Newspaper Page Text
Impure Blood
!TS^rsiCSt“S
cause pal/i and annoyance. By purifying
tho blood Hood’s Sarsaparilla completely
cures these troubles and clears the skin.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla overcomes that tired,
drowsy feeling so general at this season and
gives strength and vigor. Remember
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the only true blood purifier prominent¬
ly in tlio public eye today. $1 ; six for 95.
Hood’s Pills care tion. habitual Price 25 cents constipa¬
An Up-to-Date Theme.
“Well, Miss Yaesar, I suppose you
are busy on your graduating essay?”
“Yes.”
“What is your subject?”
“ ‘The Comparative Merits of Bona¬
parte, Trilby and Bicycling.’ ”— Har¬
per’s Bazaar.
A Ghastly Spectre
Disease is ever, but in no form is It more to be
dreaded than in that of tho formidable mala¬
dies which attack the kidneys and bladder.
Bright’s disease, diabetes and gravel may
alike be prevented, if inactivity of the kidneys
i-> rectified in time with Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters, sovereign also in cases of rheuma¬ bil¬
tism, dyspepsia, constipation, malaria,
iousness and nervousness.
The more honesty a man has, the less he af¬
fects the airs of a saint.
Dr. Kimer’s Swamp-Root cures
ali Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet Laboratory and Binghamton, Consultation N. free. Y.
Heaven will be inherited by every man who
has heaven in his soul.
They Cure The Cause.
Most of the di«com fort in life comes from
the stomac h. You’ll admit that without ar¬
gument. The proof is in your own stomach.
A great many seemingly different disordered diseases
come from the common cause—a
stomach. Comingfromonecause.it is natu¬
ral that they should nil be cured by one medi¬
cine. Ripsns Tabules not only- cure the dis¬
ease—they cure the cause. dyspepsia, biliousness,
headuche, They are good for dizziness and all
constipation, stomach, liver and bowels.
troubles of the
Drugg.sts sell them.
Tobacco Tattered and Tom.
Every day we meet tho man with shabby
olothes, sullow skin and shambling footsteps,
holding out a tobueco-palsied hand for tho
ehurity quarter. Tobacco destroys manhood
and the happiness of perfect vitality. No
To-Bac is guaranteed to cure just such eases,
and it’s charity to make thorn try. Sold
under guarantee to euro by Druggists every¬
where. Book free. Ad. Sterling Remedy Co.,
New York City or Chicago.
A Prominent Doctor Spunks.
He is not talking about medical ethics, quite
the contrary. The scientist is eager >o grasp
truth in whatever field it may be found, and
the fact that Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy is so
meritorious calls forth from him a tostimon
iah
“Chipley, Ga., August 4, 1804.—Dr. C. O. Ty¬
ner, Atlanta,Ga.: I think it is due you that I
should say ,nat Tyner’s Ilian Dyspepsia all Remedy
has done more, for me other prepara¬
tions that I have tried. 1 think it is a valua¬
ble remedy for chronic dyspepsia and indi¬
gestion. It has cured me. I hope you may be
able to cure all dyspeptics. Dh. Q. They T. Purskll." are legion,
Mrs. W.in- ow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind coiic. 25c. a bottle
Wliat a Sense of Relief it is to Know
that you have no corns. Hindercoms removes
them, and is comforting. 15c. at druggists.
0
fiSk w-NKfi
7.
: * y
1 mm
m H
0^35 BNJOYa
Both the tnethod and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, the
effectually, dispels colds, head¬ sys¬
tem
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup kind of Figs is tho
only duce^ remedy pleasing of its the ever and pro¬
to taste ac¬
ceptable to the stomach, prompt in
its action and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared agreeable only from substances, the most
healthy and qualities commend its it
many excellent
to all and have made it the most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for Bale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug¬
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. l)o not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO. CAL.
LOUISVILLE, KY. NEW YORK. N Y.
ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR
★ THE BEST *
i\ Dyspeptic,Delicate,lntirm . «» ]• + t -P anu A
x p 'T* L* TV LJ "D LiiO O UliO
i
* JOHN CARLE & S0N3, New York. *
THE OGLETHORPE
Brunswick in’its Ca
This is the fine-r Hotel The appointments supplied
south of ba.timore. able is
ThVcul-mS attentive?. ifex^tenL .b^njUlthjyear-^JRar^rea- e and sen->e n “rompt
and J. H. STILW ELL, Manager.
aonabie.
■. ........ ....... - ,,i ei: ..ffii-i
tn timrx ftrYifi hT ft <■
GO NSUM'P^lQN
FQR«a j^yilTli!) g?.
* 1 <r^W)\\ .// 1 1 tl \ / — 5
No Italian girl can marry without a
dowry.
Scarlet is mourning color for un¬
married women in Brazil.
Kansas has twenty-five newspapers
which are edited by women.
The Empress Elizabeth of Russia
was one of the stoutest women of her
time.
Mrs. Siddons was large, with very
striking features, and an air of great
personal dignity.
Eight ladies hold commissions as
colonels in the German army. They
are all queens or princesses.
Queen 'Victoria has signed but one
death warrant, and that was for an
execution in the Isle of Man.
The British matron is nettled by
Daudet’s caustic observations ou her
lack of physical charms and of taste of
dress.
Princess de Polignac, formerly Win
naretta Singer, daughter of the great
sewing machine man, is said to bo the
best amateur musician in Paris.
The Empress of Austria says she will
never wear anything but black here¬
after, and is distributing her court
dresses among her intimate friends.
A movement is on foot to erect a
memorial to the late Christina Rosetti
in Christ Church, Woburn Square,
London, where she worshiped for
twenty years.
A number of girl students in the
University of Michigan decided to
wear knickerbockers hereafter. They
expect that all the girls in the uni¬
versity will follow their example.
Miss Carrie Liebig, who has just
been appointed a division surgeon of
the Northern Pacific Railroad at Hope,
Idaho, is the first woman physician to
be appointed in the railway service.
A number of women are making a
good income in Philadelphia design¬
ing and drawing pictures for illustra¬
ting the newspaper advertisements of
the big retail mercantile advertise¬
ments.
It is the suggestion of a thrifty wo¬
man that pieces of children’s dresses
of wash materials should be included
in several launderings to secure the
requisite change of color that will
make patches unnoticeable.
“Mme. La Presidente,” as Mine.
Faure is called in Paris, is described as
the highest type of French womanly
character. She abhors scandal, disap¬
proves of flirtation, loves her homo
and frowns upon all risque tendencies
in Parisian society.
Miss Boswell, the only woman dele¬
gate in the Republican Convention at
Cleveland, is decidedly handsome,
though of delicate physique. She has
what is described as “warm colored”
hair, transparent complexion and ex¬
pressive brown eyes.
The up-to-date ladies of the Trinity
Protestant Episcopal Church in Tow- with
son, Md., are raising money
which to buy a bicycle for the rector
of the church, which he is to use in
making pastoral visits and in attend¬
ing to other parish duties.
* The college at Benzonia, Mich., is
thirty-two years old, but had its first
graduation this term. The scholar is
a girl who took an eight years’course,
carried off all the class honors because
she was the whole class, was honored
with Ph. P., and is a new woman.
Marie Corelli, tho novelist, who has
been much talked of recently in Eng¬
land, is in private life Miss Minnie
Mackay, daughter of the late Charles
Mackay. Her first book, “A Romance
of Two Worlds,” was published in
1886, when she was twenty-two years
old.
The old homestead of Jane Grey
Swisshelm in Swissvale, Penn., is the
Mecca of many visitors to Pittsburg.
Mrs. Swisshelm was the first woman
engaged to report Washington news
for a daily newspaper. She was em¬
ployed for that purpose by Horace
Greeley.
A woman angler, Miss E. T. Cros¬
by, caught thirty-one trout, averag¬
ing three-quarters of a pound each,
in thirty minutes at Rangeley Lake,
Me., a few days ago. She is noted in
that region for her skill with the rod,
having earned the sobriquet of “Fiy
Rod” by her achievements.
It is said that Queen Victoria has
had a chair constructed which will
support her in a standing position
while receiving visitors. The chair is
cunningly arranged, so that its form
is covered^with regal draperies, and
report says it would deceive any one
who didn’t know it was there.
Lady Randolph Churchill, formerly
Miss Jerome of New York, widow of
Lord Randolph Churchill, is now to
be seen in Paris in the smartest cycling
version of mourning. It is added that
she wears a black alpaca suit edged
with black leather knickerbockers,
concealed by a short skirt and a black
; straw hat.
Suburban women may be seen
boarding the trains these days for a
town shopping expedition carrying
flat wicker baskets in lieu of bags or
satchels for their small pick-ups.
These are in the basket-fawn and
light-brown shades or of dull red, and
are both lighter and prettier than the
leather bag.
There is a very evident intention
on the part of designers to modify the
Dutch bonnet that had such a sudden
j boom early in the season. The
j is becoming to but jj very few, keep and the the
3 ^ a p e j g not a eaS y to on
head. The bonnet with a round
i crown is every way more desirable,
and may be trimmed at the sides and
arranged so that it is broai without
being hard to manage.
AliA"™ e^P'^TOigreN &?oy1\VK
A List of Reliable Atlanta Bus¬
iness Houses where visitors
to the Great Show will be
properly treated and can pur¬
chase goods at lowest prices 1
STILSON & COLLINS
JEWELRY CO •9
55 Whitehall St., Atlanta. Ga.
Everything In the Jewelry and Silver
Line at Factory Prices.
PHILLIPS & CREW CO.
37 Peachtree Street.
STANDARD
Pianos and Organs.
SHEET MUSIC,
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
ATLANTA
DENTAL COLLEGE
Equipment New and Complete.
INFIRMARY PRACTICE FULL.
(Session 1S95-C Opens October 8th, 1805.
Closes March 24th, 1800,
For further particulars address
WM. CRENSHAW, D. D. S., Dean.
Grant llnliding, Atlanta. Ga.
CISEMAN Iin| BROS. 5
15 and 17 Whitehall Street.
ATLANTA, GA.
-ONE PRICE
CIjOTIIIEILS,
Tailors, Hatters and Furnishers.
Fine Millinery-*
BOWMAN BROS.,
78 Whitehall Street,
Now in New York City Buying En¬
tirely New Stock.
Open Bept, 2nd.
D TO AVOID THIS TTS^S
0 N TETTERINE
s t The only painless and harmless
o ▼ 1 CURE for the worst, typo of Eczema,
R r ot on' S B Tol‘: u ^a a hp «”p'
A e a a 8
v TP Ground itch, chafes, chaps, pira
^HSavannah, Fn siioiV au" iTCHEsf semi sue. in
xto. < Ga. 1 , \ < ar'aue' box, U ?f’yoor
You Will find it at't'iH T ynLu’s. Atlanta.
AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY
AND
RHUBARB
—FOR—
Dysentery, Flux,
Cliolcra Morbim*
Cholera, Diarrhoea
—AND—
Hummer Complaint»
Try It. Price 25c., 50c., $1.00.
For Sale by Druggists or write to
J". Stovall Smith,
M A N U F ACTURING PH A K M A 01ST.
102 Whitehall St., Corner Mitchell,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
SULLIVAN A CRICHTON’S
AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND.
The bent and cheapest Business College in America.
Time short. Instruction thorough. 4 Penmen.
Big demand for graduates. Catalogue free.
KELLIVAN k CKICHTON, Kl»»r Bid®., Atlanta, <>a.
GRAND OPENING.
THE
Blood worth Shoe Co.
AUGUST 12tli.
14 Whitehall Street.
SHOES AT LOWEST PRICES.
Wit ITE OK (’ALL.
COXi; COLLEGE
frrrimmi ill
rrnimmf; %
m,
SOUTHERN FEMALE COLLEGE,
Over fifty years under the control of one
family, and in their fuJJ pofMession forty-five
years, has been removed from LaGranRe,Ga M
and opens its 63rd session in Manchester
(College Park ). Atlanta. September 11,1#95.
i The new brick building, with electric mod lights,
water-work?, steam-heating, ac com a u-s
300 hoarders. Campus of 2S acres. Ubrary,
; museum, laboratory, telescope. Thirty in
faculty. Mrs. Sallie Cox Stanton and Miss
Alice Cox,Directors of Music. Pupils attend
Exposition: Alummc Pay. Nov.7. European
party next summer. ADDRESS C. C. COX,
PRES., OR W. S. COX, BUS. MANAGER,
MANCHESTER, GEORGIA.
^___ ~ _ _____ ______________ _
Old Virginia Ketchup.
-
Take one peck of green tomatoes,
half a peck of white onions, three
ounces of \yhite mustard seed, one
ounce each of allspice and cloves, half
a pint of mixed mustard, an ounce of
black pepper and celery seed each,
and one pound of brown sugar, writes
Eliza R. Parker in an article on
“Home Pungent Ketchups,” in the
July Ladies’ Horne, Journal. Chop
the tomatoes and onions, sprinkle with
salt and let stand three hours; drain
the water off; put in a preserve kettle
with tne other ingredients, cover
with vinegar and set on tho fire to
boil slowly for one hour.
-meTox roiie**-.
*.>uth ra Femai-o.Heee, removed from
LaGran, Ga., to Manchester, near Atlanta, family
has h-en iiicharze of the 11- con-Cox
over fifty years. In the new location the fa¬
cilities; dim ar:<l advantatn s of the College are
oled. an«l it i ow stands in the tront rank
of Southern colleges.
LOVE 13 A. GOD.
Lovo is no bird that nests and flint
Nor rose that buds and blooms and ilios,
No star that shines and disappears,
No flro whoso ashes strew the years;
Love is the god who lights the star,
Makes music of the lark’s desire;
Love tells the rose what perfumes are.
And lights and feeds the deathless lire.
Love is no joy that dies apace
With tho delight of dear embrace;
Love is no toast of wine and broad,
Ited-vintaged and gold-harvested;
Love is the god whose touch divino
On handsthat clung and lips that kissed,
Has turned life's common broad and wine
Into tho Holy Eucharist.
HUMOR OP THE HAY.
Truth is not stranger than good (lo¬
tion.—Puck.
Cultured poople are peoplo who
know how to look nt you without see¬
ing you.—Galveston News.
Mary had a little lambs
With her it used to stray,
But it ilod when Mary road her pioco
On graduation day.
—Washington Star.
Ransom—“Women are weilileil to
fashion.” Ramson— “Yes, and they
love, honor and obey it, too.”—Tit*
Bits.
Man with tho gloomy liver,
Ceaso to deplore thy fate;
Got out toward tho river
And go to digging bait!
—Atlanta Constitution.
Kate Field tells the girl graduates
that cooking is the alphabet of their
happiness. Many of them never get
any further than lot bor bo.—Lowell
Courier.
Tommy’s Pop— “Why is it tho little
boy who lives across tho stroet seems
to have no friends ?” Tommy—“Why, ”—
his father’s a baseball umpire.
Philadelphia Record,
Casey—‘That raado Mulligan fall
off de ladder? Did his fut shlip?”
Reilly-“It did not. Ot told him a
joko an hour ago, an’ euro ho jist now
tumbled.”—Philadelphia Rocord.
I lovo to swing upon tho gate,
Say, just at eventide; weight
That is, it it will bear the
Of some one else beside.
—Now York Herald.
Principal (to now apprentice)— what
“Has the bookkeeper told you
you havo to do in tho afternoon?”
Youth—“Yes, sir. I was to waken
him whon I saw you coming.”—Da
henn.
Lumleigh-“What makes you think
young Photllttr Wait© is 0- (lrillUDlor
for a bicycle concern ?” Chutnleigh
-“Anybody Can HOC that. He OUT*
*ios samples in his head. ’’-New York
World.
Grant—“Can it bo possible that
Hawkins is in lovo with that fat girl?
Why, she weighs 300 at loast. ” Ilohhs
— “No; I don’t believo ho’s in lovo;
he’s just lnfatutttod.” — Boston
Courier.
She (in the art gallery) —“I wonder
if my hat is on straight; He—"Naturally everybody
stares at me so.”
they do. You’re tho most perfect cards
picture here.” And now tho
are ou t.—Philadelphia Record.
Mrs. McBride (entering the kitchen)
—“Bridget, didn’t I soo that police¬
man kiss you?” Bridget— “Well,
mum, sure an’ yez wouldn’t hcv mo
lay mesilf opiu to arrist for rosistiu’
an officer, mum?”—Harper’s Bazar.
Why does tho poet look so sad?
Why is his life a wreck?
He always gets his poems bac :,
And never gets a check.
A correspondent of a poultry jour¬
nal asks: “Have hons enough in¬
stinct to distinguish between a real
egg and the porcelain counterfeit?”
Wo think they havo. A hen never
lays a porcelain egg. —Norristown
Herald.
Commuter—“What do you mean
by saying that that house is only five
minutes from tho station? It’s fifteen
minutes if it’s a second.” Real Estato
Dealer—“When I said five minutes
I supposed you had a bicycle.”—Bos¬
ton Transcript.
Bmart—“Whatever induced your
uncle to marry tho widow of a man
who had been hanged?” Simpson— be¬
“He has been married to widows
fore, and said ho was tired of having
the virtues of former husbands flung
in his face. ”—Spare Moments.
Husband (whose wife has been reprov¬
ing him for smoking in her presence)
—“You often used to say before wo
were married: ‘Oh George, I do so
love the odor of a good cigar.’ ” Wifo
— “Yes, thnt sort of thing is part of a
young lady’s capital. ”—Texas Siftings.
“Do you believe,” said the inquisi¬
tive man, “that these poets who writo
so exquisitely about tho delights of
early rising ever tried it themselves?”
“Certainly not,” replied the sluggard.
“If they had they would never havo
written in that way about it.”—Wash¬
ington Star.
“I have come to ask for your daugh
ter’s hand, Mr. Herrick,” Baid young
Waller, nervously. “Oh, well, you
can’t have it,” said Herrick. “I’m
not doling out my daughter on the in
stalment plan. When you feel that
you can support the whole girl, you
may call again.”—Harper’s Bazar.
“Doctor,” asked the sick man, roll
jng up his eyes till only the whites
showed, “why is it that in the days
when I ate no melons except stolen
ones they never bothered mein the
least, and now that I am a man and
buy my melons as an honest man
should, they tie me up in seven kinds
of knots?”—Indianapolis Journal.
Bass—“And of which variety is your
the clinging-vine or the self-as
gertive? » Cass—“A little of both,
When she wants a new dress or a new
bonnet, she generally begins in tho
elinging-vine role; if that doesn’t
bring the money, then she changes to
the self-assertive, and- well-sho in¬
i variably gets the dress or tho bonnot.”
; —Boston Transcript.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
RfeilBB
Absolutely pure
ODDS AND ENDS.
Two catfish, one weighing 35 pounds
and tho other 42 pounds, wore found
in a saw log in a Minnesota mill tho
other day.
Bicyclists must first learn to ride
fairly well before they aro allowed to
use their wheels in tho publio streets
of Russian cities.
The acreage planted to corn in Kan¬
sas this year is reported as 8,410,948
acres, which is groater than ever be¬
fore planted in this state.
A pair of Siameso twin eggs were I
laid by a lieu at Uuiou Springs, Ala., a
few days ago. The eggs were perfectly
formed, though small, and were joiued
together by a hollow neek of shell.
Missouri furnishes the government
oavalry horses at from $17 to $75 each.
In some of the Pacific states a horse
can be bought for $2 or $3, and is con¬
sidered to be worth less than a good
shoep dog.
Merely Synonymous.
“I’ve always said,” romnrked Mr.
Scrubbles, "that too much education
jest amounted to maltin’ peoplo furgit
all about common sense.”
“What’s the matter?”
“My daughter, this mornin’, asked
me how I folt. I told her I was in
purty shape. “Oh, papa,” said she,
like she was goiu’ to faint, ‘don’t you
know that lmd sliapo is bad form?’
Ez if anybody didn’t know that!”
I. \\
W_VV>
Pair Sailing through life for the person
who keeps in health. With a torpid liver
and the impure blood all that sorts follows of ailments. it, you
are an easy prey to
That “ used-up ” feeling is tilt- firs: warning
that your liver isn’t doing its work. Pierce’s Gold¬
That is the time to take Dr.
en Medical Discovery. As disease an appetizing, and build
restorative tonic, to repel strength, there's
up the needed flesh and
nothing to equal it. It rouses every organ
into healthful action, purifies and enriches
the blood, braces up the whole system, and
restores health and vigor.
HOTELTYBEE
TYBKK ISLAND, <iA.
Tbi* Hotel in noted for its excellent service and
splendid on wine, the table being supplied with all the
eelioaoioH the market afford h* An abundant eupply of
firth, orubf, shrimp, etc. Leon's firm orchestra «m
WAged for season- Specially low rates this »*asori.
Write for terms. Special inducements to part,in* of
ten or more* IIOII AN «V'< t (I WAN.
It’s only a
question of time
about your using Pearline. So it
n seems to us. It seems as if every
later, bright woman must see, sooner or
how much easier and quicker and
better and more economical is
/ I Pearline’s way than any
other known way of washing.
You can’t think of any draw
back or objection to it that hasn’t been met and
disproved, a thou- j O I Pearline sand times over. Ask Millions of
women are using ! \ it rightly, now. how much some she
one of them, who uses
saves by it. Manu- factured only by Jas. Pyle, N. Y.
— — • -■ 0 m
.
An elegant book for
your table and constant
reference. Send for it
Yes, it’s read y! NOW. It’s New and
Nice. . * . ‘ .
OUR NEW CATALOGUE
brimming full of illustrations, and show¬
ing how the thousand-and-one things
really look. You’ll like that.
j fe y-Scnt by mail on There are Guns, Rifles, Pistols—from
receipt of io cents in all over the world, and some of our own
make—Fishing Tackle, Dog Collars and
postage stamps or Chains, Tennis Sets, etc., etc.
money. You can see our LOVELL DIAMOND
BICYCLE—The Finest Wheel on Earth,—
the Williams Typewriter—you ought to
have one. There’s lots of other things too.
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO BOSTON,
» « MAtfo.
Sole E. 8. Agent for “ STATE’ AUTOMATIC PAPER FASTENER.
tfs ^ ^ ft ft
j -
/» f
II- '/lib V_ I 17) olvlll
A of farming gradually exhausts land,
\f the unless a Fertilizer containing a
high percentage of Potash is used. Better crops, a better soil, and a
© larger bank account can only then he expected. ©
6 is brim Write full for of useful our "Farmers’ information Guide,” for farmers. a 142 -page It will illustrated be sent book. free, and It
will make and save you money. Address,
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York. >.
Marriageable Dukes.
Young ladies who wish to possess
titles are informed that there are still
six marriageable dukes in England,
namely, Grafton, age 84; Richmond,
age 77; Norfolk,age 38; Marlborough,
ago 24; Roxburghe, age 19, and Man¬
chester, age 18.
Taken at name.
MoElren’s Wine of Carilut relieves the agony
endured by many women month after month
In modest silence. It is reoommondod by
many physicians as the most effective retnody
known for painful menstruation. The treat
meat ran he adopted,In the privacy of homo,
without submitting to humiliating examlna
tionsor consulting a doctor.
Mrs. W. L. Mitchell, of Pratt Minos, Ala.,
writes; “For the past six months 1 have suf¬
fered awful pains at the time of my monthly
poriods. A few months ago my husband got
me somo McElroo’a Wine of Cardui. .Since
using that I haven’t felt a pain. I can't glv 9
it all tho praise it should have."
J. W. Pollard, Pleasant Ridge, Miss., gays :
“McElroe’s Wine of Cardui cured my wlfo
after four doctors hail failed.”
llow’e This!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by
llali’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney .ft Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney for the last 15 years, and believe him per¬
fectly and financially honorable able 1 u all business transactions obliga
to carry out any
tlon made by their firm.
Wist A Thu ax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Wamiino, Druggists, Kinnan Toledo, .ft Ohio. Makvin, Wholesale
Hall’s Catarrh < lure is taken internally, act¬
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Price, 73e. per bottle.
Bold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
I’lso’s Cure for Consumption relieves the
most obstinate coughs. Ib v. D. liuuHMUEL
J.IEH, Lexington, Mo., Feb. 24, ’114.
Parker’s Ginger Tonic Is Popular
for good work. Suffering, sleepless, nervous
women find nothing so soothing and reviving.
GOOD POSITIONS
SECURED BY STUDENTS
Business Fins Supplied with Help
Richmond's Commercial College,
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Send for Catalogue. SAVANNAH, GA,
OSBORNE’S
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banka liked. A1IGUMTA, GA. of
No text Actual limimon* from any
mitering. Uu»Uinr*H Papers, college currmior and
Rood* uned, Hand for R. hanuHomely Illustrated oats*
rogue. Hoard cheap. It. tare paid to Augusta,
H PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
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A. N. U ........... ......Thirty-three, ’95.