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UNION-RECORDER.
Pnbllnhed Weekly In Milledgeville, Gs.
BY BARNES^OOREA SON.
The*' FBnKRAI. UN ION ”a nut he'SOUTHERN
RKi30RDER”vyereooniolldateil,AaguHtlBt ) l87J.
ttio Uuion being In its Forty-Third Volume ana
tlie Recorder unts Fifty-Third Volume.
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Milledgeville, Qa.
Official Directory.
BALDWIN COUNTY GOVERNMENT:
Judge Superior Court—lion. W. F.
Jenkins. , „ _ T
Solicitor-General—H.G. Lewis.
Senator—Hon. John L. Culver.
Representative-Hon. R. Whttlleld.
Ordinary—M. R-Bell-
Clerk Superior Court—Walter Paine.
HherlfT-C.W. Ennis
County Treasurer—J. M. Edwards,
fax Collector—J. F. Wilson.
Tax Receiver— H. E. Hendrix.
County Surveyor—Miller Grieve.
Coroner—lien Gunse.
Judge County Court—Hon. J. T. Allen.
Jury Commissioners—Sam. Walker, T.
L. McComb, J. C. Whitaker, R. R. Brown,
13. T. Betliune, Joseph Staley.
County Board of Education.—J. N. Moore.
O. M. Cone, T. H. Latimer, Dr. C. W.
Snead; R. N. Lamar, County School Com
missioner.
County Commissioners—Hon. 1). B. San
ford, L. J. Lamar, B. H. Jones.
Justices of the Peace—.1. A. Green, 320th
dist.; T. J. Llngould, 321st diet.; S. J.
Brown, 322nd (list.; G. W. Underwood,
|05th dist.; J. B. O'Quinn. 115th (list.; W. I.
Harper, 31St.h dist-, W. J. T. Ray, 319th
diet.
Notary Public and Ex Officio Justices of
the Peace, G. VV. Caraker, 320th dist.;
John Thomas, 321st (list.; W. R. Fenn,
322nd dist.; J. B. Chandler, 115tli dist.; 0.
D. Myrlck,318th dist. J P. Humphries,
319th dist.
Constables—T. S. Bagley, J. N. Leonard,
320th (list.; T. H. Pott 'r, 321st dist.; E. W.
Winter, 322nd (list.; T. L. A. Tranhaui,
105th diet.; J. J. Simpson, 115th dist.
CITY GOVERNMENT OF MILLEDGEVILLE
Mayor—Hon. Peter J. Cline.
Aldermen—A. Joseph, 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.
WAR statistics:
A BOOK REVIEWING THE LOSSES
SUSTAINED.
THEFEDERALS AND CONFEDERATES
Who Met iii the Recent Unpleas
antness—Views About Some
Important Battles—The Prin
cipal Prisons—The Mon Con
fined There.
Special Correspondence of The Journal.
Atlanta Journal Bureau, >
No. 1427 F. Street, >
Washington, D. C., Jam 11.)
Two thousand regiments containing
2,7i8,304 men, constituted the Union
armies during the civil war. The
confederate muster rolls are incom
plete and so it is impossible' to get an
exact roster of the troops of that side,
hut is estimated that first and last,
1,640,000 southerners were under
arms.
These are enormous figures and
when wo recollect that these hosts
were marshaled at a time when the
population of the country was con
siderably le-s than 40,000,000, the mas
sive military strength of our govern
ment at this period may be approxi
mated .
Colonel William T. Fox, an accom
plished volunteer officer on the union
side, has printed an interesting book
of statistics reviewing the losses sus
tained on both sides during the course
of the war. The figures are given in
detail by regiments, brigade, divis
ions and corps, and are presumably
exact. From this report it is learned
that the union infantry regiment sus
taining tho greatest loss in battle
during the war wus the Fifth New
Hampshire. As many as 295 of its
members were killed outright or mor
tally wounded. The Eighty-third
Pennsylvania Infantry and Seventh
Wisconsin were the next greatest suf-
ferers.
? tOn the confederate side the First
Texas exhibits the largest mortality
list, followed hard by the Twenty first
Georgia and Twenty sixth North
Carolina. The First Texas Regiment
appeared at Gettysburg, 226 strong,
and left 45 men killed outright and
141 wounded on the field—or 82.3 per
centage of their number. This was
frightful. The Twenty-first Georgia
lost 70 per cent of its membership at
the Second Manassas and the Twenty-
sixth North Carolina 71 per cent at
Gettysburg.
The Twenty-eighth Massachusetts
Infantry belonging to Barlow's bri
gade of the second corps, lost 2G0
members, killed or mortally wounded
during its term of service. The Sixty-
ninth New York, of the same brigade,
lost 259.
A confederate regiment, the Eighth
Tennessee, of Donaldson’s brigade,
Cheatham’s division, carried 444- men
into the hotly contested battle of
Stone River, and 300 of them were
stricken dead or wounded.
Tlie sixty-first Pennsylvania lost
nineteen officers, killed, including
three colonels during the progress of
tlie war. This is the greatest loss a
single union regiment sustained
among its officers. The thirty-first
Maine lost eighteen officers killed, the
eighty-seventh Ohio sixteen, and sixth
Wisconsin sixteen.
Colonel Fox estimates the total
union loss killed in actual battle at
110,070, of whom 6,365 were commis
sioned officers. The confederate killed
numbered 74,524.
During the bloody assault on Fort
Wagner, Morris Island, South Caro
lina, tho Eleventh New Hampshire
infantry lost 11 officers, killed and
fatally hurt, the greatest mortality
among the officers sustained by a
regiment in any single battle. Among
the dead was their chivalrous colonel,
whose corpse fell sheer over tlie
parapet of the work and rolled down
among its intrepid defenders.
A singular mortuary fact is shown.
Tlie state of North Carolina lost
double the numberof menkilledof any
of her confederate sisters. With no
more troops in the field than Virginia
or^Leorgia, she contributed the lives
of 677 officers and 13,845 enlisted
men.
Nearly nine thousand South Caro
linians were slain, and Georgia, Vir
ginia and Mississippi, each lost more
than 5,000. The other southern states
suffered to a less extent.
The First Maine Heavy Aitillery
did not take the field until late in tlie
war, and yet in a period of ten months
service they had twenty-three officers
and four hundred privates shot to
death. This was a very large com
mand, however, almost as large as a*
Prussian regiment.
Colouel Fox thinks that Waterloo
and Gettysburg were the two decisive
battles of tlie age, At Waterloo,^),-
000 Frenchmen, many of them youth
ful conscripts, attacked the British
position defended by 72,000 red coats.
Napoleon brought into action 252
guns and Wellington 176. The|French
being the assailing party lost 25,000
men in combat and in the subsequent
route. The English lost was 9,999.
AtGettisburg the confederates were
the assailants. Lee had on tiie field
60,000 veterans, seasoued by a dozen
campaigns. His batteries numbered
250 guns. The union army, accord
ing to CoIonePFox, was 82,000 strong,
with 300 superb guns that swept the
field, carrying death far and near.
The estimated union casualties at
Gettysburg were 20,000, the con
federate 27.000, in round numbers.
Colonel Fox has divided the union
dead among tlie three principal arms
of tlie service as follows: Infantry
5.4G1 officers, 91,424 men; cavalry C71
officers, 9,925 men; artillery, light and
heavy, 121 officers, and 11,626 men.
Tlie number of deaths from disease
in the two armies was phenomenally
large, being more than double the
the casualties of battle. As many as
199,720 uuion soldiers perished by
sickness. The mortality from disease
seeuiB to have been heaviest in the
colored regiments. A feature of tlie
hospital statistics, is that a Vermont
brigade encamped in Virginia in 1861,
lost scores of men by disease, while
other regiments bivouacked in the
same vicinity were practically exempt.
This is thought to be singular because
the Vermonters excelled in cleanliness
and intelligence.
The principal confederete prison was
located at Andersonviile, Georgia,
and the largest Federal prison at
Elmira, New York.
Botli were open stockades, known
in the harsh vernacular of the army
a* “bull pens.” At Andersonviile,
first and last, 45,613 union soldiers
were confined, 12,912 of whom died,
or 28 per cent, of the whole. At
Elmira 11,916 confederates were irn
prisoned of whom 2,994 died or about
25 percent, of the whole. These dead
confederates were buried in a vast
field near the stookade—now cultiva
ted, and their names and graves are
alike obliterated. At Andersonviile the
government has establishedabeau’iful
Scrofula
Is the most ancient and most general of an
diseases. Scarcely a family Is entirely free
from It, while thousands everywhere are Its
suffering slaves. Hood’s Sarsaparilla has
had remarkable success in curing every form
of scrofula. Tho most severe and painful
running sores, swellings In the neck or
goitre, hnmor In the eyes, causing partial
or total blindness, yield to tho powerful
effects of this medicine. It thoroughly re
moves every impurity from tho blood.
“My little daughter’s life was saved, as
we believe, by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Ilefore
she was six months old she had 7 running
scrofula sores. One physician advised the
amputation of one of her lingers, to which
we refused assent. 'When we began giving
her Hood’s Sarsaparilla, a marked improve
ment was noticed and by acontluued use of it
her recovery was complete. And she is now,
being seven years old, strong and healthy.”
B. C. Jones, Aina, Lincoln County, Me.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, pi; six for $5. Prepared by
G. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One-Dollar
May 6,1890. 41ew.lv.
for Infants and Children.
“Cast orla is so well adapted to children that.
I recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to mo.'’ H. A. Abchxb, M. D„
111 So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y.
“Tho use of Tnstviria’ Is so universal and
Its merits so well knewn that it seems a work
of supererogation toendorso it. Few are tho
intelligent families who do not keep Castoria
within easy reach."
CXBUX MiSTYN. I). r>..
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomlngdale Reformed Church.
Cast aria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhoea, Eructation,
kills Wcinu, gives sloop, and promotes di-
TYr
gestion,
ithout injurious medication.
“ For several years I havo recommended
your ‘ Castoria, ’ and shall always continue to
do so as it hoa invariably produced beneficial
results.”
F.pwin F. Pabubb, M. D.,
“The Winthrop," 128th Street and Tth Ave.,
New York City.
Tme Centacr (Vn.rA.vY, 77 Murray Street, Nicw York.
Jail. 1, 1891.
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH, RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND
• ,,™* °* 16I **V * N ,° OCNUINE. Till- only Safe, Harr, soil rrU.M. rill for a.].,
Mulles, luk Ihvsp.t for Uiclolir ■ Kn.iluX liiamond Brand to Hod and I...U1 nu-nillio
” 7 th ribbon. Take ao other kind. H.futa Sui.MlutWn. and InUaHom.
dr. V. Li" ° ■»«*•. ptsl wr.,.jirr«, »r- dsnnreons eon n ter frits. At «ni|[,liu. or .rod a.
tlM.IT tor vsntostsM, testimonial., »nd "UrlTef fer Indira,- in Irfi.r, to return Mall.
to. Otto T.,urhml.il. Nan. Honor. r .... — — - —- -■
Said hj nil I.oral itraifflatn.
Jan. 19 1892
cemetery, and into this tlie bodies of
tlie victims of prison life have been
gathered, and over them tlie national
ensign floats perpetually. The
stockade has long since disappeared.
Altogether 24,860 union soldjersdied in
southern prisous and 30,152 confed
erates died in northern prisons. The
cruel treatment accorded to prisoners
of war, north and south, supplies a
sad chapter in our national history,
a history whose every page is illumin
ed by their valor and achievements.
Fourteen division commanders, with
tiie rank of major general, five brevet
major generals, twenty-three briga
diers and twenty-three brevet briga
diers, were killed on the union side.
Seven major generals commanding
divisions and sixty-two brigadiers
were killed on tlie side of tiie con
federates. It seems that there were
no officers of a brevet rank in tlie
southern army. .
it appears from these figurts that
tlie casualties among officers of super
ior rank were about equally divided
between the combatants. Major
General McPherson, who fell at At
lanta in July, 1864, was the only army
commander slain on tlie uuion side.
Albert Sidney Johnson, who command
ed tlie confederate army at tlie battle
Shiloh, lost his life in that fateful
conflict. Major Generals Mansfield,
Reynolds and Sedgwick, union corps
commanders, were killed. Lieuten
ant Generals Polk, Jackson and Am
brose P. Hill, corps commanders in
tiie southern army, were killed. Geu-
erai Polk was an Episcopal bishop at
tlie outbreak of tiie war. His death
was both singular and sad. It oc
curred near New Hope church, Geor
gia, during the campaign to Atlanta.
In company witli other officers ofhigh
rank—Hardee, W. H. T. Walker nnd
others, lie was observing the federal
lines from an outpost. The brilliant
uniforms of tlie group attracted tiie
attention of a union battery, which
instautly opened fire. One of tlie
first shots struck General Polk and
passed through his body, breaking
both hit yms. He never spoke, but
was lifted from his suddle a corpse.
The battery from which tlie shot is
sued was distant quite a mile.
The average height of the Americnn
soldier engaged in tlie late war was 5
ft, 8i in. Maine, Indiana, Iowa, Mis
souri and Kentucky supplied the
tallest men. Thirteen per cent of the
sjldiers had black, twenty four per
cent light hair, and three per cent red
hair. Forty-eight per cent of the
union army were farmers and a much
larger per cent of the confederates
were tillers of the soil, thus illustrat
ing that the brunt of war usually
falls upou this class of citizens. Only
five per cent of the soldiers were
tradesmen, and less than that (three
per cent) were professional men.
Every story has its moral, even a
«tatistical story. The losses sustained
by the country during the civil war
were grievous, but it should be borne
in mind that ail governments owe
their existence to the sacrifices of their
people, and are cemented with the
blood of heroes.
The civil war was not fought in
vain. The results of the revolution
are substantial. It re-united the
states indissolubly. It established,
in tlie eyes of the world, the stability
of our popular form of government,
and last, but not least, it illustrated
the prowese of the American soldier
and the patriotism of the American
citizen. E. P. Speer.
Brewer’s Lung Restorer cures
coughs and colds without bad after
results as it conta ins no opiates.
29 4t.
A Boy's Essay on Girls,
Girls is great on making blerve.
Site will make bleeve a doll is a live
baby. She will make bleeve she is
orful sweet on another girl ora feller,
if they come to see her, and when
they are irone she will say, “Horrid
old thing!”
Girls is ul ways fooling a feller. Slit*
can’t lick ver, soshe gets the best of
yer that way.
If yer don’t do what a girl tells ver,
she says yer horrid. Idrather be hor
rid than besoft. If you do what a
girl lells you, you wilt do all sorts u!
foolish tilings.
Girls can he good in school every
day if they feel like it. 1. shod tiiiuK
they would get tired-ami have to do
suiuthiiig wouse in awhile; I know ti
feller does. Girls say fellers act or-
ftxlI, but when a .girl gits a-going it
she acts order than any feller durst.
They don't care for nothing.
If a girl wants a feller to carry her
books home, she ain’t satisfied unless
she gets the same feller the other girls
want, whet her sin* likes him or not.
Girls is grate on having secrets. 1
mean telling secrets. They make a
secret, out of nothing at all. and then
tell it round to all the other girls, or
fnl quiet, just as if it was sumihiug
dreadful.
Girls always git their joggerfry les
sons better than a feller, tint it thev
are going any where they are sure to
gp lost.
If two fellers lias a Hte, the girls all
go for the fellow that IJcks, no mat
ter wnether lie is good for unything
else or not.
If a girl don't feel like doing a tiling,
you can’t muke her, no matter wheth
er she had ortt-r or not. If she won’t,
she won’t; and she will git out. of it
somehow. That is all 1 Kuo about
girls this time.
The Southern Situation
Has been a puzzle to tlie President,
and many wouid be statesmen have
aired their petty opinions through
tlie press anti on the stump. A ques
tion of still greater moment is how shall
I rid myself of malaria. Tlie ques
tion is easily answered if you will on
ly tuke one bott le of Dr. Westmore
land’s Calisaya Tonic, tiie greatest
anti-periodic nud stimulant of tiie
age. It will purify your blood, give
you an appetite and make you fe
like yourself again.
This remedy is sold bf E. A. Bayne,
at 50 cents and #1.00 a bottle.
Many years practice have given
C. A. Snow A Co., Solicitors of
Patents, at Washington, 1). C.,
unsurpassed success in obtaining
patents for all classes of inventions.
They muke a specialty of rejected
eases, and have secured allowance
of many patents that had been pre
viously rejected. Their advertise
ment in another column, will be of
interest to inventors, patentees,
manufacturers, and all who have to
do witli patents.
Dr Lyman Abbott, in tlie Christian
Uuion: So long as there are women
in cities who buy their food only by
selling their womanhood, so long as
there are men in tlie rich coal fields of
Illinois that must stand without,
shivering at the door, with pick in
hand and muscle ready for work,
while wealth locks tlie coal fields up
against* them and n shivering popula
tion; so long as in tlie iron fields of
Pennsylvania men work 12 hours a
day, witli uo time to court their wives
or kiss their children, so long my
hand and my heart are enlisted in
any aud everv niovment that give*
tair promise for the emancipation of
man by the emancipation of industry.
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria,
When she was a Child, sbe cried for Castoria,
Wlien she became Mias, she clung to Castoria,
When she had Children, she gave them Castoria,
Three
times
a day
Take Roy’s blood purifier three
times a day, before meals, if you
are troubled with any skin or blood
disease—full directions with each
D 9 bottle. Ask your
AVOy S druggist for it.
Aug. 19. 1890. 7 lyrr
an 1 stmac tm
To euro Biliousness, Sick Hcadncho, Consti
pation, Materia, Liver Complaints, tako
tho safe and certain remedy,
SMITH’S
Vse Ific SHAM. M?.«* (40 little Beans to tho
bottle). THEY AUB TUB MUST CONVENIENT.
Suitable lor nil Acen
Price of cillier nir.e. li5c. per IlnKls.
I “
5 AT ■ “it I * * tf PANEL SIZE.
I Mailed for*4cts. (copper* or* tafafu*).
J.(.SMITH IsCO.Moieriof"! i!J.l:KAS.‘i,"ST. ICiOIS MO.
March 4, 1890. 35 ly.
New Advertisements.
PATADDU 1 :ure d- Write for sample, rnrr
uAIAnnn lai-ukkbac* company, rntt
Newark, X. j.
BEATTY’S PIANOS
talogu - address Ex-Mayor DANIEL F. IlEAtTT
Washington N. J.
OPIUM
MORPHINE. LAUD-
ADUM habits cured
in 2 to 4 weeks. No
pay In advance. 5000
cured Trial fr^o If sent
for at once. Whisky and Tobacco habits
also cured. B. 8. Pispensary Co., Berrien
Splints, Midi.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cl<**n*e* and bssutiftcf th* hsir.
Promote! a luxuriant growth.
Newer Falls to Restore Gray
Hair to it» Youthful Color.
Curt* >calp di*ea*e* & hair failing.
YOU CONSUMPTIVE
Weak l.ung*, Debility, Indigestion, Pain,Take In time.60cts.
MINDERCORN8. The only sure cure for Coma.
Stop* aTlpaiu. Dc. at Druggiata, of UISCOX It CO., N. Y.
BOILING WATER OR MILK
EPPS’S
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING.
COCOA
LABELLED 1-2 LB. TINS QNLY.
OH MY BACK!
rhy suffer?
ill-c
AtUirMa,
Jiin.21.lH00.
nr all tin
rr*. Failure i
SKW and wo:
II. Ilftll««ai Ar **© ]
$3000
,yr;
mn.r Hem-
it.rftd. r.rd* til.r, fi...
.rlUvI.M.tn.
1 undertake to briefly
Ywarln tUrlrowM localities,
the situation or employ mrn
No money for ins unless surecetlul •• i
learned I deeire hut on# worker from
have already taught and provided w
number, who are niaklnf over ftOOO
HOI. I II. Full parliruli
A YKA II !
teach any fairly iiitemy« in p. rs»m oi rimer
a mu rend and wrritn, and who,
itrnrtinn, w ill work induatrioaaly,
earn Tkree Tbaaaaad Hollar, a
|ere ver they live.I will alrofurtilah
it w hi. h yen ran earn that amount,
faalul aa ahnw. Fnaily and qulrkky
liatrlct or county. I
“ihiTiiSaW
FKKF.. Ad
liy
and sufWing. But <
Dr. Urosvernor's Bell-cap-slc
Porous Plaster will relieve you
in one night, sure. Bend s pen
ny stamp to Uiosvenor * Rich-
arils. Boston, Mass., and learn
how to remove a porous plaster
scientifically—it will pay you —
and don’t lorget that tho beet
porous plaster in the world has
the picture of n t>ell on the black-
cloth, and Is called
DR.GRObVENOR’S
BELL-CAP-SIC.
Jan. 19. 1891. 29 4t.
Central Railroad
OF GEORGIA.
(90th Meridian Time.)
Schedule in effect Murch 00, 1890.
FOUR DAILY TtlAINS —MACON TO ATLANTA
Lv Macon 8.30am. 17.00am. 1.40 pm 5 55 imi.
At Atlanta 7.00am. 11 l)0uui5.4u put tio.iopm
t line train stops only ut DaruesvlUe,
linilln ana Knot Point.
Between Macon and Columbus.
Lv Macon....
Ar. Columbus
3 25 a m 3 OOp ui
7.45 a in .... 7.50 p m
double daily seuvick
To Savannah and Jacksonville:
Lv Macon, 10.50 a m. 11.50 pm
Ar Savannah 5 55 p in. 6.30 a m
At'Jacksonville 7.55am. 12 00 m.
ToTnoiuMSvlile ,t Jacksonville via Albany;
Lr Macon 6.15 pm. 10.05am
Ar Albany til.20 p in. 2.40 p m
Ar 1 noinasvllle 5.20 p m
Ar JauBBunvIile 7,55 a m
tThls train will not stop between Macon
anil F®rt Valiev.
Between M iici n
and Augusta via MUiaii
Lv Macon
Al.Mlllen
Ar Augu- ta
... .10.50 a m
.... 3.1U p 111
11.50p m
3715 p in
6.50 a iu
To ColuniliUi- and birmingliam :
Lv Macon
Ar l ollinibus.
Ai bumliigbaiii..
. ... 8 15 a m
3.55 pm..
l 50 p m
7.05 p m
To Mllledgevlll.
e and Eatontori
Lv Macon...
Ar Milledgeville..
Ar Eatonlon
2 45 pm
.-.4.15pm
From Eatonlon
ami Milledgeville;
Lv Eaton ton
Lv Milledgeville.
Ar Gordon
Ar baVamiuh
Ar Macon
...8.20 a m
.. 9.40 a m
. .ll.iio a m
..6 55 p m
Ar Atlanta 5.40 p in
Arrtvuls at Macon from ;
Atlanta 10 35 n in 11 -Jo 6 J5
uoluintlUb 10.25 a m 11 411 n hi
Alnuity — 6.10am... 10.40 a lr * ’ * *
Savannah '... 8 U5 a m 1.20 p in.
Eat on ton *1 20 p m ..........
"Dally'except Sunday.
in.I HOI.I l>. lull particular. FH r.r.. »■<■*,
K.C, AI-.l-.fcN. JUx 4*0, Auciuiu, Alulnv.
lr. by tkM* #f
old, m4 !• t*«4r
it luralilie*,w hertvtr they Hv*. Any
van do the work. K«*y to iMrn.
W# famish •verytblnf. W* atait ^iu. No ri*k. You c*« devote
yoar epsre mementv, <>r sll your time to the work. 'I hie I* *n
entirely new lend.end bring* w onderful eurcre* te every wmker.
Berlnnere ere earning from fH Xo |>*r week and uywarda,
and mora alter a little experience. We can furnish yoa the tm-
plnviiM iit aud teach yon FKKF. No tjmee to explain her*. Full
information H4KK. 'l’llUfc dr fO., AlUtSlA, BAI.ML
1890* 24 ly
FREE
h locality can secure one
B, together with our lar*«
itluablr hue of llouarheeltl
Ull‘1. Th»’*c auiH|.iv*,a* well
•h, arc fm*. All the work you
ho call-your
need uo la to akow what w.
friends and neighbor* and thoe* "b«.ut you —that
In valuable trade for u*. w Inch hold* for yi ars whe
• 1,4 ihu. «» nr. W« p.y „ll fxpreM. fu-iirlit,
t know you
» are repaid. W» pay nil express. Height
11 If you would like to go to work tor
..... (Kim 4,20' to *«0 P«' *«l •nd upward.. jldrfr,w,
Otln.ua «lc Co., llux SlttS, l*ortluntl, Maine.
No iuad has a right to eat his fill
while his neighbor is hungry.
Jan. 21 189h,
29 ly-
Tab'ets for sshool exercises for eale at
this office
SOLID I RAINS
are run toand limn Macmi and Columbus.
Montgomery, Albany, Savannah and At-
laniu. Sleeping cars on night Gains.
Passengers iui I lionmsiou take either
7 oo u m or 1 * > p. m. i rain. Passengers for
Carrollton lake etiher 3.30 a. in. or 7.00
a. m. train, Phss ugera for P»*rrv tntrA
rtithci 10.10 a. m. or 7 00 p. nj train, l^aswm-
kers to! tort Galilee, Buena Vista,.Blake
ly and Clayton should take 10.10a m train
ra-sengeis fm S> lvanin, Wnghtsville and
Sandersville lake iu 5i ». m. train
. ,. , J HE “CENTRAL”
Is the only line from Macon making con
nection in Union las.enger Depot at At
lanta with through trains for the north
east and the north went. It is the line to
rely upon for sp.-ed, safety and comfort;
theruuie, look to your Interest and use It
when you travel.
Savannah Fast Frkioht and Pas-
oKnohh Link
Between New Volk, boston, Philadelphia,
ami all points South and -outhwest, via
Central UiiL.iad of Georgia and Ucuau
oUNimnnip Company.
1 his line i.- operated under one manage
ment between Atlaiii-. tin.! New York.Bos-
l"it am I IlllndeJphia, ai.d can therefore
olTer the Best and Mist Expeditious
fc might. Line between Ihr-se Points.
in connection with the Merchants’and
Miners I runspnrtutinn Co., we offer a
tlrsl-class treight line fi jtn and to balti-
inore, sleamahlps sailing from each port
every live days.
For rui therluforrnatlon, rates, etc., ap
ply to v
HENRY YONGE. Agent.
_ Mucon, Ga.
W. P. DAWSON, Passenger Agent,
411 Fourth St., Maeon.Oa.
BURR BROW N, Oity Ticket Agent,
r r „. Lanier, Macon, Ga.
L. J. HARRIS, Ticket Agent,
r. Bass. Depot, Macon, Ga.
E. T. OJIARLTON, Gen'i. Pass. AgC..
. „ Savannah, Ga.
1 A. D.Nisdkt, Agt.,MillodgevlHe.Ga.