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fOLUME
LV1I.
Federal Union I'Ltribibhed In 1820.
-w.w.ououm io«v.
LHOOTUEHN RCOORDEB “ *“ Jgigj [CONSOLIDATED 1872,
Milledgeville, Ga., AritiL 12. 1887
=*=
Numbeb 40.
Again a Loud Note Is Hearc|i
-FROM THE GREAT—
Dry Goods Emporium of Fashion! ;
“ IPneqwalled Novelties”
—IN—
)ress Goods, White Goods, Laces, Notions and Clothing
or Men. Youths and Boys; Gentlemen’s Furnishing Goods; Hats; Gentlemen’s and Ladies’ Shoes
id Slippers, Matting, lire.
EVERYTHING IN THE LINE OF
Spring and Summer Wear
cl all that is Novel and Beautiful. The same being marked at prices- that is consistent with all.
Our large cash capital is the all-powerful Agent that Bpeeds our business on to success, and a keen
i ('sight as to the wants of all classes. We are devoted to the low price system. Willing at all times
exchange goods or refund the money when goods are not as represented or do not suit. If you
o on the look round we extend you a cordial invitation and will endeavor to please you while in our
ore whether you pur chase or not.
T. L. McCOMB&CO.,
We have concluded to establish the Bargain Counter System
nd will commence on Monday, the 11th of this month, (Apr h) to
lake our spread and continue to do so on each Monday to make a
ew display, and will sell you goods from this counter at one-
alf their real value. So come early each Monday morning, those
ho are in search of real bargains. For instance we will sell you
welve yards of beautiful Lawn at 40c, or 10 yards at 35c. So
ome along with your cash, as we w 11 not charge any article on the
argain Counter.
O
OUT!
Compare this with pour purchase i
National Congressional Representa
tives will not be guilty in tne fnturte
of the Imbecility, or’ legislative de
lays, that caused the failure of so im
portant a bill and forced them to fre-
sort to an artifice to accomplish a part
of the work essential to the public'
interests.
Tha Wonderful Hailing Pit for
Rheumatism, Ac.
The following statement of a distin
guished citizen of Atlanta, concern
ing the above strange and now oele-
brated medicinal pit, for the cure of
certain painful ailments, situated not
far from Washington, Wilkes County,
Ga., is the most interesting and satis
factory description of it and we think
the most reliable, which we bavs seen
in print. Being founded largely on
personal experience and observation
and also the testimony of others on
the ground, w'e deem it entitled to the
belief of all who desire to know the
truth concerning tbiH phenowinal
gift of nature. We copy from the At
lanta Journal as follows: <
THJt ANTI RHKUMATIO WBl.Ii OB
tauafbrro county.
r , Judge J. D. Cunningham, who has
been a severe sufferer nearly all wln-
tfrj from the effects of inflammatory
A* yeu vain* hetltk,
package and be lure
tha red Z X
on- Croat of
the aeal and
Co., aa in the above:
if no ether genidao
Mareh 29, 1887.
. MW, eaaariM each
the Counts e. See
aad the full title
AYtilKS
i. RtuemUr than
liver Regulator*
28 cw ly
THE UNION & RECORDER,,
Published Weekly In Mlllndgevltlc, Go
BY BARNES & MOORE.
Trkua.—One dollar anil nftr cent* a rear In
advance. Hlx momlm for aevemv-llveceats.—
Two ilollum a year If not paid In advance.
The services of Col.. Jambs M. Hhythb, are en
sured as General Assistant.
The "FKI1ERAL UNION” and the' ‘SOUTHERN
I'KOORDEK” were consolidated, August. 1st, 1872,
the Union being la it* Forty-Third Volume and
:he Recordcrln Its Fifty-Third Volume.
The Next Congress.
explained. It cannot be attrl-
utsd to eleotricity alone, for elec
tricity is incapable of producing tho
beneficial results which have been
accomplished.
“As n matter of course I have given
you my unprejudiced opinions, as far
as I have been able to form any. For
the benefit of the afflicted who eon-
template trying it I would say that
the experiment is attended with con
siderable inconvenience and more ex-
S ense than one would anticipate. No
eslrable board can be obtained, at
present, nearer than one and one-
half to three miles from the well, and
at a cost of $ 10 per week; necessary-
carriage hire, for conveyance to anil
from the well, $10 more, and incident
als according to taste and capacity.
A hotel is soon to be ready, however,
conveniently located, capable of ac
commodating two hundred- guests;
the pit is also to be enlarged, and
other emproveinents made."
“Do you expect to return and give
the treatment farther trial?’’
“I think so. It will entirely depend
upon the tone of letters which I re
ceive from tome of the gentlemen
whom I mentioned, who are giving it
a thorough test. If it benefits them, I
will feel confident that it will aid me.
and I shall return as soon as good
weather prevails.”
Light Without Hatches.
In order to obtain light without the
toe of uiatcim
—AT-
T. L. McCOMB & GO’S.,
No. 8 and 10 Wayne Street,.
Apil 12th, 1887.
The Emporium of Fashion.
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
40 tf.
The Old Hardware Store
IS STILL ALIVE!
And will sell you
Goods CHEAPER than Ever!
All kinds of . ,
FAMING IMPLEMENTS,
very low figures. Plows of all kinds. I keep the Boy, Dixie
'0newn.ll, Boss, Haiman, Southern aud Athens Plows; m ac
erything a farmer needs.
Cotton Planters!
The Best and Cheapest in the Market.
BELTI TsT Or l
Bobber and Leather Belting, Rubber, Soap Stone and Hemp
icking.
Lace Leather!
E fact everything a Farmer needs at the very Lowest Prices.
Barb Wire!
Lst received a large lot—eall and get prices.
i-GT keep everything in tho Hardware line as low as tho lowest
wl anil see for yourselves.
JOS. ST-A-LESTT-
Milledgeville, April 12th, 1887. 29 ly
EDITORIAL GLIMPSES.
Mr. W. A. Cook, a well-known form
er contributor to The Cultivator, ha*
purchased the “Oconee PoultryjYard,
of Milledgeville, Ga., from Mr. C. G.
Wilson.—Southern Cultivator.
P T. Barnum, the great showman,
who for years has been an earnest
prohibitionist, comes out for high
license against prohibition. He .is
satisfied that this is the solutiou of
the question.
The Montgomery military compa
nies and the Atlanta company have
nil withdrawn from the Inter-State
drill in Washington in June. This
was on account of severalnegro compa
nies participating.
It is to be regretted that bad roan-
agementhas turned the national drill
into a sectional affair. If the admis
sion of negro companies was contem
plated at first, nothing was said, to
put the white military upon notice.
Advices from Washington, Ga.,
are to the effect that Col. John A.
Stephens, ex-adjutant-general of
Georgia, who has been so seriously ill,
is no iv convalescing, having been
able to sit up for several hours on
Monday. This intelligence will be
extremely gratifying to lus many
friends in Atlanta.—Atlanta Journal.
So great has been the success of the
Wilson Champion Spark Arrester, ad
vertised in our columns, that it has
passed into the hands of the Milledge
ville (Ga.)Iron and Machinery Co., of
which J. W. McMillan is President, C.
G. Wilson is superintendent, and T. T.
Windsor Treasurer. This company is
chartered, has a capital of $80,000 and
can fill all orders promptly and in tho
most satisfactory manner.—Southern
Cultivator.
SIXTIETH YEAR.
1C0NEE LIVERY STABLE,
Milledgeville, Ga.
H. BLAND & CO., Proprietors.
r tS CCeS80rs t0 G ‘ T> Whilden.)
rl JSJiSS " leeu a 'l Trains piomytly. W
un wit. in ?F y Y> ®eet Irammoi* at any st
ill
man ■V' “ ,cct urummcis at any sta-
, , ° r Milledgcville, at a lew
lisa, win b™ °, ri * erH , written or otherwise,
■uiiiig i u ,!?E for ' l,re - Carriages, Rubles and
tirtisln>,l 4jf leasonable rates, lirayage
I’utro’nael nfth y ani ' fa b>i f Qlly attended
T<‘b the Pdtlic solicited.
30 3m
: & > 1 pen»li° i 0 antl P inn U f r aud , not ? psl P° r
CnlonlA’ Recorder^offlce. 811 ° Cheap at
Miss M. G. LAMPLEY,
CRAYON ARTIST!
Studio in the M. G. M. & A. College.
LIFE SIZE CRAYON PORTRAITS
from photographs.
CtTLessons given in Crayon,
painting, Kensington painting
velvet and satin. .
C-iTOrders and pupils sohcitea.jB
Milledgeville, Jan. 4, ’87.
50,000 Shingles Wanted.
a Pl’LY to L & perreLI
MiUedgeviUe, Ga., March29, 1887., 88 tt
The Youtli’s Companion celebrates
this year its sixtieth anniversary.
It might well be named the “Univer
sal Companion ’’ so widely is it reud
and so wisely adapted to all ages.—
Its contributors are the most noted
writers of this country and of Europe.
Among them are W. D. HowellB, J. T.
Trowbridge, Prof. Huxley, the Duke
of Argyle, The Marquis of Lome and
Princess Louise, Archdeacon Farrar,
C. A. Stephens, Admiral David Porter,
Lieut. Schwatka, and many others.
We do not wonder that the Compan
ion, with such contributors, lias 400,
ooo’sbuscribers. It costs but $1.75 a
year.
The forty-ninth Congress exhibited,
Perhaps, more dilitoriness in the per-
predee«issors’‘^iTf«H*W‘-*Vw»’'» , »“
the government. It was really dis
creditable to that body, that, within
four or five days of its adjournment,
most of the measures of absolute ne
cessity to carry on the government
were either not passed, or were turn
ed over to conference committees who
failed to agree almost up to the last
moment; and the hands of the clock
were several times turned back, prac
ticing n, ridiculous fraud, to gain a
few more minutes to effect the pass
age of some of the most important
and necessary bills to keep the wheels
of government in motion. House
bills were strangled in the Senate and
Senate bills were strangled in the
House, and in some cases two setts of
conferees were appointed, and, final
ly, bills were hastily fmssed from ne
cessity and then, as we have before
intimated, were not adopted within
the legal constitutional limits as to
time. This state of legislative affairs
is really revolutionary and unconsti
tutional. Perhaps all the bills so
passed, lacked in some respect the
completeness which should always at
tend the appropriation of the peoples’
money for the public good. Such
legislation bv Congress is not unpre
cedented. But little has been said
about it in the public press. We
made a brief allusion to it in our
closing reports of the Congressional
proceedings, intending to refer to it
more at large, but have passed it by,
from time to time, owing to ill health
and the call upon us to furnish to our
readers the constantly pressing news
of the day. The President has been
abused for not signing the River aud
Harbor bill. That bill appropriated
several millions of dollars, and proba
bly, pretty large sums for some rivers,
or’ creeks, that would have been a
waste of the public money. Repre
sentatives may have taken advantage
of the peculiar exigency, lack of time,
to urge unnecessary appropriations
inch as, with full time and delibera
tion, would have been so repulsive to
tlie good sense and integrity of the
majority of the members of either
House. Under the'circuuistances, we
do not think the President is justly
censurable for withholding his signa
ture to a bill that appropriated
something more than three millions
of dollars. Whatever may be said
of President Cleveland no one can
justly charge him with the character
istics of the demagogue, nor can any
one doubt his integrity, and we be
lieve lie desires in all his acts the ap
probation of his own conscience.
With all the other matters placed be
fore him, we doubt if he had time to
read the bill, much lesB examine its
details, and, if we do not mistake Ills
character, he is not the man to sign
away three millions of dollars of the
people’s money {without due exami
nation. If any evil results from it
the fault is with the Congress. Sure
ly in four months time Congress
ought to be able to present to the
President an act, disposing of to
large ft sum, in time for him not only
to read it but to carefully investigate
A Journal representative met him
yesterday aad asked him to give a
little of his experience for the benefit
of the publio. In reply, he said:
“The exaot location of the well is
twelve miles south of Washington,
Wilkes county, and four mile* north
of Sharon post-office, known as Ray-,
town station, on the Washington
branch of the Georgia railroad. I
believe a description of the well has
recently been published in the Jour,
nal. It is merely a shaft or pit, about
six feet square and twelve feet daqp;
in one corner of the bottom, a spring
bubbles up, the waters of which are
pumped out as fast as they run in, in
order to keep the pit dry. The pa
tients to be treated for rheumatism
go to the bottom, where they remain
seated five hours every day; eight
people frequently occupy the well at
a time, but only Bix can be seated
comfortably; I understand that it is
soon to be enlarged. I tried it for
five days, and then waB obliged to re-
benefit’and a.n inclincl to’tlfink tWat
there is merit in the treatment, but,
in almost every case, much time will
be required for a permanent cure, if
such can be attained.
“I have talked with men who claim
to have been cured of the most severe
cases of rhematisui in a few hours, but
1 am of the opinion that as much
credit must be given to the “faith
cure’’ as to the properties of the well.
In one instance, a helpless cripple,
who was inclined to the belief that
there could be supernatural effects m
healing waters just as wellnow as in
Bible times, remained all night in tne
bottom of the pit in prayer. He came
oat in the morning without assistance
and walked with ease, for the.first
time for years, and was no doubt im
bued with the same spirit of awe and
reverence as lie whom Christ com
manded to take up liis bed and walk,
over eighteen hundred years ago.
Those who doubt that miracles will
be wrought in these modern days, of
course, cannot receive efficient aiil
from the “faith” process, and are
obliged to depend entirely upon the
merits of the tangible elements found
in tho well. That there are merits is
an unquestionable fact, but they
prove more efficacious in some cases
than in others, perhaps being govern
ed bv the amount of faith in the pa
tient. I drank freely of the water
and can attest to its valuable medi
cinal qualities, not only, in easing
rheinatic pains, but in curing dys
^ “My associates at the well were
the following: Mrs, Cunningham; Dr.
McKenna, president of Davidson Col
lege, Nortli Carolina; Mr. Swift, a
prominent cotton merchant of Colum
bus, andhisjwife; Win.|C. Sibley, pres
ident of the Sibley cotton factory, of
Augusta; Francis Coggins, a retired
capitalist, of Augusta, and two
brothers by tho name of Chaffee, of
Lancaster, South Carolina, ihere
were also many others there from all
parts of the country, whose names 1
did not learn, eager to try the efficacy
of this unique mode of treatment,
some of them coining hundreds of
miles in wagons and hving m tents.
You cannot imagine how silly t ap
pears to people of intelligence; sitting
at the bottom of that pit, for five
hours at a time, waiting for some half
demonstration, and just
matches and without dangor of
j things on fire, take an oblong
phial of the clearest glass, put into it
a piece of phosphous about the size
of a common pea, upon which pour
some olive oil, heated to the boiling
point, filling the phial ubout one-
third full, then cork the bottle tight
ly. To use it{ remove the cork and.'
allow the air to enter the bottle and
then re-oork it. The whole empty
space in. the bot tle will then beooine
luminous, and the light thus obtained
will be equal to a small lamp. As
soon as the light grows weak, its pow
er can be increased by opening the
bottle and allowing a fresh supply of
air to enter. In the winter it Is some
times necessary to heat the phial be
tween the hauds to increase the fluidi
ty of the oil. Thus prepared, the bot
tle inay be used for six months. This
contrivance is used by the watchmen
of Paris and in all magazines where ex
plosive or inflammable materials are
stored.
The “Barren Viotory” of Chicka-
Fruin HFn: rrASpra*
the battle of ChickoL - ; " ,
April Century we taktf’Vrrto
sion: ‘ But whatever blunders each
of us in authority committed before
the battles of the 19th and 20th
(Chickumauga,) and during their pro
gress, the greut blunder of all was
that of not pursuing the enemy on the
21st. The day was spent in burying
the dead and gathering up captured
stores. Forrest, with his usual prompt
ness, was early in the saddle, and.
saw that the retreat was a rout. Dis
organized masses of men were hurry
ing to the rear; batteries of artillery
were inextricably mixed with trains
of wagons; disorder and confusion
pervaded the broken ranks struggling
to get on. ’ Forrest sent word back to
Bragg that ‘every hour was worth a
thousand men.’ But the commander-
in-chief did not know of the victory
until the morning of the 21st, and
then he did not order a pursuit.
Rosecrans spent the day and the
night of the 21st in hurrying his trains
out of town. A breathing space was
allowed him; the panic among his
troops subsided, and Chattanooga—
the objective point of the campaign—
was held. There was no more splen
did fighting in ’01, when the flower of
Southern youth was in the field, than
was displayed in those bloody days of
September, ’08. But it seems to me
that the elan of the Southern soldier
was never seen after Chickainauga—
that brilliant dasli which had distin
guished him on a hundred fields was
gone forever. He was too intelligent
not to know that tho cutting in two
of Georgia meant death to all his
hopes. He knew that Longstreet s
absence was imperilling Lee's safety
and that what had to be done must
bo done quickly. The delay to strike
was exasperating to him; the failure
to strike after the success was crush
ing to all his longings for an indepen
dent South. He fought stoutly to
the last, but, afterChickaniauga, with
the sullenness of despair and without
the enthusiasm of hope. That ‘bar
ren victory’ sealed the fate of the
Southern Confederacy.”
2‘l!7r.!«b7;i'ri7.owY.'"'Th» reaU»
tion of the ridiculousness of the afiair
is very apt to soon eliminate any
faith one might be inclined to have.
The ladies (being more susceptible
probably,) are the first todedare that
they have ‘got it;’ presently one of
the y gentlemen will confess that he
feels something ‘peculiar, and will
ask the victim next to him t° take
his hand and see if lie does not expe
rience something like a faint electric
shock. As far as I am concerned, 1
cannot say that I ever felt the senwi-
tions, unless very slightly, which
others have* spoken of. 1 noticed that
when the water was being agitated
by the pumps these sensations weie
the most marked. What the peculiar
elememt is has not yet been satisfac
Distance For Cotton.
I have fresh land that will produce
800 po inds seed cotton per acre. Want
to plant in cotton, three and a half
feet rows and three feet apart, in mils,
putting fifty pounds guano at plant
ing in with seed and 150 pounds per
acre at second plowing in siding fur
row near each hill. Will mix guano
used at planting with woodsmould.
Do you think distance too great for
the land, one stalk in a hill? J. H B.,
Orchard Hill, Spalding county, Ga.,
Answkr.—No; the distance men
tioned will not bo too great if the
land produces good weed. If weed
is disposed to be small the distance
might be made 3x3. The proper rule
is to have limbs very nearly meet iR
every direction,—-Southern Cultiva
, tor.