Newspaper Page Text
Liftv
YEARS
OLB
Why let your neighbor*
knew k?
Ao4 why give them *
chance *o guees you ere even
ive or ten yeere more?
Bower give them good
reason* lor eutning the
other way- ItT* very eeey;
for nothin* eelU of age eo
quickly o* fray heir.
Ayer’s
Hair
vigor
1* * youth-renewer.
It hides the age under a
luxuriant growth of hair the
color of youth.
It never falls to restore
color to gray hair. It will
•top the nair from coming
out also.
It feeds the hair bulbs.
Thin hair becomes thick hair,
and short hair becomes long
hair.
It cleanses the scalp; re
moves all dandrufT, and
prevents its formation.
We have a book on the
Hair which we will gladly
send you.
It you do not obtain all the hen*,
flta you unacted from the uae of the
Vlfor. write the doctor about It.
Probably there la aome dlOti ulty
with your general itatem which
day he eaatly removed. Addreia,
Dr. J. C. Ayer. Lowell. Maae.
The Japanese and Their Hair.
I
The most striking difference be
tween the appearance of the male
and female Japanese lies in the hair.
The men shave nearly the whole' oi
the head, while the women allow it to
grow, and even add to it by art when
required. It is then twisted and coil
ed into elaborate and fantastic pat
terns, which few Eastern hairdressers
could imitate or equal.
The hairpins used are not so much
for confining the hair as for actual
adornment, and are very fashionable.
They are of enormous size, seven or
eight inches in length, and half an
inch wide, and are made of various
Substances tortoiseshell, carved
wood and ivory—many of them being
composed of carved figures adroitly
pivoted so as to appear to dance at
every breath drawn by the wearer.
Others are made of glass and are
hollow, and nearly filled with some
bright colored liquid, so that at every
movement of the head an air bubble
runs trom one end of the pin to the
other, producing a most curious ef
fect in a strong light.
Sometimes an extra fashionable
woman will wear a dozen or more of
these pins in her hair, so that at a
little distance her head looks as if a
bundle of firewood had been closely
stuck into it.
•From 77/rs. Sunter
to 77frs. TPink/iam,
[LETTER TO HRS. FtNKHAM NO. 76,244]
“One year ago last June three doc
tors gave me up to die, and as 1 had at
different times used your Vegetable
Compound with good results, I had too
much faith in it to die until 1 had tried
it again. 1 was apparently an invalid,
was confined to mv bed for ton weeks.
(I believe my trouble was ulceration of
wombl.
“After taking four bottles of the
Compound and using some of the Invar
Pills and Sanative Wash, at the end of
two months I had greatly improved
and weighed 155 pounds, when 1 never
before weighed over 13$. Lydia E.
Pink ham's Vegetable Compound is the
best medicine lever used, and I recom
mend it to all my friends.”—M ns. A.vsa
EvAGINTEK, liIGGINSVILLE, Mo.
Mrs. Barnhart Enjoy* Life Once More.
“Dear Mrs. Pin sham—l had been
lick ever since my marriage, seven
years ago; have given birth to four
children, and had two miscarriages. I
had falling of womb, leuoorrluea, pains
In back and legs; dyspepsia and a
nervous trembling of the stomach.
Now 1 have none of these troubles and
Ban enjoy my life. Your medicine has
worked wonders for me.”—Mbs. S.
Barnhart, New Castle, Pa.
flair Plantlna-
A Turkish physician has been exper
imenting successfully on the trans
planting of hairs, one by one, to bald
parts of the scalp. His results seem
to show that there is no impossibility
in the complete renewal of a lost
head of hair by this means, although
the amount of time and patience nec
cessary for the accomplishment of
the task would be considerable, to
say the least. The physician, Dr.
Menahem Hodara, trjed his experi
ments in the case of a disease that
had removed part of his patients hair.
To quote the account: “Briefly sta
ted, his plan was to scarify the bare
surface, and to implant thereon hairs
removed from other parts of the pa
tient’s head. The hairs used for this
purpose were trimmed with scissors
at each end. Some four weeks after
implantation a certain number of the
hairs were tound to have taken root,
and in no long time a goodly new
crop was produced. Encouraged by
these results, Dr. Hodara has since
applied the method in other cases of
baldness following favus, and he
thinks himself justified in stating that
‘clinically there can be no doubt as
to this very curious fact—that small
bundles of hair stems cut with scis
sors and implanted in the incisions
made with the scarifier can take root
and grow, forming in time long and
viable hairs.’ By miscroscopic exam
ination he has satisfied himself that
aftei some weeks a real new bulb
forms at the lower end of the im
planted hair. Dr. Hodara’s results
are interesting in themselves, ind
still more in the promise which they
appear to offer of further results, un
dreamed of, or at any rate unmen
tioned, by the ingenious author.
Why should not the same treatment
be applied in cases of ordinary bald
ness? Many bald men would gladly
submit to have their scalps plowed
and afterward sown with new hairs if
there was a reasonable hope of even
a moderate harvest.” —Home Journal.
SOMETHING TO KNOW.
It may be worth something to know
that the very best medicine for re
storing the tired out nervous system
to a healthy vigor is Electric Bitters.
This medicine is purely vegetable,
acts by giving tone to the nerve cen
tres in the stomach, gently stimulates
the Liver and Kidneys, and aids
these organs in throwing off impari
ties in the blood. Electric Bitters
improves the appetite, aids digestion,
and is pronounced by those who have
tried it as the very best blood purifier
and nerve tonic. Try it. Sold for
50c or SI.OO per bottle at W. A.
Wright’s Drug Store.
There are sixty-five steamers on
the Swiss lakes. The largest can
transport 1200 people.
QUICK CURE FOR
COUGHS AND COLDS,
PYNY-PECTORAL
The Canadian Remad tar all
THROAT AND LONG ATFtCTIONS.
L*Rsa Bottles. 2*S on.
BAViS ft LAWRENCE CO., Lim.,
Prop's Perry Davis' Pain-Killer.
for *al* mr
DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS.
When Cooking Fruits.
A well known cook, in a talk
about fruits, says that nearly all fruits
are better in color, texture and flavor
if the sugar is added when they are
first put on to cook. It is this meth
od which gives the good effect to the
preserved fruits that come to us from
France and Germany. The hard
fruits, however, like quinces and
pears, should be cooked in water un
til they are tender before the sugar
is added. Most of the dried fruits,
too, if carefully and slowly cooked,
need very little sugar. With the ex
ception of prunes, dried fruits should
be soaked over night, and then
cooked slowly in the water in which
they have been soaked. Oven cook
ing for these fruits is recommended,
in which case a small earthen pot
with a cover is a good vessel to soak
them in, and they should afterward
be placed in the oven for slow sim
mering. In any event, fruit should
never be cooked in tin or iron.
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.
COLOR and flavor of fruits
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 pamphlet*, which
tell how to buy and ue fertilizers with
greatest economy and profit.
GERriAN KALI WORKS,
M Naaaee St., New Vei.
When A Monkey is A Dog
A good story of an amusing alterca
tion which once took place between
Mr. Frank Buckland and a booking
clerk is revived by the Widsor Maga
zine. The naturalist had been in
France, and was returning via South
ampton with an overcoat stufted with
specimens of all sorts, dead and alive.
Among them was a monkey, which
was domiciled in a large breast pock
et. As Buckland was taking the
ticket, Jocko thrust up his head and
attracted the attention of the booking
clerk, who immediately and very pro
perly said, “You must have a ticket
for that dog, if it’s going with you.”
“Dog?” said Buckland, indignantly,
“it’s no dog, it’s a monkey.”
“It’s a dog,” replied the clerk.
“It’s a monkey,” retorted Buck
and, a proceed to show the whole ani
mal, but without convincing the clerk
who insisted on the money for the
clog ticket to London.
Naturally nettled at this. Buckland
plunged his hand into his pocket and
produced a tortoise, and laying it on
the sill of ticket window, said, “Per
haps you'll call that a dog; too?”
The clerk inspected the tortoise.
“No,” said he, we make no charge for
them—they’re insects.
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
turther information apply to any one
who has tried it fairly.
The cannibal chief stood with his
hand shading his eyes. A solitary
figure was timidly creeping toward him
trom the jungle.
Suddenly the old chief started. He
took a quick step forward.
“It is!” he cried, “it is my son! He
is coming home again.”
Then, with his eyes still fixed on
the slouching figure, he shrilly called
to his head hunter:
“Mbongwa, the prodigal is return
ing! Kill the fatted Kaffir!”—Cleve
land Plain Dealer.
An Uncertain Dtseae.
There is no disease more uncertain in its
nature than dyspepsia. Physicians say that
the symptoms of no two cases ncree. It is
therefore most difficult to make a correct
diagnosis. No matter how severe, or under
what disguisedyspepsiaattacks you, Browns’
Iron Bitters will cure it. Invaluable in all
■li-seases of the stomach, blood and nerves.
Urowu 1 ’ 1 >*u IVvtc.rs is sold Xy <ll dealers.
What Might Have Been.
“Goodness! I wish I had gone to
war.”
“Why, Henry?’’
“Well, here’s Dewey going to get a
present of $250,000, and I have to
scramble like mad for street car fare.”
The Cure that Cures
• Coughs, I
Colds, ,
) Grippe, |
Whooping Cough, Asthma,
| Bronchitis and Incipient 4
Consumption, Is fr
Olios:
1 ‘
I T\ve German remedy" l
25A50dey
TALK ON GATTLF. RAISING.
An enterprising firm of cattle deal
ers of Thomaston has shipped to the
various markets of the East and to
the islands of Cuba since the middle
of last November, at which time they
embarked in the wholesale cattle bus
iness, sixty-one carloads of cattle.
The Telegraph correspondent inter
viewed Mr. I. C. Thompson of the
Thompson & Forrest Cattle Compa
ny, and he said that the cattle raised
in this red land section are preferred
by growers of cattle, as they have
large bones and under favorable con
ditions grow to a good size. Howev
er, he said, the farmers of our section
are not availing themselves of .the
natural advantages they have as they
should. These red lands are finely
adapted to growing Bermuda, the blue
grass oFthe South, which, with little
exertion, they could have growing in
all such places on the farm which they
have not in cultivation. To get a
quick crop of Bermuda, plow up the
grass where there is a sod of it, wash
the dirt out in a convenient stream,
then run it through an ordinary oat
cutter, and broadcast and harrow or
plow. This should' be done in the
early spring, as soon as all danger of
freezes is over.
The cattle business has come to
stay and we should breed that class
of cattle which will bring to
the farm the greatest profit. Red
cattle, Durham and Devons should
be crossed on to our native cattle,
thereby greatly improving the size
and shape, as well as their market
value. Dehorned cattle are preferred
over those with horns by cattle feed
ers. It is a very simple matter to
dehorn young calves, or rather to
raise calves without horns. When
the little bumps can first be felt on
the calf’s head rub a solution of ordi
nary potash, such as used for soap
making,on these little horn elevations,
taking care not to allow the solution
to get into the calf’s eyes or run over
the head. The potash destroys the
horny growth.
Farmers will do well to raise more
grass and better cattle, and they will
be surprised at the result.
August Flower.
“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
oiher 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.
Mrs. A told her new man-servant
(a colored youth from the country) to
make a fire in the drawing room the
other day. Coming in soon after, she
found him hopelessly contemplating
the andirons, tongs, etc., with a pile
of logs by his side large enough to
warm a regiment.
Last fail I sprained my left hip
while handling some heavy boxes.
The doctor I called on said at first
it was a slight strain and would soon
be well, but it grew worse and the
doctor then said I had rheumatism.
It continued to grow wo.se and I
could hardly get around to work. I
went to a drug store and the druggist
recommended me to try Chamber
lain’s Pain Balm. I tried it and one
half of a 50-cent bottle cured me en
tirely I now recommend it to all
my friends.—F. A. Babcock, Erie,
Pa. It is for sale by J. H. Blackburn,
druggist.
A Wise Man.
“He seems to be an unnatural fa
ther. He never goes near the bkby.’
“That's only because he is afraid
he might learn how to take care of it.”
Mr. H. A. Pass, Bowman, Ga., writes.
One of my children was very delicate
and we despaired of raising it. For
months my wife and I could hardly get
a night’s rest until we began the use of
Pitt's Carminative. We found great re
lief from the first bottle.” Pitt’s Car
minative acts promptly and cures per
manently. It is pleasant to the taste
and children take it without coaxing.
It is free from injurious drugs an<\
chemicals.
*S
Listen
to
This
Woman’s
Story
No Bills Wanted.
“Is your father at home?” asked a
caller.
“What is your name, please?” in
quired the little girl.
“Just tell him it is his old friend,
Bill.”
“Then I reckon he ain’t at home.
1 heard him tell mamma if any bill
came he wasn’t at home.”
What is Kodol Dyspepsia Cure? It
is the newly discovered remedy, the
mosL effective preparation ever devis
ed for aiding the digestion and assim
ilation of food, and restoring the de
ranged digestive organs to a natural
condition. It is a discovery surpass
ing anything yet known to the medi
cal profession.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesville.
Milner.
EISEMAN BEOS.'
.ATLANTA^—*-
, The largest stock of Clothing, Hats
1 and Furnishings in the South. Thousands
, of styles for you to select from and prices
t here are from 25 to 50 per cent, cheaper
, than anywhere else, that’s because we are
1 manufacturers and do not pay a profit to
1 middlemen. V V V V Y Y Y *
1 Men’s Nobby Suits, - $5.00 up to $25.00
1 Boy’s Long Trouser Suits, $4.50 up to $15.00
( Boys’ Knee Trouser Suits, $1.50 up to SIO.OO
l 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
1 will make you a permanent customer of .\
|EISEMAN BROS.
( Atlanta, 15-17 Whitehall Street,
1 STORES •! Washington, Cor. Seventh and E Streets.
I ( Baltimore, 213 W. German Street.
! 15-17 WHITEHALL ST.—Our Osly Store Si h""‘\
We Manufacture and: Sell
Engines,
Boilers,
Cotton Gins
Cotton
Presses,
SeedCctton
Elevators,
Grist Mills,
weoperateMachine Shops and, Foundry*
Full Line Supplies*
MALLARY BROS & CO,
MACON, GA.
Sarah E. Bowen, of Peru, Ind.,
said:
[ “ For eighteen years I suffered
with weakness peculiar to my sex.
I could neither sleep nor eat well,
and was reduced to a mere skele
-1 ton. My skin was muddy, my
, eyes heavy, and I was dizzy much
'of the time. Doctors prescribed
for me without avail; medicine
seemed to do me no good. I was at
the brink of despair when a friend
told me what' Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People had accom
plished in a case similar to mine.
I bought a box and took them. I
bought more and took them until
I was well and strong. Dr. Wil
liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
brought me new life and I recom
mend them to every suffering
woman.” — From the Republican,
Peru , Ind.
Dr. William*' Pink Pill* for Pale People
contain, in a condensed form, all the ele
ments necessary to give new life and rich
ness to the blood and restore shattered
nerves. They are an unfailing specific for
such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial
paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neural
gia, rheumatism, nervous hendache, the
after-effects of the grip, palpitation of the
heart, pale and sallow complexions, and all
forms of weakness either in male or female.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Psle People ars never
sold by tho doten or hundred, but always in pack
ages. At all druggists, or direct from tho Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Company. Schenectady, N. Y., 60
cents per box. 6 boxes $2.50.
Aunt Broadhead (who has been vis
iting)—“When Abby Stang was mar
ried, over at Kohokus, she fainted
dead away just before the minister
could pronounce ’em man and wife.”
Mrs. Longnecker—“My land! What
happened?”
Aunt Broadhead (dryly)—“Oh, she
come to before the groom could git
away.”—J udge.
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.
The child of today is the critic o f
tomorrow, but unfortunately parents
never realize the fact until tomorrow.
Saw Mills,
..and.,
everything
..in the..
Machinery
Line.
Get our
Prices be
fore buying