Newspaper Page Text
mm
Time was wnen Cancer was considered as incurable as 1
Physicians and friends could give little relief or encour at , f . lepros . v -
one afflicted with this terrible disease. Even now doctors 8 > ent to
a blood disease, they still insist that there is no hope outsii) f W of
but at the same time cannot assure you that it will not re f u °‘ a su -s‘>-«i operation, auu auvisc you 10 nave uie cancer
its place, for the disease is in the blood is deep-seated , ^' ou may cut or draw out the sore, but another will come in
caustic, flesh-destroying plasters. The blood must be purifia ( t uctive, and beyond the reach of the surgeon’s knife or
moffpr hpfnrp the Cancer sore will hcfll. ^ 3nd sfrf*tirrtiu*tiAi1 tli*» cvufAtit miiouri nf nil
ho remedy for this fearful malady ; while admitting it to be
.L mere is no nope outside f 01 ,10 . r ^n „
you that it will not retinL a s “. r £* ca l operation, and advise you to have tlie Cance/cut out,
A JAPANESE
THE DISTASTEFUL FOOD
. SERVED AND EATEN.
"ThB ‘
COLLARD VALLEY DOTS.
matter before the Cancer sore will heal. moaned and strengthened, the system relieved of all poisonous, effete
S. S. S. is the only medicine that can overcome this po • rf
s up and invigorates the old, and supplies new, rich lif* ^- an< * contaminating poison and force it out of the blood It
found in it; the roots and herbs from which it’i 3 blood. S. S. S. is a purely vegetable remedy ; no mineral
system and make a safe and pemanent cure of o e conta * n powerful purifying properties that act directly upon
r j^^ahv^^inhentetl; your family may be free f r ' _ancer ’ ?t has cured thousands, why not you ?
■»— om an y taint, yet your blood may become so polluted that a severe
'g%nn anti stu hborn form of the disease may
****** ***^*m%5^5 ■ develop from a sore or ulcer on your tongue
—'** or other part of your body ; a slight bruise
small lump on the jaw or breast, a harmless or hurt, a little pimple on the eyelid, lip
. TP «» iwmnsr wart — -T- —7-0---* .
Squatting: Before Table* Six Inches
High, One Wrestles With Chop-
■tick* and Tiny Bowls, the While
Waited Ipon by Barefooted Maids.
When boats
And winter’s sunli
When green and ji
And hides the
Each night fa
Of pale, wan light i
Across the peaceful
And marks the lighuh)v
du:-k creeps down
d the town.
When, tempest tossed, tl. \ships slip by
The foam hid headland, an./the sky
Tittle or no attention! If you have an obstinate sore don*? 1 * 1 *} Wart or mo * e » au< ^ ot her causes so insignificant as to attract
• at once; it will cleanse your blood and prevent the format; y U P° n saIves or ointments to cure it —begin with S. S. S.
Mrs. R. ghirer, ka Plata, Mo., writes: “ A small pimple came on mv ^ °u CailCerouS cells ’
ear on the left side of my face. At first it gave me no trouble, and I didnniK
until the jaw began to swell and became much inflamed. At the same 11
rvthlwcr t " . “fuethes
e intense
:of S. S.S..
d sign of the disease. This
s anything serious
bottleo or * 0111 n °tbing did me any
; two years ago, and I am still . ^ucer healed, and there
- - tlU fvjoymg perfect health.'
Send for our special book on Cancer; ^contains much info™*
• frpr information that will interest
have
ever for this.
Write our physicians about your case, and for any advice or info™,*:,, . ,
b made a life study of Cancer and all blood disease, O ™ omi , atlo '> wanted ; they
• We make no charge what- .
Address, THE SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, ATLANTA. GA.
Kodoi
Dyspepsia Cure.
Digests what you eat.
It artificially digests the food and aids
Nature in strengthening and recon
structing the exhausted digestive or
gans. It is the latest discovered digest-
ant and tonic. No other preparation
can approach it in efficiency. It in-1
stantly relieves and permanently cures
Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,
Flatulence, Sour Stomach,. Nausea,
SickHeadache, Gastralgia, Cramps, and
all other results of imperfect di gestion.
Prepared by E. C. DsWitt A Co-* Chicago*
E. BRADFORD.
Democratic Ticket.
For President,
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN.
For Vice President,
\ ADLAI E. STEVENSON.
, For Governor,
Allen n. candler.
For Secretary of State,
PHIL COOK.
For Comptroller General,
WM. A. WRIGHT.
For Treasurer,
• ROBERT E. PARK.
For Attorney General,
JOSEPH M. TERRELL.
For Commissioner of Agricultnr
0. B. STEVENS.
For School Commissioner,
G.R. GLENN.
Fob Prison Commissioners,
-
0. A. EVANS,
The Poisonous Pineapple.
“It Is a notorious fact." says The Na
tional Druggist, “that the pineapple is
considered the least healthy of all the
edible fruits of the tropics by those
who know anything of the matter. The
juice of the green and growing plant
is credited in Java, the Philippines and
throughout the far east generally with
being a. blood poison of a most deadly
nature. It is said to be the substance
with which the Malays poison their
krisbes and daggers and is also credit
ed with being the ‘finger nail poison’
formerly in use among aboriginal Jav
anese women almost universally.
These women formerly (or some thir
ty odd years ago), and possibly do yet,
cultivated a nail, sometimes more, on
each hand, to a long, sharp point, and
the least scratch from one of these
was certain death.”
To an American given to stiff joints
and corpulency a Japanese dinner is a
tedious experience, especially when
he’s used to business lunches and the
like. But it is worth trial and dis
comfiture if one is fortunate enough
to be the guest of a rich man, for in
Japan hospitality-is one of the cardinal
virtues.
Western customs and usages have
found their way into many, homes of
the wealthy, whose dinners and
lunches are the counterpart of those
with which' we are all familiar. But a
real Japanese dinner, including chop
sticks, lacquer trays and tiny eups, is
a thing never to be forgotten.
Japanese houses are .made up of'slid-
ing screens instead of our solid parti
tions and. in summer are all leftopen, so
that, seated at dinner, one looks out
over the -gardens, seeing the lights of
the .city in -the distance, and the scent
of a thousand flowers blows in with
every breath of air. _
The guests remove .their shoes on
entering the house and.-except when
provided with a pair of cotton - over
shoes, must spend the evening in
stocking feet unless happily the host
has an extra pair.'‘The wife of a Jap
anese gentleman does not preside, at
his table unless there are ladies in the
party, but appears with the tea-and
sweetmeats, which always precede a
dinner, as do our cocktails and sherry,
etc. She merely greets the-guests and
appears again cniy when the goodbys
are said.
Silken cushions are scattered about
the floor and the guesly are arranged
according to
la torn with wrack of scmijn'i- cloud.
And winds of winter cry aloud,
Lo, through the roar of crashing wave,
Above the tempest’s moan and rave,
A voice comes o’er the troubled tide3
.And marks where yet tire lightship rides!
—Richard Stillman Powell in Criterion,
Knew the House.
Citizen—Ofi’sher, can yon (hie)' tell
ine where L(hic) live? I’m (hie) Sen
ator Bigboddy, you know.
Officer—What’s yer cook’s name?
Citizen—Mary Ann (hie) O’Brady.
Officer—Four blocks down and two
jloors to yer right.—Judge.
Metals get tired as well as living be
ings. Telegraph wires are better con
ductors on Monday than on Saturday
on account of their Sunday rest, and a
rest of three weeks adds if) per cent to
the conductivity of a wire.
Want of care does us more damage
than want of knowledge.
“Sweet Beils Jangled
Out of Tune and Harsh.
swnet dispositions are gone, and they, like
th« bells, seem sadly out of tune. But
thd *e is a remedy. They can use
McELREE’S
Wine of Cardui
brings health to the womanly:
organism, and health there means
well poised nerves, calnmess, strength.
It restores womanly vigor and power.
It tones up the nerves which suiler-
ing and disease have shattered. It is
thi most perfect remedy ever devised
to restore weak women to perfect I
heulth, ami to make them attractive
and happy. £1.00 at all druggists.
Tor advice in cases requiring spec
ial directions, address, giving symp
toms, /‘The Ladies’ Advisory De
partment,*’ The Chattanooga Medi
cine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn.
W ’ SMITH, Camden, S. C. f
fay*’— My wife used Wine of Cardui at home
for falling ot the womb and it entirely cured
J2i.AS50.hu
For Associate Justices Supreme Court'
W. A. LITTLE,
y H. T. LEWIS.
She Wns Heady.
He (describing his jonrneyingsi—
Then, leaving Gibraltar,
way to Australia, and
went to the diamond mines 1
Africa, where i made my
Then—do y'>u follow me,
kle?
are, of course,
and ceremony,
inches
and barefo
Chamber! aid's Cough Remedy a
Great Favorite.
. The soothing and healing properties
of this remedy, its pleasant taste and
prompt and permanent cures have made
it a great favorite with people every
where. It is especially prized by
mothers of small children f «r * colds
and whooping cough,as it always affords
qnick relief,and as it contains no.opinm
or other harmful drag, it may be given
as confidently to a baby as to
adult. For sale by E. Bradford.'
If wishes.were horses beggars would
growl because they were not automo
biles.
most dainty and effective pills
“ DeWitt’s Little Early Risers.
>iequaled for all liver and
"ever gripe. E. Brad-
blush)—To the
world’s end, Mr. Roeksworthy!—Chi
cago Tribune.
For United States Senator,
A. O. BACON. -
For Representative in 57th Congress,
JOHN W. MADDOX.
For State Senator,
W. E. SPINKS.
Wliere tlie Blame Lies.
“No woman." he said in his superior
! masculine way, “can sharpen a lead
: pencil.”
- “Well,” she said, “do yon know
where the blame lies?”
“No; - Where?”
“With the pencil, of course. Woman
was invented first, wasn’t she?”—Chi
cago Post.
PROCLAMATION-
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
Condensed Schedule in Effect May 6,1900,
•No. 22
7.00pm
1.00am
6.30am
9.45 am
1,10pm
6.45pm
150am
6 42am
12.43pm
STATIONS.
lv.. Mobile..ar
lv...Selma ..lv
arBirm’ham lv
ar Chat’n’galv
ar Knoxville lv
ar.. Brlstol..lv
ar Lynch b’rglv
ar, W’sh’gt’n lv
r. .N. York..lv
10.10pm
4.20pm
0.30am
*No.2i;
7.30am
1.55am
10.20pm
0.10pm
2.10pm
9.50am
3 00am
9 50pm
3.2'tpm
Ctott£
tuning car serves
nooga and New York,
meals en route
No. *18
p m
lv.. .Blrm’ham.. ar
.....Pell City
.... -Anniston.....
.......Heflin .... .
. . ..Edwardsville...
8.07 ....Pniithurst.. £
fi --.Tallapoosa....
......Bremen.
...Douglasville...
..Lithia Springs.,
ar... .Atlanta. ...lv
Lv Birmingham. ~
Lv Anniston
Lv Atlanta..... ....*.*!.*'****
Ar Macon.......-
Ar Jesup
Ar Jacksonville.'.
Ar Brunswick.. ^
4.40pm
6.57pm
10.45pm
No. 38
6.00am
8.10am
12.05pm
2.25pm
6.50pm
10.00pm
8.35pm
Lv Home. —
Ar Chattanooga,
Ar Knoxville. .......V/**** ********'***
Ar Hot Swinno •••••••••—••**
i
Jfcli:
rsal
r Asheville.?.. ..*” 1
r Salisbury (CehtTime)“"“'""
r:GreenSbora. i
No. In ,
l loam
4.00am
5.15am
9.40am '
|S^^^^| h alUbur y ana
v Chattanooga
Ar Cincinnati ' ** "
Ar Louisville
10 00am 9.00pm
7.30pmI 7.45am
7.40pm | 7.5Jam
.2 Pullman Sleeper Chattanboge to-Cin-
State of Georgia.
' - Executive Office, Atlanta.
Siibniitting constitutional amend men t
regarding pensions lor the widows oi
Confederate soldiers to a voteot the peo
ple kt the next general election.
Whereas, The general assembly’ of 1899
passed by a constitutional majority the
following act, to-wit:
“An act to 'amend section 1, article 7
paragraph l, of the Constitution of Geor
gia, so as to extend the provisions of
said section, article and paragraph, to
the widows of Confederate soldiers, who,
by reason of age and poverty, or infirm-
ity and poverty, or blindness and pov
erty, are unable to provide a livii g for
themselves, and lor other purposes.-’
Section 1. Be it enacted by the gen
eral assembly of Georgia, and it is here
by enacted by authority of the same,
that section 1, article 7, paragraph 1, of
the Constitution of Georgia be, and the
same is hereby amended by inserting
after the word “service” in the 13th line,
the following words: “or who, by reason
of age and poverty, or infirmity and
poverty, or blindness and poveriv are
unable to earn a living for themselves,”
so that -said section, when so amended,
will read as follows, to-wit: “To supply
the soldier? who lostalimb, or limbs,
in the military service of the Confeder
ate States, with substantial artificial
limbs, during life; and to make'suitable
provisions lor such Confederate soldiers
as may have been otherwise disabled or
permanently Injured in such service; or
who may, by reason ot age and poverty,
or infirmity and poverty, or blindness
and poverty, are unable to provide a
living for themselves, and for the
widows of such Confederate soldiers as
may have died in the service ot the Con -
federate States, or since, from wounds
received therein, or disease contracted
in I lie service, or who, by reason ol age
and poverty, or infirmity and poverty,
or blindness and poverty, are unable to
provide a living for themselves; pro
vided that the act shall only apply , to
such w’idows as were married at tlie
time of snch service, and have remained
unmarried siiico the death of such sol
dier husband.”
Section 2. Be it further enacted, that,
if tiiis amendment shall be agreed to by
two-third-: ot the members of tlie gen
eral assembly, of each house, the same
shall be entered on their journals with
the yeas and nays taken .thereon, and
tlie governor shall cause the amendment
to be published in one or more of the
newspapers in each congressional dis
trict for two months immediately pre
ceding the next general election, and
the same shall be submitted to the peo
ple at the next general election, and the
voters thereat shall have written or
printed on their tickets, “For ratifica
tion of section 1, article 7, paragraph 1,
ot the constitution oi this State,” or
“Against ratification of section 1, article
7, paragraph 1, of the /constitution of
this State,” as they may cliobse; and if a
majority of the electors qualified to vote
lor members of the next general assem
bly, voting, shall vote in favor ol ratili
cation, then said amendment shall be
come,a part of said artic.e 7. section 1,
paragraph 1. of the constitution of this
s tate, and Lite, governor shall make pro
clamation thereof.
Section 3 repeals conflicting laws.
Approved December 21. JS99.
Now. therefoie, I, Alien D. Candler,
governor of said State, do issue this, my
proclamation, hereby declaring that the
foregoing proposed amendment of tlie
constitution is hereby suhqutted, for
ratification or rejection, to the voters of
this State, at tho general election to be
held on Wednesday, October 3, 1900, ils
provided in said act.
ALLEN [>. CANDLER, Govern or.
By the Governor,
J. W. WA.RRBN,
Secretary Executive Depar.inem.
D-jIok II Well. ,
Half lie:irti’u;n-:.s never wins in this
world if a ihiug- is not worth doing.
Genuine Optimism.
The Pessimist—That waiter is awful
ly slow with those cheese sandwiches.
\Tbe Optimist—Oh. never mind. The
finger we wait the better grows the
cheese.—Indianapolis Press.
Yon assume no risk when yon buy
Chamberlain’s Colic, Cholera and Diar
rhoea Remedy. E.. Bradford will rer
fund your money if yon are not satis
fied after using it. It is everywhere are ’ First, suimono, a bean soup;
kuchitori, chestnuts boiled and crushed
into a mush; kamaboko, fish picked
fine and rolled into little balls and bak-
admitted to be the most snccessfnl
remedy in use for bowel complaints and
the only one that never fails. It is
pleasant, safe and reliable.
Quack doctors are probably so called
because of their hills.
A ben lays during the day bnt at
night she becomes a rooster.
You can spell it congb, coff, caugh,
kauf, kaff, kongb, or kangb, bnt the
only harmless remedy that quickly
cures it is One Miuute Cough Cure. E.
Bradford.
A man never values a turkey for its
plumage.
Carpenters are like
when they alter cases
circnmstances
A diseased liver declares itself by
morosene’ss, mental depression, lack of
energy, restlessness, melancholy and
constipation. Herbine will restore
tile liver to a healthy condition. Price
oOc. T. F. Burbank.
A crusty old bachelor says that when
a cow can climb a ladder- one may ex
pect to find wisdom in women.
A girl probably wants to give a man
the slip when she gives him an ioy etare.
Don’t throw away that sample bottle
of Dr. Ticlienor’s Antiseptic, because
it cost you nothing. It is too good
to he wasted. Nothing like it. for
cuts, burns, nail punctures, inflamed
eyes, sore throat, etc. Internally
cures colic, diarrhma and flux.
7 Defining; a Function.
“Uncle Aleck, what is a piano reci
tal?”
“Weil, one woman pounds the piano,
and all the rest talk.”—Detroit Free
Press.
The teolian harp was (hit invention,
it is believed, of Athanasius KIreher,
who lived in tlie seventeenth century.
If the earth is really round, why do
we-talk of its feur corners?— Philadei
plda Times.
f crsGns Have been known to
mb a pssfRd a day by taking
n O-’Unce of. SCOTT’S EMUL-
-;ON. U is strar.ge, but it often
make their
touching their foreheads to
the floor. Chopsticks take the place
of knives and forks; but, unlike our
weapons of attack, are made of wood.
They are never used twice, unless fam
ily heirlooms, when they are of carved
Ivory of the most exquisite workman
ship, as are also the lacquer trays,
■bowls and cups.
The host sets an example by remov
ing the covers from the tiny bowls, and
the guest, doing likewise, finds an as
sortment of food quite new and gen
erally most distasteful. Mustering up
mucl\ skill one attempts getting the
food on chopsticks from the tables to
one’s month. The first few times most
of it falls on the floor or on one’s lap.
The wretched sticks wabble and cross
each other as jf focused. When al
most desperate, the good host Is apt-
to come to the rescue by suggesting
lifting the bowls, and, with the aid of a.
chopstick, shoveling the food in, as
one would potatoes into a barrel.
In each course there are half a dozen
dishes, and the host tell3 what they
ed; sashimi, raw fish cut- into thin
slices and covered with lee. This is
dipped into rich sauce called soy, and
is really very good. Little cups of
warm sake, the native brandy made of
rice, are served with each course. Nap
kins and bread are unknown quan
tities.
The second course is a._ small fish
boiled whole. One has a chance here
to get in some fine play with the chop-
stieks—umani, bits of fowl boiled with
potatoes or lotus roots, a salad of on
ions, peasiand string beans, with a few
leaves of lettuce;'sunomono, sea snails
served with eggplant mashed, and eha-
man mush!, a thick soup made of fish
and vegetables, with mushrooms for a
relish.
The third course is a curry of rice
and picked vegetables, and for a fourth
and final course you have sobo, a sort
of buckwheat vermicelli served with
soy and a sweet liquor called mirin;
shlruko, rice cakes, seaweed and con
fectionery of all sorts, which are very
sweet and tasteless.
During the dinner each guest rises
aDd proposes the health of the host and
one other guest until the whole party is
disposed of. This custom is rather
hard on the guests, for sake is fiery
stuff and goes to one’s bead more
quickly than onr own brandy. To
make matters worse, after one has
drunk the health of all the company It
is customary to drink the health of the
waitresses, who bow their foreheads to
the floor in acknowledgment.
At the close of a dinner the tabako
bon, a tray holding a hibachl with live
coals in a cone of ashes and a section
of bamboo for an ash receiver, is put
before each guest, and cigars and ciga
rettes are passed around. When all is
over v one feels very hungry, stiff in the
joints and, if .the dinner has been a
large one. very much in need of a stim
ulant.—Boston Transcript
The Mistake.
“The other day.” said Jones, “an old
woman bounced into our office, display
ing a notice that we had written to
her to the effect tliat a quarter tax on
some property of hers was due. She
swore she had paid it. I had the hooks
to prove that she had not and suggest
ed that she had made a mistake.
“She declared that she hail not and
said, ‘Don’t yon ever make any mis
takes?’
“I assured her that I did not and
Jokingly added:
“ ‘The only mistake I ever made was
when I was married.’
“She looked at uie a second and then
said: ‘No: your wife made that mis
take.’ ’’—Detroit Free Press.
Poel’a Query Anivered.
“I wonder will they miss me?” wrqte
the poet in violet ink on gilt edged pa
per.
And the editor as he tossed the man-
useript into the yawning gulf at his
side murmured softly. “If they do, they
never ought to be trusted with a gun
again.”—London Telegraph.
Rain is needed very badly in onr
community. The wells are getting low
and some of onr neighbors are hauiin;
water.
The people have at last ceased their
pleasure trips and have'returned to the
gathering of their crops. Some of onr
hustling farmers are picking cotton.
Mr. Bob Shiflett and ' Misses Snsie
Colbert and Grace Shiflett returned
Tuesday from a pleasant visit to rela-
tiyea m Rome.
There will be meeting at the Baptist
church at Fish next Saturday and
Saturday night, and baptising Sunday.
All are invited to attend.
Misses Snsie and Mattie L. West re
turned Friday from a most enjoyable
visit to their aunt, Mrs. J. A. Blance.
Quite a surprise swept onr commnn
ity last Sunday. Mr. Bob Shiflett and
Miss Snsie Colbert were happily united
in the holy bonds of matrimony at the
Pleasant Hope church, Rev.G.B.Boman
officiating. The hride^ was the only
daughter of Mrs.Loisis Colbert,and the
groom next to the eldest son of Mr,
Frank Shiflett. We hope for them a
prosperous journey through life. May
their joys be as deep as the ocean and
their sorrows as light as its foam. v
Several of onr young people attended
the meeting at Lake Creek last Thurs
day ami report a pleasant time. - \
Misses Jennie May Gibson and Nellie^
Fite, two of Cedartown’s charming
young ladies, have been spendiug sev
eral days with Miss Susie Gammon.
Messrs. Charlie and John L. Craton
were in our vieinffy Sunday afternoon.
Mrs. Gammon has been quite ill for
several days, but we hope she may sooi£
be on the road to recovery.
The school at Union Hill under the
management of Mr. Frank West will
close next Friday.
Mr. Frank Shiflett has rented the
place he is cn again for the coming
year. We congratulate ourselves in
keeping as honest and reliable a man as
Mr. Shiflett in onr neighorhood.
Stkaxq&r
^For Fine Job Printing come to The Standard Office.]'
M»IHlHHIH10Hmnaiim
Kept on the Jump.
“That tall man seems to be the busi
est person around the establishment.
What does he do?”
“It is his duty to see whether the
others are working or not”—Chicago
Times-Herald.
You may bridle the appetite,but you
can not bribe the liver to do its work
well. You must be honest with it,
help it along a little uow and then with
a dose of Herbine, the best liver
regulator. Price 50 cts. T. F. Burbank.
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers are
promrt, palatable, pleasant, powerful,
purifying little pills. E. Bradford.
.Equal to the Occasion.
There once stopped at a tavern a par
ty of'wits. When the feast was over,
one of the members called’ in the
hostess.
“Madam,” he said, “I am going to
give you a lesson in astronomy. Have
you not heard of the great Platonic
year, when everything must return to
its former condition? Know, then,
that In 2,000 years we shall be here
again on the same day and at the same
hour. Will you give us credit till
then?”
The hostess, however, had her reply.
“I am perfectly willing.” she retorted,
“but It is just 2,p00 years since you
were here before, and you left without
paying then. Settle the old score now,
and 1 will trust yon on the new.” 5 -
New York Tribune.
Porcelain.
China (porcelain) is so called because
it was first bronght from the Celestial
kingdom. It is made principally of
kaolin, and kaolin takes its name from
a high hill in China, where it was first
discovered. It is a fine clay, white
when pure, and it is easily worked. It
has since been found in various places,
the United States as .well as other
countries.
NERVOUSNESS,
in American Disease.
Dr. S. Weir Mitchell is au
thority for the statement thatnerv-
ousness is the characteristic mal
ady of the American nation, and
statistics show that nerve deaths
number one-fourth of all. deaths
recorded, the mortality being main*
ly among young people.
Johnston’s
SarsapariMa
QUART BOTTLE,
is the grand specific for this great
American disease, because it goes
straight to the source of the weak-
ness, building up health and
strength by supplying rich, abund
ant food and pure blood to the
worn-out tissues, rousing the liver
to activity and regulating all the
organs of the body.
“The Miehtgia Drag Co.Detroit, Mich.
Llverettas the famous little liver pills, aye.
No. 1907—Height, 4 ft. 1 in.
Dip 2.8x1 Gx0.4
Base..., .‘....1.9x0 7x0 5
B. Base 2.2x1 Oxl.O
Price, $21.00.
No 2001—Height, 2 ft. 4 in.
Bi** _1.2xL0x0 4
Base....... l 2x1 GxO 4
B. Base l 6x0.10x1 0
Price, $15.00
When you want Monumental or Cemetery work of
any kind or an Iron Fence just write me for my catalogue and
prices and discounts and I will surprise you with low prices
v DALTON MARBLE WORKS,
H. P. COLVARD, Prop.,
JOJ^XnJOlST, <3\A->
OON TO MANKMim
t>* TABLER’S BUCKEYE
"“ i PILE
CL
5 ^.fc2 > \ x
— ZMiti > a
o
U1 PIM UJ
.^CDShI c
■gag o in-i
W PI m PI in I
ijgfaasBWllfl
CURE
A New Discovery for tlie Certain Cure of INTERNAL and
EXTERNAL PILES. WITHOUT PAIN.
CURES WHERE ALL OTHERS HAVE FAILED.
TuBts.-BY Mail, 75 cents; Bottles, 50 Cents.
JAMES F. BALURD, Sole Proprietor. - - 310 North Main Street, ST. LOUIS. MO.
FOR SALE BY T. F. BURBANK.
VANDIVER WHISKEY CO.,
JOHN M. VANDIVER, Mgr
No. 18 Broad St , (BAMEY’S OL- STABLE) HOME, CA.
-!* V
FINE WHISKIES, BRANDIES,
WINES, ETC.
For sale by E. Bradford.
A fool at 20 may be wise at 40.
Do You Need an lCliciric Bell?
Dr. J. Newton Hathaway has per
fected an electric belt which he is pre
pared to fnrnish to all patients who
need it, at a merely nominal charge.
Write to J. Newton Hathaway, M. D.
221 South Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
A hen may be made to lay perpetually
by hitting her on the head with a stout
club.
ARE YOU
BANKRUPTinhealth,
constitution underminedby ex
travagance in eating, by disre
garding the laws of nature, or
physical capital all gone, if so,
NEVER DESPAIR
Tutt’s Liver Pills will cure you.
For sick headache, dyspepsia,
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation, biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Tutt’s Liver Pills
an absolute cure.
Dr. Ticbenor’s Antiseptic is the
most wonderful healing compound of
the nineteenth century. Preserves
the flesh, preventing inflammation,
and heals like magic. Ask your drug
gist for it.
A woman’s mirror will tell her what
none of her friends will.
IT CLEANS THE SHIPS.
n.f how thi_
Use
STATIONS.
Lv Birmingham
Lv Atlanta..
Ar Charlotte ...*
Ar Danville ......** v ”'*
Ar Lynchburg
-^r-^5Ij\shington . ’...’:*'*;
Ar Baltimore !.***”’ : “
Ar PbfhkJp.lphia...
Ar New York.
Np. 38 No.
6 00 m
12. wu n
8.13pm
11.53pm
1.55am
4.40pm
11.50pm
. P.3."iam
1.38pm
3.-)3pm
5.3 pm
8.5ipm
11.35pm
Ar Lynchburg..
Ar Charlottesville.
6.42am
8.00am
10J 5am 2.50u
18.43pm] 0.1 jam
sriiSisn xewY 0 ?)j' ii > rar ? ass
Drawing room St
to^New Vorit?an“ DtoSg 1
Wa hinpton. tar Charlotte
■Daily, tDaily Except Sunday
G ANNON 3d v.p. & c. m V-
(. eULP. Tnif Mur Wu^hj.;.
P. A.. Washiaj
*. A-GtP.A. Chai
do llol do il.
Robert Louis
an emlnixi;!;: .j } wimivvurfs
took, livi'ii whou nt play.’
His siopdaii^hler. Mrs. I sab
wbo was for a tiiae bis ajiufl- Strong,
sa.vs that Steveiiscu used t^> tlaueusis,
that uo cue could (write a gjfuaiutaiu
who was uoi a ;
not enter fully
game. He himg
gies into whai
ing.
uces
Hi; it seems to start the
machinery going prop-
trfy. so that the patient is able
16 digest and absorb his ordinary
food, which he could not do be
fare, end that is the way the gain
is made.
Sailing Tbrongh a Volcano Crater
In tlie -Kitenil Sen.
In the JEgean sea a vessel may sail
into the top of a crater, and though it
hard to find anchorage there, yet a
mere sail through is appreciated great-
by captains, because it cleanses the
bottom. of the ships from marine
growth.
More than 2,000 years ago the isle of
Santorin was split in half by an earth
quake, with the result that what was
once the-crater of a volcano is now a
crescent shaped harbor. Two glisten
ing''
era” and St
Nicholas are perched on the summit of
the steep cliffs, whose dark and dismal
hue is similar to that of -the top of Ve
suvius. Standing out against the sky
are large numbers of windmills, with
many sails, arranged in a perfect cir
cle. These are evidently employed for
tl
o
Do Your Feet Ache anil Burn?
Shake into your shoes Allen’s Foot-Ease, _
powder for the feet It cools tlie ieet and makes
tight or New Snoes feel easy. Cures Corns, Bull-
ions, swollen, smarting, Hot, Callous, Sore and
Sweating Feet Allen’s Foot-Ease relieves all
pain and gives rest and comfort. We have ovei
30,000 testimonials. It cures while you walk.
Try it to-day. All druggists and shoe stores sell
Good nature is a glow worm that
sheds light in the darkest i ltces.
The man who is driven to despera
tion illy assilti in the driving
An envioj
in is apt to disparage
Thing, l>e it good or bad.
One hour in the fntnre is worth
dozen in the past.
FREE BLOOD AND SKIN CURE.
JUG ORDERS PROMPTLY FILL El).
TELEPHONE NO. 34
WORMS1|ver«¥3oe:
OWN RAILS, WITH THROUCH TRAIN SERVICE TO
HOME, CHATTANOOGA, NASHVILLE AND MEMPHIS.
St.
PULLMAN SLEEPERS AND FIRST-CLASS DAY COACH TO
JLOSMS® and AH Points West
QUICKEST SCHEDULES TO
CHICAGO % NORTH WEST,
An Offer Proving Faith.
Ulcers, Eating Sores, Cancer, Scrofula, Itching
Slcin, Scabs and. Scales of Eczema, Aches, and
Pains in bones, back or joints,. Syphilitic -Blood
Poison, Rotten Gums ana Chronic Rheumatism,
and all obstinate, deep-seated Blood troubles are
quickly cured by taking a lew large bottles of
botanic Blood Balm. We chitflenge the world
of Blood Disease that Botanic Blood
Balm will not cure. The cures are permanent
patdiing^np. _ Is your Blood Thin?
.^3!|i£b£.., ^
Skin Pale? All Run Down? As Tired in the morn
ing as when you went to bed? Pimples? Boils?
Swollen Glands or Joints? Catarrh? Putrid
Breath? Eruptions? Sores in Mouth or Thi oat?
If So, your Blood is Bad. Blood Balm will make
the Blood Pure and Rich, Heals every Sore,Stops
the Aches ana invigorates the old and weak.
Botanic Blood Balm, the only perfect Blood Puri
fier made. Sold at Drug. Stores. $i per large
bottle,^ including complete directions. To prove
Blood Balm a trial bottle given away
Excellent Service to Louisvilie, Cincinnati
and Ohio,, Indiana and Michigan Points„
ALL RAIL AND STEAMSHIP LINES-TO
NEW YORK snd this fAST.
TGimiST RATES TG ALL RESORTS.
Cheap Emigrant Rates to Arkansas aM Texas.
to sufferers. For fr»e trial bottle, address Blood
Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Don’t hesitate, but write
at once describing trouble, and free personal
medical adtice given. Blood Balm (B. B. B)
Cures when all else fails. Thoroughly tested for
Tof sciiefialcs, waps, t? 593 l aiiroafi IsfsrEaliou, call or write i»
J. W. THOMAS, JFl.,
General Manager,
NASHVILLE. TENN.
H. F. SMITH, CHARLES E. HARM
Traffic MA*iAGgR, Gen. Pass, ageni
NASHVILLE. TENN. ATLANTl
utary testimonials of