Crawfordville advocate. (Crawfordville, Ga.) 189?-1???, September 20, 1895, Image 3

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Nsw Star for Our Flage Another star, the forty-fifth, is to be added to the flag. The new stu,r will represent Utah, and the order for its addition to the national colors was issued by Secretary Lament. The star will be placed to the right of the fourth row from the top. The order for the addition of the star is accompa¬ nied by one changing the size of the color-. Heretofore the standard has been 6 feet by 5. The new order makes the regulation size 5 feet 6 inches by 4 feet 4 inches. The order provides for the new colorsto be issued to all infantry, artillery and the bat¬ talions of engineers, and also for new standards for all cavalry. The new flags will be very handsome. Tney are to be made of the finest American silk. Utah will not attain statehood until July 4 next, but all the Hags hereafter contracted for and issued will contain the star heralding the ad¬ mission of that territory into the Union. In tlii» Work-a-I>ny World Brains and nervous systems often give way unfertile pressure and anxieties of business. sudden Paresis, wasting of the nervous the tissues, mental a and unforeward collapse of and physical faculties are uaily occurrences, as the .columns of the daily press show. For¬ tify the system when exhausted asainst such Untoward events with Hostetter’s Stomach Bitter-, that most lie pful medicine Use of the weak, worn out nnd infirm. it in rheu¬ matism, dyspepsia, constipation and malaria. How many people live on the reputation of the reputation they might have made. The True l.nxntive Principle Of the plants used in manufacturing the pleas' ant remedy, Syrup of Figs, hasapermanently beneficial effect on the human system, while the cheap vegetable extracts and mineral solu¬ tions, usually fold as medicines, are perma¬ nently injurious. Being well informed, you will use the true remedy only. Manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. If we cannot live so as to be haypy, let us at least live so as to deserve happiness. Dr. Ki'mer’s Sw amp-Root cures all Kidney ami Bladder troubles. Pamphlet Laboratory and Binghamton, Consultation free. Y. N. The truly great man is a* apt to forgive as bis power is able lo revenge. Deafness C’nnuot be Cured by local appl cations, a- they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way tutional to cure remedies. Deafness, and that ia is by consti¬ inflame Deafness caused by an 1 condition of the mucous lining of the Fu-tachian Tube. When til is tube gets inflamed you havo a rumbling sound or im¬ perfect Deafness bearing, and when it isentirely c!o-ed is the result, and umess the inflam¬ mation can be taken out and this tube re¬ stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cases out ton are caused flamed by citarrh, which is nothing hut an in¬ condition of the mucous surfaces.* \Ve will give One Hundred Dollars for any ca6e of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can¬ not be cured by Hail's Catarrh Cure. Send lor circulars, free. F. J. Ciien t-.y & Co., Toledo, O. ISfSoldby Druggists, 76c. Among the exhibits that will add to the convenienceof visitors at the Cotton States and International Exposition will be the Yost Writing Machine, which has been endorsed by the Exposition Company, and will have ex¬ clusive concession for operating wtitiug ma¬ chines on the grounds for the conven ence of visitors. The r agents, Fielder & Mower, will have booths in convenient places, at different parts of the grounds, which will be in charge of girls, will expert prepared iu the rnse ffo typewriting of the machine, for wjo fte be to til desiring sucli work. “Good Spirits.” The words Inve different meanings to a spiritualist, For the a Kentuckian, and good an spirits average de¬ man. average man digestion? pend on good digestion. Howto insure good that’s A Ripans Taliule after each meal, all. ____ Experience Deads .llany Mothers lo Say “Use Parker’s Ginger Tonic” because it is good for colds, pain and almost every weakness. Piso’s Cure for Consumption lias no equal as a Coueh medicine.—F. M. Ahuott, S83 Seneca St., Buffalo, N. Y., May 9, 1894. Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle If afflicted with sore eyes use Dr. IsaacThomn son’s Eye-water.Druggists sell at 25c per bott le. It is a Fact That Hood’s Sarsaparilla has an unequalled record of cures, the largest sales in the world, and cures when all others fail. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier Prominently in the public eye today. $1; six for $5; Be sure to get Hood’s. Mood’s Pills act harmoniously with Hood’s Sarsaparilla. The Greatest Hedical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, HASS. Has discovered in one of our oommon pasture weeds a remedy that cores every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred eases, and never failed except in two oases (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 Bowels. This is 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 wfB cause squeamish feelings at first No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get. and enough of it Doee, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬ time. Sold by all Druggists. PARKER’S SALSAM HAIR be*u:ifies the Cletcsei and growth. xuur. Promote* a JturariEBt v- jNerer Pail* to Bettor*; Gray ^ Hair to its Youthful Color. Cures sea.p d.seMefi * hair lading. 1 50c, and fl.uGat Drug*** A. N. C Thirty-tight, ’95. _ -r.tso?si< mi WET!fm fiimta Cough it* Syrup. Best Sold try druggist* tn tuna. HANDLING THE ELEPHANTS THE WAY A CIRCUS MANAGES THE HUGE ATTRACTIONS. Small Amount of Food Required by the Big Beasts—Their Fondness for Water. (2 ONSIDERING to and strength exert the small an for elephant hours amount the at enormous of is a time, food able necessary to maintain this immense energy, one realizes that in this curious animal nature has provided a most economical machine. A hundred pounds of hav every twenty-four hours is all that an elephant eats, with the exception of twenty-five pounds of bran every Sunday. Four horses will eat 100 pounds of hay every day, and require a large quantity of oats besides. But one elephant will do more work than twenty horses. Many a time in the history of the Barnum show it has happened in rainy weather that the big rhinoceros wagon weighing seven tons has sunk so deep in the mud that four teams of eight horses each havo strained vainly in their harness trying to extricate it. Then word has been sent to George Conklin, the elephant trainer, and Babe or Mandy has come shuffling up, and with a single push from the base of its trunk, lifted the stranded wagon out of the mire. An elephant will do the work of a steam engine at a cost of $2 a day for fuel in the shape of hav and all the water he wants to drink. Although small eaters, elephants are great drinkers, requiring about fifty buckets of water each day. They are usually watered at 7.30 o’clock iu the morning and 2 o’clock in the after¬ noon. Three or four of them are led out at tho same time, and allowed to drink from a large tub into which a hose discharges from a big water cart. It is a strange sight to see them drink. The long trunks are first lowered into the water, which is sucked up until they are fall. Then the trunk is curved back into tho mouth, and tho water, amounting to about a bucket¬ ful, is is discharged into the big pink cavern, usually without spilling a drop. Elephants are not only great water drinkers, but they love to be iu the water and can swim all day without fatigue. When a circus is on the road it is customary, whenever water is available, to let the herd enjoy a wash and a swim, tho only trouble being that it is not always easy to get them to leave the water. The keepers allow only a few of the animals to swim at one time, and adopt the precaution of keeping a chain fastened to one of the logs so that in case of rebellion the end of this chain can be made fast to another elephant on the bank and tho truant animal dragged ashore whether he will or no. Although elephants are regular water dogs and can swim for many miles without fatigue, cold water chills them very quickly aud seems to over¬ come their powers. An unfortunate instance of this sort occurred iu 1887, when the winter quarters of the Bar¬ num show at Bridgeport were de¬ stroyed by fire. A great many of the animals were burned to death, while others escaped into the surrounding country, among these latter being the elephant Rachael, who ran trumpeting down to the beach wild with terror. So, frightened was she that she plunged into the bay, regardless of the bitter season, and began swimming straight out to sea. The lighthouse people saw her plunging along a mile and a half out, but she soon began to swim feebly and presently her efforts relaxed and she went down, overcome by tho cold. The next morning her body drifted ashore, and is still preserved in the Bridgeport museum. When iu the water elephants swim very low and frequently let themselves sink down entirely beneath the sur¬ face. They are fond of splashing about with their trunks and blowing np great streams of water like foun¬ tains. A big elephant swimming out at sea might easily be mistaken for a whale. There is more danger in taking care of elephants than is generally sup¬ posed. Strangers are especially liable to mishaps, largely because they think the elephant is much easier to under stand than is really the case. The day before Barnum’s circus opened in New York last spring, one of the big ele phants caught a new hand in his trunk, twisted his body between his huge tusks, snapping his leg, and with an easy toss buried him against the wall of the building with such violence that the man lay in a hospital for two months afterward. Old trainers say that the attendants sometimes make the mistake of being too kind to elephants. It is always dangerons for keepers to give dainties to his elephants, and even the general public iu doing so are fortunate in having a railing between themselves and the formidable trunks. The ele phants have retentive memories, and having once received au apple or handful of peanuts from a person, they expect the Eame attention when that person passes again. And not receiving it, they are apt to reach out their trunks in well-meant but dan gerous reminder. A new keeper, for instance, having been in the habit of giving an ele phant some tidbit, passes by hurriedly, intent on something else,'and forgets his usual attention. But the elephant doe3 not forget. Out shoots the pon deroua trunk. The animal means no harm, perhaps, but the result is that tJekeeper ha 3 several rib3 broken, his spine fractured or his internal organs deranged. There is much similarity be tween an elephant’s well-meant caress and the blow of a pile driver.—New York Son. SELECT SIFTINGS, Maurice Thompson, the essayist, has a pet rattlesnake. Billboard cars, for advertising pur¬ poses solely, are being run on Cleve¬ land (Ohio) street railways. At Helensville, Wis., recently, a number of cows attacked a turtle basking in the sun and killed it. Amos Holmes, of Unadilla, N. Y., ninety-four years old, olaims to bo the oldest bicycle ridor in New York ►State. Reindeer as a rule are not very strong. They can carry only forty or fifty pounds on their backs and draw from 250 to 300 pounds. The chief mourner at a recent fu¬ neral in Glasgow, Scotland, went to the cemetery on a bicycle, the handles of which were draped with crepe. Mrs. Frank Behr, of Boquet, Penn., gave birth to a child that weighs but two pounds and two ounces, The child is fully developed and doing well. Eastport, Me., lias, according to a local newspaper’s unsworn statement, a male resident eighty-nine years old who rides a bicycle, and another of seventy-five years who plays football. Mrs. Andrews’s little girl in Andover, Me., had the nosebleed, and it was lucky: for when the mother ran to a barrel of spring water sho found that her two-year-old baby had just fallen in. While after a lost ball, a five-yoar old girl in Scranton, Penn., thrust her head through a small aperture in a board walk. In her struggle to with¬ draw her head sho was strangled to death. There are 119 universities in tho world, with 157,513 students. Berlin, with 7771 students, is the largest, and Urbino, with seventy-four, tho small¬ est, if you don’t count some of our own fresh-water ones. Japanese postmen whose routes carry them into the country use bicy¬ cles. Their wheels are made by local manufacturers, who have appropri¬ ated improvements from both British and Japaneso manufacturers. A girl named Boyd, iu Urbana, Ill., has seven living grandparents, two grandmothers, two great-grandmoth¬ ers, one great-great-grandmother, a grandfather und a great-grandfather. Aud tho great-graudmothor is only eighty. A pair of horses ran away in Car tersville, Mo., the other day, dragging four little children iu it. Just as every one was expecting they’d be killed, one horse fell into a mining shaft and tho wagon stopped. Children and horse* wero all saved. The practice of boring the ears for rings is older than civilization. We no longer bore noses, but that is a parallel practice of all primitive peo¬ ples. In New South Wales the ofl^o of nose-borer was one of dignity, and it was hereditary. Tho captive balloon which the French expect to employ at tho World’s Fair iu 1900 will be 144 feet in diainoter, and is to ascend to an elevation of 1950 feet. This is twice as high as the Eiffel Tower. The bal¬ loon is to be managed by a wire cable, varying in diameter from 3.91? to 4.71 inches, and will probably bo capable of taking up one hundred and sixty passengers at once. Improvement i:t Tunnelin?. In comparing the four great tunnels of tho world, tho remarkable decroaso in time and cost of construction marks the great improvement that has been made in this sort of labor. The Iloosao tunnel, tho oldest of the four, cost $375 a foot; the Mount Cenis, tho next in date, cost $350 a foot; tho St. Gothard cost $229 a foot, and the Arlberg, the latest in date, cost only $154 a foot. A still more striking re¬ sult exists in the case of a tunnel through the Cascade Mountains, on the line of the Northern Pacific Rail¬ road. This, unlike those named, which wero excavated in old settled countries, the terminal easy of access, was in a peculiarly difficult location, so much so that it took six months tc convey the machinery to tho spot. Rivers had to bo turned aside, bridges built, and material transported over improvised roads through nearly 100 i miles of forest, mud aud snow fields, ; yet the tunnel, which is 16j- fecit wide, twenty-two feet high, and 8950 feet long, was bored through the mount aius in twenty-two months, at tho rate of 413 feet a month, and a cost of the completed tunnel of only $118 a foot.—San Francisco Examiner, Gibraltar’s Strategic Value, An article on the strategic import | ance of Gibraltar is published in tho Matin, in which the writer maintains 1 that that fortress can no longer be re ! garded as the key to the Mediter j raaean. “It is true,” ho says, “that it was so in the time of sailing vessels, but to-day, even if all the fleets of j Great Britain were assembled off Gi- 1 braltar and all her guns massed on its land batteries, any ships—whether j war vessels separately or merchantmen, in numbers— whether j sailing or could pass and repass the Strait with ; out running any risk of being stopped on their way, this being, of course done at night. “And even by day, ships wishing to pass through the the Strait would not j need to trouble themselves at all about the coast batteries, but only 1 about ships at anchor in the roads or cruising ia the Strait.’ j Flying House, j The flying mouse is a recent discov* ery in theCamerooncountry of Africa, It is a link between the bat and tho true mouse, has a tail like a mouse ; and heavy gTay fur, while its wings are not so well developed as those of the bat. Hallo* of the Arawskl. -- In the Port Royal Mountains, .Jamai. ca, an interesting archcoological dis covery whs recently made of a cave containing the skeletons of at least twenty-four of tho aboriginal Arawaks. When Columbus discovered the island in 1494 the Arawaks were estimated at about 600,000. A century and ^ half later, on the capture of Jamaica by tho English, they had completely disap peared, even to their bones, as only the skulls until now had been found. These showed a frontal do presHWu with lateral expansion auav tificially formed deformity that is also found in those just discovered, which are of all ages. A shattered canoe of cedar ce.tar wood wood, 7 i feet teet Inmr long and anil 11 M feet ieot wide, an arborvitm mortar, and two earthenware vessels wero found with the skeletons—Information. Antitoxin , in Diphtheria. In oonsequence of a decree of the German Chancellor, statistics have been collected regarding the effects of the anti-diphtheritic serum. These statistios cover tho first three months »; m .nd »h.y »e applied by 282 Iihysicians practicing in 191 hospitals. The percentage of deaths in !2,228 cases was found to bo only 17.3, whereas by j the ,, older ,, methods ,. i it averaged al out 50. Prof. Riehet publishes figures of mortality from diphtheria in Paris, which show that either tho disease has this year taken a milder form or that Dr. Rotn&’s serum treatment is effoo tive. The deaths in 1884 in Paris hos pitals were 1,400; from 1887 to 1891 they wero from 900 to 960 a year; from 1802 to 1894 they averaged 733; in 1895 they wero 239.—Information. Afraid of Concussion. “Smith is walking around to-day as if ho were stopping on eggs.” “He needs to.” “What ails him?” “Why, last night after ho had gone to bed he remembered that he should have taken some quinine capsules, tie got up in tlio dark and took ’em. This morning he discovered that he had swallowed three 22-calibre revolver cartridges. ”—Indianapolis Journal. Gauzy. “Did yor done hyah whut ’Rastus Pinkley says he is?” it.” “No, I ain’t done hyah •“Ho says he’s min’ roadah. ” “Huh 1 Da’s or mighty poll ’pology foh de way he played dat pokah gamo wif me las’ night; mighty poll!”— Washington Star. Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report Rpyai K* Absolutely pure Our Criminal Population. Professor Francis Waylaud told tlio Social Science Association at Saratoga, tho other day, that we have about 3, 000,000 habitual criminals in our pop¬ ulation. This is tho professor’s estimate, and if we had included those persons who are always wavering on the borders of crime he might very well havo raised his figures to 10,000,000. Such total, however, must include those who are guilty of small and occasional misde¬ meanors which frequently escape pros¬ ecution. Tho professor's remedy is to lock up all these millions of criminals, but we do not seo how it can be done. Tho prison problem has almost swamped us as it is, and if it gets any bigger it will be too much for us. There is one way out of it—when tho criminals are in the majority, as they soon will bo, at tho present ratio of increase, we can turn tho tables on them by making them lock us up, and run the government, and tax them¬ selves for our support. Bet the ma¬ jority rule is the basic idea of our gov¬ erns e nt. —A tlan ta Constitution. Horticultural Note. When a young tree does not grow and the leaves are yellowish instead of green, dig down to the roots and endeavor to discover if some insect or parasite is not working under the ground. Then dig away plenty of dirt and drench tho roots with strong soapsuds, to which should be added a few pounds of unbleached wood ashes, or put the ashes in after drenching the roots. It will not injure the tree and may prove of great benefit. The Prevailing Malady in this country is dyspepsia. people Probably more than three-fourthsof the * offer from it, in some of Its many form*. Many have dyepep.ia and don’t know it. because they i ave the painless kind. .Such are always half sick and ascribe their ailment to any cause hut the true one. Where dyspepsia i“ known, or suspected. Tyner’s is wonderiul Dyspepsia medicine, Remedy ouvht to be used. It a very pleasant to take, and not but only corrects diges¬ tion in a few minutes, <ures the worst cases of dyspepsia. F or sale by all druggists. FITS “topped free No by Dm. Klink’h first dav’s Great Nerve Restorer. fits after u*e. Marvelous cures. Treatise arid $2.(4) Fhila., trial Pa. bot¬ tle free. Dr. Kline. 931 Arch 8t., These DistrsNsIng loros! Rad as they are, Hinderooms will remove tbem. and t ; von * an walk a“ you like.* Fertilizers for Fall Crops should contain a hijfh percentage of Potash to insure the largest yield and a permanent enrichment of the soil. Write for our ■•Farmer*’ Guide,” a T43-pags 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, n N«mm Sowet, New Vo*. FABMER BAILEY'S ESCAPE, AND THE RAltK EXPERIENCE OP jGhn u. loftin. - A H “ ppy ^ “* from On Caucasian, Clinton, JT. G. We had bsen roltably Informed that J. F. Halley, of Warsaw, Dublin Co., N. C., had been cured of consumption, and sent are porter to aee him and mako a report, bellov in* that the fact* would be wolooms to msny rondew of this paper. We found Mr. Bailey strong in the belief that he had had con sumption, though his phyeiolan. Dr. W. P. Kenned^st.^jhe^o In a ilttle different “Mr. Bailey was suffering from overwork and onronia malarial poisoning, with some of the symptoms of chronic rheumattfra and “ general run-down oondttlon of hi* *y»tem. ‘-Boils prevented him from work a part of the time. Bronchitis end spitting of blood were sources of great annoyance to him.’’ have gone into consumption, as disease condition* frequently above follows the He symptoms and gtvon. wm thor ” u * hly ^ urr f h °w»ver. Mr. lay said to "mTh* spring of ’94 X began farm work, Soon I fouud my health foiling and a hack iag cough my constant oompatdon. wa .j unablo to sleep, and I was constantly ■»«*“ spitting could up blood and corruption. I My phy give me no relief and ooatln ued to grow weaker and weaker. X had well nigh given up all hope of living, muoh less being restored to my usual strength when a friend called my attention to testimonials as to tho vhIus of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale medicine Pyople. proscribed I at onoe left off using and the by my phvsiotan felt began to take the Pink Pills. I the good ^dorful medicine within three day*. In loss than two month*’ time I was a well man. and three boxes of Dr. William*'Pink Pill* did the work. “Is it any wonder," queried Mr. Williams' Bailey, “that I sing tho praises of Dr. P ink Pills when they have done so much former But for tbo timoly of them I would to-day be in rav grave and I want tho world to know of their Incalculable value as a medicine. Tho roportar having heard that Mr. John H. rheumatism Loftln, of by Warsaw, the of lind three been boxes cure<l of use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pill*, Interviewed him with the following result. Haid Mr Loftin: “I «uf fereil Intensely with rheumatltm for tan months. I was entirely helpless for two rTtWn 1 hclrO?,! ^ ,11,l good. Having heard of Dr. Williams Pink Pills and their wonderful trr.KZ’. I urri,s x .;:r f s two weeks' time I woa able to leave my bed, and in a few months’ time I was able to do nmuuftl labor, ifrom holplfihBiinM to manual labor I* my experience, and I attribute this great benefit solely to the use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pi I la” Dr. William’s Pink Pill* oontaln all the elemonts necessary to give new life and rich¬ ness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. Th»y had are for sals by Dr. all druggists, Williams' or may be by mail from Mediotne Company, Boheneotady, boxes lot N. 92.50. Y.,for CO osnta per box, or six Temperance Mansion. “I boo you aro building a new house, Mr. Bung.” “Yes, you are right.” “Made the monoy out of whiskey, 1 suppose?” “No.” “Why, you are a liquor dealer, are you not?” “Oh, yes! But tho money I’m put ting into this house was made out of E,\,r<«thlr-rn sir.Tid-Bits. water, 1 VI^OMEN’SPACES TV —like flowers, fade and wither with time; 9 the bloom of the rose mi m is healthy only known woman’s to the H* cheeks. The nerv¬ m ♦ ous the strain ailments caused and by - r _ „ pains and peculiar to the V sex, the labor ZjJr 1 ' and of rearing worry by the linea in a family, can often face. be traced the woman’s Dull eyes, the sallow or wrinkled face and those “feelings of weakness” have their rise peculiar in the to derangements The and functional irregularities de¬ women. rangements, of painful disorders, be and chronic weaknesses women, can cured with Dr. Pierce’s just Favorite entering Prescription. womanhood, For the young girl for the mother and those about to become mothers, and later in “ the change of life,” the “Prescription ” is just what they need; it aids nature 111 preparing the system for these events. It's a medicine prescribed for thirty years, by Dr K. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician Institute, to the Buffalo, Invalids’ N. Hotel and Surgical at Y. Walter Baker l Go. LimitEd, The Largest Mscufafiturers of r PURE, HICH GRADE 4 Cocoas and Chocolates On till* Continent, hme# received HIGHEST AWARD8 from the greet Industrial and Food ? r-l# lln EXPOSITIONS ‘ ^Caution: IN EUROPE ANO AMERICA. I i I KwJulAot tha labels and a*UiS wvmara on our roodl, eonauraera should make sure ^~ I * *'®7nsmeiy, HfcitViat our Ilorrhesltr, plnre of manufacture, Mmi> is printed on **th package. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER A CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, MASS. ” A^TA$po5if(3F <yplRE^TOfgr<JS A LlSl OJ Reliable Atlanta BUS“ iness Houses where visitors to the Great Show will be properly treated and can pur¬ chase goods at lowest prices. __ _ Vj|L$|)fl W 1 £ « COLL UUI-l.lll^| N\ UC.WLLKY ICVA/ICI DV U U ■? 55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta, Os. Kvery thing in the Jewelry and Silver Line at Factory Prices. PHILLIPS i CREW CO. 8T Peachtree Street. STANDARD Pianos and Organs* HIIKKT MUSIC, MUSICAL. MERCHANDISE. FISEMAN Km is and 17 Whitehall BROS., Street, 7 ATI.ANTA, ga. ONE PRICE- OLOTIIIEIIS, ’I'nilfti-H 1111,01 ttaU6rS IIsitaiN anil alUl Fnri)iHhei*s * BrDU “ 18 ' TO THE LADIE8 1 You arc cordially invitml to attend our <I'.ini> Kai.t,O re.siNOof Finn Fuknoh Mir f ^iCl s!*‘o',?s WunSlboiDlJ-t™!. kptfm am “ml . % h 'a’Jf 21 ^ s ‘‘"a ^™ 0 0 to buy their ntnv Fall Hats from us, wo will sell to anyone preBontin^ this ad. at our sfora $4.0i any eeleotion from our best $r».oo Hats for Don’t fail to cut this oijt, »is it will not appear W 1 "; \'" n orders solioHed and glvmi care tu at t° n tion. BOW MAN BROS, - |J TO AVOID THIS TJSB 0 TETTERINE \* C Th. osr.T psln.-., .nJ hsr.nl.., *T* con® for wor*^ iyp« of KusuinA, s. | T«tt«r, STfisSsSsS Riugworm,iirflyrou«h|)Rrcii * T I P In Son.I short *u. rrCHis. sec, ta « R s.onVh, ^ «’ n . bo.”?? mm tlrumiit don't Ikiap it. You will flml it at On a*. O. Ty.n nn’«, Atlanta, AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY ANI> RHUBARB —-FOR— Dysentery, Flux, Cholera Morbus, Cholera, Diarrhea —axo— It.' Hummer Complaints Try Price 25c.. 50c., $1.00. For Hale by Druggists or write to J. Stovall smith., MANUFACTURING! PHARMACIST. 102 Whitehall ATLANTA, St., GEORGIA. Corner Mitchell, # SULLIVAN A CRICHTON S w AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND. The be*t and cheapestBualnefwTolleig* in America. Tim* nhort. Imilructlon thorough. 4 Penmen. lilCT demand for graduatee. Catalogue free. NUM.IT A N * mini TON, Klisr RU*., Atlanta, Ca. IF YOU BUY YOUR SHOES FROM w m njp e y OU pleasure Every minute, you mar them. 14 Wliitolinll Street. SAW MILLS Water Wheels and Hay Presses. BEST IN THE MAilKKT ■ X-I.onrli Allll All*. Co., 305, Allantc, Ot, S! WHITE TO THE m i ; Kor Catalogue (Free). Buy Direct and S»v*- 25 Par •r Cent.agent*’ oommis>lona. I*. O. liox 691, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. OSBORNE’S M I /) udtnedd H(iau€ “oh.ool _ , of . aaortlxana Not . lt b ,„ jk , lrom of entering. Bu-inna* paper* coiiug* ourr-enoy and uaad. Hand for lituatraud oau BMrd n ' R - ,arm “ M: " t" 1 .......... . ASTHMA POPHAM S ASTHMA SPECIFIC Gi ret relief in FIVE minutes. Send foraFUKEUlal package. Bold by Jmifrglsta. One H >x aunt postpaid on receipt THOa. of fl.OO. »1i boiMfi.OO. Address rOPIfAX, FH1LA., FA. ROPSY cured M«d Treated KeaodlM. FoalUvely With ca*«s many Y«f*Ubl« fL'UlO free. I j)ro¬ Ur# rounded hopeles*. From firvt -losesvmpto oms rapidly <Lv*pp«ar. rrjloved, Itrtd in ten <fay* at least t*»o-d»irfie of allny :np’ cures >rn» seat are FPEg, mall ^ mta Great sale Parker, Baker and other Breech Loaders. Price way down. ■ ■ Binge bar-el, $4-(Hi; double, $5-M{ Vniuiz*i loadurn, $2-00; rifle*, £ 1-76; iti rifles, $100; repe*triir, fl-eO; rsvoiwrs, ttc. ; bi¬ cycles, half price; *"daktf; boxing gloves, delivered, *1 75 set of four Send stamps for 4H page pictorial N- Y cata.ogue HAD- Folsom Arms Co-, 314 B’way, Every Mai Sis Own Doctir. A Valuable FAMILY DOCTOR Book by J. Hamilton Aybes, M. D., of six hundred pages, profusely illustrated and containing knowledge of how to CUKE Disease, Promote Health and Prolong Life. The book also contains valuable information regarding mar¬ riage and the proper care and rearing of children. Send GO Cents -TO The Atlanta Mishii House.