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J. A. HUNT,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
BARNESVILLE, Ga.
~IT T*ILL practice in the countie
YY comprising the Flint Judicia
Circuit, and in the Supreme Court of the
State. OOice over Drug Store of J.
W. Hightower. dec k 2-ly
m s. 'wwz r £&m%
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
1 >\ it NEsv I I.LK, <;A. Will practice in the
1 i counties of the Flint Circuit and lu the Su
pmneCourt of the State. sep2B-8m
BROWN’S OTEL,
Opposite Passenger Depot,
MACON, - - - GEORGIA.
E. E. BROWN & SON, Proprietors.
Board $3 per Day.
naayis-tf
Three Point* for Consideration.
During tnc past five years the Vegetine has been
Steadily working Itself iuto public favor, and those
who were sit first most incredulous in regard to its
in >rits sire now its most ardent friends and suppor
ters.
There are three essential causes for those having
such si honor of patent medicines, chsmging their
opinion and lending their iniluence toward the ad
vancement of Vegetine. It is an honestly prepared
medicines from barks, roots and herbs. 2n—lt hon
estly accomplishes all that is elsiimed for it, without
leaving and bad effects In the system. 3d It pre
sents honest vouchers in testimonials from honest,
wellkuown citizens, whose signatures ar a sufficient
guarantee of their earnestness in the matter. Tak
ing iuto consideration the vast quantity of medicine
brought conspicuously before the public through the
flaming advertisements in the newspsiper columns,
with no proof of what it has done, we should be par
doned for manifesting si small degree ot pride tu
presenting the sollowing testimonial from Rev. J.
H. Dickerson, D. If , the popular and ever-genial
pastor of the South Baptist Church, Boston :
The Tivel llody Sues For Sleep.
Boston, March 10, 1874.
IT. It. Stephens, Esq : , , ,
Dear Sir—lt is sis much from a sense of duty as
of gratitude that I write to say that your Vegetine
even it‘ it is a patent medicine lias been ot great
help to me when nothing else seemed to avail which
I could safely use. Either excessive mental work
or unusual care brings upon me a nervous exhaus
tion that desperately uceds sleep, but as desperately
defies it Night after night the poor, tired body
sues for sleep until the the dap-dawn is welcomed
back, and w e begin our work tired out witd an al
most fruitless chase after rest. Now I have found
tuuti . little Vegetine taken just before I retire gives
me sweet and immediate sleep, and without any of
the evil affects of the usuai narcotics. I think two
taiugi w’oum tend to m# brain workers sleep.
Ist—A little less wm** „and me. vr “".*tine.
This prescription)* r horror of ‘ patent Medi-
Now i have horror of being afraid to
cine,” but ou fa t truth . The Vegetine has
me, and I own it up. f ///”,* hson.
Vulnubie Evidence
The following unsolicited testimonial from Rev.
O. T. Walker, D. D., formerly pastor ot Bow din
Square Church, and at present settled in Providence
It. 1., must be esteemed as reliable evidence.
No one should fail to observe that this testimo
nial is the result of two years’ experience with the
use of Vegetine in the Rev. Mr. Walkeis family,
who now pronounces it invaluable;
PnovIdENCE, R. 1., 164 Transitt Street.
H. R. Stkphens, Esq ; .
I feel bound to express with my signature tne
high value I plsice upon your Vegetine. My family
have used it for the two years. In nervous debili
ty it is invaluable, and I reccommend it to all who
may need an iavigoratine, renovating tonic.
O. T. Walker.
Formerly pastor of Bowdon Sq. Church Boston.
The Best Evidence.
The following letter from Rev. E. S. Best, pas
tor M. K. Church, Natick, Mass., will be read
with interest by many physicians. Also those
suffering from the same disease as afflicted the
sou of the Rev. K. 8. Best. No person can doubt
tills testimony, and there is no doubt about the
curative powers of Vegetine:
Natick, Mass., Jan. l, ISi4.
Mr. 11. R. Stevens:
Dear Sir—We have good rerson tor regarding
vout Vegetine a medicine of the greatest value.
We feel assured that it has been the means of
saving our son’s life. He Is now seventeen years
of age; for the last two years he has suffered
necrosis of his leg, caused by scroffulous affec
tion, and was so far reduced that nearly all who
saw him thought his recovery impossible. A
council of able physicians could give us but the
faintest hope of his ever rallying, two of the
number declaring that he was beyond the reach
of human remedies, the even amputation could
not save him, as he had not vigor enough to en
dure the operation. Just then we commenced
giving him Vegetine, and from that time to the
present he has been continuously improving. He
lias lately resumed his studies, throw n away Ills
crutches and cane, and walks about eheefullj
and strong. ~ , _
Though there is still some discharge from the
opening where the limb was lanced, we have ttie
fullest commence that in a little while he will be
perfectly cured. ...
ne has taken about three dozen bottles oj \ eg
etlne, but lately uses but little, as he declares
that he is too well to be taking medicine.
Resp’t yours, E. 0. Bust,
“ Mrs. L C. F. Best.
Reliable Evidence.
ITS Baltic St., Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov., 14,1874.
11. R. Stevens, Esq.: „ ,
Dear sir—From personal bentlt received by its
use, as well as from personal knowledge sf those
whose cures thereby have seemed almost mirac
ulous, 1 can most heartily and sincerely reom
mend the Vegetine for the complaints for which
It is claimed to cure. JAMES P. LUDLOW,
Late Pastor Calvary Bap. Church,Sac’mento,Cal.
vwiirm:
Is Sold by all Druggists
dec 7-4 w
udliU Can’t be made by every agent every moutb
i u the business we furnish, but those wil
ling to work can easily earn a dozen dollars a da>
right in their own localities. Huve no room to ex
plain here. Business pleasant and honorable.—Wo
iueu, aud boys and girls do as well as men. W e vrill
furnish you a complete Ontflt free. The business
piyea butter than anything else. We willbear
expense of staring you Particulars free. Writs
a :i d Fanny ra and mechanics, their eons and
daughters, aud all classes in nec-d of paying w <? r, i at
lirnie, should write to us and learn all about the
work at oner, iiow is the time. Don t delay. Ad
dress rite l At C., Augusta, Maine.
mar kh am ho use,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA,
.1. E. OWENS, Proprietor.
pr - talcen to and from Depot afree
charge.
CHRONICLE & SENTINEL
IS PUBLISHED
Daily, Tri-Weekly and Weekly,
At Augusta, Ga., By
W aL$H & WRIGHT, Prop !*.
t.,,,1 Teteo-ranlilc Dispatches from all points.
sSsfssss
city.
GEORGIA AND CAROLINA NEWS A SPE
CIALTY.
Daily : One Year $lO 00 ; Six Months SSOO. Tbx-
Wkekly: One Year $5 00; Six Months
\Y ee sly ; One Y§ar $2 W; Six Moutha fi 00.
VOL. VIII.
Ciiive Willing Boys it dilutee.
ibe lesson inculcated in the fol
lowing brief sketch is worth study
ing :
A green rustic lad came years ago
to the metropolis from a Connecticut
village- At home lie had done
well in an honorable way, but lie
had shown no marked ability. lie
had heard aud read of the wonder
ful city. He made up his mind
he could do something in it. When
he reached the city no place seemed
open to him. Day after day he
hunted for business. Want stared
him in the face. He would not go
back to his friends. Dropping in
to a large dry goods house one day
in the search of work,he chanced to
come face to face with the proprie
tor.
“We have nothing for you to do,
sir,” this great business man said,
in reply to his inquiry* “But stay
—what can you do ?” he continued.
“You seem to bean honest looking
lad.”
“O sir, I can do any tiling—only
try me; only give me a chance to do
something 1” And the tears came
out and trickled down the cheeks
of the almost discouraged forlorn
boy though he tried as hard as he
could to repress them. “I will
take the poorest place and do my
best.”
He was engaged and set to work.
He was sent down into the cellar,
and commenced his busines career
in New York by pounding out
bent nails, which had been thrown
in a pile beside packing boxes, so
as they could be used again. This
was his work for two weeks, and
he barely kept body and soul to
gether on the pay he received.—
Then he rose to be a clerk ; and no
clerk was so hard-working, so
faithful, so interested in all this
great house as himself. Ho saw
his chance, and counted up in his
own busy brain every point in the
game.
Iu five years from that time he
sat on the manager’s seat, and ham
mered the crooked in and outs of
the business straight.
During his clerkship lie never
missed a day; aud no morning
wont by without his reporting at
seven o’clock. Ho navod
and prospered as the years went by.
ug Broadway to day, and you
1 VT ~ * ~i or ne in golden letters
over the entrance
largest and finest establishments.
In that building there are seven
teen million dollars worth of stock.
His trade extends all over the land.
His fortune is princely. And even
now, though the great merchant is
getting gray, and the old-time cn
ergy is waxing slow, anew light
will come into his eves, and anew
life to his form, when lie tells of
those past days of striving, and
says to the young men around
him:
“Work, if you would succeed.
Bea tiue, faithful, earnest clerk, if
you would become a merchant of
position and importance.”
“Bulldoze.”
We observe that many of oar
contemporaries got the word built
dozed into their dispatches and edi
torials as “bull-dogged.” We gave
the etymology of the word a few
months ago. It is a Louisiana
word of negro parentage. Last
spring, in the parishes of East and
West Feliciana and East Baton
Rouge, large numbers of negroes
began to join tLe Democratic party.
The Republican leaders determined
to put a stop to it. and formed se
cret societies fer the purpose of
whipping in the blacksliding no*
groes. Among these were the fa
mous “Union Rights Stop” at
Mount Pleasant, on the river,
which caused so much trouble, and
was finally broke up by the Sheriff,
and their oaths, by-laws and list of
members capturcl. Their plan of
action was to sp;t a colored man
who was suspeded of Democratic
proclivities, then serve a notice on
him to come to aeertain point and
take the oath of he brethren of the
Union Right Step. If he did not
come, they ?erv(d a second notice,
then a third without a threa?, if he
still refused a detachment of the
brethren w.s sent after him, at
night, and te was brought in tied
and hand.affed. lie was then told
to sign the-hop and take the oath.
Usually trror made him comply
but if he ifused he was put down
and whippe with a bull whip un
til he comnted to join the league
or leave tb State. In very obsti
nate cases te brethren were in the
habit cf adnnistering a bull's dose
of several mndred lashes on the
bare back. When dealing with
those whowere hard to convert,
active meibers would call out,
‘give me tl whip and let me give
‘im a bulldse.” From this it be
came easy I say “that fellow ought
to be bulldsed, or bulldoied,” and
soon bulldfe, bulldozing and bull
dozers cac to be slang words.
After theexposure of the Union
Rights Sto, the Republicans of the
THOMASTON. GA.. SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY (i, 1577
State sought to turn the force of the
The translation of the Bible by
Julia Smith, one of the Glastonbu
ry Smith sisters, is now finished
and for sale. It is the first trausla
tion of the Bible ever made by a
woman, and she acquired all her
knowledge of Hebrew, Greek, aud
Latin, mainly by her own effort at
a time when no college admitted
women.
Poetry or the Throttle Valve.
Not long ago an engineer brought
his train to a stand at a little Mas
sachusetts village where the pas
sengers have five minutes for lunch.
A lady came along and said : “The
conductor tells me the train at. the
junction in P. leaves fifteen minutes
before our arrival. It is Saturday
night: that is the last train. I
have a very sick child in the car,
aud no money for a hotel, and none
for a private conveyance a long,
long way into the country. What
shall I do?”
‘Well/ said the engineer,‘l wish
I could tell you.’
‘Would it be possible for you
to hurry a little ?’ said the anx
ious, tearful mother.
‘No, madam, I have the time ta
ble, and the rules say I must run
by it.’
She turned sorrowfully away,
leaving the bronzed face of the en
gineer wet with tears. Presently
she returned and said, ‘are you a
Christian ?’
‘1 trust I am/ was the reply.
‘Will you pray with me that the
Lord may in some way delay the
train at the junction?’
‘Why, yes, I will pray with you
but I have not much faith.
Just then the conductor cried,
‘All aboard.’ ’The poor woman
hurried back to the deformed and
sick child, and away went the train
climbmg the grade.
‘Somehow/ said the engineer,
‘every thing worked like a charm.’
As I prayed I could not help
letting ray engine out just a little.
We hardly stopped at the first sta
tion, people got; off and on with
wonderful alacrity, the conductor’s
lamp was in the air in half a min
ute, and then away again. Once
over the.summit if, was difiadful
easy to give beer a tittle more, and
then a little more, as I prayed she
seemed to shoot through the air
like an arrow. Somehow 1 couldn’t
u '~>ld her knowing I had the :road,
and so we daeihed up the junction
six minutes luead of time.
There stood the other train, and
the conductoir with the lantern on
his arm. ‘Well/ said he, will you
tell me what I am waiting for.
Somehow X felt I must wait for
your coming to-night, hut I dont
know why. ‘I guess said the oth
er conductor, it is for this poor wo
man, and her sick and deformed
child, dreadfully anxious to get
home this Saturday night.’ But
the infra on the engine and the
grateful mother think they can. tell
why* the train waited.
Vulgar Word*.
A distinguished author says: “I
; resolved, when I was a child, never
to use a word which I could not
pronounced before my mother
, without offending her.” He kept
his resolution and became a pure
minded noble honored gentleman.
His rule and example arc worthy
i of imitation.
Boys readily learn a class of low,
vulgar words and expressions
which are never heard in respecta
ble circles. The utmost care on
the part of parents will searelv
prevent it. Of course, wc cannot
think of girls as being so much ex
posed to this peril. We caunot
imagine a decent girl usingwords
she would not give utterance to be
fore her father or mother- Such
vulgarity is thought by so me boys
to be “smart,” the “next thing to
swearing,” and yet “not so wicked.
But it is a habit which leads to
profanity and fills tho mind with
wicked thoughts. It vulgarizes
and degrades the soul and prepares
the way for the gross aud fearful
sins which uow corrupt society.
Cheerful Country Homes.—
Make farm-life attractive to the
young people. The country is na*
lure’s great laboratory, and the
place of all others where the. study
of the natural sciences can be most
agreeably pursued; but there must
be teachers before we can expect to
have many scholars. The very
branches of natural science a
knowledge of which would, doubt**
less be the most beneficial to the
farmer, are the ones most generally
neglected. Time and again, our i
scientific men thought the day had
arrived for periodicals devoted en*
tirely to botany, entymology, mi
croscopy and kindred branches of
natural science, but nearly every
attempt to publish them has been,
met with cold indifference, or with
utter refusal on the part of our far
mers to give them the least sup
port.
Young men seek the cities and
villages more for the knowledge
they can obfain, than for any other
motive. It is certainly not to get
rid of labor, for the successful city
man works a greater number of
hours than the farmer ; and it is
doubtful it the kind of labor is any
the less exhausting. But the couii
try boys find in the city opportu
nites of obtaining knowledge of men
and things in general, from which
he is debarred on the farm, and
these help to fill up and make his
life complete. If he is naturally
inclined to evil, he can find it at
hand in every shape, and more
abundant in cities than in the coun
try, and the same is true iu regard
to literature, the arts and sciences.
Make the rural home attractive ;
let the light of intelligence beam
upon the family ; secure good pa-*
pers, good books, music, and en
tertaining society, and the young
men will not be tempted to roam
from the farm and its enjoyable
old home, to seek for mental and
social development among the al
lurements and pitfalls of cities.
Iniliorlaiu’C of Home Paper,
The importance of home paper
to the village or county where pub
lished cannot be estimated. The
home news is something that peo
ple cannot dispense with and which
they cannot buy elsewhere. An
exchange thus fairly presents the
question :
“For various reasons their cities
can send out their news at quite as
low prices. Families can be fur
nished with a knowledge of all the
world for two dollars a year and
postage. But there is something
they cannot buy in New York or
Boston—local matter out of which
come interest, and enterprise grows;
it is the local newspaper which
gets at the knowledge of particular
necessities to the value of individ
ual persons and means. All the
improvements begin in our small
centres—becomo important, forces
by personal application and of pub
lic value by the fostering care and
attention of the local press. Then
the local press is such an individu
al power as cannot be easily swung
into line to the help of selfish out
side nurno.-e. A town’s interests
are aft closely mr,. rmmron
those of these home organs of indi
vidual expression and country en
terprise. Persons that neglect these
for the large bids of city dailes are
like the housewife who neglects her
own fireside for the cares of
other people.
The Calamity of the Age.—
All the later reports of the Bengal
cyclone confirm the first statements
made of its magnitude, and its fa
tal results cannot be estimated by
any facts or figures. The loss of
life is put at over two hundred and
fifty thousand, being two-thirds of
the population. This trouble, re
marks the Baltimore Sun, follows a
long era of famine there, and the
people of India generally rightfully
feel that they have been severely
afflicted of late years. We know
of them only through their trou
bles, through they number a quar
ter of the whole human race, and
take interest in them only when
we have news of some calamity af
fecting them. The cyclone, their
last visitation, Tanks among the
memorable events of human iiisto
ry. No calamity since the des
truction of Herculaneum and Pom*
peii has been so terrible in its re
sults.
Senator Conkling on the
Counting of the Electoral
vote. —The Washington corres
pondent of the Baltimore Gazette
says he has it from the very best
authority that Senator Conkling
has prepared an argument on the
constitutional right ofCongresto
decide upon the validity of the
electoral returns, and that he
plumes himself upon it being the
greatest effort of his life. lie will
maintain that Congress has the
power to throw out votes —to go
behind the returns of the electoral
college and examine into the whole
subject of the election. He will
moreover, maintain that the Presi
dent ot of the Senate is a mere min
isterial officer, and that his duty is
solely to open the packages and
hand thecentents to the tellers ap*
pointed by the two houses. At
the first great opportunity which
offers Mr. Conkling will get his
speech off.
In a play in which Cleopatra was
the heroine Vancauson, the celebra
ted maker of automatons, had been
entrusted with the manufacture of
the asp, which hissed loudly as the
principal actress placed it at her
breast. A critic being askod what
he thought of the piece, replied dry
ly, ‘T agree with the asp.”
Jenrde June thinks a knowledge
of cooking is what the poor need
most. We don’t like to dispute
with a 1 ady.,but it seems to us some
thing to cook might be as necessa*
ry.
The latest “Southern outrage”
took place in Ohio. A negro nam
ed Crutcher was hanged by a mob
near Nicholasville, on Thursday
night, for an attempt at outrage
upon a iwhite Woman. The peo
ple of Ohio do not show so much
self-restraint as the people of South
Carolina under circumstances like
this. They promptly “lvnchod the
nigger” for a mere attempt at rape.
But iu South Carolina, where a
horrible outrage like this was con
summated in all its brutal atrocity
and the perpetrators were arrested
they were rescued by the Radical
negroes, one of the constables kill
ed and one of his posse. Then the
matter was considered judicially
settled. The criminals escaped
punishment and the Northern pa
pers, by an inversion of facts, con
verted it into a genuine KuKlux,
shot gun Southern outrage, well
calculated to “fire the Northern
heart.”
A distinguished citizen, who has
enjoyed the friendship and intima
cy of the best men in the best days
of the government, is in the habit
of speaking of events which took
place before the present party came
into power as having happened “in
the days of the republic.” “And
pray what Mr. ,do you call
these present evil times? The
day s of the empire ?” asked a friend.
“No; the days ot the vampire,”
was the prompt rejoinder.—Wash
ington Union.
Immigration to the United States
continues to decline, aud it begins
to look as though it were uear its
end. There was a falling off of 22,
000 arrivals for the year ending
November 1, 1870, the number of
immigrants for that rear being 62,-
550 against 84,560 for the proceed
ing year. Estimating the value of
an average immigrant at $1 000,
the standard generally accepted in
our commercial calculations, the pe
cuniary loss involved in this falling
off is $22,000,000. In 1872 the
number of immigrants who arrived
on our shores was 284,581 —a num
ber which appears enormous when
compared with the insignificant ar
rivals cf last year.
Several years ago the wife of
Alonzo Hayward, of fcjan Francis
co, obtained a divorce from her
husband, and received from him a
full half of his property, then
amounting to many millions of dol
lars. Since the separation his cir
cumstances have undergone a great
change for the worse, and his di -
vorced wife has repeatedly offered
him a large part of her portion.
As lie persistently refuses to accept
a cent of it, she has altered her
tact, and courted him so warmly
that their re-marriage is reported
as soon to take place.
“Of all things,” exclaimed a
most elegant and refined gentleman
after nearly a lifetime’s familiarity
with the best society—“of all
things giv'e me softness and gen
tleness in a woman.” Above all
other requisites in a woman is con
scientiousiiesss. Without this one
touchstone of character, no matter
what her charms and acquirements
she cannot expect to command the
least regard of any man whose love
is worth having; with it, exercised
to its fullest extent, she inspires a
love which is as enduring as it is
real.
exposure by applying the term to
all sorts of intimidation. Hence,
when they say that they mean to
exclude the “bulldozed parishes,”
it simply means parishes where in
timidation is alleged to have occur
red.—New Orleans Times.
Said Mrs. Partington : “You sec
that blessed man that preached for
us last Sunday ?' Well, he was
first a circus rider, then a locust
preacher, and now he's an exhaust
ter.”
Club Talk.— “ You’ve heard
Brown’s married again ?” “No ?
Has he ? Stupid ass ! He did’nt de
serve to lose his first wife.”—Punch.
Lemon Cake. —Three cups sm*
gar, one cup butter, one cup milk,
five eggs, one teaspoonful of soda,
four cups of flour: peel and then
grate three lemons, with very little
of the rind.
Delaware still clings to the whip
ping-post, and claims that it is an
institution more volliable in purg-*
ing the State of tramps and thieves
than a large force of mounted police
would be.
It is very significant fact that,
while there were nearly ten mil
lions admissions to the Internation
al Exhibition at Philadelphia, there
was not a single arrest for intoxi
cation on the grounds.
A boy who keeps his honor
bright, however poor he may be in
worldly things, is an heii to an in-,
heritance which no riehes can buy
—the choice promise of God.
The Singer Sewing Machine!
THE PEOPLE’S FAVORITE!
Flip Largest Snips!} because { The Most Popular!
I3F*The Most Popular Because The Best!
VERDICT OF TIIE LADIES.
—that largvly uml steadily increased every year, uoiaterrupudlv
“! s-ra s?3
JSeMing Afacliiite
in> * other 1 ui auiifacloredl**’ “* *‘ sUmatlo ' i of "* 0f the country. It is Superior lo
The following returns of sales tell the story:
‘ •UtbINUER 1:11,‘4(10 ‘419,75a, ,‘44'4.11l -411 .7J|‘4 19.854.
Sales still Increasing! All CompetitionPistanced!
vEa “ e *‘ reM3 - “ u,c ''' <**
The Singer ManufacturinglCompany.
H. C. TURPIN, Agent,
80 Mulberry Street, Macon, C*.
•F. Jt. IX HON, Agent lor Pike county. auglo-tf
FURNITURE! "' FURNITURE
CASTLEBURY & CO.,
Wholesale and Retail Dealers,
cHL £4 n TLH. jP at C 5 "t TOL 1? €3 i.® & <f> £
COMMON , MEDIUM AND FTNE
furniture.
$30,000 WORTH
Now in Our Two Stores —42 & 44 Whitehall Street, and
Corner Marietta and Peachtree Streets.
o
CHAMBER, PARLOR AND DINING-ROOM SETTS
In Endless Variety !
Manufactured in Atlanta, Ga !
OF THE BEST AMERICAN, ENGLISH AND FRENCH WALNUT.
STEAM FACTORY,
CORNER HARRIS AND BUTLER STREETS,
CASTLEBURY & CO ,
nov23 ' lf ATLANTA GA.
DART & REYNOLDS,
(A. A. DART.)
BUILDERS OF
Light Carriages,
* 4
NEW HAVEN, CONN.
Manufaclure work expressly for the SOUTHERN MARKET,and
from long experience are thoroughly convtrsant with the requirements
of the country. r !he work itself used in every Southern State is its
recommendation, and renders a detailed description unnecessary
We also manufacture the CELEBRATED
DEX T E R
WA GON
Now on exhibition at the Centeunial. The best, easiest, and most du
rable vehicle in existence.
For Circulars, dr., apply as above*•
octy-lf
CHAMBERLAIN, BOYNTON A CO.,
OO ami 68 Whitehall Street, Atlanta, Da..
HAVE RECEIVED THEIR SECOND STOCK THIS SEASON AND HAVE IN THEIR DRV GOODS
DEPARTMENT ONE OF THE MOST COMPLETE STOCKS OF
Stiiple and Fancy Dry Goods,
BLACK AND COLORED SILKS AND FINE
DRESS GOODS AND LADIES’ CLOAKS
EVER OFFERED IN THE STATE. SAMPLES SENT TO ALL PARTS OF THE COUNTRY ON
APPLICATION.
CARPETS NEVER SO CHEAP AS NOW !
N THEIR CARPET DEPARTMENT THEY ARE NOV. DISPLAYING AS ELEGANT A LIKE OF
Carpets, Shades, Oil Cloths, Rugs, Wall Paper and
HOU3E-FURNISHINO GOODS, AS CAN BE FOUND SOUTH OF PHILADELPHIA. LAMBRE
QUINS AND CORNICE MADE TO ORDER.
Cull and examine, or send crdois to
CHAMBERLAIN, BOYNTON &. CO.,
[nov!6-3m ] <SG & 68 WhittbalP'ig AtlantA,Ueerg;u
IMMENSE OISCOV
LHIEH Blf STANLEY AND OTHER.*, ABE ,irri
ADDED TO THE ONLY COMPLETE
life asi> LABORS of i.tvrNmroNL,
Thi veteran explorer rank* amotu the m et K.
row* fimirea of the century, and this N>.v T®?."®!
th nioet attractive, fascinating, richly iUnstraiad
and instructive v,Li.ee cver issu* L
only entire and autheaUcUfe. the millions
for it, and wide-awake aveut. .re w.nTj ZIN\ X
For proof and terms addrewi Hubbard Pro. IhiP
lisher*, ~Si San<oru street, I’biJa. r >
NO. 5