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CARROLL FREE PRESS.
To t he Citizens of Carroll County. for a higher position is the faithful
(Jkxtlkmfx:—All I propose toh discharge of the duties of a lower ;
CARROLLTON, GA., Aug. 1 ’84 do in this article is to prove what f one; nor lias it, in Georgia, been
— _ —— I-tatodin my communication of held a crime, in the citizen liold-
Edward Ifarris of Paulding coun
ty has a Bible in his possession in
which the records of births date
back to 1741.
June 2Uth to be true. Air. Brown
denies saying that *17.00 was
that he had on hand or that
aspire to a
have dis
had ; charged faithfully and well the
all
ing a lower trusty to
higher. Whether I
Nat Hammond carried Fulton
county in the primary election
Wednesday. Hurrah for Ham
mond.
conie into his hands since his set- trusts heretofore reposed in me,
tlement with the teachers in I)e- my fellow citizens know. I make
cember last. Now
following:
listen to the the race on merit. My reasons for
I making it are personal and con-
“We, the undersigned, Grand Ju- cern only my family, my creditors, \
rors, who served at the last, April, and myself, and may be left out of
Miss Lula Hurst is now in Bos- term of the Superior court of Car- i the question. But if the people, who
ton, and the “Hub” seems to be as * r °U comity, certify that Air. S. J.. have my record before them, are
mueh 'excited over her as was ! Brown, County School Commis-1 satisfied as to my capacity, then if:
.. * - ' ’ - ‘ ' ...m .i .i i , 4.: ..e
Gotha-ro.
Dr. Pitman has given notice that
he has retired from the race for
Senator in Troup county. This
leaves the field to John H. Traylor
alone.
Aluscogee county has elected her
delegates to the congressional con
vention and while they are unin-
structed the Times says that they
are for Hon. Henrv B. Harris.
The body of a negro child was
found floating in a creek not long
since, at Powder Springs by some
negroes, while in swimming. It had j
its throat cut and several stabs in
its head and breast.
soner, said that flT.OO was all the
money he had on hand, or that had
come into his hands from any
source since settlement with teach
ers in December last.
P. H. Chandler,
AN'. T. Brock,
J. H. L. Bkxfokd,
AV. O. Robinson,
B. AV. Boxxkk,
Z. J. Cowan.
I could have obtained others,
but I deem the above sufficient to
give general satisfaction. Air-
Brown says that the Jury was mis
led by the question propounded to
i him, Air. B, by the foreman; that
the questions and answers were
The prohibitionists met the other
day in' convention at Pittsburg,
Pa., and nominated Gov. St. John
of Kansas and AA'illiam Daniel of
Maryland as their candidates for
president and vice president.
The President lias signified to
Gen. Longstreet, United States
marshal for the northern district
of Georgia, that his resignation
would be acceptable. It is under
stood that John E. Bryunt will be
appointed in his place.
The Hon. Thomas Af. Norwood
was nominated recently for Con
gress in the First district. lie was ;
brought in as the dark horse, the
convention being in a dead lock.
AA'e suppose there is no doubt about
Air. Norwood being elected and
when lie is, Georgia will have no
abler man in her delegation.
1 respectfully ask a consideration of
5 my circumstances in connection
! therewith.
If entrusted tome, the interests
of the people shall not suffer, for I
j shall endeavor to so conduct the af-.
fairs of the county as to appreciate
its obligations, and at the same i
time reduce the burden of taxa-;
tion.
.Should I be elected I propose to !
carefully,conscientiously aud leg-,
ally discharge every duty, and to.
use all (lilligence in the investiga-j
tion of every matter pertaining to :
the office for by myself, and, j
while I have the greatest respect j
for the members of the bar of Car- j
*r
abilities are rather underated than,
overated by their fellow citizens of j
the county,—yet,should I be elected j
Ordinary,there will be no lawyer;
domiciled in the Ordinary’s office,
nor wiil the Ordinary be x tram
melled by the business interests of
any lawyer. Respectfully,
AVm. Bfaff.
GEORGIA
FIC RAILWAY.
TAYLOR MFG. CO.
For terms and prices apply to E. G. KRAMER, Carrollton, Ga.
LEBANON,TENN- Ev1 n-jrr Ilnlf » Co.-
tnrr <-»f un.surpaiscd success. More tb^n T K X
TllOr* AND Yount*f Tr ' m * h ' So * ir}l
h* f l>ecu educate* Imre. I , rrpur«t»»-;.
IrcInfe. Thptilnjrb’nl •* I l.aw
*•1 Vr>t
ijf>L\.ati.»
A i
lilIKKX.
' J’CITlcilC' CjOll£Cf£, Georypih.
^♦wrvewth^Omual Sc*d.»;i I*"**;!* C/.t. 1st. li. tie
Athens Banner-Watchman:
with regard to his adminstration for roll countv an d believe that thei
1880, when the Jury thought It was; * - - - -
for the year 1888. Preposterous!!
Hear what Board of Education has
to say with regard to Air. Brown’s !
administration which met on the!
•7th of February last:
“The undersigned members of the !
Board of Education of Carroll coun
ty, certify that at a meeting of the j
Board on the -3th day of February !
1884, held for the purpose of settling j
with the parties employed by the
Board to take the school census of
Carroll county in 1883, the Board
asked Air. S. J. Brown if he had any!
money on hand, or if lie would like*;
ly have any during this spring be- j
longing to the Public School fund, j
To which he, Air. Brown replied;
that he had none.
AI. R. Russell, i
AV.O.Pekuv, i
E. G. Kkamfr, !
B. A. Shari*.
July 26th 1884.
In his last communication Air.
South. All modern conveniences. Erst ativatmees in Literature. Mo»lc and Art.
attention to **, v ^ 1 •
KENTUCKY
MILITARY
INSTITUTE.
AI Fnrmrt.ilr I*. O..Franklin I£y.. .it mil«
frijni Krankfori. Ms.-tin-nmM Iit-.-ii:l>fnl >n<l iKMulifnl
location in ill" State. lit a. tr. ll licatcd by
flfnra. A full »n.l able O.ll.-itp Family. Expenses as
moderate as any tir.t-cla.'Scnllcir.-. Fortieth year be
gins sk'nlrmlirr 1st. K>>r cat.-ih.yii.'. -ir.. address
as ala.V'-. COL. R. I). ALIEN, Supt.
T»r
An excellent School In one of the most beautiful* ’*1 need nf the l..onet due U
and healthy cities of the South. Magnificent buildings
and first-class equipments. Send for catalogue.
I It. GWALTNEY, President.
prominent farmer in this country ! Brown provesby certificate from Air , f'j J iTiYTIT »A Dir
says he lacked $100.00 of having) Jones, tax collector, that he had at
enough money to clean his crop and • tlie time the question was propoun-
tried the banks and every one he
knew to borrow, but without suc
cess. As a last resort he thought
of his fruit crop, and started a ne
gro to haul it to market- lie sold
not only enough to keep his farm
going but lias $30.00 in cash over.
He .says there is more clear money
in fruit and truck than corn and
cotton.
The, Waynesboro’ Herald says,
^ *• 7
last Saturday evening a negro buy
11 years of age, was amusing him
self by holding a collard leaf in his
mouth and letting a horse bite the
leaf. The horse reached a little
too far and caught the hoy’s under
lip in lii- mouth, and bit it entirely
off. The hoy had before a superflu
ity of under lip, and that it is the
opinion of those who saw him, that
his looks were vastly improved by
the loss of a portion.
The cholera is on the increase in
Toulon and Alarseilles, France.
Paris is greatly alarmed and many
of the wealthiest families have al
ready made preparations to depart
at the first sign oi the disease. Dr.
Koch thinks that the scourge must
spread throughout Europe, hut that
America may escape by vigilance
in quarantine precaution. Secre
tary Frelinghuysen has ordered
the consular officers at various Eu
ropean ports to inspect all vessels
and passengers departing for the
I'nited States.
Augusta Chronicle: Gen. Clement
A. Evans made a farm talk in Co
lumbia county, the other day. It
must have been a good one, accord
ing to all accounts. Said my inform
ant, lie put it all in two vital words
—words pregnant and brimming
with force. They were “Intensify”
and “Diversify.” He elaborated
them powerfully. Intensely culti
vate, work, fertilization, so as to
double production-; utilize every
resource. Diversify—crop:-, so
as to cover every phase of agricul
ture creation. AA’liat a superb
text in the two words; what vol
umes could be written and spoken
on them!
ded $100.00. Nb mistake about
this.
Air. Brown says that it would
have been great presumption in
him by telling the committee that
lie knew nothing about hook keep
ing. The committee, if necessary,
will give certificates that he so sta
ted.
I reiterate that the book examin
ed by the Grand Jury was not the
hook presented to the committee
for examination after court. I do
not deny that lie did not have his
cash book, but I do deny that the
proper entries had been made upon
it. The transaction he had had
with the present tax collector and
the settlement with teachers, in De
cember last was on what lie called
his blotter.
The Grand Jury nor the commit
tee have made any attack upon
Air. Brown’s war record nor charg
ed him with dishonesty, as lie
would have the public believe, but
they do charge him with negligence
and that charge is true.
I have proven that he stated in
Jury room that lie had only $17.00
and upon further investigatinn he
stated he had $230.00 and his hooks
showed lie had $11.73, but upon fi
nal investigation lie had $328.52,
and as a proof of this fact lie has
paid over the money and been re
ceipted for the same, lie says we
had no right to examine his book,
that other Grand Jurors had pass
ed over, I say not only the Grand
Jury hut any citizen has a right at
any time to examine any public
officer book, I leave it with every
fair minded man to judge. '
I. B. Phriiuf.
l>ougktsvill-e .star: A littie sensa
tion was created in
by the quietly conducted elopment
of Miss Charity Strickland with Air.
T. J. Brown, of Salt Springs. Air.
Brown came up during day, and
Hate that evening Aliss Srickland
quietly walked from her home and J
joined Afr. Brown at the depot. A j
few minutes afterward the 7 o’
clock train came along hoarding it
they were soon landed at Sait
A Card.
Elsewhere in this paper appears
my announcement as a candidate
for Ordinary. In view of the fact
that I now liold the office of Tax
Receiver it may be proper to ex
plain to the people why I do not
seek re-election to that office and
have become a candidate for Ordi
nary.
Being subject to rheumatism my
health is such as to render it un
safe for me to ride, and I am there-
Onno-i-^villc i fore physically incompetent to do
the duties of a tax officer.
As the Tax Receiver’s office no
more than yielded a support, and
as I could not ask the people to
give me it again on account of my
inability to travel, I determined
to run for Ordinary, because the
duties of the Ordinary are such as
rather protect from than aggravate
which* I
rents wanted
for authentic
edition of.hi? life; written at his home
with his cooperation and assistance, by
the renowned Goodrich. Largest cheapest
handsomest, best. Costs more to man
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All new beginners succeed graudly.—
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11.1IALLETT & CO., Portland, Alaine.
A Tale of Two Crutches-
A AVflf Known Citizen of At
lanta Lavs Down his Crutches.
I have only a few words to say, which
are to state that I have been confined to
my bed for two months with what was
called Nervous Rheumatism, or Sciatica.
I was only enabled to hobble about
occasionally by tlie use of crutches, and
in this condition I commenced the use of
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me to discard the use of my crutches and
attend to business, i had previously used
all well recommended medicines without
relief. It lias been over two months since
using li. JL JL, and l co us idcr myself
a permanently cured man.
J. P. Davis,
Atlanta, Ga. AVest End.
Frightful Nasal Catarrh.
PIECES OF BONE.
For Jour years I have been afflicted with
a very troublesome catarrh of the head
So terrible has its nature been that when
I blew my nose small pieces of bones
would frequently come out of my mouth
and nose. The discharge was copious and
at times exceedingly offensive. My blood
became so impure that my general health
was greatly impaired, with poor appetite
and worse digestion
Numerous medicines were used without
relief, until I began the use of B. B. 1L,
and three bottles acted almost like magic.
Since their use not a symptom lias returned
and I feel in every way quite restored to
health. I am an old citizen of Atlanta, and
refer to almost any one living on Butler
street, and more particularly to Dr. 1., M.
Gillani, who knows of my case.
Mils. Elizabeth Knott.
W e will mail on application to anyonein-
tcrested in blood and Skin Diseases, Scrof
ula Rheumatism, Kidney Troubles, etc.,
wonderful and unquestionable testimoni
als of cures effected by B. B. JL, the
quickest blood purifier ever known. Large
bottles 8J.(K) Or (i for 83.00. Sold by all
druggists or expressed on receipt of
price. BLOOD BALM GO.
Atlanta, Ga.
RHUDY & SPURLOCK,
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA,
DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
SUCH AS
Dry Goods of all kinds, Groceries, light and heavy,
Boots, Shoes, Hats and Caps, Clothing to fit anybody,
From the smallest boy to the largest man. Hardware,
Crockery and Glass ware of all kinds,
All of these goods are for sale and we don’t propose to be undersold by any one,
The public are earnestly Invited to examine our goods and prices before buying
elsewhere. We also sell the
LIGHT RUNNING, NOISELESS HARTFORD SEWING MACHINE,
The best in the market. Now a word to our friends who owe us. We are greatly
either for goods or guanos. We are compelled to set
tle up our indebtedness, and cant do so unless our friends who owe us come to our
rescue. So please come up and settle and save cost.
We have just received a fresh lot of GUANOS and ACIDS for WHEAT and
OATS. Come to see us one and all and you will find W. O. Perry and John JI.
Ward always on hand to show yon goods. Respectfully,
RIIUDY & SIT'BLOCK .
FARMERS LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST !
ioo Cooking Stoves Just Received
.A.T THE
STOVE EII^IPOIE^ITTIM:
Stoves off from last season, down low, and must be sold!
ALSO
Tin Ware,.Hard Ware of all kinds, Crockery, Wood. Wllow. and Glass Ware,
Brooms, Trays, Sifters, and a general assortment of House Furnishing goods.—
Come every body aud price and he convinced.
JTESSE IFt. GRIFFIN.
THEONLY TRUE
the disease from which T suffer,
Here they procured the (being mainly transacted at his of
fice in the court house) and be
cause the growing wants of my
Springs
services of Rev. V. P. Hendricks
and proceeded to the Medliodist
Church, where they were united family, and the demands of credi-
in marriage. Madam Rumor lias it
that they were lovers for about five
tors make it necessary for me to-
seekmore remunerative employ-
years, but parental objections have meat,
kept them apart, until they decided Under our constitution every eit-
to break loose from tlie restraint izen has the right to seek any pub-
aml bo united. We learn that since lie employment within the gift of
it is over all parents hav.e! people. It has been said that the
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our departments, until the periodical is
now the recognized leading agricultural
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Success in
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Correctly and Successfully, how to act
in Society and everywhere. A goldmine
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ter than anv other, apply for terms to
STANDARD PUBLISHING CO,
CIO Arch St. Philadelphia, Pa.
American Agriculturist,
1884- A $4.00 Periodical, ;
A 600 Page Dictionary,
1000 Illustrations.
‘Foes Or Friends?”
Morris’ 11x18 Superb Plate Engraving, j
“In the Meadow,”
Dupre’s 12x17 Superb Flate Engraving.
OK
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731 BROADWAY, NEW YORK.
To fcavo GOTO! TTUALTH fh* tJT kft Bt«*t he fcfpt In •nlnifc
| i
^5 x
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Central Standard Time.
T
-X -
Csl^ ^
^ i—
0—2:
A. M.
7 10
7 23
7 IP?
7 30
P. M.
4 i3
4 30
4 30
4 33
f
0
3
7
8'
L’ve Atlanta Arrive
♦Howell, Ga
♦Peyton, Ga
Chattahoochee
P. M.
8 OO
7 49
7 40
, 7 37
A. M.
6 45
6 30
7 .1
f, 09
7 40
H 13*
! 12
*CV>neffrd, (-a
i -7
•7 48
• 3 23
15
Mableton, Ga
7 21
5 35
8 00
5 40
18
Austell, Ga
7 It
•7 it
8 08
5 31
21
Salt Springs, Ga
7 0s
5 w)
8 22
6 17
1 27
Pouglasvilk*, Ga
0 i> »
3 43
8 30
6 30
32
Winston, Ga
6 33
4 20
7 16
' 38
Villa Hiea. Ga
6 29
3 52
!) 11
7 48
' 45
Temple, Ga
6 13
3 20
0 33
8 26
1 54
Bremen, Ga
5 51
2 40
10 (Mi
y os
04
Tallapoosa, Ga
5 32
200
10 18
9 :13
i 70
Muscadine, Ala
5 17
1 30
10 ‘.iS
10 08
77
Edwardsvill, Ala
5 0f»
12 >#
10 36
10 :?7
i
84
Heflin, Ala
4 44
12 25
A. M
11 10
11 01
90
Davisville, Ala
4 31
11 58
11 IS
11 14
93
Choecoloceo Ala
4 24
11 44
11 28
11 29
97
DeArmanville, Ala
4 16
11 29
11 42
11 51
101
Oxford, Ala
4 03
10 56
12 00
p m. ;
12 Of)
A. M.
103
♦Oxanna, Ala
4 00
10
12 10
12 10
104
Anniston, Ala
3 40
if) 45
12 33
12 30 i
112
♦Berclair, Ala
3 10
10 no
12 43
1 03
116'
Eastaboga, AI:t
3 00
9 45
1 02
1 33 *
122
Lincoln, Ala
2 45
9 18
1 16
1 •>>
127
Riverside, Ala
2 3"
8 57
1 23 i
2 <L5
129
Seddon. Ala
2 25
6 48
1 36
2 :i0 ■
134
Eden, Ala
2 12
8 25
1 33
2 36
140
♦Cook’s Springs, Ala
1 55
7 5*
2 10
3 24
145
♦IJrompton Ala
1 30
7 31
•> 0(1
3 40 j
150
Leeds, Ala
1 20 •
7 la
2 30
4 30 -
161
♦Irondale, Ala
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6 25
3 05
5 0<)
167
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SUNDAY—Eight pages. Tins edition
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THE STTHSr. j
NEW YORK, 1884.
About sixty million copies <»f The Sun
have gone out of our establishment
during the past twelve months.
If you were to paste end to end all the
columns of all The Suns printed and sold
last year you would get a continuous
strip of interresting information, common
sense, wisdom, sound doctrine, and sane
wit long enough to reach from Printing
House square to the top of Mount Cop-
ernicus in the moon, then back to Print
ing House square, and theu three-quarter*
of the way back to the moon again.
But The Sun is written for the inhabit
ants of the earth ; this same strip of in
telligence would girdle the globe
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If every buyer of a copy of The Sun
during tlie past year has spent only one
hour over it, anil if his wife or his grand
father has spent another hour, this new s
paper in 1883 has. afforded the human
rare thirteen thousand years of steady
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It is only by little calculations like
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can newspapers, or of its lufiuenceou the
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’Die Sun is, and will continue to be, a
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go in this coming year of our Lord, 1884.
If you know the Sun, you like it al
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it is high time to get in the sunshine, i
NEW
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S"
UNION SQUARE NEW YORK. I
MASS
FOR SALE BY
JOHN M. FIELDS, farrollton Ga.
LOBRILLAED’S
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to deceive the
tlie purchaser
fanner's to see that tlie red lithographed tin cans
led value, special market reports closelv resembling ours as t
literary, scientific, and domestic ’ ,,
ligeuce, make the Weekly Sun, umN:,r ?% would request
quailed value,
and
intellige
the newspaper-for the
household. To clubs of ten, with§10 in w hich it is packed a'wars bear
an extra copy- free,
Address 1. W. ENGLAND, Publisher
The Sun, X Y City.
Ol R NAME AND TRADE MARK.
In buying an imitation you pay as
inuclifor’an in ferior article as the gen
uine costs.
BE SURE YOU OBTAIN THE GENUINE
LorriUard’s Climax
Dr. Pemberton‘s Triplex Liver Pills.
These celebrated Liver pills eoutaiu
three medicinal elements of rare and won
derful efficacy—the concrete juices of!
vegetables which are collected and dried RBI) TIN-TAG PLUG TOBACCO,
Chewing
Tobacco Made.
the Genuine always Wars a Bed Tin-Tag
with our name thereon.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
111 shells.. and and according to the high- The Finest Sweet Navy
est medical authorities, nothing is known
in pharmacy or medicine to equal their i r
therapeutic action upon the Liver and
Blood. Triplex Liver Pills act directly
on tlie Liver: eure Chills and Fever, Dys
pepsia, Sick Headache, Billious Coiie.
Constipation, Rheumatism, Piles, Palpi- n AT TAfor the working da« Send
tation, Dizziness, Torpid Live j, Coated VjULlJJlO cents for postage ami we
Tongue, Sleeplessness and all Diseases
of tlie IJver and Stomach. If you do
not "feel very well,” a single pjll at bed-
" ill mail you free, a roval. valuable box
of sample gupds that will put you in the
way of making more money in a few day*
Just -what its name implies; a^JepetaSe IdTer
Mcdirine.and for diseases resulting from aderangetl
i or torpid condition of the Lifer; such as Biliousness,
Costiveness. Jaundice, Dyspepsia, Malaria, Sick-
> Headache. Rheumatism, etc. An invaluable Fam-
1 ily Medicine, l’or full information send your ad
dress on a postal card for 100 page book on the
** Liver and its Diseases,” to DR. SANFORD, 24
appreci
and prove a blessing to tlie world! Try
them once anil you w ill
better pill. For sale by druggists.
w ork may test the business, w e make
never wmt •. unpan-eHed otter: to all who are not
r„S >'r 11 / at, K f r l r r. 11 sen * 1 * i ^ w for
.•en 1 • the trouble of w riting to us. Full r.ar-
1)R. J. S. Pemberton & Co., ( liein- ticulars, directions, etc., sent frtv. Bur
sts, Atlanta, Ga., Proprietors.
ry • j Ttr ▼ j I *» Aaiver Ana US i/iseasea,
David W. Judd. I lO • I Dusno Street,New York.
1 A2k DKuaaST MUX TUX IOC ITS BCTUTATIOS.
tunes will be made bv those who *rire
their w hole time to the w ork. Great suc
cess absolutely sure . Dont delay. Start
t now. Address Stinson a t o., Portland,
Maine. *
! A Prizes f '"' ""- 1
become, reconciled. -
best preparation # man can make
tage, and receive fra*,
11 a ttTK it’s fitov Toxic Js'that frequent attempts box of goods W hit'll will help you j
at counterfeiting have only added to the popular- . to more money right away than anything
llv of the original. If you earnestly desire _l»eallh
.lu not experiment—?et the Obigixal axo Best.
( Send yimr address to The Dr. Harter Med.Co. V
St. Louis, Mo., for oar "T>WWAir BOOK.” ■
Full of strange and useful Information, free.^
Or. Harter’s Iron Tonic is for Sale by all
DRUOQIST8 AND DEALERS EVERYWHERE.
else in this world. All, of either sex,!
succeed from first hour. The broad road j
to fortune opens before the workers, ab-i
solately sure. At once address, True &!
CoAugusta, Maine. j
Tumult FMUl m
■ I u ital not
a week at home. 83.00 outfit frep.
sa :
We have made arrangiuents with
•< COLLEGE. 8
An old _
hear the centre
nnsnrpassed advanta
Begins Its next sessim ...
of Health—Giving water oo IbeCollege giwinds. I or
catalogue,addroii tli« Principal*,Thomuawlle, N. C.
tv ^ithe proprietors of the Souther., l ot
j tivator, by which we are enabled tu
ital not required. Reader, if you want
business at which (tersons of either sex,
oi^heHmc^trvof^f^'pos^a^ voting or old. can take great pay all thejolub onr pajier and that excellent
[vantages at iinpricciontediv i«vrmir3 rime they work, with absolute certainty * agricultural journal at $•’ 00 Tu>r -in
i^T4on^Si^eh-mun.n pr D.7 i wiTtp fbr particulars to II. Hallett Ajnum. Every farmer ought to take
Co, Portland, Maine
ery
the Cultivator.