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Money In the West.
Returned Wanderer (gloomily:) “All
this talk about money in thu went ih
nonsense, I lost every cent I ha<l.”
Stranger : “That’sbecuuseyou didn’t
manage right. I went west with only
n few hundred in my pocket, and ma lo
a fortuno in three months.”
Returned Wanderer: “My stars 1
How did you do it?"
Stranger: “I bought a drug store
for ffoOO. Three mouths after that tho
state went prohibition, and I sold out
for $100,000. — New York Weekly.
stenm'i I p! The Moorings (ail Off.
leave* Majestically the great ocean groy hound
the dock and steam* down the rlvnr
• nilward bound. Hut are you, my dear sir,
prepared for the sea aiokrie** almost always
incident to a trail* Atlantic trip, with the In¬
fallible stomachic, Hostetler's Htoinach Hit¬
ter*. If not expect to sulfur wliliout aid.
The U tters I* the Mannoh friend of all who
travel bv sea or Dud, emigrants, tourists,
commercial travelers, mariners, It com
pletely rheumatic remedies naneem, twinge* biliousness, dys¬
pepsia. the kidneys. und inactivity Of
it Is the satirical sneer or ridicule that galls
and wound*.
Dr. h’i mer’s Swamp -Hoot onres
all Pamphlet Kidney and bladder troubles.
and Consultation freo.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y.
The urrowB of sarcasm are barbed with con¬
tempt. __
H.iw'h Thl*!
We offer One Hundred Dollarn Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall's C'utart h (’tire.
K. .1. CHENEY <fc Co., Toledo, O.
We, tlie undersigned, have k believe nown F. J. Che¬
ney lor the la t to years, and him per¬
fectly honorable iu all business tianaact tons
and financially able to carry out any obliga¬
tion made Tiii’AX, by their firm.
West A Wholesale Druggist., Toledo,
< Hilo.
Wamuno, Kiknan A- Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
Hull’s ( atarrh Cure the Is blood taken and internally,
ting directly the upon mucous
t urfaces of system. Testimonials sent free.
Price, "5c. per bottle. Hold by all Druggists.
Dorn l.ntn of Good You Will Find It in It
Y«u Try It.
Mrs. T. J. Mi iiclor lias kind words to say
about Tyner's DynpepHa suffered with Remedy. dyspepsia "For many
years I have and
nervouMie**. I have been taking Tyner’s
Dyspepsia of Remedy and anti 1 find that In better It is health doing
me lots good am now
than I Imve been for years. It relieves mo lu
a lew minutes suffering or Indigestion."
If you are with Indigestion or d)’F
pepsia of any c.haia' ter whatever, it vvould bo
to your Interest to try a bottle of this remedy.
Price 50 cents per bottle. For Mile by all
druggists.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softeniitbe gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Ness- is iIn- Time to Cure Your Cornu
wit Ii Hindercorns. ll takes them out perfect¬
ly and give* comfort. Ask your druggist. 15c.
Nerves
and
Blood
Are inseparably connected. The former
depend simply, solely, solidly upon the
latter. If it is pure they aro properly
fed and there is no “nervousness.’’ if it
Is impure they are fed on refuse and the
horrors of nervous prostration result.
Feed the nerves on pure blood. Make
pure blood and keep It pure by taking
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
The One True Blood rurifler.
Hood’s Pills the family after-dlnnor cathartic. pill 25c. and
*pHE people’s turnpike hearts road I find, to
Lies through their
mouths or I mistake
mankind.
But the surest way to
get there is I say,
Feed them
Buckwheat
Every day.
V
■* \|| ?? ||aiKt A DAY ;
v> o will bhow you how to
m ,ke a day; absolutely sure; wo Jur
nUh the work und teach you free you
work in the locality where you live;
sen i ucyour *ddress and we will explain
the bu*int'«s fully; remember we
v l ’ a clear of $3 lor every * ay’s
> ’ w rk, ad'ohitelv suit write at oner.
KOHL JIDI Uni KlMl UtXVAW. Ho\ I N, Dftrolt, Mifh.
*%*%»* ** ■**’**’* ******* ******* lr »i ***%»* ^n******.**-*^
I IMPERIAL! World’s Pair! HIGHEST AWARD.
1 ORANUM!
I Try it when the digestion!
is WEAK and no FOOD!
seems to nourish. Try it |
w jT seems impossible to!
|keep | FOOD,™ stomach!;
5sdd bv DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE I S
John Carle 5ons. New York. S
HOUSEHOLD AT FAIRS,
TO MAKE BEETS TENDER,
Tho favorite French way of cooking
boots is by baking. They aro placed
in the oven on a bed of straw, covered
with earthenwaro plates and cooked
from six to ton hours. “This method
of cooking,” says Miss Parloa, who
in France studying cooking, “makesa
beet firm and tender and full of color
and juice.”—Bt, Louis Star-Sayings,
MOCK CHICKEN RALAO.
One head cabbage, one largo bnnch
celery dressing, one-lodf cup vinegar,
0110 teaspoouful of yellow mustard
(which can ho omitted if preferred),
piece of butter size of an egg, three
eggs, small teaspoouful of salt, cay
enne pepper to taste, one tablespoon
ful of cream, one tablospoonful of ru
gar. Mix the egg* mustard and vin
egar together until thick. Eggs are
beaten light before vinegar is added.
This ,s excellent for a picnu and also
makes a very good salad dressing nil
boilod together, eggs, mustard, salt,
pepper, vinegar, butter and sugar.—
Detroit Freo Press,
A fruit sour.
Fruit soups aro more common
abroad than hore. They are served
cold, of course, and are a pleasant
and easily prepared novelty for the
company summer luncheon. Mrs.
Borer’s recipo for cherry soup calts for
one quart of sour cherries and one
quart of cold water over the fire;
whon boiling add half a cup of sugar
and press through a colander and re¬
turn to the fire. Moisten one table¬
spoonful of arrowroot, add it to the
boiling mixture, cook a moment, add
one tablespoonfitl lemon juice, and
turn out to cool. Serve cold in glasses
with a little cracked ice.—Chicago
Timea-Herald. *
GREEN TOMATO PICKLES.
Tako a gallon of green tomatoes,
gathered on a dry day, and carefully
remove tho outer skin, slicing the
peeled fruit. For this quantity, tako
two and a half tablespoonfuls ol
ground mustard, a gill of mustard
seed, a tablespoonful of powdered
cinnamon, half a pound of brown su¬
gar, two teaspoonfuls of cloves and
throo pints of viuegar. Divide the
spices into three equal parts, and put
into threo small muslin bags. Take
half the quantity of viuegar, and in it
boil tho spices for half an hour. Then
put iu the sugar and stir till thor¬
oughly molted. Now placo a third of
the sliced tomatoes at the bottom of a
jur ; put in one of the spico bags, and
pour a third of tho boiled vinegar
over. Then another third of ’tomato,
bapj and vinegar, till all are arranged,
Then fill tho jar with tho cold vinogai
till tho pickle is covered, using mors
thftU t j tbreo 1 pints if necessary,
Covor securely and set away for at
least a mouth before using. tA softer
pickle is made if the sliced tomatoes
aro boiled with tho other ingredients,
but at the sacrifice of some of the
flavor; if this course bo pursued a
small quantity of celery seed may be
added,—Boston Cultivator.
WAYS OF SERVING PEACIIES.
When simply sliced, to bo eaten
with sugar and cream, peaches should
be set on ice for a short time, but
never sweetened beforehaud, as stand¬
ing in sugar destroys their delicate
flavor.
Baked peaelios aro nice, and this is
an excellent wtjy to use thoso that aro
not quite ripe. Pare aud halve the
fruit. Remove the stones and iu each
cavity left put a piece of butter aud
cover generously with sugar, Set
each half peach on a round of but¬
tered toast, spriugle with more sugar,
lemon juice and a very little nutmeg.
Bake in the oven for twenty minutes
and serve hot, with cream.
Peach roll has a rather rich suet
crust rolled out iu a long sheet. Cut
up the peaohes rather tiue aud spread
thickly on the paste, sprinkling liber¬
ally with sugar. Roll up and fold the
ends over. Then wrap in a strong
cloth, tie closely and steam for two
hours iu a steamer. It is oateu with
either a hard or soft sauce.
Cut-up peaches are a delicious ad¬
dition to hard pudding sauce of butter
aud sugar creamed together, aud
transform even a plain batter pudding
into a royal viand.
■' Peach potpie is merely a plain pie¬
crust filled with a deep layer of sliced
peaches, then a layer of sugar and
nutmeg. Cover with a crust and bake
slowly for two or three hours. For
preserving, the best quality of peaches
should be selected and they should
never be either over or under-ripe.
White freestones are the best. Like
other large fruits, too, they should al¬
ways be peeled with a silver kuife aud
thrown immediately into cold water
to prevent discoloring. When this is
done divide each peach and remove
the stone. Iu a porcelain kettle make
a syrup of one pound of sugar aud
one piut of water for every pound of
fruit. Drop iu the halves and let them
boil for twenty minutes. Then dip
out aud lay on a large dish. Boil
down the syrup until it is quite thick,
when return the peaches to it and
cook gently until they appear trans¬
parent. Put up in glass jars and
•crew on the covers securely.—New
England Homestead.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Powder &
PUKE
FOR SUPERSTITIOUS WOMEN.
Tbese bo‘interesting to super
jtiouH women chiid •
Monday’s is fair of face,
Today’s child is full of grace,
Wednesday’s child is born for woe.
Thnraday Fr .. chi i d ha9 fftr to go.
^ y . 8 chi]d lfl ] oviDg and giving,
j ohil( i must wotk for a
„
; tbe cbild that ig born on the
! , Sftbbath d
Is bonny and happy and wealthy
and gay.
Of the month in which one is born
it ib aaid:
If a girl*is born in January, she
will be a prudent housewife, given to
melancholy, but of good temper.
If in February, a humane and affec¬
tionate wife and a tender mother.
If in March, generous and impul¬
sive, but apt to be headstrong.
If in April, inconsistent, not very
intelligent, but likely to be good-look¬
ing.
If in May, handsome, amiable and
likely to be happy.
If in June, impetuous, will marry
early and be frivolous.
If in July, passably handsome, but
with a sulky temper.
If in August, amiable and practical,
and likely to mnrry rich.
If in September, discreet, affable
and much liked.
If in November, liberal, kind and
of a mild disposition.
If in December, well-proportioned,
fond of novelty and extravagant.
A Silence Explained.
Carry—Why was it, *1 wonder, my
poor husband never said anything to
me about remarrying?
Anna—Probably you were not the
person he wished to warn.—Life,
A Happy Woman.
At last I am a well and happy woman ayp-in ;
thanks to McElree’s Wine of Cardui. I have
suffered for four years from womb trouble
of tbe most horrible kind. Twelve years
ago I went to the San Antonio Hospital, where
they performed an operation, but it left mo in
n worse state than ever. I went to Dr. Kings¬
ley and Dr. D. Y. Y'oung, but they gave me
little relief. After spending $125.00 I was not
ablo to leave my bed, and most of tho time
suffered pains to equal a thousand deaths. On
the tenth of last October my friend Mrs. Ste¬
vens, advised me to try McElree’s Wine of
Cardui. Tbe first bottle did me good, und I
got more, and to-day I am a new woman ; am
ablo to do all my cooking and house-work. I
am running a boarding-house and doing all
the work myself. I still use the Wine, and
always keep it in the house—it saved my life.
Mrs. M. J. Meyers.
Appleby, Tesas.
Stomachic
means a medicine that strengthens th“ stom¬
ach, or to be brief, it means Ripaps Tabules.
If you are troubled with a weak stomach anil
cannot divest your food u.-e Ripa-ns Tabules.
One gives relief.
FITS “topped free by Da, Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer, No tits after first day’s use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00trial bot¬
tle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Fa.
Kserv Mother Should Always Have
abottleof Parker’s Ginger Tonic. Nothingso
good for pain, weakness.cold sand sleeplessness
We think Piso’s Ouro for Consumption is
the only medSeine for Coughs.—J f.nnie Pixck
ard. Springfield, Ills., 0(t. 1, 1S94.
*«=£■ Out of sorts
\ -“-and no wonder. Think of the con¬
*£ dition of those poor women who have
& i to wash clothes and clean house in
the old-fashioned way. They’re
vexed, discouraged, ^ out
° f S °d Lhig
r .1 /»(/y a n hearts.
They must be out of
) their wits. Why don’t
S f / they use Pearline ? That
' S is what who
every woman
'! ' l\V values her health and strength
is coming to. And they’re coming
to it now, faster than ever. Every day, Pearline’s fame
grows and its patrons increase in number. Hundreds of
millions of packages have been used by bright women who
want to make washing easy. 481
Fertilizers for Fall Crops
I should contain high percentage of Potash to
a
insure of the the soil largest yield and a permanent enrichment j 1
Write for our ••Farmers’ Guide,” a 142 -page illustrated book. It
is brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, ana
will make and save you money. Address,
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Stmt, New York.
The Carnegie Steel Plant.
The groat Carnegie steel works nt
Homestead, Pa., cover 300 acres of
ground, represent a developed ma¬
chinery force of 80,000 horse power,
pay men five times the wages paid in
Germany, turn out iu a day more
freight than is carried on the entire
Boston and Albany system, and pro¬
duce, with 4,000 men, six times tho
output of the Krupp works in Ger¬
many, which employ,12,000 men. All
the fuel used is natural gas, but for
minor operations a central station op¬
erates in various departments 390
electric motors.
Some Advantage.
“They tell me your wife is a new
woman,” said the lean man with the
yellow vest. “Of course, I suppose it
is rather a tender subject.”
“Oh, I ain’t worryiu’,” said the fat
man. “She’s all right. She licked
the hired girl yesterday for burning
the steak.”—Indianapolis Journal.
0
>
S:
ss
% IsO
m M V-
©OT 5 ISHJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs 13 taken; the it is and pleasant
to taste, acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
tem effectually, dispels colds, head¬
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only remedy Syrup its kind of Figs is the
of ever pro¬
ducer, pleasing to the taste and-ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt its in
its action and truly beneficial in
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy and agreeable substances, commend it3 it
many all excellent and have qualities made it the
to most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50
Cent bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist ^ho
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KY. NEW YORK. N Y.
I im HAIR PARKER’S BALSAM
. Cleanses and beautifies the hair, I
I (Never Promotes a luxuriant growth. Gray! I
! Fails to Restore I
K Hair to its Youthful Coior.
1 Cures sealp diseases & hair lading. I
J oOc, and $1.00 at Druggists 1
A. N. U Forty-one, '95
Best
Wintsr
I APPLE
For tbe South. Ripens November: keep* till
May. All varieties Fruit and Nut Trees,
Grape Vines, Berry Plants, Roses. Ornamon
tai Plunts, &c. Send ior new catalogue free.
W. D. BEATIE, Atlanta, Ceorgia.
1895 Edition. Just Issued.
A Credit-Book atd Comeleie Directory
OF THE
Book, Stationery and Printing Trade
in tbe United States and Canada.
With Capital and Credit Ratings. Street
addresses in all cit es.
Subscript'on, $15 per rear. For piriiculars,
address W. G. T. WEYMOUTH, Manager.
156 Fifth Avenue, New York City.
GOOD POSITIONS
SECURED BY STUDENTS
Business Firms SippM wi Help
Richmond's Commercial College,
Established 1884.
Send for Catalogue. SAVANNAH, GA.
MONEY IN PECANS.
AMBIHOUS CLERKS NOW
Is your opportunity to invest in the Lnraest
Pecan Orchard in the World. 40) acres in
orah&ni just coming in:o bearing, will prove an
absolute Gold Mine when in full bearing Send
for tree prospectus giving referances ami fall
particu ars. F.A.?»«-tndt-n,Brownwood, Texas
'e^ine^Toi^o Ajlanta^POSIT^
A List of Reliable Atlanta Bus •
iness Houses where visiters
to the Great Show will be
properly treated and can pur¬
chase goods at lowest prices.
STILSOM I COL LSI
JEWELRY CO ■»
55 Whitehall St., Atlanta. Ga.
Everything in the Jewelry and Silver
Line at Factory Prices.
PHILLIPS & CREW CO*
37 Peachtree Street.
STANDARD
Pianos and Organs*
SHEET MUSIC,
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. -4
- -_— -
CiSEMAN BROS.,
Bbbb 15 and 17 Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
-ONE PRICE-
CLOTHIERS,
Tailors, Hatters and Furnishers.
BOWMAN BROS.
FINE MILLINERY,
78 Whitehall Street.
OUR FALL IMPORTATIONS ARE NOW IN.
LEADERS OF FASHION,
LATEST STYLES,
LOWEST PRICES.
0 TO AVOID THIS XT ©33
0 TETTERIWE
s , The ONLY paints** and harmless
C“3 T I ctmE for the worst- type of Eczema,
cc Tetter, Ringworm, the face, ugly crusted rough patch¬ scalp.
ES& es on
„ Ground itch, chafes, chaps, pim¬ oak.
I ples . Poison from ivy or poison
P IjB In short all itches. Send 50c, in
I Stan. ns or cash to 3. T, Shuptrme,
n druggist Savannah, don’t Ga., tor it. one box, it your
keep Atlanta.
You will find it at Ohas. O. Tyner's,
AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY
1 AND
m RHUBARB
—FOR—
Dysentery, Flux,
Cliolera Morbus,
Cholera, Diarrhoea
■M —AND —
It.’ Slimmer Complaint*
Try Price 25c.. 50c., $1.00.
For Sale by Druggists or write to
3 Tm Stovall SSJxaaitla.,
MA NUFAOTURING PHARM A HIST.
1012 Whitehall ATLANTA, St., GEORGIA. Corner Mitchell,
SULLIVAN & CRICHTON'S
AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND.
The best and cheapest Business College in America.
Time short. Instruction thorough. 4 Penmen.
Big demand for graduates. Catalogue free.
SC I. LI VAN A- (II HU Hit, KI.rr Itldg., Atlanta, Ga,
IF YOU BUY YOUR SHOES
1
FROiYl \.
They will give you pleasure
Every minute you wear them.
14 WHiteliall Street.
SAW MILLS CORN AND
FEED 3*LLS.
Water Wheels and Hay Presses.
BEST IN THE MARKET.
Dpl.onph Mill Mfg. Co., 305, Atlanta, Ga.
~ COSirVYHtHfc Mata acastffi
Best Couyh Sjrup. AUmelse FAILS.
Tastes Good. Cee
tn time. Sold by druggiats.
_
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