Newspaper Page Text
Ague Cure
Ts a purely vegetable bitter anti power
ful tonic, and is warranted a speedy and
certain euro for Fever and Ague, Chills
nd Fever, Intermittent or Chill Fe
ver, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague,
periodical Bilious Fever, and all
malarial disorders. In miasmatic dis
tricts, the rapid pulse, coated tongue, thirst,
lassitude, loss of appetite, pain in tlie back
am l loins, and coldness of the spine and
extremities, are. only premonitions of
severer symptoms, which terminate in the
amio paroxysm, succeeded by high fever
and profuse perspiration.
It is a startling fact, that quinine, arse
nic and other poisonous minerals, form the
basis of most of the “ Fever and Ague
preparations,” “Specifics,” “Syrups,” and
"Tonics,” in the market. The prepara
tions made from those mineral poisons
although they are palatable, and may
break the chill, do not cure, but leave the
malarial and their own drug poison in
the system, producing quinism, dizziness,
ringing in the cars, headache, vertigo, and
other disorders more formidable than the
diseaso they wero intended to cure.
Aveb’s Ague Cure thoroughly eradicates
these noxious poisons from the system
and always cures the severest cases. It
contains no quinine, mineral, or any thing
that could injure the most delicate pa
tient; and its crowning excellence, above
its certainty to cure, is that it leaves the
system as freo from disease as before tho
attack.
For Liver Complaints, Ayer's Ague
Cure, by direct action on tho liver and
biliary apparatus, drives out the poisons
which produce these complaints, and stim
ulates the system to a vigorous, healthy
condition.
Wo warrant it when taken according to
directions.
Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Cos.,
Practical and Analytical Chemists,
Lowell, Mass.
BOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS EVERTWIIERS.
\ OLD m RELIABLE.
|Db. Sanford’s Liver Ixvigorator
E Standard Family Remedy for
eases of tho Liver, Stomach
* 1 Bowels.—lt is Purely §L
JVegetable.— It never ifu gj
—lt is tt *** 'n| f| II Jv
{Cathartic and pV ,
k", •>Vi
iSf -i**J
j| i 8 a 6 l A’ I? !
II
\ 0 e \S' - tf'vsSa !
j dVj.^ 6 e^ 6
! , §1 iver:
! H mS, 11 Invigorators
1 Ws3 has been nsedj
■ * D m - fr P ract * ce i'
Illi H ani * b y Public,]!
I81! f° r more than 35 years,]
Hr*** unprecedented results. 1
r* % SEND FOR CIRCULAR.'
|S. TANARUS, W. SANFORD, M.D., HkESETKft]
I *ST DRUOCIST WILL TILL TOII ITS Birt'TiTlO. 1
THE white
■ sewing machine
THE BEST OF BAt/
'
Unrivaled in Appearance,
Unparalleled in __
Unsurpassed in Construction,
Unprecedented in Popularity,
And Undisputed in the Broad Claim
r • ermaTH • ~\f
VERV BEST OPERATING
QUICKEST SELUNGi 1
t. HANDSOMEST, AND
Host Perfect Sewing Siacliine
IN THE WCRU> C
. .. •■■> 4 _ 4aa'
• The great popularity ol the Whltala the met! con*
Vncing tribute to it* excellent-.* and aupenority
over oJier machines, and in submitting It to tna
trade we put It upon Its merits, and In no Instanco
has it ever yet failed to S3ti*fy any
in Its favor.
* Tha demand forth* While has iMfMMt to weft
8n extent that we are now compelled to turn out
A Complete 6etKriM.gr IXactolaae
* — e-vexjr tinea miMU-tea —'
tbe to BMpplsr
ti.e clem n.ixal
Ever? machine is warranted for 3 yeafS. in 4
•old tor c**h at liberal discounts,or upon easy
Payments, to suit the convenience el customers.
■*•431813 WAKIID Jit 08M3BJIXD 1132110*7.
WHITE SEWING~MACHINE CO..
N Hs 353 Euclid Av„ Cleveland, Ohio.
SjoHHTY
POK SALE.
Cix Ml I.KS, iIAKXESS mid
O Lumber Dra., ail (rood and in "ood or
der. I will sell all or part, Suits the buyer,
t a bargain. Cali at once on the under.* gn
£ P ,“ s ";; w "*' %. . kili.es.
To niAKi; MONK?
Pleasantly and fast agents should address
Finley, Zfartey A Cos,, Atlanta Ca.
BY J- I>. HOYL & CO.
RATTLESNAKES IH ARIZONA.
Old Hank Pulsifer’g Prodigious
Story of His Exploits.
Tom Ewing's Adventure with a Mon
ster-Blowing off a Serpent’s Head
and Saving a Life—Sagebrush
Charley’s Idcreduality.
Marecopa Wells, Sept. 18—In
traveling through Arizona one is bound
ito see snakes in his boots. I don’t
mean whiskey snakes, hut real snakes.
Not that Arizona whiskey is lacking in
serpent-evoking protency. 1 took four
drinks one evening in June, after a
long and tiresome day in the saddle,
and saw a Chinaman poking a 100 foot
rattlesnake at me all night. Imagine
if you can what a genuine case of tre
mens must be with Arizona whiskey for
a foundation !
Rattlesnakes are plenty in Arizona.
They reach their greatest age here, and
are more savage than elsewhere. The
Arizona rattlesnake is ripe for a fight
as soon as he espies anything in the
shape of a man. Not rattling and then
sneaking off, like his namesake in some
of the colder latitudes, but the head
erect and eyes blazing fury and defi
ance, he coils and springs at his ene
my. These Arizona snakes are especi
ally fierce when met in the road, never
yielding the right of way until they are
killed. They vary in color. One sort
is almost black, with yellow spots from
head to tail ■ another is a tawny yellow;
and still another is the color of the
country rock. From June to Septem
ber the thermometer on the plains aver
ages from 110 to 120 through tho day,
and often as high as 115 at night.
Snakes do not move much through the
day in these months, pieferring to en
sconce themselves under the friendly
shade of a projecting rock or an occa
sional bit of sage brush, and await the
going down of the sun. Then they
pome out and stretch themselves in the
cool dust of the highways. This is a
very dangerous country for travellers
at night. Horses are frequency bitten
on the legs, and die in agony. Their
lives are sometimes saved, but not -of
ten. There are no end of rattlesnake
stories extant in Arizona. Some of them
are true.
A few weeks ago I saw a Mexican of
thirty years’ residence in Arizona. My
notice was attracted to him by a large
'lump or bag of flesh hanging from his
face. I inquired about it. He had
been captured by a lot of Apache In
dians when a child. They fancied him
for his beauty and his well-knit frame,
and desired to keep him in the tribe,
having previously put it out of his
power to return home by massacreing
his parents and burning the house ; so
they took him into the mountains, where
there was no danger of pursuit. There
they caused a rattlesnake to bite him
on the left cheek. They permitted the
poison to take effect to a certain ex-
tent; then the)- applied an antidote
and saved his life. But he has ever
since carried about this unsightly re
minder of his strange experience.
Nowadays the Apaches are safely
corraleld on Government reservations,
and the rattlesnake is left to his own
playful fancies. They generally know
if any one is around, and make their
own presence known. In some parts
of the Territory they are so fierce that
they will attack a man on horseback if
he comes within striking distance. Tom
Ewing of San Francisco, who erected
several quartz millls in Arizona, was
driving along one day when his progress
was barred at an abrupt turn by a
monster rattlesnake. Ilis horse be
came panic stricken, and as be was un
armed he was forced to turn around and
seek assistance at the nearest station.
.Several men came out wffli shotguns,
and after a fight, which came near
proving fatal to one of them, the veno
mous reptile was killed. It stretched
clear across the road, a distance of four
teen feet three inches. Judging from
the number of rattles, his age could not
have been less than forty-two years. I
do not vouch for this story, but there
are men in Arizona who claim to have
ssen the snake after he was killed. It
is one of the traditions of the Territo
ry.
Snakes from five to eight feet in
length are not at all uncommon. I was
riding along through Salt River Valley
at the close of a terribly hot day iu
July, when I came upon an oasis in
the wilderness, the home of a settler
named Marks. It had been so hot all
day that no work could be doue out of
doors, and it was only a few minutes
before my appearance that an Indian
boy in Marks’s employ had gone to the
upper end of a small vegetable garden
to do some necessary chores. He had
been there but a moment when he cried
out in alarm in the Indian tongue. ’ “A
snake ! a snake! and jumped upon a
shelving rock hard by. Marks grabbed
THE DAWSON JOURNAL
killed 1,400 rattlesnakes in the last two
years, to say nothing of the hundreds
he had got away with before that time,
and of which he never kept a record.
It is the old man’s delight to bask in
tho smiles of his cronies, and you may
see him at any time, wheq he is not out
prospecting the neighboring hills for
gold or silver, sitting in Bill Brigg’s
cabin, comfortably loaded with tangle
foot and detailing his adventures. He
was in Florence in August on a big
spree. When he gets pretty badly
fuddled he tells his biggest yarns. It
was my good fortune to hear one of
them. “Boys,” lie asked, “did you
see that Greaser in town yesterday with
the tarantulas ? I reckon you ain’t
seed no bigger tarantulas than them
critters. I give ’em to him; ketched
’em out near the Alvarado mine; they
havin’ a party like with a hull billin’ o’
rattlers. I never seed no such rattlers
yet. [Hank was leading up to his
story. One who knew him well at once
ordered the benzine for the crowd.] I
ain’t seed no such rattlers as them,” he
continued, setting down his empty
glass ” There was forty hundred if
there was one, and a rangin’ all the
way from two tauten foot in Jength. And
such an all-fired hissin’ and a wrigglin’
and a bowin’ and a scrapin’ to one
’nother as polite as you please, and Mr
Snake crawlin’ around Mrs. Snake, and
the young snakes a tumblin’ over their
daddies and mammies till you couldn’t
rest. What did I do ? I reekoh I
kinder didn’t do nothin’ but keep sha
dy. But a blasted j-ck rabbit run
across the bush just beliind me, .in’ I,
bein’kinder o’hungry like, lethimhave
it. The noise o’thc gun goin’ off start
ed the snakes, and they saw me quickcr’n
a second, an’ jess stood on their Lind
legs and roared to get at the old man.
There war a pile o’rocks a hemmin’ me
in on all sides ’cept one, I bad jest
come over them rocks a slidin’ down,
but couldn’t get back. There was only
one way out, and that was right through
the snakes 1 And there was forty hun
dred of ’em as sure as—. They saw
they had me, and had already divided
me up like, an’ I standin’ there a look
in’ at ’em with my eyes stickin’ out and
the sweat a pourin’ off me like rain, an’
they kep a cornin’ an’ a openin’ theirs
jaws an a lickin o’their chops as much
as to say, ‘Ole man yer our meat.’
Well, I yanked a rock an driv it into
’em an before they got over their sur
prise I’d drunk all the ‘bug juice’ in
my canteen an made a break. More'n
five hundred of ’em must a struck me
as I skinned through the gantlet. But
I had a p’ar o’buckskin breeches over
my butternuts, an the—fools couldn’t
bite through. So I hoofed it over the
perraric for more’n half a mile, cos I
didn’t d’ar to stop a second or they
would a got loose an struck me ou the
hand. - As it was, they kep’ a stringin
out behind me like so many tails. But
vou couldn’t seen ’em for the dust.
You hear me ! ”
Hank’s listeners were setting in open
mouthed wonder taking in the story as
he spun it out, and they were eagerly
awaiting the climax. Sagebrush Char
lie spoke up: “Look a here, Hank,
you say there was five hundred snakes
hitched c . to your britches?”
“Yes, five hundred ; nary one less.”
“Well, how much you reckoned each
critter would average—about three
pounds, I reckon ?’’
“W-a 1-1!”
“Whyonly this; you war packin
fifteen hundred pounds o’snakes. Per
haps you will take a tumble to yourself
and kinder explain bow you could pack
so many critters.”
“Look here, Charlie ; you’re a pretty
squar kind of a boy, and pooty good on
figgers and arithmetickin, an that kind
o’truck, an’ I don’t mind sayin to you
that fifteen hundred pounds o’snakes
tackled onto a man when he is scar’t—
when he is right down scar’t—don't
weigh more’n a ordinary shotgun. You
might stop to weigh ’em 1 I didn’t have
no time.”
Charlie was effectually silenced.
“Wall, as I was a saying, boys,”
Hank continued, “the varmints kep’ a
swishin in the air an Ia goin forty
miles a minute. I seed there was only
one way to get rid of ’em an I yanked
DAWSON. GEORGIA, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 9. 1879.
his shotgun and ran through the garden
just in time to see an immense rattle
snake preparing to strike the boy. He
jumped to one side and fired, blowing
the snake’s head off and saving the boy’s
life. This snake measured nine feet
and one inch, and was as big as a man’s
leg.
But the best snake story is told by
Hank Pulsifer, known otherwise as
“Rattler Hank,” on account of his
thousand and one adventures with rat
tlesnakes. Hank has been bitten four
times, and attributes his contiuued ex
istence to the fact that he always packs
plenty of whiskey with him. He has
out my knife an commenced choppin
their tails off close up to their ears.
By the time I ’rived at Moss’s ranch
they had all been cut away, but their
heads was still stickin by the fangs to
my buckskins. Boys, it war a lively
canter while it lasted.”
“How many heads was there a stick
in onto your buckskins, Hank 1” Char
lie asked.
“Lem me see; lem me see,” Hank
answered. “I dcclar I forgit. Rcub, I
told you the other day how many snak
es heads there was a hangin to my
buckskins that day. Do you reklcct?”
“I reckon it was four hundred and
ninety-seven.”
“Four—hundred—and—ninety—sev
en. Yes, yes; I said five lumdrcd
didn't I, boys ? I take it back, it was
four hundred and ninety-seven; but
what in—is three snakes in such an
outfit ?”
Then the glasses were filled up
again.
Little Cotton Factories in tlie
South.
[New York Herald.]
When a Southern newspaper finds re
spite from politics it usually discusses
the question of establighing small cot
ton factories throughout the South.
The fact is that many mills of limited
capacity have been established, especi
ally in South Carolina and Georgia, and
that they are important instruments of
returning prosperity in those States.
That they are not large is not detrimen
tal to their success. They are mainly run
by water power, in neighborhoods where
there is a small population which would
have no other places of employment
during certain seasons of the year. It
has been found that colored girls and
hoys are quite dexterous at the spindle,
and that where the little mills are lo
cated there is muen more peace and or
der than in hamlets where there is no
industrial attraction for the idle. The
cotton is near at hand, the running
power is cheap, the workmen are at
tracted by the novelty and by the op-
portunity to labor under sheltering
roofs, the warps command a ready mar
ket, and the profits, relieved of much of
the expense of heavy freight, are far
from inconsiderable. In nearly every
case of success the enterprisozhas been
under charge of practical spinners and
business men. In an economical point
of view nothing could ho clearer than
that the cotton should be spun near
where it is raised. As an element of
civilization these little mills are work
ing wonders, and every community
which seeks to establish one is taking
a step toward the elevation of both ra
ces. The little mill plan is morally op
posed to the Yazoo plan, and every
hamlet which has a factory is, in all
that is politically and sociable desirable,
many years in advance of those “cross
roads’’ whose only attractive spot is a
tavern.
Facts About Flour.
[American Miller.] ,
Four is peculiarly sensitive to the
atmospheric influences, hence it should
never be stored in a loom with sour
liquids, nor where onions or fish are
kept, nor any article that taints the air
of the room in which it is stored. Any
smell pciceptible to the sense will be
absorbed by flour. Avoid damp cellars
or lofts where a frea circulation of air
cannot be obtained. Keep in a cool,
dry, airy room, and not exposed to a
freezing temperature nor to intense
Summer or to artificial heat for any
length of time above 70 to 75 deg.
Fahr. It should not come in contact
with grain or other substances which
are liable to heat. Flour should be
sifted and the particles thoroughly dis
integrated and then warmed before
baking. This treatment improves the
color and baking properties of the dough.
The sponge should be prepared for the
oven as soon as the yeast has performed
its mission; otherwise fermentation sets
in and ascidity results.
Rev. K. \V. Dixon.
We regret to learn that the health of
this estimable divine is in no way im
proving, and that there is little or no
hope of his recovery. He is gradually
succumbing to that insidious and incur
able disease, cancer. Mr. Dixon is now
at the residence of his father a few
miles from Atnercus. Dr. Clark visit
ed him yesterday and substantiates
what we have heard. Truly a good man
is going whose sailing was the highest
and who worked most zealously in the
Master’s vineyard.— Republican.
Michigan is priding herself on the
fact that she has never had a case of
yellow fever within her borders. Verily
is the “law of compensation” great.
Neither has Memphis over had a case
of Zah. Chandler within her borders.
— Courier-Journal.
Tlie Smallest ol Babes.
Weighing Only Eleven Ounces and
Three-quarters at Birth.
Mrs. George Fromm of 438 West
Fifty-fourth street, is the happy moth
er of a fully developed boy baby born
on Sunday, and weighing eleven ounces
and three-quarters. The head of the
child, although smaller than a small
apple, is covered with an extraordinary
growth of light brown hair. Tlie fea
tures are regular, the eyes bright <nd
the skin is fine and delicate. The arms
are the thickness of an ordinary
little finger, and the fingers are the
size of extra large pencil leads. The
nails, although not much larger than a
good-sized pinhead, are perfectly form
ed. An ordinary luncheon basket is
an ample cradle for the babe. His
height at birth was five inches, and
breadth across the shoulders 2J.
Mrs. Fromm is a pleasant-featured
German woman, five feet seven inches
in height, weighing 135 pounds. Geo.
Fromm, the father, weighs 175 pounds.
He is an ex-car driver on tlm Third
avenue road, and out of work. They
have been married 11 years and have had
five other children, all of the ordinary
height and weight. Physicians and
others who have examined the tiny babe,
already named Georgie, say that he is
considerably smaller than either of the
midgets at the time of birth, and that
if he lives he will take the palm as the
smallest man in the world.
The child is to bo baptized two weeks
from next Sunday in t\ie German Pro
testant Episoopal Church, at Forty
third street and Ninth avenue, of which
Mrs. Fromm is a member. The father
said: “I hope the minister wont let
him fall in the front. He’d drown in
a beer mug, you know.”—JV*. Y. Sun.
Tlie Wells of Prairie I>ogs.
Some time ago the statement was
made in the American Agriculturist,
on the authority of Mr. M. T. Leech,
of Nebraska, that the prairie dogs of
the Western States dig wells, each ‘dog
town’ being provided with one. This
statement has been widely copied, hut
has been denied by some persons, and
among others by one of the professors
at Yale college. Recently one of the
stall' of the Agriculturist lias met Mr.
Leech in Wyoming, where lie holds a
responsible position in the railroad em
ploy. This gentleman reiterates his
original statements and adds that if
skeptics will come to Sidney, Nebraska,
they will find convincing proof of the
accuracy of what he says. There is a
‘town’ of twenty-five or thirty pet
prairie dogs about five rods from the
track northwest of the Railroad hotel.
The owner of the dogs will show the
visitor tno well, and will inform him
that the first move the dogs made, af
ter locating there, was to dig for wa
ter. At a point on the Kansas and
Pacific railroad, not far from Buffalo
station, the workmen in sinking a tank
reservoir some time ago struck one of
these prairie dog wells and followed it
to a depth of 200 feet. Mr. Leech's
statements were verified by Prof. Aug
hey, the well known geologist at the
Nebraska State university, who had
also discovered such wells while making
geological explorations along the Logan
river in northern Nebraska.
Stonewall Jackson’s Daughter.
Whon the Jackson statute was un
veiled in Richmond sotne years ago,
after the procession and the oratory,
Governor Kemper brought forward upon
the platform a slender little girl, and
addressing the great crowd the old cc u
federate said : “Comrades, let me pre
sent to you the daughter of Stonewall
Jackson.” Somehow the tears sprang
to every eye at the sight of this deli
cate child of their resistlesss leader.
There was no cheering, but every face
showed if deep emotion. Ever since
that time a tender and poetic interest
has clung to this little lady, and there
are many thousands who care to know
of her well-being. She has been recently
in this city, and has been entered at the
Southern Home School. Miss Julia
Jackson is about sixteen years old,
tall, slender and graceful. She is a
blonde with fresh color and fair hair,
ller eyes are exquisite clear gray, large
and expressive. Her manners are gen
tle, but not shy or reserved. There is
not any marked resemblance to her il
lustrious father, and she seems hardly
conscious of the distinction that she
enjoys and of the romantic interest that
she carries with her. —Baltimore Gazette
A man with a S6OO diamonds on his
shirt bosom leaned over a heq coop in
a Cincinnati market, and a hungry hen
picked off the jewel and swallowed it.
The thief was soon lost among the hun
dreds, and there was no way of identi
fying her. So the man bargained to
have them killed, one after another,
until the right crop was found. To re
over the diamond cost him S2B.
VOL. 16-NO 3ft.
The Homicide Jm.st Saturday.
Killing of Mr. S. D. Wilson by Mr.
Lewis Barber—A Desperate Fight.
Albany News, 2nd inst: “On last
Saturday at noon an altercation oc
curred between Mr. S. D. Wilson and
Mr. Lewis Barber, two well known
farmers of this county, in which Mr.
Wilson was fatally shot by Mr. Lewis
Barber. The trouble occurred just
eight miles below Albany, on the
“Orr place,” owned by Mr. S. 11.
Wilson, brother of deceased.
Shortly after the killing occurred
a messenger came into town and
called a physician. The Coroner was
notified, and immedhigrly ordered the
Sheriff to summon a jury for an in
quest, which w as held at 8 o’clock p.
m. From all the evidence introduced,
file particulars of the killing seem to
be about as follows:
Some time last spring Mr. Lewis
Barber bought a certain amount of
corn from Mr. Wilson, and gave his
note for payment, with the rent note
of one of the colored tenants on las
place as security. On the morning
of trie killing Mr. Barber packed a
bale of cotton belonging to his moth
er, and had it ready for market. Mr.
Wilson sent a negro man to Mr. 8.,
and told him that he must have that
bale of cotton in payment of the
note. Barber refused, saying that he
would pay w r ith another bale which
would soon be ready. Wilson sent
again for if, and Barber sent word to
him that he must send the note be
fore he could get the cotton. Wilson
then got on bis horse and ordered
his wagoner to go immediately and
load the cotton. Wilson followed
the wagoner and had the cotton put
on and hauled to his own gin-house.
Barber went over and said to Wilson:
“I suppose you are going to ta' e my
cotton, anyway 1” Wilson said ‘Yes,’
and Barber then said to him: “If
you attempt to carry it to town, 1
will kill you or you will me one.”—
Wilson then took up a heavy stick
and started towards Barber Barber,
then asked: “Is that your
game ?” Wilson then put down his
stick, went in his house and got his
pistol, came back and a loud quarrel
ensued. Wilson moved to the inside
of his gate. Barber, still on horse
back, started to ride off. After Wil
son closed the gate, he remarked:—
“You tried once to steal from old
I’rince, you G and and -n rascal.”
Baiber then turned his back and
said: “If you say that, Wilson, you
arc a d——n liar.” Wilson repeated
it. Barber then told him if ho would
come ofF of his own premises he woulo
whip him. Wilson then drew his
pistol and fired on Barber—first shot
missed him, second shot ball struck
Barber in the arm, third struck him
in the right hip. Barber then fired
at Wilson four times, the fourth shot
striking him through the heart. Af
ter receiving this fatal ball, Wilson
rushed upon Barber, who still sat
upon his horse, and placing the muz
zle of his weapon to Barber’s head,
pulled the trigger, but the cylinder
had been emptied. Barber then pla
ced his pistol to Wilson’s head and
fired his final shot.
The rencontre w r as desperate, and
the coolness and bravery displayed
on both sides was certainly wonder
ful. Mr. Barber received two very
painful wouds, but he is not consid
ed in danger. Mr. Wilson’s remains
were buried in the Albany cemetery
on Sunday afternoon. He leaves a
'wife and three children to mourn his
sudden death.
The Coroner’s jury returned a ver
dict of “justifiable homicide.”
In regard to the mysterious death
of Mr. Kellar, on the Withlacoochee
river, of which we have already made
mention, the Leesburg Advance says :
“The party who attended the coron
er’s inquest on the body of Mr. Har
ry Keller, drowned in the Withlacoo
chee river on the sth, and found on
the 7th with his head off, returned
last Sunday. Dr. Stevens’ sworn
testimony clears up all suspicion of a
murder having been committed. The
body of Mr. Keller was dissected and
it was found that lie came to his
death by drowning. From the evi
dence, the head of the drowned man
had been twisted from the body by
an alligator, and the neck eaten away
by turtle and fish. When the body
was found a large alligator was swim
ming within twenty feet of it, while
the turtles had to be kept off with a
stick. Alligators are very numerous
in this river. Not long since one
man shot thirteeq in half an hour.—
We are glad this matter is explained,
for while our entire community were
coufideut of friend McCormick's inno
cence, it was feared that others might
suspect h : m of foul play and give
him some trouble.”
TUTTB
PILLS
aro extracted from Vegeta bio product*,
combining in them tho Mandrake or May
Apxile, which is ro'joprnized by physician*
z& a subtituto for calomel, fona: ng all
tho virtues of that mineral, without it*
bad after-effect*.
AS AN ANTI-BILIOUS
MtDICIHE
thoyare incomparable. They stimulate
the TORPID LIVER, invigorate the
NERVOUS BYSTEM, and give tone to
the DIGESTIVE ORGANS,creating per
fect digestion and thorough assimilation
of food. They exert a powerful influence
on_the KID N EY3 and UVER.and
through the .0 orpins remoyeall impuri
ties, thus vitalizing tno tisauogof tho body
and causing a healthy condition of tho
system. “ “ “ ,
AS AN ANTI-MALARIAL
REMEDY 1
They havo no equal; and as a result act
as a preventive and cure for Bilious
mittent, Interm ittent, Typhoid Fey ors,
and Fever and Ague. Upon the hoalthy
action of the Stomach, almost
wholly, the health of tho human race.
DYSPEPSIA
IS THE BAMEf
of the present generation. It js forjiho
Cure of this tPseaseandlts attendants,
SICK-KEADACHE, NEBVOUSNEBS. DES
PONDENCY, PILES, &e,.
that
TUTTPS PILLS
811 chft wide spread reputa
tion _No Rome ly haa ever been discov
ered that acta so r.peedily and gently on
tho digestive organa_tqvincr them tone
and vigor to aesimilate food. This being
accomplished, of course the
her vous smew is~braced,
THE BRAB4 IS KQURISKED,
AfJD THE EO3Y ROBUST.
_Brinfr composed cft.he juices of plants
extracted by powerful chemical agen
ct°g i and prepared in concentrated
form, they tiro guaranteed free from
a:iy thin® that can Injure the moat del
icate person.
A notod chemist who has analyzed them, says
“ THESE IS KO2Z VIRTUE IN ONE OF
TUTT’S FILES, THAN CAN EE FOUND?
IN A PINT 0? ANY GTHHE.”
Wc therefore say to the atnicted G
Try this Remedy fairly, it will not
harm you, you have nothing to
lose, but wiil surely gain a Vigo
rous Body, Pure Biood, Strong
Norves and a Cheerful fnirid.
Principal ORlee, 35 Murry St., N. V. 1
PRECE 25 CENTS.
Kohl by Dmi-finta thiou-huut the wo-’d.
TUTT'S'hAIH'dyE
On*T H ua on Wimrr.n chanced to a Ci.o.bt
application of tin. “it ta*
parts a Natural Color, acta Instantnnaouelr, nd ia
a I tarm oas a* sprita -al.->r. Bold by 1. flews to. or
Bent byexproflcon receipt of PL
.Otyioe 39 Murray St„ Now York*
TOACTS FOR YOUNG MEN.
Actual Business, Students on
“““ ’Change, Tlie Business World
in Miniature,:.! MOORE’S BUSINESS
UNIVERSITY, ATLANTA, GA. The
Host Practical Business School in the country.
Send for Circulars, Terms, Etc
1879. 1879.
SECOND
MU Ml
—-OF TITE
SOUTHWEST GEORGIA
INDUSTRIAL ASSOCIATION,
—AT—
AI.iMAV,
NOVEMBER 11,12 and 13.
LIBERAL PREMIUMS
OFFERED IN
Every Departmsnt of Indasliy.
Dpt tijiciK, titWJji, k.
Special attention to
Field Crops.
■* / //
GET READY FOR THE
mm EXHIBITION.
T.M. CARTER, L. E WELCH,
Secretary, Riesideut.
B U KIAB oases-
.
• ‘ ■-v..'.,."'.;' v- 5 .
A. full a”ortro<’nt and sizes of Wood and
Mstatic Bu.ial Cases always on hand.
ORDERS b? telegraph with good reference
pioinptlv filled.
A. J. JtuldTAUi Jk Cos.,
Jul> 19, ly. Dawson, Ga.