Newspaper Page Text
<»\ fO WASHINGTON.
ARMIES Ol I MU STRIVES MARCH¬
ING I RON THU CAPITAL.
1 “ r * rnsade of tlie ( oiumonwoalen
Spreading all Over the West.
From all over the w***t coman the
iicwb that the ern ade of industrials is
pr< ling. Over a dozen armies are
now in tie field. In all the large
towns, companies are rapidly detachments being
formed. The armies,
and divisions now in the field
in the west are: General Kel
ly, 1,000 men, Neola, Iowa; ( i < - U -
oral Fry, 1,000 men, Terre Haute,
Indiana; General Fry’s second divis¬
ion, 000 men, McLeanshoro, Illinois;
G< ueral Grayson, 100 men, Mntt
ville, Colorado; General Galven,
200 men, Loveland, Ohio; >Scr
geiint Randall, 300 men, Chicago; 100
men at Little Falls, Minnesota; 500
men at Hutto, Montana; 100 men at
•Monmouth, Illinois; 200 men at Ot¬
tumwa, In., Captain Sullivan, 1,000
men, Chicago; 150 men at Anderson,
Indiana; and General Aubrey, 700
men sides at Indianapolis, Indiana. Be¬
these armies, large numbers of
i eeruits are pushing forward to the va¬
rum. liiif " of march with the intention
oi j tilling t he large bodies.
( OM V’.S MAIN A1!MV.
\fter three days’ stay in Hagers¬
town, Md., the Army of the Common*
w<ml broke camp Monday morningand
made for Turner’s Gap. Jmt after the
departure of the Commonweal army,
considerable speculation was aroused
by a dispatch from Washington, stat¬
ing that a troop of cavalry had started
from Fort Myer, bound for Freder¬
icks. I here is a rumor that the Corn
tiioiiwenlers had been making overtures
to the strikers iu the coal region, and
t!i • was the possibility of a deluge
ol miners seizing trains to rush down
and striking the lino of march some
where in Fredericks or Montgomery,
i n rn iiko i men r in ohkoon.
A special from Portland, Oregon,
says: I ii«- tilth regiment of the In¬
dustrial Army, six hundred strong, ex¬
pects to leave for Washington at once.
Iht! officers Ik. po to secure railroad
transportation, but it is hardly proba¬
ble that the railroads will accede to
their demands.
ritr.i'AuiNo ron him at Washington.
Thu Commissioners of the District
of Columbia will issue a proclamation
or statement concerning the coming ol
Coxey and his army. It is understood
t hat this action will bo taken at the
Miggestiou nf Pre-ideat Cleveland.
Pears that the arrival of Coxey will
mark the concentration in Washing¬
ton of elements bent rn disturbing
law and order, have been impressed on
the commissioners by many prominent
no n, and the president has also been
told by Home of his advisers that, it
would be well to take measures to show
tin' intending evil-doers tjiat the au¬
thorities will brook no interference
with the maintenance of law and order
in t lit! district.
1 ho president was loath to take ac¬
tion in tht' matter in the name of tho
F< th rill goveruim nt, but believing
that some positive steps wi re necessary,
he suggested that the district commis¬
sioners, as the repsesentatives of tho
lot' ll authority, issue some sort of
statement to offset the rumored inten
(ions of the extremists to mark the ar¬
rival id Coxey the opportunity for a
demonstration that might develop into
a serious riot.
MOULDERS TO GO TO WASHINGTON.
At a meeting of five hundred union
moulders, at Chicago, it was announced
that tho three unions of Chicago would
m ml five hundred men to Washington
to present their grievances to congress.
They will move on trains. Delega¬
tions from a dozen towns in Illinois,
Indiana and Wisconsin are expected
to join them.
GROW 1 11 OF THE SOUTH.
I lie Industrial Situation as Reported
For the l’ast Week.
A rev ew of the industrial situation in the
h uiti for the past week shows that the strike
nmo ig the c a! miners in the Birmingham and
,1. llieo hist: iet-t of Alabama anti Tennessee has
unsettled hue ness for the time being. It has
not provi to lie as general us was predicted,
l nt m t rial thousand men have go e out of tho
mims. Impartial observers belt ve that the
strike will be a sh it one, partly because the
demands of the strikers aro considered to bo
extreme, mid also because there i< a lack of
funds with which to support them while out of
work.
In addition to the redaction in freight rates
on iron pipe to northern poiuts recently an¬
nounced a rtductiou of a similar kind has been
made to sontnern and southwestern points,
to take i ft' ot May 1. It is unfortunate that
these redactions are counter-balanced by labor
troubles As it is claimed that fuel supplies
arc sufficient for a month to come, it is hoped
that an adjustment will be made b fore that
time expires. In other industrial hues reports
tire encouraging. I lie t fTects of the cold w ave
have not prowd as disastrous ns was antici¬
pated. Fiir:y-six
new industries were established or
incorporated tin l.eo during upling the week, among which
art' U and Manufacturing Co.,
of S.ui An'onio, 1'. vis. capital $500,000, a gold
mining company at Chari ston, \Y. Va., with
the same can.tal, and a $200,000 compress at
Uslveston, IN. \fts. a $75,000 barrel tae cry is
to be built in M mphis, Teun., a $50,000 iutu
ki plant at Western, Ark., au elcctr.cai com
ptn> $50,000 capital lias been chartered at
Hillsboro, Texas, a manufacturing company
"oh tin same capital at Austin, Texas, and a
$25,1X0 fertilizer company at Dothen, Ala.
A canning fac ory is reported at Natchez,
M s-., car woiks at Gainesville, F'a., a cotton
c■empress at Waco, Texas, and electric light
companies at l'alaika, Fla., and Wes' Point,
M ss. Kni ling mills are w-ported at Valdes.*,
N. C . a id V\ inchest, r, Ya., ironworks at Bir¬
mingham and Oneonta, Ala-, Lynchburg aud
S: ft ib, Va., and mining e. mpanies at A< tua
v; le. by , B tie Springs and H lenwood, Tenu.
Oil mills are to bv built at On hka, Ala., and
I : keland. La., a pottery established a' Merid
■an, M s-., a shoe factory at Augusta. Ga., a
sugar fact refinery at G’encoe, La., : ud a tobacco
rv at Wins on, N C. Woodworking plants
ate to be stablishedat B e«w, Ark., Inverness
and Jacksonville, Fla.. Worth. Gv. Lancaster,
Kv . J .cksxui, ituu., bheva, Va., and Hunting
ton, W. Va.
mere is also rep rted ten enlargements of
mantifactories, three new waterworks and
tw ntv imp r ant n w build ngs, among which
arc, H balk at N w Martinsville, W. Va., a
$150,000 cilice building at Nashville, Ttnu.,
businc-s house.- at Harmony Grove, Ga.,
Greenville, Teun., and Houston. Texas, ac urt
I ons a: Dub.in, Ga., tot b at F.*ufield and
Jack-, taviile. 1 i&., and Knoxville. Teun., echo >1
t u Id ngs a Oz rk. A s , and Marietta, Ga
aud $100,000 university building ,
a at Gal aim,
Ttnu.—Ti ale ■ au (ULattauooga, Teuu.)
Lost His Case.
M atliugton, the man who eueel the
Raleigh and Augusta railway for $5,000
damages on aeeount of being struck
by a cow which had been hurled from
tho track by au engine, lost his case
in court at Raleigh, The verdict was
in favor of the railway corn puny.
THE MONR OE ADVERTISER. FORSYTH, GA •9 TUESDAY. MAY 1, 1894. -EIGHT PAGES.
NEWSSl M MARY
MADE I P OF ITEMS FROM ALL
PARTS OF THK WORLD
Showing What is Going On In Our
Own Own and and Foreign Foreign Lands. Lands.
Je^ie Seliguian, the well Lii'.wi
New York l»ank< r, die 1 at San Fran
cisco Monday.
A ( hicago dispatch savs that a strike
of four thou -tJ; d employ* of the Pul
man car company will be declared oi
May 1st.
A Washington special of Monday
states that Reprr tentative Jerry Simp
son i« rapidly sinking and hope of his
'
. u » UHh , l . n « ton K I>«i . pl , l _ G. ].re
*, nlf'i tl ♦- '^ rr , onpson a ulness teok
' ■
■
an nn unfavorable turn Sunday evening,
his condition being complicated by
the return of an old kidney trouble.
One hundred and four fresh cases ol
cholerine, . or cholera, is reported at
Lisbou, Portugal, fhe disease is rap
idly spreading to the towns and vil
lage.s in the interior. The Spanish
authorities have adopted rigorous pre
cautionary measures against the disease
ad along the frontier.
The American miners of Para, Ill.,
have decided not to join the strikers,
and only a little more than half of the
foreigners voted to go out. Six linn
dred Americans will resume work a*
liKiuil, but the strikers threaten to stop
them, and there is danger of a serums
conflict of’ citizens with Americans.
Late reports from Summerville,
Mo., the scene of the recent cyclone,
Huy the town is not much injured, but
in the country the damage :i great.
Airs. A au Keel, three children, a hired
girl and hired man were killed. Five
dwellings and many other buildings
were Mown away, and a large number
of people injured.
In the Clearfield aud Beech Creek
coal regions of Pennsylvania there are
upwards of one hundred mines and
out of this number there is not one in
operation. The suspension is com¬
plete through both regions. There is
not the least excitement, but the mi¬
ners from are very the impatiently awaiting
Virginia. news regions in Alaryland and
The mortgage bond suit of the Cen
nal Trust Company of New York vs.
the Richmond and Danville railroad,
in Washington, decree of foreclosure
and sale, which was issued by the
United States circuit court for the’
eastern district of Virginia on the 13th
of this month, has been signed by
Judge Haguer, of the district supreme
court.
The Mobile and Ohio railroad tax
case, appealed from the supreme court
>f Tennessee, was reargued before tho
United States supreme court Tuesday.
Tho question at issue was as to the
force of a statute of the legislature of
Tennessee, under which the officers of
tho state claim the right to subject the
property of the corporation to taxa
tion. The company officials claim
that, under its charter, the corpora
tiou is exempt from taxation.
The Morion circuit court at Indian
epuli. hnc iteclnre.l the eppertionment
act of 1803 constitntiomil. The notion
to test tho validity of the act was
brought at the laudation of the state
republican committee, which took the
ground that the democratic legislature
of 1803 had foisted a gerrymander
upon the people and so divided tho
legislative districts of the state as to
give them the worst of the deal po
Utienllv. An appeal will he taken to
the supreme court,
A . sensational ,. , f , eature , of President
Debs address to tho American Rail
"«y t»on meeting at Minneapolis
was ins attack upon Judge Jenkins, in
which he said: “Jenkins is the most
corrupt scoundrel that was ever out
side of prison walls. He is a man
whose whole life, both public and pri
vute is rotten to the very core, and I
stand prepared to prove it too Jen
kins is a disgrace to the bench upon
winch he sits and to the people who
elevated him to the position.
Attorney General Moloney, in an
opiuion rendered at Chicago decided
that the gas companies of that city are
maintaining a trust in violation of law
and ho will institute proceedings at
once to have their charters annulled,
Tho attorney general made the
sensational statement in connection
w ith the decision that he had positive
kuowledge that at the time he was
speaking, the trust was so altering
their books and records as to make a
iavorable showing at the trial of the
case -
NO AUDIENCE FOR COXEY.
Tho Senate Refuses to Grant Him a
Special Hearing.
A Washington dispatch says: By a
vote on tho Peffer resolution, the sen
ate Monday showed that it had no
sympathy .. with ... the .. Coxey ~ movement. .
1 he resolution was put upon its pas
sage and was voted down by 2b to 17.
All the democrats except one voted m
the negative. The resolution was to
appoint a committee to receive the
representatives .. of , tho .. and , , hear
army
them. The senators are perfectly
willing to receive any itetitions from
the army and have them referred to
the proper committees, but to appoint
a committee to hear from them spe
eially is more than the senate has ever
done for any body of men, and natu
rally they refused to do it for Coxey
and his army.
SIX WERE DROWNED.
Further News of the Sinking of the
Steamer Los Angeles.
A special from Monterey, Cal., says:
It is known that six lives were lost by
the loss of the steamer Los Angeles,
at Point-sur light-house. Three bodies
were cast upon the beach near the
light-house—those of Timothy Nolan,
fireman of the steamer; Fitzgerald, a
passenger, and a hostler named Ban¬
ders of Los Angeles, It is also known
that S. N. Sheridan a passenger from
Ventura, aud a Chinaman froruLos An
geles, were drowaed. The Los Ange
les was an old steamer and was crowd
ed with passengers from southern Cali
fornia ports bound for the Midwinter
fair at San Francisco.
A female tack maker in France is
fortunate if she makes $1.16 per
week.
HALLS OF
DAILY PROCEEDINGS OF IIOTIl
HOUSE AND SENATE.
The Diseussion of Important Pleasures
Briefly Epitomized.
Immediately after the house was
called to order Monday morning, Mr.
Hepburn rai-- <1 the point of “no que
rum,” on the approval of the journal,
and the roll call was ordered. The
journal was approved ; ayes, 213 ; nays,
huh 6i The hoi then proceeded to
the consideration of measures relating
to the District of Columbia.
The O’Neill-Joy election case, from
the eleventh district of Missouri, came
up in the house again Tuesday through
an effortby Mr. Bartholdt, of Missouri,
t G bftve read a series of resolutions
( adopted by a mass meeting of citizens
if the district, denouncing the unseat¬
ing of Joy. He was unsuccessful, how*
ever, the speaker ruling that- the reso
Iutions presented no question of privl
iege. The house then went into com*
mittee of the whole and took up the
postoflice appropriation -bill for the
year ending June 30, 1895.
The house, at 12:40 Wednesday, re¬
solved itself into committee of the
whole for consideration of tho diplo
matic and consular appropriation bill,
At 1 :45 Thursday the house went
into committee of the whole and re
suroed the consideration of the diplo
matic and consular appropriation bill.
--
the senate.
In the senate, Monday, the creden
dentials of Thomas Jordan Jarvis :4
senator from North Carolina to fiil the
vacancy caused by the death of Mr.
Vance, were presented by the vice
president and placed on file. An effort
was made py Mr. Peffer to get before
the senate again his resolution for a
select committee to give hearings to
Coxey’s army. He made a motion to
take it up, but on the yeas and nays
only 17 senators voted for it, including
Mr. Hawley, who probably desired to
give Allen nn opportunity to reply to
his remarks, and 2G against it. At 1
p. m. the tariff bill was taken up and
Air. Quay, who was entitled to the
11 mr, yielded it to Air. Washburn, who
proceeded to address the senate in op¬
position to the bill.
Immediately after reading the jour¬
nal Tuesday, the senate went into ex
ecutive session. The object of the
session was to dispose of the Florida
nominations; among them that of G eo
W. Wilson, to be collector of interna]
revenue for the Florida district, and
in which no decision was reached.
After a half hour spent in executive
session, and another half hour given to
mornin & business of no importance,
* lie tariff bill was taken up at 1 o’clock.
Mr - Mills addressed the senate in sup
P ort of tli0 bill > toeing wlmt is desig
nated as “general debate.”
In tbe senate Wednesday, after the
introduction of a bill and resolution
ou the subject of the expected arrival
in Washington of Coxey and his fol
lmvers > tbe tariff bili was > »t 1 p. m.,
laid before the senate, and Air. Harris
asked unanimous consent to have the
consideration “Vf 'l* 5 ' con ?• muod till
'
Aldrich, acting °^ 8c ‘: tor 0n the ' vas republicans, ma *>. b >’ M /' to
c ?“ tl4, ' un « d “^ Be684 ““ s late f than 5
to1 " 1 Mf- Harris then: put bla , re
‘l"? 8441 ‘ e .f‘»l’ 8 ° f a motion, and on
ob ’ eotl ° n > it went oyer Mr. Hams
S a ' 8 notice that lie would submit this
motion every day until some result is
Consideration of the hill was
the n .V eB ^- ,P“?R«P k > paragraph,
a “ d 1 ' e6t 4ook 4 le 4i ° or -
the senate, Thursday, the „ Hon. _
Thomas Jordan Jarvis, the new senator
f rom North Carolina, was sworn in.
The Coxey movement was brought
prominently to the front when Senator
Allen’s resolution of Wednesday was
considered. Air. Vest opened in a
strong speech in which he denounced
j n unmeasured terms the lawlessness
of the men in the west who are seizing
trains and committing other rash acts,
He said if these men intended to
be peaceful and come here and
looked over the capitol and buildings
as other citizens, did, there was no ob
jection, but any resolution tendering
welcome to those who were breaking
the laws of the United States were oiit
of place. It was the duty of the sen,
ate to set the seal of its disapprobation
upon these acts of lawlessness. Other
speeches were made on the same line and
after a long discussion Mr. Allen’s reso
lntion went over without notion. The
senate, by tlie a vote of 5 to 0, agreed to
take up order for the daily meet
ing of the senate at 11 a. m. The or
der was then agreed to. Air. Aldrich
stating that there was general assent
to it on the republican side. The tar¬
iff bill was taken up and Air. Higgins
made a speech iu opposition to it.
A Popular Hotel Burned.
Tfio Saranac Lake House, at Sara
—j nac Lake, N. Y., has been completely
aegtr d b fixe, entailing a loss of
e io 5f0 00. The fire was of incendiary
origin , but the fiend is not known.
There was 340,000 insurance. The
bookings were larger for the coming
season than ever before, and principal
j v of guests from the south and south
^ est< to wbom this , vas a fnvorite
resort.
To Issue Licenses.
The liquor question lias been brought
to an issue in Greenville, S. C. At a
meeting of the city council, called to
mke action as to the right of the city
to issue licenses, tire discussion was
long and at times animated. A test
vote was taken, which resulted in avote
of 0 to 4 in favor of issuing liquor
licenses.
Flour For Glasgow.
The Noel Mill Company at Estell
Springs, Teun., have finished loading
the second train of flour for export to
Liverpool and Glasglovr. It will be
dilivered to the Johnston line of steam
ert ; a * Port Royal for transportion to
Liverpool
Ogden Elected.
H. X. Ogden, democratic candidate
congress from the Bare% eport, La.,
district lias beea ejected to till the un
expired term of M. U. Blanchard,
majority is about o.oOQ.
Mosx men look out for number one;
most women claim to look out for
humber two—at the shoe store.
It is better to be an April fool than
a chronic one.
THK FIRST 1
DFPFTY MARSHALS AND COM¬
MON WHALERS IN BATTLE.
industrialists Capture a Train and
are Arrested by Troops
A Washington special says: In ad
dition to the request of the judge of
the United States court, the United
States district attorney and the United
States marshal for the district of M oa
tana for federal aid in arresting the
Hogan contingent of the army of the
unemployed for seizing a train at
Butte, Montana, against the mandate
of the United States court. President
Cleveland has received the following
from the governor of Montana, which
was given to the press:
“Helena, Montana. —To the presi
dent of the United States—Informa
tion reaches me by wire that the Cox
evites, fleeing the state with a stolen
train, were overtaken at marshals Billinas bv
the United States deputy who
were trying to serve a writ emanating
from the United States court. A fight
ensued. One deputy marshal was
wounded and the leader of the Cox
eyites was wounded. The deputy mar
shals w-ere overpowered aud driven off
with revolvers and other weapons.
The mob then surrounded the deputies
and now hold them prisoners. The
train of the Coxeyites is within a few
hours’ run of Fort Keogh, It is im
possible for the state militia to over
take them. <
“As governor of Alontana I hereby
request you to have the federal troops
at Fort Keogh intercept, take into cus¬
tody, arrest and hold these Coxeyites,
subject to the orders of the United
States court issuing the writ referred
to. If the Coxeyites pass Fort Keogh
before orders can emanate from you
for their apprehension, I request that
federal troops be ordered to overtake
them. Promptness is required.
“G. E. Rick arts,
“Governor of Alontana.”
TROOPS TO ARREST THEM.
When these facts were reported to
the department of justice -they were
brought to the attention of the president
with the recommendation of the attor
ney general that the federal authority
he supported by troops, that being
the sole alternative left to the eovern
ment. The president at once called
the general commanding the army into
tlie consultation, and after considering
the matter, General Schofield was di¬
rected to call upon the commander of
the department of Dakota, in which
military department the affair took
place, to send a sufficient force of
troops to arrest all persons engaged in
the unlawful seizure of the Northern
Pacific train at Butte, Mon.,‘and to
hold the train and persons until they
could be delivered to the United States
marshal for Alontana subject to the
order of the United St/ies district
court.
THE SOLDIERS HAVE THEM.
Later advices from St. Paul, AIin«.,
are to the effect that the Coxeyites
were arrested by Col. Page’s troops at
Forsyths, Alon., forty-six miles west
of Fort Keogh.
ANOTHER AT TERRE HAUTE.
A dispatch from Terre Haute, Ind.,
says: That contingent of Coxey’s
army under command of Gen. Louis
C. Frye forcibly took possession of an
eastbound freight train, leaving the
city at 3 o’cclock. The officers of the
army claim to have paid the railroad
company for transportation as far as
Brazil, twenty miles east of Terre
Haute.
LATEST DISPATCHES
GIVING THE NEWS UP TO THE
TIME OF GOING TO PRESS.
Happenings of Interest Presented in
Brief and Pithy Paragraphs.
Two hundred and fiffy-two fresh
cases of cholera were reported at Lis¬
bon Thursday.
The National line steamer Helvetia,
Captain Froliche, has been abandoned
in a sinking condition off Cape Finist
cere, Spain, and her crew and passen¬
gers landed at Gibraltar.
A telegram received at the miners’
headquarters at Columbus, from
Thomas Farry, dated Fire Creek, West
Virginia, says that twenty-one mines
in that state are closed. They employ
3,500 miners.
The Indiana Republican State Con¬
vention adjourned at Indianapolis,
at 4 o’clock Thursday morning, after
having been in continuous session for
eighteen hours. A full state ticket
was completed and agreed upon.
L. W. Johns, the general superin¬
tendent of the Tennessee coal, Iron
and Railroad company, at Birming¬
ham, Ala., has secured at Weir City,
Ivan., 200 negro coal miners to go into
the Birmingham mines iu place of the
strikers there.
Attorner-General Olney was inform¬
ed Thursday that the miners of the
Couer D’Alene mines, in northern
Idaho, had assembled to the number
of 600 men, and threatened to capture
a train and move east. The civil and
military authorities have been advised
to take proper measures to prevent
violence to property. .
Governor Flower, of New Y'ork, has
vetoed the annual appropriation bill
because the republican legislature re
fused to amend the bill by striking out
the section to allow the attorney gen¬
eral to designate all counsel employed
by state commissioners. This action
of the governor will probably delay
the adjournment.
The debenture holders of the Cen¬
tral railroad held a meeting at Savan¬
nah Wednesday, but came no nearer a
determination of the matters before
them than at the former meeting. The
agreement which has been drawn had
received only 5610,000 worth of signa
tnres and it has to have 81,000,000 be¬
fore it can become operative. The
amount was increased to about 3700,000
at the meeting and the committee will
canvass for further signatures before
another meeting is called.
There is a woman in Ohio who was
one of the little girls in George
Washington’s funeral procession.
She is Mrs. Priscilla Spooner. Mrs.
Spooner recently celebrated her 100th
birthday.
THK EDITOR JAILED.
He is Made Responsible for What the
Reporters Wrote.
Editor Rosewater, of the Omaha,
Neb., Bee, waa tried before
Scott, of the district court, on a charge
°f contempt and sentenced to thirty
days in jail and a tine of $-300 and
co6ts - The case grew out of local ar¬
ticles published iu The Bee,
Jud F e Scott’s rectitude. Rosewater
sought to show that he did not know
of the articles before they were pub¬
lished, but the court found that he had
showu animosity and must suffer for
his reporters wrote.
A large pasture will be fenced in
on the reservation north of the Che
yenne River this summer by Fred
Dupree, an old Frenchman, who it
, known as the “battle . king, ... ... far his ,.
herd of.buffalo. He secured permit
sion from tho Government to fence it:
the Government land that he re
q " ired and 11 has also offered him any
other assistance , he may need in
pro
serving the herd. This is the largest
herd of buffalo in the world at pres¬
ent, and the preservation and increas¬
ing of it are very essential to prevent
tlie breed from becoming extinct in n
few years. He now puts the buffalc
in a corral each night, and is getting
them tame, so they' are now muci
COO is Essential!; t
to
HEALTH.| $
You cannot weliT )t,
hope to be
if-your <£ £
BLOOD |
IS IMPURE.
If you are troubled withT
or| ;
BOILS, ULCERS
PIMPLES, SORES |
>Yyour blood is bad. A few bottles of S. S. S- will 5
cleanse the system, remove ail im-g
and build you up. All manner of blem-^ *
are
» CLEARED AWAY I
b ,, tsllse . i, who u , have he test used blood it remedy o» earth.*;, 5,
-ay so.
y .$£ Th^ ««|
j®^i!JfS^on. n"n°oh° e k
rea,ed Ohio
on blood and skin diseases mailed free-S
-
F. j. Stilson,
_ i-D _ \ A/ Th 1 T" l-i^
T ^ | -J—-J ▼ Y l .J— fZ?
53 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
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This WEEK ONLY
WE OFFER
Ilf GRAND UPRIGHTS
$200 TO $250.
These beat assignment prices
all to pieces.
Write or call on
aJasic House
Macon, Ga,
JgsS^All our Christmas Piano
Lamps at COST to close out.
HILL’S mm
REMEMBER 2S
careful investigation as to our resiionsibil
ity and the merits of our Tablets.
tmurniii
raannntjtimMciuiiii I CnnAO
I READ CUR
Simuuiiliudiiiiiuiii TESTIMONIALS
less; Will completely sickness, destroy the deeire forTOBACCO in from 3to5 days. Perfectly harm¬
cause no aud may be given in a cup of tea or coffee without the knowl¬
edge of the patient, wlro will voluntarily stop smoking or chewing in a few days.
I DRUNKENNESS M MORPHIKE HABIT V ^ ^
the patient, by the use of our SPECIAL FORMULA GOLD CURE TABLETS. jfjdSSek a ' * A FEW
During until treatment such patients they are shall allowed the free use of Liquor up.' or Alor
phine We send particulars time as and pamphlet voluntarily of testimonials give theta free, ami shall Testimonials
be tiori glad with to persons place sufferers who have from been any cured of these by the habits of in eommunica- Tablets. jjT -,m
use our S
HILL'S TABLETS are for sale by all fiest-class from persons
! druggists If at $ | . OO per package. ^ Nfwk tSk xRL * who have been
j your druggist does not keep them, encloseus S | .00
and we will send you, by return mail, a package of our f a cured by the use of
| I ' whether Liquor Write Habit. Tablets your name are and for address Tobacco, plainly, Morbhine and state or /a ^ N \ "ji ® Hill s Tablets!
’ 'DO NOT BE DECEIVED into /S? j
of the various nostrunns that purchasing being rs&i-. f Thf, Ohio Chemical Co.:
offered ar.v for sale. Ask for HILL,’S are ^ Dear Sir:—I have been using
TABLETS and tak» co otker. jT B&s. for tobacco habit, and found would your
s cure it
Manufactured only by ’sHes do what you claim for it. I used ten cents
Jr worth of the strongest chewing tobacco a day,
j -THE- ^ from and ten Irom to one forty to pipes flve of cigars; tobacco. or I Have would chewed smoke
^ and smoked for twenty-five and
i OHIO CHEMICAL CO, of Tablets cured I have years, desire two for packages
your me B. M. so no it.
y JAYLORD, Leslie, Mich.
51,63 & 55 Opera Block, Dobbs Febrt, N. Y.
The Ohio Chemical Co. „ Gextlemex:— Some time a go 1 sen*
, LIMA, OHIO. them for ail - wortii J, of '’though your Tablets I was both for Tobaaco heavy smoker Habit. and 1 received chewer>
’ did the rig: work : an less than three days. a I
particulars > turn-- in am cured.
; Truly yours, MATHEW JOHNSON, P. O. Box 45.
FflEE. The Ohio Chemic al Co. —Gentlemen :~It gives me pleasure Pittsburgh, to speak Pa. a
word of nraise 'through for your Ta :u--s. led My son was strongly Tablet addicted to the use of
f liquor, and drinker, but a f»nd, usi:ig I v to Tablets try your but : . Hn was a heavy drinking, and
constant ai;er your three lavs he quit
and will not touch li? nor ■ j orr kind. 1 have waited four month before writing
you, in order to know the cure was permanent. Tours truly,
MRS. HELEN MORRISON.
The Ohio Chemical Co:— Your Tablets have formed Cincinnati, Ohio.
Gb.vTLF.Mh x :— ner a miracle ia my case,
ha reused morphia e, hypodermically, for seven years, and have been cured b^t^gpae of
-5 a.li Orders to
I lAdENTS RESPONSIBLE WANTED THE OHIO CHEMICAL CO.,
5!, 5S and S3 Opera Block. LIMA, OHIO.
(la writing nxeatioa dris: r.)
What is
CASTORIA
Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years* use by
Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays
feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd,
cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves
teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency.
Castoria assimilates the food, regulates tho stomach
and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas¬
toria is the Children's Panacea—tho Mother’s Friend,
Castoria.
“ Castoria is an excellent medicine for cbil
dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its
good effect upon their children.”
Dr. G. C. Osoood,
Lowell, Mass.
” Castoria is the best remedy for children of
which I am acquainted. I hope the day is not
far distant when mothers will consider the real
interest of tlieir children, and use Castoria in
stead of the various quack nostrums which aro
destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium,
morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful
agents down their throats, thereby sending
them to premature graves.”
Da. J. F. Kinchelok,
Ark.
The tientaur Company, TT Murray Street, New York City,
Schofield’s Iron Works 1
Is^s^-afact-u.rexs and ToToTosra of
still E10MS, Bote, SAW ILLS, (Mis Presses,
Qeneral Machinery and all kinds Castings.
-Sole Owner and Manufacturers of
Schofield’s Famous COTTON PRESS!
—- fiDo Pack by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam—--
11 ASS GOODS, FIFE FITTINGS,LUBRICATORS, BELTING, PACKING,SAWS,ETC
-General Agent for— -
HANCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETTS MAGNOLIA’COTTON GIN.
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
MACON,
EVERY IAN
HIS OWN DOCTOR
Ejr J. HAMILTON AVERS, !>I. »,
A 600-page Illustrated Book, contain¬
ing valuable information pertaining to
disease of the hnman system, showing
how to treat and cure with simplest of
medieines. The book contains analysis
of courtship and marriage; rearing and
management of children, besides valu¬
able prescriptions, recipes, etc., with a
and a full complement of facts in mate¬
ria medica that everyone should know.
This most indispensable adjunct to
well-regulated household will be
post-paid, to any address os
ci price, SlITY CENTS. Addrew
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HOUSE.
M« iwi St ATLANTA. OA.
Advertise
It wiU Pay.
*>
o
Castoria.
" Castoria is so well adapted to children that
1 recommend it as superior to any prescription
known to me.”
II. A. ARcnKR, M. D-,
111 So. Oxford St., lirooklyn, N. Y.
“ Our physicians iu the children's depart¬
ment have spoken highly of their experi¬
ence iu their outsido practice with Castoria,
and although we only have among our
medical supplies what is known as regular
products, yet wo are free to confess that the
merits of Castoria has won us to look with
favor upon it.”
United Hospital and Dispensary,
Boston, Mass.
Allen C. Smith, Pres.,