The Fitzgerald leader. (Fitzgerald, Irwin County, Ga.) 19??-1912, June 03, 1897, Image 3

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CUSTOMS OF THE MIKADO. The Japanese Ruler,s Methods of Dealing With Ministers and People. JEIis Majesty’s dally customs are very regular. He always goes to his study at 9 a. m. and remains at work there until 4 p. m. He reads and signs all Parliamentary laws and decrees. When a Cabinet Minister addresses his Majesty about any public matter he inquires about the subject, the purpose and condition, and decides it. He Is firm and not changeable. When he de- ddes a matter once he cannot after tnat. he moved. At the beginning of Matsu kata’s Cab- inet Parliament deckled to reduce tho salaries of , the , Cabinet _ _ . . Ministers . , anu •, other Government officers. The Prime Minister, Count Matsukata, addressed bis Majesty about it. His Majesty did not consent and he said: “Many officers cannot live upon a fixed salary. o Some Cabinet ^ Ministers , * have ,___ been obliged to borrow money, and I ad- vanced money from my treasury to the present A Cabinet. ,, , . . support them. , If Ministers retain their positions by bor- rowing money all Cabinet Ministers, therefore, cannot do so. Therefore I fail not consent to the reduction of salaries” ‘ _ . TT His . Count Matsukata , retired from Majesty. However, the Cabinet once more debated the question with the to % ^ Count, and Matsukata went again consult the Emperor His Majesty was not inclined to see him again, and sent an attendant to say | to him: “I have already com man tied : about not the reduction more.” of salaries. I can- j see you any : The salaries were, therefore, not re- | duced. His Majesty understands the condi- | tron of the lower classes, and conduct familiar- of j izes himself with the private the Cabinet Ministers. When he reads newspaper articles relating to the pri¬ vate misconduct of any Cabinet Minis¬ ters and attacking him, his Majesty sometimes smiles. His Majesty is fond of reading books and newspapers. He is especially fond of German books He likes to compose Japanese poems, which he can do very readily. His ability in that respect i3 much admired by his attendants. His Majesty dislikes all pretense, and hypocrisy. When it has been reported to his Majesty that some of his subjects have given their lives in time of flood or earthquake to preserve his Majesty’s piovarp, he has been much touched; but he is anxiqjjg to discourage his subjects from such quixotism, and to preserve thertk from any but necessary danger. Withal the Emperors life is a very happy and peaceful one, blessed by the love and respect of grateful subjects; and when his Majesty makes a tour anywhere in Japan without his guards he is in no danger, but is received ■everywhere with reverence and joy. . Japanese .••.w,:.. roan' x trice; Dishonored Drafts. When the stomach dishonors the drafts made upon it by the rest of the system, it is necessa¬ rily because Its fund of strength is very low. Toned with Hoetetter’s Stomach Bitters, it soon begins to pay out vigor in the shape of pure, ’ rich, blood containing the elements of muscle bone and brain. As a -sequence of the new vigor afforded the stomach, the bowels perform their functions regularly, and the liver works like clock work. Malaria has no effeet upon a system thus reinforced. kn-every school meal4 in Paris there is a whetre free are served to vhe children, who are too poor to pay for them. Just try a 10c. box of Cascarets, the finest liver and bowel regulator ever made. A. M. Priest. Druggist. Shelbyvillc, lnd..says: “•Hall’s Catarrh Cure gives the best-of satlsfac- tion. Can get plenty of testimonials, as it cures every one who takes it.” Druggists sell it, 75c. Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces.Inffamina- Hon, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle, _ I I entirely entirely ,, T cured cured —■ of of hemorrhage hemorrhage ■ r of of f , lungs lungs am am Lind- by Plso'e Cure l’or Consumption, —Louisa AMA'N, Bethany, Mo., Jan. 8, ’94. When bilious or costive, eat a candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; 10c., 25c. e..,—. Poisoned Blood These come miasms from arising p’oi- Malaria sonems from low marshy land and from decaying vegetable matter, which, breathed into the lungs, enter and poison the blood. Keep the blood pure by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla and there will be little -danger from malaria. The millions take Hood’s Sarsa¬ parilla The best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. IIhIIa rials the best family eathartie. HlOiivS S easy to operate- 25e. A ill j §g5Hp5 J “I Yl~- / [ Ayer’s have Pills been for using tlitr- i \ US V J teen years, and find \ that nothing equals l ' them for the indigestion. only relief 1 They are found in all these have ot # years for the suffering I dyspepsia and indigestion. \ I Mrs. Mattie S. Mitchell \ I / Glad Hill, Va., Feb. 21,189C. 1 \ *‘I havo been using Ayer’s \ * / Pills for years for bilious- I hnd ' ness and constipation. and mild in V them very effective, system in action. They suit my U- Ash¬ every respect.” — John ley, Pelican, La., July 19,1S95. \ Ii .1 WORDS 1 WEIGHTY FOR AYER’S PILLS. PHYSICIANS BAFFLED. Trof. It. S. Bowman, Instructor of Natural j Science in Unvisvlllo College, Cured of a .Severe Illness 1>y Dr. Will¬ iams’ Pink Pills for Palo People After Physi¬ cians Failed. From the Republican , Columbus, Tnd Trot. R. S. Bowman, the able instructor j of natural science in the famous Hartsville find.) College, is well and favorably known, I . not only as an educator, but also as a min- ister of the gospel, as fora number of years he was past or of tho United Brethren oliurch at Charlotte, Mich., beforo coming t0 i rtSV “ i0- Apr .1 *iinW»^ii FfttV # * , / f (||| 1| ’ fcS&Cv M / ^ . • _^ yyy/', X&tYwwdw 5 am A 7 w / * fif * | v j /Jp? vrof. r. s. bowmait. Some time ago he had a severe m_- illness a _ which was cured almost miraculously. A reporter hearing of this, interviewed him r< , garl jing his experience. Prof. Bowman wag (a tho mldat of h(g work when tho ra . porter called, but bo cheerfully gave him a hearing. “A year ago last fall,” said the professor, ,,j broke down with nervous exhaustion, and was unable' to properly attend to my duties. I tried different physicians but with no relief, and also used many different pro- prietary medicines, spending almost fifty dollars for these medicines alone. I then succumbed to a seige of the grip in the middle of winter, and was left in a much worse condition. My kidneys were fearfully disordered, and my digestion became very poor. I was indeed in a bad condition. “A minister in conference learning of my condition advised me to tried Dr. 'Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. I had heard much . about . . the ,. wonderful , , , curative ,. powors of this medicine, but it was with reluctance that I was finally persuaded to try it, as it seemed that nothing could do me any good. However, I procured three boxes of pills and took them strictly according to direc- tions. By the time the last dose was taken I was almost , cured, , and in better health than I had been for years. I continued using tho pilis awhile longer and was entirely — ‘“srrsrrT * 4 Williams Pink Pills for Pale People. Such was Professc* Bowman’s wonderful story, which was fully endorsed by the fol- ivn * Mirntiu.4., Hartsville, Ind., March 16, 1897. I affirm that the ibove accords with the facts in my case. R. W. Bowman. Subscribed and sworn to before me this lGth day of March, 1897. Lymax J. Scddder, Notary Public. State op Indiana, ss. Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Palo People contain all tho elements necessary to give new fif e an fi richness to the blood and re- store shattered, nerves. They are sold in boxes (never in loose form, by the dozen or hundred) at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, and may be had of all druggists or ‘directly by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medi- cine Co., Schenectady, N. Y. Judicious Expenditures Cause Big Re¬ turns To the merchant who is happy if he , can se ]j fijs goods n at an increase of ten the Cost, . , to , twenty , . per cent, over IlOW ! almost incredible must it seem that typewriting , ... machines , . and bicycles, which cost froi# about sixteen to twen¬ ty-five dollars to manufacture, can be sold for $100—or even $50—each? What machines are more universally used today than these two, excepting the sewing machine? How hard the merchant struggles for bis ten per cent, profit while the j typewriting machine and the bicycle j sell at a price which is from four to ! ! six times the cost of manufacture. Judicious and continuous advertis¬ ing has made this possible. Eflie—That young Jones kisses every girl that he meets. Jack (angrily)—How do you know that he does? EfiSe—Well, I just had it from his own lips.—Larks. l!EV. 1)1!. TALMAGK. THE NOTED DIVINE’S SUNDAY DI8- COURSK. Improvidence and Alcoholism Arraigned —Most ‘ Overpowering Enemy of the Working People Is Strong Drink—A Plea for Enrneut Christian Prudence. Text: ‘‘Ho that earneth wages earneth wages to put into a bag with holes.”—-Hag- gni i, 6. 1q pewitt , mder th „ retgn o{ D ariu» Hystaspes, HkTp^plelho^TO the people did not prosper, sack‘in were a which they put money, not knowing that the saek is torn or eaten of moths, or in way made Incapable of holding valu- ables. As fast as the coin was put m one end of the sack it dropped out of the oth- er. It made no difference how much JW 09 *&**!*<*, for they lost them. "He InTo aTaTwiMesT^ WaKeS *° PUt “ j What has become of tho billions and I’‘, Ui0I,s '’f doI1 “ rs ‘*! ls country these paid to the working classes? Borne of mon- eys have gone for house rent, or tho purchase of homesteads, or wardrobe, or family expenses, or the necessities of life to provide comforts in old age. What has become of other billions? Wasted in foolish outlay. Wasted at the gaming ta¬ 0 '' 1 ^ 1119 ' PUt int ° * Gather up tho money that the working classes have spent for drink during the last thirty years, and I will build for every workingman a house and lay out for him a garden, and clothe his sons in broadcloth and his daughters in silks, and place at his front door a prancing span of sorrels or bays, and secure him a policy of life insur- ance, so that the present home may be well maintained after he is dead. The most per- patent, anarchist a J,°®* g ° g v ® g rp 1 °'^oxiefting 0 Hoior is the of the centuries and has boycotted and is now boycotting the body \TtoT! ““foe tt!m‘'monojmr/'and out of a large percentage of earnings. It holds out its blastings solicitations to the mechanic or operative on his way to work, and at the noon spell, and on his way home at even¬ tide; on Saturday, when the wages are paid, it snatches a large part of the money that might come into the family and sacrifices it amoQg th(j salQon keepers Stand the sa- loons of this country side by side, and it is carefully estimated that they would reach from New York ’to Chicago. “Forward, march,” says the drink power, “and take possession of the American Nation.” The drink business is pouring its vitriolic and damnable liquids down the throats of hundreds of thousands of laborers, and while the ordinary strikes-are ruinous both to employers and employees, I proclaim drink, a strike universal against strong of the which, if kept up, will be the relief working classes and the salvation of the Nation. I will undertake to say that there is not a healthy laborer inthetinited States who within the next ten years, if ho wiU re- fuse all intoxicating beverages and be sav- Dig, may not become a capitalist on a small scale. Our country in a year spends $1,- 500,050,000 for drink. Of course the work- ^“uf SStato show* wage earning classes of Great Britain ex- pend in liquors .£100,000,000,000 or $500,- 000,000 a year. Sit down and calculate, oh, workingmen, how much you have ex- ' Add it all pended in these directions. up. Add up what your neighbors have ex- pended and realize that instead of answer- deplete a workingman’s physical stimulated energy, you deplete his capital. The workman gives out before the unstimulated workman. -My father said: ‘T became a temperance man m earry iim, bccaase i not : eed in the harvest Held that though I was physically weaker than other work¬ men, I could hold out longer than brick- they. They took stimulants. I took none.” A maker in England gives his experience in regard to this matter among men in his employ. He says, after investigation: “The beer drinker who made the fewest bricks made 659,000, and the abstainer who made the fewest bricks 746,000. Tho dif- Terence in behalf of the abstainer over the Indulger, 87.000.” I have no sympathy for skinflint saving, but I plead for Christian prudence. You say it is irr.uossibie now to lay up anything for a rainy day. I know it, but we are at the daybreak of National prosperity. Some people think it is mean to turn tho gas low when they go out of the parlor. They feel embarrassed if the doorbell rings before they have the hall lighted. They apologize for the plain meal, if you surprise them at the table. Well, it is mean if it is only to pile up a miserly board. But if it be to edu- cate your children, when if it bo does to give more feel help to your wife she funeral not day strong, if it be to keep your all endurance, from being horrible beyond because it is to be the disruption and an- nihilation of the domestic circle—if it be fof that, then it is magnificent. There are those who are kept in poverty might because of their own fault. They smoked" have been well off, but they or chewed up their earnings, while or they the lived be- yond their means, others on same wages and on the same salaries went on to competency. I know a man who is all the time complaining of his poverty and crying out against rich men while he himself keeps two dogs and chews and smokes and is full to the chin with whisky and beer. Wilkins Micawber said to David Copperfield: “Cop- perfteld, my boy; £1 income, expenses, 20s. 6d.; result, misery. But, Copperfield, my boy, £1 income; expenses, 19s. 6d.; result, happiness.” But, 0 workingman, take your morning dram, and your noon dram, and your jt evening dram, and spend and every- thing you have over for tobacco excur- sions, and you insure poverty for yourself and your children forever! If by some generous flat of the law capi- of talists of this country or by United a new States the Government of the twenty-five per cent, or fifty per cent, or 100 per cent, were added to the wages of the working classes of America, it would be no advantage to hundreds of thousands of them unless they stopped strong drink. Aye, until they quit that evil habit the more money the more ruin, the more wages the more holes in the bag. My plea is to those working people who are in a discipleship to the whisky bottle, the beer jug and the wine flask. And what I say to them will not be more appropriate business to the working classes than to the classes and the literary classes and the pro- fessional classes and all classes, and not with the people of one age more than of all ages. Take one good square look at the suffering of the man whom strong drink has enthralled and remember that toward that goal multitudes are running. The disciple of alcoholism suffers the loss of self respect. Just as soon as a man wakes up and finds that he is the cap- tive of strong drink, he feels demeaned. I do not care how recklessly ho acts. Ho may say, “I don’t care;” he does care. He cannot look a pure man in the eye un- less it is with positive force of resolution, Three-fourths of his nature is destroyed; he his self-respect is gone; he says things would not otherwise say; he does things he would not otherwise do. When a man is nine-tenths gone with strong drink, the first thing he wants to do is to persuade to. you that he can stop any time he wants He cannot. The Philistines have bound him hand and foot, and shorn his locks,and put out his eyes, and are making him grind in the mill of a great horror. He cannot stop. I will prove it. He knows that his course is bringing ruin upon himself. Ho loves himself. If he could stop, he would. He knows his course is bringing He would ruin upon stop his family, He loves them. if he could, He cannot. Perhaps he could three months or a year ago; not now. Just ask him to stop for a month. Ha cannot— he knows ho cannot, so ho does ndt try. Uod only knows what tho drunkard suffers. I’ain flics on ovory nerve, and travels every muscle, and gnaws every hone, and burns with every flame, and stings with evory poison, and pulls at him with ovory torture. What reptiles crawl over his sleeping limbs. What (lendsstand by his midnight pillow. What groans tear his ear. What horrors shiver through Ids soul. Talk of the raolt, talk of tho inqulsi- tlon, talk of the funeral pyre, talk of the orusldng .luggermint he feels them nil at oneb. Have you ever been in tire ward of the hospital the stench where these their inebriates aro dy¬ ing, of wounds driving back the attendants, their voices sounding through the night? The keeper comes up and says: “Hush, now he still. Stop mak¬ ing all this noise.” But it is effectual only for a moment, for as soon as the keeper is gone they Help! begin again: “0 God! O God! Help! Drink! Give me drink! Help! Take them off me! Take them, off me! O O God!” And then they shriek, and they rave, and they pluck out their Vmir by handfuls and bite their nails into the quick, and then they groan, and they shriek, and they kill blaspheme, them—“.Stab and they me! ask Smother the keepers me! to Strangle me! Take the dovils off me!” Oh, it is no fancy sketch. That thing is going on now all up and down the land, and I tell you further that this is going to be the death that some of you will die. I know it. I seo it coming. Again the inebriate suffers through the loss of home. I do not care how much he loves his wife and children, If this passion for strong drink has mastered him he will do the most outrageous things, and if he could not get drink in any other way he would sell his family into eternal bondage. How many homes have been broken up in that way no one hut God knows. Oh, is there anything that will so destroy a man for this life and damn him for the life that is to come? Do not tell me that a man can be happy when he knows that he is break- ing his Wire’s heart and clothing his chil¬ roads dren witli rags. Why, this land there to-day are on little the and streets of children, barefooted, unwashed anil un¬ kempt, want on every patch of their faded dress and on every wrinkle of their pre¬ maturely old countenances, who would have been in churches to-day and as well clad as you are but for the fact that rum destroyed their parents and drove them into the grave. Oh, rum, thou foe of God, thou despoiler of homes, thou recruiting officer of the pit, I hate thee. But my subject takes a deeper tone, and that is that the unfortunate of whom I speak suffers from the loss of the soul. The Bible intimates that in the future world, if we are unforgiven here, our bad passions and appetites, unrestrained, will go along with us and make our torment there. So that, I suppose, when an inebriate wakes up in that world ho will feel an infinite thirst consuming him. Now, down in this world, although he may have been very poor, he could beg or he could steal five cents with which to get that which would slake his thirst for a little while, but in eternity where is the rum to come from? Oh, the deep, exhausting, exasperating, everlasting thirst of the drunkard in hell! Why, if a Bend came up to earth for some infernal work in a grogshop and should go back taking ou its wing just one drop of that for which the inebriate in the lost world longs, what excitement would it make there! Tut that one drop from off the fiend’s wing on the tip of the tongue of the brightness destroyed just inebriate, touch it, let let the the liquid drop bo very small, if it only have in it the smack of alcoholic drink; let that drop just touch the lost inebriate in the lost world, and he would spring to his feet and cry: “That is rum, aha! That is rum!” And it would wake up the echoes of the damned: “Give me rum! Give me rum! Give me rum!” In the future world I do not believe that it will be the absence of God that will make the drunkard’s sorrow. I do not believe it will be the absence of light. I do not be- lieve that it will bo the absence of holiness, i 4aink it wilt be tb® absence of rum. Oh, “Look not upon the wine when it is red, when it moveth itself aright in the cup, for at the last it biteth like a serpent, and it stingeth like an adder.” I verily believe that although you feel grappling at the roots of your tongues an almost omnipotent thirst, if you will give your heart to Gok, he will help you by His grace to conquer. Try it. It is your last chance. 1 have looked oft upon the deso¬ lation. Sitting next to you in our religious assemblages there and'juilglng aro a good many people in awful peril, from ordinary circumstances there is not one chance in five thousand that they will get clear of it. There are men in every congregation from Sabbath to Sabbath of whom I must make * 16 remar * c ^ lia ^ IT they do not change their ?£ u rs ? within ten years they will, as to their . bodies, lie down in drunkards’graves, and as to their souls, lie down in a drurfo- a 3 perdition. I know that is an awful Wl ingto . say, but I cannot help saying it. beware! You have not yet been cap- ^rocl. , Beware! Whether the beverage be poured in golden chalice or pewter ihug in j;, * oam a t the top, in white letters, let there be spelled out to your soul.‘‘Beware!” drunkards hooks of judgment are open, and 10 .0°°h00 come up to get their doom, I want you to bear witness that I, in jhe tear of God and in love for your soul, told y°ib with all affection and with all kindness, to beware of that which has already exerted its influence upon your mfiidy, blowing out some of its light—a Premonition of the blackness of darkness fo J?, ve F; lf y° u could only hear intemperance F V1 , drunkards’ bones drumming on the p ea d of the liquor cask the dead march of ^mortal a wine souls, cup would methinks make the you very shudder, glance an a tne color of tho liquor would make you think . or the blood of the soul, and the foam J 3 11 t % e t( ?P cup would remind you of tae . froth the maniac’s lip, and on you would kneel down and pray God that, ra ther than your children should become captives of this evil habit, you would like f° J arr y them out some bright spring day the cemetery and put them away to the last sleep, until at the call of the south wm( I the flowers would come up all over the grave—sweet prophecies of the resur¬ rection. God has a balm for such a wound, but what flower of comfort ever grew on a drunkard’s sepulcher? CANADIAN IMMIGRATION. The Total Number of Newcomers for 1890 Was 25,478. mi The ___ annual . report . of . the ^ Department of the Interior of the D ominion of Canada aas been printed. It shows the total immi- £ r ant arrivals to have been 25,478 in 1896, against ^,0,788 m 1895, a decrease of 310. Settlement for tho year in the Northwest Territories homestead is represented by the number ef entries 1357, representing souls,compared with 2394,representing J ^ 0U ^ 9 y n ^^ ,a en ^ laes , 2? o 7, a ?/* * settlers of 1498. The entries p ? ana( ^ an ? burned from the United states number 48, against 108 in 1895. There were 142 natives of the United States took up land during the year, against Husb'.9,Scotek72, Yreucb 64, Belgians ^2’ 17, Austro-Hungarians 83, Germans 44, Ice¬ landers 14, Russians 69, and Poles 12. A Wealth of Gold. Tho United States Treasury’s reserve is still forty-four millions in excess of the conventional limit, and the Clearing House banks of New York City hold no less than eighty-eight millions. There is, in short, more gold in the country than at any time jp fifteen years. Died in Church While at Prayer. Mrs. Nancy Smith attended services at the Free Methodist Church, Vincennes, Ind., and while kneeling at the altar in prayer was stricken with heart disease, dying instantly. The congregation was thrown into a pantc. Thick. ‘•Do von think there is any lurk in afom-W , .* - vlover . ? naked , i .. the „ yutiug ; woman. “Well,” replied Mr, Parker thought¬ fully, “I can’t trace the connection be¬ tween any superstition and actual oc¬ currences. But I knew a girl who was very fortunate soon after she found a four-leaf clover.” “Do tell me about, it.” “There isn’t much to tell. While she was hunting the four-leaf clover she got her feet wet and caught a cold, and everybody safd that she might consider herself lucky that she didn’t die.”—Washington tstar. i ANDY CATHARTIC t CURICOnsriPATlOH 10* 9. ALL 25 * 50 * DRUGGISTS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEEDY.“:| New York. pie and booklet free. Ad. STERLING REMEDY CO». Chicago, Montreal, Can., «r ait.( 1/ 7, < l ■ % I m z 0 x; ; ;- 7T ml, iB rai'iSi -> L , M iSffi iffii© A w. /Ft (i « A i i m r. v ! SfSEPi •S/'/I. % j VM/. CU"J A literary man, use:.! to the niceties of expressioa and fond also of the pleasures of the tabic, in speaking of RIPANS TABULES says: “ I couldn't recommend this remedy as heartily as I do if I didn’t believe in it. I am not much of a medicine taker. I am medicine—just opposed to medicine, on principle. There ought to be no need of j as there ought to be no poverty—but there is. If people lived right i j they would be well. Sunshine, air, exercise, fun, good food—plenty tied and not too much—are the best medicines, the natural ones; but men are i to their desks, and women to their home cares, and both are tied to fash¬ j ion. Civilized existence is artificial and needs artificial regulators. I recommend Ripans Tabules—and take them myself. 1 know they are both harmless and effective. (I know what they are made of.) They are the best remedy I know anything about for headaches, or indigestion, or in biliousness, or any sort of sluggishness in the system. And they are the handiest possible shape to carry in the pocket.” V Lough*' ! ot the Sun Drink LfcfPM HIRES Rootbeer/CooS-Orml & V .;vs> —^ frSffl&mL jQuefjch^\ %^° otbee yyourthirsc\ ^^^S^SootbeeKjm ALABASTINE wall-coating WHAT? 8 A pure, permanent and artistic ready for tho brush by mixing in cold water. FOR SALE BY PAINT DEALERS EVERYWHERE. r n T P ) A Card showing 12 desirable tints, rK LL a * so AJabastine Souvenir Rock sent free ■ ** •- f i to any one mentioning this paper. ALABASTINE CO., Grand Rapids, Mich. MALSBY&COMPANY, 57 So. Forgytli St., Atlanta, Ga. General Agents for Erie City Iron Works Engines and Boilers Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and Penberthy Injectors, m “ , Manufacturer* and Dealer* in SAW MILLS, I Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin¬ ery and Grain Separators. SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and Locks, Knight’s Patent Hogg, Birdaail Saw Mill and Engine Repairs, Governors, Grate Price Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies. and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue free by mentioning this paper. Q®T AlCHqulcklp semU'or “SiOO^Invonttons :25 CTSA ■wi. Best Cough Syrup. Taatea Good. FAILS. Use In titaa 8o)d by druggists. 9mg; Keep on SerntcliinK. T>J*r* Irnr Into the bom* and the Tcttor 'yvitt only ho tho worse. There's only one way Km to treat »n irritated, diseased skin, soothe it. too germs that cause the trouble imtl heal It up. all , u tniiyou-tuni K in the wona will do tbla— 1 Tecterlne. It'd 60 cems a box at drug stores or postpaid for SO cents In stamps tqr .T. T. Shuptrino, Savannah, G». When a man 1 h facing a Jury trial he likes to be ‘■'In the bunds of his friends.” No-To-ltuo, lor Fifty Cents. Over 400,000 cured. Why not let NoTo-Bac regulate or remove your desire for tobacco? Bnvcs money, makes health and manhood, Cure guaranteed. 50 cents and $1.00, at all lil’Ugg I8t6. When a candidate appeals to the people it; la- high time to examine his record. Fits permanently cured, No fits or nervous- ness a ttor first day’s use of Dr, Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treat!so free. Dr. U. 11. Kunk, Ltd., 931 Arch St., PhUa., Pa. FRSCK COW5PA5MY ECLIPSE ENGINES Si m tesi Rollers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, Cotton Presses, Grain Separators. Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth, In¬ spirators, Injectors, Engine Repairs .and a full lino of Brass Goods. 8 ^"Send for Catalogue and Prices. Avery & McMillan * .SOUTHERN MANAGERS. Nos. fil & 53 S. Forsyth .St., ATLANTA, GA. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT, Tulane University of Louisiana. Its advantages-for practical instruction, hospital both in ample laboratories and abundant materials are unequalled. Free access is given to the great Charity Hospital with 700 beds and 30,000 patients annually. Special instruc¬ tion is given dally at the beside of the sick. The next session begins October lltli, 1807. For catalogue and information address: Prof. S. E. CHAILLK >1. !>., Dean. fyP. O. Drawer 261. NEW ORLEANS, LA. W £ MAKE LOANS on LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES. If you have a policy in the New York Life, Equitable Life or Mutual Life and would like to secure a Loan, write us giving number of your policy, and w£ will be pleased to quote rates. Address TfieEujrlisli-Aniericaii Loon anl Trust Co.. No. 12 Equitable Building, Atlanta, Ga. fflaofi Spcific Tails Cure Bright's Disease, Diabetes, Stricture, Gleet and all chronic or acute affections of the genito¬ urinary system. Restore weak organa and im¬ part vigor to both body and mind. One box $1.00; three boxes $2.50, by mail. Prepared by HAGGAIU> SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga. Wholesale by Lamar & Rankin Drug Co. DRUNKARDS disease, saved: marvellous The craving for drink is a called a “Anti- cure for which has been discovered for Jag,” which makes the inebriate lose all taste strong drink Avithont knowing why, as it can be given secretly in tea, coffee, soup and the like. If “Anti-Jag” is not kept Chemical by your Co., drug-gist 66 Broad¬ send one dollar to the Renova sent postpaid, in way, New York, and it Avill be giv® plain wrapper, with full directions how to secretly. Information mailed free. COMPLETE " oT™,.,? MILL OUTFITS- Also Gin, Press, Cane Mill and Shingle Outfits. SSI*’ Cast every day; work 180 hands. LOMBARD IROJf WORKS AND SUPPLY COMPANY, AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. MENTION THIS PAPER ssrs&s? ver~ 22