Newspaper Page Text
-GEO. It. SIBLEY, ASBL'BY HULL. o D TOJ)]N
Office Os
GEO. R. SIBLEY & CO.,
, Cotton Factors,
847 and 849 Reynolds Street.
—
Augusta, Ga., July 21st, 1887.
To Oun Patrons and Friends :
It is with profoundest regret that wo announce the death of our
Senior, Hon. GEORGE 11. SIBLEY, which occurred on Friday
evening, the 15th instant.
e 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.
Wc 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.
IVc have now completed arrangements for a sale of Popular
Fall ami Winter Styles at prices that make us the Friend of
every Economical Buyer.
Wc keep the best qualities, styles and assortment in
ART! STI C HHHHTVfItE
AND
lOUSEH9M MGO&ATIONS.
See 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 can bo bought cheaper for none are allowed to
undersell
mi ibw«;
708 and 710 Broad St., AUGUSTA, QA.
’THEO? MARK WALTER’S
Steam Marble and Granite Works
a BROAD ST., HEAR LOWER MARKET-
AUGHJfeTA. Ga.
rC Marble Work, Domestic & Imported
kW znaJPaw / JvTvl at low prices.
/J ov-l' A / Georgia aid South Carolina Granite Monu-
* specialty.
At l ar K p selection of MARBLE anil GUAN
1 ITE WOIiK always on hand, ready for LET
TERING and DELIVERY.
Alfred Baker, President. William B. Young, Cashier.
The Augusta Savings Bank.
811 BROAD ST., ..UGUSTA, 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. DERRY. WILLIAM SC'UWEIGiiRT, JAMES A. LOF LIN,
JULES RIVAL, L. A. It. REAR. ______
i T .FBOGFOND
■X / CfeiU a»d Fevw Cure-
,/ I• / / Without a superior on earth for the radical cure of ( hills
vk R / / and Fever, no matter how long standing. Aho a preven-
\\ sill 9// five of chills if taken in broken dusts. Every merchant
V\yV\ tullf / Helling Frog Pond is authorized to refund the money if it
.jk fails to cure. “No cure, no pay” is our plan of sellii g.
F.R)G POND CHILL and FEVER CURE is sold by reliable
z t* nr rchants in Columbia county. Large but th a only 50
cents. Ask for it and take no other. Address orders to
, MANUFACTURING COMP’Y,
"* Proprietors and Manufacturers, Augusta, Ga.
Office with BEALL & DA VENPORT,Druggists,
[TRADE MARK] 6 I 2 Broad Stheet, Augusta, Ga.
“'JESSE THOMPSON & CO,
MANUFACTURERS OF
DOORS, SASH § BUNDS
Mouldings, Brackets, Lumber,
Laths and Shingles.
DEALERS IN
WINDOW GLASS AND BUILDERS HARDWARE,
PLANING MILL and LUMBER YARD,
Hale Str. et, Near Central Railroad Yard Augusta, Georgia,
hsr*
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
The finest collection of butterflies in
lhe world is said to be that nt the Johns
Hopkins University. The collector of
it is Herman Strecker, a day laborer, who
wor.<s nt stone-cutting, mid does his
hunting after specimens, ns lie must, nt
night, after his day’s work is over.
Wli it is termed flexible glnss is a use
ful product just introduced. Paper of
proper thickno<s is rendered transparent
•>y soaking in copal varnish, and when
«lry is polished, rubbed with pumice
stone, and a layer of soluble glass is ap
plied and rubbed with salt. Thesurfacc
is as perfect as glass.
Tiie largest dam in the world is to be
built across the upper end of the Sas
Mateo canyon, about four miles west of
tiie village of San Mateo. Tiie dam will
consist of a solid wall of concrete, from
hillside to hillside. It will be 700 feet
long, 170 feet high, 175 feet thick at the
base, and 20 feet thick at tiie top. Tiie
reservoir which will be formed by this
dam will have a capacity of 32,000,000
gallons, and some time in the future will
be connected with tiie Ban Francisco
water shed by a tunnel five miles long.
Electric lanterns will, it is thought,
take the place, in course of time, of the
ordinary mining safety lamps. A porta
ble electric lamp can now be made, pos
sessing tiie following features: Weight,
about three pounds; illuminating power,
five candles; size and shape, similar to
present lamps; duration of light ten
hours; cost of repairs, charges of bat
tery, and materials, 2 cents for ten hours;
these facts showing that there is nothing
to prevent its adoption as a substitute for
the present lamps, and even fir candles
in many mines where they are still in
use.
The problem of protection against
yellow fever by inoculation seems in a
fairway to solution by tiie Brazilian
doctor, Frcire, who lias been seven years
at work on tlie subject. According to a
recent account, Hie number of persons
already inoculated is 6,524. There have
died from yellow fever in Rio de Janeiro,
between January, 1885, and September,
1886, 1,675 persons, of whom eight had
been inoculated (in 1884, the method
being then imperfect.) This gives a
mortality of about 1 per 1,030 for the in
oculated, and one per cent, for the un
inoculated.
Rustless iron is being manufactured in
New York by a new process which, it is
claimed, converts the surface of the metal
into magnetic oxide of iron. This is
done by subjecting it successively to the
action of highly heated air and carbonic
oxide gas from coal fires. The hot air
converts tiie metallic surface into red
oxide of iron, which is then reduced to
black or magnetic oxide by tiie gas.
This renders it rust-proof when exposed
to the air or to fresh or salt, water. The
process can be applied with most satisfac
tory results to water pipes and architec
tural work.
A forgotten chemical product, brought
out by Bode more than twenty years ago,
is now preserved in a Paris museum. It
is a transparent reflector, in which the
image of an object may be viewed as in a
mirror, or through which the object
itself may be seen as through common
glass. It is simply a piece of glass cov
ered with a thin layer of platinum. It
was prepared by combining a mixture of
platinic chloride and essence of lavender
and borate and oxide of lead, spreading
the whole on the glass with a fine brush,
and then baking in a muffle at a low red
heat. Tliis old discovery ought to serve
some useful purpose.
Prof. A. G. Bourne writes to Nature
regarding the sense of taste or smell in
leeches. While in India he picked up
with his fingers a stone from the soft,
muddy bottom of a shallow, torpid
stream. Returning to the same spot a
few minutes later, lie noticed a number
of leeches swimming near the spot. On
tiie following day, suspecting that tliey
had “smelt’’ or “tasted” his hand in tiie
wafer, he first stirred I lie surface of the
mud with a stick, but no leeches ap
peared ; after the water was clear again
lie washed his hands in the water with
out disturbing the mud, and very soon a
number of leeches came up and swam
about. The soft mud in which they live
is about a foot deep, and although the
disturbance of tiie surface mud with a
stick was not sufficient to bring them
out, the “smell” or “taste” of his hands
seems to have spread down and extended
over an area of more than a yard. Lust
year in the hill country he had an oppor
tunity of observing tiie very keen scent
of the land leeches, which will go to a
min or horse from the banks of either
side or even a wide road.
Remarkable Ureatnrcs in Ocean Mud.
I never tire of examining through the
microscope some bit of ocean mud, for
in it I am constantly finding some re
markable form of shell. They are often
spined, sometimes they arc smooth and
polished as the best glazed chinaware;
at times they are pure white, then striped
with every hue of the rinbow. It
seems a pity that such beauties should
be so small and hidden so far from the
eyes of men. On this great bed of mud
the most remarkable creatures live in
vast numbers. There are serpent-like
starfishes, beautiful branching corals,
ugly black fishes, pure white “sca-cu
cimbers,” bright pink, purple, and red
sea-anemones, and a host of other creat
ure . The fishes are always strange and
urn- >uth, with huge mouths and stomachs
nil in one, but with the tail hardly no
ticeable. When tiie fishes are brought
to the surface their air bladders and
stomach protrude from their mouths,
their eyes bulge out, and tiie blood is
fori <<l through tin- skin. Life has been
crushed out of them by the sudden
c' age of pressure, the gases within
having burst the tissues and body walls
asunder. The tremendous pressure of
the water was well shown by lowering
an empty bottle, which was crushed to
at oms. Hurt ford Courant.
Heminders of Home.
Celeste, piano pounder,
Was torturin ' the keys,
XVl.'-n in a stranger walked and said:
1 “ Ex- use me, if you please;
“ But I, alas! am homesick,
Anil when I heard the din
Ol . rashing hammers, blow on blow,
I thought I’d venture in.
“ I pray you keep on pounding,
I a -h you would not stop,
Jt :aak" me feel less lonesome, for
I own a blacksmith shop.”
—The Judge.
Lots of Honey.
Joseph N. Haring, n funner in Miwi!
county, N. J., while pronjiecting on the
side of Orange Mountain for hoop poles,
noticed a shadow as of n cloud passing,
and looking up saw a large swarm of
liees Hying towards the summit. Ho
followed tiie swarm and camo to the foot
of it wall of nx-ks. Looking up ho saw
under un overhanging ledge, thirty feet
; alxive him, n lu-nvy mass of lx>es. Ho
J observed that the liees wore passing in
i and out of holes in tiie rock. Returning !
to tiie place with two neighbor farmers
nil dressed in l>eo hats, gloves and thick
clothing, the party net to work to blast
out the rock, Tliey were attacked by
thousands of liees, and were compelled
to desist after tliey had made an open
ing. Returning the following day the
farmers found that the opening blasted
out led into a hollow beyond from which
I a stream of honey trickled down tho
i rocks. Tliey first smoked out the liees
with brimstone, mid after a little more
blasting tliey were able to enter tho
opening when they found a small cave.
On nil sides the walls were covered with
great masses of honey in tho comb, and
it was several feet in thickness. Tho
combs rim back several feet into the
veins in the rocks, and here the honey
hud been partly spoiled by ago and mois
ture. Tho honey in the cave was in per
fect condition, It was observed that the
cave was apparently divided up among
several colouiiis of bees, us barriers had
been erected, lieing walls of wax about
half an inch in thickness. Mr. Haring
thinks there uro several thousand pounds
of honoy in tiie mass.
- .. ■
on’t Scare Worth a Cent
11k —“Ah, Miss Grace, did you rend
in tho paper of all those people who were
poisoned with ice-cream f”
Bum —“Oli, what a delightful dentil!”
—Judge.
MORE TRAIN-WRECKING.
Throe llnslnrdly Act# by Undiscovered VII,
Inins—No Lives I.ost.
An attempt was made to wreck a Bt.
Louis express train on tiie Fitchburg,
Muss., road, about one and a Half miles
above the townof North Pownnl, Vermont.
Engineer Philling, in the dim moonlight,
saw an obstruction on the track about
three train lengths ahead—the train was
running about forty miles an hour—and
he applied tiie air brakes, stopping tho
train with a jerk, but not until the en
gine hud struck the obstacle. This was
a pile of nine tics, two of which wer<
spiked to the track. The engine did no',
leave the track, though several of thetiei
were displaced from the pile laid acrosi
the rails. A passenger train on tho Cairo,
Vincennes & Chicago Railroad ran into a
saw log upon tiie track about eight miles
south of Vincennes. Tiie log was as
large as a flour barrel, but the engine
knocked it off. Over a hundred people
were on the train and felt considerable
alarm over their narrow escape. A few
nights ago an attempt whs made to wreck
an Ohio & Mississippi train between
Shoals and Hutson, Ohio. On tliis occa
sion,crossties were piled on the track, but
the engineer saw them in time to reverse
tiie engine. Tiie obstruction was strong
enough to shake up the passengers and
tlirow oil tiie cab. A northbound pas
sengei train on the Iron Mountain Rail
road was wrecked near Wnlnut Ridge,
Arkansas. Members of Texarkana and
Hot Springs Grand Army Posts were
among the passengers en route to St.
Louis.
C’onnumplion, WnNtlnn
And General Debility. Doctors disagree as lo
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.
But in Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with
Hjpophosphites tiie twoare combined, and the
effect, is wonderful. Thousands who have de
rived no permanent benefit from other nrepa
rations have been cured by this. Scott's Emul
sion is perfectly palatable and is easily digested
by those who cannot tolerate plain Cod Liver
Oil.
Tiie Bank of England t ries to stop the flow of
gold to this country by raising the discount.
Don’t hawk, hawk, blow, spit, and disgust
everybody with your offensive breath, but use
Dr. Sage’s Catarrh Itemedy and end it.
Immense rainfalls follow the line of con
struction of the Mexican (Central Railroad.
Sash, permanent and complete are the cures
of bilious and intermittent diseases, made bv
Prickly Ash Bitters, Dyspepsia, general debil
ity, habitual constipation, liver ami kidney
complaints arc speedily eradicated from the
system. It disinfects, cleanses and eliminates
all malaria. Health and vigor are obtained
more rapidly and permanently by the use of
tliis great natural antidote than by any ether
remedy heretofore known. As a blend pnriner
and tonic it brings health, renewed energy and
vitality to a worn and diseased body.
In every community there are a number of
men whose whole time is not occupied, such as
teachers, ministers, fawners’ eons and others.
To these clflsse' especially we would say.if you
w ish lo make several hundred dol ars during
the next few months, write at on< rto B. h .
Johnson & Co., of Richmond, Va., and they
will show you how to do it.
Miss Mildred I>ee, daughter of th* late Gen.
R. E. Ixie, is at the Hotel de Normandie, Faris.
BeaMtifnl Womrn
are migle pallid and unattractive by tunctjoiial
irregularities which Dr. IMerce's ‘ Favorite
Prescription" will infallibly cure. Thousands
of testimonials. By druggists.
Within the last five College
has received gi ts amounting to
Ilnoghiers, Wives mid Mothers.
Hend for Pamphlet <»n female Diseases, free;
securely sealed. Dr. J. B. Marchisi, Ltica, N.Y.
I .Vo Opium in Pino's Cure for C onsumption
Cureu where ether remedies fail.
Is It Not Rlugiilnr
that consumptives should be the least appre
hensiye of their own oonqltion, while all their
friends are urging and beseeching them to bo
more careful about exposure and overdoing.
It n ay well he c hsiuered one of the most
alarming eymptyms of the disease, where the
patient is reckless aud w ill not believe that he
is In danger. Reader, if you are in this eondi
* neglect the only means of recovery.
Avoid exposure and fatigue, be regulai in your
habits, and use faithfully of Dr. Pierce’s “Guld
en Medical Discovery." it has saved thousands
who were steadily failing.
The I.lttle Orphan*
Mrs. Sea go one of tho Trustees of the New
Orleans Orphan Home, gives Dr.
Huckleberry Cordial for the lelief of all bowel
troubles. She never suffers herself to bo wit li
eu t iL
If afflicted wit h apro eyes, use Dr. Thompson's
hye-water. All druggists sell It. at 2fie. a faittle.
Tired All Over
Is the exprcMton a lady used In ilesarlblrn her eondt
tlon before using Hood'a Sarsaparilla. This prepara
tlon Is wonderfully adapted for weakened or low
slate of the system. It quickly ton<M the whole body,
glvos purity and vitality to the blood, and clears and
freaheiu the mind. Take It now If you feel ‘•tired
all over.”
'* Feeling languid and dluy, having no appetite
and no ambition to work, I took Hood's Sarsaparilla,
with the best results. As a health In vigor a tor nnd
tnediolne for general debility I think it superior to
anything alse." —A. A. Hiker, Albany St., Utica, N. Y.
N. B. Be sure to get the Peculiar medicine.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all druggists. $1; six for $5. Prepared only
bj 0.1. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
100 Doses One Dollar
The best and surest Remedy fbr Caro of
all diseases caused by any dorancement of
the Liver, Kidneys, Stomach and Bowels.
Dyspepsia, Sick Headache, Constipation,
Bilious Complaints and Malaria of all kinds
yield readily to tho beneficent influence of
It is pleasant to the taste, tones up the
system, restores and preserves health.
It is purely Vegetable, and cannot fail to
prove beneficial, both to old and young,
s a Blood Purifier it is superior to nil
others. Sold everywhere at fil.oo a bottle.
I Illi™
KIDDER’S
Ml
A SITIK CI IIE FOR
INDIGESTION Aid DYSPEPSIA.
Over fLQQO Physicians have sent un tbelr approval of
DRIESTYIzLN, Haying that it is the host preparation
for IDdlgCAtjon that they have ever used.
Wt have never heard of a ease of Dyspepsia where
DIGESTYLIN was taken that was not cured.
FOR CHOLERA INFANTUM.
IT WILL CURE THE MOST AGORA VATED CASES.
IT WILL STOP VOMITING IN PREGNANCY.
IT WILL RELIEVE CONSTIPATION.
EprSummer Complaints and Chronic l>larrh<ea,
which are the direct results of Imperfect dlgiMrtloti,
will <‘fTe< t an Immediate cure.
Take UYUESTYLIN for all pains and disorders of
the Stomach ; tliey all mine from Indigestion. ‘‘Ask
ydur druggist for DIUE.STYLIN (price per large
bottle! If he does not have it send one dollar Thus
and we wfll send a bottle to you, eipre«R prepaid.
Do not hesitate t<» send your money. Our uouse la
reliable. Established twenty five years.
w.li. F. 14 111 HER A CO..
11 nnufart ii rl ng ( hernial., NJ John Nt., N. ¥ .
A GREAT OFFER I
SWe call attention of « ur lady reader,
to the h|ndtM>m« preaeut that irbeiua
prepared for them By H|»eoial ar
rangeinerit with l)ninorj*tMonthly,
the Greatest of all Family Magaxintis,
we will print in our next. Issue an
ordkh, entitling every one of our
rendens tj*a pattern of tins handsome
Ja<jk«t (fn»a). Look out for it, for it
is worth 2f>cent«.
White Deinonwt’s is not a Fashion
Magazine, many suppose it to Im,
Imcauso ite Fnvlilon Impnrtment, like
all its other Departments, is so per
feet..
Ihupt subscribe for another Maaa
z.ine for pint year before Binding for
tills pattern, for tho pattern's de
soriptive envelope will contain full
information about Dbmohfht’h
Monthly, which is published by
W JenniiiKH Demurest, lb hast
14th Street, New York.
Ml. HAMMERLESS. I DAU THREE
MANHATTAN HAMMERtESS. IfItPER BREECHLOADERS
Bond for Catalogue of Bpcoiftltte"-
SCIIOVKKT..IIVO, IHI.Y
84 and 80 Chambers Street, Now York.
H Ely’s Cream Balm
In worth SIOOO to any
Man, Woman or Child
Miiflcrlng from
CATARRH.
Apply Balm into each nontrii.
Snill F BUSINESS COLLEGE.
UUL lv Renowned for Superior Courses
of Practical Study. Perfect Equipments, and
Efficient Facility. Over b.IXX) Students now in
Business. for riri iilnr. Address
( <>L. 44E0. NOI'LIC, New Orlenwe, !-»«•
fIntUTC Ms AMTCn -II NOV ELT V If
18ENTS WArTcD maciijnek uni rug
A.PATTERNS, for making Rugs,
® Tidies, Hoods, Mittens, etc. Ma
‘ '‘ent l.y mall for gl Send
for Into reduced price list.
' * E. It oms A' <o., Toledo, <>.
Dlral.tra Dill a Great English Gout and
ulair S llllSa Kheumatlc Ketnedy.
Oval ll.«, 34 l round, I I 1’111".
ra ■ loHoKlli-nA H<-lr«. S-.nJ.tamp
I QllwlUllw HAM, Ait’y, Washington, D. C.
Mr win All IM AD HOLD! ERH and thHr Widows
MtAluAn If AH pensions now for you all. A-l
HI dress E. fl. Gvlnloii A Co., Washington. D.C.
RPAIAIAAin An increase may be due. Ad
BJbs -If-KS Mll.o II S-ir.vr.s ..v < •>
I A IWr BA Grover Bd’g.Ws ihlnj.'rt’ii.D.t!
•P <• a day. Samples worth Al FREE.
Lines not un<i< r the horse’s feet. Write
IM V Brewster Safety Rein Holder Co.. Holly, Mich.
Morphine Ifahlt Cured fn IO
Io 20 days- No pay till cured.
Wl Ivlfl Dr. J- teiephens, 1-ebanon, Ohio.
ZIOL Dis worth * .(Xl p< rJh !’«tt t’s Eye Haire is
IJT wort h I,but is sold nt 2 < ab»x by dealer*.
- - - ■ ■ —.re '!, - - “-air —r ~ ~~1
!rKFR»4®
pSTm*’ Vla Ul\!■ 11 Enr Malt.
■ Hone gvnoiDe uohaa p on ’t ws'de vourmoney on a gum or rrrt her coat. The HSH P.RAND JLICKI-r
■itstDf.ed Ditto the stove :lrf-lu i d ind pwoor. end v »H k»- p you <]jv i i the har h • t
■ Taan* Maui. Ank for Hh/’FLSH BRAND” rtHsra and take t;o oilp-r. If ) our s>terekw per doe
W AILS
"you?
I>o you fool dull, languid, low-spirited, Utp.
h‘HB, nnd iiiileßcrlbnbly miserable, both phy<j|-
cally nnd ipentally; experience a sense of
fullness or bloating after eating, or of “gone
ness," or emptiness of stomach in the morn
ing, tongue coated, bitter or bad tgsto in
mouth, irregular appetite, dizziness, frauuent
headaches, blurred eyesight, 11 floating specks ’*
before the eyus, nervous prostration or ex
huiistion, Irritability of tcm|ier, bot fliishee,
alternating with elillly sensations, shftK 'AI
luting, transient pains hero and there, cold
teet, drowsiness after meals, wakefulness, or
disturbed and unrefreshlng sleep, constant,
indescribable feeling of dread, or of impend
ing calamity?
If you have all, or any considerable number
of these symptoms, you are Buttering from
that most couiinuu of American maladies—
Bilious Dyspepsia, ar Torpid Liver, associated
with Dyspepsia, or Indigestion. The more
complicated your disease han become, the
greater the number and dlveralty of symp
toms. No matter what stage it lias reached,
»r. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery
will sulmluo it, if taken according to direc
tions for a rensonnblo length of time. If not
cured, complications multiply and Consump
tion of the Lungs, Sjtln Diseases, Heart Disease,
Hbeuniiitlam, Kidney Disease, or other grave
maladies uro quite liable to set In and, sooner
or inter, induce a fatal termination.
nr. Picrce'H Uolden Medical Dis
covery acta powerfully upon the l.lvcy, and
through that great (pood-purifying organ,
cleiuisra the system of nil blood-taints nnaini
purlLbw, from whatever cause arising. It is
equally vflieacious in noting upon the Kid
neys, and other excretory organs, cleflnsing,
etroQgthenlng, and healing their dlacasca. As
an appetizing, restorative tonic, it promotes
digestion and nutrition, thereby building up
Until tliali and strength. In malarial dWtrlcts,
tliis wonderful medicine has gained tfrbat
celebrity in curing Fever nnd Ague, Clillls and
F'evcr, Dumb Agile, and kindred diseases.
Hr. Pierce’s Uolden Medical Dis
covery
CURES ALL HUMORS,
from n common Blotch, or Eruption, to the
worat Scrofula. Salt-rheum, “ Fevor-«ttre«,”
Sealy or Rough Skin, In short, M.ll dlpeosea
caused by bad blood are conquered by thia
powerful, purifying, and invigorating medi
cine. Great Rating Ulcers rapidly hciu under
its benign intluQie,*. Especially bus it mafli
fested its potency in curing Tetter, Eczema,
Erysipelas, Boils, (lirbundlea. Sore Eye*. Scrof
ulous Sores and Swellings, Hip-joint DlseaM,
“ White Hwoliinire,” Goitre, or Thick Keck,
and Enlarged Glands. Send ten cents m
stamps ior a huge Treatise, with qolpred
plat ch, on Skin Diseases, or the same amount
for a Treatise on Scrofulous Affections.
« FOR THE DLOOD IS THE LIFE/ 9
Thoroughly cleanse* it bv using Dr. PlcrceHi
Golden Rledlcul Discovery, and good
digestion, a fair skin, buoyant spirits, vital
strength and bodily health will be established.
CONSUMPTION,
which is Scrofula of the runga, is arrested
and cured by tliis remedy, if taken in the
earlier stages of the disease. From its mar
vejous power over this terribly fatal disease,
when fljst offering this now world-fnnn d rem
edy to the public, Dr. Pierce thought seriously
of wdHng it bis “Consumption Cuius,” but
abaiHumed t.hn' name ns too restrict!vo fpr
a medhflno which, from its wonderful com
bination of tonic, or strengthening, alterative,
or blood-cleansing, nnti-bVious, pectoral* and
nutritive properties, is unequaled, not. only
as a remedy for Consumption, but for all
Chronic of the
Liver, Blood, and Lungs.
For Weak Lungs, Spitting of Blood, Snort
nesH of Breath, Cnroiiia Nasal Catarrh, Bron
chitis, Asthma, Seven' Coughs, and kindred
affections, it is au efficient remedy.
Sold by Druggists, at SI.OO. or Six Bottles
for $/».0O.
|£F" Send ten cents In stamps for Dr. Pierce I
book on (Consumption. Address,
World’s Dispensary Medical Association,
GU3 Main Nt., BUFFALO, N. Y.
“ Rough on itch’’Ointment cures Bkm Hu
mors. Pimples, Flesh Worms. Bing Worm, Tet
ter, SaW. Rheum, Frosted Feet. Chilblaint, ltcn t
Ivy Poison, Barber’s Itch, Scald Head.Ecsema.
50c. Druggists. E. H.Wxlia
ROUGHSPILES
Cures piles or hemorrhoids, itching, protrud
ing, bleeding, internal or other. Internal ana
external remedy in each package. Hure cure,
50c Druggists or mail. E. B.Weils, Jersey City.
ROUGHa»BILE PILLS. 48?:
Active but infiiu Cathartic. Small Granules.
Small Dose. For Bick Headache. Biliousness,
Liver Complaint, Constipation, Anti-Bilious.
ROUGHsSCmRRH SJttS
chronic caseOTneipmled for Catarrhal throat
affections, foul breath offensive odors. A 1 *
| for “ Rough on Catarrh." 50c. Druggists.
J. P. STEVENS ft BRO.
JEWELERS.
Atlanta, Ga.
Mend for <’ntnlogair. .
Printers’ EXCHANfiE
K M.i Printing Presses
Manufacturer au<l Dealer in—
I’rliitcr*’
Isr-printerH’ IpJlera caat Hvenr day.Ußl TflOS. If.
KICITZINGEII, 8J Ww»t Mitchellhf., Atlanta, Ga.
GOLDSMITH de SULLIVAN’S
Kilt-n Bnlldlnr, ATI.IHTI. <A Mo»t pr«sU<»l Oullra.
Houtb Beat course al l»3Btcoat Hend i"> ■.n ni<>gu«.
BUSINESS
Education a ■pecialty at AJOOICE’M IIUMINEHS
I'MVEKHITY, Alhtiilit. <-u. One of the bss»
I echorde in tiie Oouutrr. deed for
f AC,ENTS WANTEI)
I County. A rare for newbeginners. Un
precedented euccGßM. $5 to sl2 a dey easily made.
<4E<>. A. BAKf.lf A ( <>., < Lh.lim H. C.
a "I" C? Hl T A Obtained Kend stamp tot
DA I EL IM I O Irrvcnmrs’ Guide. L. Blii»
I I HAM, i’at< 111 Attorney, WruthlriKton. D. C.
CURES wO ALL uSTIAILSr gj
M Best Cough Hyrup. ™tesf<w>d. Dee
I A. N. IJ Thlr«v-Mne, ’s7.