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aEO- K- SIBLEY, ASBUBY HULL. o B . TOBrN
Office Os
GEO. R. SIBLEY & CO.,
Cotton Factors,
847 and 849 Reynolds Street.
Augusta, Ga., July 21st, 1887.
To Our Patrons and Friends :
It is with profouudest regret that wo announce the death of our
Senior, Hon. GEORGE 11. SIBLEY, which occurred on Friday
evening, the 15th instant.
We are glad to say however, that, with the same ample means and
facilities, and many years of experience as his associates, the surviving
partners, who have had the actual management of its affairs tor the
past eighteen months, will conduct the business as heretofore.
We solicit a continuance of the business of our friends and custom,
ers. Yours, very truly,
Geo. R. Sibley & Co.,
By Asbury Hull and P. B. Tobin, Surviving Partners.
Standby Those Who Standby You.
We have now completed arrangements for a sale of Popular
Fall and Winter Stylos at prices that make us the Friend of
every Economical Buyer.
Wc keep the best qualities, styles and assortment in
ARTIBTW FWNHVKE
AND
BBBSIEOLB 11G8I1TI0K.
Sec our remarkably complete and elegant New Stock—Cash
bought it —and
LOW PRICES WILL SELL IT.
Our Specialty —To please our customers. Our Aim-To save
Money for our Patrons. Our Intention—To do better
by You Than Any One Else.
Stand up and Tell Us if you can where goods cau be bought cheaper for none are allowed to
undersell
708 and 710 Broad St., AUGUSTA, CA.
" THEO. MARHWALTER'S
Steam Marble and Granite Works
A BROAD st., sear lower market.
Ajl GFa.
Tgffi I "Wl Marble Work, Domestic & Imported
VaiKM ' T dbLX.4S / . , zV/ ■?? at low pbices .
Zg Georgia and South Carolina Granite Monu-
ments made a epecialty.
jjf?/ A largo selection of MARBLE and GRAN
UK fißfi I ITE WORK alwave on band, ready for LET
TERING and 1)1', LI VERY.
Alfred Baker, President. William B. Young, Cashier.
The Augusta Savings Bank.
811 BROAD ST., AUGUSTA, GA.
TRANSACTS A GENERAL DEPOSIT AND DISCOUNT BUSINESS
Interest on Deposits of Five to Two Thousand Dollars.
DIRECTORS :
ALFRED BAKER, WILLIAM B. YOUNG, EUGENE J. O’CONNOR,
EDGAR R. DERIW, WILLIAM SCHWEIGERT, JAMES A. LOFLIN,
JULES RIVAL, L. A. It. REAB.
——7 p ROG . ZPOJSTJD
X Vt_ y / Fever Cure-
\\x ill/ -/ Without a Hiiperior on earth for the radical cure of Chills
f/ and Fever, no matter how long Htauding. Also a preven
five of chill* if taken in broken dofien. Every merchant
pLr z gelling Frog Pond i* authorized to rotund the money if it
JL fails to cure. “No miro, no pav" i* our plan of belllug.
- —FROG POND CHILL and FEVIsR CURE is wold by reliable
i ’ , merchants in Columbia county. Large bottles only 50
cent*. Auk for it and take no other. AddresH orders to
MANUFACTURING COMP’Y,
Proprietors and Manufacturers, Augusta, Ga.
. Office with BEALL A DAVENPORT,Druggists,
[TRADE MARK ; 612 Broad Street, Augusta, Ga.
JESSE THOMPSON & CO,
manufacturers of
DOORS, SASH ? ELIIHDS
Mouldings, Brackets, Lumber,
Laths and Shingles.
DEALERS IN
WINDOW GLASS AND BUILDERS HARDWARE,
PLANINC MILL and LUMBER YARD,
Hale Str. et, Near Central Railroad Yard Augusta, Georgia.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
By careful experiments M. Bloch has
determined that it takes 1.72 of a second
longer to hear a sound than to see a sight,
and 1.21 of a second longer to feel a touch
| than to see a sight.
Chemical decomposition has been pro-
I duccd by pressure in the experiments of
I two Belgian chemists. Under a pressure
of 6,000 atmospheres,nt a temperature of
101 degrees, a pulverized acetate of
copper and lime was slowly liquefied,
and on removal of the pressure the sur
face of the instrument in contact with
salt was found coated with copper.
The nutritive value of mushrooms has
been investigated in Germany by C. T.
Moerner, who shows that to get an
equivalent of an average hen’s egg a
person must eat ten and a half ounces of
Ayartcw, compe»tru, or no less than four
pounds oriniit; and that nine
I pounds of the former variety, or sixty
seven of the latter, would be needed to
1 equal a pound of beef.
Cotton, according to a scientific au
thority, is not a fibre, but a plant hair.
It holds to be spun in a thread because of
peculiar twists in each hair, shown by
the microscope, especially in polarized
light. Linen thread may be spun be
cause the flax fibers have certain rough
ness on their surfaces which enable them
to cling together. Hence it is impossi
ble to make as fine linen as cotton cloth,
but it is much stronger.
Among the many masses of meteoric
iron which have been described, only
nine, according to Prof. W. E. Hidden,
have been seen to fall, the places ami
dates being: Agram, Crontie, May 56,
1751; Charlotte, Tenn., August 1, 1835;
Braunian, Bohemia, July 14, 1847;
Tabarz, Saxony, October 18, 1854; Vic
toria West, Africa, in 1862; Nejed,
Arabia, spring of 1865; Nedagolla, India,
January 23, 1870; Rowton, Shropshire,
England, April 21), 1876; Mazapil,
Mexico, November 27, 1885.
Electric lanterns will, it is thought,
take the place, in course of time, of the
ordinary mining safety lamps. A port
able electric lamp can now be made,
possessing the following features :
Weight, about three pounds; illuminat
ing power, five candles; size and shape,
similar to present lamps; duration of
light, ten hours; cost of repairs, charges
of battery, and materials, two cents for
ten hours; these facts showing that there
is nothing to prevent its adoption its a
substitute for the present lamps, and
even for candles in many mines where
they arc still in use.
It has been laid down by M. Chevron!
that the human eye cannot be long em
ployed in the preception of a given color
without tending to become insensible and
to arouse an impression simular to that
produced by the perception of white
light. Dr. Beclard has also noticed that
when the eye is directed for a time upon
a colored field, the other eye being
| closed, if the eye which was open be in
turn closed and the other opeued a
spectre of the complementary color will
be perceived; thus, if the right eye has
observed a red disk, the left being shut,
a reversal of this state of things would
result in the perception of n green disk
by the freshly opened left eye. In virtue
of the same property of the eye, when
two tints arc placed beside each other
| the nearest edge of the one will appear
as though deprived of all the colored
rays which it may have in common with
the other. Analogous effect is produced
with grays non-colorcd, that is to say,
formed simply of white and biack.
Was Wilkes Booth Crazy
Secretary Shepherd, of the Illinois
State Sportsmen’s Association, was an
intimate friend of John Wilkes Booth.
The two men were in New Orleans
shortly before the assassination of Pres
ident Lincoln. Both were patrons of
the same gymnasium in the city, and
each had a certain amount of admiration
for the other. Shepherd was in a run
iniscent mood the other day, and,
among other things, he said that he was
satisfied that Booth was as crazy as a
■ March hare all the time he was in New
Orleans. The assassin spent a great deal
1 of his time in the gymnasium. There
) was a high platform in the building, and
Booth seemed to have a mania for jiunp
-1 ingoff it to the floor heir,w. lie would
repeat the performance a score of times
every half hour, and, tiring of this
| strange exercise, the assassin would run
‘ round the room until he had covered
I from ten to a dozen miles. That Booth
was then in training for his murderous
work there seems to be little doubt.
One day he rushed up to Shepherd, and,
with a feverish glitter in his eye, ex
claimed: “Shepherd, you’ll hear some
thing great about mebeforcmany days.’’
Shepherd did hear the startling story of
his friend’s terrible deed, but nothing
could convince him that it was the work
of a sane man. Chicago Herald.
After the Buttle.
Hundreds of bodies freshly smeared
with blood of men who, two hours pre
vious, had been filled with divers lofty
or petty hopes and desires, now lay with
stiffened limbs in the dewy, flowery
valley which separated the bastion from
the trench and on the level floor of the
chapel for the dead in Sebastopol;
hundreds of men crawled, twisted and
groaned with curses and prayers on their
parched lips, some amidst the corpses in
the flower-strewn vale, others on stretch
ers, on cots, and on the blood-stained
floor of the hospital; ami still, ns on the
days preceding, the red dawn burned
over Mount Sapun, the twinkling stars
paled, the white mist spread abroad from
; the dark, sounding sea, the red glow
illuminated the East; long, crimson
cloudlets darted across the bright blue
horizon; and still, as on days preceding,
I the powerful, all beautiful sun rose up,
giving promiseof joy, loveand happiness
to all who dwell in the world.— Ncir.
Princeton lletieir.
The Weatherwise Spider.
Country folks have a weather indica
’ tor in the spider. Although the morn
ning clouds may be threatening, if he
spreads his web out to the breeze it
shows that the prospects for a fair day
are good. The other morning, in the
suburban towns, observers noterl an unu
i sual number of these flimsy struct fires,
and a prophecy of a pleasant day was un
hesitatingly made, though the clouds
seemed to thicken till 8 or!) o’clock. But
the spiders cafne out ahead.— Hartford
Titnu.
Ths Wealth of Ancient Mexico.
Though gold in the ore is rich and
plentiful in the Mexican country, the in
habitants could not have been aware of
any better method of obtaining it than
by sifting it from river sands. Notwith
standing his numerous observations of
marvelously wrought gold objects in
Mexico, Bernal Diaz's own words should
establish this fact. Montezuma, he says,
informed them that their gold “was ob
tained from the province of Zacntula,
where the earth which contained it was
washed in wooden vessels, and the gold
dust sank to the bottom.” It was also
to be had, he says, in Tustepec, “where
it was collected from the beds of
rivers.” Again, speaking of the expe
ditions sent out by Cortes in search of
mines, he says that Gonzalo de Umbria,
who went to Zacntula, reported that
there “the natives washed gold out of
the sand in smaH troughs.”
If this were the only means employed,
it is improbable that the Spaniards saw
it in all the instances and in the great
quantity that Cortez and Bernal Diaz
describe; and that their statements in
this regard are grossly exaggerated is
evident from the fact that, with the ex
ception of a few small trinkets, not a
relic of the beautiful things of which
they speak remains. Neither do the
chronicles record n very great amount
actually gathered by the rapacious con
queror, yet all the schemes which his
mind could conceive must have been di
rected to this one object, not for per
sonal greed only, but to meet the expec
tations of the emperor, to whom, when
ho had feared that he was to be deprived
of his command, he had promised wealth
and treasure. Though 'torture of the
most barbaric description was employed
to induce the natives to reveal the riches
that they were supposed to hide, no
more were obtained; and, in order that
the Spanish king and those about his
court may afterward understand the ab
sence of the treasure in the kind and
quantity which he had led them to ex
pect, Cortes cautiously wrote that it was
all lost in that disastrous revolution
which first drove him from the city.—
[Popular Science Monthly.
Sowing an Allspice Grove.
The planters of Jamaica long ago
found out that the birds can make much
better pimento or allspice groves than
can be made by man. As a consequence
the work of planting, or more properly
of sowing, is left entirely to the birds,
man’s share of the labor being confined
simply to chopping over the piece of
woodland which it is proposed to con
vert into a spice grove.
After the first rains following tho
clearing a number of young pimento
plants make their appearance. The
birds, flitting about among the fallen
timber all through the fruit season,drop
the seeds everywhere, under conditions
which ensure their immediate fertiliza
tion, and the partial shade afforded by
the fallen timber is just what is re
quired to foster the young plants’
growth. By the time the timber is rot
ten the planter has his pimento grove
well developed, and requiring only to
be thinned out to render it a source of
profit for many years.—[Audubon Mag
azine.
No Cause to Fret.
A couple from the humbler walks of
life came before a Justice of the Peace
to be married, when the ceremony be
ing over, the bride began to weep copi
ously.
“What’s the matter?” asked the new
husband.
“I never told you that I didn't know
how to cook,” sobbed the bride.
“Don’t fret. I’ll not have anything
for you to cook. I'm a pin t. -| Colum
bus Dispatch.
Getting Late.
“Clara,” he said in a low, sweet, kiss
metoneof voice, “do you see yon twink
ling star?"
“I see plenty of stars,” replied the
tired girl, who was anxious to get to
bed, “but I don't see anything jiarticu
larly ‘yon’ about them. Don’t be fool
ish, George. —[N. Y. Sun.
100 Much Luck.
“Do you think you will give this va
cancy in the counting-room to young
Smith?”
“No. I'm a little doubtful about
Bmith.”
Why?”
“Because he always has so much luck
when he goes fishing.”— Pitlthurg Chron
icle.
< oiiiiii in pt ion, Want hi* Diem ere.
And General Dehllitj’. Doctors disagree as to
the relative value of Cod Liver Oil and Hypo
phosphites; the one supplying strength and
flesh, the other giving nerve power, and acting
as a tonic to the digestive and entire system.
ButinScOTT’fi Emi t «ion of Uod Liver Oil with
Hypophosphites the two are combined, and the
effect is wonderful. Thousands who have de
rived no iicrmanent benefit from other prepa.
iwtions have ken cured by this. Scott’* Emu’x
sion imperfectly palatable and is easily digestea
by tho*e who <-annot tolerate plain Cod Liver
Oil.
Prof. Tyndall < alls Mr. Gladstone “a hoary
headed rhetorician.”
Dr. Pierre’s “Pleasant Purgative Pellets”
«>anse and purify the blood and relieve the
digestive organs.
Frawuelo, the Madrid boll-fighter has az
repted S&mdO for four performanc e* in Mexico.
If afflicted with *ore eye«. use Dr. Thomrsam’
Eye water. All druggists sell it at. 25-. a bottle
The best cough medicine is Pise's Cure fox
Con‘•urnption. Sold everywhere. 25c.
(Ker*'Worked Women,
For “worn-out,” “run-down,” debilitated
school teachers, milliners, seamstresses, house
ftntl ov «r-vrorked women generally,
Dr. i’ieruc's Favorite Preseription is the best of
all restorative tonhw. It is not a “Cure-all,”
put admirably fulfills n singleness of i»uri>oßP,
pving n >nos< i*>tent Siieclflc for all those
(. hronie n vaknesses tuia Dieteasos peculiar to
women. It Is a powerful, general as well as
uterine, tonh and nervine, and imparts vigor
and strength to the whole system, it promptly
cures weaknesH of stomach, indigestion, bloat
ing. weak back, nervous prostration, debility
Hint sh'eplessnoKs, in either sex. Favorite Pre
scription is sold by druggists under our poKifiiY
ViKiroub t’. See wrapia r around Iwittle. Pkick
&I.IM A IIOTTLE, OH HIX IIOTTLKH FOR $.3.(10.
■' p <r K e 0,1 Diseases of Women, pro-
fusely illustrated with colored plates and nu
merous wood cuts, sent for ten rents in stamps.
Address, World's I Hspensary Medical As
sociation M 8 Main Street, Buffalo, N, Y.
The “Boulanger March,” so popular in Paris,
is an old polka, compfised 15 years ago.
.. Those who arc trying to break up tho bane
ful habit of intemperance will experience
gio.it benefit from the use of Prickly Ash Bit
ters. Liquors derange the system. Prickly
Asn Bitters will remedy the evil results and
restore the brain, stomach and liver to healthy
action, thereby strengthening the will jxiwor,
thoroughly cleansing and tolling up the sys
tem and remove every taint of disease. It is
purely a medicine, and while pleasant to the
taste, it cannot lx* used as a beverage by reason
of its cathartic properties.
Old Alabama,
i A' Lourd, Leesburg. Ala., writes: My
little babe, ten months old, was almost dying
from teething; gave it Dr. Biggers’ Huckleberry
Cordial. The happiest result followed. Every
home should have it.
Count Lavorghnn de Bragga will soon marry
Miss Cora, daughter of the late Gen. Cuthbert.
When all so-called remedies fail, Dr. Wage’s
Catarrh Remedy cures.
An earthquake shock has been felt at Bonn,
Prussi i. No great damage was done.
Dniiglilorn, Wivrn mid .lloiliem.
Send for Pamphlet on Female Diseane*, free;
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Utica, N.Y.
Sick Headache
la one of the most (llntresßfnf affection! ; and people
who are Ita victims deserve sympathy. But the great
success Hood's Sarsaparilla han had lu curing sick
headache makes It seem almost foolish to allow the
trouble to continue. By its toning and invigorating
effect upon the digest Ivo organs, Hood’s Sarsaparilla
readily gives relief when headache arises from indi
gestion; and in neuralgic conditions by building up
the debilitated system, Hood’s Sarsaparilla removes
the cause and hence overcomes the difficulty.
•‘My wife suffered from sick headache and neu
ralgia. After taking Hood's Sarsupurllla she was
much relieved.” W. R. Babb, Wilmington, Ohio.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
by C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IOO Doses One Dollar
_
■H SENNA-MANDRAKE-BUCHU
■K] and omen ccviAurEjriniCHi remedies
■■l It has stood tho Test of Year,,
Curing all Diseases of the
LIVER, BToM
ach, kidneys, bow-
ELS, Ac. It Purifies the
■Xj ICUr II 8100 l Invigorates and
I .|| Cleanses the System.
I B ITTERS I DYSPEPSIA.CONSTI.
I CURES I PATION, JAUNDICE,
I U DISEASES OFTHE | BICKHEADACHE.BIL-
I UVEH IIOUSI IOUS COMPLAINTS, Ac
H I disappear at once under
KIDNEYS I its beneficial influence.
STOMACH I It ■ purely a Medicine I
AND ■ as its cathartic proper
nr»iarr*r c H tlea forbids its use as a
OUIeVLLO, h beverage. It is pleas-
Sja B ant to the taste, and as
r^.S. by fhUd -
AILDRUGGISTS I prickly ash bitters co
PRICEIDOUARI Hol. Proprietor.,
~ j HT.LouiMand Kanha Ojtt
THE BEST VERTICAL MILL. JWffl
IRON AND STEEL FRAME.
FRENCH BUHRS.
Neal, Durable, CornnarL V
Write for Descriptive (Trcu
lar. Mention this paper. ’
Straub Machinery Co.,
Cincinnati, O.
KIDDER’S
A SI KK CURE FOR
INDIGESTION and D VSPEPSIA.
Over 5,000 Physicians have unfit us their approval of
DIGESTYUN, saying that It b the b«Ht preparation
for Indigestion that they have ever lined.
We have never heard of a rime »>f Dyspepsia where
DIGESTYLIN wan taken that wan not cured.
FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM.
IT WILL CURE THE MGST AGGRAVATED CASES.
IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY.
IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION.
For Summer Complaints and Chronic Dlarrh<ea.
which are the direct results of imperfect digestion,
DIGESTYLIN will effect an Immediate cure.
Take DYGEHTYLIN for all pains and dlaorders of
the stomach ; they all come from Indigestion. Ask
your druggist for DIGESTYLIN (price gl per large
bottle), If he does not have It send one dollar to im
■nd we will send a bottle to you, express prepaid
bo not hesitate to send your money. Our house Is
reliable. Established twenty five yearn.
W.M. F. KIDDER A; CO., m
Ma nufnrlu ring < hemistK3 .lohii Ml.t N. Y.
He A T A R R H
AND
HAY-FEVER
CURE.
Ely’s Cream Balm.
Apply Balm intoeicb noatril.
AGENTS WANTED ”
I.E<i. A. IIMAI.K * <'<»., <'lurlMUm, S
Dill* Great Engli»h Gout and
Dlflir S I IIIS, Rheumatic Kemedy.
k, :t t > round, 14 HUI..
M a MM MAS o obtained by |<. 11.
DA T E N T O MTON A < 0., Wssb-
■ liigtori, D. < . Send for our book of iiiMruotions.
W,o H dar. Sample, worth tl.no FREZ.
IIisIimIUIU Metropol e BJk, Chicago, 111.
fini||M Habit Cured. Treatment sent on trial.
Ur lUnl Hcmaxk Remkoy f <•.. LaEuyette.lnd.
/■ 1 OLD is worth HIMSt per pound, Pot*.i s Eye Salve
< rsi ,000, but is sold at V> cents a box by de ilers.
VL IU l\ !■ It Ever Made.
■ Ngdo r»r>'.ine unlM» pon’t w«*f* wtr vnonevon a gum c»rr»fl<b*rr/»ot Th** Fl'-n mAVDFLH RTF
Ktax»p*4 with •>* Bbove j w an,) ~,r,4 FR n O p. and v ill yn»i dry i’l tho harlot storm
S 7saj>km4J'«. AMklortho- I lt-.il BKAND ’ I taf.crion'iH’ If 50-;r • r d-<-
MnoE h»ve"th«»' shani, . pend for devriptlveeataloviie tq A J TOWER. 2»>
Orijiiii
« asawS LITTLE
liver
® O Wk»\V«XS PILLS.
HBWARB OF IMITATIONS. AX.WATS
AXK FOR DR. I'IKItCE’S FKI.LETS, OR
JhITTLB SiraAß-COATKD FILLS.
Being entirely vegetable, they op
erate without tliHtuiiiance to the aytitem, diet,
or oeeuputlon. Put lip in vliihr t lain, herineti
otiUy Healed. Always fresh amt rejlnble. Al
a laxative, alterative, or purgative.
them> little Pellets give the nio*t perfect
satisfaction.
SWIOICILE,
HHlona Headache,
Dixzlneaa, roust I pa- x®C.
tion, Indigestion,
HI I lone Attacks, and sll X VS/WL
derangeinenta of the atom
ach nml liowcla. an'prompt- WJS
ly relieved and permanently JvfU
cured by tho use of Dr.
Pierro's Pleasant Purgative Pellet*
In explanation of the remedial power of these
Pellets over go great, a variety of diaeaaea, It
may truthfully lie anid that their action upon
the ayatcin is univcraal, not a gland or ttaaue
escaping their aanative Influence. Hold by
druggists, 2.5 cents s vial. Manufactured at the
I'heinh-al laboratory of Worn.D’H UtSPXNBAHT
Medical Association, Dutlalo, N. Y.
is offered by the innnufactiijr
er* of Dr. Nage’s CatArrn
ff ? Kemedv, for a ease of
FSmmL (’hronie Nasal Catarrh which
they cannot cure.
SYMPTOMS OF CATARRH. BulL
heavy headache, obKtruction of the naaal
passages, discharge* falling from the head
into the throat, sometimes profuse, watery,
and acrid, at others, thick, tenacious, muoous,
purulent, bloody and putrid; the eyes are
weak, watery, and inflamed; there is ringing
in the ears, deafness, hacking or coughing to
clear the throat, expectoration of offensive
matter, together with scabs from ulcers; tho
voice is changed and has a nasal twang; t,he
breath is offensive: smell and taste are Im
paired; there is a sensation of dizziness, with
mental depression, a hacking cough and gen
-1 eral debility. Only a few of the above-named
symptoms are likely to bo present in any ope
I east*. Thousands of eases annually, without
manifesting half of the above symptoms, re- \
suit in consumption, and end in the grave.
I No disease is so common, more deceptive and
dangerous, or i< hr understood by physiolans.
By its mild, soothing, and healing properties,
| Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Remedy cures the worst
i <aaesof Catarrh, “cold in the head,”
Coryza, and Catarrhal Headache.
Sold by druggists every where; 50 cents. (
“Untold Agony from Catarrh.”
Prof. W. Hatjsner, the famous mesmerist,
| of Ithaca, N. K., writes: “Some ten years ago
I suffered untold agony from chronic uasal
catarrh. My family physician gave me up as
incurable, and said I must die. My case was
such a bad one, that every day, towards sun*
set, my voice would become so hoarse I could
barely speak above ft whisper. In the morning
‘ my coughing and clearing of my throat would
almost strangle me. By the use Os Dr. Rage’s
Catarrh ibunedy, in throe months, I was a well
man, and the cure has been permanent.”
“Constantly Hawking and Spitting.”
Thomas J. Hushing, Esq., Pine Streps,
St. Louts, Mo., writes: “ I was a great sufferer
from catarrh for three years. At times I could
hardly breathe, ami was constantly hawking
and spitting, and for tho last eight rhontns
I oould not breathe through the nostrils. I
thought nothing could lx* done for me. Luck
llv, 1 was advised .o try Dr. Sage’s Catarrh
Remedy, and I an now a well man. 1 believe
it to be the only sure remedy for catarrh now
i manufactured, and one lias only to give it a
fair trial to experience astounding results and
a permanent cure.”
Three Bottles Cure Catarrh.
Eli Bobbins, liunyan. P. 0., Columbia Co.,
Pa., says: “My daughter had catarrh when
she was five years old. very badly. I saw Dr.
I Sage’s Catarrh Remedy advertliied, and pro
: cured a bottle for her, and soon saw that it
hel|M‘d her; a third bottle effected a perma
nent cure. She is naw eighteen years old and
sound and hearty.”
I SSBSfff
A WARK
Gone wher. the Woodbine Twln,th.
Het. are Kmart, but. “Honun on Bat.” but.
them, “leant out Kata, Mio., Eoarhr., Water
Buga. Hies, Beetle., Moth., Ant., Moaqultoea,
Bed-buga, Inaecl. Potato Buga. Hparrow.,
Hkiink., Wewel, Gopher., < hipmunlm, Mole.,
Muak Rats, Jack Babbits, fqunrels. Itc. A Ute.
ReiiGHtjnißT
Washing and atsrohlng Powder. A revel*-
tion in housekeeping. A new discovery, l>eata
the world. How to Wash and Iron.
Dishes, Glassware, Windows,
mode clear nt cry«t*l with Rough on Dirt.
YOUNG GIRLS
Dirt, do a. nice washing ami Ironing m can
be done In any laundry. Bolling not necea-
Htiry ; unlike any other It can be u«ed In both
WASHING and STARCHING you need have
no for In using this article; being free from
vile alkali it does not rot, yellow nor injure the
finest fabric; clears, bleaches whitens. Th*
only article that can be added tosrareh (hot
or cold) to give a go<sl body and beautiful
glow; insist on your Druggist or Grocer
logit for you. 10 E. H. Wells, (Sty.
, HOUGHSCORNS I.’|<. At. Itruggiet**
MARLIN REPEATING
RIFLE
IN THt
eurata and absolutely WURLUI
•afo. Made in all elaoe for
Urae or email game.
| BALLARD
Callery. Hentla* and Target Rifles.
Brad fer llleatraled Catalogue.
I Mckrlin F'lre Arma Co., N«w Umvcm, Coan.
7. P. STEVENS & BRO.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
Mend lor CfiiHlogue.
( GOLDSMITH A, SULLIVAN’S
Kitten Building, Atlanta, Da Moot practical L’ollegß
Houth Bout cotiroe at letht coet. Horn! for catalogue.
BUSINESS
EducatiOD a ipeoialiy at IKMHD ’N BLKINEKM
I’.NIVERMITV, Allanln, (*n. One of tht» beet
schools in the (Jountrr. Hend tor Otrculare.
OPIUM
1 _WL
If! CORES WheTe ALL 11StTIlB
Ittfl Bent t’ough Hyrup. Tastes gocxl. Use
Qj in time. Hold by drugtrieta- J-l
A. ,N. I Thlrty-Rrven, »«7.