Newspaper Page Text
DM kwv
_ ever
sceiaow
Saner?
never did; but we have
•een the clothing at this time
of the year ao covered with
dandruff that it looked as if h
had been out in a regular snow
storm.
Nonoodot this anowatorm.
As the summer sun would
melt the felling enow so will
Ayer’s
Hair
Vigor
melt these flakes of dandruff In
the scalp. It goes further than
this: itpret'nts their formation.
It has still other properties:
it will restore color to gray hair
in just ten times out of every
ten cases.
And It does even more: It
feeds and nourishes the roots
of the hair. Thin hair becomes
thick hair; and short hair be
comes long hair.
We have a book on the Hair
and Scalp. It is yours, for the
asking.
tom do sot obtain all h* bonoßta I
you from the üb of the Vigor, I
write the doctor about It. Probably I
there U tome difficulty with your gen- I
•ml tv item which may ba aaally re- I
■loved. Addrem, I
”DR. jo. ATKK, Low.ll, Han. I
The Camel’s Eye.
The Nile is essentially a river of
silence and mystery. Even the cam
els ♦urn their beautiful soft eyes upon
you as if you were intruding upon
their silence and reserve. Never were
the eyes in a human head so beautiful
as a camel's. There is a limped
softness, an appealing plaintiveness
in their expression which drags at
your sympathies like the look in the
eyes ot a hunchback. It means that,
with your opportunities, you might
have done more with your iife. Your
mother looks at you that way some
times in church, when the sermon
touches a particularly raw nerve in
your spiritual make-up. I always feel
like apologizing when a camel looks
at me.— Lillian fiell.
SUCCESSFUL PHYSICIANS.
We heartily recommend Dr. Hath
away & Cos., of Atlanta, Ga., as be
ing perfectly reliable and remarkably
successful in the treatment of chronic
diseases of men and women. They
cure where others fail. Our read
ers, if in need of medical help should
certainly write these eminent doctors
and you will receive a free and ex
pert opinion of your case by return
mail without cost; this certainly is
the right way to do business. They
guarantee their cures. Write them
to day.
“Here’s an example of how familiar
ity breeds contempt,” he said, as he
looked over the top of his paper at
the rest of the family.
“What is it?”
“This is a Kansas paper, and under
tiie head of ’Local Jottings’ it says:
♦Three or four cyclones ripped through
the village since our last issue.’ ”
SICK HEJUMCHE
Positively cared by these
Little Pills.
They lso relieve Distress from Drspepd*,
Indigestion ami Too Hearty Eating. A per
fect remedy for Dtuincss, Nausea, Drowst
Mn, Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongut
Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. Tfaej
Regulate the Bowels. Purdy Vegetable.
Small Pill. Small Dots,
•mall Not.
BRYANS VIEWS-
In a letter to the Atlanta Constitu
tion Hon. W. J. Bryan gives his views
as to the Philippine question. We
indorse what he says, which is as fol
lows:
“My views upon the Philippine
question have been made public over
and over again. The treaty should
have provided for the independence
of the Philippine islands, as it did for
the independence of Cuba, but I
thought it better to ratify the treaty
and declare the nation’s policy by
resolution than reject the treaty.
“I favored the Bacon resolution
which promised the Filipinos inde
pendence as soon as a stable govern
mentjcould be established. I believe ?
further, that our nation should protect
the Filipino republic from outside in -
terference while it works out its own
destination; in other words, I believe
we should treat the Filipinos as we
have treated the people of Mexico
and the people of South and Central
America. Monarchies are founded
upon force, but republics are founded
upon consent.
“The declaration of independence
asserts that governments derive their
just powers from the consent of the
governed. If the declaration is sound,
we cannot rightfully acquired title by
conquest or by purchase from an
alien monarch, whose title we disput
ed when we furnished arms to the
Filipinos.
“If the administration had given to
the Filipinos the assurance of inde
pendence which was given to the Cu -
bans there would have been no
bloodshed. If that assurance is given
now host lities will cease. No one
purposes to withdraw the soldiers
until a stable government is establish
ed, but it will be easy to establish a
stable government when it is known
that our occupation of the Philippine
islands is only temporary.
“Forcible annexation would be
criminal and contrary to our code of
morality.”
THE DISCOVERYOFTHE DAY.
Aug. J. Bogel, the leading druggist
of Shreveport, La., says:
“Dr. Kings New discovery is the
only thing that cures my cough, and
it is the best seller I have. J. F.
Campbell, merchant ofSafford, Ariz.,
writes: “Dr. King's New Discovery
is all that is claimed for it; it never
fails, and is sure cure for Consump
tion, Coughs and colds. I cannot
say enough for its merits.” Dr. King’s
New Discovery for Consumption
Coughs and Cold is notan experiment.
It has been tried for a quarter of a
century, and to-day stands at the
head. It never disappointed. Free
trial bottles at VV. A. Wright Drug
Store.
“Fickle-hearted creature!” she said;
“when I was a girl you thought the
world of me.”
Replied he: “It is you have chang
ed, not I. I still love the girls as
warmly as ever.”
fUIOX CURE rot
COUGHS AND COLDS, i
PYNY-PECTORAL;
The Canadian Rtatadv tor all
THROAT AID LBI6 AFFfIUKWI ;
Lamb Bottlcb, 25 OM. 1
_ *
DAVIS A LAWRENCE 00.. U.. !
Paor-a Paaav Davit* Paw-Kitua.
row mu ar
DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS.
If the moths have begun to eat
your carpets, take the tacks out, turn
it back one half yard all around the
room, wash the boards with a saturat
ed solution of camphor, putting it on
with a paint brush; then lay the car
pet back in its proper place, put over
it a towel wrung out of water and
camphor, and iron it thoroughly with
a real hot iron, so as to steam it
through and through, and this will
kill the insects and all their larvae.
AN EPIDEMIC OF DIARRHOEA
Mr. A. Sanders, writing from Co
coanut Grove Fla., says these has
been quite an epidemic of diarrhoea
there. He had a severe attack and
was cured by four doses of Chamber
lain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea
Remedy. He says he also recom
mended it to others and they say it is
the best medicine they ever used. For
sale by J. H. Blackburn, druggist.
[LtTTM TO MM. riKKBAM MO. 78,465!
“I was a sufferer from female weak
ness. Every month regularly aa the
menses came, I suffered dreadful pains
rauoosoF
SUFFERING
GIVE MANE
TO PERIODS
OF JOY
died. The doctor even gave me up and
wonders how I ever lived.
“I wrote for Mrs, Pinkham’s advice
nt Lynn, Mass., and took her medicine
And began to got well. I took several
bottles of the Compound and used the
Sanative Wash, and can truly say that
I am cured. You would hardly know
me, I am feeling and looking so well.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound made me what I am.” —Mas.
J. F. Stkktch, 481 Mechanic St.,
Camden, X. J.
How Mrs. Brown Was Helped.
“ I must tell you that Lydia E. Pink
ham's Vegetable Compound has done
more for me than any doctor.
“ I was troubled with irregular
menstruation. Last summer I began
the use of your Vegetable Compound,
and after taking two bottles, I have
been regular every month since. I
recommend your medicine to all.”—;
Mrs. MAdoiK A. Brown, Wxbt P*.
Pleasant, N. J.
Every hostess should learn to cut a
watermelon in the most approved
manner. It is now quite out of date
to serve the melon in round slices,
and when it is cut in boat-like pieces
and looks very appetizing it tastes
better. In order to cut a watermelon
in an artistic manner a person should
practice the cutting one or two meals
in advance of performing the “carving
act” before one’s guests. The first
time a lady will perhaps have to chalk
a few lines in a zig zag manner from
left to right, commencing about three
inches from the apex of the melon.
When the melon falls apart the pieces
are shaped like miniature canoes.
Sometimes the melon is cut two hours
before required. A small inner slice
is removed and choped ice placed
within.
Am Old Mm.
Every day atrengthena the belief ef emi
nent phyaiciana that impure blood is the
cause of the majority of our diseoaea.
Twenty-five year* ago thia thaory waa uaed
aa a baaia for the formula of Browin’ Iron
Bitten. The many remarkable curea effected
by thia fanout old houaehold remedy are
sufficient to prove that the theory is correct.
Browna’lron Bitten ia told by all dealers.
Letter Writing.
Time was when men and women
took letter-writing very seriously, and
sat down to the desk as if to an im
portant task. The scrawls of the
modern girl; her hasty dashing oft an
epistle to catch a post; her dozen notes
scribbled in hot haste and illegible pen
manship, sealed with sprawling wax,
and dismissed with a sigh of relief,
would have filled a young woman of
Jane Austin’s day with unieigned hor
ror. Apart from the stilted style af
fected by persons who had the court
liness ol their period and its leisure,
without the inborn grace of the racon
teur, who is of no period, belongs to
all time, the epistolary remains of th e
last century and of still earlier cen
turies possess an interest which we
shall vainly seek in the annals of our
own day when we come to search for
them in letters. Cowper, Madame
de Sevigne, Mary Mitford, the ladies
of the Hare family, Mrs. Browning in
a yesterday just past, and others,
whose memoirs form part of our liter
ary wealth, are good examples of the
perfect letter. —Harpers Bazar.
Secret of Beauty
is health. The secret ofhealth is
the power to digest and assim
ilate a proper quanity of food.
This can never be done when
the liver does not act it’s part.
Doyou know this?
Tutt’s Liver Pills are an abso
lute cure for sick headache, dys
pepsia, sour stomach, malaria,
constipation, torpid liver, piles,
jaundice, bilious fever, bilious
ness and kindred diseases.
Tutt’s Liver Pills
“That man cheated me out of a
cool million.”
“Ah!—wouldn't let you marry his
daughter, I suppose?”
“No; he let me marry her, and
doesn’t give us a cent.”
FOR THE HOUSEWIFE.
Kerosene oil will clean blackened
silver almost instantly.
Stonemason’s sawdust is better than
soap for cleaning floors.
in uteru*, ovaries
were affected and
had leucorrhcea.
I had my children
very fast and it
left me very weak.
A yew ago I was
taken with flood
ing and almost
China closels should be scalded
and freshened at least weekly, and a
little borax water sprinkled on the
shelves.
To clean iron sinks, rub them well
with a cloth wet with kerosene oil, or
clean the sink with potash and hot
water.
To keep away roaches, take green
cucumber parings and strew them
around the kitchen tables and cup
boards and see how quickly the
roaches will disappear.
Air curtains, beat well and put in
cedar chest. If stained use a little
benzine applied with cloth same color
as material. Never use white cloth.
Lace curtains should be washed be
fore packing away. It is not good to
keep the dust in them, but they
should not be blued or starched.
A sure preventive for bedbugs is to
thoroughly whisk and dust the beds
in every crevice; then take 25 cents
worth of quicksilver and the white of
one egg and mix thoroughly. Take
a small sized brush and paint every
crevice and all along the sides of the
bed. If this receipe is tollowed you
will never see a bug.
Thomas Rhoads, Centerfield, 0.,
writes: “I suffered from piles seven
or eight years. No remedy gave me
relief until DeWitt’s Witch Hazel
Salve, less than a box of which per
manently cured me.” Soothing, heal
ing, perfectly harmless. Beware of
counterfeits.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesville.
Milner.
Beggar Weed as A Hay Plant.
There is no question as to the val
ue of beggar weed for Southern lati
tude. Analysis made by the depart
ment of agriculture showed that the
hay cut and cured when it was in
bloom contained 21 per cent, of crude
protein and over 65 per cent of car
bonhydrates. For enriching our worn
sandy soils, it is, we believe one of
the best plants we can make use of.
It is a “handy” plant. With our
“cow peas,” soja beans and beggar
weed never be at loss for some
thing to plant in midsummer to fur
nish shade and humus for any soil
that happens to be vucat in June or
July.
For hay purposes it should be sown
thick enough as to make small stems
that are easily cured. In orchards
that need vegetable matter it can be
sowed broadcast, but ordinarily it is
better to sow in drills or 3 feet
apart, and give one or two cultivat
ings. On very poor soil we would
prefer to have the drills more than 18
to 24 inches apart, so as to get as
much stem as possible to turn under
after the stem has died. For hay it
should be cut when in bloom.—Ex.
Iwl Mmc* Spit ui S Stake Tour IJfe Away.
To quit tobsceo easily and forever, be mac
•etic. full of life, nerve end vigor, take No-To-
Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, SOc or 11. Cure guaran
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Cos, Chicago or Mow York.
“Look here! Are you the man I
gave a square meal one cold, bleak
February morning?”
“I’m the man, mum.”
“Well, do you remember you prom
ised to shovel all the snow out of my
back yard and then sneaked oft with
out doing it?”
“Yes, mum, an’ me conscience
smote me. Dat's de reason I tramp
ed all de way here throngh the blazin'
sun to do de job.”
A diseased stomach surely under
mines health. It dulls the brain, kills
energy, destroys the nervous system,
and predisposes to insanity and fatal
diseases. All dyspestic troubles are
quickly cured by Kodol Dyspepsia
Cure. It has cured thousands of
cases and is curing them every day.
Its ingredients are such that it can't
help curing.
Db. W. A. Wright.
L. H. Holmes, Barnesville.
Milner.
The
Man
Who
Lost
Hope
“I suppose,” said the young woman
who was going seashore-ward, “that I
will come back with some freckles
and an engagement ring."
“Yes,” answered Miss Cayenne,
“and the difference between them is
that the freckles will stay in place for
at least six months.”
DeWitt’s Little Early Risers expel
from the system all poisonous accu
mulations, regulate the stomach, bow
els and liver, and purify the blood.
They drive away disease, dissipate
melancholy, and give health and vigor
for the daily routine. Do not gripe
or sicken.
Dr. W. A. Wright,
L. H. Holmes, Barnesville.
Milner.
EISEMAN BROS.
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 <'usomer of .*. .*.
EISEMAN BROS.
{ Atlanta, Whitehall Street,
STORES 1 Washington, Cor. Seventh and E Street*.
| Baltimore, 213 W. German Street.
; 15-17 WHITEHALL ST.—Our Oily Store ii Atlanta.
We Manufacture and Sell
Engines,
Boilers,
Cotton Gins
Cotton
Presses,
SeedCctton
Elevators,
Grist Mills,
weoperateMachine Shops and Foundry*
mhandin p^UneMill Supplies*
MALLARY BROS & CO*
MACON, GA.
Mr. H. N. Earner, of Minden,
Neb., said:
“ In 1894 I was attacked with
paralysis in my left side. You
might stick a pin to the head into
my left hip and I would not feel
it. I was unable to do any kind
of work and had to be turned in
'bed. I made up my mind that I
could not be cared as I had used
.all kinds of medicine and had
tried many doctors. I was ad
vised to try Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People, and com
menced their use last September.
Beforfc I had finished my first box
| felt better, and by the time I had
used six boxes the disease had en
tirely disappeared, and I have not
been so free from pain since I was
a boy. The paralysis also disap
peared, and although two months
have passed since I finished my
last box, there has been no recur
rence of the disease.” —From the
Gazette, Minden, Neb.
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Pale People
contain, in a condensed form, all the de
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 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. WHUams* Pink Pills for Palo People art nover
■old by the dozen or Mind red, but always In pack-
Sfes. At all druggists, or direct from tho Oft Wil
liams NtWcine Company. Schenectady, (L Y., 10
cento per bos, 6 boxes $2.50.
If you have not yet done so, all
rugs, carpets and curtains should be
taken up, aired, beaten, and if stains
should be on carpets or rugs take a
little ammonia and cold water and
wash oft lightly. Dry perfectly, then
pack rugs in newspapers with plenty
of camphor balls. The carpets are
simply rolled together with camphor
balls.
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.” Pittfs 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 and
chemicals.
Saw Mills,
..and.,
everything
..in the,.
Machinery
Line.
; Get our
Prices be
fore buying