Newspaper Page Text
voL.
PUBLIC REPORT
OF A
POLICEMAN 1 .
I Ii ive not. enjoyed good health for several
Piet, yet hive not allowed it to interfere
wiU [uy labor. Every one belonging to the
Vi' in ' class knows the inconvenience of be
' oblr'od to labor when the body, from de-
Vlit'v, Jiuost refuses to perform its daily task,
j ! , u ,ver was a believer in dosing with medi
. 1,-jt having hoard the Veoetine spoken
so highly, was determined to try it, and
"’•v! never regret that determination. Asa
j o vhich every one needs at somo tiine( it
.••’iruasses anything I ever heard of. It invig
! ,-atrs the whole system ; it is a great cleanser
purifier of the blood, There are many of
i’,Y taiut:inu“3 who have taken it, and all
onita in praiscj of its satisfactory effect.
j ovially among tho aged class of people,
i: n't.parts to them I lie one thing most needful
in o l’d ag—nights of calm, i woot repose, the re
i v strengthening tho mind as well as tho body
One aged l*dy> who has boon suffering through
life from scrofula, and has become blind from
its (-Sects, having tried many remedies with no
favorable resuit, was induced by friends to
t-v the Vkgetink. After taking a few bottles
she obtained such grAt relief that she expres
sed a wish for her sight, that she might-be
able to look upon the man who had sent her
such ft blessing.
Yours respectfully,
0. I’. 11. HOUSE, Police Officer, Station G,
Boston, Mass., May 9, 1871.
HE vRTFELT PRAYER
Sr. Paul, Aug. 22,13G4.
II U Stevens, Esq :
Dear Sir—l should bo wmtinglin'gratitude
if I failed to acknowledge what the Vfoetine
li4H done for B rone Hit is, which settled into
Consumption. 1 Had night sweats and fever
chills ; was distressed for breath, and frequent
ly soil blood; was ail emaciated, very weak,
and so low that my frit nds my case
hopeless.
[ w;w a 1 vised to make a trial of the Vege
tine, which, under the pm vide nee of God, has
cured me. That he may bless the use of your
i ■ licine to others, as ho has to me, and that
his divine grace may attend you, is the heart
felt \)j cyer of your a !miring, humble servant,
BENJAMIN petting ill,
1* S.—Mine is but one among the many
<.U'-‘-3 your mediciae has effected in this place.
J • B. P.
MAKE IT PUBLIC.
South Boston, Feb. 9, 1971.
51 It SrF.TKNS, Es<J.
L):hs Sik— l have heard very many sources
of the grout success of Vegetine in cases of
Scrofula, Rheumatism, Kidney Complaint, Ca
t.u’Hi, and other diseases of kindred nature. I
i no hesitation in saying that I know Vog
> tine to be the n ost reliable remedy for Ca
.U a ,1
My wife has been troubled with Catarrh for
■ •.any years, and at times very badly, She has
Ihur'nghly tried every supposed remedy that
we could hear of, and with all this she has for
several years been gradually growing worse,
rnd the discharge from tile head was excessive
an! very offensive.
S',; was in this condition when she commen
ced to take Vega tine s I could see that she was
improving on the second bottle. She contin
ued taking the \ egelino until slia had used
from twelve to fifteen bottles. lam now hap
py in informing you and the pnbiic (if you
i-hoose to make it public) that she is entirely
cured, and Vegetine accomplished the cure af
ter nothing else would. Hence 1 fee) justified
iu saying that Vegetine is the most reliable
remedy,"and would advise all suffering buman
ty to try it, f >r f believe it to be a good, h >n
. at, ve 'etable medicine, and I shall not hesitate
lO .cc iannelid it - I am, &c., respectfully,
L. C. CARI'EIL,
Store 4dl Broadway.
Vegetine acts directly upon the causes of
these complaints. It invigorate and strength
> us the whole system, acts upon the secretive
organs, allays inflammation, cleanses and cures
ulceration, cures constipation, and regulates
the bowels.
HAS ENTIRELY CURED ME.
Boston, October, 1870.
Mr. Stevens :
Heav Sir -My daughter, after having a se
vere attack of whooping cough, was left m a
feeble state of health. Being advised by a
friend she tried the Vegetine, and after using
a few bottles was fully restored to health.
1 have been a great sufferer from Rheuma
tism. I have taken several bottles of the
Vegetine for th : s complaint, and am happy to
suy it lias entirely cured me. I have recom
mended the Vegetine to others, with the same
good results. Jt is a groat cleanser and purifi
er of the blood; it is pleasant to take ; and I
can cheerfully recommend it.
JAMES MORSE, 364 Athens Street.
M by all Druggists and Dealers EYGrywiiere,
Wonderful Success.
It is reported, that Boschee’s German Syr
up has, since its introduction in the United
States, reached the immense sale of 40,000 do
zen per year. Over 6,000 Druggists have or
dered this medicine directs from tire Factory,
at Woodbury, N, J., and not one has reported
a single failure, hut every letter speaks of its
astonishing suecc ss in curing severe Coughs,
Colds settled on tho Breast, Consumtion, or
any disease of Throat and lungs. We advise
any person that has uny prediposition to weak
Lungs, to go to tlieir Druggist W. 11. Lee, and
•get this Medicine, or inquire about it. lteg
ular size, 75 cents*;' Sample Bottle, 10 cents.
Two doses will relieve any case. Don’t neg
lect yonr cough.
MURDER WILL OUT.
A few years ago “August Flower” was dis
covered 1 1 he a certain cure for Dyspepsia and
Liver complaint, a few thin Dyspeptics made
known to then friends how easily and quickly
they had been"eur:d by its use. The great
merits of Geeen’s August Fboweb became
heraled through the country by one sufferer to
another, until, without advertising, its sale
has become immense. Druggists in EVEKY
TOWN in the United States are selling it.
Wi person suffering with Sour Stomach Head
mhe, Costivenoss, palpitation of tho Heart,
■ ndigistion, low spirits, etc, can take three do
ses without relief. Gc to your Druggest W. H.
Lee, and get a bottle for 75 cents and try it.
Sam pie bottles 10 cents.
THERE IS MONEY IN IT.
In these hard times a good return for hones
labor is very desUable. Any active young
man or young lady can ears a hnudsoms sum
by addressing, for particulars, the Managers
of The Constitution, the great political and
family journal published at the Capital of tho
fstate.
CONSTITUTION PUBLISHING CO.,
iTLAKTA, Ga,
ito IwMale legist
When the Song’s Gone out cf
Your Life.
When thejsong’s gone.'out of your life,
that you thought would last to the end—
That first sweet song of the heart,
after days cau lend—
Tho song of tho bird to the trees,!
The song of the wind to the flowers, '
The ong that the'heart sings low to itself,
When it wakes in life's morning hours,
“You can start no ether song,”
Not even a tremulousjuote
Will falter forth on the empty air;
It dies'in your aching throat.
It is all in vain that you try.
For the spirit of song has fled—
The nightingale sings no more to the rose
When the beautiful flower is dead.
So let silence softly fall
On the bruised hearts quivering strings;
Perhaps from tho loss of all you may luaru
Tho song that the seraph sings ;
A grand and glorious psalm,
That will tremble, and rise, and thrill,
And fill your bread with if* grateful rest,
And its lonely yearnings still,
WHAT A L Pit'e REPUBLIC AN
THINKS.
Tilden was Elected by the Vote
of Disaffected Republicans.
o the Editor of th: World:
•Slit: Tilden was chosen President by
the vote of the disaffected Republicans,
bbivk and white, in cause of a disgusted
and profound consciousness that Repub
licanism, as officered by Grant, Robeson
Chandler, bad oullivtd its usefulness.
Lincoln had a gentle wtsoom, the politi
cal ta< t and tenderness of a sweet souled,
many-sided statesman, seeing by intuition
the South could never be pinned to us
safely by bayonets. Seward, too, tcit
;hat the North could not long ho great
and prosperous and happy unless the
Smith should he lifted up and not crush
ed lower; to the end lluit she, too,
though prostrate and bleeding at every
pore (for the sins of slavery, if you
please), might become peaceful and pros
perous and happy. Not so General
'The only potent tactor he knows
in politics is the bayonet. The bayonet
is to be the new Ulysses what laudace
was to Mirakcau 1
The people declared on the seven,h
day of November last overwhelmingly
that Tilden was their choice for Presi
dent—a result which would not have
been obtained hut for the hearty cooper
ation of the ‘plain’ people belonging to
the Republican party. These disgusted
and disaffected Republicans had no other
way to ‘express their execration at the
conduct of an Administration which will
live in history only to point a moral and
give an example in politics of the Gal
vinistic doctrine ot total depravity. An
hottest count demonstrated that Hayes
was defeated ; every sane man will admit
*t—has admitted it. If Lincoln had been
in the White House no man in America
would have doubted that there would
l ave been an honest count of the ‘votes
actually cast.’ But Grant was there, and
Robeson was his trusted henchman. On
the morning of the 9lh ot November
Win. IT. Kemble (known to fame as‘Bill’
I Kentble), General U. S. Grant and Don
Cameron met at Drexel’s banking house,
in Third street, Philadelphia, and the
telegram was sent thence to Europe on
that, clay that Hayes’s electioft was in
doubt, and depended on the vole of
Florida and Louisiana. Many wise men
think that the conspiracy to cheat an
honest people out of an honest count
was concocted then and there; and it
was fitting that it. should have been done
at a banking house, and not in not in the
nation’s capital, where a too confiding
country has placed Grant, the central
figure of the banking bouse conference.
What need of the proc’aniation which
followed the next day, so apparently sur
charged with horror at fraud 1 We were
to have a fair count of the votes ‘actually
cast.’ Is there even a pretense that wa
uot it in Louisiana or in Florida? No!
No !
The conspiracy went on. Wm. Pitt
Kellogg, and Jim Casey the President's
brother-in-law, scarcely wait till they are
asked before their Returning Board, by
gigantic but swift system of villainy,
count out 8,000 majority for Tilden and
count iu Haves by a ‘satisfactory majori
ty.’ The great Bill of Rights complain
ed of a great standing army, and the
people of America are asked to writhe
wltb grace and groan in meiody when a
bayonet is thrust into Wade Hampton’s
lace and before every freeman for think-
j r „/ ie has been elected Governor of
South Carolina and for peaceably assert
ing bis rights under the law.
In Florida the Returning Boards re
fieets the political rascality of Louisiana,
and it is no wonder the people cry out
iu their anguish, ‘ls this a government
CONYERS, 0.V.. THURSDAY, DKUKMBKIi 81, 18Tt
of law or a government of men ?’
The great and good Republican leader,
Charles Sumner, and one of tho ‘simple
great ones, gone forever and forever by,’
warned us of our danger four yeais ago
in these memorable words from bis place
in the Senate:
‘The present incumbent (Graut) Luows
little of our form of government. By a
military ed ication and military genius
he represents the idea of force. Nor is
be any exception to the tule of his pro
fession, which appreciates only slightly a
government that is not arbitrary. The
time for the soldier is past.’
What the p ople ask, and upon that
they insist, is that the Presidential com
plications shall be settled by both houses
of Congress, without let or hindrance
from the Executive. Why this suspi
cion of danger which haunts the public
rninil asleep ov awake? Is it because
there may be something in the prophecy
of General Frank Blair that Grant would
not go out of the White House willingly
so long as he lived? We do not believe
in the gallant Blair's prophecy ; we
would he sorry to believe it. But we do
believe that General Grant, if ho wants
to give peace to the public mind, and not
add to the distress which to-day paralyzis
industry everywhere, will slum the Robe
sons and Don Camerons, and let what
Lincoln called the ‘angel of It's better
nature' speak. A matt repudiated by the
people is no safe counsellor for any Pres
ident.
But the people appeal confidently to
the Conkiings and Joneses and Kdimtnd
ses of the Senate, and even to Freling
huysen, who in a lucid interval of states
manship might forget that he had been
a partisan and rise to the nob.lily of pa
triotio duty. To these men we appeal,
knowing right well that if they act lrom
no loftier motive than the instinct of self
preservation, this will lead them to hesi
tate long before they inaugurate the
Mexican policy os Lerdo, Inglesias and
Diaz on the floor of the Senate—a policy
which would surely dig a grave tor the
Republican party in which the Senatorial
SUuudus migh - tuny '.liemreWc'S alive at
their leisure.
Many thousand Republicans in every
state, more in sorrow than in anger, vo
ted for Hayes because Alley feared just
what has happened. A demoralized, an
arrogant end an unscrupulous our.d of
office-holders, drunken with sixteen years
of power, wrapped in the triple brass of
their own selfishness, strong in the con
viction that this country can’t he run
without them, with unbridled audacity
refuse to let go their hold on power.
Kellogg was bequeathed to us by the
‘Wheeler compromise,’ and compromise
is the American devil. As there is no
power without justice, there must be no
compromise with fraud. Let the foun
dations,. then, he deep and broad and
strong upon which this question shall
hereafter rest, so that our children may
escape the dangers which to-day threat
en the republic. Returning reason in
both houses will being us a peace which
will come to stay. Amplifying the
words of Gambettn, America is the
Mount Aventine of a Democracy again
in accord with destiny and with human
progress. And above the passionate
conflict of the hour, see I—our flag does
not waver: it yet protects every man
who thinks or works.
James M. Scovkl.
Camden. N. J., December 11.
A gentleman said the other day to a
negro servent at the hotel, where ho was
staying: “Bless me. Sambo, bow in the
name of thunder did you get so black ? ’
“Why look 4 here, massa de reason am
dis—de day dis chile was born dar was
an eelips.” Sambo got a quarter for this
satisfactory explanation, and after grin
ning thanks, continued;“l tell you what,
massa, this nigger may be black, but he
ain’t green nohow.”
A little boy, gazing upon an old pict
ure of his mother, taken in ale w-neok
dress, remarked: ‘Mamma you was nios’
ready for bed when dat picter was took
cn/
A South Carolina negro invited his col
ored friends to a corn shucking, but as
be voted the Democratic tieket, they de
clined the invitation. ,The whites turned
out and shucked his corn.
A boy was much exercised (or fear he
would not know his father when they
both reach heaven. His mother eased
him by saying, ‘All you will have to do
is to look for an angle with a red cose.’
The Republican party prospers when the
country is in turmoil. Like the quack
doctor, it is h— lon fits, and is, conse
quently trying all the tine to thow the
country .into spasms.
THOSE SLIPPERS.
At this scl-on of the year the average
American housewife becomes as mys
terious as a lieu with a nest hid in the
current bushes, ller absences from
homo are frequent, and site avoids ’giv
ing an account of them. Her air is as
proem pied and her manner as fit 1 of im
portance ns if she were a cabinet minis
ter with a sta'e secret. She is apt to
neglect trifling household duties and lis
ten to reproof with the benign and kind
ly smilo of one who is abovo petty trou-
is preparing Chrismas pres
ents, and the burning ot a beefsteak is a
matter ot no moment. It is useless for
tho man of the house to remonstrate ; it
is idle lor him to grumble. Censure re
bounds from her like rain from the wings
ol an angel caught in a terrestrial storm.
Nothing will disturb her seraphic mood
until the January thaw. As woman at
the house-cleaning time of the year is a
lury, so woman at tho approach ot jtlie
holidays is a saint. And as no man may
withstand her when site rages about the
house in the melancholy days, with a
cloud of dust around her like that which
an ancient war chariot gathered as it
went, her skirts tucktd up rs a Roman
girt his garments for a street brawl, her
hair tied away under a hankerohief and
the bosom of destruction in her hand—
“ller broom the sceptre all who meet obev,”
—so no man may attack her with impu
nity in the milder madness of the Glu is-
mas season, when her motions aro quiet
and subdued and the mild light of hap
piness glows ill Lor eye. In bet role of
Martha, solicitous about house cleaning,
and in her role ot Mary, who hath cho
sen a Letter part, site is alike incompre
hensible to the sterner sex, aud every
sensible husband soon learns to look up
on his wife at such times as one whose
way s are not his ways, a creature to he
humored, like a poet, when tier eye is in
line frenzey rolling. t The Christmas
mania might, indeed, prove a very pleas
ant episode in family life, notwilhstan
ding the amount of money which it cost
wore it not for one peculiarity in the
madness. We allude to its tendency to
manifest and satisfy' itse t in I lie fabri
cation of slippers. Lovely woman seems
to he urged on by a sweet impulse to
decorate her spouse, brother or lover
with her own handiwork, and there ap
pears to be no other vehicle for the ex
pression of her affection, save slippers.
Like a painter through whose work the
influence of a single model is ever evi
dent, the gentler sex still fashion slip-
pers aud make them serve for even
relation of life, and its amenities. Sap
pers of morocco, slippers of velvet, slip
pers of carpeting, slippers embroidered
with roses, slippers adorned with Uniter
flies, slippers decked willi rosettes,
slipperas innumerable as the wintry
snowflakes, teach us the various minds
of women. Does the daughter desire to
show due reverence to her father ? She
gives him a pair of slippers. Does the
wife wish to pledge eternal conjugal
fidelity? What symbol for affection can
she find more potent than slippers? Is
the maiden anxious to give shy expres
sion to her fondness for a lover? llow
can the tender confession be so gelicate
ly conveyed as in a pair of slippers?
Does the solemn matron think it appro
priate to express to her minister her
approvel of his sound doctrinal methods
and fervid eloquence ? What eulogy is
so expressive as the gift of a pair ot
slippers? The man with many female
relatives is helpness at such a time, and
can only wish that he had as many feet
as Briareus had hands, so that lie might
Wear all his slippers at once ; or that
woman would devise some little variety
of method in spending his money. Hut
he might as w ell fight against the stars
in their courses, or against a setting hen
or a perverse mule, as urge objections
to woman intent upon the manufacture
of slippers. Never but once was this
propensity ot the sex towards slippers
turned to good account and therefore
baffled. The admirers of a celebrated
Jesuit preacher embroidered slippers for
him by the thousand and sent them at
presents, and as fast as he received them
they were confiscated to the common
stock of the order. It is said that a
great part of the society was comforta
bly supplied before the fair manufact
urers discovered how their gifts were
diverted to alien feet.
‘Did you do nothing fo resuscitate the
body?’ was recently asked of a witness at
a Corner’s inquest. ‘Yea sir; we search*,
ed the pocket,’ was the reply.
A Pennsylvania farmer, wbo cut open
a hornet’s nest to see how it was made,
will probably be able, it is said, to see
a born and other like small objects in a'
month or two.
Josh Billings Guide to Health. \
Pi ever run into del, not tf you can find
enny thing else to run into.
Be honest it yu kan ; if yu kati’t be!
honest, pry lor he’p.
Be kind to your mother-in-law, and
if necessary pay her board at somo good
hotel.
Bathe thoroly wutieo a week in soft
water and kasteel soap and avoid tile
bools.
Exercise in the open air, but don’t saw
wood until yu are obliged to -
Raff every time you feel tickled, and
laff wunce in a while anyhow .
Eat hash wash in days and bo thank
ful, even it yu have to shut j ure eyes to
do it.
Hold the baby hnff the time, and al
ways start the fire in the morning and
put on the tea kettle.
Don't jaw back—it only proves that
yu are as big a pliool as the other pliel
lo.
Never boirow that yu are able to buy
and alwcys have turn things yu won't
lem'.
Never git in a hurry; yu kan walk a
good deal further in a day than yu kan
run.
Don’t sware, it may couviuee yu, hut
it is sure not to convince others.
If yu hav dauters, let your wife bring
them up ; if she has got comtnou sense
she kan beat all yout theory.
Don’t drink too much nu cider and
however mean yu may he, don't abuse a
cow.
I.uv and respect yure wife entiyliow ;
it is good deal cheaper than to he all tho
time wishing she* was suiu bow differ
ent.
Don’t plioo! with spiritualism ; it is
like being a moderate drinker, sure to
heat yu at last.
Don’t hav enny rules for long life that
yu won't break ; he prepared today to
die to morrow is tho best kneed for long
that I kno ov.
Keep yure tied cool and yure feet dri,
and Loathe through yure nozo as often
as often as y u kan.
“De Cause ob de ’Spin shun.
‘I would invite you to my house brud
(hr Jackson,’ said Deacon Johnson, as
he emerged from church last Sunday
evening, ‘but I dun no as we'il get any
suprer dir night, the cook stove am so
dri ffully out oh repair.’
‘Whats de matter wid de stove?’
‘Why, you see cold wedder am coinin'
on and woods geiiin sknsc an’ high in'
I've 'structed de folks to bp berry ikono
iiiical in de usin’ ob it. Wes’e bin
buy in’ in small lots, an’ last night bein’
out of fuel I sent ono of my boys ober
to a neighbor’s to borrow a few sticks.
Do man or bis family had gone to bed
owin’ to the lateness ob de hour, an' dal
boy, U'ho would ’spise to do a wnhoucct
transaction, wrote out bis note for de
value ob de wood, an’ dropj in’ it in a
prominent place in de woodshed, spouK
dered an armful an’ brought it home,’
‘Jess so.’
‘W ell, a fire was kindled, de tea kit
tle put on de ole woman she is giltin’
dc supper; All ob a sudden puff went
de stove, zoom i keswish, kuslush went
something, and as I tumbled over 1 saw
de ole woman makin’ for de roof wid de
tea kiltie and de stove plates followin’
her, while de boys and de gals was as
black wit smut as do ace ob spades. De
stove’s goose was cooked for a fact.'
‘Wliat was de cause ob de eiiloshun ?'
‘l’m strongly ' dined to believe dat
dar was powder in dat wood, an’ dat de
powder was done put dar by dat white
man to kotch sotno theivin’ darkeys wat
nebber buys no wood, au’ bressed ef I
don't think dat man specie me, kasc he
couldn't find dat note, an won’t make
any ’pologies,’,
‘Dat am an outrage.’
‘For a fact, au' de chillen’e supper was
spiled, too.’
The smallest Bible iu the world just,
produced by the Oxford University Press
is printed on a longue India paper of ex
treme thicknes and capacity, rmsures four
and one-half by two and three-fourths
inches, is one and halfjncheg thick, and
weighs, bound in limp morocco, less than
three and one half canoes. It esn be sent
through the Biitish post foe a penny.
George Francis Train admits that he
has “sunk hi* egotism in the universal.”
Society has no guarantee, however, that
he will not, some day, be bailing his
hook to fish it up again. Without his|
egotism George will fed as uncomfortable ‘
as a rheumatic without a red flannel shirt I
in w'nter time.
A. G. MoCAUA,
Attorney at Law,
cuCTeRS, t i , GEORGIA,
Will practice in Rockdale and adjoinirg ootro
tie*- ti-nlf-lf
F. B PHINIZY~
Successor to C. H. riitclsy A C*.
€&TTQN
FaiCWm,
AUGUSTA, - - - UEUBGIAx
Literal Jeeantee made on Cceketgnenente*
nttg23 Sill
JAMUS C. BARTON. j CALM 1. BARTOW.
BARTON At BARTON.
Attorneys at Law,
CONYERS, t i , GEORGIA,
Will practics in tho Courts at this Sluts, mi
in the U. S. Court* at Atlanta, Ga.
Special attention given to the ColUetim V
Claim*- Tt-all-tf
H.H.III’DONALD,
Will be found at bis Office, Boom Vo. S Whita
bond House, Conyers, Ga., whr* he is pre
pared to do all kinds of work in hi* tin., Fill,
ing Teeth made a speciality.
work Warranted to gite ffef
Being thankful for past patronage, he re
spectfully solicits a continuance of the sense.
Will mm Smite
SILVERSMITH ami JEWELER,
CJNYEUfI, CKOUUIA
Watches, Clock, and Jewelry of every de
scription repaired. All work dons neatly, and
in order, aj lowest price* for cah, and warran
ted to give satisfaction. Shop : next door tu
Poet Office. aug231878-ty
JOOW.VS and
Lft.\6FOo,
BUGGY and WAGON BEPOWORT,
CON YE US, - GEORGIA,
DEALERS In AND MANEFAO'U.'UEBt OF
HAND CARTS,
WHEELBARROWS,
and VEHICLES of all kind*.
HARNESS, from the Cheapest to the
Dearest, both Hand and Machine Stitoh
ed. We keep the best
HMD-MADE HiltU.
in Use, for CARHIAGKS
BUGGIES, or one Horse WAGONS.
Can supf ly any part of HARNESS' on
short uotior.
Also, a full stock of
LUMBER
in great variety always on Laud, for
homo building purposes. Carpenter*
and Contractors would do well to see our
special wholesale rules.
Mouldings, Latices, Stops, Strips, etc.,
a speciality, and made of any width,
thickness, or shape. Window Saab
primed and glassed—-Blinds and Door*,
either white or yellow pine.
Also suitable lumber tor Coffins. We
always keep in stock Burial Oases and
Caskets of various sizes and lengths,
from infant* to adults—all at very loir
figures. C'-itfin Hardware generally.
With our facilities, we pr.posp to make
Coffins ot any style, from the plainest to
the finest, cheaper than we possibly could
by baud alone. Give us a Inat ami
seel
PATENT WHEELS.
Hubs, Spokes, Kims, Bodies
Scats, Shafts, Foies Dash Frames,
Axles, Springs. IRON in great
variety. Screws and Bolts ot best
make. Patent and Enameled Leather,
Enameled Clothe, Moss and everything a
Trimmer needs. Full *tock *of best
Carriage Paints, Varnishes, Oils, Color*,
Ornaments, and Paints generally. NEW
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES
and WAGONS always on hand, in great
variety, and can make to order any style
or quality desired. Old ones Repaired,
Painted and Trimmed at short notice,
*nd at living rates. We buy tho best
material, aud having suitable machinery,
are able to turn off work with neatness
and dispatch.
With constant devotion to our Bus!
ness, Honest Dealings with our Custom
ers, Experienced Faithful Mechanics, and
the manufacture of Reliable Goods in
rour line, we hope to merit a liberal pat
ronage from a Generous Public. Thank
ing you fo.- your past favors, we will be
glad to see you again at our office on
Depot Street, near the Geo R R.
Respectfully,
JVS <fe LA.Vf-.POKr>
NO. 84.