Newspaper Page Text
CARROLL FREE PRESS.
EDWIN R. SHARPE, Proprietor
TERMS OP SUBSCRIPTION:
Otic copy one year,
One copy six months,
One copy three months,
GRIT, KATES:
l’en copies one year,
Twenty copies one year,
*1.00
50
How Greely was Found.
610.00
620.00
■ Si ,
PROFESSIONAL & BUSINESS CARDS
DR. «T_ F. COLE,
CA RROLI/TON, G A.
Is devoting most of his time and atten
tion to surgery and surgical diseases, and
is prepared for most any operation. Ills
charges are reasonable.
jos. i,. conn.
fkux x. conn.
COBB Sc COBB,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
GE0KGIA.
AEE0LLT0JJ, - -
Collections a specialty,
claims, we will j. ‘
attention.
Send ns your
them our prompt
ATTENTION FARMERS.
I am agent for Cooper’s celebrated en
gines, Centennial and AVinship gins.—
Before purchasing give me a call, as J
>
think I can make it to your interest.
N. FAIN.
DR. W. L. HITCHCOCK
Late of Madison Georgia, has located
in the town of < arrollton for the purpose
of practising liis profession. He makes
a specialty of all chronic diseases, more
especially -those peculiar to females.
A' ill cure cancers when in a curable con
dition. I)r, 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 AA’ells’ livery
stable.
r. c. McDaniel,
AaEZtTTIST’,
CARROLLTON,
C3--A.
I« now inserting full sets of 2S teeth for
620, half set 14 teeth, 610. Partial set:
and fillings cheap in proportion. Satis
factum guaranteed in every case. Office
in JTa
landeville buildim
dr. id. w. dor sett
PHYSICIAN a n d SURGEON
TEMPI £, GrJ^..
Having pennane t ly located at Tern
pie I offer my p' ofessional services to
the citizens of Cat i oil and adjoining coun
ties, Special attention to Obstetrics and
diseases of Women. Offiee at Campbell
& Bells store. All calls promptly an
swered day and night—all night calls an
swered from B J. McCain’s residence.
TAKE NOTICE.
Having rented Mr. B. A. Sharp's in
terest in the Carrollton .Mills, Gins and
Furniture shop, we are now ready to
serve the public.
ETTB,3SriTTTB.E
of all kinds manufactured or repaired in
the best of style at short notice.
We have made arrangements with Air.
T. M. Chandler to run his saw mill and
re now ready to saw lumber.
All orders for furniture or lumber will
receive prompt attention.
WALKER & HAGAN.
Carrollton Ga.
Cotton Planters’ Seed Store,
Improved Cotton Seed, Millo Maize.
California Tree Beans, Grasses and all
California Tree Beans, Grasses and all
other forage plants adapted to the ('otton
States. For sale by F. M. DUNCAN,
Box 12, Dallas Ga.
Almanac’’ Free
SEED! SEED! SEED!
AY. B. JONES & SONS,
SEED GROWERS,
Birdsville Seed Farms,
HERNDON P. 0., G A.
Descriptive Circular and Price List,
Mailefi on application, of best FEILD
and GARDEN SEED, and Our Select
Southern Acclimated Varieties. tf.
HANDLES, HARNESS ETC,
J. A. MITCHELL.
CARROLLTON - - GA,
Would inform the public that lie has just
received a large addition to his stock of
Saddles, Harness,
Bridles, Martingales,
Halters, Whips,
and everything usually kept in his line.
oods will he sold at the very
see
3m.
The story wf the relief expedition
sent out by the United States in
search of Lieutenant Greely and
his party, ice-immured in the Arct
ic regions, is full of interest. Par
ticularly pathetic in fhis account of
how a search party from the relief
vessels came across the seven sur
vivors :
At last the boat arrived at the
site of the wreck-cache, and the
shore eagerly scanned, but nothing
could be seen. Rounding the next
point, the cutter opened out the
cove beyond. There on the top of a
little ridge, fifty or sixty yards
above the icB-foot, was plainly out
lined the figure of a man. Instant
ly the coxswain caught up the boat
hook and waved his flag. The man
on the ridge had seen them, for he
stooped, picked up the signal flag
from the rock, and waved it in re
ply. Then he was seen coming slow
ly and cautiously down the steep
rocky slope. Twice he fell down be
fore he reached the foot. As he ap
proached, still walking feebly and
with difficulty, Colwell hailed him
from the bow of the boat:
“Who all are there left?”
“Seven left.”
As the cutter struck the ice, Col
well jumped off and went up to
him. He was a ghastly sight. His
cheeks were hollow, his eyes wild,
his hair and beard long and matted.
Ilis army blouse, covering se
thicknesses of shirts and jackt
was ragged and dirty. He wore a
little fur cap and rough mocasins
of untanned leather tied around the
legs/ As he spoke, his utterance
was thick and mumbling and in liis
agitation his jaws worked in con-j
vulsive twitches. As the two mot
the man, with a sudden impulse,
took off his glove and shook Col-'
well’s hand.
“Where are they?”asked Colwell ;
briefly.
“In the tent,” said the man,point
OpROLLTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY MORNING, JUNE 5, 1885.
open, but fixed and glassy, his limbs ! Won His Bet.
were motionless. On the opposite i The other morning two gentle-
side was a poor fellow, alive to be j men were looking out of ofawindow
sure, but without bands or feet,and j of a house when they observed a
with a spoon tied to the stump of j cabbage roll off a market wagon
his right arm. Two others, seated that was passing. Instantly over
on the ground in the middle, had . a dozen well-dressed and apparent-
just got. clmvn a rubber bottle that; ly sane persons began yelling after
nung on the tent pole, and were ! the wagon, as though the vegetable
pouring from it into a tin can. Hi- j had been a gold watch. The driver
rcctly opposite, on his hands and j stopped, looked back at the car-
knees, was a dark man with a long
matted beard, in a dirty and tatter
ed dressing gown with a little red
skull cap on Ids head, and brilliant,
staring eyes. As golwell-appeared
he raised himself a little and put on
a pair of eye-glasses.
“Who are you?” asked Colwell.
Tiie man made no answer, star
ing at him vacantly.
“Who are you?” again.
One of the men spoke up; “That’s
the Major—Major Greely.”
Colwell crawled in and took him
by the hand, saying to him, “Greely
is this you ?”
.“Yes,” said Greely in a faint,
broken voice, hesitating and shuf
fling with liis words, “Yes—seven
of us left—here we are—dying-
like men. Did what I came to do- -
beat the best record.”
Then he fell back exhausted.
A Cure for Corns.
Editors Journal;—As I can but
have sympathy for any one wlio suf
fers pain, wish to tell your readers
of a cheap, sure and really infalli-
c ‘ ai ■ ble remedy for corns, which I have
recently and fully tested. • It is sim
ply the garden leek, the root of
widen, by 11\e way, is a delicious
vug-table, iq told to me by a
farmer’s wife, at whose- house I
once stopped for a short time, but I
could not test it then, because I
eouhi not find a single plant of the
leek among our market gar
dens.
Last year I had a little garden of
my own, and I bought a small pa
per of the seed—the large London
. leek—sowed them in April, and
mg over his shoulder, “over the hill j tMs p! , st winter j. succoctlr;d j,, get _
ting a stand of plants, sufficient to
—the tent is down.”
“Is Mr.Greely alive?”
“Yes, Greely’s alive.”
“Any other officer?”
“No.” Then he repeated absently,
“The tent is down.”
“Who are you ?”
“Long.”
Before this colloquy was over,
Lowe and Norman had started up
the hill. Hastily tilling Ids pockets
with bread, and taking the two
make the experiment. I had
bough Use veral kinds of patent corn
removers, and was never benefited
by any of them—on the contrary,
after using one of them, 1 suffered
such intense pain at intervals in
i my feet and ankles I thought my
i blood had been poisoned by the pro
1 paration. Fifty dollars is a consul
| erable sum to me, but it is nothing
compared to the agony of pain from
cans of pemmican, Colwell told the j which 1 have be en entirely reliev-
, , , , , . , ’ ed by the use of the leek, which on
er, and started after t.ie others I ]y cos q me g ve cents and the
These
lowest cash prices. Come aiul
whether you buy or not. *
McLendon & co,
DEALERS IN
General Merchandise,
At the J. M.FEELDS’ STORE,
CHEAP CASH
and
BARTER HOUSE.
See them before purchas-
coxswain to take Long into the cut
started after the others
with Ash. Reaching the crest of
the ridge, and looking southward,
they saw spread out before them a
desolate expanse of rocky ground,
sloping gradually from a ridge on
flie east to the ice-cohered shore
which at the west made in and
formed a cove. Back of the level
space was a range of hills rising up
800 feet, with a precipitous face,
broken in two by a gorge, through’
which the wind was blowing furi
ously. On a little elevation direct
ly in front was the tent. Hurrying
across the intervening hollow, Col
well came up with Lowe and Nor
man, just as they were greeting a
soldierly looking man who had just
come out from the tent.
\s Colwell approached, Norman
was saying to the man:
“There is the lieutenant.”
And he added to Colwell:
“This is Sergeant Brainard.”
Brainard immediately drew him
self up to the “position of a soldier”
and was about to salute, when Col
well took his hand.
At this moment there was a con
fused murmur within the tent, and
a voice said:
“Who’s there ?”
Norman adswered: “It is Norman
- Norman who was in the Prote
us.”
This was followed by cries of “Oh
it’s Norman!” and a sound like a
feeble cheer.
Meanwhile cne of the relict par
ty, who in his agitation and excite
ment was crying like a child, was
down on his hands and knees try
ing to roll away the stones that held
down the flapping tent cloth. The
tent was a “tepik” or wigwam teat
with a fly attached. The fly with
its post and ridge-pole had been
wrecked by the gale which h ad
been blowing for thirty-six hours,
and the pole of the tepik was top
pling over, and only kept in place
by the guy ropes. There was no en
trance except under the flap open
ing, which was held down by stones
Colwell called for a knife, cut a
slit in the tent cover and looked
in. _
It was a sight of horror. On one
side, close to the opening, with his
head toward the outside, lay what
was apparently a dead man. His
care
of its cultivation. I think I had the
most painful, inveterate corns I
ever saw. They were on the out
side of my little toe
is,
and I could
not sleep if they rested on the bed
■upon which I was lying; and when
I walked in anything like a close-
fitting shoe, every step was one of
agony. Five or six applications of
the leek entirely cured my corns,
and I now feel like a new creature.
I never had any bunions, hut I
think the leek would cure them al
so.
Tiiis is the ^vay to apply it to
corns: Upon going to bed, take
sufficient of the leaf, cut it in small
pieces, put them loosely in a piece
of strong, new cloth, and with a
hammer bruise them slightly (or .if
one has a small marble mortar and
pestle it is better.) Then take small
pieces of soft, thin cloth—as many
as thete are corns to be treated—
put upon each one a thick poultice
of the bruised leaf, and tie it on se
curely so it will not come off during
the night. Continue to apply it un
til the corn is cured. No matter
how sore the corn is, how hard or
how long standing, the leek ex
tracts all the soreness almost like
magic, and after using it sufficient
ly the corn can be picked out with
the fingers, a little at a time, with
out the least pain, until it finally
disappears. Holding the feet in
warm water occasionally will facil
itate the cure, though it is not real
ly necessary.
It is best to sow the seed of the
leek in April, but if done early in
May I think it will answer. It re
quires a moist, rich, sandy soil to
produce fine plants with broad,
thick, juicy leaves. It is the juice
of the loaf that effects the cure.
Frost or u light snow does not hurt
the plant. A Frii-ixo.
Atlanta Ga.
riage, yawned and drove on.
“What an absurd fuss people in
the street make over trivial occur
rences,” said one of the gentlemen
“Now I’ll bet a silk hat I could get
a crowd of 500 persons around that
cabbage inside of thirty minutes
aud not leave this room.” “I’ll
take the bet,” said his friend, pul
ling out his. Watch ‘Are you ready ?’
“Yes; give the word. “It is now
11:30. Go!”
The propeser of the wager led his
friend to the window, threw up the
sash, and taking a cane, pointed
earnestly at the mud covered cab
bage with a terrified expression.—
Presently a cab driver noticed the
action, and began the stare at the
vegetable from the curbstone, and
then a bootback stopped, then a bill
poster, a messenger boy and a mer
chant.
What’s the matter inquired
German approaching the innocent
base of his national dish.
“Don’t touch it! Look out there
Stand back!” shouted'the gentle
man at the window'.
At his horror stricken tones the
crowd fell back precipitately, and
formed a dense circle around the
innocent cabbage. Hundreds came
running up, and the excitement in
creased rapidly.
“Look out there frantically ex
claimed the bettor, waving his
cane lake that dog away quick!”
Several stones were thrown at
cur that was sniffing tiround the
cabbage.
“Take care!” said a cab-driver to a
policeman, who was shouldering
his way through the mass. “It’s
an infernal machine, nitro
glycerine—or something.”
Meanwhile the pavement was
flocked, the street became impas
sable, women screamed and rush
ed into the shops, and a shop-keep
er began to tie a bucket on the end-
of a long pole with which to pour
water on the fiendish invention.—
The crowd by this time numbering
over aThousand, the tw T o gentle
men moved away from the window
and sat down. In a
few moments there
was a hurried rap at'the.Moor, and
there appeared a man who had
been sent as a delegate from the
mass meeting outside.
“I shoul like to know', gentle
men, what thofacts are,” he said.
“What facts ?”
“What there is peculiar about
that cabbage out there?
“Nothing in the world,” was the
soft reply, “except chat it seems to
be surrounded by about a thousand
of the biggest fools in town. Do
anything else for you ?”
The man reflected for a moment,
said he thought not, and retired.
An Old Book.
Colonel John G. Caldwell, of this
city, is the owner of a book two
hundred and fifteen years old.
The book is a strange looking
thing. It is printed in the style of
two hundred years ago, and, al
though it has passed through many
hands, it is remarkably well pre
served.
The book has, within itself, a his
tory both interesting and rare. G)ne
hundred and ton years ago the book
was captured by Washington’;
troops at Ticonderoga. That was
on May 10th, 1775. Since then the
book’s “life” is known to Colonel
Caldwell. During the revolution
ary war it was a part of the circula
ting library in Washington’s army,
and on the inside of the cover is
written in a legible but old-fashion
ed style of penmanship the follow
ing words.
“I got this book at the surrender
of Fort Ticonderoga, May the 10th
1775. Hurra for General George
Washington, Benedict Arnold and
Ethan Allen. Benj. T. Payne.”
The book is the history of Gengh
izcan, the first emperor of the Mo
guls, and was written in 1670, A. D.
by M. Petis de la Croix, and a chap
ter in it sounds funny to the reader
of to-day. The paper is very thick
and the letters are large and bold
Col. Caldwell secured the book by
inheritance. After the revolution
ary war it fell into the hands of
Benj. T. Payne, and from Mr. Payne
the book came down the family
line until it dropped into Col. Cald
well’s possession. Mr. Payne was
a South Carolina soldier; his family
was robbed and burned out by the
troops of Col Tarleton, and after
the revolutionary war settled in
Augusts, Ga. One of his sons, Benj
Payne, lived and did there. Col
Caldwell has had several handsome
offers for the book, but he will not
sell it.—Constitution.
From the Philadelphia News.
A Good Cup of Coffee.
“It is one of the simplest things
in the world,” said Miss Corson in
her lecture yesterday afternoon, “to
make a good cup of coffee, and this
can easily be accomplished by ap
plying a littie common sense. If
you put boiling water on coffee, and
do not let it boil,” she continued,
“you have all the good qualities
preserved. One reason dyspeptics
cannot drink coffep is because it is
boiled. The style of coffee pot is
just a matter of fancy. I have made
as good coffee in an old tomato can
as I have ever sipped from a cup
filled from the finest French coffee
urn. We should take lessons in this
matter from the Turks and Arabi
ans, who grind their coffee to a fine
powder.
“When the coffee is ground as
fine as possible, put it in a little bag
of unbleached muslin, which should
be tied tightly enough to prevent
the escape of the grounds. If you
use a cup of unground coffee you
can make over a quart of very
strong, black coffee. In making
coffee many people sacrifice flavor
for strength. Bitterness come from
boiling. When boiling water is
Average Cost of Living.
How many persons have even a
rough idea of the average sum up
on which by far the larger part of
citizens of the United States are
fed, clothed and housed ? A recent
statician estimates that eigty per
cent, of the population of this coun
try is supported by from forty-five
to fifty cents per capita a day. At
the latter figure this makes $163.25
as the average annual cost of liv
ing: but, as by average we mean
the balance between extremes,
there must b.e many persons who
have not even this sum to live up
on. That fifty cents a day is a gen
erous estimate will be admitted
that many mill*operatives earn on
ly from $5 to $7 per week, and that
the wages of farm hands run from
$20 to $30 a month, and that on these
sums several persons are often sup
ported. When it is remembered,
too, that some other human beings
have a yearly income equal to what
is necessary for the subsistence of
five hundred or a thousand of these
average” mortals, the startling
contrast between the extremes of
our modern society must be most
evident —Philadelphia Bulletin.
AbscMice of Mind.
Professor Simpson of the Univer
sity of Texas, takes the premium
for absent-mindness. He was sit
ting at his desk writing a few nights
ago when one of his children enter
ed.
“What do you want? I can’t be
disturbed now.”
“I only want to say good night.”
“Never mind now. To-morrow
morning will do just as well.”
From the Cleveland Leader.
Andrew Jacksons Tenderness.
“People have little idea of the
tenderness of President Jackson’s
heart,” continued Gen. Brinkerhoff.
“Even on his deathbed, when his
body was racked .with the pains of
fast approaching dissolution, his
kindness of heart was shown in
nearly every acf', one of his daugh
ters stories well illustrating this.—
Mrs. Jackson, Jr., had some rare
and tropical plants which she priz
ed very highly, and tended with a
great deal of care. But a few days
before he died, when he knew his
end was near, Gen. Jackson, called
his son Andrew to his bedside, and
pointing to the plants which were
standing on the front veranda, said:
“Andrew, I can’t live but a few
days, and when ’ my funeral takes
place there will doubtless be a
great many people here. Unless
you take some way to protect those
plants they will be broken off or de
stroyed or taken away. Now
Sarah is very proud of them, and I
think that when that time comes
you should have those plants car-
ried.to the upper veranda)’and lock
the window and then they will be
safe.’
“He died a few days afterward.—
His directions in this respect were
not observed, and Mr. Jackson’s
plants were destroyed or carried
away in pieces or as a whole, as a
mementos of the occasion.”
Carroll MASONIC Institute,
MALE and FEMALE.
The exerc ises of this Institution will be
resumed January 12th, 1885. The spring.
Term of six months will c lose .June 26tli.
RATES OF TUITION. ETC.
1st, Grade per month
2nd, “ “ “
3rd, “ “ “ -
4th, “ “ “
Incidentals “ “ -
Music Tuition “
Tuition due Oct. 15th, 1885.
ORGANIZATION.
II. C. Brown Principal in Charge.
A. C. Reese Assistant Acadainic Dp*t.
To be supplied u Intermediate “
Annie Brown Tutor in Juvenile “ •
Miss Minnie Reese Principal Music “
“ AVillie Chambers “ Calisthenics **
REMARKS.
The educational interests of a com
munity are of vital importuned. No
people can hope to be prosperous in the
tme 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. E^ese and
the undersigned have conformed' to this
demand aud we trust that the example
will be followed by the citizens ol Car
rollton and vicinity. Thankful for past
liberal potronage, I respectfully solicit
from the patrons and friends of this in
stitution, their future cooperation and
support. H. C. BROAA'N, Principal.
Carrollton, Dec. 3rd, 1884.
IF YOU ARE
GOINTG
The Hon. Thomas J. Jarvis, Min
ister to Brazil is a credit to the Tar
Heel State The Hon. John Roach,
who takes an interest in navigation
betweenthe United States and Dom
Pedro’s dominions, offered Mr. Jar
vis a free pass to Rio Janeiro for
for himself and the members of his
family, and Mr. Jarvis declined to
take the pass. We don’t know
how much of a diplomatist Mr. Jar
vis is, and this country has no use
for diplomatists any way; but we do
like to see a public man who is man
enough to pay his own way.—N. Y.
Sun.
3Ir. Blaine has such confidence in
the future of Washington real es
tate that he has been looking
around during the past week with
a view of adding to his past pur
chases. He has partially bargain
ed for a $50,000 house on P street
in the fashionable Dupont Circle
neighborhood. It is said that Mr.
Blaine wants to invest $150,000 or
more. An Eastern member of Con
gress said on Sunday: ‘Steve El
kins was exactly right when he said
that Blaine had a genius for mak
ing money. Everything he touches
turns to gold. If he had been on
Wall street he would have been
richer than Gould. Blaine has
now on deposit in various banks at
least $750,000, and in twenty-four
hours he could raise $2,000,000 in
cash. He is much richer than peo
ple suppose him to be.”
Some strange things occur about
the White House, and late visits
by tourists are among them. It
was 11:45 Tuesday night when a
gentleman and his wife rang the
bell at the door of the north en
trance to the Executive Mansion
and requested permission to be
shown over the house. They were
told by the doorkeeper that it was
after hours, and that the proper
time to inspect the premises was
between 10 in the morning and 2 in
the afternoon. Notwithstanding
the lateness of the hour the noctur
nal visitors insisted that they ought
to be shown over the house because
they hod to leave Washington
Wednesday morning and would
not have another opportunity.
The most prominent convert that
has yet declared himself at the Rev,
Sam Jones’ meeting in Nashville is
Gen. W. H. Jackson, owner of the
great Belle Mead stock farm, and
brother ot Senator Jackson, of that
State. In his public confession he
said that “often during the late war
thought of embracing the Christain
religion came to him, but attribut
ing it to a fear of battle he would
dismiss it. He resolved, however
that if he was spared he would do
so. After the war he investigated
for himself, and the best light he
ever received on the subject was
Greenieaf on evidence. I have
faith it is the only life to live,
came to this conclusson after hav
ing tried life in all its phases. My
heart is now in the right direction
I have performed the duties of hus
band, father, and citizenship, and
henceforward, God helpiug me,
shall stand closer to Christ and
perform the duties of a Christian.”
WEST,
NORTHWEST,
-OR—
SOUTHWEST,
IBB STJB/B
Your Tickets Eead via the
N. C. & St. L. R’Y
The Mackenzie Route.
The First-class and Emigrant Passengers
FAYOBITEI
Albert B Wrenn,
Fits. Agent,
Atlanta,Ga.
WTR ogers, .
Pas.' Agent,
Chattanooga. Term
W. L. DANLEY,
.Gen. Pas. & Tkt. Agent,
Navhsille, Term.
Research .
Experiment,
Study.
Do not look down upon a labor
ing man. Who was your"father?
Who was your grandfather ? Who
was your uncle? Who are you
anyway?
This is only one case, and would
placed on t he bag of ground coffee ^ ave no opportunity. This is only
H§» ■
Jaw had dropped, his eyes jyei:.e
“Are you ever going to stop talk
ing and let me go to sleep?” said
Crimsonbeak to his wife the other
night, when she was giving him a
j dose of neighborhood gossip,
j “Well, I tell you what I say is
true. I give you my word for it.”
“That’s just the trouble. If you
didn’t give quite so many words
about it I might believe it.”
And then the room was as still as
a store where they don’t adver
tise. #
AYkU--- J
it should stand at least three min
utes before serving. Remember,
the longer it stands the stronger it
becomes. Be careful not to allow
the watered coffee to boil.
“A favorite mixture of coffee,”
said Miss Corson, in answer to a la-
dy‘in the audience, “is Mocha and
Java, in the proportion of two parts
of the latter,which is less expensive
one case, and the doorkeepers say
say it is not unusual for such visits
during the night. Sometimes they
have considerable trouble i ndissua-
ding callers from carrying out their
purpose to roam over the White
House during the hours belonging
to the President when he wants to
be private.
A young minister of Oglethorpe
county, in order to raise funds for
his school, requests each scholar in
the school to bring an egg every
Sunday morning, and the minister
pays the money for the eggs, and
thereof-very easily enables the lit
tle folks in his neighborhood to
have money to purchase their Sun
day school literature.
The, cowardly hornet always
turns its tail to the foe.
For fifty year?, by Dr. A. L. Barry an
old practitioner, especially in Female
Troubles, was at last rewarded in the dis
covery of that certain and safe specific
for woman troubles, Luxomni. Luxomni
is a preparation that daily grows in pop
ular favor. Testimonials from responsi
ble persons all oven the country furnish
ample evidence of the wondermi power
of Luxomni as a remedial agent for the
relief and permanent cure of all these
distressing conditions incident to females.
Luxomni is specially adapted to troubles
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 tonic.
Price $1. If your druggist has not til©
preparation, address
THE BARRY MANUFACTURING Co.,
Drawer 28, Atlanta, Ga-
Note—Luxomni is no alcoholic mix
ture, but a combination of herbs and
plants in paekage form from which &
simple tea is made.
AVrite for interesting book mailed free *
85 A GRAND COMBINATION. 85’
TIIE CARROLL FREE rUES3.
AND THE L0UISA2LLE
WEEKLY COULEE JOURNAL
One year for only $2,50. Two papers
for little more than the price of one.
By paying us 62,50 yon will receive
for one year your home paper with the-
Courier-Journal, the Representative
Newspaper of the South, Democratic and
for a Tariff for Revenue only, and the
best, brlghest and ablest family weekly
in the United States. The AVeekly Cour
ier-Journal has the largest Democratic
circulation of any Newspaper in America.
Those who desire to examine a sample
copy of the Courier-Journal can do so at
this office.
Notice!
Those wanting to raise mules will meet
me in Carrellton, the following days of
the week, Mondays, Wednesdays and Sat
urdays . I will be at home the other*days
of the week.
I. N. McLendon.
T
■1
DO YOU KNOW.
THAT
LOHLLABD’S CLIMAX
PLU9T< *
A pistol is not’half so dangerous j ^ ie wa Y to. make: ari
with