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YOUR
iSTORY V,
"Every morning I have a
bad taste in my mouth; my
tongue is coated; my head
aches and 1 often feel dizzy.
J have no appetite for breakfast
.and what food I eat distresses
jne. 1 have a heavy feeling in
my stomach. 1 am getting so
•weak that sometimes I tremble
and my nerves are all unstrung.
1 am getting pale and thin. I
am as tired in the morning as
at night. M
What does your doctor say/
“You are suffering from im- j
pure blood.” • *
What is his remedy? 5. 0
■ J
? , You must not have"”eonati
■ pated bowels if you expect the
I Sarsaparilla to do its Lest work.
I But Ayer’s Pills cure constipa-
I tion. -■
i We have a book on Paleness
1 and Weakness which you may
I have for the asking.
I MM to to oar Dootorm. "
I rcrhftpa you would llk to ooufult
I aniiu.M uky>lte' about your oudl
■ Uon. write u freely ell the partli-ulmr.
| In your ciue. You will rece.v# • prompt „
I ” Pl), ‘ Addrott, DR. J. C. AYER. *•
■ Lowell, Mue.
A Confiding: Duke.
The Duke 6f Beaufort, who has
just died, inherited from his father a
strong taste for the societp of actors,
says the Boston Transcript. Among
his favorite associates in past years
was the late Mr. Sothern,whose cheer
ful humor often took the form of
practical jokes at the expense of his
best friends.
Sothern invited the Duke to visit
him in America and enjoy some fish
ing on the Canadian border. His
grace had very vague notions of the
conditions of civilization in this coun
try, and Sothern amused himself by
writing to him that, ot course, he must
come to New York prepared to meet
Indians and wild animals; that the
buffaloes and bears and lions could
be easily disposed of with proper fire
arms, but that the Indians had a
positive mania for roasting English
men at the stake, and hence that a
fire-extinguisher was a part of every
traveler’s luggage in “the states.”
When the Duke's boxes and other
paraphernalia were landed at the
steamship's wharf, there, to Sothern's
measureless delight, was a fire extin
guisher of the latest English patent.
Lots of bright hope is exchanged
for gloomy experience.
i A fttTTE* TO US*. TINKHAM NO. 94, .£>31
i V
“I um so grateful to you for what
Lydia K. Piakhnm'a Vegetable Com
pound has done for me that 1 feel as
Women
Would Sure
ty Try Mrs •
Pinkham’s
Media!no if
They Only
Know , Says
Mrsm King
and received benefit from it at once.
I have taken it ever since and now
have no backache, no pain In my
side and my stomach Hnd bowels are
perfectly well. 1 can honestly say that
there is nothing like it. If I could only
tell every woman how much good your
medicine hits done me, they would
surely try it."— M aktua M.Klxo, Nobtu
Attleboro, Mass.
The way women trifle with health
■hows a degree of indifference that is
past understanding. Happiness and use
fulness depend on physical health; so
does a good disposition. Disease makes
women nervous, irritable and snap
ipish. The very effort of uiling women
to be good-natured makes them ner
vous. Write to Mrs. I’inkharu, she will
help you to health and happiness. •
It costs nothing to get Mrs. Pinkham'a
advice. Her address is Lynn, Mass.
People Who Eat Arsenic.
The old adage that what is one
man’s poison is another man’s food is
strikingly illustrated by an account of
an idiosyncracy of the Styrians re
cently published in a correspondent’s
letter in Le Figaro of Paris. The
Styrians are said to eat arsenic as the
Asianic eat opium or the European
chews tobacco—as a matter of taste.
There are people whose doses vary
from pellets the size of a millet to
pills the size of a pea, of various kinds
of arsenic, the favorite being the white
quality known as ratsbane. They
will take it daily, or on alternate days,
or twice a week, according to circum
stances; geneially they abstain from
the luxury at the time of the new
moon, beginning small doses with the
young moon and increasing them to
a maximum by the full moon. Why
this luna observance it is hard to
guess, unless, as the correspondent
says, the arsenic makes them strong
and healthy and they fancy that the
waning moon weakens them and ren
ders the greater proportion of the
restorative necessary. But whatever
be their reason, the fact remains that
the regular consumers live to good
ages, and are strong, healthy and
courageous.—New York Times.
A Tribute to Mothers.
Honor the dear old mother. Time
has scattered the snowy flakes on her
brow, plowed deep furrows on her
cheeks, but is she not beautiful still?
The lips are thin and sunken but they
are the lips that have kissed many a
hot tear from the childish cheeks, and
they are the sweetest lips in the world.
The eye is dim, yet it glows with the
soft radience of holy love which can
never fade. The sands of life are
nearly run out, but feeble as she is,
she will go farther and reach down
lower for you than any one else upon
the earth. When the world shall de
spise and forsake you; when it leaves
you by the wayside to die, unnoticed
the dear old mother will gather you
up in her feeble arms and carry you
home and tell you of all your virtues
until you almost forget that your soul
is disfigured by vices. Love her ten
derly and cheer her declining years
with tender devotion.—Ex.
FREE PILLS.
Send your address to H. E. Buck
len & Cos., Chicago, and get a free
sample box of Dr. King's New Life
Pills. A trial will convince you of
their merits. These pills are easy in
action and are particularly effective
in the cure of Constipation and Sick
Headache. For Malaria and Liver
troubles they have been proved in
valuable. They are guaranteed to be
perfectly free from every deleterious
substance and to be purely vegetable.
They do not weaken by their action,
but by giving tone to stomach and
bowels greatly invigorate the system.
Regular size 25c. per box. Sold by
W. A. Wright, Druggist.
The Witty Witness.
The English barrister, now on a
visit to New York, tells an old story
of an apt retort by a witness. It
was during a trial which took place
some years ago. The plaintiff was
undergoing a rather sharp examina
tion from the defendant's counsel.
The case was one of damages claimed
on account ot severe bodily injuries
received by the plaintiff on a railway,
due, the plaintiff claimed, to the neg
ligence of the defendant railway com
pany's servants. Mr. C , the
railway company's counsel, was noted
for his overbearing manner in which
he examined witnesses and endeav
oring to discontort them. This wit
ness, however, determined not to be
confused by his opponent's counsel.
After becoming thoroughly provoked
by the attacks by the man of law, he
remonstrated. “Mr. C—,” said he,
“I am an invalid. I cannot allow
you to question me in this manner,
It is a positive injury to my nervous
system, which is at best in a shattered
condition. 1 shall have to refuse to
answer your questions unless you put
them in a different manner. I am
troubled on account of the injury re
ceived on the railway with sclerosis
of the spinal cord. At this minute 1
can sec you double, and know by
experience it is generally enough to
upset a man to see you once.''
though 1 must
toll about it. A
year 1 was
taken very sick.
Doe tors eon hi do
me no good only
to deaden tlio
pain which l
had almost con
stantly. 1 got
some of your
Compound and
took one bottle
OAMTOnZA.
# **" tk *
PLANT LIFE, to be vig
orous and healthy, must
have
Potash
Phosphoric Acid and Nitrogen.
These essential elements are
to plants, what bread, meat and
water are to man.
Crops flourish on soils well
supplied with Potash.
Our pamphlets tell how to buy and apply
fertilizers, and are free to all.
GERriAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St.. New York.
Mrs. Baris and the Copyright.
Senator Hoar unfolded what he
called a little bit of interesting histo
ry in the Senate when the bill relat
ing to changing the copyright law was
under consideration, says the Boston
Herald. He told how Mrs. Jefferson
Davis prepared a very interesting life
of her husband. The ownership of
that biorgraphy was a very important
resource to her in her old age.
Gen. Gordon came into the Senate
one day just before his term expired,
and in the last moments of President
Harrison’s administration, and stated
that the publishers of the book had
failed to make the proper deposit of
copies with the librarian to save her
copyright. They claimed that the
copyright was gone, and Mrs. Davis
was absolutely in their power. Con
sequently, they undertook to compel
her to submit to some very hard and
onerous terms. She was in great
distress and came to Congress for
help. A bill was passed relieving her
from that disability, and it was signed
by President Harrison within 30 sec
onds of 12 o’clock, when his term
expired.
Arc Via Wwkt
Weakness manifests itself in the lose of
ambition and aching bones. The blood is
watery; the tissues are wasting—the door ia
being opened for disease. A bottle of Browns’
Iron Bitters taken in time will restore your
strength, soothe your nerves, make your
blood rich and red. Do you more good
than an expensive special course of medicine.
Browns’ Iron Bitters is sold by all dealers.
A Walter’s Dilemma.
It was in one of the large down
town restaurants that the short little
woman and her tall husband went for
dinner one night.
“Will you have oysters?” asked the
man, glancing over the bill of fare.
“Yes,” said the short little woman,
as she tried in vain to touch her toes
to the floor. . “And John, I want a
hassock.”
John nodded, and,as he handed
his order to the waiter, he said: “Yes,
and bring a hassock for the lady.”
“One hassock?'* asked the waiter,
with what John thought more than
orginary interest, as he nodded in the
affirmative. Still the waiter did not
go, but brushed the tablecloth with a
towel and rearranged the articles on
it several times, while his face got
very red. Then he came around to
John's side, and, speaking sotto voce,
i said: “Say, mister, I haven’t been here
long, and I’m not on to all these
things. Will the lady have the has
sock broiled or tried?” Chicago
Chronicle.
August Power.
“It is a surprising fact," says Prof.
Houton, “that in my travels in all
parts of the world, for the last ten
years, I have met more people having
used Green's August Flower than any
other remedy, for dyspepsia, deranged
liver and stomach, and for constipa
tion. I find for tourists and sales
men. or for persons filling office posi
tions, where headaches and general
bad feelings from irregular habits ex
ist. that Green's August Flower is a
grand remedy. It does not injure the
system by frequent use. and is excel
lent for sour stomachs and indiges
tion.” Sample bottles free at John
H. Blackburn's.
Sold by dealers in all civilized
countries.
The best life irsurance policy on
earth is to keep perfect kidneys. The
best medicine on earth for those sick
kidney’s is Dr. Sawyer's Ukatine.
People who had suffered tor years
found no cure for their Kidney disor
ders until they used Dr. Sawyer's
Ukatine. W. C. Jordan & Bro.
Reflections of a Bachelor.
A really sweet laugh is one that
you listen to after it has stopped.
A man never loves but once, the
other times he is smart enough to let
her do the loving.
It is impossible for a woman to be
in love and to Le just at the same time.
A man generally picks our his wife
about the way his wife picks out his
cigars.
No man is ever in love with a wo
man when he knows that he is being
chased.
No man should ever stroke his own
whiskers, if he lets them alone long
enough, some woman will come and
do it for him.
Before she gets married a woman
quarrels with a man for the sake of
making up; afterward she makes up
for the sake of quarreling with him.
When a woman sits in church with
a sad, far away look in her eyes she
isn’t always thinking about heaven.
A man can feel real comfortable
with only a pipe* but a woman needs
a fashion paper, a Mother Hubbard
and somebody to take down her hair.
muslin
Positively cured by these
I/ttle Pills.
They also relieve Distress from Dyspepsia,
Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A peft
feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi.
ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongus
Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. The?
Regulate the Bowels. Purdy Vegetable.
Small Pill. Small Dose*
Small Price.
Stale Bread.
All bakers, wholesale and retail,
seek to produce at their several bak
ings through the day only so much as
may be required to supply the wants
of their trade, but in making sure to
provide enough there is likely to be
some left over to get stale. There
is some demand for stale bread for
household uses—for making toast
and for cooking purposes—but the
demand is limited. Such stale bread
as may remainn unsold in this man
ner is never wasted: it is sold to
farmers and market gardeners, who
who drive into the city with produce
to sell and who buy more or less sup
plies here to carry back to feed
stock. When finally disposed of
thus, it is sold by the barrel, at so
much a barrel, the price being very
low, but depending somewhat on the
surplus stock on hand on the day ot
sale.—New York Sun.
Would not buffer so Again for Fifty
Times Its Price.
I awoke last night with severe pains
in my stomach. I never felt so badly
in all my life. When I came down
to work this morning I felt so weak
I could hardly work. I want to Mil
ler & McCurdy's drug store and they
recommeded Chamberlain's Colic,
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. It
worked like magic and one dose fixed
me all right. It certainly is the finest
thing I ever used for stomach trouble.
I shall not be without it in my home
hereafter, for I should not care to
endure the sufferings of last night
again for fifty times its price.—G. H.
Wilson, Liveryman, Burgettsto vn,
Washington Cos., Pa. This remedy
is tor sale by J. H. Blackburn, drug
gis*.
The Kiss.
The olfactory kiss is Mongolian.
The nutritive affair is European.
The Mongolian kiss is with the nose.
The European kiss is w r ith the mouth.
The mongolian kiss indicates that
the party sniffed would be an agree
able prey. The European variety
indicates that the party embraced
would make a delectable meal.
They are but the different forms of
the same instinct of preservation—
the give and take of wild beasts.
Nature is forgiving and will restore
your diseased kidneys that will -give
you perfect health by using Dr. Saw
yer's Ukatine. W. C. Jordan & Bro.
EISEMAN BEOS.
-^^ATLANTA^^-
The largest stock of Clothing, Hats
, and Furnishings in the South. Thousands
, of styles for you to select from and prices
here are from 25 to 50 per cent, cheaper
than anywhere else, that’s because we are
manufacturers and do not pay a profit to
middlemen. *.* V V V *.* V V .\ £
Men’s Nobby Suits, - $5.00 up to $25.00
Boy’s Long Trouser Suits, $4.50 up to $15.00
Boys* Knee Trouser Suits, $1.50 up to SIO.OO
We buy the best fabrics and choose the newest and
handsomest patterns and coloring that are produced.
Buy here once in person or through our mail
order department, and the satisfaction you’ll receive
will make you a permanent customer of .’.
EISEMAN BROS.
f Atlanta, 15-17 Whitehall Street,
STORES \ Washington, Cor. Seventh and E Streets.
( Baltimore, 213 W. German Street.
15 -17 WHITEHALL ST.— Our Oily Store in Atlanta.
We Manufacture and Sell
Engines,
Boilers,
Cotton Gins
Cotton
Presses,
SeedCctton
Elevators,
Grist Mills,
we operate Shops and Foundry.
We handle p u ll Li ne Mill Supplies.
MALLARY BROS & CO,
MACON, GA.
Keep Blowing Away.
A young lady organist in a church
in Colorado was somewhat captivated
with the young pastor of a church in
the next street, and was delighted to
hear one week that by an exchange
he was to preach the next Sunday in
her own church, says an exchange.
The organ was pumped by an ob
streperous old sexton, who would
often stop when he thought the organ
voluntary had lasted long enough.
This day the organist was anxious
that all should go well, and as the
service was about to begin she wrote
a note intended solely for the sexton’s
eye. He took it, and, in spite of her
agonized beckonings, carried it
straight to the preacher.
What was that gentleman's aston
ishment when he read: “Oblige me
this morning by blowing away till I
give you a signal to stop. Miss Allen.”
CROUP
Mothers, when your children are at
tacked by the dreadful croup, you
need not despair; Dr. Bull’s Cough
Syrup will relieve and cure them at
once. You can always depend on this
marvelous remedy; it always cures.
Dr.BuU’s
COUCH SYRUP
Will cure Croup without fail.
Doses are small ami pleasant to take. Doctor*
recommend it. Price 25 cts. At all druggists.
Gussie’s Big Brother.
“Yes,” said the principal of the
young ladies' seminary to the proud
parent, “you ought to be very happy,
my dear sir, to be the father of so
large a family all the members of
which appear to be so devoted to
one another.”
“Devoted! Large family!” gasped
the old gentleman in amazement.
“What on earth do you mean,ma'am?”
“Why, yes, indeed,' 5 said the prin
cipal, beaming through her glasses.
“No fewer than 11 ot Gussie's broth
ers have been here this term to take
her out, and she tells me the expects
the tall one with the blue eyes again
tomorrow.”—London Tit -Bits.
for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit core, makes weak
■MB strong, Wood port. *oc, M. AU druggists
The Tables Turned.
Birds, we know, are sometimes
trained to fire oft pistols, as well as
to perform other unusual feats, but it
is not often that a wild bird in the
woods shoots a man with his own gun,
as related in “South American
Sketches,” by Robert Crawford.
A pavo del monte, a bird of Uru
guay not unlike the turkey, had been
winged by a hunter. It fell to the
ground, but was at once on its feet
and ran away. Throwing his gun
hastily aside, the hunter started in
pursuit, and a game of hide and seek
ensued.
In one of its doublings and turnings
the bird passed over the gun, which
was lying on the ground, and its foot
chanced to strike against the trigger
of the undischarged barrel, the ham
mer of which, in the hurry of the
moment, had been left at full cock.
There was a loud report, followed
by an exclamation of pain from the
man. The bird escaped, and the
luckless hunter had an ugly wound in
the fleshy part of his leg to remind
him for weeks afterward of the ad
venture.
There are some things you can do
without but you can’t afford to risk
another day without a bottle of Dr.
Tichenor's Antiseptic, the greatest
chemical discovery of the age. Heals
Cuts, Burns, Gun-shot Wounds, etc.,
quicker than anything. And don’t
forget that it cures Colic, too, while
you wait about ten minutes. For
further information apply to any one
who has tried it fairly.
Women weep audibly when they
are angry; silent tears mark the deep
est grief.
Take a pill that is a pill, built on
medical science by an able physician:
such is the short story of Dr. Sawyer’s
Little Wide Awake Pills. W. C.
Jordan & Bro.
am mi s zm<l Whirirey Habits
B k I E X JLa! cured ftt Lome Witb
■ ■ fr 111 VWI out pain. Book of par-
Iwlwl ticularsrent FREE.
UHMMHI B M. WOOLLEY. M U.
Atlaala, vs. Office lOt N'. Pryor St.
To Coro Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets Candy Cathartic. 10c or CM.
UCC.C.bU to owe* druggists refund moaeyt
Saw Mills,
..and.,
everything
..in the,.
Machinery
Line.
: Get our
Prices be
fore buying