Newspaper Page Text
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THE MONROE ADVERTISER,
FORSYTH, GEORGIA.
OPflCIAL ORGAH OF HOHBOE COIRTY.
By Mot LOT Y d CiaASISa.
Tba gathering of buiTalo'bouM has
hanouie a businus Manitoba.
Tliero are projected ir. the •*• (lit ra
®tat»a 7609 min of railroad, and si.r
navo boea m»do on over tijfi
IolLIL
The national debt of France L |5,000,
060,000, the largest in the world. The
fntereit on it calls for $264,000,0 JO a
year, about $15 per capita of the French
population.
The lumbermen have formulated a
trust that, according fo tlie New’ York
JlcraU, threatens serious results to the
Northwest country by denuding it en¬
tirely of its forest growth.
Tobacco culture is being pushed en¬
ergetically in Florida, and an attempt to
Induce Cubans to emigrate there and
fjrow the weed is being made. A com¬
mission, with that object, has visited
Havana.
Tlui peasant girls of South Russia are
flocking into matrimony owing to a
rumor of the Government’s intention to
impress into military serve es a* “sap.
Der»” all unmarried female* between
twenty and thirty.
1 T *
It’s well known that there are nb o
lutely no genuine chamois skins in the
market; but, notwithstanding,, an Kug
lish firm is manufacturing a now- cloth
in imitation of the skins. They will
Le just as goodf ns tile real skins, it
in claimed, and will be sold us imitations.
,1
The oldest woman’s club in the United
fitates is the Women's Physiological
lustituto of Boston. Forty-one years
ngo it was organized with the purpose
of promoting Hie more perfect, health ol
women. There is one surviving charter
member, ft Mrs. Hobbs, and she is
tighty yours old.
According to the Courier Journal\
Kentucky has six couuties-— Harlan,
•Knott, Perry, i/etcher, Bell, and Feslio
»—that havo never had a church within
their borders during the sixty or seventy
years of their existence ns counties.
This fact has been referred to the Homs
Missionary Society.
---a rrra
Kx-Marshnl William IT. T eggett, oi
Princeton, N. J., who was so successful
two years ngo in breeding quails in cap
tivity, has just had a lot of ten hatched
out. of a setting of sixteen eggs. M r.
J.eggett, lust fall, while out hunting;
brought0 male and fcinalo bird burnt
-live that were wounded by stray she La,
Recently t Uj-y- arrived inXcj^ Writ
three large J^witli rice
iffTT We havo always received,
says the American (Jult'.mtor our largest
importations of rice from Patna in India,
and Rangoon, Burmah. Japanese rice
Is the sweetest a id richest in the wo 1 1,
but Its chief exportation heretofore has
been to Great Britain.
A shipment of 150 pounds of metallic,
chemically pure aluminum, the st e\
port of this metal from the United
States, has been made from Newport,
l\y., to London, ling a id. Thepreci >us
metal, which s >ld at fifty cents per
pound, was smelted from Kentucky oro
and clay by a process which is as yet te¬
dious and is kept a secret
T
Tlio Short-horn cows first imported to
the l nited States, and even down to the
middle of the present century, wen*
abundant milkers and great butter
makers. But it has bee a the practice ol
the present getun-ation to develop the
beef making tendency until the milking
qualities of American rhoct-hor s have
been nearly bred out. and they are
‘scarcely regarded as a dairy breed in this
country._
The preparation of the tickets for the
Panama (’anal lottery hi Laris was an
affair of vast proportion. It took sixty
girls eighteen days of ha d work to fold
and prepare the 2,000,oJ0 t elects for G13
great glass wheel into which they were
thrown to be mixed up. The shape of
the tickets bearing the numbers were
most ingenious, as it could be‘rolled up
and fastened by itself. It is reported
that the numbers drawing the large
pri. es were not sold.
The French Min 'ter of War seems to
revel in issuing carious orders just now,
observes the New York Sun. The latest
a that no French officer in uniform shall
f t h's cap to anybody, man or woman.
* military sihuo with the hand is hence
‘.orth to be the only greeting allowed.
^OU will easily imagine the indignation
caused >y this order among the politest
of j i to Frenchmen who hitherto have
spe... a g 1 deal of their time taking off
caps and putting them on again.
w»
The resistance to the Channel tunnel
scheme being by no means exhausted, it
is proposed to tacilitate communication
on a smaller scale between England and
the Continent. The idea is to suspend
two tubes of about a yard each in diarn
cter, by means of steel cables across the
channel forty yards abov» the level of
the sea. .Tue steel cables will bo fixed
to pillars St distances of about 80s) yards,
and in each tube a little railway will
run,* with cars capable of carrying 450
po in is in weight. No parcel of greater
weight than this will be taken, and the
cost is’ estimated at $5,000,000. It is
also proposed to run telegraph aal tele
Ullooc wire* tbrotigh $fae§e tubttv>
THE MONROE ADVERTISE! - - : FORSYTH. RA., TUESDAY. OCTOBER •2:3, 1838.—EIGHT PAGES.
SOlTHFJtN STRAYS.
i
A COK DENS/. TION OF-HAPPEN¬
INGS STiUJlG TOGETHER,
r
MOVrJKNT of Air.iA.NfE ju s—n«i.
UOAO ( Ae O’A EX IE.-. - TUE CO'I TON' r ifr*r
FLOODS ACCIDENT-s— CROP RETDKN'A,
\l AH \ *1 V
died Pol yoifow <» AV Hidgc, of Decatbr,
of fever on Afnr: IV,
M. U. AiHcrin f Alontgomer
lfolc. de dealer in . >
v to'nu o and cigar
a ade a : nsaigun > nt,, Mr. meriu
ure wast imc< slu ciions, owing
to the y< How scare- r North Ala
twfmi.
Two thousand miners;Tempi red bv
th.c Cah-flm Coal Alining com pan v. at
lilot-fon, we i o nt on a strike .-mail t a
reduefou. Ah cj Cuiuba Coin, u V has
been flic imviii.r 5o • ts i tot f, • d,i n ; n<r
since slidimr scale was -idoi. ed bv
the mines in thU J distri,t last Summua
T hevauO unto a redu -Lion of five rent
per t< the miners stopped work.
r'i u . !• m .Trruit , ... |. , ;‘ n " ... :l " ,!l , r u -;f . r
: • 1 J ''or- Zl Z1J Z , ; Bl1 "
nil •“ ^ LnV nViri ,’rr ' tl „, T own f U stalls ! .V nJ,1 , by e f’ a
Ins skull being crushed In in - on the right -
sjde. PhH o keeps a boarding house, and
drunk. at inght Place \Vcre name to the house very
met him at the head of
the stairs and .ordered lum a wav. AY are
began rur-mg and refused After some
words, Plate pushed lum down the stairs.
I I,OKI DA.
ITi if ton postofiioe has been re*estab
lishe ].
The sentiment in Florida is strongly in
favor of the policy of nonintercourse with
Cuba from Alay to November by an iron¬
clad quarantine. question It will be the most
prominent in the state before
the Winter travel between the Gulf ports
and I lavana sets in.
UKOllOtA.
I lie Macon Board of Health Ins raised
the quarantine against the infected dis
t ricts.
John IV. Nevitt, of Athens, 73 year:
old and a fornjtr resident of Bavaunah
•died at Athens.
Bill Johnson, a sort of tramp negro
employed by C. O. Newman, mar Coch
tan, was lynched by about 500 citizeus on
S : in-day.
Five prisoners attempted to escape
from the city prison in Atlanta on Sun¬
day, and were only discovered by acei
i < •nt. They bad easily enlarged a hole
in the planking, which lmd been started
by a rat.
boh J. G. Hi-cr, of Rome, bas been
granted a pension as a Alexican veteran.
II" was surgeon in tlie 2d Kentucky in¬
fantry in the Mexican War, and colli¬
ma ded the Cherokee troops during the
I st War.
a colored man of Jesup,
who, Qkh! _____i. ct.... :a.
• he proprietor of the Sunnys'de House,
and under li life sentence, Vas riddled
with bullets by a crowd on Arondav, who
broke into the jail.
Bill Lewis, the CD lored bill poster of
Albany, was burned to death on Sundav.
The i igh.bors smelled burning flesh, and
bn ke into his room, the doors of which
were lockeiL They found him lying
dead with his bond in the fire, lie whs
n epileptic, and fell in the lire while m
a lit. •
Angu-s -.EnifSriison, a Scotehinan cm
pioyed as,a granite, miner at tlie Litlionia
(juanics, bored three hides and filled
C:em with blasting powdt T. Two of the
blasts went ciT. and while examining the
third, (o a-eer a.in what the trouble was,
the blast suddenly exploded, taking
Morrison's head completely oil.
The steamship Nacoochee arrived at
Savannah on Sunday, having on board
the captain, his daughter, and a lady
passenger and seven men, composing the
( row * f the schooner Nava Alay, aban
I no 1 off Cape Henry, water logged,
i'iie schooner was on a voyage to Piiiln
Iclphiu from Patalico Sound, wi'.di a
argo of lumber.
I.Ot 1S1AN.4.
I hum; D. Miller, a member of tlie
<• 'tton exchange, a wealthy sugar planter
and widely known in commercial and so¬
cial circles. died on Tuesday, at New Or¬
leans aged 65.
John Chaffee, one of ilie most promi
liei.. m mbers of the cotton exchange,
well krown in the Cotton trade and one
o: the . irg< cotton planters in the Unit
ed States, died on Mondny in New Or
leans Air. Chaffee was funding
ag. nt dir.ing the War, for the ConfeiTer
ate goverament.
Hon. John A\ or.twortli, better known
as “Long John, man as well known
as any in the died on Tuesday.
Mr. AV eiitwm ti - one of Chicago’s
oldest reshb 1 :n his day was mayor
Of tb it el:v. g' - sin:m and editor of
the principal *. m p qu r there. lip was
73 years of age, * a man of wealth,
his i state beini: w •■th at least $1,000,000.
NORTH < N,\.
At Alt. Zion chinch, in Surry county,
as Rev. F. McAinnghan, who liafT been
invited to preach, was in the pulpit and
in the very act of opening the service, he
fell dead without the h ist struggle. He
was 72 years old.
As ;t passenger train was moving slow¬
ly into the depot at Fremont, Stephen
Davis, a white mart got directly in frout
of tlie engine, and was crushed to death.
No one saw him until the wheels had cut
him to pieces. It is alleged that he was
drunk at the time of the accident.
H. D. Robinson, who, for nearly two
years, bad been manager of the AYestern
Union telegraph office, at Raleigh, was
displaced some days ago. He has insti¬
tuted suit against the telegraph compa¬
ny for about six • thousand dollars for
damages and services.
Police Detective B. F. Turlington, of
AYilniingt n, was sh R, probably fatally,
bv a negro burglar whom he was atremp
ting to airest on the street. The ball en
teied his jaw and ranged up, lodging in
his head. The negroNvould have kided
auothcr man had his pwstol not failed to
fire.
T "'° "Wte men William Venters and j
„. W oham A. Branch, set upon Calvin Cox, •
at a p iitical meetingin ta.ico, and tear
ing planks from a fence, beat h;m on the
luiid until they had driven into his skull
the nails which, j rejected from the
planks. Cox was a pi eminent man some
years ago and was grand lecturer of the j
gramtlodge He ot Masons of North Caro
una. was a man of genius and an
inventor. This fatal affray was not due
many t! quarrel about polities, but ~y. was
e resu.r of a lon^ standing feud.
TEXAS.
T ‘‘E Y *1 1 7) J - V ■-yred), , „ r . canuiu-.iU v , , .ti ,
cot ton weigh-r, b shot kuku from
was ami
ambushm he streets of Hempstead on
cuudaymght. 4wd> Everybody condemua Ihe j
ruifcenriu.
F I ut in the Vand Im 1 ail way .
E St. Louis, and be- ’
i cigkMi* .U : st
;o»c* | the fire c‘ rarituent ; * •
CO’lid .1 h tl tie t \s. an
(loomed, and tboi P I l S] 1 to adja
cent building*, i a •luuing a hotel fibel
•with p ople. r* iie Vandali*. freight
tr isc was 1 total lo:s; Cfieen freight
m and 800 tJaks of cotton being- de
KtroveJ. VltOT.r'.M.
SOT TH <
Marion ( inty Fair will beg US' on
0( t V 31 a I cl so on November
I. . Por ar IT Y€ TS _ ••ro¬
f. in tl college of Charleston, ied
>u .Monday, f gai -2 ye
Rev. P. n. J sou, the past .r of the
£ {h li - ohu- h ,t Ab'oovlIIe. has nc-
7 pfed an appofdtri hurch in
F ilifoi la.
Key E T. H dee-, who left the state
i„ • - Ci -,t ih » I i storatc of a
i
hirn toold ' home this Wintc--
1 f,: h ■- a. f to . A ..*■ • « n ! ,, ■“ hn y
i -’ \ , * •
bur - & Vi r0
yj h U' ,
;! V ' 'hW
" J'-j S{ was - 1,1 n \ ‘ l irc J*P' °
:r tram •'* near *' Flttcio 1 Z r " -oM -V r P-' . °i h
s ‘
tw* n two em s and way in *s!u d to death,
Uis lt:ft arm and le - bem - cnwKd -
Eight of the elders in the Presbyte
nao 'iimch in Charleston have-sent a
} l ,, r to {he Sou th Carolina synod now
n s ,^ the'recent on at Greenwood, protesting
a , niinst notion of the Charlcs
t £ n presbytery. This action is instigated
by , 1P n ; cen t adoption of a resolution
forbidding the discussion of the theory
f evolution.
An attempt was made t > a&snssmate
J. L. Stoppelheim, supervisor of regis¬
tration fur Charleston county. AVlnle
driving, in (he suburbs some one in Ihe
bushes fired at him The load of shot
entered his foot. His wounds are not
serious. Stoppleheim had frequently re¬
ceived threatening letters from a man
whom lie had refused to grant registni
tion certificates, all of which breathed
threats ot vengeance.
The Magnetic Iron Ore and Sleel
Company, composed <*f capitalists from
Atlanta, Ga., and Birmingham, Ala.,
purchased for 860,OOD, tlie great
cr part of tlie magnetic iron ore
tract, near the town of Black’s in York
county. It was known that there was
iron ore in this section, but it had no
railroad connection, and nothing was
done toward utilizing it until the
Charleston, Cincinnati and Chicago was
run through it. A small part of this
property was bought a few years ago for
s 1 Mb and it was sold to the railroad for
$ 12,500. wife left
David E. Durand and lu's
home in Bishopviffe daughters, to spend Eva the day, and
leaving their little
Cora, with their brother-in-law. Late
in the evening, while tlie children were
playing, Carnes was informed that Cora
had fallen from a bed in the room in
which they had been playing. Carues
hurried in where she was and picked her
up, but she died hi a very few seconds,
her neck having been broken by the
fall. The next morning Eva died from
the shock caused by her little sister’s
death. Their ages were seven and thir¬
teen respectively.
TITvRNBSSEE.
AV 1 -ilo pk(_yh.g, around arcane mill,
whieu was in operation near Midway
on Wednesday, John aged 11
years, Rad his head caught between the
lever aikl frame, and w:i% instantly
killed- 'His head was crushed almost to
a jelly.
The Broad Street Amusement Hall in
Nashville, purchased tlie largest hall in the city, i?
to be tor an undenominational
gospel tabernacle. The price agreed on
was $21,000, and under Sam Jones’lead,
S;5r ’ 1 1 e, "" ¥ Th °“" U
J°hn Atkins, wIdle crossing Smoky
Mountain from his North Carolina home
to Tennessee, was attacked by a wild
Ru'd ea < St!.^‘U"ihUb"!? D1 £h!vl
J A,ki "-. "T
terribly mutilated by - the furious . animal. . !
E. . Steele, ... dealer in cont.ctionery .
goods, of Chattanooga, m-i ;e an assign
uient on Alomlay. Nearly all of his crcd
ifors arc local parties except one Baiti
more J ouse. Ihe assets will probably
pay about Tilty cents ou the dollar of lia
bilitics. .
Colonels Dunem P. Cooper, Sparrel
i till, and John AY. Childress have pur
chased the Daily American newspiaper, of
Na hville. Col. Cooper will be the edi
tor-iu-c icf. The paper uill be Demo¬
cratic, but the AYatter-iOnian idea will
prevail in the treatment of the tariff ques¬
tion. The American lias hitherto been
a protection journal. Col. Coiyar, who
has been editor-in-chief, will retire, as
well as the former stockholders.
HUNGARIANS KILLED
A wreck occurred on the Pottsviile
tlivisi n of the Lehigh Valley Railroad,
r.c..r T-MinsFuj.1, Pa., between a Lehigh
gia e’ train and a Pennsylvania fast
freight. Tlie flagman did not get back
far enough to signal the freight, which
struck the caboose of the grave! train, ihe
1 .tier containing a batch of Hungarian
In Lore, s, six of whom were instantly
killed. Twenty-six vtre injured, two of
them living while being conveyed to the
hospital. Tec giavel train was backing
on a siding when the freight train, which
high was running on orders, appro iched at a
rate of speed and went crashing
into the cars ahead. The kid ed and in¬
jured men were all on the gravel train,
with ihe exception of one brakeman on
the Pennsylvania train, who was killed
on his own train. So far as is kn >wn, the
responsibility rests upon the shoulders of
the flagman, who failed t flag the freight
train in time to prevent the • ccident.
THEY TOOK HOLD.
About twelve women were arrested
and brought to Grand Forks, Dak., fiotn
Thompson. All a-tempts have failed to
carry out the liquor law, the ladies took
hold themselves, and gutting the saloons
a; -4 pouring liquor on the ground, for
which they were arrested. They all wore
au *l spent-Tlieir time on the train in
.singing temperance songs,
HE WAS REMEMBERED.
A 5tatue ©f Shakespeare was unveiled
in Paii s, France, with great ceremony.
The municipal authorities and a number
of distinguished pers ns were pre;ent.
Kniuliton, donor of the statue, 31. ■
ciarebiF and others made addresses,
Passages from Shakespeare’s works were j
rec ited by Mounet Sully,
COTTON,
world is. 1.200.797 bales, of which
959.S97 are Americ \n, -against 1,946,049
^ J ^403,149 respectively List year,
1? ,. cei u at all interior towns, 174,994:
rcceipts at piantations, 292,101; crop ic
WASHINGTON NEWS.
Doings of Congross and the United
jj* States Officials.
*>
C’GXGfiESKIOX’AI/.
the Tlie Senate spent Tuesday debating
tariff?bill....In the House, Air.
Plumb, oflUinois, from the committee
on labor, called up the bill to settle the
accouufs W * /iV « la^uzderjv^h^ I L;;
m defeated >veil 1 to Ulj.uinT, and this motion was
;[ye»* -.. »«.* .31. * Mr ^°. Oates rt l<
~ a 1 the • 1:lt II !° * adjourn, tU . ‘ 1 1U and us lie c would ?
gU use to
now hke ft) adj urn himself. He asked
leave of d>senfee for the remainderof the
session.*' this was granted, as was also
a similar f lave to Air. Lnnham, of Texas.
, In the ,, ^c-nnte A , Monday, r , Air. „ Brown
on
"’ 1 0 / the Roman’s
bdinstmn Tt-niperanoe I T men . of Georgia
bT the internal revenue
kws and fie addressed the Senate, lie re
*ereil to etor fact that there was no quo
F UU1 of house in the city of Wash
ington, ;*d that no business ciuld law
{ uI1 v he (Inc in the face of a single ob
-
jection. 1 here was, therefore, he said,
but one adturn tilng left to be done, and that
was to at the earliest day possi
hie. Tbddiscussion of the adjournment
resolution * the stopped Pl after Air. Allison had the
spoken, Senate proceeded with
t)ok considevajoa the loor of to the speak tariff bill,and it.....Air. Air.\ est
upon
Dougbertf, of ol Florida, the House asked for the the unani- inline
mot\s con|deration coni'nt
diate of the Senate joint
resolutioilreiativc to a conference to be
held to i.fcuire into the methods for the
lor, .supressiojl of OAo, of objected, yellow fever. and reiterated E. B. Tay¬ his
st;;i:eme;.|tliat bo enacild this no more session. legislation The Speaker should
ductionspf jirocecoloR to call the states for the intro
bills and resolutions. Air.
Oates, ofsAl ibama, introduced a resolu
lion AYe luescay, for ^ adjournment and there of was Congress much ap¬ on
plause, c iuplea with cries of “Vote, vote
vote,” by the few members present. Ev¬
ery one Entered into it, an 1 it seemed ev¬
ident fijga the press gallery that there
was not member who opposed it; it
liowevo/went over.
GOSSIP.
The President has approved the act
to include Sapelo sound, Sapelo river
and 8apolo island in the Brunswick col¬
lection district of Georgia.
Janier Longstreet, Jr., of Georgia, has
been promoted'jfrom topographic topographer assist¬
ant at .$000 to (assistant, at.
$720 in the interior department.
Tla.e Tieasurf Department has denied
the petition of Duckworth & Co., AYilder
& Co., and otters, of Savannah, Ga., for
allowance of drawback on jute coverings
of cotton exported from that part after
Alay 19th, 1887, without preliminary en¬
tries.
Superintendent IToran, of the National
Alu-eum, left on Ale day for Augusta,
Ga., to Superintend the placing of the
govermnaut exhibits from that bureau at
the Exposition, which opens in that city
on tlie yin of November. Alaj. Charles
S. Hill, \ommissioner of the government
exliibit3|p^iil few dawhj*_n.d also leave have for Augusta the in a
ta pes to govern¬
ment -jg^hiir-hitrTi.....ird ilj i)K'|-i|tiv o
fb ' t! 1 c lh e bureau M ’ho dif¬
ferent u. “.ffXlenfS, in readiness uu.
time the Exposition opens.
l)r. Hamilton, Hospital surgeon-general, of the
Alarm c service, received the
following telegram on V: on day from the
Board of Health at Gainesville, Fla.;
“AVe have two new cases to-day in d's
tant parts of the city. The outlook is
not good.” Dr. Hamilton also received
tlie following report from Surgeon Hut
t«, ». camp Peny: “Five Cea.hs,
eleven employes, iortv new reiugees ar
r i vc q Discharged 32, remaining 113;
yellow fever c nnp 6, all convalescent; no
new cases in eight days.”
T ! 1C *f 0[ lh - North Cnrolio. -Becial
R SfrUEi
After , e counsel , on , both sides had n annouu
ced their readitussto proceed, the justices
j ie ] ( j ftn informal consultation. The
justice then announced ' that the
COU it deserved a full bench to hear this
ease as'it involved a constitutional ques
tion. As Justice Matthews was ill, the
court would adjourn the hearing for the
present. The case of Bernard P. Hans
vs. the State of Louisiana, involving a
simil** question was disposed of in like
manner.
THE YELLOW FEVER.
Dr. Ne d A!itched, President of the
Board of Health, of Jacksonville, Fin.,
issued the following official bulletin for
the 24 hours ending Tuesday'. New
cases, 5s deaths. 2: total cases, 3,675;
••AA deaths 418. Two physicians re¬
sign! 1 Tuc h-V, and 1 ft for Camp Perry.
Olliers have leconsid i\d their former
at tion, and will run in. Dr. J. M.
Fail He, Scoreb >— i f the Board of Trade,
died He had been down with fever
nearly a week, and was already worn
< ut with continuous watching of sick in
his family- He was a native of Scotland
and has resided in Jacksonville since
1879. The prevailing opinion still holds
that the epi icmic is nearing its end, al¬
though the new cases are numerous. The
phvs cians say that oftentimes the dis¬
ease is more fatal at the close than at ihe
height of an epidemic of yellow fever.
Dr. J. F. Hartigan, reports to the marine
hospital bureau, from Titusville, Fla.,
that he has investigated that city, and
S mford, and finds them both healthy.
He will leave for Orlando. burgeon
Hutton telegraphs from Camp Perry,
Fla., that ten nurses will leave th re for
New Orleans, Montgomery has rr
moved quarantine regulations against all
points in Alabama, except Decatur, Ala
and and Jackson, Jackson, Miss. Miss. Three cases of
yellow fever, all colored; no deaths.
EMPIRE PREDICTED.
The German newspapers speak di?
trustingly of the situation in France.
The iSorih German Gazette, quoting the
Temps' ironical comments on Premier
FI quet's revision bill, indorses the pre
J ktb)n t thinks ^ t 1 an ^ that pire some- is at
thing unexpected will happen in France,
and that tue doom oe the moderate re
puolican paitv issea*ed.
SPANISH TROUBLES.
c-iaYdh?3 I in“eniFii°‘to'rrei^' ,r fr^ the
Ko^hfSpiXU* who reproach him for always deferring
to the reactionary influence of the mill
tary and conservative parties. Members
of the cabinet are divided on the ques
tion of army reform. A ministerial
k«taa toatma.
Woollen
Dr.
See*wrla.a,taFls.ysiciar3.Sa3rB
Tt affords AYadley, Ga„ January GO, 16S3.
h me pleasure to say that Invigo
n rVr l !i fine?t r rouiK ;. t ot the ag0 t; ' r °
establish the prostrate fabric 1 T It tones up
the nervous system better, makes the stead
blood JH 8,1 “ or of i Cs any » sU remedy 'ong^t i muscles have over an-.; had rii-ncst r
-
course to, and eyes more g-ed in >
disease of the kidneys than all other rem
advertised so extensively tor t.-.ecure
°f that trouble. Tt is that combination of
vegetable tomes, nervines and alteratives
with iron, that acts tipon the secretions ad
mirably, while it increases appetite, im-s
proves digestion, quiets irritated nerves
and purifies the blood, and lienod it is
justly held in high esteem by the la h-s for
tiding them sweetly over the menopause,
thateliangedn diseases. life that Animates so many I
AA lshmg you great success,
tcinain ypurs truly, AY. B. Ci.ovd, M. 1>
‘
A Prominent and Favorably known Oit
izPn Testifies
Atlanta, Ga., October 3, 18S7.
I take pleasure in testifying to the great
benefit I Lave derived from the use of your
Invigorine. After suffering for several
months from general debility, and using
other medicines without material benefit,
1 have used one bottle of Invigorine, which
has acted like a charm, and restored me to
health. Y’ours truly,
\Vm. AVaiukg Habersham, At. E,
It Gives Strength and Energy.
Ennis. Texas, March 22, 18S7.
One of my neighbors whishes me to order
one half dozen bottles of your Invigorine,
for wniehl send $5. lie wants the Invig¬
orine. Air. AlcCullum took your Invigorine
and felt a gread deal better. Ho thought
he could make a fcrop, 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 rue
says that I look ten years younger.
Mas. S. F. McCuleum.
Regulates th« Liver,Bowels and Kidneys
and Clears the Skin.
Atlanta, Ga., April 5, 1887.
It affords me pleasure to say that the Ln
vigorine, used by myself and wife, has had
a happy effect in building up our health,
restoring digestion, appetite, establishing healthy
and giving cheerful spirits with¬
out alterative any disagreeable reaction, It acted as
an and tonic, clearing the skin
and regulating the liver, bowels and kid¬
neys. 1 am in better health now than in
ten years. AYh P. Reynolds.
Q
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fates and quids. PR-CE $1.00 for F: . nt Dottle. Sold by Druggists. B. M. WOOLLEY & CO., Ohnuf'rs, ATLANTA, CA, ’
In Bed Nine Weeks-One Bottle Used
and She is Up.
Carrolls Prairie, Texas. August 6. 1886.
Inclosed tlnd $5 for which please send
me six bottles of vour Invigorino. This 1
ordcring * motlier.
am for my 1 f you re
member 1 ordered one bottle last month,
!ird it j id hcr s0 much good she has con
eluded to try *eeks, six more." She has been in
p ( . ( ] n |g 0 w and your Invigorine is
the first to restore her:‘so send six bottles
for the 8"). 1 am satisfied Invigorine w ill
cure her from the improvement of using j
only one bottle. A ours, !
Bex AIcBride.
Sevent y YeafS Old,and Greatly Strength
ened.
A ancyville, N. C„ November 1,1886.
For many years 1 havo been very much
depressed, being old and feeble—now 73
years old. I was unable to go about much
or to exert myself in any way, in fact, unfit
for anything. I used a half dozen bottles
of your Invigorinc, and never saw such
improvement, I am now strong and hearty,
aiul attend to mv business daily.
Yours, etc.
j B. LOAYNES
j Sri Better SHEectltlx tlacvii fer
j "STea-rs.
|
Atlanta, Ga., December 9, 1880.
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, but I am thank¬
ful to say that through the instrumentality
of the health-restoring properties of Invig¬ than
orine, I am now feeling much better
at any time during the past four or live
years, and am entirely relieved of all ap
prehensions regarding my physical condi
tlQll. FRENCH STRANGE.
So Welirieasecl They Want the Agency,
Moss Point, Miss., July 9tli, 1887.
Messrs. B. AT. Woolley & Co.:
We are establishing- quite a demand bottle for
your Invigorine, having not sold a
but Unit 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.
AVe write to ask on what terms we can
secure the exclusive agency for Invigorine,
as v/e desire to have exclusive sale of it at
this place if possible. Ymurs truly,
D. K. McInvis & Co.
- r 'W r T
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Atlanta, Ga., 1387.
Gents—It is with great pleasure that I
testimony to the beneficial iv nits of
use of Invigorinc attacked, by my by wife. In 1879
wife was bl ’Kl poi <n.
weeks site was delirious, and for several
sho has been in fefeblo health, not able
to walk and almost blind. A number of
remedies were tried, but with lb tic ellect.
After using tlio Invigorinc she is fast, ro
gaining and her wonted strength ; can walk a
mile a half to church without fatiguing
her, and her eyesight is growing l> ttor ev¬
ery- day. has caused
The Invigorinc every mem¬
ber of my household to rejoice in thebeiuv
fit conferred on rny wife. I have trisw
myself in several cases. I can con mw
tiousiy than eay that other it has remedy slrcngthcncd mo
more any J ver tried.
Trulv. \Y. (i . AY hi dqv.
Tii.e Beat t3a.l3a.g- for Xracli^cs
,
Enfield, N. G., January 28, 1888.
I have never had anything to do me so
much good for indigestion ns invigorine,
and find it almost immediate relief l'or all
the attendant pains. I never want to he
without it. AIRS. A. 11. HUNTER.
ZDon-e HLdTore CYgccI tl-xa,:M_A.xxyr
This is to certify that In-*', urine ha*
done more good than all other remedies
used. Trouble, general debility.
AIRS. E. A. ROBERTSON,
Enfield. N. C.
2>To HvCoxe Olxills Cwooci
Appetite.
Atlanta, Ga., August 16, 188,6.
Unsolicited by you, 1 feel it my duty to
testify to you the b* m fit I In vo derived
from the use ot your valuable medicine,
Invigorine. I bad only taken a, few doses
of it before I felt the ehai in- my eondi
tion 1 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 hardiv able to walk about, But
it is different now. Invigoiine ha n it
seems, put new life in me—no chibs, - a
good appetite, ] .spire freely, sleep soundly
—and nets like 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. BROS!US.