Newspaper Page Text
__ • I 11 " 1 " T - 1-2- ' . J- ILL
1 HE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
VOL. XIV.
A’-rr’” */•*J > r
i X j&xv©
Sarsaparilla
tu :i highly concent rated extract of
Sars.»j*at ilia and other blood-purifying
roots, combined with lodide of I’otas
wluin and Iron, and is the- safest, most reli
able, mid mos‘ economical blood-purifier that
can be used. It ;:iva r iably cxiwls all blood
poisons from the system, enriches and renews
‘.he blood, and restores its vitalizing power,
it is the best known remedy for Scrofula
ntid all Scrofulous Complaints, Erysip
elas, Eczema, Hingworni, Blotches,
Sores, Boils, Tumors, and Eruptions
of the Skin, os also fol all disorders caused
by a thin and impoverished, or corrupted,
condition of th ? blood, such as Rheumatism,
lieur;:lgia, Rheumatic Goui, General
Debility, and Scrofulous Catarrh.
inflammatoiy Rheumatism Cured.
“Arm's S \ ns.\r,\nii.i,A has cured me of
the Inflammatory Rheumatism, with
which 1 have suffered for many years.
W. 11. Moore.’*
rnrham, la., March 2, 1882.
PREPARED nz
DrJ.C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mas.<,
Sold by nil Druggists ; §l, six bottles for ‘.5.
iWBS.SiONAL AND LAW CARLS
W. 0. ADAMSON,
Atto’ncy zxt Law
CARROLLTON, - - - GA.
Promptly transacts all business confided to
him.
in tA« court house, north west corner first
5-tf
S. E.GROW.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW.
AND REAL ESTATE AGENT.
MONKT loans negotiated on improved farms in
Carroll, Heard, and Haralson counties at
reasonable rates.
Titlss to lands examined and abstracts fur
nished.
Offiice up stairs in thv’court house,
Carrollton, Ga.
A. J. CAMP,
Attorney Law,
VILLA RICA GA.
WM. c. HODNETT,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
VILLA RICA, - - - - GEORGIA
Office over Dr. Slaughter’s
Drugstore. Prompt attention giv
cn to all business intrusted to him.
' W. F. ROBINSON
Pliyislcinn cfc Sxii’goon
BUCHANAN, - - - GEORGIA.
Chronic diseases a Specialty.
W. L. FITTS,
FHysioian <Jt? Snrgooxi
UARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA.
Will, nt all times, be found at W. W, Fitts’ drug
store, unless professionally absent. 38-ts
~W. F. BROWN,
Attorney A.t Uo.-w,
VARROLLTON. - - GEORGIA.
C. P. C? O R DO N ,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
CARROLLTCN ------ GEORGIA.
Tvool carding?
1 nave just reclothed, overhauled, and put in
operation my large wool carding machine, and
will give it my PcrMOimi Attention from
now until the Ist of January next. We make
perfect rolls, and guarantee good weight. Call
on «r address J) W. SIMMS,
g’tf Carrollton, Ga.
W. W, & G, W. MERRELL,
Atto’ncy& evt Uaw,
CARROLLTON, - - GA.
Records and laud titles examined. Will
collect claims, lai ge or small. Especial at
tention given to the business of managing
tstate by Executors, Administrators, Gar
dians &c and ollie 1 business before the Or
dinary. Will practice in all the superior
courts ot the Coweta circuit, and always at
tend at Haialson court- JPill practice any
where and in any court where clients may
require their services:
DR. D. F. KNOTT
Is permanently located in Car
rollton and tenders his
PROFESSIONAL SERVICES
to the citizens of Carrollton and
vicinity.
Office, Johnson’s Drug Store.
Residence, Dixie street, opposite
G. M. Upshaw's. 1-2.
Uli Ml GIIIW TO HIM?
If so it will pay you to use
MARTINEZ & LONGMAN’S
PURE PREPARED
PAINTS.
Call or seed for cojpr cards and list
houses painted with them to T II Robtrds
& Son, Agents, Villa Rica, Ga., or
• L-. J. COOLEDGE <C* EDO.,
21 Alabama st- Atlant Ga.
Wholesale dealers in Oils
Varnishes, Br • ’ and
GF
FOR SALE.
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Corn Mills. Cotton
Presses, Mill Spindles, pulley shafting. Hanger,
nil kinds CASTING. Piping- Steam guages
W histles, etc , etc.
ALSO Doors, Sash, Blinds, Brackets, etc.
Write for estimates on any
sort of machinery.
R.D, COLE & C
bt« nan,
DK. ID, AV. I)ORSETT
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
TEMPLE, GA.
Having permanently located at Temple 1 oiler
my professional services to the citizens of Car
roll and ndjoiring countie-. Special attention to
Obstetrics and disease* of women. Office at
Campbell <fc Belt's store. All calls promptly a.i
swi-red day an<! night —All night calls answered
ftom B. J. McCain’s residence. V,
Postoffice Colloquies.
BY NASH.
The uninitiated seem to think
that we clerks in country postof
fices have regular picnics just about
all the time, and, though you may
be somewhat surprised at the frank
ness of the confession, lam com
pelled to admit that in a certain
sense we have.
Die mail has come, and lam
awfully busy. In comes Claude
Jones, and planting himself in such
a position that no one else can get
near the delivery window he begins
his cantata by asking:
“Is there any mail for Ira
Jones?”
“No.”
“Is there any mail for Wilhoit
Jones?”
“No. If there had been 1 should
have given it to you.”
“Is there any mail for JoTtn
Jones?”
“No. There is no mail for any
of the Joneses.”
“Is there any mail for Lon
Jones?”
“No. Tbeie isn't, there hasn't
been, and what’s more, there isn’t
likely to be.” He looks at me with
a blank sort of a suspicions stare
and then gives the crank anothei
turn with:
“Is there a registered letter for
Stella Jones?”
I seize him by the hair. There
is an unearthly yell, and an indis
criminate mass of boy’s legs, cars
and groans is piled up in the snow
drift in front of the store door.
Just now there steps up a man
He is an older person than Claude
and must be treated with more;
consideration. He rubs his hands,I
squirts a hatful of tobacco juice '
on the stove and leads off. I know :
what is coming for I have gone 1
through the same series of ques I
tionsand answers with him two or
three times a week ever since I :
came into the postoffice.
“Tnerc hain’t no male for me?”
quite confidentially,
“No, sir.”
“What! no letter?'
“No, sir.”
“Well, now, that's strange. II
ortcr ‘a’ got alettor from my wo
man’s father. He writes reg’l ar ■
every two weeks, an’ we hain’t
heard from him for nigh onto a .
month. How d’ye account, for
it?”
“Perhaps the old man is sick,” j
I venture.
“Sick! lluh! Unka! Never sick a
day in his life. No, sir: it’s some
fault with the postoffice.'’
“Well I am sorry, but there is
no letter here for you.”
“Hain’t there no postal card?"
“No, sir.”
“Well, I was lookin’ for a pos
tal card from a seed house in Phili
delphy. I wiote ’em a letter three
weeks ago and 1 think it’s about
time I heard something from it."
I know there is just so much of
it, so I let him go right on. He
hitches up his trousers, and, look
ing me full i:i the eye, touches off
the fusilade as folio
“Did thcie any box come for
mc r>
“No, sir."
“Well, it might be a little pack
age. I did’t know just what shape i
it would come in. My woman's i
uncle down in the south part of the
State was goin' to send ter some
slips of house plants, and I was a
thinking that like enough they
might be along this week."
“No, there is nothing at all."
“Is there any registered mail?"
“No, sir,”
“Well, 1 didn't expect any yet,
but old Pete Simons, down in Gos
hen, has been talkin' of sendin' me
the money to pay the taxes on
that old back 40 on section 7. and
I wanted to make sure so that it
wouldn't I e returned to the county
Tieasurer with the money hereto
pay it. You're sure there ain’t no
lettci?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Well. 1 guess I’d better I c get
tin’ along, for it will be all-fired
close to grub time lore I get home
’n’ the old woman is a powerful
prompt hand about meals.”
C ARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 3, 1885.
Perhaps you think the agony is
er, but I don’t. In comes Bert
Davis. He gays;
Is there any mail for me?’’
“No.”
“Weil, then," he says, “is there
any female?”
Then he laughs, and haw haws,
and chuckles, and doubles himself
all up with’merriment. He thinks
he has propounded the funniest
joke of the season. This makes the
365th time he has done the same
thing in the last year, and always
with the same side show of nonsen
sicial performances. lam begin
ing to get sick of this sort of thirm,
so 1 stare at him very hard, and say
in a chilling, north latitude tone of
voice:
“Did you say anything to me,
sir?”
Ulis seems to paralyze him.
Heretofore I have always met his
mirthful sallies with uproarious
laughter, and he cannot understand
this sudden change. But I keep
right on looking nt him and he
keeps growing smaller and smaller
and smaller, and slowly edges away
toward the door. My gaze is fixed
steadily upon him, and by the
time he gets out on the side
walk he isn’t biggei than a. pint of
yeast. He has gone away to die.
Wonh of a good Nama,
A man of very pleasing address
but very dishonest in Ins practices,
once said to an honorable merchant:
“I would give fifty thousand
dollars for your good name.”
“Why so?” asked the other in
some surprise.
“Because I could make a hun
dred thousand dollars out of it,”
The honorable character, which
was at the bottom of the good
name, he cared nothing fur; it was
only the reputation, which he could
turn to account in a money point
of view, which he coveted.
But a good name cannot be
bought wi’h silver; it of all other
possessions, must be fairly earned.
When it is possessed it is better
business capital than a great sum
of money. It is a fortune any boy
or girl may secure. Honesty must
be its foundation, even in the smal
lest particulars. When an employ
er says: “There is a boy I can
trust," that youth will find himsef
in demand provided he joins indus
try with honor. “The hand of the
dilligent maketh rich."
It seems hard at the time, per
haps, to be bound to a ceaseless
round of work, while other boys
are lounging, or playing on the
green, but the reward will come
if you are faithful. Awhile idlers
are draifoiim out a miserable life
time in privation and poverty, the
hard-working boy lives at his case,
respected and honored.
Remember that if you desire to
make your way in the w.,rld, there
is nothing that can sei ve your pur
pose like a name for honesty and
industry; and you will never ac
quire either if you are a loiterer
about the streets, and neglectful of
your business. “A good name is
rather to i»e chosen than great
riches, an 1 loving favor rather than
silver and gold.—From the Golden
Argosy.
—A charming young girl, ac
companied by her octogenarian
great-grand-mother, who is all that
the name implies, enters a dry- ;
goods store. “How much is this
ribbon?" she asked of the polite
young clerk, who has bounded
over several stools to wait upon her.
“A kiss a yard” replied the young
masher gallantly. “Give me ten
yards, then. Grandma'll pay yon—
she ab.’ays settles the bills when
we go shoppin."—Chicago Inter
Ocean.
Thousands of families have had i
occasion to try tiie never failing
quahticsof Dr. Bull’s Cough syrup,
and they all unite in the praise of
tins wondeiful prescription.
Pride, like laudanum and other
poison medicines, is beneficial in
small, though injurious in large i
quantities. No man who is over
nleascd with hi nself, even in a i
personal sense, can please others. —
Fiederick Saunders.
si A Tooth-Pulling Fantasy.
1 j With eleven teeth had I parted
without the aid of amesthctics. I'n
i conditionally I surrendered them
Ito the dentist, who was willing to
) receive them for a consideration.
A twelfth must go. As I took tho
, chair of I remarked that
i it was a four-footed molar and
; would hint.
“Take gas,” suggested the den
j tist.
s “What is gas ?”
i “Nitrogen moaoxid—the best an-
esthetic known. It is harmless and
serves well.”
“I'll take it; give me enough.” !
Ihe dentist brought forth a rub j
her bag, the wooden muzzle of
which be thrust into my mouth.
With a hound-1 sprang into the
air. I attempted to fasten my hold
upon something, but everything
gave way—even a giant elm came '
up by the roots. I realized that I
had but a few minutes to live. All
my friends—l saw every one-
were watching me. My deeds,
good and bad, filed past me. I w.'ll
not say which formed the longer
procession. A man to whom I had
given a pewter quarter asked me
how I liked it, and said he knew
I would come to it.
Now 1 was going upward, and
when I had reached a g’eat bight,
I swooped down like a bird of prey,
and dashed th.rough a wall of sol
id masonry—just 100 feet thick by
actual measurement. A dozen
times I soared aloft, and as many
times sailed down. When I de
scended all the stone fences, cob
bles, boulders and trees ran to meet
me. I hit them all. Now I was '
ascending again, but in a different J
maimer. A balloon, miles in cir- 1
cuinference, was bearing upward.
I clung to its lower part with my ’
teeth. My hands were in my pock- 1
ets, for the aii was chilly. Above !
me was the balloon car, and out of
it leaned a man resembling the den
tiet. In his hands he held an im
mense pair of tongs. He regarded '
me with manifest ‘
uro.
We were rising at a fearful rate '
of speed—so fast indeed that I
could not shut my (yes. The wind
blew the lids open and held them
back. At last the man in the car
said: “Now I’ll pull that tooth;
you must cling with your nose '
while I pull." I obeyed knowing
I was in his power. The tooth
came out on the end of the tongs, 1
and was. placed in the car. Soon
after I heard a tumuit in the car (
above. The dentist appeared and '
shook his clenched hand at me and 1
shouted: “Confound your old
t
tooth; it is growing so fast that it .
will crowd me out. Pretty fellow 1
you are to shed such a monstrous
molar" I thought this veiy un
kind. I had not asked him to pull (
the tooth, and how could I be res
ponsible for its size.
Again the dentist appeared and
cried in great wrath: “I shall throw (
it overboard—look out!” It did ]
not hit me. I saw as it whizzed I,
by that it was many times larger t
than the Capitol building at Wash- j
ington. I hoped that none of my
friends were standing where it ,
would fall upon the earth. We 1,
were now near the snn and ap- ]
proaching nearer at lightning t
speed. The dentist sat on the edge |
of the car, dangling his legs, and
smoked. He had the impudence 1
to ask me why I did not smoke. ■
It was so warin'from proximity to
the sun that I decided to go no fur- ;
thcr. I relinquished my hold and
shouted: “Good-by, old jaw-break- '
er. Quick as thought, insulted, in- ■
dignant, the dentist reached for
his tongs. “I'll pull them all," he 1
said, and as I fell the tongs length
j ened, and gave cliase, but could ]
not overtake me.
After falling ali day and all <
night I came near the earth early ’ (
in the morning. As I flew down- |
ward a gilded weather-cock on a
church steeple crowed. I consid
ered this offensive, and by some
unknown agency, arrested my
flight, and went back to the weath
' er-cock and demanded to know ;
what he meant by it. He crowed
the louder. This was too great an
I insult. 1 Hew at him, when
- presto, he began to crow
1 louder and to grow
’ larger. I was now on the earth,
now fleeing from a monster cock.
> I The church and steeple were still
U attached to him, but lie had be
come so large that they were no
I impediment. I remonstrated with
him, but his only replj was a blow
from the foot that held the church
and steeple. He was on the point
of dancing a hornpipe on my stom
ach when I emerged into a new
world in time to hear the dentist
say: “There it is!" at the same
time holding up a tooth. “Did you
know when I pulled it?’’ “Yes; I
saw you and your tongs pulling, hut j
I felt it not. You were a great
” ■
while about it! How long have I
been here?” The dentist consul
, ted his timepiece. “One minute
and twenty seconds.”—[George
Appleton Stockwell in Every Oth
er Saturday.
The President’s Mother.
The Bible on which President
Cleveland took the oath on the day
:of his inauguration is said to have
been the one which his mother
gave him and from which she
taught him in boyhood. Os course
this Bible was brought from home
to be used for this purpose. To
some this may seem a childish con
ceit; but to us a tinge of
tender sentiment, reflecting credit ,
on the President’s affectionate rev
erence for his mother, and of his
regard for the value of her teach
ings. It is the fi'st inauguration
of a President at which the memo-
ry of a mother’s religious instruc
tions has been so quietly, yet pub
licly acknowledged and held sa
cred. It touches a tender chord to
think of a great man, on so great
an occasion, about to assume the
headship of a great empire, paying
tribute to to the memory of a wo
man, long since dead—the teacher
and guide of his early days. The
affair of the mothers's Bible
may be an insignificant thing in
the eyes of many; but as for us, it
inspires us with hope for our coun
try .
It is remarkable that two of our
Presidents in succesion should
have been the sons of preachers.—
President Arthur is the son of a
Baptist preacher, and President
Cleveland is the son of a Presbyte
rian preacher. Doubtless he was
well drilled in the Shorter Cate
chism, and this again inspires us
with hope. He has a brother who
is a Presbyterian preacher and this I
also strengthens us. And here arc 1
the closing words of the President’s
inaugural address, to which we re
spond with an earnest Amen :
“Our duties are practical, and call !
for industrious application and in- !
tclligent perception of the claims
of public office, and, above all a '
firm determination by united ac
tion to secure to all the people of
the land the full benefits of the
best form of government ever
vouchsafed to man; and let us not
trust to human efforts alone, but
humbly acknowledge the power ,
and goodness of Almighty God, :
who presides over the destiny ot
nations, and who has at all times
been revealed in our country’s his
tory—let us invoke His aid and His
blessing upon our labors.”
Davy Jones'. Locker.
Sailors call the sea “Davy Jones’)
Locker’' because the dead are
thrown there. Davy is a corrup
tion of "duffy,“ by which name
ghosts or spirits are known among
the West Indian negroes, and
Jones is a corruption of the name
of the Prophet Jonah, who was
thrown into the sea.
Locker, in seaman’s parlance,
means any receptacle for private
stores. So that when a sailor says,
“Tie’s gone to Davy Jones' Lock
er," he is gone to the place of safe ,
keeping whe’-e dnffy Jonah was
'sent to.*’
In all large communities persons
are taking an increased interest in
property insurance, and perhaps
for that very reason are insuring
their lives by using Dr. Bull’s
Cough Syrup.
i ’ A Dealer in old Newspaper?,
i Having occasion the other day
r to search for some copies of daily
r newspapers of a certain date in 18-
, 75, says a New York correspond
. dent, I was not surprised to fin
1 that at the offices of the ncwspn-i
pers 1 could buy no copies. Not,
► onfc of the great daiTes could fur
l nish a copy of the date which 1 ;
needed, hut I was referred to a
( man named Robert Budd, former
ly a bootblack, who makes a bnsi
j ness of dealing in back numbers
of newspajxus. I foilnd him, and
in half an hcur I had the papers.
Budd's history, or rather that of
his business is peculiar. lie is a
coal-black negro, with an intelli
j gent face and a remarkable facul
ty for estimating the value of his
wares- Although he has a regu
lar pi ice list, his prices vary ac
cording too what he thinks may be
the value of the paper to the
would-be buyer. Some months
ago there was a law case which re
quire 1 the presentment in court
either of a certain newspaper or of
a certified cogy of an article cov
-1 ering several pages in s nail type.
Budd was the only man in the city
who could furnish the paper: he
asked 8100 for it, although it was
not ten years old, and bad origi
nally cost him but two cents, and
the sum was paid, for the certified
copy would have cost still more.
Five years ago Budd had a boot
blacking stand on Broadway, near
Thirtieth street and at the same
time sold newspapers, He was
struck with the number of de
mands made upon him for copies
of newspapers two or three days,
a week, or even a month old, and
he had the idea of adding to his
business that of old newspapers.
That there is a demand for old
newspapers is amply shown by the
business he has built up. At pres
ent he occupies a the
walls of which are lined with
newspapers tied up in bundles,
each bundle containing the copies
of one month of each paper. There
is a tag attached to each bundle
giving the months and years.
As he still keeps up his newspa
per stand he of course gets his pa
pers at cost price, and when a per
son really wants a paper there is a
fine chance for profit. Every day
Budd puts away twenty copies of
the Herald, twenty copies of the
Sun, ten of the World, Times and
Tribune each, and five copies of
each of the evening newspapers.
His schedule of prices is supposed
to be as follows; For papers three
days old, double the price; for pa
pers a week old, ten cents; for pa- i
pers a month old, twenty-five I
cents; for papers a year old, 81; !
for papers more than a year old. 1
81.25 additional for every year, ■
| But, as I said before, this sched I
Mile is no guide in case Budd dis- ;
covers that the paper is of great
importance, Soon he began
business, he bought up complete
j files of several newspapers running
1 back in some cases to ISSO. That
/he finds the business a profitable
! one may be inferred from his ability
to keep two assistants at work.
The number of persons who
wish to buy back copies of the
newspapers is larger than most
people might suppose; in the course
of half an hour during which I
searched through on old file, five
persons came into Budd’s place and
bought papers varying in age from
| two da vs to six years.
•' -L
Little Neglects.
It is best to be thorough, while
one is about it. A youngster came
home from school, the other day,'
with a downcast countenance.
“Wh-at'sthe trouble, my boy?”
asked his father. The lad rc-
I plied that he had failed in bis Lat
in class; “And oh, papa!” he ad
ded, “that was the only sentence
that 1 didn't know!” It was in
deed unlucky for the poor boy, who
had his lesson well earned with
that exception. But his mishap is
not unlike that which befalls people
I of all ages.
1 Little omissions, neglects, care- i
less acts, briny a great deal of,
trouble sometimes upon people
. who are guilty of them. No doubt
many who read these lines ‘Lave
been caugnt napping in school,
very much after the style of the
" lad teferred to above. Well, such
ian experience as that is not a bad
■ one, piovided it puts you on your
! guard for the future. There is al
ways danger of being caught nap
ping, all through life, if any de
tails of our du*y are neglected. It
is only the small neglect of tur
ning a key that lets the thief into
the house.
XT A T T ’G vegetable
□ SICILIAN
Hair Renewer.
Seldom does a popular ren.cdy v. u sucli a
~tr*'Hg Mom nj*»n tJw> public cotiMeme a« h >s
‘ Tr.trmr in* Rwyw»il The* mcwinwlu
it has «eeo*n|4»sUttl> Onpleto Festorati hi of
color to lap hair, ami vigorous L to t.m
BCaljs are mn union thle.
Uhi people Jike it to,- jf, y, underfill power to
restore to their whitening locks t heir or ;al
eolor fiml Ijewwy. M}■ Idlest gpd | Uko
barmuc it prcwvnu them from g Uh-. h
Roop* dandruff awny. md make- «’• I t; r
i , grow tiuok and strung. V>Hug Udi' lio v.
a-i a dressing Ivcmu it gives the h ; ;■ a |.«?■>
liful gbrssy lustre, and enables th m to u*css
. it u whatever form the) w i*it. ihc.sji ■> >
1 favorite us all, aud it h..s b.'come so simply .<
Imeaasa it no ore, a ,
BUCKINGHAM’S DYE
fob Tin: wiii-ki i;s
Has become one of th > toot import v>- pepu
lar toilet articles lor genth men’s >.w. When
Ihc beard is gray or naturally of an unde
sirable shade, lift kisgiiam ’» IHb m the
icmcuy.
rnrrtnpn by
R. P. Hall & Co., Nashua,N.F’,
Sold by all Druggists.
HAVE Yof TAKEN
|TIIEATLAmCO\SIinTIIin’OII I®
If not, lay this paper clown and read for it rl-ht
now.
If you want It every day, send for the Daily,
which Costs $lO a j’car, or $.» for six months or
f’.’.uO lor three months.
If you want it every week, send for the Gt it
Weekly, which cists sl.«j a y. it or *.’• for c/üb-,
THE WEEKLY CO.\>TITI TION
la the Cheapest!
Biegest and B. <t Paper
Printed in America:
It has J2pages chock lull of news, gossip and
sketches every week. It prints more romance
than the story papers, mote farm news than the
ugrlc tiltlira 1 papers, more fun than the humorous
papers—besides a[l the news, and
BILL ARP’S AND BETSY HAMILTON’S LF FTLILS,
UMCLE REMUS’S SKETCHES.
AND —
TALMAGE’S SERMONS,
U »?ts ! c : il« a w nt i!
It c mesonce week takc«a whole week to rend it!
You can’t well farm or keep house w ithout it!
Write your na«e on a postal card, address ii
us, and we will send yon spec imen copy free!
Address THE UONbTITITIoN.
DO YOU KNOW
THAT
LORRILLARD’S CLIMAX
PLUG TOBACCO
with Red Tin-Tag; Rose Leaf Fine cut chewin
navy clippings, and black. Browe. and yellow
snutfs are the best and cheapest, qu-ility con-id
ered* iTWIy
WOMAN!
BEAUTY RESERVED!
Grace was in aIL her steps Heaven, in
her eye,
In every gesture dignity and love!"
So appeared Mother Eve, and so may
i shine her fair descendants, w ith the ex
ercise of common sense, care and prop
er treatment. An enormous number of
female complaints are directly caused
by distnrbnacc.or suj»presslon of the
Menstual Function, hi every such case
that sterling and unfailing specit’u
Bkadfikld’h Female Regulator, will
effect relief and cure.
( It is from the recipe of a most distin
guished physician. It is composed oi
strictly officinal ingredients, whose hap
py combination has never been surpass
ed. it is prepared with scienuiic skill
from the finest materials. It bears the
palm for constancy of strength, certiar.
t.y of effect, elegance of preparation
beautyof appearance and relative cheap
ness. The testimony in its favor is gen
nine. It never fails when fairly tried.
Cartersville, Ga.
This will certify that two members of
my immediate family, alter hiving suf
fered formany years from menstrual ir
regularity, and having been treated
without benefit by various medical doc
tors, were at length otßnplelely cured by
one bottle of Dr. J. Bradfield's Female
Regulator, Jtseflect in such cases is
truly wonderful, and well may the rem
edy be called ‘.‘Woman’s Best Friend.”
Yours Rcspectftbly,
James a. Strange,
Send for our book on the “Health and
Happiness of Woman.” Mailed free.
BRADFIBLD REGULATORCO.
Atlanta, Ga.
1 HEALTH RESTORED!
have you a CARDEN ?
IF YOU HAVE
YOU WILL NEED j*±
And wi,i A'lnt tht fteat at the b-ast monev. i n
XX' c »’- al '»*’p will anrpri.e you. No matter
i mnii A' ,av * "'' n * wiM «'«« mon/'/. It i t
beb re A and y<W ° US,H tO l,aVe 14
WM. H. MAULE,
IS) & 131 Front St., Philadelphia.
Wanted. Dry Hides and wet.
Highest prices paid, Cash or bar
ter. At the Post office.
5-4 ts. G D Merrell.
i- - -
• FOr Sale.
2 fl fi fl Acree im P r oved farm lands. Sonic
j UUU very de.-i rat le places. Two well fur
! nis heel 4 room houses in city limits. Also one
business house, good location for trade. ’
En R R F JtlT•? ne 3 room comfortable
I r Ull llsnlt i ghonse, ano one acre 10l ju«t
beyond city limits. For terms etc., apply to
S. N. JONES,
U(M Real Estate Agent,
I . -
A rrMTO' lAk l- u "l>er<(.
A I T P |\l I \ profit introducing the
1 0 CHEAPEST ALBI.Ms
ever sold. Containing
si —. JHaH'sMMHSSa places for 75 Cabinet
and Card I*liotograplin, LancUomelv bound in
moroceo leatherette, with gilt side and edges, ■» x
11 inches in size. R< tail price, 52.50 worth
SO.OO. Complete Al- » , ,»»
bum sent for cxwina
21XMA T RIIIVK
Silk Plush, sei’t foi «1> 1 4 I J I*l.lo
$2 00. Add.ess Foshee. «& Oine uaii
I B.lmo.
no. n.
YOUTH RENEWED!
i.■— ~ . -
>
w>
#<