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I -ii- m % ) } m’.&p Pi I s -a ■J: % .v m % -V- ■■ . —i—r*v 8 . , — m % rjiiTjra Ml nil r * $ !J- >?. . . tTTTI nil
* & m m % $ 11 9
•v i ■
Fy BENJAMIN W. KEY.
O!
VOL. XII.
. -- r-» —
iThr JmUpfi^rnt.
P -Mirhed every S&turdsy Morning
T E It M S :
OINL YEAR........ #».no
-IX M OMTRS...... me.
*S
. — Kn(je« A«!•»'«,
Qnijirb cue iatettion.... .* l no
...
Exiffi lUksequer.t insertion..... 50
Oit« inch, one month.......... ... 2 50
One inch, three mouths......... ... 5 00
Oueyirch, six thonthE......... ... 7 00
f Our inch, twelve month*....... ... 10 to
Ou» quarter column, one month..... 6 (X)
Ora quarter column twelve mouths 35 00
One l-.slf column, ono mouth........ 10 0
One half e-. bmiu twelve mouths..... 00 do
One column one month 15 tXI
One c .lumn t -elve months........ KHl 1 0
All bills for advertising arc due at
any time upon presentation after
first appearance of advertisement.
Aildress all k-ttirx to The Lv> ruts Isnr.
WKJ»T, t r H. W. KEY,
Proj rioter.
DIRECT OltY.
T I) Hihghtowcr, F. A. Rush
IfilGISTOWKR & BUSH »
Attorneys at Law,
Lumpkin, Cecrgia
Jan. 1, 1884
WELLUOBN F. (LAHKK,
Attorney at Law,
Lumpkin, Georgia.
Will practice in Stewart Couity.
Special attention given to collections.
Lumpkin, Ga., M»y 5. 18S3.
____i.________
K. G. SIMMONS
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
-AMEUICUH, GA.
Will pm .'tire in all the coitnfteR o
This Jiidieuil Circuit, iu the Supreme
Court of tlie State of Georgia, ami
it: the District Court of he United
States, ami in all other courts by
special.contract. jtiiy 23-81.
LLONiDL ^ MrLKJSTEK,
Attorney at Law,
Cusseta, Georgia
Will practice in the ConrtR of the
Chattahoochee Circuit atid in Stew
urt Siq,1*rior Court. bpccinl alien
lien given to collectiona.
Cusseta, Ga., May 6, 18 3.
W. A. GREGORY,
] ‘hysician & Surgeon,
Lumpkin, eorgia.
Oct.20-ly <
J. E. &,W P. CARTER,
fradrnng Physiciaos,
LUMPKIN, ^ GEORGIA.
Office Seuth Side Pubhc Square
0.5120 ly
J. A TB< JiNYON JK V
Practical Dentist,
IA PIPKIN, UUOUf.lA.
Will .. -4 Dental Work
tr - lie.; ■ r‘ stantiiil manner.
o-> 3 sffv
M. ( OKPETT,
iiK.VLKl; IN
lean J I
PEBFUMSItY, FINE EO/aFS,
Fancy ami Toilet A nicies,
f.-t. 145-1 v
CORBETT HOUSE,
M. (JOHBETT, Prop.,
LiTMtfKfJf. - Georgia.
Every A!ten!inn Given lo the Ac¬
commodation «1‘ comfort of G nests !
Oct. I -1
-tr
I BARdER SHOP.
South-West of Pubhc Square,
WILLI.-iM ABBOTT, Proprietor.
5 .
■ M. M. & W. H. GRIFFIS,
- DPALSUS IX—
Family Unmtlvr uPDCgtibs,WHskibs, ffrinnnttinn lIThinlrinn
BEBB, WINES,TOBACCO, Pool ClffAES
Splendid Billiard and T.vbles.
^®-Nortb Hide Public Square,
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 1884.
FIRS INSURANCE.
Insure your dwellings, Furniture,
Gin Houses, undotl.ei
None lmt first class Cum
I'cpresinted. Rules low,
J. B. FaciiAKjiscN, Agent.
Sept. 2-*th-1881 -1 f.
E. M. SB FLAM,
MANUFACTURER OF
WAGONS,
Plow Stocks, Etc.
Blaolmiithixg A Wagon Rki-auung
Oct 20 ly
A. H. SIMPSON,
DEV..KR IN’
Groceries,Esrfere !
DRY GOGOil, SHGES 5 4G
Coffins, Etirial Casrs, Esdste&ds,
Chai'S E c.
W.\\Cstokes 7
Okaeku In
& Fancy Groceries,
CANNED GOODS, TOBACCO,
(Jiynrs n ml Staple Dry Goods.
Get, ;U ly
W. A. GREGORY,
Idi.U.KH IN
Fancy & Family Procurius,
IANNE0 GQ.TDSjGONFBCT^
ARIES, SUPLf- DFY GOODS,
ToHACCO, ClttAHS, BnVI-F, i INWAHC E'iO
Let 20
W. S. G! L L S S 9
DEALER IN
Family Groceries,
Plantation Supplies*.
Country Produce
South Side t’ublie Square
Lumpkin, Ga. Jan. 1. 1883.
No More
Ao am m 11 eah
'I >' * d 'mS?- JtdtJPP !
MITCHELL’S
EYE SALVE J,
A certain, safe and effective remedy
for
fSore, Wear and In¬
flamed, Eyes,
Protlaciuc Long-Sightediu ss, and
Restoring the Sight of the Old.
Cures Tear Drops, Grannhintion,
Stye Tumors, R. d Eyes, Matted Eve
lashes, and Producing Quick Relit 1
and Permanent Cure. Also, equally
efficacious when used in other tuula
dies, snr-h as Tleers, Fever Sores,
Tumors, Salt Rheum, Borns, Pilett,or
wherever infl itomntiun exist, MUCH
ELL’S SALVE may be used to :uU
vantnge. Sold bv all Dinggists at
25 cents. -Mar. 10th-1883.
Ll’ 3 ! PlilX ill ill SCHOOL.
t he Sxss.o'n 4 1883 84 will open
on M r TO' h <>»' September. The
i - uo • -. anu s, y eolicils a liberal
pi; ' vo.;.; h im ' q kin and Stew
»rf Hrid oij tig eunties. Yoncan
Ilf >f t j f , * - oh*art in South
'West G '•V V. vhs y- In.-retoforp.
Beard it, 11 . 1 1 1 , sut s.itiafucto
;-v raL- •
•i 1 'i'A'i’E, Piincipai.
fevp s-i
nn UU UU nn t LLAHlJ t aa A wtunn IjIjAi
M
We can guarantee the above amount to
good, active, oucrgclio
AGENTS!
Ladies as well a - gentlemen, make a success
in tbe business. Very little capital required.
We have a household article as salable as
hour.
It Sells It&elf.
lt is used , every rluy in the family. You do
net need to explain its .,eiits. There is a
rich harvest for all who embrace this go dmi
opportUDUy. It ousts you ouh one cent t -1
learn what our busiiits-, is. Buy a po lai
card aud write to ns and we will send you
our prospectus ai d full particular.
FREE!
And we know yon will derive more gonci
than you have any idta of. Our reputation
vs^sspxssxass,
;^ftn d Z«X ' aJdK8S * Uia ' y
BUCKEYE M’F’tt CO.
Jiurion,
A Weekly Newspaper, Published in the Political. Social and Agricultural Interests of Stewart County.
A Little Plain Talk in Behalf
of the Rising Generation.
-
Parents* ,
and teachers ought to he
mighty patient will children. Smn .•
have more capacity and some mors
Kiew-ry. St-iuo are slow and seme
arc quick. It is not th« smartest child
ihut mak,es the smartest man or vu
man. It is a powerful strain on
c ute i f 'em to keep up, aud the dull
cues oughtn’t to bo crowded until
they hate books and dreed the time
of going to school. Semo folks send
' heir children to school to get rid of
'till, kol my opinion is the parent
ouyht to help the teacher every night.
It shows ti e children how much in
feiest. th-yRel in their education.
It is a sign of a good teacher when
the children get am'-itious to l eap
up and get head marks, and bring
their bo^ks home at. night and want
to g > to school if it is raining a little.
Wrap 'em up aud let ’em go. There
is nothin:, that demoralizes a school
like staying at Lome every few days
and gettiug behind the class. We
ns-d to walk three miles to school
a id never minded it at all. It was a
frolic . all the way there and till the
way back, and we did have the Lost
d.ntn rs in the world. D> linonico
never had as good things us our
moth, r us d to fix up for us. It
seems to me so now. A child’s life
is full of romance nn-1 fun—the best
sort of fun. A child's dreams art
splendid, but we don't dream row,
hardly ever. I used to read Robin¬
son Crusoe and dream it all over
again. How f did long to be ship¬
wrecked on mi iti.'nud and raise mon¬
keys and goals anil parrots. Slow
ehihlren are generally sure children,
but they don't show i ff much. Dan
" Vl ”* t,!r v,as ,,1,u '■ ;wt ,,Uvu * s foot
»»• »*• v<-r t -vg.it n. s
boys •<*. wil I au.i rest.I--s- itn ' iitive
no i- . 1 - tor b-.-'lis, but ilif-v <’i lyri’i'i
,u- lx - U i :.i ' • 1 1 I
’ 1 r
tIi s ■ >• ••> tii
t -. r a win o wi.-l
oats as. loiiiuu the Clop and get
irod i f that sort of burning. I was
reading the other day about Oliver
GoldsuTitb, uh» I reckon was the
w rst vagabond in all England, and
was k.ckcd about and tiLused by
everybody, and got iu jail, oud some¬
times slept iu the corner of the fence
and liked to have perished to death,
but hy came to himself at last and
made one of England’s best amt
greatest men. The three woist hoys
that 'ever lived in Romo are now
.
good tti-.-n, splendid men, aud aie
honored and respected They had
-good parents. Give a dog a bad
name and everybody wants to kick
him. Good men ought to notice the
boys specially, and speak kindly to
ein urnPoffer to help ’em an 1 make
’em feel that they are not Ishmacl
ltcs. Some boys get so much abuse
at home and abroad that they are as
tolnsh-j.! when a decent man speaks
to 'em. S<une folks give ’em no con¬
sideration, but want to see ’em go t«
jail or to the calaboose, which is the
worst thing that can be done for
boy, for he never gets over it and
grows desperate. It is astonishing
how long a little sin or a little 1m
miliali-n will follow a boy. One
time a boy stole a quarter of a dollar
from another boy at school, suid that
followed him to his grave, lie got
to tie a gn at man and was thirty
| years in Congress and was a Senator,
! and one day, when he made a bitter
^ si,eet ' h a ” ainKt tho corruption of the
opposite party and denounced their
stealing and plundering by whole¬
sale, one of his opponents replied by
saying be Would remind the gentle¬
man that preax-hers of morality should
conn- into the puipit With clean'
hands—that Ben Fianklin said, Tie
that would steal a pin would steal a
bigger thing,’ and be usked no quir
,Hr . ,, tll<! gentleman , on that , score,
| s,,, |>ovs, n m< lnber and keep your
a. i ts c.- an. Folks „ will ,, forgive turn*
!
.,,„j !v ,,t other things, hat
i , but forgive
tb- +-art meanness.
Bint Akp.
1
_
!“T 7 '—^ **
"'-&■** " u >
jpoiutuienU during the last wt ek of
term,
Items Cf Interest.
Tho president of the United fates
Cremation 'Society says that, there
are 5 000 persons m this countrv
pledged to have, their bodies burned.
It is-Gt-stiuiutml that iho Uni
ted States Seca!.*" is the’wtsdrhiect
uenutra - .;... tio.Ty in this «orJd, the
seventy.six members of that both
representing $180,000,000.
Slaves hi Soudan are taken duwu
lo the coast, put on board a vessel,
and shipped hy right to Arabia,
whence 11 icy are distributed to all
parts of the Turkish Empire,
O. the 2 500,000 i a dages of seed
distributed by the United S’aief Ag¬
ricultural Department during last
iea v more than 2,000,000 packages
were fmnislied|lo Oongressnn-U.
There is a reversion of the gcotru!
order of some things in Norway.
For instance, a man and bis-'wife
traveling are charg.il oniydone fare
an 1 a half, the half faro, according to
Rev. Er. Tiffany, being for the man
Twenty-Seven young women have
just been graduated‘from the Train¬
ing School;! for Nurses attached to
Bellevue Hospital, New York. Two
hundred aud twenty-two skilled nurs
cs have rtpieved diplomas since lk73
from this institution.
Cauielt^ure to be used as locomo
lives on tile new railway of six him
died, miles, constructed by,{the llus
rian government in Turkestan. Bat
after a while steam locomotives an
to be put on, as they can bo provided
with more capacious water tanks
than the camels have.
Dr. Mortimer Granville-, of L m
don, says that the man who Udiilis
le has rrlight cold should take a
large picoh of pungent snuff, like
the rupee or flee -Scotch, uml wrap
lits coat around i.-ini, while, he has a
big fit. of sn -ezing. This, he .-a; s, is
nature’s remedy for a chill.
Hugs se u to the uurket from Cal¬
ifornia. have to be I rap red iu the
hi in a urn ... ...u-ras
Lears. Oti 111.: t i<e i i;cue.-,, If is
se.ol, the sivin ate its wild as deer
though the woods, and if cornered
they will place tlumselv.es on the do
Icnsive and fight like tigers.
Elward Ida in*, <> f Richmond, Mo.,
12 years of age, U| ». nt hunting with
two dogs, and some nuurs Inter one
of the aniaiais returned h me and
Marked aud whined until Mr. Adams
followed him to thu spot where the
boy lay dead,with Ids gun which was
discharged while the boy was climb¬
ing a fence. : [
Senator George H Pendleton’s
defeat will probably throw another
fine Washington residence on the mar
ket. It was only finished a couple of
years tig >, and it is one of the pleas
ai'lesl homes in the capital city. Mr
Pendleton is a rich man but he will
jiardly be able to keep tip iiis Wash
jngton establishment nnitss he gives
u p his home iu Cincinnati entirely,
Tha intense cold, which has driv
i*il, everybody to his fireside in it'd
parts of the countiy north of Florida,
has mad-- Ihe K-mnebee river a seen*
of great activity. Men are gathering
with teams and machinery to cut
out tbe annual ice crops. The ice was
ten inches thick last week, aud is cx
pec ed to bo of the required thick¬
ness—fifteen inches—this week.
Then the laborers will begin to cut
it in cakes of 22x32 inches, for
storage in the ice house. These have
a capacity of about 1,000,009,000
tons. Between Hollo well and Rich
mond over 3,000 laborers and 800
borses will work until they fill these
houses.
There was a sad ending to an
elopement of a young couple in Glo
versville, N. Y., last week. At m.d
night, on Thursday last, the young
lover arrived at the house of a rich
manufacturer, by appointment, and
carried the daughter away with him
in his cutler. The family were
aroused, however, mid the irate fa¬
ther took urn- * f bis horses from his
stutile and I >.>'-we<l the runaways.
He overtook tiu-ni about ten miles
irotn the town. - nmpi d ‘he ; onng
mull <uit ilito.,iic iuk>w, ’wok it scat
t | 1( . s-ot-.-ii . m,| ( , nis ilnu-hter
.....,
«» pGiod u» wnxi
tve4ry way back through tho snow
god wind (tad
Lumber Made of Paper.
-
Lniuber is now made of 1 lie pulp
of wheat, rye and eat straw, and otb
er vegetable fibres, combined with
chemieai ingredients and cc-ni-nt«.
It is formed in layers, about on*
qnur'.er of an iac.b in thickness, and
these are prrsteel together by powr
erful mvchitifiry, tvncl tbits rendered
ns lim'd as the hardest wood, besides
being much more dense. Tbe boards
are also ren.l« red waterproof in va¬
rying degrees, according to the pur¬
pose for which they nre to bo used.
Tlie material is as tl arable as time,
and can be sold at a good profit for
almost half less titan ordinary pine
lumber, ft will take my finish, and
in this respect alone in equal to the
finest hard wood. Moruover, it can
be marbleized in imitation of any
kind of marble, both in respect to a
high degree of polish and an exact
imitation of grain. It will not warp
and can lx. rendered perfectly water¬
proof if desired, thus making it suit
for the construction of burial cas
kels. It makes just as solid a surface
as any wood mid may he made of the
hardness of stone. Asa substitute
for wood in tlie com-tnctu-m of buil 1
ings it possesses qualities of pet feet
adaptation. It will mans the finest
material in tbe world for roofing, not
exc p'ing slate or iron. It Can be saw
cd, split or planed, aud boatds undo
of it are perfectly smooth and fl.it
ir >m end to end on both sides, with
out tiny ku >ts, cracks or blemishes of
tiny kind commonly met with in wood.
But. is the supply of paper stock suf
ficienf to permit the general use of
paper lumber its a substitute for
wood? Why not? The production cf
straw alone is suflideot. It takes
100 years lo grow 20;000 feet of it at
oral lumber on an aero of grouted
On the other baud, an acre of ground
will proAitee every year enough
straw to make 2,000 feet of artificial
lumber, an t lienee in a hundred
years it will produce 200 000 feet—
iou times a- much as the quantity of
natural lumber.
HerrKrupp and his Gun Fac
tory.
Herr Alfred Krupp, ihe proprietor
of the great steel-works, at Eisen,
Germany,where the guns which bear
his name are manufactured, employs
20,000 men, who operate 1,541 fur¬
naces, 439 steam boilers, 450 steam
engines, and 1,822 machines for
working iron. Besides being tb
owner of the works at Eisen, he is
the owner of 547 mines in various
parts of Germany. His entire pcs
sessions are said to.be worth $40,
009.000. II* ig clescrib.fd us a tall
and rut.ber stein-looking man, with
sloping sh-iuldiii's, a long neck, and
full white beard, hiding a sensitive
mouth, aiid a face narrow at the jaw
and broadening above the thin, well
shaped nose. His dark eye is keen
and penetrating, his forehead expan¬
sive. He is delh-ate, rervous ntid
intellectual, and looks like a clergy¬
man. His only son and heir, Fritz
Krupp, who will succeed to his im¬
mense estate, is a young man of fine
education, who is already acquainted
with a!] tbe details of his father’s
business. He traveled considerably
in this country. He is r.n inventor
of very many valuable contrivances
used iu the works at Eisen. Herr
Krupp'a establishment has turned
out‘‘20?)00 cannon.
#-«4
Progress and the Red Man.
Now and then, too, a group of In¬
dians bearded the cars, grotesque in
the ragged garb of civilzation. One
of llicse coppery brethren was a
sight which incarnated in one spec
tacle the dec’iue mid fall of the red
man. The crested pluraee of the In
dian .cf romance were superceded by
a torn soft hat, the castaway relic of
somo backwoods camp, banging iu
pictnresque tatters athwart his coarse
hair-and projecting cheek bones,
ibc wai point of tradition had been
supplanted by a coarse shirt and by
faint mementoes of pantaloons, from
which all semblance of original color
had faded awav \ into tho dingy hue
of the A dried leaf , of e lq* i- native , woods. ,
lu place of ipoccunins were a pair oi‘
}>D"ul(U’ boots, and f 9
Terms $ 1.50 Per Annum.
nil, our noble reil frion-l was radicul
ly drunk. A lurch of the train de
posited him in li heap of imbecility
on the floor between two of the seats,
whence he guz-M upward with n sfo
ical expression of woe irresistibly
costa. Wi»h tb» coming of the con
doctor ihe yr—w*— anrl llrtM—met
iu old irrwprvsBibf* conflict and
with the familiar result. Tbs red
man Intel no moi.ey for bis fare, and
,, clio conductor , . summarily settled , the ,,
Indian question by roughly drop
lung , Ills . passenger at , a convenient . ,
station, amid volumes of profanity
’
ol .. distinctly civilized , typo. -Amp ,,
a —
York Post.
Wit and Humor.
Out. West the cellar,is the place to
go in lime of cjcIougp, aud when a
man has a barrel of cider in the cel¬
lar it’s surprising how in my times a
day he thinks there's a cyclone com
ing —Boston Pod.
A traveler, inquiring at. a feudal
eastlo whether Le could see the an
liquifies of the place, received the
simple answer from a servant : ‘I
am sorry, sir ; my lady and her
daughters have gone to town.’
‘Yes,’ said Fenderson, ’Miss Forte
plays beautifully. I don't know any¬
thing about music myself,but I know
she’s a splendid player, because ail
the' other players say her music is
ju=fc horrid .’—Poston Transcript.
‘One of these dollars is a counter
feit, ma'am.’ ‘How can you tell?’
’Simply by sound. Just tap it and
hear how clear the genuine sounds.
That’s tenor. Notice when I tap the
other one. That’s base.’— 'Texas Sift
ings.
Brown—'Confound itl Did you
see me kiss this lady F Boy-‘Well,
I m not stone bLml. Brown
fifty ce its. Yon needn’t say—’ Bo;,
—‘Oh, that sail right, I've made ovei
teu dullaro off of her this summer
and full.’— Pock. !
You may say what you please, but
there is luck in horse shoes. A man
nailed oue up on the fence not long
since, aud a week afterward his wife,
who u.-ed to wear out the furniture,
e’o’pcd with a ftii-nl to wb m he
was owing $10 .—Festive Prevaricator
A little company were discussing
a man of scm« note, arid surprise
was expressed that he should have
been black balled at the dub. ‘Well,
explained one who seemed to know
him rather mire intimately than the
rest, ‘the fact is he is disagict-ablo—
all his friends hate him.’
Johnny came home fiom school
the other day very much excited.
'What do you think, pa? Joe Stew
urt, one of the big boys, had an ar¬
gument with th* teacher about a
question iu grammar.' What pos -
tion did Joe take ?’ ‘His last posi¬
tion was across a chair, face down.'
’O, you dear, good mother !’ chirp
ed Birdie llellennepin, ‘do you real
ly mean to say that I can marry Gui¬
de Smith ?’ ‘I do,’ replied Mrs Mc
Hcnnepin. ‘You have ray full con
sent.’ ‘But, mamma, you said only
yesterday that you couldn’t bear
him,’ pursued the daughter. ‘Well ’
I h.,ve got something like an 81-ton
grudge against him,and for that very
reason I have concluded to become
bis mother-iu lav.’
Apropos of the recent arrest of
private detectives, the Now York
World remarks : ‘The detective pop¬
ulation needs thiur.ing out. About
three private detectives to every mar
ried man and woman in the column
nifcy would be a safe proportion, and
it should not bo al'owed to run over
that, for the simple reason that when
three fourths of the population tin
dertako to detect each other coufu
sion ensues.’
I notice in the papers that it is uo
lpuger fashionable for the minister
to kiss the bride at the wedding ccr
pinony,’ said a wife to her husband,
who was a clergyman. ’Yes,’ sadlv
responded the good man with along
drawn sigh, ‘many of the pleasant
features connedad with tho cld-fash
iomd wedding copeuiony have been
discarded, uod-~’ ‘What’s that?’
demanded his wife ominously. ‘I—I
mean,’ he stammered, ‘that the sense
!<»« cuatom of kissing the bride
nhonM nave been apohsuea long ^
. . 0h replied tho ' mom
lady, rosmning lur paper,— jPA iladd*
Qt}U>
NO. 48.
DISEASE CURED.
WlTBOUT Mkdicine.
A valuable discovery for supplying mag* ami
nefism to the humr.n system. Electricity
Jlaciif tism Uiilzed as never before for
healing the sick. t
TIffi M.UiNETON APPLIANCE CO.’S
MAGNETIC KIDNEYliELT
os mm
refunded, the li.bowing disensss with**!
mod cine: Pain in t’ e back, Hips, Head e#
I.iuiliK. NeiwniiK debilities, Lumbago, Gen
oral debility, Sciatica, Kheumatisni. Paralysis Nuurnl
gia. DiseisoR of tbe Kidneys, Spi
lln | ( ii* ea .c es , Torpid Liver, Gout, Seminal
Emissions, Inipotviicy, Ashma, Her.rt Dis
ease. Dyssepsin, Hernia Constipation, Erysipelas,
Epilepsy, Indgesfion. er Rupture, Catarrh,
Dum Ague, etc.
When aev d, bilitv of the generative ob
cans occurs, Lost Vitality, Lack of Nerva
Source ao.-t Vigor’ Wasting Weakuess, and
all tin se Diseases of a personal nature,from
whatever cause, tbe continuous stream of
Tic -ism pci-inenliug through the parts,
must restore them ton healthy action.
There is no mistake about this appliance.
TO THE ABIES : If you are afflicted
with Lame Hack. Weakness of the Spine,
Falling Inflinmation of the Womb. Leucorrhcea, Cbron*
ic and Ulceration of the Womb,
incidental Hemorrhage or Flooding, Pain¬
ful, Suppressed and Irregular Menstruation,
Barr, nness, and chr nge of Life, this is tha
Best Appliance and Curative Agent known.
For all 'onus of Female Difficulties it is
unsurpassed by anything before invented,
both as a curative agent and as a soarce * 0 1
power and vitalization.
Price of either Bolt with Magnetic D., and In¬
soles, $i(), sent by express by 0. O. receipt
examination allowed, or mail on
of price. In ordering seud mensure of
Waist, and size of shoe Remittance cantba
made in currency, sent in letter at our risk.
The Magneton Garments are adapted clothing, to
nil age-;, are worn over the ur.der
(not next to the body like the many Galvan¬
ic and F.lectrio; Humbugs advertised night. so ex¬
They tensively 1, aud shnnldjbe POWER taken FOREVER,rand off at
hold their
nre worn at all stasons'of the year.
Medical Send stamp |for V tlie i 'oout • INewjDepartureTlia Medicine,” with
tr at men t
thousands of testimonials.
THE MAGXETION APPLIANCE CO .
218 State Street, Chicago, Ill
Note.- .Semi one dollar in postage stamp*
or currency tin letter at our risk) with nixe
of shoe usually worn, and try a pair of our
Magnetic Insoles, and be convinced of tha
pow. r residing in our other Magnetic Ap
p'iances. Positively refunded. no cold feet when they
arc worn, or money
NO NEW THING.X ^
STRONG'S SANATIVE PILLS
Used throughout the country 4
FOR. OVER Aud thus 40 proved YEAJPUB,'
ji
Tlie Best Liver Medicine In the Worl
speedy Purifying cure for Liver the Blood. Complaint, Cleansing Regulating from Malarial th®
Taint Howels, A porfect for Sick Huaduclie*
cure
ConHtlpitilon land For all Pamphlets, Billoua lllaordera*
C. Sold E. bv MI Druggist*. LL & CO.. 18 Cedar 8(a etc., 2Y.T. addrewl City.
S^ sasfav :
& 1.
i m
f m
rt* '4 Li
\ i m m
m%0 §» * m 4
/■«> / •
V-b
%■:
IiUNDAiHLYT
.-dWs*''W;.w .
W-i-LA dibs.-w
3r, Mow;
m
he cfiit miLE reemj
The Fcvorlte Prescription of tho
Wiui'i 1'iiial kmiij
KuKCA, K. Y., If. E. WP. W
Formeilj'i BuflUo, N. Y.
Infitimmation For Prt-V.ivsuB o’ Y’tc A \jlcovaU l or F^Unt jl o.Ua of ^on.V Woinb|| and'
nil (U- a plaron-entb, Leucovi\i r **
ular or Painful menstruafloo, I^oodioa. Sick,
ond Heartburn, Kervous V. l:e?.daclie, cakneH It digestion \ U
U B- *
bcrofula. I -.i s In ei-tc, B.rzb e>s, 1 tdi er Come
plaint, of t.-i Si'l-I. em.es.. 1 Nervous I’rOBl:-aUon.Vlepre*i
e on '., or C ,ng, of Life, Ceheral
Tonic Debility 1 of \ omen. - Lapius’ KssvlatmW.
’ i»* n- eeiiH In the World.
If you lie- el lot o erremediee without Sue
ece., d > n-t le (l.-c-u racet!, hut give “ Ladies*
Kkgui.ati: *> Tonic" a tinyl, tual. It nmr
falls If to g re gi tick n-i pprmantnt rtHtf.
you t:> Iroulleu w ith any wcaLners or
complalut doctor', rrescript.cn common to fr-orrj our sex. ar.d lay aside I.adihs* the
Rkouliti.-o Ionic,” t,-Ich guarantee tig " wUl
vre
positively „$BOO curt -will you. be f'ven for
Ir.abtUtyWi.ich ary cafe cf Female!
w oal-ne-s or LaDii.’ 1'sgllat
me Tonic will not euro. Tl.i. 1. a buna fid*
from offer, erperienca mad, by rerponsit’o what " J-adu,.’ ladle, who kuowj
Tonio” do. D.utun»a
enn
Sold by Druggist,, Frice #1.00 per bottle, or)
•lx bottles for f5.00. -»
•It Leucorrkcca discharges Wash. »n flection poet>l tbw
live cominon to wumsnUad A
cure lu from two to live d.ys. Sold by,
crugfluts, •J^ or font by mull for 85 Mull luptamps^
ter. DI A ! 8 ' REouLATitea Impi-ovemeu, Tonic «I1 Plas¬
plasters. greet Epech-lly over other
female Porous systom. Sold diuggtsts adopted to thie by
UUdl for 25 by or seat
The cents lu stamps.
•tloa Women's Maduxil 1 atttute f, ,n assocte
of prouitueut Lady fittytiaiwu, who hava
(uceessfully their treated Treatment t no diseases common ttt
sex, lor yours, given mali to ladies -
suiter In- from any disease, either by or att
the Institution. Wives, Mothers and Daughters
can obtain advice concerning their health and
diseases by mail, fra, hy sending symptoms
and description of disease. Send two three-coni
Stamps Womens for our Medical pamphlet to women. Address Y 1 '
V^iSD"'- Institute, Nunda, N. ,
{dtntlfn TtiU Ptfytr.) v
_