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YOL, I.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA, AUGUST 15, 1884,
NO 42.
bill ARP. I and kindle their camp fires. They
| had a battle scene on the stage
Turns His Attention to the Military Boys and Set up ail old confederate liag
What a pleasant thing it is—the j n the corner,
reunion of army comrades, I be- j De la Mesa was there, the com-
ieve there are more of them both m andant of the post. lie was half
north and south this year than any French and half Spanish, half fool
i year since the war. There is a sad, an <t half dog and would have made
sweet pleasure about it, and there a splendid priest in old Spanish in
is nothing wrong or demoralizing,. quisition. When he saw the flag he
and I hope the boys in blue and i e ft the hall in a‘ tower of rage,
the boys in gray will keep it up as j Xext morning he put all the prom-
long as there is a quorum left. ; ncu t persons connected with the
The quorums of some of the cornpa- tableaux under arrest and tlireat-
nies are getting very small, for e ned to put the girls in jail but he'
The Feeble Crow Strong.
Whon llostctter’s Stomach Bitters is used
to promote assimilation of Ihe food and en
rich the blood. Indigestion, the chief ob
stacle to an acquisition of strenght by the
weak, is an ailment which infallibly suc
cumbs to the action of this peerless correc
tive. Loss of flesh and appetite, failure to
sleep, and growing evidence of premature
decay, ;are speedily counteracted by the.
great kivigorant, which braces up the phy
sical energies and fortifies the constitution
against disease. For sale by all .Druggists
and Dealers generally.
FACTS RECARBIHG
Dr, Harter’s Iren Tonis,
It will purify and enrlcli the BLOOD, regulate
the LIVER and KIDNEYS, and Kestoim: Tin:
HEALTH and VIGOR of YOUTH! In all those
diseases requiring a certain and ctBcieu ■ I <)X 11 ,
especially 1) vspepsia. Want of Appetite. I ndigos-
vlon, La'-k of Strength, etc., its use is marked
with Immediate and wonderful results. Hones,
muscles and nerves receive new force. Enlivens
the mind and supplies Brain Power;
c a mi vn sJifering from all complaints
r- g\ gj? B & 3) peculiar to their sex will find in
DR. HARTER'S IRON TONIC a safe and speedy
eure. It gives a clear and healthy complexion.
Tile strongest testimony to the value of Dn.
II.miter's liiox Toxic is that frequent attempts
at counterfeiting have only added to thepopular-
ity of the original. If you earnestly desire health
do not experiment—get the Okiginal and Best.
( Bond your address to The T)r. Harter Med.Co.V
St. Loais, Mo., for our “DREAM ROOK." B
Full of strange and useful information, free. W
Dr. Harter's Iron Tonic is for Sale by all
Druggists and Dealers Everywhere.
KING OF THE SINGERS
there is an enemy to human life
that is surer of his mark than can
non ball or shot or shell. Old fa-
tlief time is slow, but lie is sure.
Speaking of quorums reminds me
of a faithful soldier, a Jew, a very
humble and patient Jew, who
joined a-eompany from Rome and
was received under protest, for be
was frail and feeble, and had
never made any demonstration of
courage or patriotism. That man
hardly ever saw anything—rarely
smiled even at the camp-fire jokes
but lie was as true as steel. lie
never went to hospital, never
asked for a furlough, never was
well, never was sick, never strag
gled on the march, never missed a
batt le, and never boasted of any
thing he did. I remember that
when his company were badly cut
up and badly demoralized and a
forced march was ordered, the reg
iment was suddenly halted for re
view, and when his company was
called for to he inspected the faith
ful Jew stopped forward and pre
sented arms. “Where is your com
pany, Mr. Jffnas?” said the com-
ii anding officer. Jonas made an
humble salute and replied, “Colo-
was afraid.
I was lord mayor of the little
town at that time and as in duty
bound wrote to General George IT.
Thomas at Louisville, Kentucky
and told him frankly all about it
and asked for the discharge of the
young men.
The reply that i received in due
time reminds me of Logan’s letter
of acceptance. It is a splendid
bloody shirt, I have it now before
me and will give an extract just to
show where we stood in February
18(57. I had written him as humble
as a dead nigger. I told him that
our people in Home had in good
faith accepted the situation, and
the hoys intended no insult by the
display of the flag.
The answer says, “If your people
have ordinary intelligence they
misunderstand their present status,
which is that the rebillion is a huge
crime embodying till the crimes in
the decalogue. It lias been con
quered and disarmed and its very
name and emblems are hateful to
the people of the trusted states,
and he must he indeed obtuse who
expects to he allowed to parade
nel I ish de kumnuy.” I was rum- j before the eyes of loyal peo-
inating over these things the other pie that which they execrate and
day when I was in Hanks county | abhor,
and heard that the Banks county
Above is the exact representation of the
SEWING MACHINE WE SELL FOE 820
It is in every respect the very best of
the SINGER ST V LE OF MALI 11XES
which are far the
most popular machines in
the world:. Finished in the best manner
with ihe latest improvements for Bind
ing the bobbin: the most convenient style
of table, with extension long, largo
drawers and beautiful gothic cover, it
stands without a rival.
KING OF SINGER MACHINES.
Having adopted the plan of selling Ma
chines without the aid of agents and by
giving to the purchaser the benefit of the
commission usually given to the agents,
enable them to obtain Machines at one-
half of the regular prices. We therefore
sell for 320 tHe above style Machine, ful
ly* warrant it for three years. We do not
ask you pay for it until you see w hat you
arc trying. We only w ish to know that
you want to buy a Sew ing Machine and
nre willing to pay
§20 FOE THE BEST IN TIIE MARKET.
Write to ns sending the name of your
nearest railroad station, and w C w ill send
the machine, and give inst ructions to al
low you to examine it beforeyou'pay for
it. WILLMAETII & CO.
1828 X. 20th, St. Philadelphia, Pa.
IF YOU ARE
GOING
"WEST,
northwest,
—OH-
SOUTHWEST,
IBiJ SIXIRJU
Your Tickets Bead via the
N. C. & St. L. R’Y
The Mackenzie Route.
The First-class and Emigrant Passengers
FAVORITE!
Albert B. Wrenn, W, L Eogers,
Pas. Agent, Pas • Agent,
Atlanta,Ga . Chattanooga, Tenn
W. L. DANLEY,
Gen. Pas. & Tkt. Agent,
. Nash ville, Tenn
Guards were to have a reunion. I
wish I could have stayed to see it
and enjoy it. I recall the time
when the Banks county Guards
made such a sensation in the Vir
ginia army on account of the pecu
liar politeness of their captain.
Captain Candler wrs a horn Ches
terfield and neither tlie rules nor
the rigor of war could shake or
modify his instinctive politeness.
“Gentlemen of the Banks county
Guards, you will please to right
face.”
“Gentlemen of the Banks county
Guards I thought that I ordered
you to look to the right and dress
but doubtless you did not hear me
•so I will repeat tiie order, gentle
men of the Banks county Guards
you will please look to the right! _
and dress.”
“Gentlemen of the Banks county
Guards I have just received a com
munication from Colonel 8emm.es
saying that he will send Major
Harris down at 2 o’clock to exer
cise you in the drill and other mili
tary tactis. I would like to ask you
gentlemen if it is your pleasure to
be drilled by Major Harrison?”
Bill Chaston says that about this
time a great big bearded private
who was a hell weather among the
hoys and was leaning up against a
tree, locked his arms over his head
and gaped and yawned as he re
plied, “no capting I dont believe I
feel like drilling this evening.
We will let the colonel know when
we feel like it.
Military terms and military tac
tics were altogether unknown to
the mountaineers and their officers,
hut they did the best they could
and were always ready for a fight.
When Captain Candler wanted his
company to advance a few paces to
the front he always said “Gentle
men of the Banks county Guards I
will thank you to step this way.”
But in due time they became fa
miliar with right Oblique and file
left and countermarch and charge
and fix bayonets and all the other
orders except fall hack and retreat,
and no company in Colonel Semmes
command stood higher for courage
and patriotism than the Banks
county Guards. Long may the
remnant live to honor their coun
try, and long may Captain Candler
live to command them in peace as i
faithfully as he did in war.
J sec that many of the regiments
have presented their banners, their
tattered and torn and faded ban
ners, and it it is now lawful for the
hoys to plant the old colors in their
midst and do homage to them and
there are none to molest or make
us afraid.
That is a good sign of returning
reason in the minds of our masters.
I remember well when it was not
tolerated. I remember when tiie
young folks of Borne had some tab
leaux in tiie city ball to raise money
to put the pews hack in the church
es, the pews that Sherman’s men
Your excuse that the young men
did not know it was wrong is too
puerile to answer. They know
well enough what is right in such
matters without waiting to he
warned by orders from these head
quarters.
The sole cause of this offence is
that the citizens of Rome have not
accepted the situation
which is that tiie civil war was a
rebellion and those engaged in it
are rebels, and rebellion is treason,
and.treason is a crime, a heinousjone
deserving of punishment, and that
you rebels have not been punished,
isjowing to the magnanimity|of your
conquerors, with many of you, the
war is called a revolution and reb
els are called confederates and loy-
ilists to the union are called “d—d
vankees and traitors and over the
whole great crime with its accursed
record of slaughtered heroes and
patriots, you are frying to throw
the gloss of respectability.
As however, it is pretended by
you that the persons arrested were
so innocent as not to know that it
was wrong for unpunished traitors
to glory in their shame and plant
the symbol of their crime in the
face of the country they will be re
leased from confinement with the
understanding that no act of treas
on will hereafter pass unnoticed,
and may they and all others profit
hv the lesson which they have re
ceived Wm. D. Whipple
Asst. Adjt. Gen.
That is very nice and affectionate
and well calculated to make good
union men of those hoys, wasent?
Thank the Lord we have survived
such bitterness and tyranny, and if
it was not for such men as Logan,
who continue to hate and and abuse
us, our whole country would he at
peace. Bill Arp.
had taken out to make pontoons of
In a recent lecture in New York
J)r. Woodbridge said: “In case of a
bite of a venomous serpent, to suck
the wound with the lips is one of the
first tilings to he resorted to. If the
poison is in the circulation, the use
of strong brandy or whiskey, in (pl
an tities strong enough to prodcce
intoxication, must be resorted to.
The bite of a mad dog should he
cauterized at once by a pencil of
lunar caustic or the application of
irons heated, white. The peculiari
ty of hydrophobic poison is that it
remains in the spot where tiie bite
occurs for several days or weeks,
and not until this poison ferments
does it become dangerous. Dr.
Hewitt, a surgeon of London, al
lowed himself to be bitten no less
than eighty times by rabid dogs,
each time successfully cauterizing
the wound. He fell a victim to his
temerity, however, for one day lie
was found dead with a pistol shot
from his own hand. A statement
was in his papers that lie had neg
lected cauterization too long, and
feeling the first symtoms of hydro
phobia, he prefered to die without
the long agony.
From Youth’s Companion.
Common-Sense.
Until a few months ago there was
living, in this country a man who,
in the past generation, was follow
ed by fnany disciples as-a sage and
prophet. A noted Englishman once
asked one of his fellow-citizens why
the “sage” was so totally forgotten
in his old age.
“Because,” was the reply, “his
sole intellectual capital was his
imagination. He lacked common
sense. lie was always a poor man,
huthe never worked an hour for
his own support in his life; and, al
though he wrote many hooks, he
has not left a single solid idea which
can help on men to become happier
or better.”
The verdict was severe, but just.
Robert Southey, who had a large
proportion of that mixture of clear
insight, justice and unselfishness,
which we call common-sense, serv
ed for years as the halance-wlieel
and the regulator of a group of
friends, whose power of intellect
enchanted the world, hut who for
want of that homely, despised qua\
ity, were miserable themselves and
cause misery in others. Leigh
Hunt, the most amiable of good fel
lows, lived a parasite on his friends.
Byron not only was a hitter misan
thrope, hut made misanthropy the
fashion all oyer Europe; Shelley,
with tiie fire of genius in his brain
and the tenderness of a woman
in his heart, drove the poor girl he
had married to comnit suicide.
A still more marked example of
the effect of a lack of practical com
mon-sense among brilliant qualities
is the life of Edward Irving, the
great preacher, lie was a man
of tremendous intellectual force
and an irresistahle magnetism,
which drew all men towards him.
No human soul could he more de
vout or sincere; Carlyle has said of
him, lie “tried perpetually to see
God, and died in the trying.”
But lie was what his countrymen
call “feather-headed.” 1 Ic despised
all warnings of common-sense.
When he appointed a series of
meetings, lie held them before
dawn, instead of at the usual hours.
He listened with respect to all fan
tastic talesof innaclesin liis church
opened his pulpit to women who
professed to have the “gift of ton
gues,” and shrieked and gabbled
unintelligible gibberish.
Being ill with consumption, hi
was warned by liis physicians that
unless he went at once to warmer
climates, lie could not live until
spring. Upon which he started on
journey on horseback to the north
of Scotland through the storms and
cold winds of winter, being as he
declared, “called of God” to go.
One night, in a wayside in, burn
ing up with fever, he rose, broke
the ice on a tub of water in the
room, and poured it over liis naked
body, that “lie might gain strength
to follow his call.” As was to he
expected, he died in less than a
fortnight.
He had been followed by vast
crowds hut they all had deserted
him. Ilis church was taken from
him, and liis great and undeniable
power had made no mark in the
world which endured after liis
death.
This certain flightincss, or lack of
ballast, young people are very apt
to admire thinking it a proof of ge~
nius. When they grow old er, they
find that a man of brilliant talents
without common-sense is like a
beatiful body without a hack-hone.
It is the unseened, unpretending
member which holds all others to
gether, and gives them’ their force
and effect. It is a trait which can
be cultivated, and of which the
whole sect of Quakers are exam
ples.
Arctic Life,
There is one fact connec tod with
the Grcely expedition that is excit
ing attention. It is that Greely’s
entire party remained in the Arctic
region two years without experienc
ing any inconvenienc for sickness
worth mentioning as long as they
had plenty of food and cfoomrtahle
quarters. There was no suffering
or loss of life until the party, having
abandoned their station at Lany
Franklin Bay in accordance with
the understood programme arrang
ed two years before reaching Sabine
where they expected to find
foo d. There, the party being with
out proper food and shelter, disease
and death made their apperance
among them. Until within a very
few years the belief was general
that scurvy and other dreaded dis
eases were incident to Arctic life.
The experience of the Grcely party
shows that this belief is wholy un
founded. All the members of the
party lived about as comfortably at
Lady Franklin’s Bay as do the peo
ple in Northern Dakota during a se
vere winter.
R J.
Burdette in Philadelphia Times.
The Life of Man.
Man, horn of woman, is of few
days and no teeth. Indeed, it
would he money in his pocket
sometimes if lie had less of either.
As for his days he wasteth one-
third of them, and as for his teeth,
lie has convulsions when he cuts
them as the last one comes through,
lo, the dentist is twisting the first
one out, and the last end of that
man’s jaw is worse than the first,
being full of porcelain and a roof-
plate built to hold blackberry
seeds.
Stone bruises line his pathway to
manhood; his father boxes his ears
at home, the big hoys cuff him in
the play ground and the teacher
whips him in the schoolroom. lie
buyeth Northwestern at 110 when
he had sold short at, 90 and his
neighbor unloaded upon him Iron
Mountain at (53? s anil it straight
way hreaketh down He riseth
early and sitteth up late that he
may fill his barns and storehouses,
and lo! his children’s lawyers
divide the spoils among them
selves and says “Ha!, ha!” lie
growleth and is sore distressed be
cause it raineth, and he beateth
upon his breast and sayeth: “My
crop is lost!” because it raineth not.
The late rains blight his wheat and
the frost biteth his peaches. If it
he so that the sun shineth, even
among the nineties, he sayeth,
“Woe is me, for I perish,” and if
the northwest wind sigheth down
in forty-two below he crieth:
“Would I were dead!” If lie wear
sackcloth and blue jeans, men say:
“He’s a tramp, and if he goeth forth
shaven and clad in purple and
fine linen all the people cry:
“Shoot the Dude!”
Hecarryeth insurance for twen
ty-five years, until he hath paid
thrice over all his goods, and then
he lettetli his policy lapse one day,
and that same night fire destroyed
his store. lie buildeth him a house
in Jersey, and his first born is de
voured by mosquitoes; he pitcheth
iris tent in New York, and tramps
devour his substance. He moved
to Kansas, and a cyclone carryetli
liis house over into Missouri, while
a prairie fire and ten million acres
of grasshoppers fight for liis crop.
He settleth himself in Kentucky
and the next day is shot by a gen
tlemen, a colonel and a statesman,
“because, sail, he resembles, sah,
a man he did not like, sah.” Yerily,
there is no rest for the sole of liis
foot, and if he had it to do over
again he would not he horn at all,
for “the day of death is better than
the day of one’s birth.
Judge Drummond on Lawyer’s Costs.
Judge* Drummond, of Minnesota,
having retired from the bench, the
St. Paul Pioneer Press relates some
incidents of his judical career.
Among them the Press gives the
following: In a law suit over the
Adams estate in Milwaukee one
firm of lawyers put in a hill for
$15,000, another lawyer a hill for
•$$000, and still another a hill for an
equal sum. The estate amounted
to hut $32,000 and the parties in in
terest were orphan children. Drum
mond went over the charges, which
as Judge he must audit. As lie
went from item to item his
anger increased. It is said by
those who were present that no
set of men ever received such a
Jove-like castigation. “Gentle
men,” ho said: “You consider
yourselves good lawyers. How
much more are your services wortli
to your clients than mine to the
people ? You have charged $2-5,000
for sixty day’s service. Gould
you not be content each of you to
take my pro rata for the same
time? These charges are infa
mous. They are such as men who
are scoundrels and thieves at heart
would make. This charge of $15,000
is cut down to $1,500, those of $5,000
each to $500. Repeat such a piece
of rapine in this court and I will
disbar every one of you.”
It was a Southern man, Schley of
Maryland, who commanded the
expedition that, rescued Grcely.
It was a Soutncrn man, Lockwood
of Maryland, who
reached the highest lati
tude ever tread py a white man.
Further, Southern men commanded
and composed the armies that clo
sed tne Revolutinary war, that clo
sed the war of 1812, and that closed
the Mexican war. And it was the
South that furnished the greatest
generals the world has ever seen. It
furnisnes, also, the men who
shaped the Constitution of the Uni
ted States and made the greatest
of modern nations. Let our young
men.rememberthesefacts, and prove
that the old race lias not perished
with the old South. The dark days
are nearly over. There is a future of
manufacturing and commercial
supremacy in store for this section
and these forces control politics.
“Strike for your'country and your,
sires,” young gentlemen.
Open Your Window.
American women do not seem to
understand that they add very
much to their natural nervousness
by living in darkened rooms.
Houses from which the sun is ex
cluded are not wholesome. There
is always, a damp, depressing con
dition in them that makes itself ev
ident at once to a sensative tem
perament. The minds and bodies
of all who live in such houses are
affected by it. Both health and
spirits arc depressed. Their occu
pants have not only the depress
ing effect of the lack of light and
seem to contend against it, hut the
reaction consequent upon living in
unwholesome conditions. 'All the
rooms in the house should have
both light and sunshine freely ad
mitted at all times, whether they
are in daily use or not. They are
thus kept sweet, and arc in good
condition when they are wanted.
Many a woman and child has been
sacrificed to save the carpets and
keep out the ties. Many a fit of ill
ness has resulted from the same
cause. Many a disappointed,
cheerless life can be traced hack to
sunless rooms as a beginning. Mul
titudes of women and children are
only half fed. Sunshine and light
and air arc as much food for the
body and soul as the fruits and
grains and vegetables that we take
into our stomachs; and we cannot
get a surfeit of them as of fuod.
The more we have the better
Open your windows wide, then, my
sisters, and let the sun, that always
carries health in its rays, have free
access to every part of your home.
Screens will keep out the flies, and
if you have occasion to temper the
heat of the sun, use a white curtain
that can he rolled do wn at will.
CARROLL FREE PRESS.
PUBLISHED EVERY IRIDAY.
A Word for the Cranks.
Cranks, my son ? The world is full
of them. What would we do were
it not for the cranks? How slowly
the tired old workl'would move, did
not the cranks keep it rushing al
ong. Columbus was a crank on the
subject of American discovery and
circumnavigation, and at last lie
met the fate of most cranks, was
thrown into prison, and died in
poverty and disgrace. Greatly
venerated now ° Oh, yes, Tclemach-
us, we usually esteem a crank most
profoundly after we starve him to
death. Harvey was a crank on the
subject of the circulation of the
Mood; Galileo was an astronomi
cal crank; Fulton was a crank on
the subject of steam navigation;
5Ior.sc was a telegraph crank; all
the old abolitionists were-cranks.
The Pilgrims fathers were cranks;
John Bur.yan was a crank; any
man that doesn’t think as you do
is a crank. And by and by, the
crank you despise will have his
name in every man’s mouth, and a
half completed monument to his
memory crumbling down in a dozen
cities, while nobody outside of your
native villiage will know that you
ever lived. Deal gently with the
crank my boy. Of course, some,
cranks are crankier than others,but
do you he very slow to sneer at a
man because lie knows only one
thing and you can,t understand
him.
The New York organs are happy
in shoving up each other’s incon
sistencies. A year ago the Her
ald denounced Cleveland for veto
ing the five-cent fare hill. It now
applauds him for the same perform
ance. A few years ago the Trib
une abused'Blaine and Logan as
heartily as it now praises them.
Harper’s Weekly and the Post have
said more hitter words about Hen
dricks than they can unsay in a
twelve-month. And so on. As a
matter of fact, however, this amus
ing inconsistency is one of the chief
characteristics of the thorough-pac
ed party organ and it would he a
great advantage to the p. o. if it
could blot out its record as it goes
along.
A crank, Telemachus, is a thing
that turns something, it makes the
wheels go around, it insures prog
ress' True, it turns the same wheel
all the time, and it can’t do any
thing else, hut that’s what keeps
the ship agoing ahead. The thing
that goes in for variety, versatility,
that changes its position a hundred
times a day, that is no crank; that
is the weather vane my son. AYliat ?
You neverless thank heaven you
are not a crank ? Don’t do that my
son. May he you couldn’t be a
crank, if you would. Heaven is
not very particular when it wants
a weather vane; almost any man
will do for that. But when it wants
a crank, my hoy, itlooks about very
carefully for the best man’in’the
community. Before you thank
heaven that you are not a crank, ex
amine yourself carefully, and see
what is the great defiency that de
bars you fron^ such an election.—
Hawkeye.
EDWIN R. SHARPE, Publisher.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
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One copy three months, 40
CLUB BATES:
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PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS C ARDS
IDE,. I. 1ST. CHENEY
Would inform liis friends and the public
generally that he is still in the practice
of medicine. Special attention given to
chronic diseases. Office Carrollton Ho
tel.
IOSEPH L. COBB. FELIX X. COBB.
COBB & COBB,
Attorneys and Counsellors at Law.
CARROLLTON, GEORGIA.
Jgg 3 * Prompt attention given to all bus
iness intrusted to us. Collections a spe
cial tv. Office in court house.
Dr. J. W. HALLTJM,
CARROLLTON - - - - GEORGIA.
Has his office, in number 2, Mande-
ville brick building. lie makes a specially
of OSTETRICS and DISEASES OF
WOMEN and CHILDREN. Call on
him. Consultation free.
Z. T. GUTHREY,
Boot and Shoemaker,
HOOP VILLE, - - - GA.
Solicits the patronage of those wanting
any work in liis line. Repairing at short
notice and in good style. Give me a
trial
Carroll MASONIC Institute,
The exercises of this Institution will
be resumed Aug. 11th., 1884 and contin
ue for three months All pupils within
the school age will receive the benefit
of the Public Fund. Tuition due at the
end of tenn. II. C. BROWN.
1-mo. Principal.
To the Voters of Carroll County.
I announce myself a candidate for Or
dinary iit tiie election for County officers
in January next.
With gratitude to the people for con
fidence and favor shown in the past, I
shall if'cleeted, give my entire time and
attention to the careful discharge of the_
duties of this responsible office.
Respectfully,
Wm. Beall.
ATTENTION FARMEKS.
I am agent for Cooper's celebrated en
gines, Centennial and Winship gins.—
Before purchasing give me a call, as I
think I can make it to your interest.
X. FAIN.
all
S
A mnn4*ci Avautri1 for ^ ie Lives of
xL^t/ilubthe Presidents of the U
Tne largest, handsomest best book ever
sold for less than twice our price. The
fastest selling book in America. Im
mense profits to agents. All intelligent
people want it. Any one can become a
successful agent. Terms free. Hallett
Book Co., Portland, Maine.
r. c. McDaniel,
DENTIST,
C^IYROJLILTOIISr, _ GkA..
Is now inserting full sets of 28 teeth for
§20, half set 14 teeth, §10. Partial sets
and fillings cheap in proportion. Satis
faction guaranteed in every case. Office
in Mandeville building.
Holmes’ Sure Cure Mouth Wash
AND DENTIFRICE.
” splendid dentifrice for clean*
Yj / teeth,keeping thegume
healthy anl purifying the
breath. Sure cure for diseased
jpjmscommonly called sentry?^*
Sure cure for bleeding gums.
Sure cure forbad or foul breath*,'
Sure cure for bad taste ia the
mouth. Sure cure for ulcers or
sore mouth. Sure cure for mars*
ing sore mouth. Sure cure for
neuralgia, caused bv gums dis
eased. Sure cure for indigen*
tion. caused by diseased gums*
Sure cure for sleeplessness
caused hr diseased gums. Suae
cure for fiealing and hardening
the gums after extraction ei
teeth. Cures diseased gums and
tightens loose teeth (caused by
tartar) after the dentist has re*
movrd tartar and cleaned the
teeth. Sure cure for anr and all
diseases of the gums a»i mouth. Recommended oy many
leading dentists. Price fi.oofurT bottle. Literal discount to
the trade. Ask vour dentist nr druggist for it, or send to »
Dm. J. P. A \V. IS. HOLMKs. l» cn tUt*. DeatalN-
pot, Macon. Gu. LAMAR, RANKIN St LAMAR,
Wholesale Agents, Macon and Atlanta,^
MILLINER Y
MRS. M. A. WILSON
Re
.eeeutly of LaGrange, having located
in Carrollton for the purpose of engaging
in the millinery business, asks a share of
public patronage.
NEW GOODS.
Her stock, a part of which has just
been received, is new, and she respectful
ly asks the ladies and those wanting any
thing her line to call and examine.
rXR- J. F. COLE,
CARROLLTON, GA.
Is devoting most of his time and atten
tion to surgery and surgical diseases, and
is prepared for most any operation; His
charges are reasonable.