The Irwin County news. (Sycamore, Irwin County, Ga.) 189?-1???, March 30, 1894, Image 1

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The Irwin Countv News. Official Organ of Irwin County. A. G. DeLOACH, Editor and Prop’ r. professional CARDS, w. Ii. HTOKY, PHYSICIAN and BURGEON, Bvcxmork, Georgia. •jyjARK ANTHONY, PHYSICIAN and SURGEON, Sycamore, Grorqia. Will be located for the present at the Dod¬ son House. Patronage respectfully solicited. T. W. fit Li IAS, PRACTICING PHYSICIAN, Ruby, Georgia. Calls promptly attended to at all hours. I respectfully solicit a share of the public patronage Office in B. H. Cockrell’s store. TQIt. J. K GARDNER, FHY3ICIAN and SURGEON, Ashbubn, Georgia. Calls answered promptly day or night. |gyS[iocial attention to diseases of women mid children. j>KNTQN STHANGB, M, D. SPECIALIST. Cordelle, Georgia. Diseases of women, Strictures, Nervous end all private diseases. Strictures dissolv¬ ed out in 2 to 5 minutes by a smooth current of Galvanism without puiu or detention from business; and given to patient in a vial of alcohol. Correspondence solicited aud best references ;pven. Office nortd-east coi¬ ner Suwauee H JUS, 1 . B. M. FRIZZELLM, LAWYER, McRae, Georgia, Practices in the State and Federal Courts. Real Estate and Criminal Law Specialties. yjy A. AARON, LAWYER, Ashburn, Georgia. Collections and Ejectment suits a Special¬ ty. tS’T'Office, Room No. 4, Betts Building. W. PUL WOOD, LAW, REAL ESTATE & COLLECTIONS, Tipton, Georgiv. Prompt nttention given to all business. £3>“Offiee, Love Building, Room No. X. JOHN HAHKIS. SHOEMAKER, Ashburn, Georgia. My prices are low and all work strictly Guaranteed, i > I RECTORY CITY OF SYCAMORE. Mayor—A. G. DcLoacIi. Councilmen—W. B. Dasher, I. L. Murray. O, 1. W. Cockrell. E. R. Smith, J. P. Fountain, Superior Courts—First Monday m Aprii and October. C. C. Srnitb, Judge, Hawkins ville, Ga. McRae,Ga. Solicitor General—Tom Eason. Clerk Superior Court—J. B. D. Paulk, Ir Winvillo, Ga. Sheriff— Jesse Paulk, Ruby, Ga. vilie, Deputy Ga.; Sheriffs—C. Wm. VanHouten, L. Prescott, Irwin- Ga. County Monthly Sycamore, Court — session, second Monday; in Quarter!, July session, second Monday J. Clements, January, Judge, April. Irwinrille, and October. B. Ga. ttvinville, County Ga. Court Bailiff—William Rogers, Ir , day County Commissioners’ Court—First Mon¬ in eiic’.i month. M. Henderson. Commis¬ sioner, Ordinary’s Ocilla. Ga. Court—First Monday in each month. Daniel Tucker, Ordinary, Vic, Ga. School Commissioner—J. Y. Fletcher, Ru¬ by. Gu. County Treasurer—W. R. Paulk, Irwin¬ rille. Ga. Melnnis, Vic. Ga. Tax Receiver—D. A. Tax Purveyor—M. Collector—X MV. Paulk, Ruby, Ga. Ga. Coroner—Daniel Barnes, Minnie, Hall, Minnie, Ga. Board of Education— Jno. Clements Chair¬ man, Irwinville, Gi.; Ga.; It. Tucker, Henry Vic, T. Fletcher, Gj.; Ir Taj winville, L. L. D. Oo.dla, lor, Jrwinvil.e, Ga. ; S. E. Coleman, Gn. Justice Courts—SOI Dist. G. M., Second Saturday P. in ouch mouth. Marcus Luke. N. and ex-offl, J. P ; Wm. Rogers, Bailiff, Irwinville. Gu. Second Saturday 14‘H District G. M m each month. J. H. McNeese, J. P , Kissj mee, Ga. James Roberts, Bailiff, Ocala, Ga. 1388 Dist. U-. M. t Third Saturday in each S; 1 ffiinIe,^ ley ’ J - P;yaVidTr0UP 9«;i Disc G. AL., Third Wednesday in each mon 111. C. L Royal, J. P.. Sycamore, Ga. 1 , mrnt G M y "u. 1 l U Ray, 8 rr&’S: officio j. p.. Sycamore. Gn. LODGE directory: Svcmtuoiv, L'kId-w. No. 210 F. & A- Ar Regular communications, ''nil Saturday. W Story, W. M.: A . D. Ross f Secretary. Ocilla Lo.’.ge, F. & A.' M-—Regular aih Sunday corn nmmcaliou ’jhursday before the in cauii month. J. A. J. Henderson, W. M.; D. W. M. Whitley, Scc’y, Ocilla, Ga. CHUvvCH DIRECTORY. sycamore circuit. Sycamore—2nd Sunday and Sunday night. Cyclometa—Fourth Sunday. Dakota- Third Sunday. Ashburne—1st Sunday and Sunday night. ' T. i). STRONG, Pastor. UNION PRIMITIVE, BAPTIST. ^ h '-uuday aud J Saturday „ , belore Sturgeon Creek—2nd Sunday and Srtur day beioie. Hopewell—JRt Sunday $ Saturday before. Salem—3rd Sunday ami Saturday before. Eld. MV. H. Harden, Pastor. Little River—3rd Sunday and Saturday ^Turner's Meetiug House—2nd Sunday and Saturday before Oaky 'Grove—4th Suuday and" Saturday before Saluidoy before Emaus—1st Sunday James and Gibbs, Pastor. Eld. N OTICE. Parties are warned that no hunting or fl<h- 3,d dntrmf oUrw^ county. WSUK IfXJtXQIUUL SYCAMORE, IRWIN COUNTY, GA., MARCH 1894. GENERAL NEWS* General Summary of the News of the Week Gathered from Every Quarter, Cameron, Texas, has had a $30,000 fire. Fort Worth, Texas, has had a $150,. 000 fire. The jury in the case of the State vs. Ratliff, who killed Jackson at Kosins ko, Miss,, brought in a verdict of not guilty. The Drake Bank of Centerville, Ja., was robbed of $300,000 which had been kept out of the bank to pay oil the miners at a neighboring town. William Hill, a 5-year-old boy, at Knoxville, Tenn., while playing with a gun, accidentally shot and fatally wounded a 4-year-old playmate, Wil¬ liam Pruett. A large body of natives attacked the Spaniards on the island of Punter in the Malay archipeligo. They were re pulsed with a loss of 700 killed, tho Spaniards losing one man. The union depot at Denver, Colo., built teu years ago at a cost of $300, 000, was destroyed go6 by a fire. The building was feet long and said to be the most costly structure in the west. In the Pulaski circuit court of Ar. kansas, J. S. McArthur was con¬ victed ou the charge of slandering Miss Pearl Jones, a young lady of 16. The penalty is from six months to three years in the penitentiary, at the discretion of the court. Joe Carden, an engineer, at Chatta¬ nooga, Tenn., lost his months’ wages in sidered a gambling hell. He had been con¬ an exemplary young man, and was so overwhelmed with remorse that he preferred death to facing his wife, took rough on rats and died. The Howard, Harrison Iron com¬ pany of Bessemer, Ala., has shipped twelve car loads of iron piping to Philadelphia, Pa., the first instalment of a 10,000 ton contract they have with the Quaker City for iron pipe to be used in the water mams of that city. It has been ascertained that the shot which killed J. W. White, an account of whose murder while Ashing on Newnau’s Lake, FIs., has appeared in our news columns, was fired by Tom L. Boulware, and a subscription has been raised to prosecute the murderer if caught. A good looking young man went from house to house along Borean av¬ enue, Atlanta, Ga., offering for sale a large Bible which he said was the last of his stock. Ho found a purchaser at last, receiving the price, $1.75, and departed. It was afterward found to be the pulpit Bible of the 5th Baptist church, which had been slolen. A cyclone swept over Long View, Texas, leaving devastation in its track. Six miles east of that place it struck a large country house in a grove of twenty large oaks. Every tree was uprooted, live persons killed and eight badly hurt, most of whom will probably die. Hail as large as eggs fell for several hours, and it is said that the destruction wro ught is indescribable. In Matagorda county, Texas, a mob of fifty negroes went to the house of H. G. Boulditi and shot him to death. Duly one white man resides in fifteen miles of the place. Constable Hunt of Wharton raised a posse and arrest¬ ed—the report |says—sixteen of tho negroes and conveyed them to Mata¬ gorda jail. Boulditi had brought these negroes from Alabama and settled them on his lands. Mr. John Parrot, Forest Hill, Ky., found his ten-year-old son dangling from the limb of a tree by a rope around his neck, blood gushing from nostrils and mouth, and he UIICOU scions. Cutting him down and up. plying restoratives the boy was le¬ yived. He stated that two other boys, one of whom was Dan Marin, beoorn ing enraged at him, had taken this mcthodofwreakingvengeai.ee. Onr news columns have already re¬ ported the case of the two young men whose failure to return from a boat ride at Rome, Ga., had caused so much anxiety. We now have later news, to the effect that the body of one of them, Charles Bennett, was found in the Coosa river, half a mile below the shoals and two and a half miles below the city. The search for the body of Anderson continues. The Queen & Orescent route lias issued a handsome volume containing 192 photographic half tone views of the exposition, showing main buiid ings and state, territorial and foreign buildings, grounds, statuary, and la goons and about forty views of Mid- 5Vay Piaisance. The hook can be ob tained by sending address, with 25 ceutg ’ the price, and 5 cents for post- 8 „„„ 8 e to w W. C. ,, Ri neat _______ son, geueral - pas i seilgOi agent, Cincinnati, O. Additional particulars of the ruin left in the tracks of the late storms that swept over the southwest are published. At Nacogdoches, Texas, a cyclone in the evening was followed by a tornado in the morning, rain falling in sheets. Every house of a negro colony near that place was bl ° W " !UVa y- Dan Gri,UUS > ei S ! “ miles away from there, was killed “In Union, Strength and Prosperity Abonnd,” and his vifo fatally injured. In a settlement two miles east all the houses were wrecked, and two per¬ sons killed. At and near Lufkin many houses were destroyed, many people injured and their household goods scattered everywhere, leaving them no shelter from the downpour of rain which continued all day. The Portugese minister at Rio de Janeiro having refused to give up the rebel Admiral De Gama and his staff, who had taken refuge on a Portugese vessel, the government has sent the demand to Portugese government at Lisbon. A Portugese merchant steadier attempting to leave the har¬ bor was fired on from the forts and detained for search. Ninety-one in¬ surgents were found among her crew and passengers and taken ashore. The government has taken over a thousand prisoners, including the sick and wounded. About half were fight¬ ing men. At Romo, Ga., John Anderson, train dispatcher of the E. T, V. & G. railroad, and Charles Bennett, son of 8, B. Bennett, master of trains, started out for a ride in a row boat about 5 o’clock in the afternoon. Not returning at night great uncssiness was excited among their friends. Next morning search parties were or¬ ganized. Three miles down the river the boat’s rudder was found, stranded on an island, and, ten miles below, the boat itself was discovered bottom side up. No trace of the young man can be found and the conclusion that they were drowned is forced upon their family and friends. At Lee’s store, near Norfolk, Va., Mrs. Henry Hugo shot and killed Fred Watts. Watts had gone to the home of the Hugos and finding Edith Hugo, a 15-year-old daughter, there alone, had assaulted her, and forced her, under threats of killing if she revealed the crime, to swear that she would not disclose it. The girl was taken ill, and growing rapidly worse, was sent to St. Vincent’s hospital, where the attending physician discov¬ ered the crime, and promptly reported it to her parents. Mrs. Hugo went to the store, and, finding tho young fiend there, sent a bullet from her pistol into his miserable carcass, and put an end to his career. Henry McDonald, tho man whose escapade with a young woman who left her home in Atlanta, Ga., and went with him to Chattanooga, where he was imprisoned on a charge of ob¬ taining board on false pretenses, made a sensation some weeks ago, seems to have become partially insane, as a re¬ sult of his debauchery and brooding over his misdeeds. Information comes from Chattanoogo that he tried recently to kill himself in the jail of¬ fice by beating his head against the brick wail, and was only restrained by force. Later he made a desperate effort to get possession of a pistol from the belt of his keeper, Mr. Skil ern. After the mania passed oil he seemed to have no recollection of his actions. Coroner Gohagan had a long talk with him, and expresses the opin¬ ion that, though his mind is lucid generally, he is afflicted with tempo¬ rary dementia. Sheriff Kilern had wired McDonald’s father informing him of his son’s condition, and advis¬ ing to came at once. From Memphis, Tenn., comes a re¬ port of the heaviest rainfall that ever occurred in that section—nearly seven inches in thirty-six hours. Washouts on all railroads, freight traffic sus¬ pended. One hundred feet of South and Georgia sreets caved into the riv¬ er, carrying oue of the tracks of the Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis railroad. Streets were flooded and traffic suspended for half a day after the rain ceased. Twelve miles south of Jackson, Tenn., four cars of a freight train were wrecked by the failing of a bridge after the engine and ten cars had gone safely over. The sewers at Forest City, Ark., burst and Hooded the town. White river has reached tho flood stage and the Mississippi lias passed the danger line. Weakened as they are by tho rains, the levees are in ill condition to resist the strain of tee present pres¬ sure, which must be greatly increased by floods coming down from the upper rivers. The outlook for the planters along the river is very serious. Recently there was a trades’ union demonstration in London, England, in favor of a measure known as the employers’ liability bill, and against the house of lords. The fact that the procession, inarching from four to ten abreast, required two hours to pass a given point, while thousands moved along on either flank of the column, gives some idea of the vast¬ ness of the throng. Banners in the procession represented ail trades. But tho most significant things were the mottoes and transparencies. One truck carried a coffin, with the Union Jack surmounted with the motto: “The veto coffin of the house of lords.” The truck was both preceded and followed by groups of signs, such as “Down with the lords,” “No he reditary lawmakers,” “The lords threw out the employers’ liability bill, let us throw them out.” There were above 100 bands in the line- Twelve platforms had been erected in Hyde Park, and more than a hundred speak ers addressed the multitude. It is said that the good temper of all this vhst throng was only once interrupted, and that by members of two rival bands coming to blows on a question about which baud was entitled to a certain place in lino. CRIMES and CASUALTIES. A bomb was exploded in a church at Grouohle, Franco, injuring twenty persons, three of them fatally. James Conroy and William Clancy were shot and killed by Thomas Locker, in a saloon at Tolliston, Ind. Locker escaped. The carsheds of the Missouri Street Railway company, at St. Louis, were set on tire by lightning and consumed. The sheds covered an entire biocii. Eleven motor cars and forty-eight trailers were burned. Loss, $80,000; fully insured. A series of murders and murderous assaults have recently occurred in the vicinity of VVilkesbano. Pa., (he eli max of'which was reached in an affair at Midvale, when John Sohaudow shot Mike Bockrock fatally and then fled, firing right and left and killing a 2-year-old babe in the arms of mother. The crowd, in a frenzy, pur¬ sued him. Retreating into his house, he Extinguished the lights, and as the crowd surged against the door fired on them from an upper window. arriving with an armed posse, fired on him, wounding hitn severely, and at length effected his capture, and con¬ ducted him safely to prison, keeping the mob oil' with drawn revolvers, llis wounds were supposed to be mor tal. What Can Be Done. The Lewis brothers of Talladega county have 5,000 acres of land, all beautifully terraced, and, what will sound strange to a black belt farmer, there is not a negro on it. They have eighty.four people employed, every one white, and they are farming on a scale that is bound to be successful. They have a cotton seed oil mill on their farm and extract the oil from ail their seed, thus making a good profit. They use the hulls for fatten¬ ing and wintering their cattle and re¬ turn the meal to soil, thus enriching the land. They are just about completing a 5,800 spindle yarn mill, and will con¬ vert every pound of cotton they into yarns. By this means they save the expense of packing and marketing cotton and get the profit of the middle men. They save the enormous freights on cotton to the mills of New England aud ha ve a market for their yarns in the mills all around them. ELEVEN TO SEVEN. 4 Grand Jury Excused From Furtkei Service. In the Unitea States district court in session at Birmingham, Judge Bruce, on morion of District Attorney O’Neal, discearged the grand jury on the ground that the jury was no long¬ er serviceable in carrying out the pur¬ poses of the ljiw. Assistant Attorney Hawkins, addressing the court, said: ‘‘The court well knows, that thore has been com¬ mitted to this grand jury a large num¬ ber of cases of greatest importance to the public, and, which involved many intricate facts. Of these cases in particular, my observation and ex perience has led me to believe there cannot be an impartial investigation by Ibis grand jury.” The foreman of the jury, Mr. Mitchell, being question¬ ed by the court, replied: “The great¬ er portion of the unfinished business was a class of important cases which lie was led to believe tho jury would not properly consider.”—It is alleged that in the face of the most positve evidence in cases submitted, the grand jury invariably stood eleven for con¬ viction aud seven for “no bill.” The Hungarian Pa riot. The death of Kossuth stirs the hearts of Hungarians, as that of a father. He showed signs of consciousness to the last. He expired in the arms of his son, a-id pressing the hand of the lluugarian Deputy, Ivaroly. The members of his family and a few of his intimate friends stood around the bedside of the expiring patriot. The municipal authorities of Turin have offered the family to allow the remains to be buried in the patheon here. Mrs. Grant’s Hegve s. Commander Jones lias received the following telegram from Mrs. Gen. Ulysses 8. Grant: 8an Diego, Cal., March 21, ’94. Cape. R. E. Jones. C immander Cam) Hardea United Confederate Ve terans, Birmingham, Ala — I feel greatly complimented by re¬ newal of invitation to attend reunion. Being so far away, I will beg you te convoy my compliments and sincere regrets. Julia D. Gkant. sho Reached io Prisoners. Fulton county jail has lost its lady revivalist. For more than a year P ast > M ,- s. S. A. Davis, wife of a phrenologist m North Carolina, has visited the jail on Sunday and held re ligious services. Sue never missed a Sabbath during that time. The pris oners became greatly attached to iier. This morning she visited the coun¬ A prison and bade them all goodbyo. She has graduated in medicine and will leave today for Augusta to prac tice her profession. $1.00 a Year in Advance. »I»P* r .n Knit Through. [he , ’ ( inti!' ViifiV'of .'Ivor Wlt dredging of S.. Job,,'* from Jacksonville to the sea, for which Du val cotinly finished. appropriated $300,000, has been TllO work gives a uniform depth from Jacksonville to the bar, twenty miles, of eighteen foet at low water. ~~ “ m : , 111 " , fatally injured . . . Throe persons were by explosion of an ironer in tho hum dry at 70 West Van Lurcn street; Chicago. The explosion caused a panic among the girl employes and several were injured in the rush foi exits. —TV 1>V / m m JteJ p ms If & C;. - rllils. if % i NhVy,* h Mr. Walter Bell WONDERFUL GOOD AT SMALL EXPENSE Rheumatism Perfectly Cured. “C. 1. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.: "Gentlomen:—I do not know how to express the gratitude that I feel towards Hood’s Sar¬ saparilla, which has cured me at very small cost. I Have Not Slept suffering with on my left side for four years; rheumatism with constant severe pains and being completely run down, but now all is changed and I enjoy good health. I experience sweet refreshing siefep, have a good appetite, and my memory Is much improved. In fact I astonished at tiie change. I can now perform my daily work with eaee l had almost of ever enjoying good health again, but by the persuasive power of a friend 1 was induced to take Hood’s Sarsaparilla which has saved my Hood's 5 #"* Cures life. I am now in perfect health, thanks to Hood’s.” Walter Bell, Galveston, Texas. Attest: John Dk Bh chl, Galveston, Texas. Hood’s Pills act easily, yet promptly aud efft ciently, ou the liver aud bowels. 25 cents. January ’J, . • • 1M percent* “ 15, . . II February 15, 1, - • 13 •’ . . • March 1. , . 9 “ 15, . . TOTA «5 per 75 < eat. We have paid to our customers in u iys. Profits paid twic e each month; money can be withdrawn any time; |2 ) to $1000 can be Invested; write for Information. amt Brokers. FISHER A CO., Bankers New orb. 1.8 mul 20 Broadway, » FOOT POWER MACHINERY g COMPLETE OUTFITS Wood or metal work ers, without steam power,t an successfully com- m pe ete w rith the large shops by using our ou New Labor Saving Machinery, £ ft latest tical shop and most use; also approved for Industrial 1 or prac- f wJ Schools, Home Training, etc. Cat- \ alogue tree. Seneca Fails Mfg. Co.,-_= 07 Water St., Seneca Falls, N. Y. — : -A. W. t. DOUGLAS S3 SHOE equals custom work, costing from EtiUIKI 3 $4 to $ 6 , best value lor the money in the world. Name and price 'WFTT YA stamped on the bottom. Every xV pair warranted. Takenasubsti- for full IV lute. See local papers ^Cuemcn lathes or send for 11 feVl'L'DOUaijg-J---- )p\-lustratti ILATEST STYLES? how to or derby mail. Postage free. You can get the bar gains of dealers who push our shoes. ___ 3B333xrxvra!Qn.’j5i ORED AND BLACK PILLS® good luck niTtllTC—THOMAS r. SIMPSON. 0^tXen V l^r„?nV V^?,^„«h W n 5 ffer. Address Box 770, Hll'shoro , Ohio. jk GENTS wanted to *»1| TtelMirr. Picking. Ro J\e tc../or Large Factory. R , P. O. 1371, New AmN U No 12, 1894. GOOD 'IfSf 1 'feu.™ BLOOD You BLOOD cannot if IS hope your IMPURE. to be well If you are troubled with BOILS, PIMPLES, ULCEUS or SORES your blood iebad. A few bottles of S. S. S. will thoroughly cleanse the system, remove all impurities and build you up. All manner of blemishes are CLEARED AWAY by its use. It is the best blood remedy on earth. Thousands „ , .. . — who have used it say so. (cm s.s.s. is no better remedy for blood ^eaw.^ aAVINi DWoniOUo » Treatise on blood and shin diseases mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC bo., ATLANTA OA. VOL. IV, NO. 46. WII, March to sihiloh Again. General Wallace and survivor*, I 1 " 1 '' 1 di '’ ision • *™y of Tennessee are »'“™h over their route to Shiloh, to dispute ch arges made in ins tory. The J.ingest Tmv of Coal Ever Brought Down the Mississippi, The mammoth towboat, J. E. Wil iiams, passed Memphis on route from Louisville to New Orleans with a fleet of coal barges. The Williams’cargo consists of forty-soven barges, con taining^ 1,250,000 bushels of coal, which is tho largest amount of coal cvcl . towed by one boat ou the His¬ giss jppi rivei . < - Deep Mourning lot* Iloaautli* At Budapest mourning for Kossuth in general. Every man has crepe black on his hat. Wooieu only wear garments. Black flags hang.over the fronts of the house of parliament, the hanks, the university buildings and the clubs. Many provincial towns nave gone into mourning as deeply Vienna as the city. A dispatch from says that the police there have forbid Jen tho Hungarian club to display the fleck flag. . A Double Siticido In town. The bodies of John Reed, aged 20, and Etta Shaw, were found near Rose Hill, la., hanging to a limb of a tree, the couple having committed suicide. No cause is known for the rash act. They were both members of respectable families. Yellow Fever Continues Epidemic The deaths from yellow fever afc Rio de Janeiro average 70 a day. The United States cruiser San Francisco, the flagship of Admiral Ben ham, ha« sailed hence. 1110 Bus. Potatoes Per Acre. This astonishing yield was reported by Abr. Hahn, of Wisconsin, but .Salzer’s potatoes always get there. The editor of the Rural Xew Yorker reports a yield of 736 bushels andS pounds per acre from one of Salzer’s early po tatoes. Above XtlO bushels are from Sauer's new seedling Hundred-fold. His new early potato. Lightning Express, has a record of 803 bu3lleis per aci .„. He offers potatoes as low as Wel.and the best potato planter In th. wa 1 “ ^ WILL THIS 0UT AIfD send it with t0 the Jolin A . Seed Co.. La y(JU w(u reoeive free his mam. moth potato catalogue and a package of six teen-day “Get There, Eli,” radish. A $100 Reward. $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased' to learn that there is at leant one dreaded dittease that science has Ijeen able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure lathe only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con¬ stitutional disease, requires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken in¬ ternally, acting directly upon the blood ana mucous surfaces of tho system, thereby de¬ stroying the foundation of the disease, atul th* giving tho patient stlength by building doina UP its constitution and assisting have nature much in faith In work. The proprietors that they so offer One Hun¬ its curative powers that it fails to euro# dred Dollars for testimonials. any case Send tor list of Address ToledPi O# F. J. Cheney 75c. & Co., Sold by Druggists, A rose measured by its tragrance makes a cabbage head look little. Many persons are broken down from over-* work or household cares. Brown's Iron Bit¬ ters rebuilds the system,.aids digestion, mala-ria. re¬ moves excess of bile, and cures a splendid tonic for women and children. Lot’s wife was what might be called a well preserved woman. Best, of All To cleanse the system in a gentle and trnl? beneficial manner,when the Springtime comes, use the true and perfect remedy,Syrup of Figs. One bottle will answer for all the family and costs onl> 50 cents; the large size$l. Try it and be pleased. Manufactured by the Califor¬ nia Fig Syrup Co. only. If some of our heads were not so big our hearts would grow faster. Brown’s Iron Bitters euros Dyspepsia, Mala¬ ria, Biliousness and General Debility. Gives strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves— creates appetite. The best tonic for jXursing Mothers, v eak women and children. Christ did not have much to sny about death. His theme wjis life. “ I RAVE BEEN AFKlIlCTED with caused an ftffectiOll by diph¬ of the Throat from childhood, remedies, but theria, and have used various Browns have yever found anything ”—Rev.G. equal M. F. to Hampton* Bronchial Troches.' in boxes. Piheton* Ky. Bold only Bnv the baby a dress with money saved on mailable and Brain articles Treatment, in drug Or.; line. Liver . W wfc8 1 ills. jNerve 12c., Prescription “2005,” Best Worn Remedy, 12c., Porous Piasters, 12c. Free catalogue. L. A. Hall, Charleston, S. C. Impaired digestion cured by Beecham*2 Pills. Beecham’e— no others. 25 cents a box. If afflicted with sore eves use Dr. Isaac Thomf son’s Eye Wa ter. Druggists sell at 25c. a bottle^