Newspaper Page Text
The Cartersville Semi-Weekly Express.
Published on every Tuesday I UmL Friday Morn iv«s
VOLUME X.
The (’nrtersvillc Express
T- every 'fl'KHi
'I»AV AND FRIDAY, By
S. H. 3MTTIT<fc Cos., Editors and Prop’rs,
in the town <>ii nirtersviile, Bartow County, G4f
Terr j to f ShibJorip<jcra :
ONLY $2 A YEAR!!!
isvAiriKi.rm .t» vange. ■
Tlntysilay M >*nlnjf Edition, one year) ..—.1.50
This latter pr ){>o*itk)ii is eon find to clti&eng
of llartour county only.
Terms of Advertising:
Tr<i (.0 tMouth, or pur sou are often
Solid Non park 1 or Brevier lines or less. One
Dollar for the l>r#t, and Fifty Cents foreaoh sub*
Jeouent, In»*n!U»ji.
Animal »r Cos itract, One Hundred and Twenty
Dollars per coiumn, or in. that proportion.
If.jofcssional' (far.ds,
John W. WofK»r<l,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
CARTKRSVILLE.. GEORGIA.
Office over Pinkerton's Drug Store. Got. It.
TT. T. WOEKOHA, A. P. WOFPOKrt
Woi inl A Wofford,
A!TORNEYS AT LAW,
CART EUSVIU.It, GEORGIA.
lune 23, IfWK
It. W. TI ii i*|>lir t y,
AITTORNEY AT LAW.
CAITEBSVIU.K, .... GEORGIA.
Will practice in the courts of the Cherokee
Circuit. Particular attention given to the col
lection of claims. Office with Col. Alnla John
son. * >ct. 1.
.Volin *l. Jours,
ATTORNEY \T LAW & REAL ESTATE AGENT.
CARTERSVILLE GEORGIA.
Will attend promptly to all professional husi
noss entrusted to hi> care; also, to the buying
and selling of Real Estate. Jan 1.
Jere. A. Howard,
Ordinary of Bartow County.
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA,
Jan 1,1870.
A. TV. Foil its
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
ARTXEBVILLE GEORGIA.
(IV/7A Col. Warren Akin,)
Will practice in the courts of Barlow, Cobb,
Polk. Floyd, Cordon, .Murray, Whitfield and ad
joining counties. March 30.
W. MILNER, O. H. MILNER.
Milliicr «fe Hiliiur,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
0 A RTERSVILLB GEORGIA
Will attend promptly to business entrusted to
their care. Jan. 15.
Warren Akin,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
CARTERSVI LK, ;.GEORGIA.
Will practice in all the courts of the State.
Nam. 11. Patillo,
Fashionable Tailor and Agent
for Sewing Machines,
WILL attend promptly to the Cutting, Re
pairing, and Making Boys’ and Mens’
Clothing; also. Agent, for the sale of the cele
brated Grover ,t Baker Sewing Machines. Of
fice over Stokely & Williams Store. Entrance
from the rear. ' feb 17.
W. R. UXonntcaatle,
Jeweler and Watch and Clock
Repairer,
CARTERSVI LI 8,. GEORGIA.
Office in front of A. A. Skinner .t Co’s Store.
Kcnnexavr House,
MARIETTA,... ......GEORGIA.
IS still open to the traveling public as well as
summer visitors. Parties desiring to make
arrangements for the season can be accommo
dated! Rooms neat and clean and especially
adapted for families. A fine large piar.za lvas
been recently added to the comforts of the estab
lishment. FLETCHER * FURY Ell,
jnncl9wtf > Proprietors,
S. (VSILIELDS,
Fashlonable Tailor ,
Cartersville, Georgia.
HAVE just received the latest European and
American styles of Mens’ and Iloys’ Cloth
ing, and is prepared to Cut and Making to or
der. Office upstairs in Licbman’s store, East;
side of the Railroad. sept. 29.
Dr. «T. A. Jackson,
PRACTICING PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
OF Fit 'K IN’ TUB XB W DRUG STORE.
CAKTEIWYILLE, ’ GEORGIA.
Jan 4th, 1871.
WM. 0 PiOWLEH
MANUFACTURER OF,
-Ajsnj) m,
SINGLE ANI) DOUBLE
HARNESS,
‘l f'
Saddles,
COLLARS, LEATHER.
RFJ'AIKI\« »U.\E
Willi neatness and dispatch.
m West-Main Street, »t)ar the old
Market HoW, CAUTERKVILLE. (tA.
feb 21-wly WM.O BOWLER.
- ■ *J» y > f i \ I /
“ UEAIt SHOff"V jSC
w. l mmmi
CART.iRfcjVILLE, G.V.
M/tuFAi TFftF.R of Harness, Bri
(V ■Mg* <BtSj Gear, etc*, ajp Dealer in
Sswldles, Leather.
Repairing doite on short notice. Work war
ranted to stand the test. Hides Wanted,
jau. 24, I&H.-swly
. -£/ i>l 1 M
T 0,1
y.gf DENTIST.
Cartcrsville, da
--ir '~ ; y 4 < Gf-i^
-, 3: J A- ,
Teeth drawn without pain, by the use oi nar
cotic spray. moh 9.
J. T. OWEN,
JEWELER, !
?Aain Street, Cartersville, Ga..
M ill turnish anything in his line as cheap as
't-'anbe bought .un> where;
customer- M a y S P° S L ready to serve his
Every thing warauted to give satisfaction.
READ
|T is well, toiwvtii to
J i>«vtoys and to L.ujyvs
tli.it Women are subject I ~.eg
to nfimeroue diseases pe- y j|4
cullar to tpeir, Sex —Mich <
as Suttpre-'ion of the /’A,ltTiir^njK&r. ...
Menses, Whites. J'aiuiui ; m r N?
M’nthly ‘Periods,’ Rheu- * A <
in at ism of the Back aful * ’ iSL
Woqp>. irtegnlar Men-,, \ 9f /
-truntlon. Hemorrhage, i AglipySv. ■ JpK>
or Exee--,ive ‘Flow.’ and --1 » A
Prolapsus I'terlor Fall- i !S5Sfg A
ing of the Womb. N*. vJSjjSF
ThesedDea-esliavfesel
dom been »»»ji#st®pessr U llf,. Tile jo-oftfrion
hsiasoughtdilligofttly for some rftnuxlrthat wo’ld
enable them to treat these diseases with success.
At last, that remedy has been discovered by
oue of the most skilful physicians in tile State af
Georgia. The remedy is
Bradfield’s Female Regulator.
It is purely vegetable, and is put up in Atlan
ta, by BRA I) FI ELD A CO.
It will purify the blood and strengthen the
system, relieve irritation of the kidneys, and is
a perfect specific for all the above diseases; as
certain a cure as Quinine is in Chills and Fevers.
tor a history of diseases, and certificates ®fitß
worderful cures, the render is referred to the
wrapper around the bottle. Every bottle war
ranted to give satisfaction or money refunded.
LaGbanar, (Fa.. March 23, 1870.
BRAD FIELD & CO., ATLANTA, GA.:
Dear Sirs: T take pleasure in stating that 1
have used, for the Inst twenty years, the medi
cine you are nuttingup, known as DR. J. Bit A.D-
FrELIPS FEMALE REGULATOR, and con
sider itthe best combination ever gotten to
gether for the diseases for which it is recom
mended. I have been familiar with the pre
scription both as a practitioner of medicine and
in domestic practice, ami can honestly say that
1 wonsidor it a boon to suffering females, and
can hut hope that every lady in one whole land,
who may be suffering in any way peculiar to
tne|r sex. may be able to procure a bottle, that
their sufferings may not only he relieved, hut
that they may he restored to health A strength.
With my kindest regards, r am, respectfully.
W. B. FERRELL, M. I).
We, the undersigned Druggists, take pleasure
in commending to the trade. Dr. J. BradfleUVs
Female Regulator—believing it to be a good and
reliable remedy for the diseases for which he
recommends it. W. L \ NS DELL
PEMBERTON. WILSON, TAYLOR & CO.
REJ>WIN E A FOX,
M-C. LAWSHE, Atlanta, Ga.
AY. ROOT A SON, Marietta, Ga.
An S with gentleness and thoroughness
upon the Liver and General Circula
*pß Bowels in Natural Motion
ann A 'causes the System from all imnuri
taiVs | —==r=Z= Never
vlylj?!’ 0. S. Prophitt’sj
. -—— —LI Enlarg
-IV5’ "Yspepsia, Indigestion, Loss of Ap
petite, Nausea, Sour Stomach. Heart Burn.
Debility, low Spirits, Cold Feet ami Hands,
Costiveness, Listlessiiess, Colic, Chronic
Diarrhea, and Chronic Chills and Fever.
■ 1 )nl Pruned in strict accordance with
skillful chemistry and scientific pharmacy, this
purely veg- . e tab 1 e
Compo un and I “~l } has
t h w o C nTvll CELEBRATED jest'test of
.. . . 1y ! »'years i 11-
ceasant Bse,| J —"——L _iflieen stvl
u\ the (jßkat Ukstorativk and Kkcuperant
hv the enlightened testimony of thousands us
ing it; so harmoniously adjusted that it keeps
the Liver in healthful action; and when the
ill!Cetions are olvspwptl t.hp, of’ wiasLp
ami replenishment in the heinan svstem con
tinues uninterruptediv to a ripe old age, and
man, like the patriarchs of old, drops into the
grave full of years, and without a struggle,
whenever, I |D k ath
claims his ' _ . . I 'preroga
t.vc.Ada-| iljiYcr Medicine.sipt ed to
the most! I Udclicate
tempera-~ ""~'!!L"!'!!*"*‘" l *~~nieiit, A
robust constitution, it can lie given with equal
safety and success to the young child, invalid
iadv or strong man.
jiiue 2,1871.
nn. o. s. phophitt’s
Anodyno Kill It.
NEVER FAILING!
RRLS FAIN I\ EVERY FORM.
Pi HR FIS Ptrinx hi the Park. Ghent, Gripe or
t y Ltmis, ' /ihnoriati*u>. Aimntlf/ia. Cattr/he,
Cohl*t, Bronchial Ajfttetionn. Kiitneii THeeaee*. />//*-
pepxia. Li nr Complaint ; Colic. Cholera. Cholera
Muriate. Pleuriey. Asthma, Heart Burn. Tooth
Ache, Jaw Ache, Ktir Ache , ILe-ad- Ache. Sprains,
Bruises. Cute. Contusions, Sores, Lacerated
Wounds, Scalds. Burns. Chill Blaine, Frost Bites.
I otsons, 0/ all ki/ids, vegetable or animal. Os ali
[|p A I Nf KILL IT’|j
the Remedies'ever discovered for the relief of
suffering humanity, this is the best Pain Medita
tor known to Medical Science. The cure is speedy
and permanent in the most inveterate diseases.
This is no hutnbug, but a grand medical discovery.
A Pain Killer containing no poison to iiillame.
paralize or drive the inflammation upon an in
ternal organ. Its efficiency is truly wonderful
—JIBUKF IS I NSTANT A>fEOlS. j It IS* dOstifieO’.tO
banish pains ami aches, wounds and bruises,
from the face of the earth.
fn*y <>, 1(671, , s «> r o-in«j•» 'f r i
CERTIFICATES:^
We, the undersigned, haved used Dr. Proph
et’s Prepanrtions, and take pleasure in recom
mending them to the public, as beiug all he
claims for them: r .
Uol. R J llendei'son/Coy ington, Ga.; G T Rog
ers, Covington, Ga.; 0,8 Porter, Covington, Ga.;
Prof. .J L Jones, Covington, Ga.; Rev. M W Ar
nold, Georgia Conference; Rev. W W Oslin, Ga.
Conference; FAT Swagaoii, ALonticello, Ga.; Ro
bert Barnes. Jasper County, Ga.; A MRobinson,
Monticello, Ga.; James Wright, Putnam County,
Ga.: A Westbrook, Putnaui couutv, Ga.; Jmlgc
J J Flovd, Covington, Ga.; W L Bebee, “Oov
lngton I - .nterprise,”; A TI Zachrv, Coiivers, Ga;
George Wallace, Atlanta, Ga.;' Dick' Lockett,
Daves county, Texas; W Haw k Whatley, Dus
seta, iexas; VV ( Linden county, Tex
as.; TOmmy A Stewart, Atlanta. Ga; W A Lans
dell. Druggist, Atlanta, Ga; R F Maddox A Cos.;
Atlanta, (La.; Uriah Stephens, Cartersville, Ga.;
AN Louis, Lowndes countv, Ga.; Joseph Land,
Lowndes county, Ga.; .las’. Jefferson. Carters
ville. Ga.; W L Ellis, Dooly county, Ga.; W A
Forehand, Dooly county, Ga.; John B. Davis
Newton Factory, Gil; B F liass, Lowndnes co.
Bridles,
GOWER, JONES & CO.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
And Dealers in
CARRIAGES, BUGGIES,
,/ANt>
1, 2 & 4 Horse Wagons.
MATERIALS, *C.
lIEPAIIIINO, of all kinds,- BONE
WITH NEATNESS and DURABILI
TY.
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
feb. 7, 1871.w1y
JftesT* Suits of Clothes from $2,00 to
SI,OO at
SATTEiiFEHJDi, PiRON & CoS.
carthrsviLli:, Bartow county, ueorcia, .iuly vui. isti.
~f~ ; *■“7'*"
Scl|txlul(‘ oi’.tlie
CA RTERSXILLE A YAN-WERT p. r.
January .2fHh, 1871, the trains
will 1 o {•(
Leare PA YLORsVILEE,.at J... # .9.30, \. M.
STir.ESlfoßO’. af........m. \. M.
• FORJtKST HILU at 10.25. \. M
Arriving at CA RTERSV 11.T.K, at,... .10.50. A M
Leave UA RTPRSVILLE, at . 1. I’. V.
Arrive at TAY UHtSV! LLE, at.;.. .3. P. M.
U will rtiwn be cunuyig fromCedaitown
to r,i viertfvllle via. Aan WCrl, connecting with
the trains.
An Extra train will be ru» to Cartersville and
Letirrn to J ayJnr-vitle, eVerv Friday evening.
By order of the President:] .
__ D. W.X. PEAQQCK, Sec’y.
change of schedule’.
WESTERN it- ATLANTIC li. R. CO.
NIGHT PASSENG ER *P R A IN'—Ortw a kt>.
Leaves. AH an ta, aip :io, p. *»
Arrives, at Chattanooga, .'..f, ifi, A . ir
bAy Passexg er v Pra 1 x-octw a rn.
Leaves Atlanta; ... g 15. A . M .
Arrives at Chattanooga 4 25, p. m.
fast line to new York—outward.
Leaves Atlanta ...2 45, p. m
AnTives at Dalton ..7 53, p. m"
NIGHT I’ASSENGER TRAlN—Jnward.
Leaves Chattanooga..., r . 20, l>. m.
Arrives at Atlanta ;. .... ......l 42, a. m.
day passenger train—inward. J
Leaves Cluittauooga 5 30, a. m.
Arrives at Atlanta 2 20, p. M.
ACCOMMODATION TRAIN-INWARD.
Leaves Dalton !. . 2 25, a. M.
Arrives at Atlanta ....9 10, a. m.
E. B. WALKER,
may 25, 1871. Master of Transportation.
Lawshe & Haynes, *
Have ox hand and are receiving
the finest stock of the
Very Latest Styles
of Diamond and Gold
jewelry,
in upper Georgia, selected, with eat care for
the
Fall and Winter Trade,
Watches,
of the BEST MAKERS, of both Europe and \-
merica;
American and French Clocks;
sterling and Coin Silver Ware*
and t he best quality of
Silver Plated Goods,
at prices to suit the times;
Gold, Silver and Steel
Spectacles,
to suit all ages.
XX r atclics mid Jewelry
Rkpafrsp by Competent Workmen;
Also Clock and Watch Makers
Tools and Materials.
sept 13.-swly ATLANTA, GA.
W. H. GILBERT. A. BAXTER, T. W. BAXTER, Jr.
GILBERT&BAXTEK,
(41TI 'CKSaOKS TO W Ts nil DUM £
Dealers In
HARDWYR E,
IKBX, STEEL, MILS,
CLOVER & GRASS SEED.
AGENTS FOR SALE OF
COAL CREEK COAL.
Peruvian Gruano.
And other Fertilizers.
Agricultural Implements,
Agricultural and Mill Machinery.
ALSO
GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANTS
For sale and Purchase of
COTTON, WHEAT, CORN.
And all other
Country Produce, Cotton, Hav
AND OTHER PRODUCE SHIPPED ON
LIBERAL TERRS.
GILBERT & BAXTER,
Cartersville Ga.
Jan. 19, 1871—ly.
JAS. W. STRANGE,
Dealer Iri, and Manufacturer Os
XIX WARE, AND
House-Furnishing’ Goods,
ALSO DEALER IN
First-Class Stoves At
The JLowcst Cash Prices .
, , (WILL BARTER
FOR COUNTRY PRODUCE, RAGS, AC.
Uartersville, Jan. 20th, ’7l-lv.
s. 11. PATTIAJLO, Agent
GROVER & BAKER’S CELEBRATED
Elf W ICHi.
BOTH THE
FXASTIC AND SHATTAE
LOCK STITCH,
SUITABLE FOR ANY KIND OF FAMI
LY SEWING- NONE BETTER.
Men and Boys 9 Clothing
Made on the Most Reasonable Terms.
In fact, almost any description of
SEWING clone
As Cheap as the Cheapo* !
AND
IN THE BEST STYLE.
Lyman Chapman,
Brick fttti Stoae
Mason,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
1‘ prepared to do any of the above work
upon short notice and at low figuers
BORGIA, RARTOW COUNTY.—T. M. Ste w
jfart has aoplied for exemption of personalty,
and I will pass upon the same at 10 o'clock A. m.,
on the 3rd dav of July, 1871, at my olliee.
June 21st, 187i.
J. A. HOWARD, Ord’y B. C.
u Oivvavil mid V~iv.rn ydP
SHARP & FLO YD,
Successors to Geo. SHAItP, Jr., >
ATLANTA) QA., 1
Wholesale And Retail Jewelers,
We Keep a Large and Varied Assortment of
FINE WATCHES, CLOCKS*, ‘
DIAMOXOS, JEWELRY,
AND
hl* no r v c
pa Will,
A SPECIALTY.
Wo Manufactuae Tea Sets, Forks Spoons.
Goblets, Cups, Kuiv'es, etc. :
i’»
Pentiums For Agricultuipil Jj'airg;
We arc prepared to fill any order for Fairs at
short notice; also to give any informati<pi iu
re<jard,to Premiums.
Orders by mail or in person, will receive
prompt and careful attention. We ask a com
parison of Stock, Prices and Workmanship w ith
any house in the State. * *
Watcbes and Jewelry carefully; Repaired
and \\ arranted. Masonic Badges and Sunday
School Badges made to order.
J&3T“ All Work Guaranteed. .ofJjSdi:
ENGRAVING FREE OF CHARGE.
SHARP & FLOYD.
M ay 23, swly.
. CONSUMPTION
Its Cure and Its Preventive
BY J. H. SCHENCK, M. D
MANY a human being has passed away,
for whose death there was no other reason
than the neglect of known gnd indisputably
proveu means of cure. Those near and dear to
family and friends are sleeping the dream less
Slumber into which, had they calmly adopted
Dli. JOSEPH H. SCHENGK’S SIMPLE
TREATMENT.
and availed themselves of his wonderful effica
cious medicines, they would not have fallen.
Dr. Selienck has in his own case proved that
wherever sufficient vitality remains, that vital
ity, by his medicines and his directions for
their use, is quickened into healthful vigor.
In this statement there is nothing presump
tuous. To the faith of the invalid is made no
representation that is not a thousand times
substantiated by living and visible works. The
theory of tlie cure by Dr. Schenck’s medicines
is as simple as it is ui failing. Its philosophy
requires no argument. It is self-assuring, self
convincing.
The Seaweed Tonic and Mandrake Pills are
the first two weapons with which the citadel
of the malady is assailed. Two-thirds of the
oases of consumption originate in dvspepsia
and a functionally disordered livei. With Uiis
condition the bronchial tubes “sympathize”
with the stomach. They - respond to the morbific
action of the liver. Here then comes the 'cul
minating result, and the setting in, with all its
distressing symptoms, of
CONSUMPTION.
The Mandrake Pills are esmposed of one of
Natures noblest gifts—the.P?d«'fl»Jj;Hmn Petta
altarative properties of calomel.
But unlike calomel, they
“LEAVE NO STING BEHIND,’*
The work of cure is now beginning. The
vitiated and mucous deposits in tne bowels and
in the alimentary canal are ejected. The liver,
like a clocK. is wound up. It arouses from its
torpidity. The stomach ads responsively, and
the patient begins to feel that he is getting, at
last,
A SUPPLY OF GOOD BLOOD.
The Seaweed Tonic, in conjunction with the
Pills, permeates and assimilates with the food.
Chylincation is now progressing without i.ts
previous tortures. Digestion becomes painless,
and the cure is seen to be at hand. There is no
more flatulence, no exacerbation of the stomach
An appetite sets in.
Now comes the greatest Blood Purifier ever
yet given by an indulgent father to suffering
man. Schenck’s Pulmonic Syrup comes in td
perform its functions and to hasten and com
pteto the cure. It enters at once upon its work.
Nature cannot be cheated. It collects and
ripens the impaired portions of the lungs. In
the form of gatherings,* it prepares them for
expectoration, and lo ! in a very short time the
malady is vanquished, the rotten throne that
it occupied is renovated and untile new, and the
patient, in all the dignity f>f regained vigor,
steps forth to enjoy thfe manhood or the woman
hood that was
GIVEN ITT AS LOST.
The second thing is, the patients must stay in
a warm room until they get well ; it is almost
impossible to prevent taking cold when the
lungs are diseased, hut it must be prevented or
a cure cannot be effected. Fresh air and riding
out, especially in this section of the country in
the winter season, are all wrong. Physicians
who recommend that course lose patients, if
their lungs are badly diseased, and yet because
they arc in the house they must not sit down
quiet ; they must walk aliom the room as much
and as fast as the strength will bear, to get up a
good circulation of blood. The patients must
keep in good spirits—be determined tq get well.
This has'a great deal to do with the appetite,
and is the great point to gain.
To despair of cure after such Evidence of its
possibility in the worst mikes, and moral cer
tainty m all others, is sinful. Dr. Sctionek’s
personal statement to the Faculty of his own
cure was in these modest words :
Many years ago I was in the lsist stages of
consumption ; confined to my bed, and at one
time my physicians thought that I could not
live a week; then, like a drowning man catch
ing at straws, I heard of and obtainod the pre
parations which I now offer to the public, and
they made a perfect cure of me, It seemed to
me that I could feel them penetrate my whole
system. They soon ripened the mutter in my
lungs, and I would spit up more than a pint of
offensive yellow matter every morning for a
long time.
As soon as that began to subside my cough,
fevei, pain and night sweats all began to leave
me, and my appetite became so great that it
was with difficulty that I could keep from
eating too much. T soon gained my strength,
and have grown in flesh ever since.”
“I was weighed shortly after my recOvoiy,”
added the Doctor, “then looking like a mere
skeleton; my weight was only ninety-seven
pounds ; my present weight is two huncired and
twentv-five pounds, and for vears I
“ ENJOYED GOOD HEALTH,”
Dv. Sehenck has discontinued his profess tonal
visit to New York and Boston, He or his son,
l)r. J 11. Sehenck, Jr..- still ! c»tvtiinue to see
patients at their office, No. 15 North Sixth street,
Philadelphia, every Saturday from ba.Nn.. fo3
p. in. Those who wish a thorough examination
with the Respirometer will be charged JKre
dollars. The Respiroinctor declares the exact
condition of the lungs, and patients can readily
learn whether they are curable or not.
Tho directions for taking" tire medicine are
.adapted to the intelligence even of a child-,
Follow these direetons, and kind nature will do
the rest, excepting that in some eases the Man
drake Pills are to be taken in increased doses ;
the three medicines need no other aecopipuni
ntents than the ample instructions that do
accompany them. First create. appetite. Os
returning health hunger is the most welcome
svmptoni. When it comes, as it win cmneylet
the despairing be of good cheer, Good blood at
once follows, the cough loosens, the night sweat
is abated. In a short time both of (hose morbid
symptoms are gone forever.
Dr. Schenck's medicines are constantly kept
in tens of thousands of families. Asa laxative,
or purgative, the Mandrake Pills are, a standard
preparation; while the Pulmonic Syrup, as a
curer of coughs and colds, may be regarded as a
prophylaeteric against consumption in any of
its forms. .
Price of the Pulmopio Syrup, and Seaweed
Tonic, st.so a bottle, or a half dozen. Man
drake Pills, 28 cents a box. For sale by all
druggists and dealers
bh JOHN E. MENItY,
EIGHT College Place, New York,
WIIOL ESA I. E AGENT.
NOTICE.
All PERSONS who remained Lovnl to the
United States Government during the late
war, and who furnished to. or had army supplies
taken, by the Federal soldiers. ( can team soiae
thing to'their interest bv calling upon mebv
the 27th inst. at my office in Gartersville. >
’iYaim agenHV
Carters ville. June TbTl.
[ : ohi x iv* y: . >
i fit,- —r fz.NE- ~-7r
The Love of the Period.
TIIE WOMLIX WRITES. b’
il’vejfistUft the ball-reotn, -J4nr starry,
To drop You this'bit of a hot 4,
i r •
WJiich the Captain has promised u> carry
direct by il»e four o'clock boa,t,
The season is c'‘Handy ’6veV;
Sue Summers' refused Colohel Chute ;
swear like a savage sea-rover
Because our affair follows suit.
I only engage 1 for a season; >
, You're the primest of partners I vow j
I 11, yell you directly the reason
I’m writing so hastily now.
Please send mo at once by Tom Tiuberene—
His whiskers are..simply divine—
My picture, that copy of Swinburne,
And everything else that is mine.
My letters, my notes, and that poem,
The one signed AnOhtma, dear; '
I know that you never would show ’em,
Ljust want to read them all here.
Oh! send me my pink satin slipper,
I know how to cover the stain—
You pulled off aud used as a dipper
To pledge, me in Cliquot champagne.
And Harry, be Sure to see Barker—
You would cut my curls off, you know,
If you send some half a shade darker,
The difference never would show.
Send ribbon and ring ; I think this is
The whole of the things I must ask,
I’m sure that to send back my kisses,
You’ll vote an impossible task.
Now Harry, don’t rage and be horrid—
Don’t bluster and swear and abuse—
Our love was deliciously torrid—
To crop it quite gives me the blues.
I’ve viewed it in every direction,
And find in its rapturous range
A prime, pantheistic perfection, -
Progressive, electrical, strange!
Yet I know that this bliss unalloyed.
If once I were bound as your wife,
Would fade in a fortnight, destroyed
By dullness of no-money life.
And so I’ve determined, dear Harry—.
As girls of the period do—
Although I shall certainly marry,
’Twill not be, my dearest, to you.
At the Arlington soirees next winter,
jwu most sureiy ue meic,
I shall be Mrs. Daniel McLintor,
He’s a horrid, hump-backed millionaire*
THE MAN ANSWERS.
I’ll answer your letter, my Julia,
For I can take oath you are mine;
Its tenor is coolly peculiar,
Though perfectly plain to define,
Its news was forestalled by a rumor,
Ed. Eavesdropper brought from the springs,
It put me at first out of humor, * ,•
And up to unorthodox things,
I hated, yon see, to surrender C'
What gave me such capital fun,
But I went on a regular bender, ;\ ;
And bent myself straight, fee the pun ?
V'.t ;A A r
I fear, in the first ebullition
Os rage, I was rather severe ;
Sent yourself and your sex to perdition,
And called you not pet names, my dear.
I thought a second of laudanum,
And wringing your heart, (?) and all that,
But’remember my wager with Hodman,
That Blank will be beaten a bat.
So calling philosophy’s aid up.
I put for an out and out smoke;
And the bender—not Grefcian—then madcap
My miud (he whole thing is a joke,
So I stopped being spooney and fussing,
And pulling a pitiful phiz,
And quitted my wickedest cussing,
More quicker than old Horace will his.
You shall have all your articles. Leastly,
The letters and poem I’ll keep,
For the Winter bids fair to be beastly,
And fuel, no end of, not cheap.
Your kisses ? To Tom I refer them; <
His whiskers 1 think rather foxy.
I’ll tell you the style you prefer them.
And thus make the transfer by proxy.
M tttM Waliwwi*
I went down to Barker’s by stages,
' As fast as a fellow can do ;
Biif though lie’s tile heir of the ages,
He’s now false enough, Jule. for you.
dr l»rH ** '. 'ii M . HiitJ
I swear you’rjp uncommonly lucky
To kn,ow how to cover a stain ,
But spite of your sweetness, my ducky,
Sdrifc vestige is bound to remain.
it *;» h It
I ll end our affair without snarling
And part, if we can, without strife;
But did you imagine, my darling,
1 wanted to make you my wife?
Give my pious regards to Mcßinter,
I dare say. I’ve writen it wrong ; /
I’ll play him a toss up next Winter
As to which of us two you belong.
i young lady was caught smok
ing a cigar by her maternal parent.—
Her excuse was it made her smell like
there was a young man about.
What a glorious work} this
would bp, if all its inhabitants could
say with Shakespear: “Sir, I am a
true laborer; learn what I wear; I 1
owe no man hate; enH no man’s hap- j
piness; glad of other men’s good; con
tent with my farm.” I
Where the Sun Never Sett*.
The fpilawiiig isj from the description
of a seeue witnessed by Mr. Campbell
aud party in the, Xpvth of ,Xunvuy #
from a cliff one thousand feet above
the sea: ' t . , |„ V; : t n
“The ocean .stretched away iu silent
vastuess at our feet; the sound of the
waves scarcely reached our airy look
out; away in the North the liuffe old
son swung low along tb© horizon, like
tko slow bent of the pendulum iu the
tall clock of our grandfather's puriur
corner. \Ve all stoo/I silent looking at
our watches. When both hands came
together at twelve, midnight, the full
round oxi) hung triumphantly above
the wave—a bridge of gold running
due North spanned the wa between
us and him. There he shone in silent
majesty that knew no setting. Wei
in voluntarily took off onr hats; aud
no wprd was said. Combine, if you
can, the most brilliant sunrise and
sunset yoii ever saw, and its beauties
will pale before the gorgeous coloring
which now lit up the ocean, heaven
and mountain. Iu half an hour the sun
had swung by perceptibly on its beat,
the colon? changed to those of morn
ing, a fresh breeze lippled over the
Hood, one songster after another piped
up in the grove behind us—we had
slid into another day.
Finery for Babies.
When will American mothers show
their good sense and dress their chil
dren plainly ? An underskirt is just
as useful entirely plain, as with innu
merable tucks aud ruffles; aprons soil
just as quickly with all the stitching
and ornamenting, as if without it.
We should avoid all this useless
work. A good sewiDg machine used
to perform the sewing of plain gar
ments is a valuable servant. My sew
ing is no severe master for me, though
there are six of us to be clothed. My
children never seem to feel the need
of tucks and ruffles, and as I join them
for a ramble, hunting spring tlowers, 1
am not constantly fretted about their
clothes, for they are of good, substan
tial material, not easily torn, and so
plainly made that if soiled they are
very easily washed aud ironed. Peo
ple say to me what a healthy, rosy
looking family you have, and surely
we have. I think very few people ever
felt seriously distressed at the pi .in
1’ waVvefy inuch distressed by one
of the numerous children of a hard
working mechanic coining to my door
one cold, rainy and y, dressed in ruffled
dress and apron, with shoes untit for
any child to wear, and asking for a
pattern for an infant’s tucked dress.—
I told the child to tell its mother I
never had such an article, and hoped
my good sense would never allow such
a display. Very pretty they are, but
there are so many things to be done
for the sweetest and most helpless of
all creation, that I should hardly feel
justified in taking the time to make
and iron such a garment.
Mothers, try this plan of plain gar
ments, and see if the liLtie 1 ones are
not just as comfortable, and if you do
not find your labors very much
ed by it.
’Above all things try to find time for
a little self-culturej that you may be
the companions and teachers of the
tender years of children.
(Ccr. N. Y. Tribune.
Married Without Knowing It.
A Mr. Thomas Cooper, an English
man, has published an account of his
travels in Thibet, which he visited dis
guised ns a Chinman. Among his
stories is the following:
He was just halting for break
fast, after leaving the Thibetan town
of Bathang, when a group of youDg
girls, gaily dressed and decked with
garland of flowers, came out of a grove
and surrounded him, some of them
holding his mu’e while others assisted
him to alight. He was then led into a
grove, where he found a feast being
prepared, and after he had eaten and
smoked his pipe, the girls came up
to him again, “pulling along in the
midst‘a pretty girl of sixteen, attired
in a silk dress, and adorned with gar
lands of flowers,” “I had already no-r
deed,” Mr, Cooper continues, “this
girl sitting apart from the others du
ring the meal, and was very much
astonished when she was reluctantly
dragged up to me and made to sert
herself by my side; and my astonish
ment was considerably heightened
when the rest of the girls began to
dance around us in a cirtie, singing
and throwing their garlands over my
self and compuion.” The meaning of
this performance was, however, soon
made clear to Mr. Cooper. He had
been inarried without knowing it. At
first be tried to escape the liability
pntaiied upon him, but such an out
cry was made,by II the people abound
that he was forced to carry off Jbis
bride. He managed to get rid <A er
before very long by transferring her to
one of her relations, but even that was
not treated as a dissolution of the
marriage. On his way back he was
joined one day by a Thil etan dame, of
about thirty years old, who announced
herself as his wife’s mother, and s<dd
she had dome, with the consent of her
httsbaud, to supply her daughter’s
place. We can well imagine Mr.
Cooper’s surprise at meeting wiih this
novel proposal on the part of his moth
er-in-law.
& 11. ill'll <V Cq^s Jßroptittors.
! . ,*e <t ...A 4/HtVTuK*.
vn 1* «f•dd»tlt»Hfc*ft“+ , nri H t»,{j a’
The Captain tis x>ncx)f Abe larged
steamboats runup g oji the Pi'tniuxc
; was pile Huy lately, as | KB
I bout touched the Ldhh'bg'wt ob«* nf hi*
rivtl'-side Wiit&h nut a
di<d:.ncq Cr*mi.: to. see all
the g ivsts asseauUl.cd, with, Ujeir bag
gage, fea’dy to tak passage .to the cite.
In making inquiry as to the ? 'ehnse »«f
this general exodus he soon discovered
that thereby hung a tail. A.enl’s. tt
appears that tlie.fare ut, th# h del dis
agreed with the boarders, and not satis
tied with complain took French
leave. A batch of (.lough had been
prepared for the oven amt {Aneod on *
table. A playful kitten thought rt
would be nice lurui* pvyr ,it,, it looked
sq sno\vy, warm and (tempting. Kitty
tried it and soon fottnif liei* dedicate
little ieet .sinking in Ihb dough: She
struggled to escape, and like-Governor
Morton in the stolen treaty business,
only straggled to sink deeper, until
thh youthful cat disappeared entirely,
and so, like young Loehintfar, went in
to the vea’st. She never arose agnm,
but the bread did. It closed over tint*
uufortunute specimen, not leaving a
hair apparent. Cooky, qf course, was
hot aware that instead Os a loaf of
bread she had a kitten dumpling, and
put the mass into the oven and baked
it \\ hen the bread was opened at
breakfast next morning the birds did
not begin to sing but the boarders did.
They fairly howled with wrath. They
knew that there bad been a family of
kittens, and as liaati bad l>een served
for breakfast before this extraordinary
loaf was opened, the conclusion was
uatural that the other part of the fam
ily had gone into the hash and gone
down their throats. They were first
taken with sea-sickness, next with
home-sickness, and then ensued a gen
eral packing up. The fashionable
summer resort was left with no inhab
itants but the cook and the barkeeper,
and what remained of the«family of
kittens.— Coir. N. Y. World.
Feminine Reverence.
When a lady of sunny Spain has be
come jedous of her sweetheart, she *
products a very shaip knife from the
garter where she usually keeps it, and
stabs the faithless one on the spot.—
The outraged Italian beauty does not
inflict the stab, but she incites her big
brother, or hires a ruffian from the
the 'lhamduaf on *ms way dome rrhm
the case, and smite him under the fifth
rib. The German girl, under similar
circumstances, nearly cries her meek
blue eyes out. The lively and impul
sive French woman either scratches
the perfidious one’s face, shuts herself
up in a garret with a pan of charcoal,
and “asphyxiates” herself, or yet fur
ther —she gives the person of whom
she is jealous every reason to be jeal
ous of her. The Yankee girl
is wont to satisfy the gtefen-eyed mon
ster in a summary manner. She ei
ther cowhids the offending party, or
produces a revolver and shoots “pfc
sight.” The practice of the low. r
classes of English females, when tin y
are’-jealous', differs from 'cVbry one of
the processes mentioned. Alone
among.their sisters in civilieed nations
thpy throw vitriol, and unhappily this
seems to be growing in frequency eve
ry se (Son. It should be, moreover, a
source of bitter shame to those who
are so fond of deploring the use of
“the knife” amongst foreigners that
this atrocious crime should be aim >st
exclusively confined to the women of
Great Britian,
In Warsaw, Ky., are thirty-two
widows, each possessed of a fortune of
not less than one hundred thousand
dollars. The oldest of these widows
is thirty-nine, the youngest twenty^-one.-.
All are handsome and all in the mne
keh Should Brigham Young make a
sweep from his harem-scarepi at Utah,
upon this widow’s nest of Warsaw, and
capture the entire lot, he would cut
quite a figure. He might do so but
for fear such a raid and capture of the
widows of Warsaw would make more
war in Utah thau it ever before saw.—
This being the case, the reporter
would say: » • :
Os all the wars we ever saw,
never saw a war like the way we saws
am.eg the wive£ t and widows oi War
saw. .
As said the man oneb upon a time:
“Os all the saws I ever saw shw I
never saw a saw that would saw as
the wood-saw saws, except it was a
saw that I once saw in Arkan-saw,
and that wood-saw would out saw any
saw I ever saw in any place outside of
Arkan-saw.
A. Dog Stoby. —A correspondent, of
the Whig furnishes the following;:
The steamer Matilda,, running be
tween I-'redericksburg and Baltimore,
• hau just left Curler’s wharf, on her way
to Baltimore, last week, when it vvaa
discovered that a terrier, whoso
owner was bn the wharf, had rem. in
ed on the boat. At the request of the
owner the dog was thrown overb.>. rd;
and nothing more was titeiught of the
matter by those on board, until. Balti
more was reached, when one of. the
hands entered the wheel-house and was
surprised to find the dog sitting upon
a projecting piece of timber. It is
supposed t*h a t the revolving wheel*:
OHUght the dog and lifted him to the
position stated. He was unharmed,
and on toe return trip was delivered to
his owner, who hud concluded t.iathi
pet had been drowned.
-fih.WiElH