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ATHIiNiGEORIA,NOVEMBER 5 1889
s-sllES??*
„ 0 H'BE FAltMEK’S
■52**. ;
J^bout time being
o4 ' von.e»t'vith the Far-
fll .old back their cotton
! ! it »s tbe demand guar-
,1 U«ver, will not.n-
1 wl.*" ,! ’ " 3 “ rr “" g
1 „ made by Alliancemen
^ . their accounts when
.IrM'ly tow
“tftlwir *»* '* elJ ! s »*
•f , ,jter will be promptly
,i,at the creditor has
15 ml. Just so he gets his
"J concern of his whether
-iu his cotton or sells his
pother hand it would be
^country
1 \ back'
selling
r i
season of stagnation
s few menths of business
if the planter can
Sack a part of his cotton
Sine it. Then, instead
ijt* 1
£mc
|JJj 0 nionrin the country,
^continuous reign of prosper-
‘^ry line of business be ben
ign ids* about our far-
Joo heavily involved in debt
” cotton. Their condition is
j a large nnmber of plan-
y pay off the last cent they
Kt a balance over. Their
0 aide at less expense than
jc,»nd there has been a most
fcblespirit ol economy prac-
isides Georgia will make
um and bay for next year,
mother great leak will be
WS ee daylight ahead for our
farmers. The Alliance
),« done a great deal to eu-
md protect its members, and
iwill eventually result in sav-
wortliv and struggling class
cknjptey and ruin. The Alli
ses and should receive theen-
pmaiof every person in the
join the prosperity of his coun-
iutt. The honest tiller of the
&tbackbone of the country, and
tprospers everything else will
rttnare under the impression
iilhniee is composed o. a set
Lues, who are blindly gro-
hriopossibilities. Never was
ipwter mistake. They know
whit they are doing, and are
ianrell, if not better informed
ktmen who are criticising them
pnintion has not taken a step
Iproved for tbeir good. If they
ahold their cotton, you may
nred that they are acting advi-
li wisely.
lager we watch this Alliance
at, the more firmly are we
id that it is the grandest thing
rSosih that ever happened, and
ewkra the greatest &ood imagiu-
hand honest man need fear
fill safer by it. The Farin-
het is not oi ganized to oppress
but simply to right the
•fits member^j
hruers felt themselves being
Iktopoverty by the heel of cap-
coubinations. They saw that
% earns together 'and
together they and
tfildren must become hirelings;
serfs on the lands they
®fi- To save themselves from
thte the Alliance was organ
die working out their sure
rfy salvation and redemption.
■*ot imagine a greater calami-
»«mutry than for the Farmer’s
#t0 be disbanded. It is the
noblest movement the
n « knew, and the man who op-
is cither noting through igno-
'«an enemy to the advanoe-
Ptosperity of our country,
filler of the soil—it matters
« his condition—should unite
'Alliance. The stronger this
™n the greater good it can
• It cannot possibly harm
THE ALLIANCE a SCHOOL.
If the Farmers’ Alliance had proved
an utter failure in the direct objeets,for
which it had been instituted: namely
the destruction of monopoly and trust’
it could still have not been properly
termed a failure. While it is true, that
so far from failing even in this impor
tant undertaking of whipping the light
of united capital against labor, the Al
liance has come out with triumph and
llying colors, and while it is true that
the union of the farmers has been a
safeguard against future attacks against
their interests by these trusts, still
there is something more which the Al
liance has done that is perhaps of more
value than all other of their victories.
It is the educational advancement that
it has given to the farming classes
1 ho Alliance considered as a school
will show forth in no mistaken terms
the good that has been gained by the
order, and when we stop to review the
situation of the farmers two years ago
in point of education and compare it
with their position today we are at once
struck with feelings of surprise and
gratification.
Before the Alliance was instituted the
general class of farmers transacted their
business almost in total ignorance of
the commercial world. They sent their
cotton to commission merchants and
received their money with faithfulness
that they had been fairly dealt with.
They knew not the price of cotton m
other markets than that in which they
sold except by a glance perhaps in a
weekly paper which came to them two
or three days oui of date.
Quite different now. The Alliance
has brought the farmers together anil
they have been forced to make a mutu
al study of their interests. They now
keep promptly posted on the Liverpool
markets, are conversant with every de
tail of the cotton business, and in fact
have made themselves fully capable of
selling their own products and know
ing what they do when they sell. Be
sides this the general interest and wid
awake enthusiasm which the Alliance
has fanned up from dying coals and
kept constantly alive has restored the
dignity and power of the farming class,
and made farming once more the no
blest and proudest calling known to
mankind.
We repeat that if the Alliance had
failed in all else but this, it would still
have been far no failure.
THE RAILROAD COMMISSION.
THE BANNER’S CLAIMS
M bile the Georgia Legislators have
been consuming much valuable time on
such bills and substituets as would en
force and stand by theconstisutiomn the
matter of railroad construction and
competition in the State, they seem to
nave ignored entirely the fact that
Georgia has a railroad commission. In
so doing they have broughtinjuatice to
the honorable gentlemen that compose
that body, and much wrong on them
selves as law-makers.
The Railroad Commission is a state
institusion with the Spate’s best inter
ests under its manipulation, and upon
the shoulders of the gentlemen who
form this commission more than any
other set of executives, rests the future
prosperity of the State of Georgia, for
to the railroads we must look for the
advancement of the State.
The legislature should manifest more
friendliness to the Railroad Commission
than it.has done in the past session.
The commission is not sustained with
half the funds tocarry on its work, and
the Legislature should not defer appro
priating the sufficient amount any long
er. While devoting so much time to
the Olive bill and to Burner’s substi
tute it seems to us that the Legislature
is guilty of double error: that of com
mission and omission, for it has defer
ed until the twelfth hourany action fa
vorable to the Railroad Commission.
We sincerely hope that the Legislators
Will retrieve their wrongs against the sibly gained . W e are now working for
ommigpion even yet, and vote that I tbe upbuilding of Athens and Northeast
body double the amount it now receives Ge orgia, and to these ends we propose
ore the adjournment of the Assem- 11 0 devote every line of our space and
by L. D. Sledge & Co.
The final work on the city bridge at
Augusta has been completed, and
A YEAR OF PLENTY.
Thursday the first passengers
over the new structure.
A .Duty to X ourself.
..... i surprising that peoplewill use a
The Banner is an outspoken organ- common, ordinary pill when they can
i Z «l democratic organ' tl,.t fcnrl,alj- ^
takes a position on all important public are a positive cure for sick-lieadache and
issues, without waiting to see [the drift all lives troubles. They are small, sweet,
of public sentiment or how some other I ^a-silv taken and do not gripe. Eor sale
paper will stand, so as to oppose it.
The Banner is uot a chronic fence-
rider, and hence has been the initiator
of several important measures. When
the organized democracy in the old 9th
district was battling for supremacy, it
did not persue auy wishy-washy
policy—so that it was impossible to tell
whether it was a Speer or a Candler or
gan. lu this great fight, as in every
other contest waged since The Banner
has been under its present management,
friends and opponents knew exectly
where to find it.
We do not claim to be the author of
any movement that our files and a» in
vestigation of the matter will not sub
stantiate ; and a denial of our. state
ments, without any pretense of showing
wherein we have made misrepresenta
tions and false claims, shows a most
petty spirit of either malice, spite or
jealousy, or an unwarranted.desire to
enter into a controversy with a rival.
We do not propose to gratify any such
unworthy motiyes, and neither do we
care to waste our amunition on little
unfledged journalistic sparrows. We
have a higher and nobler missive to ful
fill than entering into an unnecessary
and senseless wrangle with a contem
porary, by which nothing can be pos-
Uncle Allen G. Thurmond while
making a speech in Cincinnati recently
was taken suddenly ill and had to be
taken to a hotel. Never has there lived
a more loyal Democrat or mors fearless
statesman than Uncle Allen.
Lord Salisbury is one of the best am
ateur tennis players iu fashionable
went i London society.
bly.
A HIGH KICKER.
“Tax Payer” asserts that the paving
ordinance is illegal. If this be true,
we would like to know why he took so
much trouble to prevent its passage by
the legislature. “If “Tax payer” feels
like testing the matter the courts are
open to him. He will have the pleasure
of paying the costs and be made to put
down a pavement all the same. Athens
will not be retarded in its march to
progress by a fe*v old fogies. We are
going to have paved saidewalks, paved
streets and sewers. T host not willing
to bear tbeir just share of the burthen
might as well sell out and seek other
other climes.
A GRE AT DAY IN GEORGIA.
til]
certainly work to your
? Uo of tlle farmers should be
;“UaitedWe Stand
^*««<lents have been exceed-
the South this year,
/“•roads are growing to be
® e most complete as well
Prosperous in the South.
not hR ~ a very disastrous
J 3 ears. It had a circim.
Jcstcrday,
had a circus,
Never was there a more faithful and
bounteous yeai; in the history of the
South than 1889.
The fields have bloomed with a most
bounteous yield, and the harvest season
has kept the fanners busier than for
years gathering in the abundance that
the lands have brought forth. Every
where comes the report that the crops
are good and the farmers are rejoicing
over the harvest. From the west come
the tidings that the corn crops are al
most bursting as did those of Egypt of
old with corn and grain, and the cotton
fields of the South are white with the
fleecy staple. The fruit growing trop
ics are smiling with abundance, and
every section of the country is over
stocked with the yield of its growing
crops.
To the South especially the year has
been one of fruitfulness and plenty.
Not only has the agricultural interests
been blessed with progress and success,
but the genera) development of the
whole South has been advanced more
within the present year than ever before
within the same length of time. While
the South has been thus advancing with
unequaled strides in material progress
in agricultural pursuits, and mineral
and industrial arts and developments
it has not neglected that most impor
tant of all progress mental and social
culture. Never were there such flourish
ing schools as crown ^almost every hill
top in the South today, and never was
there a rnojre prosperous ladd in every
way than the Sunny South land at this
happy harvest season.
Postmaster-General Wanamaker has
recently sent an employe with a search
warrant to Luverne, Ala., to see if he
can find a Republican there capable of
discharging the duties of postmaster in
place of the negro Gomez. It is net
known what success the official has had
in his needle-in-a-hay stack.
The cotton receipts of Athens up to
date have over leaped those of last year
by a long jump and still the staple rolls
in.
■«op this year will inspite
* 1 be overwhelmingly
‘o street railroad in Atlanta
quite so satisfactori-
-ato
motor.
tflu to * ot know quite how
A car was re
n Up electric cur-
tirs. y pe °ple -re afraid to ride
The fact that an invitation has been
tendered congressmen Carlisle and
Breckenridge, of Kentucky, to speak on
living, issues at the Athens Fair and that
euerything goes to insure their accept
ance of same is sufficient to predict a
great day for Georgia democrats at the
Athens Fair. There are no greater
statesmen in the United States today
than these, and they will find a cordial
and hearty reception at the hands of
all Georgians when they come to the
Athens Fair.
It will be the greatest day the De
mocracy of the South has seen for years
hour of our time, and feel that in this
we will receive the endorsement of
every good citizen.
W e would not now notice the little
slur at The Banner made by an eve
ning paper on Tuesday, but that it
contaius a statement that we have laid
false claims to the authorship to certain
movements. The following is the ar
ticle :
“Our morning contemporary has our
sincere sympathies. It seems from their
columns, that the legislature stole their
suggestion as to the fishway .in the Sa
vannah river;the Piedmont Exposition
stole their idea as to marrying a couple
in cotton bagging; and had it not been
for the Banner, the Farmers’ Alliance
would never have thought of using nine
ties on their cotton bales.’ ’
In reply to the first insinuation we
have but to refer the author of the above
paragraph to the files of Thb Banner,
by which he will see that upon
our return home with Mr. Grady and
party from a trip down the Savannah
river early last summer, The Banner
wrote a series of editorials upon the im-
pertanue of placing a suitable fish-way
in the Augusta dam, for which we re
ceived letters 6f thanks from parties liv
ing on that stream, as also kind notices
from papers interested. Up to that
time not a line had appeared in any
paper on the subject since the present
fishway at Augusta was put in, and
neither had a bill been introduced iu
the legislature, or was even contempla
ted, that we know of, to investigate the
matter. We never charged the legisla-
From Adam’s fall disease came.
When mortal man is not to blame.
For sickness, ills and raging pain
Use Samaritan Nervine, and you will
gain.
It’s known all over the world by name,
Masters disease and conquors pain;
Cures the sick and heals the lame.
At Druggists, $1.60 or four for $5.00.
That Hacking Cough can be so
quickly cured by Shiloh’s Cure. We
guarantee it.
For lame back, side or chest, use Shi-
loh’s Porous Plaster. - Price 26 cents.
Have no equal as a prompt and posi
tive cure for sick headache, biliou
const irfation, pain in the side,and al,
liver troubles. Carter’s Little Liver
Pills. Try them.
Jim Huff (colored,) The slayer of L.
M. Waller, will be hanged iu Ogle
thorpe county en Dec. 13.
Not one in twenty are free from some
little ailment caused by inaction of the
liver. Use Carter’s Little Liver Pills.
The result will be a pleasant surprise.
They give positive relief.
A negro named Sip Garrett was shot
by Charlie Reid of Columbia county on
Friday night and died Sunday night.Mr
Reid had put up some hogs belonging
to the negro, which had been creating
some depredations on his crop. The ne
gro demanded the hogs but refused to
pay .-he cost of their keeping. A quarrel
ensued, and the shooting followed.
A man’s wife should alwa
same, especially to her hushand, but i*
she is weak and nervous, aim uses Car
ter’s Iron Pills, she cannot be for they
make her “feel like a different person,”
so they all say, and their husbands say
so too!
Petro Baranovski was hanged at Potst-
ville, Pa., for killing two women and
setting their house ou fire in 1888.
A Safe Investment.
Is one which is guaranteed to bring
you satisfactory results or in case of
failure a return of purchase price. On
this safe plan you can buy from our ad
vertised Druggist a bottle of Dr. King’s
New^Discovery for Consumption. It is
guaranteed to bring relief in every case,
when used for any affection of Throat,
Lungs oi Chest, such as Consumption,
Inflammation of Lungs, Bronchitis,
Asthma, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc.,
etc. It is pleasant and agreeable to taste,
perfectly safe and can always be de
pended upon.
Trial bottle free at John Crawford &
Co.’s or L D Sledge & Co.’s Wholesale
and retail Drugstores.
Mr. E. Slattery, of Delhi, La~saye
her son, 14 years of age, had a dreadful
time with ulcers, sores and blotches
which followed chicken pox. After us
ing many remedies without benefit, she
gave him Swift’s Specific, which cured
him sound and well.
• Rochelle has been incorporated about
a year, and there has not been a death
among the adults since it was incorpor
ated.
Bodily health and vigor may he
maintained as easily in the heat of sum
mer, as in the winter months, if the
blood is purified and vitalized with
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. Every person who
has used this remedy has been greatly
benefited. Take it this month.
Rome’s third volunteer fire depart
ment was christened Wednesday, “W.
W. Seay Fire company No. 3.”
How’s This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
for any case of Catarrh that cannot be
cured by taking Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. F. Cheney & Co., Props., Teledo,
O.
We, the undersigned, have known F
J Cheney for the last 16 years, and be
lieve him perfectly honorable in all busi
ness transactions,and financially able to
carry out any obligations made by their
firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists.
Toledo, Ohio, Waiding, Kinnan & Mar
vin, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,Ohio.
E. H. Van Hoesen, Cashier Toledo
National Bank, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internal
ly, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Price,
75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists.
The grand jury of Tattnall found
twenty-six true bills last week against
violators of the penal law.
WRITE YOUR NAME
And the names of FIVE of your neighbors on a
postal card and address it to The Constitu
tion, Atlanta, Ga., and all six of yon will get a
free sample copy of the Great Soothers
Weekly ! You thus give your neighbor a weeks
leading free, of the best printed paper in Amer
ica. “Bill Arp,” Undb Remus,” “Betsy Ham
ilton,” write for it. Taimage and Sam Jonos
preach for it. Dr. Jones writes the “Farmers’s
Page,” and Mrs. King writes the Woman’s
Kingdom.” War Stories,” “Pictures of Strange
Lends,” “Travel and Adventtre,” in every
issue.
A PERFECT MAGAZINE
of good things, you get free for yourself and
live of your neighbors by writing your name
and theirs on a postal card and sending to
THE CONSTITUTION.
Don’t delay. Write quick Atlanta, Ga.
Buckfen’s Arnica Salve.
The best Salve in the worle for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum
Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup
tions and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to give
] jerfect satisfaction,or money refunded
’Price 25 cents per box. For sale by John
Crawford & Co., and L. D. Sledge &
Co., Wholesale and Retail Druggists.
Advice To Mothers.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup
should always be used for children teeth
ing. It soothes the child, softens the
gums, allays all pain, cures wind colic
and is the best remedy for
wenty-five cents a bottle.
and the discussion of the great, social
and political questions which confront j ture with “stealing its idea from us,
the South in frightful aspect to-day in but vre have every reason to believe
which these leaders of the Democracy that Thr Banner was instrumental in
will participate, will draw thousands of bringing the matter before that body
loyal democrats to hear the >-peeches | which resulted in the appointment of
of these prominent men of the South.
Went off With the Show.
It is reported that Charlie Scheuhart,
the butcher, w’ent off with the circus.
a committee.* We are content to rest
our claims with an honorable and fair-
minded reading public.
In reply to the second charge, we
reiterate and can prove that the Pied-
. Merit Wins.
We desire to say to our citizens, that
for years we have been selling Dr King’s
New Discovery for Consumption, Dr.
King’s NewjLife Pills,Bucklen’s Arnica
Salve and Electric Biiters, and have
never handled remedies that sell as
well, or that have given such universal
satisfaction. We do not hesitate to
guarantee them every time, and we
stand ready to refund the purchas price,
if satisfactory results do not follow their
use. These remedies have won their
great popularity purely on their merits
John Crawford & Co.’s or L D Sledge &
Co.’s Wholesale & Retail Druggists.
“Money is tight” said tho street-car
driver as a do'sen dimes got wedged in
one of the coin-carriers of his car.
Superior court convenes in Pierce
county next week. There are sixty-three
cases on the docket.
He will be employed to feed the ani- mont Exposition did steal its idea of
Physicians Use it.
One great argument in favor of Dr.
Wesrtmoreland’s Calisaya Tonic is that
long before the people ever I physicians asking for it. The follow-
. , . ing is proof positive as to it merits
sad of such a thing. Every * y * Colnmbia, S. C.
mals and do the bare back act. Charlie marrying a couple in cotton bagging
is said to have been a first class hare from the Athens fair, and that the idea I physicisns never hesitate, to use it their
back rider in the Old Country and we was first made knownr'' through The | practice. The formula is furnished to
may yet hear of him turning summer- Banner and
saults through a hoop. | thought or read of
reader of our paper knows this to be a 1 Gentleman.—I have very thoroughly
Land for Sale. I and any of the ten directors of the tested your Calisaya Tonic and do not
On the first Tuesday in December will Northeast Georgia Stock and Poultry hesitate to pronounce it a remedial
U F «... i«rin r .. ... . agent. As a stomachic and a tome it is
’ S0 A d before the courthouse door in Show mll so state. Even the Atlanta u | surpass ed. For eliminating malarial
Watkinsville, thattraet of land known I p e0 pj a acknowledge that fact. ‘
as the H. M. Fullilove place. Well im- p urtber comment is unnecessary,
proved, with splendid dwelling. Nine Qn 0ctober 8th> Thb Banner pub _
rooms to house. and lished a double-leaded article announc-
fair con l ion. n T ^. mg . Q ne _j. a if j ing to the Alliance that the only - man
ner in which the jute bagging
near High Shoals.
cash and balance in 12 months. Those
wanting a good farm would do well to I could
gee S. J. Fullilove,
dwlt Administrator.
The consolidation of the Alliance will
not only tend to unite the efforts of the
farmers of the country hut will be a
potent agent in defacing party lines.
be executed
electric cur-
ttl lee Un P r °bable, how-
'eurrentwill kUl a dozen
^ore it reaches the pris-
The State Fair at Macon has so far
been successfnl in the extreme* It
seems that this has been a most favora
ble season for great Fairs*
Singular Railroad Casualty.
Rahway, N. J., October 29-—A fast
freight on the Pennsylvania Railroad
jumped the track at Main street to
night and one car ran into the residence
of John Weldon, whose family nar
rowly escaped. Several persons wait-
ing for the train to pass were injuiedby ^
flying debris, three of them fatally#
A WARNING TO MAIDENS.
•Tfte man I wed," the young girt said,
“Must be a noble cavalier,
Fit for romance with shield and lance,
A noble heart, devoid of fear,”
A year or two, that quickly flew,
Had changed the maiden’s will In part,
••The man I wed,” this time she said, _
“Must be a mxm of loving heart.”
Her beauty grew, men sought to woo . „
And win the way ward little witch.
Bhe tossed her head, and proudly said: . _
“The. 7 ria n I marry must be rich.”
Years came and went; on riches bent,
She scorned the true hearts at her feet.
Her heart was steeled* she would not yield,
Tho dream of wealth was all too sweet. ^
Bo time sped on. Her youth Ijad gone,
ami still her maiden hand was free.
She liung her head at last and said:
“I wonder who will marry mef”
Journal of Education.
trust
be defeated was to
make up the tare in extra iron
ties. In that article we stated that the
idea originated with a prominent cotton
buyer of Athens, but The Banner was
the first paper in Georgia or tue South
to advance and advocate the movement.
Mr. Geo. T. Murrell, President of the
Alliance in Clarke county, will endorse
this statement. Prior to that time no
such suggestion had been published,
and so far as we know not a single
cotton-covered bale had been hound
with more than six ties.
These are the only things to which
The Banner is charged with laying
fraudulent claims. In the above we
have shown that any such insinuation
is untrue. Once before that same paper
poison from the system and repairing
their deleterions effects, for rebuilding,
reinvigorating and giving tone to the
system When reduced by protracted or
severe fevers or other debilitating caus
es, there is in my ingment, no other
preparation in the whole field of med
iciues equal to it.
J. F. Ensor, M D
Former Physician and Surgeon S. C .
Insane Asylum.
Dr Westmoreland’s Calisaya Tonic is
sold by LJD Sledge & Co.’s
During the’ past three months there
have been 7,000 deaths from cholera in
the Valley of the Tigris and Euphrates.
Whether from swampy land or stagn
ant pool, or from the deadly gases of city
sewers, malarial poisons are the same
Ayer’s Ague Cure, taken according to
directions, is a warraned specific for
malarial disorders.
It is evident on the face of things that
work on air-ships must be. intrusted to
the rising generation.
Caution to Mothers.
Every mother is cautioned against
. . , . , ^ I givingher child laudnum ®r paregoric
published ceitaia remarks made by the | cruses an unnatural craving for stim-
Banxer editor, that it afterwards ac- | uants which kills the mind or the child
wo Attention Alliance.
The President and Secretary of each
sub Alliance in Clarke county will
meet, rue at council chamber in city of
Athens oh Wednesday, Nor. Ctb, at 9:30
o’clock, a. m.
Fail not.
G. T. Murrell, Pres. C. C.
knowledged were not exactly as report
ed.
We propose to attend to our business
and let other papers do the same.
Rev. T. F. Millet, a Congregational
preacher of Birmingham, Me., has a
parish which is twenty-two miles square
and uses a pair of horses to make a tour
of it once a week.
Acker’s Baby Soother is specially prepar
ed to benefit children and cure their
pains. It is harm less and contains no
Opium or Morphine. Sold by L. D
Sledge & Co, Druggist.
It is seldom that a retail druggist re
commends any proprietary medicine,
hut A. C. Arnold, the largest retaiZ
druggist jin Kansas City, Mo., says
Bradycrotine is the greatest boon to
humanity in the world. It ernes every
form of Headache,
diarrhoea
Is Life Worth Livine?
Not if you go through the world a
dyspeptic. Acker’s Dyspepsia Tablets
are a posittve cure for the worst forms
of Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Flatulency
and Constipation. Guaranteed and sold
by L. D. Sledge & Co, Druggist.
Since August 3,1887, the Government
has purchased bonds to the amount of
$249,454,560 63, at a cost of $298,341,516-
1«,
Gov.Gordon and Judge Crisp will ad
dress the people at the Dodge , county
fair, Noy. 6.
In mirthful measures, warn and free,
I sing, dear maid and sing for thee!
But 1 think 1 would he performing a
greater service to you and your sex by
singing not in.measured rythm but by
setting out some strong truths in simple
prose. If you or any of your female
friends are suffering from ulcerations,
displacements,bearing-down sensations,
or unatural discharges, use Dr. Pierce’s
Favorite Prescription, which is sure to
eradicate these complaints in a short
time. It is the only medicine for wo
man’s peculiar ailments, sold by drug
gists, under a position guarantee, from
the manufacturers, that it will give sat
isfaction in every case, or money will
be refunded. This guarantee, has been
printed on the bottle-wrapped, and
faithfully carried out for many years.
One-third of the eight hundred in
habitants of the village of Woodville,
Ohio, are victims of typhoid fever and
diphtheria.
Pimples on the Face
Denote an impure state of the blood
and are looked upon by many with sus
picion. Acker’s.Blood Elixir will re
move all empurities and leave the com
plexion smooth and clear. There is noth
ing that will so thoroughly build up the
constitution, purify and strengthen the
whole system. Sold and guaranteed by
L. D. Sledge & Co, Druggist.
-Six members were received at the
Methodist church at Waycross last Sun
day.
Did you sit up late last night? Brady
crotine will stop that Headache this
morning.
Maj. E A Burke, ex-TraasGrer of
Louisiana, left Calais for Brussels a
week ago. He has not returned to Lond
on, nor has he started for America.
The thanks of many thousand invalid
mothers, worn out with caring for cross
and sickly children, have been and will
be returned, for the relief and sweet
sleep which they and their babies have
all received from Dr. Richmond’s Sam
aritan Neryine. $1,50.
Has cured my wife, after suffering for
seven years. N. A. Shuford, Meridian,
Texas.
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