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TIMES ENTERPRISE, THO MA8VILLE, OA„ JULY 29,19M.
An Ideal Fish
By Robert W. ChiCbsn
j HERE are. In some cold, clear sffearns of tbe North] certain
flail known locally ns -Mohawk chubs." Those fish nre tho
ideal fish in shape and color—graceful, slim, elegant cron tares,
pure silver except ou the dorsal ridge, which Is the tint ot
oxydlaed silver. They nre tender-mouthed, and remind me
somewhat of the grayling, although they hnve not the grant
dorsal flu nor the fragile mouth of that llsh. They often in
habit trout waters, and I have an Idea that trout feed on tha
smaller ones, although I have no absolute proof that this Is
true. I know, however, that pickerel, masknlouge and black bass strike at
them eagerly. \
These fish rise to a fly and are often quite as gatny as grayling. Often
and often I have struck them In trout waters, and have found them Interesting
lighters when tackle Is light and water cold and swift.
Animals and birds appear to be very fond of them, or at least nre often
seen eating them, perhaps because they may be easier to catch than trout.
Where Mohawk chubs are herons and kingfishers congregate. The only time
I ever saw an osprey in that region was once when whipping that stream.
The osprey dashed down within a rod of mo and seized a Mohawk chub that
must halve weighed a pound at least, bearing him up out of the pool and away
acres* .acres of swamp toward the distant forest.—Harper's Weekly. '
S'
^' JZ?
The Life and Health
:/ of Young Girls
By Dr* James II. McBride* the Alienist and Neurologist
HE girls of the present day who are brought up under luovo
comfortable conditions, than their grandmothers have gained
|«« u much, no doubt. In the change of conditions; but they have
| I I lost something in that In many homes there Is less of healthy
jj ■ exercise, less of that kind of work that developed the body
1 V 9 and also developed simple and healthy taste*. There Is ns a
result of this poorer physical development, less feeling of re
sponsibility In the home ou the part of the young Indies and
not so great n sense of duty. When every member of tho
.family had everyday, specific duties—work 10 do that had to be done, work
thnt exercised the body os well ns the moral sense In discharging a duty-
such life, dreary and harsh aa It sometimes was and often barren of most of
■those things thnt we regard ns common comforts, had at least the great advan
tage of providing work that furnished physical exercise, and that was also
done under the sense of obligation. There Is a moral and physical healthful*
ness in such a life that goes to the making of strong and simple characters,
and thnt puts purity of blood and vigor of constitution Into dcacendants.
The number of young women who soon after marriage break down from
the unexpected strain of new duties is very large. Tho mother of a young
woman who had become a nervous Invalid within two years after marriage
said to me there was no apparent cause for her daughter’s Illness, as she had
been shielded front everything from childhood. Why, Indeed, should anyone
be shielded? Wns it ever the case anywhere thnt n person who had been
shielded grew to be a forceful character or proved a success in presence of the
CT/>e Funny
\JTide of
Life,
HIS HOP&
The politician face* fat*
With feelirtgs very strong.
He says he’s not a candidate
And hope* you'll aa* he’s wrong..
—Washington Stir.
ONE OP THE DOCTORS.
“What’s the use of aq autopsy, any
way?”
“Why, If the doctor don’t know a
feller’s dead they hold an autopsy,
an’ that kills him.”
AN INSINUATION.
Jltujones—'“Smlthers insinuated that
I was A fdoli’*
Biimstnith—“So? What did he say?”
Jiinjonea—“He asked me where I
bought the umbrella I was carrying."
—Chicago News.
A PARTICULAR LADY.
Mrs. Nurltch—“I think I'll take this
Watch. You’re sure It’s made of re
fined gold?”
Jeweler—“Certainly."
Mrs. Nurltch—“Because I do detest
anything that ain’t refined."—Philadel.
Pbia Ledger.
A POPULAR DEFINITION.
“Father," said the little boy, “what
Is reciprocity?”
“Reciprocity, my son, is an arrange
ment by which you undertake to give
up something that you don’t value very
highly in exchange for something that
you do.’’—Washington Star.
swift uud onerous demands of life?
/ JZ?
The Newspaper and the State
By Samuel Bowles, Journalist
IIE difficulties of producing a worthy and excellent newspaper
nre great. It cannot he efficient and Independent unless it
T a Is at least self-sustaining; or, to put it in another wny, unless
I it exhibits qualities which will coimnnnd the support of the
■ public. Of course, the press may he endowed. In some wny,
I but the endowment is apt to be encumbered with an obliga
tion to serve tome other interest than that of the public. It
seems to me Impossible for a journal that Is entirely and
short-sightedly, commercial in its spirit to be of value ns a
‘public mentor. Such a Journal Is apt to he more harmful than helpful In Its
in fine nee. The duty that rests upon every member of society to so conduct his
business, to so perform his part, that good, not evil, shall flow from bis action,
appeals with peculiar force to the Journalist. The true journalist is broad
minded and far-sighted enough to see thnt the best service he can possibly
render tho public is the best Investment he can make for himself.
The life of the worker of the press who Is thoroughly devoted to his calling
Is strenuous and laborious. It is attended with an almost incessant strain
upon the patience and the nerves. The work is never ended; the responsibility
and the anxiety never cense; emergencies nre irlwnys imminent, and they de
mand the full expenditure of brain and muscle. TItost who enter upon It
.should do so with a keen sense of Its responsibilities as If entering any one
of the so-called learned professions. The newspaper which goes Into the
homes and haunts of the people should be clean, harmonious, attractive, nr-
ti»tlc, beautiful. To please and Improve the taste <*f his reader should be the
constant niin of the maker. Tho public welfare r.hould be his solo guide In
determining the contents of his sheet. That affords abundant field for the
exercise of skill, ability and energy, and the employment of sensation of n
worthy sort In making his paper popular and strong and profitable.
The new conditions and problems created by the country’s rapid growth
constitute n new and Insistent call upon the presu to rise to its opportunities,
to perform Its obvious duty. These relate not alone to the affairs of the Nation
and State, but to the Immediate environment of every newspaper In the
land. The time is ripe for making our home community life In every city, town
and village cleaner, fairer, richer, happier, more Just and more beautiful. This
ir. to come through a high development of the civ*/? spirit, and In that develop
ment tho press should be the most potent factor.
IN THESE DAY«.
Suitor (proudly)—“I think, sir, that
I can support your dnugbter lit the
same stylo to which she has been ac i
uustomed."
Father—“That won’t do, young man.
Y011 must support her In tho style to
which she has been unaccustomed."
CORRECTED.
Benevolent Old Gentleman.—“How
old nre you, little girl?”
Ethel—“Don’t you know It Itheut
proper for a gentleman to ntlik a lady
her age?”
UNLUCKY.
Publisher—“Your book Is fine up to
tho seventeenth chapter. Alter that it
is mere drivel.”
Author—“Sir, It Is my misfortune, not
my fault. Just as I was beginning the
seventeenth chanter, I discovered,
quite accidentally, what I was driving
at.”—Puck.
EASY EXPLANATION.
“How do you account for the fact,"
asked tho doctor, “as shown by actus!
Investigation, that thirty-two out of
every hundred criminals In coun
try are left-handed?”
“That’s easily accounted for,” said
the professor. “Tho other sixty-eight
nro right-handed.’’—Chicago T/lbune.
jZ?
jZ?
The Art of Salesmanship
By L. D. Vogel
OOD salesmanship Is so essential to all lines of business, and so
G worthy of Intelligent study and execution, that the calling, to my
inlnd, is lifted to the dignity of a profession. First, let me say
that the definitions of salesmanship which I shall offer are not my
own, but quotations from what I have read; and, coming as they
do from salesmen of experienco who have been successful, they nre
entitled to respectful consideration.
“Salesmanship is the quality In a man—partly inherent, partly
acquired—whereby he is able to successfully introduce, interest In
and sell a prospective customer any nrtic!e or commodity.”
I will quote a few others, which impress me as being particularly good, and
which I singled out of many and copied: “The ability to sell goods, or other
property, in a straightforward manner, with satisfaction to all concerned and
with the least expenditure of time and money, but having always chiefly in
view the benefit to be derived by the person for whom the property is sold.”
Another: “Salesmanship is that quality iu a salesman which enables him.
In the shortest space of time, to place in the possession of his customer the
greatest amount of satisfactory merchandise, and in the coffers of his employ
ers the greatest amount of profits; while at the same time preserving tho last
ing good will and respect of his customci.”
Bear in mind, please, that a salesman is not in the salesmanship class, ac
cording to this authority, unless he can both make a profit for bis employer
and preserve the lasting respect and go<ul will of the customers.
Another definition that, it seems to me, contains many good points, is as
follows: ".Salesmanship Is the science ot putting into each duy’s work hontsty
in speech, loyalty to employer, the hustle of modern civilization, of watching
your weak points, of strengthening them, of not only keeping your customers
but gaining new* ones, of being at all times a gentleman.”
I will tax your patience with one more quotation, and this one, to my mind,
la as trne and good as it is terse: “Salesmanship is ability to make sales; its
attributes arc’health, honesty, courtesy, tact, resource, reserve power, facility
of expression, a firm and unspeakable confidence in one’s self, a thorough
knowledge of and confidence in the goods one is selling.”
Certainly, none of us will deny that a good salesman must know bis goods
so well and have such confidence in th%n that he can convince the merchant
that he needs the goods; then ho must enthuse hJm in such a way that, after
he does purchase them, he jflll push their- —
HER BUSY DA^.
“Where’s the child wonder?” asked
the stago manager. “It’s nearly time
for her act, and I haven’t seeA any
thing of her.”
“She’ll probably be a little late to
day,” replied the serio-comic lady. “I
believe her daughter was to be mutried
nt high noon, and I s’pose she went to
the train to see them off.’—Chicago
Record-Herald.
A Wife’s Allowance.
Is It (Desirable that wives • cnould
enjoy a fixed monetary allowance for
their own disposal for dress and such
petaonAl expenses da are continually
arising? The question is put forward
in the pages of a leading authority oil
tnattera of feminine interest, and is
answered from various points of view.
Thus, a business woman urges that a
inan shoul not give him wife unlimit
ed credit at shops and then be Indig
nant if her expenditure is large. On
the other hand, says this lady, an
allowance spurs on a woman to live
within her means, ahd teaches her
the value of money. A lawyer lays
down the maxim that a mpn owes it
to the girl he marries to keep her
free from financial worries. There
are those husbands who admit that
they ere only glad to hand over the
larger pait, if not the whole, indeed*
of th'c-ir Income to careful and m-ati-
aging wives, leaving them to arrangd
the scale of household outlay, and
taking what they regard as necessary
for their own and the children’s
dress.—London Telegraph.
City Residents Near-8ighted.
“Tho race ib growing near-sighted,
owing to city life and the conditions
of our civilization,” said Frederick P.
Simmons, examining eye specialist,
while addressing the members of tho
New England Association of Optic
ians.
“Our visual range is Confined to
bear objects for the greater part of
tho day*’’ said ho, “and this keops the
eyes turned in. An object twenty feet
away will make tho eyeballs parallel;
“Anything leBE wll turn them in,
and people who spend hours In -offices
and crowded flats necessarily have
a short range of’ vision, which over
works and weakens the interior mus
cles close to the nasal cavity.
“Tho exterior muscles not being so
strained, are strong, and hence cause
the eyes to turn out. Let a persofi
who is thus affected spent a week of
two in the country and his eyes be
come normal again, because he gets
greater range of vlsiob. Savages are
generally far-sighted.”—Jewelers’ CIr«
cular-Weekly.
Ank four Dealer Vnr tit
A posrdor. It roals the feet. Cures Cortll,
Bunions. Svrollea, lore,’lot, 0*1 ]ous,AMiluf
Sweating Feet and Ingrowing Nalls. Alien’d
Foot-Easo makes now or tight shoes easy. A:
all Druggists and 8hoe .stores, 25 cents. Ac
cept no substitute. Sample mailed Fit etc,
Address, Allen 8. Olmsted, Lel’.oy, N. Y.
LIVELY HOME.
In the heart of tho great pine forest
wo found the old man sitting by his
cabin door.
“But It is so quiet here,” we said; “it
is a wonder you don’t feel lonesome.”
The old man dropped his corncob la
his astonishment.
“Quiet, did you say? Why, boss, I
hab a wife, a mule en a phouograpb."
—Chicago News.
REWARD OF TRUTHFULNESS.
Employer—“You nre having a de
cided flirtation with the girl who has
charge of our telephone wire?”
Truthfyl Clerk (with cold chill run
ning up and down his spine, and with
visions of instant dismissal)—'‘‘Y-e-e-n,
sir;-but please, sir ”
Employer—“Well, keep It up. She
will give more attention to our calls if
you do.”—Tit-Bits.
H. H. Gukcn's Hons, ot Atlanta, On., gr<>
the only successful Dropsy Specialists in the
world. Hej their liberal offer in advertise
ment in another column ot this paper.
gle log of mo
i *5000 at u »
Mrs.Wlnslow’s Soothing Syrup for qhildnrt
teething,soften.tlio gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain,cures, wind colic, 25c.abottl i
IamsuroPiso'sCure forOoivmiuptlonsaved
my ilfo three years ago.—Mbs. Thomas Boe-
*ixs, Maple 8t.. Norwich, N.Y., Feb. 17,190.).
There are moro than 100,000 widows in
Rev. Ham P. Jones.
Tho famous Methodist Evangelist aayi:
“My wife, who was an Invalid from ner
vouswick headacho, has been entirely cured
by six wooka’ uso of King’s Iloyal Gcrmo-
tuer. I wish every suffering wife had access
to that medicine. It is truly a groat rem
edy." For froo booklet write Germotuer
Medical Co., Dept. G., Uarnesvllle, Ga.
The ■unken Variag was the fastest
cruiser of her class (7,000 tons) in the
world.
Or. Blggeri’ Huckleberry Cordial
Tht Great Southern Remedy, cures *11
Stomach and bowel troubles, children
teething. Made from
The Little Huckleberry
that grows alongside our hill* and moun
tains, contains an active principle that has
rhoea and Bloody Flux.
Bold by all druggists, 25 and 60c bot
tle.
AN EX-CHIEF JUSTICE’S OPINION.
Judge O. E. Lochrane, of Georgia, In a
fetter to Dr. B/ggere, etetes that he
never suffers himself to bo without a bot
tle of Or. Diggers’ Huckleberry Cordial
during the summer time, for the relief
of all stomach and bowel troubles, Dys
entery, Diarrhoea, Flux, etc.
8old by all druggists, 26 and 60e bottles.
HALTIWAN»JER-TAYLOR DRUG CO.,
Proprietors, Atlsnta, Ga.
ONE SINCERE MOURNER.
Tlie lawyer was drawing up Enpeck'i
will.
"I hereby bequeath all njy property
to my wife," dictated Eupeck. “Got
that down?”
"Yes,” answered tbe attorney.
“On condition,” continued Enpeck,
“that she marrlea again within a year.”
“But why that condition?" asked tha
man ot law.
"Because,” anawtred the meek and
loving testator, “I want somebody to
be sorry that I died. See?"—Chicago
Ntm, - —
T.ylor’i Cherokee Remedy of Sweet
Gum and Mullein will cure Coughs, Croup
and Consumption. Price ZGcandfl ahottlc.
MEDICAL DEPARTMENT
TDLANE.UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA
IU advantage* for practical Instruction, both
In ample laboratory* and abundant boapital mi-
“ * Free acce8> i* K |v«r *-
ipltal with 900 bed
/. H pec in I Instruct
dally at the bedside of the sick. The next
aeaaton beginn October 20. 1904. ' For rataloRue
and Information, addteua Prof. ft. E. CHAILLK.
U.D.. Dean, P. O. Drawer 261. New Orleans; La.
CURED
Gives
Quick
Relief.
days: effects a permanent cure
in 30(0 60 day*. Trial treatment
given free. Not hlngcmn be fairer
Write Or. H. H. Green’s Sons.
Specialists, Bex B Atlanta, *1?*
aoMor*Bllndllori«KMM?*cS?
■ora Eyas, (tarry Co, Iowa City, Is., bar# a *ura cur*
On a tombstone at the' head of a
grave In one of tho dog cemeteries lot
1’arls Is this lnscrlptloo to the tnern-'
ory of a brave St. Bernard: "He saver!
the lives of forty persons and was
tilled by tbe forty-first."
Catarrh Cannot JJa Cured
frith Local applications, as the* eanno*
reach tho seat of the disease, Catarrh is a
blood dr constitutional disease, and in order
to cure it you must take internal remedies.
Hall s Catarrh Cure fs taken Internally, and
acts dirootly on .the blood and mucous eurfded
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is not a quack medicine.
It was prescribed by one ot tho best physi
cians in this country for years, and is a reg
ular prescription. It is composed of the
best tonics known, combined with tho best
blood purilleip, acting directly on tho mu
cous surfaces. Tho perfect combination of
tbe two Ingredients is what produces such
wonderful results In curing catarrh. Send
lor testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Co.. Props., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, price, 75c.
Take Hpll’fl Family Tills tor constipation
One morning four-year-old Margie
lind pdneakes and syrup for breakfast.
After she had eaten tbe cakes there
was Some syrnp left on her plate, anil
she said; “Mamma, please give me a
6poon; my fork leak*.”
Odors of Perspiration
Removed at once from the armpits, feet,
etc., by Royal Foot Wash. Stops Chafing,
Cures Sweating, Burning, Swollen, Tired
Feet. 25c at Druggists, or postpaid from
Eaton Dbuo Co., Atlanta, Ga. Money back
If not satisfied. Sample for 2c stamp.
The salaries ot the President of
Mexico arid of the Governor General
of the Dominion of Canada are $60,000
a year, the same as that of the Ffesi^
dent of tbe United States.
.AHouselio'il tedy
BLOOD)
ULCERS,
SALT RHEUM, EC
ZEMA, evary form of
malignant SKIN
ERUPTION, betide:
' being efficacious in
jALM/ StUSnSWTS
atltiftidn, Whan impaired
from any Sana®. HI**
j flno Tonic, and Ita alftlott auparnalarsl hailing
1 propartita justify us in guaranteeing a core of
I all blood diteaaas, if directions are followed.
Price, 91 per Bottle, or « Bottles for 90.
roil HAI.R BY DHl'QPIHTS.
J o ruT rnrr book or woxnntrnr, cures,
j SENT FREE lorxhrr ,l.h v.IceW.
| BLOOD BALM CO., ATLANTA, GA. ,
Cj>K BANK deposit
UMiWU Railroad Pars Paid. 600
y 7 FREE Courses Offered.
tUtBKSOBKtKBBMM Baird at Cost. Writo Quick
OEOBQIA-ALABAUA BUSINESS COLLEGE, UkoiuQ*.
DR. YvDOLtEl^S
OPIUM AND WHISKY
ANTIDOTE
Mr. T. M. Brown, of DcQueeo. Ark.•-**£••
“Over seven feat* Ago t whtcured of tta
opium habit byyotlr medicirlH. ajja have con
tinued in the very best of heal W v
Mr. \V. M. Tunstall. of itJZi
says: “I am glad to say that t
that I am entirely and permanently
the Drink Habit, ae I have never even so muen
«s Wanted a drink in any form since I ¥*>*
your eradlcatqr.now 18 month® ago. II. W*
the beat mfowy fever in retted.” -
Mrs. Virginia Towntend, of Shreveport,La.,
writes: “No ntore opium, j r hBV ® ,®°
other remedy than yours, and I
take when I say that my health ie bettef new
thad it aver was in my life, and I owe it to yo«
and yotii' remedy. It has boefl twelve years
since I wu ctlred by your treatment." .
Dr. Woolley has thousands of such testimon
ials, with permlfs otl to use them. A treat
ment with so many recommendations xrom
IMtvslelans and cured patient* must rite' fop®.
Dr. Woolley's A..Udote has Imitators, (a»
ail good articles have)—perhaps you hove trief*
some of them, but there is nothing like Wool-
ley's. It has stood the test of thirty years. No
Jhould hesitate to write to
DR. B. M. WOOLLEY,
tOO North Prypr Street, Atlanta, Ga„
for hts booko
Avery & Company
# SUfcCKSSOltS TO
AVERY & MCMILLAN,
01-00 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga
—ALL KINDS <W-
MACHINERY
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH.
Largs Englns, and Boiler* aupplled
promptly. Shlngla Mills, Corn Mill*.
Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Doge,
Steam Governors. Pull line Engine* dr
Mill Suppllee. Send for free Catalogue.
Give the name of thle paper when
writing to ad vert litre—(At28-Q4)
FREE
REGULAR
SOe.
size;
in use Quaranteed to Cure
Yean. All Stomach and Resulting Disorders.
(Art, on Bowele.)
Tyners Dyspepsia Remedy.
Writ* us y%or C-ose. Po« 188,-Pept. C, ATLANTA£_OA#_
SOUTHERN DENTAL COLLEGE, SSSSlt
If yon are Interested In obtaining a dental education, write
tor tree catalogue (//full instruction. *
OR. i. W. T09TER, DlAN, IOO NORTH BUTLER STREET. ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
RIFLE (St, PISTOL.CARTRIDGES.
“ It’s the shots that hit that count. ” Winchester
Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that Is,
they shoot accurately and strike a good, hard, pene
trating blow. This is the kind ot cartridges you will get,
if you insist on having the time-tried Winchester make.
ALL DEALERS SELL WINCHESTER MAXE OF CARTRIDGES.
FREE to WOMEN
A Large Trial Box and book of In-
itructlons absolutely Free and Post
paid, enough to provo the value of.
PaxtineToilet Antiseptic
„ Paxtlna la In powder
form to dlseolve In
Water — non-poisonotn
ami tar superior tolIquK.
antiseptics, containing
alcohol which Irritates
Inflamed surfaces, and
havo no cleansing prop-
ertieSe^Tbo contents
of every box makes
more Antiseptic Solu
tion—farts longer—
goes further—has more
uses In the family and
does more good than any
antiseptic preparation
you can buy.
The formula of a noted Boston physician,
and used with great success as a Vaginal
Wash, forLcucorrhota, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal
Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts,
and all soreness of mucus membrane.
In local treatment of fomalo ills Paxtinois
invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash wo
challenge tho world to produco its equal for
thoroughness. It is a revolution in cleansing
and healing power; It kills all gcims whicu
cause inflammation and discharges.
All leadlngdruggista keep Paxtlno; price, We.
abox; if jwursdocsnot,Bond to tisforlt. Don't
tal.o a lubitltute—there is nothing like Paxtino.
Write for the Froo Uox of Paxtino to-day.
XL PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldg., Bolton. Hsu.
Cotton Gin
Machinery
PRATT. MUNGER.
WINSHIP.
EAGLE. SIMTH.
«, niu tk. mt CM.IM, Is*. M i»»
,oacim 1* tk, wuM. V. ■!» nek,
ENGINES and BOILERS,
LINTERS tor OIL MILLS.
»• mu nMjrtaiet snMi skoal * Ctlu Oik.
Write foe Illustrated CeteJoguo.
Continental Gin Co. r
Birmingham, Ala.
^W^BEST FOR THE BOWELS
raoeo^eta
CANDY
CATHARTIQ
blood, wind on thertonsach, bloated bowels, foul month, headache,
pain* after eating, liver trouble, tallow akin and diirinem. When1 yo —.
regularly you aro tick. Conatlpatlon kill* more people than all other d(a«
starts chronic ailments and lone years of suffering, tio matter what alia
CAQCARET3 today, for yen will never get well sod stay wall until you gat yaw WM