Newspaper Page Text
r
ssmsppl-...-.
*'»V.
THE GEORGIA CRACKER SATURDAY, AUGUST 31, 1901
V'* 1 V T T
S 1 o w
g rowth
of hair
com e s
fron>lack
of hair
[no
'it is starved,
coming out, gets
thinner and thinner,
bald spots appear,
then actual baT
The
food
you
can
buy
is —
It
feeds
the roots,
starvation, i
hair grOws'ihiSk^'and '
Jong. It cures ^ 1 ^ 1
draff also,
bottle of it on
dressing table.
It always restores
color to faded or gray
hair. Mind, we say
“always.”
91.00 a bottle. All druggists.
“I have found your Hair Vigor
to be the best remedy I have ever
tried for the hair. My hair was
falling out very bad, so I thought
I would try a Dottle of it. I hacL
used only one bottle, and my hair I
stopped falling out, and it is now
real thick and long.” ;
Na2ncy J. Mousttoastle,
July 28,1S98. Yonkers, N. Y.
WrKo tho Bossiop*
He will send you his book on The
* “ * >. Ask him any ques-
about your hair, you
prompt answer free.
T>B. J.C.AYEB,
Lowell,!
Hair and
tion you wish
will receive a
Address,
m
BELIEVES IN CARRIE.
Mrs. H. I, McConnell, who lives
on the outskirts ot the town, has
troubles of her own because of the
demon drink, and Friday of last
week she wrote a long letter to the
chief of police of Atlanta con
cerning her marital woes because
of the aforesaid drink, declaring
in conclusion that she was “a firm
believer in the doctrines preached
by Mrs. Carrie Nation, the Kansas
saloon-smasher, and in her plan of
ridding our land of saloons.”
No doubt Mrs. McConnell has
good grounds for believing as she
does, for it appears that her hus
band is apt to tall by the wayside
whenever there is a saloon handy.
Recently, finding work plenty but
wages low in the queen city, he
hied himself to Atlanta, where
employment is harder to secure
but where wages are higher.
According to the records of the
police department he did not suc
ceed in finding work, but he jdid
find the saloons—of which his wife
pathetically writes, “I was afraid”
—and getting too much of 'the
goods in which they deal under
his shirt, fell—not by the wayside
thi^ time—but into the hands of
one of Atlanta’s dandy coppers,
who locked the work-seeker, from
Gainesville up with the charge
'“drunk and disorderly* ’ on the
blotter opposite j his name. The
next morning, when arraigned be
fore Judge Broyles,McConnell was
unable to pay the fine imposed
^ A. A
KELIC OF 76.
lea
r. S. P. Orr of Athens, writing
the Jackson Herald, mentions
fact that on a recent visit to
.J.W. McCleskey, who liyes
r Jefferson, and whose family
ell known in Hall county, he
shown a sword of exceedingly
e Workmanship, which dates
k to that sanguinary period in
national history that not on-
[“tried men’s souls,* ’ bat the en-
anceof their bodies as well,
m its appearance one would
nrally conclude that the blade
hammered out upon the anvil
ome country blaeksihith; and
it i8 so exquisitely tempered
t it bears an edge almost equal
that of a razor. It is curved
cavalryman’s sabre of today,
ugh it is not quite so long, but
ttle broader. The guard is\ a
row piece of soft iron, rough,
er on account of imperfect
•kmanship, or else by the action
the rust. The handle is of
hhorn, polished smooth so as
he pleasant to the touch, or
9 it is the leg bone of a deer,
his relic of the sanguinary
ggie, which brought independ-
to the colonies, Was captured
the uncle of Mr. J. W. Mc-
H from a Tory during the
olutionary war.
* this old sword had the gift of
h what harrowing tales it
tell of deeds of horror in
lc h it had participated, or of
°f valor in the cause of jus-
tight and truth in the hands
r * ^cCleskey’s ancestor.
a te"bank building.
C. Sanders is' fitting up
room in the rear of the
! hank building, A new roof
and was sent to the stockade^to
sober up and repent. His wife
writes to the chief asking if it is
possible to have, her errant spouse
released, and the chief promised
to keep his eye on the recreant
husband and endeavor to induce
him to return to his Gainesville
home as soon as his sentence ex
pires. ,
SANITARY NEEDS-
T “Gainesville is one of the pret
tiest little cities in ttys south and
has a great domuiercial future in
store for it,” said a visitor to the
city the other day in the hearinj
of the writer, “but, ” he added, “it
was a great surprise to me when I
learned that you had no system of
sewerage. That is something in
the development of the city that
your people have overlooked. It
is no longer a struggling mountain
village, ,but is consolidating anc
putting on metropolitan airs. The
business center is building up sol
idly, and this miniature conges
tion should be protected by the
best of sanitary safeguards. I un
derstanci that you expect to have
an electric street railway sopn
and when it arrives your principa
streets, particularly the place
about the public square, should be
paved with some substantial anc
durable material—vitrified brick
or asphalt. But before that your
city authorities should inaugurate
a system of ui derground sewerage,
even if only a few blocks in. the
center of the city are at first
drained. You have a healthy
town now, with good air and good
water. To pollute both of these
with the execrata. of communal
civilization would bring about an
epidemic of either 'typhoid or ty
phus fever that would do more
monetary damage to the town in
a week—not counting the loss of
precious' human lives—than-would
pay for one of the most elaborate
and costly systems of sanitary
sewerage and paving.”
And there are a mul^tude of
progressive and tar-seeing men in
the city wdaose views on this im
portant—nay, vital 1 —question ex
actly coincide with, those of the
visitor above quoted.
OF HEREDITARY
j BLOOD TAINT.
Scrofula is but a modified form of Blood
Poison and Consumption* , The parent
who is tainted by either will see in the
child the same disease
anifesting itself in
the form of swollen
glands of the neck and
throat, catarrh, weak i
eyes, offensive sores i
and abscesses and of
tentimes white swell
ing—sure signs of
Scrofula. There may
be rid ext^rnalsigqs for _
a long time, for the disease develops slowly
in some cases, but the poison is in the
blood and will break out at the first favor
able opportunity. S. S. S. cures this wast
ing, destructive disease by first purifying
Ibein
§ put on the building and
whole i 8
repaired.
idol
sia Cure
what you eat.
and invigorating the whole system.
J. M. Seals, 115 Public Square, Nash vUle,Tenu-
says: * * Tea years ago my daughter felt and cut
her forehead. From this wound the glands on
the side of her face became swollen and bursted.
Some of the' best", doctors here and elsewhere
attended her without any benefit. We decided
to trv S. S. S., and a few bottles cured her en*
makes new and pure
blood to nourish and
strengthen the body,
and is a positive and
. skfe^dhre for Scrofula.
It overcomes all “forms of blood poison,
whether inherited or acquired, and no
remedy so thoroughly and effectively
cleanses the blood. If you have any
blood trouble, or your child has inherited
some blood taint, take S. S. S. and get
the blood in good condition and prevent
the disease doing further damiage.
Send for our free book and write euf
physicians about your case. We make no
charge whatever for medical advice.
THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA. GA.
BUFORD'S STRIKE.
■ ‘ v
A miniature strike was inaugu
rated last week at Mr. Bona
Allen’s collar factory, in our neigh
boring town of Buford. A demand
was made upon the proprietor by
the union men for the removal of
an obnoxious foreman and was
refused, whereupon twenty-five of
the most experienced workmen
walked out. The strikers claim
that the foreman has mistreated
them in many ways and has bribed
weak members of their union.
Mr. Allen promised that they
should receive better treatment if
they would go to work, t>ut they
refused, giving as their reason that
they feared that the foreman
would seek revenge by discharging
them one by one. . .
A settlement will not likely be
effected, as the foreman is an old
employe and his place cannot be
easily filled, and since one hundred
hands are needed at a new factory
to be started there, and thirty at
East Point, the union men will not
likely press their demands further
than to force the shop on the “un^
fair list,” as they term it.
This neither will cause the shut
ting down of tke factory nor does
it affect the harness department,
which has its separate foreman.
Local union No. 69, leather
workers, of Atlanta, has voted to
sustain the strike of the union
collar makers at Allen’s factory.
Between thirty and forty men are
out to stay until their demands
are granted. This trouble was
brought about by the alleged un
fair treatment given union men
by the foreman in the collar de
partment of Mr. Allen’s factory.
The discharge of the foreman has
been demanded by the union work
ers and refused by Mr. Allen,
hence the strike.
It is reported that all the men
out have jobs at the new factory
just being completed by C. L.
Allen & Co. The strikers have
the sympathy of a large majority
of Buford’s people.
Matters were further complica
ted on Monday last when R. H.
Allen, one of the largest of Bu
ford’s manufacturers, ordered all
collar makers out of his factory.
| f 4<sr
>91
< w ★ *
INDIGESTION
Constipation, Bloating after eating, Heart-
bum. Nervous Weakness. Impurities in the
Blood and every disorder in the Kidneys
or Liver is set right by
• ! ?•
J { .
, j
PRICKLY
. ‘ ASH ,
i
i : '
| :
\
i
i
i
!i : ■
■“BITTERS
; :•
! 1
M THE SYSTEM REGULATOR
| It brightens the eye, steadies the nerves.
I I
sweetens the breath, brings color to the
I I
cheek, creates appetite, makes the body
III 1 ’ 1
strong and the brain active.-
1 1
SOLD AT DRUG STORES,
IIP II
PRICE, SI.OO.
SPECIAL AGENTS, E, E. DIXON & CO.
Trouble between Mr. Allen and I
the union men has been brewing
for some Jkime. ^ ,
Monday’s lockout affects about
men in the collar depart
□lent and is expected to be fol
lowed by developments that wil
open the eyes of some of the peo
ple in Buford. Mr. Allen is wel
liked by the people generally, and
has done a great deal toward
building up our little sister city
but public sentiment is against
bin* in this matter.
TWO BARBER SHOPS.
Lathem Brothers have reopenec
their former barber Shop. This
does not mean they have left the
Arlington—not bv any means. It
simply means they are now run
ning two shops, one under the
management of Mr. Minor Latliem
and the other is controlled by Mr.
are
Lathem. Two barbers
employed in each shop.
J. R. BRANTLEY MOVES.
Mr. J. R. Brantley, who for
some time has been doing business
in Athens but whose family has
seen living in this city, moved to
Athens this week. Our city loses
good citizen, but his many
tnends in this city wish him mpeh
success.
Eminent Kidney
Tke Discoverer of Swamp-Root at Work la
WSm/ His Laboratory.
There is a disease prevailing in this
country most dangerous because so decep
tive. Many sudden deaths are caused by
it—heart disease, pneumonia, heart failure
or apoplexy are often the result of kidney
disease. If kidney trouble is allowed to ad
vance the kidney-poisoned blood will attack
le vital organs, or the kidneys themselves
>reak down and waste away cell by celt
* *hen the richness of the blocKi—the albumen
—leaks out and the sufferer has Bright’s
Disease, the worst form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root the new dis
covery is the true specific for kidney, bladder
and urinary troubles. It has cured thousands
of apparently hopeless cases, after all other
efforts have failed. At druggists in fifty-cent
and dollar sizes. A sample bottle sent free
mail, also a book telling about Swamp-
Root and its wonderful cures. Address
Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. and
nention this paper.
MOVED SAFE.
Mr. J. H. Hunt moved his big
safe from the opera house building'
to the Arlington Hotel, where he
will fit tip his bank, Monday. It
was rolled across the public square
on iron rails.
Don’t be satisfied with temporary re
lief from indigestion. Kodol Dyspep
sia Cure permanently and completely
removes this complaint. It relieves-
permanently because it allows the tired
stomach perfect rest. Dieting won’t-
rest the stomach. Nature receives sup
plies from the food we eat. The sensi
ble way to help the stomach is to use*
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure, which digests
what you eat and can’t help but do you
good. Geo. EL Fuller Drug Co.
Mourners at a funeral at Salem,
Indiana, were attacked by a swarm
of bees and driven from the cema-
tery recently.
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
Probably the most extraordiny
journal in the world is published
weekly in Athens It is written
in verse, even the advertisements.
“Dem Mixed Pills.”
Wallace & Coleman, Solgohachie,.
Ark., write: In regard to Ramon’s
Liver Pills we bought of you will say
that we have never yet handled a pill
that gave better satisfaction. When
our colored customers forget the name
of what they want they call for
Mixed Pills.”
‘Dem
New Orleans is credited with the
only American newspaper having
a Sunday evening edition.
O. O. Buck, Beirne, Ark., says: “I
was troubled with eohstipatibn until I
bought DeWitt’s Little Early Risers.
Since then have been entirely cured of
my old complaint. I recommend them.
Geo. H. Fuller Drug Co.
Immigration for "the 11 months
ending with May increased 46,073.
$100 Reward, $100-
The readers of this paper will he
pleased to learn that there is at least
one dreaded disease that science ha&
been able to cure in all its stages and
that is Catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is
the only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh being
a constitutional disease, requires a con
stitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is taken internally, acting direct
ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces-
of the system, thereby destroying the
foundation of the disease, and giving
the patient strength by building up-
the constitution and assisting nature
in doing its work. The proprietors*
have so much faith in its curative pow
ers, that they offer One Hundred Dol
lars for any case that it fails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address,
F. J: CHENEY & Co., Toledo. O.
Sold by druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
y