The Abbeville chronicle. (Abbeville, Ga.) 1896-1953, May 19, 1898, Image 4

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Tho Gratitude ol a Thinker. “Your reflections do yon great cred it, Mr. Btainby.” “Thank heavens!” sighed Brainby, “I can get credit for something. Ah, my dear friend, I would you were s grooer.”—Judge. Bills of Fare in Fahliioiiablo ltofttaurantg. Tho question has boon mooted over and ovor «Ktiin whether the engrafting of French and German di -hen uoon tho bills of faro of the better elans of American restaurantN isor is not an improvement. Many pretend that before their introduction our cooking was coarse, barbaric. This i« an open question, but no bill of fare presents attractions to the dyspeptic, lariouff and but they, like the biliouff, roa bocured by neiHoiirt Hostetter’s with Htomaeh weak kidneyn, hitters. , can olina, According to the state auditor of North Car more money wag paid to the emnloyesof tlie f tate Boriftte at itw late nesslon than wan paid to the Hen atom themHclveg. One of tha state papers says the Jattor were overpaid. To Cure a Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Urnmo Quinine Tablets. All In uggtstsrc fund money if it fails to cure. The River Jordan makes the greatest de scent in the shortest distance of almost any stream. Beauty Iff Blood Deep. Clean blood raeanfl a clean shin. No beauty without it. Cascaretn, Candy Cathar tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by fftirring up the hizy liver and driving all im purities banish pimples, from the boils, body, blotches, begin blackheads, to day to and Cflffcarotff,—beauty that sickly bilious for complexion by All taking drug* ten cents. .puts, nolmfucUoii guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c. Ul !. , l T“ r 9 1 , " olrenU , , * f, 9<> “ .’ ‘ 1> ‘- ' _ Lvmi A - “Pick Be I. C ” M,u oklnc Tobnccs do«H not make every mouth hh sweet as a rose hut conies "mighty nigh” <i„ch give every one a most delightful ismoke. Try it. A folding bril inu&t be pulled down before It can be done up. I Si t i Uncle Sam (CfT; Says: This is r [y v i America’s \ Greatest : Medicine. l : l | It will t, Sharpen Your Appetite, Ihurnff - . r „ |1 Purify and m S H/ Hul i III Vitalize - Your r Blood, r,. , ^ Overcome T I i rat . Tired Feeling. Get a bottle of V-Wd’a Hood 3 barsaparlila Q^rconarlllia and onri hec/in cegin to 10 take K TODAY, ard realize the great 'good it is sure to do you Hood’s Sarsaparilla IsAmcviaa'a Greatest Modlolne. AH druKKiaU Russia is beginning to honor her Siberian explorers. A statue is to be erected at Chabarowsk, on the Amur, vt Deshnew, the Cossack who went by Hoa, in Hi-18, from the River Kolyma to tho River Anadyr, thus Bailing through Behring Strait for the first time, ami proving that Asia was separated from America. It l.s proposed, moreover, to change the lmmo of the East Cape into Cape Deshnew, which will probably be objected to by geographers. Aluminum hus been adopted official ly a s the materia] out of which the fol lowing equipments shall bo made for the French Army: Canteen, individual pinto or bowl, boiling pot and bowl f Gf a mess of four men. In 18U4-five hun dred Hot b were put on titai, and in the Madagascar campaign a much larger y\th satisfactory results. Tho FreScIT^rice of aluminum at last ac counts was 2G cents a pound. SINGULAR STATEMENT. From Mra. Rank to Mrs. Pinkhnm. The following letter to Airs, Pink ham from Mrs. M. Rank, No. 2,354 East Susquehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa., is a remarkable statement of re lief from utter discouragement. She says: “ I never can find words with which to titanic you for what Lydia H. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound bus dono for me. " Some years ngo I had womb trouble and doctored for a long time, not see ing any improvement. At times I would feel well enough, uud other times was miserable. So it went on until last October, I felt something terrible creeping over me, I knew not what, but kept getting worse. I call hardly explain my feelings at that time. 1 was so depressed in spirits that I did not wish to live, although I had everything to live for. llad hys teria, was very nervous; could not ‘sleep and was not safe to be left alone. “ Indeed, I thought I would lose my mind. No one knows what I endured. “ 1 continued this way until the last 7’ ..... '- ,l I t saw _____■ m a paper a testimonial . ot tatty whose n case was similar to mine, and who had been MsCinnwiiiU cured bv Lydia K iSnkham's Vet-el a bU. Compound. 1 It,...... determined I. to try . it, . and felt better after tho first dose. 1 continued taking it, and to-day am u vell weu woman woman and ana can can sir say from from my me nenrt, inauK i.od tor such a rnedi cine.’”* Mrs. Pinkhnm invites nil suffering women to write to her at Lynn, Mass., for advice. Ail such letters aro seen and answered by women only. mm ami Liquor Habit cured in 10 to J5o days. No pay till cured. l>r. .1. L.Stephens, Ohio. Dept. A. Lebanon, 333133 PiSO’SnCURT FOR: CUfitS WHlHETll ELSE f AILS. „ Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use in time. Sold by CONSUMPTION t2 SLCTS AN INTERESTING ADDRESS TO HIGH SCHOOL ROYS DELIVERED BY MR. J. K. ORR. The Boy Who Heads It and Who Heeds It Has Found the Sure I load to Wealth. Tt lion, tloke tt ir nmttn, Li 'u .president .. , of ; tho ,, board of education of Atlanta, has in- 8tituted r new feature with a view of impressing Upon the boys that honor j distinction may be won outside of | the professions. Jle bus invited a few j prominent and successful business I men to address them. The first of this ] fieneH wfts ma ^ e i “7 -vr ^ r **• t tt- r\* ^ rr * » president of the On Shoe Company of Atlanta. .... His TJ - address ,, was enter- . so tabling ° and so full of valuable sugges , _ . , lions to the school boys of our most! land th/tt we reproduce some of its ! important . , features. , The bov 7 who rends it and ‘ heeds * it ! will . ho „ the to . fortune. . . Mr. ou way ° aiu * “The first and perhaps most important duty we owe society is to become self-sus taining. Therefore, I am reasonably safe in the assertion that there comes a time in the life of every boy when ho is deeply con cerned about his future. He asks himself, ‘Wliat am 1 going to do for a livelihood? In what field of usefulness slia.ll I find my life work? Shall I be a leader or a follower of men?* And right here it is well for him to remember that ‘he who would command, first must learn to serve.’ “The toil principal of the school I attended used to the story of an Irish laborer who came to see him about a wayward son, of whom he said, ‘I tell him lie’ll have to choose whether lie makes a living with the time—Shakespeare pick or with the pen.’ So there comes a calls it a ‘tide’- in the life of every boy that decides whether he makes his way in the world with his head or his hands. Do not for a moment under stand me to say aught in disparagement of honorable labor. I have afar higher regard for the manor boy who saws wood for an honest living than I have for the young man who goes about bejewelcd the in inherited dia raotids and living on bread of idleness. The head and the hand must work together. Mr. Edward Atkinson, an eminent authori ty, in an address on ‘The Development of tll0 Industrial South,’ delivered hero a few weeks ago, gave it an his opinion that tho greatest need of the hour was the training <)f our yollnK In „ n in the practical arts of manufacturing. It lias been the almost unanimous opinion of the thinking men of this country that tho next decade will show a development along this lino so wonderful that it seems now beyond our conception. It Is in this field that you, iny young friends ill will be the actors. Iu this battle you wi be the rank and file, who will rank and who will filemust depend largely upon individual merit. "So whether you take up a profession or engage in manufacturing or commerce, I trust that the few practical with reflections loiter may be remembered profit in your after life. There is little original in them. They are the wisdom of the ages, to which I oan only add for what it Is worth tho endorse ment of n little experience and considerable observation. Industry and Thrift. “Some one has saiil: ‘Every well organized physical industry has two relations, one to 4 the public and one to tho owner.’ No mair who successfully manages a business* of any magnitude but is working more for others than he can pousibly be for himself. If, then, to win distinction in tho furtherance of honorable business is a laudable ambition, let us consider some of the stopping stones that load to the ladder of success. Not the least among these are the twin virtues, In dustry and Thrift. “Industry enables the poorest man to achieve honor if not distinction. Tho great est names in the history of art, literature and science are those of laboring men. He is pre-eminently the working man who works with his brain and whose whole phy sical system is under the influence of his higher faculties. quoted having “Even Mr. Edison is as said that genius may be divided into two parts, of which inspiration.is 2 per cent and perspiration 98. “In tho Held of commerce success is meas ured by the accumulation of wealth. This may bo' obtained by labor, but is preserved and increased by diligence without and persever ance. Few men succeed the prac tice of economy, and yet it is not a natural instinct, but rather thegrowth of experience and forethought. It is only when men lie come thoughtful that they become think. frugal. Learn to think, boys, learn to The thoughtless man hasn't the shadow of a chance in the battle of life. As you grow older you will And society to consist of two classes, the savors and tho wasters, the provident and the improvident, who have the and thrifty those and the thriftless, those who have not. Mrs. Oliphant says deny the ‘secret of success is to know how to yourself.’ Strango as it may sound to you, the world suffers far more from the waste of money than the want of it. The majority of men prefer the enjoyment of pleasure to the practice of self-denial. "I think jt was Cicero who culled economy the dauutiter of mother prifdenoe, of liberty. sister of temper ance and the The Astor Fortune. "samuei Johnson said without some mens are of economy none can he rich, and with it few would he poor. The story is told of an English Hipster who recommended one of his workmen tu lay up something for a ruinv day. Shorttv after fie asked him how much lie had added to his store: ‘Faith, nothing at all. Sir.- I did as you hade me, hut it rained hard yesterday and alt wont in a spree ’ That's a great many people’s idea of economy • The greatest harhaf* of tho world are those with the widest and deepest channels. Yet iu nearly all <>r these lighthouses ami buoys are needed to keep the mariner inthe hounds of safety. So in the great voyage of lir ,. we should use the wrecks along the shore to warn us. and the beacon lights of others to'gu'Je as. that we may bring our lifeboat to a safe and peaceful haven iu the Lulr ,„ ir 0 , ........... "We count ours-ivos fortunate to live iu s country where genfus and Industry are sure of rowarff. “It is one of the pe.\;lb,ritios stirred, of human and nature that our ambitions are our best energies are wakened by the sue cess of others. With this thought in mind. I will nsk you to tollow me while J give you a brief outline of the salient points in the elnmu’tevs of some of the men who have left their mark upon t he century. 1 hey were. generally speaking, of humble parentage. brought up In the school of poverty, and blessed with that greatest of stimulants, in* eessity. F«*w of them had the advantages you enjoy. In the great, city of New York th*' name that stands for tin* bluest blooded aristocracy, the largest wealth, a great fort- une, secured by landed estate Hull doubln In value every oilier deeadc, the name that represents all these j ; , that of Astor. And yet a hundred and twenty years ago the founder of this house was a poor boy, the son of a butcher In the village of Will d0 ’(i, a rr ny- ivi ou "Jfls fattier was asort i of .iM Rip v Van . Winkle, ne'er do well, who wanted John Jaeoh to learn bis own trade. Instead he determined to go to America-, at the ag. of 17, with two his'fortune 1 . 1 * HiT'was sirpooMhiit could ho°h»dto wulk to tho It hi whoro ho got r boat to the seaport, uud work his passage further. night fTiuTlimae!' Resting unllor'a tri-e.wlui his pa«*k for ;i pillow, he dotorminod that no mutter what befell him in tho future, ho wouid stick to throo resolutions: To be lion just at the close of the Revolution. He se cured work in the store of a furrier at two dollnrs a wc-k and Ilia board, fn two years ,Ul fVr tlm^imi^nDllcent ^tune Ids I ■ descend ants now enjoy. When you go to Now York and take in the luxuries of the Waldorf-Astoria, perhaps you'll remember the story of how Grandpa John Jacob made his start. The Vanderbilt Wealth. “The fountain head of another of Amer lea’s colossal fortunes. Cornelius Yander built made Ids first *100 plowing a ten-acre 0 n Htatun island. With this money he bought a boat, tho ownership o'f which gave him tho title of commodore by which lie was afterwards generally known. He made bis money by hard work, frequently having to work all night, yet lie was never absent from his post during the day. It was then th« rule that a boy’s earningn That’s belong to the Ills parents Until he was 21. one of rules that has been reversed. Young Van derbilt thought himself lucky that he was allowed half what ho made at night. You know the rest of his story. He had forty competitors in his heard first line of business, yet no one has ever of the other thirty-nine. Good Boys Wanted. “I wonder, my young friends, if you ap preciate how little things may affect the currents of your life. A few years ago a wealthy banker came to a merchant of my acquaintance and said: ‘I want you to let me have such and such a boy; T have a place for him.’ On being questioned as to why in a large town full of hoys ho had selected this particular lad, he answered: ‘I see him regular in Ills attendance at Sunday school and church. On the streets he moves like he is going somewhere, and I have never seen ettes.’ him Who loiterin^about knows but nor smoking cigar- be some one may observing you, and on the good or ill opinion that is formed will hinge the opportunity of your life? “When James Gordon Bennett was a youth of seventeen there fell iu(o Ids hands the life of Benjamin Franklin. The study of it com pletely changed the complexion of his fu» tore. He left his native ldlls to try his for^ tune in America. Wo find 1dm a few years later in the city of Boston, but still so poor that he was often threatened with indiges* tion, due largely to not being regular about liis meals. He finally secured work as a proofreader. After engaging in such enter prises as were open to a young man with a large fund of energy and a sad Jack of other funds, he adopted journalism as a profossion and moved to New fourteen York. So poorly of was Scotch he paid that it took years economy before lie had any working capital. It must have been during this time that lie coined the aphorism, ‘I eat and drink to five; I do not live, to eat and drink.' After many failures he started Tho Herald with barely enough capital cellar to run it a few weeks. His office was in a and its furniture a plank and two barrels, both empty. He worked sixteen hours a day, threw all of liis wonderful personality He had into fought tho paper the battle and made a go of it. with adversity and he won. The New York Herald of today stands a monument to his marvelous success. “I wish it was considered good form to tell how a bad boy occasionally gets on in the world. I know there must be one or two here who are awful lonesome. I can only offer them tho consolation story of the bad Mfctlo boy who had to sleep in the middle with three in a bed. He was always kicking, this said he never had had room enough in world. ‘Never mind, Bud,’ said his older brother, ‘if you don’t reform, in the next you’ll have room to burn.’ Pardon the di gression, but we had been making million aires so fast I was afraid some of the boys would get discouraged. In every race, you kno w, there are the favorites and the held— that last story was for the lield. * * * ‘•The genius of Cyrus Field made possible our receiving from the other side of the world the glorious news of the week, and today in common with millions of our coun trymen, our hearts beat faster in the knowl edge of the uneomjuerable valor of Ameri can arms. “To some extent we are indebted to the ‘accident of poverty’ world has for the greatest Most phi lanthropist the ever known. men who are mo privileged Here is enjoy who the found acquir- his ing of millions. one greatest pleasure in giving them away. “The parents of George Peabody were so poor that he was taken from school at the age of 11 and bound out as an apprentice to a country store. At 18 he had established for himself so much of character that friends gave him loiters of credit with which lie was able to buy $2,000 worth of merchandise, and with this he began his wonderful career as a merchant. In later years he became one of the leading bankers of London. Though frugal always in his own manner of living, he was princely the in his gifts London, toothers. He gave $3,000,000 to poor of a like amount to the schools of the south, and nearly that much more in other bequests. Peabody’s Encouraging Words. “On his last visit to his native place he made a short talk to a class of hoys,to whom he said: “ ‘Though Providence has granted me an unvaried and unusual success in the pursuit of fortune in other lands, 1 am still at heart tho humble boy who left yonder unpretend ing dwelling. There is not a youth within the sound of my voice whose early opportu nities and advantages are not very much great:'- than were my own. and I have since achieved nothing that is impossible to the most humble hoy among inspiration. you.’ Surely the life of such a man is an I can only wish that his words just quoted may sink deep into your minds and hearts, "And now. my young friends, if there is any practical lesson In all that I have said to you. it is this; if these men whose early advantages were Unified have, as the world measures it, been usefulness wonderfully have been successful, might not their greater and ttieir scope of Influence wider had they received the benefits of higher education They succeeded in spite of these disadvan tages. Hq.w much more should you, who enter the battle of life with well trained minds. If lias been iny observation that the boy who enters business with n good eduea tiou twice will, fast with as tl)e-boy equyl application who lucks it. progress liusi as ness is the putting into practice the faculties you are here developing. The man who does not us© bis mind remains a laborer. Musol© U ehenp. Brains oome high. Choose wisely which you will put upon the market, A Fartliut Word, “And now a parting word to the boy whose school life closes with the present term. If ;l ])roper foundation has been laid, if his m Rid is hungry, if he has acquired n taste for literature, his education has just begun, Lot him make a proper use of a small part of his leisure. Let him decide that he will gj V p t *t least one hour a nay to the reading G f g 0(K i books, broaden, and unconsciously his mind will grow and fitting him for that pj aCt » he will make for himself in society auJ tlie wor i<j. Marrlue and l.o.igtvlty. As to the question of marriage. tk* Registrar-General for Scotland publish, ed some tables of statistics in 1807 to prove that married men live longer than * the unmarried. Scientific critics In England , and . other countries, , . how- , _ ever, have questioned the accuracy of p^eso tables, not holding that they were deliberately and of intention false, but thut the experiment Weis not conducted bn fair or just principles, These contestants may have been bachelors of centenarian proclivities, and having a reputation to sustain, they would naturally examine a mar ried man’s tables with close and scru tiding suspicion. For. say the oppo nents of thU theory, if a man lives longer by reason of marrying one wif-% cou p] nu t ho tiien double his age or bis Chances of longevity by marrying two? Perhaps wives are to be taken however, like those of Henry VIII. of England, only one at a time, though he had six and then did not live to be a centenarian. The reasons given by old people for their long length of years are often seemingly absurd. The' Scientific American of December 10, 1803, had an account cf Miss Eliza Work, of Henrietta, New York, who was within six weeks of being 100 years old. “The reason that I have lived so long is that I have never drunk tea nor coffee, and, above all, never got married, and I have always been hearty and healthly, too.” At the age of 01 ahe traveled alone to her native place in Vermont. She has al ways been a hard worker, never had occasion to use glasses, and her teeth are of original growth. Her brother lived, she stated, to be 101, and she thought he would have lived much longer had he never married. He drank tea and coffee, too. People who drink such things, Miss Work 'thought, and then aggravate the case by getting married, ought not to expect to live long. And yet, Miss Work, being her self a centenarian, knows, perhaps, al most as much about the case as physi cians.—William Kinnear, in North American Review. An Ancient Cnstom* From Republican Traveler, Arkansas City, Kan . Pilgrimages to some slirlne of St. Vitus to cure the disease known as St. Vitus’ dense nro no longer made. The modern way of treating this affliction Is within reach of every household, ns is shown the by the experience of Karl A, Wugner, elovon-yoar-old son of George Wagner, of 015 9th St., Arkansas City, Kan, The fath er tells tho story ns follows: "Over a year ago,” he snvs, “Karl was taken with St. Vitus’ dance uiid continued to grow worse during live months he was under a physician’s care. His tongue be came paralyzed and we could not under stand a word he said. He became very thill, lost the use of his right leg and seemed doomed to become a hopeless in valid. We had atout given np hone when Hr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People wore recommended to my wife by a lady whoso daughter had been cured of a simi lar affliction by the pills. "I bought a box of them at once and soon n o t i c o d a change for the better in Karl’s con dition. I pleased lbought was so that well / ! J more of them, and When he hud taken live I k J 1 boxes the disease dis- .. . . _ appeared. A Hopeless Invalid . . "That was six months ago and there has been no return of the disease. The euro was effectual lind permanent, and I feel satisfied that no other medicine could have pro duced so marvelous a result. We feel re joiced over tho restoration of our son, and cannot Help hut feel that Dr, Williams' Pluk Pills for I’ale People are the most re markable medicine on the murket.” No discovery of modern times has proved suoh n blessing to mankind as Hr. Will iams’ Pink Pills for Pale People. invigor- Acting directly on the blood and nerve3, ating the body, regulating the functions, they restore the strength and health in the exhausted patient when every effort of the physician proves unavailing. Those pills are sold in boxes at 50 cents a box or six boxes for 1)2.50, and may be bad of all druggists, or direct by mail from Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Sebonectady, N.Y. Snys Ait Exchange. “Hans Anderson of Brooklyn, N. Y., was shot in the head forty-five years ago, and last week he coughed up a bullet. ” It is wonderful how long it takes some people to get anything through their heads.—Boston Tran script. _ At one time Spain offered to sell to Prance, not Cuba alone, but Porto Rico and tho Philippines for about $1., 000,000. And she didn’t need money a bit more urgently then than she does now. In other words, Spanish honor has not always been absolutely free from the touch of mercenary con siderations. Comfort Costs 50 Cents. Irritating, aggravating, agonizing Tetter, Eczema, Ringworm and all other itching skin Tet diseases are quickly cured by the use of terine. It is soothing, cooling, healing. Costs 50 cents a box, postpaid—brings comfort at once. Address J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga. A map of Jerusalem In mosaic, over 1,500 years old, has been found in Palestine. To Cure Constipation Forever# Talc© Cascarcts Candy Cathartic. 10c or 25c. If C. C. C. fail to euro, druggists refund money. Married men always have more buttons oiT their clothes than bachelors. Fits permanently cured. No fits p? nervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Ivline’s Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatisef ree Dll. R. H. Ki.ine. Ltd., 9M Arch St, Phila.. PA Dyspepsia, Indigestion and all Stomach troubles cured by Taber’s Pepsin Write Compound. Dr. Taber Sample bottle mailed free. Mfg. Co., Savannah. GA. Piso’s Cure is a wonderful Cough medicine. —Mrs. YV. PickeBT. Y«n Stolen and Blake Aves., Brooklyn, N. Y\. Oct. 26, 1894. Sent free, Klondike Map From Gold Commission’s official survey. Ad dress Gardne r & Co M Colorado Sp rings, Colo. “Hall’s J. C. Catarrh Simpson, Cure Marquess, cured W. of Va„ says: bad Druggists me a very case of catarrh.” sell it, 75c. The man who kicks for justice sometimes gets more of it than he wants. No-To-Bac for Fifty Cento. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure, makes weak men strong, blood pure. 50c, f l. All druggist* The man that makes the least noise isoften the most dangerous. T-PSS ±W-R1 JL n V. - a r d, A & fegf bsp -i ■>V * N] * « ’ \ tf c m / 1 V a* Ay •I =i r ftm <‘V. *T— J » 3! . l, V 1 1 No amount of argument can convince the experienced, honest grocer that any other soap will give his customers such general satisfaction as Ivory Soap. He knows that they prefer Ivory Soap to new kinds, of unknown quality. Ivory Soap will sell because the people want it, the other soaps may look like Ivory, but his customers want the real thing—they may buy a new soap once to try it, but they come back again and again for Ivory Soap, and they insist on having it. Copyright, 1883, hy Tha ProoUr ft (taablo Co., Clnelaofttl Queen Wllhelmita’s Oath. The coronation of th> young queen of Holland will take place, according to a recently published decree, on Sep tember 6, 1808. On that day the young woman, with right hand raised, in the presence of the states general, will pledge herself to the following formu la, which Is a strange contrast to the oaths administered .o the Russian and German emperors: “1 swear to the people of the Neth erlaDd to observe and always maintain the fundamental law. I pledge myself to defend and preserve with all my power the independence of the king dom, to protect public and private lib erty and the rights of all my subjects, and to employ for the preservation and advancement of individual and general prosperity all the means which the laws place at my disposal, as the due of an upright queen. And my God aid mo in my work.” Sells 5,030 Pairs of Crulcbes Annually. A Kansas City dealer in crutches said: “Crutches are staple articles with us, and we sea on an average ten pairs per week, or forty pairs a month. This; of course, would make 480 pairs in the course of a year. It is a con servative statement to say that alto gether we sell 1,500 pairs of crutches annually, and our firm is only one of several in the city that handies them. The total sales of crutches annually in Kansas City would be hard to esti mate, but would say that 5,000 pairs would not be far from the exact num ber.”—Kansas City Times. The silk industry of Russia con sumes raw material to the value of ?7,500,000 yearly. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke Your IJfe Aire/. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag. nettc. lull of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, tbe wonder-worker, that makes woak men strong. All druggists, S0o or ft. Cure guaran teed. Booklet and sample free. Address Sterling Remedy CO-, Chicago or New York. In the whole of Greece there are only 152 newspapers. . Shake Into Your Shoe* Allen’s Foot-Ease,a powder for the feet. It cures painful,swollen,nervous,smarting the sting out of corns foot and Instantly takes comfort dis and bunions. It’s the greatest Foot-Ease makes covery of the age. Allen’s oertaln tight or new shoes feel easy. It is a , cure for sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold e11 S*“£* gists u-id shoe stores, 25c. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S.OimstedXe Eoy.N.Y. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup forchildren teething, softens the gums, reduceslnuamma tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 2oo. a bottle. ST.VITUS’ DANCE, SPASMS and all nerv ous diseases permanently cured by the use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. Send for FREE $1.00 trial bottle and treatise to Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd., 901 Arch Street, Phila., Pa. In India there is a fly which attack* and devours large spiders. Educate Your Bowels With Cosearets. Candy Cathartic, care constipation forever. 10c, 25c. If C. C. C. fail, druggists refund money. A kaffir’s religion consists mostly in singing and dancing. ,rc. One of the First 5ymptoms of M. Failing: Health in a Woman Is Did you ever think that there is always a a L £• cause for this malady? In women Nervous, ness is of generally female disease, the forerunner such of some form as Whites, i jWSjj Painful, Profuse or Irregular Menses, etc., toV. either of which will produce Nervousness IV (- V . \ ’ , 1 in all of its distressing intensity. If you use '' K Sc Gerstle’s Female Panacea Ill TRADE (Q-.F.FV) MARR. 'if: you will very soon be cured of Nervous* ■ ness If costive, and all other female the bowels troubles with as well. mild move doses of St. Joseph’s Liver Regulator. I HAVE SUFFERED FOR YEARS With painful menses, attended with sour stomach, rushing of blood to the head, and occasional whiffs. I also have severe nervous spells and heart palpitation so bad 1 cannot rest. I have used various female remedies for a long time but found nl h GaV ° therS ’ 1 ^ "IrS. SARAH JENKINS. Glenraore, If your case is complicated, write us and we will give yon full in formation regarding the use or this medicine. Get it from your drug gist. If he does not keep it send us $1 and we will send a bottle, all L. OERSTLE & CO.. Chattanooga, Tenn. So Choice. “Lester, clear,” said Mrs. Giddings, cion anxiously to her husband, “I t like that cough of yours.” “I’m Bony,” replied Giddings, “but it is the best I have.”—Harper's Bazar. l r K T *2 ® bh*< *1 * <6 ** sen a — sPlS?? =1# ggw III SS liL candy f CATHARTIC m SIMM 1AADB MARK RSOtftTKRfD Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do Good, Never Sicken, Weaken, or Gripe. 20c, 25c, 50c. ... CURE CONSTIPATION. ... Sterling Remedy Company, Chicago, Montreal, Sew York, 9J8 HO-TO-BAC Sfias d «ffll£S B n ?M, , 5Sfl5^: •'T ONTRACTORS’ =* » AND MILL SUPPLIES. Castings, Steel Hearns, Tanks, Columns Towers, and Clfan- &c. nel Bolls, Rods. Weights, Hoisting Engines Stcol Wire and Manila Rope, and Pumps, Jacks, Derricks, Crabs, Chain and Rope Holsts. Every Day. Make Quick Delivery. twcuKt LOMBARD IRONWORKS* SUPPLY 60 . AUGUSTA, GA. We delight to do an early frioiid K good* turn. The working aermotor" parts of Kx SggggT _^ANY EXCHANGED gpggS FOR BEARING, A ROLLER zephyr run. a: e-ver-going, everlasting, power I UP TO-DATE ’08 doubling, MOTOR, 8 FT. FOR S6; 12-ft. for 112; 18.lt. for $30. They run like a bicycle, and arc made like a watch, every movable part on rollers. Doubles geared mill power. TheAermotor ran when all other mills stood still, and made the steel windmill business. THE NEW BEAT 8 THE OLD WHEEL.* AS THEgH OLD BEAT THE WOODEN On receipt of amount, revised motor (but not wheel IB or returned. vane) will Offer be sent subject to replace to cancellation old one at then any time. to bcj^H BBS i It your old wheel is not an Aermotor, write for Sk terms of swap—new for old—to go on old tower. SSIlfcJou can put it on. Aeraotor Co., Qfrlcago^^gpr r\ow ok St. Andrews Cold Tea FOR THE LIVER Cures Sick Headache, Biliousness. For sale by dealers. To get free sample package send 2o. stamp to ANDREWS MFC. CO.. BKISTOt, TENS, OPIUM Habit. MEW HOME CURE. PalnleM. N* Detention from work. Guaranteed. Writ. DR. PURDY. Houston. Tajaa. MENTION THIS PAPER in writing to adver tisers. A nu 03-20