Newspaper Page Text
Mexican Water Jar*.
The Mexicans do not me ice, but
nevertheless there is no country where
a man can get a class of cool, sweet
water than in Mexico. The water jars
are made of porous pottery which al-'
lows the water to ooze through the
materia! oi the tanks, and the evapor
ation keeps it always cool. It is not
cold like our ice water, but it is all the
better on that account, as a man can
dr.ni. twice as much and never feel in
the least injured, no matter how large
his drafts. Australian ranchmen fre
quentlv put water into skin bottles
which they suspend from the veran
dah, and the air cools' swaying the skins
back and forth the water and
renders it more palatable.
Ki ep Your Weather Eye Open?
Fraud Lives a shining mark. Occasionally
spurious imitations -prhvT up of Hostetler 1 *
Stomach Bittethe ii-.-at American family
Mne iy for chill- and lev r, dyspepsia, con
etipation, bidousne-s. n- rvou ne-s neural .iia.
rheumati-m and kidney (User er. These
imitation-are usual ly fiery local bitters full
of high wines. L ok out for the firm signature
on and tne genuine lab 1 and vignette of St. George
tlie Dragon.
True friends visit us in prosperity only when
invited.
When Nature
Needs assistance it may be best to render it
promptly, but one should remember to use even
the mo-t perfa -t remedies only when needed.
The best and most simple and gentle remedy is
the Syrup of Figs manufactured by the Cali¬
fornia Fig Syrup Co.
A fool who has a flash of wit creates aston¬
ishment and scandal.
Dr. Rimer’s Swamp-Root cure
ali Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free. Y.
Laboratory Binghamton. N.
Reason cannot show itself more reasonable
than to cease reasoning on things unreasonable
Pain is Not Conducive of Pleasure,
especially when occasioned by coi ns. Hinder
corns will please; it removes tuem perfectly
It Will Pay
To make some provision for your physical
health at this season, because a cold or
cough, an attack of pneumonia or typhoid
fever now may make you au invalid all win¬
ter. First oi all be sure that your blood is
pure, for health depends upon pure blood.
A few bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla will be
a paying investment now. It will give you
>ure, rich blood and invigorate your system.
I Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Is the Ono True Blood Purifier.
Mood’s PiSIs s. effec- 25c.
The Greatest Hedical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.
Has discovered in one of our oommon
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 owes
(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 boob.
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 will
cause squeamish feelings at first.
No ohango of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you can get, and enough of it.
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed¬
time. Sold by all Druggists.
iji Pearly to bed,
C— Early to rise,
Y \— ■ Eat cakes made of
/ buckwheat,
To be healthy and
wise.
BUCKWHEAT
MAKES
The
Best -
Cakes..
Always
Light
and Dainty.
Walter Baker i Go. LimiM,
The I..ry.it 3I«nnf«turtri of
PURE, HiCH GRADE
kl Cocoas and Chocolates
On thu continent, h...
HIGHEST ‘ AWARDS
Industrial and Food
EXPOSITIONS
V IN EUROPE^ AND AMERICA.
l | f-V Caution: **TJZ£*
|E ■‘■JIT- 1 of the l»bel* and should wrappers make cn rurt our
K*wi say. f-* goods, cob turner* place of manufacture,
Mthat our Mai*.
aHHMMgpB&me.r. ^ Dorchester.
is printed cn toda p*c
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER A CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, HAS*,
USE OF THE SUNFLOWER.
CHE (JAtTDT PLANT VALUABLE IN
A MULTIPLICITY OF WAYS.
It Furnishes Nutritious Food for
Man and Ueast—A Tobacco Adul¬
terant—Sunflower Salad Oil.
Y 1 J HE poetical nature of the sun¬
flower has received ample at¬
tention from the pens of writ¬
ers, but its practical htility
is just.beginning to be generally rec
ognized. In China and Russia the
sunflower is considered a valuable
plant, and it is raised for its seeds at
the rate of nearly nearly half a mil
lion pounds annually. The poor farm
ers ot Italy and India likewise attach
great importance to the plant, and the
seeds are harvested for animal food
and for poultry.
One of the most important uses for
the sunflower seeds is as food for poul¬
try and cattle. It has long been
valued by progressive farmers as
an excellent and cheap food for fowls.
Nothing makes them fatten quicker,
and they will frequently leave all oth¬
er food for them. The seeds make the
hens lav better, and greatly increase
their weight. They can be raised
cheaper than corn, and give better re¬
sults. As a food for cattle experiments
are now in progress at several of the
experiment stations, and the results
so far obtained are very satisfactory.
Sunflower oil made from the seeds
is in great demand in this country.
In Russia millions of pounds of the
seeds are raised annnally for the oil,
and large quantities of this oil are ex¬
ported from that country. In the
crude state it is used by painters for
inside work, but it does not quite equal
linseed oil for varnish purposes. It
is mixed with most of our cheap paiuts,
and also with many prepared stains.
Of late years efforts have been made
to refine the oil so as to sell in com¬
petition with olive oil. In fact, puri¬
fied sunflower oil is used quite exten¬
sively to adulterate salad oils. Many
consider it equal to the ordinary grades
of olive and almond oil for table uses.
It is of a pale yellow color, flavorless,
anil palatable. In Maryland consid¬
erable of this oil is made to supply
the Baltimore trade.
Alter the oil is extracted from the
seeds the residue is made into cakes
for cattle food, and, while noc so
nutritious as the food made from the
fresh seeds, it is of considerable value.
The factories that express the oil sell
the seed cakes at a merely nominal
sum. In the poorer districts of India
and Europe a fair kind of bread is
made from sunflower seeds, and the
natives depend upon it for a steady
article of diet. Their- cattle arc fed
with the same diet, only the seeds and
heads are chopped up together, and
even the leaves are fed to the animals.
The stalks, when stripped of their
leaves and heads, are dried and u«ed
for fuel. One acre of sunflowers will
yield a great many cords of good food.
The stalks are large, tough, brittle,
and good burners. A few acres of such
fuel will last one all winter.
Many cheap cigars are made from
the leaves of the sunflower. When
properly cured the large leaves make
excellent wrappers for cheap cigars,
and in this couutry they are employed
for this work to a larger extent than
many imagine. When pulverized and
mixed with an equal quantity of to¬
bacco, the combination is not inferior
to many of the cheap grades of Con¬
necticut tobacco. In fact, the sun
flower leaves give a peculiar aromatic
flavor to the tobacco that is liked by
many smokers. Cheap cigarettes have
considerable of this kind of tobacco in
them.
The stalks find other uses than that
for fuel. In China the fibre is treated
like flax, and woven to a grent extent
in silk fabrics. The stalks have to be
gathered at the right time for this use,
and then shredded cither by hand or
machinery. The fibre is fine and
silky, very strong, and endurable.
The Chinese use it to give strength to
their silk fabrics.
Several minor articles arc made
from the sunflowers. From the bright
yellow blossoms a yellow dye is made
that stands use very well. The process
of making the dye is not difficult nor
expensive. Moreover the flower pro¬
duces very fine honey and wax when
properly treated. In England the
honey and wax are made more success¬
fully than elsewnere, and as a side is¬
sue the manufacture of these two
products is very profitable. Finally
potash can be made from the stalks.
With all of these commercial uses,
the sunflowers should prove a 2 >rofit
able crop in a country where they
grow naturally wild in the fields and
gardens. Although a native of tropical
America, the plant has a wide limit of
growth, including Russia, India,
China, North America, and all of Eu¬
rope. Where the seeds are sown in
cultivated fields for a commercial crop
from 11,000 to 25,000 stalks are raised
to the acre.—New York Post.
History of a Famous Picture.
The Bierstadfc pictnre, which has
been hanging for a long time in the
White House, has been taken away.
It was never owned by the Govern
ment, but was hung where it was by
the permission and advice of President
Arthur, who hoped that the Govern
ment would buy it. Biers ladt
mortgaged it to a company of capital
ists. The mortgage has been fore
closed, and it will soon be sold at
action.-New Orleans Picayune.
Exterminate tlie Potato Bn?.
Professor Koebele, of the California
horticultural commission, has discov
ered in Japan a beetle which feeds on
the larvae of the potato bug. He be
lieves the introduction of the beetle in
this country will result in the exter
mination of the insect which has caused
annual loses of million, of dollars tc
the farmers. —Atlanta Constitution.
A. Prayer tor Rain.
The part of the Occident In which
the settlement of Hawville is located
lmd been afflicted with a long and se¬
vere drouth. After the ablest attempts
of the rain-makers had brought no re¬
lief, a special prayer meeting was held
at the Methodist church, and a united
appeal for rain was made to Provi¬
dence. When the service had been
going on for some time Col. Handy
Polk,an enterprising real estate agent,
rose in his plaoe, and with becoming
humility began: “Our heayenly Fath¬
er, we are assembled yere todgy that to
call Thy attention to the fact we
need rain, and need it mighty bad 1 It
hain’t a case of merely wantin’ it, but
we’ve jest nacherly got to have it or go
stone broke! Our business interests are
prostrated and town lots are bein’
off red for half the prices they would
have brought six months ago, and go
in’ beggiu’ at that. Our crops are
burnt up, and if we don’t git relief
soon half of the population will De
forced to pull up stakes and go back
East to their wives’ people. And, in
addition to the distress that a contin
neration of this yere drouth will
bring to us, I beg to call Thy at¬
tention to the injury it will inflict
upon t Thy oause and kingdom in
this locality. Already many
of the faint hearted have back slidden,
and it is only a question of time till
sin and innickerty run rampant in our
midst. Now I beg also to remind Thee
that it is Col. Handy Polk, the well
known real estate, loan and insurance
agent, who is humbly askin’ this favor
of Thee, and that Thou cunst depend
upon it that the case stands presizely
as I have stated it. And I hope Thou
wilt give my humble petitiou Thy
keerful attention, and grant us, before
to-morrow night or by the day after
to-morrow, at the very latest, the rain
we so badly need.” It it to be record¬
ed that, within the space of twenty
four hours from that time, the rain be¬
gan falling in torrents.—New York
Tribune.
Tennessee's All-Negro Town.
There is an odd little town on John¬
son island, in the Mississippi river, just
north of Memphis. It is a negro town
and is owned by a negro planter. The
island is eleven miles in area and it is
under the Tennessee) statutes. The
town is a taxing distriot and not incor¬
porated. Judson is the name of the
place, named after tho white planter
whose son is the mulatto owner of ihe
island. Tho case in which the mor¬
ganatic son won the rich property in
contesting the will of the dead planter
is well remembered, and the courts
duly allowed him part of ihe inherit¬
ance, since he was the only living issue
of Judson.
So far as known, Judson is the only
negro town in America,where there is
not a white man. Elmer Judson, its
wealthy owner, allows no white man
to come except on a visit. The town
has 450 inhabitants and is well organ¬
ized, since Judson is a highly educated
and progressive man. He owns every¬
thing on the island and most of the
inhabitants are his tenants. He is a
justice of the peace and has provided
happy homes for the men who work
for him and enjoy his bounty. The
island is about eight miles in length
and in a few places is not more than
sixtj yards’wide. The land is unusu¬
ally rich and fine crops are produced
every year. Thore are six stores in
tho plaoe, with a few shops, two
churches and a school.—Chicago Rec¬
ord.
Hone Ast. ay.
Former Resident: “Well, everything
in tho old town seems the same. But
what became of the Widow Smith’s
boys? They always seemed such bright
lads.”
Native (with a sigh:) “They both
turned out bad. John’s bin sent to
the reformatory an’ Bill’s learnin’ the
printin’ trade.”—Puck.
Nearly as Bad.
“Brother Wilgus,” said the deacon,
“there is a report current that you
were run out of Plunkville by White
Caps five years ago.”
“It was not quite that bad,” said
the minister, with a slight sm:le; “it
was only a threatened donation party.”
—Indianapolis Journal.
8100 Reward. 8100 .
The readers of this paper will be pieased to
learn that there Is at leant one dreaded disease
that science has been able 1o cure in all its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Ifa i’s O turrh
Cure is the only positive cure known to the
me iical irate ml ty. Catarrh being a consti¬
tutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hail’s Catarrh Cure js taken inf r
nall , acting dir ctly upon the blood and mu¬
cous surfaces of the system, ther by destroy¬ giving
ing the foundation of the di-*’ a-e, and
the patient strength by building up the con¬
stitution and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers, that th^y offer One Hun¬
dred Doiia r s for any case that it tails to cure.
Send for list of testimonials. Address
F J. Chenf.y <fc Co., Toledo, O,
|5f*Sold by Druggists. 75 .
An Atlanta Bunker k». Word* of Prai.e
for a /lone In.titntion.
Mr. Cha«. E. Currier, of the Atlanta Na¬
tional Bank. Is very careful with bis worts,
not only in financiering, bur in his conver-a
tion generally. Like the rest of ns. lie is si k
sometimes; but, unlike many of us, be know¬
how to get we 1.
“I have used Tyner’s Dyspeps and a have Remedy ahvay. ill
attacks of acute indige-t on, relief.
found it to yive instantaneous 1 cwi
sider it a me'licine of high rm-rir.”
Price per bottle, 60 cent-.. For sale by all
druggists.
FITS “lopped free by D a Ki. ink’s Great
Nerve Restorer. Treatise No fits after and <1r*t %‘t A day’s trial bot¬ u-e.
Marve oue cures. Phil*.. Pa.
tle free. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St..
Mr«. Window's Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
Take Pnrkrr’* Ginger Tnnie florae With
you. cold*, It will and exceed many your ill* and expectations ache*. in abat
ing
To Avoid
eon-tipation is to prolong iff. Ripare Tab
ule arc gentle, yet poruve in their cure of
constipation, One tabale give# renef.
I have found Pi«o> Cur- for Oom-mnptioi
an unfailing medicine. -Y. P,. LotZ, 1M> i-cotf
St., Covington, Ky., O' L 1, 1WJ*.
High Price* for Rare Coin*.
During the recent se*sion of the
fifth annual convention of the Ameri¬
can Numismatic Association, at Wash¬
ington, coins of almost priceless value
wire displayed, As viewed from a
numismatic standpoint it is the condi¬
tion of a coin which fixes its value. It
is not the date, nor age, except in less
than thirty instances, that is sought
for at the big quoted premiums.
Pierced, plugged, badly worn, scratch¬
ed coins, or those on which the dates
are illegible, have no particular value.
For gold there is but a limited nu¬
mismatic demand, and the supply is
greatly in excess of that demand. The
double eagle of 1849 is Worth about
$300. All gold dollars are at a pre¬
mium and worth from $1.20 to $1.40
eaeh. Those dated 1803, 1864 and
1865 command from $2.50 to $4 each,
and those dated 1875 are worth $ 6 .
The bulk of numismatic transactions
are in silver coins. A dollar of 1804
is worth $400, a half dollar of 1797
brings $40, and a quarter of 1827 de¬
mands $40. The dime of 1804 is tho
most valuable, being worth $ 10 , and
the half dime of 1802 easily holds the
record at $63. A large copper cent
of 1799 would bring $25, and a half
cent of 1796 is in demand at $30.
A thin silver half .dime of 1802 was
bought by its present bolder for $63,
and has sold for $75.
Even Then.
'Adam stood at tho gate of Eden,
looking out steadily at the new world.
“Why don’t you hurry up?” he
shouted. “I cau’t for tho life of mo
see why a woman never is ready in
time. What the—serpent—is keeping
you?”
“I—I can’t get those fig loaves
pinned straight,” was the reply of Eve
in a voice that warned him to carry
the discussion no further.
All Broke at Onco.
“So you took your family to the sea¬
shore?” said tho facetious man.
“I did,” was the melancholy reply.
“Where there is snch grandeur in
the breaking of the waves—”
“Yes.”
“And tho breaking of tho engage¬
ments—”
“Yes, and of the $20 bill.’’—Wash¬
ington Star.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Powder S
v jjggssa
ABSOLUTELY PURE
if- Sorry Not to Oblige.
Poole, the tailor, was a most accom¬
modating gentleman, and was often
Invited to the houses of “the great. ”
When staying with a certain noble¬
man, he was asked, one morning, by
his host, what lie thought of the party
who had assembled at table the night
before. “Why, very pleasant,indeed,
your grace; but perhaps a little mix¬
ed.” “Hung it all, Poole !” responded
the jovial peer; “I couldn’t huvo all
tailors!”—Argon aut.
Hail to Work.
Rural Ragges—It’s no use. Tatts;
I’ve got ter work.
Tramping Tatters—Land o’ labor.
Roory, me boy! What’s de matter wid
yer? Are yer losin’ yer intellec’?
Rural Ragges—No; but Iswallered
a yeast cake in mistake for a marsh
mailer—Judge.
Webster's International
Successor of t ho “ VnabrUbjcd.” Dictionary
Specimen page#*etc., geofc on application.
- U.8. Gov’t Printing Office, and
Htandard of the T7.B. Commended Supreme Court, all the btato Superintendent* of Hchoola.
nearly all bcboolbooka. by
THE BEST FOR PRACTICAL PURPOSES.
It is easy to find the word wanted.
It is easy to ascertain the pronunciation.
It ia easy to trace the growth of a word.
■jjdjljffll It 13 easy to learn what a word means.
G. & C. Merrlam Co., publisher*, ‘iprlnufielil, Mass-
borrowing from health.
Pi] If you have borrowed from
i / m ^ 7? health of business, getting to satisfy if that your the demands constant blood is
/A » not
\ < y 1! ' supply of fat from your food
ki 3 II f it should back from have, somewhere, you must
To // pay somewhere will be
/ and the
L from the fat stored up in
W the body.
The sign of this borrowing is thinness; the result, nerve
waste. You need fat to keep the blood in health unless you
want to live with no reserve force—live from hand to mouth.
Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver Oil is more than a medicine.
It is a food. The Hypophosphites make it a nerve food, too.
It comes as near perfection as good things ever come in this
world. and cheap lubttituti.
Bt xurt you [tl Scelt'i EmuUicn whtn you want it not a
Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 5«c. and $i.
Exhausted Soils
are made to produce larger and better crops by the
use of Fertilizers rich in Potash.
Write for our “Farmers’ 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, 9} Nima Str.et, New Yack.
STOMACH AND HEAD PAIH3.
A KEttEPY.
Wom#n At* Sabj.ot tu lloMk, on Account
of Tight Lacing.
From the Evening Jfeios, .Veu>ark t If. J.
One of the happiest women In this olty is
Mrs. George G. Reiss, of 29 Montgomery
Street.
“No one to look at me now,” said Mrs.
Reiss to a reporter, “would think for a mo¬
ment that I wo* so 111 that the do store said I
could not possibly be saved. About three
years ago I began to suffer from terrible
pains tn my stomaeh and tt was almost Im¬
possible for me to do any work. Then I had
severe headaches that almo*t distracted me
amt altogether I was in a very sad condition.
Of course I wanted to be well again, and lik*
most people tn suoh oases, I consulted a doo
’ ter, spent money for medioine and took It
faithfully. To my infinite regret I got no
better, and another dootor was called in.
More medioine was prescribed and this I
took, but it did no good. Those terribls
pains continued to make life miserable for
me. Tho doctors blandly told me that I
could not be oured entirely, if at all. Pleas¬
ant news, wasn’t It? Well, t continued to
work about the house here and suffered ns
told agonies. I did not give up hope but did
all I oould to relieve my misery. Nothlug
gave mo any relief, however, and I had be¬
gun to think that all hope must be aband¬
oned, when, in reading the Newt. I
saw Dr. William*’ Pink Pills advertised.
The printed testimonial oomlng from a resi¬
dent of this olty led me to believe that I, too,
might be benefited by these pills and not
without some misgivings I bought a box oi
them.
“Almost as soon ns I began to take them I
felt relieved aud the first marked Indication
of improvement was when that tired, weary,
don’t-care feeling disappeared. This was in
itself something to be grateful for, but other
and more pleasing results followed after 1
had taken more of the pills. My headaohes
ceased entirely and the pain in my stomach
troubled me no more. Now onoe In a great
while I have an oooasional nch* ora Cli
but I know the onre. Out comes the
Pills, and after taking one or two of them,
away tho pain goes. It all seems so good to
me that at times I can Scarcely believe that
it can be true and yet I know that if I had
not used these Pink Pills I would still bs
suffering agony suoh os few people do in this
World.”
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills contain, in a oon
densed form, all the elements necessary to
give new life and rlohness to the blood and
restore shattered nerves. They are an un¬
failing speciflo for paralysis, suoh diseases as locomotor
ataxia, partial Ht. Vitus' danoe,
sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous
headache, the after effect of ia grippe, pal¬
pitation of the heart, pale aud sallow com¬
plexions, all forms of weakness either in
male or female. Pink Pills are sold by all
dealers, or will be sent box, post paid on boxes receipt
of price, (50 cents a or six for
$2.50—they are never sold in bulk or by the
100) by addressing l)r. Williams’ Medicine
N. Y.
Seemed Too Kxtprtlonate.
A middle aged man of tall, slender
build and earnest east of countenance
stepped into a hatter’s shop and re¬
moved the wrappings from a soft felt
bat, he carried in his hand.
“How much will it oost to have this
dyed a light gray, to match my hair?”
he inquired.
“It will oost you at least $1," re¬
plied the hatter.
The caller wrapped it up again.
“I won’t pay it," ho said decidedly.
“For 35 cents I can get my hair sir.'”— dyed
to matc h the hat. Good day,
Chicago J Tribune.
—
Particular eare should be given
chrysanthemums coining into flower.
Keep them well supported and the fo
liago clcuu. Give liquid manure twice
a week at least.
"es7JiRE<“roityGN Atlanta rtpojlTfO^
o
A List of Reliable Atlanta Bus¬
iness Houses where visitors
to the Great Show wilt be
properly treated and can pur¬
chase goods at lowest prices.
STILSDN & COLLINS
JEWELRY CO V
55 Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Oa.
Everything in the Jewelry and Silver
Lino at Factory Prices.
PHILLIPS A CREW CO.
37 Peachtree Street.
STANDARD
Pianos and Organs,
SHEET MUSIC,
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
FISEMAN In BROS., ’
IB and 17 Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, «A.
----ONE PRICE
CLOTHIERS,
Tailors, Hatters and Furnishers.
BOWMAN BROS •»
FINE MILLINERY,
78 Whitehall Street.
OUR FALL IMPORTATION8 ARK NOW IN.
LEADERS OF FASHION,
LATEST STYLES,
LOWEST PRICES.
D 0 TO TETTERINE AVOID THIS TTJSXI
S N • X The only painless anti harmless
c C I Girii* for tho worst, ugly type of Koxeraa,
R Totter, Ringworm, eruatnd roufifh patch¬
»T es on the face, ecelp.
Ground itch, chafes, chape. poison Pim
ulr.H. i Poison from i*y or oek.
C r H In tHiitpH Hhort or all oaah itch to ice. ,J. T. Mornl Shuptrine, Mo, in
Savitnn&h. <*ft,, for one box, if Jour
drutfgiflt (ion't Uoep it.
You will find it at Ciia». <). Tymch’s, Atlanta.
AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY
AND
RHUBARB
—roa—
Dysentery, Flux,
Cliolfrn. Alorfoim*
(lioloru. Diarrhoea
—AND -
Wii minor Complaint#
Try it Price 25c- BOc- $1.00.
For Halo by Druggist* nr write to
*T. Stovall Smith.,
MA N UFA* TURING I’ll A liM Ai 1ST.
102 Whitehall St., Corner Mitchell,
ATLANTA. GEORGIA.
SULLfVAN A CRICHTON'S
tape
AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND.
The beet and cheapest nualneis College in America.
Time Hhort. Imtlriiution thorough. 4 Penmen.
Big demand for graduatm. Catalogue free
SULLIV AN * I KK lirON, Klor Bldg.. Atllnl*. «•.
IF YOU BUY YOUR SHOES
from BMiortl Shoe Co.
They will give you pleasure
Every minute you wear them.
14 Wliltoliall fltroot.
SAW MILLS CORN AND
FEED MILLS.
Water Wheels and Hay Presses.
BEST IN THK MAKKK'r
l>fT,rm«*li Villi Vll'u. Co., -i!)-i. Allnnln. It*.
$4.50
np.sT H.UTTEII,
HIIOItTBHT Tl "K,
I,LAST I.ABOft.
King Hardware Co,
6 N ATLANTA* Hent Htovf h OA. and
Range*. Lmv< Ht prices.
Best
Winter
M, I APPLE
Fur the South. Rljieng November; keep* till
May. All varieties Fruit and Nut Trees.
brans pj«fits. Vine?, Berry Plante, Hoses. Ornamm
tal &n. Send lor new catalogue free.
W. D. BEATIE, Atlanta, Qeorgia.
Every ii His Owe Doctor.
A Valuable FAMILY DOCTOR Book
by J. Hamilton Ayhes, M. D., of six
hundred pages, profusely illustrated
and containing knowledge of how to
CUBE Disease, Promote Health and
Prolong Life. The book also contain*
valuable information regarding mar¬
riage and the proper care and rearing
of children.
SomcI OO Cents
-TO
The Atlanta Fnlsliins House.
ASTHMA
POPKAMS ASTHMA SPECIFIC
Gbres relief In FIT* minetes. Send
for a FKE£ trial package. Sold by
Druggists, One Box sent postpaid
on receipt of 91 . 00 . tlx boxes $£.00*
Address THOi. PUfifUM, UIHLA., PA.
BARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
Cleanse* snd beautifies the hair,
Promotes i Fall* s iujcutiAQt to Saetore growth. Gray
Hever Color.
»■ Hair *<»ip to its Youthful
Cure* Mr.aed diseases <lj* A I>ruggl«* hair failing.
I » __
A. N. U Forty, '98.
h 1
Besi Cough Syrup. Ta^tee Good. Vam
tn tuna. SoUl by druggist*.