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Arex/ou
Everx
Depressed i
And is it not due to nervous
exhaustion? Things always
I look so much brighter when we
k Y are in good health. How can
* A you have courage when suffer-
A ing with headache, nervous
prostration and great physical
weakness?
Would you not like to be rid
of this depression of spirits?
jkT How? By removing the
I k .cause. By taking
f It gives activity to all parts
that carry away useless and Y
poisonous .materials from your 1
body. It removes the cause of
your suffering, because it re
moves all impurities from your
blood. Send for our book on
Nervousness. Hd
}• To keep in good health you HE
must have perfect action of the K|||
bowels. Ayer’s Pills cure con
stipation and biliousness. IV
Write to oMir Doctor*. Ul
I Perhnpa you woul.l like to consult pill
•rnnfi eminent jihy sicimi* klhhil your
condition. Then write um freely all tho ■■
particulars In your cate. You will re-
Mte a prompt reply, without cost.
rAddrenH, DR. JC. AY Kit. ■
Lowell. Mass. V
One Wornuii'n Wisdom.
He had proposed to the idol of his
heart, hut things failed to come his
way.
“Do you know,” he said as he was
leaving her presence forever, “that
you are wringing my heart from my
bosom?”
“Possibly,” she answered coldly,
“but its either that or marry you and
wring the bosoms from your shirts in
after years.”
Seeing the case was hopeless, the
party of the first part lit a cigarette
and wandered hence into the hither.—
Chicago News.
ANY PERSON
Wishing to know the truth in regard
to their health should not fail to
send for a valuable and new 64 page
booklet which will be sent Free for a
short time to those who mention this
paper. 'Phis book is published by
the celebrated physicians and spe
cialists—Dr. Hathaway S: Cos., of At
lanta, Ga., whom you should address.
Write to day.
The cheese fingers to serve with
salads are made by sifting a cup of
flour into a bowl and working into it
with the fingers a tablespoonful of
butter and adding halt a teaspoonful
of salt, a little paprika or other mild
pepper, and a half teaspoonful of
baking powder. Beat the yolk of one
egg light, and add to the mixture with
four tablespoonfuls of grated cheese.
Cold water should be added in suffi
cient quantities to make a soft dough
that will roll well. Roll to about
one-third of an inch in thickness, and
cut into strips half an inch wide and
about four inches long. Grate a little
cheese over them and bake in a bis
cuit pan in a moderate oven until
they are a delicate brown.
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 pamphlets, which
tel! how to buy and use fertilisers with
ftftSUst economy and profit.
OER.TAN KALI WORKS.
u N— MM st.. New York,
Patronize Home, and Then we
Will Grow-
Henry Grady, in one of his speech
es giving counsel to his community,
advised the people to magnify the
importance ot their town, to cultivate
: its small economics, and stand by its
iyoung industries. Commercial de
| pendence. according to the gifted
! southerner, was the chain that galled
i every day. A factory built at home,
a shoe or boot made, are steeps in
that diffusion of interests that are
needed, “Teach your children,” he
said, “to withdraw from the vassalage
of distant capitalists and pay, under
sacrifice, rather than mortgage their
lands. He prudent and simple; live
within your own resources and estab
lish the freedom of your community.
Make every village and cross road, as
far as may be, sovereign to its own
wants.”
If we would cultivate small econ
omies and stand by our young indus
tries we would be all right, and local
| capital would gladly seek investments
therein, says the Savannah News.
When ladies buy their laces, their
bonnets, their shoes, their dresses,
their jewelry, their stationary, and
their lingerie in the north, and when
men purchase their clothing, their ci
gars, their buggies, their watches else
where, how can we expect that small
economics and industries can thrive?
We need self help, local appreciation
and a mutuality of interests that will
make our city sovereign to its own
wants. We have as beautiful a city
as there is in the country and we
profess pride in its advancement, as
well as in its prestige and its history,
but we do not cultivate our econom
ics and stand by our small industries,
which we allow' to die out for want of
patronage that we freely give to mer
chants elsewhere and manufactories
in the north and east, with whom we
may not have a community of inter
ests. Patronize home economics and
industries and they will prosper, and
as they grow' and build up they will
create a demand *or just such things
as we want.
ECZEMA
ON
BABY
T.ly little slx-mrmtlis old girl had Koroma.
Wouaedall kinds of remedies, hut she kept
putting worso. I used to wrap her hands up,
and to dross her, had to put her ou the table.
1 could not hold luir, she would kick and
scream, and, when she could, she would tear
lior face and arm* almost to pieces. Four
lioxos of CuTieoßA (ointment), two cakes of
Cutiouha Boat, and ('otioiira Resolvent
cured her, and no traces are left.
Feb.7,’9B. Mrs. Q. A. CONRAD, Lisbon, N. It.
BernT Ci'*i TsrATMKuT Wurtn linth. wl'h Coti
rto< a So as, iron tlc Mi.'intlnir. with OrriciSA unatmtnt),
•ml mil,l iloAMorCvrict'SA Rksoltskt.
Sol,l throughout the worM. Pottn PRro Alto CnitH.
Cost ~ Crop.., Button. Uo* to Cur* Skin Ulmhm, treo.
It Worked Both Ways.
In some rural districts of England
there are held annually hiring fairs,
where farmers and others attend to
engage servants. At one held in
Gloucestershire last autumn a farmer
opened negotiations with a lad who
seemed suitable for his purpose. Va
rious questions having been asked
and answered, the farmer inquired at
last:
“Hast got a chaiacter from thy last
place?”
“No," replied the boy; “but my old
garter be about somewhere, and I can
get he to write I one.”
“Very weell," was the reply, “thee
get it and meet I here again at 4
o’clock.”
The time came, so did the farmer
ami the boy.
“Hast got thy character?” was the
query.
The answer come short and sharp:
“No; but 1 ha got thine, and I
bean’t a c joining."
QUICK CURE FOR
COUGHS AND COLDS,
PYNY-PECTORAL
The Canadian Remedy ter all
THROAT AND LONG MINS.
Larse Bottles, 26 cent.
DAVIS A LAWRENCE CO., Lim.,
Pnoß' Ptnav Davis* PAin-Kn.ua.
rom balm ar
DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS.
Miss Lockheart’s
LETTER TO MRS. PINKHAM.
[LETTER TO KKS. PINKHAM NO. £7,104!
“ I cannot express my gratitude to
■vou for the good that Lydia E. Pink
ham’s Vegetable Compound has done
forme. I have taken five bottles of
the Compound ar.d two boxes of Liver
Pills and feel better in every respect.
I had suffered for years with dropsy;
the veins in my limbs burst, caused
from the pressure of the water. 1 bad
the worst kind of kidney trouble, faint
ing spells, and I could not stand long
at a time. I also had female weakness
and the doctor said there was a tumor
in my left side. The pains I had to
stand were something dreadful. A
friend handed me a little hook cf yours,
so I got your medicine and it has saved
my life I felt better from the first
bottle. The bloating and the tumors
have all gone and I do not suffer any
pain. lam still using the Vegetable
Compound and hope others may find
relief as I have done from its use." —
Miss N. J. Lockiieaut, Box 10, ELIZA
BETH, I* A.
Only the women who hare suffered
with female troubles can fully appre
ciate the gratitude of those who have
been restored to health.
Mrs. Pinkham responds quickly and
withouteharge to all letters from suffer
ing women. Her address is Lynn, Mass.
Time to Burn.
Years ago Joaquin Miller was jour
neying on foot, and was overtaken by
an honest countryman, who took him
up on his loaded wagon and gave him
a long ride, says the Philadelphia
Bulletin. Tired, at length, of con
versation, the poet took a novel from
his pocket, and poured over it long
and silently.
“What are you reading?” said the
countryman.
“A novel of Bret Harte’s,” said Mr.
Miller.
“Well, now, I don't see how an im
mortal being wants to be wasting his
time with such stuff.”
“Are you quite sure,” said the
poet, “that I'm an immortal being?”
“Of course you are.”
“If that be the case,” responded
Miller, “I don't see why I should be
very economical with my time;” and
lie turned to his book again. .
J. A. Schear, of Sedalia, Mo., saved
his child from death by croup by Usjng
One Cough Cure. It cures
coughs, colds, pneumonia, la grippe
and all throat and lung troubles.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesvilie.
Milner.
A Prescription for Ellen,
“Another nocturnallst,” said the
officer, when Ellen Talbert stepped
up to get justice.
“What were you doing out late at
night?” asked the recorder of the
prisoner.
Ellen folded her arms, assumed a
tragic air of innocence and replied:
“De times am er cumin’ ter er pret
ty how when er lady can't go ter de
drug store atter a little medicine.”
“What did to the drug store
for?” asked the judge.
“Cough medicine,” was the reply.
The officer went on to tell how of
ten he had warned Ellen to stay oft
the streets. Then an old woman rose
up among the spectators and said she
advised Ellen to go to the drug store
“What’s the matter with Ellen?'
the recorder asked the old woman,
and the old creature, who is partially
(.leaf, and who hadn't heard what
Ellen said, replied:
“She am got er sore foot."
Ellen's wooly head drooped low on
her greasy shirtwaist.
“I don't think cough medicine is
good for a sore foot," remarked the
recorder, “and I will try a prescrip
tion that will cure the foot and noc
turnalism at the same time, and it
will cost Ellen just $1.75.”
CO NS U M PTtON POSIT IV EL V
CURED.
Mr. R. B. Greeve. merchant of
Chilhowie, Va„ certifies that he had
consumption was given up to die,
sougnt all medical treatment that
money could procure, tried all cough
remedies he could hear of, but got no (
relief: spent many nights sitting up in
a chair; was induced to try Dr. King's
New Discovery, and was cured by use
of two bottles. For past three years
has been attending to business and
says Dr. King's New Discovery is the
grandest remedy ever made, as it has
done so much for him and also for
others in his community. Dr. King's
New Discovery is guaranteed for
Coughs. Colds aqd Consumption. It
don’t fail. Trial bottles free at W.
A. Wright's Drug Store.
DOING WELL DEPENDS ON
DOING COMPLETELY-
It is a rule that a workman must
follow his employer's orders, as a
writer in the Living Age says, but no
one has a right to make him do dis
creditable work. Judge M , a
well-known jurist, living near Cincin
nati, liked to tell the following anec
dote of a young man who understood
the risk of doing a shabby job, even
when directed to. He had occasion
to send for a carpenter; a sturdy
young fellow appeared.
“I want this fence mended. Here
are some unplaned boards, use them.
You need not take time to make it &
neat job. I will only pay a dollar
and a half.”
Later the judge found the man
planing each board. Supposing that
he was trying to make a costly job,
he ordered him to nail them on just
as they were, and continued his walk.
When he returned, the boards were
all planed and numbered, ready for
filing. “I told you this fence was
to be covered with vines/’ he said,
angrily. “I don’t care how it looks.”
-I do,” said the carpenter, gruffly,
carefully measuring his work. When
it was done there was no other part
of the fence as thorough in finish.
“How much do you charge?” asked
the judge.
“A dollar and a half,” said the man,
shouldering his tools.
The judge stared. “Why did you
spend all that labor on that fence if
not for money?”
“For the job, sir.”
“Nobody would have seen the poor
work on it.”
“But I should have known it was
there. No; I’Jl take only a dollar and
a half.” He took it and went away.
Ten years afterwards the judge had
a contract to give for the erection of
several magnificent public buildings.
There were many applicants among
the master builders, but the face of
one caught his eye. “It was my man
cf the fence,” he said. “I knew we
should have only good, genuine work
from him. I gave him the contract,
and it made a rich man of him.”
It is a pity that boys and girls are
not taught in their earliest years that
the highest success belongs only to
those whose work is most sincerely
and thoroughly done.—Michigan Ad
vocate.
Perfect Health.
Keep the system in perfect or
der by the occasional use ol
Tutt’s Liver Pills. They reg
ulate the bowels and produce
A Vigorous Body.
For sick headache, malaria, bil
iousness, constipation and kin
dred diseases, an absolute cure
TUTT’S Liver PILLS
John’s Attld Lang Syne Act.
John Grogan, a tall black negro,
made his debut as a wife beater. The
queer part of John’s conjugal chastis
ing act was that he beat his ex wife,
whom he had not seen tor a year.
Wednesday night John called to see
his erstweile spouse, and, probably to
revive memories of old times, he gave
her one of the ‘auld lang syne’ thrash
ings.
The ex-wife told how "John drapp
ed in ter see her and den mos' slapped
her head eft.”
"Yer kin see, judge," she said, ‘:dat
one ob my ears am nearly oft'."
"She am er tellin' more den dere
wus," said John.
"You deny, then," remarked the
recorder, "that you loosened her solar
plexis?"
"I sure does," replied the prisoner.
"Well. John,’’ the recorder continu
ed. "since you revived ‘auld lang
syne' with your discarded wife, 1 will
revivify old memories by letting you
go to the stockade for three weeks."
CASTOR IA
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the
Signature of
The
House
Wife’s
Burden
“My dear, good, considerate daugh
ter, come to my arms!” he cried.
Truly she deserved well of him, foi*
it is not every girl who has sense
enough to turn a prospective wedding
into an elopement when she learns
that her father is in financial difficul
ties.
There is a time for all things. The
time to take DeWitt’s Little Early
Risers is when you are suffering Irom
constipation, biliousness, sick-head
ache, indigestion or other stomach or
liver troubles.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesvilie,
Milner.
A wife shold not expect her hus
band to lighthearted if her biscuits
are heavy.
EISEMAN BEOS.
-^-—ATLANTA
The largest stock of Clothing, Hats
and Furnishings in the South. Thousands
f 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 y v y y y
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‘'ustomer of
EISEMAN*-:- BROS.
- TAnrc ( Atlanta, 15-17 Whitehall Street,
S 1 UKbS X Washington, Cor. Seventh and E Streets.
( Baltimore, 213 W. German Street.
15 -17 WHITEHALL ST. —Onr Only Store is Atlanta.
We Manufacture and Sell
Engines,
Boilers,
Cotton Gins
Cotton
Presses,
SeedCctton
Elevators,
Grist Mills,
Machine Shops and Foundry#
p u [| L( ne Mill Supplies#
MALLARY BROS 6c C O,
MACON, GA.
Mrs. Ada M. Herr, of 439 N.
Charlotte St., Lancaster, Pa., suf
fered terribly from female disor
ders. Her nerves became un
strung, she endured intense pain,
the slightest labor v.’earied her and
household duties became a burden.
Frequent fainting and dizzy spells
would come upon her and she
would fall prostrate in a swoon.
After trying several physicians
without success Mrs. Herr began
taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
for Pale People. She says :
“ The pills brought immediate
relief, and after taking six boxes
I was cured. Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People had done
what all previous treatment had
failed to do.” —Front the Exami
ner, Lancaster, Pa.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People
contain, in a condensed form, all the ele
ments necessary to give now 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 headache,’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 Pale People are never
sold by the dozen or hundred, but always in pack
ages. At all druggists, or direct from the Dr. Wil
liams Medicine Company, Schenectady, N. Y., 60
cents per box, 6 boxes $2.50.
Labor Agitator: “Up and down
that field you toil, poor slave, so your
hard-hearted master may tatten and
grow rich?”
Small Farmer (justly annoyed):
“You’re a liar! It’s me own land.”
•
Pitt’s Carminative is pleasant to the
taste, acts promptly, and never fails to
give satisfaction. It carries children
over the critical time of teething, and
is the friend of anxious mothers and pu
ny children. A few doses will demon
state its value. E. H. Dorsey, Athens,
Ga., writes:
“I consider it the best medicice I have
ex'er used in my family. It does all you
claim for it, and even more.
I
Mr. Sealove (at his seaside cottage)
“My dear, please tell our daughter to
sing something less doleful.”
Mrs. Sealove: “That is not daugh
ter, my love. That is the foghorn.”
Saw Mills,
■ i and.,
everything
..in the,.
Machinery
Line.
Get our
Prices be
forebuying