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By RUN J AXIS W. KEY
YOU. XII.
(The gwlep enfant.
Published every Saturday Morning
T K IS 31 :
ONL YKAH........Sl.?50.
*-t\ months* . Tfir.
Rates or Advertitsinfr*
One inch one inpcrtioh..... .....$ 100
Each subsequent insertion......... 60
One inch, oiie month............. 2 f>0
One inch, three nioirths......... 5 OP
(hie inch, six months........... 7 00
One inch, twelve mosths........ 10 (0
One quarter Column, onumouth 6 no
■One quarter column twelve months 35 00
One half column, one month........ 10 0
(>ne half cnlnmn twelve months..... (10 00
One column one month............ 15 00
tine column t -elve months.. .. 100 i0
All bills for advertising are due at
any time upon presentation after
first appearance of advertisement.
Address all letters to The IX'J.nnx Isnr
j'Excii.NT, or E. \V. KEY,
Proprietor.
"facranvT' ’r*v
IJUSINEMS 1)1 ItIX E OffY,
T. D. HIGHTOWER,
Attorney at Law,
Lumpkin, - Georgia.
Ont.2 Uy
WELLBORN F. CLARKE,
Attorney at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Will practice in Stewart Com tv.
Special attention given to collections
Lumpkin, Ga., May 5. 1883.
E. G. MWKOKS
ATTOtt IS r.Y AT LAW,
AMER1CU3, GA.
Will pra dice in all the counties o.
Tins Judicial Circuit, in the Supreme
Court of the State of Georgia, r.nd
in thv District Court of die Lm!c
States, and ill all other eevrria V \
special .contract. jnh23~8l.
J JJOMIH !< MpLFKTF^.
Attorney at Law,
Cuss eta, Georgia.
Will practice in the’Courts of the
Chsttaho ichce Circuit and in Stew
art Superior Court.. Special atte-n
tion given to collections.
Cusseta, Ga., May 5, 18 3.
W. A. GREGORY,
Physician & Suegeos,
Lumpkin, eergia.
Oct.‘20-ly
J. E. &W. ]». CARTER,
Practicing Physicians,
LUMPKIN, - EO RCIA.
Office South Side Public Square.
Oct20-ly
J. A. THORN VON JR.,
Practiced Dentist,
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA.
Will do all kinds of Dental
in a neat and substantial manner.
Oct.23-ly.
M. CORBETT,
DEALER IN
'I llCU am,
PEEFUM3RY, FINE SOAPS,
Fancy, and Toilet Articles.
Cet.l6-ly
CORBETT HOUSE,
M. CORBETT, Prop.,
Lumpkin. - Georgia.
Every Attention Given to the Ae
eomniodation <1 ;eonijort of Guests !
Oct.l -1
BARdER SHOP.
South-West of Public Square,
WILLIAM ABBOTT, Proprietor.
M. M. & W. II. GRIFFIS,
—DHALKHS IX—
Family Groceries, wiisKies,
SjSEB. WINES, TOBACCO, CISAE3
Spbenpid.Billiard and Pool Tables.
^garNorth Side Public Square,
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1833.
'"T,
Fi323 INSU3A2T0I.
Insure vonr dwellings,
Merchandise. Gin Homes, and
nroperty.. None hut, first class Com
pa»ii*8 represented. Rates low.
J. 13. UicHAKiiSON, Agent.
Sept.2*!b LGi-ti
E. M. KEEMAaM,
MANUFACTURER OF
fimmm wa cm
Plow Stocks, ttc.
BLACLi-MI'miSC (Sc Waoos ReI'AUIING
Oct 20 ly
A. II. SIMPSON,
d::.vaeu in'
Fail WaMm )
k’ifU'ii L’F» uij .'0. j SHOblSj &0
CoiSllS. Burial Casce. Ec&Stsa&S, \
Gbsi s E o.
___
W.W. STOKES,
Dealer In
Fiily & Fancy Mgs,
C^H-.SS9e&3,TCB».CCa
Cigars and Stnyle Dry Goods.
Oct i(i ly
’ ~f717 ‘
GREGORY,
bEAU.lt IN
Fancy fi. Family imrzQim- Groceries,
tAr.ii .3 fiUA
AR.£. r^v mm !
ToliACUO, OlOAIlS, BkUI-K, ilNWAUE ETC
Oct 20
«W S G* 4 MSSSW Asa ^
£ 5
; Family Groceries,
, | lanialion Supplies 1
j f ^ >011-1H TjJ j ^ )'()(: lICC Jl/tC.
Simtii Side i'uhlic Square.
j Lntor kin, (la. Jan. 1, 1883.
No I?loro IFye-g‘Iasses.
\{j ^ ITCllh
, t '
h rr - i **4»*-*»
l »M Jy/jCS.
[vt» j . I i JLbL.iL i?>
EYE SALVE,
A certain, safe and effective remedy
for
Sore, Wear and In¬
flamed Eyes,
Producing Long Sighfedncss, and
Restoring the Sight of the Old.
Cures Tear Drops, Grannlantion,
Stye Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eve
lashes, and Producing Quick Relief
and Permanent Cure. Also, equally
efficacious when used in other mala¬
dies, such as Titters, Fever Sores,
Tumors, Salt Rheum, Burns, Piles,or
wherever inflammation exist, MITCH
ELL’S SALVE may be used to ad¬
vantage. Sold bv ail Druggists at
25 cents. Mar. 10tb-1883.
LUMPKIN 1IIUII SCliOOL.
The Session of 1883 81 will open
on Monday, 10th of September. The
Principal earnestly solicits a liberal
patronage from Lumpkin and Stew¬
art and adjoining counties. You can
not find a better school in South
West Georgia. Terms as heretofore.
Board in good families at satisfacto¬
ry rates.
J. F. TATE, Principal.
Sept. 8tf
$100 COLLARS A WEEK!
We can guarantee the above amount to
good, active, energelie
AGENTS!
Ladies as v.-ell as gentlemen, make a success
in the business. Very little capital required.
We have a household article as salable as
iiour.
it Sells itself.
It is‘med every day in tho family, You do
net need to explain its jerit.s. There is a
rich harvest for all who embrace this golden
opportunity. It o»'Si.s you only one cent postal to
learn what our business is. Buy a
card and write to us and we wiLl send you
our prospectus a> d full particulars
FREE!
And we know you will derive more reputation good
thau you have any idea of. Our
as a manufacturing company is such that
we can i«l afford to deeeice. Write to us on
BUCKEYE Jl’F’G t'O
1 Marlon, Ohio
A Weekly JTewssaper, Published ia the Political. Social and. Agricultural Interests of Stewart County.
STILL OFT THE OLD FARM.
•'Well, I swow,'here comes a walk*
ing hosp tal ’ said the grocery ma t
as the bad hoy’s shadow came in the
store; followed by the tioy, who look¬
ed sick, and yellow, and tired, and
he had lost baif ids flesh, ‘What’s
the matter with you ?’
‘Got the ager,’ said the hoy, as he
wiped the perspiration off his upper
lip, and looked arousd the store io
see if there was anything in sight
that would take the taste of quinine
out of his month. ‘Ha t loo lunch
dreamy life of case on the farm, and
been shaking ever since. Darn a
farm, anyway.’
‘Yon sec I went out to the farm
with my chum, and I took the 5 h
poles and remained in tho woods
while he drove the horse to the dsa
cm’s, and he gave tho deacon
my resignation, and tile deacon
wouldn’t accept it. He said he w. ul 1
hold nr resignation until after har¬
vest, ant: then act on it. He said he
ceulfl put me in jail for breach of
promise if t quit work and left him
without giving proper notice, and
my chum came and told me, and so
I concluded to work rather than
have trouble, and the deacon said
my chum could work a few days iov
his board if ho wanted to. It was
pretty poor board for a boy to work
for, but my chum wanted to he with
me, so he stayed. Pa and ma came
out to tlie farm to stay a day or two
to help. Pa was going to help liar
vest and ma was going to help the
deacon’s wife, but pa wanted to car¬
ry the jug to the fluid, and lay under
a tree while the rest of us worked,
and ma just talked the arm off the
deacon’s wife. The deacon and pi
laid in the glia ’.e and see my chum
and mo work, a .id ma and the dea¬
con's wile gossippeil so they forget
to got dinner, and my churn and me
organized a strike but we were beat
en by monopoly. Pa took me by tin*
neck and thrashed out a shock of
wheat with my heels, and the deacon
took mv churn and sat (town on him,
an I wo begged aud they gave ns onv
old situations back. But we got even
with them *.ha‘. night.’
‘After my elm n and me had g.d
all the chores done that night, we sat.
out or. a fence back of the house in the
orchard, oating green apples in tlm
moon light, and trying to think of n
plan of revenge. Just then 1 aw a
V.unk back of the house, right by
tho outside cellar door, and I told
my chum that it would serve them
right to drive the skunk down c filar
and shut the door, but my chum
said that woull be too moan. I ask
ed him if it would be any meaner
tha i for the deacon to thrash us be¬
cause wo couldn’t mow hay away
fast enough for two tnon to pitch it
in, and ho said it wouldn’t, and so
we got on each side of the Rkunk
and sort of scared it down cellar,and
ilieu we crept up softly and close 1
,
tho collar doors. Then wo Went in
the house and I whispered to ma
and asked if she didn’t tl ink the
deacon had some cider, and ma she
began to hint that she hadn’t had a
good drink of cider since last winter,
and the deacon’s wile said us boys
could take a pitcher and go down
cellar and draw some. That was too
much. I didn’t want any cider, any¬
way, so I told them that I belonged
to a temperance society, and I should
break -my pledge if I drawed cider,
and she said I was a good boy, and
for mo never to touch a drop of ci¬
der. Then she told my chum where
the cider barrel was, dowu cellar,but
he s lid he was afraid to go down
cellar in the dark, and so pa said he
and the deacon would go down and
draw the cider, and the deacon’s wife
asked ma to go down too and look
at tho fruit and berries she had cann¬
ed for winter, and they all went
down cellar. Pa carried au old tin
lantern with holes in it to light the
deacon to the cider barrel, and the
deacon’s wife had a taller candle to
show ma tho canned fruit. I tried
to got ma not to go, ’cause ma is a
friend ot mine, but she said she
guessed she knew her business,
When anybody says that they guess
they know their own business, that
settles it with me, aud I don’t try to
argue with them. Well, my chum
and me sat tl ere in the kitchen, and
I stuffed a piece of red table cloth in
my month to keep from laughing,
aud my chum held his nose with his
finger and thumb so be it wouldn’t
snort right, out,. We could hear the
cider run m the pitcher, and then it
stopped and the deacon drank out of
tho pitcher, and then pa did, and
thou they drawed some move cider,
and ma and the deacon’s wife were
talking about tow much sugar if
took to can fruit, and the deacon
told pa to help himself out. of a crock
°‘ r ftmd cakes, and 1 heard the cover
l>n the crock rattV, and just then I
heard the old tin lantern rattle on
the brick floor of the cellar, the dea¬
con said, ‘M rciful goodness,’ pa
sai.l ‘I m stabbed,’ and ma yell d
‘goodness sakes alivo,’ and then
there was' a lot of di.h pans ou the
stairs begun to fall and they all tried
to get up the cellar stairs at once,
an 1 they fell over each other, aud O,
my, what a frowy darnel! came up to
the kitchen from tho cellar. It was
enough to Kill anybody. I’a was the
first to gel trie Lead of tho stairs,
aud he stuck his lmad in the kitch¬
en. and took a long breath and said,
'whOosh! ‘Hennery, your pa is a
mighty sick man.’ Tho deacon came
up next, and ho had run his head
into a hanging shelf and broke a
glass jar of huckleberries, and they
were all over him, and he said ‘give
mo air. Earth’s but a desert drear.’
Then ma avid the deacon’s wife came
up on a gallop, aud they looked tir¬
ed. Pa began to peel off his coat
and vest and said ha was going out
to bury them, and ma said he could
bury her, too, and I asked the dea¬
con if he didn’t notice a faint odor of
sewer gas coming from the collar,
and my chum said it smelled more
to him as though something had
crawled in the cellar and died. Weil,
you never saw a sicker crowd, and I
felt sorry for ma. But you’d a dide
to see pa. lie was mad. They fin¬
ally got the house aired, and my
chum an i me slept en tho hay in the
barn, after we had opened the out¬
side cellar door so the animal could
ou *> an '* next morning 1 had
the fever anil ague, and pa. ard in a
brraght me heme, and I have been
firing quinine down mj seek ever
since. Pu says it is malaria, but it
is gettng up boiore daylight in the
morning and prowling around a farm
doing chores before it is time to do
chores. I don’t want an 1 more farm.’
—Mi waubee Sun.
——
Seeing is Deceiving.
Here is a row of ordinary capital
otters and figures:
SSS3SSSXXXXXXX3333333388S83
They are such as are made up of
two parts of equal shapes. Look
carefully at these, aud you will per¬
ceive that the upper halves of the
characters are a very little smaller
than the lower halves—so little that
an ordinary eye declares them to be
of equal tizo.
Now turn the paper up side-down
and, with any careful looking, you
will see that this difference in size is
very much exaggerated; that the real
top half of the letter is very much
smaller than tho bottom half. It will
be seen from this that there is a ten¬
dency iu the eye to enlarge the up¬
per part of any object upon wLich it
looks.
S2> *■«►«<
Just the Same.
“Mo es,’ ho called out to his son,
who sat reading tho paper’ “vl.as a
war coming in Luropt?’
‘No, fadder; dot vhas all settle oop.’
‘‘Vhas tier cholera coming?'
''No fadder.’
“Do you read of a sheep epidemic
dot kills ’em all off und bring up der
price of wool?’
“No.’
“Vbas der cotton crop all busted?'
“No, it vhas fine.’
“Yhas der some more earthquakes,
floods or cyclones?’
“Hot ono.
“Vhell, Hoses; it vhas all right
just der same. We begin to morrow
to markup all goods twenty percent
on account af der shtuall pox wuich
may kill off all der peoples next win
ter?” — Wall Street News,
Items f'f Interest.
The California orange crop will
not be as short as expected.
There are 105 unused burying
rounds within the corporate limits
of London..
The Alaska seal hunters have kill
od over 90,000 animals during tho
present senson.
It is said that sparrows and swal
lows forsake a district when cholera
is about to make its advent.
It was a pot monkey that struck a
match and fired the British bark
Marqnrite at Bayonne, N. J., laden
with 1,37-5 barrels of naphtha and
2,000'ef pe'rileum.
The Philadelphia Bulletin strenn
ousiy object to droves of hogs pass¬
ing through the streets of that city,
even if the animal in the aggregate
does represent $19,000,000 of capital.
The Little Rock Universy, no.v ap¬
proaching completion, will be tlu*
finest brick building iu the State of
Arkansas, and ono of the largest and
most convenient in the Southwest.
The Arkansas and Mississippi Tim
her Land Association bought at an
overdue tax sale G,000. acres of tim
her land, and they arc negotiatinr
with private parties for the purchase
vf 25,000 more.
The introduction of the Pullman
cars iu England has damaged the
Liverpool hotels very greatly. The
countless Americans who cross the
Atlantic now go directly to Londor,
instead of spending the night iu Liv
erpool.
According to rec/. n'.ly-pul>!ielicd
statistics, there are at present 1,971,-
3G5 bee-hives in France, from which
Hiis autumn 19,897,284 pounds of
bonoy(and_5.G91,598 1 pounds of.wax
have been taken, the value of which
amounts to about £933,050.
The Boston Traveller is reminded
by t he remark of a lady, who says
that Mathew Arnold lifted his eye¬
glasses 29 times during a lecture, of
the experience of Ixion, who dined
wi h the god:-: and remembered only
the pattern of the tablecloth.
‘There are two things,’ says a pat¬
ent lawyer, ‘that have absorbed mole
brain tissue’fiom the heals.of inven¬
tive geniuses than would he necessa¬
ry to outweigh all the gold that has
been in consequence put into their
pocket?—railroad c mplings and bed¬
s'ends.’
The sea cwailowed up last year
more lives and vessels ou the British
coasts than usual, according to the
Wreck Register. Altogether 1,907 per¬
sons perished —113 more than dur¬
ing the previous twelve months,
while tho 3.G80 disasters to’vessels
exceeded _the^preceding year’s roll
by 85.
Knew What He Wanted.
“I’ve given that boy the wrong
medicine,“ exclaimed a druggist,
seizing his hat and rushing from the
store. The boy had reached home
by the time the druggist overtook
him.
“Say,” exclaim'd tbo druggist as
au old negro approached, I’ve giv¬
en your boy the wrong medicine.”
“What did yon gin him.”
“I gave him morphine.” You sent
for quinine.”
“Dat’a all right. Do udder flay
I sciu for morphine, and ye sent
quinine, an’ dis time when I
wanted morphine, to keep down any
mistakes, I sent for quiuins, knowin’
yer wouldn’t send what the boy
axed for ; go home an’ sell rat piz
en .’—Arkamaw Traveller.
Au ingenious English manufactur¬
er has by a simple and workable in¬
vention of a coiled spring succeeded
in dispensing with the need of driv¬
ing sewing machines by hand or foot.
A few turns of a handle winds up
sufficient, power to keep a maebiuo go
ing at full speed for over aa hour.
It is completely under control as to
the race of stitching and stopping,
and can hq applied lo any existing
machine at moderate cost.
At Ohambersburg. Me-. Miss Gaf¬
fe, standing before a mirror, out her
throat with a razor, and turning to
some lady friends in the room smil¬
ed sweetly aud died.— Boston Dost.
Terms $1.50 Per Annum.
Sure ! Cure for Pride.
An old man who had for years
been n strict church member, and
had done much effective w< rk for
the cause of temperance, was lound
lying by the roadside the other day
in a state of intoxication. He was
drawn up before a committee of the
church and asked to show the cause
why he should not be excommuuicat
ed.
‘I acknowledge ° that 1 was drunk,
brethren, aud I’ve got a mighty . good
reason fur it.’
‘L’ainily trouble?' a-ked tho chair
man ofthe’e remittee.
‘No, sir, I’ve had no trouble. It
was pride.’
‘Pride-!' exclaimed the c’airman.
‘Yes, pride. As I went along to
town I met a drunken fellow and I
^ w.
cause I Lad never drunk. Pretty
,' soon „ I r u. began „„ to lee: i proud i of , p ;i it. \
little further on I met an ordinary
lootin' teller a„d ...Uut .foat
h.m. My neck was so still with my
pH* ami wouldn’t
people. 1 refl-cted that my pride
was „.:^i--.i Wicked, __ an .1 i t I tiled a... i tl.eu i
but couldn’t throw it off. I tried to
pray, but was a good deal too proud
to pray with fervor. ‘This won’t
1 , o. , T I mused. , -t - am g l ing to . , bo
a regular Pharisee.’ After walking
round . awhile . ., T I mot old , , ,
au negr- an
asked :
, T Lnc.e, . , can you teb . ,, me , how to
throw off my pride ?’
‘DM I ken, dat I ken.’
Y\e'l, I wish you would, for to
continue in this proud way will bo
dangerous to my soul.’
‘Vied, dar’o one,thing that never
fails ter knock down a man’s pride,
boss, and .’at is whisky. Got drunk
and when yer gets sober yer'il feel
m gldily ’miliuted.’
‘I acted on this suggestion ai.il
got as drunk as a—well, as an owl,
though I never ca.v nu owl drunk
When I got sober I was the most
humiliated . . . the . world, . i and
mail in 1
prayed with an earnestness I never
felt bef.n-e. 1 am now willing
leave my case in your hands.’
‘Brethren,’ said the cLairman,
‘what do you Uniik ?’
‘Well,’said the old fellow, ‘I feel
sorter proud. How is it with vonr
self?’
‘Sorter Pharisee. How do you
feel, Brother Jenks ?’
•Proud as a peacock. Brother
Larkins, how do you fed?’
‘Mighty proud. Let ns go down
to tho stillhouse and humiliate our
selves .’—Arbaneaw Traveller.
-----
If young married couples would
follow the domestic plan laid down
by Senator Vance, ofNoith Caroli¬
na, liiere would be less contention
in households, and, perhaps, fewer
divorces in courts. Ile said to Ins
seer n 1 wife shortly after marriage :*
‘My dear, I’m a stubborn fellow, and
yon may anticipate trouble. New,
iu the beginning, ivhile I atn submis¬
sive, I want to give you one piece ot
advice. If you follow it we’ll get on
mighty well. It is this : Make ms Uo
just as I darned please .’—Chicago In¬
ter- Ojean.
An exchauge desires to warn far
triers against a new swindle. Two
strangers meet at a farmer’s house to
stay all night, and during the even¬
ing they get up a trade between,
themselves which requires a witness,
and the farmer is asked to sign the
papers, simply to witness th& trade
If lie does so lio soon finds that his
name is signed to a role which he
has to gay. The law does not ap¬
pear to touch these cases, but it cer¬
tainly should be made to do so.
In settiug a lien a farmer made a
m istake and put a number of por¬
celain eggs under the fowl. She io
doing tho besl she can, but her eyes
have a faraway gaze, and she looks
like a man who has just bitten off
the end of n cigar aud lias no match.
— The Dairy.
»•««■«*--
‘How is that Biptist oyster supper
to bo served ?’’shouted tho caterer to
a subordinate. ‘On the hard shell,
of cousso,’ was the irreverent re¬
sponse echoed back.
NO. 41.
DISK tlUliUD.
Wit out aIedicinb.
uetisia A valuable the discov* human ry system. for supplying Electricity mag* and
to
Magnetism ntilzed as never before,for
healing the sick.
THE MAGNETON APPLIANCE CO.’S
JIAGNET1C KIDNEY KELT
FOR MEN TS
WAESAITTEiD TO CUBE on mmiv
refunded, the following diseases witholl
medinine; Pain in the beck, Hips, Head if
eral Limbs. dv MHfy, Nervous llbetraanHsih, debilities, Paralysis lAimbago, Neural¬ Gen*
gia, Sciatica, Diseases of the Kidneys, Seminal Spi*
nal diseases, Torpid Liver, Gout,
Lmis-hms. Impotcncy, Aslinu, Heart Dfa*
ease. Dvssepsia, Constipation, Erysipelas,
Tndgestion. Hernia or ltupture, Catarrh,
Epilepsy, Dam debility Ague, of etc. the ,
uuy emEB•.•nT1S <m
r-—-rm-q, Lost Vtallty, Lack of Nerve
lource am rVifcor’ Wasting Weakness, and
ail thi.se Diseases of a personal nature,from
wlin'ever cause, the continuous stream of
Magnetism permeating through the parts,
must restore them to a healthy action.
Tlicre is no mistake about this appliance.
Lmne WeAi ^?Tth “5S
F..t |; ng of tlm Womb, Leucarrhcea, Chrou
ggmaggpaaga ful, Suppivs-mdand Irregular AIen«tnutiou,
Barr nness, ^ and chrncre of Life, this is the
Kost Api , li nCli awd ( ; umtiv0 Agent known.
For all onus of Female Difficulties it is
power and vitalization.
exn>m«<>w<m allowed, or by mail on reeeipt
of price. Iu ordering send measure of
w . a i >; t, and size of shoe liemittauce can be
made in currency, sent in letter at our risk,
weru^ver^o e?‘c mhh£
(not next to the body like the many Galvan
ic autl Electric Humbugs advertised so ex*
tensively), and their should POWER be taken FOREVEB, off at night,
They l»old ali of the and
nro v-^rn at. seasons year,
St . ud stamp hr the ‘-.now Departure tin
Medical tr- a<i«ent Without Medicine,” with
thousunds of testimouLls.
xiiE MAGNETION Al’PTJ.WOE CO .
iji8 State Street, Chie (go, III.
Note.—bend one dollar in postage stamps
ort-mre’icv (iulotiur at our risk) with size
of shoe usually worn, and try a pair of our
ling net ic Insoles, and be com- ue d of the
pow r residing in our other Magnetic Ap
p'ianc- s. Positively no coid feet when they
are we-ra. or money refunded.
HO NEW_THING.\
SMS’S SAMTiYE PILLS
# Used throughout the country
FOR OVER. 40 proved "^srjSLAJRMp ,
And thus
The Bed Liver Medicine in the World. >
No Griping, Poisonous Drugs, but purely Physicians. Vegetable
safe and reliable. Prescribed even by A
speedy euro for Liver Complaint, Regulating the
Bowels,Purifyingtho'Blood. i'leansingfrom Malarial
Taint. A perfect CHIC lor .Sick Headache,
Constipation and all lfiilious BUonlera.
:..\N0itfEY$..*\
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THE EBB! FtSSaLE BESEDTj
l hi’t - The Favorite MiJiiil Prescription Ifistitnts' of thd n
NUNDA, H. Y., U. 5. A., ^
: rormerly, UuSiilo, N. Y.
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For Prohpsufl Ftori or Filling of (ho Womfr.
Inflammation and Ulceration of the Womb ana
all displacements, Letieorrluea or Whites, Irreg¬
ular or Painful menstriiarion, Flooding. Sick
end Heartburn, Nervous Weakness headache, Indigestion, Hack and Dyspepsia, Stomach*! >
in
Scrofula, Pains in side. Dizziness, Kidney Com¬
plaint, Barremieas,Nervous Prostration,Depre** General
Bion Debility of SpiiilH. of Women, For Change *• juA-uias’ of Life, Kegulatiw®
Tonic ” lias no t quel in tho world. i
If you Jnvo tried otlierremedies without
cess, do not bo discouraged, but give “ Ladibs*’
Begulatino quick To.viq” a 8-lngU tiinf. retie/. It . nevaf
fails to give and permanent
If you ard troubled with any weakness or
complaint common to- our s' x, lay aside the
JRkgdlatino doctor’s prescription Tonic/' fur which ni ce t md guarantee try •* Ladies* willj
we
positively ewe yon. J
$500 will be given for rny ense of Female!
Weakness Tonic or will Inability W'hicM This Ladies’ is Regulat¬ bona fids
ing not euro. a
off^r, experience made by responsible Ladies’ ladies RbqulatixM who know*
from ” do. whufc *•
Tonic can »
six Sold bottles by Druggists. for $5.00. Price C^-OO per bottle, of J I
nil LeuCO«RHC£A discharges V/ASH, m Injection foi*
common to womankind A posi¬
tive cure iu from two to five days. Sold b f
druggists, or sent Peculating by mail for 25 Tonic cents In stamps.
Ladies* A improvement all Plas* other
TER. plasters. great Especially adapted over thA
porous to
female system. Sold by druggist* or sent by
mail for 25 conts in stamps.
The Women's Medical Institute is nn HBPoet*!
atlon of * prominent Lady J‘hynlt:ians, who havft;
successfully treated the diseases common to
their sex, for years. Treatment given to ladies
suffering from any disease, either by mail or ah
the institution. Wives, Mothers and Daughter*
can obtain advice concerning their health and
diseases by mail. //’«, by sending symptom®
and description oi disease. Send two three-cenh
stamps Women’s for our gadicaf pamphlet to women, address 1J
Institute, Nunda, N.
( J/eiillon Thii Taper.) . > •