Newspaper Page Text
Bartow Sheriff’s Sales,
FOR MAY, 1886.
\ VTill UK sold before the court
House door in Curtersville, Bartow county
Georgia. on the
First Tuesday in May, 1886,
between the legal sale hours, to the highest bid
der, the following described property, to-wit:
One yoke oxen and wagon, one being a red and
white and spotted, alxmt seven years old, The
other red, about seven years old. All
levied on and will BBsoid the property of Jo
seph F. Northey to satisfy one h. fa. from Court
of Ordinary of Bartow county in favor of Henry
Northy and others for use officers of court vs. Jo
seph F. Northey. |1 96
Also at the same time aud place, lots of land
Nos. 10 and 50, containing 40 acres each, in the
17th district and 3rd section of Bartow'county,
Georgia. Levied on and will be sold as the prop
erty of the defendant, I*. IT. Reynolds, to sat
isfy one Bartow Superior Court li fa in favor of
W. A. Giliam vs. I*. H. Reynolds. Property in
possesion of said P. 11. Reynolds. $2 22
Also at the same time aud place one No. 7
Wood, Tabor & Morse engine No. 3168; also one
No. 3 Lane Jt Boadley Company saw mill. Lev
ied on and will be sold as the property of
W. F. Alford, defendant, to satify one
Bartow Superior Court mortgage 11 fa
in favor of Montgomery, Me Lauren A
Cos., transferrers, vs. W. F. Alford. Property de
scribed and pointed out in said mortgage li. fa.
Sai<l. engine and saw mill licing cumbersome and
expensive to remove, same will be sold before
the court house door in Cartersville, as other
Sheriff sales, and the property delivered to th£
purchaser at <J. V. Geemes place in the J7th dis
trict said county, where it is now, as provided
by statute in swph cases. $3 87
Also at the same time ami place 343 acres of
land more or less in the 16th district and 3rd sec
tion of Bartow county, Georgia, known as the
McDow place, and being the place whereon R.
C. Roberts resided at the time of his death, and
being 151 acres of lot No. 20, and 142 acres of lot
No. 21 and 50 acres of lot No. 11, each lot being m
the Kith district and 3rd section of said county.
Levied on and will be sold as the property of the
estate of R. C. Roberts, deceased, in the hands of
Mrs A. X. Roberts, executrix, to he adminis
tered, to satisfy one fl fa from the City Court of
cartersville, Bartow county, Georgia* in favor
of J. K. Willmore vs. Mrs. A. N. Roberts, Exec
utrix of It. C. Roberts, deceased. Property
(minted out by plaintiffs attorney, and in jHisses
sion of Mrs. A. X. Roberts, executrix. $5 ol
VV. W. ROBERTS, Sheriff.
J. A. GLADDEN, Dep’ySb’ff.
GEORGIA—Bartow County:
Martin Collins has applied for exemption of
personalty and setting apart and valuation of
homestead, and I will pass upon the same at my
office at 10 o’clock a. m. on the 30th day of April,
1880, This April 7th, 1880.
J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary^
GEORt 11 A—Bartow County.
To all whom it may concern: CorneliaM. Field,
guardian Richard If. Field, Jeremiah E. Field,
James M. Field, Eliza E. Field (m*w Inmlin).
< arrie S. Field (now Brown), and Cornelia M.
Field (now Gamp), has applied to me for letters
of dismission from said guardianship, ami I will
pass upon the Haiti application on the first Mon
day in June, 1880, Given under my hand and
official signature, this sth day of April, 1880.
* _J. A. HOWARD, Ordinary.
GEORGIA Bartow County.
Thomas J. Self lias applied for examination of
personalty, and setting apart and valuation
homestead, and and I will pass upon the same at
10 o’clock a, m. on the 24th day of April 1880 at
my ofliee. J. A. HOWARD,Ordinary.
JMarch 29ih 1886.
GEORGIA —Bartow County :
Whereas, B. I). Clark, administrator of W. I.
< lark, represents to the Court in his petition duly
tiled, that he has fully administered W. I. Clark’s
estate. This is therefore to cite all persons con
cerned, heirs and creditors, to show cause, if
any they can, why said administrator should
not he discharged from his administration and
receive letters of dismisssion on the lirst Monday
in May, 1880. This February Ist. 1886.
J. A. HOW AMD, Ordinary.
PEDIGREE
—OF—
FRITZ BEECHER
Bay Horse, foaled June 9th, 1880. Sired by
Beecher, foaled June 25th, 1811, was got by Van
dorn, son of Sir Elliott; let dam by Ned Forrest;
2nd dam by Gray Eagle; 3d dam by Hamilto
nian. Vandorn by Sir Elliott, Ist dam by Wag
ner; 2nd dam by imported Dragon; 3d dam by
Frank, son of Sir Charles; 4th dam by Aratus
son of Sir Director; sth dam by Potomac, son of’
imported Diomede; 6th dam by Comet, son of
Mark Anthony; Ttli dam by Zenith, Ac.
SIR ELLI ITT by imported Sovereign; Ist
dam Betty Body by imported Leviathan; 2nd
dam Hibernia by Sir Archie; 3d dam Morgama
by Pacolet; 4th dam Black Sophia by Tom Gal
lant, Ac.
DAM—Minnehaha, sired by Star Harablcto
nian, and bred by George E. tirowuwell, of
Elyria, Ohio. Star Hambletonian xvas sired by
Rysdyk’s Hambletonian; his dam washy Ameri
can Star, thus making Star Hambletonian the
same cross of Dexter, who is the king of the
trotting turf; also the same cross of Startle,
whom Bonner paid $20,000 for, being but 3 years
old, and Socrates, sold to Mr. Diggs, of Kyuga,
N. Y., for $15,000.
Minnehaha’s dam was sired by Alexander’s
Abdullah. Her dam was a Messenger mare.
It will be observed that FRITZ BEfJJHER is a
direct descendant from the Royalty of the Turf—
a cross that is acknowledged by the judges to lie
the best.
He Trots a Mile in 2:37*
Prices reasonable.
Sft A YEAR. Tub Coin ant, the
I svll/ best local paper in the State.
TAX RECEIVER’S NOTICE.
I will be at the following named places on
the days named below for the purpose of re
ceiving tax returns for the year 1886:
Cartersville, April 14, 26, May 8,24, 25, 2.
AUatoona, April 15, 27, May 7.
Stamp Creek, April 16, 28, May iO.
Wolf Pen, April 17, 29, May li.
Pine Log, April 19, 30, May If.
Sixth District, April 20, May 1,13.
Adairsville, April 21, May 3,14.
Cassville, April 22, May 5, Is.
Kingston, April 23, May 4, 17.
Euharlee, April 24, May C, 19.
Hall’s Mills, May 15.
Ligon’s Chapel, May 20.
Taylorsville, May 21.
Stilesboro, May 22.
To comply with the recent law governing tax
returns, each tax payer will be furnished at the
times and places above announced with a blank
upon which to make returns. I cannot other
wise receive returns. Please remember this
and save time and trouble. Each employer must
come prepared to make a full and complete re
turn for his employes. W. W. GINN,
April 2, 1886. *H. T. R. B.C.
FOITTZ’B
HORSE AND CATTLE POWDERS
No Borsk will die of Colic, Rots or Li no is
vkb, if Fonts’* Powders are used In time.
Foutz’s Powders will cure and prevent H<* 'bolßßa.
Kontz’s Powders will prevent Gapßs in Fowls,
Fontz’s Powder# Will Increase the quantity of milk
and cream twenty per cent., and make the butter Arm
and sweet.
Fontz’s Powders will enre or prevent alninat BvaßT
Diskask to which Horses and Cattle are subject.
Foutz’B Powmrt* will oivb HATiAfacriuft
-Bold everywhere.
DAVID P POUTZ, PropfietOß.
Xa TIMOItB.MO.
R. M. CLINKSCALES,
Resident Tailor,
HAS ROOMS ABOVE MAYS & PRITCH
ETT’S STORE, and is prepared to do all
kinds of Tailoring work at reasonable rates.
Parties who wish cutting done without the
making cau be attended to promptly.
Cleaning, Repairing and Mending
can also be done in Quick
Time and Cood Order.
Cartersville, Geo., July 16th—ly
SAVED HIS LIFE.
Mr. I). I. Wilcoxson, of Horse Cave, Ky., says
he was, for many years, badly aillicted with
Phthisic, also Diabetes; the pains were almost
unendurable and would sometimes almost throw
him into convulsions. He tried Electric Bitters
and got relief from lirst bottle, and after taking
six IKittles was entirely cured and had gained in
flesh eighteen pounds. Says he positively be
lieved he would have died had it not been for
the relief a (lorded by Electric Bitters. Sold at
fifty cents a bottle by David W. Curry. 8
Keynote to Health.
Health is wealth. Wealth means inde
pendence. The keynote is Dr. Bosanko’s
Cough and Lung Syrup, the best Cough
Syrup in the world. Cures Coughs,
Colds, Bains iu the Chest, Bronchitis and
Primary Consumption. One dose gives
relief in every case. Take no other.
Price 50 cents and #l. Sold by D. W.
Curry. 1
A Virginia City butcher killed a steer
the other day whose teeth were complete
ly encrusted with gold and silver bullion.
The animal came from a ranch on Carson
river, and the precious metal on the
enamel of the teeth doubtless accumul
ated from drinking the water of the
river, which is impregnated with the
tailings from the mills reducing Com
stock ores. This circumstance is not
new, however, as Sam Davis mentioned
something similar before in the (.'arson
Appeal. Most of the cattle along the
the river have their teeth aillicted in the
same way. Their owners might scrape
oft’quite a revenue from them if they had
any tinanclal sense.
iTHE FOR PILES.
Piles are frequently preceded by a sense of
weight in the back, loins and lower part of the
abdomen, causing the patient to suppose he has
some afiection of the kidneys or neighboring or
gans. At times symptoms of indigestion are
present, flatulency, uneasiness of the stomach,
etc. A moisture, like perspiration, producing a
?ery 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 effected, 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. W.
urr.y may 7-ly
A Reliable Article.
For enterprise, push and a desire to get
such goods as will give the trade satisfac
tion, D. W. Curry, the druggist, leads all
competition. He handles Dr. Bosanko’s
Cough and Lung Syrup, because it is the
best medicine on the market, for Coughs,
Colds, Croup and Primary Consumption.
Price 50 cents and SI.OO. 1
Dr. John Guiteras, of the United States
Marine Hospital Service, now in charge
of the hospital at Charleston, S. C., re
ports that he has diseoverd in cistern
water a parasite deleterious to human
health. He calls it the lilaria of the hu
man blood, and says that it is nearly
akin to the terrible trichina. A micro
scopic investigation reveals these para
sites in the blood of persons affected by
them. lie recommends that “all cisterns
should be screened in order to prevent
the access of the mosquito, or, what is
better still, uo rain water should be used
for drinking purposes without having
been previously filtered.”
Remember we do not claim that Curry’s
Liver Compound will do impossibilities.
We state only what it has done and stand
ready to gubmit proofs of unquestioned
reliability, and ask if you are suffering
from any disease of the liver or kidneys,
to give this purely vegetable remedy a trial.
It rouses the liver and kidneys, creates
an appetite, aids digestion, repels impu
rities from the blood and extends its cura
tive influences throughout the whole
system.
Itch, Prairie Mange and Scratches of
every kind cured in 30 minutes by Wool
ford’s Sanitary Lotion. Use no other.
This never fails. Sold by
F. M. Word,
Cartersville, Ga.
C. N. Mayson & Cos.,
Kingston, Ga.
“Get the best” is a good motto to fol
low in buying a spring medicine. By
the universal satisfaction it has given,
Curry’s Liver Compound has proven
itself unequalled for purifying and
strengthening the system, thus fortifying
against diseases incident to warm weather.
MIRACULOUS ESCAPE.
W. W. Reed, druggist of Winchester, Ind.,
writes; “One of my customers, Mrs. Loui/.a
Pike, Bartonia, Randolph county, Ind., was a
long sufferer with Consumption, and was given’
up to die by her physicians. She heard of Dr
King’s New Discovery for Consumption, and be
gan buying it of me. In six months’ time she
walked to the city, a distance of six miles, and
is now so much improved she has quit using it.
She feels she owes her life to it.”
Free Trial Bottles at David W. Curry’s drug
store. e
—Americans who obsequiously lion
ize titled foreigners solely because of
their titles are born sycophants, the
only mistake being that their house
and lot have been cast in the wroug
country. Chicago Journal.
—A new bridge is to be built over the
Harlem river, N. Y., at a cost of $2,500,-
000. Two j T ears and a half wll be re
quired to complete the structure.— Trof
Times.
STANDING COMMITTEES.
Council Chamber, \
Cartersville, Ga., Dec. 22, 1885.|
It is ordered that the following shall constitute
the standing committees of the Board of Aider
men for the year 1886:
Streets—A. M. Franklin, John I'. Anderson
and W. A. Bradley.
Finance—A. it. Hudgins, Gerald Griffin and
George H. Gilreath.
Ordinances—Gerald Griffin, A. M. Puckett
and A. K. Hudgins.
Cemetery—Georgell. Gilreath, A. M. Frank
lin and E. D. Puckett.
Uci.irf—W. A. Bradley, A. U. Hudgins and
A. M. Puckett.
Public Buildings— E. I). Puckett, W. A.
Bradley and John I*. Anderson.
It is further ordered that this order be entered
on the minutes and Clerk furnish each Alderman
with a copy hereof.
(Signed) Jno. IT. WiELB, Mayor.
Attest: Sau l V. Milam, Clerk.
Go to Curry’s Drug Store and get a
whitewash brush when you begin your
spring cleaning.
Paints, oils and varnishes, at bottom
prices at Curry’s Drug Store.
A job lot of laundry soap at a sacrifice
at Curry’s Drug Store.
If you want a box of laundry soap at a
great bargain, call on Curry the druggist.
Cliugtnan’* Tobacco Ointment, sold at
nrry’s Drug Store.
About 25 boxes of laundry soap offered
at a bargain by Curry the druggist.
If you want a box of laundry soap at
much less than the usual price, call at
Curry’s Drug Store.
Curry offers a job lot of laundry soap
at • big bargain.
Curry’s Cough Cure is a scientific com
bination of Tar and Wild Cherry. It is
pleasant to take and a sure cure. Only
25 cents a bottle. Try it.
m A YEAR. The Couksnt, the bet loca
qJI’UU paper in the State.
Rucklcn’i Arnica Salv*.
The best salve iu the world for outs
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, tetter, chapped hßnds, chilblains,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and posi
tively cures piles, or no pay required.
It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfac
tion, or money refunded. Price 25c per
box. For sale by ’ W. Curry.
REAL WORTH.
Bha wasn't vary pretty,
Nor was she very neat;
Her hand* were scarcely little,
Aud likewise were her f#et.
She wasn't very graceful.
Nor was she very rail;
She wasn't very brainy
And didn't know it all.
She wasu’t quite patrician,
Nor was she “Comme il faut”
In very many matters
She really ought to know.
She had a Summer temper.
Her hair was truly red;
She wasn’t always tender
In everything she said.
But what s the odds, dear reader?
You should not claim the earth,
A million good hard dollars
Was what the girl was worth.
—Merchant Travelmr.
m •
WONDERFUL INSTINCT.
How a Pack of Trained Hounds
Tracked a Georgia Convict.
At Oldtown I saw a race between a
convict and the hounds. It came about
in this way: Mr. Williams claimed,
that he was backed by Captain James,
that any convict could be selected out
of a hundred and sent off to circle
through the woods, passing through a
dozen different squads of convicts; that
an hour later he could put his hounds
on that convict’s track, and they would
thread him through the squads of con
victs, never be shaken from his indi
vidual track, and finally bring him up.
I remarked that I could understand how
the hounds might carry the convict’s
track through a crowd of outsiders from
some peculiar scent of the camp, but not
how they could separate one convict
from another.
“ There may be a hundred convicts,”
he said, “clothed precisely alike, and
wearing precisely the same shoes. They
may feed together on precisely the same
food, and sleep in bunks that touch
each other under precisely the same
cover. And yet each of them has a
icent that marks him just as distinctly
to my hounds from his fellows as his
appearance marks him under your de
liberate study.”
“And do you expect me to believe
that the dogs can catch this scent from
the flying touch of his thick shoes on
the hard ground?”
’‘Undoubtedly. And further, fle
may stop in a squad and change shoe*
with a convict, and the dogs will still
follow him. On the hardest ground,
his scent will be plain to them, though
his shoe soles are half an inch thick.
When he runs through the woods
where his clothes touch the bushes,
they will trail him, heads up, in full
cry, fifty yards, running parallel, but
away from where he ran.”
“Do you mean that you can take fifty
convicts, all clad in convict suits, let
them run through the bushes, then
send the convict the dogs are trailing,
through the same bushes, and the scent
of his body, left on the yielding twigs
as his clothes brush them, will lead the
hounds through the maze?”
(‘Yes; fifty yards away, they will
run it parallel at full speed. To prove
this, I will start a convict. I will let
others follow him through the woods.
I will let him make a semicircle in the
woods with fifty yards radius. When
the hounds come to this, instead of fol
lowing the curve they will scent the
opposite side of the circle, fifty yards
away, cut across to it, take the track
up there and follow it.”
A gaunt convict, long of leg and
flank, was selected for the run. He
was told to put off quickly, circle in
the woods, take a swift run over the
fields, roads and through every squad
of convicts he could find in his way.
This he did. The hounds were then
loafing about the stockade yard as list
less a lot of dogs as ever were seen. “I
am tempted,” said Mr. Williams, “to
let the convict ride a horse for a mile
or two after he had run awhile. I have
bad dogs to trail a convict on horse
back four miles, and then take the
track where he jumped from the
horse.” By thi9 time the flying con
vict was a small speck on the broad
fields, and in a moment more had melt
ed into the horizon and was gone, as
if, indeed, he had found that liberty for
which his soul panted, and had gone as
the strong-winged birds go when they
vanish in the blue ether.
In an hour we mounted our boro.
The hounds were still loafing in the
•unshine. Suddenly Mr. Williams,
squaring himself in his saddle, blew
three quick, short blasts on the cow’s
horn that hung at his side. As if by
magic, the hounds awaked, and
charged at his saddle—eager, baying,
frantic. “Nigger!” he said, senten
tiously. Like the wind they were off,
nose to the ground, tails up, circling
like beagles. Larger the circles grew,
the hounds silcut as specters, eyes and
nose eating the earth for its secret.
“They will pass over the tracks of con
vict squads, but will open up on the
first single track they find. If it is the
wrong track, we will simply sit still.
They will run it a hundred rods or eo,
and noting our silence will throw it oft
and search again. When they get the
right track, we will halloo, and start
after the hound that has it. The oth
ers will at once join him and the race
is opened.”
At last a red hound, careering like
mad across the field, halts suddenly,
tumbles over himself, faces about,
noses the ground eagerly, lifts hi*
head, “A-a-o-o-o-w-u!” and is off like
an arrow from a bowstring. “That’s
the track,” shouts Williams, and after
the howling hound we go. The other
dogs join in pell-mell at first, then each
hound true to the track, in full cry and
at rattling gait. Away off to the left
Captain James calls attention to a
moving ipeck against the sky. “That
is the convict circling back to camp,”
he said. On the dogs went, keen as the
wind, Inexorable as fate, following th*
track of the convict as true as his owrt
shadow. Across the tracks of hundreds
of others, along high roads, over fields,
through herds of cattle, by other con
victs that smiled grimly they passed,
the hounds went, holding the track of
the flvmg convict where it had been
laid as lightly as a thistle on the firm
earth, but where it left its tell-tale
scent all the same. Nothing could
shake them off—nothing check their
furious rush. Over other tracks made
by convicts wearing shoes from the
same last and same box they went
without hindrance, led by some intang
ible miracle of the air, straight on a
single trail.
“Now we’ll ee them wind his scent
fifty yards away,” said Williams, as
we neared a patch of forest. Close to
this was a squad of convicts. These
we had sent through the woods an hour
before. We had made “trusties,’
walking singly, touch every bush and
tree. Then the convict we were trail
ing was run through, making a half
circle, with at least fifty yards’ radius.
The hounds entered the forest at a
hustling pace, a small red dog leading.
Suddenly the leader faltered for an in
stant, with nose in air, then burst with
fierce cry to the left, ram obliquely for
fully fifty yards, with head up, when hft
took up again the track of the convict,
and lowered his head to the ground.
He had simply made a short cut across
the semicircle, having caught scent of
the convict on the bushes more than a
hundred feet away. I am aware that
this is incredible to those who have
never seen it. I cau not explain what
it is that the flying man, clad and shod
as a hundred others, fed on the same
food, chained daily to the same chain,
and sleeping in the same bunks at
nights, imparts scent to a yielding
twig touched by his clothes so that it
attracts a hound fifty yards away. But
it certainly does just that thing.
The last test was now coming. We
were moving a squad of convicts at
work in a cotton field. We had sent
the fugitive convict through thi* squad.
We had then made them walk in a
double circle around him. They then
crossed and recrossed his tracks, many
of them wearing exactly such shoes as
he wore. Qpe hour later the hounds
struck this poiut. There was not an
instant’* pause. There wa* no devia
tion, no let up in the pace. Thromgh
the labyrinth of tracks the hounds went,
as swallows through the air, hurrying
inexorably on the one track they had
chosen.
The end was now near. The convict
having run his race was seen leaning
against a tree, and watching the hound*
plunging toward him. “Won’t he
climb the tree?” 1 asked. “No, the
hounds are trained to simply
bay the convicts when they come
up with them. Otherwise the convicts
would kill them. ” By this time the
hounds had sighted him. They halted
about twenty yards away from the tree
against which he stood and bayed
furiously. Pretty music they made,
and not deeper than I have heard often
and again untjer a ’possum tree. Mr.
Willard called them off, and the convict
came forward. “Dem puppies is doin’
mighty well, Cap’n,” he said, grinning
as he lazily swung by on his way to the
stockade.
These dogs are not bloodhound*—
I doubt if there is a bloodhound in
Georgia—though two are reported near
Cartersville, descended from a pair
owned by Colonel Jeff Johnson in the
days of slavery. The Oldtown dogs
are foxhounds of the Redbone breed,
trained for several generations to hunt
men. They are never tempted by
other game. They are neither fierce not
powerful, and are relied on solely to
trail the convict and lead his pursuers
to his lair.— Atlanta ( Oa .) Constitution.
A QUEER COINCIDENCE.
4ltr Twenty-Fire Vri of Wndtri| ft
Book Rcturoi to Its Original Owner.
“A queer coincidence happened to
me recently,” said a prominent local
Judge this morning. “I was going up
Grand River avenue and was attracted
by a lot of ancient books in an old-book
store. Going inside I ran across a
novel by Anthony Trollope, my favor
ite author. I did not remember hav
ing read it, so I bought the book and
took it home. On reading a few pages
that evening I recollected that I had
read the book many years ago. My
daughter then picked it up and hap
pened to glance at the title page.
There was the faint outlines of writing
which had been erased. We studied
at it for some time when we deciphered
‘To my dear wife Julia from her hus
band.’ As I read the almost illegible
inscription my wife took the book from
me and deciphered the same words.
Then she looked at the binding and
burst into tears.
“ Do you remember this book?’
said she.
“I hardly knew what she meant at
first, but it suddenly struck me that I
had presented her with that very book
twenty-five years ago—a few week*
after our marriage. I recalled writing
the inscription in it: ‘To Julia, etc.,’
and recognized my youthful handwrit
ing. My wife remembered how she
liked the gift when she first got it, and
her chagrin at its loss. It had disap
peared, borrowed or stolen, a few
weeks after I had given it to her. The
well-thumbed leaves showed it had
passed through many hands during it*
circuitous trip of the last twenty-five
years. We now think more of that
book than all the rest of the library put
together.”— Detroit News.
m -♦ -
A tramp was found by a gentle
man on his front steps eating his lunch
“Here! What are you doing there?”
he shouted. “Partaking of a slight
lunch; will you join me?” the tramp
politely responded. “No, I don’t want
any of your villainous food.” “That’*
so; it is a pretty tough kind of fodder
I just got it out of your kitchen. You/
wife must be doing her own cooking ’
Chicago Ledger
•ft /’kfW A YEAR. Thi Coca ant, the
I ■vv beet local paper iu the State.
AURANTII
Moat of th diseases which afflict mankind are origin
ally caused by a disordered condition of the LIVER.
For all complaints of this kind, such as Torpidity of
the Liver, Biliousness, Ferrous Dyspepsia, Indiges
tion, Irregularity of the Bowels, Constipation, Flatu
lency, Eructatiena and Burning of the Stomach
(sometimes called Heartburn), Miasma, Malaria,
Bloody Flux, Chills and Fever, Break (tone Ferer,
Exhaustion before or after Fevers, Chrenic Diar
rhoea. Loss of Appetite, Headache, Foul Breath,
Irregularities incidental to Females, Bearing-down
SKiSSSTfIDIGER S ftURANTII
Is Invaluable. It is not a panacea for all diseases,
but />■ IDP al) dlsaasesofthe LIVER,
will VUHCi STOMACH and BOWELS.
It changes the complexion from a waxy, yellow
tinge, to a ruddy, healthy color. It entirely removes
low, gloomy spirits. It is one of the BEST AL
TERATIVE9 and PURIFIERS OF THE
BLOOD, and la A VALUABLE TONIC.
STADICER’S AURANTII
Far Ale by all Druggists. Price f | ,00 per bottle.
C. F. STADICER, Proprietor,
Mo 90. FRONT ST. ( Philadelphia. Pa*
RELIEF!
Forty Tears a Sufferer From
CATARRH
Wonderful to Relate.
“For forty years 1 have been a victim to Ca
tarrh—three-fourths of the time a sufferer from
Excruciating Pains Across My Forehead and
Nostrils. The discharges were so offensive that
I hesitated to mention j( # except for the good it
may do some other sufferer. I havs spent a
voung fortune from my earnings during niy
forty years of suffering to obtain relief from the
doctors. I have tried patent medicines— every
one I could learn of—from the four corners of
the earth, with no relief. And at last (57 years
of age) have met with a remedy that has cured
me entirely—made me anew man. 1 weighed
128 pounds and now weigh 110. 1 used thirteen
bottles Qf f!)e ipedicine, and 1 the only regret 1
have is tnat being in the humble walks ol' life I
may not have confidence to prevail on all ca
tarrh sufferers to use what lias cured me,
GUINN’S PIONEER BLOOD KGNEWER
“HENRY CHEVES.
“No. 207 Second St., Macon, Ga.”
“Mr. Henry Cheves, the writer of the aliove,
formerly of Crawford county, now ol JJaeon,
Georgia, merits the confidence of all interested
in catarrh. W. A. HUFF,
Ex-Mayor of Macon.
A SUPERB
Flesh Producer and Tonic!
Cuinn’s Pioneer Blood Renewer.
Cures all Blood and Skin Diseases, Rheumatism,
Scrofula, Old Sores. A perfect spring medicine.
If not in your market it will lie forwarded on
receipt of price. Small bottles $1.00; large bot
tles $1.75.
Essay on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. MACON MEDICINE COMPANY,
Macon, Ga.
SEA FOAM]
i ALL FIRST-CLASS
Storekeepers now keep it for Sale
Hthe best
R:'kin Powder
is the rail
TO PARENTS.
Many baking powders aro very pernicious
to health, and while every one regards his
own, he should also have a cure for the tender
ones— the little children.
SEA FOAM
contains none of the bad qualities of bnking
Eowders— soda or sale rati is. It conta ins Tio
urtful ingredient—no alum or ammonia.
SCIENTIFIC.
All Chemists who have analyzed Sea Foam
commend it. Housekeepers who have used it
will have no other. Cooks, whoso liest et’orts
have failed with other powders, are jubilant
over Sea Foam. Saves time, saves labor, saves
money.
It is positively unequaled. Absolutely pure.
Used by the leading hotels and restaurants
in New York city and throughout the country.
For sale by all llrst-elass grocers.
GANTZ, JONES & CO.,
170 Duane St., N. Y.
Health is Wealth!
Db E. C. Wist’* Nun and Bbaih Trb a*.
HBNT, a guaranteed specific for Hysteria, Dia&>
ness, Convulsions, fits. Nervous Neuralgia.
Headache, Nervous Prostration caused by the tag
of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness, Menial Da
press urn, Softening of the Hrain resulting in in
sanity and leading to misery, decay and deatlk
Premature Old Age, Barrenness, Lose of ponw
in either sex, Involuntary Losses and Bpermak*
orrhoea caused by over-exertion of the brain, sell
abuse or over-indulgence. Each bos contain*
one month’s treatment, fl.oo a box, or six boss*
for $5.1X1, sent by mail prepaidon receipt of prigfc
WB ITARAITEBl T ARAITEB SIX BOXES
To cure any case. With each order received by Of
for six boxes, accompanied with tr>.(JQ, we will
send the purchaser our written guarantee to Vfe
fund the money if the treatment dog* UOtoflMt
• euro. Guarantees issued only by
JOHN O. WEST & CO.,
862 W. MADISON BT., CHICAGO, lUjLg
Solo Prop’s West’s Liver Pilla,
R. E. CASON,
Resident Dentist.
Office over Curry’s drug store, C&rtersvllle,
sebs
CENTRAL HOTEL,
HOME, GEORGIA.
Li. C. HOSS, Proprietor.
Ample Accommodations for Commercial Trav
ers and Theatrical Comjia nies.
In centre business locality and slrcet cars rum
front of the door augl3
If you like Chocolate call at Curry’s
Drugstore.
Attention Everybody!
WE HAVE THIS DAY REDUCED OUR PRICES GREATLY!
ah Repairs Will be Less th.an Heretofore.
This is Done in View of the Hardness of the Times. We Keep
on Constantly a HEAVY STOCK OF WESTERN WAGONS,
BTUDEBAKER, KENTUCKY, and other Makes, which we will
Sell Cheaper than Ever Before.
If You Want the Best Wagon you can Buy on any Market Buy
The Celebrated JONES WAGON.
Made here. One and Two-Horse. SOLID STEEL AXLES, SARVIN PATENT WHEELS.
We defy the world to heat us in this line. These Wagons will last longer, run lighter, and 100
better than any. ONE OF THEM. Come or write to us.
R, 11. *T oiicn At Nous JVI mi if *’<**. 00..
dio-ly CARTEBSVILLE GEORGIA.
“Charlemagne, ”
Will be on exhibition at the stables of Crawford & Hudson after the 15th of
Mareh, Issti. “Charlemagne” is a beautiful dapple gray, and is heavily but sym
metrically built. Those interested in line stock should not fail to see him.
ROYAL FIRE INSURANCE €,. MERCHANTS INSURANCE CO.,
Liverpool, England. Newark, N. J.,
Cash Capital, - • 10,000,000 CasYi Capital, - - - 4,000,000
BARTOW LSAHE,
InsiurfiiicF Agent,
STORAGE A COMMISSION MERCHANT
Insure Your Property iu a Sale Company.
The ROYAL INSURANCE company JS the LARGEST and wealthiest in the
World. Losses paid PROMPTLY and without discount.
Insurance effected in Bartow, Gordon, Folk and Paulding counties. Insurance at home and
abroad respectfully solicited. mch4
SAEVEIN SPRINGS”
IRON-ALUM MASS.
The product of Fourteen Caltoni of the Best Mineral Water in the
World evaporated to a Mass.
A Gift of Nature, and aat a Patent Medicine.
The Finest Tonic and Appetiser Known. Cures Dyspepsia and In
digestion, Headaches, Chronic Oiarrhosa, Chills and Fevers, Catarrh
and all Throat and Nasal Affections, Scrofula and Eczema, Habitual
Constipation, Amenorrhosa, Menorrhagia, Leurcorrhoea and all Fe
male Weaknesses, Diseases of the Urinary Organs, Cholera Infantum,
A>c., Ac.
Price SI.OO for Large Size Bottle; SO canto for small Size.
Ask your druggist for it. If ha should not have it, and will not
order It, then address the proprietors and it will be sent by mail,
postage paid.
XTO CORE, NO FAT!
DIKEY'S PAINLESS EYE WATER cures weak and Inflamed
Eyes In a few hours, without pain or danger. The best Eye Water in
the World. Price, only 25 cento per bottle. Ask for it. Have no other.
DICKEY At ANDERSON, Proprietors,
And Manufacturers of the Above Remedies,
ftebll-Iy BRISTOL, TENNESSEE.
J A. CRAWFOND, Georgia. R. N. HUDSON, Tennessee.
Crawford A Hudson.
CABTEUSVILLE, GEORGIA.
SALE and LIVERY STABLE.
East of Railroad, Near the Courthouse.
<UJR TtJRNOIJTS AllE STmcTLY
HOUSES AN ft
out ACCOM MOD AT IONS
I>ROVI:It * CANNOT BE surpass-
HICKS A BREVARD,
CABIM3T MAKKBS.
Manufacturers or at*] Dealers m
TTTRNITTJTUB ofSVBAY DESCRIPTION.
UNDERTAKING A SPECIALTY.
Can Fnrnisli tlie Most BmiWe Cofls as fell as lie Mosi input Caster, *
JOG WORK PROMPTLY EXECUTED.
9hop on East Main Street, Caitsrsville, Georgia.
wDMILITI MPfEIALE IMP DECAY.
A Life Experience. Remarkable and
Quick cures. Trial Packagea Send
■tamp for sealed particulars. Address
Dr. WARD 4b CO. Louisiana, Mo,
gHOLMES* SURE CURE!
MOUTH WASH and DENTIFRICE
Cures Bleeding Gums, Ulcers, Sore Mouth, Sore
Throat, Cleanses the Teeth and Purifies the Breath;
ued and recommended by leading dentists. Pre
pared by Das. J. P. A W. R. Holmes, Dentists, Macon
Ga. For Sale by all druggists and den^^s^'
BprlG- ly Sold by p. W. CVB RY
BZeTi THE PEOPLE
RECOGNIZE THE
i OLD riOIVEEtt;
Who first issued in Commercial
2n form the great and purely V ege
*jy table Blood remedy from. South
all ern Forests. Gl’lNX’S
if PIONEEB BLOOD 2ENEWE2.
If * R. GUINN first manufactured and
g-- sold his Medicine from PERKi,
L_l GA.. in a humble way, using an
ordinary iron pot for boiling. The business was run
under tne name of
SWIFT & GttKX, Ferry, Ga„ r
With the CAUTION printed on each label: “No**
genuine without the written signature of R. GMAA-.
And the Medicine was sold at ijft.oo per bottle. Tni#
co-partnership was dissolved by MR-C. T. SWIFT re
tiring, and MR. G. GUINN continuing the manufac
ture of this Celebrated Vegetable Blood Rene wee
from Southern Forests up to the present time.
MEDICINE CO.,
Macon, Ga., .pijilit
yuinn’s Pioneer lilood
cures all Blood dt Skin Diseases,
. Price per Bottle SI.OO and 1.76.