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ihc Herald and 'Jiccrtiscr.
Rewnan, Ga., Friday, November 23, 1888.
HE IS STILL A WIDOWER.
He Would Gladly Have Married Her,
But “There is Many a Slip Twixt the
Cup and the Lip.”
Atlanta Constitution, 18th inst.
Miss Sallie McCutchen, of Franklin,
Gn., had a narrow escape yesterday
from a legal change of her name by the
performance of a marriage ceremony.
Mr. S. J. Cook, a widower, and editor
of the Calhoun County Courier, had ar
ranged to act as the bridegroom, but he
is still single.
Miss McCutchen is handsome and
attractive, and it is no wonder that Mr.
Cook was perfectly willing to vow etet-
nal fidelity and protection. But Miss
McCutchen evidently considers nine
teen too young an age for young ladic-
to marry, and as that i
allowance for the summers and wmtei>
that she had known, the mariiage di
not take place.
3 r r. Cook is the editor of the Calhoun
County Courier, and Miss McCutchen s
brother is the editor of the Franklin
Xeics. Miss MeCutcheon assists her
brother in the publication of his paper.
It is easy to see how likely Mr. Cook
would be to fall head over ears, in love
with Miss McCutchen under suclr cir
cumstances. Not only was she pretty
and vivacious, but educated in all the
details as an assistant to the publisher
of a thriving country paper. Here was
an opportunity that comes to a widow
er editor so seldom that it is not sur
prising Mr. Cook proposed on short ac-
cpiaintance.
How short that was, the story of his
Tanner was perfectly willing. He re
turned to the residence of Mrs. John
son, accompanied by Miss Daisy Sut
ton. Mr. McCutchen, the brother of his
intended, had also arrived there,and in
troducing Miss Sutton to his prospective
brother-in-law, Editor Cook proposed
that they take a stroll. Miss Sutton
accompanied Editor McCutchen and
Miss McCutchen accompanied Editor
Cook. They strolled, and Editor Cook
and his pretty companion reached the
office of the Southern Star, but Editor
McCutchen and Miss Daisy Sutton had
been lost sight of. Here Judge Tanner
was waiting to perform the marriage
ceremony, and Mr. Barker was ready to
hand over the stakes to the winner af
ter the knot, was tied and witness the
ceremony. Miss McCutchen demurred,
and it was finally arranged that the
wedding should take place at the Kim
ball House.
When the party reached the Kimball,
there
prtiinl v a full! :ilul their errand became known,
rush for the parlors to witness
was a
the ceremony. Miss Reed, of Canton,
Ga., Miss Clio Greer, a cousin of Miss
McCutchen’s, and several other ladies
were in attendance, and a few moments
after, the arrival of Editor Cook and
Miss McCutchen, Editor McCutchen
and Miss Daisy Sutton came into the
parlors, and at once began chaffing the
would-be bridegroom about his haste
ill leaving them after they had started
on that innocent stroll.
Editor McCutchen, who had been told
from the first of the affair by his sistei,
that she was only in fun and haa no
thought of marrying Editor Cook,
was very much surprised when he learn
ed that a license had been procured
and that a Judge had been asked to per
form the marriage ceremony
>°ve, courteliif, and n.an-^e | ^
.! had gone far enough now, and that she
hould tell Editor Cook that she could
will tell.
Mr. Cook, editor of the Calhoun Conn
ty Courier, and Mr. McCutchen, editor
of the Franklin Xercs, are members/ of
the Georgia Weekly Press Association,
and they decided to visit the Augusta
exposition. Mr. McCutchen and his sis
ter, the lovely Miss Sallie, came to At
lanta on Thusday last, and that evening
started for Augusta via the Georgia
road. Mr. Cook was also a passenger
on the same the train. Mr. McCutchen
and Mr. Cook were friends before this
date, and the would-be-bridegroom, Ed-
asking his
never be any more than the sistei of a
brother editor to him.
“Oh, but I want to carry the joke a
little further,” said Miss McCutchen.
“I want to wait until the Judge geG to
that place where it says ‘and do you
take this man to be your lawful hus
band, to love, honor and obey,’ and
then I’ll just drop his hand and say
‘no.’ ” And at the prospect of the con
sternation and fun this would create,
the fair Miss McCutchen laiig ;ed in a
itor Cook, lost no time m —-— , ., , , ,
brother of the country press for an in- happy and careless manner that struck
the
traduction to Miss Sallie McCutchen. j Editor Cook, who, standing near ^
d his . woman he hoped to wed, as hardly ap
propriate to the solemn occasion; for
his
lie received the introduction, an
widower’s heart was gone from
keeping the moment that Miss Sallie
McCutchen’s dimpled hand touched
his, and her laughing eyes looked
straight into his own.
Editor Cook lost no time in telling
the fair Miss McCutchen of his lonely
widower’s life, and she smilingly and
sympathetically listened. He told her
that- it was hard work for him to get out
the weekly issues of the Calhoun Coun
ty Courier with no other assistance or
companionship than that afforded by a
“printer’s devil.” He said that if he
could only find some young lady who
was congenial and experienced in the
newspaper business', he would lose no
‘ time in asking her to be his wife. As
he said this, Editor Cook looked long
ingly and lovingly at Miss McCutchen,
who sat by his side. She blushed, but
above the roar of the swiftly moving
train, 'Editor Cook caught, the sweet
murmur of her voice as she told him to
live in hope.
Editor Cook took Miss McCutchen’s
auvice. He lived in hope, and seemed
to consider that it could be found in
greater quantities when in her presence.
During the day which the party spent
in Augusta, Editor Cook made fast and
furious love to Miss McCutchen. He
lost no opportunity of telling her that
she was clearer to him than anything
else in A ugusta, or Calhoun county, and
that the Courier's subscription list and
• patronage would be greatly increased
if she would forsake her brother’s sanc
tum in the office of the Franklin A ces
and marry him. And when the party
started on their return trip Editor
Cook was still pressing Miss McCutch-
en to say “yes,” ’and share the fort
unes of himself and the Calhoun {_ ounty
Courier.
Miss McCutchen finally yielded—
that is, she told Editor Cook that she
would marry him when they arrived in
Atlanta. Editor Cook knows how fickle
are the joys of a newspaper publisher,
and he did not lose his head when he
received this answer to his pleadings.
He apparently doubted the sincerity
of Miss McCutchen’s acceptance, and
offered to bet her ten dollars that she
he had been married before, and knows
all about the cares and responsibilities
of that state.
Editor McCutchen told his sister that
she must drop the matter right th re,
and like a good sister she obeyed.
In the meantime Editor Cook had
grown exceedingly anxious for the cer
emony to proceed. Judge Tanner had
arrived and the relatives and guests
were waiting. Still the bride did not
give the bridegroom any attention, but-
stood near her brother, who was urging
her to tell Editor Cook that she could
not marry him.
At last the patience of Editor Cook
was exhausted and drawing a watch
from his pocket lie said to the fair, but
fun-losing Miss McCutchen:
“1 will give you just five minutes to
say whether or not you will marry me.
I have wagered ten dollars that you
would not, and I want you as a wife,
or I will claim the stakes.”
Miss Sallie McCutchen said she could
not become the wife of Editor Cook
and the curtain dropped.
Editor Cook wins ten dollars and has
a useless marriage license. Judge Tan
ner lost a fee. The guests were not
treated to the sight- of a wedding, and
Miss Sallie McCutchen will continue to
assist her brother in the publication of
the Franklin Xeus
President never sees them. He has sev
eral clerks whose business it is to select
and burn all such letters.
The Republicans held what was in
tended to be a grand parade and cele
bration this week, but from inherent
reasons it was a poor and almost dis
graceful affair, participated in mostly
by a rabble of negroes and negro boys.
Nearly every Republican family in the
city have husbands, brothers, sons,
daughters, cousins and aunts who have
been retained in office by the present
Administration. They know who feeds
them, and they looked on in silence as
the dirty coons, to the number of three
thousand, passed along with their Chi
nese lanterns and transparencies, inde
cent with such inscriptions as “Grover,
your day is over,” “Benedict & Co.
have gone out,” “Hurrah once more,
Grover’s been kicked out of the White
House door.”
It is too early to talk about 1892, but
many Democrats here, in and out of of
fice, are talking about it, and the drift
of their talk, or I might say their feel
ing, is, that while Mugwumpery is dead.
Democracy is immortal, and that no
temporary defeat, much less a betrayal,
can smother its eternal tfre, or deraci
nate its love from the human heart. It
lived through eight years of the despot
ism of Grant; four years of the usurpa
tion of Ilayes, with its sequela: of Gar
field, and four years more of victory
without its fruits. It can certainly sur
vive this galvanization of Republic
anism.
It seems to be accepted as a fact
among Mr. Blaine’s friends here that
he should be made either Secretary of
State or Minister to England. No one
doubts that he could have either posi
tion, but it is a mooted question wheth
er he would accept. No credence is
given to the report that he would like to
succeed Senator Frye. There is an im
pression here that Mr. Blaine would
prefer to remain out of the Cabinet, but,
as the leader of his party, having a po
tent voice in making up the Cabinet
and distributing the offices. It is un
derstood here that Mr. Blaine will live
in Washington next winter.
It is believed that Senator Stanford,
of California, will have a Cabinet nom
ination. Ilis subscription to the Repub
lican campaign fund was enormous, big,
stupendous. The President-elect and
Stanford were personal friends when in
the Senate together. It is not thought
the California Senator wants anything
for himself, but his friends of the Paci
fic slope want all they can get.
I may say, however, that Cabinet-
making at this early day, by even the
best posted, is premature. American
slate-makers cannot make the Cabinet
of the President. He is reputed to have
:i little mind of his own, and some di
minutive minds have a great deal of
obstinacy and self-assertion. It is prob
able that somebody will be surprised
when, on the afternoon of March 4,
1SS9, the Cabinet of President Harrison
is announced.
Washington, D. C., Nov. 17th.
The “devil” has written the Atchison
Globe a poem for publication, from
which is taken the following extract:
“I stand at the gate of a smoldering
land and bask in its sulphurous glow,
and I beckon the spirit with a welcom
ing hand to the land of torture below.
The young and the old, the rich and
the poor, who live in the palace of sin,
I beckon and welcome them all to my
door—I gather, I gather them in. The
chump who deserted the town of his
birth to boom up a town faraway, who’d
never invest in the city’s own earth, for
fear the move wouldn’t pay; who
groaned of the evils that held the town
down, and never would squander his
tin; as sure as I’m living he wandered
down here—I’ll gather, I’ll gather him
in.”
My Poor Back
J of the SU
That “poor back
mankind. It your dog bites
principle the kidneys utter their protest
resulting constipation. '1 uese iorcc them
system of the poisons which arc the
blood. Then the sufferer says the
“Not vet;” but they will
held responsible for.T^yott blame the dog?
man who kic*<s it, j
share of the sufferings cl
eased.
the blood purified, and the constipation
of kidney troubles, and Paine’s Celery
With its tonic, purifying, and laxative
kidneys, making it almost infallible m
neys. If your hopes of cure have not
pound; it gives perfect health to all who
Sold by Druggists.
On the same
removed. These are the ca ; y
them quick G-
the weak
effect, it «*» nerves and kkl-
Celery Com-
Friee $1-00.
Compound removes
‘ it also strengthens
curing all diseases
been realized, try Paine’s
complain of “their poor backs.
Send for Illustrated Paper.
Proprietors;
A thoughtful writer calls attention to
the growing willingness of women to go
through life unmarried. Once it was
considered a bad thing to he an old
maid, and light-minded people made
fun of one. Now it is different. Some
of the brightest and prettiest women
become so much interested in the seri
ous work of life that they regard hus
bands as.altogether unnecessary incon
veniences. They are satisfied with the
state of single blessedness, and appear
to be just as happy and useful as their
married sisters. It is all right. If a
woman remains single it is her own af
fair, and outsiders need not concern
themselves about it. As a rule an old
maid is an intellectual and interesting
woman.
WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO.
BURLINGTON, VERMONT,
newnan, ga.
“I didn’t go much on this high edde-
cation ’till a couple of years ago,” said a
West Virginia farmer to an Eastern
speculator this summer. “I drilled a
hole on my farm, poured in three bar
rels of petroleum, and then raised a
whoop about ile. Higher eddecation
downed me inside of a fortnight.”
“How?”
“Why, a couple of fellers not only
showed that the ile basin skipped me
about forty-nine miles, but they kept
figgerin’ away till they found the three
empty barrels under a straw stack, and
got my brother in jail for running a
boss into Ohio.”
FINE AND CHEAP FURNITURE‘i
-AT PRICES— 4 "
THAT CANNOT BE BEAT IN THE STATE, k {
.?•
and J
Hanson Craig, of Kentucky, is proba
bly the heaviest man in the world. Ilis
weight is given at 702 pounds, and it
requires thirty-seven yards of cloth to
make him a suit. He is six feet four
and one-half inches in height, is 01 years
old, and weighed eleven pounds at
birth. When two years old he took a
§1,000 prize at the baby show in New
Bio- stock of Chamber suits in Walnut, Antique Oak,
o
Cherry, and Imitation suires.
French Dresser Suites (ten pieces), from $22.60 to $125.00.
Plush Parlor Suits, $35.00 and upward.
Bed Lounges, $9.00 and upward.
Silk Plush Parlor Suits, $50.00.
Good Cane-seat Chairs at $4.50 per set.
Extension Tables, 75 cents per foot.
Hat Racks from 25 cents to $25.00. ^
Brass trimmed Curtain Poles at 50 cents.
Dado Window Shades, on spring fixtures, very low. '
Picture Frames on hand and made t& order.
SPLENDID PARLOR ORGANS
Low, for cash or on the installment plan.
Metallic and Wooden Coffins ready at all times, night
day.
THOMPSON BROS.,
NEWNA.N, GA
j
l
ATLANTA & WEST POINT RAILROAD,
pounds and liis mother 122. —>4AND*>o-
WESTERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA.
Our Washington Letter.
Special Cor. Herald and Advertiser.
Now is the winter of Democratic dis
content, and the. few, very few, that
President Cleveland has appointed to
office here in Washington, are gloomily
awaiting the 4tli of March and the of
ficial axe. Four years ago, when it be
came evident that the Democratic Pres
ident would not turn the rascals out, I
wrote these words: “The general who
makes battle with an army composed
of traitors will be shot in the back, and
he deserves his fate.” Now this is pre
cisely what has happened to Mr. Cleve
land. This is one of the causes of his
taking off. If it were only the taking
off of an individual it would not matter
so much; but the Democratic party,
through no fault of its own, is doomed
Looking After the House.
“Good-bye,” said the wife to her hus
band as the train stood in the station.
She was going to the country to spend
a few weeks, and he was to remain be
hind to lopk after the house.
“Now, don’t leave the house alone at
night any more than you can help, will
you. dear?”
“No, of course not.”
“And see that the shutters are always
fastened.”
“Yes.”
“And feed the bird.”
“To be sure.” • i
“Don’t forget to have the butcher
leave a little fresh meat every day for
Fido.”
“I’ll see to that.”
“Leave the up-stairs windows open as
much as you can, won’t you, dear; but
don’t let the rain beat in.”
“I’ll be careful about that.”
“Write to me often and tell me how
everything is getting on.”
“Of course. I must get off, the train
is going to start.”
“Well, good-bye.”
“Good-bye.”
Then he went to the house, locked
it up, and engaged a room at the ho
tel.
Cullman, Ala., is a town of some 2,-
500 people, and not. a colored citizen.
They don’t allow the brother in black
to locate there. It was founded by a
rich old German named Cullman, and
two-thirds of the citizens are Germans.
Every family does its own work, except
what is done by white servants and
laundrymen. There is no law against
it, of course, but they just don’t give
negroes any encouragement to settle
there.
South Carolina’s penitentiary is self-
supporting. ^7ot only that, but it has
a surplus in the treasury. The report
for the last year shows that the expens
es were §81,021 and the receipts §85,000.
The institution owes a debt of §14,000,
but to cover that it will receive from
contractors §14,000, and from the sales
of cotton made by the convicts about
| §10,000, leaving a balance of about §13,-
i 500 in the treasury.
—k.READDOWN,k -O ^-TIME TABLE NO. I4.£~<>~ READ UP.-w-
Accom-
Local
Mail
r ast
Mail
moda-
tion.
(Daily)
No. 51.
(Daily)
No. 53.
10 35 am
3 05 mil
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148 pin
2 27 mn
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3 20 a m
7 30
fill
3 22 pu
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7 59
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am
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4o2an
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In Effect September 8, 1888.
STATIONS.
Lv.
Lv..
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Lv..
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i Lv.
Selma
Montgomery .
.. .Chehaw....
Auburn
.. .Columbus...
.. Opelika....
. West Point .
Gabbett ville..
. LaGrange...
. Bogansviile..
Grantvjlie..
Puckett’s ..
. . Nevvnan....
.Palmetto...
.. Fairborn...
. Red Oak....
.East. Point...
. ..Atlanta....
Ar.
Ar.
Ar.
Ar.
Ar.
Ar.
.... Ar.
... .Ar
Ar
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Ar.
Ar.
A r
Ar.
. ... A r.
Ar.
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Lv.
4 09 pm
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2 15 p m
1 55 jim
Fast
Mail
(Daily)
No. 52.
11 40 am
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Accom
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4 25 | m
CECIL GABBETT,
General Manager.
CHAS. H. CROMWELL,
Gen’l Passenger Agent.
Sophy (who accepted Hr. Charles
Fleetwood the night before)—“Does
Mr. Fleetwood strike you as being a
sensitive man?”
Pauline (who doesn’t know of the en
gagement)—“Gracious, no! A man who
has been rejected by four girls within
six months and gets fat on it cannot be.
Why, Sophie, what’s the matter.”
WALTER E. AYERY,
( Xext Door to Post Qffi-ce,)
-DEALER IN-
RELIABLE WATCHES,
CLOCKS,
would not marry him. The result.
proves Editor Cook’s sagacity in arrang-: to four years of dirty ec ip-t
ing matters so that he would not be Ic was a “ iusln £
loser all around. Miss McCutchen and • Government
her friends promptly accepted Editor j
Cook’s wager, and Editor Barker, of the
to go through the
offices here immediately
after the election, and study the faces
of the many Republican clerks in eon-
“My friend,” said a tight-fisted hank
er to a young man who had pulled him
out of the water, “I appreciate the
fact that you have saved my life, and 1
am prepared to reward you—to reward
you liberally for your services. W hat
can l do for you?”
“Well, sir, there was a suit of clothes
spoiled,” said the rescuer, who was good
matured though not educated, “that
would be about seventeen dollars; then
I lost my hat, that would be fifty cents;
then I took considerable liquor to keep
off a cold, which cost me a quarter. I
Philadelphian—“Is there much music
al culture in Prairie City?”
Westerner—“Musical culture? Well,
I should smile. Why, sir, the Prairie
City folks just turn out and mob the
Salvation Army every time the base
drummer gets ou»of tune with the cor
net.”
JEWELRY. SILVERWARE, SPECTAC
LES AND EYEGLASSES!
0l6=Time *>2\emebies.
KNIGHT’S OLD ENGLISH 1
OINTMENT
r
guaranteed to cure
a ingrowing toe nailA
wounds, cuts, bruises, gathered fingers, fel-’
ins.' boils, gathered breasts, corns hard orb
-oft, carbuncles, bunions, ani when causeij ’
ons.
■Oft, caruuiines, Humous, an-i wnen causeii
by a wound and applied in time, even lock!
jaw.
Price 30c. a Stick by Mail Prepaid.
Doctors are to guard human life and
bring relief to the sick. So does Dr.
Bulls Baby Syrup; it contains nothing
injurious and is always reliable.
Ail persons desiring a family medi
cine upon which they can rely, choose
Laxador, which promptly relieves ana
cures diseases of the. stomach,_ liver,
bowels and blood. Price only 25 cents.
of
Atlanta, acted as Hast t5ie tace ^ of cl . ie sprinkling ( i on - t t qj n k 0 f anything else,
Southern Stai
stakeholder. . . i terious wav gotten into office.
When the tram arrived in Atlanta
Miss McCutchen and Miss Daisy Sutton,
a relative of Editor Cook’s, who accom
panied them, went to the home ot Mrs.
Johnson, at 44 West Peters street.
Mrs. Johnson is an aunt of Miss Mc
Cutchen’s, and informed her aunt that
she was going to marry Editor Cook.
This apparently settled it, and alt hough
the editor saw the hope of winding his
ten-dollar Let fading rapidly away, lie
nth- happy. Certainly he
r than wnen lie found out
IcCutciien was “only jok-
was apt;
was hap;
that Mis
mg.”
Editor Cook secured ; license from
the County Clerk, told Judge Tanner
alkabout his good fortune, and request
ed him to perform the ceremony. J udge
of Democrats who have in some mys-
The
former were trying to look lugubrious
i at the defeat of their friends, the ene
my. while the latter were smiling des
perately at their own grief. High com
edy has furnished few things better to
the indifferent on-looker, but behind it;
all was that terriblest of tragedies, the j
battle of life, in which not the fit, but
only the fittest, survive.
Among Democratic ;■ iticians, here
and elsewhere, the cursing is both loud
and deep. Mr. c 1> vesa.ui has i overted
something like a tm: of mail aenounc- j
ing him/or his lack of : liti< d c mm >n
sense, for his obstinacy again t ad\ice;
in short, for iiis failure to “hold tiie
fort.” Those who sent and are sending
these letters may as well know that the
“But you don’t mention the fact that
you saved my life. What can I do for
you on that score?”
“Oh, well, call the whole thing eigh
teen dollars an’ I’ll throw the life-sav
ing in free.”
He was young aud inexperienced and
as he struggled to tell liis love his tongue
cleaved to the roof ot liis mouth. It
w<is hopeless. Drawing a beautiful sol-;
Knight’s Liver, Kidney and Malarial Pa v '
is invaluable in districts where malaria ore :
vails. It will cure, or better st/ll, will prevent!
KNIGHT'S LADIES’ PAD
is a
irrc£
prepaid.
sovere’gn remedy for ferrule weakn«, t
rularities, lueorrhea, etc. ? lice> “ e b
Knight's London Toffet'Sp@Ci a jjj eg
Jndispensible to every lady $ toilet
Useful and ornamental novelties, as well as
=taple "oods for Wedding, Birthday and Sou
venir Gifts. FINE STATIONERY ! Also,
Christina-Cards, in seaton.
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Spectacles
Setvd for circulars. _
wa-n-tkp. Can make to MOO per month! 1
KNIGBT’S remedies' fi
Vo. 2IS Gold strret, Philadelphia. p a JJ
toYvp diamond engagement ring from | repaired in best style of workmanship.
K nnXrt he tremblingly placed it; Medals and Badges made to order. Letter
Ins pocket, ne Lie - A ; and Monogram engraving.
upon her tapering huger. Is it too
laW Miss Lulu?” was all lie could ut
ter? ’“A trifle too large, Mr. Sampson,
Miss Lulu sliylv replied, “but I can have
it fitted the first thing in the morning.
Consumption Surely Cured.
A Narrow Escape.
! Col. W. K. Nelson, of Brooklyn, came j
! home one evening, feeling a peculiar .
i tightness in the chest. Belore retiring,
he tried to draw a long breath but
i found it almost impossible. _ He >uffer-
and the
inelfstemVml 1 bu < llfng S u? e the^"L I i?, t , lle T
stimulates the torpid liver, strength
ens the digestive organs, regnlates the
bowels, and are uneqnaled as an
corrects all irresrclfriUes a .. tl
from wh !/»b -nkn. i_ ji -* JRJO) {fig trOUtli i
from which soman] ladles
weak,debilitatedLfmiauhenitlfr-^ -* t glVPS t ’>
To THE Eihtot:—Please Worn, you- j ed day* S.7
readers that I have a positive remedy Remedy for Consumption < saved
for the above named disease. By its r- am j jL well to-day. Sold by M .
ANTI-BILIOUS MEDICINE.
timely use thousands of hopeless cases
have bee:; permanently cured. I shall
be glad to send t >vo bottles of my rem
edy free to any of your readers who
hkve consumption if they will send me
their express and post office address.
Respect t ully,
T. A. SLOl.TM, M. CL,
181 Pearl St., New Aork.
him ant
p. Broom, Newnan,
•a.
In malarinl districts their virtnes are
■n idely recognized, as they possess pec
uliar properties in freeing": he stem
from flml poison. Elegantly sugar
coated. Dose small. Price, 2octs.
it is Safe and Unfaii
• ^ Lyndon, Newnan r*I
' U • f low- G A ntville, Gn. an >
Ask your Druggist,
For s-alt* by A.f.J.
The evesight of the Indian when not
weakened by disease is the -tronge.-t
most accurate ofany race of men
tl* (-111 -eo a greater distance, look at a
i jrieh ter object and discern more read) \
the conditionsand relations ot anythin*
within his view. I hi
of his worn' rf:;l sue
trails.
Sold Everywhere.
Olnec, 4-4 Murray St., New York,
the
Of Interest to Ladies.
fefBliffeAli* -BALSAM^
fr -^ ‘ Hafr n** 1 A4° Restore Gi "
-Vo. at llni'-^rfa -
cret
V.e will fond a FtTsg SAiViPLEofr-ir wonderful
spaci tie for f.-ma. complaints tocnyl: Jy who wishes
to test its efficacy befor. purchasing. Send stamp for
postage. Baker Remedy Go.,3osic*i, 2uEaio,iLY.
The safest, ^
Stops all pain,
to cure. 15 c
A
VPA-kr-V , iX ■, .
* Druggist*