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UNION & RECORDER.
MiLLED+BVLLLE, AUGPiT 81, 1886.
Democratic Nomiiations.
For Governor,
JOHN B. GORDON, of DeKalb.
For Secretary of State,
NATHAN C. BARNETT, of Baldwin.
For Comptroller General,
WILLIAM A. WRIGHT, of Richmond.
For State Treasurer,
ROBERT U. HARDEMAN, of Bibb.
For Attorney General,
CLIFFORD ANDERSON, of Bibb.
For Congress—-6th District,
JAMES H. BLOUNT, of Bibb.
For Senator 20th District,
C. R. PRINGLE.
For Representative,
W. T. CONN.
The loss from the Texas storm on
Friday, 27th, runs up into the millions.
The damage was exceedingly great at
San Antonio, Floresville, and Indian-
olaat which latter place twenty-two
people lost their lives.
The British Parliament.—The
times are hot in the Parliament but
Gladstone and the Parnelites stand
firm and will contend bravely for the
redress of the wrongs of Ireland. There
is no giving away or backing down,
and tke^rights of Ireland will be main
tained with unalterable firmness.
Pleasant and profitable employment
surely awaits a wide-wake salesman
who will supply the demand, in this
vicinity, for the New Reversible Map
of the United States and Canada and
Pictorial Map of the World, issued by
the renowned Map Publishers, Rand,
McNally & Co., 148-154 Monroe street,
Chicago. A Railroad and County
Map of the United States and Canada,
with the greater portion of the Re
public of Mexico; a fine representa
tion of Bartholdi's “Liberty enlight
ening the World,” and the divisions
of “Standard Railway Time,” are
shown on the face of the map. On
the Pictoral side are separate Color
ed Maps of the World, Europe, Asia.
North America, South America and
Mexico. Also selec* Engravings, Dia
grams and Statistical Tables.
The New English Government.
—It makes some kind of promises to
do some justice to Ireland, but put it
off to a more convenient time. Yet
the convictions in Ireland are simply
horrible, and the riots are increasing.
A change is needed now and yet the
government proposes to wait until
the winter of the next year. Glad
stone wants remedial action now, and
every sensible and good man sees the
necessity for it. Alas! for Ireland.
The government speaks’of conciliation
but delays it. Why delay relief! It
was promised years ago, and the ene
mies of the Irish have defeated the
plan of conciliation, and in our opin
ion will finally rely upon the old plan
of cruel coercion.
Princb Alexander of Bulgaria.
—The London News says: “It is obvi
ous that Prince Alexander was de
prived of the throne by the direct or
ders of the Czar: with the Prince de
posed Bulgarian svmpathy with Rus
sia will revive.” It is said that he is
confined in a inonastry near Sophia.
We do not care to take up a long
space in our columns about the affair.
Russia has been anxious to rule in the
Bulgarian Range and w anted posses}*
sion of the Bulgarian ports on the
Exuine sea.. This of course excites a
lively interest on the part of the Sul
tan of Turkey. The Czar wants his
splendid capital, Constantinople. Very
serious complications may grow out
of this seemingly small affair.
Dr. Woodrow Acquitted.
The acquittal of Rev. Dr. James
Woodrow by the Presbyterian synod,
held at Bethany, we think was a sur
prise to the country generally. He
was charged with heresy in teaching a
comparatively new doctrine called
evolution, that is that the production
of Adam was a slow process, and that
he was evolved by some process from
a low^r order of the animal creation.
We do not undertake to follow the pro
cess of reasoning on the part of Dr.
Woodrow, for it has not been specifi
cally stated in the brief report of the
trial. The prosecution was conduct
ed in a masterly manner by Dr. Ad
ams of the Presbyterian church, of
Augusta, and Dr. Woodrow must
have made a very able defence in re
sisting it to obtain a verdict of acquit
tal. We refer to this matter because
it has been a subject of anxious inter
est not only to Presbyterians, but
Christians of all denominations* and
to thousands who have not associa
ted themselves with any of the Chris
tian churches, but are dee '
ested in their teachings. T
L other British evo-
Riots Continue in Ireland.—The
London Socialists are greatly excited
by the conviction of the Anarchists at
Chicago. At a meeting of the execu
tive council of the socialist league, on
the 22rul, in London, the following
resolution was adopted: “That the
council expresses its abhorrence of the
cowardlv conduct of the government
of Illinois in passing sentences of mur
der against men who have proved
their sympathy with the suffering
masses.”
This shows that there is but little
difference betw een the Socialists and
Anarchists. All law and order would
crumble before either of them if they
could carry out their insolent and in
famous doctrines. We have long
thought we could see a devilish gleam
in the movements of these people in
Europe. There is something terrible
in their interior purposes, and the
leniency, of some of the Governments
in Europe towaids them is surprising.
Nothing is safe from their violence,
nothing safe from the terrors of their
principles. But European Govern
ments must take care of themselves.
Our freer government cannot afford
to let those dangerous madcaps get a
foothold here. We are too lenient,
however, and great danger may arise
even here, from their passionate and
presumptions methods. Those men
at Chicago deserve the halter, and, in
our opinion, the Socialists who have
not gone as far as the Anarchists have,
smothered their principle* in our
country from fear alone. Every one
of them should be expelled from oar
land. Their standards of opinion are
different from ours and are modified
to some extent from a fear of conse
quences if pushed to their full extent.
We recently gave our views in refer
ence to these characters and they
need not be repeated now. With
them their views constitute a political
disease, and their societies, wherever
thev exist, are dangerous plague spots
in our free and constitutional States.
We should never attempt to conciliate
such characters, but spurn them as
dangerous incendiaries. Even the so
cialists are bitter enemies to our
American principles, and they have
to take but one step more to become
as dangerous as the anarchists
inter-
. , teach
ings of Huxley and
lutionists, have created a pretty wide
interest in this new doctrine within
the last thirty or forty years, and
they have many followers not only in
England, but in other countries of
Europe and in the United States.
But we shall strictly confine our few
remarks to the scriptural view of the
creation of man.
The creation of the earth, the
heavens and of all the creatures upon
the earth, including Adam and Eve,
is found in the two first chapters of
the book of Genesis. It will be seen
in the first chapter, that God made
the Heavens and the earth and all
living creatures in six days, and that
he rested on the seventh day from
all his work which he had made. In
chapter 2d will be found the account
of the creation of Adam and Eve.
The statement of the creation of man,
is brief and simple, and is found in the
seventh verse of the 2nd chapter of
Genesis as follows: “And the Lord
God formed man of the dust of the
ground, and breathed into his nos
trils the breath of life; and man be
came a living soul.”
The scriptures no where say, or
hint, in the slightest degree, that
Adam was in any particular evolved
or evoluted from an inferior animal
In the 19th verse of the 2nd chapter
of Genesis it is said: “And out of the
ground the Lord God formed every
beast of the field, and, every fowl of
the air, and brought them unto Adam
to see what he would call them; and
whatsoever Adam called every living
creature, that was the name thereof. 5
From this it will be seen that God
formed all the animals and birds out
of the ground. According to the ac
count given, in these two chapters of
Genesis, He made the animals, birds,
&c., before He made man. The lan
guage is He made them “out of the
ground,” and as to man He formed
him “of the dust of the ground.”
In all this there is nothing to justi
fy the idea of his evolution from ani
mals. That idea can be founded only
on the hypothesis of Huxley, Darwin
and otherg, that the existence of man
was a slow process of evolution from
animals. We say, again, that we can
not follow the process of reasoning by
which Dr. Woodrow convinced a ma
jority of his judges that evolution is
founded in reason and common sense,
for his argument is not before us. His
dark generalities of thought w ere too
obscure for us. In the foregoing we
present the plain and simple state
ment of the bible. Guided by the po
larity of reason, man may venture to
explore the hidden regions of know!
edge, to find new' sources of improve
ment and happiness, but in this plain
statement of the Bible, piercing it
with unerring intellectual scalpel, we
can find nothing to justify Dr. Wood-
row's doctrine of evolution, if he
means by that, that man was evolu
ted from animals. These men to
whom we have referred are rational
ists. They do not recognize the Bible
as of Divine origin. We can see how,
as theorists, they may investigate the
probable origin of the world and the
creatures upon its surface and put
forth dogmatic theories and throw
them out to the world as the results
of scientific investigation. Their po
sition is “we may assume this, and as
sume that,” when they have no just
right to assume it. With this assump
tion, perhaps, totally founded in er
ror, they profess to find a link, which
in brutes, connect the sensory nerves
of brutes with those of man, and in
their peculiar w ay, connect them into
some sort of similarity from which
they make out the evolution of man
from animals. But Dr. Woodrow' is a
believer in the Bible, and a licensed
preacher of its’doctrines. The grounds
of his faith in evolution, we confess we
do not understand and we think it
will be difficult for him to recognize
any form of man’s evolution from an
imals with the clear and simple state
ments of the Bible which he avers
the word of God.
that God had prepared for that pur
pose—we cannot say he was wrong,
for the Bible is silent as to that mat
ter. So that Adam was made of the
dust, it fulfils what the scripture
•ay on that subject and those who
voted for his acquittal could not go
into a scientific investigation of the
matter, for we are forbidden by the
rules of our church while sitting as a
court, to give deliverances on scien
tific subjects. There are other rea
sons to justify the action of those who
voted for Dr. Woodrow’s acquittal
but we are precluded by want of
space from touching on them. The
subject is a very complicated one and
cannot we think be discussed in a sat
isfactory manner in a secular paper,
and while conscious that the above
comes far short of a satisfactory state
ment of the views of those who voted
to acquit Dr. Woodrow, it presents
one of the grounds of his acquittal
and is the best we can do with the
time and space at our disposal. As
the whole subject is too large and
complicated for elucidation in a week
ly paper, it is believed to be best to
let the foregoing close its discusAen in
this journal. Local Editor.
Mob Law.
We have been gratified to see that
the Christian Index and the Wesley
an Christian Advocate, representing
respectively the two great leading
Christian denominations of our State
—the Baptist and the Methodist—
have each published strong and un
answerable editorials condemning the
lynching of Moore in Macon by a fran
tic and irresponsible mob. No one
who has ever seen a mob under the
influence of great excitement of feel-
ing, in the act of perpetrating one of
those dreadful punishments of men,
either really or supposed to be guilty
of an atrocious crime, can have any
just conception of the utter want of
reason or mercy which controls the ac
tion of such a body. It is then that
those whose passions are the most
highly excited and who are generally
governed by impulse rather than
reason, come to the front and lead the
crowd to the commission of acts which
doubtless cause the consciences of
many of them to sting them unceas
ingly as long as they live. It is not
the men of reason and good judgment
who usually lead mobs. It is rather
the brutal instincts of men which are
then in the ascendency, and hence the
terrible dangers that attend the cast
ing aside of the restraints of law r and
letting loose the wild passions of men
to give shape to their actions on such
occasions.
The “true inwardness” of the crime
committed by Moore is probably not
yet thoroughly known to many peo
E le. Whatever the facts may be, we
ave no doubt that under the pres
sure of public opinion, the law would
have been vindicated by the Courts
and we are loath to believe that the
administration of the law in Macon is
as loose and inefficient as it was repre
sented to be, when both speakers and
hearers were laboring under so much
exeitement of feeling. The high char
acter of the judges who preside in the
Macon courts renders it entirely un
reasonable to suspect them of collu
sion with those who might desire to
shield criminals from just punishment
for their crimes. No courts can in
flict proper punishment upon wrong
doers unless the juries will do their
duty. And if the citizens of Macon
should urge that they feared Moore
would escape punishment by failure
of the juries to do their duty, they are
precluded from pleading their own
want of faithfulness as jurors tojustify
the punishment of crime by unlawful
methods.
• ♦ » ♦
Rev. David E. Butler Dead.
Irish Question.
Madison, August 29.—Rev. David
E. Butler died this morning at 9 o’
clock. He was widely known through
out the State. He was prominent as
a Mason and as trustee of Mercer Uni
versity and various female colleges.
He will be buried Tuesday next.
The above announcement will cause
much regret throughout the State.
The deceased was a gentleman of
much energy and public spirit and a
leader, not only in the baptist church,
of which he was a minister, but in
many enterprises having for their ob
ject the public welfare. He, for sev
eral years, filled the pulpit of the bap
tist church in this city, and here as
well as elsewhere, where he preached
the gospel during his long life, he
doubtless leaves many friends who
will sincerely regret his death.
As might be expected, everything is
in confusion in reference to the Irish.
Parnell made a great speech in Parlia
ment on the 24th. He Is hopeful. The
Irish, he said, will be patient but the
possession of an autonomous govern
ment will always be fixed in the
hearts of the Irish people. He was,
occasionally, loudly cheered. So was
Mr. Gladstone when he arose to ex
pose the suggestions of the new gov
ernment. He said: “Instead of giv
ing Ireland self-government, the pres
ent government proposed that Eng
land should govern Ireland to a great
er extent than it did at the present
time.” He said, too, there was no
power in Parliament to carry into
effect its proposition to treat with an
Irish tenant, upon a basis of the real
rentable value of property, and the
landlord upon a basis of judicial rent.
He said there was no power in Parlia
ment to carry into effect such an un
just and fatal proposition. That
means the adjournment of Ireland’s
hopes. We say it is simply horrible.
The Irishman ought to be entitled to
the regular terms of rent, when by a
judicial process it is greatly enhanced
for the rich lanlords. It is fortunate
for Ireland that there is a Gladstone,
revered for statesmanship and hon
esty, to bring the people to see and
condemn such a monstrous proposi
tion.
Prince Alexander.
The latest news states that he is a
prisoner at Reni. The people of Bul
garia, almost to a man, are in favor
of the Prince. It is stated that the
Bulgarians demand his restoration to
the throne. He was seized at night
when in bed at the Palace. The peo
ple knew nothing about it until sev
eral hours after his removal. The
Porte lias sent a circular to the Pow
ers saying they were all interested in
this transaction. It was a mean and
cowardly act. They were afraid to
meet the heroic Prince "who covered
himself with imperishable laurels in
the late war with Servia. It will be
utterly degrading to the Powers to
submit to this secret and dastardly
act, instigated probably, by the Rus
sian despot.
&•▼. Lewis J. Davies.
DEATH OF THE FIRST PASTOR OF “OLD
TRINITY CHURCH.”
Another good man has been called
away.
Rev. Lewie J. Davieg died in Gaines
ville on Sunday last at the Methodist
parsonage. Rev. R. W. Bigham, his
brother-in-law, was with him in his
last moments.
The members of the North Georgia
conference will never forget the ap
pearance of Mr. Davies on the confer
ence floor when he was so weak from
a stroke of paralysis that he had to
be supported by friends while he gave
us his last talk, which was so affec
tionate, so touching, so sweet.
The conference has lost one of its
truest, purest and greatest men. For
ty years of hard study and faithful
work have endeared him to all his
brethren, and have brought Georgia
Methodism under lasting obligations
to his memory, and to his sorrowing,
helpless and childless widow. Mr.
Davies, in the pulpit, had few supe
riors. His great mind was more ana
lytical and logical than imaginative.
His reasoning was dear and forcible;
his eloquence was earnest, fervid, and
sometimes irresistible. He had filled
the most honorable positions in his
church, and filled them wdl, being
ever equal to the duties assigned him.
He was generous, humble and devout.
Making no high professions of sancti
ty, his walk was beautifully Christlike.
He loved his brethren and was loved
by them. But he is gone, leaving his
dying message: “Tell my brethren
to meet me on hkrli.”—Constitution.
A Dangerous Man.
Notice to Farmers.
George R. Lombard & Co., having
bought out the stock of W. J. Pollard
they will offer for the next thirty days
the celebrated Pollard Champion Gin
Feeder and Condenser. Also belting,
packing, hose, pipe, fitting and brass
goods, engines, gins and presses at
very low figures. Ail new and first-
class goods guaranteed. Mr. Pollard’s
former trade is respectfully invited to
call and see Lombard’s works and ex
tensive stock. Last fall Lombard
bought out Havard Lindley’s railway
and mill supply house and carry a full
line of goods. Read the new adver
tisement in this issue.—Auguta Even
ing News.
There is not a house in the South
ern States that can compare with that
of Messrs. George R. Lombard & Co.,
in their line of business, and we doubt
if there is one in the United States
that, for excellence of work, is supe
rior to it. It is worth a trip to Au
gusta to go through and inspect their
several large establishments in full
blast, giving occupation to over 100
hands, all guided by Lombard’s supe
rior genius and direction. Anything
that may be needed from the simplest
mechanical structures to a splendid
locomotive engine can be turned out
at these great works as perfect as in
any northern house, and upon the
most satisfactory terms. Lombard &
Co., possess the genius and the means
and are doing a noble part to give
eclat and success to Southern enter-
prize.
600 PERSONS KILLED.
And 1,000 Seriously Injured by
Earthquake.
the
is
The Campaign of 1888.—The cam
paign may be said to have partially
commenced. Blaine is making speech
es in Maine and the Republican con
ventions are adopting his declara
tions. It seems quite evident that
Blaine will be their candidate again
In Ohio they have closely adopted his
utterances. If the Democrats hold
together on the questions of the tariff
and the currency, the Plumed Knight,
as Blaine is still called, is destined to a
worse defeat than that of 1884.
In view of the fact that the under
signed was a member of Augusta Pres
bytery which tried Dr. Woodrow, and
voted for his acquittal, we feel that it
is proper to make some comments on
the above editorial of the Senior edi
tor of this paper.
It is true that the Bible says Adam
was made of the dust of the ground.
So is every human being now living
made of tne same material. Ask any
well taught child, “who made you,”
and it will answer, ‘ God.” Of what
were you made?” The answer will be
“of the dust of the ground.” Yet no
one will say the child was made in a
moment. It will be conceded that it
The re-union of the glorious old
F ourth Georgia Regiment took place
at Talbotton last week. Among those
who attended from Milledgeville were
Dr. J. W. Butts, Capt. J. Caraker,
Capt. G. W. Caraker, Messrs. W. G.
Hawkins, Fred Hanft, Warren Mose
ley, W. E. Vinson, E. T. Ailing, Fred
Haug, and John B. Fair.
The proceedings of the meeting in
full, copied from the Macon Telegraph,
will be found elsewhere in this paper.
A Conundrum.—Last night I had
something no larger than my thumb;
seven men came in for some of it; I
gave some to each man, and each
then had as much as I
was made by a slow process according I LU u mucri as /. had, and yet,
to nature’s law a ore- yhat I had, was not diminished In the
to nature’s law governing such a ere
ation. And as to Adam’s creation the
Bible no where says he was immedi
ately created by Almighty power. So
far as the Bible teaches his creation
may have been also accomplished by
8 ?me slow process. Dr. Woodrow in
least, but what we all had put togeth
er was just eight times as much as I
had at the start. What was it? “c. S.”
While crops are not first rate, for
one time they are turning out better
than was expected, and fanners gen-
sists as strongly as any of his oppo- erally have abundant reasons to be
nents that he was made oi the dust
But as all creatures are made of the
same material, when he savs that
Adam may have been made of organ
ized dust—the body of some animal
thankful.
We are prepared to do job printing
in the best style and at the lowest
prices. Have your work done at home
animal ’ and send in your orders. “ e {|
Athens, August, 29.—The area of
the earth disturbance in Greece yes
terday was phenomenally wide. At
least six towns were entirely destroyed
and a score of others were partially
destroyed..
On the mainland much damage
was done, but there was little loss of
life. On the islands it is estimated
that GOO persons were killed and 1,000
seriously injured.
The undulations were curiously re
gular. The actual shocks averaged
twelve seconds in duration. People
•vervwhere are camping out in the
fields. The breaking of the telegraph
lines delays the reception of details.
The Greek cabinet is sitting at
Athens almost continuously, consider
ing relief measures.
Transports with tents, food, doc
tors medicines and a company of pom
piers started for the stricken district
Saturday evening.
VESUVIUS KEEPS IT UP.
Naples. August 29.—Vesuvius is
agian in a state of eruption. The peo
ple of Naples and Bari are fleeing to
the country, or gathering in open
spaces to pray. At Bari the priests
proclaim the earthquakes a visitation
of God.
Earthquake.— Augusta, Ga., Au
gust 28.—This town is in a hubbub
over a shock of earthquake felt here
early this morning about 4 o’clock.
The police force report the occur
rence, though the citizenry generally
were not aware of the shock.
Pictures were shaken from the
walls, houses swayed perceptibly,
trees trembled. Even bells tolled,
and the ground slightly trembled.
In one neighborhood, where it
seems the jar was most plainly felt,
sleepers rushed from their couches to
the yards and streets, and knots of
frightened neighbors were seen dis
cussing the phenomenon at daybreak.
The shock was insignificant in it
self, but it is the sensation here today,
and people find time to talk of noth
ing else.
One young woman was so badly
frightened that she fainted, and she is
seriously ill today. —-
Charleston, August 28.—Another
shock of earthquake was felt here
this morning at 5:48. It extended as
far north as Summerville, twenty-five
miles from here.
without an enemy, peaceable, yet
A HOLY TERROR TO EVERYBODY.
The following “yarn'’ is being spun
by a large number of our exchanges.
It seems to be an orphan:
The most peaceable and dangerous
man in all the United States liyes in
Murray county, Georgia. He is kind-
hearted, good-tempered, never had a
quarrel in his life, wouldn’t hurt a fly,
and everybody is afraid of him. About
a year ago he was cutting w'ood when
the axe flew off the handle and killed
a man who had come to pay him $50.
He never got a cent of the money.
The next week, while ferrying a
friend across a river, he ran the boat
against a snag and his friend was
drowned. About a month later he
felled a tree on a stranger, who was
lying asleep in the woods killing him
instantly. Not long after he shot
wild turkey and killed a neighbor
whom he didn’t see at all.
Three weeks later he lighted a kero
sene lamp, when it suddenly exploded
burning to death a colporteur to
whom the inoffensive Georgian had
courteously extended the hospitalities
of his home. All this man’s friends
run when they see him corning. He
is himself afraid to extend any kind-
negs save to his enemies, of whom he
has none.
His lagt public act was to cross the
street with a ladder on his shoulder
last 4th of July, while a procession
was passing, and when somebody
shouted to him “hurry on” he oblig
ingly turned around and started back.
The procession was laid oat and the
day wag spoiled.
The Storm at Indianola.—A
special, from Fort Worth, Texas, gives
a saddening account of the doings of
the great storm at Indianola a few
days since. It extended for 200 miles
destroying thousands of houses, in
volving pecuniary loss of several mil
lions of dollars. The total loss as far
as ascertained was 38 lives, $1,000,000
m crops, and to city and town prop
erty $2,400,000; to shipping and har-
bors $900,000. The storm was in the
snape of a hurricane. The whole
peninsula on which Indinola is situ
ated was under 10 feet water. Many
persons are missing and the loss of
life is thought to be greater than the
estimate given. All the crops were
destroyed over the great distance
stated. The loss in life was in fiien
women and children. All the crons
were totally destroyed. As great as
the loss of life in human beings and
stock was, it fell far short of the
storm over the same section in 1875,
when the loss of life was nearly 200.*
That seems to be a dangerous section
to live in.
There is still extreme doubt as to
the whereabouts of Prince Alexander.
A dispatch from Russia to his father
says he started from Reni on a foreign
tour.
President Grevy has summoned a
Cabinet meeting for Saturday to con
sider the Bulgarian crisis. He will
preside over the council himself.
But the latest account states that
the friends of the Prince are in power,
and marching on Sophia.
Lip courtesy pleases much and costs
little.
Think much, speak little and write
less.
nysPEPSiA
ts s dsnreroDs as well as distressing complaint. It
neglected, it tends, by impairing nutrition, and de
pressing the tone of the system, to prepare the mg
for Sapid Decline.
The
Savannah, Dublin and
’ Railroad.
Western
A RECEIVER APPLIED FOR.
On Thursday last, in Savannah,
Fergurson & Co., contractors on the
above named road, filed before Judge
Adams, of the Superior Court, a bill
against said company. They allege
that the Company owes them about
$43,000 for work done, that said Com
pany is insolvent and is trying to sell
the road, &c., &c., and they pray “for
an account and injunction against
disposing of the road, the appoint
ment of a Receiver and general re
lief.” On the other hand the repre
sentatives of the Company claim that
said “contractors are derelict and that
therefore nothing is due them.”
“Judge Adams sanctioned the bill,
granting a temporary injunction and
appointing Solomon* Cohen tempora
ry receiver.” The next step it is said
will be an injunction, which njav be
done by the Judge on a full hearing
after five days notice.
Much interest seems to be taken in
the cefse in Savannah and the progress
of the road heretofore lias been re
garded very favorably by the public
generally. It is to be hoped that such
measures of relief may be adopted as
to prevent the failure of this impor
tant enterprise.
Cure for Piles-
-THE g
BESI TONIC 3
Quickly end completely Cores Dye
fta forms, Heartburn) Belel
Feed* etc. It enriches sad j
late* the u>petite, end aids t _
Rsy. J. T. Ko«imx, the honored pastor of the
. First Reformed Ohuroh, Baltimore, lid., ssyi:
" Haring used Brown's Iron Bittsrs for Dyspepsia
Indigestion I take greet pleasure in ,
mending it highly. Also consider It a splendid tonie
and inngoratar, and very strengthening."
How. Joan O. Mr, Judge of Circuit Court*'
Clinton Co., Ind., says: ** I bear moat cheerful test!
mony to the efficacy of Brawn's Iran Bitten tSM
Dyspepsia, and as a tonie."
Genuine has above Trad* Mark and crossed red liatg
wW'ZkzSSSZilZXh.lSiiZli SUi
jjEApril 6 1886] 39,cw. ly
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
the popular favorite for drsadiig
the hair. Restoring color when
gray, and preventing Dandruff.
It cleanses the scalp, stops the
hair falling, and is sure to plea
Me. and SI 00 at Druggists.
PARKER S TONIC
The best Ccngh Cure yon eon use,
And the best preventive known for Consumption. It
cures bodily pains, and all disorders of the Stomach,
Bowels, Lungs, Liver, Kidneys, Urinary Organs and
all Female Complaints. The feeble and sick, strug
gling against disease, and slowly drifting towards
tho grave, will in most cases recover their health by
the timely use of Pansm's Tonic, but delay Is dan
gerous. Take It In time. Bold by all Druggists In
large bottles at |L00.
HINDERCORN8
The safest, surest, quickest and best core for Coras,
Bunions, Warts, Holes, Callouses, Ac. Hinders their fur-
ther growth. Stops all pain. Gives no trouble. Makesthe
feet comfortable. Hindercorns cures when everything
> fails. Sold by Druggists at Ue. Kisoox A Co., K. t
Aug. 11th, 1885.
5 ly
.Piles are frequently preceded by a
sense of weight in the back, 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 attendant.
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, O. Sold by T. H. Kenan’
Druggist, Milledgeville, Ga. [36 ly
E n gland Orders Alexander
Back.—London, Aug. 26.—Sir J.
Ferguson, Under Foreign Secretary,
stated in the House of Commons this
afternoon that the loyal troops had
entered Sofia Tuesday with the con
sent ot the Powers. The exact where
abouts of Prince Alexander, the
secretary said, were unknown to the
British Government, but telegrams
had been forwarded to him inviting
him to return and resume liis rule in
Bulgaria.
The Prince was deeply moved when
he received the news of the success of
his friends in Bulgaria.
Specific for all diseases
jpeculiar to women, such as
Tainful, Suppressed, or Ir^
regular Menstruation, Leu-
?orrhnea or Whites, etc. 1
Female
If taken daring the Change|
of Life, great suffering and
danger will be avoided.
f
Everything
good fortune.
may be borne except
Regulator!
Send for our book, “Message to
Woman,” mailed free.
Bradfield Regulator Co.,
*5 cm. ly.] Atlanta, Ga.
EXCELSIOR
C00KST0YES
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS
all purchasers can be suited
KANU7 ACTtTKBD BT
Isaac A. Sheppard & Co.,Baltimore,Md.
AND FOR SALE BY
T. T. WINDSOR,
Milledgeville, Ga.
Aug 10,1886. 5 ly.