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‘V‘T ANTED—LADY Active and intelli
nt, to rc})roeent in her awn loecali
ty an—(§3 firm. References requived. Per
mafent position and good salary, GAY &
BROS., 16 Barclay Bt., N. Y
THE 0 1G (s
PERRY, GA.,
Is sole proprictor of
O: lg€: v
(Old Tadian Cure),
The Pertect Blood Purifier.
This vegetable Tonic and Purifier never
fails, Druggists s¢ll it .and endorse it
everywhere.
Dr. Wm. F. Bynum, Br., a prominent
physician and citizen of Live Oak, F 1..,
writes us: ‘‘lt gives the best satisfaction
of all the Blood Purifier_s." |
LADIES IN
®
Delicate Health
have init a
SOVEREIGN CURE.
—AND—
APPETIZER,
Thero is Absolutely Nothing to
COMPARE WITH IT.
: &
1 ‘ PT 4
RN ‘Q‘ A\\ S
S RN NN
~js\' Y &
ppvee\ LIRS
R ‘ é W/ > -
HU' 6HE RY
BOWELS & CHIL DREN TEETHING
It is THE GREAT SOUTHERN REMEDY
for the howels. Itisone of the most pleasantand
efficacious remedies for all summer complaints.
Atz season when violent attacksof the bowelsare
#0 frequent, some speedy relief should beat hand.
The wearied mother, losing sleep in nursing the
littic one teething, shou!d use this medicine. 50
ets. a hottle. Send 2¢. stamp to Walter A, Taylor,
Allnllla. Ga., for Riddle Book.
B-ylor'- Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum and Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup,
and Consumption. Price 25¢. and 81 a bottle,
NO MORE EYE-GLASSES
No ! i Weak
More wEcHu _?’M @ Eyes!
MITCHELL’S
: EYE-SALVE
A Ceriain, Safe and Effcctive Remedi for
o Wal Al loflamed B,
Producing Long-sightedness, and Re
stoting the Sight of the Old.
Cures Tear Drops, Granulation,
Stye Tumors, Red Eyes
Matted Eye Lashes,
AXD PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF
AND PERMANENT CURE.
Also equally eficacious when used in
other maladies, such as Uleers, Fever
Bores, Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles, or wher
ever inflammation exists, MITCHELL'S
BALVE may be used to advantage.
Sold by all Druggists at 25 cents,
March 12-1885.
g\-_.-*_—_——
CLINCMAN’S
l REN? Lep
, EDIES
%,.“ -
oT I E
! = B
Y = W
o M
¥, N
R i
25 s 4 7. 2
" A 65 B 8
THE CLINGHAN TOBACCO OINTMENT
I L R
m"“oz.r fiimx::l cers, Abln':l?.
gy Panyics Y 4 o Boe eBo S
HE CLINGMAN TOBACCO CAKE
2‘““‘53-: gwu.lém&':nv. "'"hfi'.
i m:flou. fi‘m., o, Hore Kyes,
S ""'l@ .Corne, Neuralgis,
§'.‘hll. out, jo hs,
g’i‘*‘tgfli:lzm. and Bikon. Biloes
mkon'lmmm o!bt.t‘;d
‘“E cl" or cause, o
s GMAN TOBACCO Pllflfl
il G E S
£eof O of TSI Pocommended o
Prios wit, o inflammatory molacies, Aol and
she payier®: from £OO delicate & atate of the ssten.
du{mmhmmbeu&homn plication
and ‘}m:fl: anoy Hoadache o gfl:?: Aches
c‘fii"fi'fii‘ffihflem cw;;oth
& DURHAM, N, C., U, 8. A,
THE DAWSON JOURNAL
VOL. 21.
| GOOD-BYE.
Dear love! T will but say gpod-bye;
And yet some strange fore ings rise
Each sinile is stiffed ity a sigb?m.{ s
A heavy burn on me lies.
You, toc, within your irmast heart,
Divine a shadow lurkingvnighy
But since we now at last must part,
Bay not farewell, but just good-bye,
I even thought to smile at this, v
That you might call me brave and strong;
But life will find so much to miss,
__And joyless moments wear so long!
}la’).lply an undrawn curtain veils
he fateful future from each eye;
But true faith never flags nor fails,
And 50 we'll hope and say goocd-bye.
But now each instant only brings
My helpless feet more near the brink;
I tremble like a wretch who clings
To straws when destined soon to sink.
Ol%l]mve You counted well the duys
hich ere we meet must lag or fiy?
My soul with you—my bodg stays
Alone, when we have sai good-bye!
8%.' shall T wait untif yo:nfinmc, ¢
S W women wait weep?
Mfl lips Lo ozhers dumb, -
0 you kisses when I sleep,
And if, oh, we never meet,
- My tove, forget me not, and 1,0 ¥
My soul shall journey with you, sweet,
And now indeed, indeed good-bye.
—Annie Robertson Noxson.
; How's This for Sam?
Griftin News, 3
Col. Sam Leak,the rising young
lawyer, a few nights ago called on
his best girl, and was so com
pletely overwhelmed by the great
love bestowed upon him by her,
next morning early penned the
following lines and had them de
livered by Charley Gilsey, the
ash-tinted dude who occupies the
prominent and responsible posi
tion of “maid of all work” on law
yers’ row. We beg leave to state
that it is through the kindness of
the Colouel that we are able to
give the public the benefit of this
poetical effusion:
“Last night I left my heart with you,
A captive to your winning grace;
As you now have one that's kind and true,
Pray send me yours to take its place.”
Not to be outdone by the poeti
cal Colonel, she procured a sheet
of waste tinted paper, and replied
in the following language:
“If you have left your heart with me,
I canmot say I regret it; °
'And as for mine—well, let me see—
Call 'round yourself to-night and get it.”
A CowT)—Jy’s Queer Cal:tship.
A queer wedding is reported
from Jeffersonville to-day, where
‘Walter D. Knox, a wealthy young
cattle trader from Colorado, was
united in marriage yesterday to
Lizzie D. Miller. The ceremony
was performed in the .couuty
clerk’s office by Esquire Stiobel,
and the courtship was peculiar.
The story is that Knox came here
a day or two nago, and yesterday
morning got into a carriage on
Jefferson street and told the hack
man to drive him where he could
see a pretty girl. The hackman
started up town, and on turning
the corner of Jackson and Jeffer
son streets spied Lizzie Miller.
The hackman hailed her and in
troduced her to Knox, who was
greatly pleased with her good
looks, and invited her into the
carriage, after which he instruet
ed the hackman to drive over to
Jeffersonville. There a license
was obtained, and the wedding
solemnized. Knox pulled cut an
immense roli of bills “when he
paid the justice. The new-made
wife asked him where he was go
ing, and he said back to Colorado.
“Am I going with you?”’ she ask
ed. “No,” he said, “I have no
further use for you. Knox is still
in town, and is having a raging
time of it in Lis honeymoon.—Cin
cinnati Enquirer.
Why a Drunken Man Escapes.
One sometimes sees a drunken
man pitched violently from a
horse and when the bystanders
rush to see him dead, they are as
tonished to discover that he has
been little injured. In his“ Scra
mbles among the High Alps,” Les
lie Stephens tells the story of a
guide who, while drank, fell over
a precipice so deep that a fall
over it seemed almost instant
death, and yet who sustained lit
tle injury. Stephers accordingly
gives his readers the advice not to
fall over a precipice or to get
thoroughly drunk before doing so.
The reason of this immunity is
that the nerve centers are so
much paralyzed in the drunken
man as not to be affected by the
shock of the fall, which in a sober
man, would have acted upon them
80 violently as to stop the heart,
arrest the circulation, and cause
instant defl:L_____
ilv.pains are instantly re
-lie]3:g ltl)};r Lt)l?:a use of St. Jacobs
Oil. Dr. R. Butler, Master of
Arts, Cambridge Univgrf.!,lt)':E"gw
says, “It acts like magic.
A WHOPPER:
& U TRambaic
‘A Snake Three Feet Long Pulled
Qut of & Man's Throat.
A special to the Boston Globe
from Grand Falls, Me., says:
David Ferguson has been suffer
ing terribly *for the past six
months. H's disease baffled the
skill of all the physicians in the
country, and some were called in
from Lewiston and Auburn.
None of them eounld diagnose his
case. He has been constantly
losing flesh and frequently folt a
choking sensation in his throat.
Yosterday afternoon he began
coughingviolently. He had grown
purple in the face when a snake’s
head suddenty darted: out of his
mouth. Ferguson saw the snake
but an instant and then fell faint
ing to the floor. His sister Re
becca came in and he told her
what had happened. She asked
him to cough again- and said if
the snake showed his head she
would seize it and pull the reptile
out. Ferguson coughed two or
three minutes. Rebecca stood in
front of him, with her hands up
held. Suddenly the snake’s head
appeared with such a hiss that
Rebecca jumped away. David
told her not to be afraid, but to
grab surely next time. Rebecca
nerved herself, wrapped a towel
around her hand and stood ready.
One more coughing spell and the
snake’s head darted out. TRebec
ca made a lunge at it and caught
its Liead in the towel. Then she
quickly wound it around her han
and gave a jerk. Out came three
feet of snake and around its tail
a piece of flesh from just below
the throat into which the snake
had grown. A blood vessel was
ruptured and Ferguson bled to
death in a short time. Local doec
tors think the snake must have
been swallowed by Ferguson
while drinking water in the dark
during some of his deer stalking
expeditions. :
' Sonte of“the Fruits. - -
From the Athens (Ga.) Banner-Watchman.
A gentleman who owns land
over the river, while strolling
around his possessions a few days
since, happened upon two indo
lent darkies of whom he inquired
why they were not at work. ;
“Well, bogs,” replied one of
them, “we’s jest waitin’ to see
how dese yer things gwine ter
tarn out.”
“What things?” iaquired the
gentlemav,
“Dis yer fuss 'twixt de workin’
man and dem railroads out yon
der in do West,” replied the dar
kev.
“Well,” said the gentleman,
“what have you to do with that?”
“Why, boss, we done heard dat
if workin’ men gits de bes’ of it,
dat dey gwine ter take all de rail
roads, and all us workin’ men can
ride whar we wants ter free, and
me and dis yer gemman war jes’
talkin’ 'bout whar we'd go dis
summer.”
“You'll just about go as far as
Jim Smith’s 1f you keep on your
speculations in that line,” remark
ed the genileman, as he started
off, and we are much of the same
opinion.
“This will last out a night in
Russia when nights are longest
there,” he said, elapping his hand
over the aching tooth. But a
friend suggested Salvatien Oil,
and he was fast asleep in twenty
seconds. Price twenty-five cents
a bottle. .
TuE attempt by one or two pa
pers in the State fo make it ap
pear that Hon. A. O. Bacon is op
posed to the railroad commission
is too feeble to command any re
spect.—Albany News.
Dark rings around the eyes in
dicate {the existence of worms.
Hasten to use Shriner's Indian
Vermifuge to expel these misera
ble pests. It is a safe and relia
ble agent. Always use it accord
ing to the directions, and it will
do its work well.
A rather cynical lady, some
what of a flirt, says most men,
like colds, are very easily caught,
but difficult to get rid of. Her
mistake is apparent. Dr. Bull's
Cough Syrup will cure any cold
however stubborn it may be.
Price 25 seuts.
Dawson, Ga., Thursday, Apnl%th.,lSSG
AN ASPINWALD 'rw _
What Was Found ina B“& of Ba
| nanas Yesterday. ;
‘Macon Telegraph.
“Look out for the tramp?”’ said
Corput, the fruit dealer, yester
day. s
The Telegraph man was admir
ing the bright buff colcred bunch
of bunanas yesterday, whena big
ugly spider erawléd out and am
bled alomg the counter. He was
a bundle of dull brown fuzz about
the size of your thymb,into which
were stuck several long, black
legs.
He was a tramp all the iway
from Asgn“ll,! . B
And Tike a'tramp wh» had sto
len a ride under a freight ecar, his
legs seemed eramped from the
long journey in the crevices of a
bunch of bananas. The poor fel
low wes at a loss where to go. He
was thousands of miles from home
and friendless, for people do not
take kindly to big ugly spiders.
He was a tramp and in a strange
country.
“We killed one here the other
with a body as big as a biscuit.
His body popped like a torpedo.
They come often in bananas, but
we generally manage to kil them. |
Up at the old store one made his
ascape and made his home under
the counter. Thén another es
caped, and for a long time we lost
sight of them. One day we found
a web under the counter, and on ‘
locking closer we found the home
of the two tramps. They had
raised a large family of spiders,
and they were the cutest little
things you would care to see.
They ran nimbly into the web if
you made a motion to strike them, '
and many a day we have watched
them simply for the amusement. ‘
They caught every fly that came !
within range, and now and then a |
bug happened within their reaca
and varied their bill of fare. Al--
though we knew they were dan
gerous pets, we did mnot g%n';g
them for the reason that they
secemed to be iadustrious fly
catchers and were never inclined
to sting. One afternoon a new
clertk saw one big fellow run
around a corner of the counter, |
and as he had never seen a spider
of such an enormous size he im
agined that to allow it to go at
large was equivalent to turning a |
tiger loose, and he killed the pet.
The others ran out and for about
an hour the new clerk had about
as much as he could stand up to
killing spiders.”
“Do they ever bite?”
“Yes,but it is a rare occurrence.
They fight like wild cats, and they
are high-tempered, but they never
trouble anybody unless aroused
and teased. Although there are
millions of bunches of bananas
brought to this country every sea
son, and many a thousand spider
steals his way aeross with them,
you never hear of anyone being
stung. They are very peculiar
things, and differ widely in their
habits from the eommon spider of
this country, which makes a web
like the centre-piece of a rising
sun crazy quilt. They make a
kind of nest and then spread out
lines of web in every direction.
On this single line, which is as
small as a silken thread, they ran
with ease, hanging to it by their
long, flexible legs. When danger
threatens they have a way of
drawing in the lines, and, hud
dling together, await the attack of
tho foe. When thus disturbed
they make prodigious leaps and
arrange in a circle around the
nest which they seem to guard
with jealous care, Then, when
provoked, they run all over the
attacking party. They ure game
and put up an ugly fight.
Unhappy Man.
Why persist in ruining your di
gestion by eating unwholesome
food; and keeping it ruined by
doing nothing to restore it to use
fulness and right action? Some
think dyspepsia is incurable.
They are the ones who have never
taken Brown’s Iron Bitters. This
valuable family medicine makes
short work of the tormantor and
sosn enables the digestive appa
ratus to do its work. Mr. H. E.
Collins, of Keokuk, lowa, says,
“I used Brown’s Iron Bitters gm'
dyspepsia, and am greatly bene
fitted.
TOOK LUNCH ON- AN ALLIGATOR'S
o AR ! :
Mr. Camdei's Ad¥entute With a Flor
. Me Alligatoty T
Baltimore Herald. ikt ot
Senator Camden, of West Viry
ginia, has just returned from a
brief sojourn in Florida, whither
he went to seek relief from Sena
torial overwork. He is chockful
of stories about the adventures he
#ad in the land of orange blos.
‘soms. "‘0096 _day,” he said, “I
‘went q%t hunting ealone. Of
‘course !m not the man to brag
‘about my skill as a hunter, " butJ
‘between you and me,l'm nosloush
with a gan. | After killiag a few.
deer, one or two Boars, 30 Gr-40
squirrels, and a dozen or so wild
turkeys, I concluded to return to
the hotel. It was still early, bat
I was tired packing round my
load of game! I wasgoing along
the bank of a creek, and coming
across a friendly log I thought I
would sit down and rest. I laid
my rifle and game down by the
log and took a seat. I had a
lunch of cold chicken in my hav
ersack. I had breakfasted at day
light and was pretty huagry. 8o
I wook out the chicken and began
to eat. When I had finished my
repast [ took the pocket-knife I
had been using to cut the shicken
and drove the blade mto the log,
intending to let it rest there until
I could get out my pocket-hand
kerchief and wipe my hands. But
great Scott! You ought to have
seen that log! It was the most
sensitive log I ever saw. When I
drove my knife into it, quicker
than lightning it humped itself
like a bucking mule and gave me
a flap with its little end that sent
me sprawling about 30 feet away.
DBlame my buttons if that log was
nota Florida alligator 28 feet
long, with a tail like a cross-cut
saw and teeth as sharp and long
as tusks of a- boar.
“When I scrambled to my feet
andlooked ot the log—Lmean the
alligator—there it” was, standing
rampant or. its feet, with eyes
glaring and its teeth grinding
savagely together. 1 dared not
run, for I was told ncver fo run
from an alligator, ashe would be
sure to pursue and overtake me.
So I stood transfixed to the spot.
What did the alligator do? Keep
ing his eye fixed steadily upon
me, he deliberately backed to
where my pile of game lay and
pitched in. First he ate up the
bears, then the deer. Smacking
his chops like a regulation board
ing house hash-eater, he then
turned on the squirrels and wild
turkeys, and when he got.through
there wasn't a hair or feather to
ba scen. I'll undertake to say
that no alligator ever before had
such a rare banquet. How the
alligator held that food I don’t
understand,but he did. When he
got through there wasn't a thing
left but my rifle, and he nosed
around that for several seconds as
if ILo intended to eat it, too.
What did he do then? Well, sir,
the aligator deliberately turned
his tail to the bank, and, keeping
his eye on me, backed to the edge.
Then, with a snort and a bellow,
he plunged tail foremost into the
water, I got my rifle in the frac
tion of a second, rushed to the
edge and looked down. T was
panting for revenge, but I could
not see anything but a succession
of waves impelling each other to
ward the other shore. .'The alli
gator was at the bottom of the
stream. - I stayed there an hour
watching for him, but he was too
sharp to come to the surface. 1
bet you he's got that knife of
mine sticking in him yet, for 1
drove it in pretty deep. Yom see
the salligator -was sound asleep
when I was sitting on him, but
sticking the knife into him woke
him up.”
Startling, But True.
Wirus Point, Texas, Dee. 1, 85,
After suffering for more than
three years with disease of the
throat and lungs, [ got so low last
spring that I was entirely unable
to do anything, and my cough was
80 bad f’ scarcely slept any at
night. My druggist, Mr. H. F.
Goodnight, sent mea trial bottle
of Dr. Brsanko’s Cough and Lung
Syrap. I found relief, and after
using six $l.OO bottles, I was en
tirely cure L J. M. WELDEN.
~ Sold by W. C. Keudrick.
The Girl We All Like.
Eli Perkins, : :
“The plainest girl I ever saw
was the favorite in my native
town. Everybody liked her,
Beantiful? © no, she is not beau
fiful—that is, outside, but inside
she is an angel. Nobody thinks
of calling her beautiful. Not one
of a dozen can tell whether her
eyes are black or blue. If you
should ask them to deseribe. her
they would ouly say: ‘She’s jmfi}
right,” and there it would end.
She is a merry-hearted, fun-lov
ing, bewitching maiden, without a
spark of envy or wmalice in her
compositicn. She enjoys
‘_do the same.- She has always
a kind word and a pleasant smile
for the oldest man or. woman: in
fact, I can think of nothing she
resembles more than a sunbeam,
which brightens everything it
comes in contact with. All pay
her marked attention, from rich
Mr. Watts, who lives in a mansion
on the hill, te negro Sam, the
sweep. All look after her with
an admiring eye and say to them
solves: ‘She is just the rightsort
of a girl!' The young men of the
town vie with one another as to
who shall show her the most at
tention; but she never encourages
them beyond being simply kind
and jolly; 80 no one ean call her 1
flirt; no, indeed, the young men
deny such an assertion as guickly
as she.”
“Do girle love her, tco?” I ask
el.
“Yes, wonderful to relate, girls
like her too; for she never delights
in hurting their feelings and say
ing spiteful things behind their
backs. She is always willing to
join in their little plans and to as
sist them in any way. They go
to her with their love affairs, and
she manages adroitly to see Wil
lie or Peter and drop a good word
for Ida or Jennie until their little
difficulties are all patched up and
everything goes on smoothly
again, thanks to her. Old ladies
say she is ‘delightful.’ The sly
witch, she knows how ‘to manage
them. She listens patiently to
complaints of rheumatism or neu
ralgia, and then sympathizes with
them so heartily that they a e
more than half cured.” -
A Baby that Smokes a Pipe.
A little red-cheeked, bright
eyed French Canadian baby, two
and a half years old, attracted
much atteation at the passenger
station this morning by puffing
away for nearly three-quarters of
an hour at a strong black briar
pipe filled with nigger-head to
bacgo.
The little fellow was with his
parents, who were on their way
from Canada to Lawrence, Mass.
He handled the pipe with all the
grace of an old smoker, and seem
ed to enjoy the weed as thorough
ly sas though it was his natural
sustenance. The parents say that
the boy had been addicted to the
habit for six months past.—Man.
chester, N. H. Mirror.
Cure for Piles.
Piles are frequently preceded
by a sense of weight in the back,
loins and lower part of the abdo
men, causing the patieut to sup
pose he has some affection of the
kidpneys or neighborin% orguns.
At times, symptoms of indiges
tion are present, flatulency, unea
siness of the stomach, ete. A
moisture-like perspiration, pro
glucing a very disagreeable itch
ing, after gettmg warm, is a com
mon attendant. Blind, Bleeding
and Itching Piles yield at once to
to the application of Dr. .Bosan
ko's Pile Remedy, which acts di
tactly upon the parts affected, ab
sorbing the I'imors, allaying the
intense riching, and efl({cting a
permanent cure. Price 50 cents.
Address the Dr. Bosanko Medi
cine Co., Piqua, O. Sold by W.
C. Kendrick, Dawson, Ga.
What Can be Done.
By trying again and keeping up
conrage many things seemingly
impossible may be attained. Hun
dreds of hopeless cases of Kidney
and Liver Complaiut have been
cured by Electric Bitters, after
overything else had been tried in
vain. 80, don’t think there is no
care for you, but try Electric Bit
tors. Tgere is no medicine so
safe, 8o pure, and so perfect a
Blood Purificr. Eleetric Bitters
will cure Dyspepsia, Diabetes, and
all Diseases of the Kidneys. In
valuable in affoctions of Stomach
and Liver, and overcoms all Uri.
nary difficaltics, : .
‘Priads of Nowspapor Men.. ..
Rev. Dr. Talmage ohed
sermon last Sanday on '
men aud their teials and |
short extraet: _ FHE G g
it
‘newspaper protes : "
that they are. compelled m
move of the shams of the '
than any other 3
Through every - : 3
dly by day, go the w ;
the b:orl‘;ifi_etge vinitiu -tha
to p , the rownz‘;
want to be wreakéd, all th .
takes that want to he ocorrected,
all the dull speakers who want fo.
be thought eloquent,all the meagn
ness that wants to get its warea
noticed gratis in the editorial eol
umns in order to save a tax of the
ladvertising columns, all the sen
‘who want to be set ngu
never were right, all the eormchk
brained,with story as lomirm
‘hair, and as gloowy as their fin.
Ezr nails, in mourning m
reft of soap; all the i
bores who come to stay tive min
utes and stay an-hour. Fromihe
editorial ‘
all the foi!:'es 3 lb&auaa
world are seen day by day, and
the temptation is to believe nai
ther Grod, man, nor woman, It is
no surprise to me that in ':onr
profession there are some skepti
cal men. I only wonder that you
:)elieve anything.h Unlm: an edi
ov or & reporter has in his
ent or his ep:rly home, a mm
lo;qrnesltf ohara:lger, (l):(‘)ld he throw
imself upon the u ing graoa
of (tod, he must £flk_o temporal
and eternal shipwreck.” ;
e e ey
Excitement in Toxas.
Great excitement has been eaus
ed in the vicinity of Paris, Texas,
by Iha lemarkable reeoverg' ofjMr.
J. E. Corley, who was 8o helplesa
he ¢ould not turn in bod, or raise
his head; everybody said he was
dying of consumption. A trial
bottle Dr. King’s New Discovery
was sent him. Finding relief, ho
bought a large bottle and a box of
Dr. King’s New Life Pills; by the
time he had taken two boxes of
Pills and two bottles of the Dis
covery, he.was well and had gain
ed in flesh thirty-six pounds. Tri
al bottles of this Great Discovery
for Consumption at Crouch Bro's,
Dr. Gunn’s Liver Pills
Ramove constipation, prevent
malaria, cure dyspepsia, and give
new life to the system. Unly one
for a dose. Free samples at W,
C. Kendrick's,
Consumption Cured.
An old physician, retiged from 95
having Lt phuced in umi st :
India mlsswmgiy the formula M
vegetable remedy for the speedy and per
manent cure of Consumption, I{mnchm
Catarrh, Asthima and all Pl‘hmut and Lung
affections, also a positive and radical cure
for Nervous Debility and all Nervous Com
plaints, af er having tested its wonderful
curative powers in thousands of cases, has
felt it his duty to make it known to his
suffering fellows. Actuated by this motive
and a desire to relieve humanity suffering,
I will send free of charge, to all who de
sire it, this recipe, in German, French or
English, with full directions for preparing
and using. Sent by mail by addressing
with stamp, naming this paper, W. A.
gu\;::s, 149 Powers® Block, Rochester,
NO. 51.
RAN UC l
= L = RE LAY TS
e L‘l - _\:_— A
o,
S il Rl
1;"" @ ‘;' | v‘."'f
:' i j ; oo
Bpy AT;FE' i'j g
Uy pdi” 4 :
Absolutely Pure.
This powder naver varies. A marvel of
purity Attength and wholesomehvss, Mora
economical than the orditiaty kinds; n&a
cannot be sold in competition with”
multitude of low test, short weight, sluni
or phosphate powders. * Sold only in earis:
Boryaw Baxiya Powper Ce.,
Janlyl 100 Wall Bt., K. N. 1.
. b et e b it
CATARFE Elrs
LY's G SRAEM B
& R : ¢ »} I 8 N()’l’w %-'
CA Cupfet L Uliror s
Rl YR W It bas galiied ait
- .‘ : snviable reputation
VHR/TEVER DS & Ml wherover known,
" S S lisplacing all othef
" ‘Teparations. A#
: AR ritclé of fifidouw
RS> «d metit, €6n.-
b = v:- 'enicll: d'nd clean.-
A~ G y allays pain
e L i s 'Ndcauses I)aneon
' ”» [ ing.
CREAM BALM when applied int
the nostrils will be absorbed, efectuully
cleansing the nasal passages of catarrhal
virus, causing healthy seeretions. 1t allays
inflammation, protects the membranal lin.
ings of the head from additional colds,
completely heals the sores and restores the
senses of taste and smell. Beneficig! ro.
sults are realized by a few applications.
A thorough trectment will eure.
U nequalled for OLD in the
HEAD, Headache and Deatnoss,
or any kind of mucous membranal irrita
tion. Bend for circular. Sold by all
- wholesale and retail rliruggisw. Price 50
cents. 50 cents by mail. Stamps received,
ELY BR()’I‘P{’ERS. S
Druggists, Owego, R, Y.