Newspaper Page Text
Established in 1872.
VOL XXXI.
Published Every Saturday Morning.
A. \V. LATIMER, Pub. and Propr.
.
SUBSCRIPTION.
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Six Mourns, : : : : : 50c.
Three Months, : : : : 25c.
J ADVERTISING RATES.
1 time 1 mo. mo. * inu. 12 mo.
1 IiH'Ji $ 1.00' $ 2.50 4f> 7.00 $ 10.(M
1-4 Col. 2.50 0.00 15. 20.00 35.00
1-2 Col. 5.00 j 10.00 25. ■ 4tt.U0 | 00.00
l Col. 10.00 15.00 33.00 tiO.OO 100.00
All bills fur advertising are due atony time
upon presentation after first appearance of
advertisement.
Special rates for contracts can be made with
the publisher.
All announcements of marriages and deaths
not exceeding 10 Lines inserted without charge
Address all letters to The Lumpkin Ixdk
p xxdmst, or A. W LATIMKK,
business Manager.
V BUSINESS DIRECTORY
w. C. BATEMAN,
Physician and Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office up stairs in F. S. Singer
Building.
Phone 36 at residence.
All calls answered day or night.
Nov. 9-ly. w
L. Grier,
> Physician,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office west side public square,
Residence Airs. Susie Siddall’s.
Calls attended promptly day or
night. Telephone 44.
Jan. 11-02.
cn B. BATTLE,
Physioain and Surgeon,
Lumpkin, Ga.
Oilers liis professional services to
tlie people of Lumpkin and vicin¬
ity. Office in Forbes & Coxe Co’s.
Drug Store. Feb. 12 98
CO W. LIDE,
I Operative Dentist, -
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office in Bank Building,
♦ Jan. 1 L101.
m T. HICKEY,
i Attorney at Law.
Lumpkin, Ga.
Office in Court House. Practice
in all the Courts.
Jan. 15-1900-tf.
CD ORBETT HOUSE,
M. Corbett, Prop’k,
• Lumpkin, Ga.
Every attention given to the ac¬
commodation and comfort ot
guests. oc!6
BANK OF STEWART COUNTY.
CAPITAL, $50,(XX).
Surplus and Undivided Profits, $4,000.
A. II. SIMPSON,President*
J. T. PATTERSON.Vice-Pros.
W. L. MARDRE, Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
A. II. Simpson, J. T. Patterson,
J. B. Richardson, F. S. Singer,
J. 1). Richardson, W. L. Mardre,
B. F. Hawes, J. M. Stevens, Tom¬
linson Fort.
Jan. lst-1897.
w. L- mardre;
1'ire Insurance Agent,
House Insurance a Specialty,
Best Companies . represent
ed.
.Jan. lst-96
0
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
Lumpkin M. E. Church, South,
L. W. Colson, Pastor.
Preaching every- SumTay morning
and evening.—Sunday School—!l :H0
a. m.
Junior League—Sunday afternoon.
Juvenile Missionary Society on 1st
Sunday afternoon.
Kpworth League every Tuesday even
ing.
Prayer-meeting every Wednesday
evening. Regular Church Conference
on Wednesday evening before 1st Sun¬
day in each month.
Fast-day Service on Friday morning
before 1 st Sunday in each month, look
jug to the regular Communion Service
,*i 1 st Sundays.
Woman's Foreign Missionary Society
on Monday afternoon after 1st Sun
days.
Woman's Parsonage Aid Society on
fZTZt Maker "—Bible if kneel°before Urn Imrd
nr
Latimer's Infallible Ointment can
1 lm* had now at Forbes & Coxe drug
stare. It has a line effect when
allays the . .
on smallpox cases; pain, re
Mieves intolerable itching, and lessens
the tendency towards pitting.
THE LUMPKIN INDEPENDENT.
A WEEKLY NEWSPAPER, PUBLISHED IN THE POLITICAL, SOCIAL AND AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS OF STEWART COUNTY, GEORGIA.
HILL’S BOAST OF
DUPONT GUERRY
Ia the Hottest Card of the
Campaign.
WARM REPLY TO GUERRY’S CARD.
Terrell's Campaign Manager Compares
Ceerry's Present Attitude With His
Record on Matters at Issue.
To the Public: Every man who of¬
fers hiniseli to the people as a leader
ami an exemplar must be willing to
bear the reasonable discovery ami dis
section of his record. The people have
the right to investigate his sincerity
as revealed by the concord between
his theories and his practices. It is
thus alone that men can judge cor
rectly whether a candidate is honest,
capable and worthy.
Mr. Dupont Guerry must stand such
scrutiny whether he likes it or not
and regard leap of whether he rants
over it as abuse or slander or badger¬
ing. He has invited it by his candi¬
dacy. He must submit to the dissec¬
tion of his record, or retire with it to
private life as a thing too sacred for
public inspection.
Mr. Guerry entered the gubernato¬
rial race from "high moral considera¬
tions.” Everything in the state's pub¬
lic conduct had become corrupt and
degraded and he felt that he was tho
proper moral exemplar to take bold
of the caee, te reform tho body politic,
to rescue the good name of the state
and drive off from the people a swarm
of Egyptian locusts. He came forth
to furnish a pattern executive whose
moral courage, whose public consist
eucy and whose superior wisdom
would give character and glory to the
commonwealth.
Really, many people wore disposed
to think at first that this good man
had actually found the rotten spots in
our Denmark and would be a proper
Hercules to cleanse our Augean sta¬
bles! But no sooner had he gotten
well into the glare of a public lime¬
light than it began to .appear that he
was another of those composite idols
oi brass and clay so disappointing to
human hopes.
What has his candidacy revealed?
What are the evidences that speak
against him?
The Question of Lobbying.
First. He stands forth as tho ene
my of legislative lobbying and makes
it a prime plank in his platform. And
yet it has already been proved abso¬
lutely that a member of his own law
firm, Guerry & Hall, presents the only
Instance on record In Georgia of a rail.
road attorney pointed out at his work
on the floor of the house and driven
therefrom in broad open daylight!
Who drove him out? It was the man¬
ager of Mr. Terrell's campaign who,
for the first and only time in our post¬
war legislative history, invoked the
rules of tho house and applied them
to the man who was thou and is now
a member of Mr. Guerry's law firm!
Does Mr. Guerry deny the instance?
Can he defend it? And in the face of
it and his studious refusal to con¬
demn it. can he yet have the hardi¬
hood to ask the people of, Georgia to
believe that he is their chiofest hope
for Uyiain? defense against the crime thyseff of job
Oh, physician, heal
Second. Mr. Guerry presents the
only instance on record that I know of,
in Georgia or elsewhere, of a mem¬
ber of a law firm filing a petition in
open court, askiug fees for having
passed a private measure for a rail¬
road company to condemn and appro
priate public property through the leg
lslature. He does not now deny this.
Ho gets up a definition and then makes
a defense to fit it. He says that he
did not employ in the job “any. cor
rupting means." appealed only t.o the
judgment of the legislators! But wfeen
in the history of the state has any
!oljb J' ist confeBsed lhat used " e01 '
rupting means?” Is it not reasonable
to believe that every one of them,
when charged with tills offense, will
swear black and blue- that he “only
appealed to the reason and judgment
of the legislators?” To claim anything
more would be to confess the crime!
And so the fact remains as firmly
fixed and ineffaceable as Stone Moun
tain thut Mr. Guerry’s firm Is the only
one—verily the Only one—in Georgia
that ever hqd one of its partners hus
tied out of the house or senate for in
terferonee of this nature and the only
one that ever boldly asked a court to
pay it a fee for fruits of such labor!
Here, indeed, is cleanness and con
sittency with a double vengeance!
*»
Prohibition Question.
Third. Mr. Guerry offers himself
as the special champion of enforced
state prohibition und has essayed to
patch and stuff his record to prove
that he has always favored that policy.
But what is the truth?
Pushing aside all his turning and
twLtlng on the subject prior to 189B it
Is shown in a latter signed by hia
own hand that he was then, and claim
tloniats to engraft the principle of
prohibition upon our state poll
««• But now he is tho leader of the
tuoveznent to do that which he then
said was wrong. Impolitic atnl dcstruc
itve of true temperance methods! Oh,
w " wt *f a rare gem you are
LUMPKIN, GEORGIA, SATURDAY, MAY 31. 1902-
in the Cui.ty philosophy and prao
Ucs!
fourth. Mr. Cue cry advocates before
the pcopla tho necessity and duty of
domesticating foreign corporations. Ho
wants, he sa; s, to force railway cono
|,; ' I!ies ullii Ule !lke t0 °“t Georgia
charters so as to prevent them from
transferring cases brought by Geor¬
gians for damages, etc., from the state
ty the federal courts. That sounds
well, but It shows that Hr. Guerry is
either Ignorant of the fact or willful
ly conceals it that the supreme court
of the United States In a Carolina test
case has decided that foreign corpora
tions cannot be thus domesticated by
state taws, as much as that power is
to be desired. But that is the false
hope that Mr. Guerry is using as a
bait to catch the votes of the people
wll0 object to federal interference in
suits between Georgians and corpora
tions operating in Georgia. Yet, how
does Mr. Quarry's practice measure
with his campaign theory? The firm
of Guerry & Hall represents the great
Western Union Telegraph company,
almost as large iu capital and power
as all the railroads iu Georgia, but tho
records show that as attorneys for the
Western Union and other corporations
Mr. Guerry has frequently been a par¬
ty to the removal of cases from the
state to the federal courts.
Iu tills connection it is worth while
to again call attention to the remark¬
ably contradictory conduct of Mr.
Guerry, as illustrated in the difference
between his theory and his action in
the Itochclle-Abbeville county site
case. A bill was introduced in the
general assembly or Georgia in the
year 1898 by the representative from
Wilcox county to remove the court-"
house from Abbeville, iu said county,
to Rochelle. Mr. Guerry was employ¬
ed and paid a fee to help dofeat the
passage of that bill, before the Georgia
legislature. He appeared several
times before the legislature and made
at least one speech before the com¬
mittee of the house against the pas¬
sage of the bill. Mr. Hall, of the firm
of Guerry & Hall, was at that time a
member of the house from Bibb coun¬
ty, and by a strange coincidence Mr.
Hall agreed with the contention of Mr.
Guerry tiie and voted against the passage
of bill. The bill was defeated.
In the face of these raw hone facts,
not denied by Mr. Guerry and unex¬
plained hy him in harmony with his
theory in this campaign, how can the
people believe him sincere and clear
minded in this issue, which, like a
Frankenstein, he has created to bo
come its own victim.
Fifth. Mr. Gurry knows that he can¬
not alone enact prohibition. He knows*
that the legislature must pass the bill,
and he claims that he wants legislators
elected who will do that. Yet he sup¬
ports his law partner, Hon. Joe Hall,
as a legislative candidate from his
own homo county of Bibb, in the face
of Mr. Hall's bold declarations that he
is an antl-prohibitiouist and in favor of
the local option law which is favored
hy Mr. Terrell! Here is where hjs
theory and his practice liave another
head-on collision.
1 mercifully omit extending this re¬
view to the 12 per cent interest law
that Mr. Guerry wanted to impose on
the farmers and the bill iie favored to
allow the railroads to charge them as
much for short haults of freight as for
long hauls. But they,- also, are fatal
Instances of his inability to practice
what he pregches.
Now ‘'reason has indeed Bed to brnt
Ian beasts" If the people of Georgia
can he longer deceived by tho artful
dodging of this modern exemplar of
Mr. Oily Oummon! He is ‘"the peo¬
ple's friend” on the stump, but will
the public not draw the conclusion
that he is the Bullish corporation law¬
yer and th;> corporal ion lobbyist in his
private practice! He is the foe
placable of the liquor traffic and the
whisky ring, but the supporter of a
candidate who has been elected to the
legislature by the votes of tho anti
prohibitionists of his own home couu
ty!
llo Is the groat reformer who step¬
ped Into the arena to cleanse tho cor¬
ruption the people of Georgia have
been electing and enthroning In their
government for a quarter of a can
tury In such governors as Gordon, Me.
Daniel, Norther., Atkinson and Candler
and then turns out on being unmask¬
ed to lie Intimately Identified with the
only cases of “leglsTatlve perstiaBion”
that have ever shocked the publio
view in Georgia! He poses as the
candidate of the state prohibitionists
and his own handwriting rises up to
convict hfc .... behlK 9,x ya8 °
*
their most virulent denouncer!
What more should he said? The veil
Is removed and the eyes of the people
now see the full face of the false
prophet and will repudiate him and
his double dealings at tho polls on
June B.
WARNRR HHJx
Atlanta, Ca„ May 21, 1902.
Atlanta, Ga., May 28.—Hon. Du
p on t Guerry,- • candidate for gov
m)0r< has accc pted the challenge
of Rev. 8am W. 8ma1l to meet him
in joint debate on the question of
prohibition vs. local option. Mr.
Guerry nanien June 2nd ub the day
" akopl.^
Atlanta, - Ca.. 7 May zi. 1 he
gra , ;( l jury of Fulton county to
j av , oturiU) .l H „ indictment for
•
mmder against Millard , T Lee, who ,
killed Miss Julia guttles at Wesley
c . ia l"’ . &uuda i'
IULLjOKOW1NG IK FAYOiJ.
The name of former Senator Dn
vid B. Hill is. appearing in the
public prints with increasing ffce
queney in connection with the
presidential nomination of
Democratic parly, showing that
......................... (■■ (»• ft.
ident, and that his friends are u I >
• .11 ,i , ■
, ,
n •
8 *ttuig that honor. Among the
latest things in this
that are worth noticing ur« the
vlslt .... • u , 1111)1 , ■ Ule . ,' <>Uier . dn . , 'T
* . v
Timothy D. Sullivan, the new
nr
some
bers of the .) cksonian Oluh of
Omaha in coming out for him for
President. ll Mr. Hill Inis Tarn
many solidlv “ behind him ho is
certain of the of
New York state, and the
of that state means a good deal.
Tho members of the Jacksonian
Club of Omaha, who have come
out for him say that the Demo¬
crats of Nebraska accept it.as a
fact that the-silver issue is a dead
one', and that being the case there
is no man better qualified to.lend
the Democratic party than he is.
They have nothing to say against
Mr. Bryan, and are still willing for
him to lead the Democracy of their
state provided he leads in the di¬
rection they want to go.
Of course Mr. Bryan still thinks
he is right on the money question,
it is believed that he sees that il
would by a mistake to insist upon
a free silver plank in the next
Democratic national platform, ll
is doubtful, however, if he will
ever consent to the nomination of
either Mr. Hill, Mr. Gorman or
any other man who did not stand
squarely on the Democratic plat¬
forms of 1896 and 1900. In other
words, he will be against the nom¬
ination of any man who did not
give him a hearty support in his
two campaigns, li. is web known
of course that neither Mr. Hill
nor Mr. Gorman thougnt it wise to
make free silver coinage the lead¬
ing Democratic issue in the cam¬
paigns in which Mr. Bryan was'
the nominee.
But would Mr. Bryan have influ¬
ence enough to prevent the nomi¬
nation of Mr. Hill if lie should un¬
dertake to do so? That is a ques¬
tion that cannot .now be answered.
Much will depend upon the stren¬
gth which Mr. Hill develops be¬
tween now and the meeting of the
Democratic national convention.
He does not appear to he losing
any of his popularity iu Nebraska
—that is, he isslill held in high
esteem—hut it is evident that his
influence is on tho wane. He can¬
not lead the Democracy in what¬
ever direction lie pleases. He can
still lead, provided he leads in
the direction Democrats want to
go. Assuming that this is the case
in other states as well as in Ne¬
braska, the holt! of Mr. Bryan on
the next Democratic national con¬
vention may be so slight as not to
be a hindrance to Mr. Hill’s ambi¬
tion.—Savannah Morning News.
Shook Gorpsc* from Graves.—
Gnit liquahe in Guatemala.
Mexico City, May 28.— Private
letters from Qiiczaltenango have
been received here stating that on
April 18th, ai 8 o'clock in the
evening, a tremendous earthquake
shock was felt when several build¬
ings collapsed, many people being
buried in the ruins. The Mexican
consul, his wife and son were cov¬
ered with the debris of their house
and were, when rescued, in a la¬
mentable condition, but will re¬
cover. Shocks have succeeded one
another since 1 hat night and .the
people are living m tents, The
first shock was so violent that
corpses were ejected from their
graves ill the cemetery.
Paris, May 27.—J n order to avoid
a possible epidemic among the
seven thousand refugees now
Fort de France, it haa been
ed to distribute them among
mmib,ir l l±!^___
wanted. Capable, reliable person in every
wrrkiy; jiH per iiuv absolutely sure and all ex
]>cnsp monejr ailvai.ceit eaeli week. STAN HARD
ll J, pwii..w' !ARM " ,W m "
Mar
BUY THE
SEWING MACHINE
Do not be deceived by those who ad
be bought from us or any of our
dealers from $15.00 to $18.00.
we make a variety.
TgE NEW. HOME IS THE BEST,
The Feed determines the strength or
weakness of Bowing Machines. The
Double Feed combined with other
strong best points Be makes the Blew Home
wing Machine to buy.
we manufacture and prices before purchasing
NEW HOME SEW1NS MACHINE CO.
28 Union Sq.N.Y.,Chicago,Ill.,Atlanta,-«a,
Louia.Mo.,iiuiia.-i.Te.Y.,BanFrancisco,Cal
T. ron SALE BV
L. TRAMMELL.
The Inquisitive Cleric.
The inquisitive clerk was on
ty in the drug store, says tho
cago Post. The inquisitive
is a very annoying person at t
whenever found ; liis curiosity
most makes one doubt his sex.
the inquisitive clerk of this
ful tale there came a man,
asked fora dozen six-ounce
tles.
. “Bottles?” asked the clerk
out moving.
“Yes. "
“Are you a doctor?”
“No.”
“Patent, medicine man?"
“No.”
“Working up a little private
business with a hair restorer ora
complexion lotion, perhaps?”
“No.”
“But you want 12 bottle#?” in a
puzzled tone. •
“Yes.”
“With or without corks?"
“With corks.”
“Empty?”
“Yea.”
The clerk was plainly distress
< - . “What do you want them f»r?”
lie demanded at last.
’“To break,” answered the man
“What?”
“J wouldn’t want the neighbors
to bear of it,” explained the man
confidential!}'. “Just a whim I i f
mine, you know, but 1 like to hear
them crack. It's cheaper than
breaking windows and gives me
just as much pleasure; but my
supply lias given out and 1 want a
lew to bold me over until another
ear-load arrives.”
Tho inquisitive clerk looked at
the man doubtfully. “Oh, well,
of course, it’s nothing to me,” he
said.
“Tbep what made you ask about
it?”
Tho inquisitive clerk got tho
bottles without making any reply,
but the strain was a severe one.
He had to sav something. “Whutdo
you do with the corks?” he asked.
‘Chew ’em,” answered the man
promptly. “It’s good for the di¬
gestion. Try it some time.”
The inquisitive clerk went into
such a deep trance that ho forgot
to ask the girl who came in for a
lemon phosphate why she preferr¬
ed lemon to wild cherry.
New York, May 26.—Another
steamship, the Goya, which passed
through clouds of volcanic dust
from Mont Relee, lias arrived in
port. One of Idle officers said :
“Fifty miles from St. Lucia and
right south of Barbadoes we puss
ed on the evening' of the 8tli a
large- dead whale, around which
hundreds of Motlier Carey’s chick¬
ens were hovering. The whale nan
70 feet long.
The Coya was one hour in pass¬
ing through the wreckage -and
smoke oil' Si. Pierre, hut the Hash¬
es of lire could be seen distinctly
when we were sixty miles awav.”
Bucklsn S Arnica Salve.
, the world for
The best salve in
cllt<I> Bruises, Sores, Ulcers,
Fever Sores, Tetter, Chap
Hands. Chilblains, Corns,
a j| *g?. : jn Eruptions, and positively
cures Piles, or no pay required. It
, s .sqaianteed to give perfect satis
25 cents per |$IX. For Sale by
Forbes & Coj^ Drug Co.
New York, May 26.—A. O. Hoo¬
ver. of the American Museum of
Natural History, who went to' Mar¬
tinique on the cruiser Dixie, to ex¬
amine' the volcanic phenomena,
cables The Herald from Castries,
St. 1 ,ueia:
•‘St. Pierre can only be compar¬
ed to Pompeii. The devastation
and desolation are even worse,
It. is evident that a tornado - of
gas wrecked the build*
mgs, asphyxiated ' tin* people, Vi lire
t , H " completing the ,1 mm, • 1 Ins ■
“
accords with the statement which
*> , m h( ,;. n nn(jt . t | V |t asphyxiation
7..... 1 !w
burning ot the City, tile gas being
sulphuretted hydrogen, ignited by
lightning or the fires in the city.
The Same tornado drove the ships
in the roadstead to the bottom of
the sea or burned them before
they could escape. This comes
nearer to being a sheet of Humes
than anything hemtofoni reported
from vel-ano.
Mud was formed in two ways—
bv tiie mixture in the atmosphere
<>t dust and condensed steam and
by cloud hursts on the upper dust
Covered slopes of the cone wash¬
ing down vast quantities of fine,
light dust
; No flow of lava has apparently
j attended the eruption as yet.
The great emission of suffocating
gas and tin-* typical cloudburst ex¬
plosion. with (lie resulting streams
of mud, are among the new font
urea wliiph 1 Vice has addi>d to the
Beirutilic knowledge of volcanoes.”
No Loss of Time.
I have sold Chamberlain's ColM
Cholera , . Diarrhoea . . Lenu'cly
him
for VHlirs, and would rat her be oiit
'
collee .. mill , than . . I , sold
hi sugar i(.
live bottles of it veslerd.Ty to
' •
that . uould , . farther, un<! ,
'Ts go no
they are at, work again this morn
Hid-. . || r T a, , .. l imclus, ] ly nmu 1 h, , ()k
ialioma. As will he seen bv the
a hot'll the threshers , Were able to
keep ' on with their work without
Hxiiu.' :i Km”iV .... (lav s l mu*. ^ . on
should keep II bottle of Ibis Rome
dy m your home, i-ur sale by All
DrilP'-ists
Sen hoard Air Dine.
Birmingham, Ala., May 26,— The
Seaboard Air-Line has been
ml the franchise it sought for en¬
trance into 1111 * city ( f
hum and riefii of way.over
A throughout the length of the
city. ’! In- Seaboard bail already
seeur-d a lot of property and is
amply provided with freight depot
apace. Il is understood that, its
passenger trains will come through
union depot, as all other passen¬
ger trains do, but this lira iter has
not yet liven arranged with the
Louisville and Nashville, which
owns the original right of wav.
General Manager Barr, however,
anticipates no trouble in
this arrangement.
The Seaboard lias a corps of en
gitier-rs surveying tho route from
G’oal City, where connection
made with tin- East and West rail
road and will now hurry on to
Birmingham. The city of Bir¬
mingham is in high feather on ue
count of the entrance of the Sen
board. The city council, the Com¬
mercial club and the citizens at
large foil over one aiqither in fa¬
cilitating tin- arrangements the
.Seaboard desired to make.
Tin- Philadelphia Times has
following lo sny in regard in
G -id'gia governor:
“Governor Candler, of Georgia,
is gray-haired and benevolent-look¬
mg, but. lima thus u fiery, spirit
wlii-u speaking of '-rime. Reforr
iiig tn ivi'oiit truubb-vin Pittsburg,
Ga., In-said: ‘All harmless ne¬
groes and their homes will lm pro¬
tected at whatcvi'i' cost, and all
' riotous conduct the part of
on any
lbo<ly, whitu or black, will be
I with whatever force may be peces
| 1 the
Miry to preserve order. have
j utimiyt confidence in tin* bravery
the troops and the discretion of
tliei e officers. I hey Will never fire
| on the mol. until they are forced
to do so, but when they must they
.....«.»«< believe ***“»»?•• such
1 l hope 7Z. lid 110 IIUCCS
jaity wil arise.’”
Terms, $1.00 Per Annum
NO. 15.
« 9
V 7
.-y
A i
!?v. 1 ml
V m r,*i SAY
^ MEXICANROOFP1LLS
To cure i31CK ^HEADACHE,
HABITUAL CONSTIPATION,
and all diseases arising from tn
digostlon. They will purify your
blood and make yourcomplaxion
as FAIR AS A LILY. They are
gelatin coated. PRICE 25 CEMTS.
A WORTHY SUCCESSOR.
“Some! lung New Under
The Sun.”
All Doctors have tried- to cure Da¬
ta Kim by tho use of powders, acid gas¬
es, inhalers arid drugs in paste form.
Their powders dry up tfie mucous
membranes causing them to crack open
and bleed. Tile powerful acids used
in the inhalers* have entirely eaten
away the same membranes that their
makers have aimed to cure, while
pastes and ointments cannot reacli the
disease. An old and experienced prac¬
titioner who has for many years made
a close study and specialty of the treat¬
ment of Catarrh, has at last perfected
a Treatment which when faithfully
used, not only relievesat-once, but per¬
manently cures Catarrh, by removing
Hie cause, stopping the discharges, and
curing all inliammation. It is flu: on¬
ly remedy known to science that, ac¬
tually reaches tlx- utllicted panes. This
wonderlul remedy is known as “sxrr
KI.ES Hie (IU ARANTK 1 CI) CATARRH <:URK"
and is sold at llie extremely low price
of Dim Dollar, each package contain¬
ing internal and-external medicine
sufficient fora full mom Ids t rein ment
and every tiling necessary to its per¬
fect use.
"s.Ncri i.Ks” is the - only perfect (!*.
takiiu Cuuk ever made and is now rec¬
ognized as the only «afe and positive
for H'"* *»"ii>ying and disgusting
disease. It cores all inliammation
quickly and permanently relieve and is also
" 'outerl'nlly fi'iu-k to hay rij
vmt-or coi n in the head,
Catarrh when neglected often leads ’
1 ° <'onhitmi-tiox—“snukvoks” will save
>’“*1 il you use il at oiicd. It, is no or
dinary remedy, hut :i complete treat
"'em which is positively guaranteed to
cure Oatauuh in any form or stage if
used according !<> thfl directions which.
ficeompany each packu-v. Don't delay
hut send for il at once, and wrile lull
pari imilars as In yunr condition, and
• v u " will receive special advice from
I . be (lisr.uvcrt'i* oi 1 liis wonderful
reme
dy ivsrardin^: your ensc vvlfhoul cost-to
hej'''ml Die teg >hir price oI'-V.nuk
I'UKS the “UtUnANTRKO Dataruh
Guru.’’
Went prepaid to any address in the
United States or Canada on receipt of
One Dollar. Address Dept. Ill Kpwjx
li. (Jit.ies A Company, •j:i:!ii „nmt ekii-i
Market Street, I’hihnielpliia.
_
g’fc KJ [j ■jsfc&n (J * (A VAvd A] and Whiskey fiotue Habit*
P at witU
B S Si S •v.u " CAB out Uvular* pain. Uookofpm
m-ik FXEK.
IM&W3»'223«B Oirtce B. WWOOLLEY, 104 N. Pr M.D. St
am Miami*. fox
Hie Commoner.
(Mr. Bryan’s Paper.)
The < (ininiicier has attained within
>ix months I'nim date of the'first issue
ciiviihnic -11 of 1000,000 copies,
:i i-i-i-.urd probably never equaled in the
history of American periodical litera¬
ture. The imparaleled growth of this
paper demons! rales t lisil there is room
in th- newspaper field fora national
paper devoted to the discussion of po¬
litical, ecmioinic, and social problems. .
T.i i in* columns oi The Commoner.Mr.
| Bryan couiribiit.cs liis best eti'orls;
and his review of political events as
I they arise truin time to time can not
fail <<• inri-resf those who study public
questions.
The <kimmoncr's regular subscrip¬
tion price is $1.00 per year. We have
nr'-nnged with 31 r. Bryan whereby we
(■an furnish liis paper and The Inui:
i’endent together for one vear for
$1.-10 The regul;iFsuhseri pi ion price
of Hie two papers when subscribed for
separately is $ 2 . 00 .
Latimer’s infallible Ointment
I cures rheumatism. Try it.
SIX CUE AT CD U HJ-NATIONS.
1 1 II K I N'DI'll’KN PENT, i!ll(l 1 >r
| The Semi-Weekly Atlanta
l yr lor $l.-n)
land I III Jackson limbless cotton seed.
I'llK 1 .VJlKI-E.VnE.VT, ,‘inil 1 yr
The Weekly Atlanta Constitu
lion 1 vr li;i* $1.75
The 1 NUECES'pent, and 1 yr
The Tri-Weekly New York
World I yr fur $1.75
Tint 1 nhk.cilnuknt, and 1 yr
The Cosmopolitan Magazine lyr, $1.75
Tin-: I Nni’.ecx.DEN'T, and 1 yr
J.adiiw Home Journal 1 yr $1.75
I ‘ml *xhecunpent, and 1 yr
Youth’s Companion l yr $2.50
Here is a varied field of news ami lit--,
crafure in these combinations that
VnVVi' fond' of
rea ,„ nsr> Select your combination,
syn <l ns the price, and yoFwfll qnich
i iy gel the papers and be Well pleased.
, IjnelVllilll'lB OOilgH Wtll*0
, For Coughs, Colds and Cruup.