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About Weekly Gwinnett herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1871-1885 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 10, 1877)
herald. PCBMSHKD Irt« WEDNESDAY, UY BftACKENRfDGE. b ' . , , pEEFLES, Editor. riiL-.» , , ft .. ()F rfUiWORIPTJON. U‘ iiis ...52 00 W .'....s are ciwu—payable -ai-ci'il* 1 1,11 . . in **#l *« , *e«’* rs - an,T V,fc ' free. 11 ’ /tsUm-' efteir. |Hipfc* *■**' *** e ftlfce to another, •ro.'■ , t he post-office »-> changed, as well gloUich iiiey cards. A.M.NVIN-N --|.aarcH c * v *^ c * ” ’ , rler , |,; s Profcs-doiml Services to the [.'■ ..f Lawnmoeviile and vicinity, at i.is residence. ,7; WINS. WM. K. SIMMON'*. WINN & SIMMONS. yITOKN'GYS AT L \ , p. Georgia. Practice in Gwinnett and the adjoining .critics. marl5 ~ ly ~Y. L. HUTCHINS, attorney at law, CjA - Pnictjco in tlu; coit.lities of the Wcatcrii jilcuit.Wnn Milton arid L'orsjnh of rV fine Ridge- rvicci M. peepllEs, ATi'UKNEY aT ? ;LAW. .aWllksceviu.k, HA Practices ill the counties of Gwinnett lull. Jackson and Milton, pension claims promptly attended to mar lii-tl , Atlanta A '’harlotte Air JA he. Change of Schedule to take Kffect, Sunday, Jure 10,’77, GOING HAST. Leave Atlanta 4.00 p. m. An ice at Gainesville 6.24 p. m. ■ N’ew Holland .'...6.29 p, m “ • Lula 6.55 p. m. •• •• lielton(supper)... .7.00 p. m. ” 1 Alt, Airy 7-50 p. in. “ " Toccoa 8. 1 p. ni “ “ Greenville 1118 p. tn. - -• Spartanburg... .12 52 a. m. - “ Cliarlntte 4.12 it. in. - “ Charlotte, Junction 420 a. in. GOING WEST. pop Charlotte, Junction ... .7 00 p. m. '‘Charlotte ..710 p. m. Crivp al SpartaeJm g I .42 p. 111. " tiiiriivillc,. ... . , .n?.to p. lit. “ I’occ m /> 47 a. rn. “ “ Mt. Airy ~... .4 28 a. m Lea . .y.(k' a. in. “ New Holland 5 13 a m. “ Gainesville 543 a. in. “ Hulord (break lust) 6.33 u. in. Atlanta .8.45 a. nt ACCOMMODATION’ train. tit 1 Viliifi 1it,,.. ......,.,.7 15 a. nt. Arrive at Atlanta... „,p 5.15 p. m Sundays Excepted. (). •). PoHKv’rte, Get) ’I Manager. -*' l -ilot-sTON, Gcu.’l l’us. <fc Ticittit I ?, dM I Wlth the latest care. “eT 0 ” 4 "* 0 *” d ''«tX yorMc ‘ ,h,irto itclltllg loolimr o TV- S lve3 1C head a »infort’ SCUBa tiou of great S^S** 1 ”* ,•'?*»> ky iUus. "hite and clean. lie anil? 1 ! 01 , ,ro P erties H stores riser nr ? £]? nc * s *° Hictr normal Baking bal(l nesa, and strong 8 k grow thick aud A . 7 e " eet "al or desirable, nverof u,* Ve *’ M - State A«- a r? ÜBCtt8 ’ Say# »‘‘ Tlw •elected for, K ure ’ arul carefully or its ini?, 0 Best fended purposes.*!' rice , One Dollar. Dy© J HE WH| SKER3. *ked on S* ,)r °paration may b* t. nge the color of 11, t Citable L§T 3 t an J °thw un ri discretion brown or Llat-k, ln 2 in one a PP lie(1 * ■ an, l effeotn I? ara W° n , and quick* E %nt a per ** neither N . H . «wr l 4i U 1 la Utiicku. Weekly Gwinnett Herald. T. 51. UJiEPLES, PROPRIETOR ] Yol. YII. Hot Baby off' Mine, BY CHARLES F. ADAMS. Mine craciou.-! Mine crncious! sbnst look I ere utid see A l)eui seller so hobby ns hubby ran pe, I'cr Lcople all dink dat nr plains I huf » ot, Yas glazy in it trinking, or so media g like tit; Id vusn’t pi-cunse 1 trinks lager ami vine, Id vas all on uggouut oil dot baby off mine* Dot scltmall le, die vellow I dells yon vas rpticr; Not mooch pigjjer ronndt as a gootglass off beer, Mit a hare-footed lied, and nose but a schpeck, Ajnout dot goes most to dcr pack of! his neck, UnUj-kis lit die pitik ti es nit utr rest all eominbe To gpe footli a chat m to dot baby off tiling. I ik-lls you dot baby was von off dcr P'-y* 1 - Uml beats lecdlc Yaw cob lor making a noise, Heshnsthas pecan to shbeak goot En glish, too, Says • mama’uud -bapa,’ und somediincs ‘tih goo!’ You dou'd find a baby den dimes oudt off nine. I)o t vas quite so schrnurt as dot baby of mine. He grawls der vloor ofer, und drows dings übouilt, Und poots Urydiug he can find in bis tuout; He dumbies der shtairs down, und falls from his chair, End gtles mines Katrina yon derrible set,are; .My hair shtands like shqiiilh* on a mat borcubme Yen 1 dinks»fl oft dot baby off mine. - I fete vas s omi ding, yefti 'ftef, I ‘ dou'd yi!‘; I o hear ip der u di f|iv/dot young Deutscher yell, Und diavcl der peii room midout many CIO US Vliile dcr chills down.dcr supine off mine back quietly gres; Docs leedie shinniusdic drieks vasu’t so fine, Dot 1 cuts oop at night mitd >t baby off mine- V eil, disc leedie sehafers vus goin’ to ,pe .men, L'nd all of dose droublcs vill peen ol'cr den; Dfy viil year a vhitc shirt vront inshted oil u bdi, LJiid couldn't got tucked oop at night in deir crib — . V dll Veil! veo Ire feeble und iu life’s decline, May mine ohlt age pe cheered by do baby off mine The enormous forest fires in Al giers ean»rd a loss of many millions to the Fumed government. In fleeing from the flames beasts ol prey and beasts on which they liahit unity preyed, ran side by side, tile 'former without fear. Asi Arab sffld that lie saw fiam an eminence a lion in an open spans surrounded bv flames. He roared, lashed his side with Ids tail, and in vain sought an escape, Finally : he ra n into the flames. * The depression in the sugar mar ket at llavHva is slowly giving way to a better f eling. The new tobacco eiop is arriving in the city, and is futnd good in quality, but ileflemnt In quantity. Only the bait qualities aft; exported to the Tinted States. Gen. Howard says he is light on the heels of the Indians. Tbuie is nothing .sheering about this, how over, on tlio heck ai.il mule, but he’ didn’t Si ««n to kig«HH'g better of the’ muk.— fhirknyiun Gendin , , , t forgery Vf’ acquitted last, WfeCk at 11a. court. L&wrenceville, Ga., Wednesday, October 10, 1877. That Itii rial 1 ot.—Tlio Htoi-y Mink I wain ‘tlcaid on a New Haven i Steamer. All tlu: jourii) ing L i,ad ever done bad been purely in the way ot busi ness, The pleasant May ueitliei suggested a novelty, namely a trip for pure ivereution, the bread all 1 butler element left out. ’ldle Reverend said lie would go too—a good ut-aii. one of the best of men, although a clergyman Dy 11 al night we were in New Haven and on boat d I lie New York boat. We bought nUr tickets, and then went wainieiing an,und, here and there, ip the solid Comfort of being tro‘e and idle, an i of putting distauce between ourselves and the mails and telegraph. Alter awhile I went to tnv slate room and uniheised, but t|>e night was too enticing for bed. We were moving down the hay h ot, and it was pleasant to stand at tbe win dow-and take tbe cool night breeze and WdU-li the gliding lights on -hoie. l’ie.-1-nliy two eldeilv men sat down under the window find began a conversation. Their talk was properly no business erf mine, yet I was feeling friendly towards the w rid and vvillu, ; to be enter tained. I soon.gathered that they were brothers, that they were from a small Connecticut village, and that the matter in hand concerned the cemetery. Said one : ‘Now John, we talked it all over among ourselves, anti this is what we’ve done You see everybody was a movin’ Irotn the old buryin’ ground, and our folks was most about left- lo lie nisei yes, as you may say. They was crowded, too, »« you know, lot wan’t lug enough in the first place, and last year when Seth's wife died, we couldn’t hardly tuck (far in *oiT o’" overlaid Deacon -Itoih’s lot, and be soured on her, so to speak, ami on the rest of us too. So we l.iilred it over, anti 1 wa< fur a lay-out in the new Mili tary on the lull. They wao’t un willin’ if it was cheap. Well, air, two of the lu st and biggest plots was No. 8 and No. 9 b ith of ;i HZ*, nice comfortable room for lwenty-stXj —twenty-six full grow ns that is, but you reckon in children and other slants, and sir ke an av erage, and I should sty.von might lay in thirty, or maybe thiitysiu-o or three, pretty genteel!—no crowdin’ to signify.’ ‘That’s plenty, William. Which one did you buy?’ ‘Well I’m coining to that, John. You sec. No. 8 was §ld, No, 9 sl4.’ *1 see, No’s’l you took No B.’ 4 You wait, I tm.k No. 9 Anti I'll tell you for why. In the fir*! place, D. acon Sliorb wanted it. Well, after tint way lie\l gone on shout Kelli’a wife ocei lavin’ lii* piem’M'S, l*d ,i beat him out oj that No. !) if Id alia! to stand two dollar* extra, let alone one. That’s the way I felt about it. Says I, what's a dollar, any way? Life’* only a pilgrimage, says I, we ain't ' heie for good, and we can’t taiie it with us, says I, So l just dumped iit down, knowin’ the Lord don' l s iller a good deed to go for nothin’ and calklatin’ to take it out o* somebody in the course o’ traUe. Then there was another reason John. ‘No. 9’s a long way the Lindie.t jot in the feminity f and the likeli e.st IW situation. Jt lavs right on lop of a kn >ll in the dead centre of > the itioyoi' growtdr atrd yeu euii see Mi Hi port from there, a ini lYaey’* and Iloppilr Mount, and a raft o’ i farm*, and on. There ain’t no bet* 1 ter onitOtik from a hnryin* plot in Higgins saya so, and I reckon he ought to know. Well aVtl that ain’t all. Course Sliorb had to take No, 8. wa’ut no help f(rr’t. Now; No. 8. jiuesou to Nol 9 S lyjtilt’s on the slope of the hill, and every lime it rain* It'll sosft HgiA (Kofii dii the Shorbs. 8i lii, o dus saya’t when the deacon'd , “CO .MING EVENTS CAST TIIEIR SHADOWS HEFOREI/' tillie comes, he better take ollt fil e | and m uiue insurance both on his i i emains. Here there whs the sound ot a low, placid duplicate chuckle of appreciation and sal i-J'a ui on. ‘Now John here’s a little rough dr.ill on the ground, that I’ve made on a piece of paper. Up lo re in the 101 l hand corner wc’\e bunched the departed, took tbem bom the old graveyard and Slowed them one along side o ’ t’ other on a first come first-served plan, no par tialities. wiih grau'iher Jones for it slat ter, only because it happened so. and windiii* up indt-criminate with Seth’s twins. A little crowded towards tlie eu ! of ths wly out, maybe, but we k coned l’ wa’u’t bust to scalier the twins. \Y< II n<xt totiirs the livin.’ Hera where it’s marked, wc , ie ti> put Mii iur and her family, when lliey’ie called , l’>. that -, Ini' broths er lLiSea. an I hi.v’n, U. Calvin ami tribe. Willi’s leit in these two i L>ts here—just the <j-«i of the winds patch for general style and outlook, they’re for me and my folks, and you and yonrn. Which of them had you rutlier be buried in?’ ‘I swan von’vetook ine mighty "uexpected, William! It sort of started the shivers. Fact i?, 1 was Glinkin’ so busy about maltin' tilings comfortable for the Othera, 1 liad ut thought, about being buried myself.’ ‘Life’s oniy a fleeting show, John as the sayiu’ is. We've all got to go sooner or later. To go with a clean record’s ihe ma n thing. Fact . :• * is. its Ihe only thing woilli sliivm for. I oil n. ’ •Yes, that’s so, William, that’s »o, there ain’t no getting round it. Winch of these lot* would you reo ommemif' •Well, it depends John. Are you I p n lie'll si* ah >ut on 1 1 ink?’ 'I don't kh* I am, William, I don’t say I ain’t Ure'y. I don’t know, lint m.ni-dy. I reckon, I'd set store by a s iuili exposure.* : That’s easy fixed. John, They’ie both souih exposure. They take til** siiii ami the 8 mrhs get the sh ul* How abiipl sile, Willi on? •D's san-lv siic, E’» mostly loom. ‘You may gimme E. then Wil liam, a sandy sile caves iri more or h-ss. and cods for repairs. ‘All right, set your name down, here, John, un ler E. Now. if you don’t mind pay in me your share of the sl4, John, widle were on the besides*, everything’* fixed', After some higgling and sharp bargaining, tin* money was paid, and John bade his brother good Highland took hi* leave. There wa* silence for Horne mom*uis; Hum s soft chuckle welled ii|i from (he lonelv William, and ho malti-red: •I declare fort, i! I Invent made a mistake! It’s Dlhats nm.ilv loom, not E. And John’s booked for sandy sile, after all. Them w ts annlle r so't chu -kl», and William departed to tiis rest also. - - Governor IJainjuon, in paaslßg through Dalton, rnado a brief speech, in which lie advised the jicople 'to tliink less of jiolitics, and tin'll tlmir at’ientlon to mechaitieal and agricultural jiurkiiita, mid the daveloping of the various rcauutces of lids splendid country, which would eVenliiaUy in ike ihe South ilia garden apol ol tfie Wnlli and her tieoplc lispjoy aud pro*|>eroug.' The Gainesville Eagle proposes to take chicken*, egg*, butter, po tatoes. mutton, *L -. in payment for subscrijition, bill don't aav anything about turnip greens. Don't go back on our staple garden sass, C,J, A* tb- 'jKissum season opens, the average eo unity editor *tanda hack on his hind legs and wIiT-tles dull cure away Our Texas Better. Has in i?rniNos^'Texas, ) Sepi. 1577. ) Eiutdu Owixnktt llkkai.d: Sir. Having bri n sHlUriti-d bv imrnv filends trt drop them a 1 ine rontmi-' niug this Country, Ihe Crops, Any, I take this method of iiibftmiee them, supposing tint they are all readers of 3’ 1 ' 1 * 1 ' valilHLfb pipl-f.-*~ We have, in this (UruyMinj AfotniVy, the liucst country I ever saiv. We have black waxy prairie, black and red sandy prairie and black and rod sandy limber d land, so that most any person can be suited. Land is selling at from ten to twenty ft>« dollars per acre for improved lands, owing to situation :fhd improve ment. Raw lauds three to seven dollars per acre lli ive been Here seven years. Dining that time wheat lias aVmaged ten tv> forty bushels , oats’, sixty.’ cotton, from mm third to a bale per acre. I have a timbered farm, which hits made a bile to the acre, three veils iti seven, and ne/er has mailu less than a half bale or eight hundred pounds of oe**d cottoll 111 the flcle. We have hod a consider utils drouth this year, la-ting fr >m tile loth ot June to the first of September. Mr cotton will average I.UGH pounds of seed cotton to the acu over the en tire crop, tie or 7D acres. My bot tom corn 50 bushels, up lands fit). Irish and sweet potatoes, onion*, cabbage; beans, peas, tlml, in fact, all kinds of vegs'aUes and fruits that I ever saw raised in Georgia, grow here luxuriantly, except quin ces-the quince will do no good I'lii* health of this countv is always good of drv.Seasons During very wet siiiiitiii-r- and fall-, i lulls and fellioiis lev>*r« are verv Conimoif Myself ami faiiltiy have lift I n > eliil* or ft-vers for f.njf ve in f*x o*ri I one ea«e of r.nenm mi i. I w> ■ 1 Tlvisy* al! poi'iO'is v i i'ii vu go i f mimes in Gwinmlt. and arc r.iti-rii* I i,fi them. lo *t* v*tbe-<*',' 'l,l ll Mlgli I kiio-a the rich lan !* t’o-.-e .-tre -c,no<. Our Dud* will Mu-rug.* - unit lr inore, fesrly v, libdiif aoY iiiifnilr; or fer tilizer lli in your* will with them so thtt wlr.il iff‘*n have to pay in ifi t! eocihtry Ur fertilizer each year, world h*mii buy a (mine here. We pay farm hands here from 12] to 20 dollar;} per month. When we (uinis'i men. Ip,,ai ikq, a cyop, we give them one-half ol ilio cnqis—- sonio givo half the corn - and l wos lliirda of f fui eott-in. Uorn is Worth JoctH., wlieal 1 dollar, flout 4 dof lars, oats 30cts, chiton 9 (o lOels, bacon l(k;ta. All kinda of mei- idiandize cheaji as couln he VVt* have two good cotton nTaikcts in the cihiilL, a filin'compiess al aitclj, Wo have a largo Gimigu a Aiclioum; a* NliCi 111 m. \Vc sell our grain anil eotTon 1 u bulk* and buy our farm fools and machinery, through our Grange agent. Money seems lobe source here, though from what te.an learn, ;ne much teller off tii ili-it respect than any of tin; Olher^gJ,atj/s. We have tliley money liaivcst* in eucli year— -1 beeves in the »|*»ing, wheat aud oats ut the scunner, add cotton in the j tall and winter. If a man doen not do well here Cannoi/, the fault ties \ eutiiely with liim-cll. i 1 notice, in your paper ol the 12th ! inst., a letter written al Fort Worth I Texas, ill which the gentleman slates that limes arc balder und lUolicV .-cartel Ilian any place lie 1 ever saw. 1 say that Fort Worth i is growing rapidly—shows woallli I aud industry. Some of my neigh bor boy* are now gelling 50 dol lais per month for labor at that place. Fort Worth is about SO miles south of my place. 1 He says imigruuls can get no wage* lor work, when they rent land have to move every year; that then* are none but large projldlly holders and speculators That brag j ou this couutry, &c., (just refer to ($2 A YEAR,IN ADVANC E. lii.y li tter.) You can see wages lire much better here than in Georgia, Men who lent laud hero, it tiiev • , , y, will cultivatelt and act , innately, can continue from \ too to year mi i'lltc name toat-w as it Ia so ieldmu ■ api; il •».*■■»-%!„. . t J| m„» !*u rye get )ha( yjl irs, anil » wo ifo, it is luit a year or two they buy | lan lof their own. I can give vou • i;* i • i n .v | liiindreiL of men hete who are riot I* / *•»*• Bui > niita twipi *■ - . large pioiioi.ty holders qi I,:iml spec : **’ l * j ad 1 ~ iMilatoivtiiat will te’l you li-x.is is IJ »•* «• Mali** M->cfT .voTiii »d’ ||tliM Jiest country they .ever saw. , . - -• L . *>euo not inakn.moimy by ■>muling .. ’’ , . * , * , ' . . , . It nut ot the poiijj, but I V «iving I lie ! pool, Wly, desire lo work, wages (hat makes money for them, and their good labor makes iimlley he ut. Generally llio-e persons who me poorer than when ihey chine Imre lire years ago are those who came In re In Uud money growing on bushes and failed/ did not wo) k much before they came lute, mid, of course, have Hot improved much. Tell me w hcio a in m can live cheapei than Ticri; I liuvS given yon the juices of pnoi.-ions, As to labor, »*c want hundreds of hands now to pick cotton :u one dollars jier hllodn u This eptiuDy is overrun with mechanics oi every description, hut not half cnotigli farm hands, «sj)ecially at gatnei iilg time. 1 shall not reli t - to his let t«r any furtlmr as I atn making this ai ticlc much longer than ! in tended. If any of your readers, or my acquaintanct, ile. iifi a Uuo de wciiptipn of this country. I will try to give it to them .f tlWyjwill write to me. I would »av to all Vohii * nidi who desire a good homo in a goo I con pry, mid good society, conic to Mobile Noilhcni Ti-Xaa, oid men who have homes in Gwin nett, and call make ll living on iliem, slay win re vou an . I am *eil fit -i*il with 100 Herald; it is ' *- . •'**'. . , nowij.'ipv! a wile me usiior. I am always anxious to got it, aiu proud of your new Uoiistiuitiiii; think it will -mely ho adoptid, without any trouble. I leiu.iiu, sir, yours, truly, wishing yeu great success with your paper. * W. J, Buy ;ks. AeiLdiltorlmutl Note*, A half interest, iri the Cofingtoh Enterprise is off*red lor *ttU. Jiiifge Hopkins will bujU a syin qper a^G^iijgsyille., Rev. J*. L, BiW«#e«, of Htonc Wttu nt ain , t» r) an »efotwly* 411 . 111 | ' 'l.'-.-', nob AlsUyi.u. YU« ffyxt and Goi. Gar., r* ii: •! son are leg. rfbjtva nts fmrtf Newion. NT teH teNM* liilll I he cadets of lha Nmtjf Dahlom ga will all cud lb# Nuic fail and com- U ia iniUtitiy Liau- Uuapt Joseph Garrard is their coni' mamiunt. Dr, Shair.w** remedy fur hog cholera is | each leave*. They should be boih d arid sliired in a tittle meal. We stqqiose the mutt meal the better. Col. W. J. I’ike is *sid to "be , the coming man for Rcpre-entaiivc ! from Jack*on. He will make a 1 good one ami will be the liamjsum- I I eat mar, there. At the lute session of Nowlnu Sn* peiior court, Judge Hill charged the Jury that ‘no deduction c m be | made liv any public weigher tor ; water in cotton, uloess lire seller lii et Agree* to the same. Each vi olation of this* law subjects the weigher lo pi ost-ul ion. Col. IT. fl .tNfnrn d ctThei a re election to tlie Lagisl.Tme; ‘Flu- 1 Dr. 1 ia* fbpfeaitVfeif Cla-k for *CV- ! eral *eiin» and makes an eflficfent and valuable im-mber. Dtloug tbe last session he was chairuiall of the 'cuituui (tec on lliiauce, G WAN N KTTi LI El^LJ^. -*- 1 V -v- *Tjt %. * T \ ~ 11.-\ IKs (} 1* ADVlnitlitsl.viv, ~ 8 t. t Sq rs | I W | 2 VV VV | I M | 3 M. 1 ’ui -i -.o v 2 2 (IHm P su(> IJ in i ; *, .JyO.p 5 son i; n Isim I f ..... 4 1 Will *f M (H) i V ">»k ’ Vtf I, v •ri.’iUPii’^Ntwiia 1 ■ X'* i*mcp|o* .vcu -. And Unan-ia-iEoLuip^^^j A ii iii arc is opr luchm dcnlli ofcobinm The Hmf*.tA :r ’ Tor^lMHP iH,s’6B tla l firm liswriiwi. at tfdt i«-». ; # *- 1.1->iA‘l, *U*,Y lSlv#4.Si.,.UL)\i'G. WictWiHu’lHyi * Ii»w8. Hi* fm* nil VMB)«Mey-4 'D. s*iw>4).r;v|i)iriy trf g, oil Tax ('nllia-toi's *• 1 • olltl Ntwlv filfcliiu--- .«awa uo Jf, w- vm* M > M Jh Sale oi ianiT; per sip Ult" ..... ."iff no f/'l #W fl'trayiiwk-i|t. s , t ...... ‘OO -T,l -at tor ft'ii -<h of* V-| ,f.(u., ►*•".'•• Sinltlm Kif honl. *»n*!imtijrw. j tXJDUI)*I? rjf!l"W')i Vy | law lit la- held on.ihe first Tu-sday in the i 'ilMtn , ,''bH'u-fl»n the* tmitnjf’ trtrlff ’ll* : lorciinon and Uim.* iiil'af i»l.Vrn>oa, at ll.c t nitrt hoij-c. ip tk 1 ’ county ip which the property is slTuated. u ’ I Notice bf ilicse sales n?u*t t*a giwwi Hi a,'public naze tie 4U days prey ims to Uio ! day of sale. Noth;e in debtors nnd creditors must j also la> publi-iicd 4 days. | Notice for the saf-n| personal proper ly must be iriven in like manner, 10 days pievions tii day rs ■ nk*. Notice that application will l o mudo l ln the I’owrl.of Oulinaiy lor leave to ; sell land must be pufiTisiii.il 4 we* kv. t'iratMi.s' mi litters of lulmiirLtration, fininliuiirtUip. Hu., pmst jla; (fuiyji Ju.il JO I day-; fur disini.-sioii limn admiiiity-atinji, , ibonlhly, tf?wi'‘ modths; for eomprlHng title* tram i-tecutors or ailtiiinisiiuluis, j "i!f l i I jyick 0l “* /V nj v yp by di •ik .., j id, the Tull space of ibree imimks. mltMiomf ji*h tint ml for ktfir wi-elite I Llelru| HftUcw. two week*. imlinoarnflftr i nwwnlwlgs to U !-,. liyiul ii qiHteaniuis, i m m A NcUCtSSfiSv Thrynrti inorth their wnirihl in, fioid. READ WHAT H* €AYS-. P.<. !h»! r uti ]u»,r> i it-'t T'- it rx ii • • I>; •'.■)’ it, Cvi ■ ' I Piirk jjiTto were r 4fctfe)tMk<tt*l to mtj l u cel ihi*ni (l, u t with liillr: luHi). I n'?i row H well rt/fii, !IJ4AC If do i apjtatttdi St , perfect, rci;uli*r > onus, piles jAfAn#*, v* < I l iiyo v tim-d l<wrdfrfrfl dri i%«v ire \ftmii their weight in uoltj. HkV. K. 1.. %jm\M No. 29. VJWQ PiLLS cuJii: bick uuau* AC lUA, TiflfiliLL? OUJIX DYaparsj*. TSirSJttLS OVRBC Wl'ljfAXXW tuttFells c uxa r-rrett IW * wa, ' ctmi' dmi-i -» ta* UJI i J nuL>r •m tmw> **}»» >( (*,i{ JmiuSmW mmf £j Or'iy iUr cun be chanced lo ajm h||r}i»*VblJcli by a »:«> le off! BIDr.TUTT’* I pur Dye. It. act. like mafic.(■ Ba','l i < w.rtanlril a', h-irmlcfs *» wai. r.M PPricefi.OO. Office 3< Murray St., N.Y.D ?tjoßmasßS3Baa!S& zgaesma What ¥OuEEf^SiiT 1 Sld&d JLxiaxvo* It It a plant that jnow« in thr South, ami it j specially adapted uu* i uac of diseases of that 1 tainv*»< , v il is I, NATURE’S GW?! PEMray, I KntrMJiK tt Once infcQ the bitxw, e.\jptbMns jlll .m rofnjous, syphilitic, and rheumatic unecuon*. A lonit h a amirt hi*u att&iii t*?, hut when ! combined with Sarsaparilla, Yeilur/ Dock, and rms OR. IfUTPS SARSAPARILLA AND QUEEN’S OEUGHT, IW i t jjo 'v cr 1u l Mood purifier known turned i< il ißornce for the Cure of Old ulcer*, diseased j *ii t<, foul dim-InMrtretir.xHihc ears and nostrils, I .lb****;#, tan iliaeilfrO*, kidney com -1 pi.lint, cvn ettbefk oflcrrci fmtrflTCr, (fworderetl ‘ Il» U.SC it rvuns f rvstt :a impairs a faircomf lexlon, and builds up H-e body wi;U * , HEALTHY, SOLID FLESH. A* an . I 't • Ywllatin It ift &tro»£- . ly Jlundicdiiol cases of the worst typ? have be«Ai AdMftfM'i*kteJ*by It. pnrclv vciromble, uacpmUmed usc will do no tin iw?ar Trie bc*T time lb taktr ie is dnrin* *ht summer and fall; and i«6tcudc>£dcbiliiy', h«atl ache, fever and a true, you wftt robtt t | , : ‘ith. Sol i Price, |i.oo. '3n.ee, yfmrw ■iff - Utmjliya, (if >» gellHi-s. I. u. I’<%l :uhu.i M Uuivr of ' 1 ’ I lhi .I.!.; 'c o, . . I ■ . applies to ini in profer' rotTn to •ell the Lr.hfTV'fflPi/fTPj to fcltfl estate. ; I'hi* 4*rheifMiVSo* H,T : Wr -A wHfgulnr, tiio beirn »m| ctediiomol e .jtl UjknrwHfSl to Sj.OW CHlMe.jf Uiy they yuii s oTT ', c list ’■* nnd.iv In November ill stf|*viiiy itiTMli r l slid Ii! m*—hnn* nmlhe ig. anted. ThL ii j OYliUa A A f .ri-, V. Sfpt Id- id Ul'ii’m?/. ww.P'Mm * J| tfT- r fy>**7'pf*'». y* Ugw uil itzfjiwjtm FfT’ct T 5 toTm-r^T-^ctflC poo toproper. v ai.yitn- »yrtem f W/M9 by xTicir ionic acuon on iIL a (1 mw ;fi *r a o, ~ nt i v! r-tnh, JvMle limfJt the a'late itHlil vlenniMi lICTVOU4 clclTlitv, iull wMunjK of the mus er Oft, tfTtl IflpWß*