Newspaper Page Text
Official Organ, Dooly County, and
Town of Vienna.
PUBLISHED EVERY TUESDAY-
Subscription .$1 per year in ad
vance. Advertising rates made
known upon application. Con
tracts taken at liberal rates.
JNO. E. HOWELL,
Editor and Publisher.
Entered in the Postoffice at Vi
enna, Ga„ at 2nd class mailing
rates.
TUESDAY AUGUST G
THE FIGHT FOB GOLD.
The editor of the Progress is
very much interested in the differ
ent schemes that are worked to
fasten the single gold standard
upon this nation. A regular visi-
itor to our desk is a little cam
paign publication called “Sound
Currency” published and sent
broadcast over the land every two
weeks by the Sound Currency
Committee of the Reform Club at
52 William street, New York City.
While the administration, that
started the ball to rolling toward
geld monometalism, claims to be
friendly to silver, and while all the
speakers and others that we have
heard express themselves say they
want real bimettalism, Sound
Earners For South Georgia.
A new feature of the immigra
tion to the South has developed.
It is of such importance that the
organizeed bodies, whose business
it is to encourage colonization and
the settling up of farming lands in
this section of the state, would do
well to look into it and take steps
to see that south Georgia is pushed
to the front. The Jacksonville
Citizen says.
“Capitalists in the West and j
North- west who make a business
of loaning money on farms and
farm crops in the districts in
which they live, have concluded to
adopt a plan, which, if carried out
on an extensive scale, will bring
many farmers to the South.
These men of means have ascer
tained that they can make mote
Notice of Guardian’s Sale.
GEORGIA—Dooly County.
Agreeably to an order of the ‘
Court of Ordinary of Dooly county, j
granted at the regular August j
Term 1895, will be sold at public I
outcry at the court house door of j
said county on the first Tuesday ]
in September next, within the le
gal hours of sale the following
property to wit: The East half
lot of Land number seventy (70)
! situate lying and being in the
ninth (9th) District pf Dooly j
county Georgia. Sold as the
property of Daniel G. Lowe, (mi
nor) for the benefit of maintenance
and education of said minor.
T. R. Smith,
Guardian for Daniel G. Lowe.
This Aug. 5th, 1895
Featherbone Corsets and Waists.
.orrest Shapes.
Best Materials.
Latest Styles,
tost Comfortable.
On Sunday last, at the residence
of the bride’s father, Allen Hayes,
near Tifton, Homer Webb, son of
Rev. W. W. Webb, was married to
Mary Hayes. The groom is about
eighteen and the bride eleven years
and eight months old.—Tifton
Gazette.
The populists are kicking about
the way' they were treated at the
Griffin silver convention, but the
Republicans who attended the
gold bug convention at Memphis
were rignt in the swim and have
never had anything to kick about.
—Albany Herald.
The editor of a newspaper that
has adopted phonetic spelling, in
a measure, received a postal card
from an old subscriber in the
country, which read as follows:
“I hev tuk your paper for leven
years, but if you kant spel enny
better than you have been doin
fur the las to months you may
jest stoppit”—Tit-Bits.
The Georgia single standard ed
itors have dropped a few links in
their discussion of the money
question. They are now only
making the issue against the free,
independent and unlimited coin
age of silver at 16 to 1. This is
canny but curious. The issue is a
single gold standard againet the
equality of gold and silver as a
money basis.—Brunswick Times.
The Alden Advance says: What
this country wants is bichloride of
squareness squirted into the veins
of half the population that will
make them pay their debts like
men, instead of sneaking around
corners to avoid meeting their
creditors,”
Perhaps the editor had just been
out with his bills on a little cun
ning duning gunning excursion in
which there wasn’t any running
funning shunning or punning.-Ex.
One day early in the week, while
the little child of Mr. T. S. Shan
non, who lives about thr'ee miles
north of town, was playing in the
yard in front of the house, its
mother was attracted by the bark
ing and yelping of a dog that was
with it. On going to investigate,
she was horrified to find that the
child had a large black snake in
its hand, grasped near the middle,
and the snake w T as waiving its
head to and fro, as if about to
strike. The mother dispatched
the reptile with a stick and was
gratified as well as surprised to find
the child unhurt.—Tifton Gazette.
A Tifton citizen, returning from
a trip through Irwin county a day
or se ago, says the people over
there have about decided to build
cribs around their cornfields as
they stand, as the crop is now in
about as small a compass as it
can be put when gathered. He
has been a farmer all his life, but
says these are the finest crops of
corn he has ever seen except on
hammock land, Hon. T. B. Young
has 35 acres that will average 55
bushels to the acre, while Capt.
Henry Fletcher has something less
than a 490-acre lot (at least 100
acres,) that will average 40 bush
els to the acre—Tifton Gazette.
An editor down in Arkansas
thusly launches Vol. 1, No. 1,
upon the people of his locality:
“Our aim—Tell the truth though
the heavens take a tumble. Oui
paper—Of the people, for the peo
ple, to be paid for by the people,
Our religion—Orthodox, with a
firm belief in hell for delinquent
subscribers. Our motto—Take all
in sight and rustle for more. Our
policy, to love our friends and
brimstone our enemies. If thine
enemy smite thee on the cheek,
swipe him with haste and dexterity
at the butt of his most convenient
ear. What we advocate—One
country, one flag and one wife, at
a time. Our object—To live in
pomp and splendor.”
Mrs. Annie Abbott, a little Geor
gia woman who won fortune and
fame by her peculiar and myster
ious power, that gained for her the
name of the “Georgia Magnet”
has come to grief. After baffling
the great strength of the giant
Sandow and astonishing half of
the civilized world with her feats
of magneitism, she finally married
a Philadelphia man named Hearn,
and settled down to private life.
Now she appears again on the
stage of life as a deserted wife
She claims that her Philadelphia
husband has squandered all her
money, poisoned her baby and left
her adrift.
Since 1878 there have been nine
epidemics of dysentery in different
parts of the country in which
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy was used with
perfect success. Dysentery, when
epidemic, is almost as severe and
dangerous as Asiatic cholera.
Heretofore the best efforts of the
most skilled physicians have failed
to check its ravages, this remedy,
however, has cured the most
malignant cases, both of children
and adults, and under the most try
ing conditions, which proves it to
be the best medicine in the world
for bowel complaints. For sale by
Stovall & Forbes.
continuing to advance money in
property in the North-west. They
are of the opinion that the in
vestment will produce a good in
come from the start, and that
within a few years the increase in
the value of the land will prove
another good source of revenue.
A representative of a syndicate of
Currency comes square out for the , p ro fit by buying farming land in
single standard and it is the j t (j e g ou t.h and renting it than by
mouth-piece for the gold-bugs.
The last issue, published July
15th last contains some very bold
statements on this line. On the
subject of bimettalism it says:
“NONE HERE NOW
NOR ANYWHERE
NOR EVER.”
“It has never existed, and never
can exist.”
“International bemettalism is
no more practicable than national
bimettallism.”
Hear it on free silver:
“One cannot blatoe the free-
silver men for getting mad when
they are called dishonest. That
shows they have somewhat of self-
respect left. But what is it they
are trying to do? If I buy a coat
for $10, that means that the man
who sells it buys $10 with a coat.
Democrats don’t believe that
government ought to interfere to
make me buy one coat when I
would prefer to buy another; and
no honest man believes that I
ought to be made to accept a coat
different from the one I have
bought. Will some free-silver
man explain how it is any more
honest to make me contract for
one kind of dollars when I would
prefer another kind, or to make
me accept silver dollars when I
have contracted for gold ones? If
it is swindling for you to cheat me
at the coat end of the trade, is it
any less dishonest for me to swin
dle you at the money end of the
transaction?,’
Now, we call the above bun
combe and not argument.
When the trade was being made
why could not the kind of coat
traded for and the character of
money to be paid for it, be speci
fied. If monies of different values
were .in circulation why could the
seller of the coat specify his price
in 60 much gold, or so much silver,
or so much greenbacks?
If in making his transactions
now a man desires to stipulate
that the dollars he puts out now
shall be paid back in gold dollars,
and he can find some one that will
agree to a trade like that, there is
no earthly reason, in law or morals,
why he should not do so. If he
bases his transactions upon coin
of the realm he surely cannot be
injured for so he made his calcu
lations.
The argument is that the free
coinage of Bilver would force the
present creditor to receive the
payment of money that would be
worth to him not more than half
of the present standard. The
silver men claim that free coinage
of silver on equal terms with gold
would so increase the demand for
silver and so decrease the demand
for gold that they would reach a
parity at 16 to 1. That the in
crease of the money supply would
increase the demand for labor and
products and thus increase their
prices and circulate more money
for what is now produced. Our
people do not need to produce
more to get more money. In the
history of the world there has
never been better crops of all kinds
produced than for the past few
Administrator’s Sale of Land.
GEORGIA—Dooly County.
By virtue of an order from the Court
of ordinary of said county granted
at the December term 1894 I will sell
before the Court house door of said
county within the legal hours of sale
on the first Tuesday in September 1895
and to the highest bidder the follow
ing property of the estate of David
Altman deceased to-wit. 115 acres
more or less on the North Side of land
lot no 108 also 1521 acres more or less
of lot no 117 being all of said lot ex-
Recommended by
Ladies
who wear them.
TRADE-MARK REGISTERED.
Dress-Makers say: “They are
the best fitting corset on the
market.” Merchants cheerfully
refund the money after 4 week's
trial if not satisfactory. Call for
them at the stores.
FEATHERBONE CORSET
SOLE manufacturers,
KALAMAZOO, MICHIGAN.
SCOTT’S
CARBO-DIGESTIVE
COMPOUND.
Positively the one Remedy for the
treatment of
NERVOUS EXHAUSTION,
Simple and Aggravated forms of
DYSPEPSIA, and
PALPITATION OF THE HEART.
Does your food sour after eating?
Are you easily confused and excited?
Do you get up in the morning tired
and unrefreshed, and with a bad taste
in the mouth?
Is there a dull cloudy sensation, at- j
Professional Cards.
lawyers:
Jno. F. Powell. Jno. W. Powell.
Jno. F. Powell & Son.
LAWYERS.
We practice regularly in all the
courts of the South-western, Oco
nee and Albany Circuits: and in
other Courts by special contract
in writing. Office near Court
House on Union Street Vienna, Ga.
CO.
FOR SALE BY
j. P. Heard & Son, Vienna. Ga,
these coni to lists hie recently made 50 30168 in tlle S’- E - comer now
tnese capitalists nas recently maae owned by Marion Walden all said
lands lying in the 6th District of Dooly
known
the David
County and
Altman laud.
Sold to pay debts and distribute
among the heirs of said deceased.
Terms cash.
John A. Cross
Administrator of David Altman
with the will annexed.
a tour of the Southern states, and
a tract in Florida is said to have
attracted his favorable notice.
The capitalists intend to visit the
lands recommended by their repre
sentative at some time next month,
and they will make their final
selection.
Referring to this movement j GEORGIA—Dool y County:
the Chattanooga Times says: I To whom it may con cern :
“The South needs farmers, farm jj. Smith has in due form applied
skill, and farm capital far more ! to the undersigned for permanent
than any other line of development I letters of Administration on the Est.
force. Cities are largely made by 1 ° f Wm. R. Smith, late of said county
., . ., . ; 1 dec d and I will pass upon said appli.
the consuming population that is 1 cation on lst Monday in Sept, next,
within 100 miles of them. Double j Given under my hand and official
the population on the circuit of j signature This August 5th 1895
100 miles around Chattanooga, L D. Hargrove,
and while that shall be going for- * 0,D. C.
ward the town will quadruple in | CEO RGIA-Dooly County :
population and wealth. Of course ; * . . A
nwmn ♦-uj^ ♦ u „ ♦ ♦u^ ! Whereas B. P. O Neal administrator
we mean by this that the doubling Qn estafce of j no B o’Neal dec'd
of the rural population must be
GET READY FOR IT.
population must
done with the right material to
I produce a great and good effect
upon the town.”
We want good farmers and
farming capital, and as there is
an evident leaning towards the
South on the part of the farmers
with sound sense and plenty' of
energy, they' should be brought
here if it is possible to attract
them. The people all through the
state are ready to co-operate in
any movement that promises to
develop the different branches of
agricultural industry.
years.
The saying is common stock
among the single standard people
that even if there was a double
supply of money in this nation
the people would be no better off
unless they had something to swap
for it. That is all true, but, under
what sun will you find a people
with more to swap for money than
here under our southern sun?
A new light has been recently
shed upon the situation. When
the bond issues were being made
it was openly admitted that there
was nothing wrong with the credit
of the government. It was openly
charged, and not denied that a
corner was made on the govern
ments gold, which forced the three
consecutive bond issues.
Mr. Cleveland admitted this to
be a fact when he made it a con
dition of the last bond issue tiiat
they were not to deplete tue
treasury again during his adminis
tration !
But behold! the explanation is
now made that the whole trouble
about the iond issues was caused
by the quality of silver we had on
hand ! That it so depreciated in
value that the confidence of the
nation in the ability of the govern
ment to keep ns silver at par was
so shaken that a rush was made
upon the treasury to get all de
mand coin notes redeemed in
gold! ?!
Bosh !-Fure bosh !
They need not try to work this
explanation of their raid off upon
the people. They were too late
attributing this cause to their
corner of the gold in this country.
All this goes to show the kinds
of arguments they make. Not
only so, but they are spending
piles of money to circulate their
literature among the people and
educate them (the people) to their
own ruin.
GEORGIA—Dooly County :
HJ. C. Byrd liaSjapplied for exemption
of personalty and setting apart and
valuation of homestead, and I will
pass upon same at mv office Vienna
Ga said Co. on the 34th day of August
1895. This August 5th 1895.
J. D. Hargrove,
O. D. D,
shows to the Court that he has fully
administered said estate and asks for
a discharge from said trust. This is
therefore to cite all concerned whether
heirs or creditors to show cause if any
they can why letters of dismission
from said administration should not
be granted to him on the 1st Monday
in Nov next. This August 5th 1895.
J D. Hargrove,
O. D. C.
GEORGIA—Dooly County:
To all whom it may concern:
W. G. Gunn and E. T, Tippett have
in due form opplied to the undersinged
for Permanent Letters of Administra
tion on the Est, of Wm. L. Gunn late
of said county deceased and I will
pass upon said application on lst Mon-
mu tit 1 j r n • t> xj. day in Sept, next Given under my
The \\ orld Is Growing Better, hand and official signature
Exchange. This August 5lh 1895.
_ , ii J. D. Hargrove O. D. C.
Some people are continually
howling about this old world : GEORGIA Dooly County,
going from bad to worse, but aj To all whom it may concern:
statistician who has been investi- , Wm Short has in due form applied
.. ., to the undersigned for permanent let-
gating the subject tells us the cen- ters of Administration on the Estate
sus returns just compiled confirm j of Mrs. Elenor Short late of saidcoun-
the estimate of a growth in the j ty deceased and I will pass upon said
church membership of America 1 application on the lst Monday in
much exceeding .he rate of growth ! ftS
in population. There can be no 1 —
better proof than this that the
world is growing better day by day
and nowhere else has moral prog
ress been so marked as in America, j
“American men and women, as an j
average population,” truthfully to the undersigned for permanent
says an exchange in commenting
on this fact, are incomparably bet- (Jec^d and 1 will pass upon said appli-
ter than any other people. It may , cation on lst Monday in Sept. next,
be said that the improvement is : Given under my hand and seal of of-
due to the higher degree of com- j ® ce August 5th 1895.
fort and greater ease of living dif-j ' ’ o! Il^C.
fused through our population;!
that the increase of church mem- GEORGIA—Dooly County:
J. D. Hargrove,
O. D. C.
GEORGIA—Dooly County:
To -whom it may concern :
W. J. Pate, has in due form applied
bership is an effect as much as a
cause. Let men debate that ob
scurity if they feel like. The cen
sus returns from the churches con
stitute a magnificent fact which is
absolute testimony only to a mag
nificent condition. They tell
decisively that the whole social
order in America is better, cleaner,
purer and happier than anything
ever known before. It is generally
admitted that church membership,
if it does nothing else, develops
respect for wholesome regulations,
for the laws of our land and the
laws of society. In this it con
duces to the moral and material
growth of any country. Without
churches and religion there can’t
be much morality, without morali
ty there can’t be much law. and
without law there can’t be govern
ment. The decline leads eventu
ally to barbarism. As in all
things, America leads in moral
progress, which is another demons
tration of the superiority of our
people to those of all nations.
To the Superior Court of said County •
The petition of J. P. Heard, J. F-
Calhoun, B. P. Howell, Russel Kellam •
J. D. Hargrove, W H. Whipple, C. T-
Stovall, B. F.Forbes and U. V. Whipple
shows the following to-wit:
1. They and such others as may
become associated with them, and
their successors desire to be incorpor
ated under the Corporate name of
“Vienna Mill & Gin Company” for
and during the period of 20 years with
the privilege of renewal at the eDd of
said time.
2. The objects of said corporation
are to do a general ginning business
both of long and short staple cotton,
and everything incident thereto: also
to do a general milling business of
whatever product or products said
corporation may desire with power to
do any and all things incident thereto:
all for the purpose of pecuniary gain
and profit to the members of said cor
poration.
8. They desire that their principal
place of doing business shall be at
Vienna in said county and state with
the right of establishing branch offices
anywhere in said state.
4. Your petitioners desire to be
invested in their corpoiate cap-city
with power to sue and be sued to grant
and receive by their corporate name,
to purchase and hold property both
rial and personal, to have a common
Seal, to make by-laws for their gov
ernment ami to exercise all and such
other powers usually conferred upon
corporatians of a like kind and neces -
sarv for operating and carrying on
their business aforesaid, as mav be
eonsistaiit with the laws of Georgia
5. The capital stock of said corpo
ration shall be three thousand dollars,
divided into 30 shan.-s of 100 dollars
each with the privileges of increasing
said capita! stock to j?20000 at any
regular meeting of the Stockholders,
and of beginning business as soon as
ten per cent of the Capital Stock is
actually paid in.
0 Theie shall be regular annual or
semi-annual meetings of the stock
holders the first to be held as soon as
practicable after the granting of this
chatter at which meeting the dates of
succeeding regular meetings shall be
fixed:also call meetings upon ten days
notice being given of the same by the
secretary.
7. There shall be ejected a board of
directors by and from among tbe
stockholders of not less than s nor
more than 5 who snail elect fioin
among their number a president, secre
tary and treasurer and such other
officers and agents as may be necessary
whose duties and salaries shall be
fixed by the board of directors.
8. The individual liability of tach
stockholder shall be limited to the
amount of his stock only, and he shall
not be liable at all outside of the
amount of his stock at par value,
| 9. Your petitioners pray for the
| granting if these powers and all such
■ other prTu ers necessary for the opera
tion of s.tid business not inconsistent
with the cuts of Georgia or the
L uited States and your petitioners
wili ever pru'
Martin & Whipple
d-titi oners Attvs
Fil .1 n office of Clerk of Superioi
Court 0/ Dooly Connty this the 29th
day of July 1895.
Russel Kellam-
Clerk.
The tide of immigration is most certainly turning
south-ward. The people of this continent have their
eyes upon this section as never before.
The representatives of a colony of 40,000 western
people have just closed a trade for 100,000 acres of
acres of land in Wilcox and Irwin counties and
large number of them will most certainly move in
this fall.
The Progress is in receipt, every week, of in
quiries from numerous land agencies and prospect
ive settlers, desiring information as to our railroad,
school, church, climate and soil facilities; also as to
the character of lands for sale. Many of these in
quiries we cannot answer because we have no data.
Now, if people who are interested will help us the
Progress proposes to establish an information bu
reau:
Here is the plan. Let every person who has lands
for sale give us the number of acres, where situated,
kind of soil, if improved the character of the im-
provents and the price and terms of sale. These we
will file and get up information from them in pam
phlet,form for distribution and then be in position to
answer aVV questions.
the ball to rolling by giving this information at once,
for other counties have their literature at work ;or them and Dooly
has lots of available lands for good immigrants.
Address all communications on this line to
PROGRESS INFORMATION BUREAU.
Vienna, Ga.
Geo. W. Wooten,
LAWYER,
Ga.
tended by disagreeable feelings in the Vienna,
Are you irritable and restless? New Law office on Cotton Street,
Does' your heart thump an! :ause near New Court House,
you to gasp for breath after climbing! will practice in all the Courts
a flight of stairsi j 0 f tbe State and in the Federal
Does it distress you to lie on the left :
side?
Have you impaired memoiy, dim-1 3.13.94. lyr.
ness of vision, deprssion Of mind and !
gloomy forebodings?
Courts at Macon and Savannah.
These symEtons mean that you are D. L. Henderson,
suffering from Dyspepsia and Nerv
ous Exhaustion.
There is no other remedy extant
that has done so much for this class of
troubles as
Scott’s Carbo-Digestive
Compound.
\V. V. Harvard.
He.jderson & Harvard.
attorneys,
Vienna; GA.
Contracts, Ejectments, Matters,
before court of Ordinary and col
lections—A specialty.
ei) II)
If your case has resisted the usual
metnods of treatment we are partic
ularly anxious to have you give this
Compound a trial.
IVe guarantee relief in every case
and will cheerfully refudd your money
should our remedy fail to produce the
most gratifying results.
Please remember that the appella
tion Patent Medicine does not apply
to
Scott’s Carbo-Digestive
Compound.
It is a prescription put up by a lead
ing physician who has made stomach
and nervous troubles a specialty for
years. .
We court investigation and ear
nestly urge all physicians to write us
for the formula of SCOTT S CARBO-
DIGESTIVE COMPOUND, which we
will mail on application that they
may satisfy themselves of its harm
less character and excellent virtues.
Scott’s Carbo-Digestive
Compound;
Is the most remarkable remedy that
science has produced. It has succeed-
ed where all other medicines have
failed.
Sold by druggists everywhere, $1.00
per bottle. Sent to any address in
America on receipt of price.
Don’t forget that we cheerfully re
fund your money if results are not
satisfactory. Order direct if your
druggist does not have it.
Address all orders to
Concord Chemical Mfg.
Co., Topeka, Kas.
Mrs. Anna Gage, wife of Ei-
Deputy II. S. Marshal,
Columbus, Kan., says:
“I was delivered
of TWINS in
less than 20 min
utes and with
scarcely any pain
after using only
two bottles of
“MOTHERS’
FRIEND’’
DID NOT SUFFER AFTERWARD.
J H. MARTIN,
Hawkinsville, Ga.
U. V. WHIPPLE.
Vienna, Ga-
MARTIN & WHIPPLE
LAWYERS,
VIENNA. GEORGIA.
Will practice in all the courts
of Dool§-, except Dooly County
court
G. W. Busbee.
D. A. R. Crcm.
J. M. Busbee.
BUSBEE, CRUM
BUSBEE
&
LAWYERS,
Vienna, Dooly Co. Ga.
Practices regularly in the Courts
of the Macon, Southwestern, Oco
nee, Southern and Brunswick Cir
cuits.
State Supreme Court, United
States Circuit and D'strict Courts
and Court of Appeals
MEDICAL.
C. T. STOVALL, M. D.
VIENNA, GA.
Office at Stovall & Forbes Drug
Store.
^F-Calls promptly answered, day
and night.
NEED
for Engines Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton
Gins, Cotton Presses, or any kind of
Machinery please correspond with us.
MALLARY BROS., & CO.
jVfqcoq, - Qq.
i
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
HMD DID SORES
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT CUTURRH, MMjjjjj,
AND POTASSIUM KIDNEY TROUBLES
p. p. p.
Makes
Marvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. P. purifies tbe blood, builds up
the weak and debilitated, pives
strength to weakened nerves, expeis
diseases, giving the patient health and
For primary, secondary and tertiary
syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu
rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, ami
in ail blood and skin diseases, -ike
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers,
tetter, scald head, boils, erysipelas,
eczema—we may say, without fear of
contradiction, that I’. P. P. is tike best
blood purifier in the world, and mrkes
Ladies whose systems are poir :.c-l
and whoso blood is in an impure con
tion. due to menstrual irregulnrif on,
are peculiarly benefited by the w a-
demil tonic and blood cleansing pr- p-
ertiesofP. P. P.-Prickly Ash, Poke
Boot and Potassium.
Springfield, Mo. t Aug. 34th, 1893.
—I can speak jb the highest terms eff
your medicine from my ewn personal
knowledge. I was affected with heart
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism icr
35 years, was treated by the very best
physicians ana spent hundreds of dol
lars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief, I have or»ly taken
one Dottle of your P. P. P. and can
cheerfully say it has don< mo more
good than anything I have ever taken.
I can recommend your medicine to all
■offerers of the above diseases.
MRS. M. M. YEARY.
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
and DYSPEPSIA
Are entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas
sium, the greatest blood purifier on
earth.
Aberdeen, O.. July 21,1891.
Messrs Lippman Bros. , Savannah,
Ga.: Dear Sirs—I bought a bottle of
J -our P.P P. at Hot Springs. Ark. .and
t has done me more good than three
months’ treatment at the Hot Springs.
Bend throe bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully yours. ,
JA8. M. kEWTOH,
Aberdeen, Brown County, Q.
Capt. J. D. Johnston*
To a'l trkom it mav concern: I here
by testify to the wonderful properties
or P. P- P- for eruptions of the skin. I
tillered for several years with an un
sightly and disagreeable eruption on
my face. I tried every known reme
dy bo- in vain.nntil P. P. P. was used,
and am now entirely corod.
(Signed by) J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savannah. Ga.
Shin Cancer Cored.
Testimony from the Mayor of Sequin^Tcx*
Seouin. Tex. , January 14,1893.
Messrs. Lippman Bros.. Savannah,
G i.: Gentlemen—I have tried your P.
P. P. P?r a disease of the f*kin, usually
1 - .-.-n -s skin eancer.of thirty years*
'.ins, and *ound great relief: 1C
; -■ iostho blood and removesailir-
r • r-rioii from the seat of the disease
a:M prevents any spreading of the
sores. I have taken five or sir bottles
a: d feci confident that another coarse
w.il effect a core. It has also relieved
me from indigestion and stomach
81.00 per
mailed free.
BBADFIELD ItEGliLATOIt CO., ATLANTA, OA.
SOLD BY ALL DRCGGISTS.
NOTICE.
GFORGIA-Dooly County.
S. B. Brown I Mortgage, etc.
v. s. I Superior Court,
J. H. Shrouder J March Term 1895.
It appearing to the court that De
fendant is indebted to Plaintiff by note,
in the sum of S116.60, with interest
from Oct lst 1892 at 8 per cent, and
that in order to secure said note, said
lefendant executed to plaintiff his
mortgage on lot of land number 58 in
the 14th district of said county, and
that he fails to pay said sum. It is
therefore ordered that said J. H.
Shrouder, all of said sums, with costs,
on or before the first day of the nex,
term, or show cause to the contrary if
he can, or in default thereof this court
will enter Judgement of foreclosure on
said mortgage.
Let this r de be served according to
law. W. H. FISH,
March 13th, 1895. J, S C, S. W. C.
GEORGIA—Dooly County.
To whom it may concern :
Whereas, Mary Ann Gammage Ad
ministratrix on the estate of Amos R.
Gammage, deceased, shows to the
court that she has fnlly administered
said estate and asks to be discharged
from her trust. This is, therefore, to
cite all, whether heirs or creditors, to
show cause, if any they can why let-
teis of dismission should not be grant
ed her on the lst Monday in Septemb-jr
next. This June 3rd 1895.
J. D. Hargiove
O. D. C.
THE ATLANTA BUSINESS
COLLEGE.
The Advanced Business School-
Y'-ittig people who tire ambitious
to succeed in life should take a
course at the Atlanta Businps Col
lege. Atlanta is the commercial
capital of the South and offers
many advantages not to be ob
tained elsewhere. In poin of ex
cellence in every respect, the At
lanta Business College stands at
the head of commercial training
schools. Bookkeeping, banking^
shorthand, penmanship, typewrit
ing and al! commercial arid Eng
lish branches, are taught practi
cally by skilled normal teachers.
Circulars and information will be
mailed free to those who wish to
enter college. Address: The At
lanta Business College, Whitehall
St. Atlanta, Ga.
T.F. MVANS.
PHYSICIAN and SURGEON.
Vienna, — Ga.
Special attention given Obstet
rics Diseases peculiar to women,
a specialty
All calls promptly answered, day
or night.
Office over W. C. Willis <fe Go’s
tore.
DR. W. H. Whipple
Physician and Surgeon
VIENNA. - GA.
Surgery, Obstetrics, diseases in
cident to our climate, and disease/
of women and children specialty.
Offices over W. C. Willis & Co’s
store. All calls promptly attended
to, day or night. Can be found at
night at the Busbee Hotel.
My 1 ittle boy, when two years of
age. was taken very ill with bloody
flux. I was advised to use Cham
berlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy, and luckily pro
cured part of a bottle. I carefully
read the directions and did aecor
dingly. He was very low, but
slowly and surely he began to im
prove, gradually recovered, and is
now as stout and strong as ever.
I feel sure it saved his life. I
never can praise the Remedy half
its worth. I am sorry every one
in the world does not know how
good it is as I do.—Mrs. Lina S.
Hinton, Graharasville. Marion Co.,
Florida. For sale by otovall &
Forbes.
Notice Farmers
Tc whom it may concern:
This Certifies tnat I have used Wm.
Hall s Hog Cholera Cure with very
Satisfactory results. It has cured my
hogs in evey case when directions
were followed, M. E. Rushin.
p . S. Stovall & Forbes sell it.
M on Blood Diseases Mailed Free.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
LIPPMAN BROS.
PROPRIETORS,
lippman’. Block,Savannah, Ga
Mr. C. D. Yonker, a well known
druggist of Bowling Green, Ohio
in speaking of Chambcrlai js
Cough Remedy, says: “I take
pleasure in rr-commendin<r it to my
customers, fori am certain that
it will always please tnnn. I H( .J1
mure of it than all other kinds pm
| together.” For sale by Stova ’
Forbes.
li <k
Dooly
Money to Loan
On 'arming lands in
county on easy terms.
My agent, Col. W. G. Harrson,
can be found in Vienna from the
8th to the 13th of each month and
will give prompt attention to all
business in this line Letters ad
dressed either to Montezuma or
\ ienna will be promptly answered.
J- IV. Haygood,
Montezuma, Ga.
FOB THE HEALING OP THE XATIOYS— jg
’BotamcBlood Balm f
\ THK GREAT SOUTHERN REEEDT TOR S
/ fill Skin and Blood Diseases |
_It Purifies, bt ilds up and enriches w
tne blood, and never fails jf
iP. ^L e _"he most inveterate*
0/ ci§?c D -< A ^ D SKIN DIS '*
B l i j S, if directions are fol-S
I l°'ved. Thousands of grate- S
, “j 1 people sound its praises#
and attest its virtues. *
COWRITE for Book of Won- &
derfijl Cures, sent free on ap- S
plication. *
■ ke Pt by your local druggist, *
$l i°°J 0r ar " e bottle > or #5-0° I
isL L b fi es ’o nd medicine will be*
| sent > freight paid, by §
blood BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga. S
^^^*******B»0ta*>!ciMrx*3K*****