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A Shattered Nervous System.
M". .T l !i L. W illiam.-, the well-. P°P 11 '
FINALLY HEART TROUELE
Restored to HeslUi by Dr. Wiles’ NeaV.nO.
11 i r !
o.; oxer. v. no nas ;
tor ,j 16 Uf-Votiuli u, ^ (; -
c- ,,it- S>»uth. Mrs also ./or being | ural cure
a close nf bu.-i^v-Hs affairs j ,l lam
i’j i: £
F t
mu
him i" lake' a careful, I !ies h ; u vr© urn very sure
he 11. ! up in Use j.resent
a n cl • -x© u e r a1 ad v a i; ce.
f■< 11 1 s* j i \ si ■ i ve vip<y of * the trade
nrooivrif! of the eeubfrv, iii dis-
ciivir: use outlook jn n recent, is-
it: \ . . ,1
PU
•of
which’our U(usi
i ness world has been subjected has
- i • g t
iu- n(:! Io* J
01 li.
v Richmoj
hi* lo:
ng period
sevci
:*h trivl t< v
sen - ’-pan m
t
had a very wholesome effect upoi
i the ent ire country.
Honesty and Virtue.
There is more honesty and T : rti
contained iu a I.H.-iiie of .Suivr.bou O
tlian ’in any Other linhoeat ..now
"Mrs. A. Fiedler, 28G-! dale
Philadytiphia, Fa , confirms 1
If has fore-ci.. .g] ie found-Salvanon O 1 7
St..
t:
weak institution ^ .to' reorganize rnr h">:cellent reined v for rheum ah
(X-
i h:
R. EDWARD HARDY, the jolly man
ager of Sheppard Co’s, great storfyat
Braceville, Ill., writes: “I had never
been sick a day in my life until in 1890. I
got so bad with nervous prostration that I
had to give up and commence to doctor. I
tried our local physicians and one in Joliet,
but none gave me any relief and I thought
I was going to die. I became despondent
and suffered untold agony. I could not eat,
sleep nor rest, and it seemed as if I could
not exist. At the end of six months I was
reduced to but a shadow of myself, and at
last my heart became affected and I was
truly miserable. I took six or eight bottles
of Dr. Miles’ Nervine. It gave me relief
from the start, and at last a cure, the great
est blessing of my life.”
Dr. Miles’ Remedies p|||y|A Ofo^’y^jls
are sold by all drug. g\-
gists under a positive „
guarantee, first bottle
benefits or money re- ^5, §|©gtorGt
funded. Bookondis- se ^
cases of the heart and
nerves free. Address,
DR. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
settle down on a bus-mess
It has weeded out much noxiou.» |.
growth, and relieved vn» of a great f‘
deal of what is ‘ k iibwn’ as dean!
wood. It has nnulp .-us. deeply I of
feel the absolute necessity of char
acter and legitihafc/'methods in
the conduct of business. It has
crowded us with experiences, and
given our young.c<»ui:try the “age”
that we so much need.
t •
At ti e opening .of . the \ear wo
w T e w
time was upon us. Everything
seemed to favor a Tull tide of
prosperity. But a grave and most
important work was thrown upon
our hands. The settlement of Cu
ban and West Indian affairs and
relations were precipitated upon
us by the destruction of the
>hs]S.*j’ j dints," "bruises,
" ' should fflwab s 1
Don't list.!i t
inf;;' ■ r-
•tine
f
ioJ cts.
Wh* Vi They '7-
Tlu S’A Yu
• iietu-i rr?v
over ri •;
for p .blit 1 -. ■:
addr* - -.*<
United States
Qth en VictoM
La dies' li
Trrm rr.. r - . ,
Prai„ W. :Z,
makes a * 'a
Epilepsy, has i c *
doubt treat,. \ - - 0; ‘
ed more cas- f . t C:: ’
living Phvsic' •-.' a , r v
success isTb f'
We have hen- - V V‘ E !>
Of 20 years* Va- ^ 3
r - . 'V®?
., r.bA'.g
*3 . fis
; a
y/pybla
, i ton
“. a
tie of his absolute cure, free to ar.vVA.-Xi
who may send their P O. and Express r. '•’A.
We advise an? one wishing a cn-o * -b A. 3,
Prof.W. ZL PaEKIji £• /}.» 4 CzC&r L c.» IG ,r YorJ
ItH
(1. n.-t-.
> pern
ere ail feeling that our good uv \r- r \ ttt
° & ; \» aie-y oMpnleon ill.
or William I of G-rma
i er
po
Moving to the South.
During a recent discussion of ' Maine, and v. e found oui seives at
the progress of the South, Mr. T. | war with a ^rejgn empire. By
H. Rennie, of the Graniteville j malli festations of business readi-
Manufacturing Co., alluding to a ; ness ? ^kili, of courage, of hero-
visit he had paid to a manufac
turing town in New England, said,
according to the Augusta Chron
icle :
“While there a manufacturer
said to me, “Rennie, you people
South are getting away with our
business up here. We have not
made a dollar m some time. We
have simply been making expenses.
We do not knew what to do. We
thought that with new* machinery
we could manufacture goods at a
profit, but we are too far away
from the cotton fields. You peo
ple there have the raw material at
your very doore, and we cannot
hope to compete with you. The
only course that seems open tous
is to shut up shop here and move
to the ‘Sunny South. ’ And these
people are coming. Recently the
Massachusetts people, who already
have a 25,000-spindle mill at
Rome, have decided to double the
capacity investing something like
three-quarters of a million of dol
lars in the business. It is per
fectly natural. Cotton manufac
tured in the South is all profit.
If the farmer sells for six cents a
pound, and the raw material is
shipped North for manufacture, it
probably brings twelye cents a
pound in the lower grades of goods.
Now, if this cotton is manufac
tured here, this six cents profit
remains with us in the wages of
the operatives and in the profit
of the mill men. The freight
North is saved out of it to the
manufacturer and the money re
mains in the South. Eastern
manufacturers fully appreciate
that they can compete no longer;
while they are partly making ex
penses the mills here are declaring
dividends.”
ism, of power, of wealth, of pa
triotism, and of magnanimity,
have astonished the world. We
have summed up advancing civil
ization in the word “American-
5 J
leon aiiibMine ; s surf;
marriage to Marie. L
hirt h of hi.- s<>n, the Ki
his return i
France to
nounces her
ills
t h e
Hb - v
>!! ! o
Jr - 1
I low
Maine
—\ • s
. 1 - i
isn't i
Horse Owners! Use
GOMB AULT’S •
: ais$tic
R
marriage to
rum the • *i
e of
dlba. Viet- rut
aii-
accession to
the
jland in 1836;
her
Prince Albert;
the
rince of Wales
; the
Prince Consort:
a n d
— A
r ) t p j T1
know wbother
remem be-. V- r
. riv Oo you ask?
v r< . f>» • . u> !i sa v
niH.’ iMti 1 o• >ij i
;- ir,ruiui tor me t<»
t li*-* ,Mairm j .
You can often jndgo a wimoniV
character by the men she doesn’t
know.
You think he has changed—he ne 7er
was so sour tempered, cross and irrita
ble before. No, he is the same man,
but his liyer is out of order. He needs
Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney
Balm. It is a reliable remedy for stim
ulating thejtorpid liver, improving the
digestion, and removing bile accumu
lations. A short treatment with this
medicine will make him once more
healthy, cheerful and even tempered.
Price 31 a bottle. For sale by M. C.
Brown & Co.
ism.
All the energy, enterprise and
manhood that so briefly accom
plished the Spanish war, as a mat
ter of business, are now ready for
peace and its victories. The next
thing is something else. All these
are the conditions that are before
Americans: Europe indebted to
us on a balance of trade $615,000-
000; a wheat crop the largest ever
harvested; a corn crop up to the
average; a cotton crop possibly
surpassing all before ; railroads re
organized and rehabilitated abreast
of the times, with steadily-increas
ing business; inexhaustible mines
of coal, iron, copper and other
minerals worked and being en
larged ; sterile regions being irri
gated ; electricity daily develop
ing its owers; manufactures
awakening to new life.
Generally there is before us an
opening of power and wealth, and
fields for energy and inventive ge
nius hitherto unknown to the
world.
The only question is will Amer
ican character prove itself worthy
of the great future that is before
us.
Practically, our overwhelming
productions necessiate new con
sumers for them. The Nicaragua
canal must open to us all the
markets of the Pacific and the
East.
Financially, we must throw off
the war-chain of the tax on State
bank currency and have free bank
ing under Federal control. No
one will want free discredited sil
ver or irredeemable greenback
currency if neighborhood banks
are allowed to issue or, as the phy
siologists say, secnate the currency
for their local business operations.
Then business gambling must be
checked, or it will thoroughly de
moralize us.
Further: Our people have got
to abandon sectional prejudices
and be wholly American; stop
talking ancestry and damning the •
the famous letter thanking Presi
dent McKinley for his congratu
lations on her Diamond Jubilee
will also be given. The whole
collection in fac-simile, will he
presented in the October number
of the magazine.
PITCHING PILES
iisam
I Safe Speedy and Positive Car,
Tha §2l'e«t, Rest BLISTER ever
She place of all liniments for tniM or severe action
Removes all Bunches or Blemishes fn-m If.X.l.
end Cattle. SUPER&SDES ALL CAUTERY
OR FmiMG- Impossible to produce scar or bkmui
Every hottle sold is warranted to give sa r isf a pti<v«
Price 31=50 per bottle, bold bv dnjg2i«t» J
sent by express, charges paid, with full directions
for its use. Send for descriptive circulars. •>
f’HE LAWRENCE-W1LLIAMS CO., Cleveland n
>**•*"■ IIIIIMIIIIIII I . -
Georgia Raiiroaa
Deafness Cannot be Cured
By local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness is caused by an inflamed con
dition of the mucous lining of the Eus
tachian Tube. When this tube gets
inflamed you have a rumbling sound or
imperfect hearing, and when it is en
tirely closed deafness is the result, and
unless the inflammation can be taken
out and this tube restored to its nor
mal condition, hearing will be destroyed
forever; nine cases out of ten are caused
by catarrh, which is nothing but an
inflamed condition of the mucous sur
faces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of Deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
ABSOLUTELY CURES. 8 ■
SYMPTOMS—Moisture; Intense Itehlnjj and
stincing; mostatnigkt; worse by scratching. 11
-llowed to continue tumors form and protrude,
which often bleed nnd ulcerate, becoming very
sore. 8 WAYNE’S OINTMENT stops itching and
bleeding, absorbs the turn jrn. Sold by druggists or by
mailfor50cts. Prepared by Da. Su ayskA Son,Philadelphia.
The simple application of
SWATHE’S
OINTMENT
without any internal j
medicine, cures tet- 1
ter, eczema, itch, all 4
'eruptions on the face,
bands, nose, &c.. leaving
'the skin clear, white and health^
Sold bv druggists, or sent by mail for 50 cts. Address D*.
Sway mi & Son, Philadelphia, Pa. Ask your druggist for it.
Free tuition. We give one or more free schol
arships in every county in the U. S. Write us.
Will accept notes for tuition
or can deposit money in bank
until position is secured. Car
fare paid. No vacation. En
ter at any time. Open for both
sexes. Cheap board. Send for
free illustrated catali
iPoseieons, • •
Suaranteed
Under reasonable
conditions ....
AND-
CONNECTIONfe.
For information as to Routes,
Schedules and Rates, both
Passenger and Freight,
write to either of the undersigned.
You will receive prompt reply
and reliable information
Wallace—How does it happen
that you have no flag flying from
your house? *
Ferry—My wife insists that we
shall wait until the neighbors have
all bought theirs and we get a big
ger one.—Cincinnati Enquirer.
. ,, _ „ _ tree illustrate a catalogue.
Address J. F. Draughon, Pres’t, at either place.
Draughon’s
Practical,....
Business ....
NASHVILLE, TEHN., AND TEXARKANA,
EXAS.
Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and Kidney
Balm is an unfailing remedy for all
diseases of the liver, kid neya or urinary
organs. It is a certain cure for Bright’s
disease, dropsy, diabetes, gravel, kid
ney weakness, incontinence of urine,
bed wetting in children, biliousness,
liver complaint and female troubles.
A trial of this great remedy will con
vince you of its curative power. Price
$1 a bottle. For sale by M. C. Brown
& Co.
Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Typewriting, etc.
Th0 most thorough^ practical and. Progressive
schools of the kind in the world, and the 'best
patronized ones in the South. Indorsed by bank-
ers » merchants, ministers and others. Four
weeks in bookkeeping with us are equal to
twelve weeks by the old plan. J. F. Draughon,
President, is author of Draughon’s new svstem
ot bookkeeping, “Double Fntry Made Easy ”
Home study. We have prepared for home
study, books on bookkeeping, penmanship and
shorthand. Write for price list “Home Study.”
Extract. ' Prof. Draughon—I learned book
keeping at home from you r books, while holding
a position as night telegraph operator.” C pf
Leffingweul, Bookkeeper for Gerber & Picks!
Wholesale Grocers, South Chicago, Ill. ^
(■Mention this papexr when Tvriting.)
A. G. Jackson, Gen. Pass. Agt
Joe W. White, Trav. Pas3. Agt
Augusta, Georgia.
S. W. Wilkes, C. F. & P. A.,
Atlanta.
H. K= Nicholson, G. A., Athens.
W. W. Hardwick, S. A., Macon.
S. E. Magill, C. F. A., Macon.
M. R. Hudson, S. F. A., Milledge
ville.
F. W Coffin, S. F. & P. A.,
Augusta.
Gainesville Transfer Co.,
OPERATE BUS EINES ON SCHEDULE.
Browne—I’d join the church if
The Gainesville
Transfer Com
pany issues the
following tick
ets which will
be sold at the
rate of 28 tick
ets for $1.00.
5c.
DAY TRIP.
Good only o»er oor Lines
To any point In city limit., Including
New Holland and Gower#
Gainesville Transfer Co.
5 cents fare
to Belle trains,
both morning
and evening,
until further
notice.
it wasn’t so full of hypocrites.
Town©—That needn’t deter you.
There’s always room for one more.
ITT UC Rudy’s Pile Suppository
^Is guaranteed to cure j
Piles and Constipation, or money
refunded. 50 cents per box. Send
for list of testimonials and Free
Sample to MARTIN RUDY, Reg
istered Pharmacist, Lancaster, Pa.
For sale by leading druggists, and
in Gainesville, Ga., by Dixon & Co.
When you want a Messenger Boy Phone 102.
to me 8 h 8 3 8 w,?h Cent8 t f °, r delivering “essagee, and 5 centB for reply
to message, within city limits.
up for^our train 6 eUhir 0 d ^ a 0^de^8, ^ y ° U wish ’ we wil1 riDg y ° U
your residence. ’ &V ° r ni S ht » ln case you have a phone at
will remain on^uty aTfnLhT 6 ^° mpany wil1 ha '® an operator who
convom'Ar»r»Q , ? protect our patrons from the m*
Respectfully
convenience of missing trains.
GAINESVILLE TRANSFER 00