Newspaper Page Text
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ENQUIRER-SUN: COLUMBUS, GEORGIA SUNDAY, DECEMBER 8. 1889
BAB’S BRIGHT BABBLE.
WHAT A PRETTY NEW YORK WOMAN
FINDS TO WRITE ABOUT.
Why Some Fashionable Women Take
Turkish Baths—Coats That Leave
Their Marks -What Woman
Envies in Man, Etc.
New York, December 2.—[Special Cor
respondence.j—The fashionable woman
finds it a little d fficuit, at this time of the
year, to keep clean, and it is by no means
as inexpensive an operation as it is usu
ally supposed. She walks out in her blue
coat, with its heavy trimming of black
fur, and comes home with a broad black
band around her throat, that soap and
water will not remove even if prayer ac
companies it. The finer your skin the
aaore difficult is this mark to get off, and
it islusually"best done asithey_recommend
at "the ^Turkish;, bath—by the use ofijj
demon; just halve it and ;rub the raw part
around your throat exactly as it it were
si cake of soap. You are determined not
io get rheumatism and so you wear black
••silk underwear. No matter how expen-
■pensive it is, no matter how many times
it has oeeu washed, wnerever your stays
or a belt band press against it you are
marked. Not necessarily for life, but un
til you set somebody to seruo you off with
a small' brush. Half the women go to
the Russian bath to get these marks off
them, because the gentle vapor ana the
hard rubbing will soon cause them to dis
appear. Half the women in New York
v/Juld ask if they dropped dead on the
street that their clothes might not be
taken ofi them, and the reason why can
■easily be understood.
What a Woman S£r vies in Man.
Haven’t you always envied a man the
way he carries a roil of bills in his trou
sers poc el? He never seems to lose
them, «nd yet he thinks nothing more of
hauling out the various match-boxes,
coins, and pencils that abide therein than
if the bills weighed a hundred pounds in
stead of being light and airy trifles. How
ever, you can carry your filthy lucre, (it is
filthy,* isn’t?) in the same way if you want
to, for the very smartest of silver clasps
comes to hold these bills together and to
weight them down so they will be quite
safe in an ulster or cloak pocket.
Where American Intelligence is Shown.
I very seldom feel great anxiety * * * * * * 7 * * * II to get
up and wave the Star Spangled Banner.
When the numerous emotions were
.joined to make ’‘me” patriotism was left
out and I was given an ability to look
■coldiy and cynically at the faults of my
■country. I see its advantages, but its dis
advantages also rise up prominently be
fore me. The other night it dawned upon
.me with sudden force that as a nation we
were a very intelligent one. I was seeing
dearies Windham play “The Candidate,”
a play, the fun of which hinges on tne
■differences in English politic.-; about a
year ago I saw the original, the “Depute
de Bombignac” presented by Coquelin
and his sou. In it the shadings of French
politics formed the motive. Then a great,
audience enjoyed the French piay,
laughed heartily at the situations, and
thoroughly understood it. This year an
other audience roared with laughter as
the differences between Radical and Con
servative, between Bradiaugh and Bal
four, between Home Rule and Landlord
ism were discussed, ana not an allusion
was lost or misunderstood. Put an Amer
ican political play on the stage in either
London or Paris, and the people won’t
know what you are talking about. They
have not the remotest idea—that is, the
mass of them have not, as to who is Pres
ident of the United, most of them vaguely
belitving that it is either George Wash
ington or General Grant. So you can
easily understand why 7 1 bad a sudden at
tack of patriotism, and wanted to hurrah
for the American brain that is capable of
understanding not only its osvn rather
muddled political condition; but the mud
•dies of Eugland and France, and the Kil
kenny cat State of Ireland.
What is a Womanly Woman?
When the new American piay, “The
dharity Eall,” was produced the other
sight, a man said, “I like Georgia Cay van,
she is such a womanly woman!” Now, it
seems quite time that men should define
what that word means, so, though unlike
Japheth, I am not in search of a father,
Still I am od knowledge bent, and these
are the answers I got: “A womanly wo
man is one who is considerate, sympa
thetic, forgiviDg and genrl<; who can feel
for ttose who suffer in mind or body; who
knows how to make such a home that her
htsbrnd End children are happy
in ^ and love her as the tuling
power.” Another was: -‘A Womanly
woman is one who in physique is
-shaped like a woman. She is not womaniy
who is as flat as a shingle. She must
be rounded in body and in mind. There
must be no angles in her temper nor her
figure. She must know the power of a
loving word and of the soft answer that
turneth away wrath. From a married
man came this: “She mu3t be a woman
who doesn’t contradict a man.” From a
;young artist,who has evidently given some
study to madonnas and cherubs, was this:
* £ She is the one who knows how to hold a
baby in the easiest way for herself and
tits most comfortable for it.” From
a cynical old bachelor this: “She is not
vaasculine. She gives love and invites it
She knows how to forgive and doesn’t
make a favor of this forgiveness. She is
ftond of clothes, but doesn’t think her
k*,lvation or happiness depend upon
Cbsm. She is what your mother was and
watt mice was—a gentlewoman.” Is she
describee?
Some Womanly Actresses.
Still on inquiry bent, I asked, “Who is a
womaniy woman?” Naturally, of course,
women who are well known have to be se
lected. Mrs. Kendall led by a large ma
jority; in fact, she was unanimously
'elected as the most womanly. Then
came Georgia Cayvau, Mary Moore, of
the Wyndham Company, Maude Harrison,
Madame Moojeska, Lilian Russell, Jane
Hading, ar.d Mary Eastlake. The nays
found on their list Eiien Terry, Ada
Rehan, and Sarah Bernhardt- Evidently,
the being womanly is a something that
can oniv be understood or explained by a
man. It is the little ieaven which makes
the whole lump attractive to him, and
•without which it were better to have been
born a boy.
Maids no Longer Luxuries.
A maid used to be considered a luxu;y.
iVow she is the torment of the fashionable
woman’s life. If she is English her man
iners are very good for a while—she does
liter duty and is well behaved. But six
r.nonths*in this enlightened country and
faer quiet maimers becoxe insolent; she
o&n’c dress you without refering to the
ckicheses and countesses upon whom she
laas waited before; she scorns your table
raod reads your letters, and knows exactly
Low much money you have in your
pocket-book. If you should object to any
•of her weaknesses and summons up cour-
a.ge enough to discharge her, you had
beStar have her trunks examined before
sfce leaves, and you will be wise if you teil
your husband all about her, for the
chatoes are that, pretending to know
something about you. she wiil attempt a
itittle scheme of blackmail immediately
after she has left.
Where Maids are the Mistresses.
If she is French, she stays just long
enough to get acquainted with American
Habits, and then the leaves you in a great
Jaury either to marry the cook
HDd open a email restaurant,
or to go into the hair-dressing
business. The Irish or Scotch maids are
usually honest, usually impertinent,
usually know very littte, but are as faith
ful as dogs, so that because of their virtues,
you forgive them the rest. There are
women in New York who do not dare to
discharge maids—who live in deadly teror
of what they are going to do next; who
have been foolish enough to let them find
out something, it may be a very little
something, that they do not want either
mother or hnsband to know, and so the
maid levies tribute, gets frocks that have
only been worn once, has her wages paid
to her in advance, and is worse than any
skeleton at a feast, because she is with yon
nearly all the time. Nst long ago at a
very smart luncheon served by a gorgeous
butler and three footmen, a woman said,
“Oh dear, I think I shall go crazy if they
put in a paragraph about me.” The‘ref
erence was made'to a very personal
caper, 'i fie hosteet looked silence at her
guest, and after the servants had left the
room, said, “My dear, why in the world
did you say that before the servant; you
evidently do not know the English ene
my butler is perfectly capable of writing
you a letter demanding a certain sum of
money, or threatening just such a para-
grayh as you dread. Tne English servant
has no more idea of honor than a cannibal,
and not as much, fora cannibal eats yon
out and out and does not make life horri
ble by spinning out the agony.
A Profession Open to Women.
When it is thought what an easy life a
eood maid has, it seems strange that more
women by learning hair dressing and by
learning to be systematic, do not apply
for such positions, one is seldem asked to
eat with the rest of the household; she has
much time to go out, and hor work is
always easily done and not dirty. A good
maid is far beyond rubies when it comes
to a question of vaiue to her mistress, and
rattier than stand all day iong behind a
counter, get small wages and poor food to
eat, and no time to call my own, except
when I was so tired I could not enjoy it,
I would study the art of dressing people,
saving them steps, of doing their hair, of
keeping their wardrobes in order, in
short, of being a perfect treasure of a
maid, and a perfect treasure of a maid can
get fif'y dollars a month, a pleasant
room, a great deal of time to herself, and a
number of presents. The perfect maid
like the perfect woman is hard to find.
A Woman’s Point of Law.
I should like to know what right,when a
man dies, as did that man who was shot
on the street the other day, the law has to
go into hi3 pockets and hand a private
letter to a reporter that it may oe pub
lished in every newspaper. As a people,
we are continually talking about our free
dom, and yet there is no couutry in the
world where the individual has so few
rights. I am not an ardent believer in
murder, but if the man talked about
women he deserved to be shot. That,
ho wever, gives nobody any right to take
his private letters and publish them.
The newspapers are continually moaning
that we are not a nation of homes, that
we are not home-makers, that we live too
much before the public. How can it be
helped, when such things as this are-
allowed to be done? Suppose tomorrow
you drop dead, and in your pocket is a
letter that is perfectly innocent, but
which, when read by strangers, might
have a different construction put upon it.
You are not here to explain it, and the
woman who is nearest and dearest to you
suffers because she thinks of what, that
must mean. It is the most abominable
custom imaginable, and if there are no
homes, il there no home makers, it is
oecause the public i3 gelling what it likes
—the knowledge of affairs that does not
concern it. One lesson to be learned from
that letter is, to keep nothing which is
written that may prove com promising.
The man of the world never dots.
The 3Iau of tils World.
What is a man of the world?
He is the man who, having gone through
this world of men and women, has found
out the best way of living and of treating
his feilow men.
He is a man of opinions, but he does not
believe he can convert everybody else
into believing his way, and so he does
not bore people with long-winded argu
ments.
He is the man who is always well dress
ed, but whoEe clothes you couidn’tjdescribe
to save your life.
He is the man who dosen’t carry his
umbrella so that it will poke into your
eyes or jab into your legs.
He is the man who dosen’t muss
women’s frocks and ruin their tempers
by going out of the theatre Detween the
acts when he is in tli6 centre of a row.
He is the man who, if he cannot smoke
good cigars and drink good whisky, out ot
respect to his neighbor lets both alane.
He is the man who is courteous to all
women and familiar to Done.
He is the man who doseu’t tell you what
his dinner cost or how much he pays his
bu ! ler.
He is the comfortable man.
May his number increase, and selecting
husbands for your girl and mine, may each
of us get a man of the world. Bab.
Notes from Cliipley.
CHIPLEY, Ga.,D c. 7.—[Special.]—Judge
A. A. Alien and Mrs. J. L. Allen, from
here, are visiting relatives and friends in
your city.
Senator W. O. Johnson was in town last
week looking after the interests of the
Enquirer Sun.
Our city is adding new life to its already
enterprising spirit.
A new drug storo and dime store have
recently been put up here.
A large buggy manufactory fa to be
erected here at an early date, according to
tumor. They propose to do an extensive
business.
Trade is. exceedingly good. The farmers
have made good crops, have paid out of
debt and are trading liberally.
LaFayette is on a building boom, and
there is great demand there for shingles,
lumber and brick.
Special Church Notices.
St, Luke Church—Rev. A. M. Williams,
pastor. Sunday School at 9:30 a. m. Con
gregation invited to attend St. Paul and
hear Rev. Dr. W. P. Harrison, pastor of
St. Luke during the war. At night Dr.
Harrison will preach in St. Luke, and
after preaching reports of the year’s work
will be read.
St. Pau! Church. — Rev. W. F. Lloyd,
pastor. Dr. William P. Harrison will
preach at this church at 11 a. m. There
will be no services at this church at night,
and the congregation is invited to hear Dr,
Harrison preach at St. Luke at night.
Broad Street Methodist Church.—
Rev. J. G. Harrison, psstor. Preaching
at 11 a. m. by Rev. W. J. Snively; at 7
p. m. by the pastor. Sabbath schooi at 9:39
a m. D. D. Bartlett, superintendent.
Church conference Wednesday evening at
7 o’clock.
First Baptist Church.—Rev. Robert II.
Harris, D. D., pastor. The usual services
will be held at this church today.
First Presbyterian Church—Rev. W. 'A.
Carter, pastor. Preaching at 11 a. m. and
7:15 p. m. by the pastor.
Trinity Episcopal Church—Rev. W. C.
Hunter, rector. The usual services will be
held at this church today.
East Highlands Methodist Church—Sab
bath school at 3 p. m. Dr. W. F. Tigner,
superintendent. Preaching by Rev. J. M.
Osborne at 7 p.m.
Y. M. C. A.—The usual afternoon ser
vices wiil be held at the Y. M. C. A. rooms
to-day. All men cordially invited.
Free Will Baptist Church—Preaching at
II a. m. and 7 p. m. By Rev. Mr. Hooks.
Rose Hill Methodist Church.—Preaching
at 11 a. m. by Rev. J. R. Ware, and 7 p.
m. by Rev H. C. Brewton.
THE WOMEN OF THE LAND
interesting items concerning
the fair sex.
Blight Scintillations of an Active Mind.
The Selfishness and Egotism of
the Sterner Sex Very
Sharply Scored.
Mrs. Stonewall Jackson is writing a bi
ography of her husband.
Spnrgeon lately invited Mrs. Ormiston
Chant to preach from his pulpit.
Mrs. Goodloe, of Kentucky, has been
appointed to the collectorship of Lexing-
tou District to fill the vacancy caused by
her husband’s death. Mr. George M.
Thomas, who was seeking the office,
kindly withdrew when informed of her
candidacy.
The French Government will furnish
an official report of the Woman’s Con
gress recently held in Paris under Govern
ment patronage, for the purpose of secur
ing juster laws for women.
Fran Irma Klimm, of Buda Pesth, Hun
gary, has committed suicide. Since her
separation from Prof. Klimm, four years
ago, she has had the custody of their two
children. He recently claimed them, and
the law, as usual, gave them to him.
Mrs. Emma P. Ewing has resigned her
Professorship of Domestic Ecouomy at
Purdue University, Ind., and will open a
School of Household Science at Kansas
City, Mo.
Mrs, N. Gray Bartlett, of Chicago, has
discovered a process by which photo-
grapfiic pictures can be developed without
waofiing them in a dark room and staining
the fingers.
Mrs. Springer, an active temperance
anc suffrage worker of I >wa, has received
a diploma as Fellow of the Society of
Science and Literature of London, Eng.
Almost every man considers house
keeping a failure without some woman to
keep things decent, and in order, and to
look generally after the comfort and wel
fare of the family. So sensible is he of
his deficiency in housekeeping qualifica
tions tfiat when death removes ner he is
unbecomingly hasty to find somebody else
just as much like her as possible. The
State is simply the household enlarged; i
but as to the housekeeping of the natiou, i
the average man imagines he can run it |
successfully unaided by women; that he j
can attend to the governmental spring
cleaning and refurnishing, can employ the |
servants, and provide for the education i
of the juveniles without advice or assist- j
a,uce from the mothers and wives of the ;
national household. The final dismember
ment of every great government., what
ever its constitution, tells now huge a fail
ure he ha3 been as a national house
keeper.
The difference between the grown np
anti-suffragist, aud the little boy with the
tangled -kein who refused his sister’s prof
fered assistance, is but a difference of age.
She suggested, ever so amiably, that his
failure lay in supposing the matter to re
quire more of force than of nice hand
ling; but her offer of assistance being
practically an insinuation that John was
not all-sufficient, he courteously informed
her that if the skein could not be straight
ened without her help he would rather
leave it tangled. S> he bungled on, get
ting it, verv much knottier than before,till
finally he flew into a rage and whacked
the thing into a thousand pieces.
That fa just what the natioual house
keepers finally cio with every national
household.
the offering of the non- partisan amend
ment seems to have been generally rel
ished by the press. The goddess of dis
cord has ever sat, a delegate without cre
dentials, in deliberative bodies. We do
not think deliberaters of the other sex
have so summarily banished her tfiat they
can, with propriety, reproach female or
ganizations with her presence. At any
rate, it is not known that any deliberative
body of women has ever required the
service of a sergeant at-arms; nor have
the debaters resorted to dueling for a
settlement of their differs nces.
I go for ail sharing the pr iviieges of the
government who assist in bearing its bur
dens, by no means excluding women.—
Abraham Lincoln.
FOGIES AND PROGRESSIONISTS.
On November 1st a law went into effect
in Missouri giving married women the
power to contract.
The University of Pennsylvania and the
University of Kentucky have become co
educational.
North Dakota, South Dakota and Mon
tana come into the Union on a plane at
which Georgia, in her senior Statehood,
should at least have the grace to
blush. In the two first, women will have
school suffrage; in Montana, all tax pay
ing women will have full suffrage. Govs.
Miller, of North Dakota, Mellette, of
South Dakota, Ferry, of Washington, and
Congressmen Pickier and Carter are all
ardent suffragists.
Cassius M. Clay is unconsciously ailing
the Equal Rights cause in Kentucky
by writing some very bitter arti
cles against the suffragists of that State
About forty years ago Mr. Clay would
have only sneered at the movement, but
it has long outgrown the weapons em
ployed against it in its infancy. Its ene
mies long ago found their best logic and
rhetoric impotent against an antagonist
having justice for a helmet; and now,
casting these aside, in desperation they
have grasped slander to deal it a death
blow, as they think. Every reform has
three stages to pass: it springs into beiDg,
and is ridiculed; it gathers strength, and
is reasoned with; it grows powerful, and
is slandered. When a thing has become
honorable enough to be slandered, let all
its advocates rejoice; for the slanderer of
a movement is tfie herald of its victory.
H. Augusta Howard..
LEjtON ELIXIR.
P
YLE’S
EARLINE
OSSESSES
ECULIAR
URIFYING
ROPERTIES.
RESS AND
1UBLIC
KONOUNCE
EARLINE
ERFECT.
G. SGIEIOIMIIBTTIR Q
Ds Wonderful Effect on the Liver, stomach
Bowels. Kidneys and Blood.
Dr. Mozley’s Lemou Elixir is a pleasant
lemon drink that positively cures all Bil-
liousuess, Constipation, Indigestion, Head
ache, Malaria, Kidney Disease, Dizziness,
Colds, Loss of Appetite, Fevers, Chills,
Blotches, Pimples, Pain in the Back, Pal
pitation of Heart, and all other disease*
caused by a disordered liver, stomach and
kidneys, the first great cause of ail fatal
diseases. Fifty cents and $1 per bottle.
Sold by druggists. Prepared only by H.
Mozley, M. D , Atlanta, Ga.
DIAMONDS,
JEWELRY,”
SOLID SILVER and
SILVER PLATED WARE.
GOLD HEADED CANES.
GOODS SUITABLE
FOR
WEDDING ; PRESENTS.
-DEALER IN-
FORK-',
All are invited to call.
C. SCHOMBURG
1115 BR.O VTI ST.,
nOT/TTMm s. <:■'.
Lemon Hot Drops.
For coughs and colds, take Lemon Hot
Drops.
For sore throat and Bronchitis, take
Lemon Hot Drops.
For pneumonia and laryngetis, take
Lemon Hot Drops.
For consumption and catarrh, take
Lemon Hot Drops.
For all throat and lung diseases, take
Lemon Hot Drops.
An elegant and reliable preparation.
Sold by druggists. 25 cents per bottle.
Prepared by H. Mozley, M. D. Atlanta,
Ga. nov3s
T. 3. SPEAR.
New Watches and Jewelry? Diamonds and Earring,
Children’s Hints.
Spectacles and Eyeglasses a specialty, which ho
not tire the eye and last for many years without change.
1121 Broad Street, Columbus, Ga.
J\ JOSEPH
DEALER LET
The laws of New York allow a man to
bequ-.atu his children to whomsoever hs
pleases, entirely ignoring the mother’s
claim, and this without other reason than
caprice. Perhaps there is still seine wo
man duil enough to ask: “Why do women
want to vote?” Women want to vote in
order to send to legislature? men who will
make just laws for women, so that if
a woman fa married to the kind of man
that regards her as property, she will not
be at a practical choice between the life
of a slave, or a separation from her chil
dren.
Paul is an acceptable authority to a
certain sort of men, because his teachings
in regard to the position and rights of wo
men suit the selfishness and convenience
of such men so much better than the
Golden Rale. Thai is why they quote the
Apostle of the Geutile3 in preference to
the Son of God.
“Soft now! Who comes here?”
A remonstrant with the venerable ob
jection about the “degrading surround
ings” at the polls.
The circus seldom has a slim attendance
of women. They are escorted there by
their fathers or brothers or future hus
bands, and all push and elbow with untir
ing .perseverance to see the clown, or the
baby elephant, or the big monkey, as
they are urged by their several tastes.
Women might do for patriotism what they
do for pleasure. However, no such jostling
would be necessary at the poll- ; for from
every preciuct in vvhicU women have
voted the report has! come that “their
presence materially helped to preserve
order," and that any woman might, with
perfect convenience, cast her ballot un
attended. Women cannot possibly en
counter at the polls a more degraded
throng thau is congregated about a circus
tent; yet some of those who regularly pat
ronize the circus in company with ladies,
affect to see much impropriety in a wo
man’s going to the polls. Ail this is easily
explained. When a woman goes to the
circus she does not upset anything; when
she goes to the polls she does upset a great
many things; because, regardless of party,
she looks only to the qualifications aud
moral character of the candidate, aud
casts her ballot in the interest of good
government and social purity. Hence,
some of those who would be most shocked
to see her “in the low crowd” at the polls,
will cheerfully escort her through the’
same low crowd at the circus.
The stir created in the W. C. T. U.by
For Sale.
Thirty Thousand Dollars First Mortgage
Bonds of t :e Alabama CDniieltsville Coal and
Coke Company, of Jefferson county, Alabama.
APPLY AT
Chattahoochee Natioual Bank.
decSdlw
FROM NEW Y'ORK CITY.
Mr. A. X. Hawkes—Dear Sir: Your Patent
eye-glasses received some time since, and am j
ve>y much gratified at the wonderful change ■
that lies come over my eyesight since r have de- j
serted my old glasses and am now wearing vours. s
ALEXANDER AGAR, j
Secretary Stationers’ Board of Trade. {
All eyes fitted at the drug store of Evan3 & |
Howard. au25sun6m j
STAPLE and FANCY DRY GOODS,
CHIP CLOTHING FOR M, BOYS AND TOOTHS.
Ladies’ and Misses’ Cloaks and Jackets Very Chet p.
BEST MAKES OF BOOTS AND SHOES—Good Bargains.
FULL LINE OF TRUNKS—Saratogas Very Cheap.
SPLENDID LINE OE ALL WOOL BLANKETS.
Whatever vou want iu Dry Goods vo;i will find at
J. JOSEPH S,
CALL, AN D SEE US.
1502 BROAD STREET, COLUMBUS. «A.
octSOd&wtf
BEAUTIFUL
The lots immediately in front of Mrs
Corns r’s residence wiil only be sclt
to those who will build neat homes
Bermuda Bottled.;
“You must so to Bermuda. If
you do not I will not he resjionsi- j
file tor the consequences.’’ “ But, 1
duelor, S can afford neither the !
time nor the money.” “ Well, if
that Is impossible, try
COTT’S
IHULSI
OF PURE NORWEGIAN
COD LIVER OIL.
I sometimes eall it Bermuda Bot
tled. and many eases of
consumption,
Bronchitis, Cough
or Severe Cold
I have CURES* willi ir; and the
advantage Is that the most sensi
tive stomach can take it. Another
tiling' which commends it is the
wfiimiSatssicr properties of the Blj-
pophosphites which it contains,
lot! -.vitl find it fop sale at your
SSruffsrist’s hut see you. get the
original SCOTT’S EMUH-SITOX."
These lots are in the
city and on the most
elevated part of Rose
Hill.
BUILDING
LOTS
The lots south of resi
dence are cheaper and
you can build any kind
of house vou like.
HAVING ALL THE ADVANTAGES OF
THE CITY FREE SCHOOLS, CHURCH,
MAIL DELIVERY, ELECTRIC LIGHTS AND
POLICE.
THE FIRST
to buy will re-
cure THE
CU ICE.
Rose Hill, on the Comer Survey, north and south of Mrs. Laura B. Corner s residence.
JOHN BLACKMAR,
Slock and Bond Broker, Real Estate and Insurance Agt.
. WONDERFUL CURE
W. W. C. Co., Columbus, Ga.
Gentlemen: Last April I
took yellow jaundice, which
lasted me six months. During
that time I was not fit for work.
I too it all sorts of remedies
and consulted two doctors, but
neither seemed to give me re
lief. I also had rheumatism,
was hardly able to turn in bed,
when, hearing of what won
derful cures (V. W. C. was
making, I decided to try it on
my case of jaundice and rheu
matism, and am happy to say
that two bottles cured me. It
worked like magic in my case.
I am entirely well now and feel
better thau I have for many years.
I believe W. W. C. to be the best
fam'ly medicine on the market to
day. Yours very gratefully,
A. J. COKER.
The Wooldridge Wonderful Cure Company.
FRAZER & DOZIER,
Wholesale Hardware
nov3dly
OOXjTTJvIT3T7S
THE CHATTAHOOCHEE BREWING COMPANY.
Location of Plant
GENERAL OFFICE
Plienix City, Ah\.
: COLUMBUS, G.
HAVING largely increased its capacity and added a first-class fifteen-ton ice and refrigtra'-’- 5 *
machine is now ready to supply all demands for its well-known Sue pure lager beer, made by ski- 1 ’
ful German brewers from the highest grades of imported hops and malt. ’
PURE LAGER BEER, entirely free from adulterations and deleterious chemicals, delivered
cold fresh from a home brewery, is highly recommended by all physicians of high standing, and il
muc preferred to beer shipped long distances.
CITY TELEPHONE No. 53, at offices in Columbus.
TELEPHONE No. 175 at the Brewery. sept 22-dAtv tf