Newspaper Page Text
• '»■ •
STANDARD
CEDARTOWN, GEORGIA, THURSDAY MORNING, MARCH‘29, 1900.
ELEPHANTS’ TRICKS,
$3,000 CASH PRIZE CONTEST.
THE WILY BADGER*,
How He Rid Himself of a Plafne of
Paul W. Henrich, the real estate
dealer, is also a student of entomology,
natural history and animals in gener
al. He lived down in Nebraska at one
time, where the badgers have v tal;en
the place of the buffalo. One night
Mr. Henrich was explaining the pecul
iarities of the animal and stated by
way of introduction that a genuine
Nebraska badger was sharper than a
politician.
“They have several bright ways of
doing things.” he began. “Perhaps 1
need tell of but one to make their in
telligence plain. Now, if'a badger has
vermin, do you know how he goes
about it to rid himself of them?”
“Scratches ’em off,” said the pro
prietor.
“No, sir; Mr. Badger isn’t fool enougli
for that. Ho just goes to some stream;
then he stands on the bank and reach
es around with his mouth and pulls a
little tuft of hair out of his tail. Now
listen' closely. With that bunch of
hair in his mouth he turns around and
backs slowly down into the river. The
vermin naturally crawl to keep out of
the water and begin to wend their
way toward his neck, and as he dips
himself down deeper into the water
they hasten to his nose and then out
on to the bunch of hair which he boldq
in his mouth. When Mr. Badger finds
that they are all out on that little tuft,
he opens his mouth and lets the cur
rent drift it down stream. Then he
crawls out on laud again, shakes him
self and laughs, while he listens to
the vermin floating away, singing *A
Life on the Ocean Wave.’ ’’—Denver
Times.
A Modest Hero.
Not long ago a French ehroniqueur—
Montmirail of the Paris Gaulois—en
countered in a little village of the south
of France a gardener who wore, pin
ned on Ills clean Sunday blouse, the
ribbon of the Legion of Honor. Nat
urally, the newspaper man desired to
know how lie got it. The gardener,
who, like many of his trade, seemed to
be a silent man, was averse to meeting
an old and wearisome demand, but
finally lie began:
“Oh, I don't know how 1 did get it!
I was at Bazeilies with the rest of the
battery: All the officers were killed,
then down went all the noncommis
sioned officers. Bang! bang! bang! By
and by all the soldiers were down but
me. I had fired the’ last shot and nat
urally was doing what I could to stand
off the Bavarians.
“Weil, a general came, and says be,
‘Where's your officers?’
” ‘AH down,’ says I.
“ ‘Where’s your gunners?’ says he.
“ ‘AH down but.me.’ says I.
“‘And you’ve been fighting here all
alone?’ says be.
“ ‘I couldn’t let ’em come arid get the
guns, could I ?’ I says. And then he up
and put iliis ribbon on me, probably
because there was nobody else there to
put it on.”
Mrs. H. T. Salisbury, of rr
Follett Street, Pawtucket, R. I.,
says:
“About eight years ago, I was
taken with nervous prostration'
which was followed by a partial
paralysis of the lower limbs. The
doctor called- it locomotor ataxia.
I could not direct my steps, and I
would often fall down. I tried
many remedies but was not bene
fited until I began taking Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale
People.
Several doctors had told me that
there was no cure for my trouble,
. but my improvement continued
and I took the pills steadily for
two years. At the end of that
time I had regained full control of
my limbs. The pain left me and
Las never returned. ”
Mrs. H. T. Salisbury,
Subscribed and sworn to before
me this 2rst day of August, r8g9.
Carlos L. Rogers,
Notary Public.
HOW THE AWKWARD ANIMALS ARE
TAUGHT TO PERFORM. _
Atlanta Constitution's Great Offer of 1900—The Cotton Re
ceipts at New Orleans from September to April—Full Statis
tics Given for Your Guidance—An Unparalelled Offer for Our
Readers.
Some Are Too Dull to Learn Any-
thing, Wliile Olliers Are Quick to
Cntch an Idea — Forcible Method*
Used In Tlicir Training:.
“Scores of people ask mo everyday,’'
said Keeper Snyder of the elephant
house in,Central park recently, “how
anything so stupid' looking and thick
skinned as an elephant can be tanght
anything. 1 tell them all that elephants
are not rinlike children Some are too
dull to learn anything, and others can
catch an idea qnicfly Tom. " be went
on. pointing to the large elephant who
was busily engaged in throwing hay on
his back. • ‘although irascible in disposi
tion. is quite intelligent. The first trick
I taught him was to lie down This
was not so easy to accomplish as it
might seem, for it-took a block arid fall
at front and rear, with a gang of 15 or
20 men at each end. I stood at one
side, and as I said ‘Get down I’ his feet
were drawn ont from under fiim This
had to bo repeated only a few times be-
• 0 quanta Constitution offers a 0.000
contes t for January. February
i nd March, 1900, as follows:
To I he nerson sending a yearly sub.
c-rlpflon to The Weekly Constitution. £
• with the correct estimate on the
ottan receipts, at New Orleans during
ne seven months ol the present
■"iWOt— Car <So,ltember L to April
$1,500 If estimate Is received durin-
urinary. **
$1,000 if estimate Is received during
Instantly Mr. Hardy stepped up between the
two men before Burns could rise.
fore he learned what ‘Get down’ meant
for him
“To. teach him to stand on his hind
feet and on his head a block and fall on
a beam over his head, a snatch block
and two‘dead men’ in the floor and the
services of another elephant were all
Dr. Williams* Pink Pills for Pale People
contain, in a condensed form, all the ele
ments necessary to give new life and richness
to the blood and restore shattered nerves.
They are an unfailing specific for such dis
eases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis,
St. Vitus* dan:e, sciatica, neuralgia rheu
matism, nervous headache, the after-effects of
la grippe, palpitation of the heart, pale and
sallow complexions, all forms of weakness
either in male or female.
Rev. Charles M. Sheldon
Author of
“IN HIS STEPS"
Chester field's Wit.
Lord Chesterfield was never at a loss
for a polite retort Once he proposed a
person as proper to fill a place of-great
trust but which the king himself was
determined should be filled by another.
The council, however, resolved not to
indulge the king, for fear of a danger
ous precedent, and it was Lord Ches
terfield’s business to present the grant
of office for the king’s signature. Not
to incense his majesty by asking him
abruptly, he, with accents of great hu
mility, begged to know with whose
name bis majesty would be pleased to
have the blanks filled up.
‘‘With the devil’s!” replied the king
in a paroxysm of rage.
“And shall the instrument,” said the
earl coolly, “rumas usual, ‘Our trusty
and well beloved cousin and coun
selor?’ ” At this repartee the king
threaten and beset the masses. Its com
plete expose of the methods of Nfcill. ni
New Orleans, and the shattering of the
influence of this prophet of big cotter
crops, and apostle of ruinously low prfees
and high priest of robbery, who has co<=?
the southern farmers hundreds of million^
of dollars, ought to 'win for The Consti
tution the lasting gratitude of the tyIvI,-
south. The advice to farmers to organ
ize against the trust that would Increase
the price of fertilizers and fertilizer ma
terials lor the home compost heap, ami
taking up the cudgel in behalf of the
farmers against the combination that
would put a fresh burden upon them. Is
sound and valid, and ought to be heeded.
The bulwark of the people's rights and
the best method of defense will often be
found In a great paper, ably and fearless
ly edited, upon which the people may roly,
not only for news of the ordinary events
of government, army and political life,
but also for an alert foresight of the trend
of future events that may operate to our
lasting damege. The downfall of Neill;
the breaking down of the fertilizer trust:
the upbuilding of all southern interests,
and the enlightenment of every village,
farm and mountain Home are among The
Constitution's many high aims and great
Ideas for 1900. That these interests may
all be well served, and with the same un
swerving fidelity to the people that Th.^
Constitution-has always shown, goes
without saying.
The management of The Constitution,
with Mr. Clark Howell as editor-in chief,
and his well disciplined corps of staff
writers, brilliant contributors and special
correspondents, still under the faithful
leadership of Colonel William A. Hemp
hill as business manager, will remain the
same for the new year. The Constir^r-
tion’s long and honorable business courre.
keeping faith with the people in all its
contracts, contests and engagements, as
well as In its consistent and conspicuous
editorial fairness, places it among those
reliable institutions of our country 0:1
which the people may depend.
With such a great general newspaper,
covering the world news and world an<l
national questions, you will, of course,
need the best and livest local paper, giv
ing current local topics and the latest
and best news and freshest comments
upon events of local interest. We trust
this combinat on secured with .The Con
stitution will be found Lest suited to all
our readers. The price ?s merely nominal
when the service Is even half considered,
including your estimate in The Constitu
tion’s $3,000 cash contest.«• To g-.-t the full
benefit of the high prize sen . In your
subscription now so The Constitu'h.n may
receive it during January and record it
to your credit. Make- your hgu:es veo
plain, unmistakably plain.
We take great pleasure in announcing
that we have secured the serial rights for
one.of the best stories yet written by file
author of “in His Steps” and that it
will be published in these columns soon.
The above picture illustrates one of the
many stirring and dramatic incidents.
It is as fascinating as “ In His Steps,” a
book that has had more readers than any
book published in many years.
-Tom’s front feet went np, while his
hind feet were chained together When
I said ‘Stand on your head!' his front
feet.-which had been pn-vionsly chain
ed. remained on the floor, while his
hind feet were drawn up until they al
most literally ‘kicked the beam '
“These ^vere his first lessons. When
he learned todrill to ‘right aborit. face,'
and ‘left about, face. I stood on one
side of him arid another man on the
other, and we each had a prod. As 1
commanded ‘Right abont. face!’ he was
pnsbed over to the right, and ‘Left
about, facal’ he was prodded in that
direction I tanght him to waltz in
much the same way. only as wo pushed
him back and forth we made him go
cleay around, and now he is one of the
best waltzers in the country. He learn
ed to ring the bell and fan himself in
one lesson. Both reqnire the same mo
tion, and they are really the same trick,
although people never think of that
Yes, he knows which is which and
never picks up the fan or napkin when
I tell him to ring the bell. I only had
to put each, one at a time, in his trnnk.
and with the fan and bell 1 shook it
and with the napkin wiped first, one
side of his month and then the .other.
He took to hand organ grinding like a
Mulberry street Italian It is one of his
favorite tricks
“The elephant is the only animal
whose legs all bend the same way His
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People are never
sold by the dozen or hundred, but always in pack
ages. At all druggists, or direct from the Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N; Y., 60
cents per box, 6 boxes $2.50.
HIS HEAD LIKES THE HEAT.
But tlie Xesrro Always Tries to Keep
HJs Heels Cool.
It has ofteu been said that the ca
pacity of the negro race for enduring
heat has never been fully teSted. An
Incident related by a dairyman living
on the outskirts of .the City seems to
bear out tiffs assertion.
This dairyman has a young negro
boy who looks after the cattle and
does chores around the place. IChg^ on
ly effect that the heat produces rahls
ease Is a desire to slumber. The dairy
man had a young calf in the barnyard,
and as the sun was pouring in on the
poor animal his wife sent “Carlina”
out to turn the calf loose, so that he
could seek a shady spot. After wait
ing an hour for his return the house
wife went to the barnyard to investi
gate. There she found both boy and
calf curled up In the hot and stifling
barnyard. The calf was dead from
the effects of the sun, but the boy was
slumbering peacefully by its side.
While a negro can stand any amount
.of heat on his head he loves to cool his
heels. It is a cominon sight -in the
wiriter to see a negro boy on a frosty
morning with his head bundled np to
keep out the cold and at'tbe same time
walking unconcernedly along the
frosty ground in his bare feet. One of
the hottest places in the city on a hot
day is at-the lumber wharfs of the
Florida Central and Peninsular rail
road. When the men knock off for
noon, they frequently take a nap with
their faces upturned to the rays of the
blazing .j£iiu. At the same time they
•get ; tlielr feet under the shadow of
some friendly lumber pile.—Florida
TImes-Union.
Buy a Wheel!
HiN=And wliile yon are Buying',-s#=^
BuyaGoodOne!
BE SURE TO READ IT
"> London Word Butchers.
Time is required by an American ear
to accustom itself to English “as she
is spoke" In London. The cockney who
had no difficulty of corrupting the Nor
man French, making Route de Roy
“Rotten row” and Marie le Bon “Ma-
rylebone” and Beauchamp, who was
one of the principal lieutenants of the
Pnllimhiacf There is no Bicycle any better than the
UUllllflUIdu l celebrated Columbia. The price of this
splendid wheel has recently been reduced from Sioo to $50.
Uartfnrric I Hart( ° rd does not cost $50, tut- is the
ilulllUlliUl equal of any $50 wheel offered by other
manufjfcturers. Our price, only $35.
UQlidftQO J These are good cheap wheels; nothing better
VtiUCilGOl for the money, only $25.
-<^~These wheels are manufactured by the Pope M’fg Cc..
the World’s Leading Bicycle Makers. Call on
to every elderly woman when an im
portant functional change takes place.
This is called “The Change of Life.”
The entire system undergoes a change.
Dreadful diseases such as cancer and
consumption are often contracted at
Vim& ofGardui
At The STANDARD Office, Cedartown.
The Way Ont.
“So you refuse to give me the mon
ey?” said the prodigal son.
“Not another cent do you get,” re
plied the stern parent
“Then here goes,” said the youth as
he seized a silver mounted pistol from
"his father’s desk.
“Unhappy boy!” cried the old man,
“would you take your life?”
“No," replied the son, “I’m going to
loan this to my ‘uncle.’ ’’—Chicago
News. ~
strengthens and purifies the entire
system, and brings the sufferer safely
over these pitfalls. Its effects have
been wonderful. It is good for all
menstrual troubles, but is especially
recommended at tills time. Ask
your druggist for the famous Wine of
Cardui. § r.00 a bottle.
For advice in cases requiring special
directions, address the “Ladies’Ad
visory Department,” The Chatta
nooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga,
Tenn.
THOMAS J. COOPER, Tupelo, Mis,.,
says ‘‘My sister suffered from irregular and
painful menstruation and doctors could not
relieve her. Wine of Cardui entirely cured
her, and also helped my mother through the
Change of Life.”
to make, for you, a dozen FINE
PHOTOGRAPHS.
Condsns d Schedule in EHec. November
No. 19 stations. ~
0 30am
P.35arn
10.2 Jam
•1. :25 pm
...Birmingham...
.Birmingham Jet.
Selma
Mobile.
A Live lit rd on ner Hat.
One Chicago girl’s hat made a sensa
tion in the women’s lunchroom at the
Auditorium yesterday. She came in
from Michigan avenue and stopped for
a moment in tlie parlor. While there
she noticed a young sparrow flutter in
through the open window and wheel
once or twice around the room. She
felt It brush against her hat in its
flight, but thought no more of it and
passed on into the lunchroom. She had
picked up the bill of fare and was
reading it when she felt that some one
was* watching her. and, glancing
around, she discovered that she was a
focusing point for all the eyes in the
immediate vicinity.
Of course she blushed aud colored up
and began to wonder at the cause of,
the people’s interest. Just tlifcn. the
waiter, who had been hovering around,
noticed her confusion and. bending
down, whispered. “Palidon me, miss,
but dab’s a live build on yo’ hat.”
And then instead of going into hys
terics she calmly said: “Thank you.
Will you please shoo it off?”
And the waiter “shooed” the sparrow
toward a nearby window, while the
owner of the hat tixed it * on straight
and proceeded; to order her luncheon.
—Chicago News. \ v V
Your orders for excellent Cray
on Portraits,size, 10x*20 Inches
at
5.30am
6.15am
lv..Akron. ..ar
..Greensboro...
Marion.
.. .Marion Jet.,
ar... Selma. ..lv
2.15pm
3.45pm
4:45pm
6.00 m
7.40am
8.25am
lv.New OT;
7.30pm
5.00am
5.45am
6.40am
7.2!am
7.53am
8.35am
8.45am
10.33am
10.48am
11.1 lam
11.47am
12.50pm
1.27pm
1.40pm
2.03 pm
2.23pm
3.10pm
3.45pm
UUgpm
lv..Meridian.a r
York.
...Demopolis...
ar..Unlont’n.lv
...Marion Jet..
Sf Selma £
...Montevallo..
Calera
..Columbiana..
..Childersburg.
...Talladega...
... .Oxford.....
....Anniston...
..Jacksonville..
... Piedmont...
..Cave Springs..
Rome.....
ar..Atlanta..lv
7.50pm
7.00pm
6.03pm
5.20pm
4.51pm
4.25pm
4.15pm
2.25pm
2.12pm
1.48pm
12.57pm
12 15pm
11.39am
11.25am
11.04am
10.43am
10.00am
9.25am
5.3 Jam
(These are the kind I lie agents
sellat$1.9S.)
I Make Frames, All Sizes and
Price.
The difference between a judge and a
lawyer is that the judge charges the
jury and the law3 er charges his client.
CASTORIA.
Bears the The Kind You Have Always Bought
Signature
COIV1E TO THE
Sg 3.15pm
5.05 pm
10.22am
8.32am
Indeed you would be cruel to let your
sweet, helpless baby suffer with Colic
or Pain in Stomach or Bowels when
there is such a pleasant, safe and
there is such a pleasant, safe and re
liable Remedy to be obtained so easily.
Your druggist will sell you a bottle of
T>r. Tichenor’s Antiseptic for o0c.
CHATTANOOGA, TENN.
OFFERS
THE STANDARD,
v...Binn’ham. .ar
....Pell City
... .Anniston
... ..Oxford
Heflin ......
..EdwardsvUle...
...Fruithurst..,.
. ..Tallapoosa....
... ..Bremen.....:
..Douglasville...
.Lithia Springs..
ir.... Atlanta....lv
American ™
Agriculturist
By special arrangement with tlie publishers,
we are enabled to offer the American Agricpo-
tTtrist, tlie leading agricultural weekly of
the Middle States, in club with this paper, at an
exceedingly low figure. The American Agricul
turist is remarkable for the variety and interest
of its contents, and is undoubtedly tlie best and
The Prizes .are to be given for making tlie
largest number of different correct Fnghsh
words out of the letters which form the names of
SCHLEY-WHEELER-LEE
Combine the^e names together. ITse a letter
in any oue word formed only as often as ft occurs,
in these names.
To the one who makes the best list will he
given S50 CASH.
For the next best list a 545 Sewing Machine.
For the next best list a <25 Gold Watch.
For the next best list a S15 Fine Man’s Saddle.
For the next best list a $to Good corn Sheller.
Then $355 cash has been set aside to provide
valuable Book Prizes for all who fail to secure
either of the above Prizes, but who make as
majiv as only three words from the names. Say
which Book Prize you want at the time you send
in you*- list, (cannot get it later.
Almost any one can make three simple words
and claim a valuable Book Prize.
No hlauks! Prizes for t very contestant,
contest closes March 31,1900. All prizes scut
out at this time. - ' -
The. Prizes for Only Throe Words :
II 17 One Vol. Practical Poultry Keener.
H 16 One Vol. ’ Horse and Cattle Doctor.
H 15 One Vol. Business Education at Home.
II -9 One Vol. Family Doctor Book.
II 60 l ne. Vol. Art of Letter: Writing.
H 45 Oue Vo . Everybodi-’s Law Book.
H 5 One Vol. American Cook Book.
H 59 One Vol. Etiquette of Courtship.
H 57 Oue Vol. How Women May Enni Money.
H 51 One Vol. Cart Load of Fun. (Humorous)
H 7 One Vol. Mrs. Partington's Grab Bag.
(Humorous)
II 23 One Vol. Widder Doodle’s. Love Affair.
X Humorous)
Lv Birmir.gham.
Lv Anniston.....
Lv Atlanta
Ar Macon
Ar Jesup.
Ar Jacksonville.
4.40pm 6.00am
6.57pm a 10am
I0.45pm 12.05pm
12.55am 2.25pm
5.20am 0.50pm
& 30am 10.0 pm
5 35am 7.iomn
7.30amj 8.43; m
No 36 carries elegant'Pullman Drawing Roi.m
Buffet Sleeping car Birmingham to Jackson
ville, and Atlanta to Brunswick —
No. 38 carries Pullman Sleeping car Birm
ingham to Atlanta and Atlanta to Jacksonville
Good He-Didn't Accept.
During the second Dreyfus court
martial. M. Que.suay de Beaurepaire,
ex-president of tbt* civil section of tlie
coin* de cassation, who. was bitter
against the accused captain, received,
a very polite letter dated from the
Chateau de Prefargier. near Neu-
chateb in Switzerland; aud signed,
“A de Prefargier,” praising him for
his efforts iu the Dreyfus case and in
viting him to come and stay at the
writer’s residence.
M. de Beaurepaire replied in his
usual flowery style, saying he would
continue the struggle as long as he had
strength, and that lie would remain at
the breach like a valiant soldier to set
an example of duty to God and the
fatherland, even should lie stand alone,
lie did not positively decline tlie invi
tation. holding out hopes that some day
he might be free to accept it.
Tlie Chateau de Prefargier is the
lunatic asylum for Neuclmtel.—St.
Paul's Budget. Y rV i 7
ing, Horticulture, Poultry, Market Gar-
timing, and other topics, written by practi*
cal and successful farmers, supplemented
with illustrations by able artists, combine
t6 make it invaluable to those who “farm it
for a living.” The latest Markets and
Commercial Agriculture are features in
■which The Agriculturist is unexcelled.
"Lv Jesup.
Not His Style.
“A musician out of work, are you?”
said the housekeeper’ ‘‘Well, you’ll
find a few cords in the woodshed. Suj>-
pose you favor me with an obligato.”
“Pardon the- pronunciation, madam,”
replied Peripatetic Padroosky. “but
Chopin is not popular with me.”-~Cath-
olic Standard and Times.
THE FAMILY FEATURES: r “T-
esTf'asluonSTTancyirorCr The Good
Cook; Puzzle Contests, Library Corner,
and Young Folks' Page combine to make
this Department of as much value and inter
est as most of the Special Family Papers.
Lv Borne.........
Lv Knoxville. ..
Ar. Morristown...
ArHot Springs! .
Ar Asheville
Ar Salisbury
Ar Greensboro..
2.25am
4. Guam
5.10am
9.30am
liOGnra
3.23 pm
5.10pm
We bring to you the new. and true from the piney
forests of Norway—
.(Tent Time),
(East Time).
Ar Goldsboro.
Ar Washington.
Ar New York....
All sending their subscriptions nnder om
flubbing offer, are presented, postpaid, with
-he American Agriculturist Year Book
mil Almanac, for 1900. This great book Is a
Cyclopedia of Progress and Events of tlie
Worhf, a Guide to Markets, Marketing, and
Prices.
No. 15 carries Pullman Sleeping car Rome to
'Chattanooga. Chattanooga to Salisbury and
Salisbury to New York without change.
Tae Opportunity.
“Bilkins got mareied rather suddenly,
didn’t he?” •' l
“Yes. Somebody gave him a railroad
pass to New York good-for two, and
In* didn’t want to waste it.”—Cleveland
Plain Dealer.
6.25pm
8.40pm
7.45am
7.50am
Lv Rome
Ar Chattanooga.
Ar Cincinnati...
Ar Louisville.
A year's subscription to The Weekly Times
(only 50 cents) must be sent with each . list of
words. . . .
Send vour word* to this office, together' w lb
$1.50 and we will send you our paper one year
•and The Weekly Ti es, one year and all<?w you
to enter the contest. Renewals same as new
subscribers.
The Weekly-Times wants an active agent or
dub raiser at everv Dostoffice. Write for par
ticulars.
No. 9 Pullman Sleeping car Rome to Cincin
nati and Chattanooga to Louisville.
Nature’s most natural remedy, improved by science to
a PLEASANT, PERMANENT, POSITIVE CURE for
coughs, colds and all inflamed surfaces of the Lungs
and Bronchial Tubes. The sore, weary, cough-wom
Lungs are exhilarated; the microbe-bearing mucus is
cut out; the cause of that tickling is removed, and
the intlamed membranes are healed and soothed so
that there is no inclination to cough.
^STATIONS.
Lv Atlanta 12.00n n 11.50pm
A.r Charlotte si- 8.13pm 9.10am
Ar Danville 11.5<>’>in 1.22pm
Ar Lynchburg....... 2.00am '3.25pm
Ar Charlottesville.... 3.35am 5.28pin
Ar "Washington 6.42ain 9.l'5pm
Ar Baltimore 8.00am 11.35pm ;
Ar Philadelphia. 10.15am 2.56am
Ar New Vi.rk 12.43pm 6.13am
No. 38 “Washington and Southwestern Lim
ited” Solid Pullman Vestibule train Atlanta to
New York, carrying Pullman Sleeping car
■ to N’-w York. Dining car Atlanta to
9 O risfioro and Washington to New York.
) C/ w n Library Observation car Atlanta to
When a naan is missing, every one’s
first impulse is to count tlie women
left in town to see if one is short.—
Ateliison Olobe.
Iu Cuba the kitchens are always on
the roof or iu the courtyards back of
the bouse. Only-twice a day does the
Cuban housewife or servant prepare
meals—at 10 o’clock, when she enters
the kitchen to make ready 11 o’clock
breakfast, and at G o’clock to cook the
diuner. which is served at S.
It is a treasury of Statistics, revised to date, for
Farm or Home, aud Office or Factory. A Refer
ence Work on Every Subject Pertaining to Agri
culture, Industry, Commerce, and 31arkets; Put>
iic Affairs, Ecouomics, and Politics; Household
Education, Religion, and Society. It is also an
Almanac of Calendars, the Weather, Astro
nomical Data, Hints for Each Month, Dates, etc.
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
EirA SAMPLE COPY
Agriculturist,
magazine form, will be mailed to you by address
ing the AMERICAN AGRICULTURIST, New York
ThoMf l.ovinic Girls.
Tody—.Yennt«» n»lls me young Woodby
proposed to her last uight.
Viola—I don’t think T know him. Is
he well off?
Tody—He certainly is. She refused
him.—Chicago News.
•arries Pullman Drawing room Sleep-
'flanta to New York, and Dining car
>10 Washington.
k \ally Except Sunday. §Sunday only.
O 9N. 3d v.p. & g.M. Washington.D.C.
7raf Mgr. Washington, D. C.
_XJ. P. A., Washington. D. C.
I.ER. A.o.P.A..Chattanooga.Tenn-
Our SPECIAL Offer
SOLD BY ALL GOOD DRUGGISTS.
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A pattern woman—the dress-mater.
I AM 8S YEARS OLD, and never used anv rem
edy equal to Dr. Bell’s Pine-Tar-Honey. It gives
quick and permanent relief In grip as well as coughs
and colds. It makes weak lungs strong.
-Mrs. M. A. Metcalfe, Paducah, Ky.
Be sure you get Dr. Bell’s PINE-TAR-HONEY.
: When yon get hnrt apply Dr. Tiebe-
' nor’s Antiseptic. It will do the rest,
irth Your druggist will take pleasure in sell-
\ ing you a bottle for 50c.
CEDABTOWN, <\A
Opposite Pace’s f,ivory Stable, \V
Main Street
’S Clubbing List ^
>er or magazine yt
nr subscription.