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^-] ie n th? yellow flag 1 of quarantine
Lted over a dwelling it means disease
[danger. So when the yellow flag
n the face—when the cheek is sallow
a e c ]ear white of the eye is dyed
-there is danger. It is liver
it;, The liver is one of the most im-
• organs of the body. On the
“ discharge of its functions depend
health and happiness. When the
,jls of its duty, poisons at once be-
' generate, and other organs of the
l,ecome involved. Never neglect
■ if you value health. If yon are
from liver trouble, begin at
of Atbr’s Pills and you will
ompt relief and permanent cure.
treehmed by liver tremble that
ttarceiy lift my head. While in
tfiuiition I began the um qf Ayer’s
and find*almost immediate benefit
’ , P / ! their use until I was cured oj
ing
P: *-
jinue<^ their
of
H. R. W. BENTLEY,
Towner, N. D.
Mo CStozscea
Wfth Yous* LSvor
Very Birdlike.
iyou believe in the adage,
| have wing3?’ ”
” replied the man who is
by the trusts; “but that
[iprevent their being cooped
Nome man now and then.”—
ington Star.
isistent pain in the back is in-
of disorder in the kidneys,
k in these organs are so rapid
Lily in their progress they
I not be neglected for a single
Dr. J. H. McLean’s Liver and
[Balm has an established repu-
gamoug medical men for curing
-eases. It has in many cases
[about relief and cure after
Ming physician has exhausted
farces. Price $1.00 a bottle
M. C. Brown & Co.
and Neuralgia cured by Dr.
PILLS. “One cent a dose."
e Devil
|the author of
lSE.
iUFFERING,
DEATH.
Brown's METAPHYSICAL
tY kills the root of all Dis-
|Qiree-folil absorption of mois-
f<h‘ng to God’s plan, through
[of the head, (eyes, ears and
Drains and Sewers from
isnk
Hero Hobson.
The young men of the country
are specially interested m Lieu
tenant Hobson, the “Hero of San
tiago,” just at this time, and a
glance at his record before he sank
the Merrimac, showing the kind of
stuff of w hich heroes are made will
interest them. A Chicago paper
has gone to considerable trouble
to gather the facts about his earlier
history. From this compilation
we learn that Hobson was the
youngest man but one of his class
at Aunapolis. He was boycotted
by his whole class. They called
him ‘The Tin Saint,* and ‘Parson
Hobson.’ He graduated at the
head ,of his class. ijeffcfeei*
smokes nor drinks. He is devout-
ly religious. He prayed on the
deck of the Merimac. He is full
of ideas. He is the only American
who went to Paris and neyer went
to the Moulin Rouge. His motto,
‘To do justly; to love mercy; to
walk humbly with thy God.*
There was a good deal of the Stone
wall Jackson, evidently, in his
makeup.
As a young man in his native
town he was among the most pop
ular. To Annapolis he carried the
same personal magnetism and was
the idol of his mates “until duty
slipped in and caused him to re
port some of them to higher offi
cials.” This brought about the
“boycott,” which has been noted,
and which lasted nearly three
years. “Many times his class
mates endeavored to heal the
breach, but he refused until the
time came for graduation, when he
forgave and parted with them as a
friend.” The personal school
through which the young man
passed, says his historian, “was
probably one of the hardest that
ever beset a man with a lively
sense of duty.” He owed his
troubles, as he owes his success
and fame, to his high ideal of duty.
“It is evident,” says the historian
again, “that the young man who
patterns after him will have,'to-
walk a straight and narrow p&th.'*
This is a brief, but an instruct
ive biography, and one worthy the
consideration of any young man.
Hobson was a hero in the dis
charge of the every day duties of
life. The jeers and taunts and
final boycott by his classmates he
no doubt dreaded more than he
did Spanish shot and shell when
he steered the Merrimac into San
tiago neck, but in each case he did
only what he considered his duty,
regardless of consequences. Hob
son w r as a hero before he entered
that “mmith of hell” at Santiago.
He was a young man who knew
his duty, and knowing it, did it.
Crippled by
Rheumatism.
Those who have Rheumatism find
themselves growing steadily worse all
the while. One reason of this is that
the remedies prescribed by the doctors
contain mercury and potash, which ul
timately intensify the disease by caus
ing the joints to swell and stiffen,
producing a severe aching of the bones.
8. S. S. has been curing Rheumatism
for twenty years—-even the worst cases
which seemed almost incurable.
C*pt. 0.2. Hashes, the popular railroad
conductor, of Columbia, S. G„ hart an -experi
ence with Rheumatism which convinced him
th a t there is only one
Cure for that painful dis
ease. He says: “I was a
great sufferer freon mus
cular Rheumatism for
two years. -X could get
ho permanent relief
from any. medicine nre-
■- Scribed Ug njy physielan.
. I took about a dozen bot
tles of your -A. 8. S., and
•mow l am as well as I
erer was lnmy life. Iam
-sure that yonr medicine
eur&d me, and 1 would
recommend it to any one ’
suffering from any blood disease.
Everybody knows that Rheumatism
Is it diseased state of the blood, and
only a blood remedy is the only proper
treatment, but a remedy containing
potash and mercury only aggravates
the trouble. "• • !
being Purely Vegetable, goes direct to
the very cause of the disease and a per
manent cure always results. It is the
only blood remedy guaranteed to con
tain no potash, mercury or other dan
gerous minerals.
% Books mailed free by Swift Specific
Company, Atlanta, Georgia.
HOW SHE DID IT.
—No 1
Celebrated
“Poor
Luxu-
3. Un-
Opals and Peacock Feathers.
These are certainly the days of short
, , shrift with superstitions. Opals have
r,. S T^.nR health pr°-i beconl e 0 neof the most fashionable o<
stones, the widely spread and long ex
isting idea that it was ominous to own
them even, much less wear them, hav
ing quite passed away. An advantage
possessed by these gems over all others
is that they cannot be imitated. A paste
or any other sort of falsified opal dce3
not exist. With the passing of the opal
bogie has gone, too, the ban under
which peacock feathers have long lain.
Decorators delight in the rich colorings
of these plumes and have done much by
their persistent use of them in carrying
out effects, to do away with the non
sensical belief that they are unlucky U*
have about.
Paioids toe laws and priuei-
' i h vsjcal Discovery;
- of God for protect-
taming the human body and
the . a .uster Diseases. It is
■ ' ieat ' ,r the people.
I'viJ aft them from the ruts
.1 darkness.
ApanrsiCAi.
leet. New York
ffehed nearly Forty Year
DIVERSITY,
pecial Notice!
■ Ve y° u taken a bad Cough, Cold or LaGrippe?
}om -after from Habitual Constipation?
^"° 11 disordered Liver or Heart Trouble?
y i a languid, lazy feeling, with Headache?
’ ’’ lave Fever of any kind?
L. JL. L.
ar’s Lemon Laxative
to your case of any remedy you can find. While
JQ * ias been on the market a very short time, hundreds
tamed by taking it. If you have not tried it
Hoior let us knew your address and we will eheer_
504 ONE sample bottle FREE.
U1 b© without his valuable
fflrl Cashier's Mind Reading Methods oi
Making Change.
The girl cashier of a Madison street
rosfcaurant was for three weeks believed
by one of the customers to be a lineal
descendant of Morgan le Fay and to
have some of the feraily traits of Heller,
the second sight magician, for she
seemed to know by intuition or instinct
or something else what was the price of
the meal he had consumed and alsd just
the amount of money in his hand when
he approached to pay. He first noticed
that when he presented a 85 cent check
she immediately laid upon the rubber
mat a dime and a nickel which she had
been holding for change.
“How, ” this man inquired of him
self, “did she know that 15 cents would
be the correct change! There was no
earthly way for her to tell what money
I was going to offer her either. How
.did she come to have the exact change
ready without a second’s delay or with
out having to go to the cash register for
it?’’ He could not answer to his own
satisfaction.
The next day he bought a 45 cent
meal, and she promptly laid a niclxle
before him, the 5 cent piece being the
only coin she held in her hand. It was
the correct amount, as he gave her a
half dollar. He experimented several
times afterward and at last appealed to
her for information.
“Why,” she said, “didn’t you ever
notice the tint of yonr check?” When I
see you coming 20 feet away, I know
by the slate colored check that you have
eaten 20 cents’ worth. If yon have a
red ticket, that warns me that you want
to pay for a two bit meal. A blue one
means 30 cents. This yellow one is, of
course, for 40 cents. The amount is
printed upon the check, but the color
is my warning. ”
“Yes,” said the other, somewhat re
lieved, “that seems easy. But still my
money is not of different colors. How
do yon know what change to have
ready? That’s mind reading, sure.”
“Not at all. When you come with a
quarter ticket, you will usually give me
the exact change or half a dollar. I
have a quarter ready for you in my left
hand in case yon give me a half. Sup
pose your ticket is a 35 cent one; you’ll
either give me the correct amount or a
half dollar—or perhaps a dollar. With
15 cents in one hand and 50 cents in
the other I’m ready for any demonstra
tion almost. ”—Chicago Record.
No humane person will expect a
horse to work against a sore shoulder,
nor to rest quietly under galling har
ness or saddle. When these troubles
appear the proper method is to remove
the cause of the sore and apply Dr. J.
H. McLean’s Volcanic Oil Liniment.
It is a superior remedy for galls and
sores,chafes and burns on animal flesh.
Price 25c, 50c and $1.00 a bottle. For
sale by M. C. Brown & Co.
No family, especially
remedv.
Lamar &
Macau, Georgia.
Sons
The Woman In Wbive.
Here is one of Nugent Robinson’s
reminiscences of Wilkie Collins: “I
was walking one day toward Hampstead
heath with Wilkie Collins. It was rain
ing. Wilkie carried his white umbrella.
Presently we sighted near a hedge a
very pretty woman dressed in white and
accompanied by a child. Wilkie stepped
up toiler and proffered his umbrella.
She promptly accepted it, and I said to
him as she disappeared, ‘That’s the last
you’ll see cf it.’ He laughed and insist
ed that it would be all right He lived
in Wampole street and had given the
young woman his address. Well, time
went by until one day we two were
again strolling, this time in Piccadilly.
Suddenly a hansom was baited along
side of us so quickly that the horse was
drawn back on his haunches and that
same woman leaned out and handed
Wilkie his umbrella. I discreetly walked
on. That was the original of ‘The Wo
man In White, ’ and she became Wil
kie’s housekeeper. ”
NAVAL CONSTRUCTION.
Rich Engine and Fife Room Tempera
tures on a Warship.
The great internal heat that rendered
the Amphitrite inefficient was due to
lack of provision for ventilation in the
engine and boiler spaces. These regions
became so hot that little useful work
could be done in them, and the lack of
air was such as to actually rain the fur
nace draft, smoke coming out freely
from the holes in the furnace doors.
Aside from two small ash hoist tubes
in the central part of the fireroom and
a small escape hatch forward, there
were no openings from the fireroom to
the outer air.
The boilers reached nearly to the iron
main deck of the vessel, and as the air
above them and between the deck beams
had no escape it became greatly heated
and! lay roasting in those spaces. It was
impossible for & man to go bn the grat
ings behind the upper pahts of the boil
ers after they had been under steam a
few hours, though the main and auxil
iary stop valves were there. A board of
officers that reported on temperatures in
the vessel got at this place only by in
troducing a thermometer on the end of
a long pole, and this thermometer,
when fished out and taken to a place
where it could be read, showed 202 de
grees.
The superstructure containing the
cabin and wardroom was directly above
the engine and boiler rooms, with a
light wooden floor laid over the iron
main deck. At sea, with the doors
closed, this habitation became exactly
like a frying pan on a hot stove lid.
The smoke pipe, partly uncovered for
alleged ventilating purposes, passed
through the center of the wardroom and
by vigorous radiation contributed its
full share to the general discomfort.
The deck, in spite of its wooden sheath
ing, was so hot as to be painful, and 1
hesitate to say from memory the tem
peratures the board reported as being
usual in the rooms, in bureau drawers,
on the wardroom table and in other
parts of the officers* quarters. It was as
high as 112 degrees, and I think great
er. Sleep was only a period of uncon
sciousness, induced by utter exhaustion,
and was without restful quality.
The fireroom temperature was never
below 150 degrees and often above 170,
while the engine room ranged closely
about 150 degrees. For the first 24
hours the men stood it well, but bn the
second day seven succumbed to tbp heat
and were put on the sick list, on© of
them nearly dying. Before the voyage
was ended 28 had been driven to seek
medical attendanca
On the evening of the fourth day out
our men had literally fought with fire
to a finish and had been vanquished.
The watch on duty broke down one by
one and the engines, after lumbering
along slower and slower, actually stop
ped for lack of steam. The ship was al
lowed to drift inshore on the tide and
was finally brought to an anchor in St.
Simon’s sound. Though a warship of
formidable characteristics and sent on
this distant service, it is doubtful if the
Amphitrite could have gone into action
at that time or have steamed 100 miled
farther to save herself.—F. M. Bennett,
U. S. N., in Cassier’s Magazine.
Are you in the habit of cutting your
self when you shave? Then you should
keep Dr. Tichenor’s Antiseptic conven
ient. It stops bleeding, prevents sore
ness, rids your face of pimples and
heals cuts before you know it. Pleas
ant as perfume and cooling as a breeze
“from Greenland’s icy mountains.”
Sold by all druggists.
Why th© Irishman yuix.
There was once an Irishman who
sought employment as a diver, bringing
with him his native enthusiasm and a
certain amount of experience. Although
he had never been beneath the water he
had crossed an ocean of one variety and
swallowed nearly an ocean of another.
But he had the Hibernian smile, which
is convincing, and the firm chanced to
need a new man. And on the following
Monday morning Pat hid his eruile in a
diving helmet.
Now, the job upon which the crew to
which Pat had attached himself was
working was in comparatively shallow
water, and Pat was provided with a
pick and told to use it on a ledge below
in the manner with whioh he was fa
miliar.
Down he went with his pick, and for
about 15 minutes nothing was heard
from him. Then came a strong, deter
mined, deliberate pull on the signal
rope, indicating that Pat had a very de
cided wish to come to the top. The as
sistants pulled him to the raft and re
moved his helmet.
“Take aff the rist av it,” said Pat.
“Take off the rest of it?”
“Yis, ” said Pat. “Oi’ll worrik no
longer on a domn job phere Oi can’t
spit on me hands.”—Boston Budget .
Cooked cream at Will Summer’s.
State of Ohio, City of Toledo, £
Lucas County. f ss.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he
is the senior partner of the firm of F. J.
Cheney & Co., doing business in the
City of Toledo, County and State afore
said, and that said firm will pay the
sum of one hundred dollars for each
and every case of Catarrh that cannot
be cured by the use of Hall’s Catarrh
Cure. Frank J. Cheney.
' Sworn to before me and subscribed
in my presence, this 6th day of Decem
ber, A. D. 1836.
(Seal) A. W. Gleason,
Notary Public.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken inter
nally and acts directly on the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney' & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
NEARLY COMPLETE.
The Officers Who Will go With the
New Third Georgia.
Following is the complete roster
of the officers of the new Third
Georgia regiment, with the ex
ception of one second lieutenant,
the adjutant, the assistant sur
geon, the quartermaster and com
missary.
Colonel—John S. Candler, Edge-
wood.
Lieutenant-Colonel—Robert L.
Berner, Forsyth.
Major—Burke Shewmake, Au
gusta.
Major—R. E. L. Spence, now at
Santiago.
Major—Marcus W. Beck, Jack-
son.
Captain—Amos Baker, Atlanta.
First Lieutenant—Thomas J.
Ripley, Decatur.
Second Lieutenant Arthur
Marbutt, Atlanta.
Captain—C. E. Van Riper,
Americas.
First Lieutenant—L. F.Garrard,
Jr., Columbus.
Second Lieutenant—J. F. Crook,
Columbus.
Captain—W. E. Sanders, For
syth.
First Lieutenant—J. B. McDuf
fie, Hawkmeville.
Second Lieutenant—T. F.Pruitt,
Thomasville.
Captain—J.H.Stevens, Augusta.
First Lieutenant—Joseph Pot
tle, Milledgevilie.
Second Lieutenant — T. W.
Hardwick, Sandersville.
Captain—Robert Hodges,Macon
First Lieutenant—C. E. Gilbert,
Perry.
Second Lieutenant — Walter
Harris, Macon. -
Captain—S. V. Sanford, Ma
rietta.
First Lieutenant—T. F. Hast
ings, Atlanta.
Second Lieutenant—Max Mc
Rae, McRae.
Captain—Henry Stewart, Rome.
First Lieutenant—B. T. Brook,
Trenton.
Second Lieutenant—Max E.
Land, Abbeville.
Captain—Henry Kohlson, Sa
vannah.
First Lieutenant—R. G. Dick
erson, Comerville.
Second Lieutenant — W. R.
Leakin.
Captain—J. S. Powell, Newnan.
First Lieutenant—W. A. Thorn
ton, Dawson.
Second Lieutenant—A.F. Ware,
Dallas.
Captain—A. J. Burr, Griffin.
A Wonderful Statement
From Mrs. J. S. McGtllas, of 113 Kilburs
Avenue, Ruckfurd, Ill*
*1 was dreadfully ill—the doctors
said they could cure me, but failed
to do so.
“Igaveup
in despair
and took to
my bed. I
had dread
ful pains in
my heart,
fainting
spells,
sparks be-,
fore my
eyes, and
sometimes
I would
get so blind
I could not
see for several minutes. I could not
stand very long without feeling sick
and vomiting.
I also had female weakness, inflam
mation of ovaries, painful menstru
ation, displacement of the womb, itch
ing of the external parts, and ulceration
of the womb. I have had all these
complaints.
“The pains I had to stand were some
thing dreadful. My husband told me
to try a bottle of Lydia E. Pinkham s
medicine, which I did, and after tak
ing it for a while, was cured.”
First Lieutenant—u. A. Shel
don, Atlanta.
Second Lieutenant—Frank Z.
Curry.
Captain—Hugh M. Comer, Sa
vannah.
First Lieutenant—J. I. Gilbert,
Albany.
Second Lieutenant—Alex A.
Lawrence, Savannah.
Captain—W. W. Davis, Atlanta.
First Lieutenant—John S. Co
hen, Atlanta.
Second Lieutenant—To be sup
plied.
Honesty and Virtue.
There is more honesty and virtue
contained in a bottle of Salvation Oil,
than in any other liniment known.
“Mrs. A. Fiedler, 28G± Paletliorp St.,
Philadelphia, Pa., confirms this truth:
She found Salvation Oil to be an ex
cellent remedy for rheumatism, stiff
joints, bruises, etc., and thinks it
should always he kept in the house.”
Don’t listen to the der lei’s arguments
in favor of a substitute. Insist on get
ting Salvation Oil, it costs only 25 cts.
Cupid’s Balance.
“Papa, didn’t the baron call on
you at the office today?”
“Yes, dear; he was examining
my books to figure out whether he
loved you or not.”—-Fliegende
Blatter.
Do you want a remedy for Fistula or
Foot Evil in stock? If so, use Dr. Tich
enor’s Antiseptic as directed it will
cure it. For sale by druggists at 50c.
a bottle.
AVege table Preparationfor As-
_ . — fttita,-
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Infants Children
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful
ness andBestXJofltains neither
Opium,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
—-— - —
nu^arOldmSAMEELEmmB.
J’limpkat «fas/*
Mx.Senna *
JRcckeUc Saifs —
Anise Seal *
/&<
JfarnSeed -
Clarified Sagar •
Iffo&nj-nRca Flarur. /
A perfect Remedy for Constipa
tion, Sour Ston^ch,Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions,Feverish
ness and LOSS OF SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
TLEW YORK.
The
Kind
Have
Always Bought.
EXACT COPY - OF WRAFFEB.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, HEW YORK CITY.