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-FROM-
THE WORLD’S BEST MAKERS.
At Factory Prices. On Easiest
Terms of Payment.
SPECIAL
BARGAINS.
ROSEWOOD PIANO $210
Full Size; au Improvements; Sweet Tone;
Guaranteed a .Superior and Reliable Instrument.
JJest Sold in America for the money. Thousands
^Complete Outfit—fine riush Top Stool, Em
broidered Cover, Instructor and Music Book.
All freight paid to nearest Depot.
PARLOR ORGANS, $65.
Large Size; Solid Walnut Case; Extended
Top; Rich Design: 4 Sets Reeds; 10 Genuine
Stops. Greatest bargain, ever offered. Same
Stvie Case, with 2 Sets Reeds, only $56.
Complete Outfit—fine Stool, Instructor and
Music Book. All freight paid.
Easy Terms.
r PIANOS.—$10 Monthly until paid for, or a
small cash payment and balance quarterly, or
semi-annually. Ten different P lans j, J: ’
Responsible parties-accommodated with almost
&I ORGANs!^5Monthly, or Rented until paid
for. Easiest Terms ever heard of.
OUTFITS FREE.
Fine Plush Stool, Embroidered Cover, Instruc
tor and Music Book with Pianos. Ftne Stool,
Instructor and Music Book with O.gans.
all freight paid.
We assume all freight to purchaser’s nearest
R. R. Depot or landing.
eight grand makers and
OVER THREE HUNDRED
STYLES TO SELECT FROM.
THE LEADING INSTRUMENTS
1 OF THE WORLD.
m A lino CHICKER1XG, MASON & HAMLIN,
P ANuS. mathushek, bent, ANDARION.
MASON & HAMLIN, PACKARD nDfJAIJQ
ORCHESTRAL AND BAT STATE utlUAHO.
ENDORSED AND RECOMMENDED AY
HIGHEST TERMS B Y NEAhL1 A LL THE
1 VORLLfS GREATEST MUSICIANS.
riANOS in Squares, Square Grands, Uprights
and Concert Grands at $210, $250, $-.o, $300,
£325, $350. to $1,000.
ORGANS for Churches, Lodges, Schools and
rarlors at $24, $30, $50, $60. $75, $90, $100, $12o,
$150 to $750.
PIANOS AND ORGANS
DELIVERED FREIGHT
PAID, TO ANY RAIL
ROAD POINT SOUTH.
For Illustrated Catalogues, Price Lists, Circu
lars and full information address
THE GEORGIA MUSIC HOUSE,
E. D. IRVINE, Manager,
Macon Ga.,
Or J. S. STEMBRIDGE, Agt,,
Milledgeville, Ga.
September 14th, 18S6. 1 3~-
E. E. BROWN.
FILLMORE BROWN
EDGERTON HOUSE,
Opposite General Passenger Depot, Ad
joining Brown’s Hotel,
- - Oooiz-sia,
Mlacon,
E. E. BROWN & SON,
Owners and Proprietors.
This elegant new Hotel, with modern
iprovements, newly furnished from top
bottom, is open to the public. The
ioms are large, airy and comfortable,
id the table furnished with the very best
aeon’s excellent market affords. Terms
! per day. Oet. 16, ’83.14 tf.
MACHINERY.
ENGINES j
Steam&Water
BOILERS j
Pipe & Fitting
SAWMILLS
—ai Pfg*aag«ss5g«JBaa» {
6RIST MILLS |
Brass Valves
saws
Gotten Presses j
FILES
SHARING i
PULLEYS |
HANGERS i
VmZCSDXSSJ-FTCtr •
COTTON 8iS f
INJECTORS
PUMPS
Water Wheels
IT ’?■ .vrTUaVECZCTISSESflBBB
CASTINGS
GEARING 1
Brass and Iron
A full stock of Supplies, ohaap & good.
BELTING, PACKING and OIL.
cs 1 . 1 srt hsK zicsnu't.*
at BOTTOM PRICES
AND UV STOCK FOR
PROMPT DELIVERY.
ii in i i m nni' —a—
Repairs Promptly Done.^J
GEO. R. LOMBARD ITCO.
Foundry, Machine and Boiler
Works, AUGUSTA, GA. *
ABOVE PASSENGER DEPOT.
—BWBMBBMBBBHB
June 8, 1886. 37 ly
Bethune & Moose,
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
Milledgeville, Ga.
-:or-
PROMPT ATTENTION will be giv-
i en to the purchase and sale of
Real Estate in Baldwin County.
Milledgeville, Ga., Jan. 12th, 1885.
Plantation for Sale.
W
E OFFER for sale on easy terms
an excellent plantation contain
ing from 300 to 500 acres, lying from 3
to 4 miles north of Milledgeville, on
west side of Oconee river—good creek
and river bottom land—good water
power on creek for gin and mill—
good three-room frame house and out
buildings. A portion of the land is
well timbered, and it all lies well for
cultivation. There are numerous
springs of good water on the place,
and the location is healthful and de
sirable.
70 Acres for Sale, •
A LSO, 70 acres of Land in north
city limits, adjoining Vinson, Elli
son and others.
Apply to Bethune & Moore,
Real Estate Agents.
For Sale.
,NE suburban country residence,
i mile from town. Fruit of all
kinds in abundance. House new,
fences good and surroundings pleas
ing to the eye.
0 :
0
0
T
NE house and lot on Wayne street
in the heart of town.
NE house and lot on Green street
in the heart of town.
HREE houses and lots on Wayne
street, near the old factory site.
T HREE small 2 room houses on
Montgomery street, near Mrs.
Brooks’, with half acre of ground at
tached.
0 ]
NE house and lot* Jefferson street,
containing one acre of ground—
splendid well of water.
0 :
iNE small 2 room house back of the
college, containing one acre of
ground.
0
NE vacant lot back of college, con
taining one acre.
iSrTAll the above property can be
brought cheap for cash, or half cash,
and balance on time with interest.
Apply to
BETHUNE & MOORE,
Real Estate Agents.
Milledgeville, Ga., June 1, ’86.
•CHIMES’ SURE CORES
MOUTH-WASH and DENTIFRICE
Cnres Bleeding Gums. Ulcers. Sore Mouth, Sore
Throat, Cleanses the Teeth nnd Purifies the Breath ;
used and recommend'd by lending dentists. Pre-
Dared bv hW. J. P. x VV. TL Hot.vk*, Dentists, Mncrm
Ga. For Salo by all drue^isti aud dentists.
5th, 1886.
Aug.
4 ly.
Plantation for Sale.
A
PLANTATION 17 miles from Mil
ledgeville,' 10 miles from Sanders-
ville and 11 miles from Devereaux
Station, is offered for sale, on easy
terms—300 or 400 acres swamp land
with 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.
For Sale.—The lot opposite the
residence of the late Jerry Beall. This
is one of the prettiest building lots in
the city. Call on Bethune & Moore.
A'
VALUABLEPLANTATION FOR
SALE. 500 acres, 50 acres bermuda
grass, between 50 and 75 acres of creek,
and river bottom, good neighborhood
3£ miles from Eatonton, 1 mile from a
good grist mill. Made on place last
year 28 bales cotton, and 300 bushels
corn with two plows. Good dwelling
6 rooms, barn, kitchen, smoke house,
double pantries, ironing house, and 5
good cabins, well watered. Apply to
BETHUNE & MOORE.
Miiledgevilie, Ga.
GEORGIA CLIMATIC TONIC.
Blood Purifier.
T his is purely a vegetable com
pound, ami is highly endorsed by hun
dreds of the best citizens of Georgia and other
states for the following diseases:
RHEUMATISM, * INDIGESTION, CON
SUMPTION, HEADACHE, DYSPEPSIA,
CATARRH, and ULCERS. SORES
OF LONG STANDING, SCROFULA,
SALT RHEUM, KIDNEY and
LIVER COMPLAINTS,
And all affections caused by
IMPURE BLOOD
Or low conditions of the system.
This Medicine only needs a trial to know the
value of it. No certificates will be given in the
papers but if any one wishes them, they will be
sent on application. This Medicine is put up by
the
Marshallville Medicine Co.,
For one dollar per bottle. If your druggist does
not keep it send direct to the
Marshallville Medicine, Co.,
Marshallville, Ga.
Sept. 28, IS86. 12 ly.
DfBULLS
com
SYRUP
Cures Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness, Croup, Asthma,
Bronchitis, Whooping Cough, Incipient Consump-1
tion, ana relieves consumptive |
persons In advanced stages of
the disease. Price 25 eta. Cau-1
tion. The Genuine Dr. BulVt [
Cough Syrup is sold only In I
white wrappers, and hears our I
registered Trade-Marks to wit: |
A Hull's Head in a Circle, a Red- I
Strip. Caution-Label, and the |
fac-sunile signatures of John H*
hull efr A. C. Meyer <£* Co., f
Prop's, Baltimore, >Id., U.
Chew Lange’s Plugs—The great Tobacco An
tidote!—Price 10 C'ts.—Sold by all Druggists. —
Oct. I, 1886. 13 cw6m
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 8alve heals
Pimples.
Henry’s Carbolic Salve cures
Piles*
Henry’s Carbolic Salve heals
Cuts.
Ask for Henry’s-Take No Other.
btbeware of counterfeits.
Price 25 cts., mail prepaid 30 cts.
JOHN F. HENEY & CO., New York.
t37*Write for Illuminated Book.
April 20, 188G.
41 cw lv
Cl ERE CBS AN’S
OBACCG
REMEDIES
THE CLINGHAN TOBACCO OINTMENT
THE MOST EFFECTIVE PREPARA
TION on the market for PUes. A SURE Cl RE
fur itching Piles. Has never failed to give
prompt relief. Will cure Anal Ulcers. Absuess,
ristula, Tetter, Salt Rheum. Barber’s Itch. Ring
worms, PimpIeB, Sores and Boils. Price oOets.
THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO DARE
NATURE’S OWN REMEDY, Purrs all
Wounds. Outs, Bruises, Sprains, Erysipelas, Beils,
Carbuncles, Bone Felons, Ulcers. Sores, Sore Eyes,
Sore Throat,Bunion3,Corns, N euralgia. Rheum at ism,
Orchitis. Gout, Rheumatic Gout. Colds, Coughs,
Bronchitis, Milk Leg. Snake and Dog Bites, Stings
of Insects, <fcc. In fact allays all local Irritation and
Inllammalion from whatever cause. Price 25 cts.
THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER
Prepared according to the moat scientific
principles, of the PUREST SEDATIVE
I NGREDIENTS, 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 Id cts.
Ask your druggist for these remedies, or write to the
CLINGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO.
DURHAM, N.X., U. S. A.
Oot. 12,1885. 14 ly
The Milledgeyille Banking Co.
Of Milledgeville, Ga.
A General Banking Business Transacted.
G. T. Wiedenman, President.
B. T. Bethune, Cashier.
Directors.—W.T. Conn, D. B. Sanford,
H. E. Hendrix, G. T. Wiedenman, L. N.
Callaway, T. L. McComb, C. M. Wright.
Milledgeville, Ga., Oct. 21st, ’85, 15 ly
5 TON
WAGON SCALES,
Iron Lertrs, Bteei B»*rlngs, Braa*
T*ra Bean aud Beam Box,
$60 and
JONES he pari the freight—for fro*
Price List mention this paper soil
•ddraes JONES OF BINfiHAMTON.
OiashaaWa, H. T,
August 3rd, 1886.
[4 3ms
SHOW CASES. CEDAR CHESTS.
ASK FOR ILLUSTRATED PAMPHLET .
T ERRT SHOW CASE ; C O.
NASHVILLE TENN .
Jan. 12,1886.
27 ly.
THE EARTHQUAKE
Of August 31st gave the people a
mighty shake up, and the next morn
ing I ‘gave my prices on Lumber a
good shake up, and now I can give
all parties the lowest prices in the
market, quality of lumber to be con
sidered. Lumber-yard at C. R. R. de
pot. All orders left with Mr. M. Hines
will receive prompt attention. Re
member the mill is running on the
same plan. Come and see it run and
you will not be astonished at my low
prices. M. L. BYXNTOGN.
Sept. 7,1886. 9 3m
EXCELS
C00UT0VES
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS
ALL PURCHASERS CAM BE SUITED
KANUrACTURED BY *
Isaac LSheppard & Co.,Baltimore,Md.
AND FOR SALE BY
T. T. WINDSOR,
Milledgeville, Ga.
Aug 10, 1886.5 ly.
WANTED getic SalesmiuMn
every county in the South and West. Work
light and pleasant. Salary or commission first-
class.
Address ns at once, stating age, present and
past occupation.
J. A. WILMORE & CO.,
Richmond, Va.
October 5th, 1886. 13 lm .
DR. W. H. HALL
H AS removed his office to the room
formerly occupied by Mr. Walter
Paine, Clerk of Superior Court. (8 tf
Death of John Quincy Adams.
THB OLD FOGY.
Courier-Journal Office, )
July 10,1886./
On the 21st of February, 1848, a sud
den cry was heard in the House of
Representatives—“Mr. Adams is dy
ing.” The ex-President was in the
act of falling over the left arm of his
chair, while his right arm extended,
grasping his desk for support. He
would have dropped upon the floor
had he not been caught in the arms
of the members sitting next to him.
He was carried to the Speaker's room,
where he lingered two days and died
on the evening of the 23d. The hon
ors to his memory commenced in the
House and were finished in the Senate.
Quite a number of excellent speeches
were made. I copy a few passages
from that of Hon. James McDowell,
a Representative from Virginia, and
one of her most enlightened sons. It
is full of beauty, justice and eloquence.
He said:
“It is not for Massachusetts to
mourn alone over a solitary and ex
clusive bereavement. 'It is not for
her to feel alone a solitary and ex
clusive sorrow. No, sir; no! Her
sister Commonwealths gather to her
side in this hour of her affliction,
and, intertwining their arms with
hers, they bend together over the
bier of her illustrious son, feeling as
she feels and weeping when she weeps,
over a sage, a patriot, and a states
man gone! It was in these great
characteristics of the individual and of
public man that his country reveren
ced that son when living, and in such,
with a painful sense of her common
lot, will she deplore him now that he
is dead.
“Born in our Revolutionary day
and brought iup in early and cherish
ed intimacy with the fathers and foun
ders of the Republic, he was a living
bond of connection between the pres
ent and the past—the venerable rep
resentative of the memories of anoth
er age, and the zealous, watchful and
powerful one of the expectations, in
terests and progressive knowledge of
his own.
“There he sat, with his intense eye
upon everything that passed, the pic
turesque and rare old man, unap
proachable by all others in the unity
of his character and in the thousand
fold anxieties which centered upon
him. No human being ever entered
this hall without turning habitually
and with heartfelt deference first to
him, and few ever left it without
pausing as they went to pour out
their blessings upon that spirit of con
secration to the country which
brought and which kept him here.
“Standing upon the extreme bound
ary of human life and disdaining all
the relaxations and exemptions of age,
his outer frame work was crumbling
away. The glorious engine within
still * worked on unhurt, uninjured,
amid all the dilapidation around it,
and worked on with its wonted and
its iron power, until the blow was
sent from above which crushed it into
fragments before us. And, however
appalling that blow and however pro
foundly it smote upon our feelings as
we beheld its extinguishing effect upon
his life where else could it have fal
len so fitly upon him? Where else could
he have been relieved from the yoke of
his labors so well as in the field where
he bore it? Where else would he him
self have been so willing to have yield
ed up his life as upon the post of duty,
and by the side of that very altar to
which he has devoted it? Where but in
the capitol of his country, to which
all the throbbings and hopes of his
heart had been given, would the dying
patriot be so willing that those hopes
and throbbings should cease? And
where but from this mansion-house of
liberty on earth, could this dying
Christian more fitly go to his mansion-
house of eternal liberty on high?”
IN THE SENATE.
Mr. Benton, among others, deliver
ed in the Senate a most appropriate
discourse on the life and character of
the deceased. I feel sure that the
subjoined extract will interest the
reader:
“In this long career of public ser
vice, Mr. Adams was distinguished
not only by faithful attention to all
the great duties of his stations, but
to all their less and minor duties. He
was not the Salaminian galley, to be
touched only on extraordinary occa
sions, but he was the ready vessel, al
ways under sail when the duties of his
station required it, be the occasion
great or small. As President, as Cabi
net Minister, as Minister abroad, he
examined all questions that came be
fore him, and examined all in all their
parts, in all the minutia of their de
tails as well as in all the vastness of
their comprehension. As Senator
and as a member of the House of
Representatives, the obscure commit-
tee-room was as much the witness of
his laborious application to the drudg
ery of legislation as the halls of the
two houses were to the ever-ready
speech, replete with knowledge which
instructed all hearers, enlightened all
subjects, and gave dignity and orna
ment to all debate.
“In the observance of all the pro
prieties of life, Mr. Adams was a
most noble and impressive example.
He cultivated the minor as well as the
greater virtues. Wherever his pres
ense could give aid and countenance
to man, there he was. In the exercis
es of the school and college; in the
meritorious meeting of the agricul
tural, mechanical, and commercial
societies; in attendance upon divine
worship, he gave the punctual attend
ance rarely seen but in those who are
free from the weight of public
cares.
“Punctual to every duty, death
found him at the post of duty; and
where else could it have found him,
at any stage of his career, for the
fifty years of his illustrious life? From
the time of his first appointment by
Washington to his last election by the
people of his native town, where
could death have found him but at
the post of duty? At that post, in
the fullness of age, in the ripeness of
renown, crowned with honor, sur
rounded by his family, his friends and
admirers, and in the very presence of
the national representation, he has
heen Sphered to his fathers, leaving
behind him the memory of public ser
vices which re the history of his
country for half a century, and the
example of a life, publio and private,
which should be the study and the
model of the generations of his coun
trymen.”
She Verdict Unanimous.
W. D. Suit, Druggist, Bippus, Ind.,
testifies; “I can recommend Electric
Bitters, as the very best remedy. Ev
ery bottle sold has given relief in ev
ery case. One man took six bottles,
and was cured of Rheumatism of ten
years standing.” Abraham Hare,
druggist, Bellville, Ohio, affirms:
“The best selling medicine I have
ever handled in my 20 years’ experi
ence, is Electric Bitters.” Thousands
of others have added their testimony,
so that the verdict is unanimous that
Electric Bitters do cure all diseases of
the Liver, Kidneys or Blood. Only a
half dollar a bottle at John M. Clark's
Drug Stores.
Don’t Represent its Party.
New York Star, (Dein.)
Our more or less reputable contem
porary, the Atlanta Constitution, is
in Journalism what Samuel J. Ran
dall is in practical politics—it steals
the livery of Democracy to serve Re
publicanism in. Published in the
rock-ribbed Democratic State of Geor
gia, and fattening on the patronage
of the confiding masses of the party
in that State, the Constitution em
ploys the influence, obtained under
false pretenses, to antagonize and
thwart Democratic purposes and to
promote Republican objects in its on
ly strictly party issue now before the
country—the issue of tariff reform.
It advocates protection and urges the
retention of war taxes in a State over
whelmingly opposed to such a policy,
and it impudently pretends to repre
sent a party whose convictions it is
outraging, whose principles it is vio
lating and whose honor it ife compro
mising every day. The Constitution
ought to be careful. The war is near
ly over in Georgia, and the time is
about past in which newspapers can
screen their treachery to the princi
ples and the welfare of Democracy by
the pinchback ostentating of devo
tion to its name and semblance. Some
day the wind of a great awakening
will sweep across those balmy Demo
cratic uplands and lift the lion’s skin
that hangs so loosely on the Consti
tution’s form and blow it clear away
to Pennsylvania—where it rightfully
belongs. And in that day the Consti
tution will regret having betrayed
those who trusted it.
Cure for Piles
Piles are frequently preceded by, a
sense of weight in the back, loins and
lower part of the abdomen, causing
the patient to suppose lie lias 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 xiart affected,
absorbing the Tumors, allaying the
intense itching, and "effecting a per
manent cure. Price, 50 cents. A 1 -
dress The Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co.
Piqua, O. Sold by T. H. Kenan,
Druggist, Milledgeville, Ga. [36 ly
’ ADVICE T» MOTHERS.
Are you disturbed at night and broken of yonr
rest by a sick child suffering and crying with
pain of cutting teeth? If so, send at once aud
get a bottle 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 dysentery
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 r 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, 1885. 24 ly
New Advertisements.
ALL FOR 24 CENTS.
We must reduce our stock in the next three
months, and for 30 days offer all the following
for only 34 cts: 10 pieces choice New and Popu
lar Music, full size, finely printed; 200 elegant
designs in Outline for Stamping and Embroid
ery; 100 late and Popular Songs, including all the
gems from the MIKADO, as well as ’‘Dream
races,” “Love, Love, Love,” “Sailling,” etc,,
etc., a large collection of new Riddles and Con
undrums, over 250, jnst the tiling for picnic and
social parties; 250 Motto Verses, just side-sput
ters, 77 Tricks in Magic, 100 Puzzles, all kinds,
26 Popular Games, a Secret Alphabet, 200 Amus
ing, Interesting aud Mysterious Pictures, the
great game of Fortunes Told, etc., etc. tv e will
send all the above in one package to any ad
dress, all prepaid, for 24 cents in postage stamps;
3 packages for 50c.; 7 packages for $1. Address
all orders to AVORLD MFGCO., 123, Nassau
St. N. Y.
NEWSPAPER
ADVERTISING.
DAUCHY & CO.,
27 Park Place and 24-26 Murray St M
New York.
Make lowest rates on all newspapers in the U.
S ' and Canada. Established 1867.
SPECIAL OFFER.
We will insert a one-inch advertisement one
month in our selected list of
225 DAILIES AND WEEKLIES
covering the U. S. for $2£0. Circulation 6,980,-
232 copies per month.
We will insert a one inch adv’t one month In our
POPULAR LOCAL LISTS
of 1,130 Daily and Weekly newspapers for $600.
No patent list papers are'iucluded.
Send for Catalogue. Parties contemplating a
line of advertising, large or small, are requested
to send for estimate of cost.
October 5th, 1886. 13 lm
STATE OF GEORGIA,
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT.
PROCLAMATION.
GEORGIA.
by henry d. McDaniel,
Governor of Said State.
Whereas, the General Assembly at its
last session passed the following Acts, to-
wit:
t0 a . me . n d Che Constitution of the Stats
15, parasrael '
c Q n . actecl the General as-
^ ^ _?tate of Georgia, and it is
aamao y authority of the
same, That the Constitution of this State
beam e ndecl by striking therefrom para
graph lo, of section seven (7), article three
(3), wh'ch reads as follows) tc?Ll,: PaS
graph XV Ail special or local bills shall
originate in the House of Representative-
The Speaker of the House of Representa
tives shall, within five days from the or
ganization of the General Assembly ap
point a committee, consisting of one from
each Congressional District, whose duty it
shall be to consider aud consolidate all
special and local bills..on the same subject,
and report the same to the House; and no
special or local bill shall be read or con
sidered by the House until the same has
been reported by the committee, unless by
a two-thirds vote; and no bill shall be
considered or reported to the House by
said committee, unless the same shall
have been laid before it within fifteen days
after the organization of the General As
sembly, except by a two-thirds vote.
Sec. ii. Be it further enacted, That
whenever the above proposed amend
ment to the Constitution shall be agreed
to by two-thirds of the members elected
to each of tiie two Houses of the General
Assembly, the Governor shall, and he is
hereby authorized and instructed to causa
said amendment to be published in at least
two newspapers in each Congressional
District in this State lor the period of two
months next preceding the time of hold
ing the next general election.
Sec. hi. Be it further enacted, That the
above proposed amendment shall be sub
mitted for ratification or rejection to the
electors of this State at the next general
election to be held after publication, as
provided for in the second section of this
Act, in the several election districts in this
State, at which election every person shall
be entitled to. vote who is entitled to vote
lor members of the General Assembly
All persons voting at said election in favor
of adopting the proposed amendment to
the Constitution shall write, or have print
ed on their ballots the words, “For ratifi
cation of the amendment striking para
graph 15 of section 7. article 3, from the
Constitutionand ail persons opposed to
the adoption of the aforesaid proposed
amendment shall write, or have printed
on their ballots the words, “Against rati
fication of the amendment striking para
graph 15 of section 7, article 3, from the
Constitution.”
Sec, iv. Be it further enacted, That the
Governor be, and he is hereby authorized
and directed to provide for the submission
of the amendment proposed in the first
section of this Act to a vote of the people,
as required by the Constitution of this
State, in paragraph 1, section 1 of Article
13, and by this Act, and i? ratified, the Gov
ernor shall, when he ascertains such rat
ification from the Secretary of State, to
whom the returns shall be referred in the
same manner as in eases of election for
members- of the General Assembly, to
count and ascertain the result, issue his
proclamation for tiie period of thirty davs
announcing such result aud declaring the
amendment I’atified.
Sec. v. Be it further enacted, that all
laws and parts of laws in conllict with
tliis Act be, aud the same are hereby re
pealed.
Approved September 24,1835.
An Act to amend the hist sentence of Article!
Section 1, Paragraph 1, of the Constitution
of 1877.
Sec. 1. Be it enacted by the General As
sembly of the State of Georgia, That the
last sentence of article 7, section 1, para
graph 1 of the Constitution of 1877 be, and
the same is hereby amended by adding
thereto at the end of Sjiici sentence the fol
lowing words, “And to make suitable pro
vision for such Confederate soldiers as
may have been permanently injured in
such service,” so that said sentence when
so amended shall read as follows: “To
supply the soldiers who lost a limb or
limbs in the military service of the Con
federate States with suitable artificial
limbs during life, and to make suitable
provisions for such Confederate soldiers
as may have been permanently injured Id
such service.”
Sec. ii. And be it further enacted, That
If this amendment shall be agreed to by
two-thirds of the members elected to each
of the two Houses, the same shall be en
tered on their journals with the ayes and
nays taken thereon; and the Governor
shall cause said amendment to be publish
ed in one or more newspapers in each Con
gressional District for two months pre
vious to the next general election; and the
same shall be submitted to the people at
the next general election; and the legal
voters at said next general election shall
have inscribed or printed on their ticket
the words, “ratification” or “non-ratifica
tion,” as they may choose to vote; and
if a majority of the voters qualified to
vote for members of the General Assem
bly, voting thereon, shall vote in favor of
ratification, then this amendment shall be
come a part of said article 7, section 1
paragraph 1 of the Constitution of the
State, and the Governor shall make proc
lamation thereof.
Sec. hi. Be it further enacted, That all
jaws and parts oi laws milita'ing against
the provisions of this Act be, and the same
are hereby repealed.
Approved October 19,1885.
Now therefore, 1, Heiirv D. McDaniel
Governor of said State, db i-sue this rav
proclamation, hereby declaring that the
foregoing proposed amendments are sub
mitted to the qualified voters of the State,
at the general election to be held on Wed
nesday, October 6,1386, for ratification or
rejection of said amendments (or either of
them jas provided in said Acts respectively.
Given under my hand and theseai of the
Executive Department, this 31st day of
July, 1886. i
HENRY D. McDaNIEL.
By the Governor, Governor*
J. W. Warren, Sec. Ez. Dep’t.
Aug. 10th, 1886. 5 an.
Once upon a midnight dreary, 1 )
I was tossing weak and weary,
For I had a fit of ague,
And my bones were very sore.
Suddenly I read a label,
Of a medicine on my table,
But to reach’t I scarce was able;
I was so infernal sore!
Took I just one dose, ’twas rile beans;
Soundly slept I and did snore.
Had the ague nevermore!
25 cents per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
A Lady in Texas Writes:
“My case is of long standing; has
baffled many physicians; have tried
every remedy I could hear of, but
Bradfield’s Female Regulator is all
that relieved me.” Write The Brad-
field Regulator Co., Atlanta, Ga.