The Southern record. (Toccoa, Ga.) 1897-1901, September 17, 1897, Image 2

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The Fall Season is Here! SO IS BEN. P. BROWN, JR m 5 With a full and elegant line of Dry Goods, Boots, Shoes, Mats, Caps, Furniture, Wagons, Buggies, Crockery, Glassware, Willow and Woodenware, DRY GOODS, Notions, Groceries, Etc. I sell my goods at a profit, one that is consistent with good I buy COTTON and COUN- nighest market price for same, antee entire satisfaction. SOUTHERN RECORD PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY BV SOUTHERN PUBLISHING CO. INCORPORATED. J. B. JONES, W. A. FOWLER, PRESIDENT. GEN. SfANAGER. \v. A. FOWLER. EDITOR. Entered at the Post-Office as second ciass mail matter. Rates of subscription: ¥1.00 per year; 50 cents for six months and 25 cents for three months. Obituary notices of ten lines or less free; over ten lines 5 cents per line. The editor is not responsible for sentiments expressed by correspondents. Articles intended for publication must he ac¬ companied by publication, writer’s name, but not for nec¬ essarily for pro¬ tection to us. The Epidemic. Wednesday the trains entering Atlanta were crowded to overflow¬ ing with refugees from the South¬ ern Country,—about Mobile, New Orleans, and the cities on the Gulf. There were over $7cx> worth of tickets sold at Mobile for Atlanta, Wednesday. All the interior towns including Chattanooga, have quar- •mteened against the infected points. Savannah, Brunswick. Macon, Jacksonville, Fla., and other places have also quaranteen- ed. Atlanta, Toccoa, and other mountain towns, of N. E. Georgia stand with gates open, inviting the refugees to enter, and rest till the dreadful scourge lias abated. The outlook now is that there will be a great epidemic—in fact the Doctors sent to these places by the Federal government look for a dreadful time from now till frost comes to stamp out the plague. Our nisdemeanors. Last week’s Record went on record as favoring the working of our misdemeanor convicts on the public highways of Habersham county. We based our reasons on the proposition that since Gov. At¬ kinson has ordered that all misde¬ meanor convicts—those who are sentenced to the chain gang for twelve months or less—be returned to their respective county authori¬ ties, and as Habersham county has several—we do not know just how many—the county commissioners ought to make preparations to work them at home. There is a law al- lowing the commissioners to hire these convicts out to other counties, but Habersham has need of all of hers, and now, too, to put our roads in first-class condition. Then, too, the cost of preparing to take care of the convicts will be small, and if they are worth $100 a year hire to private parties, they are certainly worth their board and clothing to the county of Habersham. Gov. Atkinson says : “Convicts are now being worked by private individuals in every sec- tion of the State. If these men can pay from $60 to $icx> each for these convicts and work them at a profit, surely the county authorities need not fear entailing loss upon their counties by having to take charge of them, even if required to employ them on other business than work- ing on the public roads. “lf, in any instance, the county feel! that her convicts are not suffi- ciently numerous to justify the or- gamzation of a county chain gang, it can cooler with other counties similarly situated and consolidate, There is no judicial circuit in this State which will not furnish enough misdemeanor convicts to justify at least chain * one gang. “1 wish, however, to emphasize the lact that in almost every section in Georgia it will be the part of wisdom to put these misdemeanor convicts at work upon the public highways. To improve the road- ways in Georgia will be of immense value in the rural districts. I ex- pect to see the breaking up of pri- vate convict camps in Georgia give a great impetus to the movement in behalf of good roads. Senator Moneybags Hanna, of Ohio, said during his McKinley | campaign, that “no man in public Ce >%t m P u 1C Jn -\ .. im £* .. |The Democrats that wily are now using this against statesman, with the effect that that being his prin- cipie he should stand to the rack ’ nd it is probable that he will be :aten. Paper, Pens and Ink for sale, at he Record Stationery Store. * 9 Allan D. Candler. Secretary of State, Allen D. Candler, an honored son of Georgia, and a man who does not know that he is a candidate’ for Govern¬ or of the great state of Georgia— but he is—because the common people, and not the politicians, are pushing his name forward for that great office, said last Saturday, in an interview, “I do not think that any political campaign should be inaugurated this year in the inter¬ est of anybody. It is more than a year before the next election. The people want a rest. For some years past we have had a surfeit of politics, both in quality and quan¬ tity. What the people want next year, if I read their wishes aright, and I believe I do, is a short, clean campaign. This year God has blessed us with the finest crops in a generation ; we want to gather and market those crops and pay our debts as far us we can before the politician is turned loose on the people. What we want now is more peas and pumpkins and less politics; more peanuts and fewer peanut politicians. 9 J These are patrioic words from a patriotic man, and they are above the heads of the average politician. The politician is out for all he can get, and he is an eternal agitator who would swap the liberties of the people at any moment for a chance to help himself to political preferment. Candler is different. Allen D. Candler has been put to the test, and the “Plowboy from Pigeon Roost” has never been found want¬ ing or derelict of the duties encum¬ bent upon him as a representative of the people. Candler is a demo¬ crat, stands flatfooted (and has al¬ ways stood there; not a recent convert as are other aspirants for the governorship) upon the Chica¬ go platform, and is in favo^ of the repeal of the iniquitous prohibitory ten per cent tax on state banks, and opposed to government by in¬ junction. Can you think of a clearer, more logical, or better plat¬ form than this? Can you think of a more worthy man in the state of Georgia to help carry these articles bf faith into execution than Cand¬ ler? Candler is the cleanest man, today, in Georgia politics, and is al¬ so the best man in Georgia for Governor. That Lively Corpse. Augusta Chronicle. The prominent men and papers that habitually insist upon silver or free coinage being “a dead issue,” are periodically reminded that they are the victims of misplaced confi¬ dence. These men are either wo- fully ignorant and blind, as well as deaf, or they simply resort to delib¬ erate mendacity. If a Southern or Western bimetalic editor assures them that they are laboring under delusion, they pay no attention to the admonition. But here comes the New York World, with the il¬ lumination of recent events before it, and significantly says : “The dispatches in the World on Saturday and yesterday from Na- tioual and State Democratic com- mitteemen, unanimously affirming their adherence to free silver and their allegiance to Mr. Bryan, were an astonishing revelation. “It was perhaps to have been ex- pected that the Democrats who man- aged last year’s campaign in the Populistic States of the Northwest and the South should still ‘stand to their guns,’ in spite of dollar wheat land 40-cent silver dollars. But that the committeemen in the now pros- perous States of the West, and in the Middle and Eastern States that accepted the Chicago platform sim- ply to be ‘regular,’ should take the same position is a striking and dis- turning proof of the strength party spirit and the vitality * of a delusion. “The representatives of New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New Hampshire and Vermont align themselves with the committeemen of Indiana, Michigan, Iowa, Mis- *? uri .’ Kansas ; Kentuck >' aild West A lrgima, in looking to Brvan as the leader of the party and in cepting free silver as its shibboleth. “Taken in connection with the similar action of the State conven- tion this >' ear ’ k shows a surprising popularity for a defeated candidate. It is a warning, furthermore, that the battle for sound money and for the national honor and authority is not yet over.” ' Only men who are wilfully or in¬ voluntarily out of touch with pub¬ lic sentiment and the course of facts need be astonished at these revela¬ tions. Such men should read pa¬ pers on both sides of the contro¬ versy, instead of sticking to jour¬ nalistic organs that appear to be intent upon misrepresentation and suppression of truth. As for the financial battle it has just begun, as it were. Even the Maryland De¬ mocracy might safely have re-af¬ firmed the Chicago platform, for the bolting mugwumps, in the mass, have had their dose of Republican rule in that State. The Washing¬ ton Post, although opposed to free coinage, is.a fair paper, and, after discussing the Maryland situation, from the stand of Republican ad¬ ministration in Maryland—made possible by Democratic defection— says : “Nobody is better off. Nothing has been improved. The Demo¬ crats who, in 1895, joined with the Republicans to deliver the State to their party enemies, can now point to no substantial achievement, to no puDlic benefit or betterment, that will excuse or even palliate their apostasy. They cannot justify them¬ selves before the tribunal of their own consciences. Theirs is a har¬ vest of Dead sea fruit.” Unhappy mugwumps ! Their on¬ ly safety is return to the fold of or¬ ganized Democracy. When a man ceases to excuse himself he is in a bad way. The poet makes a des¬ perate character exclaim : “I have ceased to justify myself'unto myself, The last infirmity of evil.” The loss, a few days ago of sev¬ eral large guns offTybee light by the government, caused by the shifting of one of the large guns on the deck and thus sinking the schooner on which they were load¬ ed has drawn attention to the sec¬ recy with which the government is proceeding with the work of for¬ tifying the coasts and strengthen¬ ing port and harbor defences. Nobody seems to have known that the guns were on the way to Tybee, and but for the accident they would probably have been landed with a little more publicity than they were shipped. Other and simular ship¬ ments are being made from time to time, of which but little is heard. It will probably not be a great while before the world will wake up one fine morning to a realiza¬ tion that the long-discussed de¬ fenseless condition of the Ameri¬ can coast has ceased to exist and that we are ready to defend our¬ selves against the world. William Jennings Bryan, “the noblest Roman of them all,” recent¬ ly said: “The weekly newspaper plows the ground; sows the seed and cultivates the crop—and too of¬ ten is forced to step aside while those who neither planted or culti¬ vated reap the ripened grain. The cause which you advocate, the can¬ didate you support and the party you love will be immeasurably strengthened if each of you will step into the office of your local paper that is patiently and uncom¬ plainingly keeping alive the spark of true Democracy and pay up your subscription for a year or two in advance.” At Newark, N. J., almost in the , 131, , °'\ 0 .... e s . a , ue o ,. T 1 ert\ m ” 1 ork harbor, a white woman ' vas assaulted by a negro the other j day, and a mob of determined men, I armed ™ to L the teeth set l out in mir P ’ * lUt of 0t th « culprit, o whose fate may or 111 a no * settled in “the usual - manner. This adds another to the list of similar crimes in the North. which are ^ivino- thp P r>Pr»r>l*> P c " 11 . tbe character j ^ tbe *° n ne an ff ro int>1 snd g lnto the propensity a portion of the race to such crimes. Perhaps this turn in affairs will ul- timatelv g \ ^ opinion • and j ‘ - , f H U g men _ Norths radical 0 e ' emen t> President ‘ AUK ink- r «^fi in • 3 * ' ’ h -1 Buffalo, ff , N. A.., made use °^ ^ ie f°Bowing patriotic utter- anc e “’Blessed is the country whose soldiers *1° fi^ht for it and are willing g to p.: ® v „ w , fI ^ , have the best . ’ tnat an y m » n has, their own lives, to preserve it, because they love it. Such an r.rmy the United States has always commanded in all 1 her er hi* hlh * r ., ‘ Rev. Chas. R. Nisbet, after sup- I plying the Presbyterian pulpit here for the past year, to the entire sat¬ isfaction of that congregation, left for the Theological Seminary at Princeton, N. J., IastTuesday. Mr. Nisbet is a young man, and a tho¬ roughly consecrated Christian and earnest worker for his Lord and Master. Mr. Nisbet made here many warm and true friends, who wish him the greatest success in life and in his chosen profession, the ministry. Mr. Nisbet is a good preacher now though young,and we predict for him a high place in the councils of his church. He returns to Princeton to complete his course in the ministry, which will take two or three terms yet. He has minis¬ tered to this church as well and as faithfully as any minister who ever occupied that pulpit, and the con¬ gregation has been well pleased with him. We hope he will again return to Toccoa and take up again his ministerial duties here. Recent dispatches from Haiwaii say that the nations of those is¬ lands do not want to be annexed to the United States, but by what right do the natives presume to have a voice in the affairs of their own country? Have not the car¬ pet-baggers and sugar barons from New England said the islands shall be annexed? Have they not made their deal with the Republican party for annexation? There are only some fifteen natives to one New' Englander in the islands, but the New Englanders have the friendship of the government at Washington, and the government owns the war ships ; and that set¬ tles the question. The Haiwaiians lose. The 73,000 surplus marriageable women of Massachusetts are mak¬ ing the lives of the bachelor politi clans of that State sad. Mayor Qumcy, of Boston, comes in for a large share of the criticism, and it has already been hinted that he is looking around for a wife, in order to escape the opposition of this dan¬ gerous element during his coming contest. The women are right; they ought to have some show. If they cannot do anything else, they should form a trust and get them¬ selves a favorable section in the tariff bill. From the numerous letters writ¬ ten by Judge Sweat of the Bruns¬ wick circuit, on the convict lease system and his orders to return mis¬ demeanor convicts to their respect¬ ive counties instanter, one would be led to infer that that astute gentle¬ man is planting his lightning rods in pleasant places, mayhap to catch an}' political lightning that might come his way for the Governorship nomination. Springfield Republican : A Maine man who recently sued his neighbor for occupying three in¬ ches of his land was not a little dis¬ comfited when a survey proved that he himself was the trespasser to the extent of two feet and eleven inches. His overthrow was com- plete when his neighbor shook hands with him and told him the fence needen’t be moved. The Issue in South Carolina. Birmingham (Ala.) News. The triumph of McLaurin in the South Carolina Senatorial race is beintr nointed to hv R P n,ihlir P fln ^ ? T furt he f P roof of , the L “gfowth of the protection , sentiment in the ^ ou * ecause McLaurin voted or a on cotton. The issue in ! , protection ie raL e " not and free . but that ^ honest. ta e ’ a ecent , > uunv man against a brace ot dem- agogues and feather weights, It a contest in which the individ- Ua * was tbe * ssue - ~OId People. ~ Old , people who require medicine to regulate the bowels and kidneys the true remedy in Elec- tn Y I ? ltte rs - This medicine does ?°* i and contains whis no ke\ nor other intoxicant, but acts as a tonic and alterative. It acts on stomach and bowels, addln S stren gth and giving tone to f iie °rg a ns, thereby aiding nature the performance of the functions. Electric Bitters is an excellent appe- Bzer and aids digestion. Old peo- ^ ust exact b’ what they per “ ee< !* bottle Price at E. R. cents Davis and & $L Co’s ,00 Drug Store. but that is a living profit, business principles. the TRY PRODUCE, and pay Call and see me. I guar- Down With the Bible. Some twenty-five years ago, a politico-religious combination was formed in Cincinnati, Hamilton, Piqua and other Ohio towns, the single purpose of which was to le¬ gislate the Protestant Bible out of the public schools of that State. Young and inexperienced but pliant individuals were sent to the Legis¬ lature to support the measure which a junta had already prepared. The contest in both houses of the Gen- eral Assembly was bitter and pro- longed, and in many of the counties of the State feeling became almost feud. The conspiracy, the object and the propagators were over¬ thrown, and the Bible remained. The same arguments which the moral sense of the people of Ohio repudiated a quarter of a century ago, have now been advanced by a clerical gentleman of Georgia, who declares that it is contrary to the spirit of our institutions to read the Word of God to the public school children of Georgia, (and of any other State, of course.) He de¬ nounces the custom, and invites the agitation of the question of its pro¬ hibition. The two pointed reasons which the reverend gentleman ad¬ vances are : 1. That Jews, Catho¬ lics, infidels, atheists, as well as Protestants, are taxed for the main¬ tenance of the public schools, and therefore, “the taxes derived from a people regardless of religious faith or non-faith,” are misapplied when “applied for the furtherance of doc trinal teaching;” that the custom is “un-American.” 2. That the reading ot the Protestant Bible in the public schools “is distasteful to our brethren of the Jewish, Catho¬ lic and other faiths, and to the in¬ fidels and atheists,” and therefore the custom should be discontinued. We incline to the opinion that if there are any “infidels and ath¬ eists” among the schoolchildren of Georgia the reading of the word ot God to them in a brief chapter each morning will be a beneficent sending. We want no infidels or atheists in this country any more than we want anarchists ; and anar¬ chists indeed are made out of just such material. We also believe that the people of this country are by a very large majority Protest¬ ant ; and if the reading of the Pro¬ testant Bible in the public schools is prohibited because it is distaste¬ ful to the Jews, Catholics, infidels, and atheists, “then we deprive the many rather than offend the few.” We also think that the clerical re¬ former is going away outside his accredited mission ; and since he so heartily endorses Sam Jones’ prop¬ osition that any method is right which seeks to inculcate religious ideas and spread the Gospel, he appears to be inconsistent in seek¬ ing the suppression of this innocent and beneficent method. The next step, in the line of consistency, would be to abolish the custom of opening our legislative and con- gressional sessions and sittings \> ith prayer ; for there are unhappi¬ ly “non-believers” sometimes in every legislative assembly, as well as people of various faiths differ¬ ing from the faith of the chaplain to whom they are forced to listen ; and the prayer of a protestant chap- lain may be .-dUtasefui” to brothers, F.nally, let us drive God out of the Const,tut,on, (to be con- s,stent, brother,) and let the civil- ,zed world understand that not only in politics and in government, but in religion also, we are an\thing and nothing. Work of tearing down the old Carey warehouse was commenced Monday, preparatory to the erection of B. P. Brown’s large business house on that lot. If you desire good work on your watch or clock, carry it to J. S. Hiltz, in the Matheson building. We recommend him. ---- Atlanta reported six cases small- pox last Monday. This is some- thing new for Atlanta-i, e„,o admit the existence of contagious diseases within her borders. Visiting Cards of all kind at the Southern Record Sta. Store. How Is Your Stationery?. Are you nearly out ? Look and see— right now; don’t wait until you have used up your very last envelope or letter-head or bill-head before you order some more. Make it a point to order your printing before you have exhausted your supply— so that the printer will have time to turn out a good job. Another good point to bear in mind is that your printing should be taken to The Record Job Office, Toccoa, Ga. CUBAN OIL cures Cuts, Burns, Bruises, Rheuma- tism and Sores. Price, 25 cts. GLOVER FOUND NOT GUILTY] 18-Year Old Youth Acquitted of Charge of Killing HU Grand¬ mother. Clarkesville, Sept. 14. —The jury in the case of St. Clair Glover, charged with the murder of his aged grandmother, returned a verdict of not guilty at 8 o’clock last Thurs¬ day morning. This is the somewhat unexpected ending of a very remarkable and sensational case. The defendant is a youth of 18 years, very boyish looking, but had already been found guilty at a former trial of the shock¬ ing crime. He received a life sen¬ tence, but secured a new trial. He was convicted on the strength of a confession which was alleged to have been drawn from him by fraud, and for this reason it did not play so important a part in the second trial. Opinion has been about equally divided as to the boy’s guilt. The crime for which he was tried was committed on the night of Oc¬ tober 16, 1896. Mrs. Glover was found dead in bed, with a bottle of chloroform under her pillow and a saturated handkerchief across her face. Miss Ella Glover, the daugh¬ ter, and St. Clair and Joseph Glo¬ ver, grandsons of the old lady, were placed under arrest. The former two w r ere immediately released, however, and St. Clair was held for the crime. In the confession which young Glover is alleged to have made, he stated that he killed his grandmo¬ ther because he learned that she had made her will and had left him out of it. An Innocent Man Lynched. The worst feature of mob law is that it is about as likely to punish the innocent as the guilty. Henry Wall, a young white man, was lynched near Friend’s House, Pat rick county, Virginia, a few days ago, for “ the usual crime.” After¬ wards it was found that he was innocent of the charge. There is much indignation at the officers of the law who gave the man up to the mob, but the real blame lies with the public sentiment which endorses lynching under any cir¬ cumstances. New Depository. Last week cashier Bruce of the Toccoa Banking Co., forwarded Gov. Atkinson a bond for $50,000, which was accepted and now the Toccoa Bank is a State depository. This speaks well for our bank and local bankers. It also shows what outsiders think of the busi¬ ness ability of the officers of the Bank of Toccoa. There is not a better bank in Georia than the Bank of Toccoa, and few better bankers than Bob Bruce. Called Away. Monday Prof. Barrett, ^ principal and superintendent of pub , ic ^ schools of T received tele „ . gram from his wife, at Washington, Ga-> , ha ttheir little son was dead, and Prof. Barrett hurried away to place in answer to the sad message. Mrs. Barrett and children were ^ er mother’s family while awa * t ‘ n g the completion of a house here for their occupancy, and while there two of her children were taken | sick and the little *boy died very j j suddenly—before there was time to notify the father of the serious sick¬ ness of his little son. | ^ he people of Toccoa extend sym- pathies to the bereaved parents. - j A Chapman rp,. ne 8'° last " week ho assaulted in Macon a Miss ! was shot by a sheriff’s posse Sunday last, while defying arrest for killing an- other negro. He was lynched soon after being taken. STAR LIVERY STABLES, HOGSED & GARLAND, Proprs. Tugalo St. Toccoa, Georgia. we Horses, Mules and Buggies Kept constantly on hand for sale or exchange, “cheaper than the cheapest.” We can sell yo s either new or second-hand Buggies, and to prices we simply defy O ompetition. Come and see us. as J. H. VICKERY & SONS, H General * 3 Merchandise, (is; 3 GSF & w| I N T Groceries, ft 5 ± ■R Clothing, ill .;(! iiv :r! x BoAs, Shoes, . m “---V Hats and Caps. I* % Toccoa, Ga. THE CHEAPEST IS HOT ALWAYS THE BEST. We Sell the Best Goods at the Cheapest Price. A Proclamation. State ok Georgia, Executive Office, Atlanta, Sept, ioth, 1897. ) Whereas, the Toccoa Banking Company, located in the city of Toccoa, Ga., was, on the 5th day of August last, appointed a State Depository, under and by authority of an act of the General Assembly, entitled “an act to establish State Depositories in certain cities in this State,” &c., approved October 16, 1879, and of acts amendatory there¬ of, and has filed in this office for record the bond required by law— which bond has been approved by the Governor— Ordered, That the Tax Collectors of the following counties, to-wit: Habersham, Franklin and Rabun, be and they are hereby instructed to pay into said Depository, and into no other, all moneys collected by them on account of State taxes, ex¬ cept sucl) as may be paid by them directly into the State treasury'. Given under my hand and the seal of the Executive Department, at the capitol in Atlanta, the day and year first above written. W. Y. Atkinson, By the Governor : Governor. J. W. Warren, Sec. Ex. Dep’t. If You Don’t See it in the Record, It Didn’t Happen. The Brightest And Best Country Paper on Earth. A paper with this rep¬ utation must give all the news of its locality, from the little happen¬ ings of a personal sort to the best report of a big accident. Constant effort to give all the news and to give it right has gained this reputation for The Southern Record. The Record Costs $1 a Year. Less Than 2 Cts. a Week. A paper that gives all the news and gives it right is a splendid paper to ad- vertise in. Bear in mind thut Rice’s Goose Grease Liniment, cures jal aches 1 and pains in man or beast. We guarantee it to do all that is claim¬ ed for it, or refund your money. Yours truly, i Wright & Edge. We sell and guarantee Rice’s Goose Grease Liniment. Wright & Edge. Bucklen’s Arnica Salve. The Best Salve in the world for Cuts, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap¬ ped Hands,Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and positively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satis¬ faction or moi.ey refunded. Price 25 cents per box at E. R. Davis & Co’s Drugstore. AGENTS WANTED For Juvenile Holiday and Standard Subscription Books by the W. B. Conkey Company, the largest pub¬ lishers and manufacturers of books in the United States. Finest line of new holiday and other subscrip. n 000 son le mar e . Also, agents wanted for tne “S.l- ver S.de the latest and best text- book on the silver question by the great silver leaders. Exclusive ritory Largest commissions. Pn- ces below competition. Wneatmceoi circulars and :?ri‘r y* S ' g yOUr Ch ° ,Ce W. B. Conkey Co., Dearborn St., Chicago. sept3—-eow4t Have Your Photos NOW 1 The rainy weather of fall and winter will soon be here, and we have decided to close our gallery for the winter from the middle of October to Nov. 1st. All desiring first-class Photographic work, please so we can have it finish- ed by that date. After Nov. 1 st our gallery will not be open until next spring. GOOD WORK AND LOW PRICES. OEO. L. MATTESON. Fire insurance Liverpool & London & Globe, Hartford, Home of New York, Phoenix of Brooklyn, Insurance Company of North America,Lan- caster Fire Insurance Co. of Eng- land, and Greenwich of New York. See us before placing your insurance. LIFE COMPANIES—New York Life and Atlanta Mutual Life and Accident Co. Machinery And Machinery Supplies, Agents for Geiser Mf’g Co. WHOLESALE SHINGLES P<z 9 y 9 (& 10. TOGGOA, GA. ^OMEN to think used “fe¬ iffU could male diseases only be ” treated after “lo- c a 1 examina¬ tions” by physi¬ cians. Dread of such treatment kept thousands of 1 modest women silent about their suffering. Theln- _ troductlon of Wine of Cardui has now demon¬ strated that nine-tenths of all the cases of menstrual disorders do not all. require The a physician’s attention at simple, pure taken In the privacy of a woman’s own home insures quick relief and speedy cure. Women need not hesitate now. Wine of Cardui re¬ quires no humiliating Tt examina¬ tions for its adoption. cures any disease that comes under the head of “female troubles"—disordered menses, falling of the womb, “whites,” change of life. It makes women beautiful by making them well. It keeps them young by keeping them healthy. $1.00 at the drug store. For advice in cases requiring special directions, address, giving symptoms, the Ladies’ Advisory Department," The Chattanooga Medicine Co.. Chatta¬ nooga, Tenn. W. I. ADDISON, M.D., Cary, Miss., says: “I use Wine of Cardui extensively in my practice and fur find it a most excellent preparation female troubles.” I find Milwaukee, Tichenor’s Dec. 2, 1896. Antiseptic to be under any consideration. Respectfully yours, Clement Zophy, 231 Seventh St. Mr. James E. Ferrell, ot Burnt House, w V a., has discarded all other diarrbtea medicines and now handles onI Chamberlain’s Remedy! Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea H e has used it in his family / and sold it to his customers for ears , and has no hesitation in saying that it is the best remedy for colic and diar- r hoea he has ever known. It not ° n >y gives relief, but effects a per- manent cure. It is also pleasant and safe to take, making it an ideal remedy for bowel complaints. For sale by Wright & Edge.