carp become per
fectly tame, swimming up for meals
as regularly as pigs come to the
trough. If it is desired to feed simply
for growth, and not as pets, fill a bur
lap sack with ordinary ship-stuff, sew
it up tight, weight and sink it in the
pond. The soaked feed exudes from
the sack and is sucked in by the fish
as wanted. It is good food and the
carp thrive on it amazingly.—Prairie
Farmer.
Raising Carp.—Mr. J. W. Mattox,
near town, has recently turned his at
tention to raising carp. He has ar
ranged several ponds, and has them
abundantly stocked with the finny
tribe. This variety isof rapid growth,
excellent flavor, and requires but lit
tle attention. \Ve hope it will not be
long before our progressive friend will
be able to supply this market with an
abundance of fresh fish daily.— Outh-
bert Enterprise.
i Cotton and Corn.—Both the cot-
. ton and corn crop are reported as
j turning out much better in Georgia
and South Carolina than was expect
ed. This of course is very gratifying
to the planters and all other classes.
ADVICE TO MOTHEIIS.
, Are you disturbed at night and broken of your
1 test by a sick child suffering and crying 'with
I pain of cutting teethY if so, send at once and
get aliottle of MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING
SYRUP FOR CHILDREN TEETHING. Its value
is incalculable. It will relieve the poor little suf
ferer immediately. Depend upon it, mothers,
there is no mistake about it. It cures dvsentery
and diarrhoea, regulates the stomach and bow
els. cures wind colic, softens the gums, reduces
inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the
whole system. MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING
SYRUP FOR CHILDREN TEETHING Is pleasant
to the taste, and is the prescription of one of the
oldest and best female nurses and physicians in
the United States and is for sale by all druggists
throughout the world. Price 25 cents a bottle.
December, 22nd, 18*5. 24 ly
Bncklen’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.
Most Excellent.
J. J. Atkins, Chief of Police, Knox
ville, Tenn., writes: “My family and
I are beneficiaries of your most excel
lent medicine, Dr. King’s New Discov
ery for consumption; having found it
to be all that you claim for it, desire
to testify to its virtue. My friends to
whom I have recommended it, praise
it at every opportunity.”
Dr. King’s New Discovery for Con
sumption is guaranteed to cure
Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, Asthma,
Croup and every affection of Throat
Chest and Lungs.
Trial Bottles Free'at all Druggists.
Large Size $1.00.
Brick! Brick! Brick!
1,000,000 FIRST-CLASS BRICK for SALE.
P ARTIES intending to build on the line of the Georgia or Central Railroads, would
do well to consult us before making a contract.
First-Class Paving Brick a Specialty.
We are making Brick with the latest Improved Machinery, on the celebrated Cara-
keryard.
BRICK DELIVEPiED TO ANY PART OF TOWN.
wWe take pleasure in referring to Maj. J. FUSS, Architect and Building Superln-
“ foster & mcmillan,
Contractors and Builders.
Milledgeviile, Ga., June 10th, 1885. *8 ly
Perry ...24D ES 6.00 am. .22 D ES3.00p m
Ft.Gaines c ....28 “ io.05am
Blakeley 26 “ 8.15 a m
Eufaula 2 D 10.55 am
Albany 4 D 4.10 am..26 D 12.15 pm
Montg’ry 2 D 7.30 am
Mill’dg’ve 25 D E S 6.37 am
Eatonton 25D E S 5.15 am
Arrive—No. No.
Savannah.52 D 4.07 pm..54 D 5.55am
Connections at Savannah withSavannah>
Florida and Western Railway for all points
in Florida.
Local Sleeping Cars on ail Night Pas
senger Trains between Savannah and Au
gusta, Savannah and Macon, Savannah
and Atlanta, Macon and Columbus.
Tickets for all points and sleep ng car
berths on sale at the ticket office, No. 100-
Mulberry street, and at the Union Depot,
Macon, Ga., 30 minutes prior to the leav
ing of all trains,
WM. ROGERS, G. A. WHITEHEAD,
Gen.Supt.,Sav, Gen. Pass. Agt. Sav.
T. D. Kline, A. C. Knapp.
Supt. Macon. Agt. Macon.
W. F. Shellman, Traffic Mang’r., Sav.
“D” daily 4 4 D E S,” daily except Sunday.
Jlaricultural Implements
—AND—
T
As the prosperity of every country depends upon the success, of
agriculture, and realizing the necessity of thet borough breaking of
land and cultivation of the crop, I have supplied myself with a
large lot of two and one horse Plows of the best makes, consisting of
the Syracuse, Benton A Harber, White’s Clipper, Meikle’s Blue
Pony "and the Boss, and I also have a large lot of Steel Plows,
Haiman and Southern Plow Stocks, single and double, and farming
implements generally. To all who use Guano, I would recommend the
Chesapeake or Pendleton Goods!
And to all who would like to have a Pump put in their wells, I
would recommend the Buckeye Force Pump, which myself and
many others have been using with perfect satisfaction for some
time. All who wish to supply themselves with any of the above
articles will do well to call and examine my stock and get my prices
before buffing elsewhere.
HUE.
Milledgeviile, Ga., Jan. 26th, 1886. 29 ly
Georgia Railroad Company.
STONE MOUNTAIN EOUTE
OFFICE GENERAL MANAGER,
Augusta, Ga., April 17th, 1886.
Commencing Sunday, 16th instant, the follow-
ingpasseuger schedule will be operated.
Trains run by 90th Meridian time'
NO 18—EAST (daily).
Leave Macon 7:io a m
LeaveMilledgeville 9:19am
Leave Sparta 10:41 a m
Leave Warrenton 12:00no«n
ArrlveCamak 12:15 p m
Arrive Washington 2:20 pm
Arrive Athens * 5:30pm
Arrive Gainesville 8:26 pm
Arrive Atlanta 5:60 pm
Arrive Augusts 3:35 pm
NO 17—WEST (daily).
LeaveAugusta 10:60 a m
LeaveAtianta 8:00am
Leave Gainesville a m
Leave Athens 9:00 am
Leave Washington 11:20 am
LeaveCamak 1:36 pm
Arrive Warrenton 1:50 p m
Arrive Sparta 3:04 p m
Arrive Milledgeviile 4:20 p m
Arrive Macon 6:15 pm
NO 18—EAST (daily.)
Leave Macon 7:35 pm
LeaveMilledgeville 9:30 pm
Leave Sparta 10:48 p m
Leave Warrenton 12:01 a m
ArriveCamak 12:10 a m
Arrive Augusta 5:00 am
NO 15—WEST (daily.)
Leave Augusta 9:40 p m
LeaveCamak 1:18 am
Arrive Warrenton 1:33 am
Arrive Sparta 2:67 am
Arrive Milledgeviile .. 4:27 a m
Arrive Macon C6:46 a m
No connection for Gainesville on Sundays.
The Fast Trains does not stop at Camak.
Trains will, if signaled, stop at any regular
scheduled flag station.
Close connections at Augusta for all points
East, and Southeast, and at Macon for all points
in Southwest Georgia and Florida.
Superb improved Sleepers between Macon and
Augusta.
Superbjlmproved Sleepers between August
and Atlanta.
JNO. W. GREEN,
General Manager.
E. R. DORSEY.
General Passenger Agent.
JOE W. WHITE.
General Traveling Passenger Agent.
Spectacles and Eye-Glasses.
Midyille, Ga., 91 C. R. R.,
—MANUFACTURE—
Yellow Pine Lumber,,
Of Every Description, Bough and Dressed.
Framing Lumber, Ceiling, Flooring,
Weatherboarding, Staves, Shingles, Laths, Fence Pickets.
VEGETABLE AND FKUIT CRATES.
‘STSteam Saw and Planing Mills in Emanuel County, connected "with
Midville by Private Railroad and Telephone Lines.
April 6th, 1886.
39 6m.
The Easiest Way Out.
From the St. Louis Globe Democrat.
The government of the United States
had three different exits from the
Mexican trouble presented to itself.
One was to fight out of it, another
was to back out of it, and the third
was to write out of it. The third
scheme seems to have been agreed
upon.
The trial of the Chicago anarchists
will cost $25,000. The money will
prove a good investment if it resnlts in
the conviction and execution of the
cowardly murderers.
5 TON
WAGON SCALES,
Iron L*T«rf, Steel Betting*, Bras*
Tore Betm sad Seam Box,
OLD EYES MADE HEW!
A N astonishing announcement which
will please the people, is that
JOSEPH MILLER
has the largest, and one of the best select
ed stocks of “King’s Combination” Specta
cles and Eye Glasses, in the State of Geor
gia. We have studied to supply the need
of every eye requiring assistance, and with
our large stock and long experience, we
guarantee to fit the eye. Call and see
them in prices ranging from 25c to $3.00.
JOSEPH MILLEE,
The Jeweler and Optician,'
Milledgeviile, Ga.. Jan. 5,1886 . 26 tf
Machine Shop.
HAVE REMOVED my Machine
A Shop from Milledgeviile to Scotts-
boro, where I am prepared to do any
and all kinds of work in iron and
metal. Any person having intricate
or particular work in repairing would
do well to call on me. My P. O. ad
dress is Milledgeviile, Ga.
A. CORMANNI.
March 2d, 1886. 34 tf
I
ji- 'jf- •] * ' u!
_ and
JONES h* pay* thefrelght—for fro*
Prtc« Lilt mention this paper and
•dOMM JONES OF BINGHAMTON,
Binghamton, n.Y,
Wool Carding.
August 3rd, 1886.
li
Legalcap, foolscap, letter and note paper
—pens, pencils and ink, for sale at cheap
the Union Recorder office.
Imported Guinness’ Extra Stout
Porter. Good for the sick at
KREUTZ’S.
AM prepared to do Wool-Carding
at my place, at Scottsboro. Wool
[4 3ms sent to my address at Milledgeviile,
Ga., will be promptly carded and re
turned. All persons shipping wool to
me should, also, mark plainly their
own name and address'on the package,
so that no mistake can be made in re
turning carded wool.
A. CORMANNL
Milledgeviile, Ga., March 2, 1885. tf