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SWIFT’S SPECIFIC,
A Vegetable Blood Purifier.
Its Claims Sustained
BY THE TESTIMONY OF
Willing Witnesses
THE GOLDEN HARVEST
—OF—
HEALTH REAPED
From tlil» Prolific Remedy
SUCCESS
THE
TEST OF MERIT.
A REMEDY
NOT FOR A DAY
But for a Half a Century.
Interesting Treatise on Blood and 8kln Diseases mailed
FHEE to all who apply. It should be carefully
read by everybody. Address
THE SWIFT 8PECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
J une AA, 1880.
00 cw ly.
Watches and Jewelry!
Tho undersigned has a beautiful and superb stock of goods,
suitable for Holiday Presents, consisting of valuablo and useful
articles, such as
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry, Silverware,
Vases, Table Cutlery, musical instrument?-, Dressing Cases, Pocket
Knives, Canes, Spectacles,
Crockery and Glassware,
Thimbles, Scissors, Gold Pens and Pencils, a specialty. The
Public are Invited to Gall
and examine my stock. I will tako great pleasure in showing my
goods, and feel assured that I can please the most fastidious in
anything they may desire in my lino from Watches and Diamonds,
down to a Jowsliarp.
JOSEPH MILLER,
No. 15 Wayne Street,.
Dec. 7, 1880.
.Milledgeville, Ga.
22 3in
No. 17 South Wai/ne St.
T. E. WHITE & CO
We invite all our Patrons and Friends to come and examine our
now goods, which we are daily receiving. W"e can suit any man’s
pocket book, both in quality and price of goods. We do not pro
pose to make any cuts on prices but will sell you what you want and
Guarantee Satisfaction on all Goods.
We would say, particularly to our regular patrons, that at all times,
wo will try to till their orders with the
Nicest and Freshest Goods,
tho market affords. Wo do not buy in very large lots, but lniv
often. By this means, we can always sell fresh goods. We call
particular attention to
Our Stock of L'lour,
which is complete. We have on hand “White Swan,” “White
Loaf,” “White Satin” and “Jersey.” The above grades are patents.
Then we have also “New Constitution,” “Moss Rose,” and “Odd
Trump.” If you want nice white bread, buy good Flour and the
best Lard. We have the tiuest Leaf Lard on hand, which cost very
little more than poor stuff.
Our stock of Canned Goods, cannot bo excelled. Fancy Candy
and Crackers of all kinds.
Sugar, Coffee, Teas, Spice, &c.
In fact, anything you may want. Bimn for your cow at lowest price.
Mognolia Hams, Breakfast Bacon and White Meat. Jersey Butter,
always on baud and on Ice. Wo invito our country friends to call
on us and get prices, we will sell them their goods as cheap as any
one. Tobacco by the plug or box. Remember the place.
GREEN STORE!
No. 17 South Wayne Street Milledgeville, Ga.
T. E. WHITE & CO.
Aug. 81st, 188G. 31 ly.
JOpSHF ANODYNE
^LINIMENT ^
parsons’:: PILLS
Thee© pill© wore wonderful discovery. No other* like them in the world. Will positively cure or
‘ ' Th i ilUrmation around each box is worth ten times_the oost or a box c'
ep:
rohevo all raanne. of disc:
nilla. Find out about the
ri
froe. 8oldovoi
feheridan’a dondition.
Powder is absolutely
pure and highly con-]
- ‘ * Onoo
it obout Chori and you will always be thankful. One pHl a dose. Dlustrated pamphlet
rywlioro, or sent-by mail for 35c. jnetampib Dr. I. 8 L JOHWBON&OO. t 22 O.H. St., Boston.
naition^L m mm mm ■ H M ^—Nothing on earth
oentrated.
•Nothing oh earth
I will make hens lay
'like it. It cures
chicken cholera and
all diseases of hone.
any other kfnd. It BA |« ■ III ■■ ■ BB ■ Is worth its weight
ntrietly a medicine tolVI II IlLHU ■ in gold. Illustrated
bn given with food. IRHIIB^F BIB I ■ book by mail free.
Sold everywhere, or sent by mail for 26 cents In stamp*. 81*4 lb. air-tight tin camb, 811 by mail, £1.20.
iia oans by axpresa, prepaid, for ’$0.00. XML X* fl. JOHNSON is CO.. Soaiton.
Dee. 14, 1880. 23 4m.
MAKE HENS LAY
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This powder never varies. A marvel of
purity, strength and whnlesoraeness. More
economical than the ordinary kinds, and
cannot be sold In competition with tho
multitude of low tests, short weight., slum
or phosphate powders. Hold only In nans.
.Rotat, Bakinu Bowpeh Co., ioc Wall Kt-
New York. 19 ly.
iLgripuItural -Department,
Gardening.
There are so many hinds of veg
etables that few persons culti
vate all. A good rule is for one
to select such as he likes best,
and sow the soeds of such every
two weeks. Then ho can during
tho gardening season always have
a supply of those which ho pre
fers.
How to Raise Irish Potatoes.
A writer in the Home and Farm
gives the following directions for
successfully raising Irish potatoes:
take a plat of laud that is not too
thirsty nor too low; haul on well
rotted stable manure; if it should
be composted with cotton seed,
until tho seed is well rotted, so
rnueh the better; scatter the ma
nure broadcast an inch thick over
the land; be sure to make the bed
rich, aud break the laud up well,
turning the manure well under.
Then sow some good fertilizer
that contains a good deal of pot
ash. Be suro and have it all over
the land, so as to mnko tho
ground rich or this plan won’t
do. Mark off’ tho rows twelve
inches apart and three inches
deep; drop the potatoes one foot
apart in the rows and cover them
with loose dirt that was dug out;
let them be covered about two
inches deep, leaving the ground
level. When tho potatoes begin
to come up v* ell haul in pine straw;
cane fodder or leaves will answer,
and cover the bed and potatoos
1 ft. deep with straw; do this just
after a rain—while the ground
is wet—and by putting straw
from twelve to fifteen inches thick
the ground won’t get dry, but will
retain the moisture during the
drought and the potatoes keep
green and grow in dryest weather
in the spring. When some of the
potatoes get large enougli to use,
remove tho straw down to the
roots and tako out the largest
ones and let the smallest ones re
main. If the vines uro not injur
ed they will grow until every
potatato will be large enough to
use. The potatoes grow just in
the ground and are very easily
gathered.
Who Pays the Tariff?
New York World.
Who pays the tariff? The Tri
bune has twice recently sought to
lead its readers to believe that
customs duties are “paid iu part
by foreigners as a means of get
ting access to American markets.”
The Protectionists should keep
this stuff for the stump. To put it iu
cold print is to expose themselves
to instant exposure and ridicule.
The people in this country who
do not know that the customs du
ties are paid primarily by the
American importer, secondarily
by the American buyer and in
the end by the American consu
mer, uo doubt already vote blind
ly for a perpetual war tariff. And
so there is really no need of put
ting out false theories to catch
them.
Prof. Bartholomew, the success
ful horse-trainer, says that the
hearing of that animal is more
acute than man’s, and yelling at
him only tends to make him har
der to manage. It is laid down as
a certain rule that tho londer a
man shouts ut a horse the loss he
knows about horses.
I The Test Made by Two Brothers.
Hartwell 8un.
A friendly rivalry for wealth oc-
! curved between two brothers of
our county a few years ago. One,
not content with tho slow manner
of accumulation by hard licks on
the poor lands of this county, con
cluded to go W est, where it affords
only a question of very short time
to gather in a sufficiency of this
world’s goods to meet the neces
sities of a long lifo.
The mercenary youth landed iu
Texas, the seeming paradise in
the world to some people. A few
days ago the brother who was
content to remain in our county
and risk the slow process, receiv
ed a letter from his brother in Tox-
as asking him for a small loan, as
ho was absolutely destitute of the
necessities for sustenance of life.
The kind brother sent him fifty
dollars. And right hero wo will
say that tho brother who was con
tent to remain in our county is
out of debt and made money not
withstanding the short crop.
How President Taylor Died.
President Taylor, who was the
socond Chief Magistrate to die
at the W hite House (President
Harrison being the first), was in
the second year of his adminis
tration. His illness began with
oholera morbus, but soon passed
into billious remittent fever. The
malady lasted five days before it
proved fatal. His death occur
red at half past ten o’clock on tho
night of July 9th. 1850.
The Vice-President, the Cabi
net and tho Mayor of Washing
ton were at the President’s bed
side when ho expired. His last
words were: “I have endeavored
to do my duty. I am prepared.”
The body lay in state at the
White Houso until the 13th, when
the funeral took place. Among
the pall-bearers were Clay, Web
ster, Cass aud Benton. Both
Houses of Congress aud the
Judges of tho Supreme Court
wore in the funeral cortege.—
Among the military organizations
were Duncan’s Light Artillery,
which fired the first gun ut Palo
Alto and the last in the City
of Mexico. The pageant was a
magnificent one, sill the citizens
of the district taking part in it,
together with visitors from all
parts of the country. The inter
ment was in the Congressional
Burying Ground at North Point.
—N. Y. Journal
Money to be Made.
It is said that dull times are
not known by tho agents for the
great publishing house of George
Stinson & Co, of Portland, Maine.
The reason of this exceptional
success is found in the facts that
they always give the public that
which is keenly appreciated aud
at prices that all can afford. At
present we understand, their
agents are doing wonderfully well
on several new lines. They need
many more agents in all parts of
tho country. Those who need
profitable work should apply at
once. W r oman do as well as men.
Experience is not necessary, for
Messrs. Stilson & Co. undertake
to show all who aro willing to
work, not hard but earnestly,
the path to large success. It
should be remembered that an
agent can do a handsome busi
ness without being from home
over night. Another advantage—
it costs nothing to givo the busi
ness a trial, and an agent can de
vote all his timo; or only his
spare moments to it. Stinson A'
Co. guarautee grand success to all
who ongage and follow simple and
plain directions that they give.
Wo liavo not spaco to explain sill
here, but full particulars will be
cent free to those who address
tho firm: their full address is giv
en above.
Any Small Boy, With a Stick,
Can kill a tiger,—if the tiger happens
to be found when only a, little eub.
So consumption, that deadliest and
most feared of diseases, in this coun
try, can assuredly be conquered ami
destroyed if Dr. Pierce’s “Holden
Medical Discovery” be employed ear
ly- ^
The Chicago papers report the
death iu their city, on Saturday
last, of a young man from swal
lowing a spoonful of kerosene oil.
He took it as a medicine, and
died iu twenty minutes aftor swal
lowing it.
Legal.blanks for sale at this office.
Dentistry.
DR. H mTCLARKE-
W ORK of any kind performed in ac-
cordanci with the latest and most im
proved methods.
*a.Offlceln Callaway’sNew Building,
Millodgeville, Ga., May 10th, 1883. 44
The Milledgeville Banking Co.
OF MILLEDGEYILLr, GA.
A General Hanking Huslm-ss Transacted.
G. T. Wiedenman, President.
B. T. Bethune, Cashier.
Dtkf.ctous.—W. T. Conn, D. B. Sanford,
ri.E. Hendrix, G. T. Wiedenman, L. N
Callaway, T. L. McComb, C. M. Wright.
Millodgeville, Ga., Oct.21st, ’80. 15 ly
§. Barrett,
Invites his friends to call and examino his new and complete stock'
of Groceries. He has endeavored to open a
First-Class Grocery Store,
in Milledgeville, and intends, so long as lie continues in business, to
keep up a full and complete stock of FRESH GOODS and to sell
just as LOW as the same goods can be sold in this or any other
market. Ho does not propose to cut under his Brother Merchants
but it will be a “cold day in August” when he is run out by the
Brother who proposes to undersell him. His advantages are no
better than any other man, BET JUST AS GOOD, and he can well
afford to meet their prices. He
Makes a Small Profit on all lie Sells,
and “Don’t you forget it.” Ho does not sell at COST, he buys from
the best houses, pays cash, gets the benefit of c*.gh discount, and
therefore can and will
Sell Goods as Low as Any One I
To mention tho articles would he useless, suffice it to saj ho has
nearly all the goods usually kept in a First-Class Grocery Sy>re in
cities of any size. He will endeavor, by STRICT HONESTY an( \
polite attention, to merit a full share of the public patronage, ^nd
if successful in business, will promise to do all he can to build ip
the interest of the city that lias so kindly received him.
S. BARRETT.
No. 23 S. Wayne Street Milledgeville, Ga.
Dec. 14th, 1886. 12 ly.
•Vf
Lumber! Lumber!
New Mill and Excellent Timber.
I HAVE MOVED my Mill into a fine lot of new timber, and am
prepared to fill orders promptly for any and
All Kinds of Lumber at Lowest Prices,
in any quantity. Will fill orders and deliver Lumber ou short notice.
W. ZEE. ZEE. ZB-A-ZR-ZCTZEJS.
Milledgeville, Ga., Jan. 10th, 1887. 27 tf.
IE. ZR,. SOZE3ZZtsTZEjIZDE!JR,
—IMPORTEK ! —
—Wholesale and Retail Dealer In—
Fine Wines, Cigars, Brandies, Tobacco, Mineral
Waters, Whiskies, Gin, Porter, Ale, Etc.
G01 and 802 Broad Street, AUGUSTA, GA.
AOTAgent for Veuve Clicquot Ponsardlp, Urbana Wine Company. Also, sole Agent
for the Anheuser-Busch Brewing Association, St. Louis, Mo. Special Brewings
Lager Beer kept in stock.
Dec, 15th, 1886. 23 ty.
A.SB.8FARQUHAR. ROB’T H. SMITH.
A. B. FARQUHAfUCO..
MACON, GA.,,
Manufacturers and Jobbers of.
Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills,
Grist Mills, Brown’s Cotton Gins,
and Miscellaneous Machinery,
Hardware, Tinware, Cutlery, L>ins, Belting,
Iron Pipe, Brass and Iron Steam Fittings,
Hancock Inspirators &c.
June 23d, 1886. s«ly
I am here to Supply a Long Felt Want.
MILLEDGEVILLE
Marble and Granite Works\
M Y 1"ARD is open and everybody is cordially invited to come
and see my work and how it is done. I am prepared to furn
ish any size job from a small Headstone to the finest elaborately
carved Tablet or Monument. I have as good a selection of origi
nal Designs and Photographs as can be found anywhere in tho
United States.
Satisfaction Guaranteed
in every instance. Prices, Designs and Estimates sent by mail upon
application. Correspondence solicited.
E. P. LUGAND,
Lock Box, No. 1, Milledgeville, Ga.
Jan. 11, 1887. u 2 7 lm.
Brick! Brick! Brick l
1,000,000 FIRST-CLASS BRICK for SALE.
P ARTIES intending to build on tho lino of the Georgia or Central Railroads, would
do well to consult us boforo making a contract.
First-Class Paving Brick a Specialty.
We are making Brick with the latest Improved Machinery, on the celebrated Cara-
ker yard.
BRICK DELIVERED TO ANY PART OF TOWN.
*rWe take pleasure in referring to Maj.J. FUSS, Architect and Building Superin
tendent.
foster & mcmillan,
Milledgeville, Ga., June 10th, 1885.
Contractors and Builders.
48 ly