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CONGRESSIONAL
I>AILY PROCEEDINGS OF BOTH
IIOISI AND SENATE,
The DUrwtMon of Important Me usurc*
Briefly I .pi to mi zed.
Tn th* Monday, iesolfctonB of
th Memphis Cotton Exchan c favor
trig the Cotton State ind fnternat on
«1 F position, at Atlanta, (»»., in Sep¬
tember, 1895 were presented by Mr.
Hnrris and r < erred to tin nmit tee
on commerce At no t the tariff bill
was taken m
Several ! 8 vnto bill rc pa md it
Tuesday’s i don and the house went
into com 3 ♦ 4 if the whole >n the
natal “I -l ution bill.
>11 til. llOli , W- dnettd unanimous
nt ,
mi ? fused for 1 fie considcra
t toll of Met; E ii’« resolution for tho
invest i at mu y a joint committee of
congress tin Call Si >f the present
indnsti in depression, and after a rail
til commit for rep< “> tin
u in con ittei the win r* ■, con
tirnied tfii consideration of 1 - • agri
cultural appropriation bill.
the In o, 1 hursduv, the bill ri
J»c« ii 0 of l»ct .f 1800,
signal* gov» ruin disp > of tits and
on Vesi t sea, with a view
I, > pn venting (*( I led 0118 was passed,
’ll riifuli ‘-nary, it was ex
phu ed, I >y ren of the fuiliiri of
< in t Britain to liserve the agree
mi ni ol thf International Marine Cuti
ft"fence of J > I he houso then, at
12:30, went into committee of the
whole |«i further consider the agricult
ural ni |iroiiria(ion bill.
Till: HKNATK.
Monday being district day in the
M Tint measure rehd ini' to the dist rict
• if (’oltimhia w taken up.
During 11n* discussion of the tariff
bill in tin nnte, Tu lay, Mr. Y’eat
mid that it, was very vidi-nt that it
wn the intention of tlm republican
side of the chain! >er to kill the bill by
delay, | Cries ‘>f “<)h, no!” from tho
republic! senators.) “They say ‘oh
tin,’ ” M \ fc*went on, “but their
acts beli their word They upend
day after i lay in discussing iuneetivor
hum matte) h. They want to kill the bill
by procrastination i. We on thin aide
have got but one tliim: t o do, and we
intend to do it, w ithout waiting or lies
Gating We intend to pass tho bill if
it lakes us until now Hit's next xvinti r,
mid w will leave to the senators on
the other side the task of defeating by
filibustering, but we are not going into
the field of conjecture to help them.”
Mr. Aldrich •xprcf SIX 1 surprise nt Mr.
\ est’s speech and said I: “There is no
disposition, there has not been and
there will not be, on this side of the
chamber, to do anything with this
bill except, t o i liscuss it fairly. There
will be no filibustering, and no at¬
tempt at filibustering mi the part of
the opponents to tho measure.”
In tho senate, Wednesday, Mr.
I lodge dleroil it resolution reciting a
statement in the New York Sen that
bribes had been offered to certain scii
nfors to induce them to vote against
tin' pending tariff bill, and signed ar¬
ticles in a Philadelphia paper stilting
that the sugar schedule had been made
up ns it now stands in consideration of
a large sum of money paid for cam¬
paign purposes of the democratic
parly, and providing for the appoint¬
ment of a committee of live senators
to investigate those charges. Tho
vice president asked Mr. Lodge what
action he desired. Mr. Lodge replied
tlud he asked for the present consid¬
eration of the resolution. Mr. Cock
rill “Let it bo printed aud lie on the
table. ” And under the rule the reso
bit ton went over until Thursday. Tho
tar ill bill was taken up at noon, tho
pending question being item number
27, ol the chemical schedule, “llaxseeil
or linseed and poppy seed oil, raw,
boiled or oxidized, 15 cents per gal¬
lon. ”
The senate at Thursday's session
adopted a r< solution providing for tho
investigation of the charge s of bribery
in connection with the tariff bill, and
tin' chan 'OH that tho sugar trust lias
interfered with legislation. The latter
part of the resolution was materially
amended so as to include tho fact
whether >r not the sugar trust Vas
ittado utiy contributions to campaign
or election purposes to any party', or
to seen re or defeat legislation on tho
tarifi bill. The tariff lull was taken up
at noon, and Mr. Galliuger spoke
against it.
STORM IN MINNESOTA.
Sctcu IVoplo Lose Tholr Lives anil
l’ropt rty Greatly Damaged.
A special from St, Paul, Minn., says:
Half a million dollars will scarcely
cover the damage by the great storm
of Tuesday in Minnesota and Wiscon¬
sin. Tito downpour of rain was the
greatest ever known in this section of
the northwest and in many places was
as destructive ns a waterspout. The
damage is greatest along the St. Croix,
Eugallo and Chippewa rivers, where
tho rise in the waters was so
rapid that bridges could not resist it
and dozens of them were washed away.
In several places also dams were wash¬
ed out and the swift flowing flood
did large damage to business property.
The death list so far includes seven,
one being killed by lightning near
Auika, Minn., and another near New
Richmond, YVis. A woman and tw T>
children were drowned in the Eugnlle
river near Spring Valley, Wis., and
two men wore drowned near Miudon,
Minn. Railway traffic was for a time
in a state of paralysis because of the
bridges and washouts on the tracks.
SI • l BRING FOR BRR \1>.
People on the Sea Islands Reported to
He Destitute.
Governor .filiman has received a
letter from Bluffkm township, Beau¬
fort county, S. C., describing a ter¬
rible state of destitution among the
white people of the township who suf¬
fered from the storm last August. The
letter states that 150 families includ¬
ing 600 people ar« now actually sutler
cring for bread. The explanations
given is that the funds and provision?
contributed, with th exception ol
$300, were dealt out bv the Red Cross
Society to th negroes exclusively,
An appeal is made to th governor for
immediate help.
Switchmen in Saxony consider
themselves well paid with $178 a
year.
THE MONROE ADVERTISER. FORSYTH. GA •» TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1894. -EIGHT PAGES.
MINKS NOMINATED.
THE POPULISTS OF GEORGIA
NAME HIM KOK GOVERNOR.
, Other Slate llottir Officer* Selected.
The Platform.
The people’s party of Georgia met
in state convention at Atlanta and
nominated Judge J. K. Hines, of At¬
lanta, for Gc vernor. The following
tafce house officers were named: Dr.
L. Nance, of Gainesvile, Hall
county, fur secretary of state; C. M.
Jones, of Bartowcouuty, for treasurer;
NV. R. Kemp, f Emanuel, for comp
t roller- (/( neral; J. 1). Mehaffey, of
Jack n, for attorney-general; James
Barrett, of Richmond, fur eomniis
aiouer of agriculture.
THE PLATEOIJM.
Tho platform as
Hiving that the people’s party believed
in the democratic principles of gov¬
ernment laid down by J homas Jeffer
son. Tlie next proclamation was that
all men wen created equal and alike,
and that, < ntcrtainiug that belief, the
people’s party believed in nil the other
propositions laid down by tho consti¬
tution of the I nited States and by'
Jefferson.
“We are amazed that the business
men of the country are willing to give
national banks the government’s money
at one per cent and let them charge
the peoph ight per cent in return,”
was the next proposition, after which
came a declaration for a graduated in¬
come tax.
'I hen followed a number of clauses,
all of which began “like Jefferson, we
believe,” ami the beliefs Ill these
clauses covered the platforms hereto¬
fore adopted by the populists’ national
conventions.
Then after a denunciation of the
democratic party and the democratic
administration tho following procla¬
mations in connection with reforms in
the state of Georgia were made:
I'or the abolition of the convict
lease system.
Eor the furnishing by the state of
school books in state’s schools and for
payment of tho teachers monthly.
For an Australian ballot law, with
provisions for the protection of the
rights of the' blind and illiterate.
The next clause condemned the ac¬
ceptance of railroad passes by public
officers, state and national.
Lite report closed with a pledge to
support the principles laid down by
the third party in the past by invoking
the blessings of God.
TRADE TOPICS.
Dun’s & Co.’s Report of Business for
the Past Week.
R. G. Dun & Co.’s weekly review of
trade, among other things, says: “The
strikes begin to Jmvo a serious, though,
it is assumed, only a temporary effect.
The number of works depending upon
supplies of bituminous coal or coke
for fuel is large, and quite a consider¬
ably portion of them has already been
compelled to stop operations. No
doubt tho proportion is larger in the
iron and steel manufactures than any
other business, but nearly a third in
capacity of tho iron furnaces at work
a month ago appear to have closed.
Some railroads at the west are embar
assed, and textile works of some im¬
portance must soon close unless tho
strike ceases.
“Tho movement of so-called armies
of unemployed on Washington has
caused little excitement, and is less im¬
portant or significant than tho outward
movement of specie, which shows a
shrinking of foreign demand for pro¬
ducts and tho further withdrawal of
foreign capital.
“But neither strikes nor foreign dis¬
trust can long retard tho progress of
this country. The capacity of iron
furnaces in blast May 1st was 110,210
tons, a decrease of 16,512 tons during
April, but The Iron Age lms telegraph¬
ic reports of stoppages by other fur¬
naces having a capacity of 25,002 tons,
iuelHiling some expected to stop this
week, which would mean a decrease of
about a third of production since April
1st,
The textile manufacturers arc not
keeping up in prospect, for while or¬
ders do not increase, uncertainties in
regard to the labor grow more serious.
The working force shows much unwil¬
lingness to accept for another season
tho wages which were temporarily
adopted in order to have the works re¬
opened after last summer’s suspension.
The apathy of buyers in cottons is re¬
flected in the further declines of print
cloths, although some qualities of
goods have advanced slightly.
The decline of the treasury gold re¬
serve below $04,000,000 suggests the
possibility that continued exports of
the precious metal may cause not a lit¬
tle trouble before the season is over.
But at present the banks are only grat¬
ified, as the accumulation of money
from the interior has not ceased, while
the demands for commercial loans does
not yet enlarge.
“Ouo large failure about doubled
the aggregate of liabilities for firms
failing in the week ending May 3d,
w hich would otherwise have been quite
small, but were $2,922,704. The
number and the general average of
liabilities are still encouragingly
shrinking. For four weeks of Apj-il
the liabilities reported wore $8,826,-
862, of which $3,687,220 were of
manufacturing, and 14,677,699 of
trading concerns.
“For the past week the failures have
been 206 in the United States, against
257 last year and 42 in Canada, against
23 last year, with none of especial im¬
portance.”
Breekinridgefs Bond.
Representative YY. C. P. Breckin¬
ridge YY ednesday afternoon gave a
bond of $100 to the clerk of the su
preme court of the District of Colum
bin, his brother, Brigadier General
Joseph C.Breckinridge, inspector gen¬
eral of tho United States army, giving
his surety, for the purpose of securing
an appeal in the case of Pollard vs.
Breckinridge in the district court cl
appeals.
Won by Dr. Rice.
A New York dispatch says: The
Brooklyn handicap, the first big turf
event of the season, was won by Dr.
liiee in the fast time of 2:07j. Over
40,000 persons saw the race. It was
an ideal day for the race aud the track
was in perfect condition. j
LATEST TELEGRAMS
CONDENSED INTO SHORT AND
ItlifcEXY PA R VGRAPIlS,
Ami Giving the Gist of the News t p
to the Time of Going to Press.
Governor Carr, of North Carolina,
has appointed A. G. Holliday commis¬
sioner to attend the Southern Inter¬
state Immigration convention at Au¬
gusta, (i»., May 30th.
The ifficials of the Ramsey Coke
company at Uniontown, Fa., have an¬
nounced that every foreigner in their
employ would be discharged as fast as
possible, and their places be filled by
negroes.
The state convention of Mississippi
bunkers, by formal resolution, re¬
quested the Mississippi senators and
congressmen to vote for the repeal of
the 10 per cent tax on the circulation
of state banks.
Secretary of State Coke issues a cir¬
cular letter to several insurance com¬
panies reported as doing business in
North Carolina without license. This
is a violation of the law and the agents
are liable to a fine of $200 and ninety
days in jail or both.
A New York dispatch says: Of
the $5,000,000 stock of the new
South Carolina and Georgia Railroad
Company, the successor of the old
South Carolina railroad, Charles Pnr
sous takes $4,000,000, which carries
control. Holders of the old bonds
get a portion of the balance of the
stock.
Tho North Carolina state crop re¬
port for May, based on reports from
one thousand correspondents, says the
condition of small grain May 1st,com¬
pared with the vitality and growth of
average years, is as follows: Wheat,
82; oats, 75; rye, 38; rice, 82; corn,
95; cotton, 85; tobacco, 76; pastures,
hay and clover, 77. The fruit pros¬
pects are—apples, 30; peaches, 17, the
lowest on record.
A strange malady ofilicts the family
of Peter Burba at Hodginsville, Ivy.
Several months ago one of the girls
suddenly became blind and later her
tongue swelled until she almwst choked
to deal]). This was followed by sever¬
al fits, when she apparently recovered.
Another member of the family was at¬
tacked in a somewhat similar manner
some days ago. The affection spread
unt il now the entire family is suffering.
The most memorable convention of
late years in Tennessee succeeded in
breaking its deadlock at 5 o’clock
Thursday morning, and on the 455tli
ballot Congressman Henry C. Snod¬
grass was nominated to make the race
again ns the democratic nominee from
the third district, The result was
brought about by the withdrawal of J.
B. Frazier, the administration candi¬
date from Hamilton, on the 455th bal¬
lot.
A State street block, six-story gran¬
ite structure, at Boston, Mass., was
badly damaged and contents ruined by
fire and water early Thursday morning.
It was used as a United States bonded
warehouse, and tho custom house offi¬
cer states that there was over $1,000,
000 worth of goods in the building,
and in his opinion the loss will exceed
4600,000, without taking into account
the loss on the building. This is val¬
ued at $200,000, and is damaged to the
extent of $50,000.
Governor Mitchell lias appointed the
following delegates to represent Flor¬
ida in the southern industrial and im¬
migration convention, which will con¬
vene at Augusta, Ga., May 30th:
Colonel D. H. Elliott, of Sanford;
Colonel John Bradford, of Bradford
ville, and Hon. John N. C. Stockton,
of Jacksonville, for state at large;
Colonel W. D. Chipley, of Pensacola,
for the first congressional district, and
Hon. P. P. Bishop, of Citrn, for tho
second district.
GROWTH OB’ THBT SOUTH.
The Industrial Situation as Reported
for the Past Week.
The review of the industrial situation in tho
South for the past week shows that, the mine)s'
strike lias caused preparations to be made for
shutting down another furnace, and a want of
coal is reported in a few places. In other re¬
spects tli re is no change in the labor si:ua
tion, and both parties are confi lent and det r
mined. There is a decided improvement in the
lumber industry as is shown by the number of
new plants and of enlargements of existing
ones reported improved for the week. Favorable weather
lias greatly die condition of the
growing crops, and the farmer’s prospects are
now quite encouraging. In gcner.l business
and in financial circles matters aro quiet, with
reports of less businesslhan usual at this sea¬
son, and a demand for money not equal to the
supply.
Forty-nine new industries were incorporated
or established during the week, together with
eight enlargements of manufactories and six¬
teen important new buildings. Prominent
among die n w industries of the week are: Ti e
Swan ltiver Fhospb&te Company, of Sheffield,
Ala., ber Company, capital $300,000; Estabutchie, the Estabutchie Lum¬
of Mia-., capital
S50,000: the F nu Lumber Company, of Fenn,
Ga.. with $40,000 capital. The Brown Electric
and Machinery Company has been chartered at
Little Bock, Ark., with $30,000 capital; a cotton
oil company, with $30,0 0 capital, is reported
at Blooming Grove, Texas; the Hoffman Hard
\v are Company, capital 4-‘d5,000. has been or
ganized at Texarkana, Ark., and ilie E. K. Dd
liugham Iron C mp.iny, capital $25,000, char
trred at II nston, Texas.
Canning factorus are reported at Montgom¬
ery. Ala., and Houston, Texas; cotton mills at
Mobile, Ala., Athens, Ga., and Nesbitt, S. C.;
a works cotton compress Jacksonville, at Taylor, Tex.; tannic acid
at Fla . and flour and grist
mills at Philpot and Mayfi Id, Kw, Corsicana,
Groesbeck ami N\ eona, Tex. Fibre factories
are to be built at New Orlt aus. La., and Titus
vi le, F.a : ice factories a: Like City, Fla.. Co¬
lumbus, Ga.. Harrolsburg; Kv., and Biloxi
and Warer Valley, Mis-*., and machine shops at
Yallos'a, G.».. and McHenry, Ky. An oil mi 1
is reported at Mt. P c: sail', Texas, and a piano
factory at Savannah, Ga. The wood-work
ing plains of ihe week aro at England.
Ark., Apopka, Fla., BaruesviUe and Way crew,
Ga., Donal Frankfort, Jackson and Lebanon, Kv.,
lsanville and New Orleans, La , Brook
haven i ni Kuhns, Miss., Chattanooga, Erwtu,
K-nest on ml Memphis, Tenn,, 8alem, Yu.,
and Kmda’ia, W. Y.».
Waterworks are to be built at Hempst al,
Tex., an 1 Bonceverte, W. Va The new bail 1
iugsinendo a #100,000 hail at New Orleans,
I. a., bus m ss houses at Birmingham and j as
per, Ala , Fort Myers, Fla., and Wheeling. W.
Va., a #15.000 church at Tenfyie, Tex., a #60,
000 court house at Cuero. Tex., md ti $40,000
one at Welch, W. Va.. a # 10,000 school build¬
ing at Groesbeck. T x . and a $38,000 residence
at L ui-svilie, Ky.—Tradesmtn (Chattanooga,
Tenn )
The Exports of Specie.
The exports of specie from the port
of New York for the past week were
$7,353,967, of whieh $6,585,360 were
gold and $768,607 silver. The actual
exports by Sunday's steamers were as
follows: Steamship Umbria, $600,000;
steamship lift Champagne, $1,075,000;
steamship Elbee, $500,000; total, $2.-
775,000.
NEWS IN GENERAL
A BRIEF SUMMARY OF IMPOR¬
TANT HAPPENINGS
Showing What is Going On In Our
Own and Foreign Lands.
The Missouri democratic state con¬
vention met at Kansas City Tuesday.
NY. H. Edwards, United States con
sul-general at Berlin died YVednesday
morning after a long and severe ill
ness, the bads of which was inflamma
tiou of the lungs.
The Jackson plant of Cochran k Co.
nt Connellsville, I’a., was attacked
Wednesday morning by a mob of 300
strikers. The workmen were protect
ed by armed deputies and the mob was
driven off. Not a shot was fired.
Leading bankers, merchants and
manufacturers of Chicago, to the num¬
ber of fifty, have formed themselves
into a committee to further the inter¬
ests of international bi-metallism, and
have prepared a statement of their
aims and objects.
By the disastrous fire in Boston,
Mass., 137 buildings were totally de¬
stroyed, 22 partly burned, 464 families
burned out, and alujut 2,300 persons
rendered homeless. This is the report
of the district fire chief after a poll of
the district. The loss is about half a
million.
J he miners and mine owners’ repre¬
sentatives meeting at Cleveland, O.,
agreed that a committee of five mem¬
bers representing each state be ap¬
pointed to agree upon a scale of wages
to be presented to the joint conven¬
tion, arranged satisfactorily to each
state iijjoii that basis.
A Boston, Mass., dispatch says:
Four students at Harvard college Avero
drowned in the upper harbor, near
Thompson’s island, Tuesday afternoon:
They hired a catboat for a sail and did
not return. The boat was found
turned with the bodies of two students
in it. The others have not beenfonnd.
The Brooklyn Tabernacle, which was
burned for the third time Sunday, is
to be rebuilt, and Dr. Talmage is to
remain in Brooklyn. This decision
was reached at a meeting of the trus¬
tees, held nt the residence of Dr. Tal¬
mage, at which the pastor and his as¬
sistant, Rev. Chandler A. Oakes, and
every member of the board of trustees
were present.
A Washington dispatch says: Coun¬
sel for Coxey, Browne aud Jones have
filed in Judge Bradley’s court an ap¬
plication for a writ of certiorari to
stay the carrying into effect of the
verdict in Police Judge Millar’s court.
The district attorney announced that
Judge Miller would suspend sentence
until the pending application was de¬
cided.
A Washington special saye: The
trio of commonweal leaders, “General”
Coxey, Marshal Carl Browne and
Christopher Columbus Jones, met with
another rebuff in the police court
Tuesday. After four hours and a half
spent in arguments on the motion for
a new r trial, Judge Miller overruled
the motion and notified the defendants
to appear Thursday for sentence.
Fire started early Wednesday morn¬
ing in one of the wooden buildings in
the enclosure known as Jones’ woods,
at Avenue A and Sixty-eighth street,
New York. The flames spread over
the four blocks between Sixty-seventh
and Seventy-first streets, Avenue A
and East river. Over $200,000 dam¬
age was done. Fifty horses were burn¬
ed to death and a number of persons
injured.
A dispatch from Greensburg, Fa.,
says: The Galvin commonwealers re¬
ceived very little eucouragement here
and now the army is on tho verge of
starvation. Colonel Galvin and his
staff called upon the mayor and chief
of police and informed them, unless
food was given within a few hours, he
would turn his men loose to prey upon
the town. Forty special policemen are
now guarding the town from the starv¬
ing unfortunates.
ASKING FOR $500,000.
Atlanta’s Exposition Committee in
Washington.
The Cotton States and International
exposition committee had a two hours’
hearing Tuesday before the house
committee on appropriations. It was
a very well conducted and very inter¬
esting affair. The members were in¬
troduced to the members of the com¬
mittee by Representative Livingston.
From the very outset all hands got
together and on the most amicable
terms. Seldom has there been a
hearing before a committee of con¬
gress so void of stiffness or so preg¬
nant with mutual good feeling.
The committee will take up the mat¬
ter at an early date. There is every
prospect that it will recommend an
appropriation, though it may not be
as large ns the sum asked, $500,000.
Representative Livingston, who is a
member of the committee on appro¬
priations, speaking of the matter,
said*: “The visiting committee made a
very, very favorable impression on the
members of the appropriation commit¬
tee. I never knew a matter of the
kind better handled or better calcu¬
lated to attain its object. I think that
the committee will recommend an ap-
2 >ropriation. I do not think that it
will be less than $500,000, and it may
be $750,000.
THE CONFERENCE A FAILURE.
The Miners ami Operators Could Reach
no Agreement.
The great conference at Cleveland,
Ohio, between the representatives of
the 200,000 striking miners and oper¬
ators, representing every coal mining
district in the United States, has ended
in failure. The two interests came
together, presented their demands,
discussed the conditon of the min¬
ing trade in all its bearings, found
their differences irresoncilable and will
depart for their homes, leaving the
situation at the mines, in apparently
the same condition of suspense that it
was before the conference was called.
A Strike Declared Off.
The central committee of ribbon
weavers at Patterson, N. J., declared
the strike off after a desperate strnggle
of eleven weeks. A majority of the
operatives of the mills of the William
.Strange company and Levy Bros, went
back to their looms.
SALE OF THE EAST TENNESSEE
Will Take Place at Knoxville on Jul>
7th Next.
Special Master Caldwell, appointed
by the United States court to conduct
the‘sale of the East Tennessee, Vir¬
ginia and Georgia railroad, has issued
an order fixing July 7th as the day for
the sale. The sale will be at the road’s
depot in Knoxville, Teuu. The prop
erty must bring $1,500,000 with $150,
000 cash bonus. The reorganization
committee, as agents and bondholders,
will be the only bidders, and the new
owners will be operating the system
within sixty days.
The Itiker Case Dismissed.
The court of appeals of the District
of Columbia, has dismissed the case of
Carroll L. Biker, of Chicago, against
Secretary Carlisle, to compel him to
sell to Riker $50,000,000 of bonds. It
will be recalled that Biker’s offer was
not considered by Secretary Carlisle
when the new bond issue was appor¬
tioned out in last February. The
court held that as all the bonds had
been sold to other parties there was
nothing else for it to do but to dismiss
the case.
A Big Church Assembly.
The 106th general assembly of the
Presbyterian church of the United
States opened its session at Saratoga
Thursday. Six hundred commission¬
ers from 230 Presbyteries all over the
world were present.
Skin
Eruptions
and similar annoyances are caused <
result by an in impure a more blood, dreaded which disease. will j |
Unless removed, slight impurities l
will develop into Scrofula, Ecze- J |
ma, Salt Rheum and other serious
results of
a I sufferer have for from some time a severe been Bad
blood trouble, for which I «—* §-< * 1 ^
took man/ remedies that l>I"Jl/vl
did me no good. I have
now taken four bottles of
FKKS ggjjBSj jjl with the most wanderful results
Am enjoying knew, have the gained best health I
pounds and ever friends they twenty
well. my I feeling say like never saw
me as am JOHN quite S. EDELIN, a new
man.
Government Printing Office, Washington, D, C.
Our Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free to any address.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
F. J. Stilson,
JEWELER
55 Whitehall St., Atlanta., Ga.
RELIABLE GOODS.
FAIR DEALING.
BOTTOM. PRICES.
■
. BUYS
; : A PIANO
which will do for practice pur-;
pose as well as a $1,000 piano.
We are determined to close out
our practice pianos at the above
price.
Tliis WEEK ONLY
WE OFFER
W GRAND UPRIGHTS
$200 TO $250.
-
j These beat assignment prices
all to pieces.
Write or call on
I
■ I
Macon, Ga,
our Christmas Piano
Lamps at COST to close out.
!
HILL’S [ REMEMBER careful ity and the investigation merits WE of and our as GUARANTEE to Tablets. invite our responsibil¬ tho A CURE most
!JI«J Double Chloride of Gold Tablets ♦
Will completely destroy the desire forTOBACCO in from 3 to r, days. Perfectly harm¬
less; cause no sickness, and may be given in v. cup of tea or coffee without the knowl¬
edge of the patient, who w-ill voluntarily stop smokingor chewing in a few days.
DRUNKEMESS ani MORPHINE HABIT *?•
the patient, by the use of our SPECIAL FORMULA GOLD CURE TABLETS. fW
piline During until treatment such time patients as they are shall allowed voluntarily the free give use them cf Jhqucr up. or Hot - \J*S A F
We send particulars and pamphlet of testimonials free, ami shall V Testimiit!
bo glad to place sufferers from any of these habits i:i communica¬
* tion with persons who have been cured by the use of our Tablets. from
HILL’S TABLETS are for sale by all eiest-class persons
druggists at g | .OO per package. Kg; * who have been
if your druggistdoes send not keep them, enclose us S | .OO %
and we will you, by return mail, a oackuge of our cured by the of
Tablets. use
Write your name and address plninly, and stato Hill’s Tablets.
whether Tablets are for Tobacco, Morphine or
Liquor Habit. ~
*
- any DO of the NOT various BE DECEIVED nostrums ihs into t n purchasing being Jr
re The Onto Chemical Co.:
TABLETS offered for sale. and Ask take for no KILL’S other. J v Dear Sir:—I have been using your
cure for tobacco habit, and found it would
’ Manufactured only b 7 » do what you claim for it. I used ten cents
'I s worth cf the strongest chewing tobacco a day,
-TILE- r.nd lion one to five cigars; or J would smoke
from ton to forty pipes of tobucco. Have chewed %
OHIO CEEMICAL CD r.nd smoked for twenty-five years, uml two packages
■ u., Cf your Tablets cured me so I have no desire for it.
sjjgjy. B. M. JAY LOUD, Leslie, Mich.
61, 63 h 65 Opera Biocl:, A SS Dobbs Febry. N. Y.
__
LIMA, OHIO. >
1 tucm ;u; r.gnr mi j, iilthougb 1 was both a heavy smoker and chew er, gjg
.
PARTICULARS AsaaJL .tllL ” ----- Tn3ly*yours, t l £vvr JOIIN&ONf
MATIi P. O. Box 45.
FREE. 1 K fe e J J The Ohio Chemical Co.Gentlemen:— It gives me pleasure Pittsburgh, to speak Pa. a
N! §S|s J J' liquor, word anti < f pra:-o through for r. your friend, Tablets. I was led My to son try was strongly Tablets. addicted K« to heavy the use .find of
drinker, sifter using Tablets your bat he was quit a drinking,
• ><*7 QK k w; constant yoor three days
J \ & and will not touch liquor of any kind. I have waited four month before writing
n, v w’ S you, in order to know the cure was penaancut. Tours truly,
Wt XgM_ SB MBS. HELEN MORKiSON.
Cincinnati, Ohio.
JS I have The Ohio Chemical Co:—Gf.xtlf.men:—Y cnr Tablets have and performed have been a cured miracle by in the my use case. of
used morphine, hypodermically, for seven years, L. LvALwAx.
two Daekaeea of vour Tablets, and wirhnuY an v effort on rev mirt. W.
Addrtjgi 0H?0 all Orders to
s ;AGENTS RESPONSIBLE WANTED : ; THE CHEMICAL CO.,
, 51, 53 and 55 Opera Block. LIMA, OHIO.
(Tn writing please mention this paper.)
rt
»>
tss S8S3S8S8SS V ^ 1
ty
§ fj
&
for Infants and Children,
gyg OTHERS, Do You r.,.t
llWfi Bateman's Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, many so-called fckxRbing i aud
most remedies for children are composed of opium or morphine i
Do Yon Know’ that opium and morphine are stupefying narcotic poisons y
Do Yon Know that in most countries druggists are not jiertuitted to s< 11 narcotics
without labeling them poisons ?
Da Yon Kn ow that you should -not permit any medicine to be given your child
unless you or your physician know of what it is composed ?
Do Y o n Know that Castoria is a purely vegetable preparation, and that a !i.-i of
its ingredients is published with every bottle ?
Do You Know that Castoria is the prescription of the famous Dr. Samuel Pitcher.
That it has been in use for nearly thirty years, and that more Castoria is now sold than
of all other remedies for children combined ?
Do You Kno w that the Patent Office Department of the United States, and of
other countries, have issued exclusive right to Dr. Pitcher and his assigns to use tho word
“ Castoria” and its formula, and that to imitate them is a state prison offense ?
Do Yon Know that one of the reasons for granting this government protection \va.x
because Castoria had been proven to tie absolutely harmless?
Do Yon Know that 35 averago doses of Castoria are furnished for fif*
cents, or one cent a dose ?
Do Yon Know that when possessed of this jierfect preparation, your children may¬
be kept well, and that you may have unbroken rest ?
Well, these things are worth knowing. They are facts.
The fac-simile
signature of wrapper.
Children Cry for Pitcher’s Castoria*
Schofield’s Iron Works!
GLC-tro-rers a.xxcL 3 ~oToYoorc of
Stem Ennis, Elite, SAW MILLS, Ssffli Eras,
General Machinery and all kmd3 Castings.
-Sole Owner and Manufacturers of--
Schofield’s Famous COTTON PRESS!
-To Pack by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam---
MASS G0OBS, PIPE FITTINGS,LUBRIO AT0BS, BELTING, PACKING,SAWS,ETC
-General Agent for
UMCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETT’S MAGNOUACOTTON Gift
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
MACON. GEORGIA.
BS ffSF S S ffir?
EVERY MAN
HIS OWN DOCTOR
By J. HAMILTON AYEKS, JUt. O.
A 600-page Illnstrated Booh, contain¬
ing valuable information pertaining to
disease of the human system, showing
how to treat and cure with simplest of
medicines. The hook 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
every well-regulated household will be
mailed, post-paid, to any address oa
receipt oi price, SIXTY CENTS. Address
ATLANTA PUBLISHING HGUSE
IIS U/d St., ATLANTA. &*.
Advertise Now
It will Pay.