Newspaper Page Text
THE BANKER, SATURDAY, MAY 17, 1902,
A Blonde’s
Freckles
show more plainly than a brunettes,
but these discolored spots greatly mar
the beauty of either.
HAGAN’S
MAGNOLIA
BALM
will effectually remove Freckles,
Sunburn, Tan, undue Redness,
Sallowness and all other blem
ishes to beauty.
ITTs AJLIQUID
for the face, neck, arms and hands.
Can be easily and quickly applied.
Others cannot detect its use.
It leaves no sticky feeling.
Harmless as water.
At all druggists.
Price 75 cts.
NORTH AND SOUTH MET HERE
AT EDUCATIONAL CONFERENCE.
Eloquent Words of Members of the Southern Educa
tional Convention—Another Glowing Tribute
to the Hospitality of Athens
by Julian Ralph.
: Lka xs \i LS ti d 52& § \i i
ANNOUNCEMENTS.
FOR SHERIFF.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for re-election as sheriff of Olarke oouuty,
subject to the democratic primary.
JOHN W. WIER.
ronotmwcocxmxxxxioocooji
THIS IS IT.
FOR CLERK SUPERIOR COURT.
I hereby announce myself as a candi
date for Clerk of the Superior Court of
Olarke oounty, subject to the action of
the democratic primary.
J. K. KENNEY.
FOR CLERK SUPERIOR COURT.
I hereby announce myself as a candi
date for re-election as Clerk of the Su
perior Court of Olarke Oounty, subject
the action of the democratic primary
O W.COOPER.
FOR CLERK SU PERK JR COURT.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for Clerk of the Superior Court of Clarke
County, subject to the democratic pri
mary.
ELMER J. CRAWFORD.
FOR TREASURER.
I hereby announce myself a eadidute
for re-el ctioa as Treasurer of Clarke
County, snl j ct to the action of the
democratic primary.
J. A PITNER.
FOR OOUNTY TREASURER I
I hereby announce myself a candi
date for the office of County Treasurer
of Clarke county subject to the action
of the democratic primary.
W. G. CARITHEKS
FOR TAX RECEIVER.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for re-elootion as Receiver of Tax Re
turns for Clarke connty, subject to the
action of the democratic primary.
J. H. DORSEY.
FOR TAX COLLECTOR.
I hereby annonnoe myself a candidate
for re-election as Tax Collector of Clarkt
oouuty, subject to the action of tht
democratic primary.
H. H. LINTON.
X It fits the pocket and
B it fits the purse.
| Price $7.50.
IE. P>. McGregor,
;2 PICTURES. FRAMES, ART QOODS.
PHOTO SUPPLIES.
jxoc«yxmxxxx»ooooooooa
For Croup use Cheney’s
Expectorant.
FOR CORONER.
I hereby announce myself a candidate
for re-election as Coroner of Clarke
Connty, subject to the action of the
democratic primary.
H. T. ROGERS.
FOR REPRESENTATIVE.
I hereby annonnoe myself a candidate
for Representative from Clarke county.
Snbjoot to the action of the democratic
party. S. 0. UPSON.
TO THE VOTERS OF OLARKE
OOUNTY:
I am a candidate to represent Clarke
oounty In the next General Assembly,
subject to the action of the democratic
party.
THOS. J. SHAOKELFORn.
OCEAN TRIP
! AN
4 To N.L’,7 YORK, BOSTON]
£ r.ND ALL
-( EAJJkRN RESORTS
\ V> The
} OCEAN STEAMSHIP COMPANY 1
Not since Henry W. Grady, who
was born and bred in Athens,
ceaved to make his Magnetic appeals
for the full brotherhood of the North
and the South, has there been such a
patriotic love feast as last night's meet
ing of the Southern Educational Con
ference. All hearts were bared All
tae love of the two ptople for one an
other wee revealed, and very much of
doubt and suspicion about the North
ern interference iu Southern education
was horned up by the fiery elcquenoe of
a Southern orator and the warmth of
sympathy of a Northern speaker.
The two men who worked the people
the fever of broadest patriotism were
President Alderman, of Tulane Univer
sity, a musically versed, tender and sym
pathetic talker, and Hamilton W. Ma-
bio, a deep student of the intellectual
life of the South, who argued that the
poets and scholars of Georgia had done
more for her than any men whose fame j
rested on their strength and physical
might.
Cl.lms Southern Heroes
Mr. Mabie claimed the right to rever
ence the Southern heroes, and said :
“I cannot allow you to keep your Rob
ert Lee and Stonewall Jackson ; I claim
them as my heroes, the pride of the
North as well as the South.”
Gov. Aycock, of North Carolina paved
the way for this outburst by a red hot
speeoh in tho afternoon. Robert O. Og.
don was re eleetd chairman of the con
ference for life, "on good behavior.”
The gift was announced of a sum be-
I tween thirty and fifty thousand dollars
I for library bnildiug for Georgia Univer
sity. provided Georgia appropriated ten
thousand dollars annually for its sup
pert. There is little donbt that the
j donor is George Foster 1’eabody, who is
j a native of Georgia, and alumnus of
i thiH university, a classmate of Chancel
lor Hill
Hospitable Athena.
In Athens we are lodged in the houses,
of a community that has been the seat
of the University of Georgia fora longer
time than some of oar great Northern
colleges have ixi6ted. It is a town of
high-bred, cultured people who keep all
of the old time chivalry and sweetness
of Southern gentlehood.
Think of one being taken into these
homes—we rough northerners, with oar
nasal drawing voices, and our traditions
of the same discord that once embittered
both South and North.
Truly, as Brother Jasper used to say,
“thesun do move,” or else how could it
look now upon such fraternal gather
ings as it never saw before, even in the
days bofore the Civil Wa? Well, out of
j our comparative roughness, perhaps, onr
earnestness and high and noble intent
find voice and in our nasal tones onr
hearts speak lovingly to these sweet
voiced men and to their women who
were enthroned as mothers and coro-
ueted as daughters long, long ago when
our dear helpmeets were working in our
homes as hard as we worked out of doors
in the conquest of onr North and West.
Excellent Speakers,
I have never been with so many good
speakers as we keep and carry on this
Robert 0. Ogden excursion. Mr. Ogden
is himself a gifted talker, and his ad
dress to the graduates at Hampton was
manly, fatherly, tender and thrilling in
a high degree. Dr. Taloott Williams, of
the Philadelphia "Press,” has come to
be a wonderful orator—one In many
thousand. His words are weighed In
l jeweler’s scales and they rush forth
burning like volcanic lava.
Dr. Mabie, of the "Outlook,” is a fin
ished Btudent orator, a literary talker-
easy, witty, thonghtfnl, beautiful.
"Put your religion in yonr fingers and
give ns honest woik,” ho said to the
student. “Tiiis country values the
religion of the hands far more than the
empty professions of the mouth. We
want religious caip‘liters, religious
clumbers, religious painters. Wo want
workmen who pnt their consciences,
their very selves into their work. We
wnnt men like the ancients who took ns
great care in finishing what was hidden
in a building as in doing what would
show—because the gods see everything.”
Tulane’* President.
Dr, Alderman, of Tulane, is one of
the broadest and deepest and yet most
polished orators in Amerioa. He is
strong, vigorous young man, masterful
and foroeful, and yet sympathetic In a
high degree. There is nothing too con
troversial, sectional or diflioult for him
to diBcnss and with such a combination
of adroitness and earnestness as to win
all hearers.
Dr. Albert Shaw, President Baldwin,
of tho Long Island Railroad—an old
warrior In this educational field—and
Dr. Page, of Doubloday, Page & Co.,
are all finished orators. Dr. Page being
a man yon mast never miss if yon know
whero you can go to hear his subtle, dry
humor and his lnxurionB ease of mind
ang self delighting facility with words
JULIAN RALPH.
Che-
Employers Should be More Consid
erate. Mrs. Pinkham Asks Tired
Women to Write Her for Advice.
In the vast retail establishments of large cities, many women are
employed as saleswomen.
Men formerly held the positions that women now held, and while
women's organism is less strong than men's, they are e qieeted to do tho
name work. Their duties compel them to ho on their fe; from morning
to night, and ninny of them, in a short time, eontraet those i1l-.Ui ssing
complaints called “female diseases.”
Then occur irregularities, suppressed or painful menrtri.ition,
weakness, indigestion, leucorrhoea, general debility, and nervous pros
tration.
They are beset with such symptoms as dizziness, fain
tilde, excitability, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, melaneho
“all-gono ” and “ want-to-lie-left-alone ” feelings, blues, and lmpelesmic:
In such eases there is one tried and true remedy. Lydia 1’. l’inh-
ham’s Vegetable Compound at once removes such troubles. The
following letters prove tiiis. They also xirovo the value of .Mrs. l’ink-
ham’s advice.
lassi-
Fwr Asthma use
ney’s Expectorant.
SEABOARD AIR LINE
3.000 title Ticket, at $30.00 Taken oil Sale.
Seaboard Air Lino railway announces
that effective May 16, 1902, 2,000 mile
tickets of this iBsue goed over a porticn
of the system, heretofore sold at $40.00,
will be withdrawn from sale.
Seaboard interchangeable 1,000 mile
riokets, at $25 00, will interest you In
quire of ticket agents or representatives
of the company
3 50 Hovxi
\ A Sa’:
41
\ The Me,
T »54i*tatfui V it
i of Ocean Freezes{
lags each V. eeK ,
from Savannah, Ga.
Uiin Popular I.i:
Ticket jk(rents Central of Ca. and Georgia Bj«. ^
i W .i;.B.eoer,r.T.*P. A., Savannah, tin. *
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
fiio Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signaturo
Monuments,«
Headstones. <
■Grave - Enclosures.!
Inscriptions and Design
Work ajepecialty.
STEEL AND !R0N
_ FENCES FOR CEMETERY.
? ROBERTSON
?Marble Works.;
V 115 Thomas St. Athens, as.
>»aA/>/VAA'
Restaurant and Grocery Store.
DEALER IN FAMILY
GROCERIES.—^1^
Slock of Dry Goods, Neti' tm,
Shoes and Hats will he sold at cost.
Restaurant Open
Until 9:30 p. m.
Table supp ted with the best th<
market affords
R. 10. McAlpin, Agt.
Broad Street, next to the Bank o
the University. Phone 85.
MITCHELL’S OLD STAND,
** I Can Work Every Day in the Week New.”
“ Dear Ml#*. Pinkham: — I write this letter f >r you to publish for the
benefit of poor, suffering women. Lydis^ E* IMnkhnni’n VcgotuI >!o Coin-
pound has clone ine a jrrent cler.l of good. I havo taken tim e bottles .md f«vl
like a new woman- When I Ix'gan the use of your medieino I v*ns hircily nble
to be up; could n >t. tin hilt' ;; day's work. I nclicd from herul to f.n t, was
almost crazy, had those bearinj7-<town pains, and stomach was out <>f order.
Now all of these trouble.-, have left me and i can work every day in the week
and not feel tired.’’—Mn*. Jennie Pheeman, 1)-’ Pennsylvania Avc., Lima, Ohio.
44 Dear Mrs. Fiiiktiuiu : - I have read with Interest year ad \ ieo to
others so much that I thought I would write to you tor I have been
suffering for a long time. This I did some time ago.
“Now 1 eaji hardly find words to thank you for your wonderful Vege
table Compound and advice.
“ 1 was in a terrible state, every part of my lxxly ached, was very nervous,
had hysterical spells. I think I would have lxvome insane had it n. !. been for
I^ydlft K. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Your medb-ine ha ; cured
me and I cannot express my thanks. v — Miss Uaitii; I'i:« «j:oa :, Suceasunna,
N.J. (March 8, 1001.)
No other medicine in tho world has received sueli v nu . pro
unqualilled endorsement.
No oilier person can give such helping adviee to woinr
are sick as can Mrs. Pinkham, for none have had such
experience—her address is L) an, Mass., and her advice i
you are sick write her—you arc foolish if you don’t.
and
n who
great
REWARD
sum.—Lydia K. IMnkhuin M.-itlrlm-
TAKE NOTICE,
When You Want First-class Repair Work
of any kind, or an excellent job of Horse
Shoeing, you will do well to
CALL ON B. R. PICKRELL
At hia shops No. 24-20 East Washington street,
next to Robertson’s Marble yard. Remember, he is
well prepared with both men and material to do any
kind of work at very short notice.
Woikmanship and Prices Guaranteed.
\ Alton JBL Talmage. j
[Fine Buggies, Wagons, Laprobes, Whips, Etc.
J Washington St., Athens, Oa.
BERNSTEIN’S Furniture STORE,
PHONE 61. BROAD ST.
You need furniture, your home is your pride. Whether your means are limited or not you?
want the most value possible for your money. Some times you want furniture when youi,
monoy is otherwise employed. Not always possible to have the ready money when you neecit
the goods. We provide you the way not only to get the very best value your money can*
procure, but give you credit, so that you can have the goods when you need them, and-
pay when you can—that’s when they are worth most to you. All kinds and stylos Furniture,;.;
Rugs, Mattings, Feather Pillows, Etc. Seasonable goods at reasonable prices. New spring'
stock of Refrigerators, Baby Carriages, Go-Carts, all styles, all sizes, all prices. We will]
receive this coming week a shipment of combined Baby Jumpers and Rocking Chairs
J* 8. BEKNSTISIN, Furniture and Undertaldiur.