Newspaper Page Text
THE GAZETTE.
Wednesday, January 5,1876.
TEEMS.
SUBSCRIPTION $2 a year $1 for six months
—when paid in advance. Orders for the
paper unaccompanied by the cash will
not receive attention, unless trom ourau
thorized agents.
ADVERTISEMENTS inserted at $1.50 an inch
for the first insertion, and 75 cents each
subsequent insertion. Advertisements
are due for after first insertion; transient
advertising payable in advance.
OBITUARY NOTICES , of ten lines or less
inserted gratis, all in excess of that
amount will be charged at regular adver
tising rates.
READING NOTICES inserted at 20 cts. per
line —NO DEVIATION.
REMITTANCES can be made by check, draft,
or registered letter at our risk, No re
sponsibility for moneys paid to other than
the Publisher and his published agents
j. t. McCarty,
Editor and Publisher.
§io(al Intelligence.
Our Hart County Agent.
Schedule of Prices for Legal Advertising.
We announce the following schedule
of prices for legal advertising in the Ga
zette for the year 187 5:
Citation for letters of Guardian
ship $5 00
Citation for letters of Administra
tion • 500
Application for letters of Dismis
sion 8 00
Application for leave to sell land 6 00
Notice to Debtors and Creditors. 500
Sale of lands, &c. (per inch) G 50
Sale of perishable property, ten
days (pei inch) 1 50
Estray notice. 5 00
Exemption Notices 2 50
Citation on Probate of will (per
inch) 6 00
Libel for divorce, per inch, each
insertion, 1 50
Foreclosure of Mortgage (per
inch) each time 1 00
Sheriff’s sales, per levy 4 50
Sheriff Mortgage fi fa. sales 9 00
Tax Collector’s sales, (per inch).. 500
All other advertisements will be charg
ed according to the space and number of
insertions.
Duplicates of this schedule will be
placed in the offices of the Ordinary and
Sheriff. In every instance the cash will
be required to come with the advertise
rnent. Bear this m mind.
After this, parties desiring to adver
tise, must, to insure the appearance of
their advertisements, have them in by
4 o’clock p. in., on Tuesday. This here
after will be a standing rule.
Chas. W. Seidal, Esq , is our duly an,
thorized agent in Hart county, and he
only has authority to receive and receipt
for subscriptions and advertisements in
and for said c unty. Parties interested
will please take notice and govern them
selves accordingly. tf
We are able to offer the following club
rates with the desirablo publications
named:
Price. With Gazette-
Harper’s Magazine $4 $5 25
“ Weekly 4 525
“ Bazar 4 5 2
Demorest’s Monthly 3 4
Peterson’s Magazine 2 3 50
Courier-Journal 2 340
Parties desiring to obtain any of these
publications with The Gazette must pay
their subscriptiin to this journal to Jan
uary 1, 1877. This will be adhered to
in every instance.
Bold Bobbery.
One night during the Christmas holi
days four bales of cotton were stolen
from the cotton gin of Mr. Luther Mar
tin this county. The thieves brought a
wagon with them, but finding that in
sufficient they purloined another from a
negro in the vicinity. The cotton was
subsequently discovered at no great dis
tance from the gin house, and the stolen
team was also recovered.
We learn of no clue to the thieves.
Local Epitome.
Prof. H. P. Sims and family left El
beiton for their new home iu the Flat
woods. May their prosperity be com
mensurate with their real worth.
Our merchants are about settled in
their new quarters. Messrs Gairduor
& Arnold fit nicely in their now quar
ters, the Duncans are happy, and T. M.
Swift converts his brother, J. K., into
‘•Co.,” and shoots to market for anew
A largo amount of real estate changed
hands yesterday. The prices that ruled
were rather panicky.
The old friends of Mr. Peter Gar
reclit will be glad to learn of bis return
to Eiberton, where he expects to turn
out boots and shoes at prices to suit the
present days of economy.
Deserted at the pinching time by all
except his junior devil, and working till
midnight to-night (Wednesday) in ol
der to make this issue in time for the
mail, the publisher feels that any short
comings noticed will be charitably over
looked under the circumstances. The
failure to come to time of a competent
workman with whom we had been nego
tiating is the real cause of delay.
Quite a nnmber of our citizens have
lost meat by the present warm weather.
Bead Selig’s advertisement and pre
pare for bargains
The usual city style of celebrating
Christmas prevailed. Murders, fights,
riots, incendiarisms, etc., ad lib., and the
heart of tfa* sensational reporter rejoi
cetb oxcwNtygly-
The Advantages of Factories-
Endowed with as many excellent fac
tory sites as Elbert county is, it does
seem that her people will fall short of
their duty—duty to their own pecuniary
interests and to the advancement of the
general welfare of the county—if they
fail to untiiise these numerous water
powers, using them as a means to pro
vide remunerative labor for our present
population, bringiug in capital, median
ics, artisans, reliable labor, which will
cause our present ditches and barren
hill-sides and old fields to blossom in
beauty again, and also to provide a more
profitable investment for the capital we
have.
With all these advantages who will
hang back when tho time comes ? As
suring a profit from 18 to 25 per cent,
upon the invertment, it will afford an
excellent opportunity for those who
have of late years labored in vain to
make a like profit at farming on a large
scale with our present unreliable labor.
The prosperity these enterprises will
build up all over the country by giving
employment to many of our people who
now barely eke out an existence, would
be a desirable result if no other was ac
complished. Many of our women who
now sit at the loom all day to make
from 12 to 15 cents, could at a factory
make from 75 cents to $1.25 a day. To
see barren fields and hill sides decked
with houses, shade trees, gardens, and
productive fields would be a pleasant
change from the present almost univer
sal cry of “hard times.”
Why need we let the North manufac
ture our cotton and sell it back to us,
pocketing the little money our hard
working farmers make, when we can
turn the tables upon her people by
making the proper efforts? We have
right here in Elbert the groundwork for
a Lowell. It is useless to say we are
too far from railroad facilities for facto
ries to be profitable. The amount re
quired to ship the raw material—now
deducted from its value when purchased
here -will more than pay for shipping
the manufactured goods. The building
of one profitable factory in the county
would result in the building of many
more, as well as our railroad too, of a
telegraph line, machine shops, work
shops, foundries, | planing mills, church
es, schools, colleges, stores, and all oth
er enterprises which naturally follow.
To tha usual cry that thsre is no
money in the county, wo rep;y that
there is money enough to give the nec
essary impetus—to build at least one
factory, and this will lead to others.
There are many monied men in the
United States who are now satisfied
with from 4 to G per cent, for their mon
ey. When they find investments by
which they can treble and quadruple
that amount, does it not look reasonable
to suppose they would take advautage
of the opportunity. It is not only rea
sonable but true. We can now point to
illustrations in the South.
Let our people once show a determi
nation to do all they can for themselves,
and there is plenty of capital to step in
and he'p." Atlanta, to-day the most pros
perous city of the South, is an evidence
of the fact, as a knowledge of its histo
ry will show. What Atlanta has done
Elbert county, with like vigor and vim,
can do.
Even now a gentleman of forty years
experience in the factory business is
ready and waiting to embark in ti e busi
ness here, who will show his faith by in
vesting largely, and all that is desired
is the aid and encouragement of our cit
izens. The opportunity will soon be of
fered, and we desire to see him aoly
supported. A chance of the kind may
never occur again. Failure now may
mean failure for a century to come.
Shall it fail ?
The Holidays.
Christmas week, very much as other
Christmas holidays passed off, with one
remarkable and praiseworthy exception
—there was loss intoxication than we
ever saw in Eiberton on a similar occa
sion.
On Christmas eve our merchants, to a
man, were as busy as bees. Old Santa
Clans, tbat rare old genius, whose an
nual visits re fraught with pleasure
to the young and guileless, and
trouble and sometimes pain to the pa
rents, had but little difficulty in finding
the right jfiace to secure gifts for the
little ones, as almost every merchant in
town had something to chug in the cor
ner cfa stocking.
The Christmas tree at the Methodist
church, for the benefit of the Sunday
school attached thereto, must have been
a thorough success from the way all who
were present spoke of it.
The usual amount of gayeties among
the young folks prevailed, and the mer
riment of marriage bells were a funeral
dirge compared to the good times had
everywhere.
We found the usual amount of hard
tack, whose proverbial cry of a “dull
Christmas” had no effect beyond the
sound of the voice. Wfiile it may be
true that less money was thrown away
in follies and foibles, and tbat a better
observance of true temperance was no
ticeable, but we deem all this an im
provement upon the old style of reck
less exti’avagance. If our people, re
gardful of the present stringency, will
but practice close economy the present
yr a”, another Cir’stmas “will find gill
fully prepared for the occasion, with a
better knowledge as to its proper cele
bration.
We havs passed through the holidays
and entered upon the duties and trials
and uncertainties of anew year. Let
us lay aside 'bitter reflections concern
ing the past, and if we have been tempt
ted into wrong doing, resolve to with
stand similar temptations in future. If
we have been wasteful and reckless, let
ns practice economy and prudence. Let
the dead past bury its dead, and for the
present and future let us act—act that
we may benefit the world of which we
are part and parcel.
OUR WASHIISGTO* LETTER.
FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.
The Committee Surprises—Some Places
where Expenses may be Reduced—The
“Ex-Confederate” Nonsense —Senator
Ferry’s Escape.
Washington, Dec. 27, 1875.
There was something of a flutter
hereabouts when the official announce
ment of the House standing committees
came to be made, but it was short lived,
and has subsided into a feeling of gen
eral satisfaction, so far as majority side
of the House is concerned. Speaker
Kerr’s programme was materially differ
ent from any the politicians had marked
out, in some particrlars, and surprise,
more than disappointment, was the
result. It was not possible that there
should be no disappointments, for,
ridiculous as it may appear, out of 189
majority members, at least 188 would
expect an important chairmanship,
though there were only forty, in all, to
be given. But that sort of grief comes
with the organization of every new Con
gress, and speedily'vanishes, leaving no
rancor in the heart of the body politic.
The more intelligent consideration
given to the subject the more does the
Speaker’sjwork appear judicious and wise,
as well as courageous and honest. His
selection of a Chairman for the Commit
tee on Ways and Means was a genuine
surprise, as that position, which is un
derstood to carry with it the leadership
of the House, was never assigned to a
Western man before, and no Western
man had been thought of in that con
nection. But whatever may have been
the Speaker’s reason for disregarding
precedents, lie has made no mistake in
this appoiniment. There is not on
either side of the House a fitter man
for this position than Mr.* Morrison, as
those who have not yet taken his meas
ure will be ready to confess before the
session closes.
The .Republicans in Congress and out
manifest an exceedingly pertubent state
of mind. They eagerly pointed out the
supposed indignity to Fernando Wood
in refusing him the Ways and Means
Chairmanship, and tearfully hoped he
would decline to serve in the second
place. Yet how they would have roared
had Fernondo been appointed. They
forget how they applauded two years
ago when two or three Democrats
bolted bis nomination for Speaker. The
disappointment and wrath was all then
own this time when Fernando walked
into the committee room and gracefully
accepted the place assigned him But
these Republicans are exceedingly hard
to please.
It being understood tbat no changes
are to be made in the tariff laws at pres
ent, the Ways and Means Committee
will be less important in this Congress
than the Committee oa Appropriations
Mr. Randall, since his appointment ti
the head of this Committee, has re
iterated, in private conversation, bin
views when a candidate for Speaker—that
the annual expenses of the Government
can be reduced forty millions of dollars
without crippling in the slightest degree
any Department. To this work Mr. Ran
dall's committee will earnestly address
itself. Last year we were assured that
everything was whittled down to the
finest possible point, and the estimates
for the now current fiscal year summed
i.p three hundred and ten millions of
dollars. Congress, however, in view of
the elections pending, took on a virtuous
mood, and cat the appropriations down
some seventeen millions below the
estimate. This seemed very hard to the
Administration, but it cannot look for
even as generous treatment as this from
the present House of Representatives,
and probably assuming that its estimates
w r ill be ruthlessly cut down, it has
prudently made them much larger than
before, to allow an ample margin for
reduction.
Republican Congressmen and editors
hereabouts are especially r vindictive
becauce a score or so of maimed soldiers,
or other poverty pinched Southerners,
get a few pitiful messengerships and
clerkships. If their memories were not
remarkably defective they would not
need to be reminded tbat it was the ev.-
Confederate Lor.gstreet whom Grant
appointed and a Republican Senate
affirmed, Collector of the port of New
Or’eans; it was the ex-Confederate
James L. Oir that the President nom
inated, and the Republican Senate con
firmed, as Minister Plenipotentiary to
Russia ; it was the ex Confederate Aker
man that General Grant selected, and
the Senate approved, as Attorney Gen
eral of the United States; it was the
ex-Confederate Judge Settle that the
representatives of the Republican party
in the United States chose to preside
over the Philadelphia Convention which
nominated Grant and it is the notorious
ex-Confederate guerilla trooper and
bushwhacker who is now a Republican
President’s bosom friend and adviser,
and who exercises more control over
him than the whole Virginia Congres
sioaal delegation combined.
The presidency of the Senate ha been
a troublesome subject with the Republi
cans. Mr. Ferry is determined to stick,
while some of his colleagues don’t relish
the notion. Senator Edmunds offered
a resolution on Munday, just before
Congress adjourned for the holidays, de
claring Mr. Ferry President protein,
until January 7 and out of this a serious
joke nearly resulted. Just as the roll call
commenced it was discovered that the
Democrats bad a majority iu the cham
ber, and Mr. Bayard’s motion to sub
stitute the name of Mr. Thurman was
likely to prevail. Some of the tallest
; flying about ever seen followed this
j discovery, and finally enough Republi
! cans were drummed up to defeat the
motion —the vote resulting 24 to 21.
But few Senators or members are here
now, nearly all having gone to spend
the holiday recess elsewhere.
An exchange asks : ‘ If a man many a shrew
is lie not shrewd?” We answer, not of necessi
,v, any more than a widower who marries anew
i is nude.
MARKET REPORTS.
Corrected by SWIFT & ARNOLD Every Week.
Cotton Hi® 12
Ragging, 2J lbs to yd 18
T.es
Flour, Tjpcwt $5 00
Bacon—D. S. Sides 16g
Hams ..
Lard 1.8(a) 20
Sugars—Yellow C 12£
Extra C 13
A 13 J
Crushed 15
Coffee 28 @ 30
Cheese 18 (a) 25
Blue Stone 16$
Factory Yarns 1 25
| Shirtings BJ@ 10
4-4 do ll|@ 12 J
Drills ‘ 12J
8 oz. Osnaburgs 15 @ 16iJ
7 oz. do 14 (a) 15
Bed Ticking 18 33
Heavy Checks 13£(o) 15
Bleat-hings 8 @ 12 £
Calicoes, standard brands 10
Brogans, full stock 1 50 @1 75
Brogan Boots, full stock 3 50 00
Calf Boots, full stock 4 50 @7 00
Note.—The above are cash quotations.
Augusta, Jan. 3, 1875.
Cotton, Ilf and 12J.
IMmfenncntk
ELEERTONFEMALE
COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE.
The exercises of this institution
will begin Monday, the 17th of January,
1876, and continue six months.
FACULTY.
MRS. S. E. CAPERS, - - Principal
W. A. SCOTT., A.M., Prof. Mathematics & Clasics
Miss M. F. DILLARD, Teacher of French. Calis
thenics and Fancy Work.
MUSIC DEPARTMENT.
MRS. T. 3. HESTOR, - - - Principal.
Tuition in Primary dep’t, se s. of 6 mos , sls 00
Intermediate “ “ “ 21 00
*• Collegiate “ “ “ 30 00
“ Music, including instrument, 30 00
Course of Lessons in C listhenics, - 1 00
Incidental expensess 25 cts. per month.
Board in good families atsto per month.
Half the tuition is due when the pupil is en
tered, and the balance at expiration of half ses
sion ; but arrangements can be made for deferring
the time for payments.
It is earnestly recommended that pupils enter at
the beginning of the term
No deduction except in case of protracted
sickness. jaus 3m
The Collegiate Institute is pleasantly
located in Eiberton, Elbert couuty, Ga.
The situation unsurpassed for healthful
ness, and the community is remarkable
for intelligence, refinement and morality.
The course of instruction will be of
most exact and thorough character. It
will be strictly progressive, commencing
with the simplest elements of knowl
edge, and extending through the com
plete curriculum of a college course.
The arrangement of classes and stud
ies will be such as to secure to each in
vidual that careful attention necessary
to prepare her for the active duties of
life At the same time the cultivation
of the manners and moral sentiments,
rind the prosecution of those iEsthetic,
and polite studies, that add so much to
the attractiveness and adornment of fe
male character will not be overlooked
Literary Societies will be organized,
under the immediate care of the Faculty,
which will afford superior advantages to
those who seek high attainments in Lit
erature and Science. Occasional enter
tainments, consisting of music, lecita
tions, select readings, and original es
says will be given by the Societies.
The government of the school will
combine mildness with firmness. It will
rest less on penalties for the violation of
law, than on the affection and mutual
confidence between teachers and pupi's.
The “Reward System,” and “Merit
Cards,” which are so eminently promo
tive of order and diligence, will be in
troduced as aids to proper discipline.
A public distribution of premiums
will take place at the close of the term.
The highest prize awarded in each de
partment will be a gold medal, or ring
with suitable inscription. A “Certificate
of Scholarship” will be given tc each
pupil who passes a satisfactory examina
tion in any branch of science.
A faithful record of the deportment
and recitations of each pupil will be
kept, and sent to the parent or guardian.
The Eiberton Collegiate Institute is
not a denominational school. The read
ing of the Bible will form a part of every
day’s exercise, and pupils will be encour
aged to attend Sunday School and Di
vine Sciwice, but the introduction of
sectarian dogmas will be strictly forbid
den. Parents and Guardians are invited
to bring tbeir daughters and wards and
visit the school, and satisfy themselves
as to its merits.
Mrs S. E. Capers, Principal.
W* H. ROBERTS,
CARPENTER & BUILDER
EIBERTON; GA.
T HAVE LOCATED IN ELBERTON WHERE
X I will be prepared to do all work in my line
a3 cheap as any good workman can afford. Con
tracts respectfully solicited.
Collins Made to Order.
T. M. SWIFT. J. K. SWIFT.
THUS. M. SWIFT & CO.,
Dealers in
SBimi, HiCM H
At the old stand of Swift & Arnold,
ELBERTON, GA.
P) ESPECTFTLLY SOLICIT A CONTINU
k, ance of the patronage hitherto awarded
the hous , promising every effort on their part
to merit the same. jan.s
NOTICE.
THOSE interested will please take notice that
the hexes in the. Postoffice are to rent the
ensuing year at 25 cts. per quarter of 3 months,
or $1 per year. A. E. HUNTER, P. M.
Eiberton, GaJ, Jan. 1, It
I HEREBY consent for my wife, Vary Ann
Perrin, to become a free trader, to make
contracts, and do all other business on her in
dividual account, she being alone responsible.
■ Jau’y 5,’76,4i* JOHN S. PERRIN.
A Pleasant Family Gone.
Rev. W. P. Rivers, with his family,
left Elberton Monday last for his new
field at Barnesville. Though they ro
mained in this county but one short
yoar, all who made their acquaintance
formed for Mr. Rivers and his lovely
lady an attachment which time cannot
efface. He is a thoroughly accomplish
ed gentleman, of refinement and taste—
a poet-artist. His admirable helpmeet is
one of the most estimable ladies we ever
met. An accomplished musician and
possessing rare tact and judgment, she
was while here an able co-worker in the
accomplishment of good Elberton so
ciety wiil sadly miss their genial pres
ence, and we cannot too warmly com
mend them to the good people,of Barnes
ville.
The Elberton Female Oolliate Institute.
This popular institution of learning
is advertised to be opened on the 17tli
inst, with a corps of teachers that will
not fail to give satisfaction. The prin
cipal, Mrs. a apers, has a reputation for
building up schools which becomes, we
regret to say, a necessity. We hope and
believe vigorous efforts will be put forth
to build up a school here whose reputa
tion will extend over the whole country.
The most important bill for the
South which has been introduced in
Congress at this session is one directing
the Secretary of the Treasury to pay to
owners, or their heirs or assigns, without
interest, the amount of the proceeds of
sale of any land for direct taxes made
by the United States in the late in
surrectionary States. Such owners,
however, before receiving the money are
to give a full and complete quit claim to
the Government.
A gentleman had a bottle containing
12 pints of wine, 6of which he was de
sirous of giving to a friend; but had
nothing to measure it in except two oth
er bottles, one of 7 pints, and the other
of 5. How did he contrive to put 6
into the 7 pint bottle. J. P. S.
Look! Look!
All PERSONS indebted to the sub
scriber for medical services are re
spectfully requested to call at my office
between now and the first of January next and
make payment, as I am determined that all ar
rearage practize mns‘ be settled up.
“A Stitch in Time Saves Nine.”
Respectfully,
osl3,td M. P. DEADWYLER.
J. H. JOftSES & CO.
Announce to their customers and the public
that they are now receiving a large and
well selected stock of
DRY GOODS
GROCERIES, HARDWARE,
&c., direct from New Yoi ,
AT PRICES BELOW ANYTHING
EVER KNOWN IN TILS .MAKET*
FOR CASH, also upon the usual ere
did to prompt paying customers, and to no
others. We will pay
Augusta Prices for Cotton,
In liquidation of all indebted to us, and we
earnestly request all indebted to us to
come forward and help us
right away.
J. 11. JOKES & CO.
&EI TOUR HHBER
AT HOME.
HEARD & CAMPBELL
RESPECTFULLY announce their new SAW
MILD in thorough working order, and si
licit the patronage of the public with full con
fidence of their ability to give satisfaction. The
mill is located in easy distance of Eiberton
and to all in its vicinity who and sire lumber a
great saving in hauling can be made.
Every effort will he made to accommodate
the patron3 of the mill.
H A IRWORK.
MRS J. B. ALMOND, of Eiberton, makes a
business of straigtenmg and forming into
switches the loose hair combed from the head
or that falls out. By this process ladies can
procure switches or coils of their own hair at a
cost not exceeding the common barksw.tches
baught from the store, and which are equal to
those that sell at from $lO to $50., and cer
tainly prove more satisfactory to the wearer
The Ladies of the country are requestend to
send in their orders and try this rew and cheap
method of procuring switches. Prices for
straightening hair into switches from 75c. to $2.
AN AGENT is wanted in every county for
Frank Le-lie’s Newspapers
and Magazines, the oldest established Illustrat
ed Periodicals in America. Mbey are now first
offered to canvassers, who will, if they secure
an agency and exclusive territory, be enabled to
intioduce Twelve First-class Illustrated Period
icals, suited to as many distinct tastes or wants
and, with the choice from six new and beautiful
chromos, given free to each annual subscriber
be enablee to secure one or more subscriptions
in every „ family ia their district. To skillful
canvassers this will secure permanent emplov
ment, and the renewals eaco year will be a
source or steady and assured revenue. Speci
men papers and most liberal terms sent to all
applicants who name the territory they desire
to canvass. Address, Agency Department Frank
Leslie’s Publishing House, 537 Pearl street,
New York.
$5 $5
$! 5 $5.00 %
$5 $6
Five dollars will purchase a fraction of an In
dustrial 'Exhibition Bond, that is certain
draw one of the following Premiums,
ON DECEMBER 6, 1876,
A Tenth, which costs only $5, can draw any
of the following, and will be received by tho
Company at any time in 6 months ns $5 in the
purchase of a S2O l^ond.
This is a chance for gai- and no chanoe for low
10 Premiums of $3,500 each )
10 l,OOO “
10 “ 600 • Pail tn
10 “ 300 “
30 “ 100 “ Cash and
10 “ 50 “
100 “ 20 “ no deduc
-290 “ 10 “ tion.
444 “ B “
39000 “ 2.10'
The lowest Premium Is $2.10.
Each fraction must draw this sum.
All fractions will be good with sls to pur
chase a whole S2O Bond.
This is a chance for a fortune, and no chanca
for loss.
A S2O Bond participates in 4 drawings each
year until it has drawn one of the following
premiums :
8100,000,
.S!€<!.ISC) <1 S3OO, SSOO,
SI,OOO, $3,000, $5,000,
SIO,OOO, $35,000,
8100,000.
fhe bonds i sued by the Industrial [Exhibi
u Cos. are a copy of the European govern
,i,,nt loans.
The Bonds are a safe investment.
PEOPLE OF SMALL MEANS can find ne
better or safer investment. No chance of loss.
A fortune may he acquired
lon December 6th On January Bd.
PURCHASE NOW -&sa
HOW TO PURCHASE.
In person, or by certified Check, or Express,
or Postal Order, or Draft,or enclose Greenbacks
in a registered letter, to and made payable to
the Industrial Exhibit on Cos.
The funds raised by sale of these bonds will
be applied to the erection of a
CRYSTAL PALACE
Which every American will be proud of.
Recalled. —The Industrial Exhibition is
a legitimate enterprise chartered by the State of
New York,
Its Directors nre tho best citizens of N. Y.
It has had seven drawings since July, 18T4,
and paid out in principal and interest,
$750,000.
Any one obtaining a premium, the company
pledges itself not to make public.
The enterprise is simply anew form of bond |
in no sense is it to he recognised as a lottery.
There are no blanks. L, sure ond purchaso at
once.
$5 will buy a Traction for December 6, 1875.
$5 will buy sjQuartcr bond for Jan 3, 1876.
$lO “ Half Bond “ “
S2O “ Whole Bond “ “
All Bonds are exchangeable into city lots ia
the suburbs of New York City.
Each Bondholder is regarded as an honorary
member or the Industrial Exhibition Cos., and is
welcome at the parlors of the Cos , No 12 East
17th st. Agents Wanted.
All communications and remittances to be
made te the Industrial Exhibition Cos., 12 East
17th st., bet. sth avenue and Br’dway.N.Y. City
For the purpose of giving the bondholders of
the Industrial Exhibition Cos., full and complete
information as to the progress of the Company
and a complete list of the drawings, an illustra
irated journal will be published, viz :
The Industrial Exhibitionjlllmtrated.
Subscription One Dollar per Year.
Any one sending a club of 15 subscribora
with sls, w.ll be given a premium of one Frac
tion or J Bund, club of 2 5 subscribers, £ Bond,
Hub of 50 subscribers whole bond. Address
INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION ILLUSTRATED,
12 East 17th st., New York City.
S6O will Purchase 13 Fractions.
THE GREAT REPUTATION
which Dr. Pemberton’s Fluid extract of Stil
lingia (or Queen’s Delight) has attained iu all
sections or the country as a
GBEAT AND GOOD MEDICINE,
and the large number of testimonials which are
constantly being received from persons who
have been cured by its use, is conclusive proof
of its gr-at merits.
1 HIS GREAT HEALTH RESTORER
is a positive specific and cure for Dyspepsia,
Liver Complaints, Constipation, Headache, Diz
ziness, Pains in the Back, Kidney Complaints,
Jaundice, Female Weakness, Lumbago, General
Debility, Gravel, Gout, Scrofula, Cancerous
Humor, Erysipelas, Salt Rlicum, Ringworm,
PimplfS and Humors on the Face, Old Ulcers,
Rheumatism, Mercurial and Syphilitic Affec
tions.
It removes all Mercurial or other poisons from
the Blood, aud soon restores the system to per
fect health and purity. That Pale, Yellow,
Sickly looking skin is |soon changed to one of
beauty, freshness and health It will cure any
chronic or long standing diseases, whose real or
direct cause is bad blood. A trial will prove it.
Thousands have been snatched as it were from
the grave by its miraculous power, who now
enjoy health and happiness, where once all was
misery.
It invigorates a ,and strengthens the whole sys
tem, acts upon the secretive organs, allays in
flammation, <-ures ulceration, and regulates the
bowels.
Dr. Pemberton’s Stillingia or
Queen’s Delight gives Klealtb,
Strength and Appetite.
It purifies the Blood, and renovates and in
vigorates the whole system. Its medical pro
perties are alterative, tonic, solvent and diuretic.
For testimonials of wonderful cures, send to
tbs Proprietor, or call upon your Druggists.
The get nine is prepared only by
Dr. J. S. Pemberton,
Chemist, Atlanta, Qik
For sale by all first-class Druggists.
Office of George Adair, Wall Stree
Atlanta. Ga , July 16, 1
Dit. J. S Pembkbton— Dear Sir : I liu and
your Extract of Stillingin for a chro in
affection of many years standing, widci. 1 e a
cure after all other remedies hud failed l ave
known your Sti’lingia used in the w rst ases
of scrofula, secondary syphilitic diseases, heu
matism, kidney and liver affections, with great
success. In fact, l have never known it to fail
in the most desperate cases. I consider it the
greatest blood purifier known. Yours truly,
1. C. EVANS.
For sale by
Dr. 11. C. EDMUNDS,
Aug. 11. Eiberton, Ga.
$5 to S2O per day, Agents wanted. All
clasi es of working people of both
sexes, young and old, make money at work
for is, in their own loc-ilites, during their
soare moments, or all the time than at any
thing else. We offer employment that will pay
handsomely for every hour's work, Full par
ticulars, terms, he., sent free. Send us yonr
address at once. Don’t delay. Now is the time.
Do.i’t look for work or business elsewhere,
• until you have learned ivliat. we offer. S, Sttn
i sou &LV, Portland, Maine.