Newspaper Page Text
M.W
!c. N-r,
3
DAILY ENQUIRER-SEN. i nLUMhUS, GEORGIY S'
BREAD-W ASTERS.
'Hi. limit Ann)- nf Nrii-l'i'i" m 11 ( a-M-■ n tio
|:..|I). «■ If limit 'inwlm-. .uni I’ni I |" i tin Ilmn—t
linlii'li') ill' 01 lli'f>.
Now York Ob«erv
We have nil become familiar with the
term “bread-winners," to designate those
members of a family who earn its support,
and hence those in a community who con
tribute by their industry to the supply of
the necessaries and comforts of life. It is
an attractive as well as a suggestive word. <
not only embodying in it'-vir a whole 1 rea
lise of political economy, but calling up to
the sympathetic Imagination a hundred
pictures of domestic life, with its lights
and shadows, of brave struggle and patient
toil and cheerful sacrifice. It is fraught no
less with moral suggestion, giving a higher
significance to the busy scene about us, I
touching its more sordid aspects with r.
certain poetic light, imparting a human i
and almost divine quality to the common- .
est objects which are the work of men’s
hands, and entailing upon those accumula
tions of productive industry which we cail
wealth and capital the high responsibility
of a sacred trust.
The statistics would be curious and per
haps rather startling, if we could know j
the percentage of bread-winners -that is. i
those who produce more than they indi- I
vidually consume—to the population of 1
even so thrifty and industrious a land as j
ours, Take out the children the superan- j
nuated, the disabled, the incompetent and
the idle,and we should find that the nation |
is kept led and clothed and housed and
cared for by the few, and not by the many.
What then shall we think of the class
whom we propose to designate as bread-
wasters, a term which oi glit to liuvi as I
wide a currency as that of bread-winners, I
fur it contains in itself a tract full of moral j
philosophy and economic science, I'nder
the two terms bread-winners and bread-j
wasters are ranged the defenders and the i
foes of society, and the intermediate class- I
es are the camp-followers of one or the
other army.
The bread-wasters include, of course, all |
who prey upon society, producing nothing ;
themselves, and lying in wait to obtain !
without equivalent what has been won by -
the industry of others. There is the army
of thieves of every description, from the
burglar with his jimmy and dark lantern
to tne trustee or official with his forged, sc- j
curities and “cooked" returns. There are i
the professional gamblers and speculators i
who seek to live, not by creating wealth, I
but by adroitly abstracting from the unwa-
ry and unfortunate. The path of many
such and even that of single swindlers or
corners or transactions of one kind or an
other has been like a cyclone over whole
communities of humble homes and hard-;
eai ued savings.
There is the whole swarm of sharks
which follow in the wake of society, seek- ,
mg whom they may devour, and snapping
up every unguarded morsel of those who
thus hang upon the skirts of society with
keen and greedy eves, and ravenous and ‘
reeking jaws, is a dreadful thing to think
of. in barbarous or semi-civilized coun
ties they appear as savage hordes, or as
brigands. But where industry is organized,
and society is policed, and wealth has been 1
accumulated, their method are more con- i
cealed and ingenious. They uppiooch us. !
in fact, 06 contributors to' the gayety of ,
life. They are the bread winners for them- 1
selves and families they would claim; but
it is as a man who should make wages by
carting a maniac’s stores and shoveling
them into the sea. Such as all wh > pander
to men’s lasts and follies, and who tempt |
them to dissipation, extravagance and i
idleness. And such art all those, in turn,
who spend their money for that which is
not bread - in other words, for that which
adds weakness instead of strength to so
ciety. and inanition instead of nourish
ment to manhood, and which readers men
less able or less disposed to contribute to
the elements of human wealth and wel
fare. This definition, it will he seen,opens
a wide range of occupations and of ex
penditures, which we would shrink from
dwelling upon, even if spin e ailo ved. But
one or two of the most prominent and ap
parent may lie enumerated.
The main body of the army of bread-
wasters is. of course, the millions who are
engaged in the growing, manufacturing,
selling, transferring o’ drinking of liquors.
It is estimated tU./. rt.'.JOO,000,000 are thus
swallowed up every yen: in this country.
Suppose this amount wi re added to the
expenditures for f ind, clothing, rending,
mill other agencies of corn fort and stlf-im-
nrovemeot, and h will be seen how mm-h
less pauperism, ignorance and crime \\e
should have. We spend more for intoxi
cants than for bread, meat and education.
Judge Noah Davis estimates that nhio-
tenths of the crimes in Mew York City are
traceable directly to grog-shops, ana the
London Lancet attributes nine-tenths ot
disease to the same source. (Irent Britain
drinks up liquor enough every year to p:>>
all the house rent and liny all the woollen
and eotfon goods used, with millions ot
surplus besides. In Liverpool the con
sumption of drink equals the entire earn
ings of fifty thousand laboring families
In New York City alone there is a larger
number of men employed in the sale of
liquor than Liu. entire army of the L'nlted
States. Cjernmny and England spend four
times as much for drink as for their vast
military establishments, and France three
times. War is a fearful enough bread
waster, God knows; but even its enormous
withdrawal of labor and of capital from
productive into destructive uses, grows
small beside the steady, increasing, uni
versal devastation of the liquor trade.
On a minor scale, and with less far-
reaching results, is the waste occasioned
by the use of tobacco. An industrious, so
ber mechanic confessed that probably >50
of his earnings went every year for smoke.
What with the beer and the cigar, and per
haps the rum and the finecut, it isne-nib-ss
to look any farther to explain the depres
sion, if not the oppression of labor. Ifv. e
could only have a good workingman's
union organized, with a genera! system of
strikes and boycotts against these “giants
of tyranny,” \ve should hear far less of
labor troubles, and should all he esquires
to the knights in their most adventurous
crusades in that behalf.
As it Is, however, we are obliged to dep
recate strikes as among the worst agencies
in bread-wasting. There doubtless art-
cases where the interests of underpaid and
overworked labor have been furthered by
this means, but in the majority of cases
the result is not only failure but disaster,
and the loss falls ten times as heavy upon
labor as upon capital. Even had some
concessions been won during the strike on
the southwestern railroads, they could not
have compensated for the millions upon
millions of loss extending through every
ramification of society, the destruction of
property arid of business which had been
long in building up, the spending of work
men’s earnings to support this army of
idlers, and above all for the cessation of
productive' industry and the acquirement
of lazy and dissipated habits on the part of
the thousands of employees. And as it is
clear that the exclusion of the greater
part of the strikers from these roads will
be permanent, it is frightful to think of
the recruits who will ultimately be added
to the ranks of vagaboncagi and crime by
those who will drift into the life of trumps
and outlaws and drunkards.
We mention only one more class of
bread wa.-atrs, who are not usually recog
nized as such, or conscious of their own
mistake. The wise man tells us that
th re is that xcattireth and vet im ln-sset h:
and there is that withholdeth morv '.ban
is meet but :t tmideth to poverty. No such
poor investments are made as by stingi
ness. That is not the most product!' In
dustry by any means, which brings , nlv
immediate Jnnd tangible returns. Fu’th
“casts her bread up- n the waters,” and
"finds it after ninny days." It hear- God's
saving. “He that tuuli pity on t!norr
lendeth to tin Lord, nud lint wl.ii li in-
hath gic ;n will He rep iy him agai •" an t
liki.'g tin- security, it lull,iv:s the inuiin-
tioii of Lean .Swift to -down with De
dust.’’
( liiinuiuw I i ns*.-iIntion.
But to us perhaps the most interesting
fact which the movements of the xt -rs
make known is the proper motion of our
own sun, which like the other brilliants of
Um sky, is rushing forward at a mighty
space and carrying us with him, whether
we will or no, to some distant quarter
where other rams are shining whose light
we are yet unable to discern. This motion
of itself will in time operate to change
the visible appearance ■ it the henvcns.lThe
stars which wc leave behind us will grow
dim; others, like Proeyon, moving in a di
rection contrary to our own, will speed by
us as they pursue headlong their mysteri
ous journey, while the stars that lie In f, e
us will brighten as wu approach. It will
not be difficult, knowing the proper mo
tion of the stars, to picture the appear
ance of the heavens at remote periods of
the past or future, though sn.-n an at tempt
would once have Ivon thought totr.iusce id
the powers of the human intelieei. Ap
plying such a calculation to Orion, and wo
find that the appearance o‘‘ the eonstelir.- '
lion will oe somewhat altered, in the
course of .50,000 years some of tin irigir.
stars which surround him will have ap
proached so clow-as ti add their lustre to 1
the spieudor of ni- constellation Tin-
Three Kings w ili no longer be in a s: - t
line, and tile appearance of the pai. 1 Jlo-
gi-am will have altered. The pt-olV -sor. of
the l ni varsity of Lcipsie thought prubu-
bly that the constellation ot Uiion would
last fore,-er, and that the deeds of the hero
they sought to commemorate would lie us
enduring. We are but seventy years from
Waterloo, and yet who now, that is not 1
well read in military history, can tell much
about the battles of Marengo, Austerlitz,
Jena, Borodina, Eylan, Friedland, Wag-
ram, Ligny, and tile rest? Or of tfe- great
generals of the epoch, how many know
much of Pichogru, Kleber, Moreau, De-
saix. Berthier, Davoust, Ney, Sonll, Mural,
Duroc, Jilliot, Bernadottc, ’Bhieaei, Buluw
and Wellington, or can tell in every easi . !
which fought under the republic, and
which under the empire, which sided wh li
Napoleon and which against him, which
he advanced and which he ruined? To
some, probably, the names of many of
these will be unfamiliar, and yet, compar
atively speaking, the Haines of Moscow
still redden the horizon, and the echoes of
the 400 cannon that thundered at Water
loo still roll in the distance. If the lapse
of less than a century has made such havoc
with fame, what shall we say of the slow
ages which will witness the change in
Orion? In that long period the burning
ambition of the conquering hero will have
had time to eool, while the cares, troubles
and disappointments which strew the
path or ordinary existence will have had
their roughness smoothed and their asper-
ty blunted. Fifty thousand years! Yes, it
is a long vacation, and it will be impar- i
tially bestowed on all that live.- Boston 1
Herald. j
linns i'V thTh oht.
Large charity doth never soil, but only .
whitens soft hands.—J. R. Lowell. i
It is not genius so much ns ability that j
curries one through the battle of lifo.--A. I
B. .Street.
No woman is educated who is not equal !
to the successful management of a family.
G. B. Burmins. ' |
Hope without action is a broken staff.
We should always hope for things thnt are
possible and probable.—James: Ellis.
One of the finest qualities in a human
being is that nice sense of delicacy which
renders it impossible for him ever to lie an
intruder or a bore. -Taylor.
Dross, so far r.s respects neatness and
cleanliness, is of great importance to tin-
first impression wo make upon others. K.
ti. Parker.
He that calls a man ungrateful sums up
all tin- -.vii that a man can he guilty of.- •
Swift.
Learning, if rightly applied, makes a
young ,nn;i thinking, attentive, industri
ous. confident and wary; and an old man
ctieerfni and useful. It is an ornament in
prosper!:.v. - refuge in adversity, an enter
taimmur at ill tinn-s; it cheers' in solitude,
and gi.es moderation and wisdom in an
i ireunistate-es. Palmer.
Great works are performed, not by
strength, but by perseverence. Yonder
palace was raised by single stones, vet you
see its bight arid spaciousness. lie that
shall walk with vigor three hours a day ]
will pass in seven years space equal to the j
circumference of the globe. - Johnson. I
The greatest pleasure I know is to do
good, by stealth and have it found out by ,
accident.- Lamb.
I could never think well of a man’s in
tellectual or moral character if he was hab
itually unfaithful to his appointments.
Emmons.
Home reserve is a debt to prudence, as I
freedom and simplicity of eon ersution is a
debt to good nature. -Shcnsti ne
Atlanta, Ga,
101
Valuable Real [stale
FOR EXCHANGE.
*ir>.in)ii?
W-v'K : H uK
I Y OF ( OU’M.
Somnlhing About the Ups and Downs of
H»*r Inhabitants.
MISS mWWW VUVK.
Atlanta papers nrt giving the public some c’ - -
oils and lu! cases that arc ijimo interc* ,
in.. It seems :t young lady of Atlanta Rod j
hern reported a*- dead. but it cutnc to the ei.i- of
tile i nils-*itutinn reporter that she va? still . live. I
and being mi the alert foi m ws. called ui her j
reside nt •• to learn all the facts. Miss Dunaway, j
who bud h.-tii pronounced dead, said :
• For *.ur yetus rheoimdi-m and lieuralgin hn ve
rev'-ud physicians and nil ulhe-i treatment. V.y •
must If. seemed to diy up. n.y flesh shrunk away, j
m\ joints weie swollen. ptiinful and large lost
v.y appetite. was red net I \n f(> pounds in weight
and fm numths wi.s expected, to die. I com- |
menced \lie use of’ lb li. R, and the action o’one- '
half bottle convinced my friends that it Mould
cure me. Its effect was like magic. It K 1 " e lIlt ‘ j
an appetite, ^iwa me rtlength, rein ved a.I my i
pftiiH and aches, added (it sli to my tiones. and |
win n five bottle* had been u-ed ) had gained AO ,
pounds !u fb -h. and am to-day sound and well, i
M»«. .f. I*. DAVIS. OT VFIiM 1Mb
What Mr. J. P. Duvis, of VVc-sl I'i <1, sriil:
*• I huvec.nl;. a IV \v wolds to say, which nr** to
slate that 1 have been eonl'ned to niv bed for two '
months with what was c-nib d nervous iheiim-
atism or se iatica. 1 was only emahied to hobble
about occasionally by the use of cr^utches. and in
tliis coinlitii n I eoinnieneed the* use* of Ik lk Ik, 1
four bottles of which enabled me to discard the* •
use of my Clutches and attend to business. I had !
previously used all well recommended medicines
w ithout relief. It has been over one year since I
using lk lk Ik, and I cou-idei myself a pern.a- ;
liently emed mail."
Mr. It. 1*. IHHMii:. YiirnlniiiHlor
! gin ItiMlroml.
makes a Hlatenient:
"My wife has been a great sulferer from ca
tarrh. Several physicians and various patent !
medicines were resorted to, yet the disease con- |
| tinned unabated, nothing appearing to make any j
impression upon it. Her constitution finally be
came implicated, the poison Iwing in her blood.
“I secured a bottle of Ik B. lk and placed her
upon its use, and to our surprise the improvement
I began at once, and her recovery was rapid and
! complete. No other preparation ever produced
j such a wonderful change, and for all forms of
• blood diseases I cheerfully recommend B. B. B. as
j u superior blood purifier.”
d2taw se&w top col nxt rd nit
Ladies
A( i«.* Fann in st« wart county, under
lb nted thi*- \c ir . hMle** cotton. On
• 1! _ .“1 fi.( -room I ’welling and iwvcssiirv
lines. \Vi 11 wnt* ed am! timbered.
1*1101 ILSSBON A I. I ADDS.
I V l* DEO. McFI HANKY,
[ ) Ue*»i(ieiit Hcutist.
Komii No. '}, (>*.> 1 Broad -fret, up stairs, ove
Wiltich Kin-i I’s. jttIH-ly
f \ H i ’ T. OHll'HN.
| f Dentist,
■ Suoc csser to hi. .1. M. Meson.)
Olli' enexf dooi l" Rankin House. Same **n
trance r> Riddle’s v Hlery. oef-ly
\l* F. fl( iNF.lt,
. IX-M'.lst,
■;.V Twclttli sti-i-i-i I'i-iin.'i!\ Uniiilui|ili stn-pt.
ji-T-'l)
I'lIliMAS .v i HANTH.KR,
l • AUunn vs-iit-’.iiiv.
ililii-i 11K Hrn 'il tat ( nlnn Ims, <ta.
CAPITAL PRIZE, - $150,000-
luctod with l><
towurtl a 11 par
I
that, ice Auporvinr the ai 4 *
M nithl}/ and Ipinrtfrly
gnta State Lottery Con>
lanaye and control the
d that the name are cniv
•nesH, and in tjood faith
authorize the ('ompanj
!h facsimile« of our si>
i / • ;dscmcntH.'
f.D.i-i » *m Dwelling and Ib'n U'l.enu nt bouses.
Thiriv acre- in woods.
'file ah.*vt- M opciiy, siiuat' d in end m ar Hurts-
bo o. ' a., will be e.\ehauj;ed foi Columbus Beal
TOOMBS CRAWFORD,
w. s. G-TZjnmN,
HKAL EST A T E AGENT.
I'-room House on lower Broad
ot Yei.v desiiuhle home.
h'in House and two-room kiteb-
’(*. one b'oek below M. A* (i. It.
• feci front b\ 117 back. In very
inn In.u-< and full (juarti
Printing, Book-Binding
AND
|Paper Boxes
OF KYFItY DF.SCKII’TION AT
, LOWEST PRICES.
V I.AHfiK STOCK of all kinds of PAPF.lt. in
cluding Letter, Packet mid Note Heads, Bill
Heads, Statements, always on hand. Also Fn-
velopes, Cards, 4 Ve.. printed at short notice.
Paper Boxes of inn si/.e 01 description not kept
in stock made at short notice.
runs. 4.1 iaiii:ici\
tf VI Ttandolph Street, opposite Post Ofiiee.
foiniiiiHMioiiorv
•>dcr*ti(jned Hanks and Bankers wtM
■s dra e/i in The Louisiana State L<xl*
tir.es /chief! may he j/r< «. a ted at our counters.
.1. II. OtH.I SIO Dies. |,u. \nt'l lliilllf
.1. \X. li 11,Dill. I II. I’rrs. State Xnt'l D*k
A. IHMrtVO. Dies. \.U. Xiil‘1 DniiAr^
U
M’I!i:i'f.iii:m!:ii mmm
liter ll;ilf ;i Million IILslrilmtci
Home Insurance Co,
Me
sh .*
ft. H< Ills foi If) p<
••.iUn:). 1’. at ie l.ol on north ('glethorpe st n*et,
Gist north of Western railroad. One nov two-
room licG.se on lot. Boom for 11 more housi s.
i.l'TuO. 3 1 ; acres of Lund east of Swift’s nills.
Flvi houseon place ih.it rent for 12 pel cent, on
price. Boom for 20 more.
riiMO. Four new House- neai SwtiVs mill' that
fit;:.. . Beautif.d cornel lot on south Oglethorpe
‘-•treet. well improved.
fX7 r ). New three-1001;: House on lower Forsyth
street. Si/.e of lot, AO feet by 117.
£7'M). One acre of land and tour houses in Mi
ra rd. Bents foi $11 per month.
$7 AO. Four-room House on north Jackson
street. Bents foi $10 per month.
$?<«•. Four House- in Browneville. Beilis fur
$10 per month.
$IAOO. New six-room House or. upper Melntosh
street; in one of the best neighborhoods in town.
£k00. Five-room House on Jackson street. 1
acre lot. between Fourteenth and Fifteenth
streets.
$.{000. Five-room House and L. acre lot on For
syth street, between Fourteenth and Fifteenth
streets.
$*1(hi Each. Four three-room Houses for sale on
installment plan $10 per month in Northern
Liberties.
$1A00. Five-room House and 2A acres of land hi
Wynnton.
$1200. Five-room House and six acres of land
in Wynnton. Terms easy.
$A00. Two beautiful Building Lots, acre each,
fronting the park, near Slade's school: in a veiy
desirable neighljorliood; for only $2A0 each.
Terms easy.
A number of other valuable places for -ale in
and around the city cheap for cash 01 on terms to
suit purchaser.
aplf-dly
WIXjSOISTX^
Magnetic Power!
Cash Assets, $7,618,116
r , damage by Fire. Light
ning and Tornado, at rates guaranteed a- low
,is offered bv anv relialile stoeh company, 'flu*
Lightning clause will be inserted in Dwelling
policies without extra charge.
L. II. CHAPPELL. Audi I.
DR. RICE,
Louisiana State Lottery Comp’y.
Incorporated in IMS for 2A years by the Legisla
ture for Educational and charitable purposes—
with a capital of $1,0*JO,WO to which a reserve
fund of over $A5(UH)() has since been added.
By an overwhelming popular vote its franchif*®
was made a part of the present State Constitu
tion, udoplcd December 2d. A. D. 1879.
Its (annul Single imnihcr Ih'iiwiuyt
will take place inontnly. It nerer scales 0/ post-
pones. Look at the following distribution:
IfLttl Men nrt Montlily
III!AWING
In tin* Vniihmiy «d‘ Mu-h*. New Orleans,
Ttiesdm. .1 line I A. 1 ssfi.
,*r the perse mil -njiervision and mano.g<>
ment of
Gen. G. T. BEAUREGARD, of Louisiana, &
Gen. JUBAL A. EARLY, of Virginia.
C.;i|iilal Prize, S1 •’)(MMM).
Ka Notire Ticket - ill e I eii Dollars only. ILilv«H. t
SA. Fif!I»>. S2. Tenths, $H.
$1 AO, OUtL
00,000
20,00(1
20,000
20,000
20,00©
25,000
30.00C
I0.00C
00.000
AO, OUT
JM
! Co
For 15 years
:K‘2 MarketStreet
Bet. Third
•pgularlj* elm
SK l ?S ,, LOKVfflE,Kj
lnd mS SEStS AL V 'Disi
blooiu-
so, a
Do you want, a pure. 1
I11? Complexion t If
few applications of Hagan’s
MAGNOLIA IklLM will grat
ify you to your heart’s con
tent. It docs away with Snl-
lowness, Redness, Pimples.
Blotches, and all diseases aud
imperfections of the skin, it
overcomes the flu-lied appear-
mice of heat, fatigue sr-d ex
citement. it makes a lady of
THIRTY appear hut TWEN
TY ; and so natural, gradual,
and perfect are its effects,
that it is impossible to detect
its application.
and S
Sporinatorrbea and Impoionoy,
Mtt.« result of aelf-ubuKO 111 youth, boiubI oX'.'m»o* In in*
turor roarK, or other caiuoa, nmi producing ■omoof tie foV
towtnk cffocti' Servo,(KU'Ub, Scmlual Kmliiiom. (nlccht eiiil>
' y druatna). I)liun**i' * “'-*-*
llrcly eradioaUt^from theGonorrhea,
GLEET, Klrictura, OruhUU, Hernia, tor lluplurei,
IMIrs and "liter private ilinouica quickly curad.
It U aelf-oi tdunt that a phy niclan wh" pat t upeeml attention
to a oertmin cIkih of diMUHca, and troutluR ih'/urnn l* aunu-
ally, ftoqulrea greut nkill. I’hyaieiun* know log thin fuel often
recommend person* to my care. Whan it l* inconvani' ht ta
vUlt th" city for troaunnnt, medicine* u«n bu mill privately
and t tfely by mail or uxprcu anywher*.
Cures Gaarnnteod in all Case!
undertnkon.
LIST OK IMtIZKH.
1 CAPITA L PBI/E OF $150,000
1 ('BAND PBI/.KOF 50.000.
1 (ill A NI) PBI/F.MF 20,000
2 I.ABME PBl/.ESOF 10,000
4 LABMF. PBI/.ES OF 5,000
20 PBIZES OF l.dOO
50 PBIZESOF 500
100 PBIZES OF too ...
200 PBIZES OI* 200
000 PBIZES OF 100
1.000 PBIZES OF 50.
APPOXIMATU>N PBIZES.
100 Approximation Prize.- of $200..
100 ” ” 100
100 “ " 75
2.279 Prizes, amounting to .. $522^iW!
Application foi rates to dubs should he mart*
only to the Office of thei'oinpany in New Orleans
E01 further inforimition write clearly, giving
full address. DOST AI. \OTFS. Expre W
Money Orders, or New York Exchange in ordi
nary letter, ('tirrencv by ExnresH (at (»ur ex
pense, addres-ed tli A. DAt I’lllA,
New OrliMiiiN, I.ji,
Or m; a. i>\i rm\,
Washington. Ik V.
Make I*. O. Money Ortlert* pnyahk
iiimI mhlress Ke^islered LMterx to
A IAV Oltkl’ A VS .> \nn% Ai. DA \H,
my 12 wed seitwAt .\t‘H OrleiuiN, kit*
Charge*
telly c
ltd lnvtle*l.
PRIVATE COUNSELOR
Of yoo page*, Kent to any addreis, fcurcly *uale<!, f -r thirty
i IDO WtUouia itii net ie Power Dele
! is the most successful appliance in the world f
' tin* iieutmont of NT rvous Oebility N«unvL
| Bin. luiuttism. Lmnbiigo. Sleeph-Mu*-.-.-, Asthi
Dy-pepsia. Disease.- <-! Liver, K’idney> u
gi*-fiv»* Organ-. k 1 fcadiirtic. an I all t
« ari-ing from insutlicient and impure blond
v 4 ADVERTISERS
| Can learn the exact cost
of any proposed line of
advertising in American
Papers by addressing
Geo. P. Rowell L Co.,
1 per ArTv«ro«inrj Bur-Hu,
125 WilMMiin MitiiiiMii* I'uw ei l.itdii* 1
AHdoininnl Sii|rporter.
^OTJTLTTD
OOMPA TTY,
Hiif. Itroiuhvay, New York.
Dr. C. TEf-.RY, Agent, Columbus, Ga.
b' ■ 1
lijivYl \j ji!|||'!.’ M !.\ I':V , f
! u.',m m |i iiali. ,,!,', 11!, vl
Formerly Held for /C.:>00. Wib Now
S':!i I t o ' *i00.
I ! v P,i .i< I \\ A H
OfJW, W, Bruce & Son,
K
Hlid Sllpjonus,
Any Druggist is authorized to -ell i>r. F( »N-
• TAIN’S M'rtieines to you mi this guarantee. E-e
two-tnirtl- of a bottle, and if
relief, return the but lie to the 'Druggist, and lit
j authorized to refund the price paid
IDEAEX ESS
lty-eight years. Treated by
<l k specialists of the day
si himself in three months, i
itindreds of others by same pre
le and suC'.'essful home treati
FAME, Ie- Ea<: 20th St.. New Yo
mall t.i t
M. I). HOOD Y CO.,
aHiam$xsMs?K8i?$iss& mu
And stop worrying
GROCERS SELL IT.
Ar;" -• l.'l 1 Dc* if ‘U.n.| *• f . a " 1; ' U* •• -
U-v.nii.g-- N* a < an!- GO - . .. i•• -
L. LLYLltINM .A Ok, JJALXiMDHhh »-liX
COlrflFJLlSrY~.
Arc now prepare-1 to furnisii all kinds of
iioii^li and Dras.-fd liUinhcr,
C.A.M ischke
M ILLWTi |G l IT.
Five Colei «rcd Two BI!vor Kedflll)
awiiiTii'd 111 lSsfi at tin: Expositions of
Now Orii-ms ami iz 'iisvillc, and the In
ventions Exposition of London.
The superiori'y ot Coral Inc over hors,
tr wha'oit'or,'.- Ims i.- vv lioen demonstrate<t
Ijy over five yttufl experience. It is mom
durable, j-.ove j,1 iubl*-, more comI(;rtabl^
and rm*r break*.
Avoid elieup imitutions made of varioH |
kimlnof cord. None are genuine uule#
“ I)e. \V’i,iX!,:’s CoKAUjtE’’ is print#
on inside of .steel cover.
FOB 3AU BY AIL LEADING MERCHANTS.
WARNER BROTHERS,
353 Bro' dwvty, New York Gilt.
nOIL 1- .X/. J MJK T>TO E.
I'l.nKIDA LANDS.
Sc ral tli"U-aii'i here- timUrcd land.- for ei-
hang.* ibi < . nub !- ei!j property, haw mid
i, will lino ;o tb»* : r iiit« re-t to sec me in r*r
i.i'd to tbs tract.
TOO-MBS CILWVFOUI),
PITTS CilMTIVE,
The Best Medicine on Earth for
Ciiildren.
An in tali'* bit- -r»<<;:tV* for Flatulent Colic, Dia»-
h'i-a. C/mglis. T'. ' tlriig,«'holera Infitnlum.Chol-
i;i M ,i i»ii-.. and aw d • iucid .-ut to children,
j;vl it a triu*. 25 cent- per bottle. I-or sale at
CITY BlU'ti STOKE.
FOR SALE OR EXCHANGE
| mjR ..*li.-r ('llv Beal Estate. Stocks or Bondi)
New .Dwe.ling. full : , acre lot. On price
-ked lb!- pr"pt*ri\ wi;l pay ten per cent clear of
;i\• • - W'liy ke«.*p y air money in stocks and
iliat yi.-ld Kttle intere-t and often fails to
.-.*, d:* id'-n >- ! li'.'.'.* r buv Beal Estate and yous
i,. .i t i—ii.-*-. JOHN BLAOK.MAXt,
" •-•-l t'ri tf Heal Estate Agei^