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THE
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER.
Entered at the Post Office at Atlanta, Ga., as
second class matter, Oct. 16,1891.
Published Weekly in Atlanta, Ga.,
RY THE
PEOPLE’S PAPER PUBLISHING CO.
THOS. E. WATSON, President.
C. C. POST, Vice-President.
D. N. SANDERS, Sec. & Treas,
R. F. GRAY, Business Manager.
This Paper is now and will ever be a fearless
advocate of the Jeffersonian Theory of Popu
lar Government, and will oppose to the bitter
end the Hamiltonian Doctrines of Class Rule.
Moneyed Aristocracy, National Banks, High
Tariffs, Standing Armies and Formidable Na
ives: -all of which go together as a system of
oppressing the People.
TERMS—SI.OO PER YEAR.
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Send Money by Postal Note or Money Order.
DO NOT SEND STAMPS.
CLUBS : In clubs of 10 we will send the
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OUR OFFICE
Is up stairs In the elegant new.McDonald
building 117 1-2 Whitehall street, where our
frtends will always And the latch string on
the outside.
Get Up Clubs.
We want the Industrial Classes to feel that
this Paper is THEIR FRIEND. It is conduct
ed by men who are intensely interested in the
.Reform Movement, and have been battling for
it many years.
The price shows that the Paper is not being
fun for money. If the People support it lib
erally it will pay expenses. It cannot do
more.
As long as I am President of the Company,
the Paper will never be found on any other
line of policy than that which I sincerely be
lieve is best for Georgia, best for the South,
and best for the country at large.
THOS. E. WATSON,
President People’s Paper Publishing Co.
CAMPAIGN LITERATURE.
For sale by the Campaign Committee, the
proceeds to go to help defray the expenses of
the campaign of the People’s Party.
HON. THOS. E. WATSON’S ADDRESS to
• the people of Georgia. Price $5 per thousand,
75 cts. per hundred, or one cent per copy for
any Less number.
A LITTLE LIGHT ON SOME DARK
PLACES, Tom Watson examines the records
made by the moss backs and informs the peo
ple as to the facts. Price, same as the above.
SPEECH BY J. H. TURNER, Sec’y of the
National Alliance, delivered at the great
Douglasville meeting, with synopsis of speech
by C. C. Post at same place. Price same as for
Watson's Address.
BOND HOLDERS AND BREAD WINNERS,
a pamphlet by S. S. King, of Kansas, of great
value to all >ho wish to be posted. All Peo
ple’s Party and Alliance speakers should have
a copy. Price 25 cts.
SEVEN FINANCIAL CONSPIRACIES
which have enslaved the American people.—
This little book is worth its weight in pure
gold. Greatest “eye-opener” you ever saw.
Price 10 cents,
INDUSTRIAL FREEDOM, contains a
cogent and forceful statement of “The Money
Question,” “The Railroad Problem,” “The
Sub-treasury Plan,” and also the arguments
pro and con. upon “Should The Government
Own The Railroads.” Send 25 cts. for a copy.
POLITICAL PLATFORMS-Every Political
Platform Adopted by a National convention,
from 1800 to 1888, with a brief but comprehen
sive History of Political Parties in the United
States. Price 5 cts.
DRIVEN FROM SEA TO SEA. OR JUST
A CAMPIN’, and CONGRESSMAN
SWAN SON, by C. C. Post, two
political novels of intense interest and
extremely valuable as showing how the com
mon people have been robbed and plundered.
Price of each 50 cts.
Address all orders to
OSCAR PARKER, Sec’y.
H7J-£ Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Notice to P. P. Men.
Cannot the county committeemen
and other zealous workers in the re
form cause interest themselves in
collecting a quarter or a dime from
each earnest P. P. man for campaign
purposes? The enemy say that we
will fail for want of election funds.
We neither seek nor desire a corrup
tion fund, but we do need a fund to
disseminate reform literature and to
pay the expenses of the speakers.
It is the people’s fight; let the peo
ple sustain it. Send contributions to
Oscar Parker, Secretary Campaign
Committee, Whitehall Street,
Atlanta, Ga.
Mr. Pottle’s Speech.
Among the notable incidents of the
People's Party convention on the 20th
was the speech of J. E. Pottle, of Mil
ledgeville, Ga., as follows:
My Fellow-Citizens:
A great deal has been said to-day
about ex-Confederate soldiers and by ex-
Confederate soldiers. Their presence
here gives a profound meaning to the
purposes of this convention.
I speak for the young men who greet
them here and as a representative of that
class who come with the vigor of young
manhood on their cheeks and the fire of
a devoted determination in their eyes to
prove to those who left their limbs at
Manassas and Gettysburg and carry the
bullets of a ruinous war in their bodies
that the sons of their dead comrades are
ready to give them the hand of encour
agement and the God-speed of their
hearts in this battle for God, for home
and for native land.
I know not what motive may actuate
other men, but as for me, I am a Peo
ple’s Party man because I am Southern
man; because I expect to live beneath
Southern skies, and at last mingle my
dust with Southern soil. Just as thous
ands of other Southern men did, I
looked honestly and deliberately at the
history of the past, the condition of the
present and the prospect for the future.
I saw that the past showed an almost
unbroken line of legislation since the
war at war with Southern interests and
blighting to Southern homes I saw a
present wherein, by some strange com
bination of circumstances, the principal
mission of Southern toil and sacrifice is
to fill the coffers of those who are utter
ly out of sympaty with our needs and at
enmity with our interests. Looking to
the future with a fervent desire to find
one ray of light, I saw only hopelessness
and despair, and seeing it so I would
have been recreant to my trust as a
Georgian and untrue to every sentiment
of honor, of patriotism and of right, by
a veteran of the civil war, had I not
promptly and emphatically declared my
determination, to the best of the weak
ability God had given me, to remedy the
evils of the past and brighten the hope
for the future.
If the speech of General Gordon, re
cently delivered at Gibson, was correctly
reported, he told the people of Georgia
who are in this new revolution that
they had as well abandon the idea that
the government can make them rich. 1
want to tell General Gordon, with the
utmost respect for his superb character
and his glorious career in the past, that
this is not a movement of fools or pau
pers, hoping or expecting to get some
thing fox* nothing, but that it is a
demand of freemen that hereafter the
produce of their toil shall bring its le
gitimate value, and that not a day
longer, if they can help it, shall Southern
policy be dictated by Wall street and
Eastern money sharks.
For many years the Southern States,
in their political demands, have been
ignored in the councils of the Demo
cratic party—the party which, without
the united aid of these same Southern
States, would have Jong ago been
wiped from the face of the earth. The
policy of this party —the so-called party
of the peop e—has been dictated by
Wall street and Tammany Hall and its
candidates selected by the same unholy,
selfish power.
We propose to-day that a new policy
shall be inaugurated and a new era
begun.
Let them bring on their force bill
howls and negro supremacy cries
Southern people are fighting for South
ern rights and self-preservation
The people have never yet been de
feated ; Truth is with them ; Right is
with them ; God is with them.
But even if defeat shall follow and
our banners trail in the dust, we can
say, like the great Whig statesman of
England on the occasion of the defeat
of one of his favorite measures, “Oh,
glorious defeat I May thy memorial be
fresh and green to the latest gen
erations 1”
To-day, fellow-citizens, the South,
once the proud queen of this Federal
Union—proud of the splendid intellect
and supurb character of her sons and
the freedom and prosperity of her peo
ple—groans vnder the burden of partial
legislation and class-selfishness and
greed. We have come to fear that this
South, once the garden of the nation,
will, under the present system, reach a
point where there will not be
“A rose of the wilderness left on its
stalk,
To tell where the garden has been,”
and we propose now to do our best to
prevent the approach of that evil hour.
I thank you for your patient atten
tion.
Hayseed in Burke County.
Politics are getting mighty hot down
here in old Burke, and everybody thinks
he is right ; but it seems strange to an
old hayseeder like me, who belongs to
the People’s Party, to hear the leading
Democrats, who have been cursing and
abusing the negro for the last twenty
years for voting the Republican ticket,
now advising them to stick to their
party ; that it is a good and honorable
party. Why this change ? Have the
Republicans become more honorable ? or
have the Democrats just found out what
the party is? or is it because the two
old parties are so much alike that one
can’t abuse the other without being
guilty of seT-abuse?
Why is it that the Democrats are hal
looing negro supremacy so persistently ?
Is it because the negro has refused to
take their advice and stay’ in the Repub
lican party, or is it because the negro
People’s Party Club here won’t give
those leading Democrats the positions of
vice-president and secretary, as was
done here in days past ? or is it because
the house in which the negroes hold
their meetings has no loft in which those
great leaders can hold a caucus?
Why is it that the bosses have raised
such a howl because John Mack, he
negro, went to the State convention held
in Atlanta on the 20th to represent his
race, and also seconded the nomination
of W. L. Peek for governor? Are they
not citizens of the State, holding the
same rights under the law that the white
man does ? If so, isn’t it better to give
them representation in the convention,
that they may know for whom they* are
voting, thereby getting them to vote
with the white people at home than to
ignore them till the day of election and
then try to buy or force them to vote,
thereby driving them into the Republi
can party, which the Democrats have so
recently found out is an honorable
party ? Is not all this howl be
cause the bosses see that their little
game is played and the negroes of this
county are going to vote with the Peo
ple’s Party ?
I only ask these ques'ions because, as
you see, I am no politician, but simply
an old bayseeder, who was born under a
Democratic roof, rocked in a Democratic
cradle, sung to sleep with a Democratic
!ulaby, and have always voted with the
Democratic party, but finding, in my
humble judgment, that the party had
drifted from the land-marks of its
founders, and that the People’s Party
had the pure, unadulterated principles of
Jeffersonian Democracy, I enlisted in
that party to fight in the humble way
of an old hayseeder to the finish.
Am I right ? If I am not, why is it
that most all of the white people of the
country, as well as the negroes, have
acted so foolishly? Is it possible that
we have all acted the fool except a few
of the court house rings ? Is it possible
that we Georgia boys who have stood a
foar-years’ war—after which we stood
what is known in Georgia’s history as
the days of reconstruction—have 'we
departed from everything that is true,
noble and manly, and become a band of
anarchists, simply because we are fight
ing for American freedom? This is
what the bosses would have us believe.
Are we right? or are they right? Let
our ballots answer. Hayseeder.
Resolutions by Elbert County Alliance.
Resolved at a regular meeting of El
bert County Alliance, That we feel ic a
duty and esteem it a privilege to thank
the Hon. T. E. Watson, of the Tenth
congressional district, for the manly
way in which he espoused the cause
of the mases, and that we heartily com
mend him to the voters of the Tenth
congressional district; that we ask the
secretary to forward these resolutions to
the People's Party Paper, and that we
ask the county papers to publish the
same. L. H. O MartiN, Pres. •
J. R. Booth, Secretary.
P. P. stands for people's p rty, and also
for purity in politics There is no use in
having one unless we can have the other.
What is to be gained by a mere change of
leaders, unless we can get good men by
the exchange—men who will remain true
to the interests of the people who elect
them : men who cannot be “ bought” or
“sold” ‘‘bribed” or ‘ influended,” or cor
rupted in any way ; men whose personal
character is above reproach ? It is vain
to hope that a bad man will make a good
political!. He never will. The tempt
ations in public life are ten folded harder
to resist than in private life.
The farmer or mechanic who will get
scared at the g. o. p. cry of “cheap money”
is an ass. Can he not remember when
he had cheap money—when took only
one-half the amount of labor to secure a
dollar that it does today ? Was not that
cheap money much easier to get? And
was there not a job for every man that
wanted to work? But provisions were
higher, but after you had supplied your
family and paid your taxes did you not,
as a rule, have some money left; and if
perchance you were slightly in debt did
you have to let your children go bare
footed and hungry in order to keep up
the interest? Compare the present with
the days of cheap money, you party
blind gumps, and tell, if you can, who
the fellows are that have been benefitted
by dear money—Nevada Silver State.
Cleveland is called a vote getter by his
worshipers. He is At the November
election in 1888 he got in Alabama 40,000
votes less than the Democratic candidate
for Governor ; in Louisiana more than
50.000 less, and in New York nearly 15,-
000 less. In Virginia, North Carolina,
Missouri, Maryland, Kentucky, Delaware
and Connecticut his vote was less in 1888
than it was in 1884. Yes, C.'eveland is a
vote getter.—Kansas City Mail.
In Wilkes County.
A People’s Party Club was or
ganized at Mt. Zion, Wilkes county,
Ga., July 2, 1892, named the Watson
Invincibles, with 35 members. The
following resolutions were passed :
Resolved, That we endorse the
Omaha platform, and that we will
support no man for office who does
not stand squarely upon said plat
form.
Resolved, further, That we fully
endorse the course of the Hon. Thos.
E. Watson in Congress.
You can put Wilkes county down
as safe for the People’s Party.
W. S. Kendal,
G. V. Shipp,
W. T. Hudson,
Committee.
Polk County.
In the Polk county primary for
Congressional nominees Congressman
Everett received 43 votes and Judge
Maddox 127. This looks like a poor
endorsement for Mr. Everett in his
home county and considering the vot
ing strength of the county it makes
a poor show for Democracy. A
county school house rally on a hot
night will show up more Third Party
voters thanthis county primary.
Fayette County.
There was a People’s Party mass
meeting in Fayetteville on the 25th
instant. The court house would not
hold them. Fayette will go two to
one for the People’s Party.
To The Brothers.
lam prepared to assist in starting
local People's Paity Papers in the center
of any congresional district or other
available points where it will do the
most good. Address,
H. N. Cramer.
555 Marietta Street, Atlanta Ga.
Back Numbers.
We have many calls for back num
bers. The demand for samples has
been so heavy of late, that no back
numbers are left in the office.
The campaign committee urges
that every possible effort be made to
get subscribers for the People’s
Party Paper. It is the safest, surest
and cheapest campaign work that
can be done.
TO OUR READERS.
Notice is hereby given that the
offer to send the People’s Party
Paper to subscribers for two months
at 10 cents is withdrawn. All per
sons who have collected money on
lists under the 10-cent offer will
please forward at once, without seek
ing to add to the number, and the
paper will be sent as ordered.
Henceforth, besides those who
have already paid the money to
some one kindly acting for us as
agent, no names will be entered on
our subscription books for less than
25 cents and three months.
SAMPLE COPIES.
We receive a great many requests
for bundles of papers for distribu
tion. While we are perfectly willing
to send a sample copy to any one
desiring it, we are not able to fur
nish the paper to subscribers at cost
and at the same time send out large
numbers of papers free. We will,
however, send bundles of papers at
actual cost to those who wish to dis
tribute them in aid of the campaign.
The State Executive Committee
of the People’s Party has organized
by the election of M. D. Erwin as
chairman and Oscar Parker as sec
retary.
PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPERS IN GEORGIA
Farmers’ Light, Harlem, Columbia
county.
Farmers’ Friend, Waynesboro,
Burke county.
News and Allianceman, Jackson,
Butts county.
Banks County Gazette, Homer,
Banks county.
Hinesville Gazette, Hinesville,
Liberty county.
The Allianceman, Atlanta, Fulton
county.
Southern Alliance Farmer, Atlanta,
Fulton county.
The Enterprise, Carnesville, Frank
lin county.
The News, Ball Ground, Cherokee
county.
People’s Party Paper, Atlanta.
Farmers’ Herald, Wrightsville,
Johnson county.
Alliance Plow Boy, Buford, Gwin
nett county.
Progress, Cleveland, White county.
People’s Advocate, Greensboro,
Green county.
Signal, Dahlonega, Lumpkin coun
ty.
Bullock Banner, Statesboro, Bul
lock county.
News, Jonesboro, Clayton county.
The Wool Hat, Grace wood, Rich
mond county.
HAS YOUR COUNTY ORGANIZED ?
If Organized, Has It Reported to
Headquarters ?
The following counties are reported as
organized for the People’s Party, but
only a portion of them have sent the
names and post office address of the
chairman and secretary of their com
mi; tees. These are wanted at head
quarters, and should be reported at
once.
Baldwin, Jackson,
Baker, Jasper,
Bartow, Jefferson,
Berrien, Johnson,
Brooks, Laurens,
Bullock, Lee,
Burk, Lincoln,
Butts, Lowndes,
Calhoun, Lumpkin,
Campbell, McDuffie,
Carroll, Macon
Catoosa, Madison,
Chattahoochee, Marion,
Chatooga, Merriwether,
Cherokee, Miller,
Clark, Milton,
Clayton, Mitchell,
Clinch, Monro?,
Cobb, Morgan,
Coffee, Murray
Co quitt, Newton,
Columbia, Oconee,
Crawford, Oglethorpe,
Dade, Paulding,
Dawson, Pickens,
Decatur, Pike,
DeKalb, Polk,
Dooly, Pulaski,
Douglas, Richmond,
Early, Rockdale,
Echols, Sch'ey,
Elbert, Screven,
Emftnuel, Stewart,
Brwin, Sumpter,
Fannin, Talbott,
Fayette, Taliaferro,
Flojd, Tatnall,
Forsyth, Taylor,
Franklin, Thomas,
Fulton. Twiggs,
Glascock, Upson,
Gordon, Walker,
Green, Walton,
Gwinnett, Ware,
Habersham, Warren,
Hall, Washington,
Hancock, Wayne,
Harralson, Whitfield,
Harris, Wilkes,
Hart, Wilkinson,
Heard, Wilcox,
Henry, Worth.
The counties not enumerated here
have not reported at all, though most
of them are believed to have organized.
NEW OFFER I
Mr. Watson’s Book has been
received at this office.
Any one sending us $1.50
can get a copy of the book and
this paper for one year.
In clubs of ten we will send
ten copies of the book and ten
papers one year for $14.00 and
send one book and one copy
of the paper one year to the
club raiser.
YOU CAN SAVE MONEY
By sending your orders for
ALL KINDS OF
PRINTING
TO
ELAM CHRISTIAN,
Printer and Publisher,
114 Loyd St., - . ATLANTA, GA.
Tie Mwai Waktoai.
A PEOPLE’S PARTY PAPER
An Eight-page Four-column Weekly.
PUBLISHED AT
WASHINGTON, D. C.
Under the Direction of the Congressional
Committee of the People’s Party.
N". DUN NING
Has been selected as Managing Editor.
It will be impersonal, impartial and aggres
sive, and at ail -times seek to place before its
readers carefully piepared matter such as a
residence at the seat of government is calcu
lated to furnish.
The high character of the men interested in
the papei, the ability of Mr. Dunning,
and the advantage of being at the Capital
are sufficient guarantees for the kind of paper
that will be issued.
Among the contributors will be—
Senators W. A. Peffer and J. H. Kyle ; Con
gressmen T. E. Watson, John Davis, Jerry
Simpson. W. A. McKeighan, B. F. Clover, J.
G. Otis, O. M. Kem. K. Halvorsen, T. E. Winn,
W. Baker, Dr. M. G. Elizy, and many other
well known writers.
TERMS, - - - FIFTY CENTS PER YEAR.
Twenty-five cents until Nov. 9, 1892.
Address all communications to
THE NATIONAL WATCHMAN CO.,
No. 13 C Street N. E.
WASHINGTON, D. C.
B. VIGNAUXj
FRENCH RESTAURATEUR.
RESTAURANT AND LADIES’ CAFE.
No 16 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga
Open Day and Night. Telephone 201.
Run on New Orleans Style,
Merchants’ Restaurant and Lunch Room.
27 S. Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.
FRENCH COFFEE. FRENCH COOKS.
Eggs For Hatching.
Silver Laced Wyandots, Silver Spangled
Polish, Golden Penciled Hamburgs, Silver
Spangled Hamburgs, Partridge Cochins and
Cayuga Ducks. Eggs, $1.50 for 13. All first
class stock—none better in America. Address
Mrs. J. H. Davis, Hapeville Poultry Farm.
Hapeville, Ga. ts
PERKINS MACHINERY COMPANY.
THE FARMER’S' > FAVORITE ” A NEW saw MIEL that 13 BOUNB
" to lead all others. Superior to any belt feed
g mill made. Prices low and terms easy. Wa*
* | i jVOylk ile manufacture the best top-runner corn mill
<<*- 2 11 tho market, and dealers in engines, toil-
ers, cotton gins, presses, feed mills, shaft
ing ’ P ull eyß. belting, woodworking machin
ery; also, second-hand machinery at loir
.prices.
~_. -r-v. - - - PERKINS MACHINERY CO.,
41 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
MIKE HAVERTY.
$25,000
WORTH OF
-:- FURNITURE!-:-
To Be Slaughtered.
PARLOR, BED ROOM, KITCHEN AND DINING ROOM
ITTTZR/ZEL
REED AND RATTAN GOODS, PICTURE TASELS, BABY
CARRIAGES, LADIES’ DESKS, BOOK CASES,
MATTRESSES, BED SPRINGS, PILLOWS, ■
WARDROBES, FOLDING BEDS, LAWN BENCHES &CHAIRS.
All these Goods MUST BE SOLD by JUNE Ist, as I intend
to make alterations in my store, and must make room for
mama.
Zb/E. TTJLVER.T7Z-,
CHEAPEST FURNITURE MAN SOUTH.
77 Whitehall Street, 64= S. Broad Streets
ATLANTA, GA.
Igf I make terms to suit all purchasers.
HON. TOM WATSON’S BOOK.
CONTAINS 390 PAGES.
ITS TITLE
“ NOT A REVOLT:
IT IS A REVOLUTION.”
Contains a Digest of Political Platforms
since the days of Jefferson.
Contains a History of all Political Parti®*.
Os the National Bank Act.
Os the Income Tax Law.
Os the Leg&l Tender Notes.
Os the Demonetization of Silver.
Os the Contraction of the Currency..
Os the Way Tariffs are Made.
Os the Squandering of Public Lands.
Os the Pinkerton Militia.
Os Tammany Hall.
Os the Alliance Platforms.
Besides Arguments, Facts, Figures on all’
the Leading Topics of the People’*'
Party movement,
—ALSO
Speeches of the “ Nine ” at this Session.
Also a Synopsis of the Work of this
Session.
The Book should be in the hands of *
every Lecturer, Speaker, Editor and
Voter.
PRICE SI.OO.
Send orders at once.
Address
THE NATIONAL WATCHMAN.
13 C. St., N. E. Washington, D. €k
fT COSTS A DOLLAR
TO
SECURE EMPLOYMENT
THROUGH
BREESE & LOWE,
17Li Peachtree St., Atlanta, Ga.
To Brother Alliancemen and Others.
On account of the low price of cottou we
have put down our machinery to correspond.
We can sell rebuilt gins—good as new—for SI.OO
per saw. Gin Feeders and Condensers $2.00
per saw. We have in stock the Gullett, Van
Winkle, Hall, Pratt, Gate City, Whitney and
Winship.
We can furnish Feeders and Condensers for
any make of gin, new or second hand. We
have some good rebuilt Engines—4 horse pow
er SIOO.OO, 6 horse power $200.00. 8 horse power
S3OO 00. 10 horse power $400.00, &c., to any size
required. Saw M ills worth S3OO for $200; those
worth S2OO for $125. Corn Mills worth $250 for
$150; those worth $l5O for S9O. Water Wheels
worth S3OO for $l6O. Gin Saw Filers sls to $25;
Gummers S2O to 30. Terracing Levels (good
ones) $5. Theodolites $6 to SB. Sulky Com
post Distributors S2O.
We have also the best and cheapest Mill on
the market, for grinding corn and cob, peas,
cotton seed and table meal, for SSO. You can
make fertilizer that costs S3O per ton for sl3
with this mill. We send formula with mill. If
you want any kind of machinery or want ad
vice as to the best kind or capacity, &c., write
us. We take machinery on commission and
repair at our own expense. Gin and engine
repairing done. Old gins made new for one
third the cost of new ones.
CRAMER & ABBOTT,
555 Marietta St., Atlanta, Ga.
P. S. We have several 40 saw Gin outfits, with
engine to puil them, and a press for s2tio. .50
saws S3OO. Wswws $4Ol SO saws SSOO. Wc
sell, swap or trade to suit customers.
If You Are Going West
AND WANT LOW RATES
To Arkansas,
Texas, Missouri, Colorado, Oregon and Caifor
nia, or any point WEST OR NOHTHWEST—
„ . IT WILL PAY YOU
To write to me.
FRED. D. BUSH,
D. P. A., L. & N. R. B.
Wall St., Atlanta, Gs
I AfUIFO EL E CT R O MAGNETIC
111111* X EMENEGOGUE PILLS
hllUllaV lor irregularities. Never
tail. Latest discovery. $2.00 per box. All
forms of female diseases treated successfully
at office or by mail. Practice based on microbe
theory—cures guaranteed. Dropsy cured—
partial treatment free. Bacterio Medical.
Co., 6J/> N. Broad bt., Atlanta, LGa. (Strictly
confidential)