Newspaper Page Text
PLAIN
TRUTHS
• The blood is the foundation of
Hfe, it circulates through every part
of the body, and unless it is pure
aud lich, good health is impossible.
If disease has entered the system
the only sure and quick way to drive
it out is to purify and enrich the
blood.
These simple fads are well
known, and the highest medical
authorities agree that nothing but
iron will restore the blood to its
natural condition; and also that
all the iron preparations hitherto
made blacken the teeth, cause head
ache, and are otherwise injurious.
Brown's Iron Bitters will thor
oyghly and quickly assimilate with
the blood, purifying and strengthen
ing it, and thus dnve disease from
any part of the system, and it will
not blacken the teeth, cause head
ache or constipation, and is posi
tively not injurious.
Saved hit Child.
17 N. Eutaw St., Baltlmor*, Md,
Feb. ia, 1880.
Gants:—Upon the recommends
■tfon of a friend I tried Brown’s
Iron Bittbrs as a tonic and re
storative for my daughter, whom
1 was thoroughly convinced was
wasting away with Consumption.
Having lost three daughters by the
terrible disease, under the care of
eminent physicians, I was loth to
believe that anything could arrest
the progress of the disease, but, to
my great surprise, before my daugh
ter nad taken one bottle of Brown’s
Iron Bitters, she began to mend
end now is quite restored to former
health. A fifth daughter began to
•how signs of Consumption, and
when the physician was consulted
he quickly said “Tonics were re
auired;*’ and when informed that
le elder sister was taking Brown’s
Iron Bitters, responded "that is
s good tonic, take it."
Aooram Phelps.
Brown’s Iron Bitters effectual
ly cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion and
Weakness, and renders the greatest
relief and benefit to persons suffering
from such wasting diseases as Con
wmption, Kidney Complaints, etc.
Attorneys.
C ~THOifIAS n. SMI 1 f 11.
Solicitor of Patents Caveats. Trade-
Marks, Copyrights, eto.,
WASHINGTON, D. C.'
Office St. Cloud Buildine, Corner 9th
and F Streets. Opposite U- 8. Patent
Office.
JOHN W. MADDOX,
attorney at Law
BUMMItBVILLE, - EORGIA
Will practice In the Superior, Coun
ty, and District Courts.
~ P.M. EDWARDB,
attorney at law
LaFayette, - - Ga.
Collecting a spooialty.
Offioc east eide of the square.
■aim
W. M Henry,
Attorney at Law,
Bowmervillb, - - - - Georgia.
uerUJ. ««ell=e In the Rome and .djololoc CU
Hr wh Colie* • a apeclalty.
Ts. W. Copeland,
Attorney at Law,
LaFayette, - • - Georgia.
•CMon. a ■puctatty. (o*c. RP*al« °f U ‘ ck ‘ o “ '
Itor*-)
‘ W. P. Lumpkin
Attorney at Law,
LaFayette, - - Georgia.
■vtl ILL (tv. prompt attention to nil btulneM
B.IMfS-
Robert M« W. Glenn,
Attorney at Law,
LaFayette, - - - - Georgia.
Wtf T PRACTICE In the Superior Court* ofllie
Rome and adjoining circuit*. Collections •
nmcUUy oVce on fcSt.lde Public Square.
• 3S3ro.
ffliscellaneous Advertisements.
a ,
resident dentist.
Rinnggold, - • Georgia.
1— v Offers services in all branch
tttffljOes of his profession to the
eitizens of Walker and Ctoosa Coun
ties. Work promptly done at moderates
work warranted. Office on Nash
ville streot, first building west of W L
Whitman’s store.
Vain WU**
\diphtheria\
HAS
NO CHANCE,
WHEN TREATED WITH
Perry Dam’s Pain Killer
1 This wonderful remedy haa saved the
lives of many, many children i
who were almost dead with
DIPHTHERIA.
B. Henry WUiwn. Lawrence. Mas*., mtj:
"The eurveona pronounced my cnee I>iph-
OfflU aua decided that no remedial could
rearji It Perry Darla's Pa in Hiller saved my
IJbeonsLoach.Nashua,N.H.,Bay*: "Ihad;
painters’ colic and d? phthcretic sore throat very
severely. Pain Killer drove both away.
DRUGGISTS ALL KEEP IT.
Walken County Messenger.
VOL. VI.
THE MESSENGER.
LAFAYETTE, - - - GEORGIA.
SUBSCRIPTION:
One Your - - * * H OO
Six Months - 80 Cents.
Tin ee Months - - -So Cents.
. _ „ !«■ 111
COMMUNICA TED.
Dear Messenger.
Random was correct in his con
clusion nbout ray acquaintance
with the broom stick. I have a
cultivated experience io that busi
ness, one that I am uct ashamed
to own, as it always rewarded me
with a kind word and an approving
smile from the good danse of the
house. Just try it friend, Random,
and be convinced of its salutary in
fluence.
Tb re is no material difference
between myself and Random. 111
the main features of the subject we
are agreed. I think if he will ex
amine my article closely, he will
find there was no reflection, nor
spirit of opposition. My object
was to discuss the subject io the
light it is viewed by the world in
general, and not for the purpose
of discussion. It is a subject re
quiring an abler pen than mino to
discuss in its proper light, and
one that should command the best
talent of the age. There is a vast
and boundless field f r philosophi
cal disquisition on the subject of
matrimonial trouble and the grow
ing evils of almost daily occurrence,
are becoming to be alarming in
i their extent. There is a wrong
somewhere, and as I Baid before it
is often found under the paternal
roof, or in olber words, it is a lack
of proper education and mental
training in all those ncble qualities
that oorstitute tiue womanhood
and manhood.
One great deficiency of the pres
ent age, is in morals, and the lack
of morals is for want of proper cul
tivation and training in all those
characteristics that are calculated
in their nature to elevate and dig
nify the mind ; to give it a broad
and comprehensive view of the re
alities of life, (fnd lift it above the
perishable vanities of time and
eense, to the high and lofty medita
tion of superior intelligences.
There is too much of the superfi
cial and ornamental culture. Some
thing fanciful and showy, that will
be pleasing to the eye and ear, but
cannot in any degree develop those
solid mental traits of character that
form the basis of all human pro
gress ar.d happiness. This being the
case the young and inexperienid
are led to seek for pleasure in some
other channel, and it is perfectly
natural for them to loqk on matri
mony as being the very apex of
human felicity, and at the same
time, are entirely ignorant of its
obligations and duties, having no
conception of its solemnity and sa
credness. How can such charac
ters expect to ‘’dwell together in
unity.” It is often the case after a
few months —not of bliss —they
separate, and one takes hi mself to
the gaming table and strong driok,
whilst the other lingers out a life
of painful suspense, an object of pi
ty and blighted hope. Nothing can
be more mortifying to the man of
cultivated taste, and refined sensi
bilities, than to see an institution
designed to eleva'e man’s social
and moral condition to the highest
slate of perfection, thus abused and
perverted. Subscriber.
Advice.
• You will prevent and cure the
greater part of the ills that afflict
mankind in this or any section, if
you keep your stomach, liver ar.d
kidneys in perfect working order.
There is no medicine known that
does this as surely as Parker’s Gin
ger Tonic. It will keep your blood
rich and pure, and give you good
heal»h at little cost. See other
column.
m 1 »
The only time when a man is
generous in drawing the line be
tween his own and his neighbor’s
property is when he shovels the
snow off the sidewalk.
J. J. Daniel, Mclntosh, Ga., says:
‘•Brown s Iron Bitters cured my}
jjster of dyspepsia anil general de-j
bility.” ....... ~, . 1
LAFAYETTE, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 22. 1883.
A Romance of House
Cleaning
‘ls she coming to visit you?’
Slid Eiic Hale with n slight grim
ace. ‘That simpering fine ludy,
with the useless white hands and
the shallow little society laugh?
Oh, Aunt Delia, pack mv portman
teau and let me he off on a lectur
ing tour, until Flom Lee’s visit
comes to an end !’
Mrs. Dove looked a little disap
pointed. To confess the truth, she
had especially arranged visit
with reference to her nephew Eric.
‘He’s a fine young fellow,’ she
had said to herself, with true di
plomacy, with an excellent parish,
an 1 fine prospects-and it’s high
time he was settled in life with a
wife. And I think Flora Lee would
suit him exactly.’
And here wns the young roan
himself upsetting this charming
little castle-in-thc air without the
least scruple of conscience, like the
modern iconoclast that lie was.
‘Well, Eric,’ said Mrs Dove, des
pairingly. “I’ll write to her not to
come. Os course I don’t want to
put you out. just when jou are so
busy, too, with that course of lec
tures on the Book of Revelution—
but I really thought Flora would
make the House lively.’
‘Slie’a a deal too artificial to suit
me,’ said Erio Hale. *Ask her to
come in June, when I ?hn!l be off
to Omaha and Nevada on that con
ference business. But as for a visi
tor, I should prefer little Polly
Peppercorn’s big wax doll with the
silky black hair and stairing eyes,
that open and shut by machinery ’
So Mrs. Dove choked back her
disappointment (for she had been
nursing this pet scheme in secret
for a long while), sat down and
wrote a letter to her friend Miss
Lee, postponing the proposed visit
to Ccdarbougb Farm until roses
should he in bloom,and strawber
ries beginning to ripen.
‘Adonijah,’ said she to the hired
man. ‘lake iliis 'etter to the post
office.’
‘Yes, ’um-,’ said Adonijah, and
he put it in his pocket and straight
way forgot all about it.
It was a dismal, rainy morning
ing in April, the yellow jonquils
beaten to the ground, the very wild
violets shutting up their eyes as if
in unmitigated disgust at the un
promising state of the weather.
Overhead, racks of gray cloud
scudded across the lieavei s, and
the little sheet of silver lakelet un
der the hill was dotted and dim
pled all over with the falling rain,
ns if pierced with a thousand tiny
javelins.
‘lt’s no use trying,’ said Mrs.
Dove plaintively, ‘the fates have
conspire j agair.st me!’
Tbo carpets were up, the pails of
whitewash stood steaming in the
•middle of the parlor floor, and Mrs
Dove herself, with her gray curls
tied up in a yellow damask pocket
handkerchief, which her great un
cle had breught from China half a
century ago, sat crying on the low
er edge of a step ladder. For Bet
sy the help had fa’lcn down the
cellar stairs and broke her leg, and
Mrs. Mulrony, the chairwoman,
had sent a message that her eldest
son had - broken cut “wid de mai
zles, sure —speckled all over like a
shower of red pepper, and sorra a
bit of elanin’ could sl e undertake
for until the wake’s over.’
‘And these three days of ell oth
ers,’ bifihed Mrs. Dove, “when Eric
had exchanged pulpits with Mr.
Washburne! And ho so dislikes
house cleaning; and —’
•Dear me, Mrs. Dove, what is the
matter T
Mrs Dove started to her feet with
a little scream—for there, exactly
as if she had been rained down out
of the gray zenith, stood Flora Lee
herself, in a trim,brown traveling
dress, with a neat little hand bag,
a gossamer water-proof cloak and a
silk umbrella.
‘Why Flora,’ cried she, bow came
you here ?’
‘By the train, of course,’ said
Miss Lee,‘and I walked from the
station.”
‘I wrote you not to corns,’ said
Mrs. Dove, in consternation.
‘But I ueyci received any such
leit' r ’ said Miss Lee. ’Shall Igo
a aiii ?’
’No, you darling, you shall do
nothing of the sort 1” she said en
thusiastically. ‘lt was only because
- because we were house-cleaning.’
‘l’m not afraid ofhouae-clea tine,’
said Flora. ‘I see how it is,’ with
a comprehensive glance arc und the
scene of confusion,‘and l’in going
to help you through with it.’
’You?’ said Mrs. D ive.
‘Yes. ll’ saW Flora. ‘Why not?’
Just lend me one of Betsey’s dress
es. Where is Betsev, by the way?’
‘Her father has just carried her
home in the wagon,’ said Mrs.
Dove. ‘She broke her leg.
‘And your charwoman?’
‘Oh, dear!’said Mrs Dove‘She
has got a visitation of the measles
or small pox, or some other horrid
disease iu her family. And my
nephew. Elio, is to he gone for
three days; and I made sure I could
finish the house-cleaning while he
was ahsent.
’And we will,’ said Flora, cheer*
ily.
‘How can we?‘
‘Oh| you shall seel’ nodded Miss
Lee.
And, depressed though she was,
Mrs. Dove began to feel the mercu
ry rise iu bar mental thermometer
at once.
And Flora Lee arrayed Jjersolf in
one of Betsey's cast elf calicos, tied
hor rippled brown tresses up in a
cambric sweeping-cap, and wont
vigorously to work with a scrub
bing-brush; while Mrs. Dove bent
her attention to the wiudjw glass,
and Andonijah, with more zeal
than discretion, splashed white
wnsh over himself and the floor
with laudable impartiality.
‘Wa!,’ said Adonijah, afterward,
‘I never did see no cricket work
spryer than that city young lady.
By gracious, she beats Betsey all
holler at it 1 And she’s got such
an up an’ down pretty wav of doin’
things, too. I declare. I couldn’t
hardly take my eyes off her all the
time I was in whitewashin’ 1’
Mrs. Dove, however, was unused
to the severe exertions incident
upon house-cleaning time, and
went to bed with tho sick headache
in the middle of the afternoon.
‘Never mind, Mrs. Dove,’ said
Flora ; ‘l’ll get tea and make some
of those cfcam waffles and a short
cake for Mr. Dove, and you shall
see how nicely I can fry oysters.”
‘lndeed, indeed, I don’t know
what I should do without you,
Floral’said Mrs. Dovs, fervently.
But, as it huppened, Mr. Daniel
Dove was unexpectedly detained
on business nt VVhiskili, a neigh
boring tewn, and instead of him,
who should walk debonarily into
the little sitting room, flinging
down his carpet-bag, but Eric Hale
himself, just as the rainy dusk clos
ed in, and the odor of the delicious
oysteri and the Mocha coflee filled
the hous».
‘Hello 1’ said Eric. ‘So you’re
cleaning house —eh, Betsey ?’
‘Yes, sir,’ a demure voice respon
ed from the kitchen.
‘And while’s my aunt?”
“She has retired with a sick
headache.’
‘The natural consequence of
cleaning house, 1 suppose,’ said
Erie Hale with a shrug of his shoul
de:s,” ‘Dear old Aunt Delia I why
couldn’t she be contented to leave
things as they were? Tell her Bet
sey,that Washburne has concluded
not to exchange until next week,
and, that, now I’m in the midst of
the melee, I’ll l?nd a helping har.d
witn this business to-morrow.’
‘Yes, sir.’
‘And Betsey— ’
‘Sir?’
‘Where did you learn to make
such delicious coflee? Bring in a
cup at cnce, I’m ready to drop
with weariness; and it is like a
dream of Arabia.’
And Flora Lee, with Iho flapping
edge of her sunbonnet concealing
the amu-id dimples around her
mouth, brought in tho oysters and
coffee, flanked by a pile of feather
!ig\ i w.flies.'
‘I 'lecture, Betsey,’cried the Rev
ere d F. ie,facetiously, ‘if you wer
a trifle younger and prettier; I’d
marry you inysur’f to mult sure of j
coffee and waffles like this eyery
night.’ 1
Would you sir?'said the soi-dimnt
Belstty.
‘And we’ll make a compnot, Bet
sey,’merrily went on the clergy
man, ns he helped himself to but
ter. ‘to finish the house cleaning
ourselves to-morrow, and save Aunt
Delia the worry and work of it.’
‘Yes, sir,’ said Betsey. ‘But,
please, sir, it’s all done, except the
tacking down of ‘.ho carpets.
•Who did it?’
‘I, sir, please, and Mrs. Dove,
and Adonijah. And please, sir, I’m
going to finish it myself to-morrow;
and please, sir, flinging back her
sunbonnet and disclosing a ooromd
of brown braids, a pair of
very rosy cheeks, and eyes full of
sparkling hazel mischief —‘I’m not
Betsey at all, hut Flora Lee, entirely
at your service!’
The Reverend Eric stared with
round-eyed surprise, not unuiin
gled with dismay.
‘Miss Lee !' he repent: d.
‘Exactly,’ nodded the young la
dy.
‘Did you tnnke the coffee?’
•I did.’
‘And fry these brown-jacketed
oysters, and stir up these waffles?’
‘No one else, Mr. Hale.’
‘And scrub these rooms?’ glanc
ing around.
‘Yes, sir, and dusted the cornices,
and washed tho window glass, and
took down ah' the picture frames,
and put the lace curtains in soak,
beside ether items too numerous to
mention,’ mischievously added
Flora, rather enjoying the discom
fiture of the young clergyman.
‘Miss Lee,’ said Eric, ‘I bog your
pardon.’
‘What for, Mr. ITalc ?’
‘For nlways having regarded you
as the most useless of creatures. I
recant. I own that you are equal
to any emergency.’
And when, Ist- r in the evening.
Mrs. Dove crept out, with lev head
lied up in ean do cologne,.she
found hei nephew and Flora Lee
playing chess together by the fire
in the most amicable manner im
aginable.
‘lt’s all right,’ said Mrs. Dove to
herself.
It was all right. And Mrs
Eric Hale won her frank, uncon
ventional husband, not through
the medium of dress, or jewels, or
waltzes, or flower-shows, but
through the grim realities of clean
ing house.
‘1 wanted a genuine helpmeet,
said tho Reverend Eric, “and I got
one.’ — Family Monthly.
ADVICK TO MQTIIKItS.
Are you disturbed at night aud of
your rest by a sick child suffering
and crying with pain of cutting teeth?
il so, send at once and got a bottle
of Mrs, Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
For Children Toothing. Its value
is incalculable. It will relisvo the
poor little sufferer immediately.
Depend upon it, mothers, there is
no mistake aboutTt. It euros dys
entery and diarrhoea, regulates tho
stomach and bowels, cares wind col
ic, softens llie gums, reduces infliim
mat‘on and gives tono and energy
to the whole system. Mrs. Win
slow’s 3ootbing Syrup For Chil
dren Teething is pleasant to the taste
and is tho prescription of one of the
oldest and best female physicians
and nurses in the Doited States, and
is for sale by ail druggists through
out tho world. Price S 3 cents a
bottle.
An Irish woman needing some
silk and some tape, sent her hus
band for them. Thesilk was shown,
but the buyer thought the price too
great. The clerk explained that
all silk goods were dear, owing to
6omo disease at this timo prevalent
among the silk worms. The tape
was next examined, and the Irish
man thought that a little stiff us to
price. “And indado, sir,” says he,
, “is there likewoise a dezase a-pre
valin’ among the tapeworms?’’
All who lead a closely confined life
are more frequent subjects of constipa
tion, headache and indigestion. If you
will me Hailey’s Ha line Aperient. it will
cure you entirely. Pleasant as a glass of '
soda, cheaper than pilia anu never fal’3. l
After a severe test of twelve years,
by many leading physicians and thous
ands o£ females, it has boon thoroughly
demonstated that English Female Hit
ters hascurcd and rolioved more sickly
females, than ail other remedies com
bined. Ail monthly defects, excesses or
weaknesses, affecting married or single
ore promptly relieved by its uao.
“Tough on Chill*,”
g; »- i cases for 25 cts. in cashor stamps,
Mailed hy Jobs Parham. Atlanta. Go, ’
NO. 34.
JACK.
HtiW a Idltte Ho (Jalned a Place In a
Workshop.
A vear or inure ug», as tho fore
man of olio of the iron works of
tiffs city, says tho Detroit Free
Press, was crossing the yard one
day h« espied » little skip of a boy,
seemingly not over II years old,
setting on the end ofa big tlv wheel
and chewing the end ot bitter re
flection.
“Who are you?”
“I'in Jack.”
.“What nre you doing here?”
“Resting.”
“What do you want?"
“A job.”
Those were the inquiries and
answers, the hoy was pale-faced
and ragged, hut in his steel-blue
eyes tho foreman snwgamo. And
the, ido» of a whU' like him setting
out to buttle the world touched a
tender cord in the heart of a man
who had boys of his own, and ho
set Jack to work in the yard.
No one thought the hoy would
stay a week so no o ne. cured to ask
where he came from or who he wns.
But he stuck. He was Lard
working and faithful, and as the
weeks went by he gained friends
One day ho walked up to the
foreman and said:
“I want to learn the trade.”
“You? 11«! hnl hti! Why Jack,
you Are not big enough to handle a
cold-chisel.
“I can whip any ’prentice hoy in
this shop!” was the earnest decla
ration.
“Just hear hind Why, any’of the
lot either one of them could turn
you wrong side outl When you got
big cm. Ugh to whip tho smallest
one you come to mo for a job.”
At noon that day Jack walked
up to the biggest apprentice boy
in the simp and s ii.l:
“Come out doors.”
“What do you want?”
“I’m going to liuk you.”
‘ What for?”
“Because I want a ohance to
learn the trade.”
The two went out, und in sight
of twenty witnesses little Jack won
a victory. At one o’clock he touch
ed his cap to the foreman and i;nid:
“I’ve licked your bigeest ’prentice
and want logo to world”
Ten minutes later he had become
a machinist’s apprentice, and ifyt.u
go in there to-day you will find
him with greasy hands, oily face
anu a Load full of buisnoßS ideas.
Jack carries the keys to the draw
ers whero the steam-gunge*, safety
valvoß and other trimmings are
kept, and ho knows the use of
every tool, the workings of every
piocb of machinery, und there is a
constant call for Jack here and
Jack there. Before he is 20 he
will be a finished machinist, and
before he is 25 he will be foreman
of some great .shop. He is quit!
earnest, respectful and observnig.
What ho docs is well done. What
he is told he never forget*.
Tho Washington World und Citizen-
Soldier,
the Old Soldiers’ Paper, the Peo
ple’s Paper, is now in its eighth
year, enlarged to forty-eight col
umns, 8 pages, in entire new dress,
every week, at one dollar a year.
Specimen copy free to any rddress,
on receipt of postal card request,
by the World anti Soldier Publish
ing Company, World Building,
100 G F St., Washington, D. C.
Tulmaf e say* the young man
who carries a pistol ought to be
spanked. If the young man car
ries the pistol in his hip pocket
Talmage better look out how he
spanks him.—[Lowell Citizen.
Why Welcome.
What makes Floreston Cologne
welcome on every lady’s toilet table
is its lasting fragianco and rich,
flowery odor.
Nantucket has a girl pilot only
seventeen years old. —Boston 1
Avertiser. And we’ll wager that
she is familiar with every buoy on
the sound.—[Breckinridge Now*, i
C. Williams, Savannah, Gn.,?tiys: i
“I have been taking Brown’s Iron
Bitters for blood discuses and have (
been relieved by it.”
gnKDinwn the gheat cermam
remi-DV
feSf FOR PAlfi.
Hsllsrss snl cams
*■ “'‘"f lIIIIIMATIHX,
Sjffli Neuralgia,
Scidilcs, Lumbago,
||j,.. i| |» n—tlM EFADACUg, TOOTHIf 1%
inwl SORE THROAT,
<n isKt.iWKt.usua
ESffl Arniixß,
% nrßifn.acAi.iM,
"m A«t all <*hr stem
M<l v * em '
! ' Hni<ihr•» anwHMjaa
Ifr.lJr*, _ JJjJL!»r h». DlraMMOt •*” W
"Ml h.u K w^«.
|ifc ~1%/ ft] Th»Clur , 4iA.7fl*fhrfti
[’lll JW|jß|Piy V*| |KMwxioA.T«.l«iir,)
■ }‘w 1 ' aMK% t.ht.
HERE AT LAST.
After l.unp kii«l Weary Waiting Relief 1«
ltr«> ->glit to Tlume wl»«» Nimhl It.
“Well, I’tti,” hhUI ait Ontuge county
PhyMlolan to Hoc ninluinhijj trail [raticno
Miiiio year* ago, “for that pain In you/
ehest von had he tier g»- Pome ami pu»
on a mustard plaster. I can't think
this minute of anything better. Anil
by the way,” added the doctor turning
to a friend, *•[ wish Homebody would
invent a real good planter- soin'othlng
actually helpful for aildt casea an
Pat’s. Maybe they will sotnetima,
when it is too late for mo to’usft it. * *
Winn BKVSON’S < API INM*
ItO list PI. AST Kit was placed 011 till*
market about ten years ago the doctor'll
hope beeanie a fact. Because of the
mre niedieiiml virtues inherent in if,
its rtulld action and sure results, tho
('apeiue is fn.it. displacing the nlovr
aet ing plasters ot former days, for nil
alfeetions to will h a plaster is ever
applicnhlu Price 25 eenta. 11l the
middle of the genuine Is cut rtlfe* W©**d*
C\ IVIN 10.
Senbiiry & Johnson, Chemists. VevC 7
York. inch 15 U
IMANTED TEACHERB! ..JM,™
■■ Steady employment during Sprint}
mill Summer. Address
,r. C. McCI’IIDY, & CO., Phlla. Pa.
I CURE FITS!
Whi n I say cure 1 do not iminn mornly to stop ibtfitj'fhf
! n I inio muU thou lihvo thorn return ntfnln, I n>e«n anulb
I C4l rure. I have mwlo Oie ri|nf*a*e of FITS, KIMI.EPSY
or KAIXINU HICKNKMS A life-long etudy. 1 warrant m.f
trniody to euro the worst casoa. BecauM others have
ailed I* no ronmiu for not now rorslrltiK » core. Sond at
eiiiut for a truuilne and a Free Bottle of my Infallible
win dy. Hire Kxprens and l*oet OtHee. It costs yoW
jiolhlng for n trial, and I will cure yoe.
XddroM l»r. ii. G. HOOT, lss Pearl >l, Htw Yoffc
Free! Cards and Chromos
Wii will send fn o,bv mule 11 sample
set of our large Odrinaii, FremTi mill
American Clllomo Cards, oil tinted
and gold grmimla, witlm price list of
over 200 different designs, on receipt
of n slump of postage,
w' will also semi free liy irmle as sains
pics, ten of otu- beiiutifni Om-rtincs, on’
receipt of (mi cents to pay for pitHtlng
and postage; also enclose a confiden
tial price list of onr large oil eiiromos.
A cents wantiel Address F. Oi.kssom
>4 0., JO Summer Street, Boston,
Miss.
consumption;
I have u intuitive remedy for the above dleouno; by ltd
Rite thousands or caaos of the worst kind and of long
standing have boon cured. Indeed, so strong Is my fslio
111 Its o.. Toney, that I will sontl TWO BOTTLIM FUSR, t C'
rollht with aVALUABLE THEATI SB on this duasso, vs
aj.v ttuOuror. Give Ksprei** and I*. O. mldroia.
V H. T. A. bhU CLJtt, nil Pearl tit., New York.
No More Eye-Glasses,
EYE-SALVE
|A eerlnln, Hafe'Bitd.ErtVctlvo Mtimttdp ftr -
SORE, WEAK AND INFLAMED EYE*
Producing long nnd Kustoring
ilih Hlgtil of t'to Old.
Cures Tenr I*ro|w,| (Jruniibitloii, Htra
.TiimorsJltedlEj'es, Matted
Eye hashes.
and PRODtrcma quick ■ rei.ibp a iri*
PERMANENT UUIIT.
Also, rqimllv rfflcaploti* when um*d !n olltcr mml.
ndira, such «# Ulcere. F»<var floiwx, rs. Belt
Kit.miiii, Hums, t’ih a or wticrcvcr fi.HuiiiiiiHtiuu »t
l«u, Mt'l'CUKLl.'d HaI.Vl, may !»•* used to ndvoit
tag”.
• Roll) by alt Drugglmi at 96 Ueflls.
!mfoW]gshm
Will be inailcT ntu to all oj i'Ucante, and to cua
lornere of last year ■without ordering li Itoontaillß
about 176 pagoe, fUO iUuotratlOTin, pricse, aoc urate
descriptions and valuable direction* for planttM
I 16pu varietloe of VcKetablo and Flower tieeda,
Plante, Fruit Trees, etc. Invalnablo to all, eapea*
Tally to Market (iardounra. Send tor it!
D. M. FERRY & CO. Detroit Mtou.
Fruits and Flowers.
-AT THK—
Lookout Greenhouseg
Ohattjtiooga, Tennessee
The lurgcut anil.inoßt complete In the
South . 1 can supply you with any
tblng necduil for the flower yard and
fruit ‘Kurilcii. Plan is fresh flno and
cheap. 1 can furnish
Twelvo Roses for $llOO,
Twelve Geraniums for $f 00.
Twenty Coleus for isl 00.
Twout Verbenaa SIOO
Can he shipped at any time. Hand
for a Address
H. X. KfXOS,
Lookout Urceuhokstf,
f 'haUanooga, T emi. Jnnl&
H. P. Lumpkin & Co.,
AUliNTii FOU THE
Purchaee and Sale of Seal Estate
IN THE COUNTIES Os
Chattooga, Catoosa, Dade and Walker#
Ofter their services to all who may wUl*
to buy or tell. In selling they will an
every exertion to effect an advantageous
Halo, 111 buying to give NntiHfaotion to
1 lie purchaser. (’oumiiesioaß low aiul
will cover advertising* ooncppondenoi,
• xaminitig thu titlon. and the making
• 1 deeds. A ldruas tbeui i-t Lai'ayatl *
ta n
Bj viria aaiar.ikl S
m S7i n ■ ?iv ur.9 nm Si