Newspaper Page Text
VOL XXL
JACKSON.
BjicKSON is the county site of
county, Georgia, situated on the
- Virginia and Georgia
;V . between Atlanta and Macon,
ridge or water shed dividing
W () cn) nlgee and Towauga rivers.
K e ij U intc is very equable, and one
Kthi murt. healthful in the world,
K etmosjJiere always being pure
brueiiig. All manner of out
-17, W i>rk can he performed any
Kjjtii in the year without inconyeni-
KL from summer heat or winter
K.l The town of JACKSON now has
■Tpopulation of near two thousand
I, K steady increase. It has a male
IT] female High School with a fine
■j,.,..... n! professors offering unexcelled
Ejncfttioiiid facilities, several churches
various denominations, all well
Exported; splenid hotel accommo-
Ejtions, largo carrigage manufac
rv. first-class shoe shops, etc., with
■ffprthirl,'"business houses. It is now
Ip of the best cotton markets in the
■ State, ns the cotton brokers hero keep
leloseni’to tin 1 Atlanta quotations. It is
Ijtnated in the home of the peach, the
Irrape, the pear, and all kinds of fruit
|p, wliei' in abundance, in fact every
■ thing iLCi'essnry to sustain the life of
I jin or beast can be grown here in
IJgrge quantities, property of all kinds
I cheap, and the inhabitants of the town
I sail county are cultivated, courteous
[mil hospitable, and eagerly welcome
[ill emigrants who come among them
I I get a home. There are numerous
I water powers in the county
| lying idle, only waiting the
I iipitnlist to take hold and
I taild them up. Manufactories of any
find of wood work to utilize the vast
quantities of valuable timber lying near
bthese water flowers would pay liand
lome dividends.
[ Any information in regard to town
r comity will be furnished by ad
uT dug I'nr. Middle Georgia Argus,
it D. J. Tlmxton, real estate agent,
(JackaiAii. Gh.
'• Mf'KIBBI'N. A. W. LANK.
M'KIBBEN l LINE.
Attorneys at Law,
•I \ Civ SON. GEORGIA.
UI'IEN i. HAY, CLAUDE C. HAY,
Athens, Ga. Jacks u, Ga.
RAY i KAY,
ATTORNEYS
Nigotin'e loans on real estate lower
tliau iiny Loan Broker iu Georg.j.
Mimrior advantages iu collecting
in the South.
Praoiicu iu all Courts, both Federal
i 1 -State. Also Supreme Court of U.
S A. by special contract.
Itr. 0. H. Cantrell,
dentist,
'■ "•* "{) - - - ‘nos>iOßf
Office on corner Third and Holly
ltr< es.
K. Til Alt PE,
DENTIST,
FLOTILLA, - - GEORGIA.
Crown and bridge work and all the
atest methods or deutistry. Teeth ex
if acted without pain. Prices moderate.
Satisfaction guaranteed.
WRIGHT & RECK,
Attorneys at Law.
(OFFICE IN COURT 1101 SE.)
- - <3-^..
M. M. MILLS,
ounscllor & Attorney at Law.
Will practice iu nil the courts. Money
baned on r nl estate at low rate of iater
t. Long time gran tod with small pay
ments. Money obtaine lat once without
Flay.
(office in court house.)
Wilkinson House.
Fir t Class iu Every Particular.
L Th only brick hotel between Atlanta
*ui M.con.
C nveoient to all busines*.
Mus. A. E. Wilkinson, Prop
STOP AT THE
Morrison House.
EVERYI'HL\Q NEW AND FIRST
CLASS.
Conveniently Located,
Free Hack to He**® 4
C. It. Greham, Propriet r.
BROB - Proprietor#,
- L, Pi>man’s Block, SAVANNAH. BA
AT THE NATIONAL CAPITAL
Allairs of GoYernment ana Routine of
the Honse anfi Senate DiscnsseJ.
Notes of Interest Concerning the Peo
ple and Their General Welfare.
Secretary CarHsle sent to the house
Friday a letter recommending an ap
propriation of $300,000 for continuing
the recoinage of fractional silver coins
ie secretary asks that the approdria
lon be made available immediately.
Six hundred and thirty-six thousand
ounce of silver were offered for sale to
the treasury department Wednesday
at prices ranging from 76 cents to 76
J-4 cents an ounce. The whole
amount was declined at the prices ask
ed and 1 5 1-4 cents tendered.
Chairman Wilson Thursday appoint
ed Henry Talbot, of Illinois, clerk of
the committee on ways and means. Mr.
lalbot was employed in the same ca
pacity under the chairmanship of Mor
rison and Mills, and since the fiftieth
congress has been connected with the
interstate commerce commission.
Ihe receent advices received by Sec
retary Morton from one of bis agents
in Europe, Mr. Mattes, fully affirm
previous reports regarding the short
age of certain crops, in sections of
Europe, which he represents is likely
to create a very large demand
for American forage crops, including
corn, although he does not think it
likely that much of the latter will be
used as a human food.
Saturday was a great day in the
house. It was a field day. There has
not been such a day of oratory in this
branch for many years. All the great
orators of the body appeared before
the footlights, so to speak. The gal
leries were crowded to their fullest
capacity. Every seat on the floor was
filled and the interest manifested in
the closing day of the great silver de
bate was intense. The speakers were
the best that each side had to present..
The repeal men, however, presented
the strongest men of the debate.
Members of the Georgia delegation
in congress Thursday morning received
a telegraphic appeal from a citizens’
committee of Brunswick, asking for
immediate aid in the way of provisions
or money. Congressman Turner, in
whose district Brunswick lies, had a
long conference with Surgeon General
Wayman after receiving the telegram.
The object of the conference was to as
certain if help for the unfortunate cit
izens could be given by the marine hos
pital service. Surgeon General Wy
man was very sympathetic and prom
ised to do all in his power to alleviate
the miserable 'condition of the poor
people who are left in Brunswick. An
effort will be made to furnish food and
medicine out of the epidemic fund at
the disposal of the bureau if it can
be thus utilized. This course is being
taken under consideration and it is
hoped that a favorable decision will be
reached.
Eleven Majority in ilie Senate.
That the bill for unconditional re
peal will pass the senate is quite as
certain as that it will pass the house.
The supporters of the Yoorhees bill
confidently claim eleven majority
without the three new senatoas from
the western states, who may or may
not be in their seats at this time. There
are eleven senators who have not as yet
annouced their final determina
tion as to how they will vote. Of these
seven are said to be wavering toward
unconditional repeal and four towards
the substitute. A great deal would
seem to depend on the vote in the
house, the size and character of the
majority the Wilson bill receives. It
is decisive and unmistakable, the sen
ate will probably be careful not to
have the wrath of the country direct
ed at that body, as it surely will if they
long delay matters.
To Coin Gold Bullion.
A special of Monday states that Sec
retary Carlisle has ordered that the
United States mints at Philadelphia
and San Francisco be fully manned
and the full capacity of both mints be
utilized in the coinage of gold bullion.
The treasury department possesses
from forty-tive to ninety millions of
gold bullion, which is a part of the
gold reserve of $100,000,000. Gold
bars cannot be used as currency, so
it has been decided in the present
need to coin the bullion on hand.
This bullion will be coined into $lO,
$5 and $2.50 gold pieces, preference
being givei| to the first two denomi
nations. The coining capacity of the
Philadelphia mint, it is stated, will be
between $5,000,000 and $6,000,000 a
month. The San Francisco mint w ill
also be utilized, but unfortunately
nearly all the bullion possessed by
the government is in the east. There
is $20,000,000 of gold bullion in the
Philadelphia mint $15,000,000
of it being in one vault, where it has
remained untouched for fifteen years.
Acting Director Preston visited Phila
delphia Saturday and completed ar
rangements with Superintendent Bos
byshell to begin work at once. The
treasury is now paying out gold coin
all over the country, and as a conse
quence stands more in need of gold
coin than heretofore.
Major Thomas’s Men Accept.
A Nashville special of Friday says:
The Nashville, Chattanooga and St.
Louis employes will accept the reduc
tion, President Thomas having prorn
ised’to restore wages as soon as the
company’s business justifies it.
Major Thomas’s Men Accept.
A Nashville special of Friday says:
The Nashville, Chattanooga and St.
Louis employes will accept the reduc
tion, President Thomas having prom
ised to restore wages as soon as the
company’s business justifiyt.
JACKSON. GA., THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1893.
GROWTH OF THE SOUTH.
The Industrial Developement Daring
the Past Week.
PWnTt'n 0 * ,ho . ind, ’ tfr ial situation in Ihe
Bouth for the past week showß a further falling
??i in r ° n Potion, there being now but ten
f £maceß i n operation out of twenty-five
tn the Birmingham district, and four out of
tweive m the Chattano-jga diatrict. Mills all
over the South aro running on short time, som
have closed on account of failure to procure
currency, and some are issuing scrip for pav
rolls, maturing in ninety dava.
Therj is falling off in the demand for ma
chinery, but in new industries there is an in
crease over the preceding week. During the
week there were forty-five new manufacioriej
organized in the Southern States, chief anion"
which were the American Economic Boiler
Company, of Savannah, Ga„ capital $125,003:
the Loinomy Novelty Manufacturing Company,
of Charleston, W. Va.. with SIOO,OOO capita!
ind the I. Dumas Furniture Manufacturin''
company, of New Orleans, La., with $75 000
uapital.—Tradesman (Chattanooga, TennJ
OUR LATEST DISPATCHES.
Tlie Haspiigs of a Day CDroniclefl in
Brief ani Concise Paranrapns
And Containing tie Gist of the News
From All Parts of the World.
Secretary Mohler, of the Kansas
state board of agriculture, issued an
appeal Monday for seed wheat and
money to buy it for the farmers of west
ern Kansas. The appeal states that
the wheat crop is a failure in that por
tion of the state.
A Knoxville dispatch says: News
comes from Sevier county of a terrific
freshet Monday. Pigeon river rose
fifteen feet in two hours, and water
flowed two feet deep in the streets of
Sevierville. Growing corn along the
river has been greatly damaged.
Colonel Louis J. Dupree, one of the
best known newspaper men in the
south, and American consul to San
Salvador under Cleveland’s first ad
ministration, died at Memphis, Tenn.,
Monday night. He was sixty-eight
years old and until his late sickness
has been editor of The Memphis
Ledger.
The Chapin Mining Company, of
Milwaukee, Wis., filed a certified copy
of a mortgage for $1,308,000 on its
property, ore and franchises Monday
morning to secure funds for the pur
pose of the payment of labor and taxes,
the payment of royalty on ore actually
mined and for the development and
operation of the mines in Wisconsin.
Train No. 4, on the Northern Pa
cific, was held up Saturday night four
teen miles west of Stillwater, Mont.
There were five men in the gang, and
they were apparently amateurs, as
they only secured $52 out of $6,000,
which was in the express car, the mes
senger hiding the balance and the
other valuables. Passengers lost vari
ous small amounts.
The storm which swept the south
Atlantic states from Sunday morning
until Monday morning cut down the
telegraph wires from southern Florida
up into Virginia. All telegraphic
communication south was cut off with
‘Washington except by way of Chica
go. It was with great patience and
difficulty that even meager dispatches
were obtained by the press telling of
the day in congress.
A special from Madrid, Spain, says;
The old city of Saragossa, capital of
the province of that name, was the
scene Sunday of a serious riot grow
ing out of the dissatisfaction of the
spectators at a bull fight with the
characer of the performance. The
police attempted to disperse them, but
were greeted with a volley of stones.
It was not until reinforcements ar
rived at the scene of trouble that the
rioters were dispersed.
A Montgomery special says: Josiah
Morris & Cos., who suspended payment
two weeks ago, resumed business
Monday morning, and from the hour
of opening until closing a heavy busi
ness was done, the old customers of
the bank coming forward to make de
posits and open their accounts with
the firm. This incident in the bank
ing history of the country is almost
without a parrallel. The entire com
munity rejoices over the resumption.
A CUT IN WAGES.
Employes of the Mobile and Ohio Rail*
road Will Get Less Money.
A Mobile, Ala., dispatch of Friday
says: J. C. Clark, president of the
Mobile and Ohio Railroad company,
and General Superintendent McLaren
and committees representing the or
ders of conductors, engineers, fire
men, trainmen and switchmen, held a
conference regarding a reduction in
wages. The men refused to accept a
reduction of 7$ per cent without the
stipulated sixty days’ notice.
The company made a counter prop
osition to accept a reduction of 10 per
cent for several months, and at the ex
piration of that time, if the financial
condition of the road was unchanged,
the reduction should continue. This
was refused. President Clark then
told the men thaF the scale of reduc
tion submitted to them was impera
tive.
THE DEPRESSION SUBSIDING.
Many Business Men Opine That the
Worst is Over.
The New York Commercial Adver
tiser in its issue of Friday printed a
broadside of opinions upon the pres
ent commercial depression gathered
from all over the country. Most of
these opinions are from men conver
sant with the condition of trade in
their various localities and are to the
effect that the worst of the depression
has been passed and that the near fu
ture will see a decided improvement
in all lines of commercial and manu
facturing business.
A STORM’S FURY. .
Fearlni Hayoc Tronsbt Along the South
Atlantic Coast.
Savannah Torn and Sorrow-Stricken.
Havoc at Other Points.
A Savannah special says: Almost on
the anniversary of 1881, Savannah was
swept Sunday night by one of the se
verest storms it has ever known. The
storm, which had been predicted by
the weather bureau for several days,
began early in the afternoon and in
creased from then on until it reached
the climax between 11 and 12 o’clock
Sunday night, having blown for eight
hours in a terrific hurricane. It be
gan raining early in the morning, but
only in gusts. After the first fall it
ceased entirely for several hours, and
did not begin again until afternoon.
Then the work of destruction began
and lasted until the storm had spent
its force. At midnight all tlie wharves
along the river front and Ocean Steam
ship company and Savannah, Florida
and Western railway wharves were
under water and the tide was still ris
ing rapidly.
A view of the city at daylight Mon
day morning revealed a scene of wreck
and ruin that surpassed that after the
great hurricane of 1881. The streets
were impassable from the debris.
Fallen trees, twisted roofs, masses of
brick, fences and broken limbs and
branches of trees, were piled across
the sidewalks and in the squares, and
broken wires hung in every direction.
It is impossible at present to estimate
the damage, as the result of the storm,
but it was very general, and it is safe
to say that it will go up in the hun
dreds of thousands, and perhaps high
er. Nearly everyone, if not quite all
the property owners in the city, have
been damaged to some extent, and
some to the extent of thousands.
FIFTY MISSING.
The list of fatalities is gradually
growing, and it is impossible to tell to
what extent it will go. Several bod
ies of drowned persons were picked up
during the morning, and searches are
now being made for others who are
missing. Every hour seems to bring
some new story of a death as a result
of the storm.
Fourteen people are known to be
dead, and forty or fifty others are re
ported missing, and it is supposed, as
nothing has been heard from them,
that their bodies will be found later.
A DOZEN VESSELS RECKED.
Twelve barks and barkentines which
were anchored at quarantine station
were blown high and dry upon the
marsh, and some of them were carried
by the storm across the marshes on to
an island two miles distant from the
station. One of the vessels at Tybee
was completely capsized and three of
the clubhouses on the island were
blown entirely down. Others were
flooded and the people sought shelter
wherever they could. The wares are
all down and Savannah is almost shut
off from telegraphic communication.
QUARANTINE DEMOLISHED.
The ruin at quarantine is immeas
urable. Nothing is standing where
one of the finest stations on the south
Atlantic was located except the doc
tors’ house, and how this weathered
the fearful gale is miraculous; the
wharves are gone, the new fumi
gating plant which has cost the city
so much money is in the bottom of
the sea, and nine vessels which were
waiting there for release to come to
the city are high and dry in
the marsh, and no doubt w ill be total
wrecks. The Cosnine was the only
vessel which managed to keep afloat.
FOURTEEN BROWNED.
The tug Paulsen arrived in the city
at 5 o’clock Monday afternoon. She
brought up about sixty passengers
from Tybee. Mr. Revers, one of them,
stated that four negroes engaged in
clearing the railroad tracks were
drowned. It is reported that eight of
the crew of a terrapin sloop which
went ashore on the south end were
drowned.
HAVOC ON TYBEE.
The Hotel Tybee was considerably
damaged. Her verandas are gone and
so are the bathhouses. The Knights
of Pythias clubhouse was washed
away. Two of the cottages of the
Cottage Club are gone. The Butler
house is gone. Mr. Starr’s house
was washed into the woods. The
Eanche and Rambler clubhouses were
wrecked. The railroad track is clean
ed out. Henry Green’s house was
burned. George Bossell’s cottage was
swept out to sea. The north end was
practically cleaned out. The water
swept with tremendous force over this
part of the island, railroad tracks be
ing carried from 200 to 500 feet.
RESUMED BUSINESS.
The Josiah Morris Banking Company
Ouce More on Heck.
Two weeks ago the famous banking
house of Josiah Morris & Cos., of
Montgomery, Ala., made an assign
ment. Two immense meetings of cred
itors were at once held, expressing
unlimited confidence in the bank man
agers. Asa result, a committee was
appointed to secure consent of deposit
ors that assignees surrender the trust
and that the bank be reopened. The
liabilities were $1,600,000; assets,
about $3,600,000. Every depositor
interested in the large line of liabili
ties has signed the agreement by which
lime is given to the bank to pay up its
indebtedness and the assignees have
turned the bank, assets, etc., over to
the firm, and the bank door was re
opened Monday morning end business
resumed. _
Evf-rybod? should read the paper and
keep up with the times.
BUSINESS IMPROVES.
Dun & Co.’s Report of Trade for the
Past Week.
R. G. Dnn & Cos. ’s weekly review of
trade says: The improvement ob
served last week has become much
more distinct and general. While ac
tual transactions have increased but
little, the change of public feeling is
noteworthy. There are fewer failures
either of bankers or of important com
mercial or manufacturing concerns,
than for some weeks past. Many dis
asters have been avoided by a more
general pooling of resources and a
greater spirit of mutual helpfulness
and forbearance than were some weeks
ago. One large stock failure for sev
eral million dollars was thus prevent
ed in Wall street on Thursday, and
the market for securities, though at
times depressed, by the closing of
heavy loans, has been extremely dull
without material decline.
Money on call is more abundant
and lower, as many interior loans
have been paid since the banks ceased
to Send currency away, and advanced
the rates for renewing or extending
such loans, but there is little relief as
respects mercantile accommodations,
as the use of the check in the place of
currency increases, and the secretary
of the treasury in answer to an inquiry,
has stated that no legal objection
exists to the use of sight drafts on
New York for small sums.
The difficulty of collections and the
interruption of exchanges are nearly as
serious as ever. The number of in
dustrial establishments resuming busi
ness begins to compare fairly with the
number stopping work. A little bet
ter demand appears for some products,
such as wire nails and barbed wire, of
which important producers have been
idle for nearly two months. But in
general the consumption has so far de
creased that the southern furnaces are
offering pig iron av. very low figures
here, and standard makers in Penn
sylvania are contemplating a re
duction in prices. Though currency
is at a premium of 1 to 2 per cent,
the demand is less than a week
ago. Receipis of gold from Europe
during the past week have been
$6,700,000, but the Bank of England
has raised its rate to 5 pel cent.,
which is expected to stop further
shipments of gold to this country and
the Bank of France has lost during the
past week about $1,600,000. The ab
sorption of money has not yet ceased,
and credit substitutes are in use as yet
poorly supply its place.
The failures for the past week num
ber 410 in the United States and
twenty in Canada. Of the commer
cial failures in the United States 149
were in eastern states, sixty-five in
southern and 180 in western.
THE SITUATION IN BRUNSWICK
Latest Advices State that There is Now
no Fever in the City.
It was officially bulletined by the
Brunswick, Ga., health board Friday
that there is now not a case of yellow
fever in Brunswick and not a suspic
ious case. The Cox infant is six miles
in the country and the doctors are idle
for want of patients. Very little sick
ness of any kind exists, and the phy
sicians are unanimous in the assertion
that the majority of the people left in
the city are in a remarkably healthy
condition. The outlook is hopeful
and cheering.
UNCLE SAM TO THE BESCUE.
A Washington special of Friday
says: The government is going to
take care of the Brunswick sufferers.
There is a quarantine fund of several
hundred thousand dollars provided for
just such emergencies. Through the
influence of Judge Turner that has
been placed at the disposal of Surgeon
General Wyman to be used for the re
lief of the people of Brunswick.
Judge Turner had a dispatch from
Brunswick that SI,OOO a day would be
necessary. That much will be pro
vided by the government if found ne
cessary, and there will be no one in
Brunswick who will want for food
while there or for transportation to
leave.
DEATH ON THE RAIL.
Two Collisions in Which Twenty-One
People are Killed.
A frightful accident occurred Satur
day night at the Bushwick junction of
the Long Island railroad. A Rocka
way train ran into the rear of a Man
hattan Beach train about 11.35 o’clock,
telescoping several cars. Sixteen dead
have been taken from the wreck, and
it is estimated that the number of in
jured will reach in the neighborhood
of thirty-five or forty people, many of
whom, it is believed, will die.
COLLISION ON THE HAKLEM.
A head-end collision occurred Sat
urday near Dykesman station, N. Y.,
on the Harlem railroad. The trains
were a northbound express and a
southbound accommodation. The two
locomotives came together with ter
rific force, completely wrecking them
both and also wrecking the first pas
senger train. Four people were killed
outright, and a number were more or
less injured.
Reassuring News from Brunswick.
The Brunswick board of health an
nounced at noon Thursday that there
were no new cases of fever of any
kind. Harris died at 11 o’clock Wed
nesday night. The child, whose ill
ness was reported as suspicious, is
convalescent, and it is denied that it
is a case of yellow fever . at all. The
situation is encouraging and reassur
ing * ■ the public at large.
Bauks Resume Business.
The Farmer’s Exchange National
bank at San Bernardino,Cal., re-open
ed its doors for business Friday.
The Bank of River Falls, Wis.,
which suspended a week ago, resumed
business Friday,
A Cut of Ten Per Cent.
Eight thousand machinists, pattern
makers, molders, roller turners and
laborers in Pittsburg, Ta., district
have been notified of a reduction ot
10 per cent in their wages. The cut
is vigorously objected to, and a strike
is openly talked of. The proposed
reduction allects the emploves of 26
firms in Pittsburg. A special meeting
of the various trades interested will
bo held immediately, and a course of
action decided upon.
MEfSOURIAL
Mr. J.C. Jones, of Fulton, Ark., says of
“About ten years ago I con
tracted a severe case of blood
poison. Leading physicians prescribed
medicine after medicine, which I took
without any relief. I also tried mercu
rial and potash remedies, with unsuc-
RHEUMATISM
cessful results, but which brought on an
attack of mercurial r eumatism that
made my life one of agony. After suf
ering four years I gave up all remedies
and commenced using S. S. S. After
taking several bottles, I was entirely
cured and able to resume work.
is the greatest medicine for
blood poisoning to-day on
the market.”
Treatise oa Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Specific Cos., Atlanta, 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 tabuie 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, and
save many a doc-(^ yr
CHILD BIRTH • • •
• •- MADE EASY!
“ Mothers’ Friend ” is a scientific
ally prepared Liniment, every ingre
dient of recognized and in
constant use by the medical pro
fession. These ingredients are com
bined in a manner hitherto unknown
“MOTHERS’
• FRIEND” •
WILL DO all that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to “ Mothers ” mailed FREE, con
taining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Sent by express on receipt of price $1.60 per bottle
BRADFIELO REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, G.
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
ORANGE BLOSSOM
IS AS SAFE AND HARMLESS AS
A Seed Poultice.
It i3 applied right to the parts. It cures all diseases of women. Any
lady can 14 0 it herself. Sold by ALL DRUGKHSTS. Mailed to any
address on receipt of sl.
Dr. J. A. McGill & Go, 3 and 4 Panorama Place, Chicago, 111.
UNION ™ STERLINQ
BICYCLES
Are the Highest Grade Possible.
OCR LINE OF BICYCLE BBN
MEDIUM OKIES OF ALL
GRADE % KINDS. CLOTH
WHEELS STOCKINGS*
have no shoes, sweat.
EOI’AL /A.\\ \ \
A H '\\ MENT, PUMPS,
ALL SIZES. REPAIR OCT-
Airrmm MC —)) FITS, LAMPS,
ALL TKICfcS. LUGGAGE cab
wad navs vV/V/r n\\r \V//7 RIEES, OIL
FOE SOYS, vv/ / \ \VJ A Vy / hW'Jy ebs, bicycle
GIRLS, MEN r fefCSlLl - ftNL/ 2TANDB/WRJSN
AND WOMEN. :;CjatES Etc ” Mte ‘
WANTED. stokes Mfg;. Cos. B osNtfcn S
fo e.T.Loo* *9l Wabash Ava., CHICAGO. iVfw.usta
NO. 35.
P.PP.
CURES ALL SKIN
AND
BLOOD DISEASES.
l’hyslclans (i.J.-rw P. I*. I>. combination. '
ana pmeribe it with great eatUf&etlca for tbo cures of all
forms AnJ cf Pn>nrv. Secund-irv an I Tertiary
C UREiSSiRiIFOLAi
by ph 1 Bynhf iltlo Rh "luistism. Rcrofutoue
Sorst, Glandular Swellings, Krcumatb&i, Malax!*, old
—Chropjo Ulcsra thal fcava resisted ell treatraont, Catarrh,
finn c gures
.r.r. us Ml
curial Poison, Tetter, Scald iltsid, etc., etc.
an dceHent appetlyor,
■ r. £?. tr.
Cures rheumwA
building up the ey.trni lapujy’
Ladles whose systems ere poisoned r.tid whoso blood O tu
ea Impure condiilor, due to menstrual lrrt-<v,l;ltlf. erj
RU|j£ eyp,Es
r.r. Malaria
peculiarly benefited Liy'the woaderfal "i'onlo" and blo6.iT
cleansing propertiss cf P. P. I\, PricUy Ath, Poke Hoc*
and Pot isslutn.
Cures dyspepsia
LIPPHAN 8P03., Proprietors,
Unifrscfcts, Llppman’s BJoek. CAVA KKAH, fIA-
P.UHNIHG
THE BESOsSnmPEST.
Send TEN cents to SO Union Bcj., N. Y.-,
for our prlie game, “Blind Luck,” and
win a New Home Sewing Machine.
The New Home Sewing Machine Cos,
ORANGE, MASS.
UNIOR SQUARELY.
FRAKC 'Sca
ILL. S * CM. *
FOR SALE BY
EVERY MflN doctor.
A valuable Family Doctor Book by
J. Hamilton Ayers, M. D., six hun
dred pages, profusely illustrated and
containing knowledge of how to Cure
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Life. Send 60 cents to Atlanta
Publishing House, 116 Loyd Street,
Atlanta, Ga., aua they will forward
you the book by mail, postpaid.
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