The Chattooga news. (Summerville, Chattooga County, Ga.) 1887-1896, July 22, 1896, Image 1

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VOL IX sis o,ls wbat ails you? tr:i | j i i I'ave j "ti a feci- F*i / !' I weight ink r I'.;,'.' I'■l '■ Finn :th i ?. ! A Vomiting <’f Food ? i WlX' V. .iterbrnsh / ■< Hi mb-.irn !!;id T: S (e in the Month) /in the Morning t’alpii.n i n of th.) r U '• !. dm to lii'-ic.' .i >n of St imacli $ loitkr. ■Io 1. .4 in the B.i« el > J ippetite— \ on of the ( he Con- $ you have \ >IA I nt positive ] tablets? 25 cent*. C erlal, New ( 1 ' in c a ken aiu r } r* St., X. V One Lost Day <•'; i 1 ' much <nt < f a lifetime, Lut t<> S X a buoim. , man i* may m< an tho I X xof a valuable opportunity. Win n x x* l !n P rir ly cri| pl <1 w.tli any j. in & For'.oa'.n ■■, tor v. limb tin active aril P (I i ;1> ctii <•xtr-iml remedy io needed, f) 0 no' I. or,' i jo > frits: wutby a Jolim on’s 0 JI II id mna I’lastir. It t wh' ■ the J* *»•■•• F ■•••• 1 tfiv< • t h” w-!■•<•■.■•• r-li.-f. It x) » in d. I > mieee d not merely to X X 11- I '< Litho lied Cross on all x X th" genuine. P £ JOHNSON * JOHNSON. G £* Manufacturing < h<nu. tn, New York, rt) HI NDFRC 057 N 5 Th* only ror* C>r- <bf ■ .--I « till |-a!»l M'ik ••< V ttik ff t.w l.’ic. nfj' -’H. parkeUT” '■'s HAlft EIA.LSAMf BiW' 9 and bcantifica th.' halx »’• vcr Fail 3 to JlestGre Gray *»'■-ttkHair to jtn Youthful Color. I ‘ •» Rrn'p <imcfl*.'i» A I:-, r iul.sng. TV? f>{ .nt ■! ?1.‘ •■ at Druggists rro. nr CONSUMPTIVE or I.", 1 ' r'lintnl illw 01 lability <>f any kind u • 1/> UhEH’S GINGER TONIC Manywbo w. : I.opv i. ...iund dibwurap.i d Lave i< g.uiu'd health by ita I I '■■lßM HIM » '.. . ■ i’/A .>•• sA . . . o ' A ' • n\ AAoA.'. •.../■"■ A,’-A: V I / ' Av/. • h i// tii>'■••!. At HruggistH, or.’cntlAo. [ 'w ’A' ‘1 • r pnrtf.'Hinm, t< •tit-ivoUh an*. ' ’ rr!ii;n —\ ff 10.000 'I •iu>ut.ln'n. /■.;.rr. c'hh ttK 1 » < ii tial.i.L m. 4 liitn . Vv.dt; all Lu.U I‘ioj.Puiltid u. Vtu Not one part but rrrrr part of HIRES Rootbeer tends toward making it The- perfect temperance and healtbgiving drink. Mfi*leonly hr Tho Charles F. Hires Cn., I’hllaA. IphiA. A i’jv. package makes 5 aalloaa. Buld < tau wlurv. VIRGINIA COLLEGE For Young Ladies, Roanoke, Va. < >p< us S. pt, >O, 1 sfltl. One of the lead ing Schools tor Voting I ndios in the Hout h. M agnifleen t buildings, all mod ern improvements. Campus ten aeres. Urnml mountain somerv in Valley of Vn., famed for health. I', iropean and \ me. ie; n I■a> It i ••• T’.lll touts", s-u --pel ior ndt nut ages in Art and music. Ht title tits from Im nt vst at. s. for cat alogues addrt ss the Pta sklent, MA l'l’lii 1‘ HaKKIs, Roanoke, Va. Ripatus T; bulcs "lire di/.; iliras. Ripans Tabules cure headache. Ripans Tabules cure Ihitulenee. Uipans Tabuk s cure flj >■ pepsin. Ripans Tabules assist diet st ion. Ripans Tabules cine bad breath. Ripans Tabules cur biliousm :s. Ripans Tabules: one gives relief. Ripans Tabules cure imli . st ion. Ripam Tabules cure torpid liv r. Ripans Tabules: gentle eathai tie. Ripans Tabules cure constipation. •• I 0 MORE EYE-GU >SES, ?' ‘ v.. Vcak ’ * *s. M,,r ‘ ‘ Eyes! MITCHELL’S jdYE-SALVE A Certain f .de o j’. •> 1 . j,... ( . r SORE, WEAK and HfLE'l VIES, J’rmfnriiir/ f . Si-rs-, fi.astd Kestori »» the Siifht of Ute oh!. Cures 'Four Ji' mis. (irato hili m, s} vo Tumors. Red Fit-. M g..; ; : :s|i vs AND I’R-Tr.-iw tii-ien f ■ AND rEKMA.NE.\I> VURE. Al*o, .. 111 ffl.f.i. (.:*», 1; t oihrnnnln.M<'t. ■n. it■ IV . f „.,. rx v Mores. Imu »r •.. N»:< m,. ..,, ’j;.,;.,' IMlt'tt.ttr nhrn irr 1 thi„i3u, lr ,.. , . • Ml I< 111 1.1... NII.W. may t... t ' mlinntnjre. SOLO BY Ut □RfCGiS S AT 23 t£:..i , ■■••••••■, Blood and Skin Diseases ; Always R R R ; Cured. , 1 HOT \NIC BLOOD HILM : ever fails 1 to cure all manner of B .xi and Skin dis- 1 1 eases. It is the great Southern b-.al.llng up 1 1 and purifying Kemedy. a-.d cures all manner 1 11 of skin and blood dis. as. s. As a building 1 ' up tonic it is w ithout a rival, ar.d absolutely beyon.l comparison with any other similar 11 remedy ever off> >-ed to the public. It is a 1 panacea for al ills n silting fr m impure' blood, or an impoverished condition ot the 1 human system. A single bottle will demon- J strateits paramount virtues. pf'-Send for free book ol Wonderful Cures. ’ Price, si.oo per large bottle: ff.oo tor six > bottles. 11 ' For sale by druggists; ff not send to us, t and medicine w II be sent freight prepaid on ( , , receipt of price. Address ( BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga. ; THE CHATTOOGA NEWS. DEMOCRATICJPLATFORM. An Able Defense by the New York Journal. SincH tho Chicago convention a number of so cuilcd Democratic papers of Nu.v York and N v> Eng ' land have bolted the nomination, ' and have said that the Democratic platform was a tissue o* Populism and anarchism. Commenting on these statements the New ’l ork Journal says: J his crusade has been one of reckless misrepresentation from the start. The libelers of the late convention know that the Chicago platform is not anarchial. In most respects it is inspired bv enlight ened progressiveness. The anarch-■ ial elements in the convention Tillman and Altgeld—wore dis tinctly frowned upon. Tillman ' ‘ was hissed whenever ho rose to speak. The mild implied criticism of the supreme court, or rather of the one justice who changed his I mind, was thoroughly wi ll do-| | s'TVed, and might have been made] much stronger without improprie ty. Since when have we boon on- I plowed with infallible judges, whose ' i acts are not above criticism? Il the advocacy of the just and scientific principle of taxation of largo incomes was anarchistic, t hen every statsinan in England is an j anarchist, and instead of search ing (ho cellars of of the houses of parliament for barrels d gun powder, tho authorities ought to search tho pockets of every member for bombs. r J he income lax is the backbone of the British financial system. It is about to be intr duced in a graduated form in to Franc.und it alr< ady exists in its most e: Iroine < groe i Ge many. Th condo: iat. ; o of tl practice of substituting govern ment by injunction for tho old orderly process of courts and juries s> far from being revolutionary, is a vindication of the ancient rights I of t-liu English speaking race against a novel and dangerous innovation which deserves the name of an archy much better than anything done at Chicago. ■\\ o hold,’ adds the democratic profession of faith, ‘that, the most efficient way of protecting Amer ican labor is to prevent the impor tation of foreign pauper labor to compete with it in tho home mar ket.’ ‘‘ I hat is honest, straightforward protection—the only kind that doos what it protends to do. The Chicago platform demands sim plicity and economy in government and protests against the profligate waste of money that has charac terized republican legislation. 1 hat is not tho reckless spirit of a mob; it is rather the sober utter ances of prudent property owners and taxpayers, of whom tho Chica go convention was principally com posed. The protest against arbi trary federal interfermco in local affairs is one w hich Jefferson would have commended as the very foundation stone of his political faith. Moreover the silver plank I in the Chicago platform does not deserve the frantic vituperation leveled against it. If its auth >rs I were mistaken in their methods their aim was to introduce bimet allism and bimetallism is a scien-' title theory with too much expert' i authority on its side to brand its ; advocates as lunatics or incend iaries.” In closing The Journal says: ‘“On the other side we have Wil liam McKinley, bound hand, foot and tongue to the most corrupt combination that ever exhibited it-'lf i ;>.>i ’v i an meri ,m presi dential c np.igu His e.’ecti i would put here-; .rces the g - eminent ,i< the d.sposil of t ;e Hanna syndicate. It would mean a return to Chinese pr-tecti m and tho exploit of the people by a rapacious ring of mandarins. It would mean in the end a popular r-'V .: > ■:?>-• w'. -h aifright-d eon s rvatism pray for a leader with tii > miAdmv.te instincts of Bry an. In m >st respects the superior ity of the democratic candidate is so palpable as to make comparison n' Jlcssly cruel to his opponent. M hat then is the duty of American . citizens who desire to secure the best possible government for the republic during the next four years? Plainly it is to vote for that presidential candidate who is manifestly best fitted to adminis ter the government and to settle tho financial question through their representatives in congress. Gold men may vote for gold candi dates, silver men for silver candi nates and bimetalists for bimetal , ists, but nobody who realizes what .is at stake in this campaign can i vote to abandon a government of tho people, by the people, for the people, in favor of a government of Mckinley by Ilsnna for a syn ! dicatc. A GOOD ONE FROM KANSAS. Remarkable Death and Burial of a Hermit in Kansas. A story comes from Butler coun- I ty Kan., which is as romantic as it is strange and peculiar. While a I terrific storm was raging, Otto Schaller, a hermit farmer who had j iived there many years, took shelter ' in his cabin and was offering up a prayer for protection when a bolt of lightning demolished the house and killed him. Neighbors found tho body on the floor and sum moned tho coroner, who prepaied the body for burial, and in doing so made a discovery that has been the talk of the county. He says Schaffer was a woman. The de ceased was an ex-soldier, and par ticipated in many battles of the war. Despite this discovery the grand army veterans turned out and gave Schaffer a soldier’s burial. An incident happened in the burial services which the ohl c mrad - believe was a .ruing sent from God. As one of the comrades fiml a last salute over the empty grave into which the coffin was being lowered it was found that the gun was loaded with a ball as well as power, and the shot killed a dove that was Hying over. The dove fluttered and fell on the coffin dead. The deceased leaves considerable property, but no one in the county knows of ai y relatives. Last summer one of our grand children was sick with a severe bowel trouble. Our doctor’s rem edies had failed, then we tried Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which gave very speedy relief. We regard it as the best medicine ever put on the market for bowel complaints. Mrs. E. G. Gregory, Fredericks town, Mo. This certainly is the best medicine ever put on the mar ket ever put on the market for dys entery, summer complaint, colic and cholera infantum in children. It never fails to give prompt relief when used in reasonable time and the plain printed directions are followed. Many mothers have expressed their sincere gratitude for the cures it has effected. For sale by 11. H» Arrington, Summer ville, Ga. A young man named Hutchinson employed at Smith’s saw mill, in Johnson caunty, Ga., met with a ghastly accident Tuesday of last week. He was working near the saw, helping put logs into position, and while pulling with all might his foot slipped and his head fell ; against the saw, which completely decapitated him. When the ma ; chinery was stopped his body was picked up and found to be horribly mutilated otherwise. His death was witnessed by several employes of the mill, but it occurred so quickly that all were powerless to prevent it. Euvklen's Arnica Salve. The Best Sa We in th' world '' >r Cuts, Bruises. Sores. I ers. > it Rheum, Fe r Sores. Te er < ’ apped Hanes. Chilb;s. C< ns and all Skin Eruptions, and posi tively cures Biles or no pay re quin d It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or money re funded. Brice 25cents per box ' for sale by H. 11. Arrington. “Wid you please give me a half a pound of cat's liver.” she asked. “But. little Miss, we don’t keep cats' livers." said the puzzled mar ketman. “I could’nt get any liver for kitty, mamma,’’ she said at ■ home; “ho doesn’t keep it.’’ SUMMERVILLE, CHATTOOGA COUNTY, GEORGIA, JULY 22,1896 In Memory. Summerville Lodge No. 109 F. and A. M. has again been called upon to pay the last tribute of re j spect to the memory of one of its members. And whereas a committee has been appointed to draft suitable resolutions to the memory of Bro. E. C- Smith, who was born in Walker Co., May 12, 1858. Was married to Miss Rachel A-llman Dec. 1, 1878. And was called from labor to rest Juno 26, 1896. Ist. Therefor be it resolved that while mourning our loss, we recog nize our obligation to bow to the will of our Supreme Master above; and to treasure in our hearts our Brother’s memory as an example and incentive to nobler and truer lives. 2nd. That whilst we sorrowfully record the demise of Bro. Smith, we are consoled with the hope that our loss is his gain. But we cannot but mourn the loss of a Master Mason as estimable and useful a Brother so honestand true, yet believing that all the or dering of the Merciful Grand Mas ter above is wise, righteous and prompted by love, we would bow humble subinsision to His Holy will and earnestly pray that He will enable us to say “Tho will of the Lord be done.” 3rd. That the Lodge extend its heartfelt sympathy to the bereaved family of our deceased. Brother and that the Secretary be directed to spread this humbi ■ tribute to his memory upon the minutes of the Lodge, and that a copy be sent to bis family, and a copy to the Chat tooga News with a request for its publication. Res[> jctl'ully sub mitted. Geo. D. Espy, 1 E. W. Murdivant, j- Com. T. P. Taylor, ’ Mrs Rhodie Noah, of this place, was taken in the night with cramp ing pains and the next day diar rhoea set in. She took half a bot tle of blackberry cordial but got no relief. She then sent to me to see if I had anything that would help her. 1 sent her a bottle of Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and the first dose relieved her. Another of our neighbors had been sick for about a week and had tried different remedies for diarrhoea but kept getting worse. I sent him this same remedy. Only four doses of it were required to cure him. Ho says he owes his recovery to this wonderful remedy.—Mrs. Mary Mary Sibley, Sidney, Mich. For sale by H. H. Arrington Summer ville, Ga. Cut It Short. These hints to contributors ap pear in a market journal. They deserve the close study of all writ ers. “Life is short. Time is precious. We ask our contributors to write every paper as they would a tele gram that they have to pay for by the word. Verbosity kills many a good article. Few care to take the pains to get the meaning of a verbose writer. Go over your pa pers again and again, cutting out every word and sentence tliat adds nothing to the meaning. Try and give in ten words the same idea that when first written took twen ty. Every good writer is such be cause his finished sentences con ! tain only the ten and not the • twenty words. Do not string out I . your sentences with conjunctions. Make them all short and pithy. We ask you t- do this for your own sake and the sake of your readers. They will the better un derst .nd ant 1 , be :.ior ■ willing to render to you ti meed oi appr - ciation.’’ It is said that a negro accused of rape and anothtr one accused of murder, escaped from the jail at Cusseta, in Chattahoochee coun ty, on Wednesday night. Anyway their cells were found empty, and no one appears to know how the two prisoners happened to turn up missing. Not what we say, but what Hood's Sarsaparilla Does, that tells the story of its merit and suc cess. Remember HOOD’S Cures. McGarrity the man, Who Will Oppose Hon. John W, Maddox. Dallas, Ga , July 15.—The pop ulist of the Seventh Georgia con gressional district met in Dallas, Paulding county, yesterday, and nominated James W. McGarrity of Paulding county, as their can didate for congress, against Hon. John W. Maddox. The convention was called to or der by S. J. McKnight, of Whitfield county. M. L. Palmer, of Floyd county, was made permanent chairman. They adopted resolutions strong ly condemning the action of the Chicago convention in repudiating Teller and Bland, tho great cham pions of free silver, and in nomi nating a “boy orator ’ as the can didate of the democratic party for President. They also condemned, in severe terms, the nomination of Sewall, a millionare national bank president, for second place on the ticket. Tho resolutions declare that } ‘both of these nominations were made by a faction in the democrat ic party, antagonized by the brains, culture and influence of the wisest men in the party.” Theresolutiong recommend that “populists assemble in St. Louis on July 22, and formulate their own platform of principles, and make their nomination for Pres ident. and vice-president, without reference or regard, so the dismem bered democratic party.” They recommended that delegates to the St. Louis convention support Tell er for President, and indorsed the Omaha platform in toto. Tlr y a! o pas- d r solutions fa voring \\ L. Pe kas their candi date for G »verror of Georgia. They elected a new executive committee, with Col. J K. Davis, of Polk, as chairman, and J. L. Sibley, of Cobb, as secretary. The members from each county are: Bartow, R. 11. Dodd; Catoosa, J. C. Williams; Cobb, J. D. Perkcrson ; Dado, S. B. Austin; Floyd, S. J. Whatley; Gordon, C. L. Burns; Haralson, T. A. Hucherson ; Mur ray, Dr J. A. Burdett; Whitfield, S. J. Mcknight; Walker, C. A. Cameron; Chattooga, J. J. Potter. Free Pills. Send your address to 11. E. Bucklen & Co., Chicago, and get a free sample box of Dr. King’s New Life Pills. A trial will convince you of their merits. These pills are easy in action and are particu larly effective in the oure of Con stipation and Sick Headache. For Malaria and Liver troubles they have been proved invaluable. They are guaranteed to be perfectly free from every deleterious substance and to be purely vegetable. They do not weaken by their action, but by giving tone to stomach and bowels greatly invigorate the sys tem. Regular size 25c per box Sold by 11. H. Arrington Druggist For once the big daily papers were caught napping. When Sow all of Maine was nominated as can didate for vice president, not a big I daily in the south had his picture I ready for publication, which is a very unusual circumstance. Un-| j der ordinary conditions the politi-j cal prophets are able to foretell the ticket with a reasonable degree 1 of certainty, thus enabling the pa- 1 pers to make ample preparations, but this time the unexpected hap pened and they were caught out. Weak Where He Is Not Strong. “McKinley is neither strong ' enough or weak enough to be dan gerous. The mil'.ionare agencies : behind are what make him a me nace to the well-being of the re public. They would make him pret lent not / r his sake, but for their own. If h. b ■ instated in the White House, Hanna and his asso ciates wil abide there also. Per , haps never have the American peo ple been confronted by a situation so grave. Never has triumphant plutocracy been so insolently self . assertive as in making of this nom ination. Mark Hanna, a most of fensive type of the over-bearing, i consciencelesr, dominant meney j bags, has forced upon the American people this politician wh-i is weak in all matters in which he is not ; wrong.—New York Journal. Bab Is for Temperance. Personally, I am a believer in temperance, but I think people ' ought to be just as temperate with their words as with their wine, and ‘just as temperate in their judg : meats as with their tea. Green i tea, taken strong, has done as I much harm if not more than whis i key. And yet how good a cup of tea is—of good tea ; of that kind of tea that, when the hot water is put on it, sends up a fragrance like a thanksgiving; a liquid without the crudeness as the green tea, and without the bitterness of tho black tea, is tea pure and simple, amber in color, exquisite of taste and bra cing in effect. This kind of tea has no bad aftertime. And so many of our pleasures have I If you dance all night until broad daylight and go home with the girls in the morning, your head, not your heels, aches dredfully, and the figures in the day book waltz in the queerest sort of fash ion. If you commence to play cards at 10 o’clock and don’t stop until the chimes of the milkman are heard, you are to apt to be left with one pink chip and no money no money for the matinee. If you have an entrancing book and read until the late night and early morning meet, how peculiar one’s eyes feel the next day. If you eat lobster add soft-shell crabs, and and chicken, and asparagus, and strawberries, that nice way in whipped cream, and almond cakes and a few sweets, and a little more fruit, you like it, but oh ! how much better does your doctor like it, and how rapidly does your bill at the druggist run up. There is no pleasure in life that is a pleasure all the way through unless it is temperately taken. Oh, I know as well as you do that there is always a time when we are intemperate in everything. We give all our love to one man. "When we are older and wiser we divide it between that one man and five small babies. With a better return. Or else we daucei .prance and play and are joyfully fo' lish until some day we are tired of it. And then we grow poky. If we had been more temperate incur enjoyment it have been spread over a whole lifetime, but we were too extravegant. We gathered our rosebuds all at once; we took all there were, and behold! we never had any full blown roses. And after all they, are the ones Wurth having- You can get at the heart of a rose and enjoy its sweetness. If tho rose bud has a heart it is so closely covered that nobody ever finds it out. And life is only worth get ting at the heart of things. We men and women hide our hearts under fine clothes and po ite speeches, but once and awhile the l heart gets the better of everything else and we know each other as we really are. Don’t, my friend, cov er your heart up too close’y ; don’t let it be smothered under the folds of conventionality. Let it live? I beat and speak for itself, and we I will all be the better for it. For j hearts are gregarious, and when | your heart speaks out and is its i own self, somebody else’s heart comes to meet it, and your neigh bor wants to be there to see you at your best; and I want to be there, I even If I come in the form of a heart that beats rather feebly and ; loves too much and is marked just 1 in thr center with those three let ' ters that mean that mine is in me and I am BAB. DELICATE W BRADI IEXiD .3 FEMAL3 REGULATOR. IT IS fl SUPERB TONIG and exerts a wonderful influence in strengthening her system by driving through the proper chan nel all impurities. fieaßil 30(1 strength are guaranteed to result Irom its use. My wife was bedridden for eighteen months, after using BRADFIELD S FEMALE REGU LATOR for two months, is getting well.— J M. JOHNSON, Malvern, Ark. BRADFIELD BEGCLATOB CO., ATLANTA, GA. Sold bT all Drarfi.u at 81.00 p«r bottl*. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Prfrfeil Baking Powder Absolutely pure JOSE MACEO MURDEBED. Said To Have Been Killed by Men of His Own Army. Philadelphia, July 15. —Cable- grams received here from Cuba an nouce the killing of General Jose Maceo, brother of Antonio, the great insurgent leader. It is announced that the killing of Maceo was deliberate murder and cleancut race war has broken out. Since the arrival of General Calixto Garica that loader and Maceo have not been frindly. Ma ceo resented the superior authority conferred upon Garcia by the Cu ban junta in New York, and Garcia has been determined to assert his superior rank. hen the last cargo from the filibustering steamer, Bermuda, was land, Jose Maceo seized all the arms and ammunition. Garcia protested against this confiscation. When the last cargo from the steamer Three Friends was landed on the coast near Juragua, Maceo marched to the seaboard with 150 men and took posesion of the arms and ammunition. As he was re turning from the coast he was am bushed and shot to death by men whom it was asserted were from his own army. Printers’ Jargon. Many people are not aware that printers have a language of their own, unintelligible to the uninitia ted. The following “up-to-date” orders give an idea of the printing office lingo: “Billy, put Sir Chas. 1 upper on the galley, and finish up that murder you commenced yesterday. Set up the ruins of Herculaneum and distribute the small-pox. Lock up Laurier and ■ slide McCarthy into the hell box and leave the pi alone until after dinner. Put the ladies’ form to press, and go to the devil and put , him to work on Deacon Fogg’s ar- , ticle on ‘Eternal Punishment.’ ” ( Now this is all simple enough when translated into English, and ' not nearly so rough as the leader may imagine.—Meaford Mirror. The Puling Passion. The reporter lay on his eider down couch, slowly breathing his . life away. It was evident that the end was very near. Suddenly the luxuriously furn ished room was filled with a phos phorescent light, and a pale shade appeared, standing at the bedside, Igrim and inscrutable. “I am the Messenger of Death,” he said. “One moment, please!” gasped the reporter, reaching feebly for his note-book and pencil. “How do you like America?”—Exchange. Ex-Governor William H. Smith, of Alabama, who is often referred to by the Alabama people i “11. last and best of republicans gover nors,’’ has turned his back on the republican party, and declares that ho will support a silver man for president. We live in a country of which the principal scourge is stomach trouble. It is more widespread than any | other disease, and, very nearly, I more dangerous. One thing that makes it so dan gerous is that it is so little under stood. L it w re better understood, it; would be .lore feared, more easily I cured, less universal than it is now. So, those who wish to be cured, take Shaker Digestive Cordial, be cause it goes to the root of the trouble as no other medicine does The pure, harmless, curative herbs and plants of which it is composed are what render it so certain and at the same time, so gentle a cure. : It helps and strengthens the stomach, purifies and tones up the system. Sold by drugg-1 -ts. price 10cents • to SI.OO per bottle. HIRED NEGRO WOMEN. Aud Whites Promptly Refuse to Work by Them—Trouble in a Rome Cotton Mill. Rome, July 15.—The superinten dent of the Massachusetts cotton mill employed a number of negro women in the weaving department yesterday. The white employes at once re fused to work with the negroes and nearly all left the mills. Superintendent Hunking has ex pressed his determination to re main firm and employ such labor as he saw fit and to discharge ev erybody connected with the strike. The affair created much excite ment and trouble was anticipated. Efforts are being made to have the matter adjusted. Several hundred hands are em ployed by the mills. “We were married thirty-seven years,” a man said, who had just lost his wife, “and in all that time she never gave mo a cross word. But I shall never forget the first time I scolded her. One morning when we had been married about two years, I found a button off my shirt. I threw the garment at her and said in a rough voice, ‘Sow a button on.’ She got a button and sewed it on saying, ‘forgive mo, husband, 1 had a great deal to do yesterday, and I forgot it, but it shall never happen again.’ Iler gentle words almost broke my heart. I could have got down on my knees to ask her forgiveness. She made a different man of me, and. the world has been a different place since she died.” Did You Ever Try Electric Bitters as a remedy for you troubles? If not, get a bottle now and got relief. The medicine has been found to be pe culiarly adapted to the relief and cure of all Female Complaints, ex erting a wonderful direct influence in giving strength and tone to the organs. If you have Loss of A ['.’pe tite, Constipation, Headache, Fainting Spells, or are Nervous, Sleepless, Excitable, Melancholy or troubled with Dizzy Spells, Electric Bitters is the medicine you need. Health and Strength are guaranteed by its use. Large bottles only 50 cents at 11. 11. Ar rington’s drug Store. Two thingi in life are absolute ly certain—death and sorrow ; and \ these two, about which there is no contingent, alone possess the pow er to surprise us. All that is problematical we are ready for, and accept without raising our eyebrows; but to the figure of sor row, whose shadows fall athwart our path a short journey alnad and death, who awaits at its end, without clamor, since he is sure of us—to these wo say, “It cannot be! It is impossible !” We count upon the uncertain, but the inevi table surprises us.—Marietta Jour nal . Tutt’s Pills Cure All Liver Ills. Secret of Beauty is health. The secret of heal th is the power to digest and assim ilate a proper quanity of food. This can never be done when the liver does not act it’s part. Doyouknowthis? Tutt’s Liver Pills are an abso lute cure for sick headache, dys pepsia, sour stomach, malaria, constipation, torpid liver, piles, jaundice, bilious fever, bilious ness and kindred diseases. Tutt’s Liver Pilis No 20