Newspaper Page Text
JACKSON ARGOSY
SUBSCRIPTION SI.OO A YEAR.
(PeDonaFd\§ Rose.
EDITORS - AND- PUBLISHERS.
*FRIDAY, AUGUST 2d, 1895.
ADVERTISING RATES—LocaI reading no
ticeg 5 cents per line each insertion: Obituaries
>I.OO-each. Full schedule sent on application.
REMITTANCES—ShouId be made by bank
draft, post office money order or registered
letter. Postal notes or currency not registered
will be sent at owner’s risk.
Published every Friday in the Year.
roil THE PEOPLE.
The Editor of Flovilla Head
light has accused US of running The
Argus against the interests of the
people.
Out worthy neighbor has, of course,
a perfect right to express himself
thus if he can do so conscientiously.
We will not censure him for saying
this, hut will take this opportunity
of saying that our brother is badly
mistaken, and that above every other
consideration this paper is conducted
solely for the advocacy of t hose prin
ciples that will bring peace, happi
ness and prosperity to that great
class of people who to-day stand in
immediate relief of remedial legisla
tion. God forbid that we should
ever knowingly do or say anything
that would tend to increase the bur
den of the common people or bring
them into conditions more difficult
of relief than those in which they
find themselves at present surround
ed. We have a higher and nobler
purpose in view in conducting this
paper than to deal in petty discus
sions and arguments, all of which
tends t o mystify the people and in
vest the subject with unreasonable
complications difficult for our under
standing.
We do not understand that it is
the mission of any newspaper to stir
up strife and contention among the
people, but its highest mission should
be the dissemination of truth and the
destruction of everything enimieal to
the spiritual and temporal welfare of
the citizens of the commonwealth.
In regard to the money question
being so ardently discussed at pres
ent, we would advise the people to
read, study and think for themselves.
AVo cannot afford to read the argu
ments of one side only. We must
weigh the arguments on both sides,
and then after mature deliberation
decide for ourselves what cause we
will advocate. We do not believe
that further discussion of the subject
by either side will give the people
any more enlightenment than they
have already. Hence, for our part
we will not tire our readers with use
less arguments and meaningless terms
in regard to this matter.
We recognize the fact that we all
need some relief, and in the course of
natural events we believe it is com
ing very soon.
The tide of business revival has set
in, and while the farmer may not
just yet feel any material relief he
will feel the incoming tide of pros
perity when he brings his cotton and
other produce to market. This great
business revival is being felt from
east to. west and from north to south.
The men who have money for specu
lative purposes are beginning to feel
the stability of commerce and are
letting their great wealth go into cir
culation.
We sincerely hope that when the
fall season opens all the people will
cease these valueless discussions and
attend strictly to business, and let
the wheels of our former prosperity
roll free from any obstacle and clog
ged by no party discussions, nor hin
dered in their onward march to a
better and a surer prosperity than
we have ever witnessed.
The exposition management seem
to have considerable trouble in filling
the lake, Clara Mcer. They must
now wait another week before water,
can be started through the large
main which leads to the lake.
It is to be hoped that the Corbett-
Fitsimmons mill will be pulled off at
an early date and that each will suc
ceed in mutilating the other to such
a degree that they will be sick at the
stomach.
Col. J. W. Robertson had a very
interesting article in Sunday’s Con
stitution on “Some facts in our war
history, its errors and misrepresenta
tions corrected.” Colonel Robertson
is a forcible writer and a very promi
nent figure in North Georgia politics.’’
Mark Twain has given up all his
property to his creditors and is going
across the waters to lecture in his ef
fort to retrieve his lost fortune and
former wealth. He is a humorist of
the finest type and the many thou
sands who have been made happy
and glad by his writing will not for
get him in his heroic effort to re
establish his lost fortune.
LIXLTIIES OF TIIE fiICH.
Corneliu* Vanderbilt has comple
ted his $3,000,000 palace at Newport,
New Jersey.
On Wednesday night of last "week
this magnificent palace of the multi
millionaire was thrown open in the
presence of two hundred guests each
of whom is worth many millions.
It is estimated that $4,000,000,000
was represented by the guests who
had gathered at the opening ball.
The fountain alone at the foot of the
grand, stairway cost sso.o<>o.
We often wonder and are
at the prodigious wealth of the rich.
Act. if there must be immensely
wealthy men it is better for us that
they Should be exceedingly extrava
gant. Of course, in the erection df
such fairy palaces as 3lr. Vanderbilt
has constructed vast sums of money
are turned loose jmd gets into circu
lation. Thousands of poorer people
are benefit ted by this reckless extrav
agance of the very rich.
For our part we are glad to see the
millionaires spending their money in
reckless profusion. If they were to
hoard it, it would never get into the
hands of the laborer and the working
man, but as it is thousands of day
laborers are enjoying the profligacy
of the rich.
If rich men are a necessary evil
they should he encouraged in their
methods of spending immense for
tunes for pleasure and the gratifica
tion of some personal fancy.
The Atlanta Constitution says that
the exposition will he ready for visit
ors on the opening day September
18th.
Air. W. E. Sanders is now ] ropri
etor of the Monroe Hustler published
at Forsyth. Air. Clarence Brantley
will have editorial charge of the pa
per.
A Connecticut church advertises
that they have “A cool church phys
ically, a warm church spiritually,
good seats for timely arrivals and glo
rious times to aR.”
In the exchanges that come to this
office we see the publication of the
proceedings of nearly every incorpo
rated town in middle Georgia. AY by
not publish the proceedings of the
council of Jackson.
AY hen Dr. Hawthorne has vented
his sarcasm upon bloomers find bi
cycles he has another white elephant
on his hands in the shape of the
bovines imported for the sham bull
fight during the exposition.
The will of the wife of Rev. T. De-
W’itt Talmadge has been filed for
probate in Brooklyn. She left her
husband an estate valued at $166,-
000.
There is an attempt' being made in
Louisiana to effect a fuson between
the republicans and the populists.
This has been brought about by the
dissatisfied democrats who were very
impatient for some party action,
while of course, it is to the natural
advantage of the republicans.
A Hall county man has made out
the following affidavit: “Georgia,
Hall county—Know all men by these
presents, that my wife has run away
from me for nothitg and I baged her
to stay and my father and mother
baged her to stay and she would not
stay and I nowtify the world that I
won’t be accountable for her con
tracts doctors bills and no other bills.
She lift about the first of May last
this August the 7, 1895 Elijah Rey
nolds her name is Nancy and now is
Riding about in buggis with other
men.”
Atlanta will not have a Ferris
wheel, blit she will have something
similar to it for the pleasure of the
visitors to the exposition. The Phoe
nix wheel will be fifteen feet in di
ameter resting upon the highest part
of the Midway, which is about sixty
five feet above the lake level. This
will carry the people about 200 feet
above the generaiJevel of the lake.
The wheel will be lighted by eleetric
ity and will carry about 250 people
at each revolution. This wheel is
run by Atlanta capital.
A distinguished farmer wails thus:
“It’s scarcely any wonder that lines
are on my brow, it's hard to make a
living as things are going now. I
plant nice potatoes and sit down to
watch them grow, then conies the
frost a whooping and lays the blamed
things low. I plant some little seed
lets to raise some succotash, my
neighbors’ bene come over and knock
them all to smash. I had an arbor
in which to snooze and rest, a cow
came in and climbed it, and sent it
galley west. I bought a dozen egg
lets (they cost so much I cried) they
hatched a lonely chicken, audit went
off and died. The insects ate the
cabbage, the worms have nailed the
corn, my sheep are wild and woolly,
my cow has lost a horn. My pig has
got the measles, and squeals unseemly
tunes, my geese are hunting water
and I am full of prunes.”
TKOIBLE Foil THE ERITOH.
A western Alabama editor was
writing up a local theatrical enter
tainment recently and he wanted to
be very nice about it so he mentioned
the names of several young ladies of
the town and wrote, “they all filled
their parts to perfection.” Then he
went home to quietly pray for for
giveness for all the lies he had written.
The printers went on with their dia
bolical conspiracy to drive all editors
crazy, and when the paper appeared
the next morning and was being de
livered to the patrons it was found
that they had put an “n" in the
place of an “r" in the word “parts.”
The girls all have big brothers and
the" editor is hiding in a big swamp
that is full of ravenous animals and
poisonous reptiles.—Exchange.
It would seem from the clipping
we give below that Tom Watson is
not in much favor of the populists
mixing with the Democrats at silver
conventions, though their platforms
on the money issue are the same.
Air. Watson believes in independent
party action and we do not know if
he isn't right. “Tom AA'atson with
more brains than any other populist
in the country, announces that in
the future when the silver democrats
of Georgia want to hold a state con
vention, like the late affair at Griffin,
the populists will not again be on
hand to swell the affair to state pro
portions in point of numbers; that
if silver democrats want populist sup
port they must get on the populist
band wagon and drive into the popu
list camp. And those democrats
who are acting independent of their
party will have nothing to do blit
step on board and ride into the popu
list camp.”—DeKalb New Era.
OEII BEST CUSTOMER.
Avery interesting publication is the
supplementary exhibit of Secretary
Morton, classifying our exports.
It shows that three fourths of our
exports of $589,543,000 in 1894 were ag
ricultural products and that $451,000,-
000 worth, or more than one-lialf of
the whole, went to Great Britian.
Our total exports to the British empire
were worth $523,000,000. From that
empire our total imports were only
107,000,000, s 3 that the balance of trade
with the British was immensely in our
favor. While the British empire took
largely over 50 per cent of our total
exports, only lOpercent of our imports
came from that quarter. We imported
goods worth $90,000,000 from Germany,
82,000,000 from the Spanish West Indies
7,7000,000 from France, 70,000,000 from
Brazil, and 37,000,000 from Canada.
It will beobserved that the British are
by far our best customer, and as they
take over two thirds of our agricultural
exports, it is hard to see the wisdom of
the recent remark of adistinguished free
silver leader in Georgia that “If Great
Britain were sunk in the sea it would
make uo difference to us, and in six
mouths we would forget all about it.”
Journal.
From the foregoing clipping it does
not appear very forcibly that we can
do and act entirely and independently
of England’s action in some matters
at least when she takes over-, half of
our goods of export .
Lee county is said to have three
negroes whose ages will aggregate 310
years.
A KENTUCKY MIRACLE.
JUDGE JOHN M. RICE TELLS HOW
HE WAS CURED OF SCIATICA.
Circuit Judge, Congressman and
Assemblyman.
(From the Covington, Ky., Post.)
The Hon. John M. Rice, of Louisa, Law
rence County, Kentucky, has for the past
two years retired from active life as Criminal
and Circuit Judge of the sixteenth Judicial
District of Kentucky.
He has for many years served his native
county and state in the legislature at Frank
fort and at Washington, and, until his retire
ment was a. noted figure in political and Ju
dicial circles. The Judge is well-known
throughout the state and possesses the best
qualities which go to make a Kentucky
gentleman honored wherever he is known.
A few days ago a Kentucky Post reporter
called upon Judge Rice, who in the follow
ing words related the history of the causes
that led to his retirement. “It is just about
six years since I had an attack of rheuma
tism ; slight at first, but soon developing into
Sciatic rheumatism, which began first with
acute shooting pains in the hips, gradually
extending downward to my feet.
“ My condition became so bad that I even
tually lost all power jof my legs, and then
the liver, kidneys and bladder and in fact, my
whole system, became deranged.
“In 1888, attended by *y son John, I
went to Hot Springs, Ark., but was not much
benefited by some months 6tay there. My
liver was actually dead, and a dull persistent
pain in region kept me on the rack all
the time. In 1890 I was reappointed Circuit
Judge, hut it was impossible for me to give
attention to my duties. In 1891 I went to
the Silurian Springs, Waukeshaw, Wis. I
stayed there some time, but without im
provement.
“ The muscles of my limbs were now re
duced by atrophy to mere strings. Sciatic
pains tortured me terribly, but it was the
disordered condition of my liver that was I
felt gradually wearing my life away. Doc
tors gaye me up completely.
“ I lingered on in this condition sustained
almost entirely by stimulants until April,
1893. One day John saw an account of
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People in
the Kentucky Post. This was something
new, and John prevailed upon me to try
them. I remember I wasnot expected to live
for more than three or four days at the time.
The effect of the pills, however, was mar
vel ons and I could soon eat heartily, a thing
I had not done for years. The liver began
almost instantaneously to perform its func
tions, and has done so ever since. Without
doubt the pills saved my life and while I do
not crave notoriety I cannot refuse to testify
to their worth.
I Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
' co- tain all the elements necessary to give
new life and richness to the blood and restore
shattered nerves. They may l>e had of all
druggists, or direct from the Dr. Williams’
Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y,, for
60c. per box, or six boxes for $2.50.
MADE FROM PURE FIG IRON.
jp|j| DURABLE, CONVENIENT and ECONOMICAL
- Every Stove Warranted Against Defects.
FOR SAFE BY J. L. WAGNER
Tit Mri M and Wit Matin,
OF ATLANTA, GA.
McDonald & Kinard,
Local Agents, : : : : Jackson, 6a.
If You Get Sick
Do you earn Double the Amount of Money you do when well?
YOU KNOW
Should you get sick your expenses more than double, and perhaps
your earnings are stopped entirely while sick. In either event
you can have a sure thing by procuring a certificate in the
Moial Benefit aid Meet kociitk
111 case you are sick from either natural or accidental causes you
can draw what you are earning each weeK in cash.
ILLUSTRATION
Suppose you are earning $12.00 per week you would be in
class D, in which the cost to you per month would be one dollar.
In case you get sick you draw each weeK $12.00. In case you hap
pen to accident you draw each week $20.00. Benefit in one week’s
disabitity from accident nearly double the entire cost for one year.
The company is recommended by every bank in Atlanta, also the
present Mayoi of Atlanta, and its most influential citizens.
Call and See TJs About It
Very Truly Your Friends,
McDonald & kinard.
rfH SOUTHERN
RAILWAY.
CONDENSEI) SCHEIIULK.
In Effect Mar 12, 1895.
pally- 'No. 14*1 No. B*_ No. 1(1*
Atlanta . 9.lorin B.l'Oam 4.10 pm
McDonough .j 10.12 pm 9.(/lam 5.13 pm
Jackson... 10 40pm 9.45 am 5.47 pm
Flotilla 10 ’.Com 9.58 am 5.57 pm
Macon 12.10 am 11.30 am 7.lCi.m
Cochran 1.43 am I.llpm
Eastman 2.21 am 2.10 pm
Helena 2.58 am 2.78 pm
Mcßae 3 00 ;m 3.02 pm
Lumber City 3.84 im 3.4 :pm
Baxley 4.20 am 4.39 pm
Jesup 5.20 am 5.51 pm
Everett 6.00 am 6.40 pm
Brunswick 7.00 am 7.45 pm
Jacksonville 10.30 am 9.20 pm
No. 14 Carries Pullman Sleeping Cars At
lanta to Brunswick and Atlanta to Jackson
ville.
Daily, No. 13*|No. 7* No. 6*
Jacksonville 5.40 pm 7.00 am
Brunswick 7.15 pm 8.40 am
Everett B.2opm| 9.45 am
Jesup 9.02 pm 10 30am
Baxley 10.03pm ! l 1.41 am
Lumber City 10.55 pm 12.35 pm
Mcßae 11.30 pm 1.34 pm
Helena 11.33 pm 1.37 pm
Eastman 12.15 am 2.22 pm
Cochran 12. f 2am 307 pm
Macon 2.Jsam 5.10 pm 8. 45,up
Flovilla 3.47 am 6.35 pm 9.58 am
Jackson 8.58a.u 6.45pmd0.08am
McDonough 4.36 am 7.22 pm 10 43am
Atlanta 5.45 am 8.30 pm 11.45 am
Atlanta., 7.30 am 11.45 pm 2.00 pm
Rome 10.20 am 3.1 oam 4.35 pm
Dalton 11.36 am 5.52 am 5.46 pm
Chattanooga I.oopm 6.35 am 7.10 pm
Lexington 4.50 pm 4.25 am
Cincinnati 7.20 pm 7.20 am
Louisville 7.15pm11.00am
Daily,, No. 35 1 N07~37
Atlanta 6.00 am- 4.50 pm
Birmingham 12.01n’n 10.20 pm
Holly Springs 7.53 pm 6.09 am
Memphis 10.00 pm 7.40 am
Kansas City 5.03 pm 7.15 am
Holly Springs 8.13 pm 6.55 am
St. Louis 7.4samt* 6.45 pm
No. 13 carries Pullman Sleeping Cars Jackson
ville to Atlanta and Brunswick to Atlanta.
It also carries through Pullman Drawing
Room Buffet Sleeping Cars Jacksonville to
to St. Louis. Passengers for Kansas City can
take Kansas City Sleeping Car at Holly Spring.
No. 9 Carries Pullman Union Buffet Sleeping
Car Atlanta to Cincinnati.
No. 37 Carries Pullman Drawing Room Buffet
Sleeping Car Atlanta to Memphis; Chair ear
Memphis to Kansas City; Pullman Sleeping
Cars Holly Springs to St. Louis.
Daily. [ No. 38 N0~36
Atlanta 12.00n’n 9.00 pm
Charlotte 8.20 pm 6.50 am
Danville 12.00 am 11.40 am
Lynchburg 1.53 am 1.45 pm
Charlottesville 3.35 am 4.04 pm
Washington 6.42 am 8.30 pm
Baltimore 8.05 am 11.25 pm
Philadelphia 10.25 am 2.56 am ,
New York 12.53 pm 6.23 am
Boston.- 9.ospmi 3.30 pm
No. 38 Washington and Southwestern Limited
Solid Pullman Vestibuled train Atlanta to New
York, Pullman Dining Cars serving meals en
route.
No. 36 is known as the U. S. Fast Mail. It
earries Pullman Drawing Room Buffet Sleeping
Cars Atlanta to New York.
W. H. GREEN. General Superintendent,
Washington, D. O.
J. 1L CULP, Traffic Manager,
Washington, D. 0.
W. A. TURK, General Pass. Agt.,
Washington, D. O.
a A. BENSCOTEB, Assistant G. P. A.,
Knoxville, Tea*.
Accident Insurance should be carried by
everybody. There is no telling when you may
be hurt. McDonald & Kinard, Agents.
fu) WS WANT
J@K ’TOU
I (' \To examine our .12.25 Cut
\ 5 K) away Coat and Vest, made to
t J your order from Imported
English Clay Worsteds, be
\ fore going elsewhere.
Plymouth Rock Cos.,
Successors to the
i Plymouth Rock Pants Cos.
.i j C. A. HAMILTON, Agent,
Jackson, Ga.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS
VV. W. Anderson. Frank Z. Curry.
ANDERSON & CURRY.
ATTORNEYS AT LAW.
Negotiates loans on real estate.
Office up stairs over the Yellow Store,
Jackson, Georgia.
M. M. MILLS. B. P. BAILEY.
MILLS & BAILEY,
Attorney at Law.
Office up stairs iu Watkins building.
m 7 Y~ McKIBBEN,
Attorney at 3^aw,
JACKSON, - - GEORGIA.
Dr. 0. H. Cantrell,
DENTIST.
Jackson, - - Georgia.
J. D. Watkins,
Attorney at Law.
Business Promptly Attended to,
Office in YVatkir.s Hall,
JACKSON,GA
T. J DEMPSEY,
Attorney-at-Law,
Office in Dempsey Building, No. 2
Mulberry Street,
JACKSON, - - GEORGIA.
STOP AT THE
Morrison House.
Everything; New and First-Class.
Conveniently located.
C. W. BUCHANAN, Prop’b.
'f’QTT CAN PER
*WW MAKE I)A\
Baling hay, straw, shucks and oats for your
neighbors with a
CHICKAAIAIGA HAY PRESS.
Others are doing it. -Hay is high this year.
The Chiekamauga is the best and cheapest
press made. Write for information and prices.
Active agents wanted.
CHICKAMAUGA HAY PRESS CO.,
julyl2-4t . Chattanooga, Tenn.
ABE you—
MAKING THE MOST OF YOURSELF ?
There is one Magazine which will help you
to succeed by teaching you to know and appre
ciate yourself. Xlie Phrenological
Journal is a wide-awake, up-to-date expo
nent of Human Nature. Are you using thought
and tact in bringing up your children ? The
Child Culture Department helps mothers and
teachers .to study the characteristics of each
child as a guide to its proper development.
Send 10 cents for sample copy of the Phreno
logical Journal.
FOWLER & WELLS CO., Publishers.
27 East 21st St., New York.
We also publish a long list of helpful books.
FLOWERS AND FRUIT TREES.
Winter blooming Pot Plants and Cut Flowers for sale. 5, lo j- '
plants for SI.OO, according to si/e and kinds. - ■§
I can supply pot grown strawberry plants after August 15th. Tlicv . ■
bear next spring. Price $2.50 per 100.
I have contracted to supply customers with Fruit Trees and Ornani, 1
plants until I can get my own nurseries established. It you weed am if I
of plants or trees, I will procure them for you at lowest price-, co ' I
with best quality, seed ikish potatoes for safe. Mytriend^ 011 '
invited to inspect my new Green House. Terms spot rasli 0t I
Wm. I. WAGNER, I
Dingfe ©ell Fruit Farm, fa Jactson, [j,
JACKSON’S \ \ |
NEW CARRIAGE FACTORY,
(Opposite the Jail.)
JACKSON, CEOHCIA.
Is now open and ready for business. We use only the best of
material and hire skilled mechanics to do the work. We also o-ive
special attention to
rep/Ur Work
of all kinds, and solicit your pationage in this line Our prices
for Repairing, Horse Shoeing, etc, will lie cheaper than ever
offered before. Mr. 800 Thaxton, a blacksmith with year- ; f ex
perience, will be in charge of this department, and satisfaction is
guaranteed or money refunded. Now is the time to have your
BUGGIES BUILT OVER
at comparatively small cost. We are fixed for work of all kinds,
and cheerfully solicit your patronage. We are in business to do
work at “living prices.” “Live and let- live” is our motto. This is
no investment, but we are here for the purpose of saving custom
ers the money they have heretofore been paying for high juiced
work. Bring your work to us and we will treat you right,
JACKSON BUGGY CO„
P. P. P.
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Makes
Marvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
P. P. P. purifies the blood, builds np
the weak and debilitated, gives
strength to weakened nerves, expels
diseases,giving the patient health and
happiness where sickness, gloomy
feelings and lassitude first prevailed.
Eor primary,secondary and tertiary
syphilis, for blood poisoning, mercu
rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and
in all blood and skin diseases, like
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers,
tetter, scald head, boils, erysipelas,
ecsema-we may say, without fear of
contradiction,that P. P. P. is the best
blood purifier in tho world,and makes
Jiosltive, speedy and permanent cures
n all cases.
Ladies whose systems are poisoned
and whose blood is in an impure condi
tion. due to menstrual irregularities,
are peculiarly benefited by the won
derful tonic and blood cleansing prop
erties of P. P. P.-Prickly Ash, Poke
Root and Potassium.
Springfield, Mo., Aug. 14th, 1893.
—I can speak in the highest terms of
your medicine from my own personal
Knowledge. I was affected with heart
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for
35 years, was treated by the very best
physicians and spent hundreds of dol
lars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief. I have only taken
one bottle of your P. P. P., and can
cheerfully say It has dons me more
food than anything I have ever taken.
can recommend your medicine to ail
sufferers of the above diseases.
MRS. M. M. YEAP.Y.
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
FOR SALE BY DR. W. L. (MR MIC HA EL J A C’KSON, GA,
ARE THE
MM of all m Cfrafles.
( Warranted Superior to any Bicycle Built iiuiie
f World, Regardless of Price,
ami guaranteed by the Indiana Bit*}
//;\ \v V wy'/ji'x \' Aw Cos., a Million Dollar corporation. Whose I>> :
•'V . : 'iC/ / • Jty is as good as goid. Do not buy a wheel in.
you have seen the TV AY ERLKY*.
21-Pound Searcher, $85,00, GUNN 4 CIHTRELI, Exclusive Agents.
Thousands of Women
! SUFFER UN TOLD MISERIES.
BRADFIELD'S
feav^le
REGULATOR,
; ACTS AS A SPECIFIC
'By Arousing to Healthy Action all her Organs.;
It causes health to bloom, and,
jo>’ to reign throughout the frame.
... it Never Fails to Regulate...:
“My wife has been under treatment of lead-,
lug physicians three years, without lieneflt.,
After using three bottles of BRADFIKLD’9,
FEMALE REGULATOR she can do her own
cooking, milking and washing.”
N. S. BRYAN. Henderson. Ala.
BRADFIELD REGULATOR CO., Atlanta, Ga.
i Sold by druggists at SI. 00 per bottle.
Pimples, Blotches;
and Old Sores
Catarrh, Malaria J
and Kidney Troubles;
Are entirely remove*! toy P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash, Poke Root and Potas
sium, the greatest blood purifier on -
earth.
Aberdeen, 0.. July 21,1891.
Messrs. Lippman Bros. , Savannah,
Ga. : Dear Sirs— l bought a bottle of
"four P. P.-P. at Hot Springs. Ark. .and
- has done me more good than three
months’ treatment at the Hot Springs.
Send three bottles C. O. D. *■
Respectfully yours.
JAS. M. NEWTON,
Aberdeen, Brown County, 0.
Cnpt. J. D. Johnston.
To all whom it may concern: I hre- "
by testify to the wonderful properties
of P. P. P. for eruptions of the skin. I
suffered for several years with an un- -
sightly and disagreeable eruption on -
my face. 1 tried every known reme
dy but in vain,until P. P. P. was used,
and am now entirely cured.
(Signed by> J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savannah, Ga.
Skin Cancer Cured.
Testimony from the Mayor of Sequin , Tex. "
Sequin, Tex. , January 14, 1893.
Messrs. Lippman Bros. , Savannah, *"
Ga.: Gentlemen— l have tried your P.
P. P. for a disease of the skin, usually
known as skin cancer,of thirty years’
standing, and found great relief: it
purifies the blood and removes all ir
ritation from the seat of the disease
and prevents any spreading of the
sores. I have taken five or six bottles
and feel confident that another course
will effect a cure. It has also relieved
me from indigestion and stomach —"
troubles. You: s truly,
CAPT. W. M. RUST,
Attorney at Law. ""
Book on Blood Diseases Mailed Free. 7
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
LSPPftftAN BROS.
PROPRIETORS,
Mppnian’a Block,Savannah, Ga "
Accident Insurance will pay your doctor",
bill and leawe you money in the pocket,—
don’t have an accident policy you are out
’round. McDonald <fc Kinard represent thn c
of the best companies in the They
pay $25 a week While you are sick and can’t
work.
FOR SALE.
One nice five room house, on principal stn
of Jackson, good large roomy barn on prenii
tenant house, good well of water, and lot <. n
tains about \% acres of land. Here is a be
- for some speculator to scoop in. Call "ii
McDonald A Rom •
Real Estate Ag<
Thousands testify to the merit of M tU*' ! -
Preserving Tablets. Tor sale by J. W. Crum.
junei