Newspaper Page Text
It Is a Herrid >uisaoc«
To be nervous. Startln; at the giighteat
sound, uneasiness by day and fitful slumber
by it, unreasonable apprehensions, odd
- enactions, cottstar.t rest lessnees—these ar*
:
ter's Stomach Bitters, and th- food is assirm-1
Kuil^n^mn^ subdues malaria, constipation, 5 f Th* liver P
com
piaint and kidney affectious.
_
\Ye have twenty-eight cities, each having
more Ilian one hundred thousand population.
If your Back Aches, or you are all worn out.
good for nothing, it is general debility
Brown s Iron Bitters »-;ll cure you. make you
-tronkf. cleanse onrs't your liver, and give you a goo^
appetite—t he nerves.
__
Charity may cover a multitude of sins, but
that is not its regu ar business.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water-Druagists sell at 25c per bottle.
A wondurful stomach corrector—Beecham’s
Pills. Beecham’s—no others. 25centsabox.
Hood’s is the Best
The Judgment Of Long
Exoerionce.
*
'■■‘"IK
,v
r- fS \ m§0t 7 >
Air. Grant If. Barnes
“ Richfonl, X. Y., Jan. 11,1853.
“Myself and my wife have taken several
bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla with gratifying
results. For years I have had kidney trouble,
and also heart difficulty. I was unable to
sleep on my left side for years. Hood’s Saisa
parilla has done me a ureat deal of good. Iam
frw from kidney trouble, and can sleep on
either side now, thanksto Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
My wife has had a chronic sore throat for
Hood’s 3; Cures
more thm 20 years. It always troubled her
more or less but for tho last G months, since
taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, siie has not had a
sore throat except once when she took a slight
cold. We cheerfully recommend llood’e ^.ir.
saparillaas a good reliable medicine for the
blood and to build up the system; I consider it
the best medicine in use.” GbastW.
Barnes. GET HOOD’S.
____
Hood n piin are the licit artcr-jinner rail, a*
sat digestion, euro headache. Try a box. 25centa.
~~~
“August Flower 5 I 5
“Ihavebeeaafllictedwithbilious
nessand constipation for fifteen years
•ration was suggested to me and
tried, but to no purpose A friend
recommended August Flower and
words cannot describe the admira
tion in which I hold it. It has given
me a new lease of life, which before
was a burden. Its good qualities
and wonderful merits should be made
known to everyone suffering with
dyspepsia aud biliousness.” JESSB
BARKER, Printer, Humboldt, Kas.@
DIAMONDS,
WATCHES and
SILVERWARE.
Mend lor oor Catalnauc*.
J. E*. stovous tfc Hro.,
47 Whitebait HC., Atlanta, C».
Unlike the Dutch Process
So Alkalies
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are used In the
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
!&, s mkfastCocoa
which it abfolutcly
pure and soluble,
'mU f fist! it has morethanthree timet
the ttrenijih ot Cocoa mixed
Afa i'itii Starch, Arrowroot or
I h, 11. and is tar more eco¬
nomical, costing less than one cent a cup.
It i* delicious, nourishing, and easily
picketed. -
Bold bf Brows ertrywhiro.
W BATTER & CO., Dorchester, Maas.
Young Mothers!
Wt Offer You a Remedy
which Ineurtt Safety to
life of Mother and Child.
MOTHER’S FRIEND”
JRehf Confinement of its
fain, Horror and Bisk.
After «stntoBebottlecr , ‘!IIathrr , o Friend” t
mu (sa«,L uoiff,Ho.,J&D. l^b.un.
8en ^
fB Bivi.n *tr.Nt:«,AXoa. to..
ATLANTA. GA.
•0L0 BY ALL LL. j 'iiSTB.
>DCi£S2;-[
STli SHILOH'S
CURE. 1
ewfi
s<y vu
nOillM Ifll llinl $ aZZL
I.a.UI. i AH, tiiaah.iii,N. J
Tori—T > heated to r fa* for vA Cworrh a * ■j
CATAR R M
_
Mn 4 hr 4n»*r-W» os msx ty ^
a* AT, IIm-im War re*, f*.
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
HOXEY vrXEGA*.
Hcaev he used . ,
'well mav lor m&Kiag ▼!£•
«s « svrups or other sweets,
Xo make five gallons of bonev vinegar,
put five pounds of strained honey into
the empty cask; then pour m five gal
j cng 0 f warill( pure rain water and a pint
of *iood yeast, or a few sheets of mother
of v j ue g ar jf t Jjey can be had. Set the
cask in a warm place, coveting the
Vnn<vhole with mosquito .* netting to keep
out flies aad other insects, until lermc-i*
tation has ceased and the vinegar is in
the proper condition for use. New
York Sun.
HOW TO BOIL 1UCE.
Wash one cup of rice. Put three
quarts of boiliug water into a kettle;
add a teaspoonful of salt and let it boil
rapidly; sprinkle in the rice so grad¬
ually that you will not stop the boiling;
when you have it all in, give the water
a twirl with a fork, cover the kettle aud
boil rapidly twenty minutes. Then pour
into a colander to drain. Place the
colander ou a tin dish; stand it in the
oven for five minutes to dry, leaving the
door wide open; then turn it carefully
into a healed dish; servo without a
cover.
Points to be remembered: Boil rap¬
idly from the time you cover the kettle
till you take it off. The rapid boiling
aiiows each grain to swell three times its
normal size, and the motion preveuts
the grains from sticking together. Do
not stir it, as this will cause it to fall to
the bottom of the kettle and burn. Toe
drying in the oven with the door open
evaporates the moisture, leaving the rice
soft, suowy white and perfectly dry.
Boiled rice is delicious when served with
shrimp, oyster, chicken or okra gumbo.
—Njw Orleans Picayune.
FI 1 YINO FOODS.
Foods like oysters, chicken aud fish
need to be covered with a grease-proof
coating betore puttiug into the lat. Tu:s
CO ating is made by adding to one egg a
ta hlespocnful of water and beating. If
f or f ool ] s as oysters that one
wishes to . brown quickly, „ • ..i, use mAh -i.. nr
cream in place of the water, rorchicken
or fish use water. When the batter is
made, if you wish to fry chicken,
sprinkle the pieces with salt and pepper,
dip them in tbo batter aud then roll them
in flue cracker crumb3 and drop them
into the fat. If this preparation of
chickon is to be given to a parson with
a very delicate stomach, the skin and
fried crust may be stripped off before
Moat kinds of fish are treated
in the same way before frying. Oysters,
however, need wliat is called a “double
breading," and are delicious if thor¬
oughly drained, and dipped first into
seasoned bread crumbs, then into the
egg batter, then into cracker dust or
flour. The object of using bread crumbs
for the first coating is to make the sur¬
face slightly rough so that a greater
quantity of the egg will cling. Tho oys¬
ters are also more delicate and less dry
than when crackers are used for both
coa J^JSw.Sf^r ^ tterful ot white cornmcal muih ,
j dht^ofi
th mush in B .tallow dish, and when
cold cut it iuto pieceS) which s houlu be
about ^ iuc t cs thick and a finger long,
F r y a r ,ch brown aud serve iu a folded
u apkin. Hominy is very nice fried in
the some way.—St. Louis Republic,
salads.
Egg Salad—Cut three largo stalks oi
celery into pieces, aud put in a salad
bowl. Chop the whites of five hard
boiled eggs an 1 add to the celery, witli
a little salt and pepper; slice the yolks
cf the eggs in thin rounds, lay carefully
over the salad, pour over a plain salad
dressing, and garnish with celery leaves.
Lenttialad—Fill the bottom of a salad
dish with crisp lettuce-ltaves. Cut cold
boiled or baked fish into pieces, and fill
the dish with it; pour over a pint of
mayonnaise dressing. Chop the coral of
■ lobster very fine; sprinkle it over the
salad. Garnish with rings of hard
boiled eggs, and serve very cold.
Oyster Salad—Boil two dozen oystei’3
in their own liquor for live rr.inute3,
drain, and stand on ice until very cold.
Arrange crisp lettuce leaves in a salad
bowl, put the oysters on them, pour
over a teacup of mayonnaise dressing,
and serve very cold.
Shrimp Salad—Tear the leaves of two
heads of lettuce apart, put in a salad
bowl, open a can of shrimps, put ou the
lettuce feives, pour over half a cup of
mavonnaise dressing, and garnish with
hard-boiled eggs cut in rings.
Herring Smoked Salad—Put the crisp
leaves of a head of lettuce in a salad
bowl; skin and remove the bone from
two smoked herrings; chop them and
mix with the lettuce; pour over a plain
saLd dressing to which have been added
the chopped whites of two hard-boiled
egg 5 - Salad—Wash, skin, and
Anchovy
bone two anchovies, putin water to soak
halt an hour, drain, and dry them. Cut
three hard-boiled eggs into slices. Ar¬
range the leaves of a hea l of lettuce in
a salad-bowl. Add the anchovies aud
sliced eggs, pour over a plain salad
dressing, and send to the table very cold
Salmon Salad—Take two pounds of
cold-boiled salmon, remove the skin and
bone, break the fish in pieces, aad put
into a bowl with a little salt, cayenne,
vinegar, the juice of a lemon, aad a
tablespoonful of oil. Let stand on ice
one hour. Put crisp ieituce leaves in a
salad-bowl, add the salmon, pour over
a mayonnaise dressing, garnish with
olives, aad serve very cold. Canned
salmon may be used in making this salad.
—Harper's Hizir.
An enterprising New Yorker La* es
Ublisbed a place in that city where a
man can have bis clothes cleaned, preved
M( j ^ e pt ; Q perfect repair for a dollar a
month.
Packets io ladies' dresses first ap
peared is EagUnd during the reign of
Jpiwar-1 111.
Iastlurt ia a Cat.
"I hare often wondered,” said Fran¬
cis Eater at the St. James, “in how
much human beings are guided by in¬
stinct. Every one knows that animals
ure largely regulated by that queer in¬
fluence we are pleased to name, but
very few people believe that it plays
any part in human lives. I once had
an office cat that came to me a starving
kitten. I fed it for the once, and
daily it came to the office at the time I
arrived, about 9 in the morning and
always very promptly. Once it was
stolen from me by a party of clerks,
good friends of mine, and they kept it
for three months. They told me they
hail been in the habit of feeding it at
noon, and that daily at that hour ex¬
actly the eat showed up with remarka¬
ble promptness. Thou I became inter¬
ested. I changed the cat's meal hour and
from 12 noon to 3 in the afternoon
watched the result. Up to that hour
the eat was never to be found. At that
hour, however, scratching and clawing
occurred at my office door, and my eat
was always on time. Now how did
that eat know when it was 9 or 12 or 3
o’clock? We say, ‘instinct, instinct, of
course,’ but the question still remains
unanswered.”—St. Louis Globe-Dem¬
ocrat.
rinding a Lost Ring.
A gentleman living at South Ken¬
sington w as traveling with his son from
Gloucester road to Mark lane on the
underground railway. Arrived at his
destination, tho young man, in opening
the carriage door, dropped from liis
linger a valuable ring, which fell be
tween the carriage and the platform,
The station inspector, who happened to
be standing near, said: “All right,
sir; I saw it fall. Wait till the train
is gone, and I’ll get it for you.” And
directly the train moved out he duly
jumped down on to the line, but no
ring could be found. The gentleman 1
waited some time and then went home,
An hour or so afterward tho son
went again to tho railway station to
inquire if the ring had been found, and
while standing there the same train
entered the station, having been right
around the inner circle, and, wonder¬
ful to relate, on the low er footboard of
the carriage the ring whs discovered,
having traveled the whole distance ly¬
ing on the open board.—London Tit
Bits.
A Little Management.
Minks—“Say, Winks, my wife tells
me that new servant-girl you have is a
thief, and you’d better be on your
guard.”
Winks—“I suspected us much; been
missing all sorts of tilings; but she’s so
efficient and respectful my wife won’t
get rid of her.”
Minks—“She’d send her flying if
you’d use a little management.”
Winks—"What shall I do?”
Minks—“Kiss your wife in the dark
some night and pretend yon think it’s
the servant-girl.”—New York Weekly.
Not Convinced.
Male Guest—“You must admit one
thing. Though American women can
not vote, they are well taken care of.”
Mrs. Htrougmind—“They are, are
they?” Guest—“Urn!
Mule you never see
any bent up old women here.”
Mrs. Stroiigmimi—“No; when wom¬
en become too old to be offered seats
in street ears, they get straightened
out hanging to straps.”
Passed.
Professor—“If a person in good
health, but who imagined himself sick,
should send for you, what would you
do?”
Medical student—Give him some¬
thing to make him sick, aud then ad¬
minister an antidote.”
Professor—“Don’t waste any more
time here. Hung out vour shingle. ”—
New York Weekly.
In Hard Luck.
Street Urchin—“Say, mister, gimme
fifteen cents, won’t ycr?"
Gentleman—“What for?”
“Please, sir, me mudder is sick, an’
fadder is out o’ work, an’ I got stuck
Mi me pajiers.” chap!”
“Poor little
“Yes, sir, an’ I ain’t got no money
to go to do t’eater.”—Street & Smith’s
Good News.
The Seniihie Course.
Teacher—“What is the meaning of
one twenty-fifth?” Bov—“I—I don’t
Little remem¬
ber.”
Teacher—“If you had twenty-five
children visiting you, and only one
apple for them, wliat would you do?”
Little Boy—“I’d wait till they ail
went, an’ then eat it myself.”
What Is Home Without
HOME / HOME
tacks?Tnails?
Several aicc* to suit, <M.eral »i«ii i a a carton,—
In a compartment box.— handy whan you need nails
handy when you need tor a loose board, shingle, or
Tack* about the home for J i ficc Picket,
carpets, curtains, gimp, or¬ broken furniture, ittfkety
naments. oilcloths, sheath¬ door.—to bang your hat
ing. -lOOl uses you know of. and coat on, etc., etc.
Always find the right tack at A) ray* (be right nail •( I ha
the right time. rUMft
FOR SALE EVf l YWHERE.
MXtSM,*, ft* ATLAS TAO OWNATMI, BOSTWI.
Waagsorupp RoCnr;. N.w fwl Pblli r-. i, Bairte.or*. Su Prat* mr>. Lyaa
_
fororia. Tanas- a, faubarea. Wan Dm ^ry.aMnymootb. Mm.
EVERYBODY WAMTS THEM.
!«king Shoes Waterproof.
Shoe* can easily be made waterproof
and shot, -resisting by the aid of a lit- ]
tie paraffin dieolvrd in benzine. A
very little paraffin is needed, and only
enou; h benzine to dissolve it and
make it flow easily. The preparation
can be brushed over the uppers and
ovei^lt. soles, and as it dries almost
as f oPr as put on, the shoes are ready
for w ar witbont any delay. The par- j
Anin J.'TVSemS A firm waterproof tmr
face, and does not look amiss, although
it will not take A sllino hkeunprepar
ed L ather But it will resist niiv • !
mount of , wet A anti IS . very convenient
ft The*
in jury weather preparation
differs, in that instead of making the
leather stiff and hard, it makes it very
soft and plinhle. the mixture cun be
applied to patent leather tips and to
uppers teriat composed entirely of that Ilia- of
but it takes off the brilliancy
these 1 stylish articles to he used very
extertdvely for that purpose, although
when! the paraffin has worn oft, the
poiisV appears as brilliant as ever.
1 hruliailt Bread.
_ To' * part , Whitt) i •, • broad , epoiltfO
one risen
add fwo parts of Graham flour, a little
ludlipi iiujf mealy salt. Wot up, mix, lout, adit
n a imii tciUMii) uucup of oi molasses momssi s to io it » m.
Have the dough very soil. Ivneud
well, set to rise. It takes longer to
bake than white bread. Bake in a
steady oven.
Scandinavian Bread,
yjft together half u pint each of
wheal and Graham teaspoonfuls flour, one pint of of
berhjy meal, two baking powder aud
Puc k’s cream a
teaspoonful of salt; make into a but
f tr / uk one pink of milk and bake in
a gri ( wscd bread pan in a fairly hot
I
Psr« grape
1 cream of tartar
A acid forms principle the
t of the Royal
■v u exclusively.
*■ ..
I A The Royal
POM/DtfL imparts that
peculiar sweet¬
ness, flavor and
i delicacy noticed in the
finest cake, biscuit,
rolls, etc., which
i declare expert is pastry unobtainable cooks Absolutely
by the use of any other Pure
leavening agent.
YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
91 THOMSON’S
M SLOTTED -
CLINCH RIVETS.
No tool* required. Only * haiimur nppdeil to drive
nn t d itidk fht» c**i»y *«i«l n«ick.y, teavinit the clinch
■ o*o*litrljr leitfher •u»o* th. K»<jtiit fhn iufl !tt***t». no b» Th#v • to b« mad* in
th«* nor burr for ar** MronK.
loiatflk end <1uratl»le. Million* now In u«»- AH
uniform nr A*«i.»rtc«t, put up In
IsV jour ilrnlci fur ihnu, or wend 40c. In
• tniii; * for a oo& of AOU, ***»rfc i nUut. Mau Id tty
JUDSON l. THOMSON MFG. CO..
wai.TiiAv*. *****
PlSl W Nr - , 4
Polish
Of not Be neceivea WBBHBBi
wbh I'MIK. RnanieU an 1 Palnu which (tain Ux
l.ai Is, trtjur*- ibetroa ami hum rcii.
1 ii. Km In/ Hun Ht*.»c PnlUll In flrllllant, Odor
; •«<. Ilurahlc. ami tbeenmunwr p«r« fur no tin
i>t glaM packagr wltli .very |.ur<-ha«e.
H OMES FOR THE POOR
AND RICH ALIKE
Carolina ijr/<! anil -mnll farm* In Alabama, Snath
«n<l < »nri{ia, fur ral« on long time.
ofi’U.er. ailvanluL'- .-> off* n il to o*n o- more pur
lorniior; a colony. Write for particu¬
lar i toT. J. FKI.IlKH. Atlanta, tin.
BICYCLES.
Compute iir« ftt high. m»4ft>a|
an cl.*«p ind« BtcjroiAg. Uaa*
dn»ft «»f *l! kinds.
Immense* H«r«alng fllrjrlgn* In *l#e*
oihI llnnil Pnru
■ H|ic Slid ( u*hl«u> T»re«l. Writ* fm
• tui j ness. TP# <>u v lu* *ftiy In* tel* host* ui tk«
s»u Addrft,*. ft!« Vf I.K IM f’T, I.OVVHY
HIhY. CO.* K l*.< F«*ncht«ns l»n»f«r»«* 8trme, llmr., Atlsutn, On.
Nj
IfiLOOD mmmnassam| I ■Uastp W. If ru say cvrt iw Ult *-ntM m ms- Ms*
POISON ds/a 1st run kirn ia vr *9 a to for M
■ A SPECIALTY. 1 pnlr pn’Urnlnrs our rallnti an*! illy. InvpMt* Oar
S w, :i . Who* Sacking
mtmrr.
lodlf’s po'saslam, rarrap.nlia or U a Spring, fall, w.
gn* < utee a ran —sod our Hmrlr (rphitoap P It proof tkn palp
a UT ta»i «*ll cars pormsoraUr. alUTp ral
a*;tm. eooa kuin Co., Ukk»g». UL
\ *'. r Hemateea, 'V-t.
FrfA Trip in I hlro*o.
Separate W-o-B-L-D-s F-a-i-r n«* tft»
’•««•«® 'P* 11 »* word * ss c “ **
mine th. l.tt.n as many um« as yon with*
•Ithar bark wards or forwards, bat not nse lh<
§arae letter in making any one wont more timre
than u appw , in .. world's Fair.”
j t ia eeventy-*re small English words
can
wa jf, soar, idol, etc. If you are u'ie’^otl good at wom
■«*■£ ^“nd * 0 ^*
Company will pay all exix-nsea. Including H it.
aS?»»flfS!S for^ncldentaUr"
|>rnw's, to tbefin*t; person able to make
trip to the World's Fair and return with $£T»
for sendingfUPluwordA incidental «*i*n*Vl* as above, they wnh also
K i v © a free trip to the World’s Fair and return
to th *
To ‘he rtrnt prraon sending ftftu word* will
word* will be Riven $£ r > in cash towards pay
lx- given JlOin cash, and to tiXCh of tli« first ten
ITm.
person. Write your name on list of words
package of our Choice English Cottage Garden
V TM?&SStaati«.n includes the latest s:.d
most popular Km&.ish flowers of endless varie
ties (same an will le contained in theelal»orate
exhibit of English flowers at tin* World’s Fair!.
This M World’s Fair ” Contest will l* carc
fully and conscientiously conducted solely for
fl OW er seeds ever offered, and.if you are able
to make a good list of words and answer
{ n[lUy . you win ht4V) . a lirM-Ha.-s oi.pmiun
ty to 8f . C ure a free trip from your home to
OtUao > and return.
order. You will tie mnri-than gratified with
the result. Semi lo-dity, and address the
Scott Seed CojiriNV. Toronto,Canada.
Tln-rr t« nothing lliat nf mi n'flniM thought*. llm fare ami
mi ml as Ilia presence swat
For Impure nr thin HIikkI, Weakne-s. lllllnnsne-*, Mala¬
take ria. Neuralgia. Iron IndMIun anil
Brown'll Hitlers It .giro* strength,
making old persons feel young and young
persons at route; pleasant to lake.
We are at lies* tint stewards of wliat we
falsely call our oivii.
_
«
“A SUCCESS.”
P. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O., Gentlemen:—
I have suffered from catarrh for about five years
and have tried several remedies without relief
until I commenced to use Hall’s Catarrh Cure last
February. I must say that it is a A SUCCESS,
the dropping in my throat disappeared entirely
after the first bottle. It increased my appetite, so
that I now weigh eight pounds more than my cus"
tomary weight. I have recommended it toothers
and all who used it have been greatly relieved and
speak highly of it. One of them was in my store
yesterday and expressed his wish to peddle it this
winter. Will you please lpt me know the lowest
terms you could furnish it for, as I would like to
keep it in stock. Hoping to hear from you
soon, I remain, Yours respectfully,
R. C. HAUSWEDELL,
Lake City, Minn.
BOLD BY DRUGGISTS, 75c.
Tb. Brat tiood Cough Vm la r-rrup. Una We offer It i* now a "Noatmin,”
uw thosigh at first it wa» <e>m
how t.r r*.*jr . • ready
»t.i' i - TVf*A Ji liii* you a pou inied after a prescripUuo
by a regular physician, with
made niedieine for Couchs. no idea the that market it aa would a proprie¬ ctst
go on
Bronchitis and other dis¬ tary medicine BM altar
compounding that prescrip¬
of the Throat and tion oyer a tbousai.d ti n
eases one year, we named it "Plgo'a
Lungs. Like other called Cure tor > wssaftlas,* and
so began advertising it In a
A
Patent Medicines, it Is well known all over the world ii
the result.
advertised, and having merit Why ,s it not lust fifty ar esat* gno*
ea tbough ciwtia*
it ha.s attained a wide sale to e dollar for a preset to bars ipftea ta
end an eguai »sjc
under the name of Piso’s put op at a drag et*s*» ,
l ure for Consumption.
? ?
«;y. r*
fo. V
ijj
KNOWLEDGE
tends Brings comfort personal and enjoyment improvement and
to when
rightly used. The many, who live bet¬
ter than others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting needs tho world’s being, best product* will to
the of physical attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in tbo
remedy, Syrup of Figs. its
Its excellence is due to presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas¬
ant beneficial to the taste, the refreshing of and truly lax¬
effectually properties cleansing a perfect the
ative ; system,
dispelling colds, headaches and fevers
and It permanently given satisfaction curing constipation. millions and
has to
met with the approval of tho medical
profession, because it acts on tho Kid¬
neys, Liver and Ilowels without weak¬
ening objectionable them and it is substance. perfectly free from
every of Figs sale by all drug¬
Syrup and §1 is Littles, for but it is
gists ufactured in SOc California Fig Syrup man¬
by the printed
Co. only, whose name is on every
package, also the informed, name, Syrup of Figs,
aud being well you will not
accept any substitute if ottered.
AN ASTONISHING
TONIC FOR WOMEN.
McELREE’0
OF
CARBIII mmmmmm
rami mini ■■■ i
It Strengthen* the Weak, Quiet* the
Nerve*, Relieve* Monthly
Suffering and Cures
FEMALE DI8EASE8.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST ABOUT IT.
•J.00 RCR BOTTLE.
CHATTANOOGA ffO CO., fh.M.neo*., Tun.
for MUST .stamp. HAVE luiffirtian. iKrr.SI'S'it.Ka I nrl.nlirS.
luvenleS. Hint* ODlycoo*
I'll" ever weights. Sutra unparnUelad
• 14 a day. U nit quid, Uhohajui, ChUa.
OPIUM Alllllll Morphine Habit Cured In 10