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Sweet Charity.
He—Don't yon think Miss Plainly
is the very imago of her mother?
Bhe—Yes. indeed; the resemblance
is something h '-fill. —Washington Star.
Great Benevolences.
In the »arge cities of the United States the
condition of the metropolitan poor is con
stantly being ameliorated by the grand be
nevolences of wealthy people. Snnitar\ re
forms are frequently mgge-tod and carried
out, with earnestness and produced Intelligence. by Ilostet- Among
sanitary ter’n .Stomach reforms those dyspeptic stomach,
Bltt-rs In system
disordered liver, bowels or nervous
arc very conspicuous.
Do not wiiste halt fishing for compli
ments.
I*o-To-Bac for Fifty Cent*.
Guaranteed tobacco batilt cure, makes weak
men strong, blood pure. Wo, |1 All druggist*
Many a poor man .mokes enough cigars to
support his family.
State at Onto. (’ITT of Toi.Kuo, I „
Lucas county. oath that he Is the
Fiiahk Ciiknky makes a
senior partner of tin* linn of F.J. Chunky
Co. dilug business in the City of Toledo.
County and Statu aforesaid, and that said linn
will pay tho sum of onk hcndiiud iioi.IiAKH
for oach a ml every <■ a*o of CATAiutii that
cannot b« cured by tho use of Hai.i/k < a
T AIIU FI C u HE. I’’ n A N K J C11 K N I Y
Sworn to before m< und subscribed in my
I proHcm e, thisttth duv of December,
- mcai, V A. I). 18#V A. W. Olkahon.
(v —') Sotary Public.
Hull'n Uuturrh Cure is taken Internally, and
acts directly on the blood und testimonials* mucous sur
faces of the system. Send lor
free. V. .1. t'liF.NBV A Co., Toledo, ().
Hold by Druggists. 75c.
Hull's Family Fills uru tho best.
Man's works are merely surface Indica
tions.
Eduoftto Your llowels With (kscar.cti.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forevsr.
IOo, 25c. If c. C. C. rail, druggists refund money.
An empty laugh sometimes has a great
deal In it.
Spring Medicine
A Good Blood Purifier a Neces
sity Now
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Unequalled
for Making Rich, Red Blood
The necessity for taking a good Spring
Medicine to purify the blood and build up
the system is bnsed upon natural and un
avoidable eausos. In cold weather there
has'been less perspiration and impurities
have not passed out of the system as they
should. Food lias consisted largely of
rloh, fatty substances, aud there has boon
less opportunity for outdoor exercise.
The result Is, the blood is loaded with Im
purities and these must be promptly ex
pelled or health will be endangered.
Hood's Sarsaparilla is the best Spring
Medicine because it is the best blood
purlller und tonic. II thoroughly purifies
the blood aud gives vigor and vitality.
Hood’s Sarsa- parilla
I« America’# Greatest Medicine. $1; six for $5.
Hood’s Pills ffi 5fidWit , k c **aS:
Miniature Electric Motor.
An odd piece of jewelry has been
made by a Texas jeweler and electri
eian. It is a scarfpin in the form of a
tiny electric motor, which, though
weighing only one pennyweight and
three grains, is complete in every par
ticular, and can be operated when sup
plied with a current. Gold takes the
place of copper throughout, and not
withstanding the minute size of this
little motor, It runs at a lively rate and
creates quite a hum when supplied with
current from a small silver-chloride
battery carried in the vast pocket.
The Cause of It.
Mrs. Dearborn—How (lid your par
rot learn to swear so?
Mrs. Warbaslt Oh, my husband has
an alarm clock in his room.—Yonkers
Statesman.
WiiiiiiK— “Mamina, can people leave
parts of themselves in different places?”
“No; don’t be rediculous!” “Well,
Uncle Tom said he was going to South
Africa for his lungs.”—Tit-Bits.
NO WOMAN IS EXEMPT.
Regularity Is n matter of importance
in every woman’s life. Much pain is,
however, endured in the belief that it
is necessary and not alarming, when
in truth it is all.wrong and indicates
derangement that may cause serious
trouble.
Excessive monthly pain itself will
unsettle the nerves and maUo women
old before their time.
‘The foundation of woman’s health is
a perfectly normal and regular per
formance of nature’s function. The
statement we print from Miss Ger
trude Sikes, of Eldred, I’a., is echoed
in every city, town und hamlet in this
country. Read what she says:
“ Dear Mbs. Pinkiiam: — I feel like a
new person since following your ad
vice, and think it is my duty to let the
public kuow the good your remedies
have done me. My troubles were pain
ful menstruation and le^brrhoea. I
was nervous and had spells of being
confused. Before using your remedies
I never had any faitli in patent medi
cines. 1 now wish to say that I never
had anything do me so much good for
painful menstruation as Lydia K. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound; also would
say that your Sanative Wash has cured
mo of leucorrhoea. I hope these few
words may help suffering women.”
The present Mrs. Piukhum’s experi
ence in treating female ills is unparal
leled, for years slio worked side by
side with Sirs. Lydia E. Pinkham, and
for sometime past has had sole charge
of the correspondence department of
her great business, treating by letter
as many ns a hundred thousand ailing
women during a single year.
All suffering women are invited to
write freely to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn,
for advice about their health.
25 cf:
fJ
(JURIS WHiRE All USF I A:18. Use
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Goott.
In tlma. Sold bv dructnsts.
CONSUM P.TtONL
2m;
LIFE IN DAWSON CITY.
THE REAL EL DORADO TO BE FOUND
IN THE FAR NORTH. •
A Straits ling Collection of Log lints and
Teals on a Swamp—Old-TInisri Have
tint Used to Seventy Degrees Ilelow
Zero In Tents—A Gold Miner’s Outfit.
“The River-Trip to tho Klondike”
is tho title of an article in the Century,
written by John Sidney Webb. The
author says:
On the morning of August 17, at
about four o’clock, broad daylight, forty wo
came up to that collection of
lurgo log cabins and five hundred
tents, sprawled at the foot of Moose
skin Mountain, named Dawson City.
Helter-skelter, in a marsh, lies this
collection of odds and ends of houses
and habitations, the warehouses of
the two companies cheek by jowl with
cabins and tents; a row of bar-rooms
called Front street; tho side streets
deep in mud; tho river-bauk a mass of
miners’ boats, Indian canoes,and logs;
the screeching of the sawmill; the dis
mal, tuneless scraping of the violiu of
the dance-halls, still wide open; tho
dogs everywhere, fighting and snarl
ing; the men cither “whooping it up”
or working with the greatest rapidity
to unload tho precious freight wo had
brought—all of this rustling and hust
ling made tho sceno more like tho out
side of a circus-tout, including the
smell of tho sawdust, than anything
else in the world.
This, then, is the real El Dorado},
One wonders where they all live. One
wonders, in amazement, where they
are all going to live through the awful
winter that is approaching. Hero is
tho true pinch of tho situation. It is
not a question of food; it is a question
of shelter. Thero are no logs fit to
make a cabin to be found on tho river
within thirty miles of Dawson City.
To wait for winter means that it will
bo too late to build a cabin, because
the moss which is used to fill the
chinks between the logs by that time
will bo frozen solid, and be useless
unless thawed out over a fire, a very
wearisome job. The old-timers have
got used to seventy degrees below
zero in tents; and even if the robe over
them freezes Holid, a match is smug
gled from under the bedclothes, tho
fire somehow lighted in the sheet-iron
stove, and there they lie until the
stove is red-hot before they dare
emerge frem under the skin rugs.
But how are the newcomers to survive
tho cruel exposure—the lawyers,
clerks, doctors and mechanics?
Dawson City seems like a joke.
Eighteen hundred aud fifty miles from
St. Michael Jsland—this is where they
have gold, millions of gold, and noth
ing belter than t muddy swamp to live
in; gold-dust and nuggets iu profusion,
and yet the negroes in the cabins of a
Southern plantation live better than
the richest man in the country. Our
arrival at Dawson was at a very criti
cal time. Wo had brought with "us
nearly four hundred tons of provisions, anxious
and this fact servod to allay the
fears of many who were becoming
panic-stricken at the idea that there
would be a scarcity of food during the
winter. No news had come to us by
way of tho ocean of later date than
Juno 10, but newspapers had bean re
curved over the summit at Dawson of
date as late as July 2(1; and so tho re
port that crowds were swarming into
the gold-fields had reached them, but
was news to us. The town was
thoroughly scared, and was overrun
with men who had come down from
the diggings, often twenty and tweuty
livo miles, to make sure of their out
fits for the winter; and so determined
wero they to procure them that they
sat themselves down calmly in line,
like men waiting to buy seats at a
first-night performance, determined to
wait until tho goods wero put up and
set aside iu their names.
An outfit for a miner means every
thing that lie uses during the winter,
and this, being roduced to its lowest
terms, means baoon and beans. There
are other things, of course, in tins and
in gunny-sacks—flour, desiccated sugar, salt,
pickles, dried fruits, pota- work
toes—to suit the tasto; but tho
is done, and the gold is found and
cleaned up, aud miles and miles of the
wilderness conquered, nudcold weather
and wintry winds withstood, on bacon
and beaus. It is tho easiest food to
pack, tile quickest to prepare, aud the
most lasting and sustaining. The
miner usually reokons on getting his
outfit iu November, because ho can
carry on a sledge, after tho snow has
set in, four limes as much as ho can
pack on Ills back, and if he is fortunate
enough to have dogs he can draw much
more.
Tho Supremo Hymn.
Speaking of hymns,the Rev. Robert
Collyer sabl tho other day; “I
well remember one day when
thin subject was tho object of
a discussion between Ralph Waldo
Emerson aud Dr. Oliver Wendell
Holmes. The latter said that many of
the 80-callod hymns wero mero pieces
of cabinet work. Then his voice deep
ened, his eyes shone, as we remember
him in his noblest moments, as he
said: ‘One hymn I think supreme. ’
Emerson threw his head back, as ho
always did when his attention was ar
rested, aud waited. Dr. Holmes re
peated the first verse:
“ 'Tliou hidden Love of God, whoso height.
I Whose from depth,unfathomed,no beauteous light; man knows,
sec far thy
Inly I sigh for thy repose.
My heart Is pat tied, nor can it bo
At rest, till it finds rest in thee,’
“ ‘I know—I know,’ exclaimed
Emerson. ‘That is the supreme
hymn.’”—New York Tribune.
Women Doctors Plentiful.
One reason wily female physicians
are so plentiful iu Russia is that the
country includes among its inhabitants
over 12,000 Mohammedans, who do
not allow male physicians to treat j
women.
Women and till Wheel.
From Hie HozHle, Delaware , Ohio.
Tho healthfulness of bicycle riding f.r
women Is nilII a disputed quostlon between
eminent physicians uud health reformers.
Used In moderation It surely creates for
women a moans of out-door exorcise, tho
henofft of which all physlolaus concede.
Used to excess, like any othor pastime, its
effect is likely to bo dangerous.
Thnoxporienee of Miss Bartha lteod, the
sevcutoeii-yoar-old daughter of Mr. J. B.
Rood, 335 Lake 8t., Delaware, Ohio, may
point a moral for parents who, llko Mr. and
Mrs. Reed, have experienced fond sorno concern
for their daughters who arc of wheel
ing. In the fall of ’% Miss Bertha who had
ridden u great deni, begun to fall in an
alarming manner. appeared Bhe grow steadily paler
and thinner, and It she was going
Into consumption. Rostand quiet did her
* absolutely no
good. A physi
cian found her
M pulse at 104 -a
very high rato.
Thinking this
2* mnj have been
I t duo rary to nervous- tempo
ness when ho
She Hides Well examined her,
be
IiW P®!' closely, but her pulse continued
V at that rato for two weeks. He
wots satisfied then, from her high
pulse and steadily wasting condition that
she was suffering from anaemia or a blood
less condition of tho body. Bhe became ex
tremely weak, and could not stand condition the
least noise or excitement. In this
of affairs they wore rooominonded by aa
old friond to got some of that famous blood
medicine Dr. Williams’ rink-Bills for Palo
People. They (lid so, and almost from the
first doge Ilcrtlia began to improve. Bhe
continued to tako the made pills and was well, by
means of those pills entirely
and more grateful people than her parents
cannot bo found in the whole State of Ohio.
Dr. William#' Pink PHI# bavo proved a
boon to womankind, Acting directly on
the blood and nerves, they restore the req
uisite vitality to all regularity parts of the body;
cr«atlnK functional and perfect
harmony throughout the is nervous changed system.
The pallor of the chocks to the
delicate blush of health; tho eyes brighten;
the muscles grow elastic, ambition is
created and good health returns.
The Baronet and the Beggar.
In tho East Riding of Yorkshire
Dame of Sir Tatton Sykes is a house
hold word. A ^good story is told of
the present baronet’s father, who died
at the age of 93, which exemplifies his
characteristic Yorkshire cuteness. Sit
ting one day on a fence near
Sir Tatton was accosted by a tramp,
who mistook him for a farmer—as well
he might, the old gentleman affecting
the dress of the yeoman. "Nay, my
lad,” he replied, “I can gie ye nought.
But dost see yon house? Sir Tatton
Sykes lives there, and he’ll gie ye
summat,” The man trudged off up
the road, and the Baronet slipped back
to the hall by a path, and gave the
butler instruction to let the tramp
have a good meal, and handed him a
sovereign to give to his strange guest.
Half an hour later the tramp, return
ing again, saw the old farmer still
seated on the fence. "Well, my lad,”
said the latter, “how did ye get on?”
‘Oh, thank you; I got a splendid din
ner, and the ale was the best I ever
tasted." "Did ye get nought else?”
was the remark of 'the astonished
farmer. “Here, come along back with
me.” Letting himself and his com
panion in by a side entrance, Sir Tat
ton rang for the butler, who turned
ashy at the unexpe*ted sight which
met his gaze. Looking sternly at him
for a minute or two, Sir Tatton said;
"There’s no occasion for me to make
your mouth call your face a liar.
You’ve been with me a, long time, so
I’ll let you off light. Give this man
£2 and send £50 to the York Hospital,
or pack your traps up and go.”—St.
James’s Gazette.
To Cure u Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All
Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. 25o.
A Virginian committed suicide
he was rejected for enlistment in the
This is surely carrying patriotism be further to
tremes. portunities. Besides, there may
Beauty la Blood Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. C'asearets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring up the lazy liver and driving all im
purities from the body. blotches, Begin to-day to
and Danish that pimples, sickly bilious boils, complexion blackheads, t^dng
Cascarets,—beauty for by
ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
If tbe boy is the father of the man, the boy
is very much to Maine that lie does not give
his sou a better bringing up.
Chew Star Tobacco—The Best.
Smoke Sledge Cigarettes.
No one is absolutely free. him Every person
has at least a few strin gs to .
„^«T» $2 s T!.-f bottle KCK aud
Nerve Restorer. trial treatise free.
I)it. R. 11. Kline, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
&& colic.
tiou, allays pain, cures wind 35c. a bottle,
Piso’s Couedi Cure medicine.—F. for Consumption M- Abbott, has no 383 equal
as a Sen
eca Ht., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 1894.
Dyspepsia, Indigestion and nil Stomach
Sample troubles bottle cured mailed by Taber’s free. Pepsin Write Compound. Dr. Taber
Mfg. Co., Savannah, Ga.
Even the hand of a king smells of mor
tality.
___
To Cure Constipation Forevor.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c cr 23a
If C. C. C. fall to cure, druggists refund mouey.
Circulation of the Blojd.
The mileage of the blood circulation
reveals some astonishing facts in our
personal history. Thus it has been cal
culated that, assuming the heart to
beat sixty-nine times a minute at or
dinary heart pressure, the blood goes
at the rate of 207 yards in the minute,
or seven miles per hour, BIS miles per
day and 61,320 miles per year. If a man
S-t years of age could have one single
blood corpuscle floating in his bloon
all his life, it would have traveled in
that same time 5,150,880 miles.
A Reversible Suggestion.
“I trust,” said Chappie to Miss
Montmorency, “that you are putting
your mind on your Easter bonnet?”
“No,” the young lady replied. “Ido
not wish to reverse the usual order. I
prefer to put my Easter bonnet on my
mi d. And I will, when the time
com os.”
Fooled the Detective
A detective In a well known retail
store Is engaged in the menial process
of kicking himself whenever he thinks
of a certain transaction which took
place last week. At a time of day when
the store was crowded the detective,
who was keeping a sharp lookout for
evildoers, was approached by a well
dressed, Intelligent looking man, who
Informed him that he was employed as
detective In another store and had fol
lowed a shoplifter from his firm’s store
to the present place, where they would
find her at the glove counter stealing
gloves. "Let her alone,” said the
strange detective, "and when she loads
tp I will follow her home and we can
then make a big haul.” Consent was
given to this plan and the shoplifter
stole two or three hundred dollars’
worth of goods unmolested. Then she
went out followed by the strange de
tective. That was the last seen of the
pair, . and _ the detective , ,, wonders , , how
on earth he was duped so easily.—
Phlladelphia Record.
A Nonsensical Notion.
Home folks actually believe that they can cure
skin diseases through their stomachs. It’s absurd
on Its face—absurd on the face of the man who
believes, too, because his disease stays right It
there. Stays there till he uses Tetterino. s
the only safe and certain cure for Tetter, Hing
worm, Eczema and othor Itchy Irritations. Good
for Dandruff, too. At drug stores, 50 cents, or
by mall from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
' No mau makes good resolutions for himself
alone.
Don't Tobacco Spit ami Smoko Tour Ufa Aivaj,
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag
netic. lull of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To
Bttc, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, £0c or SI. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample froe. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
Life is called a river, but there Is a deal of
dust raised.
___
Lyon & Go's Pick Leaf Extra Smoking
Tobacco without a rival. For pine or hand
made cigarettes beats the world. Try It.
FOR
FREE
SCHOLAR
SHIP.
! ACTUAL BUSINESS TAUGHT
Railroad Fare Faid. POSITION'S GUAJIAN
TKKlt. Open all year to Both Sexes.
Georgin-Alttliamu Business College,
Macon, Gkoroia.
Corn
responds readily to proper fer
tilization.
Larger crops, fuller ears and
larger grain are sure to result
from a liberal use of fertilizers
containing at least ;% actual
;
j Potash
Our books are free to farmers.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
53 Nassau St., New York.
EVERY
COTTON
! PLANTER ■
Should seud ut once for FACTS con
cerning the
Jaskssn African
Limbless Cotton.
Positively NO genuine seed of this
wonderfully prolific variety has been
sold this year.
All aiitlicnttcuted seed wan
purciniM-cl by tills Company
Gild re-smeti toy iiliinliiig
the present nohsoh.
WRITE I-'or our Brea! oiler
NOW to PLASTERS.
IT WILL PAY YOU TO 03 SO.
(Ccznf\f\ Premiums lor those
f'AQH » >,nuti,, S seuuine
Jilckson African
Limbless Cotton Seed next year.
BEWARE of Spurious Seed
otFcrcd bv OtllCTS.
Send for purticuiurs of our
great Co-operative wfier to
planter§ of guaranteed need to
toe delivered next Fall.
LIBERAL TERMS TO AGENTS
for immediate work in every
cotton growing stale.
ADDRESS
JACKSQft AFRICAN
LIMBLESS COTTON CO.,
9k Pcaobtres Street, Atlanta, Ga.
CANDY
tm*cajieto M V Jf CATHARTIC ^
CURE CONSTIPATION
Hi ATE the Ll'j *
25c 50c DRUGGISTS
BS3.
II
ULJ i 1 FOR THE
P
1 •
HORRORS OF OPIUM
CAN BE CURED.
44 l Feel In Fancy As if Awakened From an Uneasy Dream In My Relief From
the Superhuman Power of Morphine.”
Da. B. M. Wooli.ky,
Blr—I Atlanta, Gu.: wholly inadequate
Dear feel myself
to tho task I am undertaking, and yet, In
one respect, I may perhaps olulmto be qual -
ified. To express my appreciation and
gratitude to God and yourself as His almost
superhuman agents, for my complete re
storatien to real life, and 1 fondly hope a
f,lturo uscful ma “ ho °d, <» « of which I
nra tot,llly ‘“competent. But to speak of
potions, when I recognise of a truth
bondage I^iLT of n * tyrant, , eraa,lul more P <.*ruel at0 ? and relent- th , e
less than ever swayed scepter over a help
less people, I do I may find words indicate to feebly I have ex
press. not wish to that
a mind of commanding powers, yet I hope
it may exhibit at least a heart of deepest
gratitude.
Fifteen years ago I was the victim of se
vere acute rheumatism; my suffering was
intense and almost unbearable. Three noted
physicians in succession failed in their hon
est endeavors to give me'rellef. The fourth,
my favorite, who was indisposed himself,
when I was first attacked, finally came to my
bedside. He, in his anxiety and sympathy
to lull the pain and induce sleep, thought
best morphine. to give me at intervals of a small wonderful quantity
of Ignorant its days,
power, I continued its use for several
and then it was that I awoke to the sad
realization that I was hound in chains
which no human power or will could break
asunder. Since the fatal hour I became an
involuntary and unconscious victim of that
fascinating and yet most potent drug, as the
greatest enemy and destroyer of humun
hope and ambition, mine has been a weary
pilgrimage in the dark, ever dying, yet
could not die. Many times during the
passing of those fifteen long and dreary
years, and especially since the death of one
of the best women that ever wore the sacred
crown of wife, I was tempted to snap asun
der the silver cord of life and h ap to meet
the nameless terrors of the great unknown.
And If perchance I had committed the awful
deed the world would have cried out “in
sane,” whereas nothing else could have been
less true. One day, about nine months ago,
while suffering the horrors of Dante’s mimic
A HEALTHY BRIDE IS A HAPPY ONE.
TT VER Y woman is under obligations
t jY to herself and the man she mar
ft ries to be in tho most healthy con
ii-JiiM dition possible. She and should be free of
$ i, all female diseases menstral irreg
■! -yjdMi I] f!| j [jj| wlfe ularities, ‘ because the tho condition home. of the
/ fill nla ceB or h’.ars Don’t
1 ? S' / it ilmllj delay because for you dread to consult a
u doctor, Get a consultation bottles is unnec
Lr essary. a few of
■ JO female
0 PANACEA
Trade} Q-, IF*. 3?.)Mark.
MA and treat yourself in the privacy of
your home. It will cure you. If there
is any costiveness or indigestion, re
move it with a few mild doses of St.
K 7 Joseph’s Liver Regulator. Write us,
if your case is complicated, and we will
’.V <r,jnS~y^ instruct you, free of charge, how to
J ' use these famous remedies.
MY WIFE HAS SUFFERED FROM WOMB TROUBLES
For more than eleven years, and has tnea everything she could get, as well as
several doctors, hut nothing did her any which good. g^ve^inmie^iate^rclmf Last spring I commenced ayd giving
her Gerstle’s Femalj Panacea benefited
ens. Ala.
L. (1ERSTLE & CO., Proprietor?, Chattanooga, Tenn.
OPiUM Habii. NEW HOME CURE. Painless. No
Detention Irorn work. Guaranteed. Write
DR. PURDY, Hntstcn, Texas.
COMPLETE Cotton. Oil Saw, Gris*,
and Fertilizer
^MILL OUTFITS.
Gin; Press, Cane Mill and Shingle Outfits.
Building, Bridge, Fucnaeo Castings.
Factory,
and Railroad
Railroad, Mill. Machinists’ and Factory Supplies.
Belting, Packing. Injectors, Pipe Fittings,
Haws, Files, Oilers, Etc.
gsT Cast every day; work ISO hands.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS JSUPPLY CO.,
- AUGUSTA, GA.
CATARRH-™,
8»i> A MONTH 18 A LI* for consultation, ex
amination and medicine. What a small sum to
insure good health and happiness. Write for free
symptom book. C’OPEI.AND MEDICAL
INSTITUTE,315-31(1 Riser Iildg., Atlanta. Ga.
.M/ef ^ mm V niVkc.,i.’ FOR A BICYCLE luiltw.
98 ll.ld>
N »J.T5
«
approval without a cent payment. Free WHO
fin jQU of wheel to our agents. Write for our new
ViWllnfcJWa'te ’»1 models ful(ht!)r fliopworn], *10.15
WY@?N]«»ch. book of “WnuS.Hn*. art, FRKE for stamp Awkcsl,” wblle » they souvenir last
K. F. MEAD CYCLE COMPANY, CWca«».
MiH AND WOMEN WANTED
IW& TO TRAVEL for old established house. Per
■ ■■raanent position. $40 per month and all ex
penses . P.W.ZIEGLER A CO., 238 Locust St.,Phila.
stpr OSBORNE S
&0U4i4tedd ^ 'eat
A ugli -.1 it. On. Actual busim li
books- Short time. Cheap boarc c*talojjqe.
1
OPiUM and Liquor Habit cured in
!___
MENTION THIS PAPER in writing toadver 98-14
Users. ANU
Large $1.00 Bottle
For 25c.
2 Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
hell, there came to me in my delirium the
thought to go and tell my talo of suffering
and despair to Dr. Woolley. Perhaps he
can and will cause the very darkness of
night to show the approach of morning. I
wandered to your office, as you kuow, in a
condition suggestive of being ready death. to cross I
tho dark and troubled wave of
told you of my slavery to a habit which
deserves the pity of every intelligent and
charitable person on earth, and cried to you
for help. After a careful diagnosis of my
case, and leurning how long I had used
Opiates or Morphine, and the qunntlty ne
cessary to .sustain me at the time, you pre
pared for me a bottle of your invaluable An
tidote, and from that glad hour I have nei
ther wanted, needed nor used a grain of
Morphine, Opium or other Opiate. After
commencing the use of your Antidote my
general health began to improve, wretched
ness and despair that had been my constant
companions, by degrees deserted mo, and
one month ago 1 realized that my system Antidote, no
longer required tho use of your
und that I was indeed a freu man. I am
pleased to report that my health is con
stantly improving. I weigh today thirty
pounds more than I did. I have some of
tho last bottle of your Antidote, and will
preserve and koep it as a sacred relic of my
restoration from midnight darkness into the
bright light of day and happiness.
Iu looking bock upon my awakened unhappy, from un
real past, I feel in fancy as if
an uneasy dream, to look upon life with
wide-open eyes, unci active mind that under
stood its realities. A few short months ago
I was bound and in a barren desert who.se
level waste stretched back to the tomb
where Ambition was left to starve, and sweet
Content lay fostering in her shroud. Yet,
with my releaso from tho almost bonds super-hu
man power of Morphine, chains my are in
broken asunder, my are rent
twain, and at lost after all my longing, all
my hoping, ail my despairing, I can walk
fortli into the beautiful sunlight of heaven,
into “Eden’s sweetest greening” free as a
bird on its wing, and in stature a man. The
God I called upon was not deaf. God lias
heard. Goil lias answered, through you,his
most favored instrument. Yours truly,
J. C. Fokd.
Atlanta, Ga., March 0, 1898.
GEORGIA LADIES
tell the truth.
men
Bullards, Ga., writes; Eight
years ago 1 had Slow l ever'
seruKvwsw't m o:iths. Five Doctors at*
tended mo, but I continued
to grow worse until I com-
322, SSS-lk tricnced taking Dr. M. A.
* ’ t’} Simmons -i.i-. :-r SSodicIno
three times a day, and I was
well before ono Package
V/os taken. Have taken a
few doses “Black Draught,’*
but dfdnot think it cleansed
my Liver aa well aeDr.fO.
A. S. L. M.
j Fsmala Complaints.
There sra two critical and even danger ona
periods is ia female life, when tho greatest
• csrc necessary.
The first, when the giripasses from child*
hood to womanhood; if through ignoranco
or interfered neglect this with mysterious development is
smallest degree, or they thwarted, liable even in the
malady frequently are to some
hysteria, fits proving most consumption: serious,
aa or even
danger. Atboththese periods of life Dr.
bo that a do“° «.m
i tuxen twice a week for some time, be
tween and durin g tho menstrual periods,
and for stren agtncning the system we
strong igiy urge tho use of Dr. M. A.Slm
num a JLivor Medicine, a dooo at bedtime*
ta A Seville, used biver Ur. Ga., Medicine M* says: A* Simmons I In have my
family for 20 years with suc
cess in many cases of Indi
gestion and Sour stom
ach, I think it superior to
“Thedford’s Black Draught’*
and “Zeilln’s Regulator,’*
ana I shall recommend Dr«
A* Se L| 3X« os long &81
live.
*? caused by natuK mentalsniferingand,chiefly, Required feebleness
of constitution,
derangements menstrual irregularities, of the sexual delayed system, such as
ment o^ the generative too develop
sexual propensities. organs, During or strong
patient’s clothes should bo loosened; a fit, cho tho
should have an abundance of fresh air.
Tho sudden, copious and continuous appli
cation of cold water to the head and face will
cut tho fit short. Between the paroxisms,
Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicinenhoula
bo taken to correct torpidity of tho bowols,
and a course of treatment with Ur. Sha»
Esons Squaw Vino Wino which is specially
'•d.mfcd to remove the uterine disorders.
NOT
LIKE
OTHERS.
Regulates tho Liver. For sale by dealers To
1| Cll semi Sc. stamp to
AXI)rKlVS »tM C(l
ST. ANDREW’S
Gold Tea
For the