Newspaper Page Text
How to Ilead Sc«idi| I cttem.
One of th ■ puzzling tricks per¬
formed by so cftlied public mind-read¬
er#, or clairvoysnte, i# an extremely
simple deception. The performer,
standing on the stage, a#k« several
persons in the audience to write each a
sentence on a slip of paper and seal it
in an envelope.
Ot course, tho stationery is fur
nisbed and afterwards collected. One
of the audience is a confederate, and
writes a sentence agreed upon before¬
hand. When the assistant goes
through the house gathering up tho
envelopes, the confederate’# contribu¬
tion is carefully put where it will be
the last one of the lot to bo taken up.
The performer picks out an "envel¬
ope, and, after feeling of it, with much
ceremony pronounces the sentence
agreed upon, and the confederate in
the audience acknowledges that he
wrote it.
To confirm this, tho performer tears
open tho envelope and repeats tho
seutenee, aa though he found it on tho
inclosed paper, which is in reality an¬
other man’s sentence, which ho reads,
and then picking up another envelope
and fumbling it over, he calls out the
sentenco ho has just read.
The one who wrote it saysitisright,
the performer tears open the envelope,
reads what is in it, and proceeds in
that way through the lot.— Exchange.
Perfect Breeding.
Mama—“I hope you behaved like a
little lady while Mrs. Hightonc was
trying to entertain yon?”
Small Daughter—“Yes’m. I put
my hand over my month every time I
yawned .”—Good News.
(JoiiNcrvntivB IJirfo llodie«
Are which, those in diminutive organ*, the kidneys,
health Kpft-e of their Hirmll hi % *, perform in
a most important part in the mechan¬
ism of the system. Out of order they breed
dangerous IloaletterVi trouble, lie new their activity with
Hfomach Hitters, which prevents
the aorintiM atid of ten fatal diseased resulting
from their inaction. This sterling medicine*
moreover, remedies malarial, rheumatic and
dysjmpt hide io comp)aint h, and invigorates the
Mi system.
Coin the gold ot love into the currency of
deeds.
l)r. Kilmer’s ,s w a mi* - fto or onra*
ail Kidney and Bladder troubles
Pamphlet Laboratory ami Binghamton, Consultation free.
S. V
Some shepherds try the hardest to feed the
fattest sheep.
Always C«m»
Sour Indigestion, Stomach, Dyspepsia, Want of Had Appetite, Breath, Debility, Distress
After Eating, disordered and all stomach. evils arising It builds from a
weak or wifi up
from the flr»t dose, and a bottle or two
cure the worst cases, and insure result a good vigor¬ appe¬
tite, excellent digestion and In
ous health and buoyancy of spirits. There Is
no better way to insure good health and a
long life than to keep the stomach ri/ht.
Tyner's this- Dyspepsia TranijUlllxlng Remedy Is guaranteed After-Dinner to
do Tim Manufactured
Drink. by O. For Tyner, sale by Druggists.
C!. Atlanta.
Vou Don’t Huve to Swear Off,
Bays tho St. bonis Journal of Agriculture In
nil editorial about Ne-To-Bnc, tho famous to¬
bacco habit euro “Wo know of many cases
cured by No-To-Bac, one, a prominent St.
bouiB architect, smoked and chewod tor
twenty years: smell two boxes cured him so that
oven the of tobacco makes him sick.”
No-To-Bao sold nnd guaranteed by Drug¬
gists everywhere. No cure no pay. Book
free. Sterling Itemedy Co., New York or
Chicago.
Worse Tb hu Item.
Iiulitfi'slion think spoils have more lives than rum. Tint
you you ‘‘malaria" or “urip," or
HOinethlug worse. The troiil.Jois nil in the <] j -
ires live tract, Ripanm Tubules brinir n sort of
their Millenium with them. One gives relief, ami
habit uni USB keeps tho whole system in
tone, (let them of your druggist.
Mothers Who Use Parker’s Dinner Tonic
insist that it benefits more than other medi¬
cines for every form of distress.
A. M. “Hall’sCatarrh Priest, Druggist, She’byvllle, Ind.,
gays: (lure gives the best of
satisfaction. Can get plenty takes of testimonials,
as it cures every ono w ho it.” Druggists
sell it. 75c.
I believe I’iao’a Cure for Consumption saved
my boy’s life last summer. Mr . Ar.i.us
Douglass, LeRoy, Midi., Oet. 20, '04.
Notice.
I want every man and woman in t he United
States interested In the Opium and IVhi-ky
linliiis to have' my hook on those diseas s.
Address H. M. Woolley, Atlanta, Wa., Box3S1,
and one will he sent you free.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething, allays softens t he gums, reduces ittflam na¬
tion, pain, euros wind colie. 25n. a hot tl *
BBS
Dyspepsia
And distress after eating are cured by
the tonic, appetizing, blood purifying
effects of Hood’s
Si Sarsaparilla. Bead
this letter:
“ f am happy to
*5 write a low words
about tho good Uo°d’s
/Vtl Sarsaparilla has done
1 me.I was troubled with
^ dyspepsia. My food
s < EfSSkJMi dull, heavy feeling a
‘Since in
J$v 8 my Hold’s head. 1 sSpanim using
s my food no longer dis
'tresses mo at all and
my head has been relieved irom all dizzy
spells. I gladly recommend Hoods Sarsn
parilla for any troubled as I was,” HcaiEii
J. Clivelamd, ltoxbury, Vermont,
Hood’s Sarsaparilla
Is the Only
True Blood Purifier
Promin ently in tho public eye.
niJUU Dillc *53 euro hsbiiiwi constlpa*
O ■ ■ 1 lion. Price3oc. per b jx,
★ ASK YOUR DRUGGIST FOR &
★ The BEST ★
F^OOO
^Nursing Mothers, Infants/
CHILDREN
* JOHN CARLE & SONS. New York, *
AT CHICAGO
MONUMENT TO CONFEDERATE
DEAD IS UNVEILED.
Federal and Confederate Veterans
Join in the Services.
The confederate monument in Oak¬
land cemetery, Chicago, was dedicated
Thursday with probably the most im¬
pressive, elaborate and imposing cere¬
monies among the exercises set down
for decoration day in any part of the
Union.
ON TOE SITE OP CAMP DOUGLAS.
At Cottage Grove avenue and Thirty
fifth street, then in tho outskirts, but
now in tho heart of the city of Chica¬
go, a stockade was built during the
civil war and named Camp Douglas,
aud there many thousands of confeder¬
ate prisoners wore confined between
the years 1802 and 1865. The men
held there under the restraints which
befell captives of war had spent their
lives in the balmy climate of the sunny
south, and the rigors of a northern
winter told upon them severely.
As a consequence 6,000 of them were
liberated by death and wero buried in
Oakwood cemetery at Cottage Grove
avenue and Sixty-seventh street. It
was to the memory of these 6,000 who
died in a military prison in the ene¬
my’s country that the monument was
dedicated by their comradesand oppo¬
nents in arms, on the spot where they
wore bnried.
mt life
1 .
S—55 r»~4 -. » yr . » scwbP . e —bm xcu.n-.-ltZS'tZVWta 1 — r-.a'-jr-i r%ti J | . — w
f r r
CONFEnEIUTE StONPMRKf.
Erected Who Died to Memory Fort of Dougin* Confederate ihieagiO Prisoner#
at <
—
WITHOUT A PABALLKL.
It is tho first monument to oon fed¬
erate dead erected in the north and the
event history. was perhaps without a parallel
in It does not appear that
anywhere else on tho face of the globe,
within a period of thirty years after
the close of a bitterly fought war, the
vanquished have ever before erected a
monument to the memory of their
comrades in arms, in the heart of tho
victor’s territory. Espeoiullv has tho
sight never been witnessed of the vio
tors heartily joining the vanquished in
doing honor to the valor of the van¬
quished dead.
This dedication is the culmination
of a movement inaugurated by the
Confederate Association of Chicago.
It undertook to raise the necessary
funds for the erection of the monu¬
ment and General John C. Underwood,
a southern officer in command of the
northern divisions of the United Con¬
federate Veterans, was chosen to carry
the work forward. The fund started
with $1,500 from a lecture given in
Chicago by General Gordon of Geor¬
gia. Citizens of Georgia also cos,
trilmted $10,000 and subscriptions by
Confederate veterans and others in
the south brought the fund up to the
necessary amount. The monument
was three years under construction.
MAST DISTINGUISHED CONFEDERATES.
The largest assemblage of distin¬
guished Confederate veterans ever
seen in the north was one of the nota¬
ble features of the occasion. They
included Generals Gordon, Hampton,
Longstreet., Lee, Fitzhugh Lee, Harry
Hetb, S. G.. French, E. C. Walthall,
M. C. Butler, L. L. Lomax, M. J.
Wright, F. C. Armstrong, Eppa Hun
ton, Joseph O. Shelby, William H.
Payne, Fayette Hewitt, C. A. Evans
J °r ph
Nearly all , these distinguished f . . . . visi- . .
tors, accompanied together" by their wives and
companions with representa
Dves of the Confederate Association of
Washington, D. C., Camp Moultrie
Sons of Veterans, of Charleston, ’ S.C., ’
,lU( -__. ^ representative _ , delegations , , ,. from ,
Atlanta and other points south reach¬
ed the city Wednesday. They were
met at the depots by comrades in arms
who, preceded by them and by the
local reception committee, composed
of and Confederate veterans
and the leading professional and busi¬
ness men of the city with a suitable
escort were driven to their hotels.
Later they attended a matinee per¬
formance at a theatre. In the evening
they were welcomed to the city by
Mayor Swift, General Gordon re¬
sponding. This was followed by a
most brilliaut banquet at Kingsley’s
I during which toasts were proposed and
responded to in honor of the visiting
Confederate veterans.
LIBERTY BELL RANG IE THE DAY.
The ceremonies Thursday morning
began with tho ringing of the Colum¬
bian liberty bell, the firiug of a
national salute, then a carriage parade
of renowned northern and southern
generals which moved under military
escort to the l‘2th street depot, and
there took trains in waiting for Oak
wood cemetery, where the dedicatory
; ceremonies occurred.
The dedicatory ceremonies were
opened with prayer by Colonel Joseph
Desha Pickett, chaplain of the “Ken¬
tucky Orphan” brigade, Confederate
States of America.
The dedicatory address was delivered
by General Wade Hampton.
A memorial poem by Major Henry
Stanton, of Kentucky, was next, and
the literary portion of the day was
closed with an address by Right Rev.
Sam Fallows, bishop of the Reformed
Episcopal church, Chicago, late gene¬
ral of United States volunteers.
The ceremonies of consecrating the
guns and placing the floral decorations
followed and the exercises closed with
the firing of the three volleys over the
graves of the dead by the first regi¬
ment Illinois National Guard, ending
with bugle blast and “taps.”
The display of flowers on the graves
of the confederate and federal dead
was impressive and will long be re¬
membered.
THE KPWORTH LEAGUE
International Conference at Chatta¬
nooga, Tenn., Beginning June 27.
The second international conference
of the Epworth League is to be held
in Chattanooga June 27~30th.
The function of the Epworth League
in Methodist churches is similar to
that of the Christian Endeavor in the
Congregational and Presbyterian
churches. It is the Young People’s
society of Methodism.
Its object is to promote aud culti¬
vate the intelligence and piety of its
members, organize and employ them
in works of mercy and charity, and in
every possible service of usefulness in
the church and society.
The League was organized in Cleve¬
land, Ohio, May 12th, 1890.
The local organizations in the indi¬
vidual churches are called chapters.
Of these already organized and en¬
rolled, the number is nearly 15,000,
and the aggregate membership in this
one denomination is about 1,000,000
members. It has organizations in
Mexico, South America, England, Ire¬
land, Germany, Sweden, Norway and
Italy; also in Japan, China and India.
The session which will be held in
Chattanooga, will begin Jane 27, 1895,
and continue four days, will embrace
the Leagues of all theMethodisms of
the world.
The program is in the hands of the
general secretaries of the M. E. church,
the M. E. church, south, and the Can¬
adian Methodist church.
The general topic is “The Methodism
of tho Future.” Under this geueral
head will bo discussed many interest¬
ing and important topics.
There will also be department con¬
ferences daily for th© discussion of the
practical work of the League in its sev¬
eral departments.
Great leaders, with many men of
eminence, as well as a largo number
of the talented and promising young
workers of tho various Methodisms,
will take part, and will make the topics
of the highest interest,
Tho music will be a special feature
of tho conference. It will bo under
the direction of Prof. Rowland D.
WiiliamH, assisted by the Park sisters
of Boston, and a chorus of 50(1 v ices.
An immense chorus of children from
the public schools of Chattanooga will
also participate.
The regular conference meetings
will be held in the great tent capable
of seating 10,000 people.
The best and most extensive ar¬
rangements with the railroads have
been made, securing half rates from
almost every portion of tho country.
Excursions to the battlefields aud
points of interest have been provided
fur, as well as side trips to Mammoth
Cuvo and other points en route.
Chattanooga is expecting an attend¬
ance of at least 15,000 delegates, and
altogether tho Second International
Conference at Chattanooga promises
to be a most interesting occasion and a
very great success.
COTTON MANUFACTURING.
Tho Manufacturers’ Record Presents
statistics ou the industry.
The Special cottou mill edition of
The Manufacturers’ Jiecord.ol the pant
week, shows that tho amount of cupi
tal invested in southern cotton mills
861,100,000 *“ > < ! r ® : ^ 8 f l ^ ro m . m §21,900,1)00 1890 to $107,000,000 in 1880 and
at present, while about *12 000,000
:s
ing and projected. In 1880 the south
had 667,000 spindles,in 1891 1,700,000
spindles aud at the present time 3,000,
000 spindles, while the mills under
construction will add 500,000 spindles
more, or a total of 3,500,000 spindles,
thus doubling the entire cotton mill
business of the south since 1890. A
number of leading New England ex
perts give their views upon the cotton
manufacturing advantages of the south¬
ern states.
AT DES MOINES
Preparations Are Being Made for a
Silver Convention.
Arrangements for the big silver
meeting of June 5th in Des Moines,
la., are about completed. There will
be delegations from silver clubs at
Sioux City, Stuart, Charlton, Du¬
buque, Council Bluffs^ Marshalltown
and other places, Tho afternoon
meeting will be in the Youug Men’s
Christian Association auditorium and
in the evening Senator Teller, of Col¬
orado, will deliver nu address at the
opera house. General Warner, ol
Ohio, Joseph C. Sibley, of Pennsylva¬
nia, and other leaders will attend.
Durant to Be Tried July 22il.
Theodore Durant was arraigned be¬
Wednesday fore Judge Murphy at San Francisco
for the murder of Blanche
Lamont and Minnie Williams. He
pleaded not guiity. Both cnees were
set tor Julv 22d.
poYa \£p ia / All and are other cheaper inferior, powders made and
fi leave either acid or
Pure alkali in the food.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 10« WALL ST., NEW-YORK.
Hot Water.
A prominent physician has declared
that hot water is a woman's best friend.
It will cure dyspepsia if taken before
breakfast, and will ward off chills
when she comes in from the cold. It
will stop a cold if taken early in the
stage. It will relieve nervons headache
and give instant relief to tired and in¬
flamed eyes. It is most efficacious for
sprains and brumes and will frequently
stop the flow of blood from a wound.
It is a sovereign remedy for sleepless¬
ness and in conclusion, the doctor as¬
serts, “wrinkles flee from it and black
heads vanish before its constant use.”
Positive Proof.
Irate Merchant (pointing to ransack¬
ed safe)—I thought you said this safe
was burglar-proof!
Agent—Well, what more proof do
you want of burglars than that?
Silence is Golden.
Silence is only golden when you can
not think of a good answer. Every
singer in a quartot can give three good
reasons why the organization isn’t ab¬
solutely perfect.
A liKiipy Woman.
At last I am a well and happy woman atfain ;
thunks lo Me 1:1 fee's IVinn ot Oardni. 1 have
suffered for four yearn from womb trouble
ot the most horrible kind. Twelve year
nan I went to the Nan Antonio Hospital, where
they performed an operation, but it left n>e In
a worse state than ever. I went to Dr. Klnprx
ey and I)r. D. Y. Young, but they gave me
little relief. After spending $125.001 was not
aide to leave my bod, and mo-t of the time
snfferel pains to equal a thousand deaths. On
tho tenth of last October my friend Mrs. Ste¬
vens, advised me to try MeETee’s Wine of
Oardni. The first bottle did me good, and 1
trot more, and to-day 1 am a new woman; am
ulile to do all my cooking and house-work. 1
am running a boarding-house and doing all
tho work myself. I still use the Wine,, and
always keep it in the house—it saved my life.
Miss. M. .1. Meykus.
Appleby, Texas.
Iltudercorn* in a simple Remedy* Rut
it takes out corns, and what a consolation it
is! Makes walking 11 pleasure. 15 •.«! druggist .
«Y&ip®gs ■
&
«■
IIS
t- -TvV
65 re
ONB ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup and refreshing of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
to the taste, and acts
gently Liver and yet promptly Bowels, on the Kidneys,
cleanses the sys¬
tem aches effectually, and fevers dispels colds, head
and cures habitual
constipation. only Syrup of Figs is the
duceu, remedy pleasing of its the kind ever pro
to taste and ac
ccptable jts to and the stomach, prompt in
action truly beneficial in its
cftccts, prepared only f from tho most
boalth md agrcea]) e substances, its
rji°Llr t0 a l and ? quaHt made r-fr Jt ^ eDdi most :
P^lar remedy known.
f ( ale . 50
« “ or f * Q '
bottles by all leading drug
g»s«s. Any have reliable hand druggist will who
ma Y not it on pro
cure it promptly for any ono who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute,
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN FRANCISCO, CAL.
LOUISVILLE. KV. NEW VORK. Ill y.
0 \ Fairly jumped into success
Pearline. Right from the very start. Not¬
Si precedence withstanding all these hundreds of years of
behind that old-fashioned, back¬
Or ^ breaking Now, way of washing with soap, too.
£0 dreds why was it? Why is it that hun¬
of millions of packages of Pearline
s ru have washing-compound been do used in the was few years invented? since Just this
c Pearline your for washing and cleaning with
a month, and you’ll
see.
It takes away the rubbing, but with¬
out any risk of harm. That puts it
at the head of every known aid for
washing.
THE AMERICAN INDIAN.
There are 5,304 Indians in New York
state.
The Cherokecs of North Carolina
number 2,885.
The word Esquimaux means “Raw
Fish Eaters.”
The Indian reservations amount to
212,000 square miles.
There were 249,273 Indians in this
country at the last cousus.
All the American languages are sin¬
gularly lacking in abstract terms.
Only in Mexico, Central America and
Peru wero there laws or courts.
In all Spanish America the Indians
form the great mass of the population.
In Brazil there are said to be three
hundred languages and dialects spoken
by the Indians.
The great temple of the sun at Cuz¬
co, in Peru, was attended by four thou¬
sand priests.
No Indian tribe north of Mexico
bad domesticated any animal but the
dog.
Tho only trading Indians, at tho
time of the discovery, were the Huron
Iroquois.
The average height and weight of
Indians are no greater than of other
people.
At the coming of tho whites, tat¬
tooing was almost universal among tho
Indians.
There are few instances of full-blood¬
ed Indians eutcring tho learned pro¬
fessions.
Imported diseases, such as smallpox,
have been singularly fatal among tho
Iudians.
The pictures writing of the Mexicans
was a very complete system of record¬
ing events.
As a general thing, tho hands and
feet of Indian men are small and well
proportioned.
Many dictionaries of the Indian
tongue were made by the early French
aiiu Spanish monks.
The skin of the Indian is thinner
than that of either the white or the
negro, nnd more easily torn.
The mos: ancient Mexican monu¬
remarkable ments display elegant taste in art and
skill and execution.
The first attempt in this country to
reduce the Indian languages to a sys¬
tem was by Smith Barton.
Most of tho ancient mounds are
erected on the upper river terraces,
and may be 2,000 or 3,000 years old.
.
> „— < *f -J —,—. Stoves. Nodirt.no/ishes. You strike p
M ■ p 1 i| «| - match, the stove does tho rest.
Refrigerators ■ Prices Send Perfection, for low. catalocue-or the best made. .the’
ar with Sito-’C’-Ofi* mid Ilntigos. A No. 7 Cook Stove
30 pieces of furniture, tor $8.00,
i^r' ^i Jr ,.fc. ""S Stoyos. family Our Fumous Oil Range will do all the cooking for a large
m Mze at a cost of 5 cents a flay. Send for circulars.
Fuimps, Goods.
T\j/5T JL.JL JLSOtp Tiles building and write Grates and get at factory prices. prices. If you are
our
Anything you want In the House Furnishing Gooils, or for the Kitchen,send to
HDNNIG mi BELLIMTi C0„ Atlanta, Georg.
‘J ■
%
1 Hammar I COSTLESS » N t^ PA,ffrOR |«% Paints Guaranteed 5 year*.
E
1 ua! on cans of Ready Mixed Paint contain o.vu gallon of actual paint ahii one
gal .on Of OIL (VI, ere. Therefore, you pay for two cans two freights, two profits, tor onk
!’a Ion ot real Paint; also yon pav for the oil making the other gallon, at. Rea y Mixed
1 a 1 xt Prices. A ta.lou of Harnmar Paint equals two gallons of Ready Mixed Paint and
you what buy your Oil at iiaiirel prices. That’s why it is cheapest, besides you know tbeh
KIND of Oil your Palm is made of.
k'-r $ .’-Jf*" '• v
•
Avoid the Fly Nuisance.
Geranium plants in the open win¬
dows are said to keep flies from enter¬
ing. Another equally pleasant remedy
is suggested by a housekeeper who
said: “I buy 5 cents’ worth of oil of
lavender at the drug store and mix it
with the same quantity of water. Then
I put it in a common glass atomizer
and spray it around the rooms wherever
flies are apt to congregate, especially
in the diniDg room, where I sprinkle
it plentifully over the table linen.
The odor is especially disagreeable to
flies and they will never venture in its
neighborhood, though to most people
it has a peculiarly fresh and grateful
smell.”
Fate of Men Elocutionists.
The college men who are paying so
much attention to oratorical associa¬
tions are makiug a mistake. Oratory,
is simply elocution, and who elocution might have hsk,
ruined many a man
made an honest living. As soon as a
man learns to recite pieces at amateur
entertainments it it about as good as
; settled that he will become a reform
j or walking delegate or something else
j worthless. Elocution leads to public
speaking, and, ns a rule, public speak¬
ing leads to anarchy, loafing and ruin.
—Atchison Globe.
PROSPECTIVE MOTHERS
and those soon to
become mothers, .
should know that Dr. —
Pierce’s Favorite Pre*..:
scriptiou robs child¬
birth of its torturey.
and terrors, as well as 1
of its dangers to both . ,
mother and child, by
aiding paring nature in pre¬
the system for
parturition. There-, '
by “labor” and the
period of confine¬
ment the^sc-crii
[ I shortened. of abundance It also promotes of nourishment for
tion an
i the child.
Mrs. Dora A. Guthrie, of Oakley, Overton ‘Co.,
^‘“rite'mSptioTiw^ without suffering almost ndt ab$S$ dwth.
Stand on my feet ^
Now I do all my housework, washing, cooking,u'v
sewing and everything thau 1 for have my been family of six eight., I.
am stouter now Prescription is the in best years. take
Your * Favorite ’ sO.wUn to
before confinement, oral least it proved
me. I never suffered so little with any of my
children as I did with my last.” 'o; ! i;
0 TO AVOID THIN USB v
0 N TETTERINE
O \ rl 1 «r The cube only for the painless worst, and of hArmless EcRorak, .
w try I Tetter, Ringworm,ugly type rough patch-. •
n O B es on tlie face, ernated soalp.
.
s I ■ Ground itch, chafes, chaps, pim
X I . Poison from ivy or peu-rm oak.
f* In short ALL itches. 8end BOc.' in
i,u H stamps Savannah, or cash Ga., to for J. one T, box, Shuptrme, if your
1 * druggist don’t keep it.
And Notice farmers to small Mill Rtei
owning power: The finest and
most complete Saw Mill in existence ms. manu¬
factured by the ncEO.K H Ml ML,
350 Ave., Atlanta* <ii». Took.first
prize at World’s Fair at Chicago. All sizes, froth" 4 b.
u. Ligue up showing to the largest. improvements; Prices reduced. Sondforcata
Cora Mills, Baling new a'»o. of Portable
Presses and Turbine WateV Wheels.
Pulleys and Shafting and all kinds of mill suppLes.*
A We Sr>Iin|rirH|)ii» in
entirely any department is to-be given
free this summer to
on* boy and girl . in - every
county of this slate. App y
promptly to (GMirgin Buii
,ties’- College, Macon, Ga.
mm ' Cleanses HAIR PARKER’S cad beautifies BALSAM the ,h*ir.
Promotes a luxuriant' growth.
"Never Fails to Restore Gray
Hair to its Youthful Color.
Dures scalp diseases & hair tailing.
50c, and $1.00 at Druggist*
A. N. V. Twenty-three, ’95.
atafraffiTtSM EAILsT P
Best _ CURES WHERE Alt ELSE '
Cou»h Syrap. Tastes Good. Use 1
in time. Sow by Uraaglsts. ’ iS
L«gi B2S3 SIS or i