Newspaper Page Text
-AND-
‘!Tp! tilflfcSfon.
St oouglas y± oiiK*sNim.Bd. * Ptop*r
■r ^ - —
Griffin, G©or*f*» *>*<’• «. 1**®-
Paper tf Spaldiag Co.
Advertising Bates.
DAILY—One ■risalSSS dollar per square lor the Bet
IL NOTICES—10 rtmtoflerltimfor
HSS ^IFKJ^LY^Enie
rates as for the Daily
sss
Now that tbe President* message
m common property what a load baz
two lifted from his lady type¬
writer’s mind and dumped upon
t'fiftf' ; rtf of 1 the public.
A carefol fflw scrutiny of the Postmas¬
ter-General's report fails to show
any allusion to John Wanamaker’s
great Philadelphia bazar. To what
shall we ascribe this unusual display
of modes ty? _____
Whila the first go overnpr of of Mon- Mo
tana happens to be it
is evident from thenerve aerveli* diapla
that iris cc^nomeorlscertoinly Politicians at
cTti^ Won’t be able 1
makes ,W of him.
Republican congressmen would
refit to look out for their own
tituencies in the North at the
election. The South will take
care of itself no matter whabelection
laws may be passed
A new brand of cigars is cafied the
Benjamin Harrison. If everybody that
office this brand is bound to becoine
recognized as n sure care for the
smoking habit.
-—-
The President wants the farmer
still further protected by the tariff.
As the only protection the Southern
tenner gets is a high tariff on jute
and ties, a little more of the same
kind would come close to ruining
W®.
_ ______
JK^TETiCSSB: il
the Republican party than a force
fsiw for the South.
Three young men of Victoria, Aus
tralia, are on a journey around the
world. The proprietor of a Victoria
sporting newspaper made a bet with
a banker that the journey could ubt
be made, os agreed upon, in eight
months. The conditions of the bet
are that every appliance may be
used for traveling aftes reaching
New York, but the journey across
North America must be made On
fqpi. The bet is for £3,000, and the
pedestrians are due at the Auckland
Glnb, in Melbourne, Jueteigbt months
from the date of their departure.
The travelers are in good health and
are confident of success.
Ohio Republicans are not in a hap¬
py frame of mind. Governor For.
akcr has been downed, McKinley has
been defeated for the Speakership
scarcely less ignominiously, and now
the President announces {hat no
Ohio man need apply for the place Of
the late Justice Matthews on the
Supreme Court Bench. General Har
rison thinks that Ohio has bad more
than he r deserts in view of the ter
suit of the recent election. Alfred
Russell of Detroit is the man said to
be slated for the position. % has
a good reputation in that city, but
after all, he is nothing more than a
provincial lawyer, and must be pret¬
ty well on toward seventy vea re of
#**. ___
A man who has practiced medicine me for 40
mgur; road
N-n,F
for have uere been been 40 40 in in the the general and 1 would practice " ot that * medicine all ~
moot meet in *
or ye yearn, say
my practice > and at that experience, 1 could prescribe hare never seen
a preparation i with as
much confidence confider of success as 1 can Hall’s
Catarrh ©ire, great many times and its effect
is wondeHul, and would say in conclusion
that 1 hateyeftofiadw case of Catarrh ? that
■W 7 take it ac-
.ouaucH. Ins M.D.
We Summit, Catarrh St.
will | case of
that can i Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Ta
F.J.CB8 Toledo, O.
KW Soldi
HaSBfi.
BIG Syrup
|prescrip-
nurees
I States.
’ years
’ millions
Dur-
its value
child
, cure# ‘ dysentery and diar-
m to ,y
1 ,e
ee 25c
Wk . „________ .. .
_
.
.
[ to Congrw* on
th£ day . Last year Presi-
dent Cleveland’s parting wordB to
the people of the United States were
given in an intelligent synopsis of
four columns; this year w© were able
to give in nine full columns of siqhll
type the exact l an guag e of the lowg-
winded first message of the new
President.
The message was not given ©ut to
the papers in advance, but was more
Jealously guarded tiuptever before.
It was not made public to anyone
until read in both bouses of Congress
at the noon on Tuesday; It was a
very long and tedious document to
transmit and put into type—but no
paper in the United States contained
a more full or accurate copy of it on
the following morning than theD aily
News and Son. We venture to say
further that in no other town in the
United States not larger than Griffin
was tills done.
We ha ve many difficulties to con¬
tend with in giving onr readers a
good news service, that they can not
fully know or appreciate. We have
been instrumental in forming several
organizations of the dailies in the
smaller cities of the State, in order
to get a common nsws service, only
to see them drop gradually out, dis¬
■ ffre
couraged by difficulties or the
9 . Undismayed by this,
have gone ahead and done the best
we could alone. Nobody feels the
occasional shortcomings of our ser¬
vice more than we do; but we also
have somebrilliant triumphs that go
far to compensate for the drawbacks.
Such an one is that of yesterday,
and it is an achievement to which we
point with considerable pride.
There is one thing that the readers
of the News and Sun always know:
that {hey will get the very earliest
and best news service that can be
given them by the greatest enterprise
And the means at our command.
General Harrison’s grandfather
Was known as an old State Sover¬
eignty Whig. In his inaugural ad
dress he dwelt at considerable length
on the relations existing between the
federacy, 1 and all his references to
the States showed that he had- no
doubt that sovereignty was lodged
In them. It is a curious circumstance
that the grandson of this man should
be made leader of a movement in the
line of centralization which promises
to throw all previous efforts in that
line into the shade. The wildest im
perialist can dream of nothing more
to his liking than the enactment of a
law giving the Federal authority
absolute control of elections in the
various States. From such a system
to something that would do away
with even the pretense of any elec¬
tions at all would not be a very long
Btep.
“This Comes Hopping.”
“This it comes leaves ‘hopping’ this to present.” find you
well as me at
was the quaint finish to many a let
ter in days gone by. The “hopping”
was odd spiling for hoping. This
comes hoping the victim to pint functional some weary de¬
woman, of
rangements or uterine troubles, in¬
ternal inflamation and ulceration or
any other ailments of hop, health peculiar and to hap- the
sex, the wav
iness. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite-Prescrip-
tion, is theonly medicine for woman ’s
peculiar weaknesses and ailments,
sold by druggists, from the under manufacturers, a positive
guarantee of satisfactions being given in
See every
case, or money refunded. guar¬
antee printed on bottle-wrapper.
Contagious Blood Diseases.
Hieere,sores, pimples, itch, salt rheum, etc.,
are evidenoee oj eontagoiu* blood disease. It
is manifestly a duty to eradicate blood pels
on from the system by a use of B. B. B. {Bo
tank Blood Balm,) thus enabling the sore
fbility place* >to to heal, bea and thereby removing all pos-
likewise of of other oth mem bets of the family becom-
Ing .u B „»ewisc < afflicted. Send to Blood Balm
Co., Atlanta, Ga., for book that will convince
J H Outlaw. Mt. (Dive, N C.. writes: “I had
running sores on my shoulders and
One bottle B. B. B. eared me etirely.”
L. Johnson. Belmont Station, Miee. writes:
“B. B. B. has worked on me like a charm. My
head hair and body was but covered B. with B. sores, and
my cams out, B. healed me
W J * "* Kfunin, ’ v* Hutches, - -- ----itee: Texas, writes: “BB
B bee cured my y wife wife of a large nicer < on her leg
that doctors and all other medidne could DOt
cure.”
M J Bossman, a prominent merchant or
Greensboro' Ga., writes: “I know of several
caaee B. Two of blood bottles disease cured speedily lady of Cared ngnly by erofu- B B
a
lons skin
W C Birchmore ft Co., Maxey, Ga., writes:
B B B in curing Mr Robert Ward of Mood
prison effected obeot mast wonder cure* that
ever came to our knswledge.” nov&ml
The Great Social Requisite.
“Bide blood” is ©till au essential
part of theffreat biood nodal is the question, key of life, but
after all pare
and P. P. P. has aehitved phenome¬
nal success as a purificant and cor
rector of ail ailments arising from
bad blood and itscontteent unhappy
$*«■©*«*w«w;
>and our
o know that A. B.
York, the well
n, estimates
is the largest
country, amount*
ing to 0,980,£$4 bales averaging
pounds per bale, against 7,-
bales averaging 488.05 per
bale, making this year’s crop equal
7,067,271 bales of last year’s
weight. The cotton is distributed
follows: Net overland movement
to Canada, 943,221 bales;
by Southern mills direct from
and interior towns, 449,243
total port receipts, 5,546,818
The total sea Island crop is
bales, of which Europe has
22,710, and Northern mills,
Of the Southern States,
Carolina has consumed the
cotton, 132,319 bales with
not far behind. North Car¬
took 85,058 bales, while other
States ranged from 21&6
taken by Missouri, to 36,975
Tennessee. Northern spinners, in¬
Canada, took 1,841,611
President Harrison, it will be re¬
appointed Mr. Watta-
post master-general because
was a business man, and Waria-
has been running the office do
line ever since betook charge of
He is no#.trying to bring about
reduction of postage on packages
merchandise, and there is a belief
the public mind that if he succeeds
t will prove a great benefit to his
Philadelphia notion house. The
scheme, however, which he has so
nicely planned to utilize the United
States mails in pushing his business
is not likely to meet with popular
favor with the people generally, and
espk’ially among country merchants,
who would be the greatest sufferers
by it. It is evident that Wanamaker
must be watched. He is in the office
as a business man, and if there is any
way of manipulating it so as to get
back the money he donated to the
Republican campaign fund he is go.
ing to do it. V
So confident, it is said, was Mr.
Campbell of his election as Governor
of Ohio that on learning how odds
of two to one were being offered in
favor of Mr. Foraker’s success he at
once intrusted a roll of bills to a
friend with instructions to lav every
cent of the amount on his
chances. Not content with this, he
wrote a check for $1,000 more, which
was invested for him by one of his
Dayton friends in a similar manner
on the day before the ballot took
place. Thus in addition to securing
the governorship of his state, be has
won $2 for every dollar which he put
up. This shows that Mr. Campbell
had sense like a News and Sun editor
and made his bets after the
pattern.
For biliousness, sick headache, in¬
digestion, ho and constipation, Pierce’s there Lit- is
remedy Pellets, equal to Dr.
tie Purely vegetable. One
a dose.
The flostoii Fire.
. Boston, Dec. i.—A conservative fire eS?
timate of the loss by The Thursday’s iuay b lire is ’
places it at $5,00(1.000. propel roperty ‘
very heavily insured. It is im mpossible
now to put the exact amount ; of insur-
knee. State Insurance Commissioner
Me.rriU says be thinks no insurance com¬
pany will go under unless possibly one
or two of the new and smaller com¬
panies. The search in the ruins for the
bodies of the four missing firemen pro¬
ceeded all day but was unsuccessful.
M«je lioflle# from tl»« Germania*
LONG Brands, N. J., Dec. 1.—Four
more bodies from the wreck of the bark
Germania, which was wrecked
Wednesday night, were washed up on
the beach at Spermaceti cove. Among
them was the body of Capt. Windhorst.
Minister IJnco!nN Son Is Rettrr.
Paris, Dec. t.—The condition of the
son of Mr. Robert T. Lincoln. American
minister to London, who is lying ill at
Versailles, is greatly improved and
hopes are now entertained ■ined for his
co very.
Bftrcli OfBk Reopened.
Phu.adkt.i-hia, Dec. 1.—The Beech
Creek railroad, which was badly dam¬
aged by the recent flood, will be re¬
opened to passenger and freight traffic
today, ___
, 14 Drain Won't Fight for ©3,900.
Baltimore, Dec, i. — Jake Kilrain
gays he will fight Sullivan, Jackson oi
any $3,500 one else is if the object purse is him. large enough,
but no to
An Indiana Blizzard.
Covington, lad., Dec. i.—A regu
lar northwestern blizzard held full sway
here all day. Considerable snow has
fatten.
Ihr (tunrnntp* Fond Newly Finished*
New York, ■rk, Dec. uec. i. i. — — The me world’s worius
fair gUata itee fund now amounts to
|4,835,7m
Salt Rheum
With its intense itching, dry, hot skis, often
broken into painful cracks, and the little
watery pimples, often canaeeindescribsbl*suf¬
fering. Hood’s Sara awapariila has wonderful
power over this disease. It purifies the blood
and expels the humor, and the skin heals
without a scar. Send for book containinr
Apothecaries, msayjstatemsnts Lowell, of cures, Mat to C.t. Hood A Co.,
Intelligent Reader* will netteetiut
Tutt’s Pills
OUtre*
sick headache,
_______appetite, s rilnt, “ sa gone ”
feeling, bad tarte, eosted tongue, and Irregn-
After symptoms. Dyspepsia does
.»t get wen of Itself. It
Mating requires careful, ukO’Hood’i persistent
attention, and s remedy 8a»a-
yttrfiia,, which set* gently, yet surelj-
ts^stz the digestion," creates a
by thus g(o|l
ton* __ hemWra'tte**™"*- _ tamps- H©ad®Clie 1 banishes the
thetlc effects of the disease,
headache, and refreshes the tired mind.
*•1 have beat troubled with dyspepsia. I
had but little appetite, and what I did eat
Heart” distressed me, or did me
ji lUe good, in an hour
burn after eating I would exp©,
rienee a faintness, or tired, all-gone feeling,
as though I had notesten anything. My trou¬
ble, I think, was aggravated by ray business,
which is that of a painter, and from being
more or less shut up ta a ftAijf
room withfresli patet "Last c - _|_
spring I took flood's Sarja- ® tornocn
rilla—took three bottles. It did me an
immense amount cl good. It gave me an
appetite, and my feed relished and satisfied
the craving I had previously experienced."
Orobor A Pack, Watertown, Mass.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Prepared only
&>M by *tl drasRkW. *U six for »*-
by C. I. IIOGD A CO, Apothecaries, Lowell. M»».
IQO Steffte Cne Dollar
ow whwt 6.8.8. has
a malignant Cancez, lncura-
h aS^S?iS2 considered
jMSlOds fj Chicaeo. where I
____
relief from the llret tow , •; the poison___
S3S n ?^ 0 i^d ,i Sd^H?5^» ■^rswSJrt: and I have
^riof S.
ho returaof the 6
Au Sable. Mich., Dec. »,m
Send for books on Blood Diseases and* Cancers.
Ordinary’s Advertisements.
I ' *RDINART’S OFFICE—Svalwuu toux-
’ t r tv, tv, Geokcia, OBonotAj Nov. nov. 27th, 27tn, 1889.—Jas. inea.-jae. B. ».
Ellis has applied to me for letters of admin¬
istration on tha estate of Jane Freeman, late
of said county, deceased.
personsconcemcd showcause . befor® .
Let nil office, by ten
the Court of Ordinary, the first at Monday my in Janua¬
o’clock a. in., on administration
ry next, why such letters of
should not be Ordinary-
|3.00. . W. HAMMOND,
/ VRD1NART'S OFFICE,—Spalbino
\/ tv, Georgia. Nov. 27th, 188S.—J. M.
Wells has applied to me for letters of admii
istration on tbetheestateof Dorcas T. Well
late of said county, deceased.
Detail persons concerned show.cause
fore the Court of Ordinary at my office
Griffin, on the first Monday whyjfiuch in
next, by ten o’clock a. m.,
tion should not be granted. HtMMOND, Ordinary,
*3.00. E. W.
^ ^BDINARY’S OFFICE-jSpiLniNt;
H. Word has applied ..ppli to me for letters of ad-
____
ministration on the estate of John Q.
late *e oi of said said count; county, deceased.
Let ail persons concerned show cause
fore the Court of Ordinary, at at my my office
Griffin, on t he first Monday in Jai mary
by ten o’clock a. why such
should no OND. Ordiuarv.
93.00.
^^RDINART’S OFFICE—Spalmng
Geobgia, Novi
Burr, executor o! Shod a H. Doe, and
to the Court in his petition, duly fully filed en
tered ■ed on on record, recuiu, that he has
ed Rhode H Doe’s eSfcate.
This is therefore to eite all persons
ed, kindred and creditors, to show canse,
any they can, why said his executor administratior
not be discharged urged from fro dismission tin
and receive letters ters of on
Monday in February. bruarv. 1890.
96,15 E. VV, HAMMOND, Ordinary.
UT t V E0RGIA— Spalding County.—
Rufns A. Thrower, administrator Court
Cbomas Thrower, represents to the
liis petition, -tition, duly filed and entered on Thoi ree
that he has tally administered
Thrower's estate.
This is therefore to cite all persoi
ed, kindred and creditors, to sho use,
any they can, why said administrator dministrator si
aot be discharged from his his administrati
■i receive letters of dismission on the
MOO ay in January. HAMMOND. 1890. Ordinary,
»,.15 E. W.
"1 EORGIA— 8pal
Jas.
phine entered
on
liy administered
Padgett’s esl cite all
This is therefore to persons
e f, kiudred and creditors, to show canse,
any they can, why said administrator
not be discharged from dismission his the
and receive letters of on
Monday in January E. W. HAMMOND, 1890. Ordinary
#6.15.
/ Ur EORGIA— Spalding County.—
J.B. Ellis, administrator of Jas. Thrash,
represent* nt« u> Vu the the Court Court in in his his petition, petition,
filed and entered on record, that he has
administered Jas, Thrash’s estate,
" '• "* —*— *" '* • •” —rsons
<UI UUU) IUUV 11 CU UMM ViCUlfViOj UV OUV" VW..CV,
if any they discharged can. why said his executor
not be from
and receive letters of dismission on the
Monday ip February, 1890.
#6.15* E. W. HAMMOND, , Ordinary,
VIA—-
BRUNSWICK, JESUP,MACON, CHATTANOOGA. ATLAN¬
TA, ROME and
ONLY LINE
Doubl D&ny S jtij 2ar S /
. Between
Cincinnati and Jacksonville.
Solid trains between
Chattanooga and Jacksonville,
Closely connecting with doable
with Pullman and Sleeping from Cars
to
Mmphis, Nashviil, Kansas Ci/
and the West and
KrwxvHi, Washingon, Nw York
and the East.
THE SHORT LINE BETWEEN
Atlanta and Jacksonville,
Atlanta add Savannah,
Atlanta and Brunswick,
Atlanta and Macon, Rome.
Atlanta and
For rates, Time Cards and other
information apply to agents of the
Eas Tm.,*Vs aad It. R
O.W. *MENN,
Gen. I. Pam. * USW.Ov 4Ticket A sr%, ySlfeAIGAVUjy, Knoxville.
'
j BERLIN, JO x. Mt mm
The Largest Storo In all the Southern States.
IT MS, CABPETS, FURNITURE, SHOES, 'MILLINERY Affl DRESS
A LOHC FELT WAWT
raadeunextensionoffloorroomof In theSouth has been a first-lass f jSo lOOxoOfret, fw t and andane aTew warehouse, 80 d feet with lone t j for SQode car loud Solid lots of
TUBE. this has ten donfiduringthe ^^^^Wiine K . . 0 a k
All witb^i in Parlor, Dining Room
price beiore yon purehase.
CABPETS, BUGS, GIL CLOTHS, DRAPERIES,
Department never so well stocked amd prices made to sell.
SILKS, WOOLENS, TABLE LINENS, HOSIERY, ETC.
French Novelties in DRESS GOODS are marvelously beautiful and superbly grand in design and color _. e
lENTO’, h MISSES’, BOYS’ and CHILDREN’S SHOES.-Stock full and complete. I
CHAMBERLIN, JOHNSON & CO..
66 and 68 Whitehall and 1, 8, 5, 7, 9, 11 and 13 Hunter Sts., ATLANTA, j
m*
January Sheriff’s Salgs.
Y^TILL BE SOLD ON THEFIRST TULS-
of the Con ™ Houw^in the the city following of Griffin, de
Spalding • ounty, Georgia,
scribed' property, to-wit : the
lOSVc acres of land more or less, being
west half of lot No. 251 and 7 acres of adjoin¬
ing lot, number not known,in the 3d district
wick, north by lands of ... —
balance of said lot No. 251
lands of T, W. Manley, Levied on
as the property of C. E. Prv or, by
a fi fl fa fa issued issued from from the the County Co Coni
ounty in favor of H. G. Sullivan ivan t t Sons vs.
M. Prvoy and C, E. Pryor, Tenant *
session legally notified. #6.00.
Also, at the same
sold one house and
improvements containing one-fonr the
vi^vuvv v «». — . .i....-ing Count v, ii
of Robert T. Daniel vs, Esther Wood. Levy
made by C. J. Little, L. C., and turned
over to me. Tenant in possession |6.-0. legally
notified. will be
a Iso, at the same time and place,
Sold one heavy drop rump horse mule, about
: years old, 15% hands high. Levied on
act) sold as Hie property of A. B. Shackel¬
ford to satisfy flsfy one one mortgage mortgage fi n fa ia issued issuea from irom
8palding Superior Superi Court in favor ofB. J.
Powell, Admini Administrator of II. R. Chi ambers,
dec'd, vs. A. B. Shackelford. #3.
nty, Georgia, said lanus being pa
lots No. 124 and 101 in said district and conn-
ty, bounded bound on the east by the right of way
of the C<i tral railroad^ f .on the south by
lands of Mrs. W. W. i. WoodruS, Woodruff, on on the the west west by by
W.'P. Manley, and on the north by land of
W. T. Freeman, rceman, said said land land being being a a strip i off of
the south side of said lots and 622 feet wide
id 2185 feet long, said lands- being tL set
apart to F. J. Freema* as his part of 3
tate of Jane A. Freeman. Levied c
sold as the property of F, J. Freeman
the Cot nty Court
’’(•mUeton
impany vs. Tenant-
sion legally notified # 6 .
ame til id place, will be
; property, to-wi to-wit: th west
half of lot No. 41, containing 10114 acres acres
more or less, also fifty acres of land off oi the
north end of tat No. 0, running the whole
h of said lot, also lot No. 24 containing taming thall
ire or less- less, and of
23, lees, containing all adjoining 101% am acres agin (djand
more or Spalding
2d district of originally Henry now sold the
county, Georgia. Levied on on and a as
property ipfi PuDen by virtne of two
fl fas fas issu issued from Spalding County Court in
m GuanoCo.vs. Joseph Puil-
pointed out by plaintiff’s attorney. Josep
Pniten, tenant in possession, legally n<
tified. wiil be
Also, at the same time and place,
sold the one undivided sixth interest in the
following lauds to-wit: 202%
less,
off
lohn Coleman estate ana u. v r-iaer, east of «y
lands of J J Elder and lands of the estate •>
rt. Elder, south bj lauds of -i M Coleman, ani
trict. west of by originally lands of D Fayette P Elder, in Spalding the_4th^ Conn di*
now
ty, Georgia. Levied on and sold as the prop¬
erty of J. H. Mala sr to satisfy two fi fas is¬
sued from the County Court of J. Spalding H. Mv
County in favor of W. 11. Griffin vs.
laier, and other fi fas in my bands. Ik».
Mary Henderson, tenant- in possession, #6.90.7 legri-
ly notified. I
R. S. CONNELL. Sheriff S. C.
h L. DOUGLAS
3 SHOE oe N 7£& en
93 SHOE FOR (LADIES.
L SHOES.
Examine W. L. Douglas #2.00 Shoes ior
entlemen and ladies.
r 'FOR SALE B1
8GMEUERMAN & WHITE.
criffin.
iPYRAffl URFJMAN'S
A A SURECURE SURE CURErOR 8kFTV^Rl rOR I
CHILLS
DUMB R6UE RND
I'LL VALE BY ALL BBUGCfsm
TO ADVERTISERS
A fist of 1000 newspapers int«
STATES AND SECTIONS wil on ap
pfication—FREE. those who want their advertising to
To pai
w« can offer no better medium for thorough
and effective work than the varion seat ion* of
onr Select Local Lis*.
GEO. P. ROWELL A CO.,
JW »s,jssssars.
JL 'J 1 }V. I). i)‘A V II
-tet-r-
NEW IsOT OF OI
■w. XD. Dav:
Also nice lino of PISTOLS. It will be to your intareat IA.. to price
goods before buying elsewhere. Give us a trial o»RH Hardware.
^
i i ii i ii i i i ©ii j ii .. ........ .uji c mn i n i iu i i .
GRIFFIN CLOTTING Handeoine Stock of
, 1 Have nn Fniisnalty
Fall Suits and Overcoah 1 ,1
Beautiful Styles and Fabrics.
NOBBY HATS! WOOLEN UNDER1
And lust the sweetest Line of Crawls-
Call for Charlie Wolcott, or Louis Niles, who' will give you thslatest pointf
CEO. R. NILES.
octlOd&w
i
(Prickly A*h, Pole© Root and Potass
- JOlAXTS POSITIVE cubes of all FOLKS AND
Physiclsne endorse P. P. P. a» » splen¬ you wfH regain flesh rad strength. | ’
did combination, and prescribe it with Oi Waste of energy and all diseases resulting
great satisfaction for the cures of ail from overtaxing theeystem are cored by > «
forms and stages of Primary, fi DwCODURL,* Socondary the use of P. P. P.
sad Tertiary Syphilis, Syphilitic illitic Jtheu- Ladies Mood whose is in eystemsarepoisonedrad impure conditionduo | ; j
mat ism, Scrofulous Ulcers ■ and aud Sores, whose an Q
Glandular Swellings. Rhei'jt, naiispf. Itid- to laenstrnal irregularities are pecnHariy
tlmi; benefited by the wonderfol tonic rad : :
ney Complaints, old Chronic Vits-rs
SYPHILIS mm
have resisted all treatment, Catarrh, Sklu blood cleansing properties of P, P.P*
Diseases, Eczema, Chronic Femalu Prickly Ash, Poke Boot and Potassium.
Complaints, Mercurial Poison, Sett**, hold by all Drnggista.
Seal Ahead, etc., etc. {.fPPfUli BROSt, Proprfetoi*,
• P. P. P. is a powerful tonic and an,
excellent appitizer, buildiag up the Wholesale Wiuooists.
eystem rapidly. Myca are weak and Llppaiaa Block, SAVANNAH, CA-
(•tide, and feel badly try F. P. F» and
RHEUMATISM
flew Advertisements.
IWfarealaktMornireM^cowda. h.ff£AkI * Ctt, t- «
ASIKS
© s ss© (Se as itnscrliaeiBthevortft.lit<rsi«o»Typ»ie.rw a
**f?.a*f* 0 *e. tVrtMl
OUR IiITTliE ONES
and me NUBSEBT
36 BROMFIELD ST.,
mStSSSS Boston, Mas*.
I copy and ITeminm Ust aeot to
a any address on receipt of a two-
■ cent stamp.
GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
EPPS’S COCOA
BREAKFAST.
and nutrition, and by a careful applicatic
of the fine properties of well-selected Obcoa,
Mr. Epps has provided our breakfast tables
with a delicately flavord beverage bills. which may
save us many heavy doctor’s It is by
the judicious use of such articles of diet that
«constitution may be gradually built up
until strong enough to resist subtle every maladies tendency
to disease. Hundreds of are
floating around us read,
there is a weak poin
a fatal sh aft aft by I keeping ourselves well forti-
fied with pure blood and a properly nourish j
ed frame.—[CiTil Service Gazette. tnfik. Made ^.de arm sim i
ofy with boiling water ......* Sold bidy in
or
half-pound tins, ^f^ocers, labelled iat thus:
HomcBopathie vmnT,c Chemists. 1,,'i’S London, & Eugl CO., and
.
» lftire « •Ikk Im* ifene ^aln, Ksinilricg,
,h*7I
J 3 » - -
MASON & HAMLIN
Organ and Piano Co.
BOSTON. NEW YOKK. I'HI CG0
NEW Contain* a five octave, Nine
Stop Action, furnished furDtebed i in a
MODEL large and handsome Priee ea*W #9»
solid black walnut. the East
ORGAN, cash; System also cold on #12.37 per
Hire at qoarf
quarter, for ton
when organ becomes prop
224*. of person hiring.
The M a b o n & H a m 1 i a
MASON “Stringer,” invented and pa-b , i
Hamlin pianos exclusively,
HA-MLiN Remarkai ble refinement m
tone and phenomenal characterife «* <-' a ' P ! V^
I’fAXOS. to stand in tune tune
l thcsetintrumentl.
FOIH LAR STYLES ORGANS at $22,
$32.50, $60, $78, $00 AND IT-
Organs ments, and and Pianos Rented- sold for Catalogues Cash, Easy free. Pay-1
-- 4 .... ■■II.^W .I - I - 1 I I f , i | i; ni.n i i l"—’
§§?§! Agents’ p: rofits per month; will,
l ’ prove portraits it or < iust pay out,. forfeit, fSm
’ w' , H.lthid^r?Son, 28 Bond St. N. t$
nov2Rd&w4W
mm
How Los ti How Regained,
r H£
ofMi/FCi
THE MM\
AScientifleatld SCIENCE .
tussussasaesoi Standard Popular I______
Exhausted viTAUTi
^UNTOLD MISERIES
, Exccasesor virtiffi
[toe
v -k. It contains $00 pages, royal Sva
Bjgp cciredffie C OpAN ajmiT^P aga Nre £‘