Newspaper Page Text
THE HENRY COUNTY WEEKLY
VO 1 . XX.
t IKJ>. W. IIKY w
u
AT TORNKY AT UW,
.WcDosnion, Ga.
Will practice in llie cduntiiW coil'irisinfr
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme
Court of Georgia, Hill the United Stales
District Court.
iy.n, r. oic’K a:.t,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonouoh, Ga.
Will practice in the counties composing
he Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
of Georgia and the United States District
Court. ap^ 7 - 1 ?
Jt .1. ISKVGAV
J ‘ ATTORNEY AT LAW.
McDonoiub, Ga.
Will practice in all the Courts of Georgia
Special attention given to commercial and
other collections. Will attend all tne Courts
at Hampton regularly. Office upstairs over
Thb Wkkklv ollice.
A. B3«m,
* ATTORNEY AT LAW,
McDonouob, Ga.
Will practice in all the counties compos
ing the Flint Circuit, the Supreme Court of
Georgia and the United States District
Court. jan'-P
JOIIA 1- I'VK.
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Gate City Natioal Bank Building,
Atlanta. Ga.
Practices in the State and Federal Courts.
jj A. PEKPLE*,
ATTORNEY AT LAW,
Hampton, Ga,
Will practice in all the counties composing
the Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court
of Georgia and the District Court ol the
United States. Special and promp 1 inten
tion given to Collections, Oet 8,
i7it7«ri*. at tin,
dentist.
McDonough
Any one desiring work done can he ac
commodated either by calling on me in per
son or addressing me through the mails.
Terms cash, unless special arrangements
are otherwise made.
o. hT McDonald,
IKNTIST,
Rooms 300-313,
The Grand, Peachtree St..
ATLANTA, CA.
THE STANDARD.
DURANG’S
Rheumatic Remedy
Has sustained its reputation for 38 years
us beins the standard remedy for the
quick and permanent cure of Rheuma
tism, Gout. Sciatica, etc., in all its forms,
it is endorsed by thousands of Physi
cians, Publishers aud Patients. It is
Surelv vegetable and builds up from the
rst dose. It never fails to cure.
Price is one dollar a bottle, or six
' bottles for five dollars. Our iO page Pam
phlet sent Free by Mail. Address,
Duraiig’s Rheumatic Remedy Co.
1316 L Street, Washington, D.C.
Dvrring’s Liver Pills are the best on
earth. They act with an ease that makes
ih'*’n a household blessing.
PHI :b 25 CT3. PES BOX. or 5 BOXES TO?. $1
FOR TALE BY BXUGGIBT3.
USE BARNES’ INK.
A. 8. BARN KS & CO.,
s(i E 10th St., K. Y.
F<h !eh r .to r‘, FiiflUb Diamond flraiid.
ENNYROYAL PILLS
Original and Only Genuine. A
•- \ safe, alw»*9 rpliable, caoie* ask ISA
£ 4( Druggist lor'Ckicheeter a Bngliah
Brand in Red and Gold metallicVy^
scaled wUh b,ue ribbon - Take \W
-fM other. Refuse dangerous eubatitu-v
IT7l T 7 fSFturns and imitation* At Druggists, or send 4c.
I ( W ia stamp* for particulars, testimonials and
\ fi •• Relief for Ladiem” '» letter, by return
\ fy Mall. 10,000 Testimonials. Name Paper.
*fhl <• h e»ter tb em leal Co., M 1 eon *<»
•old by ail Local Druggists. * minua., ra
■% m* ja a*ness & head noises cured.
■ H ► iQ ■■ My Tubular Cushions help when all
Wm H else falls, as glasses help eves. Whis
pers heard. No pain. Invisible. F. Hlarox, 853 B’way
Few York, sole depot. Send for book and proofs FREE#
Hhair R balsam
Cleanses and beautifies the hair.
Promotes a luxuriant growth.
Never Fails to Restore Gray
Ea” to its Youthful Color.
Cures scalp diseases it hair tailing.
50c, and $l.OO at Druggists
uiynrornONS The onlv sure cure for Corns.
or HISCoX * CO., -V V.
BRcAl'.h ADi-SyPi’ER.
p™ '■ rr i
uu O O
cr.vrzruL-coMroaTiNG.
OOC O A
DGIUNG WATER OR MILK._
Cures,
Botanic Blood Balm^*-
: , The Great Remedy for the speedy and permanent
L cure of Scrofula. Rheumatism, Catarrh, Ulcers,
Eczema, Eating and Spreading Sores, Eruptions,
i and all SKIN AND BLOOD DISEASES. Made
i from the prescription of an eminent physician
i who used it with marvelous success for 40 years,
1 and Its continued use for fifteen years by thou
-1 sands of grateful people has demonstrated that
1 1 It Is by far the best building up Tonic and Blood
, Purifier ever offered to the world. It makes new
1 rich Mood, and possesses almost miraculous
1 1 healing properties.
WRITE FOR BOOK OF WONDERFUL
CURES, sent free on application.
! If not kept by your local druggist, send $l.OO
1 1 for a large bottle, or $5.00 for six bottles, and
1 medicine will be sent freight paid by
BLOOD BALM GO., Atlanta, Ga.
rou DYSFISr*IA
Use Brown's Iron Bitters*
Physicians recommend it.
All 4,-alei* keep it. *l.OO per bottle. Genuine
be, trade-mark and crowed red linta on wrappet
THE GREAT “SECRET.”
There was a man, 1 knew liipi well,
He owned a little store,
And he would have to stock it up
Three times a year or more.
And when I'd take the paper up
I would lie sure lo see
His name and business well displayed;
As names and trade should lie.
He had to build a larger store,
For wider grew his fame,
Just like his trade, for unto him
The buying public came.
His rival said that trade was “dull,”
And looked ill sore distress,
And wondered if he let them know
The “secret of success.”
He was the kindest hearted man
We had ui all the town,
His genial face was like a sun,
It never wore a frown.
He met his rivals at the door
And took them by the hand;
He showed them thro’ a crowded store,
They couldn’t understand.
“We handle all the goods you do,”
The startled spokesman said,
■‘But trade has drifted down to you,
With us ’tis nearly dead.”
“Impart the secret of your trade.”
The merchant smiled: “I think
The anchor of the business man
Is labeled ‘printers’ ink.' "
*****
The genial merchant hath retired,
The richest man, I think;
He doth ascribe his fortune to
Trade’s anchor—printer’s ink.
The Old Time Religion.
The sentiment expressed in this pop
ular phrase is universally regarded as
being the best of all the religions that
is taught among the children of man.
What difference is there between
THE OI.D TIME RELIOION
aud the religion of the old time. The
idea intended to be conveyed, is the
religion that men aud women had way
back in the old time, was a pure relig
ion, aud one that would commend it
self as being worthy of our highest re
ligious aspirations. Before accepting
that proposition as being correct, we
might do well to examine this question
maturely. What was it in the old time
religion that constituted its superior
excellency. Was it a peculiar emotion
al feeling that was imparted to men and
women that made them feel happy,
t hat same emotional feeling that was
imparted to men aud women that made
them feel happy. That same emotion
al nature is still found to exist, in the
make up of mauy men aud women of
the present time. They have thier pe
riods of high and low tide, all through
their Christian experience. The differ
ent ages in which we live renders nec
essary for us a different Christian ex
perience. What miuister of the pres
ent age, ’8 fited up to undergo and pass
through such au experience, as that of
Saul of Tarsus. Saul after his mar
velous conversion affirms that he had
lived in all good concieuce before God,
aud yet he found that the religion
which he had (which was that of his
Fathers) was not the religion, that he
afterwards embraced. Saul had an old
time religion, but that religion which
he then had would not, be good enough
for me. There is a marked distinction
between the religion of the Hebrew
children and the servant of God who is
living in the present age. An impli
cit trust in God, through our living
faith in Christ is th« solid basis upon
which our religion rest and it is offered
to us at the present time, fully adopted
to our present surroundings. Aud it
is not the religion of the long past, nor
the distant coming future that we are
to live, but the religion of the present
hour. God has made no one man the
standard, by which all these are to be
judged.
Every servant has that measure of
talent, that his master has given to
him. And to his master, he must ac
count for himself.
The religion that was sufficient for
some other mau, might not be sufficient
for me. Much depends, on the oppor.
tnnities which we have been favored.
The man or servant who had but odc
talent given him to improve, lost all by
failing to do what he might have done.
That was an old time failure that
that servant made with his Lord’s
money. Let us take heed that we
look not too much to the things that
are behind. A religion that runs too
far back in the old time, may be too
cold and lifeless for the present time
The book reads, “Today if you will
bear his voice.” The old time past has
gone by and can never again take the
place of to-day. Let our religion be a
religion of to-day. To-morrow never
comes, and time gone by is too late.
The religion of to-day is the best re
ligion for ns all. To day we live, to
morrow dead. W. T. G.
The World's Fair Tests
showed no baking powder
so pure or so great la leav
ening power as the Royal.
.mcdonougii, ga.. Friday, aprii, hi, isos.
Judge Beck ou the Coal Mines.
The following appeared in last
week’s issue of the Pike Countv Jour
nal :
E I Newton, col., was tried in Pike
Superior court last week and convicted
of rape. The jury recommended 20
years at hard labor in the penitentiary,
and in proaouucing the seutence, Judge
Beck uttered words that will ring in
the ears of the listi ners for many a day.
He said, writing from our best rec
ollection :
“E<l, you have been found guilty of
rape aud, strange to say, the jury exer
cising a commendable trait of humani
ty, recommends that you be sent to the
penitentiary for 20 years. I say it is
strange, for many a man has been
hanged without the benefit of a trial
for just such infractions of the law a*
you have been found guilty of. 1 do
not endorse lynch law, because it is
unjust and unreasonable to punish a
man after hearing only one side of the
case. Looking at your case and the
cases just cited I am constrained to be
lieve that men are sometimes stern
when they should be tender, and tender
when they should be stem.
“But the jury may be right, and I
believe they honestly tried to do their
duty. Twenty years in the chaingang
will be more severe punishment than
death.
“How old are you now ?”
“ Twenty five.”
“Then when your time is out, com
puting time by our calender years, you
will be forty five years old. Yet in
fact you will be a hundred. But 1 do
not believe you will ever live to serve
out veur sentence. It is at least very
improbable.
“You now have a name and two
a'iases. In a very short time you will
have no name at all. It will be No.
2653. You are going a way up in
North Georgia where the summer comes
late and the wiuter comes early ; you
can’t make a living by picking black
berries in the summer and killing rab
bits in the winter. It will be work,
hard continual work in a filthy hole by
a flickering light. You will dream of
cowhides and shotguns by day and
chains by night You will wonder if
you are dead. 'Then you will work on
and wonder again if you are living.
“It is my opinion that when you are
brought out and chains unloosed you
will bo dead. Your father won’t hitch
the old mule to the wagon and join the
procession to the grave yard. But
your body will be boxed up and shipped
down to Atlanta to the msdical stu
dents.
“By a wise provision of nature wo
do uot at first realize the full force of
a great calamity. There is a shock
which benumbs ihe sensibilities aud we
learn the lesson of sorrow day by day.
You cannot realize the depth of the
misery which you have brought down
upon yourself. You will now be sepa
rated from your •companions, your ene
mies will curse you three days, your
friends will remember you four days
and that is the end.
“20 years.
“Sit down.”
The Little Ones
Are the joy anl sunlight of our homes.
Use all oare to keep the little ones in
health. Do net give them nauseous
doses. You can overcome their troub
les wiih Dr. King’s Royal Germetuer,
and they all like to take it because it
does not taste like a medicine, but like
a lemonade. It cures colic in small
children, overcomes all bowel troubles,
gives good digestion, and quiet restful
sleep ; while as a tonic for weak chil
dren and as a remedy for use in teeth
ing it is the greatest in the world.
New package, Large bottle, 108 Doses
Oue Dollar. For Sale by Druggists.
A staff correspondent of the Chicago
Record has this good story :
Noticing that my watch did not agree
with the clocks in the court house tow
er and the church steeple. I asked the
colored man who was driviug us
around, what kind of time they had in
Savannah.
“We has two kin’s o’ time hyah sah ;
de railroad time an’ de Mediterranean
time ”
“The what ?”
“De time dat de kyars comes in an’
! goes out by, sab, and de Mediterranean
; time, sah, which am city time, de same
; as de sun.”
“We call it meridian time up north,”
I suggested.
“1 reckon dat may be so, sah ; de
northe’n folks am a trifle quare in what
dey calls t’ings ; dey have quare ways,
! tah, dey shorely do.”
for female diteeeee.
They Don’t Speak Now.
Mrs. Siugelton put hands over
the garden wall aud thlk addressed her
ueigbbor, who was hinging out her
week's washing:
“A family has the empty
house across the way, *\\lrs. Clothes
line.”
“Yes I know.”
“Did you notice theif furniture ?”
“Not particularly.” f
“Two carloads, aud ( would’nt give
a ten dollar bill for the lot. Carpets!
I wouldn’t put thhm defrn in my kitch
en. And the children! I won’t allow
mine to associate with And the
mothei ! She looks asif she had nev
er known a day’s Sappiness The
father drinks, I expect A. Too bad that
such people should into this
neighborhood. I wouder who they
arer"’ 1
“I know them.” L
“Do you? Well, I declare! Who
are they ?”
“The mother is my slter.”
■
(A paiuful pause ensues.) —Spare
Moments.
What a Man Without Hands can Do.
The man with the steel Ingers prom
ises to become almost arf famous as the
man with the iron piask. Mr. J.
Cooper Chadwick is a ■ .good looking
Englishman in the primfe of life who
nme years ago had the tolsfortune to
have both hauds blown tar by the die- I
charging of a gnu. As soon as lie was
well enough to think, Air. Chadwick
set about devising ways to cheat fate
after all out of the viettwy over him.
It required a year to Solve the prob
lem, which Mr. Chadwick did with the
aid of a London manufacturer of arti
ficial limbs. Steel cast kgs were fitted
to the stumps of the may’s arms. At
the place where the wrlft* should be
an assortment of hooks s|id steel fingers
was fitted on. Then implements and
instruments especially deigned to be
held by the hooks and Bogeys were in
vented.
The result is that Mr. Ciadwick is able
to feed and shave himself,button clothes,
brush his hair, and hold pipe or cigar
He soon learned to write by means of a
pen held in the steel hook at the
terminus of bis arm, and actually wrote
a book thus, lie says, indeed that he
can write as well with his steel hand
as he could with his flesh and blood
oues. It is rather odd that his band
writing looks as it used to when he
wrote with the haud that uature gave
him, showing that a man writes with
bis brain, uot with his hauds.—Ex
change.
Nervous People
And those who are all tired out and
have that tired feeling or eick headache
cau be relieved of all these symptoms
by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which
gives nerve, mental and bodily strength
and thoroughly purifies the blood. It
also creates a good appetite, cures indi
gestion, heartburn and dyspepsia.
Hood’s Pills are easy to take, easy
in action and sure in effect. 25c.
A Hard Row.
Poor Frank Stanton ! He’s a good
man and knows a good thing when be
sees it, more’s the pity, for it makes it
really heart rending to think that he
has to furnish a lot of fulsom flattery to
some of the poorest papers iu the state
simply because they say amen to the
Constitution's tiiade of spleen against
Mr. Cleveland.— Richland Paper.
Booming Hoke Smith.
The movement to bring the Demo
cratic party South for a candidate for
President is doubtless in the interest of
H«ke Smith. Hoke would make an
ideal Democratic President. We,
therefore, beg leaye to nominate the
Hon. Hoke Smith as the Democratic
candidate for the Presidency in 1896.
—Woodbury Messenger.
Marvelona Itewult*.
From a letter written by Rev. J. Gunder
min. of Dimondale, Mich.. we are permitted
to make the following extract: “I have no
hesitation in recommending Dr. King's New
Discovery, as the results were almost mar
velous in the case of mv wife. While I was
pastor of the Baptist church at Rives Junc
tion she was brought down with pneumonia
succeeding La Grippe. Teirible paroxysms
of coughing wok id last hours with little in
terruption and it seemed as if she could not
survive them. A friend recommended Dr.
King’s New Discovery; it was quick in its
work and highly satisfactory in results.”
Trial bottles free at any drug store. Regu
lar size 50c. and SI.OO.
1 ■
Sam Jones thinks that dude* and
tramps are of the same genus. Due is
a wart on the nose of society and the
otb( r is a corn on it* toe.
Why She Smiled.
One rainy day recently a lady sat in
an elevated cir, with her umbrella
leaning against the seat. As the train
approached Forty second street a tall
lank young man struggle among the
standups lor (he door. In passing Lie
right foot caught the umbrella and
carried away the ferruld end with a
crash. The young man was very red
and very much embarrassed, but man
aged to stammer out a confused apolo
gy. The lady instead of being annoy
ed at the accident, smiled sweetly aud
acc-pted the apology with such aud air
of grace as at once attracted the atten
tiou and admiration of the observant
passengers
“By Jove,” ei laimed a mail near
the door to his next neighbor, “that
woman's a queen! If that had ■ been
my wife she’d have whacked that gawk
over the head!”
“I never saw a woman have such
complete control over her temper,”
remarked another.
“You’d have thought that idiot had
doue hat a favor,” said the third.
“She's an angel !”
“No she ain’t,” grutlly put in a lit
tle man iu the corner who had over
heard all this. “She’s my wife, and
she wanted me to buy her a new um
brella this moruing, and now she knows
I’ve got to do it !”—Pittsburg I)is
patch.
Three Household Familiars.
Salt on the fiugers when cleaning
fowls, meat or fish will prevent slip
piug.
Salt thrown on a coal fire wheu
boiling steak will prevent bla/.ing from
the dripped fat.
Salt as a gargle will cure soreness of
the throat.
Salt in solution inhalod cures cold in
the head.
Salt in water is the best thing to
clean willow ware and matting.
Salt in the oven under baking-tins
will prevent their scorching on the
bottom.
Salt puts out a fire in the chimney.
Salt aud vinegar will remove stains
from disc iTored teacup’’.
Salt and soda are exccclleut for bee
sting and spider Idles.
Salt throwu on soot which lias fallen
•>n the carpet will prevent stain.
Salt put on ink when freshly spilled
on u carpet w II help in removing the
spot.
Salt iu whitewash makes it stick.
Sail thrown on coal lire which is
low will revive it.
Salt used iu sweeping carpets kee| s
out moths.
Vinegar will “set” dubious greens
and blues iu ginghams.
Vinegar is au antidote for poisoning
by alkalis.
Vinegar will brighten copper.
Vinegar aud browu paper will heal
bruises or “black eye.”
Vinegar aud sugar will make a good
stove polish.
Vinegar aud salt will strengthen a
lame back
Vinegar used to wash the wall be
fore papering will help the paper to
stick.
Vinegar for soaking lamp wicks
makes a brildaut light.
Kerosene simplifies laundry work
Kerosene in starch preveuts its stick
iug.
Kerosene is a good c muter irritant.
Kerosene will remove ruit from
bolts and bars.
Kerosene will remove fr.-sb paint.
Kerosene will remove tar.
Keroseue on a cloth will prevent
flat irons from scorching.—New York
Wot 11
I'our Ilia Muccwmm.
Having the needed merit to more than
make good all the advertising claimed fo*-
them, the following four remedies have
reached a phenomenal rale. Or. King’s
New Discovery, for consumption, coughs
ami colds, each bottle gnarsnteed—Electric
Bitters, the great renudy for Liver, Sjom
aeh and Kidneys. Bucklen’s Arnica Stive,
the beet in the world, and Dr. King’s New
Life IMls, which are a pirfeet pill. All
these remedies are guarantied to do just
what is claimed for them nnu the dealer
whose name is attached herewith will be
glad to tell you more of them, sold at any
drug i tore.
Mr. John 11. Inman, writing to the
Manufacturers’ Itecord, gay* : I pre
diet that within five years South Caro
liua will have mills within her limits
that will consume one half of the cot
ton production of the state, Georgia
is following closely, and other states
east of the Mississippi will, in a meas
ure, come along later
Dr. Price’* Cream Baking Powder
Most Perfect Made.
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U S. Gov’t Report
Rpyai
ABSOLUTELY pure
CLEANSE THE BLOOD.
Purify the System of Catarrhal Impu
rities and Cure Is Certain.
Spring time is most favorable to the
cure of Chronic Catarrh. Hundreds
of letters are received, testifying to ex
traordiuary cures.
Wic Mandel of Sleepy Eye, Minn.,
writes; “I have been troubled wi.h
chronic catarrh for thirty five years
and had tried nearly every catarih cure
known, until by accident I was advised
by a friend to give Pe-ru na a trial.
Iu one week from the time I took the
first dose I began to feel like a new
man. I kept ou using it for some time
and 1 urn entirely cured. I have no
symptoms of chronic catarrh whatever.
I am 74 years of age aud am sure Pe
ru-na is the best medicine I ever used
and would not be without it in the
bouse for anything.”
Tho Peru na Drug Manufacturing
Company of Columbus, Ohio, are otter
ing free, post paid, two medical books,
one on Catarrh aud Catarral diseases,
the other on Spring Medicines and
Spring diseases These books contain
the very latest aud most reliable infor
mation on these important subjects.
For free bo k ou cancer address Dr.
Hartman, Columbus Ohio.
Mr. Humph, the great fruit man of
Marshalville, says experience teaches
him that for profit poaches ar>? on* of
the best of money crops. From all
parts of the State come fl altering re
ports of a good one this yoar. One
good Georgia peach is wjnrth a dozen pf
any other kind, and a full crop will be
worth a million dollars to Georgia.
The Venable Brothers" have started
work on a ten story hotel on the site of
the old capitol in Atlanta. The build
ing will be of grauite and steel, and
will cost a mil ion, exclusive of site and
furnishings. Is will accommodate
1,000 guests, aud is to be completed by
Sept. 20. The building will face the
postoffice ami the Grady munuinent at
Marietta aud Forsyth streets.
“Thar is (he place whar the major
fell through the ice.”
“llow do you know ?”
“Easy enough. Just look at that
cork floating yander.” Atlanta Con
stitutioo.
A Man with a History.
till Hm!g Covered with lamps Could
not eat anil Thought he wu
going to dry up.
(From the NaihvlUe, Ttnn., Manner.)
Mr. John W.Thomas, Jr.,of Theta, Tenn.,
is a man with a most interesting history.
“It was in ’H4, said he to a reporter
who had asked him for the story of his life,
when I was working in the silver mines of
New Mexico, that my troubles began.
“ From simple indigestion my malady de
veloped into a chronic inability to take any
substantial food, and at times I was pros
trated by spells of heart palpitation. On
the 11th of April, 1893, I suddenly col
lapsed, and for days 1 was unconscious,
in fact I was not fully myself until July.
On September Ist 1 weighed hut 70 pounds
whereas my normal weight is ISS pound*.
All over my body there were lump* from
the size of a grape to the size of a walnut,
my fingers were cramped so that 1 could not
more than half straighten them. I iiad en
tirely lost control of my lower limbs and
my hand trembled so that i could not drink
without spilling the liquid. Nothing would
remain on my stomacli, and it seemed that
I must dry up before many more days had
passed.
“ i made another round of the physicians,
calling in one after the other, and by tb«
aid of morphine and other medicines they
gave me, I managed to live though barely
through the fall.
Here Mr. Thomas displayed his arms,
arid just above the elbow of each there was
a large irregular stain as large as the palm
of tire hand and of a purple color, the space
covered by the mark was sunken nearly to
the bone. “ That,” said Mr. Thomas, “is
what the doctors did by putting morphine
into me.
“ On the 11th of December, 1893, just eight
months after I took permanently to bed—l
■hall never forget the date —my cousin, Joe
Foster, «f Carters’ Creek, called on me and
gave, me a box of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills
for Pale People, saying they had cured him
of partial paralysis, with which I knew he
hail all hut died. 1 followed his directions
and began taking the medicine, as a result
1 st ind before you to-day the most surprised
man on earth. Look at my hand, it is as
steady as yours; my face has a healthy look
about it; I have been attending to my
duties for a month. Since I began laking
the pills I have gained 30 pounds, and I am
■till gaining. All the knots have disap
peared from my body except this litre
kernel here in my palm. I have a good
appetite and I am almost as strong as i . i ar
was.
“ Yesterday 1 rode thirty-seven mile? on
horsi-back, I feel tired to-aay but not -ick.
I used to have from two to four sp 11s of
heart palpitation every night, since I began
the use of the pills 1 have had but four
•pells altogether.
“1 know positively that I was cured by
Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills, and 1 believe
firmly that it is the most wonderful remedy
in existence to-day, and every tact I have
presented to you is known to my neighbors
as well as to myself, and they will certify to
j the truth of ray remarkable cure.”
5 CENTS A COPY
Mixed Maxims.
If you have a good impulse obey] it.
j f baracter is not former] in a day,
I but a day may blast it forever.
Promises made to self should be as
binding as those made to others.
If you have well groundo l opinions
express them firmly, if you please, but
not dogmatically.
It is easier to make a stain than to
wipe it out.
All men are liable to err; infallibility
is not of death.
If you would have others be true to
you, be true to yourself.
Pay as you go; and if you cau't pay
don’t go.
Never deceive or tell a child a false
hood.
A little concession on both sides
would prevent many family jars.
If you can t find good company go
off aud gaug by yourself.
Ihe first wrong step is the mjst fa
tal nne. Don’t take it.
Many reforms may traced to
cranks.
Wheu your own life is above criti
cism, then, peradveuture, you may be
just fled iu criticising others.
If overy man is the keeper of his
own conscience, ho should keep it in
good repair.
Beautiful thoughts should he culti
vated and made to linger with us long
est.
The golden links of friendship
should never be stained. They might
be severed.
Nature does her work well aud sys
tematically. Mau should imitate her.
Conscience, Ordinarily,* is a safe
guide, though it may be blunted until
.it emeses jto. be.*..trusted monitor.
Lay aside a little of your earnings
every day, and you will be surprised at
the eud of the year how much it will
amouDt to.
Never magnify your own virtues or
your neighbor's faults.
Wliat are called misfortunes are
sometimes blessings in disguise.
Determination aud grit have pulled
many through very tight places.
If a mau fools you once it may be
his fault; if he fools you the second
l : me it is your fault.
Make but few promises and be sure
you keep them.—Ram's Dorn.
A (ieorgia justice has a sign in front
of his office with the following inscribed
on it: “We will marry you in this
shop for a load of wood, a string of
fish, a mess of pork, or a bale of cot
ton.”
Try tea for Dyspepsia.
“What do you suppose I’ll look like
when I get out of this ?” snapped a
young lady at the conductor of an over
crowded cable car.
. “A good deal like crushed sugar,
Miss,” said the conductor with a beam
ing smile. And the lady hung on to
the strap and rode three miles further
with the look of an angel on her face.
Brooklyn Life.
Money for Spring Clothing
Should be invested where you get goods
for the lowest possible price stylish-up
to date garments. Money is bard to
get these days and yet as “appearance
oft denotes the man” one must keep
neat if he would succeed. For first
class gentlemen’s wear durable and
cheap, there is no house that equals
Fads Neel Co. Be on the safe side by
purchasing from them, either at Atlan
ta or Macon. Don’t forget this—Make
! a note of it.
Awarded
Highest Honors—World’s Fair.
DR.
* CREAM
BAKING ■
POWDER
MOST PERFECT MADE.
\ pure Grape Cream of Tartar Powder. Free
rmi Ammonia, Alum or any other adulterant
40 YEARS THE STANDARD.
tm ■■ m ■MNESSausBSOisfSCURSO
El fc in bv lock'. In-nlbk' T-bui.r Uf Club-
U... Whup.™ h-.rJ. Comfort.bk.
80-cmful obari.i lt.in.db* foil. Sold by r. Him., only, tDCC
699 Broadway, .lew fork. Writt f<* bwk 9< proofs I n|t(