Newspaper Page Text
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION' ATLANTA,-GAn TUESDAY JUNE 1$ I88g
THROUGHDIXIE
WHATTHl SOUTHERN FOLKS ARE
SAVING AND DOINO.
SUM Or >U Sea-la-Lsw-a Sealeae bw Kilts
Ala Jtlsel-Ao SSed >"«*PM With Aaetksr
Hull wia-luo Blmulf-A Conzrssi-
mia ns.lfna-rremtnent Status.
Florida.
A mocmi council of tbo Episcopal church bu I
iKWOlnseaston twodays of FoutkiuBUbop Elect 1
Weed, of
administration.
oror her destinies and the affairs of the homo
government.
The convention made rapid work with the
rest of Its nominations.
Ail the present officials were renominated.
£ 9: lAOfden, secretary of state; T. N. He.
Clellan, attorney general; F. H. Smith, treas
urer; 8. Palmer, superintendent of edncstlon;
M. C. Burke, auditor. The present supreme
bench—G. W. Stone, chief Justice, and David
Ciopton and B. N. Somerville, associates. The
contest between Chief Justice Stone and J. I.
Heflin was very close. There was no oppoef
tfon to the associates.
Besolutiona were adopted indorsing Pros!-
dent Cleveland's administration and the state
Hioalsslppl.
horn Meridian. Mbs., says' The elec- ,
leased offqatctiy. Tbs county outside
give s majortty of ltein favor of Iota!
re wt« only one voting place in Ibe
. _en the electloo closed fully five bun- |
1 voters bad failed deposit their ballots, befog
unable to teach the polls.
Texas.
Otangs Terrell and Wiles Henderson were
tuiitors of the same woman, Terrell
called at 9 o'clock Monday night and found
Uendenon visiting, and immediately shot
him In the breast and the lady in the leg. Be-
loading his pistol he laid down on a lied in
the front room of the honse In which he had
Just shot the two persons, announcing his in
tention to die there. Shortly afterwards City
Marshal Kellar walked Into the room and or
dered Terrell to throw up his bands. Be did
ao, bnt shot at Keller. At the same time, Kelt
ler riddled Terrell with bullets, killing him
Instantly,
North Carolina.
GEORGIA NEWS.
What the People Throughout th# state are
Raying and Doing.
A citizen of Millen found a coach whip snake
six feet long under the bead of bis bed the
other day. Be killed it.
Messrs. C. P. Bansell, J. W. Bold and W. n.
Mitchell, of Thomasvllle, visited Iamonla lake
Wednesday, and captured alive an alligator
that measured tbireeen feet. The monster
"gator” was run out of his bed and captured
on the banks of the lake.
In 1870, it is said that only two bales oi
cotton were marketed In Oafnesvltie. The
season following there were eight. The county
now produces from .1,500 to 4,000 bales, and
seven or eight thousand are sold In Gaines
ville annually.
j large crop
in Houston next fall,barring providential hin
drances. The area plantedin gronnd pees is
also extensive, and a larger crap of sugar cane
... _ —- "in
n , . _ . I and syrup than usual Is In prospective. With
W. C. Cuthbortaon, of Charlotte, Thursday, I a fair yield, the corn crop will be abundant
Was shot through the heart and killed by I for home use, and the prospect for a good ba-
*, Cyrus Iaing, a young dry goods | con crop is One.
A few days since, Master T,uther Morgtn
killed a queer reptile neat Mlehell’a mill in
Americus. It was something like an eel, be
ing four feet and one inch long, and had lour
small legs. The reptile had pretty good sized
teeth ana was ready to defend Itself, biting
viciously at everything that touched it. It
was about four or Are inches in elrcumferenco,
and was devoid of Aus of any kind, although
it belonged to the water.
art and killed by
. . , a young dry goods
clerk. Two years ago Long married Cnthbert-
non’s daughter, but the match was ao bitterly ‘
opposed by the girl’s fitther that the couple
ran away and were married. Since then Hr.
Cuthbertson has made repeated threats to kill
lent, Long's baby was sick last week, and
Cutbberlson T s wife went to see It. When she
returned Cnthberteon gave her a brutal beat
ing, and would probably hare killed her hut
far the Interference of neighbors. This week
Cuthbertson made threats to kill long, and
sent him word that ho intended to shoot him
on sight. This afternoon, at long was stand
ing in Taylor's store, on Trade street, Catb-
bertun approached, whan Long drew his pis
tol and shot him dsad.
shot by Mr. Ball two weeks ago while bur
glarizing his honse is dead. Mr. Ball is said
to have been Justified in shooting him, as he
was In the house, and running upon him when
he shot him.
Early in the afternoon one day not long ago,
whllo three of Ouyton’s young ladles were
taking their evening walk, they discovered a
possum near the tosrn line. They concluded
to give him a race or a battle, and arming
themselves with sticks charged upon him ana
continued the fire until he was entirely dead
Sumter Nichole the man who killed Bill
Jordan in Baker county, in 1884, got off the
train at Leary, last Monday evening, and made
his way to the home of Mr. Thomas Bobcrson,
to whom he surrendered. Hr. Bobcrson car
ried Nichols to Newton and he is now in Jail
at that place. The governor bad offered $150
reward for Nichols’ arrestahd Mr. Bobcrson, be
ing the arresting party, will get that
amonntftom the state, and will probably give
Nichols the benefit of it in employing counsel
for his defence.
At
preaching on Sunday morning In Carters
vllle Bev. Sam Jones stated that Tf the town
would purchase five or six acres of land and
have it Incorporated, he would agree to have a
fifteen-hundred-dollar shingle-roofed abed
placed over It. A committee was appointed to
I act immediately towards the purchaie of the
land, and the shed will be erected in time for
tho annual bush-harbor meotingof 188(1. This
enclosure, when completed, will comfortably!
[ teat several thousand. j
-—.—,—- when Vhe eloped" I Savannah was excited Thuredy ....
r husband and nine children, and I the report of a serious disaster to osaseneor
from the guilty pair were loWI tralnfcoM, from AUanta. dueln i.Tnn.h
at six o’clock. Inquiry developed the follow
ing. When near Rogers, No. 81, about haif
pest two o'clock, tha train running at regular
ipeed, the engine struck an obstruction and
was thrown from the track, dragging three
cars, and smashing things generally. Engi
neer W. n. Pendergrast and Fireman Charles
Maddox Jumped as the englae was turning
over. Both were badly scalded. The
engineer was seriously braised, but
Maddox was killed, his head fearfhliy mashed
and his body scalded. Tho passengers were
uninjured but badly shaken up. A special
train was sent to the scene, and the mails and
passengers wore transferred, also the engineer
and the body of Maddox. The train reached
here at ten o'clock. Prendcrgrast was sent
Tho eltlsens of Murfresboro were very <naeh
shocked on Saturday morning by the an-
town last night." It tamed out
Judge
Mall W. Allen was banged In effigy in tho
court house yard between tbehoursofll and 1
o'clock. No one knows who did It. As Mr.
Joe Nelson went to breakfast at the Miles
bouse ho passed through the court house yard
and saw a figure hanging to the frame of the
eastern side of the house. On the body was a
caul Inscribed:
“Judge Matt Allen—hung by his friends’’
Various opinions are expressed about the
afiklr. At first everybody teemed to treat the
whole matter as a Joke, but sentiment was
won teemed to sober and take shape. Judge
Allen's friends denounce his treatment at an
outrage. Tho opinion Is that the hanging was
done by tho friends of Attorney-General
■Vaahington, who were very Indignant Tester-
“ On the other band It Is retorted‘that
home under a physician, and will recover.
Maddox was buried this evening. Be was a
worthy young man well thought of. The ac
cident was occasioned by miscreants wedging
heavy pieces of timber between the frag of the
switch, elevating the rail. Every effort will
day. vu anooeoir osnu is is rctortoa ztnsi | ■« | wqw„w«s cue ran. r.very i
Mr. Washington's Mends would not have ta- I m *d* to apprehend the scoundrel,
■Mir “ . — — . .
. . ...angeal
ington himself was thoroughly satisfied. What
‘ s abouf
A portion of Bawley springs, l
ml Its west oi Harrisonburg was burned between
8 and 5 o'clock Thursday morning. The main
building, known as the Virginia honse, tho
Walter Damp, who lives in Campbell county,
the young man who twd or three
months ago, carried one of hts father's mules
to Atlanta and attempted to sell It, and was
there arrested and lodged In the station house,
an account of which was published in Tm;
CoitKTiTt'Tiojv at tho time it occurred, on the
Igbt of the 4tb, again entered his father’s lot
id carried off a mule with the intention of
Washington house, the dining room, kitchen, I {*» ass mpturri near Palmetto,
bakery and store Loose, with all their farnl* I f* rr ., to baltburn, and was adjudged a
ture, were totally destroyed. Tha Baltimore I l""*! 10 “ d wl 1 be wn * *° Mltledgavllle In a
’’ST Vi f trtd \ Tk *. flre U wPPoaad to have
originated In the kitchen or bakery. The In-
suranre aggregates In,000, placed at follows. I
1 ortamoun, Ya- company, $1,500; Georgia
000; Virginia Fire
AsroclaUon, Philadelphia. $1,750; Pham lx,
Brooklyn, N. Y„ $1,000; Virginia Fin ami
Mt.750- The Insurance was upon all
the buildings, including tha ona loft standing.
The lota is estimated at $180,000. The spring
have keen opened Thursday. The
rebnllt this season. The
few days.
Tuesday, at Savannah, a thunder storm
came up, and in tho midst of quite a heavy
rain the lightning flashed and strnck around
quite lively. A negro man working over tho
river at Vinson's, was strnck and killed by
the lightning.
i lota is estimated at $1$0,
were to bare bean
buildings will not be
management will open tho springs and receive
^manjiJuMtsasthonmalnlnibullding will
Grier Is In Athens, having served his sen-
ence is out, lookln
not hurt him mm
tence is out, looking 'like hit confinement hat
ich, Grior was tent up for
South Carolina.
J. Culsec, of Edgefield county, hung himself
botvia* today, alter a quarrel with one of his la-
aSsfettS’aSSV ds;
s , . l ?ihbij2s; , Stf^ 0, “ , * b,u,ra, " ,,r ' u " jju *
dlanutlng the subject,
indldaiet have been
«imbutejSSs Y. LFapa.«
Jra£
*SSu&SJtS **“ ’*'*■ <* understood
wllfuot ffce ooMresa*’^ 1 * * ttl * tc «<*
Alabama.
Tie democratic convention has nominated
Boa. Tom Bear, of Greensboro, for governor
of Alabama. The nomination vu made on
Ue thirtieth ballot, the convention haring
two days. The contest was
faB, but heated from the outset, and enthusi
asm ren al fever heat. The excitement eras
larger than on any similar occasion In this
stale since the war. MrKleroy withdrew yea-
terday, hut Dawson and Clayton remained
and reft sod to withdrew to the last.
The amnlnatlon of Torn Seay over
two strong men who hare grown old In
Pol lies, marks an event that hat no parallel
[a Alabama's history. It Is a glorious triumph
for cue and honorable defeat ftr three. Seay
{* under forty, and yonager
th ,* n Mtber Dawson oK'liy-
ton. b«y ent„mi ih. convention with a
•mailer vote than either of his oppo
nents, except McKleray. He rained
gradually.but surely,and was finally nominal-
^.’■•“Wfibjrentret over the two ram sluing
opponents. Oae by one tha county delega-
&&&&&"» *•**■ ,°° lbs thirtieth
*“ S* “d ***•« ‘A* noeeiaa.
sir! 7™ , A committee was
and on his arrival he ac
cepted the high hooor la a graceful speech.
Hmv*\ T u?** 'f **•coufeierste
brSJy “* eadpUnter,
ssaeSi« , »-aa3j I ai
rei wniktage, but by people's leva and Snfiuft
A"drsswf?£»S
•StfSSiSSS&SiSs
nos nurt nim much. Grier was sent up for
opening a letter belonging to a young lady,
while route agent on the O. J. and B. railroad.
It is reported that O. W. Bolden, who mar-
sled Iola Moomang, of Bavannah, a girl of
respectable Parents, In October, 1881, has been
arrested and Is In lail at Tampa, Fla, for big-
smy. It appears that ha now has three wives
living, one In Tampa, the one he married hen,
and who now lives In Orlando, Fla., whare ha
deserted her, and one In New York. A fourth
wife, a pretty young girl of Gainesville, Fla.,
died recently. The seonndrel has been oper-
atiuR south as an artesian well contractor. Be
wlU bo vigorously prosecuted by hU Bavannah
Isabella Honey, under sentence of life in
the penitentiary, escaped from jail at Fort
Gaines,Thursday,She was confined in the room
for female prisoners which has no steel cage,
and she worked a hole through the plastering
shove and let herself down by means or
blankets.
Mr. Thomas Imngino, of Campbell county,
baa five gums cut from one tree which hold
respectively 37,33,30, 18 and 17 bntbela, ag
gregating 104 bushels. A few trees like this
would save the expense of a crib.
Messrs. Ferguason & Go, contractors, hare
put a luge force to work on the extension of
the A. 1’. and L. railroad from Lumpkin to the
Chattahoochee river, and the grading will be
done in as short time as possible.
The boiler belonging to Lawrence A
Thompson's saw mill, in Polk, blew up
Wednesday, killing Bud Htlburn,night watch-
man. Hla body was blown one hundred
yards, his bead being blown off. Damage sus
tained, $1,000,
. Mr. G. H.Tumlin, of Bartow county, says
that northern parties are negotiating ftr the
purpose of opening up the mounds that are to
— Thi
It will be remembered that Hunter Butt,
colored, who left Marlon county about three
years ago for Mississippi, killed a white man
out there some time last year at a negro
frolic. He was captured a few days after the
erimo was committed, while trying to make
his escape, and was carried back for trial.
Bis case came up last Monday week, and he
was represented by Hon. W. B. Butt, of Buena
Vista. Be was found guilty of voluntary
manslaughter and sentenced to the peniten
tiary for six years.
Jap. York, one of tho young men engaged
In the riot at Kockmart last ftll, in which Joe
Hulsey was murdered, was apprehended at
his father’s home last week by Hr. Giles A.
Lane and taken to Cedartown. and is now in
Jail. The arrestwas made without resistance:
The state bad offered a reward of one hundred
dollars each for Jap., John and Thompson
York, and two hundred for Campbell. It Is
claimed by relatives that Jap. York had de
cided to give himself up, and would have
done so in a few days if not arrested. Jap. is
the youngest of the boys, and was tired of
being a fugitive.
Toccoa News: Tbs reodors of the News will
n member that two weeks ago we published an
account of a young man who spent the night
at Mr. James Smith's and who was pursued by
four men from North Carolina, on a charge of
murder. They continued in hot pursuit, and
the last trace of him they say was near Augus
ta. They returned through here several days
ago. It 1s thought by some that ha was over
taken and killed. On their return trip one of
tha party told Hr. 8m!th that they never got
any nearer to him than they were when at his
home bofore. (They were then over a day be-
hind.) Another onetold him they camewith-
in three-quarters of an hour of catching np
with him. They ware near the Savannah
river, so one of tha party Informed Mr. Smith.
Tha nigitive baa the name of being a desperate
fellow,jiuid if he was killed it may have been
while he was making resistance.
Cedartown Advertiser: A terrific srind,
thunder and rain storm visited our section
Tuesday evening, creating considerable dam
age, especially in a belt through tho county
from north to sooth. In Coliard Valley the
rain fell in swftil torrents and washed down
fences where there was no streams. At Fish
creek the amount of water failing in a given
time was never known before equaled. About
tbo station the yards to dwellings were three
feet in water while the little creek and ravines
containing rushing volumes of water that
swept fences and all else portable before them.
Lightning conducted by the telegraph wires
(tbogromid wire being off) struck the depot,
dents of all the mills running in Augusta met
and took the case under consideration. This
was rather a matter of surpise. It was not
generally knosrn that the mill presidents
would act in concert or co-operate in the
ing the affair they came to the conclusion and
announced, that unless the strikers at the
Algernon mills return to work Monday morn
ing every mill in the city will be shut down
and a general lock-out Inaugurated. Now the
question of the connection of the Knights
of Labor with the aflhir will come
up for consideration. If the knights are
cognizant of and a party to the Algernon
strike, and Insist on the point advanced in
Algernon against Overseer MoGow, trouble
tbo
depot on (ire, and spl
mile. The flames at the depot were soon ox-
telegraph poles fora
(sled on bis ftrm.
commenced In the early ftll,
is work will probably be
'. Tamila has
already been offered a handsome sum for his
collection, which, though small, is said to be
one of the flnott of the kind in tbs country.
Mrs. Elizabeth Lyne, an old lady of ninety-
three year* now living over In the edge of
W ilkes county, seven miles from Crawford-
ville, basin her possession a pair of pints that
belonged to her ftthar, Mr. Findlay. The
pants were made over one hundred years age,
of black satin. They are knee pants with
" buckles at the knees. Mr/FIndley
from Inland with the first settlers of
the country, and fought In the revolutionary
war. Mrs. Lyne now Isas the sword used by
him in that war..
A horrible accident occurred near Halls, In
Bartow county. Mr. Jake Sherman's little
hey, Jost larieenongh to plow, was riding a
S puing mule heme to dinner after haring
LWsd.alj the morning. While an route komo
•“»>« became ifrightened and began to run.
ue threw the bey, who boeama entangled In
the harness, the mule dragging him for toms
distance ap to the hoots, whoa the authsr of
the boy tan out and caught him. The mule
became unmanageable and Jumped a fence
the „
his mother's eyes.
e boy af
eethat
right
The Eastman Messenger says that the u*,n
demolished the telegraph instrument, sot the
>n lire, and split tc' - - -
Tho
tlngnlahed.
Mllledgevilto Chronicle: Mention has boon
In a former Issue that a paper was circulated
and numerously signed by our best citizens
allowing Mr. Kreutx to come back. This pa-
S r was forwarded to him by his sister, lira.
ley, and in obedience to it, he cams back
Thursday afternoon to look after his chlllren
and his business. InanintcrvlewtheCbroc-
iclo had with him, he stated substantially the
same as published in his explanation in tho
Macon Telegraph. Be admits that he was
drunk and deeply regrets having ridden in
" recession, which ho was coaxed and flat-
intoby a lot of parasites. The next
morning, he says his mortification
was so poignant, and ho felt
to wretched from the effects of hla debauch
the night before, ha was nnable to make an
Intelligent statement, and his only desire wae
to be let alone and to be by himself. He most
emphatically denies the shameful words at
tributed to him, I know, says he, if I had had
a barrel of whisky in me, I never could have
made nss of any each remarks. They are en
tirely abhorrent to my Instinct, taste and edu
cation. Be says be mood his exile well, that
he was not mad with the people of Mlllodge-
vllle at all and that he baa a firm and abiding
conviction all the whllo that the people of
Mllledgevlllo would repudiate the disgraceful
story that was told on him.
Leary Courier: Wednesday night, at the
Mitchell, about four miles be
low Williamsburg, In this connty, a terrible
»■”> nnjrt unnatural deed was committed.
Wash Mitchell an honorable and energetic
negro man, was brutally murdered by his
fourteen-year-old son. The particulars, as ftr
aa we have been able to glean them, are os
follows: Wash Mitchell gave the boy a whip
ping ftr some offense committed against
rentel jnstlre. Shortly after mlmluistering...
whipping to the boy. Wash went to Arlington
.n bu.lnese, and returned home about dark.
Durlngthstlmohe had been gone, a desire
for revwge against his father cams Into the
boy’s heart, which was seconded by his
“°u>“ *5$ Other members of the
family. Bow terrible this revenre
proved, was shown soon after tbs
I a , * l#me ' when feeling
sick bad Immediately gone to bed and had
fallen asleep, when the unnatural son, seising
an axe, sprang upon his father and crushed
his skull to a pulp with several blows of the
deadly weapon. A few gasps of tha murdered
man and all was over, and the boy stood there
tbs muMerer of his father, one of the moot
tvrrlblo and unnatural crimes aver committed
“““““‘I- The l»y and other mem
bers of the family were snbseqnently arrested
and are now resting behind the bars of tha
county Jail at Morgan. We learn that a little
sister tl tha toy h£ divulgedtoeescretof Uw
entire trnnsJtloo. Wash Mltchclltho mur
dered man, was a negro who, by economy and
strictly reliable. The boy whooemmittod the
crime against natnre and man, seems to have
been endowed with the epiritofa demon*
The connivance of the mother In the mnrder
of her husband, adds additional horror to the
crime. We were unable to get any particulars
of tho crime In our last issue. A negro teas
repertodaahavlng been knocked in the head,
wentte press. From a letter Itoa bZ
received since the above was put in typeTwe
Ham that the commitment trial commenced
FWAhf ‘vealsg and closed Monday night.
Three of toe children Were ditebargedsnd sms
committed. The murder seems Involved In
neat mystery. The committal esurthadthe
htdyof the murdered man exhumed for the
which killed
him. Beck and Boynton
H.,uuuu -ft—-.-. ..... —LI nuuu-, MVU0IV
is in store for our mlU employes. It bknowa
the state over that Augusta mill employes
have been thoroughly organized by the knights,
and probably a teat of strength srillnowbud
out. Knots of mill employcscan bo seenat this
hour (II p. m.) gathered together in tha mill
quarter of the city, discussing the situation
Your correspondent mixed with them, but
they are reticent, and refuse to talk when the
presence of a stranger to them is knosrn.
This trouble interest five thousand workmen
in Augnata; including men, women, bo;
and girls, and fifteen thousand poop,
depend on those for support. It is developed
late tonight that President Phinizy, of the
Algernon mills, had written to the employes,
advising and asking the appointment of
a ccmmittco from the dissatisfied work-
nen to art jointly with representatives
of the mill interest to investigate the com
plaints against MoGow, but that tho strike
occurred wbile this communication was being
tranrmltted to the employes. Bad the em
ployes allowed an investigation of the affair
and permitted of time to allow consideration
of the demands they made upon tho mill
owners, the trouble would havo been averted,
and what now promises to bo the greatest
strike erer known in this section would not
le recorded
All of the mill presidents have decided to
close every mill In Augusta If the Algernon
mill strikers do not return to work on Mon-
<l»y-
T. B. Smith, ex-marshal of Valdosta, who
was charged with the murder of Kate Thomp
son in 1883, was tried Friday and acquitted.
A Queer Egg.
From the Calhoun, Ga., Courier.
Mr. E. B. Cook, showed us this week, a cur
iosity in the shape of an egg, that was a very
remarkable freak of natnre. The egg measur
ed ten inches in length and when broken was
found to contain another well developed folly
shelled egg. Tho enterprising hen that laid
this remarkable egg, did so at the expense of
her life. She had been engaged Jost a week In
and its Dual appearance in
from its great size, made
.she had produced a mon
strosity, and so frightened her that the died
on the nest ,
DEATHS IN OEOROIA.
Mrs. Bowden,Atlanta....TomleCarter, Atlanta.
EIolreiNunnally, Social Circle Captain Tom
Mafllo, Baldwin county...... Jack O’Farrell. Athens.
....lion. B. B. Hinton, Americus....Mrs. J.M.M.
Caldwell, Borne George M. Thew, Augusta
Mrs. W. C. Ward tow, Augusta.... Paul Hardin,
LaGrange....captain Moo. D. Robinson, Oolum-
bus Authur Johnston, West End....Colonel
Luther J, Olcnu, Atlanta. Mrs. Amanda Tucker,
Jackson Colonel C. M. Dickerson, Henry
county Mrs. Mary G. Brown, Clayton county.
Hr. Thomas Bowing, Atlanta..... Mrs. Burk, Ma-
COU......K. E. Brown, Macon....Dr. Virgil Holton,
Byron, Houston county .....Mias Lula McCland,
Colurabus„.. Mr. H. T. Culver, Sparta Mrs.
JaueGreon, Harris county Master Howard M.
Crosby, Atlanta.
MARRIED IN OEOROIA.
Rev. Dr. Kendall and Miss Mary Lovelace,{Rome.
Mr. Tbomas DeWolf and Mtss Mamie Daniel,
Worth county.
TIRED OUT!
. are representing the
and Haiti edge and Jay the
defease in tha
prosecution.
In Angasti, last Friday, the operatives in
Algernon factory weave room demanded Use
discharge of their ovarsacr, D. Mellow, on ac
count of alleged unjust treatment. At one
o'clock about rixty hands in the weave room
mrock, when Superintendent Woodward or
dered the mill to clean down, throwing out
two hundred hands. Tha operatives affirm
li-at this has no connection with tho Knights
of Labor movement, and say that they will re-
tarn to work when McGow fa removed.
Alter night aet ta tho strike In the little
Algernon mills assumed a more nrions
••Sstt.msi tU Ultra ia stsi.uapwlsly worked
np eves tin affair. Late at uigkt tit proti-
BltOWM CHEMICAL CO- DALT1MOBE, KD/
WILBOR’S COMPOUND OP
jPURE COD LIVERl
OIL AND LIME.
Wllbos’e Compound of Far* Cod-Mver Oil
id Lime. The edventego of this compound over
that tha nauaeatlng teste, of the
^ble.
as a
CUREmDEAF
ncni FATXjrr tunom cu«hjok«d ka* pumi
mnmT UfiWU m BfiiuM m4 Nrffif* wmk H tfc$
•U M$h *f* \XTL*U«
apr»-dly wed frt bod wkr
ATLANTA BRIDGE WORKS
ORANT WILKINS,
Ovtl.EngUeer and Contracting Agent,
Bridges, Roois and Inra Tables,
Iron Work for Building*, Jalli, Etc,
0abitnictate« rand Foundation* a Specialty;
Specific.ilona Finns Md Mfitattte ifttrntthodo.
^hUUMtefta A*
a • «
ABSOLUTELY PURE.
Royal the only Baking Powder free from Lime
or Alum and Chemically Pure.
It is a fact no longer questioned that all the baking
powders, with tho single exception of the Royal, contain
lime or alum. Prof. Love’s report as analyst of the New
Fork State Board of Health, revealing lime impurities, and
Government Chemist Mott’s researches showing the alarm
ing use of alum, have conclusively established the presence
of these substances. Eminent analysts have found in some
of the powd&s, notably those so prominently advertised,
10.7 per cent of lime alone.
Everybody is interested in this wholesale debasement
of food. The public health is no doubt injuriously affected
by the large amount of lime that is thus taken into the
system, for many of these adulterated baking powders are
imposed upon consumers by the disreputable tricks of their
manufacturers and the dishonest advertisements with which
they are placed before the public;
No Lime in Royal Baking* Powder.
Chemical tests have likewise proved the Royal Baking
Powder to be free from lime and absolutely pure. This
results from the exclusive usp of cream of tartar specially
refined and prepared by patent processes by which the
tartrate of lime is totally eljininatecL The production of
chemically pure cream of tartar involved many experiments
and great expense, which add) largely, of coarse, to the cost
of producing the Royal Bakmg Powder. But its manu*
facturers are amply rewarded in thus being able to give
consumers a baking powder absolutely pure in all respects
—the only absolutely pure baking powder made. In
emphasis of this fact, the report of Prof. McMurtrie, late
chiet chemist for the United States Department of Agricul
ture at Washington, is given:
*’ I have examined the cream of tartar mannfacturad by
the Now York Tartar Company and used by the Royal
Baking Powder Company in the manufacture of their bak
ing powder and found it perfectly pure and free from lime
in any form.
“The chemical tests to which I have submitted the
Royal Baking Powder, prove it perfectly healthful, and free
from every deleterious substance.
“ WM. MoMURTRIE, E.M., Ph.D.,
"Chemitt tn CIrief U. S. Dept, of Agriculture.”
REASONS WHY
The Stevens Patent New Model
Watches Are the Best.
; results which the*
snd^spccUl tdzptahilltr for
BECAUSE—They have features of improvement
that cannot ha found In any other
watch.
BECAUSE—Should an fieddaot to any part, s
plicate of that part can he supplied
hero, andthc welch pat runnlngsgetn
BECAUSE—They arc Indorsed by hundreds or our
best cllliens who have subjected them
u tsverett tests.
BECAUSE—It It t southern enterprise, and every
part of arch watch la guaranteed by a
responsible home cstsbUahment.who
have a reputation to sustain,
BECAUSE—Purchasers esn are In our stock tha
largest assortment of watches ever
shown tn the south-and we defy all
competition to far as prices are con
cerned.
Band for Catalogue.
J. P. STEVENS, Jewel#,
47 WHITEHALL STREET, ATLANTA, GA.
Mention thta paper, nor 17 wky ly Up
SICK HEADAGHEfe
CARffRS^^
2b?a—dlv’satnSs'lhu wky narorbnaal
T**v /% you want to team to write
DO Short-Hand?
'*1. Trio, send Map to
IIFAGE’S
■HLiQillD GLUE
h-ArN^r.vumTHir.o
mmt
iw«wifi«MUfiKE y 8T 0 NB
MALT
WHISKY I
JOS. JAGOBS,
Druggist, Atlanta, Ga,
ft Mention this paper.novit-destwy
boozes. >or ctrenlsia
andepeetmena of re»
mznzatpi address .
tettuuu Ktant'
Principal
OPIUM
HABIT CURED—I ASK NO PAY TILL
Mention thi« paper.
Electric Belt Free
w% wm fertbse
Name this paper JtnK-tue thn sat wkr
Name this paper.
SHIPMAN AUTOMATIC
Steam Engine i
ttoTplhM#
__ all. r «r all ktatft
4 hr li straw «*»
4 prteft Bm. %«•>
J. J. W1TR0US.
nicest* c«»u*
JutteU-wkjU