Newspaper Page Text
A practical study of poverty 5* an
,
nonneed by the Atlanta OoMtitntiou
as a part of the conrsn of a leading
college in New York City.
France has about twice as much cur¬
rency per capita as any other coun¬
try, and suffers less from financial
troubles. Her per capita is $40.00.
Mrs. C. If. Bishop, the psycho
physical cnHurist, holds that if yon
want to have good thoughts you must
do your breathing in yonr stomach.
The corner stone of a Homan Catho¬
lic cathedral has been laid at Hava,
in the Fiji inlands. It will be built
of stone and dedicated to fit. Paul.
China wants peace with Japan.
.In I inn wants a piece of China, Pis
tinetion with n difference, sententious
Jy remarks the Kt. I.ouisHtsr Hayings.
The anoient art of tanning leathet
lifts undergone a complete change ill
the la-1 five years through the Intro¬
duction of certain chemical* to save
time.
Nobody enn rido » “lnko" in the
public. *trects of Ht. Petersburg, Hus
am, until he lifts proved to »n ex»in
iner that he enn manage the
without running over folks.
Thu H«n Franci*eo Examiner oh
serves: A will just filed in thin city,
consisting of twenty-four words, dm
poses of $300,000 mid can't be broken.
A lawyer-proof will is a pleasing and
valuable curiosity.
In Pittsburg ono of the most highly
(■teemed compliments that cau bn
paid is to name ft chrysanthemum
after a citizen. “Thus," muses tlm
Washington Htnr, “hns tin exugger
tiled found! superseded the laurel."
Indiana farmers own seventy ono
per cent, of the farms, this rest being
hired. Thirty per cent, of the home
owned farms carry «n enoumbraiioe
of thirty per cent., bearing seven pet
cent, interest. In Indianapolis tliirly
throe per cent, of the population own
their houses. In Mississippi thirty
eight percent., and in Oregon eighty *
ono per cent, of the farmer* own their
farms.
Tho statistician of tho Baltimore
Bun has figured out that last year
Oreat Britain bought about two-third*
of tho wheat mid flour exported from
the United Htatos, nearly half of the
doth, a good deal more than half of
the cotton, and pretty nearly all tho
oattle, meat product* and other »Tri¬
oulturai ujsiUut. *\t tt-e * ’
Tn,< all prove* to the r/«»
Orleans Picayune that * ’Ureal Britain
la one of tho best friends of the Doited
MUtea, snd without her as a customer
tho American farmer would be in a
pretty bad hot,"
Tho Agricultural -Department at
Washington 1ms reports from Europe
that there i»H great increase in the
use of American corn for feeding
horses and cattle. This is not what j
it wanted, declares the Bouton t’uUi
Vfttor. The value of corn hh stock
feed hits always been admitted, but
the moss of European peoples believe
that it is fit for nothing elan. Indian
corn is a lvolter food than « large pro
portion of the people iit Central
Europe are using, and If they will
substitute it for tln-ir present rations
it will increase the domain!, Just
now, however, it is not needed to
larger demand for l here I
have a corn,
is a short crop in this country, and its
plied for another year t* likely vo be
tut high as the price of wheat.
Max OTh-ll, in hi* now book, "John
Bull »V Co , «»y« that iu traveliug
through Atutniift be ntnick with
the ubiquitoUKuea* of tho Scot 11c
feavte; “Tho Eugtiftb colon ton arc iu
the hftttda of (he Scot*. Of acvcu (lot*
eroori five arc Scottish. The Drcsi
itout of (ho Lefttelative Ooaucil, or
Second Chamber, is a Scotsman, ua
are thre,-fourth* of the Comieilom .
the Mayor of Melbourne la a Scots*
the , . . the . colony ,
man, Af r ent tienera«
in Lonviou »ort of minister j*leui
lHjteutiary) is a Scotsman. Ktiglau«l
ought not to call her colonic* Great or
lintam, but rather Greater Seot'aml
—ami the VnitcJ State* Greater Ire
laml. As for Nt « ZtAlanh it is ^
tscotiish as Eaiuburgb* >r more ao
than Glasgow, Oo to Broken Hill,
where the richest silv r mine in the
world is, and you will there see five
groat shaft* leading t > th treasures
of the earth. Tho five abaft* War
the following name*: Drew, Macui¬
ty re, Macgregor, Jamieson and Mac
cuitoek five Hcotsiucu. And it's the
MUtie everywhere/' Awd it may b«
added, thmk* the Atlanta Const it u*
Don, that Boseberr, the Premier o*
England, u a Scotch an. iu> estate
being only four Ico from £din
burgh.
••0. K.**
Professor W. S. \Yy an.of the Uni
Tt r*m of Ala vi ihts the com
mon explauation of the leitci 1. K ,
vhieh ns to tiu pcs (that they wer.
Preoideut Jocki *bbrevi*Uon for
“oi: rrect t at Jack
*ou orr I the phrase from tin
Che race, tt which the word
•'it <ul r t —Pe
trait Fret Pre
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m
I -,T? j f f
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<4 Sim
mi ; I ; 1 J , si
B // & 2 f
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LJTJCOLTJ
]\i? UEJLIGAMiSM.
JiPFEnSQMlAM
DEMOCRACY*
St/v/wm
By lha National Reform Press Association
the new statue: of liberty e:nlichtening the people.
INTENSIFIED HELL
the military spirit is a dan¬
gerous SIGN,
for If I« Now Thriwlftiiiuff to U«»tro?
All l>nt'<i »imI I-Hifrly A KIiikIiik
I' rotMl from h ropultsl F*pi»r Agi*In«t
I)i0 I'ropoNtnl Im rffM* of Our Army.
The most dangerous element in a
free country Is the military spirit.
War nt the best, is an intensified hell.
No nation should encourage the war
spirit among its people, i’repnratlon
for war often precipitates a war. ll ad
the southern states not fostered the
military spirit, it, 1* safe to say they
would not likely have plunged the na¬
tion Into an internecine war, I’cae* Is
ehcAp, It costs neither blood nor
treasure- at leust no blood, and no ex
f mordj'oflry ontlny of treasure, Kvt-ry
j' ’ ‘
- -
dlxrouvaged. At ft. resent a military ,
spirit dominates n« a rly every class of
society. Those who profess to love
<1,Ml “>” 1 ,ulu,w ,Uc ‘of the
*»"»e»e have gone wild on mil tary
training. Ail our higher institutions
of learning subordinate those things
which elevate, refine and enlighten to
those which degrade and develop all
the turner passion*. Those reflections
were suggested by reading the Inst mi
'»"»• ''cpi.rt of tlen. Schofield to the
M,, ’‘ , Ur v l,r H nr ' " l '
-
IncrcANo of !ht* annv mul iinvy, mul in
creased appropriations k f«r fortlflea
tU>ns and a rum so that we may
pre|mlT ,| for invasion from
for.-iirix jHiwera (ton. Schofield
does not earn his living by
the sweat »f his face to direct the
movements of an organisation that hns
done little else sin-c the lust shot nt
Appomattox than trend, upon the lib¬
erties of the people and eat out their
substance. He draws a princely sal
ary and gives no thought of from
h „ r , hrott(fh „ hat
channel it 1* procured. The average
render would suppose that, from lit*
i Njtvt'NM'tl tour*, ht* rt'jiftriU thf* normal
ooiuHUuii t»f Ihin us ono of war;
Oiat they should not relax their dill
but tmhirtft' tht»lr |uira|»h«*rnalia
of war nml injuipmoiitn for the flfld
mul hospital. VVtprft it not for (to coin
a new title) Darnel salvation wurrlors,
the hlomltUiratY pu>ft*hstsl followers
0 ( t hriM. hr wouhl Ih' slow to suirjrcst
his duvUiali scheme Ilf SlIg’CCSt.H It
ihnmjrh a juvfcNMsl interest in the
country. War Is not to the interest of
Ihe wage w.wkera of any nation, l're
P 8 ft*r war is not to their In*
tcivst. ami whoeverencour&irv*further
expenditure of money for the purpose
»»f increasing the army ami enlarging
the naw arouses the suspicion that tt
f or |j if % porptwr of making eaaj
v'l'N h»r a few hundretls »*f social
ami military j^arasitea. Klect men to
cN^ngrrsa who have tho courage to rip
all such schemes at their lucoptlon*'*—
Kanoa* Agitator
kniall llom»» for ihf IVitpla
If bonds tttu&f be inMitxi at ill- which
the Times ttouicx m» b>*ig there is
«?igulorugc to the tinount of $A5,O0»*.
lying uncoined vaults and it unrepresented ia pity they J
In the trcajiury » • [
<x*uId not have Wen issue! in such de
nominations and under stifli c n lttious
a* might permit the people raiiw
than the banks of foreign investor* to
buv them
•
|
j
ADVERTISE
THIS PAPER
IT WILL PAY YOU. l I
Much of the hoarding of money out
of productive use would be done away
with if government securities could be
done away with if government securi¬
ties could be bought by small invest¬
ors, Long time bonds of small denom¬
inations would serve the American
people as n place for small savings,
performing much the same functions
as postal savings banks. In France
and England such bonds are quickly
taken up, and doubtless would
Ueie.
It is the people who pay the Interest
on the bonds. The $5,000,000 in gold
which will annually How into the
coffers of banks mid great financial
Institutions at home and abroad as the
result of the Cleveland loan of $100,000,
ooo will be wrung from the toil and the
sweat and the poverty of the producing
classes. Sorely St were better that
some part of tt. should be repaid to the
thrifty among those classes.
be WThttre were iuMmmJs to be issued
nt all. A national debt has been hold
to be a national blessing—and so it Is
to the fellows who hold the evidences
of It and receive the interest, But to
those who must be taxed to meet the
annual drain it Is a curse.—Chicago
Times.
FOR SALE.
Tlu» M«ct-loii being over and having
no further um for them the next two
year*, we now offer the following job
lot «t public auction;
Two hundred thousand campaign
liars, either republican or democratic
brand; warranted to keep whatever
they can get their hands on
Five hundred thousand office seek¬
ers, any brand.
Two car loads of disappointed demo¬
cratic congressmen.
Fifty thousand select liars who can
He bv note.
Twenty thousand ballot box stuff
era.
Two hundred thousand rein-nter*.
Six million lies about tho tariff.
Twelve billion dollars’ worth of
watered prosperity.
Four million lies about the low price
of cotton mul wheat.
Eight hundred thousand indictments
of Cleveland
Two hundred thousand denuncia¬
tions of Cleveland.
Three hundred thousand lies about
the “strike.”
Twenty-five straddles, used in the
construction of platform*.
Nine hundred thousand broken
promises, with privilege of 050,090
more in the next campaign.
One hundred thousand banners prom¬
ising prosperity,
St\ million disgusted democrat*.
Nix million republicans that will be
disgusted two years lienee.
A job lot of fools who did not want
to lose their vote.
Al t*rl«sl«
A few mottoes -The Public He
Damne^l," which can be usad by mem*
bor v»f both otld jxarties to decorate
their (xarlors and reception rooms to i -
twcou campaigns
Kki i hmca\ ( AM. Cou
Dkm*h hatic ( am. Com.
It i* thought that the amount of
eastern money spent in Kansas and
Colorado to defeat the Populists will
improve times there for a little while
at le**Nt. The circulation is greatly in- j
creaatd. *
THE WHITE SLAVES
|
CRUSHED T-S' EARTH. JHEN
SP/'T upon. ;
A -Most M.nww^olr Piet me Pr**ent«*d
In the Iiowlal®t » Chlca*® Tyrant
-I»oe. Tills work Ward OIT the Ilor- j
of Kem 'tion. »
ron a
j
In one of the great wholesale houses
of Chicago tar Vfe posted on the walls, j j
dated Oct 17, . > the following royal '
edict: “1 di*ebdjg*d a man yesterday
for telling aootii /r man what salary he
was receiving, <J shall enforce this
rule.”—C. M. Sulngton.
There it is in a word—slavery, f) tt
as I bid vou, as. oo questions and tell
nobody what ( Tx>e „Ay for your soul and ,
body If y<» mv hoggishness,
your wife and Iren may starve.
“I discharged yesterday” for
telling his broth * for which I
he sold himself i t
I bought him . was nobody's
business what fit 1 made on the
sale of hia blood pud ainew.
lama capita: and laborers have
no rights after tiny sell themselves to
me. dtetbfctly
I want it understood that
I , , boss.
am met 1
I own my and propose to sell
them at whatever oth'J price 1 please. I
I can buy wen whose families
are starving at by own price* and no
beggar shall c'^nplain of the fare I
furn mb.
Men who conA-tuln arouse discon
tent.
And I belong to a class that believes
labor should * keep its mouth
shut and ac-ept whatever we I I
see fit to give it. The idea of these
beggars finding* fault with the men
ivho feed thi-m.
1 am a befeefaetor of my race, and
don’t believe In encouraging notions
of Independence among a class of men
whom Uod intended to serve me and
my wealthy friends.
It is true that labor made capital,
but we must sewto it that these slaves
j arc kept in Mintage, lest me and my
friends bo forced to earn our own
broad by work.
These fellows arc used to work, and
they don’t know ony better.
We must keep them afraid of ns.
If they found out that they were
men as strong us we are, we would be
helpless.
Capitalists, we must stand together,
or these slaves will take away all we
have stolen from.them.
I’ve got my sliises under control.
They know better than to whine.
If all you brother capitalists will use
the same iron net hods we can keep
them down.
DESTROYED AS A PARTY.
Senator Peffer Or. Ho Political Future
(or IU* D Democrats.
(Special 1>V pit IheBoaton Retail!.)
*v»*
having arrived® ' session, gives
ont an Inters® is evening, in
which he demoaratio says: ,
“The party threw away
the grentest opport unity any party has
ever had, and now they are destroyed
as a party. Discontent of democrats
and public dlstrud. a general disgust
at their failure to do what was ex
pectod of them when given the power,
is what has defeated the democrats at
this time, and this defeat, in my judg
ment, is lasting If, when the, demo
eruts came Into pr-wer In both branches
of congress and tho presidency,
tliov they hud had done done what "lint was was pos nos
itivoly 5 e wisj, of the major
it v of ? e people of the country
and what It was their duty to do, they
would have been i>ne of the great
parties of the future. One or other of
tlie great {inrtleft of to-day had to go.
One was given the first opportunity to
strengthen Itself mu to l>o the one to
survive. Tliev failed utterly, and now
the republicans have been chosen and
will form one of U,e two great parties
Of the country. They may regain their
power complete, and then will come a
realignment of parties and a battle
will be fought ivhtph will decide the
future policy of this country for a gen
eration The deinocr*tle party ns it
iimuunw-iuiuo now stands will not be In this struggle
The fight wifi be between the new
party and the repi bHcwn party.
“The new alignment may not come
until after the election of TW, in which
event the republicans will elect the
President It niav come la-fore that,
The first thing that will happen, in my
judgement, will bo that the leaders of
.....................
cracy (and that means nearly all of
them) will hold a conference among j
themselves to decide upon what policy |
shall be pursued and what principles;
agreed upon for the formation of anew ,
party. After agreeing among them
selves tliev will confer with the disj
satisfied republicans, who arc the free s
silver republicans, and those two vie- .
menu That l-eing accomplished, they ; j
wilt meet with the Populists, and ont
of this coufereoeo will come a new
party which is to do battle with the j
republican party, or Populists party of gold mon- j
..metallist- The believe iu
the free coinage of silver.
* Speaking for ufliyaobf* and, I think,
for the ropuii«t* y» :
nm heartily wdlUt** to unite in such
an o rg^an 12ation am|i »*kc free silver
the single issue odj *h< campaign*
one condition; I want it declared defi
nitcly what la logically implied in the
fight for free silver—I want a deelara- [
tion involving a principle that all pub
lie fonetions must be performed j
through public agents, With this
general broad declaration couched in
acceptable language and involving !
merely a declaration of principle, I am
wiling to go into the tight on a single J
issue of free and unlimited coinage of
gold and silver on a ratio of 10 to 1. I
am satisfied that the new party will be
formed in about the manner I have !
described to present this issue, and
that all men who believe in the free
coinage of silver will . be in . that party,
whether they come from the demo- I
crats, the Populists or the republicans.
“I believe that the gold monometal
l»"t« of both the republican and the
democratic party will fight under the j
republican who gold banner. monometallists The democrats differ lit- j
are j j
H e from the republicans on any issue
and they naturally belong in the re¬
publican ranks.”
The reporter asked .Senator i’effer if
he did not think that this might be an¬
ticipated somewhat by what would
happen in congress between now and
1800.
“It will surely,” the senator replied,
“be foreshowed if not anticipated. I
do not see that , there , can be , anything .
than trimming and dodging and
movements with the motive of tempor
arv expediency during the closing days i
of this congress, neither party will be
in a position to accomplish legislation i
and as that time will probably begin
the movement for the organization of i
” ■
a new party, and a conference which
may culminate in that may be held be
fore the national convention of 1890
and so play a part in the presidential
election of that year. ”
“You say that, this movement may
be foreshadowed at the opening of the
Fifty-fourth congress. l)o you mean
that a similar combination of all the
silver men may be made in the sen¬
ate?”
“Yes; something of that sort. I
should not he surprised if the silver
democrats and the silver men among
the republicans and the Populists
should combine together for the or¬
ganization of the senate. Under ordi¬
nary circumstances, if the question of
the organization of the senate were
merely one between the democrats
and the republicans as to which
should control, there being no
principle involved, the Populists,
who were formerly republicans,
would naturally aid iu putting the
republicans in power, but I have no
idea that under existing circumstances
any such thing will occur. In my judg¬
ment, the Populists will not aid either
the democrats or republicans, as a
party. They will either unite with
men of all parties on the one issue of
silver, and so organize the senate, or
else they will stand alone in the main¬
tenance of their principles and allow
two parish,present or¬ be
maintaining. 1 do not be¬
that either Mr. Stewart or Mr.
or any other Populist will vote
the republicans in organizing the
”
«*- •» »«>««■
“A# ft general proposition I am op
. to 4 strikes. Now and then, how- ,
ever, the choice is between the striko
degradation, and when that time
1 am always in favor of a strike,
‘ There is not a star nor a stripe in
this glorious American flag that was
not born to strike. At Lexington,
where the shot was fired that was hoard , ,
all over the world; at Concord down to
Yorktown, it was one continuous sue
eesalon of strikes against tyranny and
oppression and for liberty and inde
pendence.
“There has been no reduction of
wages on any railroad system in the
United States since the great strike,
although they came regularly at in
tervals of a week or two before it.
“Hut for the unjust Interference of
the Federal courts one of tho greatest
triumphs of labor would have followed
the I’uilman strike. 1 have no objec
tion to the use of the military to pre
serve law and order. But why is this
military always called to oid capital? *
Is capital always light and labor al- ,
ways wrong 1 The judicial system of
this country is adjusted so as to catch
minnows ond let whales go through,
Now the interstate commerce law is
violated.
'
“Labor has begun to think and will
act. It will no longer supplicate
ly. x-awa-en-.ftraa Not lawlessness or m violence;
in
but In a lawful and orderly manner at
ballot box will it take them.
“The time is not far distant when
there will be another and greater
of labor at the ballot box.
“I have reached that point where!
believe that it is absolutely necessary
to totally abolish the wage system.
w,11 melt and flow mto the co
system. Every man is en
titled to all that he produce* with his
brain or hands. Now the laborer gets
♦$ per cent of his production,
Why not oil? Why should be work to
another man in idleness?’’ j
Tur. Populists showed the greatest
v *in in votes of any p-ditieal party in
The recent election. That is how it is
Tin*
When Batiy was tic’s, we Rove her Coftorfa.
When she was a Child, she cried fur C.Wtorla.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When she had Children, slid gave them Castoria.
PROPOSED BY TELEPHONE.
A Hardware Drummer Gets Ahead
of His Rival.
An event has occurred in Michigan, j
near Detroit, which appears to con
firm the idea that courtship, as well i
„ as most most other other ihincs i bin will will hereafter hereafter
be greatly facilitated by recent in-;
ventions. It seems that there is a:
young lady residing in Detroit who.
for some time has been the recipient !
of the attentions of two young men, i
one a professor in the State Univer
ally at Ann Arbor and the other :
a
travelling salesman for a New York
wholesale hardware house whose
route extends through Michigan and
parts of Canada.
One day recently the New Yorker
arrived in Detroit late in the after
noon and, of course, immediately
C&MHitouwafe dealers, Wifh i?| .
able purpose of selling each a good I
stock for the winter before the repre¬
sentative of any rival concern should
putin an appearance. Ho had hoped
to visit the object of his affections in
the evening, but business was brisk, I
and eight o'clock found him very
t 7 in S w° iw l°zen LT in
dealer to f take six ti</en i fonr i
dozen grindstones,and a half carload :
Qf pflils , proceedings
At this stage of the a I
younger brother of the young lady
dropped in to get ft new jackknife
and incident!} mentioned that the
Ann Arbor professor was up at the
house. It instantly occurred to tho
nro .rressive hardware " l7rre and
t h e co man came
for no otlie” qf nuriiese than to 1-iv his
heart a( , he ee t of t he young lady
i le adored. For a moment there was
a struggle In his heart, but he speed
ily got control of himself and de
elded that ho could not, possibly
leave the store, as the dealer
j nst deciding to take toe
^ th ht o{ iving op tho
^'dy who luul p,, u (( >r month* con
in his mind,waking and sleep.
j n „ W!ls unbearable. Light suddenly
dawned on him. Handing the mer
chant a circular explaining the mer
its of his newdouble-bladedchopping j
knives, lie requested the use of the
‘Ruler’s telephone for five minutes, the ;
stepped 'oilloe to it and rang up cen
tr “‘ ul m./ment
v later the telephone bell
nt ,, u> ros i ( p, lu . c 0 f the young lady
rang, sharp and decisive. The pro
fessor had been there for an hour,
talking pleasantly of the grand edu
rational work they wore doing in tho
department of U-.bob'gy at Ann
^
io :. V,i, in ,, s i, e a horse If and pro
ce H I to th adjoining room to an- j
S¥ver it. The professor heard her j
step to the telephone and say yes,’’ j
make a short pause and say “yes’ i
again, i lien there was a longer pause ^
and he heard her reply ; h’n;. —-v.}
really, this is very sudden. T hen
uT/rd her ‘7v w'v" rr -"u-’v -1
UJ) t ) ie r, C eivcr and came into the
back room.
The college man moved closer to
the lady and remarked that it was a
warm evening, and he thought it was
going to rain, and then resumed -is
! » !k about 'be great work at the um
versity. Fifteen minutes later there
was a ring at the front door bell. The
lady responded to it, and a district
messenger hov handed her a plain her
gold ring, w.dch she slipped on
and returned into the parlor.
“Miss-said the profe •r. five
minutes later. “I want to ask you a
very important question this evening.
Excuse me for putting it bluntly, but
will you be my wife?'' But we need
go no further with" this. Two min¬
utes later the professor went down
the front steps and shook Ids fist at
the telephone wire, and took the first
train for Ann Arbor. Hardware.
gl>M FFCT IX POO.
Hayes—I tv -oiler why Brown sold
t Vat >w about
much.
<> .—A tramp st the chain
tiie dog was tied to.—. New York Sun.
no I . 9
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
IVIakes
Marvelous C ures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatis m
and Scrofula
P. I* P. purl*'-* the blood, ba Has
the tveuk s:u! debilitated. q ei (ft
ted OX]
■
For primary secondary ana tertisr;
£n£'. r'n ulcers, ii
blotches, pimple?, bead, oH boils, : ic
tetter, scald or yr-.i - uv?, of
cczeina-'wo may f.: 5\ without tear
contradiction, Jbat P. P. is tuc best
blood purifier i’t the world, and makes
positive. speedy and permanent cures
cases.
Ladle, whoso systems impuro are poisoned -i
pud tv hose blood i:nu an r '. r -j}
Root ana Potaasmm.
8PRIN0FIELP, *v Auff. H.h 14tD, i'-no J Jes.
—I can apeak ia the tlgb»?st terms pergonal or
your medicine from my own with heart
tnowlodxe. I was affected
disease, pleurisy and eumatlsm for
35 years, was treated by the.* very best
physicians ana spent hundreds of dol¬
lars, tried every known remedy with
SSltef of yourVlTp^'Ld csS
aU
8prlnga“d?b«enCo i uIty“lto.
PIMPLES, BIOTCHES
iN O OLD SORES
CATARRH, MALARIA.
i vwrr •o.-ragaearta xim&EAJatf’zx-iajm'-Aj ■'
KIDN EY TROUBLES
gad DYSPEPSIA
Ay© <*£firdy proven ty P.P.P.
—Prickly A?>-v PoSo Boat znd PotiS
r.iu»r?, tho greatest blood ponlior oa
earth.
Abzttdeeb, O., July 21,1991.
Lippmas Bros. . Saver* naa.
G;i. : Peas :?rxs—X bonfrbe a bottle of
tv >;p p, p J J . at Hot Springs,Ark. : au*l
It has (ionoflio merit more tte pool Hot than Spnags. three
scootb trout at V.
gaad thro© bottle#* C. O.
fci3CCti ®^ TON.
Aberdeen, Eiov:a County, C.
Csj-f. J. D. Jofeaslon.
•' V -
i trida cv.T? bnovra P. reaie- used,
larain.m.'ll "“TlTJS&IM’KW. P. P. was
**&£*«% > Savannah, Ga.
p?i:n Cancer Cured.
TsrMir.omj from tkc Mayor of &tqutr>.Tex.
Tri. t January It, ISO”-.
ME«snc. tiPr::- x linos., Savannah. P.
Ga .: havo tne l your
*, /j ?htrty relief: U #«rat
o» r j 5n ^. an i0 un<l great 1C
/SKi SKnMis’g bottle*
an{ j j,., ^ con Stjonc tint another relieved courso
will effect a cure. It has also
jjxofroDx indi istioo and stomacb
troiiblea. ’ionratraW, CAPT. RUST,
w.
Attorney at LaV\
K oo m Diseases Hoiiea Free.
AL - WlUOGISTa SELL it.
BROS.
PEOPRIET0ES.
Uppman'. illctU,savanaali,Ga
OR. HARVEY MOORE.
And Spoon-list in all Diseases of the
Eye, Ear, Throat, Nose.
Such as Cataract. I’tergiums. Cross
I’aintiii ...... inflamed , _ .
Granulated Fy-s ]' eak, Eye Lids. or Neuralgia, Head- Lyes,
| ui/.zinos. Nausea. Xervou* I>ys
< , 1()Iva 01 . virus’s D.mce,
Catarrn and Asthma,
< q-oss Kyes Straightened by Dr. Moore’s
Painless Method, ffisloro
No loss of time. No ether or
form. No confinement indoors. No
pain during or eyelids after the cured operation, without
Granulated
VoVImik, daily except
S(ltul m . an(I ;()4 Kiser building, At
lanta.
t arrespondeuce will receive prompt
attention when accompanied i>y stamp,
________----*___
j^^Alwais Cures.
Botanic Blood Balm
c JeSf G &rof
11 fnfaTsKIN AND hLoOD D|IeaSEs“ P S
f ro mthe prescription of r.n eminent phys-'-.ian
who used »t with marvelous success for 40 years,
S^SSII! U ^S »SrSeJTaL Blood
i. it is by far the best buildinK up Tonic and
, healing properties._
jjy write for book OF WONDERFUL
■ CURES, sent free on application.
“ ~~
-
'. If not kept by your local druggist, send Ji.oo
for a Urge boutc. or $ 5 .oo tor six bottles, and
medicine will be sent freight paid by
BLOOD BALM ?« 0 ., fttianta, Ga.
V' / *
[ ftP \LesrivE.VE SS
•/ 1 I Sick or
/ NEfVJO’JS
/ f HEADACHE,
* nc\J^ -D % ’losr Jaundice of
“' A ppcr/TE
‘
C/'' jj A"-O' , S£>
c '’ r
NaNEGENlitNE WlTHOUTTHE Likeness And
Sisnatuue orM ATHMrsr.o oh ruortTOt
Eacu W.tapeer. M-A-Thecfoud Hcme.GA Meo.®-
-__-
.-s>T"YV'5O»Ov<4>O«'0«-O*a
j | THfi£ STANDARD* £
:--rr-r-rr-m x X r
o TY IT TT \ T\i T”’C
| jj U RAIN U O ♦
»
» IHHFUMITIC „ f
> 1111 I- W IT* n I 1 U IILHf'.U • ♦
* 1 it-; rcpT'taJioTi for 13
n . . : for years C
♦ ' ;'T :i: i r ;:u.' i Ttie
jilt ture of ! l‘.b • ran a
i. t !i in nil i - forirl v #
♦ ;; l! l; mu - t.f i'J»\ *1 O
ft ID ilL-ii’s It
s ; :».i In:! Ib u i Hi i l
^ Pr. i BIN ^
«
'Anil €
f. piir?r ’c RhadTi t ’tir lia’Ms °d *
% best , >
♦ 4
%. r
I 4y
* *
*
-
Agent wanted f< r new bock:
xSpIemhtl seller, Bare lady. oppor*
live ir.nn or $75
v t nt rl. .No expe
ncv.ee we give AGENT require*!* fiiU instriK*iicns. a*
tVc pay exprts* :-,<W 30 day*
credit. Let u< t i r. W.
1570, Ziegler Philadelphia.Pa A; t o., P> - WANTED
.
GOING ' Z' XTY-- ' g . -itVA.
u >-fit KF
BUiLD?iSife:l '
OPIUM And MORPHINE
Halits CUBED
StelSoC r-jrcal an 1
V«*2rely i ; . S - . — I ' -
RUL "E^TFRtE, ! an-4
Add f H£ TEMPLE PHASED? C0-. Wabas^.