Newspaper Page Text
•>
- HE MONROE ADVERTISER
FORSYTH, GEORGIA.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF MONROE COUNTY,
BY McGINTY d: CAHANIHS.
Fourteen thousand men and women
»arn the r living in London with their
pen a.
The United St itoi Army retired list has
eo,t ♦16,50 0,00 ; since i rcation at th
outset of the. Ci. il War,
There are about 11,00^,006 voters ia
the United States. The vote in 1-81
was: Cleveland, 4,931,017; Blaine,
4,848,824.
The last French rifle, as describe
a ball so small that a s udier can carry
220 rounds, shoots with a now smoke
]e-s powder, and its bullet pierces a brick
wall eight inches thick at 500 yards.
The greatest achievement in the history
of life insurance has been made by Mr.
John Wanatnakcr, the great Philadel¬
phia merchant, who is now paying pre¬
miums on §1,000,000 to twenty-nine
different companies.
Only forty percent of the quantity of
pine-apples sold in any year between
1800 and 1805 is now disposed of. The
banana and early Southern fruits have
gone far toward driving this once fa¬
vorite fruit out ot the market.
“Tn joking,” says the Russian law,
“be careful ol religion, polities, officials
the law, your neighbors, the Czar’s high¬
ways and tho weather which is mido for
all.” Tho Russian therefore jokes him¬
self to be safe, facetiously observes tha
Detroit Fr e Presf.
In the gradating class of the college at
Hillsdale, Mich,, this year, two members
of the same family were rivals for class
honors. One was C. II. Jackson, fifty
three years of age, and tho other his son
aged twenty-two. So strange a rivalry is
unprecedented in educational history.
It won’t bo ten years hence, predicts
tho Detroit Fr Press, when all build¬
ings piped for heat in the winter will bo
cooled in summer through the same
pipes. If ice run bo artificially frozen
it would be no great trick to send down
the temperature of a had, opera house
or room.
Tt is human to err, moralizes tho Phila¬
delphia Inquirer , and just in so far as it
is human to err, men must be excused for
their occasional mistakes. A Cincinnati
druggist has killed a patient by making
u m stake in putting up a prescription,
the first mistake in eight years and in
200,000 prescriptions.
Sinro ex-Governor Hubbard, of Texas,
was appointed Minister to tho Court ol
Japan, our trade with that co intry has
grown from §13,000,000 to §25,000,000,
§2,500,000 in excess of the total English
Japanese trade for the same year. 11
nlso exceeds the Gorman Japan trade by
§19,009,000, and that of France by §12,
000 , 000 .
England has developed tho latest
temperance idea She has established
live Retreats, in which ‘‘the victims ol
dipsomania,” or drunkards, can be con
lined tor a given time on a written re¬
quest of the inebriate. The law is yet
an experiment, but it is said to work
well as far as facts furnish a basis for
judgment.
A New A'ork house which ton years
ago employed lOt) traveling salesmen now
(loov its business entirely by illustrated
catalogues and correspondence, and its
trade is ahead of what it used to be.
Others are moving tho same way, and in
a few years lienee, predicts the Detroit
Free Pr<s<, tho drummer will drum less
numerously.
Of that vast work, as projected, the
ship canal between Bordeaux on the At¬
lantic seaboard and Narbonne one the
Mediterranean coast, it is stated that the
lost will be some §13 ',000,090, and
tvhilc its length would be about 330
mil s the use of it would be a saving ol
nearly 700 miles by vessels going from
southern France or northern Italy to the
northern Atlantic.
The annual crop of hay in the United
States for the last seven or eight years,
according to the official reports, has
ranged from 32,000,000 to 49,000,000
tons, valued at §371,000,000 to §U5,
900,000. The average crop for the period
indicated was 10,^77,394 tons, valued at
§887,771,207. The crop of hay in the
United States is worth from one-third to
one-half more than the total crop of cot¬
ton.
Prickly pear, once a pest on the
Texas plains, has, the Drocer* Journal
fays, been used extensively for two years
ns i at tie food: and more recently a man
at Dublin, in that State, manipulated it
as a table delicacy. The flavoi, accord¬
ing to the I. < S orb Jour.ial , is “very
like preserved tigs. - ’ Thus it appears
that the hitherto despised plant can be
made serviceable in more ways than
one.
The installation of the Archduchess
Margaret Sophia as abbess of the “Da
menstift” at Prague was celebrated the
other day with great pomp, the new
abbess, who was robed in black, with an
ermine mantle, being formally presented
with the insignia of her dignity, a staff
and ring. The inmates of this ladies’
convent, which was founded by Maria
Theresa, are not subject to the ordinary
vow's or rules, and are eveu permitted to
marry—indeed, th ■ present Queen
Regent of Spain was abbess there from
1876 to the time of her marriage.
THE MONROE ADYERTISER: FORSYTH, GA., TUESDAY, AUGUST 28, 1888 EIGHT PAGES
the sorrn.
CONDENSED FACTS, ARRANGED
IN READABLE SHAPE.
Mouthing ri ' ATS n ' v °C KVF.nYV MKntt
COTTON STATISTICS SCtCIDES—RAIL
ROAD CA*C ALTtES, ETC.
* f nf>a inn.
A negro boy named Mayfield Sharp,
only t n ye irs old, living n* nr Jr r: ig
v a •o nurse a 14 m nti.s o
child, Giowing tired of the eh
tog the si nee »—v its p irents, l.e took
a kettle o f b ili n water rud poured it
j
n the cl il I’s face and mouth. He then
strangled , the ckil
\ until it was dead.
Mrs. Reed, wife of X. H. Reed, a prom
went farmer in Alexander City, was
found dead in bed. A Suspicion rested
upon the husband, and the coroner's jury
returned a verdict charging him with
murder. He denies his guilt stoutly,
but has been arrested and placed in
j * «il J1 Death was caused by strangula
tion.
Florida.
C harles W. Cook, of St. Augustine, a
y<«ung man about 26 years old, and a con
tractor in charge of the concrete work on
the cathedral, iell eighty feet from the
bet fry to the ground. lie I roke his a m
arid died a few minutes lat er.
A colored school trustee of the
Board of I rustees of Orlando, named G.
F. Edwards, having been charged with
demanding hership, §12 from an applicant for a
teat in order to secure his in
fluent";, was tried by the Couuty School
Board and found guilty.
Ooorifin.
The police of Atlanta are going to
•tamp out loitering in the streets, espe¬
cially at night.
'1 he revenue steamer Iioutwell returned
to Brunswick after a cruise down the bay
looking after yellow fever refugees and
quarantine contrabands, she having found
a bar fishing smack sunk in the bay near the
at the mouth of the bay. The
sunken vessel is supposed to be the fish
ing smack Madge, of Savannah.
Alcssrs. Dibbrell and Underwood, of
Atlanta, who, for the past year, have
been employed ns conductors on the Pan
ama Railroad. left that city cn route to
Mexico, having accepted positions on
the Mexican Central Railrood. The ge n
tit-men have had sufficient experience on
the istl.mus of Panama to last them f( r a
lifetime, and will probably never feel any
strong desire to return to that country.
I-oulMlnnn.
A severe storm raged in and around
New Orleans on Monday. Nearly fifty
boats on the river were lost, and great
damage was done to rice and sugar cane
J t w K W “ Te, .Z
the famous flood of 18G1, when New
Orleans was badly J inundated.
he storm was very severe at Morgan
City Dozens of houses wore wholly or
partly unroofed, and fully fifty buildings
are off their foundations. The floating
elevator, George Gilchrist, valued at
heaviest §18,000, was destroyed, Among the
losers of property along the
riverare the coal dea'ers. Eighty _ loaded
coal barges and boats, and one boat of
coke were sunk and a number of others
were reported sinking. The Pittsburg
at 'V ^mthe, alow Grove, n 1 oa twenty-seven l company lost at Nine- f^rty
Mile Point, and ten at Brown & Jones’
coal yard at Algiers. The total loss is
§300,000.
rtlisilsslpiii.
A bill in chancery lias been filed at
Jackson to have lands lying in levee dis¬
trict No. 1 sold to pay about 00,000 No.
1 bonds and coupons. It is claimed that
all sales heretofore made are illegal, null
and void. This suit involves the title to
over a million acres of the richest nnd
most desirable lands of the whole state.
Missouri.
Capt. Nat. Kinney the founder of the
Bald Knobbers was killed in Ozark.
North Carolina.
A waterspout burst on the mountain,
in Alexander county and in a few min¬
utes the small branches had swollen to
the size of rivers and done much dam¬
age.
Thirty of the lawless negroes (railroad
hands) were tried before Judce Alares at
Charlotte. All were found guilty and
sentenced from two to three years in the
chaingang.
The Interstate Farmers’ Convention
assembled in Raleigh, and was called to
order by the president, Col. L. L. Polk.
the convention represents the cotton
states. made by Governor Welcoming A. addresses AL Scales, Hon. were j
A. A. Thompson, Alayor of Raleigh,
Commissioner of Agriculture John Rob
inson, and Dr. G. AY. Sunderlain, of
Goldsboro.
Governor Scales received a telegram at
seat Raleigh .of Anson from Wadesboro, which the ^county
county, informed
him of the escape of all the prisoners iu
the jail there. They overpowered the
jailer when he went to give them supper,
and took away his revolver. The hue
and cry was raised and a number of citi
zens turned out ia pursuit. John Alor
ton, who had the revolver, faced the
pursuers defiantly, and dared them to
advance. They did so, and he shot two
of them, one* mortally. All the fugi
fives then made their escape.
Fire broke out at Durham in an unoc
cupiefl tobacco factory of E. II. Pogue.
The local tire department had disbanded
Saturday night, in consequence of a dis
pule with the town authorities. A high
wind was blowing, and the fire spread
rapidly. After dost roving PogueiT fac
torv the fire next burned another old to
bacco fact >rv, occupied bv AY Y.
Whined. It* next swept awav two to
Im-co houses owued by Robert Jones ,nd
huadrtd h IT". 2‘ housand bon ”; pounds m *P ch of , leaf «>«*«• tobae
oO, owned by J. nes and O-borne. Alter
burning several small buildings, the fin.
. es: roved Dr. J oh net n s lively stain e
and residences. In all twelve buildings
were 'uruet.. It .is the belief tnat
fire was of incendiary origin.
South Carolina.
Capt. F. M. Trimmer, for the last
twenty years clerk of the court, died at
Spartanburg. IL was buried with Ma
sonic honors. He was ate of the most
popular men in the county.
Great excitement was caused in Gr cn
ville by the raiding of two gambl.ng
sale, ns by the police Thirteen gnmb.ers
were arrested and pla ed in the srarn-u
house twelve negroes and one uh’.te
man.
Tlie .1 liver ef one of iiro 1.
Chark-tou hai an eye knocked out
whie driving out of the engine mu- • r,
a fire, but retained bis scat and got his
engine t-i the fire before giving up the
reiiii.
! rmi
The pol cc of C uttanooga, are arrest¬
ing law. violators of the crue.ty to animals
A threshing machine exploded near
Telford on Thursday, and Bud Carper,
engineer, instantly, and wounded several
others. The cause of the explosion was
a defective steam gauge.
The efforts t > organize a railroad de¬
partment of the Young Men's Christian
Association in Ohattm 'gh ave not been
successful, a d the proposed organization
wTl be abandoned.
The dry goo Is house of W. T. Bull, at
Chattanooga, was closed on an attach
merit in lav r of .J. C. Bui nett. Bull
was in t ie act < f packing his goods t>
move away when the sheriff levied on hi
st*ck.
W. II. Inman, of New Y'ork, died at
Tate Sprints Monday. He was a native
of brother Dandridge. The deceased was a
of r-liade and Walker P. Inman,
and the uncle of John II., Samuel M.,
and Hugh T. Inman, of Atlanta, Ga.
Mr. Inman removed to New York shortly
ftfter the clo3li of the War -
It is alleged that the revenue office,.
hid discovered one hundred empty whis
k y barrels in the wholesale liquor store
of Col. Frank M. Potts of Chattanooga,
without the stamps having be. n can
celled. The penalty for each offense is
a fine of from §5'0 to §10,000 and imprls
onmeut not less t.ian one year.
Dr. Abe Wi limns was arrested a t
Rockwo >d, by United States deputy
marshals on a charge of obtaining money
under false pretenses, by representing
himself as a pension claim agent and
I getting his fee in advance. He had
played the same game elsewhere and
left his victims to mourn his departure,
Virginia.
The Norfolk & Western Railroad Co.,
is still negotiating to buy from the Iti<h
mond & AYest Point Terminal railroad
the latter’s interest in the Virginia &
Georgia road. The transaction will in¬
volve §7,000,000.
The Merceet model of the equestrian
startue of Gen. Robert E. Lee was placed
j on Monday, exhibition and at the the capitol board at of Richmond
on managers
of the Lee Monument Association, of
which Governor Lee is president, have
cabled their acceptance of the design.
A duel between Segar AVhiting, son of
II. O. AVhitinar, president of the Hamp¬
ton bank, and Dixie Lee, son of Maj. B.
H. Lee, collector of customs at Newport
News, was arranged to take place at
Buckroe, principals at daylight on Saturday. The
were on the ground and
choosing and weapons when Sheriff Williams
arrived arrested Lee and his party.
Whiting escaped and went to the eastern
shore.
non** ... .... ,,sn,n , .
‘
1 v° 0 " lf°P 3e "’ ere
over Wheeling crock at Mam street, Tn
Whee ing watching the raging waters
® a,, “ d by the lo ° ds ; a ma ‘ 1 ou th ° cr f ^
bank one , hundred 1 feet f above, shouted
warning, and the pan c-strieken crowd
rushed into each other in a wild effort
to reach terra firma. After the bridge
was cleared, those nearest, seeing it still
apparently safe, turned back, laughing
at their alarm, but before they reached
the edge the bridge, 140 feet in length,
fell with one awful crash and the waters
leaped sixty feet in the air, and water,
gas and natural gas mains, sewers, tele
graph and and telephone wires, electric lights
street car wire conductors were car¬
ried down. The Baltimore and Ohio dc*
pot, built over the creek, and the Market
street iron bridge, "reach it is §250,000,' feared, will go. '
The losses will
THE YELLOW FEVER.
The steamer City of Jacksonville, which
brought down four cannon from Tuc-oi to
Jacksonville, which had been sent there
from St. Augustine with a large amount
of powder and a number of blank cart¬
ridges. This makes seven pieces now in
the city, but only five were used, the
others being disabled for want of compe¬
tent men to handle them. I he Postmas¬
ter General, iu an order, directed that all
mail , . . . at Jack-on- _ ,
new spa per oiigniuting
Mile, I- la., should be fumigated at that
point instead of being sent to AN aycross,
thus avoiding annoying delays. Sur¬
geon-General Hamilton, at Washington,
I). C., received a telegram from As-ist
ant Surgeon Clarkson, of Fort Monroe,
Va,, saying he has quarantined the Biit
ish steamship Athens, seven days from
PeDsacola to Newport News. He savs a
erse of liematemesis with collapse was
found on board, and too ill for transpor
tatioa. The vessel is being fumigated
without removing the cargo of timber,
Dr. Hamilton then telegraphed Dr. Clark
son to anchor the vessel in the North
Channel, near Cape Charles, and hold her
in quarantine for further observation,
Two new r cases of yellow fever were re
ported ou Alonday to the directors of
health at Jacksonville, Fla., and or.e
death onlv, that of J. AL Alinton at Sand
Hills. Ther .■ are several suspicious ca^es
which are expected to be better defined.
Alure vigorous measures will be taken for
Hie segregation of patients and suspects,
Reports sent out of financial stringency
V icad banks are erroneous. AH the
L loading bank, banks which are posted well sixty supplied.. days’ notice Gree
v s
on account of run of savings by refugees,
h-s resumed, ihe business of the city
bght, owing to the stringency of quar
autine. but is going on a- usual. A thou
sand pounds of bi-chloride of mercury is
,> be us d b - v the f ° r disinfecting.
boL , T Lester : ma /°* ot Savannah, Ga
endeavoring to get Surgeon-General
Tf, 11 ' on P u m cbai S e ° C ‘R* t ' aa ' iae
dhl f ca n ^ be ho , '® d ° * UC ta by e th « 1 secretary otfL - TZ of the
. c-n L-.e rtques o ne governor.
dered V* “ W* by 0 ? tae.government the . e ^‘ eDS ® an 1
tbe ^ e ' c « ntl derable ° utlay '
S'hhlth iXnitTZiur T 1
ee0 WoM. ^ene,ii\ llll iHoo'to yki rttodo,'
and Otter townsiu Fioridu, and
a . <v . tilin theit condition . gurg.oo Put
ton has arrived at 'Wavcross, Ga., and
assumed charge of the fumigation static n
tb ere. Dr Wall, of Tampa, telegraphs
to the M , rine hospital bureau as fol
j ows . Having h uses and effects fumi
gated as sick get well. The authorities
are having premises cleaned and disin
fected. An infant was lost in a family
which was taken with the fever on Mon
.
aa L
------- ’
*
__
W R Brooke, of Geneva. N. Y.. has
mno , nced the disooTe ry of a comet. It
Was j Q tbe nortbwe st at evening, and
, on lv * about thirty degrees from the sun,
, , .
v e rv few observations have been secured.
It snow in the lower pan of the con
-teilation Great B ar, an i is m ving to
ward Leo. It is at present 142,000,009
miles froui the earth,
OVER TIIE GLOBE.
WHAT THE ELECTRIC WIRES
POUR INTO OUR EARS.
f.ABOR NOTES— ACCIDENTS ON SEA AND
LAND—TERRIBLE ACCIDENTS ON TIIE
RAILROADS—NOTED PEOFLE DEAD.
Malitco, the deposed king of Samoa,
will be brought to Get many.
Thtee German generals in the service
of Turk- y have resigned, owing to non
receipt* of salary.
Cluif Mescott, of the- Kicknpoos, his
squaw, and five chiidten were killed by
lightning on the reservation, near Meta
waka, Kan.
1 . .. . ^ regulators of
lc ' or
r , Li , co ' int a , have decided to
-
disband. Start id developments are
ci P cted soon -
Five thousand miners in the Newcastle
district, Mew Sou’ll Wales, have given
Il0 ‘"f‘ hat th '.'» W <!">' »«* lullcts
*= l 11 te an advance m . wages.
An < pidemic of opthalmia is raging in
O.-nabruek. 'I here are few houses in
5 hat place which don’t contaiu one or
mine p. r-oos suite i* g from the diseise.
At Birdsboro, Pa., nearly all the de
p rtments of the extensive works of the
F. & G. Brooks Iron C ompany have sits
P n,: ed operations iu consequence of the
hear.
A cyclone in the shape of a funnel¬
shaped cloud struck Wilmington, Del.,
on Tuesday, and damaged ~ property to
die extent of §200,000. 'I ho mas Bruce,
a blacksmith at Harris Corner, was killed.
During a storm on Monday, train No.
G on the Cincinnati Soul hern struck a
trej across the track between Cincinnati
and Oakdale. The entire train was de¬
railed, and five passengers slightly in¬
jured.
Rev. Edward H. Camp, a Presbyterian
minister, who has just returned to New¬
ark, N. J., from Palestine, committed
suicide on Sunday, by cutting his throat
and then jumping into a cistern. Ill
health was the cause.
The Norwegian steamer Liberta ran on
AYliite Island, off Erwin Secum, Nova
Scotia, and is a total wreck. The crew
were sav< d and have reached the main¬
land. The Libeita w as from New Y'ork,
bouud to Stettin.
A military conspiracy has been dis¬
covered at Aludrid, Spain. A cavalry of¬
ficer and several sergeants and privates
were arrested. A strict watch is kept
upon suspected men in the garrison at
Saragossa and Larida.
Secretary Dillon of the American
Flint Glass AVorkers’ Association, and
three of the Rochester, Pa., Tumbler
Works’ strikers, were arrested for con
sj iiacy, in trying to prevent non-union
men trom from going t.o work.
The warehouse of Skippee Agricultural
AYoiks in San Francisco, Cal., was
burned on Sunday. About eighty com¬
bined liarvestcis and a number of grain
cleaners stored in the building were
burned. Loss about §100,000.
By the will of Frizee Lee, a rich old
hermit, who died near Plainfield, N. J.,
the Sc »tch Plains Baptist church obtains
a bequest of §800,100. Only of §7,500 was
divided among a score relatives,
There will be a fight at law over^he mat
ter.
A "terrific wind and rain storm devas
La ted Upper Austria, doing great damage
to ciops and orchards. Lightning set
^ re t0 twenty houses in the Ischl district,
and a woman and two children were
kill* cl. The ground is covered with dead
cattle and birds,
Lieut. AYis-m nin, of the German army,
who is now in Egypt, en route to Zanzi¬
bar, is a member of the Emin Bey relief
committee. If the relief expedition
proves successful, it is intended to form
and maintain a commercial highway
with stations from the lakes eastward.
AATiile a balloon was being inflated at
Sturgis, Aliclu, a guv rope attached to a
large pole, which held the air ship, gave
way, cau-ing it to fall to the ground. A
12-year-old son of Air. Graft Miller was
j us t a ntly killed, and a 15 year-old son of
^j r Appleman l { hurt so badly that he died
a {( . w i0Ui8 later . Many others were
bruised.
Gen. „ Lew _ AA allace, ,, the distinguished . . ,
an tho r °f “Ben Hur,” and life-long
Inend . 1 of General Ilamson, has just
completed an authorized biography of
ntl T ^ v - L. Hense , a staunch leader m
national councils of the Democratic
P ar L v ’ 3 ’ as just completed an admirable
l>io_rapuY of Cleveland, with a bright
sketch of Thuunan.
A cyclone passed over Marquette,
Alich., on Tuesday. For four minutes
the greatest havoc preva led. The storm
moved in a circle. The roofs of many
business blocks were torn off, telegraph
and telephone wires were prostrated,
plate glass windows were and demolished,
shade trees were torn up, the streets
were blockaded with debris.
Aliss Lena Loeb, the electric girl of
Clinton, Iowa, is astonishing people with
her wonderful powers. Though weig’n
ing but ninety-four pounds, and only
sixteen years old, she pushed five strong
rnen all about a room at once in daylight,
and held a man weighing three hundred
pounds suspended from the floor on a
chair, though ten other men were pull
j n g flown on the chair so strongly that
it was pulled in pieces,
At a ^ prohibition meefing | in a tent at
Manhei p whi!e addl sseg v ere be _
ing dfclivered by Rey _ IL Kellogg, of
Michigan> and X . H . Kauffman, of this
city, a W gas pipe bomb, five and one-half
inches ^ «d three-quarte.s Ivith of an inch
bijre> ti . h ly packed gun-powder,
plugged was“u,hted at loth ends and a fuse attached,
by some miscreant. It failed
to explode. There was an audience of
.500 children. people Jd present, mostly Women and
the result of* an explosion
’ roa,d W been db “ wo,a -
VERY CRUEL.
A man named Roder, of Quincv, Ill.,
shot three boys, all about ten years of
age. who were stealing apples from his
< rehard. One of the boys. Harman
Kemper, will die. Bail was refused Ro
der, pending the result of the boy’s
wound,
STILL. ON DECK.
Uen. BoulaDger was elected to the
Chamber of Deputies in the department
® mme, by a majority of 34,713. He
also heids the polls iu the Charente and
SThe^w^Sused ° g great excite “ent in
Paris.
WISCONSIN’S SCOURGE.
-
Fayette p X *!«««!. c-mn tits ^.«» Mis is spreading, ^ La. the
Ph^icians being totally uuably to cope
T :h Jhe disease is malignant dys
IMlowea f o : . cer^.-ia] troubles,
producing aesm.
Woolley's
Dr.
i JIVV Dyscepsia. > and all Languid wm. r Debilitated GOBINE:— Conditions of the System ; Loss of ftv a^/cbange ^Invigorine
or of Puberty ^ of regu
Lawyers. Preachers and Writers: and Feebleness from Old Age. in Stages B. M. e WOOLLEY & CO., Manut Manuf'rs rs, ATLANTA, ailahia, GA. ua. >
lates and quiets. PRICE $1.00 for Full Pint Bottle. Sold by Druggists.
Seeixrla.a.'ta^’iigsrsiciaaASays
Wadiey, Ga., January SO. 1888.
It affords me pleasure to say that Invigo
rire is the finest product of the age to re¬
establish the prostrate fabric. It tones up
the nervous system better, makes the stead
iost nerves, strongest muscles and richest
Blood of any remedy I have ever had re
course to, and does more good in bright's
disease of the kidneys than all other rem
edies advertised so extensively for the cure
of that trouble. It is that combination of
vegetable tonics, nervine- and alteratives
with iron, that acts upon the secretions ad
mirably, while it increases appetite, ini
proves and digestion, quiets irritated nerves
purifies the blood, and hence it is
lustly held m high esteem bv the ladies for
tiding that change them sweetly over the menopause,
in life that simulates so many
diseases. Wishing you great success, I
remain jours truly, W . o. V lot p, M. D*
A Prominent and Favorably Known Cit
isen Testifies.
Atlanta, Ga„ October 3. 1887.
I take pleasure in testifying to the great
benefit 1 have derived from the use of your
Invigorine. After suffering for several
months from general debility, and using
other medicines without material benefit,
I have used one bottle of Invigorine, which
has acted like a charm, and restored me to
health. Yours truly,
AYm. Waring Habersham, M. E.
It Gives Strength and Energy.
Ennis, Texas, March 22, 1S87.
One half of dozen my neighbors bottles whishes me to order
one of your Invigorine,
for wtiichl send $5. He wants the invig¬
orine. Mr. McCullum took your Invigorine
and felt a gread deal better. He thought
he could make a crop, and went to work
ike a young man. I took your Invigorine
and it gave me strength. I now sleep well,
and my health is better than it has been in
twelve years. Everybody that sees me
says that I look ten years younger.
Mrs. S. F. McCullum.
Regulates the Liver,Bowels and Kidneys
and Clears the Skin.
Atlanta, Ga., April 5, 1887.
It affords me pleasure to say that the In
vigorine, happy used by myself and wife, has bad
a effect in building up our health,
restoring appetite, establishing healthy
digestion, and giving cheerful spirits with
out any disagreeable reaction. It acted as
an alterative regulating and tonic, clearing the skin kid
and the liver, bowels and
neys. I am in better health now than in
ten years. W. P. Reynolds.
ii |
L'i!
i
sasec# - sLisii aa OTllll «
~ . ..... ~
Pjliip
The Only Saw Mill In America
That is Fully Up With the Times.
NEW VARIABLE FRICTION FEED
THAT CUTS FROM 1-16 TO lO INCHES FEED.
Ratchet Set Works and Bull Bog to Hold last Plank 34 Thick.
§200 MILL CUTS 10,000 FEET PER LAY.
§300 MILL CUTS 20,000 FEET PER LAY.
§400 MILL CUTS 30,000 FEET PER LAY.
Send for largo illustrated Catalogue of LeLoach Saw Mills, Corn and Wheat Mills, Turbine Water Wheels,
Mill Gearing, &e. The best in many respects and take first honors wherever tried.
DeLOACH mill manufacturing company.
36 to 373 Marietta Street, ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
Mention this paper.
TRADEMARK’ REGISTEREU*
-eiI
i
1529 Arc ti* Street, JPhilad’a, IPa.
4liiSslis ders.
“COSPOUND OXTGEX” being tnten into the system, th«
Brain, Spinal Marrow, anti tho Xerve-Ganglia— 44 Thus Nervou* tho
Centres”—are nourished am! made more active.
of Oxygen and Mtroeen magnetized, and the compound is so
condensed con
Treatment: JIO.V. WILLIAM JK KELLEY, Member of Con
press, Philadelphia. KEY, VICTOR L. CO.NKAl). Editor La
The EfSKwK&MSB! Centenary, Lancaster, 8. C. V«. H. liOHTHUibiON, Ed
Merchant, Philadelphia. HON. In W. W. SClIUYLEIt, Easton,
Pa., Sc thousands of other* every part of the United State*.
**COMPOUND OXYGEN—11* Mode of Action and H- suits,’* 1
I* the title of a new brochure of two hundred page#, published
iSSlSI brochure!
ttOQ. Bead the
DRS. STARKEY & PALF.N,
loti" & 1529 Arcti Street, Philadelphia, P*.
“I’m Just Gaim Down to the Gale”
ar.d m other Popular Ballads, in book form,
size of Sheet 2>Iusic. Sent, post-paid, for
OS LI FOUR CEXTS. Stamps taken
AMERICAN 7 PUBLISHING CO.
9SGO Fairmount Ave., Philadelphia Pa
Richly Rewarded
Are those who read this 3=±! and then aot: thev '
S ! £ a
m01ith - 11 is easy for any one to
it a te §4 and upwards per day, who ii will
J > -. ; » Noahilfty reeS-^: ^
Vrritv V-i-r, ean, JiTl. wM L Zw Itl
to msdl « at «« A.d4&es*BtinMf)u for foil partisan,
w« tpae & Qc ‘ j
Portland, Mam, , >
In Bed Nine Weeks—One Bottle Used
and She is Up.
Carroll's Prairie, Texas, August 6. 1S36.
Inclosed find $5 for which pleaye send
me six bottles of your Invigoriue. This I
am ordering for my mother. If you re
member 1 ordered one bottle last month,
j arc j it did her so much good " she has con¬
eluded to trv six more. She has been in
' and Invigorine is
bed n j ne w ee ks, your six bottles
tbo g rst to restore her: so send
f or the $5. I am satisfied Invigorine will
cure ber f rom the improvement of using
; | on jy one bottle. Yours,
Bkn McBride.
i
SeventyTeafsOlcUndGreatlyStrength- J J °
ened.
,
Yancvville, N. C„ November 1, 1886.
For man v rears I have been very much
* depressed, being old and feeble—now 78
1 years old. 1 was unable to go about much
or to exert myself in any way, in fact, unfit
for anything. I used a half dozen bottles
I of vour ovine, and never saw such
movement, - and hearty,
I am now strong
iind attend to ®V business daily.
ours, o c.
! B. LOW NFS.
j In Better Health tlran for
j "STears.
j
Atlanta, Ga., December 9, ISS6.
I have used, with astonishing results, sev¬
eral bottles of your Invigorine. AY hen I
began its use I was suffering so greatly
from entertained debility serious and nervous fears prostration health that
I that my
was ful permanently through impaired, the but instrumentality I am thank¬
to say that
of the health-restoring properties of Invig¬
orine, I am now feeling much better than
at any tiiuo during the past four or five
years, and am entirely relieved of all ap¬
prehensions regarding my physical condi¬
tion. FRENCH STRANGE.
So Well Pleased They Want the Agency.
Moss Point, Aliss., July 9th, 1887.
Messrs. B. Al. AVoolley & Co.:
We are establishing quite a demand for
your Invigorine, having not sold a bottle
] but that it has accomplished all you claim
for it. The half dozen bottles which you
forwarded to Pensacola, Fla., by our order
to our friend, has accomplished wonders,
as she writes us she is feeling much better
than at any time in a number of years,
We write to ask on what terms wo can
secure the exclusive agency for Invigorine,
us we desire to have exclusive sale of it at
1 this place if possible. Yours truly,
D. K. McInnis & Co.
W. H. SPENCE,
AT COLE’S WAREHOUSE
Corner Hill and Taylor (Streets,
griffin, Georgia,
IS THE ONLY PLACE THAT YOU CAN BUY THE
WAGON, *
WHITE HICKORY WAGON, COLUMBUS BUGGY.
*
Jackson _ , G. -- Smith t ji Buggy and t Dump Carts.
*
- ALSO AND HARNESS.-
——— - — — 1 ■■■■■■ —
... _____ -
----— *
----—
MGER’S MUSIC HOUSE
Masonic Temple, 9Q Mulberry St., Macon, Ga.
Largest Wareroom and Most Complete and Elegant Stock of
Pianos and Organs!
No Low Grade or Shoddy Instruments.
^ U Warranted. Special Catalogue of Sheet
* will be Sent ^«•- Free an T >
~
M Sheet Muslc ’ Music Books & Small Instruments
STRICTLY" O^-STai.
Pianos and Organs sold on long time with monthly
7 ecxS S Sit? b "h 5 'Z anybody. ila88 Address A 1 ^ trume all " ts Communications tha t are cheap^ enough for every
to
M. L. MUNGER,
96 Mulberry Street, MACON, L A,
BLOOD POISON REMOVED.
Home Testimor-y from.
Om.3 "STovl -AJ.1
Atlanta, Ga., 18S7.
Gents—It is with great pleasure that I
boar testimony to the beneficial results eff
the use of Invigorine by my wife, In llJYv
mv wife was attacked by blood poison.
For weeks she was delirious, and for several
years she has been in feeble health, not able
to walk and almost blind. A number of
remedies were tried, but with little effect.
After using tho Invigorine she is fast re¬
gaining her wonted strength ; can walk a
mile and a half eyesight to church growing without better fatiguing
her, and her is ev¬
ery day. Invigorine has caused
The every mem¬
ber of my household to rejoice in the bene¬
fit conferred on my wife. 1 have tried it
myself in several cases* I can conscien¬
tiously say that it has strengthened tried. me
more than any other remedy 1 ever
Truly. AY. G . AVht dby.
TPLe Best t!h.ixig- for loAdigres
tierr.
Enfield, N. C., January 2S, 1S89.
I have never had anything to do me so
| *nuch and find good almost for indigestion immediate as relief Invigorine, lor all
it
the attendant pains. I never want to be
without it. MRS. A. H. HUNTER.
IDcrxe I/Iore CS-oocl tlxa-rEX-A-xiy
I^ei-ned-Ty-.
This is to certify that Invigorine has
done more good than all other remedies
used. Trouble, general debility.
MRS. E. A. ROBERTSON,
Enfield, IN. C.
ITo IvCore Cixllls txn.€L O-ood.
Appetite.
Atlanta, Ga., August 16, 1886.
Unsolicited by you, I feel it my duty to
testify to you the benefit 1 have derived
from the use of your valuable medicine,
Invigorine. I had only taken ?, few doses
of it before I felt the change in my condi¬
tion. I have been a sufferer from chills
and fever for seven or eight years, in Texas,
and when I came able to Atlanta walk about, in February But
last, was hardly to it
it is different now. Invigorine lias,
seems, put new life in me—no chills, a
good appet ite, perspire freely, sleep soundly
—and acts like a charm on my liver and
kidneys, from both of which 1 have been a
sufferer for seven or eight years, caused by
malarial poison in my system.
j. Al. BROS1ITS.