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THE VIENNA NEWS.
TWICE-A-WEEK.
T. A. ADKINS. JR.yEd.
» -• , > Proprietors
W. T. ADKINS, ' )
Official Otgim Dooly County.
Official Organ ot the City of Vienna.
Entered atttyiPuitoffice at Vienna, Ga.
as Second Class Mail Matter.
Advertising rates furnished on request.
News will not be responsible
tor views expressed oy correspondents.
RATOS or subscription:
One copy one year %i.oo
One copy six months 5°
One copy three months . . .35
Published WEDNESDAYS and SATURDAYS.
’PHONB No. is.
WEDNESDA Y. JUNE 4th., 1902.
Has Dooly county ever had a
better Sheriff than Mr. G. W.
Sheppard? We think not. He
is kind, clever and accommo-
dating, and is indeed one of the
BUST and most efficient Sheriffs
in Georgia. He is certainly the
BIGHT MAN in the right place.
—VIENNA PROGRESS.
Now, the above was published
in that paper the week after he
learned that the Sheriff intend
ed changing the legal ads.
A LETTER FROM HR. PERRY.
FREEEOM OF WOMEN.
ONE YEAR OLD.
The News goes to its readers this
week in its second year, having
passed the one mile post in its
-existence Sunday, June i. During
The first year of its career the suc
cess it has attained, both as to cir
culation and influence, ha9 been
nothing les9 thiin phenomenal—
having even surprised some of its
strongest supporters, who can be
found in every section ot the
county.
The advent of the News was
purely, a business venture and as
such met with.a somewhat disad
vantage at first on' account'of the
size of the town and a paper being
already established here. However,
by a little hustling and giving our
readers the news fresh and spicy,
twice-u-week. wc have not only
overcome all disadvantages but have
placed the News on equal fodting
witli the oletfer papers in the county
and are now receiving subscribets
at a more rapid rale than some ot
opr competitors.
We have no axe to grind and
ate able to give the news on all
sides fair and impartial. We only
advocate such things as wc believe
will be to the interest of the ma
jority of the citizens of our county,
therefore our interest is your inter
est und vice versa.
The management heartily refurn
thanks to its its many friends and
subscribers for their support during
the first year of' our existence and
hope for u continuance of the same
during the next twelve months.
Vote for Terrell for governor.
A man has actually -been found
who took only ha/t the sum offered
him by a street car company whose
cur had run over him. ■ Comment
on this case will be defered until it
is ascertained whether,he intends
to lecture—Macon News.,
We believe that it is the duty of a
newspaper to'defend a public of
ficial if be lias been misrepresented
—but we don’t tlnr.k it it establish
ing a wise colirse for a newspaper
to openly abuse one candidate and
support another just for the sake of
the money there ir in it for the pa
per. Let merit and honest methods
triumph without any meddling.
Don’t forget wo have a nice line of
mens and boys Strew Hats. See them
teforc buying elsewhere.
LP, IIXABO A Sow,
Mr. Editor: “UncleGeorge”
Sheppard is gaining ’ votes every
day regardless of the “eagle eye
and nose for crime.” Mr. Ciewis’
campaign manager, Progress-Smith
failed to come up with what be said
were facts. Mr. /Smith’seems to
have taken lessons under Guerry
and his manager from the way he
has side-tracked himself. He has
said more than he can prove up.
Mr. Editor, where is Sam Jones,
Sam Small and Broughton? You
know some time ago Mr. Jones said
he was going to take these good otd
brothers'and stump the state for
Guerry—weed a fifty mile row
through Georgia and convert the
people, preaching and lecturing for
Guerry; going to beat out Terrell
and bis gang and bust the-old ring.
Oh 1 Mr. Jones, you are where the
money is. You will preach, and
, lecture for the cash from 75c tofi.oo
for people to step in arid hear you
abuse Terrell and. his followers.
No money no, preafch with Sam. I
heard Sam lectue and preach' once
and you take away his filthy slang
there is nothing else to get oal of
his preaching and lectures. Sam
says that he likes Mr. Terrell and
that there is no better man than
Joe—but his gang he can't stand.
Mr. Terrell is the safest and pur
est man and runs his campaign on
his own merits. He never has
used Mr. Guerry’s name only in
one or two speeches.
Mr. Guerry and his managers
sent down Mr. Turner of Macon,
to Vienna Saturday atternoon to
make a speech and abused Mr.
Terrell for ploughing the little red
mule and sitting back on the plow
handles, , If Messrs. Guerry and
Turner had a little more experience
in siting down and doing, some
thinking once in a while before
saying too much they would prob
ably exhibit more common sense as
to the managing of their campaign.
Mr. Turner met Mr - . Guerry’s
Cordele chib'here at the court house
nnd.gftve them some of the abuse
we jiqve been heafing all the time.
VVeil, we are satisfied that he did
not win a single vote for Mr. Guer
ry. Mr. Terrell is n clean, honest,
fearless and conservative man. He
will make Georgia a governor that
she will be proud of for a good ad
ministration and not one that will
be heralded to the world as a fana
tic, extremist and inconsistent man
us Mr. Guerry would be. Mr
Terrell has proven himself to be as
good a prohibitionist as Mr Guerry.'
Mr. Guerry voted to make the legal
rate of interest 12 per cent which
would prove quite a hardship on
the masses of the people, as most
everybody are compelled'to’ borrow
money. The only thing that can
be charged up to Mr. Terrell during
his term of ten years ns Attorney
General, is that in performing his
duties us sworn to do—he decided
under, the constitution that guano
and othei fertilizers was property,
not that he wanted to do or say
say something against the farmeis
but to do according to the Consti
tion of the state, which shows no
partially on the question. Is it not
property? Well then, you can’t
blame him for that. Amend the
Constitution. If you wnut to elect
the best man in the race, vote for
J. M. Terrell.
, O. B. PERRY,
Farmer.
A leading daily paper of yester
day had a cartoon of a murder trial
—that of Mrs. Hooks, who is
charged with killing tier husband
—in which the very large number
of well-dressed women constrains
the originator of the the cartoon,
says the Macon News, to explain,
“Not a church meeting; but a mur
der trial!”
It is no doubt, true to life, in the
particular of the number of women
present. It has indeed, become no
uncommon thing for women of re-,
finement and good standing to at
tend murder trials or any other court
trial, as in large numbers almost as
men do. When Florence Burns
was tried for the murder of her
sweetheart, the court room would
not hold the women' who .wanted
to hear the trial, in all its revolting
details.
This does not argue well for wo
men's morals. A sure sign of de
pravity in a nature, is the desire to
hear, see or know facts that daprave
A pure good woman wilt, have no
desire to be present at a murder
trial; or if she goes to one, once or
twice will lose her purity of thought
and mind. If some women is so
unfortunate as to have placed her
self in the position of a suspected
murderess, or if circumstances has
forced her into such suspicion, there
is no reason why other, women
should go to hear her trial where
they will be sure taThear and learn
many things of which they should
be ignorant.
The freedom of American women
is getting too free, when custom
allows women to regularly attend
murder trials and similar scenes,
without a loss of respect or a com
ment of disapproval from others.
This Is an Advertisement*
i K
AND OF CO TjRSE , i v '
You Won’t Read It.
Griffin, Ga., May 8,1900.
I can cheerfully recommend Dr. Ti:h-
enor’s Antiseptic as a most excellent
remedy tor Cuts and bruises. A fair
trial will convince any one ot it* merits.
J. F. Elrod. '
Jefferson, Ga„ April 12, 1S98.
Have used Dr,TichenoPa Antiseptic in
my famil/ and can recommend it as one
of the best remedies kiunvn to me for the
claims made for it.
Twos. S. Johnson,
Ex-Senator 33d District.
College Park, Ga., May 16,1901.
While attending the Southern Baptist
Convention in New Orleans, I was badlv
hurt by a fall down a flight ot steps. I
used Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic freely
and iound it the best remedy for cuts and
bruises I ever tried. It is pleasant end
heals, wounds without inflamatlon or
suppuration. —-
(Rxv.) \V. L. C TASTON,
Winder, Gn., July'?o, 1899.. •
I have used Dr. Tlchenor's Antiseptic
for severe bruises in which influma'lon
had readied a stage that caused alarm..
Other remedies had .ailed, but- a lew
applications removed all.iiifl>m.ition and'
healed the wound in a lew days
•A. G. Lamar.
*
Vienna DruehCo-
BUY A BOTTLE, OR WRITE FOR FREE SAMPLE,
Sherrouse Medicine So
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
T. H. GREGORY,
UNHDIU.H. . GEORGIA,
DEALER IN
General ^ Merchandise.
Interesting to Asthma Sufferers
Daniel Bante of Otterville, Iowa writes
■‘I have had asthma for three orfouryears
and have tried about ail the coughs and
asthma curea in the market and have re
ceived treatment irom physicians in New
York and other cities, but got very little
benefit until I tried Foley’s Honey and
Tar which gave me immediate relief and
I will never be without in in my house.
1 sincerely recommend it to all.” For
sale by all dealers.
REVOLUTIONIZING THE HOQ.
It is strange what effect refine
ment and care has brought about
in the American hog und the way
it has interfered with one of the
great industries of the country; says
an exchange. Formely, when his
hogship had to restle for a living
through the mountains and woods
of the Southern and Western coun
try, bristles were cheap and brushes
of all kinds were plentiful. Since
the demand for pork has become so
general that hogs are taken better
care ot, carefully fed and housed so
they. Will take on fiesli more rapidly
and be sooner ready for-market, it
was found that the formerly fierce
brute ceused to have any temper,
and consequently did - not rise any
bristles, and as a result the brush-
makers now have to look to the
few wild sections left in the United
States and to Siberia for their sup
ply of bristles. -■ Mexico and other
countries where the hog would still
hove to work for a living are not
good climates for the raising of
these animals. • v - ■
Every year that has been devoted
to the improvement of the breeding
of hogs has caused them to deterior
ate not only as producers of bristles
but also the celebrated “pig skins”
and the principal source of supplies
for saddles, footballs and other
leather goods that the pig skins are
used fot has come from the same
distant points, and are consequent
ly much more exensive. Care and
cultivation make the skin too 'thin
for these purposes any more. It.you
want good pork you must sacrifice
bristles and bides.
Plantation Supplies,
Buggies.
Wagons
and Coffins.
Highest Price Paid
for all kinds of
Country
Produce.
The Place to Go to Find 4
Everythin? You Want.
LARGEST SUPPLY HOUSE IN THIS SECTION.
Loans, Loans, Loans, j
WC CAN PROCURE A LOAN FOR
YOU ANYWHERE FROM $150.00
TO $5,000,00 with Interost from
6, 7 TO 7 12. PER CCNT.
AND AT A VERY SMALL COST.
HENDERSON & JORDAN.
A HANDSOME line of Spring and
Sumqior clothing for men at
A Rooblv & Qq
HALF PRICE-'
We have Just received from New
York over Five Hundred yards
of fine Swiss Edgins, Insertlngs,
Hamburg*, Ac. These goods are
worth DOUBLE wliat we ask for
them. Please call early.
J. P. Hasan A Sons.
Foley's Kidney Curt
mate* kldaeys gaff bladder right
HAIR CUT AfiY STYLE!
If you want a first-class HAIR CUT, SHAVE, SHAA
POO <gr SHINE, call to see me. Next door to Racket Store.
A UO USTUS JONES, Barber.
We Strip on approval to any person In U. S. or
Canada without a cent deposit, and allow 10 dav
it*^ triaL You take absolutely no risk ordering trore
us, a? you don’t pay a cent If It don’t suit you.
BestMakes
Guaranteed
1902 Models ESS $8 £ _
1900 and 1901 Models £&
500 SECOND HAND WHEELS
$3 to 58
standard MMRM
BO NOT JOT
oS
ITS WAXTES
s ot cor manufacture. Vou aiu male* *i«
tag* bavin* a wheel to rtdn for yourself.
at2?"«‘*5o*S9^»Jcu?S5Sfli r cS«l{
80YeL^C£.r»age ; m
r
!
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