Newspaper Page Text
VOL. XXL
JACKSON.
JACKSON is the county site of
Butt - county, Georgia, situated on the
Hast Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia
Kailway, between Atlanta and Macon,
(in a high ridge or water shed dividing
the Ocmulgee and Towauga rivers.
Th<‘ climate is very equable, and one
of the most healthful in the world,
the atmosphere always being pure
and bracing. All manner of out
door work can be performed any
month in the year without inconveni
ence from summer heat or winter
cold. The town of JACKSON now has
a population of near two thousand
with a steady increase. It has a male
and female High School with a fine
corpse of professors offering unexcelled
educational facilities, several churches
of various denominations, all well
supported; splenid hotel accommo
dations, largo carrigage manufac
tory, first-class shoe shops, etc., with
over thirty business houses. It is now
one of the best cotton markets in the
State, as the cotton brokers here keep
dose up to the Atlanta quotations. It is
situated in the home of the peach, the
grape, the pear, and all kinds of fruit
grow here in abundance, in fact every
thing necessary to sustain the life of
manor beast can be grown here in
large quantities, property of all kinds
cheap, and the inhabitants of the town
and county are cultivated, courteous
and hospitable, and eagerly welcome
all emigrants who come among them
to get a home. There are numerous
water powers in the county
lying idle, only waiting the
capitalist to take hold and
build them up. Manufactories of any
kind of wood work to utilize the vast
quantities of valuable timber lying near
by these water powers would pay hand
some dividends.
Any information in regard to town
or county will be furnished by ad
dressing The Middle Georgia. Argus,
or I). J. Tliaxton, real estate agent,
Jackson. Ga.
M. V. MCKIBBEN. A. W. LAKE.
M’KIBBEN & LANE,
Attorneys at Law,
JACKSON, GEORGIA.
T.UCIEN L. RAY, CLAUDE C. RAY,
Athens, Ga. Jacks :n,Ga.
RAY & RAY.
ATTORNEYS
Negotiate loans on real estate lower
than any Loan Broker in Georgia.
Superior advantages in collecting
claims in tho South.
Practice in all Courts, both Federal
and State. Also Supreme Court of U.
S. A. by special contract.
Dr. 0. H. Cantrell,
DENTIST,
Jackson, ... Georgia.
Office on corner Third and Holly
streets.
drT t. k. tiiakpe,
DBJNTTIST^
FLOVILLA, - - GEORGIA.
Crown and bridge work and all the
latest methods of dentistry. Teeth ex
tracted w ithout pain. Prices moderate.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
WRIGHT & BECK,
Attorneys at Law.
(OFFICE IN COURT HOUSE.)
JACKSO3N, • - OA
M. M. MILLS,
Counsellor & Attorney at Law.
Will practice in all the courts. Money
baned cm r< al estate at low rate of inter
est. Long time granted with small pay
ments. Money obtained at once without
(OFFICE IK COURT HOUSE.)
Wilkinson House.
Fir-t Class in Every Particular.
The only brick hotel between Atlanta
yt.al Macon.
Convenient to all business.
Mrs. A. E. Wilkinsok, Prop.
STOP AT TflE
Morrison House.
everything new and first
class.
Conveniently Losated,
Free Hack to
C. R. Greharn, Propriet r.
MENSTRUATION
v, ’*h a woman of vigorous health passes
in due time without pain or dis
comfort; but when she approaches this
; crisis MONTHLY with a frail constitu
| L >n and feeble health she endangers
; ' acr physical and mental powers.
i BRADFIELD’S
FEMALES
| REGULATOR
$ S en 3 ew da y s before the monthly
< r^.,',' ess se^ s in and continued untill
< F ert °fnts her functions, has no
J a SPECIFIC for Painful, Pro
[s “ Scanty, Suppressed and Irregular
ij menstruation
J “ W ° MAN " mailed free.
J LO REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta, Ga.
W b ' J aU druggists.
Ipilif Ifewjpj |i|i (
WASHINGTON GOSSIP.
Happenings iron Day to Day in tie
National Capital
Appointments In the Varions Depart
nients-—Other Notes of Interest.
ABOUT THE DEPARTMENTS.
Secretary Carlisle, on Thursday, in
structed the collectors of internal rev
enue and custom house officials to re
frain from making tho arrests of
Chinese who have not registered until
further orders from the department.
Two appointments in the treasury
department were announced Saturday.
Hon. Scott Witke, of Illinois, suc
ceeds Mr. Spalding as assistant treas
urer, and R. R. Bowler, of Cincinnati,
is mado comptroller to succeed Ma
thews.
Speaker Crisp returned to Washing
ton Thursday. He will remain several
days looking after the interests of his
constituents. There are several score of
fourth-class postmasters to be ap
pointed in his district. Several presi
dential postoffices must also be filled,
and a few of his constituents want
other offices.
The president announced the follow
ing appointments Monday: H. W.
Smith, of Utah, associate justice of the
supreme court of the territory of Utah;
Everett E. Ellinwood, of Arizona, at
torney of the United States for the
territory of Arizona. Marshals of the
United States—John S. McNeilly, of
Mississippi, for the southern district
of Mississippi; Nat M. Brigham, of
Utah, for the territory of Utah; Wil
liam K. Meade,of Arizona, for the ter
ritory of Arizona,
Secretary Gresham on Thursday, re
ceived a letter from the United States
consul general at Havana, dated April
29tli, forwarding a copy of the procla
mation issued April 28th by the gov
ernor general of Cuba, already pub
lished, declaring the province of San
tiago de Cuba in a state of Beige. The
reas ongiven for the measure is that
some bands of men have risen in arms
against the government in the ham
lets of Velasco and Puerta, near the
northern coast of that province, for
the immediate suppression of which
active military measures are now being
taken by the government.
The president appointed postmas
ters Thursday as follow s : Margaret
G. Davis at Biloxi, Miss., reappoint
ed ; Thomas W. James at McComb,
Miss., vice S. W. Collins, office became
presidential; Walter N. Hurt at Wi
nona, Miss., vice Mary C. Mathews,
removed ; Albert L. Howe at Natches,
Miss., vice H. C. Griffin, removed;
Thomas R. Crews, at Laurens, S. C.,
vice J. M. Robertson, removed; Wil
liam Y. C. Hannum, at Maryville,
Tenn., vice J. P. Edmonson, removed;
John W. Clark at Ripley, Tenn., of
fice became presidential; Robert A.
Poole at Cleburne, Tenn., vice W. H.
Deal, resigned.
On Saturday Secretary Carlisle re
ceived the resignation of General
Roseerans, of California, as register
of the treasury, to take effect May
21st. In tendering his resignation
Roseerans refers to his impaired phys
ical condition, and encloses a certifi
cate from his physicians, which states
that General Roseerans is unable to
undertake the long journey to Wash
ington, and does not hold out any
hope that he will be able to do so in
the near future. Secretary Carlisle
accepted the resignation in a letter in
which he expresses his regret at the
general’s continued illness and hopes
he may soon recover.
A Comparative Statement.
A statement prepared from the rec
ords of the postoffice department
shows that during the first two months
of the present administration, the to
tal number of fourth-class postmasters
appointed was 3,894 as against 6,104
made during the first two months of
Mr. Harrisons’s administration. The
number of appointments made during
the last two months to fill
vacancies caused by resignations
and deaths was 2,685 as
against 1,608 made during the corre
sponding period of last administra
tion. The number of removals made
during the last two months is shown
to be only 1,209, while the number of
removals made during the first two
months of Mr. Harrison’s administra
tion reached 3,496. The excess of ap
pointments four years ago, therefore,
1,210 and the excess of removals 2,887,
while the number of appointments
made on account of resignations and
death was 1,077 more than four years
ago.
The Shut-Oat Order.
The president’s order closing the
white house to office-seekers formed
the chief topic of conversation
among the politicians Monday. The
expressions regarding it varied in
character according to the condition
of the speaker. Senators and repre
sentatives with large and active con
stituencies were inclined to favor the
president’s stand, for it relieved
them of a great deal of pres
sure from importuning follow
ers, whose needs must be pre
sented to the president and their
claims for office advocated. At the
same time the proclamation is not
taken to apply as a bar to senators.
The politicians say that the order will
have the effect of making a close cor
poration of the patronage system by
giving senators and representatives the
sole right to talk with the president
about appointments and that the pres
dent will be thus barred from hearing
the voice of the people at large on the
fitness of candidates put forward for
appointment for office.
Saturday’* Appointment*. -
The president announced the follow*
ine'nppoin-m nts Saturday: Alexan
der McDonald, of Yirgmgia, envoy
extraordinary and minister plen
ipotentiary to Persia ; Wallace S. Jones,
of Florida, consul general at Rome;
Stephen Bonsai, of Maryland, secre
tary of the legation of the United
States to China. Consuls of the
United States: James B. Taney, of
West Virginia,, at Belfast; Alfred
D. Jones, of North Carolina,
at Shanghai; Charles T. Lyons, of
New York, at Zanzibar; Harvey
Johnson, of Georgia, at Antwerp;
Benjamin Lenthier, of Massachusetts,
at Sherbrooke; Harrison R. Williams,
cf Missouri, at San Jose, Costa Rica;
Ralph Johnson, of New York, at Fort
Erie, Ontario; Henry P. Dubellet, of
Texas, at Rheims; James C. Monaghan,
of Rhode Island, at Chemnitz ; Charles
Schaefer, of Kansas, Vat era Cruz;
William C. Renfro, of Oklahoma, to
be governor of the territory of Okla
homa ; Charles C. Richards, of Utah,
to be secretary of Utah; Charles M.
Brude, of Arizona, to be secretary of
Arizona; Robert W. Banks, of Mis
sissippi, to be receiver of public mon
eys at Del Norte, Col. ; David H.
Hall, of Nevada, to be register of the
land office at Eureka, Nev. ; Darwin
Z. Curtis, of Michigan, to be registrar
of the land office at Marquette, Mich. ;
James W. Duncan, of the Indian Ter
ritory, to be special agent, to make al
lotments of land in severalty in the
Cherokee outlet to seventy Cherokee
citizens as provided by act of congress
approved March 3, 1893. Harrison
R. Williams, of Missouri, was ap
pointed consul to Vera Cruz, but has
been transferred to San Jose, Costa
Rica.
THE WEEK’S BUSINESS.
According to Report of Dun & Co’s.
Agency.
R. G. Dun & Co.’s review of trade
for tho past week says: Had business
in Wall street been unsound the col
lapse of prices during the past week
might have caused a panic. Nearly all
stocks fell, but the Industrials were
more seriously depressed and while
the average decline in all stocks was
about $6 p er share for the week, Cord
age fell 43 points, Sugar 40 and Man
hattan 26. Several failures occurred
without general disturbance and the
appointment of receivers for the Cord
age Company was in some sense a re
lief. Other speculative markets are,
on the whole, rather stronger than a
week ago. At nearly all points the
backward season and bad weather with
slow collections give cause of com
plaints.
At Pittsburg the iron is still
more depressed, hut business in glass
is fairly good. Trade at Cincinnati is
quiet, collections are very slow and
money in active demand. At Cleve
land business is fair to quiet and at
Detroit the backward season causes a
shrinkage of 10 to 15 pence in orders.
At Fort Wayne slow collections are
reported and at Indianapolis money is
close. Chicago reports a shrinking
trade, slow collections, money compar
atively tight, a decrease of 15 per cent
on eastward shipments, but an increase
in real estate and building. Trade
improves at Milwaukee. At Minneap
olis and St. Paul trade is dull and col
lections are slow. At St. Louis busi
ness is active and collections heavy.
Grain receipts are large and the river
export trade unusually heavy. Money
is in healthy demand and country ad
vices are good. Kansas City reports
better trade and at Omaha groceries
are in active demand and dry goods
are in fair demand. At St. Joseph
better trade is reported, but at Salt
Lake collections are slow and money
close.
At most southern points trade is im
proving, though at Louisville money is
close. At Nashville the financial situ
ation is quiet. At Little Rock collec
tions are slow. At Macon trade is
good and at Knoxville and Columbus
somewhat improved. At Augusta bus
iness is dull, but collections fair, and
at Savannah trade improves, especially
in naval stores. Business is gaining at
New Orleans, though crop prospects
are less favorable on account of the
storms.
The iron trade shows no improve
ment. There is pressure to sell from
the west. Southern No. 2 is sold at
$8.50. Birmingham and Bessemer has
fallen to $18.40 at Pittsburg. Bar is
cut again and structural iron is slow.
Sales of 15,000,000 pounds of lake
copper to American consumers at 11
cents are reported. Tin and lead are
weak and coal dull. In the boot and
shoe trade there has rarely been
such dullness. Receipts of cattle
at the west are slightly lower
than a year ago. Wool sales at
Boston, Philadelphia and New York for
the year are 2,500,000 pounds less than
last year to date. Trade in woolens is
narrow and disappointing and in cot
tons waiting and uncertain.
Speculative markets have been
rather strong; wheat has advanced 1
cent; corn 1 3-8 cents and pork 75
cents per barrel, with scarcely any
discoverable reason, though western
reports regarding the coming crops
run satisfactorily. Oil has dropped
nearly 9 cents per barrel, but cotton
is unchanged. Prices of commod
ities average 4-10 of 1 per cent, lower
than a week ago, and tie tendency is
downward as monetary difficulties in
crease.
Exports from New York were very
small last week and for the past four
weeks have been about $4,000,000 be
low those of last year. So that imports
for the past month were probably $lO,-
000,000 or more greater than exports.
Among the failures of the week only
one is reported of rating above $200,-
000; only one between $125,000 and
$200,000; two between $40,000 and
$75,000; and eight between $30,000
and $40,000; and in all only fifteen of
rating exceeding SIO,OOO out of 24 1
in all the United States and Canada,
Advertise now, It will pay you.
JACKSON, GA., FRIDAY, MAY 12, 1893.
k FRIGHTFUL WRECK
On ttie Big Four Road Caised by Defect
in Air Brakes.
Ten Men Crushed to Death and Many
Others Badly Injured.
One of the most horrible wrecks in
the history of railroading occurred on
the Big Four road in Lafayette, Ind.,
at 1:15 o’clock Sunday morning, as a
result of which ten men are now dead
and many more injured. The train
was the east-bound passenger, leaving
Chicago at 9 o’clock p. m. The acci
dent was caused by the failure of tho
airbreakes to work. The engineer un
doubtedly discovered this beforo
reaching the cut beyond the Wabash
river, as vigorous whistling for brakes
could be heard when the train was
still a mile west of tho city. The en
gineer’s desperate effort to stop the
train was shown by the large amount
of sand thrown by him on the
bridge through which the train came
just before the fatal crash. The en
gine dashed out of the bridge over the
Wabash river at a speed not less than
aixty miles an hour, crashing into the
depot bhilding, carrying off a portion
of the depot and train sheds several
hundred feet, the engine when it left
the track being followed by the bag
gage car, two postal cars and express
car and piled in one promiscouus mass,
a total and complete wreck, burying a
score or more of victims in the awful
pile of debris. The trucks of the first
day coach were dragged out and the
side of the car knocked into fragments,
but no passengers in this car were in
jured. The chair car and two Pull
man sleepers remained on the track.
The wreck was a most complete one,
the engine and cars being torn to
pieces and piled up together with
their contents.
A large crowd of citizens in hered
Very quickly at the scene of tiie dis
aster and assisted in rescuing the vic
tims, and a large force of local physic
ians gave the necessary attention to
the wounded. Several victims of the
wreck were persons standing in the
depot waiting for tho train. A hack
man, a mail cart driver and passengers
were struck.
LIST OF DEAD.
Michael Welch, engineer, Indian
apolis, frightfully mangled, head
crushed, limb torn from body, found
under the engine; fireman Mclnnis,
of Indianapolis; E. D. Myres, of Lo
gansp#rt*jsiail aiterk; Mr. McMahon,
of Cincinnati, express messenger; A.
R. Chadwick, of Cincinnati, mail
clerk ; Charles Meyers, of LaFayette,
hackman ; John Lennon, of LaFayette,
mail cart driver; Jesse H. Long of
Lebannon, Ind., mail clerk ; Charles
S. Cahill, passenger, had just bought
a ticket to Indianapolis. ; Otto Gessel
son, Alhambra hotel, Chicago.
Passengers going to the train were
frightfully crushed and mangled, limbs
being severed iu several instances and
heads and bodies terribly injured. The
list of injured is a large one and sev
eral more people may die.
The wreck was caused by the failure
of the airbrakes to work properly.
High bluffs rise on the west banks of
the Wabash, just opposite the city, and
there is a long and 6teep grade at that
point. The ill-fated train must have
been a mile np grade from the river
when the engineer made the discovery
that there was something wrong with
the airbrakes, for he began to shrilly
blow the whistle for handbrakes. The
speed had by that time increased so
terrifically, however, that its control was
beyond human agency. With almost
lightning like speed the engine
dashed around the curves and
across the long bridge, although
the man at the throttle had
reversed the machinery and immense
streams of fire were being dashed off
from the driving wheels running in an
opposite direction to that of the
swiftly flying cars that followed. Just
after leaving the east end of the long
bridge over the Wabash, the tracks
describe a semi-circle at the midway
point of which the union station is lo
cated. When the engine struck that
6harp curve, it left the track, followed
by the cars in an awful swirl, and they
piled upon each other 100 feet away,
after crashing through the train sheds
and bringing down tons of structural
iron to add to the terror of the situa
tion.
PAY AND MARCH.
The President of World’s Fair Decides
a Knotty Problem,
A Chicago dispatch of Friday says:
Those who were afraid that Chief Burn
ham’s Guards would raise a row if at
tempts were made to parade through
the fair grounds, were relieved yester
day when President Higginbotham
gave it out that any body of men, no
matter how large, would be permitted
to march inside the big fence, provided
they had paid their entrance fee.
Consequently the commercial travel
ers, who intend to bring one hundred
thousand men to the fair, and the Cath
olic Knights of America, together
with the foreign countries and vari
ous states can proceed with their cele
brations.
The “Deacon” Paying Up.
A New York dispatch says: S. Y.
White, whose failure was recently an
nounced at the stock exchange, sent
the following communication to the
president of the exchange Monday:
‘ ‘Please announce, to the members of
the exchange that I have collected
from brokers in the exchange who are
doing business for me sufficient bal
ances that I am able to pay the 25 per
cent of my adjusted differences to
members who are my creditors. If
they send statements to my offioe to
morrow morning I will send checks as
above.”
Queer Earth.
They are dredging some very queer
stuff down at McNear’s basiu. They
struck it a few feet below the surface
md have cut through about 12 feet in
iepth of it thus far. It is the very em-
Douiment of toughness. It requires to
be cut into shavings, as it were, by one
passage of the machine, aud then in dis
engaging and lifting it the i’oo horse
power machine is strained to the utmost.
It is very much like dredging a stratum
of india rubber. The same machine
would make at least live times the speed
ind headway through the friable rock
;hat underlies our principal streets.
Besides being tough, indicating a very
Urge percentage of aluminium in its
composition, it is remarkably heavy,
much more so than the hard pan or or
ainary clays of the vicinity. [Petaluma
.Cal.) Courier.
Always keep posted on all public mat
ters, to be able to do this subscribe now.
ATLANTA MARKETS.
CORRECTED WEEKLY.
Groceries.
Coffee—Roasted—Arbuekle’s 22.10 16 100 Tt.
cases, Lion 22.10 c; Levering’s 22 10c. Green—Ex.
tra choice 21c; choice pood 20c; fair 19c; com
mon 17a 18c- Sugar—Granulated 6%c; off
granulated-; powdered 6%c;cut loaf 6% ; whit
extra C Orleans yellow clarified
53^5%e; yellow extra C 4c. Syrup—New
Orleans choice 45; prime 35@40c; common
20@30c. Molasses—Genuine Cuba 35@38c;imi
ta'tion 22@25. Teas—Black 35@55c; green
40@60e. Nutmegs 65@70c. Cloves 25@30c.
Cinnamon 10@12%0. Alltpico 10@llc. Jamai
ca ginger 18c. Singapore pepper 12c; Mace
SI.OO. Rice, Head 6c; good 5%0; common
4% c; imported Japan 5@5%e
Salt—nawley’s dairy $1.50; Virginia 75e.
Cheese—Full cream, Clioddars 12c; flats
White fish, half bbls.s4 00; pails 00c.
Soap—Tallow, 100 bars, 75 lbs $3.00a3.75;
turpentine, 60 bars, GO lbs, $2.25 a 2.50;
Candles —Parafino ll%e; star 11c. Matches—
400s $4 00; 300s $3 00a3 75; 200s $2 00a 1 75; 60s,
sgross $3 75. Soda—lvegs, bulk 4c; do 1 lb pkgs
6%c; cases, 1 lb 5%e, do 1 and %lbs 80, do%lb
6V4C. Crackers —XXX soda 6%c; XXX butter
6%c; XXX poarl oysters 6c: shell and excelsior
7c;lemon cream 9c; XXX ginger snaps 9c; corn
hills 9c. Candy — Assorted stick 6%C; French
mixed 12 %c. Canned goods—Condensed milk
$6 00a8 00; imitation mackerel $3 95a4 00; sal
mon $6 00a7 50: F. W. oysters $2 00; L.W.
$135; corn $2 50 a 3 59; tomatoes $2 10.
Ball potash $3 20. Starch —Pearl 4c; lump
4>s ;’nickol packages $3 00; celluloid $5 00-
Pieties, plain or mixed, pints $1 00al 40; quart*
$1 50al 80. Powder—Rifle, kegs $3.75; % kegs
$2 15; % kcgs-fl 20. Shot $1 60 per sack.
Flour. Crain find Men!.
Flour—First patent $5 00; second patent
$4.50; extra fancy $4.00 ; fancy $3 75; family
$3 25. Corn—No. 1 white 59 :. mixed,
66c. Oats, Mixed 44;; whito 47c; Texas rust
proof 45c. Hay—Choice timothy, largo bales,
$ LOO No. 1 timothy, largo bales, 95c; choice
timothy, small bales,sl 00; No. 1 timothy,small
bales. 95c; No. 2 timothv, Bmall bales, 90c.
Meal -Plain 56c; bolted 51c. Wheat bran—
Large sacks 88c, small sacks 90c. Cotton
seed meal—sl 3) per cwt. Steam feed—sl.4o
per cwt, Stock peas Gsa7sc per bu. White, 75
to $1.25. Boston beans $2.65a2.75 per bushel.
Tennessee, $1.75a 2.0 J. Grits—Pearl $3.35.
Country Produce.
Eggs 12a13e. Butter —Western creamery
28a35c choice Tennessee 27%30c; other grades
10a12%c. Live poultry—Turkeys 10@12%0 per
lb; hens 28 and 30c. spring chickens
large 25a35e; -small spring 15; 25c. Dressed
poultry—Turkeys 17al8c ; ducks 15c; chick
ens 12%a15. Irish potatoes, 1.00@1.10 per bu.
sweet potatoes new—7saßsc per bu. Honey-
Strained Baloc ; iu the comb 10a12%c. Oniom
$2 00a2 25 per bu.
Provisions.
Clear rib sides, boxed 10%. ice-cured bellies
13c. Sugar-cured hams Jsal7c, according
to brand and average; California, 14c.break
fast bacon 16;. Lard, Leaf 11%. Compound 8%.
Cotton.
Local —Market Quiet. Middling 7 3-lGc.
LIPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors,
Druggists, Lippman’s Block, SAVANNAH. GA
Ripans Tabules.
Ripans Tabules are com
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best medi
cal authorities and are pre
sented in a form that is be
coming the fashion every
where.
Ripans Tabules act gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual constipa
tion, offensive breath and head
ache. One tabule taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
Ripans Tabules may be ob
tained of nearest druggist
Ripans Tabules
are easy to take,
quick to act,
save many a
FAST TIME.
"THE
Washington
AND
Chattanooga
LIMITED.”
IN EFFECT OCT. 30, 1892.
EAST BOUND.
Leave Chattanooga .... 12:35 Noon.
Arrive Bristol (Central Time) . . 7:35 P. Nf.
Leave Bristol (Eastern Time) . . 8:40 P. M.
Arrive Shenandoah Junction . . 7:20 A. hf.
Leave Shenandoah junction . . 7:25 A. M.
Arrive Washington .... 9:80 A. M.
CONNECTIONS.
Leave Washington .... 10:00 A.M.
Arrive New York .... 8:00 P. M.
Leave Memphis .... 11:59 P. hf.
Arrive Chattanooga . ■ . ■ 12:25 I*. M.
Leave Nashville . . . 7:30 A. M.
Arrive Chattanooga . . . 12. 25 P. M.
Leave New Orleans .... S:00 P. hf.
Leave Birmingham . . . . 6-85 A. M.
Arrive Chattanooga . . . 11:55 A. M.
Leave Atlanta . . . . 8:20 A. M.
Arrive Cleveland . . . 1:25 P. ML
Leave Mobile . . '. i 8:00 P. M.
Leave Selma . . . 3:45 A. M.
Arrive Cleveland . . . 1:25 P. M.
TRAIN CONSISTS OF
Two coaches and Baggage Car.
Pullman Sleepers. Pullman
Dining Car. Pullman SleepersiH All
New Orleans to New York, )) ALL
Memphis to Washington and\u|jp(vv'inill FIT
Nashville to Washington. Din- //jth [
ing Car Chattanooga to Wash
ington. Through . Vestibule
Coach Atlanta to Bristol.
Dining' Car Service Unsurpassed.
NO EXTRA FARES
B. W. WRF.NN, General Pass, Agt. Knoxville, Tenn.
pgGRATCHEDTEN MONTHS.
A troublesome skin disease
caused mo to scratch for ten
mouths, and has been
cured by a few days’ uso of
M. 11. Wolff, Upper Marlboro, Md*
IWgFf’SjpECIFIC
I was cured several years ago of white swelling
In my leg by using and have had no
symptoms of ro turn of the dis
ease. Many prominent physicians attended me
and all failed, hut S. S. S. did the work.
Paul "W. Kiukpatkick, Johnson City, Tenn.
. .pa
Treatise on Blood and Skin Dis-t
eases mailed free.
Swift Specific Cos., J
Atlanta, Ga.
21st Annnal Announcement
or THE
North Georgia Apinltml College,
AT DAHLONEGA.
A branch of the State University
Spring Term begins First Monday in Feb
ruary. Fall Term begins First
Monday in September .
B st school in the south, for students with
limited means. The military training h
thorough, be ; ng under aU. S. Army
detailed by the Secretary of War.
BOTH SEXES HAVE EQUAL ADVAN
TAGES.
Studen's are prepared and licensed to teach
in the public schools, by act of the legislature.
Lectures, on Agriculture and the Sciences
by distinguished edueaters and scholars.
For health the elimate is unsurpassed.
Altitude 2287 feet.
Board $lO per month and upwards. Messing
tt lewhr rates.
Each senator and representative of the state
6 entitled and requested to appoint one pupil
from his distriol or eounty, without paying
inatriculatlon fee, during his term.
For catalog or information, address Sec ra
il tt or Treasure*. Board of Trustees.
ORANGE BLOSSOM
IS AS SAFE AND HARMLESS AS
A ETax Seed Poriltice.
It io applied right to the parts. It cures all diseases of women. Any
lady can use it herself. Sold by ALT, DRUGGISTS. Mailed to any
address on receipt of sl.
Dr. J. A. McGill <& Cos., 3 and 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, 111.
UNION STERLING
BICYCLES
Are the Highest Grade Possible.
OUR LINE OF
MEDIUM
GBADE
WHEELS
HAVE NO
EQUAL.
ALL SIZES.
ALL FBIGES.
FOB BOVS,
GIBUS, MEN
AND WOMEN.
Stokes Mfg;, Cos.
293 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO.
AGENTS
WANTED.
SEND A CENTS
FOR CATALOG.
NO. 1!).
CURE^^U^N
AND
BLOOD DISEASES.
as a splrndld couiblnatlooT™
and prescribe it with great satisfaction for the cares of all
_form and >tags of Piimirv. Secondary and TartUry
„ P. P.F.
CuresscrofulA.
BvpMlis, Syphilitic Rheumatism. Scrofulous
Sores, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Malaria, old
Chronic Ulcers that have resisted all Catarrh,
nnn c cures
nr.r. hfdisu
Skin
curial Poison, Tetter, Scald Head, etc., etc.
a powerful tonic, and an crcellont appetiser.
RP.P.
CIfRES*R H EU M AT ISM
building up the system rapidly.
Ladles whose systems are poisoned and whoso blood la us
,*p_jglPu r P_-_ condition, duo to menstrual Irregularities, ara
gjfjijr cures
r. i. r. Malaria
the
cl taming properto of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Root
and Potassium.
p p p
.Cures dyspepsia
LIPP2SAN BROS., Proprietors,
Druggists, Lippxnan’s Block, SAY AH N AH, OA-,
BUY THE
Running
THE BEST IS THE MEAPEST.
Send TEN cents to 28 Union Gq., N. Y.,
for our prize game, “ Blind Luck,” and
win a New Home Sewing Machine.
The New Home Sewing Machine Cos,
ORANCE, MASS,
UNION SQUARE,
CBlCAfio .-r3=£stS9
ILL. CAL.
FOR SALE BY
Save
( %|kj Payfag
mSSx Bills
Bn D BOTANIC
■DiUh blood balm
THE GREAT REMEDY
• FOR ALL BLOOD AMD SKIN DISEASES -
Has been thoroughly tested by em
inent physicians and the people
for 40 years, and never fail3 to
core quickly and permanently
SCROFULA, ULCERS, ECZEMA,
RHEUMATISM, PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS.
and all manner of EATING, SPREADING and
RUNNING SORES. Invariably cure, the most
loathsome blood diseases if directions are fol
lowed. Price Si per bottle, 6 bottles for $5. Bos
sale by druggists.
SENT FREE WONDE RFC I ? C CUES.
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta, Ga.
BICYCLE SUN
DRIES OF ALL
KINDS. CLOTH-
I N G , CAPS,
STOCKINGS,
SHOES, SWEAT
ERS, BELLS, CE
MENT, PUMPS,
REPAIR OUT
FITS, LAMPS,
LUGGAGE CAR
RIERS, OIL
ERS, BICYCLE
STANDS, WREN
CHES, Etc., Etc.
branches:
DENVER
AND
MILWAUKEE