Newspaper Page Text
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A List of Reliable Atlanta Bu8 *
inpoo mess Houses UniLSPS where wnere Visitors visitors
tO trie Great brlOW Will oe
properly treated and can pur -
chase aoods at lowest prices.
—
STILSON & COLLINS
JEWELRY CO •J
55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Ga.
Everything In tlie Jewelry and Silver
Line at Factory I’rlees.
mill I I ir^rv IPs Jv n nnnil In/ I «/*»
1 I 1 Mil ,l,_ 11 ** ** I Vlll-Wl nr UWi II
»t7 , I each tree street.
STANDARD
Pianos and Organs, ’* 3
SHFFT MUSH
mualtfAL Mllleir'Ai MenCnANDISI-^ MCDriJAunicc
A *-^1 I LAI A|\|TA 1 | A
DENTAL COLLEGE
Equipment Now and Complete.
INFIRMARY PRACTICE FULL.
Nrn*inii IKOA ft Open* October Nth, 1805.
Clones March 24lh, 1NOO,
For further particulars address
VM, CRENSHAW, D. D. 8., Dean,
(•rant IliilliHog, Atlauin. On.
EISEMAN DUOS. 5
■■ ID and 17 Whitehall Stroet.
ATLANTA, GA.
- ONE PRICE —
OLOTIIIBRS,
Tailors, Hallers and Furnishers.
Fine Millinery-
BOWMAN BROS.,
78 Whitehall Strut.
Now In New York City Buying En¬
tirely New Stock.
Opon Sept. Bud.
D 0„ TETTERINE TO AVOID THIS USia
Sc. c It, Th« only puinloM and harmlwm
T CUUI Tettor, on for Ringworm, th« th* wor»b face, ugly typ« oruutea roucti of Kosemft, patcli- scalp.
»T P Ground nlea. In short, Poison itch, all from IT6HKB. chafes, ivy or chans, Send poison BOo. pim- oiU. in
or cash to J. T. Shilptrine,
Savannah, Ga., for it. on# ho*, if your
lirtigirist don't keep
You will find It m (..’.'ian. O. Tvakh’s, Atlanta.
AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY
ANI>
V RHUBARB
■—roil—
Dysontery, Flux,
Cholera Mitrbiin,
Cholera, Dlnrrluen
—AND —
summer Complaint*
Try It Price 25c.. 50c.. $1.00.
For Sale by Druggists or write lo
J. Stovall Smitli,
MANUKA (TURING PH ABM At ’1ST.
102 Whitehall St., Corner Mitchell,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
SULLIVAN d CRICHTON’S
AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND.
Tho best And cheapest. Business College in America
Time short Instruction thorough. 4 Penmen.
Big demand for graduates. Catalogue free,
eri.LIYAN A ( Kl( liri», KUrr IlltUr., IllnnU, «r,
GRAND OPENING.
THE
Blood worth Shoe Co.
AUGUST 12th.
14 Whitehall Street.
SHOES AT LOWEST PRICES.
WUJTK OH t’Al.I..
SAW MILLS TORN AND
FKF.D MILLS.
Water Wheels and Hay Presses.
BEST IN THK MAHKKT
Del.onrh .Mill .Ml*. Cu., U1I5. Allanta, Gii.
THK LOOKOUT PRESS.
The Lookout Press, of Chattanooga,
Tenn., has just issued a special edition
of 50,000 copies that is of especial in¬
terest. Cuts of Lookout Mountain,
Chattanooga, National Cemetery and a
Chickamauga Tnrk monument and ob¬
servation tower, also a good map of all
the battlefields about Chattanooga ap
pear. Short articles on Lookout
Mountain, the Chickamauga and Ohat
tanooga National Military Park aud
other interesting subjects are printed.
Oar readers can get a copy of this
special edition free by addressing the
publishers and mentioning this paper.
Address (enclosing stamp for postage),
The Lookout Press, Chattanooga,
Tenn.
/ THE NEW MAN’.
Wadsworth—Well, well, well! If this
isn’t Billy Brown. How are you, old
man, anyway?
The Late Billy Brown—I am not Billy
Brown any longer. I aui Mr. Simpkins.
I have married since we met last.—ludiau
apolh Journal.
SELECT SIFTINGS.
In the Rosin Bible tho word rosin
^ snow-white coon hae been caught
. Livingston County, Kentucky.
in
i cXm% B is said that the cordage on $15,000. a first*
man of war costs about
, The tnnneli of the world Rro e9ti .
j mated to number about 1142, with a
total length of 514 miles.
I in . The Brussels, domo Belgium, of the l’alais is made do Justice of
; pa
j pier macho and weigh** sixteen tons.
One of tho moot brilliant an.l »n«
cessful , . students , , . at , *1 tho California n,i,<
m .,0 rni.or.ity UNeweH Torry, who
" tol “ U 7
Gideon Strong, a Knox County
i (Tennessee) man, fired a gun to drive
a burglar away and scared his own
daughter to death.
Two oighty-five-year-old citizens of
Camden, Mo., are to have a walking
match fnom that town to Boston to
decide which is the spryest.
Schlegel, who lectured in Latin at
tho ago of seventy-two, had a peculiar
stimulant. He always had his suuft’
box j n baud when lecturing, as,
| without it, ho fancied ho could not
| g e j. OQ
The aroa of tho United States, in
eluding Alaska, is 3,602,990 square
miles. Alaska’s area is 577,890 square
miles. Tho aroa of tho Dominion of
Canado, including lakes and rivers, is
3,456,000 square miles.
A Manistique (Mich.) poultry fan
cier hopes to raise a brood of chick
ons that won’t scratch by crossing a
short-legged x a. ^ i creeper with ui a long
l 0 ffg..l Sb.ughfti, the offspring h.,m e
ono short and ono long leg.
Chillicothe, Mo., is to follow tho
example of a number of Western
towns and revive the curfew bell. It
is to ring at nine o’clock, and will be
a signal for all children uuder four¬
teen to hurry home, uuder penalty of
arrest.
The skeleton of a white woman was
found recoutly at tho mouth of White
Bird Creek, on the Salmon River, iu
Northwestern Idaho. It is believed
to bo that of a Mrs. Manuel, who was
captured by tlio Chief Joseph Indians
from a pioneer train in that rogion in
1877.
A prospector from the Pend d’Oreillo
district catno into Hope, Idaho, a week
or so ago to sell tho furs he had gath¬
ered in odd moments of trapping dur¬
ing his winter’s mining operatious.
He had the skins of seven bears, eight
beavers, cightoeu martens, and a num¬
ber of wolf, fox and other pelts.
An Iniinense Fossil Skeleton.
The fossil remains of a huge sea ani
mal nro boiug exhibited in Southeast
oru Kausas. Tho discoverer came
npon them accidentally while looking
for firewood in tho Cherokeo Strip,
1 ho head, bill, some vertebn®, a lew
ribs and the propellers were in a fair
state of preservation, but the remain
der of tho skeleton crumbled as soon as
it was exposed to the air. 1 he bones
were purchased by^ Henry 1 utterson,
of Humboldt, of Kausas, who at onco
sent a description of them to the di
rector . of t U., tho vr„.: Nntional „1 Museum .,*■ at
Waskington. Tho letter was submit
ted to tho Secretary of the Smithson
t- witU tho request that
ft qualified man bo The sent fossil to investigate is thus de
the discovery.
cribed by Dr. R. L. Patterson iu a
lelter 1 ix , to 11 the Kegiafcered i 1 r>i________• harniacist, i.
of Chicago :
“Tho eye sockets ftro four feet in
the long diameter with a space of
twenty inches between them, making
ft skull diameter of eight feet and ' i
eight inches inA™ It It has n. a nointed pointed bill mu or or
beak twelve feetlong and a small brain
cavity comparatively, The vertebra) j
measure twelve inches each .-.,t way, and :
tho .. distauoe . from .. tip .. to . tip .. oi tuo tra- , j j
verso processes is forty inches, and j
resemble those of a mammal rather | i
tl„u, . .i,h. Tho oatryodos ia thirty
eight inches loug ; a rib is thirteen j
feet and eight inches long, circumfer¬
ence thirty-three inches and two tri
augular-shaped bones, three aud a
half by twelve inches, the use of which
is conjeotural, but supposed to bo pro¬
pellers or fins.”
Marriage Rings May Re Any Material,
There is a popular idea that a riug
made of gold is the only one that can
be legally used iu a wedding oere
ruony. This is, however, a fallacy.
Any and every kind of ring may be
used, and though gold ones are cus
ternary, there is no reason whatever ,
why silver or anv commoner metal |
should not bo called into requiultiou
Numerous instances are on record of
runaway marriage iu which a brass
rmg h- pl.T.d the .11-import.ut p»rt,
and the legality of the ceremony has
never been questioned. In some cases
a piece of hurriedly tied string has
answered the same purpose, as have
also circles cut out of Ciird or paper.
The Snake and the Rabbit.
M. W. rouruelle killed a coochwhip
rv «?, ,h8 ,"? ht ° f rr oI tho
Sandersville and Pennine Railroad, , in
ches Georgia, in length. that measured The snake eighty-two climb- iu- ]
was I
ing a tree with a rabbit in its mouth '
when it was shot. The snake was ;
brought to town and exhibited as a
curiosity.—Atlanta Constitution.
A Word to the Sleepless.
»U. XT , , ,, ., .___
E
natural remedy for sleeplessness. It
j Sf j n brief, to curl under the clothes
like a kitten, or put the heud under
the wing Uke a hen. He says: “This
insomnia seems to be now a universal
nflliction. We live wrongly; sit up
late and overwork the brain, and then
j 8 ° to be<1 ln “ n excited condition No
; one seems to have hit upoa the nature,
remedy. I think I have. People take
like ,h f‘ r P"' 1 - an ‘'
the fatal consequence 1 not seldom en
. . ,, ,_____
___
oircnm.tnnce.. But try n.turo'. plan
instead. Lower the supply of oxygen
blood, produce a little asphyxia,
limit the quantity of air to the lungs
and heart, and circulation becoming
] quicker, the brain loses its stimulant find
aru l B leep follows. When you
yourself “in” for a sleepless night,
cover your head with the bed-clothes
and breathe and rebreatho only the
respired air. Thus you may reduce
tho stimulating oxygen and fall asleep.
There is no danger. When asleep you
are sure to disturb the covering and
get a8 rauc i, fresh air as you require,
or when once drowsiness has been
produced, it is easy to go on sleeping,
though the air be fresh. What do the
cat and dog do when they prepare to
»leep ? They turn around generally
three times, and lastly bury their noses
8ome hol '°, w iu ^ir hair and “off”
*?•.. The { ar \ lu dan « er ’
although it might f look . as if they were
from the closeness : with which they J
. n U0K ’' „ nf Vcd ' c! “ 7 1 ^ '««
-
Spoiled a Good Thing.
He regarded himself as very Eng¬
lish, and he certainly was very young.
He fancied that he cut a very impos¬
ing figure as he sauntered past the
theater just as the matinee girls
emerged on tho street.
But a large, coarse man, who was
going by, spoiled it all by remarking
in a loud voice:
“Hello, Willie! What are you going
to do with that pipe? Going to blow
soap bubbles?”
And now there is one young man
who will never again smoke a pipe on
the street .—San Francisco Post.
Acute Rheumatism.
Prom the Keowee Courier. Walhalla, S. O.
For several years Mr3. Mary Hunter, wife
of Mr. William Huuter, of Mountain Rest,
Oconee County, S. C., was a constant suf¬
ferer from rheumatism aud could find no re¬
lief, even though she consulted the best doc¬
tors and tried every remedy prescribe.! by
the most eminent physicians of the South,
But she finally stumbled, as it were, ou a
; medicine which wrought her cure in a sim
j P le . bl * nevertheless a most remarkable.
j the benefit of suffering humanity she con
yented to an interview touching her peculiar
oaa<>
“Yes, it is true that I ha l chrouic rheu
matism of long standing.” said Mrs. Hunter
to a reporter, “and tho mo3t celebrated phy
siciaus of South Carolina could effect no
cure. But I have been cured, aud that corn
plj*® 1 *” And she spoke the words with a
bright smile and eheerful countenance.
“I am sixty-six years of age,” she con
tinned, “and about live years ago I began to
suffer from aouto rheumatism. The pain
any position, either lying, sitting, walk
ing or standing. There was no rest nor ease
became f or m0 » , a ‘ n burden. 1 d ‘h 113 il continued During these until years life I itself con
suited several of the most capable and emi
nent physicians of our State aud took their
prescriptions. But short and temporary was
would
last every period of temporary suspension, and at
it seemed that my case was hopeless.
.. Aboutthis timo i received a letter from j
my sister, Mrs. Lucinda Stewart, of Texas,
who wrote me to try Dr. Williams* PinkPills
f°r Pale People and she told mo how muck
gi'. nl they had done her. She had been sick
f or 90veu years and had had two strokes of
paralysis. None of the doctors of Texas
L ‘euld do anything for her, and her cure
at last did so. She wrote that she had taken
only half a box when she experienced a de- -
elded like change girl for the again, better, and though soon she felt |
a young even she was
over forty years old. In a short time she
health. was cured, and she is now enjoying good
“But, even after receiving that letter, it
was some time before I consented to try the
pills. I continued to receive treatment from
physicians little for a year or more, because I had
or no’faith in patent medicines of any
kind. But finally, being reduced to a dire
extremity, and all else failing, I concluded
to write for one box of the pills, and did so. {
Within a w«ek after beginning to take them 1
I commenced feeling better, and when the
first box was used I ordered six boxes. But
permanently, two more boxes too; effected for during my cure, the and that I j |
have been entirely free from past year
rheumatic pains,
' UJ<I count my euro complete. Since then I
to give speedy and permanent relief. Iam I
eonvinoed that the pills are a”, that Dr. Will
J™ jSMSSjSai-** I
To confirm her statement of facts beyond |
ah doubts, Mrs. Hunter made the following
affidavit:
Sworn to before me this, the 9 th day of
May. A. D. 1895 .
Mrs. t^L.S.) li. T. Jatn’ks, and Notary Public.
Hunter is well favorably known,
being the wife of one of Oconee's most suc
cesstul and substantial farmers. No one can
doubt her statement fora moment, and many
*" cwi “°‘ OI
Had to I’roteet Himself.
Bigg—Why do yon wear rubbers in
such dry weather?
Biggs—Everybody on my street has
a lawn sprinkler. — Chicago Record.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
J*V
K S
ABSOLUTELY PURE
FARMS AND FARMERS.
The first buckwheat state is New
York, with 280,029 acres and4,675,735
bushels of product.
Illinois claims the largest number of
improved acres on her farms, having
52,669,060.
Ohio liae the greatest number of
farms, 251,430, having 23,352,408
acres; Illinois is second, with 240,681
farms and 30,498,277 acres; Missouri
being third, with 238,013 farms and
30,780,290 acres.
New York has the greatest amount of
capital invested in farm implements and
machinery, the sum total being $46,-
659,465; Pennsylvania is second, with
$39,046,855; Iowa is third, with $36,-
665,315.
In the estimated value of farm pro¬
ducts, according to the returns of the
eleventh census, -Illinois is first, with
$184,759,013; New York is second,
with $161,593,009 ; Iowa is third, with
$159,347,844.
Illinois has the greatest value in
fences and buildings—$1,262,870,587,
the second place belonging to Ohio,
which has $1,050,931,828, and the
third to New York, whose fences and
buildings are valued at $968,127,286.
Kentucky stands first in tobacco,
having 274,587 acres, producing 221,-
880,303 pounds; Virginia is second,
Witt 110,579^ acres 48,522,655
pounds, and North Carolina is third,
with 97,077 acres, producing 36,375,-
258 pounds.
The first corn-producing 1 state is
T lowa, with ... an acreage of „ 8,080,0-- o ro - roo
and 313,130,782 bushels; next comes
Illinois, with 7,863,025 acres and 289,-
697,256 bnBhele; the third being K.n
sas, with 7,314,665 acres and 2 o 9 , 674 ,-
568 bushels.
Among the barley-producing states
California stands first, having 815,995
acres, yielding 17,548,386 bushels; the
second is Iowa, with 518,729 acres and
13,406,122 bushels; the third being
Wisconsin, with 47 a, 014 acres and 15,-
225,872 bushels.
According to the statistics furnished
by our consular service, the farmers
of this country are better clothed, bet¬
ter housed, better fed, give their chil¬
dren a better education and have more
money in bank than the rural popula¬
tion of any country in. the world.
The first state in flaxseed is Minne¬
sota, the fields of that commonwealth
yielding 2,721,987 bushels of seed and
8,609 peunds of fiber; the second in
rank is Iowa, with 2,282,359 bushels
of seed and 6,281 pounds of fiber; tho j
third being South Dakota, with 1,801,-
114 bushels of seed and 3,278 pounds
of fiber.
Too Rich.
“These travelers,” sighed the heath¬
en monarch, “give me a pain.”
“They are very rich,” murmured the ,
grand vizier.
“Yes—” j
r ° yal br °T S ^ in fl fr0Wn ’
The / are f ch - and > moreover, mir
StomacU . not wnat it used to
is be.
The courtier did not fail to notice
during V* 7 g reflection Giavnis that-his maieetv majeety lieln- neip
himself ,, ter cold i tourisc but once.
Detroit Tribune . i
Mothers Appreciate (he Goad Work
of Parker’s GingerTonic.witli its reviving qual¬
ities—ti boon to the pain-siriekenuud nervous. I
OSBORNE’S
adtnedd aueae
AND
ScRool of Sliortliaxici
No text books used. AUGUSTA. GA.
Actual business from day of
entering. goods u^ed. Business Send for paoers, handsomely college illustrated currency oati- ani
iogue. Board cheap. R- R. tare paid to Augusta.
u | 10 ^ III W f* 1-831 fl _ U a 1 1 I lSIL rgnl" _ THE 50 yenrs SOUTHERN under control FEMALE of one COLLEGE, family. of la Gra^
h 1 11 U U Eu IU wl I has been removed to Manchester
wfi 8 ff*. SXb* fc. to* (College Park), Atlanta, and will be Vf
W ,—, in perfect order to open the 53rd
h H mm Session,Sept. building, with 11th. electric 1S95, in new brick IjflUi/ /fiM-Xl,
II heating, lights, steam lUAjt, 0 /... .
[J Si water works, elevator. x
ft. Faculty of 30: elaborate teaching l/iffir
[j 3 I Ip' -j “ appliances: study and high extensive standards; courses best ad- or
vantages in Music and Art. Pupils /,
,, g* attend Exposition: Alumnae Day
H Co" Nov 7th; Europeon party next Ij I
M ^ Summer. Send tor Catalogue. -P. N
» MANCHESTER. GA. C. C. COX, President, .
M«WC H£i »TER , GA.
Exhausted Soils i
6 1
y are made to produce larger and better crops by the
0 use of Fertilizers rich in Potash.
? is will brim make Write full and for of useful our save ** you Farmers’ information money. GERMAN Guide,” for Address, KALI farmers. a WORKS, 142 -page It 93 will illustrated Nassau be sent Street. book. free, New York. and It 3 t
a
Remarkable Memory.
Brown (to waiter who has at last
brought his order)—Did you ever sed
me before I gave you my order?
Waiter—No, sir!
Brown—Have you seen me since?
Waiter—No, sir!
Brown—Well, you have the most
wonderful memory for faces I ever saw
in my life.
Waiter—Do yon think so, sir?
Brown—Yes; the idea of a man who
only saw me once remembering my
face so long afterward is little short of
i miraculous.— Puck.
---——
The first in the list of wheat-produc
j ing states is Minnesota, having 3,372,-
627 acres, which yielded 52,300,247
bushels of the grain ; next comes Cali
forhia, with 2,840,807 acres and 40,-
869,337 bushels ; the third being North
Dakota, with 2,709,421 acres and 26,-
403,365 bushels.
DO YOU EXPECT
m To Become a Mother?
4 ii # CgA If to so, Pierce’s Prescription say then that Favorite permit Doctor is us
t \S indeed a true
“Mother’s Friend,”
£ FOR IT MAKES
a '^03§^|^Chifdbirth Easy
system for parturition preparing assisting, the
thus Na
*^S 8 ®
and the dangers thereof greatly lessened,
to both mother and child. The period of
confinement is also shortened, the mother
Strengthened and an abundant secretion of
nourishment for the child promoted
Send twenty-one (21) cents for The Peo
pie’s Medical Adviser, 1000 pages, over 300
illustrations, giving all particulars. Sev
eral chapters of this great family doctor
tions as to successful home treatment of
same. cal Association, Address, World’s Dispensary Medi¬
Buffalo, N. Y.
The Greatest (Medical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS •h
Has discovered in one of our oommoui
pasture weeds a remedy that cures everyi
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula,
down to a common gimple.
He has tried it in over eleven hundred!
cases, and never failed except in twooasesi
(both thunder humor). He has now Ini
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty miles(
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced fromthw
first bottla, and a perfect cure is warranted!
when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it cause«t
shooting pains, like needles passing)
through them; the same with the Liver!
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts*
being stopped, and always disappears in fri
week after taking it. Read the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will'
cause squeamish feelings at first
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
tho best you can get, and enough of it.
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed
time. Sold by ail Druggists.
TYBKB ISLAND, GA.
This Hotel is noted for its excellent service and
delicacies splendid cu the sine, tin table affords- being supp led with all the
umrKet An abu ndant supply of
fish, gaged cr*ibs, for shrimp, Specially etc. Leon’s low fine orchestra en¬
season. rates this season.
Write for terms. Special inducements to partisn of
ten or more. BOHAN «fc COWAN,
I d HAIR PARKER’S BALSAM
Li. v; <S^ Promotes CleariFcs and a luxuriant beautifies growth. the hair.
Fails to Eestore Gray,
j’ Hair to its Youthful Color.
mm ^ ? Cures gQc, scalp andgl.OOftt diseases & Druggista hair falling.,
7
t&f y|| I” L WANT UiJHllI * introduce g °° d apent the for f.t this cou seJIln^ nty to
»te 8 t
goodx ever known- Permanent work and larffe
pay. Industrial Publishing Co-, Owensboro, Ky.
A. N. U...... ........Thirty-four, ’ 95 .