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About The Dawson journal. (Dawson, Ga.) 1878-18?? | View Entire Issue (Feb. 25, 1886)
TAy W S IR 51 PUNGENT PARAGRARAS. € A Georgia man has been bittan by a ppad mule. The mhle can't be relied on. at eiber ends 3 George-W-. Regers, a farmer of Hart countw, proposes to plant T;«‘»tblr\g))}xt.tnbm‘m thifl '}’(‘a!’. .\ll ‘ right, Geozoe: do sa 1[!'"0 chews. The man w;‘o wiz Witton by 1 Guogrgia mule was frying to place a third morizage on him. Ne wonder t)w _lx_f;gzl(‘st mule got mad. Sam Jones has-left Uim'innnti.‘ and neross the Bhindthe foaming | hoor still flows on Sunddy after: noon to the'mdsizof the banda. 1 The {akt i 3 unpleasaptly com-i mmented upon that none of :hc? Czant family took oty part in | payingshkanot’ to. the ‘memory nf] General Hancock. | i Brunswick i§ biggging on a girl Faby, only Thrde yaeks Toldt, - {hmt alronds has two teath: -Whemrthat girl gets to be eighteen years old the public will hear from her fgain. ; The taxeolledtor of Bibb county has issuad tax executions against R. F. Lee and Jefferscn Davis. They are not the distinguished confederates, but are eolored eiti 2ena. A shoe store at. Nevada, Mo, has employed as a elerk the noto rious handit,Frank Jamea, Drum maers dou't ‘monkey around that establishraent to any alarming ex tent. . Ii the oldest inhabitant eounld ba bound in elf skin and kept on the shelf antil wanted, ~he might be useful; but he ean mnover be found when his facts .are needed, and so he goes for nothing. The New York News has the chieek to assert that a blast ina limestone quarry, near Boiile, Cal ifornia, uncovered five petrified gulls' eggs. Now, how in the thander ean a petritied gall lay eggs? Ly = Lula Harst, the wonderfa! elee. trie girl, has made a fortune, and is now attending Shorter Female College at Rome She shows her good sense hy appropriating a portion of her money to a thor ough eduaeation, instead of marry ing some sap-headed dude to spend it for her. The first umbrella ever seen in Fngland was curried by a foot man named John MeDonald in‘! 1777, and it is & remarkable fact: that it belonged to somebody else, and was taken “by mistake for his own,” aud that has been its for-! tune ever since. | The Plaladelptia Press r(‘--i marks that “ths meeting of the Stata Agricultural Society is taken | a 3 the epening of tha gabernato- | rial campaign in Georgia, und the | number of tines in the pitchforks earried by the aspirants for the nomination is sapposed to corres pond with the number of planks they o pee’ to put in the plat form.” Th~ recont State Agricultoral Convention in Columbus ealled a grand eneampmant of agricaltnr isia, of the two Carolinas, Tennes sen, Alabama and (3sorgin, to as semble in Atlanta the coming summer. A large attendanee of Lorny-havded yeomanry and am bitions politicians will respond to the esll. ko Conventiom also openad the loeation of the State i'nir to gompeatition. " The Walton News savs that the authoritics of the High Sholes Factory digmissed a nmmber of young girls, employed in that es tabiishment, because they partiei patalin a danea. Now, then, loy the pious manugers of that model edablishment discharge every minde operative who uses fobaceo. The groat moral refozin movenmont L 1 Georgia should tolerate no compramise with vie~ and erime. The gama of “shiny,” so fat as Ligh female soeicty in New York is concernad, has como to an end. Rocontly two yonng ladies who werg playing in a game uponthe iee gof tangled sadly, One hit the other the aecidontal ghin lick with which tha old timesehool boys me fumiliar, and as nswal in sueh casps, received a 1 whaek over the hoad. There waaa elipeh, o fly ing of feathers, a slip up —und then tho pair and the eurtain went down together. . Salvation Oil, the greatest cure on carth for pain, as an anodyne Lius no equnl in the market. Ttis without doubt the best linimant. Prive 25 ecals per bottle, "THE: DAWSON JOURNAL. YOI.D 9" . IN OUR STA e A gentbmfifii'ofmh‘t};orm savs ‘that the«baz¥irds* are 7 killing ! young lambs on his plantation. ‘ Baby earriages are selling at {cost in Amarieos. This in idinuie; a bow stale of the mar 3 k\‘t.' ; £ 3L Ry ThT : { + The stock law s in force in | Thompsen, and the foddor in the {country wagou is exempt from doiug duty ns.feed fordown cows. I The Madisonian”says M good | detective wonld find plenty of | '?‘t'}rk in Madison: The~ paople pdist now are,salfiaring, [rop gh fepu omxc‘.omurg;ary. g A nogrd woman eommitied su licide in Wayneshoro Wednesday jon account of disappoiniment in 1a love affair. It is time for the !whitos to hold Mp now. % It is never too lale to reform. !'Mr. W. H. Boyer, of Hancock jeonnty, died last week at the ven (cmlvle age of 82 years. A few | weeks ago he eribraced religion land joined the Mothodist church. ! Daring the late cold weather a %ciiizon of Waynesboro, who had | “laken something” to keep warm, | started for his room, but missed | bis way, and was fonnd knocking !nt the door of the Presbyterian | crureh, which he mistok for the yhotel, and loudly demanding en | tranen, { Mr. J. W. Yarbrougl, of Floyd “eounty, took his ten-year-old son ot hanting, a fow days ago, and ! the boy shot his pa instead of a ‘! squirrel; but be didun’t aim to do It. Three shot, intended for tha “sgairrel, strack the old gentleman in the temple. Judge Augunstus H. Reese, of Madisov, 1s dead. Juadge Reese was an old Georgia landmark, a nobio representative of an ante bellan Georgia judge and gentle man. He was the {ather of Hon. Seate Reese, member of Con. aTOSR, - An eminent gaologist, who has |¥.~)tudioel the* subjact thoroughly, says thd diamouds -in great ‘abundanes will yet be foond in (teorgia, in a bolt that he loeates ‘batween Atlanta and the Savan énxnlx river, _about one hundred imiles in length and from ten to thirty miles in width. ] . - Mr. Mulling, of Chauncey, has had several hundred eigars manu factured from tobaceo which he raised last year. They are de- Nlightfully fragrant, aud far snpa. rior to the average nickel eicar of tire markes. If yoal will enclose o stamp with yvir address to Mr. | Mnllins he will sond you thrae cigar stumps for transplanting. g Mrs. Bradleyeof Madison coun ty, i 3 entitled to the blue ribbon, ' a narsing bottle of pare gold and ta life pension. About tha fiest of | last March she gave birth to thrce | ehildren, and last woek she gave | birth to another child, making four children in loss than & vear. i Capt. .. . Spivey, the only 'eitizen of the onee flourishing !tuwn of Danvillo, on the Flint ’l'ivor, was in Ameriens Taesday, {and said that with the daily steam boat visits, and the Savannah, | Dablin and Awericus railroad i erossing the Flintat old Danville, | the town will shon bad and bloom linto a live and flourishing town. There lives about two miles from this plaea a negro named Dave Virden who is a sirange Jooking creature. Ho was once ‘a3 black as the aca of spades, but sevaral - years ago white ‘spots began to appear on his body, and hiaeolor hias gradu “ally changed until now he is al 'most whita, IThs features are those of a nagro, flat nose and ‘thick lips, kinky hair and small oyes, and it seains that waturo in tended him for ono, but with the exception of a few black specks w; on his face, he 13 as white as the average white man. A wlhite man blacked looks very odd and comical, ard this negro looks strange and unnataral. No canse is known for the change in his eolor, hat it is likely that . physi cians conld explaia it by writing n column of technieal namoa— (liason Enterprise. - Bawson, Ga., Thursday, February 25th, 1886, . - DUR NEIGHBORS. _ - Take up the fiddie and the boiv, And play “‘Loat the Eag'e Scream;™ Lay down.the shovel and the hoe,” Potatoes are dug by steam. Several of the Ohioans, who cama ‘down with tho exearsion two waeks ago,- arestill linzering in the vicinity of Albapy, the bab “of Southwest Gaoriia \l bany Nows, . Capt. Sealy, while Qnt. rabbit hunting a fow days ago, shota rabbit, and in tdrning véry sud denly to shoot another, fell upon some _bard, sufi;t;mm‘,amll fenet ured oo oc: two of hig ribs - Tha eonalraetion irain on the Amerieas, Preston and Gampkin railrond passed over’ tha trestle Satarday that spang the road from Yampkin . to. Secottsboro. This is the first tim> that a train of ears was everseen by Loampkin people while standiug upon the publie square. , Gen. John Breed, of Randolph connty, well known as a patriotie citizen who commanded Lamp kin's militia in ante-bellam days, anl who was for a long time a resident of Stewart eounty. is a relative of the owner of the eole bratad Breed's Hill, as the Cien eral elaims erronsously ealled Banker's Hill. | At Americus,a fow nights lnne, ‘D. B. Hill's colored nurse ywas up with tha baby and sitting 'close to the fire. In soma man 'ner hor dross caught fire. Mr. 'Hill quaickly eame to the rescue, ‘uml in extinguishing the flamas 'was badly burnel around the 2fam, arms, body and Fast, and se- Iverely sprainel one foot. He isucceeded in saving tihe girl, | though she was badly burnad. ? A Thomasville spacial to the i'l‘elogmph says: “The mnegro i school recantly barned at Quit :m-m, and about whieh so much I fass was raisal, is to ba establish fed here. Work is to ba com jmonced at an early day. It will probably be located at the Sonth [ western extremity of Fletcher | street, beyond the corporate lim jits of the town in a neighborhood {already settled thickly by negroes {only. There are two other loca- ' tions being considered, neither of which would make it objeetiona 'ble, as both are in negro settle ! ments, The opinions and feelings ‘nf the commuanity are diverse, i'but pros and eons ara about equal. t Liast Maveh, Mr. Wm. Hooks' {Stm'e was broken into an:d robbed. i The thief was canght and impris ionml. On. investigation it was {ascortained that the nogro, John { Kitehons, was not responsibla for Itlm crime, he being dem-nted and |subject to fits. Ho still lios in Ej_nil where ho has fits every fow {days. Frequently these fits are lnf one and a half hour's daration.. | There are six othiar prisoners con [ fined in the sama cell with this | poor wreteh. On Taeaday night I Kitchens hal an unusaally severe g fit, striking and kicking violently. i,'l'lm other nagroes wore frighten (ed, and erouchod in corners and telimbad up on the windowa to keep ont of danger. Shonll not LJulm Kitchens be sent to the la l natle asyluam? -Albany News, ! Stewart county people did not lenthuse worth a cont over tha ?()hia oxcarsionists anil the at | tempt made to give tham a rocep !tion and big dinnar bare was a |failure. Too many of oar eiti | zeus met them during the war, jand one of our old voterans talls fus that the first Ohio man that | got off the train at Richland was | tha identical yankee that eaptored }him at the battle of the Wilder | ness, . 3 It does mot appaar that aay of { the Ohioans were mueh inelined Lo infest in ‘Gaorgia soil, and the smajority of them seamed willing [to hiraont a 3 dy laborers. A rich plantor-of . Webatar county is said to hdva entertained” one of 'them royally for three or foor Fdays, feeding him on cake and “wine whilo showing him his 3,000 ~aeres of fine lands, :l‘homi&ug : didl wot purchnso,: but 6 tho fifth ‘l‘d.gy is said to -have lired 54 'neighbor of the ‘rich planter for jten 6flars & moath. - Lumpkia « RESCUED BY BUZZARDS. A Fox Tunter Falls Tntoa Well snd © = How He Eseapes. e Columbus Enquirer-Sun. A gontleman who lives in the eastern part of this coanly tells one of thosy stories that few peo ple will believa“without seeing it.” He says-that he wWas out-fox hunt inz, and when- tha chase was at the height of M 8 excitement his horse' ran iato an 01l yell thirty foot desp. Pli» horsa was instant 1y killed by the fall, bat the rider was unhurt. - The walls of the well had eaved in at, tl;e:;«)ttqm a distan orf eot, and 'fi%%%%i%r:\ nted getting out oy digging foot holds. Realizing his sitwnkion, he began to eall for help at the {op of his voien, but no assistanes camo, Ho was compelled to remain in the well all night, and the next morn mg the steach arising fram the dead careass of the horse was y thing but pleasant, and he noticed that buzzards were soaring over the spot. Pinally the buzzards began to alight in the well, and it was then that a bright idea stroek him. He decided to calch the buzzards by the legs as they came down uotil he got a sufiicient number to earry him "out. That he did, and when he bad canght as many as his hands would hold, he “shewed” at them, sand they tlew up, carrying him out of the well. But still the fox hunter was in a dilemma. The buzzards flew so rapidly that he ecould not turn loose when he reached the top without falling back in the well. Upward the buzzards flew with their humau freight, and the fox hunter began todespair of his life after all. When about one hun dred yards above the ground the fox hunter wes just about to let go and fall, when he was struck by another bright idea. He ‘de cided to loose .one buzzard at a time until his weight wounld pull them downward. Acting upon this plaa hy was soon landed safe ly upon the ground. The gentlemman whe tells this story tells it inall seriousness,and as though he actually believes it trae, but it will ba a colder day than any we had during the re cent blizzard before he ecan gat anvbody else to believe it. Why They Quarreled. From the Waycross Ga. ) Reporter. Two young ladies were over heara talking glibly and confiden tially the other day: “Now, —— " said ony, tall me why Charlie anl youn gaarrelled.’ “Boeaunse he's a ninny, that's the reasop. You Lkuow he's been coming to seo me for the last three years, and I could see just as plain as anybody that he was head over heels in love with me. But ho didn't seem to have any snap to him, and I got real impatient, just as any girl would have done, A few nights before Christimas he called to see me, and before he wert away I saya: ‘Charlie, 1 want to make you o Christmas present, but I want to be sure it will suit you. It is som~thing roal nice, warm, usefal and orna mental, ani will always giay with you.” ‘A’ searf? - be. says. ‘No, not a searf,’ I said‘thoagh it might embrace you. It weighs about 120 pounds, and I've heard you say vou thoaght it very precions. Oh, I know,” he says, a bicyele!” By this time 1 was nearly mad, but I made onomore effort. ‘Not a bicyele, T says, but it can walk, has a mouth, eyes, pretty hair and is very affectionate” ‘Now 1 know,” ha said;and what do yon think he saul? A big Newlound- Jand dog. | was never so disgust ed in my life, and have not seen Charlie since. He's treated me real mean, and 1 just bhate him. Oh, there he i 3 now. Ain't he sweet? 1 wish he wonld come and talk to ni” ‘ A eold of unusnal severity which I took last antumn developed into a difliealty decidodly catarrhal in all its charaeteristios, thriatening a returnof my old “ehronie mala- Ay, eatderh, & Ona" boltla of Ely's Creara Balny ~conpletdly eradicr= gfi&gvgrs» ‘? m fik:‘,&‘gfl_fl;u p:i "§ ul an svailing disorder.—BE. W, MSWS fim‘)&m;#{met, Ro aheaer, XY, _‘ BLASPHEMER'S TERRICLE DEATH The Leader in a Moek R ligous Ser- Viee Dies a Raving Maniac. ~ A Harvisburg, Pa,, specinl soys thot nows of a strange and myste riona oceurrence ok Millersburg,s has been received there. On Thursday morping there was a Jovial crowd at ata hotel at that place, and while they were imbib ing Samuel Motter enteved. Mot ter was well lenown throughout the conntry as a patent medicine peddler anl was aboat fifty-five years of aze, Shertly after Motter entered a discussion on—religions —sabjeets arose. The sacrament of the Lord’s Supper was talked aboat. Motter beeame very earnest in his talk, and finally dared the men to engage in the TLord's Supper. They agreed to have it with beer and breal, aud accordingly a glass was filled with that baver crage. I'hey then knelt in mock hamility, and with the beer in one hand and the bread in the othor Motter went along distrib nting a bite and sup to each. Saddenly, when he was about hall through, a strauge noise was heard, and looking up the men saw a sight that “made their blood run cold and froze the m .r -row in their bones.” . As near as the searad mon could deseribs it, they claimed it was an immense, ill-formed and foal heast with great eloven feef, painted hnarns and eyes that flashed fire. With wild yolls the men rushed ont into the open air and scat tered in every dicection. Finally all of them reached their homes except Motter, who was away for a long time, and at last he arrived a maniac. He was then put to bed and physiciins summoned, but they ecoull do nothing for him. He raved, howled and pray ed, declaring that he had scen the Evil One and that he was lost. His tortara was terrible, but nothing ecould be done to re lieve him, and be died in the wild est agonv. The death-bed scence is said to have been full of horrors that can hardly bade seribaod. Editing a Paper. Editing a paper is a pleasant business —if you like it. If it contains much political matter people won't have it. Tf tha type islarge it don't con tain mach reading matter. If we publish telegraph reports folks =ay they are nothing but lies. : If we omit them, we have no enterprise, or suppress them for political effeet. ‘ If we have a few jokes folks say wo are nothing but rattle hea Is. It we omit jokes folks say we are nothing b .t fossils. It we pablish original matter they damn us for not giving se lections. | 1f we give seleetions paople say ! we are lazy for not writing more Land giving t'hym what they hav } not read in somo other paper. | It we give a complimentary no tieoe we are censured for being | partial. [ If we don't, all hands say we are j a great hog. ‘ i If we insert an article which i pleases the ladies, the men become I;jnainn.u. and-viee versa. i { If we attend church they say it | is for effect. | Iwe cemain in our offiee, at i tending to our own businesg, folks sflmy wa. are too prand. to wmingle l with othar fellows, j If we go out they say we don't Fattend to our business, ‘ L Healthful Vigor for the Girls. ' Mrs. Livermore shvs, in one of ;h-r-r leetures on Girls, “1 would tgive to girls equal intelleetual tand industrial training wath boys. [ Yes, amd give them equally good health, foo.” © When your girls 'are suffering from paleness and §<ll‘\i)iiit_\'. it isasign thad their bload is poor and thin, and that fthc‘_\' pead DBrown's Iron Eitters. ‘ Thaonly preparation’ of fron that iran be taken safely Miss Bar {ton, Chestnut streot, Tiouisville, ; Ky, says, _“Drown's Tren Bitters jeareld me: of rhenmatism when evoryrhing elso had failed.” NO. 42. © AGOOUMEE. - Cutlbyt Enterpriva. Last week. about the time our eitizens expected the delegation of Ohio visitors in our midst, there tarned wp in town & young man, rather geedy in appoarance, who represented himself as a member of the exeursion party, and was looking aroand for a home in the swrny South. He was at once inken in charge by a worthy and enterprising gentleman of Cuth bert, housed, fed and ecarried around over the country in splen did style for sevornl days. The the delightful elimate, the soeia bility of the people, and the healthlulness of oar location. was talked to ke from early morn till dewy eve. The yommg man wag charmed. He liked the town, the peopls, the elimate, the soil, the af resaid gentleman, and above all the palatable dishes prepared and placed before him by the ex cellent wife. He was coming to Randolph to live, and just as the Captain was eongratalating bim self upon his suceess m securing one of the Ohioans as a eitizen of Cuthbert, he discovered the fact that he was caring for a tramp. His disgnst was beyond deserip tion, and tho more he thought about it the madder he got. It would have been very unncalthy for his trampship if he eould have been found just at that mwoment. As it wag he got off with a light application from the sole of our friend’s boot, and the impostor took French leave, avowing that his kind host was the most whole souled gentleman in Amerieca. A WONDERFUL NEWSPAPER XAXN. A Bullelin man had the pleas. ure of dining yesterday on the steamer Marable and a goodly number of steamboat men.—Rome Balletin. The idea of a newspapsr man in the veiy heart of civilization dining on a steamer” and a goodly namber of steamboat men is sim p'y appalling. Talk of the eanni bulism of the South Sea Island s and the wan eating horrors of po lar expeditions in ecomparison with the exploit of this Rome newspaper man! Shades of Olympus! What an appetite he must have; what a powerful di gestive apparatas to eat an entire steamboat with 2 number of steam boat hands thrown in by way of desert. Why, the dime maseam and ten cent shows will fairly vell with delight at the intelli. genee, and the only drawback to his seeuring an engagement will be the difficalty of procaring enough steamboats and steambont men wherewith to feed him. Some steamboat men might have con. seientious seruples about being eaten and object to earrying out the programme in this respect. Hints £ir Cold Days. Tae throat is a most delieate and yet flexible organ, and from it issue some of thoe swoaolest sounds that ean del’'ght the ear, An organ so sensitive as thiz must necessarily ba easily aflacted by damp and fogzy weather, and it is vot surprising that with sulden changes of temperature, we hear of so many eases of hharsraoess and bronchitis, In anch a cise n medicine eontaining neither miu eral poison nor narcoties, ought to be usad. Red Star Couzh Care, the new medieal discovary, has these requirements. It has nither morphin nor opium, is ab sHolutely frec from all barmful in. r - gredients and is wonderfully effi cacions. Only twentv-five cents. , An Enterprising, Reliable House. { Crouch Brothers can always be relied upan,” wot only to earry in i stock the best of everything, but i to secure the Agenecy for such er- Hicles as bavo well-known merit, 'and are popular with the people, s thereby sustuining the reputation Lol being always enterprising, and tever reliable.. Having secured ' he Ageney for the celebrated Dr. tKing”s New Discovery for Con ' sumpticn, will sell it on a positive %gunmutee. It will surely ecure cany and every alfectim of the | Throat, Langs and Chest, and to 'show our econfidence, wo Invite you to call and get a Trial Bottle !Frea. ; : N Fiv's Crerm Belm is the best mediciie for-Catarrh 1 have ever Msed - Mis.O.Wood, Mexia, Pexas., . Remarollé fevperagion. _ DM Feorry & Co,, the - well announce thet'they are o their to recioww ol “h..,.« svory ome of tha old enstoraee, and from os ? sow Cno3 as feel kindly dtw&mffiem. They are ia condition ¢ £II prompily every-order with new seeds of the best quality. - On Jonuary Ist*sheir immndenso warehouse was destroyed by fire It was filed with probably tra largest stock of assorted seedgever gatherod under owe roof. Their booka and papers were all saved, and every person who had order ed saeds of them will be supplied with his uswal stock. They had large quantities of seeds intheir warchouses on their seed fance, in the hands of their growers and not yet delivered, and on the way from Europe, which, togather with theiv folly stocked Seed Store in Windsor, Ontario, ¢lose at hand, and tha free and vigor ous use of the telegraph'and ca ble, enabled them to secnrd & naw stock in a remarkably chort time Before the fire was subdued they had secured new quarter: and were devoting all their ener gies to their eustomers’ intérest: Iy thirty days from the fire they were in perfeet working order azain, When we consider the magni tude of their business, the appall. ing destruction of property at the most unfortomate season of the vear, we doubt if the annals of history furnish acase of “cuch rapid recuperation. Such energy deserves success, Wonderful Cures. - W. D. Hoyt & C 0.,, Wholesala and Retail Droggists of Rome, Cia, say: We have beon solling Dr. King's New Discovery, Ilec tric Bitters and Bucklen’s Arnica Salve for two years. Have mever handled rewmedies that sell as well, or give such universal satisfzction. There have been sme wonder{ul cures offected by these medicine in this city. Several eases ol pro. nounced comsumwption have been eutirely eured by use“of a few bottles of Dr. King's New Dix. covery, taken -in ‘copnsetion’ witn Flectrie' Ditterz. We guarantes them always. Sold by Crouch Dro’s. Nat Symptons, hut the Disease 14 wonld seem to be a truth np preciable by all, aud especially by professors of the héiling art, that to remove the disease, not to alle viate its sywmptons, should be the chief aim of medication. Yet in how many instanoes do we sen this truth admitted in theory, 11 nored in practice, I'he reason that Hostetter's Slomach Bitters is suceessful in o manv cases, with which remedies previously tried were inadeqgnato to cope, is attributable to the lact that it is a medicine which reaeb es nnd removes the causes of the various maladies to which it is adapted. Indigestion, fever and ague, liver complamt, gorut rheri. matism, disorder of the bowels, arinary affections and other mala. dies are not palliated merely, but rooted ont by it. It goes to the fountain head, Tt is really. unt nominally, a radical remedy. #uel it endows the system with an amount of vigor which is Its best proteetion agmust disease, The Press and Peohibitian, Says the St. Louis Repnblican in a recont editorial: *“Tha evils of prohibition are not alena con fined to the widespread a:la aud consumption of the.+ilest and most injurious speeies ¢ alcohol ic stimulants, but emb oo count less others nndreamed ~[ by the promoters of this donbiful tem peranee cause.” In vTew of this wodispatad fact, it sof imper tance to know where, in these <la generated days, a pura whirkey can ba obtained. 1. W. Harper's Nelson county, Kentucky whit key is a pure, sour mwash hiqu r, and fully supplies this want. By competent judges at the New (Or leans Exposition it was awarded the GOLD MEDAL for purity and excellonee. Sold by M.C. Mixs, DPawson, Ga. Braorirep's FeMaLe Krarrna. Ton will give ablooming eoler, an elastic step and a eheerful spiris to the woman of zallow eomplex ton, . heavy dragging motion and wetancholy disposition. Sond for onr Tre dise on“ Health and Happiness of Woman,” mail ed [rec. L Bravrieco’s Recvraton Co., Atlanta, Ga. a 8 : PUCKLEN'S ARNICA SALVE. S iy g VAR | . The best Salve in G%;%w;ofld {or Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Selt Rheam, FeverSorésPotter; (‘hon ped: Hauds, Phitblfins, €wn a‘d all Skin Eruptions; and pdsitive z eures Frles, or no pay tequi‘e L it 18 gnavanteed hgfvvq periect satisfartion, or money ro'nedad. Price 3 cents per bos. For sate by Croneh Bros: L gl i