The Carroll County times. (Carrollton, Ga.) 1872-1948, April 17, 1885, Image 1

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1 HE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES. VOL. XIV. An Old Soldier’s EXPERIENCE. “ Calvert, Texas, Maj 3,1832. *’i wish to express my appreciation cl the valuable qualities of Ayer's Cherr’" Moral as a cough remedy. “ While with Churchill's army, Just before the battle of Vicksburg, I contracted a se vere cold, wh’-'i terminated in a dangerous Cough. 1 found no relief till on our inarch We came io a country store, where, on asking for some remedy, 1 was urged to try A yeb s t’ULitKV PwroßAt. »». did so, and was rapidly cured. Since then ’ have kept the Te< I'on.ibytbi ini y 1 i me, i • family use, i.nd 1 bn-c foui d i*. to he an ini 'uabie remedy fur thioui cud lung diaeai . J. W. Win; ley." Thons. *s of tcstiniO'.iix's ceri'i'y t ? 'lit prompt c. 9 of :<] l ronvhi u a:.,; >-1:3 affections, y the use of Avins it::;.-, Pectoral. ' > '•cing very p iiatnb.e, the j*cu..g PREPARED BY , Or.J,o.Ayer &Co. z Lo well,Mass Sold by all Druggists. PROFESSIONAL AND JAW CAK(S W. 0. ADAMSON, Atto’ney fvt CARROLLTON. - - - OA. Promptly transacts all business confided to him. Office, In ihe court house, north west corner, first floor. 5-ts E. GROW? ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND REAL ESTATE AGENT. MONEY loans negotiated on improved farms in Carroll, Heard, and Haralson counties, at reasonable rates. Titles to lands examined and abstracts fur nished. Oftiice up-stairs in tho'ceurt house, 33tf Carrollton, Ga. A. J. CAMP, Attorney fit luaw, VILLA RICA GA. WM. c. HODNETT, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, VILLA RICA, - - - - GEORGIA over Dr. Slaughter’s Drugstore. Prompt attention g;iv cn to all business intrusted to him. W. F. ROBINSON r*li y isici «.xi est? Surgeon BUCHANAN, - - - GEORGIA. Chronic diseases a Specialty. AV. L. FITTS, I’lxyisilcia.Tti est? SfurgfOoii CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA, 'Till, at all times, ba found at W. W, Fitts’ drug store, unices professionally absent. 38-ts W. E. BROWN, Attorney At Uaw, CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA. C. P. GORDON, ATT() RN E Y-AT-1. AW, CARROLLTON, ------ GEORGIA. WOOL CARDING. 1 aavejust reclothed, overhauled, and put in operation my large wool carding machine, and will give it my Personal Attention from now until the Ist of January next. We make perfect rolls, and guarantee good weight. Call on or address D. W. SIMMS, X’tf Carrollton, Ga. W. W, & G, W. MERRELL, Zktto’noys atLaw, CARROLLTON, - - GA. Records and land titles examined. Will collect claims, lai ge or small. Especial at tention given to the business of managing rstate by Executors, .Administrators, Gar dians &c and othe r business before the Or dinary. Will practice in all the superioi courts ot the Coweta circuit, and always at lead at Haralson court- H ill practice any where and in any court where clients may require their services: DR. D. R 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. IRE I’oll GOING TO PUNT ? If so it will pay yon to use MARTINEZ 8c LONGMAN’S PURE PREPARED PAINTS. Call or send for color cards and list houses painted with them t<> T II Robfkds & Son, .ztgents, Villa Rica, Ga., or F. J. COOLEDGE & 880., 21 Alabama st. Ga, Wholesale dealers in P *s, Oils Varnishes, Br ’ "s, and GP FOR SALE. Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Corn .Mills, Cotton Presses, Mill Spindles, pullev shafting. Hanger, all kinds CASTING. Piping. Steam guages Whistles, etc., etc. ALSO Doors, Sash, Blinds, Brackets, etc Write for estimates ou any sort of machinery. R.D, COLE & CO.. Newnan, DIt.D.W.DORSETT PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON TEMPLE, CIA. Having permanently located nt Temple I offer my professional services to the citizens of Car solland .adjoining counties. Special attention to Obstetrics nnd diseases of women. Office nt Campbell & Bell's store. AH calls promptly an swered day aud night—All night calls answered £rom B. J. McCain's residence. 2—ly, THE EDITOR. Newspapor Men's work and Duties Catrgoiically Expressed; From the Boston Globe. Does the editor write everythino in the paper? Oli, ves He writes the love story on the outside in the morn ing, then five or six editorials and don ole as many paragraphs, then the theatre notices and the adver tising puffs. In the afternoon he helps the compositors, or goes down stairs and works the press, or as sists the boys to fold the papers. Should a newspaper man always be a printer? Oil, yes; always. You must earn to set type before you can Miite at all. Shakespeare, Byron, Lord Bacon, Tennyson and all the lest were printers. lou cannot expect to be a good compositor un less yen are a printer. What docs the managing editor do? He keeps the pens and inkstands clean and manages to mark a great deal of writing with a blue pencil. What he marks goes into the—pa- P cr basket, and is often anxious ly looked for several weeks after by the correspondent. He is the man who loves to talk with you; when you have an hour or two to spare yon can talk to him, and lie takes it very hard if you don’t stay at least half an hour after you have finished your business with him—to say it all over again. W hat is the business of the proof re id er ? Oh, he is simply hired to prove the truth of whatever the editor writes. And what does the exchange reader do? Oh, he simply exchanges news with other papers. And what docs the night editor do? Oh, he simply watches the com positors at night to see that they do not shirk their work or steal any type. _ Is it really necessary to go abroad t<> be a good foreign correspon dent. Oh, no. You can be just as bad a foreign correspondent at home as anywhere else. What kind of writers do editors prefer? Oh, people who Lave great com mand of language, or rather those who are greatly commanded by language, and who can say the same thing three nr four times over in the same sentence; also young ladies three or four months out of high school with poetry on “Sp-ing,” if Spring is in season; also, men with but one idea in their heads who have been studying it all their lives, and who have got it all down on three or four reams of paper. Can anybody write for a newspa per? Oh, yes; they can if they want to. There is nothing to stop any body from writing fora newspa- . per. And get pay for it? Oh. ves. There is nothing to tz stop anybody from being paid for writing for a newspaper. What is the best subject to write about for a newspaper? Oh, anything which happens to ' interest you. If it interest yon it is a sure sign it will interest everv- ' body else. • How does an editor like to have an article comment.e? Commonly in this way: “Hav ing a few moments to spare, I have dashed off these few lines in the hopes that what I h ive ground out may interest your readers. I havt? not said on this subject all I could or all I can, but if it should prove interesting, as I hope it will, I trust I shall be able to say more on this and otl er topicis, etc., etc." The longer you can keep on in this strain the more will the editor be delighted with your article. In what style does he like to have it written? He likes to have it written in a very fine, obscure hand, with lots of interlineations and letters sprawl ed across each other, and, if possi ble, on both sides of the paper, and then you should call for a proof of youi article, and when you get it conc’ndc to strike out every third sentence and put another in its place, and when you get a “re vise" you may re-write the entire article over again. This will make the entire office-happy and cheer ful . What will the editor do first af ter looking over such an article? He will order a new chib —for you when you call. Where do you generally put the long articles? In the waste basket. Do you pay for them? No, but the old junk man docs at the rate of a cent per pound. — There is a good opening to make C ARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 17- 1885. some money writing long articles , t'lovidirig you live long enough. Should one learn short hand to make a good reporter? Oh, ves; by all means. Then you will be sure not. to lose an item Jon i eport a tire. Or if yon go to a temperance meeting yon won’t lose a word the speakers say. Edi tors are very particular that every void of a speaker (particularly temperance speakers) should go in to the paper The reporter who brings in the longest ieports has his salary raised every week and an order for a new suit of clothes once a month. Whnt>,does the financial editor do? Generally he talks most of what he has least on hand—cash, and af ter talking a column of grand cash eats a 15-cent lunch and wonders where his new spring overcoat is to come from. What is the business of the scion tific editor? He smokes the glasses that we observe ..eclipses through, and at times and places takes observations through other glasses. What is the duty of the drama tic editor? To get §IOO from the theatre manager every time he writes a favorable notice of a new play. \\ hat idea is born into the world with nine men out of ten? That they can successfully write for and run a newspaper. Where do most of them take this idea? Out of the world with them. How Crenshaw Secured. His Ap. ment. Washington Free Press. How Col. Crenshaw came to be i made internal revenue collector in ' Georgia should be made known to I the good people of that State. He came on to Washington in search of the marshalship naw held by the notorious Bryant. As soon as he got here he learned that Senator Brown intended to retain Bryanfe in office j until next December, when the pro j gramme is to place one Nelms in i his place. This Nelms is now at the head of the Georgia convict camp j and is a bosom friend of Senator Brown. Crenshaw at once sent home and got a batch of letters, i written by Nelms, that were models of ignorance, bad grammer, and incorrect spelling, lie took these letters to Senator Brown and threat ened to deliver them to Attorney- General Garland, that he might see how ignorant Brown's prospective marshal of Georgia is. The Senator implored Crenshaw not to expose the ignorance of this convict com mander, offering to have Crenshaw appointed internal revenue collec tor, vice Johnson. There was a sud den running to and fro, Brown i. 7 working almost as hard for Cron- . shaw as he has been known to do for Bryant and Bledger. The!' appointment of Crenshaw was made in a “jiffy,” and he left for Georgia in possession of a fat office, ' which he never could have gotten had he not threatened to expose the ignorance of Brown’s friend, Nelms, who is booked for Bryant’s shoes next December. _ 1 Woke up the Wrong Parrot * Funeral fact and funeral fancy are subjects prolific of true stories, but we have rarely met with a bet ter one than the following which is ( vouched for a story of fact. At a suburban funeral not long ago, ( the clergyman was dilating upon the many virtues of the departed ‘ Ad it happened there was much justification f< r it, as the deceased } was a man of large heart and many ‘ merits; y< t the clergyman, probably i , feeling free to let his fervor of lan 11 guage play unrestrained, almost ( outdid his theme. Not content with couching his praise in simple and straightforward words he moun ted to imagery and seamed to at trioute angelic as well as human characteristics. When at the cli max of his eloquence, his hearers charmed with the sweet incense, 1 the spell was broken by a shrill voice, which cned out: “Facts, facts give us facts!’’ The sensible comment came ! from a sage and venerable parrot 1 which had been removed to an ' ante-room, and then it was remem bered that prominent among the 1 virtues of the deceased master was t a steady dislike for flattery and a 1 habit of sharply rebuking “high falutin." • ! 1 It is nobler to give a worthy ob- { ject a penny than it is to lay a ter.-1 dollar wreath on a rich man’s cos-1 ( fen. And what is more, it is cheap er. € < “Too much absorbed in his business’’ was the comment of a 1 Wes'crn newspaper on the death of 1 a brewer who was found drowned 1 in a tank of bis own beer. Grand Jury Presentments. Georgia Carroll County.— We, the Grand Jurors, chosen, empannelled arid sworn for the April Tenn 1885, of the Superior Court of Carroll county, beg leave to make the following general presentments: c find the public property and buildings of the conntv, except the court house, in gx>d condition and well kept. We find some repairs needed on the court house, and recomreend that the Ordinary have such re pairs made as he may think neces sary for the preservation of the building. We also recommend that the Ordinary have added to the jail a good and comfortable room for the convenience of the jailor and his family. We find the public roads in a most excellent condition, except the road running through Old Vil la Rica in the 2nd district, the road from Davenport’s mill to the line of the 9th district, in Shiloh dis trict, the new road in 4th district, a bad rocky place on Cedaitown road near David Bryant’s in the 6th district, a bad place on the Jacksonville road near Handley’s bridge in the 10th district, and re commend that the road commis sioners have these roads and places put in good condition at once, and that mile posts and guide boards be placed w’leiever needed. We recommend that an addi tionai insolvent list, amounting to $56.90 be allowed the Tax collec tor. We recommend that the Tax Receiver look closely int > the value of all property returned, especially wild lands owned by non residents of the county and see that a prop er valuation is placed upon the same. We recommend that the dieting of prisoners confined in the county jail be fifty (50) cents per day after the first of May next. We recommend that the Tax assessment for all county purposes be one half (|) of one (1) per cent - We recommend that our Hon. Representatives, at the next meet ing of the General Assembly, do all they can to secure the passage of an act establishing n. Board, t> consist of five members, of C mi missioners of roads and revenu is,for Carroll county, said act inakinsr it the duty of the judge of the Supe rior Court, on recommendation from the Grand Jury, to appoint said commissioners, their term of office being for two ; 2) }ears and their salary not. exceeding fifty dollars per annum each. For the first term after ?u -h act is passed, two commissi ners to be appoint ed for one ye .r and three for two years, and afterwards annually, to fill vacances occuring by expir iti >n of terms of office. We visited the jail in body and find it well kept and everything' clean and in place, in a safe condi ti n, and prisoners well cared for, which we think reflects much cred it on cur most worthy sheriff and his most excellent deputy- We also visited the poor farm in body and find the property in good condition and well kept and the in mates, thirteen in number, well cared for. We find that the poor farm church has, bv agreement between the former Ordinary and Mr. J. II Archer, been removed partly off of the land belonging to the county and on the land of Mr. Archer and that there has been no deed made the • county for said land and we recommend the Ordinary'at once hav? a deed made to the county, of this land, as Mr. Archer proposes to donate it to the county. We recommend that the Ordina ry instead of giving to paupers out side of the poor farm, orders to be traded at stores, issue to them drafts. We find the books of all the county officers neatly and correct ly kept. We find from the best informa tion we can get, that the outstand ing debt from ISB4 of the county is between four hundred and eighty seven and one thousand dollars. With some exception we find the dockets of the justices and No taries Public neatly and correctly kept so far as presented. We recommend that the justices and notaries public be more care ful about placing business in the hands of elected officers before their bonds have been taken. We recommend that J. C. Gam mon be appointed Notary Public and ex-officio J. P.,§ the 13715 t district G. M. We recommend a more suitable room be provided, in the Court house, for the Grand Jury hereaf ter. We recommend that these gen- , oral presentments be published both in the Times and Free Press. I In taking leave of his Honor, Judge Harris, we desire to extend him and all other officers of the ; court our most sincere th inks for ■ courtesies shown us. Augustus S. C. Chance, fore man; Benjamin F. Burns, James C. Shackleford, William G. Wat son, Robert B. Jones, William Mote, Hardy N Wiggins, John M. Walker, Thos. J. Perkerson, Wil liam M. Spruce, Wiley J. Stew art, John IL Marchman, Alfred I) Turner. Asa B. King, Ephriam M. Allen. Wm. IL Sparks, Albert M. Ward, Elijah L. Jones, Jesse G. Brooks, JohnN. King, David W. Brown, E. Watson Wells, Warren M. Meadows. Carroll superior court April : term 1885. Ordered by the court j tint those general presentments be i received, entered on the minutes of • court and be published in accor dance with the request of the Grand Jury. By the court. S. AV. Harris, J. S. C. C. C. E. B. Merrell, Sol. Gen. Pro. Tern. I certify the above and forego- . ing is a true extract from the min- ! utes. J. M. B. Kelly, Clerk. Malaiiai Poison The drouth in Southwest Geor gia last spring dried up the wells, and we were compelled to use wa ter from the creek on the planta tion. The result was that all were troubled with chills and fevei. I carried with we -everal bottles of Swift’s Specific, and as long as I took it, I had perfect health.— As soon as I ceased taking it, I, like the icst, was afflicted with chills. When 1 resumed its use, I was all right again. We have used it in our family as an antidote lor malarialpoison for two orthree ye?u - s and have never known it to fail in a single instance. W. C. Furlow. Sumpter Co.. Ga., Sep. 11.1884. A CRIPPLE RESTORED. Some two years ago I received a ’> >y (Lona White) into the Orphans’ Home, near Macon,'from Columbus He was one of the poorest cieatures I have ever seen—nothing but skin and bone—crippled and de formed by Scrofula, which attended him from his birth. About eigh teen months ago 1 commenced giving I'im Swift’s Spec'fic. Af ter several bottles had been taken and no visible results to be seen, I began to despair, but continued the medicine. At last signs of im provement became apparent, and from that date to the pi esent there has been constant improvement in both body and mind. He is now about fourteen years old, and is one of the brightest boys I have ever known. I honestly believe that he will ultimately outgrow the effects of this loathsome dis ease under the influence of Swift’s Specific. The two cases of erysipelas which were treated some two years ago with S. S. S. show no symptoms of return of the disease. L. B. Pane. Sup’t Orphans, Home. So. Ga. Cons. Macon, Ga., Nov. 1. 1884. Treatise on Blood and skin dis erses mailed free. The Swift’s Specific Co., Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga., What he Got By It, “Come mighty nigh killin' a fine buck dis mawnin’.” said an’ ©ld negro. “Coinin’ long though de woods an’ erole buck ee jump up an bookerty, bookerty he run off a few yards an stop still. Come in one er shootin' him, sar.” Why didn’t you shoot?’’ ’’Didn’t hab my gun wid me, sar." “Then how did you come in one of shooting him?” “Case, sah, I come in one o’ fakin’ my gun wid me.” “AV by didn’t you take your gun?” “Didn’t hab none, sah.” “You are are an old fool.” :‘Look heah, doan ’buse er man dat way when yerain' got no cause. 1 ain’t got no gun, fur a feller dat I wuz er bout ter buy one frum, axed me jus’ one dol!a v mo'n I cold pay. So’ I come in one o’ gettin’ de gun. Es I had er got it, 1 would er tuck it ’long wid me, an' es 1’ der had it, I could er shot de buck easy, sah. So doan come ‘roim’ ’busin’ er man when de faeks is all ergin yer. I hab knowned fylks ter fetch trouble on dar ’selvs dat way. Er pusson oughter be kcerful m dis heah’ worl’ o’ science an’ spec kerlation. Good mawnin’. sah. Since yer's acted dis way, I would enter gin yer none o' de meat es I had er killed it. 'Fore yer talked dat way 1 woulder made yer pres ent o’ some o' de buck. See whut yer got by it, sah.” OBITUARY. " Amhew Conner, died at his res idence in old A ilia Rica, Cai roil ; county, Ga., Feb.. 27, 18S5, in the 58th year of his age. He was born in \A al ton county, Ga., on April 22nd. 1828, and moved to Meriwether county Ga., with his father, in the year 1838. He was married to Miss Martha Tidwell |in the year 1848. He joined the I Masonic fraternity at Luthersville (Meriwether county in the year 11845 and connected himself with the Baptist church at Bethel Meri wether county in 1864 and was chosen and ordained a deacon oL that churclrln 1866. He moved to Carroll county in 1870 and went into the Constitution of the A ilia Rica Baptist church in 1878 i and remained a member of that church until his departure from life to death. Brother Conner was ■ well known in this vicinity and in the community in which he lived he was known as a man who desired i to deal honestly with all mankind - and to live for God. He was a man that had talent to keep peace among his neighbors and to settle and quell all disturbances that might arise upon the church among his brethren. He was a regular attendant of his church meetings, always at h’s j ost ready to help the cause of his master. As a husband he was kind and devoted, as a father he was affectionate and always striving to make home pleasant for his children and friends when visiting him. Brother Con ner leaves a kind and loving wife and seven dutiful children and many warm friends to mourn his loss. Brother Conner always stood high inthe estimation of hisßrethren and was a friend to the widow and orphan, always ready to help them in time of need. But alas’ alas! he has ended his career in this life, he kept the faidi to the end and was ready to be offered up. The family have lost a true friend, hus band and father, and the the church a good Christian. On Friday night February 27th, he was taken sud denly ill and at 10 o’clock he ex pired with heart disease. Bro. Conner was a citizen of old Villa Rica and was buried at the cemetery of that place on Sunday, March Ist, with Masonic honors. Thus our fathers in Israel are passing away. Roeolved that a copy of these proceedings be presented to the bereave.! family, and a copy be sent to the Carroll County Times and Carroll Free Press for publi cation. Submitted. William A. Land. ) John B. Samples. Committee. 11. T. Marchman. V This done in Conference by or der of the church. Feb. 28th,1885. 11. B. Bartlett, Moderator. 11. T. Marchman, Clerk. Never interrupt any conversation with a hacking cough: it creates a bad impression. Better invest a quarter of a dollar in a bottle of Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup and cure it. It is a pitiable sight to see a wo man who, but one short week ago, possessed an angel’s sweetness of disposition and a child’s artlessness of character, watching at the head of the stairs, at 2 o'clock in morn ing, with a towel-roller in her hand. • ' Tiredai.d languid wern n. How many women there arc of whom these words are true: “They feel languid and tired, hardly able to bear their weight on their feet, the bloom all gone from their cheeks, irritable and cross without meaning to be, nerves all upset, worried with the children, fretted over litte things, a burden to them selves, and yet with no acute dis ease.” AVhat a pity it is. But a few bottles of Parker’s Tonic will drive all this away, and relieve the troubles peculiar to their sex.. “Ah, Dudley. I understand you are to be congratulated. Is the bride pretty?” “No, can’t say she is.” "Good figure?” “ Yes, ’bout a million.”—Life. “Pa, how funny this looks in this paper. The printer has got the words all mixed up, so there is no sense to it.'’ “No, no, my child. That is a new poem by Tennyson.” The young couple who before marriage thought they could live on love are now living on corn bread and hominy. “Reading maketh a full man,” says Bacon. Curious that the libra ries aren’t patronized more. AA hat you don't know about men oftentimes make them respec table. AA hy is a mangy mongrel like a i ig? Because he’s a poor cur. A hsme druggist TESTIFIES. inty m home fa not aßrnva the best test ul out »• i«hm that ih> «>th< r hiolicine has won for iiaelf .P.. U - l ajq»r<>l«iio:i ib o<n eilr, stat •. ami cuitutry, ami auuong all people, aa Ayer's Sarsaparilla. 1 he follovring letter from one of our best. u Druggists should be of interest to every sufferer; RHEUMATISM. ~ , , Knennmtism, so rere that I could n<n move fi-utn tlie bed. or *u - sc. without help, l tru'd several remo bus without much if any r.diet. uuUl 1 ox A " ft; ■« Sti3im«ii.l.t. by the use of two optics of uuiuli I uak eomphHe.v cured. Have -<>id largo quantities of your S.tit>.\. I’AKit.i.t, ami it sail retains its wonderful jop'i.a’. its, Tifc nmny notable cures It has til vied in Utfa t cinity couviu<-e me Lhai it, I’ the bv»t bleotjl nrCdk-ino ever offered to the uublie. L. F. if tKUia.” i.tnr St., Dudklm.d, Mass., May 13. iv<2. SALT RSEdM. y . t . t ... OAtr lwctity years l»efore his removal to Lowell atlhcted with Salt Rheum in ita woi-t form. Its ulcerations nctuallv covered ra< re than half the surface <»f his body and lit'i s. l.e v,as entirely cured by At fir’s b u-uulla. See certificate lu Ayer s Almanac tor 1 <J. rm - ! .Vrti n dy Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Sold by all Drug o-its; Si, six !<ottlcs for S 3 'BS—A Gli nn Unilll.XATlOX,—*Bs THE CARROLL COP NT Y TIMES and The Lovisvillk WEEKLY COURIER JOURNAL One year for only 52.2 t Two papers lor liille mote than the pi ice of otie. I By pa\iii-j us $2 2 > you will nceive for one year your home paper with the TOUR!* ER JOURNAL, the repicsenlative newspa pei of the South, Democratic, ami for a Tarifl for Revenue only, and one of lhe best brightest and ablest family weeklies in the Ui ited Slates. Those who desire to exam ine a copy of the Courier Journal can do so at this office. 713 t. * -Cj A i.mdirul.'indoui'by- J „ i,3 Vj bieiun I'BinbliMhcs nit w IJIL .JS ~Office in New York. ’t fcc ‘ rr-'in Am. Journal <4 Med. J Eg “Dr. Ab. Mescmle, wbo - J mI Ait r Y3|niskc<<n specialty of Epilepsy 55.. fS, without doubt treated •_"ZI und cured more cimssj than ••'r.- other living physician. His sacceee has simply :n astonishing; we have heard of cases of over 9* 'cars standing cured by him. He guarantees* cure." I --ga t ottle and Treatise sent free. Give P.O. and x mldreps to . MLSEROLE, No. 96 John St.,New York. DO YOU KNOW THAT LORRiLLARD’S CLIMAX PLUG TOBACCO with Red Tin-Tag; Rosa Leaf Fius cut chewing navy clippings, aud black. Browr, aud yellow snuffs are the best and cheapest, quality consid ered? 133?1y MOTHERS FRIEND I M M A R i* This invaluable preparation I" ” If IUII t is truly a triumph ofscientlflc T 2 DD n I skill, and no more inestimable r n fl II rI Ji benefit was ever bestowed on W f) M n D E thc mo,herß of the world. Fl U MUit E |3?“lt not only shortens PfilN I the time of labor ard lessens ■ Mill « the intensity of pain, but UH FlfnDC than all. it greatly di- FI U iflbnt i" I,n >'*hes the danger to life of nAildtn I both mother and chi d, and UhFiJLII ■ ves the mother In acondi tion highly favorable tospeedy TO recovery, and far less liable MOTHER to flooding, convulsions, and other alarming symptoms in r-TTTT -n to n J>« fcrin K «”><! pain- CrilLiD. iul labor. Its truly wonderful The Dread of 'efficacy in this, icspect enti ties the Mother’s Friend to IYiCrIuRnOOD be ranked as one of the life saving appliances given to the Transformed to world by the discovery of modern science. From the nature of the * 1 vz 1 case it will ol co-arse be un and derstood that we cannot pnb- T „ iish certicate concerning the «J O Y . Remedy wounding the deiiea- 'ey of the writer. Yet we have ctftyik! ’ rcr hundreds of such testimonials J AM oAit <>n file, and no mother who has I O— ver used it will ever be with- SUFFERING WOMAN jout if in her time of trouble. A prominent physician lately remyrked to the proprietor, that if It were admissible to make public the letters we receive, the “Mothers' Friend” would outsell anything or the market. I most earnest entreat every female expecting to be confined, to use Mothers’ Relief. Coupled with this entreaty I will add that during a long obstetrical practice (forty four years) I have never known it to fa il to produce a safe and quick delivery. H. J. Holmes, M. D. .Atlanta, Ga. Send for treaties on Health and Happiness o Women, meiled free. Bradfield Regulator, Co., Atlanta, Ga. CARDEN? mv d >,-w'!■'.‘ he Bpst a * th « ,n Th «* Vauloeue »i,l * B r r ,ri M yoa. Nomatter ’ " ’’’* h * r « it wit! J< is before ° UKU ‘ ‘*“’ e W WM. H. MAULE, 125 & 131 Front St., Philadelphia. J_.i. . . Wright s Indian Vegetable Pius FOB THE LIVER And all Bilious Complaints sate Fonsaie. 2nnnAcres mproved farm lands. Ssmt. JU U U very desirat !e places. Two well fbr nit- heo 4 room houses in city limits. Also, one .business bouse, good location for trade. Fil R?NT*!? r,e 3 room conaf or tabla • shouse, anu oneacre lot just beyond city limits. For terms etc., apply to 8. N. JONES, “ 11 Real Estate Agent, r JOHN F. STRATTON, <9 Maiden l.aue, New York. *■> UH r Importer, Manufacturer & WnorrsAUt Draxjk* Os i MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. MUSICAL BOXCA BAND INSTRUMENTS. STRATTON'S CELB-J BRATED RUSSIAN GUT VIOLIN SESD FOR CATALOGUE, 2-S' < * NO. 16.