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m s
THE EXCELLENCE OF SYRUP OF FIGS
is due not only to the originality and
simplicity of the combination, but also
to the care and skill with which it is
manufactured by scientific processes
known to the California Fiq Syrup
Co. only, and we wish to impress upon
all the importance of purchasing the
true and original remedy. As the
genuine Syrup of Figs is manufactured
hy the California Fig Syrup Co.
only, a knowledge of that fact will
assist one in avoiding the worthless
imitations manufactured by other par
ties. The high standing of the CALI
FORNIA Fig Syrup Co. with the medi
cal profession, and the satisfaction
which the genuine Syrup of Figs has
given to millions of. families, makes
the name of the Company a guaranty
of the excellence of its remedy. It is
far in advance of all other laxatives,
as it acts on the kidneys, liver and
bowels without irritating or weaken
ing them, and it does not gripe nor
nauseate. In order to get its beneficial
effects, please remember the name of
the Company —
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, Cal.
MCUTILLL. Ki. NEW TORE. N. Y.
LOuAL AND BUSINESS MENTION-
Good Flour at O’Quinn’s.
Corn and oats, at O’Quinn’s.
Get your seed peas at O’Quinn’s.
Georgia cane syrup at O’Quinn’s.
Ribbons, Sajli and neck ribbons at
Mrs. Apjiel’s.
O’Quinn's is the place to get good
groceries.
See Fraley & Walker's line of fur
niture, before buying.
You can find a fine urticle of black
berry cordial at Bonner’s.
' Lamp chimneys, any size, at five
cents, at Warren Edward’s.
C’aromel, fruit and pound cakes, at
the City Bakery, this week.
Pastuiu Cereal, substitute for
cotree, at Hall & Treauor’s.
If you want to save money have
your hors'-s and mules shod by E.
Becker.
It you want to please your guests,
be sur- and get your bread from the
City Bakery.
For Salk.—Four good inilch cows.
Apply to G.L). Myhick,
Me riiwether, Ga.
Dlntnrian ■•rHilotU'ilorbrtl
And guaranteed to cure Chills. Fever and
Ague. All druirgtBts or from Mofiit-West
Drug Co., St. Louis,
One of the most Unique store dec
orations ever seen in this city is now
at the store of Mr. P. J. Cline.
We guarantee, to sell you anything
in our line cheaper than you can buy
in Macon. Fraley & Walker.
By buying your bread and cakis
from the City Bakery, you will have
plenty of time to attend the commence
ment exercises.
Hunt Residence of Mr. A.
rOl nem. Joseph on Jefferson St.,
recently improved and repaired. Ap
ply to TJr. Geo. D. Case.
May 3°, 180*. , 48 lm
Get a nice •Barnesville Buggy, for
commencement. They are the pret
tiest and best <*n earth. Sold for
cash or on time, by Fraley & Walker.
Peach Crates.—When you ship
peaches call on me tor crates, or I will
buy your peaches.
Warren Edwards.
AUBASTINK is the cheapest
and most durable Wallcoating
made, For sale by
THE COOK LUMBER €0.
May 27 tf. „
As poor as I am, I will subscribe
two dollars toward a fund for the boys
of our city who volunteered to aid in
freeing Cuba. Good things from home
and a little money now and then cheers
the heart of a soldiA.
C. H. Andrews.
Miss Mattie Keil has the prettiest
and most stylish line of millinery
in the city. Her customers this spring
have been delighted with the quality
and the taste displayed. Now it is
not too late for you to get a stylish and
pretty hat by calling on her, for she
guarantees to suit you.
The real hero in all our wars is the
private soldier in the fighting ranks.
He enlists without hope of promotion.
He fights without expectation of per
sonal a lory or individual exaltation. He
dies, ti need he, realizing that his in
dividuality will he forgotten and the
victories won by his valor will be
given to the man who commands.
—Tie Del Norte (Col.) Daily En
quirer.
G. N. & LOOLLEGE
The Eighth Annual Commencement of
the GreU Industrial School.
The Eighth Annual Commencement
of the Georgia Normal & Industrial
College opened auspiciously on Friday
evening.last, with a brilliant reception
tendered jhe graduating class by the
voting men of the city. VI ith its bright
lifted halls and promenades, ifs artis-
;i; floral decorations and its usual array
feminine beauty, Atkinson Hall pre
sented a most striking appearance. The
mirth and gaiety of the young people,
the charming chaperonage, the soft
sweet strains of music and dainty re
freshments formed a happy combina
tion for the entertainment of all, and
the delightful occasion a fitting close for
the last best year of the college and
beginning for the commencement fes
tivities.
MEETING OK DIRECTORS.
On Saturday morning the Board of
Directors held their regular meeting at
the college. The business prelimina
ries were promptly arranged. They
received and accepted the official re
ports ot President J. Harris Chappell
and heads of the several departments,
signed the diplomas for twenty-three
young lady graduates and adjourned
to meet in Atlanta on Friday, June 3d,
when the election of teachers and other
matters ot great importance will be
disposed of. The members present
jyere Gov. W. Y. Atkinson ot Atlanta,
chairman; Hon. F. G. duBignon of
Savannah, lion. J. M. Dupree of Mon
tezuma and Hon. II. N. Lamar aud
Hon. T.F. Newell of MilledgevHle.
ritK LADY BOARD OF VISITORS
Arrived Saturday morning and im
mediately held an informal session in
the College Library. No effort was
made to dispatch any business. ’They
entered formally upon the discharge of
their duties of inspection ot the year’s
school work yesterday and at their next
meeting some interesting reports may
be expected. The mere mention of
the names of these highly cultured and
intellectual women is a guaranty that
their important duties will be most
thoroughly and satisfactorily performed.
Those present were:
Mrs. G. A. Cassels, Flemington,
Liberty county; Airs. W. L. G. Da
vis, Albany, Dougherty; Mrs. Dudley
M. Hughes, Dannville, Twiggs; Mrs.
W. Y. Atkinson, Newnan, Coweta;
Mrs. W. A. Hemphill, Atlanta Fulton;
Miss Edna Cain, Summerville, Chat
tooga; Miss Neppie Hunt, Sparta,
Hancock; Mrs. B. F. Summers, Lau
rens Hill, Laurens.
THE MANDOLIN AND
GUITAR CLUB.
The recital of the Mandolin and
Guitar Club under the directorship of
Miss Laura Paine Saturday evening
was a complete success. The large
Opera House was crowded, standing
room being at a premium. 1 he rapt
attention, ioud applause and repeated
enchores attested the sincerity of the
responsive sentiments awakened in
every one in the large audience hy the
soft strains o! the twelve stringed in
struments. This is the first year the
G. N. & I. has had a Mandolin and
Guitar Club and the enthusiasm mani
fested Saturday evening shows that the
people ot Milledgeville know how to
appreciate this class of music.
THE COMMENCEMENT SERMON.
The Commencement sermon was
preached at the Baptist church on Sun
day morning by Doctor J. Lansing
Burroughs of Augusta. His theme
was “Learning,” and tor an hour fie
held the undivided attention ot the
large congregation. In spite of the
intense heat the church was filled to
its utmost capacity and about half of
those who were anxious to hear the
eloquent discourse were turned away.
For this reason the sermon is published
in full in this issue to the exclusion of
other matter.
Dr. Burroughs is recognized as one
of the ablest preachers in Georgia.
The music by the choir was exception
ally fine and added greatly to solemnity
and beauty of the services.
SERMON.
"The Lord God hath given me the
tongue of the learned that I should know
how to speak a word in season to him
that is weary.”- Isaiah G0:1,
I should be glad at the outset to call
your attention to the variation of opin
ion, concerning learning, between this
prophet, Isaiah, and that king who was
represented to be the wisest man ot
his time. Solomon sighs, “in much
wisdom is much grief; and he that in-
creaseth knowledge, increaseth sorrow.’’
(Ec. 1:18) So that, it is intimated
that among them that are weary and
so need a word in season, are those
who themselves possess the tongue of
the learned.
Does the difference consist in the
character of the learning? Shall we
say that Solomon’s was ot one descrip
tion and that ot Isaiah was ot another?
Did the learning of the disappointed
king respect some certain things to
which the learning of Isaiah lmd no
kinship? How shall we determine
that? AVhat are the things which,
with Isaiah, would be a balm to the
hurt of the weary, and which, with
1 Solomon, would be the occasion of
weariness to him that was before con
tented? It is not learning, in the ab
stract, some specific knowledge upon
certain things, some peering into mys
terious truth, that qualifies Isaiah for his
work of comforting. It is the gift of “the
tongue of the learned” that does that.
That cannot be restricted to a specific
wisdom. It may not he universal
knowledge. It is simply that there
may he a use of what knowledge is
possessed, by means of which the
“weary” may be comforted by a “word
in season.” There is suggested: The
glory of learning is that it maybe the
solace of the race.
I say‘the race” because the heredi
tary burden of man is weariness, dis
appointment, discouragement, sadness.
The heavy heart which Adam carried
out ot Eden has been transmitted to
his proseny. The eye that once feast
ed upon the vision cf angels and could
look undazzled upon the unveiled Lord
God, cannot reach beyond the cloudy
canopy of his planet to perceive aught but
the brilliant points of other worlds, that
perplex and dismay with the immensi
ty of their distance from him. Even
the lamp of experience flickers with
a sallow dimness, casting its feeble
rays upon the narrowest portion of his
way. With all the gladness ol earth
there is more of sorrow and struggle
and suffering, Levity and mirth is
audible in laughter and exclamations
of delight, the heavy heart and troubled
brain are moodily silent, and the most
Horrible grief is voiceless. I am not
taking an unreasonably gloomy^ view
of lile. Should you think so, it is only
because you formulate your view from
the patent facts which commend them
selves to your observation. You hear
the merry shouts of giddy and innocent
children playing in the streets, since
they are there before you, dancing in
the sunshine. You cannot hear the
stifled wail of the heart-broken and
weary who are behind the barred doors
and draped windows, struggling with
the horror ot a great darkness
alone. Jerusalem, busy with its plot
tings and friendship, drowsily careless
in the presence of a Gethsemane sor
row, is always the type of the world.
To this immensity of human woe
and weariness there is no satisfactory
answer in the exhortation to fortitude,
to bear as best one may,—to make the
best out of trouble—to be manly and
courageous. Fortitude is an attribute
of bravery, but bravery may falter,
fail, vanish before successive defeats.
Bravery is not omnipotence, however
magnificent. When woe rises up, de
manding its questions, it is not satis
fied with the complacent assurance that
it cannot know, and that it were better
to acknowledge the impossibility of
knowing. The questioning may cease
but wlmt follows? a satisfied restfulness?
no, a dread sullen hopelessness, a yield
ing to sense of fatality, which is only
another woe added to that gone before.
Equally as futile is the attempt to
divert the mind from care, or the en
deavor to ease trouble by a comparison
of human experiences. That was the
mistake of Solomon, who with all his
wisdom, was not wise enough to know
that knowledge gained simply for
knowledge sake, was ot no more worth
than money gained for money’s sake.
He might have known without painful
experience, that “the eye is not satis
fied with seeing, nor the ear filled with
hearing." A thirst for knowledge will
desire to know how the eye sees or the
ear hears; and whether the eyeseesand
the ear hears aright, and why the limits
to the seeing and hearing are so circum
scribed,and tantalized with inexplicable
difficulties. That another bears a bur
den of woe does not mitigate my bur
den; that another’s pain is more severe
is no anodyne for mine. All I know
is that I have a fellowship in suffering.
Solomon pronounced his knowledge,
“vanity of vanities” because it was a
continual eluding of his grasp upon de
sirable tilings; Ecclesiastes appears to
be a book of the adventures of a man
pursuing a marsh-light.
There is a glory in learning. Who
lias temerity enough to deny that? The
uplift of tile race is the accumulation of
wisdom. The growth is from within
outward. The story of civilization is
written like the story of the rocks. The
results ot the centuries lie laminated
in sheets of know ledge. Yet with all
the triumphs which human learning
has won, and within the storehouses and
museums of its accumulated treasures
where has it hidden away the solvent
for human heart wretchedness and soul
weariness? Suppose it can make an-
s ver now, when Job lay silent and sub
dued? Suppose it can now tell “the
breadth of the earth,” and “the way
where light dwelletli?” Suppose it
can see “the treasures of the hail,” and
enter into “the treasures of the snow?’
Suppose it knows by “what way the
li'riit is parted” and has discovered the
“father of the rain and mother of the
ice?” Suppose it can send lightnings
that they may go and say here we are?
Grant all the haughty assumptions of
human learning, how has it answered
hint that is weary? It lias answered
him that is strong—him that has keen
ness of intellect—hint that has industry
and thritt—him that has cunning—him
that is born to the purple, but what
has it for him that is ’heartsore and
gifted and the industrious and the
prince have become weary in the turn
ings of the wheel of human fortune
and the voice that was eloquent with
melody becomes like that of the sphynx
the silence of a stony lifelessness.
Many a problem remains to be solved
in the individual life, witli all the accu
mulations of learning. And these are
of the very essence of practicality. My
weariness,—your heart-burden.—are
eminently practical things. It is no
more natural to say “I have gained,
or “I have discovered,” than it is to
say, “I am weary,—I am soul-troubled,
—I am sick at heart.*’ The arm,
strong to strike, that has become thin
and nerveless by disease; the mind,
planful and bouyant over harvests and
merchandize, that become flame-eaten
or storm-swept; the w sunny heart, with
its contagion of sweet carelessness, toss
ed by tbe tempest ot horr.ble bereave
ment; what is to be said to these? It
has no answer, any more than it has
an answer to the wail of the Russian
serf, or the tax-ground peasant of Italy.
The belchings of cannon, the sweep ot
squadrons of cavalry are net answers.
They are expedients.^ The massive
bulk of battle-ships, grim as the stern
angel of God’s retributive justice, be
fore the gates of Spanish citadels; the
flowing sweep of the star-spangled ban
ner through the royal palms of Cuba,
borne by the impetuous battalions ot
tbe new Lee of a reunited army; these
are answers to tbe fierce, semi-barbar-
reed of a nationalism, that has
learned nothing since the days ot Philip
and Alva. Will they bring again the
child starved in the ditch, to the perish
ed breast of the reconcentrado mother?
Or the heart bayonet-pierced beneath
the # troclia, shall it beat again? Or the j
bride torn away by brutal soldiery, I
shall she come again with the scent ot |
the orange-blossom in her raven hair? j
Or the youth who rode so gaily torth
upon caparisoned steed, shall he come
back again where the hot tearless eyes
ot the mother gtow blind with watch
ing? There are some anxious ques
tionings that all the pride ot human
learning has not answered yet; it is
more helpless than the unjust judge,
since the pleadings must go on, weary
ing the ear that knows it cannot avenge
her of her adversary.
Let me submit to you, that the de
mand of “him that is weary” is not an
exorbitant one. It is only “a word,”
but it is “a word in season.” It is
not a new code of laws. It is not a
new system of ethics. It is not a re
organization of the principles ot politi
cal economy. It is not the discovery
ot a new philosophy. It is only a
word.
There is such a word; and the word
is the climax of learning, since to
know it, in all its force is the conden
sation of truth into a syllable. It is
Christ.
Are you tempted to smile at the-
literalness ot my interpretation of the
“word in season?” Do you say that
I should not insist that the meaning of
the text is restricted to one actually
voiced syllable?—that “the word”
means an idea, a thought that must be
expanded through many words and
sentences and paragraphs? Very true;
still I should insist that this one sweet,
hallowed word comes in propitious sea
son to him that is weary, and that lie
who utters it speaks with the tongue ol
the learned, and has exhausted in it
the possibilities, as lie reaches in it,
the glory of learning.
Let me dwell upon this latter thought
first. Let me ask you to consider the
end and object of learning. It has
been suggested to you that there afe
two opposing ideas of it,—learning for
learning’s sake, as you see it in Solo
mon, and learniNg for the sake ot solac
ing, as you see it in Isaiah. The bet
ter sense commends this latter as a
SPRING, 1898!
THE UP-TO-DATE CLOTHIERS
Respectfully call your attention to their special announcement,
The firm now is—
BENSON & HOUSER.
• Mr. Benson of the old firm and Mr: Walter F. Houser, for
teu years with Eads, Neel <fc Co. Both young, but well
equipped in experience and a thorough knowledge of the re
quirements of an up-to-date Llothing and Furnishing business,
and Dave spared no pains, nor expense in aggregating a Spring
stock which is the PEER of any in Georgia.
We appreciate your trade, and, all things else being equal, respect
fully ask a portion of your valued patronage, pledging honest
dealing and courteous treatment and due appreciation for any
favors shown us. Respectfully,
THE UP-TO-DATE CLOTHIERS,
BENSON & HOUSER.
March 2, lb9b. 40 gm
40S Third St., MACON, GA.
leverage for the uplifting and therefore
the blessing of men. It is only the
proportion in which it honors and com
mends Jesus Christ and presents
him as the answer of the deepest crav
ings of the human soul, that it sub
serves its, purpose. Anil because this
is its purpose, all learning is incom
plete unless there is a pointing towards
Jesus Christ. Wlmt student is there
who does not realize that there i* - “more
beyond?” There is always a hot izon,be
hind which other things lie beyond,
until one 1ms reached the, experience of
the astronomer, iveppler, who, when lie
found his engrossing application re
warded t>y a great dtscoyery of fact,
awed to trembling, 'prostrated himself
upon the floor of his observatory and
exclaimed 4 “1 think thy thoughts, oh,
God.” For ot what grand and noble
use is there in the process’s of learning,
if it search not for the answer to hu
man cravings and whoever found Jesus
Chri-t who did not find in him such a
complete satisfaction? It is not the
substitution of Christ lor something
unattainable. It is not receiving him rs
an equivalent feran undefined somthing
that is without the grasp. He. is him
self, the desired end; iie is himself, the
new motive-power ot life; he is himself,
the true incentive ot human ambition;
he is himself, the Truth, and in know
BALDWIN SHERIFF’S SALES.
U NDER AND BY VIRTUE of execution
issued from Court of Ordinary. Bald
win County. Georgia, 1 will sell before the
Court House door in said county, within
the letfal hours of sale, on first Tuesday In
June, 181H. all the following described
land, to-wlt:
All that trait or parcel of land situate
and being In theSISHh district, G. M„ con-
mining tu tho aggregate Two Hundred and
Twenty-Six acres, but this levy is only
upon One Hundred and Fifty-One, more or
less, one-t bird of the Two Hundred and
Twenty-Six acres having been set apart
.s a dower for Battle Ganaway, widow of
Sandy Ganaway, deceased.
Said One Hundred and Fifty-One acres
bounded as inflows:
On the north by the Milledgeville and
Clinton public road and lands of T. L. Mc-
Comb and L. J. Gullmartln, on east by
lands of Rose Coleman, on south by Macon
Jfc Augusta railroad and on the west by
lands of Monroe Banks. (The seventy five
acres set apart as dower was taken out of
whole lot, and surrounding the dwelling
house.) Levied upou as the property of
Walter Paine, Administrator of Sandy
Ganaway, deceased, and In tits possession,
as such Administrator. Notice given to
icount in possession and defendant tn ti fa
in terms of the taw. May 2, 1898. Levy
made Dec. 29th, 1897.
C. E. PROSSER, Sheriff B. Co., Ga.
Also at the same time and place, all that
tract or parcel of land situate lying and
being in the county of Baldwin, said state,
and containing Two Hundred and Twenty-
six (22«>i acres, more or teas, and bounded
on north by .vlilledgeville and Clinton
public road and lauds of T. L. MoComb
and L, J. uuilniartlu, on East by lands of
Rose Coleman, on South by Macon <fc Au
gusta Railroad and on west by lands ot
Monroe Banks, levied on as property of
Sandy Ganaway. deceased, in hands of
Walter Paine, Administrator of said estate
aud in possession of said Administrator,
ing luni. there is the discovery of
c, i t ;r„ T, ,i 10 a „ n i ana in possession oi saia Administrator,
Eternal Life. It is only the soul that | ^ satisfy ti fa in favor of officers ot court.
knows him not that is sneeringly in-1 Due notice hereof given according to
Levy made this May 1st. 1898.
C. E. PROSSER, Sheriff.
credulous. Such a soul Ins invented
for itself a true name, it calls itself an
Agnostic; true.—because it does not
know Him. Knowing liimis n new
birth, in which old tilings pass away
and all things become new.
And what is the badge of tbe man
who has tound Christ? How is he
known among men? What is the sub
ject-matter of the epistle that is read
and known of all? Has lie not lea’-nnl
what he never could discover in ail the
bosky shades of Aeudero? It is the
tenderness and sympathy that t 'ne has
learned from the new nature springing
up within, warming towards the weary,
the suffering. He is made a partaker of
the divine nature. Aud what is the
divine nature, if it. is not a throbbing
mother-love for weakness and helpless
ness? Is Christ formed within him?
Then is be down hy the side ot the
faint and fallen, and liis arm is around
the oppressed, and his voice is a I’salm
that rekindles tiie fading light in the
eye cf the weary. He may not indeed
have exhausted the streams <)f know
ledge, but he drinks at the fountain
head. lie may not embrace a wide
horizon of information, but the zenitli
of truth, is immediately above him,-bed
ding its lusture on his path. He may
know but little ot this world, but lie
knows Him for whom the world exists.
He may not have the mighty grasp ot
think the tremendous
MUSIC
V IOLIN, Mandolin, Banjo, Cornet,Clari-
nette and all other wind and etrlDg
Instruments taught by Prof. D. N. Bald
win, Satlsiaction guaranteed. For fur
ther Information call at residence o:t Jef
ferson hi re-t A limited number only esn
be accommodated. K So* *
A CARD.
Office over Culver & Kidd’s drug
store, where I answer calls in the
general practice of medicine. I
will give special attention to diseases
of Nose, Throat and Eyes. Iam also
prepared to tit you with glasses to suit
any condition of defective eyes.
H. M. CLARK. M. D
Keppler and
true and noble object in learning. That! thoughts of the God of Creation; but
is not under-ruting it, nor throwing
contempt upon it. Do I ignore the
value of life or contemn living, beca use
I ask what purpose there is in living?
Why seek learning? That you may
brooding with tenderness over suffer
ing and woe, and taking to his heart the
bruised,broken and bleeding,lie is think*
ing the thoughts of the God ot grace.
For let him he tender, all-sweepii g in
be elevated among your fellows, and J oempasdon,splendid in charity,oblivious
to black and ruined pasts, burden-bear
ing, patient, helpful, speaking the word
tlmt bids men look unto tbe great Sol
ver of eart;i’s bitter and anxious ques-
[Continued on sixth page.]
weary? And even the strong and the
look down from an em-purpled throne
of superiority upon what you call “the
common herd?” That you may know
how to transmute the ordinary things
of life into golden fortune and dwell
superbly, and from your luxury regard
disdainfully the image of God drawn
in the hard fines of poverty and en
forced labor? That you may attain to
ease and while heedless of the child
that begs a crust, devote the energies
of life to the pampering of a dog?
That you may win popular applause
and engrave your name upon the roll of
earth’s self-fancied honorable? Or,
with nobler thought, to inform your
self of pregnant truth, and to dwell in
the silent courts, communing with the
melodies of your own well-tuned harp-
strings, because the voices of men are
strident with greed or suffering? One
may attain the power of a Napoleon,—
but that is weaving laurels upon one’s
own brow. * The untitled statesman of
England laid away to rest to-day be
neath the sculptured arches of West
minister Abbey has solved problems
that the conqueror of Europe never
even knew. To have the power of
learning is not to have the glory of it.
For the glory of learning is never
1 discovered until it is recognized as a
Bucklen’s Arnica Salve.
The Bust Salve in the world for
Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped
Hands, Chilblains, Corns and all Skin
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or no pay required. It is guaranteed
to give satisfaction or money refunded.
Price "Jo cents per box. For sale by
Culver &■ Kidd, Milledgeville, Ga.
A Woman Is a Complex, Most Delicate
piece of mechanism. If from neg
lect, moral shock, hard study or
overwork an important function
fails, she becomes a nervous and
physical wreck, then the Specific
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Jalm. There is no other treatment
for Diseases of Women equal to 1L Hundreds
of women who have been relieved and cured
have declared it simply marvelous in its bril
liant results. Sold by Druggists. Price $1.00.
Special advice, book and symptom blank, writ*
ML MARY A. BRANNON, 1*2 Cspltel Art., Atlasts, tie.
F«»r sate by Culver & Kidd. 84 ly
DR. MOTT’S
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Weakness manifests itself in the loss of
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heingopened for disease. A bottle of Browns’
Iron Bitters taken in time will restore your*
strength, soothe your nerves, make your
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Browns’ Iron Bitters is «old by all dealers.
SCREEN DCJORS.
We hare just received a large
shipment ot fancy and plain
screen doors and windows.
£ COOK LUMBER 10.
May 17.1898. lm.
W 1
:
ILHAMS’
TANSY
PILLS
They overcome Weakness, Ir
regularity and omissions, In
crease vigor and banish “pains
of menstruation.” They are
“Life Savers”
£to girls at womanhood, aiding
' development of organs aud
No known remedy for women eqtiala
... .... jle
body. . _ ,
them. Cannot do harm—life becomes a pleas
ure. f 1 per box hy null. {3f Sold by druggists.
DA MOTTS CHEMICAL CO.. Cknland, Ohio.
For sale bv D. S. Carrington. 142 ly
l
DR. MOTT’S
NERVERINE
PIUS
Made This Chant*
7\0 YOU suffer
w from Nerv-
ens Prostra-
msi’wt
Sion, Shrunken
WKfllMMNTU
to ours you or
eupiMto
‘X Ml as Bt pee
ITh* 4 —
A SURE RELIEF TO WOMAN for
all troubles peculiar to her sex EVSend by
mall or from our Agent. 91.00 Per box.
WILLIAMS MF6. CO., Props., CLEVELAND, OHIO.
For sale tv D. 8. Carrington. 142 ly For sale by D. 8. Carrington. 142 ly
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