Newspaper Page Text
tiffin Daily New
VOLUME 17
Griffin, Ga.
Gridin is the liveliest, pluckiest, most pro¬
gressive town in Georgia. This is no hyper¬
bolical description, a3 the record of the last
Aye years will show.
During that time it lias buiit and put into
most successful operation a $100,000 cotton
‘actory and is now building another with
nearly twice the capital. It lias put up a
a ge iron and brass foundry, a fertilizer fac¬
tory, an immense ice and bottling works, a
, sash and blind factory, a broom factory
' opened up the finest granite quarry in the
United State 0 , and has many other enter¬
prises in .ontemplation. It has secured
tnothc .ulroad ninety miles long, and while
J ocatcu on the greatest system in the South,
the Central, lias secured connection with its
important rival, the East Tennessee, Virginia
nd Georgia, Ithasjust secured direct inde-
H pendent connection with Chattanooga and
v the W» st, and has the President of a fourth
railroad residing here and working
to its ultimate completion. With
t* live white and three colored
churches, it is now building a $10,000 new
Pre-byterian church. It has increased ite
population by nearly one fifth. It has at-
| r^ v ’ :> ound its borders fruit growers from
neany eery State in the Union, until it is
I now surror ,ded on nearly every side by or¬
chards ar: i vineyards. It is the home of the
J grape an < its wine making capacity has
doubled every year. It has successfully
inaugurated a system of public schools, with
» seven years curriculum, second to none.
This is part of the record of a half decade
and simply shows the progress of an already
admirable city, with the natural advantages
of having the finest climate, summer and
winter, in the world.
Griffin is the county seat of Spalding
county, situated in west Middle Georgia, with
a healthy, fertile and ro’li ig country, 1150
feet above sea level. By Ihe census of 1890, it
will have at a low estimate between 6.000 and
f,000 people, and they are allot the right
sort—wide-awake, up to the times, ready to
;■ welcome strangers and anxious to secure de¬
sirable settlers, who will not be any less wel¬
come if they bring money to help build up
the town, .There is about only one thing we
need badly just now, and that is a big hotel.
YVc have several small ones, but their accom¬
modations arc entirely too limited for our
business, pleasure aim health seeking guests.
If you see anybody that wants a good loea-
ioa for a hotel in the South, just mention
Grill! n. Gbiffin
Griffin is the place when tiie
News is published— daily and weekly— the
nest newspaper in the Empire State of the
• Georgia. Please enclose stamps In sending
for sample copies.
This brief sketch will answer July 1st,
1868 . By January 1st, 1889, it will have tobc
changed to keep up with the times.
ri '..SESSIONAL DIRECTORY
HEADQUARTERS Protective
Leak’s Collecting and
Agency of Georgia. •
GRIFFIN, ------- GEORGIA.
S. G. LEAK, Manager.
{3TSend your claims to '-'. G. Leak and
correspond only with him at headquarters. for
Cleveland & Beck, Resident Attorneys
GriUin. may9d&w8in
HENRY C. PEEPLES,
A C T O R N E Y A I L A W
HAMPTON, GKOBQI.i.
Practices in ull the State and Federal
| Courts. oet9d&wly
JNO. J. HUNT,
A rTORNEY AT LA W
OllIFFIN, GEORGIA.
w . Office, fit Hill Street, Up Stairs, over J. II
[, White’s Clothintr Btoro. mar22d<&wly
»• DISML’KE. N. M. COLL1X8
DISMUKE & COLLINS,
LAWYERS,
(1KTFF1N, GA.
office,first room in Agricultural Building
.stairs. marl-dtkwtf
THOS. R. MILLS,
TTORNEY AT LA W,
GRIFFIN, GA. Fedeial
A ill practice in the Slate and
C a rts. Office, over George & Hartnett’s
Mr nov2-tf.
o. cra vv.ir a far. t. davis.
% STEWART & DANIEL,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
Over George A Hartnett's, Griffin, Ga.
: Will practice in the State and Federa
ourts. ianl.
D. L. PARMER,
attorney at la w
WOODBURY, : : GEORGIA.
riouapt attention given to all business,
"ill practice in nil the Courts, and where-
ever business calls.
Collections a specialty. aprCJly
w ATCUMAKER c, s. wrighT,
AND JEWELER
Hill GRIFFIN, GA.
A Co.’s. Street, Up Stair? over J. H. White
~JTP. NICHOLE,
AflKNT tub
1 Northwestern Mutual Life In¬
fcr. fif Milwaukee, surance Company,
Wls. The most reliable Ir.
“pi*s re Company in America. ang28dly
I RIFFIN GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 18 1888
THE MOOD OF THE CZAR
file Poineiolon of Absolute Power Loud#
to a .Special Mental Di&oase.
Da Qnincey, in his wonderful study c t
the early Caesars, tho paper in which his
power of suggestive narrative and hia con¬
trol over tho resources of language are
perhaps seen at their best, is, so to speak,
driven by wonder at the wild willfulness
of his subjects to suggest that all the
Caesars of the Julian house were mad.
Caligula may have boon, though his
symptoms, as recorded by Suetonius, are
rather those of delirium tremens; but tho
theory which makes of the grand though
sinister statesman, Tilierius, who gave the
Roman monarchy its final impress, amat
of disordered mind in the ordinary medi¬
cal sense, will not readily be accepted at
correct. He was no more mat! than
Philip II, whose private life was much of
the same kind.
It would, as we read history, be far
truer to say that pow er, when really ab¬
solute, so absolute that the volition ia
executive and the necessity for self
restraint is unfelt, produces of itself a
special mental disease, which is not in¬
sanity, because it would disappear with
tho power, but has at intervals, like the
passion of children, many of its external
lymptoms and effects. Nero, the artist
ymperor, who was always seeking the
impossible, and whom the curly Chris-
tians believed to be tho veritable incarna¬
tion of evil, may bo said undoubtedly to
have suffered from it; so did one or two
of the Italian tyrants of the Rennaissancoj
•nd so, in our judgment, though it is •
disputable Power ixjint, did Ivan the Terrible.
of that sort, though it does not al¬
ways injure the mind—for several of the
Caesars and some of the emperors of
Delhi were men of splendid sanity and
judge*’at—when it happens to fall to a
man predisposed by inherited tendency
or by drink, or by special solitariness of
nature, undoubtedly weakens the re¬
straining force of the will and strength¬
ens impulse until many of his act*
resemble closely the acta of mailmen.
Half the great sovereigns of Asia, if their
private lives were accurately known,
would be seen to have had their charac¬
ters, so to speak, jioisoncd by power, as
directly as if they had !x«n poisoned with
one of the drags which temporarily dis¬
turb reason.
Drink, w ild and continuous drunken¬
ness with bail brandy, was tho prods*-
posing came in Peter the Great, and, it
is believed, in Theebaw, and probably in
the Emperor Buber, who, wise by day¬
light, would in tho moonlight occupy
himself in jumping from bettlement to
battlement of his palace, eighty feet from
tho ground. In Czar Paul tho predis¬
posing cause was probably an insane ten¬
dency, though that is not quite proved;
and in Alexander III it is a solitariness
almost beyond example. There is not a
man in the world more <? .-ply to be
The pitied loneliness than the of present kings, emperor of Russia.
a lonelines natu¬
rally resulting from their plaoe, which
hardly admits of friendship and does not
admit of equality, is always terrible, and
is frequently felt by themselves so sovercly
that they break through all restraints of
prudence and moral law in order to In
rid of it.—The Spectator.
Mud Batin ol Uu Vegas.
When it comes to genuine cures Laa
Vegas can show up some pretty tall
stories. Most of the cures are effected
by the mud baths, which are a novel
feature. The patient 13 plastered over
from head to foot with extremely hot
mud, made by mixing prairie loam with
the hot mineral water. The nose, mouth,
eye3 and ears are left uncovered. He in
then placed in a tub of the mud and left
there half an hour, after which his dirty
coating is scraped off. A shower bath of
the hot water follows, which then a plunge the In a
tank of it; after comes mas¬
sage of a professional; half an hour’s
siesta—tho patient, sleeping, WTapped in
a sheet, in a room the temperature of
which is about 98 degs.—and after this
another rubbing. If rheumatism sur¬
vives this treatment long the patient’s
only hope for relief lies in suicide.—At¬
lanta Constitution.
Known by Tbelr Oddities.
If you have ever visited an asylum for
the deaf and dumb you have noticed that
the patients at once name all visitors by
some peculiarity. If there be a slight
facial contortion or a peculiarity of mo¬
tion it ia instantly caught by the crowd,
represented in sign language, and so you
are henceforth designated by them.
Their names are much like those given
by Indians to children—“The Man with
One Eye Glass,” “The Man Who Has a
Mole Under Ilia Eye,” “The Man Who
Squits.” They know you by your dif¬
ferences. We are working on the same
plan when we describe our great men
and leaders. We know them by their
oddities. Grant Ls, in history, the man
who smoked and who kept silence. will A
man with no designative points Mau¬
never be accepted as a leader.—M.
rice, M. D.
Mongolian Beauty In American Drei*.
A Chinese lady in approved modern
fasliionable dress attracted a great deal
of interested attention in Broadway the
other morning. To any one overtaking
her the figure was that of a me diu m
sized girl dressed with exceptional ele¬
gance and taste. She wore a eilk dress
of a dainty green tint cut and slashed
and trimmed after the latest Parisian
Ideas, and a heavy black beaded passe¬
menterie cape over her shapely shoulder
gave a wonderful appearance of neatness
to her unquestionably slim waist Her
coiffure was stylish and becoming, and
she wore a chip straw hat of the latest
shape and of a delicate gray color, elab¬
orately and effectively trimmed.— New
York World.
&AKIM g
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
This Powder never vanes. A marvel of
purity, strength and wholesomness. More
economical than the ordinary kinds, and can
not be sold in competiton with the multitude
of low test, short weight, alum or phosphate
Powders. Hold on’y in cans. Rota'^Bakixo
Powckk Co., 106 Wall Street, New York
oti-ddnvly-tnp colnmu 1st nr i‘ 1, page.
THE STAR.
A. GREAT NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC
NEWSPAPER.
The Stab is the only New York newspaper
possessing tional Administration tho fullest confidence of the Na¬
and the United Dem¬
ocracy of New York, the p rlitical Hattie
ground of the Republic.
Jeffersonian Democracy, pure and simple,
is good enough for the Stab. Single hand¬
ed among the metropolitan press, it has
stood by the men called by the great Democ¬
racy to redeem the government from
twenty-five and years of Republican wastefulness
corruption and despotism to the South.
For these four years past it has beennnswerv
ing in its fidelity tho administration of Grov¬
er Cleveland, It is for him now—for Cleve¬
land and Thurman—for four years more of
Democratic honesty in our national affairs,
and of continued national tranquility and
prosperity. For people
who like that sort of Democracy
he Stab is the paper to read.
Tho Stab stands squarely on the National
Democratic platform. It believes that any
tribute exacted from the people in excess of
tlie demands of a government economically
administered is essentially oppressive and
dishonest. The scheme fostered and cham¬
pioned by the Republican miser, part-of making the
government a wringing and miliionsan
nually from the people locking them up
in vaults to serve no purpose but invite waste
fulness and dishonesty, it regards as a mon¬
strous crime against tho right of American
citizenship. Republican political jugglers
may call it ‘’protective taxation;” the Stab’s
name for it is robbery.
Through and through the Stab is a great
newspaper. Its tone is i arc and wholesome,
its news service unexceptionable. Each issue
presents an epitome of what is best worth
knowing of the world’s history of yesterday.
Its stories are told in good, quick, piotur-
eque Kdglish, and mighty interesting read¬
ing they Sunday are.
The Stab is as good as the best
class magazine, and prints about the same
amount of matter. Besides the day’s news
it is rich in spesial descriptive articles, sto
ries, snatches of current literature, reviews,
art criticism, etc. Bnrdctte’s inimatible hu¬
mor sparkles in its columns; Will Carleton’s
delightful letters arc of its choice offerings.
Many of the best known men and women in
literaturo and art arc represented in its col
unins, WeekLy Stab is large giving
The a paper
the cream of the news tliewirld over, with
special features which make it the in os
complete family newspaper published. The
farmer, the mechanic, the business man too
much occupied to read a daily paper, will
get more for his dollar invested in The
Weekly Stab than from any other paper
It will be especially alert dur ing the cam
paign, and will print the freshest and most
) e'iablc political news. Postage Free:
Terms to Scbscbibehs,
Every day for one year (including Sun
day................................. without Sunday, 6 00
Daily, one year......
Every day, hout six months................. Sunday, months.... A ■} uo w
Daily, wit six
Sunday edition, one year............... >
Weekly Stab, one year ................ 1 w
A free copy of The Weekly Stab to the
sender of a club of ten.
Special Campaign Offeb—Ihe
Weekly Stab in clubs of twenty-live or
more will be sent for the remainder of this
year for Forty cents for each subscription.
Address, THE STAR,
Broadway and Park Place. New York.
ST.KJHN’S C0LLE6Ejf*X of d *«“k Lni-
This Colic | enjoys inducted the by powers the Jesuit a rath
versity and $ * beautiful part
ers. It is situated in a very
part of New Fork County between the Har¬
lem R.AL.I. Sound. Every facility is giv¬
en for the best Classical, Scientific and Com¬
mercial Education. Board and tuition per
Year $300. Studies ie open Wednesday,
S< Src John’s'iIai.t., a Preparatory under the School direc¬ for
Boys from 10 to 12, is same
tion. Fer farther particulars apply to KE\.
John Scully, 8. J-, Pres- angHdAwlm
BBKMm’SKg * the U.r«,t »<1 tun?*.
ari*ini? from impure- blood ami exhaustion, The feebla
un<i sick, struKSmuK aprainst disea^, and elowljr <,f 2£?w5
MSS
lAf ESLEYAN Female INSTITUTE
VW _STAUNTON, VIRGINIA.—-'*
rU-, l«S..LADa September -i.t.. i - : «CJt» Os* the first SCHOod
»* S .NT 11
S >«'■ trow *P« to Je™ <S 60. r ,r Cnelogue wnt. ft
•o m Win. A. HARRIS, I). D„ PresMgBt siautoi,
Fresh Oysters!
Will have Frcsli Oysters to-day ! Fresh Fish all kinds,
Pork Sausage. Just received Bbl. Head Rice.
Fine White Head Cabbage, Onions.
Sweet and Irish Potatoes. Lemons 20 e. per dog.
G* W. Clark & Son
A SETTLEMENT REACHED!
PIKE COUNTY DEMOCRATS TO
HARMONIZE.
The Candidates Meet in Zebulon and
Agree Upoa a Primary as
the Best Course.
The candidates of both factions of
the Democratic party of Pike county,
met in Zebulon last Tuesday and
adopted the follow resolutions, for
the purpose of uniting the party:
Whereas, An unfortunate and
damaging division exists in the Dem
ocratio party of Pike county, grow
ing out of local issues, and
Whereas, We are on the eve ol
great national, state and county elec
tion in which the democracy of, the
entire country is interested, and
Whereas, The Republicans of the
entire country are organizing for the
recovery of lost supremacy, and
Whereas, Tne executive commit
tees of the two factions in this coun
ty have met today and failed to agree
upon a plan for adjustment of dif
Terences, and
Whereas, As patriotic citizens, wo
desire harmony in all things, and
above all things the supremacy of
Democratic principles and the Dem j
cratic party.
Therefore we, the candidates of
the two factions cf the county do
agree among ourselves to submit our
nameB, and claims to the Democratic
white voters of Pike county at a pri
mary election to be held in the differ
ent districts of the county on Sat
urday, 2‘2nd day of Sept. inst. Agree
ing hereby to submit to the result of
said election and to abide it in good
faith. In this election it is agreed
that no Republicans Gr third party
men be allowed to vote. Itisfurth
er agreed that the committeemen of
the two executive committees in the
different districts assisted by a third
man their own selection hold said
election under the same rules as
govern in such cases in the selection
of Repiesentatives, and that they tho
said managers, meet at the court
house at Zebulon on the the Monday
after tiie said election and consoli
date the vote and declare the result.
We rt quest furl her that the coun
ty papeis and the Griffin News
publish this aggreement.
John L. Gardner,
J. W r . Means,
J. H. M ITCHES,
J. F. Madden.
Let the democratic voters manifest
the same patriotism, thus relieving
Pike of tbi impending danger of be
ing represented in the next General
Assemb y by Republicans.
5,000 Yards Sea Island.
Will sell you—
25 yards Sea Island for 41.00.
12| yards Sea Island for 50c.
yards Sea Island for 25c.
Slightly damaged on the edge.
Worth double the money. Don’t
miss the opportunity. Call at ortce.
At New York Store.
An AutoDatlc Mftdleln* I>l»pen.er.
An American manufacturer of sugar
coated pills added to the attraction* of an
exhibit of bis product in London an in¬
genious pi co of mechanism, which
might have tieen intended to represent
the pbarma lit of the future. It nay in
the form of a cabinet prov ided with a
series of knobs or buttons, each inscribed
with the name of some malady for which
a remedy might be asked. The customer
puts * coin into a slit and presses the
button calling for the remedy lie requires,
when immediately a drawer flies out con¬
taining the article sought. This auto¬
matic dispenser of course makes no mis¬
takes. If the customer accidentally
presses the wrong button, he alopo is re¬
sponsible for the error. Is this really
what we are coming to?—S ci cnt i fla
American.__ _
Victims of a Tiro.
The London Lancet doubts that persons
who perish in burning buildings suffer so
much as lias been popularly supposed. and
The victim is generally made faint
pulseless by the carbonic acid or carlxmL
acid gas, and becomes insensible before
the fire reaches him.
AS A1LASTA FltiHI.
An Editor Severely (aued by a Promi¬
nent Lawyer
A sensational fight occurred in At
ianta Tuesday. There lias been
some trouble brewing, for the last
few days, between, Harry Jackson
and Tom Cobb Jackson on one side
and George Martin and J. C. Cam
bell on the other. Martin and Cam
bell, are editors of the Avalanche, a
weekly paper published in Atlanta.
The AvaLncbe came ont not long
ago containing an article fiercely
denouncing Captain Harry Jackson
who in a candidate lor the legislature
Tom Cobb Jackson replied to this ar
tide through other Atlanta papers.
The ccntrovercy continued until
Tnesday when Martin and Cambell
inserted a communication in the Con
stitution that proved very insulting
to the Jtckaonp. As soon as tho com
munication came out every one who
know the parties predicted that a
conflict would sorely be the conse
quenoe. These predictions were
verefied Tuesday afternoon- About
1 o’clock Captaiu Jackson, acoom
pained by two other friends, went
into Martin's office and severly chas
tised him with a walking cane. Mar
tin attempted to draw his pistol but
it was knocked from bis band by a
bystander. No one interferred until
Martin had received a severe drnb
bing. Just before this light occurred
Tom Cobb Jackson met Cnrabell on
the steet and walked deliberately up
to him and gave him a tremendroas
blow in the face with his fist which
knocked him down. lie then jump
ed upon him and beat him until he
was insensible. Martin and Cambell
both were badly done up but not
seriously wounded.
To Whom and W'here tl Went Lately.
It was Tuesday, August 7. 1888, Tuesday,
thq219th Grand Monthly Drawing of Tha
Louisiana State Lottery occurred uuder the T.
sole management La., (as and usual) Jubal of GenUa Early, G.
Beauregard, The prizes of ranged A . #300,- of
V'a. from f 100 to
000 and were distributed from Maine to Tex¬
as and California to Alaska. You want to
know to whom and where. No. 8.894 drew
the Firt Capital Prize of of #300,000, #1 It each, was
sold in fractions twentieths at
sent to M. A Daughiu, Mary New Orleans, La.:
one was held by Mrs. L. Callender,
New York city; one by Chaa. Wiess. Altoona,
Pa.; one by depositor, Frnnclsco, through Bal.joneby Wells, Joseph Fargo
A Co., Ban
Fishbough, 129 First 8t., Elizabeth, N. J.;
one byAmov Marsh, Klein, 99 Bell E- St., Kinsey Orange, SMt Chica¬ N. J.;
one by Peter
go, 111.; on by 8t- Yasillio Ferry, Grissaffi, Gretna. Ia; Front 8t.,
near Jackson one by
Ellis Richardson, Fort Worth, Tex.; one by
F. L. Dant, Bowland, Louisville, Ky., through Citizen’s
Nat’l Bank of Dak.: Ky,; on e by J. Hart- Ri¬
vard, Brownsville, one by Aug.
degen, Columbus, O.; the rest went else¬
where. Ticket No . 34,809 drew Second Prize
of #100,000also sold in fractional parts: one
went ro a party at Oxford, Moore, Mias., collected
through Bickham & 218 Oravier St.,
New Orleans, I>a,; York one to 8. Goldfarb, 192
Division St., New city; one to Alonzo
Edwards, Ithaca, N. T.; one to Stewart A
Wooldridge, Spiro, Mtoiiigan Mo.;
lud ; one to J, M. Gilliam,
one to O. G. Trepagnier. 8t. John the Bap¬
tist, La, Bonne Carre P. O.: the other por
Hons wens held by parties whose names Third sre
withheld. Ticket No. 53,283 drew
Prize |-’>«,OCX)-it was sold in twentieths: two
each w ent to Nat l Bank of Commerce, Kan¬
sas City, Mo., audJ. Beltramini, New Tork
city; one to Henry Hildenbrand.New York
city: one to Hugh Leddy, New York city;
one to a depositor, through Louisians Nat’l
Bank, New Oorleans, La ; one to Merchants
Bank of Atlanta, Ga. Ti« ket No. 85,709 drew
Fourth Prize of *25,000, one half of it went
to Ii. McManus, Omaha, Neb., ete. etc. Any
information desired can be bad on an appli¬
cation to M. A il-ir . Dauphin, New Orleans, Tuesday, La.
The whole well go over on
Oct. 9tl>, 1888. Take note ol date.
Advice to Mothers.
M.x Winslow’s SooTHUta Btscr
for children teething, female ia the pretcrip'i sad n
of one of the best nurses
phjKiciaui. in the United Btales, sud
has Lm» used for forty yean with never
failing z access by millions of mothers
for their children. During ia incalculable. theprooeoa
of teething its value
It relieves the child from griping pout, cures in dyt the
enterr and diarrhoea, giving
bowels, and wind and oolia th? By mother.
health to the child rests
Price 25 cents a bottle. augeodAwly
NUMBER HO
I HE COMMON WEALTH.
Tiie New* a* Gathered Over Georgia.
The merchants of Greenville are
making preparations for a tug fall
and winter trade.
The managers of the Dodge Coun
iv Fair Association are rapidly per
fee-ting all arrangements for an ex¬
hibit on Oct. 8,0 and 10.
Dr. F. VonKalosr, of xaeon, will
enters suit for #20,000 ’----
against the Georgia raiiroad, for inju
ries his wife received while changing
cars at Canuck a few days since.
The new bridge at CookVtn Heard
county, was displaced by the high
water ia New rivrr, and is now seat
tered about over the n> i >’>oring hot
toms. Tha timber* ....... placed
in position merely a.....fastened.
Mr. Wood will necesarily sustain eon
siderahlo loss.
Franklin News: We very much .v-
regret the necessity that compel* us
to send ont a half sheet this week,
but when our reader* consider our af
diction of a mother's death, end the
duty since of watching a very sick sis
ter, the only remaining immediate
relative, we feel assured that they
will bo abundantly satisfied.
Sam Clay, the negro who shot
James Sasser, another negro, a few
weeks ago in Dodge county,w»« arre*
ted Satnrday by a party of tarpea
tine distiller* headed‘by David Wil
Hams, Clay has been south of the
ocmolgee at work since the shooting
nntil Siturday, when be returned
and was arrested. Srsser said some
thing that Clay took exception to
and waylaid him aa he pawed, driv
ing a team, and shot him with bird
■hot from a double-dttrreeld gun.
Sasser is recovering.
Loo Cabiks were, in
the Hurrisoc-Tippeca of 1840
erected noe campaign the large cit
in
ies and villagee, end
used for holding hard politi
cal meetings. Barrels of cider
were placed in front of the cabins,
and tne ‘‘Log Cabin bard eider cam
paign the of most ‘40 enthusiastic u has passed of into history politi
as our
cal contests. Log Cabins have for
this reason a permanent Warner's place Log in
American history. Bnchu Remedies
Cabin Hops and
■nd “Tippecanoe” tonic bitters bare
secured a permanent place because
of their cxellence.
5,000 Yards Sea Island.
Will Sell yon—
25 yards Sea Island for $1.00.
12^ yards Sc* Island for 50c.
(ij yards Sea Island for 25c.
Slightly damaged on the Dob edge, 4
Worth donble the money. #
oiias tho opportunity. Coll at onoe
At New York Broat.
The Ruud Heaihward Made Easier.
You have Leo ill, we will suppose, and
re convalescing slowly. That is, you sre
tryiui; to pick up a little fleeb, to regain
some of your wonted color, to accustom
your stomach to more solid nutriment thou
ita recently enfeebled condition permitted
you to take. fiealthward? .low can you accelerate yew
snail's pace We ara warranted
by concurrent testimony In affirming, that
If yon will use twice or thrice a day HooMU
ter’s Stomach Bitters, an enabling medicine
of long ascertained materially parity and aided. tonic virtue*, It
that you will be jukes, and help* pro¬
mote* a flow of the gastric
the system to a** imitate the nourishment ol
which it stands so much In need. It reme¬
dies a tendency to coastloation without eow-
vulsing the bowels. The liver it stimulate#
PARKER’S G1NCER TONIC
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PUSS