The Dalton argus. (Dalton, Ga.) 18??-????, July 22, 1882, Image 2

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*— , . . LIT. IBnltcrn -■*• —... .- IWW n'„^,„.. . ZL.' 'Ll\'* r ~ r ~ * r " ,, .’.-~- rr "* "T H. A. IIIIENCH, Kclltor and Proprietor. SATURDAY, JULY 22, 1882. LVCIDS J. GAkTRtXL Is n name an familiar to our readers, as that nf any son which has ever honored the Empire State of the south. He is a man of the people, and every time of his h-sart is strung in harmonious sympathy with them. He is a good man, a capa ble man, a suecesshi! man, a firm man, without the guile of deception about him, and as free from fawning hypocracy as true manhood would demand. We be lieve, gentle reader, that he will be. the next Governor of Georgia. Let uh vote fur him. THK DEMOCRATIC COX VEN FION. The Argi h took in the State Conven tion, at Atlanta, Wednesday and Tliura day. Sparring Ixrtween the Bacon ami Stephens delegates commenced with the beginning, ami before adjournment on the afternoon of the first day, with the precedent of a great many new era < on fusion a, and a practice in extravaganza necessary to the effort of daebin; them with justice, we feel now, that there baa been more possibilitiex in heaven and earth than our wildest philosophy had dreampt of. There is, however, a religions server which periodically lifts a certain element of Southern citizenry into tin' frenzied realms of the unntter.i- We that we might draw upon as a wood cut illustration. It was simply n howl ing, hooting, hissing in >b,and doubtless, would have gone from bad to worse, had not Col. Bacon, in a spirit of harmony, withdrawn his name before the next morning. All but some forty votes then went to Stephens, for governor. Tom Hardeman got a two-third vote over Barnes, Carlton and Dabney for con gress-at-large. W, C. Glenn’s name was withdrawn in a neat little speech by Col. Hhumale, and Whitfield and Murray de clared for Hardeman. Tire convention could have done but one thing that would have tickled the Akgcs more than the result of its labors —if Bacon had net withdrawn it would have split. At last the causes of inde pendentism have been recognized, and its time-honored patron endorsed and exalted. Liberalism, the right of speech and honest suffrage, is acquiesced in by dominant Georgia—the master hand of Joseph E. Brown, first to act in war and in peace, with prophetic judgment, gath ers the w avering children of the lost tribe and leads to a place of promise. Satis fied? Why, what more could wea.sk? Indepentism has overgrown itself, and all we have is to select between the bril liant new convert of the mountains, Lu cius J. Gartrell, or the grand old hero <>f a half dozen “tote my own skillet” cam paigns, resting quietly and calmly in the consolation that victory is ours, whether it comes, dipped in the dews ol the sea, or ladened with the fragrance of mountain freshness. Ta, ta. The convention was handsomely man agsd t after all the racket. The old state officers were nominated by acclamation. Dissension reigns all along the line. The democratic executive committee, of Bartow county, met a few days ago, and appointed a new date for a county con vention, to nominate a state senator, de claring, under the following resolution— in face of a nomination already made— the grievance: Whereas, said proceedings were bois terous, illegal ami v ulemocratic, s > much so that many good citizens left in disgust without voting at all, and many persons not qualified to vote under the laws of Georgia, and republicans voted, etc. irthOuery: li the senatorial nomination laeksni a matter of choice, what about 'ei'm f action of the meeting, which is un vo’,ll,'stioned ? ind at ■arlv twiMoNis.M is as aggressive as ever to iii- v s missionaries are quite as busy in hike \V eonver bi as at any time within a< r am ten years. They expect to ro ellow, ujjope within this year te tasit 15,000 cm.' To those who ■r (We e ver seen a Mormon missionary it o°a wonder how these converts are en- Oil • Mrs. Lincoln, widow of the late Presi dent, died in Springfield 111., July 16. She had been ill for a long time. A few days ago she grow worse. Saturday evening site smTered a shock of paraly sis, ami from that time lay in a coma tose stato till she died. Dr. Atticus Haygood, president of Em ory college, in reply to a letter asking why he declined the Bishop's robe, said : “When I came to Oxford I bought a 10l in the cemetery. I mean it.” Yks, sir; Dr. Felton will run for con gress. Those who think that he would miss his opportunities, are novices in the art of politics. » The redistricting in South Carolina results in giving the Democrats live Con gressmen and the Republicans two. The railroads should dissolve partner ship with tlie-bankers and bond-holders, and seek an alliance with thb lal>or of the country. Judge Kelley has his opinion about the adjournment, of congress, which is that it. is certainly as far away as the 10th or 15th of August. Cufonef Daniel Snook, of Asheville, N. is 95 y ears old, and has 221 deceii dants, of whom !!»;: are living. He has j livedß.s rears in the same house. | I I A '•VI'ERIt GIFT. Senator Joseph E. Brown is nearing i •he end of a long and illustrious life; but he hns never done anything that will carry his name bi posterity so gracefully and so surely as the magnificent end >wn raent he has just made to the state uni versity. He has served his state honor ably, but he has never done a greater service Chan this. In this one act he lifts the man above the official, and gilds his name with a glory beyond the fame that is held for it in the archives ol the state. It is hard to compass the full effect of this gift. It is a fund of $50,000 that is to be invested in securitiei. ft ought certainly to yield $3,500 per annum, which sum is to lie devoted to paying the board and expenses of young fellows who want, a college education, but are not able to pay for it. Itjs safe to say that $l5O a year is enough bi put a young fellow through the ten month session. It should therefore, take at least twenty young men the first year. But this money is to be loaned t > the students at four per cent, interest to liogin, we pre some, after the student has left college. Say that 20 Ixiys are put through colleg the first four on this fund. Upon 1 ty ing, they will each.owe the fund S6OO, or a Lota) of $12,000. On thin debt they each pay $24 per annum, or a total of S4BO per annum. It will be seen that this will add enough to tlm annual in come to start twenty-three bays on tin second four years course. If the first twenty boys should pay back the princi pal (as Home of them will certainly do), the endowment would be swelled to $62,- 000. It will thus he seen that the fund will bo increased, ami the annual income en larged as the notes of the beneficiaries mature and are paid. If every young man who gets Ida education under this endowment only pays the 4 per cent, in -1 'mrest on his notes (and it is hard to be lieve that many w< nld fail to do so, wo should have in ten, pros ided the princi pal can )>e invested at 6 per cent., $35,• 000 bearing 4 per cent, interest added to 1 the fund, giving $1,400 additional in -1 come. After this it would increase with 1 i much greater rapidity. In twenty years we might see a total endowment and in ' terest bearing notes enough to sii|i ' port one hundred iaiyH at college. It i.-. 1 our firm conviction that Senator Brown’s sons will live to see more than one hun dred students per annum supported at the State nniversitj- by the proceeds of their father’s endowment and the fun<l increasing steadily. In the name of the people of Georgia— I in the name of hundreds of poor young ' fellows who will enjoy its benefits —iu the name of the university and of en lightenment, we thank Gov. Brown for 1 his princely gift. It has more than bal anced the account between Georgia ami 1 himself even if he had worn all the hon ers she has heaped upon him, so wor -1 thily that his record repaid for his ad ! viuicement. By the stroke of his pen in I signing away this fortune to the youth of Georgia, he has done more to settle ' the question of higher education in our • state than all the laws ever passed or all the theories ever formulated. —Atlanta ' ! Constitution. We are pained to learn that Col. Al fred Shorter is not expected to live man)' hours. He has been ill for a long time. Although the news of his approaching end will be heard with profound sorrow, yet it is not wholly unexpected. Col. Shorter an old citizen, known, honored ' i and beloved by the entire community. He has been a public benefactor, a man of charity who will leave monuments to commemorate him more enduring than brass.—Romo Bulletin. Maine l uvored with Politics There is unquestionably more polities ! to the square foot in the state of Maine to ! day than in any other. State in the Union, not even exetqdiug I’enmylvani-.i. Al i ready fjve<poTiticid State conventions , havu been In 11, and a call has been is swOd for tlm sixth ; live full Slate tickets tirein the field, ami probably another will be added to them. They are labell ' ed respectively, in the order ol their ap j pearance, Straight Greenback, Temper . I ance. Regular or Fusion Greenback, Re publican, and Democratic, with the dis satisfied temperance men yet to be heard from.—From the I’hilidelphia Times. Ah .Vll« K<-d Democratic Iludgo. in some of the Southern Congressional I districts where there is tlm likelihood of tlm Independents giving trouble, tlm I Democrats propose to delay their nomi nations to Congress until late in the I campaign. In this way they will avoid ! a lung canvass and expect to prevent i disaffection iu their own ranks and ; | take advantage of any mistake made by their opponents.—New York Tribune. i The Fallui'y of Tu o Percent Bomln, The idea of placing $2,000,000 of 2 per cent bonds suggests the reflection that' i eventually dormant capital w ill ask the • : privilege of depositing with tlm govern e merit without equity of calling m, and j charge no interest "for the loan.— N’ash ■ ville American. A Arrangements for the shipment of 50,- J OOU head ol cattle to England, chiefly ’ horn New York, during the month of - ' October and November, are irt>w being j made by represenatlves of a syndicate ' j of Western cattie raisers, who. ;r cmi i nection with the Earl a( Airlie, hiv said ' to control 300,(XM) bead of cattle, and t; have immense grazing fields in Colorado. ’ ; A conference on Iho Liberals of Geor- I i j gia is called to meet in Atlanta on the I 25th of July. The conference will be tor i the pm pose of calling a convention, or ol immediaUdy orgain..uigand makin,.i , platform and selecting candidates mr i / the diflbient offices throughout the j I tStute. ] PIXIE IHVIDEMIS. From the Farmrr’ii Toll, in the Mellow Soil. Dr. I. H. Harlan of this county dug from eight short rows, about twenty bushels of Irish potatoes, after using as many as a large family could consume, (piite a number weighed from one to one pound ami nine ounces. G. M. Easlv of Whitfield county, re cently threshed from three and one half bushels sowing, fifty-six bushels of wheat. Mr. Luke Calloway made sev enty bushels of oats from seventy dozen. They were of rust proof variety. A good many farmers and gardeners in Georgia and Teniiesee are planting another crop of Irish potatoes. There is money in them. For the past week the Nash ville Chatt anooga & St. Louis railroad has handled an average of 24,(XX) watermelons daily. Mrs. Henry Stevenson, of Chesnut Flat, W’alker county, from a strip of land 38 feet by 75 feet made this season 13 bushels of onions. At the same rate the i yield per acre would be 720 bushels. As a second crop on the same ground she has a fine lot of cabbages coining on. W» L. Wilks, of Maury county, Tenn., who bus ten acres in peartrees, has just ; sold the fruit on them for $3,000. Mrs. J. C. Sharp, Ten Mile, Meigs J county, Tenn., threshed 3UO bushels of i wheat olf 30 acres clover hmd, and 150 bushels of 18 acre stalk land. Also threshed 271 Inishels of oats oil' 15 acres of stalk land. The wheat is of the Gold- I dust variety and grain excellent,. Primus Jones, the Georgia farmer, ! who aiways gels the first bale of cotton, ■ sold one lust week at Albany for 20 cents i a pound. According to the Nashville American I a Summer county farmer has sold one • hundred acres ol Irish potatoes forslo,- (XX), ami is now engaged in planting the I second crop. Up to the Ist inst., 28,000 barrels of ' potatoes had been shipped from Hender | sotiville, on the Louisville division, and I had brought into the pockets of the I farmers ot that neighborhood a coo! j SIOO,OOO. One energetic negro farmer, near ' Edgefield Junction, majle a thousand i barrels of potatoes anti got the cash for 1 them as as he could get them bar -1 reled and shipped. •The express company of Montgomery, I Alabama, has shipped during the past month, 110,000 pounds of tomatoes. Some of the farmers in Lafayette county, Alabama, w ill make corn enough i to do them two years.- The Padufiah, Kentucky, News has i seen a cabbage which “weighed twenty i pounds ami was a yard in diameter.” G lies county, Tennessee, has a colored ' citizen who is the father of fifty-four j children, forty-nine of whom are living. Mr. .1. C. Dyson, near Washington i-Ga., had a little more than one-eight teenthof an acre in strawberries. From this patch 303 quarts of berries were j sold, realizing $51.80 cash. The sales represent about two-thirds of the ber ries pro lueed, the family consuming the other third. Commissi >m>r Henderson’s July re port, shows that the oat crop is the most abundant ever harvested ; in Geor gia the corn crop is fourteen per eent. above the average, and wheat « ven per cent. Sugar cane, rice, hay and ; sweet potatoes are above the average; ■ while cotton ami melons are below. The weather is quoted as a cause for the fall ing olf in cotton, but the acreage—some 20-25 percent, extra —devoted to cereals should be satisfactory reason showing that mixed corn and cotton crops have been largely raised. A gentleman living in the suburbs of Americus, Ga., just ninety days ago planted an acre in German millet; ol course the land was prepared and lib erally manured, the fertilizers, seed ami labor amounting to about forty dollars. Here is the. result of the little crop in figures. Six tons lviyt<t|.’o.oo per ton $l2O 00 .Manure, seed, etc 10 00 I Clear profit $ 80 00 A crop of peas is now being put in on the land, which, with ordinary seasons, will make fully fifty dollars worth ol peas ami hay, thus bringing the profits of an acre up to one hundred and thirty dollars. Whatoneacre has done, other j acres can do. | The Baldwin county, Ga., oat club | publish a slatement of the crop of four | teen members, from out' acre of land each. The number of bushels run from 43 to 108, three going over 100, and seven | over 75 bushels. Cap l .tin (J. W. Ennis ' making the greatest yield, reports the i following: Planted on a red stiff soil, j prepared by turn shovel, followed bv scooter, one mule, land previously planted in cotton. Fertilized with 250 bushels of cotton seed ; sowed six bnsh t'lsoats December Ist, per acre. Cut acre May 27th; threshed June .Ist; yield 108 6 32 bushels. The shipment of tomatoes from this I city is assuming ■ considerable propor- I lioiiH, and is exceedingly profitable. For I over three weeks from 1,000 to 10,000 lbs, i have been shipped daily, and Thursday ; night a shipment of 13.000 lbs. was made, the heaviest of the season. The crop is by no means exhausted, ami heavy shipments will continue for some time yet. Very good prices have been ‘ obtained, but during the past few days there has been a decline, and they bring . irom sl.ooto6octs per peck boxes; still, , this is regarded as very profitable, ami all are anxious to ship a. these figures.— Chattanooga Times. Chattanooga Talk. Only four marriage licenses were is : sued last week. I here are forty-two prisoners in the I county jail. Only seven deaths have, so far, been reported this month., 15th. Last week was the dullest week in the recorder’s com tin six or eight months. ; It is cuirenlly rumored that W. C. j Hodge will be appointed transfer mail , agent in the event of’Squire Cate’s elec tion. Mr. (... C. Shelton will soon have ir, operation (lt H? of the finest flouring mills in thissection. The capacity of the mills will lie 150 barrels per tiny. Grain receipts are constantly intprov ; ing. and the new crop is arriving in larger amounts every week Friday I evening 3.U00, bushels of new wheat and i oats arrived. A very large amount is now ready for shipment, and if the river i permits receipts will be heavy, though barges will be necessary next week, tin leys there is a rain soon. I r j . —— .’77’-'. . PUBLIC OPINION. ReektewJy Expressed by Varioas Observers of these Naughty Times. The Cherokee Advance mixes things. It supports Gartrell for Governor ami Clements for Congress. —Rome Courier. Hon. Jere Black predicts that Blaine will be the next Republican Presiden tial nominee, ami Hancock the Dem ocratic. It is said that the party is infallible —thatitcando no wrong—an 1 yet it sometimes nominates candidates that are about as tit to represent the people ns a blacksmith is to repair a watch' Alas! what wrongs are committed in thy name. —Rome Tribune. i The Macon Telegraph ami Atlanta Constitution have been letting each oth ! er severely alone for several days past. This is really refreshing to the readers of these two papers, although their res i pective managing editors may be on a i still hunt lor each other and trembling lest they might meet. —Ex. A D,dgo County correspondent of th- Savannah News writes to that pa per that the col >red Republican leader jinthat counly has told him that the i colored people do not propose to notni ( mite a candidate for Governor, but. t .<-y 1 intend to in orsq and support Lucius J. I Gartrell, the Imlepcndent candidate. For what are people taxed? 1. Tosupportan office-holding aris j locracy. 2. To support a railroad aristocracy. - . 3. T>> support a landlord aristocracy. 4. To support ;l banking aristocracy. 1 j 5. To support a professional aribtoc • .racy. 6. To support a trading aristocracy 7. To support a monopolist aristoc ' racy. The difference between the Repub lican and Democratic methods to build i up their parties is the former resorts to I blackmailing, while the .latter resorts to blackguarding. The former is the most popular and the latter is scarcely the more virtous. —Columbus Times. We agree with the Chattanooga Times that the $21,500,000 collected from the , silk duty is paid by the people abun dantly able to stand it, and all talk I about the 60 per cent tax being oppress- I i ive is mere buncombe. If ’he whole rev enue could be raised by tax on silk, the poor people wouldn’t care. —Columbus limes. The New oilcans Picayune says: Tennessee is fully able to pay all her . | debts at par. She is not poor like Vir ginia, but rich,prosperous, and powerful. Her debt is not large, like Virginia’s, but is only about $20,000,000 ol’ princi | pal, besides unpaid interest, while her assessment is above $200,009,000. If it was a shame for Virginia to repudiate, it is ten fold a shame for Tennessee, and I her honorable men of both parties have i steadfastly set their faces like flint against every shadow of that shame.” j The bolters are up to the calf of their ! legs in the cesspool of repudiation; but , because the Bate Dam »crats propose to I wade in knee-deep thebolters cry shame 1 j This is like the kettle refusing to asso | elate with the pot because it was black with soot. —Memplws Appeal. What about the $6,000 yon receipted I for as payment ot editoral services in j flattering down the credit of Tennessee I for the benefit of a lot of shark specula i tors. We have a copy of that receipt. I It is a beautiful document. Don’t talk i about public honesty until you make j restitution of the sum of that flagrant i robbery. Wo are not going to be lec | tured by your kind—not this year.— Chattanooga Times. wv t-.-nrr nr: .-.-.rn ir rni mu irnii ».ii !■ TN #> -v Adv fi-f issoiiitMit r | CELEBHA7O A ■ ■■ If F, g.' kbajaagy BTO3IACH BITTEF S It is the concurrent testimony of the public and the medical profession, that Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters is a medicine which achieves results speedily felt thorough and benign. Beside rectifying liver disorder, it iuvigor ‘ ates the feeble, conquers kidney and bladder complaints, and hastens the convalescence j Os those recovering from enfeebling dis j eases Moreover it is the grand specific for fever and ague. For sale by ali Druggists and Dealers I U generally. KILVIX JIO I SI C. IniiuediaUly opposite Union Passenger Depot, < >1 VT AXOOGA, TEAS. JMO.T. RUAD&SON, I’ROI’RIETORS. HEADQl ARTERS lor Euahd .M» n, llailroud VFei;, Tourist.*. Terms $2.50 and s3.<h> per Day. Acoonting to Location ot Room. . All persons visitin ( l.attanooga will find the Head llo'i o tii- centra) point vvln-re iutoriiiaM"*i m regard to all matters is.-.i -ip. obtained. ’ From this Hotel is pn wnted one ot lie tine-t vie-.-s ot Lookout Mountain. Cameron Hill Mi-, sionary Ridge, and other historic points. Tour ! ists can re.i. h most conveniently from hci--. .di pelnit of interest. Jv.lb a IW. F. Fischer & Bro. 215 MARKET STREET, CHATTANOOG-A, TLEJST 3ST., Have on hand the largest and beat sole'tod stock of jewelry, jewelry, jeavelry, in Hie city; in part follows: DIAMONDS: Pia,nOn ' l Ear Drops, ‘ E»ond Suffi 8 , WATCHES: , Gent’s Gold Stem and Key W mders, Gent’s Silver Stem ami Key inders, Ladies’ Gold Stem and key Winders, Ladies and (tent’s Gold Chitins, Ladies’ Gold Necklai'e'’ and Lockets, I.allies' Fine Gold and Stone Sets, F' ne Gold Set Hings, 18 kt. Plain Gold Engagement t an I Wedding Rings, Solid Silver and Si I ver-I’l ated Wn re, Clocks, Spectacles, &c., &e We are Sole Agents of the celebrated “ii > ” j THE BEST IX THE WOULD. BY MAIL SPLICE ED- ■ii— a■ m 111 —ii u ' b~hbi it g-umwrgTfc M— a——" i ■ ■ tromMnation of Pro* V | tooeideof Iron, Peruvian I IBekF KS' SW Sf SSf SbA I* i J3arka»MfPAo.«phorus<n iKSy~ HI a P nlata, ‘i« form. The 1 M £7 f 'TI/Xa gHBI \only preparation of iron aw v n Jw S JSr & Amu / tfiat toil! not blarken the If te S! rS S sfr - S \t<’ Hi ,so eharacterietieof /‘EX'iTE’.iEN': 1 have used Dr. Haktkk’s Ikon Tonic in my practice, and in ah experience of • L twenty.flve years In medicine, have never found anything to give the results that Dr. Haktkr’s I”ON Ti.x'C does. In many cases of Nervous Prostration, Female Diseases, Dyspepsia, and an Im- 1 T>overi')if l i condition of the blood, this peerless remedy, has in my hands, made some wonderful cures. Cases t'i.ii bare baffled some of our most eminent physicians, have yielded to tins great and lucompar abb rem-dv. I prescribe it in preference to any iron preparation made. In.get, such a compound as Du. lIAKTEK’s Iron Tonic is a necessity in mv practice. DR. HoLtKI SAMUELS, Jt ffi vex color to the blood A | natural healthful tone to \ S iffOgf v S tSt* BI the digestive organs and! IsgSYjr S iff W F f nervous system,making\ S' 9, fff iff JbRS it applicable to General / j Sgc ff A ar Jy 1 Debility, loss of Appe- \ | tiff Iff Jff Ji SB vff fife, /’roxtrofion of i Hull a 1 and Impotence.' MANUFACTURED BY THE DR. HARTER MEDICINE CO.. 213 N. MAIN ST., ST. LOUIS. wm SSBMn ; MUL-Crxt I f— I Bl— i—ib n. iirw'BraMj—w—<W—HMM——M— Xos o ? o xx d. and sirs I-: <do. CHATTANOOGA, TZNN. Successors to the WILDER MACHINE AVORKS. Wa are offering louver than ever before GIN ENGINES, GINS, PRESSES, OOKM and SAW MILLS, WllLlXlinj’jS TITIJI?II\ It: AV.-kTUGit AVIIMELS. e tsr-CTgxt’M. rwyyurcair |m—lß—o B —W—Jl—J———— LEW IS SEASOXGUOI). EI.IAS .MUCH, ALFRED SKASONGUOD. CHAS. SEASO.NGUOD W. L.'BL’TLEH, Representing the South. •T. Ac L. Ac CO., Importers and Dealers'" Foreign and Domestic AND MNUF ACTUHERSOF S. W. Cor. Third and Vine Streets, CJfcsCINF-iATL *y— rr-L-.TM TMIM--- - T MIMI!—rT-- TM- HIM ■JLUM-IL - - . I - - . .. —” s.gfsf M t> s hsM > ■ © 3 b|< gi| is fig go s-o P ,s 5“ W • ■*■—l 1 ■'!!_ ■ HENRY DIETZ. - r «r—■ LOUIS ('. SUH UETZE 11. DIETZ & CO. PORK AND BEGF PACKERS, Ct'liEKS OF i-.UIMITVO MTTNf” IJliANil). stlcet - CINCINNATI. OHIO. . US a 1 - *~* * ' ' [star candy FACTORY.I J Ji SEEMAN k CflJ MANUFACTCRING CONFECTIONERS, i WHOLESALE TOBACCOHiSTS, —:»» _ I’ANC’V GROCERS, M>. 321 MMiKi'.l AM) 2 I'2 lII.’OAH ST., lit presented by ; J. A.Tiiißs. j CHATTANOOGA, TENN. B-- ■'4u^ r ' I III,’ST PI.'EMII’M AT I till; ( IX i cixxATi expositions and wher ever EXHIBITED j ILf? SEN D 10R TERSiS. u 1120 Iy A iigti. ta. .M.unt. iu.u'2l--1' . ; TUTT’S PILLS SYMPTOMS OF A . TORPID LIVER. TiOCf. of Appetite, Bowels costive. Pain u* i tho Head, with a dull Beos.ition in tb ol back part, Pain under the Shoulder | blade, fullness after eati iy, with h dicin' ’ clination to exertion of body or mind, ! Irritability of temper, Low Bpirits, w> tlT a feeling of having, neglected some duty. Woarine.is, Dizziness, Fluttering at t’ lo ' ! Heart, Dots before the eyes. Yellow Skid, Headache generally over the right eye. Host lessn''ss, with fitful dreams, highly I colored urine, and CONSTIPATION. TUTT’S PILLS are especially adapt cd *•’ ench cases, one dose effects such a cha n K <, of feeling ns to astonish the sufferer. They Incrcnse tile Appetite, and cause tl>e body to Take on Flesh, thus tin- system >’ nourished, apd by their Tonic Action on «£ Digestive Organs, Regular Stools are PJ" I duced. Price liS cents. 3S Hoi-ray St-. N-JJ TUTT'S HAIR DIE. Gray Hair or WnrsKr.ns changed to a Glos'- Black by n single application of trits DS’K- I* l ’,* parts a natural color, acts Instantaneously by Druggists, or sent by express on receipt o'’ OFFICE, M MI RRAY ST.. MEW YOKH (hr. TLTTS ■AM'S!, -f V»ln»hh Irf«r».Ur CmM Hecrlpt. will b. Ilrd t ail MS •**’ W’. HAVE jfT" x H.ipa A t! and wil. dK C'dAn..?.. a. ,<>ipou ■ I 'las - and >ali' 1 n /yon U I ’"- r \ |