Newspaper Page Text
days until the uteri not sober. If you
license ruuiselling to make uteri so
her. then why not license thieving to
luuke them honest, ami prostitution
to make them virtuous.”
On the educative influences of the
struggle against the su non find for
prohibition, the St. .Louis Glol.e
|Democrat makes these good points:
! 'The boy observes that a man to sell
ior consume liquor must act like a
jsue'ik-thief. Hardly a week pa-ses
| that does not leave the memory of
a liquor chase cr trial in which the
i offenders ure pursued in much the
same way one would suppose a thief
to be pursued. And the boy knows
this. If he should want a drink
I he would pause and think quite a
I while before he would take it. It
would not be like pushing through a
Freeport, I.I., began to fall rapidly, lost nil ^ swinging door, behind which are
Of course, it is
prohibition will
Mrs. inn in nr Lohr
'Ot Freeport, III., began to fail rapidly, iosi nil 1 "winding
appetite and got Into a serious condition from 'lights and music.
_ - o. la ---* no t expected that
Dyspepsia Sho couW not eat ' vc " ,v
toast (li«trossi'd In r
work. In a week at
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
tables or meat, and even j absolutely prohibit in this generation
but the effect is pre
! generations to come.
toast distressed tier. Hail to give up house- U, u t the effect ia prohibitory on the
work. In a wcok utter taking 1
Siht lclta little better. Could keep more food
*>n Tier stomach and grew stronger. She took
n battles, Ini' ■ good nppetite, gainr.l ‘J'J 1 )>•;.,
•foe i her work easily, is now In perfect heal til.
HOOD'C PllL” iwo the best after-dinner
Pi.!». Tiiey as.i&i digest! m amt euro headache
There are upward of 20,COO public
houses in Loudon—one to every 200
people. There are nearly 4,000 clubs
for young men—such as dadcing
Which are to reach the State de-jy
partment in time to be used as cam- j »
paign documents, statements charg- f
iiu that bu«in depression exists »
in the country where they arc j g
‘stationed and that it was caused by | <>
the McKinley tariff law. The re |g
ports are already beginning to
couie in, and to be circulated, al
though it is not plain how it is
expected to influence any votes
with such palpably made to
order reports. The average Amer
ican lias a thinking appara
tus of his own, which he has not
forgotten bow to use.
Representative Mitchell, of Wis
consin, chairman of the democratic
Congressional campaign committee
will not be able to come to Wash
ington until about the 1st of Sep
tember, but when he comes he will
stick to his desk until the close of
the campaign. In his absence Mr.
Lawrence Gardner, Secretary of
the committee, and also Secretary
*•«.#«*>***.
“MOTHERS
L 'clubs, social clubs, betting clubs—all , of .the National Association of Dem-
June 29. 18k:
52 Jyr.
JMIWETHER TEMPERANCE UNION.
retying mainly upon drink for their
fiuanc'al sucees?. These are rapidly
increasiue in number.
Washington Letter.
ocratic clubs, is in charge of the
headquarters, which is a very busy
place. Many thousand documents
are dailv being sent out bv the com-
Makss Ohild Birth Easy,
2 Shortens Labor,
• Lessens Pain,
• Endorsed by the Leading Physicians. |
• Jinok 1o “Moth malied VREK. •
• BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. •
• ATLANTA, GA. *
• SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. ]
Mavl9.1891. 4ticm
ACTIOS OF ALCOHOL
ON THK
M. ]>.. F. It. S.,
r to tin* actiiMi
htlinau system
A representative of the New
York Times, writing on prohibition
m Kansas states: "Tue opponents of
this law assert that the driving out
•of the saloons has caused a stugna
&ion in business in all the cities, and
this law is responsible for the [ires-
<**nt dull times. And yet Topeka,
with no saloons, has been growiu
while Wichita, with saloons, ha
From Our Regular Correspondent.
Washington, Aug. 15th, 18U2.
Hon Adlai Stevenson will take a
much more prominent part in the
campaign than it luts been "custom
ary for tli Vice l'eesidentia! liotni-
•onstitution | iiee to do. beginning on the 1st of
September, lie lias written friends
in this city, he will take the field
and remain on the stump until the
eiul of the fight. He will do his
j first work in Indiana, and when the
anniversary of the birth of that
| sterling old democrat of democrats,
\. Hendricks, is i
celebrated at Indianapolis on Sep
tember 7, he will be one of the
principal speakers as lie will also be
at the monster gathering of demo
crats at French Lick Springs, just
afterward. The last two weeks of
September he .will spend on the
stump in North Carolina, and all
of October, with the exception of
several single speeches in New
York state, he devote to making
“the grandest effort of his life" to
put Illinois in the democratic col-
; utu nto stay.
I Postmaster Dalton, of the House
of Representatives who has just
gone home to take part in the cam
paign, generally manages to keep
'pretty well posted on Indiana poli-
lties without neglecting other local
ities, and lie does not believe there
is the slightest foundation for the
That*! story that J udge Gresham had de
cided to take the stump for Weaver,
a'thottgli as a good democrat he
sincerely wishes the report wye I Not only doe
true, as it would remove all doubt
about the electoral votes of indiaua.
Mr. Dalton's opinion about < rresbam
carries considerable weight here be
cause of the prestige lie gained
sometime ago, when everybody else
regarded tile nomination of Gres
ham by the Omaha convention as
certain, by stoutly* maintaining
that Gresham would not accept.
Secretary Charles Foster is away
up in “g" in Ohio polities, which
means that there are few tricks with
which he is not acquainted. Mr.
Harrison, having failed in all his
efforts to “placate”’ Doss Tom Platt,
[called on Secretary Foster for help,
and lie quickly evolved a scheme
to tiring Boss Platt to time. He knew
that the most vulnerable point of
| the New Y’ork boss was his pocket,
j and it was through his pocket that
I the secretary put his first shot by
refusing to pay the sf00,000 charged
I hv the express companies for trans
porting $2 J,000,000 in gulil from San
■ Francisco to New York, and by
BODY.
It. W. Richardson,
of England, ref«*rrin,
of Alcohol upon the
says:
I had ieartii d purely by observa
tion that, in its actions on the liv
lug body, the chemical substance
alcohol, deranges tin*
of the blood, unduly excites the
heart and respirati: n, paralyzes
the minute bloodvessels, increases
and decreases acc. idiiig to the de
gree nf its application, the func
tions of digestive organs, of the liv
er and the kidneys, disturbs tue reg
nl&rriy of the nervous action, low
ers the iminial t.-nipciatme and les-
•eontbe muscular power. Such, in-j the late Tliomat
depend uitly of any prejudice of
paity, or influence of sentiment,
are the unanswerable teachings of
the sternest of all evidences,
tins evidence of experiment, of
jiatnial fact revealed to man by
ex [k> i ime n tul testing of nature
phenomena. It be.ins by destroy
ing, it ends with destruction,
and it implants organic changes
which progress In lependonily of its
liresencu even in those who are not
born.
Ten “1 futures on Alcohol,” pub
'ished by the National Temperance
'Society, contain tlm ablest discours
es upon the question ever presented,
i’riie* M cents in paper, $1 00 in
ickV'h.
THK C OMMON EX KM Y.
Tin* Union Signal says: “A saloon
i-iglif across from a school house has
L-sdrelf outside just high enough for
oMldma to reach easily. few
nmotes before recess or iutertuis
-tot. glasses of lemonade are set out
".Imre and tile thirsty children flock
around mud drink it up eagerly
mm iivadc has "a stick ill it," and
sinv-i ml s for something stronger,
'JVxe sign in the window, “Sweet <’i
Cor free,"has. as it w as intended to do
tempted many a country boy to en
ter a, saloon, and the old story of
the spider and tile fly is enacted
over again. Cigaietes deadly
•enough to their natiie ugliness,
are made to minister to the drink
iwbit by being tinctured with wins
■key and opium, all these traps for
ibe young are spread openly, and
pupisnts, less wise than the nirils in
whose sight the Bible says it is vain
1*»-sprmd snare, [inss right by un
thinking while their children arc
mijsimied. Many of these traps can
be removed by law, but the onlv
su.e defense against them is such
teaching as will ingrain-the very na
itiiM* of the child with that ha
tred of 1 i <j ii or and tobacco which
the know ltdgi of their real effects
ripen the human system implants."
nil sections. Senator Carlisle’s re
cent tarilT speech has already
reached 250,000, and orders for it are
still coming in. Henry George's
‘Protection or Free trade’ is having
a [ihHqpmenal run. Representative
White's (of Iowa) tarilT speech has
been widely circulated in English,
and now a half million copies of it
are being printed in German. There
is u great demand* from the South
for the speech delivered by Repre
sentative Henderson,Republican, of
Iowa, showing up the public record
uf Weaver. The campaign text
book will be ready in about two
weeks.
Mr. Gardner was asked what he
thought of the outlook, and iie re
plied. “On the whole g3oil. There
are some puzzles that may worry us
a little before we get through, but
there is no question as to which par-
1 ty will control the next house. I
have no figures to give out, now,
but it is our house just the same.”
The Temptation
I To go out of doors in rough weat her
is not strong, but we arc, many of u>,
compelled to face rough weather fre
quently. Diseases which arise from
a chill are peculiar to no season of
the year. This is true, therefore there
should be in tin* closet of every house
holil—what': Not an umnedicated
stimulant, absolutely devoid of any-
! thing hut an excitive action, but a
touic combining, in the effective form
of an iovigoraut and an alterative,
tlie quality of defeuce against changes
1 of weather, llostetter's Stomach Bit
ters has three or four properties that
no other arti ie of Its class possesses.
it rtlieve tiie com
plaints which if eventually cures, it |
fortifies the system against the bad
effects of changes of temperature,
fatally aud too often shown in the
deadly form of “la grippe;” it pro
duces a radical change in the weak
ened condition of a system peculiarly
liable to be attacked by if, aud it
tends to provide against the danger
resulting from an impoverished con
dition of the blood aud a disordered
taste of the liver or bowels.
Plowing Wet Land.
The plowing of wet land is always
j to be avoided, for the reasou that it
makes the sod hard and lumpy and
I difficult to break up under the har
row. It is worse on clay land which
l may be so injured that years of after
cultivation may not bring it in good
condition again. The effect of the
plow on the soil is to compress the
laud aud plaster the surface so as to
prevent it from becoming pulverized
I either by the weather or by the bar-
row. The c ods will remain for years
before they cau be broken down
again. Light, sandy soil is l.ot so
i much damaged, but the subsoil in all
BEWARE IS-
r ic e d
B u y
Cheap at Wholesale Rates.
A Few
Sample Prices:
Pastor Koening Nerve Tonic.
....68c
Harter's Wild Cherry Bitters
7oc
Mother’s Friend
99c
California Svrup of Figs
34c
Sages Catarrh Cure—
34 c
Pierce’s Pills
15c
Pierce’s Golden DiscovoryGO*'
Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
69c
Swift's Specific (S. S. S) 59
and 99c
Botanic Blood Bairn (B. ]!. 1>.
Dr. John Bull's Sarsaparilla...
Dr. John Hull's Worm Candy.
15c
< 'hichppter s Peunvroya.1 Pill*.
....$1.67
| Brown's Iron Bitters
71c
Shiloh’s Catarrh Cure
85c
! Shiioh’s (’onsuuiption Cure..
34 o
Shiloh’s Plasters
12c
1 McElree's Wine Oordni
,7i5c
j Black Dra uglu
15c 1
| King’s New Discoverv
34c
Parker’s Hair Balsam
35c
1 Hinder Corns
10c
Castoria
25c
Injection G
P. P. P
7«3c
68c
Hire’s Root Beer
18c
Tutt's Pill 13c 2 boxes for 25c
Carter’s Pills 13c 2 boxes for 25c
Beecham’s I’ills
17c
Powers and Weightmaus morphine37c
^'Everything else in proportion.
Express charges are usually
25 cents
per package under five poutu!
8.
Address.
JACOB’S PHARMACY.
ATLANTA GA.
HETTIITNIi & Moonx.
HEAL ESTATE AGENTS.
Millkdgk villi:, Ga.
Choice Cut Lots
[& R SI BENCES,
For Sale!
MILLEDGEVILLE PROPER.
TY INCREASING AT A
PHENOMENAL RATE.
\ G ^^M residence, acre lot, oh
I vj east Hancock street.
A Nick Residknck at Midway
Fob Salk.—A pretty and comfor
table residence, six rooms, five acres
excellent water. Nine acres of [and
additional sold with the place if
desired. The owner is anxious to
sell and will give a bargain. Call
on Bkthunk & Mookk
Real Estate Agents.
$1,200 will buy a pretty and com
fortable cottage at Midway. Five
acres. Accommodating terms.
S IX room residence, cook and dining
room attached; good well of water
and good out houses; acre lot. Price
$1,500. Apply to
BET HUNK & MOORE,
Real Estate Agents.
Two good plantations, one in Bald
win county, containing 1001 acres,
and one in Hancock county, contain
ing 850 acres, are offered for siie by
Bethune & AloorJ, Real Estate
Agents.
$>150 will buy a nice two story four
j room residence, one and a half acres
Is now under the management ot Dr. J. E. ' 1 ,, ar L£ W * , f il, 'f“’ the ,, u< ?, rt J?-
Green, formerly of Augusta, who will con- j^ v estem |> niton of the city. Gall on
RELIEVES all Stomack Distress.
REMOVES Nausea, Sense of FulllIftW,
Congestion, Pain.
REVIVES Failing ENERGY.
RESTORES Normal Circulation, and
Wabiu to toe Tips,
0B. HARTER MI0ICINR CO.. St. Louis, No.
Jan. 2(5, 1892. . 30 I y
HILLMAN, G-A.,
-AS A-
Summer Resort
Is Excelled by None as to
CLIMATE AND LOCATION.
At Hillman, (In-, the most wonderful
vail of nature has been brought to Ii'
rht,
years past accomplished some of the most
table cures of Rheumatism, Nervous
Prostration. Insomnia and Kidney Trou-
Tlie waters from the various springs
surpassed for tiu-ir curative [towers,
ally in Kidney Diseases, Female
THE ELECTRIC KGUND: HOTEL
Groceries ar.& Provisions.
I keep constantly on hand a
fresli and desirable stock of Gro
ceries, Provisions and Country
Produce at prices to suit the
times. Give me a call and be
convinced. A fresh lot of garden
seed at low prices. If you need
a good buggy or wagon seo me
before buying.
B. P. STEVENS.
Milledgeville, Ga., Feb. 18, "92. 83 tf.
duck it as a First Class Resort, giving
I special attention to the table.
Amusements will be provided for the
The Dancing Hall, Croquet Grounds and
Base Hail Grounds will be ready by May
lGt.h.
Every effort will be made to ninke t he
patrons enjoy their sojourn at Hillman.
The Electric, Sulphur and other waters
furnished guests freeof charge,
RATES TWO DOLLARS PER DAY.
Special Rates by Weely or Month.
Commencing May 14th, 1892,
THE GEORGIA R. R.
Will give the following low round trip
rates. Tickets to tie sold on Saturdays
and Sundays, good to return Monday fol
lowing :
Warrenton to Hillman and return... .$ 75.
Sparta to Hillman and return 1 25.
Milledgeville to Hillman and return 1 95.
Silicon to Hillman and return 2 90.
Norwood to Hillman and return 50.
Ten days and regular summer excursion
tickets will he sold at very low rates.
All round trip tickets are of iron clad
form, and have to bo signed and stamped
at Hillman, before they will be accepted
for return passage.
You will not find a more healthy resort,
in the country than llillmnn. If you de
sire any turther information, write to or
call upon
JOE W, WHITE. A. G. JACKSON,
Trav. Pass. Agt. Geu. Pass. Agt.
AUGUSTA, ffA.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County,
Court of Ordinary, )
At Chambers, July 29. 1892.)
W HEREAS, a petition was filed iti
this office ou the 25th day of
June, 1892, sigued by more than one
tentli of the qualified voters of said
county, asking that an election be
held in said county to determine
whether or not spirituous liquors
should be sold in said county. And,
whereas, said petition was duly filed
and recorded in conformity with the
law, in this office. And, whereas, an
•election was ordered to be held on
the 28r.h day of July, 1892, to deter
mine whether or not such spirituous
liquors should he sold in said county.
And, whereas, such election wa« held
on the 28th day of July, 1892, and the
managers of said election having in
duo form made this return to me in
terms of the law. Aud alter a careful
examination of said return, it appear
ing that the whole number of yotes
cast at said election was
558 votes.
For the Sale, 328 “
Against the sale 238 “
Majority for the Sale, 98 “
It is therefore ordered and adjudged
by the court, that a majority of
• iii i . u ninety-eight (98) votes was cast for
.ses is made hard and compact by lhe ga , e of Mloh Bp i r it„ous liquors
it Ol tl)W hOltf Of tiUJ .»c jx nipnt innttil in tlm SJivMi
Georgia Business College,
IVtACON, GA,
A SCHOOL FOR THE TIMES.
One of the best equipped institutions in
the United States.
*
Actual Business Practice,
Vetlnine A Moore, real estate agents
For Sale or Exchange.
A store house and dwelling, consis
ting of a six room residence and store,
all under one roof, corner lot. size ol
x 70, at Gordon. Price $1,000 cash.
Also one store house and lot 20x50 on
Main street, Gordon. Price $200.
Or, the owner wdl exchange the
above property for a dwelling House
in .Milledgeville.
Also, a gin outfit complete, with a
(P. horse power upright engine for
$900. or a 8 horse horizontal engine
for $80 9 Terms to suit purchaser, or
will exchange for Milledgeville pro
P Tty.
Also, a new grist mill, 30 inch rock,
all complete, for $200.
Apply to BETHUNE & MOORE,
Real Estate Agents,
CLARKE & PATTERSON,
Rosidcnt - Doxxtistsi,
MILLEDGEVILLE, GA.
(Mice on Hancock Street, next door West
of Masonic Hall. 47 tf.
Public^ Schools.
r Milledgeville, Ga., Nov.25th, iso;.
To Patrons an*! Teachers Public Sciiools,
Baldwin County : The public school term
for the ensuing year (1892) will open uni
formly during the month of January
throughout the entire county. The term
will tie six scholastic months (leu days),
and without intermission unless otherwise
ordered by the Bunrd.
The billowing list of text books, to
gether with the exchange and retail prices,
have been adopted by the Board for a
period of five (5) years, and are herewith
enumerated for the information of all par
ties interested:
been decreasing in po[ illation. ! transporting it as registered mail
P’ftsburg has doubleditspopulniion ma tter, at the risk of the treasury
tile slipping over
plow and the treading of the horse’
feet.
wh'le Hutchinson, of equal size,
with saloons, has but field its own, t
although it has added to its in ,
<iustries thirteen large salt plant-
and three packing houses. Similar
-comparisons might be made with
-other cities. These instances are!
given simply to show that no one
can tell the causes of the present !
depression, not even an Alliance
. man, but at best can only assign [
•what he thinks to be the cause. Is
Kansas better off? There are in !
the cities and towns thousands of!
boys sixteen years of age who in-ver
saw a saloon, and only know from
Jtearsay what they ate like."
Senator Frye says: “Neal Dow
started tliis iuw, and it is the best law
an the world, tlie only enemy of the
rum-seller; and tlie luw has made
Maine [ire-eminent in the suppres
sion of liquor selling, not only in
America, but throughout tile wide!
world.” Continuing, lie said: “Li
cense is no remedy. Liquors e j'0 li
censed intoxicate ns quickly us when
s okl iilegally, under proliibitioi .
Glasgow, in Scot laud, licenses, but
when in Scotland I was prevented
seeing-the great iron ship building
plants; jo operation, because of a
lairfeetid but one day in that- city.
For this fair the workmen saved so
Deserving Praise
dqmi tment, and at a cost of about j
, , ‘ . , ,, , . We decile to say to our citizens, that far
$.,)00. Y goodly percentage of the years we have been seliug Dr. King’s New
would have gone to Mr. Discovery for Consumption, Dr. King’s
which New LifePifis, Buckleti's Arnica Salve and
New and Interest ing Methods.
The business course is directly adapted
to the exigencies of the Southern trade,
and taught by practical accountants,
TELEGRAPHY, SHORTHAND
TYPEWRITIN G
Taught by Experienced Teachers.
Wyatt & Martin,
Principals and Proprietors.
June 6, 1892. 49 lv.
LIST OF TE^T HOOKS.
Names of Books.
PRICE L
Ex- Re-
change, tail.
.06 S .12
.10 .20
.16
.20
$ it), 000
Platt's
gone
express compuny w “ ,ou , Electric Bitters, and never handled rerae-
wottld have brought that gold from dies that sell as well, or that have given
the Missouri River to New York, if
Mr. Foster had not interfered. It is
such universal satisfaction. We do not
hesitate to guarantee them every time
and we stand ready to refund the purchase
nut >. while -.it.ee Mr Plntt's '• Prleo, if satistuctory results do not follow
not u great winie since Mr. i latt s thrtir use These remedies have won their
express company received $3,500 for great popularity purely on their
earn ing $7,000*,000 in gold from ! n ' erU ^,, ^ sa ^ al thB store of tb0 Ml ‘-
Philadelphia to New York, but it
will be quite a while before it is ! A Tennessee girl, educated in a
given u similar job unless Mr. Pintt fashionable female .college of Nash
ville. committed suicide because her
father wouldn't pay his grocery bills.
Her high sense of honor would not
permit her to consume food that had
not been paid for to sustain life, and
as siie had no other method of living
. she decided to die. If every girl
eanuiid will, if it becomes necessary ’ whose father didn’t pay his grocery
to bend Mr. Platt, send all large hills should commit suicide, there
amounts at Government risk which : *!>ouldbe morefuneralsinthecouutry
would make the contract compara-
“comes off his perch.” Secretary
Poster cannot break the contract
which Mr. Platt's compauy has
with the Treasury department for
tin* transportation of cash, but he
as are mentioned in the Sixth Section
of an act appproved by the General As-1
semblv of the state of Georgia Sept, j
18th, 1885. And it is therefore ordered I
and adjudged by the court, the result j
of said election is for the sale of such
spirituous liquors, mentioned in the I
sixth section of Act of the General !
Assembly, approved the 18th day of)
September, 1885.
Witness my hand and official signa
ture. This the 29th day of July, 1892.
M. R. BELL, Ordinary H. C.
W. J. cox,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON.
Office in Masonic'Hall.
NIGHT CALLS AT OFFICE.
Diseases Rectum. Venerial Diseases.
Milledgeville. Ga., May 2, 1892. 44 6m
C. M. WRIGHT,
—Dealer In—
.09 .18
.00
■‘ii
.12
.22
,3S
.64
.49
.20
.40
.65
1.25
1,00
.25
.26
.20
6.4
1.60
■ Si
.65
.35
1.20
lively a worthless one. It
dieted that Mr. Platt will do
Davy Crockett's coon did.
Every U. S. Consul abroad was!
months ago instructed us to the!
asrath and drank so hard, that the 1,art u,ev ttre lo Play in the Presi-; „ , , . .
6l,ip Gliding plmits, employing idential campaign, they are to in- j in«t e Rd~ 0 f filling thp*mViu B w'M? tl . mei ? t
5 * W ^ h « d ‘hot down eight * elude in their official reports, all of I and French. ^ ' U P w,tl1 music
than there has been since the yellow-
fever epidemic. Yet it would be a
pre- ; good thing for the grocery men, if
1 fathers were brought to understand
I that a failure to pay their bills would
result in a death in tlie family. It
l would lie better than a black list. It
; might not be a bad idea for all female
colleges to amend their curriculum,
C. A. KDKN. L. B. RHODES.
C. A. EDEN cS: CO.,
SANITARY PLUMBERS
STEAM AND GAS FITTERS.
417 FIRST STREET,
PARK HOTEL BUILDING,
Macon, Georgia.
Estimates and Bids from plans and
specifications furnished.
Electric Bell Hanging, Gus L ; gbt.
ing and Burglar Alarms.
Repairs promptly and carefully at
tended to.
June 2nd, 1S91.
Sti 'kney’s First Weeks at School,S
Stiektiey’s Classic Primer
Siickney’s First Reader
Stickncy’s Second Reader
Stiekney’s Third Reader
Stickncy’s Fourth Reader
Stickney’s Word by Word, I,
(Speller)
Stickuey’s Word by Word, IK
(Speller)
Turbell’s Lessons in Language, I
Tarbelj’s Lessons in Language,
Malay’s Elementary Geography
Maury’s Revised Manual Geog
raphy
Maury’s Revised Ph ysical Geog
raphy
Sanford’s Primary Arithmetic..
Sanford’s Intermediate Arith
metic
Sanford’s Common School Arith
metic
Sanford’s Higher Arithmetic.! ]!
Lincoln’s Physiology
Webster’s Primary Dictionary.!
Webster’s Common School Dic
tionary
Spencerian Copy Rooks (com
mon School series), per
dozen
uf Books on sale at Mi! ledge y file.
4**0nly books us above enumerated
will be permitted to be used in the public
schools ot the county.
By order of the Board of Education.
,, _ _ „ Rich’d.N. Lamak,
Sec. C. B. L. and Ex-Off. Supt. Pub.
Schools, B. C,
The aflove fist of prices for books is
strictly cash, and the exchange pries
operative for six months only.
Any old books of corresponding grade
and subject will be taken In exchange and
the rew books furnished at prices marked
‘exchange,’’ i. e., when a pupil has an old
book to exchange for a new one, upon the
' “■^responding grade, he
, , ... i" . —old book and pays the
tools ana labor saving machines, exchange price of the new book.
Again, when a pupil, on account of pro
motion, desires to exchange an old book
tor a lie *» one of the next higher grade,
the dealer will make the same alio .vance
for the old book as though it was ex
changed for a new book of its own grade
or number.
The law of October, 1887, provides that
"no teacher shall receive pay for uny pu
pil who is allowed to use other than the
prescribed text books,” and further pre
scribes that the County School Commis
sioner "shall see that none but the pre-
scribed text books are used by the pupils.”
Teachers and pupils will therefore he ex
pected and required to comply strictly
with the provisioiHif the law.
1 am now prepared to contract with
teachers who desir* to be emploved in the
public schools of the enuntv Lir the en-
BOTH HARD AND DOMESTIC.
Send in your order and secure sum
mer rates. 40 tf.
JUST RECEIVED.
A now ami outiit
Tie fork Cheaper Thau Ever.:
Call ou mo now at my new*
place on Wayne Street, second
door from express office.
Very Respectfully,
C. S. STRONG, Ae;’t.
Milledgeville, Ga., April 4th, '92. tf.
Coal! Coal!
I have just returned from tlie Coal
mines of Tennessee and Kentucky and
am prepared to furnish tlie people of
Milledgeville and neighboring cities
with the best quality of eoai. I make
a specialty of Jellioo.
M. H. BLAND.
suing' year.
Ricu'd. N. Lamar,
C.S.C. B.C
If you wish to buy or >**i 1 r,. fl
tate apply to Bethune U Moure.
It will pay
anyone in
wont of
tn-i )*1 He. • , ;
r i-o 11.1** -an.pl,
Addrvtt K. II. CADY, .Pi in .» --
I _Le-*C
ILL