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For The Blood
A POSITIVE! CUREFORSCROM.A
RHLUMAXISMSCALOKtADoRTETTtR
BOILS OLDoRCHROKiC Sores
af.iKH(DSAwoAu. DISEASES ARISING
fROK W* IMPURE STATE ot theBLOOD
Per BoTTIE 6foßss
IS THt BEST 07< EARTH
HHfc
T< EVER FAILS To CURt
T. I.N.C.
iKFALUBLt CURE.
• • ■ FOR KEURAV.GIA.- • •
AOLD EVERYWHERE.
FSCo
WIRON
BTONIC
™ Will purify the BLOOD regulate
Wtk aiial the LIVEP and KIDNEYS and
V 4. Rfrtohe the HEALTH nadVTG
wMSfjRA OR of YOUTH Dyspepsia,Want
of Appetite, lndiKest.ion.Lack of
Strength and Tired Feeling ab
' s °biteiy cured: Bonos, mus
and nerves receive uew
and supplies Brain Power.
m a ■ Suffering from complaintspecu-
I § pSm 'i**. liar to their sex will tind in US.
HARTER’S IRON TONIC a
*nf, Hfieedy eure. Gives a clear, healthy complexion.
All attempts at counterfeiting only adds to its popu
/arity, Do not experiment—get Original and Best
i Or. HARTER’S LIVER PILLS k
■ Cure Constipation. Liver Complaint and Sick ■
I Headache. Sample Dose and Dream Book!
4 mailed on receipt of two cents In postage, f
THE 08. HARTER MEDICINE CO., ST. LOUIS, MO.
V Dr. HENLEY'S
BEef&TroH.
A Most Effective Combination.
This well known Tonic and Nervine is gaining
great reputation as a cure for Debility, Dyspep
sia. and NERVOUS disorders. It relieves all
languid and debilitated conditions of the sys
tem ; strengthens the intellect, and bodily functions;
builds up worn out Nerves : aids digestion : re
stores impaired or lost Vitality, and brings back
youthful strength and vigor. It is pleasaut to the
Piste, and use.' regularly braces the System agaiusi
the depressing influence of Malaria.
Price—sl.oo per Dottle of 24 ounces.
FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
“ A GREAT YEAR
n the history of the United States is now upon
Every person of intelligence desires to keep
ace with tne course of its events. There is no
otter way to do so than to subscribe for
The Macon Telegraph.
ts news facilities are unsurpassed by any paper
,i the South. In addition to the fullest Associ
ted Press dispatches, it has special correspond
ing by wire and letter from all important
oints in Georgia and the neighboring States.
During ihe present session of Congress Wasn
lgtoti will be the most important and most in
vesting news centre in the country. Ihe
■ ishington C rrespoudence of the Telegraph is
je very best that can be had.
Its regular correspondent furnishes the latest
ews and gossip in full dispatches. Frequent
;>ecial letters from lion. Amos J. Cummings,
lember of i'(ingress trom New \ork. Frank C.
urpc nter. and W. A. Croftut, three of the best
luitvn newspaper writers at the capital, dis
iiss the livest and most important issues ot the
The Telegraph is a Democratic Tariff Reform
aj'cr. It is thoroughly in line with the policy
f President Cleveland and the Democratic
>irty In the coming national campaign the
elegraph will not only give all the news, but
ill discuss all public issues from the stand
-11 nt of genuine Democra,tic faith. Subscribe
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THE TELEGRAPH,
. M ACC” GEORGIA.
g G has given univer
-1 satisfaction in the
ire of Gonorrhoea and
leet. I prescribe it and
ol safe in recoinmend
g it to all sufferers.
A. J. STONER. M.D.,
Decatur, 111.
PRICE. SI.OO.
Sold by Druggi3ts.
1 K. Wikle cV: Go., Agents. teblO-1
M’s Pills
for torpid liver.
A torpid liver deranges the wholesys
and produces
Sick Headache,
dyspepsia, Costiveness, Rheu
matism, Sallow Skin and Piles.
There Is wo better remedy for '‘"'owe
™jnn*on diseases than Ttatt' . j .er
riUs * hs a trial will prove. I*rice, 25c.
Sold Everywhere*
NAMES FOR STATES.
The True Test of the Name of a Country.
Verbal Awkwardness.
Probably the worst name for a country
know'll to history is the United States of
America. It is ambiguous, may mean
either a nation or a confederacy, and haa
tw'o senses in tb® constitution. It is not
so trivial as New’ Found Land, but it is
longer and does not admit of shortening,
as does the name of our neighbor island
to Newfoundland. New South Wales is
almost as bad, and all three are awkward
beyond redemption. The test of the
name of a country is in w’hether it ad
mits of a derivative gentile noun and ad
jective. Europe gives us European;
Britain, British; Cyprus, Cypriote, and
Siam, Siamese. Theeo are good as
names. But no man can bring himself
to say that he is & New South Welsh
man, or that he is a United States of
American.
And so, after the fashion in which the
neighbors of Praise God Barebone’s
brother with the wonderful name, “If
Christ had not died thou hadst been
damned,” said it for short, we are in
the habit of calling ourselves simply by
the tail end of our proper designation,
Americans, forgetful that every human
being from Yukon to Patagonia has
equal rights with us to the name. The
people of New South Wales want to
change their name, and The Spectator
w'ell says they ought to do it, although
for them to claim the name of Australia
would never do. They might call their
country Sydney, br Sydney land, or Cook
sylvania, or Southland, or Auralia, it
makes little difference what so long as it
is manageable. What not to call them
selves might be learned from the names
of some of our United States of American
states. Some of our states allow no de
rivative. A man from Virginia is a Vir
ginian, from South Carolina a South
Carolinian, but how does a man from
Massachusetts pronounce his name? Only
Yankee, which is no less absurd than for
Enroughty to spell Darby. What is a
man from Connecticut? Still a Yankee.
What is a man from New* Hampshire?
Still a Yankee, although Senator Cass
tried to better the term when he called
John P. Hale a New Hampshire goose,
and Hale retorted by calling Cass a Mich
igander. Men from Maine can still be
only Yankees or Dow*n Easters, for they
resent, we believe, being called Mainiacs.
The later names adopted by our states
are generally musical and usable, al
though Ohioan is a disagreeable deriva
tive of Ohio. The gentile w*ord ought to
be Ohiote, like Cypriote, but, perhaps,
the people of that great state do not care
to rhyme with coyote. Wisconsin re
fuses as strenuously as Michigan to ac
cept a derivative, as the only one possi
ble w'ould be Wisconsinner. Of the pres
ent territories Idaho has a very sweet
name, but wdiat could its citizens call
themselves? We suppose the people of
Utah might be Utes, but if the territory
were to take the proposed state name it
would be hard to call them Deseretters.
What we chiefly seek in a name is that it
be easy to pronounce and be flexible. Its
meaning is of little consequence. China
is a good name, but it means nothing,
and the people of China have 110 knowl
edge of it.—New York Independent.
Vko ami Virtue in the City.
It is said that New York is the wick
edst city in the country. It is the largest
and vice thrives in crowded communities.
Yet if it is the wickedest city it is also
the best on the continent. If it contains
thousands of the worst men and women
in our land, it contains also thousands of
the brightest and best of Christians. In
point of morality it will compare favor
ably with any city in the world. It is
unhappily true that the devil’s work is
done there upon a large scale; but so is
the work of God upon an even greater
scale. If the city contains the gaudiest,
the most alluring and the vilest haunts
of sin, it also boasts the noblest and
grandest institutions of religion, of
charity and virtue. Being the great
center of wealth and culture, New
York is also the center of everything that
is good and beautiful in life.—Joe How
ard in St. Louis Republican.
Foreign School* In Turkey.
The Turkish government appears to be
reviving its school laws with the aim of
suppressing American and other foreign
schools. The new law provides that no
foreigner can open a school without a
special firman given by the sultan him
self; and such documents he is slow to
give. The law forbids any Ottoman
subject from attending such a school un
til he shall have taken a course of relig
ious instructions. The schools now ex
isting are to be suppressed unless they
conform to these regulations within six
months. Asa large amount of capital is
invested in educational institutions in
Turkey, the American minister has pro
tested against this law, and urges other
embassies to join him.—Frank Leslie’s.
Names for New States.
There is a good deal in names, in spite
of what somebody has said. The house
committee on territories know it, and
they wisely insist that if the northern
half of Dakota comes into the Union it
shall be not as “North Dakota,” but as
“Pembina”; and that if “Washington”
organizes it must drop its already much
appropriated name and Like “Tacoma,”
“Yakima,” or “Wallula,” well known
aboriginal designations. There is no
reason why new states should bear names
worn threadbare, or why one should be*
called •-North” or “West” something or
other. It argues a poverty of language.
All new states ought to be compelled to
bear melodious Indian names, as most of
the old ones do. —Frank Leslie's.
The Aqueducts of Peru.
Among the great water works of the
world those of Peru were in some respects
the most difficult achievements of any.
The Incas built aqueducts from the
slopes of the Andes for a distance of over
100 miles to the capital, carrying the
water partly through tunnels cut in the
rocks and partly on arcades on supporting
pillars of mason work to span valleys, the
channels being composed of cut stone
without cement. From these great aque
ducts a number of branch conduits and
furrows were laterally for irrigation
purposes.—Scientific Journal.
The art of starching linen was intro
duced into England by a Mrs. Dinghein,
a Flemish woman, in 1553.
Germany’s Sepulchral Stores.
The German houses are entirely want
ing in the comfortable warmth we are
accustomed to in America. Their sepul
chral, white porcelain stoves, twelve feet
or so high, dispense almost as little hefet
as cheer. Solemnly erected in the cor
ners of the rooms, they present an aspect
that (when one is in a homesick mood) is
remarkably dispiriting, and often they
produce the same effect on one’s spirits
as would the near neighborhood of the
monuments and gravestones they so
strongly resemble. But the lied furnish
ing is as oppressively warm as the heat
of the white, ghostly stoves is insuf
ficient, The great eider down quilts, that
always form the outside coverings, are as
thick and heavy as feather beds. Beside
the sweltering heat that these produce,
there cannot but be the suggestion that
very likely they may already have done
duty for several generations. But those
who have always lived in a country of
vulgar progress probably do not appreci
ate the conditions of living in a land
where aristocratic conservatism prevails.
It is not at all likely that houses in Ger
many will be warmed by steam pipes or
furnaces, or anything but their colossal
white stoves, for several hundred years
yet.—Hanover Cor. Boston Herald.
Ice Sailing -with Skates.
Ice sailing is the latest amusement to
take here, and it has become very popu
lar. Ido not mean with boats, but with
Ikates. The skater crosses two sticks
binds him and covers them with can
vas, making the whole about six feet by
one or two in extent. He places this sail
against his back and runs his arms
through the sticks so as to hold it. With
a good wind he can go twenty miles an
hour over smooth ice, and he can tack
and beat against the wind, just as in sail
ing a boat. There is a ten mile surface
at Creve Coeur lake that offers elegant
sport. It is very exciting, but it requires
some daring to start in, as the rapidity of
the skater is apt to terrify the man who
has never tried it. In skating with the
wind one’s eyes w*ater, but one can see
quite well enough to avoid holes. There
would be little chance of being saved if
you did blow* in. However, it is an easy
thing to blow across a three foot hole in
going at a high rate of speed. It is very
exciting sport, and require very little
practice to master its intricacies. It re
quires comparatively smooth ico for good
skating. If an obstruction is met with
your fall is pretty hard.—St. Louis
Globe-Democrat.
Men Wearing Varied Colors Again.
Gentlemen are slowly but surely drift
ing back to those days when light antX
fantastic colors were necessary to a hand
some and well ordered toilet. The ladies
are no longer to monopolize the gay hues
with which the rainbow is decorated. In
the animal kingdom the gentleman mem
ber of the family generally puts on the
plumage or w*ealth of hair and fur. For
proof, behold the lion and the gold or sil
ver pheasant. I say gentlemen are slow ly
but surely drifting back to those days of
blue silk coats, yellow vests, green knee
breeches, laco collars and wristlets, etc.
Don't you believe it? Examine any new
tailor made suit and see if a pair of
trousers are ever made up nowadays
without a gay colored piece of V shaped
silk inserted and joining the waistband in
the back. A finical gentleman would not
wear trousers that did not’ have this
literally entering wedge. The crimson
necktie is already the proper caper.
These colors are bound to wfiden and
lengthen until they cover the form of
creation’s lord.—Cincinnati Times-Star.
The Dabies of Japan.
The little baby is not offered its natural
nourishment for three days. During this
time the liquov of boiled rice is fed to it!
And it is not tucked daintily up in soft
white blankets in its clean little lied, but
Bet up in a small tub and covered with
coarse, dark comforts. The only relief it
has during its infancy from this uncom
fortable position is when it is put on its
mother’s or some else’s back, inside their
clothes, and taken out for an airing. It
is claimed by the more enlightened now
that this constant sitting position, or
being crowded against some one, w*ith
shoulders thrown forward and chest
pressed in, is one reason why almost all
Japanese are so extremely narrow
chested. It is anything but pleasant to
see a 2-y>ar-old strapped on the back of
a 4-year-old, with head (shaven, of
course,) thrown way over to one side, the
unhappy little victim fast asleep with the
hot sun streaming on it, and flies feasting
on the dirt which is almost invariably part
of a Japanese baby's face.—Babyhood.
People of Alaska.
Governor Swineford says in his annual
report that there are 39,800 people in
Alaska. Of these, 27.500 are uncivilized
natives, 2,750 civilized natives, 300
Aleuts, 1.800 creoles and 5,000 whites.
The year was regarded as an exception
ally bad one in regard to temperature,
but the enthusiastic governor, who was
acclimated in the northern peninsula of
Michigan, says that he has not changed
his opinion as to the general salubrity and
mildness of the climate. And this seems
to be borne out by the statistics of meteor
ology. for it cannot be said that a cli
mate which ranges from 3 degs. below to
71 degs. above is harshly cold or sco”cli
ing in its heats.—New York Mail and
Express.
. Red Wood for Veneering.
Veneer manufacturers having been put
to much trouble and expense to secure
from the natives of Persia or from French
markets, even, fancy wood burls from
which to carve out veneers for manu
facturing purposes, have demonstrated
by recent experiments that red wood
stumps possess meritorious qualities for
such use, and will undoubtedly be sub
stituted for the more costly woods in the
future. The demand for burl and curly
red wood for finishing work has already
reached large proportions in the w’est.
The large butts of trees now being slain
in California forests will be used to a
great extent.—New York Sun.
Table Decoration.
A Paris letter says the latest agony in
silver table decoration is a very large plat
ter with a swan at one end. On this cof
fee cups are served, with a cream jug and
sugar bowl. The swan, with its out
stretched wings and curved neck, is in
reality a coffee pot. It is an old Louis
XV conceit.—Chicagq Herald.
Hunnicut* Tnroat and Lung Cure.
WILL PERMANENTLY CURE COUGHS, COLDS,
HOARSENESS, SORE THROAT, BRONCHITIS,
ASTHMA, AND ALL DISEASES OF THE
THROAT AND LUNGS.
U. S. Senator Joseph E. Brown, of
Georgia, endorses it.
Atlanta, Ga., Feb 11th, 1888
To the H. R. C. Cos., Gentlemen:
I have been troubled with Bronchitis,
and occasional sore throat, with severe
cougb, for a number of years past, and I
have tried a great many of the most popu
lar remedies known to the public, or the
profession, some mitigating the disease
more and more less.
Iwasfinally induced to try the prepar
ation known as the “Hunnicut’s Throat
and Lung Cure,” winch I have used fre
quently of late, and I find it a most ex
cellent medicine.
Indeed, Ido not hestitateto say that I
derived more benefit from it than I have
from any or all the other preparations
In case of Sore Throat it is especially
fine.
When in that condition, I sip about a
teaspoonful at a time every hour or so,
keeping the tin oat lubricated with it, with
very satisfactory results. It has another
excellence in my case—it never produces
nausea, but rather acts as a tonic.
Very Truly &c.
Joseph E. Brown.
Price $1 per bottle, six bottles sl, trial
size 25 cents each.
HUNNICUT’S RHEUMATIC CURE,
THE GREATEST BLOOD REMEDY EVER
DISCOVERED —A TUMOR IS REMOVED.
Jesup, Ga., Febuary 18, ’BB
Hunnicutt Rheumatic Cos.:
Gentiemen—l have had Rheumatism in
its worst form for eight years. About
three years ago a tumor formed in my
stomach and enlarged the chest or breast
bone so that my chin rested on the chest.
Ha.ve been treated by five physicians and
have taken large quantities of medicines
without the slightest benefit until I began
the use of “Hunnicut s Rheumatic Cure.”
I have taken eight bottles H.R. C., and
am entirely free from pain; can walk for
the first time in about two years. The
tumor is removed. Yours respectfully.
Mrs. Laura Allen.
Price $1 per bottle, six bottles $5.00.
Both of the above celebrated cures are
prepared only at Laboratory of Hunni
cutt Rheumatic Cure Cos., Atlanta, Ga.
and are for sale by all druggists.
Send for book of valuable informntion
and testimonials of well known citizens.
T 9 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. gT
pfl Beet Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use FjJ
Cm iu time. Sold by druggists. gf
I believe Piso’s Cure fi
for Consumption saved m
J| my life.—A. H. Dowell, ■
5 Editor Enquirer. Eden- ||
ton, N. C., April 23, 1887. |
The best Cough Medi- S
cine is Piso’s Cure for If
Consumption. Children II
a take it without objection. Si
By all druggists. 25c. m
9 CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. ga
sjß& Best Cough Syrup. Tastes good. Use fgj
£4 in time. Sold by druggists. jjf
*3 r?-. z** r ** • ■•* * .
* >_ . 7
2* % . •
A V * 4 ir.i* i \ - J
name on a r'ie’-n,£ r < of COF.T-'L: -
guaranc.ua o:
j, yr* - -"j
If i k t • '*, B
H i J r. ti ■%>'■ * 'a
COFFEE :s kept in r fr r * 4, -
stores iroin ;.iie Allan"! j to
rj-‘= 1
4-.:: y* u
•w" -J i 1' C-a ti-*
is never izood v/hen exposed to the r :
Always buy* his brand: n he: ■ ; •„ •; ■
sealed ON T ’’ POTTpp rp\ r-:7 \
Notice That
John Taylor is Himself Again!
He has enlarged his shop at the St. James Hotel
He has a full team now, William Johnson and
\\ estley Allen. He has a retired shop where the
“rugays” will aot annoy his customers. He does
not solicit the patronage of roughs and vaga
bonds, he promises to observe good behavior,
have clean towels and sharp razors, iu the iyth
year of his career. He flatters himself that he
knows all in the barber business from curling and
braiding down. He has been considered to be
the best hair cutter from New Orleans to New
York for 35 years. I only want you to call and
be convinced, and, all customers desiring to be
shaved twice a week will be furnished cup and
brush free. My shop will be open from 6a. in. to
8 p. m.
John Taylor. William Johnson & Cos.
Edward Bell,
Colored, does all kinds of gardening and flower
work, whitewashing of rooms and laying of
carpets, mattings, oil cloth, etc. Prompt atten
tion given to all orders left at Claiborne Walker’s
shop on West Main street. Best of reference
given. TV ill deal in ice cream this season, Hs
usual. april6-3m
When you feel depressed don’t dose
yourself with mean bitters. Hodges’
Sarsaparilla renovates and invigorate? the.
system, and cures all diseases arising from
an impure state of the blood. $1 per bo’-
tle, six bottles for $5. Manufactured by
Rangum Root Medicine C’o , Nashville,
Tenn. Sold by all druggists, m 20-lm
If you suffer pricking pains on moving
the eyes, or cannot bear bright light, and
find your sight weak and failing, you
should promptly use Dr. J. H. McLean’s
Strengthening Eve Salve. 25 cents a
box. 6-8-3 m
Hon. H. W. Grady
is expected to speak at the opera house
Saturday night on the subject nearest our
hearts just now, “How to boom Carters
ville and Bartow county, Go by Word’s
and get a Yellow Label Cigar and you
can appreciate the speech more, and as
you go home cool off with any kind of an
ice drink. mayll-tf
BAKER <& HALL,
The most extensive dealers in North Georgia in
General Hardware,
AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS.
BUGGIES, WAGONS, HARNESS, ETC.
Can supply anything from a Knitting
Needle to a 100-horse power Engine.
Sash, Doors and Blinds.
Engines, Saw Mills, Blacksmith Tools,
Guns, Pistols, Powder, Shot, Etc.
We assure the farmers that they need not go elsewhere for anything they wuni.
in our line, for we have everything they need in their business at prices that can
not be beaten. In fact we are headquarters for Hardware, Agricultural Imple
ments, and Machinery for this section.
DIVED 9. UH|| Ranlrarc We do a General Banking Business and
DlllwkTl OL nLL f DCtlllvClda ail( ] solicit deposits, Loans made com
mensurate with security. BAKER & HALL, West Main Street,
O A.R TERSVILiIjE, OA.
Dr. SALMON'S
# HOG CHOLERA SPECIFICI Si
CHICKEN POWDER.—SHEEP POWDER, fl
POWDER.—CONDITION POWDER. I
r PREVENT & CURE HOG CHOLERA.
Mg *•* ._ DESTROY & PREVENT HOG LICE & WORMS, f
fQ. - WE CAN < CURE CATTLE MURRAIN,TEXAS FEVER, Ac. J
CURE CHICKEN CHOLERA & GAPES. /
l CURE SHEEP ROT, TAPE WORM, &c. §
manufactured by the VETERINARY MEDICINE CO., Jjf
NASHVILLE, TENN.
For sale by T. A. Stover, Cartersville, J. P. Hawks, Cassville, Shelton & Childers,
Pine Log, J. G. B. Erwin, Erwin, W. H. C. Lloyd, Fairmount, Jno. B. Boyd, Sonora,
J. M. Anderson, Folson, I)r. Thos. Johnson, Adairsville.
THE LIVERY STABLE
CRAWFORD & FIELD
Always Ready with the Handsomest Turnouts,
Polite
Treatment
Horses and Mules kept on hand for gale, and our accommodations for drovers can
not be surpassed anywhere.
Thankful for the past liberal patronage and asking a continuance of the same, which
we hope to merit by careful and prompt attention to business we are,
Respectfully, CRAW KOKH & FTKLI),
apl2l-tf Hast Hailrrmrl r>pr Court TtnnsP.
!. li' )n !■ mil ) '
1 hroughout its various scenes. Who use the Smith’s Bile Beans.
Smith’s 31LE BEANS purify the blond, by acting ——
alrcctJy anti promptly on the Liver, Skin and Kid- The original Photograph,
ncys. rhey eonsist of a vegetable combination that P an l sizo. of this picture
has noeqnal in medical science. They core Constipa- i?f nt on receipt of loc. in
lion, Malaria, and Dyspepsia, and are a safeguard StM jSII.I! BE^H*
?nfl ° f chills and fever, gall stones, Lot*, Mo.
and Bright’s disease, bend 4 c.ents postage for a sum- —— !— J
pie package and test the TRUTH of what we say. Price, 25 cents per bonie,
to any address, postpaid. DOSE ONE If KAN. Noid by druggist*.,
<*• SBSITH db CO., PROPRIETORS, ST. LOUIS, MO.
aIL fcTd h-Ti k-T-i hTd hTii b?< hTi hTi lTd kTaaTa
PTI rtf riv rie rrti v*-, rre riR wriwv yp rrf t Prf PH Ptw >*rf
• The man who has invested from three A We offer the man who wants service
to five dollars in a Rubber Coat, and m m (not style) a garment that will keep
at his first half hour's experience in AAR mam ■■■ him dry in the hardest storm. It is
a storm finds to his sorrow that it is makg ELg R called TOWBR’S FISH BRAND
hardly a better protection than a mos- VWm |L_ R “ SLICKER, ” a name familiar to every
quito netting, not only feels chagrined m m m Cow-boy all over the land. With them
at being so badly taken in, but also ■ ■ IP* SA ■ the only perfect Wind and Waterproof
feels if he does not look exactly like gjsog K%.§ Coat is “Tower's Fish Brand Slicker.”
Ask for the “ FISH BRAND ” Slicker B B bSEB a a and take no other. If your storekeeper
does not have the fish hrand, send for descriptive catalogue. A. J. Tower, 20 Simmons St., Boston. Mass.
®A**4*’“l* *l* *~l* *l’®l*®|* *A* %^ t%* %<J*X* J][J
a | § a B#r" Iffe IsTii6Best
IS I p if Waterproof Coat
%h b**JP HblUHbl 1 Ever Mafle.
stlmriert
Minu sH™ is absolutely voter and trind pboot, and will keep you dry in the hardest storm.
traps mark. Ask for the “FISH BRAND” slicker and take no other. If yoor storekeeper does
pot have the “nsn brawd”. send for descriptive catalogue to A. J. TOWER, 20 Simmons St. Boston Maas,
Over
>*vAt t Package 9 to Tv jF<&gr dies for ifcese troubles, and all Quacks,
rtTSrv tienta a laTi:o £ whose only aim is to bleed their vio
tUSL/t.of v. horntook a full treat tsa-g 1 IS?7PA7.-w tints. Take a SURE Rxmedy that HT3
mentnnd were restored to health by use of SefSCURED thoocands, dues not interfere
„PROF-, DAQTI3 B EQ to business, or eausepain
HARRIS® Otis* I! jrifc, Iriiw J iiLILEOs Vfiyk r _ _ or inconvenience m any way Founded
A Radical Cur® for NerroasDebinty,. Organic on /'.entitle medical principles. By direct
Weakness nndPii7slc.il Decry in Young or MI and tyf*ppi ic&t ion to the scat el disease its specida
die Aged Mon. Tested for Eight Years in felt without delay. The natural
thousand eases they absolutely restore factions of the human organism restored. The
a,ged and broken down men to the full enjoyment of animating elemenu of life are given back, the patient
perfect and full Manly Strength and cheerful and rapidly gains both strength and health
bSISSXrt TBtATMEMT.-te J M(tttt.*3. iwnaw. n. a
HARRIS REMEDY CO., Htt CHE.ISIS,
J^£?.4S^ F li£^l t^L llust ' and Tamphlet.ic. SOOQ N. Tenth Street, ST. LOUIS, MO.
RUPTURED P ERSONS (Ban have FREE Trial of our Appliance. Ask for Tormi
THE GOWER BUGGY
is still being handled bv us. Being
made of lirst-elass material and a
home institution, the reputation of
which has long ago been made, we
make a s]>ecialty of it. However, we
keep a full line of other work, which ,
we fully guarantee. We also handle
the celebrated
TENNESSEE WAGON
Leather and Gum Belting.
Plows, Harrows, Corn Shellers and
all kinds of
Agricultural Machinery.
Wagon and Buggy Harness, Saddles,
Bridles, etc., in great profusion at
VERY LOWEST PRICES.
Careful
Drivers