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SCOTT'S |
CARBO-DIGESTIVEik-
COMPOUND. |
Positively the one Heme;;
for the treatment of
NERVOUS EXHAUSTION
Simple and Aggravated forms of
DYSPEPSIA and
PALPITATION-OF-THE-HEAR]
Does your food sour after eating
Are .you easily confused and excited
Do you get up in the morning tired an
unrefreshed, and with a bad taste i
the mouth ?
Is there a dull cloudy sensation, a
tended by disagreeable feelings m th
head and eyes ?
Are you irritable and restless ?
Docs your heart thump and cans
yen to gasp for breath after elimbin.
a Hight of stairs ?
Does it distress you to lie on the le
side ?
Have you impaired memory, dimnes
of vision, depression of mind an
gloomy forebodings ?
These symptoms mean that you a'
suffering from Dyspepsia and Nerves
Exhaustion
There is no other remedy extant th.
has done so much for this class
troubles as
scots
COWUi.
If your case has resisted the usuk
methods or treatment we are parties
larly anxious to have you give this Cot
pound a trial.
V. e guarantee relief in every ca
and wiil cheerfully refund your monc
should our remedy fail to produce th
most gratifying results.
Please n.-ieinkr that the app lit
tion Patent Medicine docs notappl: t
Scot vs Gni><>l)igesthe
It is a prescription put up by a lea
in<?-physician wno has made stomac
and nervous troubles a specialty to
years.
We court investigation and earnest:
urge ail physicians to write us forth
fomula of .SCOTTS CARBO-DIGE.
TIVE COMPOI ND, which we will ma.
on application, that they may satis?
themselves of its harmless charaeu
and excellent virtues.
Scott’s Carbo-Digestive Compound
Is the most remarkable remedy the
science has produced. It has succeed*?
where all other medicines have faile-
Sold by druggists everywhere. l?L
per bottle. Sent to any address
America on receipt of price.
Don’t forget that we cheerfully n
fund your money if resuits are not s-.u
is factory. Order direct if yeur dru..
does not have it.
Address all orders to
Chemical _.fg. L
k TOPEKA, KAS.
r ' s oO‘
ciea res t 1 ‘resen tii Lion of the'
Money - Ijiidioi
In Print. Can you afford not to undei
stand the issue which will agitate th
whole country in 1-9'5 as no other qu*
tion has since slavery ? See whu
prominent judges who have read itsa -
I consider it unanswerable, and pe
hap- the ablest presentation of ti.-
subject in print.—B. R. Tillman.
In many ways ■*9G’ is superior t
Coin’s Financial School. Johnsen d •
plays a profounder comprehension ;
the money que-tim than llarvey, an.
presents a more clear, succinct am
convincing argumen in favor of Li■
al ism. —Cel n mb: aßegis Ie r.
It is beyond (i 'ul.t the ingest pr
mentation of the Fr< e :i:ver case v
have read. Vr. Jo'nsonN treatin'’!
of his ssubj<’< lis i 'ral He avoids cla
traps and dt nunciati ’n and eomlu "
I- s argument in admirable temper an
fai-.n-ss. Many “• h’s points are n-v
am! throuj. hoi? t1 i e d he re! : .
ab-olutely on sound logic. We co no
thilk th:it:ii?y rnpr*' iudiced man. In*
ing read this ngmnrut. can fail to bo
convert to bimetallism Th ? Columbi
Mr. A. T. Johnson’s “Di” is a mo>
able presentation of tin l Free Silve
sid? of th-- Financial Qu stion am
should be i i the hands of every tnai
wh> is interested in the reform of on
present financial system. regardless o
politics. The author lays down man’
t’oi.vii'cing’ premosilions, unique and ii
controvert able, which are not to !■
found in any other disquisition on th
important subject, however elaborate
and the illustrations are as conviticin,
as ais argument.- The (Laurens Her
aid.
MA Johnson's book contains usefu
info|nation, and whenever he states :
thin* as a fact, his statement ca
be relied on. —Greenville S. C.) Daib
New!
I am greatly pleased with it. 1
treat! the silver question in a plait
way. It is logical, and the argument. 1
are pit a wav that all can understand
ll. 11 Blard.
For’sale by Jos. T. Johnson, Spar
tanburg, S. C, Price 25 cents.
MOTHERS, READ THIY
The, Best '. . . ,
Renedv ’ ' * ’ 8
For Flatulent Colic, Diarrhcea, Dy be
tery, Nausa, Coughs, Cholera Infa
turn, lee thing Children, Cholera Me
bus, Unnatural Drains from the Btr,
els, Pans, Griping and all disease*;
the Stomach and Bowels.
PITAS’ CARMINATIVE
Is the standard : earrries children or.
the eriijeal period of teething, and
recommended by physicians as tl
friend Yt Mothers, Adults and Ch
dren. It is pleasant to the taste, a.
never foils to give satisfaction, Afc
doses will demonstrate its superlath
virtues. Price 25 ets. per bottle. I'r
pared ty Dr. W. SI. PUTS, Thoms;;
Georgia and for sale by all druggia
Mflll fl iPTlhflli? SEND YOVK pss: note.
I lUliOicUlina, Judgments, etc., to J. R
.-jor»2l end 22,second floor, Inman Bldg
AiUoVr, On she cannot collect thdm they are no,
tVsni. a,-.y fur ter consideration. Give bin. atria
LU.? y.. „ COR vi„ced. Collection, made any
2Vt. cd'.eetlont. no charge Testimonial;
nam troaiiaent ’merchant, .nd banker.-
ifMar as ly
,Nc morphine or opium In Dr. Miles’Paix
IPnu* Curb All Pain- "One cent, a doso."
_ -HeotZaelse and .Vcwwalafre cured by Dr.
. MILES' PAIN Irj I.LS. "Ono cent a dose."
HOW TO =IERCE THE EAR.
Too Much Cnrelcrsness Exhibited In Tht»
Simple but Important Operation.
TIIO Hernkl contained recently a
Ties account of a littlo Italian girl,
1 years of ago, dying from blood
poisoning, which set in the day after
icr mother had pierced her oars,
the Italian mother, in utter igno
rance of the laws of health, drew a
treen thread through the holes
which she had made in the child's
■jars, to keep them open'until the
wounds healed. Inflammation set in
very socn after the operation.
This occurrence brings properly
m the tapis the subject of earrings
'.nd piercing the ears. With a view of
learning whether there were many
such cases on record, I secured the
views of a surgeon whose practice
fi.r the past 25 years has been large
ly confined to women. Ho read tho
brief article before making any com
ment. Then, as ho returned the pa
per, ho said: “No, I have never
known of death caused by the opera
tion before this one in The Herald.
But I have seen a great many cases
of agony and suffering. And I have
never seen tho operation done prop
erly by mothers or jewelers. In the
first: place, tho ears are never, cx
■ ■pt by cbai.ee, pierced so that the
I'urrings will hang or be hold prop
erly. Ono runs in and theotber out,
as a rule. Ono is often higher than
the other. The lobo is pierced too
high up or too low down. Ono hole
is nearer the face than the other.
“Tho danger of blood poisoning is
not to bo ignored as of no account
because the operation is supposedly
not u dangerous one. There is noth
ing right about this home surgery.
The cleanest; person, when it. comes
to a surgical operation, is, without
proper scientific laving, medically
unclean. If you could but know the
■■■xtreine cautions that, are taken in
all well conducted hospitals! The
operating surgeon will not allow any
mo to hand him a towel even, if
| such a ono has not. antiseptically
| prepared his hands to act as an as
: sistant. All tho instruments to be
: -mod have been cleansed. A woman
i takes a needle, any needle, and
; th/&ads it with any thread. This
! thread may have been in her work
: basket months and months, lying
' next to other spools of all colors,
i :-.'.bo would not think of washing her
own hands or washing the ear to be
I pierced. A cork is taken out of some
i bottle, any bottle, without thought
i is to what is in the bottle or how
; long the cork has boon exposed to
; the dust. This cork is placed’under
I the lobe of the ear for the needle to
■ strike against when it comes
| through. Inflammation and suppura
i.ijim.naturally result-
“I have always insisted that tho
operation should bo done by a sur
geon, and by one who will tako tho
trouble to do it properly.”
“But would not so slight an oper
ation bo beneath tho notice of a sur
geon, doctor?”
“No; the rich can command these,
md tho poor could have it dono at
hospitals. ”
“How about wearing earrings any
way? Are not earrings a relic of
both barbarism and ancient Biblical
“I do not think that women should
wear earrings. But so long as they
will do it the ears should be proper
ly treated, so that tho rings will
hang gracefully and both alike. And,
more important still, the danger
should also be avoided. Wash tho
lobe of the ear with a disinfectant.
Make it surgically clean. Oso a cut
ting needle. Pass it through the cen
ter of the lobe, and at right angles
to it. Use silk thread prepared so
that it is free from disease germs
and will turn easily in tho hole, tb;:t
tho tissues may not be irritated.”—
New York Herald.
TRAINING CHILDREN.
Mothers Should Watch Each Teiuperatnent
and Guide Accordingly.
Way cannot mothers show more
common sense in the training of
their little ones? Why can't they
take into consideration natural tem
perament and inherited tendencies?
There arc those, of course, whoaro
wise enough to make allowances in
this respect, but are assured that the
average mother, in training her cliil
dren to habits of obedience, order
and good deportment, make as many
mistakes in tho direction of over
training as tho reverse by not. mak
ing duo allowance for the tempera
ment of tho child. Some mothers.
■; hero are who adopt a certain theory
( ,■ lino of conduct as to training and
allow nothing to interfere with
them, not even its doubtful fitnos;
for tbo ease in point. In all ea.--.
temperament should bo considered,
and an impulsive, quick tempered,
I warm hearted and high spirited child
should not bo trained in tho same
way that suits a slow, even temper
ed, lymphatic youngster.
I remember a mother whoso course
of training must have been a torture
to her child. That mother was one
of those lino and rule women whose
; every glance expressed calculation,
i a woman of such rigid propriety
I and method that no ordinary event
I could in any way disturb her calm,
: cool equanimity. The child inherited
from her father a quick, joyous,
i warm and impulsive temperament,
and when on his return from busi
; ncss tho child would rush to meet
him with open arms, crying, “My
own darling papa,” and proceed tc
climb upon his knee as soon as lie
was seated, and throw hor arms
around his neck and kiss him, the
mother, shocked at the exhibition of
£HE “EOPLE’S PARt'x PAPER. ATLANTA. GEORGIA. DECEMBER 27, ISy’i
this to her unnecessary emotion, |
would frigidly say : "Edith, get ■
down instantly. Don’t be so rude. It
is not at all polite. ”
I have not: seen that child for a
number of years, and I often wonder
if under such severe training as she
lias undergone she could have re
tained her naturally gay, ardent, im
pulsive and affectionate nature, or
whether she lias become a coldly dec
orous automaton. For it is without
j doubt quite possible to remodel the
: plastic mind and disposition of a
child. I know that in tho case of this
lovely littlo one no allowance was
made for temperament, but that the
mother, taking herself for a model,
commenced early to mold this child
of ardent spirit to walk in tho frigid
path of etiquette and duty. It. is ■
doubtful if such training meets with |
permanent success, for tho inherited i
nature will some day lie apt to reas
sert itself, and tbo natural fire will ;
thaw tho artificial ice that lias over
laid it, even for many years. Bu< •
i harm is almost suro to come from :
. this false system of training, and, (
; oven if natural temporai.iont has an i
■ opportunity to develop later in life, |
' the.naturo that has been thus re-
: pressed and dwarfed can never de- I
I velop tho lovely traits that would I
have been so desirable if trained in '
I the right direction.— Philadelphia
| Press. |
I
MATTER OF FACT ANTS.
Business I:i Business With Them, and TheJ
Display Great Intelligence.
T. T. Lovolaca of this city, who
recently returned from the intercon
tinental railway survey through
Central and South America, says one
of the most interesting things to ba
seen in tho tropics is tho leaf carry-
■ ing ant.
■ “The leaf carrying ant is peculiar
I to tropical America. The two species
occupy different nests, '"hoy are
never seen in tho same roadways,
. and they always enter different
i holes, but those ants are such great
burrowers that ono could not say
I positively that the formicaries do
! not communicate with each other
under ground. Their holes do not
cross, and there is no communication
between the holes above ground. As
; an experiment, members of ono col
: ony were transferred by hand to the
path of another. There was no con
flict. Tho strangers merely made
haste to get away.
“Both species,” continued Mr.
Lovelace, “have the same habits,
save that the red fellows are the
■ most industrious. Tho black ones al
ways ‘knocked off’ work in the heat
I of tho afternoon, while tbo red ones
i struggled along all day, although
there were fewer workers to be seen
in tho paths between !'-■ and 4
o’clock. There being no trees on
Moro island to supply leaves for the
ants, they gathered hay instead. A
grass that grow close to tho earth
and produced short seed stalks was
just coming in tassel. The seed heads
were just peeping out from their in
folding leaves when I was there, and
these heads of seed were tho favor
| ito harvest.
“I saw half inch ants carrying
seed stalksan inch long and of twice
the weight of tho carrier. They also I
cut off the grass leaves and carried '
thorn in, while moist crumbs of i
bread and vegetables were cut up I
and carried also. Very dry crumbs |
were ignoied. I did not see them !
. carry meat, of any kind, and when I •
! put. a piece of freshly killed gras::- i
| hopper in their path thoy refused to |
notice it. But certain bits of damp, :
rotten wood were carried into tho ■
: nests as quickly as soft bread.
: “A peon who came to see what 1 ■
' found of interest in tho littlo work- :
ers dropped a flaming wax mate'll 1
among them. They did not seem to
see it, for they rushed into the flame
as they would have crossed a bit of
paper. A number were burned to
death, while many of them were .
crippled before the flame was extin
guished. The dead and the crippled
remained in the path perhaps two ’
minutes at a spot five feet from the '
nest entrance. Then oamo a gang of j
i workers from the nest, who picked ;
! up tho dead and the crippled and i
carried them several inches away in
to the grass at right angles to tho
path. The wounded were left unat
tended, as were tho dead. Thowork
; ers then attacked the extinguished
match taper. It was nearly an inch
long, and a dozen (by count) took
hold of it, pulled it: in all directions
at once, roiled it and ono another
ovc;', stood on their beads and crawl
ed under it, while tho leaf carriers
streamed by and over them, ap
parently heedless of their presence,
it was a case of wholly undirected
: labor, for any two, possibly any one,
could have dragged it from the path,
but it took tbo dozen 15 minutes to
tumble it across two inches of the
path.
“While in Honduras an American
told mo that the loaf cutting ant w;,.
to blame for much of tiie laziness <<:
tho natives, who do not try to make
gardens or cultivate fruit trees bo
cause the ants destroy everything of
that kind. However, the American
solved the problem of keeping these
ants away from his garden by dig
ging a ditch around it and keeping
water running through it, an elfect
' ive barrier.”—lyansas City Star. j
Tho fountain or content must
: spring up in the mind, and ho who
has so littlo knowledge of human
nature as to seek happiness by
changing anything but his own dis
' position will waste bis life in fruit
: less efforts and multiply the griefs
I which he purposes to remove.—
j Johnson. __ JUt j
ETIQUETTE IN 1628.
In a Hook Written Then Are Thlngß
Which Sound Curious Now.
What is probably one of thooldcst
books on deportment in existence
was discovered in Paris tho other
day, says the New York World. It
was published in that city in 1628
for tho College of the Jesuits of Lu
I'lecbe and is entitled “Good Man
ners In Converse Among Men. ” Tho
text is in French, with a Latin trans
lation.
Deportment in public is first
touched upon. "In yawning do not
groan,” this ancient guide to polite
ness says, “and do not gapo even
when speaking. In blowing thy nose
do it as ono would sound a trumpet
I and afterward regard not fixedly thy
' handkerchief. Avoid wiping thy
i nose as tho children do—with thy
fingers or upon tho sleeve. When
listening to some one speaking do
not wiggle about, but keep thyself
in thy skin the while.”
. It must have been hard to obey
this latter injunction, judging from
i what is said a littlo farther along,
' “Kill not fleas or tho like in the
: presence of others, but excuse tliy
i self and remove whatever torments
I th co.”
Three hundred years ago gentle
men did not wear such sad colored
I costumes as they do today, and ono
I cannot: help feeling that a littlo pride
■ and swagger were, excusable in a
dandy of those days when he donned
for the first time a particularly
fetching costumo of high colored
silken doublet and hose. Yet this
“guido” remarks severely: "If thou
art well bedizened, if thy hose be
tightly drawn and thy habit bo well
ordered, parade not thyself, but
carry thyself with becoming mod
esty. Demean not thyself arrogant
ly, neither go mincingly about. Let
not tby hands hang limply to the
ground and tuck not up thy hose at,
every turn.”
"Do not embellish thyself with
flowers upon thy ear” is another in
junction which sounds curiously to
day, but the advice, “When speak
ing, raise not tby voico as if thou
wort crying an edict,” is just as per
tinent now as whan the budding
young gentlemen of Lu Franco had
it drummed into thorn.
Tabic manners in those days must
have been rather more primitive
even than those of some of tho 50
cent table d’hotes in this city, for
tho book says: "Being seated at tho
table, scratch not thyself, and if
thou must corlgh or spit or wipe thy
nose do it dexterously and without
a groat noise.
“Stuff not thy mouth with food
when eating, a id drink not too much
_ of the
tlio house. Show not overmuch
pleasure either at the moats or wine.
“In taking salt have a care that
tby knife be not greasy, When it is
necessary to clean that or the fork,
do it neatly with tho napkin or a lit
tlo bread, but nover with tho entire
loaf. Smell not of tho meats, and, if
by chanco thou dost, put them not
back afterward before another.
“It is a very indecent thing to
wipe tbo sweat from thy face with
i tby napkin, or with the same to
; blow thy noso or clean the plate or
: platter.”
Governors’ Salaries.
j There is a great difference in tho
i compensation of tho governors.
! Now York pays the most—3lo,ooo a
year and house rent free. New Jer-
I sey and Pennsylvania pay their gov
! ernoTS SIO,OOO a year, but do not
i furnish mansions for them. Ohio
and Massachusetts pay 4:. , 000 a year.
Illinois and California pay $6,000 a
year. Colorado, Indiana, Kentucky,
Minnesota, Missouri, Virginia and
Wisconsin pay $5,000. Maryland
pays $4,500. Eight states pay $4,000
11 year. The remaining 21 states pay
miserably small salaries to their ex
ecutives. In Vermont and Oregon
tho governors receive only $1,500 a
year—hardly enough to pay a ca
i pable private secretary- In Mich igan
; tho salary of tho governor remained
: for many years at SI,OOO. 'This ro-
■ striated tbo office to rich men, for
; no poor man who was competent
could afford to tako it. Tho salary
in that state now is $4,000. —Ex-
change.
It is said that an apple eater will
never bo dyspeptic or givon to bil-
■ iousnass. The lovers of this fruit say
; that ono must always eat it raw,
i while others consider it only edible
when cooked. This latter is wrong,
however, as a ripe apple well masti
cated is a healthy food. Among the
excellent ways of cooking apples are
■ apple souffle, apple gingerbread,
stuffed, fried, preserved, jellied and
baked.
Spurgeon once described Noah as
■ “sitting outside the ark at twilight
I reading his Bible.” This reminds
uno of tho noted picture by a Dutch
artist of St. I‘oter reading bis own
■ epistles bound in leather with a pair
of liorn framed spectacles.
1 Max O’Rell declares that “the pa
'•tiencoof the American public is sim-
■ ply angelical, nothing short of that.'
Ho says that wo get no courtesy
■ from tho people we pay because wo
j expect none.
Vainglorious men are the scorn of
tbo wise, the admiration of fools,
the idol of parisites and the slaves
■ of their own vaunts. —Bacon.
Fiction allurcb to tho severe tusk
Iby a gayer preface. Embellished
I truths are the iluminated
. of larger cliildrtn.—Wilmot.
feu" jSitrtpte.
■ Nine ftsme!?
out of ten 1
whenwearc
out of sorts
our trou
bles can be
removed
by that re
i liable fold
medicine,
•'Otwn’s
iron Bitters, 1
sfhich for more than ?o years
•ias been curing many people
.f Dyspepsia, Biliousness, Ma
! Impure Blood, Neural-
Headache, Liver and Kid
ley troubles. I t’s the peculiar
embination of iron, the great
trength-giver, with selected
’egetable remedies of true
ta’ue that makes Brown’s iron
Miters so good for strengthen
ing and. purifying the system,
i h specially good for women
md children—it makes them
hrong ar-.d rosy.
ire*! B'Lt’ts <s pleasant to take,
: c U ’ no. the teeth nor cause
R;•. •' • See the crossed 1 red lines
oe f , , Gt book, ‘ How to
•,.< - "iuAri teila all about, it
" »■•/.’ j.:. . S'. 6*
'.•1... Mi.
rF 5 -;" V
? L
PAM -ms M 3 HOG
;abled Poultry Fence; Wire Fence Board; Yard,
Jemetery and Grave Lot Fencing on Steel Post s
Specialty. We Pniy the Fri»sgSht, Catalogue Free
k, L. AILAhTA, GA.
i f rn.
AND
’ashille, Chattanooga and
St. Louis Rai way.
IDfIILY
TO
SHATTANOOSA, NASHVILLE,
CINCIIUNAAL CHICAGO,
MEMPHIS, ST, LOUIS.
McKenzie
Route
'l3 ARKANSAS AND TEXAS
C MIGRANT
b RATES.
The Atlanta Exposition will be the
;reatest Exhibition ever held in the
I ’nited States excepting- tho World’s
■ "air, and the Round Trip Rates have
| ?c6n made very low. Do not fail to go
! i,nd take the children. It will be a
‘ ’.eat education for them
| Maps, Folders and any de-
' ired information write to,
. L. Edmondson. J. W. Hicks,
Trave Pass. Agent, Trav. Pass. AgL
Chattanooga, Tenn. Atlanta, Ga.
os. M. Brown, 0. E. Harman,
Traffic Manager. Gen. Pass. Agt.
Atlanta, Ga. Atlanta, Ga.
FUiiWE!
C. C. SMITH,
Furniture Dealer,
Sparta. G-a.
I offer so the next 30 days,
beginning Nov. Ist., the fol
. lowing bargains in Furniture.
$•2.00 Bedsteads at $1,2.5.
$2,50 Beds'eads at §2 00.
$7.00 Oak Bedstead at $5.00.
SIO.OO Oak Bsdst'ad at SB.OO.
SI.OO Rocker at 65 centi.
$3.50 Oik Rjoker at $2.50.
(Only a small number of these.)
(‘ip-top Oik fiockenat $ 1,2-5& 1.50
$1 50 Cent l r Tabies at SI,OO,
30 TK’z. 50 eent Chairs at 40 cents.
' $6.50 Lounges at to $3.50 and $4.00.
$6 00 Oak Cabinet, VZashstand at 3.50
$3 50 Wa-ihstand with double rack
at $1.35
1 50 Kitchen Safes at $2.50 and up.
100 Bureaus at $5,00 and up. Thes,
bureaus were manufactured h- ■.
in Sparta and are superior to
any that can ba bought else
where. They are wll made
and have large good mirrors.
See them before you buy. They
are well worth $7.00.
j If yen want Furniture come to see
•*. I’ve got it. I’ll sell it to you
HEAP.
i 1 manufacture all cheap kinds
-t furniture and I can sill it tc my
■nstomers as cheap as other dealers
1 -an -say it. 1 ata not the middle
nan, bat the first man—the rnanu
■ I'aetmer. Remember the place
John Friese’s old stand. Factory in
I 'ear cf store. Come to see me.
sjueitjs:,
The Cheapest
pppnw ? new
Kul tlkhi
■ng-eT-g.-va.- - ’ sJUVst
On The Market I
Only r M ! - ‘'■
Um J U iHO
In one volume of 3SG pa, tvs, hand
somely printed and bound, we sell yo..
a work containing--
1. A Hi-torr of Political Parties in
the United States.
2. A History of Political Platforms
from the year lgoo down to 1892.
3. A History of the vicious legislation
which has revolutionized our govern
ment.
4. A History of the Public Land
Stealage by corporatif ns.
5. A complete explanation of the
National Banking System.
.6. A History of the Greenback, its
| birth, its wonderful career, and its de
■ t truc'.i.m hv the coiitractionists.
7. The Silver Ques’ ' n, fully treated
8. How Taxe- are id],
9. Ties Army of the Corporations
Pinkerton shown up A record splash
ed with bloc ..
j 10. The Corporations ; their nature
I -heir history. Danger to the people.
11. Congress expo.o d; its drunken
ness and .-enality.
12. A record of important votes,
showing ho v boih the vid parties hav<
victimized the people.
13. Jerry Simpson's great speech on
Free Trade.
14. John Davis on the Money Ques
tion. A powerful argumenl
15. McKeighan on the silver Ques
tion. A strongly rrasoned speech.
16. Senator I'efietss Spo-eh in tht
Senate or ilie Silver Question.
17. Senator Kile’s Speech on cur
rency.
18. Watson’s Speech on Free Trade
19. Tammany cor iint on exp- sed.
20. Congress and the Whisky Ring.
The book also contains a portrait oi
the Author, Thus. E. Watson.
Address
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PIEDMONT AIR LINE.
•MTMWBIS SCIianULK or FLMENQZS TTi’Tfc
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October 6, 1895. p/f y bally LSiui Daily
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M Norcross 12 56a 9 38a 6 28p
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Lula 2 23»« H ua* b «'Bp
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4 Toccoa .'3d »u>p
" Westminster 3 >(•.! -7;. 82-p
“ Seneca 4 i>7n 12 i.'u 8 4-ip
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" bp irtanburg. 6 Ibp t. is- 32_-p 10 43p
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'* K iig b -1t...... 7 :< n so' p’
’• Gnstoula 7 ,iI ;‘> _>_>
\r. Charlotte 8 2 , p M-so : t hi*
Danville ’jmt 1 :wplll 4 <iw
a.r. Richmond b< 0a G-dipleOOa 3 5.5a
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■ Bal m ei'l; • 1 I .•
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i
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“ Sparunibnrg :1 ’ ■? cn'-pt 52 a
Groenvilie iJ '-'-i 1 .?ja 41' ] i. Jia
“ Central 1i -p 2 ' 5 4’, 7 10a
“ Seneca 3vw 6 05p
•• Westminster 6 -'-'p
M Toccoa 35t a 6 s'; 6 OCn
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* Lula 4 .1a Hr. pl 6 57*.
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“ Nvu-ros?.’”’”.' 9 rJ.| 8 !. *'
V Atlanta E.T. 4fn! e .!• ' " <pl 9 : i -
'hv At antaC. T. 88.,5 iv-d •» tit-; I 8 ::c>- 10 2 *
"A” a. ra. “P” p m. ‘ M ' noon. “N’’ night.
Nob. 37 and "B—Washing ton and Southwestern
i Yratibuleri Limded. ’J B.’dog’i Pullman sleeper
between New York find New Gileans, via G .'-tv
jngton, Atlanta and sb:ntgoniciy, and also be
•»ween New Yo k anti Memphis, via Washington,
Atlanta and Birmingham. Dining Can.
I Nog. 35 and 36 United Stohi 1 fist Mail, Pnllmer.
sleeping Can between Atlanta. New Orleans ai.d
New York.
Nog. 31 and 32, Expedition Fl* er. Through Pn!;
»,inn Sleepers between New Ye*k . <.d A nnta » •*.
VVaabington. On 11.« :«i>d i i.'.ia i. yh con
net uuu Will n »tdv rout I 'bint-f-.l with No
S.l, and on th._) dab 's ! ': ’ti :u» ."1 epn-.g Cur w 111
ba operated Ki- hint.nd and Atl-mtn. Ou
Weduesda v K >.nd '■ tur connection from At
lauta to Riehmor.'! with il;ron>h sleeping car
will be to leave Atlanta br train No. 82.
Nog. 11 and 12, Pnllmen Sleeping Car between
Richmond, DanviLe and Gieeusbora.
W. A. TURK, 8. H. HARDWICK.
Gen ) Paw Ag’t, Aiw't GeiVl !•**«. Ag’t,
Washington, r». 0. Atlanta, <2a.
W. B. RYDER, Rnperfnlendont, Ch4Rlgtta
Nok:s CacuLlNa.
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4 Beiigious Writings
16. Talmage on Palestine— By Re?,
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17. John Ploughman’s Pictures (Il
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18. 'Fhe Changed Life,
19 Pax Vobisoum, or “Peace Bit
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