Newspaper Page Text
o >v
9 HE MONROE ADVERTISER.
FORSYTH. GEORGIA.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF MONROE COUNT!.
BY McOINTY * CABANINA
Greystone. ,ive'rr Mr. Tildcn’s expensive
n.,dso. e .,d. hs. lea in th.
mu ket for two years, with no b iyer.
auit.
8 ev,„t, five mile, »n bo..r-or a mi!e
in forlj-eiir it .ccimds —is th a-fmiulia,
,... of sped »hich has juit been at
tamed l lined br by the-West in - Const Express,” ' ol
the Loudon and .Northwestern Km.way,
on it, trip from the J nghsh to the
Scotch metropolis.
■..... . .....
How many persons in the United
States, asks the Arg . know tbit
the increase of tho ia the
Argentine Republic during the last
tw-ntv five years has been one hundred
......ifty-fo r per eeet., while curs ha.
heaa <,Dl; .evantj-ame pat ccaU . a
Kansas is anxious to annex the strip
of land crllc 1 “No Man’s Land” adjoin¬
ing the State. Not, the newspapers say,
“for boom p irposes,”but for protect ion.
Every thief and murderer who commits
a crime in Kansas makes a break for No
Man’s 1 arid, where ho is as safe as the
mauslayer of old in the city of refuge.
The roaring gas well back of Canons
burg, 1 enn., is said to have thegreutest
registered pressure of any in the world.
The gas looks like a solid piece of blue
steel for some distance after it comes out
of the pipe. Holid masonry twelve feet
thick surrounds the well to hold tho cap
on. When in drilling the gas was struck,
tools and ropes weighing 5000 pounds
were thrown out us though, they were
feathers.
Fab’o Island, which lies in the direct
path of all transatlantic shipping bound
to Now York, is rap dly being washed
away. T he branch hydrographic offices
in that city and Philadelphia have just
been served with notice by the British
Government that one of the lighthouses
has been undermined, and must be taken
down and removed to a s.tc further in¬
land. At present the sea threatens to
demol sh the light and the tower.
A French inventor, M. Pagan, has
discovered a way to stop the headway of
u steamer in short order, and conse
queutly lessen considerably the dangers
of collision at sea. Thchavre and lior
lie iux papers speak of a coming test ol
tho machine by one of the French war
steamers. T he ma> hine cons sts of a
number of parachutes so placed that
they can be tos cd overboard readily and
towed by a cable. The rea stance with
out being great enough to produce u
shock, rnpidly overcomes the headway
of the vessej,
A practical rest of flre-proof, p ,te,'„
BtiffeneJ wire lathing, was g.ven recent
ly in I hibidelphia. A brick building
twenty feet square was erected of two
divisions, in one the common wood lath
Jng such as is generally used, in the
otber was tho stiffened wire lathing w th
cast iroa ribs. At 3:05 in tho afternoon
the ♦ tu> *t.M.a fires were started 1 and , , m . e ght
minutes the piaster and wood lathing
dropped and were consumed. At 4 : 55 ,
when tho visitors left the grounds the
firein the wire lathing apartment was
still burning, with no signs of consump¬
tion of the plaster or lathing.
Mr. A. W. Van Dorston estimates, In
tho S ientido American , that there are one
million cars in the United States, the
couplers of which must bo changed if
the standard of the Master Car Builders’
Association is generally adopted. He
figures the cost at $28.50 a car, which ]
would make the entire expense 1 of the ! I
^ *w~ninoo v-',’ o ‘'Uppo-xng • the :
, ..
present couplers—which must be dis
placed—to have co-t $15 per car, or
§15,000,000 for the entire equipment ’
ruul that the destruction of cars and cai : !
trucks, . . the . wrecks , from
broken links, j
the loss of pins and links, the death rate
from the free slack and going between
the cars to place and replace the links,
cost annually $17,000,090 I more W or $2 ' ^
oun non in m oil a l, still !t ;n he a thinks • , the auto- 1
. «
matic coupler mu-t be regarded as do
cidedly the cheapest. j
Tho regular annual complaint of ft
lack of dancing men at the summer re¬
sent- ■'a- made, usual, this season, re
marks the Now York Herald. The hotel
keepers at Bar Harbor, YU 5 ., boast that
thev have found a very efficacious wav
in whiMi men in to roineay Mmodrtii tins - evil. i Avi A ben the i
season is “at its height ’ they send to
certa n ageuies in Boston for a supply of
the article, for the want of which less
clever re-orts droop and pine. These
Boston institutions supply at so much
per head any desired number of young
men handy with their feet, to use a col
loquialistu. These dancers are fellows
of -poor but highly respectable family. •
Some of thpm »rp j-IopL-. M 1 c .fguns,
~
ami once in . a wmle . a few actors are fur
m-hed. Ihe don t receive much salary,
but they have a t ue time and their
board. Considerable d nlouiac’- is re
quired of toe lunel raun to
P»To», di«o*ertna ft -Im, of ,hc
young men aie of the imported stock. |
UNVEILED.
Tbe Confederate Monument fit Staun
ton, \'a , was unveiled on 1 st Tms iav
La Speeches lv. Gen. wete Ho m-ide by Gen. I.e* Gen*
s r aad Mr. McCulloch
ol Indian .po is, In I. 1
KNOCKED OUT.
John L. Su'livan, the notorious “slug¬
ger,” of Boston, Mrs., is dying His
sickness was brought on by a round of
debauchery.
THE MONROE ADVERTISER: FORSYTH, GA., TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1888.™EIGHT PAGES
DEATH'S 11 AIDES!.
EEC3RD AT JACKSONVILLE, DE¬
CATUR AND JACKtON, MISS.
ELECTB,C cch e—notes.
More lhan *!«*>,000 h.ve ,lre»d, t*«>
rece ve<l at Jacksouvile, Fit., throu-jh
;»* ..„ m. «. p( ihe „,.ch: uc ,v ot ,l.e M „i
ZZTtJmtJtoT.T'inmTu' ,L ‘ *'*” »® U -° l0 '‘. et ' kl r -
, "‘'eksloner -
... £,.m,“n 1
tide I y «if tile city over the x. 11 epidemic. ^ needed The to
w eaves op Sunday footed up 133, and
‘ at hs 10. Early in the epidemic the
question of employment of uuaccl mated
nll r ‘; e,, broiI ght up, tl e op nion pre
vadmg f among the autho iiies that vhey
wool i be likmy to take the teyer and be
come a burden rather than a help to the
community. JacksonviU.- Hill, they were allowed to
enter and now many of
an 1 requiring “«,Y“ 3 the ^ attention of V * nurses 0 in
.toad of at.cnjn.ir th, akk th™sel.«<.
Pres dent Mitel ell for a few days, was
as igued to the care of one of the wards
at th : Sandhills hospital, and two days
alter was taken down with yellow fever,
doubtless contracted before he entered
the hospital. Dr. F. J. Potts was taken
ill with fever and seat to the Saudi,ill,
fh 0 e l emio.o7lbf 1 0 bureau h' 1Ur,Ca ;Ne:,rl v° , U v “ d a11 n
-
Iria d 1 -
< r nft!’ n t ? P ° 11 r ' COlv,D a
k °
n a * b Ur f“ y d 1 d 1 n0t rC ,'
n, rt , ui'll q 0 i rti' r i Uty au<
doubtless ’
l not ? 1S ? lJ -1 ti l 4 tbat w - r i iQ money ® ome
instances in tn hey even left , ., their patients.
Upt. Z.ch Haddock u a local character
erat?m!d oinnion’hae ’ h thoriln'h "c.p^Zach
Popular regarded
us fever proof. Zoch thought so himself
unu head, a few days ago when an aching
pains in the b«ck, high tempera
ture and a burning cuticle sent him to
bed. The fever was on him sure enough,
and the stalwart old pol tical cracker
felt that his lime had come. Zach wilted
immediately. He grew- rapidly worse
through the night and at three a. m. he
hud no hope ol' life. Calling his family
about him, ( apt. Zacii said^ in tlie mo.>t
solemn tones possiolc: “See, here, all
of you. Yuur daddy s going fast. I’ll
be dead in an hour—mark what I say.
Willie, you take good care of Pinky and
Kate, ami all of you mind your mo (her.
Old Zacii wid be dead in an hour. Bring
me my cowhide boots. This old cracker
wants to die dead game in’em, right in
tins yeie bed. As a prophet, Zach was
a dead failure, except in e eciion matters,
By daylight he was up and dressed, and
he will be alive to cast his vote in the
next election.
Priutcr J. J. Dawson, who was com
polled to Stave off work on account of
hign fever, pains in his head, back and
limbs, was removed to his room, and
treated by Mr. Webb w th Dr. Stnche’s
eiet-tro-libatiun cure. T he treatment was
and applied and the patient then left alone
as eep. YVh n seen the next day, he
was qu.te free fiom ever, though rather
weak his pulse being abmt eig ty. He
bud s ( t T’' 8 UM.lly all night and was able
to get up and open the doOr 'oadmitMr.
Webb. He went down town du ing the
after oon an 1 wanted to work at nignt,
but was ."W, m’o'r obrmtmi*
.. .» o,a» oa,'. Tha , Pl ,l,cation of it
can do no harm, but its v lue iii geti
eral is jit to be demonstrated,
T he tie vns 1 rum Decatur, Ala., is mure
encouraging. Only -two new cases were
rep>u ted on Sunday and no dea hs,though
several of the sick are eXpt cb d to die.
^ ne tl,c lu ‘ w cases is Dr. W. C. Buck
one of ,h e leading physici 11 s of the
, town. Th few people left in the
town
have somewhat recovered from their first
alarm, and have organized a relief coin
mittce and are doing all in their power
^ or '^ ie s ’ c ^- A correspondent at Deca
tur that the fever there is a malig¬
nant type ot typtioid malarial fever, aud
is even more latal than yellow fever. He
says that while giading a new street re¬
cently an old cemetery was cros.-ed and
that all kinds of decaying vegetable and
other matter was left exposed in the sun
for several days. The strei t was then
covered with gravel from the bottom of
the Tennessee, which was covered by
decayed matter. Ho says for days the
stench along that street was almost un
Hearable, lie thinks this caused the
feV er ‘,
Aline A of pickets has been , formed ,
around the city of Birmingham, Ala., and
refugees will be kept out. Five hundred
-hizens have volunteered to assist the
auth orities in guarding the city. Owing
t0 the \™? clad T ,arautinc regulations of
some of the smaller towns, all trams on
the Alabama Great Southern division of
the Quee n and Crescent route will be dis
continued. After Monday no trains will
be run in Alabama except local accommo
dation trains * The Board of Health, at
Jacksonville, Miss., issued the following
not i ce : “This city is now surrounde t by
a cordon and every effort will be
made to prevent the spread of the yellow
fevt r. A census is now beiu" taken,
which will not only show the number of
per-ons number remaining* aud lu re, but al-o the
protected the number un
pro ected and the number protected by
a previous attack of ttie disea-e. The
city is now pretty well depopulated; but
assoon as a can ’P for refugees can be cs
tablish d an effort will be made to re
moVe the unprotected persons remaining,
The public wait n^mwured that we will
do ail in our 5 lower 10 prevent the spread
of the disease. The report for the t wen
ty-four hours ending at 6 p. m. to-day
tJ Mtridiai^ ^ t sc-s,^!; ^deaths, ^ 2 ; to¬
Mm., has stopped all railroad
train- from running through ir, and ihe
2d Tennessee butalion his been
ordered out to guard Memphis. Tenn.
Deakins, who attended the man
Wilson, who is suppose J t» have died of
Vc u ow f ev er at Wildwood, on Lookout
ouutaiu. near Uhattan ' 02 a, Tenn.. is
sick, but a Chattanooga physician who
vis ted him returned and re;>ortel that
,W sick ** » m * MU «
^ o'T'T-f
lUVe a „ a , , ou j 0%va;g to the rig id
quarantine at Chat' ,nooga, a d at other
oints on he line. Memp is and
'-barleston trains can ot e:iter that eiiy.
^ rangem. nts will probably be effected
delivered w beieby n.ail and expres** mattt-r can be
be*twe*n * imphisand Steven
^o;). T rains will pass through Morgan
County iu wh ch Decatur is s tuated at
not !e-s than fineen miles an hour, and
all tiaiu men are unffiv oath not to take
on a pa senger m any county in wbicb
an in e< ted pci it is soca ed. The Chat¬
tanooga quarantine has been aud is so
effective that uu— uaerson from an infected
oint idTi d l>e di-c* vered even aft r a
i iei.il rewaid was tiff re i f>*r his nppre
hen-ion. N • o ie a allowed to enter the
city of Ch;ittun>K>gu wi hout gtviu g a
satisfactory account of himself.
ABOUT COTTON.
,*>«srJri“ «■
menr, t-ays that for the week ending last
39 16! hales the week |
we>it previous
„T l Sj7 shoVmg .d crease,ince Septan.
b J l ’
» doer, bale-a» n-e m the cotton red in with sight the of 584,-
858 comp same
da e of 1887, a decrease of 28.115 bales
as compared with decrease the corresponding
date of 1>86 and a of 383,779
hu es as compared wish 1883. The total
receipts fr m the plan ations since Sep
,emb r 1, 1888. are 193,684 bales; in
1887 were 463 -/although 4G1 bales: in 1886 were
243,534 bales the receipts at
t , e out ports the pa A week were 89,677
bales, the a tual movement from plan
tations was 1«.4,894 bales, the balance
V*<* rior towns. Last ">* rt0ck9 the receipts *» «>• from
vear weik
, th. pl-Dtatlons for’ the .ame were
217.782 bales and for 1886 they were
}14,473 bales. r lhe telegraphic a'dvices
from all the South indicate that in Texas 1
and the western portion of the Gulf
States, the weather has been quite favor
able !e„t’prngr<„. and the p P ; ' ckin"' is making excel
E lscwher. the
1'™ V> been so satisfactory. Ou the
Atlantic, especially have in Florida and and Geor
V™, continued consideta
ble damage 1ms been done.
FROST AT LAST.
-
There was fr st on Tuesday nightie
Monte Sano, Huntsville, Ala., the guests
of tiC hotcl ‘ n -> v,n " 8 P lendid Lea!th aU(1
-
hr’seecnreen vems^Vh. re'wasT ithl
f,„ st on all the hillsaround Birmingham,
and veporud general throughout
North Alai am ., be.ng the heaviest on
lie Sand A* M uutains near the Tennessee
River. killing frost on the mountains
is expected Ther • is no burner any fear
rrf yellow fever in that section; the frost
s tt'ed that, and the panic sub
sided as qu ckly as it came,
The indicatio: s are favorable for light
liosts ou the m u 1 tains around Chatta
tmoga, Tenn., within a week. There
have already been light frosts on top of
me mountains in Kentucky and East
Tennessee, and before the latter part Of
the present week fro si s are expected on
the mountains around Chattanooga. The
\y ather north of the Ohio river is quiie
ehiily of mornings and evenings, and
1 ght fro-ts are already reported in sev
oral portions of Ohio, Indiana and Penn
sylvania. There is u favor >b!e prospect
of a killing frost in Chattanooga by the
20th of October, and probably sooner.
A RIOT.
The "Rio Grande at Brownsville, Tex., is
in the h.dids of an aimed Mexican mob,
400 men nf the lowest class of bandits and
smugglers. The county officers, Ameri
cans md foreigners, are barred in their
homes. Toe trouble uro e Over the
shooting of Cateiieno Garza, editor of
the Commercial Mexicano, the Mexican
paper publish d at, Corpus t hri.-ti, by
United 8 tat< s I spector of Customs See
bree. Seebree m> unted a horse and fled
in m Clen.leam?,,., SZ'iWKSS fommsad wZ ZZ S? 5 r
Col. i 0 of
c mpanies of troops,“put Seebree in the
guard house. A m b of two hundred
Mexic ns demanded him. Chndenning
refused an I order d the mob out of the
fort, Under penalty of death. The trom
bln rose ov, r ihe killing of a biack
mailer, Ruseudoy, some months ago by
Stebiee. Gaiza libeled Seebree in his
newspaper. Ga!za Seebree brought suit and
had arrested,
FARMERS’ LOSSES.
The answers received at the Depait
meat of Agriculture to inquiiies sent out
•>y C-imnnsioner Henderson, some days
mice, as caused to the damage of the principal
dented rops, by the recent unprece¬
rains, cover the state generally
tud were comp Jed on Tuesday. They
stimate the per cent of damage in the
dll' rent sections of the state as follows:
North Georgia—To cotton, 16 per cent;
corn, 13. Middle Georgia—Cotton, IS;
•om, 15. East Georgia—Cotton, 23;
corn, 14; rice 15. Southeast Georgia—
Colton, 21; corn, 9; rice, 21. Southwest
Georgia—Cotton, timated damage 18; corn, 7 . The es¬
to the cotton crop of
i he state by the rains is placed at 19 pei
cent; corn, 11, and rice, 18. Many of
the correspondents report much cotton
sprouting the on the ground or rotting in
boll, so that it i.s almost impossible
te damage give an the intelligent estimate of the
to quality of the staple.
NOT WANTED.
—~
Joseph _ Hayden, , O. ^ „ Mace
. Ware,
Redmond and Abner Lanham, of Felic
Ohio, were arrested on affidavits by
Pierce Gray-on and several other colored
schod children, residents of Felicity,
charging the tour individuals arrested
with assault and battery. This is the
culmination of a bitter warfare over the
admission of the colored school children
*be white schools of Felicity district.
It appears from the evidence that a col
ored not P e f‘ ui ' ted to enter the
school budding, and if these children do
gain admission, they ate taken hold of by
the guards, who seem to have been ap
pointed by the whites, and forcibly re
01076(1 from the building.
A WOMAN’S PLUCK.
T1 U notori °u3 “Lone Highwayman,”
, has for the past two been
years a
or .J° travelers in the vicinity of
J^'rville th - a-si-tance Texas o. and a Single who has confederate, without
repeatedly robbed staue coaches, rifled
“ ai1 ba ° s an : 1 g one thr ouffi as many as
fwithout commerci J travelers in broad day
tiie slightest inconven
’■-uce or resistance, has been killed. He
— shut bl Mr> ' Llz2 ' e P ““
FLOUR GOES UP.
A. boom in wheat caused an advance
of forty cents a barrel on flour in New
Yoik, Wednesday. The trms ictions in
wheat in th * Produce Exchange aggre
gated §16,009.0*i0.
VIRGINIA.
A fire at Bris ol totally destroyed the
bu-ine.'S houses of C lawn, Hyde Br* s.,
Dr. Peas:or, A. S. McNeil, W. AT. Davi
b. II C yde, J. T. Powell & Co., and
dwelli gs of J. W. B >ndurant and Rob¬
ert Hill. The ladies formed ia line and
pas-ed of buckets stood of water, while a number
men idly by.
SOUTHERN STRAYS
A CONDENSATION OF HAPPEN¬
INGS STRUNG TOGETHER.
movements of alliance men—RAIL¬
ROAD CASUALTIES — THE COTTON CROP
i loods accidents ciiop EETcit.Ns.
ALABAMA.
R«. A. H. M.Gaha, partor of Ac
V««U Bopto chu^.f Ch^J^
Tina,, preached his fnreoell sermon to
>*'“• congregation oa sun.iav, h viap ac
cepted a cull to Ilow .rd College Baptist
church, of Birmingham.
While the south bound freight was
switching cars at Bridgeport, a brake
man, T. A Stillman, tiied to jump from
a box to a flat car, but fell beneath the
stint] rauidlv revolving "ilis wheels and was in
v killed, body was horribly
mangled, and the track for several lea
wassnewn with pieces of flesh
bone
Spring A , cyclone . «*“?»*»• pas cd over Mammoth „ ,
Fulton county, on Sun-lay.
Seven hous s were wrecked, trees blown
down, and the Corn and cotton crops
^vere but ruined. Many ' people were injured,
none killed.
Florida.
Fever his appeared at Fernandin ageut’died i and
S. Lukcuhni, the laihoad
from it.
Dr. Neal Mitchell, President of the
Board of Health at Jacksonville, issued
the following official bulletin on Monday
night: New cases, 113; deaihs, 5; total
cases to date, 1,991; total deaths to
date, 217. Twenty eight of the new
cases are white and eighty-five colored.
“
GEORGIA.
The estate of the late It. II. Richards,
° f t00tS "P
St 'l ,a Thehareare .
". ct r, r '. ?“'* are
“ aaufil ctured in AtDnta , The cars aie
maJ e of wood grown in Geoyu.
The Atlanta Board of Police Commts
sioi o s are w ceding out their iucompe
tent policemen, and discha ged Omcer
L -' uam lor sleeping on duty,
The Salvation Army of Atlanta has
organized a colored branch, but the
white coalingcnt is in serious trouble,
on ac< ount of charges nude by one of its
princijal membeis against Capt. Jennie
Foos.
Spence Everett su’eided on Tuesday by
shouting himself in the side with a shot
gun. A farmer lidiug along the road
found the suicide’s body near Almand,
a small station about three miles lrotn
Covington.
Mr. Brossius, an Atlanta man, has in¬
vented a motor for sewing machines,
which consists of coiled springs, and a
strong company will soon manufacture
them. It is tlie only practical machine
for the purpose yet iuveuted.
Charley Burke, a colored man, aged
63, who * rove the wagon of Chief Joy
nerof the Fire Department in Atlanta,
d.e i Sunday. His enjoyment of the
chief’s reck.ess diiving in was one of the
features of a tire alarm Atlanta.
! Governor Gordon has ordered the sus
pension o’ the col ection ot taxes m Rich
mond city^’f coua; v until the Legislature Ri.-Hmond meets,
j The Augusta and
: coun y hm sustained such an immense
in-s from\“»e 5h rc««ut Roods that the
G ,T r ]" ,r *!!* e l v b8 nW, w,U,drj, . i s , of "‘ w." for 1 '
this year.
Judge Milo Olin, a white-haired and
aged justice Jacksonvibe, of thc^peace in Augusia,
leit for having volunteered
h s services as a nurse for yellow fever
patients. He is &e the Augusta
Exchange. He has b > ®n v ery affi successful
as a yellow fever nurse, has bad
much experience in the epidemics
Memphis, Norfolk, Wilmington, Pensa¬
cola. Savannah and Fernandina.
MISSISSIPPI.
A sreci-d tiain fiom New r Orleans,
holding 500 tl eing refugees from that
city, Vicksburg and other points along
the line of the h mr.sy ille. New Orleans
& Memphis R dlroad arrived at Lake
View on Sun iay, twenty miles south of
Memphis. A special detail of police met
the train, and c aches were provided bv
several lines over w’hich they had
tickets and a transfer was made, and
e tch c ach was locked and the passen¬
gers guarded through Memphis and sent
on to their desunati n.
NORTH CAROLINA.
The Acme Manufacturing Company, ot
Wilmington, at the earnest solicitation
of the farmers of that and other states,
have decided to commence the manufac¬
ture machinery of cotton having bagging immediately,
new been purchased
for th s object. The pine fibre bagging
has been te-ted by fire and compress, and
testimonials of its excellence received
from the exchanges and compress. The
insurance companies announce they will
take fire risks on it.
- south Carolina.
Maj. Eliphas C. Smith, a well-known
farmer, of Spartanburg county, died at
his home, Rockford, near Glenn Spiings.
He was descended from an historic f am -
ily. His great-grandf.ith r was one of
theorigmali-ettlcrsoftheoldlroncoun
ty and shared ia the perils and privations
of the pioneers.
Alfred Flynn, a notorious negro con¬
yjet, was capture! by the Charleston po
j; ce suburbs, and was at once sent
to the Lazaretto, where he will be de
tamed for fourteen day's and then proba
blv accommodate 1 with quarters in the
j a fi. Upon being arrested Flvnn was
identified as an old convict who had
served out several sentences in the peni
tentiary. He hails from one of the camps
of refuge near Jacksonville, and claims
to have been watching the inmates. A
large sum of money was found on his
person, and letters showing that he had
remitted several hundred dollars to per¬
sons who are unknown to the police.
Dr. Nipson, the health detective, recog
says that Flynn was put off the train
the Junc f 10 n and gradually worked h^s
way before to he Charleston, when he was capturqd i
entered the citv.
L - » A - X ^-^.*3 L L# *
A fine* of $1,000 w ill le imposed 4n
anv pe so 1 wbo violates the quarantine
regulat oas of Chattano -ga.
1) ige 1 he I erand O. O. F. encampment and Ten^ graJd
of the smte of ines
s c, will meet at Cha tanoogn in an rflual
s ssion uct tber 15, 16 and 17.
■ hree men escaj cd from the s-ate
prison .u-NnsUvil.e—G. IV. Woodward,
from M nr e cou tv, in for malicious
-I 10 ti g; . 3L E nnor, of Shelbyf m
f r two c nvictions of larceny, and
house Geoige brea Loudon, of They Davidson, in |for
mg. r ut a hfole
through the roof, and doubling a large
c >rd live times, tied one end around the
ch rnnev ; nd went down it to the
ground, fifty feet below.
Woolley’s
Dr.
Sse vx-lxav a.X^-rsiiian Says ;
It .. affords W*aiey, pleasure C.a„ that 30 Inv 1S88.
me to say igo
course to. do« Uw sLl "
disease of .ho kidney, than all other rom
edics sdver tsed so eiteimvelv for the cure
of that trouble. It is that combination of
vegetable tomes, nervines and alteratives
with iron, that acts upon the secretions ad
mirably, while it increases appetite, im- ■
P r ° Tes digestion, quiets irritated nerves |
f.?,, p ur 1 e 8 the blood, and henee it is
^ In S . ft t{ien , , A ' - ‘V sweetly over *1 J the menopause, J ^
i^es” Vours 5 ''w" Win success'"‘i
remain 7 truh- 3 _* W BClotjdMD- *
lp 4 , , , r „ n 0,t .. ‘
izen xestifies,
Atlanta. Ga.. October 3,1887.
I take pleasure in testifying jo the great
benefit 1 have derived from the use of your
Invigorine. Alter suffering for several
months from general debility, and using
?TnvSiJ’wvJS: ! U * e u ^ LU °“ t e 01 ^ 1' ^\ nne i" ‘ u< 1
tilth WawVo , * Yours uSuam. 1 “* ,
YV«. M. E.
It Gives Strength and Energy.
Ennis, Texas, March 22, 1SS7.
One of my neighbors whishes me to order
one half dozen bottles of your Invigorine,
fur which I send 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 w r ell,
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.
Jt affords me pleasure to say that the In¬
vigorine, used by myself and wife, has had
a happy effect in building up our health,
restoring appetite, establishing healthy
digestion, disagreeable and giving cheerful spirits with¬
out any reaction. It acted as
an alterative and tonic, clearing the skin
and regulating the liver, bowels and kid¬
neys. I am in better health now than in
ten years. AV. P. Reynolds.
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Main.
QNVDGORINEs: 3i
Dyspepsia, and at! Languid or Oebihtated Conditions of the System ; Loss of Nerve Power, from whatever cause, so usual with
Lawyers. Preachers and Writers; and Feebleness from Old Age. In Stages * ""
lates and quiets. PRICE $1.00 for Full Pint Bottle. Sold by Druggists. B. M. WOOLLEY & CO., I, CA. *
I n Bed Nine Weeks-One Bottle Used
and She is Up.
Carroll’s Prairie, Texas, August 6 , 18S6.
5ne tAT* wieks. TA S -iA )n“ tl Z-nii
bed ,nd vour s orine U
the first to restore her: so scad sis bottles
for the 55 I am satisfied Inyigorino will
cure her from the improvement of using ‘
only one tott j ei Yours,
Bks McBride.
Seventy Yeats Old,and Greatly Strength
ened
YancyvUle, N. C., November 1,1886
depressed, , F ° r m ? n * Y Deing ^ ea ” old ,l hav and 5 b / feeble-now c ^ very mu °4 f 3
years old. I was unable to go about much
Z a„'v,h?„ •
' nTattomi . '"STa^now T .treM.h“hJ?^ ^ ,
to
Yours etc.
B. LOYYNES.
In Setter EEealtli. tlxa-n. for
"STears.
Atlanta, Ga., December 9, 1886,
I have used, with astonishing results, sev
eral bottles of your Invigorine. \\ hen I
began its use I was suffering so greatly
from debility and nervous prostration health that
I entertained serious fears that my
was permanently impaired, but I am thank
ful to say that through the instrumentality
of the health-restoring properties of Invig
orine, 1 am now’ feeling much better than
at any time during the past four or live
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, Miss., July 9th, 1887.
Messrs. B. M. Woolley & 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 11 s she is feeling much better
than at any time in a number of years.
We write to ask on what terms we can
secure the exclusive agency for Invigorine,
as w ? e desire to have exclusive sale of it at
this place if possible. Yours truly,
D. K. McInnis & Co.
W. H. SPENCE,
AT COLE’S WAREHOUSE
Corner Hill and Taylor Streets,
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BLOOD POISON REMOVED.
XTEerrxe 'X’estirricrr^T- from.
Oxio ""STcvl ^L.1X ZE'^no’yxT'.
ti
mTTiS aveoLsbe wiSckJJ‘bv deliJX, andforEAr.i bl.«
For was
years she has been in feeble health, not able
to walk and almost blind. A number of
remedies were tried, but with little ettect
After using the Invigorine she is fast re
gaining her wonted strength; can walk a
mile and a half to church without fatiguing
her, and her eyesight is growing better ev
cry day. Invigorine has caused
The every mom
her of my household to rejoice in the bene
myself bt c 0 ! 1 i°. rm several on m J eases. ''l Icaneonseien- i lV ° tne( i U
in
tiouslv eay tintj it has strengthened ng|
tZ{ ' ' ^
y \V. G. AY HI DRY.
mw. B ---IrLciigres- ___
Enfield, N. C., January 28, 1888.
I have never had anything to do mo so
much good for indigestion ns Invigorine,
and find it almost immediate relief for all
the attendant pains. 1 never want to ho
without it. MRS. A. 11. HUNTER.
HDcm-e IvHore Creed. tlaan.ZL.rL 3 r
iH.em 0 ca. 3 r.
This is to certify that Invigorine has
done more good than all other remedies
used. Trouble, general debility. ROBERTSON,
MRS. E. A.
Enfield, N. C.
3STo 3X/£ore Clxills and. Grood
-ZL-ppetite.
Atlanta, Ga., August 16, 1886.
Unsolicited by you, I feel it my duty to
testify to you the benefit 1 have derived
fr< m tho use ot 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 Atlanta eight years, in Texas,
and when I came to in February
last, was hardly aide to walk about Rut
it is different now. Invigorine has, it
seems, put new life in me—no chilis, 1
good appetite, 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. M. BROSIUS.