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5 n Given Away
Write ws or ask an
Alabastino dealsr for
pearticulan and free sample card of
Alobasine
Tho Sanitary W souun
Destsoysdiseasegermsand vermin. fiouf |
rubs or seales. You can spply ft—mix with ‘
30,_4 water, Deautifnl .gm in white and
olicate tints. Not a digesse.breeding, out
ofdate hot.water ghw reparation. Buy
Alabastino in 6 Ib, ;:ufnuaproporl la
belled, of paint, hardware and drug du{m.
“Hints on Dooonum" and our Artists’
ideas free, -ALABASTINE €O, Gread Repids, Mich.,
-’
Small Potatoes
result from a lack of
in the soil. Potash pro
duces size and quality.
We have 3
valuable PR
books which _ oFEea 4 >
explain more = ‘“’fi“ ""{s«?} *
fully the fer- 2= =',",?‘ ‘E';/ "d
tilizing value Sl \’, o
of Potash, ™« '-““S\ ;- -y
We will ~ 1 Vil ABV .
send them B o B 650
free to any ' Y &‘7 e
farmer who _@y SS9B '\\ iLN
writes for ‘94 ) iy AT
them. A i 4
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
New York—9B Y assnu Street. or
Atlanta, Ga.—22); 80. Broad St.
A Large Trial Box and book of ine
structions absolutely Free and Poste
paid, enough to prove the value of
.
PaxtineToilet Antiseptic
o 8 Paxtine is in powder
P, form to dissolve in
i water — non-poisonous
A 4 £ and far superiortoliquid
A E ) lntlse?tlcs containing
e i alcohol which irritates
- }: 3 M Inflamed . surfaces, and
! NS have no cleanslngpro'p
a [ erties. The comtents
b A EEEEE of every box makes
! 8 more Antiseptic Solu
! J tion — lasts longer —
D 0] 4 Boes further—has more
! £ uses in the family and
i y® doesmoregoodthanany
) \ ,»/ antiseptic preparation
& you can buy.
The formula of a noted Boston physician,
and used with great success as a Vaginal
Wash, for Leucorrhcea, Pelvic Catarrh, Nasal
Catarrh, Sore Throat, Sore Eyes, Cuts,
and all soreness of mucus membrane.
Inlocal treatment of female ills Paxtine is
invaluable. Used as a Vaginal Wash we
challfin%e the world to produce its equal for
thoroughness.” Itisarevelationin cleansing
and healing power; it kills all germs which
cause inflammation and discharges.
All leading druggists keep Paxtine; price, boc.
abox; if yoursdoes not, send to usfor it. Don’t
take asubstitute — thereisnothing like Paxtine.
‘Write for the Free Box of Paxtine to-day.
R. PAXTON CO., 7 Pope Bldg., Boston, Mass.
The Great East
and West Line T[XAS AND l[] U |SIANA
Across the En
tire Btates of :
\'\ grgh l'»? Do
AW A 7 UO,
R SRS
& Tixas [P PACIFIC 3>
N‘ . N Dy, Rl \\\\\\@““‘\\‘\‘Q‘%{y
'}\ . S ‘\.'
S 0 RAILWAY £
No trouble to answer questions, 85 miles
shortest route Shreveport to Dallas. Write
for new book on Texas, free. E. P. TURNER,
General Passenger Agent, Dallas, Texas.
° Our Latest Im
' lar Saw Mills,
with Hege's Universal L.og Beams,Rectilin
ar, Simultaneous Set \Worksand the Hea
coc\t-gung Variable Feed Works are unex
celled for ACCURACY, SIMPLICITY, DURABIL
ITY AND RASE OF OPERATION, Write for full
desoriptive eirculars. Manufactured by the
SALEfi IRON WORKS,Winston-Salem,N.C.
: :‘."‘ CURED
W Gives
o 5 Quick
’ 5" Relisf.
R, § Removes all swelling in Bto 20
days; effects a permanent cure
) in 3ooto 6o days. Trialtreatment
\ W givenfree. Nothingcan be fairer
Ty | Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons,
—) 3T Specialists, Box B Atlanta, §a.
A Solar Plexus Blow.
(From The Philadelphia Press.)
My Staylate—l was going to call
last evening, but I understood you
were out,
Miss Patience— The idea! I wish
you had called.
My Staylate—Ah, you were really
at home, then?
Miss Patience—No.
“It's all oft with us.”
“Did he break the engagement?”
“No; we went out together last
night. I gave him the door key to
carry, he forgot it and came early this
morning to return it. I answered ihe
door, and, of course, he saw me.—
Cleveland Leader.
Feet Hurt,
Sweat, iteh, blister ? Rovarn Foor Wasn
cures them. Removes odors of feet, armpits,
ote.; stops chaflng. Ii not at druggists send
25¢ to EaToN Druc Co., Atlanta, Ga., for
full size, postpaid; sample for 2¢ stamp.
One application )‘»r()\es its merit. Monay
back if not gatisfled.
Patent medicines are never sold in
the apothecary shops of Sweden. The
Government limits the number ot
these shops, and there are only 350 in
the whole country, Stockholm, with
a population of 200,000, having only
twenty-two.
Deafness Cannot Bé“Cm'nd
by local applications as they cannot reach the
diseased portion ofthe ear. Thereis only one
way to cure deafness, and that is by consti
tutional remedies., Deafnegs is cauged by an
inflamed condition of the mucous lining of
the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in
flamed you have a rumblingsound or imper
fect hearing, and when it is entirely elosed
Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam
mation can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hearing will
be destroyed forever. Nine eases out of ten
are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an
inflamed condition of the muecous surfaces.
We'will give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafness (eaused by catarrh)that can
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure, Send for
circulars free. ¥.J. CHENEY & Co.,Toledo, O,
Sold by Dmggists, 75¢.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipation.
Employes in Japanese cotton fac
tories get only eight to eighteen cents
for a day’s work of eleven or twelve
hours. This work, however, is much
less strenuous than in this country,
and much time is wasted in loafing,
talking, laughing and drinking tea.
PR. WOOLLEY'S
Will cure permanently at ycur own home.
Mr. T. M. Brown, of DeQueen, Ark., says:
“Over seven years ago I was cured of the
opium habit by your medicine, and have con
tinued in the very hest of health since.”
Mr. W. M. Tunstall. of Lovingston, Va.,
say=: “lam glad to =ay thatl firmly believe
that I am entirely and permanently cured of
the Drink Habit,as [ have never even so much
as wanted a drink in any form since 1 took
your eradicatorfnow 18 months ago. It was
the best money 1 ever invested.”
Mrs. Virginia Townsend, of Shreveport, La.,
writes: “No more opium. I have taken no
other remedy than yours, and I make no mis
take'wken I say that my health is better now
than it ever wasin my life, and [ owe it to you
and your remedy. It has been twelve years
since I was curog by your treatment.”
Dr. Woolley has thousinds of such testimon
ials, with permission to use them. A treat
ment with so many recommendations from
Physicians and cured Yatients must be good.
Dr. Woolley’s Antidote has imitators, (as
all good articles have)—perhaps you have tried
some of them, but there is nothing like Wool
ley’s. It has stood the test of tl:irty years. No
man or woman who uses opium or whiskey in
any form, or who has friends so afflicted.
should hesitate to write to
DR. B. M. WOOLLEY,
106 North Pryor Street, Atlanta, Ga.,
for his book on these diseases, which he will
send free and confidential.
o The Genuine TOWER'S
. POMMEL
4410\ SLICKER
G A - \d \e HAS BEEN ADVERTISED
MR N * AND sOLD FOR A
\_\, QUARTER OF A CENTURY,
WA | sowzs irmnor
" ) g i
NG 'lk . CLOTHG
o Y It is made of thebest
R &b moterials, in black or yeilow.
AT SR
TSTICRTO THE «
SIGN OF THE FISH.
TOWER SANADIAN, O inted.. sl ehormas.usX.
Too Presumptuous.
A wealthy family residing om St
Paul street had just arrived in New
York from an extensive tour of Eu
rope and the Holy Land. The bag
gage was subjected to the usual strict
scrutiny, and the head of the family
and his wife deputized to their maid,
a gick witted Balttimore woman, the
duty of opening the trunks and giving
to the officials such information as
might be desired. The maid was so
obliging and prompt that the officer,
noticing the family name on the
trunks, addressed her as Mrs. T——.
When the last trunk had been opencd
the official became suspicious that he
had made a mistake and said:
“I presume ycu are Mrs, T—"
“Then you ar» too presumptuous,”
was the quick reply.
The officer immediately closed down
the lid of the trunk and walked away,
while a titter of laughter ran among
a dozen or more listeners.-——Waverley
Magazine.
Nevada’'s Scant Population.
No other State in all the Union has
so long and g 0 badly need an increase
of populaticn as has Nevada. . Her
population of 42,000 today is less than
it was in 1870, six” years after her
admission as a State. It is gratifying
to know therefore that she will more
than double her present numbers
when the vast government irrigation
works begun on the Truckee and Car
son rivers are completed. It is es
timated that the works will make pro
ductive abcut 375,000 acres of sage
brush desert in the western part of
the State. These lands will furnish
fertile homesteads of about eighty
acres each for 4,500 families. Towns
and villages will naturally spring up,
so that Nevada may expect from the
recalmation an increase of 60,000 at
the least.—New York Commercial.
American Machinery in Damascus.
An Amemrican sicam threshing ma
chine has been taken into Damascus,
which is said to be the oldest city in
th 2 world. On its way to Damascus
the heavy machine broke through
every Lridge, and attracted the atten
tion of the' entire country.
The Governor and a crowd of mili
tary officers came to see its triumphiil
march to Damascus. This machins
cannoc only cut down the grain, but
alzo threshes it, and put it into baszs
automatically. All the people of Da
mascus regard it with superstitious
wonder. All the small farmers of the
D'amascus country still cat their grain
down with hand sickles, just as their
fcrefathers did thousands of years
ago.—New York Journal.
Tiie Whale Was Curious.
Vincente Morocicle, the inland fish
erman, was the victim of a whale's
curiosity recently. He had put out
his nets, huge affairs, sixty feet in
depth and 600 or 700 feet in length, (o
catch bharracuda, when three whales
happened along. One of the big crea
tures had so much curiosity that it
turned- aside to investigate the neis
and the first it knew had banged its
head into the middle of one. The
nets are made up of three separate
parts and fastened together with small
ropes. Insicad of backing out, the
whale put on stecam and went right
through one of the parts, tearing such
an enormous hole that it was entirely
ruined. Besides losing a night's catch
of fish, the part of the net destroyed
will cost over $5O to replace.—Los
Value of Cinemetograph.
The cinemetograph seems to have
been rather successfully used by Par
is surgeons for a very novel purpose
—namely, that of exhibiting to medi
cal students how typical surgical op
erations should be carried out.
Wages in United States.
Wages in the United States, on the
average, are more than twice those
in Belgium, three times those of Den
mark, France, Germany, Italy ~and
Spain,-and one and a half those in
England and Scotland.
HOTTEST SPOT ON EARTH. "
Temperature of Bahrin 11 Degrees
Higher Than That of Death Valley.
“Death _Valley in Southern Califor
nia is usually referred to as the hot
test spot on earth, but it isn't quite
that,” Mr. Ralph Erling tells me. “This
rather unpleasant distinction belongs
to a portion of the shore of the Per
sian Gulf at and in the vicinity of
Bahrin.
“Statistics prove that the mean an
nual etmperature of the Persian Gulf
furnace is 11 degrees higher than
that of Deat Valley, and the aridness
of both places is about one a par,
though I am inclined to believe, if
my recollection of the records is not
blunted, that a little brackish water
has been found in a few isolated
springs on the alkali surface of Death
Valley, whereas there is no water at
al to be found on the shore of the
Gulf anywhere within a radius of
nearly 200 miles.
“Yet, while Death Valley is inhab
ited by practically none and perms
nent life there is deemed well nigh
impossible, Bahrin has a population
of several thousand people and has
had an existence as a village for many
centuries. Of course the people are
stunted mentally and to a slightly
less extent physically, a fact due to
the fearful condiiions under which
they live; but they do live there anid
are probably the nearest approach to
salamanders in the human family.
What do they do for water and food?
Why, the latter is brought to them in
boats and sold in exchange for the
fertilizer they dig from the desert,
and the lattcs they have in fairly
good abundanc® near them. You
thought I said there was no watar
within several hundred miles of the
place. Well, so I did—on the land—-
but there are a number of fresh water
springs on the bed of the saline guif
within a few hundred yards from the
shore. -
s probably' the only place on
ear.h where frgfsh drinking water is
secured from assalty sea. The watar
gushes up i considerable volume
from these S[{';rings and is secured hy
divers. The gulf is only about 20 fezt
deep at this point. The divers plunge
lo the bottom with empiy goatskins
and place fthe orifice of the skin bag
directly over the mouth of the spring:
2t fills in » few seconds, and the diver
closes the orifice and is pulled bacik
to the boat by a rope. That is the
way the water supply for the commu
nity on shore is procured. The springs
are supposed to be due to underground
streams /which kave their origin
the green hills of Osman, over 500
miles inland.”—SBt. Louis (lobe-Demo
erat.
A New Water Pumping System.
Philadelphia has recently installed
a most elaborate pipe system, solely
for fire fighting. For some years past,
owing to the increased demand for
water in the congested parts of the
city, the pressure in the regular water
mains has been failling, till, even
with the aid of fife engines, a good
stream cannot be maintained.
The new system is entirely inde
pendent of the old, and supplies only
the hydrants; the water is drawn
from the Delaware River, and kept at
a high pressure in the mains by a
central pumping station. The pump
ing station is not yet ccmplete, and
for the present the pressure is kept
up by fire boats on the river, but
even under these circumstances the
pressure is much higher than that of
the regular water supply mains.
It is estimated that when the pump
ing station is finished it will be pos
sible to send four streams over the
highest building in Philadelphia, and
that, with such a volume of water at
command, the toughest fire can Le
drowned out n a half hour.—Collier’s.
In Lowell, Mass., there are 17,000
machine-tending operatives who* care
for 883,000 spindles and earn over
$500,000 a month