Macon daily enterprise. (Macon, Ga.) 1872-1873, April 03, 1873, Image 1

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Stevenson & Smith, Proprietors, THE LOVES Or HVBON. IDEATH OF THE COUNTESS GUICCIOLI ; ONE OF HIS CHARACTERS. Prow the New York World.] In reading of the death of this cele brated lady, which event is recorded in a ■dispatch from Rome, the mind instantly reverts to those palmy days of her beauti ful and fascinating womanhood when she drew to her side and retained there until his death the gifted Lord Byron. Theer must have been something truly enchant ing in the charms of the Countess Guic cioli —charms not only of the person but of the mind—to have so influenced Byron as to lead him from the path or an appa rently reckless career of dissipation and misanthropy into a life softened almost to repose. But because she did so. and be cause the poet has immortalized her in his poems, her name lias become histori cal and her death becomes a matter of general interest. The Countess Guiccioii’s family was a noble one. She was the daughter of the Count di Gambs, a member of the Itomau nobility, and was born at Romagna in the year 1800. Her education was accom plished at a convent, and she was still a resident within its holy walls when a mar riage of convenience was arranged for her tby her father, in pursuance of a custom at ithat time in vogue in Italy and elsewhere •on Hie Continent. She was not consulted *;veu ia the arrangement of this match, ;and the husband who had been selected for Bier was the Count Guiccioli, of Ravenna, a rich man of some literary taste, and who had' been the friend in life of Albert, the distinguished Italian author, but who added to his sixty years the unsavory memory of having possessed two wives. This was the practical, uxorious person into whose t keeping was consigned the beautiful, fer vvid, romantic young woman who, at the j'*ge of eighteen, was taken from the con v/ont’s seclusion to assume t;Ue duties Ufa wife. . | At 'the time of this marriage Lord By- ■ ron, whose destiny was afterwards to be interwoven so closely with hers, was living in Venice, running the gamut of a wild licentiousness in that city of dissipations which astonished even the Venetians ithemselves, experts as they were in the .evil courses that he affected. Still dwell ing with a sort of gloomy recklessness mpon his separation from his wife, an event \ which had occurred three years before, when, in 1810, he had left England never Uo return again, Lord Byron, after two off such a life, met tiie Couutess iu Venice, whither she had gone with lb® r husband. This was in April, The meeting between the two was shortly f "Lowed by the sudden growth of a mutual affection. We write now of facts without weighing the conduct of either in the scale of n.’O'ality. -Mme. Guiccioli, who was then n. neteen years of age, es pecially felt a wa. v ni attachment for the handsome, erratic genius whom chance had thrown in her wa_v. Frotu the first hour of their acquaintance she uqnyitted this impulse to control her, and writing long afterwards of this me’eting she t’ays; “ Ilis noble and exquisitely beautiful coun tenance, the tone of his voice, his manners, the thousand enchantments' that sur rounded him, rendered him no different and so superior a being to any' whom I had hitherto seen that it was .impossible he should not have left the most profound Impression upon me. From that evening during the whole of my subsequent stay i>t Venice, we met every day.” , Frotn Venice, afTter-a brief resistance, tbe Couut and Countess Guiccioli returned to the home of the Count in Ravenna. Be fore their journey’s end was reached, how ever, the Countess became seriously ill and when she arrived at Ravenna her sickness assumed so dangerous a phase that it was feared she would die. Then her thoughts reverted more strongly than be fore to Byron. In response to a letter which she wrote to him in which she bade him come and see her, Byron set out for Ravenna. Ilis reception by Count Guic cioli both astonished and embarrassed him. “ I can’t make him out at all,” he writes in one of his letters of this period ; “ he visits me frequently and takes me out (like Whit tington, the Lord Mayor) in a coach and six horaes The fact appears to be that he is completely governed by her—for that matter so am I. The people here don’t know what to make of us, as he had the character of jealousy with all his wives— this is the third.” Several months thus passed away in liavenna, Byron in the meantime paying court to the woman who had captivated and enhanced his fancy. He had dropped easily into the role of that product of Ital ian social life, the cavalier servenle, and to all appearances without any opposition from the easy good nature of Count Guic cioli. Then another change of residence was made, and the Count and his young wife journeyed to Bologna, whither they were followed by Byron, who went upon their invitation. But the thin disguise of decorum which had hitherto marked the relations of the poet with the Count and Countess was soon after abandoned, when Count Guiccioli returned alone to Ravenna, and with his consent the Countess accom panied Byron to Venice. About this time the Count, who seemed to view drifting events en hornme d'affaires, wrote to his wife in a very practical way, urging her to prevail upon Byron to let him have the sum of £I.OOO, for which he promised good security and an interest of five per cent. He insisted strongly upon thess terms, in case the loan should be effected, as he deemed it “disgraceful” to accept the money without these conditions attached to its acceptance. For some reason—perhaps a touch of jealousy, perhaps because of the advice of friends, or the ridicule of enemies—a few months after this event Count Guiccioli wrote to his wife to return to Ravenna.— About this time, also, Byron manifested a desire to go to England and to end the relations which he then sustained with the Guiccioli family. But as he was prepar ing for this return a letter came to him from the Countess in Ravenna which in duced him to change his mind. It was this circumstance which probably called forth the subsequent charge in some quar ters that it was the Countess who inter vened to prevent a reconciliation between Byron and Lady Byron. However true or false this charge may be, it is certain that Byron reconsidered his purpose, aud that instead of departing for England ho weut once more to liavenna, where, hiring a suite of apartmeuts iu the Count’s palace, he again took up his abode with the family. The connection which had apparently been authorized by the Count when he permitted the Couutess to go with Byron to Venice was maintained without reserve in Ravenna. Byron weut publicly into society with the Countess, and tire intimacy that existed between them was made no 'secret. As an evi dence of the curious social code which permitted such tilings without rebuke, and indeed welcomed exhibitions like these, a letter from Byron may be quoted, for he thus writes to a friend : ** .Nobody seemed surprised—all the women, on tlie contrary, were, as it were, delighted witli the excellent example.” But the period was now approaching when Count Guiccioli, becoming restive under the circumstances as they existed, was to make an effort to end the iutimacy. He soon after had a return of his jealous impulse, and quarrels aud disputes —fear- fully prosaic liuings to the fleecy cloud of romance which might be supposed lo represent the surroundings of the case — occurred between husband aud wife. The Countess finally applied for a separation from the Count, and after a lengthened consideration of the application by the courts her petition was granted. But in thus freeing herself from a marriage which at this time must have been more than ever disagreeable to her, she sacrificed that large portion of her liusbaud’s fortune which would have come to her as the wife’s dower. It is another curious fact to remark in his turn of affairs that the Wife’s conduct was upheld in the society of .Ravenna aud that of the husband de nopneed. From the Guiccioli palace the Countess removed to her father’s house, also in Ravenna. There was less need now of the observance qf those rules of public de corum which might have previously been exacted from her wedded condition, and at her father’s house, with the consent of her father and her brother, Byron visited her on tho footing of an acknowledged lover. Later, when in consequence of a political conspiracy in which they were engaged, the Count Oaniba and his son were expelled from liavenna, the whole family, the Countess included, were taken to Pisa by Lord Byron and there lived under his protection. It was here that the child of the twain, Allegra, died ; aud in 1522, when a .continued residence in Pisa, seemed to promise danger to the Gambas, they all removed to Genoa. Here were they living in 1823, in the month of July of which year Guiccioli aud Byron parted never to meet again, for in that month, burning with a poetic and sympa thetic ardor, he espoused the cause of the in their war of independence aud went/to Greece, where a few months after wards he died. A long ieierval in the life of the Coun tess of Guiccioli elapsed after the death of Byron before bar came was again brought before the public. In 1851, when she was fifty years of age, she contracted a second marriage, her kusband Laving v,,'n the Marquis do Boissy, French no ble .\od Senator of the empire. The Mar ouisVwd in 1866. Once again, however was She destined to be talked about, and this time * a connection with a subject which ■ old intimacy and scandal of h. younger years. In JobJ S piled . w cued -My Keco - lections of Lord Those of Lye^ witnesses of His L j. l * lß w . Ol . „ anxiously expected, disappom expectations of the pu v )'^ o . find in it a clearer ins V* 1 iato B .i rro ?. s life of those days and perhaps a jcve a tion of the mystery of his reparation u out his wife ; but it was silent .o/> fbis subject, and its contents were main'J.v t'.'Ose oi a woman who even in her old agff proud of the young love of thO noble p. and who showed that she was not yet ol * enough to forget a liason that has been the talk of half a century. During a protracted religious revival at Cbittenaugo, N. Y., one of the preachers improvised hymns tor familiar seculiar airs, such as “ The Flying Trapese,” “ Walking Down Broadway,” “ On the Beach at Long Branch,” and the like, while “ refreshments were served to con verts gratis.” If this thing of offering a “ free lunch ” as an incentive to religion should be persisted in, the world may be saved yet. —Courier Journal. The San Francisco Alta says that the general prospects for the yield of the fruit crop of 1873 in California are good, so far as circumstances permit the formation of an opinion at this time. The orchards generally are in good condition, and are rather backward in budding, so that there is less than usual danger of frost. In sev eral districts the almond buds, and in the Sacramento Valley the apricots, have been severely bitten, and the apricot crop will probably be short. The critical pe riod for the grapes does not begin till the middle of April, and it lasts a little more than a month. Most of the vineyardists have finished their pruning. Death of Twelve Thousand lloos in Obegon. —The Portland Connecticut Reporter estimates the number of hogs slaughtered in Oregon, in excess of last season, about 12,000 head. The total number of hogs in the State, January 1, 1873, fs estimated at 153,100, against 158,- 400 at same time last year ; and of Sheep, 534,800, against 486,200 same time last year. MACON, GA„ THURSDAY, APRIL 3, 1873. IMPORTANT TO CAPITALISTS! r p JL HE City Rank is authorized to receive sub scriptions for the State Ronds authorized to be issued by an Act of the last Legislature. The Bonds to have the following strong points to commend them to such as are seek ing investments: They hear eight percent, interest. They are free from nil taxation, and lrrepeal uble provision is made in the act of authoriza tion for the prompt payment of the interest aud tiie Bonds as they fall due. Wall street says tiie State of Georgia has no credit since the report of the Bond Committee in 1 i72. Georgians, hurl back this libel on your fair fame by promptly taking up this loan in the interest of your State, lnurdl C. A. NUTTING,-President. CROI’Y (OFpO Clover and (J mss Seeds. KED CLOVER, CRIMSON CLOVER, SAPLING CLOVER, ORCHARD GRASS BLUE GRASS, HERDS GRASS, LUCERNE SEED, &c., &c. Just received, HUNT, RANKIN & LAMAR, Wholesale Druggists, 146-156 82 and 84 Cherry Stren. Claims Against Bibb Cos. A LI, persons holding claims of any kind ugainst the County of Bibb, arc notified to tile them (or tiie amount of their claims and on what account) with A. B. Boss, Clerk, by or before tiie first Tuesday in April next, in order that provision may tie made for payment. All that are not filed within the time above spec ified (unless on good cause being shown for delay) will be postponed iu favor of thosu tiled agreeably to this notice. By order of the “ County Board of Commis sioners for the County of Bibb. A. B. BOSS, mart) 2aw-til aplj Clerk. CHANGE OF SCHEDULE NO CHANGE OF CARS BETWEEN AU GUSTA AND COLUMBUS. GENERAL SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE, Georgia Central Railroad, Savannah, September 27, 1872. ON and after^unday, the 16th inst, Passen ger Trains on the Georgia Central Rail road, its branches and connections, will run ns follows : UP DAY TRAIN. Leave Savannah 8:45 A M Leave Augusta 9:00 am Arrive at Augusta 5:30 P m Arrive at Miliedgeville 11:55 p m Arrive at Eatouton. 1:50 am Arrive at Macon 7:15 pm liaye Macon for Atlanta 10:00 p m Leave Macon for Columbus 8:05 pm Arrive at Atlanta 6:00 a m Arrive at Columbus 5:00 a m Making close connection with trains leaving Augusta, Atlanta and Columbus. DOWN DAY TRAIN. Leave Atlanta 1:45 am Arrive at .Macon 7:45 a m Leave Macon 8:00 am Leave Augusta 9:00 a m Arrive at Augusta 5:30 pm Arrive at Savannah 6:15 P M This train connects at Macon with the 8. W. Accommodation train leaving Columbus atß:2o yU, aud arriving at Macon at 4:45 am, and wmkes the same connection at Augusta as the ' nl>y train. ut ' NIGHT TRAINS GOING SOUTH. . 7:00 P M Leave , wus.ta 8:15 pm Leave Al %ya#inah 4:30 a M Arrive at fc 5:30 A M Arrive at Ma. w Atlanta 7:25 am Leave Macon K • Columbus 5:45 am Leave Macon foi 11 -15 am Arrive at Column ’///,”7.7.7. J:2sf'M Ar . r . iv l °, at Atlanta.... connections at both Making prompt tbro. Atlanta und Columbia. _ Xfa NORTH. NIOHT TRAINS GOl. 410 PM Leave Columbus *"’’** 2:30 pm Leave Atlanta 9:35 p m Arrive at Macon from Columbus.. kyo p M Arrive at Macon from Atlanta ?ir, p m Leave Macon dj?- M Leave Savannah. ll:u ’£ * Arrive at Miliedgeville 11:55 a | Arrive at Eatonton 1:50 a. I Arrive at Augusta 0:20 a m 1 Arrive at Savannah 7:3oam Making perfect connection with trains leav ing Augusta. Passengers going over the Milledgeville and Eatonton Branch will (like the night train from Columbus, Atlanta mid Macon, day trains from Augusta and Savannah, which connect daily at Gordon (Sundays excepted) with the Milledge ville and Eatonton trains. An elegant sleeping ear on ail night trains. THROUGH TICKETS TO ACL POINTS can be had at the Central Railroad Ticket Of fice, at Pulaski House, comer of Bull and Bryan streets. Office open from BaMto 1r M, and from V, to 6r* sr. Tickets can also be had at De pot Offir*. WILLIAM ROGERS, inaitiO General Superintendent. Millinery and Fancy (Ms! MRS. A. BUXKXEY. Millinery and fancy goods, no. fi Cotton Avenue, near new Court-! louse. fcb3U-tf For over FORTY YEARS this PrßllLl’ VIiUIiTARLH LIVER MEDICINE has proved to be the Great linfHillnir Nprelflc for Liver Complaint and the painful offspring, DYSPEPSIA, CONSTIPATION, Jaundice, Billions attacks, SICK HEADACHE, Colic, Depression of Spirits SOUK STOMACH, Heart Bifii, Ac., Ac. After years of careful experiments, to meet a great und urgent demand, we now product) from our original GENUINE POWDERS, TIIU PRBPAREU, a liquid form of SIMMONS’ LIVER REGU LATOR, containing all its wonderful and val uable properties, and offer it in O.HK HOLLAR HOTTLKN. The Powders, (price as before) SI.OO perp’kge. Sent by mail 1.04 LAI TIOI ! ! _i*J Buy no Powders or PREPARED Si MMONS’ LIVER REGULATOR unless in our engraved wrapper, witli Trade mark, Stamp and Signa ture unbroken. None other is genuine. J. 11. KEILI.I A CO., MACON, GA., and PHILADELPHIA. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Jan 31-523 CASES AND CASKETS $W\ ' "''/l THE FINEST, THE BEST, TIIE CHEAPEST METALLIC CASES 'A N ]) C A S K E T S, WOOD COFFINS, CASES AND CASKETS, A T ARTHUK L. WOOD’S, Next to “ Lanier House.” Night and Sunday call* answered from the ‘‘Lamer House.” feblo-3m SALE OF UNCLAIMED FREIGHT Central Kailroadind Bankino Cos. of Ga., Macon, Ga., February 20, 1873. THE following unclaimed freight will be 6old at public outcry, on Wednesday, March 20, 1873, unless called for before day of sale: A & G—l bag Fepper. Bradfleld & Co—l package Merchandise. 1) M Burgay—6 Fish Baskets. 8 F Gilpin—l box Dry Goods. II L—l half barrel Fish. Diamond 11—1 barrel Sugar. S M Seisel & Bro—l barrel Flour. J C Kellogg—3 boxes Soda, 1 ditto Cards, 1 ditto Merchandise. J C Kellogg—lo boxes Merchandise. J C K—2 boxes Merchandise Rogers & C —l box Merchandise. No mark —1 bundle C Tics. Kingman & Koss (Clinton) —lbox Medicine. No mark —1 crate Starch. W A Hull—2 packages Blinds. J 8 Avera—l keg Syrup. G Burt —1 Pot. 8 T Horn—l Board (2 Saws), 2 boxes Axes. E Wiley—3 packages Bedsteads. K W Bonner—l Bread Bake. P M Harper—l Chair, 1 Stool. “ “ 1 bundle Bedding. J McCullough—l box Merchandise. BAKKON CARTER, fct)2B-tawlm Agent. REMOVAL. WE have removed our Saddle and Harries* Salesroom, Manufactory and Trunk De pot, from No. 38. Third street, to the elegant storerooms next to Seymour, Tinsley & Cos., where, with better facilities for display aud work, we hope, by strict attention to business and immediate suiiervision over the workroom, to deserve a share of the public patronage. We keep constantly on hand, Saddles, Bri dles, Bartless, Trunks, Whips, 1 raveling Bags, Shoe Findings, etc., both imported and of our our manufacture. Give us a eall and we guar antee satisfaction. W. L. HENRY & CO. "mar 6-1 n) IAAES H. BLOUHT- ISAAC HARDEMAN. IIJLOI/NT A IIA#BEMA3(, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, MACON, GEORGIA. OFFICE, at entrance Ralston Hall, Cherry street. 49-360 T. I*. COX, 1 ATTORNEY AT LAW, Ka i#ton Hall liulldingr, CHER RY STfv E E l> MACON - GEORGIA. 1 qjj * f .. „, ... -i ■ —— „ R L. L. JOHNSTON. f Zmm u d£ U citiaenjf of Mscon an- gflcond „tory ln No. 10 HolUngsworth Block, T gill, the rear. Residence, Second sU-e. feb 7-tf BREWERY BEER For sate Sole Agent, 4th st., betwevn Courturier’sand Lawrence’s, febkl-lm W. & E. P. TAYLOR, Cor. Cotton Avenue ami Cherry Street, DEALERS IN FURNITURE, CARPETS k RUGS, OIL CLOTHS, WINDOW SHADES, etc. .—. Metalic Burial Cases & Caskets, Fine and Plain Wood Coffins and Caskets. ISTOrders by Telegraph promptly attended to. 79tf IMPROVED &n GEAR. SOMETHING NEW. SUPERSEDES ALL OTHER HORSE POWER IT IS NO HUMBUG!! THE aettling of the Gin House floor ban no eflect on the Gearing. King Poet irf Iron and all the work bolted to Iron. IT IS MADE TO LAST, AND TO RUN TWKNTY-KIVE PER CENT. LIGHTER THAN ANY OTHER POWER IN USE. Cali aid see for youaaelf. I bui.u a Portable Horse Power that challenges all other MAKES, but it will not do the work with the same Druft that my PATENT GIN DEAR will. All kinds of Machinery made and repaired at 4 KOCKIITT'H IKON WORK* 108-180 Near Hrown House, Macon Georgia. RAILROAD TIME SCHEDULE. Change of Schedule. SUPERINTENDENT’S OFFICE. , South-Western Railroad Cos., r Macon, Ga., June 13, 1871. ) ON and after Sunday, 16th Inst., Passenger Trains on this Road, will bo run as fol lows: DAY EUFAULA PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Macon .... 8:00 a. m. Arrive at Eufaula . . . 4:42 p. m. Arrive at Clayton . . . 6:15 p. m. Arrive at Albany . . . 2:40 p. m. Arrive at Fon Gaines . . 4:40 r. m. Connecting with the Albany Branch Train at Smlthville and with Fort Gaines Branch Train at Cuthbert dally. Leave Clayton . . 7:20 a. m. Leave Eufaula . . . 8:60 a. m. Leave Fort Gaines . . . 8:35 a. m. Leave Albany .... 10:45 a. m. Arrive at Macon . . . 5:25 p. m. EUFAULA NIGHT FREIGHT ANI) AOGOMMODA- ’ TION TRAIN. Leave Macon . . . . 9:10 r. m. Arrive at Eufaula . . 10:20 a. m. Arrive at Albany . . . 6:45 a. m. At rive at Fort Gaines . . 11:52 a. m. Connect at Smlthville with Albany Train on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday aud Friduy nights, and at Cuthbert on Tuesday and Tliuasday.— No train leaves on Saturday nights. Leave Eufaula .... 5:15 p.m. Leave Albany .... 8:40 r. m. Leave Fort Gaines . . . 1:10 p. m. Arrive at Macon . . . 5:20 a. m. COLUMBUS DAY PASSENGER TRAIN. Leave Macon .... 5:45 a. m. Arrive at Columbus . . . 11:15 a. m Leave Columbus . . . 4:10 p. m. Arrive at Macon . . 9:35 r. m. VIRGIL POWERS, 69-1 y Engineer and Superintendent. Arrival* and Closing of* Malls. Arrive. Close. Macon <fe Augusta R. U. Way and Miliedgeville 7:40P. M. 7p. m. Augusta and Carolinas 7 p. m. Macon & Brunswick 2:25 p. m. 7a. m. Macoa and Atlanta and West ern States (Night Train)..7:3o a. M. 4:30 pm (Day Train).... 6:10 P. m. 6:10 a m Muscogee R. R. Way Colum bus 6 p.m. 7 p.m. S. W. R. K. (Day Train).... .4:35 r. M. 7a. m. Americas and Eufaula (Night Train) 7 P. M. C. R- K. Way Savannah and Northern (Day Train) 4:51 P. m. 7a. m. Northern, Savannah and Ea ton (Night Train) 5:15 a. m. 5:20 p m Hawkinsville daily (Sundays excepted 10:30 a. m. 2pm Clinton—Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday 12 m. 12:30 pm Jeffersonville and Twiggs ville, Wednesday 7 a. m. Wednesday, 2:25 v. For a clean and good shave, with good ra zors and clean towels, go to Mike Napier’s barber shop, fourth street, in the old wooden store next to Spotswood hotel. ALL KINDS OF I PRINTING | .* EXECUTED AT THIS OFFICE. Volume I. — Number 300 Change of Schedule. ON MACON AND AUGUSTA RAILROAD. FORTY-ONE MILES SAVED IN DISTANCE. Officii Macon and Augusta Railroad, I Macon, May 18, 1872. f ON and after Sunday, May 19, 1872, and un til further notice, the trains on this Ro*d will run as follows: DAT TRAIN—DAILY (SUNDAYS EXCEPT*!!). Leave Macon 8.80 A. M. Arrive at Augusta 1.15 p. h. Leave Augusta 12.15 P. M. Arrive at Macon 7.40 r. m. par Passenger* leaving Macon at 7.80 a. m. make close connection atCamak with day pas senger trains on tbe Georgia Railroad for At lanta and all points Weat; alao, for Augusta, with trains going North, aud with trains for Charleston; alao, for Athena, Washington, sad all stations on Ibe Georgia Railroal ISTTickcts sold and baggage chu zed to all points North, both by rail and by steamship* from Charleston. 24 lv 8. K. JOHNSON Suu’t Change of Schedule. MACON AND WESTERN R. R. CO., I Macon, Ga., November 16, 1872. l ON and after Sunday November 17, the fol lowing schedule for Passenger Trains will be observed oa tills road: DAY PASSENGER. Leave Macon 7:25 a. m. Arrive at Macon 7:45 a. m. Lcavu Atlanta 1:45 a. m. Arrive at Atlanta..' 1:25 p. m. NIGHT PASSENGER. L<uve Macon 10:00 p. m. Arrive at Macon 8:20 p. m. Leave Atlanta 2:30 p. m. Ai rive at Atlanta 6:00 a. m. Making close connections at Macon with Central Railroad for Savannah and Augusta, and with Southwestern Railroad for points in Southwest Georgia. At Atlanta with Western and Atlantic Railway for points Weat. A. J. WHITE, nov2tf Superintendent. ~ EDWARDSPRINZ, XTOTARY PUBLIC and EX-OFFICIO JUB - TICE OF THE PEACE. I can be found for the present at all hours of the day at my offi e adjoining the law office of A. Proudflt, over the store of Jaquea & Johnson, Third St., Macon, Ga., to attend to all Magisterial busi ness. US-880. . BUY ME, AND TBY ME, AND I WILL DO YOU GOOD! JACKSON’S MAGIC BALSAM—the great master of Pain. Cures Toothache iu one minute; Headache in five minutes ; Neuralgia in ten minutes; Rheumatism (acute) In forty eight hours, and the worst chronic in four days. Sold by all the principal druggist* at2s eta., 50 cts., SI.OO and $5.00 per bottle. P. VAN ALBTINE, Proprietor, mar3 tf Barnes vilie, Ga. JNO. B. WEEMS, ATTORNEY YT LAW, OFFICE ON 3d STREET OVER 1.. W. RASDAL'S STORE. 29-I*’