Newspaper Page Text
i cleve?
tractive
m.
tod in blue red
ch the recruiting
Z “C %zrz 'SE
a, roofs and assembly rooms,
to “« several branches of the
do more to secure enlistment
n use war talk and promises of
ion put together. The prospect
tting around in a bright uniform
young and old men to bury the
t o fbardship. The ambition to
Is well-nigh universal.—New
ss.
She Knew Him.
ig Wife (surprised)—Bqt, moth-
u did not write at all that you
:e.
t’k because I wanted to
husband once more, too.
The Chinese Situation.
The cause lor the present Chinese entan¬
glements is not ©ligious differences, but the
abuse of tho Chinese immigrants by the
foreign powers. Another great revolution
comes from the abuse of th"stomach. Over¬
taxed digestion produces consti nation, in¬
tetler’s digestion,, dyspepsia and flatulency. Hos¬
Stomach Bitters is the best medicine
to take. It will restore a healthy tone to
the entire system, and thus prevent nerv¬
ousness, fail to give sleeplessness or despondency. Don’t
It a trial.
HU Serve,
s—How I eavy the man who lust tang the
eolo.
She—Why, I thought he had an exceptional¬
ly He— poor voice.
Ob, it Isn’t his voice I envy; it’s his
nervo.—Tit-Bits.
To Cure a Cold In One Day.
Take LAXiTlVB BROMO QCIKIXE TABLETS. AH
E. druggists W. refund the money if It falls to cure
UnovK’8 signature is on each box. l~>c.
Not Neglected.
Doctor: “Well, I consider the medical pro¬
fession badly treated. See how few monuments
there are to famous doctors or surgeons!”
The patient: “Oh, doctor, look at our ceme¬
teries !”
Dyspepsia. bowel Indigestion, Heartburn and all
stomach and troubles quickly cured by
Taber’s I’epsln Compound. Full size otic bottH
free, express paid. Dr. Taber Mfg. Co. Peoria, Ill
Dispensaries For Alabama.
The next Alabama legislature will have a
number of hills for consideration looking to
the establishment of the dispensary system tn
a number of counties throughout the state.
I do not believe Plso’s Cure for Cons umptfon
has an equal for Coughs and colds.— ■ions F.
Boyer, Trinity-Springs, Ind.. Feb. 15, 1900. ]
Made a Difference.
“Kitty, I can’t stand your extravagance at.
school; $15 a month for candy I”
“But, pa, I I don’t pay for It; I have the bills
sent to you.”
Motherhood
«ig§ 9
v » REWARD
f Owing to the fact that
some skeptical people have
from time to time ques¬
tioned the genuiness of the
testimonial publishing, letters we are
constantly we
3 m have deposited with the
National City Bank, of
<y m Lynn, Ma3B., $5,000 which
71 will be paid to any person
'• who will show that the
following testimonials are
not genuine, or were pub-
. lished before obtaining
a 9 the writers’ special per-
mission. — Lydia E.
Pinkham Medicine Co.
1 r/(
How shall a mother who is weak and sick with some
female trouble bear healthy children ?
How anxious women ought to be to give their children
the blessing of a good constitution I
Many of women long for a child to bless their home, but be¬
they cause some barren. debility or displacement of the female organs,
are
iLydia Preparation for healthy maternity is accomplished by
13. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound more suc¬
cessfully and than by any other medicine, because it gives tone
flammation. strength to the parts, curing all displacements and i m-
e
Actual sterility in women is very rare. If any woman
thinks she is sterile, let her write to Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn,
be Mass., mothers. whose advice is given free to all expectant or would-
Mrs. A. D. Jarret, Belmont, Ohio, writes:
Pinkham : — I must write and teJl you what your Vege¬
table Compound has done for me. Before taking your medicine I was unable
to carry babe to maturity, having lost two—one' at six months and one at
5ST rinkhani e ?‘m-^ e . s Y egetable next Compound, time I would die, but thanks to Lydia E.
mother of months old I did not die, but am the proud
a six girl baby. She weighs nineteen pounds and
has never seen a sick day in her life. She is the delight of our home. ”
Mrs. Whitney’s Gratitude.
** Dear Mr. Pinkham j—F rom, the time I sixteen old
was twenty-three I troubled with was years till I
pains was weakness of the kidneys and terrible
when my monthly periods came on. I made up my mind to try your
an §g The Vegetable Vegetable Compound, Compound, - and and f — v was was —.— soon soon — — reli relieved. m
doctor said I never would be able to go my
Jf full time and have a living child, as I was con-
H stitutionally weak. I had lost a baby at seven
rg months and half. The next time I continued
R to take your Compound ; And I said then, if I
went my full time and ray baby lived to be
J three months old, I should send a letter to you.
b| Y. healthy My baby and is now hearty seven monthi could old. and wish. is as I
as any one
f ar ? not express my gratitude to you. I was so
V bad that I did not dare to go away from home
kyeba s A a Y E. any Pinkhaju’s length of Aims. Praise God for
pound; and Vegetable Com-
ABY I did may. others who o are are s suffering
w do as * v ** u and mid relief. relief Wishing you sue-
. ,,
dicine that cu^es the ills of women is
Pinkham*s
’eegeteble Compound
the Gardener Told Them
^ of young men and Women
vrei * bicycling along a country road,
1 * was * sketching class, and every
° 5 ’ e ’ wft3 ^vide open for an artistic sub-
^ect Suddenly the whole party dis-
“aSl'ri 3 “ ,,OB3 08
Just within the fence on the left
*«" Innumerable graceful stalks,
eac ^ bearing aloft globes of pale green
tftat »baded into gray and purple,
“ How ■enchanting!’* said
a young
woman.
“How decorative!’’ said a young
man *.
“ Just what we are looking for,” said
tocher, a full-fledged artist.
A. gardener was standing near a ^
band.
“Do tell us,” cried a girl, “what
those beau-oo-tiful things are.”
“Which?” replied the gardener.
“Why, those,” said the girl.
“Them,” said the gardener, with a
c sone *°
Liability oi Beekeepers.
At Bastingstoke County Cork, yes-
terday, Judge Gye dealt with a case
affecting the liability of bee keepers,
John Butter,* a wood dealer, sued the
village postmaster, Mr. Longley, for
the recovery of part of the value of an
old mare which the defendant’s bees
stling to death, also 10s. on account of
pain from bee stings suffered by
plaintiff, 10s. for loss of use of part
of a field adjoining the postmaster’s
garden, where the plaintiff’s laborers
could not wmrk owing to the bees, and
20s. for extra labor through having to
make a hayrick in another position.
It was suggested on the defendant’s
behalf that some other person’s bees
were at fault, but the plaintiff and ids
witnesses established to His Honor’s
satisfaction the fact that the bees
came from the defendant’s hives.
Judge Gye, in giving judgment
for the amount claimed, said that a
bee keeper kept bees at his own risk,
and if they did damage he was liable.
—London Times.
Mr. Henpeck—Maria, His Only Boy.
there’s no use
your trying to deny that our little
Arthur takes after me in one way.
Mrs. Henpeck (severely)—Oh, indeed!
What way is that, please?
Mr. Henpeck—I noticed when you
weut up behind him a minute ago that
lie dodged and winked ns if he ex¬
pect ed to be hit, just as I do.
Going to Yollir Paint
House ?
WeU, McNeal’s Ready Mixed Paints are
the Best and Cheapest! Write for prices to
McNEAL PAINT S GLASS CO.,
MANCFACTL'FBRS.
lo N. Forsyth Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Mestigo this
WHEELER’S ANSWER
m T ° wr Newspapers V In Kegard tS - a ia to
&»*• Statement
ENTERS AN EMPHATIC REPUTATION
--
Sayga That Ho Is Now OuFof Politics, But
Declares His Fealty to the Demo¬
cratic Party.
In a speech at Decatur, Ala., Friday
night, which was a number not on his
programme in the district, caused by
the stinging animadversions appearing
in The Huntsville Mercury-on his al-
IoctaiI leged bad bad Democratic Democratic faith. faith, General General
w heeler declared his undying alle-
refuted Governor em
completely Roose-
velt’s statement that he was supporting
the Republican platform,
The general emphatically declared
it the duty of every Democrat to turn
out and vote the ticket, to give Judge
Richardson a large majority, so he
would not be handicapped in obtain-
ing legislation. He replied to oriti-
cisms made by The Mercury, saying
the Huntsville papers, through enmity
to him, had not treated him fairly,
and Lad not reported his speech at
Huntsville as he had delivered it.
4
He 6aid he had made practically the
same speech there that he had made
here. They criticised him because he
had not used Mr. Bryan’s name. If
he had not it was merely because he
had forgotten it in the earnestness of
his talk. He could have done it with
perfect propriety. No two men had
stood closer than he and Bryan in
congress. Onlv once had they dif-
f er ed, but that could not keep him
from being few him.
He had never seen a man with such
indomitable will, such a clear, analyti¬
cal mind; such power of persuasion,
and such influence over men. If elect-
ed, Mr. Bryan would make one of the
distinguished presidents of the con-
tury. Ho had said in his Huntsville
speech that the two great parties, mi-
der normal conditions, had been alter-
nating in control of the government,
taking up the beginning of tho alter-
nation from the time of the whigs and
swinging the pendulum on down to
Cleveland’s defeat of Blaine, Harri-
sou’s defeat of Cleveland, Cleveland »
second victory, and the last swing of
In t 6 1900 it a T should ?°,? be C Democratic, £ inl ® y \ 89 un- °-
less you can show the conditions are
not normal. “Was that a Republican
speech?” be asked.
General Wheeler said that when he
resigned from congress he had turned
his back upon political life forever.
In a street conversation Friday
night in hearing of five citizens, Ed-
itor Grubbs, of the Decatur News,
denied the statement that he had ever
invited General Wheeler to Alabama.
General Wheeler has a letter signed
by Editor Grubbs, as secretary of tho
district committee, inviting him to
make speeches in the eighth district.
BOX DELIVERY SATISFACTORY.
Second Assistant Postmaster General Sub¬
mits His Annual Rapnrt.
The annual report of W. S. Shallen-
berger, second assistant postmaster
general, was made public Friday. It
shows that on June 30th last the an-
nual rate of expenditure for inland
mails service was $55,146,060, for for-
eign service $2,014,538; total expendi-
tures, $57,160,598.
The experiment of box delivery on
star routes, whereby persons along the
line could have the mail brought from
the next office by the star route carrier
and left in a box erected by such per-
sons, has worked satisfactorily so far,
and the next star route contracts will
provide for such service.
SOCIALIST'DAY IN CHICAGO.
Red Flags Are Hoisted and Big; Street
Demonstrations Are Held.
Socialist labor orators raised the red
flag in State street, Chicago, Friday
night and were driven off the thorough¬
fare by the police, who were compelled
to interfere to stop a riot. It was so-
cialistic labor night, and the Debs
speakers used half a dozen wagons to
speak from along the street. There
were frequent clashes between the
speakers and Ihe big crowds which
gathered around the stands.
SMITH LEAYES A. & !Y. P. ROAD.
-
Succeeded as President and General Man-
ager By Charles Wickers!!am.
George C. Smith, president and
general manager of the Atlanta and
West Point railroad and Western Rail-
way of Alabama, has resigned his post
to be general manager of a division of
the Southern railway, which is to
comprise both the present Air Line,
and the Louisville division of the
Southern, running from Louisville to
Lexington, Ky. The appointment will
become effective November 15th.
Charles A. Wickersham, general
snperintendent of the Alabama Great
Southern, will succeed Mr, Smith.
HUA1XEI) BY HOKSt’S HOOFS.
Vonng; Lady Was Killed Instantly and Her
Escort Received Fatal Injuries.
At .... Memphis, , . rn ienn., Tuesday rr. 1
as
Tor, Lon Laswell T„ 0 m 0 n and -if Miss Lillie T Ml- Henley rr ,
were out riding in a buggy the horse
became unmanageable and literallv
kicked ’
the vehicle to pieces.
His hoot struck Miae Henle. on the
head, dashing her brains out. Laswel
„„„ vas fatally injured . m . the ., same way.
VALET JUNES IMPROVING.
Would-Be Suicide Will Recover From
Self-Inflicted Knife Wounds.
A New York dispatch says: Charles
F. Jones, the personal attendant of
the late William M. Rice, who at-
tempted to commit suicide Thursday,
was visited in the hospital Friday by
Dr. Christian, who has him in charge.
Dr. Christian said that Jones was
much improved. ,
very
Assistant District Attorney Osborne
declared that • it was his opinion
that more than one man had been con¬
cerned in a general conspiracy.
lj
gj m /.KveSc
The p-reat trouble in trvincr ^
®
to sell what are called patent
medicines is that SO many claims
have been made for them that
people don t or won’t believe
vvhat honest makers say.
We have been telling our
Story sixty years, Did we ever
deceive mn you once? nnf~p If we make
win any statement thelosi that isn’t so, we
Go to the
druggist back. and get your money
Here’s; an example. Ayer’s
Cherry Pectoral is a good cure
r or a cough that comes from a
&
CO,d. I our COUgh, , if . r you have ,
one, may not come rrom a cold;
your doctor will tell you about
that.
It is a straight medicine with
sixty years of cures back of it.
1 here isn t a ghost of r the . ordl- ,.
nary ’ patent thing about it.
J. C. AYER COMPANY,
Practical Chemists, Lowell, Mass.
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla Ayer’s Hair Vigor
Aver’s Pills Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral
Acer’s Ague Cur. Ayer’s Comatone
K0W WOMEN MANAGE MEN.
“ . Lord of Creat ' on Cora P le « el Overcam* _
» >’
by ^ eminine Subtlety,
The ways of managing men are
various. Yet woman rarely makes a
mistake when handling the subject,
She sizes up the situation instantly,
and approaches from the proper direc-
tiou to take the victim unawares,
Jean is one of your innocent, fluffy
K i r i 8) w ho doesn’t look as if she ever
had an idoa of hcr own . She is going
011 a ca u]puig expedition this week,
and , s to send along Her quota of the
necessities In a box. At the dinner
tn ghe wafl telling the famlly tbe
various . ,, . that ,, . ^ re t0 . go ln , th .. a .
box ’ and sl,e innocently remarked: , , . I
tolfl tl,e S irls that papa could beat the
whole crowd packing, and 1 kneu my
things would arrive in better condition
than any of them.”
Papa beamed. He had had no in-
tention whatever of packing that box,
and he couldn’t let a challenge like
that go by, and so after dinner he
doffed his coat and went to work. And
Jean smiled and egged him on with
soft exclamations of delight at his
cleverness.
Then there is another man, the head
of a family, whose wife received a bar¬
rel of apples and other good things
from the country. She had no mind to
open that barrel herself, yet she knew
if she asked “hubby” outright there
would be a growl about “always wait-
ing for him to do some work when lie
came home tired at night.” So she be-
gan diplomatically:
“You can take lessons from me to-
night when I open that barrel. Notv,
if you had been brought up on a farm
you could know as much about it as
1 do.”
“Humph! Guess I know as much
about it as you do without ever seeing
a farm."
“Indeed you don’t! Why, you could
no more unhead that barrel than you
could fly!”
“The idea! I could open that barrel
in five minutes.”
She laughed. There was a sort of ag-
gravating tinge in that laugh. “I’d
ju§t like to see you. You'd hack it all
to pieces.”
“Ridiculous! You must think I’m a
child. Give me that hatchet!”
He seized it and went to the kitchen,
and there hacked and chopped and
chewed his way into that barrel In a
fever of zeal. And his wife stood by
and laughed at him, which only spur¬
red him on to renewed efforts.
When the suffragists succeed the
women will be the diplomats of the
country, and no man will evermore fill
a foreign post.—Philadelphia Tele-
graph,
Still fie Caught Customers.
A well known portrait painter was
hot always tlie receiver of such hand-
some honorariums as are now paid
him for his portraits. Time was, says
^lt-Bits, __ when . he lived in a common
house near the Pantheon at
an altitude of no less than seven
stories. Necessity is the mother of in-
vention, but bow to induce a discrim-
inating public to climb seven pair of
stairs?
Ha pm up a p,ac„r, ,be basemeu.
of the house, “Portraits taken here.
Only ten francs. Studio on the third
floor”
.... When the would be purchaser had ,
arrivprl arlnea at at the tlie otndin studl ° doaivnatod designated he ho
found himself confronted by a placard
“Ten franc portraits. The studio has
been removed to the fifth floor.”
After much puffing and panting the
flf,h floor " !>s
franc portraits. tH"* Ihe studio ,'S 7*“ has, ow- *“
j n g to rebuilding of the premises,
been temporarily removed to the sev¬
enth floor.”
Having suffered so much the victim
did not mind suffering once more, and
the aspiring artist got another cus-
tonier.
p i ; Q I
i 4 <11# I
m %
11 * ; k k\i
THE GHOST OF AIRLIE.
The Kystirloa* Crammer; Where, Oh
Where? Was Be ?
Who heard the ghostly drummer of
Cortachy Castle beat the death-roll of
the late Earl of Airlie?
Ills spectral tattoo is ever the herald
of death to the heads of the Ogilvys.
In by-gone times there was a drummer
who drummed for the “bonny house of
Air lie,” The wretched player offended
the earl of those days and was tied up
in hi S own drum and flung from a high
tower. After vainly pleading for his
Iife the poor little druiutoer threatened
** iat bis ghost would haunt the family
for
Legend has it that generation after
the dead drummer has
the last post for Earl and
Countess of Airlie, and the roll of his
has through the long centuries
blanched the faces of many inmates of
Cortachy Castle.
In 1845 a visitor at Cortachy was
dressing for dinner. A tattoo Was
beaten beneath her window. The lady
listened in surprise, for ns far ffs she
knew there was no bandsmen at the
castle. Going down to dinner she said
to her host:
“Who is It that plays the drutn so
skillfully outside the castle?”
The earl turned pale and shivered.
The countess could not hide her fear.
The face of every Ogilvy at the table
was deadly white. Within a week the
countess lay in her shroud. The drum¬
mer boy was the spectre of Cortachy
Castle.
A few years later a young English¬
man who was to shoot with Lord Ogil¬
vy, the eldest son, at the Tulchan, a
shooting lodge at the head of Glen-
shee, missed his way. The night was
wild, and darkness had long set in be¬
fore lie saw the lights of the shooting
lodge. Then up the glen came the long
roll of the drum. There could be no
mistaking it Who could be playing
out of doors on such a night, he asked
Lord Ogilvy. “Silence,” was his only
answer. It was the dead drummer
of Cortachy Castle. The Earhof Air¬
lie died in Loudon within less than a
week.
When the father of the Earl of Air¬
lie who fell in South Africa died, it is
said that the drummer did not sound
his drum. It may be true. Perhaps
he has not beaten it on this occasion.
But the countryside will not be de¬
nied their ghost, and it may be that
we shall soon hear that the spectral
drum was heard at Cortachy the day
before the gallant cavalryman fell in
South Africa.—London Mail.
Artillery Knocks Out Slortn Cloud.
Fighting cyclonic storms with artil¬
lery is becoming frequent all over
France. Recently a terrific show r er of
hail destroyed the vineyard crops in
Bordeaux, but the growers of
Millon, having been w r arned by tele-
graph that the storm was travelling
toward them, immediately appealed to
tho military authorities. Five huge
guns wore got ready and when the
towering black cloud came sufficiently
near it was cannonaded into shreds,
which drifted away harmlessly.—New
York World.
'I lie Best Prescription for Chilli
ami Fe ever Is a bottle of Ghovk’s Tasteless
i rut.i, Toxic. It Is simply iron an t quinine In
>i tasteless form. No cute—no pat’. Frloe -VJo.
Too Younjj.
“Ah! If I were younger,” tri-hod the woalthv
old man, “i might hope to win you ”
“Yes, or ten years older,” she replied,
ly. for he was only a little over sixty and
quite robust.
A Colonel in the British South
army says that Adams’ Tutti Frutti was
blessing to bis men while marching.
The Truth of llio Matter.
Watts—Ah, well, a man doesn’t think th
world half so wicked a ter ho gels along
years a little.
, Potts—Y< s. by that time he has generally
to be a little wicked himself.
FITS permanently cured. No fits or nervous¬
ness after first day’* use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Jforye Dr. It. Restorer. U. Kune, Ltd., trial 931 bottleand treatise free
Arch St.. Piitla., p*.
Evidently Knows Him.
Mark Hanna Is one of those
persons.—Milwaukee Sentinel.
Each package of I’btnam Fadeless Die
colors more goods than any other dye and
colors them better too. Sold hv all
druggists.
Depends.
Arny Zoppers -Eeoken you could live on 15
cents a day?
Tuffold Knutt—Ez fur ez the solids Is con-
cern ed, b’gosh, thxt’d be an Independent lor-
tun . —Chicago Tribune.
Best For the Bowels,
No matter what ails you, headache to a
cancer, bowels you will never get well until your
nature, are put right. Cascarets help
cure you without a gripe or pain,
produce easy natural movements, cost you
iust 10 cents to start getting your health
back. Cascakets Candy Cathartic, the
genuine, let has put up in metal poxes, every tab¬
C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of
Imitation*.
Gold From tlie Klondike.
A total of $-'0,166,687 worth of gold dust and
bullion has been received at the Seattle assay
office during the present year.
8100 Reward. 8100.
ease that science i Jas been able to cureifit, all
its staves: and that is fats rrh. Hall’s
( ure is the only Positive cure known to
medical fraternity. Catarrh beinu’ a const
S?£
.of th
( th^constltu^n
tient strength bv building up
and assisting nature in doing its work. Th©
proprietors have so-much faith in its curative
powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars
for any case that it fails tocure. Send for list
of testimonials. Address
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Hall’s Fami* ? pms are the best.
-----
wrinkles.
he did.
epp rey—Ah! 1 suppose he could read
between the lines.
Sirs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
leethln 3g. softens !hc gums, reduces luflamma-
Hon. n Hays pain, cures wind colic. c. a bottle.
The Battle-Scarred Hero.
It Is doubtless t< ue that Teddy has had mote
thrown at him than any other porson
in campaign work.
PURE tfLOO
AND STRONG NERVES
With glowing and real health troubles all thing, battled are po»ible, with se .mail “J
are
with perfect health are a constant juy
to themselves and all around them. The beauty
which health alone cab make permanent is a
crown which raises a woman above other %
women. Such beauty is always accompanied k-
by a sweet disposition, for snappishness is a
suro sign of ill-health and leaves its mark
quickly on the features.
It seems to be the fashion for women to _
ignore health and sacrifice it to the little , i
every-day trials, or offer it up on the altar
of devotion to daily tasks. Then again
the nervous organisation of Women is con-
stantly attacked bv woman's natural ex-
perieUCes, so that it is practically impossi¬ m
ble for her to retain the beauty which H
na ^ ure P ave her, unless she has discrimi¬
nating advice and right support.
Da*m Greene's O/Va of -
v A:
Nemurm o
o
• a J 0
O
jo¬
for the Blood and Nervesm o
Trials and troubles O
the are easily overcome by
women whose strength is the genuine
strength of perfect health. Dr. Greene’s Ner-
vurn blood and nerve remedy, bridges the c o
chasm that separates the sickly woman from 0 Jfofo e
happiness. It fills her veins with blood that is JlAi e.
pure and elean.
Mrs. WM. E. Pi o
Bosse, of 85 Farrington St.,
Flushing, L. I,, Bays i 1
“In regard to myself, I have suffered for years o
with disease, having been troubled with great ner- ■
vousness, female complaints, indigestion, and O \ c
great weakness and prostration. I did not
have strength to do much of anything, Kmnv-
ing I the great value of health and strength
consulted doctors and took many medi¬ (lkoX£
cines, but they all failed to cure me,
nd I grew worse rather than better. Jy-
I happened to seo in the papers how
much good Dr. Greene's Nervura, <-g J
blood and nerve remedy, was doing in
restoring to health everybody who took it,
and I thought I would try a bottle. I used
it and to my surprise I began to gain strength every day. I am so thankfnl tat I tried
It is certainly the most excellent tonic and strength giver. I recommend very highly
and wish that other people who are troubled hi any way would take warning and use it.”
TO PRESERVE WOMANLY BEAUTY
At all the stages of a woman's life Dr. Greene’s Nervnrn blood and nervd
remedy, is shown to be efficient to ward off the result* of nervousness, or over¬
work, or impure blood. From early girlhood to advanced years, this world-
renowned medicine builds up the forces destroyed by disease, grief, or over¬
exertion, and the effects of this great medicine are quickly felt and permanently
retained. Let women guard well their health, and consult Dr. Greene freely.
Nothing they can possibly do will so surely keep them strong and well, or re¬
pair the exhaustion from acute illness, nothing will work so continually to tho
preservation of beauty as the great health-giving Nervura. Dr. Greene’s office
is at 35 West 14th Street, New York City, where he may bo consulted cither by
personal call or by letter Women may write in perfect confidence, and get
Dr. Greene’s advice free.
91 3 H@i!©
m @ An Expensive 66 99
o is the which cut off and
one you m
throw away every time that you ®
0 smoke a Five Cent cigar. There is ^
g nearly as much labor in making this ||
end as all the rest who of the cigar, cigar and g|
yet every throws man it buys a You cuts ® ©
it off and away. get
m all you pay for when you smoke
Old Virginia Cheroots m
0 Three hundred million Old Virginia Cheroots smoked this
year. Ask your own dealer. Frice, 3 for 5 cents.
Stayed Too Late.
Amy—What balked Mr. Farrier in
his suit for your hand?
Ada—He balked himself. He was
never Willing to
Bulletin.
Cough Dr.Bull’ss3S33 Syrup jysr’SrSSu:
Refuse substitutes. Get Dr. Bull’s Cough Syrup.
>• TOW
r~ p©n§c ♦♦♦♦£
I
\ AND i
♦ O BEANS ♦ ♦ ♦
i £ There is one flavor in pork and | i
bean, that nil people like. It was
Y In our kitchen we get exactly Z
i . vnr Our beans .iIL, are cooked ..%
put . them up III I £
*"**'
♦ «- Libb^* Libby s. t ♦
J T LIBBY, McNCILL C- LIBEW O
Chicago 3 O
A A
J X Send a postal for our booklet, “Howto
% Make Good Things to Eat.” «
+
CANEf’ffi,
ENGINES, BOILERS AND SAW MILLS,
AND REPAIRS fqr same.
Bristle Twine, Babbit, Saw Teeth and
Files, Shafting, Pulleys, Belting, Injectors,
Pipes, Valves and Fittings.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS & SUPPLY CO •)
AFG3JSTA. 04.
r* 1
UNION MADE
The real worth of YV.
L. Doug las 183.00 and '
*3.50 sh, ces compared
with other makes is
84.00 to 85.C0.
Our 84Gilt Edge Bine
cannot he equalled ut
any price. Ov er 1 ,COO,-
OCO sat: - led wearers.
fe I WE \A
IIfast USE colons; V\ One p-»ir *53 of W. L. Doug!23
or $3.50 shoes will
eyelets \ will positively ofcrfilniry outweir
£ % two pairs $3 $3.50
or
We are tha largest makers of men’s 83
and 83-50 shoes in the world. Wo make
and sell more 83 and 83.50 shoes than any
other two manufacturers In the If. S.
gS&SSSS The :-e P »tau..n ot w. l.
BEST KSST.?.' BEST
OiluC, 1 SHI 1 SHOL $3 ' 00
expect more for their money
than they am g<3 ”•
TMS »i?Ae»oN moretv j.. «u *3^
SfeiSS S' ’” 1 ' I* 1 ***. 1
%+£
W.L. Bcogi^gbosto. Brockioa, Matt
a
FOR S.
Bed May seed wheat fronPB
»?eSn‘ 0 ,SSeaX r n S
bags,price CarolinafromTexal $ 1.25 per bushel, g
ih North
Seed, bushels the North Carolina <|l
per at acre, Charlotte, price 50e N.'db, p r bus freig
on ears
paid lfy buyer. Terms nash with o
CHARLOTTE OIL f I FERTILIZER _
FRED OLIVER, ARLOTTE. N. C.