The Cedartown express. (Cedartown, Ga.) 1874-1879, October 03, 1878, Image 1

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The Cedartown Express. By Jno. W. Radley. Official Organ of Polk and Haralson Counties. VOLUME IV. CEDARTOWN, GA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1878. Subscription $2 Per Annum. NUMBER 47. I> It x) F KSSI OS Ah j^URDOCK MoBRIDE, A 1' T 0 U N 1? V A. T r. AW, HUCI1.M4AK, HA. y$r Will pfoutlc* In »ll tUu Contis or the Romu jtrcalt and adjoining counties. may W-78lf 0 T *TT0SSBI8 AT LAW, {fciDAltTOWN, GA. r :fy*>VlU pravltc* la all the Court* or the Home Circuit, lit ilia Supreme Court aftho State, and In the IT. H. DUtrlct Court for thu Northern District o( UeerKla. Nov, 11,1871. T. W. MlLNKll. J. VT. HARRIS, Jn iy^ILKfiR * HARRIS. A l' T 0 K N R Y 8 A T LAW, CAHTJSKSVILLE. 6A. fc W** Of**icb »n Main Street, uoit door to Oil- •ath i Son. Mr. Mltaur will attend the Superior Court or Polk county royitUrly. Match i. lH77-tf W.M.STR AIM GE, N. 1>. & Ex. Oil'. J. 1*. ^jooRmort, Orix. {^g- (Jollvotioiid solicited, mill money paid over punctually. ESTABLISHED IM 1850. HcGLURE'S Temple of Music. W lIOLIMALKand Bvt.iil A.'rn- cy for the Iteuowned Plano -Unitors, STEIN WAY, KNABE, DUNHAM, BACON & KAR.lt mul J. & C. FIS1IER. O-l .'ir.tej Dr.iKi „f MADOX * II XMI.IN. linr; il.tt, N„w Bnjiml orr-ilC...-iil.l'l ■' I’;'"™ * 0,.', UjMfc IIJI"^{[{.Tuo) A BUST GUI i , Aas. > K , ,s,. Br """ 0 *■"' Abo rull line or Hn>-'i'll- Ii. w'.'lMc VSt o.'l ?extra liuViieeinei'le ln"|mr- 01 (J3 HALL. TONSl'l’ORI AU PARLORS. CBDAHTOWN, O-A. 'and Hair Cult lug iliim e.i|it'dltliiu»ly. THE t’LAUUE. BY WILL. S. IIAYKS. fmntfOf the Sunny South, Foul is tliy breathy Sweeping its victims Onwurd to death. Holding high carnival, Borne on the breeze, Dancing like madmen, Death and disease. Cod help the people, Bowed in their grief! 0, be thou merciful, Give them relief. All they can hope for Comes from on .high; Angels, 0 pity them— See how they die. Heaven I be merciful Ere all are los»; God! how they’ve slifter.*d! 0 send them a frost. Dying, O kiss them, And out of thy mouth Speak to them—pity them, Cod help the South. CONFESSION OF MOUNT CURRY THOMPSON’S RESTA URANT AND ladikb’ cafe, J A MHS\ HA SK IlLOVK, ATLANTA, OA. , -T oxo—— OPEN DAY AND NIGHT. jsy Accommodations for Families, ami Meals at ull Hours. Marah 14-flm Boiu$ ltaUroad. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE. <>u and otter SUNDAY, JUNK U, 1818, thu n \ u , W U1 ran on thu Rome Railroad a* follow*: EVENING TWAIN. Leave Roma daily at 8 - 10 A M Return to Homo at **•*> ** M SATURDAY ACCOMMODATION. Leave Roaie (Saturday only) i»t 5 001’M Return to Roma at 8 * u0 M C. M. PKNNlNdTON, Oon’l Sup’t. ap«tf JNO- K. STILLWELL, Ticket Ag’l A Lecture TO YOUNG MEN. A Lecture on tho Nature, Treatment, and Radical Cure rtf aominol weakness, or 8pern»atorrlioi. Induced by SKe, jnvoluuurv 1 Bta{ AIom, Impotency, Nervon. dUiiIi,.. to fcoOgJ Tho world-_ ture, clearly that the awful daogcKm* r *urpn , al operation*, iiou’ale*, in*tn limit*, ring*, or cordial*; painting out a mode of cure at once certain and effectual, by which every •uflerar. no matter what hia condition may be, may anre him *clf cheaply, privately and itdlcally. iWThlB Lecture will prove a boon to thousand* Sent under aeal, in a plain envelope, toanyaddror* ns® XL ,l S.SS!&“ r fjom his own experience poetage stamp*. GkOBGIA-POLK COUNTY.—8. K. Hogue, Administrator, of W. S. Hogue, deceased, has ap piled Ibr leave to a ell all tjm lend belonging to the estate of aaid deceased, fheletoro all peraona oon- eered will Ilia objections to the same, If any thoy have at a Court ol Ordinary, to he held In aald county oh the «r»t Mohday ln October noxt. Thla Scomber'ttftitm. JOEL BREWER, aeptfftod Ordinary. Who is now Confined in Folk County Jail for Cattle Stealing, I was born in the Slate of Ala bama, and in the county of Tnluilign, and in four miles of Taladiga Town. I belonged to Thomas Curry when I was freed. From thu best in forma lion tlirt I can get from my muster, I am about twenty-one years old. The first thing that I ever stole in my liTe was some water melons, from my father, in the year 1800. Then the next thing that I stole was s mi - money from my sister*, the unionn< I do not recollect. Thu next thing that 1 did was to kill a hog, an I I Imd to pay the owner Ibr the hog. I was hired by Mr. Park .1 m-s to catoll some wild hogs. I went in o the woods, and the lirst hog time 1 caught was Harvey G tic’s ho,; and ilieu thu next hog tint I onight belonged to Marion Burk. Then xt thing that I stole was Mr. Bishop’s bridle, and tin u went ami stub Mr. Thomas Kelley’s li *rs*> and rod • tli horse to Calhoun county, Akbana, to the town of Oxloi'd, and t ier ihey caught me and put iiie'in tin Caliboos unlil night; ami tluoi they I sent a dispatch down to Tul.uli. > and Mr. Thomas Curry and Thou ns Kelley came niter m *, and started with me back, and got in one mile of Taladiga when 1 slipped tile rope ■ df my neck and g »t away from them. I had such good luck in getting away from them that 1 took another horse from Mr. Charles Boscdl ./ho lives in six mles of Taladiga. Then I rode the horse up near White Plains, Al abama, and there I swapped the horse lor an old gray mule and got a year ling to boot. That night I let my yearling to a manJorstaying all night with him, and lie gave me on * d d- lar to boot. From there I went up near Cave Spring, and swapped my old gray mule for a silver mounted rifle. I done this in the year.1877. They came after me, and caught me at Mr. Bratley - Whites, where I was working. They carried mo to Mr. Ellis’ and stayed all night. About six or seven miles below Mr. Ellis’ 1 slipped the halter and again made my escape. I will give you a correct statement of the cattle that 1 huve stolen iii Georgia. The first that I stole was in July 1878, three head of cattle from old uncle Billy Reynolds, and then I sold one to Mr. Berry Holder and the other two iu Rome. Mr. Holder gave me #4,50 fpr the oue he got and Mr. McKee $10,00 for the one he got from me, it was a steer, I let it go to the beef man that keeps on Howard street going iu from the new bridge on the right hand, he gave me $8,00 for the little steer. Then the next cow I stole was from Mr. Hilly, on Saturday night the 1st of August, the cow was a dark color ed cow giving milk, I roped her and took her to one man by the name of Jack Bailey and delivered said cow. to him for sale keeping. Then the next cow I stole was from the old man Lyons, the cow was a white and yellow spotted, from her looks she was about 3 or 4 years old. J. found her in Mr. Lyons' lot, and I roped her in there and drove her over where 1 lived about three weeks ago. I then sold the spotted cow to Mr. Holder for $7,00. And then I got several other cattle in tho woods that I did not know who they belonged to, that I sold to that old in in that keeps the beef market on Howard street as you go in town, on the right hand side. I sold six beeves, smile wore yearliugs and some were grown cows. The amount that l g it for nil the cows and yearlings was ab u seventy or eighty dollars. I g >t Mr. JumuA.Jenkins* steer on Thursday night the 29th of August, 187 >. 1 found said steer tied in his lot, in this county. There were three o'her steers tied in the lot besides the one [ stole. 1 took Iiiiii and drove him to my homo where Aunt Peggy lives 'I stayed with her. She keeps a 1 1 I linvo for me. There is no one else engaged with me, I am by my sell Sam Williams, the sch ml teacher, owes m,* $9,75 an l lie s lys tli it. h does not owe in* bit. $135. IL knows that when he and l sold tli n yearling in K into, 1 let him hav $9,75. 1 thought [ would meet him i.. heaven, I do not bdieve I will now I am going to try t> s*ek God now On Sunday the first day of Septem ber I was lying asleep in Aunt Peg- py’s house when I was to my sail disappointment startled by a crowd of men saying to in *, Joe Curry, we have come after you, and I said tli it 1 have done nothing, but they told me they waiPel that steer, an I l told them that, it was down the w iy- 8*ule, and they told me not to pass that steer, and I went to where I tied the steer, and then t.li-y brought me to Cedartown jail. They tied m • around the neck. I would have slipped the haulier again but they did not give me any clianc*, for th y were a rough crowd of men, I tell you. I did not take Mr. J-nkim' steer because I needed him, but j i«t to keep in good practice for f'*ar it woul I be the last one. Lord for I hop* C Mlle8 to die that G»d will r.'Oei' me, for I do hope tlmt I will 8 ion i at rest. his Mount >\ Cukuy. mark THE IIKIlfiAIMW OF IMEDEI,. A Barbarous Execution In Borman} in the Modlitkal Made. A Berlin correspondent of the New York World writer as follows: Tli* sen fluid was erected in the prison-yard, where about fifty per sons, magistrates and lawyers, munic ipal officials military officials and . , , members of the f.elice force, besides, 1 wheel, (exited ^bout some rej orters, wire gathered. The prisoner, conducted by three wardens, walked with a tirin'step to the foot of (he scaffold and Stared impudently around at the assefnlduge. Council or Holltnunn, who was charged with superintending th< execution, took his place at a tabl* and read loudly lie sentence of jk*uth and death- warrant. At the ^conclusion Ilmclel spat up m thu ground and cried, •‘Bravo!” The magistrate now turn ed to a tall, 8»rong|y built man of about 30 nr 35 years of ago, hand some, with a small mustache and neatly, indeed elegantly, attired in a (l ie linen shirt with waistcoat and irousers of black broad-cloth. This brought out, into which the still bleeding remains were pitched. It was placed in a hole already d*»g in a corner of the prison-yard. The earth was tilled in and all was over. The ax with which Iloedel whs beheaded Inis been replaced in the museum in its old place, above the block on which the head of the Bur- thirty years ago for an attempt upon tho life of Frederick Williiun IV.) was struck olF, and beneath the thong with which his head was fastened to the block. II Kit It Kit ANTE, TBU EXECUTIONER. The old headsman, W. Keindel, who had giown rich through tho exorcise of his minor function of dog catcher to the city, was no longer equal to the serious labor of striking oir a man’s head at a blow, a«d so passed over his axe—or rather a duplicate of his nx—to the younger man. No such implement having been needed for more than a dubade, the Departy moot of .Justice found its -If compell ed to resort to the Market. Museum. An ax had been ordered a year ago by the director of the museum, an exact duplicate of tlmt Keindel had employed, and which the nuiseVun was u liable to seen re, owing lo the fancy price the old beadsman placed upon his wenjwfifr Tills ax was bor I Imvu pul nil mi trust in me Ron,l I l‘>wiil. Urn Gn.ssimimi, the cutler, Imt when the day of whom one h d been orueml, be* .jv,. | ing nimble to get one ready in lime. l H . I It is a I rge weapon, a good deal LIKE A ItUTOH Bit’s CLEAVE It, in appearance, with a very keen, straight edge. It was giouirl to the sharpness of a nfo«»r the nlieriiorin TO MARRIED FOLKW. The first year of unrried life is a i>81 important era in the history of an and wile. Generally, as it is spent, so is always subsequent axis The wife and the husband then assimilate their views and their desires, or else conjuring up their dislikes, they add fuel to their preju* lices and animosity forever after wards. I have somewhere read, says Rev. Mr. Wise, in his “Bridal Greet ing,.” of a bride groom who glorified in his eccentricities. He requested his bride to accompany him in the garden a day or two after their wed ding. He then threw a line over their cottage-. Giving his wife one end of it he retreated to tlm oth*r side and exclaimed: “Bull the line!” She pulled it at his request as far as she could. He cried, “Pull it over!” “I can’t,” she replied. “Pull with all your might,,’shout ed the whimsical husband. But in vain were all the efforts of the bride to pull the line so long ns her husband held on to the opposite end. But when lie came round and both pulled at one end it came over with great ease. “There,” said he, as the line fell from the roof, you see how hard and ineffectual was our labor when both pulled in opposition to each other; but how easy and pleasant, it was when we both pulled together. It will be jiist so through life, my dear. If we oppose each other it will always be unpleasant to live. Let up always pull together. In this illustration, homely ns it may be, there is a sound philosophy. Husband and wife must naturally bear and concede if they wish to make home a retreat of bliss. One alone cannot make homo hap py. There must be unity of action, sweetness of spirit and great forbear ance and love in both husband and wife, to secure the great end of hap piness in the domestic circle. You may save the expenae of a trip to Hot Springs by the use of Dr. Bull’s Blood Mixture. It is the remedy for the blood. before the execution. Bidding up the-warrant that the headsman might! see the Crown Prince’s signature, Councilor 11**11- umn said to him: “Note this document, and now re ceive from me tie tinsmith Emil Heinrich Max lljedel, delivered to you to be beheaded” Come this way.” s lid the lieails- u I. • II ludel, '.din nin lighlly lip the three steps le.Jlingf t. tin* pi it- form and threw nil his «*»at’ and waiscoat. At this)noi|ieiit the chap- l-!iell began tolling; lie gazed in its direction, then locked around upon those present with an ironical sneer. Throwing down liis braces, Iloedel began to unbutton his -hirt, hut could not uulasten oiie of the but tons. One. of the gardens went to his assistance and turned it down be neath his shoulders,leaving the neck and the upper part j 1 the breast bare. Meanwhile two other keepers had tied the coiidemnedjtnan’s arms and ankles. They theifcarried him, PINIONED AND HELPLESS, to the block, whiih was of stout, hard wood, with a’liollow to receive the neck, and minted blood-red* Laving huh on it downward, a strong leathern band was fastened over the back of the heal, so that it could not b* moved unk a clearly-defined mark was offered fir the headsman’s blow. Opening a leatlern case, on which were in gold figuus “1878,” Krantz took out the glittering new ax, and taking his aim y\th an almost im perceptible glanc/, swung the weapon aloft and bronghl it hissing down on the hand of flesh between the leath ern fastening Jin} the turned-back shirt. ONLY ONE BLOW WAS NEEDED. Toe blood sprang out of the irn nnmse wound; the neck vanished (as it seemed), and there was left the trunk, which twitched spasmodically a few times, aud the head, which looked as if it had been shorn off just at the chin. A very slight con traction or movement of the skin of the forehead was noticeable. The whole operation lastedj about two miuutes and a half. A coffin was BEAUTIFUL IIANILS. As a young friend was standing with us noticing the people on the sidewalk, a very stylish young lady passed.—“Wluit beautiful hands Miss has,” exclaimed our friend. “Wlmt makes them beautiful?” “Why, they are small, white, soft, and exquisitely shaped.” “Is that all that constitutes the beauty of a hand? is not something more to be included in y >ur catalogue of beauty, which you have not men tioned, to make the hand desirable?” ‘Wlmt more would you have?” “Are they charitable hands? Have they ever fed the poor? Have they ever carried the necessities of life to the widow and the orphan? ILs their soft touch ever smoothed tho irrita tion or sickness and the agonies of pain? Do the poor bless those rosy- tipped lingers as their wants are sup plied by them?” “Are they useful hands? Have they been taught that the world is not a pl*y.ground or a theatre of display, or a mere lounging place? I)» these delicate hands ever labor? Are they ever employed about the domestic du ties of life—the horn *ly, ordinary em ployments of the household? Or 'dies tfto owner leave all that to her mother, while she nurses her delicate hands in idleness?” “ Are they mo.lest hands? Will they perform their cimrPios or their du ties without vanity? Or do they pm- der to the pride of their owner by their delicacy and beauty? Does she think in ire of ilieir disyl iy than the improvements of her mind ami char acter, and the salvation of her 8 ml?” “Are they humble hands? Will their owner extend them to grasp the hand of that old schoolfellow who sat at the same desk with her and on thu recitation bench, but who now must earn her living by her labor? Or will they remain concealed in their exclusiveness, in her aristocrat ic muff, us siw sweeps by her former companions? “Are they holy hands? Are they ever clasped in prayer, or elevated in prayer. Does she remember the God who 1ms made her to differ from so y other girls, and devote her mind, her heart, her hands to His service?. Does she try to imitate the Savior by going about doing good? Or are her hands too delicate, too beautiful to be employed in good works? These are the qualities that make a hand beautiful.” YOUR OW.N HOME. If you marry, set up a home of your own at all hazards. The plan of taking lodgings in prefer ence to housekeeping, is adopted by many young married people, in consideration of certain supposed ad ages it holds out. One pleads inexperience iu household duties an other, the advantages of leisure, which will be thus secured, aud the opportunities for improvement; a third urges the importunities of friends. In every case tho argument is against them. They intend to be come householders at some future day. Will the duties they now dread and are tin acquainted with, be come more easy and familiar by the' postponement? No teaching is'so rapid and effectual as that of experi ence, and no time so fitting as the proper time, namely: when they are first married. CANONIZATION OF FRAUD. The Ilarfridge resolution declared llivt inasmuch us the Forty-fourth Congress counted the votes for Hayes and Wheeler there is no pow er in any subsequent Congress, in the courts of the United States, or in any tribunal created by Congress, to re verse the result. This is one way of saying tlmt Fraud by becoming successful be comes sue red, and tlmt people have no remedy. It is tin abominable doc trine. There could be no justice, no security for life and property, no honest government by the people, if were true. The Burchnrd resolution, passed only a few minutes before the Hart- ridge resolution, was parallel in its ntent. It declared that since Haves and Wheeler were counted in by the Forty fourth Congress, no subse quent Congress Imsjurisdic ion, and that any attempt to revise the action of the Forty-fourth Congress would be revolutionary. Neither the Burclmrd nor the Hartridge resolution mentions the fac tlmt the II us of U- presentn- tives of the Forty-fourth Congress adopted a resolution solemnly declar ing tlmt Samuel J. Tilden received 180 electoral votes for President, and was duly elected. The Democrats who voted fir eith er tho Burclmrd or the Hartridge resolution tire unworthy to represent any longer the party that elected Tilden President. They should be set aside as unfaithful servants, and replaced by men who have the cour age of their convictions. It is of the greatest possible consequence that the majority in the Forty-sixth Con gress should be composed of men who have not stultified themselves by falling down upon their knees atnl worsIni>pi 11gsoccesshi I Fraud.— The fJcTriuvru/i Ky. Our own representative, W. II. Felton, was oue of the majority in Congress who by resolution solemn ly declared Tilth n the legally elected President of the United States. But unfortunately for the honor 4^-tTeor- gin, when the time *JT general dis grace came round, lie stultified him self ami disgraced his district by vo ting for butli the Hartridge and the Burclmrd resolutions. Such time serving men should not hi* ti listed in an emergency like this. True men to the. front, or tmr lib erties will be gone before wo are aware of it! Digeston. “Give us this day our daily bread’, and good medicine to digest it, is both reverent and human. The hunftin stomachund liverare fruitful sources of life’s comforts; or, disordered and diseased, they tingle misery along every nerve artery. The man or wo man with good digestion see beauty as tliey walk, and overcome obs«ti des they meet iu the routine of life, where the dyspeptic sees only gloom and stumbles and growls at even imaginary objects. The world still needs two or three new kinds of medicine before death can be perfect ly abolished; hilt that many lives have been prolonged, and many suf ferers from Liver disease, Dyspepsia and Head.che, have been cured by Mkrrell’s Hkpatink, is no longer a doubt. It cures Headache iu twen ty iniuules, and there is no question but what it is the most wonderful discovery yet made in medical science. Those afflicted with Bil iousness and Liver Complaint should use Meurell’s Hepatine. Barit can be had of Buuhank & Jones. Liver is King. HOWARD ASSOCIATION. From WnoM and Why They Took The Name. .tnhn Howard, F. 8., was horn m 1720, ut Hockhnry, near London, the son of a tradesman, and inheri ted an independent fortune. It was not used for any low ends, not even for that higher of low ends mention ed by the poet, who advised the ac quisition of wealth: “Not for to hide II In • ditch. Not for a train attMirinnt, Hut for thu Klorlout* privilege Of being Independent.” Fur from socking imlcpcmlcncc, h. lined it in mnking himself the alnve of humanity in u physical sense, but thereby secured that nubia indepen dence of a man whose moral nature lifts him above trammels of sense and low desires, lie was on a mis sion of mercy to Lisbon, after the great cnr>bqnake, when lie nut will) a misfortune which was the director of Ins Itilnrc life. Captured by a Fiencli privateer, liis life in prison determined liis life-work among tho wretched and vile, to alleviate tho siilferiugs, and seek some restorations of the means of moral reform, of which the criminal iv.is deprived by prison-life discipline. He visited most of the prisons of Kngluud, and induced tile Commons to begin a system of prison reform. From that time (1704) lie spent liis life travel ing over Europe, visiting prisons and hospitals, nursing and nilieving the sick, sharing the prison fare with the worst criminals, and exhibiting the most heroin devotion, llo was temperate, self-dtuying, simple in habits, and in diet, rigidly abstemi ous. Iu 17110, alter a life spciil in good works, he died on tlte Held of honor at Ilia post. It may seem tlmt such a life should have ended at home, with friends about the couoh, and I he sympathetic hands of wife and children to soothe and caress, und calcli tile whispered lareweli of one (in whom tin* oiirtaio lias descen ded in tin- last act. His last act was one of apiece with liis. life. A terri ble pestilence of fever Imd broken -'ll oo ifnCTfladk .SrM. Mod tie'llimt^o^ ed lo labor for tile r, lief of tile atSft” ering and study Iho onuses of pesti lence ill tile interest of coming gen erations, when lie was' stricken down ut (Aierson and died, away from airy, home and friends, but died at liis post, walking the dreary round on Ids bent, guarding against death. HiicIi a life is fitly perpetuated in the name of Howard, in our cities, where hundreds and thousands of heroes, imbued with I lie samu humanity, on listed in the same cause, win the same bright crown, cither in an hon orable death nobly won, or in an ap proving conscience. Perhaps no earthly inline lingers, orearthly fame is enshrined, but what of thut'f Tile commander's name lingers oil pages to lie written years after, but the re ward for duly as honestly und nobly performed, lias been awarded PYiudly to hint who sleeps in an unmarked grave, perhaps never missed from tlie roll of the world. The Philadelphia Tunes has a department headed “Men and Things.” It is all right to give th. man the first place, lint does tile Times consider it the most gallant tiling in the world to snub women by calling them such a name? Feathers will be universally worn this winter.—[Fashion item. Guess not, exclaims the Norristown Herald man. We shall not wear feathers— not a solitary feather. If our friends choose to make themselves redicolons tliey can do so; but no feathers lor As the perfection of entirety de pends upon the perfection of minu- tins, so no one. can hope for robust health of the entire system if the blood should become ill the least im pure. Its standard ot purity is best maintained by the use of Dr. Bull’s Blond Mixture. The Liver is the imperial organ of the whole human system, as it con trols the life, health uml happiness of man. When it is disturbed in its proper action, all kinds of ailments are the natural result. The diges tion or food, the movements of the heart and blood, the notion of the brain and nervous system, are all im mediately connected with the work ings of the Liver. It has been suc cessfully proved that Green’s August Flower is iineqnaled in curing nil persons afflicted with Dyspepsia or Liver Complaint, and all the numer ous symptons that result from an un healthy condition of the Liver and Stomach. Sample bottles to try, 10 cents. Postively sold in all towns on the Western Continent. Three doccB will prove that it is just what yon want. For sale by Bradford & Allen. jmicSOe.wly When the nurse brought twins to a fond husbaud in Paris recently, he threw up liis hands, sli.rgged his shoulders, and exclaimed.' “Every thing has doubled during the Exhi bition.” ‘IF you lifte me, pay the wash bill yon owe mother,” is the remark the pretiy daughter .( a laundress made to her young man the other evening* and now he raves aud tears his hair, and swears all women ure heartless. No family can fuel that it has a perfect safeguard against the insidi ous utnicks of disease nuless it keep- rvtidy for any emergency, a supply of Dn. Ua.utkk'8 Liver Pilus. Fur sale by all Druggist. SeptSi6-3li