The News and courant. (Cartersville, Ga.) 1901-1904, October 06, 1904, Page 7, Image 7

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Cotton Must Have© Potash $ Potash is an essential plant food which must be added as a fertilizer 4 or the soil will become ex hausted, as is tru e of so many cotton W, e have books giving valuable de tails about fertiliz ers. NVe will send them free to any farmer who asks us for them. OERnAN KALI WORKS, j( e * \ ork -#8 Nmmi Street* •r Atlanta, i*a.~-Stt% N. Rraat At. WITHOUT COST TO YOU. In order that our readers may be thoroughly convinced of the curative powers of the magical, relieving, and healing remedy, Paracamph, we are pleased to say that if you will fill out the coupon below and mail to The Para camph Company to-day they will give you a full-size bottle free. * If you suffer from Rheumatism, Neu ralgia, Sore Joints, Sore Feet, Eczema, Tetter, Catarrh, Sore Throat, Hay Fever, Asthma, Piles (itching or bleeding), or any form of wound such as a Bum, Cut, Bruise, Old Sore, Swelling or Inflam mation, fill out the coupon below and mail at once to The Paracamph Com pany, Louisville, Ky. Don’t hesitate, as this places you under no obligations whatever. ? Cut ont this coupon at once, fill out , (the blanks and mail it to i j THE P&RAGAMPH GO., Louisiilla, Ky. <; ) My disease is ji \ I have never used Paracamph, but if l you will send me bottle free of cost, 1 1 will try it. • ]i Name ' ) Street Address ji ji County and State 'i i 1 (Give full address. Write plainly.) i Kemember, PARACAMPH in recommend ed by snrgoons and physicians. Used by athletes the world over. Thousands of testimonials. Guaranteed perfectly hnrmittn. The GREENE DRUG CO DR. CLARK H. GRIFFIN, DENTIST. 3FICE : Gilreath Ruihir h fl-* Stairs oyer News in i G'vui'tn. Office. CARTEPSYILLE. .3A Rea! Estate Insurance G. H. AUBREY, Attorney at Law. Loans Negotiated. Office* in Sam Jones building: Rain and sweat W-s\ \ \ , \ I have no effect on J,y fyyy y/ g H I harness treated [Tg jff ff* K /%, MB I With Eureka Har- g %S M I ness OH. It re- ' *" t I sists the damp, V V \ \ I keeps the ieath- 01 271 fITCC i I I ■ do not bfreak. \ ' \ * I srAs; \ v fjlbw ■ and cut. 1 J j Surged Indigestion Causes Catarrh of the Stomach. ~ or many years It has been supposed that catarrh of the Stomach caused indigestion and dyspepsia, but the truth is exactly the opposite. Indigestion causes catarrh. Re peated attacks of indigestion inflames the rnurtmt* membranes lining the stomach and .tic nerves of ine stomach, thus caus ing the glands to secrete mucin instead of <ne Juices of natural digestion This Is called Catarrh of the Stomach. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure relieves ail inflammation of the mucous membranes lining the stomach, protects the nerves, and cures bad breath, sour risings, a sense of fullness after eating, indigestion, dyspepsia and all stomach troubles. Kodol Digests What You Eat Make the Stomach Sweet. Bottles only. Regular size, $ 1.00. holdinr times the trial size, which sells for 50 cents. “resered b? E. O. D.WITT * 00., Chicago, lit SOLD by m. f. word. H" 1 HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and besatifies the hair. I Promote! a luxuriant growth. 1 Never Fails to Restore Grays Hair to its Youthful Color. I Cures scalp diseases Si hair failing. | 50c, and j I.l** at Druggists ... ) , HINDERCORNS. and, jf. 7 ,Ure Cure for Corns. Stops sll pain. Ensures com (*t u> die Makes walking eagy. Mas. at i>cwggisw fCounty News.l WEST ADAIKSVILEE We are needing rain very badly. Many mills and stock ponds have failed. Several of our farmers are digging wells. The cotton crop is not as good as it promised to be earlier. It is opening very fast, and some say it is harder to pick than usual. We regret to learn of the death of Mr. and Mrs. George Ellis’ little daughter. Mr. Robert Mocney an*l family visited relatives in Floyd Sunday. Mrs. S. J. Carlisle is spending some time with her daughter, Mrs. E. C. Cunningham. Mr. John W. Smith reports that his son, who lives south of Adairs ville. is mending fast. He has been down with typhoid feyer for fifty-eight days. W. T. Hall and family were visiting in our neighborhood Sun day. Several of the old rebs went to the reunion at Rome. All report a good time, and vote many thanks to our neighbor city for their hos pitality. Miss Anthony, of Pine Log, has the school at this place for next year, DO ÜBLE Sl* It I . OS. Cotton picking is the order of the day. and farmers are rtishing while cotton stays a good price. Saturday and Sunday are the regular meeting days. Misses Mary Lewis and May Johnsey spent Sunday with home folks. Master Eli Lewis, who was bit ten by a rattlesnake last week, is improving. Mr. Lewis Keown has accepted a position with the Mason Music Cos,, where he will be glad to see his many friends. Mr. J. S. Abernathy visited his cousin, Mr. E. T. Abernathy, near Emerson Sunday. Mr. J. R. Leachman was in Cartersville Saturday, Mrs. Matilda Barron is visiting her son, Mr. J. E. Barron, near Emerson- SNOW SPRING. After being silent some time we will write again. Peach gathering was such a busy time that we didn’t have leisure to read the news, or write it either. Our section was well represented at the reunion at Rome week before last. The dry weather is having a bad effect on everything. Vegetation is all drying up; the wells are all going dry. There are some springs exhausted which the oldest inhabi tants never knew to fail. Mr. Sam Conaway has got his syrup mill in operation now, and the youngsters sav they are expect ing to have an old-fashioned candy puil at any time. Mr. Henry Davis and sister, Miss Pearl, visited their aunt, Mrs. J. B. Teems, of Floyd county, last Sat urday and Sunday. Mr. John Davis visits somewhere in Floyd county every Sunday. We don’t know what the attrac tion is. Mr. S. J. W. Hood had the mis fortune .to hit his hand with a hammer some days ago, making a bad bruise which laid him up for some time. We hear he is able to be out again. We wdll try to give next week a description of Snow Springs and the surroundingcouutry. “Watch the Kidneys” “When they are affected, life is in danger,” says Dr. Abernathy, the great English physician. Foley’s Kidney Cure makes souud kidneys. Greene Drug Cos. Spent More Tlian #I.OOO. W. W. Baker, of Plainview, Neb., writes: "My wife suffered from lung trouble for fifteen years. She tried a number of doctors and spent over #IOOO without relief. She became very low and lost all hope. A friend recommended Foley’s Honey and Tar and thanks to this great remedy it saved her life. She enjoys better health than she has known in ten years." Refuse substitutes. Greene Drug Cos. FOLEYSBDNEMAR ■tops the cough end heeli lungs THE NEWS AND COURANT, CARTERSVILLE GEORGIA, OCTOBER 6, 1914. CONDENSED STORIES. J k Brave Soldier Who Couldn’t Stand Cuban Cooking. Admiral Dcwev nodded toward a tall man .with a military carriage. , “That gentleman,” he said, “fought 1 gallantly in Cuba against the Span- •' lards. But it is about his eating, i not his lighting, that I am going to ; tell you. “He was quartered in a certain j Cuban village, and at mess lie com- | -—I •‘SUGARED! SUGARED !" HE EXCLAIMED. plained bitterly every day about the Cuban cooking. * “ ‘Sugar!’ he would exclaim. ‘They sugar everything. I can’t stand this constant sugar diet.’ . “Finally he said: ‘l’ll eat nothing but boiled eggs hereafter. They can’t sugar them.’ “But a young officer came in to mess at the next meal very early, and, taking the salt out of the oth er’s salt cruet, he filled it up with sugar. * “When the older man arrived he ordered, sure enough, boiled eggs. He opened them with a gloomy com placency and sprinkled over them plenty of the doctored salt. “At the first mouthful he turned purple. “ ‘Sugared! Sugared!’ he ex claimed and rushed from the table.” —San Antonio Express. t The Allusion Classical. The agricultural appropriation bill was before the house. Repre sentative Rixey of Virginia w T as ad vocating an increase from $15,000 to $25,000 for the experimental farm owned bv the government at Arlington. He said the small amount allowed was not enough to produce substantial results. Representative Wadsworth, in charge of the hill, pointed out that $15,000 was appropriated for the farm annually and that year after year this mounted up and in time would become formidable. “Rome was not built in a day,” he added in conclusion. “No,” replied Mr. Rixey; “Rome was not built in a day, and if Romu lus and Remus had been members of the committee on agriculture Rome never would have been built.”— Washington Times. How a Soldier Won a Wife. There is a romantic love story in connection with General Sir Mi chael Biddulph, the “gentleman usher of the black rod,” who died recently in London. Sir Michael was one of the few soldiers—out side of fiction—who captured their wives at the point of the bayonet. It came about thus: During the Cri mean war, throughout which Sir Michael served with much honor, being present at the battles both of the Alma and Balaklava, the late LfiaGiL ivu rr an iviu OH Lv UiAC charge of Captain Stamati, the Rus sian commandant of Balaklava fort. This officer had two daughters, with one of whom young Captain Biddulph there and then fell in love. At the conclusion of the war the two were married, the czar’s consent having been obtained. Rubbing It In. Ex-Secretary Elihu Root was talk ing about the humanity of judges. “They are humane men,” he said. “I could tell you many moving sto ries of the pain that they have suf fered in the infliction of severe sen tences. It is not altogether pleas ant to be a judge. “That is why I cannot credit a story' that was told me the other day about a judge in the west. A criminal on trial before this "man had been found guilty. He was told to rise, and the judge said to him: “ ‘Have you ever been sentenced to imprisonment before?’ “ ‘No, your honor,’ said the crim inal, and he hurst into tears. “ ‘Well,’ said the judge, ‘don’t cry. You’re going to he now.’ ” New York Tribune. !N PRAISE OF BOXING. M. Maeterlinck is full of surprises, f lie author of "The Treasure of the Humble” and of “Polkas and Meli sande” is not exactly the writer you would expect to discourse on the glories of pugilism, and yet here he is, in the Figaro, extolling the man ly dignity of “la boxe.” The hu man body, lie says, is a ridiculous piece of mechanism at the best, wholly inferior to that of the ant for the purposes of offense and de fense. But at any rate man has a natural weapon in the fist, and how rarely he can use it! M. Maeter linck almost weeps as he describes two quarrelsome peasants biting, scratching, kicking and knifing in stead of hitting out from the shoul der like honest men. The sword is inhuman; the knife is base; but the fist, my brethren, is the true instru ment of temporal salvation. Let us learn to tap a foe scientifically on his nob —one, two, three—and the gain in self respect will he enor mous. Moreover, the cause of peace will prosper. Such is the apostolic massage of Maurice Maeterlinck. — London Chronicle. Queens Who Enjoy a Smoke. The czarina of Russia smokes cig arettes now and then, and on her desk there are always a couple of golden engraved cigarette eases, a silver ash tray and a malachite match holder. The queen of Italy seldom smokes, but the mother of the king of Spain consumes a large number of Egyptian cigarettes ev ery day. The ex-Queen Natalie of Servia owns a magnificently jeweled smoking outfit and is very partial to the habit. The queen of Roumania, Carmen Svlva, also owns a large number of gold and silver cigarette cases, but she does not like the aroma of to bacco. The queen of Portugal, on the other hand, is an ardent lover of the weed. She prefers a special brand of German tobacco, w'hich is sent to her at intervals from Dres den. Her mother, the Countess of Paris, occasionally indulges in a Ha vana cigarette or two. Philadel phia Press. Raising a Window. He weighed about 200 pounds and looked to be a giant in strength. As he sat down in the seat of a Del aware and Hudson car a delicate looking woman leaned over and ask ed if he would be kind enough to raise the window at her side. He answered in the affirmative and then began to tug. The window never moved and the important man ' got red in the face, lie said some thing about the car builders, and then informed the young woman that the window couldn’t be raised. He sat down and the crowd laughed. A few minutes later the trainman, who weighed about as much as a jockey, entered the car, and the wo man appealed to him to raise the window. He reached in with one hand and without apparent exertion sent the stubborn window up with a hang. The crowd then looked at the fat man and laughed again.—Al bany Journal. The Dentist Monk and the Pope. “I have drawn 2,000,644 teeth,” said the dentist monk of Rome re cently before his death. No charge was made, and the priest worked in the open air in the garden of his monastery, and used no instruments but his thumb and forefinger. Leo XIII. was one of his clients, and Pope Piux IX. said to him once: “Dear brother, I should like very much to have a tooth pulled byyou.” “Oh, holy father!” “But it is impossible.” “Oh! Why ?” said the monk. “Because,” returned the pope quietly, “I have none left to pull.” —Rome Cor. Pall Mall Gazette. The Door to Open. “It is not often,” said a broker, “that James R. Keene answers strangers’ letters. The other day, though, he broke his rule of silence. A country lad out in Indiana wrote him. The lad wanted to come to New York and make his fortune, and he asked Mr. Keene to tell him how to go about the matter. ‘As I stand in the broad avenue of life/ said the boy, ‘I find 60 many closed doors before me that I don’t know which of them to open. How can I distinguish the door that will lead me to success?’ ‘There is only one door for you to take,’ Mr. Keene answered. ‘lt is the one labeled push.’” Write* Without Hands. One of the most remarkable per sonages in Pennsylvania is Abraham B. Myers. With only stumps of arms he writes a very legible hand, holding the pen between the stumps of his arms, without artificial as sistance. He is a marksman of no mean ability and pulls the trigger by means of a twine, the end of which he grips in his teeth. He plays pool and billiards and even rides horseback. j &i Columbus, Ohio, May 20, 1903. , Six years ago I had a severe attack of , Inflammatory Rheumatism. I was laid up in bed for six months, and the doctors I had did me no good. They changed med icines every week and nothing they pre scribed seemed to help me. Finally I be gan the use of S. S. S. My knee and elbow joints were swollen terribly, and at one time my joints were so swollen and pain ful that I could not close them whpn opened. I was so bad that I could not move knee or foot. I was getting discour aged, you may be sure, when I began S. S. S., but as I saw it was helping me I contin ued it, and to-day I am a sound well man and have never had a return of thodisease. S. S. S. purified my blood and cured tne of this severe case of Rheumatisne after everything else had failed. I have rec eominended it to others with good re sults. R. h. Chapman. 1355 Mt. Vernon Ave. ' The poisonous acids that produce the in flammation and pain are absorbed into the blood and Rheumatism can never be con quered till these are neutralized and fil . tered out of thi blood and system. S. S. S. goes directly into the circulation and at tacks the disease itself. It purifies and re stores the blood to a healthy, vigorous comlitk'ii. It lor lain.potash, alkali^ The Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga. Tax Assessment for 1904. GEORGIA, Bartow County: court of Commissioners of lloads and Revenues, Bartow county, Georgia, September term I!HM. It is ordered Ity the court that there be assessed, levied anti collected on all the taxable property in si. id county and on the digest for the year 1904 the following tax for county purposes for said year 1904, towit: Twenty five [251 cents on the ore hundred dollars to pay any lawful indebtedness of Bar tow county past due and to become due, the necessary court expenses for the year, includ ing the salary of the judge of the city court, expenses of commissioners court, coronors fees, expenses of lunatics, public buildings and for any other lawful charge against the county not otherwise provided for. Eight [8) cents on the one hundred dollars to pay jurors per diem Teh 110] cents on the one hundred dollars for a public road fund, as authorised by law. Four [4] cents on the one hundred dollars to pay commissioner of pauper farm and support of paupers. Two 121 cents on the one hundred dollars to pay bailiffs fees, non resident witnesses, fuel, stationery, etc. t*>Three 81 cents on the one hundred dollars th pay jailors, sheriffs and other officers fees, coat they may he legally entitled to out of the county treasury The foregoing items making the county tax forthe year .904, fifty-two [S2J tents on the one hundred dollars. hi s further ordered that the tax collector of said county collect said taxes hereinhe* for elevied as provid and by law It is further ordered that this order be spread upon the minutes of this court and published in 'lie News and Gouraut for 80days a copy posted at the court house door for 30 days nd a copy Punished the tax collector as required by law Done in open court this 7th day ’of Septem - [her 1904. JOHN 8. LEAK, W. M. TUItNEU, I. I). HENDEKSON, W. 1) ROWLAND, li J. ItAIDEN, Commissioners of Boads and Revenues, Bartow county, Georgia. A true extract from the minutes this 7th September 1904. • It J. RAIDEN, Clerk Board Commissioners Road and Reve nues. Bartow county. Geo Petition for Charter. GEORGIA, Bartow County, To the Superior Court of said county: The petition of (leo. S. Crouch, ,1. H. Vlvlon, N. M. Adams and T. W. Baxter shows that: 1. Petitioners desire for themselves, their asso ciates and successors, to be Incorporated for a period of twenty CIO) years with the privilege of renewal at the end cf that time under the corpo rate name and stole of •'FAIRFIELD MILLS COMPANY" °. t’he object of said corporation is pecuntaiy profit. -i tne particular business to be carried on b.v said corporation is the owping and operating of n,ills for the manufacture of cotton, wool and other fibre, either singly or in combination into cloth, yarn nnd other products which may be munu’actured from such material, directly or indirectly. Including hosiery, and the converting of any similar raw material into any manufac tured product which may be made therefrom. 4 The principal office and place of business of said corporation to lie ip Ciirtersvllle. Georgia, with the privilege of conducting o erations and having hran<*h offices elsewhere either within or without th-State of Georgia, as may be detei niined by corpora te action. 5. The capita! stock of said corporation to be Twenty-five Thousand Dollars with the privil ege of increasing the same to any sum or sums not exceeding in the aggregate One Hundred Thousand Dodars on Ihevote of a majority of tlie capital stock; with the right to pav tor all or anv portion of said original or Increased capital stock, either in cash or In property or partly in each; such property, when taken In payment of any canital stock, to be received at such valua tion as may be fixed by the cornorators or the stockholders by a majority vote; such valuation to he conclusive unnn 011 persoue in the absence of proof of actual fraud. <!. t'etitioneis pray lor said corporation aii p -wers Incident to corporations of like character under the laws of the State of Utorgla and any other state where It may be doing business; and that said coiporatlon have also the power to sell, mortgage and convey, any and ail of its rights, powers, properties and franchises, either absolutely or as security for any indebtness which tt may Incur. JOHN W. and PAUL F. AKIN, Petitioners' Attorneys. Filed in Plerk’s office, Bartow Superior Court Sept. 7. 1904. W. C. WALTON, Clerk. Libsl for Divorce. Lizzie Highfield l j„ yjje Superior Court of Charlie IHgbfleld S Bartow County, Ga. To the deteodant, 'Charlie Highfield: Y’ou are hereby notified, required and commanded, per sonally or by attorney, to be and appear at the Superior Court, to be held in and for said coun ty of Bartow, on the second Monday in Janu ary next, then and there to answer the plaintiff’s libel for a total divorce, and In default thereof the court will proceed ns to justice appeertains. Witness the honorable judge of said court, this the-7th day of September, 1904. A. W. FITE J S. C. C. C, Notice to Debtors and Creditor-. Notice is hereby given to all creditors of the estate of Robert Chapman, late of said county, deceased, to render in an account of their demands to us within the time prescribed by law properly made out, and all persons indebted to said deceased are hereby requested to make immediate payment to the undersigned. This sth day of September 1904. W. M. DODD, W. H. LUMPKIN, fiw Executors of Robert Chapman, FOLEYS KIDNtYCUKE Makes Kidneys and Bladder Right THE NEW Interchangeable Mileage Tickets OVER THE . SEABOARD flir Line Railway are On wale now by any agent of th svstem at $25 Per 1,000 Miles. and are good over 15.000 Miles. covering the following roads: Atlanta, Knoxville and Northern Rail way; Atlanta and West Point Railroad- Western Railway of Alabama; Atlantic Goast Line; Louisville and Nashville Railroad; Louisville Henderson and St. Louis Railroad ; Nashville, Chatta nooga and St. Louis Railroad; North western Railway of South Carolina; Bal timore Steam Packet Company; Plant System; Brunswick and Birmingham Railroad; Richmond, Fredericksburg and Potomac Railroad; Charleston and W estern Carolina Railway; Washington Southern Railway; Chesapeake Steam ship Company ; Seaboard Air Line Rail way; Columbia, Newberry and Laurens Railroad; Georgia Railroad; Western and Atlantic Railroad. F’or further information relative to soli u.es, reservation of steeper accom moaai,' • tc., apply to J. L. Von DOHLEN, Trav, Pass. Agt., 116 Peachtree st. Atlanta, Ga. R. M. COFFEY, C. P. and T. A.. 116 Peaciitre6 st. Atlanta, Ga* W. E. CHRISTIAN, ss’t. Gen’l. Pass. Agt.. Atlanta Ga DR. WOOLLEY S Opium and Whiskey ANTIDOTE Will cure permanently at your own home. Mr. T. M. Brown, of DeQueen. Ark., nays; "Over seven yearn ago I wtw cured o: the opium habit by your medicine, and have continued in the very beet of health since. M W. M.Tunstall of Lovlngston, Va., says: “I a™ Klad to say that I firmly believe that I am entirely and permanently cured of the Drink Habit, as 1 have never even so much as warned a drink In any form since I took your eradicators now 18 mouths ago. It was the best money 1 ever invested,” Mrs. Virginia Townsend, of Shreveport, La., writes: “No more opium. I have taken no other etnedy than yours, and I make no mistake when 1 say that my health is better now than it ever wus in my life, and I owe it to you and yonr remedy. It has been twelve years since 1 waa cured by your treatment,” Dr. Woolley has thousands of such testimo nials, with permission to use them. A treatment with so many recommendations from Physicians and cured patients must be good. Hr. Wonlley’s Anildste has imitators (as all good articles have) —perhaps you have tried someoi them, bat there is nothing like Woolley’s, lthas stood the test of thirty years. No man or woman who uses opium or whiskey in any lorin, or who has friends so afflicted, should hesitate to write to DR. B, M. WOOLLEY. 106 North Pryor St- P. O. Box No. 307 Atlanta, Ceorgia. for hts book or* t dlHHfiHew, which he will send FREE AND CONFIDENTIAL. Atlanta and Birmingham Air Line Railway. West Bound Flast Hound Road down Effect N> r 8, 1906 Read up Nos.— Nos.— 89 2-3 21 22 24 88 AM PM AM PM AM AM (LAN) (LAN) Dly’ ex. D’ly ex, mon siLY. Cent Time daily. MOjf, .. . 430 8 22 1. Atl (W4Ary).a. 7 30 11 45 ...’ 2506 20 10 20 Cartersville... i 15930 220 3026 31 1028 . Ladds 505 922 204 317 643 1042 Stllesboro ... 453 911 149 329 652 1052 Tavlorsyille 441 901 133 343701 UOl Davitts 432851 117 34**706 1105 . ..Aragon 4298-G 1 12 402 7 16 11 14 .Rockmart ... 4 17 83t, 101 40917 35 1131 .Fish Creek .. 358817 12 41 4257 41 1188 ...Grady 350 81012 30 446804 11 57 a Cedarto wn .1.3 32 74812 13 528 .... 1243 l.Esom Hill a 250.... 11 38 585 .... 12 48 . Warners.... 245 .... ii 31 543 ... 1257 Palestine 238 .... 11 20 603 ... 116 Wilson Ridge 218 ...1055 616 .. 129 Piedmont. 204 ... 10 44 635 . 147 .. bribes 147... 10 25 657 2 04|. ..Tredegar.... 128 ... 110 05 220 ArJaeksonville Lv 110 710 2 58X*v. .Tampa—Lv 12:33 951 720 315 Ar Dukes 12 22 935 7 25 Lv Dukes (LcfeN) Ar 9 15 820 ArAnnislon “ Lv.... 825 . .. 360 ArGadsden.(LAN) 11 45 4 10" Attalla " 1125 . . 329 Hebron 12 02 .... .... 342 Ohatehie., 1140 .... .... 4 15 Ragland 10 55 .... 442 Ethel 10 20 .... 4 36 Inman 10 17 .... 955 Ar-.. Birmingham (So. By) ..Lv 610 (Excepting Sundav.) Close connections as ioiiows: At Cartersville, Ga., with W. &A. R. R.; at Rockmart, Ga., with So. Ry.; at Cedartown, Ga,, with C. of Ga. Ry.; at Piedmont, Ala., with So. Ry.; at Pell Citv, Ala., with So. Ry. Direct connections in Atlanta for points east, northeast and southeast. Going lor Chamberlain’s Colic* Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. Don’t put yourself in this man’s place, but keep a bottle of this remedy in yonr home. There is nothing so good for Colic, Cholera Morbus, Dysentery and Diarrhoea. It is equally valuable for Summer Complaint and Cholera Infan tum and has saved the lives of more children than any other medicine in use. When reduced with water and sweet ened it is pleasant to take. You, or some one of your family, are rare to need this remedy sooner or later and when that time comes you will need it badly; you will need it quickly. Why act buy it now and be prepared for sneb an emergency? Price,2sc.; large six!, 50a 7