The constitution. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1884-1885, October 07, 1884, Image 3

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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION - . ATLANTA. GA.. TUESDAY OCTOBER 7 1884. 3 In presenting this Him pi ??? Vegetable Remo*' dy to the public. ? V,.* proprietor ean add noth ing to what hin- been said heretofore, which to ??Very thinking mind should show conclusively the efficacy of thi?? p.*jiulur preparation. It is ??nly necessary t<> urg< upon all the im{>ortanco Of attending to u ti.'igh Without delay, by the timely use of T lylor???s Cherokee Remedy of BwectGum ami Mullein. Hundreds of ieu* r> have been written the proprietor by some ot the most promiuent and best educated nu n in the country, extracts from a few of which will be given. The Rev. A. T. Spalding, an eminent Bap tist divine, writing from Galveston, Texas, ??ays: ???Exprech mo two bottles Sweet Gum and Mullein???ii is tor a neighbor. It is a preparation I know irom experience to be ???- Hon. Jobu C Key,-of Jasper county, Ga., adds: "It is the l??.*jt preparation I have ever 'y used, and the lir??t that ban given me any re- >,fh lief. I recommend it cheerfully to all suffer- \ ing with couglif and colds.??? "A Dr. I. A. Cider, i he physician in charge of United States pris >ncr-i for the northern dis trict of Georgoi. >u\u: ???I lit.-.a been using it in both niy generaf practice and among'pris oners. It is uncut tin; linest preparations I lave ever um iI fir tho.*** suffering with lung and bronchia] troubl.*.?????? ProlessorJ. F. Hammond, of the Eclectic Medical college, o Atlanta. Gu., testifying to the wonderful j*>uer??* of Taylor's Cnerkoee Remedy of nw.-ct Gum and Mullein as a remedy tor chronic coughs, says: ???Thcro is nothing more dangerous than a neglected cough. Ah a preventive remedy, as well as a curative agent, I recommend your preparation.??? Ur. J. M. Boring, the well-known physician of Fulton county, having charge of the county nick, although never given to indorsing patent medicines, says: ??? f do not look upon it in that light. I haw tried it ro ".'ten in croup, coughs, colds and whooping-cough, that I cheerfully give my indorsement and recom mend Taylor???s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein to be what you .state.??? i Mr. J. B. 8wHUtou, Decatur, Ga., stnrs: "I Would not be without your remedy or Sweet Gum and Mullein. Those who mo it accord ing to directions will certainly find relief. I Rave had in my family not only four cases of Whooping-cough, but ninny instances of croup nnd colds, and elw.{y?? obtained instant relief py the use of the Cherokee Remedy.??? Mr. Joseph Jacob*, a leading druggist at Atlanta, Ga., writes: "Mrs. M. Myers, of Rlberton, Gu., the wife of n prominent mer chant there, wiih m my store this morning, and among other article* bought one-half dozen of your Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein. She. remarked that tllroo ??? mouths ago sht- hud u terrible cough; tried each and every physician in Elbcrtou, one or two in Augusta, mentioning them byname. They made a sigual failure in every instance. She became alarmed, thought consumption inevitable; tried ail the articles ou the murkot . known as expectorants, cun-*, etc. Finally a ???wjs*%--.jifricnd sent her h bottlo of the Cherokee ???Remedy. She tiled it, nail beforo tho bottlo was finished she had experienced more relief than all the physicians and the other medi cines comjiim d uHorded. She is uow well, but keeps it in her house.??? I have her permission to use this. IVlint Prominent i>ruggi??tM Say of the Sale of the Cherokee It??iuedy of Sweet Gum nnd AXulloin, E. G. Fowler, Montgomery, Ala.???Sell more of it, with better satisfaction to customers, than all other cough medicines combined. T. F. Fleming. Augusta, Oa.???When I first heard of your Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein I thought 1 would order a dozen. In less than a week 1 ordered a gross, and in less than seven weeks, as your books will show, hud ordered seveu gross. I only mentioned this fact to show you how it ???ells in this city. As a cough remedy I have ??ever seen its equal. One bottle sold makos a customer for it. Joe Jacobs, Atlanfa, Ga.???It has the largest run of them all. When once I have sold a bottle a family will never be without it. Osceola Butler, Savnuimli, Ga.???It has the lead in this section. Additional certificates could be added from many other prominent physicians and well known citizens in various parts of the state, and from residents of other states, who have used Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein in their families with great suc cess, but the foregoing are sufficiently con vincing. Tho proprietor does not claim that his preparation is a patent medicine, or that it needs to be presented to tho public witty a great array of certificates. If ncy person doubts its efficacy, or hesitates to use it, let him consult his family physician and be guided by the ad vice given. Any physician writing to the pro prietor in such s case can be informed of the component parts of the preparation, and as sured of its geuui nenets and efficacious quali ties. All communications from any source will lie promptly answered if addressed to the proprietor, WALTER A. TAYLOR, Atlanta, Ga. DK. DIGGERS???S SOUTHERN REMEDY, The Great Specific for llowel Complaints and ???Seething Children, "Old Dr. Bigger*," says ex-Chicf Justice O. A. Lochrane, of Georgia, now general attorney of the Pullman Sleeping Car company, witn headquarters at Chicago, ???could leave no ??? greater legacy than his Southern Remedy,??? p the use of which in his own family he has nnd it the moat pleasant medicine for chil- ??to take, and tho most- satisfactory to cure ~ ever met; and in'a letter to the old h "1 have used it now for several Iver allow rny-family to be with- f it on hand, aud its immediate use f trouble and danger. I have *1**7* ??? at if you had no other claim to public _fidenee than this specific for the child teething, or suffering from dysentery or diarrhoea, that alone should give it to you, and both fame and fortune added. If you would only sufficiently advertise it to let the world know its healing power and benefits.??? The proprietor having for a long time realized the merits of this preparation, based not only upon the opionion of eminent men and leading physicians, who are prescribing it In their practice, but upon his own, in the use of it in his own family, and to those to whom he has sold it while engaged in his Jarge retail drug business (which he bss re cently disposed of for the purpose of bringing the two great remedies he now controls before the world), has induced the doctor by a very flattering offer to dispose of bis right to manu facture and sell this great remedy; consenting not altogether from the fact of the large sum he receives for it, but recognizing that his old ???ge and bb office as president of the Eclectic Medical college of Georgia, and professor of the diseases of women and children, in the Itme institution, prevents his giving his atten tion to the preparation. Can Consumption be Cured? Being the recipient of so many letters from every section of the country, from patients who have been so much benefited and cured, by tho use of Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein, asking the proprietor if he thought consumption could be cured, to save time and give a thorough opinion upon the subject, all letters in future will be answered through this medium; but at any time, should somo special case need further advice, our reg ular physician who is connected with tho Lab oratory, will give all letters of inquiry special attensiou. WALTER A. TAYLOR, 17 N. Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga. CONSUMPTION IN ITS EARLY STAGE.S To a very largO???txtcht consumption is a her editary disease, cither as directly propagated in its gerin or taistt, or as engrafted on a con stitution too feeble to resist attacks from with-' out. It is not a local disease, like yellow fe ver, nor an occasional one, like cholera; nor is it confinwl to a certain period of life. Its deadly work is goiue on always artd every where, from infancy to old age. Few others compare with it in fatality. It may mock its victims with hope to the last, but its grasp, once fully fixed, is, in the majority of eases, relaxed only in death. Shall we then give up to it in despair? By no means. It is an established fact that it can bo cured in its earlier stage. Postmort ems reveal multitudes of healed and scared lungs???probably self-cured-iu persons who have died of other diseases, and medical his tory records many similar cures, tho result of well directed treatment. Tho condition out of which consumption is developed is always one of feebleness. Our only hope is in pbysicul invigoration. Boys a distinguished British authority: "If we ask what treatment is attended by tho best results, the experience both of tho past aud the present will, I think, unhesitatingly reply that which bns for its object tho improvement by overy means possible of the general health. The most important indication in tho treat ment of this disease lius been in tho past, and probably will bo in the future, to endeavor, by means of good hygiene, good fc*o*l and suitable remedies, to promote and maiutain, as far as possible, that normal performance of tho di gestive and nssimulative processes which is es sential to healthy nutrition.??? The mullein plant of the old field contains a mucilaginous healing principle, which tho Cherokee ludinns know of niauy years ago; re cently Dr. Ouillan, the lending tnodical author ity of Great Britain, on lung troubles, has made some experiments with the most aston ishing results on consumptive patients; and cites cases where he had given Cod Liver Oil with but little effect; when upon tho use o mullein the patient rapidly improved, both in health ami flesh, making an ultimate cure. Simultaneous with the above article of Dr. Quillan, written in one of the leading medical journals of Great Britain, appeared another paper from a leading Philadelphia physician in an American journal, upon sweet gum, rep resenting it to be by actual experiment, ono of tho very finest expectorating stimulants. Tho proprietor feels flattered that the lead ing authority of both sides of tho continent are Indorsing the rcnibdics that compose his mod- cine, and is gratified to know that he was tho first to herald to the afflicted world the glad ti dings; which is being considered tho best remedies yet discovered for consumption. The stimulating expectorant principle in tho sweet gum rolieves the fatigue of tho early morning cough and promotes expectoration. It is also known to bo ono of the finest remedies for in digestion, even used as ???chewing gum??? after eating, it relieves any symptom of dyspepsia. It has of course a much hotter effect when ta ken in the shape of u liquid; recognizing there fore, the necessity of good digestion in lung troubles, this must commend itself to all suf fering. Tho. mucilaginous healing principle in the mullein acts not only as an emoliont to tho lungs, with its healing power on same, but we bavo it from the leadiug authority in this country that it is more fattening than the nau seous Cod Liver Oil. With the above facts, it can bo truth fully said that when taken in time and proper precaution observed, consumption can be cured. And in reply to tho distinguished medical authority referred to above, state that the ???suitablo remedy??? has been found, when tho discovery of Taylor???s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein was presented. The requisites to this end, are; first, the taking in time of Tsylor???s Cherokee Remedy of Swcot Gum and Mullein; rest from one's usual occu pation; change of any nature; out-door exer cise and a nutritious diet as suggested above ; the special aim of the drugs to be administer ed should be to invigorate the digestive or gans. I would also suggest to those consump tive patients, weak from loss of flesh, to take in connection with my preparation of Sweet Gum and Mullein a tea, made by boiling a handful of fresh mullein leaves in a pint of rich sweet milk tor five minutes, and drink freely during the day. Under this treatment I think you will find great benefit to the dis eased lungs, thereby experience a permanent Neglected Coughs and Colds. Children Cutting Teeth, Cramp Colic, Diarrhea and Dysentery are apt to visit every household, in this country, and it is from this fact we advise sli to follow the example of the eminent Judge Lochrane, who states that ???he never allows bis family to be without Dr. Diggers* Southern Remedy, and its immediate use saves all trouble and dan ger.??? Tho Poor Wearied Mother loosing sleep night after night anxiously watching and nursing the little darling so slowly and pitifully wasting away by the drainage upon its system from the effects of teething, should be advised by her friendsto procure a bottle of Dr. Bfegers??? Southern Rem edy, and by administering but a few doses, relieye the child and restore its health. Many testimonials can be procured of its cure in such cases. BuHlnesa Men wearied from the labor of the day on going home, find that they cannot have the desired end necessary rest, for the little darling is still suffering with that bowel trouble, which keeps him awake. If they would only think to use Dr. Biggers* Southern Remedy, loss of sleep and bowel complaints would be unknown in that household. # Dr. BiKKera??? Southern Remedy will speedily cure all Bawel Affections, such as Cholera Morbus, Cramp Colic, Diarrea and Dysentery. For.sale by all druggists at M cents per bottle. None genuine witbont the signature of 8. T. RIGGERS, and countersigned by the signature of WALTER A. TAYLOR. Consumption, as tho word denotes, means being consumed, wasting away???a decay of the vital forces. It is a disease of the lungs arising from tho formation of tubercular mat ter in tbo structure, an inflammation of such an extent as to cause decay and sloughing away of the diseased parts. In pulmonary consumption, especially when the disoasojis hereditary, the lungs are naturally weak and subject to irritation aud affected from a very slight cause. When there is no hereditary taint a neglected cold, exposure, etc., are the causes that produce it. Asthma, laryngitis and bronchitis, if allowed to go unchecked, pro duce it. Consumption in its second or third stages in the sloughing state, will rarely suc cumb to the effect of medicino and suffering can only be allayed by a stiumlating expector ant and a soothing demulcent, bub it should be remembered that the first stsgo of the dis ease is always most amenable to a treatment. This fact should induce persons to resort to the uso of ???Taylor???s Cherokee Remedy o Sweet Gum and Mullein??? when tho cough is first noticed, whether it has a consumptive diathesis for its cause or not, for this romody cures all kinds of coughs with unequalled facility aud promptness. Iu tho treatment of coughs from a simple cold, two or three doses of the medicino have been found to removo the trouble. So in all diseases of tho throat and lungs, with the symptoms simulating those of consumption, ???Taylor???s Cherokoo Remedy of Sweet Gum'and Mullein??? is the only infallible remady. If you have a Cough, attend to it in time, do not neglect it, for it mas become serious and end in Consumption. If you want to save ytursclfa great deal of suffering, much valu able time, and endloss amount of expense, and, abovo all, if you want to savo your health, euro your cough by using ???Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mul- lien.??? It will cure coughs, colds, hoarseness, chronic Catarrh, sore throat, croup, bronchi tis, asthma, whoopiug cough, and all dis uses of tbo throat and lungs. IIow many persons, old and young, who suffer from "pain in tho breast,??? ???a sore throat,??? or a ???slight cough??? aro aware of tho importance of attending to the complaint in its first stages. They livo on from day to day, regarding the trouble as of little or no consequonee, and without reflecting for a moment on tho fatal termination of such diseases if neglected at the commencement. All thoso who havo boon neglecting a cough, or cold, or boon tamper ing with cither by using somo quack prepara tion, should procure at once a botUe of tho above named medicine. It is now rceoinmon- ded by some of the most eminent physicians in tho country, and by thousands of porsons who have used it and obtained a cure when everything else had failed to give relief. BEWARE or CooxTEErziTS,???The dishonesty of certain parties who manufacture and rep resent medicines to the public as the same or similar fo the above preparation, has induced the proprietors to caution all porsons against such misrepresentations. Ask for tho genuine article and tako nothing elso from any druggist. Nono genuine without tho signature of ???Wal ter A. Taylor??? on the outside wrapper of each bottle. Trice, trial size, 25 cents. Largo bot tles, $1. Sold by all leading druggists. COSTS An Astonishing Result. A Well-Known Physician, One outlie Facul ty In the Lending Medical Colleges of the South, Prescribes ???Taylor 1 * Cherokee llemcdy ofMweetGum nnd Mullein,???* Af ter all Other Agencies had Failed, with the Kenmrknble Result the Accoiupnu- ing Letter Shows* The Perfumed Itallroom. The Atlanta Constitution, speaking of the Mystic Owls??? display, adds: The perfumed ballroom was one of the novel and graceful features of this great event. As the guests entered the opera house they were greeted with the roost delicious odors, as from a freshly blooming bed of a thousand flowers. The air was laden with the soft, sweet perfume that seemed to be the very breath of the gpd* dess of pleasure and a wooing to the gaities of the occasion. A fountain, neatly placed, was playing all the evening the cologne which gave forth tho perfume, and the practiced senses of the ladies at once detected what it was. We need hardly say that the fountain 35r. Waite, a. Taylor???My Dear 8lr: I feel it my duty, not only in justice to tho gratitude which I owe to your ???Cherokeo Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein??? for tho seoming miraculous euro of my wife???but those whom it may be aro now suffering and may por- chancoread my letter (which you stato is to be published) and thereby receive tho bonofit of my experience and still more of tho won derful properties of this great Bronchial Pana cea, to submit this letter. In the early part of tho winter my wifo was taken with what at first seemed but a severo cold, which rapidly grew worse and worso, not succumbing in tho least to tho treatmont proscribed by my fami ly physician, until pneumonia was imminont ???and, as what the doctor seemed a last re sort, he instructed me to try your ???Cherokee Remedy of Sweot Gum nnd Mullein,??? stating, by way of explanation, that ho did not look upon it as ono of the quack nostrums, but knowing through you of its componont parts ho felt at liberty to proscribe it. I bought one bottle. Administering tho first doso ray wife, as if by magic, experienced roliof and fell Into a quiet rest tor (he first timo in ssvor- al nights. From that moment sho rallied and was entirely restored by the use of loss than half tho bottlo. Should any ono doubt or feel incredulous in regard to this lottor I should bo pleased to communicate with any who are afflicted or desire further testimony on the subject. Very gratefully yours, # GEO. W. KNOWLES, 17 Haynes street, Atlanta, Ga. CROUP AND WHOOPING-COUGH Taylor's Cherokoo llemotly of Sweot Gum ur.<l Mullein???Why lSvory Family Should a Dottlo^on Hand. and the two atomisers were dispensing to the atmosphere the odor of ???Taylor???s Premium Cologne,??? an article of southern manufacture that has promptly won its way into wide spread popularity. This Cologne Is of the finest quality, lasting and delicious, and an esteemed article on the toilet table of all who have used it. The quick and delicate sense of the ???Mystic (tala??? at once discovered its merits, and they bad no happier conceit to offer their guests than these fountain jete of delightful perfume. The fair dancers who found so grateful a refreshment last evening will please themselves and honor their enter tainers by keeping up the sensation through out the twelve months by means of this de lightful agent. tavloe???s pbemicm coloovb is highly refreshing, fragrant and lasting, made from the distilled product of native flowers. It possesses none of that cloying sweetness which characterizes so many per fumes, which, though gratifying at first, be comes what is called sickly after the exposure to the oxidising influence of the air. The odors are so exquisitely blended that it presents a fragrant bouquet where np one odor predominates. For sale by all druggists and fhney goods dealers throughout tho country. An old lady, well known in Atlanta, callod on tho proprietor^!th tho request that ho changotbo name of this medicine to ???Taylor???a Croup and Whooping-Cough Medicino.??? Sho asked him to do this from, tho fact that It would more strongly impress tho minds of ni mothers, as she wanted them to know what n valuable medicine ???Taylor???s Cherokee Remo* dy of Sweet Gum and Mullein??? was for these complaints. Sho told him, at tho same time, how a bottle had kept her daughter???s children from an attack of the croup, at that limp over two months sinco thoy had it, wh'da they had been subject beforo to having it once or twice a week; and bow, in another instance, it had relieved her son???s child from tho very worst case of whooping cough. These facta should attract the attention of all parents to such an extent as to Impress upon them to go at once and buy a bottle of this simple remedy, and by its ready uso In the family save frequont doctors??? bills and probably the life of a dear child. This WORD OF WARNING AND SUG GESTION to Uio parents should be sufficient Mr. T. N. Foster, of .DeKalb county, Ga., ???ays he has five children who were suffering from an alarming attack of whooping congh, their throats and necks being swollen,, theso eyes very much inflamed, and their suffering Indeed great. He purchased a bottlo of ???Tay lor???s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullein,??? and to this modicino he believed they owe their lives, for which he expresteis great gratitude. SubtAoecs thnt Ktlll Live Hwest. From the Near Orleans Democrat. ???It was the delight of kings. Baths of ottar of rosea were daily attendants upon their ???trained and exhaustive wishes. It was the dying wish of Cleopatra that tho fragrance of her lovely Nile should waft her spirit heaven ward, aud Anthony???s bloody corpse was bath ed with the distillation of Egypt???s choicest ptrftimee. Ah I but this cold, hard developed century has but little thought for the delic ious atmospheres of Arabia,??? your reporter replied to the enthusiasm of the manufacturer of Taylor???s Premium Cologne, as wa approach ed the already famous laboratory of thU gen tleman. ???On the contrary it Is an age of aestheticism, and one of the sayings, attributed to lihe ad vent of this divine afflatus is particularly ap plicable to his Premium Cologne, namely; It fa too utterly utter to be described. It is tba distilled product of native flowers, and from Die secret of Its compound the afekish sensa tion which characterises so many???yes, al most every class and quality of perfume???is entirely dispelled.??? The exhibit of Mr. Taylor In the art and industrial building, from its general character of excellence, is attracting from visitors a lit tle more attention than other displays are commanding. A magnificent fountain of cologne???Taylor???sPremiura???disports its jetty ???prays for the delectation of all possessing handkerchiefs. The csss Is twenty feet high, or octagon shape, and is most tastefully arrayed with various sized packages of his famous cologne, from which is sold by the lovely ladies in charge hundreds of bottles daily. Most agreeable of all colognes for the bath, When wo con sider tho health better tbanwoalthl then must wo consldortho (fid field mul lein betterthan gold???atloast the medio a* world so recog nize it, and at tests Its merits over cod liver oil for lung troubles. Mado In a tea and Combined with tweet gum it { presenta In Shylor???s Cher okee Remedy THE SWEET. GUM THEE l What child throughout our section o! coun try (loo. not know tbo Sweot J Gum Troo, bord ering .warn p4 or growing along ???Ido o( aprlng branchoi,where In tho hot nui' aor month, with an old caio knlfo, wo havo gonoout and gathorod It to ???chow, to tho dis comfort ot onr tooth and Un- vexation ol our , mothers f Tho National DItponiatory, apcaklng botanic al!, ol tho Bwset Gum,defines It a. "abalaamio exudation from llqnldsmbor styraclflua," being ???a largo handaomo treo of North;America, growing from Oonnootlcut and Illlnola south- ward and woatward to Moxlco.*- In Ita'aouth- tvard loonl ion, tho treo Jidda a balaamlo exuda tion from Inclaalone In tho bark."- Ol ila med ical action and una. It eaye: "Ila action la that oi an aromatio main, operating partloblarly Open tho rcaplrat'and urinary mucous mom- bera." It la em-toyed In tbo treatment of ebronto profluvta ot these tperts, (f. o. the mu- eotu membrane of these parts), auob as Bron chilis, Cystitis, Phthisis, cot. Kxtornallylt has been uaed ae an ointment for tho troatmout of froat-blto, Indolent uloore,burn* and other In flamed surfaces.??? Tho abovo work le tbo high est medical authority, and when we eee what thte book aaya of thowondorful healing power of aweet gum ovorlnflamod aurfacoa, It la but Batura! that. Taybr's Cherokee Romany of Swec., Gum and Mullein tfionldhavogalnodauoh wldeaproadcoufldonoo tvith the medical fraternity, who do not look Upon it aa a patent m.dlclno, hut alrnply os a temedy Indicating It. Ingredients by a plain ODd familiar name* k - Not*.???Id connection with tho abovo, woulu My that In South America where the Tolu Gnu Tree flourishes, many thousand doflars aro made annually In collecting tho gum. Tho Sweet Gnu Treo la Just ae abundant here In our own coun try, and the gum can ho collootod without any trouble, >neply by making aovoral incision, i??? (ho troo during tho hot rummer months and gathering It oa It flow! each day, Tho proprie tor o! Taylor???l ClMokce Remedy wliipSjBtkSMglpitoeforalllioceugei. Via* not summer's distillations left A liquid prisoner, pent In walls ol glass, Beauty???s effect ol beauty were bereft, Nor II, nor no remembtance what It was; But flowers distilled, though with winter meet, flees, hut their show, their eubitance atlll Urea aweet." Among the numerous gratifications derired from the cultivation of flowero, that of rearing them for the sake of their perfumes Hands pre eminent. And when It la coruldcred that Tay- lot???s Premium Cologno la mado from thedlatllled prodnet of native flowers, and that the rapid ad vancement It baa made above alt others, Ameri cana should feel proud of It and tha south boast over It; lor at every atale and Interstate fair where It has been exhibited, It has received the medal over ell others, until now competltora ere afraid to exhibit egainat It. This Cologne la highly fragrant and very refreshing, agreeable ???like to the Invalid and the healthy, and hae none of that cloying aweetneea which characters (. ao many perfumes. Wben one consider* the highly refreshing character ot this Cologne, and In how many instances Its use in the sick-room would add U> the comfort of the Invalid, and Its pleaaantnem refresh every one, it Is evident that no family ahooldb. without It. For salabyall druggist* and fancy goods dealers. Price glc. 60c., and HX0. It Is manufactured solely by the proprietor. THETMULLEIN PLANT. > - ' Whllo tho Sweat Gum Troo on* gaged (he attou- tion o! tho younger ones o( the family, tho' Mullein Plant roj cclved tho atten tion of tho adult inemborSe Who docs not remem ber tho mulloliS teas ol a fond grand moth ori mado undor tho direction of th?? trusted lam 117 physician, who _ modltforohron- lo coughs and colds, and recommended tha smoking ol dried leaves for tho relief of Asthma and Catarrh. In tho lat few years Mullein, it blonnlal plant growing In our old fields arul flourishing from Juno to August, has been at tracting tho altontlou of iho medical world.' Medical journals In this country and Europo have made noto of its voluo In cases of Con sumption, cbpoclally In cases whoro there waa heavy expectoration, with hcctlo fever, and if?? most extraordinary effect in relieving Croup and Whooping-Cough. There has been consid erable conjecture vhero tho mullein plant cam?? from, but tills la of hut littlo use as long aa wo havo In the seemingly long-forsaken plant such a s ,valuable romody; and presents t ??.l another instance, allowing that whllo liaturo ha* boon sparing in giving us an abundanco of ht r valu able minerals, sho has by au Allwiso prtvislo?? boon gonerous In tho prolific distribution t f such vegetation sho has given for mediciu), rud science, in Its eager search for tho ran. ones,? as overlook, - this fact, and though tho < act k ??? Indians know that In tho common xnullclr pi: .i and tho beautiful swootgum troo that bora* rt our swamps 4 \or* was In each a principle of thu very hlghoil medical virtue, wo have been lat too slow to reen iil/.n what nature Int.nuod hIiouI-' ?o tho panaeca for lung and bronchial troubles. In Taylor???a Chorokoo Romody of Sweet Gum and Mullein tho mullofn tea is combined with tho sweat gum, and the proprietor feels no hesitancy is asserting that in presenting his preparation h( offers tho finest known propara' for Cough?? and Colds. Ho has a number o* wiidorscmenl?? from loading physicians, prominent divines^ emlnont Jurists and publlo ipcaxcrawhorecom- mond it as tho best remedy for the Complaint known aa Minister s sort throat. * Tnjlnr's I???remlnni Cologne. Sweet CliemUtry, Uiy subtle powers Import new life to fleeting flowers; A slinplo jor of fragrant light??? And yet, rocthliiks, there ne???er was sight More wonderful than this, where wo Have Edeii In epitome. Iieliold, condensed In one blight drop, Ten thouwnd roses' precious crop; Gaze through the glass till It expands And broadens ont in sunny lands. No longer nows crystal tomb, With flowerets gay 'tls all abloom??? Floridian forests gave their sharo Of perfume to the dazzled air. Tho wealth of Georgia's blossomed land flhe showered with a generous hand: Odors from hills and sea are ono In Tavloe???s Rhenium Coloone. Little thinks Beauty when her brow 8he moistens o???er with fragrance, now, Could all these martyred flowers resumo By magic weird, their wonted bloom, Hhe scarce would need another dress Than their recovered loveliness. No fay by moonlight could declare A tele of fancy half so rare, As told in language eloquent By this delicious jar of scent. Cologne, fair city of the Rhine, * Thy name alone with laurel twine; Yield now thy sceptre and thy throne, ToTAVLoa's Psemium Cologne. The Price of Hweetgum. As I am In receipt of so many letters asking the price I pay for the sweetgum, and directions for gntlit rlngand shipping It, I taks this medium for replying to them. The manner by which the guns fthould he gathered Is durinv tho latter part of May; takes sharp hatchet and chip oil largo pieces of (no bsrk on the trre and let at md until tho hot ??i slher r??UM* the sum lo exude, as you havo soon rosin on the pine tree. Then take a case knife and scrape it off as fist as It ratters In sufficient qu ui- tlty to do m??; yon ran then put It In any kind of receptacle for ehlpment. The price varies accord- log to the manner in which yon have exercised In rolirrtfnjr K, serordlnr to the amount of traih you have etlowrd to get In with It; yon will bar o to ecMl me n sampi<??? nihI I will examine It aua will you st once whst It is worth. Hewn re of Counterfeit*. The df??honesty of certsin parties whomanu- factnre and represent machines t> the public a* the wire or similar lo the above preparations, has Induced the proprietor to csutlon all persons sgaiuit rurh ppn+enUlloo*. Do not let them d<(live you ly saying that thetr tincture of sweet gnm or the syrnp of sweet gum or their pine top end mullein Isas good. Ask for the genuine a-tlde and Uke nothing eh3 fpm any druggist, none genuine without the signature o?? tt slier A. Tay lor, on the outside wrapi>cn ol A*ch bottle, and Uie name Taylor???s Cherokee Rime ly F.wcct Gum and Mullein blown in e tch bottle 25 cento and I1C0 per bottle. Bold by all druggUto. {indistinct Print