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BY E. L. RAINEY. % 5 Q PR - Fet AN M CED 2 g {:‘l "2, LD ES RN W b 5207 e 4 £ Pty [CTS =Y A SN oS B W i e o A 5 i Lt h i (55 L5~ Vit L=y EEEN SRR i (s A R e J W e\ Tes Wl A ‘\f SRR NS A “ | Sl B 2 ut'*fé' .. s 7/\ : *[l-)-“;,‘T .): A ,"'?“;’;.’.»??;‘; M 2 4o ¢YS EZ Nl A \s;} T AN ~ THE NEwW PRIZD STORY ; 1s eagerly sought for, read with pleasure or dlg lppointmont..ls then tossed aside and forgot ten. But ladies who resa of Dr. Picree's Fa vorite Prescription, read it again. for they dis cover in it sßomething to prize —a messenger of Joy tothose suffering from f unct ional derange ments or from any of the painful digorders or weaknesses peculiar to their sex, Periodieal {mins. internal inflammation ana ulceration encorrhea and kindrod ailments readily yin.-ld o its wonderful curative and healing powers, It is the only medicine for woien, gold by druggists, under a Pozitive guarantes from the manufacturers, that it will give gatis. faction in_every case, or money will bo re funded. This guarantee has been printed on tho bottle-wrappers, and faithfully carried oug for many g}urfl. SLOO by druggists, or six bottles tor $5.00. : Copyriglit, 183, by WORLD'S Dls, MED, Ass'N. N ) o DOCTOR R 2 S@cPAerce’s rerces e e A 3 AS AT PELLETS LETSPRG 3 G B. wye Q‘F‘\“"Q Purely Vegetas Q i %\\g \.S bic & Harmless. Unequaled #s a Liver Piil. Smallest, cheapest, easiest to take, One Pellet & Dose Does not grine. Cure 8 Sick Mende ache, Rilious Headache, Conullf{a— tion, Endigestion, Bilious Attace .ri and all derangements of the stomach an bowels -~ Put up in glass vialg, hermetieally scaled. Always fresh and reliable. Gently laxaiive. or an active cathartie, according to size of dose. 25 cents, by druggists. m--;‘:rf"’? SR s por R b gt whi . 1A Bane s N WA : oYy %5 AN Nty FArt T e @ S SRR e e e z ,"»,,,v' MR IO i s n% o @2 o B 4 8 Nid B a g 3% £ % ® 9 | e Lz °‘€’gl2‘fi;’§‘ | @ : Rt § o M ‘ o' ¢NI A R e 1 TR TTM AT T S R S G S Re''ab's Maves, Many Styles. New I anit Second-Hand. | 194 0~ (IS: E:BY TEAMS. LONG TIME. BT e AT - e A ob o e m———— | t< VE . new iwtrument guiranteed for five i yair- shioned on trial, and if not as repre »-ted e2n ' etursed at our expense. With each Pin, we give fres a fine plushtop stool, silke | viis 61 u.»fi cuve ~ piano instructor and six pieces of I=y de * Wi he.ch Organ we give free a good lap-co.erad steol and insiructor., e et s = / <1 FREIGHT PAID. k- Aecgree to sssume a'l freigh! on Pianos and Oreans. Those who wast guick oelivery, order fromnus, The mail and freight tacilities of A{lanta are omcfect, No matter what others offer, write us lof~ & purchasing, and sse how easily money can ke s vad. g PIAMOCY . ..... -.:..8150 00 to $1,500 00 CRGANS ........ $ 4500t00 $ 76000 | < SreciaL OFFERS. TN T Piano, Style 1 (Ilastration at top r‘ fi“’va,'& b of this advertisement), rosewood €ae, T4y o taves, thies unisons, ove.strung bass, ale improvemants, The Lest low priced Piano inanufactured,. $2lO 00 i Clguzh & Warren, five octaves, large W & W case. satin walnut, very handscive, l]»m sete of jeeds, five A\logsv Is .llut.'i_.;~/’r'oo/. leiter than other organs sold at $75.00. leats the world. We offe: it for only Jfi.og A tevyear-old givl can biy an organ or prass ram Philiips & Crew, Atlasia, Ga., as sequre Irom imposition as the most expert musizicon in the ana"—Christian Worker, D If you wyant or think of buying 2 Piano Orsan, by no means purchase until you Reve seoursd prices a 1 d terms from PHILLIPS & CREW, btetished 1886, 3 ATLANTA, CA TS EA oim v [ paan SENT FREE. ‘ Every reader of this paper whe | expects to buy anythiog in the line i of Diamonds, fine Jewelry, Silves ) aud Clocks, o who tninksg ot buying ‘ A 7 [ 3 | Should send for our new illustrated { ¢atilogue for 1889, which we send | free, { | J. P, STEVENS & BRO,, | JREWERRLRKRRS# I TWhitahs ; 41Whitehall, St. Atlanta, Ga. ' OLD CLOTHES MADF NEW DOC FLETCHER, COL. Is now Jocated in Dawson to Clean, Repair and Dye garments. All colors always on hand at first house below ™ Mr, Hart's earriage shop, DON'THIN TERISH i THER AP ST Slot Rars pong i Sfleg '?‘T 'S VERMIFUGE, Atk your T S i ke o THE DAWSON NEWS. ' A STRANGE FUNERAL, The First Chinese (hiid Born and i turied East of the Rocky Moun. 1 talns. b Tis rarely thar onr Chinese viss it.re hury their dead in this conns try, and then only temporary, with a view to speedy disinterment and removal to the Celestitl Empire. This feeling that their Loaes must rest 14 Chinese sail is not simply a taney-—it is a cult. Thefisst Chiness horn in this !cnun'ry cast of the Roeky Moun | toing, &0 d the first one of the I whole land placed in its zrave with ‘ lhe' purpose ot ]n'trmi't.:ing it to res ' main there, was buried in Phila | delphia on Saturdiy. It was % Iy ce Kwi, the little four-year-old | daughter of one ot the wenlthiest i Chinese mercha ts of the E at. The ceremonies were strietly i I line with the customs of the howe | country. The ittl: one’s tace. was l paihted red,the forehiead white,ana itho Lody, richly dressed 1o Chi | nese garments, was further oraas ; mented with dinmonds and goll | jewelry: Aercgs the breast was a i white fin, and in the little one's hand a card Dearing messages to | relatives previovsly dep rted. l Two potatoes, hollowed out and | filled with Joss sticks, were placed at each end of the coffin. Sandal- | wood 01l was thhr w about th-‘{ body, snd the vial coutaining thot Litter, tocether with the soap, } sponce, basin, towel and wm;h: used in prepuring the corpse for the frueral, were also placed ins side of the lid. Just teiore the coffin was closed Chig Woba Leeoffered a prayer in Chiuese to the home gods, aud then the mother of the child askcd that | some one of the obscrvers ."l‘(mM! pray t» “the American God.” It | was done. i As the processicn started to the l place ot burial the adier seattered pertume before the hearse, and handed to each person proseuat ai little packet of red paper contain ing < picce of maple sugar and a silver coin (quarter ot a dolinr.)l This latter was a charm of goo? | luck, both to the living and lhol dead. ‘ There was tothinz at the bury ine place of note rave the extreme care excreised in proventing the coffin from touching avy olijcet wistsocver fron: the moment that it leit the hearse uutil tuat wien it rested st the bottom of the grave, And g 0 litle Eyee Kwi, first of her race on record, les deliberates ly buricd in American soil to await the d y when Gabrie' shall blow i his trumpet iv the morning.—Cin= cinnati b -quiver e Cue Way to Kill a Towa. “When the lunilroad reached Greenviile, the people were wild | with excitemment, and real estate | jnmped so high that it cculd not be }tuuc] ed by only these who were l millionnires. The town had no resources, other than ngriculmr:\l. to sustain it. The reaction, a na: tural consequence, et in and to day the whole of Greenville could be.bougl;k ior afew hundred dol lurs." High prices was the cruse ot | Greonville being a dead town, and i has killed more towns than it bas| made. Look at Tallapoosd, Ga. l Some of our readers no doubt re- | member when real estate was he'd there at fabulous prices,and the in habitants were crazy over the Loom. How is it to Sdvy? Tallapousa is‘ virtually a dead towen, from the| tact that it dido't have the natural t resources to sustain the boom, and | real estate is held there now at only | a trifle. If a boom strikes a town that has the natural advantages and re sources to back it, you will soon see in place of a quiet, country vil lage, a live, bustling place. l’utn} fair valuation on your property, ‘and if a purchaser eomes to you ‘and wants to buy, sell 10 him, and yéu need never be afraid ot having ln dead town. et A Brewer’s Lung Restorer cures coufih and colds Vgithout qu after resulte, as it contdins no opiates. SHILL £ioMs THE KEY TO SUCLCESS, We have fora lonz time advos eoted, and still advotate, the smalt farm system, believing it to be the road to agricultural success and ease and comtort for southern 9?;‘ mers, A practieal Geerzin tfm in answer to a question_on this subject says: % “You ask the hest way to culti vate a thirty-acre farm. I would plant, say five neres in-cotton, five acres in corn, five acres in wheats five :cres in oats, five acres in chover, and grass, five acros ix frui's and vegetables. - : “Now, iu order to rau this farm 1 should want to keep vot less than four wilch cows, ten head of s ieep, ten head of gouts, one sow a-d offs gpring, two good strong brood mares, plenty of poultry, and bees enough to supply the tamily in honey, and last, but not least, a fish pond. “Now the great trouble in all our southern firming has heen— our syst m s an unuatural one. We have made all our fizares to find the dollar and none to leain how to live, and have consequents ly missed both. My litle ohirty acre farm—l mean tuirty acres i cultivation—is intended to correct this nature] system and to show that every farm. r who is able to ov fifty or a hundred acres ought to live like a king and be sdhstan titlly iudependent of the world, though he lives fifty miles trom the market. “Four milch cows besides their increase, two horses hesides their animals, will make, if properly ted and stabled, an enormous amount ot good manure during twelve months and this ean be donbled—yea, quudrapled by sup plyiug lots and stalls, hog pens, ete,with a zood bedding ot sor qx coarse vegetable matter, x\'u&: varth. muck, cte. o “The first work of the farnof, and his wor ever after, is to make manure and the cow is his suano tactory. A few doll'rs wor:h of chemica s will manure bis five acres ja cotion and his tive acres in corn heavily in the drill with com post tar Lettor than guano, and can ensily make a heavy bale o cotton and® from thivty to fiity bushels of corn ty the —ere. On low lands, by this plan sixty to oue hundred busbels of corn can easily be made to the acre.” : Will some of our readers try the above plan for four or five years? Thie Lest schiool in the world s the school of expcrience. Nervous Dernugemcnt and Coi stipation. After yenrs of suffering trom! nervous derangement and coustipa tion, and after being treated by several leading physiciang, from whom I obtained ne relief, I was induced totry 8 8. 8. Soon atter commencing ite use, I tound my appetite much improys ed, and that the use of eathartics, I which T had taken almost daiiy for | twelve months, was ne longer ne- | C(““Sl”'.\'- ‘ Since elii!dhood T have been sub- | ject to sick and nervous heflda(tl'cs,g but since December 1, 1888, uti which time I commenced tsking S.BS. 8. I have had only one at—l tack, and that was when 1 negiect. ed to tuke the Specific. | 1 do not now kave to tike purga. tive medicines. ‘ J. A. Remp, Tollinr. Ala. 1 TORMENSING SKIN DISEASE, | For twenty years I was troubled with a tormentingitching skin diss ease, which at times ecaused me \ grest annoyance, and loss of sleep. 1 was treated by the best loeal physician, but received no relief ! trom them. 1 fnally concluded {0 tuke Swift's Specific (S 8. 8.) | a half dozen bottles ot which eflects ed, what I considered a permanent cure,as I have feit no symptoms ot the disease for over a vear. W. T. Cowrgs, Terrell, Texas. Trea'y on Blood and Skin Dis. eases mailed free, SWIF . SPECIFIC, CO.,Atlanta, Ga. P e An old maid in Conneeticut lalopted & boy and called him «Moses David Ab:a om Danel Mark W hite” The other day when lLe became of age he sued her for $25,000 damages for hiich ing all the nawe in trogt of him, and it is hoped lhe.jury will give him every cent of It. DAWSON, GEORGIA, DECEMBER 18, 18396. jam YOUNG MEXN. ~Young men seem {0 he going to :" front in nearly all business en terpiiscs und official positions. Ac tive,encreetic and pushing young ‘men cannot be kept back from els bowing their way to prominent positions. The legisinture is com. posed mostly of young men, as ul go the judgeships aud lesser places of honer and trust. Reilroad en terprises are directed by young men chiefly. Factories are pushed to success by the indefatigable ‘ pluck of warm blooded young men, Look at the stores a-~d shops, and how many old men do you see actively engaged in con ducting them? The press and the pulpit are lirgely given power and influerrce in moulding publie sen timevt by the young men. ~ °s¢ Well, why shouldn’t young men achieve suceess, snd prove the architects of gheir own fortunes, as wel. us useful before the evil days come? 1t is when. the body 1s strong, healthy and buoy ant, and the ‘acultics of the mind are brizht, ucuté_},{md acti e, that they should putv'fz;g{.h their best ef foris and :Ic'uevc%¢file,;we:dfb and position. It \\l”‘jiéf}fil) lite to. do this when old aze .comes on at a limping pace. 'lheg)éig;?auln ot a man’s energy aud.im “must be harvested before he _j_sk_“:gr‘%;y—five years of age. Atter that age mugh cau be accomplished, btif'»-iwtwfth as much eital foree ana. assurance asif the foundation Of prosperity lid been built by ‘young man hood’s stronger hands. At s treugently heard that the young men are crowdinz the old men out of the waye This is uns fortunate, it true,but it is the re~ sul:s of the Jaw of nature. Old mexfi@fiué but are wise in coun sclyand direet young wen in the achievement of sone of the'r graudest succosses. Every fathor is anxious to see his sons do well aud seeks to provide the best pos siole places for their future wel fare. Trained avd disciplined by these aged fathers to the routine of business and work, it isn’t the young men ciowding out ths old men, but the old men gracetully getting out of the way in order for the younz men to sh\g‘»;}v their met tle. Spurred on hyssuch encour. aging i.centives, Uf: oung en are controling and diteeting mosi ot the enterprises, instiiitions and industries of the cour ’, which are making our fair landigne of the grandest under the SEIEEEE Sk . i s Ihe new sou'th, .\\'l lEErne to the eid south, is goinz {O9 Waed i that development and PrOSSEsity that'is attracting the atte { the world and making it o Vet that will inereaae with the TORIBYT years. - Marietta Journa-. ¥ e The First step. Perhaps you are run down, can’t eat. can’t slaep, can’t think, can't do at ything to your satisfaction, and vou wonder what ails you, You should heed the warning, \'ou} are teking the first step into Ner | vous Prostration. You neea a Nerve Tonic and in Eleetric Bit ters you will find the exuct remedy for restoring your nervous system | to its normal, healthy condition. Surprising results follow the use of this great Nerve 'onic and Alteras tive. Your appetite returns, good digestion i restored, and the Liv er and Kidneys resume healthy ac tion. Trya bottie. Price 50¢. at T. D. Bale's Drug Store, E Jack Jenks was a victim ot liver ' compluint, | His strength was exhuusted, his , pulse had grown taint, + He had uleers and tu:fors and 1) ! sorts of buniors, | | And the ilis that he suffered ! wonld weary a suint. 0 Folks suid that Juck Jenks would never be cured, | But Jack said thithe would— j that they might be assured, i Pierce’s G.M. Discovery wrouzlit ‘ his recovery, After all the noor fellow o Jony ! had endured. ; | Such a multitude of serious,dis tressing snd often fatal maladies gpring from a disorded liver. Dy, | Prerce’s Golden Medical Di,scnvory or aies a healtuy action of this - poriast organ, and the ilis that have their urigin there can be eups ed by its prompt and faithtul yse, All drugyists. ey R Use the great specific lor *¢old in head” nd caturrly Pr, Sage’s ,Cltt.arrh Remedy. ATPENTED MURDER. Mr. Henry Eaigler Stabbed by New ton Ullsworth, There came near being a murder in Cuthbert Inst Satarday evening, and Mr. Henry Kuicler, nephew ot Mr. W ~ Kaigler, of this city, was the vietin, From the Cuth bort Enterprise we get the tollows ity in regard to the unfortunate afiair; Vir, Kaigler received an ugly wound ia the left breast near the heart and had also a bad cut in one of bis hands. His aseailiant wag one N. Ells orth, a man withl a wooden leg, who has been here but a short while, and who bad a shae shop son. Depot street. The fucts are abont as tollows : Some | weeks ago Mr. Kusigler engnged Elisworth t) maka bim 2 pair of‘ stoes, tha latter agrecing to accept as pay for them an overcoat which was at once delivereld to him, Elisworth was iu no hurry to make the shoes, although he had been paid for them, and sought by un satizfactory prouvises to stave off the job, My, Kuigler waited unti} he beeame eonvinced that he was being tmposed upon, and on Sat urday weot to - Eilsworth's honso! and asked for his coat which was returned to him by Vrs, Ells worth, This filled the shoemaker’s heart wich wrath, and he at once began to skarpen Lis knife for vengeance, o is reported that| during the eveninz he made mur derous threats, and about dark he saliied forth with tis keen edged blade to recover the coat or to gpitl blood. Meeting Mr. Kaigler upon the sidewalk near t e store ot FoPalaski & Co. ke, demanded the coat, and when informed that he could get it o 'y atter the des livery ot the shoes, he at once procecded to use his kuife with’ the resulte as above stated. The stab in the breast would pro - ably have proved fstal had not the weapon siruck a rib whigh divert cd it from its deadly course. The wounds were propérly attended to by Drs.Bhelley and %eclester, and Mr. Kuigler wuas carried to the home-of his sister, Mrs J, T. Moye and we are giad to state thut he is making satisfactiory progress tows axd r€overy. Ehwlxnh made un attempt 1o escape pu* was sooon taken and put in jail) Monday morning he had a _eommitment trinl before Judge, Chastain who assessed his boud at $3OO. DBeing upable to make said bond he will probably lie in jail till the May terni of the Superior Court. .2 L R : Leaving Family and Friends, Thousands go to Southern Cali= fornia an 1 other climate health res sorts, who are victims of incurable throat and” ling. diseases, ‘ there from all parts of the ;; the northwest contributing ; potion, The exciting cause in | most every instance is a cold or & acesion b colds. R Coeh Do 1 g pECOTRI £ ¢ A ) F : sTealihy vongation 9 Havo or T B AN day TUEproctira iEbastle of Chini berlai SFOOUAEHametiand cure yourselt nt 50NCE Vo mizes, o 0 cents and $l.OO, w”;\i‘h: Q'M; all druggiste, “SEEEREEEE The New Discoverys You have heard your trignds and neizhbors talking d‘l()u_ta%g‘i may yomself be one nfflld»*hlfinl)‘ who know from personal experi ence just how gond a thing it is. Tt you huve ever tried it, you are one of its staunch friends, because the wonderful thing abowt itis, that when onee piven a tria!, Dr. King's New Discoveryever afcer hold: a place in the heuse. It you have never used it and should ve afflicts ed with a eouch,eold orany Thro it, Lung or chest trouble secuire a hots tle at enece and give it a fair trial. Itis guar uteed every time,or mon ey refunded. Trial Bottles Free at T. D. Sale’s Deag store, S One Fact. Is worth a column of rhetorie, gid an Ameriean statesman. [t a fact, estublished by the testimany of thousands of peopie,that Hood’s Sarsapar=illa does cure scrotula, galt rhenm,and other diseases or als fectics arisinz from lpure state or low condition of the blood. It also overcomes thit tired feelin r, creates a gobd appetite, avd vives steength to every pari of the system. Try it ! uvd.b .- - Johnson’s Tovie permanen “cures the most maliznant’ tvpes tevers actio gby removing th As a Tome or wppetizer it equal, Price 58()9 ATOUND THE WORLD, “tiss Nellie Corcoran, better known by ner pen name “Nellie Bly,” the noted writer of the Warld newspaper, has just reccived one of the most remarkable assizn ments ever given by an editor 10 a member of his reportorial stufl Miss Corcoran has no less a task to accomplish than to make a cir cu’t of theglobe in the shortestspace of time possible to human expedi: ion and um]ur;mgo. She has ale ready le't New York by steamer bound for Southampton, Lagslund, Sho will endeavor to make her flyic g journey arvound the world in seventy days— or less it such an unheard of teat be atall feasible. When it was made known to the publie through-the ecolamuns ot the World that Nelie Bly wus to circumnavi zate the earth and heat all previous records of trivelers who had made the journcy in a limited dumber of days the enter pri-ing publisher of a New York magazine selected from among | his trusted staff of editors a lady known {or her courage, tact, aud i ability to travel rapidly anl take care of hetselt, and at once started” her on a simiiar mission. Both ladies were given by their respess tive journals carte blance to chunsei‘ their own routes, and to draw upon them to an unlimited 9{&&uh,.,M the necessary funds reguired to meet the expenses of the Journey. The magazine representative, whose name, by the way,i« Miss Eliznbfi | Bislaud, and Nelly Bly. have fis | become rivals in one ot the most novel uudertakings in the history journali-tic enterprise. Both ladion - S pCRRIL left New York ou the aitme mcros ing, Miss Bisland gois u y of San Francisco westward, #iid Nelly Bly as intimated above going caste 7 PSR . ward, A peculiar teature of the af teir is that the HeeAN VOYager is nGt aware that =he hws wrwal, nid will not learn the fact uatibher stcarmer toucher portin England. Th.e fact that hoth travelers are women, and both experienced teavelers, adde interest to the nnigue contest apart v A il . from the general exeitement folt by everyone in the question ot rec- | ord=breaking directly involved. _'L'hq f L which will be edited by the two fair globe-trctters from the va %fi at which they ‘must. stop—if they s‘op anywhere PRy o CENERR L . ¥ . dong enough 1o write at all—will e veud as they 1 poar in their res £ ve periodicnls wit! the greats | vili t? and the result of their Buunavigations awaited with Bpest interest and enthusiasm by e many thousands of their read- Lo el . He Has Found His Level. e=khe Nashville Ametican is au "‘) 7 for the stitement that Mr. 3 fi Cable, on his recent 10 that city “was entertained #. L. Napier. colored, where he ':* a 8 most agreeable evening 10 the socicty of our colored elite.” Sacaatl’ O . . . . Me, wble s quite right. e advocates the social_eqaality of the race. aud hedspracticing what he "? gaotred. It 'would be decidedly Aficonsistent for & man with My, Cuble’s views to give the prefers ?‘enge'to the white race. Of course hig intimate association wih (he ‘wegroes wiil herveafter ciuse the ‘whites ot the south to bar (leir doors to him, but this I 8 just what ‘the little renegade desires. [t is mowey in his pocket o slanler the southern pe«:{»le. aud a slight taste of martyrdom would giva bim fame and . fortune among his New England task masters who now own him body aud roul Mr Cable hus made Lis choics, and he must abide by it. I he has to bear 'the §ust scorn and contempt of the people hie his be trayed per'mps the goll aud the pl udits o his purch isers wiil iwore than balance the scale, Wonderful Populavity. The fact that the ssle of Dr. Picrce's Pleasant Purgative Peliets exceeds that of any other pill in the market, be 1t great or small, is on account of the tact that they are tiny, litile sugar-coated ¢ran. ules,and that in most eases one it tle “*Pellet” is sufficient {or a dose; that they are purely vegotable and perfectly harmless; and for con. scipagony biliovsness, sick head. ache, fnd all diseases arising from der.cigeaient of the liver, Btomach or bov c'itjhay_ne alm»lutely a epegifiess dA gontle laxutive oy o vk cElhartit, aceording (o size of QLR 3}4:5:‘,& ;;;?' S PR JhTEived ot Davis & Locke's g e aotory Bhoes, whicly e BRINE L jobbers prices, WHAT DO YOU DRINKY Arsenie, Aniline Dyes and Other Polsons Used, Wlen the New Yorker steps up to the bar and orders a dripk ok whiskey, which he does pretty ot~ ten and with rogularity, bhe s charged all the way from ten. cents to twenty-five cents for it, -The twenty-five ceut charge is made in theve gilded barrooms up town, where pictures adorn the wails,and buys in white jockets and aprons wait upon patrons at listle tables around which visitors sit i’ easy el s, A Uross veporier, who has rc-l contly had Lis atteation called to t.e character of whisky sold in New York, was startled the other night by the statement made to him by a gentleman who spoke as un expert that 80 per cent. of the whiskey drank in New York wag not what it is “represented to be. He went on to say that it \};fisl “doctored” with aniline dyes, pruné juice, aleohol, - acids, Asiate ic pepper, ginger,tolxieco juice and pure Tugel®il, watil mach of it was calenlfted to make a man crazy as well as drank, : ] know whaut T talking abant,” sail he, *an it you can get at the bottom of whishy compounding ?fitm wi'l create a sensation, Ky body who drinks will be interceted ir hearing the truth about what he is deinking® Why, I tell you that high wine distillers huy arse~ nie, not by the ounce, pound or barrel, but by earload Tuts, to in crease fermentation, afdd yet men wonder why they have big heads in the morning after a drink or two at nizht. —New York Press. A Philadelphia mon who bhas worn the the same green owercout for twenty vears, has just brought the article out again. The el th was woven for Fim, and cost -$l2 per- yard. On sits tmt{ first birthday i# will be scoured and cleaned with great ceremony, and its owner hopes that it will be fitted for a life of usefuluess. It will be to the interest of evs ery mau, boy and child to visit Davis & Locke's store within the next twenty duys. We have on hand an elegunt line ofCarpets aud Furniture at prices t hat wonld please you. Lowrey & Ogn. Talbot has everything imagina« ble in the grocery iine. He is “The Leader,” and his goods are the choicest in the eity. > R et ot sassos e it oo ' S¥WAN NEERIVER. From Branford, Fla., situated upon the romantic Suwaunee river, L\lCESl'i. Rouse & Thomas write, nn der date of Aug, 19th, 1889: Please forward us another gross of Johnson's Chill and Fever Tonie. Have sold out every boutle ot last gross Upoo your strict gusrantee, and not sne botile returned, I'voma Letter from Graniteville, S. C., dated August 26th, 1880, At the age of 50, with {wenty~ five years of active practice, | am u care'ul observer and cautiousin endorsing proprietary medicines, int I ean conscientiously endorse your Johnson's Chill and Fever Tone as one of the best eambinas tion remedies tor Chill and Fever I have ey rseen used. Tt coireets the vitiated geeretions of the l;v(gr, relieves eostivenessand promotes the absorption and assimilation or food, thus tulfilling 21l the indica tions elatined for it. Yours truly, T.P. EODWARDS, M.D. Fornanding, Fla,, Aug. 6th, A, B Gireanorauv, Savanuah, Ga. Dar Sir: Please send us one gross of Johnson’s Chill and Fever fonic. It i: the hest seller we have for malarial tevers, Parmer Bros The claim made for this med. icine is a modest one, We main tain that it is 100 times better than quinine, and 100 yeurs in advance of the protession in the treatment of all fevers, from the most malig nant types of Bilious Hemorrhagic Fever to the simplest torm ot Chill and Fever. For sale by all Drugs gists. A.B. GararDEAU,Sole Troprietor, Savaunah, Ga. Mrs'. Mize has a nice line of millinery at her residemce on Stonewall stret .- VOL. VE—NO. 31, e s o b b B r}f’A/_, : - ?‘*"h » § s“‘ ‘L‘}&_.;: 5 -R“ ’ . - BAKTN Absolutely Pure, This powder never varies. A marvel of purity, stren th and wholesomeness. More ecrnomiesl than the ordipary kinds, and ean be sHld in~competition with the multitude of low test, short weight alum or phosphatepowders, Sold enly in cane.. ROYAL BAKING POWDER COQ., 106 Wall S:., N X (¢ : (@lB ( BEREBEIIPERRNG «WaJ. SLADE'S Restaurant g W --AND— : i _ —paiooB. 5 e Parties who wish something®fine to dirnk iu the wey of Beers,Punches. Wines, ete., should eall on W. J. Slade, who ecarrie# one of the finest lines in Southwest Georgia. Over his Salooh you' will fiad his S e v RESTAURANT where you can)get meals, night or day, to suit the most fastiduous. He also carries a nice line of Y 3 N -1 . Family Groeeries, Give him a call. He will] treat you royally, ¥ £ fi"u ’ 8 oBbaabdhts Y in, I. Y. Martin, Larent Tl 3 DAWSON. GA. Alwavs on h;m“d.the freshest FAMCY ANDFAMILY GROCERIES i ’ At my Bar will always bé f'(‘iiiii(f'g a complete nad choice line of Do< mestic and Imported Whiskies, Wines; BRAHDY AND BEER. Duiing the Summer you wfll:nl ways fird ot my store’ DELICIOUS ICE COLD’ Kez and Bottled Beer-~the béss in the city, - Pickled Oysters Are an excellent table delicacy, and ecan be found at my store. Trey them. I wvite the continued patrohage o! the publie, and ¢an be found at my old stand on Main Street, next’ Joor to A. J. Baldwin & Co. T. Y. MARTIN, Agt. : - T A 2T 4 1‘ - 2 CURES IN FROM C) oue to five days. o}:' ¥anufactured enly by T. Dl Sa’e" m DAWSON, == GA, & Foidi s by Pric - 500“ BRUSHES! BRUSHES!" A fiune line of Hair Brushes. A fine line of Tooth Brushes. A fine line of Shaving Brushes.’ A fine line ot Blacking Brushes. A fine line of Horse Brushes. A fing'line of Scrub Brushes, A finelibe of Paint Brushes, | T.'D, SALE, Druggist.