Newspaper Page Text
THE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
VOL. XIV.
Cleveland's Young Days.
New York World.
Washington, May 8. —Dewitt
C. Sprague is well known in New
York. He read the poem at the
last reunion of the Army of the
Potomac nt Baltimoio. He is at
present otic of the officials in the
Fourth Auditor’s office. He was
fotnurly a lawyer in New York,
but ill health compelle 1 him ‘to
give up his practice. He was a
Consul in Italy during the greater
part of Grant’s terms. He was
born and brought up in Fayettville
where Grover Cleveland lived for
a number of years when he was a
boy, Mr. Sprague is st’ll a nmng,
active looking man. He recalls
a number of interesting incidents
in the earlier career of President
Cleveland. The former’s family
were neighbors and friend? of the
Clevelands. The President's father
was a very rigid Presbyterian
clergyman and an Abolitionist of
the extreme type He never
lost an opportunity to denounce
slavery. Cleveland’s family were
all republicans. 11 is brother-in
law, Mr. Hoyt, is one of the strong
est of'KepubJic.ns in Cential New
York Cleveland himself never
took much interest in polities when
he was a young man. Mr. Sprague
says that he cannot remember his
ever saying anything about it
whc/i he was in Fayetteville, It
was not until he went to Buffalo
that he took the side of any polit
ical party. He never has been at
any lime a parti an. His family
ttjid n|| of his relatives have always
been Republicans.
“What kind of a boy was Cleve
land at school?” 1 asked Mr.
Sprague.
“He was a very dull boy. He
never was much of a fellow for
books- He was a chubby, good- I
patm ed fellow. He was veiy fond |
in the winter time of drawing the!
girls of the school around on sleds. ’
Why 1 can remember him now
just as well as can be, running with
my sister on his red sled through
the snow'. His round, fresh face
fairly lighted up with radiant good
nature.”
“Was he a lighter in those
days?”
“No, he was not. You couldn't
get him into a light. He was the
most peaceful fellow I ever saw.—
He would do anything in the world
to keep out of a row. Those who
knew nim as a boy were very much
surprised to see him develop so
much backbone when he I .'era me j
Governor. He used to be so easy i
and yielding that any one could do !
what he pleased with him'.”
Mr. Sprague continued : “Even
in those days he showed great taste
for business. Although he was
considered very dull at the sc’ 00l
he was one of the hardest workers
in it. He was never very fond of
play. He seemed to take more
pleasure in work. All of us boys
thought he was cut out for a mer
chant. Cleveland used to come
over to our house a great deal. —
My mother used to call him Grove
Cleveland. She still calls him
that. Cleveland used to be very
fond of coming over to our house
about bieakfast time. My mother
was a great hand for bqek wheat
cakes in the morning. Cleveland
would come in and take a seat and
then cast a wistful eye upon rhe
pan of cakes. Then my mother
would, sav, “Grove, won’t you have
some of the cakes? Do 6’t up!
And, although he had previously
breakfasted at home he would eat
nearly his weight in wheat cakes
in response to her invitatation.
The President when he left
school in Fayettville entered the
Store of Beach C. Bea’‘d. Beard
was the leading merchant of the
place. lie was the great capital
ist of Pompey Hill- He moved
over to Fayetteville to find a larger
livid for his energies. His daugh
ter, Carrie, married John ().Evans,
the late president of flip Mutual
Telegraph company. Mr. Evans
was largely interested in Washing
ton property and left a very hand-,
some estate here. His yyidow
resides hcie now. She is a fre
quent caller at the While
House,now occupied by her father s
former clerk. Mr. Beard himself
was here the other day and had a
very pleasant visit with the Presi
dent. Mr. Beard -is a ver} tine
looking old gentleman who has al
ways voted the Republican ticket
until last fall. He could rot vote
for .Mr. Blaine ami so voted for Air.
Cleveland. The President always |
shows great pleasure when be meets I
any of his old Fayetteville friends, ■
Air. Sprague called at the White ■
House soon after inauguralion and
found that tiicy all remembered
him. The President gave him and
his wife a hearty invitation to a
family dinner at the White House.
Air. Sprague’s account of the Pres
ident being a dull boy finds plen
ty of parallels in the history of oth-
er prominent men. Sir Walter
Scott was regarded as one of the
most stupid boys at school. w The
Duke o* Wellington -vas a dullard
in his youth; while Goldsmith,
when a boy, was considered not
more that half-witted. The Pres
cient has surprised the politicians
about him, even more than his old
time friends, with the development
of his powers as an Executive. lie
is anxious to make a good admin—
ministration, and believes that he
will be renominated in the event
of his giving a satisfactory admin
st ration to the people.
NCES OF PREVENT!
VZ orrying.
1 his is one of the commonest,
and one of the most serious, ail
ments of modern life. It. is an ad
ment that may be prevented; it is
a difficult tiling to cure when the
habit is formed. A bad case of
worrying, indeed is seldom cured.
The worst cases occur among wo
men.
The habit of worrying may begin [
at any age, but it is most common- '
ly begun when early youth is !
passed, and the serious business of |
life is undertaken—how often by '
those who are entirely unfit for |
even ordinary domestic responsi
bilities! In those who are predis
posed to the complaint no special
trials or troubles are needed to
bring ft on. Little trials, fancied
troubles are quite sufficient. In
this country it is especially fre
quent among women who are en- j
gaged in that life-long pitched bat i
tie which in America is called :
“housekeeping.” But it is fre '
qiient, too, among our business I
men; and for a still more serious 1
reason; namely that nine out of ten |
'of them fail in bush ess sooner or I
I later.
The following is a frequent form :
lof the disease mt worry. Persons '
who suffer from it are gloomy and
absent-minded, in J)r- J. L. Com
ings good discription of the aymp
! toms, they are -’tormented by the
intrusion of ideas totally foreign
to the particular subject in hand.
When the responsibilities of the
day are over, they carry their re
sponsibilities to bed with them.—•-
The small hours of the morning
find such individual speculating up
on the pros and cons of the past
and future with an intensity which
often drives them to desperation.
The small ills of life assume alpine I
proportions; the most trivial cir- I
I cumst.ances are distoited and mag- j
| nified a thousandfold.” This spe
! cies of self-torture “lenders man
[and especially women], not the
possessor of thought, but its wretch
ed victim."
It ib hardly necessary for me to
say th- t this self-torture does not
6*oo with the victim. It grows in
to set ill temper and then ic breaks
up the peace of families.* and often
disrupts the family itself, not in
frequently by Hie insanity of the
self torturing victim.
How may one prevent froming s
the habit of worry which develops I
into this dpeadful disease?
I know a happy girl of fifteen
from whom the dancing brightness :
of childhood has not yet passed I
a wav. She is still young enough
to be happy, and yet she is wise
enough to know her happjness } and
to fear that* it will soon pass awaj.
She looks at the sad faces of her
elders, and she asks herself, “Must
I become sad like them? Would
that I could keep my girlhood!
Would that I need never enter the
land of melancholy in which they
live!”
This is the advice that I gave to
this young girl, and it is advice
that grayer heads than mine have
given, and that has been followed
successfully from youth to age in
more than one case that I could
name. “Your happiness partly de- |
pends upon your will. Resolve
that little things shall not make
you unhappy. Resist the minoi
ca 1 es and vexations, at least, of
life. Real troubles will come; you
must meet them ;<s best youi phi
losophy may tell you. But do not
be overthrown by unreal troubles;
do not magnify the teal ones.
Determine that you will not waste j
vour nerves, your health, youi life.
1 • • ? ?
in worrying.
Now this is not vi>i maty, advice.
The voting at least can form such
resolution, and keep it. One
should he ir in mind th-M the chron
ic disease of worrying begins with
Ilhe 1 itllc troubles, lheseonc may
I resist. I inesisted, no mental uis
ease fixes itself more surely. And
| when ome the habit <>f self-torim nr
■ is fixed, it is very hard to break it- ;
Like inebiietv, v.hen it passes a
certain point the sufferer hi.nself
can no longer cure it; the ilo-eat-e
r as ? es b. vend the i entraining power
of the will. .
ITp to that point the habit of
| self-torment may sometimes be
1 cured from within, from the spirit-
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 22, 1885.
' | ual side. A serious religious “ ex .
perience” may accomplish this.—
' A person of impressive and exalted
character may sometimes accoms
I push this: he may bling about the
cure in another by advising, rebuk
■ ing, and strengthening such a suf
, serer, so as to expel the almost
j demoniac possession. Such, when
i they have been more or less perma
nent, have been the so called “faith
cures ’ of all times.
fliere is a type of character “so
exalted that il will be able to im
part to the soul of a suffering fel
i low-creature so much faith, liope
and new spiritual life that Ins in
firmities vanish either wholly or
for a time.” (11. S. Constable.)
In Charles Kingsley’s life there is
a story of a madman who declared
that the devil had got hold of him,
and would not let him sleep. “The
I surgeon,” s ivs Kingsley, “came to
ime and said, ‘As I can not cure
the man’s mind by making his liver ’
act, you must make his liver act by
curing his mind.’ So I went to
i the patient and agreed with him
fully that the devil was in him.—
‘And 1 will tell you,' I said, ‘why
he is, Dis because you have been
a scoundrel. But'if you will lead
a new and honest life’ you may
snap your fingers at the devil.’ ’”
The “devil” left him presently,
and the man was cured. So resolu
tion may' expel the devil of worry
even after the nerves are more or
less broken.
But there comes a time, as I
1 have said, in all bad cases of wor
i ry, when the disease gets rooted
j beyond the power of any intellee
! tual or ethical appeal. Sleep and
| digestion are impaired, and thej
, brain and nerves suffer injury; the ■
most violent nervous symptoms'
come orq What physician is not
! familiar with these distressing cases,
-in which persons who have never
| had any sharp or serious trial in
their whole lives have actually tor
mented themselves into madness?
These become strictly medical cases.
For them it is now too late to ap
peal to reason or to religion. They
are curable or incurable according to ,
their strength of constitution, and
to the progress which the nervous
derangement has ma ie. Alany
women pass the greater part of
I their active life in this miserable
state of so-called “nervousness,” :
emerging from it partially at the
climacteric period. For thirty
I years or more they have destroyed I
* their peace and that of their fifmi
i lies; they have thrown away the
! happiness of their lives; and yet
the greater ] art of these miserable *
sufferers might have lived cheerful
ly instead of miserably, if from the ■
first they had made a strong re
solve to put down under their feet'
the minor trials, the every>day
worries, of their life, to watch and
eontroll their “nerves," to make a
faithful effort to be happy- It can
bo done. It is the most impor !
taut thing a still unworried spirit
can resolve to do.—Titus Mun
son Coan. In Harpers Weekly.
Rheumatic
I suffered with rheumatism for
many month?, at times unable to i
j walk or get about only on crutch s. I
I. took eight bottles of Swift’s
Specific, and have been entirely re- j
lieved.
.V, T. Bartrum, Macon Ga,
FROM THE MOUNTAINS.
For many years I have been
troubled with a scrofulous affection |
My right leg was covered with I
sores from the hip to the ankle—
syme of them large and painful,;
running a great deal. I tried e.-ery- !
thing I could think of or friends
could suggest. The physicians j
did what they could, but brought
no permanent relief. Aly case was
well known in this community, as
wc'l as the fearful sufferings 1 en
dured. Last fall, at the suggestion
of a friend, I began the use of
Swift's Specific It produced a
change so apparent that it aston
ished everybody, as one ulcer after
I another disappeared, and none
were more astorished than myself.
Six bottles procured an entire cure,
'My restoration is due entirely to
the use of this medicine. It is the
best Blood purifier in the world,
and will come nearer doing what
! is claimed forit th in any medicine I
have ever tried.
Jasper, Ga., March 11, 85.
J. M. Watkins.
Swift’s Spcitic is entirely vegeta- 5
hie. Treatise on Blood and Skin
Diseas s mailed free.
The Swift Specific Co., Drawer:
3, Atlanta, Ga.
Brief and to the Point.
i
“Been to Washington?
“Yes.”
“See Cleveland?"
“Did he point von!
i “Yes.”
| “What to?”
“Door.’’ —Brooklyn Times. t
Another Theory Busted.
A widow who was going to
leave the city held an auction of
her houseliold effects yesterday,
and everything went nt prompt
sale until little but the bedstead
was left. Just before this was put
up, some of the women went to
spying around, and discovered that
it was infested by bedbugs. This
fact was noised around until it
come to the cars of the auctioneer,
who mounted his box and said:
“Words cannot express the poig
nancy of my sorrow over the base
canard which has been put in cir
culation in this crowd. I have
sold goods in this town for twenty
nine long years, and this is the first s
instance in -which bugs have been '
permitted to step between me and '
the purchasing public. Ladies and
gentlemen, if there is a bug in or
about that bedstead I want to see
him. I cannot and will not be
lieve there is. It would be a Mans
der—a most foul slander on the
character of this most worthy wid
ow, who is about to remove to the
State of Ohio.”
Being invited to step down and
view the bugs for himself, he made
an inspection. They were there.
They were gallopping in and out
and up and down, and it was no use
to dispute the fact.
“Ladies and gentleman.” said the
auctioneer, as he resumed his post,
“I found bugs. I don't exactly re
member the Latin name for them,
but they are there. And now let
me talk to you as a friend. Bed
bugs were not made for gaudy
show, nor were they made for a
life of case. It is a law of nature
that they should inhabit bedsteads.
They can no more go out under the
barn and make a living, than a
dog can become an eagle and float
through space. The aversion
among you to this insect is founded
on false principles. His bite scarce
ly irritates the sleeper, but it clean
ses and purifies the blood. But
for the bedbugs of this country we
should all have boils and caibbun
cles. They keep down warts. —
They«cause moles to disappear.—
Give them a chance and they would
remove corns without pain. The
great —”
“Fifty cents!” called an old wo
man who rememheied that she he,'
a remedy at home.
“Fifty cents! I am offered fifty
cents for a $lO bedstead, a’' i as I
was going to say, the great Napo
lean always asked for a bed with
bugs in in it. lam offered fifty
cents, and yet Civsar had his bugs.
I am—”
“One dollar.”
“I am offered one dollar, and yet
the poets of Gru.ee immortalized
the insects before yon. This wid
ow tells me that she has had
an ache or a pain since the first
bug ipade hjs appearance. How
many of you have read what Ho
mer wro eof them? What was
the fountain of Mozart’s twelfth
mass? And yet I—”
“Two dollars.”
“And yet 1 hear only two dol
-1 irs! Do you have headache?
Are you afflisted with giddiness?
Do you have roaring in the ears?”
“Three dollars!”
“Aly friends, let me go home
and get my copy of Paradise Lost
and read to you one short chapter.
What did Milton—”
“Four dobars!”
“Ah! I begin to see that art and
culture are not unknown to the
audience. Did Alexander the
Great have boils? Never, not a
one! And why?”
“Five dollars!”
“I am bid dve dollars. I would
quote one verse from a well known
Latin poet, but time presses and
this bedstead is sold for five dollars,
cash on the nail. I will nowdlroct
your cultured attention to that
cookstove with a cracted oven.”
Detroit Free Press.
Self-made
Bist on Globe.
“Do you see that old man near *
the frog p'»n l on the Common?"
Thirty-two years ago that old
man came to Boston with one sus
pender and a sore toe. He also had
a basket of apples which a farmer in
Lexington had given to him. He
peddled the apples on Washington
steet and netted eighteen cents on
the first day. How much do yon
suppose he's worth now?"
“Oh, a million and half," said
one.
“Two millins,” ci ied another.
“Six millions three hundred
thousand." was the estimate of a
third.
“I give it up," iemarked No. 4.
“How much is he worth?’
“Not an infernal rent, and he
still owes for the basket.
St me peolpe seem to think that
the right of the American Eagle
to Hutter its wings over Panama,
is a matter of a pinion.
The Meximaniac.
Every once in a while, there ap
, pears in some northern paper, a
!gilt edged, frenzied sort of an epis
tie from some Ameerican in Alex
ico, which is evidently written for
the sole purpose of persuading the
International Railroad Company
to give the sere-footed pilgrim in
■ foreign parts a free ride back to
l his home in the United States in
! exchange for kind words.
The lurid description of the old,
j crumbling, cactus covered mission
churches, snow capped Sierras,
beautiful senoritas, brilliant hued
- humming birds, graceful palm
, trees nodding in the spice laden
breezes, hospitable hidalgos, etc.,
is evidently the work" of d desp.ur-’
I ing man who is yearning to make
his escape from the accursed conn
try, or who, on the plan that mi
sery loves company, is anxious to
entice some Americans into the
land of the Aztecs.
Some of these descriptions read
so nicely that they are calculated
to cause an unsophisticated Amer
ican to burst out crying because he
has lost time in not going to Mexi
co sooner, but those who have been
in Mexico once, and got back alive,
simply smile as they murmur,
“none for Joseph.”
Somehow or other, most of
these Aleximahiac?, to coin a word,
omit to mention the Aztec discrep
ancies which nestle cozily along
side of the beautiful sunsets, hospi
table hidalgos, snow-capped Sier
ras, etc., etc.
The American who arrives at a
Mexican hotel passes a sleepless
night, for the. beds are as hard as
the way of the transgressor, and m
the morning the American traveler
appalls his stomach with a Mexican
breakfast, composed principally of
red pepper, rancid oil, garlic, and
other condiments that lubricate
an indcsgible wad of boiled dough,
wrapped up in a corn shuck, called
tamales.
The Ameiican has previously
neglected to perform his ablutions,
owing to a settled aversion, the
Mexicans have to soap, water and
towels. The snow-capped Sierras,
hn nming birds and hidalgos are
a’i very well, but the pi’giitu
can't use them to wash his face and
hands with. At least, he can’t
do so very conveniently, particiu
larly as he does mt own the afore
said snow-capped Sierras.
The flowers are really wonderful.
The Espirito Santo flower (the
flower of the holy ghost) so called
from its, resemblance to a white
dove, is seen on every’hand, But
what American cares to be nosing
around flowers where the tarantu
lar goeth about seeking whom be
may devour, who has his hands full
fighting gallinnippers as big as
field larks, and is looking in seven
teen different directions for the
centipede that, like the pestilence
stalketh in the noonday sun, and
who feels uneasy on account of the
wad of tamale in his midst?
The great scarlet Passion flower
nods from every hedge, but if the
susceptible American nods back,
the green eyed monster prompts
some beetle-browed brigand to
insidiously insert a bowie-knife as
long as the hidalgo’s name into the
anatomy of the blond pleasure
seeker from the land of the Y’an
kees.
The fleas are the size of grass
hoppers, and as active as book
agents, the snow-capped Sierras
are steep, as the bill of the bandit
who keeps the hotel, so in about
two days the American Meximani
ac has only one wish, which is to
get back to the land of clean shirts,
square meals gool bedq and morn
ing papers.
Some Americans, who believe
everything they read in papers,
really require a trip to Mexico, but
like compound cathartic pills, one
is a dose, and effects a permanent
cure, for the time being at least.
A Mercbxant’s Profits.*
A country merchant, who docs
all his trading in Austin, came to
town last week to notify his credi
tors that he had failefi in business, t
and could only pay them ten cents’
on the dollar. Among his creditors
was Mose Shaumberg The merchant
went to Mose, and said to him:—
“Mose, I am paying my creditors
ten cents, cash, on the dollar, but
1 don't want you to lose anything.
I have not opened that last lot of
goods I got from yon, so I will just
return them to you, instead of pay
ing you t< n cents in cash on the
dollar. I am willing to do that, be
cause I am your friend.”
Mose grinned and said:—
“Es you vos a good frent by ire
den you vill bay me ten cents on de
dollar, in cash. I makes more money
ven you bays ten cents dot dollar
on den ven I takes de goots pack.”
Tin’s little incident will give the
public an idea of how much profit
there is in mercantile pursuits.— i
Siftings.
Spoopendike’s prayer Book.
•- “Now, my dea'-.” said Mr. Spoo-
* pendikc, cheerfully, “be lively. It’s
twenty minutes past ten and we
mustn’t be late at church. Most
r readvj”
“les, dear," beamed rs. Spoo
spendyke, “I’m all ready. Got ev
i erything?”
“I think so. Hymn book, um
i brella, and—where’s that hook? I
haven’t got the prayer book."
“Where did you leave it?" asked
Mrs Spoopendyke. turning over
. the volumes on the table, hurried
“If I knew where I left it, I’d
: strut right to the spot and get it,"
Mr. Spoopendyke. “I
ir it it with you. Where did you
put it? Can't you remember what
you do with tilings?”
‘I haven't seen it since last Sun
day, returned Mrs. Spoopendx ke.
faintly. “I know," she continued;
“perhaps it is at church."
“Perhaps it is,” mimicked Mr.
Spoopendykc, •‘perhaps it got up
early, took a bath and went ahead
of us. Did you ever see a prayer
book prowl off to church all alone?
Ever see a prayer book h’ist up its
skirtsand strikeout for thesanctu
ary without an escort? S'pose a
prayer book knows the difference
between a chuich arid a ham sand
wich? Where did you put it?”
“I mean you may have left it in
the pew rack. You know you did
once," suggested Airs. Spoopcn
dyke.
“I didn't anything of the sort. I
brought it home and gave it to von.
Where do you keep it? What did
you do with it? S'pose I'm going to
smash through the service without
knowing whether they are doing
the Apostle’s Creed or an act of
Congress? Spring around and find
it can’t yon? What are you look
ing here for? Don't you know the
difference between a prayer book
and the Wandering Jew? Find it,
Can't you?”
“Never mind it, dear,” fluttered
Airs. Spoopendpke, “I know ail
the responses, and I'll help yon
along.”
“Oh, yes, you know ’em all. All
you know about religion wouldn’t
*vad agim. All you war.l Isa licit
and a board fence to be a theologil- 1
cal seminary. Think you can find
that prayer book between now and
the equinoctial?” howled Mr Spoo
pendykc. “Got any idea wl.ether
you sold the mea-iy thing for ch ; -
na vases, or stirred it into wheat
cakes?” and Air. Spoopendykc
plunged around the room, tumbling
books about and breathing heavi
ly- ’ *
“I dont see the use of making
such a fuss over a thing you clont
really need,” sobbed Mrs Spoopen
dyke through her indignant tears.
“Oh, you don’t!” raved Air.
Spoopendykc. “ You don't see any <
use putting things where they be- •
long, either, do you?” and Air. !
Spoopendykc spun around on his
heel like a top, and knocked over a
Parian jar.
“Wait a minute, my dear,” said
Airs. Spoopendykc, looking at him
earnestly. Then she went behind
him and fished out the prayer
book.
“Got it, didn't you" he growled. •
“Dad it all the time, I s’pose. ’
Where was it, anyway?”
“In your coat tail pocket, dear,”
and Mrs. Spoopendykc jabbed the
powder puff in her eyes and stalk
ed down-stairs, leaving her leige
to follow.—Brooklyn Daily Eagle. 1
The Paity.
I attended a swell parly last
night,” says Dr. Funnytonic to to*
his fiend Steady boy. • .
“I-lidn't know you were a society
man.” answered Steadyboy.
“Well, as a general thing, I am
not. But, you see, the party I atten
ed had the mumps, and I couldn’t
well refuse. It was a v ery swell af
fair, I assure you.”
When Dr. Funny tonic crawls J
from beneath the wreck of matter J
•<nd crash of worlds which ensues,
he goes away muttering, “ Well, r
all’s swell that ends swell.” /
r But it is to be observed that he
dees not speak up big and strong
any more, and that he furtively
scans the landscape as one who lives
in momentary expectation of the -J
downward engulphing swoop of |
some bold, black shadow of impend- j
ing doumo—The Hatchet.
_ ‘
An Economical Darkey.
Gabe Snodgrass recently applkd
to the Reverend Aminidab Bledeo,
of the Blue Light Austin Tabernac
i le, for some pecuniary assistance.
“1 jess can’t do hit,” replied Par
son Blodao: “I has to s'port my
pore ole mudder.’’
\‘But yer pore ole mudder s iys
yer don't do nnffin for her.”
“ A ell, den, es I don't do nnffin
for my pore ole mudder, what’s de
• use oh an outsider like von trying
Ito make me shell out?”—Siftings.
mmi
vfeWJW z<l i
Inwi
W BEST TONIC. ?
This medicine, combining Iron with pure
Vegetable tonics, quickly and completely
( urea nyspepoia. ln<ii*c«rioii. WrakncM*,
Impure Blood, .Hal aria,Chills au<l l'rver»,
and Neuralgia.
an ODmlltor remedy for Diseases of the
Kidneys and Liver.
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar to
Women, and all who lead sedentary Hvas.
It does not injure the teeth, cause headache.or
produce constipation— oth-r Iron fnedteinm do.
It enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates
the appetite. aids the assimilation of food, re
lieves Heartburn and Belching, and strength
ens the muscles and nerves.
For Intermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Lack of
Energy, Ac., it has no equal.
tsh The genuine has above trade mark and
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no other
'«oairt>, **ons niKirrai to.. atiTiaoat. a*
PROFESSIONAL AND LAW (ARDS.
-
W. 0. ADAMSON,
Atto’ncy nt Law
CARROLLTON, - - - GA.
Promptly transacts all business confided to
him.
Office. in tAe court house, north west corner, first
floor- 5-ts
~sTe. grow? “
ATTORNEY - AT - LAW.
AND REAL ESTATE AGENT.
MONEY loans negotiated on improved farma in
Carroll, Heard, and Haralaou countict, at
reasonable rate*.
I itles to lands examined and abstracts fur
nished.
Offline up-stairs iu house,
Carrollton, Oa.
J.
AttDriioy rtt
JOEL, - - GA.,
14-17-ly.
A. J. CAMP,
Attorney ort T_izxx?V',
VILLA RICA GA.
WM. c. HODNETT,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
VILLA RICA, - - - - GEORGIA
over Dr. Slaughter's
LG*viu» I?»»otw pt, cwiienGon r
cn to all business intrusted to him.
W. L. FITTS,
Physician uia Surgeon
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA,
'Fill, at all timer, be found at W. W, Fitts’ drug
-tore, unless professionally absent. 38-ts
W. F. BROWN,
Attorney z\t IjcaxTcr,
CARROLLTON, - - GEORGIA.
C. P. GORDON”,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
HAIIIIOEL TC,< < GEORGIA.
WOOL CARDING.
1 aavejust reclothed, overhauled, and put in
operation my large woo) carding machine, and
will give it iny Personal Attention from
now until the Ist of January next. We make
perfect rolls, and guarantee good weight. Cali
D. W. SIMMS,
8 >tf Carrollton, Ga.
W. W, & G, W. MERRELL,
Atto’noys atLaw,
CARROLLTON, - - GA.
Records and land titles examined. Will
collect claims, large or small. Especial at
tention given to the business of managing
state by Executors, Administrators, Gar
bans &c and other business before the Or
dinary. Will practice in all the superior
courts ol the Coweta circuit, and always at
(end at Haralson court- /Fill 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 stteet, opposite
G. M. Upshaw's. 1-2.
y- ■— ■ i m
BARGAIN
AN ORGAN.
W e have foi sale, and can sell for lees than fac
ory prices, an ESTEY A CAMP organ, 8 stops,
knee swells, height. 5 feet 11 inches: width, 4 feet
' J-, 10 * ’ depth, 2 feet; weight, boxed, 350 lbs.
t his organ is unexcelled for purity of tone, du
ra mlity, and beauty, and is fully warranted lor
nve years, Apply at once to J. B. BEALL.
DR. D.W.DORSETT
PII YSICIAN AND SURGEON
TEMPLE, GA.
Having permanently located at Temple I offer
my professional services to the citizens of Car
ng counties. Special attention to
. bstetnes and diseases of women. Office at
-
Wrights Indian Vegetable Pills
FOB THE
LIVER
And all Bilious Complaints
Sale t i^« ake fc^ in <e pur * ,1 y vegetable; no grip-
• mg. Price 25 cts. All Druggists,
FREE!
fPniELIABLE SELF-CURE,
favorite prescription of one of tbe
most noted and succesaful specialists in the FT M.
.now retired, for the cure of
V»«sA»teae and Oeeww. Sect
® plain sealed en velope/ree. Druggistacan fill lt»
DR. WARD A CO., Mq.
NO. 21.