Dade County gazette. (Rising Fawn, Dade County, Ga.) 1878-1882, April 17, 1879, Image 3

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■'Hie Gazette. m Local Flashes. Elf 'onecit. 4f.sr'' onecrt to-night. ri -1 \\ . L. (Stewart is better. I ’ * * <1 vert ise your goods. m£oT"Give us your job work, wu*! Go to the concert to-night. •I- >„ , iarNo w goods at Company store; srw ork tor the interest of home. eavv ruin fell here yesterday. £2P\\Like up a chib for tlu Gazette. .leriff' tVeving took M s. Bullock to lie a# ■■■inm a tew days since. Thp preachers' meeting will begin at b'cntion next Friday week. tier A rare treat awaits those who Itewjl the concert to-night. to> Sunday scliool and ing the little links. J)r. .I. 11. Keith, of Cleveland. Tenn., tit la few days with us last week. B- " ' TMngs are quieting down somewhat \yhsiiington now. Rev. S. Cross pleached in the village t Sunday. IS m _ llih generally conceded that the fruit p is entirely destroyed. Bii lie Millicaii is clearing a tobacco eh just beyond the furnace bridge. •eantiful Spring weather, and vegeta i is [springing up rapidly. Tele is always sunshine when there’s ■ at h mie. #- Don’t give me out for 1 am go tcMlie concert. - —* '> oboticcd on our streets last week . Ailisoit, of Andrews’ Switch, hioln Victoria is at Lake Maggoire, O O 7 lin. m he rattle plague has made its appear t in New Jonty. •Vlnrc glad to learn tliat Mr. James roil, of tliis county, who has boon tisly ill, is improving. ' I—► - r c|innirnicati()ii from Middlcpoint 'm> late lor this week—will appear KN. F. Thomas has moved into B'h. anti is, we leant, a good boot dlb-e maker.' o. Tucker will hogin a meeting in * kurg next Saturday at 11 o’clock, will tontinne over Sunday. is. L. S. Marye, ot Lynchburg, Ya., v ’ed tl|(‘ j>rize lor the best original T lbri the Times. i 1;, 4y |y the name of Cynthia Mor- C|omm|tted suicide in (’hattanooga _B;U.fq'aay hy hangingiierself. >hnJS||] in teller, a well known jour* and, and one of the editorial staff of Louisville Courier-Journal, died at tnibia*- Tenn., March 26. vicing man by the name of Appling mu over and killed oy W. k A. IT 'vi.tUi engine af.the Market street (,a, j in Chattanooga, last lor Chandler ought to go to the be ; |>oor colored people of Yir- A eoioted minister, of that State, to^K * l^nitentia !(’a!ing a decent suit of clothes to . t |mmM ed entirely of women. A famine in the valley of the Nile caus es intense suffering and distress. Louise Pomeroy is the most popular actress that has ever visited the South. In every city in which she has performed, the papers are tireless in their praises. |W-Wm. W. Yonge, Chattanooga, Tenn., Southern Agency of Fa stern Tai loring Establishments, will send sam ples, instructions for seif-measurement, fashion plate, etc., free upon application, of suits to be made to i rder, from sl4 to S6O, and delivered in 12 days. Liberal e mis. Save 25 per cent. Fit and sat isfaction guaranteed. State price of suit or garment wanted. 21-5 t Improved. The bellows ol Mr. Mark Hale at the Rising Fawn Furnace has been over hauled and improved, and Mark now thinks that he and Mr. Pearson both can blow as much as dim Cowart. F. Z Dismal. Singular. We notice that a horse has been across the bridge between here and the furnace. Whether this horse crossed of its ow:i volition or was taken across, we are unable to sav; but the bridge is at least one hundred yards long, and there are but two narrow planks cn which to walk, and is intended only tor footmen. Strartge, but true. PROGRAM TOE For Ihe Concert To-A'ighl. I’AUT FIRST. Grand Overture—By the Company. Instrumental Music— “ Tiie New Dentist. Dr. Renfro, - - J. T. Park. (Student, - - Geo. I>. Jordan. Patient, - - J. IS. Allison. Instrumental Music, - By tlie Comp’v Les Miser abler. Prof. Snider, - - J.S. Allison Ist Singer - - J. T. Park. 2nd Singer - - Geo.B.Jordan. Inst. Music, - - By the Company. part second. Spiritual Rappings, - Geo. B. Jordan. Inst. Music, - - By the Company. part third. The evening’s entertainment to con clude with the side-splitting negro farce, cut itled, Nitro Glycerine. Admission 250. Children under Iff years of age, 15c. A Woman Ifurtat Afire. Early last month a woman named Ag rafena Ignatjeva was burned as a witch by the pensents is the village of Wrat shevo,“in the government of Novgorod. It seems that the wretched woman, who was the widow of a soldier, had the rep utation ofbeing a sorceress and witch, and strove to promote this delusion by every means in her power. Tin peasants of the whole neighboring district had such a dread of her powers of mischief that they endeavored even to anticipate her wishes, and, although an absolute pauper, she lived very comfortable on the contributions spontaneously made to h<u\ There were many persons in the district suffering from epilepsy, and it was pop ularly believed that the witch had thus punished them for offending her some way. ( One of these epileptic sufferers, a girl from a distant village, besought some peasants to burn tlie witch, and so re lease her from her sufferings. At> an as semble of headmen and seniors, of the villages it was resolved to extinguish the source of mischief. They proceeded to her hut, which they found fastened up. 'They broke it open discovered the wretch ed woman, charged her with the crime, and then nailed up the window and door to prevent her escape. Bv c ime over 200 men had assembled ai ounn the lint, and amid their jeers and sir u:s of exul tation it was sot on tire, and be whole crowd remained until it was quite con sumed. The sum df 2! oubles and 90 copeeks (nearly $16.5u) was collected and offered to the rural policeman as a bribe to secure his silence. But he reject ed it, and so this terrible tragelycamc to li :ht. O IJiiarLTSy TOeef Ink on l<oo&- osat iVfomiralti. “Doctor, you can just as the works,” wo said to the presiding elder last Saturday morning, “and Bro. Giay, of mountain notoriety, will meet you there with a horse.’’ So they went up the “cut off” and we took the wagon road. It was cool and clear, with a breeze stirring that was bracing and healthful. Passing the furnace, we trav elled mr\ till we co ae to the head of “Johnson’s Crook” and at the foot of Lookout mountain. Now we are dis tance from home about fmr miles and have yet to go three or four more to reach New Salem where the quarterly meeting is to be held, in the bounds of Lookout mission. All those who have ever traveled up the mountain know that it is quite a task, but we clambered up, after taking considerable time. Now that \Ve are on top we have a command ing view of the country below. The scene is so gran l that we arc at a loss to find words adequate to describe it. Where is the atheist that can stand on these lofty mountains and look abroad through such labarynths of grandeur and beauty, such overwhelming manifesta tions of creative power without acknewl edging the might that brought about such perfection. The beauty of the morning lent to the sublimitv of the scene, for tlie sun rode up the blue sky and unrolled its soft tinted pinions of purple and gold, and tbc wind fluttered down and blew upon the flowers that bloom below, the breath of whose sweet ness is out on the air,while a single white cloud, on the white wing of peace, float ed off in the West. Far down the glen we heard the bolls of the boviues with their clatter and bang as they browsed in the forest that stretched out below like a green expanse. These fair sunny glades and cool gushing fountains and singing birds all make us adore tlie great creator of the universe. A tew minutes after reaching the summit wc were at the little church where the meeting was to be held. Bro. Keith preache.l to a small con gregation a very interesting sermon. Af ter sermon the quarterly conference con vened on a laige chestnut Ijg that lay near the church. These brethren are disposed to follow the ancient land marks of Methodism. During the meeting we heard real good preaching by the elder. We listened to this good man while lie seemed to stand in the presence of God, where blazes a splendor beyond the slie kinah, and stood at a mercy seat more pure than the gold lid of tlie ark of the covenant, and it sparkles with more pre cious blood than evci flowed beneath the knife of a Levitican priest. It is sweet thus to listen to the Gospel of tlie Son of God, and to commune with Lis saints. We met at this meeting Bro. Moore, the preacher in charge oi this work, who is an unassuming Christian gentleman. Also, many of our friends of other days, among whom were the Grays, Moores, Boatmans, Ellisons, and many others. It was quite a pleasure for us to meet these friends, for memories of the past came crowding up at the sight, of these good people, both religious and social. How sacred are the ties ot friendship ! They are so dear that nothing but death is capable oT severing them. We form attachments—make friends and associ ates in this life; wc leave, pass through new sorrows and new joys, meet the stem realities of life, then wc return to oui former friends and they receive us kind ly and our old affection rekind’es and we love again. We eat chicken and supped coffee with John Gray and Bill Boatman, and felt like we wanted to go back again to see those kind people. Late Sunday evening we drop pen down the mountain in company with Bro. Hale and part of his family, arriving at home about the time the bats begin to fly round and round. Bro. Da it, *of the Dade County Gazette, it ha a hotel, preaches and trades in horses. lie is a business man. —Scottsbpro Citizen. Just so,Jim; do you want to sell Wil liam ? SOMETHING REMARKABLE. Glftl Tidings to Hald-headed Men. The other day Mr. M. Dessing, of Pe trolia, Pa., stepped into McClarran’s Phar macy, on the corner of Sixth Avenue and Smithfield street, Pittsburg, and purchased a bottle of Carboline. While there he ex hibited the top of his head, which bore evi dence of once being bald, but which igu present, from the use of Carboline, states, is completely covered with a s3mg crop of new hair, fully one inch tical tests of this wonderful hnirflßorcr are being made daily, and its roßrkable virtues found to far exceed aiiy before introduced, ft has bo erf demon strated that Carboline doesArcak greaC l wonders in giving the bald head a’litxu-- iant growth of hair. 11 is sold* by all dram*,', gists. " (i EORG lA—Dade ('or Ordinary’s office, I 7, 1579 . A*B Lsc has appJtpHto- c.\ emptier. of | •rx n i*vol viiluiUii n of home i™T 11 1 ]J| f-S U]H n lilt* U'lllt' !(t till o’clock a m on moudny, the sth day of May, 1879, at my t Hide in Trenton, 23-4 t. J. A. DENNETT, Ordinaiy. i iwm —i imm 11■ ii miik■! tjuwci—i mm i.-- WiTTriCT 1 1 i-—iumian Micrilf Sit Its. will be sold before th • Go irt-homo-door in tbc town of Trent -n Dade Cos., (Li.,<n the first Tnisday in May, next, within* the legal hours of sale, for cash, (be allowing property to win Lot of land No. 249 in tho 1 tit li distr'et and 4th section of Dade county, levied on as flic property Jair.es M. tuition lo satisfy a Just ice’s Court fi fa in favor of Lee Dope vs. James M. Sutton and J. C. Smith and M. A. 15. Ta tum and W. 11. Sutton or stay. Property pointed out, by James M. Sutton, levy made by B. P. Majors. ],. C., and turn ed over to me March 21st. 1879. Also at the same tine and place one st;re house and lot in tho town of Trenton Dade county Li-vi.-d on as'tl e property of Larkin pay ns to sati-o v’a Justice's f-ourf ti fa in favor of Rudolphus Fuller vs. Larkin payno. Le\y made hy 1). p. Majors L. C., and turned over to me. JAMKS W. jPLEA IN^. Sheriff. f’oslpoiscd Sheriff lilies. Will be sold before the Court-house door in Ihe town of Trenton, on the first tuesday in May litoxt, within tne legal hours of following property,’to-wit: lots of land No. 292. 283, 284 and 273 in the I lib district of Dade, and No 35 in the 12th district and 4th section of Dad# County .levied oi. as the property of K ‘ H. Tatum deceased to.satrsfy a'tax ti fa in fave 1 of J. A. Moreland, tax collector, vs. M, A. 15 ndnir. of R. If. Tatum. Levy made by J. J Dyve and turned over to m i . Also at the same limeahd place lot of land No. 4 in the 19th distret and 4tli section of Dade county Levied on as the property of Martin Sealffo satisfy a tax fi fa isued by J. A. More- Innn fax collector vs Martin Seall. I evio made by J. J. Dyre and turned over to u c Also at the same time and place lots_|of land No 21 and 22 in the 18th district and 4lb^J> i( tion of Dade county levied on to satisfy tax fi fa issued by J. A. Moreland tax collector vs J. C. Nisbit agent for phoenix Iron Cos. proper ty pointed out by J. C Nisbit levie mado'by l'. J.. Moreland L. (’. and turned over to me. Also at the same time and place lot of. land No 254 in the 10 district and 4th section of Diule county levied on to satisfy a tax fi fa issued by J. A. Moreland tax collector vs. J. (J. Jaeoway. Levy mad 1 ’ by B. p. Majors and turned over to mo. Jan SI, IS79‘ JAMKS M . ]SLE\ INS. Sh cliff Alabama €!. Soiißieni ££.!?. quick TIME AND f) KEPT CONNLCTIOXB 0- * Dcfweeii^all SOUTHWKHTKRX CITIES , A ndHlc '\ i ry; ini a strings. New Yoi(k, riiilaflelpltia, Baltimore and ff. Washington. THltdcOi: SLEEPING CAI I Pctween VlCKSlljcriO & CHATTAXbOUA Purebas#vour Tickets via. ALABAMA GREAT SOUTHERN R. R For all Points North and East.® ‘SO miles’shemest route to’ VICKSBURG, JACKSON, % MERIDIAN and 34 mil A shortest' route to NEW ORLEANS, § MOBILE, PENSACOI A® EUFAULA, MONTGOMERV And all points Bouth and South-west. Direct connection at Birmingham wit: B.AN fc Railroad.* Be sure*thayour tickets read via THE ALABAMA GREAT SOUTHERN RAILROAD Trains leave Union Passenger Depot at 8.30 a in. daily. (’has. T. Ball, L. IT Morrikon, Gn. Superin endent, Gen. Pas. & Ticket A Chattano jg a, T tin . < ;inn<<jp, 1< mi mm Je% ii W ip| nig E3 KATTV'® Ron tty’* riaaon, grand* Cuß fea*#A I I ¥ C? square and upright, artt^pro- Elg A people as the most beautiful uni o E H ill sweetest toned Pianos ever mnnu- VHWuM.mgrg.gß33 factored. Sent on test trial and AND pronounced the best In the world. Beatty's celebrated Golden Tongne Parlor Organ*. Any jp*. ft g manufacturer challenged to rC SI 3 equal thorn. They possess poW* m■awr^.rs^tK.r. depth, brilliancy and ym- WAS H S HCTON, njfcjtai vxxrrrirmsKxaawassssism beautiful so 1 o HEW JERSEY.ggjjffl&fe be disarranged by use. The bellows capacity la so great that but little ef!Vrt is required with the feet to supply all the s.!r necessary. Best made nod most elegant cases In the market. All solid wood orna ments. Every instrument fully warranted for six years as strictly flrrfc class, and seat on from 5 to 15 davs’test trial. lilm.trated Newsy.e t.er sent free. Ad dress DAN WtiKhiußjon, CT I iaf a mtTbj, _ WmMygtTßfclnif ‘irfflPpSMMe ■ '■ inline Btfeeii rt ie u- tftfr Knitft.fPSJLvvhfire ac re p /a*. tug Hhll' HEtDS A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY I A Deodorized extract of Petroleum, Tbe Only Article that Will Re store Hair on Bald Heads. What the World has been Wanting Tor Centuries. The greatest discovery of our dny, so far as a large portion of humanity is concerned, is CAR BOLINK, an article prepared from petroleum, and which effects a complete and radical cure in case of baldness, or where the hair, owing to diseases of the scalp, has become thin and tends to fall out. It is also a speedy restorative, and while its use se cures a luxuriant growth of hair, it also brings back the natural color, and gives the most complete sat isfaction in the using. falling out of the hair, the accumulations of dandruff, and the prematuro change in color are all evidences of a diseased con dition of the scalp and the glands which nourish the hair To arrest these cansee the article used m ust possess medical as well as chemical virtues, and the change must begin under the mdp to he of perma nent and lasting benefit. Such an article is CAR BOLINE, and, like many other wonderful discov eries, it is found to consist of elements almosf in their natural state. Petroleum oil is the article which is made to work such extraordinary results ; butitisaftei it has been chemically treated and completely deodorized that it is in proper condition for the toilet. It was in far-off Russia that the effect of petroleum upon the lia r was first observed, a Government officer having noticed that a partially bald-headed servant of his, wiien trimming the lamps, had a habit of wiping his oil-beameared hands in his scanty locks, and the result was in a few months a much finer head of black, glossy hair than he ever had before. The oil was tried on horses and cattle that lmd lost their hair from the cattle plague, and the results were as rapid as they were marvelous. The manes horses, which had fallen out, :.ere completely re stored in a few weeks. These experiments were heralded to the world, but the knowledge was prac tically useless to the prematurely bald and gray, as no one in civilized society could tolerate the use of refined petroleum as a dressing for the hair. But the skill of one of our chemists has overcome the diffi culty, and by a process known only to himself, ho has, after very elaborate and costly experiments, suc ceeded in deodorizing refined petroleum, which renders it susceptible of being bandied as daintily as the famous eau de cologne. The experiments with the deodorized liquid on the human hair were at tended with the most astonishing results c A few applications, where the hair was thin and falling, gave remarkable tone and vigor to the sculp and Every particle of dandsnff disappear* on the first or second dressing, and the liquid so search ing in its nature, seems to penetr-tc to the roots at once, and set np a radical change from the start. It is well known that the most beautiful colors arc made from petroleum, ami, by some mysterious operation of nature, the use of this article gradu ally imparts a beautiful light brown color to the hair which by continued use, deepens to a black. The color remains permanent for an indefinite length of time, and the change is so gradual that the most intimate friends can scarcely detect its progress. In a word, H is the most wonderful discovery of the age, and well calculated lo make the preina turely bald and gray rejoice. Wc advise our readers to give it a trial, feeling satisfied that one application will convince tlv m or its wonderful effects. - Ihtteburgh Commercial of Oct. 22, 1877 t . The article Is telling its own story in the hands of thousands who are using it with the most gratifying and encouraging results : W. II Brill & Cos., Fifth Avenue Pharmacy, says. “Wo have sold preparations for the hu:r for upward of twenty years, but have never had one to sell as well or give sH<h universal satisfaction Wet cere fore recommend it with confidence to our friends and the general public." Mr. Gust avc a F. Hall, of the Oates Opera Troupe, writes: “ After six weeks’ use iam con vinced, as are also my comrades, that your * Carbo linc’ has and is producing a wonderful growth of hair where 1 had none for years." C. H. Smith, of the Jennie Ilijzht Combination, writes: “ After using your * Carboline’ thr£ weeks I am convinced that bald heads can be * imhaired.' It's simply wonderful in my case.” B. F. Arthur, chemist, writes: “ Your • Carboline’ has restored my hair after every thing else had failed.” JosErir E. Pond, attorncv-at-law, No. Attleboro, Mass., writes : For more than 20 years a portion of my head has been as sinoo'h av.d free from l.nir as a billiard ball, but some eight weeks ago I was in duced to try your Carboline, and the effect has been simply wonderful. Where no hair has been seen for years there now appears a thick p-owth, and I am convinced that by continuing its use I shall have as good a head of hair as J ever had. It is growing now nearly as rapidly as hair dues arter it is cut. CARBOLINE Is now presented to the public without fear of con tradiction as the best. Restorative and Bautifier of the Hair the world has ever produced Price, ONK BOLLIK per bottle. ~ Sold, by all Drnggfwt*. - KENNEDY & CoToTTSBURG, PA., Bole Agents for the I'nited States, the Canadas and Great Britain. THE KING OF SULKY PLOWS. Awarded the Two Highest Premiums eve# offered for Sulky Plows In Field Trial. The Gilpin Sulky ITS ADVANTAGES OVER OTHERS ARE : Freedom from complications of levers and chains. Patent chilled boxes, preserving the wheels from wear. Lightness of draft, the wheels carrying the weight of the Plow. The only Sulky that stands the test of time in every kind of work; cutting and burying stalks and trash, and perfect an a Prairie Breaker. Its unexampled success has been achieved through merit alone, doing its work better, more rapidly and easily for both man and team. Eight themsaud farmers have in its first two years accorded it the preference over all others. / BEEBE & COMPANY, M’frs, Moline, 111 .“O O.IE ulord CIIA TTAX 00G A, TEX X. f 1 •o o ri9 -V ; J* o o v r i e ! cop re I 'V 1"1 | V'l'l fl' l’c o'"I 1 11 ■* gio 1 :nil, e inc directly to < tir (stub We will convince uiu 'bat it is for vein interester -si to trade, wfth us. <T 53 We’ DiakoFa spccia ty of Teas, and solicit a i I't'dr, f ulii mi- tl ii t iii- t 1 i o ii.i ii •’ill make you a permanent customer. ’ We keep all grades and varieties, and the prir les are extremely low. Wcwill guara Huo th- m o be cheaper and better than cau be found elsewhere in this county. Coffees. In this specialtyJwe have all the varieties - Cio and Java Coffees, green and roasted, the t. x -st line tbe market affords, end *t onr price bould inkuee every cofloo drii.kcr in the i : and country to buy from us. ” CAXXKI) GOODS. To those who buy tbe (tape or dozen, wo offur peeial indueemenfs We handle no slack-tilled r second qual*ty of Canned Goods, but guaran ie every can tube of standard packing urn esb. We have a full supply of Peaches, Tonintoos, Blackberries, Strawberri ' Green Peas, Egg Plums, Corn, Pine apples * Cos v rst vv s Etc. SUGARS. Cut Leap, Granulated "'and powdered, Coffe ‘‘.V' \Y liite extra.‘‘C,’" Vellow^‘ , C , ' > and Brown, SYRUPS. Wo subject our Syrups to a tost before buy ing tliem, and we can therefore reeomuieud as straight,’pur • sugar syrups. and invitingTstock of imported StapbiC and Fancy Gkoekii£3 mn every line, all of standarb quality, that wil oeoet all .competition. All pure and unadultev- I'M gpols. Turkish prune', ’'currants, vaiineia Vains, dried apples, Carolina rice,'Dessieate i •; oan its, chocolate, cocoi, candle#, A, eraelteiV, —all varieties flavcing extract*, usnir 1, \Vi le an l ground t spiees, pikl, est ps lisa, ill" ats, bams, tlous, dried beof, A;, a itry pro luce is always wanted. II w t> alike goal bread: usm New Poets? . .o ir au l G >ld-medal Baking Powders. SPECIALTIES. Go] l Mo.l Baking Pow lor, Erkcnhrcoh er\s Ron TLm Gloss Starch, Im prove l Gorn Starch, Enoch Morgan’s Sons’ Sapoß*, Nienna Yeast. Ayer’s Ague Cure, For Fever and Ague, Intermittent Fever, Chill Fever, Remittent Fever, Dumb Ague. Periodical or Bilious Fever, &c., and indeed all the affections which arise from malari ous, marsh, or miasmatic poisons. This is a compound remedy, prepared with scientific skill from vegetable ingredients, which rarely fails to cure the severest cases of Chills and Fever and the concomitant disorders. Such a remedy the necessities of the people in mala rious districts demand. Its great.superiority over any other medicine yetdiscovered for the cure of Jntcnnittents is, that it contains no qui nine or mineral, and those who take it are free from danger of quinism or any injurious effect -, and are as healthy after using it as before, li. has been extensively employed during the last thirty years in the treatment of these distressing disorders, and so unvarying has been its succe. s that it has gained the reputation of being infal lible. It can, therefore, be safely recommended as a sure remedy and specific for the Fever and Ague of the West, and the Chills and Fever Oi the South. It counteracts the miasmatic poison in the blood, and frees the system from its influ ence, so that fever and ague, shakes or chills, once broken up by it, do not return until the disease is again contracted. The great variety of disorders which arise from the irritation of this poison, such as Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Gout, Headache, Blindness, Toothache, Earache, Catarrh, Asthma, Pal pitation, Splenic Affections, Hysterics, Pain in the Bowels, Colic, Paralysis, and derange of the Stomach, all of which become intermit tent or periodical, have no speedier remedy than Ater’s Ague Core, which cures them all alike, and protects the system from future attacks. As a preventive, it is of immense service in thoso communities where Fever and Ague prevails, as it stays the development of the disease if taken on the first approach of the premonitory symp toms. Travellers and temporary residents are thus enabled to defy these disorders, and few will ever suffer if they avail themselves of the protection this remedy affords. For Liver Complaints, arising from torpidity, it is an excellent remedy; it‘stimulates this organ into healthy activity, and produces many remark able cures where other medicines fail. Prepared by Dr. J. C. Ayer & Cos., Practical and Analytical Chemists, XO WELL, MASS. SOLD 11Y ALL DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE. BERKSMMES For Sale, 1 I have on hand .. E EK.SHF.K~S, i all : izefi, for sale At V liu v Low Lit ices. • My stock is select and thorough, ami f would be pleased to furnish the fann *rs of Dade e unity s um? of my il'ie pigs-, Wii ome at Shel'nK.ond, Tetm. s. 11. !\< J LID 01,L,