Newspaper Page Text
THE WAYCB03S HERALD, JULY 29 1897
Evening Herald.
A. P. Perham, Sr. I Kd>t.,«»
A. P. Ptrham, Jr. j
i he mavbom paik a ditv.
Never have the condition.* been *o
favorable for the holding of a district
fair in Waycrosa. and the opportunity
should eocourage great effort on the part
ot every public spirited citizen of Ware,
Pierce, Coffee, Clinch and Charlton
couotie*. Business, farming and inanu-
j factoring will be greatly stimulated by
, ^jtfjefair. Every citizen of the district
r«* Ukoald u pablubiv* every evening, ! , • , . , ....
axospiauuiiay. TbeWaaaLT^caAiievsry }^ * ct,ve * nd el * thu8l ®‘ t,c 10 hw
support of the fair. It is understood the
subscriptions of money and lumber up
Official Organ City af Wajcrfi*-.
Official Organ Ware Connty.
•titans'
Satis* or scar-cam
t ally one year........
Jaliy %tx ooMiiiit.....
tore* utomiia
W*vKiy our year
i Ob
u< autjocnpuons payable in «a.vaUawc.
MlVertiaim- rate* reasonable. ami cwat
•" aoulicatiri.i.
WAYcrtifiid. uA.. JULY
idyi.
to insure iuaertvou. all change* jl
u* edvertiseiiu-nta muct be bai.ileil
ouou of tbe day bHore.
S*Um to Kahw-rltan.
short paragraphs.
to date are very encouraging, and this
fact should stimulate the people togreater
effort and enthusiasm.
It is not specially lor the purpose of
introducing Ware county, but as we un
derstand it, tbe interests of the whole
wire grass section is to be loosed after.
Neither is the fair to be solely of the ag
ricultural produ(£*-*f this section, but is
to include everything produced by the
arts and sciences in mechanics, in mer
chandise, in ladies work and in every
other other department that benefits hu
manity and shows the advancement of
the age Exhibitors will be here from
Northern and Western cities and the
, cities of the 5(iddte States. What Wi
tbe carrier (felt to deliver your , co , act8 in „„ ufexbiblt9 wii | be
aapar. you will coufer a favor and cause toe . , , * ... ....
-iper u, be delivered prompt!, b, report- D1 » de U P bv otber ” ec,,ons »'» be
me tbe tact to tbe business office. ] gl»d of an ojqKmunity to display their
Legal Advertisement*. J *'* re *- Fine Stock of all kinds Will be
&U legal edvertiaenp*nu must be peid for 1 bn,UJ 5 bt from neighbtiriag s i«t« nod
o advance. | thousands of other things which it is im
possible to enumerate. The advantage to
W ay cross and this entire section of an
annual fair is incalculable. Aud after
one or two exhibitions we will wonder
why it is that we did not inaugurate this
enterprise sooner.
IM Out
For Cancer!
Few people are born entirely free from
blood taint. This is often very slight or
remote, and sometimes may not develop
at all in one generation, bat breaks oat
in a serious disease later.
Cancer, the most dreaded of all dis
eases, is often tbe result of some blood
taint inherited from generations back.
It often appears as a mere mole or in
significant pimple, which later develops
into an alarming condition. No one
knows bat that he may be subject to an
inherited impurity in the blood, nor can
he tell whether or not this may some
day crop out in the form of destructive
cancer. It is, therefore, important that
any little sore or scratch, which does
not readily heal be given prompt atten
tion, or a serious condition may result.
Mr. R. F. Williams, of Gillsburg,
Miss., was the victim of a-malignant
cancer, which first appeared in the man
ner above described. He writes :
“At first I paid no attention to the
little blotches on my face, thinking they
would soon pass away. Before long,
however, they became sore, and soon
began to enlarge. I applied ordinary
local remedies, but they bad no effect,
and I then consulted a physician. When
“FOU6HTA60IDFI6HT."
» P » ,ktr VlaUMI Hi* Ktrtfcl?
The sugar trust shares still climb and
may reach the 200 notch yet.
It seems to be fr< e gold they are after
in Alaska; free silver ain’t in it.
The yield of wheat in Kansas this sea
son will amount to 0i},000,000 bushel. j
The happiest man in Illinois, says an
exchange, is in jail. He has five wives.
Hanna says his sympathies are with
the miners. How much. Mr. Hanna,
ho* much?
Spain would like to fight, but is afraid
to knock the chip off your Uncle Sam’s
shoulder. ,
It is reported that a large number of
Georgians are preparing to go to the
Alaswan gold fields.
Tillman’s loquacity is not a bad Dem
ocratic asset in such a crisis as is now
menacing the country.
OCR L.ACOHIKO CROPS.
All the railroads that traverse the great
grain-growing regions of the West have
careful crop reports made to them week
ly. These reports, as the harvest draws
near, tell this week of unusual crops ev
erywhere* They indicate beyond ques
tion that the country’s yield of wheat,
corn and oats is to be greater this season
than for many years past.
With this good news come* also tid
ings of a great foreign deman J, so great
that the price of wheat is now lit cents a
bushel higher than it was a year ago.
This advance in price, even without «
greater crop, would pour money by mil
lions into tbe laps of the farmers.
The reports show that these conditions
are producing their legitimate results—a
general revival of confidence and a great
increase in the consumption of general
merchandise. The merchants all over
the West are stocking up. Their pur
chase* have so increased that many of
the railroads aie running from 100 to
150 more cars a day than they did last
year.
The outlook at tbe South seems equal
ly encouraging. The cotton crop *ia gen
erally in good condition, and the price
of cotton is quite one cent higher than it
was a year ago. On an average crop ot
7,000,000 bales, this advance means no
less than $35,000,000 added to tbe in
comes of the cotton growers.
These things lie at the basis of pros
perity. All wealth is ultimately dug
out of the ground, and when the yield of
the earth is so greatly increased as it
promises to be this year, both in amount
Weyler says be will try to run the j * nd in va,Uf » vei 7 Htt,e «*•« « needed
insurgent* ont of the Havana district, j to r * f<Jtore prosperity throughout the
but he ha* said that twenty time* be- I
fore. Weyler ain’t fit to run a skunk- If the promise ot the harvest fields
ranch. ! Yulfilleril it will be hard for theorist* to
* | persuade a thriving people that they
S*m Jones says he is not afraid of need monetary panaceas to keep turn
being lynched because he has money out of the poorhouse, or even that the
and friends. 8am ought to have said). trusts must be permitted to tax them at
that he ha* no fear of ljncbin^: because iD ., flrdf - r ! ba l. tbe 7 “V ‘«l™nce
ke propoae. to behave hinaMlf. ->g». -V V World.
W5 0*tlwk.
Mr. William Parker died suddenly ywter-
lay afternoon at 5 to o'clock, at his home
3n Court House Sqtiufc.
Mr. Parker was
down town yester
day morning, and
seemed to be in
good spirits, and in
improved health.
In the afternoon
lie had a severe
lx morrhage of the
lungs, from which lie. died within a few
minutes. He was surrounded by his wit*
and two daughters and a number of friends.
His daughter. Mrs. Lonnie Strickland, ar
rived with her husband on the evening
train from Blackshear
For several years Mr. Parker has been
feeble*health. having retired from active
business within the last few joars. During
the last hemorrhage he spoke a few woids
about some little attentions he required.
His last words to a fellow Christian, were:
“1 am a dead nmn: glory to God V'
The funeral services w ill occur tomorrow
afternoon at 3 o’clock at the class room of
the Christian Laymen Workers’ Association,
on Thomas street. The interment will fol
low immediately after at Lott cemetery.
Revs. Domingos, Thomas and Hixon will
officiate. It is expected that Sweet Water
Class, of Coffee county, will be present and
furnish the music at the funeral.
Mr. Parker was the founder of the Chris
tian Laymen Workers Association, and has
been president thereof since it has been or
ganized. The association consists of thirty-
four classes and about 350 memliers.
An Astonishing
Statement,
SO REMARKABLE THAT. FOR FEAR OF DISBELIEF.
SOME OF THF FACTS ARE WITHHELD.
A Correspondent who Interviews a Woman in Re
gard to Her Recovery from Illness is so
Impressed with the Story and Regards
it so Wonderful that He fears to
Write the Whole Facts.
READ HIS LETTER AND THE WOMAN S STORY.
All efforts to make toe Republican
party popular and respectable, as a
party, in the South, will fall.
They are now tryiug to prove that
Flanagan, the Decatur murderer, is a
“paranoiac,” if you know wbat that is.
The supreme court baa decided in fa
vor of Stone Mountain as the county
a»at of DoKalff, and now Decatur is
mad.
Weyler says he will sgain take the
field against the insurgents. We thought
that he reported that they were “paci
fied.”
»propose* t
The Ryder brothers will ask Governor
Atkinson to offer a reward for the cap
ture of the men who recently lynched
Dr. Ryder. It might be well for tbe
Ryders to drop the matter as it stands.
Bryanism and discontent are sweepit g
the land, sava an exchange. Well, who
disputes it ? Are not the present con
ditions and tbe prospect of worse times
ahead, enough to boom Bryanism and
disconteot ?
Hon. Henry M. Mclntosu, of the Al
bany Herald, will spend some weeks at
Dahlonga, wear which place he owns
valuable mining property. While in
that section Mac. might put in a few
licks to help his gubernatorial boom
along.
Joe Stripling, one of the dirtiest scala
wags that ever afflicted Florida, is to get
a fat job under McKinley. This re
minds us of the time at a political meet
ing at Madison, when tbe editor of tbe
Herald saw Joe splitting the wind to
get away from what he imagined looked
like trouble. The preferment of such
mem a* Stripling does the Republican
party ao good in the South.
With Congress off its hasds the coun
try will now proceed to take on a much*
needed boom.
The Carlisle-Watterson |wiog of the
Kentucky Democracy naa nomii.ated a
roan named Hindman to head their
State ticket.
Th* greatest blearing that mold hap
pen to this country would he for Spain
and Japan to simultaneously declare
war against us
he told me I had cancer, I became
alarmed, and hastened to New Orleans
for treatment.
‘I went to the leading hospital in
that city, where I received the best
medical attention, but the cancer c
tinned to grow worse until the physi
cians finally said that I would have to
have an operation performed, as that
was the only hope for me. This I re
fused to submit to, as I knew cancer was
a blood disease, and my common sense
told me that it was folly to expect an
operation to cure a blood disease.
“Knowing S. S. S. to be a good blood
remedy I decided to try it, and the first
bottle produced an improvement. I con
tinued the medicine, and in four months
the last little scab dropped off. Ten
years have elapsed, and not a sign of
the disease has returned.”
Hou.J. L. Power, secretary of state
of Mississippi, says: “I regard the cure
of Mr. Williams as remarkable, and it
demonstrates that S. S. S. is a wonder
ful blood remedy. I saw him recently,
and only a small scar matka the place
where the dreadfnl disease held forth.”
The many caustic piaster* which are
applied to remove cancers are more pain
ful than death, and the danger of a sur
gical operation is as great as the disease
itself. ( No caustic plaster or surgical
operation can core cancer, because it is
a blood disease; the destructive cancer
cells are in the blood, and cannot be
cut ont or removed by local treatment.
As the disease most be forced from the
blood, it is only reasonable to rely upon
a real blood remedy for a cure, one which
goes direct to the cause of the trouble
and removes it. A mere tonic cannot
cure any blood disease.
S. S. S. (Swift’s Specific) is the only
known cure for cancer and other obsti
nate and deep-seated blood diseases such
•s Scrofula, Eczema, Catarrh, Rheuma
tism and Contagious Blood Poison. It is
Purely Vegetable
and is the only blood remedy guaran
teed to contain not a particle of merenry,
potash or other mineral, which means
so much to all who know the disastrous
effects of these drugs.
Book* ott Cancer and Blood Diseases
will be mailed- free to all who address
Swift Specific Company, Atlanta, Ga.
AND NOW, WHAT OF CUBA!
Congress has adjourned, and the war
in Cuba goes on. The sympath* lor
the patriots expressed in the Re, ubli-
can national p'.attorm was, it appears,
campaign sympathy purely, and the
pledge to take measures lo*.kir.ir to the
independence of the island u«»t serfs
ou-riy meant. This country le.uams tbe
ally of Spain, now as when Grover Cleve
land sat in the White House.
.'resident McKinley has secuiel the
kind of tariff that approves itself io his
protective taste, and be has advised re
form of the currency, as proposed by the
single gold standard Indianapolis Mon
etary conference. These duties being
disposed of, is it too much to hope that
his solicitude for the national honor
wilt extend to our attitude toward the
men who at our doors are .fighting a war
for freedom?
Tbe cold-blooded indifference ot our
government to this struggle, our practic
al partnership indeed, with the oppres
sor, has put the Unitdd States to sham^
before the civilized world. We have
permitted to be waged in Cuba for more
than two years a kind of warfare that
horrifies humanity, and which, were it
waged thousands of tniles from out-
coast instead of less than a hundred,
would rouse us as the Armenian atroci
ties did all Christendom.
Having the power, and the right, too,
to issue a mandate for tbe cessation of
this hideous war. we cannot escape tnor-
responsibility lor its blood and devas
tation. The “busiuess interests,” io*
called, which prevailed on Cleveland .o
connive at its continuance, and that are
prevailing with McKiuley to the same
end, are cau-iog to be wrilbn a coward-
and sordid page in American history
that can never be whitened.—-New York
Journal.
Ho land’s new Minister of rv»nun«rce
is named Jellv. but tbit doe* not neces
sarily mean that he’ll prove shaky in the
Dutch Cabinet.
A Macon (Mo) phv«’>inn was enter
tained at * banquet «riv*n in celebration
of the fiftieth year of his career as a
practicing physician.
The fact that “the mysterious airship”
ha* just appeared in Kentucky U anoth
er evidence of the superior staving qual
ities of Kentucky whiskey.
Id Hung Chang has employed a New
York man to organize and manage a
model farm in China. What kind of
models is he goings raise?
Congress has adjourned, now turn
loose tbe prosperity.
The Waycros* Rifles stand in »he front
rank with the best military organization
in the South.
It seems that at last Joe Stupiing, of
Fiorids, is to be rewarded for twenty
years of *calawag?s*u.
Anyway, Qnitmnn is ahead «n base
ball. We at wavs kn*»w (hat Quitman
was good fur mmethii.g
TV**» j‘-ux’r »1 aud fift.v tloPars
Waul '«nf.' r.-o f-r t|»v it»c**odi*rv who
burr.-*.! th» Qtrfuian -*■-h»»*»l building.
n in this
Atlanta
i *»u the
world? The r*ni*ta and tin
preacben* may turn the table
If there ain’t any hell, ■»« some people
pretend to beliere. tb*r»- »• tight to be
one erected immediately for such brute*
and murderers as Weyler. .
Cuban liberty seems to be
p 1 i«hed fact io Eastern Cab*. That
portion of tbe island seems to be com
pletely in the hand* of tbe insurgents.
Ct is aaid that the Ryder lynchers are
known. That inay be, bat we wouldn’t
consider it best for Mr. Ryder’s friends
to attempt too many liberties with them.
“With Congress adjourned and with
h* tariff’ question out ot the way, the
country has reached that con lido* of
cooum-rviiil ;>e*ce which ha« been so
earnestly prayed for by business men
mg the last h»x years.”—Macon Tele-
ir.pli. The nb »ve from a Democratic
paper in Georgia. Is Well, it is
just a dandy.
MONTHLY
SUFFERING.
^Thousands of
women are
troubled at
monthly inter
vals with pains
in the head,
back, breasts,
shoulders, sides
hips and limbs.
But they need
not suffer.
These pains are symptoms of
dangerous derangements that
can be corrected. The men
strual function should operate
painlessly.
makes menstruation painless,
and regular. It puts the deli
cate menstrual organs in condi
tion to do their work properly.
And that stops all this pain.
Why will any woman suffer
month after month when Wine
of Cardui will relieve her? It
costs Ji.oo at the drug store.
Why don't you get a bottle
to-day? .
For advice, in cases requiring
special directions, address, giv
ing symptoms, “The Ladies*
Advisory Department,” The
Chattanooga Medicine Co.,
Chattanooga, Tenn.
ks^tiaVt'nurtTh^UiiiU
vTOi tarriSte *al**l* wr*M«a*Sback.
Wtomiko, Wisconsin, June 6th, ttex*.
J)r. William*' }lrd. Co.. Schenectady, N. Y
Centimen .— Replym* to your t**or ot
recent date, I called ou Mr*. J*neCulv«».
of Wyoming, Wi*., ye*t*rd*y. 1 had heard
much about her c**e before I went to wee
her. She ha* *o long been regarded by her
til mil j and all her neighbors as a hopeless
invalid that her present stale of health v*
nothing less than a marvel in this (Wyom
ing) ralley.
For more than a year past. *nd up to »h*
mouth of March last Mrs. Culver had lam
actually at tbe point of death. Her neigh
hors and friends expected daily to be called
am to perform^ the “ last sad offices ** for
her, and when they learned that she had
actually arisen from her bed and could “sit
np. 1 ' it was felt that little less thsn a resur
rection had happened in their midst.
Yet imagine the astouishraeut when a
week or two later it was announced in the
** valley” that she could milk, and when
•he was, at last, really able to meet and
shake hands with friends in the door. yard,
or upon the street, it was felt that uulya
miracle bad been wrought in their midst.
i found Mrs. Culver, a pleasant faced, at
tractive little womhn, about her household
work when I called on June 5th. She waa.
ru fact, picking over gooaeberries. and her
fir«t remark after greeting was that in all her
fifty-eight years she could not recall so
** early ” * season for fruit and garden stuff
as the present. She talked freely of her long,
•ad illness—the dreary track of psto and
weakness over which for twenty years her
body had been racked, and told with evident
happiness of her wonderful cure. " The trwt h
is.” she said, “I was dead and am alive
avain.” And there was no lack ofeuthusiaam
iu her voice as she spoke of the sovereign
reinedv which had wrought such wonder
work for her. She was surrounded »*y tl
mfiti hers of her family, her husband,da Ngliti
sin) grandchildren, and Fink rills was ce
fainly the burden of their happy couvera
(ion during my visit.
But her cure, after all. is best summed up
in her own simple and succinct statement,
which she made in the hope of doing good
>.fr«. Culver is a'woman of education and
refinement. Ifer husband was postmaster
»t Wyoming during President. Harrison's
(({ministration. Among those of their
neighbor* who can further attest the facts in
her css*- are the present postmaster and his
wife, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dnnstan. Mr.
and Mrs. C. YV. Parks, Mr. and Mrs. Soloo
Kuickerliocker, and scores of others living
here in the town and valley of Wyoming.
P. S.—I must confess tnst I hail an idea
that patent mcdicinetestimonials were mostly
fake ', manufactured in the good-humored
spirit of hnmhuj
irarM at lai ,
looked up myself I have found at the. fin*
pvom Uu Press, tielau, Wts.
m spoil this spin
*lio will vouch for ihv tacts** herein stated.
** YoursHiocerelv aud mtth admiration and
•espect for Pink Pills.
(Signed)
Tli* sbof* letter is
'root the Dr. William-
asking Mr. Calkins t
' med and write op her ease for publi
Not the least interesting part of it
Calkins* own straightforward state-
tent of uatonuhment at Mrs. Culver's story.
** V. W\ C.”
(ply to s request
ificiue Company
the lady
jrew steadily
•go I Itrgan having rheums-
iralgia of the heart. In
rnplieatton of disea*esand was
id vised lor many ailments. I
*«»**• (ustdicusly disease
me. My liver and kidneys
I M palpitation of the heart
rigid aud my
medical advice
nn to New York
r school. Allo-
rould grow
k me dying
trial _
afraid to
hid'*ry of the *nw demsi
so astonishing that f h
the facte iwvt a* the actual
,se demanded, I have hero
fearful le*>t 1 **hrn»WI seem 1* overdo
it Wyoming we
inbutetfj I tried
ronsillted many |
(bout tb* XPtli ..I Man
had been troubled with do
taking f>» William*
aii-mand had
..L Pill* cam*
i I had read
a pit in* He«l
si * time Io % (title tome than t»»* week*
I could walk, and in May (Itrgan doing
hoo.-ework I am nuts able to do my *ork
sod Not tree from the frightful pain* ami
awful weak lien* from which I softe.ed •»
many year*. I owe tin* state of beuitb tw
Psnk Pill^ and to nothing elae. v.
“ My heat wtab is that this simple and
true statement will induce others suffering
as I did to give the pills a trial.
(Signed) “Mt». .IsNtt'DOM.' 1
Sworn to and subscribed before me this
5th day of Ju«e. t 189t».
ter of Mrs. Jane Culver, have read ber state-
5th day of June. ISPti
Richarp DnMf r .
Or. Williams' Pink Pills contain'all the
element* neceasnry to give new life and
./••Mice #/ the Peace
Mis . *
d "lt:
from Or. William*'
Scheneetndv. N V
DbsotWio* Notice.
The firm of Wo d, Ha'dee A Wheeler
has this day been di-aolved. Messrs. Wood
i. A heeler retiring. Mr. J «. Hardee will
continue the !*• sine s at the same stand,
nm|«r th^Opei* H«u«e. where lie will be
pie •-.( d to .tee the trade.
J ily Id 4vr-
GEORGIA. t,
Ware County. 1
Whereas. Leon A- Wilson. Administrator
of J. H. Mitchell, represents to the court in
his petition, duly filed and entered on re
cord, that he has fully admini-tered J. II.
•IioII’m Mint, Thi« is therefore to cite
r«. to show cause, if any they i
whv
said administrator should not dischargi d
from his administration, and receive letters-
of dismission on the first Monday ijt Octo
ber. 1897.
Given under ray hand and official signa
ture this 6tli day of July. 1897
7-5 .'5m Warren Lott. Ordinary.
Libel for Divorce
Warren H. Williams. ) In the Superior
( Court of Ware
—vs— }• County. Ga..
( Nov. term. 1807
J Winona Henley Williams J Libel for divorce
| To Ifrs. Winona Henley Williams
_ . . and fur said county,
; tbe first Monday in November next, then
( and there to answer the plaintiff's libel for a
! total divorce; as in deffinll ofsu<-h appear-
auee said court will proceed as to justice
shall appertain. >
j WiiiMKt. the Honorable Joel L. Sweat.
I Ju'Ue of said court, this the 21st day of
, May. JH97. B. H. Thomas.
Clerk Snoerior Conn.
May 24 eow 2m Ware County. Ga.
j personalty aud setnng soar;of homeyte»d,
• and I will pass upon tbe same at JO o'clock
j a. m. on the 28th day of July. 1907, at u:
oftv-e. j6-2t
WARREN LOTT. Ordinary.
Cm- (Ultra RHOKftf ut Bobu Defiant-
Havana, Cubs, July 27.—Gen. Ruis
Rivera, the insurgent leader who suc
ceeded Antonio Maceo in Pinar del Rio,
and who, with bis chief ef staff, Colonel
Bacall to. wss captured in Marias, after
h'iag been seriously wounded, has re
covered from the effects of his wounds
aud the illness from which he suffered.
He was removed from tbe hospital to
Cabanas Fortress today.
General Rivera, according to the offi*
ctals, expresses himself as well satisfied
with the treatment he received while in
the hospital. It was found not to be nec
essary to perform an operation for tho
removal of the tumor ftom which Gen.
Rivera suffered.
Gomez Defiant.
Madrid, Spain, July 27.—It irotated
that General Maximo Ibmirx, tbe leader
of the Cuban insurgents, h*s re-affirmed
his determination not to accept a com-
pr itnise with the Government, bat to ad
here to hla demand for the absolute in
dependence of Cuba.
Hanna and UcKitlej at Sits.
Washirgton. July 27.—For the first
time since the inauguration President
McKinley and Senator Hanna are at va
riance. Hanna I* enraged because the
President insisted n sending his curren
cy me sage to Congress ga nst the O-
(trnetjon* of Hatiuo, »i» • vouched the
inforraatiou that it would be of no avail
and thus cast a stigma upon tho Repub
lican party, which would be blamed for
inactivity hs to the currency reform,
which the mesage plainly voiuted out
was vitally necessary.
President McKinlev disagreed with
the senator and in consequence a cold-
ores resulted which is now an open se
cret In Washington official circles.
The iniquitous tariff law will soon be
gin to do its own talking.
Japan has an income *sx, and in t|iia
respect she Ui ahead of this countiy.
Negroes seem to be faring very welt
in the hands of the lynchers and fie
McKinley Administration.
Tbe county seat of Dc Kalb may be
changed from Decatur* to Stone Moun*
Hanna and McKihley are having a tain. More than two thirds of the peo-
lirrow. “When thieves fall out," etc., pie qf the county have voted for the
change.