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THE GEORGIA CRACKER, SATURDAY, JUNE 1, 1901.
| To produce the best results
in fruit, Yjegdf^< or grain, the
fertilizer used must contain
Enough Potash, For parties
ulars pamphlets,
send them free. r
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
POLITICAL HOT TAMALES.
South Carolina’s Two .Senators
Resign, and vA^^Now After
Bach Other’s Scalp, and No
May
Columbia, S. C.,
Saturday last, at
state, there was,, au aorimouioas
debate between United States Sen
ators Benjamin Revulsive Tillman,
and John Lachrymose McLaurin.
As a dehoument both of them
have put their resignations in the
hands of Governor McSweeney.
Thev have resigned, with the.
understanding that they are to go
heforeHAm pebple^nl %^<?inj; flej
bate, and thre sentiment ' ot tire
people is to be expressed in the
vote, in a democratic primary, to.
be held in November, s
The arrangement is sensational,
su
m 5 er,^eiheterf fbr tix yearef and Mo
Launn has yet two years to serve
The result of the issue meaiis tha%/
if Tillman is sustained, McLaa-
rin-s seat will be va&an
Laurin is successful, he will suc-
ceed ^J^lean’s lgne
LatintAmiA b4eS* myiWd
ney. and friends of Tillman asked
McLaurin ac
cused Tillman of attacking him,
when he (Tillman) wasin a bomb-.
proof' The latter declared that
he would resign, and meet McL|u|
in on the stump. McLaurin agreed
to the proposition. Senator Till-;
man, later, drew up a joint resig
nation, which both men
Poison oah
Poisra Ilf
tre among the best kno wn
of the many dangerous
wild plants and shrubs.
To touch or handle them
and inflammation with in
tense itching and burning
of the skin. The eruption
soon disappears, the suf
ferer hopes forever; but _
almost as soon as the little blisters and
pustules appeared the poison had reached
the blood, arid will break out at regular
intervals and each time in a more aggra
vated form. This poison will loiter in the.
system for years, and every atom of it
must be forced out of the blood before yon -
can expect a perfect, permanent cure.
Nature’s Antidote
; ; - ’ FOR '
NdSope’sfPofsoiis,
is the only cure for Poison Oak, Poison
- > an ri all noxious plants. It is com-
F°fu e . xclus ively of roots and herbs. Now
“the time to get the poison out of your
system, as delay makes your condition
worse. Don’t experiment longer with
s^ves, washes and soaps—they never cure.
(Ga^'r^* Marshall, bookkeeper of the Atlanta
O a ri J v ^ s 7 1 - pr * lt Co., was poisoned with Poison
on,.- . He took Sulphur, Arsenic and various
lotion cI U § s ’-^ n< * a PPhed externally numerous
Swellin» nC *! a -* ves witi * no benefit. At times the
almocf Sv' n j ln flammation was so severe he was
break n,7* n< ^‘ For e i£ht years the poison would
imnro,T U i e Y er y season. His condition was much
X w,? fte r ta ¥ngojie bottle of S. S. S„ and
all eviH»« les c ^ared his blood of the poison, and
ences o* the disease disappeared.
ar © often poisoned without
full v w bow. Explain your case
chJLr i, ou T physicians, and they will
vj Ce „ f>*ve such information and ad-
T^require, without charge, and
inp. t sena at the same time an interest-
on Blood and Skin Diseases. <
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
and it was mailed to Governor
McSweeney. ~ • ■ • .
It is understood that McLaurin
and Tillman will be allowed to
wage a battle royal before the peo
ple for the long term, to which
“Pitchfork Ben” was elected last
January. Thus, McLaurin’s un
expired term will be filled by
new man, no matter which of the
two principal gladiators is victor
This being made manifest, it was
discovered that every brush p
in the Palmetto State concealed a
senatorial candidate, and they are
popping out so fast that it is a
hard matter to keep tab on them*
fr\ Tf ; ff.. ~ *
The prominent ones so far an
nounced are Miles B. McSweeney,
governor; Wilie Jones, colonel of
the second regiment, chairman of
the state democratic committee,
and executive officer of the Caro
lina national bauk; Asbury C.
Lattimer, congressman from the
third district, and Tillman’s po-
IrtfclJ lidutenant^f D. S. jHender
son, state senator from -Aiken
county, and; George Johnstone,
courtesy colonel, and ex-congrass-
maSlxom the thini district. Be
tween Johnstone anil Lattimer
there are /Several: old; jgfolitical
scores to settle,, and both;-will be
out fdr> blood. When the other
candidates, yet to be announced,
toe the scratch at the final start,
South Carolina willhave on its
hands a case of political *hot ta-
malestbat will make the i|lood of
its fire-eating citizens boil at fever
heat. ... ^ ;<
In the meantime another com
plication arises. The governor
has the right to appoint regardless
of party action, and a strong ef
fort is 'being made to get him to
appoint new men on the® grou
xfi^tHeSators Tillman id Mc-
Lanrin have overstepped tl
bounds of propriety. If he should
do this it would knock the whole
political shooting-match sky-
west. , And, anent the dealing of
this political solar plexus; blow,
tremendous pressure isjfb e ing
brought to bear upon the govern^
or. tojaame, as the successors of
the two blatant now-out of-a-job
brawlers ex-Sena^ors Wade Hamp
ton and Marion C. Butler. Ye
gods! what an act of political ret
ribution this would be. It would
richly.punish McLaurin for the
treacherous manner in which he
plunged a traitorV knife into
Hampton’s political career; it
would relegate Tillman, his pitch
fork, and his brood of “reform”
followers to the obscurity of their
natal political dung heaps, and
the body of John Manning Lau
rens Irby would turn over in the
grave and clutch impotently at its
“hamestring necktie,” ip which
demagogic property of his erratic
and surprising political career he
was no doubt buried.
Educate Your Bowels With. Cas carets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
The Texas Oil Fields.
Washington, May 80.—Robert
T. Hill, chief geologist of the Uni
ted States geological survey, has
returned from an extended geo
logical investigation in the Texas
oil field, and has embodied the re
sults in a report which says :
“The importance of this oil field
is far greater than at present can
be described or estimated. It
means not only a cheap fuel sup
ply to the largest state in area in
the union, but, owing to its prox
imity to the tidewater, it promises
an export trade such as exists no
where else in the world. Prepara
tions are being made to sink hun
dreds of wells, and very soon the
present output of 500^000 barrels
a day may be quadrupled.
back of your
Heavy pressure
in your head? And are
you sometimes faint and
dizzy ? Is^your tongue
coated ? Bad taSts- iii
your mouth ? And does
your food distress you ?
"Are you nervotis and ir
ritable? Do you often
have the blues? And
are you troubled about
Than your iiver is
aii wrong*
But ther is a cure.
’Tis the old reliable
li-r-.A-FT;-
I
They act directly on
the liver. They cure
constipation ,biliou s n es s,
sick headache, hatisea,
and dyspepsia. Take a
dqse paehinight.
For 60 years years they
have been the Standard
Family Pills.
* Price 25 cents. All Dragglsis.
. *J I' have taken Ayer’s Pills regu
larly for six months.' They have
cured me of a severe headache, and- i
I can now walk from two. to four,,
miles witliotit gfefctirig tired or out
c»f bypath,. something 1 have not -
been able to do for many years.”
r S. E^WAlwokk,
Salem. Mass.
yielding bed which supplies the
Beaumont well, and thij can only
be determined by experiments.
The area of profitable exploitation
of the Beaumont oil fields is con
fined to the San Jacinto and Sa
bine rivers, east of the Houston
and West Texas railroad and south
of Oil City, Nagadoches county.
This area may be extended or re
stricted by future exploitations.
It is very probable that other oil
fields may be discovered in the
coastal plain between the Beau
mont and Tampico fields. Here
lies a vast territory, underlain by
the oil-bearing Eocene formations,
which has not been exploited.”
Write tho Doctor.
If you have any complaint whatever
‘ etheXest medical advice you
ly receive*;"•write the doctor
ou will receive a prompt- re- I
lutcost Address^| 'l$fi Si: ^1
De. J. C. ATEB, Lowell, Mass.
and
can
I freely.
I * ply wi
“It is bntir^ly within the limit
of ptobability that oil will; be
found at mauy places throughout
the coastal prairie, especially; in
its southern extension toward the
Rio Grande, and in its northeas
tern toward the Mexican state of
Tamauiipas. The outcrop of the
tertiary formations-in southwest
TexaSj ih Wilson, Atascoria, Mc-
Mullen, Duvall and other counties,
is hatufaily r ich in Oil, ftnd the
practiOal oil men are risking their
money id experimenting in that
region. As the oil-bearing district
extends east of the Mississippi in
to Mississippi and Alabama, it is
not: beyond possibility that oil
may be found in these states.
^It is impossible now to state
exactly the extent of the oil-
Women as Well as Men
Are Made Miserable by
Kidney Trouble.
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind, disp
arages and lessens ambition; beauty, vigor
and cheerfulness soon
disappear when the kid
neys are out of order
or diseased. >
Kidney trouble has
become so prevalent
that it is not uncommon
for a child to be born
afflicted with weak kid
neys. If the child urin^
ates. too often, if the
urine scalds the flesh or if, when the child
reaches an age when it should be able to
control the passage, it is yet afflicted with
bed-wetting, depend upon it, the cause of
the difficulty is kidney trouble, and the first
step should be towards the treatment of
these important organs. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition of the
kidneys and bladder and not to a habit as
most people suppose. /.~c<
Women as well as men are made mis
erable with kidney and bladder trouble,
and both need the same great remedy.
The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold
by druggists, in fifty-
cent and one dollar
sizes. You may have a
sample bottle by mail
free, also pamphlet tel I- Home at 8w«m>Root.
ing all about it, including many of the
thousands of testimonial letters received
from sufferers cured. In writing Dr. Kilmer
& Co., Binghamton, N. Y| be sure and
mention this paper.
Repiibjiean Views of Senator Me-
Laurin’s Speech. •
Senator McLaurin of South Car
olina has the sympathy of the re
publican press in a marked de
gree in the course he is pursuing to
secure his re-election to the United
States senate. ~He is upholding
most of the things for which the
republican party stands.
Some of these republican papers
seem to think that Senator Mc-
Laurih wifl^iause a split in. the
southern democracy, arid from
what they say they would be glad
if that resulted from his support of
republican policies. The republican
party, having failed to break up
the solid get a foothold
in any of the southern states by
cultivating the negro vote, hopes
that the senator will open a way
for it to bec®ne popular with the
southern people.
If Senator McLaurin needs any
encourageinSjt in : the course he is
pursuing hag will find rt in
ers.
o hold up his hands,
for the sen&tor they
arge circulation in
a, and therefore what
tp assist hito
the
’ »; j ^ ? ‘if H ‘St
They are doing
ita^n
republican
all they can
Unfortunat
have not a
South Carol
they say is
to any appreciable extent
They make a great deal of the
fact that Senator. McLaurin has
friends all over the south who] will
be glad if he is successful in bis
campaign. They are right in Bay
ing that there are influential
southern men who approve of much
of what the senator says, but these
men believe that they will get the
things which’ they approve through
the democratic party. They don’t
think they will have to go to the
republican party for them. There
is every reason for thinking that
the next democratic national plat
form will be of such a character
that all democrats will be able to
stand upon it. Most probably all,
of the things which kept democrats
apart at the last national election
will not appear in the next dem
ocratic national platform.
Yes, Senator McLaurin has
something of a following in South
Carolina, but he is not going to
split the democratic party in that
state. He is not going to split it
in any state. It will be a great
surprise if he comes near being
re-elected. As already stated not
nearly all of those democrats who
sympathise with him are going to
lift a finger to assist intis re-elec
tion. They will not vote for him.
It will take greater eloquence
than he posesses to win them aw r ay
from the regular democratic or
ganization.—Savannah News.
The CrawfordsvilJe Democrat
says: “Sam Jones has opened a
billingsgate campaign in Savan
nah for the delectation of the dev
il and other kindred spirits. As
is bis habit, he moved hell again
and located it, for convenience of
reference, just outside the city
limits. It seems to be a part of
his theological baggage.”
o Chronicle tells of
a certain young woman who re
cently made a financial hit by
producing; a popular novel. She
was asked what she intended to do
with" the money paid by her pub
lisher. “I don’t know just what
I shall do with all of it,” she re
plied, “but the day I received my
first check I went down town aud
bought two dozen shirt waists.”
The Dublin Dispatch calls on
Crenshaw to resign. It says:
“Chairman T. C. Crenshaw of the
Georgia railroad commission was
once considered a good democrat
and as such he was appointed to a
place on the commission several
years ago, but since he has seen fit
to give publicity to views directly
antagonistic to what is considered
genuine democracy, he should re
sign
jj
Tile |31. Paul Globe says that
the civilized world is gloating over
the report that England’s star is
setting. If this be true the star is
exceedingly reckless—more so than
is England’s sun. England’s sun,
we are assured on good authority,
never sets because it caunot trust
the rascals.-^-Macon Telegraph.
' ;
And now it is announced au-
thoritively that one South Car
olinian has been found who is not
a national senatorial candidate.
—
IS UKE A DELICATE
MUSiCAL INSTRUMENT
-
In good condition she is sweet and lovable,
and sings life’s song on a joyful harmonious
string. Out of order or unstrung, there is
discordance and unhappiness. Just as there
is one key note to all music so there is one key
note to health. A woman might as well try
to fly without wings as to feel well and look
well while the organs that make her a woman
are weak or diseased. She must be healthy
inside or she can’t be healthy outside. There
are thousands of women suffering silently all
over the country. Mistaken modesty urges
their silence. While there is nothing more
admirable than a modest woman, health is
of the first importance. Every other con
sideration should give way before it. Bradi
field’s Female Regulator is a medicine fol
women’s ills. It is
thesafestandquick-
est way to cure leu-
corrhea, failing of
the womb, nervous
ness, headache,
backache and gen
eralweakness. You
will be astonished
at the result, .es
pecially iiyou have
been experiment
ing with other so-
called remedies.
We are not asking
you to try an uncer
tainty. Bradfield’s
Regulator has made
happy thousands of
women. What it
has done for others
it can do for you.
Sold in drug stores
for $1 a bottle.
A free illustrated
book will be sent
to all who write to
THE BRADFIE J
REGULATOR CO.
Atlanta, Go.
§8
I