Newspaper Page Text
VOL. XXVII.
Ociiritt Cfluntj)
PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY.
OFFICE IN NEWS BUILDING,
BLAKELY, GEORGIA.
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Hereafter, all legal advertisements must be paid for
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sequent insertion.
A. 3. & W. W. FLEMING, JR.*
Editors and Publishers.
County Directory:
Superior COURT.—Hon. Jno. T. Clarke, Judge. J.
H Guerry, Solicitor General. J. W. Alexander, Clerk.
«L.’ E. Black, Sheriff. Regular term, Ist Monday in
April and October.
Court of Ordinary.—Tbomas Henderson, Ordms:-
«rv. Regular meeting, let Monday in each month.
‘County Commissicners.—H, C. Fryer, T. M. How
ard W. C. Sheffield, R. H. -Lanier* L. Harris. Reg
ular meeting Ist Tuesday in each m«nth.
County Treasureiv-H. H. Buchanan,
Tax Collector—T. G. {Johnson,
Tax Receiver —R. B. Taylor.
Coronei^—James Butler. >
Town Council of Blakely;
Chairman—B. H. Powell. , _ . „„
Aldermen —H. C. Fryer, T. M. Howard, W. A. Mc-
Sowcll, A. J. Singletary.
Clerk and Treasurer —J. J. Smith.
Marsh*—J. C.'kfhancy.
c BUSINESS DIREOTORY. "
_ ~ K. H. SHEFFIELD,
AT LAW
ASD BEAL ESTATE ‘A’GENT. All business will
receive prompt attention. Office in northwest
ipoom of Court House.
Blakely, Ga., June 3, 1886.
Dr. T. 31. HOW ARD,
Dentist & Physician,
Blakely, -
Ed. ITfRYER,
PROPRIETOR 05?
T- IVEBY, SALE fc FEED STABLES, northeast cor
uer of public square. Best teams at lowest prices.
Ample accommodation to Traveling Salesmen. Atten
tive hostlers. Give him « trial.
Blakely, Ga., September X, 1885. ly.
b. h.liobinson,
DEALER IN
Cl ENERAL MERCHANDISE, comes to Vhe front
J with one of the most varied and best assorted
Stocks of I>ry Groceries, Clothing, Boots,
8hoe«, Hats, Hardware, &c., to be found m Blakely.
Store one door north of News office. Try him.
September 3, 1885. ly.
“Tlrs. A. Y. THOMPSON^
MILLINER,
HAS JUST received her Spring & Smmner Stock of
Millinery Goods, and is now prepared to accom
modate her customers with latest styles or goods iu
her liue, at prices that defy competition* Store in the
Bass building, northwest corner of public square.
Blakely, Ga., September 3, 1885. ly.
S. II.POYYELL, Agent,
DEALER IN
DRY GOODS, Notions, Groceries, Shoes, Toilet
Goods, Tinware, Glassware, Woodware and Mil
low-ware. Stock kept constantly replenished with
choice goods. Store on southwest corner of public
square. , ,
Blakely, Ga,, September, 3, 1885. ly.
* SMITH & JAMES,
DEALERS IN
DRY GOODS, Groceries, Hardware, Notions, Cloth
ing, Boots, Shoes, Hats and General Merchandise
of all sorts. Stock kept up to the highest standard by
constant addition of fresh goods. Store on West side
Main Street.
Blakely, Ga., Sept. 3, 1885. ly.
Dr. W. B. STANDI FEB,
PHYSICIAN fc APOTHECARY,
TENDERS his professional services to the public.
Prescriptions carefully compounded, and calls at
tended promptly day or mglit. Office cast side of the
Public Square, Blakely, Ga.
September 3, 1885. ly
J. 1L BUTLER,
AGENT FOR THE
ORDER DEPARTMENT of John Wanamaker-B
Clothing House, Philalelphla. Spring & Summer
samples just received, and he is now ready to take
orders. Suits guaranteed to fit. Headquarters at
H. C. Fryer k Son’s Store.
Blakely, Ga., September 3,1885. ly.
~~S. X... BUSH,
BLACKSMITH,
G< UNSMITH and Wood-workman. Will do all work
r left with him iu first-class style. Horse-shoeing
also done. Prices very low. A liberal share of the
public patronage solicited. Shop on west Bide of Cuth
bert Street. rA-
Blakely, Ga., Sept. 3, 1885. ly.
Wm. A. JORDAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAAV,
WILL PRACTICE in all the courts of the Pataula
circuit. Collections made a specialty. Office in
the Court House.
Blakely, Ga.. April Bth, 1886. ly.
larlD Go until News.
w®sa©®g©® T® ALL « 53® £><&'? TFGOBOia SHISiSSES'? ®g®TT®"““ 188 BBJISS TOM S3C®IKI , F-” ! rMI3S!l COS® AIM ISA®.""®*
ROY* l
ill !
**4KlH*
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
-powder never varies. A marvel of purity,
iftrerigth and wholesomeness. More economical tliau
the ordinary "kinds, and cannot be sold in competitioh
With the multitude-es low test, 'Short weight alum or
phosphate -powders. Sbld ouly'ih cans. Royal Bak
ing POWdeii 0ft.,*106 Wall street, New York.
Liiwd for Sale.
THE UNDERSIGNED is dfferin£ for
sale Lots of Land Nos. 255 aDd 266,
in the sth ©istrict of Early -ccmnty, embrac
ing the plantation known as the Hutchins,
or Barksdale place. There we on the place
about 150 acres of cleared land, which Has
been lying out tor sev-emi years. The fenc
ing brsiklitrgs on the place’are very im
ferioT, except the dwelling, which is a goop
doubks-pen hewed log house. The location
is-one of the Brest healthful in Southwest
Georgia. For further particulars inquire
of tire undersigned.
\V. W. FLEMING, Trustee.
Blakely; Ua.,‘C-ct. I*6, 1884.
PARKER’S
HAIR &A4.SAWI
the ptfptxtar tor dreasing
tl*e nair, Restoring color when
gray, and preventing Dandruff.
It. cleanses the scalp, stops the
hair falling, and is sure to please.
50c. and SI.OO at Dr u&K&s.
The best Cough Cure you can use,
And the best preventive known for Consumption. It!
cures bodily pains, aiul all the Stomach, i
Dowels, Lungs, Li\'<*,ssfcineys, Organ*
all Female Complaints. Tho feeble and sick, strug
gling against disease, and slowly drifting towards
the grave, will in most cases rccqycr their health l>y
the timely us© of Parker's Tonic, but delay is dan
gerous. Take it in time. Sold by all Druggists in
lai-ge bottles at 81-00.
HINDERCORNB
The safest, surest, quickest and best cure for Corns,
Bunions, Warts, Moles, Callouses, Ac. Hinders their fWT
thergrowth. Stopsallpaia. Gives no trouble. Makes the
feet v comfortable. nindefr'&Vns cures when everything
else fails. Sold by Druggists at 15c. Hiscox&Co., N. X»
CLINCMAN'S
Tobacco
REMEDIES
THE MOST EFFECTIVE PREPARA
TION on the market for Piles. A SURE CURE
for ltckiiitf Piles. Has never fn lied to give
prompt relief. "Will cure Anal Ulcers, Abscess,
Fistula. Tetter, Salt Rheum. Barber’s Itch, Ring
worms, Pimples, Sores and Boils. Price 50 cts.
THE CIINGMAN TOBACCO CAKE
NATURE’S OWN JlKillEl>Y,, Cure* nil
Wounds. Cuts. Bruises, Sprains, Erysipelas, Boils,
Carbuncles. Bone Felons, Ulcors. Sores. Sore Eyes,
Sore Throat.Bunions.Goms, Neuralgia. Rheumatism,
Orchitis. Gout. Rheumatic Gout. Colds, Coughs,
Bronchitis, Milk Leg, Snake and Dog Bites. Stings
of Insects. Ac. In fact allays all local Irritation and
Inflammation from whatever cause. Price 26 cts.'
THE CLINGMAN TOBACCO PLASTER
Prepared according: to the most scientific
principle*, of the PUREST SEDATIVE
INGREDIENTS* compounded with the {rarest
Tobacco Flour, and is specially recommended for
Croup. Weed or Cake of the Breast, apd for that class
of irritant or inflammatory maladies. Aches and
Puins where, from too delicate a Btate of the system,
the patient is unable tobeafthe application
of ltie Tobacco Cake. For Headache or t>ther Aches
and Pains, it 1b ihtWUAbit). Ptifce Id cts.
Ask yetti* druggist fur these remedial, or write to the
CIIHGMAN TOBACCO CURE CO.
DURHAM, N. 0., U. 8. A.
HOOID’S
Liver Medicine.
A perfect, faubless family medicine, sain
ing in popularity every day by its well de
served merit- A preparation that Cbnllettg
es anything ever prepared for the common
ills of life, and the moderate use of which
will insure you perfect health and immuni
ty from sickness. Medicine is no science,
you know; only a conjectural art. But
Hood’s EUREKA will always cure; and is
the successful part.
M. I). HOOD & CO.,
COLUMBUS, GA.,
oct 22 ly
BLAKELY, GA,. THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 2% 1886.
MfflE HEART IS.
%Y E. N. e.
If "home is where the heart re/’
Then is ’my bbine with then,
Though we are separated
By leagues of iand and sea.
If “honrtTs where the heart is,”
There must my ■dwelling bel
I see the trailing tresses—
Those threads ert •sheeny £old;
I share thy fond caresses
As I have shared of old.
■Between thy home and mine, dear,
The ocean is unrolled!
Yet “home is where the heart is,”
So runs the’poet’s song.
Though-'league on league unfoldeth,
The distance is not long.
Myh'DTt witli strong wings-flutters
To where it must belong!
If ‘‘home is where the heart is,”
Then, under distant skies,
My heart’to day is tasking
Beneath my darling’s eyes.
It may not dwell tn heaVCn,
But liyes in Paradise!
Yes, “home is where the hca'rt isV’
Fly like a swift winged deve,
Oh, heart of ■Siitte, to rest thee
Within fny darling’s love.
.. No ho-nro 'oan he so %iappy,
t Excepting'that above!
A PLEASANT LOVF.
“I have got some news for you, Maggie,”
he said owe day-, -about eighteen months af
ter he had gained his commission. “Guess
what it is.”
They were walking along" the green lanes
of (Perlook, listening to the ceaseless mur
murTif the sen, as at intervals they had
walked awd listened ever since they could
remember; at any rate, she wot six years
younger than her fur-weT playfellow.
“You are going to be promoted,” she said.
“Promoted, you little goose-! No one ever
gets promoted in the British army. I am
ordered to China.”
“Oh, Alrc-l” slic gasped, and burst into
tears. It was very foolish of tier, but then .
she was only sixteen, and had not yet ae
qnired the praiseworthy art of concealing
her feelings.
“Why, whatever arc you crying for?” he
asked, and kissed away her tears. He had
kissed her si wee she was Sve .years old, and
thought no more of it than if she had been*
his sister or the cat, excepting perhaps it
was nicer—which it was, no doubt.
“I shall only be away five years at most,
and when I come back I will bring you a
pig tail, and an ivoty toothpick, and a whole
lot of things, and I will •”
“Yes,” she said, listening attentively.
“But then you’ll be a young woman—l
forgot—and ‘out,’ and all that sort of things,
and won’t can'descettd to speak to a poor
lieutenant; you will have all the squires and
foxhuntrt’s about here ut your feet.”
“Oh, no, indeed I shall not, Alio,” she
said emphatically.
“Then I shall come back and find you
just as great a darling as you are now; and
if we get any money we’U get married and
starve ever afterward.”
So Alic Granger went to China, and Mag
gie waited patiently enough for a letter-, but
six months passed and Dond came. “Per
haps it takes a leiter a long time to get here
from China,” she thought, knowing as little
about the means of transit and the time it
took as if the Celestial Oily had been in the
moon. But a year patsed and yet no letter
came, and Maggie journeyed into woman
hood, but no Word or sign came from Alic,
and at last she gave him up altogether-.
Maggie was twenty years old when her
lather died, and the creditors pounced down
and she and her mother were sold out. Mrs,
Dunlop was offered a home in London by
her sister, who was well off and bad temper
ed, and it Was thankfully accepted; Maggie
went as governess into the family of Mrs.
Marshall, of Woolwich.
Mrs. Marshall’s daughter by her first hus
band Was really mistress of the establish
ment, for Mary Patterson hhd a very strong
will, and ebe was an heiress. “A disagree
able heiress, too,” Maggie thought; and she
right, for Mary was skinny, and fancied her
self sarcastic, and always said very disagree
able things to people who did not dare to
say them back again.
One evening when Maggie had been about
a year at Woolwich and she was sitting alone
in her schoolroom as usual, for her pupils
had been delivered to the tender mercies of
their nurse, Miss Pattefson Walked in.
“Miss Dunlop,” she said, "we shall haye
a few friends this evening, and impromptu
dance' will you be ready to piny if we should
want you?”
In the evehing she put on her shabby
black gown, stuck a spray of white flowers
iu her golden hair, and waited patiently fur
•the aommons. W-ben it came, with a roll
I ds thusio Wilder Tier aim, and a flush on her
innocent-fwafe, -and a'BORTed, ftlmcmt huntfefl
expression ’in her eyes, she descended and
■timidly opened the drawing room door, then
stood for a moment, staring in astonishment.
There sat the heiress, with an eager, pleased
expression on her face, and lotfttihg dver her,
talking and laughing, but more soldier look
ing and handsomer than ever, was Alic
Granger. The color rushed to Maggie’s
face and then left*?t ’altogether. She ffecoy
‘dted her Self, ’however, nnd walked with
great dignity to'the piano. She felt rather
than gaw hltn'raise his dark eyos and look
-at her, and *ttte next iscrttient the saw 'him nt
*her 'side.
'“Maggie, vtiydear Maggie! Why, fancy
ydu being here; where did you come from?
haVe been trying to fiaC yeu out for
months.”
“I thought you- ” and then's’he did not
know-to'go on, so added ailtcously: “I a'tn
’£he governess here.”
“Are you-? Oh, I see: then that is tlm
reaso'nl have not seen you before, i suppose.”
“Do yon really kOtoV Miss Dunlop?” the
heiress-asUed, coming Wp -and speaking in
the coldest manner possible.
‘ Why, of course, I do; we have been play
mates almost’ever since we were born.”
“Oh, indeed, how interesting!” then turn
ing to Maggie; "Will you be so k-ifcd as to
'begin a wnlfz, Miss Dunlop? This Was cf&r
dance, I think,” to Alio, and she reriied off
with bitn.
The next morning, to Maggie’s great sur
prise, Miss Patterson came into the school
room before the children liffd assembled.
“Miss ©unlop,” she'said sufty, f ‘*[ should
like to know where you say you met Mr.
Granger?”
“At Perlock. Ills uncle lived next door
to my vaother. Ho hs a Very eM friend, in
deed '”
"Thank you. I merely wis*h to inquire,
bcctAYse, 'Of‘Coarse, you must bo aware that
that it is not usual for one iu yoST position ts
make herself i*e#ia l i4«W» for having long
conversations with any gentleman visiting
here.”
“I don’t know What you rtfeftn. Miss Fat
terson,” said Maggie indignantly. But the
lady had swept u«t of the room without
deigning to reply.
Then Maggie crept off to her room find
cried till her ‘Oyes Were red and her head
ached.
The lessons did not p'm'gWJt*that morning,
[Maggie was thinking of Alic. V.IYO Yio doubt
was strolling about the common listening to i
the band and making love to the heiress.
The children were very stupid, and all the
world seemed Upset. At 12 o’clock, as Mag
gie was deep in the eccentricities of the
French grammar, there was a knock at the
door.
“Come i*',’’ 3hfc skid.
The door opened and there stood Alic, and
behind him a man—evidently his servant--
with a box on liis shoulders.
“All right, Tom, put it down; that’s right;
now bo off, please. There, I have brought
the curiosities around, Maggie; £ thought
you would like to sOe them.”
“Oh, what will. Mrs. Marshall and Miss
Patterson any?”
“Nothing to you fob the next hour Or so,
for I have just seen them on their way to
Woolwich, and thought 1 should get a quiet
chat With you. My dears,” he said, turn
ing to Maggie’s pupils, “I am sure you
would like to be let off for ah hour; rhn
along, my dears,” and ho opened the doors
for them.
“Oh, Alic!” said she; in fear and trem
bling.
“Oh, Maggie!” he answered, mimicking,
“what did you mean by going away from
Perlock and not leaving any address?”
"I couldn’t help it, and you never wrote.”
“No, I nevet Wtite letters; don’t know
how to spell well enough. But I have been
hunting tbs you all oyer the place, and nev.
et drefttned of finding you herb. Now we’ll
Unpack the box; I hnc* it opened befbre I
came; Bo its only fastened by a lock. Why;
What's tho matter, Maggie?”
“Nothing, orly you’ll get tite into dread
ful trouble—you Will, indeed; Miss Patter
eon oame in this morning and sdolded mo for
talking to you last night.”
“Never mind; she io only jealous,” he
said. “Now tell me how Soon you can leave
here.”
“What for?”
“Why, you haven’t forgotten that we
agreed to get married when I came back,
have you, you little coquet?” and he put his
arm around her waist, just ae of old, and
Was not reproved.
“No, but you are engaged, are you not?”
“Yes, of course I am—to you.”
♦ J*-* uus
“Her features are not regular, yet What
an attractive face she has!” It is her beau
tiful hair. Once it was thin, grayish and
fading. A few bottles of Parker’s Hair
Balsam wrought the transformation. It will
do as much tor anybody.
About Getting Mareied,
Christine Herrick in Philadelphia Press.
Whether they are sutficiently honest to
acknowledge it or not, ninety-nine girls out
of every hundred look forward to marriage
ex a mattor of course. It Vould lab better
for them and for their future husbands were
this taken into (lie account if. ’the 'training
of girls, and without teaching that a single
life must be empty and unsatisfactory, yet
instruct them that, as matrimony will prob
ably L’e their destiny, they should ff.t them
selves fth-'it, tibt only by training in domes
tic duties, but by the study of gentleness,
forbearance and unselfishness.
A b'Cased provision ot nature often over
looked is the change Worked in a woman’s
disposition by love. If the XSntimcnt be
worthy of tho name, the deep, strong affec
tion from Which alone marriages should
spring,'Khd not a mere passing fancy, the
tendencies will be to awaken all that is best
nnd noblest in the heart. “Old thfngs are
passed away, and all'thitigs are become new.”
Looked at by this fresh true light, little de
privations, petty -economies, 'small sadrifices,
and even large ones, become a burden to be
embraced and eqjoyed for the sake of the
one with whom they Me shared.
Occasionally a wife may be feffend who is
sufficiently devoid of womanliness and gen
erosity ns to sigh over the immunity from
cf.re she knot? before her marriage and to
reproffCb the hwsbafid of her choice with his
inabflFty to provide her with the luxuries
she oraVes. So eh a -cVestft re, howeyer, would
hot be.Ye bfien Improved by wealth. Some
times prosperity seems to have a sweetening
and ennobling effect upon nti'th'res which ad
versity bn's 'narruVed a'nd hardened, but a«
a rule those who cannot stand poverty
without becoming embittered aro not fit lor
riches.
The custom of early marriages, has, per
haps wisdy, fallen into disuse. The title
of “old maid” is no longer conferred upon a
woman who remains single until twenty-five.,
K’Oi'C 'fcirls rtiarry within a year Or two after
that ago than five years before it. There
are both advantages and diTadvantages in
the forrher system. Youthful judgment is
prone to be harsh and unsparing, and iti
may well be questioned whether the larger
proportion of happy mmrrngdS arc not those
formed after 23 rather than earlier.
Another objection to boy and girl match
es is that they are likely to tfb the result of
accident instead of choice. The fancy is
readily captivated when one has secYi little
of the world, and many a man or Woman in
later life shrinks with rcptignan'ee from a
marriage which seemed altogether desirable
when neither was out of their teens. Ex
ceptions to this only prove the rule. Its
troth may be attested by the fact Hint there
is not one man or woman out of fifty who
will not acknowledge having been the vic
tim of some youthful flame 'ot which the
memory brings no pang, hut only a sensa
tion of amusement slightly tinctUFi‘il with
disgust. The youthful loVc rt Very real,
too—while it lasts—nnd causes Such altera
tions of bliss and misery as to fairly per
suade tile sufferers that it is the right thing.
But it diflers r.S completely tforti the affec
tion of riper yfearf. as do the stumbling, tot
tering steps ot a child from the firm assured
tread of a man.
i'he early inarri; ges of oilr grandparents
nrc sometimes quoted in justification of the
practice, but times have chnnged since then.
In spite of the bustle and luii-fy that make
ten years of the ttineteeth century equal to
forty of the seventeenth, the age at which
young men and women conclude their scho
lastic education and l.nlnch thctbselVes into
the world ot business or pleasuro is steadily
growing later. Boys’ and girls’ colleges
are increasing the age fin which pupils are
admitted. It used to he thought nothing
unusual for a youth to begin his collegiate
course at 14; now it is equally common for
him to pnfttpoile his matriculation until ho
is IT or 18. Few girls are graduated from
finishing schools or seminaries under 19 or
20, while those who take a regular College
course continue their routine of study even
later. The girl Wants her swihg in society
befobe she settles down to married life; while
tho man has his business or profession to ac
quire and his position to gain iii the wotld
before he can seriously contemplate taking
unto himself a wife.
If special training be necessary in the
preparation of a woman for marriage, it is
not less important for a man. This is a fact
that is gertbt-aily overlooked. A great deal
is said about the beauty of gentleness and
unselfishness in a woman, and of the need
bf her possession of these qualities in mak
ing true home happiness. But unless them
faults are glaringly apparent in a marl they
rarely provoke adverse criticism. Ihe ques
tion is sometimes asked, upon the announce
ment ot an engagement, “Is he good enough
for her?” but his peccadilloes are seldom
submitted to the keen examination to which
hers arc subjected. i
it is aeolnmon habit to lay the blame up
'o'n a'Womiin’a ’shoulders if a house is n>h
peaceful and happy, ekctfpt Iti cases where
the husband’s well-known vioes preclude
this. Even then thete are always 'censors
ready to hint that if the woman had nibde
domestic life all that it should be she would
probably have loss cauSe for cOtnpliiitit.
While open courses of extravagance, intern*
perance or infidelity are cruelly hard to bear,
there are other‘lesti palpable trials that arts
nearly as wearing. The tricks of speech-,
manner and conduct that offend in awdradti
are equally distressing in a‘mac. The hab
it of carelessness, the gradual falling away
of the minor courtesies of word atfS -bearing
that tftal*ked the betrothal days are fiflttCen’-
ly by those women who suffer from them,
although pride and loyalty may alike preveift
complaint.
Another 'Whirlpool Crank,
Niagara Falls, July 15.—George W\
White, a barber of Oswego, came here to
day'for the avowed'purpose of swimming
the whirlpool rapids, through which Crtoper
! Graham Went in a blfrfel On Sunday last.
White did not make himself conspicuous,
but went quietly around the various places
where lie could see the action of the water.
He wore under his clothes a thin cork suit,
which he skid would greatly aid him in ac
complishing what Captain Webb had failed
to do. AY hite was seen by your correspond
ent in the Elgin House at Niagara Falls-,
Ont., this evening, lie said:
“I came Tiefe for the purpose of s'WJffi'-
ming the rapids, but I will have to be verv
careful, because I am afraid the police \virt
arrest me. I am satisfied tlhat ‘Captain
Webb irftft f/is ’life by diving and striking his
heud against a rock. I know that the ra
pids are very dangerous, but I have had ek'-
periewce as n swimmer, trod with my cork
suit Wofild l £ct 'through all right by merely
avoiding the rdeks and going where the
foam was not s 6 thick. I have swam the
Lachiuc Vtipids, find, while these arc more
dangerous, I think I cau succeed. If Ido
Graham and his barrel will take a long Vek't,
1 and I will be a hefo.”
White said ho would make the trip quiet
ly to-morroVr morning. While he may be A
crank ho does not talk or act Tike oVie.
Chief of Police Madigan, of SnspensioA
Bridge, said to-night that he should not in
terfere with White’s trip, lie thought thb
man had fts much tight to go through a&
Graham. Detective Wit i), on the Canadian
side, was reported to be looking tot White-,
and the latter sCcliit'i'd himself as soon as
he h'eatd of it.
An Enterprising, ltd in We House-.
Tti'c Ccntrul Drug Stotc can always be
relied upon, not only to carry in stock the
best of everything, hut to secure the agency
for such articles as have well-knoYvn tn'erit>
and are popular With tb'e people, thereby
sustaining the reputation of being always
enterprising, and ever reliable. Having s'e
oured the agency for the celebrated Dr.
King’s New Discovery tor 'Coheohiption-,
will sell it on a positive guarantee. It will
surely cure any and every ntf’ectiou of
Throat, Lungs, and Chest, and to show our
confidence', we inyite yoU to call and got A
Trial Buttle Free.
Mar. is not the or.ly animal that commits
suicide. Herrings and Other fish have
sought dentil by rushing ashore in myriads;
regiments of ants, by deliberately marching
into streams; swarms of rats, by migrating
into thte fae'e of their deadly foes, and evert
butterflies, by flying in immense clouds
straight out to sea. It would be interesting
to learn the causes of the apparent wholesale
and deliberate self-destruction. Is the act
a purely conscious one, or are the creatures
victims of disease—mental or physical?
WoiUlerl'ul Cures.
AV. 1). Hoyt & Co., AVholesale and Retail
Druggists of Rome, Ga., say: AVc huvo been
selling Dr. King’s New Discovery, Electric
Bitters and Buck leu’s Arnica Salve For twO
years. Havo never handled remedies that
sell as well, or give such universal satisfac
tion: There have been some wonderful
cures effect!d by these medicines in this
tiity. Several cases of pronounced Con
sumption have been entirely cured by use of
a few bottles of Pr. King’s New Discovery;
taken in connection with Electric Bitters.
We guarantee them always. Sold at the
Central Drug Store.
♦ *
Little Jenny’s big sister is entertaining
Mr. Skibbers, and thinks she can get along
without any assistance; so she pats the little
pet on the head and says: “Come, little pet;
it’s time ytmr eyes were closed in
“Think not,” said Jenny: “tor Mother told
me to keep my eyes open when you and Mr:
Skibbers were together.”
Bitcklcii’s Arnica Salve.
The best salve in the world for Cuts;
Bruises, Sores, UioerS, Salt Rheum, Fever
Soresi Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains;
Corns; rtnd all Skin Eruptions; and positive
ly cures Piles, or no pay required. It is
guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, of
money refnnded. Price 25 cents per Oo*.
For sab at Central Drug Store.
NO. 6.