Newspaper Page Text
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OBdil Piyq of SptldlM Co.
Mittal •( Hpn Um CHy 1 Sriffin
▲dTerasiBff Bates.
Hjwl imi Y*n lto»« or Ire* to b» oooni-
l^ar^no« tiL2 *u *, u«
_ rate* will he nod* with partire
to MOtMU their adv*rtirem«Bto
E^SuMMtoeee tor the Deilr.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For President,
8ROVER CLEVELAND,
of New York.
For Ywe President,
ALLEN G. THURMAN,
£___._______ Of Ohio.; .
For Governor.
JOHN B GORDON.
For Secretory of State,
N. O. BARNETT.
*
For State Treasurer,
R. U. HARDEMAN.
For Comptroller General,
W. A. WRIGHT.
For Attorney General,
CLIFFORD ANDERSON.
For Member of Con greet, 5th Diet.,
JOHN D. STEWART,
of Spalding,
For Senator—26th District.
JOHN I. HALL,
of‘Spelding.
For Representative,
N. M. OOLLENS,
of Spalding.
_
Better ie peace hanging bead
downward from a balloon than to
write editorials overhead of a squall¬
ing baby, aa wee the experience of
the heavy editor of the News yester
day morning.
The Columbus Exposition has
been postponed from October 4—18
to November 14—Deo. 1. This is
on aocount of the yellow fever quar
antine prevailing all around Coium
bus and removes the time of opening
until after frost. Now, if they will
use their advertising fund a little
more liberally in a few of the sur*
rounding newspapers rather than con
centrate it all on the Enquirer-Sun,
they may yet get a good crowd.
PIKE COUNTY DEMOCRATS^
The Democracy of Pike county
has nominated for the legislature
Capt. J. H. Mitchell and Judge
James Means. Their majorities in
the primary were large enough to
make them incontestable, and they
should now receive the united sap*
port of the patty, independent of
any aide issues or differences of opin
ion.
In going into a primary where
the chances were against them, after
having been nominated by a large
faction of the partjr, Motors. Gard¬
ner and Madden showed a patriot
ism that should endear them to the
people of Pike county. They did
not propose to allow may issue to
endanger the ohanees of two Dera
ocrata being sent to the Legislature,
while a Republican ticket was in
the field. Both - have represented
the county honorably end well in
the past, gaunty the respect of their
opponents god even bringing many
to their side; and now we believe it
will be their wish that all their fol¬
lowers shall abide' the result and
vote for MitoheH and Means. Let
this eleotion see a united Democrat
ie party is Pike,* >
Is asss&Ual to good health; but at this season
IS U Wttoa l«t, owing to the poverty or Impu-
effeet at the
Hood's Sarsaparilla to a
*1 kMdtelM tor mating an appettto,
Now is tbs tons to tafce
ft. Vt rente RoofiBansparilla. —
WHITE OR BLACK I
Tha Republicans of Spalding coon
completed their ticket on Saturday
the nomination of Rev. Buford,
n colored minister, to ran for the
Senate on the ticket with Lake
Evans, very much colored. The else
Ron of tuxi Wednesday, then, which
started oat as a walk over, has a
question injected into it which should
awaken every Democrat to tbo neoes
sity of turning out end voting.
For the first time in the knowledge
of tbe the writer the negroes of
Spalding, encouraged by snpposed
dissensions among tbe whites, have
effected a sufficient organization to
ran a fall ticket of their own for both
branches of tbe general assembly.
The dissatisfaction upon which alone
they oould base a reasonable hope of
electing their ticket we do not believe
to exist; bat if it.does,then it should
speedily disappear at even the dusky
shadow of being represented in the
highest councils of the State by tbe
ignorant and lowest element of the
community.
The question is not whether every
body io tbe tbe county has just the
candidate that be wants to vote for
—that seldom happens—but wheth
er we want this county ruled by
white men or by negroes. We do
not belieye that Spalding county pol
itics have fallen to so low an ebb as
to admit of more than one answer;
bat that answer should be made em
photic and convincing for all time to
come.
Let every Democrat turn out and
vote on next Wednesday, October
3d.__^
Log Cabin Success.
\\ bat ails tbe young men?
ilobent Garrett’s father left him a
fortune of twenty millions. He was
from childhood reared in luxury;
be received a splendid education
with an especial training into a tnor
ough knowledge of railroad manage
ment and was expected to succeed
bis father os a railroad king.
Within three years after tbe re
sponsibilities which his father’s
death threw upon him were as
earned, be is reported a broken down
man, with mind and health perman
ently shattered,
George Law is another young man
left with millions of money, who is
reported among the “wrecks.” His
father, bred a stone mason, was of
gigantic size and strength, with com
monsurate brain power, so he became
a great contractor, then a railroad
king and left a half & dozen millions
for bis sod to dissipate. The young
man is a success as a dissipator.
Tbe founders of both of these
great estates were born in tbe most
bunble walks of life, grew strong,
mentally and physically, by simple
Jiving and most honest labor and do
veloped into financial giants. Their
sons were reared in the lap of luxury
and developed into intellectual pig
mies.
The great men of onr country
have not, as a rule, come from the
elegant mansions of the cities, but
from the Log Cabins of tbe rural
districts. Simple ways of living,
freedom from dissipation and oner
vating pleasures, simple remedies for
disease, < ffective and which leave no
poison in the system, develop braw
ny, brainy men, who compel tbe
world to recognize] their strength
and power.
Tbe wholesome, old-fashioned Log
Cabin remedies are tbe surest and
safest for family use. Our grand¬
mothers knew bow to prepare tbe
teas and syrnps of roots, herbs and
balsams which drive tbe disease out
of tbe system by natural methods
and leave no after effects. Tbe most
potent of these old-time remedies
were, after long and searching ioves
tigation, secured by A. H. Warner of
safe cure fame, and are now put out
for tbe “healing of tbe nations” in
tbe Warnet’s Log Cabin remedies.
Regulate the regulator with War¬
ner’s Log Cabin Sarsapilla and with
pure blood giving health, strength,
men till and bodily vigor, you may
hope to cope successfully with tbe
most gignontic financial problems of
tbe age, without wrecking tbe health
and manboood.
A German Society Convention In Gotham.
New York,'S ept. 25.—[Special.]—The
sdcond annual convention of the United
States Banmeistei's association will be
held here October 15th, 16th and 17th.
The programme for the meeting includes
a reception with a speech of welcome by
Mayor Hewitt, a grand “cownurs' bus-
iness transaction and a grand banquet.
It is expected will attend. fully six hundred dele¬
gatee
A NARROW ESCAPE.
The Princess of Wale’s Start¬
ling Experience.
THE FEVER 7t FERNANDINA.
nuffstle'K Smallpox Scare—-Wardered Th^lr
Six Y< nr Olil Playmate—-Child
Killed by aa F.*gl«—Jmlgc
Lynch at Baltimore.
London, Sept. 25.—Tho Sunday Times
publishes a Vienna telegram saying that
while the princess of Wales and her
daughters carriage were Omunden out driving the other in a pony day,
near with¬
they approached a rail way crossing
out ing of heeding danger. an When electric the bell giving reached warn¬
carrigc by wires
the track two drawbars, worked
from signal boxes, were lowered, pre¬
venting either advance or retreat. Col.
Clarke, the e«rort, hurriedly dismounted
and, ducking ui tier the bar, pulled the
pony alongside t.,.’ fence just as the train
passed.
Viena, fk>pt. '35.—The princess of
Wales han urted for London.
Jacksonville, Sept. 25.—There have
been 2,021! cases of fever to date, and 218
deaths.
reported Up to 2 p.m. the board number health of new is 21; cases It
whites and by twenty the colored. of The names
of tire white patients are as follows:
Miss May of Hawkins 310 W, Duval; Cedar one
child Alonzo Berman, 210
street; A. P. Singer, corner Hogan and
Union; Mrs. J. U. Breynard, 84 East
Church street; Alvia Herrick, Fairfield;
Benj. Herrick, Fhi f ' ;i; Mrs. Arnold,
Panama; A. B. CY.... iljohn, corner of
Laura and State street*; Henry Ft. Clark,
Springfield; son of Rev, M. M. Wam-
boldt, shell road; Sarah Gaines, colored,
Hansentown.
The only death reported is that of
Joshua S. Burch, one of the board of
commission of public works, who died
at his home in Savilla early this morn¬
ing. He was a native of New- Jersey,
and came to Florida in 1865. He was
never married, and wa3 an extensive
brick manufac? and owned a large
amount of pro; in and around the
city. Mr. Grace Gardner, the Sub-Tropi¬
of
cal, died at tbe Sand Hills last night.
Some weeks since he had yellow fever
and had fully recovered. Grief at the
death of his wife and other domestic
troubles again prostrated him with a low
type of malarial fever.
Ml.ItSH\r, 11 AZINE llT UIED.
Tlic Oi:i« Famous Commander Without a
Single French Mourner.
Madrid, Sept. 25. — [Special.]—The fu¬
neral of Marshal Bazine occurred here
to-day. A few intimate friends accom¬
panied his body to the grave. Not a sin¬
gle Frenchman was presenf to honor the
remains of the former commander of the
French army.
North Carolina Wants No More Refugees.
Raleigh, N. C., Sept. 25.—The North
Carolina board of health have given their
opinion to Gov. Scales that no more re¬
be fugees received from yellow into the fever state, districts unless should they
are placed in a sanitary Hendersonville, camp under
guard. Those sent to
parole, mington, Norfolk and Charleston.
A Thousand Refugees at Louisville.
Louisville, Ky., Sept, 25.—It is esti¬
mated that over one thousand refugees
from Jacksonville, Decatur and Jackson
are now making their homes in Louis¬
ville. There are now at yellow the Eruptive
hospital the three latest cases arrivals of from Decatur fever.
Among Carroll, of New York. He tells
is N. A.
a horrible story of the sufferings of the
people there. He says that they are star¬
ving, and there is no way for them to
to get food.
THE PICAYUNE EDITOR IN GOTHAM.
Mr. Nicholson Says New Orleans Is Safe
From the Fever.
New York, Sept. 25.—Mr. E. J. Nich¬
olson, editor and proprietor of the New
Orleans Picayune, is in the city, and is
stopping at the Windsor hotel. Mr. and
Mrs. Nicholson Yellow have Sulphur been spending Springs, the
summer at in
the mountains York of Virginia. sever# They will
remain in New for days,
and will then go direct to New Orleans.
“We are not at all afraid of yellow fe¬
ver,” said Mr. Nicholson to a World re¬
porter yesterday, “because, if the proper
measures are taken, there will be no
danger. There is some cause for uneasi¬
ness when such cities as Atlanta throw
open their gates, because people from to
the infested districts can go ;from there
to all parts of the south, by misrepre¬
senting where they the came from. Still I
think there is not remotest danger
of an epidemic in New Orleans. Galves¬
ton quarantined New Orleans, but I see
the quarantine has been removed. Of
course it was unnecessary, fever as New our York.” city is
as free from the now as
Tb« Chief of the Signal Service Gives His
Views. \
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25.— [Spe¬
cial.]—The chief officer of the signal bu¬
reau stated last night that the cool north¬
eastern wind now prevalent here, ex¬
tends from Maine to Georgia along the
Atlantic coast. He says this cool weather
will not reach the yellow fever sufferers
in the south. Those people last week
suffered dications most do not terribly point from to heat, relief and for in¬
any
them for some time to come. The
weather down there will continue sultry
for quite a while, with occasional wet
spells. What can be called cool weather
will not reach them for a month or six
weeks yet, and frost cannot be looked
for there inside of two months.
The records have rarely shown freet in
Florida or Alabama before December,
and it has been known to be as late as
Christmas.
There is a bare possibility of a low
temperature the crossing latter Texas, of and the thence week,
easterly will them part rel ief.
which give some
Fernandiua’s Plague Confirmed.
Washington, D. C., Sept. 25.—[Spe¬
cial J—Surgeon-General Hamilton's state¬
ments that yellow fever had a hold on
Fern&ndina was confirmed to-day by the
receipt of telegrams from Drs. Starbuck
and held Dettera, body stating proved that the an disease autopsy just be
on a to
yellow fever'
WHAT IS
It is that Impurity in the blood, which, ac¬
in tho glands of tho neck, pro¬
unsightly lumps or swellings; which
painful running sores on tho arms,
or feet; which developes ulcers la the
ears, or nose, often causing blindness or
which Is the origin of pimples, can¬
growths, or the many other manifesta¬
usually ascribed to ‘'humors;” which,
upon the longs, causes consumption
death. Being the most ancient, it to the
general of all diseases or affections, for
few persona are entirely free from It
Z£ n CURED
By taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which, by
remarkable cures it has accomplished,
when other medicines have failed, has
Itself to bo a potent and peculiar
for this disease. Some of these
are really wonderful. If you suffer from
he sure to try Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
“ My daughter Mary was afflicted with scrof¬
sore neck from tbe time she was 22 months
till she became six years of age. Lumps
In her neck, and one of them after
to the size of a pigeon’s egg, became
running sore for over three years. We gave
Hood’s Sarsaparilla, when the lump and
Indications of scrofula entirely dis¬
and now she seems to be a healthy
J. S. Cablile, Nauright, N. J.
N. B. Be sure to get only
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
#1; lixforffS. Prepared only
C. I. HOOD A CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
IQO Doses One Dollar
POLITICAL ANNOUNCEMENTS.
To the Voters of Spalding County.
At the solicitation of friends I offer for
position of Tax Collector of Spalding
subject toa nomination of the Dem¬
party if one is held.
B. D. BREWSTER.
THE VERNON,
A. E. RIDDLE & SON, Prop’rs
Cor. First Avenue and Thirteenth St.,
: : : GA.
you are most cordially invited to stop
us while in the city. septlSdlm
New Advertisements.
IMQ REVOLVERS, tend stamp for
price listlo JOEINSTON & SON,
Penn.
PARKER’S BALSAM
HAIR beautifies the hair.
Cleanses and
[Promotes a luxuriant to’ Restore growth. Gray
Nsver Fails
Hair to its Youthful Color.
.
[Prevent* Dandruff and Druggists. hair falling
_50c. and SI .00 at
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
rpHE A great SC1KNC3! Medical OF Work LIFE, the
of the
figeon Manhood, Nervona and t
Debility, Premature
Errors of Youth, and
untold miseries consequent
300 pages 8 vo, 125
for all diseases..
full gilt, only Jl.OO, |j i l■l■^■llHII
scaled. Illustrative sample free to all young
middle aged men. Send now. The Gold and
Medal awarded to the author by the Na-
Medical Association. Address P. O box
Mass., or Dr. W. H. PARKER, grad-
Harvard Medical College, 25years’practice
Boston, who may be consulted Confldcjptlally
Diseases of Man. Office No. i Bulflneh
HINDERCORNS.
only sure Cure for Coro*. Stop* all pain. fiOfOTM
to the feet. 15c. at Druggist#. Hiscoi<fcCo.,N. Y.
S GINGER TONIC
The best of all remedies for
Pains, Colic, all Indiges¬ Stom¬
Exhaustion and
and Bowel troubles. Also!
most effective cure fori
Colds, Bronchitis and!
of the refreshing breathing!
It promotes
improves the prostration, appetite,
nervous
gives new life aged. and strength and $ Drgguists-
the weak and 50 c. 1 . 00 , at ,
Grateful--Comforting.
COCOA
BREAKFAST.
“by a thorough knowledge of the natural
which govern the oparations of diges
and nutrition, and by a careful applica-
of the fine properties of well selected
Mr. Epps has provided with cur delicately provid¬
our breakfast tables a
beverage which may save us many
doctors’ bills. It is by the judicious
of such article of diet that a constitution
be gradually built up until strong
to resist every tendency to disease.
of subtle maladies are floating
us ready to attack wherever there is a
point. Wo may escape many a fatal
by keepingourselvec well iortifiedwith
blood and a properly nourished frame.”
Service Gazette, Made simply with
water or milk. Sold only in half-
tins, Grocers, labelled thus:
JAMES EPPS &CO.,
Homoeopathio London, Chemists, England.
siVELOUS
DISCOVERY!
Anv Book leaned la aae reading.
.Wind wandering- cured.
Speaktaar wilbaat note*.
coadenaard by Supreme Court
inducement* to correspondence
Prospectus, with opinions of Dr. Wm. A,
the world famed Specialist Thompson, in
diseases, Daniel Greenleaf
great Pyschologist, J. M.Buckley, Richard L». D,,
of the Christian Advocate, Judge Gibson,
the Scietist, Hons.
P, Benjamin, and others , sent post
by Prof. A. L0I8ETTE,
237 Fifth Are.. New York.
THE 4
-FALL - GAMPAIG
IN THE
Dry Goods Trad
has opened up and it finds
FLEMISTER-
Well Equipped Pa me witha |arge stock of new anddesirabfe goods 0 in ^ every 6 ** #|
and Jobbers rush off the remainder of their stock
at reduced prices, and 1 now have or-
' ders out for thesff goods,
and will offer
them at
BVSuch prices that it will pay you to make fre¬
quent visits to my Place.'Ml
Will ofbr Monday morning one case Standard Prints at 5 c., worth 7
353 doz. Ladies Hose in Solid Black Seal Brown and Blue . t 5 c
per pair, well worth 10 to 15 cents. Big Drive. 2 cases
Macon Knit Hose and half Hose, heavy and good,
at 10 c-, worth double the money.
Have the best half hose at 15 c "
ever shown here. Sell
dozens of pairs
every day.
* SPLENDID VALUES IN FINER HOSIERY. *
Iarw.:! havo«nlspfoyed on our Patterns center of counters Fine ail on Wool Monday morning a big
lot of Short te. gths and Drese Dress Goods at ah
most your own price, Come and see them ; they will not stay long at
prices named for them. They consist of desirable colors in Sebaster pools
Serges, Cashmeres, &c- One case Cashmere, wool one way. 9 c, worth
12 1-2c, s&'Doubfe Width Cashmeres 12 1-2 c, worth 20 c.
Henriettas 36 inches wide, at 25 c. Henriettas 44 in wide at 50 o.
JB€S“Splendid assortment finer Dress Goods with Trimmings to match.
Big - iStock - Red - and - White
Flannels,
Plaid and Striped Sacking Flannels, Blankets, &c., at living Prices.
SEE. OUR TO WEES
At 10,15. 20 and 25 c. They are eye openers. Lot of ffne towels, slight¬
ly damaged, at half price. •
Good Checked lloinespun at (» c. Shirtings, Sheetings,
&€., at Factory Prices.
Have the largr l <’ sk of Jer ns, Cassimeres and Waterproofs in the brand city.
God Jeans 10 i pi y rd. Jeans better and heavier than School-boy
at 25 c All fi e- giades proportionately low.
Shoes, Shoes, Shoes k ■
My Snoe department will be found to contain the best goods from the most
reliable manufactories ii the country. New Shoes received every day.
Have on band a let of broken sizes in Shoes that we seil for below value.
EAGLE SHH0E CO’S WJMEN COARSE SHOES ARE THE BEST MADE.
Splendid line Jersey Jackets, Toboggan Caps Corsets, &c.
HATS ! HATS ! HATS.
My stock will be found fully up to its usual standard. Good desirable
goods at Rock Bottom Prices.
-Trunks and Satchels-
I buy goods in this line from the most reliable manufacturer in tha
East and will offer you better fiuished Trunks and Satchels for the same
monee that others ask for inferior made goods.
---tot-
Will say finally that it is my determina¬
tion to convert my large stock into money before
January, It good goods at less than their value
will do it. So it will be to your interest to exam¬
ine my stock before making your purchases.
B. J. FI.BMISTER.