Newspaper Page Text
-EROM-
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
THE WORLD’S BEST MAKERS
At Factory Prices. On Easies
Terms of Payment.
SPECIAL
BARGAINS.
ROSEWOOD PIANO $210
Fall Size; ah improvements; Sweet Tone
Guaranteed a^Superior and Reliable Instrument,
Best Sold in America for the money. Thousands
sold.
Complete Outfit—fine Plush 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
Style Case, with 2 Sets Reeds, only $55.
Complete Outfit—fine Stool, Instructor and
Music Book. All freight paid.
Easy Terms.
PIANOS.—$10 Monthly until paid for, or a
small cash payment and balance quarterly, or
semi-annually. Ten different plans of payment,
Responsible parties accommodated with almost
any terms desired.
ORGANS.—$5 Monthly, or Rented until paid
for. Easiest Terms ever heard of.
OUTFITS FREE.
Fine Plush Stool, Embroidered Cover, Instruc
tor and Music Bool with Pianos. Fine Stool,
Instructor and Music Book with Organs.
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
OF THE WORLD.
CHICKERING, MASON & HAMLIN,
MATHUSIIEK, BENT, AND ARION.
MASON <fc HAMLIN, PACKARD fj f}A A!
ORCHESTRAL AND BAY STATE UjluAllO.
ENDORSED AXD RECOMMENDED IN
HIGHEST TERMS BY NEARLY ALL THE
WORLD'S GREATEST MUSICIANS.
PIANOS in Squares, Square Grands. Uprights
and Concert Grands at $210, $25(, $275, $300,
$325, $350, to $1,000.
ORGANS for Churches, Lodges, Schools and
Parlors at $24, $30, $50, $60, $75, $90, $100, $125,
$159 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
JHE GEORGIA MUSIC HOUSE
E. D. IRVINE, Manager,
Macon Ga.,
Or J. S. STEMBRIDGE, Agt.,
Milledgeville, Ga.
September 14th, 1886. sc ly.
PIANOS.
P 1
-:o:-
ROMPT ATTENTION will be giv
en to the purchase and sale of
Real Estate in Baldwin County.
Milledgeville, Ga., Jan. 12th, 18S5.
DfBULL’S
HER BROTHER’S DEBT.
Plantation for Sale.
terms
W E OFFER for sale on easy
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.
Apply to Bethune & Moore,
Real Estate Agents
One 4 room house with cook room
attached—all new—2 acres land—good
well water—good barn—bounded
north by Ga. R. R., east by Wilkin
son street.
Two half acre lots, with houses, on
Wayne street, old factory site. For
sale by Bethune & Moore.
Real Estate Agents.
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.
Plantation for Sale.
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
healthy location with good water.
This place is particularly desirable as
a stock farm. Apply to
BETHUNE & MOORE
VALUABLEPLANTATION FOR
SYRUP
conFumptira I
persona in advanced atagw of I
the disease. Price 35 eta Can-1
tion. The Genuine Dr. Bull's I
Cough Syrup is sold only ini
while wrapper*, and bears our I
registered Trade-Marks to wit: I
\ A Bull’s Head in a Circle, a Bed-1
.Strip Caution-Label, and the I
Pfac-slmUe signatures of John W. \
Bull dt A. C. Meyer Co., Sole I
Prop’s, Baltimore, Md., U. S. A.
A
A
SALE. 500 acres, 50 acres bermuda
grass, between 50 and 75 acres of creek
and river bottom, good neighborhood
S-k miles from Eatonton, 1 mile from a
good grist mill. Made on place last
year 28 hales cotton, and 300 bushels
corn with two plows. Good dwelling
6 rooms, barn, kitchen, smoke house,
louble pantries, ironing house, and
^ood cabins, well watered. Apply to
BETHUNE & MOORE.
Miiledgevilie, Ga.
Plantation To Rent.
B
ENGINES |
j Sieam&wB.
Imias” |
j Pips & Fittin;;
SAWMILtS
Brass Valves
GRIST MILLS
SAWS
Cation Presses \
FILES
8HAFTIHS i
1 INJECTORS
fL’LLEYS ?
PUMPS
HANGERS |
Water Wheels
COTTON GINS 1
I CASTINGS
GEARING
c.' 2 ^ ryf-f r* r ,TT 1
I Brass and Iron
A u!i stock of Supplies, cheap & good.
BEL Tim, PACKING and OIL
at BOTTOM™PRICES
AXD IX STOCK FOR •
PROMPT DELIVERY.
ZW Repairs Promptly Done.
O.R.
mndry, Machine and Boiler
Works, AUGUSTA, GA.
OVE PASSENGER DEPOT.
¥MTi
Y VIRTUE of an order of the
Judge of the Superior Court of
the Albany Circuit the undersigned as
Executor of the Estate of Jeremiah
BealJ, deceased, will, on Saturday 4th
December next, before the court house
in the city of Milledgeville, Baldwin
County, Georgia, within the usual
hours of sale, rent at public outcry,
for the year 1887, the plantation in
said county belonging to the Estate of
said Jeremiah Beall, situated about
nine miles from Milledgeville, Ga.,
containing about Eleven hundred
acres and known as the Cunningliam
place. Said renting to he for notes to be
secured by lien upon the crops raised
on said place for the year 1887 and
made payable one half October loth,
1887 and the balance November 15th,
1887.
JOS. B. BEALL, Exr.,
Est., Jeremiah Beall, deceased.
Nov. 4th, 1886. [18'4t.
GEORGIA CLIMATIC TONIC
G
June 8, 1880.
IMIS’ SURE CORES
WASH DENTIFRICE
Chew Lsige’i Plage—The great Tobacco An
tidote!—Price lO CU.—Sold By all Druggist*
Oct. 1, 1886. 13 cw6m
CONSUMPTION CAN BE CUBED.
ft. HALL’S
BALSAM k
Jon*
Jron-
, , _rou]
Whooping Cough, Influenza, and
Diseases of the Breathing Organs. It
soothes and heals the Membrane oi
the Lungs, inflamed and poisoned by
the disease, and prevents the night
sweats and the tightness across the
chest which accompany it. CON
SUMPTION is not an incurable mal
ady. HALL’S BALSAM will cure
you, even though professional aid
fails. Price 25 cts., 50 eta. and $1.00.
JOHN F. HENB? A CO., Now York.
IWWrite for Illuminated Book.
“Oh, Charley, Charley, how could
you do such a thing?”
Lilias Wayland’s round cheek was
blanched to an unwonted whiteness as
she stood before her brother in the
close, cramped room which constitu
ted her sole home.
Charley Wayland, a handsome, dis
sipated-] ooking youth of two or three
and twenty, with bold eyes and a
merry mouth that seemed made only
to smile, sat opposite her, looking
half-repentant, half-defiant, as she
spoke.
“Lilly, I couldn’t help it. I tell you
I was hard up. A fellow must have
money; you women don’t know any
thing about the temptations and ne
cessities of the world!”
“But, Charley,” she faltered, “do
you know how this same world, as you
phrase it, looks at the deed you have
just committed? Oh, Charley,” and
her voice grew low and tremulous, “it
is a forgery!”
“Nonsense, Lill! It’s only borrow
ing a.part of old Glencross’ unused
millions to aid my needs. I wrote
and asked him for fcash, and he, the
unmannerly lout, refused. Well, what
could he expect after this, but that I
should help myself?”
Lilias wrung her slender hands.
“How Clare you, Charley! That a
come to this!” she
April 20, 1886.
41 cw ly
ALWAYS™™. 0 !'
ALL PURCHASERS CAR BE SUITED
MANUFACTURED BY
Isaac A.Sheppard & Co.,Baltimore,Md
*NI> FOR SALE BY
T. T. WINDSOR,
Milledgeville, Ga.
Aug 10, 1886. 5 ly.
New Advertisements.
NEW YORK SHOPPING
Circular sent free on application. Address XLW
YORK SHOPF1NG, :59 West lltli St., New
I ork.
X’TEXIIIX'G ADVERTISERS should ad-
GEO. 7. ROWELL <& CO.,
10 Spruce Street, New York City,,
For SELECT LIST OF 1,000 NEWSPAPERS.
Will be sent FREE, on application.
November 9th. 1886. . 18 lm
The Milledgeville Banking Co.
Of Milledgeville, Ga.
A General Banking Business Transacted.
G. T. Wiedenman, President.
B. f. Bethune, Cashier.
Directobs.—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, ’86. 15 ly
Care for Piles-
Blood Purifier.
T
ITU U
E-«*sdfnir Gams.
Ulcers, Sore Mouth, Sore
Throat, Clonuses the Teeth and Purifies the Breath ;
ris-I and r'-oornmend-d t’Y leading dentists. 1 re-
r •- i 1 v 1),,. J. p. A W. It. Hoi.vrs. DentistMacon.
2. or Sale by all druifsinti and duatlsti.
Aug. 5th, 1886.
4 iy.
SHOW CASES. CEDAR CHESTS.
ASK FOR ILLU ST RATE D PAMPHLET
T ERHY SHOW'CASE itOlv.
NASHVILLE TENKl.Vv :
Jan. 12, 1886.
27 ly.
Tax Notice,
M Y BOOKS are now opened for
the collection of Taxes for the
wear 1886. I am compelled under a
jiew law to close my books on the 20th
of December. Please come up and
pay promptly. Office at Post Office.
Office hours from 9 to 4 o’clock on
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
J T. W. TURK,
Tax Collector B. C.
Sept. 28,1886. 12 3m
POUND, and i3 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
OFLONG 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 vour druggist does
not keep it send direct to the
Marshallville Medicine, Co.,
Marshallville, Ga.
Sept. 28, 1886. 12 Iy.
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. h. L. BYINTOGN.
Sept. 7, 1886. 9 3m
For Sale.—Pure Plymouth Rock
Eggs for sale from select hens. $1.50
per setting of 13 eggs. Apply to
W. A. C
Piles are frequently preceded by a
sense of weight in the hack, loins and
lower part of the abdomen, causing
the patient to suppose he lms 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
The 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 Store.
Cure For Sick Headache.
35 tl]
Cook.
Harrison’s Combined Writing and Copy
ing Fluid for sale at this office.
For proof that Dr. Gunn’s Liver
Pills cure Sick Headache, ask your
Druggist for a free trial package. Only
one for a dose. Regular size boxes,
25 cents. Sold by T. H. Kenan,
Druggist, Milledgeville, Ga.
Wayland should
wailed.
“Dare!” he echoed, recklessly; “it
was but the stroke of a pen, after all;
and old Glencross would be a paltrier
miser than I take him to be if -he
makes a fuss about a matter of five
hundred dollars.”
“It is the right and the justice of
the thing,” cried Lilias, almost fran
tically. “If we could pay him in any
way; but I have sold everything that
remains of our former wealth. See!”
and she looked round the miserable
apartment. “See how I live! Last
night I sat up until midnight sewing
to have a little money to pay the rent.
I have not a jewel left, nor a trink
et.”
“Oh, bother, Lill! If old Glencross
cuts up rough, it is only taking a run
across the water. I know lots of ship
captains that would stow me under
their holds, almost any moonlight
night.”
Li ias looked despairingly at him.
Was it then impossible to make him
comprehend the moral obliquity
of the deed he bad just commit
ted? ^
“But I can’t stay fooling here,” ob
served the young man, with a toss of
his black curls. “I must be off about
my business. Good-by, Lill. Give us
a kiss, my girl. Except that you’re
uncommon fond of lecturing a fel
low, you’re not a bad sister in the
main.”
After he bad gone, Lilias sat down
to try and realize the new situation
in which she and lier brother were
placed. All now depended upon the
spirit in which Paulus Glencross
should receive this new encroachment
upon his purse and patience.
Lilly had never seen this distant re
lation, yet she had formed an opinion
of him in lier inmost mind, as we are
all apt to do of unseen persons whom
we hear a great deal about; and when
ever she thought of Mr. Glencross, the
image of a hook-nosed old man, yel
low -skinned and cadaverous, engaged
in sorting over piles of mortgages or
counting bags of gold, suggested itself
to her mental eye.
“But lie must be human, at least,”
thought Lilly, in the agony of her dis
tress. “If I goto him myself, and tell
him just what, poor Charley’s necessi
ties were,, and how good hearted he is
in spite of all his faults and thought
lessness—if I say frankly to him that
I have no money nor jewels to reim
burse him, but that I will stay and
work for him, as a seryant girl might
work in the kitchen, until I have dis
charged the horrible debt, surely, oh,
surely he cannot have the heart to re
fuse. I can do a great many things,
I can sew and embroider, and I can
make good bread and biscuit, and
poor mamma always said I was a good
housekeeper, and if Mr. Glencross is
really so miserly as Charley thinks, he
would look at the economy of the
thing. At least, it is worth try
ing.”
So favorably did Lilias Wayland re
gard this idea, broached in her sore
extremity, that in two days from the
evening in which she had bidden
good by to her handsome, reckless
brother, she stepped from the cars at
the New York depot, dressed in a so
ber brown suit that made her look
like a shrinking little mouse, with her
carpet bag in her hand.
A little inquiry sufficed to bring her
to the street where Mr. Glencross re
sided—a stately avenue, lined on
either side with elegant palaces, the
like of which Lilly had never seen in
the plainer city where she had been
born and bred. Her heart sank with
in her as she stood on the broad,
brown-stone step leading up to the
carved rosewood door, on which a sil
ver plate borethename of “Glencross”
in old English letters.
Then, coloring deeply at her own
cowardly tremulousness and utter
lack of all resolution and enterprise,
she rang the bell to settle the question
at once and definitely.
“Is Mr. Glencross at home??’ she
asked of the colored servant who an
swered the summons.
Yes, Mr. Glencross was at home;
would the young lady enter? A.nd
Lilias was shown into an apartment
curtained with heavy folds of purple
satin and carpeted with velvet the
same rich color, an apartment whose
dusky splendor made her think of all
the stories she had read of enchant
ed palaces in the realms of fairy
land.
As Lilias sat on the silken sofa,
waiting with a throbbing heart for the
appearance of her unknown cousin,
the thought stole into her mind that
he wasn’t so much of a “miser” after
all; and then came a sick sort of mis
giving that her mission was all in
vain.
“For surely,” she thought, glancing
tremulously round the elegant apart
ment, “he will not want anyone to
make bread or look after the kitchen
The thought had scarcely framed
itself in her mapd when a door at the
farther end of the room was opened,
and a tall, handsome man scarcely
thirty years of age entered.
“I—I beg your pardon, sir,” falter
ed Lilias, all in a flutter, “but I wish
ed to see Mr. Glencross.”
“I am Mr. Glencross.”
“You!” Lily rose up and sat down
again coloring vivid scarlet. This,
then, was their “far-off” cousin, and
how widely different from their dreams
and fancies! Apparently the gentle
man saw and pitied her painful con
fusion, for he said politely:
“May I ask in what manner I can be
useful to you?”
“Iam Lilias Wayland!” she answer
ed, in a tone that was scarcely audi
ble.
“Wayland!” A shadow, faint yet
distinctly perceptible, overspread his
face at that word, and Lilias saw it
with a failing heart. She forgot the
labored speech of palliation and excuse
that she had prepared. She forgot
that he was no silver-haired patriarch
but a handsome young man, sur
rounded by all the adjnncts of wealth
and luxury. She remembered only
poor Charlie and her own sickening
idea of debt, disgrace and ruin; and
sinking on her knees at his feet, she
sobbed out her pitiful story.
“He is so young,” she wailed, ”so
young surely you will not refuse to
give him another chance for name
and fame! I will work and toil for
you until the five hundred dollars are
every cent paid. I will be a servant,
a seamstress—what you please, only
promise me that you will not visit him
the penalties of the law!”
Her voice died into quivering sil
ence, but her eyes still appealed.
“Rise, Miss Wayland,” said the
young man, without a moment’s con
sideration. I promise that this of
fense of your brother’s shall be over
looked for the sake of the sister
who has pleaded so eloquently for
him.”
And I—what can I do for you?
What must I do? For if I cannot re
pay the money in some shape or
other I shall die of shame and mortifi
cation!”
“I will take the matter into consid
eration,” said Mr. Glencross, gravely,
yet not without a certain gleam of
amusement in the corners of his
mouth at the idea of that pretty, crea
ture rendering up to him the equiva
lent of the five hundred dollars. “ And
now, Cousin Lilias—for I believe Ave
may claim relationship, although it is
somewhat distant—I shall insist upon
you as my guest for a while. Let me
ring and send for my mother!
Mrs. Glencross, a stately old lady
in black silk and Valenciennes lace,
welcomed Lilias Wayland with a smil
ing hospitality which belonged to the
ancient regime, and almost before she
new it the girl found herself-chatting
innocently away to her hostess, as if
she had lived all her life in the sun
shine of that pleasant smile, while
Paulus Glencross, busied among some
papers at the table beyond, watched
the sweet changing countenance with
a new interest.
“I never saw such a lovely face in
my life,” he thought. “The profile
is as purely Grecian as the face of the
Hero on my mother’s cameo, and the
eyes are as full of shifting lights as a
diamond. Upon my word, this little
new cousin is an acquisition!”
When Lilias wrote her happy letter
home that night Mr. Glencross added
a pleasant postscript and Charley
Wayland knew that his season of
peril was over.
Lilly had been neariy a month the
guest of the stately old lady in black
silk and Valenciennes lace, when the
day Paulus, coming suddenly into one
purple twilight of the drawing-room,
found her sitting all alone with tear
drops glittering on her peachy
cheek.
“Why Liliy, what is the mat
ter ?”
“Nothing, Paulus”—they had grown
to be good friends by this time “only
I have been dreaming very pleasantly,
and the time of waking has come at
last.”
“You mysterious little sphiux, what
on earth do you mean?”
She colored and cast down her
eyes.
“The five hundred dollars, Paulus—
they are yet to be paid. No—don’t
interrupt me. I cannot consent to in
dulge your generous impulses. I
must pay you, and there is no other
way for me than to seek a situation as
governess or instructess in some semi
nary. So Paulus, I have written an
advertisement, and if you will be so
kind as to take it down to the office of
some one of the daily papers—”
“Gi^e it to me!” he interrupt
ed.
She placed it confidently in his
hand, lie tore it deliberately in
strips.
“Paulus,” she cried in amaze
ment.
“Lilly, this is nonesense. If you
want to pay me you can.” '
“But, Paulus, you know I have no
thing in all the world!”
“You have yourself—to me the most
precious gift the aforesaid world con
tains.”
“I don’t understand you.”
“Must I speak plainer? Well, then,
Lilly, give me yourself. I love you,
darling, and would fain make you my
wife. Are you content to pay me in
this coin?”
“Oh, Paulus!” she faltered. “I
never dreamed of so much happi
ness ”
And so Lilias Wayland’s indebted
ness was settled most satisfactorily.
~ mrTrae Kan.
v Christian Observer.
The work ohe may do in this world
is only secondary matter. The pri
mary thing is the man himself. This
life is a school, with its long and vari
ed curriculum, in which men and
women are being trained and discip
lined for another life beyond this
earthly sphere. Carrying on busi
ness successfully is therefore not half
so important as building a good man
hood. Whether at the end of sixty
or seventy years hard toil, a man rests
with a comfortable fortune, or comes
to the close with nothing, at is really a
very small matter, in comparison with
what the man himself is, at the end of
his career. We pity a man who fails
in business when too old to start again;
but if, through, his checkered course,
he has kept himself pure, and clean,
and true, and has grown into a strong,
noble character, he is not to be pit
ied. Pity rather the poor man with
his millions, who has made money at
the price of his character, .and has
built up a fortune on the ruins of his
manhood. ........
Excitement in Texas.
Great excitement has been caused
in the vicinity of Paris, Tex., by the
remarkable recovery of Mr. J. E. Cor
ley, who was so helpless he could rot
turn in bed, or raise his head; every
body said he was dying of Consump
tion. A trial bottle of Dr. King’s New
Discovery was sent him. Finding re
lief, he bought a large bottle and a
box of Dr. King’s New Life Pills; by
the time he had taken two boxes of
Pills and two bottles of the Discovery,
he was well and had gained in flesh
thirty-six pounds.
Trial Bottles of this Great Discov
ery for Consumption free at John M.
Clark’s Drug Store.
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.
L
Farming Lands
and Timbered Tracts
FOB, SALE CHEAP;
ALSO HOMES FOR THE HOMELESS.
ESS than a week’s wages will se
cure one. Many valuable lots Giv-
FN AWAY.
CSTAgents Wanted: liberal induce
ments offered. For full information
address * E. BAUDER,
Brentsviile, Y"a.
June 8th, 1886. 48 6m.
OTHER’S
FRIEND
—MAKES •
Child-Birth Easy L
The time has come when th* terri
ble agony of* this er.tical period in wo
man’s life can be avoided. A distin
guished physician, who spent 44 years
in this« branch of practice, left to
child-bearing woman this legacy, The
Mother’s Friend,; and to-day there
are thousands of-women who, having
used this remedy before confinement,
rise*up*and call his name blessed. We
can prove all w.e claim by living wit
nesses, and anyone interested can call,
or have their husbands do so, and see
the original letters, which .we cannot
publish. -
All druggists sell it. For particu
lars address
Bradfield Regulator Co.,
5 cm. ly.] Atlanta, Ga.
Dentistry.
DR. H MrCLARKE.
VYTOEK of any kind performed in ae-
f “ cordance with the latest and most im
proved methods.
t3,0ffleein Callaway’s New Building.
Milledgeville, Ga., May 15th, 1883. 44
DR. W. H. HALL
HI
formerly rteenpied -by ; Mr.
Fame, Clerk of Supenor'Coiirr.
Walter
(Stf
Executor’s Sale.
B
Startling But True.
Writing paper pens, ink, pencils ~
blank books, envelopes, and all kinds expenditures. I wish—ob, I wish that I
of stationery, for sale at this office. I sa fe at home again!”
Willis Point, Texas, Dec. 1, 1685.
After suffering for more than three
years with disease of the throat and
lungs, I S ot so low last spring I was
entirely unable to do anything, and
my cough was so bad I scarcely slept
anv at night. My Druggist, Dr. H.
F. Goodnight, sent me a bottle of Dr.
Bosanko’s Cough and Lung Syrup. I
found relief, and after using six $1.00
bottles, I was entirely cured.
J. M. Welden.
Sold by T. H. Kenan, Druggist,
Milledgeville, Ga.
Y virtue of.authority in me vested
by the last will and testament of
^ Mrs. M. E. Little, deceased, will be
sold before the Court House door in
the city of Milledgeville on the first
Tuesday in December next, between
the legal hours of sale, to the highest
bidder, the following property, be
longing to the estate of the said Mrs.
M. E. Little, viz: The plantation
known as the “Little place,” situated
three miles North of Milledgeville and
adjoining lands of Rose, Adams and
Furman; the Stinson lot and what is
known as the “old place” lot to be sold
separately. Also ten shares of Cen
tral Railroad stock and ten shares of
Eatonton Branch Railroad stock to
gether with four debenture shares of
stock. Also the house and lot on
Wayne street, Milledgeville, known as
the residence of said Mrs. Little.
Terms: the land to be sold for one-
third cash and the remainder in one
or two years and to bear interest at 8
per cent per annum from the date of
s a ip
JAMES F. LITTLE, Executor
Oct. 26, 1886* tds.
Notice.—A bill to be entitled An Act to
fix the license or tax for sale of intoxicat
ing or malt Liquors in the city of MiiPdge-
ville and Baldwin county, Georgia, at ten
thousand dolhrs, will be introduced in
the next Legislature of said Slate. Oct, 25
1886.
Legal cap, foolscap, letter and note paper
—pens, pencils and Ink, for sale cheap at
the Union & Recorder office.