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lira?
Jr tho Back 7 J
ij Then probably the kidney?, j
| la tho Ohomt? |
i Then probably the lung?. I
i Jn tho Joints? ?
Then probably rheumatism. ~
Uo matter where it is, nor what
j .kind; you need have it no longer.
It may be an hour, a day, or a
i year old; it must yield to
Dr. Ayers
Cherry
pectoral
piaster
I Immediately after applying It yon
feel its soothing, warming, strength
ening power.
It quiets congestion; draws out
inflammation.
It is anew plaster.
Anew combination of new
remedies. Made after new
methods. Entirely unlike any
other plaster.
The Triumph of Modern Medical
Science.
The Perfected Product of years of
Patient Toil.
Placed over the chest it is a
powerful aid to Ayer's Cherry Pec
toral in the treatment of ail throat
and lung affections.
Placed over the stomach, it stops
nausea and vomiting; over the
bowels, it controls cramfts and colic.
Placed over the small of the back,
it removes all congestion from the
kidneys and greatly strengthens
weakness.
For sale by all Druggists.
J. C. Ayer Cos., Lowell, Mass.
nil pc itching piles
rlLto swAYHE *
■ inlaW niNTMFMT
abßoPd-iu.lt curies * iiii.ii I
•YMrTttMS— M.l.tuvrl 1.!*..<. lu-kU. ....I
■MacUsi HMUlalfkll warMibjr M-r<al<l.r..g. If
■U*MtoMllau farm and protrude,
whirl, oftoa hired und ulerra.tr, beromlnp rr
•ur • W AY N K’M OINTM KNT .tup. lull I !T c and
bleeding, abeerbe the tuna ore. Hold be drnpiriau or be
well for SOol. Prepered Ir? lie *<..<>•* Soe.PblledelpbU.
The aieaple eppilceUon el
■riOIHTMENTif i
wUhm,t * n - v
Withdn®. cur* Ut <HO “IT.
MU —JR tdir, (cmioi, itch, all
I Mis •ruptiußfl on Hiu face, Jl
hand*. uoh, Ar , loHvtnjf
w NT whit* ami health vA
ftrOAt.v drtifflata. or aunt h nail lor 50 oU. A.ldr<*s fa
Im h Horn. Pa. Aik druggie (or ib
Y SOUTHERN RAILWAY^
!"!§*- ”
Behedule In Effect April 10th, 1800.
v t . . N. |N. Mo. N.
Nor* li bound. a |.j ~v „ 13
ck Brunswick i f> M(h ■ 0 26a 4 00) a lOp
At. Everett UQa 10 26a 6 OOp 10 lOp
Lv. Jcsup. 1122a 10 48|i
“ Burrenor 12(Hp
“ Baxter I2 22p luip
** HuziotiurMt 12 !if,p iaote
1 " liUmbor Otty 126 ala 17a
“ Helena. 204 p IS 46a
1“ Mixater. slop
" BiiHtiiian S 42p 141 k,
“ Empire !t l)8p
3Lt. HawkinartlU 1 S 45p
“ Ooohran . !* O jjfaip N. " j Aon
M Macon 8 OUa 4 46(> 7 lOp 8 06a
■ FlovlHa HHOa HUOp Blip BSBa
“ Wi lKmough I0 06n tl 40p 8 fiOp
Ar. Atlanta. _ Ulna 7 46p 0 Mlp 620a
sr. Atlautu 4 OUp 11 OOp U (Op s>a
r. t'hnttniHHipa 8 40p (lOtit HOUti 0 60a
£r. MoniphiH .. 7,0 h 7 10p! 7 10p T 40a
gr. '* 66a "7 ar.p' 7 ysp Tit-i;
JtTbi lamia. Air Una. (1 OOp 7 I'.'u 7 12a >*-
Ar. CSneinnntl. {J. ft U 7 46(1, 7 OOp 7 ;(o|i ’• !Wp
Lv. Atlanta 4 lAp 6 40a
At. Birminuham 10OOp . lISUo
“ Memphis 7 4,Vi OHOp
“ Kansas t'it.r. 7 10a 686j>.
EY Atlanta soon n.vip
At. WaahiuKtou 0 42a I oO6p •••
“ Mi a York,. tSOm li 2:la . ..
Southbound. ; o ~J 4.
It. New VorfcT 4;*>p laifm ..
“ Wnshlmtton 10 48|> H loa -
Ar. Atlanta it.lAp Rica, ..
Sr Kansas 01 ty j 0 iiip , 10 40a
1 “ Memphis POop 7 00a
“ liiimnitthatn non.. 4 50p
Ar. Atlanta 1180a .. lo4op
3Lr. Cincinnati, Q. A (' 800 p BHOn sOOp BHOa
It. St. Louis, Air Line ®on B(,Kh o 12p 0 12(1
“ Ixiutsvillc. 7 (ftp 7-41'n 7 46p 7 40a '
tv. Memphis 7. , 8 OOp 0 15a KOOji SoOp
Lv. Chattanuottn 0 4fui 10 10| 0 46a A lOp
AT. Atlanta 11 50a 60.a 11 60a loUOp
lit. Atlanta 4 SOpi 6 80a iSOSp 1060 p
“M. 1 Bmoutch 6Stt|i!tfßoa I2 62p ..
“ Flovilla ao7p 7 14a 1 27p 120'.a
At. 61 aeon 7 lop 8 30a 2 25p 1 oiia
A.V. Cochran . 10 16a 2 12a
At HawlrinsA-iM. ~ W66a ~ | '.
(tv. Empire . 10 .lua 77 i
I Eastman 10 65m i 2 62a
i “ Miaater tl son .
“ Helena 11 ,isa I ;t 2lk
“ I.umherCity 12.'16p 4 00a
" lia/lelinrat : I2.v’.p ... 4 l:la
“ Baxley i 1 Hip 4 455.
barrwycy , 1 52p
J4T. Kvorett 7 00a 8 HOp 7 lOp A 116a
Ar. liiuiiswlek .... Sum 4 otip BHOp 7 HOa
”~\oa. 18 ami 14.—Pul tenon Bl.s'niiiK liars Is
twtH'U Bruuswiek sad Atlanta, IsOu-isn .lack
■onrille, Fla., and iHuciunati. Jaeksnuvllle and
Bt Lonis and Jaeksonville and Kansas City,
via Everett and Atluuta.
Nos 15 ami lA.—Pullman Sleeping Curs be
tween Atlanta and Cineitinati. via Chatta-
K®“: also between Chattanooga and Mem
;. Nos. 7 and B—Pullman Sla'plug Oars l>e
tireer. Atlautu and Chattanooiru
I. Nos, p and 10—Observation Chair Cars be-
Itwet-n Me.-on and Atlanta. '
L Connect ion at Union Depot. Atlanta, for all
Kdnts north, east and weat.
■SANK 8. OANNON. J. M. CULP.
Third V -P. & Oen. M(r, Trattie Maunder,
Vaahington, D. C. Washington, U. C.
w. A. TCHK. 8. H. HARDWICK,
Oen'l Pask. Agt, Asst. Oen‘l Pass. Agt
Washington. D. C Atlanta. Ua
,K - t. ' k —5
THE, ROMANCE OF MR,
STEPHENS LIFE,.
In one of the early years of the
40’s Mr. Stephens, then a young man,
paid a visit, to the home of Mr. Dar
den, in Warren county. There hq
met a flaxen haired, blue-eyed girl of
sixteen, beautiful in face and lovely
in character; piquant, witty and gifted
with a mind rarely cultivated. An
attachment grew up, which for years
did not pass the formal bounds of
friendship, but which was sacredly
cherished by both. The boy lover
was poor in this world’s goods, fra
gile in frame, and harrassed by sick
ness, he did not dare to aspire to the
hand of one whom he had learned to
love and yet foiebore to claim. With
womanly devotion the young girl read
the secret in the young man’s eyes,
and true to her heart, she could only
wait'and love.
One evening in 1849 a party was
given at the residence of Mr. Little,
in Crawfordville. There the two met
once more; here they enjoyed that
sweet communion born of perfect
trust; and there Mr. Stephens tound
courage to speak the words which for
years had fought for expression, until
at last he could no longer contain
them.
|p‘Are you sure that there lives none
other whom you prefer to me?’’ asked
the maiden timidly, shrinkingly, yet
only to happy to feel that she was
favored in his eyes.
“In the whole universe there exists
not another,” said he passionately.
Thus their troth was plighted; the
day was set for their marriage, and
all seemed auspicious for the lovers.
But clouds lowered over their hopes;
matters of private nature which it is
not within domain for the public to
know, intervened and deferred the
lruition of their hopes. The one
became immersed in politics, and,
racked with physical ills, hesitated to
enter a state where he feared the
happiness of the other might be mar
red. The lady found her duty by an
invalid mother, who long lingered
with a confining disease. Thus the
years flew by, but the plighted troth
was kept. Mr. Stephens never ad
dressed another, and kept the image
of the fair girl in his heart. The lady
was the recipient of admiration from
many, but to all she turned a deaf
ear.
SUCCESSFUL PHYSICIANS.
\Ve heartily recommend I)r. Hath
away & Cos., of Atlanta, Ga„ as be
ing perfectly reliable and remarkably
successful in the treatment of chronic
diseases of men and women. They
cure where others fail. Our read
ers, if in need of medical help should
certainly write these eminent doctors
and you will receive a free and ex
pert opinion of your case by return
mail without cost; this certainly is
the right way to do business. They
guarantee their cures. Write them
to day. *
When 11 Woman Faints.
To care for a person who has faint
ed, lay the person down, keep the
head low. loosen the clothing, give
plenty of fresh air and dash cold
water in the face. Smelling-salts and
stimulants should only be used when
consciousness has returned.
Uliratci of thv Blood aud 6t.
No one need suffer with neuralgia. Tins,
disease is quickly ami permanently cured
by Browns’ Iron Bitter*. Every disease of
the Idood. nerves and stomach, chronic
or otherwise, succumbs to Browns’ Iron
Bitters. Known and used for nearlv n
quarter of a century, it stands to-day fore
most among our most valued remedies.
Browns’lron Bitters is sold by all dealert.
Uncle Joshua; “We’ve got to
have some more coaling stations."
Uncle Jedediah: What do we
need 'em fer?"
Uncle Joshua: “Why, ter accom
modate our navy. We are going ter
have a bigger navy you know."
Uncle Jedediah: “A bigger navy,
we don't need that either."
Uncle Joshua: “We don’t? how'd
we defend our new coaling stations
then?"
POTATOES I faSEi
I arfft INT VT **•**••* *■* Awcrlf*,}
h>l cl 4 4‘U bn<s per wrr-rljn* l* 4h>. Krr *
imtlosii 'fMr prlei**. OlirffTHt lOi
1 nrnt S-ri Nmimpl' S W r|S I tC l #
10. pitutuK •. 4UIINI. KAU::BsKWM(I..Itnn,kJ
IyVYWWWWyVVVVVVWVVyt
COTTON is and will con
tinue to be t/ie monej
crop of the South. The
planter who gets the most cot
ton from a giVen area at the
least cost, is the one who makes
the most money. Good culti
ration, suitable rotation, and
liberal use of fertilizers con*
taining at least 3% actual
will insure the largest yield.
We will send Free, upon application,
pamphlets that will interest every cottott
-dlanter in the South.
GERTIAN KALI WORKS,
93 Naasau St., New York.
Brushing Improves the Hair.
The very best brushes should al
ways be chosen, and at the very least
one hundred strokes a day should be
vigorously administeredr The bris
tles ot the brush should not be so
hard as to drag the hair out in case
of a tangle obstructing their course.
Nor should they be yielding. It is
useless to brush the hair unless the
skin of the head be brushed as well.
The friction stimulates it and makes
the hair grow. Brushing the hair
with slow and languid strokes is sim
ply useless. Vigor and intention are
necessary to produce a really good
effect and induce the bright, healthy
gloss that hair should have.
I*l CURESWHtSOLL ELSEFAILS.
U Best Gough Syrup. Ta*tes Good. Use
K3 In time. Sold by druggists. HI
The American Girl.
“The American girl has set the
standard of beauty for the whole
world, and unlike most sweeping
statements, there never was one so
true, even in its finest analysis,’’writes
Ktlward Bok in the May Tadies’
Home Journal. “And not only is
this true of the American girl’s beau
ty, but it goes further and is true of
her chic anther brightness. She is
the cleverest and most graceful girl in
the world. Likewise is she the best
dressed. The French may set the
fashions, but it takes an American
girl to wear them. No girl so com
pletely understands the art of dressing
well. See, for a moment, how true
this is of the girl of limited income—
she who is out in the world earning
her daily bread. No girl in the world
dreises more becomingly than the
self supporting girl of America. Every
one who has seen anything of the
world and of the working-girls of oth
er nations knows how literally true
this is. The working girl in America
is pjettierto begin with. We all
know that some of the prettiest types
of American girlhood are found be
hind the counters of stores and at
desks in offices. But the American
1
girl does not stop with her personal
beauty. She is clever enough to
know exactly how to dress to suit her
circumstances, and rarely does she
overdress.”
Secret of Beauty
is health. The secret of health is
the power to digest and assim
ilate a proper quanity of food.
This can never be done when
the liver does not act it’s part.
Do you know this ?
Tutt’s Liver Pills are an abso
lute cure for sick headache, dys
pepsia, sour stomach, malaria,
constipation, torpid liver, piles,
jaundice, bilious fever, bilious
ness and kindred diseases.
Tutt’s liver Pills
“I dunno whether ter make a doc
tor or, a lawyer of John." said the per
plexed parent. “I've got a lawsuit
to be settled, an’ a leg ter be cut oft,
so I s'pose I can't miss it fur either
way."
Bh>ur R balsam
riMNN end beeetin** Ih* bejf>
Promote* * Insurant frvwta.
never Fell* to Beetor# Qrjr
Heir to it* YouiUful Color.
RUDYARD KIPLING ON THE
AMERICAN GIRL-
Of more than usual interest is Rud
yard Kipling's expressed opinion 01
the American girl as herewith given:
“The American girls are pretty —
very much so—with a piquancy all
their ®wn, as impossible to describe
as to resist. Sweet and comely are
the maidens ot Deavonshire; delicate
and of precious seeming those who
iive in places of London;
fascinating for all their demureness
the damsels of France, clinging close
ly to their mothers and with large
eyes wondering at the wicked world;
excellent in her own place, and to
those who understand her, is the An
glo Indian Spin in her second season;
but the girls of America are above
and beyond them all.
“They are clever, they can talk:
yea, it is said they can think. Cer
tainly they have an appearance of so
doing which is delightfully deceptive.
They are original and regard you with
unabashed eye, as a sister migTit look
at her brother. They are instructed
too, in the folly and vanity of the
male mind, for they have associated
witlW boys from babyhood and can
discerningly minister to both vices or
pleasantly snub the possessor.
“They possess, moreover, a life
among themselves, independent of
any masculine associations. They
have societies and clubs and unlimit
ed tea fights where all the guests are
girls. They are self-possessed without
parting with any tenderness that is
their sex right. They understand.
They can take care of themselves.
They are superbly independent.
“When you ask them what makes
them so charming they say: ‘lt is
because we are better educated than
your girls and w-e are more sensible
in regard to men. We have good
times all around, but aren’t taught to
regard every man as a possible hus
band. Nor is he expected to marry
the first girl he calls on regularly.’
Yes, they have good times. Their
freedom is large and they do not
abuse it. They can go driving with
young men and receive notes from
young men to an extent that would
make an English mother wince with
horror, and neither driver nor drivee
have a thought beyond the enjoyment
of a good time.
“But this freedom of the young girl
has its drawbacks. She is—l say
with all reluctance—irreverent from
her forty-dollar bonnet to the buckles
on her eighteen-dollar shoes. She
talks flippantly to her parents. She
has a proscriptive right to the society
of the man who arrives. The parents
admit it. This is sometimes embar
rassing, especially when you call on a
man and his wife for the sake of in
formation; the one being a merchant
of varied knowledge, the other a wo
man of the world. In five minutes
your host has vanished. In another
five his wife has followed him and you
are left alone with a very charming
maiden doubtless, but certainly not
the person you came to see.”
OASTOtIIA.
Bears the Von Have Always Bought
.T"
Strawberries should be replanted
at least every four years. Some of
j the best growers insist that 2-year-old
j beds give the best results.
Raspberries may be allowed to ma
ture six crops of fruit, and then anew
patch should be set out. But with
these, as with strawberries, the treat
ment given will make a considerable
difference in the length of time it will
be best to let the plants remain un
molested.
It grown in Idng rows, wide enough
apart to admit of using the horse cul
tivator the work can be done to better
advantage at much less cost.
COLDS
Colds are easily taken and often de
velop into bronchitis or consumption.
You should cure a cold promptly with
Dr. John W. Bull’s Cough Syrup.
This celebrated remedy is most effi
cient and will cure a cold at once.
Dr. Bulls
COUCH SYRUP
Promptly cures Stubborn Colds.
Dost* are small and pleasant to take. Doctors
recommend it, Frice 45 cts. At all druggists.
THE CAUSE OF i
DYSPEPSIA.
Loss of Vitality Known to be the Parent of this Dread
Disease—The Method of Cure that Has
Proved Most Successful. $
The most common of all human ailments
is deranged digestion: the most aggravating
disease, inherited by innn, dyspepsia. In
sidious in its nature, varied in its forms it
tortures its victims, baffles the skill of phy
sicians and the power of medicine.
The primary cause of dyspepsia is lack of
vitality; the absence of nerve force; the loss
of the life-sustaining elements of the blood.
It is a truism that no organ can properly
perform its function when the source of
nutriment fails-; when it is weakened on one
hand and over-taxed on the other. When
the stomach is robbed of the nourishment
demanded by nature, assimilation ceases un
natural gases are generated, the entire sys
tem responds to the disgord.
A practical illustration of the symptoms
and torture of dyspepsia is furnished by the
case of Joseph T. Vandyke, 440 Hickory St.,
Scranton, Pa.
In telling his story Mr. Vandyke says:
“Five years ago, I was afflicted with a
trouble of the stomach, which was very
aggravating. I had no appetite, could not
enjoy myself at any time, and especially
was the trouble severe when I awoke in the
morning. I did not know what the ailment
was, hut it became steadily worse and I was
in constant misery.
“ I called in my family physician, and he
diagnosed the case as catarrh of the stomach.
He prescribed for me and I lmd his prescrip
tion filled. I took nearly all of the medi
cine, hut still the trouble became worse,
and I felt that my condition was hopeless.
My friends recommended various proprie
tary remedies, some of them among the best i
Listening 1 to the Preacher.
“If it be difficult for some people
to listen, it is ten times harder for
other people to follow-, for it is evident
a person may listen and not follow,”
writes lan McLaren, of “The Art of
Listening to a Sermon,” In the May
Ladies’ Home Journal. “Very few
are accustomed to think about the
same thing, or indeed to think about
anything, tor thirty minutes; after a
brief space their interest flags and
they fall behind; they have long ago
lost the thread of the preacher’s argu
ment and have almost forgotten his
subject. The sermon which suits
such a desultory mind is one of twen
ty paragraphs, each paragraph an an
ecdote or an illustration or a startling
idea, so that wherever the hearer
joins in he can be instantly at home.
Sensible people ought, however, to
remember that a series of amusing
lantern-slides and a work of severe art
are not the same, and if anyone is to
expound the Gospel of Christ worthily
he must reason as he goes and ask
his hearers to think. The chain may
be of gold, but there ought to be links
securely fastened together, and a
hearer should try them as they pass
through his hands. If one does not
brace himself for the effort of hearing
a sermon he will almost certainly
finish up by .complaining either that
the preacher was dull or that the dis
course was disconnected. No ser
mon is worth hearing into which the
preacher has not put his whole
strength, and no sermon can be heard
aright unless the hearer gives his
whole strength also.”
THE DISCOVERYOFTHE DAY.
Aug. J. Bogel, the leading druggist
of Shreveport, La., says:
“Dr. Kings New discovery is the
only thing that cures my cough, and
it is the best seller I have. J. F.
Campbell, merchant ofSafford, Ariz.,
writes: “Dr. King's New Discovery
is all that is claimed for it; it never
fails, and is sure cure for Consump
tion, Coughs and colds. I cannot
say enough for its merits.” 1 )r. King s
New Discovery for Consumption
Coughs and Cold is notan experiment.
It nas been tried for a quarter of a
century, and to-day stands at the
head. It never disappointed. Free
trial bottles at \V. A. Wright Drug
Store.
At a cate a group ot young gentle
men were discussing politics. A
young fellow entered and joined in
the conversation, but his argument
did not please the others, and one of
them said to him: “Be quiet! At
your age I was an ass myselfi”
“You are wonderfully well pre
served, sir," was the reply.
FOR LA GRIPPE.
Thomas Whittield & Cos., 240 Wabash
aVe., corner Jackson st., one of Chicago’s
oldest and-most prominent druggists, re
commend Chamberlain's Cough Remedy
for la grippe, as it not only gives a
prompt and complete relief, but also
counteracts any tendency of la grippe to
result in pneatfTonia. For sale by J. H.
Blackburn.
From the Republican , Scranton, Penna.
in the market, but I tried several of them
without receiving benefit. After I had been
suffering several months, and had secured
no relief from any of the many remedies
which I had taken, a friend of mine, by the
name of Thomas Campbell, also a residenl
of this city, urged me to try Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People. I told him it
would be a useless waste of money to buj
them, as I was convinced that nothing could
do me any good.
“I was finally persuaded to buy a box
and began to use the pills according to
directions. Before I had taken the second
box I began to feel relieved, and after taking
a few- more boxes I considered myself re
stored to health. The pijls gave me new
life, strength, ambition and happiness.”
An unfailing specific is found in Dr. Wil
liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People for such
diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis,
St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheuma
tism, nervous headache, the after effect of la
grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and
sallow complexions, that tired feeling result
ing from nervous prostration, all diseases re
sulting from vitiated humors in the blood,
such us scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They
are also a specific for troubles peculiar to
females, such as suppressions, irregularities
and all forms of weakness. In men they effect
a radical cure in all eases arising from mental
worry, overwork or excesses of whatever
nature. These pills are manufactured by the
Dr. Williams’ Medicine Cos., Schenectady,
N. Y., and are sold only in boxes bearing the
firm’s trade-mark and wrapper at 50 cents a
box or six boxes for $2.50, and are never sold
in bulk. They may be had of ail, druggists.
The Law of Appetite.
A healthy appetite craves and di
gests the food material which the sys
tem requires. If we know that in
infancy milk is essential to the human
organism, because before the age of
six months, or thereabout, the “phys
iological machinery” is not prepared
for the digestion of starchy foods; that
in childhood sugar and starch and fat
are required to supply the elements
especially needed tor growth; that in
youth bread and meat in abundance
are necessary to meet the increasing
demands which development imposes
on the constitution; that in mature
life, when the brain is most exercised,
digestible phosphatic salts are needed
to repair wasted' tissue; that in old
age less food is required, aud bfead,
as the nonogeearian Sir Isaac Holden
asserted, renders the arteries “like
furred boilers”— if we find, in brief,
that every period and condition of life
has certain exigencies in y which rea
son must take instinct for her guide—
we should listen to the voice of in
stinct, realizing that the appetite is
subject to a “law of its own.” This
law does not involve the fallacy that
instinct is not to be trained or disci
plined; it only requires that the func
tion of instinct be given due recogni
tion. In the words of Shakespeare,
we should let “good digestion wait on
appetite, and health on both.”—Har
per’s Bazar.
August Flower.
“It is a surprising .fact,” says Prof.
Houton, “that in my travels in all
parts of the world, for the last ten
years, I have met more people having
used Green's August Flower than any
other remedy, for dyspepsia, deranged
liver and stomach, and for constipa
tion. I find for tourists and sales
men, or for persons filling office posi
tions, where headaches and general
bad feelings from irregular habits ex
ist, that Green's August Flower is a
grand remedy. It does not injure the
system by frequent use, and is excel
lent for sour stomachs and indiges
tion.” Sample bottles free at John
H. Blackburn's.
Sold by dealers in all civilized
countries.
“I want my money back, said un
cle Silas to the man who was taking
tickets at the entrance to the me
nagerie. “This show is a rank fraud.
I’ve been watching that hippopota
mus fer half an hour an' he never
opened his mouth once like the one
on the show bills."
, •
[fyou suffer from tenderness or
fullness on the right side, pains under
shoulder blade, constipation, bilious
ness, sick headache and feel dull,
heavy and sleepy, your liver is torpid
and conjested. DeWitt’s Little
Early Risers will cure you promptly,
pleasantly and permanently by re
moving the congestion and causing
the bile ducts to open aud flow nat
urally. Thev are good pills.
Dr. W. A. Wright.
L. Holmes.
DeWitt’s Little Hariy i ,sers
The iatnnut tittle Blits.