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THE OFFICIAL CALL
For the Two Conventions of the Den
ocrats of Geor§^a.
The national democratic commit¬
tee having met in the city ot Wash¬
ington on the 22d of February. 1888,
land having appointed Tuesd y, the
r5tli day of June, 1888, at noon as
the time, and chosen the city of St,
|Louis,as Itibnal the place of holding the na
democratic convention. And
raaying declared in accordance with
I the established usages of the party
hthat each state is entitled to repre
WlchTation therein, by delegates equal
to double the number of its senators
i%nd representatives in congress ot
rthe United States, and that each ter¬
ritory and the District of Columbia
I have two delegates, and a regular
Kail having been issued to that ef
| feet, the democratic executive com¬
mittee of Georgia being duly assem¬
bled in Atlanta, on this, the 21st of
■March, 1888, do issue this call to the
democrats of the state for a conven
rwon of delegates to assemble in the
Hiouse of representatives in Atlanta
on the 9th day of May, 1888, it be*
ibg the second Wednesday of said
‘ffionth of May, then and there to ap
p'oint delegates ana alternates to the
convention to be held in St. Louis
Land to transact any other business
that may be deemed appropriate under
ithe above call of the national denied
Lratfc committee.
■ t# The democratic executive commit¬
tee [a. of Georgia will meet at 9 o’clock
m. ; on the 9th day of May, 1888,
pi the senate chamber.
STATE CONVENTION.
I c Another call is now issued for the
Cr
fstate of Georgia for a convention of
| delegates to assemble in the house of
| representatives in Atlanta on the
h^dqnd Wednesday of said month of
(August, then and there to appoint
j electors and their alternates for the
I presidential ^ ticket, and to nominate
la 9 candidate for and for
governor, at
Itorney-general, and the other officers
■usually called state house officers; to
Kppoint a new executive committee,
[am! that to transact any other business
may be deemed appropriate.
L The committee adopted the follow¬
ing recommendations which we are
Rnrstructed to make known in connec¬
tion with the above:
* Resolved, That the demo
[ state
cratic executive committee Yecorm
[mend that the democracy of Georgia,
Pfn each county, select their delegates,
Bin such mode as the executive com
Inittee of each county may adopt, for
Bbfe first convention, on the first Tues
fday [vention in May, and for the second con
on the first Tuesday in Au
iist.
Resolved, That each county in this
iitate be entitled to double the number
bf votes that the county has repre-
sentatives in the lower house of the
general assembly.
Resolved. That each county be re
quested to select as alternates the
same number of persons at the
same time and in the same manner
as it selects delegates; and . that , the ,
committee recommend that each
county at the time of its election of
said delegates pass resolutions re¬
questing the State convention not to
admit any delegate unless he be reg
ulaly selected, either as a delegate
or as an alternate, and that no citi
zen not a citizen of the county be
allowed to represent said county as
a delegate or as an alternate, and
that no person not a citizen of the
county be allowed to represent said
county as a delegate by proxy, and
these resolutions apply to both con¬
ventions.
Benj. H. Bigham, Chairman.
W. D. Ellis, Secretary.
Executive Committee of Georgia.
Democratic papers throughout tl^p
state are requesred to publish this
call.
A man who has practiced medici
for 40 years ought to know s
from sugar; read what he says:
Toledo, O., Jafi. 10, 1887.
Messrs F. J. Cheney & Co.—Gen¬
tlemen : I have been in the general
practice of medicine for most 40 yrs,
and would say that in all my practice
and experience, have never seeb, a
preparation that I could prescribe
with as much confidence of success
as I can Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manu¬
factured by you. Have p< escribed it
a great many times and its effect is
wonderful, and would say in conclu¬
sion that 1 have yet to find a case of
Catarrh that it would not cure,if they
would take it accotdiug to directions.
Yours truly,
L. L. Gorsucii, M.D.,
Office, 215 Summit St.
We will give 100 for any case of
Catarrh that cannot be cured with
Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Taken inter¬
nal IV.
F. J. Cheeney & Co , Props.,
Sold by druggists, 75c. Toledo, O
Don’t Experiment,
You cannot to w sh* time in ex
penm ntirnr when your lungs are in duu
ger. Consumption al\va\s n:etn.s at first
only a cvl« 1 . Do not permit any dealer to
impose upon you with some cheap imita¬
tion of Dr. King.‘h New Di 1 every for
Gonsuiiipt« n coiitih- apd < ol is. luit b
sure you get tli • i.enuHfte Beeat^e he ca-;
inakr ,ji »re pr fir he may till you be has
come hiug just as go <d, or ju t 1 lie same.
Don’t t'C dtceived but insist up<<tt getting
DrKing’s New l> ovt ry which is guu>n
teed to «give relief in a 1 tin*, at. lung and
chest all cti >ns. Tiial bottle-: free at Cook
Bro . Luge B » tl.-s One Doll . 1 *.
♦ - 4 -
■ A Proud Woman’s Airs.
Why is « proud worn in nke a in 1 ie
box? She is uftl of air-t. And if they
blow on hi-r. cengh and eobf aids f >!<o.v.
D » not neg'eet h 00 d, ba: take Tiyl^rs
Charokte Remedy of Sweet Gum and
Mullein.’"
The Wealh Of a Home
Is dci endent upon toe jappinrss (lienin.
If rickiicas is tie re, wf aj a shadow t ills.
P.uein*. y°n >ho'tM never negl ct a slight
cough or <*old, but eive in time Tuv.ors
Chcokee lletnetly of S-e t Gum and Mul¬
lein .
rr
HOW 00 WE DIG OUR GRAVES ?
We must eat or we cannot live.
This we all know. But do we all
know that we die by eating ? It is
Rldd we dig our graves with our
l?® 41 ?: ? HW foolish this sounds.
rot it . fearfully We
is true, fire ter¬
rified at the approach of the cholera
and jellow fever, yet there is a dis
ease houses constantly at our doors and in
our far more dangerous and
destructive. Most people have in
their own stomachs a poison, more
slow, but quite as fatal as the germs
of those maladies which sweep men
into eternity by thousands without
demics. warning in the times of great epi
But it is a mercy that, if
we are watchful, we can tell when
we are threatened. The following
are among the symptoms, yet they
do not always necessarily appeal* in
the same order, nor are they always
the same in different cases. There
is a dull and sleepy feeling; a bad
taste in the mouth, especially in the
morning; the appetite is change
able, sometimes poor and again it
seems as though the patient could
not eat enough, and occasionally no
to study or work; more or less head¬
ache and heaviness in the head;
dizziness on rising to the feet or
moving suddenly; furred and coat¬
ed tongue; a sense of a load on the
stomach that nothing removes; hot
and dry skin at times; yellow tinge
in the eyes; scanty and high-colored
urine ; sour taste in the mouth, fre¬
quently attended by palpitation of
the heart; impaired vision, with
spot! that seen* to Be- swimming in
the air before the eyes; a cough,
with a greenish-colored expecto¬
ration ; poor nights’rest; a sticky
slime about the teetli and gums;
hands and feet cold and clammy :
irritable temper and bowels bound
up and costive. This disease has
puzzled the physicians and still puz¬
zles them. It is the commonest of
ailments and yet the most compli¬
cated and mysterious. Sometimes
it is treated as consumption, some¬
times as liver complaint, and then
again as malaria r.ud even heart dis¬
ease. But its real nature is that ol
•onstipation and dyspepsia. It arises
in the digestive organs and soon \
a-’’cts all the others through the
Often corrupted and poisoned blood, j
the whole body—including
the nervous system—is literally j
starved , even when there is no
emaciation Experience to has tell the sad story, j
shown that there if- j
put one this remedy disease that can certainly \
cure in all its stages.
namely, Hhaker Extract of Roots or
Mother Seigel's Curative Byrap. It
never fails but, nevertheless, no time
should be lost in trying other so
called remedies, for they will do no
good. Get this great vegetable
preparation, (discovered by a vener¬
able nurse whose name is a house
hold word in Germany) and bo sure
to get the genuine article.
GIVEN UP BY SEVEN DOCTORS. i
Shaker Extract of Roots Sei- t
or
gel's health Hyrup has raised ine to good
after seven doctors had given
me up to die with consumption.—
Ho writes R. F. Grace, Kirknittn- 1
Yille, i’odd Co., ICy.
HE HEARD OF IT JUHT IN TIME.
“I had been about given up to
die with dyspepsia when I hist saw
^ ie advertisement of Hhaker Extract
of Roots or SeigeFs Syrup. After
using four bottles I was able to at¬
tend to my business as well as ever.
X know of several eases of chills and
fever that have been cured by it.”
Ho writes Mr. Thus. Pullum, of Tay¬
lor, Geneva Co., Ala.
WORTH TEX DOLLARS A BOTTLE.
_ Mr T __ Ikoill5l Evans, of the _
* * s * • firm
of Evans & Bro., Merchants, Horn
town ' Accomack Co., Va., writes
fchat he had heen sick with digestive
dlsor(iers for Y ears aild had
fcned man y pBysKuans and medi
ernes without benefit. He began to
use Shaker Extract of Roots or Sei
" el ' s S y ru P about the lat of ' Tan *
1887 ’ and waa 80 ,liuch tetter 111
three week « that lie considered him
se lf practically a well man. He
adds: 3 “I have at this time one bot
on kand ’ and ^ ^ could not get
any more / would not take a ten
™Mar kill forit”
AR druggists, or Address A J.
White, Limited, IS 4 Warren St. N.Y.
AMEBIC AN I SOY
The Cheapest ana Best Weekly Paper
For Yount') Men and Boys in
the United Slates.
OXLY 9'i.OO PUll YKAIt.
A nix’een pBgep»pf*r, illnshitUil by tk-o
best mlri’H mid <ontHininf» hfoiitn «n-l
sketches from (he moW j onuhir writers
A great storv,“The Hoy Reporter,or »ha
Advent ores of a Yoiu»« Army Got respond
ent,” commenced ID V d. II,No. I lttttdy
Jan 7 , 1888 .
, Tim Atuertonn U was published for
one yea* »s ft monthly and Hs sueeesR w.»s
k) wiTelyfain**- f^reat ns compel it* pntdicdioii now
in ’
—
It willrati fn oeoh number throe grer.t
con tinned stories, wil 1 cohftfft ntly oottnui
sketches of trwvei, carious customs of
otLer iBtidft. i.dtentutes op haul hid >rr»,
tuu for the hoys, interesting experio>euts,
tv-cI ul articles showing*‘ho^ to do ii )tip i ,”
and “how to ua-be things.” A splendid
mniitMir spcrting page, with all thci news
about I ase l»all «nd pictuten « t * mu’# ur
player-. Exch-uige co'imm anil rt swera
to coirespondents. The A merle n Boy i-»
Hot a pMper of the ‘“blood and Ibundei’’
order. Patents can safely trnst it in the
hands of ti elr hoys, llemeniber it is $1
cheaper Ihijn any ottier io>s' pttpr r row
published Two copies will be sent t ( >
any address for $2.25. K<trple copies
sent on application, It is sold at. every
n^ws throughout 'be Unit* d Sti.lig at os
per eopv. Address
The American Ransom Philadelphia Hoy CV/ M
607 Sr . Pa.
AIIio Hansford, j Libel fi r Divorce in
V r r Harris
U til Hal s*ord ) Superior ()• urt
D 1 ppi uriut? ‘o 1 tie court tliat iho »te
fei.daiit Win Hu sfonl h»s not btense- ^
ed, t is ordered »«n 1 adjudgrd iiy ihs
Ci urt 1 hat s od case be eorni» iv d uu< KH -%
v re I t* perfected by ( ob'icdtiri in the
Hamilton •j.mKNAT,, a newspi ptr 1 ntdisn
ed n s*t d cunty. K A Rush f l,
I* flf s Anoiin v.
'I t 0 above a t d f( re going is a tine < x
tract fr >m mi* ubs Harrs Suprrinr C< nr’,
Oct. term. 1887 .
A l ? f'lf'ETT (IS (.
THE BEST OF
AGRICULTURALPAPERS
I- C* Ima* *f Rural World,prddii-hrd vv. 1 kN
it 5 1 Oft a ycar. It is a vt hire eiidiX
pag • seven column p tj*« r devoted to Ag
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