The Democratic times. (Jacksonville, Or.) 1871-1907, July 14, 1877, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    “Pa,” asked an up-town boy, “what is '
T he L ocal E
ihr ¿D mo raí ir Siinrs.’ meant
by Paradise?” “Paradise, my son,” , of local editor of a
ditor .—The
position
newspaper is one
K 1
replied the father, gloomily, “Paradise is ! that, as a general thing, is not under-
-■
-
-
v;
the latter part of next Summer, when your S ood by the people. They expect him
> \ l’U RDAY,.................. ........ JULY 14, 1877. i
- 1 mother goes on a visit to your grandfather.” .
to know everything that is going on,
New
York,
July
2d.
—
A
Washington
I
as well as that that is not. They ex­
it ea ring of the blue .
special states that Mr. Hayessays his South­ pect him to see everything. They ex­
BY W. F. T.
ern policy is no longer an issue; that he pect him to give their stores, hotels
did what he thought was right, and talking and other places of business, long and
Air—“Wearing of tho Green.”
won’t change that which has been accom­ good putfs in the local columns free of
Pad.ly dear, and did you hear
plished.
charge, but the store-keeper never
The new* that's going 'round :
Dull tithes have driven many of our mer­ thinks to give him a new suit of
The troops ot Uncle Sam must be
\\ iihdrawn from Southern ground.
chants to the cash system, ami they now clothes, a hat or pair of boots, oh, no;
Ould Chamberlain and Packard,
ornament their stores with mottoes like ; they cost money; and the hotel keep­
With their carpet-bagger crew,
these: “Pay to-day, trust to-morrow.” er never gives him a weeks’ board! oh,
No more will be supported
By liie wearers of the Blue.
“It I trust, I bust.” “In God we trust—all no! their grub costs money! but they
others cash.”
seem to think his time is worth noth­
I met with Corporal Casey
My experience in planting corn has been ing and that paper and ink is worth
And took him by the hand,
And asked how are the Southern States
that more can be raised per acre where there nothing, and that it costs nothing to
And how do they stand ?
is but one stalk in the hill than where there have printers set up the type, and that
Oh ! it’s as joyful a country
were six ; better two than five; three than the room in the paper that is occupied
As ever y et 1 knew.
Since fraud and thieves no more will be
four; that is, three stalks per hill give the by their local is worth nothing, but
Upheld by Boys in Blue.
best yield.— Prairie Farmer.
still they want the local notice, for it
Now, since the color that we wear
Our dispatches inform us of another terri­ is a great benefit to their business.
No more is at tin* call
bly destructive storm which visited In­ Persons getting up balls, parties and
Of carpet-bag Governors
diana,
Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York, i entertainments, where they expect to
To hold their Stales in thrall.
on
the
night of the 30th of June and the make money, want him to give them
They’ll be forced to pack their carpet-bags
And vacate Southern soil,
first of July. Much damage was done to long and spicy local notices before the
For truth and right will rise again,
property ami many persons were killed and
affair comes off, and then they want
Though under tout it's trod.
wounded.
him to give them a rousing notice
When the law that governs Southern men
The most original spelling we have ever after the affair comes off, so as to help
By themselves shall lie enforced,
seen is the following, which is taken from them in their next effort in the same
And when by greedy plunderers
an
old book ; it beats modern phonetics :
No mor«* they are oppressed,
line; but they never offer to give him
“SO oh ! pea—atop. Be SO bat. See SO—cat.
And “pee lers’ ” duty in the South
I
a
free ticket, so that he can go and see
No more 1'11 have to do,
Pea SO—pat. Are SO—rat. See oh ! double
■
what
is done—they expect him to pay
’Tis then, plaze God, it's proud I’ll be
you—cow. See you be—cub. See a *bee—
Of wearing of the Blue I
his own way, and then to give them a
cab. Be you double tea—butt. See a
local notice worth to them as much or
So now at last the bayonets
double ell—call.
Are withdrawn from Southern soil,
more than the price of a dozen tickets
If you desire to see thy child virtuous,
Her sons with hope ami confidence
would amount to. If you want the
let him not see his father’s vices ; thou
Can enter on the toil
local
editor to notice what you have
of forming a new government
canst not rebuke that in children that they
Where all shall have fa*r play,
behold practiced in thee ; till reason is ripe, to sell, or what you are going to do,
And while and black stand equal
examples direct more than precepts ; such pay for the notices, or at least keep
in the light of freedom's day.
as thy behavior is before thy children’s him free from expense while he is do-
So good-bye to carpet-baggers,
faces, such commonly is theirs behind their i ing what he can to help you along in
Driven by the people’s hand ;
your undertakings. The laborer is
pa re i its ’ backs.— Quad es.
Go seek tor help ami plunder
certainly worthy of his hire.
in a more congenial land,
A use has been discovered for the hitherto
...--------------
While Uncle Sam's brave soldier boys
purely ornamental polecat. A Nebraska
Will march to quarters new,
H ints for P oor S leepers .—Poor
For the South, lhaiiK God, has no more nee«i farmer recently noticed ore of the tribe sleepers, says the Herald of Health,
Of wearersol the Blue.
busily eating from the ground in a field—
will find it advantageous often to raise
S terling , July 4, 1877.
and an examination discreetly made after
the head of the bed a foot higher than
the animal had retired showed that it had
A WEEK'S ll'JR
the foot, and then to sleep on a tolera-
I stripped the ground over which it hail
I
bly
thick hair pillow, so as to bring
passed of grasshopper eggs, which were
On Monday morn the news arrived,
the
head
a little higher than the shoul­
There hail been bloody work,
about ready to hatch.
But no one knew which lied the most,
ders. The object of this is to make
Harrisburg I\itriot: Thousands of Re­
The Christian or the Turk.
the work of the heart in throwing blood
publicans in Pennsylvania express their re­
to the brain harder, so it will not
On Tuesday morning Russia claimed
gret that they did not vote for Tilden last
A victory tor her side.
year, ai d thousands more promise that they throw so much. A level bed, with the
On Wednesday, from a Turkish source,
The victory was denied.
will vote for him if they ever get an oppor­ 1 head almost as low’ as the feet, causes
tunity. They would like to purge them­ an easy flow of blood to the brain, and
Oil Thursday each swore he had
selves in this way of the great fraud upon sometimes wakefulness, when the ves­
The other put to rout,
Ami Friday's news the tight confirmed,
the country in which they were implicated sels cannot contract on it and keep the
Without the slightest doubt.
brain empty.
by the party leaders.
Then the bed itself should be good.
The Ari/onai*/ pertinaciously obtrudes
On Saturday 'twas whispered 'round
I
A
very hard or very soft bed is not
The w hole affair w as small,
these disagreeable questions: Will some­
Ami Sunday’s cable news declared
body be kind enough to explain where we the thing. Hair mattresses are often
There'd been no fight at all.
are drifting to, and where we are likely to best, but these might be improved.
bring up ? Where is this thing going to Then the bedding should be porous, so
GENEKAI. AUl'EM AND NEWS.
end ? We can't all live by swindling each as to allow free interchange of air.
Grasshoppers are played out in Nebraska. other ; we cannot all steal ourselves rich ! ' Airtight beds are bad. So, too, the
Who are going to be poor ? Who are going 1 mom should be large and airy, and th“
Work on the Yaquina Railroad is pro­
to keep the prisons when we all get into feet kept warm, and persons with a
gressing.
them ?
i sensitive skin should have as light
The ill health of the Pope is aggravated
' clothing as possible. Heavy clothing
New
York,
July
2d.
—
The
Tribune's
Wash
­
by dropsy.
ington special says : Robeson, ex-Secretary ! sometimes keeps the sensory nerves
Over four million sewing machines have of the Navy, is, according to Washington i of the skin so active that they send to
been sold since they were first introduced gossip, one of the bitterest of the opponents i the brain sensory currents that .keel»
in 1<>3.
ot the present Administration. He is said j this organ active.
Farmers never wait idly for something to to be outspoken in his denunciation of Mr.
Whether sleeping with the head to
turn up. They just take a plow* and foree Hayes, declaring that had he known what
the north makes auy difference we do
business.
kind of Secretary wouhl succeed him,Hayes not know. It seems to in some cases,
A recruiting office for cavalry has been never would have been President.
and in others not. It may be well to
opened at Astoria. It is difficult to get hor­
Col. Hardee, of Florida, a few years since try it. Generally sensitive folks sleep
des for practice.
advanced the theory that concussion, i. e., better to have a bed to themselves.
Flour thrown on burning oil will quench
the flames instanter. Remember this when
your lamp explodes.
Major Reno, for attempting to kiss a
brother officer’s wife at Fort Abercombie,
gets suspension tor two years.
Every day the wires bear news of some
new revelation ot the rottenness that con­
sumed Grant's administration.
Lulu trotted against time on the 5th, at
Boston—trying to beat 2:14. She made
three heats in 2:18%, 2:16% and 2:19%.
The Grant county Times gives an account
of new gold mines having been discovered
south of Canyon City that are very rich.
Because a man who attends a flock of
sheep is a shepherd, makes it no reason that
a man who keeps cows should be a coward.
Field Marshal von Moltke says that un­
less diplomacy intervenes the war in Eu­
rope may last two years as well as three or
six months.
Are blacksmiths who make a living by
forging, or carpenters who do a little coun­
ter-fitting, any worse than men who sell
iron ami steel for a living?
At a late meeting of the Regents of the
State University the time for the begiuning
of the next school year was fixed for the
third Monday in September.
It Oxford would confer upon Grant some
degree which would make him understand
the Constitution and laws of the United
States, it would be a great thing for him.
Pinchback says the Chinese damsels in
San Francisco are much fairer than the col­
ored ladies down South. This is a bad con­
fession for a respectable colored Senator (?)
to make.
Twenty girls living in Utica have been ar­
rested for blowing horns before the door of
a newly married couple. The J udge spoke of
it as “the shockmgest kind of depraved de­
pravity.”
There have been, up to the present time,
3,500 cases less salmon shipped from As­
toria than there were the corresponding
period of 1876, and the Asturian
the
docks are kept clean.
The Mercury says: Dr. McCauley, the
physician who attended upon Alice Town­
send and administered her the dose of med­
icine a short time previous to her death, has
been arrested and lodged in jail.
Whittier thinks $50 a year is enough for a
woman to spend on dress. And when a
married man reads this statement, he goes
home and tells his wife that Whittier is the
greatest poet who has lived since Homer.
An indelible ink in use for canceling post­
age stamps would save the Government $2,-
ooo , oimi „ .Now' if it were possible to get some
of the material with which fraud is stamped
on the work of Joe Bradley’s Commission!
jarring fruit trees or firing a gun a few times
among the branches, would drive away in­
sects. This theory has rapidly spread, and
has been adopted by many who have prac­
ticed it ; and it is now said that blowing up
the soil among grapevines, with dynamite
or other explosive material, will destroy the
grape-louse.
A man by the name of Cook, who was dis­
charged from the Penitentiary, on the
30th ult., after serving two years tor a
robbery committed in Yamhill county,
came to Salem and, obtaining a revolver,
returned the same night with the avowed
determination of effecting a general escape
of the prisoners. He was discovered by the
guard and after notice fired at, the shot tak­
ing effect in the tieshy part of the right arm.
Cook discharged his revolver twice without
effect and then took leg bail, being arrested
afterward.
The State Dental Association has been in
session at Salem last week. Dr. L. S. Skiff
was elected President; G. W. Gray, of Al­
bany, Vice President; S. J. Barber, Port­
land, Corresponding Secretary; E.().Smith,
of Albany, Treasurer. After an animated
discussion it was resolved that, “owing to
the risk attending the use of all amesthetics
in surgical operations, and the very great
danger in the administration of chloroform
in such eases, that the Association disap­
prove of the use of chloroform as an an-
»»sthetic in dental operations, therefore do
recommend and respectfully request all per­
sons engaged in practice of dentistry in tho
state of Oregon to discontinue its use as an
anaesthetic, believing that by adopting such
a course we shall do honor to our profession
as well as justice to our patients.”
Farmers, Mechanics,
and all people who appreciate the value of
keeping a memorandum of business trans­
actions, daily events, and items of interest
or importance, for future reference, should
call on their druggists and get Dr. Pieree’s
Memorandum Book free. The Doctor’s
Grand Invalids’ Hotel at Buffalo, which
costs, when finished, two hundred thousand
dollars, will be opened early in June next,
for the reception of patients afflicted with
chronic diseases and deformities. It will
afford the most perfect facilities for the cure
of such affections, and its Faculty of physi­
cians and surgeons will embrace graduates
from both American and European Medical
Schools who have become distinguished for
their skill. The People’s Common Sense
Medical Adviser, by Dr. II. V. Pierce, a
work of over nine hundred large pages, ¡1- I
lustrated by two hundred and eighty-two I
engravings, and elegantly bound in cloth
and gilt, is sent to any address by the Author
on receipt of one dollar and fifty cents. Al­
most one hundred thousand copies have al­
ready been sold.
S. A. C haio , Esq., druggist, of West Alex­
ander, Pa., says : “I sell more of Dr.
Pierce’s preparations than all others com- j
bined. They give satisfaction in every ease j
and 1 can cheerfully recommend them to ■
the public.”
I
A L egend A bout C offee .—There
is a legend about coffee—a legend in
' which a pious Mussulman is the hero
The Mussulman u*ed to get sleepy
during his devotions, and so he prayed
to Mohammed, who came to his
aid-. Mohammed sent him for advice
to a goat-herd, who took a hint from
his goats.
He observed that when these ani­
mals ate the berries of a particular tree
they got frisky and excited—bounded
about all night, in fact. The Mussul­
man took the hint, ate the coffee-ber­
ries, slept less and no doubt prayed
better.
That was the legend. That coffee,
however, was sold in the streets of
Cairo toward the end of the sixteenth
century is not a matter of legend, but
history. In fact, it was not only sold,
hut forbidden to be sold. An Arabian
historian recounts that in the year
1538 a cafe was attacked by the author­
ities, and the customers who were
found on the spit hurried off to prison,
from which they were not liberated
till they had received seventeen strokes
with a stick, for the encouragement of
others. And, in fact, this raid served
the purpose so excellently that five
and twenty years afterward the town
of Cairo could boast of more than 2.000
shops where coffee might be bought.
• *
—
N ew handkerchiefs have mono­
grams or initial letters worked in three
or four different colors. Those having
cambric centers and silk borders are
selling at remarkably low prices.
T he best way to discourage a boil is
to seek a right slippery place on the
wet pavement, and then, when the
boil aiu’t looking, come down on it
flop.
NEW BAKERY,
I n M asonic B uilding , O regon S t .,
1,000,000 » BOTTLES
K. KUBLI,
NEW STORE!
OF THE
Odd Fellows’ Building, Jacksonville, Oregon,
NEW GOODS ! NEW PRICES I
I
DEALER & WORKER IN
have been sold the last year, and not on O'
TIN, SHEET IRON, COPPER, LEAD, etc. complaint has r<*ache<i hk that they have
not done all that is claimed for them. In­
deed, scientific skill cannot go beyond the*
result reached in these wonderful prepara­
Pumps,
tions. Added to Carbolic, Arnica, Mentha,
.«eneea-oil and Witch-Hazel, are other in­
gredients, which make a family liniment
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS that defies rivalry. Rheumatic am! bed­
ridden cripples have by it been enabled to
throw wav their*erutches, amt many who
for years have been afflicted with Neuralgia,.
Sciatica, Caked Breasts, Weak Backs, Ae.r
NAILS,
have found pertnanent releaf.
Mr. Josiah Westlake, of Marysvill|, O.r
writes:
A FIRST-CLASS STOCK OF STOVES
“For years mv Rheumatism has been so
bad that I have been unable to stir from
JUST OPENED
the house. 1 have tried every remedy I
could hear <f. Finally, I learned of the-
HARDWARE, TINWARE,
j Centaur Liniment. The first three bottles-
enabled me to walk without my crutches^
I am mending"rapidly. , I think your Lini­
On the corner of Oregon and Jacksoa St«., POWDER OF EVERY DESCRIPTION
ment
simply u marvel.”
opposite Odd Fellow’s Hall,
This Liniment cures Burns and Scald»
without a acai', extracts tin* poison from?
bites and slings, cures Chilblains and-
Fuse and Caps,
Frosted-feet, ami is very efficacious for Ear­
ache, Itch and Cutaneous Eruptions.
Jacksonville, - - Oregon,
T he (' em ai ' r L iniment , Y ellow W rap ­
Wooden and Willow Ware ver , is intended for the tough fibres, cords
and muscles ot horses, mules, and animals.-
R eau ! R ear !
Rev. Geo. W. Manorkill, Schoharie Co.
ROPE, NAILS,
WITH AN ENTIRE
N. Y., says:
. u
.
“ Mv horse was lame for a year with a fet­
lock wrench. All remedies utterly failed
PAINTS, OILS, VARNISHES. GLASS to cure ami I considered him worthless
until 1 commenced to useCentaur Liniment,
which
rapidly cured him. I heartily reco­
NEW STOCK OF GOODS.
mpile! it.”
CUTLERY, WIRE,
It makes very little difference whether
the case be “wrench,” sprain, spavain
or lameness of any kind, the effects are
the saint*. The great power of the Liniment
Shot,
Brushes,
Chains
and
Hose,
—CONSISTI«« OF—
is, however, shown in Poll-evel, Big-head.
Sweeny. Spavin, Ring-bone, Galls and
Scratches. This Liniment is worth millions
ETC., ETC.
of dollars yearly to the Stock-growers,
Livery-men, Farmers, and those having
valuable animals to care for. We warrant
I have secured the services of a First-class its effects and refer to any Farrier who has
Mechanic, and am prepare«! to do all repair­ ever used it.
Laboratory of J. B. Rose A Co.,
46 St., New York.
ing promptly and in superior style.
New York Store
*
DRY-GOODS, FANCY GOODS,
CLOTHING
CHILDREN
CONNECTION WITH THE ABOVE,
HATS AND CAPS, BOOTS AND SHOES. TN
1 I am receiving and Lave constantly on
hand a full and first-class stock of
Groceries,
GROCERIES,
DRY GOODS, Gum Boots, TOBACCO.
Ready-Made Clothing,
Hardware, Cutlery and Crockery,
GLASSWARE, CROCKERY, Etc., Etc.
ETC., ETC.
Everything sold at reasonable rates.
Give me a call.
K. KUBLI.
Jacksonville, Feb. IS, 1875.
HIGHEST HONORS
Which will be sold CHEAPER than the
CHEAPEST in the State.
Mining Notice.
U. S. LAND OFFICE,
)
R osebubg , O regon , Mav 26, 1877. j
N otice is hereby given that
Peter Burkholter and Samuel Mat­
thews, whose post office address is Jackson­
ville, Oregon, have made application for
patent for placer claims, being bounded on
the North by surveyed lands, on the East
and South by entered land and on the West
by surveyed land. Situated in Missouri
Flat Mining District, in Jackson county,
State of Oregon, and described as follows :
The N. E. *4 of N. W. % ot Section 30,
Township 37 South, of Range 4 West, con­
taining 40 acres. The said claims are of
record. The said claims were acquired by
said applicants by location and by purchase,
and the same are now known as the Burk­
holter Jt Matthews Gold Dust Mining
Claims. All adverse claims must lie tiled
in the Roseburg Land Office before the ex­
piration of the sixty days of the publica­
tion ot this notice.
It is hereby ordered that the above notice
lie published tor sixty days in the D emo ­
cratic T imes , a weekly newspaper pub­
lished in Jacksonville, Oregon.
Given under my hand this 26th day of
May, A. D. 1877.
WM. R. WILLIS, Register.
LIME FOR SALE,
—AND—
BRICK LAYING & PLASTERING DONE
—AT THE—
CENTENNIAL WORLD S FAIR 1876 !
THE
SEWING MACHINES
SHONINGER ORGANS
Pronounced unanimously as
F01 SAIZ, T3LZr-AL£ ¿S3 EZTAH,
THE BEST INSTRUMENTS 1
The best and latest improved for
every variety of work, including
THE FLORENCE,
Their comparative excellence is recognized
by the
in their Jicporf, from which
the following is an extract :
“The B. SHONINGER ORGAN CO’S, er-
hibit axthc best instruments nt a price rendei-
ing possible to a large class of purchas­
ers, having a combination of Reeds and
Bells, producing novel and pleasing effects,
containing many desirable improvements,
; will stand longer in dry or damp climates,
less liable to get out of order, all the boards
being made three-ply, put together so it is
impossible for t hem to either shrink, swell
or split.” THE ONLY ORGANS AWARD­
ED THIS RANK.
This Medal and Award was granted after
the most severe competition of thr best mak­
ers, before one of the most competent juries
ever assembled.
New Styles and prices just issued, which
are in accordance with our rule, the BEST
ORGAN tor the least money.
We are prepared to appoint a few new
Agents.
Illustrated Catalogues mailed, post-paid,
on application to
B. SHONINGER ORGAN CO.,
97 to 123 C hesxvt S treet ,
New Haven. Conn.
so Ions the leading Family Sew­
ing Machine on the Pacific Coast,
its superior qualities are tco well
known to require further recom­
mendation.
the best straight needle Machine
in the market, has a great deal of
room under the arm, is very light-
running and substantial.
ALSO,
FLORENCE CO a L 0!L STOVES
FOR COOKING AND EEATiNG.
Persons desiring business, deal­
ers, and all others wishing Sewing-
Machines, either for Cash or on
Installments, should send for cir­
culars and terms to
SAMUEL HILL,
No. 19 New Montgomery Street,
SAN FKA N CISCO,
Liberal prices allowed for old
Machines in exchange tor new.
bv inform the public that he has ONE LIVERY AND SALE STABLE,
T THOUSAND
BUSHELS of superior Jackson
COR. CALIFORNIA A 4th STS.
HE UNDERSIGNED WOULD ITERE-
Interesting to Farmers.
Creek Lime for sale cheap. Persons wish­
ing Brick-laving or Plastering done in the
best style and at reasonable rates will do
rpHE UNDERSIGNED. BELIEVING IT
well to call on me. For further information
he undersigned would re - 1 to be the mutual advantage of mtUers
inquire at the Franco-American Hotel.
spectfully inform their friends and the and farmers, have made arrangements
G. W. HOLT.
public generally that they have purchased whereby the Ashland and Phtenix mill« will
Jacksonville, Feb. 11, 1875.
the above establishment, which will lie be under the management of Jacob Wag­
henceforth conducted under their constant ner, who will have charge of both mills for
personal
and they guarantee the company during the ensuing year, end­
JOHN L. CARTER
SON, satisfact:on supervision,
to all who may favor them with ing July 1st, 1877.
their patronage.
We will pay the highest market price for
PAINTERS.
These stables are centrally located, and good merchantable wln-at, and are prepared
within convenient distance of the various to contract flour at $18 per thousand pounds
houses of public entertainment. Horses at the mills. Office of the company at the
E ARE FULLY PREPARED TO DO and mules will be boarded and cared for at Ashland Mills.
moderate charges. They have one of the
all kinds of Painting, including
WAGNER, ANDERSON A FARMERS»
largest and finest stocks in Oregon, south of MILL CO., Ashland, Oregon.
Portland, of
HOUSE PAINTING,
BUGGIES AND CARRIAGES,
SIGN PAINTING,
With single or double teams, for hire on rea­ THE CITY BREWERY,
sonable terms. Also good Saddle Horses
ORNAMENTAL PAINTING,
—-BY—
and Mules, which will be hired to go to any
WAGON AND CARRIAGE PAINTING. part ot the country at moderate rates.
VEIT SCHUTZ.
Animals bought and sold, and broke tn
ALL STYLES OF BRAINING DONE.
saddle or harness.
CARDWELL A’ McMAHON.
r . SCHUTZRESPECTFULLY IN-
Orders from the country promptly attend­
torms the citizens of Jacksonville and
ed to.
OR
surrounding
country that he is now manu
RAILBOAD SALOON,
taeturing, and will constantly keep on liana
the very best of Lager Beer. Those wishing
WANTED!
Cor. California and Oregon Sts., Jacksonville a coo] glass of beer should give me a call.
T
W
M
HENRY PAPE, Engineer.
20,000 Lbs. of Old Cast Iron,
elivered at the foundry ' in
D
Ashland, for which we will pay the THROUGH TICKETS, 12* C ents .
highest price.
he undersigned hereby de -
sires to announce to thd public that he
Every farmer has more or less old cast­
is now prepared to fill all orders for cakes ings about his premises, such as old stoves,
of every description, such as wedding cakes, pinions and other articles. These they pHOICE WINES, LIQUORS AND CI-
cakes for parties, wine cakes; also brown would do well to gather up, and bring them V gars constantly on hand. The reading
and rye bread, ginger snaps and crackers. before the rain sets in.
table is also supplied with Eastern lieriodi-
Takes orders on exchange. Prices reasona­
We will also pay the highest price for old cals and leading papers of the Coast.
ble and satisfaction guaranteed.
COPPER, BRASS and ZINC.
Fresh bread everv dav.
_____ ___________ J. M. McCALL dr. CO.
OM
Giant, Blasting organ powder,
_____ _ _________ W m. KREUZER.
all kinds, and caps and fuse, for sale in
AINTS (patents cr other,) Oils, Var­ quantities to suit, by
JOHN MILLER.
XES, Hatchets, Drawing Knives, Broad­
nishes, Shelac, Window Glass, Emery,
axes, Mattocks, Picks, all sizes of Ham­
Borax, etc., for sale in endless quantities by EW Guns made to order and repairinc
mers, etc., for sale by JOHN MILLER.
JOHN MILLER.
properly done by JOHN MILLER.
A
A comple‘e substitute for Castor Oil, with­
out its unpleasant taste or recoil in the*
throat. The result of 20 years’ practice by
Dr. Sain’l Pitcher, of Massachusetts.
Pitcher's Castoria is particularly recom­
mended for children, it destroys worms,
assimilates the food, and allows natural
sleep. Very efficacious in Croup and for
children Teething. For Colds, Feverish­
ness, Disorders of the Bowels, and Stomach
Complaints, nothing is so effective. It is as
pleasant to take as honey, costs but 35-
Cents, ami can l>e had of any Druggist.
This is on«* of many testimonial :
“C ornwall , L ebanon Co., P a ., )
March 17, 1874. J
“Dear Sir,— T have used your C astoria
in mv practice for some time. 1 take great
pleasure in recommending it to the profession,
as a sate, reliable and agreeable medicine.
It is particularly adapted to children where
the repugnant taste of Castor Gil renders it
so difficult to administer.
E. A. ENDERS, M. D.”
Mothers who try Castoria will find that
they can sleep nights and that their babies-
will be healthy.
J.* B. R ose A Co., New York.
UNION
JACKSONVILLE, OGN.
T
Centaur
Liniments
P
P
N
PRO BONO PUBLICO.
milE PUBLIC ARE HEREBY NOTI-
I tied that I have placed my notes and
accounts in the hands of m.v attorney, H.
K. Hanna, with positive instrnctions to
make imrnediateand forced collection in ev­
ery instance where security’ is not given.
Those knowing themselves indebted to
me will do well to call upon Mr. Hanna,
i without delay, as this is my last call. My
i business must be settled !
JAMES T. GLENN.
j Jacksonville, Sept. 9, 1874.
VERY
.
E
<>*scr!j>ti<‘n of Cutlerv for sale
-.nj ] ek .