Banks County journal. (Homer, Ga.) 1897-current, June 12, 1897, Image 4
Not Just Then.
“Almost any man will admit that
he’s liable to make mistakes.”
“Yes, except when he makes ’em.”
—Chicago Jo.urnnl.
A Vvil of Mist
Rising at morning or owning from some low
land, often carries In Its folds the sends of ma
laria. Where main rial fever prevails no one is
safe, Unless protected by some efficient medici
nal safeguard. Hob tetter’s Stomach Ritters is
both a protection and a remedy. No person who
Inhabits, or sojourns in a miasmatic region or
country, should omit to procure this fortifying
agent, which is also t he finest know n remedy for
dyspepsia. constipation, kidney trouble and
rheumatism.
When a woman refuses to talk It is but rea
sonable to suppose that she is sick.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cents.
Over 400,000 cured. Why not let No-To-Bac
regulate or remove your desire for tobacco?
Raves money, makes hoalth and manhood.
Cure guaranteed. 50 cents and SI.OO, at all
druggists.
A point of order is sometimes noted for its
bluntuess.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is a liquid and is taken
internally, and acts directly on the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system. Write for tes
timonials, free. Manufactured by
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.
When bilious or costive, eat a Cascaret,
candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; 10c., 35c.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 35c. a bottle.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness after first day’s use of I)r. Kline s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Du. R. 11. Kune. Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
JrST try a lfie. box of Casearets, tho finest
liver and bowel regulator over made.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption relieves tho most
•bstinate coughs.— : Rev. D. Bcchmueller, Lex
ington, Mo., Feb. 24, *94.
If afflicted with sore eyes tide Dr. Isaac Thomp
son's Eye-water. Druggists soli at 25c. per bottle.
Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and
bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c.
Scrofula Cured
“When three months old my boy was
troubled with scrofula. There were soro
place® on his hands and body as large as a
man’s hand, and sometimes ilie bk>od
would ran. We began giving him Hood’s
Sarsaparilla and it soon took effeet. When
ho bad taken three bottles he was cured.”
W. H. GabMb, West Earl, Pennsylvania.
HOOd’S B pa®ia
ts the best -intact the One True Blood Purifier.
ntuU cure all Liver Ills and
nß9ll S r ails. Slc.k UeadVhe. 180.
How She Appeared.
Something whizzed by—a mingle
ment of steel spokes and red bloom
ers.
“What is that there?” asked Uncle
Hiram, withdrawing his gaze from the
high building to look after the vision.
“That is the new woman,” answered
his nephew.
Held Her Own.
“I have never seen your daughter,”
said the visitor, “but I have heard
that she is very beautiful. Of course,
she gets her beauty from you!”
The hostess glanced reflective in the
mirror opposite. “No, I think lam
still holding on to my own.”—Pick-
Me-Up.
Postponed.
Employer—l thought you wanted to
go to your grandmother’s funeral this
afternoon.
Office Boy—Please, sir, it was post
poned on account of wet grounds.—
Truth.
KIDNEY TROUBLES
Cured by Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound,
Also Backache*
X cannot speak too highly of Mrs.
Pinkham's Medicine, for it has done so
much for me. I have been a great suf
ferer from Kidney trouble, pains in
muscles, joints, back and shoulders;
feet would swell. I also had womb
troubles and leucorrhcea. After using
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound, and Blood Purifier and Liver
Pills, I felt like anew woman. My
kidneys are now in perfect condition,
and all my other troubles are cured.—
Mrs. Maggie Potts, 324 Kauffman St.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
Backache.
Ss\y system was entirely run down,
and I suffered with terrible backache
in the small of my back and could
hardly stand upright. I w-as more
tired in the morning than on retiring
at night. I had no appetite. Since
taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound, I have gained fifteen pounds,
and I look batter than I ever looked
before. I shall recommend it to all
my friends, as it certainly is a wonder
ful medicine. — Mrs. E. F. Morton, 1043
Hopkins St., Cincinnati, Ohio.
Kidney Trouble.
Before taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound, I had suffered
many years with kidney trouble. The
pains in my hack and shoulders were
terrible, My menstruation became ir
regular, and I was troubled with leu
corrhoea. I was growing very weak. I
had been to many physicians hut re
ceived no benefit. I began the use of
Mrs. Pinkham’s medicine, and the first
bottle relieved the pain in my. hack
and regulated the menses. It is the
best kind of medicine that I have ever
taken, for it relieved the pain so quickly
and cured the disease. — Mrs. Lii.i.iax
Crifpen, Box 77, St. Andrews Bay, Fla.
DRUNKARDS Wed?
The era vine for drink is a disease, a marvellous
cure for which has discovered railed Anti
jaa," which makes the inebriate lose all taste for
etronc drink without knowing why. as it can be
given secretly in tea, coffee, soup and the l'ke.
If “Anti-Jag” is not kept by your druggist send
one dollar to the Renova Chemical Cos., bS Broad
way, New York, and it will be sent postpaid, in
plain wrapper, with full directions how to give
secretly. Information mailed free.
SOAP TANKS TUMBLE DOWN.
IMMENSE SHEET IRON TUBS CRASH
THROUGH FIVE STORIES.
TWO MEN BURIED IN THE RUINS.
Th* Building, Which Was n New One,
Wat Almost Bendy For Occupancy.
Thirteen Workmen Escape.
Five enormous tanks, each contain
ing 13,000 gallons of water, fell five
stories through the new building of
David S. Brown A Cos., soap manufac
turers, at Twelfth avenue, Fifty-first
and Ffty-second streets, New York,
Thursday morning, burying two men
under thousands of tons of debris.
The body of William Frazer, forty
years old, a surveyor in th? employ of
the Otis Elevator Company, was taken
from the ruins sometime afterwards.
Jacob Jacobson, a carpenter is mis
sing.
The place was nearly ready for occu
pancy. The tanks were to have con
tained soap fat. They were put in by
the Cotes Iron Works, of Cotesville,
Penn.
Alexander Brown, the brick con
tractor; Henry F. Kilburn, the archi
tect, and Hamilton, inspector for the
iron works contractors, were arrested
charged with homicide.
The five tanks shot through the five
floors like a stone dropping through
so much space. There were fifteen
men in the building at the time of the
accident. They were scattered around
the factory. There was not a second’s
warning of the fall of the tanks. They
had been filling with water for testing
and were nearly full.
The tanks were naeli 13x13 feet
square by 20 feet in height. They
were made of sheet iron and were a
quarter of an inch thick. To prevent
the water from bulging their sides,
stout iron bauds had been placed in
side of each tank.
The fall of the tanks carrying with
them five floors of iron and woodwork
was heard for several blocks around.
At the fall of the tanks they carried
down iron girders and beams a foot in
width and four inches in thickness,
snapping them as if they were pipe
stems. There was no stopping, as
they struck the floors in succession, so
enormous was the weight of the tanks.
All the men who had been inside the
building were got together and count
ed. It was found that two were miss
ing. They were Jacobson and Frazer.
A wrecking firm undertook the re
moval of the debris. At 4 o’clock Fra
zer’s body was partially uncovered and
three hours later it was taken out.
Coroner Fitzpatrick said that it was
probably the bulging of the tanks
which had caused the dislodgement of
the walls and caused the fall of the
tanks and floors.
A SENSATIONAL PRAYER
Offered Bp By Cliaplain in the Illinois
State Legislature.
The chaplain of the Illinois house of
representatives, Bev. David G. Brad
ley, opened the session of the state
legislature Thursday with the follow
ing prayer:
‘ ‘Almighty God, we seek Thy pres
ence and blessing at the beginning of
another day’s diligent labor. Help
us, pray Thee, in the discharge of this
day’s duties. Help these men to re
member the poor, tax-burdened people
of this great state.
Contract, we pray Thee, the capa
cious maw of penal reformatory, char
itable and educational institutions of
Illinois. May they learn to be con
tent with less money and may we re
fuse to worship a golden calf, refuse
also to worship gold in any other form.
Forbid that any foreigner visiting our
shores shall ever again have occasion
to write:
“Money, money, is all tlieir cry;
Money’s the total sum.
Give us money or else we die;
Oh, let the money come.”
“And we will give Thee praise. ’*
The prayer created a sensation and
was greeted with enthusiastic applause.
Missouri Congressional Election.
The election in the first Missouri
district for a sudeessor to Congress
man Giles, deceased, resulted in fayor
of J. T. Lloyd, demoerrt, by a plural
ity of 5,516 over Clark, republican.
PROTEST MADE BY IIP R RANT.
A Formal Demand For Release, Claiming
Unjust Imprisonment.
A San Francisco dispatch says:
There will he two hundred invita
tions issued for the execution of Dur
rant and Warden Hale has fixed 10:30
a. m. as the hour of hanging. Twenty
five medical men will be permitted to
witness the execution.
©arrant has made a formal demand
for release, claiming to he unjustly
imprisoned. This will be part of the
appeal to the supreme court and iB to
cover the point which might be
made that by failing to protest and
demand his liberty he had lost the
right to complain.
MIT HOI L ON HAY D.
Branch of Standard Oil Company at
Cleveland Shuts Down.
At noon Monday the entire plant of
the Standard Oil Company in Cleve
land, 0., closed down for au indefinite
period.
Nearly 1,000 men are thrown out of
employment by the shut down. It is
said that the Standard has an immense
stock on hand in the warehouse at
Kingsberry Run, enough, in fact, to
supply the demand in the district un
til January Ist, 1898, or longer.
SUGAR SCANDAL IN SENATE.
Tillxuan Scores Committee for Failure to
Report, Hl* Resolution.
Senator Tillman shook the red flag
of sugar investigation in the face of the
senate republican bull Thursday, and
was the result of a very lively discus
sion, in which several senators took
jiart, the South Carolinian scored a
point. He got from members of the
sub-committee, to which has been re
ferred his investigation resolution, a
promise that the resolution shall be
reported to the senate at no late day.
That is what the aggressive Carolin
ian was after. He wants action. He
had read apparently authorized news
paper statements which told of a pur
pose to suppress his resolutions and
he didn’t propose they should be sup
pressed if he could help it.
It was with this purpose that he
moved that the committee be discharged
from the consideration of his resolu
tion and that an immediate vote on that
resolution be had by the senate.
This incident closed, the tariff bill
was taken up.
The house proceedings Thursday
were enlivened by a single incident,
the attempt of Mr. Terry, democrat, of
.Arkansas, to secure consideration as a
privileged matter of a resolution for
the immediate appointment- of the
committee on foreign affairs in order,
as the preliminary whereas recited, to
permit action on the senate Cuban
belligerency resolution.
It was ruled out of order and an ap
peal taken from the decision of the
chair was laid on the table by a strict
party vote.
Several bills were passed by unani
mous consent. At 3:50 p. m., the
house adjourned until Monday.
DENOUNCED BY WOODROW.
The Reverend College President Says
Militia Were Trespassers.
President James Woodrow, the head
of the South Carolina college at Co
lumbia, and known throughout the
United States by reason of his con
nection with the evolution controversy
in the Presbyterian church, has taken
sides with the students in the matter
of their collision with the military
some days ago.
Dr. Woodrow had been absent since
the clash occurred until Thursday
when he appeared at the morning
chapel exercises. In addressing the
students, Dr. Woodrow referred to
the trouble and said:
“When I gave permission for the
millitia to go upon any part of the
ground, I was under the impression
the officers were gentlemen.”
The doctor declared that the militia
and police were trespassers; that the
troops had never been given permis
sion to cross the baseball field, but
that they had been expressly warned
not to do so. The rights of the college
must and shall be respected, be de
dared. Pistols hud been drawn and
students and the acting president, a
professor, had been clubbed, a stu
dent’s skull crushed and the responsi
bility must be placed.
Dr. Woodrow’s remarks were greeted
with cheers by the college hoys.
CALHOUN COMES HOME.
His Cuban Report Will Recommend
Peace, if Peace Re Possible.
A special to The New York Herald
from Havana, Cuba, via Key West,
Fla., says:
“Mr. Calhoun goes home puzzled.
He sailed on a Ward Line steamer.
Many contradictory stories of the in
surrection have been poured into his
ear. He has declined to be interview
ed, but your correspondent ha3 an ab
solute authority as to the nature of
his views.
“Mr. Calhoun is for peace, if peace
be possible, and, if need he, for war.
He will recommend that war here be
stopped at all hazards. He will urge
in support of this position the condi
tion of Americans and American inter
ests here, and with more force the
frightful conditions of the country
folks, which he knows from personal
experience. And so in the long run
Mr. Calhoun will report to President
McKinley, and with whatever weight
he has as the president’s personal rep
resentative here, will suggest that
Spain be told that the war on the
women and children in the island of
Cuba must cease.
“The Ruiz investigation is closed.
As predicted, the matter is exactly
where General Lee left it in February
last.”
COLLINS SENDS IN RESIGNATION
And Governor Bloxham Recommends Its
Acceptance.
A Tallahassee, Fla., dispatch says:
State Treasurer Collins has resigned
and J. B. Whitfield, ex-clerk of the
supreme court, has been appointed.
Collins has for some time contem
plated resigning, but was talked out of
it. His resignation, if accepted, saves
the state $20,000 expenses of trial.
When Governor Bloxham notified
the house of Collins’ resignation, it
was with a recommendation that it lie
accepted, and the house impeachment
committee was ordered to go before
the senate and withdraw the articles
of impeachment.
RESPONSIBILITY ON (jUEEN VIC.
Irishmen Will Take No Part In Jubilee
Celebration.
A resolution calling upon the Irish
to abstain from taking part in the
diamond jubilee of Queen Victoria
was presented at the meeting of the
Irish National League at Manchester
Saturday and carried.
An amendment to the resolution de
claring that the condition of Ireland
was due not to Queen Victoria, but to
the legislation of the men selected to
make the laws, was rejected.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL,
Germany has now electric lights in
over 1000 postal cars, aud Austria is
about to adopt the same system.
Among 1318 children in the Weis'
biiden schools it has been found that
only three per cent, had sound teeth.
The falling waters of Kern River
have been made to furnish the electric
power for the town of Bakersfield,
Col.
The Japanese Government has voted
12,800,000 silver dollars for improve
ments and extensions in the telephone
service.
The grand total of the hydraulic
power at Niagara Falls secured through
electrical appliances is over 26,000
horse power.
It has been estimated that an oak of
average size, during the five months it
is in leaf every year, sucks from the
earth about 123 tons of water.
In anew invention for making ve
hicle wheels, they are formed from
sheet motal by stamping, pressing or
cutting out, and are secured to the
axle by bolts, bosses and collars.
Herr Cuffey, a German expert, sent
to Bombay by the Emperor William,
has arranged for an animal hospital for
the purpose of studying the plague
poison. He intends making extensive
experiments. .
Barrels, casks,pails,etc., are made in
Germany by molding wood-pulp in the
desired shape, subjecting it to heat in
the form of hot air or water, steam or
other vapor, and compressing it by hy
draulic pressure.
Paris and Madrid will soon be con
nected by telephone, tho construction
of a line from Paris to Bayonne having
recently been determined upon. As
Madrid is already connected wifh San
Sebastian, it will be only necessary
then to join that place with Biarritz,
Professor Forbes, the eminent elec
trician, w’h'ose appointment by the
Egyptian government to report On the
possibilities of utilizing the Nile catar
acts for the generation of electricity
was noted in this column some weeks
ago,has returned to Cairo and expressed
himself as strongly in favor of the pro
ject. •
Following up the researches of two
German physicists, who were recently
led to conclude that three lines of oxy
gen in the solar spectrum were not at
mospheric, Lewis Jewell considers that
he has proven conclusively that the
lines are produced by water vapor in
the earth’s atmosphere, and that,
therefore, the- spcctrosoopo does not
indicate oxygen in the sun. / "
“Sundown 'Ministers.” V
“Sundown ministers, by which I
mean preachers who are engaged in
departmental or other work during the
daytime and who preach evenings and
days when on leave of absence,” ex
plained a genii
recent confer'- ice
little or no consideration in our relig
ious conferences any more, and while
preachers do not like to talk out at
meetin’, they bavg no hesitancy in
speaking plainly in private’ conversa
tion. Ministers have an honorable
profession. They spend years prepar
ing themselves for their duties, have
no other occupations or employment,
and seek no other. There is but little
money in the ministry, after all, for
though a few gifted or fortunate men
draw financial prizes by it, the great
body of them do not receive the wages
received by the average mechanic in
the large cities. It is not strange,
therefore, that they should not like
sundowners. They have no jealousy
toward workers in the vineyard who
feel they can give their talents to the
good work. What they object to is
that persons should compete with them
when they have other engagements un-,
til after sundown. Asa minister at
the conference said to me, the sun
down preacher is neither fish,-flesh,
fowl, nor even good red herring,"—
Washington Star. [ i
XVhy He Thought Them a rake, Tjg*.
Carson City, Nev., has had to fall
back on its “giant footprints” in a
neighboring quarry as its star attrac
tion. A gang of convicts has been set
to work at hewing steps and paths lead
ing to the “footprints” in the solid rock
of the quarry. Among other things a
tunnel lifts been dug, showing where
the “footprints” disappear into the
mountain. This tunnel is about as
high as a man. A recent visitor brought
grief to the unfortunate convicts who
had to 'overhear the following shrewd
deductions: “Pshaw, I thought it was
a fake before, but this proves it. You
say them feetsteps are of a beast forty
one feet high, do you? Well, if that’s
so, you just tell me how the critter
managed to walk into a tunnel which
bumps my head to stand erect in?” It
is said that when the convicts heard
this, several of them went over to the
other side and wept bitterly, and the
guards did not reprimand them for it.
—New York Sun.
A , ~..
Nora M. Hughes, an unmarried
woman about forty-one years of age,
died the other day, and left a will
which provided for the division of her
property—estimated at $15,000 or
$16,000 —among her relatives, and for
a monument over her grave with this
inscription:
: — J
; TO THE JLEMOBX OF ONE *.
: WHO WAS SACRIFICED EX A
I SO-CALLED FKIEND. 1
Miss Hughes’s family knows of no in
cident in her life which should occa
sion such a peculiar epitaph.—Chicago
Record.
£Hareourt’ Dirty Chimney.
Sir William George Venables Vernon
Harcourt, M. P., Liberal leader in the
British House of Commons, has been
fined $2.50 and costs in a London Po
lice Court for allowing his chimney to
latch fire through not having been
•leaned.
Prayer and Profanity
are all light in their proper places, hut if you
liavo Tetter or Eczema, or Salt-Rheum, or Ring
worm, hotter savo your breath and buy “Tetter-
Ine.” 50 cents a box at drug stores, or by mail
from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
Some novelists pad tholr tale—llko an excited
feline.
HALL’S
Vegetable Sicilian
HAIR RENEWER
Beautifies and restores Gray
Hair to its original color and
vitality; prevents baldness;
cures itching and dandruff.
A fine hair dressing.
K. P. Hall & Cos., Props., Nashua, N.H.
Solti by all Druggists.
HAY PRESSES!
IMPROVED HUNTER TULL CIRCLE "All
Steel" ami Wooden (steel lined) shipped on trail
to reliable parties. I TILLY GUARANTEED,
if- WRITE FOR CATALOGUE AND PRICES.
111. B. LEWIS* Lessee,
.„1 ERII MaJMfWSt s " ops
/QANDY cathartic
vabcaTvefov
CURiCOfISTIPATIOHg^r
DRUGGISTS;
IDCAIHTPT V rTTI!DinJTI?Pri to care any caseof constipation. Cascarets we the Heal Lava
nDuUliU lull I UUHUnn I Drill tire, never irrip or sripe.hnt cause easy natural results. Sam
ple and booklet free. Ad. STERLING REMEDY CO., Chicaao, Montreal, Can.. orNew York. sit.
Agents Everywhere!
For the Lovell “ Diamond ”
Cycles, and we stake our Business
Reputation of over 55 years that the
most perfect wheel yet made is the
Lovell Diamond ’97 Model.
INSIST ON SEEING THEM.
H GENTS in nearly every City and Town. Examination will prove
their superiority. If no agent in your place, send to us.
Wgg/Bff* CPECIAL—A large line of Low Priced and Second-
Iplilp* hand wheels at unheard of figures.
SEND FOR SECOND HAND LIST.
RICYCL E CATALOG VE FREE.
Wo have the largest line of Bicycle Sundries, Bicycle and Gymna
sium Suits and Athletic Goods of all kinds. Write tis what you want
and we’ll send you full information. If a dealer, mention it.
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS GO,, 131 Broad St., Boston.
Headquarters for Guns, Rifles and Revolvers, Fishing Tackle, Skates and
1 Sporting Goods of Every Description.
-9®“ SEND FOR OUR LARGE ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE.
SIOO in Gold Given Away
Wt ho can form the greatest number of words from the letters In / \
tho word “INDEPENDENT?” /
You can make ton or more words, we feel sure, and if you do you will /%„ • $
be well repaid. Do not use any letter more times lhan it appears in the word. | B■ A p,
Use no language except English. Words spelled alike but with different I • H SLjtf S'
meanings cun be used but once. Use any standard dictionary. Pronouns, 8 M w e
nouns, verbs, adverbs, prefixes and suffixes, adjectives al- > *./•/%! ,■ |N * •
lowed. Anything that is legitimate will be allowed. Work it H. ////Tvk • ®.2
out in this manner: In, deep, dent, net, nine, etc.; use these ?///. /// // ES jLjrW&v £
words in your list. The publishers of The Sunny South will V///////•./
pay $20.00 in gold to the person who make s the largest list of 'il II ll f// / t
words from the letters in the word IN DEPENDENT; SIO.OO 'III I'l t J i *a
for the second, SIO.OO for the third, SIO.OO for i he fourth, SIO.OO Vl//// yilll in t\ ft) *3
for the fifth, aud $5.00 each for the next eight largest lists. ji ulf /hi ///<//// f pi/ 'll ■
The above rewords are given free and without consideration ‘i j jpHfJJjJVlJlyil IV 1/ J 2
for the purpose of attracting attention to tho South’s great AH / t*
Illustrated family and literary weekly. It is twelve large WI ni /
pages,seventy-two columns each issue; all original matter 11 f J
with the very best long and short stories, in addition to its \’ ; '.\\\ ’{w vNN [|l [UJ ft I
numerous departments, such as ‘’Woman’s Page,” “Chll- 1 / h\\\' nMMw I II h
dren’s Page," "Blue and Gray Page” ana a page devoted / VAX WWWWI I I tlr N \
to ‘‘Southern Industries,” etc. To enter this contest it is V*/ I" I I
necessary for you to send 50 cents fora three months’sub- 8 Y\w iul f
Ecription with your list of words, and every person sending ‘V l'
60 cents and a list of ten words or more, is guaranteed
an extra present by return mail (in addition toTurc Sitnny * *•
Bourn) of a 102 pago book, “The Other Man’s Wife,” a very fascinating book by John Strange Winter;
or, we will send you “The Story of an African Farm,” or ‘‘Beside the Bonnie Briar Bush." Let us know
which book you desire. Satisfaction guaranteed in every case or money refunded. The lists should ba
sent at once. THIS CONTEST WIRE CLOSE JULY 15TII. The names and addresses ol suc
cessful contestants will bo pointed in the July 24th issue of The Sunny South.
NOTE—For 75 cents we will send you The Sunny South for three months, allow you to enter above
word contest, send you your choice ol the books offered in the contest, and also send you free and post
Largest List inches, sixty-four selected views of picturesque and historic spots in
K , *(k the Holy Land, beautifully designed and handsomely bound in heavy
. *• paper portfolio covers, illustrated with a map of Palestine and a fac-
Tltird - SlO simile of Hoffman’s famous painting, “A Portrait of Christ.” The G 4
Fourth 810 pictures contained in this volume* are Actual Photographic Re
. ein productions of the localities In tho Holy Land immortal
* IIt " through Christ’s life on earth. Showing where Christ performed Ills
Next 8 largest each 8 5 miracles, the place of His birth. Baptism. Transfiguration and Crucl-
flxion, and the places made sacred by the work of His Apostles as they
appear today; it should be in every household. Address THE BCNN Y SOUTH, Box , Atlanta, Ga.
i% nfITTI W
ff fffF
i on a sweltering hot
|Ha day is highly essen
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health. It cools the
jTsgk blood, reduces your
temperature, tones
IRES
Rootbeer
j iiJjjH should be in every
r” H home, in. every
■-\m\ office, in every work-
L3;®eS| shop. A temperance
LjSgjl drink, more health
j: jffiffKl ful than ice water,
t more delightful and
1° 8 satisfying than any
In m other beverage pro
-1 ‘lra Made onlr by tbe Ch&rle* E.
iX mSS Hire* Cos., Philadelphia. A pack
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lipl’s Sped'Tii
Cure Bright’s Disease, Diabetes, Stricture, Gleet
and all chronic or acute affections of the genito
urinary system. Restore weak organs and im
part vigor to both body and mind. One box
$1.00; three boxes $2.50, by mail. Prepared by
HAGGARD SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, Ga.
Wholesale by Lamar & ltankiu Drug Cos.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT,
Tnlane University of Louisiana.
Its advantages for practical Instruction, both
In ample laboratories and abundant hosnltai
materials are unequalled. Free access Is fivsn
to tho great Charity Hospital with TOO bed*
and 80,000 patients annually. Special Instruc
tion is given dally at, Hie beside of tbs sick.
The next session begins October 14th, lio7. For
catalogue and information address:
Prof. S. E. CHAILLK, M. D., Dean.
larp. O. Drawor 261. NEW ORLEANS, LA.
w f ß or E Siee^auMe
In Actual Business. Railroad Fare Paid.
Positions Guaranteed. Students of both
sexes admitted dally. No vacations. Average
course three mouths.
Georgia Business College,
MACON, GEORGIA.
WE MAKE LOANS on
LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES.
If you have a policy in the New York Life,
Equitable Life or Mutual Rife and would
like to secure a Loan, write us giving number
of your policy, and wo will bo pleased to quote
rates. Address
TheEDglisti-Americaii Loan aM Trust Cos..
No. 12 Equitable Building, Atlanta, Ga.
Al* C 61T6 83 to 85 per day. Outfit FREE.
Au£r6 I © DR.L.W. K.TRAOY, Newport, Xy.
MENTION THIS PAPER SglfigSS
GRDVES
“tasteless
CHILL
TONIC
IS JUST AS GOOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE SOcts.
Galatia, Ills., Nov. 16,1893.
Paris Medicine Cos., St. Louis, Mo.
Gentlemen:—Wo sold last year, 600 bottles of
GROVE’S TASTELESS CIIJLL TONIC and have
bought three gross already this year. In all our ex
perience of 14 years, in the drug business, have
never sold an article that gave such universal satis,
faction ua your Tonic. Yours truly,
AUNXY. CARS A CO.