Newspaper Page Text
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Ol.lIME 17
in
JSm%.
Unfailing Spec flc for
DISEASE.
OllVIr CVIWIDTfllMQ UIViO ■ Bitt.r or bad taste in
I i mouth; tongue
white rr covered with a brown fur; pain id
i l K . i, a ck, sides, 01 joints—often mistaken
itneuinatisin; sour stomach; loss of appe¬
tite; sometimes nausea and water-brash,
indigestion; flatulency and acid eructations;
bowels alternately costive and lax;
loss of memory, with a painful sensation
having failed to do something which
lo have been done; debility; low spirits;
thick, yellow appearance of >he skin
eyes; a dry cough; fever; restlessness; if
urine is scanty and high colored, and, sl¬
owed to stand, deposits a cediment.
SIMMONS LIVER REGULATOR
IPVBEL1’ VEGETABLE)
Is generally used in the South to arouse the
T rpid Liver to a healthy action. It acts
w sordinary efficacy on the
.
Liver, Kidneys and Bowels.
AN ErveCTUAL SPECIFIC Foil
n.ilai iK. Hovel Oomplainm
Clro|>op*la. Hick Hr» aclie,
t'onotipatlou, Billiouineai,
Htilney Attectloiu,
nenial DepreuloD, Col.c.
Universally admitted to be
THE BEST FAMILY MEDICINE
i I'hiidreb, for Adults end for the Age
0.11,1 ft K.Vll.VF,
I.as our Z Stamp in red on front of Wrapper.
H. Zeiiin & Co., rmladelphia, Pa..
Soi.FFKOPRiBToas. Price $1 00
PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY
DR. JOHN L. STAPLETON,
PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON,
tiKIFFIN, : : : : GEORGIA,
Office—Fron* Room. up Stairs, News Build
ing Poplar Residence, street. rt W. pt II. attention Baker given pjace on to
calls, cay or ffiglit. janSlddcwtim
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
ATTORNEY AT LA W
HAMPTON, OEOEOIA.
Practices in all the State and Federal
Courts. oclOJ&wly
JNO. J. HUKT,
attorney at law,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Office, 31 llill 8treet, Up Stairs, over J. H.
W! ite’s Clotliing Store. mar22d«&wly
n D1SMUKK. N. M. COLLINS
DISfVlUKE & COLLINS.
LAWYERS,
GRIFFIN, GA.
i 'diet,first room in Agricultural Building.
I a; a i rs . mt.i l-d&wtf
TH08. R. MILLS,
TTORNEY AT LAW,
GRIFFIN, GA.
Ait! practice in the State and Federal
C Office, over George & Hartnett’s
e .iucr. nov2-tf.
on n sTs .vvtr mar. t. dav i k h
STEWART & DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George it Hartnett’s, Griffin, Ga.
tvt;i practice in the State and Federal
tan!.
'ARIGHT,
**” '7 AM) JBWn.l ;■
ulii-'KlN, t A
till? Mint, I p over J. H. W liito,
, <i to. 1 *.
.J. 1*. NlCHOI>,
agent the
Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
surance Company,
Of Milwaukee, TCis. The most reliable Ir.
uranee Company in America, sugSMly
HOTEL CURTIS,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA.
Under New Management.
A. G. DANIEL. Prop'r.
LiT I’o-ters meet all trains. feblodly
New Advertisements
The Art of Advertising !
For $10 we will in&hrt 4lines(32 words) in
Million copies of Daily, Sunday or
j^eekly ®one iu 10 Newspapers. day*. Send Tlie order work and check will all to be
CEO. P. ROWELL * CO.,
10 SPRUCE ST., N. Y
mail 'T® for P a 3()cts. S® Newspaper Catalogue sent by
GRIFFIN GEORGIA, SATURDAY MORNING, MARCH 3 1888
Slea.ui'.'mci!* ,,f Human IJcIngs.
Dr. Edwunl Hitchcock, Jr., of Cornell
university, read a jxuier on the uses of
physical measurement to the individual.
In the attempts to establish anthropome¬
try on a scientific basis the weight of in¬
dividuals was first taken as u standard,
but this had to be abandoned, and bo
thought we could now say with a certain
degree of exactness that hitman measures
increase with the height. It is extremely
difficult, if not indeed practically inipos-
siblo, to secure the exact dimensions of
any i. attempted man. Especially is this so when it
tc obtain the measurements
of the chest and shoulders. Six oxj>crts
might examine the same individuals, and
their measurements would probably all
differ. The testing of lung enpapitv is
very variable, tome individual ; giving
losuhs which are of value, while others
do not use the thoracic muscles at all,
but simply bring into play the muscles
of the pharynx. Some foreign countries,
recognizing the difficulties in the way of
obtaining exact measurements of parts
which were liable to vary, had adopted
the length and breadth of the head, car,
foot and finger, and the height of a man
in the sitting position, as the best, mak¬
ing use of them in descriptions of crimi¬
nals.—Science
rtie Greatest Cm-o on Earth for Wllllw
, jo Core ire more quick nuiclily Jv rvm-fn
nv.re than than any any other ot her kaown fcsorvn rera-&$
l&gf .SSSfMi \tro, PlmriKV, Fro:
J Iiu kqche, Sores,
MSolatica. wounds, Quinsy, Sore Ilci
TooUiai ' f *'• 1 Ik*, toAlo. Rpraii ^Sold”by *■- rissS * all ffl,
~ '"»nro > f/r-rff. Ufi boars cm
a
ti’.KMirr’o / '**■'*- prr--r.*\u\ Jfj.oi'.-n-l Trade-Atari:, >.<.-vt-r «fc Co., and on
A. <j. Sol-
j Proprietor*, i.nore, AM., U. 8. A. uq
OS. BOLL’S 08B8H SYBli?
Forth- cure of Corghs,Colds, Hoarse¬
ness, Whoopir- ./roup. Cou'h, Asthma, Incipient Bronchitis, Con*
sumpl .-'g .'I f.r the relief cf con-
sums:'..' ci’--. In advanced siages
of tl:.. For Fair, ty ell Drug-
Kirin :»3 c
April Sheriffs Sales.
TTI71LL VV BF. SOU) ON'TUB FIRST TUF.8-
day in April next, be ween th« le¬
gal hours of sale, before tbe loor of tbe
Court House, in tbe city of Griffin, Spalding
County, Georgia, the following described
property, to-wit:
’the house and premises of John Keller,
situated and lying in Africa district of Spald
ingcounty, Georgia, and bounded McIntosh on the
east by Kumspe.t, on the si uth by
road, west by Central HR., also known as tbe
plac • whereon John Keller resided in Janua¬
ry, 188S. Levied on and sold by virtue of lien
ft ia issued from Spaldiug Superior Court in
favor of 3. P. Newton andP. L. Newton,
administrator of C. F. Newton, vs. John
Keller. 1 enant in possession legally notifi¬
ed. $3 00.
Also, certain at the same time and Line place, will be
sold a lot of land in Creek dis¬
trict, in hundred Spalding county, Georgia, contain¬
ing two acres more or King’s less, bounded
on tbe ea t by the road trom bridge
to Blakely Fayetteville, Bagwell, on the the south by Line by land Creek, of
on west
and on the north by laud of S R. Dorough,
whereon the defendants H, \V. Johnson and
Francis Johnson now reside. Levied on aud
sold by virtue of a mortgage ti fa issued from
Spalding Superior ft. i ourt iu favor of S. E.
Iverson vs. \V. Johnson and F ancis John
son. Tenaris in possession legally notified.
$ 6 . 00 . time and place, will
Also, at the same be
sold twenty acres of land off of land lot No.
149 in the third district of originally Usury,
now Spalding and county, land Georgia, which being Willie iu a
square being the resides; on bounded
Weaver, colored, now
south by lleraules Bedeir and west by John
M. Brown. Levied on as property of dt fend
nut, to satisfy two Justice Court fl fas issui d
from the 1001 st District, G. M , of Spalding
County, one in favor of Fannie II. Woodruff
vs. Mrs Willie Pritchard and one in favor
of Amelia E. Johns m vs. Willie Pritchard.
Levy made by J. C. Little, L. C., and turned
over to me. Teuant in possession $6 legally
notified. u0.
Also, at the same time and place, wilt be
sold fifteen acres of lanu off of lot No. 115 in
the 1008th District G. M. of Spalding Comi¬
ty, Georgia, bounded as follows: east by
lands of D. P. Elder and G. \V. Sneed, south
by 'and of G . W. Si e*d, west by laud of J. J.
Chambers, and north by land of J. M. Tay¬
lor. Levied on and sold by virtue of a tax
fi fa for State and County tax for y ear 1887 iu
favor of State and County vs. VV. T. H. Tay¬
lor, trustee for Martha Taylor. Levy made
by B. C. Head, L. C., and turned over to me.
Tenant in possession legally notified. $6.0J.
Also, at the same time and place, will be
sold ten acres of land off of lot No. 199, off
of the west corner of said lot, in the 1068th
district G. M., of originally Henry, now
Spalding County, Georgia, bounded on tha
east and south by said lot, west by land of
Jas. Akins, and north by laud of J. J. Cham-
bers. Levied on aud sold by virtue of one
tax li f* issued bv J. W T . Tvavis, T. C., in fav
or of State aud County vs. James A. Reeves.
Levy made by B. C. Head, L. C., and turned
over to me. J. A. Reeves, tenant in posses¬
sion, legally notified. $6 00.
Also, at the same time and place, will be
sold leu acres of land, the same being off of
the southeast corner of lot No. 49 of the
liGStb district G. M. of originally Henry, now
Spalding County, Georgia, bounded as fol¬
lows: east by land of C L. Dupree, south by
land of S. C. Milam, west by land of E G.
Feudal!, north by said lot. Levied on and
sold as the property of J. J. Beasley for State
and Coonty taxes for the year 1887, by virtue
of a tax fi fa issued by J. VV. Travis, T. C.,
in favor of Stale aud County va. .1 . J. Beasley.
Levy made by B C. Head, L. C., and turned
over to me. J. J. Beasloy, tenant in posses¬
sion, legally notified. $6.10.
R. 8 CONNELL. Sheriff S C.
PNEUMONIA A GERM DISEASE.
Salt! lo lie Infectious but Not C'ontngtoiiSi
I’n-sli Air at.,1 Kxerelsc.
And now the theory is held that pneu¬
monia, too, is to lie classed as a germ dis»
ease. The authority for this opinion it
Dr. A. (>. Sieliert, a German-American
physician of New York, one of the most
competent authorities on the subject in
America, and an indefatigable investiga¬
tor on modern scientific methods of tht
causes of pneumonia, and especially tlw
degree to w Inch the weather furthers tbit
disease.
‘■It is my lielief, certainly,” said Dr.
Sieliert, “that pneumonia is an infec¬
tious, though not a contagious, disease.
People do not take it from each other,
but they may take it from the sams
place. In my practice, as a very com¬
mon thing, in the same family, two or
more would have it. In a Bavarian
prison, out of ,500 inmates, sixty-two died
of pneumonia in one year in one ward.
Not another ward was touched. Dr.
Enuuereieh was the physician attendant.
Ho ordered tiro floor of this Ward to lie
torn up. Beneath it there was found a
filling of refuse, impregnated with moist¬
ure in the proportion of 27 per cent, tc
the whole mass, from the washings which
had dripped through the boards. The
rubbish was analyzed under powerful
microscopes, and in it were discovered
miasms, which a few years ago Dr.
Friedlander had pointed out as being
found constantly in the lungs of people
who had died of pneumonia. This is ona
indication.
The infectious diseases begin with a
sudden chill. So does pneumonia. Pneu¬
monia lasts generally from seven to nine
days, disappearing with a crisis and a
profound sweat, and when the crisis is
past, the patient, though weak and ex¬
hausted, is otherwise perfectly well.
This is the character of fever and the in¬
fectious diseases. Again, among people
exposed even to the severest conditions of
winter weather in the open air pneumo¬
nia is a thing almost unknown. The
Arctic explorers in the extremes of ice
and snow and in pure air had no pneu¬
monia. They had many other diseases,
though, incident to cold and hardships.
Pneumonia occurs in summer as well as
tn winter, proving that cold is not an in¬
dispensable cause. All physicians of
much practice have found cases of pneu¬
monia originating in the same house at
different times of the year, and it is fre¬
quently the c.ose that those who have it
once have it again. The latter fact is
well known. An explanation of this,
which is at least allowable, is that the
locality is the cause of the disease rather
than special susceptibility in the people
attacked by it.
“Pneumonia is a house disease, as is
the case, according to my belief, with
inflammatory rheumatism and diphtheria,
[n the warm air of the house the system
is made sensitive to the cold, but the cold
is only the producing cause. It prepared
the coddled lungs for the pneumonia poi¬
son which had its real origin in damp and
iirty rooms or cellars.
“What i i the cure? Well, the steps to
the cure h.ive unhappily and advanced but
little. But t he relief the prevention
ire—no medicine and plenty of fresh air.
[f you have consumption, a dangerous
sold, or the fear of pneumonia, I should
say, if you cannot fresh air anywhere
?lse, go to the Arctics for it; but get that,
it all events, if you want to live. A con¬
sumptive who followed my advice lived
two years longer than any expectations
had been held that he could live. What
was the advice? No medicine and a voy-
ige in September down the Atlantic
;oa.st. with directions to keep on deck as
long as was up, rain or shine, and to
sleep with the port hole open, except when
it rained, ilis friends prophesied that lie,
being seemingly in the last stages of con¬
sumption, would come hack in tlireo
weeks a corpse. In three months he
same back with an added weight of fif¬
teen pounds, lie lived two years longer,
pursuing i the fresh air regimen. On his
leathbe ho told me that the ojien air
Pad given him those two years. His was
i genuine case of tuberculosis, too.”
“What, then, is the connection lietween
:ho weather and t ho cause of pneumonia,
if. as you believe, pneumonia is a germ
disease?”
“No po.^oii can enter the blood except
through a raw surface; and it is only
where the respiratory tract lias been irri¬
tated that the poison germ c. .i enter the
lungs. ’ ’
“What weather, then, prepares the
iiings for the reception of the poison
seed?"
“Whenever .you find three things-
humidity, cold and a wind of over Fifteen
miles an hour—look out for pneumonia.
February is pneumonia’s carnival month,
and by a- aal statistics, I have compared
the weather constituents for each day for
a space of three years, with GOO cases of
pneumonia occurring during that time.
In this comparison the facts are that regu¬
larly on the days of humidity, cold and
high wind the pneumonia statistics reach
their top mark. This is not theory; there
is the record. The worst pneumonia ac¬
count is not necessarily on the coldest
days, for with extreme cold there is very
probably no extreme humidity. It is the
two together that ravage. Dry cold
makes no such score. Consumptives who
thrive w< 11 in the high and dry cold of
Dav IK'S, Switzerland, in winter, suffer
most in May.”—Chicago Times.
Water courses andmardicsara tin in 1
• f fever and auge; Laxador has proved a
most valuable preventive of malari i and an
efficacious diseasex- remedy in the treatment of
malarial
Nothing stnpefjing or dansrerous, no laud.
anumor Opium, enters into the composition
of taat famed remedy. Dr. Ball’s Baby
Strop Price 25 ct«.
WHY WE LAUGH.
A MISSOURIAN’S VIEWS OF PRO-
TEI TION AND POLITICS.
>Ve Hope He Will Thaw Out Enough
by Next November to Know What
I he News !• Laughing at.
The following letter was receivoJ
yesterday and can be answered just
as well in tbe paper as anywhere else,
especially as we have no more than
enough time, to get up the amount
of copy that an insatiat#*publie de¬
mands:
Grangktown, Mo., Feb, ”(>,1888,
Editor Griffin News Griffin Ga— •
Dear sir what in Sam Pach his lie
come of my News have Reed only 5
copys since 1 was in your office Last
October. Looses Can it Be possible that it
its way hunting free Trade
c nnpany, through ohio. or Does it
Just get tired. & stop on the wav
which is it
it is A Vary Welcome Visitor
when it come & More so if it would
come ofeener. Though Not ot my
church Though thair is Vary Little
Difference Between us. you are for
Cleveland & Free Trade & I am Not.
I am for Bob Lincoln & you are
Not. if l was in georoia Raising
cotten & goobers I wouident give
A snap for Protection, if you was
m Missouria: Raising Hog & Beef
To feed Miners and Factory hands
you would want A Little Protection
spread on in places* But Dont say
any thing about it. & we can have A
good Laugh at them that Dont Know
anything about it.
We have had A pretty soiled win
ter since Christmas, A Regular ©hi
timer trom way Back; from zero o
28 Below & stil at it. zero this Morn
mg. But No Bodoy Froze to Death
in this Part of the Country, though
we have 8 or 4 feet of snow Drift
dong our hedges & Lanes & vve may
find some when it thaws out. But it
is Mtssourian A cold Day when you Did freeze he A
& if you when
thawed out in the Spring ho would
want to know what you were Laugh
ing at.
Success to you & yours. I ain
Most Respectfully yours for Bob.
Tee broad and comprehensive view
which the tvriterer takes, not only of
politics and political economy, but
of chirograph)*, grammar, capitalize
tion and punctuation, does indeed tn
able us to “have A good Laugh at
them that Dont know anything
about it;’ while his cheerful way of
looking at the weather and his liberal
willingness to be taxed for the privi
lege of selling llog & Beef To feed
a few Miners & Factory hands is
enough t make u pessimist smile, or
give a ftce iia.iti the grins. And
that is what is the matter of the
News, that it docs not reach him any
better. ! tie :illumine griffin at the :
top has t i • • : i .'augh ns it g <s
througn the snow at.d mortgage t i t¬
ered farms of Indiana, Illinois and j
Missouri and sees the limners shiver¬
ing in their shoddy protected ever
coats as they wade out to feed their
Bog& Beef, hugging the tradition
of Bob Lincoln and the delusion of
protection to keep themselves warm.
It makes us laugh to think that A
Little Protection spread on in pl aces
makes a Missouria farmer thankful
f ir the smad favor of not being froz
en to dea , l). , Down here, , Raising ,, . . ,
cotten &■ goobersJtiid believing in j j
Free Trad , we revel in a balmy cli
mate and o ir faculties are i 6
numbed tha we can not tin ietstand
when we r• o bring robbed, if it is
oj!v in plow*
Our correspondent should iu::io
down and thaw out and maybe he
can find out what we ware Laughing
at.
* * * Delicate diseases < f eiterh
sex radically cured. Send 10 cents in
stamps for book. Address, World’s Dis
paDsarv Medical Association, Buffalo
NY ‘
Religions Notice.
Beginning with Ash Wednesday,
the 15th inst., there will be Evening
Prayer in St. George’s church at 4:30
p. m., every day in Lent.
Lemons! ^ Lemons
Lemons 25 cents per dozen,
We have to-day
String F/sh,
Stud.
Fresh Oystirj.
MIXED - PICKLES.
-O—
200 Lbs Fancv Candv.
j Z
o
GO
<
CJ
«r
cc
<
iu —J
1 :» CJ)
I
C. W. CLARK &. SON. hfil ■:L
EFFECTS OF EARLY RISING.
»,.*“• —
Let us begin by snying that every jier- j
son needs a certain average amount of
simp in twenty-four hours, and that, ex-
eept best in extremely rare cases, the jiereon !
preserves health by taking that av-
enigo amount every day. beginning at
the same hour, and of course ending at :
the same hour, day after day. ;
In the next place, remembering that
if we observe ttio rule of taking a uni¬
form amount, of sleep each night, the
question of what hour we shall rise is de¬
termined by the hour of retiring, we may
say that, with yiost people, the morning
hours are the best and freshest of the
day. truth, This for, in does considering not cover this question, the whole it [
must be borne in mind that we are really
deciding beginning, between an hour, or less time,
at the and the same time at
the end of tho day.
Again, the amount of sleep needed is
not ti.o uuuo for all persons. Conse¬
quently, if all are to rise at the same
hour, they must retire at different hours.
One of the most amusing conceits of
the Rev. Dr. Edward E. Hale represents
a fanner anil his wife, with a frenzy for
early rising, to have argued, from tho
success of 0 o’clock as a uniform break¬
fast hour through tho year, that they
could gain an hour a day by breakfasting
at 5.
Tho experiment worked so well that
they presently pushed the breakfast hour
back to 4 o'clock, ar.d so gained two
hours a day. Again they moved tho
hour back to 3 o’clock—and so they went
on, until they had gone backward through
tho hours three times, with the result of
gaining three whole days every day they
live.
Obviously one may rise too early, and
may in consequence bo less “healthy,
wealthy and wise” than by choosing an
hour more reasonably early. And, final- j
Vi no rulo covers all cases. Beyond a
doubt there are persons, young and old,
more especially old, who cannot rise at
what is to most people not too early an
hour, without extreme discomfort, and in
some instances at the expense of health.
It makes no difference how early they
retire. The addition of an hour’s sleep
at the beginning does not make them
wakeful a moment sooner; or, it happens
that they cannot sleep at the beginning of j
the night if they try. Such people, if
the pitied. affliction is a rpal one, are to bo j
Now our readers will seo tho comfort -
we offer to late risers. We say to them i
that if they cannot rise early they ought |
not to do so. Leaving out of the ac- i
count those whose work compels them to !
ho up late at night, we estimate that one ,
person in fifty is unable to rise early |
without harm.
The rest of those who do not get up to ;
breakfast—are lazy.—Youth’s C-ompan- I
ion.
IRtky of tho Teeth.
There are very few people in the world
who haven't something the matter with
one or more of their teeth.
The upper teeth are the most liable to
decay every time. Tho lower teeth are
often perfectly sound when the others are
in a bad condition.
Rotting of the teeth usually com¬ J
mences in the dentine of which the body
of the tooth is composed immediately lie-
,
low the enamel, a yellow or brown spot
ind : -i ,: :h..t the affection has l-eanr. I
—*■" .
J . aud bilious headache, aud ad de
ran meats of stomach and bowels, cur ;
ed I y Dr. Pierce's “Pellets ’ — or anti
bib us grannies. 25 cents a vi d, No
cheap boxes to allow waste.of virtues,
By druggist*.
________^___
ittnil Railroad Time la file
northward.
tri)>*.-vine ,,, Special . . (Sunday ,,, , only ;
..
7:45 a. to Birnesviilo Accommoda «•! '
5:57 “
1 a cr:;“ . .■.<>. d. o.ll a. m.
Passenger No. 11. 11:31 a. m.
r> Passenger and , Mail v- No. , 1, 4:01 ,
p. m
Passenger No. 13, 9:05 p. in
SOUTH WARD.
i» aid M ii; I 2d
a. m.
Passenger No, 14, 11:20 p. m.
Passenger No. 12, 4:0) p. m.
B irnesvilie Special (Sunday only)
4:58 p m. Barnesville Accommoda
tion (daily except Sunday) 7:10 p. m.
Passenger No. 4. 8:43 p. m.
NUMBER 31
w -n
PICKLES, * all
-
Mango Pickles, m
It rd Head Cabbage tn m
r* m
Turnips, — si
* pot atoes. ;
★ r 1 m
Ltirge-I (otlon Mill in iheWorld.
If fi r.eent consular report M lo
•» “«i’«>> ■* >"»• «■•» ;
cotton inin hy the side of
which the largest mill in America ?:
t Iook gmftlI . Tbe Ne# Orleans
Cotton World, spsikiog . of it, .
aayi: ‘
Wo learu from a f ore ig Q consular
report recently published ^ that tbe ,
largest cotton mill in the world i*
‘.Lat of Krahnholro, in Russia. This
colossal establishment contains 340,
000 epindlea find 2,200 looms, dii
poses of a force of 6JiJ) hori#
power, aud gives en; ffoyment to
7,000 bands. The re power is
obtained from a fall vet Ms
rowa, which actaa'.. . turbines,
which were manufactured iu AngS
burg. Four of these turbines pro
duco a forco of 4.000 horse powet
each, nnddisebarge 16,000 lines of
.
water per second, one hating been
mounted in 1867, since which time it
has worked night and u without
any repairs. The shafting of tbe
machinery represents 9,426 running
metres and w:,» supplied by a Bol
ton firm. The work people are
Russians and Esthonians, the latter
being especially faithful and labor
ious. Tbe week's work is calculated
at 79 hours, and the wages my
from 12 to 38 roubles per month The
technical portion of the staff consists
a | IUO g t entirely of Englishmen-
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Ttm Powd , r neV6 r vanes. A inartel o
parity, utrsogth and whole»omo«M. Mor.
economical than the ordinary kinds, and caa
not be sold m cornpetiUm with the araMM*
of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate Baxnw
Powders. Sold only in cans. Kota
Powdkk Co., 106 Wall Street, New York
oet 2 -dAwlv-ton mlnmn l» f or tit nave,
A. sice to Mothers.
Mbs. V,: low’s Booth mo Siacr
for chi! rei etbing, is the prescription and
of one of i , j best female none*
physieiaus In the United States, and
has been u?d for forty years with never
failing mice i by millions of mothers
for their chi.dreu. During the procew
il
eatery and diarrhoea, griping in the
bowels, and wind colic. By giving
health to the thild. Price 25 cents a
g ott!e augeod.kwly
A NEW BOOK! Full or uew Me«
- ON | >nd valuable tu¬
CABBAGE i tor mat tot.
j Although actual-
AND | ly worth many dol¬
CELERY. | lars to growers, a
copy will be mal'od
1 fro,' to anj person
who will send itr<> stamps and the add esa
of three or n ore extensive Cabbage. Caalt
flower or • • le growers.
IMiCt TII-LIISHlir.
la tfimmtr, lsek’a Ce» Wm
feWJAwIm.