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in THE BEST OF HEALTH
SINCE T*jnH3 P£45U-fJA.
IN POCE HEALTH.
PAIRS’ IN LACK.
SIC£ HEADACHES.
PE-EU-MA CURED.
Airs. Lena Smith, N. Cherry street, cor.
Line, Nashville, Tenn., writes:
“I have had poor health tor the past
four years, pains in the back and groins,
and dull, sick headache, with bearing down
pains.
“A friend Who was very enthusi¬
astic about I’eruna insisted that i
try it.
'T took it for ten days and was sur¬
prised to find I had so little pain.
“I therefore continued to use it and at
the end of two months my pains had
totally disappeared.
“i have been in the best of health
since and feel ten years younger. 1
am very grateful to on. ”
Catarrh of the interna: organs gradually
saps away the strength, undermines the
vitality the and causes nervousness, l’erur.a is
remedy.
In the course of sixty-three years
■5,000.000 persons have been cared
for in the asylums for the homeless ij
Berlin.
ARTIFICIAL
SUNLIGHT
G A, S
mm ■Ay§
1 111 !
©If tiff&'ir Automatic
* l^V & Generators
can be installed at small cost in
any home, large or small, any¬
where. Acetylene Gas is cheap¬
er than kerosene, brighter than
electricity, safer than either.
Ful particulars JhREE for the
asking.
Acetylene Apparatus Hij;. Ck,
157 Michigan Ays,, .*. Chicago
WHY HE KNEW IT.
“Do you know,” said the Sunday
school teacher, addressing a new pu¬
pil in the infant class, “that you
have a soul. “Course I do,” replied
the little fellow, placing his hand ov¬
er his heart, “I can feel It tiei:.— Mo
berly (Mo.j Monitor.
Rossetti's East Indian Vtsitor.
Gabriel Dante Rossetti, poet anti
painter, was once visited by an East
Indian prince who said to him:
“I wish to give you a commission
to paint a portrait of my father.”
“is your father in London?” asked
Rossetti.
“No, my father is dead,” replied
the Oriental.
“Have you some photographs of
him or any portrait?”
“We have no portraits of him of
any kind.”
“How can I paint a portrait of him,
then?” asked the artist. “It is impos¬
sible. I could not think of attempt¬
ing anything so absurd.”
“Why is it absurd?” demanded the
prince gravely. “You paint pictures
of Mary Magdalene and Circe and
John the Baptist, and yet you have
never seen any of them. Why can
you not paint niv father?”
The prince was so insistent that
Rossetti yielded in sheer desperation.
He painted an ideal head that was
certainly Oriental and also regal in
its bearing. The prince came to fhe
studio in great state to view it. When
the canvas was uncovered he looked
at it steadily and then burst into
tears.
“How father lias changed!” he
cried.—-Everybody’s Magazine.
A Mew Boule de Suif.
In Paris the police have discovered
a woman whose peculiar sort of pa¬
triotism has been compared to that of
Boule de Suif in Guy de Maupassant’s
story. She was arrested recently for
having robbed a German merchant of
£G8. To the Magistrate she made a
strange declaration. She said that
her main object in life was to decoy
Germans and to rob them. She went
about with them to cafes and music
hails, and while affecting to be very
interested in them she picked their
pockets. In this way she had an¬
nexed for several years past over
£700. She had picked the pockets
of exactly sixty-seven Germans,
and she was proud of it. As her
reason for thus acting, the woman
said that in 1S7Q her family in Nor¬
mandy bad been completely ruined by
the German invaders, who stole her
father’s cattle, pigs, fowls, and even
plate. She was then obliged to go
out as a dairymaid, but. not being ac¬
customed to servitude she came to
Paris, and began waylaying and rob¬
bing Germans. The Magistrate list¬
ened to this tale calmly. It made no
impression on him, for he sent the
new Boule de Suif back to the depot,
there to await trial.—London Telo
graph.
A Ruined Seaport.
Rye is a curious old place and of¬
fers attractions to golfers and anti¬
quarians—two very different tribes.
Once it was a seaport and a strong
fortress. Its Ypres Tower, which
used to dominate both town and sea,
is still standing to remind one of Will¬
iam of Ypres, who built it centuries
ago. But the citizens have mostly
forgotten him, and call their medieval
fortification the “Whypress” Tower
without in the least knowing why.
Now the tower no longer' frowns on
the sea, but looks over a mile and-a
half of marshes between it and the
channel, and incidentally over the
golf links. The streets of Rye are all
uphill, winding, and so narrow that
from the windows you can almost
shake hands across them.
Cheap Nitrogen.
me JM
P SKIERS
„ / BY ALL T H £
'BEST DEALERS %
A. J. TOWER CO.. ESTABLISH!) 1836
<•" RO&TOH HEW YORK CHICXOO
u. TOWER CANADIAN CO..Liiiit»d .TORONTO. CAH.
THE MAN
BEHIND THE SAW
Hs*easy werlii/U’e an Atkina
Thi' keen, clean -mtting edge
and perfect taper of the
blade make it run easly
without No •'humping’’ buckling. yf, 7>
to
do with the Perfec¬
tion Handle.
But there are other men behind i
the Atkins.Suw. The originator of eL—.
sii.v eh HTEEi., the finest crucible Jyjwit
steel made, was a good deal of a ***
man. The discoverer of the A' kins
secret tempering process was likewise a mun of
brains and genius.
And there are high-class workmen behind
tliis saw, masters of I heir craft, whose skill und
pride of workmanship have helped to muse the
Atkins Trade Mark an assurance of quality as
reliable as the Goveriuent assay stamp.
We make nil types and sizes of haws, but
only one grade—the best.
Atkins Saws, Corn Knives, Perfection Floor
Scrapers, etc , are sedd by al! good hardware
dealers. Catalogue on rtq nest
El. C. ATIilNS OX CO., Inc.
Largest Saw Manufacturers in the World.
Factory and Executive Offices, Indianapolis, Indiana
MUNCHES- New York. Chicago, Minneapolis,
Portland, (Oregon), 8«attb\ ftu:> EntndwJOk
Memphis, Atlunti and Toronto, iCaru4s). 7
no Sub*tilul«—In»i*t on the AtkKa Brcod ad
BY GOOD DEALERS EVchVWHFJ^; Hi 4*tf irl
-
It is reported, says the Engineering
and Mining Journal, that by the Esch
weiler-Woltereek process for taking
| nitrogen from the air a ton of ammon¬
ium sulphate can be made at a cost
: of less than half the present price.
Prof. Wilhelm Esehwetler is in the
Technical High S. hool of Hanover,
and H. C. Wiltereek is a Londoner.
' The process is described as follows:
A current of air mixed with steam Is
passed ove~ a mass of burning peat.
I Part of the nitrogen of the air unites
| with nascent hydrogen from the
steam, forming ammonia, which is
then absorbed by sulphuric acid.
THEN HE RAN.
Huskey—My weigut is exactly 231
pounds.
Littleton—With all your clothes on,
of course.
Huskey—No, sir! That’s my net
wt ight .)
L.ttleton—Net? Hum. Most, people
would ca.l that gross.—Pniladelphi-n
Press.
HOW. INDEED
Father—Well. Julia, if I allow young
Smlt’iern to become my Bon-in-law do
you suppore he will be willing to
work and support you?
Julia—Ch, papa bow can h« when
he fiae prcmlsM to do nothing but
think of m a ni 1 t^n ‘imp?
I w Cl) fr C6) d**Li«*d «o]d1«*r» fl ■^rai «old1“r* iukti II o.' o.’ ot Hiiiir, luft*, n.Kr. ii. I I I n w. v«»*Ion others or or F L (4) «ihIJ’ ***<11 who who Ti U in' or * (?) (?) t r«, re, of men * w*-r«* w*-r«* th* >b» ArJdr**»«■ hotlivimrwr not part poI u--w n-< who draltwl <lraD« dler* nearest n* 11 I iti>ud vuur ndlitn dec**aae<l. *erv*d of who with t U> bfouti ir. liOij irln of in ppr«oi K**ntt»rky. have any their the of who tr*h«. if *ruch fad¬ i»r»i rc* of f
NATHAN BICKI ir ORIL Attorney,
V\ ti»IGn«toii, I). L.
MONEYSSS Write 1 .. K. K. ntsht, !
Lit Crof»i« \v th.
.Mm
Io cure, or money refunded by your merchant; so why not cry it? Price 50c.
LIGHTING LORE
ACETfLENE EX7ELS AS AM ILLU
MINANT.
Gas For Lighting Formerly Confine*! to
Cities and Large Towns, Now in Gen¬
eral Use in the Country.
The satisfactory lighting of suburban
and country homes requires that the
means used shall be convenient, safe,
economical nnd furnish a brilliant, pen¬
etrating. effulgent light.
Everybody admits that these are not
the characteristics of the candle or
kerosene lamp, which, formerly, were
the only feasible means of producing
light for domestic use in the rural dis
triets.
For generations there was a crying
need, a yearning for something better,
which was not satisfied. A few years
ago deliverance came in the shape of
the chemical compound. Calcium Car
bide, from which, by the simple appli
cation of water, the gas Acetylene is
derived. Acetylene meets all the re¬
quirements fully and admirably and is
being generally used.
Common lime and carbon in the form
of coke or coal are the raw materials
which, fused in an intensely heated
furnace, make Calcium Carbide, and
there is no difficulty in obtaining it in
any part of the country.
The machine into which the Calcium
Carbide is fed and from which the
Acetylene is distributed through the
building to be lighted, is but little larg¬
er than a thirty-gallon milk can, and
of the same general form. It is easily
and cheaply installed, either in the cel¬
lar or In an outbuilding.
The light from burning Acetylene is
exquisite, and lighting experts agree
that it surpasses all other known illu
minants. It does not taint the air nor
strain the eyes, and is not objection¬
able in any respect. Every up-to-date
rural residence should be equipped
with Acetylene light.
The viscar of Portsea has no fewer
than fifteen curates.
. do not Dalleva Visa's Cure tor Consume,
E.Botkb, tiontjksunequal tor ooughs and colds.— Joint
Trinity Springs, bid.. Keb. 15, UK)!).
China is anxious to have a national an¬
them.
lirnwi the Poison.
Sloan’s Liniment, the great antiseptic,
draws the poison from mosquito bites and
stings of all insects. It kills yellow fever
and malaria germs.
Peru and Bolivia have the richest silver
mines in the world.
Mmemd GUARAN'
iv°
$5,000 BANK DEP0SIT
R.R. Faro Paid, Notes Taken
S00 FREE COURSES
SS3S853ffiiK®7M _ _ l !!kSlB!l Board at Cost. Write Quick
GLOSCIA-ALABAM A BUSIN ESS COLLEGE, Macon, Ga.
Stimulates the Liver,cures
Biliousness, Sour Stomach,
Irregularities of the Bowels.
A natural produet, prepar¬
ed by concentration ; a gen¬
uine natural water.
CRAB ORCHARD WATER CO.,
EouUvillo, Ky,
CURED
Gives
Quick
Relief.
Pemovcs all swelling in Rto20
days ; effec ts a permanent cure
iti 3oto 6o days. Trial treatment
•giv.-n I free. Nothingeaa be fairer
Write Dr. H. U. Green’s Sons,
?Sj>ecialisi3, Cox b Atlanta, Ga,
faff Cough In tini«. feyf Sold up. bv TaMcH OrutrjrJgtB. (;<><>< 1. UfMj j
Mother «CN 0 Are Helped
THEIR HEALTH RESTORED
Happiness of Thousands of Homos Du a
to Lydia t. f in -.ham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound and Mrs. Pinkham’s Advice.
A devoted mother seems to listen fo
every call of duty excepting the su¬
preme one that tells her to guard her
health, and before she realizes it some
derangement of the female organs 1ms
manifested itself, and nervousness and
irritability take the place of happi¬
ness and amiability.
\ .-hH
a ■ |
>• • \ SX: ' ; . • ' 5
ii V .
xMn i rNni
| ^ ' M, •
not nr__■.J33T.X-T-- —-x a\ «i
Tired, nervous and irritable, the
mother is unfit, to care for her chil¬
dren. and licrcondition ruins the child’s
disposition and reacts upon herself.
The mother should not be blamed, as
she no doubt is suffering with back¬
ache, headache, bearing-down pains or
displacement, making life a burden.
Lydia E. l’inkham's Vegetable Com¬
pound is the unfailing euro for this
condition. It strengthens the female
organs and permanently cures all dis¬
placements and irregularities.
Such testimony as the following
should convince women of its value:
Dear Mrs. Piukham :
“ I want to tell you how much good Lydia E.
Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound lias done me.
I suffered for eight years with ovarian
troubles. I was nervous, tired and ir¬
ritable, anil it did not seem ns though I could
stand it any longer, os 1 had five children to
care for. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
Compound was recommended nnd it has an,
tirely for cured mo. of I cannot thunk you enough
your letter advice and for what, Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has done
for me.—Mrs. Pit. Hoffman, 100 Hirnrod
Street, Brooklyn, N. Y.”
Mrs. Pinkham advises sick women
free. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Orchard Water
32AaE a ^p 6 M*J5il s
Is a Certain Cure for
3 dyspepsia, , \A a
SICK HEADACHE,
CONSTIPATION.
FOR WOMEN
troubied with ills peculiar to maTvtdou'nYsuc” __
then sex, used as a douche is
ccnstul. Thoroughly cleanses, kilUdiseaso germs,
stops discharges, leucorrlKEa heals lnllamioation and local
ccrcness, cures and nasal cata.th.
Faxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pure
water, and in far tlian more liquid cleansing, healing, all germicidal
and economical antiseptics for
TOILRT >«ND WOMEN’S SPECIAL USES
For sale at druggists, 50 cent3 a box.
Trial Box and Book of Instructions Free.
the r. Paxton Company Boston, mass.
NEEDLES, .mu all sewing ma
j CHINE 1 -.' Standard Goods
SHUTTLES, ( Only. Denier*. Free t BLLLQCK sfa-L gue ta
i
REPAIRS. , MFG. St.. ST. CO., LOUIS. 113 Locus! MO.
( At39-’05)
THE WATKIN’S “BOY” HAY. PRESS
’THE MARVEL OF THE COUNTRY
Choap, Slinplo, I>urub!«*. Two boys can oppva.lv it
dm othor povv<*r needed) and half* the crop ritfnt in the
■j pgS j \ Write field It at uk less at laotn once than of for cost OtlierTliIng* circular. of hauling anti to bl7 <’o»U press. Only JB‘ 45 .
E. E. LOWE CO , Atlanta, Ga.
Mm mmmmm
m I F CHILLS YOU HAVE, IT’S m
IT’S OXIDINE YOU
NEED
It is sold under ABSOLUTE GUARANTEE, and it you are not m
m cured your druggist wilt refund your money. Made aieo in Taste¬
less Form. :::: Hold by all druggist s for .50 .•,i-nts per B ottle.
PAlTOtf-WO«BHAM OHUG CO.
Jims, Ijai.i. as, Lr.i. x.vn Mauchih, Ts.y.v.
ms mm mm.
Avery & Company
successors to
AVERY & McMILLAN,
Si-53 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga.
—ALL KINDS OF—
MACHINERY
Reliable Frick Engines. Boilers, all
Size3. Wheat Separators.
af 1fej|!SSs2S6
____
BEST IMPROVED SAW MILL ON EARTH.
Large Engines and Boilers supplied
promptly. Shingle Mills, Corn Mills,
Circular Saws,Saw Teeth,Patent Dogs,
Steam Governors. Full line Engines <£.
Mill Supplies. Send for free Catalogue.
W. L* Douglas
$ 3 & S 3 -S SHOES®
=
IV. L. Douglas $4.00 Gilt Edge Lfric*
cannot be equalled at any price.
EatablUhed ’ ’'--a ^Sj
July 9, lam.
AMY V THI
0 IU|UUU nnn REWARD disprove to this anyone statement. Who can
W. !.. Douglas $.9.50 alioeg linve by their ex¬
cellent style, easy fitting, and superior wearing
qualities, achieved the largest tale of any $.9.50
shoe In the world. They arc lust us good a»
Close that cost you $5.00 to $7.00 —the only
inference Is the price. If I could take you Into
,ny l.i lory at .imc ton. Mass., vile la.gest 'n
die world under one roof traklrg men's fin t
.hoes, and show you the care with which every
pair of Dougins shoes Is made, you would realize
why VV. L. Don <las $3.50 shoes arc tile best
shoes produced In the world.
A I could show you the difference between the
shoes made In my factoiy aril those of othor
makes, you would understand why Dougins
$3.50 shoes cost more to make, why they hold
their shape, fit better, wear longer, und are of
greater Intrlnelc vntuc than any other $3.30
< ’De on the market to-day.
W. tL. Ooufifssa Strong Iktado Shoo* for
Mon. 92.00. Bays’ School &
Drava Siicnea.SS.BO. 92, $1.73.91.BO
Ins CAUTIpN.— sboes. Take Insist siibiZItnte. upon having None W. L.I*<mg genuine
no
without bis name and pri ** stamped on bottom.
AYANTEI*. A shoo dsftlor In every town where
W. L. Douglas Himes tiro not sold. Full lino o!
samples sent free for Inspection upon request
Past Color tfciels useit; they will not wear brass if.
W-ite for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stylos.
9V. f.. fKI(/(II,AS, Kroektun, fifass.