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Look Out for “No. 1 If
Tour I'irst Duty is to Tonrself. Your Bodily Condition Calls for
the Help to be Fonnd in a Good
Spring Medicine
The tat Fiepunlion <„ thi. Fvrp,.. „
Hood’s Sarsaparilla ■ * ■ ■
Spring is the season for cleansing
and renewing the blood. During the
winter it has crept sluggishly through
the viens, gathering impurities from
indoor air, from fatty substances in
the food, and from many other sources,
The great blood purifying medicine
especially prepared to do this work is
Hood’s Sarsaparilla. It will give to
the blood purity, richness and vitality
end these will bring health and vigor,
strong nerves, a good appetite, refresh¬
ing sleep, and powers of endurance.
Cleanse your blood by taking Hood’s
Sarsaparilla, a renovating preparation
especially prepared to make para
blood, then you may enjoy the season
of flowers and birds and out door
pleasures, for you will be healthy,
strong and well.
Hood’s Pills cure ness, all headache. liver ills, 26 bilious¬ oents.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
I can recommend Piso’s Cure for Consump¬
tion to sufferers from Asthma.—E. D. Town¬
send, Ft. Howard, Wis., May 4, '94.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eve-water. Drusuists sell at 25c per bottle.
WALTER BAKER & CO.
The Largest Manufacturers of
PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
/ es On this Continent, hare received
HIGHEST AWARDS
from tho great
J! M liistrial EXPOSITIONS and Food
■in Europe aim America.
HI jff ^ I -
j ELl W P Unlike the Dutch Process, no Alka
lies or other Chemicals or Dyes ere
used in nny of their Preparation*.
Their delicious BREAKFAST COCOA is absolute]/
pur* and soluble, and costs less than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & GO. DORCHESTER. MASS.
Patent Force Sprinkler and Novelty hum.
Most Perfect and Effective Hand Aparatus
ever invented for Throwing Water.
IT HAS MO EQUAL. It Throws a Strong
Stream Sixty Feet or More.
1~
m 1111111
i
With the Sprinkler attached it For spreads washing the
water in a gentle shower or spray.
windows or carriages, and showering lawns, It
gardens and greenhouses, it has no equal.
is adapted to throwing liquid solutions of all
kinds to destroy noxious insects and bugs of
every nature on plant.vine and tree,and should
he kept in every hou-e, store and factory in
the country as a protection against, tire. si .50
Went by express prepaid on Go.» receipt Atlanta, «t <»a.
Hnnniriitt iSc BelliugralU
CONFIDENCES.
; /
\m £
»’
Yes, Jennie, I have noticed it.
I would not speak of it at all
Ware it not for the fact
That I know a remedy.
I had the same experience.
Every now and then.
And always at a time
OneVf'those little pimple-like face blotches
Would appear on my
And annoy me
Beyond expression.
X haven't had one for six month* now,
I have a talisman
That ft protects me.
I got at the drug store.
You have seen the advertisement—
X a m pretty sure.
Ripans •Tabules
la the name—three dozen in a box I
Swallow one after dinner.
Or just before bed time,
About once a week and
You will be beautiful annoyed I no If more.
But more you
Would believe that possible.
Scott’s Emulsion
is not a secret remedy. It is simply the purest N orway
Cod-liver Oil, the finest Hypophosphites, and chemi¬
cally pure Glycerine, all combined into a perfect Emul
sion so that’it will never change or lose its integrity.
This is the secret of Scott’s Emulsion’s great success.
It is a most happy combination of flesh-giving, strength¬
ening and healing agents, their perfect union giving
them remarkable value in all
WASTING DISEASES.
Hence its great value in Consumption, wherein it arrests
the wasting by supplying the most concentrated nour
ishment, and in Anaemia and Scrofula it enriches and
vitalizes the blood. In fact, in every phase of wasting
it is most effective. Your doctor will confirm all we
sav about it. Don t be persuaded to accept u substitute t
Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and 31*
“ I cannot speak too highly of Hood’s Sar
saparilla, as it has worked wonders in my
case. I am 74 years of age and have been
afflicted with salt rheum on my hands for a
great many years. I tried many things to
cure them but failed. My hands would craok
open and bleed profusely, and the pain was
terrible to bear. Since taking Hood’s Snrsa
parilla the flesh has healed and the skin is as
smooth as any farmer’s. I recommend Hood’s
Sarsaparilla as a reliable medicine and al¬
ways speak in its favor.” Lloyd B. Cuasjc,
Swansea, Massachusetts.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Prominently in the public eye today. Be
6ure to get Hood’s and only Hood’s.
The Baker Got Mad.
Mother—Take this money to the ba¬
ker’s, It’s to pay for last month’s
bread, and don’t forget you are to ask
him for a receipt.
Little Son—Yes; mum; I’ll remern
her.
Mother (half an hour later)—Well?
Little Son—He got angry.
Mother—What?
Little Son—I gave him the money,
and when I told him you wanted to
know how he made his bread, he said
that was his business.
The Dinner Bell
Sounds but a mockery to the dyspeptic. He
heat's it, of course, but his stomach does not
respond to the call. He "goes through the
motions” and suffers afterwards for the small
amount, of victuals he partakes of. Hostetter’s
Stomach Bitters alters his condition into one
of ability to cat plentifully, digest heartily,
and assimilate thoroughly. Malaria, rheu¬
matism, constipation and biliousness are con¬
quered by this world-famed medicine.
The value of a good mother can never be
estimated.
When Traveling
Whether on pleasure bent, or business, takeon
every trip a bottle of Syrup of Figs, as it acts
most pleasantly anil effectively on the kidneys,
liver and bowels, preventing fevers, headaches
and other forms of sickness. Foe sale in 50
cents and $1 bottles by all leading druggists
Bolata, the product of a tree in Sumatra, is
becoming a rival of India rubber.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root cure,
all Kiduey and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet, and Consultation froe.
La boratory Bingham t on. N. Y.
Carriages propelled by oieSftricity derived
from a storage battery are common In Berlin.
Cbicaxo, III. j
From personal knowledge, having used lt
myself and in my family, and from the en- i |
thueiastlc commendation of numerous cus
tomers, I liave no hesitancy in pronouncing
Tetterine to bo unmeiisurabiy superior to writl any
We^ieHTuheTeulnown^ner 8 !
this, the only testimonial 1 have ever given to
a remedy, because I am deeply impressed with
the extraordinary merits of ’lei terras. C. H.
McConnell, Mngr. Economical Drug Co., 128
Clark St. Sent by mail for 60°. in stamps. J.
T. Shuptrin., Savannah, (la.
- Ey I
A f
SftmngK , „ ifstuhl^ , . . ,
on the state of the digestion, meals but it does. the A
Ripans Tabule taken alter gives need,
little artificial help most grown people
The Greatest riedical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY. OF ROXBURY, MASS. t j
Hai discovered in one of our common j
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in twocases
(both thunder humor). Ho has now in |
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty mile* i
of Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from the ■
first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted I
when the right quantity is taken. !
When the lungs are affected it cause* *
shooting pains, like needles passing i
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and ulways disappears in a
week after taking it. Bead the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first i
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you can get, and enough of it
Dose, one tahlespoouful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
HE HITS THEM HARP.
WHAT IF CHRIST CAME TO
CONGRESS?
Howard Defends Himself Against the
Attacks of the Plutocratic Press and
Points Out the Source of Pujust and
Corrupt Legislation.
~-- 1 "£
praise of the plutocratic press,
if he is looking after fat
places for his relations and friends, if
his heart longs for the smiles of aris
tocracy and the fawning of sycopants,
he has only to be the willing tool of
plutocracy and all these things are
within his grasp. If thus he chooses,
his future pathway is strewn with flow
ers, anil for him there is the purple and
fine linen of Dives.
On the other hand, if he champions
the cause of the people, and stands up
for the nation’s toilers and antagonizes
Shylocks who are enslaving the honest
yeomenrv of the country, he will be
called a crank, an agitator and an an¬
archist.
He will be scorned by society, ma¬
ligned, abused and ridiculed by the
plutocratic press and treated discour¬
teously and snubbed by those in power,
and given to understand that he has no
influence w r ith the administration.
This condition confronts every man
who is chosen to represent the people
and he must become ail ally of the
aristocracy of wealth and desert the
people or stand up for the rights of
the people and be hated by the money
power. Surrounded by lobbyists anil
corruptionists, with unlimited money
to purchase votes, with avenue after
avenue to luxury and ease continually
open to the mental vision, surrounded
by vice and profligacy, is it to be won¬
dered at that so many of our public
men fall victims to the temptation, and
forget the poor toilers who labor in
the mines and factories, the vineyards
and the fields, and who are looking to
their leaders with such intense, tearful
suspense? Here lies the great danger.
This is the very root of the evil, the
source of all our ills.
So long as the trusts and monopolies
hold such unlimited power, just so long
will our legislation become more cor¬
rupt and vicious. The greedy, unscrup¬
ulous grasping, trusts have entered the
halls of congress and they have pol¬
luted the men whom the people have
trusted, and instead of a government
by the people, it is a government by a
money oligarchy. The capital city of
our nation is reeking with rotteness;
corruption and bribery stalk hand in
hand with luxury and licentiousness.
The man who sells his vote loses his
honor and becomes the prey of vicious
habits. Once started on the downward
road there is no stopping and he be¬
comes the easy tool of the money povv
er. Thus it has come to pass that the
congress of the United States is ever
ready . to foster the ,, robber , trusts . , while , ,,
Ule 11 people are starving. ° We talk of
reform along certain lines, we hold
Raster meetings and petition congress
for the passage of certain laws in the
interest of the people, and we wait and
fondly hope for good , wholesome , , legis- , ,
j a ti on when the very men who are to
pass the laws have sold themselves to
the money changers. We must break
the hold whl-h the money power has
upon * this nation ere we can hope for
reform. ... We must , scourge the ,, Shylocks
from the capital even as Christ scourged
the money changers from the temple
and we must turn out the unfaithful
servants, and with them the corrup¬
tionists, the lobbyists, the rogues and
prostitutes who make of the great cap
itol building at Washington a veritable
den of thieves. If we would have the
stream pure we, must purify the head
waters, so if we would have just laws,
passed in the interest of the men and
women who have produced the wealth
of this nation, we must work a reform¬
ation among those who gave us the
laws.
With an earnest desire to reveal to
the American people this most shock¬
ing state of affairs and to show them
the source of the great danger which
menaces us, I wrote my book “If Christ
Came to Congress.” The pictures
there drawn are no doubt vivid and
startling, but this is because they are
true—taken from real life. The pluto¬
cratic press all over the country is
heaping abuse and vituperation on me
for drawing aside the veil so that the
voters of this country might look upon
this shocking scene of corruption,
shame and debauchery, and I have been
threatened with ostracism by Washing¬
ton society and expulsion from congress
because of the revelations and expos¬
ures I have made, but in spite of all this
I propose to wield my pen and raise
my voice in behalf of the honest toilers
who have elected me to congress, and
to “cry aloud and spare not” until
every man in the land shall be ae
quainted with the true situation and
stirred to action.
Let me conclude with a picture of the
closing scenes of the session of con
gress which expired March 4. It was
the holy Sabbath day and the church
bells were ringing merrily over the
city, in the capitol champagne flowed
like water. Committee rooms became
temporary brothels. Women of ill-re¬
pute swarmed the corridors and sang
songs in the public restaurants with
inebriated congressmen. “I have sev¬
enty-five dozen glasses out,” said Tom
Murry, the disgusted caterer of the
house restaurant. “That tells the story
of the committee rooms better than any
words I could utter.”
In front of the main door is a perfect
cloud of gentlemen interested in leg¬
islation. Some of the faces are familiar
and have been seen here for the last
twenty years. Some are comparatively
new. Thousands and hundreds of
thousands of dollars are to be won
or lost within the next few hours.
Around at the other door are more
lobbyists and among them are some
women. Racked up against the marble
pillars everywhere are members but
ton-holed and on the defensive. Some
of these women are notorious, Tho
very fact that they are brought to bear
upon any item of legislation Is enough
to stamp it with condemnation.
There are poker games in the com¬
mittee rooms, and the side-boards are
stocked with the best liquid refresh¬
ment which could be nought with the
contingent fund. There were the house
and senate bars where every one from
the most respected citizen to the low¬
est strumpet could obtain a drink.
An aged senator passed into a private
room with a hilarious member of the
demi-monde on each arm.
A congressman was carried away by
friends fighting drunk. A woman, with
her daintily booted foot elevated on a
committee table, and a glass of cham¬
pagne elevated in her hand, was sing¬
ing a merry song, while a dozen mem¬
bers and their friends sat around smok¬
ing and enjoying the society of the
real lady. But this is enough. I will
cease. All of this beneath the jeweled
dome, between the marble walls of the
temple of liberty, amid the royal sur¬
roundings of art expressed in bronze
and marble and the expuisite touch of
the painter’s brush.
God pity the people when such scenes
as these are possible,, “When the
wicked rule, the people mourn.”
Sons of sires who bled for liberty, be¬
ware, for even now, if you will only
listen you may hear the clank of slav¬
ery’s chains which are being forged for
you and your posterity.
Tollers of America this is a goodly
land, we are vastly superior in numbers
to the hosts of Sliylock, so let us go up
and possess it.
Ere it is too late let us vote for free¬
dom. M. W. HOWARD,
NOTES AND COMMENTS.
The old party papers are not saying
much about many Populist victories in
cities and townships at the bite spring
elections. The returns, however, are
coining in by slow freight. Pueblo,
Colo., city of 25,000 population, elect¬
ed Populist mayor, while Leadville,
with 11,000 population, elected a Pop¬
ulist city ticket. Moline, Ill., with a
population of 12,000 elected a Populist
mayor by 400 majority. In Illinois the
Populists elected a large number of
county supervisors throughout the
state. Many small towns throughout
the country were carried wholly or in
part by the People’s party. These are
straws.
* * *
The late municipal anil township
elections throughout the country have
demonstrated in many places a sur¬
prising strength to the cause of Pop
vilsm—the People’s party carrying
many towns and cities, where the Pop
ijilist vote was light before. This is
most encouraging to the old parties.
*
The average earnings of labor In 1892
was $250; in 1894, It dropped to $195, and
the prospects are that the average for
1895 wili be still lower. On the other
hand, millionaire incomes are increas¬
ing, and official salaries climbing. Are
you going to be foolish enough to vote
for a continuance of a system that
makes sucli conditions possible?
It is said that nearly 17,000 children
are unable to attend school in San
Francisco. How can the so-called
humanitarians of to-day, who shut their
eyes to the environments of the poorer
classes, expect to build a noble man¬
hood and womanhood where the great
majority of the children are denied
proper education?
• * *
It is estimated by Superintendent
Byrnes and Elbridge T. Gerry that
there are 40,000 prostitutes in the city
of New York. It is safe to say that a
large per cent of these unfortunates
are driven by poverty to a life of
shame. What a fearful responsibility
is resting upon those who are forcing
present conditions upon this country.
Poverty, such as is forced upon one-half
the American people to-day, can have
no other than a demoralizing effect, the
worst features of which are to he real¬
ized.
*
At a late delegate convention held in
Chicago of German labor organizations,
seventy-five German labor unions
formally adopted the People’s party
platform. That Is wheeling into line
by battalions, regiments, brigades and
divisions.
The tariff question has gone glim¬
mering—given way to the universal cry
of “money!” "money!” “money!” The
persistent demands of the People’s
party and continued agitation of the
finance question finally forced it to the
front, in spite of the sham fight be¬
tween the two old parties on the tariff.
Truth and justice will prevail if we are
faithful to the cause of reform.
The effort to side-track the People’s
party on a single plank platform has
been met with such a storm of opposi¬
tion and condemnation all around the
country as to paralyze the schemers,
and has had the further effect of unit¬
ing the People’s party forces more
strongly than ever before.
Bail eggs were thrown at Carl Browne
at Massillon, O., recently. Browne is
Ooxey’s lieutenant, having charge of
the headquarters for the distribution
of the good roads literature and the or¬
ganization of good roads leagues. When
men resort to rotten eggs as an argu¬
ment they prove conclusively that they
aje without any others.
t
OF ORNBKAL INTEREST.
Grease may be removed from wool¬
en goods by sponging it with strong
cold coffee.
Fine laces may be cloAnod by being
packed in wheat flower and allowed to
remain twenty-four hours,
If a shirt bosom or any other arti
0 i e has been scorched in ironing, lay
it where the bright sunshine will fall
direotly on it.
Tea or chocolate should never be
served with fried foods. Always serve
ooffee with fried oysters, fish or lob¬
sters, also with cheese.
A carpet formed of layers of paper,
a ply of felt, and an intermediate till¬
ing of cotton, and provided with an
infold side, producing a spring edge, is
a late invention.
An agreeable way of treating the
eyes with salt and water is to wink
them in a cup that is brimful. The
eyes will be suffused by simply wink¬
ing the lashes in the water.
A good tonic for hair is salt water.
Put a teaspoouful of salt in a half pint
of water and rub a little on the scalp
every day with a small, soft cloth.
The effect at the end of a month will
please you.
Any woman doing her work may so
systematize it that it will be the eas¬
iest possible thing imaginable for her.
She need not follow any other person’s
methods, unless they nro the very best
for her own conditions.
A now iinisli for furniture is that of
Eppiug oak, and is a green, with a
real forest huo in itH brown depths.
Chairs, and high, straight-backed set¬
tees intended chiefly for halls, though
they are seen in other parts of the
houso, arc furnishod in this way.
You cannot make good tea with hard
wutor, unless you soften it with a tiny
pinch of bicarbonate of soda. Let the
water bo freshly drawn and quiekly
boiled, then use at once. The tea will
be ready to drink after an infusion of
about seven minutes.
To make a mustard plaster for u
child, take one teaspoouful of ground
mustard and three of flour, with
enough water to make a good stiff
pnste. Spread between two cloths.
For an adult, use one quart mustard to
two of flour. Mixed with the white
of au egg it will raise a blister.
Don’t bathe your head and temples
in cologne, and don’t try to scent your
hair that way, because the alcohol in it
will turn your hair gray, and burn out
the natural oil. Above all things,
don’t keep trying all the new patents
medioinea that are advertised to make
the hair grow on the back yard fence,
even. They may do hurra, and they
seldom do any good.
The system of washing linen with
petroleum, said to bo customary in
parts of ltussia, has been introduced
into a German military hospital. Fif¬
teen grams of petroleum are added to
fifteen liters of water, containing soap
and lye, and the linen is boiled in the
mixturo. The cleansing is much
eusier than by usual methods. The
linen suffers loss and assumes a whiter
color. i
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Royalgsg
Absolutely pure
Chivalry in New Zealand.
A recent letter from Now Zealand
says: “I have traveled in many coun¬
tries, but in no other land have I seen
the courtesy aud unobtrusive chivalry
habitually shown women, whether
young or old, by New Zealand young
men of every condition and rank. Tho
status of a New Zealand woman is con¬
siderably higher than that of her sister
in Australia or England, and she is
not likely to forgot that she gained tho
political franchise not by inadvertence
or by party scheming, hut as a delib¬
erate act of justice no less than chival¬
ry on the part of her countrymen.”—
Womankind.
more Consumption peop ie than kills rifle
t*' balls, lt is more dead*
ly than any of the
much dreaded epi¬
demics. It Is a steal¬
V' thy, disease. gradual, slow
It penetrates
| the whole body. It
,yis blood. in every It drop of to
[/ seems
// work only at the
,U .“K S - ter
//• rible drain aud waste
if ’f go body. on To nil cure over con¬ the
the sumption, Wood, work on it
make
pure, rich and whole- 1
sora C, build up the ;
the wasting body tissues, into condi- put !
K tion the dread for a disease. fivht with |
Dr. Pierce's Golden j
Medical Distjovery fights in the right way.
It will cure 98 per cent, of all cases if taken
thiring the early stages of the disease, Its
first action is to put the stomach, LowHs,
liver and kidneys digestion into good good and working assimilation order.
That makes
quick and thorough. It makes sound, healthy
m-sh. That is half the battle. That makes
the “Discovery" good for those who have not
consumption, but who are lighter and less
robust than they ought to be.
SULLIVAN
A. CRICHTON'S A
f/t
anoSchooloi Shorthand
The Best and Cheapest Business College in ▲jeeriee
F iur Peornen Time short. Cataioffue free- Addreea
MuUtTR.fi dc Crichtou, Pryor St.. A.VLASTa, Oa.
MORPHINE IN 20 DAYS.
HABIT CURED. NO SUFFERING.
Patients sleep at anywhere night and every the city. day Not are
able to go about In
confined to bed a single day. No pay in ad¬
vance. Not one cent required till cured and
satisfied, l iorue to see me or write me at once
lor terms and further particulars. Don't miss
tliis opport unity.
11. A. SYMS, li>? M. !>., Atlanta, Georgia.
Alexander Mreel.
THE SECOND LIFE.
mOATORT AM® PARADISE OOX*
PARED BT A HAM WHO'
■ AS SEEM BOTH.
A Mlracln Workoil In the Kur.il ReaeaM*
of Borodino Crsnteo a Sensation.
(From the Kooning Newt, Syracuse, If. T!)
Albert Applabe* was n very sick man. K*
had been ailing for months and had beea
•ompalled to remain home, unattt* to attend
to his buslneu. Hie triends stood or sat
about the few small stores In the village of
Borodino and dismissed his sad condition.
Applebee was a carpeuder, and a good ono
too, but slneo his strange maladv overtook
him ho had not shown any dispotion to do
any work. Life had lost its charms for him,
he became a misanthrope and lost In every¬
thing. His friends advised him and the lo¬
cal doctors tried their skill on him but it was
of no avail. Although they no doubt diag¬
nosed his case correctly, ho grow worse
despite their efforts.
But hs recovered and It has mails such a
stir in the small town that a .Vei os reporter
was sont out to Borodino to investigate. He
drove over and found Mr. Applebee hard at
work on the roof of a house he was building.
"Well, It was just thus way," began the
carpenter, who is a good-looking man of
about fifty summers. "In the full of IH90 I
had a siege of grip. It was a pretty rough
time for me as I was very siok and I never
expected tc go out again except feet first in a
coffin. But I recovered after a long sickness
but was left with an ailment which was quite
as dangerous and infinitely more painful. I
had scrofula in my head for two years and e
half or over and there was a sickening dle
ohargo from my right ear. I took about
every medicine known to the medical frater¬
nity but could get no benolH.
“I was also troubled with a severe pain in
the stomach and Indigestion, which made me
fool that life was not worth living. Lost fall
I began taking a medicine known as Ur.
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People, which
wore recommended by a friend whose wife
had read of them In some of the country
papers. But I gave It a trial and was sur¬
prised to find that it benefited me. I tried
more and persevered and at last, thank God,
I was cured. My ear has discontinued dis¬
charging and for the past three months I
have been perfectly well. I make those state¬
ments merely because I think the world
should be acquainted with this remarkabla
remedy. ”
Several of Mr. Apploboe’s neighbors were
neon by the reporter and they in Williams’ turn ex¬
pressed their oonfldouee in Dr.
Pink Pills after seeing the wonderful change
they had wrought on him. One said the cure
wassimply Wonderful as the man was a total
wreck.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contains all the
elements necessary to give new life and
richness tc the blood anil restore shattered
nerves. They had are by for mail sale from by Dr. all druggists, Williarar
or may be
Medicine Company. boxes Hoheneutody, M. T.,
60c. per box, or six tor tH.&O.
Notlcw.
I want every man and woman in the United
State* interested in the Opium and Whisky •
luibitH to have my book on thewu diseases.
Addresn lb M. Woolley, Atlanta, Ua.,Box381,
and one will be sent you tree.
HaU’s Catarrh Cure in a Liquid and is taken
internally, and acts dfreotly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. Bend for
testimonials, free. Sold by Druggists, 75c.
F. J. ChicnKY & Co., Props,, Toledo, O.
Those Pencil Notes.
Gent—-What is tlio reason you ehargo
twice as much for cuffs as you did for¬
merly?
Washerwoman—Becauso you have
bogun making pencil notes on them.
Gent—What difference does that
make?
Washerwoman—The girls waste so
much time in trying to make them out.
Didn’t Want Real Pood.
Theator Manager—You say yon ob¬
ject to having real fowl on the tuble in
the banquet scone, Mr. Greesepaynt?
Why the rest of the company are do
lightod with it!
Mr. Grcosepaynt—-Yes, but my part
requires me to rise from the table, af¬
ter a couple of mouthfuls, and say:
“I cannot eat tonight—a strange dread
comes over mo; I will seek tho rpiiet
of yonder apartment for u time.”—
Exchange,
Timk may or may not bring to us
the use of the ballot; but wo will not
be the more deserving of it through
clumoring for it, anil wo will the soon¬
er win it by proving ourselves worthy
of it.— Womankind.
W. S3 L. Douclas
shoe; TIT IS THE FOR AKINffi. BEST.
Mi \ FRENCH CORDOVAN, AENAMCLLEQ
\U.‘3M CALF.
Fine Cai/AKanoasm
C m eLT *3 5 - 0 POLICE. 3 SOLE*.
^ Jj
V 3 2.*I. 7 JP Boys'SchoolShoei
r J* 'LADIE3*
Over Ono Million People wear the
W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes
All our shoes are equally satisfactory
They They five the best value for the money.
Their equal custom shoes In style and fit.
t wearing qualities are unsurpassed,
he prices are uniform,—stamped on sol*.
From i 1 to Sj saved over other makes.
If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
#*V DIBICH’S PATENT HIP.B0I
A Light Durable Harrow, with Steel Teeth,
in reach of all. Low in price end doee the
work Hrre is something thet wifi *av *e you
time and lebwr. It fit* on sny coamo n Iron
Foot F ow Stock. Run it ever your Cettea
% *Tf ^iear! _ end torn ju»t»e i*l*
e*-i *7-1* - iy a S!
get one, and kill the first crop of grew It mekas
or >11.00 and chopping niinrm easier end quicker. Erery
rfw
A.N.U...... ......Eighteen. "95
F4SCVS CURE FOR. (
CURES WHERE AU USE Oood. FAILS- „ C«*
Best Couxb Byrup. l'sate*
In lime. Sold by druggists._