Newspaper Page Text
pOISONjTHEflSHES
whftt the Mt. Lebanon Shakers
found—I noidcnt in t,H> His '
lory of a Quiet community.
T jj e Mount Lebanon (New
York) Shakers are a quiet eom-
munitv, secluded from the fret
and worry of the outside world.
They are widely known, how-
ever, for their strict honor and
probity in business.
* The Shakers believe that na
ture has a remedy for every dis
ease. A few have been found—
the rest are as yet unknown.
Many were discovered by acci
dent Others came to light as
the result of patient experiment
and research.
r, Nervous Dyspepsia is a com
paratively nev' disease, growing
out of the conditions of modern
life. It' s a joint affection of
the digestive organs and of the
nervous system, lliese two
were formerly treated as sepa
rate ailments, and it was left
for the clear-sighted Shakers
to prove that the basis of this
terrible and often fatal compli
cation lies chiefly in the disord
ered and depraved functions of
digestion and nutrition. They
reasoned thus:—“If we can in
duce the stcma'di to do its
work, and stimulate the excre
tive organs to drive out of the
"body the poisonous waste mat
ters whii'h remain after the life-
giving el siients of the food
have been absorbed, we shall
have conquered Nervous Dys
pepsia and Nervous Exhaust
ion. And they were right.
Knowing the infallible power
of Shaker Extract (Seigel’s
Syrup) in less complicated
though s i m i 1 a r diseases,
they resolved to test it fully
in this. T<> leave no ground
for doubt ilmy prescribed the
remedy in hundreds of cases
which had ' _ n pronounced in-
curabh — .\iili poi'f'ct. success
in every in.-ianee whore their
dvretuoiis as to living and diet
were scrupulously fallowed.
Kcnviis Dyspep.la and Ex-
ham: m is a peculiarly Ameri
can disease. To a greater or
less extent half the people of
this country suffer from it—
botli -xes and all ages. In no
country in the world are there
so many insane asylums tilled
to overflowing, all resulting
from this alarming disease. Its
leadiru'
symptoms are these:
Frequent or continual head
ache; a dull pain at the base
of the brain; bad breath; nau
seous eructations; the rising
of sour and pungent fluids to
the throat; a sense of oppress
ion and faintness at the pit of
the stum licit; flatulence; wake-
fulness and Ass of. sleep; dis
gust with food even when
weak from the need of it; sticky
or slu;,y- matter on the teeth or
m the moiulq .especially on ris-
lu gm tlm n'Kuv.iim: furred and
coated um-iie; dull eyes; cold
hands aui f,■ t; constipation;
dry or rougli skin ; inability to
. the mind. on any labor call-
ln g for continuous attention;
f nt joppressive and sad fore-
101 hugs and fears.
^ Ad this terrible group
^ inker Extract (Seigel’s
yrup) removes by its pos-
ll ' e > powerful, direct yet
painless and gentle action upon
e functions of digestion and
assimilation. Those elements
j the food that build up and
ren »then the system are sent
P°n their mission, while all
v aste matters (the ashes of life's
JJ'vhieh unremoved, poison
1 kill, are expelled from the
oi > through the bowels, kid-
) 5 and skin. The weak and
Prostrated nerves are quieted,
bln *1 an ^ h y the purified
As . the re sult, health,
u its enjoyments, blessings
and power returns to the suf-
fiv '' v ’u° had, perhaps, aband-
ne d all Loite of ever
n other well day.
sqemg
Over 115 Years Old.
From tlm Iowa State Register.
,, f o ®°uversation with Mr. J. M
Griffith, of this city, yesterday, lie
gave tlie following account of an old
lady, probably the oldest in the state,
'*ii about two miles east of
Adel, in Dallas county: “Mot long
since 1 saw an Item in the Register
regarding old people and old settlers
i. V? C0l »nty, ana it reminded me of
old Mrs. Belotte, now living near
Adel, in Dallas county. Her exact
age Is not known but the family have
™ es an d facts that make her over
115 years old, though just bow much
over is not known. She says she can
r ® uie, uber seeing Washington
when he passed through her native
i Wn ’ Fharleston, South Carolina,
when he was going to be inaugurated
for the first time. She says that her
nT? wu old enough, to hurrah
lor Washington, and that would make
her about twenty-five years of age at
u*?i " ,ue ' There seems to be some
little coufusion as to her exact age,
but there can be no doubt as to her
being very old, and probably the old
est person living in the State. She
came to Iowa with her son-in-law,
Mr. John Miller, in 1842 settling first
near Carlisle, in this county. The
following year they moved into Dal
las county whore they still live. Mr.
Miller was the first white man to set
tle in Dallas county, and they have
lived to see the most wonderful
changes that have ever come to any
county in the same number of years.'’
CONSUMPTION.
Important to the Public as well as
the Medical Profession.
Hall’s Journal of Health, referring
to Consumption, makes the following
important statement:
“Consumption usually begins with
a slight, dry cough in the morning,
then on going to bed, getting more
and more frequent, with more and
more phlegm, [increasing debility,
thinness of llesli, shortness of breath,
and quickness of pulse. In fatal
cases its average course is about two
years; hence tlie importance of arrest
ing the disease at as early a stage as
possible, and the sooner rational
means are employed for this purpose
tlie greater the chance of success.
The disease is owing to an irritation
commencing in the throat and extend
ing to the lungs, so that their action
is interfered with, and the blood does
not receive sufficient oxygen to purify
it. The moBt marked sign of lung
disease is emaciation; and the most
positive indication of returning health
is increase in weight.”
So speaks Hall’s Journal of Health,
and we may add that in desperate
cases, and, in fact, in all cases of Con
sumption, or troubles of the throat
and lungs, immediate relief may be
obtained and a permanent cure effect
ed by the use of Dr. Win. Hall’s Bal
sam for the Lungs, a medicine known
for more than thirty-live years as an
unfailing remedy for coughs, colds,
bronchitis and all pulmonary and
pectoral diseases. That the worst
cases of Consumption have been cur
ed by the use of Hall’s Balsam has
been attested to by thousands who
have used it, or have been cognizant
of its wonderful remedial efficacy
For sale by all Druggists.
AltVICli TO MOTIIEKS.
Arc you disturbed at night and broken of j our
rest by a sick child suffering and crying with
pain of cutting teeth? If so, send at once mid
get a bottle of MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTHING
SYRUP TOR CHILDREN TEETHING. Its value
is incalculable. It will relieve the poor little suf
ferer Immediately. Depend upon it, mothers,
there is no mistake about It. It cures dysentery
and diarrhoea, regulates tlie stomach and bow-
els, cures wind colic, softens the gums, reduces
inflammation, and gives tone and energy to the
whole system. MRS. WINSLOW’S SOOTHING
SYRUP FOR CHILDREN TEETHING Is pleasant
to the taste, and is the prescription of one of the
oldest and best female nurses and physicians In
the United States and Is for sale by all druggists
throughout the world. Price 25 cents a bottle.
January 4th, 1887, 20 ly
Testing Kerosene Oil.
Manufacturers of kerosene oil say
that all lamps are safe with good oil,
and that the quality of oil can bo as
certained by the following test: Take
a pint tin cup, fill it nearly full of water
warmed so tpat an ordinary thermom
eter immersed in it will show 120 deg.,
pour a small quantity of oil on the
water, stir it a little, then pass a
lighted match quickly but closely
over the surface of the oil once, if it
ignites, the oil is unsafe. If from
three to five gallons tit a time be pur
chased, and this test be made, peo
ple can protect themselves.—Frank
Leslie’si
If a pers.on fails to have a thermom
eter to get tho water to a heat of 120
deg., let him heat it so th^yt it is quite
warm to the hand but not near so
hot that he can’t bear to keep tho
hand in it. Ed. U-R.
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for
(hits, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped
Hands, Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
Eruptions, and positively cures Piles,
or no pay required. It is guaranteed
to give perfect satisfaction, or money
refunded. Brice 25 cents per box.
FOR SALE BY C. L. CASE.
July 21st, 1885. 2 ly.
Cure Por Piles.
Biles are frequently proceeded by a
sense of weight in tho back, loins and
lower part of the abdomen, causing
tho putient to suppose he lias some
affection of the kidneys or neighbor
ing organs. At times, symptoms of
indigestion are present, riatulency,
uneasiness of the stomach, etc. A
moisture like perspiration, producing
a very disagreeable itching, after get
ting warm, is a common attendant.
Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles
yield at once to the application_ of
Dr. Bosanko’s Pile Remedy, which
acts directly upon the part affected,
absorbing tlie Tumors, allaying tlie
intense itching, and affecting a per
manent cure. Price, 50 cents. Ad
dress Tho Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co.,
Piqua, O. Sold by E. A. Bayne
Druggist, Milledgeville. Ga. 43 3t
Oconee Poultry Yard
DUELDLIIS of high class Poultry.
-LJ Eggs for sale now, chickens in fall.
reeds, Plymouth Rock, Brown and
White Leghorn of the best anil purest
strain. For prices apply to
W. A. COOK,
(Successor to O. G. Wilson.)
Mnroi, i, i m. lhhnaxVlax ’Tm
Miss M. G. LAMPLEY,
CEAYON ARTIST!
Studio in the M. G. M. A A. College.
UFE SIZE CRAYON PORTRAITS
from photographs.
•bTLessons given In Crayon, Oil
painting, Kensington painting on
velvet and satin.
™^ r 9 rde r?, an i 1 P u l >il8 solicited.jr,
Milledgeville, Jan. 4, ’87. 2tt8m
50,000 Shingles Wanted.
A PPLY to
B. BEALL & FERRELL.
Milledgeville, Ua., March 29,1887. 88 Ot
#1MOWN’
PATENTS
Obtained and nil PATENT BUSINESS at
tended to for MODERATE FEES.
Our office is opposite the U. S. Patent
Office, and we can obtain Patents in less
time than those remote from WASHING
TON.
Send MODEL Oil DRAWING. We ad
vise as to patentability free of charge; and
we make NO CHARGE UNLESS PATENT
IS SECURED.
Wo refer, here, to the Postmaster, tho
Supt. of Money Order Dlv,, and to officials
of the U. S. PatentOlfioo. For circular, ad
vice, terms and references to actual clients
in your own State of County, write to
C. A. SNOW & CO.
Opposite Patent Office, Washington, D. C.
Nov. 18th, 1384. 10 tf.
OMMaiif non with mi tnruu
TONICS, 'altklr IK «M*1 «Mr CLUMH
flat miens THl MOOD. OiMw
ttsaatloatfUMUmaailMaaf*. cUlitt.
amytalM.MkM the ikla meets. MSeeiaM
JaJaretketMtk, cease heeiieke, erpreSaeceea*
aUfetloa—ALL OTHU IKON K1DICHH SO.
fhjektom safe Pnmiif ****r>hw immotmiiiI M.
1 Cm. If. 8 Rcooue, of Marloa, Rea*., met""I
Meomamd Brown'. Iron HIM u * nlnoblo torn
for onrtehina the blood, end romovlnc all dnvopUa
■paptuni, ltdoeo not hurt the teeth."
ssag .sus
■ Mb. Wk. BTBWB, MBt. Mery St.. Ifow Orloeni, La.,
•1
>tion on nr faoe-two bottloa of
ittoro .flouted a perfect core. I
lie modiolne."
Brown’* Iron
cannot (peek too hlihlr of thi* valuabl
Genuine h*a above Trade Mark *nd crowed rod liana
on wrapper. Take do other. Mule only by
BKUWN CHEMICAL, CO., BALTIMORE, HA
April 6 1888]
7rr
80 cw. ly
JLl
FRIEND
Buffaloes Twenty Years Ago.
Twenty yeara ago buffaloes swarm
ed in countless thousands over the
whole of tlm great pasture region of
tlie west—from the Haskatcliawan to
southern Texas, and eastward from
the Rocky mountains to the borders
of civilization. Their number was
estimated variously at from 0,000,000
to 10,000,000, and later figure* have
proven that the former was by
no moans above the actual fact.
Within the memory of man or the
limits of history, so far as I know, no
other species of quadruped has ever
existed on the earth in suoh mighty
multitudes as did Bos Atnerioanus
twenty years ago. Often and often
have plainsmen said to me, in speak
ing or former times: “The whole
country was literally black with buf
faloes as far as the eye could see.
Every hill was covered and every hol
low was full.
There were thousands of sqnare
miles of them, and when a big herd
was encountered traveling it seemed
actually interminable. One that I
knew of was five hours in passing a
given point in a solid column, ten to
twenty abreast, on a dead run. Trains
on tlie first railways built across the
plains were sometimes stopped for
hours at a time by thousands of buf
faloes swarming on the track, and
travelers have gone over 120 miles of
territory through an almost unbroken
herd. In all that we have read of
tlie marvelous abundance of wild ani
mals on the plains o! south central
Africa, even the most exaggerated ac
counts full far below what we actual
ly know of tho presence of tho buffalo
in the United States.—William T.
Hornaday in New York Sun.
For Sale—Land.
GEORGIA, Baldwin County. '
U NDER mid by virtue of h Deed with
power of sale, made by Celiu Adams,
o., of said county,.on ihe 13th day of April,
A. D. 1880, to secure a promissory note of
the same date, and p lyablo on the 1st day
of November, lssil. for the principal sum
of thirty dollars, to the undersigned which
said deed tins been duly recorded in the
Clerk’s office of said county, and which
was executed and delivered "by said Celia
Adams, e., under and pursuant to sections
196!), 1970 and 1971, statutes of tlie laws of
Georgia, Code 1882, ns to deeds with pow
er of sale, etc. And by the authority there
in conveyed and given to the payee, I
will .sell on the 14th day of May, 1887, be
fore tlie Court House door in said county,
the following tractor parcel of land, to-
wit: That tract or parcel of land situate,
lying and being in the 321st Dist., G. M„
said state and county aforesaid, adjoining
the lands of Solomon Harris, Ruben
Grantland, Louis Randolph and Isaac
Adams, skill to contain throe (3) acres,
more or less. Said diseribed lands will be
sold to pay tlie principal, interest, costs,
attorney's fres and all costs attending tho
collection of said note by this proceedings
and sale. WILLIAM HARPER,
By his Attorneys, Whitfield & Allen,
41 tds.
AUantiii Glti
Dec. 14,1880.
Att’ys. at Law.
RnrlWhloUe’. Hnls
It.curedi.t l.t.ire wiih
out pain. Hook of par
ticulars Hent 1 ’ ? L, fc 1 '.
b.M.wooi.i M.n.
OlUdO 0614 Wlllic'l.tl) M.
' 23 6m
For sale at tin's office
$1.00 per thousand.
Envelopes at
Not only shortens the time
of labor and lessens the pain,
lint It greatly diminishes
Mih danger to life of both
mother ahd child, and
leaves the mother in a con
dition. more favorable to
speedy recovery, and less
liable to Flooding, Convul
sions, and-other nlannlng
Kvmpioms. Its efficacy in
illio lespeut entitles It to be
(•died I'll E MOTHEU'S
Fuiend, and to rank as one
of till! life-saving I rmeilles
ot the nineteenth century.
We cannot publish certifi
cates concerning this reme
dy without wounding the
delicacy of tho writers. Yet
we have hundreds on file.
Send for our book, “To Mothers,"
mailed free.
Bhadfikld Rkgulator Co.,
Atlanta, Ga.
FDR CLEANING-
BOLD, SILVER AND OTHER METALS!
Ecery Inttlc u-nrranted to do nil claimed for it
or money refunded.
J, N, SMYTH,
MANUFACTURER,
- Atlanta, Ga.
DIPLOMA AT GEORGIA STATE FAIR, 1880.
Agents wanted in every County and State.
Sold only by W. H. Bass, No. 27,
Hancock Street, Milledgeville, (iu.
April 25. 1887. 80 ly
ffhat to f'ook for Dinner?
Is tlie question that puzzles tho housekeeper. We admit it is a
hard question, and harder still to answer it differently every day.
We beg to suggest that you come to our store and examine our
large and varied stock of
and let us counsel together. We can surely please you in quality
and price. Respectfully,
L. H. WOOD & CO.,
No. 30, S. Wayne St Millkdgkvillk, Ga
March 29, 1887. . al ly
J. W. McMillan,
President.
C. G. Wilson,
Superintendent.
T. T. Windsor,
Treasurer.
TOE MILLEDGEVILLE
IRON AMB ’MACHINERY 00'«„
V. 1J \ujiig Street^ Milledgeville, (la.
Shops thoroughly equipped with New
Machines ami Tools of tlie very latest Mod
ern make. Our facilities for Repair Work
are unexcelled by any Shops in Georgia.
Work promptly done and satisfaction
[guaranteed.
Engine Repair Work
Especially solicited. Blacksmitliing done
inali its branches. The most complete
assortment of Engine Fittings, Piping,
Pipe Fittings, Ac., to be found in tlie
State, which we will furnish at Macon
prices. Manufacturers of
Wilson’s Champion Spark Arresters, Collins' finano Distributors,
ami Agents for the sale of Steam Engines, Saw Mills, Grist Mills, Feed Mills,
ANO AGRICULTURAL, MACHINERY GENERALLY!
CsTWlien visiting Milledgeville call and see us, and you will not hesitate to
trust us with your work.
C. G. WILSON, SUP’T
March 15th, 1887. '30 ly.
Lumber! Lumber!
New Mill and Excellent Timber.
I HAVE MOVED my Mill into a fine lot of new timber, and am
prepared to fill orders promptly for any and
All Kinds of Lumber at Lowest Prices,
in any quantity. Will fill orders and deliver Lumber on short notice.
W. in. H- BARNTBS.
Milledgeville, Ga., Jan. 10th, 1887. 27 tf.
In General Debility, Emaciation,
Consumption, and Wasting in Chii
dren, Scott’s Emulsion of Pure Cod
Liver Oil with Hypophosphitew is a
most valuable food anil medicine.
It oreates an appetite for food,
strengthens the nervous system, and
builds up tlie body. Please read:
tried Scott's Emulsion on a young
man whom Physicians at times had
given up. Since he began using tlie
Emulsion, 1 i is Cough lias ceased,
gained 1lesh and strength, and from
all appearances his life will lie pro
longed many years. I have been in
Hospital Service for tlie past twenty
years, and never have used any pre
paration with greater satisfaction.”—
John Sullivan, Hospital Steward,
Reform School, Morganza, Pa. [43*lm
The question of using tlie organ in
tlie Methodist church at Sparta was
carried before the quartely conference
by appeal, but the Presiding Elder
decided that he had no jurisdiction
in the matter, so that instrument will
be hereafter used in the regular
church services..
If you experience a bad taste in the
mouth, sallowness or yellow color of
skin, feel stupid and drowsy, appe
tite unsteady, frequent headache or
dizziness, you are "1111110118,” and
nothing will arouse your liver to ac
tion and strengthen up your system
like Dr. Pierce’s “Golden Medical
Discovery.” Hy druggists.
It is probable that ilin sale of ok'o-
inurgarino will cease ukogether in
Now York. Forty-eight dealers and
muuufuoturohs in that city walked up
to tlie bar of justice, one day last
week, and paid lines amounting in
nil to $4,700, This was done on ad
vice of counsel, who informed tho
unhappy lawbreakers that the last
Court of Appeals decision left them
no chance to escape.
The Strongest Man in Ohio
Is said to be George C. Arnold of
Cleveland, p, who less than one year
ago, owing to chronic liver trouble
and Bright’s disease of the kidneys,
weighed less than ninety-five pounds,
but by using Dr. Harter’s Iron Tonic
has gained in streugth and weight
until now he is admitted to be the gi
ant of Ohio.
Now would be a good time to pre
pare some rich patches for early corn
and amber cane for forage. I know
of nothing better to feed stock on in
tlie summer than amber cane. It
will make more forage on a small
place than anything I have ever tried.
Alitile time spent in cultivating a
small patch of this cane would save
many trips to town for corn, and the
stock would look better and feel .beh-
tey. The owner ditto,-—Islnuaelite.
Typhoid, Scarlet and Yellow Fevers,
Measles, Diphtheria, Small-
Pox, Cholera, etc.
Darbys Prophylactic Fluid will de
stroy the infections of all fevers and
all contugious aud infectious diseases.
Will keep the atmosphere of any sick
room pure anil wholesome, absorbing
and destroying unhealthy allluvia and
contagion. Will neutralize any bad
smell whatever, not by disguising it,
but by destroying it. Use Darbys
Prophylactic Fluid in every sick-
ruom.
Mulching is one ofthe most impor
tant operations in. horticulture, anil
it should be more generally appreci
ated and practiced. A mulch pro
tects the ground from scorching suns
and from searing drouths. Wherh
the plow and the hoe can not be unfed,
a good top-dressing each year will
keep down the grass and weeds, aAd
will supply many of the demands of
cultivation. In the case of straw
berries aud some other fruits a mulch
keeps tlie fruit clean.
Don’t Experiment
You cannot afford to waste time do ex-
periminUmr when your lungs .are in dan
ger. Consumntlon always seems, at first,
only a cold. Do not permit any dealer to
impose upon you with sdme cheap imita
tion of Dr. King's New Discovery for Con
sumption,Coughs and Colds, but he sure
you get tho genuine. Becauso he can
make more profit he may tell you he has
something just as good, or just the same.
Don't bo deceived, but insist upon getting
Dr. King’s New Discovery, which is guar
anteed to give relief in all Throat. Lung
and Chost affections. Trial bottles free at
John M. Clark’s Drug Store.
HUMOROUS.
Perfectly awful: Some of the gro
cery butter now in use.
Tlie best side of a sido walk: Walk
ing by tlie sfde of u beautiful wo
man.
A hotel out west advertises that it
“Stands without a rival.” An on-
position hotel keeper says it should
read, “withdut arrival.”
“Pants for five dollars?” said a seedy
lookiug man, reading the sign in the
window of a clothing store he was
passing. “So do I. I never panted
so for five dollars in all my life.”
An Indiana poultry raiser is so con
scientious that he wont decieve his
hens by using imitation nest-eggs,
That’s the.man Diogenes was trying
to corner.
The Arkansaw Traveler informs us
that “some men are like dried apples.”
and the St. Louis Magazine says, “In
the name of humanity, we protest
against any such being sent as mis
sionaries to the South Sea Islands.”
“Time isn’t money,” exclaimed an
irate idler, “and it Is ail humbug to
asy it is.” “Well,” said tlie landlord
of the house in which the declaration
was made, “I don’t pretend to know
the philosophy, but I do know that,
you spend a deal more time than mon
ey here.
A man advertised lately to forward,
on receipt of postage stamps, “sound
practical advice, that would be ap
plicable at any time, and to all per
sons and conditions of life.” On re
ceipt of the stamps, he sent his vic
tim the following: “Never'give a boy
a penny to watch your shadow while
you climb a tree, to look into the mid
die of next week.”
A young lady reprimanded her
shoe-maker for not following her di
rections respecting a pair of shoes she
hail ordered, and, among others, in
sisted that they were not fellows.
Crispin replied that he purposely
made them ho, in order to oblige her,
well knowing the modesty of her dis
position, and that she was not fond ol
fellows.
Lord Brndlanils, who was a hard
drinker, once asked Judge Mellow if
there was any truth in the saying “As
sober as a judge.”
It was a good hit, considering the
usual gravity of the Judge, and all
the company present laughed heartiiy
at it.
The Judge replied:
“It is perfectly true,—as most of the
old saws are. They are characteris
tic, at least, for sobriety is the attrib
ute of a judge, as inebriety is of a
nobleman. Thus we say, ‘As sober as
a judge,’ and ‘As drunk as a lord.”
BLOOD AND MONEY.
The blood of man has much to do
in shaping his actions during his pil
grimage through tills troublesome
world, regardless of the amount of
present or expectant money in pocket
or stored away in bank. It. is a con
ceded , fact that we appear as our
blood mukes us, and tlie purer the
blood, tlie happier, healthier, prettier
und wiser we are; hence the oft re
peated Interrogatory, “how is your
blood?” With pure streams of life-
giving fluid coursing through our
veins, bounding through our hearts
and ploughing through our physical
frames, our morals become better, our
constitution stronger, our intellectual
faculties more acute and grander, anil
men, women and children happier,
healthier and more lovely.
The unprecedented demand, the
unparalleled curative powers, and
the .unmistakable proof from those
of unimpeachable character and in
tegrity, point with an unerring finger
to B, B. B.—Botanic Blood Balm—as
far the best, the cheapest, the quick
est and the grandest and most power
ful blood remedy ever before known
to mortal man, in the relief and posi
tive eure of Scrofula, Rheumatism,
Skin diseases, all taints of blood pois
on, Kidney complaints, old ulcers and
sores, cancers, catarrh, etc.,
B. B. B. is only about three years
old—a baby in age, a giant in power
—but no remedy in America can make
or ever has made such a wonderful
showing In its magical powers in
curing and entirely eradicating the
above complaints, and gigantic sales
in the face of frenzied opposition and
would-be moneyed monopolists.
Letters from all points where intro
duced are pouring in upon us, speak
ing in its loudest praise. Some say
they receive more benefit from one
bottle of B. B. B. than they have‘from
twenty, thirty and fifty and even one
hundred bottled of a boasted decoc
tion of inert and non-iuedicinat roots
and branches of common forest trees.
We hold tlie proof in black arid white,
and we also hold the fort.
All who desire full information
about tlie cause anil cure of Blood
Poisons. Scrofula and Scrofulous
Swellings, Ulcers, Sords. Rheumatism,
Kidney Complaints, Catarrh, etc.,
can secure bv mail, free, a copy of
our 32-page illustrated Book of Won
ders, tilled with the most wonderful
and startling proof evpr before
known.
Address, BLOOD BALM CO..
Atlanta Ga.
April 19th, 1887. [30 cmly.
The coiniiiencemdnt sermon of Mer-
ceY University at Macon will be deliv
ered by a distinguished divine. Rev.
F. M. Ellis, D. I)., Baltimore, Md.,
has accepted the invitation of the fac
ulty to deliver theserinon.
That Tired Fueling
Season is here again, and nearly every
one feels weak, languid, and exhaust
ed. The blood laden w(th impurities
Which have b|eri accumulating for
months, moves sluggishly through
the veins, the mind friiis to think
quickly, and tlie body is still slower
to respond. Hood’s 'Sarsaparilla is
just wjiat is nfeeded. It is, in a pecu
liar sense, the ideal spring medicine.
It purifies, vitalizes, and enriches the
blood, makes the head clear, creates
an appetite, overcomes that tired
feeling, and imparts new strength
aud vigor to the whole body. i : J lux