Newspaper Page Text
UNION & RECORDER.
MlLLKDGKYILLK, APRILS, 1887
In our
NATIONAL PARTIES.
i., article Inst week, on the
subject of parties, there were a few
thoughts which we omitted, to pre-
vent its inordinate length, knowing
that some readers are deterred from
looking over editorials when spun
out to two columns, or more, or even
to a column and a half. We must
plead guilty to the same influence in
looking over our exchanges. In all
lmrtiPK there will be someditTei
parties there will be some differences of
opinion among the members of the
same party, and to so great an extent
as to lead them to doubt the proprie
ty or lionorablenetw of claiming party
membership while voting with the op
posite party upon questions of v tal
importance. In the Piesidentiai elec
tion when Mr. Polk and Mr. Clav were
onposing candidates, a number of
influential and very able Whig*,
with all their admiration for the illua
trious “Harry of the West,” whose el-
ithe hustings, in the House
oquence on ... .
and in the Senate, had so often tli rilled
and charmed them, hound by a sense
of honor and tlu-ir convictions on the
stirring events of the times gave their
support to Mr. Polk. The general
impression of the times was, that Mr.
Clay would be elected by a handsome
majority. The Whigs looked for a
brilliant victory and the Democrats,
wc well remember, went tremblingly,
into the contest. There was a brilliant
and startling flourish, under a capti ve,-
ting prospectus, favorable to Mr.
Clay, that left no doubt of success up
on the minds of his almost idolatrous
followers. He was a chivalric leader
and his friends deemed it almost a spe
cies of political effrontery for any one
to doubt his triumphant election. We
need not enter into an explanation of
the great question at issue, among
which was the protective tariff, and
the acquirement of Texas to become a
State of the Union. Some, of the in
fluential and leading Whigs of that
period, favored the acquisition of
Texas and others favored the reduc
tion of the high tariff. Among them
were the distinguished Louis Mo-
George Bancroft, Richard
Lane,
Rush, Charles J. Ingsrsol, Ralph J.
A. H. Everett, Levi W
THE TARIFF PUMP.
UY 1ION. SAMUKL BARNKTT.
We copy another article on the
Tariff by Hon. Samuel Barnett, pub
lished originally in the Washington,
Wilkes county, Chronicle, as follows:
Tlie tariff is a powerful piece of en
ginery; it sucks from tlie pockets of
the people, directly and ‘Incidentally.’
probably over a billion of dollars an
nually It comes in driblets, like the
waters of the Mississippi, ever flowing
Of the $200,000,000 which reaches
in.
the treasury, the process of getting it
is simple enough: it is collected at the
customhouses. Government has au
easy thimr of it.
T^e importers stand next to the gov
ernment. They pay the tax to the
custom house officers. But the ques
tion Which comes closer hometo us, is,
how do we, the oitizfeus, pay the tariff
tax? How, when, and where does it
leave onr pockets? Trace its course.
When we pay our State taxes, we
know when we pay and to whom we
pay (and grumble) and what we pay,
and also we see wbat we got for it. It
is all visible, tangible, known. But
not so with the federal tax. You see
no bill. You get no receipt. You see
no tax gatherers. It is all one, as if a
silent burglar came in the nigiit and
took it. Who then are the tax collec
tors? Who stand next to you? The
merchants of the country distributed
all over it, not appointed by the gov
ernment. are the tax gatherers, invol
untary and unconcious, willy, nilly,
not of choice but of necessity. When a
merchant makes a sale, in three cases
out of four lie collects a tax. If he
sells you a hat, pair of Bboes, or a
blanket he collects a tax out of you;
the exact amount of which neither he
nor ysu knows. These are th® tax-
eollectors. They kill Cock Robin. J
When do you pay your federal tax?
Day by day, with every purchase you
,ke of things to eat or drink, to
ins
Ingersol, A. H. Everett, Levi Wood
bury R. C. Grier, Marcus Morton,
and ’General Cass. These are a few
that we can call to mind, from many
others who were Federalists, and
afterwards Whigs, who could not.
follow the leaders of those parties in
tlieir rash measures, violative of some
of tlie cardinal principles of the con
stitution of the fathers of tlie Repub
lic. Some of them were distinguished
foreign ministers. Judges of the Su
preme court, and General C ass was
at one time a candidate of tlie Demo
cratic party for tlie Presidency of the
United States. No one of them claim
ed to be a whig, and still held on in
tlie ranks of the Whigs, while voting
with the Democrats. Their stan
dards, of opinion, were of a loftier
character. Thev rejected the dogmas
of'Mr. Samuel,1. Randall and his fol
lowers, that they could vote against
the principles of their party, betray
them at tlieir pleasure, defeat them
in parliamentary contests with their
enemies—the Wliigs-and still claim
an equality of rank and rights in the
distribution of party honors.
No one can doubt tlie right of a
member of a party to withdraw from
it when lie believes, whether lie is
right or wrong, that its principles are
fraught with evil instead of good.
To continue to sustain it in such a
case would be a shameful disregard
of public virtue, public safety’, and
personal honor. If lie can see no
hope of improvement by going over
to the opposite party, it is despicable
to betray the party he is in by voting
with the opposite party, when he can
gain nothing that is good for his
country. He covers himself witli tlie
shame of infidelity without righting n
wrong. In such a case abstention is
the only safe and honorable course
,Ve cannot conceive of any logical
process by which any member of a
party can be allowed willfully to de
feat his party when called into action
to defend the leading principle of its
political faith; and when that claim is
assumed, it weakens the consciousness
of power to give effect to its dictates.
A party thus organized must sternly
discard its malcontents, or sink into
effeminacy and iinal dissolution.
altogether. Does even (he employer
get it? For a season lie does. But in
a short time, even he fails to get it.
His profits sink to tlie average level,
and the extra price goes simply into
tlie natural waste basket.
Ah, but you say. what a nice way of
raising money, and the victims not to
feel it! Very nice, to those who get
it. But the victims ought to feel it.
Taxes ought to be felt -they ought to
hurt in due proportion, otherwise
the organic, function of pain, as a check
against self mutilation, is gone. Th®
patient feels not what hurts, and
makes no resistance. 01 the total ex
penditure of a man of average wealth
(or poverty) probably one-sixth goes
tills way. If wealthy, a smaller per
cent. If poorer than tlie average, a
larger per cent. For this tax Is on
consumption, and the per cent, rises
with poverty. To accomplish these
results, the most ingenious schemes
of public robbery are devised, oom-
E arable only to the improvements in
urglary—by means of which burglar
proof safes are more needed than fire
proof.
The tariff is a species of chloroform
to rob without awakening us. This
secret and silent process renders the
people less sensitive both to taxation
and to jobbery. It makes holes in the
pocket through which the money es
capes. If the tax payer had to put
his hand in his own pocket and make
this way
a distinct payment of his federal tax
d
there would follow a revolution;
sharp, short, and decisive. It would
be as though the chloroformed patient
awoke in time and caught tlie burglar
in the act.
The Bitter Fruit of Crime.
From the Albany News ami Advertiser.
The readers of tlie News and Adver
tiser are familiar witli the exploits of
Vincent, the embezzling Treasurer of
Alabama, who ran" away about four
years ago, and was captured and
brought back to Montgomery and
lodged in jail, a few weeks ago, to
await trial for his crime. His wife
and children followed him to his place
of refuge in Mexico, and now it will
lie seen from the following brief but
touching story, as told by the Enfaula
Mail, that they have, after his cap
ture. followed him back to tlieir form
er home and visited him in jail.
“Mrs. Ike Vincent and her two sons,
aged 10 and 12 years, respectively, ar
rived in Montgomery Tuesday morn
ing, and were driven at once to the
jail. The dispatch says the meeting
of the imprisoned husband and his
family was a heart-rendering scene.
The wife, already tired and wearied
from travel, almost broke down at the
sight of her husband behind the pris
on bars, and wept as only a fond
wife can weep over the misfortune of
her husband, and he gave way to his
-nd shame as one
grief and sorrow ani_ —
who had lost every hope, and drained
the cup of bitterness to the dregs, and
" ' ’ ’ ” ’— —lTc* i
Turned out of College.
wear or work with, you generally pay
a tax. It is not once a- year, nor
twice; nor once or twice a month. It
may be often in a week, perhaps
twice or thrice a day. What do you
pay—little drops of water, little grains
of sand! You pay in driblets. But
the sum total is a mighty ocean $200,-
000,000 reach the federal treasury—
probably over half a billiou, the wide,
yawning abyss of ‘protection,’ and a
third, calculable portion is tlie waste
of misdirected human industry on a
grand scale!
It were much hotter to see tlie tax
gatherer and talk with him face to face
—bid him good morning—scau his
books—perhaps dispute them—look
into his bill. It were better, so to
speak, to have a day in court, and
see after tlie right and wrong of it all.
Let him say to you: here is a barrel
of sugar, 800 pounds, at 10 cents, $80.
Tlie maker gets so much, the mer
chant gets so much, your State tax
on it is 15 cents, your county tax 10
cents, State and county tax together2->
cents; your federal tax is$7.50. lou ex
claim, $7.50! Yes, be replies, 300pounds
at 2j cents a pound, that’s $7.50, is it
not? Besides this, however, you pay
a merchant’s profits on the $i. ; >0 say
at 20 per cent., $1.50 more. Really
the barrel ought to have cost you but
$21. The other $0 is direct and inci
dental tax.
1 should like to see a sturdy old
farmer, who made his little money by
hard licks, have such a settlement.
Item by item. Give him but clear
knowledge of tlie situation, and let
him know that $9 out of the $30 was
tax. Let hiui bethink himself how
hard the $9 came and how easy it
goes. Suppose the State exacted it?
Would you not hear from it at tlie
next election? Would not the coun
try tingle with it? Other purchases are
the same way—a big per cent, of most
oftliem, is tariff tax. The poorest freed-
uian pavs a round Tier cent, on his
„ i ‘a Ulm oaU willow wild
Athens, Ga., April 1.—The young
men engaged in the recent dueling
affair have suffered the penalty of
their violation of the laws of the un
iversity by being expelled. It 1b now
known that the faculty hod a meet
ing to consider the matter during the
time that the duel was pending, and
it is said that shortly after the young
man had left the city, the faculty
made up its mind about tlie matter
and concluded to expel the young
men. There h*iB never been any pub
lic ceremony attached to tlie expul
sions, no reading out of tlie names at
prayer in the university chapel when
a student’s conduct warrants this se
vere treatment.
STEVENS’ POTTERY.
tlie sympathetic children could not
restrain their surpressed emotions and
joined in tears and sobs of their
wretched parents. It was a sad scene,
and none can tell tlie agony ex
perienced by mother, father and chil
dren, during the hour spent together
yesterduy.
(*n Thursday last, eu route to Ma
con, we stopped at the Buttery long
enough to have a pleasant chat with
Messrs. Stevens Brothers.
Talk about vour booms ! Tlie Pot
tery is enjoying tlie snuggest little
boom in this country, it i» running
day and night to till tlie orders that
pour in daily. From twelve to fifteen
car loads of' piping are shipped every
week, and tlie demand comes from
several States. Stevens Brothers em
ploy seventy-two hands at present.—
Their business is steadily increasing
and the Pottery is destined at no dis
tant day to support a large and thri
ving population.
Tlie artesian well at this point was
abandoned at a depth of 270 feet, after
drilling through 100 feet of solid rock.
Work will be resumed on the well
sometime in the future when they
have more time. At present they are
getting their water supply, 00,000 gal
lons daily, at a distance of 4,700 teet
from the'pottery.
Tlie frost and ice on Tuesday and
Wednesday, it was thought, had de
stroyed the fruit, usually abundant
in that neighborhood.
The Hotel, Lanier, at Macon, lias
been rebuilt, remodeled and refurnish
ed throughout, and is now the most
complete hotel in Central Geoigi.i,
Under the management of Mr. J. B.
Crawford it is fast growing in popu
larity. A regular old-fashioned wood
fire ju the office last Thursday made
a cheerful and home-like scene, on a
Very dreary day.
Judge J. C. Bower, one of the old
est and most prominent citizens of Ir-
winton, died on the 28th ult.
can scarcely make two ends meet pays
extra for her very weeds, and for tlie
flannel on her babes. And of these
hardly squeezed earnings, more go to
the rich than to the government. It
ought, somehow, to show. Manufac
turers of fertilizers are required by
law to attach to each Back, a tag,
witli analysis of tlie contents showing
the quantity of per cent, of each in
gredient; phosphate, potash, am
monia, etc. Some such arrangement
would help us in taxation.
We ought to have tax tagsattaohed
to merchandise, showing what goes to
each party—the maker, the merchant,
and government, the government pet,
and last but not least, to dead waste.
It would be interesting reading; it
would be instructive. It would breed
a revolution, peaceful but quick. It
would reform tlie tariff, not indiffer
ently, but reform it altogether.
To illustrate: On a pair of imported
blankets, there should be a tax tag.
You pav for these blankets, $4.30.
But for the tariff they would cost you
$2.60.
Government gets $1.42 of the ex
cess. This is a mild case, for though
tiie tax is enormous, yet government
gets tlie most of it.
Suppose tlie blankets made in Amor*
ica. They are no warmer, no larger,
no heavier, wear no better for that.
Hucli a pair imported without a tariff,
would cost you$3.60; with tariff $4.30
To avoid competition, tlie American
manufacturer sells at $4.00, and we
have this tax-tag. You pay for these
blankets, $4.00. If imported free, you
would pay $3.60. The protected em
ployer gets $1.40, tlie workmen get
nothing, and the government gets
nothing.
That’s tlie way tlie money goes.
More of it that way than any other.
Government is at the little end, and
protection at the big end of tlie horn.
Wliv multiply instances. The mer
chant’s counter would glisten with
tax-tags on cotton, wools, iron, steel,
tin, on tools for your hands, clothes
for your back; so with sugar and
salt, and about 1,000 other articles.
Each needs a tax. The paving list is
long, the free list short. Does the
laborer get the added per cent, when
government does not? I trow not. Is
it added to wages? Not a cent of it.
Wages depend on a different principal
QUIKTLY MADE KNOWN.
Tlie decision of the faculty is made
i known to tlie student in a quiet way
’ by tlie chancellor. From all accounts
this plan was pursued in this instance
and a very few outside of those inter
ested knew up to to-night tlie facul
ty’s decision in tlie matter. The
young men expelled are Walter
Chisholm, a member of the law school
and a resident of Savannah. His
second, Hugh M. Comer, Jr., of Sa
vannah, the son of a large cotton
factor of that city, shares his fate.
Thomas R. R. Cobb, of Athens, son of
Hon. Howell Cobb, of Athens, the
other principal, is in the academic
schools of tlie university. He is a
resident of Athens and is a member of
the sophomore class. P. W. Martin
of Florida, Cobb's second, belongs to
the university proper, and is expelled
with his principle. The young men
take tlie matter quietly. Coiner left
for Savannah yesterday afternoon,
and Martin will doubtles return home
as soon as lie gets over his present ill
ness. Young Cobb lives in Athens
and will doubtless enter business
Chisholm, of Savannah, is still
and it is said will remain her
some time before going home.
WILD THEV GET BACK?
Tlie precedent heretofore lias been
to take back tlie seconds, upon tlie
petition of different university classes.
These petitions will doubtless be got
ten up, and the good college records
of the seconds will add weight to the
prayer. There is no reason to sup
pose that the faculty will establish a
new precedent in the matter by re
fusing to take tlie seconds back. The
friends bf tlie university think the
authorities have vindicated tlie college
law, and claim 410 other course.—Con
stitution 3rd.
State ok Ohio, City op Toledo,)
Lucas County, 8. 8. j
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that
he is the senior partner of the firm of
F. J. Cheney & Co., doing business
in the city of Toledo, County and
State aforesaid, and that said firm
will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED
DOLLARS for each and every ease of
Catarrh that can not be cured by
the use of Hall’s Catarrh Pure.
FRANK J. CHENEY.
Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 6th day of De
cember, A. JJ., ’86.
’ -0 A. W. GLEASON,
SEALy Notary Public.
I*. S.—Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken
internally and acts directly upon the
blood and mucous surface# of the sys
tem. Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
■HTSolil by Druggists. 75 cents [3U lin.
A san iu.mil army meeting at rorci s
Opera House in Savannah on Sunday
night last, was broken up by a party
of roughs. While tlie band was play
ing a piece of sacred music the police
entered and arrested them. They
made no resistance and went witli the
officers to the barracks. The roughs
then immediately made an attack on
tlie audience with chairs, etc., and
the riot caused tin* speedy emptying
of (lie building. This is rather an
ugly affair for the reputation of our
seaboard city and the guilty parties
should be severely punished.
Hen: Periey Poore’s “Reminiscen
ces,” quoted all over two continents,
have netted that author but $2,500,
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.
Tear’s Support.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County.
Court of Ordinary, April Term, 1887.
W HEREAS, the Appraisers or Com
missioners appointed to set apart
a year’s support for Mrs. Sallio E.
Watson and her minor child, Elmore
Watson, deceased, filed their return
in said court.
These are therefore to cite and ad
monish all persons interested, heirs or
creditors, to show cause on or by the
May Term, next of said Court to be
held on the first Monday ia May,
1887, why said return should not be
made the judginentof said Court and
entered on record.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture this April the 4th, 1887.
DANIEL B. SANFORD.
89 lrn.] Ordinary.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County.
W/ILL be sold before the Court
\V House door, in the city of Mn
ledgevilie. during legal sale hours, on'
tlu* Inst i uesday 111 May I8S7 tl
following property, to wit: ’ ’ le
One house and lot in the citv „t
Milledgeviile and known in tlie plan
of said city as being lot No 3 ,
ir less
. 53, containing one acre
•s, hounded north by lot 0 f
more ... ..-.-c., iiumiueu norm iiv lot nt
Mrs. H. G. Kenan, east byL v
Callawav, south by estate of R \r‘
Orme, deceased. Levied on as'the
property of T. H. Kenan, ,0 satisfy
one County Court tl fa in favor of
G. Barrett & Co., vs. T. H. Kenan
Defendant notified in person, this
April the 4tli, 1887.
. „ ... £• W. ENNIS, Sheriff.
April 4th, 1887. 89tds.
New Advertisements.
Ia Tnmnt’0 belteer y om
behold
Ao *.Mr ,,orro ««
For Csastlf atlon will
And fndlgMtlon qulsklj
April 5, 188T.
•tart;
Blclc Ilwtdaehe, too, will
»oon subside.
When TarrsnVs Saltan
baa bean triad.
39 4t
Anna Bell Lee, ) Divorce in Baldwin
vs. - Superior Court,
Henry B. Lee.) Jan’y Term, 1887.
TT appearing by affidavit of plaintiff
I that the defendant resides on James
Island, South Carolina, it is ordered
that notice of this suit be served on
him by publication of this order in
tiie Union & Recorder newspaper, at
pe
Milledgeviile, Ga., once a month, for
four months after the adjournment
of this court and prior to its next
term.
W. F. JENKINS,
Judge S. C. O. C.
A true extract from tlie minutes.
Walter Paine, Clerk.
Feb. 1st, 1887. 30 ni4m.
ADVERTISERS
can learn the exact cost
of any proposed line of
advertising in American
papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell & Co.,
Newspaper Advertising Bureau,
IO Spruce St., Now York.
Send lOots. for lOO-Page Pamphlet,
Miss M. G. LAMPLEY,
CRAYON ARTIST!
Studio in the M. G. M. & A. College.
LIKE.SIZE CRAYON PORTRAITS
from photographs.
GeTLessons given in Crayon, Oil
painting, Kensington painting on
velvet and satin.
GS~Orders and pupils solicited.^
Milledgeviile, Jan. 4, ’87. 20 3m
It is reported that a negro barber,
who lias an office under the Exchange
Hotel at Montgomery’, was induced to
purchase 100 acres of land near Birm
ingham, several years ago, for which
he paidvomething less than 1,000. He
is now offered $400,000 for the tract,
but holds it for more.
TIN, IRON AND METAL WORK.
1 have removed to Milledgeviile and opened a shop at No. 25 S. Wavne
Street, next door to Post Office, where I am prepared to do all kinds of
Sheet Metal Wort, Tie Mm, Iron Mm, Gutters & Coiidnctors.
Life is a good deal like bycycling.
The main thing is keep perfectly up
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steer straight, and keep a good bal
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On receipt of 30 cents, in two eent
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on Scrofulous Affection*.
“THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
Thoroughly cleanse it by using Ur. Pierce’s
Golden fflodlcal Blacovory, and good
digestion, a full' skin, buoyant spir
its, and vital ntrougth, will be established.
CONSUMPTION,
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From Its marvelous power over this terribly
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name ns too limited for a medicine which,
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ties, is unequuled, not only as n remedy for
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ease# of tlie
Liver, Blood, and Lungs.
Burial of Rev. Joshua Knowles.
If you feel dull, drowsy, debilitated, have
I sallow color of skin, or yellowish-brown spots
| on face or body, frequent headache or dizzi
ness, had taste in mouth. Internal heat or
Rev. Joshua Knowles was buried last
Sunday by the side of the Episcopal
Church at Greensboro, according to
his request. This was in exact ac
cordance with the fitness of tiling#.
This church lie had in life loved de
votedly and served as rector, most
faithfully and continuously, for years.
Revs. Geo. McCauley, rector of this
parish, and Davis, of Atlanta, wore
the officiating priests. Dr. W. H.
Burr, who had ever been a warm
friend of the deceased, attended the
last sad rites. It was the intention of
the senior to have been among the
group of mourners on tiiis sad occa
sion, but lie was too feeble to attempt
the trip. His work is done, lie rests
in peace!—Madisonian 1st.
chilis, alternating with hot Hushes, low spirits
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rlenced. As a rejnedy for all such cBes,
Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis
covery is unsurpassed.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of
Blood, Shortness of Breath, Bron
chitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and
kindred affoctions, it is nil offleient remedy.
Solti iiy Dnuaoifits, at $1.00, or SIX
BOTTI.EH for $5.00.
General Ripley, a brave and notable
confederate officer, died in New York
a few days since and was hurried in
Charleston on Sunday last with mark
ed demonstration of respect by tlie
citizens of that citv.
Iloofs repaired and painted. Smoke stacks for portable engines made and
repaired. Repairing of all kinds in Tin and Iron done promptly at low rates.
A share of the public patronage is respectfully solicited.
W. H. Hargraves.
Milledgeviile, Ga., March 1st, 1886. • 241y.
CTTTST RECEIVED
-AT—
W. H. HALL’S,
A large lot of Best—
, vxvuu. WAXWWWW, uuuuuu WDUUM,
And in fact, everything kept by a First-Class Grocer. My trado
in the past has been all that I desired, and with better facilities,
lower prices, larger stock and a motto of “Honest Dealing,” I shall
try and increase it. I solicit the patronage of my friends and tlie
public generally.
W. H. HALL, Jr.
No. 5 E. Hancock, St.,.
March 7th, 1887,
Milledgeville, Ga.
35 ly.
ic him’a mvr-TJcBY,^
Near MillsdgevillB, Georgia,
Manufactures STEAM-PRESSED DOUBLED-GLAZED VITRIFIED
DRAIN, SEWER and WATER PIPES,
SMOKE AND HOT-AIR FLUE PIPE,
Flower Pots, Greenhouse Tile, and Other Ware, Etc.
WIBM HHIOK A SPECIALTY.
STEVENS BROTHERS & CO.
PROPRIETORS.
March 1, 1887
34 tf
Send ton cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce's
A<‘"
book on Consumption. Address,
-usury Medic
Iain Street, Uuffalo, N. Y.
World’s Dispensary Medical Inn.
elation, GC3 M#'
$500 REWARD
tor a ease of catarrh whic h
they cannot cure. If you
have a discharge from the
nose, offensive or otherwise, partial loss of
Bind), taste, or hearing, weak eyes, dull pain
or pressure in head, you have Catarrh. Thou
sands of cases terminate in consumption.
Dr. Sago's Catarrh Kkmkiiy cures the worst
cases of t’atnrrli, “Cold In the Head,”
and Calarrliul Headache. 50 cents.
Feb. 15. 1887.
32 cw ly
Look Out! Look Out!
To the Citizens of Milledgeville : Seeing tlio necessity of £*
first-class butcher business in this place, I have opened in tho
Sawyer old stand, where I will keep constantly on hand fresh beef,
pork, sausage, pickled beef, Bologna sausage, pickled tripe and
fresh leaf lard. All orders delivered, as I shall run a free delivery
wagon. Parties having cattle and hogs to sell, will do well to see
me before selling. Will pay for good beef 4^ to 5e, dressed; p°A
on foot, 4|c; pork dressed, 54c. Mr. J. L. White having associated
himself with me as salesman, will be glad to see his old customers.
J. B. POUNDS.
Milledgeviile, Ga., Dec. 27th, 1880. 25