Newspaper Page Text
Lasting Regrets.
“I never bet on a horse race but
once,” said the good deacon, “and I
have regretted it ever since.”
“Surely the sin has been forgiven
ere now,” said the minister.
“Oh, I don’t doubt that, but the fact
is I only won $ 2 , when 1 might just as
well have made it § 1 , 000 since I was
in ,
for it!”- -Indianapolis Journal.
A. -311 Wrinkles , Seam the Brow, ’
And Ana the locks grow scant and silvery, in- .
! 32 s::ri"SS
Hostetter’s stomach Bitter-, a medicine to
^ and Sracftf a" mn
fiency to rheumatism and neuralgia, improves
n-'SSriaf’T^regNa^before^retiring mutes slumber. 00 ^!
Anew species of dragon fly is mentioned as
liaving been found at Ogden, Utah.
Dr. KLmer’s S w a m P-Boor curs?
a!i Pamphlet Kidney and and Bladder troubles.
Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. V.
'Maria isoniy Dag mar, the Dotvager Empress of
Russia, 47 years old.
In Olden Times
People overlooked the importance of perma¬
nently beneficial effects and were satisfied
with transient action, but nQW that it is gener
ally known that Syrup of Figs will permanent
ly cure habitual constipation, well-informed
people will not buy other laxatives, which act
for a time, but finally injure thesystem.
The Duke of York is to he made a rear ad¬
miral. _________
What a Sense of Relief it is to Know
that you have no corns. Hiudercorns removes
them and is comforting. 15c. at druggists.
$
m
J
( A i
Weak and Languid
“Our little Katherine had whooping cough,
after which she lingered along from day to
day, poor, weak, languid. She could scarcely
eat anything. Her flesh was soft and sallow.
I gave her
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and she soon began to crave something to
eat. She steadily improved, and today is in
full good health. Her flesh and ls solid, sleep her
tjheeks rosy, appetite good her
refreshing.” Sins. M. A. Cook, 34 Fulton St.,
Seabody, Mass. Get only Hood’s.
IS..41. IkOwu S DiUn HIS are tasteless, mild, effee- 23a
I tlve. All druggists.
Them All,
Every
Tom,
Dick
and Harry’s
Buckwheat,
THEN
TRY
u
The Greatest fledical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
Medical Discovery 1
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS,
Has discovered in one oX our common
pasture weeds a remedy that cures every
kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common pimple. hundred
He has tried it in over eleven
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor), He has now in
his possession over two hundred certifi¬
cates of its value, all within twenty miles
ol 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, iike needles passing
through them; the same with the.Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappeafs in a
week after taking it. Bead 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.
^8 Agents-Ladies of Genti, S78
a week at borne, uiing or aeiHog
Gray P.a- er«, or takingorder* for a«
to plate. Plate gold, aiW«T, nickel,
copper, white metal, maoufactare
the materials and cutflta. teach the
wheels, too’, t. »u a.i 2
paring, poti sfcing.
I fishing, no toys, »m.n in w.veiing
k ^Cfcse, "pric**. i*rge testimonials, for shop*. asmples descr.ption. free.
Qruj At Co., Plating Work*, J>ep’t 16, Cohiaibaa, ©.
MARLIN REPEATER.
Models 1894. ^ f> or ,,
#t^^id\op Calibre*ready. M anf'si'de^eJectin* The Marnn F ire
an other New Haven, i-onn.
Catilozuc frM -
-
CTS. u to o W> AS o ai 7) n •n G tr
25 in tiTTl©. fiolfl
■ CON SUMPTION
TRAINING .MOUNTED “COPS.”
HOW N3W YORK POLICEMEN ARE
TAUGHT TO STOP RUNAWAYS.
Early Horning T.essons In Central
Park—Tlie Horse’s Part in a
Dangerous Employment.
ABLY wanderers in Central
Park are sometimes startled
I . , by . mounted . , police
-*-*• t seeing ,7 a
man galloping • at . full , ,, speed ,
8 * ° *
, . . .
sx«
he has gone far another mounted of
dashes out from a clump of
bushes and, galloping alongside the
seeming runaway, seizes the bridle
close to the bit, and with more or less
dexterity brings him to ft stop. This
little performance forms an import
ant part in the training of a mounted
policeman. F ew riders, however
skilful, are capable of neatly and
quickly stopping a runaway horse
without some preliminary training.
Every mounted policeman has been
put upon a month’s probation before
being appointed. During this period
he is thoroughly tested by the ser
geant as to his riding ability and
courage. Some men, though good
riders, show the white feather when it
comes to stopping runaways.
When the applicant for a position
on the mounted police force has gone
through a course of instruction, the
sergeant or roundsman takes him out
on the bridle path and proceeds to
test his mettle. He takes up his stand
at a given place, while the ' sergeant
rides back a few hundred yards, and
then comes thundering toward him at
full speed. The new policeman must
not allow him to get by, but by gal
loping up alongside and seizing the
bit of the instructor’s horse must
bring him to a stop. This maneuvre
is repeated again and again until the
novice has shown that he has the
nerve and ability to stop a runaway
going at full speed. The sergeant says
that be would just as soon train a
green hand who could not ride at all
as a practiced horsemen. Any man
ivith good nerve, a good .seat in his
saddle and a quick eye can stop a
runaway horse with a little practice.
The crack riders in the mounted
squad will defy any horse to pass them
if they are unobstructed by other
horses and carriages. It is more dif¬
ficult to stop a horse and wagon
than a horse by itself. The
reason is that there is more
danger of the wheels of the vehicle
striking the legs of the policeman’s
horse, in which case his rider might
be thrown off. A mounted policeman
never attempts to stop a runaway
which is going away from him. Tho
runaway is always stopped by a po¬
liceman in front, who, when he sees it
coming, rides along until it is abreast
and then, seizing the bit of the ani¬
mal, gradually pulls it up. They
never take hold of the. bridle rein,
but always of the bit itself. A horse
has less power aud is easier to con¬
trol when a hold is secured on his bit
than when held by the bridle rein.
The horses of the mounted squad are
very fast for a short bnrst and seem
to understand fully the importance of
exerting their speed when a runaway
is to be stopped. Their training is as
important as that of their riders, and
niost of the animals understand ex
tly what is required of them. Most
of the horses driven in the Park arc
thoroughbreds, and a stern chase
would be merely a farce on the part
of a mounted policenian. For the
short burst of speed, however, neces
sary to get rflhngside and seize the
bridle of a runaway, the policemen
can depend upon their animals. To
get the best, vVork out of the horses it
is found that., they must know and
have confidence in their riders. Tbie
idea is rigidly acted upon by the ser
geant of the squad, who is very strict
in seeing that the men use their beasts
kindly. As a rule, the men are far too
fond of their mounts to do otherwise,
and every horse greets his rider in tho
morning with a whinny of pleasure
before the order “clean horses and
bridles” is given. The pride of the
men in their horses is shown by the
tiptop condition and well-groomed ap
pearance whioh the animals present,
—New York Tribune.
The Great Simplon Tunnel.
Work will soon be commenced on
the great Simplon tunnel on the Jura
Simplon Railway. Two tunnels are
to be constructed some fifty-seven feet
apart, the entire length being 66,030
feet, or about twelve miles. At every
670 feet the two tunnels will be con
nected with each other to provide bet
ter ventilation. One of the tunnels
will be completed first, while the
other will be used fox-weutilation. It
is thought that this arrangement will
do awRy’with the problem of supply
ing the workmen with air, whioh
eaused so much tronble in the St.
Gothard and Mont Genis tunnels. The
cost of the’tumiel is estimated at about
50,000,000 franc 3 or $10,000,000.—
New York Sun. •• "
'
Division ol llie Sexes.
One of the most remarkable churches
is to be found at Freuuentbal, iu the
Black Forest. It is built on such a
plan that tffe men are unable to see
t y J6 women, an l vice versa, for it is
composed of two wings, which meet
at an angle where the pulpit stands.
The right wing is allotted to men and
the left one to the women of the eon
gregation.—-Schwabischer Merkur.
Horses Appreciate Kind Treatment,
There is no class of persons who
have a more kindly ^ feeling - for a dumo
aiumdi than the police .. patrol ,
wagon
and fire department drivers; They
are thoroughly attached to their
horses and'the latter to the men. This
is due to the fact that thy, aui horses always get
the best of treatment, are
petted and well fed. T
SELECT SIFTIXGS.
Texas has sevonty-twa acres planted
in flax.
Missouri produces 9,424,823 pounds
of tobacco.
Miss Lucretia Estes, Boekland, Me.,
is 100 and threads her own needle
without specs.
Lemuel H. Andrews, of West Gads
den, Fla., has killed 1278 rattlesnakes
during his . ... life.
s
After an Eskimo is buried no mem
■>««*.**.«»»
ls considered unlucky to tvo so.
On Quidnessit Neck, Rhode Island,
Nathaniel Allen has established an ex¬
perimental orchard of 1000 peach trees,
The greatest bell is that long fain ons
as the giant of tho Kremlin, in Mos
cow, Russia. Its weight is 443,722
pounds. Ji
The dest watches bearing inscribed
dafceg ar0 of Swi3s make , aud the date
ig U81> Anything antedating the
above is a fraud.
Through a mistake in a cipher tele¬
gram twenty-five English chorus girls
had a voyage to Rio Janeiro, Brazil,
instead of to the United States.
To remove a rusty screw apply a
red Lot to tho , , head for short , ,
iron a
time, the screwdriver being used lm
mediately afterward while the screw is
still hot.
-4 Chattanooga (Tonn.) man was ar
rested the other day for stealing, a
Bible. He 'said that he wanted to
read the tjook and didjUot have money
to buy one.
English noblemen are the only ones
in Europe who ever wear coronets on
their heads, and the sole occasion
wheu they do so is, at the coronation
of the sovereign.
Sisaburi Mikonbat, the Japanese
wko saved the Hf e D f the Czarowitz
when in Japan in 1891; was deolared
exempt from servioe during the late
war by the Mikado.
Sailormen tell of a terrible plant
called “gagus,” which grows in tho
Gauptia Island, Malaysia, out of which
is distilled a liquor whioh rots the
bones of those who drink it.
The oldest steam engine in the coun¬
try went through a recent fire in Sa¬
vannah, Ga., but was dug out of tho
ruins all right, and exhibited iu At¬
lanta. It was built by James Watt.
Briar root pipes are cut out of the
wood of the tree heath which grows in
Southern France and Italy, and the
pipes are manufactured at Nuremberg
and at St. Cloud in tho east of
France.
Adventures as a Slave in Brazil.
John Aufdemhaus, a thriving hotel
man of Braddock, Penn., went to Bra¬
zil in his youth to make his fortune.
Ho had not boen in that country long
before his money ran out and he found
himself penuildss and hungry. Slav
ery existed in Brazil’ at that time,
and in a fit of desperation he sold him¬
self Jts a slave for 200 millreis, equiva¬
lent to §200 in United States coin.
His disposition of himself in this mau
ner meant that for the balance of his
life he was tho property of another,
and as such could be transferred just
the same as au animal. His master
sent him along with 200 other slaves
out to a coffee and fruit plantation,
whore he labored along with his l'el
lows, most of whom were Africans,
and in return for bis labor received
what ho could eat and tho necessary
clothing and nothing elBe. Fortnn
ately for the young man he retained
possession of two watches, and, giving
one of them to the overseer, was made
slave driver. Ouo day, eight months
after becoming a slave, he was sent to
the coast with 100 slaves in his charge
with loads of fruit, dye woods and
collee. Arriving at the coast, young
Aufdemhaus found that the vessel to
which the goods in his care were eon
signed was the same vessel on which
he had come to Brazil, and he lost no
time in explaining his situation to the
captain, who agreed to take him back
provided he could escape. The ves
sel was to sail in the evening and tho
last of the goods had been placed on
board and the slaves were ordered
ashore, and before they had reached it
the big ship had spread her sails and was
scudding homeward, and the horrors
of the slave pen were left behind.—
New Orleans Picayune.
How the Sun Knocks Things Out.
The sun is doubtless in the main a
great globe of gas, although so in
tensely compressed iu its central parts
that they may be in a thickened or
semi-viscous condition. The gravi
tating attraction of the sun’s mass is
eve r tending to generate a downward
velocity in the gaseous molecules,
situated in any part of it, toward its
center. At the same time, the railia
tian'of heat at its surface diminishes
the upward counter-balancing pres
sure. This allows the molecules to be
actually more or lass drawn inward,
Their individual average velocities
are, upon tho whole, increased. Their
knocks against each other become
more violent and generate an increase
of temperature. And the result,
which might at first seem to be almost
paradoxical, is explained, viz.: That
the sun, as its surface radiates heat
away (which so far is a cooling pro¬
cess), may nevertheless, through its
contraction, generate a higher tem¬
perature by the fiercer clashings to
gether, or knocks, of its molecules,
ns they are drawn inward. This may
enable it to send forth a more intense
heat and light than before.—Nine
ieeuth Century.
To Cool the Hands.
Roman ladies of rank had their
slaves carry for them a number of
ambar and crystal balls about the size
of a billiard balL At fetes, or while
seated at the gladiatorial games, they
held the crystal balls in their hands
iwc the ooolaess imparted by them.
ITSrWS OF INTEREST.
Ohio stands at the head of the states
in clay manufacture, its product being
valued at $ 10 , 668 , 000 , or over 16 per
oent of that of the whole country. Il¬
linois comes next, with 13 per cent,
and Pennsylvania stands third, with
11 per cent.
Austria-Hungary ha# 174 paper fac¬
tories, 120 pasteboard factories and 84
pulp factories. The yearly produc¬
tion is about 850,000,000 pounds of
paper, 20 , 000,000 pounds of paste¬
board and 150,000,000 pounds of pulp,
worth more than $ 20 , 000 , 000 .
For a short distance a lion or a tigor
oau outrun a mau, and can equal the
speed of a fast horse, but they lose
their wind at the end of half a mile at
the moat. They have little endur¬
ance, and are remarkably weak in lung
power.
If by any meaua a bird attained the
lightness of a ballon it could not fly.
A balloon drifts with every gust; steer¬
ing is impossible, the wind ohooses its
course. The bird ballon, as light as
the wind and as strong as iron, is a fig¬
ment of the imagination.
Among the series of notices in the
London Gazette notifying the closing
of various ohurchyards for further in¬
terments, appears one relative to the
parish churchyard of Stratford-on
Avon, within tho limits of which, but
inside the church itself, Shakespeare
lies buried.
Roller Ships.
A littlo steamer of 100 tons is at
present, according to press dispatches,
being constructed at Argenteuil, ac¬
cording to the invention of M. Bazin,
which consists in rolling tho ship over
the water instead of forcing it through
as at present, To this end tv number
of enormous copper cylinders are fixed
to the vessel, the speed attained de¬
pending upon the speed of the metal
cylinders, and it is computed that 31
knots an hour can be easily made.
WOMAN'S EHEMY.
PERITONITIS SKIIlon SPARES ITS
VICTIMS.
When It Doe* She 1* But a Wreck—Phy¬
sician* Have Lone Been Powerless
—The Experience of a Haiti*
more Woman,
From, the Herald, Baltimore, Md.
Mrs. J. P. Grove, a married lady with
grandchildren, lives 417 Plnlcnoy Place,
Baltimore. She would easily pass for a
woman of half her wro, and owes her present
state of Rood health and probably her life to
tho use of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. A Herald
reporter onllod at the house a few days ago
and was Informed that Mrs. Grove had gone
ont for a walk and would soon he back, Tho
scribe was ushered Into the parlor to await
her arrival. Tho room gave every ovidonoe
of refinement and the oara and attention ol
a good housewife. Choloe books lay around
giving proof of tho Intelligenoe of the family,
and the walls were decorated with many rare
articles of virtu and hrle-a-hrao from South
America, Japan, and other countries. When
Mrs. Grove was announced the reporter looking was
astonished to find her such a young
and healthy woman. Hhnle well educated,and
is a fluent talker and interesting to listen to.
She, however, declined at first to speak of
the results she had experienced said, she did from taking like
tho Pink Pills ns, she not
to have her name appear In print in little any way.
“However,” she added, after some hesi¬
tation, “tho pills did mb so mneh good that
I might be doing wrong by not lotting some
other sufferer know what they did for me."
Then she said, “Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills are
certainly all the proprietors represent them
to be. I never had such relief from any
other medicine. A short time ago X had an
attaok of peritonitis which loft me In such a
prostrated and nervous oondltlon (hat I de¬
spaired of roeovory. I could neither sleep,
eat or read with any degree of peace or sat¬
isfaction, and life was absolutely a cured burden.
Having heard that others had been of
the same troubles by Dr. Williams’ Pink I'itls,
I secured several boxes and began to take
them. As if by magic I at once bog an to
Improve. They cured me, and now I liuvo
no symptomsof nervousness or of the disease
which so prostrated me. Now that’R enough,”
said Mrs. Grove, in reply to another qnos
tion . She walked to the door as lightly os n
young girl and, with a pleasant good within morn¬
ing to tho reporter, disappeared the
portals of her happy home with a little
grandchild clinging to her skirts.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills contain, in a con¬
densed form, all tho elements necessary to
give new life and richness to tho blood an!
restore shattered nerves. Pink Plllsare sold
by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on
receipt of price (B 0 coots a box, or six boxes
for #2.60—they are never sold in bnllc or by
10t>>, by addressing Dr. Williams’ Medicine
Company, Schenectady, N. Y.
8100 Reward. S I OO.
The readers of this paper will he pleased to
learn That, there isat leant one dreaded disease
that science ha“ been able to cure in a I its
and that in Catarrh. Hail’s Catarrh
Cure is tin* only positive cure now known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh bi inx consti¬
tutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Ik taken inter¬
nal!acting directly upon the blood arid mu¬
cous surfaces of the system, thereby de t toy¬
ing the foundation of the dis<*a , *e f and giving
the patient strengt h by building up the M»n
stitution arid a-listing nature mudi in doing faith its
work. The proprietors have so in
it u curative powers that they offer One Hun¬
dred Dol ars for any cause that it fails to cure.
.Send for list of testimonial-. Address
F- J. Chknky & Co., Toledo, O.
HT’Sold by Druggists, 75 .
Your EITorts are Iu Tolu
trying to regain lost ctrenath by cod the liver us» oil. of
tonlc«, nervinss, preparations of
Iron, etc. To get back the o.d-time vigor, tbs
bright eye, the firm »tep, the ambition, The the
first aim must be to promote nutrition.
Stomach needs the aid of a powerful ally like
Tyner’s Dy.pep-la Remedy. With its help,
indigestion vanishes, perfect digestion rules,
and health ls as tired.
For s.le by all druggists. Price 30 rent* per
bottle.
Ifng KnWiriflr Extraordinary.
Two arro» mol barrio fatten 85 hoi/-*- Tiie»
hog* were turned in tli orchard In May and
kept there till September eating nothing but
mulberries aud were fed perfectly little fat when to bar taken
nut. They were a corn !eri
the meat and th » killed. Two acres of
mulberry trees 608 ft. hi 'h cost $30.00 —w-iat
are #5 fat bogN worth? For best k nd* of mul¬
berries write for new catalogue which is s -.rit
free. Address VV. D. Beatie, Atla- ta. Ga.
For Whooping Cough, P ho’s Cure is a Hue
cosftfnl remedy.—M. P. Dirtrw. G7 Tbroop
Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., Nov. 14, ’94.
FITS stopped free by Dk, Kline’s Orbat
Nervf. Restorer, No fits after fir-? day’s u-e.
Marveious pares. Treat ise and $2.00trial bot¬
tle fre£. Dr. Kline, 931 Arch St., phiia.. Pa.
Parker** (linger Tonic i* Popular
•for good work. Suffering, Jeep 'ess, nervom
women find nothing jso£' ©thing an i reviving.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothiqg Syrup for children
teething* softens tiie gams, reduces inflamma¬
tion. allays pain, cures wi/u\<foiic. 25c. a bottle
If afflicted with sore eyes two Dr. Isaac Thoznp
ion’8Eye-water.Druggi*tss€H.at25c per bottle.
Highest of all ia Leavening Power.— Latest U. S. Gov't Report
RpyaiBS *
i
ABSOLUTELY BURE
A Boy’s Retort.
Onoe, when one of Farragnt’s gun¬
boats on the Mississippi was just go¬
ing into action, one of tho powder
monkeys was noticed by an officer
kneeling by one of the guns saying his
prayers. The officer sneeringly asked
him what he was doing, and if ho yas
afraid. i
“No, I was praying,” said he.
“Well, what were you praying for?”
“Praying,” said the lad, “that the
enemy’s bullets may be distributed tho
same way as the prize-money is—prin¬
cipally among the offioers.”—Argo¬
naut.
A Practical Youth.
Old Bullion—Whatl You wish to
marry my daughter? She is a more
schoolgirl yet.
Suitor—Yes, sir. I oame early to
avoid the rush.—New York Weekly.
OSBORNES
SfltuineM
AND V
School of SUortliand
AIHJIJMT A. GA.
No text book* usAil, Actual business from day of
Motoring. Business paper*, col In ge currency and
good* logue. used, fiend for hand aoumty illustrated oata
Hoard cheap, it. U. far* paid to Augusta.
ACME CHURN,
$4.30
Best Butter,
Shortest Time,
Least Labor.
King Hardware Co.
ATLANTA, (U.
! 49" Best Stoves ami
tangos. Lowest prices.
ASTHMA
* POPHAM’S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
eivnyreltoMn tin Au* mlnutos, Rand
Drusglata. On *1.00. it aunt postpaid aid
on Addrnra rOoelpt Tiles. Of HI, On,,.,(,.00.
I OPH1B, l'HILi., r*.
■*
make $.1 u dav; absolutely nure; v»o f ur
nl*h the work *nd Imudi you fr«« you
work In the locality where you livei
■•nd u» vour •ddron* and we will explain
tho bunneM fully; remember w* guar
ante© a cJaar profit of $3 lor every t-ay'a
d. t. uuu. .a vs’TK^Ba^.aiSjs:
$3 A YEAR.
Presidential Year. tlijSrtent. J
THE CHICAGO CHRONICLE, wUtKSI ilonm
cratlo newspaper of the weal, dkcMrlntlon Bent tdx
days a week ona year for $:!. SnmiJrl|ei. No at
ttdH rate less than one year. V TIIH
CHRONICLE, 104-1 HO Washing!.uV Chicago.
PARKER’S
HAIR BALSAM
■gi Clttftniiflff oinl bnstitiflti the hair,
Promotei a luxuriant growth,
Hover Pal In to lie store Gray
Hslr to its Youthful Color.
OurtiH fti’ulp (liRf-avi’A At heir fiillmg.
g0c,»n<l | LOUftt Druiorirti
A. N. U...... ..... Forty-nix, ’95.
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, 93 Na.ssu Street, New York.
H EATIN G STOV ES
■ ■thk largknt link south, the lowest
BTWrito for Prioos.
HUNNIGUTT & BELLINGRiTH GO., Atlanta,
Timely Warning.
Th» great success of the chocolate preparations of
the house of Walter Baker & Co. (established
in 1780) has led to the placing on the market
fmany misleading and unscrupulous imitations
of their name, labels, and wrappers. Walter
Baker Sc Co. are the oldest and largest manu¬
f facturers of pure and high-grade Cocoas and
n Chocolates on this continent. No chemicals are
V used in their manufactures.
$ 5 Consumers should ask for, and be sure that
they get, the genuine Walter Baker Sc Co.’s goo<?s.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER, MASS.
the food for all such.
How many pale folk
there are ! People who.
have the will, but no power
to bring out their vitality;
people who swing like
wP a pendulum between
strength and weakness—
so that one day’s work
causes six days’ sickness!
People who have no life
for resisting disease—thin people, nerveless, delicate !
The food for all such men, women, or children is Scott’s
Emulsion. The hypophosphites combined with the oil
will tone up the system, give the blood new life, improve
the appetite and help digestion. The sign of new life will
be a fattening and reddening, which brings with it strength,
comfort and good-nature.
Be sure you get Scott's Emulsion when you want it and not a cheap substitute.
Scott & Bowne, New York, ah Druggists. 50c. and $*.
Forgiveness of Two Kinds.
Judge Lamar, at a political meeting
in his own state, alluding to the civil
war, suggested as a parallel case tfae
parable of the Prodigal Son, and tile
joyful reception at his home when the
naughty boy returned. He was- suo
ceeded by a negro, a republican, who,
after some general remarks, paid his
respects to Lamar’s parallel.
“Forgibon!” said he; “dey forgib
en, dem brigadiers? Why, ddy’se
come walkin’ into de house, an’ b£ng
de do’, an’ go up to de ol’ man an*
say: ‘Whar dat veal?’”—Crypt. ’
r M**taFv[P <*5>IRE^TOigrG\ 05 IT' 0 K
List of Reliable Business Houses
where ' visitors to the Great Shpw
will be properly treated and can
purchase goods at lowest prices.
STILSON l COLLINS
JEWELRY CO.,
56 Whitehall St.. Atlanta. Oa,
Everything In the Jewelry and Silver
Line at Factory Prices.
.
>0 <a
l/0 0
FINS MILL HlP, Y
7igW hitehall St.
Atlanta. Oa.
°0. TO AVOID THIS TTlBLEJ
li| TETTERINE
O Tho only pain lean and harmless
J) tr> ▼ I cuke Totter, for Ringworm, th« worst.njrpe ugly rough of Kczeuug pfttch
D n hh on the face, oru8fc«a rfoalp.'
•
>
■■■*, NT Ground itch, chain*, ohap*. pim
I P dIhm. PoiHon from ivy or potion oak.
In short all ITGUKH. fiend Wo, in
1jI| Savannah. tamp* or oaah <ia., to for J. one T. box. fihuptrmo. If your
druggiMt don't keep it.
You will find It at thiAs. 0. Tvs Kit’s, Atlanta.
For Style, Wear and Comfort,
Vl*lt
laodvort
14 WliitolialX SI*.
SAW MILLS CORN AND
FEED MILLS.
Water Wheels and Hay Presses.
HUNT IN THE MARKET
llel.norli VI ill llf u. illir,. Allnntn. Gn.