Union recorder. (Milledgeville, Ga.) 1886-current, October 02, 1888, Image 313

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OLUME LIX. [southern UeOOBDBB 13 ‘ ,8h ° ' M 1S19.’ | CONSOLIDATED 1878. Milledgeville, Ga., October 2, 1888. Number 13* 156, ft WORD -ABOUT THE- 188?, )rug‘ Business! IlLABO Drug Store >r :',i years lias catered to the lU ts ‘of the public, keeping mils in this liuo, at popular ices, from one soason to an- hor. Wa take this means of liking our usual Fall Announce- , n t and ask a continued, fair are of your trade. CARRY A STOCK EMBRACING AMP GOODS, STATIONERY, PAINTS, * PATENT MEDICINES, BLANK BOOKS, SCHOOL BOOKS, ERFUMERY, TOILET ARTICLES, FINE SOAPS, CIGARS and TOBACCO, COMBS & BRUSHES, ACHIXE OILS. —Our Stock Of— loliday Goods II be laraer, more attractive and cheap- this year, than aver. We have selected assortment from the best menu- tutors and beg that you will bear this Diml when you net ready to make such chases. Ye take especial pains in the man- jinent of our PRESCRIPTION wrtment to keep fully abreast with the ee In new and Important remedies and ready at all hours, day and night, to efully and accurately dll prescriptions ' furnish Physician's supplies. 1M. CLARK’S Dm Store. GEO. D. CASE, Manager. illedgevllle, Oa., Sept. 25, 1888. 12 8m MIDDLE GEORGIA LITARY AND AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE UILLEDGEVILLE, GEORGIA. Gkx'l. I). H. HILL, President. five Teachers in llie Faculty. Four Hundred and Fifty-One Students. TUITION FREE. ird very reasonable. Courses of In- urtlun is full, Including Classical, Helen- Comiuercial, Musical, in thorougli- nf Scholarship and Discipline, this k«e 1ms no superior. Next Term opens 'timber 5th, 1888. For Catalogues, Ac., >ly to J. N. MOORE, , Bec'y. Trustees. dy 16th, 1888. 2tf. THIS preparation,without A injury,removes Freck les, Liver-Moles, Pim- Black-Heads, Sunburn and ’ " few applications will render the stubbornly rod skin soft, smooth and • Viola Cream ia not a paint or 'trtooover defect*, but a remedy to cure, •uperior to all other preparations, and trantced to give satisfaction. At drug- mailed fer 60 cents. Prepared by °" BITTNER & CO., TOLIDO, OHIO. Sold by c. L. CASE, une 10. ’88. 49 ly The Oft Told Story Of the peculiar medicinal merits of Hood's Sarsaparilla Is fully confirmed liy the volun tary testimony of thousauds who have tried It. Fecullar in the combination, proportion, and preparation of its ingredients, peculiar In the extreme earo with which it ll put up, Hood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures where other preparations entirely fall. Pecu liar In the unequalled good name It has made at home, which 1b a “toWer of strength abroad," peculiar in the phenomenal sales ft has attained. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the most popular and successful medicine before the public today for purifying the h'.ood, giving strength, creating an appetite. “ I suffered from wakefulness and low spirits, and also had eczema on the back ot my head and neck, which was very annoying, t took one bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and I have received no much benefit that I am very grateful, and 1 am always glad to speak a good word for this medicine.” Jins. j. S. Snyder, Fottsville, renn. Purifies the Blood Henry Biggs, Campbell Street, Kansas City had scrofulous sores all over his body for fifteen years. Hood's Sarsaparilla completely cured him. Wallace Buck, of North Bloomfield, N. V.. suffered eleven years with % terrible varicose ulcer on hi* leg, so bad that he had to give up bualnees. lit wat cured of the ulcer, and also of cstarrn, by Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all dnififliU. fl; tlx for Si. Prepared only bj C# L HOOD Jk GO., Apothecaries. Lowell, Mem IOO Doses One Dollar April 3d. 1888 30 ly. BETHUNE & ItOQBE. REAL ESTATE AGENTS. MlLLKDGKVILLK, GA., Offer the following property for sale: A new four room residence, on East Hancock street—I acre lot—good kitchen, garden and stable. Price $1200. A desirable residence in Midway, with si able and outhouses—all in good condition—excellent water-line orch ard—4 ucre lot. Price $1000. A seven room, residence on South Jefferson street, near the College- acre lot—in good condition. Price $1200. Two room cottage—one acre lot, in 6th ward, N. W. part of city. Also EDITORIAL GLIMPSES. He who kicketh at a newspaper paragraph when no names are men tioned glveth himself dead away.— Westporter. A balo of cotton was sent to a Geor gia town recently covered with a bed quilt. “Klverlng” Is plentiful on that plantation. It is thought by the people of Ma con that the State Fair will be held in November, If frost appears and quiets the yellow fover. The Chinamen boast that none of their race have died of yellow fever in any of the epidemics in this country, and they attribute their exemption to opium smoking habitually. Hut is not the remedy worse than the dis ease? Out of tho live persons who had died of tho fever at Deoatur, Ala., up to the 26th, two were prominent phy sicians, and anotlior very ill. This Is a remarkable fatality in the pro fession, considering the number of deaths, and only 20 cases in all. We need not issue an extra to give our readers the result of to-morrow’s election. The whole democratic tick et will be elected by majorities any where from fifty to seventy-five thousand, and there won’t be enough republicans in the next legislature to i make u committee of three. A distinguished physician in New York, commenting on the bills offer ed in Congress, fixing a reward of $100,000 for a perfect preventive of yellow fever, says, “there can be no remedy found, unless heat, moisture and filth, can be utterly extermina ted—and that is a physical impossl bility.” The man who refuses or neglects to pay his debts when he has the money it a willful obstructionist to the pros perity of his community to the extent of bis liabilities. The prompt pay- two unimproved jots adjoining. All usent of debts keeps the money in oir CoggWier $WW. ** 'culatlon and keeps up confidence.— Fifty-five acres in city limits, on Fishing creek above high water, in good state of cultivation and under good fence. Price $1,200. Possession given when this year’s crop is gath ered. An improved plantation containing 660 acres, lying 3| miles east of MiL- ledgevllle. Price $3,000—half cash. Fifty acres of land ju3t outside the city limits, on the Sheffield ferry road. Price $600. 300 or 400 acres swamp land with the privilege of 1250. Desirable as a stock farm—17 miles south-east of Milledgeville. For 8ai,k or Rknt.—A five room cottage on east Hancock street. A bargain will be given in this place. Building lot for balk—Half acre on Liberty, street. Price $850.00. Seventy acres of land on west common, for sale at $25 per acre. For Salk.—600 acres of good pine land, lying near the Eatonton and Gordon railroad. Apply to Bethuue & Moore, Renl Estate Agents. Dentistry. DR. H mTcLARKE \X70UK of any kind performed In ac- * v cordance with the latest and most im proved methods. *S_Ofllceln Callaway’eNew Building. Milledgeville, Ga., May 15th, 1883. 44 R- W. ROBERTS, ^ttornoy-At-Ijaw Millkdokvillk, Ga. rust3 , au , e 1 ntl(m 8lven to all business on- hir i k. 8 care * Office In room former!/ ic l il., ua « e “• B. Hanford. [_’ 1887 * 22 ly. Tax Notice. are now open for the es° n ti° n of State and County the present I will.be at ace in the Court. House, on vsdaya au( j Saturdays. .. T. W. TURK, T. C. B. C. uiedgeville, Sept. 11th, ’88. 10 3m run County Fair!. October 4th, oth and 6th. DISPLAY OF Agricultural Produce, Cattle, Jerseys, Holsteins, Etc. HORSES, TROTTERS, Percherons and other Draft Stock, Mule and Horse Colts, not loss than 160 Individuals. Four Or More Races Hacli Day! Every Department Complete in Itself. Writo Secretary for Cat alogue. JNO. T, DENNIS, Pres. B. W. Hunt, Sec’y. Sept. 11,1888. 10 R A Novkl Idea.—From to-day we will begin giving Stationery away as follows : Every fifteenth person buy ing stationery of us will receive it free. Call at Union-Recorder office If a man hasn’t got the money he can’t pay, but if those who have it would pay, he would probably soon get it Chief Justice Fuller had a splendid ovation at Chicago, on the 24th, on the «ve of his leaving for Washing ton to assume the duties of his office. Many distinguished mea of the Re publican party united in the banquet and made highly complimentary speeches; among these were Judge GreBham and Hon. Robt. Lincoln. This is a compliment to Mr. Cleve land’s sagacity and sound sense. There appears to be some trouble in the Senatorial district, embracing Fulton, Cobb, and Clayton counties. Rev. Sam Small is the prohibition candidate, and it is now said that there will be a regular ticket put out to oppose the Democratic nominees for the lower house In Fulton county- We arc of the opinion that tho dem ocratic nominee for tho Senate, and those for tho House will be elected to-morrow. Somo of the Georgia papers are finding fault with the State demo cratic nominees on the Electoral ticket foi not haranguing the people. Nonsense! The people are too busy with their crops, and oven State Fairs cannot be held for tho excitement caused by yellow fever, and conse quent interruption to travel—then why disturb them with other excite ment, political, when there is no use under heaven for it, there being no opposition. Tho Electoral nominees have acted wisely in staying at home. A young lady in this city dreamed that she was in company with a num ber of persons who were lamenting the spread of the yellow fever. One of the party held an Atlanta Consti tution in her hand, from which she read a poem on the subject. The young lady on awaking could remem ber only one verse as follows: Father above, As thou sittest upon thy Throne, Look down in pity and love Upon thy stricken ones. Grant us thy peace, May all our sorrows oease, And joy again be ours. The blood is the regulator. Regu late the Regulator with Warner’s Log Cabin Sarsaparilla. It cures all im purities. It is the largest bottle in the market—120 doses for $1. Your druggist sells it. Buy it for your fam ily’s benefit as well as your own. SLEBP AFTER A MEAL. The Brain Should Beat While the Stomaoh Digests the Food. From tbe Westminster Review. There is a widespread superstition, oherished by the great majority of the people, that to sleep immediately after they have taken food is to en danger health, to favor the onset of apoplexy, eto., a supersition based on the assumption that during sleep the brain is normally congested. There is no doubt such a thing as conges tive sleep, but during normal sleep the brain is amende. When a per son has taken a fairly abundant luucli or dinner''the stomach demands a special iniJnx of blood wherewith to accomplish its work of digestion, no or gan can more easily comply witli that demand than the brain, which, when in full activity, is suffused with a mux- ium amount of the vital fluid. But a derivatio%of blood from the brain to the stoiuqgh can only take plaoe, ex cept ia emgptioaally full-blooded and vigorous, jpersous, on the condition that thf ofrqhral functions be mean while partially or wholly suspended. Many peoyfe after taking dinner feel in4if^hMf)||9F qiental notion and not a few loaf for sleeps The already partially fpftmie brain would fain yield up tf the stomaoh a still further supply of fload and yield itself up to refreshingsleep. Doing so, it gains new strepgtb; meanwhile digestion proceeds energetically, and soon body and mlnd^ure again equipped to con tinue in fun force the battle of life. Bur superstition, tiie child of igno rance, intervenes, declares that sl^ep during indigestion is dangerous, ad* monishes the wound-be sleepers to struggle against their perilous inclina tion, and,' though telling them that after dinner they may sit awhile, as sures them of the adge, “After sup per walk a mile.” The millions of its victims continue, therefore, the strife to which it con demns them and ignore the sugges tions of- ed to them by the lower animals/ who have always practiced the lessons of sound physiology by sleeping after feeding whenever they are allowed to do so. Henoetbe human brain and human stomach of such vic tims centend with each other during the digestive process. The brain, im pelled by superstition, strives to work and demands blood to work with, while the stomach, stimulated by its oontents, strives to carry on its mar velous chemistry and demands an ample supply of blood for the purpose The result of the struggle is that neither is able to do its work well. The brain is enfeebled by being de nied its natural rest duing the di gestive process, and the healthy func tion of the stomach degenerates into dyspepsia.” The writer of these comments on the above, has always contended for this physiology as wise, and safe, ever since he took a medical course. The braiu and tbe. stomach shake hands on this common sense theory, and would have it more generally sustained. J. H. N. Then They Smiled. From the Boston Courier. They met in a horse car, two young women whose tawny faces showed that they were just back from the seashore, and when they had kissed and embraced, and been through all the preliminary nonsense necessary to the occasion, one said to the other: “Oil you dear thing! I had such a flirtation with your husband while you were down east. He came down to Nantasket almost every night.” “Yes, lie wrote to me about it,” the other returned sweetly. “He said you didn’t seem to know anybody, and were so lonely he quite pitied you.” “He was always so kind to neglect ed girls," the first speaker murmured. “You know they said when you were married that he would have taken all the wall flowers if he could, he was so generous.” And then they smiled lovingly on each other. • Faith Is that conviction upon the mind of the truth of thd promises and threateniogs of God made known in the gospel, of the certain reality of the rewards and punishments of the life to come, which enables a man, in opposition to all the temptations of a corrupt world, to obey God in expec tation of an invisible reward hereaf ter.—Dr. 8. Olarke. “Old Man Plunkett” And The Brave Georgia Woman. In Sunday’s Constitution Sept., 28d, Old man Plunkett tells in his homely, but truthful and graphic way how the brave Georgia women fought the battle at home “enduring of the war.” He says: “There was mighty few factories in Georgia and this made what few there was always crowded with wimtnin and children, camped erround, wait in’ their turn to get thread. The fac tory managers had to get up a sys tem en letting out their thread, and so they required tho wiumiln to form into a line the same as soldiers, and then a fellow would stand at a win dow and give out thread to each one in turn and they had to make it a rule that if any one broke line they would have to go foot. This was the best that could be done, for before they established this rule there was so much crowding and pushing that they got erlong slower than they did the other way. ' “What would these stnoe-the-war wimtnin think of standing in d line tor t wenty-fonr hours to get to pay seven or eight dollars for a buneh of thread that they wouldn’t pick up in ■ tbe big road these tiinesT It Menas strange to the young generation, theM sort of things do, but they are facts, and that’s what makes me say that the wimmin done the real suffering in the war. “I’ve seed some mighty bad sights on these faotory expeditions, for I was ( Id and rheumatic and the wiin- min always made me go erlong with ’em- jest to say they had a man erlong, but 1 couldn’t do ’$m much good „ . . . - “One rainy night when we had struck camp oh our way back from the factory three or four of the children began to cough croopy and we seed that we were going to have a night of it. Tbe old wiinmin got ready some tobaoco and fixed poultioes, and some of ’em said that, ly* J^n oak ashes was good for oroup ana they had some ready, and it warn’t no great while before we had to go to using these things, for the children began to oboke more and more and to bark with the croop at every breath, till it looked like that some of ’em would die in spite of all that could be dona, but we soon got ’em ail right but one little curley-headed girl, that every body said was tbe sweetest child on the trip, and she was bound to die, so they all said. “Old Sister Brown was sitting on a box holding the little girl in her lap, and ail that I could do was to hobble erround and hold the torch for ’em to put tilings in the little child’s mouth with a spoon, and the young mother was standing over her little girl, every once and erwhile droppin’ down on tier knees by her, till some of ’em said that if Dr. Caldwell could be got from Zebulon that lie could save the child and it was no sooner mentioned than the young mother lit on the wildest horse in the whole teams, and put out for Zebulon as fast as the horse could go. “The night was dark and the rain was falling, but that young mother ( idn’t care for nothing, and I’d knowed tier a many time to squeal at a mouse running by her and flee from tbe echo of her own rumbling in the darkness, but she was brave this night somehow, and, she plunged into the creek without stopping to think whether it would swim, and she was in Zebulon and bad Dr. Caldwell up before you’d think about it these days, and then they started on the race back to the camp. “The doctor was a good rider, and he had a good horse, but he couldn’t kepp up, and the young woman kept in front, and every now and then she’d rein in her horse and and beg the doctor to hurry and save her little girl The doctor was doing his very best, but when they struck the creek on the way back it was swimming, though it warn't that way when she went erlong. The doctor told iter to be cautious, for tbe creek was risin’ mighty fast, but she jest cried and begged him to hurry, but the doctor stood on the edge of the water and refused to plunge in and be drowned, and she wrung her hands and gathered up the reins and said ‘I’ll go in front,’ and before the doctor could do anything her horse was plunging in the water, and the current struck 'em and took ’em down stream, and the young woman lost her hold on the horse and was strugg ling in the water. “The dootor didn't wait no longer. He lit offen his horse and plunged ' right In and swain to her and caught her by the hair and held her off and qp outen the water till they struok. the bank on the other side, and she'd no sooner got into water where they oould wade, till she grabbed the doc tor’s hand and went putting him on toward the camp. “The dootor was what they called a mighty dignified man, but he was in a trot as ho come up to the camp, and the young mother didn’t turn er- loose his hand till he was right beside- her little girl, and then lie give it some lobelia and sich like and wrapped n wet cloth around its neck and dono- other things till the little thing began to breathe all right, and then we was ail glad and thanked the dootor. “I’ve seed sights at these factories; One time thar was said to be seven or eight hundred wimmin’ waitin’ to get thread at one of these factories, and It got to be common talk among tha Wimmin that these factory folks did n’t treat 'em right, and they resolved to have the thread by foroe if they couldn’t get It no other way. They - seed the manager and offered what : money they had and was refused and : then commenced a sorouglng and er push in’ to get into the factory, the* like of whioh I had never seed before, and I hope will never see ergiu. It. might have been wrong and might have looked bad to see them wimmin takin’ the thread and scufflin’ the same as men, but it was war times and it was hard times, and they was stintin’ and'starvin’ while their husbands wan flghtin’, and they didn’t have much use fur fellers that kept outen the war by running these factories., and L guess it is all right.” “But,’* continued .the old map, at* ter a pause, “as hkrdas it was to get thread and to get wool-rolls, these wimmin would take the most ofnrbatr they did get and make it up into clo thes and socks and gloves for the tpen- . •• « , who was In tbeAtuiy, and then the settlement would get together and' make up a box and send It on, andi nine times out of ten the box would get lost on the way, and when they’d find out their loved ones had failed to receive it they’d jest set down and cry an hour or two, and then get up and go to spinnin’ und weavin’ and the- same thing would repeat itself from* time to time. “One soldier felt mighty bad for a box to come to his company and ha have nothin’ in it. The wiuiinins knowed this, and I’ve knowed the- wimmin and children to set down and eat dry bread day after day in order to save, so's they oould send good things to one far away. The ohildren didn’t grumble then, neither, like they do in times of peace, for the mother would jest toll ’em that they must do this so as they’d save something to send to their poor papas, aud that was enough. I b’lieve folks love each other more during of the war, enny- bow, at least it seemed that way to me.” “It was a sight to see one of them boxes fixed up,” continued tho old man, as he wiped a tear from his eye. “They would get the box right down in the middle of the floor anil tho mother would pile everything erround that she was goin’ to send, and the ohildren would kneel erround and help her, and every one had to put in some little cake or something, and they’ll be as hungry as children could be, but they’d never think of wauting to eat it. It had to go to papa, and its one of the sad things of the war that these boxes hardly ever got to the poor fellows. Wimmin had a hard time in the war times, and so did the children, God bless ’em. Warner’s Log Cabin Remedies—old fashioned, simple compounds, used he tho days of our hardy forefathers, aee - “old timers,” but “old reliable.” They comprise a “Sarsaparilla,” “Hops and Buchu Remedy,” “Cough and Con sumption Remedy,” “Hair Tonic,” “Extract,” for External and Internal Use, “Plasters,” “Rose Cream,” for Catarrh, and “Liver Pills.” They are put up by H. H. Warner & Co., pro prietors of Warner's Safe Remedies, and promise to equal the standard value of those great preparations. Ail druggists keep them. Valuable property in the city and' vicinity for sale. Apply to Bethune A Moore.