Atlanta Georgian and news. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1907-1912, July 10, 1908, Image 2

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s THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. rniDAr^rcLT w. ism. BETTER LOSE THAN NOT TO FIGHT NT ALL Thomas E. Watson Ac cepts Nomination . of Populist Party. In the preaence of an enthusiastic audience, numbering perhaps Ooo per- »one. Hon. Thomas K. Watson was no- tilled of Ills nomination for the presi dency on the populist ticket In the skating fink at Ponce DeLeon Thurs day evenln* at 8 o'clock. The notification speech wa.x made by Judge Jay W. Forrest, of Albany, N. T. He waa introduced by Oscar Parker, of Fglrbum. Ga.. and In his brief nomina tion speech he paid an eloquent tribute to the ability and high moral character of Mr. Watson and prophesied that eventually the principles of the party which he has been chosen to lead will triumph. In hie characteristically eloquent and forceful style Mr. Watson delivered his speech accepting the nomination. In a comprehensive manner he discussed the national Issues which confront the par ty, apd expressed his determination to bend all* his energy In the effort to lead his party to the finish of a successful campaign. So Tired It may be from overwork, but the chances arc Its from an In active LIVER. — With a well conducted LIVER one can do mountains of labor without fatigue. It adds a hundred per cent to ones earning capacity. It can be kept In bealthfulaction by. and only by PLANS COMPLETED ! ^U a Sr F00 PRESS OUTING- Health DEATHOFGEO, LEWIS Never Fails to Party Will Journey Over RESTORE GRAY or FADED Business Houses Closed and TutfsPills New Railroad to Brunswick. HAIR to its NATURAL! COLOR and BEAUTY No matter how long it has been gray j * “ * 1 -* —? tn I Hundreds Attend Funeral. j or faded. Promotes a luxuriant growtl of healthy hair. Stops its falling out, ’ DUBLIN*, Ga*. July *10.—-All of the nnd positively removes Dan- MONROE. Ga#. July 10.—-The death arrangement, for th* meeting of th# drul| * K eeps hair soft and glossy. Re- of GeorgF A!l-r. Lewis, of Monroe, at 2*ti£salmuch W..l.y M#morii TAKE NO SUBSTITUTE, At the conclusion of Mr. Watson's address he was greeted with an out burst of cheering and hundreds of his friends crowded the platform w here he stood to shske his hand, pledge him their unswerving support anil w Ish him godspeed In the leadership of hts chosen party. General Coaty Speaks. Altho the weather was threatening Thursday evening. It did not deter rtsltora from braving the elements, and the vast auditorium began Ailing with paopte long before the hour of * o’clock arrived. Mr. Watson did not arrive at the ronvrritlnn ball until almost S;J0 o'clock and In the meantime General J. 8. Coxe.v entertained the convention with an address. In which ho discussed the principles of the Populist party. When Mr. Watson entsred tha halt hla appearance was the atgnal for an outburst of vociferous cheering from the expectant audience, which lasted uatll Dr. W. W. Lsndrum. pastor of the First Rsptlst church, arose to offer prayer. The eheerlng wee renewed with In creased vigor when Mr. Watson arose to make hla apeech of acceptance. The band played "Dixie" and It was some time before the audience was quieted pointed by the delegates from each dis trict and approved by the convention and the chairman Is as follows First District—Donald 1 ‘lerke. of Ef fingham county, and William Kemp, of Emanuel county. Second District—J. H. Parrish Worth county, and H. L Hraswell, of Thomas coupty. Third District—H. M. Searcy, of Ta.v lor county, and K. R. Barber, of Crisp county. Fourth District—R. W. Christian, of Chatlahoochee county, and R. B. Gas ton. of Carroll county. Fifth District—r. T. Psrker. of Ful ton county, and Oscar Parker, of Camp, bell county. 8lxth District—J. T. Mitchell. cead. Throughout his eloquent eddrese Mr. Watson held the closest attention of hie hesrers and he was frequently Interrupted bv applause. The new executive committee ap- HOTELS AND RESORTS. <0* Go to the MOUNTAINS Cheaper than stay ing at home. Mips Mary Beal. Murphy. K. C.. can accommodate a few more boarders at her delightful home. Just out of town, near the beau tiful Hlawasaee river. % Rhea Springs Hotel Rhea Springs, Tenn. Everything new but the water. Oldest and best known Southern resort. Water unsurpassed for all stomach, liver and bladder trou bles, and a sure cure for eczema of any bind. ' Hotel equipped with all modem conveniences and a water works and lighting plant simply per fect. Buy slimmer round-trip tick ets to Spring City, Tenn., via C. X. O. k T. P. Railway. DIOX LINDSAY, Manager. r STIRLING SSth 61. Near Broadway, New York City. A hlfh-claea family and transient of New Tork: fil'd mlnutee' ride to leading dry goods atoree and con venient to leading theaters. American and European Plana. Delightfully cool Rn.rma. (ingle Rooms and Bath. .$1.50 A up Paalor, Bedroom and Bath (2.50 & up. Yen' Special rate* for long terms J. HOFFER, Proprietor, formerly of Hotel Cecil. Lopdon. Vacation on the 101 Ranch. 'Eferr eaarenlenr# and romfort; rmnforta bit- ettUftt; ladlrtdnnl aaridle boric; cat tl* roundup*; bathlat. boating and all Western vporta; MMOd acraa upon which t« roam anduo ro*oj for worry. Send for llluttfitad booklet deaertbtag In detail all th* attraction* •••ociatad with •u'b • vacation, tlf erdtrin* through eu- & tlt L !&’ mu* Brua, Bex H, Elln, OkU. I Cpaott county Seventh Dlatrlct—W. B. Bridge*. Gordon county, and H. W. Natl.v. of Paulding county. Eighth District—A. J. Owens, of Franklin county, and J. J. Brown, of Klhart county. Ninth District—J. T. Waters, of Hall county, and B. H. Brown, of Forsyth county. Tenth District—C. E. McGregor, of Warren county, and W. J. Henning, of Richmond county. Eleventh District—H. C. Newton, of Appling county, and J. J. Spear*, of Glenn rount.v. Mr. Watson’a Address. The aildr»«* of Hon. Thomas E. Wat son In accepting the Populist nomina tion for president of the t'nlted Bute*, delivered at the Rt. Nicholas rink Thursday night, follows. In part: "One of the most fearful statements that was ever made Is that 'history re- peat* itself.' Take the words lightly, and you stand appalled. "The rlash of armies, the horrors of war, the carnage which spared neither age nor seg—history la full of It; and when history repeats Itself, the slopes of another Gettysburg will run ted with blood, the fiery hmom will swrep other Rhenandoaiyvalleys, and other Atlanta* and Columblaa will he fed to the flames on some other 'Sherman's march to the sea.' “The establishment of the political oligarchy, the use of legislative ma chinery by one claea to rob the othera. the exploitation of the unprivileged bv the Privileged, history la full of It: and when history repeat* Itaelf, w# shall again have the ruls of the many by the few *the confiscation of the property of the unprivileged under forms of law, and the giving to systematised piling" the sacred name of government. "C'aesnr revived the law against hoarding. Any capitallat who kept out of circulation a greater *um than H.flfio heenme a criminal, aubjsct to severe penalties. The Idea was that money should circulate, that |t wai created for no Other purpose, and that whoever hoarded It, thus diminishing the sup ply. causing Inconvenience and luss to others, committed an offenac against his fellow mull mid a crime ngalnat the state. "Oh, that we had had a Caesar In the while house last October, whrn those Wall.st. rascals drew Into New York all the available cash of the country, hoarded It, and created the panic. "History repeats Itself, nml today we have In our own republic every abuse against which tile Roman 'Populates' mad* war. “Our public domain has been preyed upon by millionaire plunderers and land-grabbing corporations, until the American people have been atrlpped of a territory larger than Ibe German em pire. "Timber thieves, apparently with the connivance of the government, have been allow ed to so ravage and desttsw vast forest arras that our losses, di rect ami Indirect, defy human compu tation. Our sireeta have been seised by telegraph, telephone and railroad com. panles. The Iron-horaa monopolises tha main line of public travel, and. In stead of belonging to the public as It should, the horse, ns well ea the ve hicle. and the road, I* private property. The Itelplega public Is not iiermlttsd to light It* own fills*. The private com pany mils! he chartered to hold the light which enahlee the public to walk the puhlfc streets. "Ruptstse you compare the plutocracy of Rome to that of these United Slates. Morgan has more money toveated In art treasures alone than the richest of all the Romans was worth. The summer cottage' of Cornelius Vander bilt costs M.ontt.ana. to say nothing of the land and the furnlshlnga. John D. Rockefeller's yearly Irconte |* greater than was the entire fortune of the richest Roman. From one little rail road. the Central of Georgia, .1. p. Mor gan and a choice assortment of par ticipating fhlevcs, stole a larger sunt than Caesar wrung from conquered Saul. \ "The Vanderbilt family, thru fran- ■Itlsc grabbing and atoek watering op eration*. have robbed th* American people of a i aster sunt titan Alexander the Great harvested by hit conquest of the Persian empire. "Antiquity ww* shocked when Cleo patra dissolved and drank a pearl valued at UOO.OOS. Historians entphs. site the scandalous luxury of Lueullus. w h« spent IS.5'to on a feast When one of our American millionaires throws open Ihe grand ball room for a night of revelry, the floral decoration* alone cost more than the feast of l.ueutlu*. "From th# traction tinea of New York I city Rtwn and Relmont have taken I greater amounts of plunder than War- i rrr Hastings wrung from the princes ot.Hindustan Who dreams of punish- j Ing such criminal* as Morgan and Har. rlmsn? Miserable cowards that we are We crouch before the gigantic law-breakers and allow them to run our government. All that we can do Is to punish such offense* a* petit lar ceny. There i* not *n Intelligent, well informed cltlsen of the country who doe* not know that thru the machin ery of both the old pa.vies, these cor ks ration law-breakor*. who ought to bo behind the bar*, dictate our legtsla- tt-n. shape our foreign and domestic policy and control our deatlnv. "What was It that turned back the »are* of gentral prosperity and made th» beginning* of congested wealth' The destruction of nearly two thousand million dollar* of paper money of tha government: the ever advancing da- mand of special privilege: the constant " crease of taxation, the unequal <1U- Gainesville next week and the excur slon to Brunswick have about been completed. Most of the railroads of the stale have Issued transportation to the mem ber# on an advertising basis, as Is al lowed by law, but some of the roads refused to do this, except to the papers along their line of road. Transporta tion to and from Brunswick will be delivered to the members at Gainesville by President Stanley. The route to Brunswick from Atlanta l* via th* new Atlanta. Birmingham and Atlantic rail road. The members of the association will leave for Brunswick on July IS. On July IT the member# will be given a steamer ride by the clrixens "f Bruns wick and a flsh fry at Frederica. They will then go to St. Simons and Cum berland for a few days’ stay. nd Build Up tha System. Take th* Old Standard GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC. You know what you are taking. The formu. Is Is plainly printed on every bottle, showing It Is simply Quinine and Iron In a tasteless form, and th# most ef fectual form. For grown people and children. 50e. in $1.00 as 50c size, IS NOT A DYE. nilo Bit Seer. C«.. Newark: N. J. (1 and 50c bottles, at druggists** BRANNEN'S DRUG STORE. JACKSON 0. WES8ELL. Atlanta Athletic Club Tha Coburn Shakespearean Playera in Outdoor Performance* of July 10—“As You Like It." July 11— Matinee, "Twelfth Night." Night— “Comedy of Error*.” On the Club House Lav/n at East Lake. tributlon of t|je burdens and the bene fit* of government: these are the cause* which have brought us to such a pass that th* non-producer of wealth en joy* fortune* never known before, while the tolling millions, whose labor produce* th* • wealth, live wllhln the shadow of poverty, and are never cer tain this month that the next will not bring the wolf of want to howl at the door. “Big Stick President." \ For several years a big stick presi dent has been engaged In the alleged work of trust-busting. Where's your busted trust? Which one of them ha* been put nut of business? You cannot name It. How- can a president, who has been 'standing pet' with the tariff standpatters, do any effective trust- busting? You might as well try to purge th* Gulf of Mexico without di verting the Mississippi. "Th# American people, patriotic Idiots that w# are. give their hearty supporj to a protective policy, a tariff system, which Is a ruinous burden 1o everybody, with two exception*. Th" first exception I* the American manu- TEETH EXTRACTED positively without us all. Surrender It to a few. who u?e It for their private gain and our op- preMlon. It ha« become a curse! "We Jeffersonians have been derrled and reviled ns wild people, asking for something that wm visionary, imprac- should be tlcnble. unlawful—vhv should condemned for advocating .and boldly demanding that the rights guaranteed to u* by the constitution of our coun try should be restored? • "Shall lectlonm prejudice always keep us blind to facts? Shall political ag itation always deafen u» to ^he voice of truth? "Tha money power which Jefferaon fought and defeated; the financial *ya- teni which .Taekson attacked and over threw. has come back. a» Thomas H. Benton said It would, hungrier and more powerful than ever. If the Amer ican people are not willing to aee their republic glide Into the hand* of a mon eyed aristocracy, they must arouse themselvea to a determined effort to regain their Industrial Independence. Federal Judiciary. "To preserve the dignity of the ,(,« state# and the minority of decision. It «*Tih III tJSEt?The ! "'** provided In the Judiciary act of SiLt-!- 'LIS! U>«< the test of the constltution- forelgner. w ho buy* American goods theoper than we van buy them—cheap er than he can buy the manufactured goods of hi* ow n country. Th# Money Question. "last fall there waa a panic. In spile of the fart that we had a greater amount of material wealth than ever before. Bankruptcy went atalklng thru the l.nd and the cry of distress •Illy of a state law should first be made In the atate courts of the state whose Ian was challenged, nnd that If the stats courts refused to set aside the statute In question an appeal might he taken to the supreme court of the, United States. "Thai method of testing th* consti tutionality of n state law has never h*«n changed by congress, nor by any rang from sea to sea. How did our. amendment to the Federal constitution. Republican president, our friend of tbo •big stick,' deal with the panic? lie followed precedent, doing Just what our Democratic president. Mr. lieveland. bad done. J. P. Morgan was com- m*nd*r-ln.chief of the Wall-st. >*- trims.’ who forced «h# panic. Just as tt Is the law of the land today. Pie vlotis to the Civil war no state law was ever attacked In any other manner. "Where do the Federal Judge* of district court* get their authority to en. Join governors and suspend the opera tion of state laws, as they have been Aft In 1898. find t«» Morgnn Rome- doing nine# the rivll war?* What line velt'ft administration vlrtmlly Mid. a* (of the revised statutes gives these low. er Federal courts any such Jurlsdle Mr. tMeveland had said In 1893: ‘If nothing else but bonds will do you. come on and get the bond*.' "What brought ahr.it the pnnlr of 1907? The volume of real money has been so greatly lessened In comparison with the country's need for money that It Is not difficult to Vomer* the avail able supply. New York did this last fall. "How could the situation have been relieved? The government should have used Its sovereign power to create money nnd should bsve broken the New York corner on money by Issuing Its own notes—Just as Andrew Jackson did in 1837! ••The secretary of the treasury last winter was handing out those Panama bonds—a violation of law for which he ought to have been Impeached—Just ns Mr. t’nrllsle should have been Im peached In 1993 when the 'endless chain’ was filling Wnll-sfs. ravenoua maw with unlawfully Issued bonds! •*By treasury rulings nnd by acts of congress our money system has been revolutionised. The government has been made to abdicate one of Its most Important functions. It would not ba more dangerous to delegate to private Individuals the t^ght to declare war and make treaties than It Is to delegate the power to control the creation and dis tribution of the national currency. Never did any government aurfender Its royal prerogative of creating fnoney until the goldsmiths of London bribed a king's paramour Into wheedling )i!in Into granting that fatal concession. ••In It* last analysis, the currency system which has hesn foisted upon the American people Is merely the ex ploitation of public credit—yours and mine—for their private profit. The redlt of all the people represented by our government has been seized up-m by 6.AW bankers. Kvery sane and In telligent cltlxsn must know that the government his no more right to sur render to private Individuals the credit of all the people than It would have to hire out the army and navv to further some marauding expedition of these buccaneers of Wall-st. Why has the national banker any more right to use the government ored. It—based upon what you and I pro. duel—'than has th* farmer, th* tn*r- hant. the t‘*r-hanlc. th* lawyer, th* ed itor. the scholar? Wbat right has the government to take what belongs to us all and give it to a fevored few ? A currency system based yp°n the general credit would he a blessing to tlon? What clause of the constitution Justifies them? "A law of Georgia, which has never been repealed, emphatically command* the gov*rnor of the state to refuse to accept service In any case brought ngalnst the stnt*. In the federal courts by private Individuals. "This legislative act shows the spirit of our ancestors. So far have w * wan dered from old landmarks, so Indiffjr MemorU! Hoipltal yeeterday. has caused widespread sorrow and sympathy throughout the state, as well as here In his home city. He w aa con nected with some of the most Influ ential families of the atate. Ten days ago he went to Atlanta for treatment. All efforts to save his life were In vain, and. surrounded by hla wife and other relatives, he passed away. The body of Mr. Lewis was brought to Monroe and tha last sad rites were conducted by Rev. G. M. Eakes. in the presence of a vast concourse of people, all business houses In th* city being closed and many people having come from neighboring towns. A large body of Masons, the mayor and city council, as well as a large nuipber of relatives and friends, united In’ A tribute of re spect to a fellow-townsman. The floral offerings were numerous. Mr. Lew is was one of the most prom inent and Influential citizens of Monroe.' He was about 39 years of sge. being the eldest eon of Mr. and Mrs. John Lewis, of Morgan county, and was for som* years associated with the High Shoals .Manufacturing Company. Ten Yfars ago he removed to Monroe to take the : position of cashier of the G. \V w Felker : Bank. He was also the senior member ; of tha firm of G. A. Lewis & «'o. H* was several times a member of the city council, n position wlilcirhe held at the time of hla death. As a Mnson and a steward of the Methodist church. Mr. Lewis’ Influence In the field of charitable and Christian work was great and far-reaching. Sev en years ago he married Miss Lena Felker. the oldest daughter of Georg* W. Kelker, of Monroe, a prominent banker and financier, well known In Atlanta. .Mr. Lewis Is survived by a wife and three sons, a father and mother, two brothers and one sister. He was con nected by marriage with Mrs. John T. > Malsby, Dr. and Mrs. H. F. Scott. Mrs. Ella Carter. Mrs. R. L. Meador anil Mr. Sanders McDaniel, of Atlanta. Only One "BROMO QUININE.". That Is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the signature of E. \V. GROVE. Used the world over to Curs a Cold in One Day. 25c. FIVE YEARS’ GROWTH OF AGNES SCOTT COLLEGE. Many chances have taken place mt Agnes Scott In the past five year*, more than linn.000 having been spent In Im provement*. Th* street east of th# College has been closed and buildings across this street purchased and Included In the College campus, Rebekah Hrott hall, a large brick dormitory building, baa been erected and furnished at a cost of over $70,000. Th* old Agnes Scott Institute has been divided Into two Institution*, the Agnes Scolt College for Women and the Agnes Scott Academy, a college-fitting school for girls. Both College and Academy are member* of th# "Associa tion of Colleges nnd Preparatory Schools of the Southern States." - Best Candy reduced to 60c per pound. till have we become to the great prfn- ••Iples iiprni which our government ia founded, that neither the legislature nor the peopl* made an outcry Iasi year when o private corporation, which was called Into life by the laws of the atnte. baled the slate of Georgia to a lower : lwttfr of „ ur , vhn „ /.ho.' rZ™ To vigilance Is neede.l to keep the sox *1 elgn stat show cause to this reo- | ..t. .«•*,! it.* iiwk. i-imma^ # w ill go. What conscience says we must do, will be done. Having obej*ed the law of our being In this behsilf, leave the rest to God. in whose \ economy no true xvord or work was cxer lost.. Oh, my countrymen! Each of us Is a temple; within each »*f us lit the sacred fire; xvlthln each of us are the eter. tem ple p\ire nnd the light trimmed and VV"' Jwt>» whyene of her Ivv. should , burn l nic . Ai „ * individual not he torn out of the books—b> the ! )( ,, w) th th# nation. The grandeur of th* republic must always rest upon part of Its glory "To every man and woman who has listened to this addre«s, to every man and woman who shall hereafter read It. I appeal: "Conaecratt the temple, .keep pure and perpetual the vestal service, for It Is moral death to the Individual to .ha ....... neglect the fire; It Is moral death to Minn# between the executixe, the leg- i >i.. n . i,,**, »$*«. n<rht •• Isltttlve nnd the Judicial departments. th * lw,tlon to the ,,ght ’ Ith- In me? Then woe unto m*— for I have lessened flie nation'* splendor. Has the light gone out of your life? Then wo* unto you—for the nation haa lo»t a Judir* of thl* Inferior Federal court "."id ! n7wTl«rif the'emren" tt' Implored LhoJd.e'TaUow 1 *•*« th* grand old state of Georgia, one of the original thirteen, to carry on her state government. "ff ex-er. by any chance. I am presi dent of this republic, I promise you one thing: These corporation henchmen, acting as Federal Judges, are going to get such n calldown as will make them glad to scurry to their constitutional sphere. To accomplish this, nothing mere Is needed than that the executive power shall assert Itself and restore the There’s Real Pleasure and Goodness In a dish of Formerly called P I / Formerly called \ X OSlV EMJah’a Manna / Toasties with cream “The Tagte Lingers" Packages two ■!**». 10 and IS cents. Made ef White Corn by If ever I should represent the chief executive power, the manner In which It w |H be asserted xvlll make good read. Ing for future generations. The Teutonic People. "The Latins sunk under the weight of special privilege. But we Americans am descend apis of the Teutonic peo- pies -a stronger race than the Latins. "If we tamely submit to the financial aristocracy which erects Its strong holds upon th* heights of special privl. and plunders us thru prostitution of leglslgtix c machinery— If xve yield to these insolent and InsAtlAblc plutocrats without a fight—we will be the firs{ branch of th* great Teutonic family thnt ever disgraced Itself by such a pusillanimous surrender. "I. for one. ant proud of a record of prolonged and determined battle against the system of class legislation whose yoke we bear. And because of this record I accept th* nomination which my party had tendered. "Any soldier can fight bravely when he knows his are the heavy battalions that are sure to win. The truest sol diers are those who fight gallantly what they know they can not w in. Why, then, do they fight? ••Because, sometimes, ft Is better to have fought and lost than nor to have TENNIS TOURNEYS. rrrnarstlon* tnr many tennis cham pionship lourney* nr# under wav. ami tlr# Interest in this popular came Is at Th# results of each day’s play of the "professional" came* ar# watched for ami read with Intense lnler«*t by the amateurs, who play for the amusement of the cam# and who don't aspire P win any championship laurels. . About th# only drawback to th# com pin* enjoyment of the cam* tt this season of the year Is the unpleasant ef fects of an excessive flow of perspira tion, with Its aitendsnt discomfort and offensive odors, which do not l«av» the body for many hours after the gam*. . , , - , no matter how- thoroughly the body .\nd because of b , bathed. New. perspiration, which 1s the natural consequence of the vigorous ecerclse In a gam* of tennis or golf during these blistering hm days. Is h*althful until It becomes excessive. wh»n It l« weakening and undesirable. Thl* excessive perspiration can be entjrely checked and all odors killed by th# use of Stinson's Deodorant For Relieving Bowel and Stomach Troubles Wilkinson's Matchless Mineral Water differs from *11 other nitural mineral waters known. Its extreme concentration makes on* gnllon l-v.-« fought and lost than not to have This valuable ponder, which Is ao fought st all. from every field of our j popular among all lover* of out-door Ivll war—from every part of that bloody path which stretch' * from Big Bethel to Appomattox—If those who wore the gray could speak w ould com# the voice "Believing as we Populists do., th* t*. which sports, has b*com* one of the Indlspen sables In the entire sporting parapher nal ia. Many tennis and golf playera report nd It very btneflclet that they have foun to sprinkle Stinson's Deodorant over the body just before the game, as It prevents damp, sticky fee: and all un pleasant odors, though the proper time to Us* It to obtain the greatest benefit Inner law of our natures, which we dare not disobey, must central: and that law saya: 'Forward, march!* Our Duly Net Results. "It Is not ours to Consider the num- [is right after the bath, "when It should her of tolunteers who wl(l rally to our I be rubbed freely over th* body and standard. It la not ours to measure | especially on the feet and arm-pit. chances and to weigh probable results. For sale at all good druggists' • or , ft Is sufficient for ur to know what Is dealers In toilet articles, or sent direct jour duty. [on th* receipt of !5c by Th* Etlnton "Whert conviction says w« should go, Chemical Company, Atlanta, Ga. blnatlon of Sulphuric Acid and Iron: makes It the most tonic, styptic and antiseptic available to materia ntedlca for the prompt, permanent relief of Diarrhoea, Oyasntery, Hemorrholda, aloe Indioest* .... — Mm digestion, Dyspepsia, Sour and -full Stomach after meals, dlgeatant It Is peerless. Take this wale.' and cat anything In the world you like and you will never hear from It unpleasantly. Dose, tea to tablespoonful. In half glass of ordinary water, une S int $1, or 6 pints $5. Sold by all druggists everywhere. Indorsed y physicians and medical text-books. MATCHLESS MINERAL WATER CO. Offices. Andalusia; Ala. Wall, Greenville, Ala. Address all commuolcatlons to Andalusia Office. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. SCHOOLS AND COLLEGES. Does not specialize on any one feature, but features' leading colloftes. Instruction individual. Largest prep gym- fnasium in the South, daily attendance of pupils required, under special director who devotes hi* entire timo to their under special director who devotes hm entire timo to tneir , physical welfare. AH athlotic exercises encouraged, under competent direction of faculty. Special department for a few 1 younger boys. Thorough business course can be taken in s connection with other work in English, Public Speaking,, JL . Mathematics. «te. Non-military, non .Sectarian, non-drnomlnational. but IC&i poalf iv*ly religious. Modern building*, beautiful grounds and moat health- ii'-'Jr ful location ou the Piedmont Plateau* Writa for year book. • ^ SANDY BEAVER, JR., Principal Stone Mountain, Ga, To enjoy the fullest perfection and luxury of a'fine, light beer, you should drink It carries absolutely everything de manded by the most critical drinkers of beer; it meets every want of those needing a strengthening food beverage, or the refresh ing, revivifying tonic effect of hops for the nerves. Acme Maltale is absolutely within the Prohibition Law as interpreted by the Court of Appeals and Superior Court. £ Is sold bottled end on draught bv all ■' ibi cafes, hotels. " * club*, cafes, hotels, and beverage dealers. Always call for UK HUJttl Brewed by ACME BREWING CO., Macon, Ga. e—J JAMES F. LYNCH, 31 3. Pryor Street. Wholetalo Distributing Agent for At* lantn Territory. \ TRUSTEE’S SALE OF DRUG STOCK, ETC. Sealed bids will be received for the stock of drugs nnd fixtures of the Braceltnn Drug Co., bankrupt, located at No. 4."i Marlotta-st.. Atlanta, Ga., at or before II o'clock noon on July 15, 19DS. Rids may be mad* upon the slock and fixtures together or separately. All bids must b* accompanied by a check for 10 per cent of the amount bid. The stock and fixtures and a complete Inventory of same may bo Inspected by prospective bidders. Terms cash. W. A. FULLER, Receiver. 1016 Empire Building. LANGFORD’S PRESSING CLUB \V. O. Conwav, President. J. A. Powers,-Manager. MEMBERSHIP $1.00 PER MONTH. Clothing called for and delivered anywhere in the city twice a week with wagon. 88 1*2 Peaehtr-e Street. Atlanta, Ga. Bel! Phon* d6t. Standard Phene 1IJ9. We are now offering the beat assorted stock of lumber ever stored In our j-ards. If you expect to build nowr Is your opportunity. W* offer every class of lumber and of all dimensions. Sash, doors and Inaid# finish. Bs- for* placing your orders, call and set us at SI3 Whltehall-st.. city. E. G. WILLINGHAM & SONS. Both Phones. BREMEN, Ga., July lO.-Th* Bap tist* at Bremen are enjevlnf the rnoet upcefftfti 1 meeting ever conducted !n th# town. Rev. J. F. Jackfon, of At lanta, la aiding th* paator, Rev. \Y. \X. Rood. Th# timber output of Slain* I® 5 * winter *a# Sfto.flW.Q#0 f«*t. and the in dication are that the*# figure# will h* ah^ut equalled this year. The »car:lt v * of labor prevented operation* lo a iarf* agree.