The Summerville news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1896-current, October 28, 1896, Image 7

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« M »»M H m Mil I I »» I ;■ BdladcßHQ Plotter : Cures ■ ’ Womans Pains ' ; • ;; . -' : _. .— — ii !; by touching the Spot : <■ ' * HINDERCORNS The only rar* Care far Cora*.Stop* All pain. Makes waikin? ea«y. 15c. at DrurjnaU. Bl® PARKER’S JS&S HAIR BAJ-SAW * n< l beautifies the hate ** * rotnotes a luxuriant growth. yzffß Wgver Fails to Beetore Gray Tjfffi?! Hair to its Youthful Color. *'4BRS Cures scalp diseases U hair fd.ane. Z/J 1 60 c, and |I.OO at Druggists n-nareCONSUMPTIVE or t,™ JndifreatlooL Painful ills or lability of any kind u.-«e HllhEß’S GINGER TONIC Many whou-n-hops- Jew» aiui discouraged have regained health by its u*e. I. , . „ ,m H mm Dlr.mox?*? T’-ard. HfshVilOYfiL PILLS Tl Crfg»i»n! anti Only Gennlne. A £<\ c.s\ a. ( - \W • >«? •■>’•<■»• «• w<‘h tlue rtbbcn. Tn ho i t k . noolh'-r.'7?ri*usea4mye<ou*et(6*tUu« V I / ~ ‘ ”»<**»•’ • <*»; <:»•>•?«. a« Uruy-isis,or i'n<l4c. I *• i » s» .Tips f« r particular*, testimonials ai. I \C* £.* ‘*lt<llcr for Lad I in Itt:er, by return M«il. ld.ooo‘fr stimofiiaia. Name Pup er. _ . *7^***r entert'heailculCo..lklf.<ii*o’i Square. Vy ail ho .: Drufigtet*. i'hii-du.. Pa. Not one part but every part of HIRES Rootbeer tends toward making it the perfect temperance .and hfalthgiving drink. Made only bv The Charlen R. Hires Co.. Philadelphia. A 25c. package makes 5 gallons. Sold every where. 1000 WAYSJG_CU2E A Ct-Lui Quinine, aconite, het ten, on inti syrup, whiskey and quinine, rock candy and rye, a “Bwent,” foot bath, star . vatmn feeding, wrapping your Lose around your neck, o.d liver oil, and old hurt ■ I reds coueh cure, these and over two other wav* are used by the human race to cure a cold. The be. t way !s to rial.e (I li.i‘»s\- m« 'IGOI IMIiLiH your daily companion and 3 ou "ill never catch cold. A man must be miserable indeed & •** X *A who Utid up with a tad Cold, <’a- F >! I Vtatrh, Headache, unable to breathe Elf \ jSkA.'-XV'H without p.*in, his throat sore and his J J-'*} Vi head throbbing.^hen one litile pro duct in the market called t LSHM AX*l IMIALLU will give him iust&ut re- llef RELIEF EASY TO GET! He may go on and on, sneeze his ' <e 7' s \ head efl for (hat matter, sniflle and /\en »' >J snort around to everybody’s discom- / fit tire. Ilia eves may become inf!<med, I n it’ ry* his head anti cars ache, and his throat K -Zu eo sore he can hardly swallow. I’a- \\Zk~\\ tlen* he must he to endure it al! when \ )// A \ for 50c. lie can bur CUSHMAN’S HIES- \•< / 1 TIIOL INlliLK't and restore himself / to his normal O4n! it ion. * ' Cushman’s Menthol Inhaler a Jewel! A woman will sit around prostrat ru e<l iH ,u rves, feeling desperate over I' )SS °f B,ec P» head and eyes racked with pain, cold settled in every 9 I “ iV-bone, so miserable that life seems I a blank, but if she would make the L |:j| marvebats little Instrument known as (THrjIAK’S MKRTUOL IMIAIER her daily companion, her headaches would come less f» - 'pient, she would never haze a cold, and sore throat mu catarrh w ould have no terrors. NEVER NEGLECT A COLD OR COUGH Neglect a Cold or Cough and <f La C) Grippe don’t get y«»u, Consumnuon will (tmis nit Zv’A' p.-IJ pr. You loae dollar* \ 'vtC\ t< bills nV’nt HARN imi aLKII haSt'l ♦ *' Jve o» a cold Z/l V/ X/ or cough or sore throat at its very z/ \ first approach. w The Greatest Authority in the World. Dr. J. Lennox Browne, F. R. C. jX? X 8. Ed. Senior Surgeon to the Cen ffff _—> tral London Throat and Ear Hos- •t-X pital, says: “The vnpor of Menthol Tw Tcaal checks in a manner hardly less than a marvp l°us, acute Colds in the head. Jy mm F° r f“ rnis °f nasal diseases, enus obstruction to the natural w*wl breath wav, I prescribe t’VSH MAN’S rl’lSvy £F inhaler to the extent of I F Jf r hundreds per annum.” r'- / fl« not thia reeomrrrndatb'n sufficient that all DK. BROWNE. who n, *y profit by it» ] Brings sleep to the sleepless. Cures Insomnia and Nervous Prostration. Don’t be fooled with worth less Imitations. Take only CUSHMAN’X 6Oc. at druggists.or mailed.postpaid,on receipt o. price. Write for l*o«'k on Menthol and testimonials. CUSHMAN DRUG CO., VINCENNES, IND., U. S. A. WHORE EYE-GLASSES, No ' :J Weak Morr *- ' ■ ■./ ' Eyes I MITCHELL’S A Certain Soft aii 7Scctive Ser.iedy for SORE, WEAK a r :dSilft!®ETES, anti HesJeriny the Sight of the old. €»r< s Tear Props, Granulation. Stye Tumors- lie I Eyes. Jatir l EyeLasbes, AND PnOlH'dXC QUICK RELIEF AND r K.LiM,-..\SXx CURS. E Also. CMCjuJy sirtr.9 Y.hen ttscA St} oltier < lie . serf, -s I'ieers, Fever Sores. mi» .» . S -!t JU.vi:. Iturrss. Pile*, er t. .•.erever .'xisls MIT.'K!:iV3 .SAL. ”, U u:c . L :. ,«h1 adsantz.jr . SOLD SV VI S-JJCS’S «' .’T ZZ CEKTS. ‘ TH IN ACURA FOR THIN PEOPLE. ARE YOU THIN? Flesh made with Thiuacnra Tablets by a scientific process. They create perfect assimilation of every form of rood, sec.eting the valuable parts and discarding the worthless. They make thin faces plump ami round out the fig ure. They are the Standard Remedy for leanness, co itaining no arsenic, ami absolutely harmless. Price, prepaid. $t p. r box. 0 for $5. Pamphlet. “How to Get Fat,” tree. T'kk Thiwacvra Co.. V 49 Broadway, Sew York . Ripans Tubules cure dizziness, Ripans Tabules cure headae'he. Ripans Tabules cure flatulence. Ripans Tabules cure dyspepsia. Ripans Tabules assist digestion. Ripans Tabules cure bad breath. Ripans Tabules cure biliousness. Ripans Tabules: one gives relief. * Ripans Tabules cure constipation. 'S S3 A TSWHESS & HtAD ssssr? CiiStß t’ ■ £&3» AS a*’ IX*’* INVISIBLE TtißCi-Aa EA3 ■o* Bttl S C"SHI2KS. w hispers beard. Ccm fortahie Successful "br-Y wll Remedies raru CrouUbw. MARY’S LITTLE LAMB. Just How the Old Story Came About. This is a true story of Mary and hor little lamb. Mrs. Mary E ■Sawyer, afterward Mrs. Columbus 'Tyler was born in Sterling, a quiet plhce near Worcester, Mass. It whs hero she grew up and went to school. The little, new born lamb found almost dead, she nursed de votedly, sitting up all night to keep it warm. In the morning it 1 could stand and swallow a little. Then it began to improve rapidly. It grew f<st and whiter. She would comb it every day and tie the wool with bright ribbons. The |amb was almost her only play m Ue, and not having m ny dolls, Mary used to dress up the lamb in ; pantlettes and a shawl. It was her brother Nat who suggested ta king the lamb to school one day. They had hard work getting her over a stonewall they had to climb over, but finally succeeded. When the school house was reached no teacher and but few scholars was there. Mary wondered what she would do with the lamb. They had high boarded up seats; and Mary put the lamb under her seat, having put on her shawl not the pantelottes however, and the lamb lay down and kept very quiet. By and by Mary had to go out of the seat to recite, and left the lamb all right, but in a moment a clatter, clatter, on the llnor and she knew it was the pattering of the hoofs of her pet. She was greatly mor tified. The teacher was Miss Polly Kimball who was the mother of Mr. Earing, the circulating library man of Boston. She laughed out right and the children all giggled, but she was too much ashamed to even smile. She led the lamb out of doors, and put her in a shed un til she went home at noon. Visit ing the school that morning was a young man named John Roulstone a nephew of Rev. Samuel Chapin, was then settled in Sterling, and the son of Mary’s dancing master. 11/ was fitting for college. lie was greatly pleased at the school inci dent and the next day he came a cross the fields on horseback, came to the school house and handed Mary a slip of paper containing three stanzas he had composed. Two stanzas have since been added by a Mrs. Townsend. From the fleece sheared from this ewe Mary’s mother knit two pair of stockings which Mary kept' until she was about eighty years old. When the ladies of Boston were raising money for the preser vation of old South church, some ten or more years ago, she contri buted one pair of these stockings for the benefit of the fund. The varn was unravelled and small ! pieces attached to cards having her ! autograph ; and these were sold for | quite a sum. realizing about SIOO. I Then Mary consented to ravelling I out the other pair of stockings and ! went herse’f to the fair and so d the wool All she kept was two little pieces pasted on cards. Mary taught school in Fitchburg after leaving Sterling. She was afterward married and for thirty five years was the matron of the McLain Insane asylum at Somer ville, Mass., where for forty years her husband was the steward of that institution. After leaving this place they built and occupied one of the finest residences in the citv, and for many years were most highly esteemed as generous, noble, useful public spirited peo pe. They left no children, and I heir estate they bequeath to the First Unitarian church for a par sonage. —Outlook. A Valuable Prescription. Editor Morrison of Washington, Ind., Sun, writes: “You have a valuable prescription in Electric ' Bitters and I can cheerfully recom j mend it for Constipation and Sick I Headache and as a general system tonic it has i)<> equal ” Mrs. An ine Stehle, 2625 Cottage Grove ave. Chicago, was all run down, could not eat nor digest food, had a headache which never left her and felt tired and weary, but six bottles of Electric Bitters restored her to health and renewed her her strength. Prices 50c and sl. Get a bottle at H. H, Arrington’s Drug store, A State Convention, The Democratic State executive i committee has decided on a state convention as the proper method ■ as selecting candidates for the su preme court bench. Each county iin the state is directed to hold a ; primary or mass meeting on the ■ 14th of November to elect delegates to the state convention which will be held on the 18, Following is the resolution passed by the com mittee : Resolved, That the several coun ties of the state are directed to se lect, either by primary or mass meeting as the executive commit tees of the several counties may e lect, two delegates for each repre sentative in the lower house of the Georgia legislature, to a con vention to be held in the city of Atlanta on the 18th day of Novem ber next to nominate candidates for four supreme court judges; that said primary or mass meeting shall be held in each county on the 14th day of November next. The Darlington, Wis , Journal says editorially of a popular pat ent medicine: “We know from experience that Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Rem edy is all that is claimed for it, as on two occasions it stopped excru ciating pains and possibly saved us from an untimely grave. We would not rest easy over night without it in the house.” This remedy undoubtedly saves more pain and suffering than any other medicine in the world. Every family should keep it in the house for it is sure to be needed sooner or later. For sale by H. 11. Ar rington, Summerville, Ga. The grewsome mahratta wad kah, the weapon of the Hindoo assassin, is shaped like a tiger’s claws and fastened to the fingers of the right hand by rings. With a treacherous embrace the mur derer claps his victim and tears him open, leaving him mutilated in a condition that leads the dis coverers of the body to believe a tiger or some other wild beast has clawed the man to death. There is no doubt that the can didates will now heave a sigh of relief, as the campaign is over. It is related of one of them that on being introduced to a lady on the train he exclaimed : “Our names are the same, and your face looks strangely familiar?” “That is not surprising,” replied the lady, “I am your wife.” He had not seen her since the beginning of the campaign.—Madison Adver tiser. McClure’s Magazine For Novem ber, The superior truth and delicacy of the old daguerreo tpye are made manifest in the November Mc- Clure’s, where fine reproductions of d-iguerreotype portraits of Cal houn, Webster, Edward Everett, Dr. Holmes, Jenny Lind, and oth ers, frem rare collections still sur viving, illustrate an entertaining paper, by Mrs. D. T. Davis, on the development of in America. Soon after the discov ery of the process American da guerreotypers became the finest in the world; and there is a strong movement now toward a revival of the art. The paper is, therefore, timely as well as entertaining- Another richly illustrated paper in this number, is Ethel Mackenzie McKenna’s intimate account of the English artist Alma Tadema. in his luxurious London house and studio. But, inevitab y, the read er’s first curiosity will be for the widely announced long story of American life by Rudyard Kip ling, of which the opening install ment here appears. It opens on an Atlantic * “liner,” passes dra matically to a Gloucester fishing schooner on the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, and begins a por trayal of the strange, romantic life" of the Yankee fishermen, in the midst of their perilous employ ment. that promises to be as strong and fine as anything Kipling has ’done. The illustrations by I- W. Taber are very close to the real life, also. The S. S. McClure Co., 141-155 East 25th St., New York City. CAPTAIN’SPREMONITION. He Obeyed It and by So Doing Averted a Tragedy. At 10 o’clock in the forenoon the valley suddenly narrowed un til wo had no choice but to take the path leading between two fir crowned ridges. We bad sighted Indians the day before, but the night had passed without an alarm and the morning had slipped along without sight of a warrior. Had the savages figured it out that the 50 of us guarding the 10 wagons of clothing and provisions were too strong for them, and that, our keeping so well closed up and on the alert made the capture of stragglers impossible? “Halt!”came ihe w'ord from the head of the column, and two men were sent ahead to spy out the lay of the land. They found the path only wide enough for the wagons, leading downwards and away un til it crossed a creek and was lost in the gloom beyond. Not a bird sang from the branches —not a rabbit skurried away in alarm. There was the silence of death along the path. Foot by foot, with ears bent forward and nostrils di lating, the horses of the scouts moved on, and their riders had the vigilance of men whose lives might be snuffed out at any mo ment . No danger along the path—no danger lurking at the crossing of the creek. So the scouts reported as they returned to the colum, and the captain had just opened his lips to give the order to march when a wolf came running up the path and dashed through the col umn. There was fire in his eyes, but yet his tail was down. “Skeered!” whispered an old veteran, “and by Injuns at that! That wolf has bin turned out of his lair by the reds!” “An ambush down thar to w’ipe us out!” whispered a second. The captain shaded his eyes with his hand and peered down the path for a moment. Then he quietly said: “Turn the wagons about and! keep to the east till we strike an other path! Don’t hurry—don’t shout! Corporal French, strike' up “Dixie’s Land” and you boys all join in the chorus !” In five minutes we w r ere out of the mouth of the gorge and march ing away to the east on the level plain again, and as we marched every trooper sang the chorus of the lively song at the top of his voice. Whatwasit? What did the cap tain see down ther> ?” was asked from man to man. The captain saw nothing he was obeying an instinct —one of those premonitions which sometimes stop a man in time to prevent a ter-l rible tragedy. The men jested and sang, but now and then one looked back over his shoulder and gavq the lie to the jest on his lips. Nc| one had seen anything —no one! had heard anything. Miles away they found a safer if longer road, and the fort was reached at last without sight of an Indian. Around the mess table they joked the captain for backing out of the gorge and adding miles to his journey. “All on account of a scared wolf!” laughed one. “And scared at his own shadow at that!” added a second. The captain had no reply, but to himself he wondered if he had ' not been over-cautious. It was months later when a captive squaw told him a tale. All night long, as the wagon-guard lay sleeping, the hostile Indians were coming up by dozens and scores going into ambush along the creek. They had dug rifle-pits —they had piled up logs and stones —they were hid den under the cedars until over 300of them lay waiting with bated breath for the train to enter the trap. When the las wagon and the la7t trooper should have passed a certain spot the signal was to be given to open fire. Three hundred jets of flame —300 bullets seeking ; living targets! There would not ; have been 20 troopers left alive i after that first volley. At the end A Faithful Wife’s Anxiety. *- . She Pleads for the Life of Her Husband but is Told that He has hut One Month to Live. A Sturdy Wolverine Farmer, Weighing 168 Pounds, Re duced to a Mere Skeleton in Four Short Months. After Being Turned from the Physician’s Door to Die, He Lives to Become His Former Self. He Tell© the Story. From the Democrat, Caro, Mich. “Fourteen years ago,” said 11. M. Under wood, who ha« for the past live years held the office of School Director in District No. 7, Indianfields township, and is well known throughout the county, “ my brother and 1 moved into this county. ’ Twas a wilder ness then, anil we located in the pines here with nothing but our hands to carve out our homes. It was an unequal struggle; but hard work and economy won the day and two years ago, with my forty acres nearly clear of debt, I began to feel that the worst was over. In April of that spring 1 was as sisting in driving logs down the Cass River, when I was taken with a slight but constant pain in the left side below the heart. As days passed the trouble increased ; my appe tite fell away and I visited one of the best known and most successful doctors in Caro, the county seat. I was informed that I had an inward abscess and must cease work. “ It was hard to quit work when 1 knew too well that, it only meant another mortgage on my little farm, but within a few days I was obliged to return to my home. The medicine furnished by the doctor gave me slight relief but 1 co’ild detect no perma nent benefit. My appetite was gone; I could not sleep, and each day found me growing weaker. I next visited Dr. A. L. Seeley, of Mayville, who, from the first, said that he had but slight hopes of benefiting me and recommended that 1 go to a sanitarium. With no money this I could not do, even though it would save my life, and with medicine that the doctor furnished I re turned to my home feeling that the last ray of hope that I ever would be my former self was fast disappearing. Days passed and I was rapidly loosing flesh. During the awful months which I passed that summer—and I can never forget them—-I was reduced in flesh from weighing 168 pounds to 110. “Slowly the long days and the awful nights passed until another seven days had been added to the awful days of torture ; and still no relief, and my weight was now 140 pounds, nerves shattered and my system in a leplorable condition. At this juncture ray wife said that something must be done, and with assistance I was taken to Mayville, where Dr. Seeley was again consulted. After making a thorough examination my wife earnestly pleaded that he do something for me. He said that M could do nothing; re lief might be found at a sanitarium, but otherwise he would give me just one more month to live. Sorrowfully she turned from the physician’s door, and what 1 considered my last journey home was soon to be under taken. I had read in the Caro Democrat of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People and the benefits many had received from them, and with faith less than the ‘ grain of mustard seed,’ I asked her to step into the drug store and secure a box. This she did, and after a jolting ride over a poor road we finally reached home, tired, worn and in sorrow. I took the first pills that night, and left my wife sitting sorrowfully comparing the flickering hopes of my life with the faint rays of light from my bedroom door, while I thought only of what the doctor had said. The forepart of the night I was restless as usual, but, do you believe, during the latter part of that very night I caught a nap, the first sweet and resting sleep I had enjoyed for months. I continued the medicine the next day, and the following night I slept, yes sir: slept a greater portion of the night. “Oh, you can’t imagine how brightly the sun shone on our home before that week was over, and how the faint rays of hope were fanned into a flame. But my father and many of my neighbors shook their heads and said : ‘ Simply something quieting about those pills; ’twill be back again, look out for the after effects.’ But here are the after effects,” said Mr. Underwood standing erect, the picture of health and weighing 165 pounds. “ From the second day after getting the pills the change set in. I could sleep, my appetite came back, and before I had finished the third box of Dr. Williams’ Pink The Greatest Cure on Earth for Pain. Cures permanently Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Sprains, Cuts, Bruises, Scalds, Burns Swellings, Backache or any other«pain. SALVATION*OIL is sold everywhere for 25 cts. Refuse substitutes. Chew LANGE'S PLUGS, The Great Tobacco AntidoteJOc. Dealers or mail.A.C.Meyer * Co,, Balto..Md. of five minutes every man would have been dead and the red de mons screaming with glee as they twisted off their scalps. A fright ened wolf betrayed the ambush. The train took another route and was saved. For an hour or more the Indians watched and waited, none daring to move for fear of betraying his presence. At last all realized that their game had es caped from the trap, and sullenly and noiselessly tho 300 moved down the path, up the rise, into the cedars where their ponies were herded, and without shout or curse or sound to be heard 10 yards away they mounted and rode away, and the ridges hid them from view.—Detroit Free Press. It was Abraham Lincoln who said : “The strongest bond of hu man sympathy outside of the fam ily relation should lie o<>e uniting all working people of all nations and tongues and kindred. Nor should this lead to a war upon property, or the owners of proper ty. Property is the fruit of labor; property is desirable, is a positive I Pills for Pale People I was able to do my chores, and before the fourth was finished I I was doing my farm work. My cure was | complete and permanent, and I have not I seen a sick day since and you bet Dr. Wil liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are as nug gets of gold at our house.” “Swerr to the statements I have made? Why, certainly and with pleasure,” said Mr. Underwood, when the reporter sug gested that some people who were not ac quainted with him might be skeptical, and he accoiiipanicd the reporter to a justice’s office, where the following acknowledgment was taken : .State of Michigan, 1 County of Tuscola, j Personally appeared before me, H. M. Un derwood, who, under oath, declared that the statements made in the above interview were true and correct in every respect. Signed : C. D. PetERSHANS, Notary Public., in and for Tuscola County, Michigan. Orson Livermore, who was present at the interview with Mr. Underwood, said : “Yes, neighbor Underwood’s cure is considered a miracle by the people of this locality, and the story is told over and aver again.” “Whysaid Mr. Underwood,“if you have any doubts about the matter, just call on Samp. AV ells, J. H.Weaver, Guy Wilson, An drew Thompson, my father,T. K. Underwood, or any of the dozens of reliable farmers in this section ; they know all about it.” During the conversation which followed after the interview, the reporter learned that Dr. Hendris, of Mayville, recommends Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People in his practice,and that Mrs. Thomas Anderson,liv ing but a few mil's away, had received mar velous help from them ; alsotbat John Smith Sr., living near Akron, this county, an old gentleman eighty-nine years of age, who had been a sufferer from bilious rbc nmatism for years, had been entirely cured by their use. But as night was approaching the reporter could not pursue his investigations lurther. A Muscatine Woman. On the second floor of one of our neatest business buildings, located at No. 125 West Front Street, is the home of Constable and Mrs. M. C. Briggs, and it was visited to-day for the purpose of speaking to Mrs. Briggs on a question of considerable weight to her. The reporter upon calling found Mrs. Briggs a little indisposed(not however v ith her form er complaint), but nevertheless in a very con genial mood. Upon inquiry as to the bene fit she derived from the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People, she said : “ About eighteen months since I was taken down with sciatic rheumatism in niy lower limbs especially my right leg, and so fierce was the attack that. I could not walk at all. After trying various remedies, all without avail, a lady neighbor of mine, Mrs. John Yoder, who, I think, is now living in Eldon, nentioned Dr. Williams’Pink Pills for Pale .’eoplc and said she had used them for simi lar trouble and had found them very bene ficial. I purchased a box of pills at F. Ncs per & Co.’s drug store, and before I had taken all of the first box I began to feel much improved and the pain began to ease. I con tinued to take them, buying a second box. and when I had nearly finished the second box I was able to walk about as ably as ever and have not had an attack since. “ 1 heartily endorse Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People and feel confident that anyone afflicted as I was could be easily re stored to their usual health by their use.”— Frovi the .lohrval, Mvzeatinc, Java. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are now given to the public as an unfailing blood builder and nerve restorer, curing all forms of weakness arising from a watery condition of Ihe blood or shattered nerves. The pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 (they arc never sold in bulk or by the ICO), by addressing j Dr. Williams’ Med. Co., Schenectady, N.Y good in tho world. That some should be rich shows that others may become rich, and hence is just encouragement to industry and en terprise. Let not him who is homeless pull down tho house of another, but let him labor dili gently and build one for himself, thus by example assuring that his own shall be safe from violence when built.” If your children are subject to croup watch for the first symptom of the disease —hoarseness. If Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy is given as soon as the child becomes hoarse it will prevent the attack. Even after the croupy cough has appeared the attack can always be prevented by giving this remedy. It is also invaluable for colds and whooping cough. For sale by H H. Arrington, Summerville, Ga. PECULIAR in combination, pro portion and preparation ofingredi ents,Hood’s Sarsaparilla possesses great curative value. You should TRY ITo Ripans Tabules. Ripans Tabules- at druggists Ripans Tabules cure liver troubles. Ripans Tabules: pleasant laxatne.