Newspaper Page Text
mt
skly Democrat.
!M», Editor and Prop'r
AY. MARCH 3,1882.
| OF SUBSCRIPTION.
$2 00
100
75
‘.V.'.V. 10
advance.
JNG RATES AND RULES,
u ■ «* inserted at $2 per square
Ion, and §1 for each subse-
eight solid lines of Ibis type,
nade with contract adverti-
t of eight lines are $15 per
it per annum. Local notices
Iree months arc subject to
irertisers who desire their ad-
Btanged, must give us two
vertisements, unless other-
in contract, will be changed
square.
1 obituary notices, Iributesof
ther kindred notices, charged
Itihcraents.
:nts must take the run of the
not contract to keep them
..r place.
mts for candidates are $10, if
lertion
upon the appearance of the
and the money will be col-
,d by the proprieloi.
[ere strictly to the aboverulcs,
.froia them under no circula
t'd- PROFESSIONAL.
iDiCAL CARD.
J. Nicholson,
led to Twilight, Miller conn
Bar
Office in J.
S. Clifton’s
feb.9,’82.
lEDICAL CARD.
J . Morgan
id his office to the drug store,
jupied by Dr, Harrell. Resi
st street, south of Shotwell.
It night will reach him. **
tRLES C. BUSH,
ney at Law
! COLQUITT, GA.
[tention given to all business cn-
DENTISTRY.
ii r r y , D . D . S .,
nd daily at his office on South
up stairs, in E. Johnson’s
■re he is ready to attend to the
public at reasonable rates.
dcc-5-7S
m. o'keal
IcGILL & O’NEAL,
neys at Law.
pAINBKlbGE, GA.
will be found over the post of-
11.SON, BYRON B. BOWER.
li/ER & D0NALS0N,
tand Counsellors at Law.
Ilic court house. Will practice
J and adjoining counties, and
|y special contract. a-25 7*
R M. L. BATTLE,
Dentist.
Ivor Hinds Store, West side
fc. lias fine dental engine, and
|verything to make his office
Terms cash. Office hours 9
>. in. jan.lStf
?. L. H. PEACOCK,
H. F. SHARON,
ney at Lav/.
Dilice in Court House.
Rice iu all the courts of the
uit aud Supreme Court of
In the Circuit and Supreme
’lorida, and elsewhere by special
go. Ga.. April 23, 1881—ly.
Omnia Yincit.”
tenders his professional serv-
people of Rainbridge and vicini-
r store of J. D. Harrell & Bro
on West end of .Broughton
ho can be found at night.
1881—Gm.
BY BEX. E. RUSSELL.
BAINBRIDGE, GA, THURSDAY, MARCH 3, 1882.
YOL. 11.—NO. 21.
BLOOD ATOALMEAT.
EFF D.
TALBERT,
rney
at Law,
plain bridge. Georgia.
Ictice in all tho courts, and busi-
itvd to his
cate will be promptly
o. Office
over store of M. E.
Son.
feb.23,’82.
Unman Sacrifice Among the
Jloriuouit.—The Unnitico.
•T. W. Bruel writes as follows to the St.
Loui3 Republican, from Salt Lake City:
With regard to blood atonement I am as
sured that it is practiced to-day as fre
quently as it was twenty-five years ago,
though not so openly. There are no coro
ners in Utah, aud when a body is dead it
is simply hurried. Poison does the work
aud there are no inquiries. When
a man gets tired of iiis wife be poisons her.
One crime which was committed here a
short time ago, I must describe. Mrs.
Maxwell came to Salt Lake City with her
husband in 1869. Two years afterward
her husband took another wife and one
year subsequent he was seald to a third.
Mrs. Maxwell had two sons aged, re
spectively, fourteen and sixteen years.
Their father urged them to go through the
Endowment home and become Mormons,
bound by all the oaths ol the church. Mrs.
Maxwell objebted and in order to prevail
over her sons she told them the secrets of
the Endowment house. The penalty for
revealing these secrets is dismemberment
of the body, the throat cut, and tongue
torn out. Mr. Maxwell overheard his wife,
being in an adjoining room, aud forthwith
he informed the elders, who serft for the
unfortunate woman and her two sons.
They were taken to what is called the
‘•dark pit,” a blood atoning room under
Brigham Young’s house. The waman was
then stripped of all her clothing and tied
on her back to a large table. Six mem
bers of the priesthood then performed their
damnable crime; they first cut off their
victim's tongue, they then cut her throat,
after which her legs-jnd arms were severed.
The sons weje compelled to stand by and
witness this dreadful slaughter of their
mother. They were then released and
given twenty-four hours to get out of the
teritory. which was then an impossibility.
The sons went directly to the house of a
friend, to whom they related the butchery
of their mother, and obtaining a package
of provisions they started, but on the fol
lowing morning they were both dead—
they had met the Danities. One other
case, almost similar to the above,occurred
about five years ago, in the city ball. These
are truths, and the lady to whom the sons
told their story is willing to make affidavit
to tlie facts if- she can be guaranteed im
munity from Mormon vergence.
Saving; the Pecans.
“Y ou picked the pecans on Onion creek,
yoa say,” said an Austin reporter yester
day to a young man on a wagon filled with
pecans.
•‘Yes. sir,” he replied, “that's where they
came from.”
“Many up there?”
“Plenty of them.”
“Believe I’ll try a few,” quizzed the re
porter, taking a big handful of the pecans.
"I’ll sell you a whole peek for fifty cents,”
said the man with swelling eyes.
“Only want a few. Say, do you know
any news?”
“Not a bit, sir; everything is very doll
up our way.”
“Don’t you know anything?”
“Well, I believe I did hear 3ome ncw9
yesterday.”
,‘What was it?” asked the repoter
cracking a pecan.
“There was a man got eighteen buck
shot in him near where I live.”
“Who shot him ?”
“I did.”
“What did yon shoet him for?” asked
the reporter, aghast.
“For stealing some of my pecans out of
of my wagon,” said the countryman, reach-'
ing under the seat for his stot-gun.
The reporter hastily replaced the pecans
in the wagon, aud after calling the coun
tryman Colonel, disappeared arouud the
corner.
spring and summer samples are
r excelcucy of quality, bcau-
md economy* of prices they
ere t of ore exhibited. Will
do’hi rig to order here and
ie-style, fit aud workmanship
of the northern trades,
J. I IIAIIN, at
C. K. Daniel’s store.
iKER AND JEWELER.
Street, Bainbridge, Ga
and repairing, watches,
ing-machines and all kiuds of
ne with neatness and dispatch,
dl work warranted.'MSt
►, Ga., August 4.1874—
Personating u Nightingale.
Id one of the pieces recently performed
at Munich for the private delectation of
the eccentric king of Bavaria, a scene oc
curs in which a nightingale is to appear
in the branch of a tree warbling its sweet
notes. Unfortunately there exists thus far
no instrument closely imitating the song
of this queen of birds; surely no bird could
have been found loyal enough to sing even
to u king in winter, mild as the season Las
proved up to this time. The despair of
the stage manager may therefore be readily
imagined. Still, the truth of the old pro
verb, "The greater the need, the nearer
the help.” was once moore vindicated in
this trying dilemma. A bootmaker. Bach-
thaler by name, who has frequently amused
and delighted his friends by his wonderful
imitative talent, was applied to by the
distressed official and persuaded to place
himself behind the scenes, and at a given
signal to “personate” the charming songster
which he did to the entire satisfaction of
his royal listener. At the next perform
ance there will doubtless be read on the
“single” play-bill printed for the king:
“A nightingale, Mr. Bcchthaler.”— Ameri
can Register.
They Never Get Over It.
Do you know, my dear,’ she sudden
ly said as she looked up from ber piece
work—‘do you know that next week
will be the 20th anniversary of oar
wedding?’
‘Is that so ? By George ! how
times flies ! Why, I had no idea of
it*’
‘Yes, we have been married almost
twenty long years,’ she continued, with
something of a sigh. You have been a
good husband to me, darling.'
‘And you have been a blessed little
wife to me, Susan. Come here till 1
kiss yon. There !
•I was thinking to-day—I was think
ing of—of—’ *
‘Of that sickly faced baboon who
used to go home with you from prayer
meeting before I knew you ? he inter
rupted.
‘\Vhal do you mean ?
‘Why, that Brace fellow, of course,
‘Why, George, he wasn’t such a bad
fellow.’
‘Wasn’t be ? Well, I’d like to know
of a worse one. lie didn’t know
enough to chew putty, and then you
were as good as engaged to'him.
‘Yes, George, hut you know you
were keeping company at the same
time with that Helen Perkins.
‘That Helen Perkins? Wasn’t
Miss Perkins one of the liveliest and
prettiest young ladies in Tennessee ?
‘No, she wasn't! She had teeth
like a horse!
‘She did, eh! How about that
stoop shouldered, white headed,
Brace ?
‘And such big feet as she had!
Why. George, she was
stock of the town.
‘Not much, she wasn’t! She was
a young lady who would have made a
model wife.
‘Then why didn’t yon marry her
and all her moles and warts and
mushroom eyes?
‘Don’t talk that way to me! Her
eyes were as nice as yours !
‘They want!
‘They wa3 ! I believe you are sorry
because you didn’t marry Brace 1
‘And I know you are sorry because
you didn’t marry that beautiful and
accomplished Miss Perkins !
‘I am, ch ? I thought you said I
had been a good husband to you ?
‘Didn’t you call me your blessed little
wife ?
Then he plumped down and began
to read the mortgage sales and adver
tisements in the paper, and she picked
up her sewing and gave the cat a gentle
kick. These old things will come up
now and then, and somehow neither
side ever gets entirely ever them.
Changing Place*.
A sitizsn who had an office in the
top story of a block on Griswold street
had half a ton of coal dumped on the
walk the other day, and the oart hadn’t
yet disappeared when a boy came puf
fing upstairs and called out:
“Say, want that coal lugged up 7”
“That’s no wap to address a person,”
replied the man. “Why don’t you ad
dress me in a civil, polite manner ?”
“Dunno how,” answered the boy.
“Well, I’ll show you. Sit down here
and suppose you are the
owner of the efflee and I am the boy
who wants to bring up your coal.”
He stepped into the hall and knock
ed on the door, and as the boy cried
“come in,” the man entered the room
with his hat in his hand and began :
“Beg pardon, sir, but you have some
coal on the walk below.”
“Yes.”
“Shall I bring it up for you 7”
“Oh, certainly!”
“How much will you pay,
“Well,” replied the boy, as he look
ed around at the scanty furniture. “I
generally promise a boy fifteen cents
aud shove a bogus quarter on him, but
seeing it’s you, and ^ou are the only
support of a large family, if you’ll bring
up that coal aud put it in that box, I’ll
give you my whole income for a year
and a half and a pair of old boots in
the bargain.”
“Boy, what do you mean ?” demand
ed the man, as he flushed up.
But the boy dodged him and reached
the stairs, and as he paused at one of
the landings to look up he called out;
“I expected every minute that you’d
the laughing j advise me to get that coal upstairs be-
^ fore some creditor gobbled it! You
can’t play boy for shucks.”—Detroit
Free Dress.
Good Advice.
Try popcorn for nausea.
Try crambemes for malaria.
Try a sunbath for rheumatism.
Try ginger ale tor stomach cramps.
Try clam brath for a weak stom
ach.
Try cranberry poultice for erysip
elas.
Try gargling lager beer for cure of
sore throat.
Try a wet towel to the back of the
neck when sleepless.
Try swallowing saliva when troubled
with sour stomach.
Try eating fresh radishes and yellow
turnips for gravel.
Try eating onions and horse radish
to relieve dropsical swellings.
Try buttermilk for removal of freckles
tan and butternut stains.
Try to cuitivate an equable temper, and
don’t borrow trouble ahead.
Try the croup tippet when a child is
likely to be troubled that way.
Try a hot dry flannel over the seat
of neuralgic pain and renew frequently.
Try taking your codliver oil m tomato
catsup, if you want to make it pala
table.
Try hard cider—a wineglassful three
times a day—for ague and rheuma
tism.
Try breathing the fumes of turpentine
or caroblic acid to relieve whooping
cough.
Try taking a nap in the afternoon if
you are going to be out late in the
evening.
Try a cloth wrung out from cold water
put about the neck at night for sore
throat.
Try snuffing powdered borax up the
nostrils for catarrhal “cold in the
head.
Try an extra pair of stockings outside
of your shoes when traveling in cold
weather.—Dr.Foote’s Health Monthly.
FOR THE LADIES.
An Ancient Legend.
One of the most beautiful legends of
ancient times is told as hapening on the
site of Solomon’s Temple, the memory
of which hallowed scene was remember
ed when the temple was decided upon,
and which caused it to be built thereon.
The story goe3 that the land was owned
and ocoupied by two brothers, one of
whom had a family, and the other had
none—the very spot on which the tem
ple was afterward built i^ing sown with
wiicat. On the evening succeeding the
harvest, the wheat haviog been gather
ed into separate shocks, the elder broth
er said to his wife, “My younger
brother is unable to bear the burden
and the the heat of the day; I will
arise, take of my shocks, and place with
his, without his knowledge.” The
younger brother being actuated by the
same benevolent motives, said within
himself, “My elder brother has a family
and I have none; I will arise, take of
my shocks, and place with his, without
his knowledge.” Judge their mutual
astonishment when, on the following
morning, they found their respective
shocks undimiuished. This course of
events transpired for several nights,
when each resolved in his own mind to
stand guard and solve the mystery.
They did so ; when, on the following
night, they met each other halfway
between their respective fieids with
their arms full. Alas ! how many now-
a-day would more likely be caught
stealing their brother’s entire shocks
than adding to it a single sheaf!
A Clergyman's Family.
“I once met (it was a garden paTty)
a clergyman’s wife—a graceful, accom
plished woman—who introduced her
three daughters, all so much after their
mother’s type that I could not help
admiring them. “Yes,” she said with
a tender pride. ‘‘I think my girls are
nice girls —And so useful, too. We
are not rich, and we have nine chil
dren.—So we told the girls that they
would either have to turnout a ad earn
their bread abroad, or stay at home and
do the work of the house. They chose
the latter. We keep no servant—only
a chairwoman to scour and clean. My
girlfe take it by turns to be cook, house
maid, and parlormaid. In the nursery,
of course (happy mother would say
of course),” “thay are all and all to
their little brothers and sisters.”—“But
how about education?” I asked “Oh,
the work being divided among so many,
we find time for lessons, too. Some we
can afford to pay for, and then the
elder teach the younger ones. ‘ Where
there’s a will there’s a way.’ My girls
are not ignoramuses or recluses either.”
The Ceunt's Romance.
The following romantic story is told
of the Count de Lesseps, projector of
the panama canal : Count de Lesseps
became a widower at sixty-eight, with
a numerous family. A few years later
he was in the habit of visiting a family
in Paris which comprised five sisters
One day be observed that he bad un
dergone great difficulties and dangers
among the Arabs, because they could
not conceive how a man could live
without a wife. The prettiest of the
sisters innocently asked .* Why, then,
do you not marry 3gain ?” “Beeause
I am too old. Besides, if I were to
fall in love with a young girl it Would
be absurd to think that she would fall
in love with me.” “Who knows ?
observed his questioner. Lesseps told
his young listeners about the rose of
Jericho, which, after being dried and
placed in water, again bursts out into
bloom. Soon afterward he obtained
one of these roses and presented it to
the young girl. In a few days she ap
peared with the reblossamed rose in her
band, which she gave to the count, say
ing : “See what a miiicle the water
has effected upon the rose; it is the
blossoming of love in old age.” Their
eyes met, and he, believing that she
had a meaning in what she did, said ;
“If you really dare venture to share the
remaining years of an old man, here is
my hand ” But for this marriage it is
very uncertain whether he would have
undertaken his laborous task at Panama.
She is always at his side, and has been
his chief help and support throughout
his arduous conflicts with politicians,
money-lenders, engineers and laborers.
A Faithful Sweetheart.
The heather bloomed gayly along the
roadside ; the hum of the insects and
and the voices of hirds filled the sum
mer air. By the brook that rippled
merrily down the mountain side stood
a young man, tapping impatiently with
his cane a tiny foot that peeped out
from beneath his checkered pants.
Brushed carelessly from his white fore
head were two golden locks, and a
number five hat was perched jauntily
on the back of his head.
“Will she never come ?” he mutter
ed, in low, earnest tones; “never come
to hear the sweet words of love that are
waiting on my lips for her ?”
A fish rose to the surface of the
brook, looked at the young man, and
went away tired.
“I will go and seek her,” he said ;
bat as he turned to go a pair of gleam
ing arms were thrown around his neck,
and two rosy lips were puckered up for
a kiss.
“So you have come at last,” he said,
looking at her foudlv.
“Yes,” replied the girl. “Birdie Mc-
Murtry never breaks a promise. I told
mamma that she would have to hang
out the clothes herself to-day, although
it nearly broke my heart to leave her at
such a time.”
“Great heavens!” said Rcdergo to
himself. “I had forgotten that it was
Monday.”—Ex.
Resolved.
Giveadam Jones offered the following
preamble and resolution :
Whereas, It was generally under
stood by the cullud race dat ole Mother
Shiptnn was to eand up dis world on
de las’ day ef 1881, an’
Whereas, Sartin odder people have
from time to time sot a day for de
grand smash to arrove, an’ de said
rand smash didn’t take place; now
darfore—
Resolved, Dat de cullud race doan’
take no mo’ stock in such prophecies
and predickshuns, but dat dey ’tend
strickly to biznesa and let de world take
car’ of herself and eand up when she
gits ready.
The resolution wa3 adopted without
debate and accepted as the sentiments
of the club.
Young men who are intending to
be farmers should remember that
agriculture is both a science and an
.art, to be carefully studied and then
practicaly carried out. The day has
gone by when the ignorant can become
successful farmers. Within the past
ten years agricaltnre has undergone a
great revolution, but the next ten year9
will see greater changes than have
yet been witnessed. The leading
agriculturists will be the ieading men
of the country.—Prairie Farmer.
WIT AND WISDOM.
“A fellow-feeliug makes ns wondrous
kind”—bat not when a fellow’s feeling for
your pocket book.
Vulgar minds refuse to crouch beneath
their load ; the brave bear theirs without
repining.
He that is indeed a man dare not com
mit those sins of which he has once re
pented.
The watchmaker can’t afford to do a
cash business, because he makes all his
profits on time.
The changes we personally experience
from time to time we obstinately deny to
our principles.
If a man talks of his misfortunes tliere
is something in them that is not disagreea
ble to him.
A couplet of verse, a period of prose,
may cling to the rock of ages as a shell
that survives a deluge.
Genius, as a rule, is no more conscious-
of itself than is the rose of its sweetness
or apple of its flavor.
v
If you wish to be agreeable in society,
yon must consent to be taught many
things which you know already.
At the polls, Tuesday, it was easy to
tell the man who voted “yes” on the li
cense question by the appearance of his
“no’s.”
“The trutli always pays in the end” is
an old saying, and that is the reason, prob
ably, why there is so little of it told at the
beginning of any busings tarnsaction.
There is a prevailing superstitions terror
of the number thirteen. That’s probably
the reason that folks dont admire the
Chicago shoe.
The mad dog which jumped over a six
foot fence to bite a man’s lesr must have
felt terribly mortified and disgusted when
he found it was a wooden one.
The season for carrying fans is a great
comfort to some women. It enables them
yawn without attracting attention to the
size of their mouths.
When a woman leaves a man who has
not earned his salt fur years, he immedi
ately advertises that he will pay no debts
of her contraction.
Paper dining plates are now in use. By
and by they will print the news of the day
around the rim and serve them fresh at
every meal.
The growing custom of wearing mourn
og f or a deceased sweet-heart should be
discouraged. When half a dozen different
girls suddenly appear in black at a young
man’s funeral, the situation is embarrass
ing.
Benevolent—“When I dine with Math-
ieu,” said Taupin. yesterday, “I never miss
saying, on my arrival, that I have no ap
petite. Not that I eat any less afterward,
but it causes him a happy moment.”
It may bo mortifying, young man. but
the mots agate slab you are wearing for a
sleeve button is not the proper thing.
Have it made over into a centre-table, aud
then buy a small, fashionabl cuff button.
“The wolf changes its hair every year,
but remaining a wolf,” suys a Russian
proverb. Nothing very remarkable about
that. A woman sometimes changes her
hair as often as two or three times a day,
and still remains a woman. Lot the Rus
sians switch off to something worth men
tioning when they want to compose pro
verbs.
Dugald : “Hoo are you, Maggie?”
Maggie: “No weel ava, Dugald.” Du
gald: “Ay! ay! Will I make of you a
cup of tea?” Maggie: No, no, Dugald,
she'll do no coot.” Dugald: “Maggie,
will I make new-povn egg? Maggie: “It's
no use, Dugald. I’m no weel wbateffer.”
Dngald : "Maggie, will I marry of you ? ’
Maggie: “Oh. Dugald. you'll make’em
laugh and me no weel!”
“ 1’he Judge” remembers once recording
the fact that a little boy said that soda
water tastes like your foot’s asleep ; but
now comes a lad who says that, weiss beer
is thawed saudpaper. This reminds U3 of
a Yankee on the Pacific ocean who for the
first time got a mouthful of Chili peppers,
when the tears dropped he gasped, “for
the love of heaven, no more needles and
pins on toast.”
“Oh, I suppose he loves Sarah, and
would be glad to marry her,” he wa3 say
ing to a woinaD in the post office corrider
yesterday ; “bat I donno.” “Isn't he a
nice young man?” asked the other. Well,
he’s nice enough, but very reckless with
his money. At Christmas time he made
us a oresent of a French clock for tha par
lor, and there's not one in the house can
speak a word of French.”
An exciting question is pending be
tween the Sud and the Inter-Ocean as to
whether a certain garment is is properly
called trousers or pantaloons. The Suu
swears by the former and the Inter-Ocear
by the latter. The New York Commer
cial Advertise comes in as umpire and
says, there should be no breeches of the
kind between two such amiable firebrands.
It matters little what men call these
things so long as they do not permit their
wives to wear them-
An Arkaarai) Farmer Plow s njt
31,100 in Gold.
A young man named Nelson, while
plowing on the farm of Bobort Hicks,
near Rally Hill. Boon county, plowed
up an iron pot containing over $1,400
in $5, $10 and $20^guld pieces. Nelson
kept the discovery a secret and appro
priated the money, but the fact of him
possessing a quantity of rusty gold coin
soon leaked oat, upon being questioned
he acknowledged having found it.
Hicks claims to have buried the money
in the field where it was found more
than twenty years ago. It is under
stood he divided the money with Nel
son.
General Gartrell is confident of his sus-
cess in the Gubernatorial race this year.
A day or two ago he said: “I am* sate of
an election this year. A large number of
the organized are lor me, and the Inde
pendents will go solid for me.” How abont
Felton ?” “Why Dr Felton is my friend.
He w’U not run for Governor, and will
give me all his influence. You see the
Doctor is auxious to re-establish himself
in his own district, and will surely make
the race for Congress. Congress is what
he wants. Mark my words, I will be the
next Governor of Georgia.”
An Atlanta special ol tho 10th, says;
No little excitement was created in this
city to-day by an assault made upon editor
Dewitt of the Evening Fost-Appeal, by
Hoke Smith, a youug lawyer of Atlauta
About noon Smith entered the Post-
Appeal editorial rooms and demanded an
apology for a sensational article published
about Smith the day before. Dewitt de
clined to apologize or retract, when Smith
struck him, knocking him down. Before
Dewittcould resent Smith! friends hurried
him from the office. The assault has
created great excitement, and blood is ex
pected The article which caused the as
sault accused Smith of betraying and de
serting a woman who is now in Denver
Colorado.
POWELL & McKAIR, Propr’s-
Bring your cotton to onr new warehouse,
situated at the North end of Broad Street,
immediately on the Railroad Track. Bran
new warehouse. No draynge. By far the
cheapest warehouse in town.
Polite attention given to all, and busi-
ne-s wanted and solicited.
Give ns a trial, for you wil. be pleased/
Liberal cash advences made on cotton-
POWELL & McNAIR.
Aug 25,1881—3m
A. X ’
Artist Photographer,
COLUMBUS,
- GEORGIA.
Awarded Highest Premium at State
FAIR.
Citizens of Bainbridge and surrounding
country : I offer myself as a candidate to
take your photographs from now on, and
if elected will do my best to make you all
look handsome. I’ve done said it, aud I’ll
stick to it, if tho stars tumble. So don’t
forget me when you visit Columbus. My
Gallery is next to Rankin House. I am’
prepaired to do all kiuds cf
COPYING and ENLARGING
I have connected with my Establish
ment a first-class Miniature and Portrait,
painter. So my pictures are not sent off
to be finished, I make alt new styles—
the Imperials, Boudoirs, Proinonade3, Cab
inet. and Scenic pictures, of many designs.
So come and see me. I am the same Rid
dle “Days Lang SyVb.”
Springfield, Robertson Co.. Ten*.,
November 27, 1880.
Dr. J. Br.AOFiELD—Sir : My daughter
has been suffering for many years with that
dreadful affliction known as Female Disease,
which has cost me many dollars, and noUf
withstanding I had the best medical attend*
ance, could not find relief. I have used
many other kinds of medicine without any
effect. I had juf.t about given her up, was.
out cf heart, but happened in the store ef
W, W. Eckler several weeks since, and he
knows of my daughter’s affliction pursuaded
me to try a bottle of your Female Regulator.
She began to improve at once. I was so de
lighted with its effect that I bought several
more bottles.
The price, $1.50 a bottle, seemed to be
very high at first, but I now think it the
cheapest preparation on the glob*, and
knowing what I do about it, if to-day one of
my family was suffering with that awftif
disease I would have it if it cost $50 a bottle/
for I can truthfully say it has cured my
daughter sound and well, and myself and
wife do most heartily recommend your Fe
male Regulator to be just what it is recom
mended to be.
Respectfully,
11. D. Feather jtoS.
For Sale lty all Druggist,
Woman's Best Friend.—,To relieve the'
aching heart of woman, and bringjoy where 1
sottow reigned supremo, is a mission before
which the smiles of kin*s dwindle info Ut
ter insignificance This is the peculiar
yrovir.ee of Bradfleld’s Female Regulator,
which, from its numberless cure*, is appro-;
priately styled “IVonjaa’s Best Friend.”
The distressing complaint known as •whitee’’
and various irregularities of the womb, ttr
which woman is subject, disappear like
magic before a single bottle of this wonder,,
ful compound, Hhysictans proscribe if.-
Prepared py Dt, J, Bradfield, Atlanta, Ga.,
and sold at $1 50 per bottle by all druggist*