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WAYCRQSS HEADLIGHT,
WEDNESDAY, May 12, 1886.
’ Kuifert «I the Pont Olik* at tUjrcm.
M Atcehd ti ts?* umil mutter
The Larxeit T»wu Circulation.
The Lsrgent Conutj Circulation.
The Largeet Central Circulation.
The HEADLIGHT <UU mote «•»»
la Ke»<t by non People th»» any
Jitter Paper pijblUlied In thla Section.
Official Organ of Ware.
Official Organ of Charlton.
JAMES J
■AN,
Editors.
Mil* Democratic Eaecutlee Committee
Atlanta, Ga., April 20th 1886.
The State Democratic Executive
Committee trill meet in Parlor Ko. 104,
Kimball House, Atlanta, Ga., on May
20th, 1886, at 10 a. m. Every member
of the committee is earoeSjly requested
to be present.
J, II, Polkim., Chairman,
Joiix 8. Candler, Secretary.
State Democratic papers please copy.
Gen. John B. Gordon will ho Geor
gia's next Governor,
Krt. Jofff Parish, of Albany, recent
ly attempted suicide by shooting. She
is in Hr critical condition.
Legjelntj ve candidates in several
tie* of the State are popping up like
bubbles on the boiling political pot,
Mr.. J* B, Wlllbonrn, cashier of the
Mrcoi) Loan Association has gone wrong
for about 812,000. lie is under arrest.
The time for Fourth of Julv orations
and big barbecues is near. Two active
candidates for Governor will make
things hum.
The Dawson Journal, one of our fa
vorite exchanges has not reached this
office in two weeks, What is the cause,
Bro. Rainy.
Two thousand veterans of the Con fed-
———.
The Right Kind of Metal.
The Cuba Journal, published at
Cuba, Illinois, has this to say in
regard to the K Jeff Davis Ovation
“We may now look for the wav
ing of the “bloody shirt* with re
newed vigor. Jeff Davis has made
several speeches in the South and
has met with enthusiastic recep
tion at the places where he has
spoken. We have never thought
the South was right , in seceding,
but have always believed that this
country ought to remain one and
undivided; that this should be
a Nation, with just as big a X as
you can make it, but wo further
believe that there is no cause for
intolerance on the part of the
the northern people; we don’t be
lieve that the South shoftld lie
prostrate in the dust; we don’t be
lieve that southern people should
be denied any of their rights as
American citizens; we dont believe
that the northern press and north
ern. politicians are helping to
bring about a better era and a bet
ter feeling by denouncing the
South on every possible occasion.
We would hate to sec any indica
tion of another attempt to dis
rupt the Union, or any attempt by
the Southern people to tgain stir
up strife, but there was not a
word of this kind in the speeches
at Montgomery the other day.—
On the other hand Gen. Gordon,
the orator of the, day upon that
occasion, said:
Let the South’s plighted faith to the
permunent Union ofthe States and the
legitimate results of the War be for-
eter unquestioned; let all constitution
al policies that tend to unite more
closely the sections and the people, and
at the same time to promote simplicity
and economy of administration, find
their sineerest and mosten-
* »» tiimijuiiu vuivrxuiH oi me v-unieti* . ,vu
jerocygrected Mr. Davis at Albany last lightened champions.
Saturday. Gen. Gib Wright was. in | Why dont the partisan papers
tell their readers what was said
comnjund.
Mr, Campboll and his force are act
ively at worn changing the guage of the
cars of the S. F. Sc W. By. They change
about ten cars a dav.—Thorausville
Timas.
An evangelist out West has been
hanged by lynchers for killing his wife.
Served him right; a preacher has no
inore right to kill his wife than any otb*
nr m*n, ‘
Labor agitations in the Western
fitates have culminated seriously dur
ing the past few days, and fifty or more
rioters und police officers have been
killed.
The editor of tho'Cnba (111.) Journal,
wanU thu alligators ih this country muz-
*led. As they fight with both mouth
and tail whicn end shall we tie up,
'Judged
Gen.‘Gordon says ho has never dis
honored Georgia. If this bo true Geor
gia should honor him for be was a bright
light wheik the sinking Confederacy
wont dowiA^-
Mr. DavlRrrivedathis home at Beau
voir at 7:15 rest Sunday night. His trip
was one of the most remarxable ever
made through Georgia. Hisjjath was
strewn with dowers.
Ane of on> exchanges, published' in
LrtlhtiTHtsk^has- quit coming to our of
ficii since it has found that we differed
in opinions. Honest opinions, backed
by reone*t intentions are allowable.
1 Tiie printers of the typographical
Vnifan of Chicago offer $100 for the ar-
ycat of the person or persons that threw
the bomb that killed and maimed sev-
e-'*d policemen in the labor riot in that
pity last week.
) The Radical warriors of the North arc
waving the bloody shirt wildly now, l>e-
ittWBe Ahey have*recently board a few
"Babel yells.” The old bloody gar-
• mcnt. like John Shermon’s record i
getting throad-bare.
President Davis did not stop over i;
Albany last Saturday night, ns was ex
pected. This wow a great disappoint
ment for those people, for they had elab
orately decorated the town with flags,
flowers and bunting. -
Judge Simmons, of Jtlncon, publishes
A letter in reply to the members of the
Macon bar, retiring from the guberna
torial contest. This is what has been
expected for some time, and leaves
race between Bacon and Gordon.
The "Big Gould Strike” has dwin
dled down to a very light blow, the rail
roads are runniug their own business
pnd the agitators, those that could, have
pone to work, nothing gained by tht
Knights, but the business of the coun
try wad thrown about a month behind.
Cold weather cannot be claimed as nr.
pxouse for the bad printing of the llines-
ed as if a cyclone had blown a keg .of
ink over the forth. A printer is needed
in that office.
Several of our newspaper friends, in
' speaking of Hon. John .0. McDonald,
of this place, puts him down as Mover
jof Waver oh*. One year ago this state-
. ment would have \n>en correct, but now
pur Mayor is,Hon. L. A. Wilson.
Please remember this, gentlemen
; Valdosta Times; Mr. Davis might
■ feel a more than Usual interest in his,
jffiort stop at Valdpeta if it occur* to him
.'that our town is nearer to the place of
■Jil* capture twenty-one years ago in Ir-
• win county than any other point on his
routo ibrongh Georgia., In one day
more he would have perhaps reached
Valdosta had ho not been captured.
South Georgia Land Agent - “ .. „
wore on a train last week, and saw oV
jects going back on one side of the train
>t a terrible rate, and On looking pn the
pthcr side of the train the objects visi
ble wore going back apparently at al»out
half the speed oMhoseon the right.
. |\> want some one to tell 'ns how one
ftido of a train can travel faster than the
Other.’’ We have heard that Artillery
punch would maKO things run faster on
i f# aide than the other,
The 1 ‘eight hour law’’ seems to bo
•" Ihc cause for much trouble among all
jhe factory,, mill ami mining employees
Pi tlie United States just now* They
want to worx eight hours and receive
!■»•» hours'psiv; now, wo do not claim
to be very bright on anv particular snb*
3*ft, therefore this thing is too heavy.
on that occasion? What good
can be accomplished by misrepre
sentation? How can we expect to
bring abo.pt n fraternal feeling
betwceii thc citizens of the North
and the South by continually say
ing things about them which we
would resent if said about us?
Vet it will not be done. The par
ty papers will teem with abuse,
and the bawling politicians will
croak till they arc hoarse with im
aginary treasonable utterances in
the South. The southern people
have accepted the situation. Let
us be patriotic, truthful and chari
table enough to treat them as
brothers.”
The editor of the Journal has
a heart in his bosom that is only
ualed in Resize by his tnagnan-
ioub sentiment.' He has been
among the Southern people .and
knows whereof he speaks. From
what he has seen and heard while
on a recent visit to this section
he is willing to. treat us us broth
ers ! Our arms are open for such
men—there is room around our
fireside for ten thousand such citi
zens, and the country will be bet
ter off. If the North had more
citizens, more writers of his abili
ty and disposition to give justice
to our people the howl against the
South would subside into a mere
whisper. This is our country—
our Union, and with the Nation’s
supremacy in view we should pre
serve it.
Litigation of two Railroads
Atlanta, Ga., May 10.—In
the United States Court to-day
Judge McOav dissolved the tem
porary injunction granted by
Judge Fain in Cobb Superior
Court against tiie Marietta and
North Georgia railroad, on the
application of J. M. McAfee
and others to restrain the road
from issuing certain bonds ajid
stocks.
Judge Howell Jackson, of the
Sixth Judicial Circuit, has pas
sed an amended aiid supplemen
tal decree to tho decree of fore
closure and sale in the ease of
th’e Central Trust Company, of
New York, against - the East
Tennessee. Virginia and Georgia
railroad. Judge 4 Pardee has
confirmed this amended decree
and made it the decree of this
court. The order was fil
day. It has special reference
to the Cincinnati and Georgia
division.* On May 12 the mo
tion to set aside the decree of
foreclosure anti sale will be
heard.
Knights Of Labor
Washington, May 10.
Representative Morrow has re
ceived a monster petition from
the .Knights of labor of Cali
fornia. It is over 2$OOfeet
long and containes the names
over 50,000 persons. Every
State, county and municipal
officer, and every Knight bf La-
Ex- President Ha vis.
The recent public demonstrations fn
Georgia and Alabami; at ihe unveiling
of the Confederate. Monument and the
Hill Statue, at both of which Mr.
.Davis was made the hero of the occa
sion has calledfor comments of a spite
ful character from some of the leading
Republican .papers und statesmen of
the North. Some of these loyal pa
triots assembled in a hall in Albany,
N. Y., in an indignation meeting, as
they choose to call it, made speeches
condemning the Southern people for
the grand welcome they were according
Mr. Davis, and with a brass band head
ing them sang: "We’ll hang Jeff Davis
i a sour apple tree.”
This was not all they said, cither,
but it was quite enough to show to the
world that the participant! were cow
ards and knaves of the deepest dye,
for, it is recorded, thi.t the majority of
those horror-stricken loyalists
fighting their part of the civil war.—
Duriug the days of blood and carnage
they sku] Ked in the rear and trembled
with fear when they read of the con
flicts that raged between brave men—
the blue of the North, the grey of the
South—but now, when the latter has
been overcome and their hopes crushed,
after twenty years liiese New Yore
skape-graces, a disgrace to America’s
name, come forward and endeavor to
arouse the Northern hatred against the
Southern pc#ple for honoring their
iallen chief.
These demonstrations were of peace
ful nature—no incendiary or disloyal
speeches were made, nothing insulting
to the Nation was offered, not a word
against the Union was voiced by word
or action, only an outburst of enthusi
asm from Southern hearts in honor of
the Southern leader. The South has
this right, brothers oi! the North, and
she will embrace every opportunity
that presents itself to do so, regardless,
or in spite of what the Republican press
of the North may say, or a few political
demagogues may do.
The Republicans claim that the mag
nanimous spirit of the North toward
the conquered South is without a par
allel in history—that the Southern
leaders owe their existence to-day to
the forgiveness of the North. To a cer
tain extent this is true, but where is
the lofty bearing of tae magnanimous
conquerer displayed in these mutterings
against a people whe desire to show
a fitting tribute of appreciation for the
man whose life has been spent in de
fence of the Union and in the leader
ship of a cause that is ever dear to the
Southern heart ? There is consolation,
however, in the knowledge, that the
sentiment of the respectable people of
the North is not conveyed in the hisses
of these reptiles that are too loathsome
to touch except to beslime—only those
that are too low to sink any lower want
to “hang Jeff Davis on a sour apple
tree,” if iiis hands
In order that the reader may not im
agine tbat-this-' hatred'-isendersetLbyj;
the Northern people, ire print the fol
lowing from the Philadelphia Times,, in
reference to the Albany “warriors” :
“They had a small meeting, they had
regulation political orations, they de
clared treason odious, they sung “ We’ll
hang Jeff Davis on a sour* apple tree,”
and then adjourned, only to oe forgot
ten by the earnest, liberalized men ot
the present. They are the babbling
warriors of peace, who, as General
Grunt well said, "didn’t fairly
up to the war until it was over,” and
they welcomed the Davis folly to givt
them excuse for making fools of them
selves.”
The New York. Herald reaches us:
friendly hand across the breach that
those infamous warriors would widen,
and shows a spirit of patriotism that
be found in the hearts of thousand^
of Northern men, sofhe of whom have
had experiences in the scenes of blood
and death that ceared our common,
country. Read-
Let the South build as many mon
uments as it will to its numberless he-
IVe have done and arc doing the
same for our noble dead. God knows
fought each other grandly, but i
the time lias come for us to grandly
get. We did our best to win the vi
ry and we won it; they did their best to
wrest it from our grasp. We cun both
hereafter do our best to protect and
purify a government which, with all its
imperfections is the last and' noblest
product of centuries of political expe
rience. ”
hs q*-»wv do not see the justness of] bor of California 1ms sighed the
H»P'»n worksw-ht; petition. Everv mule adult in
Lours lot him >mj paid tor eight hours, - «• ' * A
1 ‘ *: a* len hours is considered a fair i ***an\ of the counties of the
worn. j Suite has put his name to it. It
| prays for action on the part of
wWfa’ Copg'ess. eithCT by Appropriate
i and ’ leg^Iation or hy a change ill the
. who;present treaty .with China.os
™ n “ may be necessary to forevc r pre-
_,JiilHt the further immigration
a wilHind that; of Chinese to the United Stales.
Patronize home. Buy your
goods of liurne merchants. They
are more interested in wlmt-you
need and will take pains to keep
just such good as are demanded
hy the citizens of their commu
nity. • They can’t atluril to driOe
you away by dealiug unfairly
with'OU and, in ninety-nine
eases out of a hundred they will
uot m do it, Give your work to
home mechanics. They are
right here where you. can hud
them when you want a day's
work or au hour’s work done,
and you ought to give them all
the contracts in which there is
money to be made. Support
your home paper. It tells you
mure home liews, more of what
your owe ptople are. doiug than
all other papers cumbintd. The
man who buys a dollar’s worth
of sugar on credit of his home
merchant and then goes to some
otlie: town to spend his cash;
the man who gives his home
mechanic the twenty-tive cent
jobs and lets his good contracts
to mechanic* from other places,
and the man who borrows his
home paper and pays his money
for' one printed elsewhere are
all of the same class and a mil
lion of them wouldn’t make
respeotablt villoge.
Neighborhood Notes.
[From Hawinsville News.]
The Governor has commis
sioned J. D. Taylor as Notary
Public ofthe 1171st district of
Wilcox county-..,.
It :s'"famored that Judge
Simmons will withdraw from
the.gubernatorial race in favor
of Gen. Gordou.
Mf. Kobt. N. Bowen “knows
a good thing when he se'es it”,
lienee his purchase of a half in
terest in the News.
A boy who is too puny to
draw a bucket of wuler, can
turn over an acre of grouua
looking for eel worms.
There are two tlunys that
everybody thinks they can do
better than any one else—punch
the fire and edit a paper.
The ladies of Haw insville con
tributed a fine lot of flow ers, to
be used in strew ing the pathw-ay
of Jeff Davis in Atlanta.
[FrofiK. Quitman Free Press.]
Bertty'ljy iliiains reports young
m^lonain abundance.
Sheriff McNeil’s little boy is
better and will probably recov
er.
As a rulorihe men at* the North
who are making faces at Jeff
Davis were not in the army.
The masses in the southern
state both black and white are
better off in every respect than
any other people in the world.
A Lowndes county man was
"had x up” in Brooks superior
court the past week for hog
stealing. Well a man cunt
steal hogs unless he goes to a
county where there is hogs.
[From Valdosta Times.]
It is rumored in Valdosta
that one of our young men be
came quite smitten with the
daughter ofthe Confederacy,”
and that he will soon Dave busi
ness in Mississippi.
Mr. Joe Jelks has some oats
planted the 20th day of Febru
ary, which were heading the
20t,hday of April—-just two
months. It is an early spring
oat and is said to l>e a fine va
riety.”
The Georgia Press Conven
tion .meets in Valdosta next
year. It is rather early to dis-
tfid^'uaTter now but'\ve are
sure that our citizens will enter
tain tin* visitors quite royally
when they come.
The negro man who was shot
in the head at Forrest thn
mouths ago, an account of who
remarkable case was -reported
in these colums, has died at lust.
Dr. Bui ton says that he carried
a bullet 1 in his brains three
months before it killed him,
and the greater portion of the
time be was up and walkiir
about. One day last week he
tumbled over and departed this
life.
[From Bainbridge Democrat.]
The Senior Editor of the Dem
ocrat is perhaps the only bona
fade newspaper man in Georgia
who does not travel free over the
railroads.
AVe have had a glorious and
gracious revival of religion in
this city for the past month.
Numerous accessions were made
to the church. Now the ques
tion is will the new armor so
fuany have put on stand the
test of the pesky political cam
paign about to be launched
upon it? We hope so.
If General John B. Gordon is
Two years ago the negro vote METHOBIST CHURCH , MA Y 1STH
of Camilla was almost unani-
RKLIGIO JS KEYITAl
19TH.
mous against prohibition. Now
the best and most intelligent
colored voters of the t^wn and
county are out spoken against
tvhisky. This show’s that as
they become better "informed
our colored citizens become
more useful. They see the dam
age bar-rooms have done to their
race and the white people and
they look in vain for any real
ood that liquor does. There
is vtry little whisket’ sold now*
that is not grossly adulterated.
It is fusil oil disguised and kills
a man before he can have de-
lirium tremens.
[From Cuthbert Liberals]
The Cuthbert Liberal is one
of the best papers in Georgia.
No humbug about that assertion.
Will people never learn that
newspapers never publish com
munications unless the na'mes
of the w riters accompany * them?
Later on we may offer a year’s
subscription to the man who
bring us the first ten forty-
pound watermelons. We haven’t
fully decided yet wheter we will
or not. But there is nothing
small about us except our foot.
An hour’s work in the garden
before breakfast is j-p’.endid ap
petizer, and anti-speptic. Try it
and see if you will not feel better
all day from the experiment
P. S.-*~lfyou have no garden of
your own come down ami you
can experiment in ours.
A negro girl about 15 years
old. who was living with her
father on Maj. G. F. Bar-
field’s plantation near Spring
Vale, committed suicide last
Tuesday evening by shooting
herself in the heart with a pis
tol, No reason was .known to
our informant for the deed.
[Fro'm Darien Gazette.]
“ Hon. A, O. Bacon will'be
our next Go\*?rnor.” Jt may be
Gordon, Mr. Grubb.
One prominent liquor dealer
of this citv tell? us that he w ill
not sell any more whisky after
the first of January next, lie
is tired and sleepy.
The Gazette lias no political
axes to grind. We \rill be per
fectly satisfied to leave the
choice of candidates to the hon
est Democrattic voters of this
county. McIntosh county is a
bigger man than the Gazette.
KILLED HIS BICOIHEK I.N-LAWT
Charleston, May 10.—Oliver
T:esper killed his brother-in-la
Luther Barrett, in Spartanburg
county to-day. Hester was
whipping his child. Barrett re
monstrated, when Hester threw
n ir. n s il l j. I; r e t s l ead
killing him instantly.
THE ARTESIAN WELL FESTIVAL.
The esteemed Presiding Elder! t«. si.at. .routi.ri.* spi.»<ior.
Rev. Mr. Lloyd, and the beloved 1
Pastor of the Methodist church, j The artesian well festival at this
.opened a religious revival at that ] early day show signs that bid
chureh last Sunday, at ll o’clock fair to make it one of the most in-
a. ui. the former in the pulpit, while; Cresting and enjovable affairs
the latter, with Glide W. Jl Thom- otten ut , in Across. The
as and Revs. Marshal and Phillips,,. ... . r . . .
„ . , , ladies have been at w’ork in.cam*
acted as reserves. ; • .
The sermon, on this occasion, > est, and with the energetic efforts
was one of the most powerful, clear j of Capt E. U. Crawley their ef-
and easy-to-undfcrstand-it-you-witl f or ts promise a fine reward, oven
arguments in behalf of steadfast bevoml thc expectation of the
faith we have ever listeued to, anu | ' , , ■ , ...
this opinion, we found on compar- j most lu T cful Something will
iug notes, was sha.ed by the en- bc gotten up for the entertainment
tire congregation. i of everybody, and if the reader
Our people will he delighted.to doubts the assertion we make let
know that this-wtts only l * ,e the following be read as showing
sermon from tins pulpit, to be lul-, . ...... , ®
lowed by a series of soul-searching: a ‘ c,v ;lr ^ u cs ^at arc to bo sold
appeals to the better part of man ! end rallied away :
and woman to come out on the j China Sets—Beautiful,
line pf Christ, and will be contin-1 Silver Ware—Cukc-s t an d s,
ued as long ns an interest is shown : Butter . dishes Pi( . kle . casters ctc .
in the goud work. ; n
A celebrated revivalist who pos-
i candidate. fv»* Goveruor of
Georgia he will be elected. The
people never have uor never
will go back upon the man who
ltd the'last for lorn hope for
l\obt'E. Lee and the South at
Appomattox. Already we hear
portentous mutterings of those
who piopose to revamp the so
called Brown "bargain and sale”
scindal, to the Injury of Gen
eral Gordon. Let the thunder
cloud burst but it will be upon
the bea()s of those who sum
moned its wicked elements to
gether. j The people buried the
"Burgint & Sale” business un
der 60.000 majority when Col
quitt w’aj; elected the last time.
1«? it necessary to exhume the
corpse a?d again stow it away
under 3“ pressure of 100.000
majority ot indignant ballot^?
YVe-trow not.
[Fron Camilla Clarion.]
An exchange says that niren-
aitie Freach cook never throw’s
anyth ini-away. Neither does
the Afrno American cook, She
just puu about two-thirds of
what sh< prepares in a bucket
j for her sVters, her cousins and
It is conceded that*ribe peach ! her aunH. Never hold up.
“ will be one of the most | French look as a model of ac jiio-
Toilkt-Sets—Beautiful.
Shoes! Shoes!
A full line of
the celebrated
Albums—Different sizes and
styles.
China Sels—18 pieces, hand
painted and very pretty.
Wine-Tumblers—Handsome.
G lass-Bktt y-Sets— Something
every lady wants
Illuminated Water Ses—Ser
viceable, desirable and ornament
al.
One Fancy Fan—Exquisite.
Watches—One lady’s gold
watch; one live oZ. silver coin
watch.
One case of surgical instruments
will be voted to thc most popular
physician.
This liberal array of attractions
would do honor to the prizes of
a country fair, and the half has
The Sunday School jolifleation atllo- j "oti al "l cannot'be enumerated.—
merville last week was a success, as it j The importance of an artesian
should have been, and was largely at- • well is fully understood bv thc la-
tended by Sunday School workers from ! dics and tho pro jectors of-this en-
the country. The singing was,, , ,
enjoyed, the children were bright and ‘orprise, and now the full hearty
•operation of a generous public
sessesthe happy powers of enter
taining the listener with truths of
solemn warning and who can also
produce pleasant, humorous pano
ramic comparisons, will lend his
aid during the week tt> the service
of his Master in behalf of our peo
ple.
The Headlight, always fore
most in everything that tends to the
good of our people, would remind
its readers that no good can conic
from this meeting without encour
agement from them. Let all go,
that can, and show these ,laborers
in the moral vineyard that we arc
\yith them heart and soul and that
we appreciate their labors «
A competent school teacher \van-
ted address box "F” care Head
light YY’avcross, Ga.
SUNDAY SCHO OL JUB11.K
happy, the young ladies and gentlemen
ere putting on airs and casting .sly
glances at each other and everything
merry and cherry as the ring
of a silver bell.
is all that is necessary to bring
abount success. \\ r c regret ex
ceedingly that we have not space
The festival at night w» B a brilliant t0 further Ur « u u P" n , our P e0 P ,c
leeess, and if it could have been possi- their duty to aid and encourage
ble, the enjoyment of the occasion would the ladies and their friends in tbo
have gone higher than (luring the day, matk , r . T]ie articlcs nainecf c an
but all was carried on with a spirit of , . ^ « , , .
friendship and a general deeireffor en- be C ™' vI «y’ s
joyment. The young men were mor<^ AU P«™«n» donating artiyUa
gallant than ever before, tho eves of the. for this brilliant fair-f<%tival aro
maidens fair shone with diumoiM’s requested to send the same to Ole-
brilliancy while the benedicts and mu- man’s hail by 12 o’clock M., ; fues-
, , tl , ther in trying to day JUjiy 18th. Remember the
make each other happy. The surround- *
ing country, Valdosta DuPont, Homer-
ille, Waver;.ss and people from
other sections were present, there
fore the ^receipts on the occasion
were as satisfactory as the affair
Was enjoyable. Too much credit
cannot he given to Mesdanies Mat
tox, Norman. Stallings, Man son
and other ladies who used their
ability in making the affair a
"Clinching success.” Long may
they live.
A Captaln'H Fortunate DSactweity.
Capt. Coleman, schr.. weynioutli.
plying between Atlantic City and
N. Y , had b»en troubled with a
cough so that he was unable to sltjep.
and was induced to try Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consump’ion. It
not only gave him instaqt relief, hut
allayed the extreme soreness m his
breast. His children were similarly
affected and a single dose hid the
same happy effect. Dr. King’s New
Discovery is now tue standard'ieme-
<ty in the Coleman hovsehold and on
board the schooner. Free Trial
Bottles ot this Standard Ueinedv at
Folks & Morgan’s.
dav and hour.
Interesting: Experience!!.
Hiram Cameron Furniture Dealer
of Columbus. Ga., tells his exper
ience, thus ; For three ye?is have
tried every remedy o:i me market
lor Stomach nnd Kidney Disorders,
but got no relief, until I used Electric
Bitten s. Took five bottles and am
now cured,* and think Electric billers
the best blood Purifier iu the world."
Major A. B. Reed, of west Liberty,
Ky., Used Electric hitters for an old
standing Kidney affection and says;
"Nothing has ever done me. so much
good as Electric bitters."-Sold at
fifty cents a bottle by Folks & Mor
A school teacher that can come
well recommended as to ability
and character may get a paying
situation^by adpressiug box "F”
care Hear light YVaycross, Ga.
\ Good dwelling house, in
New YVaycross, to rent, ap~
ply to *'
W. R. MALLON.