The Dodge County journal. (Eastman, Dodge County, Ga.) 1882-1888, January 26, 1887, Image 4

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IBK LMOR SOffiD. AfTOJUP or ionr York bvbmav OF STATISTICS AMD LABOR. I wiiigsit i B &»4 Ieeafrtec late the Wttk. lagmaa’s Paaltlaa. B»w York Stats Commissioner Peck. In ths “Ftmrth Annual Report of the Bureau of Statistics o i Labor.” says: The year 1880 has witnessed a more pro¬ found and far more extended agitation among the members of organized labor than aay fefi previous year in the history of our omul own MMolas i npd not while been such characterized agitation in by oar the that Who]] "y startled unwarranted and criminal excesses with horror the {opuloce of sev- 1 oral of the Western cities, it has neverthe *■** been earnest and pronounced. With but vara exceptions, organized labor has continued in this State, with greater suo r sm and vigor than ever before, to agi¬ tate, to strike and to boycott during the past of year, and !**»( will be rememlrered as one the greatevt importance in the battle waged between capital and labor, the signal failures ami succo -boh of which will not be lost or fail to serve as les ons of value to the student of social and economic questions. The subject of apprenticeship is treated at greet length and in a most exhaustive man¬ ner. in Among discus other ing things the Commissioner ays, •As the question: a very prominent feature of the labor question, It has been fo«nd expedient and aecrsuuy to look into onr apprenticeship system—the means at hand of renewing broad and uerpetnating result is that our lab >r supply. dependent The foreign skilled we labor. ate largely «)ur supply of native upon mechanics is daily augmented by the skilled labor of Europe, ami while this foreign ele¬ ment is not equal to the skilled labor which is retained in Europe, it is in the ma ! n \ astly superior to that produced iti our own country. Whether unrestricted emigration lie or be not a national blessing may be disputed, but a visit to tho workshops of the State will demonstrate the truthfuluessof the statement that the large majority of our tradesmen and mechanics are foreigners. Indeed, in many trade and industrial establishments (hero is not a single American at work. Nearly bility in all the positions of trust and responsi¬ the hands median! a 1 derailments are in of foreign-born workers, aud most of the l*>ys and young men learning trades are either foreign born or the sons of is foreign-born workers. Aud the opinion cepted, now that very generally expressed aud ao» most of tho labor troubles of the hut few years have been precipitated, not by and whole trades, but by sections of them, that these sections wero largely con¬ trolled by foreigners, or natives who had from association imbibed foreign ideas on the tabor question.” Tha Commissioner argues In favor of man¬ ual training as a means of keeping up the supply coming of trained tabor and preventing the man from becoming tne slave of the machine. The conclusion at which tho Commissioner arrives in regard to “Shorter Hours of La¬ bor” are thus summed up:—‘ As predicted in tho last report of this bureau, a very general movement was made on the first day of May last looking to the reduction of the hours of labor from ten to eight per day. Brooklyn Tho organisations of New York and seemed to have acted more in con cert than those of other cities in the States, and were by for more successful, having won a majority of the cases where demands wero made. It is true Uiat while a targe percentage of all engaged tu the movement asked for a reduction of two did bfuvs it • with day, a very view many of compromising of the organisations nine hours on He next as a giv.n day's work. ” brief histories of the leading strikes in the State during the year, notably those iu the Troy laundries, the sugar refineries, and on the street rail roads. The losses by these different strikes, boycotts, Ac., he is unable to give in total, but fifty-eight firms alone repoit other hand an aggregat the losses > of of ♦3,000,000. On the enmtovee %r* represented h«* wages tne to striking of *9 sum A FIGHT WITH ROBBERS. Cars l<onded Willi Arms nnd Ammunition Broken Open nnd Killed. Five masked robbers boarded a Pan Handle freight train near Sheridan Sta¬ tion, just at the outskirts of Pittsburg, Friday tho night, but they were detected in moving aefc train, of throwing nnd freight desperate from the in a fight which ensued, Fireman Curley was shot through the right thigh, and a brakeman was knocked senseless with a stone. The train men then gave up the tight to at¬ tend to the injured men, and the thieves escaped. It is thought the robbers secreted them •elves in tho cars before the train left this city, and hs soon as they were be¬ yond the city limits forced the doors and threw off a number of boxes of guns and ammunition. It is thought the men got away with sonic of the arms. Several theories have been advanced as ed to why cars were selected tuat were load¬ with arms. It is thought by some persons that the gang nny have been An¬ archists, and that they were trying to se¬ cure rifles ami ammunition for future the use. They seem to have known what contents of the ears were, as both o( the cartt broken open contained arms. AUGUST HPIES’S BRIDE. Miss Nina Clark YanZanfft, of Chicago, who is soon to be married to August grandaughter 8pies, the condemned Anarchist, is a of tho late W. B. Clark, a prominent lawyer at Beaver Pa. She was among the guests at the marriage, in Pittsbuvg, of Miss Wulkcr, sister-in-law of Mr. George Westinghouse, and WHS very much admired because of her beauty and accomplishments. Mr. Van Zandt, father of the lady, is connected with the well-known Morehcad family of Pittsburg being, James K. it is said, a nephew of tho late named. It Moorhead, is after whom he was divert reported that the marriage may Mist an expected inheritance of Vai\ Zandt into other channels. DUTCH TO BETTER IN FLORIDA. Negotiations were completed at Jack sonville by which a syndicate of Dutch hankers In Amsterdam, Holland, acquired from the 1 lorida Laud Mortgage compa¬ ny, limited, a vast body of timber land in west Florida. The purchase embraces a solid area of nearly nine hundred square miles largest heavily single timbered. This is the transaction made in the state since the great Disston sale in 1881. Tho syndicate proposes to form a great land and colonization company, building a railroad into the purchase and coloniz¬ ing from Holland. THU CENTENNIAL CELEBRATIONS. The senate special committee on een* tennial celebrations has held a meeting ami decided with reference io the centen¬ nial of the promulgation of the constitu¬ tion, that tne celebration shall consist of an address and some civil and military displays, the details of which are to he settled hereafter. With respect to the 400th anniversary to the discovery of America, it was decided to recommend that raised a joint committee take the of tho two houses be celebration to in subject of an ap(go¬ si' to 1892 into considera AflMALL POUCH STOLEN. The containing mail pouch about for the north bound train, 100 letters from Nejw Orleans and Maysvilie, including two liffHteted letters, was stolen from the catcher at the depot at Rolling Fork Hite.* Saturday. Later in the day the aku/ was arrested. ‘ * ;,i tnnr o fawn mot. A Boapontt Rigro Mm ui UUoi By a <[ v •' Clitxio .* . Por tome weeks past Captain Conner, who ia in charge of the convict camp lo¬ cated at Rising Pawn, Ga., has suspected that two convicts named Jim Holt and William Jackson were planning an escape. He succeeded in getting satisfactory Evi¬ dence that Holt was the leader, and de¬ cided to punish him. * In attempting to do this Conner was stabbed in theleft shoulder. With a view to disabling him Holt, twice, Captain but Conner merely thereupon grazed shot at the skin. The friends of Holt who were in the building became threatened. very much excited, and a mutiny was A. bad state of affairs continued up to Sunday, when William Jackson, figuring as leader, was so effectual in keeping up the strife, that it Accordingly, was thought he advisable to punish him. was ordered out, but re¬ fused to come, saying he would die first. Late in the evening guards were stationed at the door, and Captain Conner, accom¬ panied by two trusties, entered to remove Jackson. Jackson resisted, using a knife, and several of the convicts taking sides with him, the hurled bottles and other missils at the guards and trusties. At this stage excitement became intense, and oue of the guards seeing Jackson furiously brandishing his of knife, shot at him with the intention disabling him, but the ball hitting his arm, severed an artery, from which he died. This had the effect of subduing the others. No blame is at¬ tached to the act of the guard; and no further trouble is apprehended. COUNTERFEITER ARRESTED. Chnttnnoogn Detective* Capture a Noto¬ rious Character. A special from Chattanooga, says: A detective lias discovered oue of the most extensive counterfeiting establishments yet broken up in the South. For several weeks an almost perfect counterfeit coin has been circulated in the city, and all at¬ tempts to trace it up proved fruitless. Saturday an old man was seen to enter a store and make a trifling purchase, re¬ ceiving departure ninety cents in change. On his it was ascertained that the coin he left was counterfeit The detectives were notified and at once put him under surveillance. Saturday night he was ur lestcd and $66 in counterfeit found on his person. He proved to be Mullins, one of the most notorious counterfeiters in America. He was arrested two years ago at Fort Scott, Arkansas, and escaped by turning Stale's evidence. It was as¬ certained that the den is in the heart of the city and has been conducted us an electro-plating in tho hanJs establishment. It is now of the police, and three other urrests have been made. It is thought that thousands of dollars have been issued from these. The counterfeit is nearly perfect. THE RIDE TO DEATH. Poor Tramps Burned to Death In a becked Freight Car. As a special freight train of nineteen cars, loaded with cotton was pulling into Paducah, Ky., on the line of the Chesa peak, Ohio and Southern railroad Mon¬ day, one of tho cars was discovered to he on fire. It had been taken on and locked at Memphis, being transferred from the Louisville, New Orleaus and Texa* rail road at that point. The engineer backed on the side track and the crew endeav¬ ored to extinguish tho flames with hose attachments. All they succeeded in doing, however, was to prevent the fire from Spreading to other cars. While removing the debris of the burned car, four dead bodies, charred beyond recognition, were discovered. They are supposed to have been tramps. Whether white or black it is impossible to say. The car was locked at tered Memphis, but the men must have en¬ to their horrible fate through a window in the end, which could have been opened from the outside. TROUBLE AT NIAGARA. A Larjre Mass of Kook Falls os tho Cana¬ dian Hide. Over 223,000 Quebec yards of lime¬ stone and slate rock of the bank of Nia¬ gara river, near Horseshoe falls, on the Canada side, fell out Thursday. |i The mass fell with a tremendous crash, which was heard nnd felt for miles around. The break has considerably changed the ap¬ pearance of the bank, and now a dark chasm can be seen behind the falls from the bank above. The mass of rock which fell was sixty feet long and one hundred and seventy feet deep. Its fall from the main rock has left a perpendicular wall. The tremendous weight of the ice which has accumulated during the past three weeks, with steady frosty weather and low water was the cause of the broak. A I1LA/.K IN NANIIV1LLF.. A tire broke out, at midnight in B. S. Ken *fc Sons’ grain and hay warehouse, and fanned by the wind the flames threat¬ ened widespread destruction, The fire department, after half an hour’s hard work, got matters so much in hand that there was no further damage. The stock of Ilea & Son was totally destroyed. The loss is $8,000. The building, also owned oy them, was damaged $8,000 Both were fully insured. The cellar continued several thousand dollars’ worth of meat, almost belonging to Ilnrt & Hensley which was ruined. Morgan & Hamilton, pa¬ & per bag manufactory, and Orr. Scoggins Co, wholesale wind grocers, lost heavily by water. The carried blazing pieces of wood across the river to the extensive lumber mills and cedar wood works of Prewitt. 8pnrr & Co. .THE MAD DANCE11M. A sad outbreak of insanity is reported from Whiteday, W. Va. Washington Lake has five grown daughters. Two weeks ago Tabitlia got married and the young cluding people her of the neighborhood, in¬ four sisters, celebrated the event the by dancing all night and nearly all second, next Martha, day. On the eveuing of the one of the sisters, lost her reason and developed into a raving maniac and four days later the bride went stark mad. Since then the three other stators exhibited evidences of in¬ sanity and the worst is feared. THE STRIKE AT OXMOOK, /’ i A, The Superintendent of the Eureka fur¬ naces hundred at Oxmoor, Alabama, has secured one and fifty men who do not tl la’long to the Knights of Labor, and put cm to work in place of the strikers. The strikers, who are Knights of Labor, notified the Superintendent that the scabs would not be allowed to work. The Sheriff was notified of the impending truuble, and put four deputies at ths made iurnaces, and so far the strikers have no effort to iuterfere with the new men. CAUGHT IN 1 CLOCK. a Terrible Experience la a Church StMple. Have you ever been at St. Paul’s? I mean the great Cathedral of London. If you have you doubtless know the dome. You have looked down perhaps from its dizzy height, on the people walking who on the pavement below, and seem in the far distance beneath you, like black ants crawling about. When I was comparatively a young man—I am not an old man, even yet, though London, my and hair is of so the gray—I first objects went that to one I visited was Bt. Paul’s. 1 had lead of it so often as a child. I had been told so frequently it was Wren’s masterpiece; every Englishman assured me that it had no rival, except, perhaps, St. Peter's at Rome, and even of that there was a doubt, that I was eager to see it. Ac¬ cordingly taking an omnibus the at Charing by Cross, the I memorable went along Temple Strand, Bar, passing until a before large dome, told looming that into the heavens me, me the object of my pilgrimage first, I was close at hand. On At confess, I was disappointed. western a nearer facade approach hid I found that the the dome almost en¬ tirely. The interior, too, was cold and gray, without a bit of warm color. The aspect chilled me I did not remain long in consequence in the auditorium, if it may be so called. I did not care to linger and read the epitaphs on the monuments ascended to the departed heroes. I at once stairs until I reached the great clock, and there, attracted by the immense wheels that move the heavy hands around the clock-face, I took my stand. Just below the centre of the great dial-plate, and to the right of the pivot upon which the hands revolve, is a hole about fourteen inches square, possibly, somewhat more; and this hole is usually left open to admit of repairs to the clock as needed. A strange fascination took possession of me to look through this hole, more than two hundred feet above Jhe street, to get a panoramic view of bustiing London below. I thrust my head, therefore, through the hole, without further thought. What a spectacle rewarded me! For miles and miles in every direction, the city and the country about lay spread before 11)6 as in a map. I saw the Thames in the rays of the mid-day sun, looking lik e a silver thread; I saw the many bridges; down piles on piles of fine edifices, I looked upon the vast parks, whose wide carriage-roads seemed like narrow paths. So busy was I with the scenes around me, that I took no note of time; all ray attention was engrossed by the view spread out around me and beneath me. since Nearly an hour had passed unheeded I took my position, and as one ob¬ ject of interest after another met my gaze, I was still unsatisfied. At length something pressed upon my neck. For an instant 1 was ignorant of the cause, and my hands being on the inside of the orifice, 1 could not raise them then to clear away any obstruction. The truth, the horrible truth, burst on me all at once. Judge of my surprise and agony, when I thought, for the first time of the inevitable passage of the ponderous hands! Slowly and steadily, but firmly, the great minute hand was making its regular trip around the dial plate; against and it was neck. that which was press¬ ing my I felt its cold edge, but it was too late to extricate myself, too la e to turn my head! I shouted aloud for help. But my feeble voice could not reach the street below, and a moment’s reflection showed me that, ev n if it could, it must take longer than three minutes to reach me at that height, and before that three minutes had become six, my head would, doubtless, fall among the people on the sidewalk! Oh! dreadful moments! The great hand pressed more heavily every sound. With every tick of the mighty pen dulum 1 couuted off another moment of my fast lessening life As my throat rested on the lower edge of the hole, l had the greatest ditfioulty in breathing. head, Heavy drops of moisture oozed from my at every pore. My eyes seemed starting from their sockets! In these brief moments I thought of home, of my mother, of my early days. Incidents, long ago occurring and for¬ gotten, of throng time I to my mind. In that space seemed to live years. Ask the victim to the Spanish garote, as the executioneer, having fastened the strap around the neck, begins to turn the fatal screw behind; slowly at first, but surely, then suddenly, till the head falls, as the neck refuses longer to hold it in place. Ask that victim how many years he is living over again, as that dread screw is turning? I closed my eyes, uttered a feeble prayer, and became insensible. But I live to tell the tale! Yes, at the last moment, when life was barely assured and death was imminent, the clock, sexton, coining to oil the works of the entered the room, saw my peril, and with ready presence of mind, •topped the pendulum. But only just in time. Then with a lever attached to the cogs of the great wheel, he pried back the hand and set me free. I lived, but was thoroughly exhausted. My nerves were unstrung, A brain fever followed, and death again seemed beckoning me away. But my strong constitution enabled me to rally, and after four weeks’ confinement at my hotel, I rose once again a well man. But my hair, from a dark brown, had become gray. Do you think, after this, I can ever forget the clock of St. Paul’s. A ©mini Restorative. Hoetetter's Stomach Hitters are emphatical¬ ly a genial restorative. Ilu cha tges which the great botanic remedy produces in the dis¬ ordered organisation are always agreeably, though surely progreasive, never abrupt nor vicldiit. On this account it is aimi-ably adapted to persons of delicate constitution and weak nerves, to whom the powerful min¬ eral dr gs are positively injurious. That ir. la dales tho*e prot eve < which result in the re cstab.i l.meut of healthful vigor is conspicu¬ ously shown fruitful in cases w'here it ;s taken to o er co.no that came of de. ilny, intii.'cs t on, em p cd, a* it usually is, with Uiiiou: ne*s ami constipath n and Tuorough abundant di rostion, regu¬ lar evac ia ion se ietion, are results which promptly and invariably a tend i ssvslemati use. it is, besides, the best p o tertlve aga nst malar.a, and a first rate din re tic. A hicd nan Earing. ; A contemporary records, with due ‘ * ® Alle .y» Massachusetts, whose ' wealth , . estimated was found is in Philadelphia at twenty millions, j ■ a restaurant recently eating a bowl of bread and milk which cost ten cents. No account ! Alley ui*^j didn’t need anything P os but *ibly bread Mr. and milk. The idea seems to be that a a mlllinnaina millionaire ought to . eat _ . in . proportion tO his capital, and that a man worth times as much M m * a 0 man !!?* 11 worth to only t wenty one million. The gastronomic test of afflu- I 9mc% howevsr. is a distressing failure, ' BIX BOBS B* 10 BT TIOUSBCB. ’ . » Similar Fatality la u Arki Farmer’s Family. Lira,* Rook, Ark.—Silas Case is a rough farmer log living cabin In situated Searcy County, gulch in in a in a the Boston Mountains, and surrounded by a clearing of many acres in extent, from which he has e&rned a living for his wife and nine children—s^ven sons and two daughters. only All is these children and only grew up,but ason living he and old the two daughters which sheltered are beneath them the roof tree in infancy. For more than half a cen¬ tury Case has dwelt in this mountain retreat miles distant, 1 The nearest Tho neighbor ta five nearest town is eighteen railway after miles away. One of strikes 160 miles the a journey through rugged a virtual wilderness, the wild and country being interspersed here and there with small settlements. Case himseT is a splendid specimen of manhood. He is sixty-seven years old, but straight as an giant. arrow, brave as a lion and strong as a He is a dead shot with the rifle, and his cabin is stored with the skins of bears and deer which have fallen before his unerring aim. In the war with Mexico he led a company and in the war of the rebellion he be¬ gan as a private and ended as a captain on the side of the Union. After hos¬ tilities ceased he returned to his cabiD, content to end his life in isolation and solitude. A strange fatality has attended hi9 children. Two of his hoys were killed by guerillas during the war. In 1880 the revenue officers raided a “moonshine” distillery in the Boston Mountains. The “moonshiners,” though surprised, show¬ ed fight, and several were wounded, among them two of the ( ase boys. They succeeded in hiding in the underbrush and thus escaped capture. One died from the effects of the wound five months after; the other died in Texas from the same cause a year later. In 1884, in a fight on Caif Creek, another of the boys was fatally stabbed, dying in a few days. To-day the father, who is in this place with cattle, received word from Colorado City, Tex., that the son who accompanied his ill-fated brother to the State named had been shot and killed in a quarrel with a man on a ranch sixty miles beyond the town. Thus six have perished by violent means. The only surviving son is living quietly with his father. lie has a violent tem¬ per, and only by shunning intercourse as much he hopojto as possible with the his fellowman which has can escape fate overtaken his brothers. Shoes in the Confederacy. The Charleston (S. C ) Neict, alluding to Mr. David Dodge's article in the At¬ lantic Moivhhj in relation to the alleged expedients resorted Confederacy to by the people of the Southern to meet the necessities imposed upon them by the enfor ement of the blockade during the war, and especially the assertion re¬ specting the use of wooden bottoms for shoes, says: “The one fact that is con¬ tained in the whole mass of rubbish, so far as we can learn, is that a few wood¬ en-bottom shoes were made aud worn iu some parts of the South iu the latter part of the war, when they were regard¬ ed with as much curiosity as they would be regarded now. It is true, indeed, that wood had long been worn by the slaves and by some of he white people, in their shoes, before the war, but the foot coverings of the this description were manufactured at North; were bought for ‘all leather;’ and the woodwork, apart from the pegs, consisted in ex¬ ceedingly thin shavings, whieh were deftly concealed in the soles, and wero made to take the place of the paste¬ board filling that is sometimes used for the same purpose at the present day. The sabots, which Mr. Dodge describes so minutely, we never heard of before, and tho fact that even a few wooden soles were made and worn at the time he specifies will be news to the vast ma¬ jority of the people whom he represents us having brought them into general u-c A Confederate officer, who is now living iu Massachusetts, and who has read Mr. Dodge’s testimony, writes to us to say that lie ‘served under General Price in Missouri, with Van Dorn m Arkansas, with Beauregard and Bragg in the West, with Johnston in Georgia, and with Hood to the end, and never saw anything of the kind which Mr. Dodge describes, Our observation is entirely in accord with that of our cor¬ respondent, and we are, therefore, com¬ pelled to believe that Mr. Dodge has either drawn on his imagination for his facts or has fallen into the not infrequent error of generalizing his own individual experience. ’ Unsolved Mysteries. An unsolved Mystery—How a woman can stand on a cold day, with her sleeves rolled up, and her head bare, and visit with her neighbor across the fence, for fifteen minutes, and not think of taking cold, nnd yet cannot sit in a cold church half an . hour, wrapped in lurs and plushes, without shivering all the time, and sneezing a week to pay for it. Another—IIow a young man can stand in front of the store, bare headed, and buzz his girl for hal an hour without a struggle, and yet can't even go to the post-office without piling on all his clothing, and then kicking about the beastly cold weather Another—How a little girl can go and slide down hill with the boys all day long when her throat was so sore in the morning she couldn't go to school. Another—'How a boy can walk four miles and skate until after dark, on the same day his back was so lame that he couldn’t bring in a scuttleful of coal for his mother .—DamnUe Breeze. Too Damp.—L ast summer a pretty and romantic city girl spent the sum¬ mer on a Maine farm, and got up a mild flirtation with the young man of the house. He was not particularly bold, and so one evening, ts she swuDg in the said hammock the in the moonlight, fellow, she coyly to young “What is God’s best gift toman?” He pondered a moment, as he watched the color come and go in her cheeks, and then said de cisively. “A boss.” The young woman Ba i ( i that it. was getting damp, and she must go right into the hou<e. - ,, lmrm’cn an-1 miws. ode t.vj remedy in the curt* of < ou^b*. He recommends it especially for ell hire a who are irr.table and obstinate, P ®* anttoUrtean l prompt in itseiiect pr ce ' lwcnty ~ flY * c * aU - Dentist, who was lonnerly :• i»in»!<*vrap'*er N«*w (U» i>:ti< : nt)—T-k** trifle this a seat, way—that's p'.oas**. it. Tn turo «! >om: hea l H Look right at the knob on that door, and a* *-u*t***h stlil. piea-ant expression. Now ke*-i> p-r feet I y and I'll he through in a moment. “A most extraordinary and absolute cure for rheumatism and other bodily ailments is Bt. Jacobs OU,”sar» Hon. James Hartaa, ex-Viee> chaneehee, LesUevOle ly 26 , 587,335 r / BOTTLES OF Warner’s SAFE Cura Sold to Dec. 27, 1886. NO OTHER REMEDY IN THE WORLD PROP OSE SUCH A RE CORD. oo ) 1,149,122. CAPT. W. D. ROBINSON (IT. S. Marine Insp., Buffalo, N. Y.), in 1885 was suffer ing with a skin huvior like leprosy. ( ould not sleep; was in great a qonif. For twoyears tried everything, without bone fit. Was pronounced incurable. “Twen¬ ty bottles of Warner’s Safic Cure com¬ pletely cured me, and to-day I am strong and well.” (Feb. 5, 1885.) Providence, 171,929. EX-GO\ . l.O. ALVORD (Syracuse, N. Y.) *n 1884 began running down t General Jlebllity, with sense of weight in the accompanied lower with a body, with feverish part of the a sensation and a gen¬ eral giving out of the whole organism. Was in serious condition, confined to his bed much of the time. After a thorough treatment with Warner’s Safe Cure ha says: “] am completely restored to health by its means.” Portland, Me., 441,105. MAJOR S. B. AOBOTT (Springfield, Mo), in is. 1 was afflicted with lame back, 1th eu mat ism and Kidney trouble. Consulted tho very liest physicians in San Borings Francisco, and visited all tha minoral there. Took a health trip to tho New England States, but for seven ycara suffered which had consta ntly from his malady, resulted in Bright's disease. Alter using a couplo dozen bottles of War¬ ner’s Safe Cure and two of Safe Pills, ho wrote: out jtain, “My back and Kidneys are with¬ and. thank God, 1 owe it all to Warner's Safe Remedies.” M of N ew Eng, - 441,753. MUS. J T. RITCHEY (5G2 4th Ave., Louis¬ ville, Ivy.) was a confirmed invalid for eleven years, just living, and hourly expecting death. Was confined to tied ten months each year. Was attended by the best physic iu ns. Her left side was paralyzed. Could neither eat, sleep, nor enjoy with female life.Tho doctors said she was troubled satisfied her kidneys complaints; but she was tho were affected. Under passed ojieration of Warner's Safe Cure she a la rge st ne or calculus, and in Nov., 1S85, reported: “Am to-day os well as when a girl. ” New York State, - ASK YOUR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS ABOUT ; WARN ER’S SA FE CURE. HE MOST POPULAR UEB EDI HER DISCOVERED. CleieW, : ■_688,032. EX-GOV. R. T. JACOB (Westport, Ky.) was prostrated and with severe Kidney trouble lost 40 pounds of flesh. After a thorough treatment with Warner’s Safe Cure he re¬ ports, “I have never enjoyed better health.” Cincinnati, - 873,667. GEN. H. D. WALLEN (144 Madison Ave., New York), scarcely able to walk two blocks without exhaustion, and, having lost flesh heavily, began tho use of War ner’s Safe Cure and says: “I was much ben e fited by i t.”_ Bal. Ohio, (State,) - 633,188. COL. JOSEPH H. THORNTON (Cincinnati, O.) in 1885 reported that his daughter was very much prostrated; had palpitation, of the heart, disorder intense pain in the hcad, nervous and catarrh of the bladder. She lost fifty-five pounds. Other.remedies failing, they began the use of Warner’s Safe Cure, Safe Pills and Safe Nervine, and within three months she had gained stored fifty good pounds in weight and was re¬ to health. That was three years ago, and she is still in os good health as ejer in her life. Col. Thornton, himself, was* cured of Chronic Diarrhcea of eighteen Safe years’ standing, in 1881, by War¬ ner's Cure. Southern States, - 3,834,617. 3. H. ALLEN (Leavenworth, Kan.), son Edwin, two years of of age, afflicted with ex¬ treme case Bright’s disease, and tho doctors gave him un. By the advice of the doctor’s wife, began the us© of War¬ ner’s Safe Cure, and after taking seven bottles he is perfectly well and has had no relapse. _ Canada, 1,467,824, tW Every Testimonial we enclosing stamp for reply, and learn A Corpse, but no Pauper. i ; Mrs. Ann Eliza Young, an aged widow, once quite well to d , and ‘residing all her life at Tuckahoe, was taken to the Westchester County Almshouse and died in the carriage which landed her at the door. Instead of being received there as a pauper she was carried in a corpse. The old lady wept all the way to the Almshouse, and prayed that death might overtake her before she became a pauper. Her prayer was answered at the xtiTj threshold. When the carriage stopped at the great door which is opened to so many unfortunates, she looked out of the carriage window, gave a shriek threw up her hands, and fell over dead. She died of shock and ex citemeat.— N. Y. Herald. We think we violate no confidence I like when we artist’s state model, that a hard inasmuch conundrum it is is j an as a poser. ssfiMi teash Dr. K. ■ar«p V, Pierce I , s Favorite over six yenis. lhan anymea Prescription’ did me more !-k lady to icine I ever took. I advise every • disappoints take it.” And so do we. It never its patrons. Druggists sell it Papain? around the hat is one way of getting the cents of the meeting. Relief is immediate, Catarrh. and a care sure. Pleot Remedy for fiO cents. Pennsylvania, - 1,821,218. F. MAYER (1030 N. 12th St., St Louis, Mo.), afflicted with tired, feelings, dizzi¬ ness and pain across the back, and lost ap¬ time. petite. The vV doctors as sallow fnilitxg, and. care-worn all the Warner's he began the use of Kafr Cure, and reports: “2 feel like a fighting cock.” Chicago, 2,808,693. MR. R. BROWN (2221 Woodward Ave., De¬ troit, Mich.) injured his back from a fall. Was confined to his teed six weeks. The fall injured his kidneys, producing in¬ tense suffering. Warner's Safe Cure re¬ stored his kidneys t/> their natural con¬ dition,' and he writes: “1 am now eighty years of age, smart and active.” Detroit, 846,948. MRS. THOS. SCHMIDT (Wifoof the Vice Consul of Denmark, 09 Wall St., New York), reported that 'her little son, afte ran attack or Diphtheritic Sore Throat eight Disease years ago, was afflicted with Bright’s in advanced forint by the advice of Gen’l Christianson, of Drexel, Morgan & Wamer’s Co., Bankers, New Cttro, York, she prescribed Safe with tho c onsent of tho physicians, and reports, “tho physi clans say that hs will be perfectly xvcll.” Milwaukee, - . 488,894. MISS Z. L. BOARDMAN (Qucchee, Vt.), in in May, 1882, began to bloat, tlienco camo stomach trouble, terrible headaches, and finally tho doctor’s opinion that it was Bright’s disease, and incurable. nounced Eventually she tho becamo doctors nearly blind, pro¬ stage of by Bright's disease. to l>e the last After having been under treatment by Warner’s Safe C ure fen* one year, she reported: “2 am as well as any one. ” Minnesota, 648,617. IION. N. A. PLYMPTON (Worcester, Mass.), in. May, 1880, was prostrated by Gravel. Under the operation of Warner’s Safe Cure alone ho passed a^Umge stone, and subsequently wrote: "i nave had no recu rrence of my trouble since Warner’s Safe Cure cured me.” Bal. N. W. - Louis , ■ ■ 1 ,530,827. CAPT. GEO. B. WILTBANIC (919 Spruce St., Phiia., I’a.), prostrated in Central America, with Malarial Fever, caused by congestion of Kidneys aud Liver. Delirious part of the timet Liver en largcil one-third. Stomach badly affect¬ ed. Could li old no food; even water was ejected. Using less than a dozen bottles of Warner’s Safe Cure he writes: “I was Completely Cured.” Kansas City, 717,866. _ MRS. (PROF.) E. J. WOLF (Gettysburg, Pa., Wife of the Ed. of the Lutheran Quarterly), began to (Over decline with pulmon¬ ary consumption. of Consumption 50 per cent, of all cases eased kidneys.) Desptiired are caused of living. by dis¬ After a thorough course of treatment with Warner’s Safe Cure, she writes: “Iam perfectly well.” Bal. S. W. States, - 746.789. EX-SENATOR B. K. BRUCE (South Caro¬ lina), after doctoring fop years for what ha supposed afflicted with was Malar Sugar lev, Diabetes, discovered and he hav¬ was ing obtained no relief whatever from his physicians, Diabetes he began Cure, the and use he of Warner's Safe friends astonished at my improvement.” says: “My are San Francisco, 1,242,946. J. Q. ELKINS (Elkinsville, N.- C.) suffered for ten years from Gravel, which attacked him every six months. He lost 43 pounds in three months, and his strength of was Warner’s nearly gone. Diabetes After a thorough usu Safe Cure he re¬ ports: “I am as well as I ever was, af¬ ter using fourteen bottles.” Bal. Pacific Coast, - 732,317. is genuine. Write to the testators yourselves. An exchange has an article on “Why Bses Make Honey.” They make it to cell. For weak lungs, spitting of blood,.shortness of breath, consumption, night-sweats, and all lingering coughs, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medi¬ cal Discovery”’ ood liver is oil a sovereign By druggists. remedy. Supe¬ rior to It looks the as if somebody throne would have to be put on Bulgarian and held there. ff Sufferers from Ceusumptleu. Scrofula, Bronchitis and General Debility will try Scott’s Emudxiok of Coi Liver Oil with Hypophosphites, they will find Immediate re¬ lief and permanent benefit. The Medical Pro¬ fession universally declare it a remedy of the greatest value and very palatable. Read: “I have used Scott’s Emulsion in several cases of Scrufutaand Debility in children. Results most gratifying. My little patients take It with pleasure.”—W. A. Hulmbt, M. D., Salis¬ bury, 111. ThS wind is not evidently tempered ths shorn Wall street lamb. Stranger than Flstinn are ths records of some ot tbs cures of con¬ sumption effected by that mast wondorrol remody-Dr. Pierce’s "Golden Medical Dta covery.” Thousands of snatched grateful almost men from and women, who have been testify that the very jaws of death, can con¬ sumption, In its early stages, is curable. The SKraiSS-afftSTWf&S Discovery hea * »S2S5£K? All druggists. power. If every man was ns bta as hs feels there couldn’t be standing room In this eeamtry, Dee gtiten, Wires m 4 Mother*. If afitated with ssre eyes use Dr. Xsaas Themp soa’s Bye-water. Druggists tell nt Me per hettie. —— \v V,., Mr own. one JAMES ME ri Gs&tlsmtn, g K 8 r.r mcelled In Durabui I** m. wsiU^ouswlil bring Jel you ln Sf tormutlon bow to . k. shoe in any Mate m Territory. fs J. Means ACq tea, VC- 8 SHOE ^■HBQBUTTOM WPM ofShoM e C<1 fa t0 f£ ppoducc ®jJ l lSL fto£t f thi d wear^hem Wlfftei world. ThouBandswho 2$«pn if you ask them. JAItIF.fi ME A ’MiOF, for Boys Is unapproached in Dural — .............. .^-y, Marvellous Memory DISCOVERY. Wholly unlike Artificial Systems-Cur* of Kind Wan dering—Any book learned la one reading- wlthopln- Heavy re¬ ductions ions for postal classes. Astronomer. Prospectus, Hons. W. w. of Hr. PaooTon, the sad AsToa, Judah P. Benjamin, Drs. Huron, Wood * ““•'■"-r^OF.^OISETTE. Fifth a»T A ren as, » I¥ cw f»k« THURSTON’S STGOTH POWDER Keeping Teeth Perfect and (imni Hea lthy, Magnificent The greatest offlsr ever mads to sul Sf ■a agricultural periodical. Every sul $iAO per year) to tha Amtrican.* - . «t for 1887 will receive tha above |we. Samples, Canvassers etc., address wanted O. J everywhere. UDD CO., 701 For z ID ■mas mmmmm roekNtol.SSoreet. Funnorsfltul to *40 others are making DM business i>cr for <l«y winter with oui Summer. m.-K-htnerr We *nd tools. the oldest Splendid end largest ©r are Manufacltn rrs ui the ti’istrers Send 4 oeatS la Stamps for Illustrated Catalogue H. Addhkbs, Pierce Well Excavator Co.. Kew York. CATARRH In its wnmt form can be cured. C'nnndlmi fnrrli Cnrr, during 10 years’trial, has never faileWo effect a cure. We sunrunteo a ottre, or pries of medicine refunded. Pamphlet this eent free. We atandinp refet to Atlanta National Bank of oity, aa to our and responsibility. Address CANADIAN CATARRII CURE CO., 16>j Whitehall St.. AllnnTa, ©a. _ _ « ATLANTA P k SAW WORKS. Manufacturer, of and Dealers in Saws Repairing and Saw-Mill Specialty. Supplies. a A**nts for L. Fuwrx A Ooxir ant’s ^ '■ mr&r Wood Working Machinery. stock. Writs pr *nd complete jflfc A TP I C kll IVB TT I O Ct Obtained. Inventors’ OulUe. Send xtamp L. Bino- for 3 . i, Patent J.awyn. Wasblinrton. 1 j. U. J.P. STEVENS &BR0. JEWELERS. Atlanta, Ga. Send for Cataloffiip. WHETHER YOU WANT A ■ TO o |8Wt m ?r It will pay you to write to PHILLIPS & CREW, ATLANTA, ©A., For Catalogue (free) and Prices. Mention this paper, (•ft 11 K-«sa DR. WILLIAMS* Ointment ■ ■ ■■ BBS W will cur i nny case of Ircfcf ■v* 1 Piles only. [Physicians’ .jar.i by express, nre Piild. sri.50.] Price per box. .10c. and 81. Sold b. druggists or mulled on receipt of price by LAMAR, RANKINLAMAR, Ag'nti, Atlanta, Ga. OPIUM nnd WHISKEY HABITS cured at honn without pain. B >ok of pnrl icul.iriBont FREB. B. M. Woolley, M. D. f Whitehall Street. Mention Atlanta, this ©a. Oirric* 86X paper. BITSITSTThISS Hchools in the Country. Send for Circulars, PULVERIZING ___ HARROW, I bo lit Crusher and Leveler. nt looi in tho world for preparing corn, oott n on 1 olher proi nd. D. II. NASH, Sole Manui’r. •>»} West Main St., Loutsvlle, By, V DO YOU P- ^ Colored DOG plates, BUYERS’ lOO engravings GUIDE,. of differout breeds, prices they at* wort! i and where to buy them Mailed for 15 (tents. 5j^ ___jJg|837 'N tJJ ASSOCIATED FANCIER8, IBrK S. Eighth St. Philadelphia, Pa, uie want your ■ W profltuble employment to represent u» In ereejr county. Salary S','5 per month and expenses, or * Every terse commission Outfit on sak-H nnd if particulars preferred. Free. Goods staple. one burs. STANDARD SILVERWARE CO.. DOSTON, MASH UfE VV GUARANTEE YOU.vfo "asSpLeS ** Books* Cirt-nlni-M, Letter* and Papers -sod FREE tr,m,,rnisa)1 ovi ' rthes aiiadas if you send 30 cents to have your na ne in n ■ .v Ihkup or Agents’ Same IMreo tyrij q.-:u. ALL!).. it CO.. 803 Main St., Buffalo, N. T. F VI SKINS Wllw, " 2i , !sn’.. yenrs” practice. , s?i.S¥iva 8uccM«<tr no fee. Write for circulars and new law*. A. W. McCormick A: So;i.Washington,P.Q. B -.«*« Mulled •a ree, Francis Brill* Hrmr.stkat), Lo.no N. Y. Dlair S Dill* IllSi Grsat English Gout and I Rheumatic Remedy. Oval Box fel.oos round, 50 cts. / Can get tlis nunt Pract ical Busin’ea* Kdu ?ationatHnldsuihhSKrliool ol Ha* /Tf- e /n-' for Circ ular*! A Specimen ot Ptmmm ahip. ELY’S CREAM BALM uin LY’ M*»J Tfegp B - IS WORTH SIOOO MmVERj^ TO ANY MAN Woman or Child ■offering from ] CATARRH. y M ot’t-.M If; , , — A. E. NEWMAN, iJ xSB Graling, Mich. H^UT “EE W EJf^ A partial* in applied into «ach nontril and ia agrsaabW APIUM W HABIT‘iUmSi vain or nelf-denial. Pay rvhen cured. Ilaudn-uae book free. Da. O. J, Wba ihkkby, Kanaas Oity, Ms. W0RKc>^ JIkS HS PiBtipni^sv^LwE fa ■ toSoiaien* *. Uelrx. Send sUnra* • e 5 UIH Ml lUMr UW HUH, 9 l«u A i ll*,* WIP BaxwsTxa'A8 Bax wstxs’h 8 avst asst r r Rain Rkim Douokh. Dou oxa. H«a ii<»a y.^itae y.uatas OPIUM Habit Hcmaxm Cured.'tveivurcnt Rxmkt)y C - o.. L aFayette, sent on a Flao’a Remedy for Catarrh Is the Beet. Easiest to Use, aud Cheapest, CATARRH B eaaaigjaajiaaa M| Ji