Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, August 23, 1895, Image 3

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Had to Protect Himself. Big(t—Why do you wear rubbers in Bnoh dry weather? Riggs—Everybody on my street has a lawn sprinkler. — Chicago Record. The Sworn Tormentors Of the Spanish Inqu sition never inflicted tor tur. s ruore dreadful than those endured by the victim of mflammatory vheuiuatism. The chronic form of this < bstinate malady is Miflici^ntly 'Mth H> pa nful. Arrest it at the avoid start stetter's stomat h Bitters and h com ins a ufelbng martyr. The Bitters will lemove ma aria and kidney complaints, dys¬ ralgia, pepsia, - ti tipation, debility nervousness and hastens and neu¬ lescence. ivm^..y conva¬ Be careful to make friendship the child, and r.ot the father, of virtue. I*iirc and Wholesome Quality Commends to public approval the California liquid laxative remedy, Syrnp of Figs. It is pleasant to the taste and by acting gently on the kidney, liver and towels to clean=e the sys¬ tem effectually, it promotes the health and comfort of all who use it, and with millions it is the best and only remedy. The personal pronoun “I” should he the coat-of-aim s of so me indivi duals. Dr. Ki mer’s Swamp-Root cures ali Kidney and Bladder troubles. Pamphlet and Consultation free. Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y. The most amiable people are those who least wound tlie self-love of others. lu tlie Police Court—Tried and Judgment in its Favor. Some time ago Judge Andy E. Calhoun, judge of the police court that of Atlanta, had oc i asion to pass a sentence was gratifying to him, and if people will take his advice much suffering will be alleviated. The Judge is subject to nervous sick headaches ana dys¬ pepsia. Here is his sentence: ‘‘I am a great sniferer from nervous sick headache and have found no remedy so effec¬ tive as Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy. If taken when the headache first begins it invariably cures.” Price 60 cents per bottle. For sale by all druggists. The Cox College. "We congratulate the management of the Southern Female (Cox) College upon the re¬ moval of the institution from LaGrange to the magnificent buildings at Manchi-ster, At¬ lanta’s most beauiiful suburb. This grand old institution is now better equipped in the va¬ rious departments, and has a larger and stronger with pleasure faculty learn than ever before, and it is we of the flattering pros¬ pects for a larger attendance this fall, A New View of Life. It is surprising how often the troubles of tills life spring from indigestion. And more surprising “I ’m blue,” how “My few in op e know it. You say, "1 or head feels queer,” or can’t sleep,” or "Everything frets me.” Nine timesin ten indigestion is at tlie bottom of all your would miseries, and a box of Ripans Tubules give you an entirely new view of life. Don’t Drag Your Feet. Many men do because the nerve centres, weakened by the long-continued use of to¬ bacco, become so a fleeted that they arc weak, tired, lifeless, listless, etc. All this can be easily overcome if the tobacco user wants to quit and gain manhood, nerve power, and enjoy vigorously the good things of life. Take No-To-Ilne. Guaranteed to cure or money refunded by Druggists everywhere. Book free. Tho Sterling Ilemedy Co., New York Cit y or Chicago. ©iOO Howard. $100. Tho readers of this paper least will dreaded l»e pleased to learn that there is at one disease that science ha 3 been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is the only positive cure now known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh constitutional being a con¬ stitutional disease, Catarrh requires Cure a is taken in¬ treatment. Hall’s ternally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de¬ stroying the foundation of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building in doing np the its constitution and assisting nature much faith in work. The proprietors have so its curative powers that they offer One Hun¬ dred Dollars for any case that it tails to cure, Bend for list of testimonials. Address , F. J. Chunky & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold by Druggists, 75c. FITS “topped free by Du. Koine’s Great Nerve Restorer. No fits after first dav’s use. Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bot¬ tle froe. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Fa. When You Come to Kealize that your corns are gone, ami no pain, how grateful you feel. The work of Hindercorns. 15c Piso’s Cure is the medicine to break up children’s Coughs and Colds.—Mr=». M. G. Blu>’t, Sprague, Wash., March 8 , ’94. Wife used “ Mothe RS’ Friend ” before first child—was quickly re lieved; suffered but little; recovery rapid. E. E. Johnston, Eufaula, Ala. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, tion, allays softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬ pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp¬ son’s Eye-water. Druggists sell at 25c per bottle. Makes the Weak Strong Hood’s Sarsaparilla tones and strengthens the dtgestivo organs, creates an appetite, and gives refreshing sleep. Remember Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the one True Blood Purifier. Hood’s PHIs •< 25e. The Greatest Hedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF RGXBURY, MASS. Has discovered In one of our common 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 two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certifi¬ cates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected It causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Liver or Boweis. This i 3 caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it. Read the labeL If the stomach Is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoouful in water at bed¬ time. Sold by ali Druggists. |i ir All ■ DT a d a^r,: for tfas- ccnn’.y to II/L ■ ■ Vf erer'kn Alt I introduce Permanent the f. work ste»t and «el large l»« *n Owensboro.K, par. Jmicbiri-'L Pcslxsb ■ >« C , Risers c Best i in time. Sola by crvgg.ets -1 I , s The Empress of Germany is making quite a reputation as an after-dinner speaker. Prinoess Helene, who recently mar ried the Duke of Aosta, is an enthu¬ siastic sportswoman. Miss Emily Faithful during the lat ter years of her life smoked cigarettes incessantly for nervousness. Labouchere, of London Truth, pro gressive in most matters, is opposed to the use of the bicycle by women. Florence, Italy, is rejoicing in the visitation of a party of fifty American young women who have settled at San Donato and go sketching in a body. Pupils in the Chicago Art Institute design lace handkerchiefs, buckles, combs and calendars, as well as wall papers, rugs, iron lamps, fireplaoes and grates. Lady Lytton, widow of the author of “Lucille,” who has just received an appointment in the British royal household, is said to bo in quite re¬ duced circumstances. Paris may evolve another Marie Bashkirtsetf fever out of the sad case of Motoysi Savian, a young Japanese poet who has just died in poverty and neglect in one ef her hospitals. Those who have seen her say the Queen of Madagascar is the handsom¬ est of crowned women. She dresses in abominable taste, and dresses her¬ self overlavishingly with jewels. Mother Mary Gouzaga, who is uaid to bo the oldest sister of charity in the United States, celebrated the sixty-ninth anniversary of her initi¬ ation into the order at Philadelphia recently. Japanese women never discuss their servants. To do so would be contrary to Japanese etiquette. They may talk of dress, the theatre, the music, and the rest, but tribulations must not be referred to. The number of women studying at the University of Geneva is constantly on the increase. This year 128, or twenty-fivo per cent, of all the stu¬ dents are women, most of them Rus¬ sians or Poles, Sir Henry Irving says that English women are singularly undemonstra¬ tive. Although women admire him greatly and often form the larger part of his audiences, ho gets his applauso almost entirely Irotn tho men. Amelia Sternecker has invented a fender for trolley cars which will be given a trial by the San Francisco electric railways. She is but seventeen years of age, but has had a passion for machinery since her early child¬ hood. Mile. Marie Lafargue, who has scored such a brilliant operatic suo oooa in Londun, was discovered in the Basque provinces by Comtesso de la Rochefoucauld, who sent her to the Paris Conservatory, where she won the first prize. Long as she has been an English¬ woman, the Princess of Wales has never quite mastered tho English ac¬ cent. She cannot manage the letter “r,” and “channel” she pronounces “shaunel,” besides other little foreign peculiarities. A prize of fifty gold dollars, offered by the philosophy and science depart¬ ment of the Chicago Women’s Club for original investigation by women students in the University of Chicago, has not been awarded this year, tho work submitted being not up to the required standard. Miss Ramsey, the young lady who has gained a first class in the moral sciences tripos at Cambridge, England, is a cousin to Mrs. Montagu Butler, tho wife of the Master of Trinity, a lady who in 1887 took higher honors in classics than any male student achieved in her year. In the cities of Japan there is a large olass of women who make their living by furnishing amusement to ennuied female patrons. They are well educated, can converse, recite poetry, tell stories, sing songs, play the guitar and dance for the enter¬ tainment of those who send for them. Tacoma, Wash., claims the only woman Custom House broker on the Northern Pacific coast. She is Miss Florence B. Moffat, daughter of a steamboat captain, and is said to be actively interested in shipping inter¬ ests and to know more on matters of transportation and commerce than many men in the business. The lady upon whom the great Cav¬ endish bestowed the proud titlo of “Queen of American Whist Players,” Miss Kate I. Wheelock, i3 a Milwau¬ keean—a petite, fascinating woman, engaging in manner and intellectual in appearance. She has been playing whist for fifteen years and teaching the game for ten years. At a meeting the other evening in London of the Healthy and ArPstic Dress Association several of the women present wore a costume of jacket, short petticoat reaching to the knees, and sandals instead of shoes. In this garb they look like old woodcuts of Captain Kidd. A Mrs. Relsey urgod all her sisters to wear knickerbockers, notwithstanding tho taunts of their tyrants. Princess Maud, of England, lately appeared balloon-tired in Battersea Park mounted on a Connaught, “safety.” The Duchess of ; being yet a learner, prefers to take her daily practice for the present in the seclnd ed walks of Buckingham Palace gar dens. Meantime the Marchioness of Londonderry, Lady Brassey, and the Princess Henry, of Piess, rank among the most graceful and expert of rid ers. SELECT SITtWGS, In the Rosin Bible the word rosin was substituted for balm. A snow-white coon has been caught in Livingston County, Kentucky. It is said that the eordago on a first* class man of war costs about $15,000. The tunnels of the world are osti* mated to number about 1142, with a total length of 514 miles. The dome of the Palais de Justice in Brussels, Belgium, is made of pa* pier mache and weighs sixteen tons, One of the most brilliant and suc¬ cessful students at the California State University is Newell Perry, who is totally blind, Gideon Strong, a Knox County (Tennessee) man, fired a gun to drive a burglar away and scarod his own daughter to death. Two eighty-five-year-old citizens of Camden, Mo., are to have ft walkiug match fnom that town to Boston to decide which is tho spryest. At West Bockport, Mo., Daniol Andrews, who is ninety-six, recently helped to string 200 rods of wire fence over Spruce Mountain. Mrs. Henry Mucklovane, of Bran¬ don, Texas, gavo birth to a girl that weighs only three-quarters of a pouud. Mother and father aro of the average | size. Tho child is doing well, Schlegel, who lectured in Latin at the age of seventy-two, had a peculiar stimulant. He always had his snuff¬ box in his hand when lecturing, as, without it, he fancied ho could not get on. Tho area of the United States, in¬ cluding Alaska, is 3,602,990 square miles. Alaska’s area is 577,390 square milos. The area of the Dominion of Canado, including lakos and rivers, is 3,456,000 square miles. A Manistiquo (Mich.) poultry fan¬ cier hopes to raise a brood of chick¬ ens that won’t scratch by crossing a short-legged creeper with a long legged Shanghai, tho offspring having one short and one long leg. Chillicotho, Mo., is to follow tho example of a number of AVestern towns and revive tbe curfew bell. It is to ring at nino o’clock, and will be a signal for all children under four¬ teen to hurry home, under penalty of arrest. The skeleton of a white woman was found recently at the mouth of White Bird Creek, on tho Salmon River, in Northwestern Idaho. It is believed to be that of a Mrs. Manuel, who was captured by tho Chief Joseph Indians from a pioneer train in that region in 1877. A prospector from the Pend d’Oreillo district came into Hope, Idaho, a week or so ago to sell the furs he had gath¬ ered in odd moments of trapping dur¬ ing his winter’s mining operations. He had the skins of seven bears, eight beavers, eighteen martens, and a num¬ ber of wolf, fox and other pelts. A Witchcralt Case In Pennsylvania. A belated case of superstition has just been brought to light by a suit entered at| Lancaster, Penn., by Abraham N. Herr, a young farmer re¬ siding near Bird-in-Hand. lie charges Mrs. Fanny Cosgrove, an elderly wo¬ man of Lancaster, with violating the act of Assembly against fortune-tell¬ ing, alleging that “for lucre, or train, she pretended to foretell future John events, and that she put a spell on Herr’s enemies.” John Herr is an uncle of the prosecutor. Tho latter is the son of Jacob Herr, a wealthy farmer. Father and son are, it seems, firm bo livers in fortune-telling and witch¬ craft, and they believe that their horses had been bewitched by an enemy. Jacob and his son, Abraham, it is said, met Mrs. Cosgrove, who told their for¬ tune and affected to give tho names of the persons who had tho father be •tfftohed. Through the various meth¬ ods employed by tho woman in dealing with her victim she is charged with having destroyed Ins peaco of mind, and his son finally prosecuted her, his principal object being to compel her to divulge the names of those asso¬ ciated with her in her practices. Tho woman was held for trial at court.— Philadelphia Ledger. The Royal Crown ol England. •The crown used at the coronation of Queen Victoria in 1838, which is said to be the heaviest and most uncom¬ fortable diadem in Europe, contains 1273 rose diamonds, 1363 brilliants, 273 round pearls, four large pendant¬ shaped pearls, one immense ruby, four smaller rubies, one largo sapphire, twenty-six smaller sapphires and eleven emeralds. The large ruby is set in the center of a diamond Maltese cross at the front of the crown. This stone was given to Edward I by Don Pedro tho Cruel, and was worn by Henry V at the battle of Agineourt, when it was set in his steel casque. It is peculiarly cut and its center is hol¬ lowed out to form a setting for a smaller ruby. Many of the stones were taken from old crown3 now un used and others were furnished by the Queen herself. They are placed in settings of both gold and silver and incase a crimson velvet cap with an ermine border. Four imperial arches spring from the four sides and support the mount, which is composed of 438 diamonds, andtne whole is snr mounted by a diamond cross whose center is a single rose cut sapphire.— Scientific American, The Snake and the Rabbit. M. W. Pournello killed a couch whip 8n ake near the right of way of the Sandersville and Tennille Railroad, in Georgia, that measured eighty-two in chea in length. The snake was climb* jug a tree with a rabbit in its month w hen it was shot. The snake was brought to town and exhibited as a cariosity.—Atlanta Constitution. FARMS AND FARMERS. The first buckwheat state is New Y(>rk, with 280,029 acres and 4,675,735 bushels of product. Illinois claims the largest number of improved acres ou her farms, having 52,669,060. '"Dhio has tho greatest number of farms, 251,430, having 23,352,408 aofbs; Illinois is second, with 240,681 faflms and 80,498,277 acres; Missouri 3pj being third, with 238,013 farms and 780,290 acres. ?Iew York 1ms the greatest amount, of capital machinery, invested the in farm total implements being $46,- and sum 65Pi465; Pennsylvania is second, with $8p,046,855; 6tf,315. Iowa is third, with $36, ducts, |u the according'to estimated value the returns of farm of pro¬ the eleventh oeusus, Illinois is first, with $1;R4,759,013; New York is second, wi(h $161,593,009; Iowa is third, with $1^9,347,844. Illinois has the greatest value in felloes and buildings—$1,262,870,587, thif second place belonging to Ohio, which has $1,050,931,828, and the thijrd buildings to New valued York, whose $968,127,286. fences and aro at hafing jhientucky 274,587 stands first producing in tobacco, 221,- 88^>303 acres, wi-ih pounds; Virginia is second, 110,579 acres and 48,522,655 pobuds, wi(h 97,077 and North producing Carolina is 36,375,- third, acres, 258* pounds. The first corn-produoing state is Iolra, with an acreage of 8,585,522 ami 313,130,782 bushels; next comes Illinois, with 7,863,025 acres and 280,- 697,256 bushels; the third being Kan l with 7,314,665 acres and 259,674,- 56r bushols. Among tho barley-producing states California stands first, having 815,995 aefes, yielding 17,548,386 bushols; tho second is Iowa, with 518,729 acres and 13,406,122 bushels; the third being Wisconsin, with 474,014 acres and 15,- 22(1,372 bushels. According to the statistics furnished by our consular service, tho farmers of this country aro better clothed, bet¬ ter housed, hotter fed, give their chil¬ dren a better education and have more mqney tion in bank thnn tho rural popula¬ of any country in tho world. The first state in flaxseed is Minne sotk the fields of that commonwealth yielding 8,(509 peunds 2,721,987 of fiber bushels the of socond seed mid in ; raiik is Iowa, with 2,282,359 bushels of „ seed i and , (>,281 a n0 i pounds ■, of «/.! liber, the 11 thiVo being South Dakota, with 1,801,- 114 bushels of seed and 3,278 pounds , AU-- r °* ‘ ‘ Highest of all in Leavening Fower.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report 1 it JiBSOWTEEV PURE RemarkaXile Memory. Ijifown (to waiter who has at last brought his order)—Did you ever see me ibeforo I gavo you my order? Waiter—No, sir! Bjrown—Have Waiter—No, sir you ! seon me since? llirown—Well, yon have tho most wonderful memory for faces I ever saw in rn*y life. Waiter—Do you think so; sir? Brown—Yos; tho idea of a man who only saw me once remembering my face so long afterward is little short of miraculous. — Ruck. RR DO YOU EXPISCT i .7 To Become a Mother? If so, then permit us to say that Doctor w Pierce’s Favorite Vu Prescription indeed is a true “Mother’s Friend,” € I'OK IT MAK KB . Childbirth Easy systerii . for parturition, by preparing the thus assisting Na¬ ture abd shortening “ Labor. ” The painful and ordeal) of dangers childbirth thereof is robbed greatly of its lessened, terrors, to both tlje mother and child. The period of confinement strengthened is also shortened, the mother and an abundant secretion of nourishment SernJ for the child promoted. twenty-one ( 21 ) cents for The Peo¬ ple’s Jfledical Adviser, 1000 pages, over 300 illustrations, giving ali particulars. Scv eral chapters of this great family doctor book are devoted to tile consideration of diseases Ss peculiar to women with sugges¬ tions I to successful home treatment of same. Address, World’s Dispensary Medi¬ cal Assjociation, Buffalo, N. Y. N it Xi-COLLEGE THE SOUTHERN FEMALE COLLEGE, ol La Grange jj 60years under control of one family. N ■ bun been removed to .Manchester K * (CollegePark), Atlanta.and will be V7 fl in perfect order to open the 5:;rd H «e$»fon,Sept. building, with 11 electric th, im ,in light*. new Hteam brick y/RTwa [J >' work*, elevator. RV yfjVS H ni111 , heating, water elaborate teaching f^lrA u II 'LJm u appliance*; Faculty of 1/0; extenmve courses v j/jf) 'm u N > study and high standard*; bent ad- N M a n tyje ■mm -A vantage!* Nov 7th; Exposition; in Europeon Music and Alumme Art. party Pupils next bay J 3 II I ml 1 ^ Hummer. Send for Catalogue. ! MANCHESTER GA. C, C. COX, PRESIDENT, Mucx ■ s- X X X X 3C3T 3C SC X X 3C * X X X 3Z ZZ M X X X X X X X X. X X Exhausted Soils d are made to produce larger and better crops by the 6 © u?e of Fertilizers rich in Potash. 3 j* yr'- Wirite t n full for of useful our “ Farmers’ information Guide," for farmers. a 142-page It will illustrated Le sent book. free, and It 3 t e make and save you money. GERMAN Address, KALI WORKS. 93 Nissan Str«t, New York. Acute Rln'kmattsm. Prom tfis JCeoioee Courier, WothoVa, A tJ. For several years Mrs. Mary Hunter, wife of Mr. William Hunter, of Mountain V«t, Ooonee County, 8 C., was a ooustant suf¬ . ferer from rheumatism and could Cud uo re¬ lief, even though she consulted the best doc¬ tors and tried every remedy proscribed by tho mo 3 t eminent physicians of the South. Rut she finally stumbled, as it were, on a medicine which wrought her euro in a .sim¬ ple, but nevertheless a most remarkable. manner, Such was her experience, and for tho benefit of suffering humanity sho con¬ sented to an Interview touching her peculiar case. ‘•Yes, it is tnio that I had ohronic rheu¬ matism of long standing,” said Mrs. Huntor to a reporter, “and the most celebrated phy¬ sicians of South Carolina oould effect no cure. But I have been cured, and that com¬ pletely.” And sho spoke tho words with a bright smile and cheerful countenance. “I am “ami sixty-six years of age," she con¬ tinued, about five years ago I began to suffer from acute rheumatism. Tho pain soon became constant, and for four years I oould Und no relief. 1 could not remain still in any position, either lying, sitting, walk¬ ing or standing. There was no rest nor ease for me, and thus it continued until life itself became a burden. During these years Icon suited several of tho most capable and and their emi¬ nent physicians of our State took prescriptions. But short and temporary was the relief afforded by any of them, and soino failed to give any" relief at all. The malady would return with accumulated foreo after every it period of temporary suspension, hopeless. and at last seemed that my ease was “About this time I received a letter from my sister, Mrs. Lucinda Stewart, of Texas, who wrote me to try Dr. Williams' Fink Fills for Palo People, and she told me how much good they had done her. Sho had boon sick lor seven years and had had two strokes of paralysis. None of the dootors of Texas could do anything for her, and her cure seemed Impossible. But she was told by a friend to try Dr. Williams’ Fink Pills, and sho at last did so. She wrote that she had taken only half a box when she experienced a de¬ cided change for the better, and soon she felt like a young girl old. again, even though she was over forty years Xu a short time good sho was oured, and sho Is now enjoying health. “But, oven after rocolviug that letter. It was some tlino before X consented to try tho pills. I continued to rooolvo treatment because I from had physicians little for a year or more, or no faith in patont medicines of any kind. But finally, Doing rodueod to a (lire extremity, and all else falling, I concluded to write for one box of the pills, and did so. Within a week after beginning to tnko them 1 commenced feeling better, and when the first box was used I ordered six boxes. But two more boxes effected my cure, and that permanently, too; for during the past yoar X have been entirely free from rheumatic pains, and count my euro complete. Stnoo then! have given tho pills to other members of my family, and in no instance iiavo they failed to give speedy and permanent relief. X am convinced that tho pills are all that Dr. Will¬ iams claims for them, and more too. X cheer¬ fully recommend them to all sufferers.” To confirm her statement of facts beyond Mra - Huntor madwth « following Sworn to before mo this, tho 0th <lay of May, A. D. lH’JB. Fulfil,-. ( r ‘-A) 11. T. Jaynes Notary Mrs. Huntor is well and favorably known, being the wife of one of Oconee’s moat suo cesaiul and substantial farmers. No one can doubt h«r statement foramoment, and many of her neighbors, moreover, aro oogulzant of hor remarkable euro. Too Rich. “Those travelers,” sighed the heath¬ en monarch, “give mo a pain.” “They arc very rich,” murmured the gra,nd vizier. “Yes—” The royal brows knit in a frown. “'They are rich, and, moreover, our stomach is not what it used to be.” The courtier did not fail to notice during reflection that his majesty help¬ ed himself to cold tourist hut once.— Detroit Tribune. lYIotliur* Aj»|»ruc*lat« tlm (aoori Work of Parker’* Gin tfurTonlc,wif:h Its reviving rjunl ii.icK a boon to the pain-stricken and nervouH. OSBOHKTE’S w udinedd a. middle AND School of Hliortliniicl A I,’(JUNTA. (J A. of No tGxt book* u»ed. Actual I>u«um«ht from day eutorinc* 15u*lnnHB ©ol! r.gn currency and good* u od. Hnnd for hananomeiy illuntratcd cuta logue. Hoard clump. It. It. fare paid to AuguRta, HOTEL TYBEE TYJBKK ISLAM), <*A. Thi« Hot©) in noted for it* oxooltorit and rp!*nriid cu nin«, i.tn tabi'* being Miipp:l abundant «1 with all the the market afford*- An supply of fihli, or*b*, ahnnap, I>ion’n fine en* unifod tor hpohoo. Hpeoialiy low rate* thi H HlttHttn, Write for term#. Special inducement* to partie. ot ten or more- BOHAN II »VV \ N. PARKER’S 4 HAIR BALSAM ■ M fJIrmriMjo and beautified the batr. £ I /'remote* a luxuriant Hentore growth. Or Never Falla to ay k m Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure* *ealp diMiuie* A hair falling. and .gl.Miat Dfu^iftta A. N. U Thirtv-fonr. ’95. r Ass«*TA$po$rrrgp(' e- 7 )IRE^TOiyr 6 N 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. STILSON & COLLINS JEWELRY CO ■i 55 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga. Everything In tho Jewelry and Silver Line at Factory Prices. PHILLIPS & CREW CO. 37 Peachtree Street. STANDARD Pianos and Organs, SIIKKT MUSIC, MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. ATLANTA DENTAL COLLEGE Kquipment New and Complete. INFIRMARY PRACTICE FULL. .Si‘mnI<iii IS!)., 11 Opeug October 8tli, 18115. Close* March 24th, 180(1, For further particulars address WM. CUKNSHAW, 1). I>. 8., Dean, ('rant Building, Atlanta. <-a. CISEMAN BROS.. 7 Ha IS and 17 Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, GA. - ONE PRICE— CLOTHIERS, Tailors, Hatters and Furnishers. Fine Millinery- BOWMAN BROS •9 78 Whitehall Street* Now in Now York City liuying En¬ tirely New Stock. Open Bopt. Bud. D TO AVOID THIS UBE 0 N N TETTERBNE S ’ The only painless and harmless c-> | | GUR* for the worst, typ® of Koserna, \ Totter, Itumworm, ugly crusted rough patoh- scalp. mh on the farm, (Ironmi itch, chafes, chans, pim C-3 nlen. Holton from ivy or Head poison oak. in In short all itch kb. 50c, Ustamps ||8avnnnah, or cash to J, T. Shuptrine, (hi., for one box, if your druggist don’t keep It. You will 11ml it at (’hah. (). Tymch’S, Atlanta. AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY © AND RHUBARB —iron— 1 Dysentery, Flux, 7,y Cholera IHorbuw, Cholera, IHnrrhain —ANP — Nu mm or Complaint* Try It. Price 25c., 50c., $I.OO. For Halo by Druggist* or write to J. Stovall Smith, M A ND K AI I’l’lmi N U l’H A ti M AI' I ST. 102 Whitehall St.., Corner Mitchell, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. SULLIVAN & CRICHTON’S AND SCHOOL OF 8 KORTHAND. The beet und cheapest business College In America. Time Hhort. Instruction thoroujrfi. 4 Penmen, lilt? demand for graduatew. Catalogue free. Hi; 1,1,1 VAN k ( Klimov, Kl.er Fill!*., Atlanta, tia. GRAND OPENING. THE Blood worth Shoe Co. AUGUST 12th. 14 Whitehall Street. SHOES AT LOWEST PRICES. WRITE OR CALI,. SAW MILLS CORN ANI) FEKI> MILLS. Water Wheels and Hay Presses. BEST IN Till; MARKET. I>,‘Loach .11111 Alla. I'o., 311.',, Atlanta, Git. Till-; LOOKOUT PUKS9. The Lookout Press, of Chattanooga, Term., has just issued a special edition of 50,000 copies that is of especial in¬ tercut. Cuts of Lookout Mountain, Chattanooga, National Cemetery and a Ohiekamanga Park monument and ob servation tower, also a good map of all the battlefields about Chattanooga ap pear. Hliort articles on Lookout Mountain, the Chickarnanga and Chat¬ tanooga National Military Park and other interesting subjects are printed. Our readers can get a copy of this special edition free by addressing tho publishers and mentioning this paper. Address (enclosing stamp for postage), Tho Lookout Press, Chattanooga, Term. Keeping Everlastingly at It. Genius is really only the power of mak. fug coutiouous efforts, 'l’he line between" failure and sueci s is so line that we scarce¬ ly know when wc pass it—so fine that we are often on the line and do not know it. How many a man has thrown up his lmqds little at a time when a little more effort, a more patience, would have achieved suc cess. As the tide go (.': > clear out, so it comes clear in. In business, sometimes, pros¬ pects may seem darkest when really they are on the turn. A little more jiersistence, a little more effort, and what seemed hope¬ less failure may turn to glorious success. There is no failure except in no longer try¬ ing. There is no defeat except from with¬ in, no really insurmountable barrier save our own inherent weakness of purpose. Virtue will catch, as well as vice, by contact.