Newspaper Page Text
iflc
s Natiue's own remedy, made from roots gath
ered from the forests of Georgia. The method
by winch it is made was obtained by a half
breed from the Creek Fndians, who inhabited a
certain portion of Georgia, which was commu
nicated to one of the early settlers, and thus the
formula has been handed down to the present
day. The above cut represents the method of
manufacture twenty years ago, by Mr. C. T.
Swift, one of. the present proprietors. The de
mand has been gradually increasing until a
SIOO,OOO laboratory is now necessary to supply
the. trade. A foreign demand has been created,
and enlarged facilities will he necessary <° meet
it. This great
VEGETABLE BLOOD PURIFIER,
CUKES
Cancer, Catarrh, Scrofula, Eczema
Ulcers, Rheumatism, Blood
Taint,
hereditary or otherwi 10. without the use of Mer
cury or Potash.
Hooks on “Contagious Blood Poison” and on
“Blood and Skin Diseases mailed free.
For sale by all druggists.
THE SWIFT SPECiFIU CO.,
Drawers, Atlanta. Ga.
New York, 157 W. 23 I street.
MOTHER’S
’ FRIEND!
This inva 1 uable preparation
is truly a triumph of scien
titic skill, and no more ines
timable benefit was ever be
stowed on the mothers of the
world.
BoT* It not only shortens
the time of labor and lessens
the intensity of pain, but,
better than all, it greatly di
minishes the danger to life
to both mother and child,
and ’■ .ives the mother in a
oiid i turn highly favorable to
speedy recovery, and far less
liable to Hooding, convul
sions, and other alarming
symptoms incident to linger
ing and painful labor. Its
truly wonderful efficacy in
this respect entitles the
Mother’s Friend to be
ranked as one of the life
saving appliances given to
the world by the discoveries
of modern science.
From the nature of the
case, it will of course be un
derstood that we cannot
publish certificates concern
ing this Remedy without
wounding the delicacy o f the
writers. Yet we have hun
dreds of such testimonials
on file, and no mother wiio
lies once used it will ever
again he without it in her
time of trouble.
No More Terror!
No More Pain !
No More Danger !
Hotter or CfcM
THE OREAD OF
Motherhood
Transfennedi to
HOPE
AND
JOY!
Safety and Ease
TO
Sufiering Woman.
A prominent physician lately remarked to the
proprietor that, if it were admissable to make
public the letters we receive, the Mother’s Friend
would outsell anything on the market.
I most earnestly entreat every female expect
ing to he confined to use Moihor’s Friend.
Coupled with this entreaty I will add that (luring
a long obstetrical practice (forty-four years) I
have never known it to fail to produce a safe
and quick delivery. FI. J. HOLMES, M, D.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Send* for our Treaties on Female Diseases
mailed freo. Address,
Tiie Bkadfield Reoflatob Cos.,
fcl>26-lm Box 28, Atlanta, Ga.
1
The Savannah Daily Times.
The only eight-page EVENING PAPEIt in the
£outh.
AN INDEPENDENT D ULY.
ONLY SIX DOLLARS A YEAR.
I7ULL AND RELIABLE TELEGRAPHIC
. Service by the United Press Association.
A corps of Special Telegraphic Correspondents
in the Principal Cities of the State and at the
Capita'. Reliable Commercial and Financial
Reports. The Cotton, Navai Stores and Produce
Markets Carefully Corrected up to the Hour of
"Closing, Daily.
The new feature introduced in the DAILY
TIME-*, and which has proven very popular is
the publication of continued stories by well
known writers whose names arc familiar to the
reading public. In all its features the Daily
Times is a live, progressive, first-class newspa
per, and the cheapest eight-page daily in the
South, being only $6 per annum. Now is the
time, to subscribe. Those who wish to keep
posted on the material and commercial interests
of Savannah and Georgia will net fail to sub
scribe to the Savannah Daily Times.
Terms, SB.OO per annum; 13.00 for six months;
$1.50 per quarter. Payable in advance. Address
all communications to
B. 11. RICHARDSON,
Editor and General Manager,
01 Bryan Stmt, SAVANNAH, GA.
OVER A MILLION A WEEK.
r i l.( t usd Newspaper St cecss of the Age.
The Hew York World
J,las a circulation of over
1,100,000 Copies Per Week.
This has been secured by making it the BEST
NEWSPAPER published anywhere on the
globe.
Its Weekly Edition,
The Weekly World,
ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR, is a complete and
perfect family newspaper. Club Agents make
from 20 cents to $2 on each subscription, by its
gran t premium offers. Subscribers save from
$2 to SSO yearly by purchasing under special
contracts made by This Would.
It Pays to be an Agent of the World.
The World’s Grand Premiums and The
World’s Grand Combinations Have Never
Before been Equalled.
Every person should know what they are
for by the knowledge every family can save from
$2 to SSO. A (l< tress,
THE WORLD,
FOUTZ’S
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS
dbanE* jsmkltS
No TTor.RK will die of Colic. Rots or I.ung Ff.
vkr. If Kour.z’s Powders are used In time.
Kout/Cs Powders will cure and prevent Hog Choi.eka
Fontz’s Powdeiw will prevent Gapes in Fowls.
Kontz’s Powders will Increase the quantity of milt
and cream twenty per cent., and make the butter firm
End sweet.
i oufz's Powders Will C ' or nrovont almost KVMItV
lJisi ask to wideh Horses and o.it! e subject.
Foutz’s Powders will give Si.*faction.
Sold everywhere.
DAVID P FijTTT'Y AropritPO?
* T CMOE.E, MXW
r ~ lu " * ~ 1 1 ‘ ■ 1
lake your prescriptions to Curry’s
D ii£ Store, vvhetc they will ha accurate
ly eon• pounded of strictly pure drugs at
mod'-r ite prices.
I Lekey’s PainlessKye Water at Carry’s
Tea Sets, Cliamber Sets and Silver
ware at greatly reduced priced at
Curry’s Drug Store,
ORIGIN OF TIIE LIFE-CAR.
A DEVICE WHICH BROUGHT WORLD
WIDE FAME TO JOSEPH FRANCIS.
Sympathy for Wrecked Sailors Made Him
an Inventor When a Hoy —His
First, Experiment —Wreck on
the Jersey Coast.
On almost any bright, sunshiny after
noon nowadays, any one who saunters
into the Stevens house on Broadway can
see a hale and cheerful old gentleman
pacing up and down the tiled corridor in
serene and pleasant reverie.
The quaint old guest is Joseph Francis,
who is famous the whole world over as
the inventor of the lirst practical life
saving apparatus, and who a quarter of
a century ago was one of the most con
spumous citizens of the country.
“I am 85 years old now,” he said, “and
I have outlived every single relative ex
cept my son, who is 50 years old. The
whole of my life, ever siuce I was 11
years old, I have given up to the study of
life-saving methods, because I couldn't
help it. When I was a little hit of a fel
low at school I used to read about the
terrible shipwrecks of those days, and I
set right to work then and there trying
to make something that would save peo
ple who were shipwrecked.”
Francis tried hifi first experiment in
devising his future life-saving appar
atus in the boat-building manufactory
that a relative owned in his native town of
Boston. The little 11-year-old inventor
made a small boat rigged up with a con
trivance in the bow abd stern that he
made by inclos ng his cakes of cork in
wood. He fiIUA the boat chock full of
water one day, and was almost beside
himself with boyish glee when he found
that it would not only hold the water
and float, but that four men could climb
into it besides and paddle around with
out sinking it. He had built the first
real life-boat ever made in America. He
kept on making boats and getting them
more and mere buoyant, and in 1819 sent
a light, fast-going row-boat that
wouldn’t sink to the first fair of the Mas
sachusetts Mechanics’ institute. The
managers had never seen anything like
it before, and they awarded it a favorable
mention.
WHEN FORTUNE BEGAN TO JOOM.
Men with brains and money began to
get interested in the boy after the fair,
and in 1825, when he brmight to New
York the first buoyant wooden boat that
he called a “life-boat” he hadn’t any diffi
culty in getting the leading shipping
merchants of town to go down to the
foot of Wall street and watch what hap
pened when the boat took water at the
end of the old wooden dock. The boat
had cork stowed at the bow and stern,
and air chambers ran along the sides
under the thwarts.
Yonng Francis tossed the boat over
board endwise and bottom upward, and
she righted instantly because of her pe
culiar model, and the water went through
her perforated bottom as it would hav >
passed through a sieve. Young Francis
next hauled her up to the yard-arm of a
ship and cut her loose. She struck the
water with an awful thump, and went
down out of sight. She came right up
again right side p, and was then loaded
with men. They tried every which way
to upset or sink it, but they didn’t suc
ceed. Young Francis tried the same ex
periment before thousands of sightseers
in Philadelphia, and finally old England
came along and ordered two boats of the
same kind for service on the- Canada
coast.
Fortune began to boom for the young
inventor then. He had all he could do to
fill orders for life-boats that poured in
from all over. People ordered him to
build yachts and pleasure boats, too, a 1
and the emperors of Brazil and Russia
sent on royal orders for state barges.
Young Francis, all this time, kept mak
ing experiments to improve the life-boat.
These experiments resulted, in 1838, in
the perfection of plans for the construc
tion of a life-car, built of wood, to run on
a hawser drawn from a wrecked ship to
the shore. He got a patent for it the
same year, and built a boat after the
plans in 1840. It looked nice, but he
smashed it to pieces almost immediately.
He saw that it couldn’t stand being
banged on the rocks or against the bul
warks of a wreck in the heavy seas.
Then he set to work to make a boat of
iron that could stand being banged
around promiscuously in a storm*, and
got a patent for the idea of a corrugated
boat in 1845.
WRECK ON THE JERSEY COAST.
But lie discovered soon that it was one
thing to make such a boat and quite
another to make people believe that it
would do what he knew it would. When
he told the secretary of the national
treasury about it, that official told him
there never had been or never could a
boat built that would carry people off a
wreck. The secretary said, however,
that if Francis had a mind to amuse
himself by taking his new-fangled con
trivance down on the Jersey coast and
waiting until a wreck came along to try
it on, the government would like to
know the result. If thd thing did half
what Francis said it would the govern
ment would look into it.
Francis was willing to take the chance.
He put a boat on the Jersey coast at his
own expense. At last, on Jan. 12, 1850,
the British ship Ayrshire came driving
ashore in a furious snow-storm. She had
200 souls on. board. The life-savers
rushed down to the beach and shot a line
at the wreck. They aimed so perfectly
that the line fell just amidships. The
sailors on the ship seized it and hauled
aboard a huge hawser that was made
fast to it. They secured the hawser to
the mast. The life-savers slung the new
fangled life-car on the hawser, and
then fired another line aboard the
wreck. A minute afterward the queer
looking car was hanging over the passen
gers’ heads on the wreck, and five people
clambered into it. It was all the car
eould hold. The crew shut down the
hatch over the five, and the car started
on its fight back through the waves for
shore. It got there safely in two min
utes’ time. It shot back and forth forty
different times in the next two hours,
and brought a shore all the passengers
save one. That one was a man whose
two nieces were safely stowed away in
the car. He vaulted on top of the car
just as it started from the wreck, and
was swept into the raging sea and last.
This splendid feat of life-saving made
Frances the hero of the day. The news
of it flew over the world. When he went
abroad the same year to build up the
health he had broken down in his con
tinuous work on his inventions, crowned
heads hurried to do him honor.—New
York Saiu.
An Art Tale of Two Cities.
A good illustration of the difference in
the characteristics of the average New
Yorker and the average Bostonian is
aptly expressed by an artist who recently
exhibited paintings in both cities. “A
New York lady,” he says, “conies in to
look at a picture, looks it over carefully,
asks the price, and, if the picture pleases
her, pays the price set upon it and has it
sent to her home. A Boston lady steps
in, focuses her eyeglasses upon it, looks
upon it critically, asking the price mean
while, and giving various hints as to the
correctness of the picture, and as she
rises to go makes the remark, ‘Oh, I
think it is just beautiful! I am going
home to paint one exactly like it.’ You
can imagine how the artist feels.”
Ouiqn Sets at Oiirry’s Drug Store.
Dangers of the Paris Streets.
A distinguished naval officer just re
turned from Tonquin and Formosa hav
ing been run over in the street and killed
The Telegraphe makes a well-timed pro
test against the dangers besetting pedes
trians in Paris. In no city, it justly says,
is the traffic so ill-regulated, and it
might have added that travelers two cen
turies ago complained of furious driving,
while English visitors after Waterloo
were struck by the absence of foot-pave
ments, which made the boulevards the
only safe thoroughfares for walkers.
Heavy-covered vans abound, the drivers
being so seated inside as not to be well
able to see persons crossing the street or
not caring to see. The new large omni
buses with three horses abreast can not,
moreover, pull up or slacken speed very
promptly. A line of coal or other wagons
is often 100 hundred yards long, without
any space between them available for
pedestrians wanting to cross the street-
Neither cabs nor private carriages
slacken speed at the chief crossings, and
the drivers frequently, to cut off a cor
ner, take the wrong side of the road.
Policemen are stationed at the corner
of the Place de l’Opera, but they look
placidly on at furious driving, violations
of the rule of the road, and blockade of
the crossings. If it rains and the car
riage traffic consequently increases, and
therewith the peril of pedestrians, the
policemen get under shelter, and do not
even look on at the scene. Not once in
six months do they stop the vehicles to
give pedestrians a safe crossing. Toward
midnight, when the theaters close, there
is the most reckless galloping. It should
be added that people who ride are
scarcely to be envied. The Paris cabmen,
some of them unfrocked priests, are
wretched drivers, and the falling of a
horse is one of the commonest sights.
It is true that the passenger is usually
uninj uved, but nervous foreigners would
do well to avoid Paris. Whether on foot
or riding, they are sure to have a bad
time of it. As to the people with defect
ive sight or hearing, P&y should never
be allowed to walk out alone. —Paris
Cor. London Times.
Shoe-Making Cme for Nervousness.
Some attention is being attracted here
in England to the new panacea of the
well-known Russian Count Tolstoi for
nervousness and overwork of the brain.
It is to make shoes. The Daily Tele
graph devotes a column and a half to this
marvelous discovery. “The fatigued in
tellectual giant will have positively noth
ing to call forth his imagination when
engaged in stitching an upper leather,
and this is exactly what is wanted iu
order to give rest and repose to his higher
faculties.” But “will it wash?” Is it true
that shoemaking rests the mind?
According to my reading and experi
ence there is no class of men who think
as much while at work as the disciple of
St. Crispin. Jiacob Behman, the great
Teutonic philosopher and theosophist,
was a shoemaker. So was George Fox.
In the novel of “Consnelo” it is set forth
that to become a seer one
should learn to I knew a
Scotch shoemaker once who was addicted
to astrology and the occult sciences. An
enormous proportion of the craft are de
voted to theology, or infidelity, or some
thing of the kind. They all have “fads.”
Decidedly, Count Tolstoi is in the wrong
—Leland’s London Letter.
State of tbe Lion Trade.
I have no lions at present; in fact, I
don’t care to keep them in stock; they
are much too expensive. You -:ee the
market is well supplied and is cun suf
fering from a glut. Lions used to tome
in large numbers from the Cape, but col
onization has driven them into the in
terior, and the heat of the interior seems
to bleach the beautiful black mane,
which is the distinguishing feature of
the South African lion, and the black
mane is scarce. After all, the lion is but
a show beast. The Soudan war has
stopped for a time one of the chief
sources of the lion supply. Before the
war it was customary for any one in the
business, who was necessarily a capital
ist, to equip a caravan of his own, with
which he traveled. He would go forth
into the desert and buy from the native
hunters until he had a sufficient number,
and then make his way to Saakin and
ship to Trieste or elsewhere. Abyssinia,
of coui’se, supplies a great malny, and
these are collected either by the natives
or by professional dealers. But the busi
ness is full of risks.—Pall Mall Gazette.
An Odd Bit from Odessa.
An odd bit comes from far-away
Odessa. It appears that anew cemetery
is about to be opened near that city, and
that two Greek merchants, each anxious
to secure the most comfortable or most
distinguished resting place, were allowed
by some official blunder to buy the same
allotment. When the mistake was dis
covered neither would yield his claim,
and the matter was referred to the dis
trict judge. Greek had met Greek, and
the tug of war threatened to be severe,
when the magistrate, with astuteness
worthy of Solomon, arranged the matter
in the simplest way possible by applying
the rule “first come first served,” and sug
gesting that whichever died first should
have the right to the coveted resting
place. The parties Went away reconciled
and happy. It is not stated whether they
had to find sureties to guarantiee ttiat
neither would take an unfair advantage
of the other by committing suicide.—
Chicago Herald.
Other Fathers Besides George W.
George Washington, the “defender and
paternal counselor” of the American
states, was not the first to whom this
name was applied. History records that
Cicero was so entitled by tne Roman sen
ate. They offered the same title to
Marius, but he refused to accept it. Sev
eral of the Caesars were so called —Julius,
after quelling* the insurrection of Spain;
Augustus, etc. The name was likewise
applied to Cosmo de Medici (1389-1464),
and to Andrea Dorea (1468-1560), his coun-,
trymen of Genoa inscribing it on the
base of his statue. Joab, the Judean, is
called the “Father of the Valley of Cha
rashim” (I. Chronicles iv., 15).—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
Mrs. Fillmore’s Obi uary Scrap-Book.
The late Mrs. Fillmore’s library at
Buffalo has in it a serhp-book made by
Mrs. Fillmore with much painstaking.
The covers of green Russia leather con
tain all the newspaper articles that she
could find to clip telling of’the last ill
ness and death of her husband, the presi
dent of the United States.—Chicago
Herald.
Was Not a Society Cardinal.
Cardinal Panebianca has just died in
Rome at the age of 77. He was not a so
ciety cardinal, as he lived a hard life,
slept on the boards, his board being also
simple bread and water, with a morsel of
cheese now and then by way of a luxury.
—Chicago Herald.
Size of South Am'erican Countries.
South America is more than double
the size of the United States. The em
pire of Brazil seems on the map quite as
large as Australia. It twenty-four times
the size of England. The Argentine Re
public is nearly as large as Europe, tak
ing Russia out. Bolivia and Venezuela
are each twice the size of England. New
Granada and Peru each are as largfe as
England and Scotland, Ecuador some
thing less, Paraguay equal to Great
Britain, Uruguay and Chili about the
same, and the little-known regions of
Patagonia and Terra del Fuego at least
double the dimensions of Great Britain.
British, French, and Dutch Guiana
as large as Great Britain.—New
York Sun.
, v
Magic Corn Salve at Curry’s.
Bartow Sheriff's Sales
FOR MARCH, (886.
WILL BE SOLD BEFORE TIIE COURT
House door in Cartersville, Bartow county,
Georgia, on the
First Tuesday in March, 1880,
between tiie legal sale hours, to the highest bid
der, the following described property, to-wit:
Nineteen acres of land in Cartersville, Bartow
county, Georgia, beginning at the southeast-cor
ner of the old Salter land, running west with the
original 1 nd line 75 poles aud 6 links to the
northwest corner of said lot, thence south 51
poles and 15 links to the center of Rowland’s
ferry road, thence north So degrees east, 24 poles
and 8 links with said road; thence north 69 de
grees east, 62 poles and 18 links to the fork of
Rowland’s ferry and Douthitt’s road, thence
north 16 degrees east 9 poles and 12 links to the
corner of the lot known as the old G. W. Hill
place, thence north 38 degrees west with said
Hill’s line to the beginning corner, being the
property set apart as a homestead to Marv J.
Ruckman, out of the property of her husband,
the defendant, .J. H. Ruckman, according to
plat by G W. Hill, county surveyor, recorded in
Book “A” of Homesteads, Clerk’s office Bartow
Superior Court, page 26. Levied on aud will be
sold as the property of the estate of J. 11. Ruck
man, deceased, to satisfy one Bartow Superior
Court alias ti. fa. m favor of Elias E. Field vs.
John 11. Ruckman. Property in possession of
Mrs. Mary J. Wilson, and pointed out by plain
tiff’s attorney. $6.93 •
Also at the same time and place, lots of land
Nos. 26, 27, 30, 31, 32, 33, 39. 10, 41, 42, 43, 44, 45, 46,
47, 98, 99, 102, all in the 17th district & 3d section
of Bartow county, Ga. Levied on and will he
sold as the property of the defendant, Mark A.
Hardin, to satisfy one Bartow Superior Court ti.
fa. in favor of Saint Secilias Academy vs. Mark
A. Hardin. $2.79
Also at the same time and place, the undivid
ed one-fifth interest in lots of land Nos. 1091,
1064, 1065, 1066 and 1067, each of said Jots being
ing in the 21st district and 2nd section of Bartow
county, Georgia, and each containing 40 acres
more or less. All levied on aud wifi be sold as
the property of R. It. Cullinaue to satisfy one
Justice’s Court fi. fa. from the 851st district G.
M., Cobb county, Ga., in favor of J. R. Hum
phries vs. R. R. Cullinane, founded on attach
ment. Levy made and returned to me by L. W.
Fowler, L. C. B. A. Etseman tenant in posses
sion and notified in writing." $3 93.
Also at the same time and place, the east half
of lot of land No. 140, and the north half of lot of
land No. 138, in the 22d district and 2nd section
of Bartow county, Ga. Levied on and will be
sold as the property of the defendant, Frank D.
Vernon to satisfy one Bartow County Court fi*
fa. in favor of Chunn & Gilbert vs. said Frank
D. Vernon. Property in his possession. $2.43
Also at the same time and place, lots of land,
NOS. 433, 434, 503, 504, 505, 576, 578, 652 and 644, In
the 17tli district and 3rd section of Bartow coun
ty, Ga., containing 40 . crcs each more or less.
Levied on and will be sold as the property of B.
11. Taylor to satisfy one state and county.tax fi.
fa. for the year 1885 against B. H. Taylor. Prop
erty pointed out by the defendant and in his pos-"
session. Levy made and returned to me by J no.
E. Yarbrough, L. C. $3 42
Also at the same time aud place,lots of land Nos.
1146, 1147, 1148, 1149, 1156 1157, 1158, 1159, 1218, 12i 9
1220, 1221, 1222, 1227, 1228, 1229, 1230 and 1293, all
lying in the 21st district, and second section of
Bartow county, Ga. Levied on and will be sold
as the property of the defendant, Elliott Moore,
to satisfy one state and county tax fi. fa. for 1885,
vs. said Elliott Moore. $3.90
Also at the same time and place, lots of land
Nos. 1005, 1006, 1009, 1010. 1011, 1012, 1076. 1077,
and 1078, all lying and being in the 21st district
and 2nd section of Bartow county, Ga. Levied
on and will be sold as the property of Miles G.
Dobbins, Sr., (in possession and in dispute) to
satisfy one State and County tax fi. fa. for 1885,
against Miles G. Dobbins. $3.00
Also at the same time and place, the west half
of the brick building and lot known as the
Adairsville Hotel and lot, lying immediately
east of the W. & A. R. R., in the town of Adairs
ville, Bartow County, Ga. Said west half now
occupied by A. F. Manning as a store and dwel
ling. Levied on and will be sold as the property
of A. F. Manning, defendant, to satisfy one
state and county tax fi. fa. for 1885 against said
A. F. Manning. $2.58
Also at the same time and place, lots of land
Nos. 1100, 1115, 1116, 750, 758, 827, 969, 901, 1044 and
898, in the 4th district and 3rd section of Bartow
county, Ga. Levied on and will be sold as the
property of Bartow Iron Company, to satisfy
one state and county tax fi. fa. for 1885, versus
the Bartow Iron Company. $2.67
Also at the same time and place, all that part
of lot of land No. 150, lying north of the Adairs
ville and Canton road in the 6th district and 3rd
section of Bartow county, Ga. Levied on and
will be sold as the property of Thomas and W.
A. F. Stephens, to satisfy one State and county*
tax fi. fa. for 1885, vs. said Thomas and W. AF.
Stephens and in their possession. $294.
Also at the same time and place, lots of land
Nos. 13,14, 15,16 and 17 in the 17tlv district and
3rd section of Bartow conntv, Ga. Levied on
and will be sold as the property of P. 11. Rey
nolds to satisfy one state and county tax fi. fa.
for 1885, vs. said P. 11. Reynolds. $1.92
Also at the same time and place, lots of land
Nos. 212, 213. 214, 238, 239, 155, 116, 125, 126 and
145, in tho i6t.h district and 3rd section of Bartow
county, Ga. Levied on and will be sold as ilie
property of J. H. Ransom, to satisfy one state
and county tax fi. fa. for the year 1885, versus
said J. Jf. Ransom. $2.61
Also at the same time and place, the undivided
one-tlnrd interest in lot of land No. 21, in the
sth district and 3rd section of Bartow county
Georgia, and all of lot No. 194, in the 16th dis
trict and 3d section of said county; all levied on
and will bo sold as the property of Mrs. Martha
Craw ford to satisfy one State and county tax fi.
fa. for 1885 vs. said Mrs. Martha Crawford.
$2.43.
Also at same time and place lot of laud num
ber two hundred and sixty-four (264) lying in the
sth district and 3d section of Bartow county,
Georgia,, levied on as the property of estate of
Wra. Aubry, deceased, property in possession
of G. 11. Aubry, agent; levied on to satisfy one
State and county tax fi. fa. for the year 1882.
Property pointed out by G. H. Aubry; levy
made by F. If. Franklin, L. C, October Ist, 1883.
W. W. ROBERTS, Sheriff.
J. A. GLADDEN, Dep’y Sh’ff.
ROAD NOTICE.
Georgia, Bartow county,
To all whom it may concern: All persons
interested are hereby notified, that if no good
cause is shown to the contrary, an order will be
granted by the County Commissioners on the
first Tuesday in March next, establishing as a
public road,”as marked out by the road commis
sioners appointed for that purpose, beginning on
Canton and Acwortli road near the residence of
J. C. Armstrong, and running nearly north
through Altatoona via the places of Rhodes,
Robertson, Miminiet, Humphries, Clark, Cox,
Miller and McEver, and crossing the old Ala
bama road at the Glade Mines, and connecting
with the Webster Ferry road at the Iron Hill
church. This Feb. 2, 1886.
J. C. MILAM,
Clerk Board Commissioners Barlow* County,
Georgia. $3 87
ROAD NOTICE.
Georgia, Bartow county.
To all whom it may concern: All persons
interested are hereby notified that if no good
cause be shown to the contrary, an order will he
granted by the County Commissioners on the
first Tuesday in March next, establishing as a
public road, as marked out by the road commis
sioners appointed for that purpose, leading from
the Cartersville road near the old Deweesc fer
ry, by James Jefferson’s and Wheeler’s, inter
secting the Webster Ferry road near Iron llill
school house, thence by way of old Ailatoua fur
nace, to the connecting road.
J. C. MILAM,
Clerk Board County Commissioners, Bartow
Countv, Georgia.
Feb. 2', 1880.—53.36.
gm m m
MOUTH WASH and DENTIFRICE
Cures Bleeding Gums, Ulcers, Sore Mouth, Sore
Throat, Cleanses the Teeth and Purifies the Breath ;
used and recommended by leading dentists. Pre-
Sared by Dits. J. P. & W. Tt. Hoi.mks, Dentists. Macon,
a. For Sale by all druggists and dentists.
aprlß-ly Sold by D. W. CURRY.
All those indebted to Dr. Lindsay
Johnson for medical services arc earnestly
requested to pay up at once.
J .A. CSAWFORD, Georgia. R. N. HUDSON, Tennessee.
Crawford & Hudson.
.
(J A BET E RSVILLE, GEORGIA.
SAGE and LIVERY STABLE
East of Railroad, Near the Courthouse,
j&w OUR TURNOUTS ARE STRICTLY
"V BL FIRST-CLASS.
1 &fro\ HORSES ANl> MULES KEPT ON
H hakd for sale*
: . OUR ACCOMMODATIONS FOR
ED ANYWHERE.
-- -.tr mtKUKmmmmmmm-I sna ■ ■ mm ■ -n.-asa- iaanoesra.J jmm iiinnw-twkmr.airor.'-
HICKS & BREVARD,
CABINET MAKERS,
Manufacturers of ami Dealers in
F’CT’XtmT’O’BJS of EVERT deschxftxoit.
UN DEItTA KING A SPECIALTY
Can Finish the lost Hnihle Coffin as Weil as the Most Elegant Casket.
JOB WORK PROMPTLY EXECUTED.
.. ■
Shop on East Main Street, Cartersvllle, Georgia. o!5
CURE FOR FILES.
Piles arc frequently preceded by a sense of
weight in the back, loins and lower part of ttie
abdomen, causing the patient to oppose lie has
some ailcction of the kidneys or neighboring or
gans. At times symptoms of indigestion are
present, flatulency, uneasiness of ihe stomach,
etc. A moisture, like perspiration, producing a
very disagreeable itching, after getting warm,
is a common attendant. Blind, Bleeding and
Itching Piles yield at once to the application of
Dr. Bosanko’s Pile Remedy, which acts directly
upon the parts efleeted, absorbing the Tumors,
allaying the intense itching, and effecting a per
manent cure. Price 50 cents. Address, The
Bosanko Medicine Cos., Piqua, O. Sold by D. VV.
urr.y may 7-ly
STARTLING CASES,
Mr. U. R. Sautter, of Athens, Ga., says: “B. B.
B. has cured on me an ulcer which had resisted
all other treatment for 50 years.”
J, M, Ellis, of Atlanta, was cure ! of a stub
born ease of Eczema of twelve years standing by
the use cf If. If. B.
AN EDITOR.
I have been almost entirely cured of nasal ca
tarrh of several years standing by the 3 bottles of
B. B. B. I have tried many other remedies, but
none equal to B. B. B. It is a quick cure, while
others are slow.
•J. J. Harpy, Editor “News,” Toccoa, Ga.
LEMON ELIXIR.
From a Prominent Lady.
I have not been able in two years to
walk or stand without suffering great
pain. Since taking Dr. Mozley’s Lemon
Elixir, I can walk half a mile without
suffering the least inconvenience.
Mrs. R. If. Bloodwortii,
GriHin, Ga.
Lemon Hot Drops
Cures all Coughs, Colds, Hoarseness,
Sore Throat, Bronchitis, Pneumonia and
all Throat and Lung Diseases, except
Consumption, which disease it palliates
and greatly relieves. Price 2 W > cents.
Dr. W. E. Bingham, Druggist, North
Port, Ala., writes: Dr. Mozley’s Lemon
Hot Drops is the most salable and the
best remedy for coughs and colds I ever
sold. Lemon Elixir and Lemon Hot
Drops sold by all leading druggists, pre
pared by Dr. 11. Mozlcy, Atlanta, Ga.
Sold by D. W. Gurry.
City Exchange Restaurant.
I will be prepared to open, on Monday, Sep
tember 7tli, a first-class restaurant, in Bank
Block, two doors below the bank. Keep oysters,
fish, and all articles that are usually kept for the
public. Your patronage solicited. Reasonable
rates and good attention. My coffee, I am sure,
my patrons will commend,
Pomp Johnson.
September Sd, 1885. 4m.
Dr. Frazier's Root Sitters.
Frazier’s Root Bitters are not a dram-shop
beverage, but are strictly medicinal in every
sense. They act strongly upon the Liver anil
Kidneys, keep the bowe)s open and regular,
make the weak strong, neal the 1 lines, build up
the nerves, and cleanse the blood and system of
every impurifv. Sold bv Druggists. sl*oo
VVI LLIA MS M’F’G. CO,, PVop’rs.,
5-ly Cleveland. O.
CEXTTStJkX. XXOTSL,
ROME, GEORGIA.
Lj. C. HOS£?, Proprietor.
Ample Accommodations for Commercial Trav
ers and Theatrical Companies.
In centre business locality ami street cars run
front of the door aug!3
The Best Newspaper in America,
and by far the Most Readable.
Agents wanted everywhere to earn
money in distributing the Sun’s Pre
miums.
The most interesting and advanta
geous offers ever made by any 'News
paper.
No Subscriber ignored or neglected.
Something for all.
Beautiful and Substantial Premiums in
Standard Gold and otherWatches,Valuable
Books, tho Best Family Sewing Machine
known to the trade, and an unequaled list
of objects of real utility and instruction.
Rates, by Mail, Postpaid:
DAILY, per Year (without Sunday) $5 00
DAILY, per Month (without Sunday) 50
SUNDAY, per Year ... 100
FOR EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR 7 00
WEEKLY, per Year . . . 100
Address, THE SUN, Non York City.
PILES! PILES!! PILES!!!
A SURE (JURE FOUND AT LAST!
NO ONJ! NKK I) StTITiriBR.
A SURE CURE FOR BLIND, P.LEEDING,
Itching and Ulcerated Piles has been dis
covered by Dr. Williams, (an Indian Remedy,)
called Dr. Williams’'lndian Pile Ointment. A
single box has cured the worst chronic cases of
25 years standing.
No one need suffer five minutes after applying
this wonderful soothing medicine. Codons,
and electuaries do more harm than good. - Wil
liams’ Pile Ointment absorbs the Tumors, allays
the intense itching, (particularly at right after
getting warm in bed), acts as a poultice, gives
instant relief, and is prepared only for Piles,
itching of tho private parts, and for nothing else.
Read what the lion. J. M. CoHinberry. of
Cleveland,says about Dr. Williams’ Indian Pile
Ointment: “l have used scores of Pile Cures,
and it affords me pleasure to say that I have
never found anything which gave such imme
diate and permanent relief as Dr. Williams’ In
dian Ointment.”
Hon. Judge W. P. Coons, Maysville, Kv., says:
“1 have suffered for years with’iirlung piles, and
have used many remedies I have used Dr.
Williams’ Indian Pile Ointment and been cubed.
while every other remedy has failed.” For sale,
by all druggists, and mailed on receipt of price,
SI.OO. WILLIAMS M’F’G. Cos., Prop’rs.,
3 5 ly • Cleveland, O.
Bn Exploded Boom.
A long, lank, lean and chronic Anti-Potash
Boom met the new, fat and saucy Atlanta Big
Bold Boom, on a hot, sultry day.
“Who are you ?” asked the I’.. B. I>. Boom.
“I am the old Anti-Potash Boom,” was thesau
reply, as the perspiration rolled down, and it
leaned heavily on the B. B. B. Boom for sup
port.
Don’t lean on me,” said the B. B. B. Boom.
“I may look strong, but I am qu tc young—only
14 months old, am growing rapidly, and am
mighty weak in the knees. lam doiugthe work
which you nave failed to do, although you are
50 years old. You are old, and tough, and rich,
and don’t require a support. But what causes
'you to look so thin of late?”
“Well, T hardly know,” replied the Anti-Pot
ash Boom. “My physicians tell me that my abil
ities have been over-rated, ami that while trying
to worship out all opposition by boast and brag,
that r have proven my inability. Old age is also
creeping on me—having fought near 50 years be
fore any one knew I was living—and now I am
unable to perform feats that others are doing.
I am collapsed; my friends have turned against
me and call me names, and oh Lordy, how sick
I become at the very sight of 13. B. B. Hold my
head while I die.”
A SUNBEAM.
Compared to other remedies, B. 8.8. is the ra
diant sunbeam of midday, flinging its glittering
glare to saddened hearts, while others are pale
moonbeams, pushing along through misty mesh
es of darknoss, in search of something they can
cure.
It cures Blood Diseases and Poisons, Catarrh,
Old Ulccvs, Scrofula, Rheumatism, Skin Disea
ses, Kidney troubles, etc., and we hold a 32 page
book full of evidence—Atlanta evidence —that
cannot be doubted, proving all we claim. Our
certificates are not phantasmagorical, nor far
fetched, but are voluntary outbursts of meu and
women of At'anta.
RHEUMATISM.
Although a practitioner of near twenty years,
my mother influenced me to procure B. B. B. for
her. She had been confined to her bed several
months with Rheumatism which stubbornly re
sisted all the usual remedies. Within twenty
four Hours after commencing B. B. B. 1 observed
marked relief. She has just commenced her
3 bottle and is nearly as active as ever, and has
been in the front yard “rake in hand,” cleaning
up. Her improvement is truly wonderful and
immensely gratifying,
C. 11. MONTGOMERY, M. D.
Jacksonville, Ala., Jan (51885,
21. E. CASOIT,
Resident Dentist.
Oillcc over Curry’s drug store, Cartersvllle,
sei)'
FOR SALE.
HP HE PROPERTY IN C ART ERSVILLE, G A.
JL kmvon as the Shockley place, on east side
public square, will be sold, at Couit House, in
Cartersvllle, to highest bidder, for cash, on first
Tuesday in January next, (unless sooner sold at
private sale). Apply to
Mrs. E. D. JACKSON,
Sharp Top, Ga.
or A. M. Foute, Cartersvllle, Ga.
deelO-td.
FOR SALE.
One of the Rest Impyei Farms in
North Georgia.
16 MILES FROM W. & A. R. R.
Fine Agricultural and Mineral lands. Good
Houses, Orchards, Willow Spring (free )
For further information call on Courant
management or address the subscriber,
jlj’23 J. G.-1. Erwin, Fairmount, Ga.
STOP THAT COUCH
By using Dr. Frazier’s Throat and Lung Balsam
—the only sure cure for Colds, Coughs, Hoarse
ness and Sore Throat, suii all diseases of the
throat and lungs. Do not neglect a cough. It
may prove fatal. Scores and hundreds of grate
ful people owe their lives to Dr. s'razicr’s Throat
and Lung Balsam, and no family will ever be
without it after once using it, and discovering its
marvelous power.- It is put up in large family
bottles, and sold at the- small price of 50 cents
per bottle. WILLIAMS M’F’G. CO.,
3 5 ly Cleveland, o
Heal Estate.
Parties wishing: to Buy, Sell
or Kent Property in Town or
Country, will tiiul it to their in
terest to consult
G. 11. AUBREY.
of money lor good loans.
R. M. CLINKSCALES,
Resident Tailor,
Has rooms aY.ove may's & pritch-
ETT’S STORE, and is prepared to do all
kind3 of Tailoring work at reasonable rates.
Parties who wish cutting done without the
making can be attended to promptly.
Cleaning, Repairing and Mending
can also be done in Quick
Time and Good Order.
Cartersville, Geo., Tulylßth—ly
ST. JAMES HOTEL.
Special Attention to Commercial
\ Travelers.
Table Supplied with the Best the
Market Affords.
.
ATTENTIVE SERVANTS.
|
Specjal inducements to parties seeking summer ]
resorts. Correspondence solicited^
DR. R. A. McFKRIUN, Proprietor,
febs-l Cartersville, Georgia,
PfJ§
FOR
ALL BOWEL TROUBLES.
FOR"
CHILDREN
TEETHING.
It will check the drainage upon the system
and relieve the little one that is daily wasting
away from the effect of teething.
Sllll
CRAMP COLIC.
It is as necessary to have a safeguard against
tliis sudden attack to the bowels as to have a
protection against the in vasion of a robber. l)r.
Digger’s Huckleberry Cordial is ihe weapon
have against all sudden attacks of ilie bowels.
|SfcSM.
FOB
BIARRHCEA
Checking it without leaving the bowels, as
most medicines do, in a constipated state—which
often produces fever.
i
FOR
Chronic Dysentery is very dangerous. Dr.
Digger’s Huckleberry Cordial should be taken
at once and slop it.
w&g&Sk
—FOR
CHOI^ERA.
Dr. Diggers, President Georgia Eclectic Medi
cal College, certifies that with the addition of
a tablespoonful of tincture red pepper it is a
cure for cholera.
FOR
CHOLERA
MORBUS.
At a season of the year when lioth stale and
greeu fruit produces Cholera, Morbus, it is ncc
essarv that every family should keep a bottle of
the medicine to prevent evil effects.
sH§i£
It is THE GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY for the
bowels. It is one of the most pleasant and effi
cacious reim-lies for all summer nnplaml s. At
a season when violent attacks of the bowels are
eo frequent, some speedy relief should be at hand.
The wearied mother, losing sleep in nursing the
little one teething, should use tins medicine.
50 cts. a bottles .send 2c. stamp to Walter A.
Taylor, Atlanta, Ga., for Riddle Book.
Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum
and Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup aud Coa
eumptiou. Price, 25c. anil $1 a lHle,
- ’.i TANARUS: C ■ ’£■ -Tf’l ; -.T" • ' ;