Newspaper Page Text
AMONG OUR NEIGHBORS
What the People Around Us
are Doing.
Gleanings ami Glimmering* from Our
North Georgia Exchange*.
MARIETTA.
The First National Bank of Marietta
has deposits to the amount of #40,000.
Rev. 1). L. Buttolph’s new residence on
Kennesaw avenue, and Mr.G.L. Daniell’s
on Cemetery street, are both being pushed
forward to completion.
Mr. J. Broad well, of the firm of Broad
well & Reid, recently killed a hog five
months and twenty-seven days, which
weighed two hundred and thirteen Bounds.
Two negro boys, Green and Jim
Oglesby, were brought to Marietta and
placed in jail last Thursday evening,
charged with burglarizing Mr. Carroll's
house near Chattahoochee river. They
took from the house a suit of clothes,
some towels, photographs, etc. They
plead guilty.
A safe blower is in jail at Marietta. He
gave his name as George 11. Simmons,
and says his home is in Kentucky. He
tried to burglarize a store at Austell, but
before he could be off with his plunder he
was captured.
The Hook and Ladder boys have had
their truck fixed so it can be pulled by
horses. This is an economic measure of
human strength, for the firemen t have
to pull their appartus to a fire leaves
them in an exhausted condition, and they
cannot do as efficient and rapid work as
if they had husbanded their strength.
Marietta feels proud of her excellent fire
department.
canton:
Chicken-pox has struck Canton.
Mr. M. B. Maynard, ofDalton, is think
ing about opening a banking business in
Canton.
Marshal Harden begun warning hands
to work the streets Monday last.
After paying the expenses of court and
all the county's indebtedness to date,*
there is still a balance of about #250 in
the county treasury.
Some weeks ago the members of the
Methodist church decided to get their
church out of debt. They have now done
that and arecontemplatingmaking some
needed improvements on both the church
and parsonage.
Deputy Sheriff Quarles arrested a man
by the name of Queen, last Friday, near
the Micou gold mine, against whom there
is a charge of burglary in Union county.
The warrant was sent here and our effici
ent sheriff succeeded in finding and ar
resting the fugitive. He is said to be a
\ bad man.
* * •
DALTON.
Dr. Murdoch has sold his lease of the
Murdoch House to a Mr. Loganfof Penn
sylvania.
The Dorcas Society is still doing com
mendable work a charitable way
among the poor of the city.
We learn that spring oats in this hr
calPy have been more or less injured by
the cold wave of last week.
The Dalton public schools enrolled 652
pupils last year—46l whites; 191 colored.
This year it promises to reach 700.
A balcony is being erected on the
northern side of the new opera house, to
be used ns a stage entrance aud band
stand.
T. F. Peck, the clothier, made an as
signment Tuesday, S. P. Maddox being
the assignee. The assets are said to be
equal to the liabilities.
The last issue of the Kennesaw Gazette
contained two columns devoted to the
interests of Dalton place of resi
dence and manufacturing point.
Mrs. Foute, the wife of Dr. Foute, one
of Whitfield's oldest and best citizens,
died last Monday and was buried Tues
day. The funeral took place at the Epis
copal church. Mrs. Foute was quite an
aged lady, and her death will be sincerely
mourned.
* *
ROCK MART.
There is some prospect of the town
council passing an, ordinance to keep up
bogs and cows at night.
Jake Davitte has the finest field of
wheat on the E. &W. R R. between here
and Cartersville.
Creed Cunyus, United States deputy
marshal, arrested a negro man near here
Thursdav. He was out on bond and hi -
case came up in court in Atlanta Wednes
day and he failed to come to time.
Three cars were ditched on the E. & W.
R. R. Thursday evening three miles east
of here. A broad guage car was the
cause. No one was hurt. The Cedar
town accommodation was delayed about
two hours. %
E. I’. O.
Don't waste time and money and un
dergo needless torture with the knife
when Ethiopian Pile Ointment will afford
instant relief and certain cure in every
case of blind, bleeding, itching, internal
and external piles. Rangum Root Medi
cine Cos., manufacturers, Nashville, Tenn.
C 0 cents and #1 per bottle. Sold by all
druggists. feb 24-1 m
Scientists tell us that a man’s brain
decreases in size as he grows older. The
human brain, it appears, weighs the
heaviest between the ages of fourteen
and twenty. This explains why -young
men know so much more than their
elders.—Shoe and Leather Reporter.
Tin: NEGRO IN THE SOUTH
He Till* the Soil, !■ Pr.p©rty
Mini Getting Along *p>Bllrtly.
Like all other efforts to colonize the
negro of the Southern States this South
American scheme is sure to fail. The
fact is, that the African, born between
the Ohio and the Gulf, will not take root
anywhere else. He is anchored. In no
other country has he made such progress
in civilization and Christianization. He
tills the soil, is acquiring property, mak
ing a home and getting along splendidly.
Last year Southern negroes produced
7,000,000 bales of cotton. All they want
is to be let alone, and that is just what
meddling, impertinent, irrepressible, ob
trusive people at the North will not do.
There was a scheme to edenize the
American negro in Liberia and it failed,
not for want of colonists, but because
the negro, in infinitely greater degree
than the Frenchman, or the German, is
incapable of colonization unless the white
man is along to show him how to make a
living. A few years ago we.had the fa
mous exodus that failed, partly because
the people of Kansas did not
the negro.
Northern people, who know nothing
about the negro, but who wish to regu
late the earth from pole to pole, have
long wanted to banish the negro from
American soil. Yankee slave traders
brought the negro here and his descend
ants want to banish him. The sceme to
acquire San Domingo was conceived by
those who lioped to colonize the negro
there, and that having failed during
Grant’s administration, it presents itself
again in this plan of an exodus to South
America.
The negro is getting on verj T well in
the country where he made such ad
vanced strides even in a state of slavery.
It was a man degraded by that slavery
that Mrs. Stowe selected for one of the
grandest characters, illustrative of Chris
tian virtues, in all fiction. The mere fact
that there was no servile insurrection
during the late war, in itself, is enough to
show that the cotton belt of the North
American States is the home of the negro,
that there he is contented, and was,
while a slave, and is, now that he is a
freeman, the happiest of human beings,
[f the people of the North will but attend
to their own affairs, and make labor there
as contented as it is at the South, they
will confer a benefit upon the country
and dispense more happiness among the
people than they ever have in the past.—
Louisville Times.
Attention, K. K. L.
For sprains, bruises, rheumatism,
cramps, inflammation, swelling, cuts,
burns, etc., in man, and splint, ringbone,
windgall, epizootic, scratches, etc., in
horses, Rangum Root Liniment is a sure
cure. The “King of Liniments” is the
universal verdict. Never fails to cure any
ailment that can be reached by an exter
nal medical application. 50 cents per
bottle. For sale by all druggists.
feb 24-1 m
There are 65,000 words in Webster’s
Dictionary, and no living man knows
one-half or one-third of then. It is as
tonishing what a number of superfluous
words there are in our language. Shake
speare, who had the richest vocabulary
used by any Englishman, employed only
16,000 words. Milton could pick out
from 8,000 words, but the average man,
a graduate from one of the great univer
sities, rarely has a vocabulary of more
than 3.000 or 4.000 words. The ordi
nary person can get along very comfort
ably with 500 words, and in the rural
districts a knowledge of 200 words is
sufficient to carry a man through his
ife. This, of course, refers to the needs
of conversation. If a man wants to read
newspapers and well-written books, he
must know' at least 3,000 words.
is warranted, is because it is the best
Blood Preparation known. It will posi
tively cure all Blood Diseases, purifies the
whole system, and builds up the
constitution. Remember, we guarantee it.
For sale by J. R. Wikle & Cos., Druggists
Mr. Morrison says of the new tariff
bill: “It is a very good bill and I hope
it will pass. But Ido not think it will.
Mills' bill goes farther than did my re
duction bill. It takes in a larger num
of articles. The house refused to take
action on my horizontal bill, and I am
afraid this one will meet with the same
treatment.”
The wniiflerful Healing properties of I)r
--bys I’roi hylartic Fluid in Case of Acci
dent-, for Gurus, Scalds,
Cuts Wounds, etc
Its prompt use will invariably relieve
pain, promote healing, and prevent Ery
sipelas, Gangrene, or Proud Flesh. Owing
to the cleansing and purifying qualities
of the Fluid the most obstinate Ulcers,
Boils, Carbuncles, and running sores are
rendered pure and healthy and speedily
cured, no other application being neces
sary.
A scientist says: “If the land were
flattened out, the sea would be two miles
deep all over the world.” If any man is
caught flattening out the land, shoot
him on the spot. A great many of us
can’t swim.—Norristown Herald.
Syrup of Figs
Is Nature’s own true laxative. It is the
most easily taken, and the most effective
remedy known to Cleanse the System
when Billious or Costive; to dispel Head
aches, Colds, and Fevers; to cure Habit
ual Constitution, Indigestion, Piles, etc.
Manufactured only by the California Fig
Syrup Company, San Francisco, Cal
Sold by J. It. Wikle & Cos., druggists,
j an 2 0-1 y
ATTEND TO SANIT ATION.
A Question of Vitnl lmp< r *np to all
Growing Town*.
Anew town starts into being. An an
cient village, by some stroke of good for
tune, commences to grow. In each,
streets are laid out; stores, workshops
and dwellings are erected and occupied;
life and activity pervade the pla-e, and
► its people pride themselves on their prog
ress and boast of their prosperity. But
sooner or later there is a pause in the
busy life; mourning takes the place of re
joicing; jteople flee from the town, for an
■epidemic is raging. It may be diphthe
ria; it may be typhoid or some other
deadly form of fever; it may be any one
of those terrible diseases that ravage
so many homes. What is the cause?
Carelessness—criminal carelessness. San
itary measures have never been thought
of by the busy, prosperous citizens. It
was a healthy spot. Nature gave it a
clean soil, pure water and a healthful at
mosphere; but when men assembled there
the w ork of defilement began. The more
people, the more impurities. The earth,
the water, the atmosphere gradually be
came poisoned. The conveniences of
modern domestic life were converted into
breeders of pestilence for lack of ordinary
precaution.
This is no fiction, written to frighten
the timorous. It is a plain statement
of what has occurred scores of times in
all parts of the United States. The worst
of it is that it might have been avoided
if well known sanitary rules had been ob
served. Sickness and death will come—
they are part of nature’s laws —but con
tagious pestilences may be prevented.
Science has ascertained the principles
and defined the processes of sanitation.
It is cheaper to employ the latter as a
safeguard than to apply them after the
epidemic appears.
The South is blossoming with new
towns and manufacturing villages. How
many of these new communities have
given any attention to sanitary precau
tions? How many have adopted a sys
tem at the outset that may be extended
as their populations increase, so that
perpetual healthfulness shall be insured?
The Manufacturers' Record hopes that
there are many such, but fears the con
trary. Let this be attended to, and at
once. Upon it depends the happiness,
the progress and the continuing prosper
ity of every community.—Manufacturers’
Record.
“Y-C enjoy your dinner
and are prevented by Dys
pepsia, use Acker’s Dyspepsia Tablets.
They are a positive cure for Dyspepsia, In
digestion, Flatulency and Constipation.
We guarantee them. 25 and 50 cents.
Sold by J. R. Wikle A Cos., Druggists.
Pretty Flower* For the Window.
There can b£ no prettier or more chc i"
ful sight in the spring time than the win
dmv flowers which one secs occasionally
in the parlor of our city houses. Those
who wish to imitate this pretty fashion
should begin to plant at once before the
season is too far advanced. Lately a
number of odd ways of growing hya
cinths, crocuses, daffodils and such bul
bous plants have been invented. One of
these ways is to obtain a spherical
earthenware pot, perforated with open
ings, filled with chopped moss, and in it
place the bulbs. In the course of time
the plant grows and the shoots escape
through the holes in the earthenware
until the jar is gradually covered with a
solid* mass of vegetation, brightened by
the delicate purple, yellow and white of
the crocuses. Care should be taken to
expose the jar in such a position that
the plant may get plenty of sunlight.
Watering frequently should not be
forgotten.
Now is the Tim©
to use Hodge’s Sarsaparilla with iodide
of potash, the great purifier for the blood.
A certain cure for rheumatism, scrofu
lous affections, and all diseases peculiar
to females. Renovates and invigorates
the system. Physicians recommend it.
Take no other. Rangum Root Medicine
Cos., manufacturers, Nashville, Tenn. #1
per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
feb24-lm
A recent interview of several United
States Senators was sought by a staff
correspondent of Frank Leslie’s Illustra
ted Newspaper gs to the South’s rapid
growth, and the cause. There were two
notable contradictions. A rabid Repub
lican Senator thought it was the influx
of vankee energy and capital running
rough-shod over the sleepy, indolent
Southerner, and forcing development bv
indomitable will. To the contrary, Sen
ator Morgan, of Alabama, says that it
is nothing new, but the natural order of
things, beginning in slavery and coming
to a climax as rapidly as the order of
things permits. He claims that the me st
notable successes of the South have been
through the efforts and investments o +
Southern men. Probably neither of these
views are correct, but Senator Morgan,
at least, states facts. g
IVI. F. Word •
has the best liver medicine in the world.
It is called Pemberton's Lemon and
Orange Elixir. It is pleasant to take
and requires no change in diet or habits.
Fifty cents will buy a bottle, and prepare
vonr system for the usual spring sickness.
It is purely vegetable and innoient.
Highly recommended for children. Be
sure you get Pemberton’s. feb24-4t
The State of Tennessee passed a pro
hibitory law in 1838, Delaware in 1847,
Rhode Island in 1845 and again in 1847,
Massachusetts in 1852 and again in
1869, Michigan in 1855, Connecticut- in
1854, Indiana in 1855, New York in
1856.
Prnt*e of Ihn South.
Neaily all the Northern and Western
ninn who were present at the dinner of
the Southern Society in New York, the
other day, hsd very pretty compliments
to pay the South. All of them recog
nized the great advance this section is
now making, congratulated us on it and
predicted that the movement now begun
was destined to keep on with accelerating
sjeed until the Southern States were the
full equals of their Northern brethren in
industries and wealth.
Mr. Edward Atkinson, who may justly
claim to have been one of the first men
to have called attention to thenew South,
who saw its |ossibilities before the pres
ent progressive movement began, and
predicted what was to come, had some
very good points to n ake. He said:
“ \Ve w elcome every success in th<? con
struction of a cotton factory in the
South. The world is not yet half clothed,
and there is work enough for us all in
providing the cloth. The wonderful sup
plies of your oak bark will draw to you
the hides for tanning, whether you will
or no, until through the diversity even of
agricultural labor, w hich is born of liber
ty, your home supply of hides will make
you exporters of finished leather, besides
supply your own wants. Of whatshould
we build our factories except we had the
abundant supply of Southern pine?
Your wealth of hard-wood timber com
pels you to develop all the arts of tlc
woodworker, sending the partly finished
material, for the present, to the North to
l>e completed. And you will have to
send until the men in the workshops o
the South have learned the fine art which
accompanies the comprehension of ttie
difference between a cen f and a niekle.
#
The factory, the mine and the metal
works have their tiue p'a-e, but
their relative importance must not be
exaggerated. The collective w ork which
can be carried on by the factory principle
of great subdivision of labor and by the
bringing together of large numbers of
people under one roof or under one con
trol now r 'gives occupation to less than
one in ten of all those who are occupied
for gain in this country, the workers
numbering about one in every three of
the population. The other nine work
with brain or hand where the work is to
be done, and each one depends on his
own personal capacity for his success/
The produet of the dairy exceeds 1 1rat of
any single branch of the textile industry,
and it is nearly equal to that of the
whole. The value of the hens’ eggs con
sumed every year in the United States is
greater than that of the pig iron. We
must maintain the true balance of power
in industry, as in politics and in the sci
ence of government. To these lesse its
cliief attention should be given in a
country which has been so long devoted
almost exclusively to some of the cinder
products of agriculture.”
Mr. Atkinson gives the South Excellent
advice, at the same time that he rightly
estimates its wealth of natural resources,
and shows that not in one, but in nearly
every line of industry it has bright pros
p H;ts ahead.
The D Hour.
For a period of four years I’ve hern a
victim of a very severe and agonizing
case of Salt Rheum, which affected mv
hands to such an extent that they almost
became a burden.
My hand became raw and horrifying
compelling me to keep it covered all tin
time.
I’ve spent hundreds of dollars for vari
ous prepa anions, but instead of tem
fitting my condition, they all seemed to
stimulate and encourage the progress o:
the miserable disease, until I had about
given up all hope.
But thank heaven, “the darkest hour
is just before day,” and I am rejoiced to
know that a positive curehas been found
which is known as B. B. B.—Botanic
Blood Balm.
My family all rejoice at its magical
curative powers in giving me relief. My
hand has been < u ed and resembles a
burnt surface after being healed over,
more than anything else. It has also
cured my two children of a loathesome
form of Itch which had resisted all previ
ous t rea tmen t. I refer to anyb u sin ess
house in Moody and to Thomas Payne,
Druggist, of whom I purchased the
goods. Signed, YV. A. Bryant.
Moody, Texas, April 27, 1886.
Flesh S;ughin off in Pieces
For two years I have been confined to
bed with a loathsome form of Blood
Poison, which had about eaten me up,
and I and others had no hope of a re
covery. Fora while I could neither walk,
sit down, nor lie down, only in misery as
my flesh seemed to be falling off my
bones in pieces as big as a hen egg. My
appetite was lost, my bones ached and
pained me, and friends even shunned me.
I used various blood purifiers without
benefit, and several physicians ti-eated
me until large sums of money had been
expended, but not one particle of good
did any one give me.
On the 19th of February, 1880, Mr.
F. R. Jackson called to see it I was not
dead, as it was thought I could not
endure my suffering much longer. He
concluded to try B. B. B. on me and got
a bottle from Air. Brockington, at Beau
fort, S. C., and before one bottle had
been used 1 commenced gaining strength,
my appetite improved, sores commenced
healing and when two bottles had been
used I was on my feet and walking around
to the astonishment of everybody.
Witness: Mrs. Laura Hart.
Fred. R. Jackson.
Beaufort, S. C’., May 10, 1886.
All who desire full information about
the cause and cure of Blood Poisons,
Scrofula and Scrofulous swellings, Ulcers,
Sores, Rheumatism, Kidney Complaints,
Catarrh, etc., can secure by mail, free, a
copy of our 82-page Illustrated Book of
Wonders, filled with the most wonderful
and startling proof ever befoie known.
Address, BLOOD B A I M CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Good fits and excellent goods guaran-
AY. A. Montgomery,
•> <) 8t Agent for \Yanamak<r & Biown.
FIELD SEEDS!
•
Rye,
Barley,
Orchard Grass,
Red Top,
Blue Grass,
Timothy,
Clover, &c.
AT BOTTOM PRICES
•
• " 1 AJTD— —
GuAranteed Prime Quality
DAVID W. CURRY,
WHOLESALE DRUGGIST,
Broad St. Cor. Howard, ROME, GA.
JOHN T. NORRIS,
Real Estate and Fire Insurance,
(UPSTAIRS.)
Fir3t Door South, of Howard's Bank.
ÜblO-lv
Twelve Years of Terrible Torture.
The gentleman who furnished us with
the following certificate was for years
mder the treatment of many physicians,
md was dosed with all sorts of medicines,
but without the least beneficial effects.
Now, how he was finally cured and re
lieved from his internal suffering, is forci
bly told in his own statement given be
low, to* which we invite the earnest at
tention of all sufferers from the same
dreadful affliction.
‘‘l had been a tortured sufferer from
articular and sciatic rheumatism for
n< re than a dozen years—up to the
year 1885. I had consulted various
doctors and used multiform • remedies
without relief, or any apparent benefit.
In 1885 I was taken afresh with the
severist acute symptoms of the disease,
in my feet and legs and hips, which made
me a helpless invalid —unable to work
or walk or help myself in any way. I
was a miserable, helpless sufferer, and
without hope of ever being cured. I had
already exhausted my faith in doctor’s
emedies, and now concluded to take
Swift’s Specific as a forlorn hope.
‘From the use of the first two bot
tles, I felt greatly benefited, which en
touraged me to continue its use. I
■steadily improved. The inflamation left
my joints, the sciatica disappeared,
iomfortabie feeling was restored, my
-strength and fiesh reinstated, and by
the time I had taken two dozen bottles
a 1 my symptoms of rheumatism had
entirely disappeared, and 1 felt wll
enough to resume iny regular labors.
[ felt like anew man. I cannot attribute
my miraculous and perfect cure to any
thing but the Swift Specific. I know
that it alone cured me, for nothing else
had done me any goo<U for twelve years.
I owe iny restoration and strength for
! abor and religious duties alone to this
grand remedy, ai.d gladly make this
statement for the benefit of all sufferers’
from this most torturing disease —rheu-
matism. “0. W. Winkfield,
Union Point. Ga.”
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free. The Swift Specifc Uo.,
Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.
In a paper on the strength of different
kinds < f wood for building purposes,
Professor Johnson calls attention to the
fact, as now demonstrated, that many
cheaper kinds of timber may prove more
valuable for structures than more expen
sive varieties, which have been supposed
to be stronger, and, therefore, more de
sirable. Thus pine supports or pilla:s
have been found stronger than oak ones,
when tested in large samples.
Over-Worked Woin*n
For “worn out,” “run-downf’ debilita
te 1 school-teachers,milliners, seamstress
es, housekeepers and over-worked women
generally, I)r. Pierce’s Favorite Presmip
t-ion is the best of all restorative tonics.
It is not a “cure-all,” but admirably ful
fi s a singleness of purpose, being a most
potent specific for all those chronic weak
nesses and diseases peculiar to women.
It is a powerful, general as well as ute
rine, tonic and nervine, and imparts vig
or and strength to the whole system. It
promptly cures weakness of stomach, iu
digestion, bloating, weak back, nervous
prostration, debility and sleeplessness, in
either sex. Favorite Prescription is sold
by druggists under our positive guaran
tee. See wrapper around bottle. Price
SI.OO a bottle, or six bottles for fo.oo.
A large treatise on Diseases of Women
profusely illustrated with colored plater
and numerous wood-cuts, sent for tei
cents in stamps.
Address, \\ T orld’s Dispensary Medina
Association, 663, Main St., Buffalo, X. Y.
Astonishing Snc*s,
It is the duty of every person who has
Boschee’s German Syrup, to let its won
derful qualities be known to their friends
in fearing Consumption, severe Coughs,
Croup, Asthma, Pneumonia, and in fact
all throat and lung diseases. No person
c>n use it without immediate relief.
Three doses will relieve any case, and we
consider it the duty ofafl Druggists to
recommend- it to the poor, dying con
sumptive, at least to tr.v one'bottle, as
80,000 dozen bottles were sold hist year,
and no one case where it failed was re
ported. Such a medicine as the German
Syrup cannot be too widely known. Ask
youadruggists about it. Sample bottles
to try. sold at 10 centjg' Regular size 75
cents. Sold by all druggists and dealers,
in the United States and Canada.
The Prince of Wales weighs 180 pounds
aud is under 5 feet 7 inches in height.
Alai'cii April May
Are the months in which to purify the
blood, as the system is now most suscep
tible to benefit from medicine. Hence
now- is the time to take Hood’s Sarsa
parilla. a medicine peculiarly adapted
for the purpose, possessing peculiar
curative powers. It expels every im
purity from the blood, and alsb gives it
vitality and richness. It creates an
appetite, tones the digestion, invigorates
the liver, and gives new life and energy
to every function of the body. The
testimony of t housands, as to the great
benefit derived from Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla, should convince everybody that it
is peculiarly, the best blood purifier and
spring medicine. feb 24-lin
“It is so healthy here,"’ writes a settler
in a Southern California town, “that the
0,, 1y physician in the place will go two
flocks out of his way rather than meet
the undertaker, whose sad, reproachful
gaze haunts him like the memory of a
day spent in reading one* of Howell’s
novels.”
Btt*.klen’g Arnica Salve.
The Best Sa've in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, ''ores. Ulcers, Sa t Rheum, Fever
bores, Tetter, Chapped Hau<’ s , Cli Mains
Coins, and all Skin Eruptions, and posi
tively cures Piles, or no p-<y required.
It is guaranteed to give pi rfect satisfy
tion.or money refunded. Price 25 cents
ter box. For sale by J. R. Wikle & Cos.
My winter goods are nearly all gone
but what is left must go at once to make
room for spring goods,, come early and
get. some of the bargains we are offering
in that line. J. G. M. Montgomery.
“You, Billy,” called a Bloomington
mother to* her son who was playing in
the street, “run right along to school
and stop throwing stones, for you are
almost certain to hit one of those candi
dates and spoil your pa's chance for get
ting an office.”—Chicago News.
Give Ely’s Cream Balm atrial. This
justly celebrated remedy for the cure of
catarrh, hay fever.cold in the head, &c.,
can be ootained of any reputable drug
gist- and may be relied upon as a safe
and pleasant remedy for the above com
p'aints aid will give immediate relief.
It is not a liquid, snuff or powder, has no
offensive odor and can be used at any
time with good results, as thousands
can testify, among them some of the
attaches of this office.—Spirit of the
Times, May 29, 1886.
Cure for Flics
JL* telling Piles are known by moisture
like perspiration,producing a very disa
greeable itching alter getting warm
This form as well as Blind, Bleeding, and
protruding Piles,yeild at once to the ap
plication of Dr Bosanko's Pile Reme y,
which acts directly upon the parts affect
*d, absorbing the tumors, a’laying the in
tense itching and effecting a permanent
cure 50 cents Address The Dr Bosan
<o Medicine Cos., Piqua, O. Sold by
Wikle & Cos. mch3