Newspaper Page Text
CHATTOOGA NEWS.
FRIDAY MORN I NG. A PRTL i.".. 188&
Pw. Sturdivant &c|]
1 o— — <
DEALERS ITT
STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES
OF EVERY KIND,
BACON,
LARD, FLOUR,
MEAL, SUGAR,
COEFEE, TEA, RICE, GRITS,
CAN FRUITS,
MAETS, RAISINS, CURRANTS,
.CITRONS, LEMONS, EXTRACTS,
BAKING POWDERS.
Also
—A FULL LINE OF
Drugs, Hardware,
Queensware, Tobacco,
Cigars; and Country-
Produce a Specialty.
CHEAP
For Cash or Barter.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
6. e! MARTIK \i. IL
Physician and Surgeon,
'TALIAFERRO, - - - - GA.
Residence at J. N. Taliaferro’s.
C.C. L.RUDICIL, M.D.,
Physician and Surgeon,
SUMMERVILLE, G-.A..
Dr. F. 11. Field,
DENTIST,
Offers his professional services to the
citizens of Chattooga county and sur
rounding country. Will visit this sec
tion frequently.
' Cl < >\ IS DJdVERSF
Attorney-at-Law,
Summerville, - - - - <-*«•
Offers his professional services to the i
citizens of Chattooga and surrounding t
counties. By close attention to whaievcv |
business may lie entrusted to him, Iwi
hopes to merit public confidence.
W. M. HENRY,
, i
Attorney-at-Law,
Summerville _ - - Georgia, }
F. W.COPELAND, JESSE G. HUNT |
LaFayette, Ga. Summerville, Ga. §
COPELAND & HUNT,!
1
Lawyers;
Summerville and LaFayette, Georgia.!
Prompt attention to all legal besinesw. .
Collecting claims a Specialty.
LESLEY SHROPSHIRE'
Attorney-at-Law,
Summerville - Georgia. >
J. M. BELLAH J
Lawyer;
Summerville - - - Georgia
JOHN TAYLOR. J. D. TAYLOR. I
TAYLOR & TAYLOR,
Lawyers;
Summarville _ - - Georgia.
* «uRFS
EeztwA*
%COYC\.
Cancer of the Tongue.
My wife, some ««.«*X*
bled with an nicer on thae incessant, causing loss
BavreenX sufferingof the two, grown
burdensome. By the ’ °s® ° lfi waa entirely
sized bottles of
rcl. red and restored to health. of t he dla-
years ago, and there has be £ n £ m iddl3 bbooks.
case. .-r- ’ -*
T;IE swift Specific Co., Drawer S,
Ist W. 28d 81., N.Y.
Local and Personal.
Prof. Loomis, of the Gazette, vis
ited Rome last week.
Seed potatoes for sale by I). M.
| White.
Johnson <t Clemmons lost a val
uable mule last Monday.
A full line of spring goods at
Taylor & Bros.
Ask Editor Loomis if it is funny
to drive a bucking mule.
Taylor & Bro. are. headquarters
for School Books.
When in town call in and give us
the news of your neighborhood.
The most stylish and best goods
at Cleghorn & Co’s.
J. X. Rush and R. 11. Bailey vis
ited Rome on business Wednesday.
We have a mule to sell or change [
for horse. J. S. Cleghorn & Co. i
The Baptist prayer.meeting will
be at 11. IL Bailey’s Thursday eve-j
ning.
Judge Maddox came home last
Saturday, returning to Rome the
following day.
Ladies Kid Gloves 25 cents al
pair—see them, at
Hollis & Hinton’s. |
Judge J. B. Hill and Col. F. AV.
Copeland, of LaFayette, were in the
village Monday.
B. L. Knox intends recovering the
Knox House with tin or metal roof |
at an early day.
No lady need go anywhere else!
to get nice Hats or Dress Goods if
she will see Cleghorn & Co.
TVe see by Grier’s Almanac that
the time is nearly here for “red
horses” to “shoal.”
Dr. Jack Bryant intends making
some additions and improvements
on his residence, soon.
Come and see our new goods at
once, before they are all sold.
Taylor & Bros.
Mr. Melvin McCollum’s twenty
days-old mule colt, which was in
town Monday is a beauty.
We have more goods than room ; j
call and get the bargains we are
offering. J. <S. Cleghorn <t Co. ,
Miss Lula Harris visited her rel-!
atives at Rome last week. She was |
accompanied by Will Hinton.
The line of Robes, both White!
; and Colored, at Cleghorn’s can not i
| be matched in price and quality.
| Joseph Abrams died last Tues- !
, day. He was a respected citizen,'
! and was aged about 65 years.
I Torchon Laces, Ribbons, Em
i broideries, etc., every style and
j price, at Hollis <fe Hinton.
Miss Julia Powell, of Summer
j ville, was the guest of Mrs. 11. P.
i Lumpkin, Monday.—Messenger.
Beyond all doubt ('leghorn & Co.
' have the finest stock of the best
(goods ever exhibited in Sumrner
-1 ville.
L. C. Cain, formerly of this coun
i ty, is now a resident of Macon, Ga.,
j •”
I where he will remain for some time.
i
Latest styles, and lowest prices
I' 1 on dry goods, shoes, hats, notions,
etc., at Thompson Hiles & Co.
“Rex”: LaFayette—Can’t we
, have a letter from you regularly?
j We would be glad to hear from you. I
I Ladies ana Misses untrimmedl
! hats, with trimmings, plumes, tips,
&c., to match, in endless variety, at
Hollis & Hinton’s.
Spring has about kicked winter
I out of her lap, and it looks as
though she is going to have a
walk over.
The liver and kidneys must be
kept in good condition. Hood’s
Sarsaparilla is a great remedy for
regulating these organs.
Our saw mill men are having all
they can do getting out timbers for
the railroad and lumber for build
ing purposet.
There are about seventy-five per
sons in Summerville subject to work
i the streets this year. Last year
I there were sixty-four.
Restaurant. —When you want
j a square meal be sure and call on j
iA. B. Nickels opposite Bailey’s
! Blacksmith Shop.
I Mr. A. R. Steele and his daugh- •
ter, Miss Mary, of Trion, were in
! town last Sunday, the guests of
I Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Branner.
FOR SALE —720 acres best tim
ber and farm land, IT miles above
Summerville. Address Clovis D..
Rivers, Summerville, Ga. l-13-3m
Littls Kate Branner gave us
a boquet of flowers Wednesday
which compare favorably with her
own fresh loveliness aid beauty,
j J. G. Tyson: Ozark, Arkansas —
I You have a host of friends who
w mid like to 1 ear from you
through the columns of the News.
j Miss May Gilmer, one of Chat
tooga’s most charming youngladies,
waS in town visiting Miss Maud
'Calhoun last Saturday and Sunday.
. It d ies seem to us that persons
■ passing in and out through the
! gates at the cemetery might shut
I them. If you have no respect for the
‘living show a little to the dead.
Miss Georgia Horton, of Menlo,
is not in good health, we are sorry
to say.
Last week Congressman Clements
introduced a claim to pay the estate
of Ephriam Liles, late of this county,
$2,506 for loss sustained during the
war.
Remember that Hollis & Hinton
keep what you want. Their stock
is complete in every department; no
better styles can be found in the
largest ci lies, and their prices are
as low as the lowest.
To the Editor of the Gazette:
Honor bright! Don’t you want to
marry mighty bad? We do; al
though several years of hard effort
has availed us nothing.
The railroad has brought in our
New Clothing and Hats. No such
stock ever been shown here. If you
will see them, we will save you mon
ey. John S. Cleghorn <fc Co.
[ Messenger:—We saw the local in
I regard to Mr. Penn in the Calhoun
Times. It was not credited. We
cheerfully pass it to your credit
now after learning it is yours by
i right.
Lum Hudgins, a minor, who is
I bound to Mrs. C. A. Hudgins, has
! left without her consent. All per
sons are notified not to hire or har
bor him under penalty of the law.
Mr. J. W. Cavender was in the
I village Tuesday. He paid out a I
■ considerable amount of money to '
: those whom he had employed to get |
■ out crossties.
I James Abrams is getting along
finely in the erection of Judge Tay-1
lor’s residence. It is fast nearing
completion, and when finished will
be one of the nicest residences in
Summerville.
We are receiving our stock of
spring goods, which will be sold as
low as the lowest. After you have
got all the prices you want, call
on us and be convinced we will not
be undersold.
Thompson Hiles & Co.
Our merchants are receiving!
! beautiful spring goods daily now.
Let every one make it a point to |
I patronize his neighbors, and thus
’ keep the money at home. It is to
'every ones interest to do this.
Dress goods, every style of white
| goods, satines, muslins, lawns, pk’s
!in fact the most complete stock, in
j the very latest designs, at prices
! that will surprise you. Price every
where else if you like, and then call
■ on us, and we will certainly sell
I you. Hollis & Hinton. |
Never buy away from home what, I
| you can get from your neighbor. If
j you have anything to sell you ex- j
pect your neighbor to buy it if he ■
needs it, and you should do'as you j
wa'nt to be done by.
Mrs. L. C. Johnson has moved to
town and will make her home with
John W. Cain. She will cut and
make dresses in the latest styles,
and will be glad to have the pat
ronage of those needing either plain
or fancy sewing.
A party of railroad men, with
wagons, scrapes, and thirty mules
passed through town last Friday.
They pitched camp at the gap in
the ridge just beyond Joe Maxey’s:
where they are now at work.
Mr. and Mrs. B. O. Henry went
I
to Bartow county last Sunday, hav
ing received a dispatch that Mr.
Rowland, of that county, the fa- |
ther of Sirs. Henry, was very sick.!
Mr. Henry returned Monday.
Already one alleged violator of!
the prohibition law has been yank- :
ed in Rome. Satterfield sold a jug ,
of whisky Saturday, received pay I
for it and delivered it Slonday, and |
as prohibition went into effect Sion- I
day a case was made against him
for it.
Misses Battie and Lillie Shrop
shire. were in the village a pirt of
Saturday and Sunday last, the
guests of Sirs. J. W. Maddox and
Miss Annie Edmondson. They have
many friends here who are always |
glad to see them.
Mrs. T. ii. Dutton, wlio.se husband is a
renter on ('apt. Joe Glenn's farm, while I
fishing lasi Wednesday afternoon on i
Chattooga river, stepped on a log which
turned over, precipitating her into the
water and she was droit ned. Two of
I her little daughters were with her, one
of whom fell in the river also, but was
rescued bv the othe-. Robert Glean re-1
i cove "cd the body of Mrs. Dutton, by div
' ing. after she had been underlbr an hour i
or two.
1). M. White has recently sold,
in three days’ time, al! of this conn- !
ty on the western side of Taylor’s !
Ridge, in’district rights, the right'
to Kearn & Noble’s Peerless Rever
sible Self-Heating Smoothing Iron, |
for near three hundred dollars, j
Pretty good three days’ work.
The town council is having done
a much needed thing in having the j
I ditch running from Lamar Knox’s
livery stable to Mr. Moyers' tannery
widened and deepened, q hat per
lion of the town the ditch traverses .
needs draining badly and the work ■
being done, if continued as it should :
be, will do this.
J. M. Clarkson’s drove of cattla, i
forty-seven in number, the hand
somest lot of beeves ever seen in
Walker, passed through LaFayette
Tuesday on their way to the sham
bles. As they are too large for the
Atlanta market, they will probably
be shipped from Chattanooga to
1 Cincinnati.—Walker C' o. Messenger.
Miss Maud Calhoun has quite a
flourish!.:g school near Foster’s
Store. She has 33 scholars, which
is a most creditable showing this
early in the season. Miss Maud is
in every way qualified to give sat
isfaction to her patrons, and the
people of that section cannot do
better than give her their undivided
support.
Some time ago a local appeared
in these columns to the effect that
Judge Bellah was becoming a poul
try and fine stock fancier. The
Judge has received several letters
from stockmen and others as the |
result of the local, one being from
Ossian Huggins, now of ilobile,
c-e>
Ala., who formerly taught school
at this place. *
I). M. White has written out and
has had a book published that is
adapt d to the sale of any kind of a
patent. Each book has fifty obli
gations for the buyer and fifty for :
the seller, and contains the sale of |
fifty patented articles, which sales
are made negotiable either with or
without the consignment of territo
ry. Price of each book fifty cents:
mailed to any address on receipt of
sixty cents.
A prominent citizen of Summer
ville, upon being asked when he
was going to send his daughter to
college, replied: “When she gets
an education at the High School
here I'm going to send her.” There
! is a great deal of meaning in tie
j answer, for it is a fact that it is at'
! intermediate schools that the young:
I acquire an education,
j Last Friday Willie Taliaferro,
aged about five years, the adopted
child of Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Tali::-1
ferro, fell backward into a large
tin boiler which was full of hot wa
terand scalded himself so badly that
he died the following Sunday morn
ing at 11 o’clock. He was buried
iat South Carolina cemetery. Rev. i
|T. IL Timmons conducted the ser
i Ira Jackson and Robert Will'mms,
I colored, who, as related in Mr. Co
: ker’s letter, have been conducting:
themselves in away to cast reproach !
upon the dignity of the State ami
the peace and well being of the oits
zens thereof, had a hearing before
Jndge Bellah Wednesday, and were
fined SIOO each, or in default of pay- i
ment thereof, to go to the chaingang :
twelve months. Up to going to
press they have not decided which
! they will do.
H amilton-Allgood.—Married on :
I LOth inst., at the residence of th ■
( bride’s mother, at Trion, A: S. Ham-
J ilton, of Rome, to Miss Maggie
! Allgood, Rev. Dr. R. B. Headden.
of Rome, officiating. Mr. Hamilton
is one of Rome’s leading business
men, and the bride is one of Chat
tooga’s fairest daughters. The'
future promises for them happiness
and prosperity and may its promi- :
ses be verified.
If the town council will brace it-1
self up, stiffen its backbone, get all
the money it can and use it judi
ciously, with the number of hands
: in addition thereto subject to s'reeti
i duty, the town can be improved du- j
ring the year so as to be the most;
I beautiful one in the State. Strang-;
I ers, and there will be hundreds <>!'!
I them here during the year, will
: spread its fame abioad, and the ■
! bread cast upon the waters (no, ♦he I
! money spent upon the streets) will
I return after a few days.
Rev. D. T. Espy, who visited La-i
■ Fayette last Thursday, says the ■
j trains are expected in that place in !
I about ten days from the date of'
' this issue. The grade is completed
to tha i
work has been done betleen there
ami Summerville. EveAulication :
is that trains will be this
place the first of July if not earlier.
Mr. Coker, in his communication;
last week, which was received too ;
i late for : üblication, says : I would
willingly discuss the question of
I “Farmers’ Clubs” with “Bill Lief,
! but do not like to tackle a “masked
I batterv.” I wish all the corres- ‘
! pondent < of the News would write
■ over their own proper names. The ;
; most part of the correspondents of
the News write very interesting
• letters. Then why hide their light
I under a bushel? Come out, gen-1
! tlemcn, and let us know who you
'are; and let us. try to help each
other along in the struggle for the
necessaries of life.
If theie arc any who are worry
i ing themselves about the way this
! paper is conducted they should re
member that perhaps one reason
yvhv we don’t do better is because
!we are worrying ourselves about
i the wav they conduct their busi
ness. I: they will let us run their
! business we will entertain their
! ouini ms in regard to what we pub
! lish, but until they do this we will
I continue as in the past to run the
! p iper a ; i do as near as we can
1 what wo conceive “to be right. We
have no hope, however, of pleasing
• everybody in this world. It is only
.' the dead who do that.
More good mules and horses can
be seen on our streets now' than for
some years past, we think. This is
one of the very best indications that
: the farmers are in a good condition
to raise good crops, and that they
are prospering. Good stock is a
sure indication of a prosperous
farmer. t
Last. Monday Captain Jos. Glenn
made application before Ordinary
Mattox for the pension allowed by
the State to disabled ex- Confeder
ates. He was wounded at Baker’s
creeK, twenty-five miles from Vicks
burg. May the 16th, 1863. lie pre- ,
[ sented as part proof of the justness ;
of his claim the bullet which struck
him and a piece of the shoulder bone ’
which was extracted from the wound,
j These he has preserved ever since.
At the Congregational Meeting
last Sunday Rev. Mr. Milner, with
out a dissenting voice, was called to
lill the pulpits of Summerville and
Alpine Presbyterian churches and
' the branch of the Summerville
church at Trion. Mr. Milner is a
conscientious, zealous and fearless i
worker for the cause of religion as
revealed by the Bible, and his
charge, knowing this, were anxious
to secure a continuation of bis ser-1
vices.
It wouldn’t be a bad thing to re-I
build the Summerville High School ■
building. The town cannot have I
i a school without a building, and I
I there is none that is suitable. The |
! trustees might purchase a building
but it would have to be repaired i
; and altered to be suitable, and all;
1 this would make it cost more than i
: a new building would, and yet not,
be adapted to the end in view. Let |
the movement for a new building
materialize.
At the County court, which con
vened Monday, Judge Bellah pre
siding, four cases were disposed of,
|as follows: The State vs. Caswell
Camp, carrying concealed weapons,
verdict, not guilty. The State vs. I
James Maxey, playing and betting. I
verdict, not guilty. The State vs. '
Mack Rounsaville, playing and bet-1
ting, verdict, not guilty. The State
vs. Thomas Maxey, firing after
nightfall within fifty yards of a
i public road, charge not sustained.
Uniform kindness and politeness
will win every time. We have
thought of it often and wondered
why it was, but until we made it
our business to see for ouis<
we were m the dark. M e nave .
reference to J. M . Pitts, the leader
of low prices, short profits and I
quick sales. Mr. Pitts treats every
one politely, sells them his goods
at close figures, has a kind word
and a smile for ail, and when you
patronize him once you will do so
again. lie buys and receives fresh
goods every week and you will find
something new everytime you go.
Rev. Mr. Milner, in his sermcn
1 last Sunday, said one man whom he |
knew had signified a willingness to |
' give $250 toward building a new i
Presbyterian church at this place,
and another would give for the I
j same purpose SSO for each member |
,of his family, which numbers five.'
With such a start as this it would i
I not be very hard to secure enough '
:to build a new church, and it will :
have to be done at no distant day, I
' as the old one is showing signs of
I decay.
I Agreeable to a notice in the soci
ety column of last week's News,
j Charles Smith and Mrs. Renallinds-
I man, both colored, were married
I last Sunday at 2 p. in. in the pres
-1 enceof several hundred friends,both
| white and colored, the marital knot
\ being tied by Rev. Mr. Nickols.
The bride, fittingly arrayed in white
I mill!, typical of gentle spring with
I its flowers, its gurgling streams and
* green fields, seemed to have regain
led her vouth, and the groom, by his
I proud and tranquil bearing, seemed
I both to realize the prize a kind fate
had given him and to be worthy of
it. Tims let it be.
Card of Thanks.
! Please permit me, through your
paper, to express my grateful
: thanks to all who so nobly assisted
iin saving me from death by fire,
I and to whom, under God, I feel that
I owe my life. May peace and joy
attend them on cr.rt.h and eternal
| life with the redeemed be theirs in
i Heaven. Kate Powell.
Ba uper Notice.
' Georgia, Chattooga County:
' All persons who expect to be
1 cared for as paupers of said county
; must present their, petition with
! j good and sufficient proof, on or by
q the first Thursday in May next,
. i otherwise they will be stricken from
, the list. Jons Ma rrox, O. C. C.
. j This April Ith, 18:-S.
■! FOR SALE—Mineral, timber and
i i farm lands. Call on or address
J Clovis D. Rivers, Summerville, Ga.
J. 11. Ragland lost Wednesday in
. I Summerville, or between here and
I Raccoon, bundle sugar, oil and can,
! 2 pounds tobacco ar il onepound gin
ger. Finder will bring to this office
I or send to Mr. Ri gland.
Chattoogaville.
News is some what scarce in this
neighborhood owing to people be
ing so busy trying to make good
use of every fair day flint comes.
Last week was a good week for the
farmers and they made good use of
it. It is raining now and has stop-1
ed all business out of doors; but
we can console ourselves by clean
ing out our stables and shucking
and shelling corn, that is if we have
it, and those that have not got it,
j can go to town and mortgage their
, cotton crop for corn and meat. So
we all will live on any way; but
will we over get back to the good
old days that we used to have be
fore mortgages came in fashion?
I see Mr. Wilson Wheeler talks
a good deal in the News of the days
when we all had plenty of corn and
wheat and then turns it off and
says that we must plant more cot
ton. As it is about the only chance
for the farmer to get out as he has
to be run, and wants to pay some
jof the back debts. If he could pay
• his old debts by planting more cot-
I ton, it would do, but my experience I
i has been that when we once fall be-
I hind then it is hard for us to* ever i
I pay up the old score and the new |
| too, and live. If we would make
| our own supplies and plant the rest
i in cotton, and use all the industry
’ and economy we could, we would
I some day be free men—out of debt.
Wheat is looking fine where it
i was sown early. The poaches are
I killed, and the early sowing of oats.
Some people have planted corn. I
[ have not heard of any cotton being
I planted yet. Observer.
_. .
Dyspepsia
Makes the lives of many people miserable, :
and often leads to self-destruction. Distress |
after eating, sour stomach, sick headache, j
heartburn, loss of appetite, a faint, “ all gone ” j
feeling, bad taste, coated tongue, and irregu- ;
larity of the bowels, aro
Distress some of the more common
After symptoms. Dyspepsia does
. not get well of itself. It
requires careful, persistent
attention, and a remedy like Hood’s Sarsa-
I parilla, which acts gently, yet surely and
efficiently. It tones the stomach anil other
organs, regulates the digestion, creates a
good appetite, and by thus Sick
overcoming the local sync - ~
toms removes the sympa- Vzl
thetic effects of the disease, |
headache, and refreshes the
•• I have been troubled with
had but little appetite, and what IS
FI 4*- distressed me, orSH
nec,i.‘ lj(tle g oo d.
burn ivitinv-'. woiMB
.:::y:lang.
I:I thin’.. w,.< ag(:r.iv:it<-.I by my hWg
which is that of a painter, and J
I more or less shut up in a Sour
room with fresh paint. Last „ .
spring I took Hood's Sarsa- wtOlTiaCn
rilla—took throe bottles. It did me an
immense amount of good. It gave mo an
appetite, and my food relished and satisfied
the craving I had previously experienced.”
Gbobge A. Page, Watertown, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists, fl; six for Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
!OO Doses One Dollar
HATE AtIDANO.
-o
It is with pleasure that I call your attention to the fact that I will
i again offer to the farmers of Chattooga County
Stohf i Ik’s Bfcs bM
Q
AND
ie Acid Phos
phates.
For two years past these goods have been used in this section and
the demand for them has steadily increased, which is sufficient recom
mendation for same.
I will be glad to make you prices, ami feel confident that I can
please von as to goods and prices if you will only see mo before you buy.
Can delivery at Rome or Hart’s Landing at Cathey’s Gap.
Thanking my friends for their liberal patronage in the past, and
' awaiting their commands, 1 am, Yours truly,
J. H. HENLEY.
STEAMBOAT OFFICE, Rome, Ga.
P. S.—E. W. Sturdivant & Co., Summerville, Ga., will take orders at
Rome prices.
——- cefcrGM canes, Wdaraiftsi ' • >
I6ABINET
1. JI-., i -lii-.LIJ- ■ LJLIi JL! I j-1L ~ ---I.IIIIM
ZhsE Dr. SALMON’S
/ HOG CHOLERA SPECIFIC!
J CHICKEN POWDER.—SHEEP POWDER. R
CATTLE POWDER.—CONDITION POWDER. J
J ( PREVENT & CURE HOC CHOLERA. j
■=• I DESTROY & PREVENT HOG LICE & WORMS- Bl
WECAN CURE CATTLE MURRAIN,TEXAS FEVER, &c. /
s, CURE CHICKEN CHOLERA & CAPES. /
I CURE SHEEP ROT, TAPE WORM, &C. /
manufactured BY the VETER! NARY MEDICINE COf /
NASHVILLE, TENN.
- !’■ I- sl.y Thompson ]ll :.i:s A <’o., Ramm ♦yS!l Ot r; a . Hom.- A TflNToh,
~ s.mm rville, Ga.—Rom. i'. 1.0r.1N son. Trion ! sos y, .>. -T ■: ion .:an i C<>.
' Tri.>n Fa--lory, <,a. llir.us. T.-.u.vi’i:sno A' Fgstbb, Taliaferro, i. -.. J. I’. IP*b
i.anu A Biio., Ilollanil's store, Va.— Khxj :ick * Kartell, • a.
„ DR. HENLEY’S _
□LEf&irON.
A Most Effective Combination.
Tills well known Tonic and Nervine is gaining
great reputationas acure for Debility, IJyspei>-
aia, and NERVOUS di.-orders. Il relieves all
languid and debilitated conditions of the sys
tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily functions,
builds up worn out Nerves ; aids digestion . re
stores impaired or lost Vitality, and
youthful strength and vigor. It isYj
taste, and used regularly braces the System against
the depressing influence of Malaria.
frlce-tI.OO l>«-r Bottle of 24 ounces.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
W. M. JOHNSON, J. R. CLEMMONS.
OLD
JOHNSON
CLEMMONS,
DEALERS ITT
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC
WINES,
BRANDIES OF ALL KINDS,
THE BF r ST RYE WHISKIES
THAT CAN BE BOUGHT,
XXXX ACME. GIBSON.
ROYAL CABINET,
MANHATTAN
CLUB,
BELLE of BOURBON,
DEXTER,
OLD FAMILY NECTAR.
The
Com TTThisky
orn 1/1/ hisky
orn I l hisky
orn T T hisky
iThey Handle is Manufactured at
OWN DISTILLERY three
from Summerville and is
and near as the best to
h where.
ts. Tobacco, < lysters,
Salmon, Crackers, '&c., in large
variety. '*
POOL and BILLIARD TABLES.
TW<> i SOUSES.
tCJ Fan M< to Cards name cover
f'-u ed with si-.-aps and samples
for 1888 sent i< your address for 10
cts 6 packs !'<•>■ 5. i ts. Address S.
j M. Holland, Temple, Georgia.