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THE WATCROSS HERALD, JULY-24 189?
AN OPEN LETTER
To MOTHERS.
WE ARE ASSERTING IN THE COURTS OUR RIGHT TO THE
EXCLUSIVE USE OF THE WORD “CASTORIA,” AMD
“ PITCHER’S CASTORIA,” AS OUR TRADE HARK.
I DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts,
was the originator of “PITCHER’S CASTORIA," the same
that has borne and does now s/ty. on ever U
bear the facsimile signature of C&4 e /yTZtuc*M£ wrapper.
This is the original “ PITCHERS CASTORIA,’’ which has been
used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty
years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it is
the kind you have always bought s/f*. m.*** on
and has the signature of wrap
per. No one has authority from me to use my name ex
cept The Centaur Company of which Chas. H. Fletcher is
March 8,1897. .n.
Do Not Be Deceived.
Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting
a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you
(because he makes a few more pennies on it), the in
gredients of which even he does not know.
“The Kind You Have Always Bought”
BEARS THE FAC-SIMILE SIGNATURE OF
THE KIDACK KOLUMN.
Insist on Having
The Kind That Never Failed You.
PRIVATE BOARDING K
, Month, at
MRS. TATI’M’S HOARDING HOUSE, on
Albany Avenue, near Court House. Every
thing home-like anil romfortahle. Crux!
meals; elean beds: REASONABLE RATES.
OOTTINGHAM’S - RESTAURANT. 1
Opposite First National Bank,
WAYCROSS, - - - GEORGIA;)
—EUROPEAN PLAN.— (
Heal, served till II o’clock p. m. anil at any
hour in the day. Comfortable bed. ’Jo cents;
•Jood meal. 25 cents. ICE C'KEAM sensed. I
Your patronage solicited. \Ve treat yon
right. E COrTINOHAM. Prop.
-ONE-
MINUTE
COUCH CURE
Children like it and adults like It
Mothers buy It for their children.
Prepared toy E. O. DeWltt A Do., makers of
ftWitryLittle Early Kisers, um lamoM
rMetalic and
Wood Gaskets
And all gr idea ol COFFINS, ROBES
etc. Order through responsible parties
Wm: Parker,
C. C. BUCHANAN, SR.
REAL ESTATE AGENT.
. MASONIC BUILDING. PLANT AVENUE
Houses rented, rents collected, taxes paid,
timber and farming lands, city property.
PIANOS
Admitte to bt*
THE MOST DURABLE,
BEST TONED.
*• HANDSOMEST,
** PIONOS,
Over 30,000 In Use.
And not a dissatisfied customer. The Stan
dard by which others measure. Sold in
Georgia for the past 30 years to the most
prominent citizens.
They cost more than others, but as their
patented improvements add more than
double to its life, its worth more than dou
ble the price.
Buy the Best, its Cheapest
in Fancy Wood Oases,
<pection at Geo. R. Yonpmns’
id prices on applicot’on to
Chas. H. Freyer,
South Georgia Manager.
WAYCROSS, GEORGIA.
Full line of tb
await your
Cutlogue and prices
C. E. Mcbtht.
6.
WABRKf Lott
• staple
Wanted-Rn idea
WEDDgKBSwfi OC^piSSitAttc^
Roberson’s Repair Shop
ALBANY AVENUE Near Courthouse,
Furniture Upholstered and Repaired, as
good as new. Mattresses made to onler and
renovated. Terms as reasonable as can be
afforded. A treal is all I ask to convince
the public that I do first-class work. Re
pairing baby carriaegs a special feat” :e.
HUTGHIKS & GHIUBERUIH,
General
“Repair
—Shop—
Wilson Block.
Guns, pistols. Bicycles. Ice Boxes. Fnrru-
ture. Etc., repaired on short notice.
FURNITURE AND
HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS,
BEDDING.
RUGS,
MATTING,
COMPLETE LINE
Bought in large quanities for cash, t
save our customers money. Exami<
nation will convince you. Mail
orders promptly attended to.
Banting, itching skin diseases instant
ly relieved by DeWitt's Witch Hazel
Salve, unequalled by cats, bruises, burns
It£heals without leaving a scar, A % M.
Stead and V.L. Stanton A Co.
It is said that “tenderfeet” are making
the richest strikes in the Alaskan gold
fields.
“They don’t make much fuss about it.”
We are speaking of DeWitt'a Little Early
Risen, the famous little pills for consti
pation, and all stomach and liver troub
les. They never gripe. A. M. Stead
and V. L. Stanton A Co.
Cotton ties and cotton bagging are
back on the dutiable list io the Dingley
tariff bill.
Vim, vigor and victory:—these are the
characteristics of DeWitt'a Little Early
Risen, the famous little pills for consti
pation, biliousness and all stomach and
liver troubles. A. M. Steau, and V. L.
Stanton & Co.
Nebraska has paid off $28,000,000 of
mortgages within the past six months.
A good showing.
Don’t nauseate your stomach with teas
and bitter herbs, but regulats your liver
and sick headache by using those famous
little pills known as DeWitt’s Little
Earlv Risers. V. L. Stanton & Co., and
A. M. Stead.
The originalbucket-sbop man has just
died in Boston*. His last act in life was
to “kick the bucket.”
It heals everything except a broken
heart, may be said of DeWitt’a Witch
Hazel Salve. Piles and rec»al diseases,
cuts, burns bruises, tetter, eczema and
all skin troubles may be cured by it
quickly and permanently. A. M. Stead
and V. L. Stanton & Co.
It is rumored that ex-President Cleve
land is to be offered the presidency of
the University of Virginia.
There is a time for everything, and the
time to attend to a cold is when it starts.
Don’t wait until you have consumption,
but ;prevent it by using One Minute
Cough Cure, the great remedy for colds,
coughs, croup, bronchitis, and all throat
and lung troubles. A. >1. Stead and \ .
L. Stan ton& Co.
Hon. James Boothby Burke Roche,
Nationalist M. P. for East Kerry, Ire-
la id, has been foiced into bankruptcy.
John Griffin, of Zanesville, O., says,
“f never lived a day for thirty years
without suffering agony, until a hot of
DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve cured my
piles.” For piles and rectal troubles,
cuts, bruises, sprains, eczema *lnd v a!l skin-
troubles DeWitt’s Witch Hazel-Salve ii
unequalled. V., L.-Stanton &CiV>. and
A. M.. Stead.
Hon: Tom Watson announces that he
intends from this time forward to remain
in comparative quiet “at his Georgia
home.
You may hunt the world overaud you
will not find another medicine equal to
Chamberlain’s Colic. Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy for bowel complaints. It
is pleasant, safe and reliable. For sale
by V. L. Stanton & Co., Druggists.
Among the adventurous argonauts
now hurrying to the Alaskan El Dorado
it is hoped a successor of Bret Harte
may be numbered. ,1!
“I crave but One Minute,” said the
public speaker in a husky voice, and
then he took a dose of One Minute Cough
Cure, and proceeded with his oratory.
One Mirute Cough Cure is unequalled
for thrort and lung troubles. V.,L. Stan
ton & po., and A. M. Stead.
Much dissatisfaction is expressed by
j organized labor over the appointment of
T. V. Powderly as commissioner general
of immigration.
Last summer one of our grand-chil
dren was sick with a severe bowel troub
le,’* says Mrs. E. G. Gregory, of Fred-
rickstuwn. Mo. “Our doctor’s remedv
BITTER AGAINST SPAIN.
Madrid, July 21.—Senor Y. Prender-
gaat’s speech at Saragossa on the Cu
ban question v and in denunciation of the
policy of the government has made a
great sensation. Tbe Epochs says:
“The frightful picture of Cuba paint
ed by the liberal leader at Saragossa can
only be compared to the inflamatvry ut
terances of tbe worst enemies of Spain.
We believe that his insinuations against
the throne must permanently keep the
liberal party out of power, owing to the
increased strength which such utterances
give the monarchists in the eyes of the
public.”
Senor Conoval del Castillo, premier,
states that the report of an alliance be
tween Spain and Japan is incorrect.
The most cordial relations exist between
the tivo nations, but the u nderstanding
does not extend further.
1 Georgia Mule’s Queer Appetite.
sou i h-west Georgia n<
> of the laborers In his vine-
An old
called to o
yard:
J..hn! Hit’s time to feed dat
mule. Give him a couple of fence rails,
quick.”
“He doesn’t eat fence rails, does he?’
quired a bystander.
“Lawd bless you, yes, sub,” replied
the old man. “Dat des whets his appe
tite. He us*ter belong ter one er dese
officeseekers, en he got so hongry stand-
in hitched in de sun dat he started on
fence rails fer a livin, en now he won’t
tackle grass tell he’s done eat up a string
er fence, den he eats oats, or grass, for
desert. W’y, suli,” continued the old
man, “he got loose de yuther day aud
took en eat up one whole gable end er
Ebeneczer chapel, en w’en we run up
on bin he ivuz makin a break fer de
pews en de pulpit. Dey ivould’nt been
much en dat meetin house left ef ever
he’d got ter de inside er it. Give him
dem rails, John. He got ter do some
hard plowin dis mawnin.”—Atlanta
Constitution.
coffin to rolled steel casket.
c. e. mm & co.,
Successors to W. R. McIntosh & Co.
THE GENERAL
REDUCTION IN
BICYCLE PRICES
eloquently proclaims tbe £
that to-day “18 year old”
are
With the patronage accorded
ua up to date. Oor place ie
better equipped than ever to
eerre onr guests satisfactorily,
i We purpoee to lire up to our
motto and keep THE SOUTH
ERN “The Model $2.00 Hotel
of Sooth Georgia."
Wbeh a Waycxoss
Stop at tbe Southern.
i—
Warren H. Williams. Proprietor
- BICYCLES
^SO^POPUUB LI5TPRICE. 580°'°
'‘Are the Standard
of the U.S.A."
JOIES a THUS, Agents j Stsntoo G Co., Druggists.
Woman of III Fame Wills Redwine $12,000.
Atlanta, July 21.—Lewis Redwine,
f the yoong Atlanta defaulter now serv
ing a term in the Ohio penitentiary, has
been left $12,000 by Lou Harrison, a
well-known wornau of the town.
It is said that the Harrison woman
was connected in many ways with the
defalcation and that she had promised
Redwine that if he would keep silent
as to her part in the transaction she
would reward him by willing him the
above - sum. While Redwine was on
trial he did not mention the name of
any woman in connection with his
crime. He plead guilty to the charge
of embezzlement and took all the guilt
upon his own shoulders.
A dispatch from Columbus, Ohio,
making public the news says:
. “Lewis Redwine, the Atlanta convict
in tbe state penitentiary here, say a trav
eling man from his home city who
called upon him yesterday brought him
the welcome news that Lou Harrison, a
well-known woman of Atlanta, who
died recently, left him in her will
$12,000. This is in part a reward for
Redwine’s silence in regard to her in
the trial.
Dug Up a Box of 6old.
Eufaula, Ala., July 20.—Excitement
prevails at Comer, this county, over the
unearthing of baried gold on the Seay
plantation, tenauted exclusively by ne
groes. Two white men, strangers, ap
peared there and alter making enquiries
descriptive of tbe locality as it stood 30
years ago went to an old land mark and
measured thence to a spot where they
The Mil nesota board of pardons has | commenced digging, They soon took
Refused to pardon the celebrated Young- ! „ , . -Lu •. „ .
, r .. . ■ . p up a box and left with it, one remark
er brothers, former members of Frank ! r ’
and Jesse James’s gang of outlaws. j In 8 10 a ne c rt * w h° showed them the
laud-mark that the box contained
Rr.M>u» wby cii.miM-ri.iii** c.iir, choi. i $20,000, John IV. Seay once owned
era aud Diarriiom Remedy u the B«»t. ; the plantation. He died in a Confedrate
1. Because it .affords almost instant re- { hospital in Mississippi in 1802 and was
lief in case of pain in the stomach, colic j known to have had considerable money
and. hnleron.wbu* f which in* never been accounted lor
2. Because it is the only remedy that t
never fails in the^ tu«>st severe cases of * * 4
dysentery aud diarrhoea. Tho Culion Ciugeln
3. Because it is tbe onlv remedv that ! . *
will cure chronic diarrhoea. * i ^nstantinople; July 2L-^The sultan
4 Because it is the only remedy that j has issued an irade sanctioning the set-
will prevent bilious colie. . i foment of the frontier question in ai-
3. Beam*, it w the only remedy that j cordance with the wishes of the p.,w-
will cure epidemical dysentery. J efs
i*. Because it »s the only remedy that! ‘ * . • *
can always be depended upon in cases of
cholera infantum.
7. Because it is the most prompt and
reliable medicine in use for bowel
i complaints.
j 3. Because it produces no bad results,
j 9. Because it is pleasant and safe to
| take.
10. Because it has saved tbe lives of
> more people than any other medicine in
the world.
The 25 and 50c sizes for sa’e by V. L.
RICE WAR IN ALABAMA
Growing Serious and n Bloody Time
Looked For. Wkalte Man Seriously
Injured—Town in Uprtar
Florence, Ala.* July 20.—A race war
is on at Riverton, Ala., and trouble is
feared.
One white man has already been ser
iously injured and tbe town is in au up
roar.
Tbe trouble commenced yesterday af
ternoon when a negro attempted to as
sault Mrs. S. L* Vaughn* Mrs Vaughn
fought the negro off and arroused the
neighborhood. Searching parties were
formed and the entre section was scoured
for the negro.
It is believed that the negro was found
and shot, but the searchers-will not ad
mit it.
After tbe attempted assault became
generally known the white men became
incensed at the negroes, and threatened
to ru i them out of town. The negroes
began arming and several conflicts oc
curred between them and the whites.
The situation was made grave tonight
by the serious cutting of a white man by
a negro.
Tbe white men are preparing tonight
for serious trouble and there may be
startling developments before morning.
Mrs. Vaugh, the victim of the negro,
will probably die.
Riverton is a town of GOO inhabitants
and is the headquarters of the govern
ment work on the Colbort Shoals canal
Several hundred workemen are employed
the works, two-thirds of them white
men. The trouble cau only result in
utter routing of the negros and the pos
sible extermination of them at the point
of guns, for the white men are of tbe
class that fight with desperation.
In the surrounding country there are
hundreds of negroes employed on plan-
tatims, and it they should enter the con
flict a race war of no small proportions
will inevitably result*
The frequency of the crime which has
brought on the Riverton trouble has
made the white people of this section
determined to take the law in their
hands and give the severest punishment
in each case.
Hundreds of white men from the east
ern and central portion of the county
will flock to Riverton tomonrow to as
sist those who are here. "
TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES
Cn«M ot ih* 5kw« of tbe imy lw Con-
ftrnwet Form, Frwh From the
Wires, for Onr Bnsy Headers
Prendergast’s speech on the Cubhn
question has stirred up the Spanish.
The great strike said to be waning.
A new Ku Klux Kl*n getting in
their work in Arkansas.
Serious riots reported at Barcelona T
Spain.
The whites are driving the negrnen
from Riverton, Ala.
Strikers capture a. train in Illinois.
The Sultan has accepted the terms
improvised by the powers.
Seven persons killed and many in
jured by an explosion of powder at New
Haven, Conn.
One thousand men employed by the
Spanish government out on a strike at
Havanna.
Weyler has entered Havanna again,
but he didn’t bring Gomez or the Cuban
army with him.
WO Carry Undertakers I toiled, then we tried Chamberlain’s
gOOd8 from cheapest pine I Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy.
which gave very speedy relief. For sale
by V. L. Stanton i Co„ Druggists. t
Advices from Ohio would indicate
that the Republican party is in a badly
demoralized condition on account of hav
ing taken too much Hanna in tueir’n.
“No party will ever succeed or deserve
success in this country,” says the At
lanta Journal,, “which proclaims as the
two cardinal articles of its faith a pro
tective tariff and the free, unlimited, and
independent coinage of silver at the ratio
of 16 to 1.”
THE ENvj.
Where the engine thrills
fllla
Yonr eyes M yon hnrn
acER.
:u<l the white ■
Bis face is dark, but a glowing vpark
Lights np bis eye so keen.
He has naught to ask. He has done his teak
And has done it well, 1 ween.
Or perhaps before, ’mid rash end roar.
Lies the hardest run in The land.
Be must clinch his teeth, set lips beneath.
And take bis life in his hand.
But his head is clear—be knows no fear—
And, clasping the throttle bar.
Be cleaves the dark as the soaring lark
Mounts up to the clouds afar.
But deep in his thought be forgeteth naught
Of his overburdening care.
The smile on hia lip is the gay wave tip
That the solemn oceans bear.
Be would rather far at the throttle bar
Quiver with death’s alarm
And so through the night and the sweet day
light
Onr grimy heroes stand,
With a million men in their keeping when
For the rescue they had wrought.
They may think us cold, those hearts of gold.
But silent lips may hide
A soul of flame which fain would claim
Bays for these heroes tried.
And whenever I pass the engine glass
Through its shining pane I peer
And breathe a prayer for the brave man there—
God bleas the engineer t
-Bate Upson Clark in Newport News Press
“Why have you never married,
Miss Antique?”- he thoughtlessly
inquired.
“You never asked me before, ” she
said coyly, es she gave him her
bafid.—Detroit Free Press.
HIGH PRICKS AND SCARCE MONEY,
The McKinley administration will be
known in history us the creator of an
era of high prices ami scarce money.
These are the conditions most conducive
to the growth of trusts and impoverish
ment of the producers of wealth^
High prices that are the result of lim
iting producliou m**an low wages, for as
the opportunities for limiting production
are increased so also are the opportuni
ties for controlling the price of labor in
creased. The Dingley bill’s high wall
ot protection will shut the consumer out
from the beuefits ot' the world’s markets
and confine him to a home market con
stantly narrowed by the operations ot the
trusts which are fostered by the bill.
The prohibitive duties levied by the
bill will decrease revenues from imports
to the point of forcing upon Congress
the necessity of enlarging the list of. ar
ticles upon which now are imposed in
ternal revenue taxes. Tifi* means the
increase ot the price of all commodities
of prime necessity without any compen
sating increase in the price of farm pro
ducts. Internal revenue taxes do not
benefit the producers of raw materia 1 s»
On the contrary, they raise the prices of
the manufactured article'which CH6 pro
ducer has to buy. Ihe farmer, there
fore, will have double burdens of taxa
tion placed .upon him without enjoying
any of the benefits of high prices which
the bill will produce. %
And the farmer, the artisan and the
laborer will alike share the hardships of
the scarcity of money which is being en
hanced by the conduct of tbe Treasury
at Washington.
in other words, the first five months
of the McKinley administration present
the grewsome prospect ot unnaturally
high prices for a period of four yeais
with a constantly contracting currency.
Such a combinaton of atrocities w is
never before imposed upon a free peo
ple. And over it all there is the con
sciousness that under this anomalous
condition of affairs must ensue greater
prosperity to the trnsts than was ever en
joyed by those concerns.
Patriotism and firm faith in the
strength of American institutions fur
nish the only hope of meeting the diffi
culties ahead of the nation and of the
ultimate triumph of a free government
whose beuefits are equally distributed.
St. Louis Republic.
“Jems was a pronounced socialist.”
says Debs, “and so am I.” But Jesus
never advocated the shedding of blood
and Debs does. Jesus taught us to obey
the law, Debs does not.*—Ex. .
ISucklen's Arnica salve.
The Bbt Salt* in the world for Cuts.
Bruises, Sores, Ulcere. Salt Rheum, Fever
Sores fitter. Chapped Hands. Chilblains
Dorr.-, and ail Skin Eruptions, and positively
cures lies, or no pay required. It is guar
antee^ te give perfect satisfaction or monev
refunded. Price 25 cents per box
8ateby *. p. Me hobter it CW, andV
L- Stanton & Co
A woman’s character is likened unto
a postage stamp. ~»ue black mark ruins
it. Man’s like a treasuiy note; no mat
ter how many stains it has it will pass at
par. When a woman falls from grace
her character is generally rained forever.
On tbe othrr hand a man may straighten
up and be received into the best society
again. All of which is true—but being
true does not make it right.—Ex.
We Are G-oing
To Move.
We will move our stock in about 15 days to tbe
new stare now being built by the Waycross Cloth
ing Store next to their warehouse on Plant avenue
near the Union Depot, and for this reason will gi Ve
Low Prices on Everything.
in onr line. Come and see ns. Every day bargain
day, for the next 15 days.
Blackshear Hardware Company.