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Cause for Laughter.
First Little Boy—What ore you
laughin’ at?
Second Little Boy—Bather’s scoldin’
everybody in the house ’cause he says
he can t lay a thing down a minute
without someone pickin’ it up an’
losin’ it—he, he, he!
“What’s lie lost?”
“His pencil.”
“Where is it?”
‘Behind . his ear all the time.”—San
Francisco Examiner. !
Sound Keasons for Approval.
There are several cogent reasons why the
medical profession recommend and the public
prefer Hostetler's Stomach Bitters above the
oidinary cathartics. It does not drench and
weaken the howels. but assists rather than
forces nature to act; it is botanic and safe: its
action is novor proceded by an Internal earth-j
quaiie like that produced by a drastic purgative, i
For lorty-flve years past it has been a household
remedy for liver, stomach and kidney trouble.
It is hard work even for the Ice to keep cool
this kind of weather.
Fits perinanonl.lv cured. No fits or nervous-
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer, trial bottle and treatise free.
Bit. K. 11. Kline, Ltd.. Ml Arch St., Phila., Pa.
Conductor E. D. Loomis. Detroit, Mich., says: I
“The effect of Hall's Catarrh Cure is won- J
deriul.” Wiite him about it. Sold by Drug¬
gists, b'e.
Piso’s Cure for Consumption has no equal as
fi Bt., Cough medicine.— b\ M. Abbott, 888 Seneca
Buffalo, N. V., May C, 1894.
SCROFULA CURED
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Just Was
Needed.
“I hare taken Hood’s Sarsaparilla for
scrofula troubles nnd it has given me relief.
I find it drives away that tired feeiTng and
it is just what is needed when the system
is run down. I gladly recommend Hood's.”
Chakles A. Baker, Little Utica, New York,
Hood’s Sarsa- parilla
Is tho. ho^t—in fact the One True Blood Purifier.
Wood's Pills euro all liver ills, ascents.
FREE in Chronic CONSULTATION! men, Diseases women of nnd all forms chil¬
dren, Neuralgia, Successfully treated. Kheumatism,
Bronchitis. Palpitation. Indigestion.
Constipation, Lungs. &c. Catarrh of Nose, Throat and
Diseases peculiar to women. Prolap.
eus. Ovat itis. Cellulitis, Leueorrhea, Dysmen-
orrhea. &c. Write for particulars. Two cents may
mean Life and Happiness s. T. Whitaker, M.
I)., Specialist. 205 Noreross Bld'g., Atlanta. Ga.
AM. peroay SURE
Salary or Commission.
DO you war,: honorable, steady r.rptoymem
(hi year >vuna. at good wages, at your oum
*>oi:u or to travel? If so. ser.o 4c in stamps
for our wholesale price-list and particulars*
life furnish best of bank references.
AMERICAN TEA CO.
OETROiT. WSlCHISAPi;
A FEW EXTRA DOLLARS !t>
Would You Like to Hake Them ?
We con offer inducements to a few good MEN
(and WOMEN as well.) by which they can
build up a permanent and profitable business
by devoting a few hours each day at first—after
while whole time. Address.
THE H. <i. LINDEKMAN CO., Atlanta, Ga.
the Weak: Met
m remedies and doctors. Fully a Three box short, tablets restored time. b o x One Sl.ijgJ® e in. sigj j flslu ^3 ^ l W? I / v ^ i
$f 0. By mall.
■<*-£» 7 [SPECIFIC uiars HAGGARD’S to CO. a j§
Atlanta* Ga.
MAPLE SYRUP
Made on your kitchen stove in a few minutes at
a cost of about 25 Cents Per Gallon, by a
new process, which soils at $ 1.00 per gallon.
“I want to thank you for the Maple ^“’’^Rev Syrup
Sd menu e n Joses, high/ywVnVand msmy Cartersville, iu huj 11 Ga. e?ery hbij one. nsi.
8am P.
Send$1 and get recipe—or stamp and investi¬
gate. Bonanza for agents.
<1. N. LOTSPEICH, Morristown, Tenn.
First-class BOILERS
<1GET OUR PR!CE3.[>
Cart every day; work ISO hands.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS
AMI SUPPLY COMPAKY,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
Bicycles
“ALEXANDER SPECIAL . $$30.00
“OVERLAND’’............. . 840.00
WAVE RLE Y ............... .845.00
ELECTRIC CITY........... . 8*50.00
You have no excuse now for not buying a
bicycle if it's tho price you have been waiting
for. AgentP WHiited. Write for Bargain Li«tof
second-hand wheels. W. D. ALEXANDER,
60-71 N. Pryor St., Atlanta, Ga.
IDE MAKE LOANS on
ff LIFE INSURANCE POLICIES.
If you have a policy in the New York Life,
Equitable Life or Mutual Life and would
like to secure a Loan, write us giving number
of your policy, and we will be pleased to quote
rates. Address
ThuEuglisli-Americaii Loan anil Trustee
Nil. la Equitable Bulltllnc, Atlanta, Ga.
DRUNK A oo? S tbeir taSZ5a£bSr marvelous
Anti-jap the
Write^Ke'novJ’chemieai N
C r rr m.‘n;d h«:
y rq t information (in plain 1 wrapp.
Hi w%
jf§ ! You? W
: 'V How Old are
i Vou need not answer the question, madam,
for in your case age is not counted by years. It tigp
will always be true that “a woman is as old
m as she looks.” Nothing sets the seal of age
so deeply upon woman’s beauty as gray hair.
It is natural, therefore, that every woman is
■ anxious to and preserve beauty; her hair that in all being its original denied |||| "W
abundance beautiful or, hair, she longs (||||
the crowning gift of to attain
to possess it. Nothing is easier than
M) to this gift or to preserve it, if already (■
possessed. Ayer’s Hair Vigor restores gray
or faded hair to its origins! color. It does this
by simply aiding nature, by supplying tho
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■ AYER’S HAIR VIGOR.
i
1
BUTTONS THE LATEST FAD.
Sums Spent by Louis XIV. tor These
Costly Decorations.
Buttons are very popular jnst at
School children collect them
judging from tho number of spe¬
in some of these collections, a
amount of money must be in¬
in the manufacture of tl ese
During tho recent Presiden-
campaign an enormous number of
was sold, and the dei.nnd for
though less than it was, has by
means died out. In view of this
certain leading tailors are won-
whether this passion for but-
may not signify that we are about
return to the old custom of wearing
and curious buttons oil our
’
r | v ,
Eighteenth century buttons, espe¬
those painted by Fragonard,
a great price to-day. Formerly
was the custom to give these but¬
tons to friends as presents and to have
allegories or other scenes
stamped on them in enamel.
The oldest buttons in existence are
the gold ones which were discovered
by Schliemann at Myeene and those
were found in the tomb of
Childeric I. The latter, which were
formerly on exhibition at the Louvre,
are of gold and of glass colored in
imitation of granite. Curious buttons
have also been found on the caps and
religious garments of the Middle
Ages and the Renaissance.
The costliest buttons ever made
were worn by Louis XIV. Here is a
list of those purchased during a tingle
year, as recorded in the “Kegister of
the King’s Precious Stones and Pres-
ents” by Maze-Sencier:—-
February 3, 1685—Montarsy sent
to tho King twenty-four buttons, each
containing a diamond; value, 138,030
francs.
May 7, 1685—Six diamond buttons
made and delivered by Sieur Bose;
value, 30,000 francs.
July 26, 1685—Given by Montarsy
to the Marquis de Seignelay for tlie
King seventy-five diamond buttons;
value, 586,703 francs.
August 1, 1685—Two diamond
buttons; value, 67,866 francs.
August 16, 1685—Three diamond
buttons; value, 69,660 francs.
December 20, 1685—Four diamond
buttons; value, 88,375 francs.
Fnrtbermore we are told that on
July 26, 1685, Montarsy furnished for
the King’s waistcoat forty-eight gold
buttons, each bearing a diamond and
ninety-six boutonnieres, of which
forty-eight were each composed of
five diamonds and the other forty-
right of one diamond, the value of the
whole being 185,123 francs. Three
hundred and twenty-four boutonnieres
were also furnished for the King's
vest, of which one hundred and sixty-
two were composed of five diamonds
and the other one hundred and ninety-
two of one diamond, the total value
being 1,006,345 francs. Finally forly
boutonniere ornaments were furnished
to tlie Killer of which seven cost 201,-
270 francs and the remaining thirty-
three 584,366 francs. about;
Here we see that a snm of
3,000,000 francs ($600,000) was spent
on buttons for the Grand Mon-
arque” during a single year. During
the preceding year (1684) the cost was
’ 10t 60 BIf at Vioinrr nnlxr ™'. T 1 ’ 071 090
’ ,
francs. Ihe amounts licr© specified,
however, are solelv for the buttons,
and do not include the cost of the dia-
monds and precious stones ___ which , . , ,, dec-
orated the hat, shoes, buckles and
other portions of the King’s dress.—
New York ^ Herald '
Elaborate Scheme.
“I wish one word from me would
strike that man blind and deaf and
dumb for the rest of his life. ”
“What crime has he committed?”
“None that I know of.”
“What has he ever done to you?”
“Hoiking. ” had the
“Then why do wish you
power to injure hira so horribly?”
“So I could generously refrain from
exercising it. This would give me a
claim on his gratitude and I could
strike him for a loan. Isn’t it a
beastly shame that a man who can
originate a scheme like that should be
suffering at this moment for the lack
of a paltry, miserable, dad-dinged
quarter of a dollar?”—Chicago Trib¬
une.
How He (Jot Along.
“It must be awful to be broke away
out west.”
“I didn’t find it so. I bad a pretty
good suit of clothes, so I pretended to
j )0 1van ting to invest in real estate.
Nothing was too good foT me.”—Indi-
anapolis Journal.
KEY. DR. TALMAGE.
THH NOTED *«.
DAY DISCOURSE.
Eloquent Exposition of the Wily Saul Won
a Flock ami Lost a Kingdom—Impres¬
sive Lessons Drawn From an Old Bible
Story—The Utter Futility of Fraud.
Text: “And Samuel said, What meaneth
then this bleating of the sheep in mine
ears and the lowing of tho oxen which I
hear?”—I Samuel xv„ 14.
The Amalekites thought they had con¬
quered God nnd that ho would not carry
into execution his threats against them.
They had murdered the Israelites in battle
and out of battle and left no outrage un¬
tried. For four hundred years this had
been going on. and they suy, “God either
dare not punish us or he has forgotten to
do so.” Let us see. Samuel, God's
prophet, tells Saul to go down and slay all
the Amalekites, destroy not leaving ail the beasts one of in them their
alive; also to aud
possession—ox, Hark, sheep, camel ass.
I hear the tread of 210,000 men, with
monstrous Saul at. their head, ablaze with
nrmor, his shield flangling at his side, hold¬
ing in his hand a spear, at the waving of
which the great host marched or halted. I
see smoke curling against the sky. Now
there is a thick ■cloud of it, and now I see
the whole city rising in a chariot of smoke
behind steeds of fire. It is Saul that set the
city ablaze. The Amalekites and Israelites
meet; the trumpets of battle blow peal on
peal, and there is a death hush. Then
there is a signal waved, swords cut and
hack, javelins ring on shields, ar ins full
from trunks and heads roll into the dust.
Gash after gash, the frenzied yell, the
gurgling of throttled throats, the cry of
pain, the laugh of revenge, the curse.hissed
between clinched teeth—an army’s death
groan. Stacks of dead on all sides, with
eyes unshut and mouths yet grinning ven¬
geance. Huzza for the Israelites! Two
hundred and ten thousand men wave their
plumes and clap their shields, for the Lord
God hath given them the victory.
Yet that victorious army of Israel is con¬
quered by sheep and oxen. God, through
the prophet Samuel, told Saul to slay all
the Amalekites and to slay all the beasts in
their possession, but Saul, thinking he
knows more than God, saves Agag, the
Amalekitisli king, and five drove of sheep
and a herd of oxen that he cannot bear to
kill. Saul drives the sheep and oxen down
toward home. He has no idea that Samuel,
the prophet, will find out that he has saved
these sheep aud oxen for himself. Samuel
comes and asks Saul the news from the
battle. Saul puts on a solemn face, for
there is no one who can look more solemn
than your genuine hypocrite, and he says,
“I have fulfilled the command of the
Lord.” Samuel listens, and he hears the
drove of sheep a little way off. Saul had no
idea that the prophet’s ear would be so
acute. Samuel says to Saul, “If you have
done as God told you and slain nil the
Amalekites and all the beast in their pos¬
session, what meaneth the bleating of the
sheep in mine ears and the lowing of the
oxen that I hear?” Ah, one would have
thought that blushes would have con¬
sumed the cheek of Saul. No, no! Hesays
the army—not himself, of course, but the
army—had saved the sheep and oxen for
sacrifice, and then they thought it would
be too bad anyhow to kill Agag, the Amale-
kitish king. Samuel takes the sword, and
he slashes Agag to pieces, nnd then he
takes the skirt of his coat in true oriental
style and rends it in twain, as much as
to say, “You, Haul, just like that, shall be
torn away from your empire and torn away
from your throne.” In other words, let
all the nations of the earth hear the story
that Saul, by disobeying kingdom. God, won a flock
of I sheep, learn but lost this a subject that God will
from
has expose hypocrisy. divine Here Saul pretends he*
fulfilled the commission by slay-
in S 1111 the beasts belonging to the Amale-
S/the &£
Mon tho secret comes out, and the sheep
bleat and the oxen bellow.
A hypocrite is one who pretends to be
what he is not or to do what he does not.
gaul was only a type of a class. The mod-
era hypocrite looks awfully solemn, whines
' when he prays and during his public de-
votion shows a great deal of the white of
his eyes. He never laughs, or, if he does
laugh, lie seems sorry for it afterward, great’in- as
though he had committed some
discretion The first time ho gets a chance
he prays ‘ ^ twenty / minutes in public, J ; and
whe n exhort hft geom9 to in ply tl at all
. race are sinners, with one exception,
his modesty forbidding the stating who
that one is ’ There ure 11 &reat many
churches that have two or three ecclesiasti¬
cal Uriah Heeps.
IVlien the fox begins to pray, look out
for your chickens. The more genuine re¬
ligion a man has the more comfortable he
will be, but you may know a religious im¬
postor uncomfortable. by the fact that he prides himself on
being A man of that kind
is of immense damage to the church of
Christ. A' ship may outride a hundred
storms, and yet a handful of worms in the
planks may sink it to the bottom. The
church of God is not so much and in danger of
the cyclones of trouble it the persecution
that come upon as of vermin of
hypocrisy that infest it. Wolves are of no
danger to the fold of God unless they look
like sheep. Arnold was of more damage
to the army than. Cornwallis and his hosts.
Oh, we cannot deceive God with a church
certificate! He sees behind the curtain as
well as before the curtain. He sees every¬
thing inside out, A man may through
policy hide his real character, but God will
after awhile tear open the whited sepulcher
and expose the putrefaction. Sunday
faces cannot save him. Long prayers
cannot save him. Tsalm singing and
churchgoing cannot save him. God will
expose him just as thoroughly as though
He branded upon his forehead the word
"Hypocrite.” He may think he has been
successful in tho deception, the but at the
most unfortunate moment bellow. sheep will
bloat and the oxen will
One of the cruel bishops of olden time was
going to excommunicate one of the martyrs,
and he began in the usual form—“In the
name of God, amen.” “Stop,” says the
martyr. “Don’t say'in thenameof God!'”
Yet how many outrages are practiced un¬
der the garb of religion and sanctity. When
in synods and conferences ministers of the
gospel and are unkind about to about say something unbroth-
erly by a member, they
almost always begin of their being tremendously
pious, the venom assault corres¬
ponding lude. Standing to the heavenly there, flavor would of the think pre¬
you
they were ready to go right up down into glory
and that nothing kept them but the
weight of their boots and overcoat, when
suddenly the sheep bleat and the oxen bel¬
low.
Oh, my dear friends, let us cultivate
simplicity of Christian character! Jesus
Christ said: “Unless you become as this
little child you cannot enter the kingdom
of God.” We may play hypocrite God will success¬ after
fully now, but the Lord
awbilo expose your true character. You
must know the incident mentioned in the
history of Ottacas, who was asked to kneel
in the presence of liandolphus I., and when
before him he refused to do it, but after a
while he agreed to come in private when
there was nobody in the king’s tout, and
then he would kneel down before him and
worship, but tlie servants .of tho king
had arranged it so that by drawing a cord
the tent would suddenly drop. Ottacas
after a while came in, and supposing he
was in entire privacy knelt before Iiandoi-
phus. The servants pulled the cord, the
tent dropped, and two armies surrounding
looked down on Ottacas kneeling before
Eandolphus. If we were really kneeling to
the world while we profess to be lowly
subjects of Jesus Christ, the tent has al¬
ready dropped and all tho hosts of heaven
are gazing upon our hypocrisy. God's
universe is a very public place, and you
I learn further from thl« subject how
‘T " 8t0 t ' ,row '* "It »n the .boulders of
aald. “The woman tempted me. and I .ltd
cat.” And the woman charged it onon the
thn x^ncnt could have
spoken It would have , chanted it upon the
devil. I suppose that the real «fcate of the
easti was that Eve was eatln« the apple au<l
tlm< Adam saw It and begged and coaxed
until he sot a pl^ee or it, t suppose that
Adam was just as mu«h to blame as 7? ve was.
You cannot throw off the responsibility of
anv sia upon the shoulders of other neoblo.
t T irndn'i^ am doing ZZrZl wrong. T? but T t1'° have ^'h not V had 1 J” any ow
chance. T had a father who despised Cod
and a mother who was a disciple of godless
fashion. I am not to blame for my sins; it is
my bringing been up. Oh. no: that young man
has out in the world long enough to
see what is right and to see what is wrong,
and in the great .lav of eternity he cannot
hnt°win'hav?tn hut vill oave to BfT stand J r for fR M himself ler and m< \ tber an- *
swer before God. You have had a eon-
science, vou have had a Bible and the influ-
ence of the Holy Rolrit. Stand for yourself
or fall for yourself.
tnowT on t Uo do 9 i exactly n . B . S rnI??i right n ‘a* ? in 8 trade, » sa , r8 ’, but ‘l
all the dry , goods men do it and all the hard-
ware men do this, and I am not resoon-
sible.” You cannot throw off yoursiuunon
the shoulders Of other merchants. Clod
Will hold you responsible for what you do
and them responsible for what they do. I
want to quote one passage of Scripture for
you—T thou think it is in Proverbs—“If thou be
wise, shalt be wise for thyself, but if
thou scornost, thou (Hone shalt bear it,”
I learn further from this subject what
God meant by extermination. Saul was
told to slay all the Amalekites and the
beasts in their possession. He saves Agag,
the Amalekite king, and some of the sheen
and oxen. God chastises him for it. God
will not stay in the soul that is half His
and half the devil’s, There may be more
sin's in our souls than there were
Amalekites. IVe must kill them, Woe
unto us if we spare Agag. Here is a Chris-
tian. He says; “I will drive out all the
Amalekites of sin from my heart. Here is
jealousy—down backbiting—down goes that Amalekite. Here
is goes that Amalekite,”
and what slaughter ho makes among his
sins, striking right and left! What is that
out yonder, lifting up his head? It is
Agag—it is worldliuess. It is an old sin he
cannot bear to strike down. It is a darling
transgression he cannot afford to sacrifice.
Oh. my brethren, I appeal for entire conse¬
cration. Some of the Presbyterians call
it the “higher life.” The Methodists.
I belfeve, call it “perfection.” I do not
care what you cal; it, “without holiness no
man shall see the Lord.” I know men who
are living with their soul in perpetual com¬
munion with Christ and day by day are
walking within sight of heaven. How do I
know? They tell me so. I believe them.
They would not lie about it. Why cannot
we all have this consecration? Why slay
some of the sins in our soul and leave
others to bleat and bellow for our exposure
and condemnation? Christ will not stay in
the same house with Agag. You must give
up Agag or give up Christ. Jesus says:
“All of that heart or none.” Saul slew the
poorest of the sheep and the meanes.t of
the oxen and kept some of the finest and
the fattest, and there are Christians who
have slain the most unpopular of their
transgressions and saved those which are
most respectable. It will not do. Eternal
war against all the Amalekites—no mercy
for Agag!
I learn further from this subject that it is
vain to try to defraud God. Here Saul
thought he had cheated God out of those
sheep and oxen, but he lost his crown, he
lost his empire. You cannot cheat God out
of a single cent. Here is a man who has
made $10,000 in fraud. Before he dies
every dollar of it will be gone, or it will
give him violent unrest. Here is a Chris¬
tian who has been largely prospered. He
has not given to God the proportion that is
duo in charities and benevolences. God
comes to the reckoning, and he takes it all
away from you. How often it lias been that
Christian men have had a large estate and
It is gone. The Lord God came into the
counting room a'l and said: “I have allowed fif¬
you to have this property for ten,
teen or twenty years, and you have not
done justice, to my poor children. When
the beggar called upon you, you hounded
him off your steps; when my suffering chil¬
dren appealed to you for help, you had no
mercy. I only asked for so much or so
much, but you did not give it to me, and
now I will take it all.”
G od asks of us one-seventh of our time in
the way of Sabbath. Do yon suppose we
can get an hour of that time successfully
away from its true object? No, no. God
has demanded one-seventh of your time.
If you take one hour of that time that is to
be devoted to God’s service and instead of
keeping his Sabbath use it for the purpose
of writing up your accounts or making
worldly gains, God will get that hour f rom
you in some unexpected way. God says to
Jonah, “You go to Nineveh.” He says:
“No, I won’t. I’ll go to Tarshish.” He
starts for Tarshish. The sea raves, the
winds blow and tile ship rocks. Come, ye
whales, and take this passenger for Tar¬
shish! No man ever gets to Tarshish
whom God tells to go to Nineveh. The
sea would not carry him; it is God’s sea.
The winds would not waft him; they are
God’s winds. Let a man attempt to do
that which God forbids him to do or to go
into a place where God tells him not to go.
the natural world as well as God is against
him. The lightnings are ready to strike
him, the, fires to burn him, the sun to
smite him, the waters to drown him, and
the earth to swallow him. Those whose
princely robes are woven out of heart¬
strings, those whose fine houses are built
out of skulls, those whose springing foun¬
tains are the tears of oppressed nations,
have they successfully cheated God?
The last day will demonstrate. It will be
found out on that day that God vindicated
not only his goodness and His mercy, but
His power to take care of His own rights rights
and the rights of His church and the
of His oppressed children. Come, ye mar¬
tyred dead, awake and come up from the
dungeons where folded darkness hearsed
you an<j the chains like off cankers the peeled
loose the skin and wore flesh and
rattled on the narrowless bones. Come, ye
martyred dead, from the stakes where
you were burned, where the arm uplifted
for mercy fell into the ashes and the cry of
pain was drowned in the snapping of the
flame and the howling and of Smithfield the mob; market from
valleys of Piedmont
and London Tower and the highlands of
Scotland. Gather in great procession and
together clap your bony hands, and to¬
gether stamp your moldy feet and let the
chains that bound you to dungeons all
clank at once and gather all the flames
that burned you in one uplifted arm of fire
and plead for a judgment. Gather ail
the tears ye ever wept into a lake aud
gather all the sighs ye ever breathed into
a tempest until the heaven piercing chain
clank and the tempest sigh and the thun¬
der groan announce to earth and hell and
heaven a judgment. Oh, on that day God and
will vindicate the cause of the troubled
the oppressed! It will be seen in that day
that though we may have robbed bur fel¬
lows, we never ^have^ successfully robbed
God.
My Christian friends, as you go out into
the world exhibit an open hearted Christian
frankness. Do not be hypocritical in any¬
thing. You are never safe if you are. At
tlie most inopportune moment the sheep
will bleat and the oxen bellow. Drive out
the last Amalekite of sin from your soul.
Have no mercy on Agag. Down with yout
sins, down with your pride, down withyoui achieve
worldliness. I know you cannot almighty
this work by your own arm, but
grace is sufficient—that which saved Josepl)
iu the pit, that which delivered Daniel in
the dec, that which shielded Shadrach. Is
the fire, that which cheered Paul In th»
Cost of House-IluiltlfHf. I
cannot be built for less than $2,000 or
*>.“*>• tmfficient, ,i-.tt~.-ra-■"'»»* if it is judiciously expended.
Any amount of money can be
rferod iu nonossentials and decorations
‘ , hat are as useless i as inartistic. innrtietir- J Tn u
the main one only inft’n, requires from a
house ns from ft \\ that it perform *
• duty A a\ . ell, u and i do i the tilings ; 4.1 that u it.
was intended to do in the host way and
be pleasing and graceful in doing it.
A model home, if it he skillfully plan- f
uod, , , be erected , , for .. surprisingly . ,
ean ft
small sum these days.—The Chicago
Record. *
—------
• Wrkns. G*.
“Having: ohtatned a Pox of Tbitekine of
ilig. 1 spent $W) for different kinds of reme-
dies and the skill of doctors, ull lor no good,
until I got the Tettetiinb. I am now well. Ac-
cent thanks. M Yours. W. II. Kino.
By mail for 50o. iu stamps by J. T. Shuptrlnc,
Savannah, « 0j
The bald-headed man would like to be a Pen.
efieiary of the •■Fresh Hair Fund."
—_______
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces intlamrna.
'Ion. allays pain, cures wind colic. SSc. a Pottle.
I SICK HEADACHE S alway tVthe ci ifir \
um,
Poisonous matter, instead of being; thrown out, is reabsorbed into |
| the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue, it i
g causes congestion and that awful, dull, throbbing, sickening; pain. |
§ • * ! * * §t>caketo »yethecuiseby(B!
5 « * STIMULATING THE LIVER, f
¥ *
I Making the poison move on and out, and purifying the blood, i
1 The effect is ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS. *
* I LHUICO AttlCC whose sensitive organism is especially prone CASCARETS, to stele headaches, be
| NOT SUFFER, for you can, by the use of ,
s , g *S'.T,7Sr Relieved Like Magic. -]
o
1 ** RIG SLASH i v~\ o
IN BICYCLE PRICES. &
© LOVELL s
Q W :e,
& M <»
o.
e .7 4 DIAMOND
© 4 iZi.
o &
■©: va Treas. Bb». Lovell S.Lovedt., Anus Co. LEADS THE WOULD, |
h °4 1897 Lovell Diamond, ' m
1896 Lovell Diamond, * ' • ‘ 40.00
S 1897 Lovell Special, to 49.70 m
4 4 Excel Tandem 89.bo m O.
4 Simmon’s Special,
Boys’ and Girls’
Oar reputation of 50 years in a guarantee that our 1897 model is the best •wheel made.
e Insist on seeing the Lovell Diamond. Agencies everywhere. :»
e> SURE AND SEND FOR CATALOGUE. : 0 ,
SPECIAL AND SECOND HAND LIST MAILED FREE.
© ©
JOHN P. LOVELL ARMS CO.,
147 Washington St., 131 Broad St., Boston, Mass.
EVERY MAW BBS OW&5 DOCTOR.
A Hook of 000 Pages on all Subjects Needed in the
Tlousoliold and. oxx tlx© Farm.
Send 60c and get it postage paid. Address,
ATLANTA BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
118 Loyd Street, Atlanta, (<a.
Y at Laugh the Sun
HtRESL^fP Drink
beer/Cool-Drtm .*
’ Root
\\ HIRES
m%fto°lheer
^WeU-Drin^^^, SflRESjOuenche^
i k Raotbeer./y 0ur £/ ] j rs f
'ootbeer.
FRICK COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENCINES
i m
•■•‘V a,
Vi—r
Hollers, Saw Mills, Cotton (litis, Cotton
Tresses, Grain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth, In¬
spirators, Injectors, Engine Repairs and
a full lino of Brass Goods.
Send for Catalogue and Prices.
Avery & McMillan
* SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
Nob. 51 & 53 S. Foisytli St., ATLANTA, GA.
^ ff *2 |7jlRFTH f»QI ! FGE ^ J/
LI 1 ljV ^ C 1 •
B „ ** UAtT<)T1IE c"lle*e» BKST
for men with ovary feature of a
hluh (trade Collegefor *o»n nddad.
A FACULTY OF to SPECIALISTS
from schools "1 International repute-
tion, a* Yit; e Johns Hopkins, Amherst,
University of Virginia. Ber‘in,New Eng-
ParU ''
I IIKKK COURhhS
Lending to degrees.
GROUP SYSTEM
with electives.
MUSIC CONSKRVATOUY
OrgHn,Plnnr>,Vloljn,Guitar,iianJo,hlafl- With course lending to dip* _.,o. Pine
dolin. Vocal,
ART CONSKRVATOUY
Full course to dlploma-*aU varieties.
FULL COMMERCIAL
Course—Teacher from' Eastman,
A REFINED HOME
With every modern convenience,
CLIMATE
similar to that, of ,‘ \sbsvillb.
rnl * u . n i N vr 5*»
_ . K wf^ ,_v
every modern appliance.
Catalogue sent free on application.
Address,
REv.C. ,.,, AS. ai.Vu, Ires KXenr, ,
Charlotte, N. C.
'O' '©I
The Bicycle a
«r>
Sensation I
o
.. .. .* «
1897 CGLtilBiASat $75 l
STANDARD OF THE WORLD. m
o
1896 Columbias , , at ISO •
1897 Harifords. . .at 50 :
Hartford Paitarn 2 . at 45 :
Hartford Pattern I .at 40 *
. *»
Hartford Patterns 5&6 at 30 l
©
©
These are the new prices. J
They have set the whole 9*
©
bicycle world talking— ©
and buying..... J
POPE MFQ. PO., Hartford,Conn. z
;
Catalog free frorii any Columbia dealer; •
by mail for a 2-cent stamp.
“Success”
Cotton......
Seedliuiier
and
m ... Separator.
mm ft ag n Nearly ofSc;Jtothe tho Value doubles
Farmer.
All up-to-date Sinners use them because the Grow¬
ers give their patronage to such gins, Hnlleris
PRACTICAL, RELIABLE and GUARANTEED.
For full information Address >
BOTTLE STEAM FEED WORKS,Meridian■ Kin
MENTION THIS PAPER in tise writing rs. An to U97-2 adver¬ 8
S CUteS Wrttte AU list fAlLfc.
Best Cough Syrup, Tastes Good. Use
a in tim e. Sold by druggists.