Newspaper Page Text
THE HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY
VOL. XIX.
B. W. WRENN, JR.
Attorney-at-Law,
Atlanta, Georgia.
1 1 ioo. w. wrrAW,
ATTORNEY AT I.\W,
McDonough, ("'A.
Will practice in the counties comprising
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme
Court of Georgia, ami the United States
District Court.
T. IHCKII.Y,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, tiA.
Will practice in the counties composing
be Flint .j udicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
ci'Goorgia and the United States District
Court. apr27-lv
P .». KKAOAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW.
McDonoioh, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts ol Georgia
Special attention given to commercial and
other collections. Will attend all the Courts
at Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over
rII K W KKKLY Office.
yy A. U9WN.
ATTORNEY AT LAW, .
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in all the counties compos
ing the Flint Circuit, the Supreme Court of
Georgia and the United States District
Court. janl-ly
TORSI I-. TT&
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Gate City Natioal Dank Building,
Atlanta, Ga,
'Practices in the State and Federal Courts.
|| A. PIiKPLKN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hami-ton, Ga,
Will practice in all the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
of Georgia and the District Court ol the
United States. Special and proinpl mteu
tiongivento Collections, Get 8, imh
||ll, fi. I». CAMPBUMs
DENTI ST,
McDonough Ga.
Any one desiring work done can he ac
commodated either by calling on me in per
son or addressing me through the mails.
Perms cash, unless special arrangements
ire otherwise made.
THE STANDARD.
DURANG’S
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Has sustained its reputation for 18 years
«s being the standard remedy for the
quick and permanent cure of Rheuma
tism, Gout, Sciatica, etc., in all its forms.
It is endorsed by thousands of Physi
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Surely vegetable and builds up from the
rst dose, it never fails to cure.
Price is one dollar a bottle, or six
bottles for live dollars. Our 40-page Pam
phlet sent Free by Mail. Address,
Ourang’s Rheumatic Remedy Co,
1313 L Street, Washington, D.C.
Duvang’s Jjiver IHillshve the best on
earth. act with an ease that makes
them a household blessing.
PRICE : 5 CTS. PER BOX. or 6 BOXES FOR $1
FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS
t t t t t t
WM. BOLLWANN,
j
Watches, (: Spe.ctacfe->. j
Clock s. .) No g Bl , OU) St
Jewelry, {'■
Silverware. :) Atianta, Ga.
_i. ■!■_ I ... *' * |
V* t lIHil ® n money: a ' Bo other valua
lUUU l)le premiums to good guossers
BASE BALL Enthusiasts, this is your op
portunity. See offer of Home and Country
Magazine. Price ‘Jc. All Newsdealers; or
r>.‘l East HHh Street, New York.
VIRGINIA COLLEGE
For Voting Ladies, Roanoke. Va.
Opens Sept. 12, 1894. One of the lead
ing Schools for young ladies in the South.
Magnificent Buildings, all modern improve
ments. Campus 10 acres. Grand moun
tain scenery in valley of Va,, famod for
'health. European and American teacheis.
full course. In Art and Music unexcelled,
i’upils from seventeen States, For cata
logues address the president,
W. A. HARRIS, I). I)., Roanoke, Va.
THINACURA f p o e r o t p h l'e n
It makes thin faces plump and rounds out
the figure. It is the STEANDARP REM
EDY for leanness, containing no arsenic,
and Guaranteed Almoluteny Harut
),‘SS. Price, prepaid, $1 per Box, <i for $.
Pamphlet, “How to Get Fat,” free.
'jlie i’HiNACURA CO., 949 Broadway N Y
H" PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
Promote* a luxuriant growth.
Never Falla to Hestore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp disease* k hair tailing.
V>*k Pain, Take in time. 'J) eta.
PINDERCORNS. The only Hire cui* It £ol™.
“FLY-FIEND”
«ill positively protect Horses and Cattle
from any annoyance from flies, Gnats and
Insects of every kind, improves appearance
~| the coat, dispensing with fly nets. Rec
ommended Bv thousands. Try it and Be
convinced. Price of “Flv fiend,” including
Brush, quart cans, ♦l.OO: half-gallon, $1.70
one gallon *2.50. One gallon will last
ihtee bead of horses or cattle an entire
season. Beware of imitations- Address
Crescent ilfg. Cp , ‘4109 Indiana Arc, I’liila
FOR SALE.
One house and lot and one
building lot, both near public
square. Apply at this office.
SMI PH’S BIG FARM.
Interesting Deseription ot Oglethorpe
County’s Famous Industry.
A correspondent of the Oglethorpe
Echo gives the following interesting
account of a visit to Smith’s famous
farm, in that county :
“On Friday last, 6th inst., in com
pany with a party of young people, we
took in Col. dames M Smith’s won
derful farm, convict camp and hospita
hie home. So much has been said and
written on the subject of these inter
esting surroundings, that it would seem
that it might be exhausted. Despite
this fact, it is true that one must he ai
eye witness to the marvelous system ol
so much industry to really appreciate
it.
The farm contains about nineteen
thousand acres, and within its domain
every imaginable enterprise seems to
have a fair share. Every product
adapted to the rich soil of our south
land we find in such quantities as to
amaze us. The green crops of all sorts
smile hack full assurances of plenty
and prosperity from all sides, aud or
derand system control every move
ment.
The convict camps are wonderfully
neat and well kept and did not possess
that element of horror that we expec
ted and dreaded. Col. Smith cordially
extended full privileges to the party,
and we went into the sleeping apart
ments and the kitchen, and fouud ev
erything comfortable, cleanly and or
derly ; and the huge ovens and boilers
were filled with wholesome, solid food
which seemed to us extremely abun
dant. The convicts are principally ne
groes, with some white men among
them. They were all well clad and
cheerful, and our whole idea of this
system of punishment was changed and
softened as we looked on. Col Smith
has promised the entire force a day’s
holiday and an old fashioned barbecue
in the near future and they seemed to
be happy in anticipation of the event.
Poor creatures ! Of course all good
.hearts sympathize with tlfem in their
siu and punishment ; but the loss of
liberty and the necessity of constant
work make up their punishment in this
camp in Oglethoi pe.
After dinner Col Smith had his en
gine fired and took our party to Five
Forks, in Madison county, in his car.
There his road connects with the Sea
Board Airline, and gives him access lo
the bustling outside world.
The scefles along this road of his are
lovely, as we pass through his broad
acres, fertile aud green and terraced,
into rich pasture lands, where browse
in ease and luxury his hundreds of
Holstein and Jersy and Ayrshire cat-
I tie, mild eyed and beautiful.
His dairy is a marvel and a model,
and contains every convenience known
to modern times, and the fact that he
daily about one hundred
pounds of fresh, sweet, golden butter,
will give some idea of its magnitude.
It seems beyond comprehension that all
this should be subject to the manage
ment and control of one man, and to
follow the life of Col. Smith step by
step our young men have a revelation
of what determination, energy and
! pluck can accomplish.
The hospitality of his home is very
| much the same as that of the late Gov.
; A. 11. Stephens—unostentatious, easy
1 aud gracious—a “liberty hall” to all
guests aud friends.
Our party waft back to him their
gratitude for his attentive kindness,
and their good wishes for his long life
aud continued prosperity, aud for our
selves we are constrained to wish for
some “happy returns” of this pleasant
occasion. L. L. O.
Shot Himself With Water.
Despite the fact that his features
were entirely destroyed by the terrible
method he selected to end his life, the
body of the man found dead in Fair
mount Park on Saturday was yester
day identified as that of Charles Weid
manu, of No. 293 G Master street,
j Alongside the body the police found
an ancient muzzle loading pistol of
I large calibre, with which he had shot
himself.
He had evidently rammed home a
heavy charge of powder and then, fil-
I ling the barrel with water, fired direct
ly into the roof of his mouth. The en
tire upper portion of his head »as torn
away by the terrible charge.
His sister, with whom he boarded, is
unab'e to advance any reason as to
whv he should have committed suicide.
—Philadelphia Record.
Dr. Price’s Cream Baking Powder
Most Perfect Made.
McDonough, ga.. Friday, august a. ism.
TYPES OF INSANITY.
Ilow Almost Any Kind of Crankiness
May He Classified.
At the Post Graduate Medical
School a few days ago, a well known
professor of nervous and mental dis
eases, who testified as an expert at the
trial of Mrs. Fitzgerald for the murder
of Mrs. Pearsall, delivered a lecture on
insanity in its relation to homicide, dur
ing which he alluded to Mrs. Fitzger
ald’s case.
The various types of insanity, said
he, all hieed homicides, hut some more
ban others. His classification of the
various forms of insanity was as fol
ows, and any phase of mental disor
ler, he said, would be fouud to fit uii
ler one lead or the other: Mama,
melancholia, dementia, paranoia and
paresis.
The victims of melancholia are mok
subject to homicide nr suicidal out
breaks Paretics are least to he fear
ed. Melancholia is often the result of
some bodily ailment, or disappointed
ambition may cause this morbid aud
dangerous state of mind. Under the
head ol “melancholia” I place Mrs.
Fitzgerald.
“Insane homicidal outbreaks could
not occur in perfectly healthy persons.
They might be apparently sane, aud be
suddenly seized with an irresistible im
pulse to kill some one or to commit
suicide, hut there must be a ground
work of melancholia or some other uu
healthy mental state to incite this pas
sion.
“Doctors now diclare,” the professor
continued, “that there is no such thing
as ‘emotional’ insanity. I believo the
word was not used at all during the
Fitzgerald trial, and 1 doubt if any
expert would take the stand and testify
that such a condition as emotional in
sanity ever exists.
“Paranoia is a word of such wide ap
plication that it may be worn out in the
endeavor to make it cover the thous
and and one varieties of mild and ex
plosive»crauks.
“Paranoia is a very good wo
use,” said the professor to the yl
doctors, “as it enables you to classV
jour cranky acquaintances. Monoma
nia is the older name for the same pe
culiarities. The condition often mani
fests itself by a fear of going to gome
particular place, by dread of crossing a
street, or similar eccentricities. The
subject is usually possessed of a single
delusion ; perhaps has an exaggerated
idea of his own greatness, or is about
to convulse the world by a wouderful
invention. There is frequently, too,
some physical peculiarity—as a bad
shaped hea I or peculiar shaped ears or
deformity of the jaws.”
The professor grouped the paranoi
acs together under several heads—par
anoia religiosa, the crank who talks
and thinks of nothing but religion ;
paranoia iuventoria, the victim of which
is full of foolish schemes, a crank of
j the Col. Sellers type ; paranoia liligosia,
or litigious paranoiacs, who are forev
er bringing suits in the couits, fre
quently for the most trivial causes.
“Cranks of this kind,” said the pro
fessor, “are, I believe, more numerous
in Europe than the United States,
though the west produces a good many.
In one notable iustauce a whole county
was engaged in a fight over a turkey in
which a few dollars were at stake.
“Under the head of paranoia reform
atory comes a more obnoxious class of
monomaniacs—political offenders, an
archists and bomb throwers, who are
convinced that only by the murder of a
few crowned heads, princes, presidents,
senators and millionaires and the des
truction of property can the existing
state of affairs be changed for the bet
ter.”
Guiteau, the professor mentioned as
one of the extraordinary cases of homi
cidal paranoia. Preudergast, the mur
derer of Mayor Harrison, was another.
From “mania” all types of insanity
may develop. Excitability and a gen
erally happy, careless frame of mind
characterize this phase of lunacy,
though the mental state of the victims
runs the whole gamut of the emotious.
Homicidal and suicidal outbursts are
frequent.
“Demeutia” is a somewhat danger
ous form of insanity. Its victims have
no mind at all, are morbid aud morose,
but are subject to homicidal attacks.
Paretics aie generally harmless.
“Paresis is a product of modern civili
zation,” said the professor. “I don’t
Know of a happier lot of people than
are the paret : cs for a time. Their im
agination is exceedingly vivid; they
haye boundless wealth, in their minds,
or have a remarkable invention which
they are about to give to the world.
This blissful state of things contin
ues for a while, then the patieuts be
come apathetic, larely daugerous.”
Regarding the responsibility of the
insaue, the professor believed that para
noiacs should be punished for their
crimes. The anarchist monomaniacs of
the Guiteau stripe are very unpleasant
people to have about, and he thinks a
few of them should he Imaged, the
others locked up or exiled.
“I hope some time,” said he, ‘‘to see
them all corraled aud trauspoftod to a
distant sea island, where they can com
municate with the rest of the tvorld hut
once a year They should have no
rum nor tobacco, they should he fed bv
fruits and vegetables and they should
not he allowed to breed, and thus be
gradually exterminated This coloni
zation of paranoiacs may be a scheme
of the future.”
Demands 5,000,000 Lives.
Chinamen iu Chicago are not nearly
as much excited over the prospects of a
war with Japan as they are over the
receipt of a cablegram from Shanghai,
which states that before many mouths
are over many Chinamen must die to
satisfy the great joss, Kwang Rung.
Sam Moy is the possessor of the mes
sage, and with it a talisman by which a
good Chinaman may escape.
It seems that Moj Tin Lew, a Chi
naman living iu Send Tong, China,
died about a month ago. Seven days
after his burial he suddenly appeared
again, and startled all his fellow men
by the tevelation which he had to
make. While he was in the other
world, he said, “Big Joss,” who has
ruled over China for more than 5,000
years, told him that before the lapse of
three months at least 5,000,000 China
men were to die, and all those that died
were to goto the bad man. A good
man to escape from the scourge must
make on his door a certain mark by
which the destroying spirit would rec
ognize aud pass on.
I | |i|i | '' | i“ i ji ii,el v after Moo Tin
ii client, and askeM x ’* le
wife did not cause thtHW “'s'* 8 * of
“Did jou notice wek has al
brilliant jouu*- raan > are y et t 0
be sacrificed.
Following this great plague comes
the announcement of a war with Japan.
While they have no doubt at all about
the result of this conflict the supersti
tious Chinamen believe that it is but
another means of completing the quota
of Kwang Rung’s victims.—Chicago
Record.
Dainty’s Battle With the Cotton Cat.
I)audy is the name of a very large
and handsome cat belonging to a worn
an living near Boston, says the Youth’s
Companion. Dandy is really very
clever ; hut he had an experience re
cently that came near branding him as
exceedingly stupid, ana he was very
much “cut up” over it.
His mistress has a little boy of 5
years for whom she has bought one of
those clever imitation cats stamped on
cloth and stuffed with wool or cotton.
Dandy did not happen to be around
when the cotton cat arrived ; and, after
playing with it for a little while, the
child left it on the window sill. It sat
there looking, Irom the street, wonder
fully like a real cat.
The lady was sitting by this window
sewing, aud presently she saw Dandy
come into the yard, lie glanced up
at the window, and was instantly trans
formed from a dignified, well behavep
cat iuto a jealous, snarling demon.
The servant girl who opened the
kitchen door in response to his iwpera
tive meows said that he shot by her
with the rapidity of lightning, and
seemed to clear all of the back stain at
a siugle bound on his way to the sittiug
ropm. Into this room he dashed, his
yellow eyes aglow with jealous rag'-,
his throat emitting snarls He leaped
I fiercely upon the dummy cat, and fell
with it to the floor.
Dandy’s demeanor? when he saw how
he had been deceived, was veiy funny,
lie walked around and around the cot
t>u cat, amazgmeut and disgust ex
pressed in one proluvial meow follow
!ed by another and another. Then he
stood still, with his head twisted to one
side, viewing the dummy in a way too
ludicrous to be described. Finally he
out of the room as swiftly as he
had entered it, and was seen no more
1 for (otfr days and nights —an unheard
of proceeding in his life. But it proba
bly took all that time for him to recov
er from the shame and disgust his feel
ings had sustained.
When he finally returned he utterly
ignored the object of bis foolish rage,
and never again pa : d any heed to it,
showing greater wisdom in this respect
than men and women often show when
enraged and mortified.
Lambs on the Track.
“It was just a year ago,” said the
old engineer, “that 1 was. running my
’commodation train on the Knoxville
and Jelico, down in North Carolina.
Ever been down there? Guess ye don’t
know, then, how the tracks suake
round them Carolina mountains. Too
steep to run straight down, ye see—
land ye iu day after to morrow—so ye
1 have to crawl dowu from the Swaunoa
divide, in an’ out, half dozen loops on
uue hillside. And ye dassont run any
too fast, neither, ’count ’o sand slides
that’s may ho waitin’ fur ye just round
I the next bend. Glad I’m oil' that
I road, I tell ye.
“Well, it was a nasty kind o’ day,
sleetin’ and blowin’ and the clouds
hung down in front of me like a cur
tain. I lost time, too, at Ashville,
wailing for a pesky freight train to get
out o’ the way; so I was in a tear in’
hurry ami not the sweetest temper, you
can bet. Towards evenin’ I was whiz
ziu’ her along, thiiikiu’ about Round
Knob and a hot cup o’ coffee, when
some way ahead, I spied a sheep in
the cut. There she lay, right across
the track, with two lambs smuggled
under her. 1 whistled, hut she never
bulged. Well, I was iu a hurry and I
wouldn’t a’ minded the old sheep so
much, but them little white lambs
somehow put me in mind of my baby,
the cutest chap ye ever see, and it
went across the grain*to run ’em down.
Had to slow up, anyhow; it was right
in a bend, and I yelled to my fireman
to shove ’em off the track. Well, ye
never see a whiter face than that man
came running hack with. ‘Stop her,
Jim ! For God’s sake, stop her short!’
he hollered. And if you’ll believe it,
just around that bend was the biggest
sand slide I ever want to come across.
Took us a good hour and a half to
shovel it off down the hill side.—Chi
cago Record.
Home and Abroad.
It is the duty of everyone, whether
at home or traveling for pleasure or
business, to equip himself witli the rem
edy which will keep up strength and
prevent illness, and cure such ills as
are liable to come upon all in evtry day
life. Hood’s Sarsaparilla keeps • the
blood pure and less liable to absorb the
germs of disease.
Hood’s Pills are hand made, and per
fect in proportion and appearance. 25e.
per box.
The Herman Karmer.
“A person who has studied agricul
tural matters abioad is impressed with
many things about our farmers,” re
marked a citizen of Saginaw. “We
have a few frugal German farmers in a
little community near Saginaw and no I
matter how hard the times or what
great depression there may be in agri
cultural interests they always seem to
have plenty and to spare. Wtiat is the
reason ? This kiud of a farmer does
not cover his entire crop with one com
modify, but plants and sows all kinds
of grain and vegetables. When the
time comes you will see him driving to
town with his little load of miscellane
ous truck, which he can easily sell.
Then all the time he is raising what he
needs fur daily consumption. He is
never hard up. This is the type of a
Gormau farmer. Many of our far- :
iners are too ambitious. They want to
raise a great quantity of wheat and
corn. There is pleuty of wheat and
corn on the market, for times have
changed since we ceased to supply the
foreign market, and the result is that
he does not get his price for his large
crop, and complains that there is noth-1
iug in farming. Any one who has
traveled through Germany and France
realizes how much can be gotten out of
a small piece of ground. The fanner
manages to live where the conditions
are ten-fold less favorable than they are
in this country. The time is coming
when different methods will have to be
employed by many farmers here, if
they expect to keep clear of debt.”
The Village Blacksmith.
"Beneath a spreading chestnut tree
The village smithy stands ;
The smith, a mighty man is he
With large and sinewy hands ;
And the muscles of his hrawny arms
Are strong as iron hands.”
He once was very thin and weak,
And pale and sickly, too ;
But now you see, in his physique,
What Germetuer can do.
He says he has no words to speak
What praise to it is due.
$1 ; 6 for
McEKesT WINE OF CAROUt for fem.tle diseasci.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U S. Gov’t Report.
D o y a | Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
The Gooil We May <lo.
Time is on the wing, and the days
are going by. What good are we do
ing i Looking out from my window, 1
| see a small field of corn that a few days
ago was greatly blighted by the with
ering drouth it had suffered, but as 1
look out over that corn to day, i ob
serve a material change. It lias as
sumed a different color, and is looking
fresh and green. What has brought
about this wonderful change? Good
has been done, and a change has been
produced. The needed rain has come
and brought its recuperating influence
which has been imparted to refresh and
revive the corn. O, the good it has
done! lint this important agency
alone is not sufficient to do all the good
that may be done, even to the growing
corn. The warnmig influence of the
sunehiiie must follow the rairi, iu order
to accomplish all of the appointed
good.
The Great Fountain and Author of
all good has opened a wide field for all
to occupy in doing good, with every
thing in its time and place. Today is
the choseu time to do good. Tomor
row never comes until it has past.
Wait not for tomorrow —today, today,
is the only sure time in which wo may
do good. Let some good bo done to
day. If nothing better carry a pleas
ant smile on your lace, with a kind
word from your heart, and tell it to
those whose hearts are burdened with
grief and sorrow. Yes, it will do them
good. Small as it may seem, it will
not be without its reward. Cruel ueg.
| lect has crushed many a throbbing
I heart uutil its last heating pulse was
| hushed into perpetual silence. No
j hand was stretched forth to rescue that
\ fainting, dying one. There was a
'chance to have done good, hut no one
was found to improve that chance.
Only a few more fleeting days, and
all our chances to do good will be gone,
and like tomorrow, never, never re
turn. Do some good today, by some
kind word or deed, and you shall have
your reward. W. T. G.
The Ladies’ Friend.
No woman can be beautiful without
a good complexion, and no complexion
can be good without good health and
pure blood. Ilotanic lilood Halm will
beautify your complexion by purifying
and enriching your blood. Try it for
all skin and blood diseases. It never
fails to cure the most inveterate cases
after eminent physicians have failed.
Price SI.OO per large bottle. For sale
by druggists. See advertisement else
where.
Wanting to Get Even.
Mr. Citiman —Well, Uncle Jeliiel,
we have enjoyed our visit to you ex
ceedingly. I’m sure the children nev
er bad a better time in their lives. 1
want you to call on us next winter to
let me icpay your kindness.
Uncle .Jeliiel —Wal, I don’t know as
me or the old woman kill git up to see
you, but if we don’t, I’ll send live or
six of the mule colts. I ’low they
would about do the same damage round
the place that your boys lias done
here.—l nd iai.apolis Journal.
All I'rcf.
Those who have used Dr. King’s New
Discovery know its value, and those who
have not, have now the opportunity to try
it Free. Call on the advertised Druggist
and get a Trial Dottle, Free. Send your
name und address to H. K. Ducklcn A. Co ,
Chicago, and get a sample hox of Dr. King’s
New J.ife J’ills Free, as well as a copy of
tiuide '<i Health and Househlod Instructor,
Free. All of which is guaranteed to do you
! good and cost you nothing. For sale at
j any drug store.
Ilia I're fere nee.
Mamma (opening the latest book by
one the modern school of writers for
children) Now, Freddy, if you will!
be a real good little boy, mamma will
read this pretty story to you, but if ;
you are naughty she will stop.
Freedy—l’ll be good mamma. (Ten j
minutes later, interrupting mamma in
ber reading.) Mamma.
Mamma—What, dear?
Freddy—l’m going to be naughty;
now. —Huggintville Monthly.
Trj BIACK-DRA'JGHT tea for Dyspepsia.
5 CENTS A COPY
Livingston’s Victory.
'The Covington Star Las the follow
ing:
“Mr. Livingston has made a record
for successful campaigning never
equaled before by any raau in Georgia.
Hut Mr. Livingston deserves a return
to congress this time, as a reward for
bis able, faithful and efficient work in
congress for tho democratic party and
for bis ildelify to bis constituents. We
asserted some time ago that he bad
done more fi r the people of this dis
trict than bad been done by any con
gressman since the war, and late de
velopments prove this to be entirely
true. Mr. Livingston is very proud of
bis brilliant victory in the present cam
paign, and he may well be, as it is a
victory of w hich any man may be
proud. ‘Hail to the conquering
chief!’ ”
Says The Jonesboro Enterprise :
“Colonel M. A. Candler in a grace
ful and manly card retires from the
race for congress from the fifth district.
The result of tho primary in Fulton
county practically settled the fact that
Colonel Livingston wrould undoubtedly
be nominated, and like a grand detno
cra., Colonel Candler bows to the will
of the majority and retires to save
further wrangle in the democratic fam
ily."
Tree I*llla.
Send your address to H. K. Bucklen Si
Co., Chicago, and got a free sample Imx of
Ur. King’s New Life Bills. A trial will
convince you of their merits. These pills
arc easy «i action and arc particularly effec
tive in Hie cure of Constipation and Sick
Headache. Kor Malaria and Liver I roubles
they Lave Been proved invaluable. They
arc guaranteed to lie perfectly tree from
every deleterious suhsiance and to he pure
ly vegetable. They do not weaken by
their action, hut by giving tone to stomach
and bowels greatly invigorate the system.
Regular g : zc Slsc. per box. Sold by any"
druggi.->(.
Wants the Blacks Let Alone.
Any discussion of negro colonization,
whether by friend or foe, or under
whatever circumstance, has lost its zest
in the south Whatever the station,
capacity or line of work, there is no
home for the negro like his native
south, uo section where he has more
genuine sympathy or opportunity, and
uo people that more thoroughly recog
nize the value of his service. The
south understands that she has the best
labor in the world, all things consider
ed. Let him alone.—Hruuswick
Titms Advertiser.
The western corn crop this year will
be something phenomenal, but wheat
will be a littie off. The manager of
the Hock Island road said a day or two
ago: “If the weather continues favor
able, this year’s corn crop along our
lines will be more tbau we cau haul for
two ) ears. There lias never before
been such a showing at this season of
the year." He estimates that Kansas
alone will produce 275,000,000 bushels
of corn, which would be 40,000,000
more thau the unprecedented crop
1888.
An “anxious mother" confided to the
editor of the Tyler Harpoon, Houston,
Texas, that she had a boy, an only son,
who was addicted to smokiug cigarettes,
and asked for a recipe to break him of
the vile habit. The heartless Har*
(Kroner responded : “llreak bis neck.
It will save time and trouble."
Awarded
Highest Honors— World’s Fair.
DR
BAMNG :
POWDER
MOST PERFECT MADE.
\ pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free
1 ir >nt Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant.
4° YEARS THE STANDARD.