Newspaper Page Text
VOL. I x >
~nR C. M. PARKER,
Ho r ‘ TCr .t moderate chHr K ep. He lie preparing
*foi cin4 ?‘-e<b and put in new teeth vn Plate. —
~ fort®® , iry'.p an teaortmont oi family tnedl
forage. Meo fa-xuiy euppliee for
' - ■ . uary, 1880.
CANNON house.
V 7r GEORa£ W. HANVEY,
STREET. - - ATLANTA. GA
-atle supplied with the best the
aflords.
TERMS MODER\T£
THE BICKFORD
OJIATIC FAMILY FITTER.
& 1 \ Bq.*
pi jfl «-v.\ »(3
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c j f 9
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r G >*fbl vartoty of plain or fancy stitch, 75 per
cent profit In manufacturintr knit goods. Karin
rr«c»n treble the value of their wool, by convart
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Agents wanted In every State, County City and
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for fall particulars and lowest prices for the
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Brattleboro. Vt.
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THE PEOPLE’S
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I^MWW | j|J?FL C? A o
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Wph.v. i „ Terrt, Houston CoTnty g»
Mercurial rV,.?^ 8 ‘.’ f ob ßttaarc cxi^ s of Syphilis.
V; at it niaae tiiT hcrofula - etc., and’ testify
cures i„ ev ° 8 y Jg e ® Ost perfect and permanent
3tM T D H KmiiJ ,E1 '’ >XRD ’ ° Eii Eli w a»R»K
Jnri. A J W WIMBKRLT.
J L ' VT rt ’ Dr J C GiLßKiiT.Drug't
JW ! ’* f firt » of J w Man*,
I Savanrlh rO J? A Co " County Treasurer,
Er. jlck “x 6a " D
ILI k Sup r Ct Mewnj Day X Gorton,
Maj VS m Burson.
l c 2 aainU . d w u Hh the gentle.-
cite rh v to the above certifi-
nl“- ? b °y ar « C'Uxens of said countv nf the
A-mi repe ctabiiity and character k ’ ° U
AS GILES,
Ordinary Houston Co., Ga.
Clerk Buperior Court, Houston cotJ'tffy, Ga.
‘rd iLao w^h a ma y n v C M nfed th thc
lures appear -^th 7 °r the gentlemen wboee aiga».
AH COLQUITT.
Governor of Georgia.
A^ r G. 0D ’ 5 ' bytb '‘ BWIrT specific co.,
by FITTS & WEST,Carrollton, Ga.
CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
From the Columbua Enquirer.
A TRUTHFUL ASi D PROPHETIC
LETTER
Flom SI nJ. danahl, of Augusta, ca.,
to a Friend in This City, Published’
by Permission.
The recent disruption of the dem
ocratic party at Atlanta, under the
evn spirit of Joseph E. Brown rnay
extend to every part of the demo
cratic organization throughout the
state, indeed, I .believe that is
Brown’s scheme and he rarely fails
in the execution of his plans. The
fracture of .the p»vty on the guber
natorial question is«but an earnest
of the general break up Gov. B.
has taken in hand. The history of
thedemocratic party is a standing re
proach to Joe Brown, and, if organ
ized and alive, its nominees will go
to the general assembly and defeat
him.
In this exigency Brown’s remedy
is to kill the party. It is not the
first time he has killed his party. —
In truth he has betrayed every po
litical trust confined to him. lie
was so hot a secessionist that he
must needs commit technical, actual
and literal treason by seizing the
property of the United States in
the name of his state when that
state was still in the union. The
war had scarcely begun when he
raised an imperium iMPERioby levy
ing an army of his own—of five
thousand men, of which he as gov
ernor of our state, was commander
in-chief. It took nearly a ye?r to
break down this scheme of demor
alization, but when it failed he con
tinued during the whole war to
M’ork for counter revolution and
put every difficulty he could devise
in the way of Jefferson Davis and
the Confederate government. The
war had not ended before he about
faced, and the ladical secessionist
became the radical republican; and
then when the dark days of ’67
•came upon us, when our slaves,
headed by scalawag and carpetbag
gers were turned into political mas
ters to keep our section subject and
degraded forever, Brown gave his
uncommon ability, his craft, his
heart and his temper to force this
bitter cup of humiliation to our
lips. We drank it to the dregs. He
made the democratic party bite
the dust. He was rewarded by the
chief justiceship of the state at the
bands of the adventurer whom he
had made governor. From thence
under cover of the ermine he was
enabled to scheme into his posses
sion and control the state’s magnif
icent property, which has made him
rich and created him a railroad
magnate of the land. It was at this
price he eame back to the demo
cratic party. The republican party
which lie deserted not only fell to
■pieces, but fled from justice.—
While his political associates were
flying from criminal warrants, their
distinguished chief, safe’, prosperous
and happy, sat enthroned a railroad
king. If his embrace of the repub
licanparty meant their ruin when
ever the price were offered to their
chief, his accession to the democra
cy meant no less to it, when the
power and occasion should come to
Joseph E. Brown. That time came,
and our party is in ruins.
What Joe Brown and Victor
Newcomb intend to do with us I
do not know. Brown, ten years
ago, got its railroad from his state,
and now it appears intends to take
the state for bis railroad. A strange
revolution is upon us. Railroad
combinations arc the power which
are henceforth to disrupt parties
and rule the commonwealth. Rail
road presidents are made senators,
and United States senators are
translated into the general counsel
of Mr. Victor Newcomb, of Ken
tucky, the famous railroad manipu
lator of the day. This young Na
poleon having possessed himself of
! the country stretching from the gulf
to the Ohio and from the Tennes
| see to the Mississippi, desires to lay
hold of Georgia, and, like Sher
man, make his march to the sea. —
To this end Brown is made his
coadjutor, Gordon his man Friday,
Colquitt his tool, and the demo
cratic party his first victim. With
the fall of this party our state will
j be turned over to the spoiler.
All this is going on before our
: eyes, and, from Muscogee excepted,
‘ not a cry of distress is raised. The
■ worst feature in the dark picture is
that the press have joined the con
spiracy. That bulwark of our lib
erty is now abusing the public ear,
and reiterating the lie that, not Joe
Brown and his caucus, but that
i the minority of the convention, in
the exercise of their organic right,
1 have broken our party in twain—
all this, too, in the name of “the
i people.”
, ' I’ue people, ah, the people, that dwell up in the
steeple, all aione,
And feel a glory in so rolling on the human heart
a stone I"
I saw our party was gone when
I heard Gordon defame it, by stat
ing that those who voted for Gree
dy in ’72 went to Brown in ’6B. I
saw the manner of its destruction
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER, 3, 1880.
when I heard Brown deciding upon
the two-thirds rule for the conven
tion and the majority rule for the
caucus. These two opposite cours
es of action—both ordered by the
people, says Joe Brown—meant
and could result only in what was
effected, an adjournment without a
nomination.
The curtain has fallen on the first
act of the drama. It has given us
no insight into the object the plot
ters design; certain it is something
beyond J. B.’s return to the United
States senate.
There is but one way to redeem
our party and our state, and that is
by the election to the executive seat
of the Hon. Thomas M. Norwood.
Yours truly,
J. G ANA HL.
Sparta Ishmaelite: But the ques
tion necessarily arises : What fac
tion is responsible for the breaking
up of the convention, without a
nomination ? Os course the “or
gans” —the mothers-in-law of the
democratic household—come smirk
ing to the.front and cry out: “Dear
people, we cannot tell a lie ; it was
the minority!” Did the gentle
men of the minority organize the
convention ? Did they establish
the rule that it should take two
thirds of the convention to effect
the nomination ? Did they receive
any offers of compromise? Did
thev limit the number of ballots to
thirty-two ? Did they, in fine, de
cide there should be no nomination,
by adjourning the convention with
out one ? Every well-read man in
the State knows that the majority
did these very things. They or
ganized the convention ; they,
dictated its rules ; they decided up
on the number of ballots that were
to be taken. Everybody knows
that there are scores of good and
true men in the State any one of
whom could have been nominated
unanimously, if the majority had
been unwilling to disrupt the par
ty. The “organs” assert that the
majority of the convention repre
sented “a large majority of the vo
ters of the State.” We challenge
the proof. Less than a majority
of the democratic voters in the
State (counting in the galvanized
Richmond county democrats) took
part in the appointment of the del
egates to the Atlanta convention ;
so that, even if that body had been
unanimous for Gov. Colquitt, it
could be established, only by infer
ence, that he was the choice of a
majority of the democratic voters
of the State. But even if a ma
jority of the party had been stand
ing at the backs of the majority
delegates, we defy the “o”gans” to
point to a single county that in
structed its delegates to take no
body, if they could not get Col
quitt.
The following is an extract from
a speech made by A. D. Freeman
of Newnan at Greenville, during
court week :
Am ashamed and sorry that I
heard Colquitt's speech in Newnan.
It was bitter, and charged those op
posed to him as disappointed office
seekers and slanderers. I am neith
er. Christian people should rise
and say that no man should associ
ate the name of Jesus with a polit
ical canvass. Why does he talk of
Baptists and Methodists but to touch
a religious chord. Such speeches
"are the causes of the divisions ex
isting to-day. Do you suppose were
I in Colquitt's place I’d say I was
a Baptist or Methodist or a preach
er to negroes ? After Colquitt
spoke in Newnan I took dinner
with a Colquitt man who is now
ashamed of Colquitt’s speech but
was unwilling to admit it then.—
The governor ought never to left
office to make speeches. This can
vassing for governor robs the peo
ple of the power to think. The
governor has no right to leave office
to preach. If elected governor he
ought to stay in that position and
not go topreaching. This is where
the line and cry arose. Other peo
ple talk to negroes and dont get in
to the papers. * ]
It is a significant fact that all the
daily press which support the
Brown Gordon-Colquitt party, were
at one time subsidized, and manufac
tured public sentiment in favor.of
the State road lease at so much per
line. The weekly press of Geor
gia have a monopoly of that Chris
tian virtue called honesty. —Phono-
graph.
Hon. Clifford Anderson writes
the Griffin Sun that his nomination
as attorney general was not obtain
ed by concessions, that when he rot
ted for Colquitt, the office was not
in his thoughts. He says he was
not an aspirant for thc place and
reluctantly consented to take the
nomination when earnestly solicited
by personal friends, and questions
whether it is his interest to do so.
UARRARD ON COLQUITT.
Below we publish an extract
from a speech delivered last week
in Columbus by the Hon. L. F.
Garrard :
The department of agriculture
was established by the act of 1874
to benefit the farmers of Georgia.
It was a tribute to the bone and
sinew of our land ; that these men
who pay so large a proportion of
our taxes should reap a substantial
reward. [Applause.] But how
has this department been-man aged ?
The department was located in the
capitol building, and the commis
sioner of agriculture was
pointee of Governor Colquitt. We
find that in 1879, that so great was
the complaint against this officer
that he resigned to avoid impeach
ment. Let us look for a minute
and see who was benefitted by this
office, the people or the office-hold
ers. According to the report made
to the last legislature, the large
amount of $23,274.90 was spent
for salaries, but some of the other
expenses were very economical,
to-wit: $17.10 was spent for seed,
and $3.85 was spent for fish ?
[Laughter.]
Somebody is to blame for this
state of affairs, and if so, who ?
Clearly Governor Colquitt, for he
had placed the people's office, and
the people’s money in the hands of
an inefficient man, and had turned
what was intended to be a benefit
to the tax paying farmers of Geor
gia into an asylum for decrepid
politicians.
I will call your attention to the
famous Murphey fee where a treas
ury clerk on a salary of $1,600 per
annum was paid a fee of SB,OOO to
influence and manage a weak and
incompetent governor. The evi
dence taken before a legislative
committee clearly shows that the
governor knew that Murphy was
interested. Now suppose it was
right to endorse the Northeastern
railroad bonds, what a picture is
presented to the world ! Citizens
of Georgia clamoring for their
rights and unable to get then un
til a treasury clerk is paid SB,OOO
for a fee. On the other hand, if it
were wrong for the bonds to have
been endorsed, we have the specta
cle of a vacillating governor in the
hands of a wily clerk, and being
used as a tool to make enormous
gains for the clerk. [Laughter.]
The legislature thought that weak
governors ought to be protected
from the strong influence of smart
department clerks, and unanimous
ly in both houses passed a bill mak
ing it a penitentiary offense for
clerks to influence governors of
Georgia, and Governor Colquitt
signed the bill, thereby admitting
that what he had permitted in the
past was to be a felony 1 [Much
laughter and applause.]
The governor claims great credit
for the present financial condition
of Georgia, especially the low
taxes, and speaks of the surplus in
the treasury. My fellow-citizens,
the governor is very forgetful. In
his message of 1878 to tne legisla
ture, he says not a word in favor of
decreasing the rate of taxation, but
on the contrary recommends a float
ing debt in the shape of a temporary
loan.
You will pardon me for a person
al allusion. Yhen the joint finance
committee met in session, during the
last legislature to fix the rate of
taxation, I opposed the rate of
taxation which was then being
enforced, and arguUl that the tax
was too high, and that the people
demanded relief. A member of
the committee arose and made a
vigorous speech, in which he stated
that the gentleman from Muscogee
was “attacking the administration”!
I replied that if to inquire how
much money was necessary to be
wrung from the hard earnings of
the toiling masses and where it
was likely to go after it was raised
was the definition of “attacking
the administration,” that I accepted
the gentleman’s definition, and
would lead the attack by moving to
reduce the taxes. [Applause.] I
felt that I was right in my position
and I told them that if the facts
and figures did not sustain my po
sition that I would yield. Suffice
it to say that we did cut down the
rate of taxation, and saved in the
pockets of the people $678,000 in
two years. The pockets of the tax
pavers of Georgia [applause], it
seems to me, fellow-citizens, is the
safest place for surplus taxes to re
main ; it does the people more
good than lying idle in banks or in
the treasury. [Applause.]
My fellow-citizens, do you know
what a floating debt means ? It
means an opportunity for somebody
to make interest and commissions
on the same money every 60 or
90 days. They are a curse to any
state.
Again, the governor in his
speeches commends himself highly ■
for collecting money from old
claims, among others the Western
<fc Atlantic railroad claim, and
leaves the impression on the minds
of the people that the surplus in
I the treasury is to be accounted for
l in this way. The 'Western A At
lantic railroad claim amounted to
$199,000, out of which he paid the
Alston-Garlington fee. Now to
show how easily the governor is
mistaken, in his message of 1878,
he says that he has reduced the
floating debt of 1877 of $350,000
to $200,000 by the proceeds of this
very collection. How many times
is he going to claim a credit for
this collection ? Surely once is of
ten enough, particularly wl>en he
| tried to throw the responsibility of
the contract for its collection on his
predecessors.
He says from these sources he
filled the treasury without resorting
to the burdens of taxation, and
hence the surplus now in the treas
ury.
Well, fellow-citizens, some one
| mus have told him that, for I don’t
! believe he would have said other
wise, for it is not true in point of
i fact. The surplus in the treasury
iis partly caused by an illegal levy
i and collection of taxes that the last
: legislature detected and exposed.
[Sensation.] The money was
wrung from you by the power con
ferred on him, without the warrant
1 of law to sanction the collection.—
The facts are simply these: Under the
I act of 1873, commonly known as the
Nutting bond act, the governor was
. authorized and required to collect
i the sum of SIOO,OOO yearly, to pay
that amount of said bonds falling
due each year.
Gov. Colquitt from ignorance,
for I will not call it design, has
raised during each year of his office
as governor, until the clamor was
raised against it over twice the
amount authorized by the act of
1873. So we see that this boasted
surplus was paid by your hard
earnings and the governor thinks he
■ found it. The sale and earnings of
the Macon A Brunswick railroad
also contributed to this surplus.
A Re publican Governor an Impowh
bilit y.
As many of our people have been
led to fear that a divided Demo
cratic vote on the gubernatorial
question may elect a Republican
candidate, we hasten to allay their
' apprehensions.
A plurality vote does not elect.
The new Constitution has the fol
lowing provison :
“The members of each branch of
the General Assembly shall
convene in the Represen tives’
hall, and the president of the
senate and speaker of the house
of representatives shall open and
publish the returns in the presence
and under the direction of the Gen
eral Assembly; and the person hav
ing the majority of the whole num
ber of votes, shall be declared duly
‘ elected Governor of this State; but
if no person shall have such major
ity, then from the two persons hav
ing thc highest number of votes,
who shall be in life, and shall not
decline an election at the time ap
pointed for the General Assembly
f to elect, the General Assembly shall
( immediately elect a Governor viva
voce; and in all cases of an election
of a Governor by the General As
sembly, a majority of the members
present shall be necessary to a
choice.
This being the law, it is apparent
that the Republican candidate, if
there should be one in the race,
would require more votes than Nor
wood and Colquitt both receive;
and if no canditate received a ma
jority the General Assembly will
elect.
Under this state of affairs it will
be seen that there is not the slight
est danger of the election of a Re
publican Governor.
Don't be a Shylock during the
week and a Uriah Heep on Sunday.
It causes a wear and tear of con
science which is almost unbearable
at this time of year.
Don’t gorge yourself with unripe
fruit and curse your liver for what
follows. Have some respect for
the proprieties of digestion.
Don’t wink with your left eye at (
a druggist who is drawing soda
water, ion might get something
in yours that you weren’t thinking
about.
Don't stop and argue a point in
theology with a man on his way
to dinner. There never was a plan
of salvation invented capable of
carrying conviction to an empty
stomach.
Don't discuss politics between
sunrise and sunset. It is not poli
tic.
Don’t apologize to the man up
on whose corn you have trampled.
It doesn’t relieve the pain, and
only confirms his belief that you are
an awkward noodle.
Gen. Kober! Toombs.
Clarkesville, Ga., August 17,
1880.—Hon. T. M. Norwood:
Dear Sir—l tender you my thanks
as a Georgian for accepting the re
quest of a portion of the represen
tatives of the people of Georgia,
that you would run for governor
in the approaching gubernatorial
election. I will give you my earn
est support as one of the people,
and if you will stand by the people
in this race, they will stand by you.
I am, very respectfully and truly
,i yours, R. Toombs.
i
Norwood’s picture of the Atlanta
Constition : “That is a wonderfully
> inventive institution (applause) and
hence I say 1 do not know what is
coming next. They have certain
departments of work divided off
there amongst themselves. How
many editors they have I do not
know. But one thing is sure, if
you want to pin any one thing
down on one of them, you will
find about fifty of them responsible,
■ but nobody among the fifty really
. responsible for it. [Applause.]
: Mr. Hemphill attends to the fi
nancial department, and does that
very well. My friend, Evan
, Howell, goes around firing off
blank cartridges, and every now
; and then you will find him stand
ing on the street corner like a qua
ker gun trying to scare people
- (great and continued applause),
• while Mr, Grady furnishes the
i facts. [Continued applause, lau
; 1 ghter and cheers.] It is not the
good fortune of any one living in
this age to ever have seen creative
; power at work. This world was
created long before we were brought
, upon the earth. But whenever
s you see Henry Grady drop that
prognathous jaw of his and look out
» on space you see the active work
j of creation going on. [Appl a use.]
’ and you see something created out
I of nothing. [Great applause.]—
[ i And facts coming trooping unto
* him as rapidly as imagination can
! play.”
According to the census just com
pleted, Massachusetts has one of
. the densest populations on the
| globe. Only Belgium, Great Brit
i ' ain and Italy support more people
to the square mile. The number
in Belgium is 469 ; in Great Britain
and Ireland 268; in Italy 243 and
in Massachusetts 228, to the square
mile.
Judge Warner resigned on
the 16th, but up to this date no
! one has been appointed in his place,
j We commend this deliberate action
1 i of the Governor, but at the same
I time beg leave to remark that it is
quite inconsistent with the Joe
Brown appointment.
The man who loafs his time away
i around a one-horse grocery while
his wife takes in washing to sup
port him can always tell you just
. what this country needs to enhance
her prosperity.
An exchange says if you are at
a picnic and are wandering through
the woods with your girl and she
suddenly cries: “Oh, George,
there’s an ant down my back!”
don’t faint; dont holler ; don’t go
for Maria’s mother, but go for that
ant.
Josh Billingsgate.
Be merciful to all dum animals ;
no man can git to heaven on a sore
backed horse.
The grate fife iz fust for bred,
then butter on the bred, and then
sugar on the butter.
The grate secret ov popularity is
to make every one satisfied with
himself fust, and afterwards satis
fied with yu.
The grate mistake that most peo
ple make iz, they think more ov
their cunning than they do of their
honesty.
The unhappiness of this life
seems principally to konsist in get
ting everything we kan, and want
| ing everything we hain’t got.
I hav finally cum to the konklu
shun that the best epitaff any man
kan hav, for praktikal purposes, is
a good bank akkount.
Paupers suffer less than mizers
do ; the man who don’t kno where
heiz going to git his next dinner suf
fers less than the one who is anx
ious to kno how much it is going to
kost him.
la 1! Possible *
That a remedy made of sch com
mon, simple plants as Hops, Buchu,
Mandrake, Dandelion, <fcc., make'
so many and such marvelous and
wood ms cures as Hop Bitters do ? I
: It must be, for when old and
young, rich and poor, pastor and
doctor, lawyer and editor, all testi- j
fy to Laving been cured by them,!
we must believe and doubt no Ipn- (
ger. See another column.
TTK.nS Os SLIiSCKirTION:
One Year $ S M
Six moutba 1 W
Three months W
CLVS RAT K• .
' Ten Copies one year f 15 00
An extra copy will be given U> the getter
up of a club of ten.
KATES Os ADVEKTISnL.
One square, first insertion .. f 100
Each auoeequeut insertion 50
One square three mouth* 5 U 0
One square viz mouths 7 00
One t-quare twelve i .ontha 10 lO
Quarter column twelve mouths 30 00
Half column aix months 3c 00
Half column twelve mouths s*'Oo
■ One volumu twelve months. 100 00
leu lines or Uro considered a square. Ail
fractious of squares are counted as full squares
NEWcFaFER DECISION*'.
1. Anj person who takes a paper regularly f’.om
the pest office —whether directed to bis name or
• another's, or whether he h£S subscribed or not—
is responsible for the payment
2. it a person orders his paper discontinued, I e
muet p.»y all arrearages, or the publisher may
continue' to scud k until payment is maoc, and
I collect ‘.he whole amount, whether the paper is
taken from the office or not.
3. The courts have decided that refusing to
i take newspapers and periodicals from the office,
or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is
prima rucie evidence of ■.uteutiuuai fraud-
SM———HMM——MMW
PROFESSIONAL A BUSINESS CARDS.
Dr, I. N. CHENKY, offer* his professional ser
vices to the citizens of Carroll and adjacent
counties. Special attention given to chronic dis ■
eases.
t?8 r> Oifice near his residence, Carrolltun, Ga.
MEDICAL CARD.
With reu -wed vigor, I tender my services in
the various branches of physic, totku citizens of
Carroll county. 1 make i specially of old chronic
case-, also midwifery and private diseases. Tor
the liberal patronage extended me in the past 1 re
turn th inks and solicit a continuance of tue same
Office in T. A. Mabiy's etore. Can be ton . d a
night at mv residence miles south of tow u
WM. QAULDING, M.D
MHHMMMHMMMMMMMMMM
PATENTS
obtained for new inventions, or for improvements
in old ones. Caveats and ail patent business
promptly attended to.
Inventions that have bebn rejected may still
in mo#t cases, be p itente iby us. Being opposite
the U. S. Patent Office, and engaged in patent
business exclusively, we can secure patents >n
less time than those who are remote from Wash
ington and who must depend upon the mails In
all transactions with th- Patent Office.
When inventors send model or sketch we make
search in the Patent Office and advi -e as to its
patentability free of charge. Correspondence
confidential, prices low, ami no charge unless
patent is obtained
We refer to Hon Postmaster General D. M .
Key, Rev. F. D. Power, to officials in the U. 8.
Patent office, and especially to our clients in ev
ery State of me Union and in Canada. For special
references, terms, advice, Ac., Address
C. A. SNOW & CP.,
Opposite Patent Office, Washington, D.C.
E Isley’s THteh Hazel.
Cure Headaches, Burns. Soraius. Cnts, Wounds,
Rheumatism, Toothache, Earache, etc , etc War
ranted equal io quality to aoy made, at half the
price.
6 oz, Bottle-. 25c. Pint Bottles 5Hc.
AND ROSE GRANT’S CHLORIDT OF LIME.
For Purifying, Bleaching and Disinfecting
Stands preemim ntly the best.
Always put up in Diamond Blue Label Boxes.
QLb. Boxes. XLb. Boxes. 1 Lb. Boxes.
All First Class Druggists Keep It.
Have your druggist order, if he has neither in
stock, from
CHARLES F. RISLEY, Wholesale Deug’t,
64 Cortland 81., New York City.
Highest Med al at Vienna and Philadelph
E. & H. T. ANTHONY & CO.,
591 Broadway, Now York.
Manufacturers, Importers a Dealers in
VELVET FRAMES, ALBUMB.GRAPII JSC’OPBB
STEREO! COPES A.XD VIEWS,
ENGRAVINGS, CHROMOB, PHOTOGRAPHS,
And kindred goods—Celebrities, Actresses, etc.
PHOTOGRAPHIC MATERIALS.
We are headquarters for everything In the way of
STERKOPTICONS AND MAGIC LANTERNS.
Each style being the best ol its class in ’.he market
Beautiful Photographic Transparencies of Stat
uary and Engravings for the window.
Convex Gla°s. Manufactures of Velvet Frames
for Miniatures and Convex Glass Picture*.
Catalogues of Lanterns and Slides, with direc
tions for using, sent on leceipt of ten cents.
1 yr-
TEETHIWA.
fTEKTHfWfi POWVERN.
lures • holer* Infantum. Allays irritation and
make* Teething easy. Removes and prevent*
Worm*.
Ti-ouarrndx of Children may fee saved rrera
year by ueiny three Povdrri.
1 S? n B * snra y° u ,ll *t In no single in’-tance ban
the leethlna ever proved a failure. We have
tried the soothing medicine* end everything
known to ns. and ‘ Old Women,” and Tee htn* i*
preeminently a sacoes, and a b esting to mothers
and children. j m. DeL aCY.
Hatctechnbbee, Ala
After t'ring soothing remedies without aval]
and phyrl .iana without relief. I gave your Teeth-
Ina and it acted like magic. I occasiona'ly glre a
powder to keep my child'* gums soft* n*d.
h. it Baldwin,
Columbus, Ga,
Sitters
Though shaking Mk« an aspen leaf w'ah chill*
and fever, tn* victim of malaria may et U recov
er by uajug thia celebrated spectfic, wh*ch not •.
only breaks noth.- not aggravated atne a. hut
preveata tbeif re/mrrenee/lf ts infinitely preTn
able to qu nine, no! only because it does the buaf
ners far more thoroughly, but also ou account ot
Ka perfect wbolaaomeneM and invlgorauDg ac
tiou upon the entire aystvm.
For sale by *U Drugglataaud Dealers g*nen»U?.
>'O. 36.