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BISMARK'S FINE DOCS.
Th# Great Prince Has Always Kept a Sup
ply of These Animals.
In Germany, as on the continent gen
erally, the dogs used for hunting large
game, the boar included, are varieties
Of the German or Ulmer mastiff or
"dogge,” and very noble animals they
are, albeit of mixed parentage, and it
is now ever fifty years ago that her
majesty, the queen, accepted from the
duke of Buccleugh a Saxon “boar dog,”
called Nelson, and Imported by Lord
John Scott from Saxony by that name.
And in a fine painting (by Morely, I
think,) of a group of the queen’s dogs,
Nelson appears as a rough-coated, bad
ly cropped mastiff, of such proportions
that, a Scotch terrier, in the same pic
ture, looks as if it was altogether no
larger than Nelson’s head.
This fine animal was the contempo
rary of young Bismark’s first hound,
the terror of the peasantry around
Kniephoff, where the parents lived.
This dog afterward acompanied his
young master to the University of Got
tingen, where, we are told, he speedily
made his mark Once, when Bismark
was summoned to appear before the
rector for throwing a bottle out of his
window, he took his enormous hound
with him, to the great dismay of the
reverend dignitary, who promptly
found refuge behind a high-backed
chair, where he remained until the
hound had been sent out of the room.
Bismark was fined 5 thalers for bring
ing this terrific beast” into the rec
tor's sanctum, in addition to the pun
ishment meted out for throwing the
bottle.
And for the sixty-odd years that
have elapsed since then Bismark has
never been without one or more of
these huge cross-bred mastiffs as his
companion or guard. Asa law student
and official at Berlin, during his trav
els in many lands, throughout his di
plomatic career at Frankfort, St. Pet
ersburg, Paris and elsewhere, as well
gs at Varzl and Friedrich3ruhe, Bis
tfaark has always had the companion
ship of one or more of his favorite
dogs. Probably the one to which he
was most attached was Sultan, who
died at Varzin in 1871. Tyras—the
famous dog of the empire—which was
of unusual size and of the slate color
most popular in Germany, was then
Quite a young dog, and it was the con
stant companion of its illustrious own
er till the time of its death, sharing
hie walks, his rides, his business and
his meals, and keeping guard in his
bedroom at night.—Good Words.
TIPS| TO THE COOK.
Slice bacon thin, put in a pan in
Single layers and cook in the oven un
til slightly brown. It will be an agree
able change from frying.
Put cherry leaves, cut up line, in
your pie plant pies and they will have
a deoidedly nice flavor. Avery little
soda put in pie plant or gooseberries
will save sugar and not hurt the flavor
of the fruit a particle.
When cooking peas use a spoonful
of sugar to a quart and see if they’re
not better.
In canning berries don’t cook them
to death; when they have all become
thoroughly hot through it is enough,
will not get soft as when cooked
S6 long. Seal your fruit as hot as
possible, -wrap your cans iu several
thicknesses of paper and keep in a
cool, dark place.
Make a strong tea of hickory bark,
use a tablespoonful to a pint of
ipolasses made of sugar, cooked with
it, and you will have an excellent sub
stitute for maple syrup.
A Big Regular Army.
The mightiest host of this sort is the army
of invalids whose bowels, livers and stomachs
hive been regulated by Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters. A regular habit of body is brought
About through using the Bitters, not by vio
lently agitating and griping the intestines,
but by reinforcing their energy and causing a
flow of the bile into its proper channel. Ma
laria, la grippe, dyspepsia, and a tendency to
Inactivity of the kidneys, are conquered by
the Bitters.
It is not considered profane to speak of a
well-mended stocking as being darned good.
You may not know it but there are large
numbers of people who have made fortunes
lu Wheat and Corn during the last few
months. are equally good opportuni
ties now. Why should you not do so. Henry
Mugrldge& Cos., Commerce Building, Chi
-4 Ago, make a specialty of advising their cus
tomers on the condition of the market.
Wiita to them for full particulars. All orders
filled on Board of Trade Floor. Bank Refer
ences.
Fits permanently cured. No fits or nervous
ness arter first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nfcrre Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa,
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption has no equal
aa a Cough medicine.—F. M. Ahbott, 383 Sen
eca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 1894.
CATARRH CURED
Troubled For Two Years and Health
Very Poor.
*‘l was troubled with catarrh for two
years and my health became very poor. I
beard so much about Hood’s Sarsaparilla
that I deoided to try it and after taking a
few bottles I was entirely cured.” A. H.
McDermmot, 86 Bolton St., Marlboro, Mass.
Hood’S S parma
The best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier.
HamPc Dill* cure nausea, indigestion,
sVOUU § I HIS biliousness. Price 25c.
YELLOW FEVER
PREVENTED BY TAKING
“Our Native Herbs”
the
Sreat Blood Purifier and Liner Regulator,
200 DAYS’ TREATMENT SI.OO
Containing a Registered Guarantee.
32 page Book and Testimonials, FREE.
Sent by mail, postage paid. Sold only by
Agent* for
THE ALONZO 0. BLISS CO.,Washington, D.C.
GRAVELY & MILLER,
o*o DANVILLE, VA. 0
MANUFACTURERS OF
KIDS PLUC AND KIDS PLUG CUT
TOBACCO.
Save Tags and Wrappers and get valuable
premiums. Ask your dealer, or write to us
tor premium list.
pU. SEXTON’S PAI.3IETTONE cures liver,
\idaey amt nenito-urinary troubles, both sexes. By
x* nl 5.1 •, stamps or posta 1 note. Address DR. J. G.
SAXTON. 117 West Mitchell St, Atlanta, Ga.
Thompson’s Eye Water
DATCMTC Inventors’Guide free. EDGAR TATE
bm I E>fl IO & CO. Patent Solicitors,246 li'way.N. Y.
CHEW STAR TOBACCO-THE BEST.
SMOKE SLEDGE CIQARETTES.
MANY NEW THINGS
* IN BICYCLES.
BRAKES BECOMING POPULAR. ;
Interest in the output of bicycles for
1898 does not begin and end with the
new bevel gear that is attracting so
much attention just at present. The
new chainless comes as an experiment
seeking popular favor, aud the num
ber that will be in use at the close of
next season will be very small when
compared to the number of chain
wheels, although with a reduction in
price and more perfected details the
bevel gear is undoubtedly the coming
wheel.
The bevel gear will not be the only
ntv unidlf
BAR
new feature in bicycles for next
year. Chain wheels are too popular,
and too many of them are in practical
use to be cast aside in an instant for
the new high-priced affair. A year or
two ago most of the cycling public was
made up of people who could afford to
phy the steep prices demanded by the
manufacturers for their products.
Since then times have changed, and
keen competition has become rife,
which has brought the cost of bicycles
down to a level that makes it possible
for almost anybody to buy them. And
with increased numbers there is an in
creased demand for a cheaper price and
better quality.
Outside of the chainless variety, bi
•ycles, in all probability, will he
CENTRIC/
CHAIM
ADJUSTMENT^
Hi '
HUB
aheaper next year than ever before,
while details in construction will re
oeive more attention than formerly,
for many have learned from bitter ex
perience that low prices, good quality
and simplicity must be combiued to
insure successes in bicycle construc
tion. Fixity of pattern has been put
forth as au explanation by some for
the present chaotic condition of the
cycle trade. And it is true that in the
present type of bicycles manufacturers
think they have attained that point
when departures will be in the nature
of retrogression rattier than improve
ment.
A local maker has perfected au ar
rangement of a hollow axle containing
an absorbent wick, doing away with
the necessity of frequent oiling of the
bearings; has devised an eccentrio
ohaiu adjustment which regulates the
chain’s tension without disturbing the
alignment of the rear wheel; has pro
vided dust-proof buttonholes in, the
hubs, which permit of spokes being
\ \ —V /\v J // Vicw-oF'
Hanger
,u out aiul replaced iniiue<liatcl.v,
taken out and replaced immediately,
and dispenses with the wrench for ad
justing the handle bar or saddle by
providing simple but at the same time
radically new contrivances for holding
the seat post and handle bar stem in
place.
To regulate the height of the handle
bar it is only necessary to turn a col
lar, which action will leave the handle
bar free to slide up or down. Bevers
iflg the operation secures the handle
bar in place. The saddle adjustment
is manipulated by pressing a small
lever which projects from the side of
the frame. This action will incline
upward a tapered eccentric disk inside
the seat post tube, freeing the post.
When the lever is released the pres
sure en the saddle renders the pdjus{-
ment firm. As both handle bar and
seat post tubes are slotted to receive
the internal adjustments, they cannot
be inserted out of line with the frame.
And these are but a few of the gpod
things that the manufacturers have in
store for the riding public next year.
There are to he gear cases galore. Up
to this time fow makers in this coun
try have made any attempt to tit gear
cases to their bicycles, ohiefly because
there has not been a very large demand
for them.
The much-mooted question of power
transmission will resolve itself in the
minds of many riders, whose analysis
of the subject does not comprehend its
strictly mechanical phase, into a study
of internal gearing solely a mitigation
of the nuisance of mud clogged and
stiffened chains, a reform which gear
cases alone could accomplish without
sacrificing the many points of superi
ority which the chain possesses over a
combination of bevel gears. Unless
some unexpected discoveries are made
which will greatly improve the best of
present chainless patterns, a chain
driven machine will be preferred as
possessing fewer disadvantages, espec
ially as the addition of a gear case
will be an effectual remedy for one of
the principal drawbacks which bevel
gears are intended to overcome.
There are several new designs of
handle bars on tlie market. One in
particular has a device which will ab
sorb the vibration before it enters the
bar. The bar is rigid in steering and
is also rigid in climbing a hill, as the
pull tends to strengthen the spring by
which it is fastened to the head.—
New York Journal.
Couldn't Talk to Save His Heard.
Several days ago a well-known
member of the Allegheny county bar,
who is also prominent in Grand Army
and Veteran Legion circles, appeared
at his haunts, shorn of a fine gray
beard which had added much to his
dignified appearance. He had worn
whiskers so long that his acquaint
ances often wondered what he would
look like without them. When he re
turned from a trip to Canada minus
his beard everybody had to look twice
to see if he really was the colonel.
Some of his friends told him he was
not so handsome, and became in
terested enough to ask why he had
shaved off his hirsute appendage.
He has explained, probably dozens of
times, that it was all an accident. He
says that while he was in Canada he
went to a French barber shop to have
his mustache and beard trimmed a
little. He could not apeak French,
and talked to the tonsorial artist by
signs. When he thought he had made
known to the Frenchman what he
wanted he leaned back in his chair
and the barber started to work. The
first clip took a large bunch of whiskers
from the left cheek, and before the
colonel could explain, two or three
more clips were taken, and nearly half
of his beard was gone. He looked in
the,mirror and was mad, but he could
not speak French, and, therefore, he
had to let the barber complete the
job.—Pittsburg Chronicle.
Crime and Atmosphere.
Dr. W. L. Moore, chief of the
weather bureau at Washington, who
is both physician and meteorologist,
states that during the months of Jan
uary, February and March 1200 sui
cides were reported in the United
States. In July, August and Septem
ber there were 1000. There were 1700
murders and fifty persons lynched or
hanged during the three cold months,
and 2500 murders and 113 hanged or
lynched during the three hot months.
Investigations are being condueted in
regard to the connection between
crime and atmospherio conditions.
The hide of the hippopotamus, in
some is two inches thick.
IMVtI Better Than Lightning Boila.
The green leaf is the best conduotor
of electricity—that most powerful and
destructive of all the forces of the
earth. To guard our homes and pub
lio buildttigß from its destructive action,
wo erect our lightning rods, whose
sharp points quietly drain the olouds,
or, failing to do this, receive the dis
charge and bear it harmlessly to the
earth. But ages bofore Franklin
painted the first lightning rod to the
storm, God has surrounded the dwell
ings of man with a protection far more
effectual than this; for since the crea
tion of organic life every pointed leaf
and blade of grass has been silently
disarming the clouds of their destruc
tive weapons. A twig covered with
leaves, sharpened by nature’s exquisite
workmanship, is said to bo three times
as effectual as the metallic points of
the best constructed rod. And when
we reflect how many thousands of
these vegetable points every large treo
directs to the sky and consider what
must be the efficacy of a single forest
with its innumerable leaves, or of o
single meadow with its countless blades
of grass, we see how abundant the pro
tection from the storm is, and with what
care Providence has guarded us from
the destructive force. —London Echo.
The Eocnat Bean Tree.
0a account of the high price of for
age for horses in South Africa, and
also of the small supply, an enquiry
is being made as to whether the locu&t
bean (free cannot be acclimatized-in
Cape Colony. The carob or locust
beau bears a long pod, which makes
excellent food for horses, and is at the
same time more portable than forage,
and it is for these qualities that it is
desired to introduce it. The carob is
a tree much resembling the apple tree
and flourishes in the countries around
the Mediterranean. The pods hare
been imported into England for horses.
The Arabs and Moors use the sweet
pulp for food very largely. The locust
tree of America is quite distinct from
this.
Henry Varley, London's B utchcr-Freachei*
He left the cleaver for the pulpit,
built a church in London, England,
and is now preaching to large audi
ences in this country. He is consid
ered one of England’s foremost evan
gelists.
China's Great Wall.
The great wall of China was recently
measured by Mr. Uuthank, au Ameri
can engineer. His measurements gave
the height as eighteen feet. Every
few hundred yards there is a tower
twenty-five feet high. For 1300 miles
the wall goes over plains and moun
tains, every foot of the foundation
being solid granite and the rest of the
structure solid masonry.
The Bev. Dr. George C. Baldwin,
of Troy, N. Y., has been marrying
couples* for over fifty years, and his
list is said to have reached a total of
3000. -
At the recent gathering of Boger
Williams’s descendants in Providence,
a movement was begun to raise a great
monument to the founder of Bhode
Island,
The waters of North America are
stocked with 1800 different varieties
of fish.
A Thoughtful Woman.
First Farmer—“My ole woman k
ther most thoughtful and generous
soul alive.”
Second Farmer —“Dew tell?”
First Farmer—“ Why, when she
goes through my overalls after market
day, she jes’ keeps out a quarter fer
me ter give misAionaries on Sunday.”
POPULAR SCIENCE.
Close oonnectioa is traced by H,
Luggin between photo-voltaic current!
let up in silver salts and the decom
positions giving photographs.
Vaccination laws are not enforced in
England. At Norwich, with a popu
lation of over 100,000, the vaccination
officer's fees this year amounted to
about $4O; he receives fifty cents for
laoh case.
The Silesia Verein Chemischer Fa
briken, at Woischwitz, near Breslau,
provides.carbonlo acid water for its
employes during the summer. The
families of the workmen are also sup
plied freely with this water.
In the streets of Portsmouth, Eng
land, each of 240 lamp posts is pro
vided with both an arc and an incan
descent lamp. It is designed to uss
the weaker light at hours when the
other is not necessary and an automa
tic switch on each post enables tha
operator at the central station to ex
tinguish instantly one set of lights and
light the other set.
The number of minor planets known
between Mars and Jupiter now con
siderably exceed 400, of which M.
Oharlois of Nice has discovered eighty
six, while Herr Palisa, the Austrian
astronomer, has detected eighty-three,
i The magnitudes of the first 400 of
these planets have just been tabulated
;by Herr G. Huber. All are telescopic,
ouly two being brighter than the eighth
magnitude, while the later discoveries
! —the second 200—nearly all are of the
‘ twelfth magnitude or smaller.
Timber used in mines is subject to
decay from various causes, such as
warm moist air, but the most serious
I cause, according to a paper by Mr. J.
Bateman to the British Society of Min
; ing Students, is the chemical action set
!up by the cotton mould fungus. This
fungus is the white, fluffy material
Seen clinging to timber, especially in
return air ways. Various methods of
protecting the timber have been tried,
such as trickling water over it con
stantly, steeping in brine, charring the
surface and creosoting. The last is
the most effective. The timber is
placed in a wrought iron cylinder, the
air is pumped out, and creosote is
forced in to a pressure of 100 pounds
per square inch. Pine fir, etc., ab
sorb ten to eleven pounds of creosote
per cubic foot and oak and other hard
woods about six pounds.
It has long been a riddle to the en
tomologist to find out how moths,
especially those of the larger varieties,
escape from the tough cocoon which
inoloses them during the grub stage.
Professor Oswald Leather, a member
of the London Entomological Society,
has been studying the cocoon method
of the moths, and in making his studies
opened up the coooons spun by the in
sects, and put the images into artificial
silk bags, with an opening at the end.
When the time arrived for the .imago
to apply his solvent, the liquid escaped
into little glass tubes instead. Careful
analysis was made of this, and it was
found to be a pure solution of caustic
potash. This discovery is anew one
in entomology. Caustic potash will
destroy the human skin, and it is at
least passing curious that it should be
distilled in an insect’s mouth.
Ministers as Business Men,
The idea that clergymen are pool
business men is pronounced false bj
ex-Postmaster-General Thomas %i.
James, now President of the Lincoln |
; National Bank in this city. He saysi '
,f Wa have among our depositors a large
j number of olergymen, and lam free
| to say that they are the best business
; men that I have ever known, You
Ordinarily call a man who is intelli
gent, methodical and prompt a good
business man. Our ministerial de-
I positors are more than methodical and
prompt. They are olever and sharp,
especially in the keeping of accounts,
rdo not wish to make any exceptions
in my general characterization of cler
gymen as good bnsiness men, but I
will- say that the Koman Catholic
olergymen—those that I have met —
are remarkably able business men.
They seem to be especially trained
that way. The ttverage clergyman of
any denomination, however, cau hold
his own with the average business
man. A clergyman of the present day
cailnot afford to be slipshod or negli
gent in worldly affairs.” —Church
Economist.
Bible Condensed to One Ineh.
An eccentrio Londoner, Bichard
Webb, has completed a machine for
microscopio writing. He asserts that
■with it he can write the entire con
tents of the Bible four times in a space
one inch square. He has succeeded
in writing the Lord’s Prayer on glass
in a space one-hundredth of an inch
wide by one-fiftieth of an inch long, or
about the size of the “period” at the
end of this sentence.
Ten years ago Mr. Webb set to work
to break all records for minute pen
manship. r He soon found that me
chanical aid was necessary and devised
a contrivance which diminished the
scope without altering the character
of the movements of the pen. The
result is a marvel of mechanical skill.
The machine is operated by a handle
resembling a pen, which is held in the
hand and used as an ordinary peD.
The motion given to this handle is
transmitted through numerous wheels
and levers until it operates the writing
point, which is a diamond so small as
to be invisible to the naked eye.
Photographing In Colors.
A St. Louis photographer has per
fected a process by which he is able
to photograph carpets, dress goods,
etc., and retain all the colors exactly
as they are in the original. He does
this by permitting the rays of light to
pass through a prism, which separates
the various colors. A plate is made
from each color and the finished pic
ture is secured by printing from each
of these plates. The invention means
much to commercial travelers ( who
will he enabled to carry photographs
instead of bulky samples of the articles
they have for sale.
More Polav Expeditions#
Mr. Karmsworth, who defrayed the
expenses of the Jackson expedition in
Franz Josef land, has declared that
he will send two ships to the Arotie re
gions next season, 'and keep an
expedition in the Arotio regions until
a oomplete map can be made of aU the
accessible parts of the North Polar
world. The Jackson expedition has
eost.him $200,000,
HEN CALL WOMAN A MYSTERY. v
Bo Sh la to Them—Not bo to a Woman.
A Warn**’. Knowledge Sav*. Mr*. Ebbert From u Operation.
A woman understands women as a man never cap ho
J to. For this reason Mrs. Lydia E. Pinkham. of Lyuo,
"v Mass., now known all over the English-speaking world)
set to work to help her sex.
** mttk* After long and patient investigation, Mrs. PinkhgU*
j i'Vm' her own conclusions, namely: that sevttl*
H /■[ eighths of the sufferings of women are due to dig.
W / i orders of the uterine system. Reason ing on this line*
I / j V fWKk she saw that the only preventive of early breaking
f j VI down, was a specific medicine which would ac\
} I I 1Y V alone on the female organism.
This was why she prepared her excellent Vegetable Compound, which
has been such a boon to thousands and thousands of women. If you bar#
headaches chiefly at the top of the head, and are troubled by painful menstrW
tion, dizziness, sleeplessness, backache, and that beanug-down feeling, tjL*
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will tone up your whole system. Mbs. CkA*
D. Ebbert, 330 Wood St., Reading, Pa., testifies to the
great power of the Compound. .... -
“Mrs. Pinkham—l can say that your medicine has cured A*'
me of the pains and troubles which I had. My case was
a very bad one, and puzzled the doctor. My womb had IA
fallen and I had terrible pains in my back and hips. ’Mk'V
1 could hardly walk. My husband wont to our lain
ily doctor, and he prescribed medicine for me, \
I found no relief, and grew worse instead of better I/ ffgagy
The doctor examined me and wanted to perform an
operation, but my husband would not consent. SeeingPjßKHj
the advertisement in the paper, I got a bottle of Lydia .Mgpy
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and before I had
taken half of the second bottle, I felt like anew wo
man In all I have taken four bottles of your medicine, and can say that lag
entirely cured. I hope that every woman suffering as I did, will follow my ad
vice and take your medicine at once.”
GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE!
Waiter Baker & Co.’s
t Breakfast COCOA
Pure, Delicious, Nutritious.
Costs Less than ONE CENT a cap.
Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark.
Walter Baker & Cos. Limited,
(established 1780.) Dorchester, Mass*
jrauc-moia.
Who Threw the Stonej7
A few months ago the residents of
Darby Township, near London, Ohio,
were greatly excited over the capers
of alleged spirits at the home of B<ir
lan P. Wood, an intelligent and Well
to-do farmer. For several nights the
house was clubbed and stoned to a de
gree that greatly alarmed the in
mates. At first Mr. Wood supposed
the aggressor was a man whom he
had discharged from his service, but
the man had disappeared from the
neighborhood, and could not be found.
The house was vigilantly watched
night and day, but at Intervals, during
the night, large stones and brick 6 con
tinued to fly through the sitting-room
window and fall on the floor. Some
times they appeared to be thrown out
of the window from the inside, the
broken glass flying outward. Hun
dreds of persons visited the house, and
while they were there the phenomena
continued, with the additional feature
of the repeated disappearance of a
lot of potatoes from the cellar, which
soon afterward reappeared, carefully
placed in heaps of Are on the sitting
room floor. One day Constable Dono
hue stationed himself in the cellar to
watch the potatoes, but had not been
there five minutes when his loud calls
for assistance brought a party down
from upstairs. They found him lying
on the cellar floor with hts hands tied
and his mouth and eyes full of clover
seed. He said that he had been thrown
to the floor by invisible hands, whfch
had thrown the clover seed in his face
and crammed it into his mouth. The
majority of those who witnessed the
phenomena declared that they wore
the work of the devil or of human
spirits. About twenty-five years ago
a pretty Irish girl lived on this farm.
She loved not wisely but too well, and
finally hanged herself to a plum tfee
at the rear of the wood-house. To
this melancholy event some of the
people attribute the strange manifes
tations.
A Hold-Up.
“I hear you were held up last
night.”
“Yes; that’s the way I got home.”
Three Good Things.
Three good things about Tetterine, besides
the one great, good fact that it cures, are that
it is painless, harmless and has no had odor.
It is the only sure cure for Tetter. Ringwonn,
Eczema. Cures them so they stay cured. r*o
matter how long you have had them, 30 cents
sets a box at druggists, or by mail for 50 cents
in cash or stamps from J. 1. fehuptnne, Sa
vannah, Ga.
A woman’s glory is her tresses. All atiove
them, at least at the theater, are distresses.
To Care Cold in One I>ay.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25c.
You cannot make a silk purse out of a sow's
ear, but you can go the whole hog.
Beware of Ointment* for Catarrh That
Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole sys
tem when entering it through the mucous
surfac es. Such articles should never be used
except on prescriptions from reputable physi
cians, as tne damage tney will do is ten told
to the good you can possibly derive from
them. Hall’s Catarrh Cure manufactured by
F. J. Cheney & Cos., Toledo. 0.. contains no
mercury, and is taken internally, acting di
rectiy upon the bleod and mucous surfacesof
the system. In buying Hall's. Catarrh Cura
be sure to get the genuine. It is taken lnter
nally, and is made in Toledo, Ohio, by 1. J.
Cheney & Cos. Testimonials free.
twSold by druggists; price, 75c. per bottle.
Hall's Family Pills are the best.
PHALLS^
Y Vegetable Sicilian
HAIR RENEWER
| It doesn't cost much, yet it <
I adds wonderfully to the
1 looks. It is youth for a few
cents. No gray
hair. No dandruff.
OSBORNE’S /7 /?/?
CToudinedd e/teae
Augusta. Ga. Actual business. No text ff
books. Short time. Cheap board. Send for catalneua
AT THESE
jAffsM8 CENTIaBiSsS Polled Plate Cuff Links.
8 cents iu Stamps to
D.M.Watkins&Co.
Catalogue Free. Providence. i. i.
MENTION THIS FfIPER#S. ÜB fis-37
“Rust,”
the dread of the cotton grower
can be prevented. Trials at
Experiment Stations and the
experience of leading growers
prove positively that
Kainit
is the only remedy.
We will be glad to send, free of charge,
interesting and useful pamphlets which treat
of the matter in detail.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New Vofk-T !
GEORGIA LADIES
HATE SHAMS;
Whtteville GA, wrltyt
wArfMtVh Have used Dr. M. A. Sim.
jPMHIIfULk mons Liver Medicine is
years for slok Headache*
wj Cd*tlvi*es* aha n§*
INMfel
X? TL Is without it. If cots oh
v A ln r more mildly and thorough.
\ >Bk. / Jv than the “Liver Rejtl.
\ “ J lator" made by Zeiltn pr
the “Bitch Draught'’ made
Chattanooga Meilctfi#
Nervous Depression of Women,
A woman will often without knowing If
commit slow auiclde for her family. Btfi
will think, toil and worry for her ofiildrCU.
Too often they do not appreciate it. H
tired nerves and weary body at last reach fi
stage when she is almost powerless for any
kina of mental or physical work, ana she If
depressed and worried over the conscious
ness that she is unable to perform her ad*
enstomod duties. Her organs of digestion
are disordered 3nd although there Is a con, ,
slant disposition to rest, wakefulness ad*
loss of power to sleep are serlons tndlcq.
tions of nervous depression, What ska
needs is a coarse of Dr. Simmons §u u htv
Tins Wine to restore a healthy functional
activity and give tone and vitality to bar
nervous system. At the same time tA*
stomach, liver and kidneys should be stlm*
Plated with Dr. ML A. Simmons Lite*
Medicine.
801 l Ground, Ga., wrltett
I have known Dr* M- A#
m ■ Simmons Liter Medi*
cine 20 years, and it
a# cures La Grippe, Xte&d*
m jL&I W and othtft com*
yLgtSfkJ plaints. I think il it
m. J! stronger than "Zeilin*s
Regulator” and “fllaolc
|SSI iCCTI Draught," and that It
gives better satisfaction.
After riSllffiWSwgciant
after passing through the experience ©i
maternity, moat women find taelr healtl|
seriously damaged, If not entirely impaired*
The painful ana weary dragging tndbetr*
in g down sensation in the back almost every
woman has at times experienced. Some
times these are from uterine dlfijpleoemeirt*
bat often they are simply from weakpesH.
Women who have to bear heavy burdens, to
undergo severe fatigne or to endure crush*
lug disappointment, are soblect to this and
many other diabases. W e cannot tod ItrohfiF
recommend the a sc of Hr. Sltnmob* oqtlw
Vine Wine, the great ftxoAie toaio
regulator. __
MALSBY&COMPANY,
57 So. Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
General Agents for Erie City Iron Works
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and
Penberthy Injectors.
Manufacturers and Dealers in
SAW MILLS.
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin MachllL*
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth
find Locks, Knijrht’s Patent Dogs, BirdsalJ
Saw 31111 and Engine Repairs, Governors
(irate Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies*
Price and quality of goods guaranteed. Cat*
nlogue free by mentioning this paper.
BO Business College, Louisville, Ky.
JL \ SUPERIOR ADVANTAGES.
U v> BooK-KEuriNfl, Shorthand ani>
Telegraphy. Beautiful Catalogue Free.
m Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good, use Kl
in time. Sold by druggists. Efl .