Newspaper Page Text
THOSE PRETTY 0CT0B00XS.
A HACK OF PEOPLE WHICH IS NO RACK
-THE PKCCUAK PO«.ITIO> OF IT*
WOMEN. •*
^ooietv Debnrs Them from )Inrriagp-How
They JJve and are Provided lor—Future
of Their Children.
There is in New Orleans a race and
distinct race which & no race. It has
its one ham! upon the whites and the
other upon the blacks, and it occupies a
position betwixt and between, belonging
to both and to neither. The whites re¬
fuse to acknowledge them, and they
hold themselves so far above the blacks
that they will acknowledge no relation¬
ship with them. Like the bat, they are
neither bird nor animal, but occupy
position entirely distinct, and a very
lonesome one it is. There are the octo¬
roons, which in New Orleans means not
only a person all whose blood is one-eighth
negro, but of that class who are almost
white, but in whom negro blood is per¬
ceptible. Down there they don’t say
negro blood—it is negro “taint.” They
are not white enough for white nor black
enough for the negro.
Their position, especially that of the
women of the race, is very peculiar. No
matter how white an octoroon girl may
be, a white man may not marry her.
She may be as beautiful as Venus, and
accomplished in every possible like* way; she
may sing like Patti and paint Boss
Bonheur, but no white man would marry
her and remain in New Orleans. It
would be ostracism for her and for him
also. She could not be received in
society, and he would find himself on
the wrong side of the wall at once. The
, law is fixed and the barricade . is impass- .
ab )C;
The of this mixed .
women race are
wondrously beautiful. 1 heir complex*
ions of olive are underneath dazzling!* white, the skin wUh that a slimes shade
through toning down the white to a
shade of brown that is as bejfttiful m
color as beautiful can be. Their teeth
are marvels of whiteness and rejriilaritv pfrfect
Their figures are invariably and^ in
their voluptuousness, the whole
woman is as near physical perfection as
anything ever permitted on Ibis earth to
the temptation of men. St Anthony
would have stood but a poor chance had
he undergone his temptation in New
Orleans and had the arch enemy em
ployed octoroon women to bis fall.
There is nothing iu womanhood more
delightful. The• men among them are
in various have employments and many of
them achieved successes. They
have had advantagea above their half
brothers who are darker in color, for
they are all necessarily the sons of white
men, many of whom have for their
mothers sake been liberal to them m the
matter of education and means to com
mence life with after education was com
pleted.
To understand this the status of the
octoroon woman must be understood,
3he cannot marry a white man, nor can
a white man marry her. She cannot
jigger-’ P~P« Jitk
c without .;gstS?Bfe drop
oi
bjer beanjyr and aemuremeuto might
fieri any place while among white womensMie cannot
desire. But a man
uarry her, there is no law—human at
east—that prevents his living with her.
As the poor girl cannot marry a white
man, and will not marry a negro, ahe
does what seems to her the next best
thing, and the only thing she can do;
she accepts the “protection of a white
lover and lives with him. The next
thing is for the white lover to buy her a
house and furnish it gorgeously, and
make it really his home. He tltis not
take her to the theatre or balls of his
own class, nor is he ever seen with her
on the street; but her house is really his
home. She bears him children, and
those children he educates and provides
for. in many instances better than his
legal them. offspring; but he may not recog
uize The black blood in them
bars that.
When he is tired of his illegal flame it
is the simplest thing in the world. The
house and its furnishings are hers and
whatever money he has given hep be¬
comes hers in her own right; and the
middle-aged woman who lias lost her
beauty, accepts the situation, lets the
furnished rooms to single gentlemen, and
lives in comfort all her life on the
proceeds. ■ It was for this that she en
. _ , ’ j , ., the arrangement . to . , begin .
0
with, d its , ending satisfies her. She
accumulates money her children, who
wou d pass for white anywhere ex
cept in the South, go elsewhere where
their a nt has scope, and become
actual men; and the daughters may emi
grate also, or they may stay in New
Orleans and go through the same ex
perience that their mother did before
them.
The Height of , a Tree.
Woods TI r v and j Forests rv (English) says:
“Any person, however ill-miormed
might easily get at the exact height of a
tree when the sun shines, or during
bright moonlight, by marking two lines
on the ground, three feet apart and ther
placing m the ground on the line nearest
the sun a stick that shall stand exactly
three feet out of the soil. When the
end , of the shadow of the „ stick exactly
touches the furthest line, hen also the
shadow of the tree will be exactly m
ength the same measurement as its
height Of course, in such a case the
suu will be at an exact angle of forty
hve degrees Measurements of this
character could be best effected m the
summer when the sung powerful, has
readied to a good height m the heavens,
and when the trees are clothed with liv
ing green so as to cast a dense shadow.
10 ma °L t0 h T thL lM ea ma 7 not
uavc v.' rre n it niight be made an
nua; v a matter of interest thus on
warm summer days to take tue height
of Srow.h prominent irom trees to an^ sO f to compare
year year. .
“Gxsr’nEx,” said the President of the
Lime-Kiln Club, “in gwine our devious
ways homewards remember dat de man
who sots on de garden fence must steal
some odder man’s cabbages or go wid
c:.:.” . ., .... rv.vn i
WIT AND WISDOM.
A blacksmith ought to be able to
forge ahead.
c™> fruits are proving more dead
lv than dynamite.
The best hand to hold in the game of
llle lifp is IS that tnat of OI the me vonnmuit youngest girl. trirl
We suppose a one-eved mall has to
lOOK^wice look twice to to see BOA anvtliinrr anything as as plainly nlaiiilv as as
& two-eyed man.
TffiJ light, like the morning star,
which dwells in the inmost heart of every
man, is his refuge.
Axtoxio, the Merchant of Venice, was
plainly going to the dogs when he had
many barks upon the sea .—Boston
Budget.
V potrricrAS remarked lately that ha
vvas opposed silver to a trade Trade dollar Dollar Bill, bad and
thought a already
enough.
A Western justice of the peace ad
vertises “Matrimony made easy—one
dollar down and balance in monthly in
stallments.”
Tim total catch of herring the past
season in Maine was 18,000,000, and her
ring lies some of Maine’s prosperity.—
Boston Post.
The wife who sits up until 2 a. m. for
lar frolicsome husband to come home is
waiting for the fast mal e.-PUUburg
Chronicle-Telegraph. seatWae-ed
“Is is this this seat engaged 9 . “ She—“Yes bne res
sir, I am keeping it for a gentleman.”
He-bowing politely)-“Madame, he «
here. (Sits down.)
An old lady in Maine thought overy
New York policeman was a father, be
cause he had a billy—but no more so
thau a farmer who has a hennery.
, Banos are still popular. If you don’t
, believe this just notice how the men
I bang doors when they come homo and
; j find the whole family house cleaning.
Only those who carry sincerity to the
highest point, in whom there remains
no j a s i ng i e bair’s-breadth of hypocrisy,
the hidden springs ‘
ca n see * ^ of things. 9
LIIE 0C 01 7 ater poured on the ,,
■ ‘
roots of , a tree 19 86911 aloft in the
branches and fruit; so in the next world
***' **
There exists not any man in . any
nation who may not improve in virtue if
- he adopts his own true nature as agmde.
| hen I say nature I mean nature in its
genuine purity.
| days Mistress and Saturdays to her new I shall cook: “Wednes
; go to market
with yon.” “Very well, mum; but
who’s a gom to carry the basket the
other days, mum?”
In some places a broken-down front
g a t e> produced in court, furnishes all the
, evidence a pretty girl needs to insure a
i favorable verdict in a breach of promise
, sn it .-Chicago Sun.
l There is a difference between “ingot’
.
and “got in.” Many folks have “got
| in” to silver mining companies easily
j enough, but the “ingot” haB not yet re
warded their expectations.
| UabM8 Peai , SAIjIj of New York 1 ,a ate
OC a ■ Vr
i 4 ' T*”;
: 1 J «n yoailSh', ^e'never gCfs M until 1
t ”— Merchant 9 t
Traveller.
ght on the Tell myth — A magazine
writf r declares that William Tell newel
sfiolfan f apple off his eon’s head.—Oh,
yes he did. That is where the schutzen
core originated.— Boston Bulletin.
i l T may not be generally known, bm
the faot i8 nevertheless true, ’ that the
^ who wiJ1 be at a ^ in the baok
yard js greater than he ho gtays dowD
town until midnight talking °, politics, r
14T> ‘Boma ^ Black, said a teacher , of . a
N f, wftrk P nbll c ° ohoo J>, ^ hat Cttn .7 oa
‘f , nce me ab Have ° ut . Bangkok you forgotten ? A . already? painful
‘
™ ^ , b re ,s ^ that tbe whlte
' ,7 ? T r ^ eat 7 shout9 7 of 1 know
-
111 Jiew Y xorK.
j TUCE LOVE.
j If To yon the wish question to find that the answer ask,
interview laborer yon
Just the
I Returning from his task.
1 He’il take to his humble home,
you
Where his good wife does her duty,
And I’ll wager that he 11 say true love
Is woman’s greatest beauty.
Women Clerks In Washington.
A prominent class of women in Wash
ington, says a lady correspondent, depart- are
those working in the Government for edu
. ments—a hopeless, weary task
catedi refined, well-reared women, ns
“way man y 0 f them are. I would rather p&- go
to the Western God’s prairies good and soil, and
| em ^ pt a few acres of
own hand, gui de the plow and
j gg plant the seeds in the free air and sun
ht of the bffle heaven than take a posi
j t ion at one of those monotonous desks,
wr ite dtp-irv conies of
| sou ;j ess documents until wal-mth the fight failes
! o.,t of the face the from the
| heart and health from the to body be machine, and soul,
Woman wa3He ver meant a
Every nerve in her body protests against
Fverv T fibre of her soulrevolts against %
j j r 0 f her own free will
j room adjoining Aent, this where I write,
lie8 at this mo ,’ on a bed of suffer
|’ % tle girl w hose life for eight
| i ^ rs h ten , a the Treasury Depart
entbe re. This young woman is very
; | finel J cultured-trained in the atmos
* h e ol book s and music, in the library
j f a studioua fatheri who t^as dying, left a
| small COQ2pe tence that soon swept
| awav b y lack of management. For eight
| ' s jj e has written in that office, until
bealth has gone Md she Iive8 to-dav
in fea r Jest her position > shall be
takeu {rom her a:jl! veu to
whose vitallty ’ is llni mpaired. As she
lies there now her greatest dread ^ lest
ghe shall hear to-morrow that there is no
more work for her
__„_____
The Bota— he Cleveland (Ohio)
\{ f T ald is enraptured by a remarkably
gendrD11B y^w Yorker vmiting that city,
w!lo A the otl;er news-lTpys dav. threw 330 in silver
cha efor and boot-blacks to
scramble for. “I was a boot-black ouce
myself, boys,” it quotes him as saying,
“au-I I know what a hard time you have
to get along. I was a boot-black in New
York when I was a toy, and got mv first
start while handling the brush. Now
fern rich, aid I like to help the poor
MJf/ S' V*
W
W
h;jK EMORY’S i J LITTLE u, i Jrf
( T 0 p
, nnnu i tmm
-*
MAIaARIA EmOl)’ anl'goM co St co H a> I'd ClIN PHIS, !
Quhhneileroury, orpolsoa of aoj kmd. Endorsed by physician* by druggists everywhere, or
by mail! as ©sots a Box. 8 TAMTDABD CUTU2 CO., New York.
A PEN PORTRAIT OP LINCOLN
uI)rawn b , „ lnio 7^. (took of “v.ncri
can Notabilities”
Mr. Lincoln united firmness and gentle- rarely
ness in a singular degree. He
spoke a harsh word. Heady to hear
argument and always open to convie
tion, he adhered tenaciously to the con
elusions which he had finally reached,
Altogether modest, he had confidence in
himself, trusted to the reasoning of Ins
own mind, believed in the correctness of
1 } li3 own judgment. Many of the popu¬
; lar conceptions concerning him are er
joneous. No man was further than he
! r0 “ th f W faraiiiar, jocose chartStar
ln whloh he 13 often P““ted. While he
pa j d j itt j attention to form or ceremony
wa4J not a man with who m liberties
eonld be taken . There was b nt one per
gon & Illinois outside of his own house
hold who ventured to address him by bis
first name. There was no one in Wasli
higton attempted it. ’ Ap
who ever
preciating wit and humor, he relished a
good story, especially if it illustrated
a truth or strengthened fund an of illustrative argument,
! and he had a vast
anecdote which he used with the hap.
piest effect. But the long list of vulgar,
salacious stories attributed to him were
retailed only by those who nevkr on*
joyed the privilege of exchanging a
word with him. His life was altogether
R B “f loa8 ■ One—mspirea _insnired bv Dy the tne noblest noijiest
^ ^ . ^but Xf^to^he an iScKiSh.T^ mi^
which
tinned all aented' his vears
tj T)rp P j£ an extraordinary Silities. eom
hiDatio u of nta i and moral
^ a 8tate9man he had the loftiest ideal,
aud u feU to hi8 lot to inaugurate of millions meas
ures w hich changed the fate
0 f living men As’a of tens of millions yet to
he born manager of political is
sues, and master of the art of presenting
t h em , he has had no rival in this coun
try unle88 one be found ^ Jefferson,
The complete discomfiture of hia most
formidable assailants in 1863, especially
of those who sought to prejudice him
before the people on account of the ar
rest of Vallandigham, cannot easily be
naralleled for shrewdness of treatment
and for keen appreciation of the re
actionary influences which are obtain to
control public opinion. Mr, Van Buren
stands without rival in th'e use of par
tisan tactics. He operated if-inter«st altogether
nll in as
Om^ligW laj oi. i -
j&StJ GirtJ W JLm 'f
__
ptesenting his views s v as
to force conviction on the m huyb of his.
hearers and readers. y
There has been discussion ae to Mr.
Lincoln’s religions preference belief. He was creeds. silent
as to his own among
Prejudice against any entertain. particular Allied denom¬
ination he did not all
his life with Protestant Christianity, the he
thankfully availed himself of ser
vices'of an eminent Catholic prelate—
Archbishop Hughes, of New York—in
a personal mission to England, of great
importance, at a crisis when the rela¬
tions between the two countries weyfi
disturbed and threatening. period
Throughout the whole of the
war he constantly directed the attention
of the nation to dependence on God. It
may, indeed, be doubted whether he
omitted this in a single State paper. In
every message to Congress, in every
proclamation to the people, he made it
prominent. Iu July, 1863, after the
battle of Gettysburg, he called upon the
people to give thanks because “it has
pleased Almighty God to hearken to the
supplications and prayers of an afflicted
people and to vouchsafe«signal and
effective victories to the army and navy
of the United States,” and he asked the
people “to render homage to the Divine
Majesty and to invoke the influence of
His Holy Spirit to subdue the anger
which has produced and so long
sustained a needless and cruel I rebel
’ion.”
A Story of Emma Abbott ... ..
Vri,en Co1 - Baldwin, editor ... of . the ,,
*™r»al, r , came to Peoria, he taught
school. It was m his capacity as peda
gogue that lie first met Emma Abbott,
ior she was one of his pupils. He say e
she was not a prohciant scholar because
she ne thrumming K lect #. her 8t,ll old ?‘ c “ gui a “ d was which , . al '
ways an ar,
iho Lad 2 ot possession of by some
means or other; childhood but, he remembers
that even in her Emma was
“ ln fla ‘ te ^>,? r 88 he now puts
jt, “a dawy on taffy. He tells in illns
^rarion of this, a story to the effect that
’ le announced one day that he would
have to punish Emma for some searching violation
of the rules While he was
f ° r hw femle Emma stood in the mid¬
dle o{ the schoolroom sobbing like a big
haby K “Do yon tbink, she wailed,
that 1 am cr J“K th rOT « ! ’ f ^ ar of the
Toa abont 4 to 4 T \™ e P
- I suffer I
because of the remorse that
should have wounded the feelings of
7?** cions “7 diplomacy dear old so unnerved /his Mr preco- Bald
™ ^ ha he I^tponed the punishment
indefinitely, , and after that the embry
otic prima donna had pretty much her
own way in the Peoria schoolhouse.
“FirTY hours and fifty dollars will .
take a man from New York to the City
of Mexico.” Ten cents’ worth of ar
sense will take him to a more desirable
place, no matter what sort of life he
may have lived on this earth—provided
the reports from New Mex ico are true.
Ik _ our , highest . , , gpuitua. . ... states . the
re
ward is in keeping the commandments,
no: ior keeping them.
EMORY'S LITTLE CATHARTIC PILLS
aro tho BEST of EVER three MADE tour Xmory’* for Costlvsnoss, Indigestion, Headaohs.
pill One good night doss for week or two, Little Oathartio Mils, followed by one
every a or makes the human machinery run as regular
“u^e^W Sold by all l>ruggist» and Medicine
them. Dualers at 15 Ola. a Bor, or by maU.
Ewern’e 9TA Little . W . P * R ° CatharHo C , U R ? CO are '' more Pro ^ than , * h>r Is *’ claimed; 107 they N " Y to ‘ be the
host Pill used here. Worth twioe the asked.—W. prove H. Goheb,
ever money W.
Harmony Grovo, Go.-Emory's Little Csttisrtio are the most popular of all
tes Cathartios.—Wu. BaHor. MllIa Rltcr. N. C.-My aged mother used one
box with wonderful reaulte.—N.W. Bara. LocustGrove, Ohio.- 1 recommend
them.—Jons Coluss, M. D.. Athena, Texas__They are excellent—It. Bmaos,
Jackson. Miss. They arennercelled—Maa. Euxuarn Knraxa. Moberly, Ho.
r*.
THE BEST
OF ALU
r * LINIMENTS
J pen MAH AND BEAST.
i Mexican For more Muslnng llinn a third Liniiuentilasboifil of a oonlnry t ho I
y known to millions nil ovor tho world as
tlio only sulo rnllanoe for tho relief of
Recidonts and pain. It is a medicine
i above price and praise—I Ixe l*e»t of it« f.
IHiul. For ovefy form of external pain
a tilO
I
Mustang I.lnimeut is without an equal.
It pcnclinun flc»h ami muscle to
E(jam*o tlio icry bone—making and inflammation the eonthm- impo.s- N
of pain
Its effects upon Human Flesii ami
i ful. the Unite The Mexican Option aro equally wonder¬
r
w
:A J Idnlment is needed by somebody in
^the t t. very n^onyofan house. Every nwful day sn»Wl brings news liam of
«>t
^stored, Biihthnxl, of rheumatic innrtyt* n>
vf or a valuable i».•*'.•«« or ax
ca-rcil by tho healing pow* v or tl;is*
y 4si
i 1 v.-liloh apci'dilv euros such ailments <>.'
iJUio HUMAN 1‘t.KSH ns
'I Hliox.mntl.nl, Swelllngt, SUIT
'Tl .Faints, t’ontrnctfil Burn,
-.hand Sealds, Cut*, IE . .. I s <• « and
[4 ( 3 Sprains, J’olsonouo Riles and
Si.lDs., titimiru, I-nmeiiens, Old
Hi i»i'u,I!lc«ri. VraitbUo, Caked Itrenot. A'l»m>lal»i», and
p L] i Sore indeed Nipple.. form of external dl»
every heals whhoutjcsn.
Mlr«<o, It
vfl E’ or tha iimiTU Creation It oures
ij ™ Founder, Sprains, Harness Swlnnj', yores, Stlir Hoot Joints, IH»
La Kti oases. Foot Mol, (Screw Worm, Scab,
Hollow Horn, Sorutclies, Wlud
jil.-.-alle, fa Old Mores, flpovJn, IV.11 Tlirim.il, l'vli. Film Itln«hono, upon
f £ tile Slehi ami every other ailment
to which tho occupant, liable. of the
Y Stable and Stock Ynrd are
I Tho Mexlrmt jllustnnjf I.inhuent
f' always cures and Dover disappoints;
■? am 1 It is, positively,
THU FEST
OF AL.L
J LINIMENTS
S'OB MAN OE BEAST.
■fnzt/m a
jEWMOME * 1
jSyjtajttiie
I % 6
V
% 4 mm
■f V- 'co
$tf (A
] i?
1 m SltfT CO
mm i)
m mm MM 1
Li«r. ***»«
^ 7 n J y , pT CULAR.
pH-. r »w‘ VC Ifd &• w CPfRi * , O&i'* 1 NEVER
V r) C\ 3 ‘Nt.tD, CUT OF ORDER.
N0 fn
inrOf UQME r -i
JUUSdPIftli LU11MW
1/ 30 UNION SQUARE NEW YORK,
r ^\0^ 0 0 ^AN^ mass. GA. *
ILL .
r 0 R SALE BY
J. W. DARRACOTT. I
__
1 IG0R0USHEALTHro«M,EN
l
PHOF.
rp ZL&&SS>1$ A ©BTC!*
, a »flieal Ckn
rc2
bukA S
‘ ItfsSScy, ‘ ‘‘ lA“ *
^
s^-T«tcd
7 o« by a« 11
cf cax.
3 T^iAh “
P ACKACi.
SEND ADDRESS
HARRIS REM20 Y CO.. V. "g Cl i. I
CtWHJortt. mth St., St. Lch:-, Be.
% ."tr, Til c it
WEP VQV8 D?B!L1T7,
crgHci? weakness»n 1
cay inti bvmirm ob
emre ■k.Ufal <lls<ris»t^, tdBmg
frora youthful phy*iciao* Sad»«cri-
1 sawttftTir?:
no*. t:-a.ior.v: rk fa while es:‘a |
en let iu ywt t?* j
. A*. j'A fxAtki tnyoiA nt j i
f.o ctLcr hf prcvaflouj for cialTN
xcn. !ic»
troubles. C' t our Irr .lira
h J:tt msl tri J ftp. I
:Arn itSto/n»ot frtots befor t 1
t;UCt ‘IsCWh'.M. |
s r <ty tf.v.liiiftch/.l 1
thvuusu It, t.A dots no- In¬
ttrfcre v- Hh ftttcnMoc to Li’!*
iocm*
entlfl'i rini,'. i.
Growin-j a:.1 r< ■Tihf> ths
tion. iJir m to
oftii-'••ft,?.: h.-.V' V kU t\,f
ei'cls-ifiv ;fi.t A V .f
TLoatt*
■ f C-. h U: j
■
“ •*• '•
’ j
*t'i
Engines, Gins, Saw Hills, Etc.
‘
i
PERKINS BROS.
-DEALERS IN
ALL KINDS MACHINERY.
«■(
m V- y
pi v
*>•1 U v: ■■ * I'M Ml "^
,
1 m
»■
m
m
jj The largest dealers in the South in Steam Engines, Boilers, Saw
9 Mills, Circular Saws, Steam Pumps, Boilor I’oeders, Jet Pumps, Steam
! 1 Gauges, Whistles, Piping, Wrenches, Shingle Machines, Planing and
| | Matching Horse Machinos, Water Wheels, Grist and Flouring Mills, Separa*
tors, Powers, Cotton Gins, Feeders and Condensers, Presses,
| | Plows, Brass Goods, Engine Fittings, Belting, Machinery Oil, etc.
DuT Second-hand Machinery at low figures. Get our prices before
[buying.
PERKINS BROS.,
ATLAUTA, CA.
3FJ3S3
S. H. MYERS,
(SUCCESSOR TO MYERS & MARCUS)
-JTOIBIBIEJIR. 11ST
®iy d;oodf(, jsfotioi^ ^ So^ieTy,
Boots, Slio®s, Hats and Cloth in?,
rpHE undersigned would resnectfnlly inform the merchants of Taliaferro and
I adjoining counties, that his by FALL that Stock has is now being been brought received to nd this in market. priwa
and assortment is unequaled business any is the establishment ever of a
A special feature of iny
WHOLESAL E—
BOOT SHOE AND HAT HOUSE
brought to Augusta, and we feel satisfied that it will be to the interest of par
ever stock before purchasing e’sewhere.
th&sers to examins oar
S, H. M YE IIS, 288 and 288 Broad St., Augusta, G«.
Mar-30 ’82-ly
lC\{l Ids}!! Ids}"' • • • fri.J.
E. LIEBSCHER'S «
BOTTLING WORKS
Corner Jackson and Ellis Streets, AUGUSTA, GA.
I S TAKE THE LIBERTY of iniorming the people of Taliaferro and adjoining
ecutules that I have considerably enlarged my businest facilities and I am now
re oared to furnish my patrons with the following articles at wholetale and retal
, AND SHIPPED TO ORDER.
1 aud lowest prices: ICE PACKED
at
CINCINNATI LAGER BEER IN 1-4 AND i-S REGS.
FRESH AND SALT WATER FISH. OYSTERS IN CANS SHELL & BULK
j 0 \ VE also added a BOTTLING ESTaBLISHMENT to my already article exten
| rive business, and I am now prepared to furnish you with a first-dasa of
Bottled Bi*r. It is the best in the market and recommended highly for its lead
mg qualities especially so by some of our leading physician?, also by a great num
y.f or our best merchants and citizens......
that will give goods fair trial, and , also , that „ , you will tinily
Hoping you my a
rive me a share of your patronage. I remain, RESPECTFULLY,
E LIEBSCHER, Augusta, Ga.
83-ly.
ffl i PURGATIVE
/####/
And will cnroplKfcely change the blood in tho entire system In three months. Any
person who will .aki, 1 Fill each nlrfht from 1 to weeks, may be restored to sound
health, if sur.h a thing be, possible. For Female Complaints those Fill* have no equal.
Physicians use them for t.Ve cure of LIVKB and KIL1NEV diseases. Sold everywhere.
or Hrr.t by mail for »3c. in stamps. Circular* free. I. 8. JOHS90S A CO-, Boston, Matt.
r K pB3BSeXr Croup, Asthma, Bronchitis, Venrol
Kl», UbeumatiMDs Johnson aNO
a 1>V U»e) NK will MNI.MKNT liMianiAneouftJj (/or Internal relier.- ih*** and Ertemml ternbio
, \ '■ ‘ 1$ jf p ttMflm, out iivci) Vrirvcnut/U of rtf-ril ti n. ami i'n-.e Is Information better by v ill mail. pinmlvely than Don cure. that t delay cure will aave Din a atom e many cases eat*
' r; yp l.i IIMSNT -Q JUEH lnfuu nzT. Bl^dlnir at tho LnnT* Hoam
*; i.tj'ih, Chronic Diurrn'sa ■ Dyr JOllsSON ontdrv, < j,ulera Morbttn, Kidney I roubles, arid
■ l i <‘Ar f u\ «a*a free. I. r- k 0O.» lJoston, Ma«v
'*
id %
idle
: . i j i f.\ih 3
' > oiera.fto. Sold every wf.ere.orser.t by ma!l forMc.1*
f"rr hrd hi Isrt'f- rnttn, prioe 31 . 0 TJ: by mail. $ L2 Ql
• i-rs r»
A MiMvntu suddenly stopped in his
iiutou aud sang a hymn. “If the mem
»-=m of the chair arc to do the talking,
OXpl&iDfiu. 1 they certainly ” ml thfkTT V ill yxirniIt
me to , do 7 .r. khe oJnmnff singing. Ana A tnen thinfTa tmngs
in the neighltorhood OI tho Organ DO'
come more quiev,
Csm^S^ -.EVi VVIj T JLVg.
Treated. MSS
mnwlics. DeformitiM Ca l f ' wr.'f f*r-list of
question* to \ir triswered by those An. ri»g tr«iLtm«nt by moiL
***************** ^ «h*»ra 4 <tre-,%
^andle»raiK>ntethlngtntlM-lr • 4 v*Btagw. Itlsnbtatrqu,/
Dr. f. !.. La BA RDF, and Phy-iri** m fharga
c«atr%ix« 4 .*.s»r*.ismtuir. moloto^ %».. m.
<i^-c*aor ly Dr. Huu #*i