Newspaper Page Text
VOL XXI.
JACKSON.
JACKSON is the county site of
Butts county, Georgia, situated on the
Bast Tennessee, Virginia and Georgia
Itnilway, between Atlanta and Macon,
on r high ridge or water shed dividing
tho Oemulgee and Towauga rivers.
Ahe climate is very equable, and one
of the most healthful in the world,
the atmosphere always beinfc 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
c<>rpse of professors < iffering 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, ns the cotton brokers here keep
close 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
man or beast can be grown here in
hrge quantities, property of all kinds
cheap, and the inhabitants of the town
mid 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 those water powers would pay hand
some dividends.
Any information in regard to towrn
or county will be furnished by ad
dressing The Middle Georgia Argus,
or D. J. Thaxton, real estate agent,
Jackson. On.
M. V. MCKIBREN. A . ’A. LANE.
MKIBBENI LINE.
Attorneys at taw,
•T \CKSON. GEORGIA.
M’CIEN 1,. RAV, CI.AUDK C. RAY,
Athens, Ga. Jacks n, Ga.
RAY & RAY.
ATTORNEYS
Negotia'e loans on real estate lower
than any Loan Broker iu Georgia.
Superior advantages iu collecting
chims in the South.
Practice in all Courts, both Federal
and State. Also Supremo Couit of U.
S. A. by special contract.
Dr. 0. H. Cantrell,
DHPJTXST,
Jackson, - Georgia.
Office on corner Third and Holly
lr<e s.
DR T. K. Til AH PE,
DENTIST,
FLOVILLA, - - GEORGIA.
Crown and bridge work and all the
latest methods or dentistry. Teeth ex
tracted without pain. Prices moderate.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
WRIGHT & BECK,
Attorneys at Law.
(OFFICE IN COURT BOISE.)
JACKSON, • - QA
M. M. MILLS,
Counsellor & Attorney at Law.
Will practice in all the courts. Mo- ey
baned un r al estate at low rate of inter
est. Long time granted with small pay
ments. Money obtained at once without
id ay.
(office in court house.)
Wilkinson House.
Fir-t Ciass in Every Particular.
Tlu oily brick hotel between Atlanta
f.r.d Mi*con.
Convenient to all business
Mns. A. E. Wilkinson, Prop.
STOP AT THE
Morrison House.
EVERT THIS G NEW AND FIRST
CLASS.
Conveniently Located,
Free Hack to Dn*
C. I?. G roll urn, Propriet r.
young Wives
Who are for the first time to
undergo woman’s severest trial
we offer
“Mothers Friend”
A remedy which, if used as directed a few
weeks before confinement, robs it of its
pain, horror and risk to life
of both mother and child, as thousands who
have used it testify.
“I used two bottles of Mothers Friend with
marvelous results, and wshtvery woman
who has to pass through the ordeal oftfuld^arthi to
know if they will use Mothers Friend for afew
weeks it will robconfinement of fat* and stiffen *g-,
and insure safety to life of mother and child-
Mrs. Sam Hamilton, Montgomery City,Mo.
Sent by express, charges pre-aid, on .receilrtcJ
prio* *1.50 per bottle Sold by all druggists. Hook
5 a Mothers mailed free. , . „
Bradfield Regulator Cos., Atlanta, Ua.
IPIIItif
THROUGHOUT THE SOUTH.
Rotes of Her Progress and Prosperity
Briefly Epitomized
And Important Happenings from Day
to Day Tersely Told.
The heaviest rainfall in the recollec
tion of the oldest inhabitant occurred
throughout Tennessee,Mississippi, Ar
kansas and Louisiana Saturday night
and Sunday. The whole country is
flooded and incalculable damage is" be
ing done to planters.
A deed of trust for SOOO,OOO, given
bv the Seaboard Air Line Belt Com
pany to the Mercantile Trust and De
posit Company, of Baltimore, Md.,
has been filed in the office of the clerk
of the superior court at Atlanta, Ga.
-The date of the deed of trust was
April Ist. I his deed of trust was
given by th railroad to back up $600,-
000 of bonds.
A Savannah, Ga., special of Tuesday
says: The naval stores market has
taken a decidedly upward trend.
Turpentine has advanced 1 1-2 cents
during the last week and pure rosins
have gone up from 25 to 30 cents on
the barrel. Prospects are decidedly
bright. Receipts bear out early esti
mates of a much shorter crop than last
year.
Depositors in the failed Bank of
Commerce at Bertan, Tenn., filed a
bill Tuesday against the bank and its
officers and directors seeking to hold
the latter personally responsible for
their claims. The bill cites the consid
eration of 40 per cent of the notes
given for stock subscriptions, alleges
gross mismanagement and negligence,
and charges that the bank was insolv
ent two years before it failed.
At Milner, Ga., Sunday, the Rev.
William Graham, one of the oldest and
best known evangelists in the state,
and his aged wife were dashed into
eternity by the Nancy Hanks, the
Central railroad’s fast train. The old
people were walking along the railroad
track, returning from church, arm in
arm, when the Nancy Hanks, moving
at full speed, ran upon them, raising
them high in the air and hurled them
down a steep embankment to instant
death.
A Jackson, Miss., special of Friday
says: The pardon of Vincent, the Ala
bama defaulting treasurer, lias started
a movement to secure the pardon of
ex-Treasurer Heming way, of this state,
who was convicted and sentenced to
five years in the penitentiary in No
vember, 1890. He was short $15,000.
A communication in Friday’s Clarion-
Ledger declares him to be more wor
thy of pardon than Vincent and refers
to the fact that while Vincent was
sentenced for twenty years, he only
served six and says that Hemingway
has now served over half his time.
A Vicksburg, Miss., special of Mon
day says : There are at least ten thou
sand homeless and hungry people in
East Carroll, Morehouse, West Car
roll and Madison parishes, La., and
the suffering and privations they are
undergoing is appalling. With the
exception of a few small elevations the
whole of the northeastern portion of
the state is under water. Forty-four
negroes were rescued from a perilots
position near Swan Lake, East Carroll
parish, Sunday night. They were
almost insane from hunger, having
been without food four days.
A special from Bristol, Tennessee,
says: The Big Stone Gap Land Com
pany, capatalized at $2,000,000, and
with a bond indebtedness of $1,000,-
000, was forced into liquidation Tues
day by a suit entered in the United
States district court at Abingdon by
Philadelphia stockholders in the com
pany. The bill filed in the federal
court alleges gross mismanagement of
the affairs of the company and misap
propriation of its funds. By an order
issued by Judge Goff, of the the United
States district court of West Virginia,
Messrs. H. Clint Wood, of Bristol, and
J. K. Taggart, of Stone Gap, are ap
pointed receivers of the company to
wind up the business.
WIND ON A FROLIC.
It Tackles a Circus Tent With Disas
trous Results.
Dispatches received from several
towns in Missouri and one point in
Kansas report the occurrence Thursday
afternoon of a severe windstorm. The
storm was accompanied by hail and a
downpour of water amounting almost
to a cloudburst. No loss of life or se
rious injury reported to human life,
bnt the telegraph wires are down in
the country surrounding the towns
that the storm struck.
At Sedalia, Mo., the wind attained
a trrific velocity. It surged under the
tent of Gurgling Brothers’ circus and
snapped the poles supporting it like
pipestems. The crash buried 2,000
people beneath it. They screamed
and struggled and several women faint
ed, but all were finally safely removed
from beneath the canvas. Several re
ceived severe bruises.
At Brookfield, Mo., the 6torm struck
the roundhouse of the Hannibal and
St. Jo railroad and it was partially de
molished. Some of the engines were
badly damaged. A number of work
men were in the building, but all es
caped injury.
IJ. CHRISTIE -MX I! RAY, tUe iSQgllSt
novelist, turns on his critics in a brief
note to a London paper to demonstrate
that truth is stranger than fiction. Of a
reviewer’s charge that au episode in one
of his novels was “wholly incredible,
Mr. Murray says: “I got. that story oc
the spot and had full proof of its ac
curacy. In fact, I built the novel on
that genuine bit of history which voui
reviewer thinks incredible.”
rX-SECRETARY FOSTER FAILS.
His Different Enterprises Placed in
the Sheriff’s Hands.
A special from. Fostoria, 0., says :
The business world was astonished
Friday morning bv the news that ex-
Secretary of the Treasury Foster had
failed and had turned his financial in
terests, in an embarrassed condition,
over to an assignee. The liabilities are
given out by Mr. Foster as being
$600,000, and the assets are about the
same.
At an early hour Friday morning the
bank of Foster & Cos. was closed on
two attachments. The presence of the
sheriff was the first intimation that
there was something wrong, and it
soon leaked out that an assignment had
been made. The deposits of the bank
at the time of its last statement, were
about $175,000. The news spread rap
idly and soon the streets were filled
with people, after learning the extent
of the calamity.
The assignment of Secretary Foster
was a signal for the assignment of a
number of concerns in which he was
interested. The brass and iron works
was one of the concerns that assigned.
Bessides Mr. Foster, Mr. Portz was
one of the onwners of this concern.
The liabilities and assets of his com
pany are included with the personal
statement of the ex-secretary. The
Malbourg calcined and crockery and
window glass companies, three con
cerns that have been backed by Mr.
Foster, also failed.
The loss to business men who were
depositors in Foster & Co.’s bank is
one of the deplorable features of the
crash, but it is confidently believed
that none of them will suffer to an ex
tent that will cause them to assign.
The loss to Fostoria is a great one,
and one that will require considerable
time to recover from, but great as it
is, the regret on that account no way
lessens the regret and sympathy ex
pressed for the ex-secretary. It is
conceded that his generosity and pub
lic spirit have been the indirect cause
of his financial downfall, as he was
ever ready to lend a helping hand.
The assignment of Davis & Foster,
the wholesale grocery Company, will
probably be the direct cause of the
failure of a number of grocery con
cerns throughout the country. It is
said that the firm has $125,000 unpaid
accounts and notes due it.
The failure is due to the fact that
Mr. Foster has been a very heavy en
dorser for the three assigned win
dow glass houses and the brass and
iron works, his endorsements for these
companies aggregating over $300,000.
The stringency of the money market
caused the banks to request payment
of the notes, which precipitated the
failure.
THE NEWS IN NEW YORK.
A New York dispatch says: The
Foster Banking Company, of Fostoria,
0., which assigned Friday morning,
according to the last issue of the bank
ers* almanac, has a capital of only $40,-
000, a surplus of $20,000 and an undi
vided profit of S9,O(H). In Bradstreets
Foster & Cos. are put down as having
a capital of from $500,000 to $1,000,-
000, but their credit is only rated by
that agency as second class.
CHANGE OF VENUE.
The Central Receivership Case to be
Settled at Savannah.
Saturday ended the hearing of the
Central Kailroad cases in Atlanta,
The three days’ session was of tinttsUal
interest. There were gathered togeth
er more legal brains under one court
roof than ever before iu Georgia.
Justice Jackson has set June 26th as
the day, and Savannah as the place to
settle the question in dispute. The
most sensational incident of the pro
ceedings was Justice Jackson’s state
ment as to the duties of a receiver.
Iu plainest language he gave notice
that the court would tolerate no receiv
er who in any way attempted to fur
ther the plans of any party, clique,
combination or reorganization com
mittee. The court, he said, would
most postively not sanction the help
of any receiver or officer of the court
to further the schemes of any reorgan
ization committee.
The status of the case which will be
heard in Savannah is about as follows:
The question of the validity of the
endorsements or guarantees made by
the Central on the bonds of its auxili
ary roads will be determined. The
question of a final decree in the suit
of the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Com
pany for the foreclosure of the tripar
tite mortgages will also probably be
passed on, and it would seem that un
less some arrangement is made either
by the receiver or by some of the other
parties at interest by which the tripar
tite bonds and the floating debt can be
carried upon favorable terms, that a
decree of sale will be rendered. An
other important point in this connec
tion is the suggestion of the court that
in the event Messrs. Alexander Brown
A Cos., or any other parties, shall pre
sent a receiver with sufficient financial
backing the court would hear their
application for another receiver.
The hearing in Atlanta was of a pre
liminary character. Little pleading
and evidence were introduced. Justice
Jackson called upon the lawyers to aid
the court to co-operate in arriving at a
speedy and just determination of the
eases. In this he evidenced a desire
to save the property, which, in many
cases, is held by people in very reduced
An eighteenth century tombstone in
the old Catholio burying-ground at Con
cord, Mass., proves that the best in
tended epitaphs may with the lapse ol
time take on an ironical significance.
The stone stands awry, is fast crumbling
and shows the discoloration of a century’s
exposure and neglect, but it st 11 bears
in legible characters this now incongru
ous inscription: “This stone is erected,
by its durability to perpetuate tilt
memory and by its color to signify the
moral character of Miss Abagain Dudley.’
JACKSON, GA.. FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1893.
TELEGRAPHIC GLEANINGS.
Tie News of tbe Worn Conflensei Mo
Pity and Pointed Parappiis.
Interesting and Instructive to Ail
Classes of Readers.
Decoration Day was fittingly ob
served in all the large cities of the
union.
Mrs. Mary Nevim Blaine and Dr.
W. T. Bull were married at New York,
Tuesday.
Dr. Nash, the representative of Dr.
Jenkins in Hamburg, Germany, re
ports by cable one death from cholera
in that city Sunday.
A suburban train ran into a passen
ger train on the Texas Pacific road at
Austin, Monday night. Two persons
were killed and ten injured. The in
coming train disregarding orders.
Comptroller Echols stated Monday
that there were indications that tho
Chemical National bank, of Chicago,
and the Capital National bank, of In
dianapolis, Ind., would resume busi
ness.
Advices of Monday froni London
stated that during the fearful cyclone
which has been raging in the bay of
Benfal the ship Germania was lost and
sixty-four people lost their lives with
the ship.
Passenger train No. 36 on the Louis
ville, New Albany and Chicago, which
left Indianapolis Monday morning,
was wrecked near Broad Ripple, sev
en miles noitli of the city. Engineer
George E. Plant was killed and Fire
man Williams was injured it is
thought fatally.
Decoration day opened at Washing
ton, Tuesday, with beautiful weather.
At an early hour the processions be
gan forming at the various Grand Ar
my headquarters, and at noon the pro
grammes at the different cemeteries
were under full headway. An incident
of the day was the decoration of the
graves of Generals Rufus Ingalls and
W. W. Belknap by Major W. C. Dox
bury, an ex-con federate.
A New York dispatch says: It is
stated officially that outside of the
Memphis and Charleston and Mobile
and Birmingham, the security holders’
reception of the Richmond Terminal
plan is more satisfactory at the pres
ent time than the reorganizers had ex
pected it to be and the indications are
ample now that the Terminal plan will
be successful, as it stands without
modification except, possibly in these
particulars.
The National bank at Fargo, N. D.,
and the First National of Lakota, N.
D., were closed Monday on orders is
sued by Mr. Eckels, comptroller of the
currency. Both of these banks were
organized by E. Ashley Hears, who
was also the organizer of other nation
al banks and of many state banks and
other institutions. His plan, says the
comptroller, appears to have been to
make loans to the various institutions
subscribing to the stock of the two
national bankß in some caßes exceeded
the amounts in which some cases ex
ceeded the amount of the stock sub
scribed to by them.
At Chicago, Monday, Judge Stein
issued a temporary injunction re
straining the exposition directory from
closing the world’s fair on Sundays.
The decision was made in accordance
with the prayer of a bill filed some
Aveeks ago by Charles W. Clingman, of
Chicago, in behalf of himself, as a
stockholder in the exposition company,
and as a citizen. The proceedings
were in the state court and were en
tirely distinct from the more recent
case in the federal courts to which the
United States government iB a party.
Judge Stein held that congress had
made no law compelling Sunday clos
ing.
A CIRCUS TRAIN DEMOLISHED.
Six Men Killed Outright and a Number
of Animals Get Loose.
Tuesday morning a special train on
the Tyrone and Clearfield, Pa., rail
road, composed of Main’s circus cars,
got beyond the control of train-men
and came down the mountain with
fearful rapidity. At Vail station the
train was wrecked and the animals,
men and broken cars were piled up
together. Six men were killed out
right, twelve or fourteen others badly
wounded, some of them fatally. The
eicus is a complete wreck. Several
lions and tigers made their escape and
only after the greatest exertion were
they recaptured, and then not until
one of the tigers had killed several
domestic animals in the neighborhood.
It will take several days to get the
property together. The wreck is one
of the worst that has occured on this
division and the worst in the number
of lives lost.
BROADWAY CABLE CARS,
Six Hare Been Started and the Horses
Will be Given a Rest.
A New York dispatch says: CabL
ears have at last come into the proces
sion on Broadway, and though they
are running slowly and cautiously,
they have come to stay. Pair by pair
the horses will disappear as soon as
the cables run smoothly, and before
many months it will be possible to en
joy something like rapid transit, with
freedom from blockades. The first
regular cable cars of the Metropolitan
Traction Company were started Mon
day afternoon and the event was hon
ored by the presence in the cars of
many prominent people. The start
was made from Central park abont 3
o’clock, and six cars made the trip to
Bowling Green and return without a
hitch.
Advertise now, it will pay you.
GROWTH OF THE SOUTH.
The Industrial Development During
the Past Week.
A review of the industrial situation in the
60uth for the pist wees shows the organization
of a land development and manufacturing
company with $1,500,000 capital, at Jonesboro.
Tenn,, by the La Follette Land and Improve
ment company; of a cotton se and oil mill, capi
tal $250,0U0, at Velasco, Texas, by the Velasco
Oil company; of a cotton mill companv, with
SIOO,OOO capital, at Raleigh, N. C., by J. S.
Mvnne and associates; of a lunib.r manufact
nring company at Camden, Ark., capital $55,-
000, by the On&chita Manufacturing company,
and of a water and light company with SIO,OOO
capital, at Hillsboro, Texas, by 'the Hillsboro
Water, Light and Power company.
There is also reported the bn lding of a $50,-
COO flouring min at Jefferson, Texas, by the
Jefferson Milling Company; of a compress and
storage company at Bowie, Texas, capital $40,-
000, by the Bowie Compress and Storage Com
pany, and of one with $30,000 capi'al at Brown
wood, Texas, by tbe Brownwood Compress
Company; the organization of a lumber com
pany with $35,000, capitat at Hon ton, Texas
by the Bayou City Lumber Company, and of
one at CoDroe, Texas, with $25,000 capital, by
the Texas Tie and J imber Company, and or a
$30,000 oil mill at Goliad, Texas, by the Go
liad Oil Mill and Gin C >mpany.
Forty-six new in Instries were estoblished or
incorporated during the week, tigetlier with
six enlargements of manufactories and fifto n
important new buildings. Among the new in
dustries not above referred to are a brewery at
Austin, Texas; brick and tile works at Sauasv,
Ga., Greenville, Ky., aud Morgantown, W. Va.;
camming factories at S iussy, Ga., Fredericks
burg, Va., an l Wells burg, \V. Va ; a distillery
at Lawerenceburg, Ky., and a flour ng mill at
Stanley ton, Va. Ice factories are reported at
Eau Gallie, Fla., and Fayetteville, N. C.; coal
mines are to be opened at Pittsbur/, Ky.. Elk
Valley, Knoxville and Lafayette, Tenn., and
Rural Retreat, Va., and a qua>ry at Waco,
Texas, a steam cotton gin at iiosebud, Texas,
and cotton mils at Lincolnton, N. C-, and
Roanoke, Va.
Among the woodworking plants' 1 reported for
the week are bent-wood works at Bridgeport, Ala.
aco iperage at Amity, N. C.; saw and planing
mills at Camp Hill and Do;hen, Ala., Dawton
ville, S. C.. and Big Stone Gap, Va.; variety
works at Enterprise and Meridian, Aii-s., anil
Dayton, Tenn.
Water works are to be built at Kyle and
Waxahachie, Texas. The enlargements include
a flouring mill at Faith, N. C.;a foundry at
Charleston, W. Va.; an oil mill at Hempstea I,
Texas; a woolen mill at Jackson, Ten n., aud a
lumber mill at Warned, Fia.
Among the new buildings of the week are a
bank buiiding at Blacketone, Va.; chureho ■ at
Newberry S. C., Temple and Tyler, Texas, Ports
mouth. Va., and Lexington, Ky.; a $75,000 ho
tel at Hopkinsville, Ky.; a fac ory at Richmond,
Va.. aud an opera house at Victoria, Texas.—
Tradesman (Chattanooga, Tenn.)
DECORATION DAY
Fittingly Observed Throughout the
Country.
Memoral Day was observed in New
York City with the usual parade.
Many thousand people visited River
side park and attended the Memoral
Day services at the tomb of General
Grant. The tomb was tastefully dec
orated by the members of the United
States post No. 327 and elaborate
floral offerings were sent by Mrs. Grant,
the Loyal Legion, President Cleveland,
the Sons of Veterans of New York city,
the Chinese legation and the General
Meade post, of Philadelphia.
an Ohioan reeau:? mat Dituminous coa
was literally free fifty or sixty years ago
in the eastern part of Ohio, to such
persons as chose to dig it where it
cropped out, and it was not uncommon
to see the industrious citizen returning
from some hillside, his wheelbarrow
laden with enough free coal to warm him
the better part of a week. This was in
the days when eggs were 3 and 10 cents
a dozen in Ohio and squirrels so plenti
ful that farmers' lads killed them with
sticks as the nimble creatures scampered
along the fences.
L"DU MB* AGUE AND J
MALARIA.^
UPPMAN BROS.. Proprietors.
DriW’lsts. I Imman’s Block. SAVANNAH. GA
RipansTabules.
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.
RipansTabules may be ob
tained of nearest druggist.
Ripans Tabules
are easy to take,
quick to act, nd/3^*s^P
save many a doc-^^pplV 7
FAST TIME.
“THE
Washington
AND
Chattanooga
LIMITED.”
IN EFFECT OCT. 30, 1592.
EAST BOUND.
l eave Chattanooga .... 12:3." Noon.
Arrive Bristol (Central Time) . .. 7:35 P. M.
Leave Bristol (Kastern Time) . . 8:40 P. M.
Arrive Shenandoah Junction . . 7:20 A. KT.
Leave Shenandoah Junction . . 7:25 A. Nff.
Arrive Washington .... 9:80 A. M.
CONNECTIONS.
Leave Washington .... lO'OO A.M.
Arrive New York .... 8:00 P.M.
Leave Memphis .... 11:59 P. M.
Arrive Chattanooga . . . . 12:25 P. Nf.
Leave Nashville . . i 7:30 A. if.
Arrive Chattanooga . . . 12 25 P. Nf.
Leave New Orleans .... 8:00 P. M.
Leave Birmingham . . . 635A. M.
Arrive Chattanooga . . . 11:55 A. M.
Leave Atlanta ..... 8:20 A. M.
Arrive Cleveland . . . 1:25 P. M.
Leave Mobile ii i . 8:00 P. At'.
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 Sleepersni ii ■
New Orleans to New York.))) ALL
Memphis to Washington and \\|||ppTi ni 11 Pit
Nashville to Washington Din- VtO I IdULIU
ingCar Chattanooga to V ash-ii
ington. Through Vestibule
Coach Atlanta to Bristol.
Bitting Car Service Unsurpassed.
NO EXTRA PARES
B. W. WRENN, General Pats, Agt. Knoxville, Tenn.
ORANGE BLOSSOM
IS AS SAFE AND HARMLESS AS
A Flax Seed Foultice.
It is applied right to the parts. It cures all diseases of women. Any
lady can use it herself. Sold by ALL DRUGGISTS. Mailed to any
address on receipt of sl.
Dr. J. A. McGill & Cos.. 3 and 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, HL
UNION "2 STERLINQ
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Are the Highest Grade Possible.
OUR LINE OF
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HATE NO
EQUAL.
ALL SIZES.
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FOR BOVS,
GIRLS, MEN
AND WOMEN.
Stokes Mfg. Co 9
393 Wabash Ave., CHICAGO.
AGENTS
WANTED.
SEND 4 CENTS
FOR CATALOG.
NO. 22.
AND
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Physicians endorse p. P. F. as a - splendid combla ctlot*.
and prescribe it with greet satisfaction for the cures of all
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! P P P
Cuiffcs *A<
syphilis, Syphilitic Rheumatism, Scrofulous t f !cera and
Sores, Glandular Swellings, Rheumatism, Malaria, clsl
Chronic Ulcers that have res! ted nil treatment, Catarrh,
fip.p.sa
Skin Diseases, Eczema, Chrome Female Complaints,aler*
curiai Poison, letter, Scald Head, etc., etc.
mid an ey~ellent r.ppetlgfr,
P. P. P.
Cures'rheumatisM
building up the system rapiuiy.
Ladles whose systems are poisoned end whose Hood !.i m
_*n_ijopnre_condition, due to menstrual are
D D 0
r.r.r. Malaria
by the wonderful tonic and bloods
cleansing properties of P. P. P., Prickly Ash, Poke Root
and Potassium.
CudsJ^pliiA
LIPP3UAN BEOS., Proprietors,
Druggists, Lippznan’a Block, RAY AH N AH, GrA-
BUY THE
tIGHT RUHHIHG
JSB
woodwork,
THE BEST IS THE CHEAPEST.
Send TEN cents to 28 Union Sq., N. Y
for our prize game, “Blind Luck,” arc!
win a New Home Sewing Machine.
The New Home Sewing Machine Cos,
ORANCE, MASS.
UNION SQUARE,KY. 3-^...,
O
FOR SALE BY
( mJNng
Doctors’
vgiy 7 Bis
BP m BOTANIC
lisii BLOOO BALM
THE GREAT REMEDY
- FOR ALL BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES -
Has been thoroughly tested by em
inent physicians' and the people
for 40 years, and never fails to
care quickly and permanently
SCROFULA, ULCERS, ECZEMA,
RHEUMATiSM, PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS.
and all manner of EATING, SPREADING and
RUNNING SORES. Invariably cures the most
loathsome blood diseases if directions nro fol
lowed. Price $1 per bottle, 6 bottles for Jo. i’or
sale br dim?gists.
SENT FREE WONIHAtFCL*? rtLEB.
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlania, 3a.
BICYCLE SUN
DRIES OE ALL
KINDS. CLOTII-
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 ,
AN 3
MILWAUKEE