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Tlie Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been
in. use for over 30 years, has borne the signature of
and has been made imder his per
sonal supervision since its infancy*
Allow no one to deceive you in this.
AH Counterfeits, Imitations and Substitutes are but Ex
periments that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experience against Experiment*
What is CASTORIA
Castoria is a substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Props
and Soothing Syrups. It is Harmless and Pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind
Colic. It relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation
and Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
Stomach and Bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children’s Panacea—The Mother’s Friend.
genuine CASTORIA ALWAYS
Sears the Signature of
The Kind You Have Always Bought
In Use For Over 30 Years.
THE CENTAUR COMPANY. TT HURRAY STREET, NEW
When $1,000 Looked Big.
Divide anything into parts and
on magnify it. A certain wise
nan took this way to give his wife
n idea of how much $1,000 is.
;he had no idea of money. Her
lurchases were enormous. It hap-
ifened one day that her eyes fell
ipoD a magnificent ring, and she
:oveted it. It cost $1,000. But
That was $1,000 to her, in com-
mrison with the ring? Of course
er husband consented to the pur-
hase. What else could a dutiful,
ffectionate husband do. But he
ried this method of educating his
rife concerning the great price of
he ring. * He instructed his bank-
r to send her the $1,000 in small
)ieces—pennies, dimes, quarters.
came the money, bagful after
agful. She never had such an
lea of $1,000 before. When the
loney was piled before her it
[armed her; the price of the ring
ent an hundredfold, and was cou
riered at once an extravagance
hich she of hfer own option aban-
oned.—New Orleans Times-Dem-
erat. *
A Bright Plan.
The Montgomery Journal says
that Mr. Lcgrand, a farmer bank
er of that city, is a large land own
er which he rents to negroes on
the usual terms, but on condition
that they shall use oxen instead of
mules as plough animals. He
claims to have learned by ex
perience that theox is more profit
able, as he grazes at night and
needs no corn, will cultivate as
much land'as the negro has ability
to work; at odd times the latter
will not mount the animal and
gallop off to a big meetin’ at
night and thus sacrafice the time
for sleep, and the result is that
the tenant with the ox is more
contented, enjoys better health,
works more steadily, and, not hav
ing to buy any corn to keep a
mule, he has a smaller debt to pay
for Vances out of his cotton crop.
Of a verity, the world moves.
Th« EnglUh and Americans Are Imp®**
— taut Factors In Paris Life.
"On and after this date,” wros*
Napoleon I to Fouche, "see that iii~
English are expelled from Paris. ’ *
Such an edict would seem a very
large order at the present day, but it
was by no means a small one in Napo
leon’s time. What would the Paris of
today be without its English colony?
From Sir Edmund Monson, our embas
sador. to the pale boy who files the
English journals at Neal’s library in
the Rue Oastiglione the English are
very important factors in Parisian life.
There has been an English colony in
the French capital for many centuries,
yet one might search in vain for a sim
ilar French colony in London. The
Leicester and Soho square districts, al
though owning to a large French popu
lation, possess hardly a trace of the
flavor or mien that distingr^, hes the
quarter the English frequent Paris,
and it is not a fifth the size.
To speak broadly, Paris has withir:
its walled borders a little London of
many thousand persons—not squalid
and impoverished, but boasting splen
did mansions, fine shops, hotels,
churches, hospitals and libraries, and
all these to such an extent that it is
difficult to believe one is not in the
British capital itself.
The inhabitants of this colony might
roughly be catalogued as follows: Re
tired people and gentlefolk who have
seen better days, those who desire to
have their children educated in the lan
guage, business people, authors, artists,
students, journalists and professions;
men, those who have the best of private
reasons for living out of England and
cranks, which term includes certain in
dividuals who for some causer or other
have developed a feeling of hatred for
the land of their birth. Nearly all are
exiles of their own accord.
On Sunday the elite of the English
colony turns out to the Church of the
Embassy in the Rue d’Aguesseau. Here
for a number of years Dr. Nayes, who
was formerly a Leytonstone incumbent,
has preached, and here a collection bag
goes regularly round, and is as regular
ly returned in a condition of compara
tive emptiness. For your Englishman
of the English colony is either in a con
dition to help largely support the church
and does or else gives nothing at all.
One thing must be 6aid about the
English and Americans who go to Paris.
They support the city. Without their
patronage there is scarcely a big shop
on the boulevards that would not close
its doors within a few months.—London
Mail.
TheScaUQP*
The scallop accomplishes
motiqn by a series of leaps. When
it is alarmed or wishes to change
its location it opens and energet
ically closes it- vahe thus im
pelling the water. The re- ction
shoots it backward. By this nn-aus
the creature is able t<> travel long
distance. Sometimes scallops muk
considerable journeys in arg*- u-
panies. One can scarcely itm«gitM
a lovelier sight than that of ?
flock of those pretty creatures,
with shell of every hue from purpb
and white to black enlivened with
shades of pink yellow and fawn
darting about in clear water. Ii
their flightlike movement vertical
horizontal and zigzag they art-
more suggestive of a flock of
winged animals than of bivalve
mollusks.
TO MOTHERS OF LARGE FAMILIES
1 druggists sell Dr. Miles’ Pain Pills.
Only One Way.
An exchange tells a story of a
judge who could not control his
temper and so c< uld not control
other people. One day there was
unusual disorder in the courtroom
and at last the judge could endure
it no longer.
"It is impossible to allow this
persistent contempt of court to g<>
on,” he exclaimed, “and I shall
r >e forced to g° to the extreme
ngth • f Diking the one step
that will stop it ! *
There was a long silence; then
one of the leading counsel ro-e. u: o
with J j ust a tract of a ^mile in
quired : If it pleases your honor,
from what date will your res g n -
tion take effect ?*’
In this workaday world few women
are so placed that physical exertion
is not constantly demanded of them in
their daily life.
Mrs. Pinlcham makes a special appeal
to mothers of large families whose work
is never done, and many of whom suffer
and suffer for lack of intelligent aid.
To women, young
or old, rich or poor,
Mrs. Pinkham,
of Lynn, Mass.,
extends
her invita
tion of
free ad- •
vice. Oh,
women! do
not let your
lives be sac
rificed when a
word from Mrs.
Pinkham, at
the first approach of weakness, may
fill your future years with healthy joy.
Mrs. A. C. Buhi.er, 1123 North Al
bany avenue, near Humboldt Park,
Chicago, Ill., says: "I am fifty-one
years old and have had twelve children,
and my youngest is eight years old. I
have been suffering for some time with
a terrible weakness; that bearing-down
feeling was dreadiui, and I could not
walk any distance. I began the use
of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound and Sanative Wash and they
have cured me. I cannot praise your
medicine enough.”
Knew His Business.
Catarrh Can be Cured
By eradicating from the blood the
The papers in Georgia and Ala-
ima are doing everything they
m to encourage farmers to en-
ige ui raising wheat on a larger
:ale than they have ever done be-
ire. The LaFayette, Ala., Sun
is offered a prize of twenty five
ollars to the Chambers qounty
inner producing the largest
mount of wheat per acre. If
milar plans were adopted in
rery section of Georgia and Ala-
arna, it would encourage the far-
lers to compete with each other
i wheat growing, observes the Co-
imbus Enquirer-Sun.
Recently published French stat
istics.show that nearly one fourth
of the adult population of France
are bachelors, and that a very
heavy percentage of the married
couples have no children. Poor
old France, she must reform or
perish by the selfishness of her
children.
scrofulous taints w’hich cause it
Hood's Sarsaparilla cures catarrh,
promptly and permanently, because it
strikes at the root of the trouble.
The rich,*pure blood which it makes
circulating through tlie delicate pas
sages of the mucuous membrane,
soothes and rebuilds the tissues, giving
them a tendency to health instead of
disease, and ultimately curing the af
fection.
At the same time Hood s Sarsaparilla
strengthens, invigorates and energizes
the whole svstem and makes the debil
itated victim of catarrh feel that new
life has been imparted.
Do not dally with snuffs, inhalants
or other local applications, but take
Hood’s Sarsaparilla and cure catarrh
absolutely and surely by removing the
causes which produce it.
_ Dr. David Kennedyis
favorite Remedy
mors all KIDNEY. STOMACH T
CUBES ALL S lSotBEES .
E
asy to Take
asy to Operate
e features peculiar to Hood’s Pills. Small in
e, tasteless, efficient, thorough. As one man
Japanese Ingenuity.
The Japanese are ruthless in
their tampering with nature. If
they decide that thev want a bird
or an animal of a certain shape or
colo r , they set about manufactu
ring tbe article, so to speak, by the
exercise of exceedingly clever in
genuity and untiring patience.
Here, for exampl’, is how the
white sparrows are produced. They
select a pair of grayish birds and
keep them in a white cage in a
white room, where they are attend-
d: ’• You never know you
ve taken a pill till it is all
er. u 25c. C. I. Hood & Co.,
oprietors, Lowell, Mass,
e only pills to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
ed by a person dressed in. white,
The mental effect on a series of
generations of birds results in com
pleteiy white birds.—New York
Times.
All druggists sell
Verve Plasters.
An Ill Wind That Blows No Good.
Foreman—What are we to do?
It’s press time, and the new man
has just pied the whole first page
of The Hustler. Every word is
pi.
Editor—Is that so? Great scis
sors ! We’re in a deuce of a fix
But hold ! I have a scheme. Run
the page just as it is, and set up a
line calling attention to our ful
page cut of the Spanish fortifica
tions after the bombardment —Up
to Date.
An ancient Christian compared
^prayer to “a chane of gold, with
one end fastened to the tongue of
man and the other to the ear of
God.” We amend his figure: The
chain is linked here to tlie human
heart and on high to the Heart
Divine. Prayer is a transaction
between hearts.
Hoax—You know Schneider,
the bottler, who recently became
a magistrate?
Joax—Yes.
“Well, he discharged a prisoner
vesterdav who was charged with
stealing a dozen of beer.”
“So?”
"Yes. Schneider said that
wasn’t enough to make a case.”—
Philadelphia Record.
If you contemplate buying
anything in the line of
Men’s or Boys ,
Fall and Winter
CLOTHING
furnishing
Goods or
Hats. • •
You will be blind to your own interests if you fail to ▼
see Atlanta’s Greatest, most Reliable and Progress- f
sive Clothing Store. Our stock is the LARGEST IN .
THE SOUTH. We aim to have our Clothing the best f
that can ba made, and every detail in its manufac- I
ture is carefully looked after. t
Our Men’s Suits and Overcoats
i Range in price from $8 to $18, and Boys’ and Chil- •
{ dren’s from $2 to $6. ▼
All our goods are made to our special order and a
suit from us will FIT BETTER, LOOK BETTER and
WEAR BETTER than any you have ever had although I
you may have paid a higher price.
Everything is marked in
PLAIN FIGURES and at the
Lowest possible prices
consistent with honest,
reliable goods sold under
a guarantee to be satis
factory in every respect.
AS® - 1^
jggy»A thorough aAd criti-
examination of our
Yorkshire is the country in Eng
land which has the greatest rail
way mileage. The next is Lanca
shire.
Th© longest verse in the Bible
is the 9th verse of the 8th chapter
of Esther!
cal
stock will pay you.
i
t 39-41 WHITEHALL. ST., ATLANTA, GA. y