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Not by anything she drank or took, but
by bad blood. Is it any wonder ‘she
feels “‘blue?” In most cases blues are
only another name for bad blood. A may
or woman feels unhappy. Life seemy
dark. The heart is heavy. Bad blood;
carrying its poison all over the body, &l’
we call it ** blues.”
Read these experiences :
- Mrs. C. C. Hutchinson, of Pittston, Pa.,
says: ‘I consider Dr. Acker’s English
Blood Elixir the best medicine in the
world, not only for blood troubles, buy
also for dy‘:sepsia, with which I have
been afflicted.”
**Both my wife and myself firmlls' be
lieve that Dr. Acker’s English Blood Elixir
is the best of all blood medicines, and will
remove all impurities of the blood.”
GEO. V. SUGNER, Valley City, Dak.
This grand Elixir is sold by druggists
in all parts of America. It is a pure,
honest medicine; not a cheap sarsapa
rilla. Try it to-day.
" For sale by DE AN & DAVIS,
172 1 ~yurranted, and_every pair |
‘*r‘nmien W, L. Douglas Shoes are
Eas his name and price stamped on bottom,
5,00 ™3oy,
o 0 N ‘2OO
%40 e A l FOR
" PN P S
Rivase o Loy ADI ES
SUNE Y xYO
s R,
s2’2 0 Vi i 25 o $R Bovs
2% (IR b e
- serpolt ey U
GENTL MG~ A SSES
SN A RS NN RN
T ‘W RN
W. L. DOUCLAS
= 2
3 SHOE centita
CENTLEMEN.
Fine Calf and Vaced Waterproof Grain.
The excellence and wearing qualities of this shoe
cannot be better shown than by the strong endorse
ments of its thousands of constant wearers.
€=.oo Genunine Hand-sewed, an elegant and
<y stylish dress Shoe which commends itself.
51.00 Einndesewed Welt, A fine calt Shoe
& unequailed for style and durability.
53.50 Goodyear Welt is the standard dress
Shoe, at a pni\ulnr nrice.
53.50 Policeman's N_ o is especlally adapted
for railroad men, farmers, ete.
All made in Congress, Button and Lace.
: FOE
s3&°2 SHOES {5B,
‘have been most favorably received since Introduced
and the recent improvements make them superior
10 any shoes gold at these Irrl('es.
Ask your Dealer, and if he cannot supply I'ou send
irect to Tactory enclosing advertised price, or a
tal for order blauks.
W, L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Mass.
YAVIS & LOCKE
/ £ 7 g
.»'4‘\" e O Ai.l\) AN L
Y !
ks % 3 % i
o 1 ] 3 g 5
NSURIFTION | C2UGH or COLD
RONMCHITIS l Throat Affactien
.
CROFULA |Wasting of Flesh
any Disengevwhere the Throat and Lungs
e Inflaomed, Lack of Strength or Nerve
wer, you can be relicved and Cured by
% A ;—:% E ’s
QL ok fi !
PURE COD L'WER OIL
YvWith Hypophosphites.
PALATACLE AS MILK,
Asl for Scoit's Ewmn'sion, and let no em~
lanaiion or selicitation induce you te
ceept a subatitiie,
Sold Ly all Druggists,
PCOTT & BOWME,Chomists,N.Y
b p;agmn}g e
3 3‘1;‘:99“?.4_ ;?!; _
¢ it A ;,‘;i’_ g =
8 004 N 59 fi§ U
o, 9 v
SR g g "
E%, IoIANOS
Qw2s cASH
WUNERE oo
(g ' 7 RGANS
PUALE |57 $lO CASH
f 920 §ig and THE BALANCE next
b December sth,
. \.;;,:,’5.‘ WHEN CROPS ARE SOLD.
é s Eun L eseT GASH Prices.
Hs'mllé' [ Spcemity Rednoed. and the
Bt e \{% Ht".!"w;?‘ km:wtn on stand
-1 fifiufi:‘ifi ard instraments,
N LO IRNTEREST
] TR or ndiuce on the eash price,
A h;r“-';'\ W o Fopr Menths timo give
P on Wil 1y einarge whatever,
v a;X on W thont x_i‘,':' © whatever.
¢a
| \-. TS ATFER COOD for
AMRAET R 2oaust September, or
\ & ULt +g? Octobor, 1200,
Y i B ¥ idg Praso, any Organ, any
“’ Poriehe . pd Styie or Price.
2 1250 | @0 excepTiON,
& osl CUR ENJIRE STOCK.
pl 2 g B e
i ' r ]
B cizunn THAT
5 K s."ls*})'."' i 1 Sehodula for our Summer
By Yg b The SEST SUMMER
R !',’_h i Vi, # we ever made. You
u&:.»:".:ku wil ne wlion you see the bare
i otiored.
Foxs "9 Write for Circular—
b R,
¢ _ Summer Offer 1890.
W iy
15;‘@4 .&B.S. MH
s 82 The whichest mesns
{ i as IR s
UALE = (UODEN & BATES,
R on ;
%50 g 3outhern Music House,
e wiuk” SAVANNAMN, CA. .
‘s <iis .. [ s and Whiskey Habite
e ’:} eßb’ 3 ired vt home withe
vt g E-' L & out pain. Book ufrw
b i ‘.:’{fi ticuiars sent FREE
.&T e g @ B.M.WOOLLLYL,' X
7 M iiac n Mu witice 10454 Whitehais st
n the spring-time” comes m Z Qj
tonic and a boon.
THE DAWSON NEWS.
BY E. 1. RAINEY.
—HAVIE MOVIIE)—
hlnvto their handsome new store and now have ready to
show you by far the handsomest and most extensive and
varied line of
a e A
b, : d
W Sh ‘
!
raps, Shoes and Hats
It has ever been our pleasure to show. We are show
ing a beautiful line of Embroidered Dress Patterns just
fr m Paris at $3,50, $lO,OO, $15.00 and $20.00.
Also a handsome line of €ilk Patterns in Black and
Colors at goc., sl.co, sl.2sand $1.50 per yard, with Trim
ming to match in great varlety.
A —————
UST OPGNED:
o
150 pieces of new Dress Goods of all descriptions—
ITenriettas, Tricots, Serges, Flannels in every imaginable
shape and design. We bought
‘oo Miany Groods
and they must be sold. Come early and get the choice
things. Yours anxious to please,
N ) Y N .
DAVIS & DOZLER.
DAWSON, GEORGIA, OCTOBER S, 1890,
l CINNOCENTS ABROAD.”
A Party of Seven Beantiful Speel
mens of Rural Simpliicity
Strike the City.
’ T e Hotel Mayo, one night res
| cently, entertained a party o! seve
éen very aged people from Irwin
ic unty—four women and three
[ men—who came in on the B. and
J\\'. train, and were captured by
[the euterprising porier for thut
) hotel,
[ Tt transpire ! that these ol peo
tle, not one of whom was nader
0 years ot age, had ever ridden
in an omnibus nor had ever stop
ped at a hotel hefore. 'fhey were
on their way to Dawson to see the
Indian doctor, but failing to make
coneetions, they spent the night
}in this city, and the next morning
one of the men of the party was
detaited to go on to Dawson and
vet treatment for the erond, all
of whom were more or less ailing,
while the remainder of the party
returned to Ty Ty.
W hew: the party arrived at the
hote!, after having taken mn the
town, sipper had just begun, and
when Miz, Mayo's attentention
was culied to them they had all wa.
ken seats in the office and were
staring in cpen wonder at what
they saw. l
Mrs, Mayo asked them if they
wanted rooms tor the night, but
onc of them spoke up and said,
“them chairs are goold enough for
we'uns, and we will jist set here
till ther train gits ready to go, and
that biy yailer man has promised
te take us back to the depot.”
In the meantime, one of the old
adies who had a daughter living
in the city had gone around to see
her and Mre. dayor, not wishing
to be inconvenienced, or to turn
her hotelinto a curiosity shop, had
by earnest persuasion induced them
0 take a room- a room with two
heds in it. Mrs. M. yo went with
l‘]ulll -y ».\5 LU TN, v LR
they had entered therein she asked
them if they would have their sup~
per sent up or go down tor it. An
old lady spoke up and xaid : *“No,
my God, lady, we couldn’t swal
low another moufful. We'uns eat
erbout a dollar’s worth ot mullet
apiece before we come down lere,
I lhad the measles erbout =six
months ergo, and I've been hanker
in* arter fish ever sirce, an' when
I =ot down ter ‘em I was Jetermin
ed to eat «r plenty.”
This opinion was concurred in
by the balance of the crowd, so
Mrs. Mayo, after instructing them
18 to the purposes of the electric
button, left them.
Subsequently a servant had oc=
casion to pass the room, the door
of which they had not taken the
trouble to close, and looking in
saw that they had divided up and
gone to bed. Three of the old la:
dies and one of the men were in
one bed and the other two men
were in the other. The servant
reported the condition of affairs,
when Mrs. Mayo sent them word
for heaven's sake to shut the door,
or else they would be taken for
heathens.
} They complied with the request
and that was the last of them until
they were called for their train,
when upon reaching the door the
servant was almost horrified by the
‘unearthly suore which rattled away
‘and filled the chamber, so to speak, |
from ceiling to floor. Six distinet
snores were counted, and the noise
was terrible, sounding like the
combined noaises of the tom-tom,
the hurdy.gurdy, the bazoo, the
dumb-bull and the pouring of peas
on a drvy cowhide. It wus horrible,
and under its influence a large
piece of plastering in the cen-~
ter or the ceiling overhead gave
wiy and fell with a crash to the
floor. But they slept and snored
on, until a terrible blast woke oue
of them up and he heard the bawl
ing of the porter at the door.
ey were all gotten up fina'ly,
and firing down started out of the
office without paying their hill.
Iheir attention was celled to this
omission by the night clerk. |
“Bitl! Uil why we ain’t got
no bill,” said oue ot the men,
“Well, but you owe for your
beds,” said the clerk. !
*Jerusalem 1Y exclaimed the old
wan, ‘“‘that’~ the first time I ever
heard of folks bein’ inuited toa
place and have to pay tor goin'
thar. Why blamed if tht i
valler feller didu't ax me to cone
here.”
Finally the matter was explain
ed to them nnla compromise ef
fected by their paying $2, in as
much as they had slept three in o
hed, and getting into e "hus they
were driven to the depot: and by
this time it is )mpml filry have
venched their simple howe, whers
probably they are mere ot nnu(ai
than among the sighis and scenes |
of u busz, hustling city, ‘
What relationship existed among
the awembers of the porty has nm.‘
been lenrned.—Albany Nows nmll
Advertiser,
~ Caught by the Aet Themsclyes.
[t is rather singular that some
of tie most rabid advoeates of the
passage ot the anti-littery law
have been making a thritty penny
out ot the “chance”™ business thems
selves, and are rather dismayed at
discovering that they are amenable
to the law,
A number of these papers, nota
bly the Chicazo Triune, a very
fi rce radieal shoet, lins heen ran
ning u little lottery of its own with
the view ot increasing its subscrip
tion lists, and enriching its coffers.
It hos"not serupled to offer tempis
ing prizes to its readers in their
gift enterprises, at the same time
howling fiercely ngainst the lottery
evil, and abusing Lounisiana and
her people for chartering such an
institation.
The Tribune is not alone in this
businegs. There is a host of pus
pers _,North and West in the same
cutezory. They aresevere in their
denunciations ot the Loui®ana lot~
tery, and very zealous in advocas
ting their “magnificent gi:t enter
prives.” These viriwous journals
now find that thcy will have to
avaudon their vragrices | Vil
nuve snouted over the artppling of
the Loaisiana lottery and hud
their own little schemes, worked
on the same plun, though under a
more pleasing name, perhaps, sre
smashed, and will have to bhe
abandoned. This is what the act
BHYS *
“No letter, postal card or circu~
lar, concerning any lottery, so
called gift concern, or other simi
lar enterprise offering prizes de
pendent upon lot or chance, (or
concerning schemes devised tor the
purpoge of obtaining money or
property under false pietenses)
and no list of thz drawings at rny
lottery or similar scheme, and no
lottery ticket or pirt thereot, and
no check, araft, bill, money, pos.
tal note, or money order, tor the
purchase of any ticket, tickets or
parts thereot, or anv share or
chance in any such lottery or giit
enterprise, shall be carried in the
mails or d-hvered at or through
any postoffice or branch thereof,
or by any letter carrier. Nor
shall any newspaper, letter, puni
phlet or publication of any kind
containing any advertisement of
any tottery or gift enterprise of
any kind oflering prizes depen
dent upon lot or chance, or
containing any list of prizes avard
«d at the drawings of any such
lottery or giit enterprise, whether
said hst is of any part or all the
drawing, be carried in the matter
delivered by auy postnaster or
letted carrier,
Whent ‘
Wiien sores break out on your
person, when pimples cover vour
face, when yoa eel wenk and de
hilitated, and your nervous system
feels shattered. when you have
aches or pains, when your appes
tite fails, when you are troubled
with dyspepsia, when there is a
general functional derangement
aud lite hardly seems worth living.
give Dr. Bull's Sarsapaiiila a tiiul
and you will be delighted at its
pleasant effect. As a general
health restorer and e&trengthener
of the whole system it is superior
10 auy other compound. It will
not harm the most dericate invalid
and has saved thousands trom a
premature grave. You wrong
yourselt wheu you dilay giving it
atvinl, -
s
Cholera preverted by u ing Lav
mar’s Diarrhoea Mixture.
* DBEPEW ON FARMING.
f He Uerzes Farmers to Combine, aud
l Thus Have a Yoice in the
' Government ,
l Dr. Chaurey Depew has just
had time to wash the salt and
steamer’s cinders from his face
But he has commenced to make
speeches The latest is an azri
coltural orstion st Syracuse,
Wten Dr. Depew tulks about
farming, the havseeds and wiln
men ot the New York stand aghast.
The prisidentin New York €en<
tralis a manyssided man. He can
quiet a sirike or convulse a far
,mvra' club—all in'ene breath,
Put Dr. Depew always says
something, At Svracus2 he utters
ed “muny things that were good
and many things that were true."
The prosperivy, prominenes and
power ot the republic, he declares,
rest upon the farn.. Of the se,en
teen millions of bread winners in
the land, including the professions
and those engaged in the commer
cials pursuits, ten million, six hun.
dred thousand are farmers, and of
the thirteen millions whose labor
create our productive welth, all
may be assigned to agriculiure ex
cept two millions and balf.
Every mile of railroad, says Dr.
Depow, brings iuto cultivaiion
1,000,000 tresh acres. A half cen
tury ago there were four
thousana milhons of dollars inves
ted in agriculiure, and wow there
are eleven theusand millions.
There were then one miliiy
farms, and now there are hetwoen
four and five millions, Within
the last thirty years the acreage
devoted to corn has increased from
fourteen million 0 seventy-eigl
mitlion aad the amonnt produced
trotm five hundred miliions to two
thousnud millions of bushels,
while wheat in the same period has
exgunded g Apiie” domis
acres, and the amount produced
from one hundred miliions to five
hundred millicons of bushels. Since
18340 the land improved and uune
der cultivation has growa {rom
one hundred and thirteen millicns
to threee hundred millions of acres.
Our popuiation since 1840 has in
creased from seventeen miiliors
to sixty five millions.
Dr. Depew said the raiiroads had
opeied the Western prairies ana
given tree farms to the scttlers
from Euiope. Thetw pecple in
troduced no variety in agriculture,
but entered without exception into
the planting and harvesting of the
sume cereals. We have become
the lurgest agricultural nation in
the world . The output of our
larms chas become 30 per cent.
groater thun the absorning power
ofthe country. We produce 30
pet ceut. of the food of the world.
Dr. Depew wants farmers to or
ganize o tizht the combines.
Capital organizes in corporations,
labor orgunizes in trade unions,
manufacturers or:anize tor protecs
tion. Faimers alone have tailed
to unite in any eflicient and prac~
tical way. Their agricultural so.
cicties are purely educational,their
Alliances are largely the c¢ppor.
tunity ot the village lawyer to ex
pliot crude ideas upon corpora
tions and capital as the first round
of the Indder vpon which he hopes
to climb to the Legislature or to
Congress, But the farmers should
be 0 banded together tiat they can
impress upon the government with
commanding voice their needs,
that they can so educate each oth
er in the rotation subdivision of
crops as to relieve a surplus of any
one product, that they can escupe
the middle man who is now sap
piog the lite of their business,
Our tfarmers should study the
coudition ot markets and the char
acter of their solds and when they
find that the market is overstocked
with their produets they must
change to thuse things wore in
demand. To-day there are 200
agriculiural papers pubiished 1
the United Statesfifty schoois aad
colleges teach pructical tarmin ..
Country boys are flocking 10
towus in the West because inven.
tion and discovery have given rise
to_enterprize in industrial centres.
Thua the ranks of the consumers
are being enormously recruited,
VOL. V111..-NO. 20.
and out of all proportion to those
lot the prolucers. It is the inevita
ble result that within a brief pers
ind the tarmers of the country wiil
again find within the borders, and
ahout their lmnma a profitable
market for ol their products,
The English tarmer first pove
the landlord, then the parson, then
the govirument, betore there is
any lett tor himsel!, but threes
quarters of the American farmers
own their own land und most o
the remainder farm upon shares,
which is bet er than ownership, hos
cause it gives them all the profi
and iaposes upon them none of the
burdens. ]
Dr Depew seos hefore us agri
caltural prosperity 8o certain and
so full of promise that the connt-y
can be confident ot growth
in wealth and happiness,
R
Fool Killer Not There,
At Carbonada, Pa., John Hill
has brought svit against Samuel
'V yeth for the recovery of about
“4,000, al eged to have been ol
tined under false prctences.
Mrs, Wycth is a medium and Hil
was nstrong heliever in spintuals
ism. When his wite died Hil
consultcd Mrs. Wyeth as to her
condition in the unknewn world,
and was told that she would e
per ectly happy but for the faci
that she was not 80 bacomingly
dressed as the angels by #hom sh
was surrounded. ‘This grieved
“Ar Hill, und he agked Mrs. Wyl
what the miiliners up there char.
ed for diesses, havirg, perliaps
dismud recollections ot what the i
hills were 10 this mundane sphere,
Mrs. Wyeth s:idshe wounld nsh
the departed =pirvit, and afterward
told Mr. 11l that prices tor dress
es in the prevailing style ran oo
from $lO to £l,OOO. His wite, tne
mediam sail, wus not disposed o
divk‘v.' u'l.m_il the price, but assured.
would be expended tor her wonl |
be duly returued o him by th
Lord.
Finally Mr. Hill wus told to put
whutever mouey he could spare au-
Jder g certain stone aud gssured hin
thai it would reach its distination
He was liberal in tis ideas, mul‘
wld the medium he wanted his
ngel to dress as well us any of her
celestial veighliors,
Alter a whi'e the ealls for ne.
robes became uumerous and exi
gent aud the mouney put under ihe
stone by Mr. Hill disappeared s
quickly that he suspecied it wa
removed by other hands, He con
sulted his triend #nd they advised
him to bring suit.
Counsel for the defense will ar.
gue that there is no proot that th
money was not taken away by
pirits nor that it was not handed
10 the Lord.
A Delicate Operatioa,
Among the visitors to Americus
yesterday was a gentleman frcm
Lee county, who deserves to rank
not only emong the best surgecns
in Georgia and the South, but in
the vutire country as well. Tle
gentleman's story of a delicate su
zical operation, performed by hins
selt, and he will vouch for it, is as
follows :
Lnst spring I planted a lot of
Eugiish peas. Oue duy the chick:
ens got in the garden, scratched
them up and ate them. 1 didn‘t
wve time, just then, to send to
tow: after more pea seed to plant,
«0 I deciced to cut the chickens’
eraws open, take the seed out and
plant them. I did that; thea 1
sewed up the eraws with a common
aeedle and thread. I never saw a
Aner crop ot Eazlish peas than |
raised last spring, aud I think thos
chickens were the best [ ever taste |
ior, be it known, the chickens liv d
wd crew to be ot good size,”
Awmericus Tines,
To Dispoi colis,
Hendaches and Fevers,to cleans,
the sysiem effectually, yet venily
shen costive or hilivus, or whe
“he blood is fmpure or sluzgish, to
permonently care habicaal eon
sumption, to awaken the kiduey:
wd liver to a healthy activity,
without irditating or weakening
them, use Syrup of Figs.
e e GOt e
All Kinds of bowel Coripluints
are prowptly relieved by usiug
Lamar's Diarrhoea Mixture.
< .
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' ‘“AGE CANNOT WITHER HER,»
remarked an old gentleman, as he gazed
. fondly upon the comely little woman by his
' side; “but frankly,” he continned, *at one
- time I was afraid cosmetios would, The lfllr
little wowemn, in order o _appear youthful
- plastered her face with ditferent varietics of
‘[ whitewash, yelept * balms,’ 'creamll‘.‘ lotions,*
| ete.” * Yes,” intcrrul»wd the litt wolmuli
"1 did, until my skin vecame like lpnrohmeu
and so plm&lg and coarse.” **Wel "'-!g the
listener, * at do gnu use now?" * Uge,"”
- was the reply, * not ing but common sense
and Dr. Pierce's: Golden Medieal Discovery.
Common gense told me that if my blood was
{mre, liver active, appetite and difoatlon good,
hat the outward woman woul take on the .
hue of health, The * Discovery * did all those
thlngs and untunll[v rejuvenaied me,” If x:)u
wouid possess a cloar, benutiful complexion,
free from blotches, pimples, eruptionn. yellow
Bpots and roughness, usc the ** Golden Med
ical Discovery.” Tt s guaranteed to d
all that it {8 claimed to, or monoxorlg
for it will be prompily refumn
Copyright, 1882, by WORLD'S Dls. Mup. Ass'N. 3
424 S 5 00 OFFERED
N/ (k 5 ST
L §} for an incurablo oaso of Ca=
& ‘ tarri in the Head by the
roprietors of Dr. Sage's Catorh l(wue%{. 'B‘
fls mild, soothing and healtog propertics,
cures the worst cases, no matter of how loug
standing. By druggists, 5 cents
TR dh a e ——————————————————
228 iw2 e O e2w
FOR THE HEALING OF THE HATIONS, ‘
i 1 e b (s
\ESNCITT- DN
ROYAL N
O F
-BB A A
b IWJW .
BN T e T
3 VIS
NATURE'S REMCZDY
Is a first-class sclentific preparation, the
result of Dr. King’s untiring labors and
researches following after Gaffray, De.
geer, Brandtlott, Pastuer, Koch, Migquel
and other tllustrious compeers, whose la
bors substantiate, as held by the French
Academy of Sclence, that ** disease gerng
may be not only attenuated until neasly
harmless, but may be revivified by degrees
and given the most virulent characier.”
—ROYAL GERMETUER
I 8 an infallible cure for numerous diseases,
such as Rheumatism, Indigesiton, heart
troubles, Headache, Liver, Bladder, and
Kidney diseases, Chills and Fever, Ca
# tarrh, Paralysis, Asthma, Bronekitis,
Coughs, Inclpient Consumption, all Blood
and Skin diseases, Female troubles, ete,
HST SR LR U B pationt qulckly
feeling Its Invigorating and health-giving
influence. It Increases the appetite, aids
digestion, elears the complexion, purifies
the blood, regulates the liver, kidneys,
etc., and speedily brings bloem to the
cheek, strength to the body and joy to the
heart. For weak and debilitated females
it is without a vival or a peer.
It you are suffering with disease, and
fail of a cure,send stamp for printed mat
ter, certificates, ete. It is a boon to the
suffering and the wonder of the century.
Por sale by King's Royal Germetuer
Company, Atlanta, Ga., and by drugglsts.
Price §1.50 per concentrated bottle, which
makes one gallon of medicine as per di
rections accompanying each bottle, Can
be sent by express C. O. D. if your drug
gist can not supply you.
W by AN & AN L.
S
¢ ‘XW?."-‘V. 2
figg&”:»' [ T-: ‘
(¥ o o
Ria it N S
e
f'?;;.{*:#'“ 7 S : ;
it & s
2's;': £op s !
L T e oy
i’.’:‘:g&';? _37-,'?.-;,2;‘:_23‘? -
o R
e SR A
=R A T
Joth the method and esults when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
nd refreshing to the teste, une acly
zently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys
wm effectually, dispels colds, head
whes and fevers and cures habitual
onstipation. Byrup of Figs is the
only remedy of)its kind ever pro
luced, pleasing to the taste and ace
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly benefiginl 81 its
lects, prepared only from the most
naithy ums) agreeabie substances, its
many exccllent qualities commend it
i» all and have made it the most
_opular remedy known.
Syrup of E‘i is for sale In 500
and $1 bottles E; 21l leading druge
gists. Any recliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute,
CALIFORNIA FiG SYRUP CQ.
~‘OO!BVILL£§.‘I'(IYf flufc_oqé‘v?m .
stven SEVENTERN
WD
~ 5;?7 p £
To cure Biliousness, Sick Headache, Consti=
pation, Malaria, Liver Complaints, take
the safe and certain yemedy,
SMITH'S
Use the SMALL Size (10little Beansto the
bottle). THEY ARE THE MOST CONVENIENT.
fHuitable tor all Ages.
Price of either size, 25¢. per Hottle.
. '.'“'T
KIS SINGT-11-10xurmmmaren
Mailed for ¢ ets, (coppers or stamps).
l 1. F.SMITH & 00 Makersof “BILEBEASS,” ST, LOUIS MO,