Newspaper Page Text
WiTlen Does the XX Century Degin?
'J’bo exact ending of the present and
the beginning of the next century are
» fljestions L fa French that Academy are about of Sciences threadbare. has,
i( *iwever. finally settled the matter to
i hps own satisfaction by agreeing with
fits secretary, M. Bertrand, who con
tpnds that designated there never via< cypher nor could (0); and be
» year by a
that we must reckon from the year 1
A. C. This appears to be a reasonable
proposition. So, as far as France and
the French Academy of Sciences are
concerned, the twentieth century be¬
gins January, 1901.
Man Wns JIrde lo Mourn,
Perhaps, but rheumatism need not add to the
ca’amiiies to which we are more or less sub¬
ject, when there is such an efficient means of
counteracting the dire complaint as Hos
tetter’s Stomach Biriers. When the liver,
bowels or stomach are out of order, or the
kidneys also or nerves troublesome, ilio Bitters is
an efficient remedy. It prevents and
remedies all malarial disorders.
Imit te the < amal if you want to succeed in
life. Got a hump on yourself.
Kest of AH
To cleanse tlie system in a gentle and trnly
beneficial manner, when the Springtime
comes, use the true. and perfect remedy.
Syrup of Figs. One bottle will answer for all
the family, and costs only 50 cents; the large
size 51. Buy the genuine. Manufactured by
tho California Fig Syrup Company only, and
for sale by all druggists.
The work God w ants us to do He puts within
our reach.
_
Dr. Ki mer s Sit aiip-Rooi cure a
aii Kidney and Bladder troubles.
Pamphlet and Consultation free.
Laboratory Binghamton. N. V.
One of th“ rigns of the times that the devil
of drink is about to be east out, is that it is
crying so hard to he let alone.
Nothing in bath or laundry so good as Borax
Dobbins’ Floating-Borax Soap needs but one trial
to prove its value. Costs same as poorer float
ing soap. No one has ever tried it without buy¬
ing more. Your grocer lias it.
Save vour money and some day your money
will ave you.
Bronchitis. Sudden changes of the weather
cause Bronchia 1 Troubles. “Brown's Bronchial
Troches" will give effective! relief.
A big stomach gives a very swell effect to a
man’s new cl .thee.
Yellow Hind, Blood lted Fleslit
A wonderful combination, a tremendous
novelty, found only in Saizer’s Golden
Pumpkin Watermelon. It’s marvelous. We
paid $300 for one melon! You will want it,
everybody wants it. 5 kernels 10c., 25 ker¬
nels 40c. 35 packages earliest vegetable
seeds $1.00. Our new creations in oais yleld
ing 20] bu., barley 11G bu,, potatoes 1200
bus. per acre! Where will it end?
If you Wall cut this our and send with
10c. postn-n to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La
Grossu, Wis. y you will g«‘t free a package of
above Sa zer’s Golden l’urapkiu Watermelon
seed and our i IS page seed catalogue free.
Catalogue alone 5c. for mailing, (A. 0.)
==:
Scrofula
Infests the blood of humanity. It
Appears in varied ’terms, bat is forced
to yield to Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which
purifies and vitalizes the blood and
cures all such diseases. Read this:
“In September, 1894,1 made a misstep and
Injured my ankle. Very soon afterwards
A Sore
two inches across formed, and in walking to
favor it I sprained my ankle. The sore be¬
came worse; I could not put my boot on,
and I thought I should have to gtve up at
every step. I could not get any relief and
had to stop work. I read of a cure of a sim¬
ilar case by Hood’s Sarsaparilla and con¬
cluded to try it. Before I had taken all of
two bottles the sore had healed and the
swelling had gone down. II y
Is now well and I have been greatly bene¬
fited otherwise. I have increased in weight
and am in better health. I cannot say
enough in praise of Hood’s Sarsaparilla,”
Mbs. H. Blake, South Berwick, Me.
This and other similar cures prove that
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All Druggists. $1
Prepared only by C. I. Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass.
P IIS The best family cath-t rtic
ana. livrr p*imuJ»T)t. -Sc.
at your door. It can and does furnish a
better article for less moDej than
_ Pumping xuA
others. It makes
Geared, Steel, Galvanized _ after- _
Completion Windmill!, TllUoc
ana rued steel Towers, steel Bnrz
^ Frames, Steel Feed Cutters and Feed
a Grinders. On application It will name dm
of m<»se articles that It will furnish until
SLfruc‘.. Rockwell and Fillmore Pr £nd Street*. Cbtcaia
Factory: 12tb.
OSBORNE’S
/g? „
udinedd is-isi/z, / LPts
AND
School of Shiortlia.ri.cl
AKiUMTA, GA.
Not«xt books used. Actual business from d tj of
♦Uterine. Business D»Der-., college curr-nc j &a i
good* a->ed. Send for handsoine.y n •jstrated cat*
ocue. fio&rd caeiiper than n any .Smtbern city.
£ ASTHMA
POPHAK S ASTHMA SPECIFIC
Givse relief In FITE mlnate*. 8end
for a Fl£E£tri«.l package. Sold Ur
Drnggrists. receipt of One il.OO. Box Six sent Imxm p08-.p*fd
on TU08. Si.00.
Addreee POPHiE, PHILA , Pi.
o?m and WHISKY habit* cored. Book sent
PRRK. Dr. B. X. WCOLLET, ATLANTA, ttJL
■ *
■fig JeT P ISO’S CITRI ELSE FAilS. FOR 25 |
CUKS WHERE All Good. Use
tea Best Cough syrup.. Tastes CTS.
r a in time, sold by druggists. I
•V
VI
g.
o.\ vV
WuJlWb s. ■ :v
INFLUENCE OF BEAUTIFUL WOMEN.
Emerson long ago apprehended the
truth when he said : “Beauty reaches
its perfection iu the human form. All
men are its lovers. Wherever it goes
it creates joy and hilarity. It reashes
its height iu women."
Our reminiscences are, therefore,
only the recognition of the tributes
men pay to beauty, aud when we re¬
call the stories of Pualine de Yiguire,
that virtuous and accomplished
maiden’of the fifteenth century, who
so tired the enthusiasm of the people
with her enchanting face and form
that the civil authorities compelled
her by edict to appear publicly twice
a week on a balcony to allay the ex¬
citement—and the accounts of that
other lovely woman, Elizabeth Dun¬
ning, the Duchess of Hamilton, of
whom Walpole says that when she was
presented at court the noble crowd
clambered on the tables and chairs to
look at her—when we recall this mad¬
ness of the world, it is not difficult to
perceive how the theatre can become
the pedestal and the wand of a beauti
iul woman.—New York Commercial
Advertiser.
SEVERE ON HUSBANDS.
According to the Massachusetts Su¬
premo Judicial Court husbands can no
longer rule their wives. The Court
says, in virtue'of rendering a recefit decision:
“By this legislation a mar¬
ried woman becomes, in the view of
the Jaw, a distinct and independent
person from her husband, not only in
respect to her right to own property,
but also in respect to her right to use
her time for tho purpose of earning
money on her sole and separate ac¬
count. She may perform labor, and
is entitled to her wages and earnings.
If she complies with the statutory re¬
quirement as to recording a certificate
she may carry on any trade or busi¬
ness on her sole and separate account,
and take the profits, if profits there
are, as her separate property.”
Her husband can appropriate neither
her earnings nor her time, but he is
obliged to support her as in the old
regime. He has few rights left,
though, for, “to a certain limited ex
tent* as tor example, , in fixing „ . tho ,,
domicile and in being responsible un¬
der ordinary circumstances for its or¬
derly management, the husband is
still the head of the family.”—New
York Press.
a clever maiden.
“Why do you go so little with Maud
D. ?” asked a mother of her daughter,
a girl popular in society. “I find her
charming,”
“You will laugh if I tell you, mam
my,” said this up-to-date young
woman; “but it is simply because she
is so unbecoming to me; I simply can¬
not afford it. I like her immensely,
but an unbecoming intimate friend is
really a great affliction. Tnere are
some girls that make you look stumpy,
and others that make you look fat. A
lair, fresh girl will make a dark, sal¬
low one look yellower than ever, while
the latter otten makes the former re¬
semble a broadfaced milkmaid. Look
at Ethel M. and Carrie S. They have
been devoted to each other since they
were babies, hut the one grew like a
bean pole, and the other stayed a roly
poly little thing, and now they look
positively ridiculous together when
they are walking on the avenue.
Carrie alone would be rather pretty,
although she is short and plump, but
with Ethel she seems u positive
dwarf.
“That is the worst of tall people, by
the way; they make every one else ap¬
pear to be undersized. Of course, you
cannot exactly choose a friend as you
would a gown, because sho sets you off
to the best advantage; but, ail the
same, it is much nicer to have some
one who harmonizes with youpgeneral
appearance.”—Philadelphia Inquiier.
GOSSIP.
Eighteen American women bear, by
marriage, the title of Princess.
The post of Secretary of the Utah
Senate is filled by a woman, Mrs.
The Empress of Austria, who has a
reputation as a horsewoman, now rides
a bicycle.
The Duchess d’Uzes, of France, is
the only feminine Master ^ ohthe , Hounds TT
in the world.
A woman. Miss Emma Whitney, of
Cleveland, was recording clerk of the
Ohio Legislature last vear.
Miss Helen Gould has presented
$3000 to Vassar College for a scholar
ship * n memory of her mother.
^ „ Tem , le lfe .. of , tha ,, Bl3h t. ■ , of .
P ’ * °P
London, T acts as his private secretary.
bhe is an excellent shorthand writer.
The Dowager Duchess of Atholl,who
, has , been ii lady in waiting to Queen vr Vic
tom for forty-two years, is about to
resign.
The last census shows that there are
in the United States 1235 women
preachers, 203 lawyers, 455o physi¬
cians and surgeons.
Judge C. \\. Smith, of Stockton,
.-van., keep3 the salary of court sten
ivgrapher in the family by appointing
tus wife to th<. place.
s< -w ar i° a Butler, wire . of the
North , Carolina Senator, has tastes
ecidedly domestic, but she like3 so
iety in moderation.
Miss Mary French Field, daughter
i. Eugene Field, and nineteen years
of age, is preparing herself to give
readings from her father’s poems.
Mrs. H. M. Stanley has not a single
green garment of any sort in her ward
robe. For some reason she conceived
a violent prejudice against the color.
Mrs. Thomas Carter, wife of Mon¬
tana’s Senator, has a decided talent
for music, She is devoted to her
family, and is a model wife aud
mother.
Two American women have been ad¬
mitted to the Pedagogical “Seminar,"
University of Leipsic, an extraordin¬
ary privilege, for the first time con¬
ferred upon women.
Dartmouth Collego has its first wo¬
man student. The University of Chi¬
cago has the largest attendance of wo¬
men graduate 'students of any educa¬
tional institution in tho world.
Vilma Von Parlaghi, the fair Hun¬
garian portrait painter whom the Ger¬
man Emperor so markedly protects
and distinguishes, and whom he en¬
dows with pfcizes despite the academy,
has been divorced from her husband.
M. Dampt, a French f sculptor, will
contribute to the next Salon a statu¬
ette, of a Comtesse well known in
Paris, and the flesh will be represent¬
ed in ivory, and the drapery in old
gold will be ornamented with precious
stones.
There are at present two Chinese
girls at the University of Michigan.
One of them, Miss Lhie, has been
elected secretary of the senior class.
The ultimate object of these women is
to return to China as Christian medi¬
cal missionaries. (
Mrs. McKinley, whoso husband has
just retired from tho Governorship of
Ohio, recalls the faot that during the
term of President Hayes sho and her
husband occupied the White House
for ten days by invitation to “keep
house” thero while the President and
his family were absent.
Miss Williams, professor of English
at the Normal Sohool of Sevres, has
founded a “Franco-English Guild,”
the object of which is to make French
girls who have learned English ac¬
quainted with tho views of American
and English women through lectures
and meetings in Paris, or by corre¬
spondence. Mrs. Potter Palmer has
lectured before the society on the
work of women in the United States.
FASHION NOTES.
Empire house gowns are picturesque.
Spangled trimmings are more popu¬
lar than ever.
The Marie Antoinette craze seems
already departing.
Imitation pearls are the only neck
jewels worth buying.
Batiste insertions will be seen on
many summer gowns.
Large flowered veils of lace are seen
on some of the new hats.
Sliding chain bracelets of other
days are seen once in a while.
A large number of tall Spanish
combs are now on view in the hair¬
dressers’ windows.
The reddish-purple duchesse is used
again, and a lighter shade, Ophelia,
that might be styled a mauve.
Brown, green, orange, red, cherry
pinks, also coral pink and violet are
pronounced perfectly safe colors for
the spring.
Full chiffon sleeves and plastrons of
tho same are worn with round or
pointed waists of plain rose, nauve or
green satin or Dresden silk.
A fur cap is by no means the
abomination of former years, but
rigged out in lace and flowers is a
genuine bit of Parisian millinery.
A most pronounced feature of the
ball-rooms this winter is tho ubiqui
tious aigrette, worn, it is safe to say,
by ninety-nine women out of a hun¬
dred.
In spite of the fact that the immense
sleeve has been frowned upon in high
quarters, fashionable women in society
continue to appear in sleeves quite as
voluminous as ever.
Big hats are plentiful in the winter’s
millinery, and they are sure to im
press by their size and richness, but
the out-and-out wonders of headgear
are rea ^Y tde sraad sizes.
Among the hundred and one pretti
aesses of the winter are adjustable
collars made °, f velvet > which are cut
mto 8 T uare tabs at the outer ed 8 e aad
iined wlth a contrasting color.
M ° ir « “ a ,P°P ular trimming ma
terial. Moure ribbons trim skirts from
waist line to hem, and are made into
rose ruchings to trim over the
shoulders and down the sides of the
,
. oeen ± shown oil several f !° D of ', tne lately
im ^ rted evenin 6 dreases , is a deep, '
8q are yoke> cut round oa the nec ;>
the yoke being made of a different :na
terial from the rest of the gown,
Tho indication9 are that the skirt
and coat style will continue in favor
for ordinary walking, shopping and
traveling costumes, and that mohairs,
cheviots, English tweeds and serges
w ill be the fabrics used for these,
Among the popular ideas in skirts
ari , fjyg box plaits at the back.
Xhe skirts are cut on very much the
same plan as those heretofore worn,
but all of the fullness is laid in these
plaits, wnich are very narrow where
they are attached to the belt.
COTTON MANUFACTURING.
The South Has Knormous Room for
expansion.
The New York World states that
England has invested in textile indus¬
tries §1,000,000,000, with an animal
production of cotton goods of §500,
000,000. Out of total British exports
of 81,080,000,000 iu 1890. the exports
of cotton goods alone amounted to
8332,000,000, or one-third oi the
whole. Sneh an industry, says the
World, “stands for tho support of at
least 5,000,000 people, exclusive of
those indirectly interested," and “the
interruption for a single month of the
trade aud production represented by
theso figures would fill many thou¬
sands of homes, with misery and star¬
vation."
Commenting on the above para¬
graph, tho Manufacturer’s Record re¬
marks: “It is true that this is one of
the great industries of Englaud, and
one upon which the prosperity of a
lar^e portion of English trade is
based. But'the magnitude of these
figures simply emphasizes the import¬
ance of the prize for which the south
is contending. This vast industry,
built up on the utilization of southern
cotton, is undergoing a great change.
Economio conditions arc forcing the
mill to the cotton field. This is not
true simply as regards the cotton man¬
ufacturing interests of America, but of
Europe as well. England cannot, un¬
der the conditions which have been
brought about during the last five or
six years, indefinitely continue to com¬
pete with the south iu the manufacture
of cotton.
The room for extension in the south
is so vast that the miud almost stag¬
gers at the possibilities before this in¬
dustry.
That England can import its cottou,
transporting it 3,009 miles, manufac¬
ture it and find a market throughout
tho world, and develop on this an in¬
dustry with a capital of SI ,000,000,
000, representing the support of
5,000,000 people, shows something of
the possible expansion before the
south in this great industry.
Dou’ts for Youiig 5Ien.
Don’t pose at a reception.
Don’t relate arecdotos of yourself.
Don’t wear diamond studs in the
day time.
Don’t wear your hat on tho side of
your head.
Don’t say “sir” or “ma’am” when
answering people.
Don’t extend your visit unless pressed
to do so.
Don’t wear your overshoes iu the
drawing room.
-* Don’t make a first call longer than
twenty minutes.
Don’t discuss religion or politics at
a dinner party.
S* Don’t fail in courtesy to old ladies
Lr old men.
liJDon’t Jlljflje refuse an invitation, however
it may appear.
jf entertain your friends with all
yon oes and mishaps.
Don’t correct the children of your
hostess.
I Don’t, if acting as osoort to a lady,
I rivo too late. Re on time.
1 Don’t wear creaking shoes.
Comfort for Children.
Much of tho outcry ugainst candy is
the result of wrong methods of use.
It can often safely bo taken at meal
time with good results. Wcioutists
say that tho food value of sugar is
very great. A pound of sugar con¬
tains much more energy and power to
Support animal life than a pound of
fneat. If candy is taken under such
Conditions that it will not derange the
digestive apparatus it is perfectly wise
find rational to bo a candy-eater.—De¬
troit Freo Press.
A Great IIIi’hhuik ^Somethin* in tlie Rraeh
• of Everybody.
What would you think of a man who was
sick and constantly lived in reach of salva¬
tion, yet because he lia/1 failed in other direc¬
tions refuses to take the hies lug t li it is he fore
him? This was the case with .Mr. John o.
Cook, of Atlanta. suffering with dyspepda for
"I have been
ten years. I began taking Tyner’s Dyspepsia thirty
Remedy aud gained fifteen pounds in
Jays. messing. I commend it to the public bed as arid n great, sleep
I can eat supper, go to
ike a babe—something 1 could not do before.”
Price 60 ct». per bottle. For sale by all drug¬
gists.
_
DflnfiifMN Can nor bo Cured
by local applications, aw they cannot reach the
diseased portion of the ear. There is only one
way to cure Deafness, and that, is by consti¬
tutional remedies. Deafness is caused lining by an
inflamed condition of the mucous of
ill** Eustachian Tube. When this tube
inflamed you have a rumbling entirely son ml or closed im
perfect hearing, and when it is
Deafness is the result, and unless t he inflam
rrmti- n can he taken out and this "tube re¬
stored to its normal condition, hearing will he
destroyed forever: nine eases our of ten are
caused by c -tarrh, which is nothing hut an in¬
flamed con ‘ition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafnc-s (caused by catarrh) that can¬
not be cured by Hail’s Catarrh Cure. Send
1 or circulars, free.
F. J. Chen ry & Co., Toledo, O.
rfTSold by Dru/irit-ts. 76c.
The World’, Ksrlleet Potato.
Thfit’s Saizer’s Earliest, fit for use in 28
days. Balzer’s new iate potato, Champion
of the World, Is pronounoed the heaviest
ylolder tn the world, and we challenge you
to produce its equal! 10 acres to Balter’s
Earliest Potatoes yield 4000 bushels, sold in
June at $1 a bushel—*4000. That pays. A
word to the wise, etc.
Now IF TOU WILL CUT THIS OCT AI»D SEED It
with 10c. postage to the John A. Baiter Beed
Co., La Crosse, Wls., you will get, free, 10
packages grains and grasses, Including Teo
ainte, Latbyrus, Band Vetch, Giant Spurry,
Giant Clover, etc., and" our mammoth seed
catalogue. (A. C.)
Mrs. Wfnslo ,.,i in: for children
teething,softens the gums, reduces inflamma¬
tion. allays pain.cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
FITS -topped free by Da. Kline’s Great
Serve Restorer. So fits after first day’s use
Marve ons cores. Treatise and 92 (tOtrial bot
•ie tree. Dr. cllne. 231 Aren St... Phita.. Pa.
Hinderrorna l*» a **lniple Remedy, Hu*
it. out rorue, arid what a consolation it
1 ! Makes walking a plea-ure. 15o. at druggists.
I r-onld not tfet a on/ without, Pino’s Cure for
( on urn . i m. It alway* < ur^ - Mr . K. C.
Moulton* Needham, M t-s., Oct. 22 , M.
If afflicted w|?h wore eve- use Dr. IsaacThomi
eon’s Eye-water.Druggists sell at 25c per oottie.
The Ins and Outs of It.
If you get best wear out of a coat, best work must
have gone into it. You can’t get good bread out of
poor flour.
Moral: You can’t get the best out of anything, unless
the best is in it; and the best has to be put in before it
can be taken out. Now, we have a rule to test those
sarsaparillas with a big “best” on the bottle. “Tell us
what’s put in you and we’ll decide for ourselves about
the best.” That’s fair. But these modest sarsaparillas
say: “Oh! we can’t tell. It’s a secret. Have faith in
the label.” . . . Stop ! There’s one exception; one sar¬
saparilla that has no secret to hide. It’s Ayer’s. If you
want to know what goes into Ayer's Sarsaparilla, ask
your doctor to write for the formula. Then you can
satisfy yourself that you get the best of the sarsaparilla
argument when you get Ayer’s.
Any doubt left ? Get tho “ Curebook.”
It kills doubts but cures doubters.
Address: J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass.
Lincoln on Politics.
In McClure’s Magazine for March
is brought, to light a speech of 1837
by Abraham Lincolu, which the biog¬
raphers until now, seemingly, have
known nothing of, though it contains
passages still of the highest interest.
For example, of politicians, Lincoln
says: “A set of men who have inter¬
ests aside from the interests of tho
people, and who, to say the most of
them, are, taken.as a mass,at least one
long step removed from honest men.
I say this with greater freedom bo
cause, being a politician myself, none
cun regard it ns personal.”
XVliere I>I<1 You Get Till* Toffee?
Had the Ladies’ Aid Society of our Church
out for tea, forty ofthom, and nil pronounced
tho German Coffoeberry equal to Bio!
Saizer’s catalogue tells you all about It! 35
packages Burliest vegetable seeds $1.00 post
paid.
If von wilt, out this out and send with
15e. stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Oo., La
Crosse, Wls., you will get free n package of
above great ooffoo seed and our 143 page cat¬
alogue! Catalogue alone 5c. (A. C.)
Mollit rs \Vlu» I'se Parker’s Ginger Tonic
insist thut.il benefits more than other medi¬
cines l'or every form of distress.
C orn
is a vigorous feeder and re¬
sponds well to liberal fertiliza¬
tion. On corn lands the yield
increases and the soil improves
if properly treated with fer¬
tilizers containing not under
7% actual
Potash.
A trial of this plan costs- but
little and is sure to lead to
profitable culture.
ing Our special pamphlets fertilizers, arc hut not advertising practical circulars works, contain¬ boom*
are
ing latest researches on the subjei t ..I fertilization, and
are the really a.king. helpful to farmers, 'they are sent free for
GERMAN KAI.I WORKS, New
B3 Nassau St., York.
$50 A WEEK AGENTS
Local or traveling,
ladle* or KflntH, selling
laSR'i ■ Bf National bent mads, aim Patent pie, durable, IHmIi Waalier, low pric«,
i I fSdJk/ woll and bonoHtly nmdo, wafdie* and
I iSwl Ik slop, drift* scftldod (IIhIich in Angernor two miniito*, broken no dishes, iimihh,
a child can opurate, every one warranted, oiio In a
locality means a sale to all the neighbors, Mi lls write on
merit, ev«ry family buys, permanent situation,
for agency. World Mfg. Co., (O ‘Mi Columbus, Ohio.
ilVlB UPIUIbI I Bit A Morphine Habit Cured In 10
A. N. U ..................Ten, ’3H
COCOA CAUTION
If “ La Belle Chocolatiere ” isn’t on
the can, it isn't Walter Baker & Co.’s
Breakfast Cocoa.
WALTER BAKER & CO., Limited,
DORCHESTER, MASS.
Mamma l
&
Baby
»«r Have both been benefited by Brown’s Iron j
Bitters. No wonder they look well and happy. C
y Thousands of mothers and babies can look ! 1
the same if they will use
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS,
11 A sure cure for women’s troubles and
(G)j\ strengthens weak and puny children. K
> * Red X lines on the wrapper show it to be genuine. (
Brown Chemical Co., Baltimore, Md.
SALZER’S VEGETABLE SEEDS
■i North Am Thst r^enfniz*d Is Sprout or their South, Quickly, aa because th^ the bant wo.-M the/ Grow for all over. Vigorously, toils and climes, Tt’orthcrn-grown, Produce whether Enormously! East they or are West, bred ^ H ft*
to earliaess. There is lots of money m.vi« in early Tsgetables, and we are
going to make a l - I statement, here that tu>* earii nt, choicest vegetables in
\ f the world are produced from Saizer e Seeds. Our Catalogue tells you wnr. so
/ If jo u wish to make money—to at, is, have vegetanles in the market IU to 20 days
i ahead of yo'ir neighbors—plant Sa zer's Heeds. Bead 4c. for market
deners* wholesale list. jg^rLishtaiog Cabhar > is the earliest Cabbage novsltj
V Of the wor.d, lit for market in fWdavs! Pag , I'f ; cz .,U“o ; >4 ib.,|2.U0.
w WtnslwsnemH/ofeiioiospsdigfNOsion Balter’s Earliest Cucumber Pkg.* Bead:Due IQc.; personae! 2»)c.; \ lb., 50c. ^ij I
cannot be beat. oa.,
Our mammoth Plant and Seed Catalogue, contain:n? a magnificent array of
the postage, choicest Catalogue vegetables, and with Package prices dirt of Early ch»ap, Bird is mailed Radish to upon you upon receipt receipt of 8«. of 5c. ^ ^
or
JOHN A. SALZER SEEP CO., La Crosse, Wls.
IT II
»
»'
Mr. Wm. J. Carlton, ot Elizabeth, N.
J., says : “I consulted a physician in.
tho country this summer where l was
spending my vacation, about a
chronic dyspepsia, with whloh I
have boon a good deal troubled, ft
takes tho form of indigestion, the
food I take not becoming assim¬
ilated. After prescribing for me for
some time, the physlolan told me I
would have to bo treated for
several months with a mild laxative
anil corrective—something that
would gradually bring back ray
normal condition without the vio¬
lent nation of drastic remedies. I
recently sent to the Doctor fDr.
Thomas Cope, of Nazareth, Pa.)
u box of Blpans Tubules, and wrote
him what I understood the ingre¬
dients to he—rhubarb, Ipecac, pep¬
permint, aloes, nux vomioa and
soda. He writes back; ‘I think the
formula a vej^r good one, and will
doubt just suit you.’ ”
no
lllpsuiH Tnb'iles are sold by driiftfslatu, or by mail It
the price (50 cents a boa) U sent to The Hin ah 9
('hflikilcul (Jompany, No 10 bpruco aL, Now xorlc*
Humplo vial, 10 could.
DO YOU RAISE
Cotton,
Corn,
Tobacco,
Sweet Potatoes,
or Hay ?
If so, solid In your name at once as
. . . a contestant for . . .
S500.00 CASH
for the largest acre yield of these
important Southern Crops. Full par¬
ticulars by return mail.
Keep n record of your work aud
watch all the leaks on your farm.
Contest open to all subscribers of
I IIF. CONSTITUTION. No entry fee.
Attend to it today. Address
The Atlanta Constitution V
ATLANTA, OA.
0 V Cleanup* Vr ornotflf HAIR PARKER’S and u luxuriant beautifies BALSAM growth. the hair. n
m ri_ B|Curc8 j) It Hair ever Hfalp to Fulls and its dip#-**»;* |l.ooat to Toothful Restore & Oruggiwts hair Color. toiling. Gtray