Newspaper Page Text
YOL. XXIV.
(£iu’li> (Lmtiitt) |lctosJ
IS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY.
OFFICE IN “NEWS BUILDING,”
Blakely, Ga.
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
One Copy, Six Months $1 00
One Copy, Eight Months $1,25
One Copy, One Year $1,50
in advance —hut when not paid until the end
of the year, fifty per cent, will be added.
HATES OF ADVERTISING.
One square, (ten lines or less of solid
Bourgeois) 1 insertion $1 00
For each subsequent insertion 50
All personal mailer double price.
Obituaries will be charged for as otber
advertisements.
Notices in local column, 20 cents per line.
Editorial notices, where requested, for indi
vidual benefit, 20 cents per line.
For a man advertising his wife SIO.OO !
Advertisements inserted without specifica
tion as to the number of insertions, will be
published until ordered out, and charged ac
cordingly.
All advertisements due when handed in. 1
Cards.
Dll. T. M. HOWARD.
Dentist & Physician, j
Blakely, Ga.
Parties living at a distance wishing to
make Dental appointments, will please do
so through the mail.
A choice selection ot pure, fresh
DRUGS & MEDICINES
kept on hand, for sale at reasonable prices
f ir the CASH OXI A’.
May 4, 1882
©a ©TOM,
Attorney at Law,
COLQUITT, GA.
Prompt attention given to all business en
trusted to n-:e. (opr. 20.
lfl kl
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
IJLAKFLY, GA.
Office— One Door South of News Office.
v9-25-t
BURIAL CASES.
MoWOWELL & nunmx
■\TT ILL KEEP on hand, at the “Railroad
W Store," a supply of Rosewood, Ma
hogtny and Walnut
Tdurial Coses
of assorted sizes at reasonable rates, to suit
the times. Give them your patronage.
Blakely, Ga. July 19, 1883.
E L. FRYER
XYTOULD INFORM those who are soun
* V fortunate ns to need
OCP£' ! INB
That he keeps constantly on hand a fine lot ;
OF
ROSEWOOD, MAHOGANY & WALNUT
Burial Cases and will promptly fill all or
ders for same.
Blakely, Ga., October 4, 1883.
A. S. BROWYB
LIVERY STABLE.
Fort, Gaines, Georsiu.
Teams and vehicles always on hand to ac
commodate the public. Good accommoda
tions for Drovers. Stock well groomed and
fed.
I am also Proprietor of the
Howard House,
and will convey passengers to and from the
Depot to the Hotel free of charge. G(vc me
a call.
11l a week At home. $5.00 outfit free. Pay abeo-
V»■ lntclv pure. No risk. Capital not required.
gUy Header, if you want bu«fncs» at which persons
of either eex, young or old, can roaile gr*at pay
pH the time they work, with absolute certainly, wril'i -
for psrtirulars to H. Halleii It Co, I>rtlaa<l, Maine.
Early County News.
*®*©il!)©©[l©© ‘u 3 ® AiLL 1 * 6 ®® Yf®Qi)./A\ rs f& ©®
BLAKELY, GA., THURSDAY EVENING, JANUARY 3,’ 1884.
! CENTRAL
BLAKKLY, GA.,
DR. DOSTOR, Proprietor,
Practitioner of
yfe&T' Medicine
I” fid its Branches.
DEALER IN
Brigs and Medicmes
OF THE BEST QUALITY.
J. T. GATERIGHT \ CO,
237 Sixth Street,
LOUISVILLE, Ky.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
Saddles, Harness, Collars, &c.
i
j IVe make a specialty of First-class Hand
made Work. Our house is headquarters for
Gathright’s Patent Men's and Wo
men’s Saddles, Gatlirightli’s Pat
ent Harness, Saddles, &c.
CASH DEALERS will find it to their in
terest to sec our stock and get prices before
buying.
SIOO A WEEK!
We can guarantee the above amount to
good, active, energetic
AGENTS!
Ladies as well as gentlemen, make a success
in the business. Very little capital requir- |
ed. We have a housi hold article as salable
as flour.
It Sells Itself!
It is used every day in every family. You
do not need to explain its merit. There is a
rich harvest lor all who embrace this golden
opportunity. It costs you only one cent to
learn what our business is. Buy a postal
card and write to us and we will seud you
our prospectus and full particulars
fubb 2
And we know you will derive more good
than you have any idea of. Our reputation
as a manufacturing company is such that we
can no afford to deceive. Write to os on a
postal and gi\e your address plainly and re
ceive full particulars.
BUCKEYE M’F’G COMPANY,
Marion, Ol- io.
HOTELS.
BARNES’ HOTEL
Albany, Georgia.
This well known house, is
situated near the centre of the busi
ness portion of the city, and is still kept by
Merrick Barnes, its original owner and
proprietor. Its fare and accommodations
are the best that can be provided, and charg
es moderate.
PAYEE’S IO Horso Spark-Arrostlng
! Portable Engine baa cut 30.000 ft. of Michigan Pine
! Boards in 10 hours, burning t-labs from the taw in
' Our 10 llarte ire Guarantee to furnish power to
1 saw 8.000 fe tof Hemlock Hoards in 10 hour,. Otir
1 IS Horn trill ml W.teM fe. t in same lime.
Engines arc el-aha NT RED to
furni-h a horse-power on y, less
fin I snd water than any ether Kn
pine not fitted with tin Automatic
Cut Off. If roil want a Stationary
or Portable Lngine, Boiler. Circu
lar Saw-Mill. Shafting or Pulleys,
cither cart or Meddart’s Patent
Wronght-Iron Pulley, send for our
illustrated catalogue, No. VI, tor
information and prices.
B. W. PAYNE & SONS.
Corning. N.Y. Box H2<.
NOTICE!
THE CORBETT HOUSE.
To Priends, Patrons and tlic Public
Generally.
-xy OTJ ARE RESPECTFULLY INFORMED THAT
JL E, C. Corbett, formerly of the National Hotel,
and more recently of the Corbett House on Second
Street, has purchased, thoroughly renovated and furn
ished the large mot elegant three story brick building
known as the Lawton Tcnameut House, situated on
Poplar Street, second house above the City Hall, just
five minutes walk from the general passenger depot,
where he will be pleased to see all who may favor him
with their patronage—either by day, week or mouth.
Persons visiting the city for pleasure, business or
health will find the Corbett House pleasantly situated,
in a first-class location, commanding as flue a view of
the city as any place in it. The air pure and cool, and
’ water fine. He guarranteea his fare as good ar the
l market affords. Terms reasonable. Call and try us.
F. C. CORBETT, Pror. Corbett Uui'js
; Macon, Sep.ember 21, 1810
1 i
DISEASE rriußr-
Without Medici ile..^
A Valuable Discovery for supplying Magn "tiAttvrtviiy J
Human System. Electricity and MMaA-.imawfQAl
utilized as never before for healing jin- *
THE MAGNETION APPLIANCE CO.'fJ&tfZ
Magnetic Kidney Bel£U;1
FOR MEN IS ttfG'Dhoi
WARRANTED 10 CURE fu ° u r %
lowing diseases witnout medicine:—Pain in J/»xoqe < j|
hips, head or limba, nervous debility,
al debility, rheumatism, paralysis, neura4;>i*iDp r (iW,r
diseases of tho kidneys, spinal diseases, t : “ Pile*
Gout, Seminal Emissions, Impotencyy Ast .® jr ,
Disease, Dyspepsia, Hernia or RuptmrcV**’ O.
Epilepsy, Dumb Ague, etc. , J
When any debility of the GENKkATaS l4\ ' .
occurs, Lost Vitality, Lack of NcrvwFiytTe and JgjfcLrn *
Wasting Weakness, and all those dlslaws.pf••
nature; from whatever cause, the s
Magnetism in rineating through the oaaLft
them to u healthy action. There „Li
this appliance. A*
TO THE LADIES— 1
of the Spine, Falling of the WomV,
Chronic Infltuuntiou and Ulceration of
cideutal Hemorrhage or Flooding,
and Irregular Menstruation, Barrenness andg law?,;-
of life, this is the besi. appliance and curati emA
known.
For all forms of Female Difficulties it is
ed by any hing before invented, b<>th as
agent and as a source of power and vitalization. r.
Price of either Belt with Magnetic Insok*HfrViE U ’ Tt
by express C. O. D., and examination >;^!lo'v£dr >- 0 y j
mail ou r<*:eipt of price. In ordering i
of waist, and size of shoe. Uemittaurff>can'be made j
in currency, sent in letter at olt risk. • f f > , j
The Magneton garments are adapted Jp all a?V Ar© !
worn over the underclothing, (not nekV to ly i
like the many Gal vauio and Electric A .'t
tised so extensively), and should be UifcVirtoff |
They hold their powr.R rc hkveh. and w&rji all j
seasons of tiie year. *
Seud stamp for the “New Departure f\»' Medical
treatment without Medicine,” with of testi
monials. tj* vr •
THE MAGNETION APPLIANCE jOO..
218 State street, 0,^11.,
Note.—Send one dollar in postage starqps cj-r* curren
cy (in letter at our risk) with size pf |lkk' worn,
aud try a pair of our ruaguetic
ed of the power residing in our other inir-?u«n<v
ances. Positively no cold feet when - or
money refunded. '/ u hl 'lf
T 0 PRESERVE THE HEALm,
Use the Magneton Applianee'K^^^|.
MAGNETIC LUNG PRof^W
Price Only
They are priceless to Ladies Genii
Cltildren with Weak Lungs;
Pneumonia or Croup is ever
these garments are worn.
vent and cure (lenrt Difficuhvef. voids,
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Throat’ T-ouliles,
Diphtheria, Catarrh, arid all Dis
eases. Will Wear any service Three
Years. Are worn over the
PftTftDHU ' 8 needless tbvvJescrihe
UlilnlirUl. Hie symtonis of U\be nause
j ous disease that is sapping the&vtie and
strength of only too many of ihe .fairest and
of both sexes. Labor, study anfV research
in America, Europe and Eastern lands, have
resulted in the Magnetic Lung Protector,
affording cure for Catarrth, a remedy which
contains no Drugging of the System, and
with the continuous stream of Magnetism
permeating through the afflicted organs,
must Restore them to a Healthy Action.
We place our price for this Appliance at less
than one-twentieth of the price asked by
others lor remedies upon which you take nil
the chances, and we especially invite the
many persons who have tried drugging their
stomachs without efl’eet
HOW TO OBTAIN
and ask lor them. It they have not got
them, write to the proprietors, errfliismg tke
price, in letter and they will he sens to you
at once by mail, post paid. j
Send stamps for the “New Depar*-urc in
Medical Treatment without McdieTif^V. h
thousands of testimonials. Ft "■ V
THE MAGNETON APPLIANCW 1 '' 8
218 State Street, (fit
Note.—Send one dollar in poestge?_ '/wW*.'
or currency(in letter at our
of shoe usually worn, and try vPy
Magnetic Insoles, and bo convin&Cy|? > 'V -'jj,!
power residing in our Magnetic 1
Positively no cold feet where they
or money refunded. [A ■■ 4-fatrafcl!
Swept into the Streaml^ cu
One Tliouwand Acres of
“ftifflit Smart of Hears.”
Ou th© deck of a big MißHisHippi steam'joat
aged Southern planter. Indicating by tbe
his arm the waters the boat waa i>aflsing over,
to a passenger from the Norths “When I wan t\velv 4
years old I killed my first lx*ar on a new plantation
father was then cutting out of a forest that grew ; .cj> _
rectly over the waters of this bend. That was a mitff|p’
good plantation, aud there was right smart of
there, too. But that one thousand acres of laud weut v j
into the Mississippi years ago,” .[•
It is putting no strain upon th© figure to say thol j 1
great forests of youthful ho]>e, womanly beauty an<VJs
inanly strength are swept in the tame way every yeattA
into the great, turbid torrent of disease and death. YeMh
it should not-tie so. That it is so is a disgrace as
as a loss. People are largely too careless or toofet jjjh. h
to defend their interests —the most precious of widch,, •
is health. That gone, all is gone. Disease is sii(ij»le.,f
but to recklessness or ignorance the simplest thing*' a
might as well be complex as a proposition in Conner
Sections. As the huge rivers which so often flood
cities along their shores, arise in a few mountain.. (
springs, so all our ailments can be traced to impure
blood and a small group of disordered organs.
The most effective and inclusive remedy for disease
is Purker’M lonic. It goes to the sources of
pain and weakness. In response to its action, the liv
er, kidneys, stomach and heart begin their work afresh,
and disease |« driven out. The Tonic is not, however,
an intoxicant, but cures a desire for strong drink.
Have you dispepsla, rheumatism, or troubles which
have refused to yield to other agents? Here is your
help.
GO TO
X3T. C. Fryer Sz Son’s,
AND BUY YOUR WIFE
OOOD
COOKING STOVE.
i ' i
d i The Bad Boy.
j “Well, I never eee u boy change oa you
k said the grocery man to the bad bo*
he came in with a poor, dirty looling
Mramp, aod bought him a pound of crack
Ifjrs and a big piece of cheese, and, as the
jjjjcauip sat down on a soap box and began
*k o fodder as through it was
Y'i ** le looked out of th<-»«*
Pw'A/W tft.'lhe rain that was falling, tl'A ur
aS-SiJ'V ’'l 81 ' added; "What has got into
Yquihaven’t got religion, have you?”
f Stoeßs not,” said the boy, as he
tjilyW a' |tToWe out of a barrel to the tramp.
M‘'lntft isjf diaven’t got it by soy regular
frule, be it is iD my system. I tell
old oleontargorioe, I have always been
(.yn for fuo, and haven’t cared much how I
jhad it, but lately I have hud more fun
making aeoplc happy than 1 ever had uiak
j in" pr around. Don’t you know
if a person who is io hard
i luck thiA "Hunks the world is all a
iraud, iwid'Y'ho almost wants to be run ov
er by a freight train, and you go to work
and surprise the person with a bit of kind
ness, smuggle a warm meal down him lies
fore he know.-, it, it makes your heart feel
as though you had got loosen your belt? I
never knew there was so much sufferi "in
in the world uutil that humane societyQef
low hired me to go around with him to
hold his horse while he relieved distress,
but the woods are full of people who have
no drawers to wear io wioter, and who
would faint away at sight of a roast ot beef.
Gosh, I wish I had a million dollars!”
“Oh, what would you do with SI,OOO,
000?” asked the grocery man, as he watch
ed the tramp pick his teeth with a sliver
off tbe soap-box. “If you bad $1,000,000
you would buy a dude suit of clothes, and
a trotting wagon with red wheels, uud u
horse that could trot in 2:10. And yon
would part your hair in tbe middle and
wear yellow gloves and suy ‘g’lang.’ That’s
the kind of a millionaire you would be.”
“No, sir! You are no guesser,” said the
boy, as he gave the tratnp a glass of cider.
“I would buy out a bakery and a meat
market, and when poor people hadn’t any
thing to eat I call on
Hennery. Then t&P 0) .
and go iu
advance lur cople
knew they would j^ahotn
paying rent fur a be so
hajpy they would I would
buy 10,000 flannel drawers,
regular old thick ones, all sixes, and sell
them to poor people aud take their notes
for the pay. Y'ou see, some people wouldn’t
like to have drawers g’p'en to them, but if
you took their Dotes they would feel as
U bought the drawers, aod then
i-ild have a bonfire and burn up the
Jtjpfe Dut I had rather be able to work
t aod tu r ’ them into loaves of
- and water iri Glwine, tbe way Christ
f would set at a stoue
Lt frrv ami opiiti-Yi ve bakery, and would
r ‘ ,er aIJ 4 make it into
„ tell'rhe people to help them
safe the breweries sick,
■ / ’ wß«stild.s-frip *l heir beer to Texas
Sh*rHSi o iorado. i ti4(.you, what this coun~
As-a felloifr that can tnuko a ba
,dt of rpaarry by a simple
K&u’Y ,i the ifrist, aud I had rather have
S l 'sucli a job Thao io Jid. President. If I
hard hgads into bread it would
tbeU —*yWauld tit", n big stone and
. f* i/tidte of who had
io, tliCi ho>me i.ud tell her I
t <.£ Etrljughr some bread, and I jrfould, *
fd as j^ er ' 4 6 tot,e-as big as a peak roeasui'e J .
iawsly;onw, v t *
oLfor see it was a,stone, am yfiA.
Woflld come ioio her eyes, and : She' ;
ViVi'4 lor k sorry ll been use I was-somianr"
fjiife «he was piping her eyct'Ct tlye y.
mder side of her oprou Lwo'wld 'opjply iig
stone with my and ttfrn it it s
to a loaf of salt rtsl»g-> Bread/or brown
bread, with a mansard roof on, and the
poor woman would give me when
she found the stone was bread /rould be
worth a thousand dollars, and Tjwotdd go
away feeling pretty cunning I should
want to be able to turn cord wood into
canvas hams, too ”
“Yes,” that is all right for talk*but you
1 ain’t no angel, yet,” said the grocery than.
1 “Tho-detective in this ward says he is
! shadowing a lot of you boys that are hold- |
inf* clandestine meetings in a bnrn and he
thirties you are up to some deviltry. You
better look out or the detccotive will have
you boys all pulled.”.',
“Don’t you worry about us,” said the boy,
as he "bv<» ‘he quarter to buy the
next meal, and t>l< ) not to mention it,
when the trump.> *o to thank him.
'‘That is t ‘mart for his boots.
a'rv I ,|aV,; 0 )' C, J for playing
jokes on poor widotyM • 'p winter. 1 have
got nine boys in our- diborbood to join
the society, and we 1 X going to make it
hot for widows, and don’t you forgot it.
The humane society man is going to tell
us when they take a load of wood to a poor
widow’s house, and us boys are going to
sneak up to her house after dark, armed
to the teeth with buck-saws and saw-bucks,
and axes, and before a widow knows what
kiod of a gang wc are, we are going to saw
up her wood end split it, and carry it in.
We made the darudest mistake last night,
on the South side, though. Wc found a 1
load of wood next door to a poor widow’s j
hoti9e and after we had got it all done, a j
Dutch cigar-maker, next door, who owned
the wood, got mad about it and made us
pay 84 for the wood. It took all the moo
ey we had, but it was fun, and the widow
'merer knew where the wood came Iron)
I had to sell my skates to raise my share,
but there is oo ice, .anyway. I suppose
that detective thinks he will run ou to a
kit of burglar tools when he makes u'ruid
on us iD (he barn, but ho will find us filing
saws. Pa says us boys have struck a lead
now that makes him proud of us, and if
we can’t find wood enough to saw he will
buy some. If he does wo will give it to
somebody that is poor. Wc are not sawing
wood for peoplo that arc oble to hire a
Polacker to saw it.”
“Well, you take the cake,” said the
grocery man, as he cleared up the siogle
crumb that the tramp left. “One spell I
expected you would bring up in State
prison, and now I would’t be surprised
any Sunday to go to church and fiud you
in the pulpit ”
“No, you needn’t expect to find me in a
pulpit,” said the boy, as he scratched a
mutch ou his .pants to light the tramp’s
pipe. “I shall practice, and not preach.”
Peck’s Sun.
Good style is good sense, good health,
good energy and good will, but a bottle
of Dr Bui’s Cough Syrup is a good ben
efaction that suffering humanity has al
ready learned to appreciate.
Two persons have obtained the exclu
sive right for ten years to gather the cac
tus from the government lands of Mexico.
It can be put to highly profitable use in
the manufacture of paper und textile fab
rics. For each 5150,000 paper mill the
guarantees erect, they are to receive a pre
mium of §20,000 dollars from the Mexican
govcromcot. Such a scheme might be
intioduccd with profit nmoog the cactus
beds of our western Territories.
Health is impossible when the blood is
impure thick and sluggish, or-when it is
thin and impoverished. Under such coo
ditions, boils, pimples, headache, neuralgia, j
rheumatism, and one disease after another
is developed. Take Ayer’s Sarsaparilla
and it will make the blood pure, rich,
warm and vitalizing.
♦ ♦ ♦ - -■ - "j' - -
> Tho Yuma Indians on tne Colorado,
bury watermelons iu the dry desert sand
aod preserve them all winter fresh and
crisp. It is eoough to make one shiver to
think of watermelons :n January, but the
fYuma may like that sort of thing.
*■ . “0h to think,” said a religious English
his gamekeeper, “to think that I
"shijuli.JhHve called you a d—d infernal
/'poVMFm very sorry. To think that one
jjlrrilftan should use such language to an
other! - Heaven forgive me! But it’s
God’s truth all the same.”
—— .. .ft * ——*
A correspondent t»f one of the Chicago !
papers Mr. W. 11. Vanderbilt j
gives away $250,000 a year. In the mat-!
tef of charity ho does not le£ bis right |
hand know what his left elves. His bcD*
efuotious ore, hfddco from the general eye.
The correspondent also says he is sensitive
to newspaper criticism.. His vulnerable
place, like the late Mr? Tweed's, is touched
more immediately by caricature, 'lhat bet
hates. .
1 «; *4
NO. 30.
The Squatter’s Daughter.
“Light and look at yer saddle,” said the
squatter’s daughter, as a man stopped at
tho fence. The mao, who had beco several
weeks in tho neighborhood, and who had
become so well acquainted with the girl
that her handsome face was ever before
him, advanced to whero she was sitting
and lingeringly shook the hand which she
extended to him.
“How arc you, Emily?”
“Fust rate; never felt better nor had
less.”
“Where’s all the folks?”
“Scattered. Dad’s gone to the still
house, mam’s gooo to a quiltin’, Bob’s
lyin’ around loose, somewhur, and Dick’s
drunk, I speck.”
“Emily,” said the visitor, seating him
self in the doo r way, “don’t you know that
dressed iu anything like a stylish way, you
would bo one of the handsomest girls I
i ever saw?”
“Wall, Lor’, I hadn’t thought about it.”
I l I r
I “YY’ould'nt you like to wear fino dress
es ?”
“Now, you’re shoutin’.”
“And have a good education?”
“I don’t kero so much about tho eddy
cation, 'cause I’m sorter ’spicious ’bout
book scdsc. Ileal old boss sense is the
kind to have, an’ es a persou’sgot the ho-s
sense, he don’t need the book lamin’ an’
es he hain’t got the boss sense ho cau’t
take book lavuin’ to any great shakes.”
“You are mistaken. Education accom
plishes woeders, and without our great
colleges and schools this entire country
would scon be worse Ilian it was when first
discovered.”
“I know job’ what I'm cr talkin’ about.”
sho replied, “an'tliar aiu’t no usen you
tryin’ ter talk boolf lamin’ agin’ me, ’oaso
I’so got the figgers. A mighty eddycated
feller come ter see me fur a long time, aDd
folks ’lowed we’d marry, au’ I reckin we
would cf it hadn’t er been that his eddy
cation proved to be a failure. Ouc day at
a log rollin’ Tony Diver, the runt of the
neighborhood, arter hcariu’ my eddycated
man blow a powerful chance, went up to
him an’ said; ‘Look a hear, Cap'u you've
been talkin’ bout your cddycation for some
lime, now I want io Bhow you lhat it don’t
amount to nothin’,' an’ tclliu’ the smart
man to cut liis capers, Tony grabbed him.
They scuffled arouo' a while an’ finally
Tony flung him. Tony don’t know a let
ter in the book, an’ when it was diskivered
that the fellow’s cddycation did’nt amoout
to anythin', pap he come home an’ sez
‘Emily, that smart man o' yourn was flung
down jes' now by Tony Diver. Es yer
marry him I'll drive yer from under my
roof, an’ you shan’t come back do mo’.’
‘Pap,’ ss’l, ‘I an't a goiu’ ter fling myself
away’. ”
“Emily, do you think that you could
live happily w'th me?”
“Look a here, if Gabc Jolmson knowed
yer was er talkin’ ter me that er way, he'd
chaw yer roaue.”
“What, are you engaged to him?”
“It hits ccc that cr way.”
“I must say that I don’t think he’s—”
“Hole 00, right thar. Didn’t ho whip «
the doctor at Dry Fork t'other day, an’
didn’t ho slap the jaw otfen the County
Judge? Yer can’t set here ou talk about
a man with such ’complwhmeets. Get on
that boss an’mosey.”— Arkunsaw Traveler.
It was a wiso one that said: “Every
man is occasionally what he ought to be
perpetually.” That must be when he is
honest enough to acknowledge the merits
of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, the ody euro
cure for coughs and oolds.
It is a dufficult thing for a dog without
a tail to show bis master how much ho
thiuks of him.
After wrestling with the subject for a
long while, a New York writer concludes
j that there is only one thing that can effeo
i tually remove the odor of friend onions—
' time.
Ayor's ChSrry Pectoial is recommend^
by nhyswions of the g-falest eminence ou
both sides’of’the Atlantic, as the most re
liable‘remedy for colds and coughs, and
all pulmonary disorders. Ii affords
prompt relief in every jcasc. No family '
1 should ever be wit ho V, V f
L 1