Carolina Watchman |
Previous | 1 of 4 | Next |
|
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
Large
Extra Large
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
All (PDF)
|
This page
All
|
Loading content ...
the carolina watchman fol i-fourth series salisbury n c f thursday may 25 1893 n 14 _ r i . " • ' ft •-. * a --•• i i_6 i castoria castoria is dr samuel pitcher's pres fifard 3 and children it contains neither orim fcinonos ot her narcotic substance is is a harmless substitute for paregoric drops soothing syi ■castor oil it is pleasant its guarantee is thirty rears use hy millions of mother's castoria is the children's pana i the mother's friend castoria ( - - _ ' a 1 promotes * . ■' ■■j k .,,. iit -. tciii til ■";■r s ti aj y •■•- ■i ■.-.- ■r .; -, ! , . •.,: : ■i : . ■■■■• c ' ■■. i i co not to < , , .-. i ■:.■'.:...: .■-..■i '.... an ituao*i rcai :.." i lite d d ■■' ' ■= ■■•'- new york city ■j25tli strcwt and 71a ... ., new york c:*y the centaur compaq 7 mot :■.-.•• ! ceekt net yu;:e ore fill 1 li i p q a j j c l i y u h l j nll b3 iai 1 1 • wnnn nhrnhj-h u l u li u u i j l h -,? l j t j rjw£!f ■■: . ■- •• '• ■■■< • ■. ; . . ; 1 ' ._• . y .■;.- : . j • • : ■■' - i : ■' ' ' ■\ \ -■... ._' ____„._ y _^ . , , n j . : - i .'. lipi - 3 prop jtors m i v rites 1 ■■*■- at ' d had 1 si the use ol tii | : ■. i : ii i . ■. . i . ii m : • i i liere a v ', sllaii » : v ... api il -' '. p usi 1 ilnt'c botl ic of j i i 1 ami u » • 1 1 ■■'. ul w eakness . ■: dei lvetl gre il ben til - from flesttiuo having gained 11 pounds in w eeks i take ur^at pleas ueudiug it to uni'ortunntes like yours truly john morris office ofj.n mcelroy.druggist ■y riuiuhi i i a u il 20 .; vl j mofcsrs lippmati bros . sa ain^ili ga dew siis 1 ■. . of !'. f m w)te size yesterday and ouu bi ttl • ■to-day fhe p p ]'. cured my wife of rheurna i«m winter betbi e ii !:.-.,■wtht past winter und a half 11.03 * zc relie ed lier a«aiu,and s i »'; 1 a symploai sauce itolie bgttkufr 1 i to a friend of la af of i;i turkeys a small one *•* s4ind his w ife gave it a tejispoon w,*»*i tt in the e\'eiiing and the lit nefcl ot turned over like lie was dead •"* next morning was up hollering and fell your respectfully j n mcelroy s ivanuah ga 17 i8i)l lippmau bros savannah ga dear sirs — i have suffered from rheu ' ir a long time and did not find ai ure until 1 found !'. p p.,which com i d me n .'< iirs truly eliza f.jones grange st savannah h 18 i * 5 f 5 ts wan l li a keliable persou in every town t ' take the exclusive ageney oi the world's columbian expo sition illustrated authentic 0r3a?l of the fa r eiitablisued 1 j i breat opportauity to aakemouey for the n'ext year 0a9 chra i u a limatime enclose 15 cents in stamps lor samp v • ' ' i ! il 11 in culars i.b gamp3f.ll p?st3 151 auam3 st chicago ill t ,- ig a 1 ! - ■irseii and ir.tti 5 y ( ; - luc i - your moacy by pun basing \\ ,' > . , which represent iho bent value .-■- prices asked as chousasda a \ 1 h b .: :; !. ■■': ei ■■• ■• . ui .-... y p thai ill not rip i'.uo i in , hi . - • '• m ..-' i ii au ' ' ■■' i i •■:. .." ■• v . i ■'■■', shoes ti\pi .: 1 1 us ever sold t : pricr tin 1 eq . sting ,-.- v , b^i'oli ■• ' op v i by farmers and nil .-.. . -/■■. . . . ■i.o.l bt-i vy calf l ! a .. , ■.•■■., .,.-.■.■_ iu a^d will , - . pi , '■; r.u 1 s3 50 worlc .'.-.-, .■-'-■■igiv morov irfortl ) i lhanany o ■. ■■■aremafie forec r • .''■■\. -,..■:■* :.. , u .-. . ;: ■•.■■/ that woritiugicfia h.'aa 1 '■••; vonilss '■\ -/'■■school p ■■!■■i . t e boj 3 evtry n b m i .■■■: ■i tuepriccs r " - "■-:' 5 r <- llaaj,l r vvik i -_. ■_-. • -.-.',. .;:. ; ■> - > . hi ! *'• : , ■■. liior nne ' air as . ..-, ■■: . • • ' ■■'.:.■' diira ■costing fr;iin"!.tioi • ■atvccwion izeia tli ;:•'-■ii t >> eai a e i ■■" - • is ul camion w.i^doi ■: . ' n ■a nn 1 the pric9 13 btamped on tb . " nn ■v eacu r ' ■■; . ■■. ; ■" ■'■• when con buy bev ■! ■incto3nb gtitu ' ri-.ii'i'i'isaro fi luleut ■.• ■■i " :■■:'-•'■' -■■■.:■• : : • i i lo'lavjrforob t : i ..•--. ■u mi rfi isc preti nces k^ra « -■•- - ■' ■■y • . : i 1 1 • ' s/dselore'l in [ " bobhic $ 1 1 pmi m i % the great remedy £ \ - for all bli ' : dseases - a \ scp ulcers eczr.^a \ rheumatism pimples eruptions e al m sprkading and * v ;• „; , i-.irrfl t!u nil-.-t a i • j fur \ £ ,, atlanta 6s p o o o o g o o €> © gsfrom dyspepsia a^d 1 «^ rendering 1 e mircrable vuca tlm reniody at j our uana . r tl ffffi n c -. . : ■. ad - • ' yourfooa,vs -•■r . ri an -'.'. . deli you l^nvo 1 cui ile complaints and monthly i r . ularity l u sorrhoea or whites paiain ba k or sides stn agthens the feeble builds up the wh le e j stem it has cured thousnnda and will cure you druggists have it sead i stamp i rb db j i 9k0mg00le & co loaisyiile kj the confederate fla take thai banker down tis weary bound its stuff tis dropping drearft furl it hide it let it rest for there's uot a man to avc it for there's not a soul to lave it lii ln mood that heroes gave it furl it uide it let i f . resv fake tbat banner down tis tattered j j broken is its stuff sun shattered : j and the valiant hearts nre scattered • ( iver wlnjni i floated lijfh oh ! tin hard for us to fold it — i to think there's ii v ih to holt i — j haiti thiii those who once lyirolted it { n,.w rniist furl it with a btgh furl that banner furl it sadly unce six diillions hailed it gladly and three hundred thousand madly swore ii should forever waive — swore that tbeinan's sword h<uilil never hearts like theirs entwined dissever — tilsit their flag should float forever o'er their freedom or-their grave ! furl it for the hands that grasped it ami the hearts that fondly clasped it j c id and dead are lying low i and that banner it is trailing j rt'hil • around it sounds the wailing j mi people in their woe i _, j for tli digli conqum-d they adore it i,r.ve the cold dead hands that bore it \ weep for tli se who who fell befi rz it 1 in ! how wildly they deplore it : now tu furl aud fold it so fnrl thai banner true tis gory i ut tis wreathed with glory and twill live in song and story though its folds are in the dust : for its fame on brightest pages — sung by poets penned by sages — shall go sounding down to ages — furl its folds though now we must furl that banner softly slowly i eurl it gently it is holy for it droops above the dead touch it not unfurl ii never let i droop there furled forever for it people's hopes are fled . — ii..i i i r ■■— — washington leiter prom our regular correspondent men and brethren hear ye all ! this atlaiiitistnition is going to be democratic in fact is well as in name l?he overwhelming verdict rtf the peo ple is tu be obeyed and no republican is to be left in a place of responsibility flie pace towards this has not tii precipitate but it lms been aiid vill be steady and sure until it is reached secretary gre*haiu took he lead and there isn't m v than one or vu ltepublicaiis left in important po sitions in the slate department scc ivutry curli.-le.is'agoou second situ it will not be un before all of the chiefs of divisions of lie i'reasury di-part nioul will be democrats secretary 6 mtli h.s begun to call for t lie res iunations of tlm li,hpnb!ic..n chiefs of divisions in the interior department and he proposes to keep it up until they h re all out secretary morton his not been behind in proportion to the size of his depart men t postmas ter general ljissell has had to devote hj in ich lime to the selection of post nu>ters that lie hasn't made very natiy changes in his department but lie will as will attorney general 0 nev and secretaries l imout and her bert judge whren believes he will kill ne of the principal roots of the pension evil by making the medical boards vliicli examine applicants for pensions ntirely democratic instead of allow ing one ltcpublican on each board of three as lias been done speaking of this change be is quoted as saying one of the things the democrats have committed themselves to do u to sift ms t.ir as possible the rubbish which has been drifting into this pension cesspool the parly has committed itself to reform in this matter and there is no better way to make a start than by having only democrats on these boards i do not state it as a fact that president cleveland has ap proved this action of judge lochreu but it is hardly probable that such a radical change would have been an nounced by him unless it bad been previously approved by the president much more or less silly talk h;i been indulged in this week about the probability of a war with china be cause of the supreme court having de clared the geary law constitutional needless to say neither the president nor secretary greshara have the re motest idea that there will be any seri mis trouble with china the chi nese minister told secretary grresham that his govern nit-lit would not take any retaliatory steps and that it would as tar as possible protect americans in china from any attack which the ia norant natives might be disposed t make upon then the geary law will by enforced by the administration to us great an extent as possible with the means at its command but the lack o 1 a sufficient appropriation to pay foi their n.nspoitation makes it probablf that no chinese will be returned t china until congress shall have decid ed whether it will appropriate the large amount that will h<s needed 6,000 oooisthepstiinatc — to send the mire than 100,000 who failed to register tn accordance with the geary act back to china or modify the law so as to ak low those who are now in the unired states to remain many congressmen wh'i voted f jr the geary act have nn noanced their wulingacss to vote fot an anivndnient to huuw the chinese now here to stily in preference to ap propriating the money necessary to send them to china the official contract by which the cherokee indians surrender their in terest in the cherokee strip to the u s government was signed this week by secretary smith and the rfcp rescutiifives of the cherokee nation the contract provides for the reten tion by the government of 1,000,000 to satisfy the c'.aimsj of the delc wares slmwnees and the freedmen there are yet to be received ynd ap proved the instructions fur making the seventy allotments to cherokees residing in the slrip which under the re«ent attorney general will have to be made by the chejokees from the 140 applicants the general laud office will as soon as these allotments are made prepare instructions to intending settlers which are not expected to differ from those issued when okloho ma was opened and divide the strip into counties etc officials now fix july 15 as the date of the opeuingof the strip president cleveland has let it be very plainly unders:ood this week that the rule of allowing federal officials to serve a term of four years is not in tended to keep republicans in office who have used their official positions solely to aid their party prove tbat the man you name has been an offen sive partisan said he to a senator and several representatives who had call ; ed to ask for the removal of a i'epub j liciiii official and i will remove him i as ron as i can hnd a good democrat ic successor i opposing honors for jefferson davis si iuuiii^tuu messenger we iiave been expecting that the republican organs would improve the i occasion to attack the south because it honored the memory of president jef | ierson davis one of its x>_'v greatest j men of the century \\ e are prepared to read all sorts of rot ami hog-wash i i that wing of the northern press tbat never swept before their own door that are forever finding beams in ; the southern e\e that publish ail sorts of rumors lies crimes etc and bold them up as ex impie-s of southern life southern civilization of course they wiil j^et up a new rebellion in the south because the noblest and best and purest in the south heroic l men and refined and virtuous women !— unite in showing all possible rever ! ence and honor by solemn display and i procession to the noble dead s the ! remains are borne from new orleans to richmond for final interment bui we hardly expected that north ! em democratic papers would protest against this or see cause for censure in such mourning of a brave aud noble people for their heroic honored and i illustrious dead we pity the narrow soul cold hard unsympathetic that can see aught to censure in these honors for tke dead it in not worthy of any enlighteued age in a tree re public the chicago herald is a democrat ic paper and among other things gets oft this unworthy suggestion that it is time for the southern people to lay aside their mourning for their heroic dead and that they should not > r petuale war recollections and stinui ate the perishing animosities of the war period by extravagant and un timely displays of the unwholesome ? o utiinentalism which they may cher ish on the subject that paper is un worthy of the country in which its destii.ie are cast or the civilization and freedom which its editors are permit ted to enjoy no great people will ev er object to another great people cher ishing as sacred the memories of their mighty dead or to expressing with due e remonial and civic pomp on the 10th f may or any other time their rever ence and lore and gratitude for the uen of high emprise and noble man bood and lofty souls who stood forth in troublora days us leaders and ex empbu-s and who bore the fiery ordeal uf patriotism without stain or blur the able richmond times introdu ces an impressive thought well taken because ji«t in its calm rebuke of northern objections tc the propose honors for president dark it well emphasises a fact long apparent to u but which we do not remember to h«ve stated it saysi and tlw widely diverse views which the chicago ier»m and the southern peojrle take of this matter strikingly shows the difference between the north and south with the one everything is business and even the burial of the distinguished men of that section is attended with an eye to what can be . made out of it with the south this is entirely different 1 . here the bodies of our honored dead are reverently placed in their last home in love and sjitoiv kiki the suggestion that busi ness or politics or anything of that i nature was e/er thought of in connec tion with the funeral ceremonies ] would be resented as an unpardonable insult this is why the north in se ' leetiug a day to place flowers on the graves of their dead soldiers of the late war calls it decoration day 1 ' because with them the graves are simply dec orated while the south calls it me morial day 1 because here flowers are placed on the graves of their dead he ! r >♦ s by southern ladies in loying and grateful memory of their brave sur render of their lives for tiieir beloved s mthland the south has rights equal in all respects to those belonging to t!,e north we are all equals it is just as fitting as every way appropriate as every way honorable and right for the south to show its affection admiration and veneration for jefferson davis in re-interring him as for the north to show it to u s grant or any of its heroes we have sufficient confidence in gen grant to believe that if he were living now he would read with approval and satisfaction the honors paid by the south to iis illustrious president of the confederacy the south will never sacrifice its rights its faiths its iii'cti"iis upon the altar of mammon or expediency or politics in this gilded age ot shams and mock-heroics of the false and the mean of the material and the sensual the south will remain faithful and and true to its ancestral traditions and faiths to its highest sense of what is noble and great and pure and honora ble and of good report 4i be it so though right trampled be counted tts wrong and that he called right which is evil victorious here where virtue is feeble and vill ainy strong tis the cause nut the fate of the cause that is gloricus ead time to laugh as a matter of fact a boy never should laugh at his father until he the boy is is years of age at least earlier than that it is not safe a b>y over near the university has for several evenings stood up to eat his meals and all because he neglected the above rule of conduct his fath er takes great pride in a haunble ' tonian colt he is raising the other er morning the pater was fussing around in an old silt hat and equally venerable greatcoat pitchfork in hand and while he was working about the colt's heels the boy gave the animal ■his feed the colt does not allow any | familiarities while feeding and when j the old man in a stooping positbb backed up against him the colt lashed out with both feet the man stood so near that the kick broke no bones but he was shoe as from a catapult right through the clapboards on one side of the barn his head was driven through his til and when he extri j cted himself from the splinters the j rim of his headgear hung around his neck like a rnff he regarded the whole business as \ rough and delivered an oration through his hat which the boy re gnrded as amusing the youngster laughed first he stood and laughed ; ; and then he laid down and laughed j and rolled over and over and hugged himself and still laughed but when that devoted father got clear from the wreckage he seized the nearest strap a id the boy has not smiled once miice : the boy knows now that he is not big enough to laugh at his father minneapolis tribune wilmington maaenqer : at last georgia erects a fine monument in memory of one of its most illustrious citiwns — vice president alexander h stephens on 24th iost at craw fordsville it will be unveiled with ap » propriate ceremonies highest of all in leavening power — latest u s gov't report \ s^s i uwvici absouuteut pure a day dream by lillik ti stafir thursday at evening war ing at hooip sweet home which you know is only moggie mur phy's home among tho liilie i was tired and weary and just s of old when still is the night 1 w;is dreaming and my dreams were as just a song at twilight sweet and low when the day is done or in the krentide i lived in a cottage by the sea within a mile of edinboro town and suujet down by the sea carries me back to by-gone hours on white wings of reverie to mv ain countrie and unforgotton days answer ! cried i where are the friends of my youth ?" could 1 ' forget dream paces of ctnurades when life was young like a sunset dream i snw mary and john sit the kerry dance : the indian maid in the evening by the moonlight singing the lost chord and the song that reaches mv heart in the gloaming just goin<j down to the gate was robin adair | that warrior bold whistling and waiting for katie bj the palms near the bridge 1 xeliit bly aud little annie roonev at the irish christening * of macsorley's twins down on the farm ' marguerite the star of my heart in the church i'i the wild wood sunday nihgt saying the maiden's prayer ave maria at twilight while the whippoor will's son was heard by the old church gate annie laurie leaning orer the banisters watching pauline who was sitting on the stile with kath leen mavourneen at " 5 o'clock in the morning waiting till the clonus ii oil by there was little fannie mclntyre and mary given with a broken pitcher wandering through meaders green m the dear home land ' i saw natalie the maid of the mill >- tiie clover blossoms kiss her feet as with her beauty's eyes down the shadowy lane she goes laden with pretty primrose flowers sweet violets and i'ansy blossoms 1 — all the eloweis that bloom in spring darling sweet bessie coining through the kye carrying the old i oaken bucket tilled with hot chick en tomalies i saw dougla , tender and true u warbling at eve the winds that waft my sight to thee to dollie day juanita who was eating miss mulligan's horat-made pie with n 0 embnrrassment ' i thought of alice buried un der the lindens yes su under the dai-es and ben bolt his u heart bowed l)3*vn weeping sad and lonelv a he'd nothing klse to do for only the sound ot a voice crying alice where art thou ?"" thou art gone from my gaze !" it were vain to tell thee ail i fee then too nancy lee her bright smile haunts me still as h looks for the ship that nevej re turned ' bestof all 1 saw old black joe gwine back to dixie to hear dem bells 1 and afterwards i faw auld r«hin gray only waiting till life's dream is o'er to go sailing 1 in the cradle of the deep arthur and martha are stranger yet although far awav in tin garden of sleep in old madrid i dreamed of the sweet bye and bye and 1 saw little maggie may 1 and she came and vao i-heri like a dreaw but his hear was true to poll ! by the sad sea wave w lswl • jjighfc sat u darby an joan slu emeu to say to-morrow promise me that you and i will )>» an chored at twickenham feirv home at last 1 hare something sweet to l \ yon so til be dar h said alone at last stood d»im tv ; •• ' and her the gates of th ufa ■• y closed ami lo ! it w - . ' — the musical visitor a combination of forces next • c * says the richmond l>i$i>atch l t e 14th congressman money of missis«ipp says that the fi<jlit in his state will hereafter ta l>etw«en tht democrat and ihe populists or third party rarrv there beins not a fragment l<"ft of re publicanism in that state how i i it be in virginia ? will the li , - lieans here nominate a candidate for governor ? will they rally under tie standards of the people's party ur tic populist or will they have thrir • dii nominees ? the leaden of the re publican party and the lenders ti tie populist know full well that nrii r of those organizations is t long enough to stand up before tii conqueiiii hosts of the democratic party wlwfc follows isn't it certain that i « democrats will lisve to ti^ht next fall a combination of all the opposing fac tious ? throughout the south the fight f • r the next two or four years will b n indicated in the foregoing in the states like mississippi where tin-re it no republican party it will be be tween the democr ts and the popu lists in the other states n<ttb caro lina among them it will be tium-eu the democrats on the one hand mid the republicans and populists com bined on the other it cannot l<afe escaped the observation of ihe intelli gent citizen that all things tend in this i state toward a union between these i elements of opposition to the deuio j cracy no two things could by any 1 possibility be more divergent natural ly than republicanism and populism ' and when the time for union comes i what i to bee me of those republican i who have through all the year stood by theii party upon principle ? what ever is lu become of this few whether the democracy is to find in them al ie or as heretofore enemies the ic<i of the republican parly will not hes t ite to form the alliance and the ; democracy will face one enemy in ! tr*d of two two en mi s united ai 4 ' therefore stronger ihis c«nibinati n i would as a governing power be iutol i eirtble it cannot j^o rn north cai jiiiia i ts scheme will fail tae democratic s^ip wili ne»er i y us icoutj to an j such private c •• — i statrsvil e landmark davidion comme::ceiaeat ixercues the fi liowing is the ]<"& ''•" " lor ! the cosr.meucement exercise at david son college sunday june 4th 11 a m u - laureate sermon by her eugene i u iel 1 d raleigh n t 8 p m.,a - muii l>efore the y m c a*«oci .... n by kev k h barnelt d d atla,it gh tuesday june oth 11 «. ra — annu al tneetiii of the boar of trus ees 8 p ra reunion of the lttemrj fckx tie phi orator attoruey-creneral t i osborne of charlotte eu o rev c { j yardeil ot newberue wedndesday june 7th 11 . m — annual address before the l te ary s<»cietieii by kx-gov t m ! h w river n c ajinuai ■rai • • he aiumni associaiion £ c smith esq of k*lci,h n ' - . m meeting of the alumni a a mc 8 p m n annitersarj of ' • v-rar societies thursday.june st.li 1 1 a us.—coni mencementexercises 8 p uu tecej iou by the literary societies the president and mrs cleveland lave left the white house and taoteu 1u their ceuntry hjonje in the subprbt [ washington
Object Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-05-25 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 25 |
Year | 1893 |
Volume | 1 |
Issue | 14 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was |
Creator | J. W. McKenzie, Editor and Proprietor |
Date Digital | 2008-12-29 |
Publisher | J. W. McKenzie, Editor and Proprietor |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | The Thursday, May 25, 1893 issue of the Carolina Watchman a weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
OCLC number | 601559274 |
Description
Title | Carolina Watchman |
Masthead | The Carolina Watchman |
Date | 1893-05-25 |
Month | 05 |
Day | 25 |
Year | 1893 |
Sequence | 1 |
Page | 1 |
Technical Metadata | Image was scanned by OCLC at the Preservation Service Center in Bethlehem, PA. Archivial image is an 8-bit greyscale tiff that was scanned from microfilm at 400 dpi. The original file size was 5240388 Bytes |
FileName | sacw17_18930525-img00001.jp2 |
Date Digital | 12/29/2008 8:17:48 AM |
Publisher | Hamilton C. Jones |
Place | United States, North Carolina, Rowan County, Salisbury |
Type | Text |
Source | Microfilm |
Digital Format | JP2 |
Project Subject | State Archives of North Carolina Historic Newspaper Archive |
Description | An archive of the Carolina Watchman a weekly and semi weekly newspaper from Salisbury, North Carolina |
Rights | The SA of NC considers this item in the public domain by U.S. law but responsibility for permissions rests with researchers. |
Language | eng |
FullText |
the carolina watchman fol i-fourth series salisbury n c f thursday may 25 1893 n 14 _ r i . " • ' ft •-. * a --•• i i_6 i castoria castoria is dr samuel pitcher's pres fifard 3 and children it contains neither orim fcinonos ot her narcotic substance is is a harmless substitute for paregoric drops soothing syi ■castor oil it is pleasant its guarantee is thirty rears use hy millions of mother's castoria is the children's pana i the mother's friend castoria ( - - _ ' a 1 promotes * . ■' ■■j k .,,. iit -. tciii til ■";■r s ti aj y •■•- ■i ■.-.- ■r .; -, ! , . •.,: : ■i : . ■■■■• c ' ■■. i i co not to < , , .-. i ■:.■'.:...: .■-..■i '.... an ituao*i rcai :.." i lite d d ■■' ' ■= ■■•'- new york city ■j25tli strcwt and 71a ... ., new york c:*y the centaur compaq 7 mot :■.-.•• ! ceekt net yu;:e ore fill 1 li i p q a j j c l i y u h l j nll b3 iai 1 1 • wnnn nhrnhj-h u l u li u u i j l h -,? l j t j rjw£!f ■■: . ■- •• '• ■■■< • ■. ; . . ; 1 ' ._• . y .■;.- : . j • • : ■■' - i : ■' ' ' ■\ \ -■... ._' ____„._ y _^ . , , n j . : - i .'. lipi - 3 prop jtors m i v rites 1 ■■*■- at ' d had 1 si the use ol tii | : ■. i : ii i . ■. . i . ii m : • i i liere a v ', sllaii » : v ... api il -' '. p usi 1 ilnt'c botl ic of j i i 1 ami u » • 1 1 ■■'. ul w eakness . ■: dei lvetl gre il ben til - from flesttiuo having gained 11 pounds in w eeks i take ur^at pleas ueudiug it to uni'ortunntes like yours truly john morris office ofj.n mcelroy.druggist ■y riuiuhi i i a u il 20 .; vl j mofcsrs lippmati bros . sa ain^ili ga dew siis 1 ■. . of !'. f m w)te size yesterday and ouu bi ttl • ■to-day fhe p p ]'. cured my wife of rheurna i«m winter betbi e ii !:.-.,■wtht past winter und a half 11.03 * zc relie ed lier a«aiu,and s i »'; 1 a symploai sauce itolie bgttkufr 1 i to a friend of la af of i;i turkeys a small one *•* s4ind his w ife gave it a tejispoon w,*»*i tt in the e\'eiiing and the lit nefcl ot turned over like lie was dead •"* next morning was up hollering and fell your respectfully j n mcelroy s ivanuah ga 17 i8i)l lippmau bros savannah ga dear sirs — i have suffered from rheu ' ir a long time and did not find ai ure until 1 found !'. p p.,which com i d me n .'< iirs truly eliza f.jones grange st savannah h 18 i * 5 f 5 ts wan l li a keliable persou in every town t ' take the exclusive ageney oi the world's columbian expo sition illustrated authentic 0r3a?l of the fa r eiitablisued 1 j i breat opportauity to aakemouey for the n'ext year 0a9 chra i u a limatime enclose 15 cents in stamps lor samp v • ' ' i ! il 11 in culars i.b gamp3f.ll p?st3 151 auam3 st chicago ill t ,- ig a 1 ! - ■irseii and ir.tti 5 y ( ; - luc i - your moacy by pun basing \\ ,' > . , which represent iho bent value .-■- prices asked as chousasda a \ 1 h b .: :; !. ■■': ei ■■• ■• . ui .-... y p thai ill not rip i'.uo i in , hi . - • '• m ..-' i ii au ' ' ■■' i i •■:. .." ■• v . i ■'■■', shoes ti\pi .: 1 1 us ever sold t : pricr tin 1 eq . sting ,-.- v , b^i'oli ■• ' op v i by farmers and nil .-.. . -/■■. . . . ■i.o.l bt-i vy calf l ! a .. , ■.•■■., .,.-.■.■_ iu a^d will , - . pi , '■; r.u 1 s3 50 worlc .'.-.-, .■-'-■■igiv morov irfortl ) i lhanany o ■. ■■■aremafie forec r • .''■■\. -,..■:■* :.. , u .-. . ;: ■•.■■/ that woritiugicfia h.'aa 1 '■••; vonilss '■\ -/'■■school p ■■!■■i . t e boj 3 evtry n b m i .■■■: ■i tuepriccs r " - "■-:' 5 r <- llaaj,l r vvik i -_. ■_-. • -.-.',. .;:. ; ■> - > . hi ! *'• : , ■■. liior nne ' air as . ..-, ■■: . • • ' ■■'.:.■' diira ■costing fr;iin"!.tioi • ■atvccwion izeia tli ;:•'-■ii t >> eai a e i ■■" - • is ul camion w.i^doi ■: . ' n ■a nn 1 the pric9 13 btamped on tb . " nn ■v eacu r ' ■■; . ■■. ; ■" ■'■• when con buy bev ■! ■incto3nb gtitu ' ri-.ii'i'i'isaro fi luleut ■.• ■■i " :■■:'-•'■' -■■■.:■• : : • i i lo'lavjrforob t : i ..•--. ■u mi rfi isc preti nces k^ra « -■•- - ■' ■■y • . : i 1 1 • ' s/dselore'l in [ " bobhic $ 1 1 pmi m i % the great remedy £ \ - for all bli ' : dseases - a \ scp ulcers eczr.^a \ rheumatism pimples eruptions e al m sprkading and * v ;• „; , i-.irrfl t!u nil-.-t a i • j fur \ £ ,, atlanta 6s p o o o o g o o €> © gsfrom dyspepsia a^d 1 «^ rendering 1 e mircrable vuca tlm reniody at j our uana . r tl ffffi n c -. . : ■. ad - • ' yourfooa,vs -•■r . ri an -'.'. . deli you l^nvo 1 cui ile complaints and monthly i r . ularity l u sorrhoea or whites paiain ba k or sides stn agthens the feeble builds up the wh le e j stem it has cured thousnnda and will cure you druggists have it sead i stamp i rb db j i 9k0mg00le & co loaisyiile kj the confederate fla take thai banker down tis weary bound its stuff tis dropping drearft furl it hide it let it rest for there's uot a man to avc it for there's not a soul to lave it lii ln mood that heroes gave it furl it uide it let i f . resv fake tbat banner down tis tattered j j broken is its stuff sun shattered : j and the valiant hearts nre scattered • ( iver wlnjni i floated lijfh oh ! tin hard for us to fold it — i to think there's ii v ih to holt i — j haiti thiii those who once lyirolted it { n,.w rniist furl it with a btgh furl that banner furl it sadly unce six diillions hailed it gladly and three hundred thousand madly swore ii should forever waive — swore that tbeinan's sword h |