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He Pleads.
„
Justice—You admit taking the
wheel?
but—it Prisoner—Yes, your honor— but—
was the same make your honor
rides.
Justice—What has that to do with
the case? »
Prisoner—Your honor will under¬
stand what a temptation it was to a
man who knows that it is the best
make in the market.—Puck.
Some medical men of Turin, Italy,
have formed a syndicate for the pur¬
pose of publishing a paper, to be
called LaMorte Apparente, which will
treat of cases of apparent death and
of burying alive, and will discuss the
best means of avoiding such mistakes
in future.
Uf»o Gentleness.
Be gentle in stimulating the kidneys, other¬
wise you will excite and weaken them. The
happiest Stomach results follow the use of Hostetter’s
Avoid Bitters to overcome renal inactivity.
the unmedicated, fiery stimulants of
commerce. The kidneys have a delicate mem¬
brane easily irritated, and upon this the action
of such excitants is pernicious. Malarial com¬
plaints. indigestion, rheumatism, neuralgia
and biliousness succumb to the corrective influ¬
ence of the Bitters.
Tho aeronaut is always a man of high posi¬
tion.
1 have found Piso's Cure for Consumption*an
unfailing Covington, medicine.—F. It. LOTZ, 1305 Scott St.,
Ivy., Oct. 1, 1804.
W. II. Griffin. Jackson, Michigan, writes:
“Suffered with Catarrh lor fliteen years. Hall's
Catarrh Cure cured me.” Sold by Drug¬
gists, 75c.
TROUBLESOME PIRSPLES
Blood Perfectly Purified by Hood's.
“I have been troubled with small rod
pimples breaking out on my face. They
caused mo a great deal of pain. I have
taken several bottles of Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and it has given me relief. I have not been
troubled with tho pimples since I began
taking it.” Lucy Fischer, 230 West 144t h
Street, New York City. Remember
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the best—in fact the One Tr ue- Blood Purifier.
Hood’s Pills cure constipation. 25cents.
“SUCCESS”
Cotton......
SeedHuiier
and
Separator.
it Nearly
doubles
the Value
of Seed to the
Farmer,
All up-to-date dinners use them because the Grow¬
ers give their patronage to such gins, Hulleris
For PRACTICAL, RELIABLE and GUARANTEED,
full information Address
SOULE ST EAM FEED WORKS,M eridia n,Miss
||JE WllFE MAKE LOAMS on
"you INSURANCE POLICIES.
have a policy lu the New l’ork Life,
Equ'itaiile Life Loan, or Mutual write Life giving und number would
like to secure ll us
of Tour policy, and we will be pleased to quote
rates. Address
TbeEnglisb-American Loan anil TrastCo-..
No. Equital»le Building:, Atlanta, Ga.
FREE CONSULTATION!
Chronic Diseases of all forms
in men. women and chil¬
dren. Successfully treated. Rheumatism.
Neuralgia, Bronchitis. Palpitation, Nose. Indigestion. Throat
Constipation, Lungs. &c. Catarrh of Prolap- and
Diseases peculiar to women. p
sus. Ovaritis. Cellulitis. Leucorrhea. Dysinem
orrhea. <fce. Write for particulars. Two cents may
mean Life and Happiness. S. T. Whitaker, M.
D., Specialist, 205 Norcross Bld’g., Atlanta. Ga.
FEW EXTRA DOLLARS !t>
Would You Like to Hake Them?
We can 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. G. LI\ DERM AN CO., Atlanta, Ga.
WSAPLE SYRUP
Made on your kitchen stove in a few minutes at
a cost of about 25 Cents Per Gallon, by i a
new process, which sells at $1.00 per gallon.
“I want to thank you for the Maple I Syrup
recipe which I find is excellent. can recom¬
mend it highly to any and every one.”—R ev.
Sam P. Jones, Cartersville, Ga.
Send $l and get recipe—or stamp and investi-
pa;e. Bonanza for agents.
J. N. LOTSPEICH, Morristown, Tenn.
$75 00 For $37.50 To be obtained at
WHITE’S BUSINESS ATLANTA, COLLEGE, GA.
If, K. Cain St., Com¬
Complete Business and Shorthand Course
bined. $7.50 Per Mouth.
Average time required five months.
Average cost $37.50. This course
Would cost $75.00 /it any other reputable school.
Business practice from the start. Trained
Teachers. Course of study unexcelled. No va¬
cation. Address F. B. WHITE, Principal.
ajcjj. K H ARDS can be saved with-
U H 11 out their knowledge by
5S21S ^dSTiffiS!
■ B Write P.enova Chemical
Co., 66 Broadway, N. Y.
Full information (in plain wrapper) mailed free.
SUMMER, Is tlie best time to
CURE CATARRH
Cutler’s Pocket Inhaler, $1.00; all druggists.
W. D. SMITH CO., Buffalo, N. Y., Props.
Pill Clothes.
Tlie good pill has a good coat. The pill coat
serves two purposes; it protects the pill, en¬
abling it to retain all its remedial value, and it
disguises the taste for the palate. Some pill
coats are too heavy; they will not dissolvo in
the stomach, and the pills they cover pass
through the system es harmless as a bread
pellet. Other, coats are too light, and permit the
speedy deterioration of the pill. After 30 years
exposure, Ayers Sugar Coated Pills have been
found as effective as if just fresh from the labor¬
atory. It’s a good pill with a good coat. Ask
your druggist for
Ayer’s Cathartic Pills.
More pill particulars in Ayer's Curebook, too pages.
Sent free. J. C- Ayer Co., X,owell, Mass.
Bicycle Prices Fall.
After several years of exorbitantly
large profits the manufacturers of
bicycles have been compelled to very
largely reduce their prices. The pub¬
lic actually refused to longer pay $100
for a machine which can be built' for
one-quarter that amount.
A few makers saw this some time
ago and put on the market cheaper
machines at very greatly reduced
prices which so cut into the business
of the higher priced manufacturers
that in pure self defense they were
compelled to bid good-bye to their old
high prices.
Why should not the same thing oc¬
cur with type-writing machines? They
no doubt cost considerably less to pro¬
duce than bicycles, and yet some of
them are selling at the ridiculously
high price of $100. It is fair to iqfer
that a machine which sells at $50 costs
close to $15 to manufacture.
If a few large department stores in
New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chi¬
cago, etc., would arrange for large
quantities to be manufactured for them
by some one outside of a trust the
prices would come down to reasonable
figur es as have those of bicycles.
Electricity in Ship Yards.
The extensive adoption of electric
power in shipyards is only a question
of time, for already many of the most
progressive shipbuilding concerns in
this country and Europe have real¬
ized the great advantages offered by
electric power, owing to the portabil¬
ity of the apparatus, which can be
used in any position and for many pur¬
poses' without rigid mechanical con¬
nections. Among the newest applica¬
tions in this direction, says the Phila¬
delphia Record, are electrically driven
capstans and electric lifts. It is a
great convenience in a shipyard to
have a large number of electrically
driven capstans, jvhich can be started
at any moment by shutting a switch.
By means of these capstans hand cars,
on which material is placed, are hauled
in any desired direction by the distri¬
bution of snatch blocks over the whole
area. By means of the same capstans
the plates and angles are also lifted
into their places. The electric cap¬
stan has proved one of the most use¬
ful applications of electric transmis¬
sion of power. In shipyards there is
very little slope, so that the keels are
laid at a great height from the ground.
For instance, if the molded depth of a
vessel is thirty feet the height of the
keel at the forward end will probably
be fifty feet. Formerly a high stair¬
way was used, and in this way much
valuable time was consumed, but the
most progressive yards have adopted
electric hoists to transport men and
materials to the upper decks.
Firing Heavy Guns Immersed.
An interesting and very suggestive
experiment lias been made by British
naval officers in the way of firing solid
snots i f f irom lionvv ueaty guns inioiercpil immersed in 111
deep water.
A 110-pound gun was used which
was anchored upon a platform at the
bottom of Portsmouth harbor, After
being loaded the gun was pointed
toward a target set in the water
seventy-five feet from its muzzle. The
target was composed of oak beams and
planks, twenty-one inches in thick¬
ness. Behind this was placed the hull
of an old vessel, to which had been
riveted sheets of boiler iron, making
an armor three inches thick. A wire
connected the firing mechanism of the
gun with the shore station. The gun
was fired at high tide. There was a
! slight disturbance of the water above
the gun. Then the vessel beyond the
target was seen to rock and to disap¬
pear beneath the weaves. Subsequent
investigation showed that the target
had been knocked to pieces and the
hull of the. vessel completely pierced
by the shot. The water apparently
had little effect upon the projectile. It
went as accurately as though fired
through the air. In the test the gun
was loaded and aimed by a diver. But
with the modern mechanism now avail¬
able, the same results could be at¬
tained from above the water. A new
field for marine attack and defense is
thus disclosed. Fitted with port holes
below the water line, ships could strike
the enemy in the points most vulner¬
able and wage war with double devas¬
tation in both elements. For harbor
defense the submarine battery would
prove of inestimable advantage.
„ , T . f r
Her > leiVs OI Gils.
“ J Ow much do yon charge for pull-
iiitr out « tooth vomit? man?” *
Une shilling and a me shillings
with gas. ”
“Five shilling* with gas! Then I’ll
fnniP c°me nriin agam tnmnrrmv tommimv v’iipn when it’s its (Liv- clay
light. lunch.
MTT'YT IvK Y r\T) 1*1). rr 1 A i t 1,1)1 "tf A t e>T-\ tK
’ . ,y ‘
THE NOTED DIVINE'S SUN-
DAY DISCOURSE.
A Plea For Cheerfulness—Three Prescrip¬
tions For the Cure of Business De¬
pression: Cheerful Conversation
Behavior, Proper Christian Invest-
inent, and a Great . Spiritual Awakening. ,
Text: “Wherefore doth a living man
complain?”—Lamentations ill., 39.
A cheerful interrogatory in the most mel¬
ancholy book of the Bible! Jeremiah
so many sad things that wo have a word
named after him, and when anything is
surcharged call jeremiad. with grief and complaint we
it a But in my text Jere¬
miah, as by a sudden jolt, wakens us to a
thankful spirit. Our blessings are so much
more numerous than our deserts that Vie is
surprised that anybody should ever find
fault. Having life and with it a thou¬
sand blessings it ought to hush into perpet¬
ual dealings silence everything like criticism of the
of God. “Wherefore doth a living
man complain?”
While everything in our national finances
is brightening, for the last few years the
land lias been set to the time of “Naomi.”
There has been here and there a cheerful
soloist, but the grand chorus has been one
of lamentation, accompanied by dirges over
prostrated commerce, mechanism, silent manufactories,
orders unemployed described by the and all those dis¬
two short words,
“hard times.” The fact is that we have
been paying for the bloody luxury of war
more than thirty years ago. There were
great national differences, character and we had not
enough Christian to settle them
by aroitration and treaty, and so we went
into battle, expending life and treasure and
well nigh swainping the national, finances,
and north and south, east and west, have
ever since been paying for those four years’
indulgence in barbarism.
But the time has come when this depres¬
sion ought to end—yea, when it will end if
the people are willing to do two or three
things by way of financial medicament, for
the people as well as Congress must join in
the work of recuperation. The best politi¬
cal economists tell us that there is no good
reason for continued prostration. Plenty
of money awaiting investment. The na¬
tional health with never so strong an arm
or so clear a brain. Yet we go on groaning,
pufthis groaning, groaning, as though God had
nation upon gruel and allowed ns
but one decent breakfast in six months.
The fact is, the habit of complaining has
become chronic in this country, and after
all these years of whimper and wailing and
objurgation we are under such a momentum
of snivel that we cannot stop.
There are are three prescriptions by which
I believe that our individual and National
finances may be cured of their present de¬
pression. The first is cheerful conversa¬
tion and behavior. I have noticed that the
people who are most vociferous against the
day in which we live are those who are in
comfortable circumstances, I have made
inquiry of those persons who are violent in
yheir have jeremiads asked them, against “Now, these after times, all, and I
are you
not making a living?” After some hesita¬
tion and coughing and clearing their throat
three or four times they say stammeringly,
“Y-e-s.” So that with a great multitude of
people it is not a question of getting a
livelihood, but they are dissatisfied because
they can’t make as much money as they
would like to make. They have only
$2000 in the bank, where they would like
to have $4000. Tney can clear in a year
only $5000. when they would like to clear
$10,000, or things come out just even. Or
in their trade they get $8 a clay when they
wish they could make $4 or $5. “Oh,”
says some one, “are you not aware of the
fact that there is a great population out of
employment, and there are hundreds of
ik* 5 good families of this country who are
at their wits’end, not knowing which way
to turn?” Yes, I know it better than any
man in private life can know that sad fact,
for it comes constantly to my eye and ear,
but who is responsible for this state of
things?
Much of that responsibility I put upon
men in comfortable circumstances who by
an everlasting growling keep public confl-
dence depressed and and new enterprises from
starting out new houses from being
built. You know very well that one de-
spondent spondency, man can talk fifty men into de-
while one cheerful physician
can wake up into exhilaration a whole asy-
lum of hypochondriacs. It is no kindness
to the poor or the unemployed for you to
join in this deploration. If you have not
tlie wit and the common sense to think of
something cheerful to say, then keep silent,
Now I will make a contract. If the peo-
pie of the United States for one we#k will
talk cheerfully, I will open ail the manu-
factories, I will give employment to all the
unoccupied men and women, I will make a
lively market for your real estate that is
eating you up with taxes. I will stop the
long processions on the way to the poor-
house plentiful and the table penitentiary and I will spread-
a from Maine to California
and from Oregon to Sandy Hook, and the
whole land shall carol and thunder with
national jubilee. But says some one, “I
will take that contract, but we can’t affect
the whole nation.” My hearers and read-
ers, representing,as you do all professions,
all trades and all occupations, if
you should resolve never again to utter
a dolorous word about the money
markets, but by manner and by voice
and by wit and caricature and, above
all, by faith in God to try to scatter this
national gloom, do instantaneous you not believe 1 the in-
fiuence would be ' and wide-
spread? The effect would be felt around
the world. For God's sake and for the sake
of the poor and. for the sake of the em-
ployed quit comfortable growling. Depend upon it, if
you men in circumstances do
not stop complaining, liow God will blast your
harvests and see you will get along
without a corn crop, and He will sweep you
with floods, and He will devour jou with
grasshoppers, and He will burn your city,
If you men in comfortable circumstances
keep on complaining, God will give you
something to complain about. Mark that!
The second financial prescription distress is for the allevia- Chris-
tion of proper
tian investment. God demands of every
IndivithiaJ sr’ .""“c- r. c-rtaia fro-
£, portion of their income. W3 ar:
ou . \ V e keep back from God that whioh
belongs to him, and when we keep back keep
anything from God he takes what we by
back, and he takes more. He takes it
storm, by sickness, by bankruptcy, by any
one of the 10,000 ways which lie can em-
ploy. The reason many of you are cramped
in business is because you have never
learned the lesson of Christian generosity,
You employ an agent. You give him a
reasonable salary, and, lo, you find out
sides that he is appropriatingyourfunds.be- do Bis-
the salary. What you do?
charge him. Well, we are God’s agents,
He puts in our hands certain mon-
eys. Fart is to be ours, part is to be
His. Suppose we take all, what then?
He will discharge us. He will turn us over
to financial disasters and take the trust
away from us. The reason that great multi-
tudes are not prospered in business is sim-
ply because they have been withholding
from God that which belongs to Him.
The rule is, give and you will receive, ad-
minister liberally and you shall have more
to administer. I am in full sympathy with
the man who was to be baptized by immer-
sion, and some one said, “You had better
leave your pocketbook “I out; it will get wet.”
“No,” said he, want to go down under
the wave with everything. I want to con-
secrate my baptized. property and Wliat all to God.” And this
so he was we want in
country is more baptized pocketbooks.
The only safe investment that a man
can make in this world is in the cause of
Christ. If a man give from a superabun-
dance, God may or he may not respond
with a blessing, but if a man give until he
ieels it. if a man give until it fetches the
biood, if a man give until his selfishness
cringes and twists and cowers under it, he
wil1 R pt not only Kplrituul proflt, but ho
will Bet paid back in hard oasli or in eon-
.vertilile securities. W« olteu geo men who
ere tii<ht-ll»te(l who seem to Bet along with
Suddenly in that man’s history every¬
thing goes wrong. His health fails,
or his reason i? dethroned, or a
domestic curse smites him, or a mid¬
night shadow of some kind dro ps upon
his soul and upon his business. What is
the matter? God is punishing him for his
gma j| henrtoduess. lie tried to cheat God,
and God worsted him. Ho that one of the re¬
cipes for the cure of individual and national
finances is more generosity. Where you
bestowed #1 on the cause of Christ give $2.
God loves to be trusted, and he is very apt
to trust back again. He says: “That man
knows how to handle money. He shall have
more money to handle,” And very soon
the property that was on the market for a
great while gets a purchaser, and the bond
that was not worth more than fifty cents
on a dollar goes to par, and the opening of
a new street doubles the value of his house,
or in any way of a million God blesses him.
Once the man finds out that secret and
he goes on to fortune., There are men
whom I have known who for ten years have
been trying to pay God $1000. They have
never been able to get it paid, for just as
they were taking bill out from one fold of their
pocketbook a mysteriously somehow In
some other fold of their pocketbook there
came a larger bill. You tell me that Chris¬
tian generosity pays in the world to come*
I tell you it pays now, pays in hard cash,
pays in Government securities. You do
not believe it? Ah, that is what keeps you
back. I knew you did not believe it. The
whole world and Christendom is to be re¬
constructed on this subject, and as you are
a part of Christendom let the work begin
in your own soul. “But,” says some one.
“I don’t believe that theory, because I
have been generous and I have been losing
money for ten years.” Then G od prepaid
that is all.
People quote as a joke what is a divine
promise, “Cast thy bread upon the waters,
and it will return to thee after many days.”
What did God mean by that? There is an
allusion there. In Egypt when they sow
the corn it is at a time when the Nile is
seed overflowing its banks, and they sow the
corn on the waters, and as the Nile be¬
gins to recede this seed corn strikes in the
earth and comes up a harvest, and that is
the allusion. It seems as if they are throw¬
ing the corn away on the waters, but after
awhile they gather it up in a harvest. Now
says God in His word, “Cast thv bread
upon the waters, and it shall come
back to thee after many days.” It may
seem to you that you are throwing it away
on charities, but it will yield a harvest of
green and gold—a harvest on earth and a
harvest in heaven. If men could appre¬
ciate that and act on that, we would have
no more trouble about individual or na¬
tional finances.
Prescription the third, for the cure of all
our individual and national financial dis¬
tresses, a great spiritual awakening. It this is
no mere theory. The merchants of
country were positively demented with the
monetary excitement in 1857. There never
before nor since has been such a state of
financial depression as there was at that
time. A revival came, and 500.008 people What
were born into the kingdom of God.
came after the revival? The grandest
financial prosperity we have ever had in
this country. The finest fortunes, the
largest fortunes in the United States, have
been made since 1857. “Well,” you say,
“what has spiritual improvement and re¬
vival to do with monetary improvement
and revival?” Much to do. The religion
of Jesus Christ has a direct t indeney to
make men honest and sober and truth tell¬
ing. and are not honesty and sobriety and
truth telling auxiliaries of material pros¬
perity?
If we could have an awakening in this
country as in the days of Jonathan Ed¬
wards of Northampton, as in the days of
Dr. Finley of Basking Ridge, as in the
days of Dr. Griffin of Boston, the whole
land would rouse to a higher moral tone, busi-
and with that moral tone the honest
ness enterprise of tlie country would come
up. You say a great awakening has an
influence upon the future world. I tell you
it has a direct influence upon the financial
walfare of this world. The religion of
Christ is no foe to successful business,
it is its best friend. And if there should
come a great awakening in this coun-
try, and all the banks and insurance
companies and stores and offices and
shops should close up for two weeks and
do nothing but attend to the. public wor-
ship of Almighty God, after such a.spiritual
vacation the land would wake up to such
financial prosperity Godliness as is we profitable have for never the
dreamed of.
life that now is as well as for that which is
to come. But, my friends, do not put too
much emphasis on worldly success as to
let your eternal affairs go at loose ends,
I have nothing to say against money. The
more money you get the better, if it comes
honestly and goes usefully. For the
lack of it sickness dies without medi-
cine, and hunger finds its coffin in
an empty bread tray, and nakedness shivers
for clothes and fire. All this canting tirade
against money, as though it had no praeti-
cal use, when I hear a man indulge in it,
makes me think the best heaven for him
would be an everlasting poorhou3e. No;
there is a practical use in money, but while
we admit that we must also admit that it
cannot satisfy the soul, that it cannot death, pay
fo^r our ferriage across the Jordan of
that it cannot unlock the gate of heaven
for our immortal soul.
Yet there are men who act as though
packs of bonds and mortgages could be
traded off for a mansion in heaven, and as
though gold were a legal tender in that
land where it is so common that they make
pavements out of it. Salvation by Christ
is the only salvation. Treasures in heaven
are the only incorruptible treasures. Have
you ever ciphered out that sum in loss and
gain, “What shall it profit a man if he
gain the whole world and lose his soul?”
You may wear fine apparel now, but the
winds of death will flutter it like rags.
All the mines of Australia and Brazil,
strung in one careanet, are not worth to
you as much as the pearl of great price.
You remember, I suppose, some years ago,
the shipwreck of the Central America? A
storm came on that vessel. The surges
h.-pr’,--: hat eh!-,?, and SJ-fi tnuo Jcw^through wont up a
hundred voiced death shriek. pitching The team of
on the jaw of the wave. The
the steamer, as though it would leap a
mountain. The glare of the signal rockets,
The long cough of the steam pipes. Tlie
hiss of extinguished furnaces. The walk-
ing of God on the wave. Oh, it ship was did a
stupendous spectacle. But that
not go down without a struggle. The pas-
sengers stood in long lines trying to bail it
out, and men unused to toil tugged until
their hands vFore blistered and their muscles
were strained. After awhile a sail came in
sight. A few passengers got off, but the
most went down. The ship gave one lurch
and was lost.
So there are men who go on in life—a
fine voyage they are making out of it. All
is well till some euroelydon of business
disaster comes upon them,- and they go
down. The bottom of this commercial sea
is strewn with the shattered hulks. But
shall , soul
because your property goes your
go? Oh, no. There is coming a more
stupendous shipwreck after awhile, This
world—God launched it 6000 years ago, and
it is sailing on, but one day it will stagger
at the cry of “Fire!” and the timbers of
the rocks will burn, and the mountains
flame like masts, and the clouds like sails
in the judgment hurricane. God will take a
good many off the deck, and others out of
the berths, where they are now sleeping in
Jesus. How many shall go down? No one
will know until it is announced in heaven
one day: “Shipwreck of a world! S9 many
millions saved! So many millions drowned!”
Because your fortunes go, because your
house goes, because all your earthly posses-
sions go, do not let your soul go. May the
Lord Almighty, through the blood of the
everlasting covenant, save your souls!
The o kl ,
homa, is printed by wind power sup-
plied by a wind mill, the only instance
of using power of this sort in printing
a newspaper on record. If it is not
edited by wind power that is also the
only instance of the sort on record.
Dallas News.
Not Much.
Dodo—Now, tell me what do people
think of me?
Penguin—And make you my enemy
for life? Not much!-Boston Tran-
licript.
Cure Corns With Physic.
Might as Eczema, well try that as to attempt the cure
of Tetter, Ringworm and other Tetter!ne cutan-
ooub affections with blood medicine.
Ik the only absolutely sale and certain remedy.
With it cure Is sure. It's an ointment. 50 cents
at druggists or by mall for 50c. In stamps from
J. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah, Ga.
A good conscience is much better than a big
bank account.
Fits i permanently cured. No fits or nervous-
n ess after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Da. It. H. Ki.ine. Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Philft., Pa.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma-
tion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25 c. a bottle.
|min EF&flii 111 fill? PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS, BLOTCHES, |
! 'SjPf'lSJ? USLUl/aJ a SCALES, ULCERS, SORES, ECZEMA, |
and CHRONIC SWELLINGS.
I ’ ARE WONDER WORKERS in § -
*
* the of disease caused by bad im-
* cure any or i
? pure blood. They eliminate all poisons, build I
? ! up and healthy enrich the blood, enabling it to make |
: new, tissue. *
PURE BLOOD MEANS PERFECT 5
» —HEALTH, and if you will use CASCARETS *
J they will give you GOOD HEALTH and a PURE, CLEAN SKIN, free from i
i pimples and blotches. -
| ? To there TRY been CASCARETS produced in the history is of to the (ike world them. perfect For never and before harmless ha.s |
so so a
r BLOOD PURIFIER, LIVER and STOMACH REGULATOR. To use i
* them regularly for a little while means f
! Pure Bleed a^d Perfeat Health. 1
| encufti.iMia
lot ).>*•*•* i.'.t.i.i.i.iM t.i.tM i wi.iwi.i. i.i.i.i. i.i i.im i
rwtr
eon frit S
STANDARD OF Till’, WORLD.
HAVE MADE themselves the leading bicycles
on account of their quality — not on
account of their price.........
1896 CQLUMBIAS, . . ■ ■ ■ $60
1897 HARTFORDS, . . ■ ■ ■ 50 N
s HARTFORDS Pattern 2, 45
■ . . ■ ■ ■ ■
■ ■ ■ 40
HARTFORDS Patterns 5 and 6, . . ■ H 30
POPE MFG. CO., Hartford, Conn.
^Catalogue free from any Columbia dealer, or by mail from us for
a 2-cent stamp.
If Columbias are not properly represented In your vicinity, let ns know.
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fr
A Southern farmer, whose home is somewhat in the
backwoods, in un interview with a newspaper correspondent
said: “I am 6i years old, and until I was nigh unto while 50 j years suf¬
old I was always well and peart, then for a long
fered with indigestion and lives could not eat anything hardly of at
all. My daughter, who in the city, sent me some
Ripans Tabules
told me how to take them, and they have I completely cured, cured is
me. I want you to tel! everybody how got for it
S a blessing to humanity.”
FRICK COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
■j
mwq
'/As?
.. .tf . 'A-'I - — ■ '• 7.
Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton (Jins, Cotton
Presses, Grain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth. In¬
spirators, full Injectors, Engine Brass Repairs and
a line of Goods.
SS Send for Catalogue and Prices ,
Avery &
* SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
Noe. 51 & 53 S. Forsyth St., ATLANTA, GA.
ELIZABETH AUK*
i
I Gil ttliCUUJu I?TiOTTl! 1 J, 11. M ( I 1
J j EQUAL to thk best
Colleges for men with every feature eft a
high grade College tor women lultled.
A FACULTY OF 15 SPECIALISTS
From schools «*f International reputa¬
tion, as Yale. Johns Virginia. Hopkins, in,Ne\v Amherst, Kn«-
land University Conservatory, of Pari?, Her Ac.
,
j THREE Leading COURSES degrees.
to
OK _ <)Ul' S' STEM
w|th
MUSIC CONSERVATORY
With course leading to dip*'* - ...*. Pin©
dolin, Organ,Piano, Vocal. Violin, Guitar, Banjo,Man¬
j ART CONShilV^TORI diploma*-all varieties.
Full course to
FULL COMMERCIAL
Course Teacher from Eastman.
A REFINED HOME
With every modern convenience.
CLIMATE
Similar to that of Asiievim.r.
COLLEGE BUILDING,
172 ft, frontage,143 ft. deep, 4 stories high,
built of pressed brick, lire proof, with
every m oaern appliance.
Catalogue Address, sent free on application.
REV, C. B. KING, President,
Charlotte. N. C.
advertised oil I®
| si
pi!v> a Fully short restored time. One in j a jg
box tablets T
tr' - all tried soipouioa doctors. Three Write uiars SRKCI $2/0. HAGGARD’S to for By nc boxe partlc- rrml CO.L H ! | l 3 j * = Specific 8 Jm
I Atlanta, Ga. '
NGiNES -AND--
BOILERS.
Tanks, Stacks, Stand-Pipes Pulleys; and Gearing, Sheet-
Iron work; Shafting,
B oxes, Hangers, etc.
every day ; work 180 hands.
LOMBARD IRON WORKS
AM) SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GKOKGIA.
MENTION THIS PAPER in tisers. writing ANU97 to adver¬ 30
PISCES-CURF TOR
O CURES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. _ Use
Rett fh Cough Syrup. Tastes Good.
time. Sold by druggists-
1 :c\T"