Newspaper Page Text
Don’t Carry Out th« Effect,
“Very few women are altogether
consistent in their tailor rigs,” re¬
marked a masculine critic. They are
very apt to commit some little solecism
in their dress that quite spoils the
general effeot.
“I saw a funny sight today that woe
a case in point. A pretty girl rode
past me on a very handsome horse;
she worp a skirt and shirt, and looked
very nice, I thought, until her horse
broke into a canter.
“Then suddenly up rose two ex¬
crescences on either side of her, which
bobbed about in the most ridiculous
manner. They were the big leg-o’
rnutton sleeves of her shirt—very pret¬
ty and becoming in their place, but
utterly absurd for riding. The effect
as she galloped off ahead of me was
indescribably funny. ”— Philadelphia
Press.
Laugh mill Grow Fat!
You shall do both, even if you are a slab
sided, pallid, woa-begono dyspeptic, if you
reinforce dige-tlon, nonriihing insure ihe blood, conversion of
food into rich and and re
cover of the appetite and sleep by of the health, systematic strength use
great renovator
and flesh, Hostetler's Stomach Hitters, which
also remedies ma'arlal, k'dney and rheu¬
matic trouble, nervousness, constipation and
b.lioueness.
All sensuality puiity Is one, though it takes many
forms; all is one.
Pure amt Wholesome Quality
Commends to public approvnl the California
liquid laxative remedy, Syrup of Figs. It is
pie asant to the taste and by acting gently on
the kidney, liver and towels to cleanse the sys¬
tem < ffectually, it promotes the health and
comfort of all who use it, and with millions it
is the best and only remedy.
Disease generally begins the equality which
death completes.
Dr. Khmer’s Swamp-Root cures
a'i Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet Laboratory ana Consultation N. free. Y.
Binghamton,
We qut the country unwillingly because wo
must part from oursclvee.
Supreme Court Dccltlong.
Since Clias. O. Tyner began the manufacture
have of Tyner’s Oyspep-ia Remedy, many people
Bleckley,of inquired Georgia, as to its lias efficacy. Chief Justice
tion irleu it for indiges¬
and dyspepsia, mid gives this as his de¬
cision:
"Atlanta, Atlanta, Ga„ March 1 14,1894—Chas. O. Ty¬
ner, Ga.: have u-ed, and am now
using, mental Tyner's well Dysd«p-ia physical Remedy. With It is a
as as a elixir. its
aid and a pair of spectacles I can frequently
see the law in spite of unsuitable or too much
diet. “Looan e. Bleckley.”
This is a splendid decision and people are
profiting by it.
Do You Kuorv Its Cause.
Do Indigestion: Do yon know when you have it?
druggist you know Its cause and cure? Ask your
for Iiipans Tabules. One gives relief.
Skinny Sufferers Saved.
Tobacco users as a rule are aways below
normal weight because tobacco destroys di¬
gestion ami causes nerve irritation that tape
brain power and vitality. You can get a
quick, To-Bac, guaruntnod and then if relief you don’t by the like use of free¬ No
dom and improved physical your
learn condition you
can the use of tobacco over again, just
like the first time. No-To-Bao sold under
guarantee Book free. to Ad. cure Sterling by Druggists Remedy everywhere.
York Chicago. Co.. Now
City or
Notice;
—i States WXifrrcvcry interested man in and tho vropjan Opium in and the Whisky Uujted
habits to have my tiook on those Ga., diseases.
Address B. M. Woolley, Atlanta, Box381.
and one will be sent you free.
The Illore One line* Parker’* Ginger Tonic
the colds, more indigestion, its virtues pain are and revealed in weakness. dispelling
every
I a im (’iso’s entirely cured of hemorrhage of lung*
by Cure for Mo., Consumption.—L Jan. odisa
Li.sdaman, Bethany, 8, ’94.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, allays softens the gums, reduces colic. inflamma¬
tion, pain, cures wind 25c.abottle
Wife used “ Mothers’ Friend ” before first
child—was quickly relieved; suffered butlittle;
recovery rapid. IC. E. Johnston, Eufaula, Ala.
If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬
son’s Eye-water.Druggists sell at 25c iter bottle.
Rev. II, F. Carson, Scotland, Dak., says;
“Two bottles of Hall’s Catarrh Cure Druggists, complete' y
cured my little girl. ” Sold by 75c.
I Can’t Sleep
Is the complaint of many at this season.
The reason is found in the fact that the
nerves aro weak and tho body in a fever¬
ish and unhealthy condition. The nerves
may tie restored by Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
which feeds them upon puro blood, and this
medicine will also create an appetite and
tone up the system, and thus givo sweet
refreshing sleep and vigorous health.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is tho only true blood purifier prominently
in the public eye today. $1; six for $A
Hood’s Pills MszxM; a. with 250.
The Greatest Hedical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered In one ot our common I
pasture kind of weeds Humor, a remedy from the that worst cures Scrofula every j
,
down to a common pirn pie. !
He has tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except In twocases
(both thunder humor). He has now in
his possession over two hundred oertld
cates of its value, all within twenty mUss
first bottie, and a perfect cure is warranted
when the right quantity is taken.
When the lnn^-s aro affected it cause*
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the duets
being stopped, and always disappears in ft
week after taking it. Bead the label.
If the stomach ts foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first j
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you can get and enough of it
Dose, one table? & noon ful In water at bed
time. Bold by Druggists.
\ SHTnTDEAL shorthMi.Typewris
yrSl&UfoeJJ FBA.CTICAL fe?ett-‘
S-HbE riL
Vyt : a *
COLLEGE, Aictmoiid, Va. —
4 * : E
•- CURES WHtKfc Ad ELSE FAiLS* j
Best Cou#h Byrup. Tastes Good- ^ Use
{S9 COM in timo. SUMPTION Sold by druggista_ M I j !
P B Ji
Mrs. Langtry’s jewels are valued by
experts at over $850,000.
Portugal has 1,080,000 women m§re
than seventeen veurs old.
Holland, though small la slzo, has
1,070,000 women, young and old.
There is a flourishing Young Wo¬
men’s Christian Association in Calcut¬
ta, India.
All over Washington State the
ladies are organizing co-operative
home industrial associations.
“Ouida” is small, with a seamed and
wrinkled face, overhung with gray
ringlets, and is afflicted with a dis¬
tinctly bad temper.
Unless a Chinese father happens to
be a schoolmaster, and at home with
nothing to do, he never thinks of
teaching his daughter to read.
Durham (England) University has
been authorized to bestow degrees
upon women. Oxford and Cambridge
Universities, however, still refuse.
The widow of John Brown, of slnv-
3 ry-day fame, lives in a pretty oabin
in the Sierra Azure Mountains, about
fifty miles from San Francisco, Cal.
Over 40,000 women are attending
colleges in America, yet it has only
been twenty-five years sinoe the first
collego in the land was oponed to wo¬
men.
The furniture revival next year for
the drawing room will be the rosewood
and red velvet of over fifty yoars ago,
when there was leas style, but more
solidity.
The glove manufacturer who will
make “black kids” of a kind that will
not “rub off on everything” he blessed may not
be knighted, but will be by
everybody.
The first woman admittod to prac¬
tice lifw bofore the oourtsof California
was Mrs. Clara S. Foltz, who was ad¬
mitted to tho bar of that Stato on Sep¬
tember 5, 1878.
Tho first woman to act tho part of a
woman character on the stage was
Margaret Swartz, who made her first
appearance in London on the night of
November 9, 1656.
A few courageous women have ap¬
peared carrying canes on the'promen¬
ade. Of course, it is generally under¬
stood that these artioles are more orna¬
mental than useful.
Tho first woman elected Mayor of
an American city was Mrs. Susanna
Madora Salter (nee Kinsey), of An
gonia, Kan. Mrs. Salter was elected
in the spring of 1887.
Dickerson County, Virginia, has a
woman mail carrier. She is a widow,
sixty yoars old, and covers her route
regularly and punctually in all weath¬
ers, rendering tho best of service.
Mrs. Frances Klook introduoed a
bill in the Colorado Legislature pro¬
viding for an industrial school for
girls, and the general feeling seems to
bo that she has struck in good timo.
Mrs. Langtry declares herself so
much pleased with tho United States
that sho has determined to put her
daughter Jeanne, who is now thirteen
years old, at school in Now York City.
It is now reported that sinoe the
presentation of a copy of tho New
Testament to tho Dowager Empress of
China, a Christian Chinese woman has
been called to tho royal palaoo to fill
the position of nurse.
Ex-Empress Eugenie, who is now in
Paris and is showing herself more than
at any timo sinco tho death of the
Prince Imperial, was present at tho
dinner given by Princess Mathildc on
her seventy-fifth birthday.
Women have worn corsets from tho
earliest times. Tho mummy of tho
Egyptian Princess, who livod 2000
years B. O., was discovered in 1872,
and around the waist was a contrivance
closely resembling tho modorn corset.
The quiet Bwodes,. who make capa¬
ble servants, are now in such numbers
in Boston that an attempt is being
made to raise funds to finish the struc¬
ture, partly completed, designed for a
Methodist Episcopal Swedes' Church.
Miss Mary M. Haskell, of Minneap¬
olis, is about to exhibit her courage
and endurance by venturing alone on
horseback, in her capacity as census
taker, into tho wilds of Cass County,
Minnesota, which is largely inhabited
by Indiana
Princess Nasle, of Egypt, one of tho
most intelligent and progressive wo¬
men in Europe, is a constant laborer
for tho advancement of tier sex. Sho
js now arranging an exhibit of tho
work 0 f Egyptian women at tho At
j to Exposition, ‘
Miss Maria M. Love, of the Buffalo
(N. Y.) W. C. T. U., told tho local
conference of charities and oorf» c
tions, a few days ago, that if girls
would learn to coook, sew and keep
too .0 tidily, there „outd be „„ch lea,
drinking by men.
Tacoma, Wash., claims the only wo
man custom house broker on tho
Northern Pacific coast. She is Miss
Florence B. Moffatt, daughter of a
8teamboat cap 1 tain, J and is said to be
actively interested . . shipping . . . lnter- . ,
in
ests, and to know more on the matters
of transportation and commerce than
many men in the business.
Miss Fanny J Elkins is a New York
artl3 \ in a special hue of c ____ work . woo , re
an expositioh medal and di
ploma awarded for “accuracy, detail
and beauty. ” She devotes her atten
»«>“ t0 Sawings for physi
clans and surgeons. £ These drawings
sLe readers om dissections , photo¬
graphs, sketches or books. She has
recommendations from leading physi- i
cians in New York, and probably in 1
the only woman who has made a disr
tinct success in this work.
Atlah <T < &P05ITI0K
IRE^TORjrGN
A List of Reliable Atlanta Bus¬
iness Houses where visitors
to the Great Show will be
properly chase treated and can pur¬
goods at lowest prices.
STILSON £ COLLINS
JEWELRY CO •*
55 Whitehall 9t., Atlanta, da.
Everything In the Jewelry and Silver
Line at Factory Prices.
PHILLIPS & CREW CO.
87 Peachtree Street.
STANDARD
Pianos and Organs.
SHEET MUSIC,
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
ATLANTA
DENTAL COLLEGE
Equipment New and Complete.
IN FIR WARY PRACTICE FULL.
Suasion ISOiVO Opotta Ootobor 8th, 1895.
CIonpn Hlarch 24tb, 1800,
For further particulars address
WM. CKKNSHAW, D. D. 8., Dean.
<>rnut Building. Atluntn. 9a.
PSEMAN BROS. J
ygg IS and 17 Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, OA.
----ONE PRICE
CLOTHIERS,
Tailors, Hatters and Furnishers.
QC Q.
wWntclujH Oleanflrt 60c., Main SpringH 60c-, IIa“ds
ldc-, titan-ton 10a. Stttinfni’tion guaranteed. THE
SOUTHERN UOUOI.OGICAL SUJJOOL lor
WotcliiiiitUcra. Whitehall Jewelers amt JEuKiaveri*.
88 St., Atlanta, Ga
Fine SVSIllinery-
BOWMAN BROS.,
78 Whitehall Street.
Now in New York City Ruylug En¬
tirely Now Stock.
Opou Sopt. 2nd.
D TO AVOID THIS TTJ913
0 N TETTER5WE
S "• T Thp only for painless and of harmloes Eczema,
I ciritK Totter, I^inKWorni.u^ly the worst typo roujrli
patcli
H (Tround t’oiruin itcji, chafes, chapti, pira
| IP C plea, from ivy or Send poison oak. in
In snort ALL ITOHE8. 60c.
llutanips SavannniL or cash Ga., to for J. T. bo*, Shuptrine, if
II one your
driiRgist don’t O. keep Tyner’s, it. Atlanta.
You will find it at Ciias.
AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY
ANI>
RHUBARB
m —FOR—
Dysentery, Flux,
Cholera illorhiiM,
Choi or il, lUarrlMitn
i —ANp—
P Sum in or Complaint*
Try It. Price 26c., 50c., $1.00.
For ^’alo by DruguiHtu or write to
J. Stovall SmitU,
MANFFAI'TRUING PH A KM AGIST.
102 Whitehall St., Corner Mitchell,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
SULLIVAN A CRICHTON’S
i?
AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND.
The best and cheapest Buslneafi College in A merica.
Time short, instruction thorough. 4 Penmen.
Big demand for graduates. Catalogue free
mxitauf & ( Kldfrov, UU-r Hide., AtUnln, (in.
GRAND OPENING.
THE
Blood worth Shoe Co.
AUGUST 12th.
14 Whitehall Street.
SHOES AT LOWEST PRICES.
WIMTK Olt C AM,.
COX 1 COLLEGE
;.v,
fr •-1 !
••
SOUTHERN FEMALE COLLEGE,
Over fifty years under the control of one
family, and In their foil possession forty-flvo
yearn, has been removed front Lu(»range.(jra..
i I and opens its 53rd session in Manchester
(College Park 1 . Atlanta, Septomber 11. IMfg.
J The new brick building, with electric light*.
I water-works, steam-heating, accommodate*
! 300 boarders. Campus of 25 acres. Library,
; museum, laboratory, tele«uo|>e. Thirty m
: facult V. Mrs. Sal lie Cox Htanton and Miss
! Alice Cox. Directors of Music. Pupils attend
Exposition; Alufnni*- I)av. Nov.7. Knropo^n
party next summer. ADDRESS C. C. Cox,
P’res., or. W. S. Cox, Qus. Manager,
MANCHESTER, GEORGIA.
A Cure-All Slot, .Machine.
One of tbe most remarkable develop¬
ments of the automatic machine is a
“Dootor-Cnre-AU” in Holland. It is
a wooden fienre of a man with corn- ,
partrnents all over it labeled with the ,
narnee of various ailments. Jf you
have a pain, find its corresponding lo- :
cation on the figure, drop a com in |
the slot and the proper pill or powder :
will come out .-Exchange.
__________
And Here It Is.
“Yes,” said the humorous writer, ns
he glanced at the balloon environrn t *
of his sister’s arm; “yes, there should
be room in a woman’s sleeve for ut
least one more joke.”— Boston Tran
script.
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
THE ADVANTAGE OF A BLEACHING GROUND.
Bleaching powdora, chloride of lima
and chemicals aro damaging things to
tably use on dtSroaso ijbod fabrics. their They will qualities, inovi
utiljts woanng
and used with tho utmost cars
nre likiHy to make holes in tho goods.
For all-tound bleaching, a grass plot
is the linfL b ’st of all places. To spread
the out on the groop turf and
keep it Jell sprinklod with soapsuds
for a t| T days is to insure a bleaoh as
perfect 1 ono could ask. Failing of
this, of|T a { Uat deal can bo dono on tho
roof porch or on tho linos in tho
yard. I-Many housekeepers do not
seem tif be aware that if clothes aro
hung otit of a suds dripping, and al¬
lowed to drain and dry in a bright
sunshine, they will bleiroh almost as
well as on the grass. They may bo
sprinklod again and again, and for this
purpose a force-pump that can bo used
in a pail of water is of very great ad
vantage. _ In , localities ,... wlioro , there
are no drying grounds or bleaching
facilities of any other sort, a good
deal may be accomplished by hanging
a little frame from tho window and
putting the pieces to bo bloachod upon
this. One ingenious woman has had
a hinged frame attachod to tho out¬
side of tho window sill, Tho frame
turns up against tho wall and is se¬
cured with a hook. Whouever it is
necessary either to bleach or dry any¬
thing, tho frame is let down, a strong
ooid fastened at tho other end and
drawn through a ring at tho typ> of
the window keeping it in position.
Here stained table linon or other nr
tides aro hung out and kept wet with
soapsuds, bleaching out in a vory sat¬
isfactory fashion.
Any of theso ways aro far superior
to the ohlorido of limo blenches or
any of the thousand and ono labor
saving compounds with whioh tho mar¬
ket has for tho bust few years boon
Hooded.—Now York Lodger.
TO CAN VEGETABLE^.
Thi) manner of canning one kind oi
vegetable applies'to almost all kinds
except corn, and by mixing corn and
tomatoes no difficulty is experienced
with these. Tomatoes are tho oasiost
to oan, and are invaluable in a house¬
hold, They make delioiotts soups and
sauces. Mrs. Henderson givos tho
following reoipos:
To Gan Tomatoes—Lot them bo en¬
tirely fresh. Put scalding water over
tliom to aid in rornoving tho skins.
When tho cans with their covers are
in readiness upon the table, the red
soaliug wax (which is generally too
brittle androquiros a little lard melted
with it) is in a oup at tho back of tho
tiro, the teakettle is full of bolllug
water and tho tomatoos are all skinned,
we are ready *to begin tho canning.
Put enough tomatoes in a porcelain
preserving kettle to fill four cans, add
no water. Let thorn come to tho boil¬
ing iioiut, or lot them all bo well
softlutd through. Fill tho cans with
hot water first, then with tho hot to¬
matoes, wipe off moisture from tops
with a soft cloth and press tho covers
outigAt.ly. While pressing oooh cover
down olosoly with a knife, pour care¬
fully around it the hot scaling wax
from a tin cup. Hold tho knife still
that the wax may set. Put the blade
of an old kuifo iu the ilru and when it
is rod hot run it over the tops of the
sealing wax to molt any bubbles that
mayhavo formed. There will be juice
left after the tomatoes aro canned.
Season this and boil it down for cat¬
chup. Helf seniors aro very conveni¬
ent, but miifiy think that heat hardens
the rubber rings so that they arc unfit
for nse in a year or two, ami for this
reason they prefer tho cans or jars
with a groove around tho top for seal¬
ing with wax.
String Beans—Next to tomatoes tho
vegetable easiest to can is tho string
bean. Remove tho tough strings at
tho sides and break the bean into two
or three pieces. When ready throw
them into boiling water for ton minutes
and can like tomatoes.
Corn and Tomatoos—Scald, peel
and olico tomatoes in proportion of
one-third corn and two-thirds torpa
toes, put in a porcelain kettle immedi¬ and let
boil fifteen minutes and can
ately in glass or tin. Homo take equal
parts corn and tomatoes, preparing
them in the same way. Others, after
cutting corn from the cob, cook it
twenty minutes, adding a little water
and stirring often, cooking the toma¬
toes in a separate kettle for live min¬
utes, and then adding them to,the
corn in the proportion * 1 of one-third
corn to . two-thirds . . , tomatoes, . , mixing
well till they boil up once, and then
canning immediately.
Gunned Corn—I no following pro
cess is the one patented hy Mr. Wins
low, and is tho best for preserving
the natural , flavor ,. of , sweet .
green corn.
Fill the caus with the uncooked corn
(freshly gathered) out from the cob,
thorn r» ”•! with «••*> wtraw to prevent . ».yo„„.l HlritLln%
against each other and put them into
a boiler over the fire with enough cold
watcirto cover them. Heat the water
gradually and whou they hnve boiled
one and one-half hours, puncture the
tops 1 of the cans to allow tho escape of
then , Beal , them . immediately ixi
while they are still hot. Continue to
boil Uiem for two and one-half bourn,
,^i *, d K tho cut coni ju the cau the
^ ^ ed miik ftn(1 juio08 8Urr0UU d
*« ruelH _ rormiag a liquid m wLlc L
t ' r(j cooked
Tomatoes-Fill a large stone
I" . w »‘ h ri I>e. «ouud whole tomatoos
afld a f e ^ olove8 aa ? a fl T" n8lm « «
SQ ^ ar v ^ween each layer. Cover well
with one-half cold vinegar and one
half water. Pat a piece of thick
flannel over the jar, letting it fall well
l*wn into tho vinegar, then tie down
with a cover of brown pap tt.
will keep all winter, and it mold col
I«cts on the flannel it will do no
harm.—American Agriculturist.
ODDS AND ENDS.
A Reading, Pa., woman bled to
ff pa th after having sixteen teeth ex¬
tracted.
Three townships in Muskegon coun¬
ty, Mich., have more than 1,000 acres
set to peppermint,
Holbein’s picture of the Barber
Surgeon’s guild, in London, iH offered
for sale for $75,000.
The jaw-bone and a ten-pound tooth
of u mastodon have been found in Mo. Cy
pisss township, Harrison county,
A Connecticut church thus adver
tie0H: “A cool church physically, a
church spiritually. Good scats
t '°r timely arrivals and glorious times
to all.”
Mrs. Adam Hahn, of North Lima,
O., and her daughters, Mrs. Henry
Getz, of Washingtonville, and Mrs.
Simon Frankford, of North Lima, all
died within 24 hours,
A Paducah, Ky., man has a tree in
rwi jd 0!10e y ar q which bears fruit
jj la ( j 8 a cross between a peach and a
pj um The fruit is luscious and at
tractive, and is larger than an ordina¬
ry-sized peach.
The Presbyterian minister at Tar
kio, Mo., raised 151 quarts of straw¬
berries this spring from a patch of
ground twenty feet square, At, 10
cents a quart an acre equally produc¬
tive would yield $d ,500.
An insane woman wive brought to
Beattie, Wash., from a ranch in the
interior of the state receutly, and sont
to an asylum. The supposed cause of
her insanity suggested by the doctors
was “the solitude of ranch life.”
The Krupp steel 139-ton gun has a
range of fifteen miles, and can lire
two shots a minute. The shot woigtm
2,600 pounds, and 701 pounds of pow
dod’ aro required for a charge. The
cost of a single round from thi s gun is
$1,500.
When pins were first invented they
were considered so great a luxury as
not to be lit for common use, and the
maker was not allowed to sell them in
an open shop except on two days of
the year at tho beginning of January.
A French engineer has conceived the
interesting idea of reproducing the
house in which Napoleon livod at St.
Helena ns an attraction during tho ex¬
hibition of 1900. Tho house will be
an exact, copy of the original, sur¬
rounded by piiuoramic canvasses, rep¬
resenting the natural surroundings.
An Elizabethan brown-stone jug
mounted in silver, 1581, woh sold at
the Clifdeu sale, in London, for $320;
a fitted Monteith withdion mask han¬
dles, 1700, 58 ounces, for $028; four
chased circular salt, cellars, two-handled 1741, 40
ounces, for $500; a fiat,
basin and cover, 1792, 12 ounces, for
$300; a Queen Anne salver, 1711, 276
ounces, for $1,813.
Shadow of the Future.
.7ttkey Cohen—Papa, I failed in my
school examination today.
His Father (patting him)—God bless
yon, mine boy, you will be a big busi¬
ness man some day. — F?srnhan(/c.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report
4 1 g % Baking Powder
ARSOUNrECY PURE
Household Hints.
Btrong ajurn water is efficacious as a
vermin destroyer.
Add a tea,spoonful of powdered bo¬
rax to tlio bath, as it will soften the
water arvd prove very invigorating.
In boiling rice, peas or macaroni,
save the water in which they wore
boiled for use in soups.
In making hard pudding sauce add
sugar gradually to butter, and it will
cream more quickly.
Poultry that is scalded will not keep
ns long as will poultry that has boon
dry-picked.
Thread a needle from the end of the
thread last cut from the spool.
GREAT BOOK FREE.
When Dr. K. V Bierce, of Buffalo, N. Y.,
pnhimhed . . . ... the first r , edition .... of ... his work, , The , r .
People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser,
he announced that after 680,000 copies had
been sold at the regular which price, $ 1.50 per
copy, the profit, on would repay him
for the great amount of lalror ar..l money
expended tribute the in next producing half million it, he free would As this din
number of < opies has already been sold, he
j s now distributing, absolutely fret. 500,000
copies of this .------------- most com
plate, interest- COUPON ing and val
the recipient only being' - required l£&3t mail
to
to him, at the above address, this little
coupon with tv,, nty-one (at) cents in one
cent stamp* to pay for postage ana pack
ing only , and the book will be sent by mail,
/t ;t veritable medical library, complete
in one volume. It contains-over moo papes
»«*''•'<*<: tha!l Y*> illustrations. The Free
Edition is precisely the same as those sold
at %\.yo except only that the books are
bound in strong manilla paper covers in
nt* ad of cloth. Send now before all are
given away. They are going off rapidly.
Fertilizers for Fall Crops
should contain a high percentage of Potash to
insure the largest yield and a permanent enrichment
m of the soil.
Write for our « « Farmers' Guide,” a 142 -page illustrated book. It
is brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent tree, and
will make and save you money. Address,
to GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York.
0N0E WRECKED.
BROKEN IN HEALTH.
N»w He Can Kan nnd Jump M JEqnal to m
Slxteeti-ypur-oW Boy M -Tho Effect
of Si* Itoxos of Pink Pills.
From the Messenger, Wilmington , N. O.
The following letter from George Bnaseli,
a sttlzca o/Laurinburg, N. O., will prove of
Interest to many of our readers who mary t >9
suffering from that dreaded disease-—rheu
Lacsin uvao, N. 0., April 3, 161*9.
Dr. Williams’ Medlsins Company, Bohan
ootaily. N. Y.
Gentlemen :—During the summer of 1888 I
hail a severe attuck of typhoid fever whlsh
left my constitution in a wrecked and broken
down condition. Ever afterwards I had to
bo very careful not to get tho least damp for
if 1 did on attack of rheumatism would be the
result. X was able, however, to attend to
business the most ot my time though I could
never say that I was whll. I continued this
way till the summer ol 1894 when I was
taken with a more severe attack of rheuma*
tism whioh commenced first In tho back of
my head and neck, then my shoulders be¬
came involved, t suffered untold agonies,
could not rest day or night, could got iu no
position that would give me rest oven for a
few moments, could not sleep more than 15
minutes at any one time, had no appetite, my
Hush was reduced till I weighed only 121 lbs.
Tho disease moved down or roilier hips, spread tft
the sranl) of ihe back and into both the*
to the left knee Joint. I oould not walk up
the door steps, but had to crawl out and into
the hoiiBo. About this time I wus taken with
a shortness of breath which one doctor pro¬
nounced heart dropsy, ijnother an excess of
water in tho chest. I l-hvo up all hopes of
over getting any tmtnm or wen living for
more I him a few months. I wrote many of
my relations that 1 did not expect to live but
a very short time. Of course! had lieen under
tho care of men who called themselves good
doctors all this time; 1 bait six of them to at¬
tend me during my stnknoss. I tried every¬
thing that I could get t hot was said to benefit
people who had rheumatism, but iusteod of
getting relief I continued to grow worse.
One day a friend onmo to visit me, and like
all other friends, Dr. had a remedy for my ills.
Her remedy was Williams' l’lnk Bills for
Bale People. Who showed me a paper whioh
praised nod fuilh them in very tnom, highly. and I told for tbe her article that I
no ot*
In tho paper, it wns nothing but more
bosh. But like a drowning man that will
catch at a straw 1 concluded to try the pills,
I I commenced took si* boxes to and get better well, from the appetite (list day. is
am my
good, I sleep well, have gained in flesh from
121 lbs. to 109 lbs. I have been In the rain
till l was literally drenched without ex¬
periencing any annoyance ufterwards. I
eon run, jump, hop anil skip equal to a nlx
teen-yoar-old boy.
Any one doubting this statement earn bo
satlsttod by writing me.
Yours truly,
GEORGE RUBSELIs
Mr. George Russell lias tills day appeared
In person before me, a J iiatleo of tho B*'«ce
fur Iliehmond County, N. 0., and made oath
that the statement eontaluod In this mnnu- tiS
soript Is true tn every particular. Hworn
before me this 18th (lay of April. 1896.
M. K. Jones J. P.
Dr. Williams’ l’lnk Pills euro alt forms of
weakness arising from a watery condition of
the blood or shattered ill nerves that flesh two is fruiting lietr
of almost every trv
These pills are also a speelfle fortho troubles
peculiar to females, such an supjireseions. all
forma of weakness, chronic constipation,
bearing down pains, cite., and In tho cnee of
men will give speedy relief and effect a pe*
wiuuxit cure in all eases arising from men¬
ial worry, overwork or oxeeasee of what cvek
nature.
I>r. Williams’ l’lnk Pills contain all the ali¬
ments necessary to givo now life and rloh,
ness to tho blood, and restore shattornfl
nerves. They are manufactured by tho Dr.
Williams’ Medicine Go., Schenectady, ft. Y..
and are sold only in boxes bearing the firm’s
trado-mark and wrapper nt 50 cents a sold box, of
six Ik ex o<4 for sfU.flO, ami are never in
hulk or by the dozen or hundred.
How .Itmixif! Counted.
Teacher—Now, Jimmie, it you ate
three apples at two cents a piece then
four apples at ono cent apiece, what
would the cost be?
Jimmie—Ob, about $12, I believe.
Our doctor is a steep one.— Exchange,.
“My mother-in-law never under¬
stands a joke,” says a correspondent.
“Ho I was surprised to receive a let¬
ter from her a few weeks after my lit¬
tle boy had swallowed a farthing, “itae in
which tho last words wore:
Ernest got over his financial diffii"ci¬
ties yet?”— Tid-nus.
Walking Wmild Olh’ii be a f’Jetmiirc
were it not for conn*. These pent® arer«moved
with Hi ride room*. at druicgtatfs.
osboukte’s
M S /Mined4 oi/eae
1 ' '
A Sit
School of Bhorth.oncl
AVJOIJMTA. GA.
.Vo text books unfid. Actual mi annus from d<ty of
ring. lirjejMH.K imp**m, Cftilflgfi curr*noy <’ aad
gooC i-i mod. Sond for h*na nouioiy Ulu tttOtl OAbit -
loguG. Hoard ch«ap . R. K. fare pad t* ujrnM a.
HOTEL TYBEE
TYBKB ISLAND, (iA.
Thi Hotel in n oOxi for tt*t "xotultont s*»rvi ;e* an')
Npiortdid cu tho ain«, »h- afford* table* bging imppiind ahrindant with supply nil fch® of
Wciicacco*- ni&rk«t Ah
fiith, • fib's Bbnmp, !»oa> firm *»n
Luiffm J for *omou. Special .Specially iiiduc^manti !o«r rat o« this j uwofi.
Writ4s for tormti. U> DArtln nit
ten or more HOI I A N »V « OW.VN.
•me. PARKER’S
Jm| HAifJ BALSAM
ArraSI Olrmnw-t■ and beautifies growth. Ihe haiik
i* a lux'xrlant
Haver Hair to I’nila Its to Youthful Peatcro Color. Gray
&)<:. ■< tL and \> d.sc g "I unef Ct A UnigstUU hair failing.
«
A. N. U Thirty-two. ’DA.