Savannah Tribune

Saturday, October 8, 1904

Savannah, Georgia

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V01. XX. WAS A MONSTER GRAFT Ex-Head of City/Council Tells How He and His 'Associates Grow Rich In a written confession Monday, Charles F. Kelly, speaker of the house of delegates in the city of St. Louis during a period in the life of the boodle combine, relates his story of that combine. In the course of his confession, Former Speaker Kelly said: "I know from my own knowledge and from the statements made to me by those on the inside, that bribery has been going on in the municipal assembly of St. Louis for the past twenty-five years. Hardly a bill passed that body in the last quarter of a century unless it was paid for. We did not fear exposure and punishment, for the reason that we believed no one would dare to do it. In case of attack, we knew most of the politicians and many of the large financiers of St. Louis would be with us. A former prosecutor showed some signs of startling after us, but was bluffed off. "When the present prosecutor (Circuit Attorney Folk is meant here) commenced his war on us, we tried to intimidate him by threats of assassination, and when this had no effect we laid all sorts of traps for him without success. Then some decided that the best plan would be to start a newspaper and libel him so fiercely as to draw his fire by taking up his time in libel prosecutions, or, if he did not, his influence would be weakened and destroyed. Although we could find nothing, after a thorough search, to make attack ca. libels were deliberately made up for the purpose of affecting public sentiment. This plan was participated in, not only by members of the house of delegates under indictment for boodling, but by prominent financiers of St. Louis, who feared exposure, and by those who gave us money. Of the combine Kelly had this to say, "We never thought of passing a bill out of which any money could be obtained, unless we were paid for our votes. We set about in a business-like way and had combine meetings at stated times and fixed the bribe prices which we were to receive for our votes by a majority vote of the combine. Then we would select one of the combine, in whose honesty we had confidence, to go out and get the money. These agents would rarely ever betray us. In one or two instances they confiscated part of the money, not as a general rule, they were honest with us. Among ourselves, understand. we had a high code of morals, and it was considered extremely dishonest for a member of the combine to accept bribe money without dividing it among his fellows." "We had a fixed scale of prices for various bills, according to the value of the franchises or privileges given. We hardly ever received less than $1,000 for the combined vote. We considered it be neath our dignity to take less than that. On one or two occasions, though, we got as low as $50 each for our votes, and some of the boys took $5 ench, but were ashamed of it, because the price was so small. "In the majority of the wards of St. Louis, both the democratic and republican parties usually nominate men to go to the house of delegates for the money they can make out of it. Each party man votes for his own fellow and either one that gets in serves those who rob the city of franchises. I believe this has been tolerated in St. Louis' because so many of the large corporations of the city are mixed up in boodling one way or another. The heads of these corporations used to think it less trouble to buy what they wanted than to elect honest men to the house of delegates. TWO MEN SURRENDER. Mass Meeting of Talbot CITizens Against Lawlessness Bears Fruit. Late Saturday afternoon, after the mass meeting at Talbotton, Ga., guaranteed protection to the negro woman whose boy was recently shot by a lawless crowd of white men, Sheriff Richards persuaded her to swear out warrants against Tom Butler, Seab Hall and Ed Shipp. After night Seab Hall and Ed Shipp came to town and surrendered to the sheriff. The sheriff says he will have Butler if he stays on top of the ground. The Savannah GOREE ASSAULTS LIVINGSTON. Congressman Received Many Blows While Seated in Court Room. Denounced as a liar by Colonel Lon F. Livingston, C. P. Goree, of Atlanta, the republican candidate for congress from the fifth district, who had attacked the congressman's record in his speech at Covington, Ga., Tuesday, sprang at Colonel Livingston and struck him severally blows in the face before the two men were pulled apart. Goree was addressing the people of Rockdale county at the noon recess of court. Toward the close of his speech Livingston entered the court room and took a seat near the front. Goree was reading a table of statistics he held. He charged that during Livingston's service in congress the salary of his grandson, L. F. Livingston, Jr., clerk in the postoffice at Conyers, had been raised from $100 yearly to $750. Without rising from his seat Colonel Livingston exhaled on hearing this: "If you mean that for the truth you are an infamous liar." Quick as flash Goree sprang at Livingston and began to rain blows on his face. Livingston was taken by surprise. Before he had risen or succeeded in striking a blow at his assailant the men were pulled apart. No arrests were made. Goree immediately left the court room and went to his hotel. Colonel Livingston was only slightly bruised as a result of the encounter. DAUGHTERS OF CONFEDERACY. Gathered at World's Fair City in National Convention. The national convention of the United Daughters of the Confederacy met in St. Louis Tuesday. Dr. J. W. Lee delivered the invocation, which was followed by the address of welcome by Mrs. A. Washington Rapley, of Missouri, state president. Response was made to this and to the other addresses by Mrs. Alexander T. Smythe, of Charleston, S. C., president general. Almost every state in the union was represented in the convention. Mrs. Goodlet, of Tennessee, who was the originator of the organization, was called to the platform and seated as a guest of honor. A telegram of greeting was sent to Mrs. Jefferson Davis, and one of condolence was sent to the wife of the late United States Senator Vest. A feature of the convention was a procession of children who marched around the hall waving small flags and singing "The Bonnie Blue Flag." The appointment of committees and routine business concluded the first day's session. NOTED SCULPTOR PASSES AWAY. Grim Reaper Claims Frederick Bartholdi. in Paris. Frederick Auguste Bartholdi, the sculptor, died in Paris Tuesday of consumption. He had no blood relations, but two of his wife's relatives were with her at the bedside when the sculptor died. Tuberculosis developed three years ago and showed violent symptoms during the last few months, but Bartholdi insisted on continuing work in his studio. During the last days of his work he fully recognized the fatality of the disease and began to design his own tombstone. It was completed the day before Bartholdi took his bed. HOAR'S MANTLE FOR MOODY. Attorney General Slated for Seat of Deceased Massachusetts Senator. A special from Worcester, Mass. says: Governor J. L. Bates will in all probability, at the next meeting of the governor's council, announce the appointment of Attorney General William R. Moody, of Haverhill, to succeed United States Senator Hoar. Shortly before his death Senator Hoar communicated to Governor Bates his wishes that the present attorney general might succeed him, and it is understood that Mr. Moody will accept. UNJUST TO CUBAN INTERESTS. Cigar Manufacturers Displeased at Treasury Ruling. Cigar manufacturers in Havana regard the decision of the United States treasury department in the cigar stamp case as unjust to Cuban interests. They see no reason for protecting manufacturers in the United States to the extent of removing the only conspicuous evidence that the contents of a box of cigars was imported. The decision having already been announced, it is doubtful whether the Cuban government will make representations on the subject to Washington. PAYNE IS NO MORE Postmaster General Succumbs to Grim Reaper. Henry C. Payne, postmaster, general of the United States, a member of the national republican committee, a stalwart of his party, with the history of which both in his home state and nationally he has been identified for many years, died at his apartments at the Arlington hotel, in Washington, at 6:10 o'clock Tuesday night, aged 66 years. His death was announced in an official bulletin issued by the attending physicians, which gave the causes of his demise as disease of the mitral valve, dilation of the heart. Mr. Payne had been in poor health for at least two years, but his last illness covered only seven days, an attack of heart trouble precipitating the end at a time when after a rest he seemed to have recovered a small measure of his vitality impaired by years of arduous labor. Death came after nearly six hours of unconsciousness. The last caller to inquire as to Mr. Payne's condition was President Roosevelt, and he had gone only about ten minutes when the stricken member of his cabinet expired. Secretary Hay had called at the Payne apartments a few minutes before the president made his visit. Neither entered the slick room. As Mr. Roosevelt was leaving about 6 o'clock he spoke feelingly of Mr. Payne to the newspaper men gathered in front of the hotel as "the sweetest, most lovable and most trustful man he ever knew." Mrs. Roosevelt, accompanied by Captain Cowles, was a caller at the family apartment of the Paynes during the late afternoon. The last day had been one during which practically all hope had been abandoned for some hours. The approach of dissolution began during the noon hour, when the sick man lost consciousness and no longer recognized those whom he had attempted to cheer during his illness by saying to them that he was all right. When Mrs. Payne saw that the end was near, she summoned the Rev. Dr. Dunlap, of St. John's Episcopal church, and at her request, he read at the bedside of the dying man Psalm 150: "Out of the depths," and then repeated the prayers the Episcopal church provides shall be read at the bed of those about to pass away. Funeral services will be held at St. John's Episcopal church, Washington. Afterward, the body will be taken to the Pennsylvania railroad station and placed aboard the private car of President A. J. Earling, of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad, and sent to Milwaukee for interment. Cortelyou Payne's Successor. In succession to Mr. Payne, George Bruce Cortelyou, formerly secretary of the department of commerce and labor and now chairman of the republican national committee, will become postmaster general. Mr. Cortelyou's appointment as head of the postoffice department was determined on several months ago by President Roosevelt, when Mr. Payne indicated to the president his desire to retire from the department on account of the precarious state of his health. Mr. Payne would have resigned the portfolio long ago had it not been for the pending investigation of the affairs of the department. He felt, however, and said many times to his friends that he could not relinquish the duties of the office while the investigation was pending and expressed his determination to carry the investigation to conclusion. The intense mental and physical strain incident to the direction of the postal inquiry very seriously undermined his strength. BLUFF OF BRAVE BROWN. Express Company. Operator Holds Off Lone Texas Highwayman. A lone robber entered the office of the Fort Worth and Denver railway and Wells-Fargo express at Dahlart, Texas, Thursday to hold up Night Operator G. H. Brown. The robber fired at Brown and ordered him to throw up his hands. Instead of obeying the robber's order Brown drew a revolver and opened fire on the intruder who fled to the railway yards. Sherin Webb was immediately notified and put his pack of bloodhounds on the trail. Brief Summary of Most Important Events of Each Day. —Hon. H. S. Davis, democratic vice presidential nominee, gave out his letter of acceptance at Ellins, Va., Sunday night. —Sir Wm. Vernon Harcourt, noted Liberal leader in British Parliament, died suddenly Saturday at his home near Oxford, England. —A strong shock of earthquake was experienced Sunday in the south of Italy, accompanied by floods of rain. —The property loss entailed by the flood of Trinidad, Colorado, will approximate one million dollars. —Mob in Kershaw, South Carolina; lynches John Morrison, a white man, for the murder of a prominent farmer. —Arthur Dunn Fiatt, vice consul of United States, has been fined ten shillings, according to an American dispatch from Dublin, for fast running on a motor cycle within the city limits. —Joseph Jefferson, after more than seventy years on the stage during which time he has become one of the most honored and beloved members of the dramatic profession, has decided absolutely never to resume his theatrical career. —The general staff at St. Petersburg has received news that in the general assault on Port Arthur from September 20 to September 26, the Japanese were everywhere repulsed. —The total production of gold in the United States during the calendar year 1903 is of the value of $73,591,700, and of silver, $29,322,000. The total output of gold shows a decline of $6,400,000 and of silver a decline of $1,200,000 ounces from the figures of the previous year. —Charles Maston, superintendent of the Southern Engraving Company, Atlanta, was bound over to the grand jury in the sum of $3,000, for alleged complicity in counterfeiting case. —Survivors of the General Slocum steamer fire at New York—those who are bereaved by the horror to the number of more than 30—have held a meeting to protest against the decision of the local boat inspectors in their recent investigation. —Acting Secretary of State Loomis has cabled Consul General John Goodnow, at Shanghai, China, permitting him to return and answer charges of maladministration in the affairs of rwLLLLo etaohr shrdlu shrdluu nanu his office. —Gel. Sakharoff reports to St. Petersburg that the Japanese are still pouring across the Taitse river at Bentsiaputze, 30 miles northeast of Liao-Yang. —Mrs. Carrie Nation, Mrs. Lucy Wilhoite, Mrs. Lydia Mounts and Mrs. Miram C. Henry broke two large plate glass windows in the Mahon Wholesale Supply Company's warehouse in Wichita, Kansas. They were arrested and jailed. —Frank Ryan employed at the New York navy yard as a rigger, who smashed against the side of the battle ship Connecticut the bottle of wine which Miss Welles had failed to break, has been officially commended. —The Spanish Red Cross society adopted a resolution to send 25,000 postas to the Japanese branch of the society, by almost unanimous vote rejecting a proposal to send an equal amount to the Russian branch. —The cotton business in Savannah, Ga., took but little cognizance of Sunday. Aside from the closing of the cotton exchange, there was a rush and bustle as great as any week day could show. - Efforts by the Russians to retake positions commanding the water supply of Port Arthur has resulted in hard fighting, the losses on both sides being reported to have been heavy. The Japanese retain the contested ground. - Secretary of the Interior Hitchcock has given out a statement in answer to certain charges regarding the method of conducting the investigation into land frauds on the Pacific coast. - Greater New York is at present threatened with what may be the severe epidemic of typhoid fever in its history. - Alderman John Pound, chairman of the London General Omnibus Company, limited, has been chosen lord mayor of London for the ensuing year. —United States Senator George F. Hoar died at his home in Worcester, Mass., after a lingering illness. Accepting Democratic Vice Presidential Nomination MADE PUBLIC AT ELKINS Ex-Senator Deprecates Extravagance in Administration Affaire—Jumps on the Trusts and Discusses Other Live Issues. At Elkins, West Virginia, Sunday night, former Senator Henry, G. Davis made public his letter accepting the democratic nomination for the vice presidency. In part it is as follows: The times are propitious for the recontrol of the government. The public mind is being disillusioned of the pretension of the republican arty, so long and so arrogently made, that the material prosperity of the country depends upon its own ascendancy. Thoughtful and patriotic people are becoming more and more distrustful of the heady and personal element of the present administration, and are more than willing to see if replaced by one that better recognizes constitutional and other lawful restraints. They demand that the present wasteful extravagance in the expenditure of the money, drawn by taxation from the industry of the people, shall cease, and that economy and honesty in the public service shall be again regarded as virtues in the high places of the government. The expenditures per capita of the government are increasing at an alarming rate. When the present administration went into power there was a large surplus, but notwithstanding the enormous taxation, the revenues therefrom are not now adequate to meet the demands made by reckless appropriations. The cost of government during the fiscal year was $7.14 per capita, which means that the average tax paid in some form or another by every family of five persons toward the support of the national administration of public affairs was over $35, which, in the case of wage-earners, is a considerable percentage of their entire earnings for the year. No more money should be taken from the people by taxation, direct or indirect, than is necessary for the needs of a government economically administered. We all hall as the harbinger of the new era in the commerce of the world the inception of the great work of building the canal that is to join the two great oceans, but we deprecate the action of the present administration, which inflicted a wound upon our national honor by its disregard of the rights of a weaker nation, in order to gain a doubtful credit for energy in forwarding that great enterprise. Territory of a neighboring republic, with which we are at peace, was seized by a band of revolutionists, protected by the guns of the United States navy and erected into a state overnight, which the president promptly recognized as an independent nation. A gross offense against a friendly republic which it was heiless to resent. These and many other unwarranted things that belong more to an empire than a republic, have occurred under the present administration and brought deep concern and ularm to thoughtful and patriotic minds. That many of the existing tariff rates are excessive and enable powerful combinations to extort unjust and oppressive tribute from the people cannot be controverted. The tariff is undoubtedly too high upon such articles as enables the manufacturer to sell his products abroad cheaper than at home. It is estimated that there are in the United States between two and three hundred combinations of capital and corporate interests, known as trusts, which have grown up in the last few years under republican rule. Some of them are so conducted as to be pernicious and harmful to the general interest. With the power they are able to exert, they can lessen competition, control prices and regulate to their own advantage the law of supply and demand. All lovers of their country must deprecate the rehabilitation by the republican party of a disappearing race issue, at a time when every effort should be made to promote rather than retard the progress which was being made in the states where slavery had existed, toward kindler relations between the two races. The revival of this issue, with all its attendant evils, must of necessity retard the development of the southern states, whose people are struggling manfully with conditions left by the war, and seriously interferes with the industrial progress of both races. Charges Against Atlanta Engraver Agent Counterfeiting Case to Be Investigated by Grand Jury. Under a $3,000 bond, Charles A. Manson, superintendent of the Southern Engraving Company, in Atlanta, charged with being a party to the making of the $10 counterfeiting plates, the unearthing of which some three months ago efeated a pronounced sensation throughout the south, was held Saturday no answer to the charge in the United States court. William Wynne, who brought the accusation against Manston, was the principal witness. District Attorney Bell requested him to tell all he knew about the plates from which the $10 bill plate had been made. Nothing, loth to talk, Wynne started his story- "I was approached," he said, "by parties who wanted a plate from which to make money. I was told that a plant had recently been purchased and established here, and that work of that kind could be done. I had worked with Maston and I went to him, telling him that we could coin something out of it. Maston asserted that he would have the parties arrested. I told him that would accomplish nothing, as nothing could be proved on them. Then he said if there were suckers about, he'd like to trim them himself. I told him what we could do, and he dropped into the scheme. It was Maston and myself who made those plates. I got Willie Howell to let me work at night for him, and on Friday night we made the plates." "These plates?" interjected District Attorney Bell, showing the witness the plates. Wynne identified the plates. Then he told how he had asked Willie Howell, an assistant in the engraving department, for a night's work, and during that night, some time about May 20, the plates were made. He described to the court the usual inside working of a shop of the kind, much of which was Greek not only to the spectators and audience, but to the attorneys interested in the case. He declared that, after Manston had become interested in the work, he had arranged for a night off for Howell when Wynne should work. Howell when approached by Wynne was not anxious to drop out for the night, but did so. Then Wynne told the court how the plates had been made. He asserted that the bill used was a Buffalo bill and that Manston took the bill from his pocket when the photographing process began. "The bill," said the witness, "was an old one and he was afraid of it. He thought it ought to be a new bill. It was that bill we photographed, and from it the plates were made." Wynne testified that he had known Manston seven or eight years, that he he went to work for him as an office boy, that on a Saturday night about the 10th of May, Manston and himself stayed late at the office of the company for the purpose of making the plates that night, and that Manston did most of the work with his own hands. Wynne said that Manston locked the door and put cardboard over the glass part of it to obscure the vision from the hall. He said that he got $250 and a lens for the plates after they were completed, of which sum he handed Manston $100. He sold the lens, he said, to Mr. Robert Hemphill for $60, receiving a check in payment. This check, he swore, was cashed by Manston, who gave him half the money. J. H. Wallace, watchman at night in the Constitution building, where in the engraving company is located, testified that the keys to Manston's office were not in the elevator on the night of May 21st, where they usually were. He said that Manston and Wynne were in Manston's office practically all night. Paper was pasted over glass part of the door. He was in the office of Manston at 11, at 1 and after 3 o'clock on that night. "I knocked on the door," he said, "and falling to get any answer, went to the elevator to get my keys. They were not there. Then I went back and knocked again. Wynne let me in." Maston made a statement denying all complicity in the affair. TUMBLED INTO THE CELLAR. Accident Occurs at Corner-Stone Laying in Adams, Mass. During the laying of the cornerstone of St. Stanisllaus' Polish church at Adams, Mass, Sunday afternoon, a floor collapsed, precipitating 150 persons into the basement. Thirty-seven persons were so injured as to require medical treatment. Of this number the injuries of sixteen are serious and in one case may prove fatal. The others sustained minor cuts and bruises. REPUBLICAN TICKET FOR VICE, PRESIDENT, CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS. THE following is from the report of the Huntsville, Ala., special grand jury which recently found many true bills against lynchers, and it applies with equal force to the mob law situation in Georgia: "The issue presented to us is clear cut. We have reached a crisis. The question is whether we shall be ruled by a mob or by the law; whether we shall have anarchy or government; whether an armed and unreasoning rabble whose worst passions have been inflamed and prejudices aroused shall be permitted to trample our statutes under foot and openly commit most atrocious crimes merely because they happen to have brute force at their command, or whether we shall say the law is supreme; it is the only safeguard of our property, our liberty and our lives; it shall be upheld, respected and enforced." Rmv. J, W. HARG, a leading Baptist preacher of Montgomery discussing the lynching question in which he said: "Our race is falling into a grave error, namely, unlawfully punishing the Negro because of his color. We boast of freedom, and yet we, by our actions, would force a race in our midst into indignities and suffering and allow others to go unpunished for similar crimes. Our aim should be to punish legally and justly all wrongdoers according to their misdemeanor without prejudice or distinction. Any and all discrimination and partiality will engender the more hatred of the races and precipitate a worse state of affairs than exist today. Can we not read just our judiciary machinery and restore such confidence that will feel willing to allow the law to take its course and not ruthlessly trample sacred things under unhallowed feet? A duty and obligation rests upon every citizen to see to it that the law is upheld and wrong suppressed. Let us acquit ourselves like men in doing the right things." In a sermon delivered yesterday morning, Rev. Frank E. Jenkins, D. D., pastor of the Central Congregational, church, strongly indorsed the efforts of The Constitution to arouse public sentiment against the mob spirit which has recently become so dangerous to the peace and good order of the entire country. Dr. Jenkins referred to recent lynchings in this and other states and pointed out the evidences of a growing disregard for law all over the country, stating that mob violence and disorder cannot be charged to one state or section alone, but that it has become a dangerous national menace. In this connection, Dr. Jenkins said: "It is seldom that I single out individual persons or newspapers for criticism or commendation, but in this instance I am constrained to refer to the noble work now being done by the Atlanta Constitution in calling upon all who have the public good in heart and mind to use their efforts toward the creating of a healthy public sentiment which will enforce respect for law and order and abhor those influences that make for the brutalizing of mankind and the ruin of the nation. All honor to the Atlanta Constitution by the Christian people of Atlanta and of America as it calls for needed changes and holds up the truth and right." Communicated. allow me space in your columns for a timely suggestion to the colored ministers of this city. Some weeks ago Ex-Gov. Chamberlain of South Carolina, in a lengthy but rather illogical letter to Prof. Brice, the noted publicist of England, sneered at the influence that A. M. A. Schools, Hampton, Taukegee and the Odgen Board had and could exert in preventing rape. He also charged the Negro ministry with dereliction of duty in trying to suppress this foul crime. He says there has been no concerted effort on the part of the ministry in preaching against rape and the rapist. The last statement is partially true for the following reasons: first three fourths of the lynchings in the British are for crimes decidedly other than rapes is clearly proven by Mary Church Terrell in the May issue of the North American News. Mr. Chamberlain practic- ally commends the fact when he urges to fight the issues that originally occasioned lynching. Secondly, the rapist is no more to be found among the intelligent and peaceful Negro than among the same class of any other citizens. The thought or mention of that unamnable crime is as repulsive and as grating on our sensibilities as on any class of men; again a general effort like which Mr Chamberlain suggests implies that as a race we plead guilty to the charge he so recklessly imputes to us. As the intelligent of the race, as the loyal industrial one’s by whom all races must be judged, we deny the charges in toto. Nevertheless there are some of us who have and will constantly preach against the heastly crime. Further, I read in the Press, two Saturdays ago. Gov Terrell's weighty words on the situation; his statements go to the heart of the matter and should be read by every "lover of law and order." In discussing this matter a few days ago I said that the time had come when the best elements of both black and white should co-operate in stamping out lawlessness and the crimes that occasion it. Still further, we have noted with deep satisfaction the recent efforts that are now being made in Georgia and Alabama, to bring to justice the leaders in these lynchings. I have prayed that righteousness will soon prevail in all the executive places of of our commonwealth and that our heritage of democratic government and free institutions will be strenuously guarded. In view of the above and at the risk of being somewhat forward, I suggest that the colored ministers of Savannah meet in the near future, to discuss and take some action whereby our severest condemnation of both rape and the rapist may reach the lower stratas of the race from which comes this class of criminals State Press Condemn Acts of Mob Violence. (From The Milledgeville Union Recorder) The law-abiding people of Georgia are determined that lynching shall be stopped. (From The Columbus Ledger.) The Talbot county citizens are determined to prosecute to the extent of the law the men who recently shot two innocent Negroes in that county, with no apparent cause. Solicitor General Gilbert promptly responded to a request to go to Talbotton to conduct the presecution, which is a guarantee that the men who did the shooting will be punished if the evidence shows them to be guilty. Talbot county people take the right stand in this matter. If the parties who did the shooting are convicted and punished, it will tend to keep down much lawlessness in future. (From The Statesboro Times.) (From The Statesboro Times.) It is evident that the authorities and the thinking people of the southern states are rapidly coming to the conclusion that it is about time to deal with the mob spirit with a strong hand. That this is true is shown by the action of the grand jury at Huntsville, Ala. on Wednesday, by the sending of troops to Camilla, in this state, to protect a Negro prisoner, by action of, some of the churches of Statesboro in telling those of their members who participated in the lynching near that place that they must either confess and promise to have nothing to do with lynchings in the future, or resign their membership, and by other signs indicating a growing sentiment against mob law. (From The LaGrange Graphic.) When lynch law once begins there is no telling where it will end. Mob law is no law, and the danger is that from having some justification it increases and encroaches from less valid reasons each time until there is no end to it. Here recently, since the Statesboro affair at one place in Georgia, a Negro was lynched for shooting a white man, and in another Georgia county innocent Negroes were shot to death for nothing. Also in Mississippi after the mob had completed its work it was discovered that the wrong Negro had been lynched. And so it goes. It is time for Georgia and the south to call a halt on this era of lawlessness, and Governor Terrell deserves great credit for the prompt actions he has been taking to put a stop to this evil. Press and pulpit should cry out against it until law in Georgia is supreme. (From The Savannah News!) We have already expressed, the opinion that there are no Before Day clubs in this or any other state. A very careful examination of witnesses in the "Before Day Club" case at Talbotton was made by Judge Raines, of that place on Tuesday, but no evidence was elicited that supported the charge that the defendants were connected with such a club, or that there was such a club, and yet a great many people in and about Talbotton were quite satisfied they had found a sure-enough Before Day Club. The whites and blacks would get along, a great deal better together if there was not so much suspicion. The lawlessness of one or two Negroes in a community is made an excuse of suspecting that all of the Negroes in that community are banded together to do an injury of some sort to the white people. As a general thing there are always a few hot-headed white men who want to make a raid on the Negroes, even without provocation. (From The Macon News.) (From The Macon News.) The voice of Allen D. Candler has always been raised in behalf of the majesty of the law and dignity of government. Before this distinguished Georgian become governor of Georgia, and during his incumbency of the executive office, and since his retirement from the governorship he has been a defender of the constitution of the state, an advocate of the enforcement of her laws, and against mob violence and lawlessness of every kind. In a letter published in The Atlanta Constitution today, relative to lynch law, ex Governor Candler makes a strong attack on lynch law. His virile utterances will do good. He writes as a patriot and a statesman, and as a true Georgian who loves his state and her people. (From The Savannah News.) What is needed in every county in this state is a public sentiment against crimes of all kinds and particularly crimes of violence. If there were a sentiment that wouldn't tolerate crimes of violence there would be comparatively few such crimes, because as soon as a crime of that kind was committed the sheriff and his deputies would be hunting for the criminals, and they wouldn't rest until they had arrested then or became assured they were beyond their reach. The outrage that was committed in Talbot county a few days ago—the shooting of two inoffensive Negroes-provoked a strong public sentiment in that county against those guilty. Two of the men have surrendered, and the sheriff is on the trail of the other one. If the sheriff had not waited for the complaint to take out a warrant, but had proceeded to make arrests as soon as he was informed a crime had been committed, all of the accused men would have been in jail, in all probability, within a short time after the commission of the offense, and the moral effect of the conduct of the sheriff throughout the county and even over the state. would have been very great, because it would have been an announcement to the criminally inclined element of the population that crimes couldn't be committed with comparative impunity. It would have been equal to a proclamation that in future vigorous prosecution would follow the commission of crime. Meeting of the Emancipation Association. Savannah, Ga., Oct. 4, 1904. At a meeting of the Emancipation Association held this day at St. Philips A. M. E. Church West Broad Street. The following offices were elected: Rev. Alexander Harris, President; Rev. Randolph Kemp, Vice-president; Mr. C. H. Ebbs, Secretary; Rev. W. L. P. Weston, Treasurer. The following were appointed on the executive committee: Revs. F. R. Sims, J. A. Hadley, H. L. Haywood, R. Kemp, R. H. Singleton, R. H. Thomas, N. H. Whitmire, Mr. Richard Barnes, Mr. C. H. Ebbs Our worthy and much esteemed citizen and popular railway mail clerk, Prof. Geo. S. Williams has been slected to deliver the oration for the occasion. This high honor conferred upon so worthy a young man, besneaks for him. The confidence and high esteem in which he is held by his fellow citizens and friends, our worthy and popular friend and brother, Rev. G. L. Word of St. Paul O. M. E Church is the alternate to Prof. Williams. Rev. F. R. Sims the worthy and popular pastor of St. Philips Church West Broad street, and president of the ministerial union of his denomination and Bishbp, so to speak of the diocese of Sayannah, is the chairman of the executive committee. This committee has all the arranging and planing of the Association in hand. Our friend and brother, Mr. R. N. Rutledge who ranks second to none in oratorial ability and who is distinguished for that promptness of courage and coolness of deliberation, is the honorable Chief Marshal, who will be ably assisted by Messra R. Barnes and J. E. Kimball. It is hoped that all societies and churches together with the general public will take an active part in making this the fortieth celebration the grandest in the history of the race. The next meeting will be held Wednesday Nov. 2nd, at the same place, at 12 o'clock m. All persons desirous of becoming a member, can do so upon the payment of 25 cent Visit the St. Louis Cafe corner West Broad and Alice streets. It is the only first clear Cafe in the city. FALL CLOTHING «FOR MEN AND BOYS» IS JUST COMING IN SPECIAL SUITS AND PANTS ...FOR BOYS... FOR THE FOLLOWING WEEK Leopoto Holer. BROUGHTON & BULL STS. The Largest Department Store in Georgia. Knowles Building. Boys' Hall. Stone Hall. Girls' Hall. Model Home. ATLANTA UNIVERSITY, Atlanta, Ga. Christian and unsectarian. For the education of young men and women in the higher studies. Collegeate, Normal and High School Courses, with Industrial Training. New Practice School and Kindergarten building for training teachers. Graduates secure most important positions as teachers and leaders. Home life and training. Athletics. Superior advantages in Music and Printing. Aid given to needy and deserving students. Term begins the first Wednesday in October. For catalogue, address: President HORACE BUMSTEAD, D.D., Atlanta, Ga. Mrs. W. H. Burgess, EXPOSITION ST. LOUIS REDUCED RATES AND QUICKSCHEDULES VIA SEABOARD AIR LINE RAILWAY. Lv. Savannah. 7.15 A.M. Ar. Montgomery----7.55 P.M. Lv. Montgomery----9.25 P.M. Ar. St. Louis----5.50 P.M. RATES: SEASON TICKET $38.35 60 DAY TICKET $32.00 15 DAY TICKET $26.05 Inquire Relative Low 10 Day Coach Excursion Rate. Only line having through cars to Montgomery, where direct connection is made with M. & O. R. B. through LIMITED train, carrying Pullman Library-Sleeping and DINING CARS. ONLY ONE NIGHT EN ROUTE Full information upon application to Ticket Agent, or address Charles F. Stewart, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Savannah, Ga. Name World's Fair Short Line. SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Job Printing of all kind done at our office. Metropolitan Mutual Benefit Association. A sick and death benefit organization that pays larger benefits than any other and pays them quicker. Has nearly 50,000 members and paid out to its members to August 1, $10,580 Gives employment to two hundred intelligent colored men and women. The mother of this company is the Metropolitan Mercantile and Reality Company. 150 Nassau street, New York, 222 W Broughton street Savannah, Ga. Ber Tee es 8? 8 DAEs SS i RES Se oe Re. Je Ee ce tae ER pe a eee Fe” The Savannah Tribane. |: Geerdinat then, m. 0. “[Ane TT wae] Te nO OE ee r The Savannah Tribune. © Georg well tepresented at the somims Raskin il - LO? at is re re oe 2 , 8,°1904 “M. O. ewhich commenced ite ses-} Coming Bvents‘in 'e Ba wie, ge wee oe ewe PE ete ps Pe a RE Ae ha ae . wee —Sarunpay_Ocrones_2y"t006 - {aion at Columbus, Oblo, on Tues- * @ial Werld. ed E bn T.ocal Brevities- dav morning lest, Georgie: has| TheG.E. Club will ‘give the closing} _ Lee ee a eg . as - = me :; liamaleft on Monday night Jast iol ; Atlanta, University. a . Br. Cato Young hag retursed ta < the city after spending'several weeks in Northerncitie. Miss Emma E. Swangin left on Monday last for Atlanta where ahe > will attend Spellaan Seminary, Mra. J. ©, Carr retarned- home after a very pleasint stay in Walter- . boro, S. O., “with relatives and friends. Miss Josephine Martin of Wil mington, N, v., spent awhile Yh the city the guest of Mra D.‘A. Carr, aud returned home much delighted. Wa regret to noto the.death of Mrs. A. E. Harrison, on Thursday last. She was buried yesterday from her residence, 765 Gwinnett street East. ; Mr. Henry Green accompanied by his sister Miss Oliver V. Green left on Saturday last for Hampton, Va, . where he will attend school. Miss Green Will epend awhile before re- turning? Capt. W. D. Armstrong has been on the sick list during the past weék bat at this writing is able to resume his duties at the post office. Master Robt. Lee Armstrong, Jr., of Camden County is in the city at- tending school. He ix stopping with hie uncle Capt, W.\D, Arm- atrong. z \ Mrs. D. H. Raing returned hom last week, from Chicago, Il, where ashe spent a very pleasant vacation. Miss Tena M. Fuller, left on Sunday night of last week to re- sume her studies at Spelman Sem- inary. " Mr. Rufus M. Gooper, the new in- stractor of Tailoring at the Georgia Btate Indostrial College, paid us a call this week. For best wood at low prices and prompt delivery, call or ring up Savannah Wood Co., Atlantic Ave, near Gwinnett street, Both phones Tt. = * After spending two weeks very pleas- antly in Beaufort Mrs. E. N. Sullivan and little Miss Helen returned home on Mon- day last, accompanied by Mrs* James Riley and her son James. Mr, Pierce M. Thomson, after a very pleasant stay of two weeke, lefton Monday last for Atlanta to resume his studies at the University. Miss Lizzie Hill returned home on Friday of last week, after a stay of several months. She visited at lantic City, Orange Grove and As- bury, Park N. J., and is looking well. Miss Mary Lou Walker and Mr, James Davis was married by the Rev. J, W. Oarr, D.D., at the Par- sonagé on Monday evening last, We wish them much joy and along wed- ded life. Mrs. Susie Lee, lefton Thursday for Atlanta, on visit to her husband Mr. Richard Lee, from there she will go to Abbeville, S. C., for a few weeks stay as guest of Mrs. Sallie Williams, Mr. W. Smith formerly collector for the Union Association has re- signed from said Association and accepted the position as general in- spector for the Guaranty Aid and Rehef Society, with main office at 468 West Broad. | Mrs. E. &. W. Snyder died on Thursday last, after several weeks of serious illness. She was a consistent member of First A. B. Church, and was buried ffbm her resi- dence on Bismark street, on yesterday afternoon, Rev. J. W- Carr officiating. ‘The funeral was attended by the Charity Workers and Household of Ruth 118, she, being Secretary of both at herdeath, She lefta venerable mother, busband and son to mourn ‘her loss. The family has our sympathy in their sore bereavement. Mrs. A. L Johnson returned home on Monday last: via Steam- ship City of Atlanta, after spendixg’ a Plcanaat summer.in New York and New Jersey. She brought her niece Miss Marion, daughter of Mr. and Mre, Geo. & Johnson. St. Philips Monumental church New street, will begin a Harvest Home festivul at, and for the benefit of the church on Monday night Oct. 10; the aame to last 10 nights, All are invited, Admission free. _ Mr. Rufus M. Cooper, basa full tineanffnll Arass eniteta rant. See itty College Dots... Bid ————een © opening of the Georgla State Industrial College “was. ieformal. Notice Pres. AY eight mate apractical talk] The members of tothe atudents fall of wholesome] tion Association, are advice. The recently appointed| together with all frie teachers ¢ Profs, Davis ree Cooperjing willbe beld W _were introdnced to the school by ember 2,1904, at St. the President; both made short ad-| West Broad St,, 12 o dresses in which they pledged co-, persons desirous ef t operation and unselfish and faith-|the celebration, can ful service. Over two hundred were| bers by paying 25, « enrolled on the opening day. The|mesting the, Execa return of Prof. Work from the Un-| will report, and’ ‘all iversity of Obicago where he took} looking forward tot the degree of Ph. D. was omitted |of the arraagenienta: ivadvertently last week, He will|tion on Emsncipatic have charge of Pédsgogy this, year | perfected “pysorder: _and Prof, Cotton will preside {m.the] ton. Rov; Alexands gdepartment.of ;Mathematlos!:” <-*| ‘0: Hi. Bbbs,: Secretar havc ot Vip, SR Ob sks dated pees se Lifes a aE Fe Rae er , Georgia.at the B, M. C. . > Georgia iz well represented at the BOM. ©. »which commenced ita ses sion at Columbus, Ohio, on Tues. day morning Iast, Georgie. has nearly one hundred and fifty dele- gates in attendance and there ie about eix bundred from various parts of the United Sistes. "The first contingent ofthe Savan- nah delegation composing of Col. Deveaux, Dr. Bugg, Dt. Parks, Maj. Royall, and Tux ‘RisuNB Sepeseh: tative, with Lawyer Kiuckle Jeft-on the Southern on, Saturday night, and hada pleasant trip, striving in Columbus ‘Monday afterndon, after stopping ac several cities. 8 ‘The citizens of Columbna treated the delegates cordially. Will give a full account of the meeting In our next issue. OS Social Everts. A very pleasant evening was spent on Wednesday last at 603 Whita- ker street at the wedding reception of Mr. and Mra. J. H. Cuyler. The guests were: Meadames D. Reed, D. Singleton, J. Holmes P. Jackeon. Misses R. Burke, E- Green, L. Carr, L Gordon, A. Millard, P. Biller, 8. Williame. Messers. J. Hamilton, A. Montague, P, Lovett, J. Varn, L. Singleton, W. Matthews, A Wil- liame. Masters L. Williama, David Holmes, D. Castello. Mrs. Cuyler formerly Mrs. Laura Williams. is a popular and highly esteemed young lady. Mr. Cayler isa prominent and energetic young man, and well thought of among his friends. Mr. and Mrs. Cuyler have the good wish- es of their many friends. =~ . On “Wednesday evening lait a aocial was given at the residence, of Miss Mamie Williams 718 W. Daffy atreet, The evening waa epent in games, dancing, and other amase- ments. Each pereon enjoyed them- elves. Each guest after enjoying one of the above amusements, the special feature for all to participate in was refreshments. Each one did justice to hie part. Those present ‘were: Missees, Mattie Lyons, Eveline Hugher, Maud Dozier, Julia Frazier, Eatetla, Johnson, Mamie Johnson, Glaudia Robinson, Lizzie Squire, Hattie Stevens, Marie Johnson, Bertha Rowe, Henrietta Matthews, Maseline Green, Etta Middleton, Mabel Hembry, Gertrude Hembry, Emma, Walker, ~ Annie Greene, Mamic Wiliams, Messrr, Olifford Bagrell, Henry Huger, John Whit- field, Willie “Timmons, Arthur Wicks, Charlie Jones, William Julian, Stephen Cook, Benjamin Jobnson, Benjamin Greene, Ray- mond Rill, Charles Allen, Fred Ed. wards, Jr, Murry McNeal, George Fargerson W. H.. Williams, Chas. N, Williams . St. Philips Dots. | Large congregations were out at each service on Sanday- Commun- jon was administered in the after: noon and at,night. Rev. Sinis de. hyezed two appropriate sermons and the choir rendered very good musig ateach service. The Fourth Quart. erly.Conference was held on Friday night, good reports were made -by éuch ‘department, The following seryics will be" held on Sunday: Prayer meeting at 5:30 s,m, preach- ingat 11 a.m., by Presiding Elder W.O. P. Sherman; Sunday Schoo! at3 p.m. Christian Endeavor at 4:30 p. m., preiching at $:30 pm by Presiding Elder W. 0. P. Sher- man. Strangers are cordially in- vited. = ae Evengelical Union. The Union met atll:4> 8. m., after the summer vacation. Rey, ¥. R. Sims B, D., presiding. Deyo- tional services wera conducted by Rey. D. H. Porter. The 93rd Panlm was read. After congratulatory re- marks by the brethren, the fol- lowing sermona were reported: Rey. Jamea Jackson preached from Judges 16:19 subject, ~The Delilan which hath shown the church of its power.” Rev. J: A. Hadley, from John 10:9 _sube ject, “Chriat the open door.” These excellent discourses were well re- ceived, The following ‘ministers ‘were present at the opening exer- cises: Rev. F. R, Sims, B. D., James Jackeon, D. H. Porter, G:.W- Jenkins, J. S, Jenkins, G. L. Word, B.D. RH. Singleton, D. D. -On account ofa special meeting of the Emancipation Association the nieet- ing was abbreviated. Adjonrment at 12:45, p.m. . oo Notice... - The members of the Emenofpa- tion Association, are hereby wotitied together with all friends that a:meet- ing willbe btld Wednesday,.Noy- ember 2, 1904, at St. Philips church ‘West Broad Bt,, 12 o’clock a. m-All persons desirous ef taking » ‘partin the celebration, can’ become. wem- bers by paying 25, cents. Ati this ‘meeting the, Execut|ve committee will report, atid’ all, afranxemeyts looking-forward tothe perfeetion's of the orrangementssfor:the celeagy tion on Emancipation: Dayiepl se perfected “bysorder 6. the: ton. Rev; Ajexander<Herris ¥ O: Hi. Ebb Sécsotaty.t:--.5 tage ee, » er ae er” | AMUSEMENT COLUM. Coming Events: in The Sa- * @ial Werld. The G. E. Club will give the closing picnic at Lincoln, Park on Monday Oct. 10. Admissioa rs cents. . The Y, G. E, A. and 8, C,will give its first autumn dance at Harris‘street hall oo Tuesdaynight Oct. 18 Admission-25 acd 35 tents, - The First Congregation&l church will give a Japanese Bazaar at Harris Street hall, commencing Mosday night Nov. 14 to continue to the 25.ihclasive. ee in Memoriam. in memory of my devoted husband, Eli Oliver, who departed this life Oct. 5, 1903 One year ago the Lord in his wise Pro- vidence saw fit to take from home a kind ‘and loving father, and devoted husband It seems but yesterday; we iiss nim, its our loss but Heaven's gain. Gone, gone to that beautiful land, Gone with the angel band; Freed from earth's sorrow and care ., Safe with the dear Saviour there, All that is glorious to share; Gone to that beautiful land, : Gone with the angel band. His loving wife Maria L, Oliver, The Woman's H. and F, M,. Society of St. James A, M,,E. church beld a very in- teresting meeting Wednesday afternoon. Quite a creditable program was carried out, touching’ the different phases of work on the district. Noticeable among the pa- pers read were those by Mrs. H. B, Sales and Mrs. Emma Lucas. Rev. R. M. S. Taylor, P. E. of the district was present and commended the ladies on their good work Mrs S. E. Cruse, District Directress and Mrs. W. 0. P. Sherman, Convention President ‘addressed the meeting. Their addresses were greatly appreciated, and very helpful. Success is evident. Z ———— —__ (From The Americus ‘fimes-Recorder.) Governor Terrell, of Georgia, and Governor Cunningham of Alabama, ara doing their utmost to curb lynchings mm these states And they should have the hearty support of all good and law-abiding citizens. —— = ___ Y¥.M.C.A. of Beaufort. The young men of Beanfort, are being congratulated for the rapid progress they are making in pushing to success the Young Men Christian Associatios, an institution and its object too. familiarly known for dis- cussion. The special program con- sisting of addreeses, solos and duetta rendered on last Sunday. afternoon was of the highest class of literature. The solosand duetts sang by some of the female well-wishers of the or ganization showed that the musical telent of Beaufort is hard to be sur- passed. The young men say that they are deeply indebted to the young Indies who are ever ready to ‘take 4 part in the program which has proven tobe of much benefit to ‘the organization. Mr. W. Wright, Ansistant postmaster of Beaufort is president. He is a young msn wor- thy of the honor. ee | H.'T. 8. Don’t forget the Web. Those who will contest for the prise offered by the Web East nd Pleasure Club, Oct. 17, at Harris street hall are as follows: Eastside: Messrs H. Wara, 7 Bliger, J. F. Prelow, J. Wil liams, Edw. Green. ' West side: BR. Scott, V. Bottamus, J. Sheftall, A. Co h- ran, H..Rowa. Prizes on exhibition at Scott's dry good store West Broad St: Interest Notice. Interest for the third (3) quarter is now due. Depositors will please leave thelr pass books and have same computed. Savings Bank, Metropolitan Mercantile & Realty Co., 222 W. Broughton St. Oct. r.2903. J. W. Armstrong, Cashier. llama es Ae Cheap-Rates 8S. A. L. | Low rates Georgia State fair, Macon, Ga., October 19—28th, 1903 ‘Account of above ‘occasion the Sca board Air Line Railway will sell tickets trom all Georgia and Alabama poiats oo Macon, Ga., and return’ at rate of tine fare plus 75 cents for the round trip, ckets will inclade admission coupons to he Fair and will be sold for all trains Oc- tober 18 to 27th and trains scheduled to arrive Macon on forenoon of Oct. 28th, rexcept that no tickets will be sold on Sun- Gay Oct, 23. All tickets will be limited for return tatil Oct. 31. Seaboard Agenis will gladly give infor- mation and specific rates npon application, or address Charles F, Stewart, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Savannah, Ga, ————————— Notice Stockdkoles, Mert- ropolitan Mercantile and Realty Co. 7 A dividend of'7 per cent, has been de: clared by the directors of above company onall stock of record year ending July rst. Payable at the company’s office 222 W. Broughton street on and after Sept. roth, inst, Cheeks mailed outside city. Stock also advanced to'$7 per share effective the same date. . ~~" J, W, Armstrong, Gen Mgr, pcan x : A OLS, PAS, i Seen Se Sec 940 ‘Barnard-St., Savannah, Ga. _PDéS¢s all kdud of high grade dental work ‘of the best quallty and-workmanship, Gold ‘erowp’ and bridgetwork., White Porcelain ‘Pivet,fand Gold Crowns mounted on the Aatitral Tots." Gold Fillings; Cement Fill frige;and Silver orAinalgam Fillings, from: spine te 8 fall ot of [teebe $7.00.and $3.00 ‘Brpken Places. mended aod teeth added. te pee eros Bell Phone 124 POR Oro we taaram be: rea weed KO eI, Rae “STP Special Sale Starting TODAY Our MEDIUM WEIGHT $20.00 AND $22.50 SUITS, —. ..Now Offered At : $14.90! _ - FALL BLOCKS . of Dunlap & Stetson Stiff and Soft Hats: “NOW OPEN. : B.H. LEVY,BRO. & CO 5 Broughton Street, West. — q . a! Zap iroquois Bicycies 3192 ® i = —S———————— = oh Aa sehsiinvene dogs Maceh SW acs f \\ P} my wD IROQUOIS CYCLE WORKS FAILED Sie = A\ ZA es AWAY SESS EERES Solin ENVIR eS WYRM ris, toned sod complete, Made 10 oll at G0. Tost. FSH ASD Sci om mirccaenaa seca usar Par CR NY f {ROOUOIS BICYCLE wSi6. teri tay nes Tosseale LF, aX Sy BAY RF SESS te eee Soreroaar tenet onde eal, 7 Wy, AU \\ Aa Ree err RC | VF —_ es uae pret rig ikea arene Lar ron shore rare bance aed ps iate at ot ets Get SS Leas a hts ale igi or Writing, Snares vn aes SEAD ORE DOLLAR Gemurmerttattennwagn os Wierteen dimen eewaetct {eile eramarat enteral, ren Sr gaat ects PDecna essen for cae fe SOR Ta Oe ayy We HAVE BICYCLES swiiuis haamroen saane WE HAVE BICY CEES sic Sri ais tect ov crn rods tse canta ent aot FETT Aras ep at Se, rants seeite agwater” Wits for oor liberal propesitian. We are kuows evs(TwRant irra Pores ag Stns meet gate ea tataciy kere tear to ay oak ot bor toms Seas Sree estastee eee Honesintte setae = Ue Le MEAB OYOLE GOs, Chicago, (ie ee tsa Cc ce erv ede ries cad rae ea ba vinta bers ————————————————————————————— a Your teeth properly fixed ?- 0 You ant The best attention ? The benefit of years ot UNEXCELLED EXPERIENCE? Or Course You Want Honest Fair Dealing and Reasonable Prices . seoees¥You Will Get All This At...eas DR. HE. D. BOLELEY, DENTIST. Bell Phone 1124. 211 Bast Broad Street, Cor. Oglethorpe Lane. Estimates cheerfally given. Unsurpasted Modern DentalWork. Savannah, G a ec annanenen tinaceeeneenent Union Benefit Association. = ——— were Union Benefit Association of Savannah, one of the'yonngest, and ‘one of the best of our new race_en- terprises. Tho management is well pleazed with the remarkable success of the past six months. It is grati- fying te know that more than 82600 have been collected during the past six months and about $2000 have Been paid to agents, and for sick and déath ‘benefits—the Union Benefit is managed by ome of our best business men, and it is hound to aucceed. Office ofthis Oo. is 20 State St. W. —————— “MEETMEAT THE = 7 ST: LOUIS CAFE located at OU WEST: BROAD Stréet’over BERRY,& JACKSON Saloon. Every- thing Grst-class, Ordess-served quickly. We,invite iaspection, Call, see“nsy and be convicced, The oily. first-class Cafe fm the South far colored peoples” » Orders prepared by, Louis Richardson, : ihe, best short order chef cook'in the. Sontli,«.for merly-of Sémers Cafe Unica Station $ * | = Bel Phone ado8 ot <= sg L=RIGEANDSON & [MURIM CAPITAL STOCK, $500,000. y 7 Per Cent. is the Interest Paid > , IN cae x - SAVINGS BANK DEPARTMENT | uy ‘ 1 s Mirvaitian ” Mercantile Realy Go,, ay aH OF SAVANNAH —~ ly Money deposited with us is subject t6 check, draft, etc., and is withdrawal on demand Deposttors cau always feel certain that thelr money invested ‘with us twill xeceive’careful attention and be placed where it will reap the best results, as meu: layest in gilecdged securities of Ue eegt on the marist 10-437, H HIE nals Greteheortalleshousés nd terface any thing fa the bulldlngilaes tS sa pmepgettal ot #rcoo nt snraede Wiles recived betyicen tholehoarell i btonab 5, 3,8 W: Brosental cir eS 50 ee BL MORN Tellen, I.E RRMS RONG MB me Sos “— WAINES is a first-class dealer in Grocer- ies, Cigars, Tobacco, Fruits, Corffectionaries, Cool, Drinks Wood and Coal. GWINNETT Sr. Cor. WILSON COURT: na Eat the best meats. You can ‘find this by visiting the. OLD RBBLIASLE Stall Ne. 314 City Marxet Beef, Veal and Mattes, And all kinds of game in season, Goods deliverei promptly. F. F. JONES & BON. Both ‘Phoue 689. ; L. S Reed, | Money, . : Realkstate, | Insurance 20StateSt.,W: Ga. Phons{g70. LOGAN'S: WOOD & WASHING LIQUID ¢0.¢ Pino Wood, Ook Wood, light Wasd. Guaranteed foll load and good Wwoots ‘Forms cach to overybody. ~~ Hall’s Washing Liquid, ‘The great labor anvor of the ags fur Howsokeeping and Wash Wao, Sc per Quart, rsc per Gallen. W. H. LOGAN, Bole Agent rend To nae oe ee een ak 7? pew aed 3 aaa Te SEES Pe Ts u eee Sees ae ae ES ea = = rr —~ z = Se : Soa HGUSENGLB | THouciT SHE WouLo DIE, | Wouves INORRASING IN NUMBER | MODERN JAPANEEE GIRLS, . Sa s " aes PS AFFAIRS «| re 5. Ww. marine of Gslorado Sprites | > - See = = a P ‘ = ny oF 4 Ss yd : 1 Began so Fear the Worst = Doan’s | targa Ambuiits Still Bald by Wesera | Have Entirely Adopted Gcsldehtal . Lee a Fe PE 4 Aj Ridney Filly Saved Hen, : Gisted ia Bochtion ae ie y iy iy AD A \ + 10g &t, teats . States ih Beatitics: Edacation Methode. wai ; en ot 3: P a Mra, Barah Mania, of 428 6 ws ta ee ee 4. cee Ea e Eng : ot l Ce aH. | | wtreet, Dolofetié Springs, Col. Pres | The Wolf th fmoe dfeaded of ba: | in an atts id tus wasseest oes: a R F 2h eek Pond | dent of the Gleb Eyrie Club, writes: inanit}-than any ‘other animal, No | Uchida, wife of thé Japdacvé ‘Spocns d ae ‘~ : “{ ', Buffered | Goubt Se of today Inherit that dread | General in New York, tells Of ing se Pa ¢ BEADED OANDEE SHADES. aw for ‘thrée years | from ancestors who had occasion to | Japanese women a3 they were and a oe 1. Fe Beaded shades are in high tavor tor; \. with severe | fear the long-fanged quadtuped, for | are, She says: j oe ae eendles. They are not wiificnlt to, #7 m \\ back ache. ‘The | there aro few portions of the world | “In gur mothers’ generation the ae f t 2 make, and the maktig ut them is pret- i Pree, \\ doctors told | today where the wolf is really dan- | girls were taught simply to become aor arse y Be i : Basie ty occupatten Fot Bpare minutes. there | i E. \\ me my kidnoys | aowirs.to mankind. 2 good wives to their husbands and Gok i cd ret ‘are vo many'kinds of lovely-beads now- | PAWE were affected Dangerous to man’s pocket, to his | good mothers to their children; there- Ane Sey adays thit one can hardly make an} + ANY] and prescribed | herds and fiocks, he Is still today in | fore they wera educated to be mod" be 4 TS ‘a a ugly shade if one selects delicate, fine, | f fe, PVR \H! medicines for | many portions of the country, A |est, obedient and capable of eontrol- ei ar trarfstucent beads. Gold beads, stlver,| | S@gagates ao me, but Ifound | seneh in Montana or New Mexico | ling theméelves, They ara taught a: ye oO heds, very pale turquoise, sreen and| (| 7a eR w that it was only | may pay many hundfeds of dollars | also now to keep house, how to dew, ES : 4'° ‘crystal beads are charming, but, asa} } Pew 8 waste of time | & year for gray wolf scalpb. Such a | how to réad Gad writh, how to ar ot wee eee P ad z role, they sre not mixed. If one is ex- Remeay/ and money to | Bralb 1s clicap at $12 or $16 to thd | fange Howeré; hoi to malts aiid serve Fane ‘ as mf pert, a Uttle pattern may be strang by take then’, and yasshet, ‘for the gray fobber would | tea; aid very Sttéa they dled dtudted Fl Bae fy 2 into the strands that,go to compose the y y began td fear |-certatily haye destroyed many times | shusic and literature, but they recel¥- |. eS ae i shades; but even this is prettler for be- i that 1 would | that Valob i Calves or Colts from | ed no scliool education auch ds they Pas ae ef cons eRe Jae q Ang kept‘low and refined in tone. The . hhevér get well. | the fange, Yet in spite of all the | receive now. . . i B73 ees)” 3. ad Ree SoA M light shining throngh the beads gives; A friend advised me té try Doan's Kid- | warfare made upon chem; and kil the | “Gitls of the present, ting di re we. if Pn eh ¥8 ¥ RNS zoey ae ‘them a xronderfal brilliance, ‘ey Pills, Within a week after {began | bricaa put upon theit Heads, theso | éelve a modetd school édugdtian, Jap- Eien Oars OO Bone Laser § SEE . : oO ising them I was $0 mech bettér that | Hreadéd, shysterfous, ehistlike; terror | nese ladies In 190¢ aire not eontént SE ET eh A A eee ees OS y ((® UNBREAKABLE Distins, _| 1 decided to Kec ip té tedtment, | inspiring creatures atili hold. their | ba métely td stay at home and take | MEMOS? a Lyon: Of eee =F ML “According to our Consul at Liege, Belgium, a certain company in that historle town is manufacturing dishes, the resisting powers of Whieh exceed the wildest dreams of tong suffering Lousekeepers, . The treasure trove Is a dish of hard- ened crystal closely resembling trans- “lucent china in appearance, and hard- ened, by a special secret process. Submerge one of these hardy new Uishes Inn pot of boiling water and take it steaming thence to plunge it Suto an ice water bath—no noticeable damage és done. Plates, to test thélr strength, ‘are Juurled-to the stone floor of the ware- house. They go bounding along the whole length of the bullding with no Bteater internal injuries than those veceived by’ a rubber ball in the same PFOCESS. ae . a 1. ™ DOMESTIC SCIENCE. ‘Not soap, but ammonia, should be used in the water with which windows site washed, af clear, bright glass is desired. It is stated that lamp chinr ueys rubbed with dry salt after wash- Sng will acquire wnusual brilliancy, says The Pligtim, * Sneks made of several thicknesses of uewspaper pasted together are moth proof for clothltig, .provided the gur- ynents are thoroughly prushed and shaken so no moth eggs are lodged in them. These sacks should be pasted Together, not tied. . ‘Never ‘use cornmenl to clean a car- pet, as it will attract vermin, Instead, for the weekly sweeping try handfuls ‘of damp salt. Matting is best cleaned dy wiping with cloths wrung out of warm, not hot, salt water. y Clean the straw matting with warm “\water in which oxalic acid hag been dissolved, applying it with a scrub; Ding brush; then rinse carefully with clegn watzr, using a soft old cloth and wipe dry. Clean but a small space at a time. In patebing cracks in plastering, it plaster of paris is mixed with vinegar \ instead of water It can be handled bet- ter, as it will not set so quickly as when water is used. Strong hot vine- gar ‘Will remove paint trom window glass, ~ Exact coples of costly brocades of ‘the three French Louls periods cant _ now be obtained in cretonnes, in linen zaffefas and art tiekings, which make harming cusbion covers, window and dvor* draveries, re en AP RousEHaLD ey RECIPES NF FEA ie a he erent. of ‘Waflles—Two eggs beaten well, yolks und whites separated. | Mix one tea- spoonful of soda and a little salt in buttermilk, which add to one pint of flour. “Thé batter should be as thick as strained honey. Beat into this bat- ter the yolks, one dessertspoonful of melted iard, ‘and lastly the frothed whites. Have the waffle trons hot, grease well, and pour into them from a pitcher the waffle mixture. ‘They should cook quickly, should be golden yellow, thin and crisp enough to be caten from the fingers, just as crack- exs are. : + Preserved Peaches—Weigh the fruit after it is pared and the ae extract- cc, and allow a pound of sugar to every one of peaches. Put the sugar in a preserving kettle and make the syrup as directed; after it is strained put It back; let st boll steadily until they are tender and clear. ‘Take them out with a perforated skimmer and lay apon flat dishes, crowding as It- tle as possible. Boll the syrup almost to a jelly; that fs, until clear and chick, skimming off all the scum, Fill the jars two-thirds fall of the peaches, pour on the boiling syrup, and when cold cover with brandy tissue paper, ihen with cloth, lastly with thick pa- per tled tIghtly over them, cr put them in airtight jars. Fresh Vegetable Salad—Boll_ two- ound can tomatoes, six sprigs of pars- Jey, one silee of onfon, six peppercorns, clght cloves, blade of mace, for twenty minutes; strain’ and add while hot one tablespoonful bf vinegar, one teaspoon- ful of celery salt, one tablespoonful of gelatin dissolved; set in water; stir uatil gelatin fs dissolved; set in & pan of ice water and stir slowly until it begins to thicken, then add one grated cucumber, three large boiled artichokes cut into small cubes;. turn into a bor- eer mold set on.fce to chill and be- vome firm. When serving unmold; ar- range sliced tomatoes on outside and four tablespoonfuls mayonnaise, mixed with six tablespoonfuls of shipped «rcam in centre, se THOUGHT SHE WOULD DIE Mrs. 5. W. Marine, of Cslorade Spriich Began so Fear the Worst Doan's Widney Filly Saved Hers : Mrs, Sarah Marita, of 403 St vinla street, Dolotatd Springs, Col. Presk dent ot tre Ged Byrle Club, writes: a “L ', Suffered am for ‘thrée years p \ with — serere f m \\ backache. The Pee. \ doctors told A By \\ me my kidneys i MEP AWG were affected Bs FAW) and prescribed | Ze, Bars! medicines for eee ao me, but I found Miele se Ry) that it was only ' PeRaEMe 2 waste of time 5 yy and money to yy take them, and x P began W fear Se that 1 wonld = hevér get well. a a, for ‘thrée years oy \ with — severe i me. \\ backache. The Bae. \\ doctors told i E. \\ me my kidneys " eR AH were affected Bs PSN) and prescribed fl (Ze, Bers eNWN! mnedicines for | fg ae \ me, but I found Miele se Ry) that it was only " Pie & waste of time 5 y/ and money to yy take them, and x P began W fear Se that 1 wonld . hevér get well. A friend advised me to try Doan's Kid- wey Pills, Within a week after { began ising them I wa 86 mgih better that I decided to keep {ip thé tredtment, and when I had used a little éver two boxes I was entirely well. I have now enjoyed the best of health for more then four months, and words can,but poorly express my gratitude.” For sale by all dealers. Price 60 cents. Foster-MilburnCo.,Butfalo, N.Y, MATINEE ACCESSORIES. George—Did you have a‘géod time? Gertle—Oh, lovely, lovely. George-—Was tho play good? Gertic—No, but I had on my néw hat and had @ box of delicious cara imels with me—Cincinnatl Commer cial-Tribuned ie We guaranteo aquick “ and lasting cure in all Poe) ences of SPECIFIO i BLOOD POLSON, = Mi sTRICTURE,VARICO- Pe) CELE. WEAK BACK, p PY PRostaTIo TROU- 29 fF BLE AND ALL DIS- . TO MEN, Abe’ Abe Pep xenvous, kipwzy. MM Sai BLADDER AND BEC: a TAL DISEASES AND i OME RNEUMATISN. We guarantee a quick “ and lasting cure tn all ae) eaces of BPECIFIO i Brood POLsON, = Mi sTRICTURE,VARICO- Pe) CELE. WEAK BACK, p AY PROSTATIO TROD: 29 fF | oBLE AND ALL Dis. ; Hye rainie Warp kenvous, Kioxey. gets) BLADDER AND REC- a TAL DISEASES AND SME prrcwatisw. Drs. Leatherman & Bontlo} important tro" the only “specialists 12 Atlanta who treat their cases themselves. Write ',2e%,cazzet call and describe THe fons troubles and, rocelve by re- tum mall, froo of charge, our diagnosis blank. BEST HOME TREATMENT. Consulta- tlon Free, Everything confidential. Drs, Leatherman & Bentley, Cor. Marietta and Forsyth Sts.. ATLANTA, GA. Hours: 8a. m.to10p.m. Bunday: 10to 1. THE BEST =" WATERPROOF CLOTHING ET ED on Ye Zi) fies Ce 0 Rie tp DeSeiZ | uitiasasrittis WA Rpcee ees ON SALE EVERYWHERE LARS CAIALOCUTS IE Be riN Sener i. roe on, RNS NDA sstadclumenras ier emetic The Watkins “Boy” Hay Press THE MARVEL OF THE COUNTRY. 2 Se zeé = ee £0: Si oe TATE erep rane in hetelsat ts Gea et mele cee gb sthseemenn ent ate E. E, LOWE CO., Atlanta, Georgla, (O@-WE BUY AND SELL LUMBER.-“Sa Re. CURED eS Gives mo: & Quick lL Rellsf. IGE Removes all eweiting fa S BSar ciate a nersnacot cose Aes po, Bet econ Bilteiae OS Zar, titenicee Notiinccan betauer Se Dre He Ofer Seas. SESSA sracisicte, Gor B Atienta, 52. 1,000 [en and Women to Try $6.00 Worth of Samples Free,. Sendno money. Only send your name to W. C. HUGHEN, Atlanta, Ga, Ygeeseearivs Thompson's Eye Water WORLD'S FAIR ST. LOUIS. Louisville and Nashville Ratlroad. Ifyou are going to the World's Fair°you want the best route, The L. &N, Js the shortest, quickest and best line. Threo trains dally. Through Pullman Sleeping Cara and Dining Cars. Low Rate Tickets sold dally. Get rates from your local agent and ask for tickets ¥is L.&N. Srorovsn ALtowzn at MAMMOTH OAVE. All kinds of information furnished on &p- pifeation to J. G. HOLLENBECK, Dist, Pass. Agent, Atlanta, Ga, BoM WAr. Old Manager—So your prima donna bas @ bad cold? Youthfnl Manager—Yes; she con- tracted it— ~ Old “Manager—A contract, hey? She'll break it inside of -twenty-four Rours—Detrolt Free Press. _ CETTE aes WOLVES INORRASING IN NUMBER Large AmOuiits Still Patd by Weetera « Sbstes 1% Beohticn , Thb ¥olt th frofe dfeaded of vb, inanit}-than any ‘other animal, No Boubt Se of to-day Inherit that dread from ancestors who had occasion to fear the fong-tanged quadtuped, for ‘ere are few portions of the rorld today where the wolf is really dan- Bemus to mankind. - Dangerous to man’s pocket, to his herds and Socks, he Is still to-day In many portions of the country, A yeneh In Montana or New Mexico pay pay many hundteds of dollars & year fot gray wolf scalps. Such a imalp 18 cheap at $12 or $16 to thé passes ‘for the gray fobber sould certabily haye destroyed many times that Value ih calves or colts from the fange, Yet in spite of all the warfare made upon dhem:; and Bil the prices but upon theit heads, theso Hreadéd, shysterious, ghostlike, terror inspiring ‘treatures’ stilt hold thelr own. Ontedsts for ages, hated, per- Becuted, they still endure, each for himself, and without a “friend oa earth, even among his own Kind. Last year the State of Minnesota pald over $0,000 2 mouth in the best of the wolf season, One day of the month of list March the State Au ditor patd $6,158.50 In wolf bounties. The total for the few months preced- ing was $36,548.50. On this basis the current year will foot up nearly as much as the two years preceding, which appears to indicate that Broth- er Wolf {s holding bis own, even as a matter pf commerce. In many parts of the Western cattle range the gray wolves are Increasfag rather ‘Yhan decreasing.—Field and Stream. , _ Chinas ateateal school. ‘the Dowager Empress of China has given a sum of money for the estab- Ushment of an institution for teaching ‘medicine, the management to be con- fided to,the missionaries. How's This? ‘Wo offer On» Hundred Dollars Reward for ny case of Catarrh that eannot be cured by Hall's Catarrh Care. FJ. Cunxer & Co,, Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned, have’ known FJ. Cheney for the last 15 years, and bollove biti pertectly honorable in all business transao- Hons and financially ble to carry out any obligations made by thelr frm. Weer & Taos, Wholestle Dragsists, To- lo, 0, Warm, Kissax 4 Manvrs, Wholesale > Drnggists, Toledo, O, all's Catarzh Curis taken internally, act Ing direotly upon the blood and mucousscr- faces of the system. ‘Testimonials vent free, Price, 760, per bottle. Bold by all Dragelsts, ‘Take Hall's Family Pills for oonstipatton. His Just Deserta, * ‘A Chicago tallway ‘ticket scalper toust serve elghteen months in the House of Correction for fraudulently representing himself to be a clergy- man to obtain half-rate tlekets, FERVOR OF THE MOHAMMEDANS. American Tourist Calls Attention to a Railway Gang at Prayer. I have often remarked the fervor of the Mohammedans, says Jercme Hart in’ the Argonaut. Thelr strict attention to shein religious rites is unique among denominations, so far as my observation gues, for when the hour of prayer comes, whether they find themselves in public or not, they ‘go through their devotions. I ad- mire a man who has the courage of Bis convictfons, religious as well as political, and the unaffected devotion of the Mohammedans has always im- pressed mv. On the outskirts of Cairo one day wo eaw a row of workmen on tho railway Hning up just as the muez- zin’s call to prayers-rang out from an adjacent mosque. “Look,” cried I. “There is another tastance of Mostems’ devotion fo their religious rites.” “How 6?” I was asked. “What do you mean? What are they standing in & row fort” “To pray,” I repited, sententiously. “Don't you see they are faciig toward Becca?” Now they were all standing In a row. AS I spoke—as if at a given signal—they all went down, “Bee!” I cried. “They are prostrat- ing themselves. In a moment you will see them begin to bow toward the sa- cred elty md go through all the elab- vrate forms of Mohammedan prayer. Ah, is {t not interesting to see a group of ordinary workmen interrupt thelr foll in the middte of tie day and turn to thelr religion?” ‘We were all much impressed. I was particularly 0. | But 28 we gazod on them, with re- flex religious interest, ths row of men arose. With a upantmous grunt they rose, bearing on their shoulders a Jong steel beam, which they proceed- ed to walk away with down the rail- way track. ‘An awkward silence followed. I 1m- agined I heard a faint snickering, but I affected not to observe {t. Theré are “moments when it is just as well not te ‘ba too observing. NoT OUT FoR, A GAME. Willie—I met our new minister on my way to Sunday school, mamma, and.ho asked mo if I ever played marbles on Sumiay.” : Mother—H'm! And what did you say to that? P TWillle—I sala: “Get thee behind me, Satan!” and walked right off and left him—London Tit-Bits, g@@PFARMERS! a ATTENTION! p AN DF ye SLOANS NF For norses ann oTHER S aL Thao Re ER, CF Sak Sa as ‘ eet i. Ss d Ag # ha: Bal Pip’) > { sae . =: == hie if Take-Down Repeating Shotgans jf} Don’t spend from $50 to $200 for a gun, when for so ey much less moncy you can buy a Winchester Tako- fp | Boze Rats Soe, aan ga |f24@ | outlast the est-pric le-barre! F492, | Sesides being as sale, reliable and handy. Your dealercanshowyouone. They aresoldeverywhere. ven PREZ s Ose 160-Poge Tlasttaied Catalogs, ‘ ‘WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO. NEW HAVEN, CONN. MODERN JAPANESE:@iRLS,, fisvé Entifely Adopted Scaléental Papestion Methode. ~ in an afyhré id Sie Fare sue. Uchida, wife of thé Japdacis Sposa General in New York, télts of iH§ Japanese women a3 they were and are, She says: “In ur motters’ generation the sirls were taught simply to become good wives to their husbands and good mothers to their children; there- fore they wera educated to be mod* est, obedient and capable of eontrol- Ung theméelves, They ara taught also now to ireep house, how to dew, how to rénd bad trite, how to at fange Howers; how to make aid serve tea; aid very Gtten they dled studied shusic and litetature, but they recel¥- ed no school edueation such ds they recelve now. expe » “Gitls of the present, ting bi ro Celve a modern school édugettad. Jap- hnesé ladies In 190¢ dre not eontént- ba ae @ stay et home and take care of theif chilgten, ‘They attend lectures, meetings and ontertaln- ments. They publish women’s miaga- zines and discuss thelr rights aud dc- thes, “I think there Is no girl now in Japan who cannot write her own name, for the paronts are compelled bylaw to send their girls as well as thetr boys to school when they reach the aga of six. In tho pri- mary school girls receive the samo education as boys, with the additional study of sewing. After they grad- uate from the primary school many girls attend the high school. “A tact that might interest Amer Jean readers 1s that ¢he woméh in Japan neveF get etdut, whba they grow old, although they take hardly any exercise. “Young men and womei whila they are in school or college take much vutdoor exercise, but as soon as they leave school they givo it up. Teants ls a popular game among young 12- dies.” 5 “Gt: ANSWERED. “What,” asked tho female suffrage advocate with the square chin, “has become vf our manly men?” “Some of them,” replied the meek and lowly citizen, “have married ‘womanly women and are now engaged in ratsing childish children.”—Chicago News. “ | ————— A SNOB'S GRIBVANCE, “Young man,” sald Mr. Dustin Stax, “I had to work for my fiiéstey.” “Well, father,” was tho chilly re ply, “enoug& people in our sét are throwing that up to me without your talking about It."—Waablagton Star. ¥ITs; ently cured. No fits ornervous- nessatter frst ‘oye uso of Dr, Kline's Great NerveRestorer,@trial bortleand treatise tres Dr. R. H. Krsxz,Ltd_, 9$1Arch Bt., Phils, Pa, ‘The United States leads all comntries. as a consumer of coffee. £ ‘Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of spucoagh cure J. W. ODassx, 24 Teed Avenuo, N., Minnespolls, Minn., Jan. &,1900, ‘The average cost of labor in the produc- \ion of coffee is 4.7 centa a powad, Dasag isn car co wong rhea Pe bite betcpte racer ‘The Cear employs 30,000 servants. At 41-04) SRICHTON’S: ? shorthand Depts 2G Ooeibon, -Bookiaenins at . Dept Dee. Btewkier” Catal Be ice ee eee Pte, Ge . £2. aid ia oe — at ae “a - Wy, +8 ‘y be ; oe Hope ne eet - Bie ae Tis Fs 5 wags 4 ea ce . oe cs : jf a ra Ae , 7 KS ed ° a ees PL eae c7 rs ‘ a Bee ne I, Be 7 as ¢ q Pe ae ae Brees Pipl Rae. Bess ae Liga ea pee: “Pah Be ogc iA oat OR ees Fe } ar! it Eis, edi eee. > PNM) hes EA ROS ee ae ff of - EPR ad &. se * 1% . . Mrs. Hughson, of\Chicagostwhose jf letter follows, is another womam in\high; position. who owes her‘health to the use tof: Lydia E, Pinkham’s . Vegetable Compound _ 4Dgaz Mrs. Prvxriam:—lI suffered for several years swith generat joalmais and bearlng-down pains, caused by womb Trouble, My sppo- eS fitfwl, and I would lie awake for houts, and could noi seep, fintil F popined: more seary, in the morning than when I retired, Ader geading ons of your &dvoftisements I decided to try the merits of Lyte | B. Pinkham’s Vezetppie 5 Gpmpound, and. am £0 pad Idid, Noon, | Gali describe this good it did me, I took threo bottles faithfully, and’ | besides building up: 1a general “healthy {t drove all disease and poison: | out of my body, and madé-me ‘feel ag spry and active as z young girl, may body, and. feel oy Pty ea 8 Foun gi | Mrs. Pinkham‘ medicines ety gertainly they are claimed to be?—" Mus. Mit Hoausox, $47 Kast Ohio St; Chicago, DU. “4, ‘Mrs, Pinkham Tells How Ordinary Tssks Produce Displacements. Apparently triding incidents in woman’s ésily fe frequently, produce, displesementa of the womb. A_slip on the stairs, Tifling during menstrution, Btandifig st a counter, running @ sewing machine, or sttending. to the most: ordinary tasks may result In displacement, and a trainot serluscvilais started ‘Tie firat indication of such trouble sfonld be the signal for qa action. Don't let the condition bécome chronic through negiest or & stakdn idem) oat you oan overcome It by exersiee Or fried health by:@Baqsdot Lydia Ee na : Pinte Ce ee Se : If the slightest trouble appears which you do not understand Hille te dime Einkham, ot how you the sight ‘ihea aad Shere rw eee rors ro ee pat itimay mean ifs orhappiness or both. " eA Mrs. Lefah Stowell, 177 Wellington we , St, Kingston, Ont., writes: e FO 2h mY aa al tory ee pir 2 en, ant e) w what La fp Fou, exo do ot the there youl bo Do need, > Bp, of the: erable lives inagonye ww: ae. *t et Yor years with fering aga ping! 2 womb trouble, nervousness,and excruciating head. =~ Bie) bat afew bottles of Lydia B. Pinkkham's . Vegetaple Compaind mado, He oe E oh Pee new-an misin; me. Iam. eee Repos, aud T do. not know Ta eee ‘ . * Lis, and I now enjog tho best of health.” y F wiia E. ‘inkham’s Vegetable ‘Compound 13 alssys be refied.upon to restore, es ‘health to-women who thus guffer, It is 5 sovereign cure for arorst forms of female complain’s, —that Dearing dom, fee ling -weale” face, falling apd displacement of the womb, inflammation of the ovaries, and ‘oublas of the uterus or womb. It dissolves and expels tumorg trom the Bterus in the early stage of develgpnient, and checks shy tendency to cancer oe ge, tied ertely aea Etec tas wad ea Shoula be relied upoa with confidence. ° $5680 FOREEIT tre senmottortnwith prado the orignal tiers and sigcatcoa RITA Sw redse selene ys SAN A We = s ead type weriilog College, Laulsviile, Ky. open the while year. Studente can enter any tints. Catalde free. Massy '& Co: Gf South Forsyth Se, Atlanta, Ga, Ay 23 C2 kaa 7 Peeabie and a Engines, Boilers,! Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY Complete line carried tn eock for IMMEDIATE shipment. * poss Macninery. Lowest Proes and Dot Terms Write us for catalogue, prices, etc.. before buying. = “Berta, eta, Tor monde “Oueae” f8 Pe shes ark ene ates Engiereeteensd eGo isn tat STIRETESS on ener sn gerey cu 3e ZW Best for : FELIX treBowels ir ng F aS WOR Witte te Pann Poste, Potegh xt Gent, Doo, Ee Reese st Sterllng Remedy €o., Chicago'es N.Y,’ 559 AMMUAL SALE, TEN MILLION BOXES TSR eager nae gee ret carga" MOTO TSCA 1S) — Se = == = pee 3s =