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1 HE CARROLL COUNTY TIMES.
VOL. XIV.
Fffi WIBI i'
I W*®] •
■ -7‘
Z rVfSN >*«!?* a
-- i—•( k a r
i
IE 11 Bl i
y BEST TONIC. ?
This medicine, combining Iron with pure
vegetable tonics, ouickly and completely
C ures nyanfepsiau In<ll B e«tion, Wenkncmfc,
Impure Blond, Malaria,Chills and Fevers,
and Neuralgia.
It is an unfailing remedy for Diseases of the
Kidney* and Id ver.
It is invaluable for Diseases peculiar te
women, and all who lend sedentary lives.
”’A lire . p lO te *tE, cause
prnuwr., 7ron medioi™ dh
I. enriches and purifies the blood, stimulates
the appetite, aids the assimilation of food, re
neves Heartburn and Belching, and strength
ens the muscles and nerves
For Irhermittent Fevers, Lassitude, Tsck «<
Energy, &c., it has no equal.
J he genuine has above trade mark i- :
crossed red lines on wrapper. Take no otU •
• cul* hy »'”OM N < IIKBICAL CO.. 1! *1 Tinoi.r, JIV
; KOPES;Sb'L\AL AND LAW CARDS.
9 W. (j. ADAMSON,
Atto’ney
CARROLLTON. - - -
Promptly transacts all business confided U
him.
Holding the oflice of Ju’ge of the City Court
does not interfere with his practice in other
courts. 5-1 f.
S.~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 lauds examined and abstracts fm
Ofliice up-stairs in tlv/court hou«e,
88tf Carrollton, Ga.
jTw. JONES? ’
Attorney Uaw
.JOEL, - - GA.,
14-17-ly.
G. W. MERRELL, W, p. COLE. I
MERRELL & COLE,;
Successors i < A W A c V M< mH
Zjzivv.
CARROLLTON, - _ _ g\ j
Will practice in all tie courts.—
Special attention given to the business
connected with the a'iinini.-t ration ot
estates, and-oim incases in the court of
ordinary.
' Collections proinp'ly made. Ab-;
stracting and examining ,titles and
records a specialty.
\V ill also lend money on improved
farms. MERRELL & COLE. ;
Nov. 17. 47-tt.
A. J. CAMP, I
Attox’ncy atlußW,
VILLA RICA GA.
VVM. c. HODNETT,
ATTORN E Y-AT-L A W,
VILLA RICA, - - - - GEORGIA
over Dr. Slaughter’s
Drugstore. Prompt attention git j
on to all business in I rusted to him
i
W. L. FITTS,
*. afc I
CARROLITON, - - GEORGIA.
'Till, at all times, be found at W. W, Fitts’ drug j
store, unless professionally absent. 38-ts I
O. P. GORDON XV. F. BROp’JN. (
GORDON & BROWN.
ATT< )RNE I'B-AT-L A \V,
CARROLLT- N, GA.
Will practice in the various com tsj
in this and adjoining counties. •
Special attention given to suits fcr
land, claims against terminated
homestead estates, Mie adniinis- '
tration of estates, &c.
DILI) F. >TT
Is permanently located in Car
rollton and 'eiiders his
PROFFSSIUNA L SERVICES
to the citizens of Carrollton ami
vicinity.
Office, Johnson’s Drug Store.
Residence, Semimqv street.l-tf.
PR. D.W.D ORSETT
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
TEMP E, G-A.
Having permanently located nt Temple 1 oiler
my professional services* t<> the ciryz ° '
roll and adjoining counties Speciwi A
Obstetrics and ill-eases ol >vome i. Omce at
Campbell & Bell’s store, ca.ls promptly ar
twereu uay ariu mj,,..-.... cu..a«answerer
from B. J. iMcCain’a residence. S—ly,
BA S
Von tidence in hon&ts< yof Invr.. .ds: . * 11eat .1•- J
fcfcßGE.either*Sex, howev. rcausal,uru*. receiva pay a rer
cure is effected. Describe ca - ,r> iu • iy. nnd send Ftftrnp
for instructions. DK« BAK.L.E* Box li4. Buffalo* rL x.
PATENTS
Wm. G. HENDERSON,
, IMEVf ATTORNEY AWHW,
OFFICE, 925 F STREET.
K,O. Box 50. W.isSBKTON, 2».
hormeily of il.i Exttmmmg Corps,
U. S. Pnli’iit < fhc<-.
w iWaciicvs LefoTa tin- Valent Office
U. S. Supreme Court and £the Fede
ral Courts.
..ivfc’ii p. i i <cop<, validi
ty, aim iiilim ;• ip* m otH’ :lH ’ ts ‘
liitormali<»i‘ eh- eifui y ; <■ 1 prompt
ly iurnislo d.
/Zand bouk on pat' nt-, with rt-fe
rentes annexed, Free.
• _ __ ■ iiiiwmjuaiMr.:
i Address of Dean Jenckes at ths
Funeral of Vice-President
Hendricks
“Hnally, brethren, whatsoever
things are true, whatsoever things
are honest, whatsoever things are
just, whatsoever things are pure,
whatsoever things arc of good re
port, if there be anv virtue and if
there be any piaise, think on these
i things. —Philipians iv 8
j Uhiß is a momentous occasion and
a thrilling scene, we, who are gath
eied here around the loved remains
of him who lies before us in the
quiet, sublime dignity of what wo
cah deatn,and all who share the in
j terest and bereavement, a surging
| mass of living, sympathizing hu
inanity, packed to repletion in the
; adjacen' streets. A nation turns
its tearful eye towards our city
and counts fleeting time by the
lieart throbs, while it roads the
clickings of lightning to learn Hie
, successive stages of the last solemn
tribute which the living can ever
: pay to the greatness and virtues
; and memory of the dead, and bey
ond us and above us, if we could
only with eyes of flesh penetrate
! the veil, there is a still vaster aasem
j blage of “Angels and archangels
arid all company of heaven,” who
J desire to look into the mysteries of
human redemption,and rejo’ce over
’ the triumph of a redeemed soul.
At such a time as this, xvhen
the gates, perchance, are still ajar,
and the place we stand upon is holy
ground, it still behooves any one of
us to attempt to voice forth a com
mon plaint to express the vast aggre
' gate of respect and love and honor
and to illustrate and enforce lessons
l of this hour and this scene. It is
; better, far better, that we let
OUR ILLUTRIOUS FRIEND
on whose account we are gathered
here, impart such instuction as
his life and his death supply, while
we, with bated breath and. in rapt
attention stand aboiß his bier, and
to this task we address ourselves,
fore-going all personal allusion,for
there are such allusions, many and
tender and consoling, to the con-
I ci cte incidents in his social and re
ligious life, in his private, as dis
tinguished from his public life. Ilis
youth had a prolific lesson for the
youths of our land. In an adjom
-1 ing county some fifty years ago
his tutilage began. The days so
often spent Ly thoughtloss boys
in pointless diversions from hard
study lie, with energy and applica
tion, devoted to the acquisition of
useful and permanent knowledge,
! laying with painstaking earnestness’
and perseverance and zeal the found
ations of that sturdy, indomitable
pcharacter which in later ht-e, carried
him to the'proud p nnacle of ex
. altcd success, aud wi'h such teach
ing the lads of our day shohld not
shrink from the daily task of cotn
i mon scholars, nor sterner studies
of the university. And thus he. pro
claims from his coffin: “Whatso
ever thy baud findethlo do, do it
withall thy might; and work while
it is called to day, for soon ’he night
cometh wherin no man can work.”
HIS EARLY MANHOOD
were years of trial and comparative
privation, the common lot of those
who apart from the thronged haunts
of the denser populations, stem the
tide of pioneer resistance to the hos
tile forces of nature and verify the
adage that the course of
empire takes its way. Io such
spirits resislcnce is discipline,
arow t h, ? de vol opmen t. He and the
sturdx' men who were his co labor
erß in tlw nggresMve work carved
out in the wilderness
and ipippy common
wealth, the work of their own hands
and our heritage, who followed after
them. M e <e adv’sed that as a
young man, whdv occupied with
the labors of character building,
he was an honest, brave, exempla
ry young npm, who scorned to do
ame m <•!’ unworthy action, and
taught his fellows so, who rocog-
I nized the restraining influence of
moral obligations and by both pre
cept and example, inculcated hon
. e.-’y mid piobity ami purity of life,
and so he taught aid so he teach
es Now to ah young men of our
city aud our state and our great
country this cogent injunction, ie-
CARROLLTON. GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 18, 1885.
joice O’ young man, in thy y< ith,
and let thy heart cheer thee in the
days of thy youth and walk in rhe
way of this eaith and sight of thine
eyes. But remember that for all
, these things God will bring thee to
; judgment.”
then in maturer years
we have this sturdy, hearty man
with and a warm heart
in a sound body essaying an active,
earnest, prominent part in the as-
> fairs of his state and country as an
* able and successful advocate, as a
painstaking and conscientoius leg
islator, both helping to build a new
’ constitution of his State and adjust
it to the complicated relations of
the whole people and also enacting
a distinguished part in national
legislation, and in both houses of
congress, as an able manager of
the public landed interests of rim
country. As the second officer in
the administration of this great na
tion, he was every where and always
the same able, conservative, consis-
I tent and conscientious character,
which he early illustrated when he
first startd out upon life’s
ARENA OF TRIAL AND CONFLICT
and of triumph, and sowed the pre
, cious seed of honor, virtue and tern
perance, and so he has taught this
urgent lesson,“Be not deceived,God
is not mocked, for whatsoever man
soweth that shall he also reap, fur
he that soweth to the flesh’ shall of
the flesh reap corruption; but he
that soweth to the spirit shall of
the spirit reap life evelasting.”
He carefully chose his seed and
he has abundantly reaped his har
vest. And again he would
preach to us. Ou the other hand
he would impress us with the short
ness and uncertainty of life He
was in his usual health until near
the moment when the silver cord
was broken;, Ho came faithfully
and bravely and confidentially to
the very dividing line which sepa
rates between the things which are
seen and temporal and the things
which aie unseen and eternal, and
yet he knew not that he was com
ing and in a moment without war
ning he was as one“who wraps the
drapery of his couch about him and
lies down to pleasant dreams,” and
this notable feature of his departure
warns ns all in emphatic terms that
in the midst of life
WE ARE IN DEATH,
and admonishes us that we know
not the day nor hour when the
summons shall come to us. These
things his good and great
life teaches us, and uh! that we
might be amenable to the teaching,
and oh! that ail might learn from
his uniformly graceful bearing, his
polite manners, his courteous de
ference toothers’ views;his thought
ful consideration for others' feel
ings, even while differing with
them in opinion or conduct. Learn
to cultivate the amenities and cour
tesies of life under the guiding in- ■
spiration of politeness and urbanity, <
I run no hazard in asserting that )
such considerate deference to i
others’ feelings and wishes, and 1
such regard for their rights and
privileges is the touchstone of all
true manliness, a sm-e criterion of
genuine Christianity, and to this <
crucial test no one ever re- 1
spunded more thoroughly than our '
dear friend who lies here so calm ’
and peaceful—so forcibly deipon- J
strating the great mystery that en- <
shrouds the problem of human life, i
and yet his c mrtesy did not out- 1
strip his benevolence. No one who ]
appealed to him f<w qnd H
counsel au<J assistance'ever turned ’
empty away, though his right and '
his left hand were not in each !
others confidence. Still there is re
cord somewhere of.
HIS UNBOUNDED LIBERALITY
in numberless ' cases of destitution
and guferiug, ’‘He experienced
in bis daily life the joj of faith and
the patience of hope and the com
fort of love. These were with him
ever: Faith, hope and charity.
These three; but the. greatest of
these was charity;” and the admir
i ably organized charities of our city
have long felt the guiding impulses
‘ of his skillful hand, and have been
> cheered by the sympathetic throb
■ bing of his generous heart.
Dare wp tread upon the verge of
halloaed ground and touch upon
i the conjttnl relation of Governor
Hendncki, and describe how for
forty yeai| and two months to the
J very day Ife passed along with dig
nified and steady and faithful pa;e
, beside a noble and devoted woman,
whom he had chosen so the better,
for worse* and how through storm
and sunsiine, like as Isaac and Re
i becca they lived faithfully together
in perfed , love*and peace and
kept the wow and covenant betwixt
I them, made in firm and graceful
bonds of! a mutual affection; we
dare imt cut here at this time and
in this presence. But we must not
i tarrv lon rer.
i -Lite i* «hort and time Is flee’lng,
. AP ( J. onr Hr/triH, though «t<>tii ana hrnye,
Still like muflled drums are beating.
Funeral marches to the grave,”
To our graves; and wo must be
up and doing if we would receive
an.l apply the lessons our friend
has taught us in the incidents of a
varied and conspicuous career.—
Lhese lessons all converge to one
point:—
BE YE ALSO READY.
I hey all show with great em
phasis the vanity of the human
hopes and wishes.
The noast of heraldry, the pomp of power.
All that beauty, all that wealth e’er gare,
Await alike the inevitable hour.
The paths of glory lead but to the grave.
But the path of truth, the path of
duty and honor and integrity and
temperance,— the paths which
he trod so patiently and persisten
tly and successfully, have ushered
him to the bosom of his God in the
full fruition of eternal life. Emis
nent citizen, faithful fried, Chris
tian gentleman, honest man, fare
well!
Intsnsivs Farming.
Southern Cultivator.
[continued.]
My oats are as much trouble to
me as any other part of my crop.
Not that they require so much
time and labor, but, what I have
to do or them comes at such times
as I can ill afford it. When I sow
in January, as is usually done,
they interfere with the preparations
to be nuide for corn and cotton.—
This is another reasonwhy the first
breaking of corn and cotton lands
should be done in December.—
Then harvest comes in the middle
of the.busy season. A few days
lost from the cotton patch at. this
time, is hard to recover. I have
no harvester, or mny be I could
stand it better.
Fifty bushels of cotton seed, or
one thousand pounds of compost
per acre, sown broadcast, aud plow
ed in with seed, certainly yields as
good a profit as any where it could
be used. The yield is from thirty
to sixty bushels per acre.
In planting sugar cane, former
ly I trod the ground with cattle;
hut there is too much waste in
this; so, now I cover the ground •
witii compost, open and drop cane
in furrow and bed on it. When I
can spare cotton seed, 1 fill furrow
about half full; sometimes give a
liberal sprinkle of guano at time of
planting; sometimes when I lay by
I put it by the side of canes. In
latitudes where sugarcane cannot
be successfully raised, this might
do well f-or sorghum. Yield from
twenty to thirty barrels, of thirty
two, gallons per acre. 1 have al
ways been doing nearly this with
sugar cane, from the fact that I
always manure high. The reason
is, it being but a small patch, there <
was manure put on. This U 4 very
profitable crop to raise; much more
sg., than cotton in this section of
the South; provided always, if
there is ready sale for sugar aud
syrup.
Patting it at twenty barrels per
acre, we have six hundred and for
ty gallons.. Thi& at twenty-five
cents per gallon will bring one
hundred and sixty dollars.
Pindars is an important crop
with me. I do not give them any
extra care; however. Ihey seem to
be satisfied with the poorest land,
and the least amount of work. In
fact, “g >od pasture of grass,” I
do not believe this, and always try
to keep them clean and no more.
Principally from these I raise my
meat.
Sweet potatoes, like the above,
t is an essential crop, because a food
i crop. It supplements the pindars
a- a meat producer very well; and
they are so nice and good for the
‘ table.
I very rarely get out of'potatoes;
have old potatoes until the new
> ones come in. I planted on cow
pen laud until a few years ago.—
1 Now I raise them on stubble land
almost entirely. Os all my farm
products, sweet potatoes take the
; lead in not responding to high fer
tilization. Os course I can increase
the quantity by manuring highly,
but always at the expense of the
quality.
Naturally, rich fresh land is the
best of all conditions for sweet po
tatoes. Verx poor fc andy land, in
which there is little or no vegehi- ,
; blc mould, will not do so wefi,
i however rich it is made. I admit
that a specially prepared manure
will meet the demands of the po
tato. Cow-lot manure does very
well if the land is tolerably good
and fresh, but 1 can spare this ma
nure foi those little crops, only as
1 am compelled, and then combined
with other ingredients.-
Tnis ends the list of my farm
produces proper. Os course I have
a vegetable garden and some
fruits, but as I wish to give my
views and experiences on two or
three other topics, intimately con
nected with intensive farming, I
pass them by with, a mere mention.
The following subjects are alluded
to. viz: The improvement of seeds,
and the making and saving of ma
nures, etc. As in what has gone be
fore, lam going to give my plan,
and first 1 invite attention to tho
mprovement of corn.
Ten years ago I began the improve
ment of my seed corn, and have
worked at it assiduously ever since.
I bad noticed for a long time, ev
er since 1 was a boy, that occa
sionally there would be a stalk
with two ears ayd a nubbin; and
once in a while a stalk that would
shoot from the ground up as far
as there was an eye. This led me
to think that corn may have degen
erated as well as man. Any way,
1 concluded the beneficent Creator
did not put these eyes there for no
purpose. Reasoning thus, I arrived
at the conclusion that, under suffi
cient length of time ard right con
ditions every way, corn might be
made to bear an oar for each eye
on the stalk. 1 have gone far
enough to prove my convictions to
be right. I began by selecting
corn of one uniform color, the
best shaped ears and grains, and
from the most prolific stalks. I
found it difficult to find Bush seed
as I desired for my entire crop.
There was a decided improvement
the first year, nearly half the stalks
1 bearing two good oars.
In four years’ time I had the
satisfaction g! seeing nine tenths of
my corn with from two to fohr
cars on the stalks. I have for four
or five years had several stalks
with five respectable ears, tor the
same- length of time it is an unusu
al thing to find a stalk with only
one ear on it.
’ What an argument against “sur
vival of the fittest,” for this is the
logic of facts. 1 have not made
any advancement for the last two
years, owing mainly to the seasons
being very n.nprapitous. Farmers,
d,id you ever think that if it re
quired one quart of corn to feed
one pig in a pen, that if you put
two pigs in, yon must add another
quart of corn? And three pigs
must have three parts, and so on,
a quart for every pig; of course
you have, and this is sensible too.
In like manner, if your land
will bring ten, or any other nuuh
her of bushels of corn* aim you
wish to' de üble it, why. as a mat
ter of course, you must double the
plant food, the material that makes
corn. If jou want to treble, or
quadruple il, yon must keep the
same idea in w iew, and follow the
same rule. No v what is applica
ble to your corn in the aggregate,
is applicable to it in a particular
sense; or as relates to one stalk. If
it bears but one ear, and you want
two, you must improve both seed/
and land; yes, and in cultivation
and preparation of land. Every
observing fanner knows full well
that if he is not careful in breed
ing his stock will soon run down
to dwarfs or rants, and he knows
equally well that he can breed up
with proper care; why not breed up
corn as well?
Taking as data the history of
our choicest fruits brought up
from a wild course, and bitter
, state, to their present perfection,
we may safely conclude that corn,
and in fact all farm products, are
susceptible of vast improvement.
Thus L have left the animal and
entered the realm of the vegeta
kingdom to prove my declarations,
should any doubt them.
In the next place the improve*
ment in cotton is as great as in
corn, though I have not experi
mented with it to the same extent
as I have with corn. Let it suffice
to mention Dickson’s, Lata more's
and Ozier’s improved varieties.
ART.
Sarah Bernhardt is not the
only Frenchwoman who has
achieved skill in the scolptor's art.
The published list of gifts just
made to a charity under the pat
ronage of a number of ladies in
Paris includes several works of art
by the patronesses themselves,
among them being a statutte by
the Duchess of Uzes, which we arc
told, “no master of the day would
disown,” and a bust of Chopin,
modeled by the Countess de Beau
mont-Castries. Sarah contributes
a group. Among the paintings
contributed by lady amateurs men
tioned in the same list are a “Red
Riding Hood,” by the Princess
Mathilde; a landscape—a view in
St. Helena—by the Bnroness Na
thaniel de Rothschild; a “View of
an Interior,” by the Princess Scyl
la, and a number of other pieces
by ladies of rank.
Cause Enough.
A travelei, upon entering an
Arkansaw county town was struck
by the apparent good humor of the
people. Men shook hands with
one another and laughed, and chil
dren, in u nrestrained glee, played
in the street.
“My 'friend,” said the trav
eler, addressing a man who,
laughing softly, stood leaning
against a post, “the people
of this town seem to be enjoying
shcmselves.”
“Yes,” the man replied as he
wiped the tears of gladness from
his eyes. *
“Business must be good here.”
“No, it’s mighty dull.”
“Well, “the town must have
brilliant prospects.
“No prospesets that I know of.”
“Why do you all rejoice?”
“Oh, weve got a cause,”
“What is the cause?”
“The editor of oar paper has
gone to Little Rock.”
“What difference docs that
make?”
Wy, you see he won’t be back
for mon’n a week an’ we’ll miss a
issue of his paper. Oh, come on
here, won’t you, and help me laugh.
Er haw, haw: ter he, be.”—Ar
kansaw Traveler. ,
<e»» » _
Dr. John Hall of New York
was the §2 500 pastor of a Dublin
church 17 years ago. His present
Filth avenue congregation, it is
said, pays htm S3O 000 a year, the
university of New York $1 000 a
year tor sreving as its chancellor;
Bonner’s Ledger sl2 000 a year
for his contributions; and other
magazines quite an additional sum.
He is, by the way, preaching the
gosplo of Jesus Christ, who had
not where to lay his head.
A GOOD EXCUSE.
“I want to ask your advice about
something, said Kosciusko Mur
phy to Hostetter McGinnis.
“I’ll give you the best I’ve got.”
“Last evening at the ball 1 slip
ped and fell while 1 was dancing
with Alias Esmerelda Longcoffin.”
“Did she get angry?”
1 on bet slio uid. 1 didn’t know
how to excuse myself. 1 want to
aet myself right with her. 1 don’t
want her to think hard of me.”
/ “O,say you were drunk.”
•
■ ITEMS OF NEWS
r *
1 Joseph Brantley, of Fairborn,,
Ga., died from an overdose of mor
i phinc, taken with snicidal intend
> I last Friday. He was insane.
The Secretary of War has inform
mation that the Northern Cheyenne
Indians are in great distress for
want of of food and clothing and
» has asked tho authority of Congrew
to use $12,500 for their relief.
Capt Halmoss, of Harris county,
accidentally snot himself last Fri
day. 11 is buggy whip was in the
same tack with his gun. Pulling
out the whip it caught the hammer
and the gun was discharged. The
load entering his body caused hit
death in 30 minutes.
Mr. Cannon, Commissioner of
the Freedman's savings bank, has
made a report to Congress. He
shows that 62 cents in the dollar
has been paid the depositors and
estimates that $950,000 will cover
the difference between the amonnt
paid and the sum due depositor* at
the tune us the failure of the bank.
He recommends that Conirress ap
propriate that amount to make ip
the defiqjt.
Rev. Cephas Bennet, an Ameri
can Baptist Missionary, who had
been in Burmah. since 1828, died
Nov. 16th, in his 83rd year.
Wm. 11. Vanderbilt, tho Nev
ork millionaire whose recent
death has filled so much news*-
paper space, bequeathed a lib
eral share of his wealth to pnblie
institutions. Vanderbilt Univesity,
at Nashville, Tenn, gets $200,000.
The nature of the labor strike*
ing Fcnnsylvania may be inferred
from the head lines put over the
dispatches: such, for instance, a*.
“Quiet on the Monongahela,”
“No Attack at Alliquippa, T
“Peace at Bevien.” The lovely
stare of affairs indicated show*
the bcnefficent manner in whieh
the republician protective tariff
protects the interests of the hard
handed sons of toil.
‘•We” The Editor.
IT CLOSED THE SHOP.
A Massachusetts man brought a
jug of cider to the editor of his
country weekly, and tiie knight of
the quill immediately shut himself
in and hung out a placard saying:
“This is our busy day.”-—Burlinh- *
John Boylh O’Rielly says: “Wo .
men are better than men because
they are spiritual, while men are
in icl lectual. lhe spirit follows
what is true, gentle and good; the
intellect follows what is pleasant,
successful, dominating, strong.
If women could rule, civilization
would be a poem.
When you speak to a parson
look him in the face.
Consumntion Cured,
h A h.°. d i pl ?? id, l a ’ r “ tired f,orn practice, hat
nifc had placed in Aia handsbyan Want India mill
enary the formula c! a simple vegetable remX
dy for the, speedy and permanent cure of com
gumption. Bronchitis, Catarrh, Asthma and all
throat and Lnng Affections. also a i oaitive aid
c “ r .e for SerTo ° 9 Complaints, aftlT h*V
iuj: tested its wonderful curative nowera in thnn.
ands of ca 6»,. Aas felt it hie UJ to mlu i't
known to hie suffering fellows Actuated Wv
ine ?win C an d f 1° relieTe h nman Mffe’Z
t JL^ ;n<? t re ® charge, to all who desire
it, this recipe in German, French nr FpitH.k
with full-directions for ore’panug and fit’
SSlD’S®#*
Nr TOPER' 'ADVERTISING •
DAUCHY & CO.,
27 PARK PLACE, 24-26 MURRAY ST.
NEW YORK.
Make lowest rates on all newspapers in the P
b and Canada. ESTABLISHED 1867
lo those whose purpose may De accomnilsheii
by a short advertisement, or by a taSfitt?
leni
Popular Local Lists:
lectiohs!’’ aDd Weekly nPW ßpapere, divided Ute
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over eSC papers have a circulttieh es
ELEVEN MILLION COPIES!
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templating a line of advertising la or
are requested lo send for eetlmate'of <^ t
name thia paper. rieaae
Parker’s Tonic.
A PURE FAMILY*M EDICIME THA T NEVER INTOXI6ATK
If you are a lawyer, minister or business «...
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Tonk ke lutoxieatiu £ stimulants, but use Parker’*
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Tinkers Hair Balsam Is rtnel” perfumed and
ssekkms ° t '“ e «*»
HISCOX & CO..
163 It ill.am Street, Naw York.
- -
Old papers for sale here.
NO. 5«.