Newspaper Page Text
H iCLUZVlIXZ XaBmsjgsEt
'
VOL XXXIII
•
To niv fib-nd* ami customers of VI. 3 >e ••minty, ami elsewhere, I <b"-iro to say that
1 have received, and am now receiving, bigge-t, ch«*:lp«‘.-t Hfld |»: -1 -I'll'ctdl stock ot
Kpring GixkI-, over brought to \1 iddle <Jcorgia. I rely on mv past record as a guarantee
to llin people that I will give them morn, fresh nobby, good-, for tln-ir almighty dollar,
than any retail House in tb<- South. No old latest shop worn goods, no second or third hand
►t<w-k, hut all fresh, new goods in the very noveltie 1 take special cure in m\
•selections, and use every effort to get j tut such styles an will please my trade.
MY LEA D E RS-- CLOT H1NG !
I still carry the famous > o< rhee Miller & Ituphfs fine clothing, us well a® all
grade* in ehi-Hper g<wwL, and I claim that 1 wil sell you u suit, 10 to 20 per cent cheaper
than .Macon or Atlanta.
DRESS GOODS !
Without prciiiipmtion f say that I carry the best assorted stock of Dress Good and
Trimming* in the country. I have all the newest shades ill Plain and Fancy Suitings,
with Trimmings to match in Velvets, Braids, .Moire Silks, &e.
WHITE GOODS, HAM BERGS & LACES.
Lint slimmer I made fur rnvself a reputation on these goods ami being inspired to
greater efforts by my last year’ ■iioci I hav e mev a stock of White Goods, Luces and
Bamberg.*, that are tin- admiratCn and wonder of all the ladies.
SHOES AND SLIPPERS!
Klii nnd Slipper- nre u big factor in my stock, and 1 can fit tbc largest or small¬
est font, and also tho largest or smallest purse.
Il is too mucb of an undertaking to try to tell the people ot everything I have;
but sulliee it to say that I have got everything kept in a
DRY GOODS STORE!
That you need and will sell them cheaper than you ever thought you could buy them.
Gome in and take a look through, l will take great pleasure in showing you.
Yours truly,
EDGAR L. ROGERS.
ltarnesville, Gn., March 22nd, 1888.
N. 11 MU. JOHN F. HOWARD is still with me, to help extend you a coriiul
welcome.
7: H
2
f;
NO TARIFF!
The public is notified that 1 have this day purchased tho entire stock of
Groceries, Provisions, Ect.
Of Messrs. PON PER & FLETCHER,
And have moved my large and complete stock of GROCERIES to the
stand formerly occupied by PONDED & FLETCHER on the North side
Public Square, next door to Brainblctt, & Bro. The public are invited to
call ami examine my STOCK and PRICES, and you will find the
BEST AND FRESHEST
STOCK OF
PROVISIONS
IN TIIK CITY.
Compare my I’ll It ’ ES and yon will concludo that it matters not whether
tho Tariff or no Tariff laws arc in force.
I CHALLENGE all competitors to undersell me. L UNDERSELL the
Cheapest.
S. B. HEAD, Agent.
FORSY TH. GA., Jan. 2, 1SS8. For Mrs. \V. II. Head.
AYCOCK
JllHiIlllIaCTjll TWTn _ nn-fn 1 ITii? m* bOmn&HV v*TT
XfJLUl IX J tiX j
.MAM m \ viuMOTimri.u L A CL 1 LI'. BS Of
T\ A (l A n K ft S Q ry A l m YT T5 tat T T Tirn ^ a
U M II UU l\ J. O A O fi DLiID U G.
1 9 . 9
Mantels, Moldings, Ballusters, Newels,
WINDO W AND DOORFRAMES.
-DEALERS IN
I11MRFR wlULii\, jrllliULJjtj) RHlNPd FR I Lin ATHS 1 nO r\ AND lX U Duil/iV. RRUK -
ALSO, CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS.
AVo now have our Factory in operation and will bo glad to see all wanting Building
Material and give prices. \Ye feel confident we can please both m price and quality of
our work. Call before making your purchases and get prices.
Factory 13th Street, Opposite Cotton Factory.
OFFICE PLANTERS' WAREHOUSE, GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
N. B.—Our Blinds are wired with Patent Clincher Machines, and will not break
loose, thus preventing the unsightly appearance that most others do.
SMITH & MALLARY j
MACON, GEORGIA.
STATE MANAGERS OF THE
Watertown Steam Go.
-AGENTS FOR
BROWN’S COTTON GINS,
LUMMUS COTTON GINS,
FINDLAY COTTON GINS,
SCIENTIFIC MILLS,
NORDYKE & MARMON’8 CELE¬
BRATED GRIST MILLS.
WE C3-TTAEANTEE THE
WATERTOWN STEAM ENGINES
To be the Safest, Strongest, Most Reliable and Efficient Engines in
MarkeB gjBT Beu«J_for Circulars,^ C ** m'**’
-DEALERS IN
ENGINES AND BOILERS,
SAW MILLS.
BELTING, LUBRICATING OILS,
IRON PIPE AND FITTINGS,
BRASS FITTINGS.
Yi‘ '*'1 J I pf F-; , ml '>r m mm mm Es.
FORSYTH. MONROE COUNTY, GEORGIA, TUESDAY MORNING. AUGUST 28 18S8.
THE STORM’S FURY.
WHEELIKii, WEST VIKGIMA, IS
AGAIN DELIUED.
DELAWARE SWEPT BY A CYCLONE.
Boi h Sliorc** ot Clirsaprakc I*n y Vis¬
ited i>y TeriEic Storm---l‘ar>
ticaiars of ttte Storm itt
>«•«• Orleans, Etc.
Wheeling, W. Va., August 21.—
flic storm, which in its disastrous
effects is equal to that of July 14th
last, has been in progress here since
3 a. m., and shows no signs of abat¬
ing. Wheeling crock, in a narrow
valley cast of here, is a foot higher
at 6 p. m. than over before, the roads
being flooded from two to six feet
deep and bridges destroyed. The
valley is now one angry flood. The
damage can only be estimated by
the wreckage that dashes through
the city and out into the river. At
3:40 p. m. a piece of the Baltimore
.and Ohio wooden bridge from the
Pittsburg division struck the Balti¬
more and Ohio bridge at Alain and
Sixteenth streets, which was destroy¬
ed in July and rebuilt, and it was
carried away with the rapidity of a
cannon ball. Warned by former
experience, there was no person on
it. At 5:50 p. m., while one thousand
or more people were massed on the
substantial stone bridge over Wheel¬
ing creek at Main street, a man on
the creek bunk, one hundred feet
above, shouted a warr ing and the
panic-stricken crowd rushed over
and into each other in a wild effort
to reach terra firm a. After the
bridge was cleared those nearest,
seeing it still apparently safe, turned
back, laughing at their alarm, but
before they reached the edge, the
bridge, 140 feet in length, fell with
one awful crash and the waters
leaped sixty loot into the air.
The water, gas and natural gas
mains, sewers, telegraph and tele¬
phone wires, electric lights ami street
cars were carried down. The Balti¬
more and Ohio depot, built over
the creek, and the market street iron
bridge, it is feared will go.• The
fact that the waters rose gradually
ami in daylight is believed to have
prevented loss of life. It is k.A'wn
that five Baltimore and Ohio bridges,
rebuilt after the former flood, have
been destroyed, and the Wheeling
and Elm Grove railroad bridge
over Wood’s run is also gone, All
trains have been ordered aban¬
doned on the Ohio River rail¬
road. About two hundred delegates
to the Republican State convention
at Charleston to-morrow are stuck
on this road at Sistcrville, fort}* miles
south, on the river.
OR EAT DESTRUCTION IN LOUISIANA.
New Orleans, August 20, via
Meridien, Miss., August 21.—Great
damage was done in the city and
throughout the sugar belt, from
Baton Rouge to the gulf, including
also the rice section of the stale,
.Inch o, the sugar cane and rice was
down flat on the ground and many
sugar houses and dwellings were
damaged. Tho damage to the sugar
crop is roughly estimated from 10 to
20 per cent, and tho rice crop 20 to
50 per cent. In the city many
houses were unroofed, fences mis
placed and trees uprooted.
The greatest damage done by the
storm about the city Was boats! along the
riverfront. longing Fifty’ coal he
to the Pittsburg and South
ern companies, were sunk, valued
at S:MH)0 cach * The small steamers
' V * U - Little the Laura and the
>
Buratria were also sunk. The steam
or K(l - Richardson went adrift, had
her stacks blown overboard and sus
tainod other damage. There are
hundreds of minor losses throughout
the city that will, in the of’dollars, aggregate,
amount to thousands
The storm drove the waters of the
Gulf up against and over the Louis
ville and Nashville railway embank
ment, extending Station,W from Mi ebon to
Lookout distance of twenty
miles, and caused many washouts
and a snpension of tratic over that
of ro«d. Connection
with this city is now made bv boat
from the river *
tiie losses immense.
The Future City, with seven bar
ges, and the Oakland, with six bar
ges, both from St. Louis, due here
Sunday,have not arrived and nothing
has been heard of them since they
passed Bayou Sara Saturday. Al
most every store on Cana! street was
deluged by the unprecedented vain.
Many signs were torn from their
fastenings and carried away some
distance by the flood. St. Charles
street presented a dismal appearance,
with a deep and rapid stream of
j water over the asphalt drive, rhe
j j and railroad there track by prostrated was obstructed trees,fences here
and telegraph poles, and lumber and
debris that bad been washed in from
j >*ide streets. The basement of the
cotton exchange building was flotxf
ed with eight feet of water, which
pourd down through the gratings
from the overtlowmg employed street. The
fire engine was this morn
ing in pumping the water out.
A BIC. BLOW* IN MARYLAND.
Baltimore. August 2B—The Sun
has dispatches from various points
in southwestern Maryland giving
particulars of a severe storm this
afternoon that swept up both sides
j of the Chesapeake Bay, causing eon
I sidcrahle damage to property and
creating the wildcat soft of excite-
ment. Numerous frame houses and
barnes were destroyed and two
schooners were overturned, but no
loss of life has as been reported.
Entire fruit orchards were destroyed
and cornfields were, in many in¬
stances, swept clear. An immense
water spout formed at the mouth of
the bay and was carried with ter
rific force across Poole’s Island,
The full extent of the damage can
not be estimated, as reports thus far
received are rather indefinite. The
storm came from the south and was
accompanied by a heavy rain.
A CYCLONE SWEEPS ACROSS DELAWARE.
Wilmington, August 21.—A cy¬
clone passed across northeast the state from
the southwest to this after¬
noon about six miles below this city,
cutting a path about two hundred
feet in width, leveling fences,
orchards and outbuildings and dam¬
age estimated at 8150,000. So far as
known hut one person was killed >
L'lios. Bruce, a blacksmith, of Harris
corner, whose shop was destroyed.
Several other person were danger¬
ously, and many badly injured. It
is probable that when the full de¬
tails have been received the list of
fatalities will be increased.
They Could Have Been Saved.
We can not but notice how many
of the citizens of this country, of
both sexes, before‘their are apparently being
taken awav time. One
of Georgia's most honored sons—her
gifted silver-toned orator, not male” long
since fell a victim to frightful
dy. Gen. Grant was another victim ;
and the dispatches from the world
across the Atlantic tell us that
Germany s new emperor will very
soon follow his honored father.
Many others, scores and hundreds,
unknown to greatness, hut very
dear to those around them, are
perishing cverv year from the same
sconrage. It is unnecessary to tell
you that this terrible, repulsive and
loathsome disease is—cancer. Can it
he cured? Medical skill has ap
parent!}* exhausted itself, and the
surgeon’s knife has cut in vain to
root it out.
Seemingly, cancer is incurable.
Now what is to he done? If you
wait until the disease is upon you
it is too late. Then why not antici
pate the monster and use the prevent
alive. In order to avoid this and an
innumerable number of other blood
troubles, von must keep the blood
mire and" healthful—and the one
great remodv for this is, that King
of all Purifiers—“Guinn’s Pioneer
Blood Konewcr” It extracts the
virus from the blood and keeps it in
a pure and excellent condition,
Don't delay until it is too late. Call
at the druggists for an almanac, and
you will.find that this celebrated
medicine has cured, right here in
your own country*, about every dis
ease emenating from a depraved
condition of the blood.
\ f cw bottles taken in the spring
and fall will he all that you will need.
An 0 ],[ adage, but a very good one,
that “an ounce of preventive is better
than a pound of cure” is very appli
bio here.
As ; v - f or “Guinn's Pioneer Blood
Ron ewer the druggists all soli it.
War on the Bagging Trust.
-
Savannah Morning News.
The cotton planters of Mississippi
will meet in convention in Jackson.
F> e capital of that state, to-morrow,
to devise some way, if possible, to
get the better of the bagging trust,
They don t propose to be robbed if
they can help it, and they intend to
fight the trust as long as they can go
so wiMi any prospect of success.
The inventive genius ot this great
country, which has always responded
successfully to every demand upon
it, ought to find a way to assist the
cotton planters m tins emergency.
Is there not some substitute for bag
ging, as a wrapper for cotton ? Got
ton duck has been suggested, but
that would cost more than bagging,
unless tiro price of bagging should
be greatly increased. Paper has
been mentioned but can paper
which can bo used as a wrapper, be
made so thatAt will not be seriously
damaged by rain? Barrels and car
wheels are made of paper, and it
may be that wrappers for cotton can
p 0 made of it that will answer as a
substitute for bagging.
Only the cotton" planters of Missis
sippi appear ti to be organizing oppo
sition the bagging trust. The
cotton planters of other states are
j ns t as deeply interested in the matter
as they are, and should lend them a
helping hand. There is no excuse
for the present exhorbitant prices of
bagging, and there would he general
rejoicing it a subst itute for that ar
tiele were discovered.
------*
Brace Up.
arc depressed , your
wub headache, 'T^ or ’ } J* on ou ff ate fidgetty,
aervous, and generally out of sorts,
and want to brace up. Brace up, but
not w ’ tb stimulants, spring modi
c ' ncs > or bitters, which have for their
basis very cheap, bad whisky, and
which stimulate you for an hour,
j j and tion then than leave before. you What in worse condi- is
you want
an altertative that will purify your
blood, start healthy action of Liver
. and Kidneys, restore your vitality,
j and give renewed health and
strength. Such a medicine you will
j find in Electric Bitters, and only 50
ceuis a bottle.
1 ^ ^aaaiairam h“H gq HrH O
Down Witn Trusts and Monopolies.
A correspondent writing to the
Giitfin Sun on the subjects ot Trusts,
tariff, and monopolies, says:
“We are yet in our infancy as far
as using machinery ,. farms „
on is con
cernoa, but the time is not far dis
tant when our southern young men
" ill come from a well painted, first
class barn to a neat carpeted cottage.
The protectionist will say that won’t
do, the negro must be protected il
" T e sell part of our lands at 850 and
860 per acre and Scotch and English
men settle here and work white
labor, we must make them pay a
tanli or the negro will strike and
'
No, no, the negro is all right, we
have had him all our lives and will
and must keep him, but wo must
learn him to drive and ride instead
of pull hack and walk. We must
learn him to make 30 instead of 3
bales to the mule and to raise corn
and meat instead of buying it on a
credit.
A negro on a sulky plow reminds
me of the Chinese who was riding
across Brooklyn bridge. He kept
watching the cars as they sped, on
the electric wire underneath and a
white man said : “Say, Chinee, how
do you like this?” The Chinee said
<<no hosse, no malic, no pushe, no
P ullo > Lut*sho g™* 1'ke belle alle
-amc.” -Now while the southern
People have not acquired that happy
faulty of taking things easy and
b 3' machinery seeing their broad
acres tilled, 1 am glad to see that so
many are opening their eyes to the
wholesale robbery under guise of
protection. Millions are locked up
which should he in circulation,
^ a farmers wife wears a silk
dross it is with the knowledge that
the tariff is as much as the first cost
*- be goods, or in other words to
know that the merchants who im
port silk paid two dollars and fifty
con "S per pound on the whole cargo
°* bno colored silk goods besides
about 30 per cont. on amount of cost,
The same will work in woolen eloth
bat n °f T ll * te so much. But 1
dare say our boys could wear good
Scotch tweeds “free of duly” for less
than good wool jeans will now cost,
The ^lilis bill don’t go near as
deep as the people should demand
course, hot the tax be taken off
the necessaries of life first, and re
licvo the people and stop the aceu
initiation of Millions of the people’s
money in United States vaults, to he
P ui, l in extra high premiums to the
bloated bond holder to get him to
let loose the, public tit, and then he
f °rms a trust with his illgotton gain
to continue to plunder that class who
arc now just awakening from a half
trust in providence and half do the
best they can.
Tiie people who'own land own the
country and the president and other
national officers, are their servants.
The judge who gives them the
charge on a common law case is in
their employ. Every business known
to man is lower than farming: In
England a merchant is called a
trader, hut a man who ownes land
is called and treated as a landlord.
and England is a free trade country.
Our southern people, as a class, are
land owners and Slave land to spare,
and in exchange let us have good
homes, barnes, machinery, stock and
independence—above all let us put
down monopolies.”
The Wife”"
qW,?° ^ v
'
f ,u m-n
‘ V ‘
tho W succt ss 0 e verv m-n denends
} “ . ; r * f oiv > v 1 ,non J^ n his ” wife uithon-dt this \l
sho ^ exlravaffant careless" untidy
wasteful ^ neirlment be^ncTsuecess or ill-tom farm'- novel
hQ ^ on the
. f ^ j and cheer
j‘ " p ‘ a men . v ieart
f Housed is nr id lent thefann^I car Bil
‘ , if tlmW-.’n J h(l •’ ’• j.
f , • Ti A
’* 1 ’ ^Wnlvhalf r-.V.- to sneuB of
■
‘ .J , ‘time ‘ recognized n .'F ‘ ’ j ‘ t t ‘
fi ‘ o me
| ab “;' j h "^ ‘ *
\\ f 1 ,!<1 J . : ' 0 11 ( ‘ X Y r <lu _
-
! iro >;g h °u busy hours and at
1 s c 0>< j’ HI v Sl101 1 ' icceixc
acknowledgement,, . , her , burden , be
1 ^‘ 1 ene 5 an< l ‘ 0 1 .! ^ e,,e<
, . e
, nu ! c . !
‘
lu « a hard hfooi labor , )ut whi e he
wo, "? ie } H 9a! 10,1 n ‘ Q ■'* a rea ;
^orld ) and ,s . broadened . . and helped .
un "« l ! n g J» wm.e ins wire tons »»
JJ n( * e asingly wahm tie narrow con
J 1 ! 108 of the h ^ Usse > and lives in the
kin ( , ot ,? me a Ite as roa .‘l
p ’
and deep , and , far-reaching .. ,
as ms u
s 0 ha f ever as Die .limits ot tier to
!' !ZOa . ’ t 'J e S !'" ng k ^ C ° f h er
iu*pun am cm., . , ten. . I ia . . jc
seemingly _
denied even a narrow,
confined existence will be hers
whoso onl 3" boon that doath " nl
one day set her free.
V | b en is fully realized a hap
pier . slate , t ot things will exist. She
will not he expected to cook things
for others which she detests, without
in turn receiving little delicacies
which she alone cares for. Her taste
for music and flowers and home dec
oration will be encouraged, and it
will be deemed as essential to furnish
, labor saving machinery for the home
as for the farm, and the farmer’s
wife become what she should ever
be, the true help-mate of her bus
band, the honored queen of a happy
: home, which, because of her, will be
\ the dearest spot on earth to every
member of her household.
LEPROSY IN CHICAGO.
Chicago Herald.
The Cook count}' hospital shelters
a genuine leper!
liis name is August Johnson ; he
is a native of J) 0 nmark ; is twenty
one years eighteen*years old. and came to this
country hospitalVhursday ao-o. Jle ar
r j ve q at tlm an* after
noon am } was placed in isolated
apartment in the contagious ward
A diagnosis of the case was made
yesterday hy l>rs Clarence Earle
anc j Wittwer. Thev both agreed 'from
that the patient was suffering
tubercular leprosy. In this opinion
the entire faculty concur, or at least
do not oppose it. Every effort was
made to conceal the real nature ot
the disease. On the diagnosis book
in the clerk's ofiicc “lung trouble” is
placed opposite the patient’s name.
Dr. Earle was disincline to talk
about the case at first, but finally
said: consented to give the facts. Tie
“Johnson came into the hospital
yesterday afternoon and asked for
one of tho doctors. 1 happened to
he in the office and took temporary
charge of the case. After examina¬
tion 1 formed the opinion that the
man was a leper. I had him taken
to a room where there could ho no
danger to other patients and com¬
municated my opinion to the other
physicians. 1 think all of them
agree with me. We shall not form¬
ally give our opinion before Mon
day as we desire to vfatch the
case for a few days. Dr. Witt¬
wer now has charge of the
patient. Johnson has been in the
country eighteen years and is now
just past twenty-one. Denmark is
the land of lepers, and it is possible
that the germs of the fatal and
loathsome disease entered into his
system in infancy. For the past
eight years lie has been living Oil ti
farm near Ellcndale, Minn, The
disease made its first appearance
about eight months ago in tho form
of a small reddish blotch on his
right loin. It spread until it became
as large as a man’s hand. Similar
tubercles appeared in different parts
of the body, until he is now com¬
pletely covered. His neighbors
began to shun him, and finally his
appearance on the highway or in
the field was the signal for a general
scattering of his former companions.
Johnson could not stand litis for
long, and gathering his few effects
together and drawing from the hank
his small savings, left for Chicago.
He has been here four weeks, and
during that time has been under
treatment with several physicians
down town. lie cannot tell their
names or addresses.”
“When his money gave out he
came here. He is not very bright,
and seems sullen and morose. lie
speaks English well, and before tin’s
blighting disease came upon him he
must have been a handsome man.
He left El lend tile about three months
ago, but cannot, or will not, give
any intelligent account of his wand¬
erings since.”
Thrift ana Energy Succeed,
Albany News and Advertiser.
We are often forced to admit the
truth of the time-honored apothegm,
“there is more in tho man than in
the land.” The success of a farmer
is proportioned to the thrift and in¬
dustry employed in the management
ot ’ fann It matters not
u - where
°" c «°cs he finds that the most
s 'A fna,! 7 successful farmers are few,
a,ul t!lci, ‘ &■*"« «hi..e ™ contrast
w .' tl ' t!l ° £ eneml & ,oom ,ike tnpevs
‘Tow and far between” in the gloom
of ni ^ ht ’ They do not have tho ad
van tn »° ot tiioir neighbors in the
Utility . of the soil, or in tho favor
ab! ‘mess of seasons. Things just
seem to prosper under their touch,
as under tiie hands ofadegerdema
illist fi° vvei ' s gi‘°w in an empty pot,
But hack of all this apparent easy
-success is the tireless energy, the
correct judgment that enforces an
observance of successful methods.
-God eiv« no vnlne nnto men tm
matched by meed of labor,” and we
can with certainty fp know that the
measuP0 of a ma s sncees * is lho
am ount of manual or mental force
expcnt | 0( i > j t j H a common thing to
see a man who works hard enough,
but nothing under bis management
8cems to prosper. Poor judgment
and misdirected energy account for
lhis fVuiticss toll . D requires a rare
combination to make an eminently
sue( . ess{ - ul man 5n any department of
industry, and the number of failures
in every vocation of life is about
equa | to t)l0 proportion that obtains
in a g r iculture. Failure in farming,
then, is not to be attributed to the
conditions that environs this ancient
an(1 indopendent occupation, but to
t ho man—his want of economy, or
his lack of energy, or his poor indg
ment, or an utter absence of all these
quaiities which combiuc to raako a
. m » in
0
byrup oi f’.gs
Nature’s own true laxative. It is
t effective n<i most easily taken, and the most
M System remedy known to Cleanse
ie when Bilious or Costive;
to dispel Headaches, Colds,and Fcv
ors 1 to Cure Habitual Constipation,
Indigestion, Piles, etc. Manufiictur
ed only by the California Fig Syrup
Company, San Fraoscisco, Cal.
\ For sale by Alexander & Son, For
syth, Gu.
NUMBER 23
9
I W E
f ROYAL “SwotS
- 1 &
_
mm ti Ja .Jt
■4
—
'3
m
m
Absolutely Pure.
Tliis powder never varies A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomeness. More
economical than the ordinary kinds, and
cannot be sold in competition with the mul¬
titude of low test, short weight, alum or
phosphate powders. Sold only in C(7?iS.
Royai. New Baking York. Powder Co.,' 100 Wall
street.
YOUR EARS.
Ought to have attention perhaps. If so,
B. ]>. 15. will do you good, removing all
inorganic matter, the direct cause of dcaf
ness. lt will also aid your digestion.
M itness the following testimonies:
COULD HEAR A TICK CRAWL.
Mr. C. E. Hall wrote from Shelby, Ala.,
thunder. February !), 18H7: “t could not hear it
1 heard of B. IL IL, used two
bottles, and now can hear a tick crawl in
the leaves.
“I GAVE UP TO DIE.”
Knoxville, Tenn., July 2, 1887.
I have had catarrh of the nead for six
years. J went to a noted doctor and ho
treated me for it, but could not cure me, lie
said. I was over titty years c Id and I gave
up to die. I had a distressing cough ; mv
eyes were swollen and L am confident I
could not have lived without a change. I
sent and got one bottle of your medicine,
used it, and felt better. Then 1 got four
more, and thank God ! it emod me. Use
this any way you may wish for tnegoodof
sufferers.
MBS MATILDA NICIIOLS.
22 Florida Street.
A PREACHER CURED OF DYSPEPSIA.
Miccosukee, Fla., Leon Co., July “20, 1880.
I have been a sufferer from indigestion
and tried dyspepsia for a long time, and have
dneed many remedies, hut until I was m
by my friends to try your B. B. B.
received no relief, but since using it have
•amid more relief and comfort than from
any other treatment i have used. Hoping
you will forward to my address your little
82 page book for prescription, also evidence
of cures. Send at earliest date.
KEY. EOE’T. C.
Book of coves free. Address,
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga.
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