Newspaper Page Text
CARROLL FREE PRESS.
CARROLLTON, GA., Jrr.Y
’84
The Mass Meeting Tuesday.
The meeting on last Tue.‘
From -Harpers' Weekly.
Grover Cleveland.
The nomination of Governor Clev
eland defines sharply tlie actual is
sue of the Presidential election of
this vcar. He is a man whose ab-
the lowest limit consistent with
a due regard to the preservation of
the faith of the nation to creditors
and pensions.” Is this not honestly
>\
, „ „ , A ay I solute official integrity has never
for the purpose of selecting dele- boon questioned, who has nolabori-
-iona 1 and sena- j oug aiu j t ioubful explanations to un-
" as not . vt>ry ! dertake, and who is universally
largely attended. It was estimated known . w the (JoV ern 0r of New
that there were 'Try' dr BO persons
gates to tin
® A p «
torial conventions
present in the court house,7 and
the most. ,of these" of course
were from town. The meeting, if it
was the object to get at the public
sentiment of the county, was cer
tainly called at a very inoppor
tune time, in the. middle of the
week, on a day that was not a
public one, and at a season of the
year, when the farmers are busy
with their crops.
The meeting was called to order
by the chairman Of the executive
committee who stated its object,
when it Was organized by calling
J. L Cobb esq to the chair,and re
questing C. J. Julian to act as secre
tary •s^arptraiKEio t*e
In the selection of congressional
delegates the following gentlemen
were chosen: E. S. Roberts, II.
Hogan, 11. L. Rowe, J. W. Downs,
sr, Word Jones, and W. L. Craven,
B. F. Burns, D. X. Tilmon. The
delegates have the power of choos
ing their own alternates, and
here we think a mistake was made,
for it is quite likely that a majority
of the delegates will not be able to
attend, and it is often the case, that
the places of such,are sought by
professional politicians, who go to
conventions, not so much for the
purpose.of representing the public
sentiment of tlieir county as for the
purpose of making political capi
tal for themselves.
The following is a list of the sen
atorial delegates elected: E. VV.
A\ ells, J. B. Beall, H. C. Brown,
and J. M. Hewitt.
While therewas the usual amount
of political spouting and buncombe
speech making in the meeting it
upon the whole passed off very
harmoniouslv.
The Atlanta Constitution cries
out lustily for reform in one column
and in the next publishes an elab
orate editorial defending its can
didate for congress for gambling.
Our idea of reform
must be different from
that of the Constitution, for accord
ing to our idea, it means to elect
men to make laws, who are not
breakers of the law.
York , elected by an unpreedented
majority which was not partisan,
and represented both the votes and
the consent of an enormous body
of Republicans, and who as the
Chief Executive of the Stete stead
ily withstood the blandishments
and the threats of the worst el
ements of his party, and has justly
earned the reputation of a courage
ous, independent, and efficient
friend and promoter of adminis
trative reform. His name has be
come that of the especial represen
tative among our public men of the
integrity, purity, and economy of
administration which are objects of
the most intelligent and patriotic
citizens. The bitter and furious
hostility of Tammany and of Gen
eral Butler to Governor Cleveland
is his passport to the conlidence of
good men, and the general convic
tion that Tammany will do all that
it can to defeat him will be an ad
ditional incentive to the voters who
cannot support Mr. Blaine, and who
are unwilling not to vote at all, to
secure the election of a candidate
whom the political rings and the
party traders instinctively hate and
unitedly oppose.
So firm and “clean” and indepen
dent in his high office has Gover
nor Cleveland shown himself to be,
that he is denounced as not being a
democrat by his democratic oppo
nents. This denunciation springs
from the fact that he has not hesi
tated to prefer the public welfare to
the mere interest of his party. Last
autumn, when the democratic dis
trict attorney of Queens county was
charged with misconduct, the Gov
ernor heard the accusation and the
defense, and decided that it was
his duty to remove the officer. He
ts asked by his party friends to
A new mail route has been estab
lished from Cedartown, Ga., to
Merrillton, Ala., via Esom Hill,
Palestine, Borden’s Spring and
Cross Plains, by the East and West
Railroad of Alabama. Service will
begin on the route July 21. Sever
al new post offices have been estab
lished in consequence of the open
ing of this route.
The congressional contest in the
Fifth district is red hot. So far
Jackson is ahead, having carried
Henry and Douglas counties, the
only ones that have acted up to
this time. It will be a misfortune
to the whole state should Ham
monds be defoated.
Blaine and Logan have written
their letters of acceptance. They
are both long and tedious docu
ments. Blaine dwells particularly
upon the tariff question, arguing
in favor of protection.
The Darien Gazette isn’t particu
larly anxious to see briliant men
elected to Congress or the Legisla
ture. It prefers men that will work
fort he section which they repre
sent.
The Hon. 31 ike Summerlin of
Heard countv, attended the late
commencement ofthe university of
Georgia at Athens, having gradua
ted there in 1834—JO years ago.
The Atlanta letter of the Augusta
Xews says that Judge Stewart of
Griffin is an open candidate for Jus
tice of the Supreme court.
Judge Hiram Dennis of Troup
county has made 49 crops on the
place where he now lives. So says
the Lagrange Reporter.
constructed a tariff for revenue
defer the removal until after elec
tion, as otherwise the party would
lose the district. This kind of cour
age and devotion to public duty in
the teeth of the most virulent op
position of traders of his own party
is unusual in any public man,and it
hows precisely the executive qual
ity which is demanded at a time
when every form of speculation and
fraud presses upon the public treas
ury under the specious plea of par
ty advantage.
The argument that In an elec
tion it is not a man but a party that
is supported, and that the Demo
cratic party is less to be trusted
than the Republican, is futile at a
time when the Republican party
had nominated a candidate whom a
great body of the most conscienti
ous Republicans cannot support,
and the Democratic party has nom
inated a candidate whom a great
body of the most venal Democrats
practically bolt. Distrust of the
Democratic party springs from the
conduct of the very Democrats who
madly opposed Governor Cleveland
because they know that they can
not use him. The mere argument
is vain also, because no honorable
man will be whipped in to vote for
a candidate whom lie believes to be
personally disqualified for the Pres
idency on the ground that a party
ought to be sustained. The nomi
nation of Governor Cleveland is due
not so much to the preference of his
party as to the general demand of
the country for a candidacy which
stands for precisely the qualities
and services which aro associated
with his name.
promise? Having thus demanded
the reduction of the war tariff
within the revenue ssandard, it
proceeds to proscribe the mode and
manner of the proposed transition
from a protection system to a reve
nue system. This furnishes a com
plete refutation to the republican
charge that “a tariff for revenue on
ly” means a violent and reactiona
ry revision of the tariff, which
no revenue reformer ever medita
ted or proposed. The transition
even from a bad system to a good
system should be made with prop
er deliberation and laid in “a spirit
of fairness to all interests.” The
Republicans assert that the free
traders, as they persist in calling
us, mean to destroy American in
dustries. The Democratic plat
form denounces this with the coun
ter assertion of the purpose to “pro
mote their healthy growth” by the
introduction of free raw material
and fewer commercial restrictions.
Republicans arraign with a design
of reducing the American work
men to the level of the pauper la
bor of Europe. The Democratic
platform limits the reduction of du
ties to a point which will cover the
increased cost of living created by
the higher wages paid in this coun
try, which is a simple matter of de
tail, and in no wise a point of prin
ciple or of doctrine. In fact, all
through the tariff plank the demand
for no more revenue than will sup
port the Government economically
administered, and having replied
to the misrepresentations of the
Republicans and specified the
spirit which the Democracy will, if
entrusted with power, apply to the
revision of the tariff, the fundamen
tal idea and faith of the party are
embodied the clear, explicit and
ringing declaration that all “feder
al taxation shall be exclusive for
public purposes, and shall not ex
ceed the needs of the Government
economically administered.”
These words taken in connection
with the whole spirit and tenor of
the platform entirely sustain the
position of the friends of revenue
reform.
Speaking of Mr. Cleveland, Mr.
Watterson said:
“The Governor of Xew York is a
brave an honest magistrate. He is
liberal and enlightened. He has
allied him self with all that is clean
and sober, upright and elevated in
our public life. He is not a plum
ed knight. He is not a tattooed
man. He is not a legislative prize
fighter nor a diplomatic play actor,
lie never in his life wrapped the
American flag around him and
marched down the halls of the A-
merican Congress to show his shin
ing lance in the face of anybody.
He is not an experimentalist or an
adventurer, lie is a plain and solid
citizen who has done his duty al
ways and without any fuss of fust
ian and who has the strength and
the nerve to handle the new broom
which is to sweep the public service
clean. He has in the person of Mr.
Hendricks, joined to him all that
remains to us of the ‘old ticket,’
and finally, he is a lucky man in a
streak of good fortune. My belief
is that the ticket will be elected,
and for my own part I enter the
canvass without one single reserve
or regret.”
Ex-Governor L. P. Blackburn,
General Simon B. Buckner and
several others made ringing speech
es in behalf of the ticket and plat
form.
t
GEORGIA PACIFIC RAILWAY.
4LOO-AX, TIME TABLE.
c ^
O -
§ Central Standard Time.
& = ~
^ 5 —
© ~ 7Z
TAYLOR NIFG. CO.
For terms and prices apply to E. G. KRAMEIl, Carrollton, Ga.
•\M37in *V ,vOJ !T\
'wpMu 1 ?o rojj lor'?
• • -uoiii.avAUT: nyssj-ons in R-uidmio
a,.1 t .» s utt'j pm
1 \l i»‘« ; aMJniojjUQiuP.ttnoAUVVSIlOlIX
V ;4 X •'!> 'ssoDDns p3SSL<unsun jo .uii)
-••O • Jl"U « 3U s *4 *NH31‘NONV83*1
*jr!r»S smSoq satismwjitep fpe joj a
SVestetjan -female-QoUccre,
The FAftj-WVcnth Annua
S-.ith. All motl.wn convcr.icnc
mention tnhcallh a
•KtC
1 l.ltvrut
KENTUCKY
MILITARY
INSTITUTE.
At Fnmidnlr I*. O..Fr:mhlln Co.. Ky.. -ix miW
from Frankfort. Has tin* most litvthhfn! »i*«i Beautiful
location i:i the State, l it l>y iris ;i>’.veil »s lieated by
steam. A full r.tnl ablc.Collcirt* Faculty. F.\pcn>os a*
moder ate as any first-cIa.-NScollege. Forilclli year be-
eins 1*1. For ratnl<»uu*»<. eir.. address
as above. COX. K. I>. ALLEN, Supt.
RHUDY & SPURLOCK,
C-AJRIROILILTOISr,, GEORGIA,
DEALERS IN GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
SUCH AS
Dry Goods of all kinds, Groceries, light and heavy,
Boots, Shoes, Hats and Caps, Clothing to fit anybody,
From the smallest boy to the largest man. Hardware,
Crockery and Glass ware of all kinds.
All of these goods are for sale and we don't propose to be undersold by any one.
The puhlie are earnestly invited to examine our goods and prices before buying
elsewhere. Wo also sell the
LIGHT RUNNING, NOISELESS HARTFORD SEWING MACHINE,
The best in the market. Now a word to our friends who owe us. We are greatly
in need of the money due us, either for goods or guanos. We are eompelled to set
tle up our indebtedness, and cant do so unless our friends who owe us come to our
rescue. So please come up and settle and save cost.
We have just received a fresh lot of GUANOS and ACIDS for WHEAT and
OATS. Come to see us one .and all and you will find W. O. Perry and Joint II.
Ward always on hand to show you goods. Respectfully,
ltllUDY & SPURLOCK.
A. M.
7 Iff
P. M.
4 i*j
0,
L’ve Atlanta Arrive
P. M.
8 (Mi
A. M-
6 15
7 23
4 30
o
♦Howell, Ga
7 19
6 30
4 30
7
♦Peyton, Ga
7 40
7 .1
4 33
s
Chattahoochee i
7 37
6 09
7 40
3 13
12
♦Concord, (la
7 27
5 48
7 -32
3 23
15
Mableton, Ga
7 21
o :55
8 00
3 40
18 1
Austell, (4a
7 11
3 20
8 08
3 31
21
Salt Springs, Ga
7 08
5 09
8 22
6 17
27
Douglasville, Ga
6 55
;> 43
8 30
6 30
32
Winston, Ga
6 -K)
4 20
8 33
7 16
38
Villa Rica, Ga
6 29
3 52
9 11
7 48
45
Temple, Ga
6 13
3 20
9 33
8 26
54
Bremen, Ga
3 54
2 40
10 (Ml
9 08
64
Tallapoosa, Ga
5 32
2 00
10 is
my/9 3-j
70
Muscadine, Ala
5 17
1 30
10 3S
Jo OS
77
Ed wards vill, Ala
5 00
12 55
10 36
10 37
84
Heflin, Ala
4 44
12 25
11 10
11 01
90
Davisville, Ala
4 31
A. M
11 38
11 IS
11 14
93
Choccolocco Ala
4 24
11 44
11 28
11 29
97
DeArmanville, Ala
4 16
11 29
11 42
11 31
101
Oxford, Ala
4 03
10 56
12 (Ml
12 (Ml
•:-■*•
♦Oxanna, Ala
1 00
10 50
I* M.
12 10
A. M.
12 10
103
104
Anniston, Ala
3 40
10 45
12 S3
12 50
112
♦Berclair, Ala
3 10
10 00
12 43
1 05
116
Eastaboga, Ala
3 (Ml
9 45
1 02
1 33
122
Lincoln, Ala
2 45
9 18
1 16
1 55
127
Riverside, Ala
2 30
8 94
1 23
2 05
129
Seddon, Ala
2 25
S4K
1 36
2 30
134
Eden, Ala
2 12
8 25
1 33
2 56
140
♦Cook’s Springs, Ala
1 33
i i>S
2 10
3 24
145
♦Brompton Ala
1 30
7 31
2 20
3 40
150
Leeds, -Via
1 20
i l-»
2 50
4 30
161
♦Irondale, Ala
12 30
6 25
3 03
5 00
167
ARR. Birmingham LYE
12 33
6 00
P. M.
A. M.
1
P. M.
P. M.
3 20 p m.
10 20 p ni.
6 00 a m.
Lve Birmingham Are
Arr Merida n
New Orleans
12 20 p ni.
= 5 20 a m.
| io oo p m.
3 30 a m .
5 00 a m.
Read Down.
Jackson
» Vicksburg Lve
♦F r.At; Stations
.
: 10 :55 j) m.
8 00 pm.
Read Up,
JOY
Sleeping Car on night trains between Atlanta and Birmingham.
Westward—Connect at Oxana with E T V& G and at Birmingham
with C X O & T P and L & X.
Eastward—Connect at Atlanta with R & D, Ga It It, Central R R
of Ga, E T V & G, W A A, and A & W P R R.
THE SUIN'.
SEW YORK, 1S84.
FARMERS LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST!
ioo Cooking Stoves Just Received
AT THE
STOVE EMPOBIUM
Stoves off from last season, down low, and must be sold!
ALSO
Tin Ware, Hard Ware of all kinds, Crockery, Wood, Wllow, and Glass Ware.
Brooms, Trays, Sifters, and a general assortment of House Furnishing goods.—
Come everv bodv and price and be convinced.
JESSE E. GRIFFIN.
TMMIU1 Film
1 «COLLEGE.*
The DeKalb Xews declines to
support a man for Congress “with
whom poker playing is even a ‘cas
ual occurrence.”
Col. A. P. Mooty formerly super
intendent of the public schools at
West Point has been selected su
perintendent of the puhlie schools
in Columbus.
Watterson and Tariff.
Louisville, Ky. July 18.—A mass
meeting of 5,000 people assembled
at Court Place last evening to ratify
the nomination of Cleveland and
Hendricks. There was great enthu
siasm and good humor. Hon. Hen
ry Watterson was the first speaker,
and after giving an account of his
stewardship at Chicago, discussed
the tariff plank in the platform and
explained how the victory had been
won in committee for the phrase
“a tariff for public purposes exclu
sively.” He said that the course
pursued by the more representa
tive protectionists on the committ
ee, notably 31 r. Burke, of Louisiana,
Senator 3rc Pherson, of Xew Jersey,
and ex-senator Davis, of West Yir-
ginia, was frank and manly. Ev
en 3Ir. Converse, of Ohio showed a
commendable spirit of self-repres-
An nld and firmly established Institution. I/ieated
U'ar the centre of the Hill Country of X.C. Possessing
unsurpassed advantages at unprecedentedly low rates.
Begins its next session A us. 20,1X84. A Mineral Sprint
of Health—Giving water on the College grounds, For
catalogue,address the /Vinci/infs,TUomasville, X.C.
A Tale of Two Crutches-
ASKEW, BRADLEY & CO.
BARGAINS! EA.EC3-A.HsTS!!
We have a large ami well selected, .stock of
Dry Goods, Groceries, Clothing, Boots,
Shoes, Hats, Notions, Trunks, &c.
In fact everything usually kept ill a first class store, which we propose to sell at
THE VERY LOWEST FIGURES.
Give us a call and we will convince you that we mean just exactly what we say,
ALSO
ASKEW & BRADLEY
Next door to ASKEW, BRADLEY & CO have on hand a large stock of
FURNITURE, COFFINS AND BURIAL CASES.
COFFINS, FROM $3 TO $15;
BTTFtIFYL CASES, FFLOTYE $25 TO $100.
Metallic cases furnished on short notice. Vault cases and coverings furnished and
delivered free in the city. Don't fail to give us the first call
them cheaper than they can be made or bought elsewhere.
Burial Robes, Burial Gloves, etc.
ever brought to Carrollton at price:
cut Bed springs and 3Iatt resses; w<
About sixty million copies of The Sun
have gone out of our establishment
duringthe past twelve months.
If you were to paste end to end all the
columns of till The Suns printed and sold
last year you would get a continuous
strip of interresting information, common
sense, wisdom, sound doctrine, and sane
wit long enough to reach from Printing
House square to the top of 3£ouut Cop
ernicus in the moon, then hack to Print
ing House square, and then three-quarters
of the way back to the moon again .
Rut The Sun is written for the inhabit
ants of the earth; this same strip of in
telligence would girdle the globe
twenty-seven or twenty-eight times.
If every buyer of a copy of The Sun
during the past year lias spent only one
hour over it, anil if his wife or his grand
father has spent another hour, this news
paper in 1888 lias afforded the human
nice thirteen thousand years of steady
reading, night and day.
It is only by little calculations like
these that you can form any idea of the
circulation of the most popular of Ameri
can newspapers, or of its intluenceon the
opinions and actions of American men
and women.
The Sun is, and will continue to be, a
newspaper which tells the truth without
fear of consequences, which gets at the
facts no matter how much the process'
costs, which presents the news of all the
world without waste of words and in the
most readable shape, which is working
with all its heart for the cause of honest
govennent, and which therefore believes >
that the Republican party must go, and
go in this coming year of our Lord, 1884.
If you know the Sun, you like it al
ready, and you will read it with accustom
ed dilligence and profit during what is
sure to be the most interesting year in its
history. If you do not yet know the Sun
it is high time to get in the sunshine.
mewHome
for we can furnish
Also a full line of
Also tin* fullest and tastiest line of furniture
to suit everyone. We carry a full line of Pat-
also make a specialty of
SEAATIlSra- UVEFYCFFFISrES-
Attachments, Oils and Needles. Sewing 3Iabhilies repaired by a first-class machi-
■st. All work guaranteed. Orders for coffins filled day or night.
ASKEW Sc BRADLEY.
A Well Known Citizen of At
lanta Lavs Down his Uki ti des.
I have only a few words to say, which
are to state that I have been confined to
my bed for two months with what was
called Nervous Rheumatism, or Sciatica.
I was only enabled to hobble about
occasionally by the use of crutches, and
in this condition I commenced the use of
B. B. 15.. four bottles of which enabled
me to discard the use of my crutches and
attend to business. I had previously used
all well recommended medicines without
relief. It has been over two months since
using 15. B. 15., and l eo us ider myself
a permanently cured man.
J. P. Davis,
Atlanta, Ga. West End.
Frightful Nasal Catarrh.
PIECES OF BONE,
l’or four years I have been afflicted with
a very troublesome catarrh of tin* head
So terrible has its nature been that when
1 blew my nose small pieces of bones
would frequently come out of my mouth
and nose. The discharge was copious and
at times exceedinglv offensive. 31 v blood
The Columbus Times is not an
admirer of dark horses and hence
likes the candor of Col. Harris in
openly announcing his candidacy.
platform excepting General But
ler, arrived at a final decision,
which carried notmerley the judg-
The lleporter says th.it the La- mcl ,’ t ' ! , " 1 t of
(lr.ii.ge Oiliaml Mam.fact..!.,- l o. i cat ' 11 " fl1 "' l“ ,rtl «
propose to gin cotton the coming Tht ‘ ^‘mmd sentence denouncing
season for 80 cents per 100 pounds Bopuldcan party for having
or fl.off per bale. That is getting it hilled to relieve the country of
/Jown pretty. fine. ■ crushing war taxes, was, he said,
ion for the sake of united action
The result was that the suh-com-. tecanie *> impure that my general health
mittce of eight, which made the " i ""’° 0r
Numerous medicines were used without
relief, until I began tile use of 15. 15. 15.,
and three bottles acted almost like magic.
Since their ust* not a symptom lias returned
and I feel in every way quite restored to
health. I am an old citizen of Atlanta, and
refer to almost any one living on Butler
street, and more particularly to Dr. L, M.
Gillam, who knows of my ease.
31 us. Elizabktii Knott.
\\ (' \\ ill mail on application to ail} onein* ^ist what its n&m^intj^tes; a^i'epetn^e X^et
terested in blood and Skin I liseases, Scrof-
but another way of endorsing the ula Rheumatism. Kidnev Troubles, etc.,. costiv<*n£>s. jaundice. Dyspepsia, Malaria, Sict-
wouderful and unquestionable testimoni-
I Is of cures effected bv 15. 15. 15., the dress on ft postal card for ICO page book on the
L -t:—and its Diseases,” to DR. SANFORD, 3i
For Everything that goes to make
Desirable Gun, the
REMINGTON FIREARMS
UNEQUALED
SHOT GUN.
MODEL OF
1882.
RIFLES,
SHOT GUNS,
REVOLVERS,
RIFLE CANES.
FIR 1 : *,*?W!Sfor HUNTING
and T,‘..7C,ST SHOOTINC.
SEND FOrt ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. -«*
IAHBERSOM,- FURMAN & CO.,
MiNCTON SPORTINC COOD8,
281 & 283 BROADWAY,
SOLE ACENTS F.t
WESTERN OFFICE,
D. H. LANIEER80N & CO
73 STATE STREET. CHICAGO. ILL.
YORK.
Te fcaee GOOlt HE 4I.TU Hie ITTEH most he kept In or.l<-n
Guide to Success in
Business
and
Society,
TKI5MS TO MAIL SUllSCKIUKUS :
f GjJ'HtfH 1 . OUTOF ORDER.
&gmaghSEC°
30 UNION SQUARE NEWYORK,
ill. ” mass. GA. *
FOR
MASS.
SALE BY
The several editions of the Sun are
bv mail.post paid, as follows:
DAILY—JO cents a month, 80 a year:
with Sunday edition, 87.
SUNDAY—Fight pages. This edition
furnishes the current news of the
world, special articles of intere
everybody, and literary review
new* books of the highest merit. 81
a year,
WEEKLY—81 a year. Eight pages of
the best matter of the daily issues:
an agricultural department of une
qualled value, special market reports
and literary, scientific, and domestic
intelligence, make the Weekly Sun
■° ut JOHN 31. FIELDS. Carrollton Ga.
LORRILLARD’S
MACCOBOY SNUFF.
ap
( At TK»N ri > t < :
As many inferior imitations have
pea ml on the market in package- so
closely resembling ours as to deceive the
unwary, we would request tin* purclia-er
the newspaper for the farmer's to sce that the ml lithographed tin tains
household. To clubs of ten, with 810 in which it i- packed a w ay- ln ar
«U K NAME AM) TKAllK MAKK.
In buying an imitation you pay a«
muchfor'an in ferior article as the gen
uine costs.
an extra copy free,
Address I. W. ENGLAND, Publisher
The Si n, N Y City.
Dr. Pemberton‘s Triplex Liver Pills.
These celebrated Liver (tills contain
BE SURE YOU OBTAIN THE GENUINE
three medicinal elements of rare and won-. Lorrillard’s Climax
ilerful efficacy the concrete june» of 'nx' T w* im
vegetables which ate collected and dried;Iy** _ - * ‘ A T IJ ” H BA( ( O.
in shells., and and according to the high-! The Finest Sweet Navy Chewing
est medical authorities, nothing is known ’ Tobacco 3hule.
in pharmacy or medicine to equal their
therapeutic action upon the Liver and
Blood. Triplex Liver Pills act directly
The Genuine always bears a Red Tin-Tag
with our name thereou.
BEWARE OF I3IITATIOXS.
the Liver: cure (hills and Fever, Dys
pepsia, Sick Headache, Billions Colic. - - -
Constipatioii, Rheumatism. Piles, Ralpi- F3 F3T TVfor the working cla-s. bend
tation, Dizziness, Torpid Livej, Coated cents for postage, and w«*
Tongue, Sleeplessness anil all Diseases -will mail you free, a rovaL valuable box
of the Liver and Stomach. If you do u f sample'goods that will put you iii the
not "feel very well." a single (till at bed- way of makiug more luonev in a few days
tune stimulates the stomach, restores than von ever thought possible at anv
thc appetite, imparts vigor to the system, business. ( apital not required. We wiil
'The remarkable success w hich lias at- start you. You can work all tin* time or
tended the use of the Triplex Pills just- in span* time onlv. The work is univer-
lv entitles them to lie denominated the sallv adapted to both sexes, ynunv and
best Liver pill and antl-billios medicine old.' You can easilv earn from Jn*Wms
evrr introduced; and, like a True Friend to sJ every evening.' That all who want
when once know n w ill be appreciated work may test tin* business, we make
and prove a blessing to the world! Try this impanelled offer: to all who are uot
them once and you w ill never w ant a well satisfied we w ill-end
better pill. For sale by druggists. the trouble of writing to us. Full
Du. J. S. Pkmiikkton (i Co., Cbom- ticulars. directions, etc., sent frt*e.
Sts. Atlanta. Ga., Proprietors.
Hickory pud cherry require a Morrison Bill, which was simply a
growth of tliirty years before they Democratic measure to reduce war
are valuable for timber, maple, taxes.
twenty years, and beeches fifteen The platform pledges the Demo- 1)rice
years. i era-tic party “to reduce taxation to
• quickest blood purifier ever known. Large
| bottles 81.00 or (» for-SJdKJ. Sold by all j
druggists or expressed on receipt of;
BLOOD BAT.3I CO.
Atlanta, Ga.
Livor t
Dunne Street, New Yerk.
ill ftKMMUI WILL TULL IW ITS BCPUTAT10S.
The most universally useful book ever
published. It tells completely How to no
Evkkythimj in the best way, How to lie
Your own Lawyer, How to do Business
Correctly and Successfully, how to act
in Society and everywhere. .V gold mine
of varied information to all classes for con
stant reference, aoknts wanted for
or spare time. To know why tills book
1 to pay for
par-
For-
tunes will l*e made by those who give
their whole time to tin* w ork. < ireat -no
cess absolutely sure. Dout tlelav. Start
now. Address Stinson A Co.. Portland.
Maine.
home. 8.1.00 outfit free.
i «eek at _
^jqtporay x„ns k . the proprietors of tlH-Soutli«''rnC
all ifal not required. Leader, if von want , . , . .
ok business at which persons of cither sex. * lX :, ‘ or * • " mvii we arc enabled
Blanks for sale at this office
iof ifKAi. value and attractions sells bet- young or old. can lit ke great pay all the club our ]»ajH*r and that excelle
-j ter than .any other, apply for terms to time they work, with absolute certainty agricultural journal at $2.00 m*r s
STANDARD IT BLiSinNG CO, write for particulars to II. Hai.i.ktt A mini. Every farmer ought to ta
blO Arch St. Philadelphia, l'a. Co. I’ortland, Maine. I the Cultivator
3Ye have made arrangim-nts with
ul-
to
Rent
an-
»ke
« —
,n c ' '