The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, April 10, 1885, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

THE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES. VOL. XIV. AYER’S Sarsaparilla l« a hißlilr concentrated extract of Sarsaparilla and other blood-purifying root*, combined with lodide of Potas sium and Iron, and is the safest, most reli able, and most economical blood-purifier that ean be ns d. If in vs'■'.ably expelg all blood poisons from the system, enriches and renews the blood, and restores its vitalizing power. It Is the best known remedy for Scrofula and all Scrofulous Complaints, Erysip elas, Eczema, Ringworm, Blotches, Sores, Boils, Tumors, nnd Eruptions of the Skin, M also foi all disorders caused by a thin and impoverished, or corrupted, condition of th? blood, such a? Rheumatism, neuralgia, Rheumatic Goui, General Debility, and Scrofulous Catarrh. inflammatoij Rheumatism Cured. "A Tim's Saksapabilla has cured me of the Inllnminatory Rheumatism, with which 1 have suffered for many years. W. H. JlooitE.” Durham, la., March 2,18 M. PREPARED IST Dr. J. C. Ayer &. Co., Lowell, Mass Stdd by all Druggists; ?1, six bottles for 50. PKOFIWMOXAL AXI) LAW (ARTS ; -_-r - - x _ ■ W. 0. ADAMSON, Atto’ncy Law CARROLLTON. - - - GA. Promptly transacts all business confided to him. . In tAc oourt north, wrtt oornrr flrxt ' , ‘' nr - 5-ts ‘ S. E. GROW. ATTORNEY - AT - LAW. AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. 10... nnc.ti.ted on improeed farm. in Carroll, Heard, and Haralson countiet, at FBftaonabie ratea. Tlfl** to lands rx mined and abstracts fur slahed. OfUee sp-etairs in the’ccurt hon*e, Carrolltos, Ga. A. J. CAMP, Attorney XactxTir, VILLA RICA GA. WM. c. HODNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, TILL A RICA, - - - - GEORGIA £qg>M)ffiee over Dr. Slaughter's Drugstore. Prompt attention giv cn to all business intrusted to him. W. F* ROBINSON JEUiyurtcinn Sxirgoorr BUCHANAN, - - - GEORGIA. Chrpnic dwasu a Specialty. ' W. L. FITTS, Pliyfaiciati <fts Surgeon CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA. 'Will, at all times, be found at W. W, Fitts’ drug 3torc, unless professionally absent. 38-ts wTfTbrown, Attorney ZVt ZLaaa.'w, CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA. C. P. G O R DO N , ATTORN E Y -AT-LAW, &ARROLLTCM, ------ GEORGIA. WOOL CARDING. 1 aavcjriM. vcftjpthed, overhauled, and put in operation my large H’ool cnrdlng machine, and will give it my I'eiwal Attention from anw until the Ist of <ian##ry next. We make perfect roll*, and guarantee good weight. Call on or addrefi* j) W . SIM MS, Carrollton, Ga. W. W. & G, W. MERRELL, atluaw, CARROLLTON, - - GA. Records and land title a examined. Will collect claims, large or small. Especial at tention given to the business of managing fatale by Executors. Administrators, Gar aiians A-c fiiuf otlie r business before the Or dinary. Wilj practice in all the superiot courts of that Coweta circuit, and always at tend at Haralson court- IFi 11 practice any where and in any court B’here clients may require <ieir services: DR IX F. KNOTT Is permanently located in Car rollton and tenders his PROFESSION A L SERVICES to the citizens of Carrollton ami vicinity. Oilice, Johnson’s Drug Store. Residence, Dixie street, opposite G. M. Upshaw's. 1-2. mtuti th him. If so it will pay you to use MARTINEZ & LONGMAN’S EURE PREPARED PAIN T S. Call or ser.d for color cards and list houses painted with them to 1 II Robfrds & Son. Agents, Villa Rica. Ga., or K J. COOLEDGE <C* EDO, 21 Alabama st. Ga . Wholesale dealers in V *S, Oils Varnishes, Br * ’ '5, and GP FOR SALK. ItTOndi CASTIW Pipiug- Steam guagos "aLSO%'»<»fs, Sash, SUa4*. Brackets, etc. Write for estimate# on any sort of machinery. R .D. COLE & CO.. New i an. _ I £>K. D.W.D ORSETT PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON TEMPLE, GA. Having permanently located at ’Temple I offer ■tny proffrrtonal services to the < tiiun WUI sad adjoining counts, Spsc vA n Obstetric* and ffleeatc-* of .. •Omobell* fMi*< store. All calls promptly A £ered dav -nd night—AH »4<W ca)G answered | Iftom ‘B. /• McCain’« residence. i— ljr, Poverty ani its Remedies- Henry George, the latter-day apostle of Socialism is represented as recently saying: “No such nor. erty exists in nature as amon'.uien Whoever saw a school of 6sl. in which a few were fat and the re it were skin and bone! There is no such thing among savages as we may hud in our civilization— want, hunger, starvation in the midst of abounding wealth. “Is it a wonder that all over the world forces are gathering which will rise and destroy this’state of things if it is not remedied? This question is not a speculative one, but it is a question of the first im pel tance and which presses upon every one of ns. The rich cannot help the poor by bestowing alms. Poverty demands something high c> it demands justice alone.” Such sophistries as these are stir ring up discontent, uneasiness, a spirit of bitterness and revenge among the poor and laboring clas ses. that threaten the peace of so ciety if not its very existence. This country has generously opened its gates to all who chose to enter (ex cept the Chinese); the poor, half starved laborer of foreign lands, oven the outcast and the outlaw— have entered, and many of these who have been welcomed to share with the native-born the grand port unities of the country, are the very ones who hare sought to ar> ray the laborer against the capital ist- Let ns examine some of the so phistries quoted above. If there are no poor fish in a school it is not because the strong divide the food with the weak, but rather because they swallowed them. In feeding domestic animals every farmer knows the strong drive away or crowd back the weak until they have supplied themselves, that he only can prevent starvation of the weaker by protecting them. Among wild animals, if one becomes Dis abled the others worry him to death unless he can hide away from them. Only maternal feeling pro tects the weak among animals. The sharp, unyielding, unremitting con test for subsistence goes on, also through the vegetable king dom; strong, rank weeds intrude themselves wherever there is plant food to be obtained, contesting cv cry inch of soil with the useful plants. If, among savages, there is no such thing as ‘‘want, hunger, starvation in the midst of aboun ding wealth," it is because there is none of that persevering industry, pi evidence, frugality and economy so necessary to accumulate wealth, among savages. In many instan ces savages put their infirm to death. It is only among mankind and the more enlightened, cultivated, relined, moral portion of mankind, that the weak, unfortunate, shiftless, the lazy, improvident, arc cared for by me industrious, the frugal,tiie economical,the provident the strong and capable. Our land is dotted all over with free schools, with asylums tor the blind, deaf, dumb and insane, hospitals for the sick, pauper houses, for the lazy, shiftless and improvident, as well as the unfortunate, and a large pro poition of the earnings of the thrif ty are either voluntarily or involun tanly given for the support orcaie of those unable or unwilling to sup port themselves. If we carefully inquire into the an'cccdents of those who become a charge upon society for their sup port, we shall find a large propor tion are descendants of the two ex tremes of society—the very poor and the very rich, an 1 th it theyh ive become a burden to society because their parents never trained them to any useful employments, never taught them anything well. Train ing the young to industrial pur suits is one of the Lest remedies that have been suggested for pov erty. Establish in lustrial schools, and if parents will not pay for the industrial education of their chil dren, educate them. So long as any considerable number of the children of the country are growing ui> inc ipable of doing any kind of acceptable work, so long poverty will continue and the dangerous classes multiply. When others arc suffering drop a word of kindness and sympathy If they are suffering from a cold, give them Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup: a few doses of this valuable reme dy will afford instant relief, and a twenty—five cent bottle will cure the worst cough Two dollars furnish cloth iiv for a family in Porto Rico for one year. If one were suddenly translated to that island he would Dfink he was attending a swell re> eeptioa. CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 10i 1885. THE OLEANDER. Faithful Picture by B. Bur dette. The oleander contains a deadly poison in its leaves aud plants, and is a dangerous plant for the parlor or dining room. But it is far more dangerous about half way down the basement stairs, when it has nearly attained its full growth and lives in an irou bound green tub and weighs about 68 000 pounds. The botanists seem to have overlooked this dangerous quality of the per nicious oleander. But all men whose wives have kept oleanders, know the perils of that pernicious and deadly shrub twice a year—when it has to be brought into the house and when it is taken out again.A man who can successfully get a half-grown olean der down a flight of stairscan cars ry away a bank safe. To him who in the love of nature holds com munion with the oleander and her tub, she speaks a varied language, and causes him to utter in the same accents, but as the mildest varie - ty is unfit for publication in a fam ily journal we refrain from giving even a diluted sample. Once upon a time the wife of a Roman gladiator planted an oie anaer in a tub, and autumn and spring she made Rome's fiercest gladiator take it in and take it out As the oleander grew, and the tub from time to time was exchanged, for a bigger aand heavier one, the gladiatoi’s strergth grew until he could carry a full grown oleander down stairs and through a narrow door without a groan, grunt, or skinning his knuckles, and the Qneeu of Sheba came to see him and couldn't believe it. One night in sear October she aw r oke with a start as the bell in the castle tolled 1, aud said to him that he had for gotten to bring in the oleander, and there was certain to be a frost that night. The savage chief of still more savage men got up in his robe denuit and went out doors and began groping in the dark for the oleander. By mistake he pick ed up his neighbor’s cottage an I four acres of laud, as described by metes and bounds, and carried it all aown into his basement dining room. The oleander remaining out over night, froze to death. The poor wife died of a broken heart.—The neighbor sued the gladiator for misappropri ation of funds and the gladiator was given his choice, by the com t, of dying cv fighting some one.— Having been trained in the Amer ican championship school, he had never had a fight in his life, and would rather die than fight. So they made him do some honest work, lie sawed wood for half an hour, audit killed him so dead that no pugulist from that day to this has evei dared to do ten min utes hard work in his life. Moral : This true story is so full of morals that you couldn't crowd them all inti a dime novel.— Reader, go thou and do likewise. — Pittsburg Dispatch. Sc ub Farmeis. The Practical farmer saysf “The day has gone by when it is consid ered that any dolt of a fellow is good enough for a farmer. Agri culture is one of the piofessions re quiring for its highest success the very best training of all the best intellectual faculth s. No profession has to deal with such numerous and intricate conditions as the far mer, and his observation must cov er a wide range, and his habits in thought and judgement must be trained in the proper channels or he cannot compete successfully with his more wide awake and bet ter-Mn formed neighbors. With cheap lands, not yet drawn upon for the fertility stored up in them by nature, and with scrub cattle ranging the woods or public com mons, most anybody could get along with most any management. But times are changed, lands have in creased in price while deteriorating in quality, and there is now a neces si tv for better methods, an 1 better farmers, and better live stock. Aud the new class of farmers appreciate the necessity of keeping read up and posted in their profession and understand the advantage of study aud method, and can see where brains and mtclligently- directed th night count even more than mus de ”And there is nothing which so accurately indicates the extent and rapidity of this improvement as the earnestness and zeal and in telligence displayed on every hand in the improvement of all classes of live stock. He must bp blind, indeed who cannot perceive that ‘the world moves. ’ Is a bass drum a dead-beatt —Oil City Derrick. The Sorrows of Genius. ~.“Seren eitiw longkt for Homer, dead, W here Homer, living, dnHy bWtfd.” Homer was a beggar; Plautus turned a mill; Terence was a slave: Bwthius died in jail; Paul Borghezc had fourteen trades, and yet starved with them all; Tasso was often dis tressed for five shillings, Banti voglio was refused admittance into a hospital he had himself erected; Cervantes died of hunger; the cel ebrated writer of the “Lusiad” en ded his days, it is said, in an alms house, and, at any rate, was sup ported by a faithful black servant who begged in the streets of Lisbon for the only man in Portugal ou >m God had bestowed those tal ents which have a tendency to erect the spirit of downward age; and Vagelas left his body to the sergeons to pay his debts as far as the money would go; Bacon lived f a life of meanness and distress; Sir W alter Raleigh died on the scafford; Spencer, the charming died in want, the death of Collius I was through neglect, first causing | mental derangement; Mil ton sold i his copyright of “Paradise Lost” | for fifteen pounds, at three pay- . nients, and finished his life in ob ' scurity; Dryden lived in poverty and distress: Otway died prema turely, and through hunger; Lee died in the street; Steele lived a life of perfect warefare with bai liffs; Goldsmith’s “Vicar of Wake field" was sold for a Jh’ifle to save him from the grip of the law; Fielding lies in the burying ground of the English factory at Lisbon, ' without a stone to mark the spot; Savage died in prison .at Bristol, | where he was confined for the debt of eight pounds; Butler lived a life of penury and died poor: Chatter ton,the child of genius and misfor tune, destroyed himself. A real Necessity. We presume there is hardly a lady to be found in our broad land who, if she does not already pos sess a sewing machine, expects some day to become the owner of one. But after the mind has been ful ly made up to purchase one of these indispensable articles the question arises as to what kind of a machine to buy. It should be so simply construe> ted that the most inexperienced can successfully operate it. The other points mainly to be consid ered, and which are the must de sirable, are durability, rapidity, capacity for work, ease of operation regularity of motion, uniformity of tension, and silence while in opera tion. The “Light-nm iing New Home” fills the above r quiremente, and is said to combine the good points of all sewing machines, with tin? ad dition of many new improvements and laborsaviug devices. The price is no higher than that of other machines, and every lady who is the happy possessor of one ma; rest assured she has indeed a treasure. All who send for the company’s new illustratsd catalogue and en close their advertisement (printed on another page) will receive a set of fancy advertising no\ cities, of w value to thote collecting cards, &c. Their address is, NEW HOME SEWING MACHINE CO., 30 Union Square, New York. ARKANSAS ELOQUENCE. What Won Him Over toJones, Mr. Baker, of Bentou, when his name was reached, rose to his feet and said: Mr. President, I cast my first vote in this Senatorial contest for Gov. James 11. Berry, and I have continued to do so up to the present time. 1 know him and 1 like him. He is a good man, and well qualified to fill the office; an honored citizen, a brave soldier, and an able statesman, he is high in the esteem of the public. lam a rough man myself—a man from the mountains —and I am one of those men who stick by their friends I stick by my friends when they deserve it, when they are able and well qualified, until they fall, and even then I'll not desert them; I am like Collins’ ‘sheep;’ when they fall I fall with them. I hated to see Go/. Berry withwtaw from the field, but when 1 saw it must be, 1 looked about me and took the thing into consideration pndthougbt on it. I thought, long and careful ly over it, and I slept with it.— [Laughter.] I saw I must cast my vote for some one else, and I must make a choice of the other candi dates. I'll tell yon how I did it. I looked over the field. I have met the other two, and I had stud ied them. I had met the lion. Poindexter Dunn and I saw in him many good points. I saw a fine head on him (I greatly admire a fine head) and I saw in him a great coming man. But I tell yon what did the work for me. I met Mi.«. , | Jones—the wife of Hon. James K Jones —that settled k it. This is ' * how it was. I met her sud I went and called ou her—yes I dal. The room was full of beautiful women i I didn't hardly know what to in, i but she sat by the piano and I aek |cd her to play a little tune on .ft ‘ | for me [laugter]— Tasked her that, . very thing—asked her if she could play ‘My Old Cabin Home.' She said she would if I would sing a verse of it, and I said I’d try. [cries ' “Sing it now, let’s hear it.’] You wait. I said I would, and she touch ed up the piano, hit tlte very key note of the piece—the tune I know, and love best on earth. It rang ?’'' 5 ’ j echoed about the mom. The place was full of women, and pretty wo men too. [Applause.] And among them I saw Miss Roaue, the daugh ter of old Gov. Roane, the lady of I whom Mr. McMillan spoke so beautifully a while ago. They crowded around and right there I stood and I sung that verse. [Okies. i ! of ‘Sing—sing—give us the verse.’} All right’gentlenicn, to accomodate ! you I'll sing it r ” and clearing his throat, the gontleman from Benton struck up a baritone solo and eang: ‘ o “We’ll huia no more the grizzly In the nook, We'll leave the canon nil So dry ; We’ll drink no more of the Clear crystal brook, So, my old log cabin home, good-bye.” As the “good bye" fleated up among the oob webs in the dome of the hall the densely packed throng burst in to cheers and shouts, a tornado of applause shaking the old house, while hursts of laughter broke out like thunderbolts, aud handclapping sounded like hail among the confusioifi At length the orator sncccetlcd in getting silence again, after bowing and ges ticulating several minute.-, and said: “Hold on—wait and hear the cho rus;’’ and then he sang THE CHOK4 S. . “We’ll mind no more, but play, j 1 never shall forget That log cabin home— Ti at log cabin home far away. ’ Again the storm broke forth, and it was several minutes before he could proceeji. When a lull came he continued: “Well these ladies crowded around, and when Mrs. Jones stopped playing I seized her hand and said ‘Madam, I am in love with you.' [Shouts.] Yes, I told bus I had f allen in love with her, and she said she wished I’d fyll in love with her husband aS well. She treated me nice—they all did, too. Now, I am a rough old man, but ladies have great at tractions for the old mountain boomers. I know, I do, [cheers] and I never forget that visit. They loked so sweet and nice I wanted to hug them all. When I met Mr. Jones 1 looked at him closely, and saw in him a man I could well support. lie had a big head, too— ahead like a washtub, eyes set away bacK in, and a] deep thinking look in them, and so, with all this to think of, after looking well about me, after considering the matter well, after sleeping with it, I have concluded to vote for the Hon. James K. Jones.” [Cheers long and loud.] SCROFULA. I have had hereditary scrofula broken out on me for eighty years. My mother and one sister died with it. and I, supposing that I would go as other members of the family had, had despaired of life. The treatment of mercury and pot ash seemed to aggravate instead of curing the disease. In this condition I was pressed to use Swifts Speci sic. After taking six bottles the fearful ulcers on my neck and arms disappeared and the scars only re mained me of my suffering Had I taken S. S. S. a‘ first, I would have been a well man long ago. Frank Gilchkr. Danville, Ky., Oct, 18, 1884. eczema . I was affected for nearly four years with eczema. The doctors call ed it at first erysipelas. 1 was treat ed by physicians. las wcured by Swift's Specific. I used about thirty bottles and have had no trouble with it since. I refused to take it, even after it was recommended to me by others, for some time —such was my prejudice to the name of it; but having tried it myself, I now believe it is the best blood purifier in all my knowledge. It did anoth er thing for me. I had suffered from piles for many years. Since taking this medicine I have been relieved, and believe it cured me. R. H. Jones. Cartersville, Ga., Aug. 25,1884. Col. Ingersoll in his lecture, “W hich \Vay, says, “I never saw a minister with brains enough to do his own thinking and mine too,” Yes, Robeit, yes, but if he could only do his own, what a soft snap he’d have on the rest.- St. Paul Ileiald. I EG if E THINGS G.AV. Jl.in Haralaoaßanner, 1 1 i i 1 have noticed tuat a chhd that was extra stnArt, and the wonder of the community, and especially of his pa re u trover amdnnfs to very much: Thej’ begin too nigh the top of the ladder and fall off and break their necks, 1 x>uppßsr, as we quit bearing uriytliiug after tboy get three or four feet high. The great est trouble of the present day is that they areifeencraliy a “lectio two smart.'’ It oftens happens that the dull plodding boy who is consider-? i oil a duq|je at scJiool leaves the in a long run. m everj? tbino thqj nractical, and the one uii nis wits and his smartness, is forceil to iftquiro : “How is it that I can't keep up withlhat dunce." The answer is easy. He has call xl to his assist ance “common sense,” which is the best thing to have after all. Another thing I have noticed, is ithat when yon sec a man making a groat parade ut his honesty before the wpijd, it means that lie has dis posed ojhis mam stv-k, and only has a few samples left in his show windows. It is an up hill business to try convince the world of the fact by argument, and this is one case where a man had better have otlier witnesses besides him self. I notice that men never brag on how honest they are till every body else forgets to ever mention it. 1 notice that the bigger sinner a man is himself, tine worse he seems to hate it when a professor of re ligion gets a little wrong. At any , rate/he‘ tiiHkes a bigger fuss about j it than the dmrch folks themselves and seems to tiling that it is proof positive that religion is a humbug. If the church was .just half up to I the Standard erected for4tbj’ the | worst mon in the iwu’ld the mem bers would have m order white robes, golden haiqis, and wings > from the celestial realms, and then thev would be chargid with steal ing them by‘these fastidious world lings. 1 nQtice that some people are a greajyjpal more sociable and clever when they arc at yoiir house than they are when you happen to call on them. Some how or some how else it always happens- that yon went at the wrong time of the moon. The good lady will be complaining or the baby will have the croup, or Johnny lias a sore foot, or the beds arc in wash, or something of the kind will be the matter, which all summed up just simply means that they are sorry you come. It makes a fellow feel sorter cheap to decline a half dozen good invita tions to stay all nigln, and ride about five miles to get to stay with somebody to whom he had given a promise, and then have to say af ter sitting on his horse till nearly dark, “Well, I thought I would come by and stay all night with yon. But I’m glad that such peo ple are the exception instead of the rule, especially in Carroll and Haralson. Little boys, I have noticed an other things A man never gets drunk on the second, third or fourth drink. The danger lurks in the first one. If he will let the first one alone there is not a hit of danger in the next 500, They are perfectly harmless* You hear jieople frequently say, “Oh there’s no danger in one dram;” but peo ple who talk this way are no friends to the little boys. To look at it in onelight itjwould seem that they arc right, for a dram makes ns have /‘good feelings” at the time, but the danger is so much the greatei', for by degrees we are lured into the folds of the serpent for the wisest man who ever lived or wrote said ‘AT LAST”—not at the start —“it biteth like a ser pent and stiugeth like an adder.” The only safe plan left for you is to let it alone entirely. “Touch* not, taste not, handle not, the un clean thing,’’ and then you will be the master over whisky instead of its being your master. I know your mother is a good woman, and would not give you bad advice. Ask her what she thinks would be the best thing for a boy to do. If she don’t agree with me that the first drink is a good one to let anlone, I will doubt whether lam right or not. G. W. M. The most hew Maine of all lum bermen are the woodchoppers of the Androscoggin. If yew pine fir such joke timber as this, search a ship s log.—loukers Gazette. A man in Cressville, Penn., has fourteen marriagable daughters. The number of times his front gate needed hinges last year is not sta ted. Original Western settlers—pis tils and knives. f ' i PROAS THE PRESIOE! OF BAYLOR UNIVERSITY. 1 “ Indepcudenoe, Texas, Sept. 3G, 1«| Gen.'<aao».- , ; Ayer’s Hair Vig( ' Has Iks u used in my household lor til luu-iiis: • -4 , Ist. To peer nt falling out of the hair. I 2d. To prevnt too rajud change of co)'I 3d. As a dresssing. It lias given entire satisfaction in c | instance. Yours J*« specif ally, W M. CAREY ci: txt I I" I. AYER’S HAIR VIGOR is entire y from uncleanly, •kijjgcrous. or itihiriou* j stances. It pre ret to the hair front tun ‘ gray, restores gray hair to its original c< prevents baldness, preserves the hair promotes its growth, cures dandruff all diseases of the hair ami scalp, am • 1 M tbrfl danic time, a very superior desirable dressing. PRETAIIED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Ma Sold by all L'ruggiata. HAVE fdu TAKEN ( TiIEAIL.WtACO.\STITITIOnOR If not, lay this (taper down nnd send for it now. If you want it every day, send for the I which easts $lO a year, or $5 lor six montt $2,50 for three mouths. If Con want it every week, send for the Weekly, which casts £1,25 a year or $5 for of five. THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION Is the Cheapest! • Biggest and Best Paper Printed in Am It his Ji pages chock full of news, gossl sketches every week. It prints more rort than the story papers, more farm news that agri* nltnrnl papers, more fun than iho hntn ,|>:ipers.--besides ail the news, mid Blit ARP’S AND BETSY HAMILTON’S LET DMCLE HFMUS S SKETCHES. ——AND— TALMAGE’S SERMONS, O >?ti 1 ejatt a >vj3x! It cones once week-takesn whole week to re You can’t wait farm or keep house withoi Write your name on a postal card, address us, and we will rend you speclmeN copy fre Address THE VONNTITUTK DO YOU KNO’ THAT LORRIUARD’S CLIM PLUG TOBACCO with Red Tln-Taa Rose Leaf Fin« ent eh*’ navy clippings, and black. Brown, and y< snutfs are the best mid cheapest, quality cot ered? 133 W OMANI "Grace wot in all her eleps Heaven, in her eye, In every gesture dignity and love.'" So appeared Mother Eve, and so may shine her fair descendant*, with the ex ercise of common sense, care and prop er treatment. An enormous nnmber ol female complaints are directly caused by distnibaucc or suppression of the Menstnal Function. In every such case that sterling and unfailing aperitif Bradfield’s Female Regulator, will enrct relief and cure. It is from the recipe of a most distin guished physician. It is composed ol strictly officinal ingredients, whose hap py combination has never been onrpase ed. It is prepared with scientific skill from the finest materia is. It bears tht palm for constancy of strength, certlan ty of effect, elegance of preparation beautyof appearance end relative cheap ne*s. The testimony In its favor i* "en nine. It never fails when fairly tried. ~ . m .Cartersville, Ga. This will certify that two rnembenioi my immediate family, after having suf sered iot many years from menstrual Ir regularity- and having been treated without benefit by various medical doc tors, were at length comidetely cured bv one bottle of Dr. J. Bradfield s Female Regulator Its eflect. in snch rases is truly wonderful, and well rnay the rem edy be called "Woman’s Best Friend ” Yours Respectfully, James a. Straw £ g, - I Send for our book on the “Health and Happiness of Woman." Mailed free BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO. Atlanta, Ga. BEAUTY RESERVED! HEALTH RESTORE! have voo a CARDEN IF YOU HAVE gL f y YOU WILL NEED | J J —” d _ Beat at ths least mwr. 1 S*? 4 Catalogue will snrpriM you. No m : mai'lM'w’ h!lT t b * en de * ,in < * m'wry. “‘'Ld Free to nil, and you ought to laav< before buying anywhere. v“*uii UU bt WM. H. MAULE. 129 & 131 Front St., Philadelphia. Wright s Indian Vegetable Ph FOR THE LIVER And all Bilious Complain FOrSaie. 2nnn Acree improved farm lands. jUUU very desiratle places. Two w< nis hed 4 room houses in citv limits. Al* business house, good location for trade. FAR RF N T «? ne 3 roon » comfo ■ 'll! IIK. 11 | .house, and one acre lo beyondxity limits. For terms etc., apply i S. N. JVNI 1101 Real Estate A; r JOHN F. STRATTON, 49 Maiden Laae, New ' Importer, Manufacturer A Whoutoaiji Dial MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. MUSICAL I BAND INSTRUMENTS. STRATTON’S C BRATED RUSSIAN GUT VIOLIN STBDi BKXD FOB CATALOGUE. 2“ NO