Newspaper Page Text
f say that
Mmm — ... — .d.
_ayiag. and a true
‘but unfortunately
ill that talks is not
say ‘unfortunately’?”
hat were so,” he ans-
1 be married to a fabu-
Were Palpable.
narked the great de-
a vegetarian
make that out?”
»-
id easy,” replied the
trroty hair, reddish
?h< turn-r'p nose and a sage
!5go Daily New*,
The Oldest Banknote,
. lote is in the possession of tho Bank
and. It is dated December 19, 1699,
>r 555 pounds, but on account of its
e Ls mnde very valuable. One of the
tost valuable stomach medicines
ublic is Hostetter’s Stomach Dit-
le I of past such fifty remedies years it has been
biliousness, fordyspe) sia, In-
tya, Ii will nervousness or
effect a cure when faith-
Two Veteran*.
It’s true.” boasted Colonel Brags, “I’ve
Innumerable engagement*, and yet I
uever tost my head.”
“And I’ve been in hundreds of them," re¬
plied the Summer Girl, “and never lost my
Good Position.
Trustworthy men wanted to travel. Ex peri.
once not absol ate ly necessary. For particulars,
address Peerless 'i’ob. Wta., Bedford Ctt 7 Va
,
The Main Thing.
“Twombley says he thinks he’ll eo In for
yachting. He s more than half equipped al.
To Cure a Cold in One l)ny,
Take bAXtriv* Br°m° Qcininr Tablets, ah
druegtete refund tho inonoy tt It falls to cute.
L. ». ubovb s Bignaturo is on oach box 9>o.
Dlftagrernble Feature.
ingB*»»oni»oTer Wel1 ’ 1 sur>p 86 tho y ac,,t -
Tte Yachimen—Oh, I don't know—tho bills
have not stopped coming in yot.—i’uck.
_ No7ts
FITS permanently eared or nervouv-
ness after nr»t day'-ui» ft of Dr. Kuno’s Great
’ ’
-
An Occult Influence.
................ ............. tel,el [ to |^ . that .
nil me aomo power-
influence wa» standing between ine and
•ucoess in life.”
“Poan't decide'wuefh'er'u 'la our baby or tho
cook."—Chicago Record.
|// 0 #y Mothers may Help mm
their Daughters intoWwhhood
1,
:
nr 1 m Wk
m
Every daughter. mother possesses information of vital value to her
young the That daughter is a precious legacy, and
mother. responsibility The for her future is largely in the hands of the
less girl into the mysterious change that develops the thought¬
on the watch day thoughtful and night. woman should find the mother
well-being of her As she cares for the physical
children also. daughter, so will the woman be, and her
When the young girl’s thoughts become sluggish, when
she experiences headaches, dizziness, faintness, and exhibits
an abnormal disposition to sleep, pains in the back and lower |
limbs, society eyes dim, desire for solitude, and a dislike for the |
of other girls, when she is a mystery to herself 1
friends, then the mother should go to her aid and
such a time the greatest aid to nature is Lydia promptly. At i
ham’s Vegetable Compound. It E. Pi nk-
system for the coming change, and is prepares the young
this hour of trial. tne surest reliance in
The following letters from Miss Good practical
of Mrs. Pinkham’s efficient advice are proof
to young women.
Miss Good asks Mrs. Pinkham for Help.
“DBAS Mbs. Pinkham:—I have been June 12th, 1899.
time with my monthly periods being irregular. very much bothered for some g
it, and put myself in your for I have I will tell you all about 1
month menstruation would care, heard so much of you. Each
for six months, and become less and less, until it entirely stopped
and of now it has stopped again. I have become
vous a very bad color. I am a young girl and have very ner¬
work very hard. 1 would be much always had to
S ou would tell me what to do.”—Miss very Pearl pleased if
t. 29th Avenue and Yeslar Way, Seattle, Wash. Good,
The Happy Result.
“ Dear Mrs. Phskham :—I February 10th, 1900.
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable cannot praise Lydia
V just simply wonderful the Compountl change enough. It is
22: has made in me. I feel like another your medicine
^bour work is now a pleasure to me, while before person. using My
beftlthy medicine it was a burden. To-day I
and happy girl. I think am a
wouuji use your Vegetable if more women
less suffering in the world. Compound there would be
relief I ’nave experienced I cannot express the
ham’s Vegetable Compound.”—Miss by using Lydia E. Pink-
iOOD Cor. 29th Avenue Pearl Good,
and Yeslar Way, Seattle, Wash.
.. n . w sESsHfiSEiSSS SSS
[SCOVERY; ief *ive.
and cures worst
> days’ treatment
Bex B. Atlanta. Qa
otrrtisers.
-17
His One Brate Deed.
She wa3 a liero worsh per.
Often she would read -lstory, Just to
find some new hero to worship.
Otherwise she would r’-ad such nov¬
els as “Beautiful Betsy, the Belle of
the Brass Works, or the “Baronet'3
Bride.”
Of course this made her feel that she
had married beneath her, for her hus¬
band had not grown round-shouldered
from wearing heavy medals.
Occasionally she Would tell him that
she wished lie was a hero.
Once the foolish man told her that
he would be a hero if he bad a chance.
“You would?” she said, In tones of
incredulity. “Did you ever do any¬
thing in your life that looked like
bravery, or that seemed valorous in
after years?”
He thought of the day when they
played Mendelssohn’s wedding march,
and he gave the minister ?10 and she
became his wife.
But he didn’t say anything about it.
For a true hero never talks about his
glorious, dnre-devil deeds.
So she never knew that her husband
was a hero.
Isn’t it a sad story.—Baltimore
American,
Dogs in Palo.
A foxhound, as every sportsman
knows, if caught in a trap or suffering
pain from an injury, Is most danger¬
ous to approach, even if you assist him
out of a difficulty—say, from a pit or
hole where, but for yott, he Would
probably be drowned—he will show
hlB gratitude by biting you. Pointers;
Betters ftud spaniels, though hot quite
so ready with their teeth, will, under
similar circumstances, bite not only
straqgers but their own masters with-
out scruple. The flateoated retriever is
totally dissimilar in this respect, and
can be handled without the slightest
risk. I h»V0 got them Ollt Of all sorts
of difficulties, and never once met with
injury. In doing so you may fearlessly
let their head rest on your shoulder or
11<? a ^’ linst y° ur faCe Q» ,te gently
-
a valuable dog of mine got lmng up in
R ' vire frnce. and a dislocation of the
or some serious Injury seemed
imminent. Running up, I lifted lnra
bodily, ’ struggling and terrified ns he
was; yet the , idea , of , . biting , , occurred .
n0lt,,0r to the he, P er nor the hcl P e<1
Blackwood.
PROFITABLE EMPLOYMENT
If you can (or think you can) solicit
LIFE 1/VSURADieE,
\\ rite (with refer«ces’ for terms to
local and special agfcits, to
R. F. SHEDDEN, Gen. Agent, Atlanta, Ga.
MUTUAL LIFK INSURANCE CO.
of L A*»«ts Over 333.0,000,000,00.
i ThMmpon’iEyiWitir
FEARFUL OF RESULTS.
-
Course of Allies In China Is
Watched With a Consid¬
erable Degree of Alarm.
The state department has not heard
from Minister Conger for four days
past. But his last report upon the
progress of the negotiations now go¬
ing oh at Pekin between the ministers,
taken in connection with the depart¬
ment’s ample instructions relative to
this subject, warrants the officials at
Washington in confirming the Pekin
view that the end of these consulta¬
tions is in sight.
It .cannot be concealed, however,
that disapproval is entertained of the
attitude of the German military com¬
mander in China, and though our gov¬
ernment has not protested against the
punitive expeditions, which it regards
as ingeniously calculated to cause
fresh outbreaks among the Chinese, it
fears the results.
There is no hesitation in energeti¬
cally denying the European implication
that the United States government is
moved in its Chinese course by senti¬
mental and unbusiness-like considera¬
tions.
On the contrary, it is pointed out
that while sentiment is on the side of
our government on this matter, it is
accompanied by the soundest business
considerations, for the animating pur¬
pose of, the state department now is to
prevent the destruction of Chinese
territorial integrity npon pretexts; to
maintain the open door for which our
government so long has contended; to
secure indemnities for the past and
guarantees for the future.
It is felt that these objects can be
secured without breaking the implied,
truce entered into between the minis¬
ters and Li Hung Chang and Prince
Ching. influential
Advices from the most
Chinese sources agree in stating that
American prestige has been grentely
advanced in China by the moderate
and humane course adopted by the
United States.
“HOBHIIILE” PUMSIIMENTS.
Chinese Lenders Sentenced to Degrada¬
tion and Life Imprisonment.
Minister Wn at Washington has re¬
ceived from Director General Sheng
the following cablegram which he
communicated to Secretary Hay Fri-
dav: y
“An imperial decree of November
13th deprives Prince Tuan and Prince
Chwang of their ranks and offices and
orders them to b8 imprisoned for life;
Prince Yih and Secondary Prince Ying
to be imprisoned; Secondary Prince
Lien to be deprived of his rank; Duke
Ian and Ying Nien to be degraded in
rank; Ivang Pi being dead, no penalty
can be imposed rtpon him; and Shao
Shu Chian to be degraded, but re¬
tained in office, and Yu Hsien to be ex¬
iled to the farthest boundary.”
GKEAT ARMY IS IMPERATIVE.
Such Is the Gist of Commanding General
Allies* Report.
The feature of the annual report of
Lieutenant General Miles, command¬
ing the army, is a chapter dealing with
the need for a general reorganization
of the military service. In regard to
this question he says:
“The need for an efficient and well
organized land force fo» an indefinite
period in the future is most obvious,
and the organization of such a force
cannot be wisely avoided, Such a
service as is now demanded of the
army cannot be performed by a tem¬
porary organization.”
PROMINENT VETERAN DEAD.
Major Van Holt Nash Attends HI* Last
Reunion at Augusta.
Major Joseph Van Holt Nash, one
of Atlanta’s most distinguished citi¬
zens, died suddenly at the home of his
Bon-in-latv, Cornelius Garrett, in Au¬
gusta, Ga., early Saturday morning.
Major Nash, tvho tvas one of the
most prominent confederate veterans
in the state, had gone to Augusta for
the purpose of attending tho Confed¬
erate reunion in that city. When he
left Atlanta he was in the best of
health and good spirits and was look¬
ing forward to meeting his old com¬
rades with great pleasure.
Atlanta Firm In Trouble.
Friday morning Shiff & Webster, a
dry goods firm doing business at No.
11 North Pryor street,‘Atlanta, Ga.,
were placed in Involuntary bankrupt¬
cy on motion of Dresser & Co., et al.,
of New York.
THE HAWAIIAN ELECTION.
Hoy alls! g Win Over Republicans and
Whites Are Depressed.
Robert Wilcox, the independent elected
Royalist candidate, has been
Hawaiian delegate to congress by a
small majority^over Samuel Parker, Re¬
publican. Much depression has result¬
ed among all whites, as Wilcox was
strongly opposed by Republicans and
Democrats alike. His campaign was
an anti-white canvass, with promises
on the part of some of his campaign
workers that if he were elected Queen
Lillioukalani should be restored to the
throne. The result of the vote shows
the native bitterness over annexation
to be still alive.
GRIGGS TO QUIT CABINET.
Attorney General Makes Formal An-
nouncement That He Will Retire.
A Washington special says: At the
cabinet meet ing Friday Attorney Gen¬
eral Griggs made the formal announce¬
ment that on the 4th of March next he
would retire from tht cabinet. Mr.
Griggs will leave the president’s offi¬
cial family for purely business rea¬
sons.
One Thousand Hales Burned.
A dispatch from Montgomery states
that at noon Friday, fire broke out in
the Alabama warehouse and compress,
near Riverside Park, and destroyed
one section of the building and 1,000
bales of cotton, causing a total loss of
§50,000, covered by insurance.
Cudahys Increase Their Capital. •
The John Cudahy Packing and Pro¬
vision Company was incorporated Fri¬
day at Springfield, Ohio; as the first
step In organising a §10,000,000 cor'
purstiec, aisbraeieg nil Jwfes @t}dAhar'4
h Look at your tongue. k
* < Is it coated? ¥
4 Then you have a bad N
taste in your mouth every
► morning. is and Your food appetite dis- kj
M poor, i
► tresses you. You have
4 frequent headaches and 4
are often dizzy. Your ►J
► stomach is weak and sj]
i your bowels are always ^
?■ constipated. There’s old and J
4 an re- p
◄ liable cure:
◄
p >4
<
4 p
¥ m ►
4
¥
4
v « A
* £ 4
*
I 4 Don’t take cathartic
a
4 dose and then stop. Bet¬
P ter take a laxative dose
<i each night, just enough to
r cause one good free move¬
c ment the day following.
> You feel better the
► very next day. Your
> 4 dyspepsia appetite returns, is cured, your p L 4
4 your
►< headaches pass away,
your tongue clears up,
► <1 your liver acts well, and
your bowels no longer
give you trouble.
> Price, 23 cents. All druggists. >
“ T bare taken Ayer’s rills for 35 <
< years, and I consider them the best
< made. than half One a box pill of does any me other more kind good I 4
have ever tried.” :
jF [ 4 1 March 30,1S89. Mrs N. E. Arrington, TAt.hot’, Kans.
’T' * V "*£>’ • " ’ V
AM1MALS HAVE PETS.
A Collie That Wouldn’t Bite One of His Sheep
•••Horses and StabL Cat.
When a good sheep dog is in charge
of a flock of sheep he has one regular
way of driving and pushing those
that stray. He nips lightly with his
teeth the sheep’s hind leg, just below
the hock. A dog called Ralph, be¬
longing to ft sheep farmer on the chalk
downs near Huugerferd, in Wiltshire,
was noticed by the shepherd to allow
one of the flock a great deal more lib¬
erty than any of the others. Curious
to know If this was only fancy on Ids
part, the shepherd set the dog on the
sheep as soon as it began to stray
again. The collie ran around the crea¬
ture, pushed it, licked it, but absolute¬
ly refused to bite it. The dog never
maxed in the least his severity toward
the rest of the flock, hut to his special
pet lie could not he too kind, and
eventually It was found necessary, for
the sake of discipline, 1 to get ® rkl of
the spoiled _ creature. L
Horses are always fond of the stable
cat. The great race horse Australian
was so passionately attached to his
special cat that wherever he went she
had to be taken, too. He could not be
trusted at the starting post unless his
cat had been In his stall before he was
taken out. The Godolphin Arab
Seham—the first Arab thoroughbred
brought to England—had a black cat
which always slept on his. back. One
day he accidentally crushed her. After
that the mere sight of a cat sent the
great horse into convulsions of fright.
A market gardener at Croydon was
amazed one day to find that a basket
he had filled with caiTots half an hour
before was unaccountably empty. He
refilled the basket and hid behind a
trellis to watch for the thief. He
could hardly believe his eyes when he
saw T a little half-bred terrier that he
kept about the place as w r atehdog take
a carrot in Its mouth and slink off.
Dogs do not eat raw carrots, so he
quietly followed the animal. The dog
w'eiii straight to the stables and, wag¬
ging his tail, presented the carrot to
the horse in whose stall he slept. The
scene was repeated until the supply
of carrots was- exhausted.
The writer once owned an American
Raccoon, which was a most amusing,
but very mischievous pet. He was
kept chained like a dog in a kennel
and only allowed out wffien someone
wAs watching him. One day a little
black kitten was found in his kennel.
She must have strayed within reach
of his chain and he have caught her
and adopted her. He treated her as
well as her own mother could have
done and divided all his food wdth her.
She always slept between his fore
paws. When she got bigger it was
liis delight to be set loose and allowed
to play with her. The two would
scamper all over the garden and if
any stray dog approached, the sharp
cry of the raccoon warned pussy to
escape up a tree.—London Answers.
Mr. Gilbert’s Reply.
Success: “Who composed‘The Magic
Fiute?’ ” an old lady asked one of the
authors of “Pinafore. ”
“Mozart,” replied Mr. Gilbert.
“Indeed, I never heard of him. Is
he still composing?”
“No, madam8,” re plied the wit,
“he is decomposing, ” whereat the
lady was somewhat discomposed. i
Plantation Chill Cure is r-'iy Guaranteed
1 o C u» - ■<t Non, » KGumhii itv Yt>!»» Hrn}iMil. M.WKv NoI.Tpy it ? Friv,- < vi r
( OURSE GIVEN. Post-
Tioss Guaranteed by
$5,0C0uep *lt. R. R. F A KB
Paid. Write quick.
Ga.-Ai.a. Bus. Colleoh,
Macon, Georgia.
ELECTION DAT.
Bow It Came to be Tuesday after Flrtt Moa*
day la November.
The designation of the day for hold¬
ing the presidential election Is left to
congress. The first act passed by it re¬
lating to that subject was in 1792. It
provided that presidential electors
should be appointed “within 84 days
before the first Wednesday in Decem¬
ber.” This left each state free to select
a day to suit itself within those Bruits.
Pennsylvania chose electors on the
last Friday in October. Other states
elected theirs on different days be-
tween the beginning and middle of
November.
When Harrison was elected in 1840
the Democrats asserted that bis suc¬
cess was due partly to fraudulent vot¬
ing, which was made possible by the
lack of a definite election day. It was
alleged that Kentucky and Ohio Whigs
had voted In both states, the election
being held on different days. So In
1S43 the Democrats passed the law
now on the statute books making the
first Tuesday after the first Monday
election day.
At that time but five of thd twenty-
six states had their state elections in
November. In Michigan and Mississippi
voting was carried on through two
days—the first Monday and the follow¬
ing Tuesday, New York had had three
election days—the first Monday, Tues¬
day and Wednesday—but had finally
confined voting to the middle day, or
the first Tuesday after the first Mon¬
day. Massachusetts chose state of¬
ficers on the second Monday in Novem¬
ber, and Delaware on the second Tues¬
day. So congress selected the first
Tuesday after the first Monday to con¬
sult the convenience of three states out
of five, one of the three being the Im¬
portant state of N *w York.—Chicago
Tribune.
In the Near Future.
Now, the train was thundering on
with its load of human freight toward
the abyss with great rapidity.
“Alas!” cried Gladys, “I have no red
r.kirt to wave.”
For it was she who stood beside the
track.
It suddenly occurred to her that the
engineer was a woman.
Taking off her brand-new hat, she
waved that.
Of course the train was halted. To
insiieet the hat? The idea.—Indianap¬
olis Tress.
Before and After.
“Do you think of me as often as you
did before we were married?” asked
Mr. Meek ton’s wife,
“Much oftener,” he answered, cheer-
ily, but absent-mindedly, “You see,
Henrietta,- you weren’t in a position
to then remind me of yourself ns much
as you can at present.”—Washington
Star,
Wantod.
A traveling salesman in each southern State;
$30 to $60 p >r month and traveling ex t ponses;
♦ S] mvWv ■ n t aboolutel v>lately necessary. Address
Pei 1 -A* Tobacco Works Co , Panicles, Va.
Too T.'tlp.
•Stuttering ’ Em pi ‘ye (wilting letter) —B b-b-
b iy. hand Hand me m > a b-b b-bl-bl-bl—
Ofiloe Boy—A blotter, idr do you wish?"
Stuttering Employer—Never mind n-n-n-
now; the ink has d d d-drled.
t lie Host Proscription for CliHl*
A nd Fever is a bottle of GiiOVR’s TA8TEI.mil
him,Tonic, it Is simply iron mul quinine la
n lABteloBS form. No cure— no pay. BrloeWo.
J ^cailna the Power..
breiia “Our ail cook the carries ” Harry 8 gold-handled urn-
tiina
“Oh[ 0 I Ub/nlt ,0 11
make ye». you would. We wouldn’t do a thing
to her di sliko us.— IndianapotTs Journal.
Indigestion is a had companion, Got
rid of it by chewing a bar of ’Adams’ rep-
sin Tutti Frutti after each monk
Bu'iness Gra-p.
“What! Fifty cents for pulling In this load
of coal? You charged only 25 cenM the last
time.”
•’Yee’m, but coal has rlx."
It requires no experience to dye with Put¬
nam Fadeless Dtes. Simply boiling your
goods in the dye is ail that’s necessary. Sold
by all druggists.
A Philosopher.
“I should think you would spend your money
tor clothe* Instead of whisky.’’
“Oh. thoy’s always old clothes to give away,
but Ihc older booz • gits tho worse people hang
on to i t."—Indianapolis Press.
l!eware of Ointments for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury,
ns mercury will surely destroy tho sense of
smell and completely derange the whole system
when entering it through the mucous surfaces.
-ueh articles should never be used except on
prescriptions from reputable physicians, as the
damage they will do is ten fold to the good you
oRn possibly derive from them. Hall’s Catarrh
Cure, manufactured by F- J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo. O.. contains no mercury, and Is taken
internally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of tho system. In buyt mg
Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure to get the genut..... ne.
It is taken internally, and Is made in Toledo,
Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
t-r Hall’s Sold Family by Druggists', Pills price, 75c. per bottle.
are the best.
Her Fate.
“So Iren > has met her fate at last.”
“Indeed?”
“Yrs. It Is : fifty years old, baldheaded and
owns a grocery. '.’’—Indianapolis Press.
non. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c a bottio.
He Mmt Have Had.
‘•Did you have a good time on your vacation?”
“Good time? I've got to wear mv old clothes
for two years.”
Best For the Bowels.
No matter what ails you, headache to a
cancer, you will never get well until yonr
bowels are put right. Cescarets help
nature, cure you without a gripe or pain,
produce just 10 cents easy to natural movements, cost you
back. Ci.8ca.rets start getting your health
genuine, Candy Cathartic, the
put up in metal boxes, every tab¬
let has C.C.C. stamped on it. Beware of
imitations.
An Apt Accountant.
“Mis? Sllmmerhorn tells Tne that De Smetis
great on figures. Is he a college professor of
mathematics?”
"No; ladles’ tailor.”
Piso’s Cure for Consumption is nn Infalli¬
ble medi ine for c ughs and colds.—N. W.
Samuel, Ocean Grove, N. J., Feb. 17,1900.
The Pressure.
Kate—Dell Daniels must be hard presses for
a beau to ta'ae Up with Charley Chowders.
Mate—Rather she Is hard pressed by a beau
t i i : t > v , , him.— Denver News.
FADED IN HER YOU 1
rC ^ :* ccs and graceful forms of young women f Why is it they are so
n rep . ace by plainness and lankness? It is because the young girl Just-
enterhag into womanhood does not know how to
-a a j p. competent to
take care of herself and has no one
instruct her. It is not necessary that there should
anything weakening or wearying about the
functions of a female organism. Parent# of young
liglpV iir girls should inform themselves and prevent theis
dear ones from making costly errors. of
That young woman hM a just cause oom*
^ P laint "^ho is permitted to believe that great
’ expected, that
periodic suffering is to bo sever®
mysterious pains and aches are part of her
natural experience as a woman, These thing®
are making constant war on her health, her dis¬
position and her beauty. It is a wanteui aacri-
fice, absolutely unnecessary and cruel. It is
more—it is criminal.
Dr. Greene’s
NERVURA
for the Blood and Nerves
Dr. Greene’s Nerrura blood and nerve remedy.
Is the right medicine for every young girl who
w I is just entering the first stage of womanhood..
It prepares the system in every way to act nor¬
mally. It enriches the blood supply, and keeps:
the nerves calm and steady. Fortified with this
m great undertaken medicine, and all experienced the womanly without duties the may slight* be.
est jeopardy to health. It preserves the gifts of
nature and assists their development into glow
mg, healthful beauty.
Mbs. Mart Frances Lttxe, of 2 Hunter
Alley, Rochester, N. Y., says:
“I was very pale and delicate—had' no color.
I took Dr. Greene’s Nervura, blood and nervo remedy, and
and now I am well and strong, pure.” my face is plump,
1 cheeks red, and my complexion
Mrs. William Bartels, 239 East 87th St..
ft New York City, says: wonderful improve¬
“Dr. Greene’s Nervura made a look left
ment in my health, and that dark, sallow my
face. My friends hardly know me. I hare gained flesh
and am like a different person.”,
__The nervousness In women which invariably
_ comes with pain is of itself certain to stop tha
development of beauty in face and figure. Ex-
c i te< I nerves make sharp lines and hasty speech..
The beautiful curves which make women so>
a ractlve are not possible when the female organism is out of order, as ifc
surely is when discomfort and pain are always or even periodically present,
t is only necessary to look in the faces of young women everywhere to se»
that this must be so. Else why are they so pale and thin ?
GET FREE ADVICE FROM DRa GREENE
Real beauty is rare. It belongs to perfect health. It Is possible to every
woman who takes the matter in hand intelligently. Get advice from Dr.
Greene, the great specialist in these matters. He will tell you why all this is
so, and show you how to avoid the stumbling blocks that bar woman’s way
to happiness. You may consult Dr. Greene without cost by calling or writ¬
ing to him at his office, 35 West 14th Street, New York City. Don’t throw
away your beauty. Write to Dr. Greene to-day.
The man who smokes
G (MS* • Cheroots g
_ has expression a satisfied, his . a< from ave the got time it” §
® on face 9
® he lights disappointed. one. He knows No he will J
m not e matter m
S where Florida he buys California—he one—Maine knows or Texas, they J
or $
® ^ will home—clean—well be just the same as those made—burn he gets ■
at
• even—taste good—satisfying!
Three hundred million Old Virginia Cheroots smoked this
ye»r. Ask your own dealer. Price, 3 for 5 cents.
Gladstone's Astuteness.
One day Mr. Gladstone, who had
then just turned twenty, was stopped
In a street by a man minus a leg, Yvho
solicited alms and averred that he had
been disabled at Waterloo. Inquiring
the nsmber of the fellow’s regiment.
Mr. Gladstone then submitted him to
a smart cross-examination concerning
Its position In the great battle, and
the would-be ex-warrior broke down
entirely. He admitted he was a com¬
plete fraud, and owned that he had
lost a leg by being run over by a
wagon. He further volunteered the
Intelligence that he was intoxicated at
the time. But, noticing that Mr.
Gladstone seemed more amused than
otherwise, the vagrant whined: “Sir,
If you had only a lost leg to get a liv-
ing out of you’d be inclined, I fancy,
to make as much out of It as you
could. I told the truth till I was
£££. , ... iJ _ ,
£:
ter> Thank heaven, young gentleman,
all folks are not so mighty smart as
you are, and most of ’em believes me!”
The young Oxford undergraduate, as
-was then, was so tickled with the
candor of the imposter that be gave
him a shilling.—Household Words.
When it Became Lovely.
Mrs. Schoppen—Oh, my! look at that
rug over there, Isn’t it perfectly hide¬
ous?
Mrs. Price—Horrible! Such wretched
colors!
Dealer (a moment later)—I noticed
you looking at that rug, ladies. It’s a
great bargain; only $135, and it’s a
genuine antique.
Chorus—Oh, how perfectly lovely!—
Philadelphia Press.
pr.BuirsgSSs&s Cough Syrup ‘£S?°sk“S5S:
Refuse substitutes. Get Dr. Bull’s Cough Svrup.
that Literary the Fame. of the hour
He saw mood
called for Concord philosophy,
Happily, this was not difficult.
“It matters little,” he wrote, “which
shoulder you see the new moon over,
provided you put the shoulder to the
wheel!”
An intuition told him at once that his
literary fame was now secure.—De¬
troit Journal.
IBBY’S
q • Premier Soups *
• TEN GENTS a
g Libby’s O
soups arc as good as soups •
a can Some cooks may know •
® - ^ 2
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™ cnca P J blx of delicious s O
O * f° u P J- ° r IO c ^ t8 an< *
•
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o •
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® serring — just herd tkttjj 9
O • LIBBY, MoNEll
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Good Things^
o
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$129 TO $'
With Improved Rope
SAWS, FILES and TEETH
Engines, All Boilers and ! same". .al
Kinds and Repairs for
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AUGUSTA. GA