Newspaper Page Text
The North Georgia Cheap Furniture House
| STILL CLAIM TO SELL
Better Goods for Less Money,
|Than Any other House in this Section^
As space forbids mentioning Jeverything, wejwill only enumerata a few. We have
complete stock of
Parlor and Bed Room Suits,
Wardrobes, Baby Carriages, Chairs Mattings, Rugs and Carpets, and
MANUFACTURERS of MATTRESSES
PEACOCK & VEAL,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
LUMBER! LUMBER!
Parties in want of Lumber of an/ kind will find it to their interest-to see us be
fore buying, as we keep the only regular
LUMBER YARD
in the city. We carry in stock a large assortment of Framing of all sizes and
lengths, Dry Flooring and ceiling, Weatherboarding and Mouldings, of any patera.
We have just received ears of all heart Fencing and will carry a supply of it in stock
in future. Lumber Yard and Plaining Mills, cor. Leake and Skinner Bts.
GALLOWAY & FREEMAN.
Notice This As You Pass By.
W. OMDLEr
WEST MAIN STREET,
CARTERSVILLE, GEO.,
Carriages, Buggies f Wagons,
And do all kinds of
Repairing in Wood and iron,
Making new jdeces when necessary. He is also
prepared to do all kinds of blacksmithing. None
but the best workmen employed who can make
anything that is made of wood or iron. All
work warranted to Rive satisfaction. Terms
reasonable. Work done promptly. Give him a
trial and be convinced.
ELY’S CATAUHH
Bali KteM
Cleanses *Ke |f|
Nasal
Allays'Pain
Ia 1 1 o) n, <^jf|
Esals ths Sorss, gw* /
Restores *k s "m
Senses of Taste
and Smell.
TRY the OUBEHAY-FE.VER
CATARRH
h a disease of the mu nous membrane, generally
originating in the nasal passages and maintain
ing its stronghold in the head. From this point
it sends forth a poisonousyirusinto the stomach
and jthrough the digestive organs, corrupting the
blood and producing other troublesome and
da ngero us sy tn p toms.
A particle is applied into each nostril and is
agreeable. Price 50 cents at druggists; by mail,
registered, CO cents. ELY BROTHERS, 235
GreenwiehSt., New York.
Don’t forget to smoke Sullivan's fine
hand-made cigar. “The Virginia Seal,"
“Hibernia," “Starlight," “Sullivan's No.
1." Ask your dealer for them. 6-8 lm
T. I. N. C. is not a cure-all, but a quar
ter of a century of constant use has de
monstrated beyond question that Tan
ner’s Infallible Neuralgia Cure is the
only known infallible cure for all kinds of
neuralgia and for ueryous headache. 50
cents per box. Manufactured by Ran gum
Root Medicine Cos., Nashville, Tenn.
Sold by all druggists. m2O-lm
T\ T and ITT \7 li**ward#*d are those who read
It 11 M I Y Dii* ftn then act; they will lint'
II 11.11 111 honorable employment that will
not take from them their homes
and families. The profits are large and sure for
every industrious person, many have made and
are now making several hundred dollars a month,
it is easy for any one to make #5 and upwards
per day, who is v,tiling to work. Either sex,
young or old ; capital not needed ; we start you.
Everything new. No special ability required;
you, reader, can do it as well as any one. Write
to us at once for full particulars, which we mail
ree. Address Stinson & Cos., Portland, Maine.
VALUABLE Cm PROPERTY
FOB, SALE.
I will sell my house and lot in Cartersville, lo
cated on Cassville street. Good dwelling and
outhouses, lot containing five and a half acres.
Fruits of all kinds on the place. A most conven
ient residence. Also one lot containing one acre
on which there is a 8 room house.
TERMS REASONABLE.
fefcs-tf J. T. OWEN.
yv y| T% **ea Wonders exist in thousanus o
I I H r( M forms, but are surpassed by the mar
vels of invention. Those who are in
** need of profitable work that Can be
done while living at home should at once send
their address to Hallet <fc Cos., Portland. Maine,
and receive free, full information how either sex,
of all ages, can earn from $5 to #25 per day and
upwards wherever they live. You are started
free. Capital not required. Some have made
voer ss(> in a single day at this work. All suc
ceed. eblC-1
J. M. XTEEL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Special ateention given to litigation in real es
tate in the administration of estates of deceased
persons, and in cases in equity.
Office on Public Square, north of St. James
Hotel. 24febly
Notice to Debtors and Creditors
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
All persons having demands against the estate
of 1-ham Alley, dec’d, are hereby notified to pre
sent the same properly made out and verified ac
cording to law. And all persons indebted to said
Isham Alley are hereby notified to come forward
and make payment in full. This January 9, 1889.
Isham W. Alley and Elizabeth A1 ey as Adm’r
and Adin’rx of Isham Alley, dec’d. jan 1
D. W. K. PEACOCE
REAL ESTATE,
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA
MINERALS A SPECIALTY.
Real Estate bought and sold. Informntion
cheerfully given.
OR. J. G. GREENE.
having located in Cartersville for the purpose o 1
practicing medicine and surgery, offers his pro
fessional services to the public. Calls promptly
answered. Office up-stairs over Courant-American
office; residence on the corner of Market and
Stonewall streets. janl3-6m
A.. M. FOT7TE,
Attorney-At-Law,
Cartersville, Ga.
Office up-stairs, corner Main and Erwin sts.
Special attention given to Collections and Com
mercial Law.
BARTOW LEAKE,
INSURANCE.
Loan M Real Estate Agent.
Money Loans made on the most reasonable
terms. P.0.80X, 123,
jul,v2l-ly Cartersville, Ga.
Joh.n T. Owen,
Reel Estate & Life & Fire Insurance
AG-EITT,
The interest of patrons carefully considered
msreasonable.
CURES WHEREALL ELSeT Ai LS * [s^
Ira Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use R
Ey in time. Sold by druggists. fil
f? I believe Piso’s Cure
■ for Consumption saved
my life. — A. H. Dowell,
F Editor Enquirer. Eden- f
% ton, N. C., April 23, 1887.
I PI S OI
F The best Cough Medi
|g cine is Piso’s Cure for
y Consumption. Children
take it without objection.
" By all druggists. 25c.
™ CUS[S^^£ALLtLS^?LS l^^ra
M Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use
Ed in time. Sold by druggists. • fff
ARBUCKLES'
name on a package of COFFEE is a
guarantee of excellence-
ARIOSA
COFFEE is kept in all first-class
stores from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
COFFEE
is never good when exposed to the air.
Always buy this brand in hermetically
sealed ONE POUND PACKAGES.
COFFEE, TEA, MILK, SUGAR.
A Brief Chapter o* Food and Its Adul
terations.
*LA. cup of coffee,” says Alexandre
Dui?*%s, tlu? elder —who, by the way, was
as greet a gourmand as he was romanc Ist
—“acu (pf coffee is the review of the
dinner.” Dumas was right. Of all
the food adulterations that of coffee is
the most palpable. Not only is the
roasted and ground article adulterated,
but—incredible as it may 9ound—the
green bean is imitated from common
clay, colored with arsenic. If rumor has
it correct, there is a green coffee manu
factory in Chicago, where nature is
“corrected” by machinery. Mechani
cal appliances mold, press and dry Cook
county clay into coffee beans, as it is
said, at a cost of about eight cents a
I>ound. Of course, this artificial coffee
cannot be used in its purity, or rather
impurity. It is used to mix with the
genuine article, and, strange as it may
sound, the clay bean assumes the same
color in roasting that the natural bean
does.
Coffee roasters all over the land ad
mit that they use stale bread in roasting
coffee. The bread is freed from its crust
and then cut into small cubes.' The
roasters claim that the presence of this
bread during the process of the roasting
improves the coffee. Of course, if the
latter is sold in the bean it is impossible
to make the customer pay for stale bread,
but if ground the bread becomes part of
the coffee. Think of M. Dumas’ glow
ing tribute to the after dinner cup, and
then imagine a compound made up as
follows: Chicory, peas, beans, date
stones, biscuits, figs, roasted hominy,
burned sugar, acorns, mangel-wurzel,
dandelion, turnips, parsnips, carrots, rye
and potato flour.
The introduction of chicory into coffee
Is defended by many roasters on the
ground that it really improves the coffee
and does no mischief to the drinker.
But Dr. Hassell, a German authority,
says that chicory in prolonged use is in
jurious to health. He claims that the
root—belonging to the class of radishes,
by the way—produces heartburn, cramp
in the stomach, loss of appetite, acidity
in the mouth, constipation with intermit
tent diarrhoea, weakness of the limbs,
trembling, sleeplessness, and a drunken
cloudiness of the senses. Professor Beer,
the famous Vienna oculist, goes so far as
to claim that chicory in large doses pro
duces blindness.
The adulteration of teas are even worse
than those of coffees. The practice of
using exhausted tea leaves is so well
known as scarcely to bear mention.
These exhausted leaves are‘‘faced,” or
colored, and fixed up with plumbago,
gum, indigo, Prussian blue, turmeric,
China clay, mica, soapstone or French
chalk, sulphate of lime, rose pink, Vene
tian red, carbonate of copper, arsenite
of copper, chromate and bi-chromate of
potash and carbonate of lime and mag
nesia. Other substitutes for the genuine
article are leaves of the elder, willow,
aloe and other plants and trees, lye tea,
paddy husk, sweeping of tea house floors,
sand, quartz, starch and magnetic oxide
o. iron.
The most dangerous of all food swind
ling practices is that which lowers the
nutritive quality of milk. Its direct ef
fect is largely upon infants and small
children. It is the opinion of the ablest
medical observers that half of the infant
mortality in cities is due to sophisticated
milk. Professor Wiley, of the United
States department of agriculture, asserts
that “it is doubtful whether 10 per cent,
of the milk which reaches the table is
pure.” The principal adulterant of milk
in these modern times is water. The
cream is skimmed and water is added to
restore the bulk and weight. The color
is restored by coloring matter. Fleur or
Starch, boiled white carrots, milk of al
monds, sheeps’ brains, gum tragacanth,
carbonate of soda and chrome yellow 7 also
en :er into milk as adulterants.
There is practically no limit to the
&r n Iteration of sugar. Cane sugar is
manufactured from grape or starch glu
cose, wheat and potato flour, tapioca
punch, blood, pipe clay, marble dust,
gypsum, bone dust, lead, iron, lime and
sand. The confectionery sugar consists
of glucose, terra alba, chalk, arrowroot,
sand, wheat and potato flour, and hy
drated sulphate of lime. These articles
are colored, as the case may require, by
cochineal, indigo and Prussian blue, car
bonates of copper and lead, white lead,
vermillion, gamboge, chromates of lead,
sap green, arsenite of copper, Indian red,
umber, sienna, Vandyke brown, cobalt,
smalt, Naples yellow, bisulphate of mer
cury, sulphate of arsenicum, bronze
powders or alloys of copper and zinc.
Speaking upon the law concerning
adulterants, Manager Robert M. Floyd
remarked: “The English have dealt
with the question of food adulteration
very intelligently, and, as experience has
shown, very profitably to the empire.
Adulteration of food had grown to enor
mous dimensions some years ago in Eng
land. A parliamentary commission re
ported that scarcely an article that was
served on the table was free from fraudu
lent admixture or was what it pretended
to be. The result was the passage of an
act of a simple and comprehensive nature,
which required that all manufactured
articles of food should be labeled with a
statement of all their ingredients, fraud,
upon detection, being punished with ex
treme severity 7 . If coffee contained
chicory the manufacturer and seller
must make this fact distinctly known.
The proportion of corn starch employed
in tempering mustard, and incidentally
expanding its bulk, must be stated. And
so through the long list of comestibles
and condiments the law enforces perfect
candor between buyer and seller. The
effect of this legislation was to purify
the trade and then to bring it to unprece
dented proportions. The reason why
Great Britain has a monopoly, or some
thing very like it, in the condiment trade
of the world, is because her great houses
guarantee purity.”—Chicago Herald.
Celluloid fof Sheathing Ships.
In experiments during the past year,
celluloid has proven an excellent sheath-'
mg for ships, in place of copper, over
which it has some advantages. Another
application of a valuable material is the
use of the lately cheapened aluminum for
dental plates, which are better than rub
ber, and cheaper and stronger than gold.
—Arkansaw Traveler.
A debt of gratitude is too often com
promised at about ten cents on a dollar.
STRAY BITS.
The length of the streets of London in the
a ggTvgtito is 3,600 miles.
Bells were first introduced into churches as
a defense against thunder and lightning.
It is said in England that the Russian
wheat crop this year has been better than for
ten years.
Announcement is made of the discovery of
rich gold quartz in Buckingham township,
Province of Quebec.
Bookkeeping as a system was originated in
Italy, where it was derived from a system of
algebra, published by Burgo at Venice.
Roundhead, a term of contempt applied
to Puritans in the time of Charles I, arose
from the custom of cutting their hair close.
The inhabitants of London consume an
nually 400,000 oxen, 1,500,000 sheep, 8,000,000
chickens and game birds, and 500,000 oysters.
Fif tv-nine survivors of the 600 who charged
at Balaklava thirty-nine years ago held their
annual reunion in LondoU a short time ago.
The British government is making efforts
to cultivate oysters on the shores of Tasma
nia, and is said to be meeting with good SUC
CESS.
It is said that Alaska will become a great
mining country within tv few years, and will
furnish canned salmon enough to supply all
creation.
In a Virginia newspaper of thirty years
ago is a long account of the sentence of a
woman to two years’ imprisonment for teach
ing slaves to read.
During the past seven years more than
200,000 acres in England have gone out of
cultivation. This means an immense loss to
the land owners and farmers.
In the Desert of Sahara rain falls in tor
rents at intervals of five, ten and twenty
years. In winter the temperature frequently
falls below the freezing point.
The islands on the eastern coast of Virginia
are bekig restocked with hares imported
from England. Several thousands of the
animals have been turned loose.
Elihu Stevens, of Smithfield, Me., is at the
head of a family which is probably the
largest in the country. In this family there
are five generations, which comprise 310 per
sons.
Mr. Holcomb, lately secretary of the
American legation at Pekin, says that out of
the 400,000,000 inhabitants of the Chinese em
pire fully 300,000,000 spend less than $1.50 a
month for food.
Sea otter has only been known to Euro
peans as a fur for about 150 years. It is the
rival of seal in fashionable favor. Minever,
or gray squirrel, is a very old fur, and was
at one time the special favorite of royalty.
It is said that scales for weighing diamonds
are brought nearly to that delicacy of balance
which would enable dealers to detect flaws in
the stones by minute variations in weight.
They weigh accurately the 040th part of a
carat.
Dr. Gross, of Geneva, has lately experi
mented with himself in hanging. His ex
periments established that the sensations
were only warmth and a burning in the head,
without convulsions. Of course liis experi
ments didn’t go very far.
The monument of Gen. Toombs has been at
last shipped from Italy. This is the third
monument that has been built. The first
was lost at sea. A bed of crystals was found
in the second after all had been completed
except the base block.
t
The Lincoln Journal, while it does not
claim that the town lias the prettiest women
in Nebraska, is quite certain that it has the
homeliest men. “They are warm hearted
and nice,” it says, “but as homely as a sorrel
horse with a blazed face.”
It is estimated that pin factories in New
England turn out 10,800,000,000 pms yearly
and that other factories i:i the states bring
the number up to 18,000,000,000. This is
equal to about one pin a day for every in
habitant* of the United States.
English etiquette has decided that unmar
ried ladies should never uSe a crest on any
thing—note paper, servants’ buttons, brushes
or any other article. It is usually found tha:
the people best entitled to crests and coats of
arms make the least use and display of thorn.
A curious law case in Liverpool concerned
chewing gum. A confectioner was fined for
selling the article for food, which, it was
claimed, was as indigestible as a button, but
the defense stated that tho article was per
fectly harmless and not intended to be swal
lowed.
In order to retain one's place on the pen
sion rolls of Germany it is necessary to ap
pear there in person once in ten years. A.
Ruddatt, of Glemnore, Ga., had nearly lapsed
the time, and at the last moment sold his ten
acre farm, with a good house, two cows and
his entire crop and effects for SSO to raise
money to go.
An experiment is being made on the Cali
fornia coast to test the utility of ocean wave
force. At an opening in some cliffs great
fans are suspended, and their movement at
the ebb and flow of the waves is so geared as
to work immense pumps, which are designed
to fill large reservoirs on elevations, these be
ing used to supply water power to manufac
tories of various kinds.
The United States is tho largest consuming
country of raisins in the world, and the an
nual consumption is about 2,000,000 boxes of
about twenty pounds each, which at an aver
age of $2 a box shows an expenditure of
$4,000,000 per annum for one article in the
dried fruit line. The amount referred to repre
sents, say, 1,000,000 boxes Valencia, 050,000
boxes California, 200,000 boxes Malaga and
100,000 boxes Smyrna.
PERILS OF WINTER.
V.L F. Morris, of Wausau, Wis, while hunt
ing lost bis way and was found frozen to
death in the brush.
Harvey Havener, 6 years old, of James
town, N. Y., while coasting ran into a street
car. His skull was fractured, and he died
instantly.
Daniel Stillwell, 70 years of age, was within
calling distan e of his home at South
Pittsburg, Tenu., recently, when he fell ex
hausted in the snow and perished.
On his way to church one morning, a few
days since, Joseph Favre. of Perryville, Mo.,
bb years of age, was caught in a blizzard and
wandered off into a wheat field, where ho
froze to death. —New York Sun.
CURIOUS ACCIDENTS.
William Good, of Mount Joy, Pa., broke
his leg while trying to pull off his boot.
Jesse Mead’s horse ran away near Tremont,
0., and threw him headlong into the frozen
creek where ho broke through the ice and
was drowned.
The mule upon which William Brading, of
Lick Creek, Ills., was riding, shied, and
throwing Brading against a tree, he was
killed instiuitly.
Seven years ago the little son of James
Roup, of Itoupville, Ga., got a blade of straw
in his Aar, *r and was made deaf by it. Re
cently -he straw-, two inches in length,
worked Itself out, and the boy’s hearing is
restored.
TEETH, TEETH
MADE WHITE AS SNOW
BY USING.
DE-LEC-TA-LAVE
WHITENS
THE TEETH.
DE-LEC-TA-LAVE
Dr, Calhoun Endorses Delectalave.
Atlanta, Ga.. October 17. 1885. —Dr. C. T.
Brocket: My Dear Sir—lt affords me pleasure,
after a careful examination of the formula of
your Delectalave, to bear testimony to its value,
aud to state that its curative qualities are be
yond question. I regard it as the name implies,
a delightful wash, and can recommend it to the
public. Yours truly, A. W CALHOUN, M. 1).
Get a bottle and try It, and you will be con
vinced to its merits. Its taste is pleasant and
ts aroina delightful. 50 cents a bottle.
Positively the best remedy ever discover
ered for all diseases of man and beast that
fan be reached by an external medical
application, is lianguhi Root Liniment.
One trial will convince Manufactured
only by Rangum Root Medicine Cos ,
Nashyille, Tenn. 50 cents per bottle.
For SBle by all druggists. m 20-1 m
After Three Tears.
W. F. Walton, of Sp ingfield, Tenn.,
says: “I have been suffering with Neural
gia in my face and head off and on for
three years. I purchased a box of Dr
Tanner's Infallible Neuralgia Cure and
took eight of the pills, lhave not felt any
symptoms of Neuralgia since. It gives
me pleasure to recommend it. Sold by
J. R. Wikle & Cos.
Syrup of Figs
Is Nature’s own true laxative. Jt is the
most easily taken, and the most effective
remedy known to Cleanse the System
when Billions or Costive; to dispel Head
aches, Colds, and Fevers; to cure Habit
ual Constitution, Indigestion, Piles, etc.
Manufactured only by the California Fig
Syrup Company, San Francisco, Cal
Sold by J. R. Wikle & Cos., druggists.
jan2o-iy
Bu'jklen’s Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Sa t Rheum, Fevei
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hauds, Ch lblains
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi
tively cures Piles, or no piy required.
It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25 cent
ter box. For sale by J. R. Wikle & Cos.
My winter goods are nearly all gone
but what is left must go at once to make
room for spring goods, come early and
get some of the bargains we are offering
ii that line. J. G. M. Montgomery.
CN n\ro vO c Rl°°d Elixir is the only
Blood Remedy guaran
teed. It is a positive cure for Ulcers, Erup
tions or Syphilitic Poisoning. It purifies the
whole system, and banishes all Rheumatic
and Neuralgic pains. We guarantee it.
. Sold by J It Wikle & Cc.
Home testimonials are most relif,ble,and
if you will send your name and address
we will send statements ->f numbers of the
best citizens of Nashville regarding the
wonderiul cures effected by the Ethiopian
Pile Ointment. It never fails. 50 cents
and $1 per bottle Manufactured by Ran
gum Root Medicine Cos., Nashville Tenn.
For sale by all druggists. m2O-lm
The Furnace
is bound to be built. Everybody is going
to take stock in it and when we get one
started more will follow. Everybody
work for it and buy your Drugs, Cigars
and Soda water at Word’s Drugs Store,
may 11 tf
Hood s Sarsaparilla. Lemon and Orange
Elixir, Fig Syrup, Lemon Elixir and in
fact everything in the drug line lower than
any town in North Georgia at Wikle’s
drug store near the railroad. m 25 tf
Our Future
Whs never brighter and our citizens are
beginning to realize the glorious possibili
ties in store for them by taking stock fn
ilie new furnace and other enterprises,
and while all these improvements are as
suming positive shape and enhance our
city and lend energy and enterprise to the
surrounding country. We are the more
determined to make our business all that
can be desired. We shall surely keep
pace with any city in the South, no mat
ter its size and abilities, in drugs,
chemicals, toilet articles, paints, oils and
patent medicines. Our stock is complete.
Our prescription department shall be kept
in the best possible; order and our friends
who will favor us with their patronage
may rest assured that no pains will be,
spared in their int< rest.
Very truly,
m25-tf J R. Wikle & Cos.
15 v orVvV always have
Acker’s Baby
Soother at hand. It is the only safe
medicine yet made that will remove all
infantile disorders. It contains no Opiurn
or Morphine, but gives the child natural
ease from pain. Price 25 cents. Sold by
Sold by J. R. Wikle & Cos., Druggists.
When you want to buy shoes thaj
will wear, “solid as a rock” and want
to get them at prices you can afford to
pay come and see. Yours, truly,
J. G. M. Montgomery.
Hurrah for Gordon!
The gallant General captured the peo
ple of Cartersville and Bartow county
last Saturday night in his talk on devel
oping this section. Everyone is praising
him and all rushing to Word s Drug Store
for Pure Medicines, Fine Cigars and deli
cious ice cold drinks. mayll-tf
We have still on hand twelve or fifteen
of those cheap Overcoats. You can al
most buy them at your own price. Come
soon. J. G. M. Montgomery.
Sparks Perfect Health, Warner's Safe
Cure and all the leading patent medicines
of the day at Wikle’s drug store. m25-tf
("•Paines
clery
(om|}oun<l
For The Nervous
. The Debilitated
Mm The Aged
■ URBS Nervous Prostration, Nervous Head.
m' ache, Neuralgia, Nervous Weak ne
Stomach and Liver Diseases, and ali
* affections of the Kidneys
AS A NERVE TONIC, It Strengthen,
ftnd Quiets the Nerves. * ™
‘ AS AN ALTERATIVE, It Puriflea and
Enriches the Blood.
AS A LAXATIVE, It acts mildly jv*
surely, on the Bowels.
AS A DIURETIC, It Regulates the Kid.
neys and Cures their Diseases.
Recommended by professional and businessmen.
Price si.oo. Sold by druggists. Send for circulars,
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., Proprietor*.
• BURLINGTON, VT.
£THAT FIGHT
W The Original Wins.
£3 C. F Simmons. St. Louis, lWt
| M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine,Est’d
§ *B4O, in the U. S. Court defeats I
I | A H. Zeilin, Prop’r A. Q. Simmons Liv.
a J r Regulator, Est’d by Zeilin IS6B.
H*'i gjj M. A. S. L. M. has for 47 years
W AS cured Indigestion, Biliousness
I Dyspepsia,Sick Headache,Lost
■T Appetite, Souk Stomach, Etc
A Rev. T R. Reams, Pastor M. k!
• ulChurch*, Adams, Tenn., writes: “1
% JLthink I should have been dead but
for your Genuine M. A. Sirn
# -4k mons Liver Mbdicine. I have
JB)qtßo££\ sometimes had to substitute
1)17 a *Ut I “Zeilin’s stuff” for y->ur Medi
t!COURTS I cine > but don’t answer the
I p ur p° se ”
/ IjfpPLEl , Dr - J- R- Graves, Editor Tht
Memphis, Tenn. says:
I T I received a package of your Liver
A A Medicine, and have used half ot it.
■L V It works like a charm. I want nn
u better Liver Regulator and cerj
fin \ tainly no more of Zeilin’s mixtur®
W. C. Edwards, F. D.
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER.
Repository in new store room on West Main
Sreet, Cartersville, Ga. jan27-ly
r\\\\ An that are fretful, peevish,
cross, or troubled with
Windy Colic, Teething Pains, or
Stomach Disorders, can he relieved
at once by using Acker’s Baby Soother.
It contains no Opium or Morphine,
hence is safe. Price £5 cents. Sold by
Sold by J. R . Wikle & Go.. Druggists.
DE-LEC-TA-LAVE
PERFUMES
THE BREATH.
Notice That
John Taylor is Himself Again!
He has enlarged his shop at the St. James Hotel
He has a full team now, William Johnson and
Westley Allen. He has a retired shop where the
“rugays” will not annoy his customers. He does
not solicit the patronage of roughs and vaga
bonds, he promises to observe good behavior,
have clean towels and sharp razors, iu thetjth
year of his career. He flatters himself that he
knows all in the barber business from curling and
braiding down. He has been considered to he
the best hair cutter from New Orleans to New
York for 35 years. I only want you to call and
be convinced, and all customers desiring to be
shaved twice a week will he furnished cup and
brush free. My shop will be open from f> a. m. to
8 p. m.
John Taylor. William Johnson & Cos.
Edward J!el!,
Colored, does all kinds of garden‘ng and flower
work, whitewashing of rooms and laying of
carpets, mattings, oil doth. etc. Prompt ntten
tion given to all orders left at Claiborne Walker’s
shop on West Main street. Best of reference
given. Will deal in ice cream this season, as
usual. april6-3rn
When you feel depressed don’t dose
yourself with mem bitters. Hodges’
Sarsaparilla renovates and invigorates the
system, and cures all dis ases arising from
an impure state of ihe blood. .$1 per bot
tle, six bottles for $5 Manufactured by
Rangum Root Medicine Cos , Nashville,
Tenn. Sod by all druggists, m2O-lm
If you BUflier pricking pains on moving
the eyes, or cannot bear bright light, and
find your sight weak ami failing, you
should promptly use Dr. J. 11. McLean’s
Strengthening Eye Salve. 25 cents a
box. ‘ 6-8-3 m
Hon. H. YV. Grady
is expected to speak at the opera house
Saturday night on the subject nearest our
lieaits just now, “How to boom Carters
ville and Bartow county, Go by Word’s
and get a Yellow Label Cigar and you
can appreciate the speech more, and as
you go home cool off with an) 1, kind of an
ice drink. msyll-tf
Your old Buggy.
You can m>;Ke your old buggy or
carriage look new by the use of one can
of Detroit Carriage Paint. Only 75c. at
Wikle’s drug store near the railroad.
m'2s-tf
ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
Mils. Winslow s Soothing Syrup, for
children teething, is the prescription of
one of the best female nurses and physi
cians in the United States, and has been
used for forty years with never-failing
success by millions of mothers for their
children. During the process of teeth
ing, its value is incalculable. It relieves
the child from pain, cures dysentery and
diarrhtea, griping in the bowels, and
wind-colic. By giving health to the
child it rests the mother.* Priee 25c. a
bottle. tf
Street Tax.
Books will be open for the collection ol
street tax on Monday, 2nd day of April,
and will remain open until 15th of May.
The street tax for 1888 is two dollars.
J. I), WILKEIbSON.
Marshal and city tax collector. Office
at Council Chamber. inch 10-tf
Insect powder, insect powder and guns
at Wikle’s drug store. m25-tf