Newspaper Page Text
We copy the following from the
Commercial, which we take more
pleasure in republishing because it
clearly shows what live men can do
•md are doing in Rome. We endorse
the statement, as hereinafter made,
as well as the entire firm of McWil
liams <t Co.;
Dry Goods at Wholesale.
“We are pleased to see the rapid
progress of big things in our city. We
do not know how the House of Mc-
Williams & Co., got a favorable noto
riety so soon, but they are already
thronged with customers. Not half
their immense stock has arrived and
yet they make nothing of selling a
thousand dollars worth a day. We
did not know that a house could du
plicate Sheldon & Co.’s job price list
of New York, but this house will do
it and charge no freight. We do not
know how they can do it, but they as
sure us they are doing it daily. Now
we know that Sheldon & Co., furnish
weekly to the merchants of the United
States the New York Jobber’s Price
List of all tin- standard goods sold in
that city, and all that the country mer
chants desire to know is that these
gentlemen will sell by that list. Mes
srs McWilliams A Co., ;ue, however,
limited to sell to merchants only.—
There is a substantial reason for this.
They will not come in competition
with their mercantile patrons. Neither
should th' y. Their business is for the
trade, and the trade only,
One of the partners of this House \
remains in New York, and will con- ,
tinue there for sometime'. They have
established a gurchasiiig agency nt i
No. 25, Thomas street, and will avail j
themselves of all fluctuations of the
market. In a few days their full stock ■
will be in. The Rome Railroad is
gain in motion and will i ring down
to-mc. row e',-oral <tar loads of their
goods which have been bloc/aded at
K ingston.”
Diamonds in Brazil. —We havelem
prntitied by a ”isit from It. M fame. F-q.
(he agent fur Ayer's PIN, S’ii Si' paiillu and
Cherry I’eetoral, in South America, who I
has jn>t vi.'ited the mines with his medi
cines and described to us the process of .
taking gems iroin the earth* A driver
place ' his gang of slaves in a mud hole,
where the gems are found, and pans out
the earth in the wafer like gold washer-. —
The negroes are n:y»ed, to prevent their
secreting the diamonds in their clothes. —
They ate required to work facing their
ovet.-eei . and forbid leu to raise a hand to
the face, h'st they should swaliow the jew
el' when found. Yet they do carry them
uWtiy by becoming so expert that they can
snap them with their fingers fiotn the pan
to t'm ir motith without detection. Ayci
medicines are the tali-itrHis lor their dis
< uses, and it was not dilTieult to exchange,
with the negroes. Ater spills in about ev< n
weight lor the tough stone- in which the
biioiant- are holden — Heston l.nidir;
Tim mi'Hant for Twenty Years.—
More than twenty years ago the Mustang
Liniment made wsddnit in the West. Its
( art s oi' the various t xternnl diseases of
horst s and cattle a-t«’nished the planters
ami farmers of the Mississippi and Ohio
\ alleys, and a demand for it sprung up
which nect -sitated its manufacture on an
extensive -calc. S >.m th di-eovery was
made that it wa- a grand specifi fortheu
matisu), pout, neuralgia, earache, tooth
ache, and other external ailments of man
kind. Then it was tried as a healing pain
ki'uny appli atio’t, tn car sos cutward in*
iury, such ns cut- bruises, burns, t»pn-ms.
,V. and was found equal y serviceable ■
Ti e fame ot'th » new remedr !>r seme of
the tin.'t painful ills that afihet mankind
tu,d the lower anima's spread rnpic.iy, and
Mu'tiiu I niinent soon took rank m every
Stale and Tctrttmy of ti e I nion as a '-tin
card etire
♦
('cNt,:;: "s has turned Louisiana over to
th '«">id charities of tirant and Kvllog
\\ ■ il know w ’.at that mean- to the i;-
. . x. at d a st t of n ; u’’ that a nye.r
c . | , ... t- . oL-n . \V bat wid be
rlic re'U I ot ’his ne'ion bv the Senate re-
II 'lcF.sex :s m | :e of
ti e- nil that we think he is, he wi.l ti’ve
tl.i cn.des of Lmisiana some trouble be
fore tin) out him trow office.
L i |s(\na will be left out in the Cold
•• e I C.mt " refuse to act. Ibe I re-i
--dem sh.nud ea\e (ho matter with the p<o-
I ■ . ]. 'u ' .ina. e oar bottom dol-
•M ’ h if the Government will play
hand* ell.
I'm? Credit Mobiher investigation re-
Mtt'p'v ui Uk iNOJUN Qi' e>
and .Tames Brooks, the other thieves im- '
plicated being excused by their Radical I
brethren. 1
The Legislature of Alabama has before I
I it a civil rights bill, which we suppose will j
not pass if the Democrats are true to j
themselves, the Senate now being Democ- I
ratio. The bill is about the same as that ■
passed by the Florida Legislature giving ]
negroes free access to Railroad ears, Thea- j
tres, &c. j
A HIGH compliment was paid Mr. Steph- i
f*ns in his election on the 26th ult., in the ■
unanimous support of the people of his i
district as their Representative in the next .
j Congress. They could not have paid the j
' compliment, to a purer or better man.
! Double daily passenger trains now run j
> between Atlanta and New Orleans, via f
West Point and Montgomery.
Congress has increased the salary of ’
i the President to $50,000, Vice President 1
and Sneaker of the House to SIO,OOO, and ■■
■ pay of members, including the forty second (
| Congress to $6,500. ‘ I
The Mobile Register says • “The Mobile >
Cotton Exchange will send five bales of I
i cotton to the Vienna Exposition, rej resen- j
ting the grades ordinary, good ordinary, ,
I low middling,middling and good middling.” 1
The Bankrupt law has been so amended
I as to exempt property to the amount al
; lowed by each State to insolvent debtors.
In this State three thousand dollars, gold
' value, is allowed the Bankrupt.
The Committee on Commerce of the i
United States House of Representatives, j
renort favorable on the Atlantic and Great .i
I W es'ern Canal. The report of the Com- I
mittee being unanimous, the hili will pass I
; Congress we hope with a like unanimity. *
; The only thing to be regretted is, that it i j
not likely to p iss the pre-ent session.
T.vo siste-s in Boston both of whom
were married several years ago at the same
time, now simultaneously apply for divorces
i with a view to an exchange of husbands.
An lowa lady is paying an election bet
by kissi ig the winner once a month.
_ j
SLEET, snow and rain on Saturday. Cold,
ch ar and windy since. Gardening in this
section somewhat delayed on account of
the weather. We hope to plant by the
10th of April.
The Governor will endors? the bonds of
the North ami South road, in a few days,
to the amount of $240,000.
The first twenty miles of the road at this
end will now be completed, the grading of
which is about completed. '1 he first tweo- !
ty miles out from Rome will connect this
city with Cedartown. Spead the work say
we.
fitE Port Royal Railroad was com
pleted on Friday last. If a good line
of steamers are put upon this line, it
will give Augusta many advantages
she lias not hitherto enjoyed.
v
Gardening and corn planting is go
ing on brisi<ly in South Westi rn Geor
gia. Snow and freezes prevent such
agreeable pastimes in this section.
■
The Civil Rights bill was not acted on
by the present Congress.
Atlanta boß*ts ol tifeen hundred case'
of Menscls.
Meningitis has been quite fatal in Guth
but. Twenty deaths reported in one week, j
Gov. Brown has paid into the State ?
Treasure twenty-five thousand dollars ren- j
lai for (he mouth of February.
DON T FORGET *HE CHILDREN J
Win'll pvo\ idiugyour supply of
reading for next year do not for
get tiie children. Nothing better
can be found for them than the
weekly Bright Side and Family
Circle, u hich is designed especial
ly tor them. It is edited by ('.
G. (1. Paine, A. M.. a teacher in
tiie Chicago High School, and has
among its contributors some of
the best writers in the country,
such as Rev. Dr. Alden, Pres, of
the N. Y. State Norman School,
Prof. Sanborn Tenney, of Wil
liams College, Mrs. A. E. Sher
wood, Ina ( layton, Amelia E.
!>ale\ and others. It is designed
to iitferesl as well as instinct, and ■
is Midi a paper as any parent or
te.’.t her may give to liischildren or
pupils, assured that they will be
benefited bx it. It is furnished at
the low price of $1.60 ]H*r year,
every subscriber receives a hand
some Uhromo, the Calla Lillies.—
Published by the Bright Side Co.,
A Model Newspaper.
THE SAVANNAH DAILY NEWS.
The Savannah Daily Morning News
i» acknowledged by the press and people to
be the best daily paper south ot Louisville
and east ot New Orleans. Carrying with
it the prestige and reliability of age. it haa
all the vigor and vitality of youth, and its
enterprise as a gatherer of the latest and
freshest news has astonished its contempo
raries and met the warm approbation of
the public.
During the year 1873 no expense of time
labor and money will be spared to keep the
Morning News ahead of all competitors in
Georgia journalism, and to deserve the flat
tering encomiums heaped upon it from al!
quarters. There has, as yet, been no seri
ous attempt made to rival the special tele
grams which the News inaugurated some
years ago, and ’he consequence is that the
reader in search of the latest intelligence
always looks to the Morning News. The
telegraphic arrangements of the paper arc
such that the omissions made by the gen
era! press reports are promptly and reliably
supplied by us special correspondents.
The Morning News huS lately bei n en
larged to a 4iirty-.-ix column paper and tbi
broad ssope of type embraces daily every
thing of interest that transpires in the do
main of Literature, Art, Science, Politics,
eligion and General Intelligence ; giving
the reader more and better digested mat
r than any other paper in the State.
It is, perhaps, needless to speak of the
politics of the Morning News* For years
and years—indeed since its establishment —
it has been a representative Southern pa
per and from that time to the present in
all conjuncture it has consistently and per
sistently maintained Democratic States
Rights principles, and labored with an ar
dor and devotion that know no abatement,
to promote and preserve the interests and
honor of the South.
The special featuies of the Morning
News will be retained and improved upon
during the cn-uiog year and several i.ew
attractions will be added.
The Georgia news items, with their
quaint and pleasant humor, and the epi
tome of Florida, affairs will be continued
during the year. The local department
will be, as it has been for the past year,
the most complete and reliable to be found
in any Savannah paper and the commer
cial columns will be full and accurate.
The price of the Daily is SIO.UO per an
num ; $5.00 for six mouths; $2.50 for
three months ; SI.OO for one month*
The Tri-Weekly News.
This edition o* the Morning News is es
pecially recommended to those who have
not the facilities of a daily mail. Every
thing that has be<n sail in the foregoing
in regard io the daily edition may he re
peated of the Tri-Weekly. It is made up
with great care and contains the latest dis
patches and market teporls. The price of
this edition is sti.') ) per annum, &3.U0 for
six menti s and $1.50 lor three months-
The Weekly News.
The Weekly Morninj News particularly
recommends itself to the farmer and plan
ter and to those who live off the fines of
railroad. !ti-o cos the best family pa
pers in the country an! its ehcanness
brings i t within the reach of all. It con
tains thirty-six solid columns of reading
matter and is mailed so as to reach sub
scribers with the utmost prr>mp’ne<s It
is a carefully and laboriou-ly edited com
pendium ot the news of the week, and con
tains in addition an infinite variety of other
choice reading mrtter Editorials on all
topics, sketches of men. manners and fash
ions, tales, poetry, biography, pungent
paragraphs and condensed telegrams enter
into its make up. It contains the latest
telegraphic dispatches and market reports
up to the hour of goititr to press, and is in
all respects an indispensible adjunct to every
home.
Price—One year s2.t)O; six months $l
- ; three months, 50 cents.
Subscriptions lor either edition of the
Morning News tuav be sent by express' nt
the risk and expense of the proprietor. Ad
dress J. 11. ESTELL. Savannah. Ga.
Commrcia! Hotel
J. G. FULGHUM, Prop'r.
Corner Cherry and Cedar Street b,
NASHVILLE TENN.
J XMES A. HOLT. JAMEA A. ATWEL, Clerks.
TEN TII'H'.-JAXD dollars have RF.CF.NfLt
b« »*ii • «♦?» 11m* * '’inniff' t.«l. making t» n*»t
mu v tip* itiracitv**, but U»»* br»t i
in t !»• rin h b cent illy h»vatr«l, bring
b«*twrrti ihr 4'apito* ••• . •’oilf»»»•.«<•- fr»-rt fM.-e
Ui»* door t-ver) trn miiiuirK ’o ail !iir Depot* in liir « ily.
U. S. MAIL PA( K ET LIN E
Coosa River Steamers.
OX xxtt xl i i K JI I.) l-t. the steamers mi tt.»
C.r *a Klvrr will run aster «cbe'ule a-follows
»jpt> ) ing the P nt Orti'-es on Mail R mte No. 6189:
I. i • every I • it 7 A
Arrive at G n*. Im ’V 'dr. -d.v at 6 A. '1
X • ava G ■ XX ■ di.- sduy at ... 7 A M
Arnvv at 1...in. l.but-,1..) at 8 M.
.ive R-nnc «v- y Friday at 2 P. M.
Arrive at Gadsden Saturdav at '• -A M.
Leave Gad-den Saiurd.v at. 9 A M.
Arrive at Rome >undav al 7 F. M.
J. M. ELLIOTT, Gen'i Bupt.
juen25.1872.
THE h--t Hot.’ and Girls’ Magazine. Demurr-C*
*• Y<-t xr AMsa: *•’’ Alwavs •:>uk!ms with entda
taming -tt-ries. Poems, Puzr es. Ma-le. 1 ravel*. Dt r
cgu. >. Games, and other entertaining fratnree. all par
u-. > illnstraied. If you wish to |*»*enl a benu.iinl.nUe
. ver wetcums present to a Bov o. Girl s nd one ude a
lor a veatXt »u*'-cnption for You.xg Ame-ica.
men. w, ti c.rcuiar*. mailed f.»« <>« .eeeipt ol o-tiai-o.
Acdtaas, W. JENNINGS DKMORESTSpe-
838 Bread*a». NYrkacdle,
Virginia
I
I
TONIC OIL
FOR THE HAIR!
for Beautifying and Preserving the Hair
and rendering it Soft and Glossy.
USED AS A DRESSER,
twice a week, or daily, and it promotes the
rowt h, removes the dandruff, scurf, etc
Wil! always prompt the hair to its growth
when falling out-
Warranted free from Injurious Substance.
Prepared only by
V7, R. Fenner,
Pharmaceutist,
ROME, Ga.
I
W. 1). HOYT & CO., Sole Agts.
For Burns, Erysipelas and inflamed sores
, use Fenner's Soothing Ointment, it will
cure s burn in from 3to 5 days. Testimo
ials furnished if de ired.
1 W. D; Hoyt & Co.
SOLE AGENTS, ROME, GA.
Central Railroad.
NG CHANGE OF CARS BETWEEN
AFGFSTA AND COLUMBCS.
GtSIRAI SIIHPI '• I .Sl-KNT’S OFFb'l', 1
<'t s rR*!. K aii.ro«d, ’
Savaiiiiaf. s< pt.-mber 27, 1-72. S
OX' and a icr Sunday tin- 29ih in»t., Pa'sencnr Trains
<>>i tin-Gc<>ryia < 'entral Kailroad, its Branches and
< uiiuectioii-, wilt run as follows :
UP DAY TRAIN.
Leave Savannah S 45 a
“ Augusta 9 (Ml a m
Airive at Augusta 30 i- m
“ at Milledgeville II 55 p m
“ at Ktouton I .'>o a m
“ at Macon 715 p m
Leave Mancoll for Atlanta 10 0(1 pm
“ Maron lor Columbus SOS p M
-Irrivr at .■i'lanta 61'6 a m
“ at Columbus 400 a m
Making rlosn c nitrc’ion. with trains leaving .Augus
ta, .'hlauta and Culutnbu*.
DOWN’ DAY TRAIN.
Leave .ftlanta 200 am
Arrive at Maron 7 30 a m
Leave Macon S 00 a m
“ .fiignnta 9 till A M
•frtiveat .tfugtista 5 30 pm
“ M Savannah C 15 r m
This train < oi nret« at Mh-oii with S, W. .■Jccunmna
a turn tram leavi nt Columbus »■ f 20 P !H. and arrivlnd
t M iron at 4 45 .4 M. and makes the same ' utiut-etim.
t .4ugu-ia us the up day train.
SIGHT TR.IIH GOING SOUTH.
I.eave Savannah 7 00 p m
“ .imtu.la *ls p M
.Arrive at Savannah 43(1 a M
*• at Macon 630 a m
Leave Macon for .Atlan-a fl 50 a m
“ Maron for Columbus 546 a m
.Arrive at Columbus II 15 a m
“ at .Atlanta 316 pm
Matting prompt throush connections at both .Atlanta
l und C j luiuhus
NIGHT TRAINS GOING NORTH.
Leave Columbus 4 10 p m
•• .Atlanta 4Oh pm
.Arriv- a; Macon for Columfus 9 35 p m
at .Maton tor .Atlanta 9 25 p m
Leave Macon 9 .'(* p m
“ Sava.-nah 11 tk) r m
• Arriv. a. Mith dgev.ile ]| 5.',
•• at Eatonton I s<j a m
•• at .Autusta 62n _ m
•• a: .Savannah I IS) 4 M
Makit.y pertr et roimrcttr.ii- with tr:ir>- leavti.g .4u
git-ta.
I'a.-enj going over the Milledg. vO and Eatonton
Branch will take nt.ht 'rain from I oi:iml.u«. .Atlanta
.<i.d M |.<>l>. ■' !V trim from .Augusta and .-nvvnnali.
wuicli •• meet di. ■■ at Gordon .-undays exceptwith
lie Mt ■ Seville Hlid Est-n t. Il • ,11 ..
Aw IClegant MceplngCar on m!1 Xight
1 li k« t* «»4H he* jrid ut < .fntrH
'I i kG ar H' »!*•* c«>rn»- D<il
and •tr** I#, t'tti *•• op- u * a to “• pin
ai..i :r< iu -’u t ui. jl k» .ani’ ■ > • ;*.< lat
<’H’ WILZJ.iV ktn;EK
General r*up» rintra»D‘n
MATBY HOUS E,
l-LTI MOKE. MJ).
< . A’. Proprdtitr,
Has n:*t receive, * series of Cm’y and Elegant Im
provement*, having b»-n Remodeled, Enlarged and
Xrwly Furnished throughout, thereby eupplyinga
long felt by the Uavtiling public,
‘ FIRST CLASS HOTEL,”
moderate price*.
FehJhM.
multum in Parva-
M. A. Siiam»»s,M. D., is » m »f Dr A Q Simmons
deceased. He was cottdiututor with his father in pre
paring and intredu<ring the original Vegetable Liver
Medicine to public antlce iu IsW. Me pdid for aH the
advertising kiaiaelf, and did it ext*asiv«ly fei about
twenty years before his father’s decease ; stating at the
close of the advertisements that it was prepared only
by bis father and himselt. Some time before his fathers
decease while they were laboring in unison thus harnao
t iuusly amid great prosperiy, sending their medicine
over al! the Continent, and rttceiving statements of as
tonishing cures by it from every direetinn, one young
lamented half brother caused the report to go forth that
he'had learned to make the medicine, and commenced
selling his tecipe. But such a bold attempt to blight the
prospects of his father and brother, by destioying their
business, if he had believed his receipe to be corect,
savored too strong of error to meet with public favor.
■ Those who bought Ills recipe in hopes of getting some-
■ thing useful, repotted themselves deceived. J H Z-Jlin
j &. Co., of Georgia, procured his recipe from him, ar.d
| that is all they profess to know about Dr. A. Q. Sini-
I mons’Liver Medicine. Yet they advertise their’s as
j genuine. That they have deceived hundreds is cleat
! from the following references to Druggists and those
who have nsed both.
“The Georgia Zeilen &. Co’s, is an imposition. I
tried It before 1 knew the original and know it to b« as-
I Isay. Rev. J. T. Freeman, luka, Miss., March 93, 1871.
I
The Georgia Simmons being repudiated; W. W
! Carter &. i.’o., Egypt, Miss., Feb. 18, 18Z1.
Your medicine is the only kind I now keep, Zeilin’s
not giving satisfaction; G. VV. Mctee, Druggist, Monroe,
’ La., Oe.. 23, lt-70.
Tried both and much prefer the original; KeV. L. J.
i Davies, Au.-usta, Georgia, Jan. 12. 1871.
Zeilitts Medicine does not sell hete as it did a year
ago. lam aware of the superior efficacy ol that pre
-1 pared by M. A Simmons of luka, Miss.; Dr. John C.
1 Spoiis.vood, Drusigist, Huntsville, Ala., Jan, 23 1871.
i Anxious to repair the wrong done the pnblie by giv
. ing Zeiliu St Co. a ceriifiicnte, after trying their pre--a
ration am! finding that it did notact like the original
i James K. Chiles, Forsyth, Ga., Oct. 4, 1869.
The effect of Zeilin X. Co’s is not like the original
Rev. M. R. Lyon, McMinnville, T enn., July 11, 1871.
That prepared by Dr M. A. Simmons of luka Miss.,
is the only Vegetable Livi-r Medicine that can be relied
on ; Rev. B. F. Davies, Forsyth, Georgia, June 15, 1879
Dr F. O. Mays, Druggist, of Forsyth, Georgia, April
5, 1870; testifies to the trigrnality, genuinenr.-s and su
perior excellency of the Liver Medicine prepared by
Dr. M. A. Simutonf, of luka, Miss. Having carefully
investigated the subject, sold, examined and wat. h'-'d
i the effects of holh it and the Zeitin &. Co’s preparation
for uiativ months.
Il is fraud to pass it (Zeilni &. Co’s) off as SimtnOnß.''
genuine Liver Medicine, whii-h il is not; Kev. J. G.
' Junes, Fort Gibson, Mi.-s , March 30. 1871.
Those who have triedtiioth in our section, say they
wart the Round Tin boxes, ihst they are lite ones that
do tin-good. It is certainly the best ruedirine weever
sold; J 11. Stuart & C. ~ Druggists, Decatur, Ala.,
March 24 1871.
Rev Z. Park-r. of Ittk.a, Viss., say*. April 27, 1871
that be tried a package of Zetlin h < '«'s Simmons
Liver Rcgula'or, and soon found by experience that ir
rvas not what he wanted, and afterwards tried thar
prepared bv Dr .M A Simmons of luka, Miss., and found
tha. it fully answered ail that it professed to do.
“Fordl-en-es of the liver, I would risk your media,
rather than ,he skill of the whole medical faculty com
bined. - ’ From < x Gov. A. G. Hiwwn, of Newum, Mist
to Dr M. A. Simmons, July, 1857.
We do n< t hesitate to say, that your liver medicine
has given b- it- i anil more universal i.atistaetlon ihan
any patent medicine we have ever handled. Goodrich
ic Street, Druggist. Columbus, Miss. « Dr VI A Sim
mons, luka, Mt.-s.
Phillip B. Pritchttt,nnd T. J. Priichitl, of Mont.cello,
Georgia, .1 ami's E McCord ol Forsyth. Georgia, and T.
M Faulkner ot J.t 'pt r Co. Geo., all state about the same
—that tit -y bad tried other preparations called Liver
Regulators and found that they act as catburtics, but do
not regulate or act on the liver as Dr M. A. r*in.'uuiis’
Liver Medicine docs.
“The people of this section want M A Simmons liver
medi- itte ; and nil that w e have beard speak of it way
they will nave no >tlier, anti give honor to whom bonor
is due ” Mortok, Kitchen At Co.
Druggists, Natchez, Miss., May 10, r 7U.
After Jas. A Walker, Centerville, T< xas had tried
both p < pratinns; he says March 20, 1871. Seidiitz
Powders i* jusi as good for the liver complai.it as
Zeilin’s Simmons Medicine I-, but that prepared by Dl
M A .siium<iii“ of luka Miss, is tne best wedv-iue for
the liver be bad ever tried. He bad suffered trow liver
complaint lot litre’: years.
In trying to get Dr VI A. Simmons’ liver wedi«in« we
got Zeilin? it.‘tiie name of A. Q Simmons, here ofor*
from Galveston ; Dr F A Patrick be Co-, Drnggwbt < en
terville. Texas, A prill 24, 1871.
-• 1 herefoi., It>elit my duty to pat the public and
wotld on t‘n-ir guard against the presumptuous assump
tions ot this prury J 11 Zenin K Co. Druggists ot Ma
ton, Geo.) ami their anxtr.rn of medicine, whicb is the
greatest lio|s sition I ever knew. That which is prepar
rd by Dr M X .- iitm n,. luka, Miss., is the only reli
rib!' fiver m> tin ine in this country. 1 have been a< Ung
as agent, “- ring and using it nearly Nineteen yeßts It
has given universal satisfaction in the sornmnding
< ountry, from thirty to forty miles.’’ John G Guice.
Fr inl • 'I 1 ouiity, Mi*-., Air-u-t I. 1871.
1 wi'i r.'.i ee!i the G' u.—ia Medicine, and am doin
. II I - an tor yours-; Dr M C Kinnard Druggist. Ltving
stone. 'pril 5. 1871: to Ur M. A. Sinuuous.
I liave iisi ft y.iur liver medicins twentv five tears
it is the !>• »t I vor preparation 1 ever tried ; W. F. Ort
i ahvlUi, Ala., April 13,1871.
I am i euln.g tiuely with yuur liver medicrne.lt
run s many ob.t.iiate cases whore good pbyrieistis,
h .v. rm! o.r, iiw.-.1.-k’ t M..9’ tc’l.
Home R. R. Company
CHANGE OF SCHEDULE.
OM XXr M’TER eI’NDAY, Os TOBLK ««(.,
-1 the lit t::e SatUuaJ w.il run >•
follow- ;
Moaatxc ikxis.
Mo r ni ■ *~."^vl; m-c al 8 • a M
Arrive
MiVHT :Ra g
Xight Tt aiii *« at : : r*:* or. a
Arm*; at Rome al : : • r * K
X _ ■
Xtw York t Xnrth. A*« Mi kt ch»** con
!»» ;!»■»> i t *- w ii.’i M ii train ‘ . ar.<t
ballon Rati r.uad for a.i poml« .Mori>ii»C if■*»<-
inaKrM ci<we • ounection h»r Ck-iri’b' »?a, iv.ii amiL
all poictfi WewU Both train* ionnccuorii tr Ado
W. 8.