Newspaper Page Text
A Mistake,
“Of course,” said the jeweler," again.” you
meant well, but don’t do that
“What do you mean?” inquired the
man in charge of the repair depart¬
ment.
“You charged the last man so much
that instead of having his old watch
fixed he bought a new one that I had
marked down to cost as an advertise¬
ment.”—Washington Star.
Befarmi N«e<l More Than a Day
To bring them about, and are always morn
complete and lasting when ooaHumiliation. they proceed Few with of
Mteadjr regularity to n failed
the observant among ns can have to no¬
tice that permanently healthful changes In the
V’uinan system are not wrought by abrupt and
violent means, and that those are the most sal¬
utary* medicines which are progressive. Boa
tetter’s Stomach Bitters is the chief of these.
Dyspepsia, a disease of obstinate character, is
obliterated by It.
Atthe average dog show some greater brutes
may be among the spectators.
Life and Health
Happiness and usefulness depend upon purs
blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla mskei pure blood.
Tills is the time to take Hood's Sarsaparilla,,
because the blood is now loaded with Impu¬
rities wh ets must be promptly expelled or
health wiV. be In danger. Remember,
Hood’s Sarsa¬
parilla
Js the host—in fact the OneTrne Blood Purifier.
Sold by all druggists. $1, six for $5.
Hood’s Pills act larroorii-usi with
Hood’s .Sarsaparilla.
FREE I tion markable We direct to tl>» statements: .pedal lollowtng atten¬ re.
Dear Madame:
Yours to hand. I recom¬
mend the Moore treatment
because I have tried It, and
know it to be just what he
'■ai* says It Is, 1 was cured by
* it, and have remained so
eight year*; have known of
W,t many, other* being cured
of the very worst cases.
Hy all moans get It,
Hr.it j ' Yours SlJRBKA truly, flPHlNOS, W, K. AKK. Pksn,
■ The above. Is a Jen or
r written by the late Rev. W,
E, Venn, the noted Evange¬
list, to Mrs. W. H. IVutsoii,
New Albion, N. Y.
Restored His Hearing in 5 Minutes.
My ago isV»t. I suf¬
fered from Catarrh to
years. Had intense head¬
ache, continual roaring took
and singing in cars,
cold easily. fail, My and bearing for
throe began to almost
entirely years deaf, was and oon- W
tlnually Everything grow worse.
1 had tried
failed. In despair I com
meneod to use Aerial
Medication in 18SS, and
the effect of the first
application than five minutes wus simply hearing wonderful. fully In less
tuy wo* re¬
stored, and has been perfect ever since, aud lu
a few months was entirely cured of Catarrh.
Km (iuow.v. Jacksboro, Tenn.
“Whereas I was deaf, now I hear.”
jQ At tho age of 69, after Catarrhal hav¬
ing suffered from
Deafness twenty years, that am 1
truly thankful to state
am entirely cured by Aortal
m Medication; be my bearing, bud that
whioh had ootue so
I could not hear a watch tick,
or con versa! J will ion. is verify fully this re¬
stored.
statement.
Wm. Hitch ns,
Derby Center, Vt,
Medicine far 3 Months' T realm ent F ree
To introduce this treatment and prove be¬
yond doubt that Aerial Medication will our*
Deafness, Catarrh, Throat and Long Diseases,
1 will, for a short time, send Medicines tor
three months’ treatment free. Address.
J. H. Moore, M. 0.. Oopt. K. 7, Cincinnati, 0.
Cotton.
v/ith careful rotation of
crops and liberal fertilizations,
cotton lands will improve. The
application of a proper ferti¬
lizer containing sufficient Pot¬
ash often makes the difference
between a profitable crop and
failure. Use fertilizers contain¬
ing not less than 3 to 4 %
Actual Potash.
Kainit is a complete specific
against “Rust.”
All about Potash--the results of its use by actual ex¬
periment on the best farms iu the United States—ii
told in a little book which we publish and will gladly
mail free to any farmer in America who will write for it.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
93 Nassau St., New York.
&QimAm44 rfpr OSBORNE’S Jk me
Augu«n\. Gn. Actual Not*xt &
books Short time, Ohoap bowed- bond for oatalojruo.
”J8Z FARM in TEXAS «
your own twivs 1 writ* ms. I banvUo UJ l< Auitlil, netbin^bu^bay- Tax*..'
-
Pistols and Pestles.
The duelling pistol now occupies its proper
place, in the museum of the collector of relics
of barbarism. The pistol ought to have bosido
it the pestle that turned out pills like bullets,
to be shot like bullets at the target of the
liver. But the pestle is still in evidence, and
will be, probably, until everybody has tested
the virtue of Ayer’s sugar coated pills. They
treat the liver as a friend, not as an enemy.
Instead of driving it, they coax it. They are
compounded on the theory that the liver does
its work thoroughly and faithfully under
obstructing conditions, and if the obstructions
are removed, the liver will do its daily duty.
When your liver wants help, get “tho pill
that wm,”
Ayer’s Cathartic PiiSs.
=
THE RED CROSS SOCIETY.
One of the Most Famous Organizations on
the Clobe.
The Boston Transcript prints the fol¬
lowing Interesting history of the world
famous Red Cross Society:
Such noble women as Florence Night¬
ingale and Clara Barton, together with
societies working aiong the same lines,
have established the fact that the civil
power is an important factor in connec¬
tion with the military in carrying out
the sanitary service of armies engaged
in war. For generations there has
been some sort of custom or treaty, al¬
though very crude, between belliger¬
ent nations, for the protection and care
of the wounded on battlefields. The
past fifty years have seen a great ad¬
vance of feeling on the subject. With¬
in a short time after the Austrian-Ital
lan war of 1861, Dr. Palasiano in Italy,
M. Henri Arrault In Paris, and M.
Henry Duttint In Geneva, published
pamphlets In which the human idea of
making wounded on battlefields neutral
was put forward,
M. Dunant, the Swiss writer, achiev¬
ed the most, His work, the famous
‘‘Souvenir of Solfcrlno,” describing his
experiences as an eye-witness cm the
field and after the victory, gave the
most realistic account of the ghastli¬
ness of a battle and its consequences
ever published. He suggested that
associations Bhould be formed to send
volunteer doctors and nurses to attend
the wounded In war, and that an Inter¬
national conference should be sum¬
moned to consider the question. Both
proposals were carried out In a few
years. In 1863 "the Geneva Society of
Public Science, of which M. Dunant was
a prominent member, assembled at
Geneva a conference of representative
men from almost ail European coun¬
tries. It was from this conference
that the international committee for
aiding wounded in war dates, with its
federated national Red Cross societies
In various countries. The conference
arrived at conclusions which justified
tue Swiss Federal Council in Inviting
the various powers to attend a diplo¬
matic congress, which was held in
Geneva fu August, 1364, Fifteen Eu¬
ropean powers and the United States
sent, delegates, and the conclusions
were embodied in the so-called Geneva
convention, which was signed on Au¬
gust 22, 1864. The great principle of
the Goneva convention Is that the
wounded, those who attend to them,
their hospitals, ambulances, aqd every¬
thing pertaining to the Bick and injured
in war, are acknowledged to be neutral,
and are to be protected and respected
as such by the belligerents. The flag
and armlet universally adopted for hos¬
pitals, nurses, etc,, bears a red cross on
a white ground.
The treaty was first signed by twelve
governments; soon after by sixteen,
and now forty governments have
agreed to be bound by the ten articles
of the Red Cross Association, Japan be¬
ing the last to join. In tlie war be¬
tween Austria and Prussia tn 1866 the
Red Cross Association was put to the
test of actual, experience, and its good
points as well as its defects at once ap¬
peared. The great difficulty arose
from the ignorance of Its provisions
displayed by the Austrian army and
citizens. The whole subject matter of
Geneva treaty should be familiar to
every cftlzcn of the civilized world, so
that in time of war everyone may know
the rights and privileges of the treaty.
Three conventions have been held
since the first one—one in 1867 in Paris,
another in 1868 in Geneva and the last
in 1884 In Geneva. At the second one
fifteen additional articles were adopted,
the last ten of which pertain to naval
warfare. The “American amendment”
pertains to the relief of sufferers from
famine, fire, flood, drought, pestilence
and cyclones, as well as sufferers in
war. The credit of this amendment is
attributed to Miss Barton.
Surely Fatal.
A certain regiment hail a very small
band; but the commanding officer’s
feet were—well, very large. One day
the regiment was to march out, but the
music was not forthcoming. ‘ ‘Where
the deuce is the band?” qnerried there the
adjutant. For some time was
no reply, but when the question was
repeated a gruff voice was heard from
the rear rank: “I believe, sor, the
colonel trod on it be accident. ”—Tid
Bits.
Never nt Leisure.
“Hawkins, you ought to pay that
telephone girl a handsome commis¬
sion.”
“Why?” advertising
“She is always you as
busy. ”—Chicago Record.
BET. DB. JONATHAN I
WIDOW STRICKEN WITH *
PARALYSIS.
Bnt She Ha» Been cured-..t.onic May She
tlre anil Lone Live the Remedy to
Which She Owes Her Life.
From the Gazette, Meadville, Pa.
The following interesting interviews con¬
cerning the efficacy of Dr. Williams’ Pink
Pills for Pale People, have lately beon re¬
ceived at the office of this newspaper:
The first embodies a conversation with Mrs.
M. A. Wnitely, the widow of the late Rev,
Jonathan of the Methodist Whiiely, denomination. D. D,, an eminent div ue
Mrs. Whitely
spoke ‘‘I as follows:
consider it my duly to tell for publica¬
tion the immense benefit! have derived from
Dr. Williams’Pink Pills. Three years ago I
was stricken bv paralysis, anil lay helpless
for months. I was at last advised to try Dr,
Williams’ Pink Pills, which afier many mis¬
givings I concluded to do, as I had lost faith
mall medicines. The first box helped me
worked much, and and the is working continual wonders. use of the To-day pills has X
have driven twelve mlieg without fatigue, X
cannot say too muoh in praise of Dr. Will¬
iams' Pink Pills for they have done matt
world of good.”
Mr, John W. Beatty, who Is a contractor
and builder of Meadvillo, of the highest re¬
spectability, ‘'Although says:
I have passed tho meridian of
life, but little I am glad to be able to say that I have
or no use for medicine of any kind.
But ray wife is not so fortunate. During the
last few years she has been a sufferer from
dropsy and disease of the heart, and at times
suffered greatly. A few months ago she be¬
gan taking Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for Palo
their People and has been greatly benefited by
use. She experienced a numbness and
coldness in her limbs anti at times could
scarcely walk by retison of poor circulation
ofthe blood. All these unpleasant symptoms
have disappeared and I confidently hope to
see her a well woman ere long. 1 will also
take the liberty to speak for a brother-in-law
of leyvllle, mine, Mercer G. W. Myer, who Pa. resides at Shenk
his affliction County, 8o great was
by reason breaking of erysipelas in the
face and n general down of tho sys¬
tem that last winter he was given up to die.
Dr. Williams' pinkPUie for Pale People have
made him a now man and he is as one ras¬
cued from the very jaws of death.
Mr. Prentice Fry, of Meadvllie, testifies as
follows:
“My wife and daughter have been falling
In health for some time and the treatments
oi physicians iu their eases have been fruit¬
less. 8o much has been said of Dr. Williams’
Pink Pills for Pitie People that I resolved to
iry them, and myself and family will always
be glad that Proviileuoe threw such a medi¬
cine in our way. The pale faces and wasted
cheeks of my wife and daughter lmve disap¬
peared, and the ruddy glow of health has re¬
appeared. Pen cannot record my feelings in
the matter, and all I can say is that I trust
all who ate bowed down by the heavy hand
of physical infirmity will learn that there is
a remedy that cures and places suffering
humanity where they can enjoy this earthly
existence. God bless the maker of Dr. Will¬
iams’ Pink Pills Pink for Pale People.”
Dr. Williams’ Pills contain, in a con¬
densed form, all the elements necessary to
give new life and richness to the blood and
restore shattered nerves. They are an un¬
ataxia, failing specific partial for paralysis, such disease St. 'Vitus’ as locomotor dance,
sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous
ItBudache, the after effect of la grippe, palpi¬
tation of the heart, pale and sallow ^either com¬ In
male plexions, female. ail forms Pink of Pills weakness sold by all
or are
dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt
of price, 50 cents a box or six boxes tor #2.50,
by addressing Dr. Williams’Medicine Com¬
pany, Schenectady, N. Y.
Reflections of a Bachelor. .
There never was a married woman
who would admit that no other
ever usked her.
There isn’t anything more pitiful
than when a woman gets an idea that
the gas company is cheating her, ami
sets out to watch the meter.—New
York Press.
Love is like mush. It has lots of
nourishment, but nobody but a pig
likes it without molasses on it.
A girl is never really in love with a
man until she thinks of him when she
says her prayers at night.
A woman can never lie very bad after
she has once learned that her little
child measures its ideas of God by her.
No-To-Bac for Fifty Cent*.
(Ivor 400,000 onred. Why not lot Nt>-To-Ha<
regulate or remove your deslro for tobacco?
Saves monoy, makes health and manhood.
Cure guaranteed. SO cents and $1.00, at all
druggists. _____j____________
Courting a deaf girl must he exceedingly
embarrassing. Did you ever try It?
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, softens the gums, reduces Inflamma¬
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottlo.
Whkn bilious or costive, eat a Cnsearet,
candy cathartic; cure guaranteed; 10c., 25c.
Statk of Ohio, Citv of Toledo,! i' ...
Lotus COUNTY, 1
Prank J. Chknkv makes oath that he is the
senior partner of the firm of F. *1. Cheney .V
CO., doing business In the City of Toledo. County
and Stale aforesaid, and that said firm will pay
tlie sum of one hundred dollars for each and
every cone of catakkii that.cannot be cured by
the use of Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Cheney.
Sworn to before me and subscribed In my
presence, 1). this 6th day of Gleason, December, A,
{ seal - 18S6. A. w. Notary Pttblie.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, surfaces and
nets directly on Send the blood ami mucous free,
of the system. for testimonials,
F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Hills are the best.
Just try a 10c, box of Caacarcts, the finest
liver and bowel regulator ever made.
I could not get along without Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It always cures.—Mrs. E. C.
Moulton, Needham, Mass., Oct. £3, ’04.
Cascakkts stimulate liver, kidneys aud
bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c.
Questions Answered.
The following answers are guaran¬
teed by a Philadelphia paper to have
been made at the graduation exercises
of one of the leading grammar schools
of Boston:
“Name a fruit, which has its seed on
the outside.” “A seed cake.”
“Name six animals of the arctic
zone.” “Three polar bears and three
seals.”
“What are the last teeth that come
to a man?” “False teeth.”
“What is yeast?” “Ifeast is a vege¬
table flying about in the air, hitching
itself on to anything.”
“Name and locate the five senses.”
“The eyes are in the northern part of
the face and the mouth in the south¬
ern.”
“Explain ‘flinch’ and use it as a
sentence.” “Flinch, to shrink. Flan¬
nel flinches when it is washed. ”
Printing and Publishing.
A young lady explained to a printer
the difference in printing and publish¬
ing, and iu conclusion said: “Now,
yon may print a kiss on my eheek, but
you must not publish it.” With that
lie locked the fair form in hia arms so
that it would not pi and went to press.
SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL.
-
Salicylic acid, boric acid, . borax and
formaldehyde are some of the cbemi
cals added to prevent milk from sour
ing
The sanitary condition of Madrid,
Spain, leaves much to be desired.
During the week from January 3 to 9
the births were 302, the deaths 437.
Eagles do not have different mates
every season as do birds generally;
they pair for life, and sometimes oc¬
cupy the same nest for many years.
Most British geologists are now has
prepared to admit that the earth
passed through several glacial periods,
instead of only one, as is commonly
supposed.
In the mountains of Sweden,Norway
and Lapland all vegetation would be
destroyed by the Norway rats were it
not for the white foxes, that make
special game of the rodents.
When we look at the sun we see him,
not where he actually is, but where he
was about eight minutes and eighteen
seeonds ago; his true place is then al¬
ways in advance of his apparent place.
The Frankfurter Zoitnngclaims that
an important medical discovery has
been made in Frankfort, namely, ft
method of communicating to the hn
man system the effect# of iodine,
bromine, mercury, morphium, iron,
etc., by means of electrolysis, instead
of via the stomach. It thinks it will
lead to a new science and practice of
therapy.
A long series of orgonic, inorganic
and vegetable pigments have been ex
perimented with to determine their
relative permanency on cotton fiber.
The universal pigments were found to
be the more enduring, remaining un¬
changed by sunlight and moisture
after 366 days. Anthracene pigments
rank next. Then oomes aniline black,
while roseline is least stable. Vege¬
table dyes are almost equal to anthra¬
cene, but depend on a mordant for
their fastness.
Power for the Jungfrau Electric
Rack Railroad will be supplied with
two waterfalls producing 4500 horse¬
power. The steepest grades will be 1
in 4,and the minimum radius of curves
328 ieet. The conductors will be over¬
head. Three trains, holding 200
passengers, will be kept moving at the
same time. The length of the line is
7.6 miles, and the total rise is 6555
feet. The speed is limited to 5.3 miles
an hour, the trip taking 96 minutes.
The cost is estimated at 12,000,000.
Clerks Celebrate Their Promotions,
“I do not know when it was started,”
observed an old War Department
clerk, “but for the past forty years I
know it has been the custom for every
clerk to eelebrata his promotions in
salary by handing aronnd cigars to his
fellow-clerks in the same division. It
was a simple enough matter when I
first entered the War Department, but
now, when some divisions have hun¬
dreds of clerks, it is rather a serious
affair. Woe be to the clerk who hands
aronnd a poor cigar on snoh an occa¬
sion. The cigars must be of the best.
The proper thing of late years is to let
a messenger band tho oigars aronnd,
with the compliments ot the donor,
though in olden times the promoted
clerk always handed them about per¬
sonally. The box must go with the
cigars, so that evory one can see exact¬
ly what kind of a cigar is being dealt
out. The saw, ‘ft man is known by the
company he keeps,’ has been for such
occasions turned into ‘a man is known
by tbe cigars be hands around,' The
same or a similar custom may exist iu
some of the other departments, though
I have never heard of it. The cases
have been rare where promoted clerks
do not celebrate. Now and then clerks
give dinners and suppers to the clerks
in their own room on occasions of this
kind, but the cigars have to go around
to the entire division to have the cele¬
bration perfectly regular.”—Washing¬
ton Star.
Says He is Able to Make Gold.
Benjamiu Braze lie, of St. Louis, Mo.,
scientist, and inventor, claims to have
solved not only the problem of the
transmutation of metal, but of the
transmutation of clay into gold,silver,
iron and other metals. More than this,
he claims to have discovered the true
source of electricity, and says that by
it he is enabled to work the marvels
he has in store for the future. All the
■known laws of chemistry are to be
revolutionized and the dreams of al¬
chemists are to become practical reali¬
ties. By actual test, Mr. Btazelle
asserts, be has changed silver into
gold and gold into silver. The trans¬
mutation of metals he considers the
most insignificant part of the discover¬
ies he has made—a mere nothing in
comparison with tbe feat of changing
clay into gold, silver, iron, calcium,
aluminium, glaucinium and fifteen
other metals not known to science,
whose qualities have not yet been de
termined by the discoverer.
Mr. Brazelle advances the ’ theory
that metals are endowed with life and
grow the same as any plant when placed
under the proper conditions. A com¬
pany the backed by strong capital has be¬
gun erection of a plant at Fairlafr n,
St. Louis, to test Mr. Brazelle discov¬
eries.—Chicago Record.
A Slow-Going Postal Card.
A postal card that required fifteen
years to travel ninety-nine miles
breaks the record for slow postal de¬
livery, It was mailed in Leicester,
England, in June, 1881, and has just
been received in London. The address
was plainly written on the card, and
no one knows where it has been all
this time.
London lYorK of Salvationists.
Last year the Salvation Army in
London provided 3,221,917 meals and
1,339,246 lodgings for the poor. It
received in pay §190,000 and in con¬
tributions $91,175.
Woman’s Way.
“Well, my dear,” said Mr. Proud
wife “did you have a successful meet- j
iug ot your club this afternoon?”
“Ob, yes, indeed,” said she enthu
siastically, . -a: Jiu,. TVe did ,t 4 just „ d a UL like a AV.L, the ryvAii meu
—passed resolutions that we were real j
sorry for Cuba, and that the Turks are
just as mean and hateful as can be! — j :
Cincinnati Commercial Tribune.
THREE HAPPY WOMEN.
Each Relieved of Periodic Pain "and Back*
ache. A Trio of Fervent Letters.
Before using Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable
■it ^ Compound, mined. I my suffered health untold was gradually from being painful under
agony
7* & 'menstruation, backache, pain on top of my
’head and ovarian trouble. I concluded to
t fir f with try that Mrs, it painful was Binkham’s all monthly any woman Compound, periods. needs who It and entirely suffers found
i r cured me. Mrs. Georgie Wass,
823 Bank St., Cincinnati, O.
",
For years I had suffered with painful men¬
struation every month. At the beginning of
menstruation it was impossible for me to
stand erable. up* One £ R for day more little than book five of minutes, Mrs. Pinkham’s I felt so mis
a was
thrown into my , £ house, and I sat right down and read it.
I then got some of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound and Liver new'7^| w Pills. I can heartily say that to-day I
feel like a ''' woman; my monthly suffering is a thing
of the past. I /W / shall always praise the Vegetable Compound
lor what it has done for me.
Mrs. Margaret Anderson, 363 Lisbon St., Lewiston, Me. i
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound has cured me of painful men¬
struation and backache. The pain in my back was dreadful, and the agony
I suffered during menstruation nearly drove me wild.
Now this is ail over, thanks to Mrs. Pinkham’s medicine and advice.—M bs.
Carrie V. Williams, South Mills, N. C.
The great volume of testimony proves conclusively that Lydia E. Pinkham-a
Vegetable Compound is a safe, sure and almost infallible remedy in cases of
irregularity, suppressed, excessive or painful monthly periods.
SpfoOQjwfthy /SVndy cathartic
^^Tcure corisnP BP^^dbucsisis ATioH^ r
art
ABSOLUTELY GDARAHTEED
pie and baptist free. Ad. STKRlJNf. UVttKUY CO..Chicago. Hontn-nl. Cnn., nr Sew Tork.
-jY
j
IT WON’T RUB OFF.
Wall Paper is Unsanitary. KALSOMIlf E IS
Vi TF.IH’OKAbY, BOW,BtBS OFF A.VO M ALE*.
ALABAbl A 1 Ann fWB MF is tt P ure > permanent and artistic
i ^
For Sale by Paint Dealers Everywhere.
kcSSSSS thrive." * free Souvenir A ALABASTINE Tint Card Bock showing sen t free 12 CO., to desirable any Grand one mentioning tints, Rapid*, also t. Alabastine hispaper. Mich,
butoaunot
♦
9 wm WQOID PAtNYS
.mill y
the STANDARD PAINT FOR structural purposes.
Pamphlet, ''Suggestions for Exterior Peroration," Sample Card and Descriptive Price-List free by maiS.
Asbestos Roofing, ffuildititf Felt, Steam Packing, Boiler Coverings, Materials* Ffre-Proof Faints, Etc*
AflbcHtoij Non-t omioctins: ami Electrical Insulating
H. W. JOHNS MANUFACTURING CO„
87 Maiden Lane, NewYork.
CHICAGO: 2401:243 Randolph St. PHILADELPHIA: 170 4 l?a North 4th St. BOSTON: 77 4 79 Pearl St.
' Who 'N'7
opened that Sgi i
‘ Dottle ot
HIRES ;7fj
Root beer? d, ~J
Tbe popping of a
cork from a bottle of \ «V
Hires is a signal plea-S^ of \ •
good health sound and
sure. A the
old folks like to hear n
— the children can’t ri
resist it.
HIRES
Rootbeer
Is composed of the a.
system very Ingredients requires. Aiding the >
the the digestion,soothing purifying
the blood. nerves,
A temper¬
ance drink for temper¬
ance people.
Made only br A
The Cbarlo E. Hires'Co., Phtla. v. ■
A package makes 5 galiooa. ft
8old everywhere.
* TIRTTIE. *
Rice’s Goose Grease Liniment
Is nlways sold under a guarantee to cure all
aches and pains, rheumatism, also neuralgia,
sprains, bruises and bums. It is warrant¬
ed to cum colds, croup,coughs and la grippe
quicker than any known remedy. No care
no pay. Sold by all druggists and general
stores. Made only by UOOSE GKEASE
LINIMENT CO., Grkxnsboro. N- n
Building, Bridge,
Factory, Furnace
and Kallroad
Railroad, Mill, Machinists* Injectors, and Factory Pipe
Supplies, Belting, Flies, Packing. Oilers,
F ittin gs, Saws. etc.
fSP“0ast every day; work 180 hands.
LOMBARD IROh WORKS
AND SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
M iff HD U|1» DU II11*C.cured I MET Opium at anti home. Whisky Never Habit fails.
Monarch Home Cure Co., New Albany, Ind.
ET ILK H quickly; send for “3W inventions
V3i Wanted." Edgas Tate & Co.. -45 B'way, K.Y.
A. N. U ...... ......Fourteen, ’97.
E 335?:
PISO’S CURE FOR
Use
in time. Sold by druggist*.
za'z’smzw‘s'f. 1
Purely a Local Disease.
S
be soothed and smoothed and healed. No use to
fflXtSr5SSEKS' safe for T£?2S Tetter, Ec
simple, Ringworm and certain cure
aenia, and other skin troubles. KX
4 rU T. ggj fl t s or by mail for 50 cents in stamps.
J. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
FITS Stopped tree and permanently cured. No
fits after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
2T&W8ME
FRICK COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
;;
£
boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, Cotton
Presses, Grain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth, In¬
spirators, Injectors, Engine Brass Repairs and
a full lino of Goods.
IJTSenCL for Catalogue and Prices.
Avery J & McMillan
SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
Nos. <11 & 53 S. Forsyth St., ATLANTA, GA.
W. L. DOUGLAS
3 IS; Hp
DOLLAR tiflfcf
pm
IN THE WORLD
FOR 14 YEARS this shoe, by merit alone,
has distanced all competitors.
IKDORSEB BY OVER 1,000,000 WEARERS
as THE BEST in style, fit and durability of
any shoe ever offered at $3.00.
IT IS MADE IN ALL THE LATEST SHAPES
and STYLES and of every variety ot leather.
ONE DEALER IN A TOWN eiven exclusive
.ale aud advertised iu local paper on receipt
reasonable order. Write for catalogue to
W. L. DOUGLAS, Brocfctoa, Mass.
For Men Only.
Diabetes, Blight’s Disease and alt chronic af.
lections ot the genlto-uriDary system are cured
by HAGGARD’S SPECIFIC TABLF7TS.
They not only core bat invigorate and re¬
store. 1 box $1.00, 3 boxes $2.50. by mall. Ad
drest HAGGARD SPECIFIC COMPANY,
310 Norcross Building, Atlanta, Ga,