State of Dade news. (Trenton, Ga.) 1891-1901, June 12, 1891, Image 4

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ALLIANCE TALKS. NEWS OF THE ORDER FROM ALL SECTIONS. Items of Interest to Alliance men Everywhere. TIIE NEW YORK HER ALB ON THE THIRD PARTY MOVEMENT. The New York Herald says that the National Union conference held recently in Cincinnati, is not to be poh-hoohed away as an insignificant gathering of cranks and soreheads. Following this the Herald continues: “Party leaders, Republican or Democrat, Vho look upon it with indifference or treat it with ridi cule, fail to see its significance and its warning. Admit that the interests rep resented are diverse, even incongrous and discordant; that visionary schemes may be favored and extreme demands made. It may be that no practical agree ment will be reached, no platform adopted, no third party formed. All this signifies nothing. The real signifi cance of the event is rather in its origin than in what may be its immediate re sults, in the causes which have led to it rather than the effects which may now come from it. From this point of view the gathering on the banks of '.lie Ohio, representing as it does the Farmers Al liance and the Knights of Labor, to say nothing of other organizations, is more significant than any so-called third party movement we have had in this country for years. The greenback, the prohibition, the woman’s suffrage and even the labor cause have appealed to special classes of limited numbers. They lacked the elements of national strength, and consequently of national achievement. Different from all these is the movement now looming up with growing importance especially in the west. We have said that its significance is in its origin, its cause. That cause is party politics. It is a deep seated griev ance felt by the farmers and* the wage earners of the country in consequence of the shameful disregard of their interests and welfare shown by the party in pow er. The organization of the ag grieved classes is a practical pro test against such party manage ment. As the grievance affects ag ricultural and industry the scope of the movement may be as broad as the nation, as general as the masses. * * * The Farmers’ Alliance joined with the forces of labor and other organizations may prove a factor in coming politics more potent than many affect to believe. Of course it is not expected that a third party, if one should be formed next year, would elect its candidates. It might, however, carry enough States to throw the choice into the house, which would insure the election of a democratic presi dent. But whatever may be the imme diate effect of this new uprising, the movement is not going to disappear while the cause which started it exists. Either party in power must look to the interests of the farmers, workingmen and the masses generally, or these classes will combine for their own protection.” TIIE “CRUSHING OCT” IDEA. Under the above caption the Alliance Advocate of Louisville, Tenn., says: ‘The fiat has gone forth. The na tional banks have assumed control of the old political parties and directed that the Alliance be forced to stand alone as a third party. Tney forget, however, that if the Alliance Democrats and Republi cans in their respective parties go to the primaries that they are numerically strong enough to control the workings thereof. Do they expect to be able to buy up the farmers of the country by taking advan tage of their oppressed condition and holding them iu thrall by threats and glittering promises as heretofore? Oh, no! They realize that the poor worm has at last turned, and that the farmer is thinking for himself, and that his thoughts are turned to his own hard con dition and how to improve his opportu nities to secure a fair amount of relief for himself and his family. Hence the edict goes out thut the farmer must be led or forced into a third party, and the two qld parties unite to crush him out of political exist ence. And the city press has been bought up and are one and all united in an effort to turn the attention of the farmar to the high offices and great wealth awaiting him as the rewad of independent political actiop. But the farmer will not be thus led from the enemy. He will be at the caucus and at the convention, and his voice will be raised in defense of his home and his family. If there is to be a third party formed let the bankers and monopolists organize it, and let them come before the American people defend ing a platform erected on the natioual binking system of to-day. Ye gods, what a spectacle they would present to the taxpayers of America. Let the na tional bank advocates defend their own position rather than attempt to dictate the position the farmers shall take, and they will be kept busy from now until their platform is rent asunder by the wrath of an outraged people. If the farmers of Tennessee adopt the sub-treas ury plan they will defend it to the last. * * * ALLIANCE EDUCATIONAL CAMPAIGN. The Washington correspondent of the Atlanta Journal sends the following to his paper: “The last issue of Col. L. L. Polk’s Raleigh paper, the Progressive Farmer, hits a significant front-page illustration, representing a female debu tante, labelled “Third Party.” Colonel Polk did not gainsay the suggestiveness of the cartoon in his paper, and finally declared that unless the next congress got down to business according to the Alliance forms, the waters in 1892 were going to be mightily agitated. He stated further that an Alliance educa tional campaign had been agreed for the summer and the leaders of the order would appear at different points, north, south and west, and address the people. The campaign in Georgia will be vigorous. The season will open at Araericus on July 14. and Hon. J. B. Weaver, of Iowa; Hon. Jerry Simpson, Dr. C. W. Macune, Mrs. Anna L. Diggs, of Kansas, and Col. Polk will appear. Atlanta will be visited by this party on the 15, Athens on the 16, and Rome on 18. In stating the names of the speakers for this educational work, Hon. I . F. Liv ingston was not overlooked. Along with a number ol speakers, he is expected to appear at Gainesville and Lakeland, Florida, in July, and at various points in Mississippi during the present month. The states included in this grand educa tional campaign are Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kan sas. Kentucky. Louisiana, M-try land, Mississippi. Missouri, New York. North Carolina, North Dakota, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, the two Virginias and the territory of Oklahoma. The whole trend of this movement indicates the in tention of the Alliance to put a presi dential ticket in the field in ’92. Senator Peffer stated as much during a recent visit to Washington, and Colonel Polk did not deny that such a program had been discussed, and practically agreed upon, but it depended on the acts of the next congress. * * * In its salutatory the Industrial Union , Creston, lowa, says: We are here “to champion the cause of the masses and to sustain labor in all its just demands. As the official organ of the Farmers’ Alliauce and Industrial Union we shall ever be found true to the principles embodied in its declaration of purposes, and ready f o champion and defend the prin ciples of the order. We realize that the alliance is entering upon a tempestuous voyage. Nothing but the energy of its leaders and loyalty of its members will serve to guide it aright. The Industrial Union expects to be assailed from every side. It will be ridiculed and reviled. It will be assailed by open en emy and secret foe. All the forces of monopoly will be brought into requisition to drive the order out of existence. Re it so. We are here to defend the right, and, with the approval of the farmers and laborers of lowa, we shall with charity for all, with malice toward none, with courage for the right as God gives us to see the right, keep up the war against oppression of every kind until all class legislation is forever stricken from the statute books, and in their stead shall be written, “Equal and exact justice to all.” The Liberty Bell (Sioux City, Iowa) speaking of the power of the Alliance says: “The good, solid common sense of the American people, when they have fully determined upon doing what their conscience and their judgment tell them is right, that they will not long allow them to be kept from uniting to carry out that purpose. They are now firmly convinced their demands are right, and hence every effort to prevent it only unites the more firmly, and in spite of all that politicians may do or attempt to do, tlyi sound, common sense of the “great, plain people” will prevail. We repeat, that in our opinion, the Alliance has been strengthened by thus showing its ability to foil the attempts of its enemies to di vide and set to wnrring oach other its two principle divisions.” * * * On the sub-treasury plan a correspond ent of the Union says: “Economists have for 500 years been trying to adjust the volume of money to the available amount of precious metals. This is, and must always remain as impossible as “squaring the circle,” because the metals always run away and hide in time of trouble, war or civil commciion. The real problem is to-day the same as it has always been, and it is a very simple one— to adjust the volume of money to the volume of commerce. A.ll that is neces sary is to permit the commodity to fur nish its own flex, be its own security, float itself into market. This is the es sence of the sub-treasury plan.” The membership of the Colored Alli ance is increasing beyond count. Na tional President Humphrey writes the Alliance Bureau, at Washington, that the organization is prospering beyond all precedent so far as organization is con cerned. His greatest hindrance is in the educational line. The demand for liter ature is far in excess of ability to supply. Organizations having literature which they can dispose of, can do much by forwarding it to President Humphrey, or distributing it among colored Alliances that may be near them. * * * The Faulkner County Wheel (Conway, Ark.) says: “Why is it that the metro politan press have maintained a grave yard silence on the issues presented by the Farmers’ Alliance? Because they plainly see that a simple discussion of them would open the eyes of the people, and they would quickly hurl some of their demigods from place and power. They will never discuss issues, they only throw a little sand to blind the people.” * * * People's Economist (Thomasville, Qa.) says; “The Alliance warehouse in Grif fin has just declared a dividend of 45 cents per bale fop the season of 1890-91. That means that the cost of storage and handling their cotton to the farmers who stored iu the Alliance warehouse was only 5 cents per bale." * * * The Canton (Miss.) Progress say3 : “The sub-treasury scheme has an object to accomplish—the lessening of the money pressure. This result will the scheme accomplish, and that, too, with out a sub-treasury in every county.” Na ional Lecturer J. F. Willettß is doing excellent work in the field. Good reports fellow wherever he goes. The alliance needs a thousand just such men to advocate its cause. —National Econo mist. * 9k * The alliance in Maryland is thoroughly awake and decidedly aggressive. It pro poses to take a hand in the coming cam paign. It is growing rapidly. Specie Movement. * Exports of specie from the port of New York last week amounted to $0,975,412. of which $6,414,835 was gold and $560,577 silver. All the silver and $5 ,859,399 in gold went to London and $1,000,000 gold to Paris and $04,835 -gold Was shipped in small lots to South American points. Imports of specie during the week amounted to $78,341, which S7I,SCO was gold and $3,781 il ver. Corn Oysters. —Take six roasting ears “just out of the milk,” split each row of the corn in the center of the ker nel lengthwise with a sharp knife; scrape out all the pulp; add one egg, well beaten, a little salt, one tablespoonful of sweet milk, flour enough to make a pretty still batter; drop in hot lard, with a tablespoon, and fry a light brown; use as little flour as possible. Baked Eggs. —Break one dozen of eggs into a well buttered dish, season with pepper and salt, cover lightly with cracker or bread crumbs, one-half cup of cream, two tablespoonfuls of butter; set in the oven and bake twenty minutes, Deafnemt Can’t he Cured By local applications, as thsy cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deal neae, and that is by con stitutional remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when It is entirely closed, Deafnoss is tne result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but au ixv flamod condition of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that we cannot cure by taking Hail’s Catarrh Cure, bead for circulars, free. F. J. Orkney & Cos., Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, 75 cents. During the past year 3533 new books were issued by the American publishing houses. Malaria cured and eradicated from the system by Brown’s Iron Bitters, which en riches the blood, tones the nerves, aids diges tion. Acts like a charm on persons in general ill health, giving new energy and strength. Twenty-three penniless emigrants were sent back to Europe from New York a few days ?go. Van Winkle Gin and Machinery Cos.. Atlan ta, Ga., manufacture Cotton Gins, Feeders, Condensers, Presses, Cotton-Seed Oil Mills, Ice Vachinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Tanks, Pumps, Wind-Mills, Etc. Write for prices and disc’ts. If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son's Eye-water. Druggists sell at2sc per bottle. Creates An Appetite There is nothing for which we recommend Hood'* Sarsaparilla with greater confidence than for loss of appetite, indigestion, siok headache and other t*ou bles of dyspeptic nature. In the most natural way this medicine gently tones the stomach, assists di gestion and makes one feel “real hungry.” Ladle* tn delioate health, or very dainty and particular at meals, after taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla a few days* find themselves longing for and eating the plainest food with unexpected relish and sasisfactlon. Try It. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Bold hv All ftrncrcrlaf.tr tlj 1r f/>* •< iVnnnmii nniv kyU. JsHOOD Apothecaries, Lowell, Mas*. 100 Doses One Dollar “August Flower” “ I inhlfet some tendency to Dys pepsia from my mother. I suffered two years in this way ; consulted a number of doctors. They did me no good. I then used your August Flower fand it was just two ays when I felt great relief. I soon got so that I could sleep and eat, and I felt that I was well. That was three years ago, and I am still first class. I am never Two Days. without a bottle, and if I feel constipated the least particle a dose or two of August Flower does the work. The beauty of the medicine is, that you can stop the use of it without any bad effects on the system. Constipation While I was sick I felt everything it seemed to me a man could feel. I was of all men most miserable. I can say, in conclusion, that I believe August Flower will cure anyone of indigestion, if taken Life of Misery with judgment. A. M. Weed, 229 Belle fontaine St., Indianapolis, lud.” <3 eshkt. * requires Addition of AN' DllaS& EQUAL PART OF Ol 4 QJS rutiiu making cosm<uioll .Advertised l n 734B PAPERS I Where we have no Agent will arrange with any active merchant.—L. A M.—N. Y. SMITH’S WORM OIL For Worms IS A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY. Sold Everywhere. 25 Cents, Gnrn EVEN TOBACCO rtCU CIC IS THE HKST foi ii Mild, Sweet CHEW. No HEARTBURN nw HEADACHE Sard JO centM >" stamp* lorn 5.4 Jl if yonr dealer does not KEEP IT. TAYLOIt Manufacturers, Winston, N. C. mnnv Iflir r C positively remedied BAGGY KNfchb Greely Past Stretcher Adapted by students at Harvard, Amherst and othyr Colleges, also by orotessiouat and business men every where. *lf not for sale in your town send 25c. tJ B. J. GItKKLY, 7U> Washington Street Boston. pcuomMO^Hl Ii uI sJ dis Passed. j V " -and Father* are en titled to $lB a mo. Fee SlOwhen you *.-t yourmoner. Li.-w. (rM. Mfet.ru 1L MiTiTsu, Ittr, amw. *■ *■ ■ II ABOUT Enet Tenneaa-e'n EINE SS ft 1 (1,1 MATE and Clkkat Rksources is Mil KNOXVILLE SENTINEL; daily 1 mo., twi li AOc.: w.ekly 1 year, 81; wimples sc. PATENTS-M---C. ■ W 40-paae book free. Al All Weak, Nervous, Wretchki. mortal* set Nk&iaK well and keep well. Health Helper UIUO% tells how. 50cts. a year. SampSe copy free. Dr. J. ii. DYE, Editor. Buffalo. N. Y. PEIWSIOWS - liar all :.OI,I)IE8Sl M disabled, f- fee for icrese jo years ex perience. Write for Laws. A.W. McCormick Sons. Wasuinoton, D. C. it Cincinnati. O. NEWS AM) NOTES FOR WOMEN. Corn-flower blue is anew color. Flowers continue to rule the toilet. Pearls are prime favorites at present. Turquoises were never more popular. The bustle is coming into style again. Gauntlet gloves are only for daytime Wear. Norway, Me., has a womap road sur veyor. A distinctive church dress for women is proposed. The Parisian hair-dressers have decreed that bangs must go. The stronghold of the blonde is the North and Northwest. The sticks for some fans cost SSO each, and the paintings S4OO more. Pale blue, yellow and apricot are favorite shades for tea gowns. Loose fitting gray growns seem to be a fad with many literary women. Heart-shape stones are the rage for pins, earrings and finger rings. There arc 425 female students at the Universtiy of Ann Arbor, Mich. A good walk will redeem an ill-de signed skirt, and a bad walk ruin a good one. Pretty maidens rival the butterfly in their attire, and resemble walking flower beds. The girl of the period thinks it is “smart” to be ignorant of common tiiiijgS. A London woman has a classs of 10G cooks, to whom she gives “entire dinner lessons.” In Amsterdam now it is the fashion to announce a broken engagement oi marriage. A pretty bride went to the altar in a white Swiss muslin gown and a white chiffon veil. Senora Isidora Cousino, of Chili, is a handsome young widow with a monthly income of SBO,OOO. Dr. Martha Robinson, of Cleveland, Ohio, has been her father’s partuer in dentistry for several years. Louise Michel has started a school in Loudon, where she gives free instruction to forty poor children. One of the prettiest of Alabama’s many belles is Miss Mary Leftwich, of Florence. She is a small blonde of graceful figure. Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, has received the comfortable sum oi SIOO,OOO for its Women’s Medical School fund. A Kentucky paper relates that the grandmother of the bride at a wedding in Covington recently acted as the brides maid. It is said that Miss Bedle, a daughter of ex-Governor Bedle, is one of the handsomest young women in New Jersey. Loose-fitting gloves are the latest. II says so plainly, “see how small my hands are; I can afford to wear a lose glove.” Hairpins of shell, with ornamental top of twistled gold, valued at seventy-five dollars each, are not uncommon in the streets of New York. A girl in Atchison, Kan., has a pecu liar way of attracting attention to her- Eelf. She scallops her tinger-nail3 and leaves them that way. A woman is now considered old fash ioned who does not care for women’s rights and a lot of things it is supposed she ought to care about. A fad of the moment among some fad affecting young women is to chew a flower, or, to put it more elegantly, to wear one between the lips. Embroidery silks come from China, Japan and Italy, but they are dyed and prepared in England. Girls are em ployed in skeining and winding it. There are constant demands for wo men who ea* charm snakes. The sup ply is very small, and the wages are SIOO a week, with all expenses paid. It is said that England has more wo men workers in proportion to her popu lation than any other country; twelve per cent, of the industrial classes being women. Elaine Gurst and her sisters have started a novel undertaking in the form of a mushroom farm, the proceeds of which are for the support of a boy’s evening school. The Superintendent of the Baltimore Training School for Nurses, Miss Louisa Pajsons, studied her profession in Lon don with Florence Nighingale, and was a nurse with the Egyptian expedition. Dresses n*ay be rendered incombustible by dipping them in a solution of tung state of soda, one pound in two gallons of water says the Sanitary Neus. The most delicate color will not be affected by it. Mrs. Annie Hyde, of Fishkil!, N. ¥., the oldest pensioner on the rolls of the United States Government, has cele brated her one hundred and second birth day. Records show that she was born in Fishkill, April 28, 1789. Miss Emma Eames, the American prima donna who has won so notable a success before the British public in “Faust” and “Lohengrin,” is not yet twenty-three years. She possesses a fine voice, great dramatic talent and re markable beauty. A lady came to the polls in Fort Scott, Kan., who refused a ticket from those doling them out, saying she had her ticket already prepared. She was allowed to have her own sweet way, and when the ballots were counted out her registra tion ticket, with her name in big letters, turned up all right. The most, distinguished literary wo man in Rome is the Countess Lovatelli, who lives in a palace at St. Angelo. She is a handsome woman, tall, slender, pale and always richly dressed. She is about forty-five years old, and no one doubts her erudition. She is the only woman member of the German Archaeological Society. He Careful of Your Eyesighr. It is a well known fact that the eyesight— the most delicate of our senses—may lie easily destroyed by the use of glasses not suited to the eves, or of poor quality. It is the greatest foolishness to purchase cheap glasses from unreliable dealers. The risk taken in doing this is a thousand times greater than the small amount saved. With the above in view, Mr. A. K. Hawkes, well known throughout the country as a lead ing optician, lias established a factory in At lanta, where are prepared perfect glasses of every shade of strength. Hawkes’Crystallized Lenses have a national reputation and are en dorsed bv thousands of the best citizens of the United States, whose names will be given upon application. Druggists and merchants find these crystal lized lenses the best paying part of their stock, because the people want them, and will have no others. These spectacles are sold in nearly every town in America, and every pair is warranted. They are not supplied to ped dlers, remember, Mr. A. K. Hawkes is the only manufacturer of these Crystallized Lenses, and makes a specialty of fillingocculists’ prescriptions. Ad dress all orders 12 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. A movement is on foot in Paris against cost ly funerals. Brown’s Iron Bitters cures Dyspepsia. Ma laria, Biliousness and General Debility, Gives Strength, aids Digestion, tones the nerves— creates appetite. The best, tonic for Nursing Mothers, weak women and children. The census of London shows a population of 4,211,056. Prooriti Popularity. TUB LOVELL DIAMOND SAFETY BICTCIJS FAC TORY KEPT RUNNING TWENTY-FOUR HOURS A DAY TO SUPPLY THE DEMAND. Passengers on the ghost train which whizzed through Worcester in the small hours of the morning havo noticed of late a factory which never seems to close, and from whose windows the bright light streams all nightlong. It is the factory of the John P. Lovell Arms Com pany of Boston, and it is running literally twenty-four hours a day, with two complete relays of men, from the foreman down. This activity is due to the extraordinary popularity of the new eighty-five-doUar Lovell diamond safety bicycle, a machine which is giving the very best uf satisfaction. —-Boston Herald. FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. No Fits after first day’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2 trial ti ttle lree. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St., Pkila., Pa. For leather and rubber belting and all kinds of rubber goods, seud to Southern Belting Cos„ Atlanta, Ga. \ %>*++ j Copyright. ISW. Which will you have , sickness, suffering and despair, or health, strength, and spirit ? You can take your choice. All chronic diseases and de rangements peculiar to women are permanently cured by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription. It restores the female func tions to healthy action. It removes the obstructions and suppressions which cause trouble and misery. For pe riodical pains, internal inflam mation, ulceration and kindred ailments, it is a positive rem edy. The system is invig orated, the blood enriched, di gestion improved, melancholy and nervousness dispelled. It’s a legitimate medicine, the only one that’s guaranteed to give satisfaction in the cure of all “ female complaints.” Wl KEIEDY Of roxbdry, mass.. Says: Kennedy’s Medical Discovery cures Horrid Old Sores, Deep- Seated Ulcers of 40 years’ standing, Inward Tumors, and every Disease of the Skin, ex-* cept Thunder Ilumor, and Cancer that has taken root. Price, $1.50. Sold by every Druggist in the United States and Canada. Ss Life Worth Living? No—Not if Your Bowels are Out of Order. WILL FIX YOUjALL RIGHT. Cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery, Cramps, Summer Complaint and. all Stomach Troubles of Man, Woman or Child. Tnke n<> substitute. It lias no ennui. Your dniKglst or mrrohniit will order it for y® n I Frm#, st©d Dfp F#nHr. Steel Tahlac, AdJiwUbw Ball ttjß SWk ™ B / /Vv llv\ Bwtaf* U all llanaln* Fart*, lad uiUs; PwUla /I ' W.Jft \W' \ * ,n ** t “ aUrlai BM>>p y p a boy. Flabby la Kaaa*l and Mtekd- ■■ ■ ■ S l STRICTLY HIGH GR*DE IN EVERY PARTICULAR. Wi j ) Send * ,x c * n ** ,n stamps lor our 100-page migrated Catalogue ot i ( Bicycle Gun8 > Riflß> - favours, Sporting Goods o* Ail Kigjg, etc, j ) JOHN P. IJ)VEIiTi ARMS CO, - _IK)BTdN; I ■ P Cheapest, ltelief js immediate. A curb is* certain.' ' For MK Cold in the Head it lias 1.0 equal. Sflfaß ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys tem effectually, dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial fa its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its fir ny excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 500 and $1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure It promptly for any one whs wishes to try it. Do not accept anj ■ubstitute. .* CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO, CAL. 10UISVIUE. KY. NEW YORK. M.V. About diamond studs. Every younn man knows that he must have one, if he is “in the swim;” ancl instead of putting this article upon the list of expenses, it is really a good investment, especially when you can get them at such low prices as we are offering. You can't lose much in buying diamonds, that is, if you buy directly from the importers. Call and examine our assortment. J. P. Stevens ft Bro., 47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. Send for catalogue. IMM BELTING CO, MANUFACTURERS O/ PURE OAK-TANNED LEATHER ZBZEX-.TITST Gr Agents for Boston Belting Cos. The Original Manufacturers of Mechanical Rubber Goods. HEADQUARTERS FOlt LAWN lIOSE. 45 Decatur St., Atlanta, Ga. For Sale] TWO Q A UfTQ SECOND-HAND LJ/Tl 1 JLj |J| Must be Sold! Cheap for Cash. Address JOHNSON, PARKER A CO., 913 Chestnut St., Chattanooga, Teun. KING COTTON Buy or sell your Cotton on JONES sAAs'Tofi Cotton Scale. inf 1 i NOT cheapest m best - H K For terms address S3 aj JONES OF BINGHAMTON, V W BINGHAMTON. N. Y. TTP A T TIT CALENDAR and Bill cj XIxjAL A H tone for each day of'ql. 30c. row loft, will mail lor 12c. each to close. 850,000 in use designed for the maxes-economical! 1891 Cook Book —mb— mb— —a— imawanwßrattleboro, Vt. practical COLLEGE. Richmond, V. u> *, *t •£* —" eSFa Big KS ag and Whiskey Habits 22 S zya) cured at home with- Sr lii £f@sSout pain. Book of par ti $ If! ticulars sent FILES. Tnm H.M.WOOLLEY,M.O. Atlanta,Ua. Office 10434 Whitehall St A. N. U Twenty-Four, ’9l.