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THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION. ATLANTA, GA.. TUESDAY. AUGUST 16,1887.
H
EXHAUSTED VITALITY
A Crcit Medical Woik for Youug and Mid
.11. A .....1 Hfmn.
(lie Aged Men*
KSfW THYSEIF,
Mere Than One Million Copies Sold*
E TREATS UPON NEBV0U3 AND PlTYHCAL
Debility. Premature Decline, Errors of Youth,
austed Vitality, Lost Manhood, Impaired Vigor
and Impurities of the Blood ana the untold miseries
Consequent thereon. Contains 300 pages, substantial
fmbossed binding, Dill gilt Warranted the beat
popular medical treatise published in the English
gm£jd£» $2tiMh# 3S
Published- by the PEABODY MEDICAL
INSTITUTE, No. 4 Uulflneh street, Boston,
Mass., WM. H. PARKER, M. D., Consulting
‘clan, to whom all orders should head-
VICTIM OF CIGARETTES.
They Are Largely to Blame for
the Death of Young Knevals.
TOBACCO HEART ANDCONGESTED BRAIN
Is What the Coroner Sold Be Mad, Owing
to Bis Abuse of Tobacco—What
the Autopsy Showed.
ED UCATION AT*
Commercial College lexinqton, ky.
Cheapest 4 Best Business College in the World,
Dtcbi*«t lienor and Gold Medal smsll ether Collects, •«
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k Including Talt!oa.Htot^^H
1
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. In its department of Science, Literature and
Law. Theology, Engineering. Pharmacy, Den.
, and Medicine the highest educational advan*
a moderate coat. Address
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) this paper.aug9 wkylm
ATHENS FEMALE COLLEGE,
ATHENS. ALA.
fNHEAP SCHOOL, IIEALTHY LOCATION. FULL
V course, Literary, Scientific, language, Ar*
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locue. M. G. WILLIAMS, President.
Name this paper.July5—wky it
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. ATLAHTA MEDICAL COLLEGE
•wIiiAAI.ANTA.GA., OUUANIZKD IN 1855-FACUI,
vni t£K ty: W. F. Westmoreland, M. D.; W. A. Love,
i,'V, H. TalUftriOL D.; A. W. Calhoun. M.
"f.'p.; James A. Gray. M. b., prootor; 1L V. M. Miller.
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MEDICAL DEPARTMENT,
TULANE UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA.
(Formerly, 1887,—ISM, the University of Louisiana.)
Its advantages for practical Instruction, and es
pecially In the diseases of the southwest, ore un-
equaled, os the law secures It superabundant mater
mis from the great Charity Hospital with Its 700
bads, and 20.000patients annually. Students have
no hospital fees to pay and special Instruction Is
telly given at the bedside or the sick, as In no
pther institution. For catalogues or Information,
address
Prof. 8. E. CHAILE, M. D. Dean,
O. Drawer 261, New Orleans, La.
me this paper. JulylO-wky.
MARIETTA (GA.) MALE ACADEMY.
T30YB PREPARED FOR ANY CLASS IN COL-
crlenccd teachers.
. August 22.
'tfriu why
J. C. HARRIS. A. M.,
Principal.
1
ROME FEMALE COLLEGE.
Under Control of the Synod of Georgia.
Bar. J. M. M. Caldwell. President.
IE THIRTY-FIRST YEAR WILL BEGIN ON
_ Jonday In September, with an enlarged fkculty
Sir. Sam’lP. Snow will direct the department o
Basic. For circulars or information address
& C. CALDWELL, Home, Ga.
wed fri sun&wfiw
Atlanta Female Instilufs and College or Music
WILL REOPEN WEDNESDAY, SEP. 7,1837.
2 HE MUSIC AND ART DEPARTMENT ARE
respectively uidcr the caro ef Mr. Constantin
mbergand Mr. William Lyrctt. For cirtu’ars
apply to MRS. J. W. BALLAllD, Principal.
auuH—sun wclfl, frl-sndvvky.
From the N. Y. World.
When Russell H. Knevals, the medics' stu
dent, was found dead in bed Thursday at the
house of his father, the late President Arthur's
former law partner, at No. 62 East Fifty-
eighth street, groundless rumors of suiciae
and opium poisoning were circulated. He
was more the victim of tobsceo in the shape of
cigarettes than of anything else. Yesterday
Coroner M. J. B. Messemer made on autopsy,
rather against the wishes of Mrs. Knevals,and
last evening he gave the results of it as fol
lows to a World reporter: “I found the heart
flabby and fatty and a decided enlargement of
the liver and spleen—both the results of the
tobacco habit," he said. "The stomach and
Kidneys were normal, but the brain was con
gested. I should say that death ensued from
congestion of the brain, aggravated by ‘tobno*
co heart,’ and accompanied by |a congestivo
chill. The chill resulted from malaria caused
by sewer gai, as the street has been tom up}
but as tho deceased was a great cigarette
smoker I think the bitbit resulted in conges
tion of the brain.
"Yon see it is not every man who can smoke
with impunity, and although Mr. Knevals was
twenty-eight years old anda stout man, it re
sulted in his death. There is nicotlno in to
bacco, whether manufactured into cigars, ci
garettes, chewing or smoking tobacco, ana tho
result Is always the same—poison. Stout,dark
and sallow people are not as apt to too poisoned
as thin, Ugnt-complexioncd persons—at least
that is the result of iny observations at Mount
Sinai hospital, where I have had many inter
nal nervous diseases under my charge. I no
ticed that nervous men and boys were troubled
with intermittent heart pulsations in greater
proportion to-women and girls. In most esses
the males used tobacco and the females did not.
The pulsations of the heart would be regnlar in
tono and note say for eight or ten pulsations,
and then there would be an intermission or
suspension of two pulsations. The Germans
calf this 'tabnek here,’ or tobacco heart. To
bacco contains two deadly poisons, nicotine
and omprycnmatic oil, tho antidotes for which
are tannin and caffeine, or strong coffee. One
drop of nicotine in a state of concentrated solu
tion would immediately destroy a dog, and
birds perish at the approach of a tulio contain
ing tho fluid, tho mere smell killing them.
Tobacco moderately taken in any form
quiets restlessless, calms mental and
corporal inquietude and produces a general
languor or roposo which has great charms to
those habituated to tho impression it creates.
A liberal use of the narcotic gives rise to corn
fusion Of tho head, vertigo, stupor, faintness,
nausea, vomiting and a general depression of
tho nervous and circulatory functions which,
if increased, eventuates in alarming and eron
fatal prostration, as was the case with young
Knevals. Tho symptoms of its excessive use
and action are severe retching, distressing and
continued nausea, a feeblo pulse, coolness of
the skin, fainting and convulsions, The symp
toms of tobacco heart aro a coated tongue, a
discolored to saffron, and, worst of all, the in
termittent heart pulsations.
"Manufactured tobacco contains more nico
tine than tho raw material, and combustion
while smoking always incrcuos the quantity.
I believe that a pipo which allows the. partial
evaporation or absorption of nicotine the best
—or rather tho least harmless—smoke. Tho
cigar, which allows some evaporation by ita
wrapper, is far less injurious than tho
wrapped cigarette, os the paper noither t
nor permits the evaporation of nicotine.
JEFFERSON DAVIS REPIES.
but _
cigarettes,
strong of
and not
SL_. =
Woodland yctordoy.
nerer think of smoking ton
itltloi of
to. Grant smoked Tut quantities of
olgars, which only affected his throat
>t hla heart, hut row men could har.
UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA.
(Founded by Tuos. Jefferson.)
•4th Session begins October 1st, IS*7.
Bend for catalogue to Secretary of the Faculty,
JTwk UNIVERSITY OP VIRGINIA. VA
JEAFNESS CURED KM
ar Drum, guaranteed superior to all others; light,
nnfortablo and invisible: the only ariiiic.al.cur
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a N. HUKHTISS EAR DRUM Cp„
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MORELAND PARK MILITARY ACADEMY
NEAR ATLANTA, OA.
L FOR BOYS IN THE SOUTH.
us fcretcrober 1 Itb. For dr-
CU.Uk U.
TfiFwtosept 14
HARWOOD SEMINARY,
MARIETTA, GA.
i—
A COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE FOR YOUNG LA
A die*, in a location unsurnuKd in the sooth,
►jaiprei with a Faculty of skilled Teachers and
•apetfor apparatus and fornJture. Unusual ad-
vantage* offered in Music and Art. Fall tarn be-
A "NEW ONE" ABOUT BEN BUTLER.
The Shortest and Best Speech He Ever De
livered in Congresa.
From the Omaha World.
n*‘I was talking with Congressman Calkins In
Indianapolis on Sunday last," said Mr. W. V. Booker
in the lobby of tbo Paxton, "and ho gave mo what
I thought was a near one about old Ben Butler. The
way our conversation started, Calkins asked me
about Cnuy-horso Van Wyck, and remarked that ha
mado a very picturesque picture In the senate. T
never saw but ono other man with such a wild nad
wooly gesture as Van Wyck had, and that
was an Ohio congressman, whom 1 will not name.
He represented one of tho intorlor districts of bis
state at the time Ben Butler was having no end of
trouble with Sam Cox and a good many other people
in the houso and doing them all np more or less lu
his own peculiar way. Tho Ohio man had been
loaded for Benjamin for some time and at last one
day he got his chance.
"His speech was simply a torrent of vulgar a'juse
and would have attracted unmitigated disgust bad
It not bem for bis peculiar gesture, which tempered
the disgust with mirth. He bad a fashion of rais
ing his arms just as high above his head as possible
and then wringing bis hands as though he were
making a delirious attempt to wring them off Well,
old Ben sat through the speech, with his one good
eye half shut, not moving a muscle. When tho
Ohio man had finished and taken his seat,
Ben rose—calm, dignified and impressive—
%nd stood in the aisle. For a half
minute he said nothing. Then he began: "Mr,
Speaker." Another pause, long and ponderous.
Everybody waited, with hiuke 1 breath, for him to
continue. Raising his arm, Ben reproduced ex
actly tho aw Ail gesture of the Ohio congressman.
Thou he permitted hfs arms to fill again and lor
another half minute stood still and silent. "Tlrat is
all, Mr. Speaker," said the shrewd and sarcastic son
of Massachusetts. "I Just wanted to answer the
gentleman from Ohio." Judging from tho wild
laughter aiul applause which followed old Ben's
speech was at once the shortest and best ever de
livered in tbo lower house.
SMOTtlERKD IN THE OPEN STREET,
Pedestrians In Allegheny Witness the Death
of Two Men by Natural Gas.
From th« Pittsburg, Pa., World.
Pirrsnuno, Pa., August 8.—Natural gas
added two more deaths to lu list of victims thU af
ternoon In Allegheny. The Chanters company has
a regulator at tho corner of Locust and Cbartlen
stnets, which regulates tho flow of gas from the
high to the low pressure line at this place. James
Herron, superintendent of the company’s lino in
Allegheny, and William Sampson, a line-walker,
were making the repairs. Sampson got down in tho
hole and began to take off the valve on the high-
pressure line, art that when he unscrewed the cap
which covers the end of tho line tbo gas puffed out
in blalkce.
Miss Clara Kunkle. who witnessed tho accident,
aays that after tho gas began to escape Sampson
raised up so that hU head ^ould be seen at the top
of the hole. Superintendent Herron then reached
down to pull Sampson out, but he himself was over
come and fell In the bole on top of Sampson. MUu
Kun ic te mu to a Mr. Janie* Kennedy, of Mount
Washington, who was near, and called hla attention
to the accident. He ran to the rescue and tried to
assist the men out, but was so aflcctcd by the gts
that he had to retrt at. He says the men were then
almost gone and could scarcely ratoe their heads.
He ran for their grappling hooka but could not use
them. At this time the gas pressure seemed to In
crease and tho roar mado by the es
cape was deafening. A young man
named nollar was let down in the pit bytomeof tho
crowd of bystanders who bad gathered, tot he be
came os limber as a rag In 1cm than a minute and
had to be pulled out a?ain. Frank Marquis, a
plumber, was working near and he ran np with a
monkey-wrench and shut off the gas. One Zimmer
then went dow n Into the pit and caught bold of Mr.
Herron’s band to lift him np, but the hand closed
upon him with such a tight grip as to hurt him.
The men were finally taken out of the bole, but
both were dead.
Governor Curtin and the Story of the Pro
posed Assassination.
To the E.litor of the New York World.
My attention lias been called to a letter
•ex-Governor Curtin, published in the Herald of the
12th Inst., In regard to an alleged complicity on his
part with a purpose to assassinate me during the
war between the states, and also to a letter from
Wilkesbarre, Pa., on the same subject published
the World of tho 18th Inst I solicit the use of your
columns to make a brief statement of the facts,
far as they are known to me.
Governor Curtin makes two mistakes in his letter.
Find, that I had made public accusation against Mm
and that I had alleged that he was to pay $100,000
to a desperado for my aasanlnatlon. AU this, based
on a newspaper article purporting to bo the report
of an "Interview” held with me for publication by
a newspaper correspondent. Such was not the ease.
A well-known historian proposed to write my biog
raphy, and asked me to give him for that purpose
an account of attempts made during the war to as
sassinate me.
I told him In that connection, and for that pur
pose, that an anonymous letter of warning had
been sent to mo ftom Philadelphia to the offset that
the governor of Pennsylvania had released from the
penLontlary a notorious oonvict on condition that
he would go to the south and assassinate me, and If
successfol, he was to receive as a reward 1100,000.
Thougb tbe letter did use the name of Governor
Curtin, I omitted it in my statement of the substance
of the letter, and as the writer did not state how
the money promised waa to be raised, I did not at
tempt to supply the omission. Indeed, it was quite
unimportant to me whether it camo from a
secret service (bud, from the private purse of the
governor, or was contributed by others who, with
like seal, sniffed the battle from afar and cried
havoc.
The anonymous letter acquired an importance jt
would not otherwise have possessed from the fact
that a’jout the time of its receipt, when going to my
residence at the usual hour, I saw a man crouching
beside the basement wall of the paling of the yard
fence and looking Intently toward! the gate en
trance. Instead of proceeding to the gate I turned
and went toward the crouching figure. Aa be was
approached, he rose, fled and escaped. The impor
tance thuc given to the anonymous letter induced
me to Inclose It to the Hon. W. B. Reed, of Philadel
phia, with a request that ho would make such in
quiry as to liim might be practicable to discover the
writer, find to verily or dssprove-tho statements.
Governor Curtin's "emphatic contradiction" of
the accusations against him pertains not to me, but
to the writer of the letter, who is unknown to *
and for whom I have not vouched.
The avowal of Governor Curtin of zeal to maintain
tho government by honorablo warfare, and tho de
nial that ha "ever resorted to such meant for the
conduct of the war," murk a coramcndablo appre
ciation of the obligations of civilized war, and
it U a pity that there should be anything to inter
rupt the current of bis self-laudation. The letter
from Wilkceberre, already referred to, certainly
reveals conduct not very different from that al
leged by the anonymous letter-writer. It thereby
appears that Governor Curtin received an applica
tion, apparently ftom the United States war depart
ment, for tho release from the Pennsylvania peni
tentiary of a notorious convict, that ho might
"be sent over the lines for a specific purpose." On
this and other like representations It appears that
an order was issued by the governor for the releaso
of the convict. It ;■ not shown that the governor
knew or thought proper to inquire for what special
service tbo general of tho army required a con
victed criminal; that the fact that he was to te em
ployed at the south was enough to secure compli
ance with the application. To an average ml ud In
tent upon "honorable warfare" tho question would
naturally have arisen, for what proper duty with
the army can a convict be particularly qualified?
In the absence of Information on that point it might
have been reasonably supposed that tho "specific
purpose" was to do an act which a soldier woitby
of the name would not perform. Assassination
might readily have been supposed to be such "spe-
clflc purpose," and the application for releaso have
been pqgtponcd for farther information and refused
unless it should be suoh as would justlty compliance
by bringing the "purposo" within the pale of "hon
orable warfare."
Governor Curtin dees not say whether this was tho
first tracsiction of like kind between himself and
the United States war department, but his ready be
lief that tho forged letters were genuine would In
dicate that it was not a surprising event.
In conclusion, I repeat that, In stating the sub
stance of the anonymous letter received by mo and
the attendant circumstance*, it was not intended to
accuse or excuso Governor Curtin; neither was the
statement made for a nowspaper article, and condi
tions precedent for further investigation were im
posed upon its publication even In the proposod
Jefferson Davis.
Every American woman should remember
that by simply sending her address to Mrs,
Harriet Hubbard Ayer, 90 and 41 Park place,
New York, she will wceiro without any ex
pense a samplo of the KecamierToilot Por J —
The finest sifter in the world is used in . _
paring the Recamier Powder, it is so much
liner than any used by Lanbln or the best Amer
ican manufacturers that it has to bo especially
manufactured for us. Tho silk bolting cloth
is made for us alone. .No other toilet powder
will go tlirough it. It is harmless, will not
leave the faco shining, is imperccptiblo and
contains neither blsmnUi, lead nor arsenic.
BATS IN A BEDROOM.
Tit© Hip-Docket Pistol.
From the Charlotte Chronic!©.
It baa been said that "the hip-pocket to a
of widows and orphan*."
Sir Knight Greenleaf'a Adventure When In
Vermont With tha Coxnmamlery.
From the Lewiston Journal.
Sir Knight Greenleaf had the queerest ad-
vcjiture. He told It himself along about eight
o’clock Wodnesdsy evening on the broad plaza,
when the band was playing. *
1 wmt to bed about eleven o’clock Tuesday
evening," said he.
"Just so," echoes Mrs. Greenleaf, who subscribes
to the story.
"The night was pretty warm aud the transom
was up In tho room, with the light of the hall
shining through. I was half asleep, when something
i in at tbo window like a black oat out of a
Ictrap. The thing bumped up against tbc
and slammed against the door and whltzcd ov<
bed. It darted down so close to the bod that I
thought it was going to hit me, but it didn’t.
never did IJke to sleep with over two in a room, so
I got up and straek a match. It was a bat. A big.
live, fluttering bat, dazed by the light. My wife
screamed a little-just a little, you know—and I
drew my sword and started for him. Ho can
me and I stood ot*guard and lunged at nil
didn’t have my chapeau and regimentals ou—not
exactly—because I wasn’t expecting oompany, but
I wished I had Just donned the chapeau tocomplcte
the picture, for It must hare been a study for an
artist. Tbundcration! botf I chased him. He uas
earlier than a New Jersey mosquito and my flutter
ing garments caught the breezes. My swonl gleam
ed in tbefeudight, but it didn't seem to gleam in the
immediate vicinity of tbo bet. That ’ bat was
pluckier than Captain Michael Kelly, of the Boston
baseball club, but I cornered him and laid him lew
and put him to rest beneath the cover or my regalia
trunk, and was just cedfng off for another nap when
In came another. This one was a regular dandy.
Ho bad a sharp nose and waadressed in a foil suit of
black. He came sanntertng in, took a look round,
and went for the bed.
"My wife screamed nod the hat lit on tho coverlet.
I nuulc for him, and he ran just Uke a motuo along
the bed and dived down nudor the dotbea In 1cm
than a Jiffy be had the bed to himself, and quicker
than Jack Robinson in came another bat at the open
window, and things were lively—with the bat under
the trunk cover, squealing aud flapping his wings.
Says I, ‘This la getting Interesting. This room ain't
big enough for five. It’s only a soven-by-nlncr, and
my wife an 11 want it,’ aud l drew the trusty sword
and went into tattle. I got the first wound. The
bat was under the bed clothes, and 1 made fpr him.
He Lit me. Sec there! (showing bis f >rrfinger with
a plainly marked biuise’. Well, Mr, ue bit me right
through the fo-efingvr, and I squealed like a / nd
one; but 1 got him. I got him tight aiul Hung . .in
under the trunk cover and mode for the other. I
won't weoij you with tho details of the cLsm, but
it was exciting. 1 choxed tliat bat No. 3 over the
bed, over the chairs, up the celling, into the cup
board, up In the corners, ami flm lly I laid him low,
dead a* a herring, fn tha corner of the chimney,
and added another to t ic family v jder the trunk
cover.
"I stood on guard for ten minutes waiting for the
rent of the surprise party, but he wot the fast, and
abo* * ten oV v-k I went to oh* p. 1 here's Ute tat."
conclud' d Si.. Grecniea/; pointing to the dead body
of a bat lying on the gravel walk beneath the elec
tric light. And Mrs. Greenleaf corroborated the
story in its details.
GEORGIA FARMERS.
What Was Done at Their Meet
ing in Canton.
A VERY INTERESTING GATHERING.
First and Second Day’s Session—Th© Brady
Bill Condemned—Message to Presi
dent Cleveland.
Canton, August i0,—[«p*j|al.)-TM meet
ing of the agriculturists is a pronounced suc
cess. The mootings are held In the courthouse.
THR FIRST PAY.
The body convened this morning at 10
o’clock* with President Livingston in the
chair.
The proceedings were opened with prayer.
The roll waa called and 226 delegates answered
to their names.
Captain Newman mado on address of wol-
como in behalf of tho citizens of Canton.
Captain W. H. Perkinsoii delivered on ad
dress of weloomo in behalf of the citisens of
Cherokee county,
Captain J. G. McCall, of Quitman, mado a
fitting response for the convention.
A thoughtful address was delivered by the
president. He reviewed the work of past
agricultural conventions and talked of the ob
jects and alms of tho agricultural society of
Georgia. In the courso of liia remarks ho
mado some pertinent crltlolsms on tho "Brady
bill,’’ his opposition to that measure being
couched in strong language.
Thereupon Colonel Waddell offered a reso
lution commending the spirit of tho address.
This resolution was declared by tho chairman
to be out of order.
An adjournment was taken for dinner.
AFTERNOON SESSION.
Colonel J. T. Henderson delivered the first
address, and ho was followed by Dr. J. A.
Cook, of Atlanta, tho veterinary surgeon, who
spoke of the dlscasoa destructive to domestic
animals.
Bill Arp followed In one of his inimitable
talks, which captured the entire audtenoe.
Tho memorial committee offered appropri
ate resolutions on the death of the late lament
ed David E. Butler, of Madison.
S1TT1NO ON THR BRADY BILL.
Colored Waddell introduced a resolution
condemning tho "Brady bill." The body was
so overwhelmingly in aocord with tho resolu
tion that it was adopted by a vote of 114 to 11
At night the convention heard the address
of Dr. JT C. Maddox, on the "Improvement of
Worn-out Soil." Afterward the assembly re
solved itself into a kind of experience moot
ing.
SECOND DAY.
The convention, reassembled .’at 8 o’clock
this morning.
An address by R. J. Guinn, of Conyers, on
tho "Tariff, aud Its Relation to tho Farmor,”
was heard.
The Hon. L. P. Livingston hero formally
tondcred his resignation as president of the
society, which was accepted.
Nominations being in order, Mr.
T. J. Lyon, of Bartow, noroinatod
tho Hon. W. J. Nortlien, of Han
cock, to fill tho unexplrod term of President
Livingston.
The rules were suspended, and hp was unan
imously elected by acclamation.
Colonel J. O. Waddell, of Polk, was elected
vice president for tho state at large.
In tho abscnco of Messrs. Glenn and Boner,
who wore to have addressed the convention,
Dr. W. L. Jones, of Athens, snoko on reports
of experiments at the university farm.
Adjourned for dinner.
Waycross selectod for noxt meeting.
Resolutions of thanks wero offered to Can
ton and Cherokee, and tho railroads of the
stato.
The convention adjourned sine die.
craiou at tanion, in inis hihp, ana ny in unani-
is action this day, wo aro appointed to invito
r excellency and Mrs. Cleveland, together with
nu mbers of your cabinet, to attoniftha annual
attractive and Instructive, as
Georgia represents the best agricultural succces at
the south. It will be our pleasure to entertain you
and present you to the pooplo of our state, who will
welcome you most cordially to all tho hospitalities
of the occasion. Signed, L. F. Livingston, b. D.
J. o. HcUir - *-
r.oTTr.xr nr. Amy a.
OFFICIAL DRAWING
Louisians State Lottery
SINGLE NUMBER, CUSS "H”
Drawn at X.w Orle.n., LooUUiw, on Tne»-
d.r, August 0,18*7.
FULL FRIZES.
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lE
Beadwku, J. G. McCall, J. H. Buck. c. L. Mo
ses, J. W. Grande, K. A. Nisuet, J. O. Waddell,
W. J. NoitTMEN, D. C. BARROW, JAMES BAnnETT,
committee.
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trial bottle froo to Fit cases. Bend to Dr.
Kline,031 Arch street, Philadelphia, Pa.
The Kentucky Election a Fair Notlc© That
the Watterson Idea Cannot Prevail.
From the Nashvlllo American, dem.
Tbo election in Kentucky gives thedemoo-
icy of the south fklr warning. If ever a question
ad a fair trial, the Kentucky "Idea" bad in tho late
election. The Courier-Journal, a paper of wide cir
culation, edited by Mr. Watterson, whoeo ability is
conceded, fathered it Mr. Carlisle, Mr. Beck, Joe
Blackburn, W. C. P. Breckcnridgo and Phil Thorny
t on, and one of the most popular men In the state,
General Buckner, as (he candidate, all turned in
and the people gave them barbecues In all parts of
the state; and yet the republicans, with an obscure
man, camo within a few thousand votes of carrying
the state. About 45,000 was Governor Knott's ma
jority. It Is claimed that tbo gain in seventy-odd
counties heard from Is 82fi votes to the county. It
is admitted to be very large, and the explanation is
the republicans were well organised anff democrats
stayed at home. This answer esphfins nothing.
Let every democrat In tho United States ask what
caused a loss of 325 rotes to the county in. Kentucky.
Tossy there Is no cause for it or to say the demo
crats stayed at home is childish.
If the south means anything it means progress;
it means diversified Industries, and it means at all
hazonbandatan/oosttohavea better
public scli« o!s. The Issue mado up In
between the Kentucky Ides and tho
democracy or an adjusted revenue tariff Is ono of
life aud death to tho democracy. We do not pro-
pore to bo offensive, but we propose to tell the plain
truth. The men in Tennessee who believe in the
Wattcrson-Kentueky Idea are the drones in pro
gress. If there is ono of them that la turning his
hand over In the way of building np now Indus-
tri<'s, we cannot put our Anger on him. If there Is
a sloglo lire, wide-ewake, pcogreeslve man, either
in Tenneswe or Alabama, engaged in making wealth
by developing the south’* resources, who believes
in the Kentucky idea, we do not know. him.
Believing, as they all do to a man, that the Wat
terson idea Is death to tho south, they are not going
to aid in fastening It on tbo county. Ur. Cl eve-
Mr. Cleveland is a wonderfully popular man, but
the amth ctfn’t be carried even for him on the Ken
tucky Idea. The people of tbo sooth are mostly
democrats, but tbay will not o it their own throats
The time uas come when tho south must speak.
thesoutb,
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he and Doctors' Bills Saved
By always keeping Simmons Liver
Regulator in tho house.
“I tav« found Bimmun. Uvn Iteguktor
the Lest family medicine I ever used for
anything that mar happen. Have owed it
in Indigestion, <k>!ic, Diarrhcnt, Bilious-
new, and found It to relfeva Immediately.
Alter eating a hearty supper, if, on going to
bed, I take a teaspoonfol, I never feel the
effects of the supper estcn.~0. O. Sparju,
ex-Mayor, Maoeo, Ga."
8TONLY GENUINE-**
Has our Z Bfamp In red on front of Wrapper,
. H. 7.EILIN Si CO., Sol© Proprietors,
Price, SLOO. PHILADELPHIA, PA.
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APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
100 numbers from 50205 (o’CO.vif*, inclusive, bo-
S3=
IB Sit:
100 08541
ixm mbw drawing I r —
• horinfUir'erTileti lfw> mim.
/ drawn from tho 100,000 placed In tha
wheel, wltlttbe prises corresponding to them.
Witness our hands at New Orleans, La., this Tues
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J.' A.' baIu!y K,A11D ' } Oommkriontn.
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' "*• G , - £Z Portland, Mo., Toronto,
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r _, Veh., Jiutto City,
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***** tiv) Jeans, Louisville, Ky.,nnd Dall&i, Tex. No. 40521
***** /mo draws 810.000, sold In Washington, D.fi, Memphis;
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I Min, .Mil, C.im l.-n, Ark., JhcIimhivIIIo, '1 cxom. and
San Fernando. Gab No© lboo, 21001, 72109,83610,
asoh draw TOO. told Jiill»ht<.n, New York, New
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timore. Memphis, Lai Angeles, Chi, Colujnbus,
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GSH3
CAPITAL PRIZE, $160,000.
Monthly and Hunt-Annual
ttlaua stato Lottery Company,
jjijM Urol tho Drawings
and control
losamo aro conducted «
, in. flood faith toward all
Commissioners.
WethaundersifnedBanksand Bankerswm pay
oil Prizes drawn in The Jjouhdana Kioto Ja *mri(i
which may bo presented at our counter*.
i*ijjhuicI'SlNAuxTrii*^gtato :Nun
A. IIA I.mVI.V, I'r.«. .N.-wOrlrum Nul’l Hank.
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T TNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION!
U OVER MXAMLIONDISTJtIBIiTED.
Louisiana Stato Lottery Company.
Ineorponnd In IMa for 23 Tran by tbo be.i.l*.
tore for gdaratlonkl Mirt Charitablr purr^n-Wltti
* ruttyo.l fund or
I on and ladongdbr
_ UednewSber SI, A. 1
Its Grand ftlngl© L._.—
plum monthly, und til© Heiill-AnnUMt Drt..
lug* regularly every six months (June and
Drcninbor.)
r A Kl’LKNDID OPPORTUNITY TO WIN A
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MontW U ^Sring Kcl,l “ uber w * ****-
CAPITAL PRIZE $150 OOO.
dg-Notlee. Ticket* ©re Ten Dollar* only.
Halves «0. Fifth*, •*. Tenths, HI.
FRIZES.
t>-V),MX) 4!V),«»
8
1,000 Term'll d
rrzsm
?»-sra::_.
Address Registered letters (o
HEW OB LEANS NATIONAL BANK,
H«w Orlran., La.
AEMBER
ly, who are Til chanre
-ofabaotut© ftlnuL
T the President of on Institution, wht-
* rights aro recognized In tb* hjghcit
Jwrefore, beware of any
anoaymousMhemsi. sua w#d .