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GATE-CITY GUARDIAN.
ciate-^itg Auanliati.
A Dollar or Two.
A* onward wc pass, aud crowd oar way through
Till* t rouMrsoui* world *> other folk* do,
May w* util I on our journey bt able to view,
The benevolent face of a dollar or two,
For an excellent thing ia a dollar or two—
No friend is ao true aa a dollar or two ;
Through country and town aa we paaa up and down,
No proapectao good aa a dollar or two,
A dollar or two, a dollar or two ;
It ha* a magical power to help a man through,
The Pagan, the ClirDtlan, the Gentile, the Jew,
All bow In reverence to a dollar or two.
wears.
Ite aure and take care of your money, my hoy a,
lie aure aud take care of your money,
For you will find that your friend* will be diataut and
few
If you ever run short of a dollar or two.
Would you rid youraelf of a bachelor crew,
Aud the hand of a beautiful lady pursue f
You inuat alw ays he ready the handaoma to do,
Although it may coat you a dollar or two j
Love’s arrowa are Upped with a dollar or two;
Affection Is gained with a dollar or two;
A dollar or two, a dollar or two ;
There's nothing ao good to help a man through,
In sorrows or joys, with the girls or the boys,
No friend is so true as a dollar or two.
Chorus.
It’s got so the ladles, when they wish for a beau,
Always look for the man that can make the best show;
lie must swing a big cane, and support a big chain;
They bolh perhaps will cost hhn a dollar or two,
For an excellent thing is a dollar or two,
Through country aud town as we pass up aud down,
No prospect so good s* a dollar or two,
A dollar or two, a dollar or two,
It’s for that now I'in singing to you,
And when to this village I bid an adieu,
I'm in hopes to be blessed with a dollar or two!
Chorus.
A Sensible Landlord.—An exchange says:
A little incident transpired some time ago, at
one of our hotels, which ie worthy of notioe.
A little girl eutered the bar room and in piti
ful tones told the keeper that her mother had
sent her there to get eight cents.
“ Eight cents!” said the keeper.
“ Yes, sir.”
“What does your mother want with eight
cents ? I don’t owe her anything.”
“Well,” said the child, “father spends all
his money here for rum, and we have nothing
to eat to day. Mother wants to buy a loaf of
bread.”
A loafer remarked to the bar keeper to “kick
the brat out.”
“No,” said the bar-keeper, “I’ll give her
the money, and if hur father comes back again
I’ll kick him out.”
Didn’t Know How to Do It.—A justios of
the peace in a rural nrefinet was lately called
Upon at an advised hour in ike evening to
perform the marriage ceremony for a young
and interesting couple. It was difficult to
tell whether the lovers or the justioe were
most embarrassed. It was his first attempt.
They stood up before him, and he commenced
the work by an address, partly religious and
partly offioial, and finally broke down. He
then made them join hands, and declared
them married, but at the same lime told theis
that they had better send for another justioe,
as he was afraid that it wouldn’t hold—that
perhaps it had not been done legally. Here
was a “pretty kettle of fish.” It was late,
aud the young oouple were in a quandary.—
Finally the young man said he was satisfied
that it would hold until next morning, when,
if there was anything lacking, it could be sup
plied by another justioe. To this the lady
demurred, aud refused to leive for home un
til she was satisfied that she was legally mar
ried. The young man remonstrated—the jus
tice “guessed they would find it all right,”
but she was firm, and the husband had to start
off several miles for another justice. The jus
tioe came, and finished the job, and the mar
ried oouple departed, “happy as clams at high
water.”—St. Paul Pioneer.
An Evil Conscience.—When Professor
Webster was awailiug his trial, he brought
against his fellew-prisoaars the charge of in
sulting him, ‘You are a bloody man !’ On
examination it was found that the oharge was
wholly groundless, and that these accusing
voices were imaginary, being but the echo of
a guilty conscience.
ifsuoh things can be done in earth’s pris
ons, what are sinners to look for in a future
world ? Oh, what taunts and curses shall
pierce the ears of those who lie down in hell!
Conscience will have a terrific power of start
ing such accusations, and then an ear of keen
sensibility to receive the echoes as they roll
back upon the soul. What an occupation for
eterdUy ! What inconceivable agony to be
shut up with the ghostl? memories of past
sin, and to hear, through long centuries of
gloom aud despair, only the uttered and ech
oed curses which sin brings do rn upon the
soul I Oh, for that grace which sprinkles our
hearts from an evil conscience!—Fretbgtcri-
Give mk Drink.—Mr. M’Leod, au English
writer puts the following language in the
mouths of those who visit the runtseller’s den :
There’s my money—give me drink ! There’s
my clothing and food—give me drink ! Tbero'e
the clothing, food, and fire of my wife and
children—give me drink 1 There’s the educa
lion of family and the peace of the house-
give me drink ! There’s the rent I robbed
from my landlord, fees I have robbed from my
schoolmaster, and innumerable articles 1 have
robbed from the shopkeeper—give me drink !
Pour me out drink, for more I will yet pay
for it! There's my health of body and peace
ot mind, there’s my character as a man, and
my profession as a Christian, I give up all-
give mo drink ! More yet I have to give!—
There’s my heavenly inheritance and the eter
nal friendship of the redeemed, there is all my
hope of salvation! 1 give up my Saviour!—
I give up my God! I resign all! All that
is great, good and glorious in the universe, I
resign forever, that 1 may be drunk !
To Prevent Skippers in Hams.—In a com
munication to the Cotton Planter, Mr. W. Mc-
Willie says: “There is, according to my ex
perience, nothing easier than to avoid the skip
per and all worms and bugs that usually infest
and destroy bacon. It is simply to keep your
smoke-houses dark, and the moth that deposits
the egg will never enter if. For the past twen
ty-five years I have attended to this, and never
had my bacon troubled with any insect. I have
now. hanging in my smoke-house, hams one,
two, and three years old, and the oldest arc as
free from insects as wheu first hung up. I am
not aware of other causes for the exemption of
my bacon from insects, but simply the fact
that my smoke-house is always dark. Before
adopting this plan, I had tried many experi
ments, but always either without success or
with injury to the flavor of my bacon. I smoke
with green hickory ; this is important, as the
flavor of bacon is utterly destroyed by smok
ing it with improper wood.”
♦ ♦
Women horn to do tiib Lovino.—That Na
ture has ordained love as woman’s task, more
than man’s, is thus declared, by a late moral
ist:—“With man, love is never a passion o
suoh Intensity as with women. She is a oreaf
turs of sensibility, existing only in the out
pourings and sympathies of her emotions.
Every earthly blessing, nay, every heavenly
hope, will be sacrificed for her affection*. She
will leave the sunny home of her childhood the
protecting roof of her kindred—forget the
counsels of he sire, the admonishing voice of
that mother on whose bosom her bead had been
pillowed —do all that woman ean do consistent
ly with honor—forsake all that she has clung
to in her girlish simplicity for years, and throw
hersslf into the arms of the man the idolises.
He that would forsake a woman after these tes
titnonles of affection, ia too gross a villain to
be oalled a man.”
Yovnu Ladies should Daiss Well.—Lava-
ter, in bis standard work on “ Physiognomy,’'
says:—** Yon of women who negleot tkeir lot-
letie, indicate in this very particular a disre
gard of order; a deficiency of taste, and tke
qualities which inspire love The girl of eigh
teen years who does not desirt to pleass in so
obvious a matter as dress, will be a sloven, and
probably a shrew, at twenty-five.”
Shirts Highly Natural.—The highest
trees in South America produce shirts ! “We
saw on the slope of the Cerra Duida,” says
M. Humboldt, “*Air< trees, fifty fiet hiyh.—
The Indians cut off cylindrical pieces two feet
iu diameter, from which they peel the red and
fibrous bark, without making any longitudi
nal iuoision. This bark affords them a sort
of garment which resembles a sack of a very
coarse texture, and without a seam. 'J he up
per opening serves for the head, and two Int
ernal holes are cut to admit the arms. The
natives wear these shirts of Marina in the
rainy season ; they have the form of a pon
cho.”
Tiik Jim Without a Bottom.—On the bridge
that crosses the Grand Rapids, we met a hale
old man and his wife, with eleven sous, seven
daughters, and thirty-sevon grand children,
with horses, calves, sheep aud furniture of
antiquated appearance, among whioh were to
bo seen cradles for babies, cradles for grain,
spinning-wheels, pots and kettles, and almost
everything requisite for a settlement such as
fifty blood relations will make in Grand River
County. After the train had stopped we made
some inquiries, aud asked the old gentleman
what use could be made with a bottomless jug,
whioh was carefully stowed away among his
domestic equipments, and received the follow-
ing rf ply:
“ Why, sir, I am a man of many years, have
worked other people’s land all my days and
paid from four to nine bushels of wheat per
acre for doing it, and have all the lime used a
jug with a bottom to it, by which all my profits
have been wasted, and 1 was sick of feeding
both landlord and rurasellers—so 1 sent seveu
of my boys to Mexico to fight for their oountry.
They got back safe, and brought seven sections
of laud ; that will be mine without reut. Aud
now you see that this shall hold all the whisky
that will be used in my fanfily while I control
them. Old General Taylor told my sou John
that a jug without a bottom was the best kind
of a jug to put liquor in, and I believe it.”—
Exchange.
Cuke fcr Cancer.—A gentleman lately rc.
turned from England has requested us to pub
lish the following remedy, which, he was in
formed, had effected many cures of the above
mentioned painful disease:
Mr. Thomas Anderton gives the following
recipe for cancer:—Boil fine Turkey figs in
new milk, which they will thicken ; when they
are tender, split and apply them as warm as
they can be borne to the part affected, whether
broken or not; the part must be washed every
time the poultice is changed, with some of the
milk; use a fresh poultice night and morning,
and at least once during the day, and drink a
quarter of a pint of the milk the figs are boiled
in twice in the 24 hours. If the stomach will
bear it, this must be persevered in for three or
four mouths At least. A man aged 105 years
was cured about six years before his death
with only six pounds of figs. The cancer, which
began at the corner of his mouth, had eaten
through his jaw, cheek, and half-way down his
his throat; yet he was so perfectly cured, as
never to show any tendency to return. Should
it ever do so, the figs should be again applied.
The first application gives a great deal of pain,
but afterwards each dressing gives relief. A
woman cured by this remedy had been afflicted
ten years ; her breasts bled excessively ; ten
pounds cured her.
Lending Money.—“ What have you done
with your half-dollar?” said Anthony Fife to
his cousin Walter Jackson. They had each
received a half-dollar at the same time from
their unole.
“ I have lent it to John Sturgis. lie is to
give me a cent a week interest till it is paid.”
“ Has ho given you security ?”
“ Yes : I have a book of bis worth a dollar.
What have you done with your money ?”
“ 1 have lent half of it, and have the other
half in my pooket.”
“Who did you lend it to ?”
“ 1 lent it to the Lord.”
“ The Lord don’t want money.”
“ Somo of his poor ones do. I gave Mis.
Paine a quarter to get some potatoes with. I
call that lending it to the Lord ; for the Bible
says, “He (hat giveth to the poor lendeth to
the Lord.”
Cheap aud Excellent Ink.
We like ink that is as black as midnight, and
glossy as a raveu’s wing. Bad ink is a decided
nuisauce. There is scarcely anything more
undesirable than lo receive a long letter with
bad spelling and worse penmanship, on another
man’s business ; but the annoyance is greatlv
aggravated if written on dull blue paper with
ink about (he color of muddy water.
Good ink may often be bad by paying a good
prioe for it, eay about fifty cents per quart;
but after the manufacturer has got up hie rep
utation, be ie tempted to sell a cheap and mis
erable article. The beat way ie for all to make
their own ink, and eave at least one thousand
per cent, as ink is commonly sold at retail, be
tween first oost and final price. But how shall
we make it easily and cheaply ? Thus : —Buy
extract of logwood, which may be had at three
cents an ounce, or cheaper by the quantity.
Buy also, for three oents, an ounce of bi chro
mate of potaah. Do not make a mistake and
get the simple chromate of potash. The former
is orange red, the latter clear yellow. Now,
take half an ounoe of extract of logwood, and
ten grains of bi chromate of potash, and dis
solve them in a quart of hot rain water. When
cold, pour it into a glass bottle, and leave it
uncorked for a vfeek or two. Exposure to the
air is iudispensabie. The ink is then made
and hae oost five to ten minutes, labor, and
about three cents, besides the bottle. This ink
is at first an intense steel blue, but becomes
quite blaok. We have recently given this ink
a fair trial, “ and know whereof we affirm ‘
So far as we know, it is new.
MISCELLANEOUS.
M. LITCHBRSTAIlT.
J. K. EASE*.
NOW OPENING
—AT THE—
FdRIQbTVCtl STQUE.
FIRSTDOOR WEST OF THE FULTON BANK
ALABAMA STRUCT,
A great variety of
Americans not Jolly Enough.—“It was
the opinion of both Spurahcim and Combe,
that the pleasurcdoving side of our nature is
too little cultivated and indulged in the Unit
ed States; that we are too thoroughly engros
sed in our business ; that our devotion is too
apt to run into the ascetic extreme ; that we
have certain faculties for enjoyment, which
ought not to be stifled or ignored, for, ration
ally indulged, they contribute to the general
health.”
1‘lan foe a New City.—It was recently re
marked by the “ Builder,” that a spider’s web
furnishes a better plan for the laying out of
new cities, than any which has yet been devis
ed by surveyors and engineers. Any one who
can And a distinct and complete web unbroken,
will see how beautifully regular it ia, and how
nerfectly adapted for the quickest passage
from any one point to another. The concen
tric rings are not circles, but polygons, the
radiating exquisitely regular and straight.
•SF“Once upon a time there lived an old
couple, known far and wide for their interim
nable squabbles. Suddenly, thev changed their
mode of life, aud were aa complete patterns of
conjugal felioity as they had formerly been of
discord. A neighbor, anxious to know the
cause of snch a conversion, asked the gude
wife to explain it. She replied, “I and the old
man hove got on well enough together ever
•ioen we kept two bears in the house.” “ Two
bears!” was the the perplexed rwply. •• Yes,
«ure,” said the old lady, “bear and forbear.”
Parlor Suites,
Made of
ROSEWOOD,
Mahogany,
-And "Walnut,
Covered in BROCATKLLE, REP8, VEL
VET, SHALLY, and HAIRCLOTH. All
made in a workman like manner, combining
Strength, Durability and Beauty!
Modelled after the style of LOUIS XIV,
and many of the Oriental Styles adapted to
American taste. Also may be found
lOO Hoolxlng
AND
Ladies’ Farlor Chairs,
Mostly of new Patterns, from
$5 to $U0 each.
Sofas, Divans,
Ottomans, and
Tete-a-Tetes,
Of the latest and most fash
ienable styles.
200 BUREAUS,
Of Rosewood, Mahogany,
Walnut and Imitation, from
$1.25 to $S0.
LOOKING-GLASSES,
Of every style, qi hty and
variety.
Cane, Rush, aud Wood-Seal CHAIRS, fo
Parlor, Dining, and Bed-Room, with a large
variety of Children's Chairs ; Rocking and
Nurse Chairs, with Cane, Rush, and Wood
Bottoms.
WARDROBES, Wash Stands, Hat-Racks,
Corner btands ; Side, Centre, and Parlor TA
BLES, Ladies’ Work Tables and Quartettes.
BEDSTEADS OF EVERY KIND.
FRENCH IN ROSEWOOD,
FRENCH IN MAHOGANY,
FRENCH IN WALNUT
ORIENTAL IN ROSEWOOD,
ORIENTAL IN MAHOGANY,
COTTAGE IN MAPLE AND
WALNUT,
COMMON IN POPLAR & MAPLE.
Cottage Suites in a variety of styles.
Hair, Moss and Cotton Mattresses made to
order. All kinds of common Mattresses usual
ly found in Furniture Stores kept on hand.—
Also a full supply of Window Shades, new
Patterns, together with many other articles
common to this line of trade.
Particular attention paid to Repairing and
making to order. Looking Glass Plates kept
constantly on hand.
D. CHAFFEE, Ageut
Atlanta, Sept. 19—dSm
CUT BARGAINS!
ABE DISTRIBUTED DAILY AT THE
Planters' & Mechanics'
D1Y-MHT011!
NO. 40 WHITEHALL STREET,
Atlanta. Georgia,
T O thousands of customers who are delight
ed with the magnificent display of our
EXTENSIVE STOCK OF ENTIRELY NEW
STAPLE & KES8*
DRY-GOODS!
DRESS GOODS,
OF EVERT VARIETY
Embroideries,
Hosieries,
Black Italian Silks,
Silk Robes,
Shawls, Lace Points,
Mantillas, Domestics
—AND—
Carpets,
KCats
Boots,
Shoes
and uumcrous other articles appertaining
to our business—all of which we arc now
offering at the very
Lowest Prices’
At Wholesale, or Retail.
MISCELLANEOUS.
BOOKS!
New Book Store!
—AT TUB-
SIGN OF THE BIG BOOK
Whitehall Street.
We most respectfully iuvite the attention of
the public generally to au examination of our
Stock, and solicit of them a share of their pat-
on age.
J. K. IIAGKN k CO.,
marchl3 At Herring’s Old Stand
ATTENTION!
mutjiiy mm
FURNISHED WITH
UNIFORMS
AT SHORT NOTICE AND
LOW PRICES,
LAWSHE & PUBTELL,
NERfHAST TAIEORIAU
ESTABLISHMENT,
Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, 6GOROIA.
Am I
Removal.
M RS. A. ISAACS would respectfully inform
her numerous lady customers and frionds,
that she has removed to, and is now occupying
one of the spacious and elegantly fitted-up ten
ements in tnc New Building on the corner of
Whitehall and Alabama streets being the third
door from the latter street.
She is uow opening in her New Store,
one of the most
Extensive, Best Assorted, and Superb
Stocks of
Fall and "Wintei
MILLINERY,
comprising very rich Velvet, Satin and Fancy
Bonnets, Head Dresses, Bertha
aps, ollars, Embroide
ries, etc.,
of the latest Styles, iu almost endless variety.
She has also a full line of
CORSETS,
DRESS TRIMMINGS,
HOSIERY,
LACE VEILS, Ac.,
tc ail of which she would most respectfully in
vito the attention of her numerous customers.
Her Opening Day will be on Monday, Oct 8.
oet2d2m
BUTLER & PETERS,
(Successors to High, Butler k Co.,)
Commission Merchants,
FOB TBB PURCHASE AND SALE OF
TEJYJYE8 8EM JP U O U V € E
Cotton, Groceries, Ac*,
ATLANTA GEORGIA.
Hava removed to the large Fire-Proof Ware-
houae, formerly occupied by Winship A How-
ell, oppoeite the 8tate Road Depot.
duee* 1 Ton “ e “** mone y Uken at par for Pr.
20 IrARD OIL.juat received on eoo-
■irnmentand for aale by
juneli BUTLER A rETERS.
F LOUR I FLOUR I FLOUBI-80# barrel, of
8L Louis Family Flour, aud 300 aack. of
Teunestoc Extra Flour. For aa!e bv
j un « t» BUTLER A I*ETERS.
\Xrni8KY 1- 300 barrels Pure Com Whliky
v* in Store end for sale by 1
J UMl » BUTLER A PETERS.
gUPERl^NK FLOUR-1,000 aacka 08 lb.
BUTLER A rETERS.
For ulo by
june 1
AGRICULTURAL ROOKS of every
description.
ARCHITECTURAL BOOKS of every
description.
MEDICAL BOOKS.
SUPERB GIFT BOOKS.
SPLENDID’FAMILY BIBLES.
ELEGANT ENGRAVINGS.
PICTURES FRAMED TO ORDKlt.
PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE PAINT
INGS OF LANDSEER aud other
Artists.
TE11EOSCOPE AND STEREOSCO
PIC VIEWS.
ARTISTS’ MATERIALS.
WALKING CANES—from 80 cent* to
$30.
VIOLINS—from 75 cents to $75.
All of which will ho gold cheaper than
the cheapest, at tlie^Hign of the
“BIG BOOK!”
oct. 23 —tf. J. McPIIERSON k C
CENTER & TRE AD WELT
WHITEHALL FTIIRKT, ATLANTA,
Four lJoors He low Brady A SolomoL.-*s,
—DBAI.RBS IM—
CARRIAGE HARDWARE k TRIMMINGS
SHELF AND BUILDERS’ HARDWARE !
SWEDES. AMERICAN, CASS COUNTY AND
ENGLISH IRON, AND CASS COUNTY
AND ENGLISH CASTINGS!
—ALSO, IM STORK—
CASES Shoes, at Manufactures prices.
V/ Cull ami see us before you buy elsewhen
You Bhall be pleased.
junel 4 CENTER TREADWELL.
N UTS—We have
500 lbs Pecan Nuts;
500 lbs Alicant Almonds ;
500 lbs Hard Shell Almonds ;
500 lbs Brazil Nuts;
50 boxes Assorted Candy ;
50 boxes ar.d Half boxes Raisin.
For sale, low, bv
junel4 CENTER A TREADWELL.
3 to No. 10. For sale by
jan’l CENTER k TREADWELL.
T OBACCO AND CIGARS—of the boat brand,
for sale by
CENTER A TREADWELL-
M ackerel-
100 Half-barrels No. 3 Mackerel;
50 Half-barrels No. 3 Mackerel ;
50 kits No. 3 Mackerel;
10 bbls No. 1 Mackerel ;
10 Half-barrels No. 1 Mackerel;
20 kits No. 1 Mackerel;
1,000 lbs Cod Fish;
250 lbs Pollock ;
60 boxes of best Herring.
’ low, by
CENTER A TREADWELL.
city Also,
f-Turned Gudgeons—4 to 12
low, by
CENTER A TREADWELL
A CARD—TO THE LADIES.
Mrs. J. M. Boring
Announces, with pleasure, to her friends and
patrons, that she is again prepared to suit them
with
ALL THE LATEST AND
Most Fashionable Styles of Bonnets,
HAXS. CAl J S,
Head-Dresses, &c.
At her old Stand, on WHITEHALL.STREET,
W here she will be happy to receive
A Liberal Share of (he Trade
—or—
Atlanta
AND SURROUNDING COUNTRY,
oct 9. •
Te* A«»i.oiM*vioj or Lim.-
a growl*- (gndency in lhn»„£"
the oioet expressive word. '
end after awhile to incorpor^T!
own ; thue the word Criibtfo JH*
the Greek, eignlfylng y widfl
becoming popularised in .v..—T*Vn
Spalding's greet Haadaeh. -,j| i
*iw be used la a wore
word Cepbnltb will become a* <y_’
trotype end many other, wkowtl
foreign word* bee been wore -
neege until they eeeni "uetieeuAa
bora.” *■
’ardly Heali**
it: '-« ’orrible 'eadieheUkk.
1 iuto the hi "
•ajB Hi IV man, “Can >n*.
eadache V* “Doe* it hache’vd V*. 1 *
creedinglr,” »ay« hi, hand nJ/fE.*
me a Cephalic Pill, hand 'potL' *
ed me so quick that I ardlv raalJT?
'eadache. ^ m «
UBTH«a»ach« is the favertoj.-
natur# makes known any A*+J**'
from the natural state oi tUbiV*
ed in this light, it iray he looSt
guLrd intended to give notice J
might otherwise escape *Ueiitj<JT5|
to be remedied; and iu indie^Z.*
never be neglected. HeadachuTJrf
fiod under two names, vix ;
Idiopathic. Symptomatic
ingly common, and ia
varietyof diseases, among
Gout, Rheumatism, and all
In iu nervous form it i* symt,*
ease of the stomach constiiatiir
of hepatic disease constitutiagiUee
uf worms, cousiipatiou audit*
the bowels, as well as renal and ikrEj
tions. Diseases of the heart are ymT®
ly attended with IDadaebss; j
Plethora are also affection*
occasion headache. Idiopathic 1
also very common, being usually
by the name of nervous kttdtdt, a
coming on suddenly in aiUUtfi^M
sound health, and prostratiagnuuCJ
lai and physical energies, ud /■
stances It conies on slowly,
sion of spirits or acerbity of imp*. i t l
instances the pain ia in d*fro»t*/uti
over one or both eves, and a
ing vomiting; uoder this c!a$ may i
named Neuralgia.
For the treatment of either eiujvfU
the Cephalic Pills have bttataudtMuiJ
safe remedy, relieving the mist, uuie r*j n
a few minutes, and by its subtle powrv«w
ating the diseases of which llasdadui if
unerring index.
Bridget.—Missus wauls m wieUV
Jbcx of Cephalic Glue, no. a Uttieof h«t
Pills—but I’m thiukiug that’s nut jut it
ther; but perhaps \e’ll U-. after known
it is. Te see. she’s uigli dead gonew
Hick Headache, and waul* mine a
same as reiaived her before.
Druggist.—You must uieaa StuloufiQ
alic Pifls. ^ 1
Bridget.—Och ! sure now ind ru'rtu...
here’s the quarther and giveatibNHta
dont be all day about it aitber.
Constipation or Cmruo.
No one of the “many ills fieak iabairU
prevalent, so little undented,trial
neglected as Costive Dess. Often origin*
carelessness, or sedentary habiia Hmk
as a slight disorder of Ug>Jhtle«*$sq«__
excite anxiety, while iiS mlitj it is the ji
cursor and companion of mtnj ot tha r
fatal and dangerous diseases, tri.mleafl
eradicated, it will bring thesadwwloait
timely grave. Among the lighter evils of wf
costiveness is the usual atloDdut,!*®
ache, Colic, Rheumatism, Fool Breath,F
and others oflike nature, wbilssl«$lr
frightful diseases, such as MalipiDt f
Abcesses, Dysentary, DiarrkcM, Djif
Apoplexy, Epilepsy, Parslysis,Hysteria,!
p Miondriasis, Melancholy ind fusshity I
indicate their presence in Ik* systsa if I
alarming symptom. Nut uc/rcjiientl/hw*
eases named originate is Constipation, b
take on an independent
cause ie eradicated in an early staffc Freai
these considerations it follows thatthefii
should receive immediate aUcat/oi whi
it occurs, and no person should neglect to#
a box of Cephalic Pills on the fint ippsan
of the oomplsint, as their tiaaaly use will«
the insiduous approaches o! diieauari del
this dangerous foe to human life.
Gk*at DtscoVKRT.—Among tb«
tant of all the great medieal daww****
age may be considered the intern of v—
tion for protection from Small Pox,U>e
lie Pill for relief of Headache, ari tM*
Quinine for the prevention of Fiwa *
of which ia a aure specific, ubm bead*'
be experienced by auflerio< humaiitj V
ter Ihoir discoverers are forjdtan.
NEW CARRIAGE REPOSITORY!
Q. IR,. 1ST OLA. 1ST
H AViNG bought out ti e entire interest of
M 1 ** W. HENDERSON, will keepon hand.
and
sortment of
-UK keepon hand,
ill be roceiviug, constantly, a good
Sides, arriviug.
junel* BUTLER A PETER*.
F IFTY barrel, of Prime Leaf UrTin Smii
anu for sale h*
BUTLER t PETER*.
end for sale bv
junel*
100 c *f!“ ‘‘rr in .tore
* WV end for tele by
j““e*» BUTLER 4 PETERS.
26 &£££,*uK*“ d 11 ofW
junel*
/UTL*
R 4 PETERS.
CARRIAGES AND BUGGIES
lure here tho BEST BUGGIES new ie
which will be mid el ,,nee. JVui^rebVen
Repaid** of aay Kind
dune, from e beby’t cab to the fineet Ooech. In
thrt beet ana most fashionable stvle.
MjRepeeitory teen WIIITEUAlLBTRRET.
i oor , l °, *•“ Ketone Rmldiuge, where I
ibell be vied to eee end welt on ell m went of
env article in in, line.
any article iu my line.
Allanta. November t
Q R. NOLAN.
TO THE PUBLIC.
Havius disposed or my interest in the Cer-
rtep end Buffly Doelneae to Mr.tJ. H. Nei.v,
I «near full/ reoomtnend him to ell my old —I
trone end frlendu u e rclieblo. end unrieVL.
end prompt Luaineae men end eenthmen
every w.y worthy lh.tr hi*heel, ft!\|„t ooofL
Jenoe, end reepectfully aolioit for him e can.
tinuence of Use eame bbarel i»lron«»beetow
NervousHeadadi
Id
By the use of these Pilfe
of Nervous or Sick Headache may w g
a«4 if taken at the coinm*****”
tack immediate relief from P** a M
will be obtained. .v. V«sfX>
They seldom fail in removing in *
Headache to which female* are
They eat gently upon the A
ifen.
and all persons of sedentary
valuable as a /xueefanc,
giving tone and vigor to
and res tori ng the n atural claabcitj a>* B
of the wbelc system. lk ..
The CEPHALIC PILLS >» >»L-
long investigation an«i caronuil
S erTthents, having boon >n " Ip
uring which timo the/
relieved a vast amount of p?* *
from Headache, whether ,*A$*
*urn»oi» system or from a derange
They era entirely vc«eUkl» IjL
sition, end mey be Ukcu
fbet safety without mekiof »*I 1 '
end Mr tlsraet tf t.y
If tary lo adeunufer Mot U <*“*"*■_,
BEWARE OF OOUSTBBF»IW|
Bold by Drui
iee beve die si|eeUR* •
on eeeh Box.
i„1st, end
Medletnee. —y «■
A Box will be eeet by med pto’” A
oeipiof Use
MUCH. JB6
All order, should be addressed ^
■ BNRY C. » . ,
4*1 Cedar HI rest,’
Wev. tA Hwly.