Newspaper Page Text
ltt , SClNGr’0
fessssr.' OERKETUEB 1
i->ssg£SKaiasa
T^» iblei- 0 -r lanta, eve' waa : cured i
6 r case et
' fend 1 ''' e away, I i
tlanta,
£ e h U r&.oa..wa,
iJwUJSw »«-“ tw » dreadful
?^rSiS1?3: igSSs
l*SS$fi3S: SggsSW- , SfiSj
•k^nti tS'o stenographers, nonP»«ll of all liouse- rem- I
r4£© WoodP ? «°?—d*]' ar *® er and inf withoSt B° r - 1
f^on"tmemcln\" S per'ac- tor j
w directions. Send stamp 1
s, druggists wonderful cures, etc.
and by Kino’s 1
dbb Co., Atlanta, Ga.
m Pills
t?UHB
uia, Dumb Chills,
and Ague, Wind
Bilious Attacks,
B e« regular, grip* natural evac-
__ ««»« or Interf ere with
rpastnesa. should he In As every a family household. medicine,
'" "bold everywhere.
IS III TV. warranted, I» Deatlas and. Shoes pair are
and price stamped every bottom.
sits name on
fOR *2oo
if **175 0
' *1.75 *3*
%
UCLAS
"" WR .....
v GENTLEMEN.
nd I.nced Waterproof Greln.
mine Hi i-sewed, an elegant and
dress Welt. I which " commends fine itself.
iwed style and durability. A i calf ca Shoe
1 for Welt
,r Is the standar ard dress
llroad farmers, etc. adapted
men, Button and Lace.
to Congress.
$3&$2SHOES uHIBs.
haw tana moat flrorably pTement* received make since them Introduced superior
*Sf fe'jdidTiliml^** it and these if be prices. cannot advertised supply price, you sei
«*»« 08 or
1 L. DOUGLAS, Brockton, Bfws.
W.
jr^ CHEUERMAN &
f4 "emmN.
I '» i,r .:.
.Jew Advertisements.
HKfitoi&.RSijeaB
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM the
9€s irod beautifies -Lair.
‘j a luxuriant growth..,
PailB to fi«ctore Color. Gray
to it» Youthful
Up tUeeaiMja & hair tailing.
PmtgiMU
■6. CONSUMPTIVE
ture cure for Com*.
COX is CO., N. Y.
H.ufiosy.t NOR’S?
PLASTER li.
Alts THE BEST POROUS PLASTERS
IN THE WORLD.
Backache, They cure Pleurisy Rheumatism, Kidney famene—
bronghi and all over-exertionl
Hyou want on by exposure or r
>uick Relief from!
insist on having Grosvenor’s
mth aL-C’AP-SIC; plaster
back-cloth a picture for of a bell on the,
, there is no plaster,
Uniment, •uch or lotion that has
complete mastery over
ALL ACHES AND PAINS. _
Dr. Grogvenor's Bell-Cap-slc 1
**» Purely Vegetable and Harmless,
installtly and never fail to core,
SAFE, QUICK AND SURE.
Sold by druggists or mailed on receipt of
GROSVENOR & RICHARDS,
Boston, Mass.
She aid Trade jiutm
FEATURES FOR 1890.
aZ^^.rc-Porte and market orecasts from
h0W to 8hi P and what to STow.
crop reports from all sections,
bait ^« 1 * peB80 ^’ e Journal Information for fanners Bureau nnd
^l»cnbers tells all free
*-w»a’it* about commission
'a all the Cities
* Handsome 12 page Weekly.
k nnt Trade Journal Co
24 Stale St. New York.
jjUo FAtKil,
............ i'WihieM.
Tho careers of tl,-spring bully,
tio ferociou.; <wg, tha footpad and others
of like ill: arts fast drawing to a close.
,No longer will the small, weak man go
out at night with the fear of being
robbed by a footpad or getting tho stuff¬
ing kaoc>l out of h.’.n in an argument
with tt larger man. A check is put upon
tho ravages of the bulldog, and the most
timid refined lady will be able to go
anyvfnere at any hour of the night with¬
out fear of being insulted. To the won¬
derful inventive talent of George A.
Buckel, the electrician, is this great
scheme of physical equalization due.
No mercenary motive actuates him in
the matter, for he gives it without price
to the public. Like the chivalrous
knights of olden t' ;u ho labors only to
protect the weak from oppression and to
do good for human kind. Beside this in¬
vention all of the" electrician’s previous
effort;', cunk into obscurity. It consists
Bimply of an electric walking cane
heavily charged. Tho cano is mado of
wood or leather, with a thin steel rod-
running through the Centre of it. A
man. put3 a small battery in his hip
pocket, with one fine, wire running down
into the left shoe and connecting with a
steel plate at Ms heel.
Another wire runs from the battery np
into his coat sleeve and terminates in a
hook at tho wrist, Upon the head of the
car.e is a wire eyelet, and the hook is fast¬
ened to it. It is only this and nothing,
more, and a man thus equipped could
hold out against twenty men as expert
even as John L. Sullivan.
For illustration, a short, slim gentle¬
nothing man, weighing 1H> oouncls, and knowing
whatever or pugilism, has occa¬
sion to go down town after dark. A
short distance from his home a dog with
extended jaws and an I’ll-bite-you air
about him leaps-out. A touch with the
point of the cano electrifies and lays him
out flatter than tissue paper.
Continuing his journey the gentleman
suddenly comes upon a man with whom
he has not been on good terms for a long
time. The latter is large and is noted as
a fighter:
After first trying to arrange their dif¬
ferences amicably tho small man pro¬
vokes the other to assault him, and then
electrifies his assailant. Henceforth
people will have to be cafeful about call¬
ing even a puny, sash-wearing dude a
liar. No brains are necessary to work
the machine, and one round will be suf¬
ficient to put a stop to a fight. Police¬
men will have their clubs charged in
tMs way in order to facilitate the mak¬
ing of arrests, and woo betide the luck¬
less individual who is so rash as to re¬
sist.
Ladies carry their batteries in a con¬
venient place, and the steel rod goes
through their parasol handles. In the
crowd on Fourth avenue a man snitches
a lady’s pockethaok. She se es him just
in time, and touches him with the end
of her parasol. Of coarse he falls, and
she then easily takes her purso from his'
fingers. Later on a policeman finds him
and takes him to jail. The result is the
same if an impertinent man makes an
objectionable remark to her.
When this invention is perfected there
will be no more of the old style dnels in
Kentucky, and it will lose its reputation
for blood spilling. Two gentlemen wall
engage in a dispute, and ono will chal¬
lenge tho other to a bout with electric
canes. Two batteries of equal strength
will be selected along with the other
apparatus. Facing each other, they
stand with crossed canes, and at a sig¬
nal agreed upon each endeavors to prod,
the other with the point of his weapon.
Finally one receives tho shock and is
stretched out. There are no black eyes,
no ugly sword or bullet wounds, and the
fallen man is not dead. Besides, the law
has not beon violated, and in a day
everything is lovely.—Louisville Times.
Not Export Linguists.
1 went into a store to look at some
Eastern hangings. A very pleasant
young woman attended to my requests,
and I asked her what they called the
variety of hangings I was examining.
“Doories,” said she. I asked her how
the word was spelled. “D-h-u-r-r-i-e-s,”
she spelled, and added, “I suppose they
were named after Doory lane. They are
Indian, aren’t they?” TMs struck me as
even more remarkable than a reply 1
once received from a girl at Macy’s on
inquiring there for a certain French con¬
fection. After a good deal of explana¬
tion on my part she finally seemed to
get the idea, and turning somewhat con¬
temptuously to a little cash girl standing
bv, she bade her fetch a “can of Marion
glaze." This reminds one of the man
wbo went to an English costumer to get
a Haul IV costume for a fancy dress
party, and was astonished to hear the
man call up to Ms assistant, “ ’Airy,
bring down the Angry Cat!”—Boston
Transcript
Hens That Ate Gold.
Even the hens at Byron havo caught
the gold fever. Two men got a pan of
^mixture worth supposed pT^otiF'Trictat-arrd to contain aTioiit
ot the Bet it
under the stove to dry. The next morn¬
ing two hens wandering about in search
of good things ventured in through the
could find and probably went away
wondering at the poor taste of mankind
who could prefer that kind of fodder to
yellow corn.—Bangor (Me.) Letter.
Travels of a Cap.
An Oldtown manufacturer bought a
cap for his little boy in Bangor, and at
once recognized the cloth of wMch it was
made as a product of Ms own factory.
The cloth was sold to New York parties
who sold to Philadelphia manufacturers
who mads it into caps and sold them to
Boston wholesalers from whom the Ban¬
gor merchant bought.—Lewiston Jour¬
nal.
Mr. Haden, the great English etcher,
spent two hours on Ms well known
plate, “The Agamemnon.” He has real¬
ized, I am told, over $50,000 from tho
sale of prints from this plate.
Deafness Can’t be Cured
by local applications, an they can not reach
the diseased portion of the ear. There is only
°" e wsy to cure Deafness,and that is by cen-
stitational remedies. Deafness is caused by
an inflamed condition of the mucous lining
of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube get*
inflamed you have a rambling sound or im¬
perfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed
Deafness isthe result, and unless the inflam¬
mation can be taken out and this tube restor¬
ed to its normal condition, hearing will he
destroyed forever; nine cases ont of ten
caused inflamed by catarrh, whieh is nothing but an
condition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars tor any
case of Deatons* (caused by Catarrh) that we
,^ti?<wrireuSi^f^ :Halr * t:atftrrh , un ‘-
Not every day does mm meet with *
man who has been blown seventy-five
feet through the air and lived to tell of It,
but lives such in a comfortable man is John homo McCleary, in Gfeen- who j
a
point with his wife and two children,
and drives a custom house truck down
town for a living. He was at lunch
near by when one of the steam-heating
explosions at the corner of Broadway
and Fulton street took place, and so was
a reporter.' The atmosphere waa con¬
ducive to explosive story telling, and
McCleary told of his experience to an
interested group, and produced a number
of newspaper, clippings to verify the ex¬
traordinary occurrence. Ono of them
was from the Eklred (P«m.) Eagle, and
it called McCleary the hero of the nitro¬
glycerine explosion at Haymaker, Pa.
in 1880, and said that every stitch oi
clothes had been stripped from his body
during Ms flight of seventy-five feet
through the air.
McCleary explained that he was what
is known as a torpedo shooter. In de¬
scribing Iris sensations ho said: “When
the explosion took place I was probably
twenty feet from the stuff. I saw a
blinding flash as if the world had sud¬
denly taken fire. I knew that I made an
attempt to run from the derrick. I felt
that I had maybe a minute to live, and
I remember resolving to occupy that
minute in running. All at once it seemed
to me as though in tho attempt I had
taken a fearful leap, and thnt I was going
down—down as one in a dream. I knew
intuitively that the explosion had taken
place, but I had not heard the report,
strange to say. EverytMng looked blue,
and I began to wonder if the explosion
had killed me and if I was dead. I cal¬
culated how many others were dead. I
oouid hoar their widows crying and I
witnessed their fnnerals. I suppose it
took me ten seconds to be thrown to
where I was found, but it seemed to bo
ten years, and I had time to think of a
thousand different things.
“Finally I lost consciousness, and that
was when I struck the ground, I sup¬
pose. I was badly broken up, and finally
gave up ‘shooting’ wells for good and
came to New York. No, now that I
realizo the great risk, the hazardous life,
the almost daily danger of death, I would
not go back to it again for a farm.”—
New York Times.
Mr8 ; ¥ F- Fambr °, Kansas City, Mo.,
says tkat after a long use of Bradverotine
she still finds instant relief from her Head¬
aches, and no bad after effects.
To Nervous 3Ien.
If .you will send us your address w
will send you Dr. Dye’s Celebrated
\ olfaio Belt and Appliances on u
trial. They will quickly restore you
to Voltaic Vigor, manhood and health.
Belt Co„ Marshall, M
He Witt’s Little Early Bisers. Only pill to
cure Sick Headache and regulate the bowels.
Sold by N. B. Drewry.
“Just as Good,”
Say some dealers who try to sell a substitute
preparation when a customer calls for Hood’s
Sarsaparilla. Do not allow any such false
statements us this induce you to buy what
you do not want. Hem ember that the only
reason tor making if is that a few eents more
profit will be made on the substitute. Insist
upon having the best medicine—Hood’s Sar¬
saparilla. It is Peculiar to Itself. h
Little Mary Lynch, the S-year-oid
.
daughter of L. M. Lynch, fell down
stairs at her father's residence, at
Columbus, Friday, narrowly escap¬
ing instant death. She fell on her
head x causing concussion of the
brain. She will recover.
BucKien’s ArmcvaSale.
The Best Salve in the world for Oats
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Bheum Fever
Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains,
Corns and allS kin Eruptions, and positive
tedto ly cu-es Piles or rop iy frequired. It is gunr-
funded. gives perfect Batisaction, or moneyre
Price 25 cents per box. For sale by
J. N. Harris & Son.
A. W. Mershon, of Crawfordville,
was stabbed in the right side by a
negro a day or two ago. The wound
is not dangerous. He had ejected
the negro from a store for using bad
language.
Mysterious Disappearance.
Mrs. John A Clarke was a great sufferer
from Indigestion and Sick Headache. She
left her home Iasi Saturday to buy a bottle
of De Witt’s Little Early Risers, took a dose
and her headache disadpeamlasmysterious-
y as ft came. Try them. N. B. Drewry.
. W. H. Hart, a farmer living ten
miles from Tennille; broke his right
knee a day or two ago in jumping
from a wagon drawn by a runaway
mule. Mr. Hart weighs 200 pounds.
Tdere is one medicine that will cure iinme
diately. We refer tp De Witt's Colic and
Cholera Cure lor all Summer complaints. No
delay, sell no N. B. disappointment, Drewry. no failure. We
it.
George Hudson, colored, is ’ r '
m
at Lumpkin for stealing $100 from
J. E. Humber & Co. Ninety-five
dollars of the money was recovered.
We recommend Tfe Wltt'sCottc and Cholera
Cuie because we believe it is a sufe and relia
qle remedy. Its good effects are shown at
once in cases of Cholera M orbuS and similar
complaints. N. B. Drewry.
R. B. Mardie, who lives a few miles
south of Boston, had his hand badly
lacerated by having it caught ia a
gin a day or two ago.
No Gripping, no NauBea, no Pain, when De
Witt's Little Eqyly Risers are taken. Small
pill. Safe pill. Best pill. We sell the a. N. B.
Drewry.
Jeddy Brannon, a colored boy of
Fusseta, shot himself in the hand
Friday by accident and amputation
had to be performed.
De Witt’s Little Early Risers. Best Liter
Pill ever made, lure Constipation every
time. NoBe equal Use them now. X. D.
Drewry.
is Henry Cook, a white man, age d
under arrest at Cusseta char
with beating his wife so badly as ‘
cause her death.
De Witt’s Colie and Cholera Cure
Is always safe and always sure.
We recommend it. Jf. B. Drewry.
The restaurant of All Worrell, col¬
ored, of Lumpkin, was burned a day
or two ago. T. (J. Shelton’s store
hnd e narrow escape.
De Witt’ft Little Early Risers. Best little
S 3 -% D i? T^ r!itomacb ’ *** B ™ th -
’’BLOOD (KM*
taint.
CUBES DCMOniLA IV
IN ITS wowrr FORMS.
T 1 had scrofula In from i*M. tfiA bv taking cleansed my
£SS£f- system entirely s s lt vfey" « seven
g -*
■ i.....D ..... ..
I HAS CURED HUNDREDS OF
CASES OF SIHN CANCER.
Treatise on Blood and Skin Cft. Diseases mailed
fraa. Swift Specific Atlanta. Ga.
The Use of Quinine.
There is no questioning the (act that qui¬
nine is a voluble medicine a* a tonic, anti-
peridoie and auti-pyretie, And that its dis¬
covery has greatly helped the cause of medi¬
cine. Still in a majority of cases its use is
not deranges altogether satislactory producing as it, frequently heudache,
the system,
dizzy feelings, eonvuteions and sometimes
even paralysis. It. was the endeavor of the
eminent Dr John Bull ot quinine, 'Louisville, Ky., to
invent a substitute for something
that would have all the good qualities of
quinine, and vet Ire entirely free from its evil
tendencies. How admirably he succeeded is
evidenced by the estimation in which his
remedy people Smith’s where it Tonio best Syrup VttoVn is held everybody by the
, is
uses it in place of quifiine and it never fails
to give the very best of retisfaction. In
cast s ol chills and Sever it is absolutely a
safe and certain cure.
_
Encouragement for the Feeble.
So long astlie failing eroliert info of vitality are
capablo of being rekindled ft warm and'
geuiai glow, just so long there is hope for, the
weak and emaciated invalid. Let him not,
therefore, despopd, from but the derive farther encourage fact
mont from this and that
there is a restorative most potent in renew¬
ing the dilapidated powers ota broken down
system. Yes, thanks Stomach to its unexampled Bitters daily tonic
virtues, Hostter's fs
reviving strength in the bodies and hope Appe- in
the mind of the feeble and nervous.
titr , refreshing sleep, the nrquisitien of flesh
and color, are b'eseings nttendant upon the
reparative procesnes initiates which this priceless in-
vigomnt speedily and carries to a
successful conclusion. and Digestion is restored afforded
the blood fertilized sustenance
to each life-sustaining organ by the Bitters,
which is inoffensive even to the feminine pal¬
ate, vegetable in composition, and thorough¬
ly safe IJaeJt^and regai n vigor 1
__
A Boon to the Sick.
Dr. King’s Royal Germelucr is endorsed by
Rev. J. B, Hawthorne, pastor First Baptist
church, Atlanta,Ga., who says: “Itis a great
remedy.” Rev. Sam P. Jones says: “I wish
every poor suffering Thousands wife had access to that
medicine.” of others attest its
virtues. Fifty gallons are drank in Atlanta
daily, where it is performing remarkable
cures. It removes the cause of disease and
builds up trom tho first dose. Send stamp
for full particulars, King's certificate* Royal of
cures, ets., to Jcermetuer Co,,
Atlanta, Ga. It cubes when all else fails.
Price, makeaWe-gallan $1.50 per concentrated ot bottle, which
medicine aft. per direc¬
tions accompanyingeaeh bottle. Can be sent
by express C. O. D. if your druggist cannot
apply you. tf
Drops, Weggs-like, Into Poetry.
“Softer than sleep's are the Tonic’s caresses,
Kinder than Love that betrays and blesses,
Blither than Springs when her flowerful tresses
Shake forth sunlight, and shine with rain.”
The musing poet, who has burnt the. mid¬
night oil until the over-taxed bruin beats
feverishly Dr. against Westmoreland’s its bounds, lias found
liculth in Caiisnya Tonic
and paws tribute toits virtues. Well may he,
for its formula has in itingmlients that have
nMerln'tetV hnnmii «uW«>ui<v oiiMw iUo wo*U
was young. But the combination is new and
destined to revolutionize the treatment
nervous complaints disorders, and deranged raojarial digestive symptoms,
and chronic headaches. It is for sale by
It. Anthony and J. N. Harris & Son.
October Sheriff’s Sale.
VyiLL TF day in BE Dctaber SOLD ON next, THE before FIRST the TUBS- door
of the Coirt, House, in the city of Griffin,
Spalding scribed County, Georgia, the following
property, to-wit:
Thewast half of lot of land No. 93,containing
101 'A acres of land more or less, it being in
originally Henry now Spalding County, in
the third district, bound originally east by
W. by R. W. P. Woodruff, Manley, west by R. A. Eilis, north
south by John C. Ransom,
Levied on and sold by virtue of a mortgage
fi fa issued from Spalding 8ni>erior Court in
favor of Griffin Banking Company ya. Stil-
w«ll Sl Keith. Squire Stilwell, tenant in pos¬
session, legally notified.
$0.00. B. 8. CONNELL, Sheriff.
TYLER BANK COUNTERS.
UtOSTRATED IH COLORS; • perfect Work of Art;
150 Pages; How ready. Books free, postage 15c.
TYLER DESK CO., BT. L0UI8, M0., D.8.A.
FINE Aft*Ask SHOW for catalogue. CAlES.
TERRY M'F’G CO„ Nashville, Tenn.
iTHOU SA N OS t°' f POLL: AjRSr
r CHILDRENirelRRIHBlt, cverish, sometimes cyaving food and
ln sl e refusing w and olesome gr.ndingthe diet, n»sir. s
then you ? know P>moa;::osr TA teeth,
hnd unless may onus are sapping tieii
..a prompt measures sre taker., spasm.
Mre ^ - X Jy ana Vermifuge aeeibr vo-r^cJt newer it bug Zrr%e^ rails t j, tr
por . e
eo yelar&i
Caacot ta Sftfcte ;,;3 la Use,
2ts •*« »♦ J*
We^».0C. mijfd '■fesilM *
■ ■V • r .
JLDttta
Commencing Nownber 5th, Ending Rmafcir 15th.
OOXjTJMIBTXS, G-A-.
k SEASON OF UNMVALLEO ATTRACTION.
This Exposition Will Be One ot the Most Complete and Interesting
Ever Held in the South.
every department wm PRESENT a fife display.
LIBERAL PREMIUMS OFFERED FOR COUNTY AND INDIVIDUAL EXHIBITS.
The Attractions for Visitors Will Be Numerous and Varied.
TROTTING and RUNNING RACES, MILITARY CONTESTS and EVERY
KIND OF AMUSEMENTS.
ALLIANCE DAY, MERCHANTS’ DAY,
DRUMMERS’ DAY and RED MENS’ DAY.
Balloon Ascensions and Parachute Leaps Every Day During the Exposition.
ONE CENT A MILE SATES OYER ALL RAILROADS.
Everybody come and have a good time, Columbus will be in her glory,
For further information, catalogues, etc., address
A * C. B. GRIMES, Secretary. J* J* SLADE, President,
c4£a/&&£
df” Served [at leading hotels. Sold 4 by nearly all grocers
junelld2m
«• :? WHAT COMMISSIONER KOLB SAYS.
Omen CoMuisaioxi* of AoiictiLrtnut, Acbom, Ala.
- ..:;fSOK, £l£C*KTA*Y CtlLTIVATOH |^HUSKIXO Co■ !
.-.j .1 na and do mo«t heartily rooommond Thi Boctbmh Coltitato* to the fkrmeri
r Ju v as a farm journal of very .uperlor merits. It should be In the home of every pro-
lietuivo agriculturist- . Very truly yours, R. f. KOLB,
200,000 Readers 1 Established 1043. Leading la 1BS9!
THE SOUTHERN CULTIVATOR AND DUE FARMER,
ATLANTA, G-ZEOZBLGOLA.,
3STo w In its P’orty-sexren.tla. “ST«fttr of Pvu’blleftttloai.
_J_
The recognized organ of Southern agriculture and tho ind-istrial progress of tb# South, with
a guaranteed circulation in every Southern and Western State.
A BRILLIANT CORPS OF WRITERS
The editorial corps of writers and contributors is unsurpassed, if equalled, by that jf any time
ilsr publication in all the Union. HON. W. J. NORTHKN is the President of the Georgia State
Agricultural Society, and a practical farmer of tho most thorough oulture, and his artioies are
always instructive to farmers. DR. DANIEL LEE is not only one ot the ablest and most team¬
ed agricultural Journalist in the oountry. but he was for four years virtually Commissioner at
Washington, D. C.. and later, Professor ofTTgricultufc at thiGsorgla State ffelrertUy. COL.
R. J. REDDING is the able and thoroughly equipped Assistant Commissioner of Agricalturo of
the State of Georgia, as well as an experienced writef. Fnos. J. 6. NEWMAN Is in charge ef the
Alabama State Experiment Station, and stands in the front rank of agricultural educators and
writers in the South. With theso eminent writers ere associated a score or more of molo end fe¬
male contributors— including not a few professional agricultural writers-whose monthly ar I-
cles eover every department of farm management and houaehold work, making Tug Ccutir*
tor the most complete, attractive and valuable agricultural Journal in the South, each issue
boieg worth more than » whole year’s subscription to any farmer who reads and thinks la con¬
nection with his work.
Its illustrations aro superb, and every department will be found fall to overflowing with mat
tor to instruct, enlighten and entertain. Each number is worth the anm charged for the year's
subscription. CULTIVATOR. Now is the time to
No family can afford to he without THE SOUTHERN
send in your subscriptions. Only Ono Dollar per annum, the twelve numbers constituting a
volume ot extensive information useful to all clours. An dotted by Prtm and People et • journal
for the farm, fireside and counting-room. Subscription, $1 per year. Per advertising rotes
etc., address
THE CULTIVATOR PUBLISHING CO.,
G*0. “Wrft-A«RlSO,Y,' •r -—----Drawer 8, Atlanta, Go.
Manager L ad for sample copy-
AT COST !
dFromJ thisjdate to Sept. ist,£we will sell any ; Hardware
or Wire Screen Doors, at
ACTUAL COST.
gWeJbave^HmgesJin*aMargc having and Barn Stable variety^but cheap. All those
Oako« or doors to hang any time
soon would do well to come in and buy now
We also have a large stock"of Sashjand Doors^at LOW J
EST MARKET PRICES. Come and sec us, or write fo,
estimates. Trulyyours,*
June i6th, 1880.
VICKS PUINtI
'
Suitable to all Tastes and Occasions.
Deiiffhf/ul with Dintu r. Cooling and Brac¬
ing before l.rcakfaat.
Sparkling The Golden Russet Cider.
juice of russet apples treated in accordance with
approved methods tor Champagne,
Sparkling Sweet Cider.
Unfermented juice of sound, ripe apples, bottled
fresh from the press, with carbonic gas. Sparkling
and brilliant, but containing n > trace of alcohol.
Quarts or pints, Champagne style.
CIDER AND VINEGAR IN WOOD.
ro* aoM» os sxvorr tsaok.
Write for price list and further information.
S. R. 5 J. C. MOTT,
No. 1 18 Warren Street, New York.
MILLS, BOUCKVILLE, MADISON CO.
’MTASIISHEO IMS.
.1 .
• 'i-7r3
louitifen > Stan- itttir*
fwenefKmttod fey - toe AftskJffiL
rntional and t. hard aide purpotoNt, i
<-hi«e made « part of the present' I
*ti nt oo, in 1879, by ae
alar vote, and
.£VP«73?.?B«
U* MAMMOTH DBAWiSOS'
in the year and are ail l._
the Academy of Music, New t
FAMED FOR TWENTY
I or Integrity of Its Drawing*, a
Prompt Payment of Prim,
Attested as follows:
“We do hereby certify Hint we m
arrangement, for all the Monthly
Annual Drawing* ol The Louisiana
control tery Company, the Drawing. and in tWmMlvte, person mam
the a
same are conducted with honcety,
and in good faith toward all p*u‘
authorize the Company to use ihf
with (uo-eimlbw of our signatures
JteadrertisenMSte.”^ f
-
-Hi
-to
.
We tU underMgried Dank* and 1
will pay all 1‘risee drawn to
State Lotteries which way
ottr counters.'
Grand I Monthly *. Dra
At the Academy of Music, Newt,__
Tueadny, September it, 1890.
Capital Prise, 9300,000
utTorrann.
1 Pure* or WOO,000 to,,..,-----
l I’aiiE or lOO.OOOto....,.......
1 Psua or is.
1 Parr* or 25.000 is,...........
5 2 Pena Puna or 10.000 are
or ere...,,,.,,,
as Purer or 1.000 are
100 Ptusssor 500
aoo Paan or 800 are......,.,
600 Pbujs or 200 are,—,.,,.
Aj’FsoxnfATum rates,
100 Prises of *500 ore............. $50,00
do- 800 are—
100 do. 200 are---------------
TERMINAL raizes.
999 do. 100 are.. **»••• •«»MI »*«
999 do 100 are., i «»• >••••»,<>(«
8,184 Note—T
ickets drawing Coniti
not entitled to terminal Priree.
AG ENTS W ANT ED.
ssaasssssssaat-
IMPORTANT.
Addrree M^A. DAI
orM. DAUPHIN, **
A. W.
Address Registered Letters
lfBW OBUMMftTliij ing Currencj tc
’ New l
s^gBSf&sva mu
whone chartered right* are recogx..
hlgheat Court*; therefore beware of,
decided.to be a CONTRACT with the81
Louisiana and part of the Constitution
hiwt of January, isor,. UNTIL
AMENDM^T? ad -
ordered an
tion of the State to be submitted to the
awtaatM
— TTTE 33
wmujiiiii.iir.mTi
18.THE ONLY
SHORT and DIRECT
TO THE
North, East and W<
AND THE
SUMMER RESORTS
East Tennessee, Virgin 4 ^
and Carolinas.
Kw and finest Fafln* |
IN THE SOUTH.
ation flfgsft.lt apply to’
W. f. 1 f l
IP*. K . ixrillt. To
^—* M *
Summer Tours.
Patac* Srt*Mt*i. Low Raru
Trips peVtotsre.
DET80IT _ ' MAC KINAC ISLAND
Meeoy *: . rntng It t-.-ww
DETROIT AND CLEVELAND
T ”re t^ltoToJS'* A ***‘
Oun IllustrateId Pamf
Meeet ^J^ntaengarie Wink
t. B. WHITCOMB, a P. K, Otraorv, I
THE DETROIT A CIEVEUIO STUM I
1'li
i>
It