Newspaper Page Text
THE HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY
VOL XXII.
mm a From C.S. Journo 7 of JfrifHfei
B A __ Pm?. W. H. Peeke, who
■ makes a specialty ct
fc A fill 1 ! Epilepsy, has without
£fc doubt treated and cur
-1 1 I ed more cases than any
y living Physician; his
B| 1 9 W B H ccess i 3 astonishing.
We have heard of case?
ct jo years' standing
cured by
S B him. Ho
I iirpniii
Liu Ufc
tie of his absolute cure, free to any stiff ere r.
who may send their P. O. and Express address.
We advise anv one wishing a cure to address
Prof.w. H. PEEKE, F. D.,4 Cedar St.. New Tor*
Makers ok the
HOFFMAN
BICYCLE, which is reinforc
ed with irianyular tubing
throughout the whole
length of the round tub
ing, making it the strong
est Bicycle in the w orld.
For sale by
W. D. Alexander,
39 N. Pryor st., Atlanta, Ga.
PARKER’S CINCER TONIC
abates Lung Troubles, Debility, distressing stomach and
female ills, and is noted tor making lures when all other
treatment fails. Every mother and invalid ghould have it,
HAI R RBAISANf
Daniel and beautifies the hair.
Promotea a laxuriant growth.
:i wMNever Pails to Bestore Gray
"dWM Ilair to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases & hair falling.
JOe,andfl.uU at Druggists
HINDERCORNS The only sure Curs for
Corns. Stops ail pain. Makes walking easy. lie. at Druggists.
w§
ELY’S CREAM BALM is a ponttiventure.
Apply into the nostrils. It is quickly absorbed. 50
cents at Drnggists or by mail; samples 10c. by mail.
ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warrca St., New York City.
fChlchentcr'i* Englii«b Diamond Brand.
ENNYROYAI PILLS
Original an«l Only Genuine. A
y- .tCN SAFE, always reliable, ladies ask
& 4\ kaliia Druggist for'Chichester s English Din
ie^*LaS^.JoOi.mond.Brand in Red and Gold metallio\\jfcy
sealed with blue ribbon. Take
ri other. Refuse dangerous substitu- ▼
J f /4r tionsand imitations. At Druggists, or send 4e.
I W , in stamps for puriiculars. testimonials and
\ 0 “Relief for La«llfA,* r m feffer, by return
—X if Mall. 10.000 TentirnoniaU. Name Paper.
/ <-hleheAterC’nen»lful I ’o.,MudUon Square,
•old by ail Local Druggists. Phil ado., i'i.
Ere. Geo. I Edw . T.IMEB,
dentists.
Grant B’ld’g, Corner Broad and Marietta
streets, Atlanta, Ga.
Will Be in their office at McDonough, Ga.,
from the 21 at a. m. till the last of each
month.
jjU. «• CAJIPBEM,
DENTIST,
McDonough Ga.
Any one desiring work done can Be ac
commodated either By calling on me in per
son or addressing me through the mails.
Terms cash, unless special arrangements
are otherwise made.
JjtRNEST M. SMITH,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonolgh, Ga.
Business promptly attended to.
Loans negotiated on real estate at rea
sonable rates.
Office up stairs in Stetvart Building.
P J. REAGAN,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of Georgia
Special attention given to commercial and
other collections. Will attend all the Courts
at Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over
Thk Wfkkly office.
yy A. i* it OWN.
* 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-fy
A STEPHENS,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Office over Star Store, south ide square
A 1 business carefully and promptly at
tended to
CW Am prepared to negotiate loans on
real estate. Terms easy.
yy.n. t. hick en,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonough, Ga.
Will practice in the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
of Georgia and the United States District
Canot apr27-lv
Wanted-An Idea £3
Protect jour Idea*: they maj bring you wealth.
Write JOHN WEDDERBtJRN & CO- Patent Attor
neys. Washington, D. C., for their fl.s.u prise offer
pAd list of two hundred lureaUont wanted.
By Request.
THE NEW CHOKOH ORUAN.
They've got a bran new organ Sire, for all
their fuss an' search;
They’ve done just what they said they’d do,
and fetched it in the church;
They’re sure the coilter shall be seen, sc on
the preacher’s right
They’ve ho sted up the ne .v machine, in
everybody’s sight.
They Ve got a ehoister an’ choir, agin my
voice an’ vote;
Kor it was never iny desire, to praise the
Lord by note,
I've been u fiddler good an’ tiue, lor five
and thirty years;
I’ve done what seemed my part to do, an’
prayed my duty clear.
I’ve sung the hymns both high and low just
as the preacher read;
Au’ t»i c when deacon Tubbs was sick, I
took the fork an’ lead.
But since their bold new fangled ways are
coming ail about,
Why I—right in my latter days, am fairly
crazed out !
To day the preacher good old dear, witli
tears all in his eyes,
Read “I can read mv title clear, to man
sions in the skies.”
I always liked that blessed hymn, suppose
I always will;
It somehow gratifies my whim, in good old
Ortoville.
But when the folks go. up to sing, I couldn’t
catch a word;
They sung the most out landish thing, a
body ever heard;
When they were high, then I was low, an’
also contrawisc,
Or they two fast, or I too slow, “to man
sions in tire skies.”
An’ after every verse you know, they play
a little tunc;
I didn’t understand it so, an’ I started in
too soon !
They laughed a little lam told, but I had
done my best,
“An’ not a waiver of trouble relied across
my peaceful breast.”
An’ deacon Tubbs he all broke donn, as
one might well suppose;
He took a look at sister Brown, and meek
ly scratched his nose;
An’ when they took another bout, he didn’t
even rise,
But drew his red ban dana out, an’ wiped
his weepin’ eyes.
Now some day I to church will go, an never
more come back;
Kor death wilt stop my life I know, as he is
on my track,
An’ when the folks get up to sing, when ere
that time shall be,
Please do not have that patten thing a
squealin’ over me.
—Will Carltoti.
“Friend of tbe Court.”
Hon. Th jtnas E. W&tson discusses
a most important question in the Peo
ple’s Party paper as follows:
“The fatally weak place in the pres
eut method of trying cases is that too
much depends upon the lawyer. It
seems monstrous to us that a man
should lose bis money, his home, his
liberty or his life because he doesn’t
happen to know a good lawyer from
the other sort. To see a man’s family
put into the streets because his lawyer
failed to file some paper in the case,
or failed to remember some particular
decision of tbe courts, or failed to ask
some vital question of the witness,
seems to us radically wrong. Beggary
ought not to rosult from a technicality.
A man’s life ought not to depend upon
the skill of a lawyer. The judge and
the jury ought to have and to exercise
mure power in drawing out tbe real
meiits of a case, and no case should be
finally disposed of as long as it appears
to court or jury that evidence is acces
sible which is necessary to a correct
understanding of the case, and which
the party did not willfully neglect to
have ready.
“We are not all sure but that there
should be a salaried “Friend of the
Court,” absolutely impartial between
the parties to see that no iguorant citi
zen loses land, goeds, liberty or life
because he had the bad judgement to
hire au ignorant, careless or dishonest
lawyer.”
When a person begins to grow thin
there is something wrong. The waste
is greater than the supply and it is on
ly a question of time when the end
must come.
In nine cases out of ten the trouble
is with the digestive organs. If you
can restore them to a healthy condition
you will stop the waste, put on new
flesh and cause them to feel better in
every way. Tbe food they eat will be
digested and appropriated to tbe needs
of -the system, and a normal appetite
will appear,
Consumption frequently follows a
wasting of bodily tissue because nearly
all consumptives have indigestion. The
Shaker Digestive Cordial will restore
the stomach to a healthy condition in a
vast majority of cases. Get odb of
their books from your druggist and
learn about this new valuable remedy.
When the children need castor oil
give them Laxol; it is palateable.
mcdonough, ga., Friday April 2, ihot.
THE UREA! FLOODS
Promise More Trouble am! People
Warned to Move Out.
Washington, March ’2B—The fol
lowing special river bulletin has been
issued by the weather bureau:
‘•The crest of the Hood wave is still
at Cairo, which shows a stationary
gauge reading 51. G feet for the past
four days.
“There is great danger yet to come
from the Hood in the region from Hele
ua southward to New Orleans.
“The river will continue to rise for
at least ten days iu the region from
Helena southward to Vicksburg, and
to rise during a longer period from
Vicksburg southward.
“If no break occurs before, levees
will be subjected to the greatest strain
April the 10th, iu southwest Arkansas,
western Mississippi aud iu Louisaua.
Should the levees break, the result will
he one of the most disastrous floods
ever known.
“Weather conditions note additional
fall in the middle and lower Mississippi
valleys, which will materially intensify
the Hood conditions.
“Those living in districts overflowed
in former years, should be ou the safe
side, and trausfer stock and movable
property to places of kuowu safety
while there is yet time.
Willis L. Moore.
“Chief of Bureau.”
A Tax on Civilization.
The wearing of clothes has always
been considered a distinguished badge
of civilization. The Euglish philoso
pher, Carlyle,, differentiates man from
all other orders of creation, particular
ly the brue creation, by describing him
as a “clothes wearing animal.” The
higher nations rise in tho scale of civil
ization the more attention is generally
paid to the quality, comfort, elegance
and convenience of the bodily raiment
of both sexes. Acting upon this
Knowledge, apparently, the Hon. Nel
son Dingley, Jr. of Maine, and the re
publican majority of the committee of
ways and means, propose to make the
American man and woman pay dearly
in future for the privilege—or shall we
say the luxury?—of wearing clothes.
It was Mr. Harrison himself who four
years ago, in the national campaign,
originated, or if he did not originate,
made use of the aphorism—that “cheap
coats make cheap men.” The Ding
ley tariff, if it should become a law,
will effectually remove this disgrace
from the Americou people. There
will be no more cheap coats, —uor for
the matter of that, cheap trousers, or
waistcoats, or hats, or fianuels, or any
thing else that is made of wool, in
whole or in part, including b'.ankets,
the necessary garment by day of the
uncivilized Indian, as it is the usual
covering by night of his more civilized
brethren.—Baltimore Sun.
Damage In Sumpter County More
Than $20,000.
Americus, Ga., March 28th.—The
waters inundating this section of the
slate are now receding and an estimate
can be made of the enormous damage
done. VVhille this can be only ap
proximated, the loss will easily exceed
$20,000 in Sumpter county alone,
while adjoining counties were equally
hard hit. The damage in this county
alone will doubtless exceed $3,000,
aside from the very heavy loos result
ing to the railroads, which were entire
ly submerged. Tbe county sustained
considerable loss in damage to roads
and bridges, several structures being
carried away by the swollen Bireams
and must be replaced at great expense.
Farmers also lose enormously.
Many bad planted corn and the entire
crop will have to be planted again, as
all plowed ground was washed badly.
The loss in guano will also be great.
Few farmers had planted cotton,
though all who had done so will be
compelled to plant again.
An old man >n Warren county had
$3,300 hidden in a trunk, which was
recently stolen from him. Three
fourths of this amouut was recovered
by the sheriff from the parties who had
stolen it, says the Middle Georgia
Progress, and placed in the bank at
WarrentoL. The tax collector inline
diately issued tax fi. fas. for several
years past against tbe total snm amount
ing, with interest, to about SSOO, and
attached the money in the bank for
the taxes due the Btate and county.
Tbe money had not been given in for
taxation for five or six years.
PISO’S CURE FOP
25 CTS
CURES WHERE All ELSE FAILS. i
Bc«t CouKh Syrup. TrnatAß Good. Uae
in time. Bold by druggist*. j
CONSUMPTION
Less Chicken but Mfore Negro.
In an address delivered recently in
New York City, Washing
ton, principal of the Tuskeege, Ala.,
Normal aud Industrial institute, gave
his view of the south.
He oiaiutaiuad that ihe races were
hound together and were a community,
so far as tho nation is concerned.
Iu speakiug of the moral and reli
gious life of his own race, he said that
it was all that could be expected after
their 250 years of slavery.
He told a:i auecdote of an old slave
who once reasoned that, as his body
belonged to the master, if lie ate the
master’s chickens the chickens were
still his and no theft hud been commit
ted. His master remonstrated with
him for eating chicken shortly after,
and the slave replied : “Well, massa,
you’se got less chickens, but you’se got
more niggar!”
“Circumstances,” he said, “some
times forced the colored man to reason
similar nowadays. What the race
needs is a practical industrial traiuiug,
aud as soou as brains are aloug with
muscle in their work, creating an ecou
omic demand for their services, the
question of the relations of the white
and colored people of the south will be
solved. What makes any clhbs in any
community interested in any other
class is the fact that one class has
something, either business, culture,
or trade, that that other wants.
“No man more strongly believes in
aud loves the southern white man more
than I do,” he declared in conclusion.
“No one section of our country can
afford to cherish hatred against an
other.”
Lock the Door
Before the horse is stolen. Purify,
enrich aud vitalize your blood aud
and build upyour physical system before
disease attacks you and serious sick
ness comes. Hood’s Sarsaparilla will
make you strong and vigorous and
will expel from your blood all impuri
ties and germs of disease. Take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla now.
Hood’s pills are the favorite family
cathartic. Easy to take, gentle, mild.
25 cents. ,!
Two Pictures.
llon. Patrick Walsh, editor and
Btatesmau with a silver lining, at the
Augusta meeting of agriculturists, said:
We have passed through four years
of great depression. That depiessiou
extended to every department of busi
ness. There has beeu a depreciation
in the value of the products of the soil
and the price of land has declined un
til it may almost be said that it has no
market value. This has been the con
dition of our own state, and I may say
throughout the south. City property
has also depreciated, and industries of
all kinds have been dormant.
When tho farmers of today return
to the principle, aud practice the in
dustrial policy of those who preceded
them they will prosper.
Following him Hon. J. Pope Brown,
practical farmer said:
lam sick and tired of people com
plainiug about hard time! and the con
dition of farmers They have become
chronic grumblers and croaked so
loud and long that it has taken the ap
petite away from many.
Let me give you an illustration. A
negro tenant on my place was in good
corcumstance He had paid rent and
had several bales of cotton left to bis
credit. He went to llawkinsville one
day and bearing about hard times came
and told me he wanted to sell out.
I asked him what was the matter
and told him he was in better condition
than any negro in the county.
“Yes,” he said, “but I waut to sell
out. I’m afraid I’ll lose what I got.”
The negro was persuaded to keep
light along, aud such was his success
that recently he purchased a nice little
farm and paid cash for it.
Take your choice.
Gen’l. Wade Hampton, who was
thought to be at death's door last week,
is slowly improving. He bas been in
feeble health for some time.
An exchange tells of a prominent
citizen of Oklahoma who died suddenly
of heart failure. It seems that he
failed to get the fifth heart from his
sleeve to his hand before his opponent
tumbled to the game and get the drop
on him.—Americus Herald.
A northern in speaking of
the many advantages of the south, re
marks: “There is no necessity for a
man in the south committing suicide.
If he is tired of life, just let him make
love to another man’s wife ”
Tbe Maine hear is fast becoming a
i tradition. There is talk of abolishing
the $5 bounty on bear.
25 CTS
A Word From the Postmaster.
We are tho Postmaster of this town,
aud while i ccupying tho oxalted posi
tion we propose to keep right on feel
ing that we are more or less the United
States. The day after we took posses
sion of the office we gave notice that
it was beneath the dignity of a post
master to lien stamps on to letters.
Our predecessor had dona it iu order to
curry favor with the public hut we had
no such object iu view We promptly
and positively refused to lick, aud
though we offeuded scores of citizeus
for the time being, all of them event
ually came around to our way of think
ing. It has beeu three months siuce
anyone requested us to lick, but last
Tuesday a stranger iu town named
Baker entered the office aud bought a
stamp aud demanded that we paste it
to his letter. His manner was very
offensive, aud after a few words had
beeu exchanged lie announced that we
must either lick the stamp or he would
lick us. We passed out into the cor
ridor aud he tackled us aud it took us
just five miuutes to make him holler.
We did not lick him as editor of the
Kicker, Mayor, Senator or Deputy
United States Marshal, but as Post
master, and to maiutaiu the dignity of
the United States, and after being res
tored to consciousness he made us
an ample apology aud admitted that
we could have taken no other course
under the circumstances. Ue was able
to limp out of town next day, aud de
parted for Pine Hill, where the Post
master not only licks on all the stamps
but has never dared send a letter to
the Dead Letter Office for lack of pos
tage. If there is any other crifter m
Arizona who thiuks we haven’t made
up our miud on this matter he will
oblige us by making uu early call.—
Arizona Kicker.
THE NEW YORK WORLD,
Thrlce-a-week Edition. 18 Pages a
Week. 150 Papers a Year.
A paper as useful to you as a great
$(! daily for ou'y one dollar a year.
Better than ever. All the News of
All the Woild All the Time. Accu
rate and fair to everybody. Democrat
ic and for the people. Against trusts
and all monopolies. Brilliant illustra
tions. Stories by great authors in
every number. Splendid reading for
women and other special departments
of unusual interest.
It stands first among “weekly” pa
pers in size, frequency of publication
and freshness, variety and reliability of
contents. It is practically a daily at
the low price of a weeklj; and its vast
list subscribers, extending to every
state aud territory of the Union and
foreign countries, will vouch for the
accuracy aud fairness of its news col
umns.
We offer this unequaled newspaper
and Thk Weekly together one year
for $1 75.
W. E. Cleveland, Fire, Life aud
Accident lusurauce Agent, McDon
ough, Ga.
The Monroe Advertiser tells a
queer story of a blind man being given
eyes wiih which to see. It was a
Monroe county man, aud his sightless
orbs were taken out by a Macon ocu
list and the orbs of a white rabbit put
in their sockets. A bandage was kept
over the man’s eyes for a few days,
and since its removal he has had no
trouble to see. The Advertiser says
that no one is compelled to believe the
story.
A baby that weighs but eight pounds
at the age of eighteen months, which is
a pound and a half less than ic weighed
when born, is the attractive center of
all the gossip of the little towu of Dan
bury, N. H.
Denmark’s foreign egg trade has
grown to tremendous size, mainly with
England. Twenty years ago the an.
nual Danish export of eggs was 600,-
000, now it is reckoned at 111,000,-
000.
Mom Rums, tbe Scotch diver, who
some time ago jumped from the Forth
bridge, recently succeeded iu leaping
from a moving train off the bridge over
the Tay. The fall was 100 feet.
Don't Tobacco Eplt and Bmoke Tour Life Away.
If you want to quit tobacco using easily
and forever, be made well, strong, magnetic,
f ull of new life and vigor, take No-To-Bac,
the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten days.
Over 400,(XX) cured. Buy No-To-Bac of your
druggist, under guarantee to cure, 50c or
11.00. Booklet and sample mailed free Ad.
Sterling itemedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Paris is making the veoture of lay
ing down mahogany roadways Tbe
Rue Lafayette has been pulled up and
relaid with real Rrazilian mahogany of
a jecuharity fiue texture and color.
Never Forgave Ills Daughter.
James Martin, a well to do farmer,
recently died, leaving a will by which
he disinherited his only daughter, the
result of a disagreement about a valen
tiuo fifty years ago. It was a few days
before St. Valentine day fifty years
ago wheu the daughter asked her father
for a new dress. He refused to buy it
for her. 'I he girl took her fathtr’s
refusal much to heart. On Bt. Valen
tine’s day Mr. Marlin received a val
entitle addressed to him in his daugh
ter’s hand writing.
It was a rough caricature, represent
iug a miser counting and gloating over
his money. He at once took his daugh
ter to task for what he considered an
insult. She denied that she sent the
cartoon. There lived in the neigh
borhood another farmer who had treat
ed a ueice living with him brutally.
Martin’s daughter said that she and
this girl had purchased each a valen
tine, and that she (Miss Martin) had
bought one eutitled, “The Honest Far
mer,” while the other girl had pur
chased the caricature to send to her
harsh uncle. In addressiug the envel
opes, she said, the valentines became
mixed.
But, in spite of explanations, Mr.
Martin would not believe his daughter,
aud from that day be never spoke to
her. She soon married and lived on a
farm adjoining, and, although the old
man was on the most intimate terms
with the husband aud children, lie
uever noticed her. He died the other
day, leaving au estate valued at $ 15,-
00*0.
By his will ho left bis widow $30,000
and to hia son-in law the remainder,
provided he survived his wife, the far
mer’s own daughter. If the ton in law
died first, then the money was to be
divided among his three children. To
bis daughter Mr. Martiu bequeathed a
“package to be found in his trunk, tied
with a green ribbon and sealed with
green wax.” Wheu tLia was opened
it was found to he the unfortunate
valentine that bad caused the es
trangement of the father from the
daughter half a ceutury ago.—N. Y.
Press.
Proverbs from Jerusalem.
No one knows better than the Bible
students how valuable the proverbs,
adages, saying, etc., of the Arabs are
for the understanding of the Semitic
methods of expressing thought. In
these sayings of the Arabs there are
often Bide lights on the proverbial lit
ature of the Bible. Probably the most
valuable new collection of proverbs of
this kind that have appeared for years
has been published in the Zeitschrift of
the German Palestine Society (vol.
xix ). The author is Mrs. Lydia Ein
sler, who all her life has lived in Je
rusalem, and gives this collecton of
proverbs gathered in her intercouroe
with the people of the sacred city aud
its environs. We quote a number as
samples:
“Is your friend made of honey, do
not lick him away entirely,” i. e., use
a friend when in need, but do not abuse
him.
“A wise enemy is better than a crazy
friend,” i. e , a crazy friend will do you
more harm than a wise enemy.
“fie who sees his relatives, forgets
his friends,” i. e., when in the circle of
relatives friends are forgotten.
“If your neighbor casts hatred up
on you, change your door to another
side of the house,” i. e., avoid quarrels.
“A house without a neighbor is worth
a thousand gold florins.”
“Search your own house through
seven time before you charge yopr
neighbor with theft.”
“A neighbor who is helpful is better
than a brother who is not,”
‘ Every cock crows lou lest ou his
own manure pile.”
“He has no garments for his legs,
but yet he is decorated with flowers.”
“Praise nobody unless you have first
tried him.”
“The gossip of two people can de
stroy two houses.”
“Sit rather between two women who
are baking bread than between two
who are washing,” i. e., the first will
give you fresh bread, the latter will
bespatter you with water.
“ily day she destroys her bouses
i and at night she burns her oil,” said of
an impracticable womau.
A Philadelphia woman has sued her
' heartless husband for divorce because
: he has forbidden her to eat pie.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
i 3.
5 CENTS A COPY
•’ip
Making
powder
Absolutely Pure,
Celebrated for its great levening strength
and healthfubiess. Assures the food against
alum and all forms of adulteration common
to the cheap brands.
Koyai. Bakino Powder Co., New York.
Michigan to Texas.
1 hat Pe-ru na is uneqnaled as a
spring medicine is testified by a great
many people every spring. When one
is run down, listless aud tired, depress
ed with that peculiarly distressing
trouble popularly known as Spring
Fever, I’e ru-ua should always be ta
ken, as it is sure to give prompt aud
permanent relief.
Lena L. Stoll, Adrian, Mich., writes
as follows : It affords me much pleas
ure to testify to the merits of your
i’e-ru ua. I can speak in the highest
terms of it, haviug used it for five
years as a spring medicine with great
benefit to myself, and I recommend it
to my friends with like results.” J
LI. Stewart, Eastland, Tex., the oppo
site end of the continent, corroborates
her statement as follows : “I purchased
a bottle of Pe-ru-na and it was used
by myself aud wife as a spring medi
cine. I consider it the best dollar’s
worth I ever bought. My wife has
used your remedies with gratifying re
sults.”
One of Dr. Hartman's latest books,
treating on the catarihal diseases pe
culiar *o Bpring, will be sent free to
any address The Pe-ru-na Drug Man
ufacturing Company, Columbus, O.
Over cat skins are used
every year in the fur trade.
Upward of fifty miles of railway
liues are laid in lvrupp’s factory.
'I bo first American telescope was
put in position at Yalo college in 1830.
The two year old son of W. L. Fur
gasou, of Bolton, Miss., had whooping
cough. “After several physicians bad
prescribed for bim, without giving re
lief,” writes Mr. Furgason, “I per
suaded my wife to try a 25 cent bottle
of Chamberlain’s Cough Remedy. The
first dose had the desired effect, and in
forty eight hours he wa9 entirely free
rom all cough. I consider your reme
dy the best in the maiket, especially
for children and recommend it at all
times.” The 25 aud 50 cent sizes for
sale by D. W. Scott, Druggist, Mc-
Donough, Seaborn Lawrence, Locust
Grove, Ga.
There are twenty monarchies and
twenty-five republics iu the civilized
world.
A pearl that was afterwards sold to
a jeweler for $75 was found in the
gizzard of a turkey in Loudon recently.
OASTOXIIA.
Tie («• .
There are 150 prisoners iu Fulton
county jail. Sixty of them are State
and 00 moonshiners. And the num
ber daily increases.
“How to Cure Alt Skin Disease *
Simply apply “Swaynk’s Ointmknt. ” No
internal medicine required. Cures tetter,
eczema, itch, all eruptions on the lace, nose,
bands, etc., leaving the skin clear, white
and healthy. Its great healing and curative
powers are possessed by no other remedy.
Ask your druggist for Swavne’s Ointment
It is said that a Missouri dealer who
recently shipped several hundred mules
to Johuuesburg, south Africa, realized
$250 to SSOO each on them.
“I feel it my duty to give you a
truthful statement of what Chamber
lain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy did,” writes J. S. Collins, of
Moore, S. C., “I had a child about two
years old, that had the diarrhoea for
two months. 1 tried all tbe best known
remedies, hut doub gave the least re
lief. Wheu this remedy came to band,
I gave it as directed, and in two days
tbe child was completely cured.” Sold
by D. W. Scott, Druggist, McDonough,
Seaborn Lawrence, Locust Grove, Ga.
All kiuds books aud stationery at
i list prices, remember 20 per cent saved
' at W. R Rivers & Co’s.
CASTOniA.
, sfr&AfftaU 3L