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Milledgeville, Ga.
Official Directory.
BALDWIN COUNTY GOVERNMENT.
Judge Superior Court—Hon. W. F.
Jenkins.
Solioltor-General—H. G. Lewis.
Senator—Hon. R. Whitfield.
Representative—Hon. L. N- Callaway.
Ordinary—M. R. Bell.
Clerk Superior Court-Walter Paine.
8hertff-C.W. Ennis. ,
County Treasurer—J. M. Edwards.
Tax Oolleetor—T. W. Turk.
Tax Receiver—P. T. Ennis.
County Surveyor—Miller Grieve.
Coroner—W. S. Scott.
Judge County Court.—Hon. J. T. Allen.
Jury Commissioners—8am. Walker, T.
L. McOomb, J. C. Whitaker, R. R. Brown,
B. T. Bsthune, Joseph Staley.
County Board of Education.—J.N. Moore.
O. M. Oone. T. H. Latimer, Dr. C. W.
Snead; R. N. Lamar, County School Com
miss loner..
County Commissioners—Hon. D. B. San
ford. L. J. Lamar, B. H. Jones.
Justices of thePeaoe-J. A. Green, 320th
dint.; T. J. Lingould, Stilt diet.; S. J.
Brown, 322nd dist.: G. W. Underwood,
105tb dlst.; J. B. O’Qutnn. 115th dist.; W. I.
Harper, 818th dlst., W. J. T. Bay, 319tb
Notary Public and Ex Officio Justices of
the Pesos,. G. W. Caraker, 320th diet.;
John Thomas, 321st dlst.; W. R. Fenn,
322nd dlst.; J. B. Chandler, U5th diet.; J.
D. Myrlck, 318th dist. J P. Humphries,
319th dist.
Constables—T. S. Bagley, J. N. Leonard,
320th dlst.; T. H. Potter, 321st dlst.; E. W.
Winter, 322nd di»t.; T. L. A. Tranham,
105th diet.; J. J. Simpson, 115th dist.
CITY GOVERNMENT OF MILLEDOBVILLE.
Mayer—Hon. Peter J. Cline.
Aldermen—A. Josupb, W. T. Conn, J.
Caraker, G.T. Wiedenman. T. F. Newell,
R. W. Roberts.
Clerk-G. W. Caraker.
Marshal—A. Dunn.
Deputy Marshal-W. J. Owens.
Street Overseer—A. J. Wall.
City Sexton—T. A. Caraker.
Democratic Executive Committee.
30th Senatorial District.
Baldwin.—G. P. Wntlden, P. T. Ennis,
^WAshlngton.—M. Newman, S. G. Jordan,
J Hancock—S- W. Roberts, J. W. Caw
thon, W. M. Wheeler.
Post Office Bulletin.
Office Hours.
General Delivery Window opens, 7 30 a. ra.
Money Order Window opens,.... 7.30 a. m.
General Delivery Window closes, 5.80 p. m
Mnnev order Window closes, ... 4.00 p. m.
PeoDle who cannot And it convenient to
transact their business with this office
during the above hours must wait until
the next day—for when the office Is closed
i h have other official duties to perform
USSm watting on belated patrons, and
will not be Interrupted.
MAILS CLOSE FOR
nt R (Macon & Augusta,) North and
ua.itv. xv. v Eagt 8 50 a m
“ West and South, 3.50 p. m.
,, •> “ for night trains
both ways 7.30 p.m.
Gentral B. R.. South, 915 a. in
i'®? 1 '™ 1 xv (> North 2.00 p m.
The 8 50 a. m. Mall is for all points
nnrth and west of Atlanta, for Ga. R. B-
connect?oa3, 0 for Augusta and S. C and all
notnts north and east of Augusta.
P The 7.30 p. m. mall, same as above.
The 3 50 d. m. mail Is for Macon and all
noTntesoutfi of this and in addition all
points reached by the 8.50 mail, except
fooal stations on A. A M. road, Ga. R. R.
And South Carolina. ..
The 9.15 Central mail is the same as the
last with the addition of local stations ou
^Fhe^ p!m.is Eatonton mall. ’
If patrons will read this bullion, and
consult the clock plaoed just above it.
they will save themselves the trouble of
asking many usel 0 S. i ^6Uon^ 8t
Milledgeville, Ga.. May 2lst, 1890.
The importance of purifying the blood tan
not be overestimated, for without pure blood
you cannot enjoy good health.
At this season nearly every one needs a
good medicine to purify, vitalize, and enrich
the blood, and we ask yon to try Hood’s
Pppilliar Sarsaparilla. It strengthen*
rebuild! ud bulld# up tte sj . stea>
creates an appetite, and tones the digestion,
white It eradicates disease. The peculiar
combination, proportion, and preparation
of the vegetable remedies used give to
Hood’s Sarsaparillapecul-
br curative powers. No * O 1TS6IT
other medicine has such a record of wonderful
cures. If you have made up your mind to
bay Hood’s Sarsaparilla do not be induced to
take any other instead. It Is a Peculiar
Medicine, and is worthy your confidence.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is sold by all druggists.
Prepared by C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Maw
IOO Dome One Dollar
May 6,1890, 41 cw. lyr.
MAKING DOLLS AT SEVENTY.
Bemarkabto Xtient.
Mrs Michael Curtain, Plainfield, 111..
—Vr»<i the statement that she caught oold
-hleh settled on her lungs; she was treat
ed for a month by her family physician,
twit grew worse. Ho told her she was a
hopeless victim of Consumption and tha
gSS?SiSt ; >o“5i ffiSSmSffiSS
ffipgftg- S”g!uSrteJSiXSS
eound and well, now doee her own houte*
work and Is as well as she ever was —
Free trial bottles of this Great Discovery at
Clark’s Drug Btore, large bottles 50c and
*1.W,
Margaret Ball, a Graduate of llutgers,
Kkea Out a Living in This Way.
She is a dainty little gentlewoman,
“an unappropriated blessing” 70 years
old. Once she was rich and lived in
swelldom and had her maids to serve
her and a coachman and a carriage.
She graduated at Rutgers, and was a
winsome belle, gladsome and gracious
and the dispenser of many joy giving
hospitalities.
Lacking the prudent genius of finan
ciering, after ner parents died, one
way and another she lost a great deal
of money, and one day she realized,
with keen foreboding, that she was al
most alone in this big world, with very
little to keep her from starvation. She
was only learned in gracious house
hold ways, which are of little money
value in the practical workaday world.
Sho finally invested her bit of money
in goods, hoping to make a living by
“keeping store." She established her
self in a quiet street in Brooklyn, and
for a time her enterprise succeeded,
but gradually the large stores grew
more attractive and the street less de
sirable for tho better class of people,
and tho little old lady was forgotten,
and the problem of getting* a living
was harder to solve than before
Tho store liegan to look seedy and
empty, and the storekeeper's courage
was almost gone, when one day a child
came in to buy “tho doll in the shoe.”
It was a rag doll, with a group of gay
pigmies about it—“tho old woman in
the shoe”—which a kind friend had
made for her wirtdow when she first
opened the store. She was glad to sell
it now, but soon replaced it with an
other, which was also sold, and so on
until the worrying problem of how to
earn her bread solved itself in this
happy, providential way, and she de
cided to make rag dolls for a living.
Her aged sister sewed the dresses uo
the machine until she had the “old
fashioned rheumatism” so badly sho
could do nothing, and a helper had to
be hired to do them.
The dolls are very cute ami chic,
notwithstanding they are made of
stout corset jean stuffed with cotton
and dressed in simple wash calico, but
the dresses are pretty and so are the
coquettish bonnets made of the same
material. A dainty bit of lace at the
neck and sleeves, and artistic touches
here and there, add an air of delicacy
to the rig, which tells in a subtle yet
convincing way that long ago the
cheery little gentlewomen delighted
in pretty femininities of exquisite
stylo and of texture dainty and sheer.
A society belle, of Brooklyn, paints
the faces of the rag dolls. She bus
many Bocial demands, but makes time
to do this work of love aud charity
with unvarying faithfulness.
A kind friend took some of tho rag
beauties to the seaside, and the orders
from a fashionable resort kept the
workers comparatively comfortable
during the summer. The dolls sell for
a dollar apiece at the home of the
worker and a trifle more than that in
tho different exchanges for woman’s
work where they have found a placer.
The aged maiden is affectionately
called “the cheery little doll woman,”
and the name suita her signally well.
She has no misgivings, no repinings,
and, like a true little gentlewoman
that she is, never refer* to the “days
when she was better off." Her only
worry—a great one to her—is to get
clothes for her rag dolls. This ques
tion absorbs her thoughts more than
anything else, and she has to buy
with exacting judgment and out her
cloth with close economy.
,In her sunny personality one for
gets how pathetic her life history is
tlm age of W is a he&rtoching
contrast to the time when she was
cosily housed in luxurious surround
ings not far from the Lorillards some
fifty years ago.—New York Herald.
himself to muxic"until he was 16. and
composed nothing worth speaking of
until he was *0.—-New York Ledger.
Before
Bourrieune tells us how the First
Consul, in his cabinet in Paris, traced
the march to Marengo and laid his
finger on the spot in the map where # M » . . , , - ,
he would fight and defeat tho Aus 1 master of PeU »; 1 " rhen ho hful the nns-
The faihtUn at Palltrneu.
The perfection of politeness is well
illustrated by an anecdote told by Mr.
Lear in his “Journey of a Landscape
Painter in the Eaat.” He was taking
a parting cup of coffee with the post
triau army—a prodigy of calculation,
if we recollect the circumstances:
“When he had stationed the ene
my's corps and drawn up the pins with
red heads on the points where he
hoped to bring his own troops, lie said
tome: ‘Whore do you think I shall
beat Melasf’ ‘How do I know?’ ‘Why,
look here, you fool I Melas is at Ales
satidria with liis headquarters. There
he will remain until Genoa surron
ders. He lias in Alessandria his mag
azines, his hospitals, his artillery and
his reserves. Crossing tho Alps here’
(pointing to tho great Mont St. Ber
nard) T shall fall upon Melas, cut off
his communications with Austria, and
meet him here in the plains of Scri-
via.’"—Temple Bar.
XUUni in Auort«d Lots.
A singular coincidence has come to
our notice. Two cats in this village
have recently given birth to three kit
tens each, and in both cases one of the
kittens had a fully developed tail, an
other had a stub tail only, and the re
maining one had no tail at all.—Cor.
Taunton (Mass.) News.
No IRootn for Doabt.
“I am afraid you got cheated when
you bought this place. You'll never
get me to believe your front yard con
tains an acre.”
“Yes it does; I measured it."
“What with!”
“My lawn mower.”—Detroit Free
Press.
fortune to set his foot on a handsome
pipe bowl. Crash went the bowl; tho
Mohammedan sat unmoved. Mr.
Lear apologized. “The breaking of
such a pipe bowl," said the postmaster,
“would, indeed, under ordinary cir
cumstances, be disagreeable; but in a
friend every action has its charms.”
A, Bmineu Man’s Literary Saturation.
Capt. Ed H. Webster, of Kansas
City, is a hustler and has been from
his youth up. There are few men
however, who have at ready command
so much general information on liter
ary matters. Knowing that he began
at a high pressure speed when he wai
a boy in Indiana, that he was a captain
in the army when he 18 years old,
and that he has been on the pace that
kills most people ever sinoe, I asked
him one day when he found time to
read and how he had obtained so much
information.
He said: By reading on my businesz
trips. I always take a book or several
books with me when I go away from
home, no matter whether the journey
is long or short. Sometimes I take
notes of what I read. I never throw
a book away. I never get my handz
on a book that I do not examine the
oontents. It is an old saying, but a
true one, that every book contains
something worth knowing.
Not long ago I made a short run
out of town and forgot to take a book.
I didn't forget it, but I had no time.
At a station down the road, where the
engine stopped to water, I got out of
the coach for a rest. I picked up a
piece of a magazine on the roadside.
The cover was gone, and in the section
I had there was nothing to indicate
the waifs name or whence it came,
took it to my scat and began on it.
There were not more than eight or ten
pages. But out of those pages
gleaned so much that I wqs astound
ed. I made notes of tho information
which I had literally picked up, and
that little trip will always be a pleasant
one in my recollection.—Chicago
Tribune.
Two Million Plant*.
The chief gardener of the city lie
has about 40:) other gardeners under
his instructions—tells mo that the to
tal number of plants employed for the
toilet of Paris is about 2,000,000. The
nurseries which produce them arc sit
uated in various parts of the oity. In
the Bois de Boulogne, near the race
course of Lougchainps, are the nur
sery grounds of trees with caducous
leaves. At Auteuil, on the borders of
the Boulogne route, in a sandy soil
excellent for tlaeir propagation, are
placed a collection of resinous trees,
plants with persistent leaves and
heath-mold plants; on the banks of
the river Marne, at a village called
Petit-Buy, the plane trees that are
planted along tho boulevard*of Paris
are cultivated, and finally, out at Vin
cennes, near the Reuilly barrier, just
beyond the fortifications, a large as
signment of land is reserved for orna
mental plants.—Paris Letter.
Thoae Beautiful Eyes.
The main; of a town on the frontier
hud, in accordance with the recent
regulations, to make out a passport
for a rich and highly respectable lady
of his acquaintance, who, in spite of a
slight disfigurement, was very vain of
her personal appearance. His native
politeness prompted him to gloss over
tho defect, and, after a moment’s re
flection, he wrote among the items of
personal description: “Eyes dark,
beautiful, tender, expressive; but one
of them missing.”—Figaro.
In tb« Four Hundred.
Mr. Richfellow (with an admiring
gaze at the beauty of the evening, Miss
Psyche)—Have you noticed, Miss
D’Avnoo, what a delicate, ethereal,
spirituelle beauty Miss Psycho has?
Miss D’Avnoo (rival belle)—Yes.
She reminds me of a very dear friend
of mine 1 knew at school, llow 1
loved that girll Poor darling! she
died of consumption, cancer and sere
fula.—New York Weeklj*.
Tb# Itoneuty In Women.
Did you ever notice that when a wo-
man gets ou to a horse car and the
conductor fails to collect her fare sho
invariably hands it to him as she
leaves) A man under tho same cir
cumstances will, in nine cases out of
.ten, quietly slip his littlo nickel inlo
his pocket, and, saying nothing about
it, mentally pat himself on tho back
for his shrewdness.—New York Jour
nal.
THE WOMAN OF THE FUTURE.
Star
The Precocity of Mozart.
An example of precocity was the
composer Mozart. In his 4th year he
played the piano well. In his 5th year
he composed several pieces. When he
was 6 years old his father took him on
concert tours, when he astonished all
who beard him by his skill on the
piano and tho violin. At the age of 7
he astonished all Paris by his compo
sitions as well as by his performances
on various instruments. At this time
he published some sonatas for piano
and violin, and in tho following year
he composed his first symphonies. At
the age of 12 he composed an opera.
He became a very great musician, but,
after all, he is not generally rated
To be making rag dolls in a dismal, i «■—* •» —. »-
sunless, stuffy little store in a forlorn, hi?her by the musical wor d than
uninviting bj-street in Brooklyn at BisllMsLWagner, johOillA not devote
Will Belong to Combination* to
liaise tho Price of Her Labor.
Combination among skilled women
workers is increasing every day,
though slowly, for women are natur
ally conservative, and they do not
readily accept the principle of union
ism. They liave, many of them, suf
fered sorely from the effect of strikes,
and though they realize that prolong
ed combination, if carried out con
sistent!}’, must improve their position
aud in the long run raise thoir v.-nges,
never lose sight of the long period
during which their employment must
cease till their ultimate demands are
conceded. Added to which 1 icy do
not forget the bitter feelings aroused
—the breach botween employer and
servant—and. above all, that in :• strug
gle such as a long strike must al ways
be it is only the strong who win. the
weak ones go to the wall.
All these, things make womcp shy
and slow to join a trade union, while
the introduction of foreign labor in
England and the increasing demand,
on account of their cheapness, for
foreign goods have made a much deep
er impression on their minds than is
generally admitted. The skilled wo
man worker has, however, the securi
ty of knowing that she can take up her
stand with a greater chunco of suc
cess. for with the best women workers,
u.-, with the men, the supply is rarely
in excess of the demand. And were
technical instruction given to women
a-good deal of the better class work
they cannot do would be carried out
in England, instead of being executed
by French women, who are trained
for it in ilie niuny technical schools
which exist for women in France.
In Soollund the question has been
warmly espoused by the women who
work in Glasgow und Dundefi, and
the prospect of combining for the un
skilled as well as the skilled workers
i* very much more promising than in
England. Scotch women arc more in
dependent imd self reliant, added to
which, though the pay is had, their
surroundings are less deteriorating
than those of the Iiondou women, aud
their dwellings are better and rents
are lower.
Tho rapid increase of the population
and the influx of people from tin*
country to the largo towns make the
problem of how to deal with our skill
ed female labor every year more diffi
cult. The education hitherto given to !
women in Englaud is purely intellect j
ual, and wlten a girl has passed the ,
standard she at once goes into the
ranks of the unskilled. If she can
give time she may be apprenticed and !
learn a trade, but the number of girls
who can afford to do that is getting
fewer every day. The few shillings a
girl can earn at once is too important
an addition to tho family income to be
rejected, aud as the majority of them
marry while practically children,
neither the necessity of being appren
ticed nor of joining a union appeals
to them.—English Illustrated.
He Aatonlshed the Judge.
Monday afternoon Officec Coolidge
interviewed an Italian rag picker, who
was harvesting the copper from the
ruins of Stevens’ block. The min was
locked up, and on Tuesday morning
was brought before Judge Field in the
district eourt, who imposed a fine of
|20 and coots. The culprit coolly drew
eut a clean $50 bill and tendered it to
the court, at the sight of which the
judge nearly fainted away, and aa
there was not wealth enough in the
court room-to change the bill an offi
cer was despatched to the bank for
that purpose.—Gardner (Mass.) Jour
nal.
Hl|l> lnt«mt in Chirac*.
The other day a gentleman who is
engaged in tho chattel mortgage busi
ness here in Chicago took a friend
from the country up to tho top of tho
Auditorium tower to give him n bird’s-
eye view of tho smoke. While up
there he was accosted by a friend who
’appeared to know the peculiar features
of his business, for he said: “Hello,
1 What are you up here after?
Looking for higher rates of interest?
If you arc, this is the place to come.”
The chattel uiortgago man ground his
teeth and was silent. But he was mad
clear through.—Chicago Herald.
Prerocton* X. O. Mill.
John Stuart Mill is another remark
able example of precocity. He began
Greek at the age of .3, aud by the time
he was 8 years old he had read far
more Greek than most college grad
uates, besides all the works of Hume,
Gibbon, Robertson, Rollin mid many
other books of a similar character.
When 12 years old he rend “Ariatotlo’a
Ixigic” in tho original, a work of great
difficulty even for an accomplished
scholar.—Now York ledger.
Tl»« Modem Infant.
A modern youngster who scorned
the language of baby talk surprised an
old fashioned parent the other day.
“There’s the choo-choo, baby,’’ said
the visitor, pointing out a train of ears.
“Yes,” answered the baby, with slow
distinctness, “und the locomotive is
coming, too."—Boston Jod$nal.
A Honeymoon Warning.
He—The cutlet is eold again, dar
ling. Now what would you do if I
scolded junta little,'
She—Make it hot for you, denresL—
Jester. •
Bethunx 4 Moon.
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
MIIiLIDSITIUS, Ga.,
Offer the foHowtag property for sale:
A new four room raeMenoe, on
HaneoeK street—| mb lot—
WtjBhen, well, garden and stable.
>■ Midway.
with stable aad oathquea-allin good
condition—excellent water—fine oroh-
ard-4 acre lot. Priee $MM.
A seven room reeldraee on South
Jefferson street, uoor the College—
acre lot—in good condition. Price
91*60.
An improved plantation containing
660 acres, lying 3J mites east of Mif-
ledgeville. Price $3,600—hall cash.
300 or 400 acres swamp land with
the privilege of 125©: Desirable’as a
j —* 7 roll®* south-east of
Milledgeville.
Building lot for salk—Halfacre
on Liberty, street. Priee $850.90.
But Ming lot on N. Wayne street, art Join
ing H. Jewell. *
*3.500—For sale, the eoSetantial two sto
ry brtex store, on Wayne street, one doer
ooiith of tho Bank. Location central and
ueslraMe.
A handsome resMeaee-ten room aad
-jasement—In good repair—half acre, good
water—on Wayne street aad central.
Fob tftaLR or Bma.-Tlie desirable res
idence 00 Jefferson street at K*eent oc
cupied hr R»v. D. McQueen. Apply to
Bethoae k Moore, real estate agents.
TatiaUe Citj Pnperlr br Sale,
was* s&ttssawss
«u*__
Hancock streets—containing two
fiKTUlyLSS ** ***« »■*>
Wltirh !• Nearly tlnray* Drown.
"How dark sho is. llor face is as
brown ns a burry. V,
“Yes; she is Boston bred-" I’lint
ter.
If You Have
CONSUMPTION I COUCH or COLi
BRONCHITIS Throat Affactfak
SCROFULA I Waiting of n$fh
Or way OSmm w'ntrr thn Throat ..4 Iimg
art Inflamrd, Lack of Strength or Jforte
yaw mh be rotirvrd and fond Ig
SCOTTS
EMULSION
PURE CO& LIVER OIL
With Hypophosphltes.
PALATABLE AS MILK.
Jlh for Srott'o Kmtdoinn, and lot too w-
plana lion or oolMtmtlon tndnro pot to
accept a niGHt.li,
Sold by all Druggists.
•OOTT * ■OWNK.Chemlnta, N.V.
Mur.-li 4,1890. 86 lynrchru
~ v-.
Now Advertisements.
nc A gfllffI»Wff&CTW
omlji Hit Ur’twor, *»» lot. Writ, tor kook ot prooO rut
DETECTIVES
Wanted In every County. Shrewd men to act under iistrurttUns
in our Hocret Service. Kxperienco not necessary. Particulars froc.
Uraaaaa Detective Bereaa Co. 41 Arofe.Cluiutti,9.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSABI
-Icanhes and beautifies the hsir.
'romotes a luxuriant growth.
N«ver Fails to Rostors Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Prevrntd Pundniir an«l hair fulling
T BEER.
; The moot ATTTIglWe aad WBOUBOm
TMttrWHAJiaa DRINK la tha world.
Doliolouo aad Opart ling TRY IT.
Ask yaor Dragglet or Oroeor too H.
iC. 1. HIRES, PHILADELPHIA.
I hui- ID h, 1«0. 49 4t.
SES.
avr
t*
IRA MOORS
il Estate Ai
Agents
For Sale.
A Desirable Residence at Midway,
O NE and a half miles from Mflledge
* onr acref * l*nd with large
dwelling containing eleven rooms,
with servants’ house, (two rooms)
large smoke-house, cow-house, forage*
house, oarriage-house, stable, fowl-
house, all In good condition, with ex
cellent well water, fine pear and peach
orchard. The locality is very healthy
and within two hundred yard* of the
Midway depot where passenger train
stops twieeeaob day. (Priee, $1609.00)
, BETH UNE * MOORE,
. R*al Estate Agents.
Milledgeville, Jan. 8,1866. 86 tf
PRACTICAL HINTS
To Those Cotnem pla
ting The Purchase
OF A PIANO!
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firiin'gH»7f!ranrmvnn’
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instrument* sre Bui ci lor in nil
rSpetSy’inwHni&TO latest t.- Xr.
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to line
toW^rTn *
WEBER * PIANOS.
The favorite iil.nonf the worlo's great
singer*. Paltl ami Nilsofo Positive even
ness ot scale. Husceptlbllity ot action, free
dom from iftetalic tones and extraordinary
durability, characterizes this wot Id famous
piano.
EVERETT
* PIANOS.
“An honest iiisnu at an honest price,” or
In oMi-r words. » 8'r -tty First-class Pla
no, wltliio Lite imi.Ii ot t .ose of mod-nils
at ratts.
The Bverett. Pis no took the highest
awnrd st the reoeid, Georgls Stats Fair for
sii|iefliH' tone, o-rtect action and elegance
in deslvn slid finish. I he victory whs com
plete hIi hongti me Everett in mis In compe
tition with montol ins best known pianos
of the world.
PIANOS.
STARR *
Certsin to surprise you, sure to please
you and positive to convince you. Realize
the artists’ ideal of a purled touch and re
fined tone. ’
PIANOS.
HARVARD *
Tbs summit of superiority In alow price
piano. The greet parlor favorite on account
ot Us not oelng high priced and shoddy
but low priced and reliable. Full Cabinet
Grand size.
We handle In our business, pianos of nine
different makes, and organs of five differ
ent makes. Write for catalogues of dif
ferent manufacturers.
In selecting aw instrument we give jjou
^^nseieetinganjmeiruinen^jj^givejou
teeZSEESLSGSLjESSaSSSESsS
Vggre.
our bnuMhM^oi^beenjstahUshe^ga
^TchTi positively rely on whatever w»
1H2JJHQIBEIE
ta’Aik for catalogue.
TERRY M'F’G CO., NAgHVii.ll. Tknn.
March 25, 1890, 88 6m
We give uiw meiqt outfit tree v
“BESSES
and
!ue^av«Muo^!^3eiMrhHM>un!3!ae»gSM)f
Call oo or addrees.
THE GEORGIA MUSIC BOUSE,
558 Mulberry Street, Macon, Ga.
N.B.-Our pianos took all premiums
the State Fair, ot 1889. Plano* represent
ed by other firm* took not a single pre
mium. Merit will toil.
Feb. 18,189G 33 ly
Croup, Whooping Oongh and b> ouoht-
tls immediately reflevedby Shiloh's Cure.
For sale by E. A, Bayne.