Newspaper Page Text
hey
Have Only a Month in
Which to Prepare,
STILL SOME BOARD VACANCIES,
The Ladies Will Fit up One Room
Handsomely in the Woman’s
Building at Nashville,
as to reach fully all the parts ef
fected by Catarrh is by srpoMiig it
in a pipe- Our remedy is free
from tobacco, and has no unpleas
ant effects.
It destroys catarrhal germs, heals
the mucous, membrane, removes yyy^ ^ BAILIFF AND FIDDLER
the unpleasant and annoying symp
and makes a radical cure His Many Other Positions He
the worst cases. The
He Ran a Moonshine Still in
Addition to His Church.
The woman’s board of the State
of Georgia for the Centennial Ex
position is nearly completed and
they are exceedingly active in their
efforts to give to Georgia a worthy
representation. • r
The resignation of Mrs, Joseph
Thompson was much regretted by
them, as her extensive experience
was of great benefit in arranging
plans for the exhibit. j onair.'j
” Qr i Mr. Ransom claims that his ma-
Her successor, Mrs. A. B. Steele,
toms
even in
remedy, after the free sample, costs
$1.00 for a month’s treatment
Sample mailed free.’ Dr. J. W
& Son, 12 and 13 Grant Building
Atlanta, Ga.
home-made gas.
a Utile Machine in the Cellar Supplies
The Burner.
George F. Ransom of the Wis
consin city announces an * inven
tion for the purpose of which is
the liberation of gas by the action
of gasoline in small proportion up-
'
> -
will not let the work lag, but with
renewed energy will take hold and
push it rapidly.
Mrs. Steele is well known in
this kind of work, having been for
two vears secretary of the woman’s
board of the Cotton States Expo
sition, and the present board for
the Centennial Exposition.
The honor that has fallen upon
her was so sudden that she has not
yet arranged any definite plans,
but will probably take up the work
and carry out the original idea of
the board.
The ladies realize that they have
only a short time in which to pre
pare for the opening of the expo
sition, which occurs May 1st.
They will not only fit up a room
in the woman’s building, but will
assist Commissioner of Agriculture
Nesbitt in arranging the woman’s
portion of the general Georgia ex
hibit. The room in the woman’s
building, which will be given over
to the Georgia women, will he fur
nished in the most elaborate and
elegant manner. It will be known
as a studio and be arranged on that
plan.
One of the most eminent artists
of the country will be engaged to
prepare the decorations and inter
ior furnishings. Several promi
nent artists have been discussed,
but none has as yet been-.^chosen.
This room_will not contain any
exhibit of woman’s work or of
Georgia’s-, resources, but will be
made for the sole purpose of fur
nishing a place for the Georgia
people to make their headquarters
while visiting the exposition. The
reason for this is that the Georgia
exhibit proper is the place for any
industrial display, and the large
number of Georgia people who will
visit Nashville will need some
place to meet and rest.
The room will be in the charge
of a matron, who will have sole
control and see to the pleasure of-
all visitors. The ladies have been
promised one of the largest and
most conveniently located rooms
in the building, and they promise
when it is completed to have the
best and most beautiful quartern
in the building!
The board has not yet been fully
completed, but it will be this week,
and Mrs.’Steele will call a meeting
in the early part of next week,
when the final plans will be agreed
upon.
Only a month remains for the
plans to be chosen, gotten together,
shipped and set up, but the ladies
Kg
determined to have things in read
iness on the appointed day.
A FREE GIFT.
To Everyone Who Will Apply for It. ’ -
We want to demonstrate to
everyone who is afflicted with
Catarrh, Bronchitis or Asthma that
we have the best remedy that has
ever been discovered for these dis-
ses, and to do this we will give
free trial sample to every -suf
ferer applying at our office or
writing to us.
We have found that the only
.ctieable way to apply a remedy
chine enable every man to have
his own gas - works in the base
ment of his house, and by which
he cam supply himself with a bet
ter article of light than is fur
nished by the gas companies of in
candescent electric lights, and at
a remarkably small cost. The ma
chine is simple. It consists of a
water motor, an air chamber, a
small oil pump, a gasoline resovoir
and a gas tank or holder. The
machine works automatically. A
model operating in Milwaukee is at
tached to the city waterworks. The
water being turned on starts the
motor, but only enough will run
through to start the machine and
keep it running long enough to
manufacture an amount of gas to fill
the gas holder. Then The water is
stopped by an automatic cheek. At on
the same time that the water motor
is set in motion it drives the oil
pump which is attached to the
gasoline resovoir, and about two
tablespoonfuls of gasoline are lifted
to the air chamber and sprayed
over 1,000 cubic inches of acid.
As soon as the gas holder is full
the machine stops, but as the gas
is used it automatically regulates
simple device, which releases
the water check and sets the motor
in operation again. When the
gas is bumiilg the machine is con
stantly at work, but the moment
that consumption stops the ma
chine ceases working;
The light produced is described
as steady, brilliant and three times
as powerful as the ordinary incan
descent light.
In the matter of costs experi*
ments are claimed to show that
aside from the cost of the original
machine the cost of producing the
light is from one-eighth to one-
fourth of a cent for each light per
hour.
George Ransom is not unknown
to the world of inventors.
He has been at work on the in
vention which he has just perfected
for the last five years. A few
months ago, L. D. Dorchel, of
Chilton, Wis., who was looking
for a gas machine, decided’ to give
Ransom’s device a trial. He did so
with the result that he has become
financially interested, and is now
devoting his energies to pushing
it and placing the invention before
the public.
The light was exhibited at
Green Bay, Wis., a short time ago
and, it is said created a sensation
in that town.
Besides the plans for machines
adapted to private use in individ
ual houses, larger machines for the
in their enthusiasm say thev are use communities may be con-
J structed.
A machine said to be capable of
running thirty lights occupies, in
dependent of the gas tank, a space
of but tweniy-one inches square
and three feet high, while the gas
holder is the same height and sev
enteen inches in diameter.
The machine, which is set up in
a little out of the way shop in
Milwaukee, ’will be put on exhibi
tion in a few days. It has been
investigated .by a committee from
the board of fire underwriters of
that city and has been pronounced
safe and not calculated to increase
the fire risk on the building in
which it is placed.—Chicago Trib
une.
Was Road Overseer—He Gets
Two Months and $100.
John Wilson, a kind of Jack-at-
all-trades, was sentenced yesterday
in the UnitedJStates court to pay
a fine of $100 and spend two
months in jail for making whiskey
without the license from Uncle
Sam. v - . - *v . . .
Wilson was a Baptist preacher,
and almost everything else from
the voluminous testimony of the
witnesses. One witness said that
Wilson was a road overseer, a
Baptist preacher, a bailiff, an il
licit distiller and a rogue. .
Wilson seems to- have been a
kind of leader around his home in
Haralson county, especially iri the
bailiwick over which he presided
as constable. His many offices
and high ministerial position
brought him many social privileges
and these, together with the fact
that Tie was a fine fiddle player and
made the best liquor in Haralson
county, served to make him quite
popular.
Wilson’s enemies say that he
had himself elected bailiff so as to
gratify a strong desire to arrest a
young man against whom he had
grude. He got his coveted
place as bailiff and the next morn
ing started out to arrest his enemy
the charge of selling liquor.
He says when he got there the'
man drew a big pistol and stuck
it right in his face. “I saw death
shining down there in that man’s
eyes,” said Wilson when'he was
on the stand yesterday.
Wilson’ got help, it seems, and
afterwards experienced the great
delight of putting handcuffs on
ns old enemy’s wrists.
It developed, however, that the
jreacher-bailiff was the man who
was .making the liquor, and he
was arrested and brought here for
trial.
When the jffdge gave the-sen
tence he said he ought to send the
wily Wilson to the chaingang, but
Wilson used his ministerial elo
quence and begged the judge to
be as lenient as possible. f
verted thoroughly to the theory
and practice of community policy,
there is a stride, of improvement
ahead which dwarfs their present
st8itus«
Let the South once reach a plan
of systematic economy and hon
esty of administration, in state,
county and municipal affairs that
redounds entirely to the benefits
of the people, as a whole, and re
lations of perfect sympathy exist
between town and country as rela
tive parts of a great system of
common interest, and' every
worthy citizen regarding commun
ity affairs as the first incentive of
action, and co-operation as the ba
sis of all public thought, and we
will soon begin a period of ad
vancement That is real and tangi
ble.
We are verging a period of such
universal combination and con
centration in business affairs as
the world has never known, and
every day the compact is becom
ing more concrete.
The tendency offers a lesson to
the farmers which the state agri
cultural society, in its good de
signs, should put into practical ex
istence.
President Brown supplies the
text, in bis ideal imagination.
When the farmer shall grow ev
ery need of his home and com
munity on his farm, in exchange
for that which his^ nearest central
town shall convert into the needs
FEMALE DISTILLERS.
Unexpected Sight Witnessed by
Revenue Officers
AT RED OAK, CAMPBELL COUNTY.
Young Women were Running an Illicit
Still for Their Father, Who Di
rected Them.
of the farm which are not a part in full blast.
A GENUINE iDEAX.
J. Pope Brown Makes a Very Optimistic
Address Regarding, tire Farmers.
President J. Pope Brown, of the
Georgia Agricultural Society, in
assuming his new station, made a
Very optimistic address, and sen
sible as it was pleasant in senti
ment. He declared that the farm
ers and farms in Georgia were in
better condition than they had
been in twenty years, and he
would be’ willing to have, them
guarantee to remain unchanged
for the next twenty. He pict
ured as the ideal of prosperity the
time when the farmers produced
everything that was needed for
food, both on the farm and in the
town, and the towns in turn man
ufactured every article that was
needed on the farm.
Under President Brown’s limit
of time, the Advertiser cheer
fully agrees as to the conditions
of agriculture. It would not feel
cheerful in feeling that these con
ditions were to remain unchanged
for the next twenty years. There
is a story of struggle behind the
better conditions of our farmers.
They are nearer out of debt than
for twenty years past, _ because a
refusal of credit for the past six
years has aroused their indepen
dence, and brought them to their
senses in some respects; but there
is not such a state of mind as
points to the hopeful conditions
which President Brown pictures
as the ideal of prosperity. They
are in shape now from which the
better evolution may begin. Con-.
of its soil, and the interchange of
the one for the other shall be-a
matter of loyal observance, the
farmer feeding and the town me
chanic supplying other needs, then
truly, shall we be reaching for a
happier and better condition.
The village smity, wheelwright,
shoemaker, tanner, and other con
comitants of forty years ago,
would follow in the train of this
new order of things.
The combinations of interest to
fight other combinations of inter
est is wrong, and weak in policy.
The combinations of interest to
make independence of the exact
ions of other combinations of in
terest is a natural law of success
ful defense.—•BrunsvViek Adver
tiser.
The Manly Wonls of Gladstone.
W. Evarts Gladstone, The grand
old man of England, is nothing if
he is not manly and honest. In a
recent letter to the Duke of West
minister on the Greece trouble,
the great English statesman says,
among other things, in advocating
the cause of Greece:
“ How stands the case of Crete
in relation to Greece ? Do what
you will by the might of brute
power, 1 a man’s a man for a’ that,’
and in respect of everything that
makes a man to be a man, every
Cretan is a Greek. Ottoman rule
in Crete is a thing of yesterday,
but Crete was part of Greece, the
Cretan people of the Greek people,
at least 3,000 years ago; nor have
the moral and human ties between
them ever been either broken or
relaxed; andin the long years and
centuries to come, when this abd
dream of Ottoman dominion shall
have passed away from Europe,
that union will still subsist and
cannot but prevail, as long as a
human heart beats in a human
bosom. V •
“ Further, it remains to be
recognized that, at the present
juncture, Greece, with whom some
seem disposed to treat as a crimi
nal and disturber, has by her bold
action conferred a great service
upon Europe. She has made it
impossibleTo palter with this- ques-
tion as we palterd with the blood
stained question of Armenia. She
has extricated it from the meshes
of diplomacy and placed it on the
otder of the day for definite solu
tion. I. can remember no case in
which so small a State has con
ferred so great a benefit.”
Peter Walker, a farmer living
twelve miles from Atlanta, has
been operating an illicit distillery
with the aid of his two handsome
daughters, Sallie and Mary, who
are respectively seventeen and
eighteen years old. Uncle Sana’s
vigilant servants had learned that
several stills were being operated
within two or three miles of Red
Oak, Campbell county.
Wednesday night was selected
as an opportune time for a raid, and
Deputy Collector E. WTRembert
and Deputy Marshals Mann and
Whatley went out there to bag
some of the boys, but what they
saw was a surprise to them. They
reached the still which they wished
to destroy, and found that the birds
had flown. They were demolish
ing the furnace when several shots
were fired down the creek to warp
the other stills. The officers ran
down to the place where they
heard the shooting, and, looking
through a thicket, saw another still
The attention of'all parties think;,
taking a trip to the West is
called to the famous Memphis
Charleston railroad as being by fa
best route.
“gof
ty
and
the
If you desire to get the fastest ti
and avoid layovers, which are alw C
source of much worry, waste of ti m *
money, you should call upon or wri^
J. L. Smith, Pass. Agent, Dalton oj
who will interest himself i n yoilr T - ’
and sell you tickets via the M * p
SHORT LINE. ’ * V-
The coaches on this line are i n «
class condition and close connection **
made at Memphis with the trains for J
For rates, time tables and tickets •
the recognized route to the West then*
& C. 5 call on or write to, ’ ^
J. T.. Sihth, Dalton, Ga
C. A. DeSaussub, G. P. a.,
' - ’ , Memphis, Tena.
Western & Atlantic R.R,
(BATTLEFIELDS UNE)
fosfivilfe, Chattanooga & St
Louis Railway
1
TO,
3
Creeping up carefully they look
ed through the cracks Df the log
hut before making the seizure, and
the sight they beheld nearly took
their breath away. Lying upon a
bed was an old man sick with
rheumatism, who was directing his
two daughters in making the
liquor. The officers went in and
arrested the old man. who gave his
name as Peter Walker, and his
two daughters, Mary and Sallie.
They broke the still, destroying
3,000 gallons of beer, three barrels
of whiskey and much other mater-,
ial. They pronounced the moon
shine as-good as any they ever
tasted, and regretted having to de
stroy the works, despite the young
ladies’ pleadings. Old man Wal
ker was too sick to be brought to
Atlanta, so he had to be left at his
home, under arrest. The girls
were not arrested.
CHATTANOOGA,
NASHVILLE,
CINCINNATI,
CHICAGO,
MEMPHIS and
ST. LOUIS.
HJLLMAN PALACIT BUFFET SLEEPING CAR?
JACKSONVILLE and ATLANTA
. . TO ..
NASHVILLE and ST. LOUS,
THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE.
-ocal Sleepers between Atlanta and Chat
tanooga.
Rates to Arkansas an
Texas.
Excursion Tickets to California and Col
orado Resorts.
to
He—Miss Bellacour claims
belong to a very old family.
She—W e 11, she’s justified.
There are six of those girls, and
the youngest of them must be at
least 35.—Cle veland Leader. '
sympa-
“ Does your husband
thize with the Greeks? ” •
“He does, indeed; he has
named two of our hew pups Alpha
and Omega.”—Chicago Record.
w<
omans
Dis
eases
Are as peculiar as
unavoidable, and
cannot be discuss
ed or treated as we
do those to which
the entire human
family are subject.
Menstruation sus
tains such import
ant relations to her
health, that when
Suppressed,Irregu
lar o r Painful,
she soon becomes
languid, nervous
arid irritable, the bloom leaves her
cheek* and very grave complica
tions arise unless Regularity and
Vigor are restored to these organs.
Is a receipt
^ of one of the
most noted
physicians
of the South,
where trou-
. •. hies of this
sort prevail more extensively than
m any other section, and has never
failed to correct disordered Men
struation. It restores health and
strength to the suffering woman.
Female
We have lor the past thirty yearB handled
Bradfield’s Female Regulator, both at whole
sale and retail, and in no instance haa it failed
to give satisfaction. We sell more of it than all
other similar remedies combined.”
Lamar, Rankin & Lamar,
Atlanta, Macon and Albany, Ga.
The Br adfield Regulator Co., Atlanta, Sa.
Sold by all Druggists at $1.00 per Bottle.
For Maps, Folders, Sleeping Car ReservatiosM
iny inforiatkm about Bates, Stfcedafcg, etc
Trite or apply to
B. WALKER, J. A. THOMAS,
Ticket Agent, Ticket Agest,
Union DepoL^^^ Ncl 8 Kimball House,
C. K. AYER, J. t. EDMONDSON, T.P.A,
3 Ticket '
JOS.M.
Traffic
BROWN,
CHAS. L HARMAN,
6ea.Pass.Agt,
JUNTA, GA.
SOUTH
iRfuy.
CONDENSED SCHEDULE.
la effect November 15,1896.
Stations.
No 8
No. lo
riv Chattanooga
Ar Dalton
Ar.Rome
Ar Atlanta..
Lv Atlanta..
Ar Macon............ .
ArJesup... ;
Ar Everett....
Ar Jacksonville
12:0am
2 02am
8,‘-5am
&5. : am
7.203m
10 2 am
5.37pm
&3upin
9.12pm
8.15am
3 23am
10.35am
1.16pm
4 oopm
7.00pm
Lv Jesup .
Ar Jacksonville
8.23pm
11.50pm
Lv Everett
Ar Brunswick
6.40 pm
7.30pm
So U
d 15pm
72 pm
laftpa
tl.lOpm
l35u>
S.ti'tm
613am
9.uoan
933*0
1230pm
Tom
8<«ta
Na 8 Pullman Sleeping tar Chattanooga w
Atlanta. This car is open to receive passen
gers at 10.00 p. m. ,,-
No. 10 Pullman Union Sleeping Car Ctncis
nail to Atlanta. Na U is Solid Vestibuletr*j>
carrying Pullman Sleeping Car Chattanooga w
sta rioNa
tv Atlanta
Ar Rome
Ar Dalton.:.. ......
At Chattanooga
Lv Chattanooga. ..
Ar Lexington
Ar Louisville ..........
No •
Tom
4.3!?m
aiSpm
7 l.pm
7 30pm
4 2340
73l»m
Ar < incinnatl. ~T lupin
Na 13 Is Solid Vestif uletrain Atlanta 10
oinnatl with Pullman Sleeping car. Also tv
man Sleeping car Atlanta 10 Chattel**
This oar is open in Atlanta to receive pa- 8 *
gers at 10:00 pm , , ra
Na 9 Carries Pullman Union Sleeping
Atlanta to Ciiniianati. and Puilman 3“™
oar CUattanoog
No. 13
No. 5;
4'45am
7 00am
3 05am
9.25am
9.45am
4.40pm
7 5.>pro
750am
10.35am
11 43am
l 00pm
7. lopm
innati. and
to l.ouisvtiIe
STATIONS.
Lv Chattanooga
Ar Knoxville
Ar Morristown
Ar Hot Springs.
Ar Asheville '
Ar Salisbury.
Ar Greensboro .......
Ar Raleivh
Ar Norfolk
....
Ar Washingion .. .
Sr New York...;.......
runuiau sleeping w -■—- , CnrlSM
Knoxville. Knoxville to Asheville.. Hotbpr ^
to New York and Salisbury to Kichtnoo
riving Richmond 6.00 a. m vorfol*
No. 16 Is solldtram Chattanooga to __ M
with Pullman Sleenlnn Car Cbatt. 0 ^
C lop nl n u
Raleigh without ohnnge. - .
made at Norfolk with steamers lor ^
more. New York and Boston ^washl 0 ** 0 *
floT*
lng Car Salisburv to New York vlaj
■■■■■■ Na 16
STATIONS.
t>v Chattanooga.
Ar Knoxville
Ar Morristown.
Ar Bristol
Ar Washington
Ar New York
Ak|t^
Na 6 carries Pullman Sleeping Gsr >4«*
nooga to Washington and Gbattanoog
York without change. r>»r Cb» t H’
Na 16 carries Pullman Sleeping L* gr ytol
moft La IfnntvillO w
Koji
10*3*
‘*8?
STATIONS.
t/v Rome.
Ar Anniston
Ar Birmingham
Ar Selma
Ar Meridian
Ar New Orleans
.:::....
Ar Jackson
Ar Vicksburg
Ar Shreveport
tNo. 15
§Na 9 I
2.10pm
6.40pm
7.10pm
4.5'Opm Lv Rome....ar
7.11 pm Ar Gadsden.ar
7.25pmlAr Attal!a...lv
iS?
RNaJ?jg£
7*5*?
7>5® .
t Daily except Sunday. s -— jj, o.
W H. GREEN, Oea Supt Washington
J. M. CULP. Trmf. Mgr Washington, a
W. A. TURK. G. P A U ashlngton, ^ ftit
& A. BENSCOTEK.4.ar.A Ch»«* 390 *