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DAILY EvaiiNnso
Savannah pi: il -m- EM ■ ■ ». m y? Recorder
VOL VII.—N<x 10.
THE SAVANNAH RECORDER.
PUBLISHED EVERT EVENING ,
Saturday Exoepted.)
At lex BAY 8THEHT,
By J. aiJBBN.
The Rkcozidbb is served to subBorlbera, In
every part oi the city by careful carriers.
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the name of the writer, not necessarily for
publication, but as a guarantee of good faith.
Remittance b; Check or Post Office orders
must be mace payable to the order of the pub¬
lisher.
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rejected communications.
Correspondence on Ducal and general mat
teru of inter as- so.’ lotted
On Advertisements t unning three, six, and
tvelve months a liberal reduction fromoui
regular rates will be made.
All correspondence abort'd be addressed JBb
(jouoitK, Savannah, Georgia.
The Sunday Morning Rbcobdbb wl take
the piace of the Saturday evening edition
which will make six full issues for the week.
49rWe do not bold ourselves responsible for
th^ opinions expressed by Correspondents.
1 he Recorder is registered at the
Post Office in Savannah as Second Class
Matter.
Round About Georgia.
Tbe drought has beeu so protracted
in Emanuel county that it is with great
difficulty water can be obtained for
cooking aud drinking purposes, so says
tbe Courier.
The Catoosa Courier says: We
learn that on Saturday, a large black
bear was seen Dear Graysville by two
men out hunting. One of the men
had a double-barreled shot gun
loaded with small shot which be fired
8 t him, taking no effect. The bear
leisurely strolled off, leaving the hun¬
ters dismayed and out of ammunition.
The bear had scared the dogs so badly
before the hunters came up that they
conld not be set upon him.
Augusta Evening News : Tbe latest
combination in railroad circles ia the
purchase by tbe Carolina Central Road,
which runs from Charlotte to Wilming¬
ton, of the Atlantic, Tennessee and
Obio Road. This road is now operat¬
ed for about 41k miles, and runs from
Charlotte to Statesville. It is tbe in¬
tention of the Carolina Central anthori
ties to extend the road on from States¬
ville to Spartanburg, and there con¬
nect with the Augusta and Knoxville,
which will be another streak of good
fortune for Augusta and its pet road.
Thomasville has taxable property
to^tbe amount ol $1,130,893, of which
amount $30,128 is owned by colored
persons. The Enterprise says: .This
is tbe largest return ever made, we
believe, and when it is remembered
that tbe Mitchell House property,
worth at least one hundred thousand
dollars, not more, is not included in
this estimate, we have cause to con
gra alulate ourselves on our continued
growth. Tbe city tax is only 30 cents
on the hundred dollars, which we be¬
lieve is the lowest rate of auy town of
over five hundred inhabitants in the
State.
At Hamilton, on Saturday evening
last, says a correspondent of the Colum¬
bus Times, while Mr. J. H. Beers, a
son of Mr E. W. Beers, of Kingsboro,
was engaged in ginning cotton, a match
it is supposed, in the seed cotton igni¬
ted as it struck the h.iws With re¬
markable presence of mind, he gave
tbe order to throw off the power, and
raising the broast of the gin, threw
motes on tbe burning cotton and with
his left arm brushed the fire off the
saws. But before the gin could be
stopped his sleeve Was caught, and his
arm drawn in by the saws, lacera¬
ting It terribly from tbe hand to the
shoulder and throwing his face on the
saws, which fortunately stopped at this
instant. It cut a frightful gash in his
chin, and he will probably lose the two
first fingersjof bis left hand. His presence
of mind, however, saved the gin huuse
and cotton, though at a terrible oost.
The work of improving Galveston
(Texas) harbor is going on rapidly.
The steamship San Antonio crossed the
bar one day last week, drawing thirteen
feet nine inches. This is said to be,
by fonr or five inches the deepest
draught ever obtained on the bar, even
at highest spring tide.
A potato famine lsimmiueot in Iow a
the diy weather havirg almost wholly
destroyed the late crop throughout the
State.
The Popular Demand.
So great baB been tbe popular de
mam! for tbe celebrated remedy Ivid
uey-Wort that it is haviDg an immense
-to from Maine to OahtornU. Some
have found it inconvenient to prepare
it from the dry compound, tor such
the proprietors now prepare it in liquid
form. This can be procured at the
ArURRiuts- ^ It has precisely the same
effet as tbe dry, but ia very concen
trated so that the dose ia much small
at.-—Lowell Mau.
8A VANN AH, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1881.
EMiHT MONKS murdered.
Brigands Who Outwitted a Detail
of Hungarian Soldiers.
The St. James Gazette lecounts the
particulars of a shocking crime which
was committed recently at a monas¬
tery near the forest of Yranyo-Selo, in
Hungary This monastery, which was
inhabited by eight monks who were
believed to be very wealthy, was at¬
tacked by a band of biigands, but an
alarm having been given, a baod of
soldiers came to the rescue. The brig¬
ands endeavored to barricade them¬
selves in the monastery, and exchanged
several shots with the soldiers,'who were
more than an hour before they could
force an entrance. When they did get
in tbev found the monks lying gagged
on the floor, but could find no trace of
the brigands. After the monks had
been set at liberty they informed their
deliverers that the brigands had esca¬
ped by an underground passage lead¬
ing from the cellar into the forest.
The soldiers at once’ searched for the
passage, while the monks went off to
the chapel to give soldiers, thanks for their de¬
livery. The having explored
the cellar, and having failed to find
the door of the passage, came back to
ask one of the monks to act as tbeir
guide; bat they were nowhere to be
seen, in the coarse of further in-*
vestigations, however, they found the
dead bodies of tbe eight monks in a
small room, and the mystery was then
solved. ' The brigands, seeing that they
conld not escape, had murdered the
monks and hidden their bodies in this
room, having and first stripped them of
their clothes pat them on them¬
selves. They then gagged one another
to deceive the soldiers, and while the
latter were searching in the cellar had
made off to tbeir fastnesses in the for
eat.
Hurried Dinners.
It ia a mistake to eat quickly. Mas¬
tication, performed in baste must be
imperfect even with the best of teeth,
and due admixture of the salivary se¬
cretion with the food cannot take
place. When a crude mass of inade¬
quately crushed muscular fibre, or un¬
divided solid material of aDy descrip¬
tion, is thrown into the stomach, it acts
as a mechanical irritant, and sets up a
condition in tbe mucons membrane lin¬
ing of that organ which greatly impedes,
if it does not altogether prevent, the
process of digestion. When the prac¬
tice of eatiDg quickly and filling tbe
stomaoh with unprepared food is ha¬
bitual, the digestive organ ia rendered
incapable of performing ite proper
functions. Either a much largepquan
tity of food than would be necessary
under natural •conditions is required,
or the system suffers from lack of
nourishment. Those animals which
were intended to feed hurriedly were
either gifted with the power of rumina¬
tion or provided with gizzards. Man
ie not so famished, and it ie fair to as¬
sume that he was intended to eat slow
iy.
We must apologize for reminding
our readers of facts so familiar, but we
do this in hope that any who may
chance to have influence with the man¬
agers of large hotels where dinners
a la table d'hote are in vogue will
take measures to bring about a much
needed reform in tbe manner in which
these enteitainments are conducted.
At the best and most frequented es¬
tablishments iu places of fashionable
resort, where at this season multitudes
of health-seekers are wont to congre¬
gate, the hurried dinners are not only
causes of annoyance, but actually
go far to prevent the benefit which
should be derived from a change. No
sooner is one course served than
auother is introduced, without giving
the guest time to digest or even to
swallow the firBt. The eagerness to
secure good dividends takes a parti¬
cularly mischievousform when it piles
food on the plate of a customer, and
compels him to consume it breathless¬
ly. The matter may seem a email one,
but it is not sc. Just ae a man may
go on for years with defective teeth,
imperfectly masticating bia food, and
wondering why he suffers from indi
geetioo, to a man may habitually live
under an infliction of harried dinners
and endure the consequent loss of
health, without knowing why he ia
not well, or bow easily the cause ot his
illuess might be .remedied.— The Lan
cct.
-• •-- ;
A Washington rumor has it that ex
Governor Diogley, elected to succeed!
Mr. Frye, of Maine, in the House of
Representatives, will decline in favor
of Mr. Blaine, who, back again in his
old field, will endeavor to get his old
place ot Speaker.
* • “
^ The once famous and extensive cedar
forest of Lebanon, according to a writer
in the \ lenna Pohtsche Correspondent,
h «»8 dwindled down to the dimensions
of a mere thicket, numbering about
400 trees.
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
An Incident Illustrating liis Cour¬
age and Pluck.
Ad iocident of hie experience as
Quartermaster General is told by a
friend to show that, in addition to
energy, foresight and scrupulous in¬
tegrity, be possessed courage and de¬
termination. In the early days of his
occupancy of the office, the city was
full of Colonelp, Majors and Captains,
in dazzling uniforms who had takeo
advantage of the authority given by
Congress to recruit and organize inde¬
pendent commands for service in the
armies of the United States. These
newly fledged soldiers whose commands
were move or less mythical, in many
instances refused to acknowledge tbe
authority of the State officers. Pro
miuent <tmong the men of this class
was “Billy” Wilson, formerly an emi¬
grant ruDner, a volunteer firemaD, and
a man of somewhat unenviable noto¬
riety. He had obtained authority
from Washington to organize a
regiment of zouaveB. Hundreds of
men of his own stamp volunteer¬
ed to serve under him. They
were unwilling to accept the govern¬
ment rations, and complaints as to
raids by them upon restaurants and
liquor saloons reached Gen. Arthur’s
rection headquarters. Morgan, Gen. Arthur, by di¬
of Gov. sent for Wil¬
son and requested him toi prevent his
men from making those raids. Wilson,
it ia said, coolly informed Gen. Arthur
that he was a colonel in the United
States army, and that he did not re¬
Gen. cognize the right of Gov. Morgan or
Arthur to give him any orders.
“You are not a colonel, sir!” Gen.
Arthur rejoined, '‘and you will not be
until your regiment has been mustered
into service and your commission has
been issued.”
“Well,” Wilson replied, “at all
events, I have my shoulder straps and
I want no orders from you or any
other State official.” He turned to
quit the room but Gen. Arthur sprang
forward, saying : “I’ll make short work
of your shoulder straps, then 1 ” and
tore Wilson’s shoulder straps from his
shoulders and put him under arrest.
The sequel of this episode was that
Gov. Moi gaD, at Gen. Arthur’s instance,
petitioned Congress that the authority
to raise independent regimeuts be no
longer conferred upon individuals, and
the petition was granted .—New York
Sun.
Timely Advice.
After you are married it ia unneces¬
sary to shave or put on a clean collar
once in a while. Of course yonr wife
can’t get a divorce on each trival
grounds, and yon are therefore at lib¬
erty to make her ashamed of yon if
yon want to.
Never give a blind man a nickel
without advertising the fact thorough¬
ly. It will show that yon are charita¬
ble in fact.
Cast uot thy pearls to the swine.
Save them and give them to some¬
body’s good-lookiog sister. If she
don’t accept them, onr address is
Keokuck.
Advise yonr friends to go West and
grow up with the country. Don’t go
yourself. Assert your superior ity, aDd
when your friends leave there will be
more room for you.
If you want to show people how
little you know be careful and express
your opinion of everything you know
nothing about. We pay $5,000 for a
case this receipt will not cure. Try it.
.weTnd m men“oD“\h. ,Sl “ct te h i
at tbe
dinner table when then’. company
present It you don t tbe company
may not nnd it out.
Be sure you re wrong before you
swear right, it is not necessary to
swear you re right until you are fully
convinced of tbe weakness of your
caee '
Don’t give the young men a chance.
Wait nntil they get old and romantic
and then they won't want it.
In a letter published in the Boston
Traveler, Neal Dow attacks President
Garfield's physicians for administering
alcoholic stimulants to their patient,
and ventures the opinion that “there
ie no rhinoceros in Mr. Barnaul's
gfeat menagrie strong and stout enough
to resist each alcoholic medication as
our beloved President was subjected to
if brandy, whisky, fermented mare’s
milk, and dry champagne was admin
istered to the huge beast m quantities
proportioned to his bulk and weight,”
Skiiiuy up" Tleu °
,, w n ' tt health i Ken ewer, greatest
remt ’ 1 y on earth ior impotence, lean-
1 $ tty e«c $, at drag
* ' K *
h
- m ms -
“Bucluiptiilm.”
New, quick, complete core in four
days, of urinary affections, smarting,
frequent or difficult urination, kidney
diseases. $ 1 . Draggista. Depot, Os
ceola Butler, Savannah.
A BAPTIST DEACON’S LOVE.
Church Gossip Rife Over a Breach
of Promise Suit.
The worshippers in the Second Bap¬
tist Church, on Seventh street, below
Girard avenue, Philadelphia, are in a
high stite of excitement over a breach
of promise case, in which the defend¬
ant is William Hawkine, one of the
church deacons, and the head of the
firm of William Hawkins & Co., glove
kid manufacturers, of No. 206 Willow
street. She who seeks financial redre-s
for alleged beaitaches is Sarah Ayres,
a handsome blonde, now 35 years of
age, whose suit is made doubly inter
ee'iug by the fact that her recreant
lover is an old man of 72 yeans and
the possessor of a fortune of $150,000.
For nearly a year the aged deacon,
who is a widower without children,
and hie'fair pursuer have been the
subjects of church gossip, but few be¬
lieved that the relation would culmi¬
nate in the suit which is set for trial in
Common Pleas Court No. 3, on Tuesday
next.
The story of Miss Ayres, as related
by her brother-in-law, Peter Shearer,
of No. 414 Redwood street, with whom
she now makes her home, is that about
twenty years ago she was taken by
Deacon Hawkins and his wile to raise.
Three years 8 go Mrs. Hawkins died,
the home at that time being at New
Britain, Bucks county, where the fami¬
ly had removed from this city. Sarah
Ayres in tbe meautime had grown into
womanhood, handsome acd intelligent,
and had become a member of tbe
Second Baptist Church. On the death
of Mrs. Hawkins Mies Ayres, at the
earnest solicitation of the aged widow¬
er, consented to remain in bis estab¬
lishment as his housekeeper. The dea¬
con, with an eye for tbe beautiful,
soon lost bis heart, and despite his
years, just three months after bis
wile’s death made a proposal of mar¬
riage. After a year’s reflection Miss
Ayres consented, but before the day
tor the wedding came around Dsacon
Hawkins’ affections wandered into new
pastures, and his neglected love one
morning caught him in the garden ad¬
dressing a tender epistle to a Bostou
lady, a distant relative, who had just
before been spending a few weeks at
his New Britain mansion. There was
a crash and then a reconciliation, but
a subsequent discovery ot more Boston
correspondence led to another scene,
and finally Miss Ayres invoked tbe
aid of the law, laying her damages at
$50,000.
The deacon tells a different story
through his friends, who assert that,
immediately upon the death of Mrs.
Hawkins, his housekeeper, fascinated
by tbe fortune and instigated by her
family, laid her wires to capture the
old man's heart and hand. Though
sorely pnrened, he sternly resisted and
succeeded in escaping a compromise.
A Marriage at Eighty Cut Short
by Death. —Isaac Sprague, an old
resident of Tottenville, Staten Island,
died suddenly on Wednesday, at hie
home in that village. Mr. Sprague,
who was eighty years old, was to have
been married Wednesday to Miss Wog
lum. # He bad returned from a short
walk, and was waiting for the hour ap¬
pointed for the weddingeeremouy when
his death occurred. His estate will be
divided between bis two grand¬
daughters. After tbe marriage it was
bis intention to make a new will in
favor of his wife.— N. Y. Tribune.
The Chief of the Bureau of Statie
^ j*J“ rel>or r . lB ° . tba ^ . 1 Tht^Uofted’ . 'J 16 , lotal . ’f 'state” *** 01
pro f 0
dunng the month 0 f August, 1881,
were $5959949 and <i ur i n g August,
1880, $3,883,089, for the eight mouths
ended Au J Q8t 31 ’ 1 881, ’
and for th 8ame iod m 188o
076 , ’ 580 .
-— -
Poker has ruined Dr. E. J. Hoff¬
man at Louisville. TT , , ® * ar g®
practice, was an active Methodist, , aud
bit.reputation excellent. Becoming
infatnated with the genre, he Deflected
hte patients to play it, he
all the money Le could to meet
looses, and finally lorged check,
amounting to $ 2 , 000 , for which be
now in jail. His church loses $600.
-4B
An Irish bushwacker in county
Mayo missed the landlord he shot at,
but hit a girl who wad riding with him.
As the report says tbe would-be as
saesin was disguised in female apparel,
it may have been a woman and a case
of jealousy.
-** ** -
Bogus Certificates.
dru^oed stuff Dretend
roots, baike, etc., and puffed up by long
bogus certificates cf pretended miracu
lous curt-s but a simple, pure, effective
medicine, made of weli-known valuable
rem-diee, that furnishes its own certifi
cates bv its cures. We refer to Hop
Bittere, the purest and best of medi
cinea.— Republican .
BY TELEGRAPH.
NEW YORK STATE DEMOCRAT¬
IC NOMINATIONS.
RESULT OF OHIO AND IOWA
ELECTIONS.
Nominations by the President
INTERESTING GENERAL SUM¬
MARY.
OHIO’S ELECTION.
Columbus, October 13. —Ohio sends
forth the old story of a Republican
victory throughout the State. Ttie re¬
sult has not been contrary to the ex¬
pectations of any one. The temperance
agitators somewhat reduced the stand¬
ing majority, but in a Republican
strooghold like Ohio, made so by a suc¬
cession of Presidents and Government
officials, it amounted to but very little.
The State has beeQ carried by the Re
publicans in both branches oi the Gen¬
eral Assembly with a continuance iu
office of Governor Foster. Nobody
expected any different result.
IOWA ELECTION.
Des Moines, October 13. —The elec¬
tion throughout the State was the
quietest ever koowu, and the most
meagre interest was felt as to the re¬
sult. As was expected, tbe Republi¬
can select their ticket. Tbe result will
be the collapsa of Greenbackisffi in
this State.
NEW YORK DEMOCRATS.
New York, October 13. —The Al¬
bany convention refused seats to both
tbe Tammany and Irving Gall Demo¬
cracy. The action of the convention
was strongly endorsed. Both factious
quietly submitted to the lulings. Tne
convention having dispose ! of the New
York city delegation matter proceeded
to make nominations with the following
res-ult: For Secretary of State, Wil¬
liam Pursed, of Rochester; ior Comp¬
troller. George H- Lapbam, of Yates;
lor Attorney General, Roswell Ptu
menter, and tor Treasurer, Robert A.
Maxwell.
TUNISIAN AFFAIRS.
Tunis, October, 13. —The insurgent
Arabs continue to depredate upon tbe
country outside of tbe districts not
yet garrisoned by French troops.
Communications have passed between
tbe representative of Austria, Italy
and Germany, relative to a joint
naval France service in conjunction with
along tbe African coast.
nominations.
Washington, October, 13.—Tbe
fullowiog uoninations have been sent to
the Senate: Wm. W. Dudley, of Indi¬
ana, to be Commissioner of Pensions;
Otis P. G Glark, of Rhode Island, to
be First Deputy Commissioner of Pen*
sione; C. B. Walker, of Indiana, to be
Deputy Commissioner of Pensions;
No ib C. McFarland, of Kansas, to be
Commissioner of the General Land
Office; Addisou Brown, of New York,
to beUoited States District Judge for
the Southern District o! New York;
George M. Duskin, ot Alabama, to be
Attorney uf the United States for the
Southern District of Alabama; Robert
S. Foster, of Indiana, to be Marshal of
the United States lor tbe District of
Xudiana Among tbe Postmasters
nominated were John D. Tinney at
Vicksburg, and BeDj, Chatfield at
Aiken, S. C.
0 ESES 4 L suxaure.
Ht-ary D. White, secretary of the
Boston .Shoe and Leather Company,
has succumed to the prevailing dis
ease. Hw mode of procedure was
the customary way of doing bu
He look * 15 -°°° of other P e0 ’
pie’s money and then attempted to ex
plain the modus operandi.
Guiteau's day of arraignment has
b een fixed. His brother-in
j aw Mr. Seville, ia in correspondence
wi(h General Butler, id relereooe to
h[8 ukj jn lbs Jffence. Mr.
Sco „ ille h „ 8 ^ adlised b many
ble i.wyer. thronghoot the country to
bl £,tier , , ia , , 0 bear opon
tbe that can be produced, and
he has been assured by judges that they
be duly considered.
1 H. Buffington, <$ merchant at Jack
eonville, Fia , shot himself through the
head yesterday wh’le iaboring under
temporary aberration produced by
business affairs. He leaves a wife
child m Connecticut.
1 The Baltimore and Ohio Railroad
| shows $1,400,000 to be carried to the
surplus fund after d.vidnnd* paying a aemi an
nnal 5 ret cent,
Ex-Governor Moses, of South Caro
lina, jailed in New York for falsely ob
taioing money has been bailed,
Charles B. Watern and John K. Bley
ler, were arrested in Philadelphia on
Wednesday, for counterfeiting. Their
tools for operating, besides a quantity
of coin, waa captured with them.
MEDICINES.
jwpil
t 1
I
iit«i n fUmsHi mm
Hi SUSP?
THEGREAT
FOR
RHEUMATISM, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Lumbago,
Backache, Soreness of the Chest,
Gout, Quinsy, Sore Throat, Swell¬
ings and Sprains, General Burns Bodily and
Scalds,
Pains,
Tooth, Ear and Headache, Frosted
Feet and Ears, and all other
Pains and Aches.
No Preparation on earth equals St. Jacobs Oil
as a safe, sure, simple and cheap External
Remedy. A trial entails but tho comparatively
trifling outlay of 50 Onts, and every one suffering
with pain cun havo cheap and positive proof of its
claims.
Directions in Eleven Languages.
BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS AND DEALEBS
IN MEDICINE.
A. VOGELER & CO.,
Baltimore, Md. , IT. S. A.
W REWARD
■
-1
:in« "
m v OVER A MILLION
m OF PItOF.
GUILMETTE’S
F PENCIL
~ l&jPais
Have* already in this
boon sold
I'-onnt.ry aiiu lu
t Franc o; every
4 wif OLeor wliloh has
given perfect and sa¬
pli tisfaction, performed
has
cures when every time
A, j used ac¬
cording to direc¬
tions.
We now say to the afflicted and doubting
ones that we will pay the above reward for a
single case of
IjAlMS back
That the Pad falls to cure. This Great, Ue 1110 -
dy will POSITIVELY and PERMANENTLY
cure Lumbago, Lame Hack, Sciatica, Grave,, Ki
Diabetes, Dropsy, Bright's Disease of the »
neys, Incontinence and Retention of the
Urine, Intlamailou ol theKidneyt, Catarrh of
the Bladder, High Colored U ’ine, Pain in tho
Back, Side or Loins, Nervous Weakness, and
in f«otall disorders of tho Bladder and ITrl
nary Organs whether eontraeted by private
disease or otherwise. Fe¬
LADIES, If you are sutroriug from disease
male Weakness, Kidneys, Bladder, Leucorrhcea, Urluary or auy Organa,
of the or
YOU CAN BE CURED!
Without swallowing nauseous medicines, by
simply wearing
PROF. GUILMETTE’S
FRENCH KIDNEY PAD,
which cures by absorption.
Ask your druggist Pr l*ROF. GUILMETTE’S
FRENCH KIDNEY PAD, ami take no other.
If he has not got it, send $2.00, and you will
receive the Pad by return mail.
TESTIMONIALS FROM THE PEOPLE.
JUDGE BUCH ANNAN, Lawyer, Toledo, O.,
says: Prof Juilmette’H French Kidney
“ODe of weeks’
Pads cured me hi Lumbago in three
time. My ease has been given up by the heal
Doctors its Incurable. During all this timu I
suffered untold agony and paid out Iaigo huiiih
of GEORGE money.” VETTER, .J. P., Toledo, O says:
‘•I suffered for three years with Sciatica aud
Kidney Disease, and oiten bad to go about on
crutches. I was entirely Oiillmette’.s and permanently French
cured after wearing Prof.
Kiduch Pad for lour weeks.”
’StilJIRE N. C. SCOTT, Syl vanla, «>., writes;
“I have beeu a great Hufl'erer for Li years
with Bright's time Disease unable of l bo to Kidneys. get out of bed; For
weeks at a was
took barrels of medicine, relief, but they two gave of Prof. mo
only Gu flinette’H temporary Kidney Pads i six wore weeks, aud now
I know I am entirely cured.”
MRS. 11 ELLEN JEROME, Toledo O., says :S
‘For years I have been confined, a great
part of the time to my bed, with Luoorrbuea
and female weakness, I wore one of Guil
mette’s Kidney Pads and was cured iu one
month.” I- iudlay, ,,
H. B. GREEN, Wholesale Grocer,
°V. I^rliffcred for lil*years with lame back,
and three weeks was permanently cured
by wearing one of Prof. Gullmette’8 Kidney
Pads.” KEESLING, M. D., Druggist, Loga»s
B. F. In order for
port, Ind., when writes; sending an
Kidney Pads, of the first . had, . and , I _
“I wore one ones we
received more beuelit from it than anything
ever used. In fact tbe Pads give better gen
eral satisfaction than any Kidney remedy we
ever sold.” Druggists, Hannibal,
RaY A SHOEMAKER,
‘‘We are working up a lively trade In your
Pads, and are hearing of good results from
them every day.”
PROF. GUILMETTE’S FRENCH
LIVER PAD.
will positively cure Fever and Ague, Dumb
^®®J^ 1 “ gu |^ k a{ 1 Bi t ij|SS5Jf Price e of r the lU L?verI mall.
Htomach and Blood. si 50 »>y
^^e^nji^^.CT^irSljyVian^^Vddre.sJi. fuknuiiku) co.^ °
For Hale by PPM A N 11 BOH.,
LI
R & Z-jeS-Iy .Savannah, Ga.
a Tar .13 Line,
sefeg&rrsy \7. W
LEAVING NLW YORE i.V.rV T1IVRRDA i
AX 2 1-. -M.
rorEngland,France & Germany.
Por Pauare affly to
C. B. RICHARD A CO.
I General Pat sender AfOntit,
l Broadway, HEW Y 0 B 5
•pl4-un
PRICE THREE CENTS.