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THE GEORGIA LEGISLATURE.
Onr Lawmakers Easily Engaged in
Framing Slate Statutes,
Proceedings of the Body from Pay to
Day Briefly Told.
THE SENATE.
23d I)av. — In the senate, Thursday,
Mr" Reese, from the judiciary number commit¬ of bibs
tee, reported back a recommended do
which the committee bills
pass as amended. I he following
were read the third time and passed: of West To
amenu an act to charter the establish city
End, of Fulton county; to new
terms and regulate the practice of return¬
ing and trying cases in the city court of
Atlanta and to amend the act establish¬
ing said court, passed December lOtb,
and acts amendatory thereof.
23d Day.—T he senate was in session
but a short while Friday. A number of
bills were read the second time. Mr.
Wooten introduced a bill to establish
public schools in Albany, The senate
then adjourned until Monday morning.
24 th day— The senuto stood adjourned
till Monday. the opening of tho
25tii Day.—O n
session of the senate Monday morning
leave of absence was granted the com¬
mittee on penitentiary that they might
visit tho various convict camps in the
state. The military committee made a
report recommending the creation of the
office of surgeon general during of state day’s troops.
The bill was passed the ses¬
sion. A number of new matters came
up for consideration, A bill to increase
the number of companies in the 4th
Georgia battalion, making it a regiment. adopted
w :c passed. A resolution was
refunding Houston county $191 paid
into the treasury by mistake. A bill to
authorize the board of commissioners in
various counties to bid, in their official ca¬
pacity, property Rold for taxes, when no
other bid covers amount and costs
passed. The bill amending tho law re¬
garding the power of judges to send to
jail for contempt, limits the judge’s
power in cases where disrespect is shown
the court or an effort is made to hinder
the court in the discharge of its duty
was unanimously passed. The bill pro¬
vides that in cases where a man denies
having money in his hands he shall not
be sent to j til unless ho has had a trial by
jury anil pending the trial shall lie ad¬
mitted to bail. Other bills passed keep wore
ns follows: To require clerks to a
reserve index docket of executions; to
amend section 1455 of the code relating
’to the fence law—it provides that fifty
.free holders shall petition boforo an elec¬
tion is held; providing for an examina¬
tion of officers elected in the military
force of the state by a regular appointed
board. After tho introduction ol a num¬
ber of new lulls tho senate adjourned un¬
til Tuesday. —In tho Tuesday,
26th Day. senate,
Mr. Corput, from the committee on
finance, reported back tho house bill to
authorize and direct the governor and
treasurer to issue $368,000 of bonds to
raise money to pay off a portion of the
public debt, with tho recommendation
that it do pass. Ou motion, one hun¬
dred copies of the bill were ordered
printed for the use of the senate. Tho
following bills were passed: To of author¬ pub¬
ize the establishment of a system
lic schools in the city of Albany; to re¬
peal an act to amend an act authorizing
a county court for Effingham county; to
fix the compensation of members of the
county board of education of Elbert
county. Several new bills were road
first time ami the senate adjourned until
Wednesday.
TI1K HOUSE.
23d DAT —The house met a 9 o’clock
Thursday morning and was culled to or¬
der by Speaker Pro Tom Boifeuilet.
After prayer by the chaplain tho roll was By
called and a quorum was present. bills and
unanimous conseut a number ol
resolutions were introduced, rend the
tirat time and properly referred. Mr.
Branch, of Columbia, offered the follow¬
ing resolution which was adopted:
Whereas, Information has just been re¬
ceived of the departure from this life of
our late associate, the Hon. W. J. P'rkle
representative from tho county of For¬
syth, Be it therefore resolved,That in the
death of Mr. Pirkle, the state has
lost a valuable aud conscientious
citizen, and a gentleman who, in his brief
legislative career, gave promise of marked
usefuluess. Resolved further, That we
tender to his bereaved family our sincere
sympathy in this hour of severe affliction,
and that the clerk of this house be in¬
structed to convey to the family of the
deceased an expression of our condo¬
lence.
28d Day —The house transacted con¬
siderable routine business Friday but
none of it was of great importance. Mr.
Allen, from the committee on railroads,
reported a number of bills that the com¬
mittee recommended to nosa An un¬
usual aunt er or new measures were pre¬
sented. To The following bills were passed:
amend section 3.910 of the code so
as to require that the traverse jury list of
a county shall include also the names of
persons selected as grand jurors, aud to
carry said change into effect; to amend
aection 4,095 of the code of 1882 as to
confer jurisdiction upon police courts of
cities having populations of 20,000 or
upwards to abate the nuisance referred
to in said section, slaughterhouses, acid
works, etc.; to authorize suits
to be brought against receivers
or managers of any properry ap
yjointed by any court in this state or for
■stuer purposes; to define the liability of
^receivers by their employes of railroads during for torts committed
such such time as
receivers may operate railroads in
this state, and to prescribe the manner of
service upon such receivers in suits
brought against them, and for other pur¬
ameq.d poses ; u* repeal section two of an act to
an act for the protection of game
■JBjBWnber 29. sEe 1888 00 Major Bacon Bppwv made : d
" lirr
" * hi* bill to define
to hind add vote
jtdii m
■.
\ s
I
| alty for other for false purposes, swearing On It in was motion the passed same, of by and Mr. a
vote of 115 to 0.
Martin, of FultOD, a committee of three
was appointed to escort Speaker Crisp,
who appeared in the gallery, to the
speaker’s stand. The chair appointed
Mr. Martin, Major Bacon, and Mr. Sta¬
pleton of Sumpter. As Speaker Crisp
appeared on the floor he was greeted he
with applause, and immediately after
took a seat in the speaker's stand, on
motion the house took a ten min
ute recess, in his honor, dur¬
ing which the members gathered around
the distinguished gentleman and ttaSre
was a cordial hand shaking. The bill to
authorize and direct the governor and
treasurer of this state to issue, bonds of
this state to the amount of $368,000, and
negotiate the same for ihe purpose of
raising money with which to pay off that
portion of the public debt, or so much
thereof as rnay be necessary, represented
by the interest of the public debt matur¬
ing in the year 1893 was passed.
94th day— But little business of im¬
portance was transacted by the house
Saturday.
25tii Day —When the bouse met at f
o’clock Monday morning, only 83 mem¬
bers were present—not a quorum. The
mi ssenger was then ordered to close the
dooisand to dispatch officers to go out
and bring in five more members, 88 being
a quorum for the transaction of business.
After a careful search of two hours the
necessary five were brought in and busi¬
ness began. 'Ihe call of the counties for
the introduction of new business brought
to the surface a large number of new
bills. The bill which commissioners passed the senate of
requiring the board of
Eflingharn county to appoint election
managers for the several election pre¬
cincts of that county, came up for a third
reading, but was, on motion of Mr. Flem¬
ing, recommitted to the special judiciary
committee, there being some doubt as to
its constitutionality. The following bills
were passed ; To amend an act creating
a board of commissioners for McIn¬
tosh county; to cieate aboard of commis¬
sioners for the city of Darion. The sen¬
ate resolution calling on the senators and
representatives in oongross from Georgia
to vote for the “Hatch bill” was, on mo¬
tion of Mr. Branch, read and referred to
the committee on general agriculture. holding
The bill to change the time of
the superior courts of the counties of the
Flint circuit was passed. Major Bacon define
introduced a bill to enlarge and
the powers and duties of the railroad
commission, and particularly schedules relative of rail¬ to
tlie supervision of the
road companies, the physical condition ol
railroads and the inspection of the same,
the investigation of the cause of accidents
on railroads, the examination into viola¬
tions of law by railroad companies and
into tho control of railroads in this state
by foreign corporations, charges tho fixing of just
and reasonable rates of for trans¬
portation of freight and passengers—and Guerard,
for other purposes. Messrs.
Thomason, Morton, Worrill and Gum¬
ming were appointed a committee to look
into the insurance laws of the state and
ascertain if any changes are desirable.
20th Day. —When the house reached
its calendar Tuesday morning, the first
matter for Us consideration was a resolu¬
tion to requiro the governor I. article to enforce IV. of
paragraph IV. section
tho constitution, declaring illegal and
void all contracts and agreements by any
corporation which may defeat, or tend to
defeat aud lessen competition or to en¬
courage monopoly. Some opposition
was manifested, and tho resolution was
recommitted. The following bills amend were
read a third time and passed: To
the act lixiug the place on the dockets
of superior courts of cases in which new
trials are granted by tho supreme court;
to authorize the treasurer to pay slate
bond No. 193, owned by Dr. A. W.
Calhoun; to authorize the payment
confederate of pensions soldiers to thirty-eight widows of
who are entitled to
pensions under tho law but who have not
been paid for the reason that the appro¬
priation was exhausted; to refund to
James E. Love amount of tax paid as li¬
quor dealer for 1891; to amend the fence
law, so as to make legal an election held
in Webster by mistake on the wrong day ;
to amend an act to define the rights of
landlords, etc., and to make it penal to
sell crops in certain coses, approved No¬
vember 5, 1889, by striking out the
words, “with intent to defraud bis crop¬
per;” to amend the act prohibiting
the holding of more than one office
by one person, approved September 11th,
1891, so as to provide that it shall not
npp y to members of the board of educa¬
tion; to limit the use of the capitol build¬
ing and grounds to the legislative and
executive departments of the govern¬
ment and to state and national political
bodies; to authorize the fourth infantry
batalion to become the fifth regiment,
Georgia volunteers, and provide for at¬
taching additional companies; to amend
section 4,427 of the code by adding
“metal kuucks” to the fist of unlawful
weapons. A few new bills were intro¬
duced and the house adjourned.
POLITICS IN CHURCH.
A Strange State of Affairs In Country
Churches in Jiorth Carolina.
A Raleigh special says: The North
Carolina Western Methodist conference
convened Tuesday morning at Alliston,
in the Centeuary Methodist Episcopal
church. Bbhop Hendrix presiding. The
attendance was large. The third party
and farmers’ alliance movement, not con¬
tent with disturbing political relations
and quiet, is found to have also taken a
hand in religious matters. Most of the
preachers are ardentdemocrats and mem¬
bers of the country congregations, who
are members of Gideou's band, or, under
its yoke, have declined in many cases to
pay church assessments and a number of
pastors have received for this reason only
about half their salaries. A number of
them have resigned their pastorate on
this account.
California’s Yote.
A special of Tu sday from San Francis¬
co says: The official vote of all counties
in California, with the exception of San
Francisco, give Harrison a plurality cf
is p
AFTER THE CENTRAL.
Go?, Tillman’s Message to the South
Carolina Legislate
Wherein He Recommends Some Action
Against the Road.
The South Carolina legislature will
shortly be after the Central road of Geor¬
gia for trying to do in the state, as Gov.
ernor Tillman says, what the West Point
Terminal attempted to do with the Cen¬
tral. This matter involves the control of
the Port Royal and Augusta road by the
Central “to the detriment of the Port
Royal and the public welfare.” Gov,
Tillman sent a message regarding the
matter to the legislature Saturday. Com¬
plaints had been made of the matter and
the last legislature had directed the at¬
torney general to investigate that them.
The governor states in 1857 a
charter was granted to build a road to
Port Royal for the purpose of developing
the haibor. He gives a very interesting
history of this harbor, the finest on the
Atlantic coast. In 1857 a charter was
granted to build a railroad from Augusta
to Port Royal for the purpose of develop¬
ing that harbor. In 1886 the road was reor¬
ganized and it entered upon an active and
prosperous career. Large and commodious
clocks and wharves were constructed at
Port Royal, one of the largest cotton
compresses in the south was built, and
an elevator was erecied, the workshops
of the company were there, and energy
and life permeated the entire organiza¬
tion. Lines of steamships called regular¬
ly at the port and large numbers of ves¬
sels used in deep water and improved fa¬
cilities for the purposes of commerce.
The business of the company steadily in¬
creased. In fact, everything promised
speedy development of this magnificent
harbor as the deep water outlet for the
great grain and meat Irade of the west.
This condition of things, however,
soon attracted the attention of the Geor¬
gia Central railroad, as a competing road,
having its terminus in Savannah. It
bought the stock of the Port Royal road
until it acquired a majority of the shares
when it assumed active control of the
property. The result was disastrous to
the Port Royal road and the Port Royal
harbor. The service that followed occa¬
sioned frequent complaint, the port facil¬
ities were neglected, the the grain cotton elevator compress dis¬
was pulled down, allowed
mantled, the wharves machine and to go to
ruin, and the car shops
were removed.
“The air of desolation around the
port,” says the governor, “strikes the
most casual observer.”
The governor declares that the pur¬
poses for which the corporation was
created are not being fulfilled, the har¬
bor is neglected, the rights of the people
disregarded, and all increase in taxable
property has been prevented, while the
rights of the minority stockholders are
sacrificed. The governor quotes the status
to show that the control of this property
by the Georgia Central road is in a viola¬
tion of law.
AN AGREEMENT PROBABLE.
The Ultimate Success of the Monetary
Conference Assured,
A cablegram of Tuesday from Brussels
says: The committees appointed by the
international monetary conference to
consider the proposals of Mr. Alfred de
Rothschilds, will also consider the plans
suggested by M. Levi and Professor
Adolphus Soelber. Professor Soelber’s
plan is to establish one gramme of fine
gold as the international unit of value
and to stop the minting of coins cont.iin
ing less than 5.8065 grammes of pure
gold. The circulation of coin of foreign
countries of less than new' standard
will be prohibited by the countries sign¬
ing an agreement, and gold coin of infe¬
rior value will be withdrawn within five
years. Private inviduals will be allowed
to coin gold upon the payment of an
agreed seigniorage. Gold certificates
may be issued against cold held in re¬
serve. Professor Soelber’s plan also in¬
cludes the coinage of silver in the pro¬
portion of tweuty value units of that
metal to one of gold, but private indi¬
viduals will not be allowed the free
coinage of silver. Of the committee five
are avowed bimetallists, six monometal¬
lists and one is doubtful. It will sit
twice each day. It is the general expect¬
ation that Mr. de Rothschild’s proposals
will be accepted by the committee and
referred to the conference and govern¬
ments with the modifications suggested
by the schemes of Mr. Levi and Professor
Soelber. One of the modications will un¬
doubtedly be that all gold coins below
the value of twenty francs be with¬
drawn from circulation and replaced by
silver notes. The adhesion of the Ger¬
man delegates is considered certain, as
Herr de Cleben, formerly president of the of
reichstag, approved the main lines
Professor Soelber’s proposal. The French
representatives will also accept the plan,
which was communicated by M. Tirard,
French ex-minister of finance, and was
favorably received by the French dele¬
gates before it was submitted to the con
lerence.
With the prospects of an early agree¬
ment, nobody now talks of the failure of
the conference, which at first was the
only prediction. It is reported that the
conference will likely conclude next
week.
The American delegates are disposed
to support Mr. Rothschild’s proposals on
the principle that half a L.af is better
than no bread.
OUR LIFE SAVING SERVICE.
General Superintendent Kimball Makes
His Annual Report.
General Superintendent Kimball, of the
life saving service, states in his annual
report that the number of disasters to
vessels within the field of operation of
the service during the year was 837.
there were on board of these vessels
2,570 persons, of whom 2,500 were saved
and seventy lost. The number of ship
wbo received succor at
of
.
Strike Bills.
Government statistic* show that in
seven years, taking all together, there
were, in the United States, nearly 80,000
strikes of working men or employes of
various sorts, and that these strikes cost
the strikers nearly $52,000,000. What
they cost the employers is not known,
but probably it was not a less amount.
The number and costliness of strikes
increase from year to year, and as they
become more frequent and more expen¬
sive, they also become more bitter and
harder to settle.
The last summer has seen the soldiery
called on in four states at the same time,
to suppress riotous disturbances in some
way connected with strikers. Probably
the total “strike bill” of the year 1892
will surpass in magnitude any which has
been incurred before.
It is impossible to settle the “rights
and wroDgs” of strikers off-hand. Some¬
time the employes are exacting, unreas¬
onable and unfriendly to their employers. their
Sometimes the employers goad injustice,
workmen to open resistence by a
grasping policy, or overbearing insolence.
But nothing could be clearer than that
the oost of strikes, in the long run, is
just so much taken away from the gen¬
eral wealth of the community. Nothing
could be more wasteful of the resources
of both parties to controversy. No
doubt it would be less harmful, because
less productive of the bitterness and
hatred that leads to future trouble, if
the millions of dollars which strikes cost
were taken out and publicly burned
rather than spent in tho way that they
are.
Let us hope that the practical sense of
the American people will, before many
years, hit upon some satisfactory means
by which this frightful and menacing
strike warfare can be prevented.—Youth’s
Companion.
True Culture.
An admirable observation regarding
culture is given by Mr. Mallock in these
words:
I don’t call a woman cultivated who
bothers me at dinner first with discussing
this book and then that—whose one per¬
petual question is, Have you read so-and
so? But I call a woman cultivated who
responds and who know9 what I mean as
we pass naturally from subject to subject
—who by a flash or a softness in her eyes,
by a slight gesture of the hand,by a sigh,
by a flush in the cheek, makes me feel as
I talk of some lovely scene, that she, too,
could love it—as I speak of love or sor¬
row, makes mo feel that she herself has
known them; as I speak of ambition or
ennui or hope or remorse or loss of char¬
acter, makes me feel that all these are not
mere names to her, but things.
A Terrible Strain.
Son—“If you think I can be a newspa¬
per writer like you, what is the use of
my taking up so many studies on subjects
that newspapers never talk about?”
Father (a dramatic critic)—“They are
simply for mental discipline, and the cul¬
tivation of the powers of memory, analy¬
sis, etc.”
Son—“What good will that do?”
Father- “If you do not acquire great
powers of concentration, backed by enor¬
mous retention, you will never be able
to get the hang of the family history out¬
lined by tho servants in the first act of a
new play.”—Street & Smith’s Good
News.
For Musicians.
Somebody has taken the trouble to draw
up a list of all the lyrical works of wo¬
men composer# from 1675 to the present
time. He has succeeded in compiling a
catalogue of 153 dramatic workers (ope¬
ras, operettas and oratorios) which are
distiiuuted among the various nationali¬
ties as follows: Eighty-seven are by
French composers, 37 by Italian, 20 by
German, 7 by English, 2 by Dutch, and
1 each by Russian, Spanish and Sweed
ish.—Boston Transcript.
Letter of the Law.
Boy (on a bridge)—“Say, mister, if
you don’t look out you’ll be fined.”
Teumster—“Whv will I?”
Boy—“That sign says 'Walk your
horses,’ don’t it?”
Teamster— ‘ ‘ Jesso. ”
Boy—“Well, yours are standing
still.”
N* Wonder They Groan.
Groaning is permissible to the rhenmatlc.
But the groans will soon cease when they take
Hostetter’a Stomach Bitters, which relieves
the agonizing malady with gratifying prompt¬
itude. Indigestion, constipation, malarial ail¬
ments, sick headache, biliousness, nervous¬
ness and a lack of physical by stamina, this com¬ are
among the ailments overcome
prehensive remedy.
One-half of the wealth of England is in the
hands of 1,000 individuals.
■swars *f Ointments fbr Catarrh That
Contain Mercury,
As mercury will surely destroy the sens* of
smell and completely derange the whole sys¬
tem whsn Such entering articles it throegh should the mucous be used sur¬
faces. never ex¬
cept on prescriptions from reputable do fold physi
ci«n« ss the damage they will is ten to
the Hairs good you can Cure, possibly manufactured derive from by them. F. J.
Catarrh
Cheney & Co.. Toledo. 0.,oontains no mercury,
and is taken internally, and acts of directly the upon
the blood and mucous surfaces system.
In buying genuine. Hall's Catarrh Oure be sore you get
the It is taken internally, Co. and made
in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney A
| W~ Sold by Druggists, pries 75c. per bottle.
•• Your Work in Lite.”
successful men in as
man v pursuit* is one of the many straaegroups
of articles waic '. are announced in The 1 "U th •
C vnoano* for 1S£«. "The Bravest I've a I Ever
Saw" i« the topic of another eeriee by United
States Generalf.The prospectus for the coming
v£t<vr of T 1 ?* Onmp&ninn is more v»rls**d ana gen
irons than ever. Those who subscribe at once
will receive the paper free to Jan. and
forafull vear Yocra’-<C03iPANiOs4Sostou,Moss from that date.Only Il..ea'ear.
Address The
The Only One Ever Priated.
CAS TOC ITSD IS1 WORD?
is a S-inch display advertisement in
this paper, this week, which has no two words
alike except one word.
A Different Branch;
Mother (looking over her boy’s shoul
der)—“Your spelling is perfectly terri¬
ble !”
Little Son—“This isn’t a spellin’ les
sod. It’s a composition
Complexion cleared wi t h Small B ile Beans.
One of the most beautiful sights on
earth is a happy child.
If yon want a positive cure for Bilious At¬
tacks and colds use Bile Beans Small .
The only heavy burdens are those we
try to carry ourselves.
Will do good in almost every case of sickness
—Small Bile Beans._
False worship will kill the soul as
quick as no worship.
Chicago. II'.. has begun a canal to cost $30,- the
000,000, which is to carry large vessels from
lakes to the Mis-issippi.
A A Child child Enjoys Enjoys
The pleasant flavor, gentle action and sooth.*
ing effect of Syrup of Figs, when in need of a
laxative, and if the father or mother be cos
tive or bilious, the most gratifying results fol¬
low its use; so that it is the best family rem
edy known and every family should have c.
bottle.
An incandescent lamp withont a filament is
the next electrical improvement promised.
Beech AM's Pills cure bilious and nervous
Illness. Beecham’s Pills sell well because
they cure. 35 cents a box.
Our old reliable eye-water cures weak or in¬
flamed eyes or granulated lids without pain.
Price25c. John R. Dickey Drug Co.. Bristol. X a.
i
«"
•T'
v
mm?. WmUA
W
Mrs. Annie W. Jordan
Of 185 Tremont St., Boston, wa« in very poor
health, from bad circulation of the blood, hav¬ and
ing rush of blood to the head, numb spells
chills,and the physician said the veins were al¬
most bursting all over her body. A collision
with a double runner brought on neuralgia of
the liver, causing great suffering. She could
not take the doctor’s medicine, so took
HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA
and soon tullv recovered, and now enjoys Hood’s per¬
fect health. She says she could praise enough.
Sarsaparilla all day and then not say
“Hood’. Pills are hand-made, and are perfect in
composition, proportion and appearance.
^MOTHERS’ !
FRIEND”
To Young
s. Mothers
_
mkw'H£ ?■ u ~\
• <*
Makes Child Birth Labor, Easy.
Shortens
Lessens Pain,
Endorsed by the Leading Physicians.
Book to '• Mothers”mailed FREE.
3RADFIELD REGULATOR CO
ATLANTA, GA.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
‘August Flower”
“ For two years I suffered terribly
with stomach trouble, and was for
all that time under treatment by a
physician. He finally, after trying
everything, said my stomach was
worn out, and that I would have to
cease eating solid food. On the rec¬
ommendation of a friend I procured
a bottle of August Flower. It seem¬
ed to do me good at once. I gained feel
strength and flesh rapidly. and consider I
now like a new man,
that August Flower has cured me.”
Jas. E. Dederick, Saugerties, N.Y.O
It is better to take Scott’s
Emulsion of cod-liver oil
when that decline in health
begins—the decline which
precedes consumption —
rather than wait for the germ
to begin to grow in our lungs.
“Prevention is better than
cure; ” and surer. The say¬
ing never was truer than
here.
What is it to prevent con¬
sumption ?
Let us send you a book on
careful living ; free.
Scott & Bowks, Chemists, X32 South 5th Avenue,
New York.
Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver
oil—all dru gg ists everywhere do. $1.
w
ptso's Remedy fbr Catarrh Is the
Best. Easiest to TTse, and Cheapest.
CATAR R M
Sold bv druggists or sent by mail.
50c. E.T.
—
1 Inn^s frtf *
■
SrovEp^if
DO NOT BE DECEIVED Enamels, and paints ---— which stain
with Pastes, burn off.
the hands. Injure Sun the Stove iron, Polish anil is Brilliant, Odor¬
The Rising for
less. Durable, and the consumer pays no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
- J{oW Afr
-^owv •Blood?
I had a malignant breaking out on my leg ll
tb* knee, and wascuredsou nd and we
twQ an( j a h a ]f “bottles of *»'
other blood medicines had failed
C^Beaty, ____
to do me any good. Will
^
*— /TRADE s.s.s MARK.
pavatedcaso I was c^^^“anently. three'bottleiToi
s.ss __| Wallace Mannville, Make, I.T.
_____
Onr book on Blood and Skin I* 1 ®®? 8 ®? Ga.
free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta,
NATIONAL SURGICAL INSTITUTE,
n ATLANTA, GA.,
Treats Deformities and
Chronic Diseases, such as
Club Feet, Diseases of the
Hip, Spine and Joints, Par¬
alysis, Piles, Fistula, Ca¬
tarrh, Female and private
diseases, Hernia, Diseases
of Send the for Urinary illustrated Organs,etc.
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