Newspaper Page Text
Keep •
Your
Youth
If you are young you nat
urally appear ao.
If you are old, why ap
pear so?
Keen young inwardly; we
will look after the out
wardly.
You need not worry 1 longer
about those little streaks of
gray; advance agents of age.
Auer’s
Hair
vigor
will surely restore color to
gray hair; and it will also
give your hair all the wealth
and gloss of early life.
Do not allow tne falling of
your hair to threaten you
(ongerwith baldness. Do not
be annoyed with dandruff.
Wc will send you our book
on the Hair and Scalp, free
upon request.
Wrltm to thm Doator.
If you do not obtain all tho ban*,
fits you exported from the use of
tho Vigor, write thu doctor shout U.
Probably there Is some difficulty
with your general system which
may be easily rsmored.
Address, PH. J. C. AVER.
Lowell, Mass.
Raise More Lire Stock.
No one, the southern farmer least
of all, will dispute the statement that
live stock has had more to do with
the general improvement of southern
(arms than any other thing, says an
exchange. The southern farmer,
having learned his hard lesson, is
now headed the right way. It is
admitted that the care of live stock
requires the constant attention of
someone, and that one is pretty
closely tied to the farm. This plan
is not in harmony with the general
inclination to make the tarm produce
crops that will not require constant
care or at least supervision. What
would be bought ol the merchant
who keeps on his shelves goods suti
able for only one or two seasons of
the year? and yet many farmers are
working on this same line. • The
general disinclination to keep stock
is due partly to the fact that good
returns are received from grains,
fruits, hay and the like, and to some
extent because stock raising is not
generally understood. Stock keep
ing means steady and fair returns
for the outlay, but more than all, it
means the maintenance of soil fertil
ity, which cannot be had in any other
way so easily and cheaply. It is not
meant to imply that the use ot ferti
lizers may be done away with entirely,
but their cost will be materially
lessened.
Sick Women Advised to Seek
Advice of Mrs. Pinkham.
[LETTIX tO MRS. FtNKHAM NO. 94,SAj)
“I had in nomination and falling
of the womb, and inflammation of
ovaries, and was in great puiu. 1 took
medicine prescribed by a physician,
but it (1 id me no good. At last 1 heard
of Lydia E. Eiukham's Vegetable Com
pound, and after using it faithfully L
am thankful to say I am a well women.
I would advise all suffering women to
seek advice of Mrs. l’inkham." — Mrs.
11. CIiAITLLL, Grant I’ajkk, 111.
“ For several years my health was
miserable. 1 suffered the most dreud*
ful pains, nnd was almost on the verge
of insanity. 1 consulted one of the
best physicians in New York, and he
pronounced my disease a fibroid tumor,
ad vising an operation without delay,
saying that it was niv only chance lor
life. Other doctors prescribed strong
and violent medicine, and one said I
was incurable, another told me my
only salvation was galvanic batteries,
which 1 tried, but nothing relieved me.
One day a friend called and begged me
to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound. I began its vise and took
several bottles. From the very first
bottle there was a wonderful change
for the better. The tumor has disap
peared entirely and my old spirits have
returned. I heartily recommend your
medicine to all Buffering women.” —
Mrs. Van Cleft. 416 Saunters Ay*.,
Jersey City Heights, N. J.
LOVELY HYPOCRISY.
Utile Vrleke Whlcli Shew Wbsl m
Ceusumsiafe Heiress Is I’sltl.
A dramatic writer <rf San Francisco
tells the following ainnsiug story of
Patti’s last visit to Ihe Pacific coast.
He was at the station with many others
to uwet the great diva when the ar
rived.
“The diva stopped from the train,"
aaid the San Franciscan, “aDd after
inhaling a Jang full of fog remarked:
‘Oh, this is heaven 1 All my tronbles
are paid foe. Thank heaven, I breathe
the air of Wan Francisco once again I’
This was all very sweet in the high
priced canary bird, and the newspaper
boys were all delighted.
“However, it was only a short time
before I went down to the train to meet
Patti at Halt Lake City. She was de
scending from her car, and as her feet
touched the ground she exclaimed:
‘Thank heaven, I breathe the air of
Halt Lake City once more! All my trou
bles are paid for. Oh, this is heaven!’
The newspaper boys were all delighted
with her.
“As for myself, on both of these oc
casions I was delighted also—with the
diva's lovely hypocrisy, that accursed
sin which the poet tells ns takes the
best men in. I never thongbt Patti
much of an actress, bnt I changed my
mind in this respect after witnessing
these two exhibitions.”
Nothing in the way of “lovely hy
pocrisy" can surprise anybody who lias
ever seen Patti on the concert stage.
Bhe rushes to the footlights, a vision of
smiling radiance, eyes swimming with
the moistnreof overpowering joy and a
look of pleading affection on her coun
tenance, as if the present moment were
the happiest of her life and as if she
were consumed by an eager desire to
embrace and kiss everybody in the au
dience. And she does it all so naturally
and spontaneously that the majesty of
the assemblage is instantly “mashed"
and would cheerfully lynch anybody
who would intimate that there was any
“acting” about it.
HER FACE WAS NOT FAIR.
Rut There Wn* Owe to Whom She
Woull Alwuy* He llenuttful.
The blind boy raised a rapt face to
the light.
“And my motherf” he said qnee
tinningly. “Tell me how she looks
again. I shnll soon be able to see, and I
know I sIihII find one more beautiful
than all th<* rest and cry mother I moth
er! Why do you not speak?”
His sensitive face was turned re
proachfully toward his father. “You
have always told me how lovely she is.
Sho is little—not taller than my shoul
der— I know that.”
The old man laid his urm over the
lad’s shoulders.
“Yon must know now what your
blindness wonld have kept you from
knowing,” he said. “Your mother is
not fair and beautiful now in face, but
her soul is wbat God made for a
mother. When you can see, look for
the face which holds the greatest love.
Yon will not be mistukeu. It will be
your mother's. ”
The great surgeon looked for a mo
meut or two into the sightless eyes, and
then turned and laid his hand on the
father’s trembling arm.
“Only God can make him see. my
friend,” he SHid kindly. “Your boy
was born blind, and human skill can
not help him.”
The blind boy was the first to epeak,
and he laid hie arm around the sudden
ly aged form of his father.
“Come,” he said, “let us go back to
mother. She will always be beautiful to
me now," and they turned and gave
place to the others.—New York World.
A Historic Uld College.
The first Greek letter society—Phi
Beta Kappa—was organized at William
and Mary in 1778, and among the char
ter members were John Marshall, chief
justice, and Bushrod Washington, asso
ciate justice, of the supreme court;
Spencer Roane, who was considered the
ablest jurist ever produced in Virginia;
John Brown and Stephen T- Mason,
senators from Virginia ; William Short,
minister to Spain and Holland, and
Elisha Parmalee, a native of Massa
chusetts, who established chapters at
Yale and Harvard when he returned
home. William and Mary was the first
college to adopt the elective system of
study and the honor system in the gov
ernment of its studeuts. The old build
ing has been restored to almost its orig
inal condition, although in the days of
its prosperity was double its present
size.—Chicago Record.
What n llocr Will ICnt.
The Transvaal Boer will eat almost
anything in the flesh, fish or fowl line,
for all is grist that comes to his gastro
nomic mill, and the following mixture
is voted most delectable by the majority
of the rougher classes: A great square
Bliceis cut off a loaf made of coarse un
sifted meal and covered with a thick
layer of jam, preferably strawberry. A
row of sardines is then placed on top,
and the oil from the sardine box is lib
erally poured over 'the whole. A loud
smacking of lips and other manifesta
tions of thorough appreciation accom
pany the disposal of this delicate bonne
bonebe. But the unsophisticated Boer
only indulges in this luxury when he
means to enjoy a special treat, quite re
gardless of expense.—Chambers’ Jour
nal.
FUh.
The beautiful girl had parted forever
from the only man she ever really loved,
and she was even sadder than was usual
with her upon such occasions.
They tried to comfort her.
“There are always good fish left in
the sea,” they urged.
“Yes, but when you catch them they
turn out to be lobstersl" she exclaimed
bitterly, thereby showing that after all
a person’s liair may cnrl naturally
without rendering a person entirely de
void of sense.—Detroit Journal.
GOLOR and flavor of fruity
size, quality and ap
pearance of vegetables,
weight and plumpness of grain,
are all produced by Potash.
Potash,
properly combined with Phos
phoric Acid and Nitrogen, and
liberally applied, will improve
every soil and increase yield
and quality of any crop.
Write and get Free our pamphlets, which
tell how to buy and use fertilizers with
greatest economy and profit.
QERHAN KALI WORKS,
D.l Naasau St., New York,
There’s a little expansionist living
in upper section of the city whose
father is an officer in Gen. Otis, army.
She was recently taken out to dinner,
and, in reply to a query as to where
her father was, replied: “Oh, he’s
way off there,” pointing to the East,
“fighting the P hilistines!" —Philadel-
phia North American.
Ileanty la Illootl Deep.
Clean blood means a clean skin. No
beauty without it. Cascarets, Candy Cathar
tic clean your blood and keep it clean, by
stirring tip the lazy liver and driving all im-
Eurities from the body, begin to-day to
anisli pimples, boils, blotches, blackheads,
and that sickly bilious complexion by taking
Casearets, —beauty for ten cents. All drug
gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c, 25c, 50c.
“It’s not easy to get a wife,” he
said dejectedly. “Oh, you’re entirely
wrong,” replied the man from New
York. “It's no trouble at all to get
one, but it's not so easy to keep her.”
Thus it became evident that he be
longed to Gotham’s “four hundred.”
—Chicago Eveving Post.
Bald heads are becoming too fre
quent amonk the middle aged. This
=an be prevented by the timely use of
Hall’s Vegelable Sicilian Hair Re
newer.
Buying Him Off—Ambrose Bever
ly, I have proposed to your 4-year-old
daughter.
Beverly—What did she say?
Ambrose—She said she couldn’t
marry me, but she would give me a
a Maltese kitten.—Puck.
BuOtLEN’S ARNICA SALVE.
The Best Salve in the world for
Cuts, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum
Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands,
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin Erup
tions, and positively cures Piles, or
no pay required. It is guaranteed
to give perfect satisfaction or money
refunded. Price 25 cents per box, for
sale by W. A. Wright.
Miss Lillian J. Martin, who has
been appointed professor of phychol
ogy in Leland Stanford University,
who studied four years with Prof.
Muller in Germany, and was the first
woman ever admitted to that sci
entists laboratory. The professor
thought so much of her ability that
he requested her aid in preparing one
of his books.
To those troubled with piles, either
itching or bleeding, we particularly
recommend Dr. Sawyer’s Arnica and
Witch Hazel Salve. It will imme
; diately relieve and positively cure
this disease. W. C. Jordan & Bro.
“Isn’t this the most delightfu 1
! weather you ever saw?” exclaimed
1 the exuberant young man. She
■ turned upon him with that icy manner,
which only a girl c.n command, and
answered: l never saw any weather
My impression has always been that
weather is invisible."—Washington
Star.
dUiE/iy
7
A Cure for Constipation.
I have been troubled with constipation for
Years. It was ruining niy health, my com
fort and my complexion,nnd I tun clad to any
that Celery King has restored all three, and
this after trying many other medicines that
were supposed to be good, hut which were or
no value whatever. I would like to tell every
suffering woman what Celery King has done
for me.—Nellie Gould, Medina, Ohio.
Celerv King enres Constipation and all dis
eases of the Nerves, Htomaeh, Liver and Kid
neys. Sold by druggists. 35c. and 60c. s
UNTO THE END.
I know not where tomorrow's paths msy wend,
Nor what the future held*, but thia I know,
Whichever way rny feet are forced to go,
I shall be given courage to the end.
Though God that awful gift of Ills may send
We call long life, where headstones in a row
Hide all of happiness, yet lie it so;
I shall be given courage to the end.
If dark the deepening shadows be that blend
With life’s pale sunlight when the sun dips
low, ■
Though Joy speeds by and sorrow’s steps are
slow,
I shall be given courage to the end.
I do not question what the years portend—
Or good or ill whatever wind may blow;
It is enough, enough for me to know
I shall be given courage to the end.
—Ella Wheeler Wilcox in You til's Companion.
A LITTLE EIT OF A DARKY.
He Told Hitt Story Well and Reaped
Hln Keward.
He was a little bit of a darky, not
much bigger than a lump of coal and
not much whiter, and when I called
him tip to do an errand for me across
the street his eyes snapped as if they
were electrified.
“What is your name?” I inquired.
“Tank, boss,” he answered, with a
bow and a grin.
“That’s a queer kind of a name.
Your peoplo aren’t temperance folks,
are they V”
“ ’Deed, boss, I dunno. Dey calls me
Tank, but my name’s Pasquotank Per
quimans. ”
“Oh!” I laughed. “That’s name
enough for two kids like you. W’here
do you come from?"
“I’se f’lllll Norf Ca’liny, boss.”
“W’hat are you doing so far from
home?”
“Doin the best I kin, boss.”
He stopped a moment to stndy.
“How much have yon made today?”
“When I gets de 10 cents yon’s
gwinter gib me,” he said, with a
shrewd little smile—l had not agreed
upon a price at all—“an I gets 10 cents
mo’ f’niii de nex’ gem’man it’ll make
20 cents, boss. ”
“Is that all? Yen can’t live on 20
cents a day, can yon?”
A shadow, if a shadow could show
there, came into the little black face,
and with it a hard line as of determi
nation.
“I'se gotter lib, boss,” he said. “I
cain’t die, fer dey ain’t nobody but me
ter take keer ob mammy, an she’s
mighty po’ly 1110s’ oh de time.”
Possibly Pasquotank Perquimans was
working on my sympathies and his
story may have been told many a time
before, but I think not, and I know
that his revenue for that day was more
than 20 cents. Washington Star.
He Wan No Authority-.
The New York Times relates an anec
dote concerning Mr. Howells that is
good enough to be true, whether it is
or not. According to report, a dispute
as to the words “lunch” and “lunch
eon” recently arose between Mr. and
Mrs. Howells. Mr. Howells championed
“lunch” as the proper term, while his
wife defended “luncheon.” At last, at
Mr. Howells’ suggestion, they appealed
to the Century Dictionary to settle the
question. “Well, I was right, after
all!” he exclaimed in triumph, and he
read aloud the following extract qnoted
as show’ing correct usage: “We lunched
fairly upon little dishes of rose leaves
delicately preserved.”
“From what author is that sentence
taken?” inquired Mrs. Howells.
“Why, I declare, from W. D. How
ells!”
“Pshaw!” was the retort. “He’s no
authority.”
Curloua Rlrd Habits.
It is a well known fact that if the
young of almost any kind of bird are
taken from the nest before they can fly
the old onee will feed them most atten
tively if the cage in which the little
birds are inclosed is placed somewhere
where the parents can reach it. and a
popular hut erroneous belief is current
that they do this for a time, and end
by poisoning the young ones.
Thie, however, is a mistake, the fact
being that at a certain stage of a young
bird’s existence, when it is naturally
able to begin catering for itself, the
parent birds, also quite naturally, cease
to attend it, and then, if the birdlings
are shut up in the cage and their cus
todian has not thought of placing some
food at their disposal they necessarily
die, not from poison administered by
the parents, hut from starvation.—St.
Louis Post-Dispatch.
Kodol Dyspepsia Cure completely
digests food within the stomach and
intestines and renders all classes of
food capable of being assimilated and
converted into strength giving and
tissue building substances.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
1,. H. Holmes, Barnesville.
Milner.
Capt. Stgbee when forced to make
a speech at a reception in New York
last week said the three things a sail
or thinks he can do thoroughly well
on shore are riding a horse, manag
ing a farm and holding a baby.
Speech making has not heretofore
been among his fancied accomplish -
ments, but if there is no flaging in the
invitations of the public, the United
States navy will soon, he said, have a
fine collection of trained orators.
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
Tl>6 Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the /T? , ~
Signature of
EISEMAN BEOS.
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.
( Atlanta, 15-17 Whitehall Street,
STORES \ Washington, Cor. Seven?!! ;,nd E Street.
( Baltimore, 213 W. Gertnui Street.
15-17 WHITEHALL ST. —Our Only Store jo /*' ”
O
We Manufacture and! Sell
Engines,
Boilers,
Cotton Gins
Cotton
Presses,
SeedCctton
Elevators,
Grist Mills,
weoperate Shops Foundry,
FuU Line Miu Supplies.
MALLARY BROS & CO,
MACON, GA.
Take a pill that is a pill, built on
medical science by an able physician;
such is the short story ot Dr. Sawyer’s
Little Wide Awake Pills. W. C.
Jordan & Bro.
A California manager gave an ac
tress as a memento of her success on
his stage whut purported to be a real
diamond. But it was an imitation, as
she learned when she tried to pawn
it. In her resentment she published
the fact.
HOW TO LOOK GO OD.
Good looks are really more than
skin deep, depending entirely on a
healthy condition of all the vital or
gans. If the liver be inactive, you
have a bilious look; if your stomach
be disordered, you have a dyspeptic
look; if your kidneys be affected, you
have a pinched look. Secure good
health, and you will surely have good
looks. “Electric Bitters - ’ is a good
Alterative and Tonic. Acts directly
on the stomach, liver and kidneys.
Purifies the blood, cures pimples,
blotches and boils, and gives a good
complexion. Every bottle guaranteed
Sold at W. A. Wright’s Drug Store.
50c per bottle.
In seven years' time, if the present
programme is carried out, the Mikado
will have at his disposal sixty five
ships, with an aggregate tonnage of
233,000: eleven torpedo boat des
troyers and 115 torpedo boats. Ihe
latter boats will have a speed of thirty
knots an hour.
free of charge.
Any adult suffering from a cold settled
on the breast, bronchitis, throat or lung
Troubles of any nature, who will call at
tolin 11. Blackburiv's, will be presented
with a sample bottle of Boschee's Ger
man Syrup,free of charge. Only one
botvie given to one person, aud none to
children without order from parents.
No throat or lung remedy eve; had
such a sale as Boschee’s German Syrup
in all parts of the civilized world. Twen
ty years ago millions of bottles were
given away, and your druggists will tell
you its success was marvelous. It is
really the only throat and lung remedy
geueralty endorsed by physicians. One
75 cent bottle will cure or prove its value
Sold by dealers in all civilized countries
To Coro Constipation Forever.
Take Cascarets CanUy Cathartic. 10c or 2Se.
It C. C. C. fsil t cure, druggists refund money.
Didn’t Know They Were Dead.
The story of the London music
publishers who received the other day
a letter from a gentleman, asking for
the address of Mr. Ben Jonson, author
of “Drink to Me Only With Thine
Eyes,” recalls another, says an ex
change. Avery rich parvenu gave
an order to a London bookseller not
long ago to send him a thousand vol
nmes or so of books at his discretion.
The bookseller very properly included
a handsome edition of Shakespeare;
but, while he was gratified to think
that he had pleased his customer, he
was considerably embarrassed by one
passage in a letter received ftom the
millionaire, in which he remarked
that he particularly liked the plays by
Mr. Shakespeare, and would be oblig
ed if the bookseller would take care
to send any more that he might write
directly they were published.
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.
COLDS
Colds are easily taken and often _ de
velop into bronchitis or consumption.
You should cure a cold promptly with
Dr. John W. Bull’s Cough Syrup.
This celebrated remedy is most effi
cient and will cure a cold at once.
Dr. Bull’s
COUCH SYRUP
Promptly cures Stubborn Colds.
Doses are small and pleasant to take. Doctor?
rccommeud it. Price 25 cts. At all druggists,
Lots of bright hope is exchanged
for gloomy experience.
Nature is forgiving and will reston
your diseased kidneys that will gi'-
you perfect health by using Dr. Saw
yer’s Ukatine. W. C. Jordan & Bro.
'Saw Mills,
..and.,
everything
..in the,,
Machinery
Line.
| Get our
Prices be
forebuying