Newspaper Page Text
THE WEEKLY TELEGRAPH! MARCH 7, 1895.
fhe Famous Southern QoOelist, (Dps. 6. Qupl^e Rollins, ^ells
of Complete I^eQo0ep9 From QepOoas 0ebilit9 b9 the
Use of Paine’s Celep9 Compound.
01 >1. O.i the morning of
r* ached Bermuda with the
»f wo d Burnt and could
no ten mil** further,
ng the very severe weath-
in encountered tho worst
nd n >l being und.r control,
’easel. notwdt'ns&ndHig what
publish**! to the contrary.
Jrgo is in goo.I cndiMOn, and
nhe is none the wor^' for
|H.*r englntu nre good and *,he
fm^neer is worthy of praise for
k»ner in whloh he handled her.”
NOTICE.
in ami woman in the United
the Opium and Wfclsty
books on these dls*
I WA1
States iMiuu
habit* l<i'J®'e one of hit books on these dis
eases. Jkddrees U. M. Woolley, Atlanta, <ja,
Box 38?. Hod one will be sent you free
i CTION UNAVOIDABLE.
Why thi Treasurer and Secretary TYero
1 ellevod of Their Duties.
New V ork, March 7.—Qeneral Manager
Sway no. pr . .. : ,t ,.f t h •- Am. r' o'. i|*ro-
*—• M*l»copal) Church MP donary So-
mude the following official state-
’ afternoon concerning the dla-
>y that society with the services
A. Oakley, treasurer, and Rev.
William Newhoid as assistant treasurer
cr(uary:
present at the meeting of the
committee March 5, 1SD5. and
voted In favor of the resolution terminat
ing the Relations of the treasurer, Mr.
Oakley, and of Mr. Nowbold, the secre
tary, wit a the society. The action of the
committee was unanimous. With quit©
full krm-.ylw! .■ . t i i ts I .b-rm It to
have b**«4n, as to e-acto of the persons re-
ferred t<L ju*t and mild and necessary.
“The j-lround of the committee’s action
was as fjo each of them a separate ac-
countnbl(Htjr for moneys with which the
oth*'r wj.s not Involved. Action was tak
en onlyj after repeated and solicitous con*
ferencei with each of them, extending
over a considerable period and with ev-
ery «*p;» " ’ jrdt? -r.-1 im Hat! >n to . a h
of then, to relieve himself and the com
mittee from the r i rowful conclusion to
which the .-.luml't •• ot h-r\s ls-» wa-t h--
driven by the facta After the report of
the sub-committee on finance had been
read, n written attempt at exculpation
OQ thf part of Mr. Now hold was also read
to the committee, and tne fact was dis
closed that Mr. Oakley had already mado
n partial restitution. Enough remained
as is each of them to make 'the action
taken, in the Judgment of those present,
unavoidable.”
Complete* Fertilizers
for potatoes, fruits, and all vegetables require (to secure tho fSf jftfSfl
f y. yield and best quality)
At “’Least f IO 0 /, Actual Potash.
/ Results of experiments prove this conclusively,
why, is told in our pamphlets.
TJipy ars sent (rec, It wilt cost you nothing to rend thorn, and they
dollars. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, Nc
MEXICO WANTS GOLD.
Even That Sliver Country for a Chans?
of Standard.
Bo,ton, March 7.—A Mexico City epeclat
to the Herald aayat
“Bankers arc becoming apprehensive of
the currency situation In tho United
State, and -everal Important houses re*
fuse to purchase drafts on New York
when they are not expressly payable In
cold. This rule Is being encouraged on
sixty-day draft*. One banker today said
that ‘there la no certainty that the state,
will not be on a allver boats In two
months. Gold Is pouring Into the treas
ury at Washington as the result of the
new loan, but It la highly probable that
It will flow out quickly' leaving the treas
ury Incapacitated to maintain gold pay
ments. There la no guarantee of the con
tinuance or a sound financial policy and
we cannot afford to take tho risk of
what may happen within a short time.
President Cleveland la a aound money
man. but both parties as represented In
congress are uncertain.
The London Graphic, In it* recent
limiting up of the half-dogon succeas-
1 novela at Bie year, Includes with
1 Maurlera “Trilby," Hall Cain’s
tanxman," Conan Doylyk “Sherlock
wnei," "The Heavenly Twins" anil
Ihipa That Paaa In the Might," Mrs.
ta. E. Burke CoHlna' “A Modem
ithen."
Seeking of TMa lost work of 6Ur
■tSjr-Hshed Soti&crr. author, the
raphlc any,;
“"that George W. Cable’s avritlnga
ttn tale Creoles of New Orleans. Miss
•free to the rough strata of hurrrjn-
emong the Tennessee mountain,.
Gertrude Atherton to California.
'• E - Burke CoHlna* are to the Aca-
«ni of the Louisiana pine lands. In
• latest works Mrs. Burke OoIUna
struck a now vein In literature,
Wing to the novel rending world
virton at thf real life at the Aca-
ans of the tmoknvoods, among the
1*1, scarcely known region, at the
O'etia and trvamjw at Loulaktna 1 .”
Betides her novel, she contribute,
'll Week abort storira. *ketobe«. etc.,
the prominent magaxlnea, «nd to a
**' variety of other publication,.
Although her writing hns always
a l abor of love, yet such Incessant
ntal exertion, constantly harvesting
■ ideas of her brain .without a single
idle season or fallow time for ret nnd
refreshment, could not fall to have Us
effect on the recuperative pdwer of her
nervous system. Ait one thne she found
hemrtf tired out and weak from sued
uninterrupted work; she became ner
vous and Incapable of work; she even
sttw nervous prostration staring her in
t'h® fiC?. Th? £9!?*?**•! trniiw un that
her system needed so badly she found
In Pains’s celery compound. Today V4he
Is perf(*ctLy well and strong again, (busy
«• ever wltQi her brain and pen, and
grateful to Paine's celery compound
for the timely help <Whcn failure and
trouble and despair seemed about to
olose around her and stout her off from
everything that wag dear to her. She
says:*
Now Orleans, La., Nov. 21. 1804.—I
wish to add my 'mite to the thousands
of testimonials which you have received
In repaid to the efficacy of this won
derful compound. In my profession m»f
author such a strengthening medicine
is in valuable. I have Just completed my
nlnety-flftfh novel, and constant work
at the desk had weakened my consti
tution, Injured my nerves and I suf
fered, from general debility. When a
person In that condition writes con
tinually, living In the realms of Action
and romance, the effect upon the ner
vous system is lamentable. I was
weak and debilitated, suffered from
insomnia, and was Irritable and ner
vous. Pour bottles of Paine’s celery
compound grave me strength, quieted
my nerves and brought sleep to my
pillow. I owe lasting grtftltu le to this
wonderful medlcin-*. and I take pleas
ure In adding mine to the long list of
testimonials. Yours gratefully,
Mrs. E. Button Collins.
_I1S Valence ittiit..
Paine's celery compound is foun 1 to
b. - -'-'•v 1 stu 1 m*.
s-l*ntiry people. Its extend v<* us.* by
brain workers, both men
suffering from a'.eeplcsst
tkra, or other effects <<f n deficient
nerve force, shows Us ability to fe-d
tired, enviclJted, nervous tiseu s. Notti-
:m ' • his • \ ■ r p ■ s 1 .mvr ng
like the power of Paine's celery com
pound to restore a healthy nervous
ton* to tSie entire body and to thor
oughly cleanse the blood. School teach
ers, professional men, newepiper men.
ministers, public officials, men whose
dally outlay of vitality, because of
hard, trying, anxious work, is exces
sive, And renewed strength, not
only to # the nerves, but, through
their healthy action, of the entire
body 1n Paine's celery compound.
Its use Shortly dispels headaches,
rheumatic pdin, dyspepsia, heart
trouble, general debility and languor,
and ail other outward signs of the
grave mischief that comes from disor
dered nerves and Impure blood.
DEAFNESS CANNOT BE CURED
by local application.*, ns they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the oar.
There la only one way to cure deafness,
and that is by oostltutlonal remedies.
Deafnet** is caused by an Inflamed con
dition of the muwus Unging of the
Eustachian tube. When this tufbe gets
Inflamed you have a rumbing sound or
imperfect hearing, and when It is en
tirely closed deafn -ss Is the result, nnd
unletv the Inflammation can be taken
out and this tube restored to Its nor
mal condition, hearing will be dewtp>y-
• I forever; nle oases out of ten are
caused by catarrh valch Is nothing/but
an Inflamed condition of the mucuoua
surfaces.
We w-IU give one hundred dollars for
any cone of deafness (caused by cn
tarrh) that cannot l>e din'd by Hall'i
Oaturrh Cur,', s^nd for circulars, free.
F. J. CUDNEY & Co., Toledo, O.
Kohl by .r !•. 75c.
A erftE F(*!t RilErMATlSM
Ibmt.>n. Ark.- M n. Llppmai
Bp*’*.. Sinniuth. CT-.i.—•Gentlemen:
had rh'-uui itabout two riKQth.s dur
int
•it In
’•ui.lii
1 to
iu i
t'me. I saw an
•• Saline Our'.er reo
P. as n cure for rneu
l.t thr.M' b>ttl*s. but
ommeuatng r
mutaiAl 1
lM*r,*r.* i ;‘t tiir 'tu'h with I
anion, | tie I « *? cur it. m I hav • not f ■:
dlges- | least eiiwt or rneumntiem since
tlf*l *ul>t IIv th -i rem.-Gi
I l».t-
• I I
an
fully r-<’ iiini-mil :,> the puble. V- *ur-<
tr
n. m.
annlnsha
I’-'X'ND roll LIBERIA.
■Mi, Term, March : -Thr.
WEATHHR rNDICATIONS.
'■aahlngton. Mamh 7.—For Georgia;
rally cloudy weather wltih ralna;
»t "tvUwta. bMoaarimr vortahle.
DEFENSE.
torncj Enviu Makes a Very Strong
l’lea in Hebalf of the
Defendant.
LIXT CARRIES THE BLAME.
Atlorn.y*. Gha.tly Wit NotAppre-
l.trd by Spectator.-*'Tl.e n.havtor
of Adry Hay want on th. Stand
Mad. a Strong t'oint.
'nneapolls, Minn., March 7.—Mr.
r -> resumed his address tor the do
te In tha Hayward trial this morn-
H, began:
What will you do with Bllxt's In-
41ble, unreliable testimony? It your
ids have become morbid, the time
come to throw It oft and Judge
■ cose courageously. I want to call
u attention to matters of Import-
whlch the county attorney passed
T with s simple wave cf bis hand.
u » now endeavoring to aid you in
■-mining whether the testimony cf
[>t Is Incredible or not, Claus Bllxt
only contradicted ilmself and has
ixninxdrcted by outers but uaa
*> on the stand testimony of an
!r| r careless character."
*i‘*in Mr. Erwin turned >o the first
'etuent ahowtng the icntradlctkms
•cveral points, scoring Bllxt again
' again.
go over those things not to rpur
r acts; i do not doubt as to what
' action will be," declared the at-
*y. ''but I read them bef -ru the?"
d’le thtit they may see why you ren-
»uch a verdict; so that they may
cannot accept this testl-
R)> This Is a ossa wiiera It Is Sd*
,, i that Claus Bllxt shins com-
tted that tnucler, or whether ('i.* **
—nlttlng Adry atM B1
°t me rc Harrj Haywc
■sset jvm ut>l make uc
or originator of acts of murder?
"Theae two men who have attempted
to put on to Harry Hayward the au
thorship of this crime must be held
to be corroborated or you must not
believe them.
“In defiance of the principles of the
grand Jury, Adry and Bllxt have en
tered Info collusion to place this crime
upon Harry Haywnrd, and the grand
Jury baa violated Its principles, and
said to these men that If you by your
testimony can convict Harry Hayward
you shall receive clemency and an In
nocent man shall hang.
“Do not let this self-confessed mur
derer and the self-confessed accessory
of the eRme before the foot shift the
——q-atMHty of their guilt vntll they
carry crsdlbtllty by their witnesses."
Then he reviewed the testimony of
Beraesnt Ootohell as to the position
in which the murdered woman's body
must have Inin, Judging from the
wheel track* of the patrol wagon and
the buggv, after the body had been
ta Next' > produclng tho bundle of <dnthe*
Mr. Erwin attept.ed to spring ghastly
humor by remarking:
“X feel thut tn ejecting this leal-
ritln sack that X have betrayed my
f,'minim* tndt tools." _ K .,„
The mint, tmwaver, was wholly un-
nppreotated by the
looked ImrriflWl at such an attempt
nt irrtt amidst such solemn surround
ing* and circumstances.
lift NsegeVs testimony *■ to hearing
the two Shots and the soream was
ehsrasorlxed as but th# bght evidence
of a delicate, sensitive, refined woman.
Then the bloody dotWrur was exhib
ited 'to the Jury, and the attorney pro-
oieded os tallows:
"Didn't She bleed before death? Look
•t that Shirt front. DM She bCeed from
the nose? Let her blodd toll you. Can
there be a bettor witness than her
blood? It speaks to you In thunder
tones. She bkM before the hat was
found. Dorn •>? Uh> hat show? Dora
not the bow show the bloody band that
twined She top and nut the rrtbe between
her and him. What was It that tore
the hat out of her hair and dishevelled
her hair and left M lunging down?
What waa tt chitted her hair until she
Hy there? It Is true that I was partic
ular ttbout the veil. When the veil
ww-s r’nt the eternnl truth came out.
H.-reiM Its front (spr* cling the veil out
before the Jury.) Here Is Its bv-k.
Well, we won't tear It axy tssor- n >w,
w in*, rent th? V*ft? It '.va? the tihrv
t t ,t cot the lip. It wax a hammer or
a rovolwer or something, rt was that
... ... t „«t rent th- veil. Whs it before
r.,. r {oath? Let the tilo.-l .ine*r
It 1-tv it flioldtng hy Its
.■ -t-r.-tit tna-r-i’is 'lie veil > H?re !?
a.,|. a... It,.if. .re drath Here are the
wf the
tlon to tli« exact olmllltude of Adry’a
ami BUxt'e evMenco, word for word
almost. BUxt wld Harry came to him
In September, nnd Adrv nays u w.rt
1n Noverrtber, to kill n woman for
$2,000. Why did Adry placo it in No
vember? He wanteo to is 'rlbo another
motive to Harry'*: that’s wtiy.”
The testimony of both tnen that Har
ry had apokon of kill Inc cripples was
characterized as monatrous. Their to*-
tiony relative to tfhe killing of fhro*
otfhcrsra IPU declared to bo hard to
oountoract If Vt were not m silly. This
woman, constantly In the rocoipt of
food ai>d drink from Harry, and be4n»?
with him constantly, ft was not rea
sonable that be would ttfl anybody
else ot he was going to kir. h?er.
Mr. Erwin oontlnued: "You biw tho
two boys on the stand. You saw
Adry’s unAlhil oowdudt on tlie stand.
You saw the father’s tears on th«' stan 1
ns be told of how the Insane boy at
tacked the virtue of his mother. \Vh: h
Is the consdencelo»i brother?”
Mr. 'Erwin will cootelud.* btesaddreffi
drel nesroes arrive! In Memphis yester-
• I . on ; tl.ro.ul- I.-. lln - f f •• .
I- " ti t. .Ml-x.slpi i nul Tux t«. h i m l
for Africa. Today they took trains for
Savannsh, whttnee. on March 9 they will
embark on a v* • 1 su[>pI1m1 by tho Afri
can □toainsh'.p Company. They are
transport'll by thf African Migration So
ciety. CK-h hmvlnr rvald Ml. which defray*
alt exposes of tho trip. Six thousand ne-
troes ire now paying their fares in ad
vance., The n ex roe* who arrived yester
day ir. neatly farmers, though there are
carpcnt'rs. blacksmiths and other crafts
man. I alf of there are women nnd child
ren. Though they met yesterday for the
first ti< •, they hove anreed to form a
colony by themoelvea.
Tf.fi STEAMER CHARTERED.
PhUtdelphla, March 7.—D. J. Flummer,
presld«nt of the International Migration
Com pair of Birmingham, Ala., today
chart'-oil the Danish fruit lie amor Hoiea
to c< n/ey to Lltxerla the negroes of the
Southicn states who are to be taken us
colonUts to that countr>'. The Hor«a will
leave lere on Tu* sday for Sa\*annah and
la expected to sail from .Savannah on tha
12th of the month with >• nefrocs as
colonial' for Monrovia, Liberia. Other
s ten me s will follow the Hors.1.
THE ISTRLVN IN PORT.
iar<ft told
fall. I *.i
.if th.* -.klrt .
Sh- slipped
• i '..ill y«*ur at
rhio Captain TeKs the Story of a Very
Rough Passage.
Newport News, Va., March 7.—After
beitu* out forty-throe dare the steamer
Iserfcm came to her pier this morning
at 8 o'clock wfWi 2,200 tons of cargo
from Liverpool. Captain Creamer gave
your correspondent the following his
tory of tvls long trip;
"W» left Llrerpool at mldnlgh-t on
the 24th day of January, nnd had very
Severn weather coming down the chan
nel, being obUffed to carry our pilot
to Waterford inland, as it was im-
poraCble to land him at tn.» Liverpool
1 t! r *MTi"n n n aiwiiM < f the h *avy
weather. The storm oon-ttoued until
the 27th, when we had It fair tin til
Fcbruarj' 2. wthen we agste encoun
tered a h>-tvy galo from tit • n*»rthwest,
lasting nearly three weeks, it b ln*: so
Severe at. tlm«>s that mv <i!p xx;t«
Obllfbd to st'^> anti we were at the
mercy **f th** sea. We were th**n 600
mllHj fn»m Ik*rmuda on T-Vbru.xry 10,
f«>r whioh i>olrU w.* wore making, as
only a!"
xperie
• 1 IV.
d tho
n a ml th<
flv.* days w.* hod n
hn«l kvr*t up "te; i
th*-r and bal tried
.1 wo would nf, .*r h
ghty-flve -tons
'V‘T* burning
T’p to the
rn*»st sevon*
ribald.
Ind
► flr** at all If
n during this
to make Rer-
ve gotten into
. On the nlg.it of rh-* 221 we were
n comp-lied ro stop, letting our
ot»* again Ar midnight on the
we *9*irted again The wind be-
in our fa\•■*.-, we *?*t all available
ir>1 put every man to work brvok-
nj> between d.^rk.s bti*'gh?^a<U. nar-
1/Mtttng, Mi«rH, haloltea ax.d any
f - a^ /» .
I Has" !
I Upset |
•'J ihcold ideas, andrevo-r^
aitionizcd cooking—
V iVkat?COTTOL£NE,S
Why ? Because it isrf
clean, pure, healthful,
c :onomical, and makes rs
rjrtfe most delicate and vy.
St dtlicious food. 5 lbs. ^
oi Cottolenc equals^
§: 7 ,lbs. of lard, saving rs
?v y the cost. Get the^
A gtuuiuc, with trade^
^ mirk—steer’s head in^jk
Fk ctiiou-piaui wxcuiu—L*
r£ 01 every pail. Fk
Made only by
The
1 N K. Fatrbank Company,!
Most Penetrating Remedy
in Existence.
V/ARRANTED CATI5FA0T0RY.
Horse Sizes, 50c. and $1.00 bottles.
60IJ by Druggists and Dealsrsi
Dr. EARL S. SLOAN CO.
BOSTON, MASS., U,S.A.
Dr. Slonn’ft New Rook “Treatise
on tho Horse,” sent Free.
ARRESTED FOR FORGERY.
Richmond. March 7.—Burney Taylor,
corrimS-M.iri' r of rc-v^nu" for King Will
iam county, was arrest, d today and
brought to Richmond, charged with ut
tering a forged order upon tho common
wealth for tho support of a lunatic.
COMMISSIONERS* SALE 07 EMPIRE
LUMBER CO. PROPERTY.
Will bo sold, by tho undersigned, as
,.., M loii-'s s np| 1 b\ th<‘ 1 ourt,
on the premises at Empire, in tho
county of Dodge, Mate of Georgia, on
Tuesday, the nineteenth (19th) day of
March, eighteen hundred and ninety-
Ini' t: '••*, i-> til*- hl-’le t l.M'l-r, all
the property. L th n .il and i-*n-onal,
of tno Eknplre Lumber Company, In
the state of Georgia, consisting of
parts of lots of land numbers two hun-
!n <1 and • ! d)t>-:i\ * iJ'.'i, a:.-l .11 of
lot number t\v.* hundr« 1 and lift v-«.-ven
(257). slid land situated, lying and be
ing in Phe Nineteenth (19th) district of
tho said county of Dork* 1 , containing
three hundred and ninety-four (394)
acres, more or Isfh. nnd upon which 1*
located tho stvir and planing mill plant
hereinafter described, tof»tt>y Witt ill
Improvements thereem, to-wit: Twenty
(20) goo<l dwelling houses, one (1) <ho-
t. :. . 1 i - if mi ■ ’<•! «h;itit : <"i Jifid
mill shtMls, a store houpo and offico
building—about seventy buildings al
together.
Two steam circular saw mills com
plete, under one shed, fully equipped
\\ left «U P'llh'j « f--’l ft
necessary for operation, two y iintls
macihlnes, ome (1) kitho cn • hlne. slab
. !i\.- l. pumps, piping, tanks and
hose attaehmont Tor nre protection in
good running order.
One (1) pVwtfng mill, consisting of five
(5) planers, ivr? (Ti rlps-T?. Ai-
lington * Curtis seperator, seven (7)
Sturtevftnt dry kilns.
One (1) electric lijjht plant, with wires,
Insulator**. etc., c’lovltv one
hund-r 1 nnd fifty (180) |f>rKidfscrnt
and fifteen (15) arc lights.
On« michlne shop, consisting of nli-n-
er. drill press, lat he nnd ’ < 7r an 1 nut
cutter, made by Niles To-q C nipany,
nnd operTted by a twelve (ID Inch
Erie en-rlne. ns also all usual and nec
essary hand tools.
Fifteen head of mules. Five (5) log
carts, with Innvv" sod rlgTing.
A lot of old plpinr nnd ncraip iron.
One million (1.000.000) feet, more or
less, of lumber, on yard at mills, con
sisting of dry side boards, framing and
dress stuff.
One (1) Iren safe. Mvo (2) desks and
other office furniture.
Lot of land number erne hundred and
seventy-one (171) nnd r«n« hundred and
thlrtv-one (1*1) In the Nineteenth (19th)
district of Dnd&e county.
Al -o lot of land number seventy-four
(74). in the Seventeenth (17th) dlstrl- t
of Tenure ns county.
Toftpi of sr»le ope h«’f ( 1 -7‘
LUMBERMEN MEET.
Philadelphia. March 7.—The annual
meeting of the Natioual Whol sale
Lumber Dealers’AssodiUlon, whirii be- | fejd&Ve In six months, t
g.in In the Contlucntal hotel ycr r l »y,
endexl today. The association t
'membership of over 200. und 140 rep-
resci».-atlv**s were
lng officers were
vim w. Robinson of N<
da, N. Y.; first
fml Haines, Bufft.
Laren, Toledo, O., and John C
h 11, New York. President Robin
WHS re-elected.
A DREADFUL HERITAGE.
One of the moot striking facta with
which we meet in everyday life Is
found In the unmlatakoible ftvldenco
that children almoflt alwuy* Inherit,
not only the looks and dharacterlstlcs
of their parents, tout alao the phyatcal
conditions and diseases of even their
remoter unoestoru.
The divine aniibUDOfniwnt that tho
sins of the fathers would bo visited
upon the Children un/to the third ind
fourth generations, was the statement
of as fact which exeriencs awl observa
tion have abundantly vprtfied.
In tbebioodof many an inn bent child
lurks a secret foe in the form of dis
ease germs, which are the dr**adful
heritage received from tin' father or
•mother or more distant ant**cedenta.
Th^e germs will be sure, f»x>ner or
later, to shew themselves, and f.ae chUO.
possibly, when grown bo manhood or
womanhood, will be the victim of th*
scrofuolu* sores, terrible burning and
Itching eezeroi or some similar erup
tion of the skin.
tunes the disease takes otter
forms and the tortures of neura'gla or
rheumatism aro flat.
Frequently th? digestive organs are
affected and thc*i the horrors of dys
pepsia are experienced, anil there is
loss of appetite. Indigestion, WWouanfii,
nnd Headache. The disease *1>e« not
«i«ravs «npsar In the* child in the same
form that It aamrm«?d in the parent.
Tuberculosis, for Instance, In the fa
thers or mothers, may affect tbe brain,
spine or stomach <it their offspring.
That these diseases am transmitted
In the blood and that they lurk In the
blood fs proved beyond any question
by the foot, no well attest-1. that
they are most readily cured by purify
ing and enriching the vital fluid. No
medicine which has ewer been pro
duced has accomplished so many ac
tual and permanent cures w Hood's
SofNap'OrlHa, and yet Hoad's Saraipa-
rtlla H advertised, first, lid and nil the
time, aa a bOJod purifier. By rcaoun of
Its peculiar combination, Hood’s Sarsa
parilla possesses power to act directly
upon the blood and upon the purity
anl vitality of the blood the
o-ll tfie -rrcans ond of the entire body
depends: If the blood Is impure, if It is
loaded wKiii disease germs, whether
they » xfst ns a heritage or have come
Okn dther source, all tth organa may
be In danger, and (those whirtv are we.xk-
est and most aurspitto>le will fall flrxt,
Df the dls# as** germs can be driven out
ir \ ’ • '• * • 1 iti <•!.■ ;>•! 1 .•*•«!' v iy
It will carry h'-arih tr> every pArt o.' the
bo-iy i an nature Inr»*nd»*l.
g blds^vSl bo rc elved by the r«
I sionors for all or any pirt «»r p:
sji ! :-r. • erty to b*» reported
opened bv
JOHN W. HIGHTOWER.
Empire, r;a
j r: vnoTi'A'.
E. A. SMITH,
dee rlbnxl
Id deed, to-
In rihn
pie
affilkrte<l with disease In Its
ImSmUl llZOi U SCt
fl the mon why Hoad's s«r-
l cures so many of these dis
til At »t makes purs Mood. It
rh, scrofula and
blood.
it
[’•hy u<b<> 1m
ring
reak ■
blDtilt-'il and roa/ly vl -tlm* *f j ».
nla. dx«7i^ J*ls an-i Typh- » 1 f»*v
•'VJSe y dentrcr>n the %*«'ci«t f.*\^hl
lur'xinjf In the bl^v-l nrul thus ••
V.shes jporfor-t physlosj health In
pla< e <*f disease. Judged by Its
’•rtift rtf ,
irig of vvhat its proprietor* oh
H H'd’s HarsiparlllA Is c«»rtalnlv
i..—' mowis Which htu* yef b e-n rile -
. r» 1 f r preventing and curinjr th
to which a nvaV-rl'v rn
kk*>l ar* 1 HaMe. by reason of ln>'»
bWvrt whWh t* In very nkojio
h iriug*- fnpm g-svraUona
NOTICE.
By virtue of a power f sal a contained
11, ;i . 1.•.I ..f ?r11*»t !’• I by Julia E.
Vinson to tbe oouthepn Bijwlflff and
Loan elation of ! ti \\ 1 *. Tenn*-»-
v> hi *h d. -lb f■"•!■.! 1 in >h" . IIIco
Of the clerk of tho superior court of
Bibb thtinty. In book of deods AD.
pax*- five hundred sjk! five.
Will Im* (+■ *1 >1 ■ >ii Friday, Mai' a SMi,
iw ».frt A.-.-n tli" 1...U . " r ‘•h'Vt rt
and twelve o’clock noon . beforo
th.- • i'iM h-. I*- 1 d r. in th • «-ltv of M.a •
con, Bttb oounty, to the hlKh*-*d bid
der for anwb. the follow
property, ns sot forth In
wit:
Tiint lot or pared of land known In
the plnn of the cltv of Macon lot
number thirteen, block number thlrty-
h.x. on Hendricks and Har’.-hunst moo
Of the city of Mat ft. f imierly (ot num
ber eight, block thirty -six. on IkKtrd-
rnan’s map J oaid »*»ty. froiu.lnjr >n
Ac:, afreet Hixty-e-ven and •• half feet,
and fronting Telfair etre**t one hundred
and twenty feet, together witli tho
dw*illing hou-*-* and other inurove-
m-nts. Sri Id’ d"d made to b-up* an
iiylebtedne.iH therein HpodfiM. upon
which Is now due for principal. Jnter-
enl uud flfifis the SSSt fourteen hurv-
dnxl and fifty-three dollara and flva
oenti, and «*no hundriM und forty-dvo
dollars nnd thirty cents -»h att'.iey
fen an 1 the Mim of - dollftil for
tble notice, default having been mado
In th-‘ payment of du.*» and Interest for
more than six montilH b -forc this no
il-.. :u? r?I • 111 • *• 1 ill . •*• 1 • 1 S -Id aS
the prop- ;ty of Julia E. Vinson. Thi-«
January twelfth, 1895.
SOU'l'IIEItN BUILDING AND LOAN
ASSOCIATION, by it* president. L.
B. Lutlrell.
JAS. A. THO^LVS. Atty.
NOTICE
Georgia, Bibb County. By virtue of
a p »w<sr of ^iile conUttood In a d-.^l of
trust sx*vutad by Jacob ns. E. Farmer
to th>* S ait hern Building ial L>an As-
soa -ttlon of Knoxville, T->»i. >«-.*. r- 1 -
co;'l -d iii deck's office ..f R M> c cinty
superior court, In d*—«l b.>ok A. D., page
203.
Will be sdd on Frid ty. Man*!i S. 1905,
)>.-*vv'»- :» th-- h--uN -f 11 .i d 12 m .
fore th * court hoiw.* door. In ih«* city
..f M? "n. Bibb c**»mty. to th.* hVi h:
birid-H- for ciish tha*. l->t cr ptrccl «.f
11ii-1 s ruitc in tfi.i c.»unty «.f Bibb,
s*ir.. ..f G.*«rgH. '*• iur >n-* ami or.o-
qu.inter :icr>v. in *r * or in Suuth
Macon. :ind n fin* t »rk of tho
..Id in*l now Houston t ed-, h. lng tri-
ntu-’ihr In xlnp** ,n, > fronting on c^ch
roid ind running back from tlh** f rk
of sikl roads to th.* lb ml of W. E .Ton
kins. Slid d--d nnd • ;o s-*curo d-br,
upon whh'h 's t»w du•* f--r principal.
inr.*r>>t. Insumnci*. du.-s and iax.-s rho
«mn <«f $1,211.46 and iO ]>-»r c-'nt. attor
ney default having h.** n mad.* m
th* payment of da-* nrut intc-r-t;: for
m >r*'* than sir moni#)« Ju<foro fhi< no.
r!«*►-. Sold as T»1.* property ,>f said .la-
rob m i: F.irm»*r.
K'-brinry \ IM).'
Tli* S Mirh-rn Budding nn-1 Amo.
ciatton.
T. TV Tsiffr.B T’o^hi -nh
Jani*« A. Thomas, Attorn«*y. ,J