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PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Makes
Marvelous Curas
in Blood Poison
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
the I wLv PUr i f . iC r t: ‘.° builds up
Mromrih** ail< debilitate*!. si\<—
mrenelh to weakened nerves ex,.eh.
hni>iuew' V h S ll,e pat •■‘’“•Hi" and
‘S",'
!*} blood and skin df<*e;i-o* ll*.
blotches, pimples, old chronic ulcer*
oesem'a "S" W bca<l, t>olls - * , rysi| * las.’
( we may Pay, without f
c-omrmdiotion. that lV P P o o
i" * bc w,, rld. and makes
LldVeLe"'! CCdy a ' ,a penua,! ' J,!l '-’“res
Ladle* whose systems are poisoned
oncl whoso blood is in an impure con i
tion. due to menstrual irregularities,
aro peculiarly benefited by the won
derful tonic ami blood cleansinsr pr*.n
ertlenof P. p. p. -Prickly Ash, PoLo
Root and Potasstum.
Springfield, Mo., Aug. 14th. 1893.
I can speaU in tlie highest terms of
your medicine from my nvtn personal
knowledge. 1 was affected v. it h heart
disease, pleurisy and rheumatism for
3.> years, was treated by the vervbest
physicians ana spent hundreds of dol
lars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief. I have only taken
one bottle of your P. P. p. , and can
choerfully say It. has done mo more
good than anything 1 have overtaken.
I can recommend your medicine to all
aunerers of the above diseases
MR9. M. M. YEARY.
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
Wait not, be wise as
MBR Mir a,H bring your rr
ySmm
jev%j e J 1
akSOll 1 J B. S(W(i ajmpstj Horn
f Repairing MULBERRY ST.
t LLl c Li /j AC KSO NGA
R- S. GRaTCHER, T J. FAMBRO.
R. S. -CRUTCHER & CO.,
Furniture. - - - - Furniture.
Everything at “Cut Prices,”
IW'd Room, Bailor, Dining Room, Library, Office and Hall Furniture
PrioegW (J)©tt©.
iite for om illustrated catalogue or cad to see us when in the city.
53 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga.
King of all Absolutely
Bicycles. \ the Best *
Light Weight and Superior Haterial
Rigidity. Every Ma- and Scientific Work
chinefullywarranted || —fl nranship.
Highest Honors at the World’s Colombian Exposition.
send two-cent stamp for our 24-page Catalogue-A work of Art.
Monarch Cycle Company,
Retail Salesroom, 2&> Wabash Ave. Lake and Habted Sts., CHICAGO, ILL.
NORTH GEORGIA
Agricultural College,
DEPARTMENT jlh THE UNIVERSITY,
At Dahlonega, Georgia.
Spring term begins first Monday in February.
Fall term begins first Monday in September.
FULL LITERARY COURSES.
TFITIOX FREE
With ample corps of teachers.
THROUGH MILITARY TRAINING
under a V. 8. Army Officer detailed b.;
Secretory cf war.
Departments of Business, Short
hand, Typewriting, Telegraphy,
Music and Art.
Under competent and thorough instructors.
▼OUNG LADIES have equal advantages.
CHEAPEST COLLEGE IN THE SOUTH
For tgtttloguis and full taformetlou ad
orn* Secretary or Treasurer . r F-c
Trustee#
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
AND OLD SORES
CATARRH. MHLARU
KIDNEY TROURLES
and DYSPEPSIA
Are entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas
•tnm, the greatest blood pvriflef on
e&rta.
AnFfmEEN. 0.. July 21,1891.
Messrs Lippman Bros.. Savannah,
Ga. : Desk Sirs— l bought a bottle of
your P. I p. at Hot Bprix:gs,Ark.,and
it has dono mo more good than three
mont hs’ treat ment at the Hot Springs.
Bead throe bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully yours,
.. , JAB. M. NEWTON,
Aberdeen, Brown County, O.
Capt. J. D. Johnston.
j'o all trhom it may concern : I here*
by testify to the wonderful properties
° ~ p . p - for eruptions of the skin. I
ipnered for several years with an un
sightly m<l disagreeable eruption on
my face. 1 tried ev.-ry known reme
dy bo. la vain,until P. P. p. was used,
and am now entirely cured.
(Signed by> J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savannah, Ga.
Shin Cancer Cared.
Teztimony from the Mayor of Sequin,Tex,
Sequin. Tex.. January 14, 1893.
Messrs. Lippman Bros., Savannah.
Ga.: Ircntlemen—l have tried your P.
I*, i*. for a disease of the skin, usually
known -s skin cancor.of thirty years'
standing, and found great relief: it
purifies the blood and removes all ir
ritation from the seat of tho disease
and prevents any spreading of the
sores. I have taken llveor six bottles
and feel confident that another course
will effect a cure. It has also relieved
mo from indigestion and stomach
troubles. Yours truly,
CAPT. W. M. RUST,
Attorney at Law.
Book mm Diseoses Moiled Free.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
LIPPMAN BROB.
PROPRIETORS,
Llppman’s Bloch,Savannah, a
W. L. Douclas
*> CUAr IS THE BEST.
OnVbNOSQUEAKiNa
IBw And other specialties for
Gentlemen, Ladies, Boys
ond Mls#f9 ® Te tbe
Best in the World.
AkSSWPM See descriptive advertise-
HE -' : ment which appears In this
Take ne Substitute.
Insist on having W. L,
DOUGLAS’ SHOES,
with name and price
stamped on bottom. Sold by
DR. J. W. CRUM.
Take
f JkSCoSTIVENESS
DYSPEPSIA / \ N^Zu°s *
incicestion i Smamm. j headache.
BiljouskessX MgaSmvJjaundice
S■ UHNESS or'm°f /r£ .
Stomach appetite
None Genuine Without The Likeness And
Signature cfM. A.Thecfcro o Front Of
rACiI WnAFPJR. M.A.Th£OFORO^ MED.
How a Chinaman Farms.
A large part of the farming of China
is done by irrigation. It is wonderful
how well they work, and how much
the> get off the land. Three crops a
year is by no means uncommon, and
if any sign of a failure of crop is seen,
the seed for another crop is straight
way sown.
It is wonderful how 6mall the farms
are. There are thousands of holdings
in China which are less than an acre,
and some are even as small as the
tenth of an acre. It is estimated that
an acre of iand will, in the better parts
of the empire, support a family of six,
and a volume could be written on
Chinese agriculture.
The use of fertilizers is universal,
and, though there are practically no
horses and few cattle, there is no land
which is so well fed. Everything is
saved. Thousands of men do nothing
else but gather up bits of fertilizing
matter and sell them. The refuse of a
rich family will briug more than that
of a poor one, and the slops of the
foreign part of Shanghai are farmed
out annually for a sum which gives
the city the most of its educational
fund.
Potato peelings, the parings of fin
ger nails, the shavings of the head,
andothtr refuse from a part of the
fertilizing material, and this is usually
put together in such liquid form that
not a bit of it is wasted. The manare
is kept in great vats, and the farm is
watered like a garden. Each plot gets
its daily food and drina. A dipper
full from a vat is put in each bucket of
water, and the mixture is poured in at
the roots of the plants. All through
out this part of China such fertiliza
tion goes on, and from twenty to
thirty dollars a year is sometimes
spent upon an acre of land.— Ex,
Eat Apples.
Chemically the apple is composed of
vegetable fiber, albumen, sugar, gum,
chloropliyl, malic acid, gallic acid,
lime and much water. Furthermore,
the German analysts say that the ap
ple contains a larger percentage of
phosphorus than any other fruit or
vegetable. The phosphorus is ad
mirably adapted to renewing the es
sential nervous matter of the brain
and the spinal cord. It is perhaps for
the same reason, riidely understood,
that old Scandinavian traditions rep
resent the apple as the food of the
gods, who, when they felt themselves
to be growing feeble and infirm, re
sorted to this fruit, renewing their
powers of mind and body. —North
A mcrican Practitioner.
Are You Goins Abroad
For health, pleasure or business, and would
not have your voyage marred by sea-sick
nesr? Then take along with you Hostetter’s
S omach Bitters, and when you feel the
nausea try s
ina ical change for the betterinyourinterior,
and a continuance of it will save you from
further attacks. Asa means of overcomine
nvilaria l , kidney, dyspeptic, nervous and
i heumatic troubles the Bitters is unequaled.
Turpentine is a sure exterminator of bed
im _s.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cure 9
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
Stories to suit the public taste must be half
epigram-> and half pleasant vice.
How’s This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's Catarrh Cure.
F. J- Cheney & Cos., Toledo, O.
We, the undersignei, have known F. J. Che
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Walping, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all druggists.
“A Practical Age”
Is a fit ep'thet for the present age. “Of what
use is it ?” and “How soon will I get my money
out of it?” are questions always asked before
making ail investment of any kind. Bright,
intelligent young ladies no longer spend ineir
time in acquiring useless accomplishments.
Parents who wish to render their children
independent, cannot do a wiser thing than
give them a course in shorthand ana type
writing. For young ladies it is a gentesl and
pleasant work, and for young men it is often
the stepping stone to a higher business posi
tion. For terms, etc., in the best, most thor
ough and complete school in the South, write
Miss McNutt’s School of Stenography &
> ypewriting, 137 and 139 S. B. & L. Assn.
B’ldg., Wall St., Knoxville, Tenn.
Karl’s Clover Root, the great blood purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex
ion and cures constipation, 25 c’s., 50 cts., §l.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle.
Hot Noons
Chilly Nights
Of Fall present so many variations of tem
perature as to tax the strength and make a
pathway for disease. Hood ’a Sarsaparilla
will fortify the system against these dangers,
by making pure, healthy blood. “Sores
|—lOOd’S Sarsa
*l- !>%%%%%% parilla
came out on my limbs.
I tried different medi- M 11 FcJji
cines, but none helped
me. At last my moth
er heard of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. After tak
ing part of a bottle the sores began to heal,
and after a short time I was completely
cured. We keep it in the house most of the
time. Asa blood purifier I know of nothing
better.” Leon St. John, Fairmont, Minn.
Hood’s Pills are purely vege able, hand made
Valued Indorsement
of Scott’s I
Emulsion
is contain
cd in let
ters from
the medi
cal profes
sion speaking of its gratify,
ing results in their practice.
Scott's Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with Hypo
phosphites can be adminis
tered when plain oil is out of
the question. It is almost
as palatable as milk—easier
to digest than milk,
fVr-*red i>> Soft 1 f & Buwae, N V. Ali druggiaU.
GEORGIA IN BRIEF.
NEWSY ITEMS GATHERED HERE
AND THERE OYER THE STATE
And Condensed Into Pithy and Inter
esting Paragraphs.
The next legislature will be asked
to make anew judicial circuit for Sa
vannah, taking in Mclntosh county.
* * *
Up to a few days ago there was con
siderable doubt as to whether or not
the Dixie fair at Macon would secure
Paine’s “Last Days of Pompeii,” as
one of its great attractions. The di
rectors met and closed the contract for
the great spectacular agreeing to give
the owners of it 80 per cent of the
gate receipts at night.
♦ * *
President Collier, of the Exposition
company, received a letter from the
board of control of the government
exhibit a few days ago giving the out
lines of the building which the govern
ment will erect at the exposition
grounds. The letter states that the
building will contain 51,000 square
feet of floor space and the extreme di
mensions will be 100 by 270 feet with
the main entrance on the long side of
the building.
♦ • ♦
The property of the Oyster Canning
and Cultivating company, at Bruns
wick, including oyster farms, steam
boats, shell, plant and machinery, have
been sold by Sheriff Berrie, and were
bid in by John C. Lehman and F. D.
Aiken for $10,200. The property cost
more than $25,000. A company com
posed of A. H. Lane, J. M. Madden,
F. D. Aiken and others will be organ
ized to operate the plant, and 200 peo
ple will be given employment.
* * *
A most enthusiastic convention of
the Lauudrymeu’s National Associa
tion has just adjourned at Rochester,
N. Y, Lots of laundrymen were pres
ent, and when the important matter
of selecting a meeting place for 1896
the delegates had no hesitancy in se
lecting Atlanta. Several hundred
strong the laundrymen will be in the
city during the exposition. Atlanta will
treat them white and clean; there will
be nothing stiff about the welcome they
will receive.
* * *
A goodly sum of money, $18,850,
was sent out from the executive office
last Tuesday morning for educational
purposes. A warrant for $5,625 for
the fourth quarter’s dues to tlie Tech
nological School was issued, one for
$5,725, the dues of the Georgia Nor
mal and Industrial College was sent
out, as well as $£,750 for the school for
the deaf at Cave Springs, $2,000 for
the negro college at Savannah, a
branch of the State University, and
$750 for the college at Dahlonega, also
a branch of the university.
* * *
Pending the hearing of the petition
against tho Atlanta and Florida road
for the appointment of a receiver and
permanent injunction, Judge Lumpkin
has appointed Mr. Eugene C. Spald
ing temporary receiver. While the
appointment occurred before the time
set for the hearing of the case, it was
an instance of where the emergency
demanded immediate action. The road
has out against it not less than $50,-
000 of indebtedness, which does not
include bonds, and then holders of
nearly two-thirds of this amount were
praying for protection in the bill for a
permanent injunction and receiver.
* * *
The Macon and Northern railroad,
running from Macon to Athens, was
sold at the door of the courthouse of
Bibb county recently. Mr. Alexander,
Brown, Jr., of Baltimore, was the only
bidder. He took tlie preperty in for
the sum of $1,700,000, the upset price
of the road. A check for $30,000 was
deposited with the commissioners as a
guarantee of good faith. The price
paid means that the bondholders pay
the receiver’s debts and take the road.
What will become of the Macon and
Northern road is now tlie question in
railroad circles. Mr. Brown declines
to be interviewed, but so far as can be
learned, the road will be operated in
dependently.
* * *
Two important resolutions were
adopted by the United States grand
jury at Atlanta a few days ago. The
first was a resolution urging the estab
lishment of a reformatory prison.
And the second called for the appoint
ment of a special committee to repre
sent the views of the grand jury in
regard to the establishment of a
United States prison in Georgia. A
bill has already passed the two houses
of congress providing for the erection
of a certain number of additional
jimons throughout the country. The
nearest federal prison at this time is
the one at Columbus, 0., and to
this point nearly all the prisoners
who are convicted of felonies in
the northern district of Georgia are
carried for imprisonment. The dis
tance is such as to make the expense
of carrying prisoners to and from the
prison at Columbus very expensive to
the government, and it frequently
happens, on account of the difference
of climate and latitude, that great suf
fering is occasioned to the prisoners
and many die from exposure to the
rigorous climate of the north. If the
prison is located in the northern dis
trict of Georgia it will bring to that
section of the state a large appropria
tion—between $500,000 and $600,000.
It will furnish employment to a large
number of officers and will be an im
portant acquisition in many respects.
WRECK ON THE SOUTHERN.
Many Seriously Injured—Coaches De
stroyed by Fire.
A most disastrous wreck occurred on
the Southern railway three miles from
Bristol, Tenn., at 2 o’clock p. m. Sun
day. The Washington and Chatta
nooga vestibule southbound train was
rounding a sharp curve, when the en
gine flew the track, followed by the
mail, express, dining car, three pas
senger coaches and the sleeper, all of
which, save the sleeper, took fire and
were consumed in a short time. Thir
teen peopb were seriously injured, and
one or t wo of them may die.
( Dm/
V Baking •.
,
Jipso/ute/y
“I regard the Royal Baking Powder as the
best manufactured and in the market.”
Author of “Common Sense in the Household
A Japanese Clock.
The real Japanese clock, one of the
kind in use among that brown skinned,
almond eyed race of orientals before
they came in contact with the time
keepers of European pattern, is the
oldest horological instrument imagin
able. They are of many kinds and
patterns, of course, but all are alike
in one respect —viz., in recording the
flight of time without that seeming in
dispensable adjunct, the pointer ro
tating on an axis.
In these queer Jap timekeepers the
scale and figures (characters) are ar
ranged in a fashion more resembling a
Farenheit thermometer than anything
else, the pointer or “hand” being at
tachatl to a rod, which is continually
sliding downward in the “time tube,”
thus pointing to the hour and minute
as it slowly but imperceptibly falls to
ward the “bulb” or “weighthouse.” A
square linked chain is attached to the
upper end of the rod, to which the
time pointer is affixed, and when the
clock is “wound up” it is done by
simply coiling the chain around the
toothed wheel. A heavy weight fastened
at the other end of the rod continually
pulls rod and pointer downward, thus
plainly and simply recording the fight
of time. St. Louis Republic.
Sleep for Children.
A physician urges upon mothers the
necessity for plenty of sleep for child
ren during the age of development. A
child brought up in a town can scarcely
get too much sleep. The least amount
for a child up to 4 years of age should
be 12 hours, 11 hours from that to 7
years, lOi from 7 to 10, 10 from that
to 15 and 9 up to 20 years of age.
Nor is it a good plan to make a prac
tice to awaken children at some re
quired breakfast hour. See, if pos
sible, that they go to bed sufficiently
early to get their quota of sleep by the
time the breakfast summons sounds,
but in any event let any morning task
or duty go by rather than the growing
and building sleep power be shorten
ed. Fortunately mothers these days
have much more liberal and enlighten
ed notions about child bringing up
than formerly, and they more often
select the right and most important
line of action in this respect. —New
York Times.
Oatmeal in the Soup Pot.
Few people, says a w ell known cook,
appear to realize the value of oatmeal
as a means of thickening soups and
stews, etc. It should be smoothly
mixed with a little cold water and
stirred thoroughly to the rest in a
boiling state. It requires brisk boil
ing lor 15 minutes, but need not be
stirred all the while, as cornstarch or
flour must be. This means of thicken
ing ir not only the most nourishing,
but also the cheapest.
Last year Florida’s exports of or
anges to Europe were as follows: To
Liverpool, 23,794 boxes; London, via
Southampton, 15,307 boxes; Glasgow,
950 boxes; making a total of 40,051.
Brings comfort and improvement and
tends to personal enjoyment when
rightly used. The many, who live bet
tei ifian others and enjoy life more, with
less expenditure, by more promptly
adapting the world’s best products to
the needs of physical being, will attest
the value to health of the pure liquid
laxative principles embraced in the
remedy, Syrup of Figs.
Its excellence is due to its presenting
in the form most acceptable and pleas
ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly
beneficial properties of a perfect lax
ative ; effectually cleansing the system,
disnelling colds, headaches and fevers
and permanently curing constipation.
It has given satisfaction to millions and
met with the approval of the medical
profession, because it acts on the Kid
neys, Liver and Bowels without weak
ening them and it is perfectly free from
every objectionable substance.
Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drug
gists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is man
ufactured by the California Fig Syrup
Cos. only, whose name is printed on every
package, also the name, Syrup of Figs,
and being well informed, you will not
accept any substitute fi offered,
A Utilitarian Mother.
A fond young mother, who is yet a
utilitarian, converted the lace flounced
first robe of her baby, atter he had
outgrown it, into a most fetching lamp
shade, a soft pink sash holding its
filmy fullness in at the top in true
baby dress fashion. And no one sus
pected its origin, but all who saw ad
mired the lamp’s accouterment. —New
York Letter.
Dirty, Disgusting Dandruff
is produced by an unhealthy scaley
condition of the scalp. If it were on
your face, you wouldn’t 6top till you
stopped it. Tetterino cures it just as
it cures eruptions and roughness on
any other part of the body. It is the
only thing that avill cure such things.
It is 50 cents a box at drug stores, and
from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
Johnny’s Opinion.
“I’m going to marry your sister,
Johnny, and take her far away. What
do you think of that?”
“I guess I can stand it if you can.”
—Life.
fBUDS, Society
buds, young wo
men just entering
the doors of soci
ety or woman
hood, require the
wisest care. To
be beautiful and
charming they
must have perfect
health, with all it
skm, rosy cheeks,
bright eyeß and
this period the
young woman is
tive, ancf many
nervous troubles,
which continue
through life, have
their origin at this
time. If there be
pain, headache, backache, and nervous dis
turbances, or the general health not good,
the judicious use of medicine should be
employed. Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip
tion is the best restorative tonic and nerv
ine at this time. The best bodily condition
results from its use. It’s a remedy spe
cially indicated for those delicate weak
nesses and derangements that afflict wo
menkind at one period or another. You’ll
find that the woman who has faithfully
used the “Prescription” is the picture of
health, she looks well and she feels well.
In catarrhal inflammation, in chronic dis
placements common to women, where there
are symptoms of backache, dizziness or
fainting, bearing down sensations, disor
dered stomach, moodiness, fatigue, etc.,
the trouble is surely dispelled and the
sufferer brought back to health and good
spirits.
“WOMAN’S ILLS."
Dihi'orth. Trumbull Cos.,
took Doctor Pierce’s rT
which has been a great sq X md I
benefit to me. I am in
excellent health now. i.6m
I hope that every wo- WV
man, who is troubled /. )\
with ‘women’s ills,’ /A
will try the * Prescrip- ‘ ' V \ f
tion ’ and be benefited
as I have been.” Mrs. Bates.
FINE THE OLD HOUSE
All k IA Established 1826.
!■ | I sL “ Purdpvs’i." -‘Scott’s,** “Wcstley
|1 H B Bib Richard*,’” “Williams A Powci!,”
BE U B w BIW ' Colts,” “ I.efeter," “ Parker," *nd
™ all other makes.
"Also the new Scott “ Monte Carlo ” Ifammerlesi, best run
out! and which took last grand prize at Monte Carlo for ABOO.
Now on hand, a lot ofhTjrh grade second-hand Guns, taken
in exchange, bargains: other puna taken in trade. Send
atampa for illustrated catalogue and second-hand list.
William Read & Sons, 107 Washington St, Boston.
fPLKASK IKXTIOX THIS FA PER,’]
SPECULATE m
tury. Corn crop n< arty ruined. 1000 bu-hels can be
bought on $lO nvirgla giving you the ben.' fit oi nil
the advance name as if bought outright. Sen i
ior our free booklet “How to Trade.” C. F. VAN
WINKLE & CO., Room 45, 232 La Salle St., Chicago.
f tf-h d* f* ft CATALOG, giving
■ fia a-” fP 3 * Ia full detcriptio
■ S am umw ■ of the chi a pest and
best IRON FENCE made for cemetery
u;e. J. Wi RICE, Atlanta, Ca.
t Dollars or Kicks
Dr women, according to whether they do, or don’t
do, their washing in a sensible way. If they use
Pearline, it means good, hard dollars saved.
Pearline is economy. All that ruinous
/m Tubbing that makes you buy linens
AL and flannels twice as often as you
jjk need to, is spared, to say nothing of
* 7 r your time and labor,
ee the troubles that women have to endure with
ways of washing. There’s that hard, wearing
b, rub, rub, or the danger of ruining things with
acids if you try to make it easy. Washing with Pearline is
absolutely safe.
and Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you “ this is as good as”
wCIIU or “the same as Pearline.” IT’S FALSE—Pearline is never peddled,
h Back
No Pipe or Chiiiiey
NECESSARY.
“ALL RIGHT.”
A Little Furnace on Castors.
< 'lpsSjF ffffffff
v * SB
W t, vT J H
No. 20 will heat a room 14x1*1. Price SO.
No. 25 “ “ “ 16x1*. Price 512.
In the Coldest Weather, at a Cost
of One Cent an Hour.
Coal, Coke and Wood Heaters
Of all kinds, from $1.28 up.
J3ff“Send for Prices. Dealers send for **:implc.
Hunnicutt & Belliopti Cos.,
ATLANTA, - - - GEORGIA.
W. L. Douglas
CUAS 3 ISTHEGEST.
NO SQUEAKING.
$5. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH&ENAMEUEDCALF!
\ s 4. s-3.5_° $ -3. 5 _° FINE CA'i&KMIGAfM
Mmkfki. M $3.50 POLICE, 3 SOLES.
*OSO42*WORKINGMEN?
fU' 11l EXTRA FINE.
T- S 2.*I. 7JS BoYiSCHO()tSHOES.
p S O NG °tH.
SEND FCR CATALOGUE
WL* DOUGLAS,
BROCKTON, MASS- 1
You can save money by wearing the
W. L. Douglas 83.00 Shoe.
Because, we are tho largest manufacturers of
this gradeor shoes In the world, and guarantee their
value by stamping the name and price on tho
bottom, which protect you against high prices and
the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custom
work in style, easy fitting and wearing qualities.
We have them sold everywhere at lower prices for
the value given than any other make. Tako no sub
stitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, wo can.
McELREES
WINE OF CARDUI.
&V < fpv'ollf
vtlv^JjfV ft I l ' Y •
SMSf
aHvA/f#
For Female Diseases.
11/ri I Drilling Machines
WELL for any depth.
ills H DEEP
Bent line of Portable and Semi-Portable Ma
chines ever made. Brill 2to 12 inches in diame
ter, all depths. Mounted and Bown Machines.
Steam and Horse Power. Self Pumping: Tools for
shallow wells. Hope tools for large and deep
weUs. State size and depth you want to drill.
LOOMIS & NYMAN, Tiffin, Ohio.
Automatic, Kapkl
Central Fire Revolver'^T^^^S^V’' 1
Finest Nickle Plated, Rubber If r
Handle, *2,82 or 88 Caliber;4 J |
using B.AW. Cartridges. Send WX jB W/m.'M
this Ad to ua and we will exp. , EfeSfe*
you 100 Nickel Cigars, C. O. D. 84.00, and allow
examination. Revolver comes with Cisarsfre®.
It retails at *7.50. Winston Cigar Co.,winston,N.O
RAMONS™?
eTonic Pellets.
TREATMENT and Biliousness.
At all stores, or b, mail 25c. double box; 5 doubie boxes
*I.OO. BItOIVN MF'ti CO., New York City.
PORTER’S Educates lorßnsiness.
I Splendidly equipped. Very
X Practical Thorough. Expert a count
_ . ants and court reporters as
Klisiness teachers. Terms liberal.
UU9IIIC9O Graduates assi-ted to cood
COLLEGE, po-iiions. Write for par-
MAPHM fIA J. E. PORTER. President.
lunuUllj un. H. CUItTIS, Principal.
Hthk elastic:
ARTIFICIAL LI DIBS.
vith bail-bearin'' knee joints.
T e latest improved and best.
Send for des rii>tive catalogue
and price ist.
Succes-or to A. McDermott,
616 & 518 (o dNo.ll't) St.Char.es
ireet., Aew urlean-, La.
CUfiPPINn Ury goods, Millinery, Furniture,
J • W • r I II U Pianoit and everything bought
witheir • <fc judgment. No comm ssion-. Mr- An i*
Smart Wroe, la E- Lexington Stree , Baltimore, Md-
TI”SeS WHEREALL E**Alsr
h Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use gf
in time. Sold by druggists. I*9
A. N. U Ferty-on , ’9i,
■nans on 'snows on
DD**sl o
sit jo a’tju uvtqj
oarnbs JLVHII XIIA4