Newspaper Page Text
jeralri and jpocrfiBcr,
OFFICIAL ORGAN OF CITY 4NM- C' l l NT V
8 If. MURRAY, llli-lti.v-. >|iij'Hi;
braid. Of such stuff nre the oalnmlty i
reports being circulated by the repub- j
lienti croakers.
CALAMITY CROAKERS.
They Circulate False Reports About Jute
Industries—Exposure of Their Tactics to
Reduce Waites uml Deceive Voters.
Many protected manufacturers who carpet industries have been ruined or
prophesied that their industries would even injured; only trust profits will
bo ruined by tariff reductions now feel suffer. Next year prices will be lower,
Strangulation a Coveted Honor.
Strangulation is considered an honor
able death, in China, and very much
th„' j,,,. irt,
demned In permitting it Instead of de
capitation. This, because the method
docs not involve mutilation of the bod v,
, -Y “ V A 1 n, 2, „' T„“ „ , YT, 0 -V, , ’ ! which,to the Chinese mind,is the height
incumbent upon themselves to do more bagging and carpetings will be , .. , , , . , , , .
prophecies, made; me:
Mra. At. K. Made
Stonewall, Tenn,
A Helpless Invalid
Kidney and Liver Trouble
and Nervous Debility
IC Years of Suffering Ended by
Taking Hood’s.
"C. T. Hood tf Co., Lowell, Mass.:
"The efTects of Hood's Sarsaimrllla In my case
have been truly roarvslous. It far surpasses
any other medicine I have ever taken. For 18
years I was troubled with torpid liver, kidney
trouble and nervous debility, aad was
f ^ Helpless Invalid.
. Q srsuparllla for three
I have been taking If ode*.... . T . .
Oontlis and I feel that I am ouroS. ». ,, <)t
now than I have for six toon yoars. I tnw^.
Clod first, for my health, and C. I. Hood & Co., ]
second, for Hood's (Jarsaparllla. I havo ruconv
something to fulfill their
Fortunately for the
fortunately for their
ecies, prosperity is returning, under j
the inilnenee of free rinv material and
lower duties, as rapidly as is safe. It
is expensive to hold mills idle when ,
there is work to be done. It costs but
little to issue bluff notices to employes
and to the public. Hence the' latter ,
plan is much more fashionable with the '
calamity croakers. Their efforts to
fulfill their promises, scare their em
ployes and to deceive the voters (until
after election) are often ludicrous.
The manufacturers of jute bagging
for bailing cotton have been doing
some artistic work in ttie calamity line.
On September 15 the American Manu
facturing Co., which employs (500 or TOO
people in its Brooklyn mill, issued a
notice to its employes saying that the
duty on bagging had been removed;
that they would have to compete with
bagging from India, Germany and Scot
land, where wages were from 10 to 45
cents per day; that “It will not be pas
sible to continue to pay the present
-onle of wages," and that “by about
November 1 It will decide whether the
mill can be run at nU. w
No effort was inn le to keep this no
tice secrot and it wus at once published
in the New York Tribune, IToss and
men and women will tie
ountry, but un- employed at wages as likely to be
calamity proph- higher as lower; cotton planters will
be the greatest gainers of all. If some
mill, or parts of mills, now making car
peting are put to other uses it will only
be because, as in the case of the l’ntri
sen mill, the reduced duties on silk
yarn and other raw materials havo
made other industries more profit aide.
Hykon \Y. Holt.
A TRUST HIT HARD.
The Now Tariff 11111 Gave the llomx Trust a
Severe Slap.
That the removal of duties that pro
tect tlie trusts is the most effective dlately put their hands into the straps
way of removing the evils of trusts, is nn ,i prepared to stand; but l'nt jumped
clear front the behavior of the borax pp and offered his seat. “Hut I don’t
of disgrace in death, since the body in
recomposing itself in the spirit world
may get a head or members not be
longing to it. it is not unusual to see
women put to death by strangulation;
in such eases the frail creature is held
down by two brutal ruffians while a
third fiend at her back is slowly twist
ing a cord which runs around her neck
and forces out tongue and eyeballs.
**Utntlenianly Dailies."
It was In a country horse enr that a
true son of Ireland sat with his tin
dinner-pail going homo from work.
The Boston Gazette gives tills story
of his ride: The car was crowded and
two young ladies on getting in inline-
trust. Four days after the McKlnl
bill went into effect the borax trust,
which owns or controls all of the work
able mines of the Pacific coast, ad
vanced file prleos from S'f to 8 11 .,. to
want to take your seat, tlmnk you,"
said one, smiling but hesitating.
“Never mind that," suid the gallant
Hibernian, "I’d ride on u cowcatcher
to New York for a smile from such
0>f, to 05f cents per pound. Prices | gintletnanly ladies." And *ho girl eon-
have been chunged several times sin
but have remained firm at 8 to 8\ dur
ing the past year. The cost of ex
tracting and refining probably does not
exceed 4 cents per pound. Chinese la
bor is employed uml the mines or tie-
poelts are the most easily worked in
the world. The foreign prjee lias for
sillers tlds as pleasant u compliment as
she ever received.
hundreds of other protection news- j j, oar8 been close to 5 cents, although
papers and journals. A representative j controlled by a syndicate of producers.
| ,0u August 28, the duty on refined
obtained the following an j crude borax was reduced from 5
to 2 ccuts per pound. The effect upon
The .fncrlcan Manufacturing Co. is I pr (ce3 has boon in exact accordance
a combine efi’ ti UY, formed about four j democratic theories. The Oil,
years ago, Hoop lifter being formed It ^ j> a ( n ( alu ( p n1 <y I’apm-ter of October 8,
dismantled and closed UJ) !t P»H1 at i nays editorially:
" tin tin tnil*. I J -k
of the Reform club who Investigated
the matter
facts:
Hood’s Si ;> Cures II
monfidd * * »« ' n r„ , ! # L B . bb0rS « 4 un^Y M,,uul °' lnA “ | waK ualuI . tt U y cxped^l V hut >h«
Sj$3fi rt and tlirae or four others in different | prloe of borax would be reduced a"!
did at 40.” Mks. K. Wauk, Stonewall. Tenn. parts of the country. It now lias two l j lu tariff bill should have become a
~ Hood’s Fills »ct >' ct promptly and
efficiently, on the liver and bowel*. 25c.
The Ladder
Of
“Non- or never you must climb
Upward to the peaks sublime,
Leaving trivial things below,
Upward where the laurels grow.”
factories In St. Louis and one at i aw , and this expectation was promptly
Charleston, K. C., besides the Brooklyn ; j.calized by a decline of one cent per
plant—the largest in the country. The | polm (i i w j,'lch was almost immediately
company claims to make DO per cent. f 0 n 0WC( \ i )y a reduction of a quarter of
of all jute cotton bugging mado in the' a (<ent a poun d. The condition of the
country. During the past two years It , f ore ig tl market was such that the first
has so advanced prices that cotton ( , a ^ was scarcely deep enough Ip pro- J toitiiiiinni
growers are threatening to discontinue | vont t j 1(! importation of some twenty
the use of jute bagging and to subst'l- , tons of borax, but the price- being
tute bagging made of cotton. On May i ubout equal to that then quoted for
1, when jute butts were selling at 2*tf j domestic it was thought that when the
cents per pound, the Cordage Trade 1 additional quarter of a cent wus taken
Journal quoted the following prices | off the j u tter the inducement to import
for jute bagging: i would cease. Such does not appear to
One uml throe-fourths pound bnfodiig i j lavc been the case, us one buyer hero
has purchased a lot of fifty tons in the
roM|
nl™
What is
Custorin is I>r. Samuel Pitcher’s prescription for Infants
and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor
other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute
for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.
It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years* use by
Millions of Mothers. Custoria is the Children’s Panacea
—the Mother’s Frlond.
Castoria.
"CnulorlnlsHo well adapted k hadron that
I recommend It an miperlor to any prescription
known to mo." II. A. Aiu-iikr, M. 1>„
111 So. Oxford St,, Brooklyn, N. Y.
foreign markets, un-l it is intimated
that negotiations looking to further
purchases are pending.
“At the figures now quoted it would
be impossible to send foreign borax to
this market except at a considerable
loss.
"The foreign market is in a very un
settled condition and linn been for sev
eral months past. Prior to that time
the borax trade on the other side was
a virtual monopoly. The syndicate of
fore, says this trust, we j manufacturers who controlled that
te with foreign goods market nad. it is said, an understaiid-
Aineriean producers,
Nothing Is
More Inspiring
To the ambition* young man than to rend th*
life storlss of those who. from the poorest
sarrourxflM!*, have climbed the ladder of
success.
Thomas A. EAisos was a train boy. Jay
GoiSd cnnvnose* for hooks ; f’. A. Collins
worked Is a mine ; Henry Clews started life
*s o hoek-keeper; Aogu-.fia Daly uo»d to
earn f8 a w*rti.
Such facie seem stranger than fictfom. Yel
tbe Asl e<oM ka r»de*t»teVy draws out from
then whh, ham prwrr. with te« edocartoeal
dkuant*«es. have, by perslifhrtl work, b|r
fyord -stair, ky goUtntt to its best use eyery
ctv^rhsd tba qeVlet of tortwaa
Aid stf«As».
Greater
Opportunities
WouU y*u ryuvrA fadd^r o( success?
Your k r. t.ucb a rise will be*to seture
that toi»p|n\4ltt25 vt «.W krw/vWfc<ige,^he pew
EWCYCWO^ifeDlA W^JT/^S'ICA, now
placid vttUui yew ri^acb If you wttl wave ten
Cents a day. Wf1u» f«r application Wank,
and otuin a 6Ciiwhii« * be had at
iatroffucfc/ry p*;c«w*. Ad^ r L*ss
> • Tlie Constitution
AT LAMA, GA.
I«itmd bngirliiK
cents per yard.
Two pound h:i;o{hiK > cents per yard.
Two mid ono-fourth pound iiaBKlni? 5V4 rents
per yard.
On Heplcmhcr 20. 1801, with jute
butts sellinc at cents, bagging was
quoted as follows:
One and throe-fourths pound bagging n%
coats per yard.
Two pound bogging 014 cents per yard.
Two and one-fourth pound bu-rglm: 7-X cents
per yard.
With prices of raw material but 24 or
25 per cent. hi"-her than In May, 1800,
prices of lingglng are over -1(1 per cent,
higher. Thor
cannot com pi
without reducing wages to the foreign
level. If it had said that it could not
sustain present prices and profits with
bagging on the free list it would have
told the truth. If free bagging had
come several months sooner, prices
would have been several points lower
for this season, and the cotton growers
would have gained what the trust
would have lost in profits. The truth
is that the trust has been screwing
prices up and wares down in a desper
ate attempt to make as much as possi
ble during Its last year of tnrlff pro
tection. Hereafter it must meet
foreign competition. That it is entirely
capable of doing it is clear from re
marks made about September 1 by
Anderson Gratz, vice, president of the
company, when asked by a reporter
from the Cordage Trade Journal bow
the new tariff affected the bagging in
dustry. He said:
“We will take an order for 5,000,00(1
yards of bagging, delivered In March
next at 5 percent, under any legitimate
prioe obtainable anywhere on earth;”
which led the Cordage Trade Jour
nal to remark that “evidently the
placing of bagging upon the free list,
had not disturbed the American Manu
facturing Co. to any considerable ex
tent.” This boast was probably mad*
to frighten foreign bagging away from
this market until the close of this sea
son—about .November 1.
The way in which the new tariff has
ruined this industry is evident from
notices like the following in the Cord
age Trade Journal, of September 1:
“Joseph 0. Todd’s bagging plant in
Paterson, N. J., which has been closed
for about five years, is now in oper
ation working up some jute that lias
been on hand for some time.”
While publishing the notice to the
Brooklyn employes the Tribune and
other republican papers added Insult
to injury by quoting Manager Norris
of the mill, ati saying that the averagt
wages paid in bis mill is 811 per week.
The facts are that over three-fourths
of the employes are girls who earn
from S2.50 to $>i per week, and that the
average earnings for all in the mill i
only about 80.50 per week.
A similar calamity shriek was heard
from the jute carpet woidis of F. C
Reinhardt in Paterson, N. J. The re-
; port said that “immediately on the
new tariff law going into effect Mr
Reinhardt ordered his plant closed and
his machinery takwn down ifnd plaoed
in storage. He had 810,000 worth of
machinery and now it is all in a heap.’
A reporter from the Cordage Trade
| Journal visited tho factory on Septem
her tn. He found “on the second floor
Rs busy a scene as has been seen in
many a day.” The manager bejng ab
sent, the reporter frankly said that tin
report {/Tinted in the papers was only a
joke. He explained that .MV. Rein
hardt had found there was more mon
in the silk suspender business than in
the jute carpet industry and that i
was taking the carpet machinery or
the first floor out to make room for 155
or 200 braiding machines to lx: use
the manufacture of silk susuender
mg with tile
through which tile latter would prob
ably have been left In tho enjoyment
of their home market. But the high
prices abroad, brought about by the
foreign monopoly, Invited competition
from outsiders, forcing prices down to
a low point and producing a condition
of demoralization in the market there,
which some of the consumers took ad
vantage of immediately the duty was
reduced, and which would no doubt
have resulted in large importations
but for the step taken by the Ameri
can makers.
Should tbe present price not prove
low enough to cheek foreign competi
tion, there will be a further decline
here, us American manufacturers have
determined to retain control of tho
home market, and from statements
that have been made by them will do
so at whatever cost."
Soap makers, meat puckers and other
consumers of borax will save at least
825 per ton. Soaps, meats, etc., will
be cheaper, greater quantities will be
consumed, and more labor will be. em
ployed because of the reduction of du
ties. More borax will be demanded,
and more labor will be required to pro
vide it. Everybody will be gainers ex
cept F. M. Smith and his “California
syndicate.” If tho duty had been en
tirely removed the trust would have
been “out” and consumers “in" 875 per
ton. I'erhups twice as much borax
would bo consumed at $125 as at $200
per ton.
Domocratlo Achievement®.
Surely it Is no Insignificant list
which shows economy in expenditure,
witli a lightening of tho taxes which
tho people pay for the support of their
government, and a much greater
lightening of tho taxes whleh they pay
for the support of private industries;
an improvement and purification of
tho pension system, whiofti was so
rapidly degenerating into a national
scandal; the Wiping out of a law that
was fraught with menace to sound
finance, and whoso repeal opens tho
wav for a proper settlement of that
difficult Issue, tjia obliteration of elec
tion laws which lay right across the
grain (ft our federal system, and whose
enforcement never failed to produce
exasperation and bitter feeling, and to
involve wasteful and irresponsible ex-
jymtHture of piiblio money, and a con
tinued ivdranco In tho rescue of our
civil service from spoils.--Hon. Wil
liam L. Wilson, In North American
Review.
Uattled Repi»t>lte»n*.
“On behalf of the farmers of New
York,” said the New York republicans
at Kara toga, “(Vo protest against free
wool, which means the destruction of
our sheep husbandry, and which has
brought the price of wool to the lowest
figure recorded.” If the republicans
h:i'l /■on i markets they would
have found that the lowest prices ever
recorded o ••• ; about three months
ago. v. ’ n .-. ..»! kly protected.
To day ;»ri-.- are a non? 10 per edit,
above low water mark.
ES&TKAWAY&GO.,
^SPECIALISTS^.
(ir.i’Kular 42rutluutc«*)
Atp tho lpnrlfni: titul moot successful.ipcclaltutoanu
.U» give you help.
Youngand mid
dle aged mon.
Iiciniirkatilo ro-
HUltH have follow
ed our treatment
Many yeitrM of
viirlod uml hucc fish-
fill experienc'd
In the tine of t urn-
live uu’tliofli thut
we ntnnoowu ;i’ul
control tor r.“ dt«-
orders of in«u\t !> >
I.kvu weak, uudu*
,veloped or (ju-
(jiiNud orgNiip, or
wlu> lire aulTerlnir
'from orrorn of
and excess
who im ”"fVUU»
1 wTftr nn d ■ *»» pe ten*.
Acorn of their
©Jwj^^ifellowB iind the
•'.'•jcontempt of their
friends nnd cr
mnionw, loi»dn
to"fill put lent". If they can po
I tie rentorccl, out' own moluilve treut
1 will nll'orii ii cnroi
I WOMKN! Don’t you v/nnt to got cured of that
wvnhneva with a treatment that you min m 11 ut
i tmme without. Inntriimenihv Our wonder!ill tiout- I
j mi nt Uua cured othcra. Why not you? 1 ry It. |
I PATAWRIU, nnd dlwcsoa of tho fikto. Mood,
! Heart, Liver and Ktdncyp.
i The mont rapid, aiifo and cflcctlvo
! remedy. A complete Cure ftuurnntecd.
1 Hit TTY HTHE AHr.fi of all Ictnda cured where
1 inu:iy others Luvo fulled.
i vsTiATvrn.tr, msrn.uiORS nroim.tiy
! cured in n few day". (Jutck, HUYe and «uf«. IhlH
'ncludcs Gleet and tjonorluca.
TRUTH ANI> FACTS.
Wo hnvn cured paaea of Chronic Dlaeriac" that
havo fail' d to C'd cu*ed at the, tmmln of other "pt’Clul*
• alrfand u»e ileal l:iut .tute".
ii ::.f» r.wnr.li that there I" hope
lor You t' i u.t no other, ua you may wuBto valuahh)
i time. Obtain our tvetitiucnt at once.
I Beware of freo and cheap treatmentn. We give
the heat ami moat He.lentlfle. treatment id mud end o
pr eeH ualMWiM ean he done for Fate ami skillful
treatment. KICITK conmiltnilon at the oiliee or
hy mall. Thorough examination and eureful ding
nosla. A liomn treiitment ean he given In uiinjorlty
of ciihcH. Send fur Symptom Dlank No. 1 for Men;
No. ii for Women; No. HforS'UIn DlHcnneH. Allcorte-
apondenco tutswered promptly. IniHlnera Htrletlv « on
thlentlal. KillIro treaimetit pent freo from ohnei vu
lion, ltofer to our putluuta, nuuka nnd hUHlneua men
Address or call on
DR. HATHAWAY & CO.,
22 1-2 South Broad Struct. ATLANTA. GA.
“Thoiwoof ‘Oturtoria’ Is bo untvorwil uul
its luorUB ho .roll known that U booihh a work
of mi;ioron>Kntlon to oiulorHo It. Kow urn tho
Intollltfont. fatnllioH who tlo not kocp Ckuitorliv
within cany ronch."
Caulo* Mxhtyn, T>. D.,
Now York City.
jCastoria.
t iiHtorhi ouroH Oollo, (’onHtlpftUon,
Hour Stoniooh, lllnrrhma, Kniotatlon,
Kills Woruid, t/ivoH Hlcop, and pnimotcn d4
gvitUon,
Without Injurious niodlcatlon.
“For tu'voml yoani I havo rocommondod 1
your ‘ ClmitoHn,’ and ulinll always cntillnno to
<lo ho ns It lias Invariably iirmlueod bonoUcia.'
niHults."
Fowls F. I'Aiinn, M. I).,
lavtli Htrtx't and ?Ui Avu., Now York city.
Tun Okntaur Oowpanv, 77 Msiulav Hmxirr, Nitw You Orpf
JACKSON OFFICE FURNITURE
COMPANY,
JACKSON.
TENN..
MANUFACTURERS OF
SCHOOL, CHURCH AND OFFICE FURNITURE.
$3 SHOE.
Schools and Churches seated in the
furnished. Send for catalogue.
best manner. Office
<5»,.tLajv
IS THE DEBT.
NO SOUCAKINT.
$5. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH& ENAMELLED CALC
^WFlNECAlf&lftNGAItt
13.1P POLICE, 3 Soles.
so so.*2. WORKINGMFmc
^ EXTRA FINE.
BoysSciioolShdes,
•LADIES-
^S$&***.
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
Wi.DOUOI.AS,
BROCKTON., MASS.
Yat can save monry by purcbiuiluK W. L.
Douulus (Shoes,
Because, we me the largest manufacturers ol
advertised shoes In the world, nud Kiinriintec
the value hy stamuinK the name nnd pi ice on
the V/llom, wliich protects you auainhl liiKh
prices and the middleman's profits. Our shoes
eotittl custom work in style, ussy filtiiitf and
■weiiriiilt qualities. We linve tliem sold every-
whe. .• at lower prices for the yu’ uc Riven ti.
unyoiiiei
denier ca
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.
Dill >
1,1ft! (1 ltd
liisiiriiix
Thu Hum of nil llie proiiiluuiH mild I
Iho dnlt-H of oi'»uiilr,lllloii Ui Ilia cIoho of II .
l.lffV purl Ion Is hul 1188,115,'2,55, Hots hIiowIiik Uml, wllli only Iw .
I7ve ciipltul of llio IdiHlm-HH, 'I lot Muliml lom carnod for Its polli'y-holdiTH
I by llio reinaliiliiK olfthty pur coiif. Tho Mill mil l
policy-liolderH of Mtn.lliil ,(M(), a rid urn of inoro tliiin twenty-two pur cunt, of
IT*
liO
Take no fiubatitutc. If your
:>t hiipjily you, we liui. bold by
P. F. CUTTIWO fit CO.
MORE EYE-GLASSES,
Mare
limed fill,111,1IIKI, or onu-liiilf. 'J'IiIh Ih i'Iid sinpundouH fuel In Ihu history of IJf®
lie hi.’voniI coiiirmnb H by thuli' pollcy-bolilora fr«»rn
n- ymir l« Ih |2 11^,217,^2, of which The Mufti*)
lug dial, with only twenty per eent,. of the collw!-
M ui mil hiiH earned for Hh polley-hohlern un miieh profit nn
luhty per emit. The Muliml Mfeliiih made groan niiyment* U>
iin t f it ret urn of more Ihun twenty-two per eent. of the tola) Ilka
puyinenlH ninth* hy nil the coini unli’M eolleetlvely.
Ami m/iiln, Thu Mutual Life i xhlhlls In payniciitH nlrimdy rrimiu to IIh pollcy-hnlduni anil
In inoimy pliii ud to tlu lr caeillf, and to lie paid to fiiinilmunt ol policy contrnctH, tho sum of
$552,287,Jill 1, liuliiK n not profit of inoro limn Klxty-four (iilllloiiH over und above every dollar
reeelveil hy It rrom |)olley-holilorH. The one eonqmny eiitnilH In ri-HiillH the two illy-six of a
list wlileh eoinprlKUH Kiiuh aMpIrlnu eonilietltors us the Sew 4 ork Idle, he ' ' led
Northwestern, the Mut.mil llenellt, and the Coniieellent M ill mil, eneh of lliem oearly Miilil
IIH Muliml Idle, mill each ol them enJoyliiK hh kooiI op|iorliinllli h In loenllly uml tline. Ibl*
hloKUlur mill nil'llIMi-uiit fuel Ih ooiinpleiioiiH, Unit wllli all llielr HCimrale prelunsi s of HpeelM
irrmnleur, they are merited In Unit one iiiiihh of eoni|iet Horn whluli. coni run ted with tn« Mu-
iioiI Idle, Hliow I Iml with four IIiiiuh the u mount of enpltiil, will nlnuli en I lines tin
of venrH of imtlve operation anil with l wiuitv-Nlx IIiiu-h ii i- fiuld linn iiKOincnt, they I'lin only
show n Joint nut profit i.-ijiihI to Unit of The Miitmil Idfu ulnnel
For the best plan of insurance consult A. W. HILL.
»-* SAVANNAH AND WESTERN RAILWAY
Ejrcs!
nrrcHELi/B
EYE-SALVE
A Certain Safe and Elfecf.y/ Ttcmmfy far
S03E,W £ AKani! 1SFIAB1ED EYES,
2 Vv/ffirof n't J.'id'/ .'li'/tH (Itte.iiK, ruul
Mentorin'/ the ttifjh >■ UJ’ the. 'till.
Cureh Tear Drops, (.'nitB lution, Styo
Tuuioi-k, Ited Jiyes, ibaIGW. l./c f,ashes,
AND PRODUOING (i'-’fCK RfiLIEF
AND PERMANEKi’ *,iJ.Ui.
AIm>,e<|iinlly s-tti.-i i Inis -ivlien imisl In
a'lier muliMlieN, siu li oh elio-rs, fcvi-r
S iri-o, Tiimuri, N.-lt lUit-uni, llnriis,
,1'IIeM, or wlim-ver iiiflo'-i-ma liini-rids,
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fMi rnniage.
5'JLD BY ALL DR'.JtJ(U5 td AT *7;Ci CENTS.
ATLANTA SUB-DIVISION.
H. M. COMER AND R. J. LOWREY,
III'. All l,”U'
IN EFFECT SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, IBT4.
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DR. S. C. PARSONS’
WOMEANDRECTAL SUPPOSITORIES
A local home treatment for ml
arasRfiaMW Atlanta and west point railroad, and wll-
enrn AiTiv lnflumm/t ; ' w
aiibrJm* *nd curcitny inflarnmn <
tIon,irrit«tlon,nlcorntlon ordia .
charge. In wonobawd rwl* 1 dla
eji*rn th«y relieve wain and will •
aI>*iolnt»dy ct)rn if ?JM-d aa di- j
7f;cb;d. PRICE 7Cc.
OffioH N. Hr oad Ht. H 1 urn fit*. 7
Yor pamphlet*, qacatlon J!«t*, or
private Information vAtlrr-vM with !
atump, DILH. r. I'AUMIH V tllnnU. Oo.
TERN RAILWAY OF ALABAMA.
II ft A n DOWN. I
IN EFFECT JUNE 12, 1894.
Hold hy tl. Ii.
die
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DR S.C,PARSONS’ BLOOD POBIFIEB 'i?fSiBTC
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Jr.rirt, Cu.Utrrh, Fever- J iv- rniid
Kidner I;iw}i.w, M'l rorn,
Eruption* and oil dlsr<rden< ro-
Hulling from Impure blood.
PP.1CE $1.00.
Office 7%H f mad H H un 'ni.
For pnmptoleta
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Dully. Dally
Dully
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