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O
THE MONROE ADVERTISER.
FORSYTH, GEORGIA.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OP MONROE COUNT!.
BY McGLNTY & CABANISa.
There arc a million more women than
men in " vrrnany.
The r k Tin e 3*
the fa mor -0 A nva at *y. > 1 , -
0U0, 000 .
The bad driving of the Paris cabmen
lias impel lei the “Syrulicat d i Sport
Francais” to offer a prize for competition
in driving.
_
More than $530,000,000 worth of min
eral products nmo from the mines of
this nation la< year, according to the
report just issued.
Experiments in raising tobacco ir«
South Australia have been highly s>u
cessful, and the crop wilt hereafter ic
ccive much attention.
About 500,000 persons hold Govern¬
merit tobacco lire ed. Fully 5)0,000
in addition find employment in racing,
handling and manufacturing it.
Dr. Robert Morris, who recently died
at La Grange, Ky., was one of the two
poet laureates which Freemasonry has
lul l in all its history. Robert Burns
was t he first.
The late Paris census shows six thou
b;iih1 nine hundred and fifteen Aineri
cans, fourteen thousand seven hundred
and one English, and thirty-five tlioi
Bund .‘even hundred and eight Germans,
The statistics of the Board of Charity
of tlie Stale of Illinois, show that the
cost, ol supporting each pauper in the
Btate to be sixty-six and three-tenth
cents per day, twenty-six cents more
than the laborer gets on an average.
The California Florist offered a gold
medal to the person who should select
the most appropriate national flower.
Thirty-five answers were sent in, and
the judges decided that the sunflower's
partisans had made out tho bost case.
This country imports cocoons and
reeled silk, the ravi material of iriimu
farmed oilk, tu tho amount 0/ $J0,0 0,
000 annually, nil of which, according to
the American, Vul/i ator, might lie pro¬
duced in such States as Florida, Geor¬
gia and Alabama.
According to London Tru'h, the
mother of Germany’s new Empress
would have married in 1852 the Em¬
peror Napoleon III. but for the opposi¬
tion <>f Queen Victoria and tho Prince
Consort, to whom as Princess of Ilohon
loho-Lungcnburg, she was closely re¬
lated.
An estate situate l in the bus ness por¬
tion of the village of Port Chester, in
the township of Rye, N.. Y., valuci’ at
$ 15,000,00 ‘, and which was leased for
100 years, is about to invert to the heirs
of its original owners, through the dis¬
covery of u re oid Which has just come
to light.
The decline in value of hill town
farms in Massachusetts is put by tho
t hicago 7 i»u s at fifty per cent, dui ng
the last ten years. A well improved farm
near ( .rcciF'cld, valued at $7000, brought
recently QffOO at a forced sale Tho
shrinkage in several town values lias
been from $: 00,000 to $800,000.
Dno of the most remarkable moehini
cal changes of the day, declares the
Scienti t cri an, is the setting aside
of steel and the readoption of iron for
some of the most important parts of lo.
comotives o:i many railroad It is only
comparatively a few years since the
change was made, on mo t roads, from
iron to steel.
In tho approaching evolutions of tl a
French fleet olT Toulon, captive balloon i
are to bo employed—a new idea in
naval man , uvres. The apparatus s to
be supplied from the armv aerostatic
school at Chalais-Meuiion, and will bo
rent to scion board a pontoon, which
will 1 e towed by one of the vessels of
the squadron, and from it the ascents
will be made.
In 1869 there were i:i Moscow, Rus
but five common schools, withanatte.
mice of only 250. Ten years later the
schools e ,, , , . had , multiplied to eighty , and , tne .
pupils to more than -40 )\ Since then
tlie numbers have doubled. In 8t.
Petersburg the:c were in 1876 oulv s"x
teen common schools, with 800 pupils.
These numbers hive since multiplied
more than fifteenfold.
____
Tho r ! ... hi adelphn , . Dru n 0,1 ... and , Paint „ .
’,
Reporter attributes tho decline in tho
price A of quinine * largely to tho fact that
the trees planted „ , some thirty ,
years ago
, f, he ,. Lnglis.i ... and , ,, II ,, ua id V Govern- .
ments in India, Java, Ceylon, and else
where, are beginning to markedly affect
the market. The export of cultivated
i.«rir bark from these a■> places i is • now enormous
and yearly increasing.
The Railway Age comments on the
incomp ehensible fear of invasion felt
by tho English. Not only are they
nervous at any mention of tunneling
or bridging thc channel between them
and France,but the Hou^e of C ommons
has beeu s riously considering the ques¬
tion of d stroying the 600 yards of the
experimental tunnel which was bored
five or six years J a-o! °
A well known London firm of ref regiment
contractors recently advertised for 4,(AX' ad¬
ditional waiters, and 10,000 whole applications of tho candi¬ were
received in response, the
date. claiming to have had experience.
FORSYTH, GA., TUESDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1888.—EIGHT PAGES
SOUTHERN STRAYS
A. CONDENSATION OF HAPPEN¬
INGS STRUNG TOGETHER.
MOVEMENTS OF ALLIANCE MF.V—RAIL¬
ROAD CASUALTIES—THE COTTON CROP
—FLOODS—ACCIDENTS—CROP RETURNS.
ALABAMA.
Twelve horses, in the livery stable of
Folmer & Son-, in Troy, were poisoned
by some unknown person and at last ac¬
count three of them had died. There is
no clue to the perpetrator of the act, and
no reason ran be imagined why it
should have been committed.
FT.On.IDA.
Col. Daniel, the leading man of Jack¬
sonville, died from the fever.
On Tuesday, there was not a single
death from yellow fever in Jacksonville.
A. M. Rebstan’s saloon, in Jackson¬
ville, was burned down on Monday. A
tinsmith named Brown was suffocated
to death.
Horace Stalbert, of Kissimmee, a negro
policeman, who was shot on Sunday,
died on Monday. IIo said that Mack
Bowen, a negro, shot him. Bowen has
been arrested.
A. I*. Fries & Co., of Jacksonville,
tendered the employes of tlicit three
stores a reception. The gentlemen, with
one exception, have all had the fever.
Refreshments were served, and singing
and dancing were indulged in.
Tlio saloon of A. M. Rebston, on
Newman street, near the Bay, in Jack¬
sonville, was gutted by fire on Tuesday.
A man named Brown, a tinner, was
smothered in his room over the saloon,
and died on the sidewalk when removed.
The report for the week shows that
nearly 15,000 people lnve been fed by
the Relief Committee in Jacksonville, at
a cost, including delicacies to the sick
and convalescents and other expenses, of
over $30,000. The total disbursements
of the Citizens’ Relief Association for the
week are about $47,500, but this in¬
cludes some large hills for supplies that
will be available hereafter.
ijeorgia.
A committee of GO citizens, in secret
session at Atlanta, nominated Jolm T.
Glenn, the well known lawyer, for
mayor.
Macon citizens have subscribed $3,000
towards the expense of holding a State
Fair, and it will be held November
5-10.
William Percy of MBs, was arrested by
two Atlanta detectives for alleged mur¬
der. and attempted to shoot them with a
pistol but was overpowered.
day The with Rome Exposition opened on Mon¬
great eclat. The massiveness
and variety of the mineral exhibit is
striking, is but tlie in st beautiful feature
the display of marble.
The steamer Tronteeska, with 400
bales of cotton, was burued at the mouth
of Flint River. No lives were lost. Loss
$35,000, partially insured. The crew
were picked up by the steamer Naaid.
Under the able management of Judge
Win, Lowndes Calhoun, the president of
the Fulton County Confederate Veter¬
ans of Atlanta, the association is going
ahead rapidly. Thirty new members
were added on Monday night.
One day’s doings in Atlanta: Marion
Cunningham William was stabbed to death by
Merriwether, in Jack Ryan’s
billiard hall, on Ivy street—all negroes;
a grocer named Abney, who came from
Florida a month ago, was shot by negro
burglars; Elijah llardeman, a negro,
attempted to kill a negro man and
woman by shooting them, claiming they
insulted him.
At Bob King’s saw mill, four miles
cast of Calhoun, Mr. King was standing
over the saw, which was running, en¬
deavoring to tighten some bolts with a
wrench; his foot slipped, he' lost Ills bal¬
ance, and fell upon the saw. The power¬
ful steel teeth horribly mangled his arm,
and striking his head, crushed the skull.
The teeth so deeply penetrated his body
that the machinery came to a complete
standstill. The workmen carried him
into a shanty near by, where lie shortly
expired.
KINTFCHY.
The Southern Woolen Manufacturing
Company, M. A. Curley, president, and
II. S. Gilmore, secretary, of Louisville,
has assigned. Liabilities, $50,000;
assets, about equal.
MISSISSIPPI.
All shotgun quarantines in Mississippi
have been w ithdrawn on the railroads
throughout the state, and Louisiana has
resumed business. The weather contin¬
ues clear and cool.
MISSOl'R I.
A wreck occurred on the St. Louis,
Iron Mountain and Southern Railway
bridge, wlreh crosses the St. Francis
river one mile north of Frederickton.
For several weeks a bridge constructing
firm has been engaged in repairing the
wooden bridge which spanned this
stream with an iron structure, and Sun¬
day would have witnessed its cornple
tion. A freight train was sent over the
bridge, and it gave away under the
strain. Where the blame lies is not
known. The wreck is a very costly
me.
TENNESSEE.
The Willard hotel, ’ at Chattanooga, ,
was cli)Scd ou Mondav "tuist bv the creditors,
who held a deed of on the furoi
ture. Eight months ago Grant & Bar
her, of Columbus, O., took charge of
the house, and Mr. Giant has left for his
Ohio home.
A south-bound freight train on the
Cincinnati Southern road ran over a cow
nearSheffield, and ditched the , loeomo
motive and ten cars. A brakeman was ■
instantly k lied, Engineer Martin Quig- j
1; ?- v l :id y hurt that he will die, and
the fireman seriously injured.
Audv . , Bald „ ,. was . before , Mayor ..___, Nicklin, ..
Chattanooga, on a charge of ciiculat
ing a malici us report. Andy had gone
to a saloon, and in the course of eonver
swdou, had stated that he l ad just ar
rived in the c tv from Dtcitur, Ala.'
Thc mavor |10 and costs for
kj s f uu /
Robert Harris, prominent .
a y ’ un F j
n , an in , was was killed killed Tuesday Puesday on on the standard j
gauge railroad running up Lookout .
Mountain at ( hattanooga. As the train
was coming down the mountain he was
struck bv a brake on one of the cars and
knocked off on the track and several
wheels passed over his body. j
The 11 tli regiment of Ohio decided to
hold their next reunion in Chattanooga,
in September. 1889. This regiment be
longed to the Fourteenth army corps,
and at a meeting of the survivors of that
__
corps, held at Columbus, Ohio, during
the Grand Army encampment, it was de
cided that the entire corps should hold
its i equiou in Chattanooga next Septem
her,
WASHINGTON NEWS. i
Doings of Congress and the United
States Officials.
The CONd It ESHtOXAt.
resolution offered by Senator Call
on the 2?th September, instructing the
committee on epidemic diseases to con¬
sider and report before the adjournment
of this session of Congress, additional
legislation to prevent the importation of
contagious foreign or infectious diseases from
countries on the coast and boun¬
daries of the United States, was taken up
in the Senate and Mr. Call pretended to
speak upon it. Mr. Pasco offered an
amendment directing the committee to
inquire further into the introduction of
yellow fever Into Florida and other
stub s of during the present year. In
course his remarks, Mr, Call read a
htter from Dr. Read suggesting spirits of
ammonia as a method of cure and pre¬
vention and recommending that some ac¬
tion be taken to test that method. After
a discussion by Messrs. Call,Blair, Pasco,
tion Chandler, Berry and Morgan, the resolu¬
and amendment were referred to
the committee on epidemic diseases.....
On motion of Mr. Forney of Alabama, a
bill was passed in the House, authoriz¬
ing the construction of a bridge across
the Coosa river, Ala. Mr. Bums of Ma¬
ryland, presented the conference report
upon the joint resolution in aid of yel¬
low fever sufferers. As agreed in the
conference the resolution appropriates
$100,000 to be expended under direction
of the President, whenever in his opinion
such expenditure will tend to the eradi¬
cation of epidemics of yellow fever now
existing in the United States or to pre¬
vent its spread from state to state.
In the Senate on Monday, among the
communications presented, was one from
the Italian minister at Washington ac¬
knowledging, of the with gratitude preamble on behalf and
people of Italy, the
resolution of the Senate accepting the
bust of Garibaldi presented by Italians of
Washington. Among the bills reported
from the committees and placed on the
calendar, were the following: House
bill, with amendments, to forfeit certain
lands granted to the Northern Pacific
Railroad company. The House bill to
construct a road to the national cemetery
at Florence, S. 0. The President’s Mes-.
sage to Congress, announcing his ap¬
proval of the Chinese exclu-iou bill and
submitting ‘ some suggestions and rec¬
ommendations” on the subject, was laid
before the Senate and read at length.
On motion of Mr. Call, the Senate bill
gtantifig the right of way through the
naval and military reservations near Pen¬
sacola, Fla., to the Pensacola & Memphis
Railroad Company, was taken from the
calendar and passed... .In the absence of
the speaker, Mr. McCreary, of Kentucky,
occupied the chair as speaker pro tern.
The following bills were introduced and
referred: By Mr. Dougherty, of Flori¬
da, to prevent the introduction of con¬
tagious diseases from one state to another;
also to establish a scientific bureau in
Jacksonville, Fla., to gather facts in re¬
lation to yeilow fever, its origin
and spread, and the best means
of suppressing and preventing it.
By Mr. Wheeler, of Alabama, proposing
a constitutional amendment providing
that one-third of the members of each
house of Congress shall constitute a quo¬
rum. By Mr. Phelan, of Tenn,, provid
ing for the appointment of a board of yel¬
low fever commissioners to investigate
the sani ary condition of fever-infected
places, and t > provide for the co-opera
tion ol' Spain and Mexico.
COfRSIl’.
Everett Hayden, of the Navy Hydro¬
graphic Office, has been detailed to go
to the West Indies to study hurricanes.
A dispatch received by Dr. Hamilton,
surgeon-general of the marine hospital
seivlce, says the*re was one new case of
yellow fever at Calahan, Fia., Sunday.
The State Department has been in
foimed by telegraph, “amity, by Minister Buck,
that the treaty of commerce and
navigation” between the United States
and Peru, has been ratified by the latter.
The report of the Utah commission
signed by G. L. Godfrey, A. B. Wil¬
liams and Arthur L. Thomas, was re¬
ceived by the Secretary of the Interior.
The recommendation of the last annual
report is renewed that Utah should not
be admitted to the Union.
Dr. Hamilton has suggested by tele¬
graph, that some of the money contrib
u ed for the beuefit of the yellow fever
sufferers in Jacksonville, be used in pay¬
ing the expenses of poor persons who
have been detained in quarantine for ten
days and who have not money enough to
continue their journey.
As the investigation of the construc¬
tion of the new aqueduct tunnel pro¬
gresses, more flagrant and criminal ap¬
pears to be the fraud. A large number
of holes have been drilled through the
walls of the brick arch in mauy sections
of the tunnel and at but few points was
the work found to have been done in
any particular according to the contract.
The Senate confirmed the nomination
of John B. Baird, of Georgia, to be reg¬
ister of the land office at Seattle, W. T.
Air. Baird is now superintendent of the
dead letter office, and he expects to re
s : gn his present position and leave for
his new post soon. Mr. Baird is from
Atlanta, Ga., where he practiced adju- law
some years. He was at one time
tant-general of Georgia.
AYhat was at first thought to be a case
of yellow fever, and which may yet de
vedop into the dread disease, was found
in Washington at the Baltimore & Ohio
depot. A train which arrived there from
Baltimore the other morning, brought
with it a man about thirty years of age,
who was so ill that he could hardly leave
the car. The sick man wa3 very poorly
dressed and was destitute of money.
His namej he said> was James Oswald.
Qe admitted t h at he had come from
j ac Jcsonville.
NARROW ESCAPE,
The artillery parade recently, at which
the Emperor Francis Joseph narrowly
escaped being shot, took place at the
Steinfelt ranges in Vienna. The empe
r, t had oidered that the bugle be
sounded—the signal to cease firimr—in
oider that he might inspect the targtt.
'i he officer in command of the lattery,
] oca ted : 1.000 j' yards away, did not hear
S1 gna an j a3 i t wa s impossible for
^- m tQ _ ee t ^ e em p er0 r as he advanced,
t owing ^ to ___^ a depres-ion 1 _____*_ in * the ground, ' the
hatterv DaUery a^ain a ° fired, Fortunately the
emperor and his suite were out of the
line of fire, and consequently were not
hurt. Orderlies rushed to the battery
ac d prevented any further firing.
___
GOBBLED.
The East Tennessee, Virginia «fc Geor
gia Railr ad will wilt soon piss under
the management of the Richmond A
Danville system.
THE WORLD OYER.
INTERESTING ITEMS BOILED
DOWN IK READABLE STYLE.
THE FIELD OF LABOR—SEETHING CAUL¬
DRON OF EUROPEAN INTRIGUE—FIRES,
suicides, etc.—noted people dead. '
The oppression of the Jews by the
Russi a officials lias been renewed.
The Russian government is about to
take steps to restrict tire Chinese influx
■ uto Siberia.
The French minister of war is going to
reduce the army estimates by 60,0 ^0,000 ,
rases. !
°‘ ^\ ^ 1 ^ sub- s
Ucd aid yellow fetei _
,cn $o,0G0 to suiur
ers.
The German harvest in cereals and
potatoes has been a failure. The price
of bread is rising.
Henry Fitch, Democratic candidate
for state senator of the Oxford district
in New Hampshire, was thrown from his
wagon and his neck was broken.
At Toledo, Ohio, the Armeda Flour
Millsffaught fire from friction in the
rollers, and the structure was entirely
destroyed. Entire loss $100,000.
The Traders’ Bank of Chicago, Ill.,
failed on Tuesday. Judge Shepard ap¬
pointed Hugh McChesney, receiver of
the a-sets of the bank. The liabilities
are nearly $1,000,000.
The President’s action in regard to the
Chinese bill was received with great sat¬
isfaction in San Francisco, Cal. Five
thou-and Chinese are now on the ocean,
and will have to return.
The Conway Manufacturing Company’s
extensive furniture factory on the We
nominee river, in Wisconsin, was do¬
st! oyed by fire the third time in the last
half dozen years. Loss $125,000.
The|mpre-sof Austria explains that
although she admires Heine’s poetry, she
withdraws her gift to the Heine monu¬
ment fund at the request of the emperor
in consequence of Heine’s insults to the
Holunzollerns.
A dispatch from lshpeming, Michigan,
says: ‘-A lie ivy snow has been falling
lor the pa-t six hours. Reports from a
number of points in the upper penin ula
show that the storm is general. This
is Tie first snow of the season.”
Williams, Black & Co., one of the best
known business houses in New Y r ork,
holding a membership in the produce,
rotton, coffee, and until recently the
me al exchanges, have failed, The fail
tir • is connected with the Chicago wheat
squeeze.
Jn->tiee Greenland,of the state supreme
court of Pennsylvania, has decided that
Jacob Reese must disp >se of his basic
procesaJfco Jpaims the Bessemer Steel Company.
Reese that he loses $50,000,000 by
the decision.
At a conference of miners held at Man¬
chester, England, at which 250,000 min
eis were represented, it was decided to
strike on October 29, unless the demand
for an advance of 10 per cent in wages
was acceded to. It was also decided nut
to accept the advance unless it was made
general.
Many retail bread dealers in Chicago,
III., have raised the price one cent per
loaf owing to continued advance in wheat
and the consequent increase in the
price of flour. The probabilities are that
the price will be put if up the another price notch,
and the u{Wll impression -will be
.forced over the country.
The widow and children of Gen. Sher¬
idan, in company with Col. Sheridan
and wife, left Nonquitt, Mass., on Sun¬
day, for Washington, chapter D. C. The re¬
vised proofs of the last and index
of Gen. Sheridan’s memoirs were re
ceived by Col. Sheridan from the pub
li-liers the day before.
The Pope celebrated high mass for the
dead in St. Peters on Sunday to solem¬
nize the close of his jubilee. The con¬
gregation numbered 20,000 persons. Ad¬
mittance was by ticket. IIis holiness
was given an enthusiastic reception, and
was greeted with prolonged cries of
“viva.’’ lie appeared to be deepl)
moved.
The Norwegian brig Hurdi worked
her way into the Delaware Capes in a
help'ess condition, part of the crew hav¬
ing died of yellow fever and nearly all
these living unable to get out of their
bunks, being delirious. The Hurdi is
bound from Guayamus, Cuba, for Bos¬
ton with bag sugar, and was spoken by
by tb,e pilot boat Edmunds.
The effort to induce the Indians to
sign the bill presented by Judge Wright
and Capt Pratt at the Dakota Agency,
has failed; the commissioners will return
home. The decision of the Indians is
briefly that the bill as it stands now
they refuse to accept, but if some changes
can be made they will look upon it more
favorably and recommend it to the In¬
dians.
Advices from Zanzibar says the Ger¬
mans murdered at Kilwa, died while
nobly defending themselves. The Ger¬
man gunboat was present, but was un¬
able to give assistance in face of the
thousands of armed natives lining the
beach. The corpses of the murder
ed Germans were terribly mutilated. The
English gunh at saved the lives of the
Germans at Sinde. The Germans es¬
caped irom Mikindaui half an hour be¬
fore the arrival of the insurgents who
fired volleys at iheir dhow, laden with
thousands of pounds of gunpowder.
GHASTLY SENSATION.
On Sunday morning the whole cyy of
London, England, was again start.ed by
the news that mote muruers wtre added
to the list of mys erious crime- that 1 ave
recently been committed in Whit chapel
At an early hour it was known that two
women were murdered. Tlie two vic
tirns, as in the form r cases, were ui-sc
lute women of the poorer class. T1 e
bodies of th-* unfortunate worn n had
been disembowtleu, their throats cut
and noses severed. The heart and lungs
had been thrown aside, and the emraiis
twisted iDto a gaping worn d around the
neck. The inc s.ous showed rougti dex
terity. The work of dissect on w s done
with the utmost haste. In consequence
of the refusal of Home Secre ary ..ath
ews to offer a reward f r the arres of
the murderer, the people of E st End
petitioned Queen Victoria herself to au¬
thorize the offering of a reward.
WESTERN PLAGUE.
There are 450 cases of typhoid epidemic fever
in Dnluih, Minn., and the
seems to be gr wing. At St. Luke's
hospital there a:e 38 cases, mauy of them
serines, including one of the nurses, and
at St. Mary’s there are about 38, of which
some are serious; while numbers of iso
lated cases are thickly scattered around
the city. A number of deaths have oc*
curred.
s
Woolley
Dr.
See-wixat a, :F:fa.3rsicia.:n. Stairs
It affords Wadley, Ga., January that 30, Invigo¬ 1888.
rine is the me pleasure product to of say the
finest age to re
establish the prostrate fabric. It tones up
the nervous system better, makes the stead¬
iest nerves, strongest muscles and richest
blood of any remedy I have ever bad 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, nervines Rind alteratives
with iron, that acts upon the secretions ad¬
mirably, while it increases appetite, im¬
proves digestion, quiets irritated nerves
and puriSes the blood, and hence it is
justly held in high esteem by the ladies for
tiding that them sweetly over the menopause,
diseases. change in life that simulates so many I
remain Wishing you B. great Cloud, success, M. D
yours truly, W.
Prominent and Favorably Known Cit¬
izen Testifies.
Atlanta, Ga., October 8, 1887.
I take pleasure in testifying to the great
benefit 1 have derived from the use of your
months Invigorine. After suffering for several
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. Y'ours truly,
Wm, Waring Habersham, M. E.
It Gives Strength and Energy.
Ennis, Texas, March 22, 1887.
One of my neighbors whishes me to order
one half dozen bottles of your Invigorine,
for wnichl 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. 1 took your Invigorine
and it gave me strength. 1 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, used by myself and wife, has had
a restoring happy effect appetite, in building establishing up our healthy health,
digestion, and giving cheerful spirits with¬
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ten years. AV. P. Reynolds.
IS 8
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Mention this paper.
trade MAHir ^ registered*
HOT^ (PRUC
_
1523 .A. re La Street. Hiailad'a, PflU
A WELL-TRIED TREATMENT
ror cnxsrnrTiox, arthyu, bronchitis, dyspepsia, KIIEC
lATAItHH. HAY 1 EVER, HEADACHE, DEBILITY,
MATISM, SEIRALUIA and all chronic acd Kervoua Dl»or
ders.
“C'OMrorND OXYGEN ” being taken Into the ,T«tpm, th*
Erain, Spinal Marrow, and the Nerve-Ganglia— 44 Nervon*
Centre*”—are nourished and made more artive. Thus the
Fountainhead of all activity, both mental and physical, th« la
restored to a vtato of Integrity, ami the nervous system,
organ*, anti the inn*-cle* ail act more kindly and efficiently.
The Compound Ovyiren Treatment *’ Ur*. Starkey Sc I'alen,
No. lo2'J Ar* h Street,T'hiladeIphia r hav® been mint£ for the
last seventeen years is a krienti if adjustment of the ele menu
of Oxygen and Nit rogen magnetized., and the pound the world, is so
eonden-ed and made portable that it is se“t all over
I)n* I>r*>. STARKEY Sc r.4 1ALEN have the libe rtr to refer to the
following-named Xlow well-known eM- person* wh> o have tried their th* J
Treatment: HON. WILLIAM I>. KELLEY, Member of Con* Co
rre«s Philadelphia. REV. VICTOR L. CONRAD, Editor Lu¬
theran Observer, Philadelphia. RF.V. CHARLES W. CUSH¬
ING, n. !>., Rochester, N. Y. HON. WILLIAM PENN N IXON,
Editor Inter-Oeean, Chicago, HI# REV, A. W. MOORE, Editor
The Centenary, Lancaster, S. 1. W . H. >H)RTlIIN(JTOS, Ed¬
itor New South, liirmtn^ham, Ala. JUDGE II. P. VROOMAS*
Quenetuo, Kan. JUDGE R# 8. \00K1IEES, New York City.
MR. E. C. KNIGHT, Philadelphia. W. MU. FRANK SIDDALL,
Merchant, Philadelphia. HON. W. SCHUYLER, Easton,
Pa., k thou-and* f »f other* in evprr part of the United State*.
JSM ‘•COMPOUND OXYGEN—It* Mode of Action and R *uUV*
is the title
by Dr*. >la
format k
of vevera
tion. Head the brochure 1
DBS. STARKEY & PALF.N,
1527 & 1529 Arch Street, Philadelphia, P*.
Tin Just Goins Down to tla Gale"
and 8 ® OLher Popular Ballads, in book form,
size cf Sheet Music. Sent, post-paid, for
O.vzr FGCR CEXTS, Stamps taken.
AMERICAN PUBUSHING CO.
-Hint Ave.. PhUadelphia Pa.
Richly Rewarded
Are those who read this and then aot; thev
will find honorable employment that will
not take them from their homes and fami¬
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Write to us at once for full particular .
Mata.”* ***** Stifi30rj 4 W
PcrtUrA
INVIGORINE For KIDNEYS, NERVES, BLOOD, Diseases AND of ‘
Dyspepsia, and a!! Languid or Debilitated 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 of Puberty and Change of liife Invigorine reau
lates and quiets, PRICE $1.00 for Full Pint Bottle. Sold by Druggists. B. M. WOOLLEY & CO., Manuf'rs, ATLANTA, GA ’
In Bed Nine Weeks—One Bottle Used
and She is Up.
Carroll’s Prairie, Texas, August 6, 1880.
Inclosed find $5 for which pleas® send
me six bottles of your Invigorine. This I
am member ordering for ray mother. If you re¬
I ordered one bottle last month,
ard it did her so much good she lias con¬
cluded six "
to try more. She has been in
bed nine weeks, and your Invigorine is
the first to restore her; so send six bottles
lor the $5. I am satisfied Invigorine will
cure her from the improvement of using
only one bottle. Yours,
Ben McBride.
Seventy Years Old,and Greatly Strength¬
ened.
Yancyville, N. C., November 1,1886.
For many years I have been very much
depressed, being old and feeble—now 73
years old. I was unable to go about much
or to anything. exert myself in any "half way, in fact, unfit
for I used a dozen bottles
of vour Invigorine, and never saw such
isms* beotty '
Yours, etc.
B. LOYYNES.
In. Better Healtli. tlxan fox
"STeers.
Atlanta, Ga., December 9, 18S0.
I have used, with astonishing results, sev¬
eral bottles of your Invigorine. When I
began its use I was suffering so greatly
from debility and nervous prostration that
I entertained serious fears that my health
was permanently impaired, hut I am thank¬
ful to say that through the instrumentality
of the health-restoring properties of Invig¬
orine, I time am now during feeling much better than
at any the past four or five
years, prehensions and am entirely relieved of all ap¬
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 lias accomplished all you claim
for it. The half dozen bottles which you
forwarded to Pensacola, Fla., hv our order
to our friend, has accomplished wonders,
as sho writes us she is feeling much better
than at any time in a number of years.
We write to ask on wlnit terms we can
secure the exclusive agency for Invigorine,
as we 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,
GRIFFIN, GEORGIA,
IS THE ONLY PLACE THAT YOU CAN BUY THE
STUDEBAKER WAGON,
WHITE HICKORY WAGON, COLUMBUS BUGGY
Jackson G. Smith Buggy and Dump Carts.
-ALSO WHIPS AND HARNESS.___
HUNGER’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.
All Pianos large scale, full octaves, genuine ivory keys, all modern improvements,
elegant finish and fully warranted. All Organs in Solid Walnut Cases Elegant Designs,
Pine Finish, Strictly First-clas and Fully Warranted. Special Catalogue of Sheet
Music will be Sent Free to any address. If you want anything in the MuSie Line, send
m your orders and they will be promptly filled.
Ail Sheet Music, Music Books & Small Instruments
3THICTLT CASH.
Davinent^ wdth^M S S ° ld t° n S w ’ ith “ onthl 7. quarterly, semi-annual or yearly
P a y ments . wl thout interest. t Th Ihe scale of uniform prices adopted by this house are the
e X er °® ered on .superb, first class instrument, that are ohoap enough for every
body and S 00 * en<w S h for an ? Wd Y- Address all Communications to
[Ml. L JVLTJ2STGER,
93 Mqfo«Ty Street, MACON, GA.
BLOOD POISON REMOVED.
3E3tom.e Testirrxcrvy- from.
One Tom ^.11 IOno^r.
Atlanta. Ga., 1887 .
Gents—It is with great, pleasure that I
bear testimony to the beneficial results of
the use of Invigorine by my wife. In 1879
my wife was attacked by blood poison.
For weeks she has she been was delirious, feeble and for severai
years in health, not able
to walk and almost blind. A number of
remedies were tried, but with little etleot.
After using the Invigorine sho 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¬
ery The day.
Invigorine has caused every mem¬
ber of my household to rejoice in thejflB>
myself fit conferred in on my wife. 1 have trSrit
several cases. I can conscien¬
tiously say that it has strengthened me
more than any other remedy 1 ever tried.
Truly. W. G. Whtdby,
TlleBostfor
-
Enfield, N. C., January 28, 1888.
I have never had anything to do me so
much good for indigestion as Invigorine,
and find it almost immediate relief lor all
the attendant pains. I never want to ho
without it. MRS. A. II. HUNTER.
IDon.e 2>v£ore G-ood.
IEiem.ed.37-.
This is to certify that Invigorine has
done more good than all other remedies
used. Trouble, general debility.
MRS. E. A. ROBERTSON,
Enfield, N. C.
JSTo ItvJIore Olrills and O-ood.
-Appetite.
Atlanta, Ga., August 16, 1880.
Unsolicited by you, I feel it my duty to
testify to you the benefit I have derived
from the use of your valuable medicine,
Invigorine. I had only taken a, 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 to Atlanta in February
last, was hardly able to walk about Rut
it is different now. Invigorine has, it
seems, put new life in me—no chills, a
good appetite, perspire freely, sleep soundly
—and acts like a charm on my liver and
kidneys, from both of which I have been a
sufferer for seven or eight years, caused by
malarial poison in my system.
J. M. BROSIUS.