Newspaper Page Text
it St W
7y More Eyve-glas
vo I TVvak
D, P\, R
el ] Bl
Hore RS g 5, Lyes!
N s
o “\COH R 9
MITCHELL’S
- Y
EYE SALVE,
A certain, safe and effective remedy for
Y 7, / )
Sore, Weal And
mflamed Eyes,
Producing Long-Sightedness, and Re
storing the Sight of the Old.
Cures Tear Drops, Granulation, Stye Tu
mors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye lashes, and
producing Quick Relief and Permanent
Care. Also, equally eflicacious when used
n other maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever
Sores, Tamors, Salt Rheum, Burns, Pilea
o 1 wherever inflammation exist, M[T(Jl[’-
ELL'S SALVE may be used to advantage
gold by all Druggists at 25 cents.
B 9
RADKFIEK
aAV4d
~s F 1
Bradfield’s Female
e v
Regulator
Is 4 Special Remedy for all diseases per
aining to THE woMB, and any intelligent
oman can cure herself by -following the
lirections. It is especially eflicacious in
ases 0f SUPPRESSED OR PAINFUL MENsTUA
wy, ThE wiiTes, and PArTIAL Pnorap
rs. It affords immediate relief, and per
uanently restores the Menstrual Funetions.
As a remedy to be used during that critical
eriod known as “Change of Life)”
his invaiuable preparation has no rival!
- ’ . .
- v .
Holmes’s Liniment
san INESTIMABLE BOON to !l child
caring Women; a real blessing to suffer
ng females ; a true |
3 :
"
m N il . D
MOTHER'S FRIEND.
Then apnlied a few weeks before confine
ent it will produce a safe and quick de
very, control pain, and alleviate the usu
| dread, agonizing suffering, beyonA the
ower of language to express!
Yerir iTI O' .
Pryor's Ointment
2
s a sure and speedy cure for Blind or |
eeding Piles, Sores, Uleers, Tumors, Fis
-13, Burng, Corns, Felons, Sore Nipples,
. Its effects are simply arvelous, and
is an inexpressible blessing to all afiliet- |
Iwith either of the above complaints. l
rv it!
For cirenlars, testimonials, and full par
entars, address Sole Proprietor and Man
acturer of these
HREE GREAT REMEDIES ! |
PADRTIRT
1. BRADI U‘J]‘]),
No* 103 South-Pryor Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
S illion ise !
3 s £
"') J{E li i()ll I\;3s{,b e
INSURE WITH
r. PARKS
J. G. PARKS .
WSON. = GEORGIA.
e R e
REPRESENT a numberof the bestand
strongest Fire Insurance Companies in
United States, whose acoregate cash
etsand eapital exceed %15,000,000. 1
4 zeneral Fire Insurance bugineas, insur.
every species of property at reasonable
. Every company, for which I have
agency, has fuily complied with the
s of Georzia respecting the deposits
hthe State Treasurer. Dwellings and
m Property made a specialty at low
5. Call on or address,
6.1 y, J. G. PARKS, Dawson. Ga.
o '”)'""“.“ ®
ob Printing
BUSINESS MEN I YOU WANT
Keads,
\ote H ads,
Letter Heads,
.\'::nv-u:e‘m",
Envelopes,
Circulars,
Cards,
Dodgers,
Hand Bills,
Programmes,
v other kind of Job Printing done,
Litto the office of the Dawson JOURNAL,
You can have it done neatly and cheap-
We have on hand a large stoek of I‘gh
F. New Job Type, Faney and Plain
s, ete., of the latest styles, and we are
bared to do all work well and on short
Ce. Satisfaction guaranteed. Please
C Us your orders,
1. I. WESTON & ("),'__.
EATTY’S Organs 18 unseful stop
3 reads olyB 3. Praxos r‘*f',’r.)'tlp.—
Ix. & 1
diastrated caigl igue (ree, Address
. Bearry, Washineton, N Y,
;') A MONTH and Board for three
* live Younz men or ladies in each
aty. Address P, W, Ziegler & Co.,
idelp Lia, Pa, (aug 16,4 w
- f,_:::if'_;;,“_,-._, A 1
|
COMPLAINT’
e —————————
SR i :
Hl€re 15 no time to be lost when those
we love are taken with these i
terrible diseases. |
1
e !
e beauty of PERRY Dl‘\\/iS’SI
PAIN KILLER ;s that it acts |
50 promptly, surely and t
efiiciently, ‘
Yon't be without PAaIN Kirigr '
T . |
Have jt ready for instant use! |
Keepit with you at home l
or abroad ! |
|
\“_m
ALL THE DRUGGISTS SELL T,
\ 1
- A BURNHAMS
u:'\ _‘T‘SWP“ (‘;,vTv‘\ \\f\‘fin,r] oz ey
S \'T,l‘f, iji \»'y\/i-fl fif]
gfi; ‘.,‘Jf'fi ]DLA} uD “)‘1 BL-.:\,JE"J
L PAMPHLET’ FREE gy
v BURNHAM BROS,YOP.K,PA.
THE DAWSON JOURNAL
BY U. L. WESTON & CO.
FOOD FOR THOUGHT.
Silence is one great art of con.
versation.
. He who speaks sows, he who
listens reaps.
The man that blushes is not
quite a brute,
What fate imposes men must
needs abide,
The noblest mind the best con
tentment has.
It ig only by the sun’s light that
you discover his spots.
Those people in whom heart and
understanding balance each other
develop late. -
They who teach the children to
day are moulding the character of
the next generation.
The silence that accepts merit
as the most natural thing in the
world is the highest applause,
A failure establishes only this—
that our determination to do some
thing was not strong enough,
Evil habits are webs which are
too light to be noticed until they
are to strong too be broken.
Cheerfulness lis an excellent
wearing quality. It has been
called the bright_ weather of the
heart,
Judge not a man by the failures
he makes, there is many men too l
honest to succeed.
The people whom we never con
tradict are those whom we either
love most or respect most. °
The power of a man’s virtue
should not be measured by his
special eflorts, but by his ordinary
doing.
True goodness is like the glow
worm—it shines most when no eye
save that of heaven are upon it.
Church diseipline may be pain
ful; but for churches to tolerate
seandalous sins is to forfeit divine
{avor and help.
The simplest and most familiar
fruth seems new and wonderfal
the instant we ourselves expeti
ence it for the first time.
The reason why so few mar
riages are happy is because young
ladies spend their time in making
nets, not in making cages.
Marringe is the best state for
man in general; and every man is
a worse man in proportion as he
is unfit for the married state.
To educate a man is to form an
individual who leaves nothing be
hind him; to educate a wowman is
to form future generations.
Taciturn people always inspire
respect. It is difficult to believe
that one has no sécret to keep but
that of his own insignificance.
The poor man wishes to conceal
his poverty, and the rich man his
wealth; the former fears lest he be
despised, the latter lest he be
piunaercda.
Despize mnot any man, and do
not spurn anything; for thereis
no man that has not his hour, nor
is there anything that hath not its
place.
One is much less sensible of
cold on a bright day than on a
cloudy one; thus the sunshine of
cheerfulness and hope will lighten
every trouble.
A more glorious victory cannot
ba gained over auoiher man than
this, that when the injury began
on his part, the kindness should
begin on ours.
It is very nice and easy tobe
amisble when tide and wind are in
our favor; but adverse winds and
currents test the temper, whether
they are for show or use.
The warm days in spring bring
forth passion-flowers and forget
menots™> It is only after mid
gummer, when the days grow
shorter and hotter, that frut be
‘gins to appear,
Disputes between true friends
and true lovers are of no conse
quence. The only dangerous
quarrels are those between people
who do not quite understand each
other.
There is nothing which helps us
8o much to feel thatour lives have
been worth living as the humble
but grateful conscionsness that
we have helped some other soul to
fulfil its destiny.
If fortue has fairly sat ona
man, he takes it for granted that
life consist in being sat upon.—
But to be codled on fortune’s knee,
and then have his ears boxed, that
is aggravaling.
Every effort is made in forming
matrimonial alliances to reconcile
matters relating to fortue, but very
littie is pmd to the congeniality of
dispositions or to the accordance
of hearts.
Two. vines grow in the same
soil. The ivy produces poisonous
fruit, the other bring forth grapes.
The live Christian and the droad
formalist are in the same chureh;
the latter matures the fruit of
‘moral death, the former produces
“ihe wine of the king.”
The Story Toid by Widder
Green,
I'm goin’ to die, said Widder
Green I'm goin’ to quit this airth
ly scene. 1% ain’t no place for me
to stay, in such a world as "iis to.
day. Such works and weys is too
much for me. Nobody ecan’t let
nobody be. The girls stick {heir
hats away up high, to see if the
top won't scrape the sky. And
then they’re flounced from top to
toe, and that’s the whole of what
they know. Then men are mad
on bonds and stocks, a swearin,’
an’ ashooting picking locks, till
Pm dredful ’fraid I'll be hung
myself, if Yain't laid on my final
shelf. . There ain’t a cretur but
knows to-day I never was a luna
tic, anyway. ~ But now since crazy
folks all go free, Tm real afraid
they'll hang up me.. There’s an
other thing that is pesky hard: I
can't go iuto a neighbor’s yard to
say how be you? or borrow a pin,
‘but what the papers will bave it
in. They're pleased to say that
the Widder Green took dinner on
Tuesday with Mrs. Keese; or, onr
worthy Mrs. Green has gone down
to Barkhamstead to see her son.
Great Jerusalem! can’t T stir with
out raising some feller’s fur? But
the printing press and telegraph
must blaze 1t round to make foiks
laugh? There is no privacy oto
say nomore'nif it was the Judge
ment Day. And as for meeting, I
want to swear, whenever I putmy
head in there to hear Old Hund
red spoiled, and done like every
thing else under the sun. Why'it
used to go so solemn and slow,
“Praise ye the Lord all men be-.
low!” But now it goes like a gal- |
loping steer, hi diddle, didle, here
and there. No respect for the
Liord above, no more'n if He was
hand and glove with all the cre
tures He ever made, and all the
Jigs that ever was played. Preach
ing, too. But there 'm damb,but
I tell you what, I'd like it some, if
good old Parson Nathan Strong |
out of his grave would come along,
and give us a stiring taste of fire,
judgement and justice is my de- J
sire. It ain’tall love and sickest
sweet that makes this world or the
other complete. But la, I'm old
I'd better be dead, when the
world’s a “turning over my ho:;d‘
and spirit a talking like "(:a}‘q:d‘
fools, and erazy people murdeérin’
round. Honest folks beiter be
under ground. So fare you wall
—this airthy scene will no more
be presented by Widder Green. |
A
Two Great Stallions.
On the old Harperfarm in Ken
tucky are two horses that were
famous on the turf and now gain. |
ing new glory through the achieve
ments of their sons. Longfellow
and Ten Broeck were among the
greatest racers at all distances
ever seen in America, and Leona
tus, son of Longfellow, and Drake
Carier, son of Ten Broeck, have
found no superiors this year
among the horses of their age.—
The eceentricities of the Harper
family have interfered somewhat
with the brilliant suceesses which
would otherwise have been attain
ed lonz ago by these two stallions.
Old John Harper, the original
owner of Longfellow, was one of
the quain est characters that ever
appeared on a race-course. S 0
densely ignorant that he had never
heard of the poet whose name was
given to the colt by a better in
formed friend, and always sup
posed that the unusual length, size
and power of the animal had
caused the choice. He was so
fond of the ecolt that he would
never set a price on him, and re
fused an offer of §50.000. Long
fellow was out of his sight searce
lv a moment either day or night.
He slept in his stable. Nothing
that he could do was tco much for
the stately creature whose devoted
slave he was. And the horse well
repaid the loving service lavished
upon him. No nobler animal
ever appeared on an American
race-course., His courage, his
gpeed and his endurance were all
phenomenal. When Longfellow
‘broke down in his second great
race with Harry Bassett, but ran
to the end with unflinching forti
tude, though suflering intense
agony, the old man’s heart seemed
to break too. Weak, worn and
sorrowful, he went back to his
Kentueky farm with the magnifi
cont wreek of the superb race
horse. He did not live long af
terward,
The breeding farm has been
managed in a peculiar way, no
effort being made to attract pat
ronage, and churlishness and eare
leasness often tending to repel it.
Longfellow and Ten Broeck have
at times been left entirely in the
care of reckless little negro boys,
and the two thoroughbreds, worth
tons of thousands of dollars each,
have been used by the urchins to
ride after the cows. Dut in spite
of these disadvantages and draw
backs, the surpassing value of the
two horses as. stallions is shown
by the appearance of such three
year-olds as Leonatus and Drake
Carter in a single soason. 4
Dawson, Ga., Thursday, Septeml;fl' 20, 1883.
The Wicked Ely.
The weary man would fain take
a nap in the hot summer afternoon.
He surveys his comfortable sleep
ing-cham{)er, all re-arranged fresh
and tidy from the hands of the
chambermaid. He pulls down
the blinds and converts the day
glare into twilight, and when he
has disrobed he lays himsel# upon
the eool, clean sheet and pulls the
other over him and says: “Itis
good.”
But from the ceiling aloft the
wicked house-fly has been an in
terested and amused speetator of
all these proceedings. He has
been a motionless, silent black
speck on that ceiling for the last
three hours. Now he bestirs him
self. He has work to do. Heis
to have his day’s fun. He is to
show the would-be sleeper’ the
’power of a single fly. |
He rubs together first his fore
legs and next his middle legs, and
at last twisteth out from behind
his last pair of hindlegs, and then
works his wings to see if they be
in good condition. Then he makes
a dive upon the would-be sleeper.
He encircles his head two or
three times with a preliminary
buzz. Then he strikes him upon
the nose. Ha softly crawls upon
that nose. He erawls with many
feet, and he tickles with each par
ticuler little foot. And the man
launches out at him a blow hard
encugh to burst a bandhox and
hils his own nose. The fly is afar
off ere the nose is hit.
He waits that a little more
slumber may settle down upon his
vietim. He hummeth to himself
a little tune. Then alights he on
the man’s cheek. He erawls there
on. He tickleth with his many
little pedal ticklers. And the
weary man lanncheth out another
blow and hits himself again. Th-n
the fiy visits his ear. He crawls
about in it and tickleth. He
knows the exact time for every
slap and is afar long ere it hits.—
Are the weary man’s feet project
ing from the sheet? But this fly
has not time to tickle the toes. He
sends another fly, his private see
retary, to do that. There is much
more surface to be operated upon.
It is an adventurous and inves
tigating fly. He loves dark, dan
gerous and mysterious places.—
Be there the smallest rent in any
portion of the man’s raiment and
he will find it. Be it but half an
inch of ripped seam, and his tiny
eye ferrets it out. He drives into
it and erawls within. Crawls up
and down and around the man’s
leg, though it be &s much as his
lifo is worth.
The busy fly watches for new
places whereon to tickle. He
waits for the weary man to roll
and throw the sheet from his per
son. On which he alights and
tickleth as before. With desper
ate effort the man wraps himself
from top to toe in his sheat, ledv
ing only exposed tha tip of his
nose for air. He flatter himself
that the wicked fly will not find
his nose,or if he does find it he
will not care to waste his tickling
power on such an insienificant bit
of surfaca. But the tip of nose is
jnst what the fly has been waiting
for. This is the acme of his fun.
This is the very situation he has
been trying to work up. Not find
that noze? He surveys it from
the eeiling. His eye is full of
delicht. He laughs a buzz-z-zty
laugh to himself and z-z-zts down
on the poor man’s olfactory. He
lights with all his six feet uponit
and delivers a tickle with each
foot.
Then there is a tremulous up
raising, a chock, a commotion of
the bed-clothes, a kicking out of
enraged legs and the man ariseth
straightway and delivers himself
of one and sometime more wicked
words not here- to be mentioned,
and every fly in the room shaketh
with derisive laughter.
Dawsox, Ga., July 21, 1883
Mzssrs. U. L. Wrstox & Co:
My wife has given your Clothes
Washer and Wringer several im
partial trials and we are delighted
with the result. The Washer is
a great labor-saving machine and
it also saves at least one-half of
the soap. We most cheerfully
give you this certificate, and take
pleasure in recommending your
machine to the publie,
Most Respectfully,
. M. JENNINGS.
The shortest and surest way to
live with honor in the world is to
be in reality what you would ap
pear to be; and, if we observe, we
shall find that all virtues inerease
and strengthen by peace and ex
perience of them.
it ek e .
To know how to say what other
people only think, is what makes
men poets and sages; and to dare
to say what others only dare to
think, make men martyrs or re
formers, or both.
Every man ought to aim at emi
nenee, not by palling others down,
but by raising himself, and enjoy
the pleasure of his fsuperiorty,
whether imaginary or real, withont
interruping others in the same
felicity. - :
Faryuie vowy sovrn:—We are
a strangs farming people down
here; we are crazy on cotton rais.
ing, and although all admit that
at the present it does not pay as
well as other things, still we go on
in the same old routine, working
twe've months to make cotton to
sell, to get money to purchase the
meat and bread that we could
raise with half the labor in six
months.
For instance corn is worth in
Memphis 70 cents per bushel, in
the country away*from’the river
it is 80 cent per bushel, and eotton
is worth ten cents per pound; so it
takes eight pounds of cotton to
purchase one bushel of corn.
The labor of a good man will
raise and pick from 3,000 to 4,000
lpounds of cotton. The same la
bor will raise and put in the erib
2,000 bushels of corn. Now, if
this corn be exchanged for cotton
at the rate of eight pounds of
cotton for one bushel of corn, it
will purchase 16,000 pounds of
cotton, or as much as four men
can raise.
R e
Nothing is easier than fault
finding. No talent, no self-denial,
no brains, no character are requir
ed to set up in the grumbling bus
iness. But those who are moved
by a genuine desire to do good
have little time for murmuring or
complaint.
e e i o
Experience that is) not based
upon prineiples, that does not em
body the results of past thought
and preparation, and that is unin
spired by any peculiar fitness or
love for the work in hand is at
best but a mechanical and monoto
nous routine.
How He Managed.
“Brown,” said'a neighbor to him
one day, “I dou’t see how itis that
your girls marry off as soon as they
get old enough, while none ot mine
¢an marry.
“Ob, that's simple enough,” he re
plied ; “I marry my girls off on the
wheat straw principle.” |
“But what principle is that?
Never heard of it before.” |
“Well, T used to raise a good deal
of wheat, and it puzzled me to know
bow to get rid of the straw. Nothing
would cat it and it was a bother to
me. At last I thought of a plan.
I stacked my straw nicely, and built
a high rail fence around it. My cat
tle of course concluded that it must
be something good, and at onece tore
down the fence and began to eat the
straw. I drove them away, and put
up the fence afew times: but the
more I hunted them off the more
anxions they became to eat the straw
aud eat it they did, every bit of it.
As T«aid, I marry my girls off on
the same principle. When a young
man I don't likebegins to eall on my
gitls 1 encourage him Lim in every
way I can. I tell himto come often
and stay as late as he pleases, and I
take pains to hint to the girls that I
think they had better set their caps
for him. It works first rate. He
doesn’t make many calls, for the
girls treab bim as cooliy as‘they can,
But when a fellow that I like comes
aronud, a man that I think would
suit me for a son-indaw. T don’t
let him make many calls before I
give him to-understand that he isn't
wanted about my house. I tell the
girls, too, that they shall not have
anything to do with him, and give
them orders never to speak to him
again. The plan always works exact
ly as I wish. The young folks be
gin to pity and sywpathize with
each other ; and the next thing I
know they are engaged to be mar
ried. When I see they are deter
‘mined to marry, Tof course, give in
‘ and pretend 1@ make the best of it.
Thal’s the way I manage it.”
In speaking of Dr.A. G. Hay
good's Monteagle speech, the Lump
kin Independent says; Several years
ago Bishop Turner, colnrc:d, of the
African Methodist church, and who
ought to know more about the negro
than Dr. Hargood, made use of the
following illustration in & speech to
show the negroes proper sphere.—
He said that when God first made
man there were three of them—one
white, one red and one black. e
called thew to him and laid before
them a hoe, a bow aud arrows and
pen and ink’ and told them to take
their choice. “The negro,’ said he,
grabbed the hoe, the Indian the bow
and arrow, and to the white man's
lot fell the pen and ink, and this, wy
colored friends, is why the hoe is in
your hands to day.’
Mr. S. Gordon, White Bluff, Ga.,
says: “Brown's Iron Bitters has
gnite relieved me of rheamatism,
with which I long suffered.”
* VOL. 18 —NO. 18.
Men Who Have Made Georgia
Prominent.
Alexander H. Stephens, Beujamin
H. Hill, Robdrt Toombs and Jose h
E. Brown were Georgia's “big four”
in affairs of State during recent
years. Each was prominent in the
Southern Confederacy: Stephens as
Vice-President, Toombs for a time as
Cabinet officer, Hill as the leader of
the Jeff Davis wing in the Senate.
while Joe Brown was Georgia’s war
Governor. The eourse o each of the
four subsequent to the war has been
distinet. Brown joined the Repub
lican party in 68, was prominent in
l its councils until ‘75 when he return
ed to the Democracy ; Stephens was
t 4 bourbon Democrat in 72, refusing
to support Greeley, but after his re
turn to Congress was virtually an
Independent ; Hill was a bitter oppo
nent to reconstruction in ‘67—B af -
liated with reconstructionist in 7 1
and was bourbon after ‘7B ; Toombs
has been bourbon every year, day
and hour since Georgia seceded from
the Union. The quartette were four
interesting personages. Toombs and
Brown Lave always been at logger
heads ;: Toombs and Hill were always
at outs ; Toombs and Stephens wer
from first to last friends of the Da
mon and Pythias type. Joe Brown
and Hill were at enmity for twenty
five yoars, uniil they became col
leagues in the United States Senate,
in 1880. Brown and Stephens con
tinued personal frieuds even when
opposing each other in politics. Ste
phens and Hill never were friendly.
Stephens once challenged Hill to
fight. Stephens and Toombs were
great lawyers; Brown a thorough
scholar in law, but no orator ; Hill
the most elogquent of the four, but a
special pleader—effective before a jury
by reason of his magnificent speech,
rather than from profound knowled ze
of law. Drown and Stephens were
the poerest of boys, and paid for
their schooling from their personal
earvings and savings. Toombs and
Hiil had ineans for acquiring an edu
cation. Stephens was always weak
physically; Brown never robust.—
Hill and Toombs, on the coutrary,
were superb specimens of manhood.
Opposing each other, almost all
around, each of the four men hns'
nevertheless, been successfulin his
candidacies for honors from the same
constituency. Toombs, Brown and
Hill have represented Georgia in the
Senate. Drown and Stephens have
occapied the Gubernatorial chair.
Brown has been Cheif Justice of the
Georgia Supreme Court and Toombs
was the falher of the present Consti
tution of the State, adopted in 1877.
BrownandToombs ar: bo h wealthy 4
neither Stephens or Hill acquired
any wealth. DBrown isa religionist
—a prominent Baptist; Toombs is
not a church man andis profane;
Stephens was a moralist ; Hill devout
in his early and again in his latter
days® Robert Toombs is no longer
a factor in Georgia State affairs.—
ilis political influence is as cemplete
ly gone ag that of either Hill or Ste
pheus, lying in the grave. He still
is, however, a power at the bar, and
is leading or sole council in many
cases before the higher couits, from
| which bLe vealizes a large income, va- |
lryi:uz, it is saids from $30,000 to
;8101).(){)0 per annumw, Dut the im ‘
press of Senator Brown is recogniza
i ble upou well nigh every matler of
import. Heis the Richelicu of Geor
aia’s political affairs ; the back of his |
band is the doom of any aspiring
man or measure—its grasp a surety
of success. He Las attained every
honor {or which he has reached. In
1868, npon the occasion of his defeat
(while running as a Republican) for
the United States Scmatorship, he
was buried in effigy on a public
square in Atlanta. Some of the iden
tical men who took part in the pro
ceedings in 1880 voted to make him
Senator. The recent decease of ox-
Governor Charles J. Jenkins and of
Judge Martin J. Crawford, of the
Supreme Coart, removed two other
distinguished Georgians from public
service, When tho “flerce spirit of
the scythe and glass” shall have re
moved Robert Toombs and Joseph
T.. Brown from the public gaze,
Georgia’s giants will have all depart
ed her corsts. Her great quartette
is not likely to be duplicated within
her borders out of the present gener
ation,.—Boston Advertiser,
Mr. Edward Charleston, Savannah,
Ga. says : “ILaveused Brown's Iyon
Bitters for Leartburn and obtained
perfect relief, $o
l()ur Clothes Washer!
PRONOUNCED A WONDER
FUL SUCCESS!
~ Tre Hawirzy CroTues WassEßis giving
‘ great satisfaction. The proprietors of this
paper have the exclusive right to sell them
in Bumter, Lee, Rando'ph, Stewart and
Terrell Counties. The machine weighs
only two pounds and is very simple~—a
child 12 years old can work it. The only
secret about the success of this washer is
in knowing how to use it, and we furnish
printed directions with each machine for
that purpose. We also keep on hand for
sale one of the best yWringers made. Be
low we give a few voluntary certificates
from responsible parties who have used
our washer and wringer :
’ All that we Claim for It.
| Dawson, Ga., April 19, 1888,
Mzssrs. U. L. WestoN & Co.
I cheerfully recommend the Clothes
Washer bought of you. It is all that you
ciaim for it. W. 8. Waircnarp,
Would not be without it.
Dawsox, Ga., May Bd, 1883.
Mrssrs. U. L. WestoN & Co.
My wife has given your Washing Ma
chine and Wringer a thorough and impar.
tial trial. It is a fine success. I am satis
fied that I can wash as many clothes on it
in one day as two hands cth washina
whole week. It is a great labor saving
machine and we would rot be without it
for three times its vaive, We washed on
this machine 80 garments and had them on
the line in two hours by tle watch and
four of the pieces were quilts. 'We recom
mend it w our friends and neighbors,
Very Truly Yours,
J. B. F. HARgELL.
WASHING A MERE PASS TIME.
Dawsox, Ga , May sth, 1888-
Mussrs. U. L. Wesrox & Co.
It affords me great pleasure to recom.
mend your Washing Machine and Wringer.
I have given it a thorough trial and am
pleased with it. It not only washes clean,
bui makes the labor of washing a mere
pass tiine; and, besides, one can wash the
finest laces or coarsest quilts and blankets
with as much ease and facility as a pocket
handkerchief. I would not be without
mine for any consideration.
Very Rcspectful}{,
Mrs. T. J. Brack.
A wonderful Success !
Mpsers. U. L. Weston & Co.
Gentlemen :—At the solicitation of your
Mr. Weston I carried home a few weeks
a5O cne of your Hawley Washing Machines
upon trial. We gave -it a fair and impar
tial trist and pronounce it a wonderful suc
cess. I regard it the only machine that I
ever saw that will wash and not injure the
eloihes, It does its work rupidly and saves
a great deal of labor. Every family should
bave one. My old colored washer-woman
immediately after trying it stated that if I
would let her have tlie machine that she
would do the washing of my family the
balance of the year for nothing, thereby
saving me some $lB or £2O.
Joux R. MARSHALL,
May 12th, 1883.
It is no Humbnug.
Messzs. U. L. Wzstox & Co.
Your Washing Machine-is all that you
claim for it, :mr%wc are all pleased with it.
We have tried it now for several weeks
and can reconunend it to everybody as a
good thing. It is no humbug.
Respectfully,
Mges. Joux A. Bisnor, Jr.
May 12th, 1883.
Mr. A. J. Lee’s Opinion.
Dawsox, Ga., May 14, 18883,
Mzssea, U. L. Westox & Co,
Gents:—l am well pleased with your
machine. Itis a good thing. My wife
hus tried it now for séverdl weeks, and we
take pleasure in commending it to the pubs
lic. Kvery family should have one.
Very Respectfully,
A. J. Lee.
Dawsox, Ga., May 22, 1883.
Mszasra. U. L. Wesrox & Co.
I have tried your washer and wringer to
my perfect satiefaction. It is a good thing
and too rauch cannot he said in its praise.
It is the cheapest investment for the
money I aver made and it will pay every
family to have one. Itis eertainly no
humbug.
J. W. CoMMANDER.
Dawsow, Gi.; June 5, 1883,
Mgessna, U. L. Westox & Cos
My wife Lns had a very strong prejudice
acainst all kinds of patents for years, and,
especially, washing machines. 8o strong
was her prejudice in this direction that
even after I had bou%ht one of your
washers and earried it home I found it
difficult to prevail npon her to try it. Her
mind was made up from the beg{nniug not
to like it, but to her great delight, after
once trying it, she is prepared to say that
it is all you claim for it. The eris a
remarkable success, and; In my mmg
‘every house-keeper should get one Aust as
soon a 8 possible. It saved & vast deal of
labor and trouble, and I am satisfied that it
saves at least one-half the soap.
Ruspeetfully &c.,
E. T. Kexyey.
DawsoN, Ga., June 4, 1833
Mrasns. U, L. Westoy & Co.;
I have given your Clothes Washer a
thorough and impartial trial and am plegnd
with the resalt. It is certainly no humbug,
and is all that you claim for it. It washes
quickly and quite satisfactorily, and I take
great pleasure vin rccommelfrdli‘ng it to the
publie. ery Respectfully;
J. B. Roßerts:
Broww’s SratioN, Ga., June 11, 1688,
Messis. U. L. Westox & Co:
My wife has tried your washing machine
thoroughly dnd we are prepared to say, in
our judgement, that there nothing to
cowpare with it. We wou!di!‘).ot be with
out it for any reasonable consideration. It
does al! that you claim for it, and we cheer<
fully give you this cirtificate in its favor.
It does away with all the heavy labor of
washlug and then it washes in sbout one<
forth of the time of the old washloard plan.
Every family ought to have one.
are cheap for the mr‘»’ney. 8 ol
ery mgect my,
d. 8. W%;