Newspaper Page Text
The Gainesville Eagle.
Official Organ of Hall County.
Official Organ of White County.
Official Organ of the City of Gainesville.
Entered at the Gainesville Postoffice as
Second-class mail matter.
W. H. CRAIG,
Editor and Business Manager.
Thursday, March 31, 1898.
FROM THE SEAT OF WAR.
It looks more like war. The
board investigating the cause of the
Manic disaster reported Monday.
They found that, in their opinion, the
ship was blown up from the outside,
by a submarine mine. As to who
did it, they made no suggestion.
The President transmitted the re
port to Congress on Tuesday, with
out recommendation. I
Congress is in a hysterical state of
impatience, while the President is
moving cautiously and in order.
Congress wants war right this minute,
but the President says he wants a
few more hours to talk with Spain,
and maybe the whole thing can be
settled, and Cuba freed, without
war.
The president is right, just as
Cleveland was always right when
Congress was shrieking for him to
hurry-up and do things in a jiffy,
and he insisted on doing them delib
erately.
Both Republicans and Democrats
have their eye on the fall elections
as well as Cuba. It is a pretty point
of competition who shall make the
first lead in swiping the Hidalgos.
Bailey, the Democratic leader, put
ting unlimited confidence in the Cu
ban hysteria, thought that all he had
to do was to reach out his hand and
round-up all the glory for himself
and his party. So. on yesterday he
strode heroically to the front and in
troduced a sizzling whereas and reso
lution recognizing the freedom of
Cuba. Then he stepped partially
aside to get out of the way of the
waves of applause and approval
which, in his mind, he saw coming to
bear him up to the very pinnacle of
apotheosis. But nary a Hood. The
Democrats cheered and howled ; but
your Uncle Czar Reed gave the
Reps, a wink and a cold stare, and
they sat like knots on logs.
Congress will wait on the presi
dent, and he, it is said in the dis
patches this morning, has given Spain
48 hours in which to give Cuba
freedom.
We still think there will be no
war. It is pretty hard for big
nations to get to war these times.
WHERE WAS TATE?
The little wheezy Tate papers in
the Ninth district are making a great
hurrah in supporting Col. Candler
for the governorship. They are
using him as a running mate for
Tate because they know Candler
is deservedly popular, and they wish
their peanut politician to shine with
borrowed light.
Col. Candler, with his incompara
ble record as a protector of the rights
of the people, is not in the least com
plimented by being placed in the
harness with a nag of such doubtful
record for honorable achievements.
Let us give some history. In his
superb speech at Rome last Satur
day Col. Candler said :
The first legislature that assembled
after the adoption of the constitution of
1877 enacted a law to create a railroad
commission to regulate and control the
railroads of the state and prevent ex
tortion and unjust discrimination. I was
a member of the committee in the senate
which drafted and reported that bill and
secured its passage. It is the law today
and is considered one of the best railroad
commission laws in the Union and has
served as a model in many other states.
I was responsible for the constitution
which made this law possible, and aided
in drafting and enacting the law which
has already saved many millions to the
people of the state and will save many
more.
Brother Tate was a member of
that legislature. The capitol was
full of lobbyists, and money was be
ing poured out like water by the rail
roads to kill the bill establishing the
Railroad Commission. It was a
terrific fight, and the cause of the
people was nobly led by Toombs,
Gordon, and Candler. They won,
but by only three rotes.
Where was Tate when the yeas
and nays were called? Where was he?
Where was this budding statesman,
who is now so watchful of the “peo
ple’s interest”? Brother Tate
knows where he was, but we do not.
We know where he wasn’t. He
wasn’t in the ball when the vote was
taken. He wasn’t sick, for the
journal shows he answered present
that morning at roll call.
Where was our peerless Ninth
district friend of the people at that
crucial moment when the battle for
life and death was being fought to
the finish between the people and the
railroad monopoly ?
Will one of Brother Tate’s post
masters at Jasper or Canton please
answer ?
CANDLER OPENS FIRE.
We have read Candler’s speech
delivered at Rome last Saturday—we
have read it several times, and the
more we read it the more we like it.
When a speech grows on the reader,
like looking at a pretty picture, there
is something in it.
We met a man of our town who
went to Rome with the colonel last
Saturday, and asked him, confiden-
tially, how Candler came out. He
replied, “It was a remarkable speech,
and I was proud of the old man.”
And so it is. The man that takes
your Uncle Allen for a clodhopper
because he looks like one and chews
tobacco and wears common clothes,
will be sure to get left. The idea
that Candler is afraid to meet At
kinson or Berner on the stump is
too absurd to talk about. He could
send them both to grass in the first
round.
Col. Candler is in many respects
a remarkable man. He is the
equipped man, politically, in the
State, and has a wonderful memory.
He can sit down and tell you every
thing that has happened since the
days of Oglethorpe. It has always
been a marvel to us how so much
could be contained in one small head
and not get tangled-up and squab
bled. And do you know Candler
is a superb scholar ? When in Con
gress he was considered the best
grammarian in the House, and was
appointed chairman of the Commit
tee on Education. And he can read
Latin like a dog trotting, although it
has been thirty years since he had to
do with the musty old language.
Last spring, when there was consid
erable interest manifested in the his
tory of Dido, because her picture
was in the Auditorium, and people
were asking us who she was, and we
didn’t know, we met the Colonel one
day and asked him about it. He led
us into a barber shop and talked
an hour about her, and we thought
it was the prettiest story we had
ever heard, although there were
some names in it that would tear the
teeth out of a sausage grinder.
Your Uncle Allen is tender and
sympathetic and as sentimental as a
maiden, but when you go to battle
against him the safest place is the
rear.
But that speech at Rome was a
great one, delivered to an immense
crowd. Speaking from a utilitarian
view, it was a vote-maker, not be
cause of an appeal to any particular
fancy or prejudice, but because it
was sensible, lucid, enlightening, and
pitched on broad lines and high
planes of statesmanship and patriot
ism.
AN EMBARGO ON MATRIMONY.
Mrs. Maria Louise Myrick of
the Americus Recorder and Dr.
Henry Carlton of the Athens
Banner are at daggers’ points. They
are both supporting Candler, but
Sister Myrick accuses the Dr. of
apostasy, in that he is criticising
Candler for not joint debating and
the executive committee for fixing
an early primary.
In the course of her remarks Sister
Myrick calls Brother Carlton a
blatherskite, which same causes the
gallant Banner editor to emit a faint
warwhoop to the effect that the good
sister, being of the gentler sex, has
the under hold cn him, but that if
she will “consummate her matrimo
nial intentions” he stands ready to
do all sorts of things to her “ben
edict.” To our mind, this is a pretty
far-fetched challenge. No one knows
that Sister Myrick is indulging any
“matrimonial intentions,” and it is
not likely that the present situation
will induce her to form an alliance
on purpose to get her partner slewed.
This looks like a diabolical scheme
on the part of the Dr. to put a dan-i
ger signal on Sister Myrick’s hyme
neal horizon, for what sensible mat
rimonial candidate would want to
fall legatee to a full-grown spat with
a man of Brother Carlton’s belli
cose proclivities?
It is our understanding that Sister
Myrick, although endowed with
qualities to make some good man
doubly blessed, persistently avers
that she would not pool her issues
with the best of them. It may be
that an ample confidence in the sin
cerity of these protestations embold
ens our Athenian Chevalier Bayard
to be so reckless in handling the
gage of war.
Time, that proves all things, can
not help proving something in this
case. Shall Sister Myrick raise the
white flag, sue for an armistice, ex
tend the olive branch, and try to
patch up a truce ; or shall she defy
the grim Dr. to keep up his embargo
on her matrimonial outlook, and at
some auspicious season, with an un
daunted commander at the helm,
attempt to run the blockade?
As we said, time will tell; and in
the mean time the situation will be
watched with interest.
THE STILLHOUSE VOTE.
Appealing to the stillhouse vote
seems to be a favorite card with Mr.
Tate’s papers in the mountain
counties. We don’t know how large
the stillhouse vote is, but we do
know that it is composed of the
vicious, ignorant, and lawless ele
ment, and that all good people in
the mountains, as elsewhere, have
their hands set against those vile cor
rupting plague spots, the distilleries.
It may lose Mr. Thompson votes
in the mountains for us to condemn
whiskey making, whiskey selling, and
whiskey drinking. If it does, let it
be so. There is no influence that
can induce us to cease, for the sake
of policy, to denounce crime and
criminals; and not that victory
should perch ar? hundred times on
our banner would we fail of our duty
and denounce that fountain head of
vice—that feeder of all crimes, the
stillhouse. This may not be popular
with the criminal classes, and it is
quite possible that the Bible and the
churches are not popular with this
etillhouse clientele who spend the
Sabbath day in drunken brawls.
Last week Mr. Tate’s postmaster
at Jasper spun a touching little Sun
nay School romance in his paper, the
Herald, the official organ of still
houses and blind tigers. Here is the
story :
In an adjoining county a few years ago
there lived a boy about fourteen years
old, who had a feeble mother and three
small sisters to support. He was not
strong himself, consequently he could
not with his labor keep even a scant
supply of the commonest food and cloth
ing for those dependent upon him. In
his dire necessity he began dealing in il
licit liquors. In the same neighborhood
there lived a stout, healthy, lazy man
who was always looking for chances to
get money without having to work for it.
He went to the boy to buy some whiskey
but the boy would’t let him have it until
the man said his wife was very sick and
that the doctor said she would die with
out whiskey; he then let him have a pint.
The man drank the whiskey, reported
the boy, got his ten dollars, and the boy
was sentenced to jail; leaving his mother
and little sisters helpless, unclothed and
unfed in the midst of winter.
Now before you begin to weep
over the misfortunes of this good lit
tle dutiful blindtiger, let us tell you
that it never happened. We regret
to spoil a good story with such a
manifestly good moral to it—but it
never happened. It had no existence
outside the stupid head of Mr.
Tate’s Jasper postmaster.
As we have pointed out before,
and as Mr. Tate’s postmaster knows,
if he knows his own ears from mush
rooms, the government pays no in
former’s fee for report of whiskey
selling—not even for its manufacture.
The reward is for the destruction of
the still—the copper—and for noth
ing else under the sun. When a
still is reported, it must be found—
not the marh and beer and the ap
pliances, but the copper. That is the
only thing on earth for which the
informer’s fee is paid. Judge New
man would instantly discharge an
officer if he were known to have of
fered inducements for testimony
against whiskey making and selling.
Now, is a stillhouse a good thing,
or is it a bad thing ? There is no
sane man living in the ninth district
today but knows its effect on the
community where located. If it is a
bad thing, then the law offering a re
ward of ten dollars for its destruction
is a good law, and Mr. Tate was
working in the interest of the crimi
nal classes when he was working for
its repeal.
No, the touching little yarn about
the dutiful little blind tiger’s selling
wbiskey to support his mother won’t
do, because it never happened. But
think of the condition of morals of a
community where such things can be
turned to use in supporting a man
for Congress.
In this section a 14-year-old boy
caught selling whiskey would be sent
to the rock-pile. In the office of
Mr. Tate’s organ he is canonized.
We shall endeavor to further Mr.
Thompson’s cause without indorsing
the stillhouse or apealing to the
vicious riffraff of society who spend
their nights and Sundays and their
daily earnings in getting drunk and
fighting.
YES, WE ARE CONVINCED.
We suppose that our Gainesville con
temporary will be convinced that there
will be a j’int dis. now, as the commit
tee to arrange for the times and places
met in Atlanta today. And we predict
that the aforesaid contemporary will be
sorry its prediction didn’t prove to be
true.—Jasper Herald, March IS.
Well, brother, what about it now?
You will stop your bluffing, won’t
you ? You knew all the time,
didn’t you, that there would be no
j’int dis. ? It is very strange if
Brother Tate hasn’t taken his home
organ into his confidence ? You may
wonder how we, not being a confi
dante of Handsome Carter, knew
there would be no joint debate. We
judge the future by the past. We
knew that Tate had shown the white
feather when challenged by Winn;
again when challenged by Twitty,
and again when challenged by Perry.
Tate was very wise in dodging a
public discussion with these gentle
men, for he knew either of them
could down him.
Brother Tate has never failed to
distinctly remember his first and
only experience in joint discussions.
It was at Clarksville in 1890, when
he locked horns with that able orator
and statesman, Thomas E. Winn of
the county of Gwinnett. They were
both running for the Democratic
nomination for Congress. When they
finished speaking, old Brother Jim
mie Robertson, the Tribune of the
Mountains, got up with tears in bis
eyes and his voice husky with sup
pressed indignation and cussed them
both out—said they reminded him of
two scabby-headed school-boys—and
said they were carrying-on disgrace
fully. The audience then gave
Uncle Jimmy a rising vote of thanks.
Tate has never tried discussions
any more; and bless your soul, honey,
he doesn’t intend to.
WATSON DECLINES.
Tom Watson has declined to run
for governor. He says he sees no
chance of winning—that it is an un
written law of the Democratic party
that he shall not bte governor—and
that he desires to remain in private
life and attend to his large and in
creasing law practrice.
Walter B. Hill, who was nomi
nated for supreme court judge, has
also declined.
There has been issued a call for a
meeting of the Populist State Execu
tive Committee to assemblein Atlanta
on April 13th to call another State
Convention to repair the now dis
figured ticket.
A WORD DE ADVICE.
To Those Coming to Alaska or the
Klondike Gold Fields.
One thing should be impressed up
on every miner, prospector or trader
coming to Alaska, to the Klondike,
or the Yukon country, and that is
the necessity for providing an ade
quate and proper food supply.
Whether procured in the States, in
the Dominion, or at the supply stores
here or further on, this must be his
primary concern. Upon the manner
in which the miner has observed or
neglected this precaution more than
upon any other one thing will his
success or failure depend.
These supplies must be healthful
and should be concentrated, but the
most careful attention in the selection
of foods that will keep unimpaired
indefinitely under all the conditions
which they will have to encounter is
imperative. For instance, as bread
raised with baking power must be
relied upon for the chief nart of every
meal, imagine the helplessness of a
miner with a can of spoiled baking
powder. Buy only the very best
flour; it is the cheapest in the end.
Experience has shown the Royal
Baking-Powder to be the most reliable
and the trading companies now uni
formly supply this brand, as others
will not keep in this climate. Be
sure that the bacon is sweet, sound
and thoroughly cured. These are
the absolute necessities upon which
all must place a chief reliance, and
can under no circumstances be neg
lected. They may, of course, be
supplemented by as many comforts
or delicacies as the prospector may
be able to pack or desire to pay for.
—From the Alaska Mining Journal.
A book of receipts for all kinds of
cookery, which is specially valuable
for use upon the trail or in the camp,
is published by the Royal Baking
Powder Company, of New York.
The receipts are throughly practical,
and the methods are carefully ex
plained, so that the inexperienced
may, with its aid, readily prepare
everything requisite for a good,
wholesome meal, or even dainties if
he has the necessary materials. The
matter is in compact though durable
form, the whole book weighing but
two ounces. Under a special arrange
ment, this book will be sent free to
miners or others who may desire it.
We would recommed that every
one going to the Klondike procure a
copy. Address the Royal Baking
Powder Co., New Vork.
The Telephone Line.
Col. Henry P. Farrow was with his
many Dahlonega friends Monday last.
He has already contracted with parties
for the delivery of a part, of the tele
phone posts and for digging a portion of
the number of holes. Other contracts
will be made soon, and his telephone
line from Gainesville to his famous sum
mer resort at Porter Springs will be
ready for use in time for the opening of
the hotel. —Signal.
Spring Millinery Opening 1
MONDAY AND TUESDAY,
April 4th and sth.
EVERYBODY CORDIALLY INVITED to ATTEND
We are now ready for the Spring Trade and invite the ladies to call
and seejwhat is in store for them. For the most regal and bounteous
assortment of styles and best values in high class Millinery
Thtß.&C.Ms.
BJGWELL 8 SDWHS—
Buggies, They are
THE BEST MADE.
Carriages, the most durable.
THE PRETTIEST.
“W"agons, They are
GUARANTEED.
Bnaetons. cheaper than ever.
Big lot of Harness of best make. Come and examine our goods.
MRS. J. E. JACK SON
Invites You to
Her Select Display of
Imported Hats,
Flowers, Ribbons,
MILLINERY NOVELTIES.
A Cordial Invitation
Is Extended to All.
... OPENING DAYS . .
March 31, April 1, April 2.
COUNCIL PROCEEDINGS.
Council Chamber, March 10, 1898.
Th6 Council met in regular session,
Mayor Gaston presiding. Aidermen Cas
teberry, Blats, Norris, Little, Hynds
and Webb present.
Minutes of preceding meeting read
and adopted.
Appeal case of William Addison, fined
by Mayor Gaston, w as taken up apd tried
by the Council, John Blats, mayor pro
tein, presiding. The Mayor’s decision
was reversed and the defendant dis
charged.
The Cemetery Committee reported
that the petition of H. M. Puckett to
close a walk at the cemetery had been
granted.
Officers’ Report for February.
Clerk received from—
Ad valorem tax $1,219.26
License tax 350.59
Street tax 10.50
Water rents 44.82
Light rents 79.20
Fines 16.00
Sundry items 3-60
Amount paid treasurer 1,723.88
Treasurer*
Balance on hand Feb. 1, 1898.... $128.79
Received from Clerk 1,723.88
$1,852.67
Paid out on vouchers . 927.63
Bal. on hand March 1, 1898.. $925.04
Marshal:
No. arrests 20
No. discharged 5
No. worked out 3
Fines collected 16.00
The following accounts were read the
first time and referred:
Canning & Bro., R. E. Andoe & Co.,
W. J. & E. C. Palmour, W. L. Wheeler,
G. P. Estes, G. F. Turner, J. G. Hynds
Mfg. Co., C. I- Deal.
The following accounts were read the
second time and ordered paid:
E. P. Chambers, insurance colored
school building, sls for 5 years.
The following ordinance was read the
first time and, on motion, the rules were
suspended and, after the second reading,
was passed;
An ordinance to repeal Sections 226,
227 and 229 of the City Code, pertaining
to regulations for keeping dogs, and for
other purposes.
Sec. 1. Be it ordained by the Mayor
and Council of the City of Gainesville,
and it is hereby ordained by the author
ity of the same that Sections 226, 227 and
229 of the City Code of the City of
Gainesville of 1890, pertaining to regula
tions for keeping dogs be, and the same
are hereby repealed.
Sec. 2. Be it further ordained by the
authority aforesaid, that all ordinances
and parts of ordinances in conflict with
this ordinance be and the same are here
by repealed.
The following assessors to serve for
year 1898 were elected:
T. P. Hudson, Ist ward; Oliver Clark,
2d ward; R. Smith, 3d ward.
Petition of J. M. Hubbard for water at
his brick yard was referred to Committee
on Water and Lights, with power to act.
No other business Council adjourned.
Copy of proceedings.
J. B. Gaston, Mayor.
G. P. Boone, Clerk.
A Rising Youth.
The friends of Jamie Roper will be
glad to learn that he has forged his way
from the least lucrative position in
the the Southern Express Company
to the agency at Salisbury, N.
C-, at a good salary. He entered tbe
service here a few years ago, and step by
step he has risen until he has
reached his present responsible
position. He is possibly the youngest
agent ever appointed to take charge of
so important a transfer office as that at
Salisbury.
Chautauqua July 7.
Prof. VanHoose informs us that the
Chautauqua which will bold a ten days
session this season, beginning July 7th
and ending Sunday, July 17th, will be a
brilliant success. He is now negotiating
for some of tbe best talent of this conti
nent, and says that no pains will be
spared to procure it. He has already
engaged Col. L. F. Copeland, “the King
of the Platform.” who will deliver two
lectures. This one celebrated orator and
lecturer will draw an immense crowd.
Tickets will soon be put on sale, and
the Chautauqua will be thoroughly ad
vertised. He further says that it will by
far surpass the expectations of its pro
moters and that Gainesville and tbe sur
rounding country shall have one of the
most brilliant summer attractions to be
had in our glorious south land. That
what he says will prove true no one
doubts for a moment.
The Faculty Concert.
The concert given by the faculty of the
Conservatory department of the Semi
nary at the auditorium last Friday night
was well attended and greatly enjoyed.
The people have long since learned
that the faculty never disappoints an
audience. On this occasion we but
mildly express it when we say that
sweeter vocal and instrumental music
than that produced by the teachers and
girls would be rare indeed.
J. P. Blanks.
VVe now have on hand a supplly of J.
P. Blanks—fi fas, witness subpwnaes,
jury subposnaes, summons, appearance
bonds, and forth-coming bonds. You
can get them at rock bottom.
Well
Children
that are not very robust need a
warming, building and fat-forming
food —something to be used for two
or three months in the fall—that
they may not suffer from cold.
SCOTTS
EMULSiON
of Cod-Liver Oil with Hypophos
phites of Lime and Seda supplies
exactly what they want. They
will thrive, grow strong and be
well all winter on this splendid food
tonic. Nearly all of them become
very fond of it. For adults who
- are not very strong, a
course of treatment with
the Emulsion for a couple
mont^s * n the fall will
TlrY put them through the
vr 1 1 winter in first-class con-
IX, Ask your doctor
about this.
Be sure you get SCOTT’S Emulsion. See that the
man and fish are on the wrapper.
All druggists; 50c. and SI.OO.
SCOTT & BOWNE, Chemists, New York.
PAkitER’S
ha;w balsam
Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Mair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases & hair Lalling.
50c, and SI.OO at Druggists
SENT FREE
to housekeepers—
Liebig Gompang’s
Extract of Beef
Cook IBook,
telling how to prepare many
delicate and delicious dishes.
Address, Liebig Co., P. O. Box
2718, New York.
jotin martin,
NACOOCHEE, GA.
REAL
Mines and Mining Lands,
Farms and Farming Lands,
Timber and Wild Lands.
SOLID INVESTMENTS AT
TEMPTING PRICES.
Correspondence Invited.
Hi! finest Plow In Earth
S. C. DINKINS &, CO.
Ar(> AgfentsV]l?or'
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TX
THE HANCOCK ROTARY
Manufactured t>y
THE SOUTHERN AGRICULTURAL WORKS,
ATLANTA. - OEOROIA.
' This Plow is a breaker and pulverizer at the same time—a wonderful combination.
It will scour perfectly in the stiffest red land. You can set it to cut from four to twelve inches
deep, and it will do it—wet or dry. Where land is broken with it, one-third more corn, cotton or other
crops can be produced with one-half the quantity of manure. It fixes land so that it will catch water
and hold it for plant in time of drouth.
Three horses will draw the Hancock Plow with more ease than four horses will draw a medium
sized mold-board plow.
It is the cheapest plow on the market, taking its durability and simplicity as a basis; but such fact
will be fully realized by every farmer as soon as they see the plow in operation.
This plow will break from two to three acres of red clay land a day, and pulverize it thoroughly be
fore turning it loose.
This plow can be seen at our store ; and we will also have a representative who will exhibit it and
its working at the different farms throughout this and adjoining counties.
S. c. OIKTSCIKTS <& CO.
The School Census.
The County Board o' Education will
meet next Tuesday. One of the impor
tant matters to be attended to is tbe ap
pointment of census enumerators who
will enroll the names of all the children
of school age in the county. The State
school fund is divided in proportion to
the number of children of school age in
each county.
A Great Day.
Next Tuesday will be a day of more
than usual interest. It is sale day. The
Confederate veterans meet at tbe court
house. The County Board of Education
meet in the Commissioners room. The
tax receiver opens bis books on the first
round that tax payers may give in their
property early. The Democratic Execu
tive committee meets to fix the time of
the primary in this county. The candi
dates will be on hand to engage in active
campaign work. Protracted meeting
will be in progress at the first Methodist
church. The city will doubtless be full
of people who will take an interest il
some of these things, and then, too, the
horse swappers will also be on hand.
BARYS
SKIN
- In all the world there is no other treatment
SO pure, so sweet, so s.t;e, so speedy, for pre
serving, purifying, and beautifying the skin,
Scalp, and hair, and er., heating every hu
mor, as warm bath) w: h Cvtk'l'RA Soap,
and gentle anoin: :s w.'.1l vine tit A (oint
ment), the gn at skin cure.
(tacira
Is sold thronzhaut the world. PoTTEB
DBtr.lCiiEii C'lßr.. Sole rnir«., Boston.
ca- •• au About the Soin, Scalp, ai«d lluix, free.
EVERY SR cine.-bj Cvticvba.
fcj is guaranteed to cure PILES, B
B and CONSTIPATION (bleeding, itching, protruding, B
B inward), whether of recexit or long standing, or money B
B
B and permanent cure. No surgical operation required. B
B Try it and relief your sufferings. Send for list of testi- B
B menials and free sample. Only 50 cts. a box. For sale B
B by druggists, or sent I y mail < n r<-. cipt of price. M
[MARTIN RUBY, Reg. Pharmacist, Lancaster, Pa, [
For sale by E. E. Dixon & Co., Gainesviile, Ga.
Call for free sample.
TREAiMT THAT CURES
Knowledge and skill are now at your service. Diseases
once pronounced incurable now treated and cured
at home. Every invalid applying is guaranteed
the personal attention of Dr. Cowden.
The most modern, scientific and cur
ative methods in the world.
Thousands cured.
For three years Doctor J. M. Cowden has enjoyed the reputation of
having cured more people by his mild, scientific modern methods of medi
cation than any other physician in the City of Washington. This is not
the result of accident, nor is it a popular fad, but it is altogether depend
ent upon seventeen years of hard study and research. He personally con
sults with his assistants over two hundred patients every day. He treats
only a few diseases, and the results are almost miraculous. His specialties are
Nose, Bowels, Rheumatism.
Throat, Blood, Skin Diseases.
Lungs, Deafness, Asthma,
Stomach, Consumption, Cataract.
Upon request, will send a short, readable article, explaining Doctor
Cowden’s theories and treatment of disease. This is of great value to
those who are sick, and of interest to those who are well.
CONSULTATION FREE. WRITE TO HIM.
Address J. M. COWDEN, M. D.,715 13th St. N .W., Washington, D.C.
TH Al I UPM Dr. Cowden's words of advice to all men, voting, middle-aged and old,
. IU RLu InLilt are worth their weight in gold, and Can be had for the asking. ,
UAIWHW Probably Need Repairs
GAINESVILLE IRON WORKS. shl, cAiNEsviLLE, Ik cA.
La Grippe,
Followed by Heart Disease, Cured by
DR. MILES’ HEART CURE,
czx
n?!,,
jwL
Mr. C. C. SHULTS, of Winterset, lowa,
inventor and manufacturer of
Shults’ Safety Whiffletree Coupling,
writes of Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure “Two years
ago an attack of LaGrippe left me with a
weak heart. I had run down in flesh to
mere skin and bone. I could not sleep lying
down for smothering spells; frequent sharp
darting pains and palpitation caused a con
stant fear of sudden death, nothing could
induce me to remain away from home over
night. My local physician prescribed Dr.
Miles’ Heart Cure and in a few days I was
able to sleep well and the pains gradually
lessened, and finally ceased. I reduced the
the doses, having gained fifteen pounds, and
am now feeling better in every way than I
have for years."
Dr. Miles’ Remedies
are sold by all drug
gists under a positive B
guarantee, first bottle F GUCfiQg
benefits or money re- L: Restore* J
funded. Book on dis- Kp' * ki-—iai. J®
eases of the heart and
nerves free. Address, '
DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind
A Good Shave.
LEE PARNELL, Barber.
ARLINGTON BLOCK.
Hot and Cold Baths.
First-class Appointments.
FOR
the corning saw mill and threshing
seasons’ work.
Let us do them for you.
Our prices and terms are right.
A full line of
Saw Mil! and General Supplies
on h;ind.
Come to see us before you buy.