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ry 5 ^
aP &
P* tfij s.'C i-.-
£' 5 M J?’ >•■
4 u
u E'.ugfwi
;i ixia,I?idy has becon
This inch-.- - .. , r
beaded net more for us direct -a
the weakness oi
it leaves behind it.
rolonged
OS-
r .-,: ,om. laneri'ilv and suicide tol-
*rv:: "For this disease
0*’ l.d '--Pi -• ;
- ; o r-.-ineay superior to
~rv Pectoral.
lov
'v*3i r^iriedv for la grippe that I
. Avar's Cherry Pectoral.’’
Rev. JOHN K. CHASER
•South Hampton, N. H.
, if®, snd fi.e children were taken
• la gripro. while the disease was so
v- ..KJent! 1 dosed them with Ayers
•vetorai, and before using quite two
was restored to health. 1
f the; same
n;mi.
vera’r ofc.sfcicate cases
v. tuch were stso cured by tins
J. PAK3IINTES,
Paulette, Miss.
j.i by the use of
ft* 1 ’-' L
r;V Pectcj
G. S. THOMPSON,
'•Vest Farmington, 0.
■■ t J5 {£
P-4 ft
-AS
r
fc r;
r :
brio
izo bottles at half
Iona! si
American Spirit.
;rty-odd years of sec-
“t iiHse” United States
fig, even though the
-If may be a, step to-
How Talmage Does It.
Many Americans abroad are ex
ceedingly annoyed at their lack
f gkill in the use of the European
guages, writes the Rev. DeWitfc
fa!mage in the Ladies’ Home
Journal. After a v a i n a t te m p t t o
make a Parisian waiter under
stand French they swear at him
in English. But I have always
remembered when traveling abroad
the art of the physician who put
all the remains of old prescrip
tions into one bottle—the oil, and
the calomel, and the rhubarb, and
fh assafoetidn—and when he
found a patient with a “complica
tion of diseases,” he would shake
I up his old hotrle and give him a
dose. And so I have compoundeo
a language for European travel
I generally take n little French,
and a little German, and a little
English, with a few snatches of
Chinese and Choctaw, and when I
find a stubborn case of waiter or
landlord who will not understand.
I simply shake up all the dialects
and give him a dose. It is sure to
strike somewhere. If you cannot
make him understand, you at any
rate give him a terrible scare.
I never had the anxiety of some
in a strange land about getting
things to eat. I like everything
in all the round of diet except
animated cheese and odorous cod
fish ; always have a good appetite;
never in my life missed a meal
save once, when I could not get
any, and knowing that “eine gerc-
stete rindfleieh schiehe” means a
c p (k *
liped o' *
inn deni
?rk'iu
u a foreign country, j beefsteak, “eine messer” a knife,
and “eine gabel” a fork, and “eine
seryiette” a napkin, after that I
feel perfectly reckless as to what
I can or cannot get.
onal lines and party
n Congress and every
umbng as a representative
v. vd voting the- sinews
f i •; { - real defense. It
ex ‘cession of national
and as an assertion of the
. i spirit over sectional
d par! politics which is
■ questioned or inisnnder-
A meric a for Americans!
as bins spirit lives and we
brought together as one
loyal to rear common conn
Plymouth, Pa., Aug. 25, 1S9C.—My
opinion of Dr. Tichenor's Antiseptic is
that it will do all that is claimed for it.
As a remedy for colic it is the best I
have ever used.—Albert G. Groblewski.
It is impossible for the system
to withstand the demands made
upon it just at this season, with
out the assistance of a good puri
fying and strengthening tonic.
The changes which Nature decrees
shall take place each spring are
so severe that a breakdown is
almost sure to come. It is wise
that all possible assistance be
given during this period, as upon
this purifying process depends the
health for the entire summer.
Everybody just now should take a
thorough course of Swift’s Specific
• The
which thoroughly cleanses Iv.e
blood of all the accumulated im
purities, tones up and strengthens
the entire system, and aids Nature
in renovating and renewing the
body so as to render it healthy and
strong. Those who purify their
blood with S. S. S. at this season
are 'well fortified against the many
forms of disease so prevalent dur
ing the dreaded heated term, for
it has been demonstrated that the
system that is thoroughly purified
in the spring is well prepared to
resist disease all summer.
No other remedy on the market
is equal to Swift’s Specific as a
spring medicine, because it is the
only purely vegetable blood rem
edy and is guaranteed absolutely
free from potash, mercury and all
other minerals. It cleanses, puri
fies, builds up and strengthens.
Insist on S. S. S., for there is noth
ing half as good.
Die greatest nation
Jefferson’s Ten Rules.
Never put off until to-morrow
what you should do to-day.
Never trouble another for what
The Mouse’s Blanket.
One day vVillie’s mamma missed I
a bank note which she was certain
I £
tw §
she had put in.a particular place.! p
Thinking that Willie might have j
everv ou
co:
taken it fora plaything, not know- ! nourishment.
ing its value, she asked him if he
had seen it. But Willie knew
nothing about it, neither di*d the
nurse nor anybody in the house.
By ana by papa came home.
He pointed to a mouse hole in the
nursery floor, and said the mice
must have stolen it. A carpenter
came and took up the floor, and,
sure enough, there was a nest of
little mice all cuddled down on
A f,
ieruazer
gen, phosplioi
iiitro-
i not
less th
a u
o
the bank-iivte, which Mother
Mouse had spread out as a lining
for the nest. Oth r pieces of paper
w*-re found, all torn and nibbled,
but this, being nice aim soft, had
been saved for a blanket by the
v* ise old mother.—Congregation-
alist.
Hot Springs, Ark., March 3, 1388.—
I find Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic all it
is recommended, to be for cuts, burns,
bruises and colic I would not be with
out. it.—B. H. Randolph.
Crows and Caws. r
“Why is it,” asked the inquisi
tive one, “that a rooster crows,
and a crow caws?” It is true that
a rooster rcosts, but nobody ever
Ik
.
I
will increase the croi and im
prove the land.
Our books tell all about the subject. They
are free to any farmer.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
03 Nassau St., New York.
A Chines
Brofche ly iov
the Chinese o;
than filial du
There i*• a s. o
named Woo, b-
t.
'ed by
rtant
brothers
divisions of a
much litigation
tervals for ten
vin at last calk
fore him and ad
(* r. • i: tv. ... |
i l> 1S . ( i i i s i * *; 1
it is easy enoi
heard of a crow crowing. This is
j Suppose you ga
I 1
lose vonr
a question that should occupy the ! f ee ] then?”
attention of the scientific. A wo
man, perhaps, could answer the
query, why doesn’t a crow crow?
At a breath she would say: “Just
’cause.”—New Orleans Times-
Deinocrat.
* roi l;
a iter
in-
«nda-
a be-
tiius:
i her:
land,
s and
11 von
MARCH, APRIL, MAY.
These are tlie Months in Which to Par;Ij
Your ISlood.
Upon this tin-
and not one c
could keen bac ■
stautly » the br*o
their error, bowen
istrate, asked his
after ten years of
up their abode in i
stead.—Ex.
wept,
audera
In-
rceiving
lie mag*
• as, and,
* ion took
iv home-
This is the season when your bh
is loaded with impurities, accumulated | 1
duriuar the winter months from close ; ' u ‘
The need of a good
is almost universal a is
parllia ex-.iet.iy meets t <;
o -.re;.- Hood’s
V Medicine
i ood's Sarsa-
. need. Be
coniinement, rich food, and other
causes. These impurities must be driv- The nmn iageabU
>f woman
;e of the earth.—Alban
iMaudie went into the lot
I To find a four-leaved clover
I very soon she saw a fence
Which she was flying' over,
u.l m t faint, but said in tones
b*ii were of sadness full:
mv -ine blunder made
ifa blander is a bull.’’
you should do yourself.
Never spend wouey before you
have earned it.
Never buy what you do not
! want because it is cheap.
; Pride costs more than hunger,
I thirst and cold.
j We seldom repent of having
! eaten loo little.
j
Nothing is troublesome that we
In England during the sixteenth
century stealing above the value
of 12 pence, burning a haystack,
killing or stealing sheep, breaking
a dyke or bridge, breaking a bank
or a fish pond, cutting down a
a tree in an orchard and the ma
licious tearing or defacing the
garments of a person in the street
were all capital offenses and were
punished as such.
en from your system or they may breed | j g anywhere between mxteen and
serious disease and cause untold suffer-! .
i death.
ing. Hoods Sarsaparilla is the greatest j
and best blood purifying medicine it is j
possible to obtain. It is what the mil- !
lion take in the spring. It will purify
! K
<J s *
fl JuIiO
rs
Rudy’s Pile suppository
and enrich your blood, create an appe- „ „ „_ ,,
‘ , " ‘ S3 is guaranteeo to
tite, tone up your system, and give you j g Pi]es ar . d Constipation
sound, robust health.
It is no disgrace for a woman to
make a mistake m marrying—
almost every woman does it.
or money
refunded. 50 cents per box. Send
for list of testimonials and Free
Sample to MARTIN RUDY, Reg
istered Pharmacist, Lancaster, Pa.
For sale by leading'druggists, and
in Gainesville, Ga.. bv Dixon & Co.
lain a bachelor.
akes two to make a
W here there’s
■nrrally a won’t.
will
make at least one
>r life. All he has do willingly.
How much pain the evils have
cost us that never happened.
Take things away by the smooth
handle.
A
50
1 fr
f’rovt Zr.P-.J'ourtial of 'Te<i{<yfne
Prof. W. H. Feslre, who
makes a specialty of
Epilepsy, has without
doubt treated and cur
ed more cases than any
living Physician; his
success is astonishing.
We have heard of case3
Of 20 years’ standing
cured by
him. Ha
publishes a
New Orleans, Jan. 12, '97.—Having-
used Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic in mv
family and known of its use for a num
ber of years, I take pleasure in recom
mending it as a valuable household
medicine. Its efficacy as a dressing for
wounds, burn£, etc., is really wonder
ful; preserving the flesh and allowing
When you see a man with his
ears stuffed with cotton, lie either
has tli8 ear-ache or a scolding wife.
Sure Cure I
PLEASANT TO TAKE.
Will Relieve Every Time.
• The successful man always sticks
to one thing until he gets ther* 3 .
So does the postage stamp.
i| INSTANTLY RELIEVES
valuablo ! it to heal without inflammation or sup-
this "d{s- I pupation. It is very popular wherever
hTserds we h known.—J. F. Purser, pastor First
with a ‘ Baptist church, New Orleans, La.
r ure ’ free to any sufferers
^ fueir P. O. and Exuress adrlrpss.
ontr . , . Express address.
L • wishing a cure to address
L - j _fea» c gJLj y fo
;A interesting books “Invent-
* J q, - r ^ ow y°u are swindled.”
sketch, or mocel of your
o-'iinpro, ement and we will!ell
uaniv,?? 1 opinion as to whether it is
i:..t; by- n tol !e. We make a speciali y
bT V iS rejected in other hands.
I 10 J rences furnished.
furnished.
‘^TfcOUdWms & EXPSRTS
t^chnio 3 I W in ? ers ’ Graduates of the
In the royal family of England
the order of precedence among men
isthus:The sovereign, the prince
of Wales, the other sons of the
sovereign in the order of their age,
the sovereign’s grandsons, the
brothers or sisters of the sover
eign, the sovereign’s uncle, and
finally, the sons of the brothers or
sisters of the sovereign.
Georgia Railroad
I
-AND-
CONNECTIONS.
For information as to Routes,
Schedules and Rates, both
INFANTILE COUGH,
COLD, CROUP OR CRAIVSP.
«
Passenger and Freight } j
write to either of the undersigned.
You will receive prompt reply
and reliable information.
-un-f-vn.,, , Water Works Assoc.
'•»tch;V,S“' on ' <»■>.
;1 Engineers.
° Ff 'iCE8 • \ Washington, D. C.
( iVlpNTREAT,, Can.
Letart Falls, Ohio, Aug. 29, 1896.—
We have used Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic
with good results. Our customers come
back for it and speak well of it. One
said it is was the only thing he bed
found to give his wife relief from neu
ralgia.—Allen & Allen.
A. G. Jackson, Gen. Pass. Agt
)
Joe W. White, Trav. Pass. Agt
Augusta, Georgia.
S. W. Wilkes, C. F. & P. A.,
Atlanta.
H. K. Nicholson, G. A., Athens.
W. W. Hardwick, S, A., Macon.
S. E, Magill, C. F. A., Macon.
M. R. Hudson, S. F. A., Milledge
ville.
F. W. Coffin, S. F. & P. A.,
Augusta.
The Father’s Patience,
The Mother’s Happiness,
Th«3 Baby’s Health.
Every Bottle Guaranteed to Benefit.