Newspaper Page Text
Street Car Profits.
The great profits of street oar busi¬
ness is shown by the report of the
rapid transit company of Minneapolis
and tit. Paul for the year ending De
cember 31, 1895. The gross earnings
on the 225 miles of line in St. Paul
and Minneapolis were §1,988,803.44,
and the net earnings §258,170.09, an
increase of S3S.309.37.
Don’t Be Too Late for the Steamer,
And don’t omit when you are packing up
your effect* preparatory to the voyage, to in¬
clude among them a supply of Hostetter’a
Stomach Betters, tlie great remedy for sea
sickness. Travelers for pleasure or business
steamboat eeekiug foreign climes, besides or who yacht locomote by
or train, men and and
mariners, testify to the Bitters, remedial which is pre¬
ventive effica y of the in¬
comparable for nausea, headache, dyspepsia,
biliousness, rheumatism, nervous and kidney
trouble.
If our belief is wrong, our life is wrong, and
if our life is wrong we will find eternity
wrong.
_
Dobbins’ Floatiair-Borav -Soap is not an imita¬
tion. It is original. The only soap that floats,
contains Borax and is 100 per cent. pure. It ia
worthy a trial. Every lady who trios it con¬
tinues its use. Red wrapper.
Times must b“ verv bard when all but four
out of the 26 alphabets ^re out of work.
Dr. Ki mor s Swamp-Root cure*
aii Kidney an ! Rladdor troubles.
Pamphlet Laboratory and Consultation N. free. Y.
Bint: ham ton.
The boy v r lio alwavs carries on in school sel¬
dom carries off much when distributing honors
Rest of All
To plennse the system in a gentle and truly
beneficirj manner, when tlie 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 $1. Buy the genuine. Manufactured by
the California Fig Syrup Company only, and
for sale by all druggists.
We are not trusting in God unless we make
His wi 1 the law o our lire.
Irritation oftfieThroat and Hoarseness
are immediately relieved by ” Brown's Bran
diial 'lrtidtcs.'” Have them always ready.
Tiie man who lias gold for his master is
bound with iron ti tters.
Does I.ots of Goo*l—You Will Find It so if
V™ Try it.
Mrs. T. ,7. Meador ha kind words to say
about Tyner’s Dyspepsia Remedy "For many
year- I have sintered with dyspepsia Tyner’s and
nervousness?. I have been taking
Dyspepsia Remedy and find that it is doing
me oisof good and 1 am now in betterln-alth
than I have be n for years. ft relieves me in
a tew minutes Mifferii.M of indigestion.” with indigestion
If you are or it
dyspep ia of any character whatever, of
would be to your intere i to try a bottle
of thi remedy. Price 50 cents per Lottie.
For sale by all druggists.
Caturrli can be permanently cured by a
pleasant lemedy discovered and recently
greatly improved by Dr. J. IV. Blosser, 53 IV.
Cain St., At anta, Ga., (a Methodist preacher)
who has had 20 years’ experience in the treat¬
ment of this disease. It is smoked in a pjpe,
but conta ns no tobacco. He will mail a trial
sample free to any sufferer.
Tell a Friend Good News.
Providence. R. I.
"Please forward six boxe-. of Tetteiune, C.
O. D. I think it strange that it is not sold
here in New Enulnnd, a- it is t-he bestcure or
eczema, ringworm and all eruptions of the
skin I ever saw. 1 gota l;ox iron) a Cincinnati
drummer, and gave part of it to a young lady
who had tried almost everything to remove
pimples and ar. erupi ion.from -’ H ' r fa*e. Two
applications of Tettkiiine completely cured
her. I know also a gentleman whose body had
been covered with eczema. 1'woboxesof Tf.t
Terine cured him completely, and now his
skin is as smooth as a baby’s.”
P. O. Bleaching Hanlon, Co.
With Silver Springs
1 box for 50c. in stamps.
J. T. Shupibine, Savannah, Ga.
SIOO Reward. SI00.
The reader of this paper will dreaded be pleased disease to
learn that there is a’ least one
that science has been able to cure in ad its
stages, and that is Catarrh. Ha l’s Catarrh
Cure is tlie only positive cure now known to the
me deal iraternitv. Catarrh being a consti¬
tutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nail , acting directly on the blood and mu¬
cous surfaces of the system, thereby destroy¬
ing the foundation of tiie tiis- a-e, and Bmp*
the patient strength by buildin? doing the (on
stitution and agisting nature in its
work. The proprietors have so much faith in
its curative powers, that th y offer One Hun¬
dred Dol ars for any case that it fails to cure.
{Send for list of testimonials. Address
F. J. ( m:\KY & Co., Toledo, O.
,S >ld by Druggists, 75
Experience Leads Many .Mothers to Say
“Use, Parker’s Ginger i onie” because it is ^ood
for colds, pain and almost every weakness.
FITS-topped Restorer. free Vo by Du. Kmne’s dav’s Great
Neuve fltsafter 11 ust use.
Marvelous cures. Treatise and $2.00 trial bot¬
tle free. Hr. Kline. 931 Arch St.. Phiia.. Pa.
I cannot- sp ak loo lii rhly of Piso’s Cure for
Consumption.—Mrs. Frank Mobbs, 215 W.
22d S:., New York, Oct. 29, 1894.
m
la the season for purifying, cleansing and
renewing. The aoiumulatlons of waste
everywhere are being removed. Winter's
icy grasp is broken and on all sides are
indications of nature’s returning life,
renewed force and awakening power.
E2
m
a
Xs the time foe purifying tho blood,
cleansing the aystem aud renewing the
physical powers. Owing to close con- ;
finement, diminished perspiration and !
other cause-s in the winter, impurities j
bave not passed out of the system as they ;
should, but have accumulated in the blood.
Is, therefor” the best time to take H^d’s |
Sarsaparilla, because the system is now .
most in need of medicine. That Hood’s
Sarsaparilla is the best blood purifier and
Spring medicine is proved by its wonder
ful cures. A course of Hood’s Sarsaparilla
now may prevent great suffering later on.
I 9
iK m !
j I
Sarsaparilla i |
Is the One True Blood Purifier. A 1 1 druggists. 51
Prepared only by C. L Hood & Co.. 1/jwell, Make
JlQOQ S rlllS D1IU cure Liver Ilh.; ©aerate. easy 25c. tc
take, easy to
v I’Us
/l (s ' V
7/ -v £
% a A
7// Jl /S I - i
Vv S
(*•
J..0 V S’ C \ 00^/ a W*
. ■
^
TO INSURE A GOOD COMPLEXION.
A first and imperative condition for
a good complexion and skin of fine
texture is that all the excretory orgaus
be kept in an active, healthful state.
Many people do not drink sufficient
water to encourage the kidneys to per¬
form tlieir duty, and are painfully
ignorant of the dangers which lurk in
a habit of constipation. With these
organs in a torpid state undue labor
is forced upon the skin, the pores of
which becomes coarsened by tlieir
onerous work and clogged in their
effects to throw off all the waste pro¬
ducts of the body, and hence arise un¬
sightly blotches and pimples.
The lungs, too, must not be over¬
looked iu enumerating the sources of
evil, for they are Nature’s first and
principal agent in purifying the blood.
However, as nine-tenths of people are
accustomed to breathe they are not
allowed to perform half thoir neces¬
sary work ; and if, in addition to bad
habifs indulged through the day,
while engaged in ordinary indoor avo¬
cations, a person sleeps in a room
without ventilation, the action of the
lungs becomes so sluggish from tho
reduced amount of oxygen in the air,
that with every pulsation the blood
grows heavier, more impure, and the
natural result is morning headaches,
sleep that brings no rest, and a fatigue
of mind as well as body that makes
the facing of the daily duties a burden.
—Demorest’s Magazine.
The “electric girl” in the orient.
Miss Annie May Abbott, the Georgia
girl whose prodigious feats ol strength
created such a sensation in this coun¬
try a few years ago, aud gave her the
name of “The Electric Magnet,” isnow
in China after having made a tour of
Japan. In the latter country the
strongest of the wrestlers were unable
to lift her little body from the lloor,
or even push her over, while with the
tips of her lingers she neutralized their
most vigorous efforts to raise other
objects, which, under ordinary cir¬
cumstances, would have been the
merest trifle. When she placed her
hand upon the arm of the champion
wrestler he was unable to lift an
ordinary cane from a table. The
Japanese scientists, however, repu¬
diated the electrical theory which Miss
Abbott’s manager usually suggests to
the newspapers, and attributed her
remarkable feat to hypnotic powers,
claiming that it was the force of her
will instead of the strength of her
muscles that interfered with the action
of those who are engaged in the ex¬
periments. In China she is creating
an even greater sensation, and the
native scholars accuse her ol receiving
aid from superhuman agencies. Such
a feeling has been excited among tlie
literal that it is feared it may have an
unfortunate effect in stimulating nuti
foreign and anti-missionary prejudices.
Chou lian, au educated Chinamau,
writes to a Shanghai paper asking:
“Do not such exhibitions, as viewed
by Chinese, fully corroborate what
the natives have alleged against mis¬
sionaries possessing uncanny powers,
and therefore confirm them in the be¬
lief of the ability of foreign men aud
women to stupefy children and bring
them under their influence for good
or evil? The Chinese will certainly
conclude that if foreigners practice
this mystic power to make money they
will do so for the far higher object of
gaining converts and saving souls.
Natives who have witnessed Miss
Abbott’s powers will never be per¬
suaded to believe that among mission¬
aries there are not both men aud wo¬
men who possess the same power of
rendering others subject to their will.”
—Chicago Record.
GOSSIP.
A ghost in bloomers has appeared in
Alameda, Cal.
Originality is the thing to be most
sought after just now in dress.
Hardly a woman in the smart set
but belongs to some literary class.
Few luucheons ordered by the up
to-date wofhan are other than sensible.
A Chicago woman killed herself be¬
cause her husband did not like her
cooking.
Miss Kilty Reed, the Speaker’s nine
teen-year-old daughter, is said to be a
great favorite in Washington society,
Mrs. Julia Ward Howe will deliver a
lecture in Syracuse, N. Y., on “Per
sonal Reminiscences of the New Eiig
land Poets.”
Mrs. Sarah F. Dick, cashier of the
First National Bank of Huntington,
Ind., is one of the most successful
financiers in that State.
Miss Agnes Belle Steele, daughter
or Mayor Steele, of Helena, Montana,
christened the new gunboat City of
Helena at Newport News.
Mrs. Catherine Parr Traill, the only
living sister of Agnes Strickland, now
iu her ninety-third year, is one of the
best amateur naturalists in Canada.
Miss Emma Bates, the new editor of
W estern Womanhood, the organ of the
iVestern suffragists, is said to be au
exceptionally clever and forcible i
writer. ;
Mrs. Chilton, wife of the Texas ’
Senator, is a tall and strikingly hand- j
some brunette, a typical well-bred
Southern woman of very domestic
tavtes.
-'Ire. Joy, of Missouri, is noted
among the Representatives’ wives in
iVaehingtou for her exquisite taste ia
dress and her charming social accom¬
plishments.
Queen Victoria has five maids to at¬
tend to her wardrobe and toilette—
three dressers and two wardrobe wo
men. Tho senior dresser is specially
charged with all her royal mistress’s
shopping.
Miss Clara Barton, President of the
Red Cros?, was sixty-eight on Christ
mas Day, but she is still able to work
more hours out of tho twenty-four
than most young women, or young
men either.
Berlin schoolgirls seem to bo grow
ing very emancipated. They now have
their “salamanders” - or drinking
bouts, just like tk a university stn
dents, but content themselves with
coffee instead of beer.
A Mrs. Humphreys, of New York,
has been refused admission to the So¬
ciety of Colonial Dames, though de¬
scended from Benjamin Franklin, be¬
cause his morals were not considered
all that they should have been.
Mrs. Ellen Henrotin, President of
the Federation of Women’s Clubs, has
been presented with a chair and a gavel
by the women of Tennessee and Georgia.
The gavel is made of wood that grew
on tho Kenesaw Mountain battlefield.
Grand Duchess Marie Valerie, the
youngest daughter of Emperor Fraucis
Joseph, has, according to a European
rumor, a chance to become Empress of
Austria upon the death of her father.
It is said that the Emperor desiros t<?
make her his heiress.
The first female lawyer has just hung
out her shingle in Berlin, and signifi¬
cantly enough sho is un American,
Mrs. Emily Kempin, formerly of New
York. Her specialty will bo looking
after the interests ol German clients
in cases pending in American or Eng¬
lish courts.
The most prominent “new woman”
in Japan is Mins, Batoyama. When
her husband was running tor Parlia¬
ment recently she took tho stump and
made speeches in his behalf, au un¬
precedented thing for a woman to do
in Japan. She is now a teacher in an
academy, of which her husband is the
principal.
FASHION NOTES.
Silk sales are the rule of the hour.
Some table linen looks like fine lace.
Black crepon promises to outdo silk
in popularity.
Wee tots in scarlet coats make the :
streets look gay.
Barbario effects will be much in^favor
among passementeries.
A hat with long satin streamers was
seen at tho theater lately.
Summer organdies in black and white
combinations are lovely.
The modernized poke bonnet is the
new model par excellence.
India dimity looks shivery now, but
it will be all right in June.
A rattle for tho baby to bo quite au
fait must have solid silver handle aud
bells.
Narrow black satin ribbons add
much to all gowns suppossd to bo up
to date.
Anything fluffy and becoming is
worn is a neck piece by the up-to-date
young woman. .
A returned foreign dress goods buyer
says that brocades in the silk aud wool
combinations are the latest.
Black beads interspersed with a few
dots of color a la pompadour mark the
latest Parisian passementeries.
Not a few bridesmaids carry', in ad¬
dition to the indispensable bouquet,
muffs made entirely of flowers.
Artificial roses mixed with real fyrn
or asparagus vine make an economical
and deceptive table center piece.
If you have a gown trimmed with
steel put a lump of camphor iu its
folds and the seed will not tarnish.
Two-toned basket weaves of domes¬
tic manufacture will be used for inex¬
pensive walking and traveling cos¬
tumes.
Push your hat well up in tho back,
stuff iu as many roses iu the space next
ycur hair, and you will have achieved
the latest Parisiau agony.
Embroidery is still a mark of exclu¬
sive elegance, particularly the superb
French work wrought in special de¬
signs directly on tho bodice, sleeves
or skirt.
Black and white striped add flow¬
ered taffeta silk makes a handsome ad¬
dition to a black dress for a matron,
with white silk girnp laid over black
velvet ribbon as a finish.
The knitted jersey blouse so much
worn when golfing, cycling, skating or
taking any other form of vigorous ex¬
ercise is now made in a score of dif¬
ferent colors and patterns.
Some of the sleeve puffs are tucked
their entire length, others are slashed
an(i finished with puffed insertions of
contrasting materia', copying the pic
turesque Huguenot sleeve in style.
j s true that a great many of the
C oat (style’s developments necessitate
the plentiful use of costly materials,
but, on the other hand, this fashion of
fers many opportunities for dressiness
at small outlay,
The gown that is of good T wool rna
ferial, » dark -male an. made with a
skirt of lull cut a 1 perfectly plain,
with bodice fitting cloiely, except for
the invar a le lo - ; or open effect,
cannot fau tj bj fety iisii an l effective-
The Salts In the Ooean.
Ths salts of the sea have fed,
throughout all time, countless living
thing which have thronged its waters,
aud whoso remains now form the rocks
of continents, or lie sprenil in beds of
unknown thiekuess over 66,000,000
square miles of the 143,000,000 square
in den of the ocean’s lloor; they have
lent the substance to build the fring¬
ing leaves of land and all the coral is¬
land'.; of the sea, and there are at pres¬
ent, on the basis of nu average salinity
of 3 V per cent, in the 290,700,000
mil© i of water which make up the
oceahs 90,000,000,000,000,000 tons, or
1.1 13,000 cubic miles of salt. This
j 8 sufficient to cover the areas of
nil the lands of tho earth with a
J un jLrm layer of salt to a depth
| 0 f 1,000 feet. It seems that
i thetsea was made salt in the beginning
as a part of the grand design of tho
Creator to provide for the system of
, evolution which hag been going on
since the creation. Many distinct
spefcies of living organisms exist in the
sea as a result of its salinity, and their
re pains have largely contributed to
tha growth of continents. The three
great factors in accounting for the sys
teni-s of currents in the ocean, oy
which it becomes the great heat dis¬
tributor of tho globe, are changes of
tori perature, the winds and salinity.
The last mentioned becomes an impor¬
tant factor through tho immediate and
essential differences of specific gravity
amil consequent differences of level that
it (produces iu different parts of the
ocean through the action of evap ora
tirtn and rainfall.—Popular Science
Monthly.
Age and Influence.
The most, influential people in Europe
are old. Queen Victoria in nearly 77,
Lbrd Salisbury ia 65, Prince Hohenloho
is 71; Count Galuchowsky, the now
Austrian banoff, the chancellor, Russian chancellor, is 65; Prince is Lo- 67;
Sig. Crispi, tho Italian premier, is 77;
M r. Gladstone is 86, and Prince Bis¬
marck is 81.—Detroit Free Press.
An Alabama Story.
| Copy Reader—“Here’s a dispatch
a,bout a two-headed girl born in Ala¬
bama. What shall l do with it?”
I Night Editor—“Put a double head
-
over it, of course, and mark it small
claps. ”—Chicago Tribune.
How Islands Grow.
slid 1 Fifty-two islands have appeared (by
of volcanic action) during tho
jhreeent century, and nineteen have
(disappeared—have been submerged.
This makes a net gain to tho earth of
thirty-three islands.
He—“A re you an admirer of Long¬
fellow?”
She—“No; I prefer these short fel
?trVli m U U eflChWheay0UWBnt
thdr hair ”
. AN INVITATION.
It Gives II# Pleasure to Publish tlio fol¬
■ lowing A imouneement,
All women suffer’ng- from any form
rtf illness peculiar to their sex are re*
(quested to communicate promptly with
Mrs; Pinkliam, at Lynn, Mass. All
letters are re ceivcd, opened.
read and an y swered by women
(jnly. (»/ A woman cai
freely talk ol
her private
V illness to a
'A ') } woman;
V j thus lias
been estab¬
lished the I
f/i '/W eternal
confi¬
dence be¬
tween Mrs.
I Pinkham
and tlie
women of ;
W/ America.
(CAsM ^ duced fidence This has con- in¬
more than
100,000 women to
write Mrs. l'inkhain for
ail vice during the last few months.
' ink what a volume of experience
shy has to draw from! No physician j
1 . 'g ever treated so many eases of
female ills, and from this vast experi
en* surely it is more than possible
she has gained the very knowledge
thai will help your case.
Flic is glad to have you write or call
upiher. You will find her a woman
full of sympathy, with a great desire to
assist those who are sick. J f her medi¬
cine, is not what you need, she will
frankly tell you so, and there are nine
chances out of ten that she will tell
you exactly what to do for relief. She
asks ( nothing in return except, your
good 1 will, and her advice has relieved
thousands.
Surely, any ailing woman, rich or
poor, is very foolish if she does not
take {advantage of this generous offer
of assistance.
Never In the history of medicine has
the d< mand for one particular remedy
for female diseases equalled that at
tained by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege
table Compound, and never in tlie
Compound history of Mrs. has Pinkham’s wonderful
the demand 5&r it been
so great as it is to-day.
ijuRABLE^BEAUTMjP WILL NOT RUB0FF"£
WALL COATING. 1FUi *
GOOD WRITERS ana Ulufttra'or?, known or un¬
known, wanted to com tribute to
yonr The 1Vat*rt>ury, newndealrr pnbiia) tor iabadat copy, Waterbary, to ffee wnat Conn. it's hkf>. A^k
a
I: ivi
9
7,! J‘
h:
DiKtS WHtHt AIL IL 8 E FAILS.
in i t/ugh Syrup. Ta.-;t<*3 Good* Uf.c
„ time, ^old t»r 'ir>.u%mi* i.
gififiltn T3 '—
DIET AND DIGESTION.
Beans may be properly digested in
two hours and a half.
Melted butter requires three and a
half hours for digestion.
Wheat bread requires three hours
and a half for perfect digestion.
Cheese cannot be properly digested
under three hours and a half.
A„ Oyster n i ftll soup lequires _ i* irom throe 11 to a
four hours for proper digestion. °
Baked sponge cakes requires two
and a half hours for proper digestion.
Carrots are considered difficult of
digestion, requiring over three hours.
Three hours are required for the di¬
gestion of broiled or boiled mutton.
Tho capacity of the stomach is va¬
ried greatly by age and habits of eat¬
ing.
Hashed meat and vegetables will be
digested in two and a half hours.
Green corn, properly masticated,
will be digested in three and a half
hours.
Boiled parsnips are completely di
dested at tho end of two hours and a
half.
Boiled turnips will be properly di¬
gested at the end of three hours and a
half.
The frying pan is said by physicians
to do almost as much harm as tho
beer mug.
I'O'lSF®-'
the of Five l “A Word in Season"
name Ayer..... years w J
ago, I become nervous, sleepless, and
lost flesh. I took a variety of tnedi- k The season is Spring,—
ciues without benefit. At last I be¬ It* Spring when call
gan a course of Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, I * you on
became stronger, gained flesh, and# jj. t- body for all its
ij, your ener
* gy t and. tfix it to the limit
of effort. Does it answer you when you call? Does
it creep unwillingly to work? It’s tho natural effect
of the waste of winter. So much for the season.
Now for the word. If you would eat heartily, sleep
soundly, work easily, and feel like n new being, take
Ayer’s 5arsapari!Sa.
Tills testimonial will be found in full in Ayer’s "Currbool: with a
hundred, others. Free. Address J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell. Mass. ^
c*- S >light
costs cotton planters more
than five million dollars an¬
nually. This is an enormous
waste, and can be prevented.
Prac L ical experiments at Ala¬
bama Experiment Station show
conclusively that the use of
“ Kainit”
will prevent that dreaded plant
disease.
Our pamphlets are net advertising circulars boom
ing: special fertLIizirr.n but nre practical works, contain¬
ing the results of luteut experiments in this line.
Every fr cotton lor the tanner asking. should have a copy. They *»o
bcm eo
GERMLN KAI.I WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
PATENTS Promptly procured ami sold.
Writ/tt for paraph let. All About
it. riinnillon, (/'luuifilco M Ward, llUt-r ISnllillii,';, Atlanta.
osi 3 c>n uxrmrsi
Sclu&imedd
A NI> V
Beiio ol of Bb ortHand
NotHXt bo AUGUSTA* GA. from day of
,kn uend. Actual buninas*
nil.nnin\ t vartHoof ah I
(roods u.-od, bond '.or handsomely illustrated oat*
lofftio. lion fU cheaper than in any Southern city.
Ml '£ ASTHMA
x- PGPHMI’S ASTHMA-SPECIFIC
'mto Gives relief In FIVE m inn tee. H«*nd
for a FI/ICE trial package. Hold by
I rnAon K < I>ru(fKh.t><. Ono Box Mi nt I»oxm$£. postpaid
: receipt of t l.uo. HI* 00.
AddroHff TIIOS. 1'oMfA.TI, Miii.a., I'A;
PARKER’S
HAIR* BALSAM
& a 'same* and beautifies the hair.
Promote* u luxuriant growth.
& fit, Never Fails to Youthful Restore Color. Gray
lluir to its
Viklii Cures gOti.qnd *' alp diiea«f» gl.Qdftt h Dmggiats__ hair lading.
TLi
ttivt WHISKY hablta mod. Book «-u»
IIIIW nizR. or. a. a. nouf.uk?. rrusm. «*-
Premium No. 1 Chocolate i
Made by Walter Baker 8c Co., Ltd.,
Dorchester, Mass., has been cele
brated for more than a century as
a nutritious, delicious, and flesh
forming beverage. Sold by gro
cers everywhere.
********
f / IS 1
As the -8* -S' superior
to the
■
■
3, is BROWN’S IRON BITTERS to other medicines.
GUARANTEE
Purchase Money refunded nhould Brown*’* Iron Biion taken ns directed fail to benefit sny
person suffering with Dyspepsia, Malaria. Chills ami i-vi*, Kidney and Liver Troubles, Bilious
nae Female Int.-ialties. Impure Blood, Weakness, Nervous Troubl-s, Chrome Ueauache or
Neuralgia. More than 4,000,000 bottles sold—and only S-VflO asked lor and refunded.
[Seal.] DROWN CHSMICAL CO., Balt-more, Md.
A GEORGIAN WINS 810.000.
Harry Stillwell Edwards’ Ntory Awarded
First Prize in tlie < liica«o Record’i
(■rent “.Stories of Mystery” Com¬
petition Open to tite World.
Tho Atlanta Journal Secure* tho Exclusire
Rights to the Great Prize Story in
This Section.
The C’hieajco Record, wflii lcai vdous enter¬
prise, offered $30,000 in prizes to the authors of
tile The world for the. advertised las!; “stories in of mystery.”
contest Engliab-speakin was the newspapers
of every r country on the
globe, and 816 manuscripts were submitted
from all parts Of Enjrlimrl, as well a- from
every nook and ee.rner of the 1 u ted States.
The first prtyeof $ 10,000 has just been awarded
forwarded to him.
Tlio Atlanta Journal has at a heavy cash
expenditure, lish Edwards’ secured exclusive rights to "Sons pub¬
Mr. ureal prize story.
and Fathers,” and it will appear in daily in
si with ailments its publica'i in The Journal, in lh« contemporaneously Chicago Record.
ui
The stori will be:;in Monday, March 23d.
I n addition to being t ho winner of t he $10,000 is,
prize, this story is is a throuuh “mystery it, story.” hut is that de¬
a mystery woven not
chapters veloped until will the published last chapter. and then Fifty--even publica¬
he
tion will lie suspended for one week, during
which interval tne readers of '! he Journal
will ho allowed to guess at the solution of the
mystery, wlti.-h will he revealed in tlie con¬
cludin'; chapter For the best guess The
Journal otters $50 in gold.
The Atlanta Jour, ul will he sent to anv ad¬
dress, for the live weeks through which the
story will run, forSOc. The Send Journal, postal Atlanta, note or Ga. 25
Uvo-eent stamps to
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething,softens the gums, reduces 25c. inflaming, bottle.
tion,allays pain,cures wind colic. a
Those Corns!
Bad as tho are, Hindercorns will remove
them, ami then you can walk as you like.
I f afflicted with soreeyesuse l)r. isaaoThoinp
son V Fye-waler. Dniguist h soli at 25c per bottle.
-Cy'
n i \s.
Mr. E. M. Cross, a special Associated
Press reporter, who llvos at HUG
Maple Avenuo, Huntington, W. Vo.,
has knowledge of the remarkable
cure of Mrs. MarthaGilldson, the
wife of ucarpenter of the oast end
of the city, who, on the 22d of Sep¬
tember, 1895, related her oxperienca
as follows: "For n good many years I
have been bothered an awful sight
with my stomach. I got so X
couldn’t eat anything at ull without
souring on my stomach. Lots of
times while working I would spit up
great mouthfuls of stuff bitter os
gull. 1 kept getting worse ull the
time and look piles of doctor med¬
icine, but 1 might us well took that
much starch for all the good it done
me. It run Into neuralgia of the
stomach and worked itself ail over
me. Dr. Gardener, tho new doctor
up on Twentieth Street, fold me
when f saw him it was my stom¬
ach that caused nil the trouble
and give me an order to the drug
Store. I took It thero, and the boy
give me a box or Hi pans Tubules, t
began getting bettor, and have used
a little over two boxes, and am now
souad and well. (Signed), Maiicha
Gii.kison, No. 1820 Fourth Avenue,
Huntington, W. Va.”
filraiM Tubules an sold by driiffpuD, nr hr null
II the pric'i (:JQ :t box) Is uont to J 'nn hipam
(.'belli li*ul'’omoany. No. 10 .Spruce Ht., Nevr lurk.
Sample vial, id ecui*
EGGS! ! Strawberries Free?
1 I Brown I>(riiorn9, Plymouth th«gr*»t- Hocks,
i*st «,
the boHiness either $1.0!) hen. and 13 Ktfgfl
■ irom Mitohsll fr**
2* plants Esrl y
I Wk' Hi Jiotit; raw berry. of Earliest both $2.00, and
05 plants free. Jf you want
to improve your poultry flocks
and garden better *nd know why
tit/ ► chickens pay than co*a
/ and how Htiawb«»rrt«# save
► doctor's bids, ataloguv our free idus
iat ^futfts rated < tell* uriiqne
** K^nm Marietta, «rw Faring
Box l£d. Georgia.
> N. U Twelve, ’UG