Newspaper Page Text
The North Georgia Cheap Furniture House
STILL CLAIM TO SELL
Better Goods for Less Money,
Than Anyother House in this Section."
As space forbids mentioning Everything, we will only enumerata a few. We have
a complete stock of
Parlor and Bed Room Suits,
Wardrobes, Baby Carriages, Chairs Mattings, Rugs and Carpets, and
MAITTTFACTTJBiEBiS of MATTRESSES.
We have also added a full stock of Undertaker’s Supplies, consisting of
Collins, Caskets, Rohes, Shoes and Gloves,
In the building, corner Main and Erwin Streets, formally occupied by Mr. W. C.
Edwurds.
Will give personal attention and render assistance at funerals. Respectfully,
PEACOCK & VEAL,
CARTERSVILLE, GA.
LUMBER! LUMBER!
Parties in want of Lumber of any kind will find it to their interest to see us be
fore buying, as we keep the only regular
LUMBER YARD
in the city. We carry in stock a large assortment of Framing of all sizes and
lengths, i)ry Flooring and ceiling, Weatherboarding and Mouldings, of any patera.
We have just received cars of all heart Fencing and will carry a supply of it in stock
in future. Lumber Yard and Plaining Mills, cor. Leake and Skinner Sts.
GALLOWAY & FREEMAN.
Notice This As You Pass By.
in. uiLEi
WEST MAIN STREET,
CARTERSVILLE, GEO.,
Carriages, Buggies § Wagons,
And do all kinds of
Repairing in Wood and iron,
Making new pieces when necessary. He is also
prepared to do all kinds of blacksmithing. None
l>ut the best workmen employed who can make
anything that is made of wood or iron. All
work warranted to give satisfaction. Terms
reasonable. Work done promptly. Give him a
trial and be convinced.
ELY ’ 8 Catarrh
Cm Bata Rpl|
Cleaases S th ' e ltfel^/ ? £'JRESS°'si
Nasal Passages,
Allays’Pam and rHAVFEV£R S"
la3ammht join, bar-'
HialsltlieJ Sores,®*' /
Restores *k e i|§aR B r-^
Senses of Taste
aai Smell. !Bbw‘M- v Y^. i
TRY the CUREHAY-FEVER
CATARRH
* a disease of the mucuous membrane, generally
originating in the nasal passages and maintain
ing its stronghold in the head. From this point
re sends forth a poisonous virus into the stomach
and through the digestive organs, corrupting the
blood and producing other troublesome and
dangerous symptoms.
A particle is applied into each nostril and is
agreeable. Price 50 cents at druggists; by mail,
registered, *>o cents. ELY BROTHERS, 285
Greenwich St.. New York.
|-v y a tit tt Rewarded are those who read
1/ 11 'U I Y this then act; they will find
lllUlllJ JL honorable employment that will
not take trorn them their homes
and families. The profits are large and sure for
every industrious person, many have made and
are now makingseverai hundred dollars a month.
It. is easy for any one to make $5 and upwards
per day,.who is willing to work. Either sex,
young or old ; capital not needed ; we start you.
Everything new. No special ability required;
you, reader, can do it as well as any one. Write
to us at once for full particulars, which we mail
ree. Address Stinson A Cos.. Portland. Maine.
VALUABLE CITY PROPERTY
FOR SALE.
I will sell ray house and lot in Cartersville, lo
cated on Cassville street. Good dwelling and
outhouses, lot containing five and a half acres.
Fruits of all kinds on the place. A most conven
ient residence. Also one lot containing one acre
on which there is a 3 room house.
TERMS REASONABLE.
J. T. OWEN.
yv T’J T\ Sea Wonders exist in thousands o
11 H M r *’ orm8 ' hut are surpassed by the mar
vels of invention. Those who are in
need of profitable work that can be
done while living at home should at once send
their address to Hallet & Cos., Portland. Maine,
and receive free, full Information how either sex,
of all ages, can earn from $5 to $25 per day and
upwards wherever they live. You are started
free. Capital not required. Some have made
voer SSO in a single day at this work. All suc
ceed. eblC-1
J. M. NEEL,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Special attention given to litigation in real es
tate in the administration of estates of deceased
persons, and in cases in equity.
Office on Public Square, north of St. James
Hotel. 24febly
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEORGIA —Bartow County.
All persons having demands against the estate
of Isham Alley, dec’d, are hereby notified to pre
sent the same properly made out and verified ac
cording to law. And all persons indebted to said
Isham Alley are hereby notified to come forward
and make payment in full. This January 9, 1889.
Isham W. Alley and Elizabeth Alley as Adm’r
and Adm’rx of Isham Alley, dec’d. jan 1
D. W. K. PEACOCK.
REAL ESTATE,
CARTERSVILLE, GEORGIA.
MINERALS A SPECIALTY.
Real Estate bought and sold. Informntion
cheerfully given.
DR. J. G. GREENE.
having located in Cartersville for the purpose of
practicing medicine and surgery, offers his pro
fessional services to the public. Calls promptly
answered. Office up-stairs over Courant-American
office; residence on the corner of Market and
Stonewall streets. j in 13-6 m
A. M. FOTJTE,
Attorney-At-Law,
Cartersville, Ga.
Office up-stairs, corner Main and Erwin sts.
Special attention given to Collections and Com
mercial Law.
BARTOW LEASE,
INSURANCE.
Loan M Real Estate Agent.
Money Loans made on the most reasonable
terms. P. O. BOX, 123,
july2l-ly Cartersville, Ga.
Joim T. Owen,
Real Estate & Life & Fire Insurance
-AGKEIfcTT’,
The interest of patrons carefully considere.d
unreasonable.
'mmm oxtti
fiditicQ to Everybody
who has a diseased Liver is to at once take proper
means to cure it. The function the Liver is de
signed to perform, and on the regular execution
of which depends not only the general health of the
body, but the powers of the Stomach, Bowels 9
Brain , and the whole nervous system, shows its
Vast ana vital importance to human health.
Nomßsme
should run the risk for a single day of neglecting
this important organ, but should promptly get a box
of Dr. C. McLano’s Celebrated Liver Pills,
made by FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa., and
use according to directions they will cure you
promptly and permanently. Around each box is a
wrapper giving full description of the symptoms of
a diseased Liver. They can be had of druggists.
4®*Beware of Counterfeits made in St. Louis.*©*
FLEMING BROS., Pittsburgh, Pa.
IVORY POLISH *teeth. E
Perfumes the Breath. Ask for it.
Exposure to rough weather, getting
wet, living iu damp localities, are favora
ble to the contraction of diseases of the
kidneys and bladder. Asa preventive,
and for the cure of all kidney and liver
trouble, use that valuable remedy, Dr. J.
H. McLean's Liver and Kidney Balm.
SI,OOO per bottle. 6-8-3 m
Continued From Third Page.
TERSE TARIFF TALK.
This sounds very much like a threat
deal of the argument that our mails are
daily loaded with now, from the parties
specially favored by existing laws, and
who desire to retain their advantages.
Mr. Alexander H. Jones, of Philadelphia,
interested in the manufacture of quinine,
said, while before the Tariff Commission,
July 25, 1882:
“I do not know a class of manufactu
rers in the United States who would say
that they would be willing to submit to
a duty of 20 per cent., if they could get
a higher rate. They would say that they
could not live on that rate of duty. We
went before the Ways and Means Com
mittee and said that we were willing to
accept 10 per cent., that that was better
than nothing. There was such a howl
all over the country, that we said make
it 10 per cent. But they did not make it
anything.
This was rather a frank admission. I
suspect it is true that the favored inter
ests will accept all advantages that the
law will give them.
That was a sad state of things pic
tured by the leading protectionist Repre
satives on this floor, representing dis
tricts in which the manufacture of qui
nine was carried on to a larger extent
than anywhere else in the country. Now,
what has been the result of the reduc
tion of the duty? At the time it was put
on the free-list, quinine was worth $3.50
or $3.00 per ounce. To-day, it is worth,
I believe, about 55 or 00 cents an ounce.
The year before it was put on the free
list, 1879, the amount produced was
said to be a little over a million ounces.
The amount produced now' is 2,200,000
ounces. So we. see that the production
has been increased more than 100 per
cent., while the price has been cheapened
to the consumer until the money that
then would buy 1 ounce will now buy 6.
And all this has followed in the face of
these predictions that the whole business
would have to be closed out in this coun
try, predictions made by the ablest and
most distinguished representatives and
advocates of protection on this floor.
The laborers employed in its manufac
ture receive as high wages now as they
did before. The argument to the people
of this country by those who insist upon
this prohibitory tariff is the protection
of labor. That is their cry everywhere.
Now' we all know how that has been
heretofore. Aggregated capital, under
these tariff laws adopted in past years,
has sought protection in every possible
way that it could according to the dic
tates of human nature.
At the same time the capitalists have
gone into the cheapest markets of the
world for their labor; they have im
ported it under contract, and they have
employed it when it did not come in under
contract, until they have brought a large
percentage of the pauper labor of the
Old World into this country in order to
have cheap labor here; yet all the time
they have been asking the American Con
gress to keep up a prohibitory tariff for
them, and even going as far as the gen
tleman who spoke last [Mr. Brmnm],
who said he would have the iron that
was produced in England dumped into
the sea rather than have it brought here
to deprive the American laborer of his
wages. Yet, as I have said, notwith
standing all these protestations, we find
these gentlemen getting their labor as
cheaply as they can, by contract or oth
erwise. The employer gets the cheapest
labor he can, even if he has to employ
armed detectives to keep the labor-union
men of America from revolting against
exactions. That is the practical illus
tration of these protectionist professions
of sympathy for labor.
*, * * * *
Again, Mr. Chairman, all this discus
sion about the benefit of the tariff to
labor has been confined to those classes
of laborers commonly known as mechan
ics and those who work in
the mines and in the various
workshops. The great millions in the
fields and upon the plantations, not only
in the West and Northwest, but in the
South, are forgotten in this great race
for profit and for wealth. In order to
shut out foreign goods, to enhance the
price of American goods, you will keep
upon the American farmer, North and
South, a tax of five or six dollars for
each head of a family, producing a sur
plus over and above that which
he pays for the legitimate ex
penses of the Government and
also the four or five times that amount,
which, by reason of the prohibitory
tariff, he contributes to the manufactur
ers. It is not the amount which is taken
by the Government and which it needs
of which he complains; for, I rei>eat, it is
the four or five times that amount which
he is compelled to pay from day to day
upon the necessaries of life, and which
goes into the pockets of the manufac
turers.
Therefore, the farmer, the laborer of
this country, stands as the guarantor,
as the insurer to the manufacturer of
clear and handsome profits. But where
is the guaranty, where is the insurance
to the man who toils, who cultivates the
ground, who depends upon the rain of
heaven and the sunshine and his own
work for his living? Who insures profits
to him? He is brought iu competition
with the cheap products of the whole
world when he goes to sell the products
of his farm. Gentlemen talk about labor
unions and organized labor being pecu
liar to the North and unknown in the
South. Why, gentlemen simply show
that they are uninformed as to the facts
when they talk in that way. ' There is
being organized everywhere throughout
the South the “Farmers’ Alliance” and,
in some parts of the country, “Farmers’
Federations,” and we have had labor
unions of one kind and another there.
These organizations are the necessary
and natural outgrowth of the condition
in which the American farmers and la
borers are placed to-day under the exist
ina system of taxation. They rise up
everywhere.
They are not peculiar to one section.
They are peculiar to the cause of the
discontent and distress that surround
the laboring people of this country. The
working people of the country are seek
ing in these ways and in every possible
way that human ingenuity can devise, to
improve or at least to palliate their con
dition. Are they not entitled to a free
and equal race in life? Are they not en
titled to a fair and living chance in the
struggle for existence and for profits?
Many misleading tables of figures and
comparative statements have been pre
sented in this debate. For instance, the
tariff is credited with the admitted fact
that many goods are cheaper now than
before the war under a lower tariff, al
lowing nothing for the unparalled growth
of inventions, the unexampled improve
ment and use of labor-saving machinery,
etc., in the manufacture of goods, where
by one person now does the work of
many persons then. The case of steel
rails, which have fallen from $139 a ton
to about s3l under the tariff is cited as
an argument for protection; but this
great reduction in price is due to the re
duction in cost of manufacture by reason
of the discovery of the Bessemer process.
It is no more just to credit the tariff with
this than it would be to credit the re
moval of the tax from quinine with the
entire fall in the price of that.
It is insisted that protection stimu
lates investment and manufacture and
causes overproduction, and consequently
cheap goods. But the great interests
built up and fostered by the process of
absorption of the products of others
combine against the very competition
uhieh their friends say protection will
stimulate and cause cheap goods.
Thus they form the trust, so called, to
protect themselves against protection.
The rapid multiplication of trusts is one
of the threating evils of this age. Why
they should be given that name “trust”
I do not know, unless upon the idea that
every scheme of evil should take a good
name for a disguise. Thus, tariff taxes
are called duties. The process of trans
ferring the earnings of one man to an
other by law is called protection, and
the conspiracy of combined interests of
the same kind against the whole people
to prevent competition, limit production,
increase prices, and put the labor out of
employment in order to make the full
profits demanded is called a trust. The
people need more competition in many
respects, less restraint upon trade, and a
greater volume of circulating medium.
What is the character of relief offered in
this bill? It is estimated to reduce taxes
about $75,000,000. Articles now dutia
ble and producing a revenue of about
$22,000,000 are put on the free-list.
These are salt, hemp, flax, wool and
woolen goods, blankets, etc., cotton-ties,
tin-plate, soap, and many other articles
of universal and daily use among all
classes of people.
The effect of the bill, if it passes, must
be to cheapen all these articles and re
duce the revenue to the extent named.
Then there is a reduction of the tariff on
the dutiable list from 47 percent., the
present rate, to 40 per cent. This is
surely conservative and not radical. It
is estimated that this will dispense with
nearly $30,000,000 of the revenue, and
it would beyond doubt cheapen all the
goods of the kind affected by it, whether
manufactured in this country or abroad.
To illustrate, there was imported last
year cotton-ties, or hoops for bailing
purposes, $345,997 worth ; the duty, 35
per cent., amounted to $121,098.95; this
is paid by the importer, and of course is
added to the cost of production, the cost
of shipping, and the profit he must make,
so that the cotton-planter pays it all. If
it is removed he will be relieved to this
extent and will be able to buy cheaper
ties. It is persistently contended that
the farmer sells his ties by weight with
the cotton in gross and therefore receives
for it the same price per pound that he
does for his cotton. This is not true;
nothing could be more absurd or ridicu
lous than this statement. The buyer of
cotton in Liverpool, where the market is
fixed that governs our markets, knows
what the average weight of the ties and
bagging to each bale of cotton is, and
estimates chose as dead weight, and fixes
such price as he can afford to pay for the
net cotton, and the farmer receives noth
ing whatever for the ties and bagging.
The tax on bagging also is reduced, but
I cannot enumerate the many articles af
fected by the reduction. Then the entire
tobaco tax is reduced by |the bill, except
on cigars and cheroots, amounting to
about $24,000,000, so that the farmer,
dealer, and manufacturer, as well as the
consumer, will be unmolested by the in
ternal revenue laws except as to cigars
and cheroots. The bifl is a compromise,
There can be no legislation upon this ‘
subject affecting so many conflicting f
views, except by concession. Various (
schemes have been suggested. One says
repeal the whole internal revenue system.
To do this would leave a deficiency of
about $00,000,000, and would require
an increase of taxes on the necessaries of
life.. Some would increase duties, and
thereby prevent importation and dimin-'
ish the revenues; but this would make
higher goods and increase the bounties
paid by the consumer to the manu
facturer.
This bill both the tariff and the inter
nal revenue, and contains important
provisions preventing abuses in the de
struction of stills and other property by
internal-revenue offices without process
of law as heretofore practiced. Should
the bill pass it will, in my opinion, de
monstrate in a short time the feasibility
in the near future of further reduction or
partial abolition of these taxes. Much
has been said of the needs of the South
and what protection will do for her. Has
she not been under the same tariff laws
all these past years that have applied to
the whole country? Have they enriched
her? No; they have heii>ed to retard the
general prosperity there by withdrawing
the money necessary for business and by
taking daily a part of the earnings of
the people to insure the prosjierity of
Northern and Eastern manufacturers.
It is true that there is rapid progress
in diversified business pursuits in the
South. This is due to several plain
causes, and is so not by virtue of but in
spite of the present burdensome taxation.
Immigration has filled up the Northwest.
Lands are high there, while in the South
lands have been cheaper and the climate
is more genial.
But the recent advance in the prosperity
of the South is due mainly to the estab
lishment of confidence in the security of
property, business, and investments
there since the disgraceful military and
reconstruction policy of the Republican
party towards the South has passed
away. What the people need is protec
tion in the possession and enjoyment of
that which they earn. They ask no
bounties or favors. They demand even
handed justice, and no more. What the
country needs is equal taxation, and
that limited to the honest needs of the
Govern ment, and that the policy of
favoritism, discrimination in favor of the
few, and profligacy in expenditures be
abandoned —a policy which has squan
dered the public domain and put it in
the control of railroads and syndicates,
foreign and domestic; a policy which im
poverishes the many to build’up the few,
and which has created oppressive trusts
and enables a few men to make cornel’s,
so called, upon the necessities of life.
This all tends to the establishment of a
comparatively §mall but strong creditor
class and a large debtor class—not a
desirable or justifiable state of society in
this Republic.
Mr. Chairman, I ask the Clerk to read
a paragraph which I send to the desk,
embracing some figures with reference to
the mortgages upon the farms in this
country. The publication referred to in
the article is the New York Times—good
authority on this subject. I know that
my friends on the other side will say
“That is mugwump authority,” but
everything which does not accord with
their theory of protection is discredited
in some way.
The Clerk read as follows:
THE FABMEIt ? S PROTECTION.
“Lexington Transcript: Twenty-five
years of very high protection have had
anything but a good effect upon the far
mers of the country. The New York
Times, which is good authority upon
such subjects, computes the mortgages
upon the farms in the ten most prosper
ous farming States—Ohio, Indiana, Illi
nois, Wisconsin, Michigan, Minnesota,
lowa, Kansas, Nebraska and Missouri—
to amount to $3,422,000,000 on which
more than $200,900,000 is required to
meet the annual interest. It would seem
that the farmers have had about enough
of this kind of protection.”
I do not object to the identical protec
tion afforded by necessary taxation, but
the present high and prohibitory tax is
leading to the aggregation ol money in
the hands of a few, which is not produc
tion of wealth, but simply the transfer of
it. The laborer, the man who toils and
takes wealth out of the earth, is the man
who produces it. It is not produced by
a system of transfer, absorption, and
accumulation. Yet this is pointed to as
evidence of thrift and prosperity, be
cause it results in great manufactures
at particular places, forgetting that the
masses of the people from whom it has
been taken are lingering and struggling
along for a bare subsistence. What is
the effect? The result is that we have
already inaugurated in this country a
system which will make the debtor class,
in the North as well as in the South, de
pendent alike. Money is loaned upon
mortgage on real estate through money
loaning associations all over theeountry.
The rate of interest, large itself, is
doubled by commission paid to men who
negotiate the loans. These mortgages
rest upon men who have little farms
without other means than their labor to
pay the indebtedness, and who, under
this system ol protection, get deeper and
deeper in debt each year as the interest
accumulates. The result will be that
this class will be turned out homeless,
and the real estate of the country, as
well as the money, will be largely aggre
gated in the hands of the favored few
through a system of oppression upon
those who will become pauper tenants
like the tenants in Ireland. [Applause.]
Flower pots at very low prices.
apl27-3t Wikle & Cos.
elcrv
“IJmfiound
For The Nervous
The Debilitated
eThe Aged
Nervous Prostration,Nervoua Head.
eche.Neuralgia, Nervoue Weakness
Stomach and Liver Diseaeee, aad all*
affections of the Kidneye.
AS A NERVE TONIC, It Strengthen*
and Quiets the Nerve*.
AS AN ALTERATIVE, It Puriflea and
E&riebea the Blood.
AS A LAXATIVE, It acts mildly, but
■ureljr, on the Bowel*.
AS A DIURETIC, It Regulates the Kid.
neys and Cures their Diseases.
Recommended by professional and businessmen.
Price si.oo. Sold by druggists. Send for circulars.
WELLS. RICHARDSON A CO., Proprietors
* BURLINGTON. VT.
WHAI
AILS
YOU?
Do you feel dull, languid, low-spirited, life
less, and indescribably miserable. Doth physi
cally and mentally; experience a sense of
fullness or bloating after eating, or of “gone
ness,” or emptiness of stomach in the morn
ing, tongue coated, bitter or bad taste in
mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frequent
headaches, blurred eyesight, “floating specks"
before the eyes, nervous prostration or ex
haustion. irritability of temper, hot flushes,
alternating with chilly sensations. Sharp,
biting, transient pains here and there, cold
feet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or
disturbed and unrefreshing sleep, constant,
indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend
ing calamity?
If you have all, or any considerable number
of these symptoms, you are suffering from
that most common of American maladies-
Bilious Dyspepsia, or Torpid Liver, associated
with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more
complicated your disease has become, the
greater the number and diversity of symp
toms. No matter what stage it has reached,
llr. Pierce’s Golden INedical Discovery
will subdue it, if taken according to direc
tions for a reasonable length of time. If not
cured, complications multiply and Consump
tion of the Lungs, Skin Diseases, Heart Disease,
Rheumatism, Kidney Disease, or other grave
'naladies are quite liable to set in and, sooner
>r later, induce a fatal termination.
Dr. Pierce’s Golden INedical Dls
covery acts powerfully upon the Liver, and
hrough that great blood-purifying organ,
cleanses the system of all blood-taints and im
purities, from whatever cause arising. It is
equally efficacious in acting upon trie Kid
neys. and other excretory organs, cleansing,
strengthening, and healing their diseases. As
in appetizing, restorative tonic, it promotes
digestion and nutrition, thereby building up
both flesh and strength. In malarial districts,
this wonderful medicine has gained great
celebrity in curing Fever and Ague, Chills and
Fever, Dumb Ague, and kindred diseases.
I>r. Pierce’s Golden INedical Dis
covery
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from a common Blotch, or Eruption, to the
worst Scrofula. Salt-rheum, “Fever-sores,”
Scaly or Bough Skin, in short, all diseases
caused by bad blood are conquered by this
powerful, purifying, and invigorating medi
cine. Great Eating Ulcers rapidly heal under
its benign influence. Especially has it mani
fested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema,
Erysipelas, Boils, Carbuncles, Sore Eyes, Scrof
ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint Disease,
“ White Swellings,” Goitre, or Thick Neck,
and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents in
stamps for a large Treatise, with colored
plates, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount
for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections.
“FOR THE BLOOD IS THE LIFE.”
Thoroughly cleanse it by using Dr. Pierce’s
Golden iNedica] Discovery, and good
digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital
strength and bodily health will be established.
CONSUMPTION,
■which is Scrofula oftlic Lung**, is arrested
ind cured by this remedy, if taken in the
•arlier stages of the disease. From its mar
velous power over this terribly fatal disease,
vhen first offering this now world-famed rem
■dy to the public. Dr. Pierce thought seriously
>f calling it his “Consumption Cuuk,” but
tbandoned that name as too restrictive for
. medicine which, from its wonderful coin
>ination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative,
>r blood-cleansing, anti-bilious, pectoral, and
nutritive properties, is unequaled, not only
is a remodv for Consumption, but for all
Chronic Diseases of the
Liver, Blood, and Lungs.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Short
ness of Breath, Chronic Nasal Catarrh, Bron
chitis, Asthma, Severe Coughs, and kindred
affections, it is an efficient remedy.
Sold bv Druggists, at SI.OO, or Six Bottles
for SS^RO.
£5?” Send ten cents in stamps for Dr. Pierce’s
book on Consumption. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
663 Main St., BUFFALO, N. V-
ITHAT FIGHT
Pil The Original Wins.
M C. F. Simmons, St. Louis, Prop*!
I | M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine, list’d
f I 1840, in the U. S. Court defeats J.
1 H. Zeilin, Prop’r A. Q. Simmons Liv
er Regulator, Est’d by Zeilin i36S.
B ISib A. S. L. M. has for 47 years
1 IsS cured Indigestion, Biliousness,
1 Dyspepsia,Sick Headache,Lost
Appetite, Sour Stomach, Etc.
W A Rev. T B. Reams, Pastor M. E.
Church, Adams, Tenn., writes: “1
I should have been dead but
M I for your Genuine M. A. Sira
mons Liver Mbdicine. I have
g|i|*4EßDs\\ sometimes had to substitute
|||J r r# f | “Zeilin’s stuff” for y- ar Medi
S'. /CoU/ij’g I cine, but it don’t answer the
I /xs / purpose ”
I Dr. J. R. Graves, Editor *he
\Bafitist , Memphis, Tenn. says:
mil received a package of yourLiyer
A Medicine, and have used half of it.
■k V It works like a charm. I want n£
4 better Liver Regulator and cm3|
H| A tainly no more of Zeilin’s mixture?
C. Edwards, F.
UNDERTAKER and embalmer. I
Repository in new store room on West Msj I
Sreet, Cartersville, Ga. J an ~' J
r\Vv\ oe, that 9XO retful - P evis ' I
VXV3VvS cross, or troubled T '
Windy Colic, Teething Pains,
Stomach Disorders, can be retire 1
at once by using Acker’s Baby Soothe- j
It contains no Opium or
hence is safe. Price 25 cents. Sola W|
Sold by J. R .Wikle & Cos., Druggists.