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About The Dawson journal. (Dawson, Ga.) 1878-18?? | View Entire Issue (Dec. 5, 1878)
m r M Jaurual ,dbusb*x> itbmt THOMDAT. fp. tt.MS— Strictly In advance. T^ee m ?h hß *: *2 gix 4 W) o*e year -—J .irerUser* .’—The money for ad considered due after first inser- tio .°;. er ti S etnents inserted at intervale to be A t„• new each insertion. ***lo additional charge of 10 per cent will made on advertisements ordered to be in ,erf^“ r “iaeme r nti ,0 und the bead of “Spe • t Notice*” wilt be inserted for 15 cents Cl * line for the first insertion, and 10 cents pC ! ne’for each subsequent insertion. in the “ Locl Column ’ _mhe inserted at 35 cents per line for the - per line for each subse „,,nt insertion. . q 111 communications or letters on business tended for this office should be addressed ■•Xhs Dawson Journal ” LEGAL advertising RATES. Sheriff sales, per levy of 1 square.... 4no Mortgage sales, per levy 8 00 it,, sales, per levy 4 "" Citations for Letters of Administration 400 Application for Letters of gu-.rdia- Application for Dismission from ministration •••• 10 00 Application for Dismisstom from Guardianship ••;••• 600 Application for leave to Sell Land— )n g sq |5, each additional square..... 4 00 Application for Homestead.. 800 Sotioc to debtor* and creditors ... 600 j,,nd sales, per aqaare (inch) 4 on Perishable properlv, per eq 8 00 jiatrav Notices, sixtv days 8 00 Notice to perfect service 8 00 Rule Nisi, per square 400 , u ]es to establish lost papers, per sq 400 Roles compelling titles, per square.. 400 gules to perfect service in Divorce cases 10 00 The above are the minimum rates oflepal advertising now charged bv the Press of Georgia, and which we shall at.rictlv adhere to in the future. We hereby give Snpl no tice that no advertisement of this class wil ha pohlished in the Journal without the fet is paid in advance, Only In cases where we have special arrangements to the contrarv frofessicnal ©arfls. It. GCFBKY, JAB. O. PARKS GUERRY & PARKS, jUloNiem apt! Collision at Lain, DAWSON, - GEORGIA. —jo;— rjRACTICE in the State and Federal | Courts. Collections made a specially.— Promptness and dispatch guarantied snd insured. . N° v ltf R. f. simm6rs7 jUi’f at Lain & Ileal tjtate jlg’t, Dawson, Terrell County, Ga. SPE IAL a tention given to collections conveyancing Dd investigating titles 1* Real Estate. Oct '.B, tf T. IT. PICKETT, Atf y 4 Counselor at Law, OFFICE with Ordinary in Court Hocst All business entrusted tc his care wil receive prompt and efficient attention. JnD J. J. BKCK, Attorney at Law, Jtarsr.ii, Callionn Comity, Ga. Will practice iu the Aibay Circuit and else where in the State, by Contract. Prompt at tention given to all business entrusted to his care. Collections a specialty. Will also in vestigate titles and buv or sell real Estate it. alhann, Baker aud A’arly Counties, march 21-tf L. G CARTLEDGE, Attorney atLaw VOK6AW, - - GEORGIA. alflLL give close attention to all bust- v ness entrusted to his cate in Albany Circuit. 4-Iv L. C- HOYL, Attorney at Law- Dawson, Georgia. J. t, JANES. C. A. MCDONALD Janes & McDonald, Attorneys at Law, DAWSOV, - OEOkOIA. Office at the Court House. 7an.T N. B. BARNES, ITCH M MAKE! AND -JEW ELER DAWSON, QA. \\7 ORK done in good style and at most ▼ reasonable prices. Office in Melton & Jlro's Store, Main Street M&-tf CHEAPEST DAILY INTHESOUTH It tVtftifiq jt/iTipU, AUGUSTA, GA. Is published at the Lcfw Price of •4.00 per year. IT IS'A BRIGHT, NEWSY EVENING 4 paper, and is edited with ability bv Mess James B Randal and P A Stovall. It is the mdy afternoon paper in the South that nub 'ishes the Telegrphic dispatches of the New ‘Otk Associated Press. In its columns wiH !l * found all the news that comes by tele iraph, and the telegrphic mirket leports received up to the time of going to press. Official Paper of Ibe City. The Evening Sentinel is the official paper of ‘he city Of Augusta. UP All who want a cheap p*per should 'uhacribe for it. Terms, |4 per year, #2 for ** months; and $1 for three months. tU'Ser-d for specimen copies. Address, WALSH A WRIGHT, Augusta, Ga. THE DAWSON JOURNAL. BY J. D. HOYL& CO. VEGETINE .WILL CURE RHEUMATISM.' 'JfttfSSJOHOOKEKUr. wlMmown in,. |^3mZ a " e tr ° ;,bl,,<l uTu? Read His Statement; Mjl a R. Stiveni*— OTAI, *‘ ' oct.,nwm.> •Iff wit y '*” no iMt fall I was taken Mt aSu Tf* unlbl to move ttnUliS three veer* eeo that a man could. Orer n&ri aii i h!. ** VEGETINE, and not suffer for Krmef A UruokwACo., vg&gffgSS,£& VECETINE HAS ENTIRELY CURED ME.I *u. a a sx,™,:- Bobto *’ oa.tsiO Beia^Tisedb, a friend ahe tried the relate *“ w bottl “ W “ *■“* • i *“*? * *o*“ •"Borer from Rheumatism. JJff ’* Uk ,*“ ‘* y “ r J l Betties Of the thhicemplemt.andeinh.ppjrtesav It hee entiriK nmommeudod the VxoiTDmte otnan with the him sued reauHs. M is a ■■■■> Rheumatism is a Disease of the Blood.' The blood in this dicesse is found to eoatein ea e, •eesofffbrui. VEGETINk nets *fa. Wood from us duessed condition to e health/flrcU “•tea- Vna*Tiwn re*ulatw the boemU which is eer/ importaut in this complaint. One bottle ef eeme ae that of before ot Barks, Hoof And Hrrbo. * TlOlIUl" m*• * Boston phrsiolsA, H hia at %25£}** • ruriflr. Hasrinc of |t nuar won- Sff?j*ytV tor .* u oth# l raw**" Ss*3/1 fwted Uko laboratory and convineod rajrself of it# fsnoiiM merit. It w prepared from barks' roete ane ♦fleotiTe, end they are mx*h a manner •• to predoee st VECETINE. - NOTHING EQUAL TO IT.\ Stas MA “ • • 1874 i>sar Sir.—l hare been troubled with Scrofula, vankcr. and Lirer Complaint for three years. Nothin* did me any good until I commenced using the VEOITIME Imm new getting along first-rate, and •till ustnf the Vkgetink. I oonsider there is aothiss equal to it for such complaints. Can heartily recoin, mend it to erexTbodv. Yours truly, m Mas. LIZKIK M. PACKARD, Ho. 10 JLagpunge fttreet, Sooth Scieia, Maat. VECETINE Prepend bp H. It. STEVENS, Boston,Massl Vegetino is Sold by all Druggists, dr. rice; 37 Court Place, LOUISVILLE, KY., A rrtularir cducmtcdiend lenllj qualified phrilri.n nd th most mcrfuLs his prmctwc will prore. Cures elltormi ef private, ehroulo and aexualdiseases, Spermator rhea and Impotency. ssWuieresuitofseif abuse iu yuuth, sexual excess",iu maturer years, or other cause! and producing acme ofthe following effects: Net vinta- Bess. Seminal Ktuisslona. Dimncas of Sight. Defective Mem. cry. rh7icalDecay, Pimples on Face, iverslon U. Society of Vsmsles, Confusion of Ideas, I.oas of Sexus 1 forer,. Ac, re deriag marriage Improper or enbappjN are Shovotigh.jr and permanently cured. _.SVPHiUS cured and purely eradicated from the system: {jrvFiv- ORRHEA, Gleet, Stricture, riles and other pre cured. Fstlectstreatedbym^lwex. pres*. Consult*ti >n free *nd inTited, ctiargee reaonWU und correspondence etricUy eoafidfttUL A PRIVATE COUNSELOR Of MO pages, vent to any address, securely gesled, for thirty Sot n Should ba read hr all. Address a. abore. wfflss hnura from 9A.M.t01 P. sL Sunday., u. AT. M. The Remedy .f the 19th featory. Barham’s Infallible MM) PILE CURE. \ Jj Mnnulkctured by the V Cflflßpr X Barbaa Pile Cure Cos., Durhaa, S. C. d&A I* * r frlle *• *“ r *‘ Hweephelii er I’ll***, when n tore U MMsible. Price I.Ut and buna fide tesUmonlula furs inked ea application Til© White -is- THE EASIEST SELLING, the best satisfying SBiiilclii Its Introduction and World-renowned reputation was tho death-Wow to high oficed machines. 11 .., n THEBE ARE NO WHITE MACHINES IN THE MARKET. chsap * tac n tram customer* bstss ssti&M ah <* *• “fIiSTwHITE IS THE PEEBOF *£"'"<> MACHINE NOW r T ?h A N A THE E FAMILY MA CmNE S "OF C THE H T OWE AND WEED IUIIE'„„ -.gc ,n MANUFACTURE THAN “Vtsworkwanshif is unsurpassed. Do not Buj any other before try ing the WHITE. Piim* eefl Terms Msds Satisfactory. AGENTS WANTED 1 White Sewing Machine Ce.. CLEVELAND, #• DAWSON, GEORGIA, THURSDAY’. DECEMBER £ 1878. Better Than Gold. BY K. E. REXFOttD. Darling, come and sit by me. Put your hand in mine, l pray, Whils I tell you in the dusk, What I could not in the day, I have striven, dear, to gain Something for a rainy day, But the storm has come too soon,; Wealth, like loaves, is swept away. Hope’s not even left to us ; I could bear it all alone, But to think of you i Oh, God ! If I only c uld have known ! Crept, the true wife closer still: Kissed him on his lip and brow; “Darling, we re not beggars yet, For we have each other nuWl” Opium Eating in Maine. Brunswick lAle.) Telegraph. We have stated, and furnished statis tics from time to time to prove, that the consumption of opium is largely on the increase iu the State of Maine. Some weeks since when traveling, we entered the store of a druggist, a friend, Just passing out was a lady in dress and bearing, though enfeebled, who had just been making a purchase of opium. Said our friend, here is a fact for you. That lady has just purchased ten dollars worth of opium, and she has made simi lar purchases for several years, coming once every year, from I know not where, and, indeed, I have never found out her name. She buys about the same amount every year. That lady did not dare to purchase at home for fear of de tection, but when she wanted opium she obtained it of dealers residing at distance from her place of residence. And this was not the only case “by a lohg shot,” that our friend had to deal with. Rum may be a nuisance, but o, ium is an infinitely worse one. A Way Passenger. He was a “cullud tramp ’ and ap proached Captain Philips as the train : hauled up at Pcwee. “Is you de cap’n of de kears?” “Yes,” replied Philips.” “Don't you want fur to hire no deck , hands, duz yer ?” “No ; I’m not running a steamboat.'’ “’Zackly. Mout I ride straddle oh de cow-snatcher to de nest land’ll j T se busted, an’ a long ways from home.” “Get on—all aboard!” and the ne negro straddled the cow-catsher. lv’. Giligan pulled the throttle wide open, and the engine had not gone more than half a mile before the engine collided with a cow, throwing it over a fence in to a earn field, and the negro after the cow. Next day, coming down, the ne gro limped up to Philips at the same depot and said: “Boss, I didn’t vide fur wid you on dot cow-snatcher. ’Kase you see de cow wanted to ride dar too, an dar wan’t room enuff for bofe ob us, we got off together up here in a con field for to rest. Nex’ time I rides wid you I’ll freeze to de tail gate ob de wagon— hit's safer.”— Ex. A Very Sad Case. A mother residing at Newark, New Jersey, lcl't her infant daughter in care of her sister. The aunt put the child ,0 sleep, and, wanting to leave ihe room, just tied a cord to ihe knob of the door and hung the other end in a loop loosely round the little one sneck. The silly woman thought it would be a nice amusement for the infant when ii awoke to get hold of the cord and pull the door knob, besides which the noise would attract her attention and sum mon her to the bedroom. The poor child, however, instead of pulling at the door knob, drew the loop tightly around its own neck, and then in its struggles fell out of bed. When the mother re turned and went to the bed to kiss her darling and meet the welcome of its outstretched arms and its pretty crow ing she found its corpse on the floor. The child was strangled. It is to be hoped that the painful tragedy will teach other people that there are safer ways of providing for a child’s amuse ment than by means of a rope tied in a hangman’s noose around its neck. A poor Irishman at Rochester, N. Y., owed a rich man some money and was unable to pay. The rich man obtained a judgement and an execution, but there was nothing on which the Sheriff could levy. The Irishman had two large pigs, but the law allows a man two, and the Sheriff could not take them.— The rich man then bought two little pigs, and presented them to the Irish man, aud thereupon took his two large ones. . ■■ The temperance women in many places in Indiana had free lunches, with tea and coffee, near the polls on elec tion day, to keep the voters from drink ing. death by inches. Horrible Situation of au O and Man. On Tuesday afternoon Yopp quit work at cigar-making in a little shop of South Trenton and struck out down the river in the direction of Camden.— He had with him a pet dog and a small wicker basket. To various persons of his acquaintance whom he met on the road he said he was going TO LOOK FOR WATRIt-CRKSS Along the river shore and in the swamps baek from the river. From the time he left the main road until about 10 o’clock on Wednesday morning Yopp was missing. About half-past 9 on Wednesday Mrs. Martha Gilbert, whose husband has a smal farm near the swamp, was attracted to the “cripples” 11 near the house by he continued bark ing of her dog.- She made her way through briars to the spot. Her own dog, a large hound, was giving vent to its feelings with a small dog beneath its fore-paws. The smaller dog kept up a whining, and upon the approach of VI rs. Gilbert crouched at her feet as though it had something to communicate. Mrs, Gilbert tried to take the dog to the house, but it refused to stir in any path except a narrow', muddy one that led directly into the swamp. Mrs. Gil bert armed herself with her husband’s boots, and struck out on the little dog’s trail. After going about a quarter of a mile Mrs. Gilbert was brought to a sudden halt by the sight of a man’s head and shoulders. PROTRUDING FROM THE BLACK MUD A few feet from the edge of the path. The man's head was bent forward, the eyes closed, and the face blank. His arms were extended, one grasping a low tussock and the o:hcr resting a few inches in the mud, stretched straight | out. Though much star led Mrs. Gilbert 1 floundered into the mud with the idea of ascertaining whether or not the man had any life lefi in him. Sh<f hers If ; began to sink, and was only able by ' the exercise of her whole strength to get back on the path. When she did get back she made her way hurriedly to the house and summoned her husband with the dinner-horn. Mr. Gilbert was told of the wonderful predicament of the stranger, and, with two men from a neighboring field, hurried to the res cue. They took with them a coil of rope and pieces of heavy board. Yopp was in the same position, still uncon scious. Mrs. Gilbert said to a reporter yesterday that she thought the left arm was buried a little deeper, and ilia: TIIF. WHOLE BOin' HAH SUNK Perceptibly during the time of her ab sence. The boards were’ placed upon surrounding tussock-, the ropes work ed by incans of poles under .he arms and around the chest and the arms drawn up A strong pull upon the rope showed that the man could not he gotten out in that way. More boards were brought, and upon fence 1 ails a bridge was built, over the treacherous mud clear up to the unfortunate old water-cress hunter’s body. Shortly after 10 o’c ock the body was hauled out into .he path. It was still warm aid .he heart was beating faintly. It was taken to the house and rubbed with flannel. Whisky wa3 poured down the throat, and in twenty min Wes the man OPENED HIS EYES A few moments Liter he was able to speak, which he did, incoherently, in German. Consciousness was fully re stored after awhile, and then the r.tran ger told who he was —Charles Yopp— and of his strange adventure. He had penetrated the swamp and had nearly filled his basket when he saw a particu larly fine bunch of water-cress, growing on a bank from which he was separated by the ditch like deposit of mud In attempting to push himself from tus sock to tussock to reach the water-cress he dropped his basket in the mud, and, without a thought of sinking deeper than the lops of his shoes, he had jump ed off into the mud. But his legs went down in o the black deposit as though it were water. He caught at the tussock and was about to gain a firm hold when the terrible situation paralyzed him and his arms refused to act He sank deeper and deeper. THE MUD GURGLED As though with the hiss of a snake. He felt like Tantalus in the desire for res cue ; but like an infant in strength. The sun was shining on the tops of the trees. He threw back his head and looked up. There seemed to be some thing below pulling him down. He was buried to the hips, and upon part of the body above the surface of the mud he felt almost as strong a suction as upon the legs. The sun moved from the tops of the trees and it began to grow dark. With the darkness his strength returned, but as it seemed to him the tussock had moved two or three inches from his hand. His shrieks were as loud as his cracked voice would permit. He exhausted himself with outcries that were only answered by the whine of his little dog in the path. He could see the stars come out through the branches. It was calculated by him in his frenzy that he was sinking at the rate of one inch every houi. A NIGHT OF TORTURE. When tire moon began to rise the half-crazed Yopp could feel the press ure of the mu l against his abdomen. The pain, he said, was not great, be cause whatever of physical torture there might have been was sunk in the agony of what he called his death upon the lack. With the moon up, he fell iuto a more quiet moou. His past life en tered his mind picture by piciure. He prayed over all his sins and at, last for a quick death. Stupor fell upon him along toward the middle of the night. When the moon was almost overhead he lost consciousness aud did not regain it until rescued. He was buried nine teen hours. When the farmer Gilbert learned who Yopp was he set out for Trenton and told the unfortunate man’s friends. They did not believe the story, but on Thursday* Gilbert took the old man home. Medical attendance was given For a time it was thought that his body would get its strength and vigor back, but he grew weaker and at last died two days after his living burial.—Phil adelphia Times. A Singular aiul Melancholy Accident A few days ago it was reported that Rev. IJ. E. White, of South Carolina, had been fatally shot while riding in his carriage by some unknown person, and that a negro named Coleman sus pected of being the assassin had been arrested. It now turns out that Mr. White was really the victim of a singu lar accident. A special dispatch to the Charleston JVews and Courier says he was killed by a twelve year old son of Mr. Spencer Davis, who was hunt ing for hawks in the woods near the road. The rifle used was a Remington, and the heavy ball missing its aim and prcbably glancing downward from con tact with a twig sped through the f tr eat to the road, two hundred yards dis tant, and struck down Mr. White with install’ancous fatal effect. The little fellow was too much horrified and frigh tened when the body was taken to his lather's house to tell how the killing occurred. Investigation pointed to him, however, and having now made a full statement, the negro Coleman, who was arrested, has been released. —Savannah News. BiU Arp in Atlanta Constitution :— I never liked steers as a model of blooded stock nor as a motive power, but my neighbor Freeman says they make the best plow nags in the world; thai. they go slow, hut the'll go ail day constant, and keep the tiirrer, and never break nothin’ nor runa way, and if they plow tip a yellow jacket’s nest and gets stung all over it only peertens ’em up a little—noth in’ more, liut it seems to me that nothin’ in the world would be more monotonous than to fuller ’em around. I’d druther work a mule any time, and have him runaway or kick the hack-hand in top of a tree once or twice in a while- Wouldn’t you? Two Women Shooting a Delin qcint Lover. —At Ada, Ohio, Miss Hattie Baker, a highly respectable young lady, accompanied by her moth er, entered a drug store in which V. C. High was employed, and charged him with Hattie’s ruin. They tried te per suade him to marry her, which he re fused, whereupon both began firing at him with pistols. He was severely but not fatally injured. Both ladies were arrested but released on bonds. The alfair eauses a great sensation. The Cherokee nation, composed of about 3000 souls, wilt, we learn, re move to Georgia to live. Geo. Busy head is the chief of the nation. It is expected that they will reach our state soon, and will settle in North Georgia. Over a bridge at Athens, Ga, is the following: “Any person driving over this bri.ige at a faster pace than a walk, shall, if a hwite person, be fined $ and if a negro, receive twenty-five lash es—lialf the penalty to be given to the informer. Mr. W. R. Faircloth, with one mule made this year 142 bushels of com, 8 bales of cotton, 108 gallons of syrup, and a good quantity of other products, | in Southwest Georgia VOL. 14-NO. 39. Apache Daring. Beaver ( Utah) Square Bealer. An instance of what an Apache In dian will do in the way of cool daring, when the prize is worth the risk, once occurred on a ranche in Arizona. Tho owner of the ranche was an American. To guard against the Apaches he had built a block-house, and adjoining it a court-yard and corral, surrounded by an adobe wall eight feet high and two feet thick. In die corral the herd was nightly secured. He hada contract to feed and guard 400 Intod of beef cattle belonging to the United States Fort, some thirty nttUs away. More than one attempt had been made by the Apaches to capture the herd while feeding three miles fro a* the block house. But th vigilant herdsman had driven the cattle at -4 garfep Wto the corral before the Indiana could “stampede” them. One night there came a fearful storm. A solitary Apache, unarmed, with nothing but a blanket to protect him from the rain, climed over the corral wall j crouching in the corner, he waited for day. Ear ly in the morning, the storm having passed away, eight herdsmen, mounted and armed, waited at the corral gate for the heard to be turned The gate was opened. The stock poured out. Suddenly up sprang the Apache. Vaulting on the nearest horse, he clutched his mane with one hand, while with the other he waved his red blank et and howled like a demon. In an in stant every hoof made a rush and tin stampede began. The horse, frighten ed, darted into the midst of the fix ing cattle, as in a frenzy they went thr -ugh die gateway. The Apache clapped h.s arm around the horse's neck, and, throw ing his body on one side of the mad dened animal, disappeared from view. A thousand men ranged in column could not of stopf i that rush of tlx crazed herd down tl.at valley. The herdsmen tired a volley, which wound ed and killed some of the cattle. Two bands of Apaches, dur; iug out from op posite side of the valley, cl isetl up from behind the heard. Four hundred head of cattle were thus captured and run off by the daring and cunning of the Apaches But I pass,” said a minister one Sunday in dismissing one theme of his subject to take up another “Then I make it spades,” yelled out a man from the gallery who was dreaming the hap py hours away in an imaginary game of euchre. i—> o - w* One of t\ie great needs of this coun try is a vest pocket deep enough to take in the whole length of the extra cigar, so a man can look his fellow square in the eye and say, “No, I’m sorry, but this is the last, and I have already had it in my mouth.” * - The liquor dealers of Augusta have held a meeting and adopted a resolu tion calling upon their brethren of Co lumbus, Atlanta and Macon to unite with them in opposition to the Moffett punch bill. A man committed suicide in St. Clair, 111, by drowning himself in four inches of water, but the local newspa per thinks he would not have succeed ed if his wife had not abligingly sat on his head. A Connecticut wife wants a divorce because her husband bound her with a rope, poured kerosene oil over her, and threatened to burn her up. He replies that he was only enforcing proper obe dience. Daniel and Derrick Crevistoo, broth ers, fought with knives in Sparta, Wis Their mother implored them to stop, and then tried by main strength to part them, Lut they kept at it until Dame’ was killed. Josh Billings says: “There iz no man who needs so much watching az the one who iz always watching some one else.’’ All the theology in the world has never succeeded in answering the child’s question ; “Why doesn’t God kill the devil ?” A negro woman by the name of Tin nie Gray died at Savannah recently from an overdose of religion taken at a revival. Anew Krunip cannon sends a ball through the heaviest armor plate at eight miles. It is the darkest just before day but Sambo says that is the very time when Ia chicken is the widest awake. THE GENUINE DR. C. MoiAXir S Celebrated American WORM SPECIFIC OK VERMIFUGI SYMPTOMS OF WORMS. fJIHE countenance is pale and lends n colored, with occasional flushes, or a circumscribed spot on one or .Van cheeks; the eyes become dull; the -.• pils dilate; an azure semicircle rrn* along the lower eye-lid; the nose is ir Titated, swells, and sometimes bleed*; a swelling of the upper lip; occasional headache, with humming or throbbing of the ears; an unusual secretion of saliva; slimy or furred tongue; breath very foul, particularly in the morning; appetite variable, sometimes voracious, with a gnawing sensation of the stom ach, at others, entirely gone; fleeting pains in the stomach; occasion;.! nausea and vomiting; violent pains throughout the abdomen; bowels ir regular, at times costive; stools slimy; not unfiequently tinged with blood: belly swollen and hard; urine turbid; respiration occasionally difficult, and accompanied by hiccough; cough ■omen—* dry and convulsive; uneasy and disturbed with grinding of the teeth; temper variable, but gener ally irritable, Sic. Whenever the above symptoms are found to exist, DR. C. McLANE’S VERMIFUGE will certainly effect a cure. IT DOES NOT CONTAIN MERCURT in any form; it is an innocent prepara tion, not capable of doing the slightest injury to the most tender infant. The genuine Dr. McLane’s Ver mifuge bears the signatures of C. Mc- Lane and Fleming Bros, on the Wrapper. :o: DR. O. McLANE'S LIVER PILLS are not recommended as a remedy “for all the ills that flesh is heir to,” but in affections of the liver, and in all Bilious Complaints, Dyspepsia and Sick Headache, or diseases of that character, they stand without a rival. AGUE AND FEVER. No better cathartic can be used preparatory to, or after taking Quinine. Asa simple purgative they are unequaied. BEWARE OF IMITATIONS. The genuine are never sugar coated. Each box has a red wax seal on the lid with the impression Dr. McLane’s Liver Pills. Each wrapper bears the signatures o. C. McLake and Fleming Bros. Insist upon having the genuine Dr. C. Mc- Lane’s Liver Pills, prepared by Fleming Bros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the market being full of imitations of the name Ke/.atte, spelled differently hut same pronunciation. BOOKS^frJILUOru H'TTT'TV kf*lTk H A comp.CM? uuigc io Wedlock* ■.y/jl ".Baß with Chapter* on. A competent '.v >m v flJßiMAitrtillMirrfrn Knhootl, Evidences of Viigmtiy. Mcri lily In women, Advice to Bridegroom. - ffnimrriJrmM and Wife, Celebi’C/ il l ITF.IVTM2 Matrimony compand. luq i iliiiifi 4 to Marring.', Congug* <lu Scieu, a u! Hcproti action. Law of Man mgr, U of Divorce, Legal right* of married women, etc alto on DUeaoea of VO or• eft, the.r cause and Cure. A Coufldcntial woi’it oi Uiv> pages,with fell Plate Engravings, vent for CO eerta. private Medical Advicar,’* on the reactor m pure associations, *c. t also on the ferret habit* of’you.lt luul their effect* on after life. ru using Vtncuu-. . Seminal Emission*. Nervous debility. Lot* ot lyiutil Power, vie. making marriage improper or unhappy. giving mai > valu able receipts for the cure of private diseases ;t line siie, over SO plat- s, 60 cents. •* Medicul Advice.* ‘ * acture on Manhood and Wonutnocd, 10 cent*; or all three sl. They contain 000 pagrs and over too lliuatiai Dr, tm hm ;g everything on the generalive system that is worth knowing,and much that is not published in any other work Stiii m tingle volumes, or complete in one. for Price n 6 tarn is. Silver or Currency (The author invite* consulta tion. and letters are promptly answered without charge l A<idress: Dr. Butta' Diepensary. No. 13 Northbvii". Si. Louis, Mo. (Established 1047 ) and I earnestly ask persona suffering from E T JPitJIIE\ ] to send me their names and addreta, they will learn ■ l something lo their advantage Not a Truss, m r?\Vi tciif* fS to f7. HfV 1 vr Sfy\ $2.50. Over 100 latest Novelties wh ko'* wauu-u. Mu.Ri>lyCo NnshvlUß.Teun *T RjA % >* JSH ■ Mi'"**ise ar<‘( . fl Pll ii:: Thi* important organ weigh* but about three ■ pounds, and all the blood in a living person (about H three gallons) passes through it at least once every ■ half hour, to nave the bits an i other impuriti 'S strained or filtered from it. Bile is the nattted .. purgative of the bowels, and if the Liver becomes plgj torpid it is not separated from the blood, but car l—l ried through the veins to all parts of the system, and in trying to escape through the pores of the Wskin, causes it to turn yellow or a dirty brown color. The stomach becomes diseased, and Dys- Ll pepsia. Indigestion, Constipation, Headache, Bk ousness. Jaundice, Chills, Malarial Fevers, Piles, Sick and Sour Stomach, and general debility fol -7* low. Merrell’s Hepatins, the ereat vegetable discovery for torpidity, causes the Liver to throw _ _ off from one to two ounces of bile each time the blood passes through it, as long as there is an <x- Wcess of bile; and the effect of even a few doses upon yellow complexion or a brown dirty looking skin, will astonish all who try it—they being the I first symptoms to disappear. The cure of all bili ous diseases and Liver complaint is made certain by taking Hepatins in accordance with directions. Headache is generally cured in twenty minutes, and no disease that arises from the Liver can exist if a fair trial is riven. ' SOLD AS X SUBSTITUTE FOR PILLS BY ALL DRUGGISTS. Price 25 Cents and $l.OO SLINGS P The fatality of Consumption or Throat and fig L U ng Diseases, which tweep to the grave at least P* one-third of all death's victims, arises from the m Opium or Morphine treatment, which simply stu pefics as the work of death goes on. $ lO,OOO vil , be paid if Opium or Monahine, or any preparat: n aI ! of Opium, Morphine or Prussic Acid, can be fouoa *5 in the Globs Flower Cough Syrup, which has cured people who are living to-day v ;th but o~: I remaining lung. No greater wrong can be v c than to say that Consumption is incur;: \ . 2 Globs Flowls Cough Syrup will cuicitw.cn Q all other mean* have failed. Also, Col-. '.Cot' 1, j Asthma, Bronchitis, and all discas-s c* l*-o ti. ; t P*! and lungs. Read the testimonials of ti-Q Lon. £y Alexander H. Stephens, Gov. Smith anu Lx-Cor. j Brown of Ga., Hen. Geo. Peabody, as well as Eil those of other remarkable cures in CLr boow—iree 2 1 to all at the dug storo-and be convinced t - tif H you wish to be cured you can be by taking the O Globs Flower Cough Syrup. j Take no Troches cr Lozenge* for Sore Threnv, H, when you can get Globs Flov/sr Syrup at saw* price. For sale, by all Druggists 1 (Price 25 Cents and $l.OO IBLOOD \ Grave mistakes are made in the treatment of alt diseases that arise from poison in the blood. Not one case of Scrofula, Syphilis, White idling, V Ulcerous Sores and Skin Disease, in a thousand, £3 is treated without the use of Mercury in some form. Mercury rots the bones, and the diseases it pro -85 duces are worse than any other kind of blood or r] skin disease can be. Dr Pemberton’s Stillin m gia or Queen’s Delight is the only medicine J upon which a hope of recovery from Scrofula, Sy , philis and Mercurial diseases in all stages, can be H reasonably founded, and that will cure Cancer. *lO,OOO will be paid ky the proprietor if Mercury, any ingredient not purely vegetable and hart*- P less can be found in it. Price by all Druggists *i_oo. Globe Flower Cough Svaur and Merrell t ! Hepatins for the Liver for sale by ail L rug gists in 25 cent and *l.OO bottle*. A. F. HEESELL Is Z% Proprietor*, PHILAL'EL ?riiA, PA.