Newspaper Page Text
Cured of
Kidney disease
Mr. A. B. Hendrix, a prom
inent business man of
W Rochester, N. Y., says:
Your great Blood Purifier
wa * reeom mended to me
&V a for Kidney
\ trouble, which has been
annoying me for some time.
V-M ? began about one year
A ago to use Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People
g&lsfftd X". ond okfter taking them for
four months all pain
gjjE; vanished entirely and 1
am 03 to-day as ever
in my life. I cheerfully
f recommend them to all
■MB sufferers from Kidney
trouble.
A. B * Hendrix,
K 20 E. Main Street,
X B. HHNDRII Rochester, N.T.
Dr. Williams* Pink Pills
for Pale People
positively cure all diseases that arise from impurities of the
blood; they eliminate the poison the veins with a
rich, red, life-giving fluid. The best Spring medicine.
At all druggists or direct from j>r. Williams
a Medicine Co., Schenectady, N.Y., postpaid on
receipt of price, 50c. per box; six bßces, 12.50. t
A
I Healthy Mothers
I Few mothers are healthy, because
I their duties are so exacting, the anxiety
I of pregnancy, the shock of childbirth,
I and the care of young children, are
■ severe trials on any woman. But with
I Wine of Cardui within her grasp, every
| mother—every woman in the land —can
J pay the debt of personal health she
I owes her loved ones. Do you want
I robust health with all its privileges and
I pleasures? Wine of Cardui will give it
I to you.
wiNrami
I strengthens the female organs and invig-
I orates weakened functions. For every
R female ill or weakness it is the best
1 medicine made. Ask your druggist for
| SI.OO bottle Wine of Cardui, and take no
I substitute under any circumstances.
fl Mrs. Edwin Crass, Gormer, Mich., "Vben I
■ commenced using Wine of Cardui I was hardly able
fl to walk across the house. Two weeks after I walked
I half a mile and picked strawberries. When my
1 other child was born I suffered with labor pains 24
3 hours, and had to raise him on a bottle because I had
■ no milk. After using the Wine during pregnancy
I this time, I gave birth last month to a baby girl, and
■ was in labor only two hours, with but little pain,
I and I have plenty of milk. For this great improve'
I ment in my health I thank God and Wine ol Cardui."
| For advice in casaa requiring special directions,
I address, giving symptoms, "The Ladies' Advisory
K • Department," The Chat'
S r/x tanooga Medicine Co.,
I | '4 Chattanooga, Tenn.
A Monkey That Milks Cows.
Samuel Farren, of Trembley,
N. J., near Elizabeth, has a large
monkey on his farm which has be
come a noted character about the
country. Not only does he per
form various antics which attract
visitors from far and near to watch
him, but he is valued as a useful
and obedient servant. The monkey
does everything his master says but
talk, and he tries to do that if chat
tering and motions amount to any
thing.
The most useful and at the same
time intelligent act the monkey per
forms is to get the dinner bell down
from the hook on the porch promptly
at noon each day and ring it vigor
ously for the farm hands to come to
dinner. The animal does not stop
his ringing until he sees the men
drop their hoes or farm implements
and come to the house. The
monkey is a good watchman, and
runs chattering to the house when a
stranger approaches. It will also
carry water from the well, wash
dishes, and do many chores about
the farm, a#d is especially handy in
shaking down apples and cherries
from the trees.
It frequently sits at the table, and
eats from a plate with as much
decorum as a well-disciplined child.
It delights in playing pranks with
the horses, and to ring door bells as
a joke. It is fond of milk, and will
milk a cow with much dexterity,
'rhe animal is an early riser, ami if
perchance the household is late in
rising it will seize the bell and soon
has the inmates astir.
$
• If you will buy three •
■ Old V irginia Cheroots"
a ° 2
3 and smoke you will get 0
® the greatest amorof comfort and ■
® satisfaction that 5 cents will buy in ■
a a smoke, and get it three times over! £
£ You haven’t any idea how good they •
• are and cannot have until you try them. S
• Try three to-day instead of a sc. cigar. S
J Three hundred million Old Virginia Cheroots smoked this ®
gi year. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents. 3 ®
Martha Washington’s First Husband-
Westover is perhaps the most
beautiful of all the celebrated
Colonial homes of Virginia,” writes
Mrs. Thaddeus Horton, in the Oc
tober Ladies’ Home Journal. “It
was built by William Byrd, a Vir
ginian of Virginians. The greatest
of his claims to distinction was his
beautiful and beloved daughter
Evelyn, perhaps the most celebrated
belle of that day. She was edu
cated in England, whither the ac
companied her father on almost all
of his trips as colonial agent, and
was presented at the court of
George I. She had many lovers,
and naturally many offers of mar
riage from men of distinction in the
Old Dominion, for she was not only
a beauty but an heiress. Her heart,
however, was given, so it is said, to
her cousin, Colonel John Custis,
with whom she had had a childish
love affair, but whom she had not
seen for some years, and she refused
positively to marry any other man.
Finally, quite in despair, her de
voted father sought to arrange a
marriage between her and the gal
lant Colonel Custis. For some rea
son that gentleman was quite in
different to the match, and refused
it altogether. It came to light la
ter, that during the years of their
separation his fancy had become
estranged from his erstwhile favor
ite Cousin Evelyn, and he was at
the time of the overture from her
father deeply in love with one Mar
tha Dandridge, who soon afterward
became his wife, and subsequently
the wife of the illustrious George
Washington. The beautiful Evelyn,
on learning of Col. Custis’s indiffer
ence, pined and faded, and in spite
of all the love lavished upon her by
friends and family, died of a broken
heart, and her body now rests in
the old burying ground at West
over.”
Southern Cotton Mills.
Reports of cotton mill industry
for the year ending August 31 indi
cate the continued rapid growth of
that business in the South. In that
year the Northern mills purchased
2,063,000 bales against 2,027,000 in
1891, the Southern mills took
1,597,000 bales, against 604,000
in 1891.
This is a most encouraging ex
hibit for the South, and is calculated
to cause grave fears among the
Northern mill owners for the sta
bility of their business.
Moreover the growth is noted
daily. Last year the South put in
operation 800,000 new spindles, and
1,418,000 more are now in course of
construction. It is claimed, in view
of these statistics, that within the
next twelve months the South will
manufacture as much cotton as the
North. Nothing more graphic
could be produced as evidence of
the coming greatness of the “New
South.”
Child Was Feeding Snake.
The strange sight of a child feed
ing a snake was witnessed a few
days ago at Millstone, Washington
county, Md. Solomon Herbert
stated that his little grandson, Wil
lie Rice, two years old, while play
ing in the yard, shared his nursing
bottle with a great, fat, shiny black
snake. The child was thought to
have an abnormal appetite. He
usually took his bottle, after being
filled, into the yard, where it was
supposed he enjoyed it himself.
One day the bottle was filled with
coffee, well diluted with cream.
The little boy went into the yard,
and soon returned for more, calling
to his grandfather to go out and see
something. Mr. Herbert followed
his grandson, who went to where
the snake lay. The babe sucked
awhite, and then the snake sucked.
When the babe sucked too long the
snake showed signs of restlessness.
When the bottle was finished the
reptile crawled down a hole near
the cellar door. It is thought the
child had been sharing his bottle
with the snake for many days.
The Fate of The Confederate Seal.
result of the .last Con
council of waij held *0
South Carolina, in May,
1865, was soon known all over
Abbeville, and the Generals and the
Secretary of War were kept busy
for hours signing honorable dis
charges for the tired soldiers, who
immediately applied for them,”
writes Mrs. Thaddeus Horton, in
the October Ladies’ Home Journal.
“During the evening Mr. Benjamin
asked for a hatchet, and with it he
defaced the Confederate seal. At
twelve o’clock the same night the
Confederate party continued their
retreat in the direction of Washing
ton, Georgia, and while crossing
the Savannah river in the darkness
some one suggested that the seal be
thrown overboard. This idea was
at once approved, and when the
boat reached mid-stream it was
dropped with a dull splash into the
sandy river bed of that beautiful
Southern watercourse where to this
day, its mission all fulfilled, it
serenely rests.”
DO YOU GET UP
WITH A LAME BACK?
Kidney Trouble Makes You Miserable.
Almost everybody who reads the news
papers is sure to know of the wonderful
■ i ;; i. cures made by Dr.
~~k Kilmer’s Swamp-Root,
? I "‘ e £ reat kidney, liver
S 11. and bladder remedy.
-■ I? It is the great medi-
- (’*v 1 ca l triumph of the nine-
Vt I I lj '■ teenth century; dis-
Il 1 covere d alter years of
id'ln ' 1 T-sTk 3 scientific reses/ch
K Kilmer, ythe
i|. ’_k>*<p . nent kidney add blad
der specialist, and is
wonderfully successful in promptly curing
lame back, kidney, bladder, uric acid trou
bles and Bright’s Disease, which is the worst
form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root is not rec
ommended for everything but if you have kid
ney, liver or bladder trouble it will be found
just the remedy you need. It has been tested
in so many ways, in hospital work, in private
practice, among the helpless too poor to pur
chase relief and has proved so successful in
every case that a special arrangement has
been made by which all readers of this paper
who have not already tried it, may have a
sample bottle sent free by mail, also a book
telling more about Swamp-Root and how to
find out if you have kidney or bladder trouble.
When writing mention reading this generous
offer in this paper and
send your address to
Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bing- K: ! ■
hamton, N. Y. The
regular fifty cent and Homo of Swamp-Root,
dollar sizes are sold by all good druggists.
Prince Tovalou of Dahomey is
now one of the sights of Paris. He
is over six feet tall, and is 43 years
old. It is not his stature that
makes him, of interest, however, but
the fact that he is the husband of
103 wives, not counting the 23 that
died. He is the proud father of
233 living children. „ Just how
many he has been called upon to
mourn he does not remember.
Many of his children are married
and have children of their own.
All told, and including daughters
in-law, sons-in-law and grandchil
dren, Prince Tovalou’s family con
sists of 1,019 members.
A Kansas girl recently sued an
.accident insurance company because
\f injuries to her foot. It was
brought out during the progress
of the trial that she had corns and
bunions. This disclosure caused
the young man to whom she was
engaged to break the engagement.
The court gave the girl a verdict
against the insurance company for
$47. She doubtless wjyhes she had
let the company keep’
since it cost her a husband.
Germany is now buying cabbage
in Michigan for her krout. The
heads are selling for $3 per ton, on
board cars, at Bay City. The Ger
man cabbage crop of this year
proved a partial failure.
The sailors of the American fleet
that destroyed the Spanish ships off
Santiago have at length received
their prize money. There were
2,000 of them, and to each a check
for $94.75 has been mailed.
One of the most graceful of all
condolences on the Galvestor disas
ter sent from abroad was that of
the queen regent of Spain.
Steel Forks In the White House. fl
Writing of “One Hundred Yeaijfl
in the White House,” nd recalling
some of the notable entertainments
given by our Chief Executives,
Rene Bache, in the September La
dies’ Home Journal, says th al
“President Madison revived much ot,
the formal ceremony which Thomas
Jefferson had discarded, and under,
his administration great attention
was given to the state
expense being spared in makinlfl
them as fine as possible. PresidenH
Jackson disliked ceremony eve™
more than did President Jefferson®
and, preferring a steel fork himself/
always provided each guest with one
silver fork and one of steel. After
dinner he smoked a long-stemmed
corncob pipe. He wished to throw
the doors of the White House wide
open to the public, but this idea he
was forced to relinquish after the
experience of one occasion on which ;
he extended an ill-judged hospitality
to all comers. The carpet in the
East Room was ruined by punclf
which the mob spilt in its eagerness
to get at the buckets containing the
beverage; the gowns of many ladies
were spoiled and the furniture was
At tyis farewell reception I
'introduced a’
Wrtous noveltw in the shape of a
gigantic’cheese, which was cut into
pieces and distributed among the
guests.”
Largest of Prehistoric Animals.
Chicago, October B.—Elmer S.
Riggs, assistant curator of the Field
Columbian Museum, has returned
home from his fossil hunting trip in
western Colorado, during which he
found the fossil remains of the larg
est animal which ever lived on this
earth, according to all scientific rec
ords. The scientific name of the
animal is Brontosaurus excelsis, and
is commonly termed a dinosaur.
The specimen of which Prof. Riggs
found a part was, according to
scientific calculation, about 75 feet
long and 20 or 21 feet high. The
next largest specimen of this creat
ure ever discovered was estimated
to be 65 feet long and 18 feet in
height.
The portions of the skeleton se
cured by the Riggs party were the
two thigh bones, a number of
vertebrte, and seven or eight ribs.
The thigh is six feet and ten inches
in length, the vertebrae fifteen inches
in diameter and the ribs over nine
feet long and eight inches broad.
The dinosaurs were the largest ani
mals of prehistoric times, existing
when the region now covered by the
Rocky Mountains was a waste of
marsh and fresh-water lakes. The
find of Prof. Riggs has aroused
yrtietmtientrfil; interest.
The growth of Siberia, according
to Russian Vice Minister of Justice
P. Boutfsky, who has just arrived
in San Francisco on his return from
that country, means much to the
United States. Russia will pur
chase from this country, he states,
all the supplies for the trans-Siberian
railroad which cannot be secured at
home. This means the expenditure
in America of many millions of dol
lars, as it is estimated it will re
quire to complete the work, some
thing like $100,000,000. Os course
Americans are glad to sell to Russia
all she needs, but there is no doubt
that Russia is coming here because
she knows that she can get the best
the market affords.
All except
bad ones!
There are hun
dreds of cough medi
cines which relieve
coughs, a// coughs,
except bsd ones!-
The medicine which
has been curing the
worst of bad coughs
for 60 years is Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral.
Here is evidence:
“My wife was troubled with «
deep-seated cough on her lungs for
three years. One day I thought
of how Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
saved the life of my sister after
the doctors had all given her up to
die. So I purchased two bottles,
and it cured my wife completely.
It took only one bottle to cure my
sister. So you see that three bot
tles (one dollar each) saved two
lives. W e all send you our heart
felt thanks for what you have done
for us.”—J. H. Burgs, Macon,CoL,
Jan. 13, 1899.
Now, for the frst time you
can get a trial bottle of Cherry
Pectoral for 25 cents. Ask
your druggist.
E A Wonderful Man.
Fitzsimmons is a wonder
ql man. He claims to be about
\ J£^" seven years of age, but there
I ose who, having looked up his
\ are quite sure that he is at
years beyond that mark,
IWmJr forty-eight. At all events,
I; is one*of the oldest men actively
the prize ring, and decidedly one
Ej.the best, if not indeed the pre
■|wf' That Jj? was able to give
|Mkin, fifteen or more years
and thirty pounds heavier,
IFli a terrible beating is proof pos-
Hre that the “old man” has not yet
the limit of his usefulness.
Instill knows how to use his fists,
Jid has the muscle, the steam, and
ajflhtamina to turn his knowledge
best money-making purpose.
Ihe secret of Fitzsimmons’ wonder
ful strength and lasting power is
t®jubtedly that he takes care of
rjnself. He burns up a plenty of
CTsnie while he is fighting, to be
but when the fight is over he
goes to work to regain the tissue he
has lost. He does not debauch, but
is temperate in all of his habits.
That is why his brain is always
ciear and his muscles always hard.
would seem to indicate
is not' the hard
Wich makes a pugilist’s “life”
short—for Fitzsimmons has been
fighting almost constantly for more
than twenty years—but the fast
living which almost invariably ac
companies the following of the prize
ring-
A grave containing the remains
of a person who died sixteen years
ago of smallpox was opened in the
churchyard of a Middle Tennessee
village, a few weeks ago, and one
or more of the men who made the
excavation have since been attacked
by the dreaded eruptive fever.
The germs had been preserved in
the tomb all those years. We can
think of no more conclusive argu
ment than this incident affords, in
favor of t a more rational mode of
disposing of the dead. Burial is
dangerous to the health of the liv
ing; and it is becoming an em
barrassing inconvenience, through
the growing area of cemeteries in
and adjoining cities.
I,
is only a symptom—not a
disease. So are Backache,
Nervousness, Dizziness and the
Blues. They all come from an
unhealthy state of the men
strual organs. If you suffer
from any of these symptoms—
if you feel tired and languid in
the morning and wish you could
lie in bed another hour or two
—if there is a bad taste in the
mouth, and no appetite —if
there is pain in the side, back
or abdomen—BRADFIELD’S
FEMALE REGULATOR will
bring about a sure cure. The
doctor may call your trouble
some high-sounding Latin
name, but never mind the name.
The_trouble is in the menstrual
organs, and Bradfield’s Female
Regulator will restore you to
health and regulate the menses
like clockwork.
Sold by druggists for $r a bottle. A free illustrated
book will be sent to any woman if request be mailed to
THE BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
I IMMMWMMWeSUMeMMaMCSOWMMaMMcaMMI
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Oruinary’s Office, Oct. 2, IMO. Notice to all
concerned: Geo. L. Chamblee, administrator
of the estate of Elisha Chamblee, deceased, rep
resents in his petition duly filed in office that
he has fully and justly administered the estate
of said deceased, and prays to be discharged
from said administration. This application
will be considered and passed upon by the
Court on the first Monday in January, 1901.
- A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Sept. 17, 1900. Notice to all
concerned. T. H. Gilbert, administrator of the
estate of W. R. Chamblee, deceased, represents
in his petition duly filed in office that he has
fully and justly administered the estate of said
deceased, and prays to be discharged from said
administration. This application will be con
sidered and passed upon by the Court on the
first Monday in January, 1901.
- A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORdrA—Hall County.
Ordinary’s Office, Oct. 2,1900. Notice to all
concerned: H. W. T. Gaines, administrator of
the estate of E. R. Wright, deceased, represents
in his petition duly filed in office that he has
fully and justly administered the estate of said
deceased, and prays to be discharged from said
administration. This application will be con
sidered and passed upon by the Court on the
first Monday in January, 1901.
—.... A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
- Twelve Months’ Support.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Oct. 1. 1900. Notice to all
concerned: The appraisers appointed to appraise
and set apart a twelve months’ support to
Mrs. N. E. Thomas, widow of J. A. Thomas, de
ceased, and her one minor child, out of the es
tate of said deceased, have tiled their report in
this office. And unless some valid objection be
made to the Court on or before the first Mon
in November, 1900, the same will then be ap
proved and made the judgment of the Court.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Administrator’s Sale,
GEORGIA—HaII County,
By virtue of an order from the Court of Ordi
nary of Hall County there will be sold at the
court house door, on the first Tuesday in No
vember, 1900, at public outcry, within the legal
of sale, the following described property,
tc
Ah tract or parcel of land lying and be
ing in t 12th district of Hall County contain
ing two nundred acres, more or less, and being
part of original land lot No. 139, known as the
old home place of Geo. W. Garner, dec’d, and
being the place whereon the said Garner re
sided up to the time of his death.
Said property has a merchant mill in good
condition, together with house and out build
ings. T£pi>e sold as the property of George W.
Garner'deceased, for the purpose of raying
the debts of said estate and for distribution
among the heirs at law.
Terms a>f sale, one hundred dollars down,
balance -fan. 1,1901, at eight per cent interest;
or ail ceswdown if purchaser so desires,
pe HOMER L. KEMP,
.fe-uininistrator of George W. Garner.
HEALTHY OLD AGE figg
The majority of persons upon reaching middle age and past ksSBBBW
find their blood becomes weak and thin, and diseases that were
\ easily controlled in earlier life begin to affect the constitution.
b. U Those predisposed to Scrofula, Cancer, Rheumatism, Gout and other hereditary troubles may escape
1 till then, but as they age the blood, so long tainted and weakened by accumulated waste matters, is no
l° n ? er a ble to properly nourish the body, and it becomes an easy mark for disease. At this critical period
bl°<>d must be re-enforced before it can perform its legitimate functions and rid the system of
these poisons, and nothing so surely and effectually does this as S. S. S.
S. S. S. strengthens and enriches the blood, improves the appetite, and builds up the general constitu
tion. It is not only the best blood purifier, but the best tonic for old people. It warms the blood, tones up
the nerves, removes all taint from the blood, and prevents the development of disease.
S. S. S. is the only purely vegetable blood medicine known. Not one particle of mercury, potash or
other mineral poison can be found in it, and it may be taken for any length of time without harm.
S. S. S. is the only remedy that reaches deep-seated blood troubles like Scrofula, Cancer, Rheuma
tism, Eczema, Tetter, etc. It purifies ana restores the blood to a healthy, normal condition, and makes it impossible for
any poisonous waste materials to accumulate.
If you have an old running sore or an obstinate ulcer that refuses to heal, or are troubled with boils and carbuncles, try S. S. S.
It never fails to make a quick and permanent cure of these pests. If your system is run down and you feel
the need of a tonic, S. S. S. will strengthen and help you as it has many others to a happy, healthv old age.
S. S. S. cured Mr. H. Borden of Saumsville, V«„ of a case of ® la^.^ ar J fo l years afflicl s d
Eczema of thirty-five years’ standing, after the best physicians rh s u ? at ,s m ’ and h ® d us^ d e ' el > remedy WF
in the surrounding country had failed. This was seven years a “ d recommended as a cure without receiving anv V JF
ago, and there has been no return of the disease. complete an ° “ *
If you are in doubt about your disease, and will send us a statement of your case, our physician will
give you any information or advice wanted, for which we make no charge.
Book on Blood and Skin Diseases sent to any desiring it. Address Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga.
S, S. S. IS THE IDEAL TONIC* AND BLOOD PURIFIER FOR
OLD PEOPLE.
The Maine Republicans expect to
re-elect Congressman Boutelle on
Monday, though he is in a lunatic
asylum and probably will never be
able to serve in the house again.
It has been stated that failure to
re-elect him would certainly result
in his collapse, and his constituents
he has «erved since 1881 say
they would rather go without a rep
resentative than to have any share
in his undoing.
GOOD
HEALTH
[ by the Quart.
M Every bottle you take of Johnston’s
■ Sarsaparilla means better health,
jj and every bottle contains a full
quart. It makes better blood—purer
blood. For thirty years this famous
\ IF remedy has been creating and main
\ff taining good health.
JL Johnston’s
p%| Sarsaparilla
builds up the system, tones the
jiggllllj nerves, and strengthens the muscles
more promptly and effectually than
any other remedy known. The pallor of the
cheek disappears, energy takes the place of
languor, and the rich color of health flows to
the cheeks. Unequalled for all disorders of the
stomach and liver, and for all weakening com
plaints of men, women and children.
Sold everywhere. Paleo, *I.OO per fall faart bottle.
MICHIGAN DRUG CO., - Detroit, Hick.
For sale by M. C. Brown & Co.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Oct. 1,1900. To all persons
concerned: This is to give notice that H. M.
Newman has in due form of law filed his petition
to be appointed permanent administrator upon
the estate of John R. Newman, late of said
county. This application will be considered
and passed upon on the first Monday in Novem
ber, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Oct. 1, 1900. To all persons
concerned: This is to give notice that H. M.
djMßßfßfes in due form of law filed his petition
administrator upon
late of said county.
IWHWpplication will be considered and passed
upon on the first Monday in November, 1900,
A RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Oct. 1, 1900. To all persons concerned: This
is to give notice that Y. b. Abercrombie has in
due form of law filed his petition to be appoint
ed permanent administrator upon the estate of
David G, Blackwell, late of said county. This
application will be considered and passed upon
on the first Monday in November, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Oct. 1, 1900. To all persons concerned: This
ts to give notice that J. H. Simpson and F. M.
Simpson have in due form of law filed their pe
tition to be appointed permanent administrators
upon the estate of Moses H. Simpson, late of
said county. This application will be consid
ered and passed upon on the first Monday in
November, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH. Ordinary.
Letters of Administration.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Oct. 1,1900. To all persons concerned: This
is to give notice that Thos. C. Black has in due
form of law filed his petition to be appointed
permanent administrator upon the estate of
Eliza R. Black, late of said county. This ap
plication will be considered and passed upon on
the first Monday in November, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Leave to Sell.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Oct. 2, 1900. Notice to all
concerned: A. J. Carter, administrator of the
estate of Larkin C. Carter, deceased, has in
due form of Jaw filed his application for leave
to sell the lands belonging to the estate of said
deceased. This application will be considered
and passed upon on the first Monday in Novem
ber, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH. Ordinary.
Leave to Sell.
GEORGIA—IIaII County.
To whom it may concern: Jno. A. Suddath,
administrator of Z. T. Suddath, deceased, has
in due form applied to me for leave to sell cer
tain lands belonging to the estate of said de
ceased, and desires a special order to sell eaid
land in Jackson county, where said land lies,
and said application will be heard on the first
Monday in November, 1900. This Oct. 2,1900.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA, Hall County.—Ordinary’s Office,
Sept. 3,1900. Notice to all concerned: T. M.
Merck, executor of the will of John Merck,
deceased, represents in his petition duly filed
in office that he has fully and justly administer
ed the estate of said deceased, ana prays to be
discharged from said administration. This ap
plication will be considered and passed upon by
the court on the first Monday in December, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Aug. 25,1900. Notice to all
concerned: Garland H. Prior, executor of the
Will of Mrs. Huldah McClesky, deceased, rep
resents in his petition duly filed in office that
he has fully ana justly administered the estate
of said deceased, and prays to be discharged
from said administration. This application
will be considered and passed upon by the
court on the first Monday in December, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Aug. 24, 1900. Notice to all
concerned: G. P. Pitman and M. B. Carter,
administrators of the estate of T. N. Brian,
deceased, represent in their petition duly filed
in office that they have fully and justly ad
ministered the estate of said deceased, and pray
to be discharged from said administration.
This application will be considered and passed
upon by the court on the first Monday m De
cember, 1900.
A. RUDOLPH. Ordinary.
Letters of Dismission.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, Oct. 2, 1900. Notice to all
concerned: Russell Smith, administrator of
the estate of B. G. McCluskey, deceased, repre
sents in his petition duly filed in office that he
has fully and justly administered the estate of
said deceased, and prays to be discharged from
said administration. This application will be
considered and passed upon by the Court on
the first Munday in January, 1901.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
Homestead Notice.
GEORGIA—HaII County.
Ordinary’s Office, September 29, 1900.—M. M.
Savage has applied for exemption of personalty
and setting apart and valuation of homestead,
and I will pass upon the same at 10 o’clock on
the 20th day of October, 1900, at my office.
A. RUDOLPH, Ordinary.
THE GREAT Mil,
P. T. Barnum, is quoted as saying “the bigger the hum
bug, the greater the success, ’ ’ but this is shown to
be a fallacy, as demonstrated by Blackman’s Bar
gain House, in building recently occupied by Mrs.
Dykes, Milliner, east side square. This house is
revolutionizing prices, as will be found by noting
the following quotations:
1 paper good Pins, lc.
1 paper good Needles, lc.
Good Steel Thimble, lc.
20 Marbles, lc.
Bunch Cotton Tape, lc.
Paper hair-pins, 2c.
1 Purse, 2c.
1 dozen Bone Collar Buttons, 3e.
Bottle fine Cologne, sc.
Pair Sleeve buttons, 15c; worth 25.
28-inch Gloria Silk Unbrella, 49c;
worth 75c.
Gloria Silk Umbrella, Gents’, 98c;
worth $1.25.
Large Cotton Towels, sc.
Extra Large Cotton Towels, 10c.
Good hammer, 10c.
Key-hole Saws, 10c.
Good Padlock, sc.
Full line Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, Tinware, etc.,
at astonishingly low prices. Everything in keeping
with above quotations.
Hoping to see everybody at Blackman’s Bargain ’
House, I am,
Yours, truly,
L. J. BLACKMAN,
East Side Square. - Gainesville, Ga.
SIGN OF THE
“BROAD AXE.”
I
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|| gut | Wig K..«* |
No. 2111. No. 4086—Height 3 ft. 2 in.
Height. Width. Thickness. Price. j)j e 24xl4xlo
4 ftlß in. 3 ins2s 00 B. Basel.B x 1.4 x 0.10
4 ftlß in 2 in 18 00 Prine Sfel 15 OG
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ftl4 in 2 in 12 00
3 ftl2 in 2 in 800
When you want a MONUMENT or IRON FENCE, write me for
Catalogue and Price List; and after you have made your selections I will
make you a discount that ought to secure me your order.
DALTON MARBLE WORKS,
11. P. COLVARI), Proprietor.
Dalton, Ga.
mb m ■ ■ B m ■ mb 'The disease is the national curse of Japan
■ ■ I Lu and China. A remedy wasimperative and
MM| M M HA |J | |X| the medical profession there a' cepted this
B n . Z as the only permanent, painless, private,
■■■ HA ■■ ■ II ilnilim file quick cure known to science. A weeks’
■■■ ■■ ■ ■ ■ UpiUllly GlUi treatment FREE OF CHARGE. Phy.
, - Tlffif 1 nfill Olli sicians and all confidentially treated by man.
disease cured DV I Au!k“A-rUU-onA Cure guaranteed.
J inv«% n ivu unn home treatment co.,
345942 cases In* 17 years 123 West 42d St., New York (Sty.
* •'
BIPANS tabbies
Doctors find
A Good
Prescription
lor mankind
Ten for five cents, at Druggist, Grocer,, Restaurant,,
Saloons, News-Stands General Stores and Barbers
Shops. t hey banish pain, i .duce sleep, and prolong life
One gives relief! No matter what’s the matter, one will
do you good feu samples and one thousand testi
monial. Bent by mad to any address on receipt of price
by the Ripans Chemical Co., io Spruce St., New York city.
Genuine Brass Padlock, 10c.
Good Steel Pliers, 10c.
Good Scissors, 10 to 25c.
1 set White Metal Teaspoons, 10c;
worth 25c.
1 set White Metal Tablespoons,
15c; worth 35c.
1 set common Tablespoons, 7c.
Lace Pillow Shams, 10c. each.
3-lb. Feather Pillows. 50c.
Good bristle hair-brush, 15c; worth
25c.
Good Shoe Brush, 10c.
Shaving Brush, 3c.
Box Toilet Soap, 3 cakes, sc.
Men’s Knit Drawers, 15c.
Large line Embroideries, lc. yard
and up.
Large line Laces lc. yd. and up.
(Job) Large line sample hats, 25c.
to 98c.