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EEALERS IN
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"SLNDALL’S
Magnetic Soap.
liie Cheapest Soap that can be used
for the following reasons:
:no bar will yo as far as two of any other.
U-o 1 ■ half the usual rubbing being required
there is a saving of more than tlie entire
east of the soap in labor alone.
Si.— T"-' clothes are made SWEE P. CLEAN, and
WRITE, without Hoiunu sc vi.l'ino, thus
„il Injury to them Is avoided. There is a
saving m fuel and hard work, and the
washing is done In about halt the t line.
It i, also guaranteed under a penalty of flfty
1 ihrs not to Injure the clothes or hands, and as
uai'M.d will enable any person to ascertain the
v-mh of lU. >o statements, it would never pay
U' niVi-rk-ior to engage in an extensive system
oi auveriMng and claim such decided merits for
hs - .up unless he knew from positive exporl
euco Umt that it would prove to be in every rea
ped wlut la claimed for it.
This 1 ..iso a superior Soap for Toilet and
Sieving purposes.
WARNER RHODES & 00.,
A HOLES A I.E PAHCV O ROGERS,
General Agents, Philadelphia, Pa.
niity 25~ t£
MXBY’S
'"Best”
A COMBINED POLISH BLACKING AND
LEATHER PRESERVATIVE.
W • rU and Professional Bootblacks in Mow York,
■■adaii titinn' Urge cities where this Blacking has
■> and, acknowledge its superiority over
m tic Blackings in use, ao an El
rint Polish and Couservcr of Leather.
XOTKE.
, j*' l * s ‘•3-'pt” Blacking has a lied ami Blue '-a
-, - ‘ I be licet ived by accepting our “Stan
,-r isu i-;: tr ; m pAct of “Be3t.” The Standard
the label stamped into the tin cover.
lU,S brand is male to compete with other Arneri
wan i French Blackings, but is inferior to our
JfcSJtu
< U : t” Blacking will save its entire cost
’at wear of your boots and shoes.
housekeepers
’i'ry Birins French Laundry
Blue,
InSifting JJoxcb.
,v r i V >n ' e:r and economical package,
X * • tily -jornbined Bleaching and Bluoing I“ow
v in use.
S. iS. B'XBY & CO.,
v iUscrr.CTumxQ Chemists,
‘ ' ■’Al7s Wusliington St., New York.
LOOK AND READ!
h e unparalleled Success
OF
Pat. Gin Gearing
roil THE PAST 3 YEARS
lot ai s HORSE POWERman
uri-i -i where, for oinning. It Is strong
King Boat is Iron, and pre
bu • etthng of the Gin House.
Schofield’s Cotton Presses,
dinning engines,
Browns Cotton Gins,
•i-r, hv'VT" ,s ;i ’il kinds Manufactured to or-
WsoiuP; 5 Sni E Macon, oa. They
-k r au a i ure the
bHSBET COTTON SCREW.
"inrunted to give full satl-sfaction.
H. H. SWATTS,
Agent-, BARNESYII.LE, GA
t\ SIIS IEI DO
r 4iE!v*fcOSß 3 m
i **.* for Day wSVrM
‘■z* l ' :■ TANARUS:"\ a ' vte of lidfeetpcr dav. An?***
If./ ' < bi | W ''Uii4 warranted. Alwav
/-¥ ■ t hertteol in the wurM tor
, G b-r coal and ore*. Fjtfnj.Towi.sLip
V /•’ ! " J vKbts for calc. Send you
vA ■ ’ ,l! d Mate, and gat du= V,u V..,.,L Vit,
•~-a.. Uu j. Audrcii Au. r C-> . bt. L- iio.
(§! / ftp jlll 11 l i./fl 'W] |f;11 ii yP Hi Ini; j)F: 131
VOL. VII.
Slosiest Sum.
Hio rallying cry is Honest Sam,
A granite shaft, no marble sham,
A- lirin as Washington for trath,
AN ho never tol l a lie in youtii.
Tr ‘ Ri’mt return to honest giorv
f)n peaceful soil, and not on gory,
lno rallying cry i Honest Sam,
” <i wont a statesman, not a sham.
AVc must reform, the people cry
lA>r rogues and ringsters now ikfy
1 lie honor and the people’s power—
( If time was coin,they'd steal the hour,)
1 Jiey robbed the poor of Honest bread
VV ho on the battle-lleld had bled ;
r i’licy robbed the oplian,youth and child,
And even have the Bench defied.
AVe must return io honest giorv,
On peaceful soil, and not on gory.
The rallying cry is Honest Sam.
We want a statesman not a sham.
The people do a man demand
\V ho can upon their platform stand—
AVho lias the moral nerve and brain
To break each link that makes the chain
Uniting rogue and wily ddef.
He form must bring all those to grief.
AYc must return to honest glory,
On peaceful soil, and not on gory.
The rallying cry is Honest Sam.
They want a statesman, not a sham.
oy. Tihlcn vs. s>ix.
New York Express.
Gov. Dix administered the at
fairs of the Slate in 1371, and Gov.
Tilden administers tlicm in 187 G.
The tax-payers will therefore look
on this picture and on that:
TAXES — 1874.
Extraordinary canal repairs... .$1,898,144
Awards and outlays in cxgcss
of appropriations necessita-
ting a tax . 475,536
For general purposes 7,087,620
Ordinary canal repairs 1, r>74,510
Reappropriations of cash in
treasury.. . 917,379
Total under Dix $11,062,189
taxes —1876.
Extraordinary canal repairs.. None
Awards and outlays in excess
of appropriations necessita
ting a tax None
For general purposes $1,005,387
Ordinary canal repairs 1,277,479
Reappropriations of cash in
treasury None
Total under Tilden $5,283,567
Less under Tilden than Dix . 5,768,823
To this must be added the savl
- from former taxes and expend
ditures for which they were levied,
amounting to $1,1)49,124, and also
the amount reclaimed from expen
ditures going on when Gov. Tilden
took office —$849,000,70;}. These
two amounts, added to the $0,70*8,-
823 above, give a grand total of re
duction of taxes under Gov. Til (Ten
as compared with the amount col
lected under Gov. Dix, of $8,577,
710.
Let the tax payer ponder over
these figures, and drop this conclu
sion in the ballot box.
Ireland's Resources.
The population of Ireland by the
census of 1871, was 5,409,435. The
•inhabited houses are 959,393* The
total number of owners of lands is
63,759. For every thousand per
sons there are thirteen owners of
lands, and seventy-two owners of
land for every thousand inhabited
houses. Of the owners of land,
less than half—that is 36,151 —
have le-s than an acre; 32,614 an
acre or more. It is evident that
the ‘‘land less than an acre” rep
resents generally a house, with or
without a bit of garden, for the
aggregates of these small proper
ties, though of considerable value,
covers little ground. While the
32,611 owners of an acre and up
ward have 20,150,612 acres, with
a ratable valuation of £12,052,-
809, the 46, 144 owners of less
thau an acre have only 0,005 acres,
but of the ratable value of £1,366,-
449. The majority of “Irish own
ers of land, could be comprised in
the area of many an English par
ish known as a good sized villiage
oi small market town. It is only
when we come to the fifth figure—
that is, the thousands—that the ag
gregate properties of half the land
owers affects the total acreage. The
disproportion is by no means uni
form in the several provinces. In
Leinster, while 10,0-10 owners own
4:,809,292 acres, 15,084 own no
more than 8,119 acres ; in Munster
7,077 persons own 5,895,809 acres,
7,101 only 2.511 acres; in Ulster
14:,950 own 5,257,253 acres, 10,-
030 only 3,010 acres; in Con
naught 2,29-11 own 1,188,20 acres,
while 2,322 have properties cover
ing altogether 42T acres, or only
about a ten thousandth part of the
total territory possessed by the
more fortunate moiety of Con
naught land Owners. —London
Tinics.
What Else wile Science Do?
“A remarkable photograph of the
inoon has been received at the Par -
is observatory, from Signor Melcn c
dez, a Spanish photographer. The
Paris Journal which calls attention
to the photograph, states that Me
lendez invented an adjunct to his
apparatus, which enabled him to
obtain a remarkable picture, show
ing mountains and volcanoes upon
the surface of the moon, and indi
cating forests of huge trees now pcU
rilled. The picture naturally at
tracts much attention,
THOM ASTON. GA.. SATURDAY MORNING. AUGUST 19, 187(1
I’rim i 11 ve Warrare.
*
INTERESTING PROPOSITION EY A
MOXTEGRIN TO A WOUNDED
RUSSIAN OFFICER.
From the- London Daily New.-’.
1 . The Montenegrin method of mak
ing war is very primitive. A Kus
sian officer, who visited their coun
try, and studied it, tells us that a
Montenegrin never sues for mercy ;
and whenever one of them is se
verely wounded, and it is impossi
ble to save him lrom the enemy,
his own comrades cut off his head!
When at the attack of Clobuk, a
small detachment of Russian troops
• was obliged to retreat, an officer of
scout make, and no longer voung,
tell oh the ground from exhaustion,
A Moiiicyiegrin, perceived it, ran
immediately to him, and, having
drawn his vatagan, said, “You are
very brave, and must wish that I
should eut off your head. Say a
prayer and make a sign of the
Cross.' Tiic officer, horrified at
the proposition made an eflbit to
rise, and rejoined his comrades
with the assistance of the friendly
Montenegrin. They consider all
those who have been taken by the
enemy as killed. They carry out
ol the battle their wounded on their
shoulders. Arms, a small loaf of
bread, a cheese, some garlic, a lit-,
tie brandy,an old garment, and two
pair of sandals made of raw hide,
form all the equipage of the Mon
tenegrins. On their march they do
do seek any shelter from the rain
or cold. In rainy weather the Mon
tenegrin wraps around his head
the sh'ooi Hi (a shawl of coarse cloth)
lies down on the ground and, put
ting his rifle under him y sleeps very
comfortably. Three or four hours
of repose are quite sufficient for his
rest and the remainder of his time
is occupied in constant exertion.—
It is impossible to retain them in
the reserve, and it seems that they
cannot calmly bear the view of the
enemy. The tactics of the Monten
egrins are confined to being skillful
marksmen. A stone, a hole, a tree
Oifer them a cover from the enemy.
Firing usually in a prostrate posi
tion on tho ground, they are not
easily hit, while their rapid and
sure shots carry destruction into!
the closed ranks of a regular army.
They have besides a well practised
eye for judging of distance, and
thoroughly understand how to m,Lo
ad van fa go of the ground. Of courso
it will always bcdiflieult to employ
such warriors against regular
troops.
Sii ilfliaiiiL Trouble
Brigham Young is be.-ct by all
manner of tribulations, according
to the latest tidings from the scat
of Mormondom, It is an old, ii
not true saying, that bad luck nev
er comes singly. Just now ii
seems to be raining in on the
prophet from every side. Congress
and Gentile emigration are forcing
his retreat to New Mexico. Tho
disaffected arc taking this advan
tage to throw off the yoke of bond
age, and are leaving for oilier and
less tyrannical pastures : there is a
growing and sslf-asserting dissent
sion among the leading saints for
the successorship of President of
the church ; his health is failing ;
his numerous family troubles fur
ther rack his scheming brain ; and
last, but worst of all, the Gentile
lawyers arc going after him. The
Prophet has always picachcd
against this “lazy set of men,” who
breed trouble that they may profit
thereby. When lie was sole ruler,
and his sword was law, lie would
not permit a lawyer to hang out
his tin shingle in Mali. But with
Gentle “innovations” came the
lawyers, and at the present term ol
court three cases in which the
Prophet dirtedy and indirect-,
ly interested have Been decided ad
versely to his and the Mormon
cause, the most prominent being
the Reynolds polygamous* case.
Reynolds is a clerk in Brigham’s
tithing office, and rejoices in the
luxury of two wives. He has been
convicted of polygamy under the
law of 1802, The other two cases
decided against the Prophet were :
One in which the Caine heirs sued
for a large amount of city real es
tate which Brigham held as guar
dian, and still wanted to hold ; but
the decision of a Gentile Judge
prevailed against Brigham. The
other case is that of Miss Sarah M.
Pratt, who sued for the recovery
of an undivided town lot which
the boss polygamist also coveted.
She also was victorious. These
little legal straws show which way
the Gentile winds are blowing.
Arkansas has for two years been
in the control of its own people,and
there is peace and prosperity;
South Caiolina has been in carpet
bag hands for eleven years, and
scenes like that at Hamburg are
still possible. —[Boston Post.
He who sows courtesy reaps
friendship, and he who plautskind
ness gathers a harvest of love.
? A Himaiicon u i.ocomoUi
Frora theSaratorrir a. .T Hp 2-a i
About 9 o’clock last Saturday
evening a colored man named Tom
Taylor, who is crazy, entered the
Delaware and Hudson round house
in the south part of Saratoga. ]le
announced that he was the only
man who could urn a locomotive,
and with one bound sprang into
a locomotive cab. Tho locomotive
was steamed up, and the turn-ta
ble,’over which it had passed into
the round house, was standing at
right angles to the track. Theem
•ployees ordered him off die engine.
He replied that if they attempted
■to put him off he wo ilo tart the
engine, and '"action u.
tlie word he placed his band on
the throttlc.-lcvcr, when* the loco
motive began to show signs of life.
They yelled at him and he stopped
for a moment, when they began
the work of blocking the* wheels.
Seeing that the lunatic whs l>cnt on
miseaief, and tuat he must be re
moved by force, a messenger was
despatched for help. Officers were
speedily at the scene, where they
found the men desperately at work
blocking back the engine, on which
stood Taylor, with his hand on the
throttle-lever and his eyes fairly
gleaming with fire. By strategy
several men climbed up’on the en
gine from different sides, when one
of them forced Iris way into the cab
and forcibly wrenched Taylor’s
hand from the throttle lever, while
others seized him. Bound to keep
up the exoitemon:, Taylor, while
being ejected from the engine, seiz
ed the whistle cord and clung to it
like grim death, the screaming
whistle deafening all with its Jerri-
Ho roar. Taylor was finally taken
out and placed in the lockup by
the officers. Had he succeeded in
running the engine twonty-flve foot
ahead, it would have plunged into
the turn-table nir,
F<jj’cc iJcviord From Use SunN
Hfcsil.
An interesting computation lias
been made of the amount ol force
imparted to the earth by the sun’s
beat. According to the best inves
tigations tl ;V have keen made,
there is received i • oiyj minute
enough beat to raise the tempera
ture of iivu and one half centigrade.
li, now, wc compare this won the
work liono by a given amount of
heat, as utilized in a steam engine,
it will be found that the heat sent
to the earth in the sun’s ray’s dur
ing the space of one minute is able
to do us as much work as would bo
done by two thousand steam en
gines, ' h rse-p v\ver each,
working eoatihuou.uy for the space
of four thousand years.
What becomesr of this inconceivi.
ably great amm-nt of power is
worthy of consideration; and we
begin to realize the nature of the
problems of the future scientists
when we reflect that by far the
larger part of tins heal' force ex
pends itself upon he earth in ac
tual work, only a small portion of
it being radiated into space. Of
course tho result accomplished,
such as the main enance of the
temperature ot the earth, ocean and
atmosphere, the stimulating of ani
mal and vegetable life, etc., etc.,
must be the equivalent of the pow *
er retained bv our globe.
It’s too Expensive.— He was
in the morning of manhood, his
eye clear and bright, his skin of a
warm, ruddy glow, his step bou
yant and clastic, a A his spirit
bounding and healthful. Sail a
friend to him :
“Come in, Harry, and take a
drink.”
“No, Tom, it’s too vpc-fivtv
can’t afford it.”
“Oh, pshaw ! Come and drink
with me —at my expense. 5 ’
“No Tom, I wouldn’t drink at j
your expense if I could ; but thatj
thing could not be done. Ue who j
drinks must do so at hi: own ex-1
pense.
“Nonsense ! If I invite you in
to drink, and pay for it. what’s
the expense to you Harry v
“'Ah, Tom, dear boy, I .-wash t
thinking of the money pait. As
for that, I fancy I could allow! the
expense better than yon could. No
no —the expense which I cannot
afford is of another kind. The
peace and happiness oi my mother
I can not sacra flee; my own health
and strength, and mental and mor
al vigor, and my seif respeot, I
cannot foolishly expend arid cast
away. And, dear Tom, theie is
another —God bless her, your
sweet sister, Lillie—have Ia right,
since our betrothmc-nt, to endan
ger the heart and the life I have
pledged to her ?”
A tear stole down Tom’s cheek,
lie took Harry’s arm, and walked
away from the gilded saloon, cou
sciensiously reflecting upon the bet
ter way of life.
Galveston, Texas, is now snip
ping wheat direct Jo Liverpool at
twenty-eight cents per bushel
tfi -• ’:*.•.* : j( ; -'*or? 11 <{* I*rov
.4 -Guru • Jtilolir iixiiati
fi*o I icy.
from the Omaha IR-raUl.
Ihe puerile and idiotic manage*
j ment which has characterized
Grant’s conduct of our Indian af
-1 fairs is enough to make a phiian
trhopisi: weep tear- of blood and
Reap an ordinary man fiighting
ma : all the time. The practice
is to Led the Indians bv gucs
that is, without knowing the exact
number there are to feed—and li- j
soensc traders to go among them, j
whose cupidity and greed for gain .
prompt them to sell to the redskins
the most improved kinds of fire
unaa. with ammunition to fit, in j
any quantity desirable.
in other words, Grant’s policy L
to soil the Indians firearms to shoot
white soldiers and white men with,
and then send the men in small ex
peditions to be shot in detail. AVe
affirm our solemn belief that there
lias never been an accurate census
taken of Indians at KCfr Cloud’s
and Spotted Tail’s agencies, and
that the agents there are issuing
rations right along to a suppusi-*
iious number of Indians. In this
way the squaws and children of a
large number are supported, while
the bucks keep to the front to fight
against our troops.
More than this, wc boldly .charge
that these agencies are made the
means by which these hostile In°
dians arc furnished and kept in
supplies. Tills is the way of it,
and the people might as well un
derstand it first as last. The Her
ald lias demanded time and again
the removal of these Indian agen
cies to a point where they could
not be made tho means of commu
nication and supplies to hostile
Lands; it lias demanded the imme
diate transfer of their whole man
agement to the War Depart ment,
but tho thieves of the Indian ring
and tools of a besotted President in
a Radical Senate Yaml in the way
of every reform suggested, flow
long must this slate of affairs con
tinue ?
E*iuck sis fHpE*,
Girls can make their own way in
the world if they have energy to
plan and courage to execute. The
•Luff is in them, if they know how
to use it. Jlail Hamilton tells a
good story :
£ T know two girls born to
wealth. In their early youth they
were rich, careless, free. They
walked and drove, and hunted, and
boated and drank deep draughts of
happiness and health. Presently
Loubics came. The stalwart father
became a helpless and confirmed
invalid. Did they sit down and
wring their bauds? Did they go
moaning all their days, beggidg
men to give them a little sewing, a
lit;ic teaching, a little copying ?
Not they. They began in a small
way in a country town to keep a
dry goods and grocery store. They
gave fair measure and right change.
They kept what the people wanted;
and if anything was called for
which they had not they put it
down in the list of their purchases.
They had the cleanest, the nicest
grocery for miles around. Hired
them a clerk, and bought a horse,
and built a house, are at this mo&
ment independent property holders
as well as piquant and agreeable
women*'’
iii-v Fatiier.
A good woman searching out the
children of want, one cold day last
winter tried to open the door in a
third story of a wretched house,
when she heard a little voice say;
f Pull the string up high ! Pull
the string tip high 1 ’
She looked up and saw a string,
which on being pulled, lifted a
latch, and she opened the door on
two little halt naked children, all
alone. Very cold and pitiful they
looked.
‘ Do you take care of yourselves,
little ones ?' asked the go#d woman.
‘ No ma’am/ said tlie oldest,‘God
takes care of us.’
llow beautiful and lull of faith
was the reply.
A Florida man, writing to the
Columbus Enquirer, says he saw :
800 bushels of cucumbers shipped
by one farmer to New York in
April that brought fifteen dollars
1 per bushel, making &±,SQO. He
j saw an orange tree that supplied
1 a family with more flour than they
could consume in a year, and pould
mention a number of the like re-.
suits if time and space would al
low.
Take your time, Mr. Tilden. A
man who has saved to the tax
payers of his State eight millons of
dollars need not be in a hurry to
j write about what he will dt> for the
j Nation.
Bristow has written to Grant
that the sanctity of cabinet con-*
yersations cannot be waived by
either or both parties.
The Chicago Times offers this as
a straw. The lrs f Democratic
President was blind in one 03*0.
Tilden is blind in one eve. Straws
show which way the wind blows.
"Gan you change this William
tor mo V” said a young man who
; presented a SSO bill at the counter
ol the Gloucester National Bank,
recent] \\ “Yes, said the cashier,
“But why uo you call it a Wil~
liam V ‘'Oh, I’m net familiar
enough wiln tliat soi l of a thing to
call it Bill.’ wa-the quick reply.
Shook s boy heard him snv the
other day that there was ’ moii,
03' in hens, and lie proceeded to in**
vestigate the old man's poultry
yard. He liad opened a dozen fine
specimens without finding anv,
wlien tlio old mail descended upon
imn, and Wfsud:T , if
there s a balm in Cnlcad.
j An odd Dick up in Michigan ha
t built a church and placed back of
! the pulpit a slab lettered as follows:
! “No man will be allowed to preach
in this elnireh who preaches from
manuscript, who belongs to any sc-
I crct society, or who has his life in-*
: sured in any way.*’ That man
would be an interesting phvQholog
| ical study.
| Some old triend says, “Get up
with the sun if you want to be
'healthy and wise.” It is easy
to follow this advice in the winter
when the sun acts sensibly, and
doeschit get up till about seven
o’clock, but when he commences to
get up at ibm o’clock, we have ob
served that the wisest men give
him about two hours start, and let
their wives accumulate health and
wisdom.
Asa Detroit man. was digging in
iiis garden his wife appeared at the
door and shouted : “Come 3 t ou old
fraud—come into dinner.” As he
did not conic, she opened the door
pretty soon and yelled : “1 [ain’t
3 r ou coming to dinner, you blasted
—•” she saw a neighbor along in the
garden with her husband and fin
ished —“old darling you.”
“My bov,” said a sobann vPaged
evangelist to a lad who had just
emerged from a hiar-pulling match
with another boy. “do you expect
to rove hereafter in a land of pure
delight?” “No,” said (lie lad, ' I’ve
busted another blit ion off otY’ll my
trousers, and 1 cxnccl to get a lick
in’ for it.”
“Arc you going to make a flower
bed here, Judkins ?” asked a young
lady ot the gardener. “Yes, miss ;
them’s the orders,” answered the
gardener. “Why, it will quite
spoil our croquet ground !’ “Han’t
help it, miss; them’s your pa's or
ders. lie says he’ll have it laid out
for horticulture,not for husbandry!’"
A lady in Bedford, who lived
near a church, was sitting by the
window listening to the crickets,
which were loudly chirping, the
music from the choir being faintly
audible, when a gentleman dropped
in familiarly, had just passed the
church and had the music full in
his mind. “What a noise they
arc making to.-night!” “Yes,” said
the lady, “.md it is said they do it
with their hind legs
02> edUniot.
There is nothing more admirable
than obedience. Little children,be
obedient in small things as well.as
in great.
I onec knew a little bov. he was
only four years old, but he had al
ready acquired at that age a habit
of rendering implicit obedience to
the commands and wishes of his
parents. One Sunday as ho was
walking in fife garden accompanied
by ?i servant, he saw a fine rosey*
looking apple lying on the path be
fore him/ Ho ran to pick it up,
but handed it directly to the ser
vant without looking as if he would
like to eat it.
“This is a very ilne one, Master :
Harry,” said the servant without
closely examining the apple, “and i
quite ripe. You mav eat it if you !
like.”
“Papa told me I was not to cat j
fruit I found lying on the ground
in the garden,” said the child,
“I should not be likely to give
you leave to eat anything that
would hurt you, sir,” said the maid
sharply. “Your papa told you not
to cat fruit off the ground, because
he was afraid you might cat some-*
thing some day that was not ripe,
and that would not be good for
you. Unripe fruit would make
you ill, you know.”
“He did not say all t:d v” said
the child gravely, “he only said I
was never to cat fruit J pick 'd up
off the ground. So 1 tiwnk 1 will
not cat this apple, if you please
nurse, although it does I ok very
nice and ripe/ added the bttle fol
low, evidently thinking it did Dok
very tempting.
His father who happened to be
near enough to overm-ar this con
versatie:i, hero -termed forward,an 1
taking the apple from th • servants
hand, sat down and drew his little
sou towards him.
A SPECIAL ("AHI).
D“ J> s : S ° l niWK k, lormcrly of
.>**•.. O'Yatis , • i ft] • m t urro .-
cert'l. IJf I” 1 ' ''Pm-ldy, quickly, anti
nr in mV ' ? '* 9 ? ap S 1,1 l‘V flmv
x i u >n of y kin.l. Al: iiscaso
iwu.iar t> females confitlcntially cored in
.a u short n, ? . M *<lioi„ ; - (, m : ,| y
rf h t L' :it ( !X rr *v mail u> all parti
m the coniry. All coun„nimtion S
“i I w- 3 - l T‘ v i! t ■ (m 7 a " l rv>:viS > 43 *wi
df TV ill tell a 1 ! street, Atlanta (i
mclilG-tf
NO. 41.
“Do yon see t!at. Ilirry ?” said
he turning over tlic apple and
pointing to a Mack speck near the
stem “Now, if r cut this apple
opon, 3or. will s<\* something verv
disagreeable inside of it.”
He did so, and displayed to Har
ry s wondering and Somewhat dis
gusted eyes an ugly insert lodged
in the core.
. Ton see, said li lather, “that
o nodi once really the *est thino
tea us. You might have bitten in
*.o tins apple without observing that
nasty insect inside of it.”
Harry assent a k :’ic look o:
gusi deepening on his face ; lookal
thoughtful for a minute or two,ami
then ran off to play.
iko lesson, however, was not
iorgolten. (Jbedienee Jiad never
erst him math effort befor this in-
CRlcm, it. never cost him anv after
G 'onigw;sf“o7'A V;? 1 ’ u r 3
t!;at it might be ;;ood for him"to i*
SO,
VECETSWE
in' nXulrti k :^X *° * ftiOP ’
k v i • n *, u: ~ 2oU3 ..nymuaU, wLicit simply
:, V?., f s ' , ra G l,lc;u '‘ 4Qt n “ly wlmdi
iirdiil. : H ” : ■■■• ■ r-.l ih it by n-stor tiie
KOETIXK
jn cn.v.i of Serofr.la ami othor
.xsc.m9 oi tJio blood, by many of ibebcst physb-iMn
ihi 'nJxV' " re: “ B,UVCi * i! ‘■■nrbig all <IL mm of
VEGETIXE
*’ ’'. ‘ • S’ 0 invalids iuio false hopes bv purff.
. ..., '■ ' ; :I ’ 0 ' 1 appetite I ■•. ■ i 1 -
turo in elcariTu; an 1 pmiryi-ig tho whnlo „ v ,c, m.
i-.mmg ili" I*- lent. ab i,j peviovt health.
w VESET2SK
, I'f * ook f d "2*o a' aj i :nerimcni ioi ,omo lime
I k ° f mu ' lxv,; l*?-*Luis, bn: tiro,, mo. t i„-
V? r ~, ml to Its merit arc now its most
a..lout friends a:ut supporters.
VEGETIXE
Jnfitoad of beinff a pnld-up mwli. ine has worked
J- ; way upto its present ar.>ni*tiiiiff snce.sn bv ac
tual tuont in nneni,: all disease of the blood, of
whatever nature.
VEfcETJXE
Says a I>otua pliybiciau, “lias no equal aa a l 100. I
purilßT. IT uiritvr j ; irnay vrouiloiful cun R t a(l*r
.li oJiei vyuiQ lip ir.-J -1, visited the lalxitorv
•iiitl G'Mvm •■ (! my ’ ir oi d', gonuine merit. It in
piVpy f’Ctl from > -A’li 'y i\y.{ > iintl Jioi lis, each ol which
1,1 * c*4ict'.ive, aiul they are <1 in
:i manner a* to product* astouishiii,*? nsulls/’
VCGETIXE
1 1 ie.., i add recommended by fihysiciaiiß
and apoti ••. .•• u, li tin; best tmri tier and elcamer
ot tin; !’••>.: • v t di.-ovored, and thousands speak in
it' pra:;;j w.i • ; ,vu Lean rector- and to h altli.
fi* lit >Oi ’,
WHAT IS NEEDED.
Boston, Fob. 13,1371.
Ma. 11. It. Srnvi.N :
n '?y Sir_AlKjut i. ;t- ye .• 1 for ad myself in
'‘ bt in • .... general<lebili‘y. VEGETINK
w;.?atron.'jiy re onint. udod to mjby a friend who
bad been benefit and by j: use. i pnrand the :uii
o;" uter. nsti;;; e \< ralbottle-., was lwtorrd to
h ■ na a.id di. on!: ih and I t vl *j it its* ciiiil)-
d-m tiiat there is no medicine* eujicrior to it for
inost* complain .s ror whi. hit is especially pn*ired.
and would cbeerndly recommend it to‘those who
f..t*l tliat t'i yin ■ and E*:methiir to restore them to
pcitect health. Jic.'pocltidlv yours,
„ , r U. L. I'ETTIKGII.L.
Firm < ■“>. M I> tingiil ,v (,*o., 10 State St., ii...ton.
„ , < ■ • . ■. ism.
Mis. If. i.. Stkyi ss :
Fe i; .. J ;t w > bottles o‘ t liGETlNEfnmiph
<;lm by your iuy lvifc ha*. ur<*d with great
bcnciit.
l or a long time f-ho was troubled with dizzinera
*di<l ( ■ir.livi na:;; ill"'r :v iiiblcn arj-uow atirolv rr*-
rn msl by the u o o; VI OETINK.
w.-n r.l x> 1 * v.ibltd v.iUi Dyr j ••pria and ncral
V •il>i!U;. ; and liaa b-.en greatly b nt-ii’ <t.
TIIOss. GILMOIIB, C. _ Wslr.nt ft.
frVi'l >iyHi‘3S*a Meu
X.irn . r 1J Jun.. int, 1872.
. ... ..
I' ariMi - I‘liroiigh tin ad, : •..nd'*arti ‘a)pcrf<ii ;-
f-on <>:' ii< . . 1-:. .w ij. it, of this ij.ia . (liavo I -en ta
bmg your VEiitTIME f r Dyspnea, of widt h l
have f> u lie red for ycir .
I have used only two botll-.s and ul:: ady f. < 1 mv
n U anew man.
Ib. spcctfuliy,
l>:;. J. W. CARTER. 2
Jvt jdH t from a i'raoiit ai Ciiciii
i-j mu! Apoiliceary.
i .on, -laa. 1, 187
■ : rtify 1 11 bare ■ ild at r"-
tail.'U'i dozen (13.12 bouic.s) cf y-utr VKGKTINK
since April 12, IH7O, cr.d cun tiuly say that it has
gir.*u tlio bet:- saii.st.ietion ol any remedy for all
• ornplaints for which i. ' recommended,that I ever
■i-t. Scarcely :: dsypacaoc without sonic of ray
customers testifying t its rat l it, o; t tic ms* Ive., or
tliei: Irieinls i sun p rfceUy cognizant of aevornl
ca ;-s of Scrofuloua Tumor., 1 cured by VE<>E
TINE al -a - in t u : vi -inity.
Very v -apcttfully yours,
Al GiLMAN, I■, Broadwav.
I'o n. It. Steven-, Est>.
vehe Tm:
Is Sold by ail Draggists.
auTlt*-lm
i:--]**3, iv r.vj’
fcihalo,
js'a : aah ot, one . a names*
J 1 \ :. v : . rex . O.: t' 1 is a vvt-ll
Of * fi’iOTrr'uV, t Tari-.-nr e; ; • , ncsu-lio-'.
grai* a ant! str.'.w<tvric- . Acl -.‘paWo n!a% and
nrj am now Gr
it red to the trade.
For Sale.
Ho; -C id ;.ot on TlidTn-.ston irect, Barnes
v :le, Ga.—f acres land, snort sanlcn spot,
lot aad out liou..an. Asplentlnl trade eaufoe
mo dcalraUc l*n In
town. at. the price. Call aud see us.
For Sale or Rent.
/ DWiv.WNG.u rooms—dining and store
V / iv/iiu Cyan a a.; -;.= or j ncros, weil ot
■ i • !•■ i; vii'/-.
O-
Fn-p QHp *
J- Ui IOC-jLOj
r: - . .
t 1- Tfco.nastoii.
For Sale!
i \ s;>;.:;xi>ii) l 1 A> -.A’ .ON <•, :wi acres,
j . n:; ■■'•i i,ni; n river, la Monro*;
| county.
For Sale.
CI.MAi.!. led :1 AN!) LOT e nvciuu pt to bust
n i,t- : • ::• i !rrn‘ rfl*.- can tx.* ltomriit
cheap.
For Sale.
| >IiASTATION. . var MonticoUo,
O
Exchange.
i '(‘.; rt is (. i 11 ;<m e-r I.did nr foi
. . real c*.! ;<• pi Ur.: ■> a iSlr.
J. ( //. Si lUIAEL,
* . -r !• n. -c.liU*. (i.i.
SK',U id ><+l* im .-id. •. Cos, New Vork, fo
t.: i. • curtaining il!t ft
, und . ..iv.u a cort of adver
tising. * m I.Hi-ly
Job Work
N. ViLY EXECUTED AT THIS OFFICE.