Newspaper Page Text
NEWS AM) NOTES FOR WOMEN.
Gray is a popular color.
Chantilly is now a popular lace.
The skirts of all dresses are longer.
Street dresses nearly touch the
ground.
In many cases the gloves reach the
shoulder.
Parisiconcs arc wearing long pendant
earrings.
Thoro arc .1000 women physicians in
this country.
Silver ornaments are more than ever
the fashion.
There are 200 women editors in the
United States.
Mexican onyx handles figure ou the
new umbrellas.
The Kmpress Eugenie has at last paid
a visit to Paris.
About a dozen women practice den¬
tistry in New York.
The State University of Oregon has
150 women students.
Some of the new largo buttons are ex-
tremely artistic in design.
There are female medical colleges in
Philadelphia and Huston.
Tea gowns now have less of the efTect
of a wrapper than formerly.
The portiere of bead and bamboo still
retains its formor popularity.
Nowell regulated newspapernowauays
is without women on its staff.
Accordion plaited cloaks are to be
frequently seen on the streets.
Two-thirds of the magazine articles
are said to be written by women.
Fringe is again very fashionable and
may be seen on many new dresses.
The taste for contrasts is carried out
In furs as well as other trimmings.
MufTaof black Russian net over colored
silk are very effective for dressy use.
In New York there is not a profession
into which women have not entered.
The daughter of a Parisian million¬
aire is to marry I)r. Tanner, the faster.
About fivo hundred women mission¬
aries are employed by mission societies.
I.ow-nccked evening gowns are dec¬
orated profusely with floral garnitures.
Twin sisters in Richmond, Va., have
arranged to be married on the same
day.
Evening gloves should meet the sieves
of the dress whatever the length of the
latter.
The newest feather muffs are flat and
square, and ornamented with a bow of
ribbow.
Tho cattle reporter of one of New
York's leading morning papers is a
woman.
Queen Iiapeolani, of Hawaii, rolls =3
cigarette with tho skill of a Spanis
senorita.
Women reporters, correspondents,
etc., are coming to rival the men in
number.
Women have practically monopolized public
the business of teaching in the
schools.
Women earn more money in journalism they have
than in any other occupation
invaded.
There are nearly 100 women now
serving on sihoofboards in England
and Wales.
A permanent library, composed solely be
of books written by women, is to es¬
tablished in Baris.
Glossy black cocks’ feathers are made
up into collars and small capes, with
small muffs to match.
Wherever room can be found for a bit
of fur ornamentation or trimming fashion
demands that it bo seen.
A New Y'ork school teacher has just
resigned after fifty-five years of service.
Nhe is in her eightieth year.
The biggest pay yet given Fern, to any who wo-
man was received by Fanny
got $100 a column for her work.
Women lawyers—unknown abundant, and ten years of
ago—are getting making plenty of some
them are money.
Light delicately tinted party dresses
arc now cleaned by a chemical process
which leaves the fabric uninjured.
Long mantles are now noticeable for
the novel and leading features of double
sleeves with which they are adorned.
Green is combined with blue, although
contrasting shades are used. If the blue
is pale the green is deep, and vice versa.
It is said that in Italy there are eight
Americau-boru Princesses, seven March¬
ionesses, twelve Countesses and a Baron¬
ess.
Princess Metternich and Princess
Reuss, the wife of the German ambassa¬
dor, are among the best skaters in
Vienna.
Novelties in fans include lace aud tulle
headed ones, which, when closed, ex¬
hibit a Christian name written in beads
on tho folds.
Women are catching lecturing up to business. men as
money makers in the
Kate Field has made more than $100,000
by her lectures.
Tho Queen of tho Belgians, assisted
by her daughter,the l’rineess Clementine,
has started a monthly magazine entitled
La ,/eunn FilU.
Pinner and reception dresses have
demi-traius of tea to fifteen inches in
length, but full trains are seen only ou
full dress toilets.
Suede gloves for evening wear are now
brought out in a l’ght buttercup shade
which accords well with tho fashionable
colors for evening wear.
It is said that Miss Mary Garrett will
spend $300,000 upon a new school, de¬
signed to be the Ualtimore branch of the
Bryn Mawr (Penn.) College.
Hand screens are made in the shape of
magnified insects and flowers, the
foundation in this case beiug firm card¬
board. fixed to a handle in gilt. wood.
Perhaps the single book which has
brought a woman the most money in the
fiiortest time is Miss Leslie's cookery
book, which netted $12,000 for its au¬
thor.
old fashion-makers say that never in
the history of the dressmakers’ at t have
there been such au abundance aud vari-
sty in the materials and designs for even¬
ing dresses.
Popular Empire veils are of black net
with lace edge or of real lace with a deep
border wrought in scallops. Thp border
should drop below the chin, so as uot to
obscure the wearer’* face.
NOW! IN THE SPRING OF THE
YEAR.
During Winter, Nature wisely arranges that we
should live on foods containing much the fat, or, as
tin y urn known, hydrocarbons, for purpose
of supplying In at to tin body; tlie chemical op¬
eration necessary to transform fat into beat is
ilie exclusive work of the liver, and so during
tiie time stated it is constantly congested. diet
Widi the approach of warm weather our
changes to muscle-producing food, and the
work of the liver is much lessened. In (lie ma¬
jority of canes, however, it is if -v nimble to com¬
pletely throw off dm excess < f lain, lait remains
congested, c.iiiHinx that SMazy, tired feeling
which many have in the Spring months, when
the weather becomes warm. unhealthy condi-
Cv>"This is evidence of an
Pon, and though people appreciate the liecos-
sity of un alterative at this period, tho corn-
mon idea is to take drastic pills and produce a
cathartic effect, only to nnik ■ matt :rs itaT worse.
The liver must he unloaded, weather, and its if proper wisli ac¬ to
tion restored before hot you
c:.r preserve health, and if this distinct call of
nature is unheeded, serious results will occur.
K-<rf)m bio si will become loaded with bile
and lithio acid, and as (W every drop of vital
duel passes through the kidneys unable to bo purified,
they soon break down and ale to carry
out. the deadly poison. Warner’s Safe Cure aud
Warner’s Safe Fills have not only CCvViiver a KA" -pecitic also.
a non on the kidu *ys, baton tho
W*nicy thiu through tin its thickened ducts, enable bilo the so glands that it
will pass out all
to unload themselves, act ss a solvent on
biliary acids, and in a word, CsT tit these great
organs for the season’s work, BA" preventing aud ult
blood poisoning, inflammation, abscess,
affections to which they are so liable.
thPAn you value the blessings of health, do
not allow ilie summer to approach without giv¬
ing your system a “general house-cleaning, in
tlm manner wo have indicated.
IW’To L»o forewarned is to bu forearmed.”
POPULAR, SCIENCE.
Tho movement of glaciers in summer is
four times that made in winter.
Hara of wrought iron will length expend for or
contract 151200th of their
each degree of heat.
One ton of coal is capable of yielding that of
an amount of force equivalent to
six and two-thirds men.
The tooth with which young cobras
cut their way through tho egg is shed as
soon as it lius served its purpose.
Tho now electrolytic treatment ot cop¬
per solutions in Spain results in seventy-
eight per cent, pure electrolytic copper.
It is a startling fact that from one-third
to one-half of all persons born into the
world die before reaching the age of live
years. nine
In testing forty two boys between
and sixteen years of age for color-blind¬
ness not one wudo an error in matching
the colors.
The preservation of rails in use is due
to the formation of magnetic oxide pro¬
duced by tho compression of the rust ou
the metal.
As the moon revolves around the earth,
it also makes just one revolution on its
axis, thus keeping the same side always
towurd the earth,
A French subterranean river has been
explored for a mile or more by M. Martel,
xvho derives from his investigations a
theory of the origin of canons.
Dr. Kruss, a chemist of Munich, and lias
succeeded in decomposing cobalt
nickel, both of which have hitherto been
supposed to be elementary substances.
Choose such a place for emptying acid,
carboys, or any other containers of
as will suffer the least injury should the
vessel be broken, or any of the acid bo
spilled.
Professor Ayrton estimates that the
power wasted at Niagara Falls exceeds
that which could be produced by the
annual consumption of 150,000,000 tons
of coal.
The microscope often reveals impuri¬ organic
ties in diamonds, particles of
matter and bubbles of gas being com¬
mon. Quartz, chlorite, pyrite, hematite
and topaz have also been seen.
The scientist I-ouwenhock says that
ho had often compared the size of the
thread spun by a full grown spider with
a hair from his beard, und estimates that
it would requiro more than 100 snider
threads to equal the diameter of the
hair.
The latest things in torpedo boats in
Franco is the (Jyuinots, a submarine
craft propelled by olectricity. rlie can
bo driven under water at a fair rate ol
speod, and in her latest trial made a run
of 1700 feet when submerged half to a depth tho
of twenty-five leot. A hour is
longest timo she has thus far remained
under water.
There is strong evidence that wood
mbjoctcd for a certain length of eventually time tc
the heat of steam pipes may when,
reach a state of carbonization,
with tho addition of moisture, exposure
to a draught of air or under the intiu-
sneo of friction caused by expansion and
contraction of the pipes, it may break |
into flame.
It is said the largest gun in the British
Navy is capable of throwing a projectile I
weighing 17,000 pounds at a velocity of
aver a milo in four seconds, the
momentum being equal to that of 33 7,*21D
tons of metal falling one loot. It re¬
quires 1170 pounds of powder to fire this
snot at this velocity, so any one versed
in the prices of steel and saltpetre can
calculate the cost of every shot that these
guns will throw. It will be found to bo
ibout$1000.
First Man to Utilize Natural Gas.
General .lack Casement, of Ohio, who
was the first, man to utilize natural gas
in this country, was in Now fork a day
or two ago. lie ran a drive pipe into
the earth, next to his house at 1 a:nes-
ville, over twenty years ago, and secured
a supply of gas, which has ever since
served him for light, heat and fuel. In
a group of gentlemen who were talking
about natural gas, a curious theory was
propounded, mented which the unanswerable General com¬
upon as an cou-
undrutn. Said one of the gentlemen:
“The crust of the earth all over North¬
ern Ohio, if it is penetrated, reveals the
presence of natural gas. It must be now
confined in vast chambers, and to a large
extent shell tho gas assists the earth. in holding up the al¬
outer of As it is
lowed to escape, what takes its place?
Nobody knows. Is it not possible that
some day the gas will have escaped to
such au exteut that the entire surface of
Northern Ohio will sink down to fill up
the void? South of Lake Erie the land
rises rapidly to from a summit the from 40 to 100
miles away water. Imagine
this all dropping suddenly down wkilo
the water of Lake Erie pours over it and
the great inland sea enlarges its borders.
It might be and it may be.”— 2few York
Graphic.
Infant Schools. f
The pliable period of curly childhood
is the time most favorable to the eradica¬
tion of vicious tendencies, aud to the de¬
velopment of the latent possibilities for
good. The foundation for national pros¬
perity down and perpetuity infant are to be laid deep
in our schools. And the in¬
fant school to b! must successful, must
be organized and carried forward on the
kindergarten plan. The kinderguteu
has rightfully been tunned the ‘‘Para¬
dise of Childhood.” It is the gate
through whirli many n little outcast fins
entered Eden.
“I bad ’em all,” said arubiennd.bftppy-faccd
gentleman. ‘All whafr” asked bis friend
back, ‘Why, aching all the Joints, symptoms sleeplessness, of malaria, viz: lame
dizzy cold indi -cation,
the head, fits, o-trembles, rush of blood to
thehrea constant after fatigue, no appetite, pains
in t eating, night sweats, alter¬
nate chills and fevers, etc., bm Browu'ii Iron
Jidten cured mo and I recommend it ok being
the best tonic mude.”
A unique attraction is monkeys, dogs, tragedy. pon¬
ies, goats taking part in comedy and
A (treat Discovery.
The fact that cnstor-oil, as vile a medicine
as was ever discovered, has so long held its
own as a laxative, Is because, until Hamburg
Figs its were disc ivered, however, no medicine ladies could children take
place. Now, and
take Dose Hamburg Mack Figs, and Drug like them. Y. US cents.
one Fig. Co.. N.
A Radical Cure for Epileptic Fits.
To thr. Editor— Please Inform your readers
that I have a positive remedy for the above
named diseaso which 1 warrant to cure the
worst cases. So strong is my faith in its vir
tues that I will send nee a sample bottle and
valuable treatise to nny sufferer who will givo
me bis 1' O. and M. Express 0,183 I'carl address, Ht~ ltesp’y, New York.
H.U. HOOT.
Catarrh Cured. v
A clergyman, after years of suffering from
that loathsome disease, remedy, Catarrh, last and found vainly
trying every known at a
prescription which completely cured and saved
him from death. Any sufferer from this dread-
ful disease sending a self-addressed stamped
envelope to l’rof. J. A. Lawrence, 88 Warien
St.. N. Y., will receive tho recipe freeof charge
When change of life approaches woman,
use Bradfield’s Female IScguliUor, thereby
passin/safely the crisis. Sold by druggists.
A Perfect
Laxative
should be mild, prompt,
and pleasant, with no
griping or purgative ef¬
fects. It should also In¬
C, cite the liver to action,
aid digestion, and re¬
lieve the kidneys.
d 5 U-» Like nothing else.
[*.-•*t*. IgMeP gjGS? Paine’s Celery
Avs Compound is a
perfect laxative, and
A cures constipation
7/ where all other
remedies fall.
“As a gentle laxative, Paine’s Celery Com¬
pound is surely without a peer. I think I ought
to know, since 1 have tried remedy after reme¬
dy for about five or six years, and have found
nothing that equals It In my case of costlveness.’’
J. 13. Jenkins, Teacher, Cloyd’s Creek, Tenn.
“ Paine's Celery Compound ta prompt and
pleasant. As a laxative It leaves little to be de¬
sired. I have great confidence In Its merits.’’
Albert Leonard, Aitnciate Editor.
Journal Fedagogy, Athena, Ohio.
••For two or three years I suffered intensely
every night with severe pains In my bowels,
which were habitually oonstlpatod. My tyjwyls ,
are now regular, and I have had no return ot
those pains since using one bottle of
Paine’s
Celery Compound
F. G. Sticknet, Druggist, Havana, Ala.
Moral: Use Paine's Celery Compound and stop
ruining the Intestinal tract with harsh purga¬
tive pills. $ 1 . 00 . Six for $ti.oo. Druggista
Wilis, Richardson & co., Burlington, Vt.
DIAMOND DYES
BABIES upon Lariated Food are Healthy
ELY'S Catarrh
CREAM BALM (feai?
Glenuses the HK>aB
Nasal Passages I
Allays Pain and
I n fl a m m a tion. t
Heals the Sores yjm
Restores tin MtW
Senses of Taste iAS y
and Smell. TO
ost
TRY the CURE HAY-FEVER
A particle in applied Druggists; into oacliuostril mail, registered, and is agreeable.
Price 50 cents at by 60 cts.
ELY BROTHERS, 06 Warren Street, New York.
Si
TEE WOULD WOHT TO ENOW IT.
The world ought to ITJr.'S know what S. S. S. has
done for me in the cure "SS of a malignant Cancer,
ble which by was tho bo physicians bad as to Mgaj JTOin lie considered Chicago, where incura¬ l
went to be treated. of ailver- One L£Atiscment ft lof my neighbors in regard sent to
me a copy Specific, an and lMrae® began taking it. I got
Swift’s
relief from the first few Ar« | doses; the poison was
gradually forced out of my system, and I was
soon cured sound and 8W well. It is now ten
months since I quit tnk- ing S. S. S. and I have
bad no sign of return of the dreadful disease.
Mns. Ann Botiiwell.
Au Sable, Mich., Dec. 29, ’08.
Send for books on Blood Diseases and Cancers.
moiled free. Tun Swift Specific Co.
Drawer 3, Atlanta, Ga.
0 RADFIELD’S^
-FEMALE--
REGULATOR
Cures all Diseases Peculiar lo Women!
Book to “Woman” Mailed Free.
BKAOriELD REGULATOR t'O.. ATLANTA, GA.
SOLD 11V ALL DRUGGISTS.
Diamond Vera-Cura
FOR DYSPEPSIA.
AND ALL STOMACH TROUBLES SUCH AS
Ind igestion, Sour Stomach, Heartburn, Nausea, Oid-
CoxiRti nation. Fullness after sating. Food
Rising in the Mouth and disagreeable taste after
fating, Nervousness and Low Spirits,
At Druggists • nd Dcalfrs or sent by mail on re¬
ceipt o/*25 cts. <5 l'ores $ 1 . 00 ) in stamps. Sample sent
ou rece ipt o/2-ccn( stamp ._
The Charles A. VcgelFr Co., Baltimore, Md
ETCPTIl/CC ill I IW wante< *. go<xlmeu f° r
LO Lu ectives everywhere, NO
FEE charged. Send 9 one-c°nfc stamps for instruc¬
tions. MOHAWK DETECTIVE BUREAU,
headquarters, Wichita, Kansas.
■who have used Pi.o'3
Cure for Consumption
say it is BEST OF ALL.
Sold everywhere. 25c.
A gentawantt-d. SI an h‘»ur. 5enew artic es. Oat'lcne
g\. »nd sainiDosfcee. C.K. Marshall, I, v.kporl, N. Y.
PEERLESS DYES Aro the BEST.
Solo bt Plcogists.
Addin# In*ult to Injury.
It is like adding insult to injury to »dminti er
a decoction of poiaou oak to a sufferer
from blood poison, Doctors don’t do it. They
know it has no real merit, and is often danger¬
ous, yot, because Indians used it and the stuff
is cheap, it is a common ingredient in remedies
advertised as vegetable cures of blood diseases.
B. B. B. (Botanic Blood Balm) contains no
p iison oak, no mercury, no hurtful ingredient
of any kind. It. is strictly a professional baflin, pro-
Rcripticm with iodide of quickest pofaah a.* and a Hafoat euro ana
linn proven itself tho blood, tor
fur the many evil effects of bad aUo,
strengthening, regulating and benefiting the
whole general system, and as a Spring Tome, it
gives tlie greatest satisfuetion. I
Ij. W. Thompson, Damascus, Ga., writes:
believe D. B. B. is the best blood purifier made.
It has greatly improved my general health.’
A minister writes from Miccosukce, Fla.: I
received no relief from a severe case of indigos-
tion und dyspepsia, until I used B. B. B."
An old gentleman writes: “B. B. B. gives
me new life and new strong 1 h. If there is any¬
thing that will make au old man young, it w B.
B. B.” prominent merchant . . of ,
M. J. Itossman, a “I know of several
Greensboro, Ga., writes: by li. B. B.
cases of blood disea-e speedily cured
Two bottles cured a lady of ugly scrofulous skin
sores.” Hawkinsville,G writes:
James W. Lancaster, eight 1 .,
“My wife was in b.ul health for years.
Five doctors ami as many or moro different pat¬
ent medicines has done lier no good. Six bot¬
tles of B. B. B. has cured her."
The center of population of the U. S. is sup¬
posed to bo 500 iniies west of Cincinnati.
Delicate Children, Nursing
Mothers, Overworked Men and for all dis¬
eases where the tissues are wasting away from
the inability to digest ordinary food, or from
overwork of the brain or body, all such should
take Scott's Emulsion of Pure Cod Liver
Oil, with Hypophospbites. “1 used the Emul¬
sion on a lady who was delicate, and threat¬
ened with Bronchitis, it put herinsuch good
health and flesh, that I must say it is the best
Emulsion lever used.”—L. P. Waddell, M.
D., Hugh’s Mills, S. C.
Dr. Parker says: “Conscience lives upon pa¬
renthesis foot notes or scholastic glosses.
Icy Facts.
If we had plenty of wheat the coming
crop, we may be able to teach Russia a
mild lesson as to our supremacy as a mer¬
cantile nation when we have goods Mean¬ to
market, aud we hope we will.
while. we can furnish her with the mo¬
tive power to perfect her methods of
marketing her vast surplus, and if we
can’t buy her slaves, can furnish them
with clothing, as does our mother coun¬
try in a world nearer the suu. Our corn
trade is not dead nor yet sleeping, and
demonstrates possibilities of plenty, well
handled. Railroad companies foreign stockhold¬ are not
always blessings, and
ers are frequently the better oil. East¬
ern capital built our roads; Eastern edu¬
cation supplies the craftsmen who run
their shops and direct their management,
but the West continues to make the
rates which has placed wheat, still places place
flour, and may next threaten to
com in foreign ports a less tariff than
covers its transportation to the seaboard.
We will either wind up in Eastern Eu¬
rope or Western Africa, with a wide
waste between.— Baltimore, Md., Jour¬
nal of Commerce.
A “moonshiner” has been discovered
in Chicago, Ill., and the still captured. its
It is very small, but complete in
workings, and was used on the top of a
kitchen stove.
ECLIPSE PLANTER
A
1 ss m
imtumm
McKinzie, Tenn., May 29, 1889.
Mr. D. O. Lytcii, Laurinburg, N. C.—I have trav¬
eled for five years in Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama,
Mississippi and Arkan-as saw a great many different
kinds of planters, and yours is the only one I ever saw
that I thought a suoco*h, I planted two crops besides
my own and every one that lias seen the A planter large number and its
work pronounces it section a perfect success.
will be sold iu this next season.
Yours truly, R. E. PATE.
fcSP'Saye this for future reference. It will not appear
again.
1,000 OASES
TINWARE.
$15.00 Per Case. Freight Prepaid.
RETAILS FOR 823.00.
COKTENTi AND RETAIL TBICES:
6 Coffee Pots, 1 quart.. ..@.10 $0.60
12 Coffee Pots, 2 quart .. ..@.15 1.80
6 Coffee Pots, 3 q uart.. ..@.20 1.20
6 Stamped Wash Basins, 10 In......@.05 in... .30
6 Stamped Stamped Wash Wash Basins, Basins, 13 11% in. @ .10 .15 .90 .80
6
48 Cups, 1 pint quart.................. .................. .05 .10 2.40
12 Cups, 1 1.20
12 Covered Covered Buckets, Buckets, 2 1J< pint .... .05 .10 2.40 .60
24 Covered Buckets, 3 quart..... .15
6 Covered Buckets, quart..... .20 1.20 .90
G 4 quart.....
8 Milk Buckets, Buckets, 4 8 quart ....... (#.10 .25 1.50 .60
6 Milk quart.......
12 Stamped Dippers, pi pint........05 bl’k handle .80
12 Cocoa Stamped Shape Plates, Dippers, 9 (A .10 1.20
18 in............. .05 .90
12 Stamped Milk Pans, S>£ in........@ .05 .60
12 Stamped Stamped Milk Milk Pans, Pans, 13 11 in.........($ in.........($.10 .15 1.20 .90
6
6 Stamped Pans, Milk Pans, 15 in... @ .20 1.20
3 Dish 8 quart ......... @.10 .30
6 Dish Pans, 10 quart.......... @ .20 1.20
3 Dish Pans, 12 quart.......... @ .25 .75
Total Retail Selling Price $23.05
Shipped promptly to any point in ol your $15.00. State,
aud freight prepaid, on receipt
L. F. BROWN, Charleston, S. C„
Importer Tinware, and Jobber Glassware. of
Earthenware,
Look Here!
Orders for the Shannon Letter
Files and Cabinets, Document
Filing Cabinets, Rapid Roller
Coppiers, the Schlicht Indexes,
Metal Roller Shelving; many
styles of Office Desks, and the
latest improved Bank and Office
Furniture and Devices solicited
at the Atlanta Agency, by
H. FRANKLYN STARKE,
Manager,
es reachtree Street,
ATLANTA, CA.
p.\U|»K lUIK. COUiEOE. Pbiladelphit. circular. Pa.
i Scholarship and positions, 5 $oO, Write for
Your Blood
When spring approaches, it Is very important that
theblood should be ruritied, as at this soaaou im¬
purities which have been accumulating for months
or even years, aro liable to manifest themselves and
seriously affoot the health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla la
undoubtedly the boat blood purifier. It expels every
taint, drives out scrofulous humors, and gives to
the Wood the quality and tone essential to good
health.
“ For five y.'ars I was sick every spring, but last
year b pan in February to lake Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
I usod live liottles amt have not seen a sick day
since.” ti. W. Hloan, Milton, Mas .
'• I think Hood'a Sarsaparilla ia ju.t the medicine
for women, or anyone who has bad blood.” Jennie
IC. Smith. Fast Broad Top, Pa
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Sold by all drnfirtfwt*. $1; six for $ 5 . Proptred only
by C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mass.
I OO Doses Ono Dollar
• J
<. \
?! ’.I
1 \>
M L <
o id •5 lip
M<$ A’i
iff /A
i 'Jfig w. kV % ■ X'
a
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m 7
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V
J
'V
‘Vye
MAY TO BELL.
Dear Bell: I’ll write yon a short letter
To say I’m wonderfully better;
How much that means you ought to know,
Who saw me just one month ago—
Thin, nervous, fretful, white as chalk,
Almost too weak to breathe or talk ;
Head throbbing, as if flt for breaking,
A weary, ever-present aching.
As a powerful, invigorating tonic, Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
imparts strength to the whole system. For overworked, “worn-out,” “run¬
down,” debilitated teachers, milliners, dressmakers, seamstresses, “shop-girls,”
housekeepers, nursing mothers, and feeble women generally, it is the greatest
earthly boon, being unequaled as an appetizing cordial and restorative tonic.
“ Favorite Prescription ” is the only medicine for women, sold by drug¬
gists, under a positive guarantee, from the manufacturers, that it will give
satisfaction in every case, or money will be refunded. This guarantee has been
printed ou tho bottle-wrappers, and faithfully carried out for many years.
Copyrighted, 1888, by World’s Dispensary Medical Association, Proprietors.
T 3737 23 OHXGVIW ,/A. Xji
tEUEI -'UTfeA\vo lice's LITTLE Vegetable LIVES and Perfectly PILLS. Harmless.
©\\Q\S Purely
Unequaled ns a I.ivei- Pill. Smallest, cheapest, oaji’esit
to take. One tiny, Sugar-cowted Pellet a Dose. Cures Sick Headache.
Bilious Headache, Constipation, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and ail
derangements of the stomach and bowels. 25 cents, by druggists.
CHICHESTER’S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS
g EEE CEOSS 2IAMCOT BEANS. A
J Original, best, only genuine and
reliable pill for sale, Never Fail.
Ask for Chichester's English
pgjW tallic boxes, sealed with blue rib- \y
’SjhWbon. ft\ other. At All pills in Accept paste- v
no piuk adan_
board boxes, wrappers, are ircr-
ous counterfeit. ♦•Relief Scud for 4c. Ladles,” (stamps) ») for in
particulars aud
■-- V_ _— f*'- Utter, by return mail. 10,000 testi¬
r LADIES who have used them. Name Paper.
monials from Sq.,Phila.,Pa.
Chichester Chemical Co..Madison
SENT FREE!
Every reader o f this paper, who expects to buy
A WATCH, 1889
send for new Illustrated Catalogue for
which we send Free.
J. P. STEVENS & BR0., Jewelers,
SI Whitehall Street, ATLANTA, GA.
DETECTIVES
Wanted in every County. Shrewd men to Act under instruction*
In oar Secret Service. Exn pericnce not necessary. Particulars free.
Grosman Detective Bureau C'o.44 Arcido.Cinciaaiti.O,
A BUSINESS EDUCATION!
E^nsl to the^bost, and entire exponse only one-
anytime. CU1.TURAI. Address COLLEGE, NORTH GEORGIA AtJUl-
i>nlilo.i,«„. Gu.
|/\ W ID STIIKV ntrinfLsay sumption Piso’s is Cure THE for BEST Con-
voice
SOLI Live at home and make more money workings for ns than
I nt anything el«e in the world. Either eex. Co*tly outfit
SJtUB. Terms m KB. AddreM, TltUJt k Co., Augusta, AUino,
| V/ sv Derby’s Yeit-Uocbet Encyclopedia contains over 500 useful And
* V* * iujlnictiva article*. Mon and women Alike should know its
•onunu. Postpaid, .0o iilrsr. O. P. KERBT, 86 West 33d Bt. Now York
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE CENTLEMEAk FOR
Best in the world. Examine i'.'»
85.00 GENUINE HAND-SEWED HAND-SKIVED SHOE’
t 84.00 IVELT SHOE.
83.50 POLICE AND FARMERS’ SHOE.
83.50 EXTRA VALUE CALF SHOE,
83.35 IVOKKINGMAN’S SHOE.
83.00 and 81.75 BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES.
All made in Congress, Button and Lace.
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 SHOE t=OR
iVaBM Best Material. Best Style. LADIES. Best Fittinr*
CAUTIO N
( CougH _v PRICE ' d ISOS CURE
Ml FO R (bAS\)R0Pfl.
rOR SALE BV ALL DRUGGISTS.
to The five luuu dollars who in has a iiivesteU liubber from Coat, three and A *^tstt**** C. lot style) a garment that will keep
at storm his first finds half to his hour's sorrow experience that it in is „ Mlf _ I TOWER’S lia «le*t FISH storm. It iS
a W BRAND
hardly a better protection feels titan chagrined a mos¬ W 8 SLICKER,” a name familiar to every
quito netting, badly not only taken in, but also HEN
at being so does look exactly liko
feels If he not
A»k for the “FISH BRAND ” Slicker
T. Is trus economy to buy Hood's Sarsapw.llL tot
" 100 D.-scs One Dollar ” is original with an< trus
only of this popular medicine. If you wish to^rors
this, buy a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla and m<tsur»
itsoontenU. You will find it toh dd 100 tsa/*om-
fuls. Now read the directions, »n 1 you will flnlthat
the avsrago dose for p rsone of different ages . lass
then a t-sspoonful. This is certainly ron.-n-dve
evidence of the iwculisr strength and econoiy of
Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
"Hood's Sarsaparilla purihod my bloot. ga* >ua
strength and overcame tho headache and dUzness.
so that now I am able to work again, I reoonxnend
Hood’s Sarsaparilla to oth -rs whose blood ie thin or
impure, and who feel worn out or run d»wn.’
LuTHEit Nason. Lowell, Maas.
Hood's Sarsaparilla
Sold by all drusgi.it>-. 41 ; six for » 5 . Prcparedoaly
by C. I. HOOD k CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mats.
IOO Doses One Dollar
But now life seems a different thing:
I feel as glad as bird on wing!
I say, and fear no contradiction,
That Pierce’s Favorite Prescription
Is grand I Why, I’d have died without it t
Ma thinks there’s no mistake about it.
It’s driven ail my ills away :
Just come and see! Yours ever. Mat.
$5 TOSIOADAH
| AGENTS WANTED*
CIRCULARS FnEft.
1000 Brewster’s Safety Kelli
Holders GIVEN A WA Y to intro-
lliSlIi duce them. Lines Every horse under owner horse’* buys
from 1 to 6 . never
feet and Send packing 26 cts. in for stamps Nickel to paypost- Plated
II f'| Sample a#e that sells for cents. Addresst
66
Brewster Mfg. Co., Holly, Mich.
CONSUMPTION remedy for tho above disease; by its
1 have ; uds ft positive of of tho worst kind and of long Btandlnfr uw
Ihousa canes that
ive been cured. So strong is my faith In its •fneaev
i will send two bottles free, together with a valuable
treatise on this disease SLOCUM. to any sufferer. M. a, Give Pearl Express St, N. and Y
P. O. address. T. A. 181
DO YOU SEE THIS.
I WANT to heur only from sensible in«*n anti women,
that are tired of bogus, deceptive, A'on-SettsicQl ailver-.
tiseinents, offering much for nothing That are willing,
to do easy, FRANKLIN honest work PUTNAM, for liberal 4$3 pny. Canal (Not peddlinr),’ St.. N Y,
Address
ANTI-D Y 8PEPTINE.
The most successful and certain enro for DYSPEPSIA PjjE*
INDIGESTION, NAUSEA, CONSTIPATION Druggist und
HEADACHE. the Insist manufacturers. on your getting it foa-jisu^
or send $1 to
The PB1YATE FORMULA CO., Leban.fts,
M 1 prescribe and fully en,
JfrAnl dorse Big G as tho oniy-
5RgtodfiUSr w * ,acui *
f'j j **- a S2S£££Mi
fSKlrui lira only by the We have sold B;*<S-foiy ha^
WSlHB Chtmiol Oft, many ?K years, he a! li
“ *
Ohio. jfr D. R. DYvHE & CO., Ith.
*mUB^nsrklS1.00. , W Chicago,
Trade Sold by Druggists,
A. N. U. Eleven, ’89i.