The Fairburn gazette. (Fairburn, Ga.) 1871-1871, May 05, 1871, Image 2

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THR FAIRBORN OAZ'KTTB TTRM3 ; 2,00 PEPv ANNUM. A. D. ST\R*r*S. Editor. SATURDAY MAY 6, 1871. To The Public. With this issue I would respeottuly enounce to the citizens of C ainpbdl comity and the public generally that the location of this paper will he ( hanged front Fairburn to Palmetto, hut will give all the local, county and general news as heretofore. It will continue to come regularly to its sub scribers, and I hope to make it an in teresting and valuable paper. The change of location has been caused by various circumstances, the most im portant of which is that I find there is some'opposition here to my enter prise caused by the publication ot an other paper and subscribers have some difficulty in finding out which paper they are patronizing. And then again the friends of the Gazette have adv ised uie to publish my paper at Palmetto so that they can more read ily distinguish one from the other. And again I have visited Palmetto during the past week and have met with a welcome reception, and have met with such encouragements that 1 think will authorize a removal. Be sides 1 think that the subscribers of ihe Gazette will favor the removal as they do not want two papers publish ed in the same village. I have only to say in conclusion that I was the first man that ever proposed to pub lish a paper in [this county and came to Fairburn upon the promises of the citizens to sustain me. I have faith fully fulfilled my part of the enterprise „„d have done all I could for them. I leave it with them to judge if tbev have done theirs, still I ha>e the best of feelings towards them and will al ways remember them with gratitude for I have found some as’good citizens, and as clever gentlemen, as it has „ver been my lot to know anywhere. In the removal of my office it will necessarily change the name oi m\ paper which will be called the Pal nu t to Gazette, it will continue to give all the county news, local and general news of the day, and I Shall use eveiy effort to make it a valuable and enter tabling paper to all ol its patrons and subscribers. To those who have stood by me and sustained me, during 'uum^ I’am 1 ’ami 1 wm!iV aH limes do anything in my power to advance their interest. The columns of this paper shall he always open to them. I shall be glad to see them in j-erson at any time. And it is the height of my ambition to show to the people of Campbell county that I fell myself identified with them and will ever look to their interest. Published by request. April Ist 1872. Miss Katy. —lt is the day. the un known and unknmnug must speak, or he silent. Now, the most pusillan imous of human beings becomes the most intrusive, but, perhaps he alter all, is, devoid of infrangible reso lution to act, in a recondite way, ill older to set forth in glowing colois a motive of action and celebrate it by the elegance and beauty of election as he eanno’ employ formal urbanity even in this proceed me. Ncverthe -1 38 their is a presumption, to day which may in time—somewhere in the future, assume another form of magnitude, if there he, in the future any disposition on your part to sanc tion such presumption by the inspir ing light of your soul—absorbing smiles But if like the scowling heavens, they will flash lightning to wither and externinste this days pre sumption it will he right though it subvert the powers o' mind and give them all over mental stupidity and the blindness of fn*u’’y Sometimes with regard to the beauty of thy excellence is desin and to beexpressid, but can not be. Before your excellencies words are beggars, and because you possess them you are rich, and around them cluster undying admira tion which has originated this pre sumption. All the plumed songsters may make musiek to zephyrs and flowers, and hills and mountains and he will forget them, and if they were to come to him in the clearness of gloom he would decide to listen to you and hush them. Sponta niously they would all conclude their songs and fold their plumed wings and listen to superior songs. Anojohovs The united railroad companies of New Jersey, comprising the New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Company, the Camden and Amboy Railroad Company, the Philadelphia and Trenton Railaoad compauy, and the Delaware and Raritan Canal Cos. haue been leased by the I’a. R II Co.- which agrees to pay 10 per cent per annum on their capital stock, and lAiimf all their obligations. Manufacturing Stock. One hundred shares of the Langley Manufacturing Company’s stock was sold yesterday, upon a foreign older, at par. This company has but start ed. It is only a few days since that we chronicled the proceedings ot the first annual meeting of the company aud the sale of the first yard of cotton cloth made at the Langley Mills. Ot course, the first annual meeting could but receive the report of the cost of constiuction, and the first yard of cloth but herald the outset of oper ations. But the sale of this stock at par, upon a foreign order, is evidence of what people ab-oad think of stock in manufacturing companies under Augusta management. We have now lour large cotton mills in our neighborhood under Au gusta management and drawing all their supplies, cotton and provisions from our market. The first of these is the Richmond Factory, of which Adam Johnstone is the head. No body knows what this factory is doing or has done. The stockholders ae few in number and choose to keep the result of their operations within themselves, of which no one can com plain.. The Augusta Factory, under : the management of Win. E. Jackson ‘ Esq, chronicles its dividends quar terly and regularly. The Gvanitville Factory, under the able management of 11. H. Ilickman, Esq., struggling up from severe losses hv the war, gives its stockholder! - 8 per cent, per annum in dividends, and lays by with in a decimal fraction of one hundred thousand dollars for banking purposes i m a single year, and now the Lang ley Manufacturing Compton, just star | ting into existence and operation, un ; der the management ot Win. C. Sib- ley, Esq., finds that its stock, at the I first turn of the wheels under Au- j gusta management, commands par j from a foreign put chaser This is a j record which not only speaks well for the efficiency and sagacity of Au gust a entei prise, hut demonstrates thot the advantages of climate, the pr xiinity to maikct tor the raw ina te.-ial, and the facilities for tiro export of the manufactured goods, are such as to yield profitable rewards to such ai invest in manufacturing our great staple in and near Augusta. —Augusta Ca, onicle, Mth. From Ihe SeTnnnfih Republican. John Wesb y’s First Sermon in America. The Brunswick Appeal says that a number of Methodist divines, togeth er with some friends, proceeded re cently to St. Simon's Island, to visit and have pin t 'gia. hed the venerable live oak under the umbrageous bran ches if which John Wesley, the foun der of Methodism, preached his first s imon in America. It is probable that the picture will be engraved on steel and offered for sale. The live oak rcferied to is a ma(z a lively group in the flush times of St. Simon s ; the Farmer’s Club House, to which all the islands were accustom! and to resort on one day ol e. e y week, having stood in imme diate piox.miiy. For its own sake, is welt :.s o t; Social history, the tree should be photographed—for there is m,tiling approaching it on the Atlantic ei.asi. But we net er before heard that this monateh of the forest had a religious history. '1 he Church of Frederica, established by Charles Wesley, not •John, was originally located, and still stands—a portion of its original tim hers being vet incorporated with the oftentimes renewed buildings—in a I eautitul grove ot live oaks, some half mile or more in the rear of the town, or the site once occupied by the town, nothing ot which remains but a fevv briek and tabby ruins. John Wesley, the great founder of Method.sm, was occasionally at the Frederica settlement, aiding iri the work ot his brother—which, iinf >rtu nately was not a very successful one— but his "first sermon in America” was not p cached on St. Simon’s. ILs tbst eligi ms ministrations in this country were delivered on Tybee, on the arri val of the immigrant ship Cat b r: him hither, and consisted of thanksgiving to God for the sate de liverance of himself and fellow-passen gers, having landed for the special purpose. This was in February, 1770. The party then came up the river, and John Wesley’s “first ser mon in America,” according to his own private journal, was preached in the Court House in Savannah, on Sun day. 7th March, 1836, the text being the epistle for the day, the 13th chap ter of Ist Corinthians. We dislike to spoil a handsome lit tle photographic speculation, but this is history. To Yor.xo Men. —Let the business of every one alone and attend to your own. Do not buy what you don’t want. Use every hour to advantage and study to make a leisure hour use ful. Look over your books regularly If a stroke <sf misfortune comes upon your business, retrench, work harder, but never fly the track. Confront difficulties with unflinching persev erance, and you will be honored ; but shirk and you will be despised. Seek to acquire the power of continuous application, without which you can not expect success. If you do this, you will be able to perceive the diffid ence which it creates between you and those who have not such habits.—You will not count yourself, nor will they eount you as one of them. Tims von will lind yourself emerging into the higher regions of intellectual and earn est men—men who are capable of making place for themselves, instead of idly gaping, desiring a place. Wcturapka is making an effort to get a railroad from Elmore Station on the North <jfc South R. R to that point. From the ColnmbUA Eu;]uir«r 1 Nuirow-Cruage Railways. We have been examining our ex changes for information on this sub ject, and we find that there arc in this country a number of railroads on the narrow-guage plan in a process of construction. The Houston Tele graph of the loth inst reports pro gress in the survey for a narrow guage railway from that city west , waid. The western terminus is not limned in the article but the survey had reached the Brazos, which river would be crossed near the vilfage of l’ittsville. We learn from the Atner i iean Hallway, Tima that charters have been obtained for two narrow | gunge railroads in Texas with wooden i rail, on stringers stripped with iron : for sections of country whose traffic is light; and it says that they are soon likely to be built. In Tenues see, too, a narrow-guage road with wooden rails is to be built. It is a Greene county enterprise, to be elev en miles long, with a guage of thirty inches, uud it iv estimated tlia t the total cost ot the ;oid will be S2O 000. (Too cheap.) The e arc t oor three j short narrow-gauge railroads in Tun I ning operation in the mining districts | of Pennsylvania, and it is stated that ! the width best answering their re- j quirements is thirty inches ; that on ; a road of this guage a locomotive of j eight tons can run with a speed of twenty miles an hour. There is now a proposition to build a long narrow : guage railroad running north and ! south, from Denver, Colorado, to Tex | as, a distance of 850 miles, Serious ! attention has been given to this ques tion in Massachusetts, and a bill is ' now pending in the Legislature of I the State establishing a uniform | naarow-guage ot three feet The j j Railway Tones advocates that width 1 las the standard for narrow-linage ’ I roads throughout the country. It says that “the construction of these narrow-gauge lines has got to be ac cepted as a fixed fact in all the, States,” and therefore advocates the early establishment of a uniform gauge for the whole country, g 0 that it may form a distinct system. These movements suffice to show that the narrow-gauge, proposition is not one to he treated with the sneer of prejudice, or reject, and without, con sideration. T o mu- h n crest in the subject lias already been enlisted to allow it to be disposed of so that man ner. The narrow-gauge nmv no t be expedient for loads in which Colum bus is immediately interested, because of the coin .ciions which they are to make It might not an g y e • g 0 well for a railroad fro u this cg v to Rome or Chut ano. a, e ause the eontem plat.on is t > connect th e . e with the proposed Cincinnati Southern Rail road. But it a narro w gauge could be agreed upon for the whole dis tanee from Cincinnati to the Gulf, this width might be found to answer ad miiablv. Its foefoto o, v T travel-would, to a grem cAient he independent of (oanectii n<, a ; j wou'd almost suiely well sustain a road built and operated so cheaply, without “feeding” from other railroad- - . And tin re is noth ing improbable in the idea tnat Cin cinnati, when she clears away the ob structions and commences her great woik, will be disposed to adopt the narrow-gauge, and thus make her “air line ’ communication with the South and the West Indies even more ex clusive than a wide-gauge would al low. We repeat that our knowledge of this subject does not enable us to ei ther advocate or oppose narrow-gauge railroads. But we are daily more con vinced that the proposition is one that ought to be duly tested bv the inves tigations of engineers and others and the results of experiments. Over four thousand London thieves are said to be in Baris, and the chief of the detective force of the former citv is there watching them. These thieves have probably,been attracted to Baris in hopes of securing some booty during the troubles there. Bitts burg has a society of women known as the Pythian Sisterhood- A young mail asked a girl if she be-’ binged to tiie “Tythian Pythterhood’ And she bad him arrested for being drunk without license. He was drunk. When Mr. Greely wrote something about “Anna Dickinson’s lecture on Joan of Arc,” the printer made it read “Ana Duclnnan can play the Jews harp.” Love is the shadow of the morning tvhieh decreases as the day advances : Friendship is the shadow of the even ing which strengthens with the set ting sun of life. —La Fontaine, The Newfoundland sealing this year beats everything of the kind in Utah. The esiimate is that six hundred thousand seals have been captured, worth in pelts and oil forty miUiyns of dollars. It is again announced that Mr. Fish will positively retire from the depart ment 6f Statute on the Ist of June. The Scranton miners can’t heal their difficulties. At Pottsville on Thursday ilie Executive Board of the Miners’ Union made anew proposition and an alternative one for arbitration. Meanwhile the miners have reached the bottom of the meal tub and are in great distress. Yellow fever is said to be fatal in Buenos Ayres, and the death rate is from 150 to 200 each day. Small pox is also very prevalent and fatal. The Disgrace of Labor. The Goodman (Miss.) Central Star makes this humiliating and “over true" confession in regard to the crowds of idle people, white ami black who have to be supported in some way by our working population : The stranger visiting the South is particularly impressed with the vast wealth of a country that can support in idleness so large a portion of its male inhabitants. Two-thirds of the citizens of our country towns are only iioininally employed, and under a bare pretense of employment manage to pass their time in complete indolence. i- - - —i —- Tliis will apply to whites ns well as colored. There are numbers of both classes out of work and money, yet who will not work. Offer a negro a dollar to cut up a cord wood, and he lias not time, he has to do something for somebody else ; yet that something is never done. Offer the job to a white man and the chances are ton to one your answer will be a shot from a pi.sfol, or a thrust from a bowie- knife. Os the two, the negro is the only one ashamed of h's laziness, for he excuses himself: but the white is insulted. Yet neither of them has seen a dollar for a week, perhaps, and both lying around some, dramshop, waiting to bo asked to drink by some acquaintance who has a few dimes. •Tor ways that are dark and tricks that aie vain,” commend us to the Southern pe pe ; but raised among : them as »e have been, and seeing j every day the development of some ; peculiar idiosyncrasy, we are more and more puzzled to discover why it is that it is considered so great a dis grace to labor at some manual \o -a --t on. E\en the negro, with hi, imi tative faculties, is fast coming to the conclusion that to work is a disgrace, j and honest labor is a thing to be 1 avoided by all means. Seeing these things we are constantly lost in won dering to find the country subsist so well on so little labor, and that little iso illy directed. In any other eonm try the curse of Adam is entailed upon his posterity; but here there 1 erms a special exemption. How is-it? The Press Association—Basses.- Upon the application of the writer, as President of the Georgia Bress Asso ciation, the Atlanta and West Boint Railroad, the Georgia Railroad, the Central, Southwestern, Macon, and Augusta, and Savannah and Gulf Railroad officials have consented to pass one representative to each Geor gia newspaper tree of charge to the meeting of the Bress Association in Augusta on the 10th prox. It is be lieved that other roads which have so far made no response will extend the same courtesy. The issue of pass es will be restricted to papers which shall make application for them and intend to be represented in the Asso ! ciation. The Georgia road requires that the passes over their line shall V,„ 1 o n.. G„..u.-..l teudent, \\ e therefore invite an ear ly application to the writer by such of the brotherhood as may desire to avail themselves of these passes.— Macon Telegraph. Wki.i., Tom,” said a blacksmith to his apprentice, “you have been with me now three months and have seen all the different, points in our trade. I wish to give vour choice of work for awhile." “Tank’ee, sir.” “Well, now what part of the business do you like best?” Shnttin’ up shop and goin’ to dinner, sir.” The most suspicious name yet made public for a revenue collector to be that of the new appointee in the Eighth Ohio District—Robb. James M. Mason, whom it will be recollected was one of the ministers of the Confederate States during the war, to England, died last week. Mr Mason was a man of mark and had occupied various offices of public trust during his file. Wiiat a Good Wire Should Be —A good wife should be like three things; which three things she should not he like. First —She should be like a snail to keep within her house, but she should not be like a snail to carry all she has on her back. Secondly —She slieuld be like an eco, to speak when spoken, to, bu she should not be like an echo, a) way to have the last word. Thirdly —She should belike a town dock, always to keep time and regu larity; but she should not be like a town clock, to speak loud that all the town may hear her. Proverb of the slow but sure man —“Large oaks from little acorns grow.” Proverb of the tight boot wearing man—“ Large achas from little toe-corns grow. “ A female barber out West has re tired from business on account of the appearanoe of a little shaver Josh Billings insists “it is a statis tikal fakt, the wicked work harder tew reach hell than the righteou do to tew git to heaven.” Harrisburg, Pa. is about to erect new water works, and issue bonds to the amount of $200,000. St, Lcuis has just had constructed anew smoll pox ho - pital capable of commanding from 75 to 100 patients Hotel proprietors at Niagara Fall anticipate a goo 1. season. Pensacola shipped 48,000,000 shingles in January and Fcbuarv. A Indiana court has decided that it is larcency to steal a taxed dog. Acwooth N. H., produced 98,088 found* of maple sugar this season. ' P»wum’» new menagerie and circus j were run into by a Jersey Central train last Thursday, and three of the company killed and three badly wounded. The receipt? for customs at New York, Boston Philadelphia and Balti more for the week ending April 15, footed up $5,822,490. Sentence on Laura Fair has been postponed to the 26th of May, her counsel demanding a months’ time to prepare an application for anew trial. Mr. David S. Wells has written a letter to show that for the next quar ter of a century the rate of interest cannot bo lower than 7 per cent, per aunuin. The cotton excess over last year reached 991,262 bales on Friday night Up to last Faiday some five hun. (L ed claims of ‘‘Southern loyalist” had been filed before the Commission, amounting to about two and a half millions of dollaas- The Radicals who say there is no ‘‘loyalty" in the South will now find they are laboring under a grand mistake. There will be a good many millions' worth of it on owners’ vari ation, but it is not thought that more than one per cent' of it will pass current with the Com mission. Mr. Secretary Boutwell has stopped payment of subsersption bills for pa -1 ers never ordered by the department- This is an official rebuke to newspaper bumery. The Secretary knows, too, that “small leak will sink a great ship”—and “a penny earned”—and “mattey a mickle makes a muckie”— and a good deal more of that useful lore which sprung from Boston. The Philadelphia Germans are go ing to celebate the triumph of the “Fa derland” for three successive days That is to beat New York, and second ly because Philadelphia lager is petter ash goot. AIR LINE HOUSE. Just Open for Private and Transient Boarding) too VIRUS OTOFm MSSffiEI! DEPOT On Pryor Strtet, First Door So nth of the Stubble. ATLANTA. GA. J L. KEITH, PKOTI (formerly of the Campbell House.) This House is new. clean and well ventilated Visitor* are invited. Terms $2 per day- J. M. & J. C. ALEXANDER, Importeis aril Dealers in H area w are CARRIAGE MATERIAL ML STONES bolting clotii. WHITEHALL ST LEE] ATLANTA GA. Spring and Summer imperial ion 18/1. RIBBONS, WLLISEIU IMI STRAW COIR ARMSTRONG CATOR & CO. IMPORTERS AND JOBBERS 07 Ikttiuel, Trimming & Velvet Ribbons Bonnet Silks, Safins and Velvets, Blonds. Nett*, Crapes, Ruches, Flowers, Feathers Sliaw Bonnets stmt Ladies Iluts. TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED, Shaker Hoops, &c. 237 and 239 BALTIMORE STREET, BALTIMORE., MO. Ofler the largest Stock to ebe found in thin Conn try, and unequuled inchoi e. variety, and cheap p.WHf* comprising the latest E ropean novelties. Orders solicited, and prompt attention given. Atlanta Steatu. Brewery. XX & XXX ALE nd. 3PCZ>^LT , JE3 C. A- GOODYEAR, PROPRIETOR. Agricultural Implements Machines of all Kinds. Garden Grass aad Field seeds. lluetrated Catalogue and Price List emit free on pticaiior ». AMnm, P UC’L A. ECHOLS. Atlanta Ga rEERLESS corcfl AND LUNG REMEDY CJLOBETFLOWER'UOUOII SYRUP. This celebrated Pulmonary Remedy is the ac tive principle obtained by chein cal prices* from the Globe Flowkr. known also as “Button Root, and in botany a*. ** Cephelanthue Occident all*. This rare and delightful compound is a certain cure for every form of Cocoa Bronchitis. Asth ma. Sork Throat, lloarsrnkss «fce., and will pos itively enr- CO SSL MPT l *N when taken in time. It cures when all other boasted Remedies fail. tiff It has cured people who arr livieg to-day with only one remaining lung. A single bottle will convince the most skeptical that it is perfect ly peerless—immeasurably ahead of anything ever before discovered or offered to the public.. It is a Nutrient, Demulcent Vitalizer, and Ecsolvent of Tubercle. It purifies the fluids, and heals ulcers and tuber cles in the lungs. . ' It should be used in every form of Phthisis Pul monalis, l’aiu or bore ness in the Chest, Cough, Bronchitis, More Throat, Feverishness, Night Sweats, Loss of appetite and gradual wasting away. It strengthens amt builds up the system to a healthy condition, is plvasaut to take, aud harm ess, under all conditions. IDE MANY THOUSAND CASES WHICH HAVE BEEN CURED bv the GLOBE FLOWKR SRRUP convinces us that we hold in our possession an agent whose value none caa estimate ; READ! READ!! A few specirnneri *f tV ms.nv thousand testimo uittis in iaver of this .r. •t medicine. Btinoton’h Hors:., Fort Valley, Ga., December 1, 1370. .4 fessrt. Pemberton Taylot' and Cos., A lanta Ga. Gentt —For the pust two mouths I have been suf fering with a very severe cough, anil I used fifty different remedies without receiving the io.ist ben fft. but a lew days ago u friend recommended youi Globe Flower tio'ugh Syrup, and 1 am proud to saj that my cough wa. entirely cured belore tho bot tle was'near entity. 1 am, very respectfully. E. F. BYINGTON. Bomb a., January 10, IS7O. jfeeere. Pemberton Taylor ts Cos., Gentlemen —Having disposed of over three hun dred bottles of vour Globe Flower Cough Myrup vve now wish to say a word in regard to its merits. \‘e have given the Globe Flower Syrup special at reiirion, recommending it in all cases of colds. t'Ugiis etc., and in all lung diseases, aud are pleas •and to say that in every iustance it has not out) given imminediato relief, but also resulted in a permanent cure. Wishing your raedicne every success, Yours respectfully, W. D. HOYT & CO., Wholesale Druggists. Boutubkn Kxphrss Company. Atlanta, la., February 22,1371. Msesr*. Pernbtrton , Taylor & Co s., Gentlemen— lt affords me great pleasure to bear testimony to the eflhaoy oi the Globe Mower t ough Syrup, it has entirely eradicated a cough which had t.oubled me for a year. During last summer I was obliged, owing to the •1 • icate staie of my health, to give up business in New York and spend that season in Vermont. 1 came to till# city last October, the cough still •dinging to me. I commenced using the Globe Flower Cough Syrup, and its good effects soon be came apparent. The cough has gone entirely. 1 would unhesitatingly recommend the use of the lobe Flower Syrup to all who are afflicted wit .isease of the throat or lungs. Vjrv truly WM. D. BOWERS. The genuine Globe Flower Cough Syrup, is pro tected by letters patent aud trade mark and com pounded by Pemberton, Taylor At Cos. PROPRIETORS AND WHOLESALE Druggets Atlanta Oa- IT is wed knovrr. {•> doc tor* and tho Ladios, That Wotneu are subject to numerous diseases particu lar to their sex— such as Suppression of the Menses, Whites Painful Monthly '•Perlola.” Rheumatism of the Back and Womb. Irreg ular Meur-truation. Hemor rhage, or excessive ‘Flow,* and Erolapsus fieri or Falling of the Womb. These diseases having seldom been treated cessfully. Ths profession has sought diligently for some remedy that would enable them to treat these diseases with success At last, that remedy has been discovered by one of the most skilful physicians in ths Mtate of Geor gia. That remedy is Bradfieki’s Female Regulator, It is pure vegetable, and is put up ki Atlanta., Ga., by BRA DPI ELD Jt CO. It will purify the blu«>d and strengthen ths sys tem, relieve irritation of the kidneys, aud is a per fect specific for all the above diseases ; as certain a cure as Quinine is in Chills and Fevers. Fora history of diseases, and certificates of It# wonderful cures, the reader is referred to r.fae wrap per around the bottle. Every bottle warranted to give satisfaction or money refunded. LaGkangk, Ga., March £3. 187 U. BRAD FIELD A CO., ATLANTA GA. : Dear Sirs: I take pleasure instating that I have used for the last twenty rear* the medicine you are putting up. known as I>R. J. BRADFIKDH FEMALE REGULATOR, and consider it the tv st. combination ever gotten together for the diseases for which it is recommenced. I have been famil iar with the prescription both as a practitioner of meiciue and in domestic practice, und can hones* ly say that I consider it a booh to suffering female* aud can but hope that every lady in our whol* laud, who may be suffering in any way peculiar to their sex, maybe ablo to procure a bottle, that their suffering may not be only relieved, but that they may he restored to health and strength. With my kindest regards, 1 am, respectfully. W. B. FERRELL. hi. ». We the undersigned Druggists, take plea wore la commending to the trade Du. ,J. Biiadpield’s Pj»- malk Regulator— believing it to be a good and reliable remedy for the diseases for which he rro ommends it. W. A LANSDKLL, Atlanta Ga. PEMBERTON, WILSON, TAYLOR & CO.. Atlanta. (ieorgU. RED WINE £ FOX. Atlanta. Georgia. W. C. LAWfcHB. Atlanta, Georgia. W\ ROOT &. BON, Marietta, ucor^ta. DR. PROPHITT’si Celebrated Liver Medicine. It i« purely vegetable, and will art uoon the Lto* er and Kidney* ns promptly a* Calomel and Backs, without any danger of salivation or destruction of the bones. Parties taking this medicine need not fear get ting wet, or auy other reasonable exposure. Symptoms of Liver Di«««iw: flesdache. Dull Fating or lh* B!a«, «t« nr ■ica, h;ck or I-crvou. licsduch.-, nnit-liHs, ladt 'erHon or Drrp.p.M, Bad or Bitter Ttt.te in th. Mouth, tho »iun tut. . thick, roivh teuliug, .ud I* 1 *?“ r l '“* u 111 “"J. f’osttveuns, Melancholy Fvt us,., cramps, Cold rict, Colic, Djrmu.rv. or IB orb..’, (Sun, and Fever and Files. In fact where the Liver is out of order, you »•« Siabia to every usease that is not cootagious. Prophitt’s Liver Modiciue, if taken properly wilt a “ y di “ e!,ee reaultiu *: » It will regulate itu functions and thus cure all diseases caused by the failure of its healthy action. it has been used fora great uumb«r of year a, md has given universal satisfaction. There is no brother or son claiming to have th® T ’df recclpK - 11 iB P ut U P 1* both Powder and Fairblrn, Ga.. Sent 1. OR.O. S. PROriUTT: P * Sir : My wife has been an invalid for fifteen •ears, Doctor* all agre-d she had “Liver Dianas® ’’ In connection w ith their practice she used rarionf nd noted remedies, none of which seemed to do my good. Sometime ago I procured a bottle of our “Liver Medicine,” of your ag at Imre, C A larvcy, which being given according to direction*, tad effected a complete cure. Kvsngctfullv. A-r , GEO. L. TOMFBOX. I PROPfIITTS’S DYSENTERY COR DIAL. '* one rao,^ 4 valuable compounds now pat up tor Diarrhaa, Dybouterr, Cholera in fautum. cr Cholera Morbus. ’ I hip medicine has been in use for yp*r§ **fi •ivoa universal satisfaction. The moat delicate child may take it with im punity •n. rHOPKITT: C0YOi0T0 ”- OA.. Nov. 9, )M7. Having a severe attack of Dysentery during -ho as! summer, I was induced tonne vour Dvaentery orai.nl, and derived there-from immediate and lernianent relief. It give* me pleasure to recom uend this remedy to all who may be ao attacked, ‘elYevlng that, shonid the directions be followed, relief would surely be obtained. Trulv. Ac o. s. Sorter. PR 0 PHI XT’S PAIN- kill XT. This is the celebrated medicine that run Perry Davis' Pain Killer out of the market, wherever it was sold. Davis made Prophitt change the name from Pain Killer TOfPAIN KILL IT. For Rheumatism, Neuralgia, or pain of any kind ; t Das no equal. For Cuts, Bruises, Burn* or old Sores, it U tho best thing you cau use as a dressing. For SNAKE BITES or STINGS a? POISONOUS INSECTS, it is a perfect ANTIDOTE. It, is good for Colic, Cold Coughs,' or 80-wel Com • plaint. Itb name indicates its nature fully. It U truly DEATH to pain. Manufactured and sold by BRADFTELD £ CO., Atlauta, Ga., and for sale by all Druggists. Dooly County, Ga., April, 1857. This is to certify that I was confined to the house, and most of the time to mv bed. and suffer iny the greatest agony imaginable with Rheuma tism, tor five months, and after trying every avail able remedy, with no relief, l was cured with two bottles of Dr. O. S. Prophiu’s Anodyne Pain Kill It; each costing fifty cents only. It relieved nw almost instantly. 1 therefore recommend it in tb* highest degre** to other* suffering from similar dis ease. i can say that it is one of the finest family medicines now out, certain. Yours truly,’ FOREHAND. STATE OF GEORGIA. ) Know all mftu Fulton County, fby these presents. That I have this day. for value received, sold and transferred to BRADFiJELD & CO., tke sole right to manufacture and sell my Family Medicines, and have furnished them with the fall recipes, and have authorized the said BRADFJELD A CO., to print, or have printed, anything they may **e i>roner concerning ar.v and all of above named Msaicines. This J6tli day of June, IK7O. fbigned] O. 8. PROPHrTT. In prt!«e7ice of Thomas F. Jones, and Robert Crawford, Notary Public, (l. *.) For Sale by T. L. ANDERSON ACO. Manufactured aad for sale by BRADFIELD & CO., BROAD street, Attontn Ga., and sale by ail Drogjifct* 5. IKID—ly.