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H* Approved the Recipe.
"Do you know, doar," said Mr.
Hunnimuno, "that I like the way you
make a Welsh rabbit?"
"Why, Charloy I” she exclaimed.
"You know you couldn't eat the last
one. ”
"Yes, And I want you to make ’em
all just like it. Whenever I eat Welsh
rabbit I have indigestion.”—Washing¬
ton Star.
A Singular Form of Monomania.
There Is a class of people, rational enough In
other respects, who are certainly monomani¬
acs In (losing themselves. They are constantly
trying experiments upon their stomachs, tlielr
bowels, their livers and their kidneys with
trashy nostrums. When these organs are
teally Hostetler’s out of Htomach order, if Hitters, they would would. only use If
hopelessly perceive they Its superiority.
not Insane,
Surely, If all the world was made for man,
then man was made for more than the world.
A Clillil i;n|nva
Th« pleasant flavor, (fmitlc action and soothing
effects of Syrup of Fig«, when in need of a lax¬
ative, and If the father or mother be costive or
biHoua. the most, gratifying results follow
Qge; so that ft Is t ho best family medicine known
and every family should have a bottle.
He on whom heaven till rnnfers a sceptre knows
not the weight he beam It.
J>r. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root norm
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation fr>'«.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y.
It Is to live t wice when wo enjoy tho recol¬
lections of our former life.
Everyone Know* II«w if Is
to suffer with corns, and they nro not conduc¬
ive to walking; remove them with Hindercorna
Plso’s Cure for Consumption has saved me
many a doctor’s bill. H. V. IIakdV, Hopkins
Place, Baltimore, Md., Dec. 2, ’l>4.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething;softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays paln .cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
If n (Tllct(>il with wire i*yi*« nwi I >r. 1 lAtuvc Thom li¬
no n V K vi*-water. I trugglsta a* II a I 26c per but tic.
Always
Taking oold is a common com plaint. It is
duo to Impure serious and deficient troubles. blood, Tho remedy and it
Often lends to
i* found In pure, rich blood, and tho one
♦rue blood purlllor Is
Hoods
_Sarsaparilla
Hood's Pills act harmoniously with
Hood's Sarsaparilla. 25 c.
P oor soil
and exhausted fields which
were once productive can again
be made profitably fertile
by a proper rotation of crops
and by the intelligent use
fertilizers containing high per¬
centages of
Potash.
Strikingly profitable results
have been obtained by follow¬
ing this plan.
Our pamphlets arc not advertising circulars boom¬
ing special fertilizers, but are practical works, contain¬
ing latest researches on the subject of fertilization, and
aie really helpful to farmers. They are .sent free lor
the asking. GERMAN KALI WORKS,
9* Nassau St., NVw York
MARLIN REPEATER.
1 25-20 HARUIN
Made in 23-20ami 44-40 K>Teatv,'‘inn.l,-. Calibres.
Ouly Solid Top end 8 Ide-eloctln» ArmeCo.
All other Calibres ready. The Marlin Fire
Catalogue free. New Haven. Conn.
(5 Aft/ makti$3 SJiMSmSsss a work day; absolutely pure; free we SEND fur
nith the and touch you you
^— fey wmduz work in the fuidtva.4 locality ami whore ill vou explain live;
your we w
tho bushu’Rf* fully; remember w ( > £uaj>
^ anted rk; a Ataolutftly clear profit o: $3 toroverv writ* oay’s
W purr: at oner.
T. »H mux*.
Drs. Maybe andlustbe.
YOU Choose (he Old doctor helore the young u\ "T.. ?
Because you don’t want to entrust your lile in inexperienced
hands. True, the young doctor may be experienced. But
the old doctor jimsf be. You take no chances with Dr. Majbe,
when Dr. Mustbe is in reach. Same with medicines as with
medicine makers the long-tried remedy has your confidence,
—
You prefer experience to experiment—when you are concerned.
The new remedy itinv be good — but let somebody else prove
it. The old remedy’must-be good—judged on its record of
cures. Just one more reason for choosing AYER’S Sarsa
parilla in preference to any other. It has been the standard
L houMbold L ,, sarsaparilla , for u U d I » .entury. Tfc Its „,, record nH inspires inenitve
confidence — ot) years o n c C res. H o 'hi. n may H £ »
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla must b a 5;ou take a o chances wh^n you
take AYER’S Sarsaparilla.
A Chinese I dvoree.
The American humorist should be
glad to learn that loquacity ia recog
nized in China as a ground for the di¬
vorce of a wife. Opportunity for
many jokes is presented by this fact. lord
Other causes are neglect of her
and master’s family, jealousy, child
lessness and curiosity. The young
Chinese girl seems born to be ruled
half her life and to rule the other half
unless Fate gives her a too-long
lived mother-in-law. In her home she
is subservient to mother, father and
brothers, working for them all and
looking for no reward in the way of
trips to Europe, diamond riugs or Hud¬
dle horses. At 12 or 13 she marries.
She is then the slavo of her mother-in
law, and her term of servitude under
this awe-inspiring person’s rule is apt
to be even more wearisome than ber
childhood’s slavery.
Finally the mother-in-law dies, as
they sometimes do even in China, and
her successor, who is little Mrs. Sun
Flower herself, at once begins her re¬
gime of authority, rearing her dnngh
ters to be submissive and her sons to
, be spirited and filled 'with a healthy
contempt for womankind. And then
when one of these manly individuals
brings home a wife her victory is com
plete, and she bullies and tyrannizes
over her to her heart’s content, and if
she be malicious and the record of a
Had girlhood to avenge, the npirited
sou’h wife is apt to have a sad time of
it.
QllKKlt THINGS.
Milwaukee millers ground 1,576,064
barrels of flour during the year 1894,
agaiuHt 1,070,860 barrels in 1884,
735,481 barrels in 1874, anti 187,339
barrels in 1864.
The receipts of barley malt in Mil¬
waukee last year were 764,705 bushels,
and tho shipments 3,055,781 bushels.
Milwaukee is not only a large brewing
but also a malt center.
Chinese records are quoted to prove
that tea was cultivated in that country
at least 2,700 years before Christ, and
it is generally conceded that its use
originated in that region.
Dramatists in France get 12 per
cent, of the gross receipts of each
play, and aro allowed tickets to the
value of 100 francs for every perform
anco of such plays as they have writ
ten.
It is estimated that 30 per cent of
the iron manufactured by Tennessee is
sold outside of the southern states.
It is said to be the favorite iron with
pipe, plow and stove makers in the
east and tho north.
The several species of turnips all ap¬
pear to have orignated in Europe,
to have early spread under cultivation
into Siberia and other parts of Asia.
They aro still found in their original
wild state in many parts of northern
Europe.
Detroit street cars will not bo heat¬
ed by electricity this winter. The
Citizens’ company at least has
to this conclusion after an investiga
tiou of tho state of science with refer
enee to tho capacity of electricity to
furnish heat ns well as light and me¬
chanical power.
The ground in tho dark coal gas re
gion of Indiana is said to bo so
ated with the gas that it is
to drop a match in a well,sewer or
sort of diggifig in tho district.
serious explosions have resulted
tho incautious work of well-eleaners.
Wo See All of the Sun.
The inhabitants of this earth
a glimpse of but one side of
but in the course of a
portion of the sun’s surface
turned toward ns. This is because
equator is almost coincident
plane of the ecliptic, the
tion being only about seven degrees.—
St. Louis Republic.
A Gentle Hint.
Down by a little running brook
1 first met Maggie May;
Her father was a dairyman
Who made the business pay.
—Detroit Free Press.
TOLD BY FI Mi OR RAILS.
SIGNS BY WHICH A MANICUR3
READS CHARACTER.
Some Finger Nalls Indicate Cove of
liiixury and Others Melancholy—
People With Small Nails.
P EAR me, but you are luxuri¬
ous in your tastes!’’ said a
pretty little manicure who
does a thriving business in
caring for the hands of men es well as
those of women. The customer to
whom she spoke was a young woman
whom the manicure had never seen
before, says the New York Sun.
“And, pray, how do you know that
I am luxurious in my tastes,” the cus¬
tomer asked in astonishment, and at
the same time with much interest.
“Oh, 1 can tell by your nails. You
hear people constantly talking of
character being shown in the hands,
feet, eyes or mouth, but no one but a
manicure with years of experience
knows how people can be read by
their finger nails. I’ve been in this
business five years; many of my cus
tomers are men, and I’ve got those
that come to ine regularly down pretty
fine, and yet I’ve never exchanged a
dozen words with most of them. I
judge everybody the first time that I
fix the nails, and it isn’t often that I
make a wrong estimate of a person’s
character.”
"But how in the worid can you tell
what a man or a woman is merely by
the finger nails?” asked the customer.
"Because they are such telltales.
As soon as I took your hand in mine
ami saw how your nails grew into the
flesh at the points and sides, I knew
instantly that all your tastes are lux¬
urious, and you indulge yourself, too,
just as far as you can, don’t you?”
“I’m afraid you are right.”
"There, now, I knew it. All of my
customers who have such tastes have
nails that grow into the flesh. They
quarrel about it and beg mo for some
thing to stop this tendency, but I
Cfln »t stop the work of nature. Of
course, it’s ugly nail and often causes pain
to have the embed itself in the
flesh, but if one is fond of self-indul
gence one must pay the penalty, even
to the finger nails,
"The other day a little woman came
in here with pale nails; they ivere al
most lead-colored. She made two or
throe pleasant remarks, and finally
said:
“ ‘I wish my nails were pink like
those of most girls.’
<< « But you pan’t have pink nails so
long »s you tire so melancholy,’ I an¬
swered, and she blurted out:
“ ‘You neyer saw me before, and
don’t know whether I’m melancholy
or not!’
(i < oh, yes, i do,’ i said, ‘because
the color of your nails tells me so.
but they don’t know that I know it.
When a person is subject to fits of the
blues, or rather is in a constant state
lead-colored from sympathy. If you
would make up your mind to always
bo cheerful, your nails would grow
pink after a while.”
( l Then she told me how she had lost
her sweetheart just two weeks before
they were to have been married ; and
although three years have elapsed she
has never becu ablo to shake off the
meiancxioly* . * .
"Small nails indicate littleness of
mind, obstinacy and conceit. Watch
out for the person with small nails, es
pecially 1I it lUippGUS to be LI man, tor
he will be capable of petty thoughts,
speeches and actions, and thinks more
Ol htmsolt than of anyone else. If it IS
a woman, she is apt to be spiteful and
jealous, and, generally speaking, says
things behind your back that she
wouldn’t to your face.
‘‘People of bilious temperament
have red and spotted nails, and so do
martial men, delighting in war. When
you see these red nails you may be
sure that the person possessing them
is easily irritated, though apt to get
in a good humor just as easily.
“There is a superstition to the effect
that white marks on the nails denote
misfortune, but there is nothing in it.
These white marks that schoolgirls
call beaux, merely show that there is
too much acid in the system. They
are rather dislignring, but are easy
enough, to get rid of it’ one is inclined
to diet for a week.
"People with very pale nails are
if you obsi rve them closely you will
find that they always have a grievance.
They,really are easily imposed upon,
and often suffer persecution from
neighbors and friends, and they dote
on talking about their troubles. Be __
lenient with them, because they cau’t
it.”
Expert in an Odd Line.
An expert employed by a New York
house earns the handsome salary of
$8000 a year for just four weeks work
—two in tha autumn and two in tha
spring. His business is to go to Ham
burg, and out of thousands of designs
made there and submitted to him for
■..edgiog,,'' select those that shall
fc, e manufactured for the American
market. His judgment is almost un¬
erring, and, while the salary seems
large for the service performed, it
means literally thousands of dollars in
the pockets of his employers.—Atlanta
Constitution.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U.S. Gov’t Report
Powder Baking
AB^OLUmV PURE
Preparing for the Worst.
Tourist—Hello, uncle! Where are
you going with that cart-load of chick¬
ens?
Uncle—I done gwine kyar dem
chickens clean out f’om ol’ Kaintuck.
Tourist—What are you going to do
that for?
Uncle—Case I done got some p’ints
on some quar doin’s dat’s gwine tu’n
up when did yer man Bradley be’n sot
in degub’nor’scha’r.
Tourist—Indeed! What’s going to
happen then?
Uncle—Dey done say dat he’s gwine
wnxinnte dis yer state wid dat Raoze
welp bizness what dey be’n wukkin
down ter New York, an’ ef dat’s de
case dis nigga’s boun’ ter hab dese
chickens whar dey won’ be ’rested fo’
layin’ eggs on Sund’y.—Richmond
Dispatch,
Octal?.
-you can.
Some say that the hypo
phosphites alone are sufficient
to prevent and cure consump¬
tion, if taken in time. With¬
out doubt they exert great
good in the beginning stages;
they improve the appetite, pro¬
mote digestion and tone up
the nervous system. But they
lack the peculiar medicinal
properties, and the fat, found
in cod-liver oil. The hypo
phosphites are valuable and
the cod-liver oil is valuable.
SccUs emulsion,
of Cod-liver Oil, with hypo
phosphites, contains both of
these in the most desirable
form. The oil is thoroughly
emulsified; that is, partly di
g es ted. Sensitive stomachs
C an bear an emulsion when
the raw oil cannot be retained.
As the hypophosphites, the
medicinal agents in the oil,
and the fat itself are each good,
why not have the benefit of
all? This combination has
stood the test of twenty years
and has never been equalled.
SCOTT’S EMULSION
has beei endorsed by the medical profession for twenty
years. your doctor.') This is because it is always
prtatabU—Awzys uniform—zfuays contains the purest
Norwegian Cod-liver Oil and Hypophosphites.
Insist on Scott’s Emulsion with trade-mark of
man and fish.
Put up in 50 cent and $1.00 sizes. Thesmallsize
may be enough to cure your cough or help your baby»
n branch
Wind power to 1 .« what it was. It has many
eMMp* aTffin^o” P1 imuanddowfurnish" than
__ better article for less money and
others. It makes Pumping
rf&vS Geared, Steel, Oalvanized-after- Tilting
^‘-*‘•3 Completion Windmills,
and Fixed Steel Towers, Steel Buzz Saw
f ralaes> steel Feed Cutters and Feed
o£aflk Grinders. On application It will name one
YlT of these articles that it will furnish until
January 1st at 1 /:s the usual price. It also roake3
Tanks and Pumps of all kinds. Send for catalogue.
Factory: 12th, Rockwell and FUloore Streets, Chicago.
OSEOH-KTE’S
vudinedd Q^e//ea, *
AND
Scliool of Slaoi'tlaaxicT
AUGUSTA. GA. from
No text books used. Actual business day of
entering:. Business papers, collage currency an i
goods used. Send for handsomely illustrated cata¬
Board than m any Southern city.
siiiii mb YOU is Treadway Oil what Onsite CAN Air. DO made. Louis as ol HIES
WE LL by gettintt the best plants, which are furnished by
W, D. BEANE, Atlanta, Georgia. Catalogue IE* 17 *. 33 EL
nr* timely Warning.
The great success of the chocolate preparations of
the house of WaEtor Baker & Co. (established
cJ n 1780) ^ as * ec * t0 ^ ie placing on the market
M^many - misleading and unscrupulous Imitations
of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter
§ ^ Baker & Co. of are the and oldest high-grade and largest Cocoas manu¬ and
facturers pure
m Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are
used in their manufactures.
m Consumers should ask for, and be Co.'s sure gooefs. that
they get, the genuine Walter Baker &
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER, MASS.
Efficacy of Hot Milk.
Hot milk for the complexion has
proved to be of the greatest benefit,
and many women say they owe an im¬
provement of their complexion to the
constant use of hot milk applied every
morning and night to their faces.
Here is what a woman prominent in
the literary world, and whose complex¬
ion is equal to a young girl’s, says:
"When I am frightfuily fatigued from
the rush of the life I lead, I get a gal¬
lon of milk for 30 cents and put it in
my bathtub, adding sufficient hot
water to cover the body. I lie in this
mixture for ten minutes and come out
feeling thoroughly refreshed and with
a new life to the skin, which, previous
to the bath, had a dead look.”
f A^TA^posmojr e-7jiRE^Toiyr6>
A List of Reliable Business Houses
where visitors to the Great Show
will be properly treated and can
purchase goods at lowest prices.
STILSQN & COLLINS
JEWELRY CO ■J
55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta, Ga.
Everything in the Jewelry and Silver
Line at Factory Prices.
)
FINE M/LUNERY^
78. Ww TEH ALL St.
Atlanta. Ga.
0 TO AVOID THIS TTfSIIJ
n N TETTERINE
s I The only painless ami harmless
c C ▼ cure for the worst type of Eczema,
R I Tetter, Ringworm, u*ly crusted rough patch~ scalp.
*T es on the face,
Ground itch, chafes, chaps, pim¬ oak.
ples. Poison from ivy or Send poison 50c, i®
in short ALL itches.
II stamps or cash to J, T. Sli up trine,
jj Savannah, Ga. , for one box, if your
druggist don’t keep it.
You will Ami it at Chas. O. Tv.ner’s, Atlanta.
n «» v ]p im™ uum n ni «w iui
uiyiu, weal ami i,
Visit r
14= WBitohall St.
ASTHMA
Fg* POPHAffl’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
^ Tuj ,Gives for FREE relief trial in FIYB package. minutes." Sold Send by
a
Druggists. Ono Box sent postpaid
on receipt of $1.00. Six boxes $5.00.
■Address TOPS. UP Fill A, HULA., PA*
Aa Unheard of Offer !
\V, This Columbus $55.00 where Buggy Full for Leather with examinati shafts, Top, ion sent Genuine on any¬ re
, ceipt of $5. Brewster Springs
v jf if depired. None better retailed
f it $!00. Absolute guarantee
f for represented, one year. If nearest exactly bank a&
pay $53
the balance, $50. Prico 35>
cash with order Draft, registered letter or money order. L#
5 American Buggy Co, °°£X"*
Hi PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
■s Si Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
W 9 Promotes a luxuriant Restore growth. Gray t
Never Fails to
jju Cures Hair scalp to its diseases Youthful & hair Color. lading.
j} CQc,ar.d$I."Jat Druggists
PISO’S CU R EDITOR
WIRES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in time. Hold by druggists.
331$
A. N. U..,7 •Fifty, ’ 95 .
£