The News-herald. (Lawrenceville, Ga.) 1898-1965, November 03, 1899, Image 1

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||E9!!JaSs2s2sSEas3S&s3g3sas3saS®o®aSs(j News-* Herald d i' |*E® Constitution, jj | 12 IwContlie —$1.25. i —(■■■■ .. - - _ rrm mi rm nrzi rr-$> THE OWINNBTT HRKALD, ) THE eawkbn'Sevie®® news, [ Consolidated Jan. 1, 1898. Katabliahed In 1893. ) WITH EVERY SUIT OF CLOTHES costing $5.00 or more A GOOD Stem-Winding Watch is Given Away, Absolutely Free. * * * Removal Sale-= The store house which we now oc cupy is to be sold the first Tuesday in December. In order to reduce our stock, we have marked down all goods to bed-rock prices, and now offer bargains to the trade such as they never have had offer ed them before. Clothing, Shoes, Hats at your own price—almost. Ladies’ Dress Goods cheaper than ever. Dry Goods and Notions at 5-cent cotton prices, though cotton is worth 7c, Groceries, Sugar, Coffee, etc. lower than the cheapest. Our entire stock must be reduced- Come and see us, if you want the best goods at the lowest prices. -*J. P. BYRD & C 0.4- (At J D Spence old stand ) Every customer spending Five Dollars in Cash with us gets a Watch free of,charge. « * * * REFORM! REFORM! Consultation Held and the Following Resolutions Adopted: Resolved 1 st, That from this date we sell all goods for Spot Cash or its equivalent in produce. Resolved 2nd. That we keep the very best grade of goods we can buy for the money. Resolved 3rd, That we sell goods as cheap as anybody can le gitimately sell the same grade of goods- Resolved 4th, That we pay the highest market price for all coun try produce. Resolved sth, That we guarantee to do everything we say that we do and that is to give satisfaction or return money. We have a great big store full of good new goods to sell on above conditions. ClOthing -125 Men’s Suits from $2 75 to sl3 50 50 Youth’s and Boy’s Suits from ... 175 to 800 15 dozen Pants and Overalls 25 cents to 450 Shoes! Shoes! 1500 pairs and all good shoes. We do not buy the cheap, shoddy kind. Our Calf and Vici Shoes, lined throughout with calf skin, are the best shoes ever offered for $3 50. Farmers and everybody that do out-door work during the winter should see us and get the best shoes for winter. Our Children’s Shoes may seem high, but they are the best and the cheapest after all. Notions! Notions! This line includes Dress Shirts, Work Shirts, Negligee Shirts, Undershirts, Drawers, Suspenders, Collars, Cuff's, Ties, Hosiery, Union Suits, Ladies’ Undervests, Gloves and all goods of this class. 25 dozen Dress, Negligee and Work Shirts from 25 cents to $1 00 5 dozen suits Men’s Underwear from 90c to $2 00 Undershirts from 25c to $1 00. Ladips’ Cotton Underveste 25 and 50 cents. Ladies’ All Wool Undervests 75 cents. Children’s Union Suits, good at 85 cents. Jeans and Domestics— . We carry the very best in this line, and advise everybody needing these goods to come quick before we have to advance the price. We quote some of our many bargains below. 30 balls No. 1 Thread lOcts. Men's Socks, 3!bs to the doz., 10c pair. Goat’s Spool Cotton, 45c dozen. The best 10c children’s hose in Geor gia, 3 pairs for 25ct,s. White Money Tobacco, 30c pound Home Nine Twist “ 33c “ Our Weapon “ 33c “ Annie Jones No. 1 “ 40c “ All other brands of Tobacco propor tionately cheap. We cannot quote prices on everything but invite everybody to come and see us. Bring us your Barter. We will pay the highest market price for it. Remember, we guarantee satisfaction or money refunded. .RUTLEDGE & CLOWER’S SPOT CASH STORE, Lawrenceville, Ga. THE NEWS-HERALD. Hats— We are the hatters of Lawrenceville, and our fall stock of Hats and Caps, made especially for us, are now coming in, and when they are all in stock we can show the most up-to-date line in the city. We will have anything you need in Hats and Caps. Dress Goods— We have a good stock of Fall Calicoes, Outings and Staple Dress Goods which we will sell as cheap as anybody. Ladies’ Capes— We have added Ladies’ Capes to our stock this season, and have a nice line of them from $1 25 to $4 50. Trunks and Valises— We have a nice stock of Trunks and Valises, which we wili sell very cheap. Valises 25 cents to SIOO. Trunks 75 cents to $5. Stoves! Stoves! We hit them heavy before they went up so high. 20 No. C, 7 and 8 Stoves from $7 00 to sl3 50. We sell Bagging and Ties, Farmer’s Friend Plow Stocks, and a general line of Hardware. Groceries, Tobacco, Snuff and Cigars! This de partment is full of the best, and at prices to meet all competition. Four 10c cans Railroad Snuff 25c Four 5c cans Railroad Snuff 15c. 2 pounds Keg Soda sc. (i pounds best Package Soda 25c. 6 5c pck’s.Soda and 6 teaspoons 25c. 3 10c pek’s' and 3 tablespoons 250. 2 lbs. Black Pepper 25c. 40c worth of Toilet Soap for 25c. 1% lbs Bar Soap for sc. 0 lbs choice Parched Coffee for SI,OO. 11 lbs good Green Coffee SI.OO. LAWRENCEVILLE, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3. 1809. AGAINST A DISPENSARY. - ‘ *" ~2 ' i Lcxomni, Ga., Oct. 23, 1899. Editor News-Herald —The let ter of my distinguished friend, Mr. Brand, in yonr last issue was amusiug indeed. In it he did not offer any new excuses that had any bearing whatever upoD the dispensary question, and the cause which he advocates would have been utterly better off had he not written it. It clearly shows that his plans had been frustrated, and that he was really mad about it; so mad that he made no excuse- to conceal his madness. But before he finishes his letter he becomes more calm, and decides to resort to a little schemeing, a little dip.- lomacy, and offers to give me the control or right of all the rest of the county, allow me to run a dis pensary in every district, and a blind tigo, too, if I wish (provi ding, of course, that I only hush and give him the right of Law reuceville). In the name of com mon sense, I ask, does this seem like the gentleman really wishes to put down the illegal traffic in whisky, or does it not seom that he, personally, wants a dispensary in Lawrenceville and is willing to do almost any thing or any way to get it, even to the promise that I may operate a blind tige (with out molestation, of course) in ev ery district, if I choose ? He tries to make it appear that I am al ready in the blind tige business; but did he? No. He did not give a single reason for what he said, nor can he. There was not a single word in my letter to which lie refers to sustain him. One thing the gentleman did do though : He promised me that I could operate one in every district in the county. In my letter I did not express myself upon blind ti gers, as they were not the question under consideration. Of.' ,e they are now in violation of thp law, but this is not the question at issue. Everybody but Mr Brand understood what I said about blind tigers, and I believe he did too, but he, like a drowning man, is ready to “grab at every straw',” and tries to construe my letter to mean that I am in sym pathy with the blind tigers. This he does to try to put. his state ments upon an equal plane with mine. One thing my friend did do: He gave us a new quality to a mule, that is that it could “blow both cold and hot at the same breath.” This alone shows that he would be well qualified, and is entitled to the position of Presi dent of the Lawrenceville “Bone Yard.” In this he would doubt less find the place for which he is best suited, and might acquit him self with great distinction. An other fact the gentleman shows to us, the fact that his ideas are all borrowed, borrowed from Athens, and the keeper of the Athens dis pensary. In this connection he al so gave us a lot of outside news, for which we, as well as the Edit or, should feel very grateful. The fact that he has sent his children to Athens to school, has been there himself to commencements, saw drinking and fighting, saw' a man killed, saw 100 (?) knives and pis tols drawn, etc. All this, indeed, is news to us. It sounds more than anything else like the narra tion of a child to its mother of what it has seen on its first visit to a city. And for this qualifica tion my friend, in addition to his dutios as President of the “Bone Y'ord,” might also write a few dots for some backwoods periodical. The idea of a “leading member of the church” conducting the dis pensary at Athens! Bah! How absurd 1 It would have been bet ter for the gentleman if he had left this statement unmade. It only shows bis conception of what it requires to be a “leading mem ber of the church.” No doubt by his frequent visits to the Athens dispensary and numerous consul tations with its keeper, the gentle man has discovered that there is money in the business for some one if the thing be properly work ed. I imagine that the gentleman and this “leading church mem ber” (?) who keeps the Athens dispensary are fast friends, and that this Atheus man has ex plained the whole thing to him, and shown him just how to get the mouey out of it. Why did not the gentleman refer me to some one else in Athens besides the keeper of the dispensary ? Of course the keeper thinks it a good thing. He is one of the “clan,” and it gives him a good easy posi tion, plenty of money and what whisky he wants to driuk. We would not expect him to not praise it. And there are two institutions in Athens that could buy out Gwinnett county ? Well, this is indeed more news; but it does not tend to prove the merits of the dispensary in any manner whatev er. I wonder if these institutions Remarkable Rescue. Mrs, Michael Curtain, Plainfield, 111., makes th’e statement, that she caught cold, which settled on her lungs; she was treated for a month by her family physician, but grew' wor«e. He told her she was a hopeless victim of con sumption and that no medicine could cure tier. Her druggists suggested Dr. Kings New Discovery for Consump tion, she bought a bottle and to her de light found herself benefited from first dose. She continued its use and after taking six bottles, found herself sound and well, now she does hdr own house work, and is as well as she ever was.— Free trial bottles of this Great Discov ery at A. M. Winn & Son Drug Store. Only 50 cents and $l,O, every bottle guaranteed. are not that school und that dis pensary he visited ? They must be, and that “leading church mem ber who keeps that dispensary” told him so, and that is how he came to know. Supposing that this statement regarding these two institutions be true, and that it has a bearing upon the question at issue, think then, from whom these institution,which have grown to such enormous proportions, con tracted all this wealth. Think how much they have impoverished the surrounding country. They have contracted all this wealth in to one heap, which, by nature, should belong to the citizens of the SJ 'rounding country. Do we wanton institution .hat. will :lra». all our wealth from the surround ing country into the city and build it up at the 1 expense of the farmers and other smarter towns less for tunate ? The people will answer in one voice, “No. ” Of course my friend is acquainted no farther than Athens and Clark county; were he, I would kindly call his attention to the situation in South Carolina, the origin and home of the dispensary, Has it reduced the taxeß there ? No. Hus it stopped the illegal traffic in whis ky, and put down lawlessness there in any manner whatever’ No. There is never a day but what we read ot some riot there caused by the infamous dispensary system. Think for a moment of all the dis gusting scandals we have hoard of connected with the dispensary in South Carolina. This alone should be enough to forever turn anyone against it. Do the better people of South Carolina favor the dis pensary ? 1 say emphatically, No. They look upon it as a scourge, a blot upon the fair name of their state, and they are trying every way they can to get rid of it. But it is hard to get rid of, and so would one be here, were it over es tablished. I speak of the condi tion in South Carolina from per sonal observation, and, to substan tiate what 1 have said about it, I refer to any leading citizen of that state, except Ben Tillman or some other fellc w who has a “finger in the pie.” The people there were mislead and fooled into it. and now they find it quite a hard mat ter to get out of it. Let’s even suppose that the dispensary would pay all the taxes of the county, I will ask the gentleman who would pay thpm after all ? Would the peopl<*not have to pay them indi rectly, anyway ? Would a dispen sary really lessen our taxes, that is, lessen the amount required to run the county government ? Not one cent. It would increase it, from the fact that it would in crease the number of positions and salaries to be paid, and the taxes collected in this manner would fall most heavily upon the unfortu nate, and take the bread out of the mouths of many helpless wo men and children, and they would thus become the real bearers of | our taxation. There must be enough taxes paid, either directly or indirectly, to run the govern ment; then why mix this nuisance into it ? It would only serve as a kind of slot-machine to collect the taxes, but the people would have to fill this slot anyway, and es p3cially those who would he the loas.t able to bear it. I will ad mit that it might complicate the tax system a little so that the peo ple might not understand quite so much about it, but they would have the taxes to pay anyway, be sides being forever compelled, in addition, to tolerate this curse. Have the people of Gwinnett comi ty ever refused to pay their taxes ? No. They are honest and sensible. They realize that a tax must be paid and they are willing to pay it, pay it directly, in a way they will understand it. The only thing they demand is, to know for what purposes these taxes go, that they are not unnecessarially ex pended, and then they are perfect ly willing to pay them, and there is no use to resort to tricks and schemes to get them to do it. Then why the dispensary ? There is no good reason for it under the Heav ens. Nothing to justify it except to please the whims of the gentle man who holds Athens and that “leading church member” (who is a bar-tender) in such wonder ful admiration that he is willing to do anything, even to the adop tion of their worst institutions and practices in mimickry of them, and for whatever else there might be in it for him. I shall de sist from furthei argument with the gentleman upon this question, as the sentiment of the county is overwhelmingly against the dis pensary, and there is no danger whatever of us haviugit. I should like, however, to convince him that he is wrong, but any attempt at QUESTION ANSWERED. Yes, August Flour still has the largest, sale of any medicine in the civilized world. Your mothers and grandmoth ers never thought of using anything else for Indigestion or Biliousness Doctors were scarce, and they seldom beared of Appendedtis, Nervous Pros tration or Heart Failure, etc They used August Flower to clean out the system and stop fermentation of undi gested food, regulate the action of the liver, stimulate the nervous and organ ic action of the system, and that is all they took when feeling dull and bad with headaches and other aches You only need a few doses of Green’s Au gust, Flower, in liquid form, to make you satisfied there is nothing serious the matter with you. Sample bottles at liagweli Drug Store, I.awreneevill, R. | O. Medloek, Norcross, Smit h & Harris, I Suwanee. this would no doubt be futile, as his mind seems to he sot. and it is very probable that no is one of those persons who never changes his mind. Very respectfully, S, E McDaniel. Mr. Editor; —We do not hesi tate to ask space in The News-Her ald to discuss briefly the subject of a dispensary, as a place for the legal sale of whisky. In the first place, I desire to sav that I do not want to be per sonal, or to hurt any one’s feel ing. 1 wish to be perfectly fair and liberal. The Arst dionensav" "i e nlace into at Athens, Da. Those who originated the plans for a dispensary were both ingenious and engenious gentlemen. They had to agree upon a plan of decep tion! Time and space will not per mit of my entering into a full his tory of this the first dispensary as a place for the leftal sale of liquor. Those gentlemen who had the plans in their hands for a place where liquors could be sold legal ly, knew full well that it would never do to christen this young in fant, which was conceived in sin and to be brought forth in iniqui ty, by its proper name, therefore, the Devil, who i$ always on the alert, comes to his oohorts and says, “It will nevdt do to call thip place a barroom. % These people will see that it is the same old thing. You must give it a better name, and I will suggest, as these people have been getting their medicine and their etc. at the drug stores recently, that vou had better call it a ‘Dispensary.’” Y'ws, a dispensary. A place for the devil’s delivery of the broth of hell. A place to manufacture drunkards, liars, gamblers, pick pockets, thieves, adulterers, etc. A place to make hypocrites. A place where all the little devils can go and cram themselves chug full of the broth of dissension, and then go out into this bright, beau tiful earth and scatter seed of dis cord and fill whole communities with broils and turmoils, the fruit of which is the poor house, prison and the gallows, We object to the sale of whisky, both legal and illegal, because we believe it to be wrong. We believe it to be wrong because we believe that the Bible condemns it. VV'e believe the Bi ble condemns it because it is wrong. We believe that the Bible was writ ten by inspiration, therefore, it is true We believe that we are commanded not to put the bottle to our brother’s or our neighbor’s mouth. We believe that no drun kard will enter the Kingdom of Heaven- We believe it, therefore, to be wrong for any individual to furnish the material to make a drunkard, and thereby shut him out, or to lessen his chances to en ter the Kingdom of Heaven. We I believe that if it is wrong for an in dividual to engage in the nefari ous business of Belling whisky,that it is wrong, yes, a greater wrong, for the state government to sell it. Why a greater wrong ? Simply because she is not only guilty of all the wrongs committed by the individual, but steps in with her great iron arm, and lays hold of the poor criminal that she has made, and says to him, “Sir, you had no right to get drunk and go out to that church arid disturb that congregation; you had no right to go to your home and curse and abuse her whom you had sworn to love, cherish and protect. ” We grant that these propositions are true; but who is responsible for this state of affairs ? The person who sold him the liquor, if he is a blind tiger. And the whole people if sold by the state or its authori ties. You ask me if I favor the blind tiger. No, Ido not, but I do think they are preferrable to the dispensary. You say “Yes, but the tige is au illegal thing.” That is true, but it is not go much the illegal saie that we object to as the wrong that grows out of tiie sale. The object of both blind ti ger and dispensary are the same. The sole object of both is money, and it matters but little how it is obtained. We have the one in a great abundance, and I am aston ished that some of our great men and leading citizens want the oth er Wo are told by Uncle Burt Brand how to solve the blind tiger question. He tells us to kill the blind tiger with the dispensary. The remedy is worse than the dis ease. lam afraid Uncle Burt does not read his Bible enough. “A house divided against itself cauuot stand.” So if Satan’s kingdom was divided it could not stand. Now, let me tell you something, Mr. Brand, the devil is no fool. The man who is engaged in the sale of liquor either legally or il legally, is working for the Devil. And is taught by his father, the devil, that his business cannot flourish among gentlemen, honest, sincere and consecrated Christians, therefore his first work must be to drag down the gentleman to the level and often below the brute creation. He must make liars of Bismarck’s Iron Nerve Was the result of his splendid health. Indomitable will and tremen dous energy are not found where Stom ach, Liver, Kidneys and Bowels are out of order. If you want these quali ties and the success they bring, use Dr. King’s New Life Pills. They de velop every power of brain and bodya Only 25c at A. M. Winn and Son’s dm store. LATEST STYLES I2ST -*Fall Millinery Goods*- Just received by MISS HATTIE MELTON. The ladies of Gwinnett county are invited to call ori me before buying their Fall and Winter Hats, as I have a very pretty line of these goods to show them. Respectfully, Miss Hattie Melton, : GkA.. his customers; he must drag down the weak-kneed brother or member of the church to the low standard of the hypocrite. Some tell us that the dispensary will save our young men from shame and ruin. God deliver us from such a salvation. If our boys are ever saved it will be by the grace of Almighty God, and not by any of the works of the devil. I am afraid that very many are deceived on this Dispensary ques tion, and are honest, too. Let me beg you, be not deceived. Remem ber the fable of the spider and the fly. The dispensary act is only a dodge, a stumbling block, an ob stacle put in the way of the tem perance cause, to check if possible its wonderful success Do you | object tc the blind tiger ? If so, how can you favor the dispensary ? The object, I repeat, is the same, and the same spirit that predomi nates over the one, presides over the other. Mr. Brand tells us if we had any respect for our labor or our pock et-book, to vote for a dispensary. My friend, I love the fruit of my labor, and I kindly think that I love my pocket-book, but I’m free to confess that I love the etornal interest of my children and my neighbors’ children far superior to either. I deny the proposition that a dispensary will lessen taxa tion. In fact, ail information on thiß question, obtained from the most intelligent sources, go to prove the falacy of such a proposi tion. I agree with yon that taxes are continuously growing, and I think iiecessarially so, and that la bor is becoming more and more uncertain year by year. But I beg to differ from you in the remedy. I think that a dispensary would naturally increase taxation and diminish the means with which to pay not only the taxes, but debts generally. It would increase the taxes by producing more crimi nals, and consequently giving the courts more work to do, and nec essarially costing more money to run them. It would diminish the means for paying debts by furnish ing more inducements and better facilities for drinking. The dis turbance in the labor of Gwinnett county today is largely attributa ble to the work of the illicit man ufacture and saie of whisky. But Mr. Brand cites us to the dispensary in Athens to prove his position. All that he says about the wealth, education and religion, I am glad to say, is no doubt true, but I deny that the dispensary has anything to do with the prosperity of these things. In fact, its great factor is opposed to religion and education, and also to wealth,when he cannot manipulate it to his own interest. What he says about the courts and the grand jury is no doubt true, but he leaves us to draw our own conclusions as to the cause. He simply gives the statement of affairs, etc. . As to the taxes, I’m prepared to Btate positively they have in creased. As to minors getting whisky, I can say positively that I have seen them drunk in Athens since the dispensary was opened. I can not say with any mathematical precision how many I have seen or how much trouble, but can say that during the prohibition pe riod, which was between the closing of tho barrooms and the opening up of the dispensary, that peace and prosperity reigned supreme. Men who were never known to go to Athens and return home sober broke the record at thiß time and brought home the little necessaries bought with money usually spent for whisky, and when the dispensary was opened up “the hog returned to his wallowing place.” The idea that a minor can’t get DOES IT PAY TO BUY CHEAP ? A cheap remedy for coughs and colds is all right, but you want something that will relieve and cure the more se vere and dangerous results of tbroui and lung troubles. What shall you do? Go to a warmer and more regular cli mate ? Yes, if possible. If not possi ble for you, then in either case take the only remedy that has been introduced in all civilized countries with success in severe throat and lung troubles, “Boschee’s German Syrup.” It not only heels and stimulates the tissues to destroy the germ disease, but allays iuflamation. causes easy expectoration, gives a good night’s rest, and cures the patient. Try one bottle. Recom mended many years by all druggists in the world. Sample bottles at Bagwell Drug Store, Lawrenoeville, Smith <£ Harris, Suwanee, R. O. Medlock, Nor cross. News-Herald % |*Er Journal, weekly, | Only $1.25. -57“'! O - ifO r-i Oir; RrJ On) ri Kti VOL. VII—NO 2 whisky from a dispensary is pre posterous. Any minor old enough to be untied from his mother’s apron string can get whisky of the Athens dispensary or any other dispensary. They can get it more easily from a dispensary than from a blind tiger, for the tiger is hid, and the dispensary stands wide open and savs to every one, “if you want whisky just step in. If you are a minor, just get some trifling white man or dirty negro to gat it for you.” Until Mr. Brand explains the difference of the physiological effect of dis pensary liquor bought at Athens and blind tiger liquor bought at Lawrenceville, we will think it has but the one and same effect, and that when men get drunk with like passions the result will be the same in Clarke county as it is in Gwinnett. No experiment nec essary to convince us, It iB a self evident 'act. Now, in conclusion, I want to say to Mr. Brand, with all frank ness, with no blame attached to him either, that it is not the cus tom of the Baptist church to al low her members to engage,in any immoral conduct without discip ling them, especially for selling liquor. We are not ashamed of the record of our denomination. We believe that we voice the heart and sentiment of every true Chris tian of whatsoever denomination when we condemn the sale of liquor as being uuohristian. As I understand it, under a compro mise of the whisky question in Athens, the First Baptist church permitted one of her members, Mr. Macon Johnston, to take the management of the Athens dis pensary. Now, those who are in formed know that the first Bap tist church has the right to con trol her own body and permit her members to do as they please, and no other church in the association has the right to interfere. The Sarepta association, to which the Athens church belongs, also has rights that she can and will main tain. At her last session, held a few weeks ago at Maysville, she declared these rights and princi ples, und thp First Baptist church, like a good and dutiful child, cheerfully submitted, and it is no longer “Brother Johnson” or it is “goodby to the dispensary” with Mr, Johnson, So hereafter you will have to get up new reference, or not charge the Baptist denomi nation with such inconsistency Thank you, Mr. Editor, for your very great courtesy. 1 am, respectfully. E. G. WARB. Story of a Slave. To be bound hand and foot for years by the chains of disease is the worst form of slavery. George D. Williams, of Manchester, Mich., tells how such a slave was made free. He says: “My wife has been so helpless for five years that she could not turn over in bed alone. After using two bottles of Elec tric Bitters, she is wonderfully im proAed and able to do her own work. ” This supreme remedy for female dis eases quickly cures nervousness, sleep lessness, melancholy, headache, back acee. fainting and dizzy spells. This miracle working medicine is a godsend toweak, sickly, run down people. Ev ery botsle guaranteed. Only 5 cents. Bold by A. M. Winn & Son, Druggists. Ail old Hall county negro who is equally short ou history and geog raphy, was asked: “Who was the first governor of Georgia,ai.d where are his remains ?” He replied: “George Washington, an’him now remains iu heben.” Mr. T. Williams, Senoia, Ga,, writes: For many years my family has used in cases of biliousness, costiveness, indi gestion, sick headache and sour stom ach, Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medi cine, which, in my opinion, is over 50 per cent stronger and belter than Zei liii’s Regulator, which i have used. A baboon in San Francisco re cently drank seme whigky, and then proceeded to smash the mir rors. That is another missing link between the baboon and man. As a clue, if an honest mirror is held up before a man he will smash it if he can. It will not be a surprise to any who are at all familiar with the good qualities of Chamberlain’6 Cough Remedy, to know that peo ple everywhere take pleasure in re lating their experience iu the use of that splendid medicine and in telling of the benefit they have re ceived from it, of bad colds it has cured, of threatened attacks of pneumonia it has averted and of the children it has saved from at tacksof croup andwhooping cough. It is a grand, good medicine. For sale by Bagwell Drug Co.