Newspaper Page Text
LEGAL ADVERTISEMENTS.
<ii4fti'iliait*4 Sale.
By virtue fttun nl*4*r from thuOrmrt of Or
.Ti'iiy of K(Hi>w county, Ga. W ill le-old
< i the fli't Tutfc'lay in St-pn-inlter, 18t-'4 at itt*
court house ittair in t.nrterovitle, -ai<l county,
between tiie leeai sale hours, the molivi-le.l
two-sixths o, b>t ot land No. 101, in the fth
dsitrlct H"d 3*l section of said county, said lot
containing 10 acres, more or less. Same ly ihx
three miles Westot Adairsville. iti said coun
ty, sold as the property of Peter ItieWVr and
Junius Brewer. minors, for the ptn po-es- ot
division and support of said mrnor?: “PefTtrs
ot sale, cash. Augusts. IHB4.
. H. BKKWKR, Guardian.
4t W.*l.
To ull whom it may concern:
Kmm.t If. Scott has applied to be appointed
the guardian of the person and property ol
of .f t.nea M. S< ott, Ui'iatio, of said courty.
Th-refore all ncr-ons concerned ate hereby
notilied to tile their objection*, if any ft ey
have, in my otlice, a* provided by statute, else
letter*, will be granted applicant on HrSt Mon
day in September next.
J. A HOWARD, Ordinary,
.July 2*2d. 1884-41
COUNTY COURT BALIFF'S SALE.
Will be sold before the court house door in
the city of Cartersville. Georgia, on the tlrt
Tuesday in Septetnt er 18S4, between t• legal
hours of sale, the following property to-w it:
Lots of ):tmj Noi. 710 him! Til in the lith
triet and 3 I aeet ion ot Partt.W county. Georgia,
each containing 1 1 acres, more or 1* ss. Levied
in and will be -old as the property ol * • Dodd,
to satisfy two li. la’s issued lrout the ( onntv
tmirt of saitl county in luvor of It. '*• d° lM *'
vs. C. I bald. Property in possession ol deiei >*-
tint and pointed out by hltn. Notice waVrd.
l.ew made August 1-t. 13f4. bv .J.M. W bite,
Special llaliff. .1. tb KKOt till D>N. L.,. L.
A tig s— 4t J. M. WHITE, Special ( . L. L
GEORGIA —Bartow County.
Whereas, \\ . M. King and l-aali Holcombe,
Administrators of Ans.m Holcombe, deceased,
have applied for letters ol dismission Horn
.-aid administration: Therefore all persons con
cerned are hereby notified to file their objec
tion-, il any thev have, in uiv ofiiee within the
time preaertbed by law. else dismission will
gi anted applicants on the first Monday m Ot
tober next. This, .July 7t,h. IS"4.
J. A. HOW A KD, Ordinary.
THE FARMERS? CORNER.
Valuable Collection of Agricultural Items
Gathered for Farmers.
To Destroy Weeds.
The soil is as prone to weeds as
mtn to sin, and it is possible that
some men have been provoked to
sin by weeds. Flow to eradicate
them is an important question.
Could they once be cleared out, anil
there be a probability of their remain
ing so, the farmer could go at them
cheerfully, hopefully ; but quite the
contrary is the experience of all.
Land that has grown nothing but
timothy and clover for twenty years
will produce a spontaneous growth
of pigeon grass, rag weeds, pig weeds,
etc,, if put under the plow for a few
years. Cutting the pests before they
go to seed is the common remedy of
fered; but it takes a vigilant com
mittee for each farm to do that if all
weeds are to be kept down. r l he
plan we adopted has proven satisfac
tory, and thut is not to till any piece
of land long enough for the wepds to
get possession of the sol!. Bod is
turned for corn; the second year for
corn or any other crop most desired;
the third to wheut or oats and stock
down. Wtinc convenient, it is Q
good plan to turu under a crop of clo
ver. then seed again. The second
piece of sod land is turned, and by
the time that is ready to be stocked
the first is ready for the plow again.
It will be seen by this method that
manuring is not necessary. We do
not believe in the use of manure on
land used for hold crops, for seeds in
the fertiliser add to the labors of the
farmer. VVe use manure upon the
gresg land and get the benefit of it in
the increased production of hay, and
also in the growth of corn when the
land is turned for tillage.
Farmers depend too generally up
on their barnyard manure to help
out their grain crops. Year after
year the plow is put upon a field,
year after year a half crop is gather
ed, and a great amount of labor ex
pended with poor compensation for
investment. Soil needs rest —that is,
rest from the production of such crops
as sap largely its primitive elements.
A Sait) Plow.
“If you have a very rusty plow,”
pays a writer in the Cincinnati
Times, “pour about eight ounces of
sulphuric acid, as purchased at an
apothecary’s, into a quart of water:
do this slowly and very carefully,
for it will burn hands, clothing; or al
most anything else; also, use an
earthen or crockery vessel rather
than a tin or iron one. Apply this
to the rusty surface two or three
times, making each application as
soon as the former one is dry. Then
wash with clear water and repeat the
process. Give some of the worst
spots a rub with a bit of Bristol brick,
wash again with water and wipe dry.
Put a little Kerosene around the bolts
and take the plow to pieces, scouring
each piece to get off the remaining
rust if necessary. This sounds like a
formidable process, but the whole
operation ought not to take over an
hour. Oil all exposed surfaces with
kerosene when you set the plow
away, and when you do your plow*
ing a very few turns will finish off
the balance of the rust.”
“It is ray opinion that we are on
the eve of a great panic,” said the
man on the soap-box at the grocery
store. “I have never known such
universal distrust in financial circles
as there is now, and unless there is
an curly return of public confidence
I shall not le surprised at a general
crash. Why, a mm that 1 have
known alt my life refused to trust
me for a flfleen-cent string of hsli
this morning, and they weren’t very
fresh fiih tither. I don’t nee how
moneyed men can help feeling very
uneasy in the midst of such a stafe of
affairs. I think I will draw my
money out of bunk and in\cat it in
Uud.”
Woods 101 l of Bej.
It is a cold day when t here is not
some boy wanting advice from this
advice foundry, and there is no duty
that is more pleasant to the editor
than that of setting the boys
when they have symptoms of eotng
Wrong. A letter from a boy at West
Alexandria, Ohio, is as follows:
Dear Mr:— l have, been a reader of
your paper for some time and have
noticed your advice to boys. lam
in a predicament to know what to
do, and I thought I would write and
ask your advice. lam a young man
of seventeen years and am very de
sirous of going inti* the saloon busi
ness. I have capital enough, but my
father and mother object. I think I
am capable of running my own af
fairs. Any advice from you will be
kindly received by
Yours truly,
Now. here is a chance to save a
seven teen year old boy from almost
sure min, if tie will take the modi-|
cine. The medicine is this: Boy, i
take a sharp hatchet, lay your righ< |
wrist across a butcher s block and :
wi'di the left hand take the hatchet
and cut off Hie right hand, haggle it,
because you can’t do a clean job 01
cutting with the left hand. Then go
through life peddling popcorn balls
with the left hand, rather than ent( r
the business of selling whisky at
your age. Asa popcorn peddler you
will be respected, as a seventeen
year-old saloon-keeper, you will be
pitied and despised, and at the age
of twenty you will be a drunkard, or
will have made a dozen other boys
drunkards, and the friends of the
other boys will hate you, your pa
rents will not be proud of you, no
girl of respectability w 7 ould be seen
in your company, and your compan
ions will be loafers j you will be dis
gusted with yourself, will smell of
stale lemon peel, whisky and two-for
a-nlckle cigar nicotine, and you w ill
be a sign-post of warning to other
boys to take the other road, -There,
you got more advice than you ex
pected, didn’t you. Well, any suc
cessful and respectable saloon-keeper
able men who keep saloons, though
they are as scarce as hen’s teeth—
would give you the same advice.
Any of them will tell you, if they
tell you the truth, that ninety-seven
boys out of a hundred, who begin
life at your age behind the bar of a
saloon, become either drunkards,
gamblers, thieves, loafers, or else
they lose their health, leave the bus
iness in disgust and die paupers.
You don’t want to be an unsuccessful
3aloon-keeper, Well, to be a success
ful one you have got to have ability
enough to be a sucoesfcfuul lawyer,
doctor or merchant. The men who
are successful as saloon-keepers have
ability, which, turned in another di
rection, would have made them suc
cessful in any other calling, and they
hate themselves when they think of
the lost opportunities, and they al
most hate the wealth that has come
to them through the mouth of a
whisky bottle. A man who keeps a
successful saloon and makes money,
doas not realize what a mean busi
ness it is, until he has a family of
nice children grown lip. He has
money, furnishes them with a nice
home, educates them, and is proud
of them, and knows that hiy girls arc
as beautiful and accomplished as
those of the best citizen of the com
munity, and knows that they are
worthy to marry the best nren of the
state or country, The first that lie
notices is that the young ladies of his
household are ashamed of themselv?
os. They try not to show it to the
father who has been so kind to them,
hut they cannot always disguise the
fact that they do not receive atten
tion from desirable acquaintances.
They are qualified by nature and ed
ucation to go into the best of society,
but the aigu over the door of the fath
er’s place of business is wfiat is the
matter. If such a girl is invited into
the beet society, she i3 liable to have
ner heart broken by some one asking
who the beautiful girl is, and bear
ing the answer, Why, her father
keeps a saloon down town some
j where.” The father may be square
and honest, and have friends among
the best men of his city, and he may
think lie is happy, but when he sees
that bis beautiful daughter is being
snubbed on account of the business
I he is engaged in, he gets lo hate him?
! self. If a bartender should aspire to
the hand of that daughter, the father
would be indignant. If a gambler
that frequents his saloon should want
to marry the girl he would kick ter
ribly. If a rich young drunkard and
spendthrift should ask for her hand,
he would be sorry, anti yet those
three are the classes that would be
most liable to look for an alliance
with the saloon-keeper’s daughter,
white she would be worthy of the
hand of a governor, Jt is when these
things come up before the eyes of a
successful saloon -keeper that he
would give every dollar he has ac
quired if he had entered almost any
other business on earth. There is
nothing redeeming about the busi
ness, except that many saloon-keep
ers are open-hearted, gei.erou*, hu
mane, charitaM i and good friends to
their friends. They are so became it
is natural, and in any otiier business
they would be tine same, or more so.
No, young min, ifther* is any
wood to saw in your vicinity, if
there is a crop of peanuts that can be
baked and sold, a job to be secured
driving* pair of blind mul*a haul
tug the dirtiest load that can be
found, if you can control the capital
to buy a box of blacking and a brush,
go into the peanut trade, drive the
mules, or black boots, or anything
for a starter, but don’t, for God’s
sake, at the age of seventeen open a
saloon, and confine the talent God
has given you, to the base uses of
puliing a squeaky cork out of a bottle
of rum, because every squeak of the
cm k is the wail of a soul that has
been drowned in drink, every gur
gle of the liquid as it goes from the
bottle to the gins*, is the throbbing
of a poor brain that has been crazed
by the hellish stuff, and every stroke
of the dirty dnhcloth on the bar, to
wipe away the stains of the spilled
hel!-fire, is an emblem of attempts
‘o wipe the sins from the soul of the
man who kills his brother by mak
ing him a drunkard. You, a seven
teen-year-old boy, saying, “I think
I am capable of running my owu af
fairs/’ against the advice of the fath
er and mother who bore you, is one
evidence that you are an ass, but
your coming to The Sun for advice
may do you good, and if so send us
a postal card. Also, if you do not
take the advice, and do go into the
saloon business, send a notice of
your funeral two years hence, when
you die of the delirium tremens, or
when some customer of yours, who
is drunk with rum, as you are now
drunk with egotism, brains you with
a bung starter when you tell him he
has had enough liquor, and who
thinks he is capable of runniug his
own affairs. That will do, boy, you
can step dow 7 n and make room for
the next,
Looking After the Brood Sows.
Avery important item now to the
farmer wishing to secure a fine lot
of spring pigs is to select out from
among his old sows those that have
proven themselves excellent suckers,
together with his earliest and choi
cest young sow’s, and place them in
separate quarters from the rest of the
herd. Now, if he has not procured
a choice, pure-bred mate, he should
at once proceed to do so. Let him
not be content with anything but
the very best, It is not good policy
to breed from a grade, not even if it
be a high grade; for such an animal
has not the potency to transmit his
good qualities—whatever he may
possess—to his offspring in a manner
that a thoroughbred animal will, and
the herd upon which a grade male is
used, instead of advancing will reto
grade. After the purchase of a pure
bred male has been made, he should
he kept in a small enclosure by him
self, and not allowed to run w 7 ith the
whole herd, to worry and fret him
self to death, as a great many far
mers are inclined to let him do. In
fact, it is better for the boars and the
sows, that they should ne kept in
separate quarters, and there is no
doubt but what the farmer will get
better and stronger pigs by this
method. After the sows are bred
they should be allowed a variety of
feed, and not confined wholly lo a
corn diet, Give the young sows all
they will eat, as there is no danger
rf their getting too fat while carry
ing the.r first litter. Put a liberal
supply of charcoal, a9hes, salt and
sulpher wiiere they can get at it;
feed some kind of vegetables or roots
once a week during winter, and a
good supply of slop once or tw’ice a
day made from mill stuff; furnish
them with good shelter and plenty
of good, clean oat straw bedding,and
the result of afl this pare will be a
fine lot of spring pigs.
Apple Bust.
A correspondent in the Farmer’s
Home Journal declares that the ap
ple rust, which has ruined so many
fine apple trees In Kentucky, origi
nated from cedar trees growing near
orchards. Green, woody balls, the
size of walnuts, grew on the cedars.
These ba/8 were full of horns, re
sembling roots, and when It rained
or the weather was very damp they
would sw 7 ell into a deep red, soft,
jelly-like substance,more than a hun
dred times their original size. When
the rains would cease these roots
would shrink back to their original
size and leave a impalpable red
powder. This powder being very
dry, was easily lifted by the winds,
and, lodging on tfie appie trees,
caused them to rust and fall. That
this was the cause of the rust was
proved by the fact that wherever the
cedars were destroyed rust disap
peared and the trees bore full crops
of fruit again aud the foliage was
clean and healthy.
* *
An Invitation to Dinner.
The story is told that the playing
of a celebrated violinist very much
impressed one of the ladies of the au
dience, a well known society leader,
and she caused the musician to he
presented to her.
“I was delighted with your w7on
derful music, Mr, 8,,” the lady said;
“quite carried away with it, in fact,”
The musician was charmed.
“If you have no other engage
ments for Thursday evening,” the
lady went on, “I would be pleased
to have you dlno with us.”
He had no other engagements.
“And ho sure and bring your vie.
in,” hlio added.
“Well, madame,” Mr, S. replietl,
‘I It rdly think that will he necessa
ry; my violin never gets hungry."
Asparagus.
It is a wholly erroneous notion
that to make a good asparagus bed
one must dig tip the ground to the
tfPpfh of two feet and pile in lones
aud other mtterie.D. A gardener
gave us his experience with tw 7 o as
paragus beds. One was prepared by
plowing deep and sub-oiling, and
then with spades digging up the
earth to the depth of two feet. This
w 7 as an expensive proeea*. The oth
er oed was planted upon ground
plowed in the ordinary manner.
Both beds wore manured liberally
w 7 ilh stable manure. The gardener
lived to wear out both beds. They
returned him an annual profit for
twenty-five years. For the first few
years the bed on the shallow soil
gave much the earlier crops. After
four or five years there was no differ
ence in the beds, and they continued
of equal value for a quarter of a cen
tury.
A Fast Line.
We were going west on the Great
Western Division of the Grand Trunk
and the night was chilly for the lat
ter end of May.
“Hi ! porter,” said the commercial
man in the bunk overhead; “can’t
you give us another blanket? It’s
deuced cool to-night.’’
“Ain’t got another blanket, boss.”
“Well, just see what you can do
for a fellow 7 ,” said the commercial
man, putting his hand out through
the curtains with a quarter in it.
“Dunno, boss, but I’ll do what I
kin.”
There was scarcely a perceptible
pause in the porter’s measured tread
as he passed our section fifteen min
utes later, but the curtains parted
and a blanket went through the
opening as if it had been shot out rf
a cannon.
“Thought I felt somebody carry
ing off part of my bedclothes last
night,” said a passenger in the fur
ther end of the car, as he worked
himself into his boots in the morn
ing.
“Dunno, boss; went mighty fas’
las’ night, making up time; proba
bly run from under ’um.”
Conuti’T Board.
City Gent—Can you tell me of any
nice farm-house round here where I
can get board?
Farmer—Nice farm-house?
City Gent—Yes.
Farmer—Wal, I spose you want a
nice, cheerful place, whar you can be
accommodated with tolerable good
sized rooms?
City Gent —Just so.
Farmei—And wliar they keep a
kenidge?
City Gent—Exactly.
Farmer—And wliar you Kin git
plenty of fresh eggs, and milk, and
chickens, and vegetables and sitch
like?
City Gent —Precisely.
Farmer—And whar they charge
pretty moderate?
City Gent—The very thing I'm
after.
Farmer—Wal, thar ar’nt no sitch
place round here,
“Tim,” said one Hiberian to an
other, as they marched to the tune of
“Paddies Ever More,” on iast St.
Patrick’s day; “ ’tis no wundher that
Ireland is not free to-day.’’
“Why?” said Tim.
“Sure we’re all here.’’
BARTOW CLASSICAL
—AND—
SCIENTIFIC INSTITU TE,
ADAIRSVILLE. GA.
The fall term ol' this Institute will com
mence August 15th, Full corps of competent
teachers provided. Hoard can be obtained on
very reasonable terms with the principal.
The collegiate and scieniillc departments will
h ive all modern appliances necessary lor
thorough instruction, especially bookkeeping
and civil engineering, mineralogy and min
ing. Student carried to the junior class course
of the University at Georgia and Tennessee.
Send Jor circular.
iliiNiiy D. CAPEltsg, Frippipal.
Adairsvilie, Augusts, 1884. tf.
IF YOU ARE
GtOIjSTGt
'West:
NORTHWEST
OR
SOUTHWEST.
BE BTJRE
Your Tickets Read via the
N., C. & St. L. By.
The McKon/i^Houte
The First-class and Emigrant Passengers
FAVOU I T JE !
Albert B. Wrenn, W. I. Rogers,
Pas. Agent, Pa. Agent,
Atlanta, Ga. Chattanooga, Tenn.
W. L. DANI.KY,
•Gen. Par A Tkt. Agent.
Nashville, Tenn,
PARSfINSIPPILLS
® the blood In the entire Bystem in three months. Any
And will compl T % from Ito 13 weeks, may be restored to sound
l or Female Complaints these Pills have no equal.
SCwSTSLtLemto? fh. <tL of I-IVEB a„d KIDSEV di*Me,. Sold , v.r, wh.re,
or sent by mail for 35c. in stamps. Circulars froe. 1. 3. JOIIXsQX <fe CO., host, n. Mass.
nQb ■ Pwi *a?'* jSS L 4 f !•“ &fm P WTO gia. Rheumatism. .JOHNSON'S AXO
HVIS EE S PS aK a “P ■ m I>V\K MS IMF.NT ( for Internal and External
B|B|R sia gyt SgJS; H,., ** if? H gB l'i,') wflt i',i?!:*:i:;iuvu>:.v relieve t liege terrible
9 S OB' BJB K y3 Wfca tafrjg $3 *351 disca-c*. and will n*niv*-lv erne nine cafes
SIS H M , i3 |a B| gpa 9 rCtt oat tg ton. Infenuat-.un t! ;.t will save many
■R . N B B 8H B 898 liv.-s .e:>; fre<-by mail. Don't delay a moment.
inuilcmu’C ftMnnVMP I_INSWI£NT VURRR influenza, Bleeding ftt ti.c T.nncs IToarse-
WHNsofs S ANOBTN6 t j^rTiiu' t Dvwn’-.-' (lulcr.) idw .. Kidno.v Troubles, and
ness, Haeklngr Coußb, WhfKJtunst ( <>ush, t brmac lnartnaa. rii i. . -
Diseases of the Spine. Sold everywhere. ( 1.-culars dree. I. S- JOHNSON A < •
It is a well-known fact that most of the fc*| US IS f7 B S jfe fcl
Horse and Cattle Powder sold in this conn- ■■ j&j *d3j JX MGj g 3 t|L® P mm
try is worthless; that Sheridan's Condition BadnC fire f2l> i*,** {xJK fcag \a sj af
Powder Is absolutely pure and very valuable, hjf&fi E® S&j ■h' a rag Er* ’SR |E II a| B
.Nothing on Earth will make hens Bms E*| gra ga S sis Ij. r| 9 S&m 3
lay like Sheridan's Condition Pow- |ii rls fed yJ3 IsS ati 'vT. SSOS B B
der... Dose, one teaspoonful to each pint of .. ..
food. It will also positively prevent an j cur? Hog Cholera, &c. Sole, everywhere, or sent bv mad for Ac. ia
mbi B™* BEV A stamps. Furnished inlaw** cans,price .il.yu; by man. sl.B*
CHICKEN CHOLcnA; Circulars tree. 1. S. JUU.NBON & CO., Boston, iia.s.
ELIXIR.
MANDRAKE & BUCKU,
Nature’s True Remedy for all Biliou'
Diseases or Torpidity of l!ie
Liver & Kidneys.
Bilious Headaches, Dyspepsia, Costiveness.
Sour Stomach, Jaundice, Heartburn, Nervous
ness, Catarrh of the liladder, Retention and In
continence of the Urine, and loss of tone to tilt
nans. It has no equal in the relief and cure ol
Piles.
IPrice 50 Cents*
Manufactured By
ITAIL.E cA* MOWER
93 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
For Sale By
M. F. Word, Druggist,
Cartersville, Ga.
kosSSr
j STOMACH
To the needs of the tourist, commercial
traveler and new settler, Hostetter’s Stom
ach Bitters is peculiarly adapted, since it
strengthens the digestive organs, and
braces the physical energies to unhealth
fill influences. It removes aud prevents
malarial fever, constipation, dyspepsia,
healthfully stimulates the kidneys ana
bladder, and enriches as tvell as 'purifies
the blood. When overcome by fatigue,
whether mental or physical, the weary
and debilitated find it a reliable source of
renewed strength and comfort. For sale
by all Druggists and Dealers generally,
msaaerr. *
7G22PSD 80W51.9,
Di§ORDER£D LIVER,
and Ul&LtkmA.
From these sources arise three-tonrths of
the diseases of the human race. These
symptoms indicate tireir existence: X<oss of
Appetite, Bowels costive, Sick Ileßtl
nelie, fullness aftereating, aversion to
exertion of body or mind, Eructation
of loud, Irritability of temper, Eovv
spirits, A feeling of having neglected
some fluty, Dizziness, Fluttering at the
Heart, Dots before the eyen, highly col
ored Urine, t OASTIPATIOIV, and de
mand the usd of a remedy that acts directly
on the Liver. AsaLivormedictuoTUTT'S
MT.I,S have no equal. Their action on the
Kidneys and Slcin is also prompt; removing
ull impurities through these three “ scav
engers of the system,” producing appe
tite, sound digestion, regular stools, a clear
skin and a vigorous body. TUTT’S PILLS
cause po nausea or griping nor interfere
with daily work and are a perfect
ANTIDOTE TO MALARIA.
Sold everywhere, 25. Office. 44 Marray St.. N .\ .
Tyffs mm dye.
Guay Him OR Whiskkks changed in
stantly to a Glossy Black by a single ap
plication of this DTK. Sold by Druggists,
or sent by express on receipt of SI.
~ Office, 4 i Murray Street, Y*.rk.
M>TT’S MAHUAI GF useful receipts fres.
KtSIMIVS PULS!
, > Old, Weil Tried, Wonderful
Ith Renewing Remedies.
SAHATIVE PILLS
. Keaul(Hi.i the Bowels. Pnriiyin*
• : uausiug 1 rolls Malarial Taint A per.
>. r . Sick Hemlaefce, Conttipatlon
r iiil**:e UlwrdcH. „ , ,
. .-ectobal pills -t
. , ii!,r.ve boaUhyappetne.goou digev
■ , i. A nreolou* Poor
v.*!*-*. s'iotbiiMJ t<i<l bract** the
■ . • vie- vieor'wd henltii to every
>)• ■ fsri“ts. for Pamphlets,
: i vedar St .h.\.Qit4
" 4HP FREE!
OTEUABLE SELF-CURE,
:aai A favorite prescription of vino of tlij
-I noted and successful specialists in tlieU.a.
idw retired) for the cure of Mervous Debility,
it Manhood,Weakness and Decay .Sent
in plain scaled envelope/Veo. Druggists can fill it.
Address DR. WARD A
customers of last 'IIK year without ordering it.
It cohtains illustrations, prices, descriptions and
directions for planting all \ egetable and Flowe;
Seeds Plants, etc. luvaltialdc toilyl-
DM. F£RRX&CO
TTofolp.
HIBUBN HOtfSW,
ADAIRS VILLE, Gl.
W. J. HlLßnW^Prop’p.
Nice rooms, lean bets, thorough ventilation,
table applied with Mo voy host
the market affords.
J®°TERMS MODKRATF. jul4-tf
Central Hotel
ROME. GEORGIA.
J. H. KIPPS, Proprietor.
Rates 89 p'r day. Bagg;u e handled free. Sit
uated in the business part of the city. Free
omnibus to and from all trains. Recently enl
arged and newlv furnished.
Business Cards.
W. tt. LtiAKE,
Practicing Plipician,
Cartersville, Ga.
Special attention given to Diseases of Women
and Children, and all Chronic Affections.
Ollice up-stairs, between Bank and Post Of
fice.
R. E. CASON, “
33 333 "37 I Si "37 ,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
Ollice, over Curry’s Drug Store.
"37. -W. White.
CABINET MAKER and UPHOLSTERER.
Furniture of all Kinds Made and
Repaired.
SHOP ON WEST MAIN STREET,
Cartersville, Ga
" HICKS & BBKVARO,
Cabinet Makers,
BUILDERS AND CONTRACTORS.
Cartersville, (.a,
BURIAL CASES
Of hvJAXS? rlftsnrinffAß r>OLrcAx *>** a-—— J
-9&*F urniture of all kinds made and repaire
Shop on East Main Street,
ADVICE TO MOTHERS.
A re you disturbed at night and broken of your
rest by a sick child suffering and crying with
pain of cutting teeth? If so, send at or.ee and
get a bottle of Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing
Syrup for Children Teething. Its value
is incalculable. It. will relieve the poor little
suffercrer immediately. Depend upon it,
mothers, there is no mistake about it. It cures
dysentery and diarrhoea, regulates the stomach
and bowels, cures wind colic, softens the gums,
reduces inflammation, uud gives lone and ener
gy to the whole system. Mrs. Winslow’s
Soothing Syrup for Children Teething
is pleasant to the taste, and is the prescription
of one of the oldest and best female nurses
and physicians in the United States, and is for
sale by all druggists throughout the world.
Price 25 ceuts a bottle, may2o-ly
I am determined to meet competition in any
thing in my stock of Groceries and Dry Goods.
Call and examine my prices and be convinced
that it will be to your interest to bov from me.
DICK JONES,
With R. H. JonesA Sons’ Mig. Cos.
Beet Cough Syran. Tastes good. sSg
Use In time, Bofd by druggists,
W, A. SKINNER. C. A, SHAW.
SKINNER £ SHAW,
Ilaviug-leased the shop in the rear of R. M
Pattillo’s store, on Erwin street, are prepared
to do all kinds of
Carriage,Buggy & Wagon
KKrAIUIXftI,
Both in wood and iron. All kinds of Farm
Work and
IIOftSK SH
W-ill he given prompt attention. Using none
but the best material, we guarantee satistac
tion in work and price.
DRUNKENNESS
CURED IN ITS VARIOUS STAGES.
Desire for stimulants entirely removed,
floma treatment. Medicine can be adminis
tered without knowledge of patient, by simply
placing it in coffee, tea or any article ol food.
Cures guaranteed.
SIOO WILL BE PAID
For any case of drunkenness that Golden Spe
cific will not cure. Circulars containing tes
timonials and lull particulars sent free.
Address GOLDEN SPECIFIC CO.
juiilOy 185 Race St., Cincinnati, O.
are relieved
WRIGHTS INDIAN VEGETABLE PILL!
Purely Vegetable; Ho flrifi§g. Pries 25:. Ail Droggiiii
NOTICE!
BLACK DIAMOND COAL
The best for Domestic pur
poses. Address Coal Creek
Mining Company, Knoxville,
Tenn., for prices and freight.
T. H. HEALD,
President,
•J in ad i-oiu
wyigp
mm\
! Are you failing, try Wells’ Health r*
newer, a pure, clean, wholesome
TOINTIC,
! For Brain, Nerves, Stomach. Tjvc-r Ki<!ne\
Lungs. An UuequalcU lnvig<>raat.
dyspepsia
Headache, Fever, Ague, Chills 3
! DEBILITY & WEAKNESS .
Nice to take, true merit, uneaualed f nr
i TORPID LIVER and Night
Sweats, Nervous Weakness,
Malaria, Leanness, Sexual Decline
I SI.OO per bot, 6 for $5.00, at Druggists
i E. S. Wells, Jersey City, N. J., U.S
w
I Remarkable Cures of Catarrh of the ■
; Bladder. Inflammation. Irritation of Kid- ■
; neys and Bladder, Stone or Gravel I)is- 9
j eases of tlie Prostate Gland, Dropsical I
Swellings, Female Diseases. Ineontin-1
cnee of Urine, all Diseases of the Oenito-1
j Urinary Organs in either sex. For Cn- I
j healthy or UnnatTiral Discharges use H
also “Chapin’s Injection Fleur,’’ each sl.l
I For SYPIIIIJS, either contracted or I
hereditary taint, use Chapin's Constitu- 9
lion Bitter Syrup, SI.OO per bottle, and 9
Chapin’s Syphilitic Pills, sg.oo; and Cha- H
pin’s Syphilitic Salve, $1 00. a bottles |
; Syrup, 2 of ITUs, 1 Salve, by Express on 9
j receipt of SIO.OO, or at Druggists.
[ K. S, Wells, Jersey City, N. J., U. 8. A. 9
|P&
. ’lik V'X \
/ 'w,
j&LJP
V v s\w\ 111 ill///. , J
v \ V \ jA // / s
xx\\vOk \ \yrp //
NSXW\Mi Wmji
\ a
! I $%. i#
kW
Unrivalled in Appearance.
Unparalleled in Simplicity.
Unsurpassed in Construction.
Unprecedented in Durability.
Unexcelled in Economy of Fuel
Misputediii tie BROAD CLAIM cl Beingtae
t VEEY BEST OPEBATUTS,
aUIOEEST SELLING,
HANDSOMEST AND
ißßßlnßflinnnn
Ever offered to the public.
HADE ONLY 3Y
EXS£U2iO!S WAHUtAOTUMNQ 00,
Nos. 612, 614, 616 Si 618 N. Main St.,
ST. LiOTJTS, MO.
.AMERICAN JOB OFFICE
o
LETTER HEADS,
BILL HEADS,
NOTE HEADS,
HAND BILLS,
INVITATIONS,
CIRCULARS,
POSTERS.
SHIPPING TAGS,
SHIPPING BOOKS,
RECEIPT BOOKS,
BUSINESS CARDS,
VISITING CARDS,
POST’D CARDS,
BLANKS,
And everything eLc iu the Job Printing line
executed with
FiEATNESS and DISPATCH.
Bring us your Job Printing and we will
GUARANTEE SATISFACTION
IN’
PRICE ANT) STYLE.
IT STANDS AT THE HEAD.
THE LIGHT RUNNING
“D’OMESTIC”
BECAUSE 17 IS
The simplest machine made, having few
parts, n<> complication, and requires little
skill in management.
The lightest running machine, tence pro
duces less fatigue in operating, and on that
account is especially recommended by the
medical faculty. ...
Adapted to the greatest range of work—win
! do the finest as well us the heaviest, ana is
I suited to the use of nil appliances that taciU*
| tate the ordinary, fancy, or difficult work,
Always ready lor u-e, and requires no spe-
I cial adjustment, when the work is changed.
The most durable machine ever made. Its
construction is in accordance w th the most
| advanced aim approved ineclunieal principles
■ and all the parts are case hardened, wor.ung
on adjustable conical bearings.
; it has the most beautilul wood work.
i It his the best set of attachments ever lur
nished with a sewing machine.
FOR SALE BY
WIKXE Sc CO.,
CARfEItSmtE, LA,
iebotl
a no* Send six cents forpos-
A bige, aid receive tree a
ila 1 luW. eosllv box ol goods which
w ill help all, of either sex
to ir.ore-iiu ney s igbt away than an) thing else
in ibis world. Foitm e* await the workers ab
>olntoly mh*. At once a idvtss TRVk &
Augusta, Maine.