Newspaper Page Text
■ERE AND THERE.
If the Atlantic ocean could have a
layer of water 6,000 feet deep removed
from its surface it would only reduce
the width of that body of water one
half.
In 1881 the paper mills of the
United States Lad a daily capacity of
1,390,050 pounds, iu 1886 it was 6,-
849,380 pound?, and now it is 14,102,-
580 pounds per diem.
A race was recently rowed at Deal,
Eng., between four four-oared crews
of boatmen over 60 years of age. The
winning oarsmen averaged 70 years,
while their coxswain was 85.
A chapel in honor of St. Paul gave
a new name to the Minnesota city. It
wrs originally called Pig’s Eye, from
a nickname given to a one-eyed
Frenchman, who kept a drinking
shanty at the place.
At the Santa Caterina cathedral,
Genoa, may be seen a crescent made
of an emerald, which is eight inches
between the points. Tradition says
that it was a present from Solomon to
the Queen of Sheba.
It is said that the largest diamond in
the world was found a short time ago in
the mines of Bahia de Pernagus, Bra¬
zil. The gem is reported to weigh
3,100 carats, which is 2,129 carats
heavier than the largest existing dia¬
mond.
A IJiff Hepii nr Army.
The mightiest host of this sort is the army
of invalids whose bowels, liversand stomachs
have been regulated by Hostetler’s Stoi«a< li
Bitters. A regular habit of body is brought
about through using: the Bitter , not by vio¬
lently agitating and vriping the intestines, causing
flow but by reinforcing the their energy channel. and -Ma¬ a
of bile into its proper
laria, la grippe, dyspepsia, and a conquered tendency by to
Inactivity of the kidneys, are
the Bitters.
Character is its own preacher and can make
impressions upon others after it ceasts in life.
Wlicn Nature
Needs assistance it may be best to render it
promptly, but one should remember to use even
the most perfect 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.
The truth sometimes <uts like the surgeon’s
knife after decayed liesh.
Dr. Kilmer’s S w amp-Root cure*
ali Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. Y.
The haunts of linnpine s aro varied and
rather unaccountable.
Catnrrli Cannot it i- Cureil
With local applications, as they cannot roach
the seat, of 1 tie disease. Catarrh is a blood or
constitutional di.-case, ami In order to cure
it you must take internal remedies. Hall’s
Catairh Cure is taken internally, and acts di¬
rectly on the blood and mucous surface. Hall’s
Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was
prescribed by one of ihu best physicians in
this country for years, and is a vetsular pre¬
scription. It is composed of the best tonics
known, combined with the best blood puri¬
fiers, acting directly ou the mucous surfaces.
Tue perfect combination of the two ingre¬
dients is wliat produces such wonderful re¬
sults in curing catarrh. Send for testimonials
free Props., Toledo, O.
F. J. CheneX*& Co.,
Sold by druggists, price 75c.
flick Hendnclie—A Positive nnd Unfallinc
Cure.
There with are headache. thousands of These people headaches who suffer
da'ly of character and caused are
mostly indigestion. a nervous Relieve Indigestion are and
from Tyner’s
your headache will disappear. Dys¬
pepsia headaches. Remedy Pleasant is a specific the for all kinds of
to taste, easy to
take, effective in ils action. It never fails to
cure, Price 50 cents per bottle. For sale by
all druggists.
Hog iinisiiiB Extraordinary.
Two acres mulberries fatten 85 hogs- These
hogs were turned in th • orchard in Mac and
kept there till September eating nothing li.it
mulberries and were perfectly fat when taken
out. They were fed a little corn to harden
the meat and then killed. Two acres of
mulberry trees 6 o 8 ft. high cost $30.00—what
are 85 fat hogs worth? For best k nds of mul¬
berries write for new Beatie, catalogue which is sent
free. Address W. I). Atlanta, Ga.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for childr mi
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle
j, I8 t HOW it Does it is Not the question.
It is enough to know that Hiudercorns takes
out corns, a nd a great relief it is. 15c . druggists,
If afflicted with soreeye-use Dr. IsaacThornp
W ,n’s Kve.wat.m.Drng^-t ■■ -ei, a : 25- per m>U
Your Happiness
Depends upon a
healthy body and
a contented mind
Y our Health
Is seriously in. danger
unless your blood is
rich, red and para.
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier
P/ominentiy in the Public Eye.
Hood’s Piiis core all liver ills, bilions
ness, head aches. 26c.
ACME CHURN,
a Best $4.00. Blitter,
Shortest Tima,
Least Labor.
Yinw UarHuinra fin
^ rg-Bcst stores and
Ganges. Lowest prices
WHY I AM " AN A. P.~A.
... Rochi^» . Y.' a,,*r cuwti’ons inawery-i
Baidmg v a i
Price. * -
poatige paid- Ca=amusiacc v >_____—
ARE YOU A DEMOCRAT?
Presidential lear. CHICAGO
You Will find aid andcomfort in THE
ofM CHRONICLE, the ;•£»<> x^eat democratic newspaper
ZT oni -a- at th-.s 164-ies rat
r- sample copies f”-®-. THBCHROSICL IU.---- W
Washington st.. Chicago.
i
$$Mtnedd OSBORNE’S
y O-AAH
//
otezt book. w<l tro» d«»rf
.
eel *nng. Ba-ria*-** ; ' -jiirAW-i C)U-
2ird?£Ap.‘ , .
a 0 V V* d
R. to
GREAT ENGINEERING
OCEAN STEAMSHIPS BETWEEN
NEW T02K AND CHICAGO.
,
A $200,000,000 Ship Canal to Con¬
nect Take Erie With the Sea¬
board—Difficulties Overcome.
^ t J HE boldest plans hitherto of¬
fered for a ship eanallbetween
Lake Erie and tho seaboard
have none of them conteru
plated less than thirty-five locks, and
one of the most feasible would have
required fifty-five. To bo adequate
for the traffic they would bear these
locks would have to be as capacious as
the new lock at Sault Ste. Marie, the
largest and finest in the world, The
latter is 800 feet long, 100 feet wide
and 21| feet deep, and is costing
more than $5,000,000. With locks
like the Sault, thoccst for lifts alone
for the contemplated ship canal would
be at least $175,000,000 on the St.
Lawrence route, and upwards of
$250,000,000 on what is known as the
Oswego route, that is to say, from Os¬
wego to the Hudson. |So long as nine¬
teenth century engineering was unable
to advance beyond the lock invented
by Leonardo da Vinci, about the time
that Columbus discovered America,
the problem, could not be solved. The
cost would have been too great for
even Government undertaking.
It has remained for an American en¬
gineer to cut the Gordian knot by the
invention of a new lock, exceedingly
simple in design, easy and cheap of
construction, and quickly and inex
pensivley operated. In 1890 Chaun
cey N. Dutton, a young Pittsburg en¬
gineer, took out in the principal
countries in the world letters patent
for what he described as a pneumatic
balance look. His design, revolution¬
ary as it was, seemed, on the whole, so
simple that engineers stared in won¬
derment that no one had thought of it
before. Colonel Haskell bad already
applied the compressed air principle
to the pneumatic dry dock, now in use
in all countries. Mr. Dutton pro¬
posed simply to make the pneumatic
dry dock into a wet dock by building
up the side walls and putting in end
gates between them. Simple as this
device appears, it puts navigation by
hydraulics upon an entirely new basis,
and, in the judgment of the most em¬
inent engineers, must revolutionize
canal construction all over the world.
Merely to indicate the meaning of
this new invention, it will now be pos¬
sible to construct huge ship-lifts of
equal size, and at least eight times as
high as the greatest lock now in exist¬
ence. Two locks, each lifting 160 feet,
could replace the twenty-five locks
now required along the Welland Canal.
The cost of these new locks, built as
large as the new look at the Sault,
would not be more than $3,000,000
each. They would pass a ship from
Ontario to Erie in an hour, where it
now requires a day.
It is from the invention of the pneu¬
matic balance lock that Mr. Dutton
has developed his huge schemo for a
maritime canal, which has reoently
been before Congress and the Legisla¬
ture at Albany. It will extend from
the mouth of the Welland Canal on
Lake Erie, utilize a portion of that
canal, descend, by a pair of locks set
tandem, into the Niagara River at a
point about opposite Lewiston, utilize
and enlarge tho present Canadian
canal system along the St. Lawrence
River as far as Lake St. Francis, and
there fork in two directions, one arm
will reach by a new canal to Montreal,
and thence by the St. Lawrence River
to the sea, while another will extend
from Lake St. Francis to Lake Cham¬
plain, reverse the current of that lake,
and reach from the lower end of
Champlain to Waterford, on the Hud
; son River. It will involve only about
ninety miles of artificial canals, and
| afterwards fifteen miles of this will be
cut Qut by the construction of a new
I canal from Lewiston, on the Niagara
| River, to a point above the Falls on
| the American expenditure side. The of project will
! require the a vast sura
i of money, but Mr. Dutton has asso¬
ciated with him some of the best
known engineers in the country, to¬
gether with a number of heavy capi¬
talists, and it is proposed to construct
this gigantic system without a dol¬
lar of subsidy from either the
Canadian or United States Govern¬
ment. The Canadian Parliament in
chartering the North American Canal
Company two years ago, gave it the
right to use the summit levels of the
Canadian canal system along the St,
Lawrence and across the Welland Pen¬
insula, to acquire and enlarge any
present locks, and to construct such
new locks and canals as will be re¬
quired to complete the enterprise.
Such National legislation as is needed
in this country has been introduced
in Congress by Senator Allison, of
w
Specifically, Mr. Dutton proposes
to build a canal equipped with locks
of sufficient size so that an ocean
freighter like the Cevic may sail at
river speed from New York to Chnjago,
intern, p
fcion. He proposes a canal system Wita
iocks of 2G feet draught, 65 feet wide,
"? 510 l f t clear k^th .hich will
htt -essei, MttrWt U.'K» «•» »■
freight. In place of the thirtv-iive to
tiftv-iive j locks required 9, in any other
plan yet propose 1 for a similar ., _ canai,
this project involves but five. In a
word, instead of an estimated expert
ditnro diture nt of at at least lr-a- t $20 tiofi ),<Kt), i n i fi' >-J ) fr,r r
lookg) the latter, under tne new con
struction, will not require more than
g 15 0 00 ,000. The projector estimates
tfaat to carry the first ocean steamship
from New York to Chicago will re¬
quire the expenditure of $109,000,
00. and to complete the canal to en
- bl ° vesse!s like the Cevic to make
again—in ail, some
P 5* T
CONNECTICUT BLUE LAWS.
Some of the Restrictions That Envi¬
roned Our Ancestors.
The story of the so-called Connecti¬
cut “Blue Laws” is told in a history
of colonial times written by the Rev.
Samuel Peters, once pastor of a church
iu Hartford iu revolutionary days
Here arc some of Peters’ bluest laws,
all of which are identical, iu a vital
sense, with old colonial enactments:
No. 1—“The governor and magis¬
trates convened and in general assem¬
bly are the supreme power under God
of this independent dominion.”
No. 2—From the determination
the assembly appeal shall be made. ”
no
No. 10— “No one shall bo a freeman
or give a vote unless he is
and a member in full communion of
one of the churches allowed in this
dominion.’’
No. 12—“Each freeman shall swear
by the blessed God to bear true alle¬
giance to this dominion and that Jesus
is the only king.”
No. 13—“No Quaker or dissenter
from the established worship of this
dominion shall be allowed to give a
vote for the election of magistrates or
any other officer.”
No. 14. — “No food or lodiug shall
be afforded to a Quaker, Adamite or
other heretic.”
No. 15. — “If any person turns Qua¬
ker he shall bo banished, and not suf¬
fered to return, under paiu of death. ”
'No. 16. — “No priest shall abide in
this dominion; he shall be banished
and suffer death on his return. Priests
may be seized by anyone without a
warrant.”
No. 18. — “No one shall ride on the
Sabbath day or walk in his garden or
elsewhere, except reverently to and
from meeting.”
No. 19. — “No one shall travel, cook
victuals, make beds, sweop houses, cut
hair or shave oil the Sabbath day. ”
No. 20.—“No woman shall kiss her
child on the Sabbath day or fast day.”
TO GAIN WEIGHT.
PAI/E, THIN PEOPLE USUALLY ABE
DISEASED.
Tlie First Thing Necessary to Enin Flesh
Is Health, Tlien Proper Food for
liotli Body and Nerves.
From the Journal, Kirksville, Mo.
Henry Gelirko is a thrifty and prosperous
German farmer living four miles south ot
Bullion, In this (Adair) County, Mo. Mr.
Gehrke has a valuable farm and ho has boon a
rosidont of tho county for years. He is very
well-known hereabouts and well respected
wherever ho is known. Last week n reporter
of tho Journal stopped at Mr. Golirke’s and
while there became much interested in Mrs.
Gehvke’s account of the benefit she had not
long since experienced from the use of Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills for Palo People. She
said she wonted everybody to know what a
groat medicine these pills are, but as so many
people are praising them now-a-days. she
modestly doubted whether her testimony
could add anything to what others had al¬
ready said of them. Her only reason for
talking for publication about Pink Plils was
that the pooplo of Adair and neighboring,
counties might be convinced, if any doubted
that oft-published testimonials concerning
Pink Pills wore genuine statements from Iho
lips of persons who have been benefited by
the uso of them. Speaking of her own in¬
teresting experience, Mrs. Gehrke said:
, “A tittle over a year ago I was completely
broken down. I had boon taking medicine
from a doctor but grow worse and worse un¬
til I could scarcely go about at all. The
least exertion or the moro bending of my
body would cause mo to have smothering
spells, and the suffering was terrible. I
thought it was caused by my heart. When
everything else had failed to relieve me and
I had given up all hopes of ever being any¬
thing but a helpless invalid, T chanced to
read some testimonials in tho Farm, Field
and and Fire,side, suffering also in the Chicago Inter-Ocean,
the of the people who made
the statements were so nearly like the suf¬
fering I had endured that when I read I hat
they wore so greatly benefited by the uso of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People
I did not hositate to go at once and pur¬
chase two boxes. I took them according to
directions nnd before the first box was used I
folt a good hit better. Really tho first dose
convinced me that it was a great remedy.
Before tho two boxes were used up I sent
my husband after three more boxes, so I
would not be without them. When I had
used these three boxes I felt like a different
woman and thought I was almost cured.
“Sinco that time I have peon taking them
whenever I began to feel badly. When I
began taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for
Tale People 1 weighed only 113 pounds and
after I had been usingthe medicineforabout
six months I weighed 122 pounds. I have
had a good appetite ever since I commenced
taking Pink Pills and instead of minotng
along, with picking effort, such I food as I anything could eat even that
an eat*most
comes on tho table. I am not the invalid I
was. I do not have to be waited upon now
as if I was a helpless child, but I work all
the time, doing the housework and ironing
and working in the garden without that
dreadful feeling which comes over a person
when they are afraid they are going fo have
one of those spelLs that I used to have.
‘•Work don’t hurt me any more. I hon¬
estly believe that had It not been for Dr.
Williams’ Pink Pills I would now be in my
grave. I still have what the doctor calls
bilious colic, but the Pink Pills have made
me much better and the spells are not so fre¬
quent and are nothing like as painful as be¬
fore I began to use them. I would not be
without the Pink Pills for that disease alone
under any circumstances to say nothing of
the other diseases for which they are espe¬
cially recommended. I take pleasure in tell¬
ing my neighboistbe benefits I have received
from Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale Peo
pie, and know of several who have taken
my^advice .-tndhave been greatiy benefited
J williams’Pink Pills for Pale People
Dr.
are considered an unfailing specific partial for
such diseases as locomotor ataxia,
^ CSV®
after effects of la grippe, palpitation of the
heart, pate and Bnllow complexions, that
turnon In IM blood, mint a, no.ofuln,
ohronio erysipelas, etc. They are also a
*P<*iflc for troubles peculiar to females
such as suppressions, irregularities, and all
forms of weakness. In men they effect a
tadicial cure in all cases arising from
mental worry, overwork, or excesses of
whatever nature. Dr. Williams Pink Pills
nre sold by all dealers, or will be sent port
paid on receipt of price, <50 cents a box or
six boxes for t2.50—They are never sold in
buikor bythe 100) byai dressing Do Will
Co " **""*•** N. Y.
FITS -top I free by I J Kune’s Great
Nerve Restorer. \'o fir« er lir«t dav’ G-e
Marve ou« cures. Treat f-e aud Z*
tie free. L>r. Kline, U31 Aren Sr., Phi.
p iso . g c „ re js a wonderful Cough roedlcl
esy irrB--- »-■ -
4 ;i n»ve Tried Tonic
»Uld b ‘:-ill it, o”. a d bit hi
) 0 U **Ua ) OU know . -1 -. * aiizin.' prop r i
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
RS>&!RS r
PURE
CURIOUS FACTS.
By the census of 1891 Ireland had
4,704,750 inhabitants, a decrease of
9.08 per cent iu ten years.
The population of London, taking
<^y ..... at its greatest , . extent, . . amount- ,
e3 ln l to 4, <06,661.
It has been noticed that workmen
attending pans in salt works do not
have cholern, smallpox, scarlet fever
or influenza.
France has 7,842,053 houses, of
which more than half have but one
story, 221,799 have three stories and
96,487 only four stories or more.
The largest sailing ship afloat has
just been completed at Bremen. She
is called the Potoai, is a five-master,
394 feet long, 50 feet broad, with a
draught of 25 feet and a carrying ca¬
pacity of 6,150 tons.
It is said that there are in the state
of Kansas twenty well-built towns with¬
out a single inhabitant, and that Sara¬
toga, in that state, now absolutely un¬
inhabited, lias among other buildings
a $30,000 theatre.
According to M. Gambier Bolton,
lions fetch $1,500 each, lion cubs $500
each, tiger cubs $400, a Malayan tapir
$500, a young hippopotamus $2,500,
giraffes up to $5,000 a piece, while
African elephants cannot be purchased
in Europo at any price.
'Tlio Dear Creature.
Mrs. Yerger was dressed to go to
the ball. She had on her now dress.
“You look stunning in that new
dress, but, Great Caesar ! what a lot of
money it costs these hard times,” re¬
marked Col. Yergor. .
“Lor, Charles, what do I care for
money when it comes to making you
happy,” beaming smile.—Texas replied Mrs. Yerger, Biftiugs. with a
Timely Warning.
i* The great success of the chocolate preparations of
the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established
in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
_
misleading and unscrupulous imitations
M #wC° f ** ie ‘ r name Co , labels, ^ oldest and wrappers. * largest Walter
Bal<er & * are t ie anc manu
§ Jl WSl facturers of pure this and continent. high-grade No chemicals Cocoas and
JPI 11 Chocolates on are
gfelM H used in their manufactures.
Consumers should ask for, and be sure that
they get, the genuine Walter Baker & Co.'s gooefs.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER, MASS.
Fertilizers for Fall Crops
should contain a high percentage of Potash to
insure the largest yield and a permanent enrichment
of the soil.
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, 93 N«*s.u Strttt, N«w York.
The Greatest Hedlcal Discovery
ol the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery.
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered in one of our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind ol Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple.
Ho lias tried it in over eleven hundred
eases, and never failed except In two cases
("both thunder humor;. Ho 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 lunge 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 change 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.
chealth a health signal.
Signal
The baby’s mission, its
work in life, is growth. To
0j that little bundle of love,
* . half trick, half dream, every
/ <r i added ounce of flesh means
r
~ added happiness and
com
’SLL^i^ fort. Fat is the signal of
perfect health Comfort tomiori, good crnnrl mtnro nature, hahv-beantv Daoy Duality.
Scott’s Emulsion is the best fat-food baby can have, in
the easiest form. It supplies what he cannot get in his
ordinary food, and helps him over the weak places to perfect
growth, For the growing child it is growth. For the full
grown, new life.
Be sure you %et ScotCs Emulsion vjken you want it and not a cheap substitute.
Scott & Bowne, New York. AU Druggists. 50 c. and $ 1
.
Found Them Useful,
Watts—Do you think it does any
good to belong to so many lodges?
Potts—Well, when I went over to
Europe I used to add the initials of
all of them to my name when I regis¬
tered at a hotel, and got all sorts of
deference from the clerks and waiters.
—Indianapolis Journal.
No Trust.
“When he proposed last night he
told me ho had actually bought the
ring.”
“Have you accepted him?”
“Not yet. He forgot to bring it
with him.’’—Town
You
Happen
To forget the name,
just ask for the best
Self-Raising Buck*
wheat.
YOU
WILL GET
Of course.
19
kn
kui
*
tM ■1
v>
! b
OOL. BENJ. 8. LOVELL.
Tkkan. John I’. I,over. 1 . AiimsCo.
COL. LOVELL'S
successful tl/jht for the Councillor
nomination in the Second Massachusetts
District was the subject of editoru 1 / com
rnent in the Boston Journal as follows:
“ That, animated and stubborn contest in
the. Second Councillor District end s in the
selection of an admirable, candidate., Col.
Benjamin Lovell of Weymouth. <:OL Lov¬ ’
ell is one of the best-known and Iredt-Uked
men in the Slate. A gallant soldier, an
publican, energetic man he of business, a stalwart, lie
deserves well of his party,
which has honored himwith more than o u c
conspicuous mark of its confidence, and
has made, no mistake in giving him, this
present nomination. Col. Lovell has - t.
be army of warm personal the. friends. He shun la
carried into Executive, Council by a. 1
record-breaking majority."
^ Aj£ANTA$P05l’ r (9^
©^piRE^T0Ry6>
A List of Reliable Business Houses
where visitors to the Great, Show
will be properft/ treated and can
purchase goods at lowest prices.
STILSON & COLLINS
JEWELRY CO.,
55 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
Every tiling In the Jewelry and Silver
Line at Factory Prices.
PHILLIPS & CREW CO.
37 Peachtree Street.
STANDARD
Pianos and Organs,
SHEET MUSIC,
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE.
CISEMAN BROS., 7
IB 15 and 17 Whitehall Street,
ATLANTA, GA.
— ONE PRICE-
CLOTHIERS,
Tailors, Hatters anil Furnishers.
FINE MILL/NEFU
78 Wm teha ll St
Atlanta. Ga.
D TO AVOID THIS TTISX1
0 N TETTER8NE
s I The only pttinle*! and harmless
C~3 *f* CUitR for the worst type of Eczema,
\ I IVtter, Ringworm, ugly rough patch¬
es on the face, oranted aoalp.
pie*. Ground PoiHon itch, from chafes, chaps, pim- oak.
C-3 ivy or Send poison io
In short all iichks. fWo.
II itaiiipe or cash to J, T. Shuptrine,
fl ilruggiHt Savannah. don’t <la.. k««p for it. one hoi, if your
You will find II at ( has. (>. TyM m’s, Atlanta.
AROMATIC EXTRACT BLACKBERRY
* ANI)
A f RHUBARB
—Foil—
Dysentery, Flux,
k£ Cholera Uorlnw,
Cholera, Diarrhoea
—AND -
M muni or Complaint*
Try It. Price 25c., 50c., $1.00.
For Hale by Drug-dat-s or write to
J. Stovall Smlth-i
MANUFACTURING PHARMACIST.
102 Whitehall St., Corner Mitchell,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
SULLIVAN & CRICHTON’S
AND SCHOOL OF SHORTHAND.
The bent nnd cheapest Business College In A merle*.
Time short. Instruction thorough. 4 Penmen.
Hig demand for graduates. Catalogue free
Hiu.MVtx fc i lin n run. Mvr uw*., uism*. (is.
Fur Style, Wear art Comfort,
Visit
14 WliltoliAll 8t.^
SAW MILLS CORN AND
KICK!) 51 ILLS.
Wator Whoels, nnd Hay Presses.
bunt in the market
!)«• Lon dIi *>1111 'Hu. ( •».» Atlanta* t«a«
T HE LOVELL DIAMOND
and EXCEL LINE
0F BICYCLES
Will lead the
World In 1896--The LOVELL
DIAMoVG easily takes this po¬
sition through its past glorious
record, hub with IMPROVED
CONSTRUCTION insuring light¬
ness, durability nnd finish it will
stand out alone .without a rival.
The EXCEL ihne is designed
to meet a popular- notion that
calls for a lower priced wheel.
fln'Bnea , . , .
If IS durable, nicely ana
good value. Our BICYCLE CAT¬
ALOGUE sent free on appll
cation Will QUOte prices.
The new LOVELL < A J ALOGUEof
Guns, Hides, Jievolv*;rH, Bicycles and
Kporting Goods of every description,
is mailed for 10 cents in stamps or sil¬
ver.
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO.,
BOSTON, MASS.
At.ENTH WANTED in rill 4 none*. .Hi * and Town*
where we have
WRITE FOR PART1QULAR8.
M- SQ V# A DAYSMEN Low
vxxj v,.a .p, -. you to
nish in .kl the $: a work day; aud absolutely trrach you »ure: trtf w* fur¬
work In the locality where lire; you
Mnd uayonr 1 *ddr****and w* will you explain
th* busI.-it-M fully; reraemner *?uar
UiU“ux >cV < ■:> ar profit o; $3 Jor every t ay 'a
v. < Eur»; writ* at on*e.
D. T. SOIKH1, fv F-.X IV. DF.THOIT. SHHlbAJi.
m POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
Giro*relief In FIT* minutei. 8«nd
ss. O for *. FWE£ trial package. Sold by
u £on A LroKfrluta. One Box sent postpaid
■ M Jgj receipt of *1.00. Six box— *5.00.
Addr ss THOS. POrtUM, F1IILA., PA.
PARKER’S
HA!R BALSAM
Cleanoes and beaut:Get the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant jrrowth. Gray
Never Fails to B©store
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Cart. 3-aip <1 leases & hair failing
fifjc.and t 4 at Dmggtsf
A. N. U ..... ......Forty-four, ’93.
FAILS. [9lt\ 25 I
'CURLS WHERE ALL ELSE Good. ^ Use
Best Cough fcyrup. by Tastes druggists. CTS
in time. Sold
CONSUMPTION I