Wayne County news. (Jesup, Ga.) 1896-????, January 15, 1897, Image 4

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The Bluff Failed. “When I was in Haris,” said the man who pretended he had traveled, “I did more drinkiug than ever be¬ fore. Force of example, I suppose.” “Yes, I guess so,” assented the cynic, “those Kentuek’.aiis are lushers. But do you think they are any worse in Paiis than in Paducah, Lexington or Louisville?”—New York World. JJatrgbv fcimiw Us li we t ve In &■ region where malaria Is preva¬ lent,. It la useless to hope to escape it II unpro¬ vided with a uiwll- lual sauyuard. Wherever the endemic Is most prevalent and malignant - (u South aud Central America, the West indies and certain portions of Mexico and the Isthmus of Panama, Hostetler s Stomach Hitlers dis¬ has proved a remedy form. lor and Not preventive etlectlve of the Is It in ease in every less curing rheumatism, llvor and kidney com¬ plaints, dyspepsia, biliousness and nervousness. Even if a man does get rich in the Ice bn tlness, it is a cold snap. When on article has been sold for 28 years, In Spite of competition and cheap Imitations, it must have superior quality. Dobbins’ Electric Hoop lia3 been constantly made and sold since 1800. A sk your orover for it. Best of all. Cupid Is the original sneak thief. He slyly steals hearts away. Cascaket* stimulate llvor, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c. When a college student gets drunk in New York city ho Is fined *3. The ordinary Individ¬ ual has to hand over the usual $5. FITS stopped free and permanently cured. No file after first day's use of Dit. Kline's On EAT Nebvk Restorer. Free $2 trial bottle and treat lee. Send to l)r. Kline, 981 Arch St.. I’tdla., Pa. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces liiltammu tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 3oo. u bottle. J PST try a 10c. box of Cascarots, candy cathar¬ tic, finest liver and bowel regulator made. Try© MoritisBeharaetorlstic of Hood’s .Sarsaparil¬ la and is manifested every day In its remarit ii)ui cures of catarrh, rheumatism, dyspepsia. Hoodi’s * Sarsaparilla lsthebest—In fact the OnsTrue Blood Purifier Hood’s Pills Hoo^ r s=AtI :,V iU ‘ It Was Funny. When Duncan, the legerdemain ar¬ tist, who came to this country with Chevalier, first appeared in New York, he thought he would set the American people crazy with his English humor. While it is true he accomplished his desire, it was hardly in the way he ex¬ pected. One of his exquisite bits of humor was to step to the footlights and ask: “Is there a lady or gentleman in the audience kind enough to lend me a fi’ pun note?” Not a sound followed the question, nd Duncan was abashed. Relating t to a party of American friends that .veiling he complained of the Ameri¬ can lack of appreciation of good hu¬ mor. “ ‘I’ll tell you a question you can ask tomorrow night,” spoke up one of the Americans, “aud I’ll guarantee you’ll get. a laugh,” and he whispered u moment into Duncan’s ear. He look¬ ed puzzled, but the American reas¬ sured him. On the following night Duncan stepped to the footlights am* inquired, earnestly: in the “Is thero a lady or gentleman audience kind enough to loan me a twenty-fivo-dollar bill?” all right.—St. He got the laugh then Paul Dispatch. l lll Wi ft? t**' Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Will cure the worst forms of female complaints, all ovarian troubles, in¬ flammation and ulceration, falling and displacements of the womb, and conse¬ quent spinal weakness, and is pecu¬ liarly adapted to the change of life. Every time it will cure Backache. It has cured more eases of leucor rhcea by removing the cause, than any remedy the world has ever known; it is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels tumors from the uterus in an early stage of develop¬ ment, and checks any tendency to can¬ cerous humors. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Liver Pills work in unison with the Compound, and are a sure cure for constipation aud sick headache. Mi’s. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash is of great value for local application. COMPLETE Cott oit u«CiuHr MILL OUTFITS —.» I-SO— Ct a. F re-w. Catta filiil nntl Shiiifile Ontfll* CST“Cast every day; work ISO hands. Lombard Iron Works and Supply Co M AUGUSTA, GEORGIA. ASTHMA POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC GlT« relief in nt« minute* Send for* FKEEtrial oecknge- Sold or AqtrftH P ISO’S? IttE UUKkS mint AU FAILS. Best Couth tyruti. Tastes Go>xi. Cse in lime. A>14 t*Y drumrisis. CONSUMPTION m 5‘ 25) ICTS. 7: 2'5 crsf .4 -_ I WORK 0E CONGRESS. \ X BUSINESS OF THE TWO HOUSES BRIEFLY CHRONICLED. Synopsis of measures Dismissed That Are of More or Less Importance to Uncle Sam’s Citizens. SENATE. The senate disposed of much routine business at the opening of the session Thursday. The petitions as to Cuba and for and against the Loud bill,were exceptionally heavy. Mr. Mills, of Texas, offered the following resolution: “Resolved, by the senate and house of representatives, that the expediency of recognizing the independence of a for¬ eign government belongs to congress, and that when congress shall so deter¬ mine the president shall act in harmo¬ ny with the legislative part of the gov¬ ernment. Second, that the independ¬ ence of the government of Cnba ought to be and hereby is recognized, and the sum of 810,000 is hereby appropri¬ ated for salary and expenses of a min¬ ister to that government whenever such minister shall be appointed by the president. ” In the senate, Monday, Mr. Mills, of Texas, delivered a speech on Cuba. His text was the resolution he intro¬ duced a few days ago recognizing the independence of the republic of Cuba, declaring it to be the duty of the ex¬ ecutive to act in harmony with con¬ gress in recognizing a new state and appropriating a sum sufficient to pay a diplomatic representation to the re¬ public when the president shall have appointed one. HOUSE. Despite the fact that the house Thursday entered upon the considera¬ tion of the Pacific railroad funding bill the attendance on the floor was not large. Great interest, however, was manifested in the opening debate by those present. A large map show¬ ing the routes of the Pacific roads has been erected in the area in front of the speaker’s rostrum and were frequently referred to by several speakers. Under the special order adopted for the holi¬ day recess, the debate was to continue until Saturday evening and the voting to take place Monday. The sensation of the day and the sensation of the session of the house Friday was the attack of Johnson, of California, on Hearst, of The New York Journal and The San Francisco Examiner. This came out in the Pacific railroad funding bill discussion before the house. Johnson is a strong advocate of the funding hill. He ran for congress in November on this funding bill issue, was fought hard by The Examiner and was overwhelm¬ ingly defeated. Hence his attack. It was of a personal nature, was vicious in the extreme and called down severe criticism from Johnson’s colleagues. The evening session of the house Friday devoted, under the rules, to the consideration of private pension bills, was rendered of no avail by absentee¬ ism. At 10:30 o’clock the session ex¬ pired by limitation under the rules, and the house stood adjourned until Saturday. funding The debate on the Pacific bill closed Saturday night. The day was devoted to debate under the five minutes rule, which developed still greater opposition to the measure than the early debate had indicated. The adoption of an amendment requiring 3 per cent instead of 2, as provided in the original bill, is a strong indica¬ tion againf'- the passage of the bill as originally passed. funding bill The Pacific railroad was defeated in the house Monday by a final vote of: Yeas, 102; nays, lfi8. This kills the bill outright, NOTES. Secretary Carlisle is the subject of t vo contradictory reports. One of t tese states that he is to go on the su¬ preme bench. The other story comes from a source exceedingly close to the secretary himself. This confirms the oft-repeated and oft-denied rumor that Carlisle is to go to New York and prac¬ tice law with Cleveland as seuior part¬ ner of the firm. Charley Crisp has secured a favora¬ ble report from the public buildings committee of the house on the bill in¬ troduced by his father at the last ses sion, providing tor the erection of a public building at Amerieus. The bill carries an appropriation Herbert has of ordered $35,000. the Secretary battleship Texas to visit Galveston on February 16th to receive an elaborate silver costing about $5,000, the money having been raised by popular sub¬ scription through the state for which the vessel was named. ALABAMA’S WOOL GROWTH. More Than » Quarter of Million Sheep in the State. An authority on sheep states that there are 250,000 sheep in Alabama, and that the average weight of wool clipped from each last year was four and a quarter pounds. The total of the clippings was, therefore, considerably more than a million pounds. WILL WAIT FOR CENTENNIAL. Postponement <>r Pate of Bail way Men’s Convention. The convention of railway men, con¬ sisting of the Orders of Railway Tele¬ graphers, Conductors, Firemen aud Engineers of the Southern, which was to have been held in Knoxville, Tenn., on January 25th and 26th, has been postponed and the place of meeting changed. It will be held in Nashville during the Centennial, which opens May 1st, bnt the date of the meeting has' not been agreed upon. GEORGIA IN BRIEF. The electoral college of Georgia met Monday at high noon in the state cap itol and the democratic vote for presi¬ dent and vice president was east by the thirteen electors who had beenap pojnted for that purpose. * * * Wednesday morning a large force of hands began work on the new jail building at Atlanta, and day by day tlie pick and shovel and hammer and saw will steadily build up the walls and push the mammoth structure to. completion. * ♦ * The cold weather has started the wealthy northerners south at an earlier date than usual, and Jekyl will catch more than her share. Gordon McKay and party, from Newport, arrived a day or two ago and I. K. Roosevelt, of New York. Seaborn The impeachment Reese and Solicitor talk about Sweatre- Jutjv^ calls the famous trial of CoIonelVjrold Hmith and Colonel Keitfroe iu 1879. The trial of 1879 furnishes a precedent in the manner in which the high court proceeded to prefer charges of impeachment and the way in which the whole trial was carried on. Colo¬ nels Renfroe and Goldsmith were state treasurer and comptroller general, re¬ spectively, at the time of their trials and were arraigned for offenses agatsist the state. Mayor Myers, of Savannah, ap¬ pointed Hon. F. G. duBignon, Colonel J. H. Estill and Ald.erman H. H. Ba¬ con delegates to the convention t<> be held at 'jjampa, Fla., on the20th inst., to discuss and advocate harbor im¬ provements and coast defenses of south Atlantic ports. Savannah is one of the ports in greatest need of harbor defenses and since arrangements have been made to put up a battery of four eight-inch disappearing guns at Tybee a lively interest has been taken in the matter. The famous case of Norman W. Dodge against G. A. Powell & Co., which has been pending in the United States court for several years, has been settled in favor of the defendant. Powell leased about 5,000 acres of land in Montgomery county for turpentine purposes and Dodge brought suittor injunction and relief. It. was apparent, however, that the litigation, if continu¬ ed, would involve a long contest over Dodge’s title to the land, which has been in dispute before, so settlement^ all partieif concerned agreed upon a thereby avoiding the contest promised. • * . Judge W. T. Newman, at Atlanta, has rendered an opinion in the case of the Eagle and Phenix Manufacturing Company that is one<of the most im¬ portant papers which the -ease has developed. The points settled by lien the opinion are whether or not the held by the depositors is statutory or equitable. The decision makes the lien equitable. It decides that what appears on the face of the bonds and trust deed is not sufficient to consti¬ tute a notice. The question of how far the different bondholders are charged with notice is left for the spe¬ cial master to decide. There has been much interest mani¬ fested among the friends of Mercer university relative to the finances of the institution. Colonel E. D. Hugue nin, treasurer, makes the following statement, which will be read with at¬ tention by many: Just prior to the pauic the total endowment was §150,- 253; the present market value is $130, 018.40; showing a falling off of $13,- 634.60. This,Treasurer Huguenin says, was caused by railroad wreckage aud depression of all bonds and stocks; $9,000 of this depression was one $5,000 note, and two $2,000 notes surrendered to the makers, who lived in Americas, Ga., as they had lost so heavily they were unable to pay them, and had failed in business. Judge Speer Confirms Sale. Judge Speer has passed on the ques tion of eoufirmining the sale of the Macon and Atlantic railroad, or as it i"s now known, the Atlantic Short Line. The Atlantic Short Line was sold at Savannah on December 17tk for $50,000 to Attorney Daly, of the Wrightsville and Tennille railroad. It is not known tor whom Mr. Daly bought the road. The sum of $50,000 is not thought to represent the total amount of interest the purchasers have in the road, as they are thought to have purchased the greater portion of the $100. tX)0 worth of claims against the road. For some time past some one has been buying up the claims. It is generally believed that the Central or Southern is not the real purchaser of the road. Charges Against an Officer. There has been much talk in military circles about the rumored investigation into the record of the commissioned officers of the First regiment eavalry, Georgia volunteers. Military men who have been inquiring into the matter say that an officer of one of the troops has been discovered to have been a de¬ serter from the confederate army during the war, and that the investigation is into this report with regard to his record. Of course, the officers in charge of the regiment would not want a man with such a record holding a cominissior. under their command should it be proven to be a fact. The officers of the regiment are silent with regard to the matter, though they do not deny than an in¬ vestigation is being made. Military men think that the party in question may be allowed to resign, in which event nothing public would likely come of the matter until an election of a new officer was called. A TALE OF FRONTIER LIFE. RECOLMSCTIOKS llEC AXLED BI IN. MAN INCURSIONS. What a Lowell Reporter Discovered in the Historic Town of Dunstable— Miraculous Escape From a Misera¬ ble Existence of a Descendant of One of the Pioneer War¬ riors of Colonial Times —The Talk of the Neighborhood. • From the News, Lowell, Mass. Mr. Hiram Spaulding, who was for many years the proprietor ot the Massapong House, a Boston summer resort, is undoubt¬ edly as well known as any man in Mid liesex County. Mr. Spaulding, besides having been a popular hotel man, boasts of being » lineal descendant of John Spaulding, a well known soldier who was killed in action with the Indians while serving in the command of the famous Captain John Tyng tn 1804. He also is well known as the ffrst leader of the celebrated Dunstable Cornet Band, of Dun¬ stable, Mass., familiarly " known as the ‘•mounted baud Altogether Bandmaster Spaulding is perhaps the best known citizen in town, and respected sterling everywhere for his uprightness NJfrs. Nellie and A. Spaulding character. is the wife this c? g« leman, and almost as well known as her popular husband. A recent severe illness from overwork and malaria caused grave fears am'ang her numerous acquaintances, and Ihe lohai physicians seemed powerless to aid beh Chills and fever, impaired action of heart and liver, and general wretch¬ edness called were her D\ portion, Williams’Pink until her attention Pills for was to Pale People, and she began to use them. On Labor Day v Monday. Sept. 7, 1896, Mrs. Spaulding finished the first boxof Pink Pills, and she informed the New* reporter that on that day she performed one of by the hardest day’s work ever accomplished her. She is still taking Pink Pills according to direc¬ tions, and all traces of malarial poison seam to have vanished. ‘•No one was more astonished at fny recov¬ ery than my husband and Nuy neighbors, and they are not surprised,” said she, “to find in me such a champion of what is des¬ tined to become a household medicine, 1 he precious Pink Pills.” At the requast of Mrs. Spaulding, person^ .the News reporter called on several in the town of Dunstable, all highly respect able ladies of prominence iu the community; he found them using “Pink Pills” with good results, and after a fair trial will fso they thought) be ready to add their testimonials to that of Mrs. Spaulding especially as to their in medici¬ chronic nal and curative worth, cases of nervousness. Dr. Williams’Pink Pills contain, in a con¬ densed form, all the elements necessary to give mw life aud riohness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an un¬ failing specific for such diseases ns locomo¬ tor ataxia, partial paralysis, Ht.Vitus’dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la grippe, pal¬ pitation of the heart, pale and sallow com¬ plexions, all forms of weakness either in male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price, 60 eents a box or six boxes for 42.50, (they are never sold in bulk or by the 100), by addressing Dr. Williams' Medicine Company, Bcheuectady, N. Y. ON OCEAN’S BED. AYliat Becomes of the Vessels That Sink to the Bottom of the Sea. What becomes of a ship that sinks in mid-ocean? If it is of wood, it takes in the first place considerable time for it to reach the bottom. In one hun¬ dred or more fathoms of water a quar¬ ter of an horn- will elapse before the ship reaches the bottom. It sinks slowly, and when the bottom is reach¬ ed it falls gently into the soft, oozy bed, with no crash or breaking. Of course, if it is laden with pig iron or corresponding substances, or if it is an iron ship, it sinks rapidly, and sometimes strikes the bottom with such force as to smash in pieces. Once sunken, a ship becomes the prey of the countless inhabitants of the ocean. They swarm over and through the great boat and make it their home. Besides,this, they cover every inch of the boat with a thick layer of lime. This takes time of course; and when one generation dies another continues the work, until finally the ship is so laden with incrustations, corals, sponges and barnacles, that if wood, the creaking timbers fall apart and slowly but surely are absorbed in the waste at the sea bottom. Iron vessels are demolished more quickly than those of wood, which may last for centuries. The only metals that withstand the chemical action of the waves are gold and platinum, and glass also seems unaffected. Now matter how long gold may be hidden in the ocean, it will al¬ ways be gold when recovered, and this fact explains the many romantic and adventurous searches after hidden sub¬ marine treasures lost iu shipwrecks.— Bangor Commercial. Calendar, ami Coupon*. So manv beautiful calendars anti entertain¬ ing novelties bnve been issued by the pro¬ prietors of Hood’s Sarsaparilla, that we are hardly surprised to receive this season not only one of the very prettiest designs in cal¬ endars, but with it coupons which entitle the recipient to attractive uoveUies. Every one who gets a Hood's Sarsaparilla calendar for 1897 secures something that will prove inter¬ esting and valuable as well ns a beautiful specimen of the lithographer’s arl. The cal¬ endar is aeeotnpauiod tins season by an amus¬ ing little book on “The Weather." Ask your druggist for Hood’s Coupon Calendar, or send 6 cents In stamps for one to C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass. An electric light is never an orna¬ ment to a man’s nose. His Explanation. “He made ducks and drakes of his money.” “Yes? And those promissory notes of his?” “Decoys!”—Chicago Record. State of I.CCAS Ohio. COCNTY. Crrr of Toledo,), ss. 1 is FkaNS J. Chexby makes oath that he the senior partner ol the firm ol F. J. CHENEY & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo. County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of one hcndbep dollars for each and every ease of catarrh that cannot be cured by the use of Hall s Catarrh Ccrs. FraNX j. Chsxet. Sworn to before me and subscribed In my .____ presence, this 6th day of December, A. . seal > D. lStsi. A. \Y Gleason. I—,— > Notary Public. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Send for testimonials- free. F. «t. Cheney a Co., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists. t5c. Hall's Family Fills are the best. Piso's Cure for Consumption has saved me many a doctor’s bill. —S. F. Hardy, Hopkins Place. Baltimore. Md.. Dec. 2. '94. WHes bilious or costive, eat a Cascaret, candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; Wc, 35c. The Origiaal Needles. Needles first _ , made , of „ , bone or were ivory, and specimens of these articles have been foand m many parts of the world, says the St. Louis ocrat. Bronze, ivory and bone needles have been discovered in the tombs of Egypt, and on the monuments are in rep resentatious of ladies engaged tng and, it is possiole also m chatting at the same time. It is known that Chinese Hindoos and Hebrews used need es, from a great antiquity Steel needles we known to the Homans, but none have been discovered, the metal not being able to resist the cor roding influence of the atmosphere. The making of fine needles was intro duced^into Spain by the Moors, and from that country w as 1-ought to En gland in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, The foreigners who made the needles, however, refused to teach their trade to the natives, and, not until 1850, did the manufacture obtain a footing on English soil. The needle-making ma¬ chines of the present have been brought to such a state of perfection that the work of managing a machine is largely entrusted to boys and gilds, and the machines turn cv.i thousands of needles per hour. Southern Cotton Mills. The total number of southern cotton mills in 1895 was 135. Of these fif¬ teen have been “crossed out” and merged into other concerns, and three were burned, reducing the number to 420. To this number, however, fifty five new mills were added during the year 1896, making the total now 475. “Put me down as a warm friend of Tetter ine. I have a child three years old who has been afflicted from its birth with the worst case of eczema I ever saw, it being one mass of sores from its feet to its crown. It has been treated by ulna of the most eminent physicians in this and ad.'otulng States without the slightest bene¬ fit. Hi vo. al months ago we commenced the use of Tettekine on the child, and to-day. thank God and the manufacturers of Tetteki.ve, the child is cured. My wife and I will ever feel grateful to you for sending us this blessing. Yours truly, Ckas. A. Cambeh., Druggist, Dallas, N. C. 1 box by mall for 50c. In stamps. J. T. Shuftrine, fmvannah, Ga. No-To-ISnc for Fifty Cent*. Over 400.000 cureU. Why not let No-To-Bac regulate or remove your desire lor tobacco? Saves money, makes health and manhood. Cure puaraatced. 50 eeuts and *1.00, at all druggists,_______ Cotton. With careful rotation of crops and liberal fertilizations, cotton lands will improve. The application of a propet ferti¬ lizer containing sufficient Pot¬ ash often makes the difference between a profitable crop and failure. Use fertilizers contain¬ ing not less than 3 to 4% Actual Potash. Kainit is a complete specific against “ Rust.” All about Potash—the results of its use bv actual ex¬ periment on the best farms in the United States—is fold in « little book which we publish and will gladly mail fre« to ftoy farmer in America who will write for it. GERMAN KALI WORKS, York. 93 Nassau St., New South ox-xx Sooci Co., Glencoe, Ala., growers and dealers in tested Farm, Garden and Flower Seeds for Southern climate. Catalogue froe. ANDY CATHARTIC CURE CONSTIPATION 10* 9 { ALL 25* 50* DRUGGISTS ! ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED 8 sE |pi* a nil iio vUIri Ad. STERLI N G BKMK O T Cam, or ?)>w Dirt*. if 1 ' -\; • t m \Vffl $ \ M H, fi S»|i I him % a y. Ti m m \* ] $ _ , HI 7^ 4e*~' e= < In Brooklyn, N. Y.. one of the few wood engravers who continue to do commercial work relates: “ Three or four years ago I was pre¬ sented with a box of Ripans Tabules These I took borne and ever since that day have been a regular cus¬ tomer.” His wife’s mother is pronounced proceeding in from the opinion disordered that for stomach, gastric troubles, or for any the irregularity best medicine which her a attention has the Tabuies are to ever been directed during all her long experience. His wife at one time astonished him by asserting that for a sore throat the Tabules were a remedy of amazing effectiveness. his physician He understands that throat—like this better now since he has learned from sore many other apparently disordered local troubles, notably headache—is often a direct re¬ sult of a stomach: and for this thousands of people well, know Ripans Tabules are a specific. 5 how to find out. Fill a bottle or common water gl aes wit* ^ ^ let it M ^ty-four hours-, a sodimellt or 9ettungindicate8 ^ a diseased con. of the W ken urine stain. - ““f - positiveevidence o . kidn^ .,_____,___ trouW^ <hl , Too frequent desire to urinate or lammth. baek 13 n 3 ° ^vmcing proof hat the tod '‘«? s U ^at Vo to Thero oomrort in the knowtodgeS ooften expressed that Dr SUmer s swam^lioot, the v remedy, iulfills every wish jn re]iCTj ,,3 the back) kidneys, U ver, Wadder and every of the urinary pas Mgefc It eorree ts inabiiity to. hold urine au(J 3ea , di ^ . * It , or had effects {ollowi m e or beer, and , .. eom °ZVZ7 ** ,,ed to Ket ufJ many tlmeS darmg ^ night to urinate. The mild and the extraor¬ dinary effect of Swamp-Itoot is soon realized It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing eases. Sold by drug¬ gists, price fifty eents and one dollar. For sample bottle and pamphlet, both sent free by mall, mention this paper and send your full postofllce address to Dr. Kilmer it CO: Binghamtoa, N. Y. The proprietors o* this paper guarantee the genuineness of this offe*. FREE Business Course to one person in every county. Please Georgia apply promptly Business to College, -UaCOS, GEORGIA. !i am Is Better —<4 S.......... 0=3 Tiian ......... '» ... —BUT— S. B. P. ACCOIHPLISHES EITHER OR BOTH. “Impure blood and its attendant evils “CANNOT exist If you tafce the remedy. “WRITE US FOR PARTICULARS. S.B.P.Co., Box 28 , Atlanta, Ca. Best on Earth. EVERY FARMER Should Ilavo GEiiti’s Improved ;•' CUAIMO am. COTTON PLANTER. Opens and dietribdtee any quantity at tbe same time. For prices write to .1. T. GAIVTT, Macon, Ga. DON’T BE CUT Tl- A Wf ,-nn cure you without It. If you have the PILES use Planter’s Pile Ointment. We guarantee to give'instant and 3jk permanent relief. Send five two cent stamps to cover postage aud Ad-_MaMS.F_. Pw we wilt mall FBEE package. dress liept. A. y Sff l i New Sp-uoer Medicine Co., —----- CHATTANOOGA. TENS. QC LxJ I M --IHitl other articles. WATCH fREEi Read (38 offer, tveiy Cost nothing. * W stUBTS our p«r*oa cut* Uu. o„t Mad* -FalSLj. I *« ‘4*. c»x.iug eif ret* cOSj*. will b» total*.] te I aut*> Saufil* MUPO. S i w Aadfl as cr 3«C*i |! fU»* H t ••lid Nlr*«i "tad aod 8«*na »<t *•» 3L l ro!l*d J»I4 }t V'*»t tU»io. fi uipi* il**» plat A , *1 t*a ipeon* etrtb • 1 , Fad gold pUUtl 11 CuJI jggSga buHea*.t«eld dmtncid m**,) •»»rb I 2 charm Bca/f p»a. w.rth » dot ?6C CoUaa 1 Ian. $ iJV ,puj fe ;.i buiu»a», 100 Ea.ciep*.. I dot fei«h frod* U*> •raalum u*} I p*B-i!»bary««*r.l button PwktlmM*- bol* Ifeqo**. tad all »« Mk. i* order to iotraduct *ur Cig» wi it that too allow u* to oeod in »*«*• pack**, f* 5 <‘f out dot ft 10 r. . 9k. u«J at H 91 Fuff tiasri&AOce alh 'fak ••*<! •nd R«*.«tbci for th* j*» w>!r pay tfc* • ttie** etftra and FREE MOattWU* n«Bi#<i abort at* ft** If y.u doc’t eontidar th* Uiireriba limit wb*t we mi don't pay ) teak Ad- tire? 4 - Wiiiton K'fg Cq., Wisstos, H Ci OPIlli.r^DRyNKENNESS OinA A. N. U...... .......Two,'97.