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A Golden Rule for English,
Auntie—“Do yon jind your lessons
hard?”
Little Nephew^—“Soine of them is;
tint spellin’ and pronunciation is
easy."
“Thoy are?”
“Yea’m. All you has to do ia to
pronounce words the way they isn’t
spelled, and spell ’em some way they
isn’t pronounced. ” — Street £ Smith’*
Good Xews.
Kept, His Promise.
“John,” said Aland, “didn’t yon
promise me that ou the day 1 became
your wife you’d give up smoking?”
“Yes, dear.”
“And now 1 find you puffing on a
cigar.
“Why not dear? I kept my promise.
I didn’t smoke a bit the day you be¬
came my wife.”— Truth.
In I)©rt» Water.
Like incautious ami weak swimmers are
those who incur the risk of chronic rheuma¬
tism by a neglect of safety. This can l>c in
medicine, • tired at the Hostel start ler's by Stomach that J»y* Hit preserving IMieu
ters.
HiatiMii may attack the mart. There is no
safety then. Forestall the chronic stage of
the malady by using the Bitters, which Is
equally eflltweirmsin malaria, dvspepnia, liver
compiaint, constipation aud kidney disorder.
they Promissory notes should lie picked when
mature.
Malaria cured and eradicated from the sys¬
tem by Brown’s Iron Bitters, which enriches
the blood, tones tho nerves, aids digestion.
Acts like a charm on persons in general! ill
health, giving new energy and strength.
To get the best effect of beer drink it out of
a sieve.
Jn Olden Time*
People overlooked the Importance of per
manently beneficial effects and were satisfied
with transient action, but now that it Is g en
erally know that Syrup of Figs will per ma¬
nently cure habitual constipation, woil in¬
formed people wiii not buy other laxatives,
which act for a time, but finally injure th«
system.
lung A short bank account generally makes a
face.
___ _ ____
For Dyspepsia, Indigestion and Stomach
disorders, use Brown's Iron Bitters—the Best
Tonic. It rebuilds splendid the Blood medicine and strengthens
the muscles. A for weak
and debilitated persons.
Don't let your courage nor your subscription
expire.
A LIT! SCHOOL.—The trustees of the North
Georgia Agricultural College are leaving no
stone unturned to niako that school second to
none in the South. double As a result, that the the attend¬
ance is more than of same
time last year. In addition to the regular
collegiate aud military departments, iliere
have been added this year departments In
Business, Music and Art. The same high
standard will lie maintained in the new de¬
partments as lias been in the old. The busi¬
ness course will be equal to that found any¬
where and at a fraction of the cost elsewhere.
Dahlonega, the location of the college, has
long been noted It an is one of the healthiest olieup place*
In the Month. also a very town to
live in. Board can bo obtained at from $9 to
$12.50 per month. In fact it offers an ideal
place for parents to send their children where
they will M away from the temptations to be
found full in Information. large cities. Address the president
for
Catarrh Cannot Be Cured
With local applications, a* t hey cannot reach
the scat of t ho disease. Catarrh Is a blood or
constitutional disease, and in order to euro
It you must take internal remedies. Hall’s
t iatarrh Cttro blood is taken and internally, surface. and acts Hall's di ■
reetly on tho mucous medicine. It
Catarrh Cure ia not of a tbo quack best physicians in this was
prescribed country for bv one aud is a regu lar prescription.
composed years, of tho best tonic* known,
It Is with tho best blood purifiers, actIn* com¬ di¬
bined Tho lierfeet
rectly on the mucous surfaces. ingredients is
combination of the wo results in eurjn* what
produces such wonderful ca¬
tarrh, Mend for testimonials free Toledo, O,
F. J. CttRsntr & <’o„ Props.,
Sold by druggists, price 75c.
Boeoham's Pills cure indigestion and consti¬
pation. Beeoham’s—no others. 23 cents a box.
DO YOU READ
The testimonials pnblished in behalf of Hood’t
Sarsaparilla. They are reliable and a*
worthy of confidence as if they came front
your most trusted neighbor. They proT«
Hood’s 5 *;^ Cures
I yyv •> g
\\ 55?
\Ym Cripple the outlook lor for Life
our boy who was seised
with hip disease. We read of a case cured by
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
and when we liad given him a* bottle and a
half, the sores entirely healed up. He limps a
little but is in the beat of health, *oes to
sehooi, runs and plays just as lively as auy of
the boys.” Isa Ac W. Pe ask, Conuersville, lud.
Hood’s Pills cure nausea, sick headache.
YO“ r AND YOUR
Strength & rl BUILT ’ ndown up and system
Renewed r* ,
reorganized.
A few bottles of S. S. S.
will do it. If you are
ed. languid troubled with a depress¬
blood is not right, feeling, and and needs lack purifying. of energy, your
ss.s. Will Ore uglily dear away all jm
I purities and impart new vigor and
- life to the whole system.
‘‘I have used your medicine often for the past
eight best years, and feel safe in saying that it is the
general health restorer GIBSON, in the world.”
V. H. BatesvUle, Ark.
Our Treatise on Blood and Skin diseases mailed free:
SWIFT SPECIFIC COMPANY. Atlanta, G«.
The Best for Either Heating or Oookinsr,
Excel in Style, Comfort and Durability,
g P KINDS AND SIZES. EVERY ONB
WARRANTED ASaikbt defects.
ASK YOUR STOVE DEALER
Vo shew dealer you SHEPPARD'S LATEST CATALOGUE.
JLf no near you write to
ISAAC A. SHEPPARD A CO..
Baltimore, mo. tours.
iMaf st lUhvrActvHsas it tbs
m w
L> IMS -4 y'
-m 3. iO wxm m
1
MKAStREMKNT OF HAT IX A STACK.
Hay settles in the stack quite slowly
on account of the elasticity of the
grass stems. It is a matter of guess
work wholly how much it may settle,
but in a month it may settle one-tenth
in the height of the stack and more
slowly after until it stops. Now wiil hay
stacked twenty-four hours only
weigh more than a ton for 1000 cubic
feet; after a month the weight of a ton
will be about 900 cubic feet!—New
York Times.
Mrt.Es FOB Fa KM wobk.
The mule is used much more than
the horse in the Houth, probably in
part because Southern laborers arc not
to be trusted with the more spirited
and valuable animal. A Southern
planter mentions as advantages of
mules over horses: Their feet
smaller, so they injure the crops less
when working in them, and can be
used in closer rows than horses; they
are less liable to disease, are better
feeders, being less fastidious as to
what they eat, endure hardship better,
are steadier not so easily injured and are
to work at, the plow. The
experience of most Northern farmers
with mules is that, however serviceable
for work on the farm, it is less pleas¬
ant and less safe to work among them.
Good horses are none the worse for
the farm, because they require better
care than the mules will pilt up with.
—Boston Cultivator.
y/.-.T-,-.'-- RAISING CALVES,
A calf to each eow can be raised on
skim milk and a little additional food.
A calf may be fed skim milk when one
week old, w ith the addition of one gill
of boiled flaxseed, increasing this ra¬
tion gradually to a pint per day when
four weeks old, and then adding fine
middlings or corn and oats ground to¬
gether, or a pint to one quart of oats
ungrouiul.
Flaxseed gruel, with plenty of skim
milk, will produce a very fine grow th,
leaving the calf as mellow to the t: • -U
as if sucking the cow. A calf two
months old will gain three pounds per
day on this ration. Tho oil taken off
in the cream can be replaced for one
fifth of the money value of the cream.
Butter dairymen may raise a calf to
each cow upon the skim milk and a
little additional food as indicated, and
get one-fourth to one-third as much
profit, out of the butter. Helling but¬
ter robs tho land of nothing valuable
—only carbon, which has no manural
value.—Mirror and Farmer.
THE EXCELLENT LIMA BEAN.
The Lima bean is the best flavored
and largest variety of the bean family,
yet it is not raised for the market in
any large quantities on account of the
trouble and expense of getting poles
for them. The villager has to lmy
poles for what he plants, end the sum
expended for them often exceeds the
income from the vines. Those farmers
who have timber on their land are gen¬
erally too busy, or think they are, to
bother with pole, beans, so they plant
some of the bush varieties that are not
half so good in flavor aud yield very
poorly. For the benefit of those who
like Lima beans and do not raise them
because of the trouble of providing
with poles, we give the following plan
of ti trellis, which answers every pur¬
pose fully «« well as the old method:
If thoy ure to be raised on a large
scale two heavy posts may be set at in¬
tervals of forty feet, the full length of
the vow, being sure to brace the end
ones. Then plain wire is stretched
from post, to post. As the vines are
very heavy, it is best to strengthen it
by putting two or three pieces of ordi¬
nary three-inch board. Then loop a
strand of package twine from the top
wire to the lower one. These twines
should be about sixteen inches apart.
Very little trouble is experienced in
making the vines follow the wires, and
no tying is necessary. This trellis will
last many years, and we think it is a
great improvement over the poles.—
American Farmer.
PLANTING THE GRAVE.
Experienced grapemen everywhere
urge deep planting and it is a lesson
one must learn sooner or later. We
may think it an absurd thing to plant
a vine a foot and a half or two feet
deep, but unless we do we may as well
let grapes alone.
Nearly all planters recommend at
least the former depth, and it is a cus¬
tom followed in the oldest grape
eouutries. Not only is it an all hut
universal method, but in some of the
Rhine countries all surface roots are
cut off by thrusting the spade down
alongside the vine, so compelling the
plant to find its entire sustenance in
the subsoil.
Without a deep aud thorough pre¬
paration of the soil our vines will be
both short lived and unproductive.
Drainage must be.secured if necessary,
for a grape will not endure wet feet,
nor will fertilizing the subsoil be of
the least use so long as water remains
in it.
How to enrich the whole soil to the
depth of at least one foot is, in the
vineyard, an important matter. It pro"- may
possibly be done otherwise, but to
mote a good healthy growth of vine
and fruit, there is to my mind no way at
all equal to ploughing in good com¬
post, either of muck well dried out or
of parings of low rich lauds, including
wire grass, bushes, vines, all the small
growth. Such a compost made up
with hardwood ashes and a sprinkling
of bone, distributed all through the
soil by repeated ploughings, will give
yon wood and fruit,
Now, in preparing to plant, throw
out wide, open furrows, or dig boles at
least three feet wide and a foot and a
half deep, and put in a generous sup*
ply—a bushel or more—of the same
compost. Mix it with the best surface
sod, and in that plant. You cannot
fid up at first; let the upper roots be
covered three or four inches, and for
the rest successive hoeings as the vines
grow will suffice, and by the close of
season the ground will be
“Welled up.
Lon t forget to get the vines down,
d° wn near the bottom of the prepared
holeB > for most of the failures in grape
” rowiu g result from surface prepara
tio “ and “hftUow planting.—Florida
•Agriculturist,
POOR PASTURES.
Good pasturage is essential to sue
cessful dairy fanning in most sections
of New England. On a large propor¬
tion of the farina these pastures are
not and very many of them canuot be
cultivated, and, as a consequence, these
that are stocked with cows are slowly
being depleted of their original fertil¬
ity, and brush and weeds _ take the
place of nutritious grasses.
A short time since the writer passed
through a hilly town where sheep rais¬
ing was formerly the leading farming
industry, but after the collapse of the
Merino boom the farmers changed from
sheep raising to dairying, and for the
past ten or twelvo years cheese making
has been their specialty. For a few
years this line of farming was profit¬
able. The pastures furnished an abun¬
dance of feed, and the cows gave a
good flow of milk with small cost. But
things have changed. Many of the
pastures now are overgrown with weeds
and hushes, and produce but little
good feed. Farmers are obliged to
buy largo quantities of grain to keep
up the flow of milk through the sum¬
mer months. The grain bills absorb
the profits and keep tho farmers in
financial straits all of the time. The
only practicable way out is to try sheep
raising again for a few years.
Last spring I turned a flock of sheep
into a pasture that was so overrun with
weeds aud daisies as to furnish but
little feed for cattle. To-day not a
weed or a daisy is to be seen, and !the
sheep and lambs which are long wool jod,
Costwold and Leicester, have f «lone
finely. In two or three years I pxpect
the pasture will be entirely frtw from
weeds and daisies and ready for! cattle
again. A good flock of sheeyi well
cared for should net the owner lambsi aw least
$4.50 per head in wool and rmiy and
with special care much more be
realized; allowing fifty cents per r, tul
for grain would give you a rei" i,
$4 per head of cash in hand. In tne
town referred to the annual average
receipts for the milk of the cows at the
cheese factory is about $30 per cow
and from this must be subtracted the
grain feed.—New England Farmer.
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES.
A good mulch keeps down weeds.
Mixed grasses mako the best pasture.
Milk as quickly and quietly as poe<
sible.
The curl in the pig’s tail is a sign ol
health.
Small eaters are almost always pool
milkers.
Large crops are not always the most
profitable ones. •
Liquid manure will force crops to a
rapid maturity.
The best quality of meat comes from
the pig, not the hog.
Bulky food should always he fed
with concentrated food.
Pigs in the orchard will consume
wormy fruit and insects.
Change the quarters and pasture ol
your sheep occasionally.
Too much wood is a prolific cause of
the non-fruitage of trees.
A creamery should not be started on
less than three hundred cows.
Oil meal is a concentrated food and
should be given in moderation.
The more flowers are picked, the
more flowers the plant will bear.
Raspberries, with the exception of
Blackcaps, can be planted in the fall.
Mulched tomatoes produce larger
crops than those that are not mulched.
A little extra work in mellowing the
soil will give a larger profit when the
crop is harvested.
Market gardeners are preparing the
laud and sowing turnips and lettuce
for tho late market.
Those kinds of cabbage which have
firm, close heads are the least injured
by the cabbage worm.
Turnips will produce larger crops
when weeded, but they will do well on
the average ground if not cultivated.
The loss by shrinkage of vegetables
stored in cellars is very great; some
claim it to be as high as forty per
cent.
To get the, best results with rasp¬
berries, cut out old wood and all weak
stalks as Boons as the bearing season is
over.
After the potato vines have died
down, the bugs that were ou them are
apt to attack the other plants,especial¬
ly the eggplants, but they can be killed
by applying Paris green.
HOUSEHOLD AFFAIRS.
BAKED CHICIELV.
An appetizing way to cook chicken
is to cut it in pieces, as if for a fricas
■ ■ Dip the pieces in beaten egg and
then in tine bread cnrnbf.. Season
with salt, pepper and minced parsley.
Put them in the/'rippingpan witlibits
of butter over tm/n, said a little water
in the pan. Bake slowly until they are.
done. Put the chicken upon a hot
disli, make a rich gravy of the con¬
tents of the pan and pour over them.
Garnish the dish with parsley.— Boston
Cultivator.
t
n.Aix waffles. r
One quart of sifted flour, two ounces
of butter, one teaspoonful of salt, one
half cup of yeast, or half a compressed
cake, three eggs, one and one-half
pints of milk. P.ub the butter into
the flour, add the salt, then the milk,
which should be scalded and cooled,
and then the yeast. Beat thoroughly
and continuously for three minutes;
cover and stand in a warm plaee for
two hours or until very light. Then
beat the eggs separately, add to tho
batter first the yolks and then the
whites; let stand fifteen minutes.
Have the waffle iron gradually and
thoroughly heated. Dip a small brush
in melted suet and brush the iron
until every part is well greased. Pour
the batter into a pitcher so that yon
may fill the iron quickly. Open the
iron, pour the batter from tho pitcher
into the iron until you have covered
the elevations, close the iron quickly
and turn it over. Bake about two
minutes or until a nice brown, then re¬
move them carefully, place on a hot
dish and serve quickly.—New York
World.
DELICTOVS SUOAB COOKIES.
Delicious sugar cookies that are so
rich that they will keep some time are
made by beating a cupful of butter
and two of sugar to a cream. Beat
the yolks of four eggs until light, and
add them to the butter and sugar,
thon add the beaten whites. Mix
thoroughly and quickly, and add just
enough flour to make a stiff paste.
Boll out as thin as possible without
breaking, cut and bake in a moderate
oven. Cookies are more tempting
when baked a delicate brown than
when "white. .Tumbles made with sour
cream are also excellent. Cream a cup¬
ful of butter with two of sugar, and
add a cupful of sour cream to which »
teaspoonful of soda, dissolved in a lit¬
tle hot water, has been added. Sep¬
arate tho yolks and whites of two eggs,
beat both until light, then mix them,
and add to the other ingredients. Add
enough flour to make as soft a paste as
can bo rolled, not a particle more.
Roll as thin as you can without break¬
ing and bake in a hot oven. The
grated rind of a lemon added to either
will improve the flavor.—New York
Tost.
f
no Tor? know?
Do you know that bread crumbs
cleanse silk gowns?
That ammonia will clean and bright¬
en carpets?
That a heated bag of salt will relieve
neuralgia?
That salt will kill weeds if applied
in quantities?
That the pineapple is a valuable aid
to digestion?
That the herb tansy is a sure pre¬
ventive of moths?
That the best dish cloths are made
from grass toweling?
That salt and water is the best anti¬
dote for a mosquito bite?
That sweet clover has the reputation
of being abhorred, by flies?
That salt as a tooth powder is better
than almost any dentifrice?
That coffee and tea stains are re¬
moved by boiling hot water?
That the best way to polish window
glass is with a piece of chamois?
That white goatskin rugs can be
cleaned by washing, or with naphtha?
That common dry salt cleans marble
thoroughly without injuring the sur¬
face?
That nothing made with sugar, eggs
and milk should reach the boiling
point?*
That oilcloths last much longer if
a thin coat of varnish is applied once
a year?
That flowers keep longer if cut with
a knife aud scissors than they do if
picked?
That articles of plate which are not
in daily use should be put away in
green baize?
That white of egg will remove a fish¬
bone from the throat, if beaten ami
given at once?
That two or three geranium leaves
added to crab-apple jelly will give it a
delicious flavor?
That a few pieces of beeswax put up
with silk or woolen goods prevent them
turning yellow?
That berry stains on damask will dis¬
appear if soaked in milk before send¬
ing to the laundry?
That inkstains can be removed by
dipping the spot in buttermilk and
rinsing in clear water?
That a pinch of cream of tartar put
in with the whites of eggs when being
beaten will make tkemstiffer?
That if vaseline or butter be ap¬
plied to the skin immediately after a
blow of any kind there will be no dis¬
coloration?
That a piece of tallow wrapped in
t issue paper and laid with furs or other
garments will prevent the ravages pf
moths?
Silken fabrics should never bo
kept folded in white paper. The
chloride of lime which is used to bleach
the paper causes a chemical change»in
the silk, and injures the color, V.
! SHOULD or be used wher- ■
« has
| ever yeast .
koVal served Yeast fermentation heretofore. acts % bv ‘ ' 4 ,
® m Baking and the '
destruction of ■
Powder, part of the .
gluten of ‘
Y Absolutely the flour to pro- ■
Pure. duce the leavening gas. Royal ,
Baking Powder, through the action ;
of its ingredients upon each other in the loaf while •
’ baking, itself produces the necessary gas and leaves the ,
r wholesome properties of the flour unimpaired.
It is not possible with any other leavening agent
to make such wholesome and delicious bread, biscuit,
i rolls, cake, pastry, griddle-cakes, doughnuts, etc.
* ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Stronger Than the Eye.
The massive six-foot reflector in the
Lord Rosso telescope at Paraontown,
Ireland, is just ly considered one of the
modern wonders of the world. This
gigantic reflector, the first that ever
solved the problem of the Nebula of
Orion, is set in the end of a 55-foot
wooden tube held together by iron
bands. Although it weighs a fraction
over four tons, it is so sensitive that
the pressure of the hand upon the
hock will produce distortion in the
reflected image of a star. Compared
with the human eye, this monster re¬
flector is ns 130,000 to 1. It has a
penetrating power of 500 aud can re¬
veal stars so remote from our earth
that it would require (50,000 years for
their light to reach us, and yet light
travels at tho unthinkable speed of
192,500 miles per second.— St. Louis
Re-public.
Dust Settlers.
With a little care the dirtiest car¬
pet can be swept without raising
much dust by placing outside the door
of the room to be swept a pail of clear,
cold water. Wet your broom, knock
it against the side of the bucket to
get out all the drops, sweep a couple
of yards and rinse off the broom again.
Continue this until you have gone
over the entire surface. If the carpets
is very much soiled, the water should
he changed several times, Slightly
moistened Indian meal is also used by
the oldest housewives. Snow, if not
allowed to melt, is also excellent as a
dust settler.— Exchange.
Blessing in Disguise.
Bad Boy (gleefully)—“‘I had the
earache this morniu.’ ”
Good Boy—“What good is that?”
Bad Boy—“Mo mother put cotton
in me ears, an’ now I don’t hear ’er
when she calls. ”
Safe Until Spring.
He—“I am going west to seek my
fortune. Will you wait for me?”
She—“Indeed I will. I’ll wait all
winter.”— Street & Smith's Good Keivs.
“German
Two Syrup” bottles of German
cured of Hemorrhage Syrup
me of the
Lungs when other remedies failed.
I am a married man and, thirty-six
years of age, and live with my wife
and two little girls at Durham, Mo.
I have stated this brief and plain so
that all may understand. My case
was a bad one, and I shall be glad
to tell anyone about it who will
write me. Philip L. Schenck, P.
O. Box45, April 25, 1S90. No man
could ask a more honorable, busi¬
ness-like statement.
Will You Marry Soon?
If so, you are obliged to have a solid
18 karat gold ring. You will want to
feet sure that it IS 18 karat, pure
and genuine. Write to us for our
catalogue of wedding rings.
J. P. STEVENS & BRO., Jewelers,
ATLANTA. GA.
Unlike the Dutch Process
No Alkalies
— OR —
Other Chemicals
are U9ed in tbs
preparation of
W. BAKER & CO.’S
;• ■ reakfastCocoa
tehich is absolutely
pure and soluble.
\ ! ] P Mc'Jt* h the. has strength ttwr? than of Cocoa three mixed times
- m J|\rith Sugar, Starch, and is Arrowroot far more eco¬ or
nomical, costing _ less than
one cent a cup.
It is delicious, nourishing, and easily
DIGESTED. _
Sold by Grocers everywhers.
W. BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mau.
I I 0
Do Not Be
With Pastes. Enamels and Paints which stain the
hands. Injure the Iron and burn red. a
The Rising Sun Stove Polish Is Brilliant, Odor¬
less, Durable, and the consumer paw for no tin
or glass package with every purchase.
A Household Necessity.
No household should be without a
tightly corked bottle of boric acid in
powdered and absorbent cotton. When
a enf, wound, seatch or sore of auy
kind is to he attended to, put some
cold boiled witter into a cup and add
boric acid until tho water will dissolve
no more, and a thick layer Wash remains
undissolved in the bottom. first
your own hands in hot water and oas
tile soap, and then tho wound, after
which sponge it off with a wad of cot¬
ton dipped in the solution and tie up
in clean linen wet with it. This will
allay the pain and throbbing, and un¬
less it is very severe will heal it in 24
hours. —Excha nr/e.
On some railroads the ears are pro¬
vided by tho Bible society and other
religious organizations with Bibles
that are kept in racks, and curiously
enough the racks are systematically
robbed.
Old Time
Methods
of treating
Co Ids and
Coughs ivere IHL_ m
based on the
idea of sup- __J
pression. know We (ifL
now
that “feeding a
cold” is good doctrine.
Scotfs Emulsion
of cod-liver oil with hypo
phosphites, a rich fat-food,
cures the most stubborn
cough cines when ordinary medi¬
have failed. Pleasant
to take; easy to digest.
_Proparpd by ocott k Bowno. N. Y j l ‘ l ,Al] ||| druggl«ts.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS
WITH
THOMSON'S Sf!
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS.
So tools required. Only a hammer needed to drlv*
and c inch th< m easily and quickly, leav.ng tiie clinch
abso'utely leather smooth. Requiring no lioe to be made «a
the nor nurr (or the Rivets. Their are stron
toizEii and durable. Millions now in use.
lencths, uniform -r assorted, put un lu boxo
Ash your dealer lor them, or send 40c. lu
stumps for a box ol lOd, assorted size*. Maa’td by
JUDSON L THOMSON MFG. CO.,
WALTHAM. MASS.
GRAND CLEARANCE SALE OF
2ND-HAND BICYCLES.
To make
room f o r
new stock.
\viY9w Pneumatic
tired Saie
lies (92 and
93 models),
from $30 to
mm ///,, 11 cash. $90, spot Ail
in t hor
pair and condition. — ”*■ ” ough re-
23 60 prime Prices reduced f r Dill
to per cent. Send two-cent stamp for
price list Lowry and particulars. Hardware Bicycle Depart¬
ment Co., E. P. Chal
fant. Man iger, 38 Peachtree St. Atlanta, Ga.
Ian Indigestion, ideal family Biliousness* medicine:
■ For Constipation*
-Headache, Complexion. Offensive Bad 2
f | and all disorders of the Stomach, Breath, 1 *
fact = | Liver digestion genUy^?pro5®^. and follows Bowels, their use. L Fe?feet Sold ; mm 11
? by druggist s or sent by mail. Box
C = (6 For rials), free 75c. samples-address package (4 boxes), $2. __ 2
|_ B1PAKB CHEMICAL CO., New ouaBiuuaiumai York. |
ksiui«iti.iaB:n;iaabiuHitu:>HiiimaiM'haimt;aai!::-Hi
a money-maker™*agents Joaialt
•‘SAMANTHA Allen'sWHe's New Book.
at Hi* WOItLD’S FAIR,”
large 6vo„ nearly *30 pace;; over lw Illustrations ov
deGritnm; 500.CM) copies sure to be sol ; Cloth,$2.50;
Half Russia, ,4.00. Agents wanted now. Apply to
Funk & Wagnails Co.. Pub..18-20 Astor Pi., NewYork
For Xngieside Diseases of Women. Scientific JE&etreat.
treatment and
cures guaranteed. Elegant apart ments for ladies be
fore and during confinement. Address The Resi¬
dent Physician. *1-72 Baxter Court, Nashville, Tenia,
I A CENTS'feofEe’s'SoUHNaT] itUI address “ Agents’
■ B M H year Directory.” on ami Our in tne biiMlielso*
D. Campbell, patrons X 933. get Boviscou, lad.
mail. Tnr it. T.
C A W C E R Cured Permanently
NO KNIFE. NO POISON, NO PLASTE1G
JKO. B. HARRIS, FortP.iyne,
I
' PtSO’S CURE FOR
Conanmptlvea and people
who have weak tongs or Asth¬
ma, should nse Piso’s Care for
Consumption. It has eared
thousand*, ft has not injur¬
ed one. It is not bad to take,
it. ia the best cough syrup.
Sold everywhere. »5e.
CONSUMPTION,.
A. N. U. Forti-foar, ’£&