Newspaper Page Text
(Quit!mm Reporter.
JOS. TILLMAN, Editor.
THURSDAY. APRIL 12. 1877.
Tlio Louisiana Imbroglio.
Now that tlio President has nndoiio
Grant’s nefarious work, in forcing
States to go Republican, as far ns res
pects South Carolina, by tlio with
drawal of the troops from the capital
house in Columbia, tho country can
take a breathing spell ; but while do
ing so, the public mind naturally
turns its attention to the Pelican
State, and says to Hayes : let justice
bo done, though tho Republicans
fall.
The circumstances in respect of
the intricacies which surround the
States of South Carolina and Louisi
ana have been stated time and again
in theso columns ; tho reports of the
House and Senate committees have
been given to thc,country ; Mr. Mayes
has undoubtedly read with deep in
terest theso reports, and with the
able advice which he can obtain at a
nod, left him without any excuse
whatever in appointing a commission
to go to Louisiana.
Is it any wonder, in view of the
late decision rendered in tho Presi
dential contest, that tho country
.should distrust, .before a report shall
have been rendered, that another un
just appeal may be made to the Pres
ident, in order to shift tho responsi
bility from his shoulders ?
An usurper, devoid of conscience
or moral sentiments, one who, by ac
cepting an office to which the people
pronounced him unfit, is judicially
hardened, and therefore should be
able to stem tho torrent of an almost
frenzied public opinion and an out
raged people by proclaiming an opin
ion in accord with the wishes of the
extreme men of the party which he
represents.
It was smooth sailing for tlio Presi
dent in South Carolina affairs. 'l'hc
seven votes in the Electoral College
was conceded to him ; but Florida
and Louisiana voted for Tilden, and
ouly one vote was wanting from either
State, to have forever put to silence
all conflict between the States and
the Nation. No opposition therefore
was made to Hayes’s course except
by the most extreme wing of the Rad
ical party. The Louisiana case how
ever presents different phases. The
State went unquestionably for Tilden
and Nieholls, by at least seven thou
sand votes, making due allowances
for all that the Republicans claim on
the false cry of intimidation, Ac.
Now, when the High Commission
came tbgether to consider this state
of affairs, aliunde was the word that
saved Hayes, and gave fresh courage
to Packard. Cannot a mind, even as
shallow 7 as Grant’s, see that if testi
mony had been admitted, Mr. Tilden
would have been introduced into tlie
White House, and Packard hurled
from his entrenchment?
Such an exodus from Louisiana
would have been delightful reading,
and doubly pleasing to the Louis
ianana to have witnessed it. But no.
Fraud sat as a queen of infamy, and
justice slept, crushed under foot by
a commission claiming legislative and
judicial authority, with Aliunde Joe
Bradley holding the ltcpublican bal
ances, nowhere else found except in
the radical brain of Senator Ed
munds, even Morton could not see it
But Hayes will undoubtedly find a
crevice somewhere from which ho can
crawl out; maintain his position and
let Packard go the way of Chamber
lain.
The President can plead that he
swore to support, protect and defend
the Constitution of the Republic, and
the withdrawal of the Federal forces
in Louisiana is simple obedience to
that instrument; that having found
them in that State when he entered
upon the duties of his stolen office,
he is only complying with the spirit
of it.
The four-and-pne commission lias
been sent to New Orleans to drive a!
bargain in respect of the U. S. Sena
tors. The Senate stands on a bal
ance nearly. Senator M. C. Butler
will be added to the Democratic side,
from South Carolina, and Kellogg
and West, whose time expired on the
fourth of last month, will he making;
►strenuous efforts to have two Repub
lican Senators declared elected from
Louisiana by Democratic aequios- j
cence.
Gov, Hampton made no bargain,
and if there is no weakening in
Louisiana, Nicholls will come out
with flying colors, returning to the
Senate of the United States two new
members who will grace that cham
ber in company with Gen. Butler.
Conover, Patterson, Dorsey, and
Spencer will then be left* to represent
carpet-bnggery, and mis-represent
the States of Florida, South Carolina,
Arkansas and Alabama.
The preamble and resolutions a
dopted in mass-meeting in New Or
leans on the Gtb. speak forth no uu
.certain sound. Anarchy, ruin, and
desolation, with Packard ; or peace,
prosperity, and reconciliation, with
Nieholls.
Tho Southern skies arc brightening
and Hayes may to some extent save
his reputation by withdrawing the
Federal soldiery, and thereby permit
justice and state sovereignty to reign
iu Louisiana.
Tlio Lust Ditch What will Prob
ably Como of it.
Tho extreme wing of flic Republi
can party cannot euduro Hayes’s pol
icy towards the South in respect of
the condition of South Carolina and
Louisiana, and are bolstering tip the
forlorn hopes of Chamberlain and
Packard by secret interviews and in
trigues, hoping thereby to precipitate
trouble; yea,'a hand-to-hand conflict,
in order to fire the Northern heart
anew. Their stock in trade has been
diminishing lower and lower ever
since election day, when the “ bloody
shirt” was buried out of sight by the
the people, and unless something is
done and that too speedily, tho Radi
cal] party will be numbered with
tho things that were, and will exist
only as a skeleton of its hopes and
past plundering.
Chamberlain’s mind is now’ chang
ed. Ho intended to leave Columbia
State House with the troops on Tues
day last, and it was announced con
templated the practice of his profes
sion in New York City; but Blaine,
Morion and Cos., have advised him to
I “ stick” and force Gov. Hampton to
j harsh measures. Ho is sustained al
-Iso by Wright, the negro Associate
•Justice of tho Supreme Court of
South Carolina, who takes the ground
that if neither Chamberlain nor
Hampton were properly inaugurated,
then Chamberlain holds over under a
clause of the Constitution of South
Carolina, which provides that all ofii
! cers shall continue to discharge the
• duties of their office until their suc
j cessors are elected and qualified.
Chamberlain arrived at Columbia on
Sunday last, and his friends insist
that the Legislature must meet, if ut
all, under Chamberlain’s call, and ei
ther order anew election, re-canvass
j the vote or do whatever is to be done,
as the case may be.
It is tho last refuge of a scoundrel
and we opine that Gov. Hampton,
having been recognized by the a ma
jority of the Supreme Bench, during
Judge Moses’s lifetime, with Justice
Willard concurring, will find legal
methods to eject Chamberlain and
force him to jail, there to remain,
j in failure to give bond, until tried by
i his countrymen] for insurrection and
j rebellion against the lawful govern
ment of South Carolina.
Packard is digging his political
grave hourly, and is not ouly dis
| gusting the commission at New Or
| leans, but threatening the President
1 with exposure. There is nothing to
I expose. No radical can be disgraced,
because condemned already by all
right thinking men of the Nation. He
is a dare devil and hopes to keep a
! standing army in Louisiana to prop
; his fallen power, which is momentari
ly waning. Forbearance will cease
! to be a virtue in this case, and Paek
| ard may turn the whole North against
him; and if the Northern press raises
j a howl, which now seems certain,
j public opinion will let ‘ slip the dogs
of war,’ and he will find himself with
out friends even in his own party.
Verily, Hayes lias a pair of ele
| phants on his hands, and uneasy is
; the pate that wears stolen honors.
Our Trip to Savannah.
"We, on last week, paid a very pleas
ant visit to the Forest City, and it af
fords us pleasure to state that we.
' found the good citizens of that lovely
j old city in much better spirits than
since the late epidemic.
They are at length aroused, and
are determined to put forth their en
ergies, and regain what they have
lost by their lethargy and the mis
fortues of the late scourge. They
have gone to work with a vim, and
there arc none who know better than
they tho value of printer's ink. See
the many cards that appear in this
week’s issue. Now vve have a word
to say to our merchants and tlie read
ers of tho Reporter generally, which
is, that they should at all times and
under all circumstances; all things be
ing equal, give Savannah preference
over any and every other place; for
we are one and inseparable, and if
Savannah languishes we too must suf
fer in like proportion to herself. Sa
vannali i.s our ouly sea-port town, and
to her more than every source are we
as a people indebted for the A. & G.
It. R; which i.s the great artery
through which all of our coin nierce
passes, and upon which we arc wholly
dependent. Savannah helped us
when we could not help ourselves.
Lotus not forget her;let us not show
that we are recreant and ungrateful
for past favors and especially in this
her hour of need. Let us all put our
shoulders to the wheel and make her
what she should be; the Queen City
ef the South.
LETTER FUR.U WASHINGTON.
A TANGLED IV Ell.
Tin: PRESIDENT'S ACTIONS DE
STROY MIS AItOL'MENTS.
Til® Southern Complications Reform in
the Department*, Etc.
[Fiom Our Own Correspondent.!
Washington, April (!, 1877.
Overcome by the fatigues of his
place, or in a moment of absent
mindedness, when not principle or
precedent, nor the eternal fitness of
things, seemed to hnvo weighed with
him, tho President tho other day ap
pointed a man Postmaster at Fre
mont, Ohio, for whom a majority of
his fellow-citizens had expressed a
preference by ballot. Thus one by
one lie removes the steps from tlio
ladder by which he himself climbed
to office. First, the poor African in
the South, for whom alone tlie Presi
dential heart bled when Tilden was
known to be fairly elected in Novem
ber, is turned over, bound and naked,
to the barbarians of the section, and
that with a celerity which Mr. Tilden
could not have excelled; and now tho
sacred and fundamental and indis
pensable administration idea that a
miuoritjj is hotter than a majority is
disregarded. In this blind and reck
less way the President will yet make
his position so absurd that, like the
darkey when the day of judgment
was thought to be at hand, ho will
‘‘take to the woods.”
The height of absurdity will be
reached if, as is reported, Governor
Nieholls, of Louisiana, shall employ
Stanley Matthews ns attorney to rep
resent his case before the Louisiana
commission. Matthews proved to his
own and Justice Bradley’s satisfaction
that Hayes had carried Louisiana,
and now proposes to show that Pack
ard, who bad more votes than Hayes,
was defeated. Hatthows will lie an
object of ridicule to every man in the
United States if he goes on in this
way.
Meanwhile, Packard emphatically
refuses to make any compromise, and
asserts that his case is a stronger one
than that of Hayes. In this he will
be credited hv everybody, and he will
have the sympathy and support, after
a while, of the bulk of tho Republican
party if lie stands by his guns and
refuses to be made a “vassal.”
Nieholls is gaining members of the
Senate and House, from day to day,
from the Packard Legislature, the
recruits being influenced probably by
secret pressure from administration
circles here. Hayes may fear the ef
fect upon himself, liis administration
and his supporters of an open aban
donment of Packard, and bis friends
(always without his knowledge) may
in this under-handed manner seek to
detach supporters from Packard to
such an extent that he will be com
pelled to take himself out of the way.
Thus the pledges made to Lamar,
Gordon and Ellis, in February, (with
out Hayes’s knowledge) may be kept,
and still an open and flagrant, though
not less disgraceful, breach of faith
jon the part of the President bo
i avoided.
Since the war there has been npent
nearly $S0O,000,(X)0 —one third of our
whole debt—on the army and navy
alone. Even if President Hayes shall
promptly withdraw troops from the
South, tliere will remain a question
to be settled at the extra session of
Congress in June as to the amount of
money to be appropriated. In view
of this enormous aggregate in a time
of peace, a more careful investigation
even than those of the past few ses
sions into the manner of its expendi
ture, would seem to be in order.
Kiimo.
“It is stated,” says the New York
I Herald, “on good authority that the
| Savannah steamers and the Georgia
Central railroad will commence cut
ting down rates of freight, and inaug
urate a freight war against the
i Charleston steamers, the Atlantic
: coastline railroads, the Old Dominion
steamship company and Tennessee
railroad some time next week. The j
fight promises to he a lively one, and
ships will be put on to take all freight j
that may he offered at rates that
shippers will not grumble at. This j
movement is a set off to the meeting j
of a majority of tho coast lilies which j
was held on Monday.”
Tun New York Sun of Tuesday
says that Tweed’s offer to compromise
has been accepted and he will be at
liberty before the end of the week.
The Worth comity jail was burned
by an incendiary two weeks ago.
Now Advertisements.
(rEOIK 11A—Brooks County.
To all whom it may concern:
-CTTHEBEAS, C. C. AVEKETT has np-
V X plied to me for letters of administra
tion on the estate of Mary Everett, deceased.
These are, therefore, to cite and admonish
all parties interested, whether kindred or
creditors, to show cause, if any they have,
within the time prescribed by law, why
letters of administration should not be
granted to said applicant.
Witness my hand, this April sth, 1877,
A. P. PERHAM,
215- Ordinary.
Postponed Coroner’s Sale.
T TTILt. BE SOLD BEFOItE THE COURT
V V House door in the town of Quitman,
Brooks county, Ga., within the legal hours
of sale, on the first Tuesday in May next:
One acre of land, lot No. 21, in the south
east section of said town, as property of
Jasper li. Thomas, to satisfy an execution
issued upon, an attachment from Brooks
County Court February 27, 1877, in favor of
J. T. Thrasher vs. Jasper H. Thomas.
Property pointed Out l>y execution.
214-217 E. D. PONDER, Coroner.
Now Advertisements.
I. EPSTEIN & BROj
JOBBERS IN
PLAIN AND FANCY
B >i‘y < aootSw,
NOTIONS, BOOTS, SHOES,
HATS, Etc., Etc.
Particular attention paid to country orders.
NO. 137 CONGRESS STREET,
215-208 SAVANNAH, GA.
M EINHARD
IM £4 >. CX
WIIOL HALE
BOOTS, bIIOKS, 11. ATM.
Gents’ Furnishing Goods,
AND MANUFACTURERS OF
JtKADY-MADE CIA )THIXO,
Nos. 1*21) and 131 Bhouohton Street,
SAVANNAH, GA.
Office 39G ancl 398 Broadway, N. Y.
[ 215-2GG Orders Carefully Executed.
M.W. NEUBUROER,
(SUCCESSOR TO FRED. GOEMAN,)
Watchmaker and Jeweler,
DEALER IN
WATCHES, CLOCKS, JEWELRY,
Knives and Pislo'p,
180 Bryan Street, Opposite J. G. Watts,
SAVANNAH, G V.
7?-??** Repairing done at shortcut notice.
215-
JOHN OLIVER,
DEALER IN
Paints, Oils, Turpentine,
r* LASS, ANI) ALL PAINTERS’ AND
UN Glaziers* materials.
RAILROAD, STEAMBOAT AND
MILL SUPPLIES,
MIXED PAINTS, ALL COLORS,
West’s Kerosene .Sc .Via(l <ii; i Oil.-,
House and Sign Painting,
Gilding and Glazing.
No. 5 Whitaker Street,
215-223 SAVANNAH, GA
McKenna & Hanley,
Paint and Oil Store!
] > AILROAD, STEAMBOAT AND MILL
I A Supplies, pure White Lead*, and deal
ers in Oils, Varnishes, Glass, Putty and
Brushes.
Plain and Fancy Wall Paper,
Fire-board Prints,
Paper Curtains, and
Kerosene Oil,
Pratt’s Astral,
Vestal rtnd other
Lubricating Oils.
House, Sign, and
Ornamental Painters.
Parties wishing kerosene oil in three and
five barrel lots, special prices given. We
call your special attention to our Star En
gine Oil, which wc recommend and offer it
at lower figures than any machine oil now
in use.
No. 3 12 St. Julian St., and 141 Bryan Street,
215- Savannah, G.v.
A. J. MILLER. C. P. MILLER,
A. J. Miller & Cos.,
FURNITURE DEALERS,
150 and 152 Broughton St., near "Whitaker,
Savnimah, Ga.
W A L N U T B E D-R O 0 M SET S,
IMITATION FRENCH SETS,
PARLOR SETS,
BUREAUS,
WASH STANDS, BEDSTEADS,
CHAIRS OF ALL GRADES,
Children's Caiuuages, Ac.
Jobbing and Repairing Neatly Done, and
with Dispatch.
Mattress Making, Feathers, Upholstering,
215-266 A: c.. A' c .
CELEBRATED JACK,
BAIL E Y!j
rjpilE UNDERSIGNED WILL STAND
HIM IN QUITMAN FOR THE SEASON.
$lO PER SEASON.
211- D. 15. THRASHER.
P3IICEN
—TO—
Suit tho Times!
Having just returned from
. New York where 1 have selected a
FIRST-CLASS STOC K OF GOODS
with groat care, for cash, at bottom prices,
J am now fully prepared to sell to my old
customers and thepublic generally. Gltl’,AT
BARGAINS IN
dolling, Dry Goods,
.BOOTH A NI) SI I OKS,
LADIES’ and RENTS’II ATS
Together with a largo and complete stock of
<jJ rqce ri e .
SUCH AS
SUGAR, COFFEE, TOBACCO,
SOAP, Ac., Ac., Ac.
(’till and sec mo before purchasing else
where, and convince yourself that goods
have never been sold so low before in this
market.
214-222 JACOB BAUM.
TO THE PiiIUHJ!
UNUSUAL INDUCEMENTS ARE
OFFERED AT
John Tillman’s!
WHO IS CONSTANTLY RECEIV
ING HIS EXTENSIVE
STOCK OF
Spring and Summer
GOODS,
Which he is offering at greatly re
duced prices, consisting of
I L_
1 DRY GOODS, I
_! iL_
ii
! OF ALT, KINDS, |
: . Boots and Shoes. !
IT A TS,;
_J L
. 1 HARDWARE 1
~i i
I CROCKERY,;
_J i__
| P I, O YV S , I
'I I '
—aNd other —*
| Funning Implements !
Tlie price on plows reduced 33J per cent,
from last year.
My friends and the public generally arc
respectfully invited to call and examine my
extensive stock before purchasing elsewhere.
I expect to sell, if low prices will induce
customers, and will keep goods constantly
coming as they are wanted.
JOHN TILLMAN.
April 5, 1877. 214
—WORTH OF—
DRY GOODS,
CLOTHING,
mmmw&mE,
BOOTS, SHOES, &c.,
To be sold immediately to make room
for more goods.
OUR FRIENDS IN FOREIGN MAE
kets having heard that we are doing a
large business, are crowding goods upon us
on consignment and otherwise, daily from
every market, consequently we must sell to
make room for them. If you want goods for
Cash or Produce,
VERY CHEAP,
CYome IV o w l
Yon will buy at such bargains as you have,
not thought of. We can assure our friends
that we are surprised at the prices of many
kinds of goods being daily sent to us, and
we mean to sell them accordingly. We
MEAN BUSINESS, and SO HUM 11UG. No
market shall out do 0 UR'
IIRIGGS, JELKS & CO.
Quitman, Ga., April 4, 1877. 214
6) a day at home. Agents wanted
Jjp .l. Outfit and terms live. TRUE <
CQ., Augusta, Mains. 2-ly
DRY GOODS.
LATII HOP iV 00. ,
HAVING decided to relinguish tho Retail Dry Goods business, are now offering their
large and well assorted stock in that department AT BARGAINS. Now on hand
full lines of
Black Silks, Caslimeivs 9 Grenadines, Alpacas, Printed
Lawns, Percales, Cambrics,
Hosiery, Cloths, Shirtings, Sheetings, Linens, &c.
Dry Goods at Wholesale!
LATH HOP & CO.
Have now iu stock full Hues
GEORGIA STRIPES,
CHECKS, SHIRTINGS, SHEETINGS, COTTON A DES, TICKS,
DENIMS, JEANS, PRINTS, BLEACHED
COTTONS, HOSIERY, Ac., Ac.
LATHIiOP Sc CO.,
212 ‘ SAVANNAH, GA.
Tlie Kennesaw Gazette,
I A MONTHLY PAPER, PUBLISHED AT j
j-V 1 I. ,Y TV XA , GA.
I Devoted to Railroad interests, |
j Literature, Wit and Humor. Fifty |
i Gents Per Year. CHROMO to 1
| every subscriber. Address
9KEXXESAW GAZETTE, 1
218 ATLANTA, GA. |
$lO REWARD!
I WILL GIVE A REWARD OF TEN
DOLLARS in CASH for the apprehen
sion of the person who obliterated the figure
ONE (.1) on the mile-post on the Quitman
and Tallokas road, with proof to eonvict.
There is a place in the “chain pane”
especially reserved for this class of offenders.
EDWARD R. HARDEN,
Judge Comity Court Brooks Cos.
Quitman, Ga., March 27, ’77. 213-215
A SPLENDID
FLASTATION
FOR SALE!
TT CONTAINS ABOUT FOUR IIUN-
I DIiED (400) ACRE■> OF LAND, ami
lavs directly east- of Quitman; about 50 acres
inside the incorporate limits of tlie town,
an 1 are eligible as town lots. 125 acres
cleared land on the place. Good Gin-house
and new Gin, a dwelling house and two
negro cabins.
The land is good for farming purposes,
and a bargain can be had by any one who
wishes to purchase, by applying to
MRS. C. CULPEPPER,
213- Quitman, Ga.
“NEWSY, SPICY, RELIABLE.”
THE
Atlanta Constitution.
I T UNDER ITS NEW MANAGEMENT,
UJ The Atlanta Constitution hAs won
j for itself the title of the leading journal of
the South. Its enterprise, during the re
cent election excitement, in sending corre
spondents to different portions of the coun
try, and its series of special telegrams from
'Washington while the electoral commission
was engaged in consummating tlie fraud that
placed Radicalism once more in power in
our national councils, are evidences con
spicuous enough to prove that no expense
will be spared to make the Constitution not
only a leader in the discussion of matters of
public concern, but a leader in the dissemi
nation of the latest and most reliable news.
There is no better time than now to sub
scribe for a fresh and vigorous newspaper.
Albeit, there has been a quasi settlement
of one of the most difficult and dangerous
problems of modern federal politics, the
'discussions springing therefrom and the re
sults likely to ensue have lost nothing of
their absorbing interest. In addition to this,
the people of Georgia are now called upon to
settle the convention question, and in the
dissension of this important subject (in
which the Constitution will take a leading
part) every Georgian is interested. If a
convention is called its proceedings will
find their earliest and fullest embodiment in
the columns of the Constitution, and this
fact alone will make the paper indispensable
to every citizen of the State. To be brief,
The Atlanta Daily Constitution
will endeavor, by all the means that the
progress of modern journalism has made
possible and necessary, to hold its place as a
leader of Southern opinion .and as a pur
veyor of tlie latest news. Its editorials will
be thoughtful, timely and vigorous —calm
and argumentative in their methods and
thoroughly Southern and Democratic in
their sentiments. Its news will be fresh,
reliable and carefully digested. It will be
alert and enterprising, and no expense will
be spared to make it the medium of the latest
and most important intelligence.
The Weekly Constitution.
Besides embodying everything of interest
in the daily, the Weekly Constitution will
contain a Department of Agriculture, which
will be in charge of Mr. Malcolm Johnson,
the well-known Secretary of the Georgia
State Agricultural Society. This depart
ment will be made a specialty, and will be
thorough and complete. The farmer will
find in it not only all the current informa
tion on the subject of agriculture, but timely
suggestions and well-digested advice.
Subscriptions should he sent in at once.
TERMS FOR THE DAILY:
1 month $ 1 ()(\
3 months 3 00
0 months 5 30
12 months 10 00
TERMS FOR THE WEEKLY:
Omortlis $1 10
12 months 2 20
Money may be sent by Post-ofiico money
order at our expense. Address:
THE CONSTITUTION,
213 Atlanta, Ga.
I.LFALK&CO.
—DEALERS IN —
(NOTHING,
if .v r r h 9
• AND
GENTS’
Finishing Goods,
—AT —
WHOLESALE AM) RETAIL.
Corner Congress, Whitaker and St.
Julian Streets,
Savannah, - Georgia.
Manufactory, 4:> Warren Street,-N. Y.
Branch House, Charleston, S. C.
208-260
Cormack Hopkins
MANUFACTURER OF
TiNWAI eiG,
AND DEALER IN
HARDWARE
fs X o v is rs,
TIN WARES,
—AND
House Furnishing Goods.
CONTRACT Oil FOR TIN ROOFING
AND CORNICE WORK.
167 BROUGHTON STREET,
203-231 SAVANNAH, GA.
Weed & Cornwell,
—DEALERS IN —
IIA ED WAKE,
IRON,
—AND
T lid .FIG IA 9
173-175 Broughton Street,
208-234 SAVANNAH, GA.
BOOK-KEEPING
THE undersigned by request, offers his
services to the young men of Quitman
for the purposes of instructing them in tlie
above science, and guarantees that all who
pass through a regular course of instruction
shall be able to take charge of a set of books
by double entry.
Those desirous of information without
going through a regular course of instruc
tion will be accommodated.
For terms and particulars, apply at this
office or to Mr. Brass personally.
51 JOHN BRASS.
FITS Oil EPILEPSY.
Any person afflicted with the above dis
ease is requested to send their address to
Ash & Robbins, and a trial box of Dr.
Goulard’s infallible Fit Powders will be
sent to them, by mail, post paid, tree.
These Powders have been tested by hun
dreds of cases iu the Old "World, ana a per
manent cure has been the result in every
instance. Sufferers froiu this disease should
give these powders an early trial, as its cura
tive powers are woifderl'ul, many persons
having been cured by a trial box aloue.
Price for large box, by mail, post paid to
any part of (lie United States or Canada, $3.
Address,
ASH A BOBBINS,
360 Fulton Street,
42 -53 Brooklyn, N. Y.
(at ,"7 (jh . )/A per day at home. Sam.
ijpfj TO free