Newspaper Page Text
®he Herald and gtdcertifier.
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF CITY AND COUNTY
S W. MURRAY, HusiinrsH Jlnimsfr.
EFFECTS OF FREE WOOL.
Forpirn TVnnls Cheaper—Domestic Wools
Dearer—Higher \S uml Great Pros
perity In Woolen uml Testllo Mills.
These are tough times for the repub
lican calamity howler. He was
ease duties have been lowered or en
tirely abolished. Here are a few of the
trust products on which duties have
been abolished:
Sulphuric acid, copper ingots, cotton
^ dead j seed oil,'yellow pine lumber, salt, bar-
certain'before the passage” of the Wil- | rows, harvesters, binding twine, jute
free wool would ! bngging for balling cotton.
Here are trust products on which
duties have been reduced SO to 100 per
son bill not only that
knock the bottom out of prices and
ruin the wool and sheep industries, but
that the great reductions of the duties cent.:
on woolens would close up all of our Borax, castor otl, copper sheets,
woolen mills. Ills position is now most wllitu _ , U ' tt f\ 2°.'* *'*‘AT Mt? '
pitiable. Facts refuse to submit to his
pessemistic theories; moreover,
stand out so plainly that he cannot
possibly deceive the voters until No
cement, locomotive tires, smelsers
they products, soap, penknives, shot, stove-
boards, zinc in sheets, teazles, peanuts,
rubbber goods, cordage, brooms, but*
A Peculiar Case
Periodic Attacks of Neuralgia In
the Eyes.
"C. X. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
“ I write to say that I have been a sufferer for
four years with neuralgia In the eyes. The pains
were very severe at night, causing me to safTcr
winter and summer alike. Sometimes a month
would lapse between spells, then I would he
Troubled Every Week,
especially If I was up at night. I am a man of
regular habits, 42 years of age, and employed
for the past seven years by Heath, Springs & Co.,
well-known merchants and bankers of tilts place
Hood’s %'> Cures
and Camden. I bought a supply of Hood's Sar
saparilla, used four bottles and bcltcvo I am
cured." W. J. Long, Lancaster, South Carolina.
Hood’s Pills ore Constipation by restor
ing the peristaltic action of the alimentary canal
Advice
vember. While prices of foreign wools , f°n s
have fallen about 40 per cent.—just
as the democrats promised—prices of
domestic wools have advanced fully 10
per oertt. over McKinley prices of three
months ago. And on top of this ad
vance the Dry Hoods Economist, of
September -0. says:
“The wool market in New York for
the past week has shown a more active
and general demand and fully sus
tained prices. Slight advances in
prices have been paid for certain
classes of domestic wools, notably in
the mediums and quarter-bloods.
Thers is a good demund for Texas fall
wools and some sales of the earliest
arrivals. A fairly large and diversi
fied stock is being offered in the mar
ket, and manufacturers are showing
better interest than they have evinced
for a year past.
‘The Boston wool market has expe
rienced a good demand tills week uml
prices have been fairly well main
tained.'’
The mistaken and misanthropic ca
lamity shrioker can get no more satis
faction when he begins to look for
woolen mills closed up by the new
tariff.
Never before in our history have so
ninny woolen mills beenopeued in such
a short time.
The Wool and Cotton Reporter, by
fur the greatest authority in America
on textiles, devotes considerable space
every week to a “Bulletin of New En
terprises.
We show in a table below
Here are trust products on which
duties have been reduced 28 to 50 per
cent.:
Bornelc ncld, ammonia, iodoform,
linseed oil, coal, ultramarine, red lead,
fruit jars, calomel, crockery, biscuit
and crackers, starch. Hint glass: win
dow glass. plate .glass. sanitary ware,
freestone, indurated fiber, iron and
steel beams, boiler Iron, vapor stoves,
steel rails, wire rods, electrical sup
plies, galvanized iron and steel, bolts
and nuts, sewer pipe, east iron pipe,
soda water machinery, penknives (some
kinds', binges, wheels, saws, screws,
skewers, type, preserved fruits, raisins,
leather-board, wood pulp, oil cloth,
matches in boxes, sash, school furni
ture, snaths, axes, barbed wire, con
densed milk, spool, bobbins and shut
tles.
On .the following trust products
duties were reduced 10 to 25 per emit.:
Cigarettes, oat meal, rice, envelopes.
India rubber, paper bags, brushes,
matches not in boxes, umbrellas, cart
ridges, caskets, celluloid, cotton duck,
cotton thread, lime, lithographic
prints,»maride, safes, sandpaper, straw-
board, tomb-stones, trunks, wall paper,
whips, wrapping paper.
Reductions of duties on nil these prod
ucts have lowered the limit to which
trusts cun raise prices. McKinley
raised this limit and turned millions of
dollars into trust coffers.
Refined sugar is t he ohly important
trust product on which the duty has
the result j been increased. But the sugar trust
would gladly pay S«5,1)!IO,OOI) and per-
jet back its
McKinley duties, limler the new law
four-fifths of the duty paid on sugar
will go to support the government.
OUR CITY NAMES.
Easton, Pa., was at first East Town.
NantucKKT, Mass., has an Indian
name.
Causon City, Nov., was named for Kit
Carson.
Omaha, Neb., is named from a tribe
of Indians.
Gai.hna, Ill., was named from its
lead mines.
Lot ts .Iolikt furnished a name to
.loliet, 111.
Muncy, Pa., was named from the
Mlnsi Indians.
Ni:\v London, Conn., was at first
called Tawagog.
Fond id: Lac means bottom, or lower
end of the lake.
Till? Peoria Indians furnished a name
to the Illinois city.
Passaic, N. ,1.. has an Indian name,
meaning the valley.
Chattanooga isan Indian name, and
means hawk’s nest.
Finn' Wayne, 1ml.. \vus named after
lion. Anthony Wayne.
Ill: u’koht, S. I'., was named after
Henry, duke of Beaufort.
Noitroi.lv county in England, gave a
name to the Virginia town.
of the iirst month’s experiment with
free wool. In order, if possible, to in- i luips 10,000.000 :i year t
duee protectionists to read the whole
table, we have sorted out and
placed at the head of the
table every
tinned. The
"calamity" item
record of textile
. i Under the McKinley law till percent.
duty paid went to swell the
mills. | of the
compiled from Wool and Cotton Re-1 trust’s profits. Hut tlie democrats ar
porter’s bulletins, is as follows:
Classification of notice.
’£% \%i
’H *'i'S w
The great financier, gives the follow
ing good advice to boys, which
parents mig^t also read with profit:
“ Boys, go to school as long as you
can, and remember every hour spent in
study in youryouth will be worth money
to you in after life. Read good books;
make yourself acquainted with history;
study the progress of Nations and the
careeis of men who have made
nations great.
“Study religion, science, statecraft
and history. Learn to read
intelligently, so that you can turn to
practical use in after life the reading
of your youth. Be sure you begin
right. Do not waste time in reading
trashy books.”
Mr. Sage ffiirtEner says:
“ The boy who is wanted in the
business'world of today must be
educated. If his parents cannot afford to
give him a college or a high school
eduucation he must learn to study
without the aid of a teacher, in the early
mornings before business begins, and
/ in the evenings after business hours.
It can no longer be truthfully said that
an education is out of any one’s
, reach.”
This is the advice of a man who is
one of the most conspicuous business
successes of our time, and who lias
amassed one of the largest fortunes in
America. It cannot possibly be
• charged that he is in the pay of THE
ATLANTA CONSTJTUTJON, and yet
these words given as the conviction of a
life of unusual observation and
experience advises as strongly as words
can that vou hasten to accept the offer
of The Constitution, and secure this
greatest of popular educators, The
Encyclopaedia Brltannica.
The edition offered by The
^ Constitution fills every requirement of
M& Sage’s recipe for success. It is the
only edition that Is up to date. Who
Will be without these books now,
When T«fn Cents a day will secure
them ?
Write for Particulars
Notice to Debtors and Creditors.
GEOT HI A - —Coweta Cor ”ty:
■VI persons having demands against thees-
tuteof W. F. Gay, late of Coweta county,
deceased, are hereby notified to render in
kbeir demands to t!:e undersigned according
.Ato law; and all persons indebted to said <• -
* tate are required to make Immediate paj-
inent. This October 1. 1HH.
M A KG A ItET G A 5 ,
Adtn'x, 5V. K. Hay, dec'd.
.Shutting down because nr low
water : •
Repairs, usual vacation, etc..
Strike
Unexplained
New mills j 6 | 15 | 10
Enlargements uml Improve
ments | 28 i 18 I I
Mills starting up ■■■ I 80 I 80 I 80 | 80
Forty mentions of new mills, seven
ty-three of enlargements and bnprnve-
ri’icnts, ninety-six of mills starting up,
and only two (or possibly live) of mills
idle because of lack of orders Is the
record for the (irst month under free
wool. Protectionist croakers can find
no such prosperous record, with so few
shutdowns, during any consecutive
three weeks of the years of McKinley-
Ism.
Free wool has caused the change
from idleness to activity, it is setting
the old spindles to turning and bring
ing thousands of new ones into exist
ence.
The Dry Goods Economist, of Septem
ber 29, says: “The worsted yarn trade
is in a first-rate condition. Spinners
are all very busy and unable to supply
yarns as quickly as users require
them.” Under the heading “Woolen"
It mentions four new mills, eight mills
starting up and one shutting down.
One of the mentions says that every
mill in Hudson, N. Y., started up full
handed and on full time on Monday,
September 17; one mill starts up with
sixteen new looms; another after being
closed down “several years,” and
others after being closed a year.
McKinley is welcome to all the capi
tal he Can get out of the one “close i
down on account of the operative
striking for a 20 per cent, increase in
wages.” T lie Wool and Cotton Re
porter, of September 0, said “that
Rawitzer Tiros., of Stafford Springs,
had settled with their dissatisfied
weavers, giving them a 25 per cent, ad
vance in wages.” The operatives in
the Continental worsted mills, Phil
adelphia, probably read of the above
advance, became dissatisfied and struck
for Wilson bill wages. McKinley phi
losophy offers no explanation for such
behavior on the part of woolen mills
and woolen operatives.
not through with this trust yet. When
j they get another wlutck at it this win-
! ter they are likely to take away the re
maining’ half of McKinley protection.
The democrats have won a decided
victory in the tlrst battle with pro
tected trusts. It should not be forgot
ten that these trusts were entrenched
behind protection walls which the re
publicans bad been thirty years in
building. They were glutted with the
“sinews of war” extorted from the
populace on the outside of the walls.
At every point the outer walls have
boon taken and the trusts have been
driven from their position. The trust
combine is broken; those trusts that
have lost, all their protection are no
longer interested In the light and will
not assist other trusts to maintain pro
tection. In fact they should help to
defeat tlie other trusts, for the trusts
prey upon each other as well as upon
outsiders. The trusts are making a
desperate effort during the present
campaign to win recruits from the en
emy. Thousands of trust emissaries,
disguised as republican campaign
speakers, are trying to deceive the pro
pie by telling liicin that the protection
walls (behind which are the
trusts) do not protect the trusts
but protect the people from
the trusts. They said to the people:
“If you knock those protection walls
down you will let the trusts loose and
they will prey upon you more than
ever before.” They are fooling a few
nervous, half-witted people, lmt they
only make sober-minded people smile.
Any man with two lobes to his brain
knows that a robber’s castle protects
the robbers from their victims, but
does not protect the people from the
robbers.
The trusts are routed and disorgan
ized. They are making some big
bluffs, but they know their time is
short. '1’hey will always fi-ht to save
as much McKinleyism as possible, but
they expect to have but little left after
a few more charges by the democrats
—their mortal enemies. On with the,
war! Let it not stop while one protec
tion stone stands on top of another?
Hvr.o.N YV. Holt.
^SPECIAUSTS ^
illcirttlur Oruiluntoa*)
Arn the lonAtnff and im>»t aucceiHful .'poclallate nnd
will givu you hvl|».
Youngand mid
dle aKPil men.
Kunnirknblo re*
p-.iliH I mV (j follow
i*d our treatment.
Mirny yearn of
viii led uml fug <h>
fill OXIM’I’InUMl
III tllO uni* of nil'll’
tive r.u'U.otiK tlifit
wr alone own mid
eoutiid lor nil i|If
orderHof moil wli
mhnvu wuuk, mule
% veloped or d I s
(Mined orniinM, 01
who nre milTerlng
from error»
youth un i px«
or who lire nervous
uml Impale n
(lie worn of (lo
JfellowH and the
I'-oiih-inpt of their
frlendH uml eom
IMMlIonH, lends II
tofrimrantcu to all patient*. If they niti possibly
iio roNloretl, our nun cxiiIiihIvo treatment
will afford a ««*■••»#
WOMKNI Don't y..u want to Ret ouml of that
wrukiicMN wlflin tiTaiinent that von cun me nt
home without Instrument’*!' Our Wonderful treat’
nient has cured otlieiu. Why not you? Try It.
(’ IT UHtiri, unit dlseiiRc.i of tlio Skin, ltlood,
iluurt, Liver ami Kidneys.
NYT*1IICjIN The most rspld. rnfe nnd elToctlvo
remedy. A eompleto Ouro Ouaraiiieed.
NICIX IHRRArtT’.H of nil kinds cured wlmro
many utlie: h huvo fallal.
VVN ATV R iI. Id VH A IKTJF.H promptly
cured In ti fe\V diivn. (JdlrU, mire lilid Ho 11*. UllH
Includes (jlcct nnd uonoiha'ii.
TRUTH AND TACTS.
We have eared rusts of Chronic Dlsnnnu* that,
have fulled to Ret cured nt the hands of other rpeclnl
iHtn nnd medical Institutes.
, —ifrs UKIM j-:*! C&r.te that there Is hopo
for You (Join ull no other, mi you may wm te vultiuhlo
time. Obtain our tvoMiuent lil om e.
■Beware < f f e and rheup treatment*. We ntvo
the best, nnd most, n.’h ntilir. ireiiimeni at nio l*’i;i»e
prices as low ml run done for s ite ami skillful
treatment. rKKf', consultation at thoolllcoo’
by mull. Thorough i xiimlnnilon and careful mug
jiohIh. A bourn treatment ran t»e given In a majority
of eases. S» nd for hymptom Blank No. 1 for Men
No. *2 for Wonn ,, .»; No. SlforHkln JMsenst H. Alleorn
Hpoiulene.e niiHWercd prompt I v. Ihisltiess st riel IV cor
Adeutlul. r.iiilro ttentmeni sent free from ohserva
t Ion. Defer to our patlenis, hunks auu huulncss hil’ii
What is
Costoria is Or. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants
nnd Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Nnreotlc suhstunee. It is n harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, nnd Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years’ use by
Millions of Mothers. Cnstorln Is tlio Children’s Panacea
—llie Mother’s Friend.
Castoria.
•’Castoriaisso well ailnpto.1 tnrhiMmllHint
1 nxximmeml II, um huimm IoT to any prcftcrlptlna
known to im>." H. A. AncnKu, M. 1>„
111 So. Oxfonl St., ISrooklyu, N. Y.
"Tlio two of ’CoKtorln' in po nnlvorml ami
Itn merit a bo well known Unit It ws'iim n work
of KUiHirerognlIon to cmtorHo it. Few ni-o the
lritelllgcnt fninlllen who ilo not kivp Caatorliv
within ootty reach.”
t’AHUIH 51 Him, 1). 1'.,
Now York City.
Castoria.
Unutorlit cun>H Colic, <'oiwtipntIon,
Sour Blomnclt, DiiirrluiMk, Knu'tntion,
killH Worms, p-tvi-H shs-p, oml pnmmtoa di
gwt.lon,
Without Injurious medication.
“ For Hovcml yours I havo recommended
your ' Onatorln,' nnd Bhnll always continuo to
do so ns It luut Invarlalily produced licuellciul
rcsulls."
Edwin F. 1'aiihrr, M. D„
18!W.h Struct and 7th Avn., Now York City.
Tim OKNTAim Company, 77 5tmuiAY Snutirr, Nnw York City
JACKSON OFFICE FURNITURE
COMPANY,
JACKSON.
TENN
MANUFACTURERS OF
SCHOOL, CHURCH AND OFFICE FURNITURE.
WAR ON TRUSTS.
Democrats Have Won the First Battle with
Republican Trusts—Duties Greatly Ke-
dnced on All—Hypocrisy of Republicans.
Most of the claims and pretensions
put forth by repubicans to catch votes,
during the past decarle, have been mis
leading if not actually false. Such is
the claim now being made from every
stump that the new tariff bill is pecu
liarly the work of trusts, and that no
other tariff bill ever granted such
special favors to trusts. Conscientious
republicans who know the history of
the McKinley bill would not open their
mouths on this subject. They know
that the trusts and protected interests
Dodging the Income Tux.
The republican stumpers are still
fighting very shy of the income tax j
Gov. McKinley, during his speech at j
Kt. Louis, was asked by a voice in the j
audience: “llow about the income
tax?” The artful dodger evaded the
question with the “smart” retort that
“we are a good deal more troubled
about tlio incomes that we are to get
hereafter than about the tax on them. ’
Rut a certain number of people will en
joy incomes of more than fbt.OOO, in
spite or because of tlie remnants of Me- j
Kinleyism left in the tax laws. What
does McKinley, what do Harrison, '
Reed, Sherman, Allison and the other
republican leaders, think of this tax?
They do not say. They dare not In
this state Mr. Platt’s convention emit-!
ted a feeble protest against “taxing!
prosperity.” The boss’s pa-rty has so |
long taxed poverty that the delegates ,
assumed, in a dazed sort of way, that |
this is still the proper policy to advo
cate. Hut since the convention none
of the republican orators or organs ,
have demanded that this tax on con-
^AililreiM or cull cm
DR. HATHAWAY & CO
aa i-a South Broad Street, ATLANTA. CIA.
w-fcAS
IS JV.f. I’f.GT.
NO SQUEAKING.
2-5. CORDOVAN,
FNENCH&lNAMELLEDOALr.
*4. l 3. 5 - 0 Ft NE CALF& KANGAROO.
$ 3.5P POLICE,3 Soles.
49 so>2-WORKINGMEN?
EXTRA FINE. 1,4
*2.b. 7 - 5 Boys'SchoolShoes.
•LADIES-
, SEND TOR CATALOGUE
W-L-DOUGLAS,
BROCKTON, MASS.
You cun save inoni-y by nurchuntuK W. L.
Doindun HIioch, , .
Ilecnune, wc tire tin- largi-nt laanufartiirerfl of
nilveitiicil kIiik-s ill the world, uml uunrimlce
the value by stamiiiUK the niiiiv- mul pi Ice oil
the bottom, wlih li protcctB you against high
prices and the inlihlleiimii'-- iuufils G'.u slioi- i
equal custom wol k m s’c-Ic, i asy fitting amt
wearing onaliti- We have them so! I . vet y-
where at lower prl. i--i lor the v.ihie r iven than
any other in;-l.c. 5 ,hi- no suhsLHutc. II your
dealer cannot • ply y<m, we can. i old by
P- F. CUTTING & CO.
To HORfc LIE-GLASSES,
° rc ■
OTCimil/S
IA1
Schools and CJiurchcs seated in the
furnished. Send for catalogue,
host manner. Office
WHY YOU SHOULD
INSURE IN THE MUTUAL LIFE.
Report of Twenty-seven Companies to the New York In
surance Department, from Date of Beginning Bus
iness to December 31, 1893.
I >ll I of
IJlf 11 loll'.*
f nominee
lolfi] | id pi'ollf Of .‘f • * (ill I'll *’i| l»y I III* rol| oiiifloilS rolled I vdv. The M Ilf 11.11
-MiiJiMM’ilyUl.iMO, or oiic-liull. 'ITiIh Ih (lie nt npeiidoiiH fant In I In* hIMory of Idle
We hi
•yr
jLi AA'-
t, Certain Sain ano Efleoiivo Rontidy la:
rrifhirltit/ I,-•»•««>t.f*• ••<*»»««#, Wi'.rf
etf»torinf/ I lt< ,i/’f/ri ol<:.
Cr.-roH Tour IL-'-j- ,, nnlnih'M. '“ye
- lanois, Red Lye.:, AtiiH.-rt eye Sjitsiti’T,
ANJJ PRODUf f,!KF
AND 1-ee.dANi.. i'i (A., -. .;.
At ho, eqnn.llv ? fllca: « . i.'u-'-. -i vr-«i ■ i-
ithnr mnltuUi'N, r-.ig-ft ns !eter
-. ,re«i, TuinurH, Krill AM ,i f’.iirnu,
.li'H, «»r whi-rcer Suflm/i-nmfori «--:l .In.
jm’IIKU/H NAI.Vt; tMiiy foe tiueU ««
<i vantage.
SOLO BY ALL DRUGOISfS AT CENTS.
III,. diili-H III nrgniilziitlini In Mill Ithisn III' tin- year IHtlit Ih 112,217,222, of which Thu MnUml
I ,|ii V noi l Ion Iml. | IHH.H0.2u6i l hUH Hliowfii 1 ' 1 lutf v wI! Ii only I vvciily nor cent of I lie nulluy-
llv,, I ,1 ( ,\ Ibii’Jiic.-F, 'I lie M ill mil J Jih * nrued lor IIh pollcv-hohlnrM mm iiiiiHi pmfH. «•<
wjih (lined by llie reiimlulng elgbl.v per n nl. The Miitiml Ul« liMH imnle KIOH8 nay in frill* lo
II u policy ho I, It-I’M of ^;MI7,:i:JI,(H0, a relnrn of more tlnm 1 vvenly-lvvo per cunt, of the total bln
payments made by nil Miu com, imlfrM collfrullvuly. . . , , ,
' And Mi'll in, Tbr M tit mil Idle exblbllM in piiymciif h ulrcmly made to Mm pollcy-liolduiH and
In money dared to Midi ( redll, and lo be pahi In fulfillment of policy contracts, the hum • >
t.VD S7 bdiicn net profit of more than sixty*lour mllllom. over and above every dollar
reeV'i\«d h'v It I com policy-hfddel'M. The one company euiialH In nHUlt.H 1 lie I went v-dx of a
Ilf I whldiV'fO.pi Ih S Knell I.splri!.« eompdltoie as the New York Idle, the l.'fOllable. 'hr
Noil b w< tern, Mu’ M ill mil Mem’ll I, and the I'oiiih et lent Mii'iml, each of I licit miu is ium» •
ns Mutual fdf« , and each ol Mem iuJo.\lng a «ood op; oilnnil.h - in locality and Mine. 11
ingitlar and blKfilfleant fad h eoiDpleumiH Ibat with all their h« narate prelenkeM of
„|i i ir, Ha v me mef/ed m that one mat ol com pel Horn vs hleli. cold Misled with I he h -
tnai Idle, hhow Unit wllli lour I linen I he union n of « apltal, with nfiicP en Mined b-- nil no
of yea n o* ad.l ve opera Mon and wit li t. w •*i , l v-sl x I Iiiicm t ee pa Id mu' ag» men I, I hej' can *"
hIiow a Joint nd profit- eijnnl to Unit *A f ]'hu Mutuitl Dll
W. HILL.
'y
For the best plan of
• alone
insurance consult
A.
SAVANNAH AND WESTERN RAILWAY
ATLANTA SUB-DIVISION.
II. M. CX)iMLK AND R. J. LOWREY, Ri.cfivers.
in (i
practically had their own way in the
McKinley bill, which is a patchwork of j fTxur.y Ia:* repealed in order that
trust legislation. Dozens of important taxes ofJ cryiu j, necessities may
DR. S. C. PAR80NS'
WOMB AMD BECTAL SUPPOSITORIES „
A local home treatment for fib ! yy p.
crim plain Ik peculiar to feraab’ ,
arid diheaycH of tin.* rofsttun. Th*
fiiihdnu and ( are any inflarninr 1 ■'
tfon,irritation,ulceration or d
r-harge. In womb and redid di
chhch they relieve pain in d wP
abMoltitely cure if nn-d tun di
reetud. PRICE 76c.
Office 7*^ N. Broad St. H>-ur* 0 to'
For pamphlet*, cjuuHtlon Uatu, <
private fnrorrnation adtirenn wit'
U/impt DK.H.C. I’.( IlSOfcH, AllrtiiU. Ui
Bold by f). It. Bradley, Newman (in.
IN £
*** I
T W pii
. .(ijjhpn
i m i) 27 pm; 0 \i pu
in r» 12 pm! ti fo pir
8 17 a ii., 0 o I pm
H '.'.i urn * r •'' • •
li iJnm
in 10 u u> 1 7 JJti pir
hi -JO um
10 1 ; an
11 loam
il 15 am
I tCr C!JND/.Y, SEPTEMBER 1C, 1894.
, pi
f i,ii nil
jiro' 7 15 Jm
22 pm 7 45 pm
!l pir. i
H 01 pm
k 22 pi i
pm H 27 pi
s t-7 pin K 1fJ |»i
8 20 pm 0 05 pro
A rrl ve ...
;Tn Inn marked I Iiun + ran dally, exer i t Bitnrfay, ar.d 11
F or Im Mk i i» foiniM Jon as to m In Huh . , ia•»
\V A. Mooki . ^nj t., Mituon, (ia.
iii./.i.M.rn,'Traffic Mgr. Thko, I' Kt
Ha vain, ah, t
Ti TION
i • i iiin
\'» w . I..
Hrooks
J-.- no a
'J ii. In
Mm rpsboro
New nan..
Haig! id.
W idP Hhurg.
lOmiiing
(l cl i
( ariollloi.
No 10+ 1 N
| III a n or
) J K> ; No fh
a 11 | ty r/> 11in
mi,. n a') air.
ho;? ami H2I jm
/ Hi am! 7 52 an
*; I5 am| 7 2K Mr
a *2*1 amj 7 11 am
4*» inn « 4 • am
) :tn ami
d Ibiu ’
i J’.»i am'
^t.i da
7 15, in
20 , m
<1 611 pin
5 22 , m
I 8 f rn
•» 51 p.
•t ti' ]nn
'2 42 , m
‘2 2 ' pin
*2 05 , m
1 52 pm
1 30 . in
' • nly.
T. It Fkaioi i:,
k, 1 n.tibMp.
rgl i.
Vi nt. N• wi ai , On
J ( . Hah k, d. P
ATLANTA AND WEST POINT RAILROAD, AND WIN
TERN RAILWAY OF ALAPAMA.
clauses are in the language suggested
by the protected manufacturers, i
Duties were increased—often doubled ,
—on almost every product sold by com
bines and trusts. The few reductions
on trust products, such as those on
steel rails and steel beams—-were not
sufficient to interfere with trust prices.
On the contrary, it will be difficult
for the republicans, to instance, with
one exception, any singe trast product
on which datic- are now higher than
before !a->t August. In nearly every
ay be re- DR. S. U. PAHSONS* BLOOD PURIFIER
stored. Nearly everywhere, except to
New York,the democrats arc approving
this most just and least burdensome
of taxes. And the republicans know
public sentiment too well to oppose it
openly.—X. Y. World.
Vt.r < Kb
Mr. McKinley i
the >e days but 1
plain whv w<
a Me Ki nle
n-.ndc. -N.
: Ui F.vplain.
tilting a great deal
.u,t trying to ex-
io! hat 't-ot falling under
tax ke- o ri.-. qg under free
". World.
Cures Syphilis, Fell, TTinrior
PwelilngV, :-1.in Jd-'i-.s' Ein-i
iimtixin, I'lniple-, Serufula, M»
Jhriu, ( .itirrh, i-i vtrs. I.ivi nut
Kidney Jnsenses. Old Hon
Kruptiona and all di-order. :
sultint' front Imjinrc !■ nod.
PMCE $1,00.
Office 7'/,N I’roarl 8’- H-ur4 0 m ■
For painjihli-ts or rr-vuta Inf 1
matlon, adiirt-hs w-tli stain{>,
337. 2 C, PA2S3HS. C1.
. Hi nd ley . Newnan Ga.
it.,pan* l ai.iiie- for torpid livor.
Ripatt* Tabules . I.cttf livei Ujrtic.
KK.A \>
DOWS. 1
IN
EFFECT JUNE
12, 1894.
1 n pa 0 ui*.
Dally.
No. 30.
Da ly.
No IH.
Dully. ; Dully 1
: Kx Knn 1
N(..::s,; No. 12.
HTA’I MSS,
I 'ally
Kx Sun
No. m.
Du 1..
K(|W
Dally. D *:/v
No. i% No
Lv Hclum
A r
.. . "
|
;; ;h» it m
1! Mi pm
so an
IiV. Mont/ ij.i” >
ar,
11 20 pin
3* pn ; 1 *
fin.
J^4 Kin
7 < am. j
(iV 1 l
\i
« " 1 I"
t -.!) [in ' ti A! a
, r,i pr.
1 52 a if
v IH nm :
Ar ()|ji-!li;it
Lv
•' pm
5 5!) in ! <) W at
!<•{ pm
i H j n
2 tr • -i in
x 11) a 11 - . . j
l.V ' lit a
r.
/ pm
■1 52 . 11,: ii 1.2 «
S 02 um s IS n<
--
Ar \S fM ''(/Ini
A r
ii i‘2 pm
i '!.; {'ll
.... . . |
1A1 LaD’.mgf
A 1
« 27 pm
1 27 pm. 7 51 at
.... | (».
• j 1 11111
' D "
1 A. V l|oi!i:..st: Me
A r.
HUflpm
'• Apo-; 7 2! u
1 J«> .
j a ■ •
- ' , ...
; 1 Grm IviPe
A1
Ar.
»0 j pm
* ' 8 pn
■ -O’ pin, 7 M aj
1 .»./ J * J»
.11 n
j A i* w an
. 2j 1'ui
• » ID pill H ;^l aj
'/II ,-I,
■ /’ fill
a. si ii* ; (17 an.;
\ . I* . .11 (lo
•.
; 1 ■> pi:
■ "j p"
51 pn., 0 20 ui
!'• Ha . 2am,
, . 1 LnT '»m
» r -
I Ml pr.
1 H ji H1
•21 tin 1 K 15 - r
' 1 1 1
(■ in ri
•: • ’ 1 •. 8u 1 am
\r I- nt-' Pioiil
Ar.
i 1 I" pin
1 .t.,...
1 •**» pn ; 5 ai;*- ur
Id PJ,
1. 1 > ■.!•)
11 - r*. ~ 2.) af/i
A r t 1 Ian l a
l.V
15 ; -r.
i 2«' run
JOHN A. G1
;k.
l.GO. W ALL (•: N
ai* < >.
(' K '1 IT ! * ,
Uc.tc.rn) J’assenKer A,enl.
Ti nv. Pus. ; t,
I’n-s’l. * Gen. Mum