Newspaper Page Text
World'* Production of Money MetaU.
The New York World says: “The
world’s production of gold and silver
for 1894 has been compiled by Rich¬
ard P. Rothwell, editjor of tho En¬
gineering and Mining Journal. The
result shows that a liftlfc over eight¬
een times more silver than gold was
mined—5,205,065 kilos ’ against
as
280,146. The increase in the produc¬
tion of gold ($27,219,438) was not as
great as was expected, the output of
the Transvaal reaching only 60,707
kilos ($40,340,000.;) but the produc¬
tion for 1895 will be much greater.
The decrease in the production of sil¬
ver (134,681 kilos) was caused by the
fall in tho average price of silver from
78 cents per ounce in 1893 to 62 cents
in 1894. The decrease in tho commer¬
cial value of tho year’s production was
$28,812,087, in a total of only $105,-
429,034. There were several serious
errors in tho different mint reports of
last month, which Mr, Rothwell has
corrected, and his revision from offi¬
cial and original sources may bo con¬
sidered final.”
Open the Safety Valve
When there? fa too big a- head of btaam on. or
yon will to- in danger. Similarly, when that
important, bowel* become* safety obstructed, valve or the system, the
op n It promptly
with Hostel the ter'* Stoma; h Hitter*, and gui.rd
"gainst iousnes*.d)'«nep.ia, enasctjiieni'es malarial, of its closure. Hn
kidney rheumatic mil
all suhjugat complain d I, m-r vnunnes* and nenral.ia
am by this pleasant but potent
conqueror of di>«t v.
The first mid last thing required of genius
is the love of truth.
Dr. KHmer’s Swamp.I t oor cures
ail Pamphlet Kidney and and Consultation liladder troubles.
Laboratory free.
Binghamton, V. Y.
There is oven a happiness tlmt makes the
heart alruid.
Always Cures
Indigestion, Stomach, Dyspepsia, Bad Breath, Debility,
Sour Want of Appetite. Distress
After Bating, and all evil* arising from a
weak or disordered stomach. It builds up
from the first dose, and a bottle or two will
cure the worst coses, and Insure a good appe¬
tite, excellent digestion and spirits. result in There vigor¬ Is
ous health and buoyancy of
no better way to insure good health and a
l»ng iifs than to keep the stomach right.
Tyner’s this. Dyspepsia The Tranquiltsing Remedy Is guaranteed Attor-Diuner to
do
Drink. For sale by Druggists. Manufactured
by C. O. Tyner, Atlanta.
They Lull It Overwork.
Business requires a clear hraij yet how few
business men with all their their soosa- rtallzo
what is the trouble with heads. They
call Itovor-work, worry, anything hut what it
really allmonis ln- usually lNritommoN. disguised This atealthled, of
el Wouldn't comes be as romethlmr
He. you convinced If a box of
ened Kipuns Talmles the business cleared your head and bright¬
up outlook?
“I Have Tried Parker’s Ginger Tonic
and when believe In It.” know savs a mother, and so will
you you lterevitalizing properties.
W. H. Grlilin, Jackson, Michigan, writes:
’’otiHured Hall’s tvliU Catarrh for iitioen years.
Druggists, Catarrh 75c. Cute cured me." Sold by
Pino’* Cure for Consumption has saved mo
many a doctor’s bill.— B. F. U ahdv, Hopkins
Place, Baltimore, Md., Dec. 2. ’94.
Mrs. Winslow’s Sosthliuc Syrup foroliildren
teething, tion, allays softens pain, the sums, wind reduce- colic. 2fio. Inflamma¬ bottle
cures a
Summer
Weakness
Is cansod by thin, weak, impure
blood. To havo puro blood which
will properly Btiataiu your hoalth
and a give . nerve strength, take
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
it ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR it
R 1
★ The BEST ★
^Nursing Mothers,Infants/
CHILDREN
★ JOHN CARLE & SONS, New York. *
THE OGLETHORPE
Brunswick, Ca.
This is the finest Hotel in its appointments
south of Baltimore. Tho table is supplied
with all the delicacies the market, can afford.
The Cuisine attentive. Is excellent, Open all and service prompt
and the year. Rates rea¬
sonable. J. H. STILWELL, Wanagor .
•
GOOD POSITIONS
SECURED BY STUDENTS
Busiifiss Finns SopplM lift Help
Richmond's Commercial Coilego,
Bstnbiished 1884.
Send for Catalogue. SAVANNAH. GA.
OSBORNE’S
SSadmsdd tfda/frae
AND V
School of Shoi-tlinncl
No text books used. AUGUSTA. Actual business ISA. from day of
entering. Business papors, collogo currency ami
goods used. Bond for handsomely illustrated cata¬
logue. Board cheap. R. R, fare paid to Augusta,
GREAT OPPORTUNITIES
Are not *11 gone- To 8 ©o the wonderful Atlanta Ex
position this fall is one of the greatthings of» Ufa time
Th© civilixed world will be there. We have arranged to
take 100 of our Georgia salesmen there, at our own ux
»«v#n days. F- j-FowW, Ptk*Oo,, oa., reportsssor
der* m six <fAy«. >end for fud mfonnation,
wkmtbrn rriu.isHiNt; hols TV,,.,. is* No.
808 N -r. i. mu r ue N a.uviii,-.
j. a/N -J s w r mrm .Ai. sharthtmi^TTpermt. rS&JS&TSftS
PKACnCAL
(djf s
Mr
COLLEGE, Bioluaoad, Ya. j: re re 1
•A PISO'S -CURE T£
■
outitS WHkRF. (ta ELSE Good. FAILS. Cae
Best Cough Syrup, T&sces
In time. Sold by druggists.
THROUGH GEORGIA.
BITS OF NEWS GATHERED FROM
OVER THE STATE,
Being a Summary of Interesting Hap¬
penings From Day to Day.'
At a recent meeting of some of the
most influential citizens of LaGrange,
it was decided that the Southern Fe¬
male college should remain here, and
Dr. O. A. Nunnally, ex-president of
Mercer university, was elected presi¬
dent.
Elberton is getting to be a city of
conventions and associations. Next
year the editors and members of the
Georgia Pi ess Association will meet
in Elberton. The invitation to enter¬
tain them at their next annual meet¬
ing was unanimously accepted by the
association in their recent convention
at Gainesville.
The law class of '93, University of
Georgia, will have a reunion and a
banquet on University Day at the At¬
lanta exposition this fall. When this
class graduated, the members decided
to have a reunion within tho next few
years. University Day at tho exposi¬
tion will bo such a favorable opportu¬
nity for the reunion that it has been
selected as the date for that affair.
S, n. Hawkins, of Americns, and
Dupont Guerry, of Macon, met tho
bondholders’ reorganization committoo
of the Savannah, Amerieus and Mont¬
gomery railroad at Baltimore and were
paid, in their capacity as the commis¬
sioners of sale, $3,323,000 in bonds
for account of the purchase of the
railroad property. The new company
will be known as the Georgia and Ala¬
bama railroad.
Among the prottentments of the
grand jury of Floyd county arc some
recommendations that are rather eon
sutional. The jury finds that tho in¬
debtedness of tho county is $55,000,
payablo $2,500 each year up to 1899,
with a floating debt of $35,000, aud to
provide for the payment of this it finds
but two ways: the floating of redemp¬
tion bonds, or the reducing of county
expenses.
A letter has been reseived from a
capitalist in one of the eastern cities
stating that ho desired to remove his
shoo faotorji to a sou thorn town, aud
that, seeing the people were enter¬
prising enough to get up a cotton
mill, ho would make a proposition to
ihe Monroe. people to locate his pluut at
The enterprise works 200
hands and has a weekly payroll of
$ 12 , 000 .
Sitting in his summer home at Gray
Gables, President Cleveland will press
the electric button that will set in mo
tio11 the ponderous whools of tho on
the Cotton t wi States *\ l ’ ,ru aud tij ' j machinery International of
exposition . At high noon on Sep¬
tember 18th, in the presence of many
thousand visitors and distinguished
guests, the electric current will come
bounding fresh from the hand of
President Cleveland, wliools and with a roar
and a rumble tho will begin to
revolve, and the Cotton States and
International exposition will be in full
blast.
The Savannah J'ress is opposed tp
the movement being inaugurated by
Hon. Walter B. Hill to have a dispen¬
sary in Georgia. Ott the subject it
says: “Abcut, this time of year prohi¬
bition measures crop out aud petitions
with anti-barroom bills begin to take
shape. The attempt in arty form to
fasten upon Georgia the dispensary
system of South Carolina, whether by
the issue of public moneys raised from
taxation or by the confinement of the
sale of liquor to the hands of one man
or set of men, would be resisted as
undemocratic aud as violative of per¬
sonal liberty.”
The fate of Elizabeth Nobles, the
ignorant and illiterate white woman
convicted in Twiggs county of the mur¬
der of her husband, Win.’ Nobles, and
sentenced to be hanged, is becoming a
state issue. Several of the most prom
iueiit ladies in Georgia aav that if a
petition will get the governor to com¬
mute the sentence of Mrs. Nobles, now
under sentence of death, she will never
hatig. A petition has been sent to a
prominent lady in every county in tho
state and letters from these ladies
say that they are meeting with the
most pronounced success and that if
the petition will have the sentence
commuted it eertaiuly will be pre¬
sented.
Joseph Mills, a colored mau living
on the Erin plantation between Blake¬
ly nod Arlington, was struck with the
African fever last winter just before
Christmas. f.mrfeen'in n^mber^all'M thon^fine
lu u 11 uuinner, an oi mem line
Rllu 8 OXB 6 over two Years Oil!, for Olio
!■ liar a b. a! (the tetrebn^er wanted
them for 50 cants), his corn, over 100
bushels, at 50 cents per bushel, and
his Qotton seed, three or four hundred
, bushels, v, r for 11 11 and 12 cents. , TT He didu v.-.,, t
got off> but baa farmed on the same
place this year, buying the meat for
hls family at 11 cents per pound; the
coru > which ho is compelled to use, at
$1.05 per bushel, and pays a peck on
every bushel of cotton seed which he
borrowed to plant his crop.
The tax returns for Screven county
! last year amounted to $1,455,062.
For this year the returns show an ag-
gregate of only $1,281,686, showing a
slump of $173,376. For Gwinnett the
tax returns last year footed up $ 2 953 ,-
789. This ,
year tho figures represent
the value of property in the county to
be only $2,7887,036, making a drop of
slowiy, $103,754. The returns are coming in
bnt all of them bear the stamp
of depression and tell the story of dis¬
content and hard times. About one
dozen Georgia counties have been
heard from up to date. They have
shown a decrease in tax values since
the year before averaging $53,000 in
each county. Only one county has
shown an increase in values returned
for taxation. The increase aggregated
$56.
En gineers have been placed in the
field to make preliminary examina¬
tions of the country and survey the
route of a new railroad lying between
the copper mines and Gainesville.
The route from the mines to Lula has
already been surveyed. The road
will tap the Southern at Gainesville
if the people of the city will subscribe
more than Athens and Lula, provided,
however, the road can be built aa
cheaply from there as from Lula.
Athens and Gainesville are both wide
awake and steps are being taken by
both cities to get the road. The final
location of tho road will be made
within tho next fifteen days. It will
also be decided in that time whether
it will be built to the copper mine and
stop there, or whether it will be ex¬
tended on to Dahlonoga.
AMUSING EXPERIENCE
Of a Georgia Farmer with the "New”
Sacallne Plant.
Mr. Toon Powell, of High Sboals,
who is known as a very progressive
farmer, had an interesting experience
with a new plant. In a seed catalogue
he read a catchy description of a plant
called sacaline. It was stated that
this ploJat wonld produce from ninety
to 180 tons of forage per acre; requir¬
ed no plowing before planting, needed
no cultivation; would flourish in poor¬
est soil and luxuriate in wot lands;
stems and leaves are relished by horses,
cattle and sheep; more nutritious than
clover or lucerne, grows fourteen feet
high by June; affords shade for cattle
in summer and protection against
storms in winter; floods will not de¬
stroy it; once planted it stands for
ever.
Tho last statement, that it was an
indestructible plant,' caused Mr. Pow¬
ell to proceed with groat caution. He
got a little neck of laud and ditched
around it and inclosed it with a rock
wall. The rest of his plantation was
(o bo protected from the spread of
this remarkable forage plant. The
seed were planted, 'vnd in due season
they came up. The young plants grew
and throve. In time the stems and
leaves came to havo a striking resem¬
this blance to a familiar Mr. weed;*-’ "j k;"mon ’“ne in
country. I’ow I of
these weeds to compare L'l'ic iris Rus¬
sian tmiasure, under which Mb cattlo
were to find shelter from summer sun
and winter storm; and the plants were
exactly similar. Not trusting the evi
derroo of sight, he resorted to the
sense of smell. Ho crushed tho loaves,
rubbed them and applied to his nose.
They were the sunih. There could no
longer be doubt. The Russian dis¬
covery Georgia. was the despised hog weed of
GLANDERS IN BURKE COUNTY.
Colonel Nesbitt Sends Dr. Carnes to
Investigate.
Dr. W. E. Carnes, veterinary eur
goon, has returned from Burke county,
where he has been, at the request of
Commissioner Nesbitt, on the lookont
for cases of glanders. He discovered
a dozen or more eases and killed the
animals to prevent a spread of the
awful disease. It seems that the dis¬
ease has been going for two years or
more, but it has not spread rapidly,
because the mules are known as “cot¬
ton mules” and remain on the plantj
tion till the time.
“The disease hns been raging for
two years,” said Dr. W. E. Carnes.
plaining “Recently parties have been com
and writing to the commis¬
sioner of agriculture and he sent mo
to the scene—tho eastern part of
Burke county. I found that the re¬
ports havo been true ones. In '94
there were thirty-five or more eases. I
disposed of several eases. Glanders is
a highly contagious febrile disease.”
A MOVABLE CAMP
To Be Used in Case of Outbreak of
Yellow Fever.
Dr. J. A. Nydegger, tho marine hos¬
pital surgeon at Savennah has just
taken steps to establish a movable camp
to accommodate 1,000 yellow fever
refugees. This step lias been taken
by the government not on account o."
any apprehended danger, but for the
purpose of having all the arrangements
for the establishment of the camp in
readiness on short notice at any time
that it may be wanted. The lumber
has been purchased for making the
tent floors, and these together with the
tents and other paraphernalia will be
kept at Camp Detention at Waynesviile,
while the disinfecting aparatus will bo
kept in Savannah. The cautp will be
so nrrnnped that it can be packed nr*
and put aboard a train within ten hours.
aud carried to any point where it may
be needed. This means a great econ¬
omy of time in case there should bean
occasion for the immediate use of such
•in outfit.
Indians Will Not Obey.
Indian Agent Teter, of the Fort
Hall, Idaho, Indian reservation, has
wired Commissioner Browning that the
policemen who were sent to the In¬
dians ordering them with tho com
missioner’s message to return to their
reservation report that the Indians
positively refuse to return.
A Docile Giantess.
A young woman of twenty years,
who lives in Price, Mo., is more than
eight feet tall. Mies Ella Ewing is her
name. She was educated in this re¬
mote settlement, and will not loave it.
Thus it happens that very few people
have ever seen Miss Ewing, although
her fame has spread far and wide by
word of mouth.
To be more exact on the subject of
Miss Ewing, it may be mentioned that
although she weighs 290 pounds, her
height of eight feet two saves her from
any appearance of obesity. On the
contrary, she impresses one as grace¬
fully slender, and this impression is
confirmed by her taste in dressing.
Her shoe is seventeen inches long ex¬
actly and her arms are decidedly
lengthy.
But impressive as these physical
characteristics of the young lady are
they would not have given her any¬
thing but notoriety were they not
combined with qualities to which she
is indebted for her fame as the saintly
giantess.
In the matter of physical strength
this yonng girl might arouse the jeal¬
ousy of even Mr. Sandow, The tasks
which two men together might feel an
embarrassment in undertakii^ are ac¬
complished by her with the utmost
ease. There is some difficulty in be¬
ing precise on this point, however, be¬
cause the young lady shrinks from any
display of her accomplishments in this
direction. The fact that she is a giant¬
ess, and a saintly one in the bargain,
is not an occasion of fake pride in her.
On the contrary, she is averse to notice
of this sort, and that is why her ex¬
cursions are rarely further off than
the country round about her village
home. She will not be induced to
enter a circus or to exhibit herself,
notwithstanding the tempting offers
that have been made her. Her feats
of strength, therefore, have not been
seen except by her immediate friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Ewing, the parents of
this wonderful girl, are devoted to
their child, and feel a great pride in
all her qualities. Her father is him¬
self six feet high and the mother is of
more than medium height .—New York
Herald.
She Had Him.
Mrs. Newed—How are tho biscuits,
George?
Newed—A trifle heavy, dearest.
Mrs. Newed—And the soup?
Newed—Too much seasoning in it.
Mrs. Newed—And the duck?
Newed—Done a little too much.
Mrs. Newed—I’m so sorry, dear^
that your dinner does not suit you.
Y’our mother prepared it .—New Or¬
leans Times-Democrat.
Certainly Not.
“Remember, my son,” said Mr. Sage
to his eldest, "a rolling stone gathers
no moss.”
"Well, father,” replied the young
man, “yon wouldn’t have me be a
mossback, would you ?”—Detroit Free,
Press.
Mi*» Brovrn of Dalton.
By tho simple Wine of Cardui Treatment of
. Female Diseases, thousands of afflicted Women
are restored to heallh every year. It corrects
the menstrual irregularities from which
nearly all women suffer, and Is'being univer¬
sally used for that purpose now. Ask your
druiraist for McElree’s Wine of Cardui.
Speaking of this class of women diseases,
Miss Laura P. Brown, of Dalton, Ha., says: "I
have been suffering from excessive menses for
two years, constantly getting worse, and I feel
that McElree’s Wine of Cardui has saved my
life. 1 looked forward to each month and
thought I could not endure such misery an¬
other time- I can’t express my gratitude for
the wonderful relief.”
T obacru- W eakenetl 1! esolutlong.
Nerves irritated by tobaceo, always crav¬
ing for stimulants, explains tvhy it is so hard
to swear off. No-ToBac is the only guaran¬
teed tobaceo habit cure because it acts di¬
rectly on afl’eoted nerve centers, dostrovs ir¬
ritation, freshing sleep. pre-notes digestion and healthy, re¬
days. You Many gain 10 pounds in 10
run no risk. No-To-Bae is sold
and guaranteed by Druggists everywhere.
York Book City free. Ad. Chicago. Sterling Remedy Co., New
or
Just llow It Dor* it i-t Not tlio ilnestluti.
It is.enough to know that Hintlorcoms takes
out corns, and a great relief it K 15 -.druggists.
■S?
JWffuss
L X
V'
1
m wllllllllllil
OI?m ENJOY®
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels colds, head¬
and cures habitual
constipation. remedy Syrup of Figs is the
only duce!., pleasing of its hind ever pro¬
to the taste and ac¬
ceptable action to and the truly stomach, beneficial prompt in
its in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy excellent and agreeable substances, commend its
many all and have qualities made the it
to it most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable hand druggist will who
may not have it on pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. I)o not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
10UISVIUS. Kf. NEW YORK. N t.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
ABSOLUTELY pure
Sun Flowers.
The cultivation of sun flowers for
their seeds, which are fed to the poul
try, is said to be on the increase in
Pennsylvania, the country of fine farms
and economical, prosperous farmers.
As long ago as 1820 the following
notice of the value of the sun flower
appeared in a Charleston publics
tion :
Native Oil—Finer, sweeter oil, no
country oan supply than what wg can,
with little trouble and expense, pre
pare for ourselves. The tall annual
sunflower will prove this, its seeds
bruised and pressed yield an oil a 3 sweet
and as fine as that we import from
Florence. From a bushel of this seed
a gallon of oil may be drawn and with
this advantage, that it can be obtained
at any time, quite soft, bland and
fresh. The seed also and mass that
remain, after the expression of the oil,
are of excellent use to feed and fodder
hogs, poultry, etc. But besides all
these uses, the growing plant is of
eminent service, it having been proved
that near twenty times as much pure
depelogisticated air is exhaled from
one plant in twenty-four hours, in
light and clear weather, as a mau res¬
pires in a vitiated and impure state in
that space of time. Hence the inhabi¬
tants of close, ill-aired and unwhole¬
some places should be diligent in its
cultivation.
Newfoundland Dogs.
Newfoundland is perhaps best known
by its famous breed of dogs. But it
appears that these, like the island’s
present humanity, are not indigenous.
They seem to have been produced by
some happy crossing of breeds. It is
said that, in the island, they appear to
degenerate, and that the Newfound¬
land dog thrives better out of New¬
foundland. Old settlers are reported
as saying that the genuine breed con¬
sisted of a dog twenty-six inches high,
with black, naked body, gray or white
stockinged legs, with dew claws behind.
The Leouborgdogs—across between
the Newfoundland, the St. Bernard
and the Pyrenean wolf-dog—are said
to thrive well in the island, and to
possess “some of the noble races whose
blood blends in their veins.”— Cham¬
bers's Journal.
Would Make an Alteration.
Biggerstaff—Young Huggins says be
adores the very ground Miss Fosdick
walks on.
Timberwheels—He wouldn’t have
such an affection for it if he knew it
was mortgaged to its full value.— De¬
troit Free Press.
How it looks,
\ to the women who wash with Pearline, when
\ they see a woman washing in the old-fashioned
_ \ way with soap—rubbing strength, the clothes to pieces,
f . rubbing away her wearing herself
\v£ * °ut over the washboard! To these Pearl
& ** J I * ne women > fresh from easy unawares.” washing, she
seems to “wear a fool’s cap
Everything’s in favor of Pearline—
easier work, quicker work, better
r ' work, safety, economy. There’s
not one thing against it. What’s
V \= the use of washing in the money? hardest
way, when it costs more 489
rs^l mm
SELL ON SIGHT! A
Lovell Diamond Cycles . .
HIGH GRADE IN EVERY PARTICULAR!
LATEST IMPROVEMENTS, LIGHTEST WEIGHTS ! A
HAVE YOUll MECHANICAL FltlKND examine those machines, as we desire d
to slimv the work and material to men who know what «ooil work is. ”
i> wheel Wo made stake in om- the business world than reputation the Lovell of over Diamond. flftv years that there is no better J “
A
> A
' it im A
> m t 4
»T i A
< ^r- - 4
/ 7/ 4
9 i^isssrac^ 4
* Warranted in every respeot. All prices, sixes and weights. Call and see them
Catalogue free. «3-Jf there is no agent in your place write us. 4
Manufacturers and Jobbers In A
ARflS, BICYCLES AND SPORTING GOODS. 4
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO., 4
$ 147 131 Broad Washington St. St •’ } BOSTON, Mass. 4
► A A A A
fc A afk. u jf k j3k. A A A A A A j
9 Exhausted Soils «i
@ are made of Fertilizers to produce rich larger in Potash. and better crops by the ^
use
9 is brim Write full for of useful our *' Farmers' information Guide,” for farmers. a 142 -page It will illustrated be sent book. free, and It
e will make and save you money. GERMAN Address, KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York.
’Twould be Unwholesome.
^ gentleman who has been recently
0 Ter l°°king a trunk of old family lot
* er f came across one written from a
his son on September 4,1794,
111 w hich the writer says: “Pray turn
y°* r almanac, where you will see
*he perigee falls on the 11 th of the
n l on ^h; therefore it will be found un
wholesome by those who have had no
feV6r 8 d °ring the past 2 mos to get
‘l 1 ’ 1111 , aD( l he out in tho rain in the
* or
‘ <iue ’ from th ® 6th ol the mo *Bh nntill
e iglilGenth , inclusive. ” Whether
the perigee faii on the 11th of Septem
her or not, in these modern days, most
modern young men would find it “un
wholesome” to ho “drunk and in the
rain and ‘due’ from the 6 th 'untilF the
18th inclusive.”
Ml
3 y £
1
LEAVES ITS flARK
—every one of the painful irregularities
and weaknesses that prey upon women.
They the fade the wither face, waste the make figure, ruin
temper, you up, you old
before your time.
Get well: That’s the way to look well.
Cure the disorders and ailments that beset
you, with Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip¬
tion.
It regulates and promotes all the womanly
functions, improves digestion, enriches the
blood, dispels aches and pains, melancholy
and nervousness, brings refreshing sleep,
and restores health and strength.
D TO AVOID THIS TTS3ES
0 N TETTERINE
Sc , The oxly painless and harmless
C "*• CDitE for the w^rBt type of Kczema,
R I Tetter. Ringworm, ugly rough patch
• es on the face, crusted twain.
Ground itch, chafes, chaps, pim
T pies, Poison from ivy or po»-tmoak.
In short all itch Eft. Send 50c. in
U H stamp* Snrannah. or cash G*,, to J. T. Shuptrine,
* 1 drugget don’t, keep tor it. one box, if yocu
HOTEL TYBEE
TYBKK ISLAND, GA.
Tb!« Hotel is uotad for its exosllent servi le and
splendid cu sine, th« table being supp ied with nil the
doUo&ctee the market afford"- An abundant h upply of
filth, ersb--, ahr rap, etc. Leon's fine oroho stra an
gaged Write for for season* Special ^Specially inducements low rates this s nvson.
terms. 1IO HAN & COWAN. to partie• of
ter. or more
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Clcan?« and beautifies the balr.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
E
A. N. U Thirty-one, ’95.