Newspaper Page Text
ALLIANCE TALKS.
NEWS OF THE ORDER FROM
ALL SECTIONS.
Items of Interest to Alliance
men Everywhere.
NATIONAL ALLIANCE EDUCATIONAL CAM
PAIGN.
Alabama —Birmingham, July 21; Hon.
Jerrv Simpson. Montgomery, August
15; 'Senator W. A. Pcffer anil C. VV.
Macuue.
Arkansas—Arkadelphia, July 25. Mc-
Neill, July 28; Hon. Jerry Simpson.
Florida—Monticello, July 28; De-
Funiak Spiings, July 25; Gainesville,
September 28; Lakeland, September JO;
Hon. L. F. Livingston of Georgia, and
Mr. J. W. Stokes, president of the South
Carolina State Alliance, will attend the
meetings at Monticello and DeFuniak.
Georgia—Americus, July 14; Atlanta
July 15; Athens, July 10; liome, July
18; Hon. J. B. Weaver of Iowa; Hon.
Jerry Simpson, Dr. C. W. Macuue, and
Col. L. L. Polk will address these meet
ings.
Illinois—Virginia, August 0; Spring
field, August 13; Senator Pcffer, Dr. C.
W. Macune and National Lecturer J. F.
Willetts will be present and address the
meetings.
Indiana —Rensselaer, August 4; New
castle, August 8; the speakers will he
Senator Peffer and Lecturer J. F. IV il
letts.
Kansas—Horton, September 7 and 8;
Concordia, September 9 and 10; Hutch
inson, September 14 and 15; Chanute,
September 16 and 17; President L. L.
Polk. Other speakers will be assigned.
Kentucky—Grand Rivers, July 2;
Bowling Green, July 4; Mt. Sterling,
July 0; Catlettsburg, July 7. Na'ional
Lecturer Willetts will attend all these
meetings and President L. L. Polk will
be at Mt. Sterling and Catlettsburg.
Louisiana—Shreveport, August 18; Baton
Rouge, August 25; Hon. Ben Terrell will
attend both meetings and Dr. C. W. Ma
cime will also be at Shreveport.
Maryland—Annapolis, August 22; Mr.
J. Brad Beverley of Virginia, and other
speakers will be present.
Mississippi—Holly Springs. June 17
and 18; Durant, June 19 anti 20; Hazel
hurst, June 22 and 23; Meridian, June 24
and 25; Tupelo, June 20 and 27. AM thes;
meetings will be attended and addressed
by President L. L. Polk, Hon. L. F.
Livingston. Lecturer J. F. Widelts, Mr.
J. H. McDowell, president of the Tennes
see State Alliance, and others.
Missouri—Sedaiia, August 11; Chilli
cothe September 2. Senator Peffer will
be at Sedaiia. Speakers lor Chillicothe
are yet to be assigned.
New York—Machias, July 11; Pen
Yun, August 18 and 19. President L.
L. Polk and Mr. Ralph Beaumont will be
at Machias and Senator Peller and lion.
Jerry Simpson will attend Pen Yau
meetings.
North Carolina—Goldsborougb, June
27; Charlotte, August 20. President
Polk and Mr. Manu Page, president of
Virginia State Alliance, will be at Golds
boro. Speakers will be provided for
Charlotte later on.
North Dakota—Valley City, July 28;
Grand Forks, July 30. Hon. J. W. Har
den of South Dakota, and lion. Van B.
Prather, lecturer of Kansas State Alli
ance, will address these meetings.
Oklahoma Territory—Oklahoma City,
July 4. air. W. N. Wilkins, of Kansas,
is the visiting speaker.
South Caroliua —Florence, July 9 ;
dreenwood, August 28. Lecturer Wil
letts will be at Florence. Greenwood
has not yet been provided for.
Tennessee—Knoxville, July 4. Presi
dent L. L. Polk will be present.
Texas —Austin, July 23; Sulphur
Springs, July 25 to 27; Fort Worth, Au
gust 5. Senator Pefler will be at Austin
and Sulphur Springs, and Hon. J. B.
Weaver, of lowa, will be at Fort Worth.
Also Mr. B. E. Kies, of Kansas.
Virginia—Staunton, July 28; Roa
noke, September 23. Lecturer J. F.
Willetts has been assigned fur Staunton,
and other speakers will also be sent there.
Roanoke will be provided for later.
West Virginia—Charleston, July 8;
Martinsburg, June 23 and 24. Mr. Ralph
BeaumoDt and Mr. J. Brad Beverly will
be at Martinsburg; Mr. Beaumont will
also attend the Charleston meeting.
* *
WORKING FOR THE THIRD PARTY.
Five of the seven members of the ex
ecutive committee of the people’s party
met at St. Louxs a few uays ago. loose
present were: 11. E. Tnubeueck. of
Illinois; George F. Washburn, of Massa
chusetts; J. B. Weaver, of Iowa; A. O.
Williams, of Kansas, and M. C. Rankin,
of Indiana. Ingatius Donnelly, of Min
nesota, and Mr. Davis, the seventh mem
ber of the committee were absent.
Reports were received from gentlemen
representing different p irts of the
country as to the outlook in their section.
General J. B. Weaver, of Iowa; G. A.
Gaithe,r, of Alabama; G., 11. Smith, of
Kentucky; M W. Wilkins, of Kansas,
and Mr. W. J. Kline, of Illinois, and
others, reported that the prospect for
success in their states is most favorable.
In Kentucky and Ohio a special fight
■will be made, and the active work of
preparing for the campaign is left in the
hands of Taubeneck and Robert Shil
ling, the secretary. The secretary was
instructed to establish a literary bureau
to furnish items of interest to the reform
press, which now numbers between GOO
and 700 papers. A weekly letter is to
be prepared and published by those
papers. A medal was ordered to be
struck, commemorative of the party’s
convention at Cincinnati on May 19th.
The medal is to be made of aluminum,
and is to be distributed to different alli
ances to be sold, the proceeds, to be de
voted to campaign purposes next year.
A constitution was adopted for the peo
ple’s party clubs. The committee agreed
to and instructed the chairman and secre
tary to prepare an address to the people
of the United States. The following
resolution is the most important action
taken by the party, in view of the fa t
that it is the first declaration of where
the party stands, and is in a great meas
ure a refutation of the charges of dick
ering, which were so freely made during
the Cincinnt-ti convention: “Resolved,
That the national executive committee
is unalterably opposed to a fusion wiih
any other political party, and will not
recognize an / individual commi tee that
proposes or eaters into such im on, as
affiliated with the people’s parly.” After
the adoption of this resolution the mem
bers entered into a general discussion of
the best campaign policy to be pursued
during 18 >2. The concensus of opinion
was ihat the principal issues to be con
tended for will be a subtreasury plank,
opposition to banks of issue, and to ad
vocate government control or ownership
of telegraph nud railroads, and to uphold
the interest of wage earners.
*
* *
OREGON TO ORGANIZE.
The Alliance is booming in Oregon, 3
tne following official proclamation issued
by President Polk, shows: “Whereas
iufoimation having been filed in this
office through legally constituted author
ity, that a sufficient number of county or
ganizations have been effected in the
State of Oregon to form a State organiza
tion, under the constitution and laws of
the National Farmers’ Alliance and In
dustrial Union, Therefore I, L. L. Polk,
by virtue of'authority vested in me as presi
dent of the National Farmers’ Alliance
and Industrial Union, by the constitution
of the same, do issue this, my official
proclamation, designating Portland, Ore
gon. as the place, and Wednesday, the
Bth day of July, 1891, at 10 o’clock a. m.,
us the time, at which the legal and prop
erly accredited delegates of the various
county organizations aforesaid shall as
semble, for the purpose of adopting a
constitution and tie election of officers
for til e sum bittlc ui'gauiZut.Cu. 1 * *
When the body this constituted shall
have adopted a State constitution, and
shall have elected officers in conformity
to the constitution of the National Farm
ers’Alliance and Industral Union, and
shall have adopted the secret work of the
said order, the said State organization
•hall be entitled to a charter from the
National Farmers’Alliance and Industrial
Union, and to all the rights and privileges
appertaining thereto.
THE WHOLE TRUTH.
Tbe Montgomery, Ala., Daily Journal
has the following editorial notice on the
farmers’ movement; “The mistake that
some of the Journal's esteemed contem
poraries make in their ciriticisms of the
farmers' movement and its leaders is th/it
the causes that have brought it about are
not merely local. They are wide spread,
ever spreading and growing in import
ance everywhere. Polk and Macuue,
Kolb and Adams, and hundreds of presi
dents of county and district alliances,
have little to do with the threatened
storm which may follow the terrible aud
ominous clouds now above the horizon.
If each and everyone of these central and
conspicuous figures were dead, the clouds
would continue to gather, continue to
grow more portentious, and the longer
the storm broods before it breaks the
more irresistible will be its forces. How
long they will continue to grow, how
portentious they will become no one can
fore-ee. But. as lion. J. Phelps truly
says iu the North American Review for
May, ‘there is no government or institu
tions under our system that is not within
tbe ultimate reach of the numerical ma
jority.’ When the farmers, so long the
most conservative element iu American
political and social life, become at once
the most radical, it can not be said that
it is w ithout reason.”
THE SUB-TREASURY AND THE TRIRD
I'AHTY.
The Progressive Farmer , (lta’eigh, N.
C.) under the caption of “Some Troublous
Things—How r to get Rid of Them,” says:
The sub-tnusury bill haunts the politi
cians and The friends of money power.
They ought to get rid of it. They ought
to remove it from the domain of party
politics. They should not allow it to
become a disturbing element iu parties
and in coinmimitii s. They should kill
it. How ? The easiest thing in the world,
the simplest kind of a thing to do. Just
let them offer something better and the
people will drop the sub-treasury bill and
jump at it. Try it, friends of plutocracy,
and you will see how quickly you can
kill jt. The ghostly presence of a Peo
ple’s Party hovers over the pillows of
certain people and they can't sleep. How
will you get rid of it? Simply give the
people a fair, square showing in the race
of life. Give them parties and a govern
ment which recognizes their intereg's
and their just rights—which will not
dwarf and ignore the rights of persons
and unduly magnify the rights of money.
But these things will continue to trouble
our politicims until the just demands of
<ur suffering millions are respected. The
leaders of the two old political parties
may thank themselves and no one else
for these troublesomcCthings.
STATE ALLIANCE MEETINGS,
So far as has been reported the follow
ing location and dates have been agreed
upon for state alliance meetings.
Alabama, Montgomery, August 4.
Aikansas, Little Rock, August 19.
California. LofAngeles, October 20.
Colorado, October 3.
Georgia, Atlanta, August 19.
Illinois, Springfield, October 27.
Louisiana, August 4.
Maryland, Baltimore, August 11.
Michigan, Lancing, October G.
Mississippi, Sfarkville, August 25.
Missouri, Pertyle Springs, August 25.
North Carolina, Morehead City, Aug
ust 11.
North Dakota, Grand Forks, June 23.
Pennsylvania, Harrisburg, November
10.
South Carolina, July 22.
South Dakota, Huron, dute not fixed.
Tenue c sce, Nashville, August 11.
Texas, Dul'as, August 18.
V rginia, Richmond, August 18.
Oklahoma, Oklahoma City, August 18.
*
* *
The Southern Mercury (Dallas, Tex.,)
says: “A statement is going the rounds
of the partisan press to the effect that
only about 17,000 legal voters belong to
the Texas Farmers’ Alliance. When this
false report was set on foot over forty
counties had not sent in their semi-annual
reports. Thp most of them happened to
b s the strongest alliance counties in the
Slate. Since this report was started,
which w-as in February last, 138 new
sub allian- e* have been organized, GOS
defunct alliances resuscitated, besides
four new county alliances have been
chartered since the Waco conference.
It-ports fron all parts of the State are
that great numbers of the best farmers
who nave heretofore held aloof, waiting
to see what the alliance intended to do,
are coming into the order, having become
latisfied it means business. Besides, for
the first time in three ’ ca s, every officer
in every department of ttie State Alliance
and the official organ are in perfect ac
cord, and every one of these officers is
doing everything in their power to build
up the order.
*
, * *
The San Miguel, (Cal.) Messenger,
commenting on President Polk’s procla
mation on membership duty, says: “Pres
ident Polk has issued an official mani
festo in which he empatically states that
no paper which has been constituted an
Alliance organ, and no man avho retains
membership in the Alliance, has the right
to assail Alliance principles dr members
of the Alliance publicly. The president
says that the fullest discu-sion of all
matters is invited and urgid in Alliance
councils, but the will of the majority is
the law of the order, and if any one feels
that he cannot acquit see in the decision
of the majority, and feels that he is con
scientiously impelled to go before the
public and assail our principles, he should
first divest himself of all Alliance uni
form. The president holds that any
paper vested with authority to represent
the order, which assails Alliance princi
ples should be promptly repudiated; and
that any member who assails another
publicly, while both are Alliance mem
bers violates bis obligation, and such an
offense merits expulsion.”
The McComb City (Ark.) Enterprise
contains the following in refutation of
charges that sub-treasury money will be
taxed: “lhs sub-treasury plan is the
only plan yet given out that requires no
taxation for theenvssion of money. The
idea that money issued through
the sub-treasury is first taxed from one
class of the people before it is loaned to
another is absurd, and discloses the ig
norance or mendacity of every one that
makes the assertion. The third and
fourth sections of that bill when read
will exhibit the mean, underhand war
certain selfish partisans are guilty of
waging against the bill. Every farmer,
mechanic and laborer should read the
sub-treasury bill for himself and not be
guided by enemies, who aim to cruffi
the orderT Brethren, their object is to
wipe out the Alliance root and branch.
Will you let ’em.
*
* *
Secretaries of sub and county a'fiances
and all other members are warned against
sending or giving names of their officers
and members except tincugn official
channels. We learn that literature is
being sent out to members of the alliance
gs alliance li erature which is written ex
pressly for the enemies of our order to
circulate among the memb rs of our or
ganization. Brethren w atch your enemy,
while you pi ay to be delivered from their
oppression. See that those who are
placed in office are true devoted followers
of our order. What I said unto you
brother secretaries, I say unto all, watch!
—Rural Home, Wilson. 2V. C.
*
* *
The Reveille, published at Hill City,
Kan., says: of the Alli
ance should constantly keep in mind that
this is the year for them to study and ac-
Siaint themselves with the great issues
at are being discussed. This is the
educational year inThat respect with us,
and we must improß every opportunity
to becoHie familiar wdth our principles
and demands, in order for them to avail
us anything. We can no f afford to stand
•till. ‘Let us then be up and doing,’
and always employ our best efforts to
further our cause.”
The Southern Alliance Farmed' (Atlanta,
Ga.) says: “So soon as farmers lay by
their crops, there will be Alliance revi
vals held all over Georgia. Our brethren
are starting even now. We are glad to
hear of Alliance rallies, for they do our
cause great good. They bring the mem
bers together, speeches are made and zeal
and enthusiasm are worked up. The
farmers can’t have too many of them.
We have a splendid corps of lecture.s
jjow in the field, and they are always at
the service of our members.”
*
* *
The People's Press (New Castle, In
diana,) says; “A partisan politician is
one who sticks to his party without re
gard to the causo it defends or the prin
ciple it advocates. The millionaire can
not afford to be a partisan, and is not;
therefore, laboring men, can you? Can
you afford to work for a cause that is
robbing you, simply because somebody
will call you a sore head if you. do not?
Think this matter over.”
*
♦ *
The Alliance Farmer , Chiplev, Fla.,
says vehemently; Stand up squarely for
the sub-treasury bill on all occasions,
and never, never accept any substitute
whatever. A man that is willing to ac
cept less than the full measures demand
ed by the National Alliance is just that
iinuch short of a true Allianceraan.
TO RAISE FUNDS
For a Memorial to Davis, Lee
and Jackson.
The college of Charleston, 8. C., issues
a circular iu which it earnestly invites
the co-operation of all southern colleges
in the forming of an association to ra se
funds to be applied to the erection of a
monument to perpetuate the fame and
memory of Jefferson Davis, Robert E.
Lee, Stonewall Jackson aud the confed
erate dead in general. In order to ar
range some definite mode of proceedure,
it is proposed that a convention of south
ern universities and collegi s be held in
Charleston, at such time during the com
ing fall as may be found most expedient
and convenient, and that an interstate
oratorical contest be made a feature of
the proposed convention, each institution
being represented by one contestant.
Every southern university and college is
earnestly requested to send a representa
tion to tho convention, whetner such
delegation takes part in the contest or
not
DREW A CROWD.
Jones—l hear you had a dog show in
vour town last week. How did it go
on?
Adams —Splendidly. It was a howling
success. —1 Kate Field’s Washington. 1
Too Fastidious.
Railroad President (to applicant for
position)—“But why do you desire an
outdoor position particularly? Would
you not be willing to take a place in my
own office here? A vacancy that I think
would be suitable exists ju9t at present.”
Fitz Dudell (just broke loose from
Harvard) —“Well—er —ye know, sitting
at a desk all day would make a fella’s
twousers bag horwibly at the knee;
don’t’che find it so yourself, now ?” —•
Life.
There are now 19,373 newspapers
printed in tbe United States and Canada,
a gain of 1,613 over last year’s record.
New York is in the lead of the states,
having 1,958 papers.
To Dispel Colds,
Headaches and Fevers, to cleanse the system
effectually, yet gently, when costive or bili
ous, or when the blood is impure or sluggish,
to permanently cure habitual constipation, to
awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy
activity, without irritating or weakening
them, use Syrup of Figs.
If It wasn’t for its light nobody would ever
find out that the sun has spots on it.
Itc Careful of Your Eyesight.
It is a well known fact that the eyesight—
the most delicate of our senses —may be easily
destroyed ny the use of glasses not suited to
the eyes, 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 Ilian the small amount saved.
With the above in viev , 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 by thousands of the best citizens of the
United States, whose names w'ill 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 tbe only manufacturer
of these Crystallized Lenses, and makes a
specialty of filling occulists’prescriptions. Ad
dress all orders 12 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
Thpre Is more Catarrh In this section of the
oouatry than all other diseases put together,
and until the last few years was supposed to
be inou*,ble. For a great many years doctors
pronounoed it a local disease, and prescribed
local remedies, and by constantly failing to
oure with local treatment, pronounced it in
ourable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a
constitutional disease, and therefore requires
constitutional treatment. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney fe Cos.,
Toledo, Ohio, is the only constitutional cure
on tho market. It is taken internally in doses
from 10 drops to a teaipoonful. It acts direct
ly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the
system. They oiler one hundred dollars for
any case it fails it cure. Send for circulars
and tost.monia.is. Address
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, 0.
IV Sold by Druggists, 75c.
The fear of future evil is in itself the great
est of evils.
For Dyspepsia, Indigestion, and Stomach
disorders, use Brown's Iron Bitters, Tho
Best Tonic, it rebuilds the system, cleans tho
Blood and st rengtkens the muscles, A splen
did tonic for weak and debilitated persons.
There is a sufficient recompense in the very
consciousness of a noble deed.—Cicer *.
St Makes
Pureßlood
And by so doing Hood's Sarsaparilla cures scrofula,
salt rbeum and all blood disaases, ads proper
digestion, gives strength to every organ of the body,
and prevents attacks of that* tired feeling or more
serious disease. If you will take Hood’s SaruaparLlU
now It will put you in ths be*t condition to bear the
hot days of bummer.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Bold by all druggtata. $1; six for $1 Prepared only
by 0, L HOOD A 00,, Lowell, Mass.
100 Doses One Dollar
“German
Syrup”
“ We are six in fam-
A Farmer at ily. We live iu a
_ , _ place where we are
Edom, Texas, su^jec t violent
Says: Colds and Lung
Troubles. I have
used German Syrup for six years
successfully for Sore Throat, Cough,
Cold, Hoarseness, Pains in the
Chest and Lungs, and spittiug-up
of Blood. I have tried many differ
ent kinds of cough* Syrups in my
time, but let me say to anyone want
ing such a medicine —German Syrup
is the best. That has been my ex
perience. If you use it once, you
will go back to it whenever you
need it. It gives total relief and is
a quick cure. My advice to every
one suffering with Lung Troublesis
—Try it. You will soon be con
vinced. In all the families where
your German Syrup
is used we have no John
trouble with the Franklin
Lungs at all. It is
the medicine for this j onos .
country. ®
G. G. GREEN. Sole Man’fr.WoodbuixNJ.
IA THE NW METHOD
for ALL chronic diseases, dyspepsia, do
bility, catarrh, Ac. No patent medicines,
17 j Send for pauiphl*t free. Hundreds of
11/ testimonials. r *The New Method is worth
its weight in go 1 and. Long live Dr. Forest.”
Wm —J. B. SHUATB, Pastor First P esbyterim
Jw Church, Carthage, N. Y., Infinite y better
M than the Hall System. Agents wanted.
Health Supply Co> 7XO Broadpy, N, Y.
“RED EYE* S tobacco
lILU k| h IS THE REST for
Mild, Sweet CHEW. No HEARTBURN n .r
HEADACHE Swid lOrenrwin Stamps for a SAM
PLE, it your dealer dooß not KKKP IT. TAYI.OU
IIKOS., Manufacturer., Winnion, N. C.
m? AT TIT CALENDAR and BtiiTot
XIAJXI AJ JL XX fare /ur each day of\i. U;
Pee- left, will mail for 12c. each to close. 4 50,000 In
me —deeigneil for the masnei-econnuilcal !
1891 Cook Book
Vi.
DEa M 0 [ f) M 0 Great PENSION Bill
I LllulUNu is Passed.SSK£
ep* and Fathers are en
titled to sl2 a mo. Fee tlO when you get your money.
Blank* flee. Jo.Sfc.rll 11. IR.NTKR, auj, Wuhlaftou, b. £.
n ■ P ABOITT Enet Triinr-r> PINE
Ml H CLIMATE and Great Reason rcks is
■all KNOXVILLE SENTINEL: daily lino,,
m **" *” A Of.; weekly 1 year, 81: samples jo.
nirTimUKDV ofSB.OUh ward* and Definitions
111 It I lUllUn I Finely Bouvd in Cloth. By man
If jyustpa ti. -ZOc. J. J, FINNEY, Evergreen, Wis.
Don’t Say
Cute, for acute.
Party, for person.
Depot, for station.
Promise, for assure.
Posted, for informed.
Stopping, for staying.
Like I do, for as I do.
Feel badly, for feel bad.
Healthy, for wholesome.
Try and do, for try to do.
These kind, for this kind.
Cunning, for small, dainty.
Funny, for odd or unusual.
Guess, for suppose or think.
Fix, for arrange or prepare.
Ju-t as soon, for just as lief.
Had rather, for w ould rather.
Had better, for would better.
Right away, fo; immediately.
Not as good as, for not so good as.
Some ten days, for about ten days.
The matter of, for the matter with.
Not as I know, for not that I know.
Somebody else’s, for somebody’s else.
Kind of, to indicate a moderate degree.
Storms, for it rains or snows moder
ately.
Above for foregoing, more than or be
yond.
Try an experiment, for make an exper
iment.
More than you think for, for more than
you think.
For impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Ma
laria, Neuralgia, Indigestion, and Biliousness,
take Erown’s Iron Bitters—it gives strength,
making old persons feel young—and young
persons strong; pleasant to take.
Cherish your best hopes as faith,' and abide
by them in action.
Van Winkle Gin and Machinery Cos.. Atlan
ta, Ga., manufacture Cotton Gins, Feeders,
Condensers, Presses, Cotton-Seed Oil Mills, Ice
Machinery, Shafting, Pulleys, Tanks, Pumps,
Wind-Mills, Etc. Write for prices and disc’ts.
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No Fits after iirst day’s
use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and SI trial
t cttle tree. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Phfla., Pa.
How About Your Mother.
Scrofula or Kings Evil is the most stubborn of all Skin af
fections. Whether inherited or otherwise, it is a blood disease
and cannot be permanently cured by anything but S. S. S.
A GRATEFUL DAUGHTER.
My Mother was sorely afflicted with Scrofula for three years and a half;
daring that time the glands on her neck burst open in five places. Tliiee of the
openings w ere small and healed right up, but the other two would fill up and
break open anew, about everyjtwo weeks, always causing severe pain and often
prostration. She was so reduced in strength, that tonics and coca wines had to
be generously used to keep her alive. She commenced taking S. S. S., and
improved from the start, the first bottle gave her an appetite and by the tiuu.
•he finished the fourth bottle her neck healed up, she Is now cntirelly well.
Mrs. E. J. Rowell, Midford, Mass.
Books on Blood and Skin diseases free. TUB SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, oa.
PAI NT.
Requires Addition of AN"
□li ' Tag* EQUAL PARTOFQILAJ Qf*
"Urlk MAKING COSTPkQaIUPII MmO
Advertised in 7348 PAPERS I
Where we have no Ajicnt will arrange
with any active merchant.—l,. & JI.-N. Y.
m 1 EWIS’ 98 % LYE
je&s. ■ Powdered and Perfumed.
to (PATENTED.)
IT* Strongest and purest Lye made.
/\ Makes tho best perfumed Hard
A & Soap in SO minutes without boil
ing. It is the best for softening
water cleansing waste pipes,
disinfecting sinks, closets,wash
ing bottles, paints, trees, etc.
PENNA. SALT MFG. CO.,
(ten. Ageuts, Phila., Pa.
For Sale!
TWO C A CpC
SECOND-HAND kj I Lj LJ ,
Must be Sold! Cheap for Cash.
Address JOHNSON, PARKER <& CO.,
013 Chestnut .St„ Chattanooga, Tenn.
. j? YSM:THDEAL jo Wridok. Tjp *rHl'|.
f/w/ PRACTICAL g 5£uSfi7 "TEX.
yCueJtiteJJd §
ofrr; Book keeping,7s*4
COLLEGE. Richmond, Va. u> fw*. H *•. - -
iTk f tr> iff Weak, Nervous, Wretched mortals get
Nn 11, he well and keep well. Health Helper
tells Dow. 50 eta. a year. Sample copy
free. Dr. J. 11. DYE. Editor. Buffalo. N. Y.
HIJ CKLEBERBi
CORDIAL
■mmnugjgtAr 1
tcl Drop fcurpl.cx. Si..l Tablp, idjaafibl. Bull BIS iK ■ B
ibb!bs Pavin. luciudDiir PnUln BH _ B <
IJBOBey raa buy. KlaUh*4 ia F.aaai*l aa4 IWtP* B HI B I
HIGH GRADE IN EVERY PARTICUUR. W )t
ents In stamps tor our 100-page Illustrated Catalogue of i'
es. Revolvers. Sporting Goods of All Kinds, etc. \
- BOWTON^MABe.j
Ejfl Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians.
to Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the SriFQ
XU taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists. Cl
Chiqhfstcr's English, Red Cross Diamond Brand A
TEMNRONMi ? ?\\l\lS
, A THE ORIGINAL *ND GENOiHE. Thr only Safe, P-urf. .nil relinbU Pill f.r Kit. \TV
- j jfjp/ Ldlca. Dnifciil for Chichester a Jtogli'h Diamond Brand iu Kcd au 1 Gold nietalllo \ y
i / f/j boxe* Muled altb blue ribbon. Take ho other kind. Refuse .Substitutions and JmUatione. v
\ All |illU Id pasteboard boxei, pink wrappers, are danqrcroua counterfeit a. At I>rug(ltta, or en 4 *>
\ K? in • tamps fbr particular*, te*tlmouUl*, ami **Kenef for Ladle*,” in letter, by return MalL
\ if 10,000 Te*tlooulal*. Fame Paper CHICHCftTCR CHEMICAL CO., Mudluon
r bald bj all Local lXrauc.aU. PJULADELPHIA/VA*
Pretty strong
reasons for trying Dr. Sage’s
Catarrh Remedy. In the hrst
place, it cures your catarrh—
no matter how bad your case,
or of how long standing. It
doesn’t simply palliate —it
cures. If you believe it, so
much the better. There’s
nothing more to be said.
You get it for 50 cents, from
all druggists.
But perhaps you won’t be
lieve it. Then there’s another
reason for trying it. Show
that you can’t be cured, and
you’ll get SSOO. It’s a plain
business offer. The makers
of Dr. Sage’s Remedy will
pay you that amount if they
can’t cure you. They know
that they can —you think
that they can’t. If they’re
wrong, you get the cash. If
you’re wrong, you’re rid of
catarrh.
M e are always ylad to see you whether you
wish to purchase or not—delighted to show
iroods because that gives tis an opportunity of
convincing you how much lower our price*’
are than our competition. You do yourself
an in justice if you buy anything in the way of
diamonds, precious stones, watches, art good*
or silverware, before seeing our stock J I\
Stevens & Bro., 47 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Gas
’•‘end for catalogue.
Smith’s
Worm Oil
For Worms
IS A SAFE AND SURE REMEDY.
Sold Everywhere. SQ Ceuta.
/gato HF| 111 || and Whiskey Habits
agf n isVq 0! 3 Mai < > >lrt. l d at nome with
er SSB B 188 out pain. Hook of iiar
ilfl s 111 titular*sent FREE.
aBJg in i It.M.WOOLLEY,M.D.
Atlanta. U a. office My a Whitehall 8t
A. N. U Twenty-Five, ’9l*
FOR DIARRHEA,
DYSENTERY,
And all CRAMPS
Stomach Troubles.
IT IS A SURE CURE.
THE BEST THING FOR
TEETHING CHILDREN.
Ask your Druggist or Merchant for
it, and take no substitute.