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Proper Springs
for a buggy, surrey, or any side-bar vehicle are the
Thomas Coil Springs. As different from as they are better and easier than
plate springs. Make an old buggy comfortable —anew one luxurious.
KThe THOMAS
COIL SPRINGS
e heartily endorsed by every one who has ever tried
them. At any wheelwright’s, or we’ll supply you
direct. Full information mailed upon request.
The Buffalo Spriu# tV (ienr Co*, Buffalo, New York*
I
Hi iBSi
OF INTEREST TO LADIES.
With the greatest pleasure we
give below an article which appeared
in the South Illustrated and which no
doubt will prove of interest to the
ladies:
“Prominent among those who -cast
their fortun.es with the progress and
development of Atlanta; and who
have gained fame and fortune with
its growth, are Dr. W. A. and Mrs.
Rosa F. Monnish, M. D.
Dr. W. A. Monnish was born in
southern Germany, and comes from a
family of eminent surgeons and phy
sicians. His grandfather was a noted
surgeon and physician: an uncle was
court physician to the Grand I)ukei
of Mecklenburg. His father a prom
inent government official.
Dr. Monnish graduated at Atlanta
Medical College after which he at
tended the Royal Saxon Hospital
for women at Dresden, Germany, af
terwards taking another full course
at the New York Postgraduate Col
lege and Hospital. After returning
from Germany he associated himself
with the Private Sanitarium for Worn
en, established by Mrs. R. F. Mon
nish, M. D. His success has been
consistent with the growth of Atlartiki,
numbering among his patients sojie
of its best Citizens.
Mrs.- Rosa F. Monnish enjoys the
distinction of being the first female
physicjjn ever graduated and prac
ticing in the south. She graduated
in 1881, afterwards attending a spec
ial course in Berlin, Germany, then
taking a post-graduate course in New
York. She enjoys the reputation of
being the most skillful female phy
sician in the treatment ol the diseas
es of women, in the south. She es
tablished the first private sanitarium
for women in Atlanta, in 1884. Her
patronage is among the best and
most refined women in the south.
This sanitarium is situated in one
of the most popular and healthy sec
tions of Atlanta, is an elegant three
story stone structure (as shown by
cut) fitted up with all modern conven
iences and is the only institute in the
south where ladies exclusively are
treated and under the charge of a
competent, graduated experienced
German Female Physician. This
has overcome a great obstacle, as
the most modest young ladies will
not feel the least hesitancy to consult
■with and be treated by one of their
own sex, which meets with the ap
proval of ail refined and modest wom
en who naturally object to come in
contact with all classes and sexes
commonly met with in so-called
private infirmaries.
Patients remaining in the sanita
rium receive separate rooms anti have
thy strictest privacy combined with
pleasant refined surroundings and
all the comforts of a quiet home. A
branch office for' the treatment ot
diseases of women, diseases of the
skin and nervous system, in charge 01
Dr. W„ A. Monnish, is located in the
Chamberlin—Johnson Building cor
ner Whitehall and Hunter Sts,
Ladies requiring the services of
the above physiciaus can address or
consult them at No. 3 Church St.
from 9a m, to 6 pm, all their cor
respondence and consultation is
treated strictly confidental.
DACFPTAWO SBCUBED. May deposit money
f l/jl I linn for tuition In hank till position Is
vuiiiuiiu secured, or will accept notes.
Cheap board. Car fare paid. No vacation.
Enter any time. Open for both sexes.
DRAUGHON’S S?
PRACTICAL
yylfl&yC&p
NaahTiUe, Tenn. Savannah, Ga.
Galveston, Tex. Texarkana, Tex.
Indorsed by merchants and hankers. Three
months’ bookkeeping with us equals six. elsewhere,
Ad commercial branches taught. For circulars explain.
In* “ Home Study Course.” address “ Hepaitment A,"
Tor college catalogue, address “ Department A 4
aa |||B a and Whiskey Habits
Ira O 111 cured at home with
■ lr 111 Iwl out pain. Book of par
-188 lABITI ticn lam sent FREE.
UMMM B.M.WOCTXF.Y. M.D.
u loasia. uw. OOioe lut J. I ’ St ■
The Romance of the Hope Diamond.
Recently the papers have been full
of the account that Lord Francis
Hope, husband of May Yohe, had ap
plied to the court for permissio into
sell the famous Hope diamond, which
he said was ot no use to him or the
estate shut up in the bank vault. Per
mission was refused. He inherited
the big blue diamond from his grand
mother, Airs. Hope of Deepdene.
The blue or sapphire tint is about
the rarest of colors ever assumed by
the diamond, and the story of the
Hope stone is like a romance. It was
the first blue diamond to come to Eu
rope, weighed in the rough over 112
karets and was brought from India by
the famous traveler Tavernier in 1642
and was sold to Louis XIV in 1665.
By his orders it was cut to sixty-seven
karats.
When the great revolution befell
France in 1792 the jewel was put in
the Garde Meubel in Paris, and a
month after it was deposited there it
disappeared. For forty years nothing
was heard of it. In 1830 one Daniel
Eiiason was in possession of a cut
blue diamond of forty-four karats, and
there is little doubt this represented
the major portion of the famous
French stone. At that time Henry
Thomas Hope, a wealthy virtuoso,
b aught the blue diamond for $90,000.
What had become of the remaining
twenty-three carats was not then
known. In 1874 a fine blue diamond
weighing six or seven karats came
into the market and experts declare
it part of the original Tavernier stone.
Since then smaller blue diamonds
have appeared, making up the missing
part of the stone.
Diseases of the Blood, unit Serve*,
No one need suffer with neuralgia. Tins
disease is quickly and permanently eured
by Browns’ Iron Bitters. Every disease of
the blood, nerves and stomach, chronic
or otherwise, succumbs to Browns’ Iron
Bitters. Known and used for nearly a
quarter of a century, it stands to-day fore
most am one our most valued remedies.
Crowns’lron Bitters is sold by all dealer*.
“The minister,” observed the church
member, as if the idea had just oc
curred to him, “can take a vacation,
but Satan never takes a vacation.”
“True,” replied the other church
member, “but Satan can stand the
iheat a great deal better than the min
ister. ” —Puck.
VELVET BEANS.
The greatest fertilizing and stock
food plant for the South yet known
full, discretion free. Package 10c
<jjt. 30 cts. post paid, peck 60c, bush
el S2OO F. O. B. Ocala, Address.
J. B. Sutto# Seedsman,
Ocala Fla.
“Well, Johnny, my dear, how are
you getting on with your French ?”
“Oh! very well, uncle. We translate
quite nice sensible sentences now,
such as, ‘My uncle never allows my
birthday to pass without giving me a
present,’ or ‘lt is certain that my un
cle will give me something quite
splendid this time.”—Tit-Bits.
Thomas Thurman, deputy sheriff
of Troy, Mo., says if everyone in the
United States should discover the
virtue of DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve
for piles, rectal troubles and skin dis
eases, the demand could not be sup
plied. Dr. W. A. Wright,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesville.
Milner.
Finesse —She did not poison her
husband, although ne was 73 years
old, while she was but eighteen. She
was far too clever for that. Instead
she kissed his brow, and asked him
would he not. for her sake, try to live
to be 100? Of course he could rot
refuse. The effort to live to be 100
was, at his advanced age, necessarily
fatal; and the young wife came at
once into all his property. —Detroit
Journal.
Edaeatc Tour lie well With CMoriia
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
Uc.jfc. uc.C. C. tail, druggist* refund atone/.
THE HORSELESS AGE,
It will dot do for the friend of the
horse to put too much reliance upon
the lately increased value which he
has attained. In the market place
he fetches a better price than he did,
but his day of usefulness is as nearly
over as ever. As yet we cannot do
without the horse. For purposes of
luxury, indeed, the horse is as indis-'
pensable as ever, but no one can be
blind to the merits of those infernal
inventions that come buzzing along
on asphalt pavement with the celerity
of a scorcher on his wheel. Much as
we love the horse, we confess that he
cannot compete with this animated
sedan chair, this funeral-looking thing
with wheels four sizes too fat for it,
and a youthful engineer in charge,
whose perfect control over it keeps it
from running away when you know it
ought to, and stops it when you know
it ought to be toppling people in all
directions. Indeed, our ideas about
that mild social dissipation called
"taking a drive" must be absolutely
and radi'cally changed with the advent
of this new device: There was an
element of uncertainty about a horse
which made driving a mild form of
sport, deemed something hazardous.
The risk, however, is totally different
with these new mechanical things,
and the old rules don't apply. It is
not yet known how an obstreperous
motorman. who has been given his
head, is to he treated if inclined to
run away, and it will take years of
experience to lay down rules with re
gard to this, which will be thoroughly
practical, because the motorman, if so
inclined, could run away with you in
any one of three directions—ahead,
astern or in a circle. It certainly will
not do to hold on to something and
yell “Whoa!” at him; nor is it likely
that any soft words will avail, even if
you felt you could utter them. He
has you so completely at his mercy
that he can hold you up for any ran
som he is pleased to ask until his
source of power runs out. With a
horse you are dealing with a senseless
creature, and you can guide him
against a stone wall or picket fence,
where he will proceed to dash himself
to pieces with the utmost celeiity,and
you can extricate yourself from the
ruins if your head has been longer
than the horse’s. This is not a habit
which you can depend on in a motor
man of ordinary capacity, unless he
is under the malevolent influence of
liquor, and even then it would be
hard to drive him to a form of self
destruction from which you yourself
could be sure of escape. Fortunately
we have as yet advanced but little in
the art of controlling the motorman
and his carriage, and we still have
our serviceable friend, the horse, with
us. Hill-climbing is one of the things
the horse hates to do, but he can
laugh at his ungainly rival on this
point, and ask derisively, “Where is
he at,” when it comes to fine work on
a steep incline. Unfortunately, men
are inventive, and their ingenuity will
devise some means of overcoming
this. When that has been done the
era of the horseless man will begin.
So passes away the friend of thou
sands of years. While the horse at
times may seem to have been lacking
in intelligence, it should be inscribed
on his tomb that he had one distinct
ive virture in that he never ran away
with any one in more than one direc
tion. #
ECZEMA
CURED BY
BOTANIC
BLOOD
B.ALM
(B. B. B.) FOR
Bad Blood
Itching, torturing, ecaly Eczema, Pimple*
and Skin Humori are outward evidence! of a
deep eeated Blood Diieaie, hence to really
cure to atay cared n thoroughly teited Blood
Remedy like Botanic Blood Balm (B. IS. B.) ii
required. It ii the only remedy itrong enough to
reach the eauie, expelling the polaon and humor*
from the blood, thu* driving out every veatige of the
dlaeaae. Botanic Blood Balm core* after doctor*,
■alvea, external or Internal remedial have failed.
HAVF Yflil >tcb,n *< burning, aealy, cruatrd,
"MIG IUW 0 j pimply ekln, bllater* containing
put or watery fluid, akin red, and an Itching heat,
with or without aorea, on lega. arma, handa,
neck, or face ? Then take Botanic Blood Balm
iB. B. 80, which will cure you, leaving the
eah free from bleminhea, itching, or aorea.
ectama on Children. Children are very fre
quently afflicted with Eczema or aorea, aornetlme*
affecting entire face and aealp. Blve the child
mild doaea of Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) and
the aorea will coon beal. Price sl, per large bottle
(elk for t j), at drag Korea. Perfectly cafe to uae
by old or young.
Sample Bottle Free. Bend 2 atampa to pay
poatag* for free cample bottle and book. Deecrtbe
trouble, and free peraonal medical advice given.
Addreaa, Blood Balm Cos , Atlanta, Georgia.
Nearly every disease is the sign of!
Poverty, either ot the blood or of the ;
nerves. When the brain cells and j
nervous tissues are used up taster!
than they are repaired, not only the !
brain and nerves, but every vital or-j
gan of the body cries out for help, j
Headaches, neuralgia, heart disease, 1
nervous dyspepsia and liver and ktd- j
ney troubles ruu rampant in the help- j
less system, destroying whatever
strength remains until at last the
break-down comes and then
Dr. M le's Restorative Nervine is do
inga world of good for such weak,
nervous people, whose brain and body
are overtaxed, but who may yet be
saved from a state ot indescriable
wretchedness, and restored to lives of
happiness and industry. By sooth
ing and strengthening the secretive
glands of the digestive organs it fa
cilitates digestion and assimilation,
while the nervous system is rapidly
built up again and put to work with
out confusion, thus bringing all the
important oigans into harmony and
restoring perfect health.
In the following let, ev Mrs. 11. L.
Redman, 80 1-2 E. Main ■■!., Meriden,
( 0n.11., tells how her health was res
tored: “For several months 1 sulTeied
Secretary of State Hay has caused a
social sensation in Washington by ap
pearing at a fashionable morning wed
ding clad in a cool suit of white flan
nel. The mercury stood at 100 in
the shade, and Mr. Hay seemed to be
the only man there who
no discomfort from the heat. The
Presiden and a number of other no
tables were present, all boxed up in
regulation attire and many of them
cast envious glances at the Secretary
of State.
To those living
in malarial districts Tutts Pills
are indispensible, they keep the
system in perfect order and arc
an absolute cure
for sick headache, indigestion,
malaria, torpid liver, constipa
tion and all bilious diseases.
Tutt’s Liver Pills
Better out of fashion than out of
credit. Some spend so much to be
fashionable that they get into debt,
and lose credit with their neighbors.
“You must be in fashion,” is the ut
terance of weak headed mortals.—
Spurgeon.
J. A. Schear, of Sedalia, Mo., saved
his child from death by croup by using
One Minute Cough Cure. It cures
coughs, colds, pneumonia, la grippe
and all throat and lung troubles.
Dr. W. A. Weight,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesville.
Milner.
A drummer for an Eastern tobacco
house entered the hotel lobby and
generously distributed cigars. One
of the fellows who had taken one
turned it over suspiciously and said:
“I wonder if this is real or cabbage.”
“It's real cabbage,” said another,
who had just taken his first whiff.
What you want is not temporary
relief from piles but a cure to stay
cured. DeWitt’s Witch Hazel Salve
cures piles, and they stay cured.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesviile.
Milner.
Pimples,
Skin
Eruptions
That Burn
and Itch,
Scales,
Sores.
A passenger who had observed to
the street car conductor that it was
and and hot, suddenly turned and dis
covered a lady within hearing.
“I beg your pardon, madam,” he
said contritely.
“Oh, you needn’t, sir,” responded
madam, fanning herself vigorously;“it's
very much warmer than that.”—Har
lem Fife.
rvi in time. Sold by drnggtata. St
F H* I i*iP“B IM
"Kerns
A Weak Stomach, Sleepless, Nervous, Irratable Pains In
Chest and Stomach, Cured by
Dr. Miles’ Nervine.
very seriously from extreme nervous
ness. My sleep was broken, my appe
tite fai'ed mo and 1 was threatened
with nervous prostration. 1 could
scarcely endure the sliglu st noise shout
the house; my nerves were completely
unstiung, and distressing pains across
the stomach and in the chest made life j
to mo a miserable existence. My nights
were long and tiresome and 1 was
obliged to refrain from all efforts ot' any
character. 1 began taking Dr. Miles’
Restorative N crane and the first, night •
slept soundly al night. I can truth
fully say that. Dr. Miles' Nervine enreil
me and 1 recommend it to the suffering
everywhere.”
“It is with pleasure that I wiite of the
benefits 1 have received nom the use of
Dr. Miles’ Nervine and the Anti-Rain
Rills. 1 have suffered I- 1 •"> or six years
from a set ions nervous trouble for which
l doctored continually, but could find
nothing that would dome any good un
til I got a bottle of Dr. Miles’ Nervine.
It. helped me right away and since 1 be
gan taking it my health has improved
wonderfully and my nervous trouble has
been cured. I would advise anyone
who lots nervous trouble to give Nervine
a trial for 1 know it, will give satisfac
tion. I use Dr. Miles’ Anti-Rain Rills
in my family for head ache or any aches
or pains and they give good results at
all times.”
MliS. ANNIN I>HAXXON,Uosine, ICy.
About four yeaVs ago I was taken with
nervous prostration, - The doctor was
Music Out ol’ Storm.
Stress and storm arouse our ener
gies and awaken our spiritual nature
and needs. They develop in us qual
ities of soul that air and sunshine
cannot produce, and that are our
most precious attainments The
sounding boards of pianos, which
catch the vibrations ot the strings and
and pour them forth in floods of mel
ody, must be carefully selected from
a certain kind of wood. It has been
found that wood grown down in the
swamps where it has been proteccted
and richly nourished will not do; it's fi
bre is too coarse and soft; it has been
having too easy a time. The best
results come from wood grown in the
open upland, where it lias had to bat
tle with storms that have tightened
its fibre and made it dense and fine.
Such wood is vibrant and musical; its
pores are full of melody. In its tex
tuie sleep the wooing breezes of the
spring, the myriad tunefulness of sum
mer and the trumpet blasts of winter,
the twitter of birds and the hum of
bees, the innumerable laughter and
the sighing and sobbing of the wind,
the ripple of the streams and the
soothing lullabies of the rain, the
deep-toned organ notes of the thun
der, and the rattle and roar and crash
of the storm; and at the touch of the
strings these slumbering chords and
songs wake up and float out upon the
air. That wood acquired its music
through distress. It is in this way
that God is tuning and enriching us.
He plants us in the rocky uplands
and exposes 11s to storms that we
may be compacted and mellowed and
made vibrant and resonant to the
music of his life. He is constructing
a many-voiced, myriad stringed instru
ment that shall forever pour fo/th the
rich melodies and grand harmonics of
his love, and only selected, tried souls,
in whom slumber chords that have
been caught from the very storms ot
earth can enter into it and become a
part of its song. “For which cause
we taint not; but though our outward
man perish; yet the inward man is re
newed day by day.”—Presbyterian
Banner.
THE GREATEST DISCOVERY
YET.
VV. M. Repine, editor Tiskilwa, 111.
“Chief,” says: “We won’t keep
house without Dr. King's New Dis
covery lor Consumption, Coughs and
Colds. Experimented with many
others, but never got the true remedy
until we used Dr. King’s New Discov
ery. No other remedy can take its
place in our home, as in it we have a
certain and sure cure for Coughs,
Colds, Whooping Cough, etc.” It is
idle to experiment with other reme
dies, even if they are urged on you as
just as good as Dr. King’s New Dis
covery. They are not as good, be
cause this remedy has a record of cure
and besides is guaranteed. It never
fails to satisfy. Trial bottles free at
W. A. Wright's Drug Store. 1
•
called, and while he got me on my feet
I was very weak, faint, and altogether
out of soils. I finally, got a, bottle of
Dr, Miles’ Nervine and I began to rest
better and gain strength almost from
the first dose. 1 received great benefit
from the use of Net vine and can recom
mend it highly for nervous (roubles and
weak, run down conditions.”
Mas. Dow llkaglk, Sing Sing, N. Y.
Sampc treatment
FREE.
A trial package of Dr.
Miles’ favorite treatment, con
sisting of Dr. Miles’ Restora
tive Nervine, Dr. Miles’ Anti-
Pain Pills and Dr. Miles'
Nerve and Liver Pills will be
sent absolutely free of cost to
any person who will send
name and address on a postal!
I card, requesting the samples,,
j and mentioning name of this
paper to
Dr. Miles Medical Cos.,
Elkhart, ind.
Pin Money.
An old woman wants to give the
farmers’ wives a little of her experi
: ence in making a little pin money, for
j there is not one but would like to
handle a little money of their own.
If you have good range for turkeys
they are profitable. I raised eighty
( last year, and sold them from Bto ro
I cents per pound, making $i apiece.
] The only thing is to keep the young
( tree of vermin. Use insect powder
' and a little lard rubbed on the head.
. Feed bread, add a little black pepper
j when very young. Yyu must have
I small grain and peas on a turkey farm.
1 There is money in butter. A good
I article sells well, never less than 20
j cents. I sold over $4,000 worth tO'
; one man. He ran a boarding school.
I made three and four hundred dollars
a year. Now lam too old to attend
to the dairy; it requires more work
and cleanliness than any other busi
ness you can follow. I have one acre
in Irish potatoes. I plant one acre
every year and make some money.
Use Paris green for bugs, and water
melons are treated with the same
poison. I raised the second crop and
got $1 per bushel—potatoes, I mean.
Any one living near town and with
a family could make good money off
strawberries. I have sold some at
lair prices.
Ia ecabbage is very easy to dispose
of. Have them come in in Septem
ber before the* northern cabbage is;
shipped in. I must acknowledge that
all I know about farming I learned
from dear old Home and Farm. I
have read it ever since it was first
published, I reckon. May it continue
to teach the young farmers for a long,
lime to come. A Woman Farmer.
Sorters!
JmHbbittle ;
JPWIIVER
jm
SICK HEADACHE
Positively cured by these
Little Pills.
They a'so relieve Distress from PyspepdH
Indigestion and Too Hearty Eating. A per.
feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi.
ness, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongug
I'ain In the Side, TORPID LIVER. The*
Regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable,
Small Pill. Small Dose*
Small Price.
The first silk hat was worn in the
streets of London by John Hethertcyi
haberdasher, on January 5, 1797. He
was arrested for inciting riot, but was
dismissed with a reprimand.