Funding for the digitization of this title was provided by R.J. Taylor, Jr. Foundation.
About The Chattooga advertiser. (Summerville, Ga.) 1871-1??? | View Entire Issue (May 24, 1872)
THECHATTOOGA ADVERTISER ~FRIDAY, MAY 24, 18727^ Church Directory. Appointments of Rev. R* F Taylor, l*»stor of tie Presbyterian Church: Ist Sabbath in each month at Walnut tlmrf. 2n*l Sabbath at Summerville. 3<i r.t Reershebst. 4th at Alpine. Appointments of Rev W. C. Dunlap.— Summerville Circuit. M. E. Church South. 1872. t'afc Hill an 1 Ami. IstSabbath and Sat urday hefore. alternating everyother month. W hen at one chnrrh on Saturday and Sun. day, preaehine at the other on Friday be fore. Tn addition to the above, there will regular services at Oak Hill on Thurs day hefore 3d Sabbath' and at Ami on Friday. Reeular appointments at Broom Town and Ma--edonia are on the same plan, 2nd Nahbath. Friday and .Saturday hefore.— Alan, at Maced nia Thursday and If T. Friday before 4th .S’ahbath in earh month. Trion Factory—Tn New Church, 3d Sab lath in each month at 11 a. tu. .Summerville, 4th Sabbath in each month at II a. tn. —and in each month that has five Sundays preaching and Church Con ference on Saturday before 4th Sabha h. Ewing’s Chapel, every sth Sabbath and Saturday before. Also. Thursday before 2nd .Sabbath and Saturday hefore 4th -ex cept when there is a fifth Sunday, there will Is l no service on Saturdav before 4th Sabbath- Church Conference and Sacrament of Our Lord s Supper quarterly at all the churches- Appointments of llcv. V. A. Bell. Pas tor ip charge of the Baptist Church, Sum ut -rville: Ist Sabbath. .Sulphur Springs. Dekalb county, Ala. sd. Nummerville- 4th, Now Hope, Rroomtown, Ga. 2nd. Trion Fac tory. The Primitive Baptist Church at Mcl- | ville is supplied by Elder Kinchin Rainbo Meeting .lays, first Sunday in each month and Saturday before. The Primitive Baptist Chlireh at Em maus is supplied by Elder F. M. Casey.— Aeeting days, fourth Sunday in each month and Saturday before. Appointments of Rev- W.T. Russell: La- F lycttc, 3d Sabbath and .Saturday before at 11 a. in Trion Factory, 4th Sabhi.th am! Saturday before at 11 a. ni. Chicka n auga. Catoosa county, Ist Sabbath and S iturday before at II a. m. 2nd and sth Sibbaths in each month, mission work in 0->Osa Association. Rev, Janies G. Larne preaches in the Presbyterian church in LaFayette the 2nd and 4th Sabbaths in each month. '""r ' Appointments of Rev. A. Odom: Ist Saturday at 11 a. m. at Zoar. Ist Sunday at LaFayette, 11 a. m. 2nd Sabbath and Saturday hefore Mount Carmel, at 11 a. m. and Wesley Chapel at 3p. m. 3d Sunday and.Saturday before at Salem, 11 a m. 4th Sab -1 ath and Saturday before at Trinity, 11a. m. Appointments of Rer. W. R. Bran ham, Preacher in charge of Subligna Circuit: . Bethel, Ist Sabbath, 11 a. m.— Pleasant Hill, Walker county. 2nd Sabbath, lit*, in. SuhUgna hath, 11 a. tn. Concord, 4th Sabbath 11a.m. Salem. Whitfield county, 4th Sabbath, 3 h p. m. We shall Ik* obliged to the M lu-lers i-t this eouu y and Walker to send in a list of their appoint merits, wbieh will apjiear reg ularly in each issue. W. I>. HOYT A- CO., V h -lesale P-mr gista. No. 43 Broad Street. Rome, Ga.. keep co "stantlv on hand a full supply of Clover and Gras-seeds of allkinds. White Lead. Window (’.lass and Oils of all kinds. Orders left with lion. Sann\ol Hawkins, at Summerville, Ga , will receive prompt attention at the lowest cash prices. Liver Compound is warranted to curb Liver Complaints, Dys pepsia, Coustipittiort. Billious Colie, Fe male Irregularities, and all irregularities of the stoma/ h and bowels. For sale by Bran ner\y Brother, .Vummerville, Ga. jkrtJs-6m lCotuiwavillp A Itrothcr. No. 115 Broad Street Rome Oa..’havingre moved to their large and commodious build ing. formerly occupied by H T. Hargrove, beg leave to inform their friends and the public generally, that they have, on hand the largest stock of Groceries ever offered in this market by them, and arc prepared to offer the greatest inducements to the citizens of Chattooga and Walker counties and Cherokee county Alabama. Givens a call and we feel sure we can give entire aatisfaetion. Thankful for the liberal pat ronage heretofore given them they solicit a continuance. april!2-tf Parties in arrears for the ADVER TISER will please arrange to settle. Aa large clubs are forming in this •ounty and Walker and Cherokee county Alabama for the Advertiser we take this occasion to make the fol lowing liberal proposition: To the largest club of new cash iubscribers, over fifteen, sent us by the 20th day of May we will furnish Three copies free for twelve months to the destitute families in the neigh borhood of said club. Those getting np the club to designate the families to whom the papers shall be sent. To clubs of 10 or more the paper will be sent at $1,50 per annum. This is a fair and liberal proposition. Let; us not forget the needy who are not able to subscribe. Now, let all go to werk, and we shall promptly report who has been most successful. B®*Correspondents and exchanges will please direct via Home, as we have now a tri-weekly on that route ! and only a semi.weekly to C'hatta nooga. “Beck at the Farm,” an absorbing Home Story, bv Neil Forrest, appears j in Demovest's Monthly for June, with i the usual and full display of reliable Fashions in all the!” details: also an elegant portrait of the Editor. W. Jennings Deinorest, in his sanctum, with a spicy biography, by Jennie- THE CHATTOOGA ADVERTISER; SUMMERVILLE, GA., MAY 24, 1872. June. . A splendid array of other novelties both useful and entertaining. 83 per year, with a splendid chrome as a premium. Published at 838 Broadway, New York. Demorest’s Young America for June, is on otr table; it is budget full of enuf Moment of the right stamp for u • juveniles. “Miee at P!av,’’ by Neil Forrest, and ‘‘Just My Luck,” are continued and become more interesting. 81 per year; or tiith a valuable premium, 81,50. — Published at 838 Broadway, New \ork. Every boy and girl should have this valuable juvenile magazine. When the smallpox gets hold of ei ■ ther one of a pair of lovers look out for romance and agony. The papers are telling of a Chicago girl who very i recklessly flew to the bedside of her I smallpox stricken lover and insisted upon nursing him, regardless of dan ‘ ger to herself. It was a severe case, but she was unceasing in her devo tion. and principally through her care i and skill the patient recovered. Soon she herself fell a victim to the com plexion-destroyer monster, and al though she survived the attack, at its dose the beautiful pink and white of her fair face had flown forever, and Iroin being the prettiest girl in Chi cago she be came one of the plainest, i Her lover had attended her through her illness, but when he saw how fear fully she was changed his love for her departed, and when the marriage day drew near he refused to fulfill his part of the contract. She took the refusal very calmly; no reproaches came from the once pretty mouth which had lost its prettiness in saving the ungrateful one from death ; her cheek, which the tell tale blood used so often to tinge with rosy red, retained its color, and she married an octogenarian worth $500,000. — Walton Journal. “Fortune favors the brave.” After being So badly treated she ought to have married a million and gotten a man of proper age. But we feel sure she will be “a great darling” with the old man she has married for the re mainder of his sojourn on earth.— Her first lover we predict will always vote the radical ticket, and if ever he marries he ought to fall into the hands of some “woman’s rights” shrew, who will make him sigh for any epidemic which will relieve him from his posi tion as a “hen peeked husband.”— [Ei> Advertiser. Our First Female Lawyer, and a Colored One at That.—Yester day afterdoon, Miss Charlotte E. Ray, ■ ! > produce ok the Law College of Howard University, made her appear ance in the clerk's office of the Su preme Court of the District. Mr. Meigs. Jr., ever courteous and ob liging to ad visitors, politely reques ted to know her business, whereupon she thrust into his hand her diploma. Mr. Meigs read it with puzzled ex pression of countenance, and in a kind of dazed manner took up the Testa ment and duly administered to Miss- Charlotte, who is a dusky and intelli gent looking mulatto, the oath to sup port the Constitution of the United States, not to defraud her clients, and not to talk too much. Miss Charlotte afterwards was furnished with the necessary eertficate, after which she went ori her way rejoiceing as a full fledged “limb of the law.”— Washing ' ton Patriot. The North Pole Expedition-—News From the Polaris at Disco A letter from Newfoundland gives intelligence of the United States Arc tic exploring expedition, under Capi tain Hall, recieved by the Danish brig Meerbek, from Disco, Greenland.— On February 28th the exploring steam er Polaris put into Disco for fresh provisions. On the Bth of that month she had encountered heavy weather, and run upon ice snags on the peaks of icebergs imbeded in sand or mud. The Polaris was so damaged that she was only kept afloat by the united exertions of all hands at the pump, and when she reached Disco the com pany were so exhausted that another day at sea must have compelled them to abandon the vessel. The log of the Polaris contained many strange discoveries, which led to the convic tion that in the extreme and undiscov ered north there is, at times, a genial atmosphere and open sea. Plants were detected in the ice which are indigenous to southern climates, and the examination of a floating stick of wood, found on Saturday, January 13th, proved it to be a limb of some huge birch. The most important clue to the existence of a polar passage is the fact of the crew of the Polaris having seen, followed and killed a white whale having in one of its fins a harpoon similar to those used in the South Pacific ; and this happened in a region where, as Captain Hall says, “the sail of an American or European vessel had never been given to the wind before.” In May Captain Hall hopes to make a clear passage to the undiscovered pule.— Macon Tele graph. Judge John Baker, of Broomtown alley, in this county, paid us a very pleasant visit on last Wednesday.— He will be 86 years old next Decern’ her. He Dan intelligent, affable gen tleman and we do not remember ever I to have met with a gentleman of his ! a g e whose memory is so remarkably preserved. He mentions occurrences ! which took place when he was hut 3 jor 4 years old, when Indian troubles were common in many sections of this State. He served as Justice of the Peace for 62 yeats. We are glad to see that time has dealt so gentlv with him. He is still industrious and en terprising, and in politics an unswerv ing Democrat. May his valuable life be spared for many years. A gentleman who has been a sub scriber to this paper for some time called at our office a few days ago to give notice that his paper must he dis continued. and urged a< a reason that he seldom received it for several weeks after it was issued, and when it finally found its way to him it was really worn out from repeated perusals. This is flagrant injustice to publishers of newspapers, this habit of loaning them out at Post Offices. These news paper borrowers at Post Offices are a terrible plague. They are “of all men” most detested by editors and publishers. We testify to what we know when we say that this paper is mailed as carefully as any published south of New York, and we appeal to Post Masters to give us a fair show. When those prowling borrowers pro pose perusing a number of this paper sent to any of our subscribers at your office become our agent and get them to subscribe at once, but don’t fail to make them pay in advance. For the present we shall not mention the Office where this gentleman has been so badly treated—but if we hear from him a gain that there is no improvement the name of the office must come. We failed to mention for want of spac in our last issue that Mr. Iloge Gaddess, of this county, hadT>rought us a number of stalks of cotton with six leaves. This was nearly two weeks ago, and it was by far the best we have seen or heard of in this part of the State, and expect the fine rains with which wc have been blessed recently have caused it to keep its distance. Mr. Anderson Lawrence has sent us some mineral specimens which lie found in Dirt Town Valley. As yet we find it difficult upon their true chanwtor mul worth. We* shall be obliged to our friends to bring or send ns specimens of coal, iron, Ac., found in different parts of this county and Walker. If precious metals should be discovered, bo certain *o send speci. mens of that also. During the sum mer and fall we expect a number of land buyers will visit this part of the State and we shall he glad to have a cabinet of minerals arranged for their inspection. It will also he a matter of interest to many of our own citi zens. In the coming Presidential canvass there will be 357 electoral votes cast. Necessary to a choice, 179. The New York Sun. —The pros pectus of this leading and racy jour nal appears in our columns thismarn ing. The Sun is always filled with interesting reading. It has an able corps of editors and correspondents who always succeed in filling its col umns with the latest and most impor tant news. Asa campaign paster it would be difficult to find one surpass ing it. M hilst advocating the elec tion of Greeley and Brown its record will be fair in its notice of other can didates. Head the Prospectus care fully and see on what accommodating terms it is published. An important notice of the Inter nal Revenue Collector appears in our columns this morning. He will be in Summerville on the 3d and 4th of June next. Let those interested pre pare to meet him. When you visit Rome and find it necessary to purchase Books and Sta tionery call on A. S. Patrick, who sells at Publisher’s prices and makes a liberal discount to teachers and mer chants. Ilis stock is large and well selected. Remember Planner & Brother have Dr. R. V. Mitchell’s Family Medi cines for sale. They have given uni versal satisfaction wherever they have been used. His Diarrhoea Cordial) Neuralgia Medicine, Remedy for Chills, Pile Ointment, Cough Medi cine, Worm Svrup, Mother’s Sooth ing Syrup, and other valuable reme dies are finding an increased sale wherever they have been introduced. Call and get a supply. Ihe New York Demonracy arc in clined to endorse fully the nomination of Greeley and Brown. Cartersvillc must be decorated with , a splendid specimen of jail architec | ture, since the Express has occasion | to sing: I n ith the handle of a spoon, And a ten-penny nail, A prisoner last week Escaped from our jail. [Sun. Congress will adjourn on the ond of June. A recent fire in Yeddo, Japan, left 30,000 people without shelter. Ciiattooua County Still Ahead! —Mr. Thomas Dickson will commence his wheat harvest in the next few days. It is of fine quality and will yield heavily. This is the earliest harvesting we have heard of. We hope he will lose no time in having it mauufactered in to flour. We are ready and willing to test some new flour and give our opinion of it “free, gratis and for nothing.” About M arrying. Forty years ago at)looming young girl of sixteen married an old man of sixty for his money, expecting that Ihe would soon die and leave her a I | wealthy young widow, Last week j l the lady died at the respectable am; I jof fifty-six, leaving a husband aged one hundred, and four children to mourn her loss. The above is going the rounds of the press as a “sad mistake.” Sad, why sad? We see nothing sad about it. The man at the time of his mar riage was not such an old man. Ma ny older men have married. Last year a man ninety-two years old was married in Florida, and he was so fat that ho couldn’t pull his marriage li cense out of his breeches pocket, and it had to he cut out with the bride’s scissors before the marriage could be perfected. As for the young girl of sixteen who married a man of sixty, the as sumption that she did so for his mon ey is purely gratuitous. No woman marries for money ; and if this one did marry for money she got forty years of comfort and four children.— Was there any “mistake” in that? True, she vjas not left a wealthy young widow. ,But if she expected to kill off a man of sixty-sitnply by marrying him, she w as a great goose, never read her Bible, and knew nothing of the history of Solomon, No; women do hot marry for money or wed with murderous intent. We go further and say that women marry solely out of compassion. Motives of a selfish or mercenary nature never actuate them. f-;»* • give all to get nothing. SiYr-r-yTrt,.d■ what is more pit iaole than ail old man ? Women ought to injury old men and none Other. VV hat, earthly use has a young man for a wife ; what good can she do 1 1 tin ? lie don’t need her. Hu can drink whiskey, smoke cigars, ride horses, play curjLj, sit up all night, fly around generally, jump, run, wiuk,.swan, play on the aecordeou, eat what he pleases, wear fancy clothes, tight boots, has got rio corns, no asth ma, rheumatism, is not bald or hip shot, wears no spectacles, can sleep in damp sheets, and go to the theatre and join the masons, fish, hunt, fight duels, travel, play billiards, part his hair in the middle, and enjoy himself in every conceivable way. To such a man a wife, especially a young wife, is a superfluity. An old wife, who would act as a mother and guardian to him might be of service to him. But when a man is in the sere, spavined, wheezy, purblind, broken down, used up and played out, then he really needs a wife, and a young, able-bodied one to take care of him, irritate his scalp with a fine-tooth comb and smooth his pathway to the tomb. And he ought to he able to pay handsomely for these services. As woman’s life is one of self sacrifice, that most beautiful and touching trait in her character should be illustrated, brought out and developed. This can best be done by marrying an ancient and dilapidated man.' The “sad mist take” is in marrying young men. It ought never to be done.— The Char leston Daily News. Masonry.-— Benjamin Franklin spoke thus of Free Masonry: “I ad mit it has secrets. It has secrets pe* ceuliar to itself, hut what do these seerets consist!? They consist of signs and tokens, which serve as tos titnonals of character an I nuafifica tioris, which are conferred after due course of instruction ami examination. I hey speak a universal language and are a passport to the support and at tention of the world They cannot be so 'long its memory retains its pow er. Let the possesor be expatriated, ship-wrecked or imprisoyjpd; let him he stripped of everything he has in the world, still these credentials re main. and are available for us as circuit.- stances n1 ay require. The good effects they have produced arc established by the incontestable fact of historv.” A. S. PATRICK, HOOK SELL Kit, ST A 71 ONER, GENERAL NEWS REA LEE Nit. .-Vi Broad .Street. Rome, fra. —o— r Sell till Books at. strictly Publisher’s Bates, witli lilsral discount to Teachers and Merchant-, and Receive Subscriptions lor all Periodicals. G uarautcpjnt' Prompt Delivery. man h23lr. Are EX'nor-.SEp and prescribed by rnor ** lea -ling Physicians that any other Tonic or stimulant now in use. They are A SURE PREVENTIVE, For Fever and Ague. Intermitten's. Bil liou.snesjj suitl all disorders uvisijijy from mu larious causes. They are highly recommen ded as an antv-dysiieptie, ami in eases of indigestion are invaluable. As an apetizer and reeuperant, and in eases of general de bility they have never in a .single instance tailed in producing the most happy results. They are particularly BENEFICIAL TO FEMALES. (strength: I'imijr 1 'imijr the body, invigorating the mind, and giving tone and elaUicitv to tlui wh do system. The Home Bitters are com pounded with the greatest of cave, ami no tonic stimulant has ever before been offered to the public so pleasant to the taste and at the same time combining so many reme dial agents endorsed by the medical frater nity as the best known to the Pharmaco poeia. It costs but little to give them a fair trial, and Every Family Should Have a Bottle. No preparation in the world can produce so many unqualified endorsements by phy sicians of the very highest standing in their profession. Endorsed also by the Clergy and the lead ing denominational papers. Rev. Win R Babcock, the oldest Metho dist minister in St. Louis, says the Home Bitters were most grateful in contributing in the restoration of my strength, and’an increase of appetite. Osborn, Mo., June 25, 1871. Persons greatly debilitated, as I have been, and who require a tonic or stimulant, need seek for nothing better than the Home Bitters. S W COPE, Presiding Eld t, M E Church. Plattslmrg District. Ignited States Marine Hospital 1 St. Louis, Mo., Oot. 8, 1870. j James A Jackson & Co.—l have exam ined the formula for making the “Home Stomach Bitters,’ and used them in this hospital the last four months. 1 consider them the most valuable tonic and stimu lant now in use. S M MELOIIER, resi dent Physician in charge U S Marine Hos pital. James A Jackson & Co.—Gentlemen: As you have communicated to the medical profession the recipe of the “Home Bit ters, it cannot, therefore be considered as a patent medicine, no patent having been taken for it. We have examined the for tuula for making the “Home Bitters,” and unhesitatingly say the combination is one o! rare excellence, all the articles used in tte composition are the. best of the class to which tlmy belong, being highly tonic, stim ulant, stomach \ earminitivc. and slightly laxative.. The mode of preparing them is strictly in accordance with the rules of pharma -v. Having use I them In our pri vate practice, we take pleasure in recoins mni ling them to ail persons desirous of taking Bitters, us being the best tonic and stimulant now offered to the public. I'll amc G jhiRTEn, Professor Obstetrics and Diseases of Wo men, College of Physicians, and late member Board of Health. L C Bojsmnikkk. Prof, of Ob stetrics and Diseases of Women, St* Louis Med College. Drake M -dowel!, M l>, Late Pres’t Mo Medical College. E A Clarke, M I), ProfWgery, Mo, Medical College and late resident Physician city Hospital, St Louis Missouri. Herbert Primm, Prof Prnfljcal Pharmacy, St Louis college of Pharmacy. J C White-hill, Ed .Medical Archives. Alf lleaeoek, M D Dr CV F Lunwig, C Geriek, M I). » Grata Moses M I) C A Ware, M (>, W A Wilcox, M D lEminent Physicians Os Chicago. The formula for the Home Bitters lias been submitted to us, and we believe them to be the best tonic and stimulant for gen eral use now offered to the public. J B Walker, MD, II Woodbury MD, ThosT Ellis, “ “ RLudlam ' “ “ Eminent Physicians in Cincinnati. No other Bitters have ever been offered to the public embracing so many valuable remedial agents. J L Vat,tier, MD, 0 W Biegler, M D J J Quinn, “ “ G K Tayior, “ “ Eminent Physicians in Memphis. The Home Bi tters are an invaluable reins edy for indigestion and diseases arising from malarial causes, 0 B Thornton, MD, Paul Otey. M D II W Purnell, “ “ Jos E Lynch “ “ tfe?" For sale by all druggists and grocers. JAMES A. JACKSON & CO. Proprietors. Labratory 105 and 107, Second St- St. Louis Missouri. *5 AI, Ei» tS ST ORE —Asm— Wagon Yard, —AT— OOSTANAULA BRIDGE, ROME , Pry Hoods, Groeerie and other articles, too numerous to mention, nre constantly , kept on hand, and sold at a reasonable per | '“ ,L !Haroh23lOin. ' NOTIC I :! fjWlh undersigned begs leave to inform i I the citizens of Chattooga emintv that I he has a Blacksmith Shop a: S.-rugg's* Mill, 1 where he is prepared todo Plantation work, ! Iron Wagons and /biggies, and all other work in best style and promptly executed. He solicits the patronage of the. public. '] with the assurance that he eao give them '■ entire satisfaction. p- K. ROGERS, i apt'l2-tfti g FORGO), Chattooga County. \\ hbrear. John M Johnson makes ao i filiation for letters of Administ ration niton the estate of James Johnson, deceased.- This js therefore to cite and admonish all. and singular those concerned, to be and ap pear at my oflioe within the time pro eribed h.v law to show cause, if any they have, why said letters should not r>e era n ted Given under ntv hand this April IRrh JK7'> apt 10 30d J. R. BILL Ordinalv." | GREAT ATTRACTION In Sutnmsrviiie! III! Bravxer & Brother take this method of informing their friends and the public generally that, notwithstanding the “hard times,” we will still Ik? found at the Large Brick Building on the corner with oar usu ally large stock of jSPRIXG AM) SIMMER GIBS. Consisting of Eadicw IR'fxs Goods, H ATS, RIBBONS, LACES, &C. | Latest fashions and most approved styles. Also a well selected stock of jumigiin muisiimi coons. OUlt STOCK OF j Groceries. Hardware, Queen -rare. ! Hats, Hoots, Shoes. Bridles. Sallies. Collars. Drugs and .1/ -divines Is complete, and are constantly in receipt of new supplies. \ on will do well to call and examine our stock before pnrcha-iiig elsewhere, as wc do not e insider h any trouble to exhibit mil- Goods, hut «ill take pleasure in so do ing, and feed that Our Prices will compare favorably with any House in North Georgia. We take in Exchange for Goods Nags, rnrs, and Country Produce generally, for which we pay the highest market price. thankful for past patronage, we shall do all in our power to merit a continuance of the same- aprl 2-tod OUR Spring Stock Is now in Store; embracing every thing usually kept in the Dry Goods line. In LADIES DRESS GOODS our stock is the largest ever offered in this market. Consisting in part of Striped and Checked Percals, Striped and Printed, White and Colored Peques, Checked and Plaid Gingh atns. Muslins, Or gandies, Striped, Checked, Plaid and Embroidered Gren adines, Striped, Checked and Fancy J a pen esc, W hite and Colored Lawns British Cloth, Chalies, White and Colored De laihes, Alpacas, Bom bazines, Blue, Green, Pink and Black Ja panese Silk Robes. Ranging in price from 15 cents per yard up. Our Stock of ILITS, BOOTS AND SHOES, BK.tpy ,1/ADE CLOTHING, LADIE'S HATS AND BONNE IW, Is full and complete, embracing many new and novel styles, from the lowest price to the finest. A I*'nil Assortment of Hardware, Cutlery, Saddlery, Queen s Ware, Double, and Single barreled Shot Gune, Jhjles, Stationery, Groceries, Virginia Leaf, Smoking and Chewing Tobacco, Drugs, Medicines, Paints, Oils, ,fr. Our Stock was purchased witli CASH at lowest possible prices, and we flatter ourselves that we calf sell all first-class goods as cheap as any other House in North Georgia. Thankful for past favors, we will guarantee to our friends and the pub lic generally satisfaction in all future transactions. All we ask is a fair trial. Come and see for yourselves. Respectfully, CLEGHORN, BASS & CO. apl4tf Newsy, Reliable, Spicy, Cheap! H >» il v Commercial. Read 1 l'j’VTl! Read! Read! Read! Read! I Wf. will furnish the D.vit.v Oommer- I ( lAi. y, times n week tu parties living along ; l.ltc line of the tri-weekly mail route at $5,00 a year. j We nail attention to the fact that the j( o.MMEItt iAi, i. the only paper in Rome lhat. furnishes the TEL EG RAP FI TC NEWS AX D MAR KETS FROM ALL I CHITS OF THE EaRTII ! | Telegrrphic correspondents in every Commercial center, and daily reports (it ; the movements of the markets. The-e re ports ate received at noon and midnight. ‘ the inidiiightedition will he mailed to Swu ! mcrville. ()tir Telegraphic eo’umns epitomize the history of the world in a few bright flashes of lightning. The local news of the city is carefully dished tin every day, and every important, event duly chronicled. Address Grady A’ Fhankt.ix, Commercial Radding, Route. Georgia. Now is the time to subscribes >r the Ad vertiser The Presidential campaign will h* an exciting one. and every man should keep himself pertod. R R R Rinwirs RRinVKELIRP CURES THE WORST PAINS In From One to Twenty Minutes AOT OA K HOUR - after reading this advertisement need anv one SUFFER WITH PAIN RADWAY S READY RELIEF IS A CURE FOR EVERY PAIN. It was the first and is T lit* Only P.’iin llemcdv that instantly stops the most excruciating pain?, allays Inflammations, and cures Con gestions, whether of the Lungs, Stomach, Dowels, or other glands or organs, by on* application. IN FKOM OXfi TO TWENTY MINUTES, j no matter how violent or excruciatin' l * th* pain the RHEUMATIC. Red-ridden’ In firm. Crippled, Nervous, Neuralgic, ~ prostrated with disease tnav suffer iWWW’S HEADY HEIISF WILL AFFORD INSTANT EASE. Inflamatiou of the Kidneys. Inflaiiiatioii of the Blad ler. Inflamation of the Bowels. r „. . Congestion of tbs Lutiga. Sore Throat, Difficult Breathing. It . „ Palpitation of the Heart. Hysterics, Croup, Diptheria, Headache, Toothache, Cold Chill., hmri'b ut'" WieUm,UiSm ’, The application of the Ready Relief <o the part or pin ts where the pain or diffi eultv exists will afford ease and comfort. I wenty drops in half a tumbler of water will in a few moments cure Cramps, Spasms, Sour Stomach, Heartburn. Sick Headache, Diarrhea, Dysentery, Colic. Wind in ttie Bowels, and all INTERNAL PAINS. Travelers should always carry a bottie o Kadway’s Ready Reuef with them. A lew drops in water will prevent sickness or pains from change of water. It is better than French Brandy or Bitters as a stimu lant, FEVER A \ 7> AGUE. I’LI LR AND AGUE cured for fifty cents. I hero is not a remedial agent in tins world that will euro Fever and Ague, and all other Malarious, Bilans, Scarlet, lyphoid Yellow, and other Fevers (aided ,(V 'C\I *V\ A V S PILLS) so quick as It AD WA\ S READY RELIEF. Fifty cent, per bottle. Health! Beauty!! ST tv?u7 i'if’ PTTi!,,; mill blood- N BEASEOFFLKSH AND Weiglit.-- CLLAR SKIN AND BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION SECURED TO ALL. T3 r. Tfarhvav’s SMSUMIIILID RMMT HAS MADE THE MOST ASTONISH ING CUKES : SO QUICK, so R IB ID ABETHE CHANGESTHE BODY I J NDEHGOKS. IJNDEB THE INFLIJ hNCKOFTIIIM TRULY WONDER FUL MEDICINE THAT Every Day an increase In Hesh and Weight is Seen and Felt. The fiireat ISlood Purifier. Every drop °f the Sarsaparillian Resolv ent communicates through the Blood, Sweat, I rine. and other fluids and juice* or 'the system the vigor of lift, for it re pairs the wastes of the body with new and sound material. Scrofula,' syphilis, Con sumption, Glandular disease, Ulcers in the throat, Mouth, Tuuiui>, Nodes in the Glands and other parts of the system, Sore Eyes, strumorous discharges from the Ears, and the worst forms of Skin diseases. Eruptions. Fever sores, scald Head, Ring Worm, Salt Rheutn, Erysipelas. Acne, Black spots. Worms in the Flesh, Tumors, Cancers in the \\ omb, and all weakening and painful discharges, Night sweats. Loss sperm and all wastes of the life principle, are within the curative range of this won der of Modern Chemistry, and a few day* use will prove to any person using it for either of these forms of disease its potent power to cure them. If the patient, daily becoming reduced by the wastes and decomposition that is cont inually progressing, succeeds in arres-t mg these wastes, and repairs the same with new material made from healthy blood— and this the Sarsaparillian will and doe* secure—a cure is certain: for when one* this remedy commences its work of purifi cation, and succeeds in diminishing the loss of wastes, its repairs will be rapid, and everyday the patient will feel himself growing better and stronger, the food di gest mg better, appetite improving, and flesh and weight increasing. Not only does the .Sarsaparillian Resolv ent exec! all known remedial agents in the cure of Chronic, scrofulous, Constitutional and skin diseases ; but. it is the only posi tive cure for Kidney and Bladder Complaints, Urinary, and Womb diseases. Gravel, Dia betes, Dropsy, stoppage of Water, Incon tinence of Urine, Bright’s Disease, Albu minuria, and in all cases where there are brick-dust deposits, or the water is thicks cloudy, mixed with substances like the white of an egg, or threads like white silk, or there is a morbid, dark billious appear ance. and white bone-dust deposits, and wnett there is a pricking, burning sensation when passing water, and pain in the small of the back and along the loins. DR. RAD WAY’S Perfect Purgative Pills. Perfectly tasteless, elegantlv coated with sweet gum, purge, regulate, purify, cleat.se, and strengthen. Rad way's Pills, for the ■"urc of all disorders of the stomach, Liver Bowl . Kidneys, Bladder. Nervous Dig. oa o . Headache, Constipation, Costiveness In.ltgesuon, Dyspepsia, Biiliousness, Bib Items Fever, Inflammation of the Bowels, Piles, and all Derangements of the Inter nal. Viscera. Warranted to effect a posi tive cure. Purely \ egetable, containing no mercury, minerals, or deleterious drugs Observe the following symptoms ro suiting from Disorders of the Digestive Organs: ! Constipation. Inward Piles, Fullness ol the Blood in the Head, Acidity of thv stomach, Nausea, Heartburn, Disgust ol l'ood, lull ness or Weight in the stomach sour Eructations, sinking or Fluttering at the pit of the stomach, swimming of tits Head, Hurried and Difficult Breathing. A few doses of RAHWAY'S PULLS iviiJ free the s; steal from all the ahovo nimod disorders. Price, 23 cents per Box, Sold 1 v Druggists. Head “FALSE AND TRUE." Send mic letter-stamp to RADWAY & CO. .V>. \\ aiTftn 8 tree", Cor. ol' Church Street, aNuw x ovk. jubT-lv F h. KIRBY, xYttO lU’.V at IjMAV, At MMKRYILLE, GA, Pae.h c m th*> v-mru of Chattooga .'Unoutciitig f .tnu.A'.. fl'ti>9.|y