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TORTURING PAIN. \
L —— o ‘
Half This Man’s Sufferings Would Have
Killed Many a Person, But Doan’s
Cuared Him,
" 'A. O. Sprague, stock dealer, of Nor
mal, I, writes: “For two whole years
I was doing nothing but buying medi-
T cines to cure
' : my kidneys. I
0 ik e do not think
'j.‘f;z;“ 2 that any man
; ' ’_{/f/,/,r,im;‘ ‘\ ever suffered as
R P (' N y
15N e\ I did and lived.
/;’,’//A G ‘WQ\ .;\3‘ The pain in my
;,:/11‘ : \ /‘ ‘\ back was 0
b, AW\ bad that I could
%x \\v Q i not esleep at
ROV night. I could
A. C. BPBAGUE, not ride a horse,
and sometimes was unable even to ride
in a car. My conditlon was critical
when I sent for Doan's Kidney Pllls,
I uged three boxes and they cured me.
Now I can go anywhere and do as
much as anybody. 1 sleep well and
feel no discomfort at all.”
A TRIAL FREE—Address Foster-
Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale
by all dealers. Price, 60 cts, }
1
ON THE WAY.
She—Yes, I just love dogs!
He—Tuen I'd like to be a dog.
She—Never mind; you'll grow.—
Harvard Lampoon.
g 4 ?”
The Watkins ““Boy’’ Hay Press
THE MARVEL OF THE COUNTRY.
’lu F O T Y bt
E_lg et BT e e i
o g ‘“Fil s 2
EZ - er&:&-l
Two bt‘){vs can operate it {no other power need
ed) and bale the grop rif(bt in the field at less
than cost of hauling to big press. It does lots
of other things and costs only #s2s. Write
us at once for circular No. 27.
E. E. LOWE CO, Atlanta, Georgia.
_£@-WE BUY AND SELL LUMBER.-9Q
S’l‘. JOSEPH'S ACAggZMX.
TQN, WILK ' .
WABHIN T QN K S dosirn.
_A Home School
With all the mo63£ t?onvenlonou Mh"gfi
tical Bd on ig the aim of this
g&?fifi:fi. :"ferms r the f( ear, 0168. For
stalogue sddrell, rHER SUPERIOR.
Atlanta College of Pharmacy.
Greater demand for our gr&duates than we
can su%fl&; Address, DR. GRO. F. PAYNE,
Dean, hitehall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
P CURED
AN Gives
. Quick
’ ) Relief.
BENE Removes all swelling in Bto 2o
days ; effects a permanent cure
in 30to 60 days. Trialtreatment
5 \ ) I given free. Nothingcan be fairer
Al Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons
SIPT AR oo acialists, Box B Atlanta, Ga.
$20.00 TO $40.00 PER WEEK
Belng Made selling ‘5600 Lessons in Business.”” It is a complete hande
book of legal and business forms, A cgmplote Legal Adviser—a complete
) Compendium of plain and ornamental Penmanship; a complete Lightning
4 /4 Calculator and Farmer's Reckoner.
Bk A complete set of interests, Grain, Lumber and Cotton Tables; measure-
N ments of CISTERNS, Timber, Lumber, Logs and Bins of Grain, etc., In
‘ one volume. Over 472 pages, 250 {llustrations.
i It is a complete business educator; brought home to every purchaser.
SIMPLE, PRACTICAL and PLAIN; 800 agents wanted at once. Boys
e --'\‘ and girls can sell as well as men and women,
Gt eT b\ One agent in the country eold 45 copies in one day. Another 210 in one
i e week. Agents have canvasged all day aénd sold a copy at every home,
[y it Semn¥ price $1.50. Liberal discounts to agents. Send 25c¢ for outfit; sate
T S isfaction guaranteed (or mongy refunded).
. me Circulars free. BERTEL, JENKINS & CO.,,ATLANTA, GA.
A XY »
/3'(
20l 1Y)
. b 1
m SQAY TON 3 ’
IYoLE PO N DEYROIT)
gty et N AN PO )
CeRISAGS D
SUMMER DAYS
IN MICHIGAN
The best place In the world to spend
YJUR VACATION DAYS
R Ryt U Adaas:
0 Amuse
Good Hotels.nfow Rates.
Mackinae, Georgian Bay, The
800, Huronia Beach, Pt Aux
Barques, Hundreds of Island and
Coast Resorts. The airof Mich
igan is a known Specific for Hay
Fever, Asthma and Kindred dis
orders. Let us talk the matter
over with you, our sgent will
gladly call, Write for Booklet
and Information. i g
D. G. EDWAl‘!l')SjPorosen;e; fi':fflc Manager, Cinclanati, Ohlo
Window Dréssing as a Fine Art,
In one important department, un
molested by public criticism, thes ad
vertisers have even not established
tastefulness as the underlying essen
tial principle of their competition.
This is In window dressing—a vital
part of advertising, The beautiful,
not the bizarre; the attractive rather
than the startling; the alluring and
interesting are now wsought in the
window effects of every shop—from
the great department store to the lit
tle candy kitchen; from the basement
lights of a modern florist to the long
plase-glass front of a shoe emporium.
Salaries of several thousand dollars a
year are pald In cities to the “artists”
most skilled in window dressing, and
their requisition for plants or ribbons
—totally irrelevant as these may be
- to the stock on sale, and designed
merely to add to the beauty .of the
window picture—are honcred un
grudgingly. -In effeot, the merchant
says, “Give m? a bebautiful window
that people will atop and look at, and
that yet shall indicate generally the
gort of goods I handle, and I do not
care what it coets.”—Charles M. Rob
inson, in The Atlantic. :
AN EXCEPTION.
“My son, don’t forget that there is
always room at the top.”
“To®s; but think of what Lappens
when there’s a fire.,””—Chicago Jour
nal, {
nB B BOTANIC |
D:0:0:BLOOD BALM
The Great Tested Remedy for the speedy
and permanent cure of Scrofula, Rheuma
tism, Catarrh, Ulcers, Eczema, Sores, Erup
tions, Weakness, Nervousness, and all
BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES.
It is by far the best building yp Tonic and
Blood Purifier ever ogcmd to the world. It
makes new, rich blood, imparts renewed vi
tality, and. possesses almost miraculous
hoahns properties. Write for Book of Won
derful Cures, s%nt free on appflcnlon.
If not kept g your local druggist, send
$l.OO foralarge bottle, or $5.00 for six bottles,
and medicine will be sent, freight paid, by
BLOOD BALM CO., At;anta.. Ga.
%omo.wmws . @ %
et Sk .. G ot
0 .y B. 0. Orichton. Bookkeepl
Dept., D. B. Shumaker, Cuul?uo free. o
E. C. Oriehton, Prop., Kiser Bldg., Atlanta, Ga.
| A |
\ . ‘ i - % 3 §
LOTMN \(\)\\ NS
-~ Business, Shorthand and ’l‘i;pe
writin;z College, Louisville, K{.,open the whole
year. Students can enter any time. Catz}_l_(lg (:_'ee.
TS ATV Y e Fioiey
' RES WHERE ELSE FAILS, ot
N Best Congh Syrup, Tastes Good. Use P&
m‘ < intime, Bold by druggists. © &ty
N CONSUMPTION: @
)&;‘,.‘lfi‘u
e H&%%
CH&D to St. Louis
WORLD'S FAIR TRAINS
Theough Trains Baily to st. Louls
LOW
ROUND TRIP RATES
| Coach Excursions -
Tuesday’s & Thursday’s
All our trains stop at our
World's Fair Station at the
Main Entrance, near the big
Hotels on the way to Union
Station.
( Thn sy e bae 3 saton
RICASSN.
SR
ECGE
CRCANC
ee R TR g )
SUMMER IN THE
COOL NORTHWEST
~ The CH & D runs
through trains to Chicago
connecting there with
‘roads f%r the famous
} Wisconsin Resorts, also
for Yellowstone Park,
Alaska, Colorado and the
| West.
4 Trains Every Week Day
~ LOW ROUND TRIP RATES
} Write or call for Information
ENGLISH AS SHE 1S SPOKE. ]
Comic Test Exercise in Dictation for
the Stenographer. J
The following is prescribed as a test
exercise in dictation for a new stenog
rapher: ,
The wind blew, so Miss Baliou care- \
fully pinned on her hat with the blue
bow, and at a leisurely gait went out
to meet her beau, whom she greeted
with a cool bow as he stood under the
bough of the old apple tree at the
gate. At their last meeting they had
quarreled over a garden and had quite
a row. Ste wanted some rows of trees,
preferably rose trees. He differed with
her, and ghe finally told him a row of
shad roes would perhaps be more to
| his taste.
“Lou,” she said, “in lieu of the apul
ogy which is my just due, for you do
owe ‘e one, you certainly know—"
“Oh, no!” he said.
“You may take me for an hour or so
in.our boat,” she serenely continued,{
“until the dew falls. It has been sew,
sew, all day, and I am so tired I would |
be willing to sue to a Sioux Indian
for a row. Why, I am willing to ask
you.” |
“l think your manners a trifle
askew,” he said, “but never mind. We
will go for a sail.” Then he spoke of |
the sale of a tract where they had
mined for coal and for lead. “Thatl
led me to think I was on the track\
of a really good piece of land, and T
simply gave my friend nc peace, for
I sought in every sort of way possible
to secure it, but in vain.”
He spoke in this veiii for some little
time, and as she saw he felt sore, for
Iquite a while she tried every little
wile she knew to divert his mind to a
lnew subject, without avail. She said
this world was a vale of tears, while
she was wearing a veil full of tears,
where it had caught on her bhat pin,
but she courted his usual reproof for
a pun in vain. However, she finally
won him to happier thoughts by one
silly little rhyme about the hoar frost
and the rime in the winter. He was
interested when ahe proposed going to
the Aquarium to see a sea-lion, a seal
and a sea-eel, which she had read of
lately. Then a red bird flew by. They
saw a gull reach deep down after a
fish, and then watched him soar far
up into the blue. She said the first
was probably a feathered diva, while
the latter was a plain, ordinary, work
'aday diver, who dived for his living.
Divers suggestions cof ‘his that gulls
are not divers she said were merely
details.
Just then a houseboat that looked
like'an ark approached in an arc that
threatened pretty close quarters. They
dared wait no longer, but started at
once, for their weight made the boat
sink low in the water, and lo! another
glance showed the big one fearfully
near. They made for the shore, and
'the maid Jumped ashore, and amid
cheers from several boats’ crews, taey
ended their cruise. :
She said: “I have escaped being
the prey of the hungry waters, but
pray take me no more. When we want
to go higher up the river, we will hire
a tug.”—C. O. L., in Life.
The Strategy of a Weasel.
“A weasel is a wizard as well as &
fighter, and often wins his battles by
strategy,” said Emmet Wolfe, of Mis
sissippi. “I was recently in a fishing
camp, that was near a large stack of
lumber. It seemed that a large num
ber of rats inhabited the cool crevices
under the lumber pile, and on day a
- weasel put in its appearance. We
had the pleasure of seeing a battle
.royal every day for several days, and
by and by the weasel had killed every
rat in the colony except one, which
was nearly as large as a cat.
“They fought several times a day,
and the weagel always got the worst
of it. One daz we noticed it indus
triously digging a hole under the
woodpipe, and though little of it. A
little later we saw it challenge the
rat to battle, and as\soon as the fight
began to warm up the weasel sudden
ly turned tail and sneaked to the hole
like all possessed. 'l\’Q§e rat followed
in hot pursuit, and both disappeared
l To Steady Steamships.
| £0 lessen the rolling of steamsliips
' i a sca an interesting device has
| been_designed by Herr Otto Schlick,
| & German naval architect, and con
| gists cf installing a rapidly rotating
'\ fly wheel in the hold of the vesgel.
| This involves making use of the prin
‘ ciple of the gyroscope familiar in the
| toy sometimes known as the Archime
' dean tcp, where a fly wheel whoge
I:-w’sight is concentrhted near its cir
| cumference is mounted in gimbals
go that it is free to rotate in any
plane. Herr Schlick proposes to
mount a fly wheel carried cn a ver
tical axis in a frame which is sus
’ pended cn a horizontal axis trans
| verse to the length of the vessel, the
‘ whole mechanism being placed at the
bottom of the boat. To rotate the
fly wheel with the necessary high
speed, electric motors or steam tur
bines would be employed. There
would be hydraulic brakes and band
brakes to restrain and regulate the
hotion of the fly wheel when neces
aary. The effect of the rapidly rotat
ing fiy wheel is io develop forces that
would oppose the osciliation of the
vessel, making it slower and reducing
| its extsnt materially. An elaborate
calculation was made of the size and
weights of such fly wheel, and Herr
Schlick has ascertained that for a
steamer of 6,000 methic tons (5,805.5
English tons) a fly wheel four metres
(15.12 feet) in diameter, weighing
ten metric tons (9,842 English tons)
and moving with a peripheral velocity
to 200 metres (656 fe2t) per second
would have a most marked effect.—
Harper’'s Weekly.
“Everybody pronounces Niagara
wrong,” said a philologist, in the Bal
timore Herald. “The accent of this
beautiful Indian word should not be
put on the syllabie ‘ag’ but on the
syllable ‘ar’—the penult—the one be
fore the last. Niagara means ‘hark ta
the thunder.’ Its accent should fall
on the penult, because the Indians
themselves accent it there, because
in practically all our Indian names of
places the penult is the accented syl
lable.
FITS permanently cured. No fitsornervouss
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great
Nerveßestorer, §2trial bottle and treatisefroe
Dr.R.H. KriNg, Ltd., 981 Arch Bt., Phila., Pa.
The dowaier‘ Duchess of Abercorn, aged
ninety-two, has 150 descendants.
Piso’s Cure is thebest medicine we everused
for all affections of throat and lungs.—Ws.
0. ExpsLey, Vanburen, Ind., Feb. 10, 1900,
Smuggling by motor car has been devel
oped into a fine art in Switzerland.
One of the largest and most noticeable
business signs seen anywhere is that of the
National Casket Co. on their mammoth new
factory at Neshville, Tenn., made on a wire -
frame with aluminum letters six feet high
and one hundred feet long, which can be
read from a long distance by day, and
when reproduced in clectrie lights, can be
read even further at night. This is the con
cern that is called on to furnish Caskets for
the most prominent people everywhere, in
cluding among its recent orders, Caskets
for Presidents William McKinley, Benjamin
| ¥ J
Harrison and the late lamented Gen. John
' B. Gordon, and yet whose goods can be had
through the smallest undertaker in every
town. From the fact that they are called
on to furnish Caskets for the best citizens
everywhere, there must be some merit in
their claim that their goods are the best,
and the South should be proud to have a
branch of such a high class establishment
within her borders.
A YONKERS BEATU.
Patience—lsn’t your friend Georgie
~an entertainer?
~ Patrice—l don’t think he ever en
' tertained an idea, even.—Yonkers
Statesman.
WORLD'S FAIR ST. LOUIS,
Louisville and Nashville Railroad.
It you are going to the World’s Fair you
wanf the best route. The L. & N. is the
shortest, quickest and best line. Three
tralns daily. Through Pullman Sleeping
Cars and Dining Cars. Low Rate Tiokets
sold daily. Get rates from your locai agent
and ask for tickets via the L. & N.
All kinds of information furnished on ap
plication to J. G. HOLLENBECE,
Dist. Pass. Azent. Atlanta, Gg.