Newspaper Page Text
UNION & RECORDER.
Augusta Letter.
Augusta, Ga., >
April 1st, 1887.)
Editors Uniun RKroiiDititi
Wo uro indeed in the midst of very
changeable weather. It is of all
kinds, to suit all tastes. In the past
week we have enjoyed the luxury of
spring weather, considerably mixed
with winter and hummer. Just now
however, old winter seems to be on
top, and promises to remain there for
several days to come. The tempera
ture fell considerably during the
night, while a slow rain pattered gent
ly on the house-tops and flowed along
the ground in tiny streams almost on
the verge of the freezing point. This
morning at 10 o’clock the thermome
ter showed another fall, and in a few
minutes the natter of sleet was heard
upon the window paneB. So when
Tyou hear of Augusta's having a fall
of-sleet on the 1st day of April do not
put it down as an April fool. It is to
be regretted that the Deficiency bill
failed to become a law, as the Signal
Service is prevented thereby from
sending valuable weather information
to different parts of tlm country. Sam
Randall is a nuisance to the Democ
racy anyhow, and his failure to have
this bill ready for the President s sig
nature is about as serious a blow to
>the country at large as many of bis
congressional acts were to the party
be claims as his own. Sergeant Fish-
. <r <4if the Augusta Signal Ofllee in
formed your correspondent that no
weather news woidd be sent from
Washington until next July and lays
all the blame at the door of Hon.
GEORGIA’S MILITIA.
Blonie Society,” in honor of the
worthy and popular Clerk of our City
Council. The Society will before long Report of Adjutant General Kell to
given public entertainment.
Houghton.
Among our Exchanges.
serious!
Col. John A. Stephens
ill at Washington, Gu.
the Adjutant General of the Army.
Luther Ellsrson, the young man who
murdered hart Wall, In Atlasla, last year,
and who was under a life sen ten oe, has es
caped from jail.
Messers. C. J. Harris, J. L. Hardeman
U. Davis and Mr. Lae Kills have made
up the anm of $20 and offered It as a spe
cial premium at the State fair for the beet
two dozen etalke of sugar cane.
The Intereta te law doeanotaffect rail roads
operating wholly within a State. It Is in
tended to regulate only those reaching
rrom one state to another—hanca the name,
intar-etate law.
Advices from over the State Indicate
the fruit crop ia seriously Injured—
I hie Is a severe loss, for fruit to Georgians
te not only a luxury, but is getting to be
also a eouroeof lacotne.
Judge Laweon Is employing his time
farming. As tn other matters, the
Judge Jh a success In the art of getting the
heat results out of the land—Katonton
Messenger.
Samuel Randall, the Republican Dem
ocrat from the State of P
Heavy snow storms prevailed Fri
day all over North Carolina and up
per portions or South Carolina, Geor
gia and Tennessee.
The Markham House, Atlanta, Ga.,
was sold Tuesday for $100,000 to Mr.
John Silvey, a prominent dry goods
merchant of that city.
Major Monroo, assistant adjutant
general, has prepared a detailed state
ment of the militia of the state of
Georgia, as requested bv a recent
communication from Adjutant Gen
eral Drum, of the United states ar
my. This statement shows that the
militia of Georgia consists of one reg
iment, eight batteries and soveral
detached companies. There are In all
9 eonipanies of cavalry, 4 of artillery
and (ifi of infantry. There are21 aides-
de-camp to the Governor, 1 adjutant
genoral, 1 judge advocate general and
1 quartermaster genoral. The cavalry
companies huvo thirty six commis
sioned ofllcers, the artillery compa
nies 14 and the infantry companies,
305. Six hundred and ninety non
commissioned officers are distributed
ns follows: Cavalry, 107; artillery,
39; infantry, 644. There are 345 pri
vates in the cavalry companies, 178 in
artillery and a,(198 in infantry. The
total or enlisted men and commis
sioned officers is as follows: Caval
ry, 497; artillery, 333; and infantry,
3.551, making a grand total, including
aides and staff officers of -1,40.7.
What becomes of great men’s sons?”
This long familiar question seems to
have been answered of late by tint
sons of Grant, ITlaine and I.ogan.
They marry rich men’s daughters and
become pets of their fathers-in-law.
Tt is said that $84,000,000 hare been
invested in the South since the begin
ning of the new year.
’ennsylvania
Until that-tiine we will have to fall
upon the old darkies’ way of
*'rognosticating.
The Irishmen are to have a grand
willy at Hussar Hall, next Tuesday
might, and invite all who sympathize
with tlie Emerald Isle in her struggle
tor home rule to join them in giving
rpression to their opposition to Eng-
ind's oppression. The “Coercion
'amis oppression
'Act” now pending before the Hritisli
Parliament has won many a luke-
warm sympathizer to the Irish cause
and the meeting next week will be
Largely attended by Augusta’s repre
sentative citizens. Our people as a
vule are conservative, and will not go
to the extreme of unqualified denun
ciation of England, but there are
thousands here irpAugusta who long
d-
jto .see tiie ilag of Erin waving proud
-iy over a free people. The South
should remember that while England
jju some measure sympathized with
. 4is in our late struggle, the sons of
Erin did more, Many of them gave
usiheir service, and better still, their
Hives. The blood of Ireland mingled
freely with that of the Confederacy
hi our struggle for liberty. The meet
ing next Tuesday will be a rousing
om‘.
A revival of great interest is now
in progress at St. James Methodist
fyjjMrcb. Rev. O. A. Evans, the pas
tor, is assisted by Mr. Scuddy, Seci-e-
taryof Y. M. C. A. of South Carolina,
uid Miss Cassie Smith a consecrated
Christian lady of Connecticut. The
meetings are largely attended and al
ready souls have professed conver
sion.’ Special efforts in behalf of ohil-
Iren are being made, a meeting being
Held every afternoon at 4 o’clock for
them alone. Sf. James has a mem
bership of several hundred, and is one
of the most active churches in the
city. As one of its members said the
>iher day, “she is always red hot.”
The church edifice is now undergoing
enlargement, and when finished will
be one of tlie finest in the city. Gen.
Evans, the pastor, is beloved not on
l!y by liis own membership, but by the
community at large, and his position
.-uid iniluence give him great power
in the cause of the Master whom he
*o faithfully serves.
Tlie Baptist City Mission Board will
fcold its semi-annual meeting at the
1st Church on the 3d Sunday in this
month. The program is already be
ing arranged, and a treat is in store
tor the people of that denomination
iu our midst. Rev. Henry Tucker, D.
iA., tlie very able editor of tlie Chris
tian Index of Atlanta, and Ex. Chan
cellor of the State Fniversity has
been invited to deliver the sermon
xqion that occasion. Dr. Tucker is
one of the ablest divines in the South,
lie is a deep thinker and a ripe schol
ar, is possessed of a logical mind ana
withal has a heart filled with the
grace of Got!. Hon. J. C. C. Black is
to make an address to the congrega
tion at the close of Dr. Tucker’s ser
moil, and many will he the ear to hear
and the heart to respond to the burli
ng words of tlie “most eloquent man
in Georgia.”
The Mission Board is doing a great
work right here in Augusta. It has
two Missionaries at work—one up
town, the other in the lower part of
the city, and will soon take possession
of territory unoccupied by other de
nominations. It should receive the
hearty sympathy anil substantial sup-
The prevailing
passion In tho South is no longer pol
itics ; it is business.
Nina Van Zandt, who won the prize
for sentimenal idiocy by marrying
Anarchist Spies by proxy, is occa
sionally permitted to touch that he-
roe’s finger tins through tho gratod
door of his sell.
Charles S. Fairohild lias been ap
pointed Secretary of the Treasury in
the place of Mr. Manning, resigned,
and entered upon the discharge of his
duties on the first of April.
There is safety for the country in
that future which finds the North and
Month united upon acotnmon business
platform, Mr. Sherman himself is a
line illustration of how quickly sec
tional projudioe and sentimental tradi
tions are overcome by a common pur
pose.—Macon Telegraph.
The biggest purpose we see in Sher
man is to make hitnself president.
That would be very nioe for Sherman
—very nioe. But the South prefers
Grover a while longer yet. Sorry,
brother, but we can’t “shake.”—
Greensboro Herald and Jounal.
April
It is now regarded as a settled fact
that the proposed railroad from Ma
con, Ga., to Birmingham, Ala., will be
built. Citizens of Macon are expected
to subscribe$120,000.
The Irish Coercion Bill passed its
first reading in tho British Houso
last Friday night. Mr. Gladstone
and Parnell made rousing speeches,
aud left tho houso after tho vote wns
announced.
Blaine.—Tho Now York Sun states
that James G. Blaine has completed
his arrangements fora European trip
that will keep him absent until af
ter the next meetingof the National
Republican Convention,
Mr. Jesse W. Jackson, who married
a sister of Mr. J. W. Tunnel, and was
well known in Greene county, died in
Washington City last week, and his
remains were brought to Georgia and
buried at Buokhead. He was a prom
inent republican in Dip days when
Bullock was Governor of Georgia aud
made campaign speeches throughout
the State.
WARD’S WOES.
Maxky’s, Ga. January, 188(1.
For twelve or fourteen years I have
been a great sufferer from a terrible
form ofbfood poison which ran into tlie
secondary and finally it was pronounc
ed a tert iary form. My head, face and
shoulders became almost a mass of
corruption, nndfindly the disease com
menced eating away my skull bones
I became so horribly repulsive that
] for three years 1 absolutely refused to
let people see uie. I used large quan
tities of most noted blood remedies
and applied to nearly all physicians
near me, but my condition continued
to grow worse, and all said that
must surely die. My bones became
tlie seat of excruciating aches and
pains; my nights were passed in inise
I was reduced in flesh and streng ,
iny kidneys were terribly deranged,
and life became a burden to mo.
I chanced to see an advertisement
of B. B. B. and sent one dollar to W.
C. Birchmore & Co., merchants of our
place, and they procured one bottle
for me. It was used with decided
benefit, and when eight or ten bottles
had been used 1 was pronounced
sound and well.
Hundreds of scars can now be seen
on me, looking like a man who had
been burne i and then restored. My
case was well known in this county,
and for the benefit of others who may
lie similarly affected, l think it my
duty to give the facts to the public,
and to extend my heartfelt thanks
for so valuable a remedy, 1 have
been well over twelve months, and no
return of the disease has occurred.
ROBERT WARD.
Maxky’s, Ga., January, 188(1.—We,
tlie undersigned, know Mr. Robert
Ward, and take pleasure in saying
that the facts above stated by him are
true, and that his was one of the
worst cases of Blood Poison we ever
knew in our county and that he has
been cured bv the use of B. B. B.—
Botanic Blood Balm.
A. T. Brightwell, Merchant.
W. C. Birchmohk Si Co., Mer
chants.
J. H. Brightwell, M. D.
John T. Hart,
W. B. Campeell.
Capital Prize $150,000.
port of every Baptist in the city,
l. Charles 'A. McCord is President,
Hon.
Rev. Thomas Walker, Vice President,
Rev. J. S. Patterson, Treasurer, and
J. Cuthbert Shecut, Secretary.
The Knights of Pythias have formed
a uniform rank ordered ont some very
tiandsome uniforms, and are drilling
weekly with a view to soon appearing
on the streets. The Order in Augus
ta is rapidly increasing and tlie Rank
alone numbers about 75 members.
The Augusta Encampment of Odd
Fellows have also organized a canton,
or uniform rank, aud are also drilling
for public parade. Their uniforms
are as handsome us any ever seen in
Augusta. Hon. C. A. ltobbe is Cap
tain General of the Canton, and is
handling the boys with much skill.
The Knights Templar, the Canton
and the K. P’s should form a lmtallion,
if such could be done. They would
certainly rival the regular military.
The Literary Society of the Hough-
fen Institute, composed of a large
number of its brighest scholars, held
a* meeting last Tuesday afteruoon,
vuid adopted tho name of “TlieL. T.
Tlie papers of Southern Georgia dif
fer somewhat in their estimate of the
damage done to their several locali
ties by the cold snap, but they concur
in the opinion that the early melon
crop has been destroyed.
The town of Aoworth, on the West
ern and Atlantic railroad, was visited
by a violent hail and wind storm on
Sunday night of last •week. About
half a dozen houses were demolished
by the wind, and some others dam
aged, but no lives were lost.
John Swinson, a young man living
about four miles north of Dublin, re
cently through mistake swallowed
strychnine fora dose of calomel. He
discovered liis mistake as soon as he
took thft,poison and at once swallowed
an emetic which saved liis life.
Another curious cuso of apparent
sensation in a member of the body
after it had been amputated, comes
from Florida. George W. Clay’s arm
was amputated, put in a box, and
buried. Moon after he began to com
plain that the fingers on the bu
ried arm were cramped, and that
there was sand between them. His
physician and his sister had the box
dug up and opened, and found the
fingers cramped and tlie sand between
them, just as George had said. They
arranged the arm properly, and rebu
mile they
On the 31st of March, a cyclone
swept over the neighborhood of Jack-
son in Jefferson county. No lives
were lost but Mr. Weeks and Messrs.
R. J. Palmer and S. D. Anderson were
sufferers by the loss of fencing, timber,
&c.
A movement is on foot in Macon to
establish a femenine branch of the
order of Knights of Labor. The prime
object of tho movement is said to be
to establish a knitting factory and
perhaps other enterprises for tho em
ployment of women at remunerative
wages.
Fruit and vegetables reported bad
ly damaged in Virginia. A snow
storm prevailed in nearly all portions
of the State Tuesday.
Our advices on Saturday brought
the intelligence of another fall of snow
in Virginia of considerable depth.
Such weather has had no parallel
there for many years.
A Savannah dispatch of the 2nd
inst., says: “The Salvation army was
granted permission to day by the mu
nicipal authorities to parade tlie
streets, and to-night made its first
parade. While passing through Aber-
corn street a volley of rotten eggH
was thrown into their ranks. Other
than this the Salvationists were un
molested.
The elegant results of the union of
church and State are beautifully
shown in the condition of one parish in
London. The parish is made up of
thirteen houses on one street, and the
income of tile rector is some $5,000 a
year. The rector while drawing this
salary, has not done a moment's duty
in four years, but is represented by a
curate to whom lie pays $000 a year,
and out of this princely sum the cu
rate must pay for gas and an organ
ist. They do some tilings better in
England than in America, but this
is not one of the things.—Nashville
Union.
Dr. Macgowan has sent to the Ag
ricultural Bureau at Washington a
collection of shoes made of rice straw
like those which are worn by the la
boring people in the south of China.
These shoes are made by the old and
feeble who are unfit for hard labor,
and cost only a few cents per pair.
It is suggested that the manufacture
of such shoes in the rice-producing
regions of the Mouthern Stales would
be a most useful innovation. It is
also suggested that for nursery use,
straw' shoes would be invaluable, as
giving greater freedom to the grow
ing feel of children.
riedit. Clay said while they were gone
lie felt an awful pain in tlie amputa
ted arm, and then came a sensation of
great relief, and tlier^ Mgis no longer
tlie old cramped sensation in bis hand.
Mr. Wales Wynton, whose death
not long since occasioned universal
regret among liis large circle of
friends, last year invested $4,200 of
liis own and his mother's money in
Birmingham real estate. The prop
erty could now he sold for $15,000.
By his foresight the young man has
left his mother comfortable.
All who desire full Information
about the cause and cure of Blood
Poisons, Scrofula ami Scrofulous
Swellings, Ulcers, Sores, Rheumatism,
Kidney Complaints, Catarrh, etc.,
can secure by mail, free, a copy of
our 32-page Illustrated Book of Won
ders, filled with the most wonderful
and startling proof ever before
known.
Address, BLOOD BALM CO..
Atlantu, Ga.
March, 15th, 1887. [80 duly.
■•We do hereby certify tlmt wo tunervuethe
arrangements for all the Monthly mil Semi-
Annual Drawings of The Louisiana Stale Lotte
ry Oompany, ami In person manage and control
the Drawings themselves, ami that the same are
conducted with honesty, fairness, an i in good
faith toward all parlies, and we authorize the
Company to use thlscertlflcnte, with fac similes
of our signatures attached, in its advertise
ments.
Commissioner*.
[J 1 ® n p4arslgned Ilanlts and Bankers will
P*y " raw n in the Louisiana state
Lotteries which may he preseuted at our Coun-
J. H. OGLESBY, Ures. Louisiana Nut'! Ilk.
PIERRE LANAUX, Pres. State Nat'l Ilk.
A. BALDWIN, Pre*. New Orleans Nat’l Bk.
CARL KOHN, Pres. Union National Hank.
UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION!
U \ ur Hull a Million Distributed.
Lonisiaiia State Letter} Company.
incorporated In 1868 for 25 years i>y the 1 oirP
latnre lor Educational and Charitable nnruoses
—with a capital of $1,000,000— to which a re.
serve fund of over $550,000 lias since Been added
Uv on ovneurtnl m 1 **
By an overwhelming popular vote Its franchise
was made a part of the present state Constitu
tion adopted December 2d, A. I)., 1879.
The only Lottery ever voted on aud endorsed
by the people of any State.
it never scales or postpones.
Its (>rand single Number Drawings take
place monthly, and the Semi-Annual
Drawings regularly every six months
(done and December.I
A SPLENDID OPPORTUNITY TO
rmVwi'vn r? aTFK*’, F<)UKTU « K A N U
DRAWING, CLASS D,, IN TJJK ACADfcllY OF
TUESD^yf A V prn
13th, 1887—303(1 Monthly Drawing.
CAPITAL PRIZE, $150,000.
WNotice.-Tickets are Ten Dollars only.
Halves, «5. Fifths, »«. Tenths, •!.
LIST or PBIZKS
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OK
1 GRAM) PRIZE OF
1 GRAND PRIZE OF
2 LARGE PRIZES OF
4 LARGE PRIZES OF
20 PRIZES OF
PIANOS
ORCA
Or all
quarters,
prices, V
“bleed. \
till instr
"'rite
JESSE FREh(
NASHVILLE, '
Wholesale Distributing Dtp’ll
SHOW'.u
DESI
OFFICE & BUI ITFlIITUCt
Ask for Illustrated Pan,,
TERRY SHOW CASE CO., 5*
Mar. 22, 1,R«7.
INtuI,lislu<tl 181
W. & J. SLO
Wholksalk and RetailIj
GARPETINCS,
FLOORCLOTHS,
RUGS,
MATTINCS,
MATS and
UPHOLSTERY
Milledgeville Booming.
The presence of Eev. B. F. Iliehard-
son iu the city last week mid liis pe
culiar stylo of preaching brought out
the following auecdoto: In Dalton
there lives a friend of Dr. ll.s who
has a precocious son. Tho father
said to his boy, “Well my son, what
are you going to bo when you aro a
man?” “I’m going to bo a preacher”
promptly replied the youngster. “A
F reacher!” “Yes sir, preacher; and
’m going to do likeBrotherlliichard-
8ou —I am going to give ’em h—1!”
Tho twenty-first annual convention
of the Georgia Teachers’ Association
will be held at West Point, May 3, 4
and 5.
Tho edition of the Constitution for
Tuesday consisted of 118,000 copies
of twelve pages each. This single ad
dition weighed 1G.75G pounds.
The Macon Tel
egraph
ir. (liis
of yesterday
been the pastor in charge of tho Pres
byterian Oliureh in Macon for the
last fourteen years, has tendered his
resignation, it further says it lias no
information concerning the cause of
this event.
Considering that Mr. Clisby is a re
markably able preacher of tlie gospel,
a devout and zealous follower of his
Lord and Master, and a gentleman
whose character is completely above
reproach, it is to be presumed that
liis church will refuse to accept his
resignation. But there is no know
ing what interest will prevail in tlie
determination of that question. If
left to the older members, we think
we could forecast the result.
LOCAL AND BUSINESS NOTICES.
For Salk.—Two well broke gentle
Horses. W. T. Conn & Co.
April 4, 1887. 39 tf.
Look out for W. H. Carr's big ad
vertisement next week.
New goods arriving daily at W. H.
Carr’s.
Envelopes for sale at this office at
$1.00 per thousand.
Why pay $3.00 for a 5 gallon Oil
Can when you can buy one “Good
Enough,” for $2.00, at
32 lm. Jos. Staley’s.
Buy your Steed Flows where you
can buy tlie cheapest, at
32 lm. Jos. Staley’s.
Now is the time to buy Garden
Tools, I have got all kinds.
32 lm. Jos. Staley.
Go to C. L. Cask’sJ and buy your
School Book*.
Cotton Compress, Oconee Canal, Steam
boat on the Ocone", Water Wotks to be put
up as soon as the money Is raised.
N. 11.—Tim only way to niiso it is by buy
ing everything cheap. Begin with your
Family Groceries. In order to do it look
bolow:
14 lbs. Granulated Sugar, $1.00
16 “ White XC Sugar l.oo
17 “ Carolina Rice l.oo
30 “ IIudnui’8 Grits, l.oo
I doz. Best Laundry Soup, 35
II lbs. Choice Family Lard . 1.00
Raisins, per pound, 15
Nuts, (assorted) 15
Extra Shore Mackerel io
Fulton Market Beef, 15
Apalachicola Oysters, per can 12*4
Magic Yeast Cake, j:j
California Pears, per can 15
Peaches, per can, 15
Grated l’ineaple, per can.
Coudensi
M
HI:
Eagle & Border)
Crown) per can,
Sardines 17*
Genuine Import
Horso Radish, per bottle,
Partridge, 30
Quail, 30
Ammonia and Borax 10
Strawberry Syrup, 40
Oilvo Oil, ; 40
Maple Syrup ’ ic
Fruit Jam (different kinds) 30
Lemons, per doz. 25
Mason’s blacking, per doz 40
Puro Apple Vinegar, per gal 30
4 lbs. Dwight’s Soda, 25
Tompson’s Red Seal Potash, 10
In fact, I have a large lot of Pickles,
Snuff, Tobacco, Cigars, Turnips, Cab
bages, Potatoes, Onions and every
thing kept in a first-class Grocery
Store. This is my Spot Cash price.
No charging.
F. A. HALL, Ag’t.
March 15, 1887. 36 lv
luo
2UO
500
1,000
100
100
$150,000..
..$150,000
50,000..
. 50,000
*20,000..
. 20.000
10.000..
. 20,000
5,000..
. 20,000
1,000..
. 20,000
510..
. 25,000
300 .
. 30,000
200..
. 40,000
100..
. 50,000
50..
. 60,000
PHIZES.
Of $300...
$30,000
200...
20,000
100...
10,000
2,179 Prizes, amounting to *535,000
Application For rates to clubs should be made
only to the ofllee of the Company in New Orleans
For furthorlnlorinatlon write clearlv, jrivlna
full address. POSTAL NOTES, Express Mon
ey Orders or New York Exchange in ordinary
letter. Currency by Express (at our expense, 1
addressed
M. A. DAUPIIIN,
New Orleans, La.,
or M. A. DAUPHIN, ’
Washington, 1). C.
Address Registered Letters to
GREAT NOVELTIES AT
PRICKS.
SAMPLES SENT IF BE
LOKltEM’ONHENCE IU
Broadway, 18th & 29th
NHW YORK
AND
841 to 647 MARKET ST., sty pi
March 1, 1887.
IF. IF. I
fdr DLEmra
GOLD, SILVER AND OTHER
NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL liANK,
New Orleans, La.
RPMCMRCD 1 ,lat Bio presence of C.encrals
HLmLlllutLn Beauregard and Early, who
aro in charge of the drawings, is a guaran
tee of absolute fairness and integrity, that the
chances are all ci|ual, and that no one can possi
bly divine what numbers will draw a Prize ap
parties therefore advertising to guarantee Prizes
In this Lottery, or holding out any other impos
sible Inducements, are swindlers, 'and only aim
to deceive and defraud the unwary.
March 15th, 1887. ana.
For Sale.
F EELING called to give up mv bus
iness and devote my entire life to
the services of the Lord, I offer my
stock of goods, books, &c., together
with a good run of custom, for sale.
The store is one of the best* stands in
town and is already rented for the
year.
Mrs. S. D. WOOTTEN.
Milledgeville, Jan. 10th, ’87. 27 tf
Administrator’s Sale,
GEORGIA, Baldwin County.
B Y virtue of an order from the ('ourt
of Ordinary of said comity, grant
ed at the regular March Term, 1887,
of said Court, will be sold before tho
Court House door in the city of Mil
ledgeville, on the lirst Tuesday in
April next, within the legal hours of
sale, the following property belong
ing to the estato of James Herty, de
ceased, to-wit: All that tract or par
cel of land, situate, lying, and being
in the city of Milledgeville, and said
State, and County, known and dis
tinguished in the plan of said city as
part of Lot No. 1, in Square No. 40,
be^nning at Lot belonging to estate
of M rs. A. B. Turner, dec’d, on Jeffer
son street, running West along said
Lot 210 feet to City Hall lot, thence
North 159j feet to Hancock street,
thence East along said Hancock St.,
50 feet to lot belonging to estate of
said James Herty, dec’d, thence South
90j feet, thence East 100 feet to Jeffer
son St., thence South along said Jef
ferson street 03 feet to the beginning
corner. Sold as the property of James
Herty, deceased, to pay debts, and
for distribution. Terms cash.
F. A. HERTY, Adrn’x of
James Herty, dec’d.
March 7tli, 1887. [35 lui
* Over 9,000,000 worn during the post six
years. This marvelous success is due—
1st.—To tho superiority of Coralino over
all other materials, as a stiffener for Corsets-
2nd.—To tho superior quality, shape
and workmanship of our Corsets, combined
with their low prices.
Avoid cheap imitations made of various
kinds of cord. None are genuine unless
«*DR. WARNER'S CORALINE”
Is printed on inside of steel cover.
FOR SALE BY ALL LEADING MERCHANTS.
WARNER BROTHERS,
350 Broadway, New York City.
Jan. 18, 1887
28 17
A CARD.
To all who aro suffering from tho error* and
indiscretions of youth, nervous weakness, early
decay, lossof manhood, Ac., I will send a roelpo
that will cure you, FREE OF CIIARGE. This groat
romody was discovered by a missionary in South
America. Send a self addre3sod envelope to the
REV. JOSEPH T. INMAN, Station V, A'cui York City.
September 3rd, 1886., 81y
An elegant line of Handkerchief
Extracts of tho best make at C. L.
Cask’s. 3Q tf.
Croquet Sets for sale by C. L. Case.
Only a few more of those cheap
Stoves left. , .
32 lm. i J. Stalkt.
Ktrry bottle warranted tn do nilt
or tnonty refund*!.
J. N, SMYTE
MANUFACTOri.
121 Pulliam Street., kw
DIPLOMA AT GEORGIA STATE 1
Agents wanted in every Co;::.:
Feb.
1887.
CrTHE l|
'I Rif
TON
he
Rrbtori the-—,.
OK of YOUTH.r*
of Appetite, IndijiJ
Strength and Tint
•oluteljr cured;
clee •ndnen"
force. Kai**
end ifippn* 1
LADIES HARTEB & itfj
•efe, speedy care. CHre« * clear. n« ‘j
All attempts tt oonnterfsiting
larlLr. Do not AinarimMil-Ret '- 1 ” ..
lnrity. Do not experiment—get ( ....
i Dr. HARTER’S LIVF8 PJ
■ Cure Conatlpttion.Liver Comply
■ Headache. Bamplo Do bo ^
"mailed on reoelpt of twocenw »•!
THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. Si
Tutt'sr
stimulate* the torpidlivw-
cm tlie«IIgei.tlveorif«n8.r;!
bow els, aud aro uuequuiw
ANTI-BILIOUS MED
In malarial district!ibtjf
widely recognised, astofJJ
iiliu'r properties iu fRJJ'lj
from that poison.
coated. Dose small, rrlc
Sold Everywl
Office, 44 Murray St., -
Fob
CANDY FACTORY f
A HOME WANT Sll
l have established in ,
Candy Factory and Bakery on w
cock anil Wlluuson Sts,, ne»r-
where I sun prepared tosupp.
with excellent .
FRESH BREAD OF AL
Also pure Candles, In <1 U *“ I L
chasers. Also line FrancliJ-
(redding Cakes, Suppers, H" 1 '
Iy Oiled. Country Merchants
Interest to apply to 1,1,1 ' <,
Bread. A liberal patron-,
surrounding country, S0I1L
guaranteed. ,
P. SCHEIK
Milledgeville, Ca.. Mar. 1 st '
tiff
FITS: All FitsstoPPe° K “
Great Nerve Restore'- f
day’s use Mnrveiousc^
$2.00 t rial bottle free t0 J ,,
Ur.Kline, 931 Arch
Harrison’s Combined Y
ing Fluid for sale at this"