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PRICKLY ASH, POKE ROOT
AND POTASSIUM
Wakes
Warvelous Cures
in Blood Pnismt
Rheumatism
and Scrofula
IV *’■ P“ 'ICn too I>u ; lK i;n
tjio weak and ileliilitatei' LIW V
strength to ’.venkotiert :i<rvcs' rxi , ;,s
h mhho' f:ivi,l “** 1-Cio:;, | 1(:a - ;i |i and
? “Rl‘' ,esa where Mcknc.R. gloomy
toolings and laaMtude flrr.t pr-v: ii j.
r t~i c ■miwiii -ijMl.. m
h <>r primary pcconrtiiry arid torti-irv
Pyplulfß for blood poixoning, Z-rc7.
rial poison, malaria, dyspepsia, and
' ,°n blood and ekin clises-e* Ho
nlotchcs, pimple., old ehrooic t :<fi
to:t<-r. scald bead, bolls. rrvß‘i< lr.’
cczomn-Bc nip.v m: v. without fir, f
eonlnvluti. n, that l\ I’. i\tbol-e-.t
blood purifier i'l the world, a~i timk.-s
poKitive. speedy and permanent cures
in all cases.
r I ■ ■— WI.MB W Mm .IM M
Ladlos whoso ayateni" rro p>lvne.i
and whoso blood is in ar impure eon i
tlon. duo to menstrual irregularities,
aro peculiarly benefit ed by the vp,n
dorful tonic and bloou cicarrinrr prop
erties of i>. r. r.-Prickly Asb, l’clro
Itoot and Potassium.
PPKINOFIKLD, Mo., Aug. ]dUpT<)T
—I cin speak la the highest terms of
your medicine from my personal
knowledge. I wns affected with heart
diseaso, pleurisy and rheumatism lor
35 years, was treated by the very best;
physicians ana spent hundreds of dol
lars, tried every known remedy with
out finding relief. I have oalv taken
ono "bottlo of your P. P. P., and can
cheerfully say it has done me m>ro
food than anything 1 havo overtaken.
can recommend your medicine to all
sufferers of the abovo diseases.
MRS. M. M. YEARY.
Springfield, Green County, Mo.
I’cr Sale by W. L. Carmichael, Jackson, Ga.
I f|j nfep ™ ES 'ETC,
Millfir And bring your re
||f| -TO -
I L Millet,
I ft*South of Jempsey Souse
( j f Repairing MULBERRY ST.
®P n tH=22/jACKSON GA
R- s. eßarei-iER. r. j. fambro.
R. S. CRUTCHER & CO.,
Furniture. .... Furniture.
Everything at “Cut Prices/’
Bod Room, Parlor, Pining Room, Library, Office and Hall Furniture
0&r WQot Prieeg’ £Jl©tt©.
Write for our illustrated catalogue or cafl to see us when in the city.
53 Peachtree Street, Atlanta, Ga.
King of all Absolutely
Bicycles. t t * ie
Light Weight and Superior /Material
Rigidity. Every Ma- and Scientific Work
cliincfuliywarranted —lra
Highest Honors it ttt WtrN't MwMm EipmMm.
Send two-cent stamp for our 24-pase Catalogue A -work cf Art.
Monarch Cycle Company,
Retail Salesroom. aSo Wabash V e. Lake ami lialsted Sts., CHICAGO, ILL.
NORTH GEORGIA
AfiicuH College,
DEPARTMENT Uf THE UNIVERSITY,
At Dah/onega, Georgia.
Spring term begins first Monday in February.
Fall term begins first Monday in Septem r.
FULL LITERARY COURSES.
tuition free
With ample corps of teachers.
THRflllfiH MILITARY TRAINING
nnder a V. S. Army Officer detailed b;
Secretary of war.
Departments of Business, Short
hand, Typewriting, Telegraphy,
Music and Art.
Under competent and thorough instructors.
v OFNG LADIES have equal advantages.
pumppvt f.niiFr.E in the SOUTH
rcr •£££??
fl'po.fe**'
PIMPLES, BIOTCHES
AND OLD SORES
CATARRH. MALARIA.
KIDNEY TROUBLES
and DYSPEPSIA
Arc entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash. Poke Root and Potas
sium, tho greatest blood purifier oa
earth.
Ar.rTPEEjr. 0.. July 21,1901.
Mrnsns Lippman Baos., Savannah,
Of.. : Peak Siiw-| bought a bottle of
your l'. I* i>. at Hot Springs. Ark. .and
ic h vi done mo moro good than three
mom ha’ tror.tmentat tho Hot Springs,
Bond * hruo bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully venrs,
J AS. M. NEWTON,
Aberdoon, Brotva County, O.
Carl..l. D. Johnston.
2V> 'll! W/em <’ may concern: I here
by testify to the wonderful properties
ft P. I‘. for eruptions of the skin. I
i ufTore I lor nevcral years with an un
t vtht'y md Oi -.j-grrcablo eruption oa
i.-y fk' o. l tried every known remo
cy bn- i/i vain,until p. p. p. was used,
and tn now outlrcly cured.
(Signed by) J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savannah, Ga,
Si it* Cancer Caret",
Test!monyfretn xhc Mayor of E:guln.Tcx
from?. Tk-., January n, ir<93.
Mr Lippman Buos.. Sevaunah,
Go.: Oc ■iilcmer. —l Unvo tried your P.
V. F. f*.r n. disoaso of t ho f-kin.'usually
l.no-vii -a akin thirty V' ars*
standing, and .ound groat rolicf: ;$
pcriliostho blood nnd removes all Ir
ritation from tho seat of tho disoaso
•' r vl prevent •• any spreading of the
sores, T havo taken P.voor .-six bottles
onu fee 1 eoniidonc that anothercourso
will effect a cure. It ha > also relieved
rue from indig 'nlion and stomach
troubles, Your i truly,
CAPT. W. M. RUST,
Attorney at Law.
Book n Bloou Diseases Mnlied Free.
ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT.
UPPMAN BROB.
PROPRIETORS,
Lippmon’i Block,Savannah, da
W. L. Douclas
*% CUAr 13 THE BIST.
f]Vb NO SQUEAKING.
And other specialties for
Gentlemen, ladies. Boys
and Hisses are the
g Best in the World.
Sf S3 See descriptive advertlse
take bo Snhstitnte.
Insist on having W. L.
DOUGLAS' SHOES,
with name and price
on bottom. Sold by
DR. J. W. CRUM.
v 402&
Fcp I fgPMfc'?© \ Sick or
DYSPEPSIA I FU W I Henvaus
-INOICESTION I jgjj|| j HEADACHE.
Biliousness \ jaundice
s^ PP£r/TE
Leu wwyi"MA Tll, y ll isS.sl. *
A WOMAN’S HEART.
ONE DISEASE THAT BAFFLES THE
PHYSICIANS.
The Scary of a Warn** Wbo Siflrrrl fei
Nine Yean-Btw She WmCnrrd.
(From the Xeioark, X. J., Evening
On the summit of pretty little knoll in
the heart of the village of Clifton, N. J.,
stands a handsome residence about which
cluster the elements of whnt Is regarded by
the country people round nbout as little
short of a miracle. The' house is occupied
by the family of Mr. Geo. Archer, a former
attache of the police department of New
York City, but who now hoi Is a responsible
position with the Standard Oil Company.
Mr. Archer’s family consists of his wife, a
sprightly little woman, who presents a pic
ture of perfect health, and a son, twenty
s**ven years of age. No one would suppose
to look at Mrs. Archer now that she was for
nearly nine years, and less thnn two months
ngo, an invalid so debilitated that life was
a burden. Yet such was the eas 1 *, according
to (ho statements made by Mrs. Archer nnd
her relatives to a reporter who visited her
pretty home recently.
In 1885 she strains 1 herself in running to
catch abo it. Then ensuel a long spell of
illness, resulting from the tax upon her
strength. Doctor after doctor wis consulted
an l while all agreed that the patient was
sufT-ring from a valvular trouble of the
heart, none could afford her the slightest be
lief.
“Ob, the agony I have suffered,” said
Mrs. Archer, lu speaking of her illness. “I
cou and not walk across the floor; neither
could I go upstairs without stopping lo let
tho pain in my oh< st and le't arm cease, I
felt an aw'ul constriction about my arms
and chest as though I were tied with ropes,
Then there was aterriolo noise at my right
ear, like the labored breathingof some groat
nnimnl I have often turned expecting to
see some eroaf ure at my side. The only re
lief I o’.taine 1 was when I visited Florida
and spent several months there. Oa my re
turn, however, the pain came back with re
newed force.
“Last Ju'y,” continued Mrs. Archer, “I
wls at Springfield, Mass., visiting, nnd my
mother sh awed me an account in the
Springfield Examiner, telling of the wonder
lul cun s effected by the use of Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pale People. My mother
urged me to try the pills, and on November
•25th ;nst I bought a box and begnn taking
them, and I have taken them ever since, ex
cept for a short Interval. The first box did
not seem to benefit me, but I persevered,
encouraged by the requests of my relatives.
After beginning on the second box, to my
wonder, tho no : se at my right ear ceased en
tirely. I kept right on and tho distress tha*
I used to feel in my chest and arm gradually
disappeared. Tne blood has returned to mj
face, lips and ears, which were entirely de
void of color, and I feel well and strong
again.
“My son, too, had been troubled with gas
tritis and I induced him to try tha Pink
Pills, with groat benefit. I feel that every
body ought to know ot my wonderful cure
and I bless God that I have found some
thing that has given me this great relief.”
Mr. Archer confirmed his wife’s statement
nn 1 said that a year ago Mrs. Archer could
not walk one hundred feet without sitting
down to rest.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Tale Peoplenre
not a patent medicine in tho sense in which
that term is usually understoo I, but nro a
scientific preparation successfully used in
general praci ice for many years before be
ing offered to the public generally. They
contain In a condensed form nil tho elements
nocessary to give new life nnd richness to
tho blood, and restore shattered nerves.
They are an unfailing specific for such dis
eases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis,
St. Vitus’ dance, s iatica, neuralgia, rheu
matism, nervous he.i inche. the after effects
of tho grippe, palp tation of the he irt, pale
and sallow complexions, that tired feeling re
sulting from nervous prostration; all dis
eases resulting from vitiate I humors in the
blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas,
etc. They are also a specific for troubles
peculiar to females, such as suppressions, ir
regularities and nil forms of weakness. They
build up the blood and restoro the glow of
health to pale or sallow cheeks. In men
they effect a radical cure in all cases aris
ing from menial worry, overwork or ex
cesses of whatever nature.
These Pills ure manufactured by the Dr.
Williams’s Medicine Company, Schenectady,
N. Y., and are sold only in boxes bearing the
firm's trade mark and wrapper, at 50 cents a
box, or six boxes for $2.50, and are never
■old in bulk or by the dozen or hundred.
At the Circus.
The elephant hit the bars of the ti
ger’s cage a whack with his trunk.
“What do you want?” growled the
tiger.
“I wanted to know,” replied the el
ephant mildly, “if you knew we had
gone into winter quarters?”
“Of course, I do; what do you take
me for?”
“Well,” smiled the elephant, “I
don’t have to take you for anything,
thank goodness; but if I did, I suppose
I’d take you for medicine,” and he
blew a trunkful of dust into the tiger’s
cage. —Detroit Free Press.
The Sensitive Oyster.
Any man who leaps heavily upon the
deck of an oyster boat is likely to make
an enemy of his master. It is a belief
of oyster-catchers that the oyster is
peculiarly sensitive to such jars. The
careful oysterman never chops wood
on deck when he has a cargo on board,
lest he kill the oysters, and he dreads
a thunder storm for the same reason.
—New York Sun.
Baby’s Sore Head
and chafed skin are quickly cured by
Tetterine. Don’t let the poor little
thing scream itself into spasms when
relief is so easy. Every skin trouble
from a simple chafe or chap to the
worst case of Tetter or Ringworm is
cured quickly and surely by Tetterine.
It’s 50 cents a box at druggists, or by
mail from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah,
Ga.
He—“ What do you think your father
would say if we were to run away and
get married?”
She —“Really, I don’t know; but I
imagine he would say I was a bigger
fool than he thought I was.”
Pure Blood
Cives Perfect Health—Hood's Sar
saparilla Makes Pure Blood.
S“ I became troubled
with Horen which
broke out on me from
the lower part of my
body down to my
ankles, dark, flat and
Very Painful.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
cleared my system
and healed the sores
in a short time. It
also improved my
Appetite
and benefited my gen-
K eral health. I recom
mend Hoods Sarsaparilla to all.” L. P.
Thomas, Postmaster, Burton s Creek, ' a.
HoodV^Cures
Ilosd’a Pills are the best. 25 cents per box.
FROM WASHINGTON.
NEWSY ITEMS PICKED UP AT
THE NATIONAL CAPITOL.
Sayings and Doings of the Official
Heads of the Government.
Judg*e Cole has dismissed the peti
tion for habeas corpus in the case of
Smith, the stamp robber, and remand
ed him to jail for trial.
All of the inmates of the white house
were vaccinated last Monday by Dr.
O’Reilly, the president’s physician,as a
necessary precaution in view of the ap
pearance of Bmallpox in the city.
The United States supreme court
Monday reversed the decision of the
circuit court in the ease of Jghn C.
Eno, formerly president of the Second
National bank, of New York, who was
convicted of forgery in the New York
state courts about ten years ago.
The department of state Saturday
evening received the following cable
from Mr. Denby, at Peking: “Japa
nese troops entered into Manchuria.”
This is the first authentic information
that has been received by the United
States government that any Japanese
forces had entered Chinese territory.
Another death and an additional
case have have resulted from the small
pox epidemic which began in the law
division of the interior department,
and the marine hospital service is in
vestigating a report that still another
death traceable to the same source has
occurred. William Owens, a young
man employed in the census office as a
messenger, died Tuesday morning from
the disease at thepeot house.
The contract fo. dredging and im
proving the Harlem river, New York,
will be awarded to Rittenhouse R.
Moore, of Mobile, Ala., by the war de
partment. When proposals for doing
the work were opened, the bid of Mr.
Moore was found to be considerably
lower than those of his competitors,
the next lowest being that of a New
York firm. This is probably the first
time that a firm so far south has suc
ceeded in securing such a large con
tract in New York.
Another case of smallpox developed
in Washington Friday morning.
James I. Parker, of Indiana, a law
clerk in the division of tho interior
department, where the other cases
were reported, was the victim. Sec
retary Smith issued directions to havo
the department closed. This action
was taken before the secretary was
aware of the new case. He said that
the order to close was on account of
the fumigation of several rooms in tho
bidding which was very disagreeable
to persons employed in the building.
Secretary Carlisle will not make any
political speeches during the present
campaign. The secretary had a con
ference with the president Monday
morning in regard to the matter. The
secretary told the president that he
had received a very large number of
invitations to speak in different sec
tions of the country, and would very
much like to accept as many of them
as he could fill, but there were a num
ber of important questions pending in
his department that imperatively de
manded his presence in Washington
for some weeks to come.
Secretary Herbert spent an hour
■with the president Saturday morning
endeavoring to settle a problem which
has worried the naval authorities for
several months and which must be
disposed of promptly. Four impor
tant commands are to be filed—the
superintendent of the naval academy
and naval observatory, the commander
in chief of the south Atlantic station,
and the commandant of the New York
navy yard, the latter becoming vacant
November 10th by the retirement of
Admiral Gherardi. Ordinarily these
details would not cause so much con
cern, but at present they involve most
of the higher officers of the navy and
numerous changes are likely to result.
HOPE FOR ALEXANDER.
The Crisis in the Czar’s Case Supposed
to Have Been Passed.
The condition of the Russian empe
ror continues to excite hopes that the
crisis of his disease has passed and that
his recovery may be possible. The
following bulletin was received at
Washington Monday by Prince Canta
cuene, the Russian minister to the
United States, from the minister of
foreign affairs:
“St. Petersburg, October 29.—The
emperor slept well on Saturday night.
Yesterday (Sunday) there has been no
change in the condition of his maj
esty.”
HOLOCAUST IN A TENEMENT.
Seven Unfortunates Succumb to Rag
ing Flames.
Seven persons were burned to death
at New York Tuesday morning in a
tire in a five-story tenement. Those
dead are: Minnie Applegate, aged 22
years ; George Friedman, aged 4; Levi
Friedman, aged 3; Mrs. Margaret
Killin, aged 37; Jacob Kilain, aged
40 ; George Levey, aged 20; Mrs. Lena
Mitchell, aged 24. Mrs. Lena Fried
man leaped from the window, was
horribly burned, and will probably
die.
THE CZAR GROWS WORSE.
A Sudden Change in His Condition
Reported.
The following official bulletin was
issued at St. Petersburg at 10 o’clock
Tuesday morning: “The general con
dition of the czar has become consid
ably worse. Last night the spitting
of blood, which began yesterday with
severe coughing, had increased.
Symptoms of congestion of the left
lobe of the lungs have manifested
themselves. His majesty’s condition
is one of danger.”
A Dispensary Decision.
Attorney General Olney has rendered
a decision in regard to the South Car
olina authorities seizing liquors in
bonded warehouses. The attorney gen
eral says that such liquors cannot be
seized under the dispens’ary law. Gov
ernor Tillman says the opinion of At
torney General Olney was nothing
more than he expected.
Tens eaddeet kind of an April fool is
to opß a tetter in which you expect to
Inti ®<?Rey, but find as om*de bill.
3lysterlously Pleased.
An artist who was sketching on a
Japanese island found himself able to
perpetrate a mysterious joke in a very
simple manner. He was at work on
the beach, overlooked by a crowd of
villagers. He Bays:
I noticed then what extraordinary
effects colors produce on those whose
eyes are unaccustomed to them. A
man in the crowd would get excited,
open his eyes wide and show his teeth
every time I happened to touch with
my brush the cobalt blue on my pal
ette. Other colors had not the same
•effect. His eyes were continually fixed
on the blue, anxiously waiting for the
brush to dip into it, and this would
send him into fits of merriment.
I squeezed soma blue paint from a
tube on the palm of his hand, and he
nearly went off his head with delight.
He jumped about and yelled and then
ran some distance and squatted on the
sand, still in admiration of the blue
daub on his hand, aud still grinning at
intervals with irreplessible enjoyment.
Where the point of the joke was no one
but himself ever knew. Youth’s Com
panion.
It is a cast iron rule that when the
head of the Astor family arrives at •
certain age his photograph is taken
and inserted in a frame which contains
also those of his predecessors. These
framed photographs stand in the head
office, where the business of handling
the vast estate is carried on, and every
day a bunch of flowers is placed in a
vase in front of them.
Held by the Enemy.
If you are held captive by the enemy, rheu
matism, bound hand and foot in the shackles
of rheumatic gout, you have yourself to
blame, because you did not check their ap
proach in the outset, with Hostetter’s Stom
ach Bitters. Tackle them at once with this
pain soothing, nerve quieting, b ood depurat
ing specific, and you will experience speedy
relief. Biliousness, malar al, dysp ‘ptic, liver
and neuralgic complaints yield to it.
Aluminium corrodes under the action of
the human breath.
In Olden Times
People overlooked the importance of perma
nently beneficial effects and were satisfied
with transient action, but now that it is gener
ally known that Syrup of Figs will permanent
ly cure habitual constipation, well-informed
people will not buy other laxatives, which act
for a time, but finally injure the system.
Iron, when very finely divided, is inflam
mable.
Dr. Kijmer's Swamp-Root cures
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton, N. Y.
Fans arj used in the Catholic services in
Spain.
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With local applications, as they cannot reach
the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or
constitutional disease, and in order to cure
it yon must take internal remedies. Hall’s
Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts di
rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall’s
Catarrh Cure is not a, quack medicine. It was
prescribed by one of the best physicians in this
country for years, tnd is a regular prescription.
It is composed of the best tonics known, com
bined with the best blood purifiers, acting di
rectly on the mucous surfaces. The perfect
combination of the two ingredients is what
produces such wonderful results in curing ca
tarrh. Send for testimonials fi'ee.
F. J. Cfieney & Cos., Props., Toledo, 0.
Sold by druggists, price 75c.
(Success in Life
depends on the li tie things. A Ripans Tabule
is a little thing, but taking one occasionally
gives good di'e-dj.>n, and that, means good
blood, and that means good brain and brawn,
and that means success.
Mr*. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, redu-.es inflamma
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Karl’s Clover Roit, the great b’oo l purifier,
gives freshness and clearness to the complex
ion and cures constipation, 25
WALTER BAKER & CO.
j. The Largest Manufacturers of
UvA PURE, HIGH GRADE
JgL COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
faffs On thii Continent, have received
HIGHEST AWARDS
/arwg*jr\ from the great
I film Industrial and Food
II H expositions
1; Kyjln Europe and America.
fIM [ {., j r lj Unlike the Dutch Process, no Aika-
JVJ lies or other Chemicals or Dyes are
used in any of their preparations.
Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA is absolutely
pure and soluble, and costs less than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER &CO. DORCHESTER, MASS.
W. L. Douglas
ISTHE BEST.
no squeaking.
$5. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF.
FINEGAIf&KWJ6AROI
mf a# $ 3.5 P POLICE,3 Soles.
JpL j Boys’SchoolShoes.
FOR CATALOGUE
&****** BROCKTON, MASS.
You enn save money by wearing the
W. 1,. Douglas 83.00 Shoe.
Because, wo aro the largest manufacturers of
this grade of shoes in the world, and guarantee their
value by stamping the name and price on the
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. Take no sub*
stltute. If your dealer cannot supply you, wo can.
AGENTS WANTED
TO SELL THE
Standard Dictionary
IN EVERY COUNTY IN THE SOUTH.
Apply to N. D. McDonald,
P. O. Box 249 Atlanta Ga.
Consumption
was formerly pronounced incurable. Now it is not In all
of the early stages of the disease
Scott’s Emulsion
I-- will effect a cure quicker than any other
Jsphi known specific. Scott's Emulsion pro
motes the making of healthy lung-tissue,
relieves inflammation, overcomes the excess-
J-fc* ive waste of the disease and gives vital
For Cloughs, Golds, Weak Lungs, Sore Throat,
Bronchitis, Consumption, Scrofula, Anaemia,
PjS[ Loss of Flesh and Wasting Diseases of Children.
Itiygi Buy only the genuine with our trade
-rc mark on salmon-colored wrapper\
Sendfar pamphlet t>H fkeU't Rmuhion, FRKfi,
•oott A 9own*, N. Y. All Drugging, so oanta and l,
The best baking powder made is,
as shown by analysis, the Royal.
/p
Comr of Health , New- York City.
Monarch of Telescopes.
A San Francisco, Cal., special says:
Ex-Senator James G. Fair is inter
ested in a telesoope building project
which may result in the construction
of the greatest Btar magnifier the world
has ever seen.
The instrument will not only bring
distant planets nearer than the great
equatorial at Lick observatory, but it
will permit as many as fifty persons to
use it at the same time. The instru
ment has been perfected by Professor
George, formerly director of the as
tronimical station at Melbourne, but
now in the Paris observatory.
There he has worked on his new
telescope, which will have no tube.
It will be a reflector with a mirror
twenty feet in diameter. The cost
will not be more than SIOO,OOO, yet it
will have ten times the light-giving
power of the Lick Observatory glass.
Mr. McGeorge, when he had perfected
his plans, began hnnting for a million
aire patron. Ho wrote to an old friend
in this city, Dr. McLean, and gave
him an outline of his plans, McLean
saw ex-Senator Fair and the California
capitalist was so much struck with the
idea that he offered to advance money
to build the telescope and mount it in
the Lick Observatory. The plans is to
perfect the glass here and then take it
to the Paris exposition, where it would
soon pay for itself.
A Beautiful Thing.
The lady in her elegant victoria
drove up to the great dry goods store,
and, stepping daintily out, she walked
into the busy place. Approaching a
weary-looking girl at one of the coun
ters, she said:
“What time do you get off duty?”
“Usually at 6, madam,” replied the
astonished girl, “but today at 5.”
“Don’t you get very tired, working
so long?”
“Yes, madam; but I must work or
starve.”
“Well, will you let me take you for
a drive of an hour, after you are
through today? I am sure it will do
you good.”
The girl knowing the wealth and
social position of the lady, blushed
with pleasure and she was only too
glad to accept the invitation so polite
ly and kindly extended, and the lady,
with a cherry smile and bow, walked
out.
Then the mau who dreamed this
woke up and wondered how the mis
chief people could dream such improb
able and ridiculous things. —Exchange
FLOATING FACTS.
A journalistic ballet will shortly be
produced at Vienna. The subject is
the history of the press from the earl
iest days to modern times.
Sweden will hold a grand national
festival on December 9, in the present
year, to celebrate the tercentenary of
the birth of her great king, Adolphus
Augustus.
Paper mills are getting large orders
from cartridge manufacturers. This
paper has, heretofore, been made
principally in the east, but now the
western mills are getting their share
of the business.
The value of medical missions is
shown by the fact that out of twenty
five recent additions to the Presbyte
rian church in Canton, China, eleven
have been treated as patients in the
mission hospital, which is both medi
cal and evangelistic.
He Never Painted Feet.
Bassano said it was impossible to
paint the feet of a human being so as
to make them look well in a picture, so
he never painted the feet of his figures.
In outdoor scenes, drapery, glass, flow
ers and the like were utilized to con
ceal them ; in interiors pots, pans, ta
bles and other objects were employed
for the same purpose. — Exchange.
Worn-Out Lands
quickly restored to fertility by the use of fertilizers containing
A High Per Cent. of Potash.
Full description of how and why in our pamphlets.
They are sent free. It will cost you nothing to read them, and they will save you
dohar_. GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York
He Was Fixed.
The young inan essayed to win the
daughter’s hand from her father, inas
much as he had already won her heart
from her, but the old man was obdu
rate, and had made up his mind not to
be persuaded. However, the young
man went at him.
“So,” stormed the old man, “you
want my daughter, do you?”
“That’s what,” responded the youth
in a dreadfully fresh fashion.
“Don’t be impertinent, sir,” sternly
commanded the father.
“That’s all right,” responded the
youth. “What objection have you to
me as a son-in-law?”
“You don’t work.”
“What’s that got to do with it?”
“A good deal. lou can’t support
her, can you?”
“Of course not.”
“Well, you don’t expect me to, do
you?” raved the old gentleman.
“No, but I’ve something that can.”
“What’s that—your father?”
“No, it’s $250,000 in 6 per cent
bonds, and it beats anybody’s father
all to pieces, and I don’t do a lick of
work. I even hire a clerk to cut off
the coupons for me.”
“Um-er-er,” hesitated the old gen
tleman, and he took a reef in his tem
per until he could investigate— Detroit
Free Press.
An Indication.
Jones—“DeSlim cuts quite a splurge
in society, doesn’t he?”
Brown—“l suppose so. He never
pays his bills.”— Detroit Free Press.
HOTHERS
mother and
child, by aiding Nature in preparing the
system for parturition. Thereby 1 * labor ’ ’
and also the period of confinement ore
greatly shortened. It also promotes an
abundant secretion of nourishment for
the child. During pregnancy, it pre
vents “morning sickness” and those
distressing nervous symptoms from
which so many suffer.
Tanks , Cottle Cos., Texas.
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. :
Dear Sir —I took your “Favorite Pre
scription ” previous to confinement and
never did so well in my life. It is only
two weeks since my confinement and I am
able to do my work. I feel stronger than I
ever did in six weeks before.
Yours truly,
A MOTHER’S EXPERIENCE.
South Bend , Pacific Cos., Wash.
Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.:
Dear Sir—l began taking your “Favor
ite Prescription” the first month of preg
nancy, and have con
tinued taking it since
confinement. I did not
experience the nausea JgfwF
or any of the ailments 'C y
due to pregnancy, after l-c- Jr
I began taking ycur
“Prescription.” I was
only in labor a short
time, and the physician. ' Jfcpla (/
said I got along un- ‘
usually well.
We think it saved me ivjßo ' Baee --
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done a world of good for me.
Yours truly,
Mrs. W. C. BAKER.
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