Newspaper Page Text
How We Go to Sleep.
“Order is heaven’s first law,'* and
the truth is manifested even in the
process of going to sleep. When a
man drops off to sleep, says the Cin
ainnati Medical Journal, his body does
not do so all at once, so to speak.
Some senses become dormant before
others, and always in the same order.
As he becomes drowsy the eyes close
and the sense of seeing is at rest. It is
quickly followed by the disappearance
ofthesenseof taste. He next loses
the sense of smell and then, after a
short interval, the tympanum becomes
insensible to sonnd, or rather the
nerves which run to the brain from it
fail to arouse any sense of hearing.
The last sense to leave is that of touch,
and in some hypersensitive people it
is hardly ever dormant. Even in their
case, however, there is no discriminat¬
ing power or sense of what touched
them. This sense is also the first to
return upon awakening. Then hearing
follows suit, after that taste, and then
the eyes become able to flash impres¬
sions back to the brain. The sense of
smell, oddly enough, though it is by
no means the first to go, is the last to
come back. The same gradual loss of
power is observed in tue muscles and
sinews as well as in the senses. Slum¬
ber begins at the feet and slowly
spreads up the limbs and trunk until
it reaches the brain, when unconscious¬
ness is complete and the whole body is
at rest. This is why sleep is impossi¬
ble when the feet are cold.
f THE ELECTION OF THE FUTURE.
Candidate — I can’t understand
why my svpport was not greater at
the polls.
Manager—I am told a great many
of the voters had nothing to wear.—
Town Topics,
A Syndicate of Monsters.
Here are the names of the abominable trio
that compose it, hated and abhorred by man
and woman kind—dyspepda, biliousness and
constipation. What is the mo-*t successful
way to attack and squelch these united
monsters? Take Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters,
and they wiil pull up stakes and make tracks
for parts unknown, leavi ig no tia e behind.
The letters also exterminate malaria, rheu¬
matic and kidney trouble and nervous ail¬
ment.
_
If Satan ever laughs it must be at hypo¬
crites; they are tho greatest dupes he lias.
Dr. Ki'mer’s Swamp - Root cure-*
all Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Binghamton, Consultation N. free. Y.
Laboratory
All the impediments in fancy’s course are
motives of more fancy.
Many Influences Combine to Reduce Health
to the danger limit. The reviving properties
of Parker’s Ginger Tonic overo me these il s.
Don’t Tobacco Spit or £inoke Your Idfo
Away
Is tho truthful, startling title of a book
about No-To-Bae, tho harmless, guaranteed nicotinized
tobacco habit cure that braces up
nerves, eliminates tho nicotine poison, makes
weak men gain strength, vigor and man¬
hood. You run no physical or financial
risk, as No-To-Bac is sold by druggists
everywhere, under a guarantee to cure or
money refunded. Book free. Ad. Sterling
Remedy Co., Now York or Chicago.
How’s Tlii.!
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for
any ease of Catarrh lhat cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure,
F. J. Cheney & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. .1. Che¬
ney for the last 15 years, aud believe him per¬
and fectly honorable in all bu-iiiess tiansaet ons
financially made by able to carry out any obliga¬
tion their firm.
West & Trcax, Wholesale Drugg st 4 , Toledo,
Ohio.
Wat,ding, Rinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Hall’s Druggists, Catarrh Toledo, Cure Ohio. is taken internally,
acting diiectly upon the blond and mucous
surfaces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle.
Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Are You Troubled? And do You Want
Your Troubles to Fly Awavf
You have suffered worlds of trouble, anxiety
and pain, and you hardly know what ails you.
Sometime your business goes wrong, and tor a
longtime you linve been feeling physically
very badly. Don’t know wliat is the matter?
Of course you don’t, else you would get some
medicine. The trouble is with your stomach
and liver. Tyner’s good Dyspepsia in helping Remedy will do
a vast amount of this trouble
if you will use it. Price 60 cents per bottle.
For sa • by all druggists.
Out ot Sorts.
That is the way you feel as a result of tho
headache you had when you awoke thi->
morning. Get in your usual frame of mind
and body by using Ripans stomach Tabules. and liver the stand¬
ard remedy for all eom
plaints.__
FITS stopped free by Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. No fits after first day’s use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and ?2.00trial bot¬
tle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
I can recommend Piso’s Cure for Consump¬
tion to «ufferers from Asthma.—F,. D. Town¬
send, Ft. Howard, Wii, May 4, 94.
Mr=. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, euros wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Everyone Knows How it JT*
to suffer with corn 5 , and they ar.^ not conduc¬
ive to walking; remove them with Hindercorns
The Foundation
Of Good Health is
Pure, Rich Blood
And the surest, best way to
purify your blood is to take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Hood’s Pills are tasteless, mild, effec- 25c.
tive. All druggists.
+ ask your druggist for ★
IMPERIAL
★ THE BEST ★
FOR
INVALIDS New York. *
* JOHN CARLE & SONS.
!Wi PARKER’S
m HAIR BALSAM
■£ Clean.**? And beaut.fie* the nair.
Promote* a luxuriant growth. 3-ray
Never Fe .s to Bestore
Hair to its Youthful Coxor.
Cure* *c*.p d.-aect 4 hair la.-iiig.
y>c,*r.d ji.’Ata: Drugguta
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL,
Aluminum is being used in making
bodies of cabs.
As a rule, a man’s hair turns gray
five years sooner than a woman’s.
A double line of electric omnibuses
is about to be started in London.
In Ottawa, Canada, a city of 40,000
inhabitants, there are 50,000 electric
lights.
The automatic bicycle tiro iuflater
is a device for maintaining a hard or
soft tire, as may be desired.
It is propose I to include an inter¬
national exhibition of aeronautical ap¬
paratuses among the features of the
Paris Exposition of 1900.
Hr. Kanson, one of Professor Behr
ing’tr assistants, has discovered a serutu
remedy against cholera which has
proved successful on animals.
Experiments recently made prove
that signals of lights may be seen at a
greater distance if the flashes follow
one another at irregular intervals.
A spectroscope detector by which
ono part of blood in a solution oi
S50,000 parts cau be discovered has
been invented by M. de Thierry. It
will be of value in murder cases where
the stains are very minuto.
David H. Wyckoff recently wrote
that a million horse-power could not
produce the effect that a single flash
of lightning has been known to ac¬
complish. He believed that we have
as yet hardly begun to utilize the
forces of nature.
A cure for cancer and consumption
is reported to have been discovered by
a New York doctor. The treatment
consists of injecting minute doses of
pilocarpin until the lymphatic system
is stimulated and the white corpuscles
of the blood overcome tho poisonous
which disease.
G. W. Johnson, a well-known
authority on chemistry, writes that
the taste of the cucumber is due to a
poisonous substance called “fungin”
that is found in all mushrooms and
fungoid growth as well as in cucum¬
bers. This poison accounts for the
effect of cucumbers on some stomachs.
Alfred C. Lane writes that ton miles
above the earth the cold is far below
zero, while ten miles below the sur¬
face everything is red hot. This latter
is not so certain. It is thought by
some that the heat of the earth may
be wholly due to absorption from the
sun, and so may decrease after a cer¬
tain depth has been reached.
Dr. Chapman shows that the bobo¬
links which nest west of thq Rooky
Mountains do not migrate southward
with the birds of that region, but re¬
trace their steps and leave the United
States by way of Florida, thus furn¬
ishing evidence of the gradual exten¬
sion of range westward and of the sta¬
bility of the routes of migration.
Starchy foods, such as milk and
many other substances recognized as
highly nutritious, are, it is said, det¬
rimental to tho growth of the hair.
Chemical analysis shows that the hair
is composed in part of five per cent.
of sulphur and its ash, twenty per
cent, of silicon, and ten per cent, of
iron and manganese, The foods
which seem, therefore, best adapted
for nourishing the hair are meat, oat¬
meal and graham flour.
Spices aud Other Things.
Prunes are prepared fruit of small
trees.
White pepper is made from the ripe
berry.
Cloves are the dried blossoms of tho
clove tree.
Carraway is the seed of a common
wild plant.
Rice is the pealed and dried seed of
the rice plant.
Dates are dried and prepared fruit
of the date palm.
Coffee is the kernel taken from the
berry of the coffee tree.
Cardamon is the ripe seed of several
varieties of tropical shrub.
Raisins are sun-dried grapes of a
peculiarly luscious variety.
Starch is extract ed from potatoes,
corn, rice, arrowroot, etc.
Sago is a dry, granulated starch im¬
ported from the East Indies.
Black pepper is made from the un¬
ripe dried berry of the pepper plant.
Capers are the flowers of the caper
bush, preserved iu salt aud vinegar.
Figs are dried and skillfully pre¬
pared fruit that looks much like tho
pear.
Vanilla is make from beans tha
grow upon a vine that clings to trees
and rocks.
Allspice is made from the fruit of
the pimento tree. The seed is much
like the pea.
Saffron is tho dried stigma of the
common yellow crocus which grows in
our gardens.
Black mustard is the seed of sinapis
nigra. The seeds have a brown color,
with a redish tint.
Mace is the blossom of the nutmeg
tree, and is prepared by being im¬
mersed in salt water.
Cocoa is made from the fruit of the
cocoa tree, fermented for five days in
heaps, or in earthen vessels.
The tamarind is the marrow in the
podlike fruit of the Indian tamarind
tree. It is a dark brown mass, and is
generally mixed with the seeds and
fi bers of the fruit.
Disgusting Etiquette.
In a recent interview with Queen
Victoria, Nasr Ullah Kahn, following
the custom observed by his father, the
Ameer of Afghanistan, in presenting
a missive to a high personage, wetted
all over with his tongue a letter from
the Ameer that he had been charged
to hand to the Queen. The latter
looked at the process doubtfully, and
finally decided that it would be better
for her not to take the letter. A Lord
in Waiting received the missive with
a look of undisguised disgust oa hi?
face.—New York Times.
Artificial Marble.
Nine-tenths of the marble-topped
tables and so on—what I might call
furniture marble—seeu iu this coun¬
try, are made of artificial marble, said
a man in the trade.
Thousands of tons of this mock mar
ble are made annually, and even meu
in the trade can scarcely tell the dif¬
ference between the real and the false
article, for the markings, or mar
bliugs, go wholly through the block,
and are not merely superficial. The
basis of the whole is a combination of
limestone and chalk, which, chemical¬
ly treated, can be made of any shudo
desired. The artificial marble in the
rough is placed in a water bath, and
upon this is sprinkled a sort of varn¬
ish, consisting of sesquioxide of iron,
gum, and turpentine, and all manner
of marbled designs are produoed when
the turpentine is broken up by the ad¬
dition of water.
Any pattern of marbling can be pro
duced to order, Onoe such pattern
appears, the air is expelled from the
block, and the colors are fixed by the
immersion of the stone in sulphate
and warm water baths, and then an¬
other bath of sulphate and zino so
closes up the pores and hardens the
stone that it acquires the density of
the natural article, and oan be out and
polished in the same manner.—Ex.
Why it Failed. •
“No, our onion social was not a
success.”
“Onion sooial? What is that?”
“Why, all of the girls stand up in a
row and one of them is selected to
take a bite out of an onion. Then the
young men pay 10 cents a guess as to
who ate the onion.”
“Yes.”
“And if he guesses right he gets to
kiss all the other girls.”
“I see.”
“And the girl who bit the onion
kisses all the fellows who guess wrong.
And that is where the row began. All
of the girls wanted to be the onion
girl. More fellows guess wrong than
right, you know.”—Cincinnati Tri¬
bune.
GREAT BOOK FREE.
When Dr. R. V. Pierce, of Buffalo, N. Y.,
published the first edition Medical of his work, Adviser, The
People’s Common Sense had
he announced that after 680,000 conics
been sold at the regular which would price, $1.50 per
copy, the profit on of labor and repay him
for the great amount money
expended tribute in producing half million it, he free. would this dis¬
the next As
number of copiTs has already been sold, he
is now distributing, this absolutely free , 500,000
copies interest- of .-« | COUPON ing most and com¬ val¬
plete, uable | No. 113 | I med¬
common sense
ical work recipient ever *-——-published— being required mail
the only above address, this to little
to him, with at the (21) in
coupon twenty-one cents and one
cent stamps to pay for postage pack¬
ing only, and the book will be sent by mail.
It is a veritable medical library, complete
in one volume. It contains illustrations. over 1000 The page! Free
and more than 300
Edition is precisely the same as those sold
at $1.50 except only that the books are
bound in strong manilla paper covers in¬
stead of cloth. Send now before all are
given away. They are going off rapidly.
QUANTITY iO Which have
7 'V\ to,
,, \ ^ you an eye
, v quantity or quality, when *you buy
rs> r* 3 something to make washing easy ?
H If it’s quality, you want Pearline.
*4 In effectiveness, in and
economy,
“"S above all in its absolute harmless¬
1 ness, no matter how or where you
/ \' \ * use with it, there’s this, the nothing fir6t and to com- only
pare
washing-compound. quantity make, after all? If
What difference does the you
spend five cents or ten cents or a dollar for an aid to washing,
don’t you want the thing that will give you the most work,
the best work, and the most certain safety for that amount oi
money? That thing is Pearline.
n J Peddlers and some unscrupulous erocers will tell you “ this is as good as"
ijCIlU or "the same as Pearline.” IT’S FALSE-^-Pearline is never peddled,
•4. r\ £>ack * and if —lenhtback. your grocer sends you something In IA&E3 place PYLB,¥ew of Pearl ine, Voriu be
“ honest <83
An elegant book for
your table and constant
reference. Send for it
Yes, it’s ready ! NOW, It’s New and
Nice. . ‘ . 1 .
OUR NEW CATALOGUE
brimming full of illustrations, and show¬
ing how the thousand-and-one things
really look. You’ll like that.
jfi jr -Sent by mail on There are Guns, Rifles, Pistols—from
receipt of 10 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.. BOKTON,
MASS.
Solo U. 8. Agent for “STAR” AUTOMATIC PAPER FASTENER,
Exhausted Soils
are made to produce larger and better crops by the
use of Fertilizers rich in Potash.
Write for our "Fanners’ Guide,” a 142-page illustrated book. It
is brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and
will make and save you money. Address,
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Kimd Street, New York.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
PACTS THAT ARH PKCULIAR.
The tongue of a common suuil is set
with 30,000 toothlike points.
The raven is the only bird found na
tivo in every country iu the world.
Latest geological calculations make
the earth 1,526,730,000 years old.
The frog, owing to his peculiar con¬
struction, cannot breathe with tho
mouth open.
Authorities ou ehess declare that the
game was known to tho Chinese in the
year 174 B. C.
Professor Draper says that the de¬
scendants of a single pair of wasps may
number as high as 20,000 in one sea¬
son.
The surface of any given quantity
of gold may be extended 310,814 times
by being properly boaton with the
hammer.
The velocity of the earth at the
equator, due to its rotation ou its axis,
is 1,000 miles per hour, or a milo in
3.6 seconds.
A gold dollar if beaten until its sur¬
face was enlarged 310,814 timos (as
noted above) would become a golden
film not more than tho 1-566,020th
part of an inoh in thickness.
The famous sacred Mohammedan
flag enshrined at Constantinople, is
said to bo a portion of a silk nightshirt
formerly worn by the groat Mohammed
himself.
rlt would take a lino of cradlos ex¬
tending entirely around the globe to
accommodate the 37,000,000 babies
that are born into this world every
year.
L.W. Palmer, of London, Eng., has
one room of his house papered with
canctdled one-penny stamps. It took
70,000 to complete tho job.
A peculiar blunder oocurred iu tho
engraving of tho plate from which the
reverse side of the $5 silver certificates
was printq^I. It will be noted that on
tho back of these certificates are the
fac-similes of severul silver dollars.
The third one of these from tho left
end of tho certificate has the word
“trust” spelled “trash” On all the
others the word is properly spoiled.
Rear Admiral Matsumura and Com¬
modore Kuntinomo, of tho Japanese
navy, who covered themselves with
glory during the Chinese war, ore
graduates of the Naval academy at An
r^gp^is. The vice minister of educa¬
tion in the Japanese cabinet is a grad¬
uate of Cornell University, the vice
minister of finance of Yale, and the
vice minister of agriculture and com¬
merce of TIurvard.
The Telephone N. G. In Russia.
Tho telephone, it is said, is not mak¬
ing much progress iu Russia. Aud no
wonder! Fancy a man going to the
’phoue aud shouting : “Hello 1 Is that
you, DviHostkiqchsmartroiczki ?” “No;
it’H ZollemschffoilttkafllrustiffHagowoff.
Who’s speakiug?” “Hezjmonohookier
trjuaksmzkischokemoff. I want to know
if Xliferomanskettiskillwajuchwchazx
vastowskswoibierskioff is still stopping
with Dvisostkivclismartvoiczki. ”
Who Can Answor?
The New York Evening Bun asks
the following question, but wisely ro
fraips from attempting to answer it:
“Why is it that, whoreas only three
of tho seats in open street oars are re¬
served for smokers, women will per¬
sist in sitting in them, while others
are empty?”
V,
yy
m u
ONU ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
aud Syrup refreshing of Figs is taken; tho it is aud pleasant
to taste, acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, cleanses on the Kidneys, the
effectually, dispels colds, hoad- sys¬
tem
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. only remedy of Syrup its kind of Figs is tho
ever pro¬
duce!., pleasing to tho tasto and ac¬
ceptable to and the stomach, prompt in
its action truly beneficial in its
effects, prep ared only from tho most
healthy excellent and agree able substances, its
many all and have qualities made commend tjio it
to it most
popular Syrup remedy of Figs known. is for sale in 50
cent bottles by all leading drug¬ who
gists. Any reliable druggist
may not have it on hand will pro¬
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FHANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KV. , NEW VOHK. N.r.
WANTED
Bright Boys and Girls
-TO
Sell the New York Ledger
Every Week.
Rig I*ny lor I.itllo Work.
Tho Now York Ledger has hail so many ap
DIM lioiitioim from boys and soil girls tho throughout Ledger by
tho country wanting to for
tho weok, Jiavo us woll decided as by subscription establish whitt¬ tho
year, wo to
aw a le o young agents in every town iu tho
country.
We Wmit an Active Worker In
Every IMiice.
Hundreds of smart boys anti girls inevory
locality have several hours’ spare time each
week.
lteli.1 Our Finn.
Wo want just such ones to work for us a
little while each—selling every weok selling reliable, Ledger* orig¬ at
(5 cents the old, published—the
inal and best story paper
New York Ledger.
i\o Possible Riak.
Our yonng bundle agents take no possible week, risk. and
Wo send a of Ledger* cakes every each.
they sell them like hot at fi cents
Every one wants the opportunity New York Ledger examine as
soon as given an of it. It willonlybo to
and road a copy likely reader neces¬
sary for an agent to show a
our offer of
$1,000 in Cash Frizes to Readers
81,000 in Mb Prize* to Ledger
IteptlerN
And a regular reader will bo secured on tho
to rea<lej\s who wind the? Florence he,wfc explanation Warden of V
the rilVHtery of Mins B
wonderfully interesting story beginning in
this week’s Ledger, dated Sent. I I, entitled
“The Mystery «,f the Inn by the Shore.”
Each a^ent will be entitled to compete for
tho $1,000 in Fanh l*rijce«.
The I.ctlgcr Prcc.
If the postmaster or any of responsible boy party
will send ns the name a smart or
girl to sell tne Ledger every week in his
town, we will put an extra Ledger in the
agent’s bundle each week, to be delivered
free to the party appointing the agent so
long as the agent sells the Ledger.
Send us the name of a smart boy or girl and at
once. Have them fill out this coupon
send it at once:
189
T hereby aprr^e to art from date as agent for tho
Now York Ledger, and to null the same to ladie*.
farmers and others at 5 cents a copy every week, and
that I will report not later than the Monday after
each package is received, on blank furnished me, and
remit 3 cents for each copy l sell or deliver to sub¬
scribers, ami will keep all unsold copies, to be re
tuyued as instructed.
Name
Address.
State
Appointed by. .......-.........- —
Address NEW Y0BK LEDGER,
182 William Street, New York.
T A^NTA^pojmojf e'TJiRe^TORjrGN
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.,
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 MU8IC,
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
FISEMAN IB and 17 BROS,; 7
■B Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
-ONE PRICE
OLOTIIIEHS,
Tailors, Hatters and Furnishers.
BOWMAN BROS M
FINE MILLINERY.
New York City and Atlanta.
Our Atlanta ntoro* at 78 Whitehall St,,
1 « now opon with a complete lino of the latest
Parisian and Now York styles In Fall Hats,
Honneta and Novelties. You ara cordially th
vit od to oall to «oe uh when In tho city or vis¬
iting the Exposition.
D TO AVOID THIS TTI9XQ
0. TETTERINE
C 11 l The only painless ami harmleti
0 C“5 j I Totter, cTirtic for Ringworm, the worst. ugly type rough of Ko/.oma, patoh-
11 K . e* on tho face, crusted scalp.
Ground itoll, chafes, chans, pim
I P C pies. Poison from ivy or poison oak.
■ In short all itchks. Hand 50u, in
H •Savannah. itninps or cash Ga., to for J. T. box, Sliupfcrine, if your
one
druggist don’t Loop it.
You will find It at ('hah. O. Tyneu’*, Atlanta.
AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY
AND
RHUBARB
—FOIL—
Dysentery, Flux,
Cholera Morbus,
Cholera* Diarrhoea
—AND—
Hummer Complaint*
Try It Price 25c., SOc., $1.00.
For Hale by Druggists or write to
J. Stovall Smith,
MANUFACTURING PHARMACIST.
102 Whitehall 8t., Corner Mitchell,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
SULLIVAN & CRICHTON’S
AND SCHOOL Or SHORTHAND.
The bent ami cheapest Business College In America.
Time short. Instruction thorough. 4 Penmen.
Big demand for graduates. Catalogue free
Hr rI I\ A % A Cliff’ll TON, KUrr 1114#., Atlanta. «•*
IF YOU BUY YOUR SHOES
FROM
They will give you pleasure
Every minute you wear them.
14 WHitoHAll Stroot.
SAW MILLS CORN AND
FKKD MILLS.
Water Wheels and Hay Presses.
BEST IN THE MARKET.
Hel.oneb Mill Alfa. Co., .7115, Atlanta. Ga.
WRITE TO THE
V
. For Catalogue (Free).
Xf/; Buy Direct and Have 25 Per
3 Cent.agents’ commissions.
I*. O. Box 501,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
GOOD POSITIONS
SECURED IIV STUDENTS
Business Firms Supplied i® Help
Richmond’s Commercial College v
P.Ntablfaheri 1 HH't.
Send for Catalogue. .savannah, ga.
OSBORNE’S
M udinedd <jueae
ANn
No text boolo* u**d. Actual t> mi ness from day aad ot
«>t«rin*. Bumowi nnp«r«. coJiegH curr-ncy
”SLs ch«ap.’° r iu’it, f*!r8^>iLid uTa ajp.it
Every Ian His Own Doctor.
A Valuable FAMILY DOCTOR Book
by J. Hamilton Ayres, M. D., of six
hundred pages, profusely illustrated
and containing knowledge of how to
CURE Disease, Promote Health and
Prolong Life. The book also contains
valuable information regarding mar¬
riage and the proper care and rearing
of children.
Sond GO Cents
—TO—
The Atlanta PnMislii House.
A. N. U Thirty-seven, ’95.
JF Cims Cough WHtRt Syrup. Ait ELSE FAILS
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