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iWessicttat Cavils
J, H. QtJFEKT, JAS. G PARKS
GUERRY & PARKS,
jlltsrpeyi and Cilinstlnrj at Lain,
DAWSON, - GEORGIA.
.—:o;
PRACTICE in the St *<* and Fede r al
Courts. Collections made a specialty.—
Promptness and dispatch guarantied and
insured. Nov ltf
R. F. SIMMONS,
jltt’i at laid J Ileal Estate jlg’t,
Dawson, Terrel! County, 6a
SPECIAL a ten'ion given to cofiecii ns
_ conveyancing and invenigating titles *e
Real Estate. Sc' 18, tf
T. H. PK ’KKTT~
Atfy & Counselor at Law,
O Eh ICE with Ordinary in Court House.
All business entrusted tc his care will
eceive prompt and efficient attention. JalO
j. j. bk< K,
Attorney at Law,
*sr:an, Calhonn ’nily, <*“•
Will practice in the Albav Circuit and te
where in the State, by Contract. Trompt at*
trntion a;iven to all business entrusted to Ms
cere. Collections a specialty. Will algi >n
v'stilfate titles and buv or sell real Estate •ti
alluuß, Baker aud Ifarly Counties,
march 21—tf
L. C- HOYLi
Attorney at Law.
Ditwsoib Georsiti.
i\ A. I¥IcI>ON/Ual>,
Attorney at Lew,
S) 1 - OEOIMiIA.
II J ILL practice in the Courts of the Patou
* ? la Circuit. All busings* entniflied to his
e*ie w ill receive prompt attention. Office at
the Court House, Dec9,tf
11. sj7iH^KS,
WHTCH jfil MAKER
AND
J K W E Li K K
DAWSON, GA.
I\ T ORK done in good style and at mos
* ▼ reasonable prices. Office in Melton &
Pro’s Store, Main Street. ss*tf
CHEAPEST DAILY IMTHESOUTH
Tt tltjnjiq jtiilijiti,
AUGUSTA, GA.
I published at thk Low Price of
§4.00 per year.
IT 13 A BRIGHT, NEWSY EVENING
A paper, and ie edited with ability bv Mess
James B Rrndal and P A Stovall. It is the
°nlv afternoon paper in the South that pub
hshes the Telegrphic dispatches of the New
fork Associated Press. In its columns will
he found all the news that comes by tele
g'aph, *r.d the telegrphic mirket tepofts
received up to the time of going to pres.
Official Paper of the City.
The Evening Sentinel is the official paper of
the city of Augusta.
WAII who want a cheap paper should
subscribe for it. Terms, $4 per year; #2 for
six months; and 41 for three months.
L# 'Send for specimen copies. Address,
WALSH & WRIGHT, Aueusta. Ga.
- Th . R,x.y • Ik* ia>a
Barham’s Infallible
PILE CURE.
V.nrflrtlin-cl h, the
Barbus Pile Cara Cos., Barham, H. ~
It ..r IUU* "• * Mi * rTl gy
tun i*Ee< o* ‘II vliwo..
iMI Da WSOIN i )iJ 1 1N AL.
DY J. l). 110YL& CO.
Hosts of People are Martyrs.
r| "*ick headache, that infalliulde
symptom of'a disordered sto/n mb. liv
er and bow3l s . Many suffer In.m it
as many as three or tour times week.
They do so needlessly, for H , .-t ,-i’s
fitomach Bitters, by toning the diges
tive organs and regulating th w
and liver, removes the cause, and d,.-
pcis the painful symptom. T >utt
niatr sympathy between theb'ui *...
thealdumtniiil region causes th ig-, t
est disorder affecting the latte
reflected, as it were, in the o l <>, ni
thought, The rnfoim uistitu
the Bitters when the digestive, - r .•(-
ive and evacuative functions in a
state of chaos, has other and ni- ie
beneficial results, viz., the comph'to
nutrition of the whole physic I • ri -
my, *he restoration of appetite *i ie
pos , and au increase in the povv f
the system to tesist diseases of um -
aria! typr.
1* tom all parts ot the country repot
come of itrmense sal* * and incr using
demand for that decEivingly p t.t In
Sow ing Machine, The Old and Reli
able “Standard ” the pries of whn-t.
the proprietors wisely reduced t ©2O
including ail the attachments, a <i
once secured for them a popuh-rity
among ti e people, far beyond that
BV* r yet attained by any other rua t *■
at any pi ice, 'he consequence of ' ' tch
i, agents are leaving the old nigh
ppced machines, and seeking territo
ry for the “.'tandabd,” Knowii g
ftom experience that with the be t
goods at the lowest price tltey can out
sell all other Machines wheie tin su
perior quality and low price is ma le
known. This splendid Mchine*om
tdnes ail the improvements, I- iar
ahead of all other in beauty mid ‘ur
abiiity of its woik, eas' of man g
ruent, light running and eeitain'\ -d
operation, is sensibly made upon sound
principles, with positive working parts
all steel, and can he safely put dan
as the very perfection of a Serv u
*de Sewing Machine, in every pan
la?, tfiat will outlast any Machine,
and at a price far down below am
other. It is thoroughly warranted
for five years Kept in order free of
charge. And sent to any part of the
Country for examination-by the (‘iis
tomer before payment of the bill. We
can predict equally as large adenian t
for them in this section a in other s
Families desiring the Lest Mac on
manufactuied should write direct **>
the Factory. And enteiprising -
sons willing to seize thechancesh '
apply for 8" desirable an agency. *Se
advertisement in another putt of rh s
paper. Address, Standard Mac 1
Cm, Cur. Hroadway amt Clinton Pi rn ,
New York
Consumption Cured.
An olri physician, retired from prac
tice, having hud placed in his hands
by an East India missionary the lor
rnula of asiruple vegetable remedy, for
the speedy and permanent cure lor
consumption, bronchitis, catarrh,a-'b
nta, and all throat and lung affection-,
also a positive and radical cure lor
nervous debility and all cervou9 com
plaints, after having tes'ed its wonder
ful curative powers in thousands of
cases, has felt it his duty to make it
known to his suffering fellows. Act
uated by this motive, and a desire to
relieve human suffering, I will sod
free of charge, to all who desire it,
this recipe, with lull directions for pie
paring and using, in German,Fren : .
or English. Sent by mail by addr
ing with stamp, naming this paper.
W. W. Shrrur, 149 Powers’ HI ok,
Rochester, New York 4w.
Good ingestion.
“Give us this day our daily bread
and good medicine t digest it, is both
reverent anft bu.nan. The human
-tomsch and iiver are fruitful souo e
, f life’s comfrts; or, disordered nod
diseased, they tingle misery along
every nerve and through eve y art r\.
The man or woman with good digoxfion
seer tieautyasthey walk,and overcome
obstacles they meet in the rotine of
life, where the dyspeptic sees only
gloom and stumbles an 1 growls a
every imaginary object. The world
still needs two or three tew kind- of
medicine before death can be perfect
ly abolished ; but that many lives have
been prolonged, pud many sufferers
from Liver disease. Dispepsia and
Headache, have been curod Mekrell’s
Hepatite, is no longer a doubt. It
cures Headache in twenty minutes,
and there is no question but what it is
tho most wonderful discovery yotmtde
in medical science. Those afflicted
with Biliousness and Liver Complaint
shcnld use Mrrhell’s Ufpatine.
It can be bad at Db. J. B Jaxes.
Mexico amfUnitecl States.
Owing to their warm and delightful
climates, their inhabitants giow sal
low from torpid Livers, Indigestions
and all diseases arising from a disord
ered Stomach and Bowels, they
should of course at ail times keep r e
liver active, and to our readers we
recommend 'fabler’s Fortoline, or
Vegetat le Liver Powder, lakea in
time, will often save mooey and mueh
suffering. Price 50 cents. For sale
by J. R. Janes & Soy.
Have You the Buckeye ?
It i 8 a well establishsd fact, tha
Tabler’a Buckeye Pile Ointment will
cure if used according to directions-
The jEsculus Hippocastanum, or Horse
Chestnut, commonly known as the
Hnckeve lias been highly esteemed
“ :bs
that it possesses virtues,lying in the
bitted principle called E-culm which
can be utiliwd for the cure 011 dr*.
If affected with tha: terrible disease,
L KSi-. Kta 0,.1-m,
[ Sals by J-R Jasm &
DAWSON. GEORGIA, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1879.
A CHOCTAW’S MARRIAGE.
Ceremonies in Brooklyn flint
Only One White Person Could
Witness.
Dr Charles Nelson, of 172 Fulton
street Brooklyn, is a Choctaw Indian,
over six feet tall, massively bud , and
as red-skinned as Indians ever are He
is 62 years of age, but he seems hardly
40. Six months ago he came to Brook
lyn to practise medicine with his Indi
an remedies. On Saturday night last
he married a comely young woman,
Mis-; E izabeth Doyle, who had paid
him a casual visit a few weeks before,
and had fallen in love with him on the spot
The marriage was -peedily arranged.
The young woman has some we 1-to-do
relatives in Brooklyn, as well as in Fall
River, Mass., where she was born, and,
although :* Oa holic, the religion es
poused by die Indian as well, she would
not r "iisent to have the banns published,
as is necessary when a priest conducts
the ceremony; and so, to avoid publici
ty, the Rev. Lindsay Parker of the
Sands Street Methodist Church was
engaged. The ceremony was performed
in the rear of the Doctor’s medicine
shop. The Indian’s costume was a pair
of buckskin breeches with fringe down
the sides, a short beaded and braided
jacket, luid a beaver cap, banded with
Indian handiwoik. The ceremony was
that unusually emplo ed by Methodist
ininisteis, but after the minister had
gone an Indian ceremony was begun,
which lasted far into the night. None
was adm'tted to the festivities except
those whose veins contained Indian
blood and who could appreciate them.
Las! night, when a reporter called to
get some further aecoun of the pecul
iar ceremonies, an Indian maiden sa
by a red-hot stove in the Doctor’s shop.
She said that she was the Doctor’s
daughter.
“Then your father has been married
before ? ’
“Yes,” she said. “This is the third
or fourth time.
“He habitually marries pale-faced
women, then I”
You bet. My mother was a white
woman. I wouldn’t marry an Indian.’
The mai ’en spoke a little Choctaw,
but the most of her conversation was iu
improved latter-day English. Ske said
her father kept on the go so much that
she didn t get a chance !o marry, ad
she didn’t choose to do the business up
so rapidly as lie had done it. A heavy
step was heard approaching, a curtain
in the partition was - pushed aside, and
the Indian Doctor approached. He
has a quick eye, a s lid manner, am! a
sanguinary cast of features, lie wore
a sealskin cap, beneath which glistened
his long black hair, done up in queue
fashion. Me was wrapped iu a heavy
coat made of the tawny skin of a young
buffalo, and trimmed with beaver fur.
He was provoked at the
his marriage had obtain- and. lb • >i<!
that as for himself he didn’t Cure, but
“the other side of the house, nodding
his head toward tii baa rum •••y- 4
on account of her fol aAs to tie In
dian cereuwnte , he said that they .uad
a wa- lan >n< ho
refused n letails 11 * * liked a
speedy m. ■ ' - -
“1 knew or, he said, “who
was on a spree 4 >uth Caro ina. He
was in a hotel half dru lk, w en a young
widow from the country came in. As
soon is he laid his e-.es on her he said :
“Are you married V* She said “No.”
“j) nine, neither am I,” he said:
“will you have me l’ “Yes, I will,”
she said. They linked and marched off
the squire’s and I never knew a hap
pier couple.”
Nelson was born in Hamburg S. C.,
his father being a Choctaw Indian liv
ing on a reservation there at the time
His mother was an Englishwoman, who
was a widow with children when An
thony Olive, the Choctaw, married her,
Olive was a medicine man, and Nelson
chose his own name. When the Indi
ans of South Carolina were moved
West, Nelson, then an infant, was stolen.
His step-sister followed the tribe, re
covering him, and carried him back to
his mother, travelling 100 miles on
foot with In'm on her back.
“All of my wives,’’ lie said: “have
been white women. An Indian will
choose a pale-faced woman every time.
A white man may marry a negro woman,
but you never heard of an Indian do
ing it. I admit that a young squaw,
when she is well dressed, is a mighty
nice creature, but give me a white wo
man for a wife.”
Nelson is a migratory physician, and
rarely stays long in a place. This is
his first visit to Brooklyn. “I came,”
he said, “because I wanted money and
a wife ” —vY. Y. Sun.
A Hartford beau has just ma le the
startling discovery that a girl’s ribs run
up and down. Of course it’s so.
The Devils Fruit.
Potatoes were first introduced at
Moscow by a Mr. llowland, eighty or
ninety years ago. At first the people
would neither plant nor touch them,
saying they were the devils fruit, given
to him on his complaining to God that
he had no fruit, when he was told to
search in the earth for some, which lie
did, and found potatoes. A curious
Berwickshire legend, which, however,
is palpably anaehronicle, attributes the
intrr iluction of potatoes into Scotland
to that famous wizard of the North, Sir
Mich 1 Scott. The wizard and the
devi’, being in partnership, took t lease
of the farm on the Martoun estate, call
ed White-house. The wizard was to
manage the farm, the devil managed
the capital The produce was to be di
vided as follows .
The first year sir Michael was to
have all that grew above ground, and
his partner all that grew below; the
-ecoiid year the shares were to be the
opposite wav. His Satanic Majesty, as
is usual in such cases, was fairly over
reached in his bargain, for the wizard
cunningly sowed all the land in the
firs' year with wheat, and planted i;
wi ll potatoes the second, so that the
devi got nothing for his share but wheat
stubble and pota o tops And this
scourging ro at ion Sir Michael continu
ed mi! il he had not oniy beggared his
partner, but exhausted the soil. In
spite of this legend, however, we must
continue to give credit, to Sir Walter
Raleigh for having been the introducer
of potatoes in o that country The
first that tried them, we are told, foil
into the very na'ural mistake of eating
the app es and disregarding the roots.
Backwoods Courting in Hiss
soitri.
He sat on the side of the room, in a
big w ire-oak r eki ig-chair. A ong
eared w rlioir : i ifping at flies was
by his -i-'e : a i -k. *of sewing by hers
Bull r- ckt i :ne -fitly—tha is, tne
young people—no' 1 lie dog or basket.
He sighs heavily and ooks out of the
west window at a crape myrtle tree;
she sighs lightly and gazes out of the
ea-t window —at a turnip patch. At
last he remarks:
“This is mighty good weather to pic
cotton.”
“Tis tha. it we only had any to
pic':..”
The rocking continues
“What s your dog’s name ’
“Ooony.’
A..other sigh-broken stillness.
“What is ho good fur?”
“What is he good fur?’ said she ab
strac edly
“Your dig, t bony
“Fur ketoliin possums.
Sile ce of half an hour
“lie looks like a deer dog.
“Who looks like a dee>- dog ? '
“Coony ”
‘lie is—but lie’s kinder bellowed,
and get tin’ old an slow now. And he
ain't no count on a rod trail.
“Your ma •’ many chickens? ’
“Forty odd ’
Tin i more r* eking, and somehow,
.Th ; awhile the big rocking-chair and
the little rocking chair were jammed
side b side. I don’t know how it hap
pened. Af cr awhile the conversation
was resumed.
“How many has your ma got'*”
“H w many wha V
“Chickens ”
“Ni ,'h on to a hundred. ’
Bv this time the chairs were so close
together that rocking was impossible.
The mink has eat most of ours.”
More silence, when he says:
“Do you like cabbage V’
“I do that.”
“Presently his hand is accidentally
nlaced on hers She does not know it—
at least dues not seem to be aware of i'
Then, after a half hour spent in sighing,
coughing, and clearing of throats, he
says:
“I’ve a great mind to bite von ’
“W hat you great a-tuind to bite me
fur ?’’
“Kase you won’t have me.’
“Kase you ain’t axed me. ’
“Well, now I ax you.”
“Then, now I has you.’
Then Coony dreams he hears a sound
of kissing.
Then the next day the young man
goes to Tigerville after a marriage li
cense—Wednesday the following week
No cards.— Sl. Louis Globe-Democrat.
A Miracle.
.Vorridoxn Herald.
If Alexander H. Stephens were to
step into one side of a large pair of
scales, and all the medicines he swal
lowed during the past fifteen years
were to be suddenly dumped into the
other side, the shaaowy statesman
would shoot up like a balloon. He
has taken eight hundred and seventy
nine kinds of medicine, and that he
should now weigh sixty-five pounds, in
stead of sleeping with his fathers, is
little short of a miracle.
Dr. Holmes says that crying widows
marry first. There is nothing like wet
weather for transplanting.
It is the liar who wants to knock you
dowry fot doubting his word. Tho hon
est men Hill stop to argue matters.
Tlic Ages of Animals and Men.
TRANSLATED FROM THE GERMAN.
When'tlie world was created, and
all creatures assembled to have their
life-time appointed, the ass advanced
first, and asked how long he would have
to live.
Thirty years, replied Nature; “will
that be agreeable to thee ?”
“Alas! answered the ass, it is a long
while! Remember what a wearisome ex
istence mine will be ; from morning un
til! night I shall have to bear heavy
burdens, dragging corn-sacks to the
mill, that others may eat bread, while
I shali have no encouragement, nor be
refreshed with anything but blows aud
kicks. Give me but a portion of that
time, I pray thee.
Nature was moved with compassion
and presented him with but eighteen
years The ass went away comforted,
and the dog came forward.
How long dost thou require to live?
asked Nature, thirty years were too
many for the ass, but you will be con
tented with them ?
Is it thy will that I should ?
replied the dog Think how mush I
shall have to run about; my feet will
not last so long a time; and when I
shall have lost mv voice for barking,
and mv teeth for biting, what else shall
I be fit for but to lie in a corner and
growl ?’’
Nature thought he was right, and
gave him twelve years. The ape then
approached.
Thou wilt, doubtless, willingly live
the thirty years; said Nature. “Thou
wilt not have to labor as the ass and
the dog. Life will be pleasant to thee.
Oh, no ! cried he ; so it may seem
to others, but it will not be. Should
puddings ever rain down, I shall have
no spoon 1 I shall pay merry tricks,
aud excite aughter by my grimaces, and
then be rewarded with a sour apple.—
i f w often sorrow lies concealed behind
a jest I shall not be able to endure
for thirty years.
Nature was gracious, and he received
but ten
At last came man, healthy and strong,
and asked the number of his davs.
“Will thirty years content thee'!'’
llow short a time ! exclaimed man,
when I shall have built my house and
kindled a fire on rny own hearth—when
the trees I shall have planted are about
to bloom and bear fruit—when life with
me will seem most desirable 1 shall die!
Oh, Nature, grant me a longer period !’
“Thou sh .It have the eightscu years
of the ass, besides.”
“That is not yet enough,’’ replied
III;!:.
“Take likewise, the twelve years of
the dog.'
“It is not yet sufficient, reiterated
man; give me more. ’
••1 give thee, ■ ' en, the ten years of
the ape in vain wilt thou crave more.
I.n departed uusatistied.
Thus until lives seventy \ ear.- Tb>
first thirty are Lis human v.- irs, an.,
pass swiftly by. He is ; healthy
and haapv: he labors cheerfully, and
rejoices in i.is existence The eighteen
years of the ass come next, and bur
den upon burden is heaped upon him ;
he carries the corn that is to feed oth
ers; blows and kicks are the wages of
his faithful service The twelve years
of the dog follow, and he loses Lis teeth
and lies in a co.ner and growls. When
these are gone, the ape’s ten years form
the conclusion. Then man, weak and
silly, becomes the sport of children.
A Wisconsin girl put on trousers and
started through the deep snow to walk
sis miles to a village for provisions, the
family larder being empty. She soon
became tired out, besides losing her
way, and the cold was intense. A big
Newfoundland dog which accompanied
her was the means of saving her life.
She scooped out a hollow in the s!iow ?
lay down in it, and made the warm dog
lie on her, shifting him about so as to
successively cover the coldest paris of
her body. In that way she passed a
whole night, and was not very severely
frost bitten “With tw >or three more
dogs,’’ she says, “I would have got
along very comfortably.”
Every man is a miserable sinner in
church, but out of church it is uusafe
to say much about it, except to a smal]
man.—
am •
There are ten shades of red this sea
son in women’s toggery and 347 shades
of blue about tli" husband and father
i wlio foots the drv good* and u.i r.uery
hi is.
VOL. U~NO 47.
A KENTUCKY ROMANCE.
Why Phil Hodge Deserted His
Bride the Day Alter the Wed
ding.
Cincinnati Enquirer.
Ten years ago, in Lewis county, Ken
tucky, a young lawyer named I’hil
Hodge married Miss AddieSillet, amid
flowers, music and hearty congrotu’a
tions of friends. At early dawn Hodge
left the house, and in passing out he
met a servant of his wife’s father, to
whom he said : “Tell your ma ter I
am gone forever.” The new-made fath
er-in-law, upon receiving this message,
hurried to his daughter’s room, where,
to his amazement, he found her still in
her wedding robes, with her hair dishev
elled and veil torn off, and in a state of
great excitement. A severe spell of
fever followed, but never, in her wild
est delirium, did she betray the cause
of her agony, and thus it remained a
theme of conjecture ever since. To a
friend the other day she told the cause.
Here is her story :
“Lon Follett and I have been raised
together. 1 had received most marked
attention from him, but never dreamed
of marrying him, for he had a mother
and upon,him for a
livelihood. Phil Hodge, whom I had
known a few years, courted me. I ac
cepted him, and my admiration for him
tempted me to believe I lovedhim. The
night of our wedding, Lon and I were
sitting a little apart from the crowd.
Our conversation was only of ourselves,
and I confess I then felt Lon loved me,
and he was more of my happiness than
I had ever dreamed. Phil Hodge over
heard a few words, and saw our earn
est manner When he came to my l
room he found me dressed still as I was
when I left the parlor, and, showing his
surprise, asked me what was the mat
ter with me, to which 1 answered as in
differently as possible, ‘Nothing.’ We
exchanged seve al commonplace remarks
after which he asked me quite harshly,
‘Addie, did Lon Follett ever tell you
he loved you ? 1 answered, ‘No.’ ‘What
was your conversation to night?’’ His
eyes were upon me; 1 dared not tell
aught but the tru'h ; they seemed to
pierce me through. I told the whole
truth, and when I had finishes', he said
with coldness, calmness and stubborn
resolution, ‘Addie, you love Lon Follett;
he shall marry you. We will never
meet again. I begged him on my knees
not to leave me, but it was of no avail
When the dawn came he kissed megood-
by, and with a ‘God bless you,’ passed |
out from me forever. My feelings were !
indescribable, the room was horrible in
its darkness, my mind lost its reasoning
powers, and thus I passed many weeks
Through a mutual friend I heard of him
often, of his wan lerings, desolate life,
and death upon the frontier. Well
have our blighted lives paid the penal
ty of a false step. When Lon heard of
his death he c mie immediately to see
,ic. I ; f n-d to see him. Then he
vrute me a long letter, teding of Ills
i , his never forgetting me an hour
esc long years, and I have con ented
to marry dim, but we will not meet ti i
oar wedding night—January 1), 1870.
Laughed H r rclf Dumb.
From th eR vi li, t ' P i Tim jJ.
While Miss Sue Zcntrnyer, a milker
employed at Elizabeth City Dairy Farm
Lebanon county, was laughing heart ly
at the herd man, who had been “upset
by a cow he was milking, she dnloc-.it.
ed her jaw, and found it ianosvb'e
shu f her mmth, and was obliged to
walk homo with her mouth open As
it happened a physician was vs- tiu-r h a
invalid father nt the time she err; red
at home. But anew difficulty awt.ite
her, as she found it impossible to tei
. c
them what ai'cd her By pantomuui
siims and ac'ions she finally made them
O •'
comprehend, un 1 her jaw was quickh
set aright.
CentUHlri'inp.
Why is dancing like milk 1 Because
it strengthens the calves.
Why is an Englishman like a bee
Because he is ruled by a Queen.
What is the best way to curb a wild
young man to bridal him.
What kind <>f ship has two mates and
no Captaiu 1 1 ourtship.
Why is a discontented man like a
watch dog ' Because he is a growler.
What is that by loosing an eye has
nothing lei t but a nose A noise.
What is that which makes everything
visible but is itself unseen Light.
Why is a letter like a flock of .-beep ?
Because it is pennel and folded.
What class of women are mo: t apt to
give tone to s cicLs ! Eel's.
45 Years Before the Public.
THE GENUINE
DR. C. MeLANE’3
CELEBRATED
LIVER PILLS
FOR THE CURE OF
Hepatitis, cr Liver Gonplaint,
DYSPEPSIA AND SICK HEADACHE.
Symptoms of a Liseaecd Liver.
FAIN in the right side, under the
edge of the ribs, increases cn pres
sure ; sometimes the pain is in the l it
side; the patient is rarely able to he
on the left side; sometimes the pain
is felt under the shoulder blade, and
it frequently extends to the top of the
shoulder, and is sometimes mistaken
for rheumatism in the arm. 'The stom
ach is affected with loss of appetite
and sickness; the bowels in gener; 1
are costive, sometimes alternative with
lux; the head is troubled with pain,
accompanied with a dull, heavy sen
sation in the back part. There is gen
erally a considerable loss of memory,
accompanied with a painful sensation
of having left undone s nnething which
ought to have been done.* A slight,
dry cough is sometimes an attendant.
The patient complains of weariness
and debil ty ; he is easily startled, his
feet are cold or burning, and he com
plains of a prickly sensation of the
skin; his spirits are low ; and although
he is satistied that exercise would be
beneficial to him, y:t he can scarcely
summon up fortitude enough to try it.
In fact, he distrusts cvc:y remedy.
Several of the above symptoms attend
the disease, but cases have occurred
where few of them existed, yet exam
ination of the body, after death, lias
shown the liver to have been exten
sively deranged.
AGUE AND ’/EVER.
Dr. C. McLane’s Liver Tills, in
cases of Ague a. I-ever, when
taken with Quinine, arc productive of
the most happy results. No better
cathartic can Ire used, preparatory to,
or after taking Quinine. Wc would
advise all who are afflicted with this
disease to give them a fair trial.
For all bilious dc ngements, and
as a simple purgative, they are un
equaled.
BGIVABS OF r-1 ITVTIOXS.
The genuine are never sugar coatciE
Every box has a re 1 wax seal on the
lid, with the impression 1)K. McLane’s
Liver Pills.
The genuine McLane’s J.ivf.r Pills
hear the signatures ol C. McLank and
Fleming I>ros. on the wrappers.
Insist upon having the genuine Pr.
C. McLane’s Liver Pills, prepared by
Fleming Pros., of Pittsburgh, Pa., the
market being full of imitations of the
name IMe Lane, spelled differently but
same pronunciation.
Stronger than any Yeast . Baking Fowcer
in the World, and erfeotly Pure.
m FBAM
Ik warranted to imiko batter, lighter*
healthier, nwretois more toothsome*
rat.re digestible, more nutritious
BREAD. BISCUITS, CASES,
PUDDINGS, Etc.
THAN CAN BE NA3tS IN ANY
OTHER WAV.
SxlA FOAM is an entirely new In ■•ca
tion. without any of the bad qualities of y >,-!
or hoiking ptwdf rs, aoda, or salcratus.
SEA IOAM contain* no ingredient or
element which can produce an injurious er<- r,
but on the contrary has in itself a tendency i >
sustain and nourish the human system. Ti .j>
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Not infrequently the best of flour gets all tho
blame, when in reulity the dark color and poor
taste are both caused by tlio nse of inferior
raising powder. Many baking powders now
highly recommended by grocers, and henoo
largely sold, are made of oid bone* ground vp,
and by a chemical process mined with other
Ingredients. Before lending their influence to
increase the sale of any boki ng powder, grocors
would do well to ascertain the reputation and
standing of its manufacturers. They would
thus avoid becoming instrumental lu pcipe
trating a fraud on their customers, and would
in the long run make more money. Of course
no honest man would knowingly lend htimclf
to such a fraud upon his euslomers, and it is
very poor policy for any greet r to attempt to
palm off Inferior goods when the best r.ro
asked for. lie may by so doing make a little
money at tho time, but be surely will at some
time. If the fraud is discovered, lose one of bis
boat customers, and with him a score of other*
who might otherwise have dealt with him.
A merchant’s wisest policy is to iseeure the best
customer*, and they are Just the ones who
want the best goods. SEA FOAM is
WITHOUT AN EQUAL
It is prepared from the purest and best materi
als only, and is never under any circum
stances adulterated. There Is no Lunger auy
excuse for sour, heavy, or sodden bread, bis
cuit, or pastry. Every housewife In the land
should make herself acquainted with the tacts
W e have stated, which ara indisputable, and
she will soon ascertain that most of the yeast
preparations now being sold are anything
else but what they profess to bo, and that
this is the main reason why so large a propor
tion of the bread consumed by Bio masses of
the community is unheeltlifttl. Invalids r-ro
especially interested in this question of yenst,
and ought to keep constantly in mind the im
portant fact that their dietary shonld at all
times he the best, and that under the roost
favorable circumstances they can not hope to
regain health and strength unless their fool is
the most healthful and nutritious that can ha
obtained. Good food makes good blood, and
the nerve force is strengthened or Impaired in
proportion as the food we eat is nutritious or
otherwise.
SEA FOAM is worthy of a fair trial, an-1
that is all we ask for it.
No one having once used it will ever use any
other preparation in the baking powder line,
but will at once and forever banish from the
house the various crude mixtures and bogus
preparations in the form of yeast that have so
long and so persistently tended to destroy
health by imperfectly performing the require
ments they professed to fulfill.
SEA FOAM retains in all their excel
lence the nutritious properties and natural
taste of the various cereal preparations of food,
while in bread raised by the ordinary means
there is very frequently great loss of their
toothsome and palatable qualities.
Of all baking ortos. powders, Sea Foam
is beyond dispute Uie
BEST IN THE WORLD
Give it a trial, and you will concede that we
havo offered you the means to make poor
fiour much better than when used under
ordinary conditions, while good flour will be
Immeasurably Increased In sweetness, rich
ness, and all those qualities which combine to
render good bread essentially the stair of life.
SEA FOAM is now u-ed by the leading
hotels and restaurants in N\w York city an-1
throughout tho country. One eating-house in
New York has become famous for its SEA
FOAM biscuit, and during the dinner hour*
there are always dozens of people waiting
their turn to be seated.
Ask your grocer to get it for you, if he has
not already placed it in ilia stock, and if an
Obliging man lie will do so; or send fr#
circular and price-list to
GAHTZ, JOhES & CO.
SOLE 3XAK IT ACT USEES,
176 Duane Street, Tk sv Tor?:,