Newspaper Page Text
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TOL, II.—NO 15.
CAEEOLLTOH, GEOBGIA, FEIDAY MOENING, FEBEUAEY 27, 1885.
$1.00 A TEAE,
CiREILL FREE PRESS.
gw»aeBagwBaBEaBge
PUBLISHED ETERI PEIDAY-
ft'*-- ALIM 11»» 13lii.ll, H.^MW! 1 . ■*. ... “
B^TflN B. SHARPE, Publisher
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One copy ene rear.
From the New York Mail and Express, j as well pass a law tu legalize theft
: A CHAT WITH GOUGH. as to pass a prohibition measure
1 ! the people are not in favor of. I
j think the measures taken to lis-
He Says there is Less Drinking and Less j cense the sale of ]j quors in this
Drunkeness Now than Ever. | city on Sunday a disgrace to New
I York. What do they do it for?
John B. Gough, the temperance , Does the community derive any
©n» *opy six months,
One copy three months.
fliRB RATES;
Ten copies one year,
IVentty espies nee year,
$1.00 j orator, was seen at his hotel recent- i benefit from it ? Not the least. Why,
50 j ly hy a Mail and Express writer. j do you know Dr. Andrew Clarke
2 ; > Ho chatted freely about temper- j says the first teaspoonful of liquor
j ance work. “Of all the societies, I j taken into a healthy body does it
think the Woman’s Christian Uni- harm.”
$10.00
$20.00
PROFESSIONAL ft BUSINESS CARDS
siMuureg,
DHi W, L, HITCHCOOK
Late pf Madison Georgia, has located
in the town of Carrollton for the purpose
of practising his profession. He makes
n specialty of ail chronic diseases, more
especially those peculiar to females.
Hill cure cancers when in a curable con
dition. Dr, II. is one of the oldest root
doctors in the State,
and ranks high in the eclectic practice.
Satisfaction guaranteed. Call on him
at his office one dooi above Wells" livery
stable.
j on is doing more good work than
any of the others. It seems to me
that there is less drinking and
drunkenness now than there has
ever been, and public sentiment is
moving in favor of prohibition.
The work in this country, however,
is not to be compared to the work
in England. All over the united
kingdom the temperance workers
are making rapid strides. There
From the Rome Courier.
Atlanta and Columbus.
A charter has been obtained and
a company organized to build a dir
ect railroad from Columbus to At
lanta. The company is a strong
one in means and influence. The
Enquirer-Sun earnestly advocates
the commencement of the work and
reports increasing interest in the
David Dickson Dead.
Sparta, February 18.—Mr. David
Dickson, long the most prominent
farmer in Georgia, died very unex
pectedly this me ruins at half past
eleven o’clock. He was attended
by a physician, however. His death
was caused, ir is supposed, by apo
plexy. He leaves a fortune of near
ly half a million dollars. It is not
known yet, but it is thought that
he has made a will.
When Robert Toombs, one of the
most noted men in in the state of
Georgia, was a boy his playmates
called him “Rob,” the unlucky, be
cause he never could catch many
fish. He would sit hours at a time
on the banks of a
ently awaiting a
T h e* J a pan ese' _ r d e n t i s t Id oes ’• not
frighten his patient with an array
of steel instruments. All his ope
rations’in tooth drawing are per
formed by the thumb and forefin
ger'of one hand. The’ skiil neces
stream, impati- j sary to do thisjs only acquired nf-
bite. while the j ter long practice, hut once it is oh
boys around him would be landing ; tained the operator is able to ex
perch by the dozen. One day after ! tract a half dozen teeth in about
SADDLES, HARNESS ETC,
J. A. MITCHELL.
C^TUROX.IL.TOIN’ - - GA,
Would inform the public that lie hap just
received a large addition to hisstock of
Saddles, Harness,
Bridles, Martingales,
Halters. Whips.
and everything usually kept in his line.
These goods Trill be sold at the very
lowest t-asli prices. Come and see
whether rou buy or not. 3m.
r. c. McDaniel,
XJIBIkTTIST,
fS^R.ZROILX.TOJSr, GA.
If now inserting full sets of 28 teeth for
$3$, half set 14 teeth, $10. Partial sets
and fillings cheap in proporton. Satis
faction guaranteed in every case. Office
in Mandrvill* building.
Farmers Terrace Your Land,
1 have a good Theodolite and will use
it for two dollars and twenty five cents
Per day. When 1 have to go beyond 5
miles yeu must furnish me with as
much as three days work 20fo 30 acres
per day. A. 8. SRICKLAND.
Whitesburg., Dec. lptli, 1884.
Free to Farmers.
Tub National Agriculturist.—An
American Farmer’s Journal, will he sent
free for one year to every farmer who
tends us at once the names of ten far
mers, and 12 two-eent stamps for pos
tage, &c. It is the best farm and home
paper in the United States, and this offer
is made only to secure names to whom
we can pend specimen copies, as we
know every intelligent farmer, who
once sees the National Agricultu
rist, will subscribe for it. Regular
price, $1.00 per annum. Send to day and
secure this offer.
Address,
National Agricttltrist,
Nunda. N.
13
quite the proper thing to decline to
drink.”
“How do you account for this
great revolution ?”
“The Britishers are a more steady,
piodding people than the Ameri
cans. They are very careful before
they take hold of anything to ex
amine it thoroughly, and then being
convinced of its worth they lay hold
of it with a bulldog tenacity and
stick to it. Then they are great or
ganizers. You know Whitfield
preached and Wesley preached, but
Wesley preached and organized,
consequentlytheMetiiodistcause is
growing all over the world. The
same with the temperance cause.
We here preach while our English
cousins preach and organize. Why
do you know that a little while ago
in Liverpool they had a congress
that lasted for a whole week and at
it such men as the bishops of Exe
ter, Durham, Rochester, Bedford,
Gloucester and Manchester,Canons
Wilderforce and Farrar, and Cardi
nal Mannings were present. Look
at the grand fetes they have in Lon
don every year at which over 70,000
total abstainers are congregated
together at one time. I verily be
lieve if that were to bo done
hero they would be mobbed. Look
at their societies—the church of
some nine million persons are total j ( surprise. As we understand it
abstainers, and it is becoming this road fs not intended to have
any connection with the narrow-
gauge railroad from Columbus to
Greenville (which is under the con
trol of the Central railroad) but is
designed to give Columbus an out
let, which she greatly needs, whol
ly independent of the Centrals’s
system.
Our readers will doubtless re
member that we last year inter
preted the deflection of the Colum
bus and Rome railroad to Green
ville as an indication that the or
iginal design of extending that road
to Rome had been abandoned. The
effort to construct the Columbus
and Atlanta railroad is another in
dication of the same fact. We do
not refer to this by way of com
plaint, but rather to show that our
apprehensions were correct.
Neither do we blame the people of
Columbus for striving to avail
themselves of any opportunity to
rid their city and section of the
monopoly that has so long and so
arbitrarily controlled all their
means of transportation.
The Columbus and Rome rail
road may now be considered as un
questionably abandoned—that is, if
this new project should be realized
—because Columbus will secure at
Atlanta a connection with Rome
by two routes. This being the case,
England temperance society with the obvious policy of our people is
14,000 members, Cardinal Man- to try to obtain a connection with
ning’s society, the society of the
holy Cross with 30,000 members,, the
National temperance league, the
the Central system at Carrollton, a
distance of but little over fifty
miles, we believe. It may be said
Scotch the Irish and the United ! of the Central’s great railroad sys
Heard County Land for Sale
80 acres more or less in the Twelvth
district of originally Carroll, but now
Heard county, being part of lot
202 in said district. \Vi
Apply at this office.
"ill be sold cheap
ATTENTION FAEMEBS,
I am agent for Cooper’s celebrated e-n
gines, Centennial and Winship gins.—
Before purchasing give me a call, as
Sunk I ean make it to your interest.
N. FAIN,
UFR-. 3D. "W. DORSETT
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON
’HTELvdlR’XvE, O-AA.
Having permanently located at Tem
ple I oiler my professional services to
the citizens of Carroll and adjoining coun
ties. Special attention to Obstetrics aud
diseases of Women. Office at Campbell
& Bells store. All calls promptly an
swered day and night—all night calls an
swered from B J. McCain’s residence.
SIMS TWALKER^
P ARROLLTON, GA.
Chair and Furniture Shop,
T1 ill make bedsteads and all kinds of
furniture. Repairing done at short notice
and in the best of style. A large lot of
chairs on hand for ale.s
A PPT^P^nd six cents for pos-
and receive free, a
costly box of goods which will help you
to more money right, awav than anything
else m this world. All, of either sex!
succeed from hrst hour. The broad road
to fortune opens before the workers, ab
solutely sure. At once address, True
& Co., Augusta. Maine.
WTNT" mrmp y than at anything
taking an agenev for
the best selling hook out. Beginners
succeed grandly. None tail. °Terms
free. IIallett Book Co., Portland
Maine.
‘ ffcoflfl nm 11 *given away
kj/AlvyL/j v/Uv/Send us 5cents postage
and hy mail you will get free a package
of goods of large value, that will start
you in work that will at once bring you
in money faster than anything else in
America. All about the $200,000 in pres
ents with each box. Agents wanted ev
erywhere, of either sex, of all ages, for
all the time, or spare iime only, to work
for us at their own homes. Fortunes
for all workers, absolutely assured
Kingdom temperance alliances,and
host of others. We want this or
ganization here, and then see the
stride it would make,”
“How long have you been wor
king for this cause now ?”
“Forty-two years last October.
For eighteen years I spoke noth
ing but temperance, but since 18(501
have lectured on various other
subjects. I always make it a
point, though, to introduce total
abstinence into my talk somewhere
oinee returning from England in
18601 have lectured on temperance
967 times.
Then you have traveled conside
rable?”
“Up till last July I had traveled
493,000 miles.
“Have you any method of prepar
ing your lectures?”
“You know I received no edu
cation, and since I was 10 years old
I never went to a school of any
kind. My lectures are not orations.
Every single sentence could be
criticized. I am a keen observer,
and, if working on a new lecture, I
think it out while traveling, and
it becomes as it were crystalized on
my mind, and when I have observ
ed enough I give it to the public,
spoke so frequently on temper
ance that I ran dry of anecdote^
and to get a fresh supply I used at
night to often go round the worst
slums in company with detectives,
audsoget my illustrations from
real life. Although I said I gave,
say the lecture on London 284 times
I guarantee it was different each
time, and that I have never given
the same lecture twice over. They
are like an umbrella I gave my
niece some five years ago. She lift
ed it so that it has been recovered,
had a new handle, a new stick, and
all the ribs replaced but one, yet
she says I gave her that umbrella,
although there is only one rib of
the original. So with the lectures,
the subject is all that remains, in
fact.”
“Are you a prohibitionist?”
“I am, but not like a number of
tern as has so often been .said of
lire, that it is “a good servant, but a
bad master.” It was a “master”
of C’olumbus, on account of its mon
opoly, and therefore, it was to the
interest of that city to escape from
its clutches. It can only be a “ser
vant” of Rome, because we have
other lilies of transportation that
will prevent its obtaining a mono
poly here; and its competition may
prove an advantage to us, besides
the securing for Rome of the trade
of the country between this place
and Carrollton. We, therefore,
think that, in View of the' present
prospects, the attention of the peo
ple of this section should be direc
ted to a connection with the Cen-
tral’s’system at Uarrollton as one
of their most desirable and advan
tageous improvements.
the story or his life.
Mr. Dickson was raised on a farm,
and while quite young was a close
observer, and discovered what he
considered were fatal errors on the
part of the farmers. He had a great
love for agricultural pursuits. At
twenty-one years of age he started
with $,200. In the fourteen sueceed-
ing years he cleared by merchan
dising and trading $2.3,000. In 1845
he invested all his means in lands,
negroes, stock and agricultural
tools. He purchased 2GG acres of
land in Hancock county, for which
ho paid from fifty cents to two dol
lars an acre. He was wonderfully
successful as a farmer; and lands
about him increase greatly in val
ue. He made money rapidly until
he owned an immonse tract of land
and at the opening , of the war he
was worth the princely fortune of
half a million dollars, e-very cent of
which was made on his plantation.
During the war he delivered to the
Confederate government 400 bales
of cotton, taking his pay in bonds,
which were never paid. After the
first year of the war he planted no
cotton, but raised provisions for the
army, for most of which he received
no pay, not even in Confederate
money. He owned 250 select ne
groes, who were worth 50 per cent
more than the average. General
Sherman burned 400 bales of cotton
for him, and took all of his stock
and a large amount of provisions.
His profits under the new system
of labor were smaller, but he has
made money every year. His
plantation embraces thirty thous
and acres and is well stocked. He
has been farming on the tenant sys
tem for some years on account of
the uncertainty of other labor. In
addition to his plantation he own
ed a considerable amount of rail
road stocks and other property.
Had it not been for the war he could
easily have amassed a property of
a million dollars. He always lived
well and entertained a great ’many
friends. Mr. Dickson was the au
thor of a small volume recently is
sued, called “Dickson’s System of
Farming; or, how to Farm Success
fully.” Ifis death occasions gener
al regret.
angling without success from innr
ing until nearly sunset, he drew
up a very large mud turtle. The
other boys laughed, but young
Toombs took it seriously and argu
ed that .by means of the turtle
he could break his run of bad luck.
He cut his name in full in the hard
shell, and threw the turtle-back in
to the water. Two years later lie
was fishing at the same spot and
again caught a turtle. It was the
same turtle, and he was astonished,
to find below his name the words.
“Too ugly to catch fish.” A wag
gish friend, happening to catch the
turtle, had cut the five word
Young Toombs threw the turtle
back into the stream, hoping nev
er to hear of it again, but when he
caught it the third time, he chop
ped off its head, and kept the shell
as a reminder of his unchanging
ill-luck as a fisherman.—Golden
Days.
thirty seconds without or.ee remo
ving his fingers from the patient’s
mouth. The dentists education
commences with the pulling out of
wooden pegs which have been
pressed into soft wood; it ends
with the'drawing * [of hard-1 j pegs
which have been driven into an
oak plank with a mallet. A wri
ter in the Union Medicale says
thatTio human jaw can resist the
delicate but powerful manipula
tion of the JapeneseYlentist.
50
The father of Lulu Hurst says
that during their Northern tour
the receipts were about $75,000 or
$80,000. In the larger cities they
generally played for from 40 to
per cent., paying all their own trav
elling and individual expenses and
the other parties paying all adver
tisingand other expenses connect
ed with the exhibition. Continuing
he said: “I must say that we were
very pleasantly treated in the
North. I confess that I was preju
diced and at first held myself aloof
fearing I would meet with rudeness
and possibly insult on account
coming from the South and having
once been a‘rebel.’ But this soon
wore off and with it all the un
pleasant feeling that arose from the
late war and ignorance of the feel
ings of the Northern people. The
Americans are all one people eve
ry where, and all that they want is
to know each other.”
people.
prohibition bill on the
suddenly. I would work up to It;
do all that is possibly to hinder
the sale of liquor by such bills as
Sunday closing, local option, and
so lead up to the principal measure.
It is no good forcing a measure on
don ’t delay. H IlALUiKE & 1 C#. r poVtl the people that the public senti-
land Maine. - r • ' •
Many newspapers, and many
persons, take a rose-colored view
of the future. Threjwsee nothing
ahead but peace, prosperity and
progress. They see without ap
prehension, bodies of men in our
large cities combining to inaugu
rate a socialistic revolution. When
they, hear of a dynamite explosion,
they say, “There will not. be an
other.” When they hear of an as-,
sassiuation by an anarchist, they
say, “It is the last.” When they
hear of a'threat they say, “It
will not be executed.” All this
may show confidence and courage,
but it do.es not show common
sense. Professor Ely, of the John
Hopkins university, speaking of
the recent dynamite fxplosion^says
“I believe we^are just beginning to
enter upon a terrible era of the
world’s history—an era of internal
and domestic .warfare, such as has
never been seen, and the end of
which only the Almighty can fore
tell.” These are the words of an
educated lawyer, a calm observer
and a deep student. Professor Ely
talks like a man of sense. When
A Remarmable Case.—Or the
2d day of January past, Etta Wor
ley, a seven-year-old girl, the step
daughter of Nelson Carroll, who
lives three miles from Carnesville,
was kicked by a mule. At the edge
of the hair above the eye the skull
was fractured to the size of a half
dollar. Part of the fractured bone
was taken out by Dr. H. M. Free
man, the physician in attendance.
He also removed a half teaspoonful
of the brain that protruded into the ! dead.
Miss Ellen Dortch, editress of
the Carnesville Reporter, prints
the following in her editorial paere:
She had been called an old maid
—and she rather resented it. She
said: “I am past thirty; I have a
good home; I think you know I
have had plenty of opportunities
to marry; I have been bridesmaid
a • score of times; 1 ask
myself, with which one
of the beautiful girls I have
seen take the marrfage vow would
I exchange to-day? Not one. Some
are living apart from their hus
bands; some are divorced; some
are the wives of drunken men;
some are hanging on the ragged
edge of society endeavoring to
keep up appearances; * some tread
the mysterious land, aud some
have gone out in the darkness and
unknown horrors, and some are
A few there are who are
A new man lias just takeu charge
of the Lockhart (Texas) Register,
and makes the following ^unique
announcement: “I wish to state
that J have not done this with a
view of amassing a colossal fortune,
for, having been engaged in teach
ing school for the last sixteen years
I have saved a pile, most of which
I have invested in personal proper
ty in the shape of a 140-pound Tex-
aness mule. I have been for a
long time undecided whether to
become a mule driver or an editor
and having at last made the im
portant decision, I shall endeavor
to convince every one that I would
make'a good M. D.”
Abnormal Appetite.—When
cattle are seen to chew leather, old
cloth, old bones Ac., stockmen say it
isan indication of a lack of phos
phate of lime in their food, require-
ed to supply bon** material. A lit
tle bone dust may by given in their
food, but where the $ pasturage is
fertilized with bone dust, this de
ficiency never appears.
*ITT£**
By tht ns* of Hostetler's Stoiftack BittfcEfi
the haggard appearance of the eougp-
nance and sallowncts of dyapcpiiea
supplanted by ' ‘ —
food is assimil;
stance. Appetite i
ons system refrw
slumber, through the use of this
which is also beneficial to ’ persons ef
rheumatic tendency, and am
prerentire of ferer and ague.
For sale by ell Druggists and 1
ieraEy%
fens
In growing special crops, says an
intelligent farmer, “I have made
a profit of $10 from a single load of
manure.” Heavy crops, lie says,
do not often coine by accident, but
by careful forethought and man
agement, and no one thing requires
more intelligence and care than
saving and application of the man
ure.
Trained Dogs.—What is the use
of an untrained, blundering cur,
but to eat, worry the stock and
poultry, and to frighten away your
friends, if not to destroy your
neighbor’s sheep? If you must
have a dog, have one trained to
some valuable purpose, say a good
shepherd dog that can be taught
not only to tend the flock, but also
to guard the house. There
would be in this, both economy and
real advantage, and a step from the
savage to civilized life. Do you
never read that savages keep troops
of equally savage dogs?
Books Given Away.
Ladies Guide to Fanct
Contains over 200 handsome illustra
tions, 64 large 3 column pages, nicely
bound. It is the only practical instruc
tor in fancy work. With it, as atgtfid*,
you can make hundreds of beautiful
things for adorning your home, or.pres
ents for your friends, at a trifling ex
pense. Every lady is delighted with ft,
as there is no fancy work hut that she
can accomplish by its aid.
Ladies Private Companion.—A
complete work on womanhood. It tonfiTl-
es upon every subject of interest to a.
wife, mother, or daughter. Gives the
advice and information so many time!;
desired by ladies, hut which modesty
prevents her asking a physician of the
opposite sex. Worth its weight m gold
to every one suffering from any of those
weakness of the sex. Illustrated and
bound in cloth. (Regular price $1.60.)
Fun and Candy.—A handsome 48
page book, telling how to make over 166
kinds of candies and other sweet things
at home. Should be in ever}' American
Household. (Regular price 50c.)
The Housewife.—An illustrated do
mestic journal, devoted to ‘*What to
Wear,” “How to Cook," “Fancy Work,”
“Household Matters,” and every snb-
j»*‘t of interest to an American lady.
(Regular price, $1.00.)
Send oOcts. and receive The House
wife on trial for six months, and any one
of above books free, of $1.00 and re
ceive it for one entire year, and all of
above books free. This is for new sub
scribers only, who send now. Address,
The Housewife, Nuuda, N. Y.
bad men combine and good moo
fall to unite arid stand idly by, ridi-
t a., k l- „ culing the possibility of danger, the
.o not believe in forcing i situation begins to present very
people j aiarining features. The
storm signal is out and may be
seen by all.—Constitution.
ment is against. You might just
Wound. On the 1st inst., when the
doctor called to see her, she was
out at play with the other children
and suffering no apparent incon
venience from the wound, which is
not entirely healed. Her mind does
not seem to be affected by the loss
of portion of the brain.—Carnesville
Register. „
The following item of interest is
from the Atlanta Journal: “The
Governor has issued an order direc
ting the Comptroller General to sus
pend the collection of license from
disabled Confederate soldiers who
make a support by peddling in this
State. This law is already in force,
but its strict construction applied
inly to those soldiers who lost limbs
in the late war. A few days ago a
soldier who had lost his eyesight ap
plied to the Governor for exemption
from the peddler’s license, and in
granting his petition Governor Mc
Daniel issued a general order ex
empting all blind soldiers from the
payment of the tax, which is $25 in
each county, until the next meeting
of the Legislature.”
loved and honored wives, with
happy homes—but, alas! only a
very few.
No breed of sheep makes st>
quick an improvement on the com
mon flocks as the Merinos. They
are small enough to combine ac
tivity to blend with the hardiness
and vigor of the natives, and as
they are industrious foragers, they
are easily kept.
Raising Calves.—As it requires
eleven pounds of milk to add one
pound of flesh to a calf, farmers who,
in milking their cows, leave the
calves less than one pound of milk
per day, may form some idea as to
what kind of stock their future
cows will be. Is it not “cruelty to
animals?”
The Texas Siftings mentions the
case of a man who said, “I am not
out a cent and have never failed to
make my wife a present on her
bieltlday for twenty-five years.” On
being asked how to manage it, re
plied: “It is very simple. After we
were married, when her birthday
came around, I gave her a twenty
dollar gold piece. When my birth-
A Washington correspondent
says: Many anecdotes have been
told of the absent-mindedness of
Congressmen. I saw a funny in
stance of it the other day in the
House. They were calling the
roll, and came to the name of York,
of North Carolina. He was verv
busy writing. When the call was
finished, Mr. York rose and stated
that he would like to vote and
that he did not hear his name call
ed.
9
“The gentleman’s name was call
ed,” promptly replied the Speaker,
“and he voted in the affirmative.”
The old gentleman from North
Carolina looked a little foolish, but
finally joined in the laughter at his
expense.
Enthusiasm is one of the most
powerful engines oFsuccess. When
you do a thing, do it with a will
do it with your might, put your
whole soul into it, stamp it with,
your own pesonality. Be active, be
energetic, be enthusiastic and
faithful, and you wilL accomplish
your object. Nothing great was
ever achieved without' enthusi
asm.
The Indians have.been lucky in
morejrespects than one. While
the intruders have jusc been again
removed from the Territory, it is
now ascerteined that they have
lost very little stock during the
cold weather of the past forty days,
Their neighbors in Texas, New
Mexico, Colorado and Kansas can
count their loses up into£the thous
ands.
An injudicious burglar worked
five hours one night last week, bur
rowing into one of the railings at
Chester, and after he effected an
The Tichborne Claimant.—
The Tichborne claimant, who was
recently released from prjson, has
made arrangements to come to
America on a lecturing tour*
entrance, exhausted, perspiring
day came around she gave me the and profane, he had his choice of
twenty dollar piece back, and we stealing a hand car or a disabled
have kept that ^up ever since and
neither of Us is out a cent.”
Alabama requires a $15 license on
drummers selling in that state.
a
freight car truck. Long, long,
hours after he had passed out of
sight down the railroad track, the
people of Chester could hear him
swear.
President Diaz of Mexico will at
tend the laying of the corner-stone
for the new Texas capital build
ing-
“Look here; this piee of meat
don’t suit me. It’s from the back of
the animal’s neck,” said a man to a
German butcher. “Mine frin’, all
dot beef vat I seifs is back* of dot
neck. Dere was nodding but horns
in front of dot neck.”
Carroll MASONIC Institute,
MALE and FEMALE.
The exercises of this Institution will he
resumed January 12th, 1885. The spring
Term of six months will close June 26th.
RATES OF TUITION ETC.
1st, Grade per month $1.50
2nd, “ “ “ 2.00
3rd, “ “ “ - - 2.58
4th, $.00
Incidentals “ “ - - . - 10
Music Tuition “ $.go
Tuition due Oct. loth, 1885.
ORGANIZATION.
H. C. Brown Principal in Charge.
A. C. Reese Assistant Acadaiaic Dp’fc
To he supplied “ Intermediate £
Annie Brown Tutor in Jurenila “
Miss Minnie Reese Principal Music °
“ Willie Chambers “ Calisthenics “
REMARKS.
The educational interests of a com
munity are of vital importance. No
people can hope to be prosperous in the
true sense of the word while their
schools are neglected. In the(foregoing
organization the principal has had re
ference not only to efficiency but also to
such combination of interest as shall de
velop a school commensurate to the In-,
terests involved and facilities at hand
Success in public enterprises demand mu
tual concessions. Prof, A. C. Reese and
the undersigned have conformed to thifi
demand and we trust that the exampl#
will be followed by the citizens ol Cat**
rollton and vicinity. Thankful for past
liberal potronage, I respectfully solicit
from the patrons and friends of this In
stitution, their future coopera
support. II. C. BROWN. Principal.
Carrollton, Dec. 3rd, IS84.
A Milwaukee lady, in taking her
morning gape, lately, put her jaw
out ol joint, and it was two days
before the doctor could get it in
place again. Her husband says he
hasn’t had such a vacation since
his married life begun.
Research
Experiment,
Study.
For fifty years, by Dr. A. L. Barry as
old practitioner, especiallv in Famali
Troubles, was at last rewarded intho df*-
coveryofthat certain and safe speeifi*
for woman troubles, Luxomni. Luxonufi
is a preparation that daily grows in pop
ular favor. Testimonials from responsi
ble persons all oven the country furnifil
ample evidence of the wonderfnl powar
of Luxomni as a remedial agent for th»
relief and permanent cure of ail them
distressing conditions incident tofemalm.
Luxomni is specially adapted to troublm
of pregnancy. It greatly ameliorates the
pangs of child birth, shortens labor, pre
vents after pains, and facilitates recovery.
Owing to the strengthening and toning
influence Lnxomui relieves all MEN
STRUAL IRREGULARITIES, and is a
uterine sedative and tonie.
I 'rice $1. If your druggist has net the
preparation, address
THE BARRY MANUFACTURING CM.
' Drawer 28, Atlanta, G*.
Note—Luxomni is no alcoholic mix
ture, but a combination of herbs and
plants in- package form from whiek a
simple tea is made.
Write for interesting book mailed frea.
UR- <T. F. COLE,
CARROLLTON, QA.
Is devoting most of his time and atfetr-
tion to surgery and surgical disease*, utf
is prepared for most any operati<w. In
tharges are reasonable j
i
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