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BABTOW SHEWS SHIS
For May. ISS4,
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' in the following lines, to-wit: |
at the white oak corner on lot
number 258, thence to anew made corner on ,
lot number 254, thence north along anew
made line to the lands of Thomas Upshaw, ]
thence west along said Upshaw’s line to num- |
her 288, thence north along the line ol said lot i
number 288 to the cross fence at the old J brash* |
er place on the line of the,lands of the estate 1
of-lames Vaughn, deceased,thence west to the j
Tennessee road along the cross icnoe to said
Tennessee road, thence down the Tennessee
road south to the branch, thence south along 1
the branch to the said white oak tree or corner
on said lot number 253, the starting point, all
of said lots and parts ol lots ot land as afore- i
said being in the twenty-secor.it district and
second section of originally Cherokee and now
in the county of Bartow, and containing in
the aggregate tour hundred and eighty acres
more or less and known as tho said Thomas 11.
Baker’s land in said district. And it further
appearing that thirteen ot said promissory
notes remain unpaid, except that the interest
<lue upon twelve of them has been paid up to
April 10,11 80, and interest upon one has been
paid to April 10, 18*8, upon which one there
are two other credits one of twenty-three and
59-100 dollars, the other of ten and 65-100 dol
lars, the loriner dated February 3, 1879. and
the latter February 16,1879, and except lurther
that on June 18,1831,the sum of one hundred and
ttftv ($150) dollars was paid by said Baker upon
said thirteen promissory notes generally. It
is therefore ordered that the saul defendant,
Baker, do pay into con; t, on or before the first
day of the next term thereof, the principal,in
terest and costs due on said thirteen prorulsso
vy notes, or show cause to the contrary, if any
he have, and that on lailure of tho defendant
so to do, the equity of redemption in and to
said mortgage premises be forever therealter
barred and foreclosed. Ami it is further or
dered that this rule be published once a mouth
for four months in the Cartkksvii.i.k Ameri
can,previous to said next term or served on tin
defendant or his special agent or attorney at
least three months previous to the said next
term of this court. This Feb. 5,1884.
J. C. FAIN, J. 8. C. C. C.
Marshall J. Clarke, Petitioner's Att’y.
JCobert B. Daniel (Libel for Divorce. In
vs. vßartow Superior Couit,
CONCBIA Daniel. | January Term, 1834.
It appearing to the court by return of the
sheriff in the above stated case, that tlie de
lendant does not leside in said county, and it
further appearing that she docs not icside in
this state: It is therefore ordered by the court
that servioe be penected on the defendant bv
the publication of this order once a month for
foilr months before the next term ot this court
in the Cahtkksville American, a newspaper
published in Bartow county. Georgia.
J. C. FAIN. J. S. C. C. C.
Douglass Wjkle, Fetitionei‘s Att’y.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
J. A. Howard i Application for Writ of
vs. >
Jno. S. Leake, et al> Partition.
It appearing to the court that Armistead Y.
Leake, one ol the common owners of ilie prop
erty described in the loregoing petition reside*
out of the jurisdiction of this court: It is or
dered that service of notice of this application
be perfected by publication ot'this order in the
Caktersvillk American once a month for
three months previous to next term of this
court. This Feb. 5,1884
J. C. FAIN, J. S. C.C. C.
A true fextract from the minutes of the supe
rior court, F. M. Durham, Clk. 8. C.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
James F. Hargis has applied for exemption
of personalty and setting apart and valuation
of homestead, and I will pass upon the same at
10 o’clock, a. m., on the 22d day of April, 1884,
at my office. March 27, 1884.
2t J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
Whereas Geo. W. Rogers and Joe C. Rogers,
administrators of John Rogers, dooeased, has
applied for dismission from said adminis
tration: Therefore all persons concerned are
hereby notified to file their objections, if any
they have, in my office, within the time pre
scribed by law, else dismission will granted
applicants on first Monday in July next.
Mar. 3,1881. J, A, HOWARD, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Bartow Couuty.
Whereas, Camilla M. Wofford, executrix oi
James Wofford, deceased, has applied for let
ters of dismission, from said administration.
Therefore all persons concerned are hereby
notified to flic their objections it any they
have, irt my office within the time prescribed
by law, also dismission will be granted appli
cant on the first Monday in Jane next
J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Bartow County.
Whereas D. M. Taff and J. S. Tuff, adminis
trators of Joshua Taff, deceased, have applied
lor letters of dismission from said administra
tion: Theretore all persons concerned are
hereby notified to file their objections, if any
they have, in my office, within the time pre
sented by law, else dismission will be granted
applicant on the first Monday in .Tidy next.
March 3,1884. J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
GEORGIA—Bartow C unity.
Whereas J. E. Shaw and L. F. Shaw, admin
istrators of James E, Shaw, deceased, have ap
plied for letters of dismission from said ad
ministration: Therefore all persons.concerned
are hereby notified to file their objections, ii:
any they have, in my office, within tlie time
prescribed by law, else dismission will be
granted applicants on the first Monday in
3 uly next. March 3., 1881.
J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
II NITJCD STATES INTERNAL REVENUE. )
Dep. Collector’s Ottice, Dist. ol'Ga. I
Carteksville, Ga., March24.lßß4.
Notice is hereby given of the following j
seizures made by me, for violations of the i
United States Internal Revenue Laws:
One small bay horse about 13 years old, one ]
package containing about 12 gallons of corn i
whisky, the property of Isaac N. Young. Any
person or persons having any interest in any o:t'
said property mast make claim and give bond,
as required by law, within thirty days, else the
same will he sold and the net proceeds deposit
ed to the credit of the Treasury ot the U nited
States. J • A. CRAW FORD,
aprl-4t neputy Collector.
INSTITUTION FOR
BOYS & YOUNG MEN.
The undesigned will continue to devote him
sell to the thorough preparation of a llmltci
number ot boys and young men who may de -
sire to enter college or the university, or who
may wish to receive a practical business edu
cation. Hoard and tuition, with improved
facilities for acquiring knowledge, will be fur
n.i-hed at low rates. For further particulars
apply to HENRY 1). CAPER3, A. M.,
Principal. Adairsvile, Harlow Cos„ oa.
Refers by permission to: Gen. E. Kirby
Smith, chancellor Suwanee university; Rev
Dr. Ale’ll, chancellor University of Georgia;
Rev. Geo. W. Stone, A. M., prolessor of mathe
matics Emory college, Ga.; Rev. Dr. Garland,
chancellor Vanderbilt university; Senator J.
jE. Brown; Mr. J. M. Veach, Adairsville; Dr
.Tno. W. Bowdoin, Adaiig.ille, a., and to the
Toung men who have entered the above named
institutions, or passed with my certilicate into
the active duties of life.
io the
*AM BROWS.
Hr lit! Ax-t tat Eardii:pt and
Lir-S mi* an A~pr%tk
*n;; in a Hitter’s Shop—
Qettrag a Hog Out of
ike IV. i Etc.
PcGpte jtt think my ht*
one round of plemare sad
(no txh! naigisfy bed upy d r . cmt
tsie. M y efe i ; J bond wms c at p leas*
ant, irbatmr the poets scay -ay
stoot cbilflhoctoi in getsenU, to tine
contrary. oct withstand lag, toy &dc~
le&ee©€* wan won# thsa porgmlory;
my ycufijf m&aoy xh w;- % wild,
ftorse-bnir k lod cf draun. tad
I was |xi*hed out Into life like a
iruokzz pristfeT oat of a composing
roorr. But, I ton-idetiag ev
erything. I have had l-" niu b
fun aa h.rti ! 'B*t any iitiie taan who
has eever bees in politics mocb, and
who hx*} never ia*o a ja*£ice of the
{>4tce. If there \* anything in the
word that I don’t want to be, it is a
jostiUse of the p-wee. He does have
a right ciee tlm*-. and.of eorw, feels
mighty big, bat X wouldn't bare all
tbeee little lietiefc-legged, CirtiffTille
fawyere yell'icg’ tbeir ideas
r ; .> ifours ai a lime, for
twenty-five dollars a day. I was in
Dennis Vandivere’s store one day
last summer, when some small brain
ed, leather-iunged, disciple of Black
stone, kept a yelling up stairs until
I know, if I had been in Squire
Shaw’s place, I would have gone
plum crazy and tried to butt my
braiDS out against that little old rus
ty stove in the court room just to
have kept myself from being talked
to dealt).
When I was about ten years old,
I was put under a fellow named
Spears, to learn the hatter’s trade.
Old Spears was just about the size of
Squire Shaw. He was thejivialest
man I ever saw, and the fun was
packed in him from his heels up to
his eyilids. He moved to this coun
ty in ’34, and he lived iu the seven
teenth district until he died, about
two years ago. Neariy everbody in
Bartow county knew him, but there
didn’t anybody know him as welt as
Idid.
Well, when Spears first got to be
my boss, he put me to pulling the
hair off of squirrel skins,rabbit skins,
cat skins, beaver skins, and every
other kind of skins. Some folks may
consider this nothing but play, but it
was work, and I bad almost as soon
be a justice of the peace as to pull
tho hair off of a coon skin. After I
got to be a first rate hair jerker, my
boss put mo up a notch higher—l
began to tote water in a tub about
two hundred yards. I felt good
when I made this rise, but I made
such a good water toter that I was
kept at it for nine years. If there is
anything in the world that I do
knowhow to do, it i3 to tote water
in a tub. I would put the tub on
my head, walk down to the branch,
and stand under a little wooden
spout that hung over a fence, until
i my tub got full, then I would wig
-1 g!e up tho hill to the hatter’s shop,
empty my tub, turn around, prance
back down the hill to the branch,
stand under the spout, and so on and
so on, for nine Jong years. Rain or
shine, that tub had to be kept a
moviDg, with my head under it a?
a base ot operations. I never see a
tub and a branch now, but what I
am painfully reminded of toting
water for old Spears at the battel’s
shop. Jim Milana used to laugh at
!me for being so small. I guess he
would have been small, too, if he
had toted as much water as I did.
Why, for nine long years I did not
grow a quarter of an inch, for that
old tub kept my head mashed as flat
as the bottom of Dennis Vandivere’s
feet, and the hair was worn off of my
head until I was, and am still, as
bald as that last mentioned geutle-
I man. By the way, I wonder if Den
nis ever toted any water in a tub on
his head. I guess he has, from the
looks of his hair.
Old man Spears was always play
ing off some joke on me. He would
give me an old dry tub sometimes
to tote water in, so the water would
leak out on me; again he would tie
a string right in front of the trough
of dye, and I would walk along
whistling a Sunday school ditty, and
all at once I would be picking my
self out of the dye, blacker than the
blackest nigger in Cartersville. I
would get powerful mad.but woufd’nt
say a word. One morning ho told
me that an old sow was in his corn
field down on the branch, and he
wanted me to go and get her out,
find the hole that she got in at, and
stop it up. I went down to the field,
and hunted, and hunted, and bunted
for the hole. After awhile I saw the
old sow sneak out through the hol
low of an old chestnut tree that had
been blown down before the fence
had been built I got two boys to
help me roll the old hollow log from
under thefer.ee, and when we turned
it around, the end that was in the
field projected over a bluff that was
nineteen feet and seven inches high,
with water ten feet deep under the
bluff, while the other end of the log
remained in the same old place.
The next morning my two partners
and myself went back to the bluff to
see if the old sow’ would come
through the log again. Well, we
waited, and waited, and waited.
After awhile the old sow came trot
ting along towards the log, looking
iMipjHf, .Tit TMXfMtt aBXJKAQ*. S r>*
iw-med to be la & berry. n*d with at
xaeh pfeliaisi?y ier estlg-Atioc. -be
veitt right .s*o the g la lhr at a
a ecd&ate he passed oat of toe
other *-d*. J. *cd ker— %he I**2l!
over the Meff into the whts-r. -ae
t'j*e quick y snorted swam 00 ‘ r*n
a/k ?o the kg -tA Cjl&c tbr g .
the -ecof.J time. Tuh eiperiiuetit
or if* repeated re vec titu** before the
eld fool w*r eoavicc and that she vt:
f *slowing the wrong h/.p. When
-he did fisd It out howeve* -h'- be
came very, very angry. She looked
awfully Sere* raised her bristie*.
ear led her tail over her back, sn&ried
defiantly and trotted dilitpiil ’y
tifiy. If I erernv m mad hog, this
wa*oae. Be=:d' being fi ed with
the fotec&est rage, she seised her:
Mb to her feel logs—efee looked w>
faiiy di4ap:>oiated. -be did. certain..
I shall never forget bow she cocked
her eye to one -id" con trade*! her
generally pleamot dmotecaeae, and
£ 'OLterl oat her dl-. hi being
foiled ia her little gime of getting
icto the com field. M y noer? *n * j
1 frijhed until we felt -i k and
then went hack to tho hatter's hop
10 JtUV J, r £f&tV7 ~i?ut old
man Spears wouldn’t believe a word
of my story. He was mad because he
had to tote the water from the brauch
that morning himself. He took me
across his lap, and—well, I felt worse
than the old sow did when she dis
covered her mistake. Good bye for
another week. Sam Brown.
PECK’S BAD BOY AND lIIS PA.
The Boy Tries to Play Prodigal Son, and In
stead of Fatted Calf, he Gets Kicked by
a Loaded Calf Skin.
“Hello, got back again, have you?”
said the grocery man to the bad boy,
as he came iu the store looking tired,
with his clothes soiled, and a general
appearance of having been sleeping
in freight cars with cattle. “Your pa
told me he expected you had run
away for good and that you might
not come back. Where you been?’’
“Chicago,” said the boy, as he took
out a toad stabber knife and proceed
to take the ulster off a smoked her
ring. “Been playing Prodigal Son,
in two acts. But times have changed
since that young fellow in the Bible
went off on a tear and came back and
the old folks killed a young cow for
him to eat, and fell on his shirt collar
and cried down the back of his neck.
They don’t receive prodigal sons that
way iu our ward. They fill a prodi
gal son’s coat tails full of boots, and
he can’t find cold veal enough in the
house to mi" •~/dindwich.”
“I thou£~ ne^K B c i* folks were piou,
and woulr V iclined to overlook
anything, '*■.& tho grocery man,
he charged the herring and cracßers
to the bad boy’s father. “You don’t
mean to tell me they went back on
the teachings of tne good book, and
warmed your jacket?’’
“ You have guessed it the first time,”
said the boy. “this prodigal son bus
iness is all right in theory, but in
practice it’s a dead failure. You see
at Sunday-school the 'e.sson was about
the prodigal son, and the minister
told us all about how the boy took all
the money he could scrape up and
went away to a distant country and
painted the towns red, and spent his
money like a countryman at a circus,
and how he took in all the sights, and
got broke, and got hungry and took
a job at tho stock yards feeding pigs
and he was so hungry he used to help
the pigs eat their rations, and fiually
he thought of his home, where they
had pie, and he went home expecting
to be fired out, but his pa was tickled
to see him, aud set up a free lunch of
calf on the half shell, and hugged the
boy and made him feel bully. Wiien
we got home pa and ma talked about
the lesson, and pa said it was one of
the most touching things he ever
heard, aud told me to think of it, and
it would do me good. Well, the
morel thought of it the more I felt
like trying the prodigal business on,
and told my chum about it, and he
said he hadn’t had any vacation and
he would go ofi‘ prodigaling with me
if I would go, and walk into the
country, and have a good time, and
come back and oe received with open
arms. Well, we got all our money
together, and a brakeman on a freight
train, that goes to out church, cause
his wife sings in the choir, he hid us
in the caboose, and we went to Chica
go. O, my, but we had a good time.
I never saw* money wither the way
‘it did with us* We eat about twenty
times a day, the first two days, and
then our appetites left us, because we
didn’t have any more money. The
first two nights weslept in a two shil
ling lodging house, the third night
we walked around, and the fourth
night we slept in the police station.
When our money was gone half the
1 fun was gone. If a fellow can walk
around with money in his pocket, he
1 feels good, even if he don’t want to
; buy anything, hut when the money
is gone, he feels bad, and wants to
buy lots of things. We waited two
days for our brakeman, and when we
got on his train he put us in a cattle
car, and it was vile. I traded my
collar-button for a postal card, and
wrote to pa that the prodigal would
put in an appearanca at nine p. m.,
and for him to prepare to fall on my
neck, and to send down to the meat
market for a hind quarter of fatten
call, and have plenty of gravy. You
wouldn’t believe it, but there was no
carriage at the depot, and wo had to
walk home. I could have overlook
el that, if ioere A>4i anything
to when I got to the b use, bat
t - -rie w. - \ f- 1 etLJUj 11 A.
Fa r&. bovev>r *ad I was
j z loz \ i fa-11 oat my uk f:r : a
to get &a to weep, wr.es he gnobed
It with his haiKt and same sear twist
ing it cf?. and taen he tamed roe
around and began to play the ho*
drum on soy clothe® with his feet.
I never ss**o annoyed in tl my life,
honestly. It wa* not th? treatment
I bod a right to expect, after they had
i told me about the prodigal sjb of ar
dent times. As quiex as> I eeuli catch
my breath I asked pa what the prod
igal son of the Bible times would have
" tbcc/nt if hi- jit ha! mtalcd him
when he came home, and what kind
of & **ory It "■•11 have mxde, if i.
had told aly.a* the old man tikieg
rJm by the neck and kicking him all
over the room roeiead of Ulllog on
his neck and weeping, acd giving
j him a veal j>>t pie. Pa said he wasu\
nraaisg toy cld back number prodi
gal sous, and he thought his way was
the best, asd he sent me to bsd with
out any supper. T at setties tfay
* .. irennery. No
tatted calf for Hank, if you
please,” and the boy got up and
shook the herring peelings off his lap.
“Well, how did your chum come
out?” asked the grocery man, with
much interest.
“O, he hasn’t come out yet. He is
in the lockup,” said the boy. “His
ma put the police onto him, and
when he showed up they run him in
to the police station for a tramp. I
thiuk we have both demonstrated
that this climate does not agree with
the prodigal business,'and however
much they may try to teach the
beauties of such stories, they do not
expect us to try to imitate them.
When 1 go to Chicago alter this I
shall go in a parlor car, with lunch
enough to last me, and a return tick
et. I don’t understand it all. Now
I didn’t do half the mean things in
Chicago that the Prodigal son of old
did in the far off country, and yet he
got taffy when he got home, and I
got my spine broke. It may be all
right, out they do things different in
the old country, you know.”
“If I understand the kind of a
Prodigal son you are,” said the gro
ceryman as he sprinkled tho floor
from a wash basin, preparatory to the
semi-annual sweeping out, “you have
got even with your pa before this, for
his outrageous treatment. That is,
mind you, I don’t suggest anything
for you to play on him, but from
•.viiat I know of you, the account is
evened up before now. Ami right?”
“Well, I should remark. Any per
son who thinks I cannot resent such
an insult, makes a mistake as to the
sort of a prodigal son I am. We had
company at dinner to-day, and pa is
always in his element when we have
company. He prides himself on his
carving. We had a roast of beef, and
before it went on the table I took the
steel that pa sharpens the carving
knife ou, aud made two holes right
through the roast, and then I took a
rawhide whip that pa basted me with
once, cut it in two, and run pieces of
the rawhide in the holes of the beef.
Pa began carving with a smile, and
asked the minister if ho w r ould have
his beef rare, or an outside piece. He
was bearing gently on the carving
knife, when the knife struck the raw
hido and wouldn’t go any furthur.
Pa smiled and said he had struck a
barbed wire fence, and he turned the
roast around and cut, again, and he
struck the rawhide. The minister
drummed with his fork and spoke to
rna and said ‘we had a splendid meet
ing Wednesday night,’ and rna said
it was perfectly gorgeous, and pa be
gan to perspire and turn red in the
face, and he said some words that
would sound better in a brewery, and
he tried to gouge off some meat, but
it wouldn’t come, and the minister
said, ‘Brother, you seem to be having
a monkey snd a parrot time with
that roast,’ and that made pa mad
and he said he could carve his own
meat without any sky pilot’s inter
ference, and mas&id, ‘Why, pa, you
should not be impudent,’ and pa said
he could whip the butcher that sold
him that piece of work ox, and he
sent the beef out to the kitchen and
the company ate cold liver. The
girl set the meat in the ice chest, and
pretty soon I went down cellar, cause
1 didn’t like cold liver, and pulled
out the rawhide, and I had the fatted
calf I wanted, and I gave the rest to
that lame dog you see me have here
a spell ago. O, a boy can get enough
to eat if he has got any originality
about him. 1 think if pa would show
a Christian spirit, and wear slippers
when he kicks me, I would do any
thing to make it pleasant for him,
but when a man wears out hunting
boots on bis own dear little Prodigal,
I think the prodigal is apt to get hard.
Don’t you?”
The groceryman admitted that per
haps the boy was right, and he raised
such a dust sweeping out that the boy
coughed, took a few peaches off the
top of a basket, and went out whist
ling, “Home again from a foreign
shore.”
A rural subscriber wriles to us to*
say that it is all bosh—this talk about
trees increasing rainfall. He wants
to know if everybody doesn’t get
under a tree when it is rainiug.
“I saw a capital thing in that last
pamphlet of yours,” said O’Connell
to a conceited scribbler. “Indeed,”
rejoined the delighted perpetrator,
with a beaming smile; “what was
it?” ‘‘A pound of butter.” \
W. A_
SHIRKER & SHAW.
Ikrn; lease* i mt f> i tibe ne*x 2.- S
P*u£h - ♦*.-. •-. Ema -tsv-rt. t-rr-jrawofi
s* 4* ■**! fc arifc aC
Carriag9.Bu£g7 & W ag:r
BEI*iIKDi6,
i* T*ai tt4 im. AH kisrij af F trsr
W rt k..t
HORSE SHOFIXG,
®i ita m&Ußr t%Lie sc
: -i *®rl #>rKsc-
AMERICAN JOB OFFICE
LETTER HEADS.
BILL HEAD"
NOTE HEADS.
HAND BILLS.
INVITATIONS
CIRCULARS, .
-ASTERS.
Jvft.Wl'NG TAGS,
SHIPPING” BOOKS,
RECEIPT BOOKS,
BUSINESS CARDS,
VISITING CARDS,
POST’D CARDS,
BLANKS,
And everything else in the Job Printing line
executed with
NEATNESS and DISPATCH.
Bring us your Job Printing and we will
GUARANTEE SATISFACTION
IN
PRICE AND STYLE.
W. W. EiRAKR,
Practicing Physician,
Carterstdlle, Ga.
Special attention given to Diseases of Women
and Children, and all Chronic A flections.
Office up-sU'irs, between Dank and Post Of
fice.
J. T. OWEN,
Jeweler,
West Main Street, Cartersville, Ga.,
Keeps constantly on hand a large assortment
01 Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Plated Ware.
Spectacles a specialty. Twenty-live years ex
perience enables him to do all kinds of repair
ing at reasonable.rates and to guarantee satis
faction to his patrons.
“3?. ~%757. ■^V r liit©-
CABINET MAKER and UPHOLSTERER,
Furniture of all Kinds Made and
Repaired.
SHOP ON WEST MAIN STREET,
Carters ville, Ga-
IIRKM ite ISKKVAKI),
Cabinet IViakers,
BUILDERS ADD CONTRACTORS,
C’a rtemille? Ga.
CASES
Of every description constantly on hand.
'Baf*Furniture of all kinds made and repaire
Shop cn East Main Street
NOW IS TIIE TIME TO IMPROVE JOUR
STOCK.
THIS IS A RARE OPPORTUNITY. BLOOD
WILL TELL.
DON’T RAISE SCRUBS. IT WON’T PAT
IN THIS PROGRESSIVE AGE.
This thorough, Virginia bred horsey
GrolcL Dust,
Will be permitted to serve mares the jvreseut
season, at the Dobbins larm, on the Ric h’s fer
ry road, two miles west of Cartersville. at SIE
to insure a colt. Money due as soon as certain
the mare is in foal, or parts ‘ with. Care taken
to prevent accidents,out not responsible ehould
any occur. S. O. JONES.
EISEMAN BROS
MANUFACTURING
CLOTHIERS & TAILORS
65 SVIHTEK.VI.L STREET,
ATLANTA. GEORGIA.
CONSUMPTION.
I have a positive reme/Jy for the above disease; by
its use thousands of cases of the worst kind and ot
long standing have been; cured. Indeed, so strong
is my faith in its efficacy ,that I will' send TWO BOT
TLES 1* REE, together with a valuable treatise on
the disease, to any puffer er. Give express and P. O,
address, Dr.T. A. SLO CUM,IBI Pearl st., N. Y.
ALDEN’S MANIFOI.D
CYCLOPEDIA.
Over 300,000 subjects and 5,000 illustra
tions, numerous muiltL 20 volumes, large octa
vo, #35 00, cheaper n lition, #15.00. Speci
men pages free, 50 o.*ooo Volumes Choice
Books descriptive cott, vlogue tree. Books for
examination befor-a pa jment on evidence ol
good faith. Not s ah] by dealers—prices too
low. JOHN 11. A1 JOES /. Publisher, lb Vesey
street, New York* P. o, Box 1227.
JOHNS AUL*S
Catalogue of New, Rarm and Beautiful Plants,
for 1884, will Wneatly i February with a col
ored plate. It i; full mn ialh good and beau
tiful plants, as well us*lll the novelties of merit.
The rich collections of ft ne Foliage, and other
Cireenhouse and Ho'thou se Plants, are well
grown and ut low prices. Free to all my cus
tomers; to others, l< ) cts .; or, a plain copy
gratis. Catalogue.-. < >f Seeds, Roses, Orchids,
Fruits, etc., gratis. .IOITN SAUL,
mar2s-lrn Washington, D. C.
—
SANITARIUM. Riverside, Ca!. Th 9 dry climato crre3.
•cose, Throat, ii ill idea, SSp., route, cost, fine.
mm jBPKiBBSi
1 All that the doubtful cxnrkMisor thoughtful want to,
' and gui. ; *Sikding 50 cts.paper gfcc.Mar* [
<\m P l .areufe led, money or etps, by ,
OR. WHITTIE
1 :J h S, fr !®f t specialist, fietvaiß Debility,!mpeiiiments ,
' Qonaul *.thm and Pnmphlpt free, ;
-THIS PAPER
is YK 'FILE WITH
T. E. H ANBURY & CO.,
ADVERTISING’ AGENTS,
ATI OA-.
Where adve rtisiiift contracts may be mad©
at our ber rat.ee. f?. O. .hrawar 35.
fcJubsdtj for the AM^ikiCAN.
PARSONS’S/PILLS
Ai4 r© ajfcygt fir Mi*i la <S* —im nunri , .
* tii tads* 1 Till rati fr? ■ i &* t-i w<.s raniy rap pp
*Mdh.atfetragfce si... Far Y~xma/k Musaa -fiat
t. t'spcFpe? M4*& Ups Fan- --r— m - - -rT * 8 parr'” EL, LI ii tr -—mbth. .fws*4. jnatsrTTf
A*€*®TWe
fT/if yinunic j i
■ gIMKIKMU
si It *3l *** t—-r-tttty panaMt ac 4 ecu SarCtca!EaL..te. Sfcoi ■ar? *** ~ - - --ye,. w
CHICKEN CHOLERA,
Hotels.
HILBURH. WW'
ADAIRSVILLE, GA.
Wa j. HILbFbX, Proper. |
Nice rooms, loan beds, thorough ventilation,
tables jpplied with the very best
the market affords.
MODEUATE. jul4-tf
Central Hotel
ROME, GEORGIA.
J. 11. KIPPS, Proprietor.
Bates $2 per day. Bagga* e handled tree. Sit
uated in the business part of the city-. Free
omnibus to and lrom all trains. Recently en
arged and newly furnished.
FIFTH AVENUE HOTEL,
LOUISVILLE, KY.
CENTRALLY LOCATED
And all the appointments, including
ELEVATORS AND FIRE ESCAPE.
VERY COMPLETE.
S. M. SCOTT, Proprietor.
GRANT HOUSE.
BEST HOTEL IN ATLANTA.
New building, new furniture—everything
first-class.
Headquarters lor commercial men.
WALNUT STREET HOUSE,
Walnut St., between Gth and 7th,
CINCINNATI. OHIO.
FIRSTCLASS IN ALL APPOINTMENTS
Popular Price, *2.00 per day.
FRANK J. OaKE?, Manager.
ELIXIR.
MANDRAKE & BUCHU.
Natare’s True Remedy for all Bilious
Diseases or Torpidity of the
Liver & Kidneys.
Bilious Headaches, Dyspepsia, Costiveness,
Sour Stomach, Jaundice. Heartburn, Nervous
ness, Catarrh of the Bladder, Retention and In
continence of the Urine, and loss of tone to the
parts. It has no equal in the relief and cure ol
Piles.
3?rice 50 Cents*
Manufactured By
TTATXjE efis MOWERr
!)8 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
For Sale By
M. F. Word, Druggist,
Carter3ville, Ga.
Tr STANDS AT THE HEAD.
THE LIGHT RUNNING
“DOMESTIC”
BECAUSE IT IS
The simplest machine made, having few
parts, no complication, and requires little
skill in management. .
The lightest running machine, hence pro
duces loss fatigue in operating, and on that
account is especially recommended by the
medical faculty. _ .
Adapted to the greatest range o! work-will
do the finest as well as the heaviest and is
suited to the u>e of all appliances that acili
tate the ordinary, fancy, or difficult work,
Always ready for use, and requires no spe
cial adjustment when the work is changed.
The most durable machine ever made. Its
obstruction is in accordance w th the most
advanced and approved “ e c hi “*cal principles
and all the parts are casc hardcned, working
on adjustable conical bearings. _
It has the most beautilul wood work.
It has the best set of attachments ever lur
nished with a sewing machine.
FOR SALE BY
WIKXE & CO.,
CARTERSVHihE, GA,
I ebStf • ' ' —:—>
We Are Selling
THE CELEBRATED
T. J. MAGRUDER A CO.’S
CUSTOM MADE
SHOES,
And kindly ask the ladies and gentlemen ol
CARTERSVILLE,
And surrounding country to call and see
THEM
4
When they want to buy first class goods.
JONES BROS. & CO.
A wpp, ■ Send six cents lor pos-
A L;m<| tage, and receive free a
J \ JT L A-/Aj -costly box of goods which
will help alt, of either sex
to more money right away than anything else
in this world, Fortunes await the workers ab
solutely sure. At once address Tbuk & Cos.,
Augusta, Maine.
Unrivalled in Appearance.
Unparalleled in Simplicity.
Unsurpassed in Construction.
Unprecedented in Durability.
Unexcelled in Economy of Fuel
Undisputed in the BROAD CLAIM ol being me
VEBY BEST OPEBATIITG,
aUXCEESf SELLING,
HANDSOMEST ANB
Ist non u
Ever offered to the publiie.
MADE ONLY BY
EXCELSIOR MANUFACTURING CO.
l f os. 612, 614, 616 & 616 N. Main St.,
ST. LOUIS, MO.
{Jfl STiIXERS
|^ OMACH
The Want of a £elialde Diuretic
Which, while acting a stimulant of the
kidneys, neither excites nor 'irritates them,
was long since supplied by Ifo tetter’/
Stomach Bitters. This lilie medicine exer/
th.e requisite degree of stimulation upo
these organs, without producing irritation,
and is, therefore, far better adapted for the
purpose than unnjedicared excifcmls often
resortetl to. Dyspejjsia, iV-ver and ague, and
kindred diseases, are ail cured by n
For sale by all Druggists and'Dealers
generallv
OH*"STRONG’S PILLS!
The Old, Well Tried, Wonderful
Health Renew trig Remedies.
3TM6’S SANATIVE PILLS p, iISSKS
cot cure for Slek Hearinphe, Constipation
,>.l nil Bloordeix , ,
TP,DNS’S PECTORAL PILLS
t-Sfe'KWSSS
. Vltcate iV.miles. and br*em the
you., hV-sfem. neri pwing vigor and health toeveiT
r . ! 1 1 the body .Sold by_l)ruKgists. tor I amphlet-i
..I--i: •" HiTT.fc# (to 18 Cedar St .W. i City
Will be mailed rnce to alt applicant* ,od to
customers of last nCK year without ordering it.
It contains illustrations, prices, descriptions and
directions for planting all Vegetable and Flowet
s A"\*"SrribDVX’nn
D. M. FERRY & CO. auc*.
.1 1 r a
Of Kentucky "University,lEklNSTON, KT.
Spring Session begin* April 3d, Tim! to‘••iruplrw
Pic FuiTDiplouia Busiuess Courw fchoutlO week*. average foul
Coat, including Tuition, det.t Books 4ml Boar 1 in
Vrlegraphy a specialty. Ladies received. 5000 \io£ess!l ersd
nates. Over 100 pupils last year from 15 to 45 years of age. jom
10 States. Instruction Is Practically and Individually mpatted
by 10 teachers. Special courses for Teachers and Business Hen.
University Diploma presented to its graduates. This beautiful
city is noted for its healthfulness and society, and is on ie*ling
Railroads. Students can begin at any time. Summer Session
begins June lflth. No vacatiou. For Circular and full p&r'ico
lars, addregs 1,3 W. R. SMITH, Lexington, Ky.
HEADS
and all BILIOUS COMPLAINTS are relieved by taking
WRIGHTS INDIAN VEGETABLE PILLS
Purely Vegetable; So Sripiag. Pries 25e. AUSragsirt.
'jjK’ FREE!
SELF-CURE
A favorite prescription of one of th*
i.o<st noted tmd successful specialists hi theuo.
.now retired)for the cure of yerrovsDeotlttyt
T - id Manhood, Weaknesa and Jieeay.Sent
in plain sealed can fill lfc
Address PH. WARD & CO. Lnuisiaea.
CURES WHERE AIL ILJvE FAILS, gl
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. M
Use in time. Sold by druggists. Cg
Tola Printing
Of all kinds done at ‘he
American office*