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FEMALE WEAKNE8« m i-a ominh m. rü«um7lli 1 *i. Oat. IT, 1MB. I Miklir wta* or CorBul w yrtoe So Mjr éoator't ru.Aletm. I «va» *s*4 wt I kaaw wkaraof I apeak far*4 far alma aotlki wita rtraafcoa wkiak aoataiatolv paoo tootoâ ma. Falaa wouldakoat aur kaak m€ aldaa and I would ton huadlaa kaaAsakea. Mr ltaika would f**l aa wd 1 I BO* ■waU a» wl I would fcalp of ykyetoleaa bo* Whoa ad lui «am* oa a Ood -aaad to sea. I weak. After atnatoau days tooato f «>•».»- .*<-4 auOartac age* tea I nasally did u< wmmbummm ragslar ul without pula. Win it Oh*<3 at ta «Imply woaBarful Md 1 w*to that ail sotfertag wi u n hoaw ad m r**d fuuUMaa. Period tea] heada ah aa toll «I fe hle wuhkuaaa. Wùm ef Catohd oatoau oud cl oI irrufhkr , bearing dowa seise m u/ famala waainaas. If ywa a«» <fiwo*raf*<4 failed that sray twenty •sd doeton herra 1» the baat mm to ft« world yoa .kaiil A toy Wise el 0a*4ni sow, lUmmmhar that ti mala 0» kototo «I Wise ci tSSfTfTS Parlai Wap. WINE* £4 RDM MOLE BUSINESS COLLEGE. bdtoa Year U I ■ I Itafc artd*. L aSmZae a* toe **« iMltl Mm E.S.&J.T.&H. W. M. DRAKE, LÄllU. «'6RS, PORT G1B80N, : MIMIMMP'' Practice u all the Conn» * CUiboro and Jeffers n Countie*, and f ederal a".i Supreme C »arte at Jack» . Real Ester Cor aale. J. N. BRASHEAR, Attornev-at-Law* Port Gibson, Mi»«. DR. L. A. SniTH, XDIEISr TIST, Port Gibson, Miss. Rooms 8 A lo, Bernheimer Building. TRANSFER. FREIOHT and BAQGAGE DELIVERED PROMPTLY Order* can be left at my RESTAURANT AND OYSTER SALOON, where I keep beat grade of •yaters, next to Mr. Howard'a barberabop. Telephone. S. A. HUBBARD. JNO. LANCFORD THILOR, Cleaning, Dyeing and âme. Port Gibson and ran fuiniah best of ref erence«. Shop on Carrol! atreet, next to Mr. •on'a residence fitting well I work for almost everybody in Chamberlain-Hunt cademy, PORT GIBSON, MISS. Next Beseioti will open 8<pt. 16, «903 Next Session will dose June 9, 1904 t'ulUonYor the aeaaion, $35.00. Payable, $15.00 at the time of entrance, $10.00 by the ist Jan. and $10 00 by the tat March. A. K. BRASHEAR. Secretary, Idle lie 1016 DISTII 6 E TELEPHONE A Fmcior of Your Busmen It is the Ideal Means of MI1IIICITIII IIIIIEI IISTtIT «TIES. . I am prepared to furnish mate rial and do contract work of all kinds, both brick and frame work. Will do house, fence and all kinds ol repairs at reasonable prices and guarantee satisfaction in work manship. Very respectfully, E. C. JORDAN, Contractor and Butldsr. Quldnunk Kwlllets. Munsey's Magazine for January contains a scholarly article, "The Absorption of Mexico," illustrated by Walter Flavius McCaleb, late fellow in History of the University of Chicago. Mr. McCaleb recog nizes that the Ameritanization of Mexico by economic spoliation will eventually throw the tide of immi gration to the Southwestern fron tier and that means political consol idation in the future. The social fabrics of Mexico are becoming welded by inter marriage of Amer-' ican and Aztec senoritas—there is no antipathy like that of the white and negro. We have heard of some of the proudest American families boast of Indian blood in their veins, but the world never heard of any person boast of African blood, ex cept Alexander Dumas, who said of his father, in one of his romances, il est mulâtre, il est mon pere— he was a mulato, he was ray father. Walter flavius McCaleb has just become editor of the Philadelphia Public Ledger, and is now a per manent resident of that Quaker me ? tropolis. It may surprise many old-fash ioned mothers that baby cradles are not to be found in the furniture stores of the present day. The sci entists are opposed to cradles and the mere mention of being on that kind errand would excite the re mark, "Why you do not want to rock away a child's intellect ? There were as great men as there are nowadays, only science »s more advanced and lots of people believe too much rocking dulls a child's in telligence, leon and Descartes were rocked by their mothers. Hon. Charles R. Byrfies of Natchez and Capt. Harry Metcalfe of New York were inspecting Greenwood Plantation last week. The politicians and newspapers make themselves ridiculous by pro posing Colonel George B. McClel lan, mayor of New York, the Dtm ocratic nominee for President. Col. McClellan was born in Dresden, Saxony, and is debarred by the Federal Constitution from being elected President, for his father was not even the representative of his country in Saxony at the time. When the Philadelphia Convention of Republicans in 1868 first nomi nated General Grant, General Gordon Meade was chagrined be cause they would not take him up. The delegates informed him he was ineligible because he was a native of Cadiz, Spain, but of American parentage. It was claimed Presi dent Arthur was a Canadian. His baptismal record proved that he was a Vermonter by birth. Congratulation». Mr. John II. Cullum, editor of the liar land, Texas, News, has written a lette< >>f congratulations to the manufacturers of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy as follows: "Sixteen years ago when our first child was a baby he was subject to croupv »pells and we would be very uneasy about him We began using Chamber Iain's. Cough Remedy in 1887, and finding it such » reliable rem edy for colds and croup, we have never been without it in the house since that time. We have five children and have giv en it to all of them with good result-. One good feature of this remedy is that it is not disagreeable to take and our babies really like it. Another is that it is not dangerous and there is no risk from giving an over dose. I congratulate you upon the success of your remedy." For sale by Pope Drug Company. I < »I I I Shakespeare, Napo 9 * * a of in The Little homestead. The Little Homestead", which comes to the opera house on Tues day, Feb. 2nd, is one of those de lightfully refreshing plays centered about New England life. It tells a story with a moral, is replete with pathos and forceful in its dramatic situations. In due proportion, a comedy vein is iuterwoven with the pathetic romance which heightens in interest as the tale is unfolded. There is not a dull moment from the rise of the curtain to its final 4 A The Little Homestead, drop. as the title implies, is distinctly a home play—a sweet, simple and in teresting chapter from every day life, a wholesome story, beautifully told, which carries with it its les < I I I It is from the pen of W. B. son. Patton, author of "The Minister's and is beautifully interpreted Son, by a strong company, headed by William Macauley. 99 MANAGERS. A Very Clo»e Call. "I »tuck to my engine, although every joint ached and every nerve was racked with pain," writes C'W. Bellamy, a locomotiie fireman, of Burlington, Iowa. "I was weak and pale without any appetite and all rundown. A* I was about to g ! ve up,, I got a bottle of Electric Bitte s, and after taking it, I felt as well as I ever did in my life. Weak, sickly, run down people al ways gain new life, strength and vigor from their use. " Try them. Satisfaction guaran teed by J, A. Shreve druggist. Fifty Years (he Standard BAKING POWDER Awardtd Highest Honors World's Fair Hlchost tosts U.S. Sov't ChomMs rmoa bakino fowbib oo. OMIOAOO An Inaugural Address. The inaugural address of Missis sippi's Governor, James K. Varda nian, should be read in that he is alive to the needs of the Common wealth in the twentieth century. He favors the divestment of the ex ecutive branch of the government from interfering with the judicial and legislative by' the election of judges by the people and against the official lobbying of legislative bills. Only Louisiana and Missis sippi, of all the Southern States, retain the appointive judiciary and manufacture laws like a newspaper manufactures lies. The recom mendation that the rate of interest should come down from ten per cent, to eight per cent, will find a responsive amen among all classes, from the capitalist and investor to the artisan and husbandman. Small rates of interest are safer than big rates of interest—as Charles Reade once said, "it is better to be asleep with three per cent than awake with six per cent. The nepotism of office-holders receives a just re buke. The other features of his address, public education and the care of the Confederate soldiers, are elaborated on and fully measure up the debt we owe to our children and veterans, the Alpha of our citizen ship and the Omega of our patriot ism. The Governor reiterates his cam paign views of the negro problem. The sincerity of his motives no one questions. Sometimes in going through the veneer of with holding education from the negro, it is to make a w'hite man's State, to invite immigration to rid us of a shiftless tenancy, and to require something more than the three R's for the ex ercise of the franchise. Governor Vardanian's inaugural address is the result of environment—the en vironment of the white man's bur den. JAMES F. McCALEB, M. I). Cold Springs Plantation. Wonderful Nerve. Is displayed bv many a man enduring pain of accidental ' ut , Wound«, Bniises, Bums, Scald», Soie feet --r stiff joints But there's no need for it Buckler's Anuta Salve will kill tlie pain and - ure (lie trouble. It's the best Salve <»» earth for Piles, too 25c, at J. A. Shreve Druggist Legislative Matter#. SENATE The senate has passed a bill cur. tailing the back tax powers of the revenue agent, limiting him to a period of five years. A bill to divorce the judiciary from politics, introduced by Sena tor Smith of Warren, was defeated. Discussing the bill, Senator Thrash er of Claiborne is quoted as follows: Senator Thrasher told of the exalted character of the judges in the old days and said that he was surprised at the acts of some of them in these later days. He said that he believed that the bill would cure the defect. A bill providing the governor with a contingent fund of $10,000 was passed. 4 < 9 9 HOUSE The house has passed the Wells vagrancy bill, which is a most dras tic measure, copied after the Geor gia law. A bill providing $2500 for re furnishing the governor's mansion passed. Other bills of less importance were passed. A bill exempting money loaned at 6 per cent, from taxation will doubtless pass both branches of the legislature. Found a Cure for Indigestion. I use Chamberlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets for indigestion and find that they suit rnv case belter than anv dyspepsia rem edy I have ever tried and I have used many different medicines. I am nearly fifty.one years of age and have sbfiered a great deal from indigestion. I can eat almost any. thing I want to now —GEO. W. EMORY, Rock Mill*, Ala. For sale by Pope Drug Company. DAVID BOCK'S^, Department Store 2k BUCKING FOR MORE TRADF Our Mr. Rock is now in the city of New York to buy his spring and summer stock, which will consist of all kinds of up-to-to-date merchandise and novelties. He knows where to buy them and what to buy, and has plenty of money to back him. Our stock will be one of the best ever been in the south, and remember our motto : Always a little cheaper than our competit ors. He has instructed us to reduce the price on all the goods and to sell the dry goods, which have advanced so rapidly, at the old price. r - i a Our Store is the Only One Where You Can Get Now: Good Calicoes at............ Good Domestics at..... .._ Good Plaids and Cheques at...... and all other dry goods at the same old prices. Come and see us for everything. We guarantee to save you money on all of your purchases. Don't forget to get one of our % ' Magazine Fashion Books, free of charge at our store. - 5c P er yard 5c P er yard 5c Per yard A a i gggjjgg ag; SORE LUNGS l; When your lungs are sore and inflamed from coughing, Is the time when the germs of PNEUMONIA, PLEURISY and CONSUMPTION find lodgment and multiply. w FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR stops the cough, heals and strengthens the lungs. It con tains no harsh expectorants that strain and irritate the lungs, or opiates that cause constipation, a condition that retards recovery from a cold. FOLEY'S TAR is a safe and never failing remedy for all throat and lung troubles. k Ths Doctors Said Ho Had Con sumption —A Marvelous Cure. ■ L. M. Ruggles, Reasoner, lows, writes: "The doctors said I had con ti sumption-and I got no better until I used FOLEY'S HONEY AND TAR. ■ It helped me right from the start end stopped the spitting of blood and the w pain in my lungs and today I am sound and well. THREE SIZES 25c, 50«, and $1.00 REFUSE SUBSUITUTES 1 ? /V v HONEY AND >7 * '•ill 4 y i U 1 iif y SOLD AND REOOHMENDED BY < POPE DRUG COMPANY. = V AftLi g* s, ■Si ...WÜ 'iff »toCia YN Guns, Pistols, Bicycles, LAWN MOWERS And ALL LIGHT MACHINERY repaired Satisfaction Guaranteed. JNO. W. 3 AWLICK. T. R. Warburton Plumbing & Tinning PORT GIBSON, MISS. V — For Drunkenness. Opium, eelevÄX er the Tobac o HabH and NeurasUienla, THE SEELEY l«?T ir UTE. Hi. Cams* ure striai? 1 1 Furniture ! I » « - 1 I I i« . CARLOAD AFTER CARLOAD! |4l * « to ALL GRADES « to » « ©N DISPLAY AT ©UR ST©RE! 4 5 ► j ». :« At I « » r • I4S to Only Exclusive Furniture House in Port Gibson. « At B 14? » K J I -j ■ Stoves a Specialty. - to j* \ 1 St . I Levy & Welsch, I ■i » 4 ? » 4? » Port Gibson, Miss. 4 » Deeds of Trust, Leases,» Contracts, Rent and 1 Promissory Notes, at REVEILLE OFFICE. FOR SALE 4ft