Newspaper Page Text
■ P. P *
___
PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Wakes
Marvelous Cures
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
I* P 1* purifies tbe blood, builds tip
Mrenjrt, ^entd^ner^'. effl
feelings and lassitude first prevailed.
I
1 aHlotKl ™d rl H dy dt?e£&
in s ktn hke
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcers.
tetter, scald head, bolla, erysipelas,
ecr.ema we may say, without fear of
contradiction, that 1*. P. p. is the best
blood purifier In the world, and rn okes
In positive, all cases. speedy and pertuauen t c ures
Ladles whose blood sy ■terns impure are poisoned
nnd whose is Ii In an con<xl
Don, d ■G* > to menstrual benefited Irregularities, the
are derful peculiarly tonic nnd blood cleansing by won
of P.-Prickly Ash, prop- Poke
or ties P. P.
Hoot and Potassium.
BrniNOFiELP, Mo., the highest Aug. Tlth, 1893. of
-I can speak in from terms
your knowledge. medicine I affected my own with personal heart
was
disease, pleurisy nnd rheumatism for
S physicians i years, was treated hundreds by the very ofdol- best
trlcd ana spent known remedy with*
ft Indlng every relief, only
Oil i have taken
one bottle of your P. P. P., and can
cheerfully good anything say It has I h done S!H
than av
I can recommend yocr mi
ouffercra of the above diseases.
MRS. M. M. YEARY,
Springfield, Oroon County, Mo,
WF HAVE
™.e in laffgest clothing stores
the Somth, in Atlanta
and Macon. When in need
of clothes, call to see ns.
Mail orders promptly fill
ed.
(N rP
,A n
39-41 WbitelwJL
Atlanta, Ga.
0. P. & B. E. Willingham
!W ANUFACTl#HERS OF AND DEALERS IN
SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, MOULDINGS,
Mantels, Paints, Oil, Lime, Cement,
REEDED, TURNED AND SCROLL WORK,
---AND
BUILDERS’ HARDWARE,
MACON, GA.
Write us for Trices before you buy. Estimates cheerfully given
Scliofteld’s Iron Works .
3lv£«wxi.w.facYu.r©rs a-nd. ToToToer® oi
Slm Eipii, Boilers, SAW MILLS, Cottei Presses
General Machinery and all kinds Castings.
-Sole Owner and Manufacturers of
Schofield’s Famous COTTON PRESS!
-To Pack by Hand, Horse, Water or Steam
1BAS8 <W»S, PIPE FITTINGSJiUBRIOAT0BS, BBLTING, PACKI»G,SAWS,ETC
-General Agent hr -
HANCOCK INSPIRATORS AND GULLETTS MAGNOLIAICOTTON GUI
J. S. SCHOFIELD & SON,
MACON.
_ Jk
■!
STEEL 'E? have \\ IRE the CHE4PFST lino of SUPERIOR
a special barbless FENCES in existence, and make
special fence Horse and Cattle fence; a
for Hogs and Sheep and the
nest and cheapest Cemetery and Crave Toot,
\ ard and I,awn fence in the market. For cir¬
culars and prices, address.
K. I.. SlIEULABERGER,
70 S. Forsyth St. ATLANTA, GA
THE OLD RELIABLE
ENSIGN'S
BOOK STORE.
Having renovated and improved
tbe old stand I am prepared to offer
inducements to purchasers cf School
BOOKS ANDSTATIONERY
and to subscribers aud purchasers of
Magazines and Newspapers. Call and
examine.
I. W. ENSIGN.
FORSYTH, GEORGIA
PliriPtES, BLOTCHES
AND DID SORES
CATARRH, MflURIft,
KIDNEY TROUBLES
and DYSPEPSIA
Arc entirely removed by P.P.P,
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas¬
sium. the grear—st blood purifier oo
earth.
Abbiwwpw, O.. July 21,1891.
Me««rjs Lippman Bros. , Savannah, of
Ga. : Peak Sirs—I bought a bottle
yourP. It V. P. at Hot Springs.Ark.,and good than three
has done nio more the
months’ treatment at Hot Springs,
bead three bottles C. o. I>.
Respectfully JA9. yours, M. NEWTON,
Aberdeen, Brown County, 0.
Gapt. J. D. Jehniion,
To *?**»*« meg cancer nr 1 here
_ propertlea
the skin. I
^U^aSd
(Signed by) J. D. JOHNSTON
bavannan, ua.
Skin Cancer Cured.
Teitimony from The Mayor of Sequin. Tex%
Messrs. flEQviv, Lipfman Tex. , January li, 1993.
Ga.: Gentlemen —I have Bros., trfpfl Savannah, P.
p for disease of the skin, your
known > a skin cancer,of thirty usually
aa years*
standing, purifies tho and blood found and great removesalllr- relief: 1C
rltation from the seat of the disease
an,i prevents any Bnreading of the
sores. I have taken fivoor six bottles
and feel confident that another course
liais al 7° rellovo<1
truuDies. L r ,i“ Youra xours trnlv truij, d a torn a oil
v&xri.vf Attorney . M. RUST.
ut Law.
Book go m Diseases Maned Free.
ALL DKUGGI8T3 8ELL IT,
LIPPM&N BROS,
PROPRIETORS.
.. Llppmaa’s ___ Block,Savannah, Ga
* ’
-’■SCY
Macon, Ga
Hygienic Sanitarium.
Is permanently located one block from
the passenger depot for the reception of all
acute and c hronic invalids ot all kinds.
PRICES.
Rooms, board and lodging included in
all prices. Chronic patients will be
charged ?1 per day; fever and svphaletic
cases will be charged a reasonable price
extra for extra attention. Nurses will be
ooarded free if needed by the doctor, oth¬
erwise they children, will be charged. Adults, 510
per syphiletic month; Rad fever and
cases must furnish their beds
and bed clothes. Each patient will re¬
ceive prompt attention from the doctors at
every hour in the day and night if neces
sary. Each patient must bring with them
for bathing two sheets, four towels, two
blankets, two quilts or two coverlets and*
three yards cloth.
J. M ARMSTRONG. Prop..
Griffin. Ga.
jg* JS|£! ■ H ■ H ■ ■ a Mficur«d 1 a na Whist a t Himu
at heme with
d. Book of par
FREE.
II I— ■ in nr 11 imi BM.WOOLLEY.M.IV
Atlanta,«a. Office 1Q4& Nhiuhali Sk
COTTON GROWING IN THE SOUTH
Some Suggestions From a Corre¬
spondent In Regard Thereto.
We hear a great deal said about .
concert of action among farmers for
the purpose of decreasing the area
planted on cotton this year, in order
that a smaller crop may be put on the
markets of the world. But a little
reflection will show the utter impossi¬
bility of effecting the desired purpose
in this way. Human nature is very
selfish, and if there was a prospect of
a general agreement, there are thous¬
ands who would at once imagine that
now was the time to plant heavily to
take advantage of the prospective rise,
and the whole thing would be de¬
feated. The low price of cotton is
itself working the cure. There is no
need for any concert of aetioD,
for the men who have been using three
or four acres of land to grow a bale of
cotton cannot grow it in this way any
longer and live. Cotton as n sole crop
is done forever, just as wheat as a sole
crop is in the north. The man who
makes anything from cotton hereafter
must be a farmer, and not a mere
planter, gambling on the chance of so
much fertilizer giving him so much
cotton. He must learn how to accu
mulate fertility in his eoil, while get¬
ting increasing crops from it, and must
learn the fact that the only way to rest
land is to keep it at work between salo
crops feed growing peas and crimson clover
to stock for raising manure for
the corn and cotton, so tha k the old
time practice of dribbling a little fer¬
tilizer in the furrow, for im¬
mediate effect, can be forever
abandoned, and a generous broadcast¬
ing of tho manure for the benefit of
the soil take its place. Of course the
change cannot be made all at once,
but it behooves all farmers whoso in¬
terests aro in tho cotton crop, and with
whom as a matter of necessity the cot¬
ton crop must be the monoy crop, to
begin to take measures to mako it
really a money crop, the surplus crop,
but not the sole dependence for pay¬
ing all the expenses of the farm.
The fact that land can be brought
up to a high state of fertility by a
proper rotation of crops, and the use
of the cheaper forms of mineral fertil¬
izers, phosphoric acid and potash,
without the purchase of the expensive
nitrogen, has been abundantly proved,
where the leguminous crops, like peas
and clover, have been grown between
the sale crops. Now is the time to
begin to get our lands into such a
proper rotation. The southern field
or cow pea will do more for the lands
of the southern coast plain than any
plant yet discovered, as by its growth
the farmer is enabled to get free from
the air the nitrogen which is so costly
when purchased in a commercial
fertilizer. Cotton needs for its
growth a well balanced fertilizer
in with which potash hasja prominent place,
a proper percentage of tho other
elements of plant food to enable tho
plant to use the potash economically.
On land where no peas or other legum¬
inous crop has been grown, it will be
necessary to use a complete fertilizer,
. . ,
°
clover on the land aid
need to buy the costly nitrogen for
the cotton crop. But it will no S do to
assume that because the peas or clover
nitrogen Mwif tt that e , it »“ will d -„ i keep n th L the T land W , er per- o!
ennially fertile. The peas are them
se ves greedy consumers of potash and
phosphoric acid, and those being sup
phed to them they will get the rest.
lhereiore, if we want to start our
land in the proper rotation for the
growth of the cotton crop, it is essen
tial that wo start with the pea crop,
and supply it with tho essentials of its
growth. Let us.start then this spring
and sow tho pofts broadcast, not less
than a bushel per acre, and apply to
them 300 pounds of acid phosphate
pounds of muriato of potash,
^0 pounds of Ivainit per acre.
uu Ibis • will give us a good growth of
peas, and the best use we can make of
these peas will be to turn them into
hay or ensilage for feeding cattle,
then in September run a cut-a-way
harrow over the stubble and sowerim
son clover at the rate of fifteen pounds
per acre. This will grow during the
winter, and can be plowed under in
the spring for corn, and the same dose
of fertilizer given it.
Among the corn plant peas, and as
soon as the corn is off plow all under
and sow the land in winter oats w T ith
peas for hay again, and plow the stub¬
ble for cotton the next season fertil¬
ized again with the same cheap fertil¬
izers, and sow crimson clover all
through the cotton at the last working,
to be cut for hay in the spring and
the land put in corn again. You will
soon find that if you keep stock enoxTgh
to use up the forage you will grow that
ere long you will have home-made ma
cure enough to cover your corn field
over broadcast, and finally yon will
need no artificial fertilizer except the
dressing to promoto the growth of the
renovating crop of peas. The rotation is
planned for the purpose of accumulating
fertility for the cotton crop, and at
the same time grow crops thnt will pay
expenses and give a profit besides." I
can point now to men on the sandy
fields of the south who are practicing
a similar plan, and who, while grow¬
ing over a bale of cotton per acre, are
making 60 to 75 bushels of oats per
acre, 40 to 50 bushels of corn, keep
well-bred stock and have smoke¬
houses full of bacon, grown and cured
as cheaply as the western farmer can
grow it. Their cotton, whatever the
price, is a profit. W. F. Massey.
IRON 31 EN IN CONFERENCE.
Committees Appointed to Consider
Wages, Discount Rates, Etc.
Anunber of leading bar iron rnann
facturers from Ohio, Pennsylvania,
Illinois and other states were in con¬
ference at Cleveland, O., Wednesday,
to consider wages, discount rates and
other questions of interest to the
trade. A committee of five was ap¬
pointed to formulate plans bearing
upon these subjects after which the
conference adjourned pending the re
port of the committee.
3Iiners iu Favor of Striking.
The miners of the DuBois, Penn.,
district held a closed meeting "Wednes¬
day, but refused to divulge any pro¬
ceedings. It has been learned, how¬
ever, that many of the miners favor a
strike for a cent raise.
WAS GOrLD ISSASEt
mrAxciAt vroiiRX avd physical
exertion not the greatest
destrotbr op HUMAN life.
... _ zsr s:
MU Ho, a. w., M Pro..
CaMrrdl.s. J., March ». lW5._(Speol.l.)
—Since oao of our prominent citizens snf
fered so terribly from tobaooo tremens, has
half * of l t ? humanity, own fri the ? h ^x ladies here are making lr \ J 5 *"
tobaceo-uaing husbands'fives miserable tobacco. with
their entreaties to at oaoe quit
The written statement of 9. J. GouM is
using tobacco at thirteen; I am how forty
nine; bo, for thirty-six year^ 1 chewed, 1
smoked, l snuffed and rubbed snuff. Jn the
M
chewing Sometimes and I eight ounces of smoking checks a day. and
had a chew in both
bacco l qnH time d n HaiiTw'LY.ri could My
and again, but not. till
nerves craved nicotine and I fed them
my perspiration skin turned a tobacco-brown, cold, skin, stioky and
oozed from my
trickled down or baok at the least exer
tion or excitement. My nerve vigor and
my life was being slowly sapped. I made up
ofo«»d^{?^pMnd'f^r.”d I suffered the of the damned. a On
tortures
the third day I got so bad that my partner
accused me 'of being drunk. I said, ‘No. I
have quit tobacco.’ ‘For God’s sake, man,’
he said, offering me his tobacco box. ‘take a
chew; Tobacco you will go wild;’ and I was wild,
was forced into me and I was taken
home dazed. I saw double and my memory
was beyond control, but I still knew how to .
ehew and smoke, which I did all day, until
toward night, when my system got tobacco
soaked again. The next morning I looked
and felt as though I had been through a long
spell of sickness. I gave up In despair, as I
thought that I could not cure myself. Now,
for suffering humanity, I’ll tell what saved
my life. Providence evidently answered my
good wife’s prayers and brought to her at¬
tention in our paper an article which read:
‘Don’t Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your Life
Away!’
“What a sermon and warning in these
words! Just what I was doing. It told
about a guaranteed cure for the tobacco
habit, Easier called for No-To-Bae. I sent to Druggist faith
a box. Without a grain of
I spit out my tobacoo cud, and put into my
mouth a little tablet upon which was
stamped No-To-Bao. I know it sounds like
a lie when I tell you that I took eight tablets
th8 first day, seven the next, five the third
day, lossness and all the nerve-creeping feeling, rest
and mental depression was gone. It
was too good to be true. It seemed like a
dream. That was a month ago. I used one
box. It cost me one dollar, and it is worth
a thousand. I gained ten pounds in weight
and lost all desire for tobacco the first day.
I sleep and eat well, and I have been bene¬
fited in more ways than I can tell, No, the
cure was no exception in my case. I know
of ten people right hare ii n Caldwell who
have bought noNo-To-Bac from Hosier, and
they have been cured. Now that I realize
what No-To-Bac has done for me and others,
I know why it is that the makers of this
wonderful remedy, the Sterling Pxemedy
Company, ‘Wo of don’t New York claim and Chicago,
say: to cure
every do ease. That’s three Fraud’s boxes talk, a He, but
we guarantee to cure tho to¬
bacco habit, and in ease of failure we are
perfectly willing to refund money.’ I would
not give a public indorsement if I were not
certain of its reliability. I know it is backed
by been men worth a million. No-To-Bac has
a God-send to me, and I firmly believe
it will euro any case of tobacoo using if faith¬
fully tried, and there are thousands of to¬
bacoo slaves who ought to know how easy it
is to get free. There’s happiness in No-To
Bac for the prematurely old men, who think
as I did that they are old and worn out, when
tobacco is'the thing that destroys their vital¬
ity and manhood.”
The public should be warned, however,
against the purchase of any of the many imi¬
tations or. the market, as the success ox No
Toj foffrtas brought forth a host of counter
imitators. Tho genuine No-To
Bac is sold’Pder a guarantee to cure, by all
run no physical or financial risk in purchas
ins the gamine articl.,
Head, for Emergencies.
__
«< 3 a y ( w hat does that mean?” in
quired a stranger of a Montgomery
street clothing dealer, as the interro
gato r drew attention to'the weather
signals fluttering over the building
across the street.
“What color are they? My eyes are
bad, »*
“Well, there is a red flag, with a
black square in the center and—”
“That means a storm/’
“—and underneath is a white flag.”
“That means fair weather. ”
“Well, what do both together mean?
A fair weather storm?”
“No, sir. The man who handles
them is a weather prophet, and he is
compelled to be careful in his predic
tions so as to make no mistakes. Those
signals mean ‘either fair or foul wea
ther. » >»
“Oh,” and the stranger bought an
umbrella and duster .—San Francisco
Evening Post.
GEORGIA BAP^ ^CONVENTION,
w s
Doable Daily Through Trains Atlanta to
Waycross, via Central Italli oad
The Central Railroad of Georoia will sell
th:r.l certificate 2^^“..%^",; plan. The double daily
on
^,‘SSnVh quickest and th Sa,’ direct rt tt“’ZWlPiK
most route to aud from
the convention. See that your tickets real
over the Centra' Railroad, avoiding any
«h ft nee of cars. Positively the only lino with
noubla daily through trains. Leave Atlanta
7:30 a.m., 6:55 p. m.: arrive Wavc-ross 5:00 p.
a.m. For detailed information, sleeping car
fTISE™!" appllr s. E. (Vedb,
c.p.&T.a. t. p. a.
IS ».'.I street, G„.
How's This !
TVe oiler One Hundred Dollars Reward Tot
any ca- c e of Catarrh that cannot be cured bv
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
"We, the undersigned, have kr.o-.vn F. J. Che¬
ney for the last 35 year-, and believe him per¬
fectly and linanc honorable ally able in all business transactions
: to carry out any obliga-
1 10 a made by the.r firm.
West & Tkcax, Wholesale Druggists. Toledo,
Ohio.
Walding, Druggists. Kin'-an & Marvin, Wholesale
HaTs Toledo, Oh;#
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act¬
ing faces directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
of the system. bottle. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 73e. i>er Sold by all Druggists.
Attention! Confederate Veterans.
A grand reunion o' the Confederate Vete¬
ran- widbe held at Houston. Tex.. May 22nd,
23rd and 24th, 1535. Thi- will be the largest
gathering of Confederate sold ers since the
war, and Texas i-making great preparations
to entertain them. The Atlanta & West Pomt
Railroad and the Western Railway of Ala¬
bama (The Atlanta Ar Houston Short Line)
will sell excursion tickets for this occasion at
a low rate. Anyone contemplating making
th s trip will please notify ns that we may
furnish them witn rates, etc., as soon as they
are named. Fred 7>. Bvsn.
D. P. A., L. & N. R. P... No. 36 Wall St.
Geo. W. Aeeen,
Trav. Pa-s. Agt., No. 12 Kimball Hou-e.
Jxo. A. Gee,
General Passenger Agen;, Atlanta, Ga.
“Hcaltli Insurancr.’’
That is almo-t as necessary as life insur
auce. It meaai rca onable care and occa¬
sionally a little medicine—not much. A Ri
pans Tabule is enough in most cases.
Mr?. AVinelow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teethine. softens the gums, redo -es inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25:. a bottle
I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of lungs
by Piso’s Cure for Consumption.— Louisa
Lisdamax, Bethany, Mo., of Jan. 8, ’!H.
Karl’s Clover Root, the great blool purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex¬
ion aad cur#s c^ustlpatioa. 23 eta., 50 cts., |L
Th© Enjineet Lovea His St«*d.
((T 'wick ... , we TT'T all Ioto xl the , loccjnp
■*>
tire,” , said traveler. “Coming into
a
on a through train on one
*• ^»« .bo u. .«a.
l P‘M« I ,e stopped .Uelched at to change mj en-
81M3 got off and lags
01 2 the platform R little, and walked
forward and looked at ha4 ’em oonpte drivers, oh
the fresh engine. It big ’
a tremendous i v boiler, cylinders as Ki big
as a barrel, steam chests aft big as ft
trunk, and a stumpy little chimney}
ho gingerbread work about her any
where, and no light—it was after dark
—except the headlight and the little
lamp in the cab shining on the face of
tb. eteafn guagea. Everything elk.
about her black; when the engineer
leaned out of the cab window yoo
c general °« I ' i «“«> fclacuness; 8se but , hi ‘'; be »*»*”* backed *!>' the
engine down ns gently and as smoothly
an q with ns perfect * accuracy * as though
, ^ad , , bij,h . , noon for light. v .
“He was evidently in great form,
the eugineer.and the big engine looked
tllo “8t “ coul d B°. “‘V”' 8 '' “"i
blizzard that ever blew; . and as a mat
ter of fact it about made time into
tf ew York. But it was a hard pull for
her, you could ____,, , Lear her breathing t\9
you stepped out of the car in the
Grand Central station and started to
walk along the platform. You look at
her here ....... the light
again in as you pass,
admiringly ; and you have a very
friendly feeling ° for the man whom you
, hrmg into . instant . . , , later ,
view an as you
move ahead, and who is standing on
tho track square ahead of tho big en
gine and looking up at her with a smile
on his face .”—JScw York Sim,
IIow to Warm Cold Hands.
Tho passenger on the front platform
of the crowded car v/as blowing ener¬
getically on his gloved bands.
“They ’pear to be cold,” said the
driver, sympathetically, “Well I’ll
tell you how to warm ’em. Don’t
keep your gloves on when your hands
get cold. Take ’em off right away.
Then double up your fist as tight as
you can—just as if somebody was try¬
ing to open your fingers and you
wouldn’t let ’em—an’ then ram your
hands down in your coat pockets. It’ll
s’pr’se you, sir, how quick they’ll get
warm.”
The passenger immediately put the
suggestion into effect. In a minute or
two he looked pleasantly at the driver.
“It is wonderful,” he remarked.
“My hands are as comfortable now as
I could wish.”— Washington Star,
Produce of Fractions of a Penny.
The old lesson as “little drops of
water, little grains of sand” making
the universe lm3 had one more exem¬
plification. It is the custom of the
Bank of England not to pay fractions
of a penny. In the case of dividends
on government stock, these fractions
have, in the course of years, amounted
to £140,000, which amount, it is
stated, was a few years ago paid over
to the chancellor of the exchequer.
L<» w Hates to Eastern Cities.
SSOTK amrfancingto their patrons tluBugESut tne
points. i™ rllff if S!nj°
pa! Atlanta to Richmond, £9.80; Pe
aSTS, $19; S& Philadelphia,
more, ^Approved’. p9 75 $ 11 . 80 ; Now York,
' ‘
T. J. Anderson,
E. General Passenger Agent.
St. John, Vico President.
The above low rates are still in effect, and
every one who contemplates a trip North
should take advantage (if this extreme iow
rate. For detailed information, time tables,
&c., address B. A. Neweand,
Gen. Agt. Pass. Dept., Atlanta, Ga.
“ Weak Lungs Dr. Hunter’s famous cook,
explaining how consumption arises, in what
way it can he prevented and the new treat¬
ment by which it is now tin ed, is advertised
in another column.
Ifltl Iv
V ^iSlSS
gEnnp y
& B PS j|j}
RNJOY3
? tojrup oth tl! ?“ et, ’. 0<1 taken; results pleasant when
OI JL‘ lg8 IS it 33
an d refreshing to tho tote, nnd acta
gently T yet promptly ‘p J OH the Kidneys J *
L,lver kn« an( j l IsOWeiS, cleanses ■, the 6JS
-
tCM effectually, J dispels Colds, head
aeties and - levers n and habitual ,
cures
co ? stipatio ?- i» tho
Only remedy OI its kind ever DFO
ducet., pleasing to the taste and ac
ceptable fo* to the stomach, prompt | in
action md truIy n its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup bottles of Figs is for sale in 50
gists. cent by all leading drug¬
Any have reliable druggist will who
may not it on hand pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. I)o not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK, N t.
/ Don’t be the Axe!
V- 7 Just keep in mind that the grocer or
i the peddler has “ an axe to grind ”
when he tells you that he has some¬
t thing “as good as” or “the
same as ” Pearline. There
% can be but one reason—more
V V profit to him by your use of
the substitutes.
But how is it with you ?
What reason can you have
Q\ for wanting to take the
risk ? Certainly not econ
the , greatest in omy—Pearline leads to
economy every direction—saves the most
money, time, clothes and health. If your grocer sends you
an imitation, be honest—send it back. a* JAMES PYLE, N. Y.
I N all receipts for cooking
requiring a leavening agent
the ROYAL BAKING
POWDER, because it is an
absolutely pure cream of tartar
powder and of 33 per cent
greater leavening strength than
other powders, will give the
best results. It will make the
food lighter, sweeter, of finer
flavor and more wholesome.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
A Trick of the Trade.
That there arc tricks in all trades,
even in a dentist’s, was well illustrated
a short time ago in a large dental office
of this city, says tho Cincinnati 'Tri¬
bune:
A little girl wanted, or rather her
relatives wanted, her tooth pulled.
Accompanying her was her mother and
two aunts, all very nervous and very
much excited.
After much coaxing and bribing,
she was induced to seat herself in tho
chair and open her mouth; but. when¬
ever she saw the dentist bend over her,
snap would come her teeth together,
and no persuasion could make her open
her mouth until tho dentist had re¬
treated a few* feot.
This performance was repeated time
and time again, and at last the dentist
gave up in despair and called in his
lady assistant, a member of tho firm.
She talked to the little girl for a
few moments, and then asked her to
open her mouth. This she did, but
the lady declared that it was only half
open. The little one tried it again
and again, but only found that the
lady ridiculed her the more.
“My dear,” the lady said at length,
“do you know why you cannot open
your mouth very wide? It is because
you keep your eyes open. If you shut
your eyes you can open it twice as
much.”
This idea seemed to please the girl.
She laughed, and, shutting her eyes,
opened her mouth a3 wide as possible.
In an instant the lady bent over her
and extracted the tooth.
A scream, a few “dears” from the
mother and aunts, 50 cents in tho
hand of the dentist, good-byes and all
■V.LV/vG.
“Verily,” sayeth the wise man,
“there are tricks in all trade3.”
Keep the Walls Clean.
Walls and ceilings should be dus¬
ted regularly, using a long handled
wall brush that takes up the dust in¬
stead of merely dislodging it. A cloth
over a common floor broom can be
made to answer. At least twice a year
the walls should be wiped carefully
with slices of fresh bread. Hard fin¬
ished walls can be washed, but they
aro cold and glaring to look at usually,
and the papered walls can be kept
clean with care and make more pleas¬
ing backgrounds. New paper should
always be put on over clean walls, not
over other old paper. A room that
has been occupied by one ill with a
contagious disease should be disinfec¬
ted and should have the walls and
ceiling renewed before it is again oc¬
cupied .—Sanitary Journal.
Morphine if* 20 Habit DAYS. Cured
NO SUFFERING, Nor any Money
Not Required In Advance. SATISFIED.
one cent till CURED and
Come to sae me or write me at once for terms.
- Jk.* SYMS, M. XX,
ATLANTA, <»A., 197 Alexander >St.
~ 1’S
-i
11 ----------- i 1 ^CGRN MILL
HAY PRESS, WATER WHEELS
RFBert and Cheapest.
DeLoach Mill Manufacturing Co.,
850 Highland Avenue, Atlanta, Ga.
i ipNSffif 8 * s^Tonic Pellets.
TR EATM EN T MSiSS
Atal! stores,ur UltOWN by mail urn 25c. double bo*; a double boxes
SI 00 . to.. Now York Gitv.
How Consumption
is Now Cured;
Pamphlet fully describing the Treatment gent Free
on application to
ROBERT HUNTER, M. D.,
117 W est 45th St„ New York.
8 i 1 ftgDQ CURED gS"S£J
ULutno ‘nnynn.
Eiwyn. M. D.. Bex 103, Clarks Green, Lack. Co., Pa.
Felling Trees by Electricity.
Troos aro now felled to a consider¬
able extent l>y electricity. A platinum
wire heated white hot by tho current
is used, stretched between two poles,
as a saw. There is less work than with
a saw, no saw dust is produced, and
the charring of the surface of division
tends to provent decay. In somo cases
the time required to fell a treo by this
method is only one-eighth of that
necessary for sawing.— Electric.
He Was Too Slow.
“What is this I hear about you
folks talking of dismissing your min¬
ister?”
“Oh, he is too slow. We have had
him nerly a year now, and he hasn’t
given us a sermon on Napoleon yet.”
—Indianapolis Journal.
Call St a Craze.
AN ALARMING STATEMENT
CONCERNING WOMEN.
HOW BAD HABITS ARB FORMED.
The New York Tribune says : increasing “ The habit of
taking * headache powders ’ i9 of to an
alarming throughout extent the among country. a great These number powders wo¬
men as
their name indicates, are claimed by the manu¬
facturers form headache. to be a positive In and speedy cure for any
of many cases their chief
ingredient Is morphine, opium, cocaine or soma
other equally injurious The drug habit having of a tendency them
to deaden pain. taking is
easily off. Women formed, usually but almost begin Impossible taking them to shako
to re¬
lieve powder a raging alleviate headache little and soon pain resort ache to the
be to subjected to, any and finally like or the they
may phine fiend, into habit of mor¬
regularly, or opium imagining get the taking
them if they happen to their that regular they dose.” are in paiu
miss
In nine cases out of ten, tlxe trouble is
"lake w h .:i\ h x
laxative and liver tonic and remove the
offending stomach and matter which deranges the
causes the headache. Dr.
Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets are composed
entirely of the purest, concentrated,
dose; vegetable sugar-coated, extracts. One Pellet is a
used, always in favor. easily swallowed;
once tively sick headache They posi¬
cure and remove
the disposition to it.
Mr. E. Vargason, of Otter Lake , Lapeer Co.,
Mich., infrequently writes: b : “I not
ha ve an at
tack of the headacho.
It usually comes on in
the forenoon. At my
dinner I eat my regular
meal, and take one or
two of Doctor Fierce’?
far Jpfrv I diately Pleasant after, Pellets nnd imme¬ lu the
course of an hour my
(. headache is cured ana
no bad effects, I feel
better eve very way for
having- taken tn en?*.
not worse, as is usual
after taking- other kinds
of pills. * Pleasant Pel¬
lets ’ are_ worth more
than their weight in
gold, if for nothing else
R. VARGA30N. Esq. than to cure headache."
W. $3 L 0©U CL AS
SHOE TIT 13 THE FOR A BEST. KING.
Pr £3. CORDOVAN,
|M4. FRENCH &CNAMELLE0 CALF.
ML s 3.5o Fine C/ilf&Kanoaroii
§§? $3.S0 POLICE,3 SOLES.
ik BOYSSCHOOLSHOEI
Wr ^3.« ‘LADIES’
WfaM-'' ? -” 8 *^ongoh.
WM&W- SEND FOR CATALOGUE LAS*
L’DOUG
BROClCTOM,idAS3.
Over One Million People wear tho
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They They give the best value for style the money. fit.
Their equal custom ehoes in unsurpaeaeU. and
The prices wearing uniform,—stamped qualities are sola.
are on
From $i to $3 saved over other tiqdces.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can. '
McEUREES
OF CARDUI.
Jr
%
VS
£
A
A/f£
Ii « P
m
For Female Diseases.
D 0 TO TETTERINE AVOID THIS XTSI353
S u , T I The CC Tetter, HE ont-T forth R e painless worst. 1 y; pe ly and ronab of harmless Kczems, patch
cc Ground *n tho itch, ngnroriD, face, cha:e**, ngiy orufctea roiian chaps, aps, patoa- ucain. pirn- pim
To C Fi™. short Poison all from Irenes. ivy or Send pouon el) c. o%S. in
M LI ‘tamps Savannah, or cash sh to to J. T. Shuptrmo,
Ga,. fer ono box, if your
druggist don't kaep cep it.
I II® Bftl 1^ CDCC To Introduce our goods and to
■ secure local ar.d general agents
two «-e will *«rd one ounce Keel Ink and
of 6c. ounces Black Ink FIIKF. prsrahl. upon receipt
postage. KING HFG. CO„ D 41, Chicago.
WAI n I RT * I * NRWS FREE to LETTER reader* of of thl* value seal
” papery
Ch arU * A. Ua in & C’«„ 40 Wail at, X. T.
» I • Thirteen. W