Newspaper Page Text
VOL. 3 NO. 40
I Am Going’ to
Faint the Town Red!
m w
H
m k few*
Vi
1
V m F
Z/k M
-MY NEW
FULL AND WINTER STOCK
Will soon be complete, and I desire to say
To the trade that, as heretore, I
Will be able to show the
BEST GOODS AND LOWEST TRICES.
I have already in slock many new tilings
In DRESS FABRICS from the CHEAP¬
EST to the FINEST.
I Have some Beautiful Patterns in
t Dress Goods
STTGTT A.S
SILK WARP HENRIETTA, BEDFORD
CORD, SERGE, CASHMERE, ETC.,
IN THE LATEST SHADES.
These goods are all in single patterns, so there is no chance for anybody else to
pi get die** like yours. The desirable goods are not to be had anywhere else
a
jn Kastman. I simply ask you to look around over all the goods in town and
alien come to see mine.
-I HAVE SOME
(fraud Bargains In Shoes!
Yon can save money by coming to my store to buy SHOES.
£ff-PrlcsBon Clothing ore
IflU ms EM KNOWN.
It wlil b* MONEY IX YOUR POCKET not to bulk a dollar’s
worth of clothing till you gee what I can do for you.
Lakes’ Trimmed
I am still leading in this line. I sell more hats than any three
concerns in the town. My styles are correct, and prices the lowest.
-1 AM OFFERING
At price* that will astonish everybody.
Pocket Knives, Tinware, Tubs,
Buckets. Brooms, Stovos, Etc.
If you buy a siove before hearing my prices you will regret it.
School Hooks.
I am the only dealer in SCHOOL BOOKS in Eastman, and can
always furnish them at JtlACOJ\ PRIt ES.
Groceries, Groceries, Groceries•
MY GREAT
Split Silk”
Is the FINEST FLOUR you can find.
18 One Half £s Granulated Sugar For $1
_WONDERFUL BARGAINS IN
Tobacco, Snuff and Cigars.
WYNNE**
THE TIMES-JOURNAL Q
EASTMAN. DODGE COUNTY GEORGIA. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 10 1891 .
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
DR. T. J. KEY
DENTIST,
EASTMAN, - - - - GA.,
^tgi^Oflice over J. B. King's Jewelry
shire.
IP. BETTS,
DENTIST.
over J. M. Arthur's Store,
Eastman, Ga.
Will be in Eastman during Decem¬
adjourned term of Dodge Court.
May 15, tf.
JAS. R. MOOD, M. D.
AND SURCECN 9
J-EASTMAN, GA.-J
Office in basement rear of Masonic
formerly occupied by Dr. C. T.
Residence south side of Court
Square. April 24—tf.
DR. C. J. CLARK,
Physician and. Surgeon,
- Gil.
Avg. 22, ly.
PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS.
R. E. L . M E It It I L L,
Chauncey, Ca.
KjfF" Ifflce and residence at Laslie
ANSWERED D A Y O R NIGHT.
FISHER, M. D,
Physician .Surgeon and Accoucheur.
GEORGIA.
Office at Eastman Drug Store, corner
Fourth Avenue and County Road St.
corner Fifth avenue and
street. Jan. 11 1889.—ly.
C. Pate, C. R. Warren.
PATE & WARREN, '
/' S »rn i/fi <sl
llitwkinsville, G a. 136 Jack so n St.,
Will practice in the counties of Pu-)
Dimly, Wilcox, Irwin, Twiggs, |
Telfair, Montgomery, special ami tarn
and an v others bv contract.,
United States Courts. Maylstlv
|
at 8
Attorneys at Law,
— 0 —
GLORGIA,
Office over McArthur’s Land
7-5-1 y ttie
HERRMAN & COFFEE >
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
GEORGIA.
over S. Herman, Bro. & Co.
W. O. MALLEY,
BRICK MASON
AND PLASTERER.
- - - GEORGIA.
at S. T. Rogers store.
E. WOOTEN,
ATTORNEY AT LA W.
Office at Court House.
D HERRMAN ’ M* B’!
Physician, aac. Surgeon
OFFICE, City’Drug Store.
8 to 11 a. m.
HOURS -
j 3 to 5 p. in.
Residence, Cliauncey Avenue.
H. H. JOHNSON ' j
Dentist- j
Second St., MACON, GA.
j
Specialty F.J'tor
Jk Bridges. Southern Dental lorn a
Wg* | I i
>C: ^ §B u" w
£g4
w\
TQ A
J. M. BUCHAN *
I’hysiicau and Surgeon,
E-A-STIvlJAiT, G-jA.
Tliirtr vears as a specialist in the
of Chronic Diseases and Diseases
Women and Children. Also all pn
disease* diseases and at Dropsies.
STANLEY & ARMSTRONG.
— { Fire Uvsi raxce Agents. > —
EASTMAN. GA.
bes: < . .
Represents the ompames in
citi*ens'of EMMM^nUDalge*county?
-^V- Advice 5 -—a. to tu© ,, Aged, A ,
§er*od j'rJSxasKiawns.vaa torrid ii»w.
E 5 B I ■ 1 I
i 1 llWfl {ITT - - V illiin II" V
I i II 8*56^ 1-8- u w I 0 11 S 8 lu 8 V
bar* a .peelfle aff*®* »■ ,b**eor»an».
• tunulatlnc «ho bowel*, girln* atralaUg nator
al dl*ehars*a wlthect or
v riptnr. ond
imparting vigor
bladder and lhsv.
gniayar* adapted I* old or young.
BOLD EVEBYWttSttK. -
PAT CLEARY’S GHOST
It Continues to Bob up
Out in Kansas.
Lincoln, Kan., Oct. 8—Is Pat
Clearv keeping his promise?
Tl • •
fvnnhHno-thp Uoubhn the minds minds of of thi' this eifv city
and the surrounding country. In
the spring oi 1>"P a murder was
committed near here and Pat
dence'and r 3 :m“uT A- r
toto "
was only by the persistent efforts
of the officers that a lynching was
prevented a and i the cron cl who An de
sired to mete out justice to Cleary
pacified uy , oeing • com . i, itiai
was
he would be given an early trial
and . would iii be dealt i I* with I, accord- „„„„ ,
ing ~ to law.
This sort of talk sent the men
away Qir»r omi and the the tiiai tnai was vas had Dacnna in a
very short time, but it resulted m
an entirely different manner than
was expected, as the jury after a
very short deliberation brought
in a verdict of not guilty. Ihe
people were astonished, for it
looked to them, while they were
blinded by their passion and pre
judice, that Cleary was caught
red-handed and when the verdic
became known the old f ding of
mob law again came to the front
and Cleary was placed in jail for
safekeeping.
That night a mob broke down
the doors of the jail, and took
Cleary out and hung him. Ihey
took him to the cut above the
railroad bridge just west of town
n„d tliere told him to prepare for
his deat l as his last hour had
come. Cleary did not pray, nei
I her did he beg, but lie turned to
the men who were to lie his exe¬
cutioners and tol 1 them that he
innocent and then , cursed .
was
(hem. He cursed 'heir town and
. . .
their families and said that lu
you Id return to trouble them in
If there was a here
irfter he would come , back , and ,
'onnent those who hud placed
themse'ves higher than the law'
which had acquitted him. His
curses and threats only served to
make his executioners more anx¬
ious to send his soul to the here¬
after and he was strung up to the
cross beams of the bridge and left
to hang there until daylight came
the next morning when the body
was discovered by an engineer
and reported to the station agent
and it was taken down and buried
on the hill just above the cut be¬
yond the bridge.
As ihe time passed lhe matter
faded from the minds of all ex¬
cept those who were directly in¬
terested in the lynching and the
curse and threat were alike for
gotton. About two months ogo,
however, an engineer on the Union
Pacific reported that he had been
8l °PP eti in tlie cut by a man
swinging a lantern, investigate but he when could he|
got down to
find nothing of either man rr :
lantern nor could he discover any
reason why he should be stopped, j
This was on Friday night but tne
matter was given no attention
whatever by those who we r o told
o r .he occurrence, but on t he fol
lowing Friday nigh 5 another en¬
gineer’s story corroboiaied that of
the first. He said be saw a man
ngon .Me .rack wk’i a lan
tern in his hand and wlvn he
•donned his train the man had
d disappeared. - - red I
This has continued every Fri
dav ni-dit since the first engineer
‘
S aw tl iu e ma ,n,n n and and the he «I.er exneriente e„.e
ot Mat W heeler, one o. the d .e. t
engineers on the road, last Iriday
night, convinces the people
the ghost of Cleary has returned
to keep his prom is of
trouble to those who took P a rt» n
his muider.
he little .
Wheeler says was a
late and was pushing his engine
to make up lost time when he
rounded the curve and saw di
rectly in front uf the engine a
jjj an swinging his lantern for him
"
to Stop. la - luJ was close
enou enotl (, h n for lor everv e feature of his
face to be seen, and \v , neeiet , saw
to his horror that the eyes were
like those of a dead man, while
the tongue protruded from the
^
mouth . , la was r fastened 4 1
an rope
, )an ’ g nec k Re
j g^ in g a t such speed his that train it was
i m P° s 3'We to stop in
time to prevent running over the
m«.»ddo..
, hewheels. He stopped
quickly as as uoisible possible andhre and W ent back 0
Wlth the conductor to . 00 * for
body, but there WM no sifO Of
man ne i { her was the
marked with blood or in any oth
er way. The people will set
watch on Friday night to see
they can discover anything,
BULLETS FLY IN A
A Maconite Shoots a Man aud
Woman and Cuts Fis Throat.
Macon, Ga, Oct. 8,-EarIy
mornin S a well-known young man
of this city. Jack Rouche. at
tempted to shoot and kill
VVj(r ^ ng a f astwomar and Phil
a >J.. * C on youn^ man. ]{ e
’^cted serious ouswounds wou ms, ana and then men
’
i,aU entering ■ the , npper, . part t oi of
the breast and the other inflicting
a scal , n P wound "°, u Fssie ran scream
ing from the room, with the blood , ,
P°unn„ • f Irom . ner wouuus d Then men
Rouche opened tire on
. ’? • bed : One out of two
more shots took slight .. . effect , on
.1 u,e i neaa d > hnt ,)UL the Gie ammunition dill uni ill.-nm be
ing exhausted a tussle ensued, in
wbjch Eounce wa8 badlv mauled .
Rouche then went to the room he
had 0 ied durin . the ni ght
andde]iberate l v cut his own throat
witfa a small Anife, inflicting a
ghagtl wound? from which the
blood poured in torrents . A po .
liceman on lhe beat hearin3 the
shots a;uI the cries broke i„ lhe
dQor and first found Rouche
gtretched face downwar d across
the bed in a j of bloodi but
nQt unconscious _ The Wiggins
girl had fainted. Up to this hour
none 0 f the parties concerned are
dea d, although the wounds of two
of them are serious
-----
nis HMghterSuffored From Eczema.
bahlec* the treatment of «iil the best .
SS ■:,!
began to improve from the ttyst (lose,
and l.ofo-e she had eo.npi ied the see
o id bottle t ir irrita io.i had -ii.-appeai- j
e I, and she is now well and enjoying
unexcelled health. These are plain and j
S1 1 11 de tacts, and 1 will cheerfully ans¬
wer ail enquiries, ciiher in person or
by mad. V. V.ii dii A.v, Druggist.
Sandv Bottom, V a.
IT IS "i'll i; BEST.
1 liave used Swift’s Specific from and
cleansing the Blood of imparities,
find it to be the best, in the market. It
not only purities the blood, but is it
mos„ exc'dlent tonic, and builds up the
general lisaltli promptly. Litchfield, Ill.
J. Monday,
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free.
SWIFT SPECIFIC 00„ Atlanta, Ga.
Tom Hardin Caught.
Rochelle Recorder.
The negro who shot and killed
Mr. Lloyd and serious wounded
Mr. Edenfield has at last been
caught. The murderer was found
by Mr. Jesse Paulk, a deputy
sheriff of Irwin county and one of
t ia most untireing detectives in
this part of the state. Mr. Paulk
is the man who arrested John
Jackson, the murderer of Mr. Bee
Brcwu, who is now in Sumpter
county waiting for the Supreme
Court to pass on his case.
Our readers will remember this
murder at Seville .as one of the
mogt unprovo ked and diabolical ;
cr i mes lba t has ever been commit-!
tedjn thestate . This negro, Tom ■
Hard j nj C er.ainly deserves the full
extent of the law. and will doubt
Jegg get it R be ev<rr bve8 to reacb
county j. tib
Rewards aggregating $400 had
been offered for the apprenhe'n
sion and delivery of the murder
er to the sheriff of the county,
The 111 c $125 reward offered by the
council at Seville has been j
city j
«-iih.lr twtnuM j w 111 n .
Queer woild! Queer people!;
Here are men and women by j
thousands sit.lenng 10 m ai sous _
of diseases, bearing all manners
f pain, spending iheir al. on,
physicians and “getting no better,
rather worse.,” when right at ,
|i!iu(U|l „ e . 8 . remellv wh,d,,,.vs
^ belp tbern because its help
ed thousauds like them. “An
patent-medicine advertise
nieiit, you say. es ju none
lhe f rJ |
cal discovery, and it’s different
from tbe ordinary nostrums in
. .
this:—
It does wh; t it claims to do, or
it co*ts you nothing. Y
The way is this: ou pay yonr
druggist $1.00 for a boti'e. \ou
read tbe directions, and you fob
low them. \ ou get beiler. or
VOU don't, if you do. VOU buv
'..nnthoi- al1 ‘ V.nttlA ’ ami ne rh .L a ns an
other. If you don’t , get better ..
; vou get your monev back. And
the q Ueer t hj n g is‘that so
people are willing .0 be sick when
j this remedy * so near at haud.
—~———---- *
•
Klectric Bitters
xhi* remedy i» becoming to well
known and so ^utar . to need nospe
tricBitieri #ing v „ gaa) , gongofp-ai^
v T medic i -.edoesPote3wt amlit i*
trie Bitters will *,*,*,***-*.*£ cure ail disease- of the
Liver and Kidneys, will remove pimple,,
'
bo , li . ^ 1BfU . n and ofe • *
by impnreWood . will drive
from the ivitein and prever t M
a* cure al! Malarial fever*.
headache,constipation and
try Electric Bitters—Entire
j gu aranteed, or money
j wet?. 5 and $1.00 per bottle at Herrman
Everltt'i Drugstore.
BLAZE AT H
A "Warehouse and Over
Hales of Cotton turned.
Fawkinsville, Oct.
br< kt out in McCormick & Brid
g s Lone Star warehouse this
morning at 11 o'clock, an ! in a
! veyv few minutes the flames had
spread i-o rapid!-- that 'hey were
bevond the control of the fire de¬
-
^
^
11.600 bales of cOvton was doomed.
! While the loss is . g»*eac it wills up
^ °> the insurance companies prin
cipally, fnr lor moot mo . t rif o , me h e on co.ton ton was v.is
1 insured and the brick warehouse
,
• - ,
hail duo on it. me on_in o,
he fire is known. The wheel of
' _. tnn matcb
a cotton iiuciv ran ran n osci „ pr a „ inaicn
I which ignued r- and set fire to some
loose cotton. Every effort _ was
made to stop the fire, but the
truckers and one of the clerks were
compelled to flee. There was
about $65,000 on the cotton and
warehouse in insurance. The Lon¬
don, Liverpool and Globe Insur¬
ance Company loses $13,000, the
nEtna $15,000 and the Home of
Atlanta $6,280. They are some
of the heaviest losers. Only fifty
four bales were saved. George P.
Woods, late editor of the Hawk
insville Dispatch, lost nineteen
bales. He bad no insurance.
poison in Cosmetics
it seems to be the fashion for young
ladies with pimples exijerinients ami blotches with on
thci - faces t0 mate
'^vVtVs i\V-r 'fonTgi'i--n:mic!lroni
fS&rMiArSSSSkJ j burden the delicate substances
on !ln(
g!^r°^:rr
j . sM-engtiicning and iiea th-giving cf
()f s-.vitVs speeilie (S *. «.) per
nature to work her u iii in this re
speet. as tliousumls of ladies, both
voting JIM old, have discoveied. T.. The
ritr:i jx*.-t :i.’»d most brut iiful cdmi/ icx
ions depend on heulili :md vi^or. Itb
\ he oFU-e «>f SwiVi’s Sj>e< i‘h- (S. S.S.,
ro <rive vigor and tout' and health (<
the system, and in tii^ way to giv\
lustre to the eve aud rose- to the cheeks.
Thu Strike nt an Fml.
Savannah, Oct. 8. —The great
strike of the colored laborers is
practically at an end and the
powerful Laborers’ Union and
Protective Association belongs to
the history of the past.
The leaders of the union refused
to declare the strike off, and to¬
day the bulk of the strikers kicked
loose from the organization and
applied at ihe transportation com¬
pares, warehousemen and dray
men for reinstatemenj. About
one hundred were taken back,but
the majority were told that they
were not wanted. Their places
had been filled by others during
the strike, and these wouldn’t be
discharged to make room for men
who had not only cripled the bus¬
iness of the corporations, but the
entire city as well. It is probable
that not more than half of the
strikers will be able to fcecure
employment here, and the city
wi’l have a surfeit of idle negroes,
Business is moving to day as if
there never bad been a strike,
v. H. Wilder, Mayor of Albany,
Ga., says he lias suffered with Rheuma¬
tism for fifteen years, and it! that time
he has .. ; ed alt the so-called specifics,
to no purpose. IDs grandson, who
was on .he U- Jeof .V W. P. Railroad, F. The finally
'-•«« a bo. 1*. first
pi, tie of I’. 1 . 1 . showed it* remarka
ble efiec.s, a.ut af ,er us'.n; a short time
na.'s 11 disappeared, and he
w-'.eshe feels like a new man, and
take* Measure in reeonimeruliiig it to
Hheumadc s. ffe evs.
p epor * ; 8 from the comptroller v
genera so.T.ceshow thegrandto
tal of property on digests of the
b uie to be $102,586,468, an in
creMe of l25 , 119 , CS l over l„t
j haV0 found y0l , r Bradycro
t j ne a gure cure f or headache,
A. R. Hanks, Mountain Peak.
lexas -
My wife lias used Bradycrotine
for headache with the best imagi
na ble results. 1 state this with
out solicitation. J. W. Mashburn,
Abbeville , Ga .
Lost manhood lost energy.weak
genera! ueliiiity are all cured by
D.F.P. New life, new energy are
D*Dise 1 in the ^ystetn by the blood
purifying ' ^ and cleansing properties J ot
p p ; v e ;itest blw d purifier of
a . re
—-; -r
! JiT-ord?.-? LLe, vA KUl
i ney Complaint, try P. I’. I’., and vou
will reioice at its masrtcal workings
Females are peculiarly benefited by P.
h. 1*. It expel* disease, and giver
ealthy action to every organ:
W. J. McDonald, superintend
ant Lar.neau Manufacturing Co .
i<a used Hraai. lotine
ache and it is the Only thing that
relieves her sufferings.
— ■>!■■ hi i lines ■ ............
W« t*«..!’C*LTHOSf»w.«-D, '! th« Tuarr-r-.s Fr»orfcl,
j — E N \ enar.ntM that Oltr-h will.
, . , STOP DilUvm * EaklMdMM.
: ’ Rtw V tudEmancuuvictr. ttw. s^-r^.turr-kio.
I V WIP*V , At fit it and pay if satisfied. ,
A44r— VON MONL CO..
}
KASTMAN TIM ES Established iS 74 .J Consolidated ltBf
DOOGfi COUX TV JOUKN AL 1 $ 6 * 1 . \
PLANTERS
■ CU3AN OIL
m } A GREAT TRIAL. >
ft Mr, J. L. Wilcox, of Hur¬
i ricane, Ga., write* Mr. Ro¬
gers, one of our Georjii
M >il alesmen, In I got regard of and you to say*: : the Itiswaa- G»b*»
liV terful. It cured my bor.e,
fitjREENEVIllE. TENnIT) ■ ad in six days lien.
' " - 1 —^ time you were here ht
on the plow and ha» worked
*>
S2S
Is sold under u POSITIVE GUARAN
TEE to bring worm* under any and all.
circumstances where they exist and all
MERCHANT'S selling if are instructed
V REF1 * 5) THE MONEY to purehas,*
if they can get ANY’OTHER prepara
don that wit! bring worms after using
Planter’s Syn.p Vermifuge.
........ ................ ..............
-rashes.
-' horse drover present refused to make an offer of any kind for tne horse,
-aying he was sure to die. This was two days after it was hurt and tbs
! wound was hot with fever and terribly swollen.
I ^ gave Mr. TVileox a 50 cents bottle of Cuban Oil, which he used exalnsiT#*
ly the abovestated .
CUBAN RELIEF
Cures all pains ami aches and Colic in horses.
For sale by M. II. Edwards <k Bro., Eastman, G.i. May 8 13fl— VT.
th
j
;
j
!
1
A (tilling Outfit Tlrijf Season?
•A 6 i—jr ‘l t&t V- l/’w • \
r • V
MR
m WmmB ijf >
•SJ" / ZiSBt
'■m.
SIPT?
frnmsfa f«! I | :
Watertown Engines and Boilers, Saw Mills, Lummus Cotton Gins,
Nance Cotton Presses, Sailor Seed Cotton Elevators, Mowers, Horse
Ha a Rale es. Cotton Seed Crushers, Grist Mills, Circular Saws, In
piretors, Belting, Pulleys, Shafting, Pipe and Machinists’ supplies.
B sure -and write us before buying. We can take Qgre of you.
| rMSk ti B— ■■HI S3 Bros. &Co *3
MACON, GA.
May S.—tf
A Household ALL Remedy J
FOR *
3L0017i* nd SKINI
DISEASES
e
Botanic Bicod Bahn %
I* IV ^.UTgb. r«.r«o SGR0FULA, R y EUM. ECZEMA, ULCERS, SALT »v«r» J
form system sides of being and malign effi re, inf :aclon3 Soring SKIN the In ERUPTION. toning constitution, up the b«- i
.
when Impaired frem »ny cause. Its V'
justify directions almost sapernaSural us are In { lollowod. uaranteelng healing properties a cure, it t
^
SENT FREE #
BL000 BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga. ^
Heed the A anilng.
It is not infri queritlv lhe < nse tha
itching pimples anc irritating “cat
boils” are the forerunners of large
boils, or the uk >re set ions carbuncles.
Invariably Nature puts on her danger
signals, ami th» y should he heeded at
once. The pirnples and little boils
-how that the blood is not In a good
condition am: nature is trying to
lieve the system. A few doses
Swift'* Specific at this juncture
accomplish wonders. The
will be heal -d and the system
if its imp’.rules. The modern
phrase of L ■ e old that saying, *' 'Tiinelr 1 “A stitcti
time,’’etc., is
will save nine pairs of breeches.”
modern l .rrn iia- 1 touch of humor
’hat does not mo-tlfy the truth oMt. In
that vein, we may say that 1 course
Gift’s vpecitic prevents ills
Tutfs Fills
CTJ2rS.:E3
Knlaria, Eumb Chills,
Fever and Ague, yfind
Colic, Bilicus Attacks,
They protveo r«*alar. nitnr.I
‘"'iff rrYd^Jlki
SOLO EV£.IiYWHEKE.
ForMalaria, LiverTrou
ble,or Indigestion,use
BROWN’S IRON BII1ERS
^
ever uo quas
lion lint he would liara died tiau net
Cuban Oil been lrequenlly an4 fraaly
ised.
Your Dr. Baker's Femtla Rrfalater
gives satisfaction and Cuban Relief his
no equal In fact everrthmg is vary
g ,>oJ il ' u1 I am w * itI,, K tor r»*to come
aroun<Hogive I hope , you another $60.00©rd*r.
to see you soon,
Mr. Rogers Mates In regard to tfa*
above: Mr. Wileox’s horse jumped on
a picket fence and ran two palings foreleg *le*r
through, just between .he in
so the two others
f t
iMl WE.
v
w srWFlRW
S3 OOfeSTOJCTtOH
U0HT fiUTWWi
AW0 PUmLI
V
I aslli m* a
GiVES
PERFECT
SATISFACTIOM
AMERICAN B&0.& SRT1N5 MM& COi
Fmcm. 8FFJ3E % FKCTCTTT j
sw. c(jr*p-st. im&mwn ml ;
PffilAOELPlflA, 1%.
WHOLEaRLE BRftHCH HCJGfC#
OHicAeo. tu efutrerran cm. J
j m
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a«?o Hottlffi €ur«4 Tier* Vl
Cabboll, I*., July, 1888.
I w&b suiTefiing 10 yoari from shock* in my
i head, bo much so that at times 1 didn’t expect
to recover. I took medicines from many doo
tore, but di*l not get any relief until I took Pastor
Koenig's Nerve Tonis; tho second doss relieved
' and i bolt lab cured B. W. PECK.
roe me.
Nsw out, Ky , February 2D, 1801.
For me.ny yean I waa atckJy and very a err*
aus, so that the Least thing would frigh .en u*«,
an«! Diy sleep w&a ge refreshing and I wae se
•wt-ak an to be tn&ble to do any housework I
was always Ill-humored and Now
«?wylhia^ /Mies ii cluwi^iil Pastor Kmmig'f 1 Nerve
Toni l b has helped me; am like a r w
u^rson. fun work. ki«>ep w**11 and U* i contou ve>L
rv-c’ommeml this medietas at every EUUlJL nr £-*or»
v
rnrr
[ flLL lbig^!!uclium frt^’Sr
Tbi. r. m.4r hM b«a Ur tl..
KOENIC MED. CO.. Chicago, lit.
Kohl bv Dnnlua at SI vote DotUa. I he
tarze HU* hi.75. 0 Bottle* for CO.
ier wise or casoui, • x«uc iw
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