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What Nervs Berries
have done »or others
they wii! do
for you.
1ST DAY.
VIGOR
M E m Easily, Quickly
and Permanently Restored, both day.
A positive cure for ell Weaknesses, Nervousness,
Bel.ir y. :md all their train of evils resulting
Iron) * irlv errors and later excesses; the result
of ovenvorli, sickness-, worry, etc. Develops
and gives lone and strentrlh to toe sexual or*
fZHss*. nmmuira! Io.mkps or iiietitly
cn*i.«ftioa.s caused by .routSitnl errors or ex-
c • use of tobacco. and liijuor,
v. 1 i ie.id to conKiimpf sort and insanii.r.
Tlieir us** shows immediate improvement. Accept
n > imitation. Insist upon having the genuine
»0 other, ronven-
w w «—■<>• s d svOj lent to carry in vest
pocket. Price, $1.00 per box. six boxes, one full
treatment,C-o.f'K). Ps-.mr’tpf'!! toearean.v ease.
If not kept by your dniggNt we will send them
by ir.a l. inou receipt of yr:ce. in plain wrap
per. Pamphlet fr* - . A-hir s ;*.!! mail orders to
AMERICAS 3IEI>£C\1L. CJ«. 5 fJijji iKJiati, O.
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What a darling I’d be
In the highest degree.
To mammas wherever I’d go:
What charms they would see
In whatever pleased me.
If I had but a million or sol
What a beauty and grace
They would lind in my face,
With a soul in me pure as the snow:
No woman would think
For a moment, to shrink,
if I had but a million or so
What a feature I'd be
At a'german or tea,
What a man for all women to know.
And men, none the less.
Would my virtues confess,
1/ I had but a million or soi
—Will ,T Lampton, In Lifa
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ELIXIR.
HGLLEYiV! Aft'S
Com pound
Will cure any case ol Ilorse Colic
Under the Sun!
Worth it- Weight in Gold ^iIIiWr !
SOLI) the genuine! !.\ WAlSKSBORO at 50c.
S. A. GRAY & SOS. li. K. HALL .1 SOS. 51. It.
MRAY, ami V. K. SOHKKEK. At DRONE, by
Dr. J. C. HILL; at Shell Biull', by DR. W. li.
Me NO KRILL. Raseoin—R. M. WILLIAM
SON. Giivrd—S. II. BUXTON & Co., and
BUXTON & GODBEE. Waynesboro—P. L.
CORNER and T. QUINNEW Munnerlyn—
.1. A. LAMBERT.
rHHTICIN f We bought the formula and
unu i nj.v . a ij title-rights to this remedy
from Dr. Holleyman. He and ourselves
alone know the formula. All imitations are
spurious and untrue. And any one selling
Holleyman’s Elixir without our label will be
prosecuted.
The Howard & WiHet Drug Co.,
Manufacturers,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
jan27.’94
An artist, 101151115 for some touch of
life to vivify a woodland scene, would
probably have said that, amid much
that was fair, there was naught fairer
than Mabel Carr herself. And yet,
when 1 have told you that her eyes
were of the same deep blue as the
violets at her feet, and that her hair
was of that shade with which the me
diaeval painters loved to depict the
flowin5 locks of their aii5els, I know I
have not made you understand in the
least how beautiful Mabel really was.
it would strike you sometimes as real-
izin5 your conception of a perfect an
gel face; sometimes it would appeal
to you with all the winsome artless
ness that makes a child’s features fair,
while child face and angel face alike
were ever pervaded with an expression
of the most genuine womanliness.
Mabel remained so still that the lit
tle woodland creatures, taking heart of
grace, passed her by with no more
fear than if, as she sat there in her
white spring dress, she had been a
statue hewn in marble.
E. *J.
a
Dealer in
OLD MONONGAHELA WHISKIES,
908 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Largest Liquor House in the
South. Choice Brandies, Wines,
(Jins, Rum, and Liquors of every
description. Mailorders , eceive
prompt attention.
oct7,’93—am
ACLE
1 lb. 25c.; \
lb.
BAKING
POWDER.
15c.; 7I lb.
10c. All the old 50c. per
lb. Baking Powders were
made and priced 30 years
ago when materials were just
twice their present prices.
But you still pay their mak
ers 50c. a pound.
The price of Eagle is based
upon price of materials to
day. It competes only with
the 50c. powders.
If it is not as good as any
one of them, then don’t
use it. A 10c. can experi
ment will convince you.
For sale by
E. C. LANIER.
may!2,’94—
H. J. FULLBRIGHT,
Attorn ey at Law,
WAYNESBORO, GEORGIA,
OFFICW—With Hon. W. II. Davis. Will
practice in all the Courts of this and adjoin-
ng counties. inayi2,’94— by
C. D.Perkins,D.D.S.
606 Broad Street,
AUGUSTA, • -
Opposite Augusta Hotel.
GEORGIA
nov9.88—
MABEL CARR.
Suddenly, however, there came a
change. There was a rush, a scuffle,
a flutter, and all the happy, frisking
animals were out of sight. Only Ma
bel Carr sat still, heedless of the ap
proaching step, hardly less so when a
soft hand was laid upon her shoulder.
“Ah, it’s youi” she said, without
looking round or changing her atti
tude; and the tone in which she spoke
was expressive of placid content, as if
her companion's presence was just
what she had been expecting—was just
what she needed to complete the pleas
ure of the moment.
There was in the aspect of the new
comer more than seemed q>i*te in keep
ing with the gay brilliancy of the sur
rounding scene; this, however, ^vas
mainly attributable to the fact that she
was dressed in mourning. Her face,
though neither so beautiful nor so
winning as that of Mabel Carr, was
perhaps more striking. Its essential
characteristic was strength. As she
stood behind Mabel, her darker color
ing, her sombre dress, the more set
tled expression of her countenance,
might have si-gested a shade to the
picture of which Mabel was the light;
but it was a pleasant reposeful shade.
They were not sisters, these two, and
Victoria Lacy was a widow. She had
been married when quite young, less
from any strong attachment than from
a sense of duty, and because others
had told her it would bb well for her
to marry. Her short married life had
not been at all unhappy; and yet,
when she recovered from the first
shock of her husband’s sudden- death,
she was able to accept her widowhood
with no sense of an overwhelming an
guish. tier life, however, was lonely,
more particularly as her husband’s re
lations were not congenial to her, and
she had none of her own to whom she
could turn in her solitude. Then she
came across Mabel Carr, and they
formed a mutual friendship, as women
can and do, in spite of the incredulity
sometimes expressed to the contrary.
Mabel was an orphan; she was of an
age to act as she pleased; she had a
sufficiently strong will to know what
and whom she liked, and she possessed
a fortune of her own large enough to
make her independent. Therefore,
when the proposal came from Victoria
that they—each loving the other, and
both lonely—should make their home
together, Mabel accepted It with joy;
her admiration for her friend and her
belief In her were boundless. The bar
gain was struck, and neither had ever
had any cause to repent it.
Whether Victoria Lacy really took
any steps toward procuring for Mabel
a wished-for visit to London, which
they had often discussed, or whether
circumstances shaped themselves from
without independently of any co-opera
tion from within, it needs not to relate
In detail here. Mabel received frum
cousins in London an invitation, to pay
them a visit of a week, if Mrs. Lacy
would consent to be parted from her
for so long.
The Lefroys’ home was in London.
They had a comfortable house and a
numerous acquaintance, but they lived
well up into their income, principally
derived from a government appoint
ment occupied by Mr. Lofroy
and, with a family of four sons
and one daughter, there was not
much to look to as a provision for
the future. Three of the sons were
doing well in different professions in
various parts of the world; but Hu
bert, the youngest—one of those at
tractive, popular, clever creatures, who
might do anything and invariably do
nothing—was his mother’s darling, and
Hubert must marry a woman with
money.
“Of course, I wouldn’t ask any one,”
said Mrs. Lefroy to her husband; “but
Mabel—a cousin and all—it’s so per
fectly natural to have her as a com
panion for Gertrude; and she has a
very comfortable fortune. I really con
sider it quite providential that Mrs.
Lacy should be In mourning this year.
Of course, if she had not been, they
would have come down together; for
she has got Mabel completely under
her finger and thumb, and Mabel is
positively silly about her. That kind
of infatuation is much better broken
through as soon as possible; and, any-
now, it is an opportunity hot to be
lost.”
It is not always that a mother’s ar
rangements with reference tc her scn*&
matrimonial future find favor in his
eyes; but in this case, Mrs. Lefroy
being cautious enough to keep her
designs to herself, matters took their
own course. Had Mabel’s attractions
rested solely on her fortune, the busi
ness might have been harder to man
age. Hubert " Lefroy, younger son
though he was, and with nothing but
a slender portion to look to, was never
theless not at all inclined to give mere
money the foremost place in his calcu
lations. His cousin Mabel, however,
whom he had not seen since they were
both children, had that about her
which appealed to him far more
strongly than if she had possessed a
hundred thousand pounds. With her
deep-blue eyes and her sweet mobile
expression and her halo of golden hair,
“what can a man want more,” thought
Hubert, “to live with and look at day
after day? This is the woman for me
to marry,” was the decision he ar
rived at almost as soon as he saw her.
So he fell in love with her at first
sight.
Perhaps hardly any man, having
singled out a woman as the peculiar
object of his love, is acutely troubled
by the thought of any insuperable
difficulty in the way of liis winning
her. Certainly the circumstances and
the surroundings of Hubert Lefroy’s
existence had not been of a kind to
place any such reflection prominently
before him, and only a close student of
human nature would have detected that
Hubert Lefroy was deficient in that
kind of strength which is implied by
constancy and consistent conduct.
Mabel Carr, however, possessed no
subtle perceptions of this sort.
“If he is not perfection,” thought
Mabel, “he is as near it as I am ever
likely to find.”
Thus, by the time her visit had
lasted a fortnight, Mabel Carr and
Hubert Lefroy were as much in love
with one another ns even Mrs. Lefroy
herself could have wished.
And. when at last Mabel wrote to
say that her visit to her cousins had
culminated in her engagement to Hu
bert Lefroy, Victoria Lacy was not
taken by surprse.
Then she sat dow r n and wrote a little
note of love and sympathy that was
more precious to Mabel than all the
congratulations with which she was
daily overwhelmed.
“I have never seen Mr. Lefroy my
self,” so ran the note; “but if all the
accounts I hear of him speak true, I
think I would sooner trust my Queen
Mab to him than to any one else.”
I am not sure if the sweetest part of
all those happy days for Mabel did
not lie in the long talks between her
and Victoria through the summer
hours—among the roses and the honey
suckles when the morning air was
warm and soft and still, or in the
evening light by the open window
when the wood-pigeon’s note sounded
from the neighboring trees—talks
which were all of Hubert.
“Well, but, Mab, having heard so
much of Hubert Lefroy, when am I to
see him? I’m naturally dying to see
any so charming, let alone being eager
to welcome him for your sake, dear."
This was how the daily conversation
always ended; but for awhile no prac
tical opening presented itself to Mabel
for introducing her lover to her friend.
At length, however, matters arranged
themselves. The wedding was not to
take place til! the autumn, and m
the meanwhile Mrs. Lefroy, partly to
gratify her son and partly from a
sense of expediency in keeping the
young people together, settled to spend
the intervening months at a pretty
little place that was to be let for the
summer, and which was hardly two
miles distant from the home of Mabel
Carr and Victoria Lacy.
Hubert Lefroy had formed a distinct
conception of Mrs. Lacy long before he
ever saw her, and, as is usual wltn
such preconceptions, it was sufficiently
wide of the mark, for the data on
which it was based were the antago
nistic descriptions of her which he re
ceived from Mrs. Lefroy on the one
hand and from Mabel on the other.
The Lefroys were no sooner estab
lished in their summer home than Mrs.
Lefroy and Mrs. Lacy wont through
the form of exchanging visits, which,
however, did not result in the intro
duction of the latter to the bride
groom-elect. Whether bv accident or
by design, Hubert was a week in the
country before Mabel was able to ar
range a meeting between him and her
friend.
Hubert Lefroy, having accepted an
invitation to luncheon, made two mis
takes; he forgot the exact time for
which he had been asked, and so ar
rived half an hour too soon; and he
lost his w T ay, thereby finding himself
at last in a rose garden before an
open window, instead of on the door
stop correctly ringing the bell.
Somehow, when he got as far as the
open window, though he hardly ven
tured to enter the house that way, he
did not feel inclined to turn and go
round to the front door. By the win
dow was a high Japanese sereqn all
red and gold and grotesque figures, and
on the other side of the screen
lady was sitting at the piano, and
singing with all the pathos of a rich
and sympathetic voice. It was not
Mabel’s voice he knew, yet It had the
power to keep him listening there—
how long he was never quite certain.
But the music ceased; a little blue
skye terrier crawled out from under
the curtains, making a demonstrative
commotion, and Hubert Lefroy found
himself face to face with a lady, tall,
graceful, dressed in black, whose face
struck him at once less by Its beauty
than by its compelling interest. His
first thought was an admission that,
if this was Mabel’s friend, she had
some grounds for her enthusiasm; his
next was one of annoyance with him
self. primarily, for the admission; sec
ondarily, because what was there
really in Mrs. Lacy’s appearance to
make him so inconsequentially reverse
his preconception of her? Victoria was
the first to speak.
“Ah, Mr. Lefroy!” she said, fore
stalling his apologies, "we have cheat
ed Mab out of her formal introduction;
it is so much pleasanter to meet like
friends than like strangers, isn’t it?
And we are friends already, I hope?”
“I hope so,” he replied, rather grave
ly, as he took the hand which she ex
tended. “I am very sorry to disturD
you in this way, but I mistook the
turning, and, having come in by the
garden door, I didn’t know how to get
round.”
“It was a verj£ happy mistake,” she
replied, smiling; “you have seen Mab’s
home for the first time on its brightest
and prettiest side, and that is as It
should be.”
He liked her for the way in which
she at once identified him with Mabel.
He sat down opposite to her, between
the Japanese screen and the window,
just in the warmest patch of sunlight,
and felt already as if he had known
her for years. Mabel, wandering over
the grass, among the rose bushes and
the beds of yellow nasturtium and
purple clematis, found them sitting so.
"Oh, you cunning creatures!” she
exclaimed, stopping before them in the
narrow gravel pathway; “so you’ve
managed to get over your first im
pressions without me by to notice!”
Then, stepping in through the open
window and laying a hand on the
snouider of each, ’she said, with one
of'those smiles that made her face so
intensely lovable, “and I hope neither
of you ever means to be the least bit
jealous of the other.”
Mabel Can- and Hubert Lefroy were
sitting together on the lawn, under the
shade of a walnut tree, one hazy, hot
afternoon some six weeks later on in
the summer. They were occupying
two easy garden chairs, and a third
had just been vacated by Victoria
Lacy. When she was out of earshot,
Mabel said:
“Nov.-, Hubert, won’t you confess at
last that she is quite as nice as I
have always maintained she is?”
Mabel did not notice a peculiar light
in Hubert’s eyes as he gazed after
Mrs. Lacy’s retreating figure.
“She is quite, quite different from
what I fancied her to be before I
knew her.”
“And doesn't she read charmingly?”
continued Mabel. “It really is a pleas
ure to listen to her.”
“She does everything well,” he ex
claimed, warmly; "she is—a—a won
derful woman.”
Mabel laughed out merrily.
“Well, you’ve come round, certainly,”
she said; “and I’m glad you have, for I
wanted you to appreciate my best and
dearest friend, Hubert. But I knew
you would when you came to know her
—everybody likes her!”
He did not make any further reply.
He took up the book which Victoria
had thrown down on the grass, and
opened it at the place where she had
left off reading. Mabel went on work
ing, humming a little song the while
under her breath, utterly unconscious
of the expression, half wild, half
weary, that had stolen across her
lover’s face.
But had Mabel followed her friend
into the house, I think she would have
been startled at what she would have
seen. Victoria had left the garden
quietly enough, nothing in her look
or manner suggesting any effort of
self-repression, nothing in her words
or tone to indicate a slackening of her
habitual self-control. She wanted to
be alone. That happy pair out in the
sunshine, amid the birds and flowers,
would not follow her in here.
“Oh, I wish, I wish I had never seen
him!” was the passionate cry from her
heart; and she kept on repeating this
again and again as she paced up and
down the room.
“If he only would go away! Why
doesn’t ho go away?” she reiterated
angrily. "Why should he waste his
time down here when there’s so much
a man may do—and Mabel’s love Is
safe enough?”
But by degrees a better feeling came
to her. Had she any right to demand
that the happiness of others should be
curtailed merely to make her own weak
ness the easier to cope with? Even if
it were possible to arrange matters so
that Hubert Lefroy should be com
pelled to go away for a while, the chief
result of such a step would be keen dis
appointment to Mabel. Nor would it
be very unlikely should some suspicion
of the truth be thereby excited in Ma
bel’s mind, the natural outcome of
which would be to cause her bitter sor
row, and would probably strike a death
blow at the friendship which had hith
erto brought such complete pleasure to
both. No. It came home to Victoria’s
heart that, for Mabel’s sake, nothing
must be done to induce Hubert Lefroy
to absent himself, even for a while.
And the courage and self-control, which
she had vainly sought to bring back at
the bidding of reason, began to re
sume their accustomed sway under the
better guidance of a tenderness which
shrank from shielding self, even in
the moment of its weakness, at the
cost of a loved one’s peace and happi
ness.
When she had taken this resolution
she felt herself becoming calmer—hap
pier, it would perhaps be too much to
allege of her actual state of mind—but
calmer, with a resigned, numb passiv
ity higher than which not even the
noblest natures can rise, in the first
moments of an accepted self-sacrifice
and self-effacement. And with a par
tially regained tranquility came the
power to reflect more effectively.
Though it would be selfish to separate
Mabel and Hubert during this, per
haps, the happiest part of all their
lives, it would spoil no one’s pleasure
were she herself to go away. The mat
ter could be easily arranged, bearing
the stamp of reality so as to excite no
wonder and no suspicion—private busi
ness of her own, entirely independent
of Mabel, being put forward as the ex
cuse.
Just at this crisis in her reflections
the afternoon post came in, bringing
her a letter which, by one of those curi
ous turns of circumstance that some
times serve to settle definitely a hith
erto half-formed plan, was such as
might be made to do duty for the re
quired business excuse. A faint, sad
smile stole across her features as, with
a touch of superstition from which few
of us are, I think wholly free, she ac
cepted this coincidence of the letter in
token that her resolve was meant to be
carried into effect.
“Mab, darling,” she said, when, a
few minutes later at tea-time, she re
joined Mabel and Hubert Lefroy in the
garden, “do you think you could ar
range with Mrs. Lefroy for her to take
you in for a bit. I find I must leave
home—on some tiresome business.”
“Oh!” exclaimed Mabel, sounding a
long note of surprise and disappoint
ment, “isn’t that something new and
sudden?”
“Not altogether; I’ve been expecting
it,” said Victoria, quietly, as she poured
out three cups of tea. “Do you think
you could arrange it. dear?"
“Oh, easily,” replied Mabel. “Mrs.
Lefroy has been wanting me to go over
there for the last month, hans’t she,
Hubert? Only I told her I had treated
you badly enough already, and I didn’t
mean to leave you again for the rest of
the summer. But If you run away from
me, that altars the case.”
If you have realized at all how com
plete was the affection between these
two friends, how unreservedly the one
had poured forth her whole soul in
her happiness, how tenderly and un
conditionally the other had given her
sympathy, then you may imagine some
thing of what Victoria Lacy suffered
in combating the conflicting claims of
ner heart. On the one hand she was
conscious of her weakness; on the other
she despised herself as mean and
treacherous. Excited emotions and a
sleepless night left her next morning
.with unstrung nerves, and in a state of
unusual irritability.
“I think thcie will be a thunder
storm,” she said, in answer to Mabel’s
tender inquiries. “You know, I always
get a headache when there is too much
electricity in the atmosphere.”
“You don’t look well, my sweet, cer-
in!y, whatever It Is." said Mabel.
“Perhaps it's a good thing you’re going
for a change, as you haven’t been away
for so long. Now, I am due at the
school this morning, you know; but do
let me make you comfortable on the
sofa first. I am sure a nap would do
you good.”
Mabel’s attentions were very tender
and very thoughtful; she pulled down
the blinds, arranged the sofa cushions
and fetched some eau de cologne and a
fan. Her tread was light, her touch
soothing, her kiss soft; and ye£ Vic
toria felt thankful when she closed the
door gently behind her and left the
house.
Physical exhaustion, however, must
Rally losing herself in a half-doze when
! she was aroused by a ring at the door
j bell; and before she had time to de-
[ cide whether she would allow the vis
itor to be admitted or not, she recog
nized the too-familiar step of Hubert
Lefroy.
He came in. as he was in the habit
of corning, without any formal an
nouncement. wished her good morning,
and sat down opposite to her, as he had
done so frequently since that first
time when they sat together by the
open window. Yet she could not help
noticing something constrained in his
manner which it had never evinced for
merly.
“You know it is Mabel’s morning at |
the school,” she said, in a tone expres- j
sive of some surprise. He knew as |
well as she did that Mabel was out on j
a Wednesday morning, and he never j
came at that time.
“I have brought a message from my
mother, to say she will be delighted
for Mabel to come to us at any time
whenever you settle to go,” he re
plied.
“Mrs. Lefroy is very kind; I shall
probably go by the five o’clock
train this afternoon,” she said; “but
though you are going to have her all
to yourself so soon, Mab will certainly
be disappointed to find you have been
here so early this morning.”
“I didn’t come to see her this morn
ing, Mrs. Lacy; I came to see you,”
he replied, in the low, emphatic tone
of a man who has soinethng he means
to say, and has made up his mind to
say it at once. And he continued: “O,
you may think what you will of me
when I have made the confession; but
since I have known you, haven’t you
seen that It has been to see you that
I have come here day after day?”
Wm
B a ||
§M 1
for Infants and Children.
HIRTY years’ observation of Castoria with the patron a- 0
millions of persons, permit us to spoak of it without gnes *
It is unquestionably the best remedy for Infants and Child
tho world has over known. It is harmless. Childr
T
gives them health. It will save their lives.
ren
en like it.
Tn_it Mothers W
“YOU DO NOT MEAN IT!”
“Oh, no, no,” she exclaimed wildly,
“you do not mean it! I know you do
not really—you cannot!”
Somehow, now the truth, was re
vealed to her, she almost wished it
were not so; for whatever else she
might feel and know concerning Hu
bert Lefroy, this one fact could not be
forgotten—that he had won the love
of Mabel Carr, and had pledged his
love to her,
"I do,” he answered emphatically.
“I have watched you, listened to you,
talked with you; no woman has ever
been to me what you have been. Oh,
I know what you mean; I know what
you’re thinking; I understand your
scruples; I indorse your judgement;
hut the truth remains—I love you!
Don’t shrink from the truth in return;
you love me! For pity’s sake, don’t
deny it!”
“I never thought you knew it!” she
cried. “God knows I never meant to
let you find it out! No,” she contin
ued, and though her features were
very white, she looked him steadily in
the eyes. “No, it may not, it cannot
be! Do I seem hard, unkind, incon
sistent? Ah, believe me, you will
judge me better by and by! Ask your
self—could I ever look Mabel in the
face, could I ever take her by the hand
again, if I answered you differently?
So my last word to you is no; and I
feel I have decided rightly for us both,
though you cannot guess now, perhaps
'you never will guess, what it has cost
me to answer you thus.”
There was that about Victoria Lacy
which stamped ht«- decisions as ab
solutely irreversible.
“You may have your own reasons
for returning me such an answer,” he
said bitterly. “I feel, of course, that
I have lost even your good esteem,
which I might have kept; vet, I should
never have gone so far had you not
led me on. If I had not thought you
saw to what my fate was tending, do
you think I would have come here this
morning to say what I have said?
But your last words yesterday' were
a direct encouragement to me to come.
Yes. Mrs. Lacy, I have been base, cow
ardly, selfish, cruel, anything you will—
very mad and reckless, I don’t deny;
but that it has come to this has been
your doing, and yours only!”
And with no other form of parting
he turned and left the room.
r TO BE CONTINUER,I
SURROUNDED BY MYSTERY!
A Great Mistake.
A recent discovery Is that headacho,
dizziness, dullness, confusion of tlio mind,
etc., aro duo to derangement of tho nervo
centers which supply tho brain with nervo
force; that Indigestion, dyspepsia, neuralgia,
wind In stomach, etc., arise from the derange
ment of the nerve centers supplying these or
gans wit li nerve fluid or force. This Is likewiso
t me of niSmy diseases of tho heart and lungs.
The nerve system is like a telegraph system,
as will ho seeu by the accompanying
cut. Tho little
vliiio fines aro
the nerves which
convey the nerve
force from tho
nervo centers to
every part of tho
body, just as tho
elect ric current is
conveyed along
t li o telegraph
wires to every
station, large or
small. Ordinary
physicians fail to
regard this fact;
instead of treat
ing thonervecenr
ters for the cause
o f tho disorders
arising therefrom
they treat the
part uffected.
Franklin Miles,
M. I)., LL. B., the
highly celebrated
specialist and
student of nervous diseases, and author
of many noted treatises on thelattersubject,
long since realized the truth of the first
statement, and his Restorative Nervine
Is prepared on that principle. Its success
in curing all diseases arising from derange
ment of the nervous system is wonder
ful, as the thousands of unsolicited testimo
nials in possession of the company manufac-
turing the remedy amply prove.
Dr. Miles’ Restorative Nervine is a reliable
remedy for all nervous diseases, such as
headache, nervous debility, prostration,
sleeplessness, dizziness hysteria, sexual de
bility, St. Vitus dance, epilepsy, etc. It Is
sold by all druggists on a positive guarantee,
or sent direct by the Dr. Miles Medical Co.,
Elkhart. Ind., on receipt of price, SI per bot
tle, six bottles for S5, express prepaid.
Restorative Nervine positively contains no
opiates or dangerous drugs.
For sale in Waynesboro by WHITEHEAD
it Co., and in Milieu by H. Q. BELL,
mar ’94—
—Use Imperial Bak.ng Powders
Tt is healthy.
something which is absolutely safe and practically
child’s medicine.
Castoria dostroys Worms.
Castoriaallays Feverishness.
Castoria prevents vomiting Sonr Cnrd.
Castoria cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic.
Castoria relieves Teething Troubles.
Castoria cores Constipation and Flatulency.
Castoria neutralizes the effects of carbonic acid gas or poisonous ai-
Castoria does not contain morphine, opium, or other narcotic propert-
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the stomach and bowel-,
giving healthy and natural sleep.
Castoria is put up in one-size bottles only. It is not sold in built.
Don’t allow any one to sell you anything else on the plea or promise
that it is ‘* just as good ” and “ will answer every purpose.”
Sec that yon get C-A-S-T-O-R-I-A.
The fac-simile
signature of
'“Very
wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria.
Eighteen Thousand Dollars Worth of
Dry Goods. Clothing, Shoes, Ilats. Cloaks and Cnderwear,
Consigned to D. C. FLYNN'S AUCTI N HOUSE, to he sold
to he sold at 75c. on the dollar.
! Children’s Suits for 05c. iid
We have
5c. Calico for 3|c.
5c. Ginghams for 3|c.
7c. Bleaching for 5c.
40 yards Fine Shirting $1.00.
Good Check Homespun 34c.
Young Men's Suits $2.50 iy.
Gentlemen’s Suits $2.50 up.
Men’s $15 Suits for $0.75.
Men’s $17.50 Suits for $I:‘.50.
Men’s $20 Suits for $11.75
Valises at
Women’s
-Men s, Bov s and Children’s Hats, Trunks and
any price you want. Children’s Solid Shoes, 25c.
Shoes 64c. Men’s Shoes 75c.
We have a verv line assortment of
ME CHS ffl LADIES’ W S
All-Wool Red
IS
in u el
-ArivfirUse in The Citj/.en.
at prices you have never heard of before,
at 70c. on the $1.00.
We have everything von can liiicl in a first-class Dry Foods,
Shoe or Clothing Store, and we can save you at last 25c. on
every dollar you trade.
FLYNN’S AUCTION HOUSE,
Augusta, Georgia.
rnay5.’D4—sm
The AEHMOTOBy^
is tlio WINDMILL that-turns when all others
stands still and is the oniv wheel and
TOWER mads of STEEL and
G A L V A N1 / E D A FTE11
its COMPLETION.
WE •> MAKE v TOWERS
from 20 to 100 feet in height, and Tilting Tow
ers up to 70feet in height for eight and
ten-toot wheels, that lets tlie
wheel down foroilirg, and
obviating the neces
sity of climbing
Otir 10-foot geared wheel will saw wood, cut
feed, grind corn and pump water, or do any
other work that two horses can do.
Our Goods Received Highest Awards
at the COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION,
but the award which we value most is the ap
proval of our fellow men which gives to us the
WORLD’S business in WIND WHEELS.
H. JEFF. DAVIS, Waynesboro, Ga.,
GENERAL AGENT.
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
AND OLE SORES
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT CATARRH. MALARIA,
AND POTASSIUM KIDNEY TROUBLES
Makes
Marvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. V. purir.es ttie Wood, builds up
tne weak and debilitated, gives
strength to weakened nerves, expt'ls
diseases, giving the patient health and
happiness where sickness, gloomy
feelings and ias.-itude tird prevailed.
For primary secondary and tertiary
syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu
rial poison, luaiaria. dyspepsia, and
in ell blood and skin diseases, like
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers,
tetter, scald head, boifs. erysipelas
eczema—we mnv sav, without fear of
contradiction, that i 1 . P. P. is the best
blood purifier in tho world, and makes
i all cases.
Ladies whose systems are poisoned
and whose blood is in an impure condi
tion. due to menstrual irregularities,
are peculiarly benefited by the won
derful tonic and blood cleansing prop-
—I
Springfield, Mo., Aug. 14th, 1893
-I can speak la tho bigf
your medicine from my
knowledge. Iwnsaffecl
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for
37) years, was treated by the very beat
physicians ana spent hundreds of <iol-
iars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief. I have only’ taken
om bottle of your P. P. I s .. and can
cheerfully say it has done mo more
good than anything I have ever t.akr.;.
1 can recommand your medicine to ail
EUfiorers of the above diseases.
MR9. M. N. YEARL
Springfield, dries CoEiity. 77 >.
and DYSPEPSIA
Are entirely removed by P.I’.*’-
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas
sium, the greatest blood purifier cn
earth.
Aberdeen, O.. July 21,1891.
Messrs Lipi-man Bros.. Savannah,
Ga.: Deak Sirs—I bought a bottle of
>our P. P. P. at Hot Springs,Ark..ana
It has done mo more good than tbreo
months’ treatment at the Hot Springs.
Bend threo bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully yonrs,
JAS. M. NF.T7Y0N.
Aberdeen, Brown County, O.
Capt. J. C. Johnston.
To all tohom it may concern: I here-
bv testify to the wonderful propertieP
of P. P. P. for eruptions of the skin, i
raftered for several years with an un
sightly and disagreeable eruption on
my face. I tried every known reme
dy bu. ia vain,until P. r. P. was used,
and am now entirety cured.
(Signed by) J. D. JCIlNSiOL.
Savannah.fob
Skin Csnttr Cured.
Testimony f t-crot 'he Mayor of Senuin.Tes.
SEQEIN. Tex. , January 14 1893..
Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savar.naa,
Ga.: Gentlemen—I have fried your ' .
P. P. for a disease of the skin, use.: 17
known -s skin cancer,of thirty
standing, and found great relief: ii
puriflos the blood and remo.es ai!
ritatlon from tho seat of the d:?e , )
and prevents any spreading ■ •! 3
sores. I have taken flveor six bottc’S
and feel confident that aaotber roe..- ,
will effect a to re. It has also i ;ic> s
me from indigestion and ctcias u
troubles. Yotu-a trr.ty,
CAPT. W.JM. HUS G.
M S3 Blood Dloorsus solid riea.
ALT. DR77GGI3T3 SELT. ' ’.
LZPPMhm u
PRoriLUTcr.j,
Lyrutsr.'o Llei :,rcn. rcali, G3,
Sold l>y Wliitehead Ac Oo., Waynesboro, Wu