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/hedford\
nSLACKORAUGHTjI
pfidnlr
jAurjisS&ii.
|f\ Constipation is nothing more
MB than a clogging of the bowels
■B anil nothing less than vital stag-
JjL nation or death if not relieved, at
lii jf every constipated sufferer U
r (( ,ulil realize that he is allowing B
poisonous filth to remain in his B
s ostein, he would soon get relief. S
Constipation invites all kind of
contagion. Headaches, bilious- M
ness, colds and many other ail- 9
ments disappear when consti- 9
pate] bowels are relieved. Thed- 9
ford's Black-Draught thoroughly 9
cleans out the bowels in an easy 8
and natural manner without the p
purging of calomel or'other vio- 13
lent cathartics. f
Be sure that you get the origi- 9
l nal Thedford’s Black-Draught, /y
B niade by The Chattanooga Medi- B
/ cine Cos. Sold by all druggists in wl
f 25 cent and SI.OO packages.
V.orinin, Arh., Mav 25, 1901. jf
Ii rnnnot recommend Tliedford’s Black- **
9 flrausht too highly. I Seep It In my house H
9 all the time and hare used it for the last ■
9 ten years. 1 never gave mv children If
9 any other laxative. I think I could h 9
never he able to work without it
W on account of being troubled with w
constipation. Tour medicine la
wiM all that keeps me up.
C. B. JIiFARLAXD.
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‘The Bandit
The Marquise de Beauminois had
mourned sufficiently for a goutv
and unreasonably jealous husband.
She had recently laid aside her
weeds and begun a neuvaine when
an order from the king enjoined
her to lodge a captain and his
squadron, who had been sent to
clear the country of an audacious
)>apd of brigands.
The young widow submitted with
good grace. \V bile the dragoons
had free access to the pantry, she
did the honors of her table for their
chief, the Due de Merval. Dom
Marouflot, the chaplain of the cha
teau, acted as chaperon.
One evening the duke was talk
ing and drinking in the large wain
scoted room, where he was playing
chess with Dom Marouflot. The
marquise, who wore an exception
ally elegant toilet, was asking her
self for the thousandth time that
week, “Do I really love him?” and,
though she reflected seriously, 'her
question remained unanswered.
“That Gillou is a clever bandit,”
growled the captain between two
games. “For two weeks we have
scoured the country, and still he
slips through our fingers. I have
decided to search for him tomorrow
with the whole squadron.
“Gillou is not an ordinary brig
and,” continued the duke. “They
say he is educated, courteous and
even gallant upon occasions.”
As the marquise drew her chair
nearer to the table where the tw r o
men were sitting the captain begftn
to tease her.
“What a serious countenance,
madame! I fear my stories about
brigands have so frightened you
that you will not dare to venture
two steps in the park this evening.”
Dom Marouflot looked at the
clock and said: “It is the hour for
your neuvaine, madame. I will
ring for the servants to escort you.”
“No, no; it is needless,” replied
the marquise, piqued by the duke’s
sarcasm. “I shall go to the chapel
alone. I wish to prove to Captain
Merval that women are not such
cowards as he believes.”
The old chapel was at the farther
end of the park. Once out of the
house the marquise began to regret
her bravado. Mme. Beauminois’
mind was tilled with the stories she
had heard concerning Gillou, ‘‘the
man in the mask,” as the old wo
men of the country called him.
Under her fine satin corsage her
heart beat so loudly she could al
most hear it.
At last she reached the chapel
and, entering, kneeled and said her
prayers a little more quickly than
usual. Then she rose and went to
ward the door.
Suddenly she stopped and caught
her breath. A masked man was
standing near the holy water vessel.
As she saw that he remained mo
tionless and in a respectful atti
tude she took courage and ad
vanced.
The man dipped his fingers in the
holy ’water and held them out to
]}cr. She did not dare to refuse the
stranger’s offer, and, thanks to a
ray of moocflight that filtered
through a stained glass window, she
remarked that he had a very beau
tiful hand.
A little reassured, she made a
sign of the cross and left the chapel.
""She had scarcely taken ten steps
before the unknown man rejoined
her, and she started at hearing a
voice which she thought she recog
nized, although it was singularly
softened.
“•Will you allow me to offer you
my arm, madame? Some accident
might befall you alone in this great
park at such an hour.”
He had such a courtly bearing
that the marquise felt perfectly
safe.
As they crossed an opening
bathed in "moonlight she examined
her companion more closely. Ilis
mask left the lower part of his face
uncovered. Not only did she believe
that it was not the first time she
had heard this voice, but it seemed
to her that it was the same blond
mustache which had lightly touched
her hand each evening in a discreet
kiss. The masked man had there
fore almost the same voice, mus
tache and figure as the duke.
He had disguised himself to
frighten her. This discovery gave
her a great desire to laugh, and she
leaned upon his arm with more con
fidence. Finding the adventure a
pleasant one, shb resolved to play
her part of the courageous woman
seriously so long as it should please
the duke to remain a brigand.
Besides, what a fine occasion to
learn under cover of jocularity the
duke’s real sentiments!
“Do you often go out alone like
this, my pretty devotee?”
“Yes, M. Mask, all alone, just like
this.”
“Do you know that Gillou and
his band are running about the
country ?”
Thousands Have Kidney Trouble
and Don’t Know it.
How To Find Oat.
Fill a bottle or common glass with your
water and let it stand twenty-four hours; *
. . sediment or seS
JtPJJn tling indicates af.
-ygT] unhealthy condi
ntfl iv/ Bon of the kid
\y/\
) your linen it is
evidence of kid-
BJ \\l fl ne y trouble; too
r|_\W/y frequent desire to
pass it or pain in
the back is also
convincing proof tha{ the kidneys and blad
der are out of order.
What to Do.
There is comfort in the knowledge so
often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-
Root, the great kidney remedy fulfills every
wish in curing rheumatism, pain in the
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it, or bad effects following use of liquor,
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ordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon
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If you need a medicine you should have the
best. Sold by druggists in 50c. andsl. sizes.
You may have a sample bottle of this
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and a book that tclls^!fcaiH?Bfr3Bff^ , '~ t ?b|
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address Dr. Kilmer & Home of Swamp-Root.
Cos., Binghamton, N. Y. When writing men
tion reading this generous offer in this paper.
“Yes, I know it.”
“Are you not afraid of brig
ands ?”
“That depends upon the brig
and.”
“Myself, for example.”
“Are you a real brigand ?”
“Alas, yes, fair lady,” he said in a
melancholy tone.
“Indeed!” replied the marquise.
“I am sorry for you, but you do not
frighten me a bit. Quite the coh
trary.”
The stranger had such a grateful,
tender and eloquent look that the
young woman was touched. She
would never have believed that the
duke’s eyes could express so much
as that.
“Would it he indiscreet, beauti
ful princess, to ask why you went to
the old chapel ”
“I went to finish my neuvaine.”
“A neuvaine! And for what rea
son ?”
“Guess.”
“Are you married, my queen?”
“I have been,- but” —
“Ah, I understand! You were of
fering up vows for the end of your
widowhood.”
“Perhaps that is it.”
Without another word he began
to press a series of kisses upon the
marchioness’ taper fingers.
Her hesitation increased the ene
my’s boldness, and when she
thought of drawing away her hand
he had already abandoned it for a
skirmish where the kisses closed her
eyes.
Suddenly she escaped from her
imprisonment and noticed that his
eyes were fixed upon the brilliant
diamond she wore upon her little
finger.
“Do you want a pledge of pardon
for your boldness ?” she said. “Here
it is.” And, putting her whole soul
into a last playful smile, she added:
“It is a talisman that will aid you
in, returning to the right path, my
dear brigand. Remember that I
should prefer to see you dead rath
er than unfaithful or a felon.”
At these words, lightly uttered,
the masked man showed extraordi
nary emotion. Then, with rever
ence this time, he kissed the lady’s
hand and disappeared.
SECRETS
At th Price of Suffering.
Woman on her way to semi-invalidism
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Ignorance prompts her to suffer alone
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THE BRADFiELD REGULATOR CO., ATLANTA, GA
When she entered the house, she
found the duke and Dom Marouflot
at the chess table. The duke was
so absorbed that he did not even
turn his head as she came into the
room. She thought that really she
was in the presence of a consum
mate actor.
She leaned over his shoulder as
he was moving a knight and sud
denly turned pale—the duke had
no ring on his finger!
The poor marquise passed a rest
less night.
Toward morning she had scarcely
closed her eyes when she was awak
ened by the sound of gunshots, fol
lowed by the noise of galloping
horses.
The duke, at the head of his
dragoons, was returning to the
chateau. He had alighted and was
taking off his pistols when the
marquise appeared.
“It’s all over,” he called out to
her. “I brought down Gillou with
a single shot. We had hardly got
outside the park gate before the
idiot came to us. He threw him
self between our horses’ legs, so to
speak. And for fear that I might
not recognize him he cried out: ‘I
am Gillou! Kill me!’
“He kneeled down ten steps from
me. When he saw me aim my pis
tol at him, he raised his hand in the
air and held up something brilliant.
Then ho cried out again, but I don’t
know' what he said, for the report
of mv pistol drowned his voice.
“He fell, and one of my men
picked up the brilliant thing he held
in his hand. If you want it, here
it is. It shall be your part of the
booty. But there is a little blood
on it.”
The duke handed a beautiful dia
mond to the marquise. Recogniz
ing the ring, she turned deathly
pale, and suddenly she read clearly
in her heart. She had never loved
the duke, and now she detested him.
—From the French.
Not a Minure to Lose
if you are wet and feel chilled to
the bone, after a tramp through a
storm. Get into dry clothes at
once and warm your insides with a
teaspoonful of Perry Davis’ Pain
killer, in hot water, with a little
sugar. Thus you will avoid a cold,
and, possibly, a long sickness.
The precaution is worth while.
There is but one Painkiller, Perry
Davis’.
Distress after eating, belching,
and nausea between meals are
symptomsof dyspepsia, with Hood’s
Sarsaparilla always cures.
■SAVES TWO FROM DEATH
“Our little daughter had an
almost fatal attack of wheoping
cough and bronchitis,’’writes Mrs.
W. K. Haviland, of Armonk, N.
Y., “but, when all other remedies
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King’s New Discovery. Our neice,
who had Consumption in an ad
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STEPPED INTO LIVE COALS.
“When a child I burned my foot
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of Jonesville, Va.,“which caused
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but Bucklen’s Arnica Salve wholly
cured me after everything else
failed.” Infallible for Burns.
Scalds, Cuts, Sores, Bruises and
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To Cure a Cold in One Day
Take Laxative Broiuo Quinine
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money if it fails to cure. E. W
Grove’s signature is on each box.
Price, 25c.
Money to Loan.
1 am authorized to make
application for the loan of
money on real estate
through the Georgia Loan
& Trust Cos., of Macon, Ga.
Terms reasonable.
T. C. MILNER,
Attorney at Law.
World’s Great Fever Medicine
Johnson’s Tonic does in a day what
slow Quinine cannot do in ten days.
Its splendid “urea are in striking con
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I ( you are utterly wretched, take a
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the wiser insure tbeir health by using
Johnson’s Chill and Fever Tonic. It
costs 50 cents if it cures; not one cent if
it does not.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
the Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the /l?,
Signature of ( ~&aS7Y.
£* A99 If 59/9 9A HO Is the name sometimes given to what
■ .19111 fllllllßll is Rurally known as the BAD DIS
-999 EASE. It is not confined to dens of
vice or the lower classes. • The purest
99 1A A A Fk AID A n and people are sometimes
■ ■■99 Cl 99 fill mil 19 infected with this awful malady
Ir IV V wi 94j\F9 through handling the clothing,
. _ drinking from the same vessels,
using the same toilet articles, or otherwise coming in contact with persons
who have contracted it.
It begins usually with a little
groins, a red eruption breaks out on
the body, sores and ulcers appear
in the mouth, the throat becomes
ulcerated, the hair, eye brows and
lashes fall out; the blood becoming
more contaminated, copper colored
splotches and pustular eruptions and
sores appear upon different parts of
the body, and the poison even destroys the bones. 1
S. S. S. is a Specific for this loathsome disease, and cures it even in the
worst forms. It is a perfect antidote for the powerful virus that pollutes
S —. i the blood and penetrates to all parts of the system.
Unless you get this poison out of your blood it will
ruin you, and bring disgrace and disease upon
KJH your children, for it can be transmitted from parent
to child. S. S. S. contains no mercury of potash,
but is guaranteed a strictly vegetable compound. 9
% Write for our free home treatment book and learn all about Contagious
Blood Poison. If you want medical advice give us a history of your case,
and our physicians will furnish all the information you wish without any
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v—" ■■ - 1 .. 7
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Cheep Rates to Mans m Texas
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1. W. THOMAS, Jr., H. F. SMITH, CHAS. E. HARMAN,
General Manager, Traffic Manager, General Pass. Agent,
Nashville. Tenn. Nashville- T - "f Atlanta. Ga>
How Can I Keep Up with
the Times ?
IT is pretty hard to keep well informed on the
political news, the scientific news, the literary
news, the educational movements, the great
business developments, the hundreds of interesting
and valuable articles in the hundreds of excellent
magazines. About the only way it can be done by
the average busy man and woman is to read a
magazine like “ The Review of Reviews,” and, as
it is the only magazine of the sort, it is a good
thing to send $2.50 for a year’s subscription.
PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT says:
“ I know that through its columns views have been pre
ss Aed to me that I could not otherwise have had access to;
be. übb all earnest and thoughtful men, no matter how widely
their ideas diverge, are given free utteiance in its columns.”
EX-PRESIDENT GROVER CLEVELAND says:
“ I consider it a very valuable addition to my library.” ,
t y !
The Review of Reviews Cos.
13 Astor Place, New York , j
Read The Review of Reviews
WHITE MAN TURNED YEL
LOW.
Geat consternation was felt by
the friends of M. A. Hogarty of
Lexington, Ky., when they saw
he was turning yellow. His skin
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and he suffered teiribly. His mai
ady was Yellow Jaundic-’. He was
treated by the best doctors, but
without benefit. Then he was ad
vised to try Electric Bitters, the
wonderful Stomach and Liver
remedy, and he writes:’ “After
taking" two bottles I was wholly
cured.” A trial proves its matchless
merit for all Stomach, Liver and
Kidney troubles. Only 50c. Sold
by Young Bros. Druggists.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure
DtyyMrtr vrtmt you wit*
blister or sore, then swelling in the
Ten years ago I contracted a bad oasa
of Blood Poison. I war under treatment
of a physician until I found that he could
do me no good. Then began taking
S. S. S. I commenced to improve at one*
and in a very short time all evidence of
the disease disappeared. I took six bot
tles and today am sound and well.
R. M. Wall, Morristown, Tenn,
DON’T GET THIN
get fat; get nice and plump, there is
safety in plumpness.
Summer has tried your foodworks;
winter is coming to try your breath
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Hut weather is tricky; lookout!
Lookout for colds especially.
Scott's emulsion of cod-liver oil is
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Don't get thin, there is safety in
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Mother Gray’s Sweet
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