Newspaper Page Text
9 oo Drops
Vegetable Preparationfor As -
simulating tbeFoodandRegula-
g ihe S tomachs ancLBowels of
Promotes Digestion,Cheerful
ness and Rest.Contains neither
Opium ,Morphine nor Mineral.
Not Narcotic.
f ^ 0 ,OldI*SAMU£LEinmR
pumpkin
ALx. Senna *
JteJuUeSJtt-
Anist Se*d ♦
Jippermint -
Jh Car&anail Stda *
J formfeed -
Clarified Sugar -
Hlharyrtan narar.
A perfect Remedy far Constipa
tion, Sour Stomach.Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .Feverish
ness and Loss OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
ForlnfantsandChildren.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
' ■
The
Kind
You Have
Always Bought.
GASTORIA
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY.
Encouraging- to Farmers.
A recent issue of Zion’s Herald
gave the following statement,
which will be of interest to farm-
1 er& and others who may be con
cerned :
— “The farmers of the United
States will this year receive more
money from abroad than during
any previous year of our history.
The Treasurer of Bureau of Statis
tics has issued a statement show
ing that during the ten months
ending October Slat there has been
paid the enormous sum of $413,-
118,098 for breadstuffs and pro
visions sold to foreign countries—
181,095,206 more than last year,
Ind almost $200,000,000 more than
the corresponding ten months of
1893, the receipts for cotton for
he ten months exceed the receipts
if last year by more than $13,-
K)0,000, and the number of pounds
lent abroad is larger than any
brresponding year of our history.
Dne specially noticeable thing is
he increasing demand for Ameri-
an corn. Nearly all the European
)untries seem to be fond of it.
he increase in nine months is
lore than 40,000,000 bushels, and
he increase exportation to British
»orth America amounts to more
ban 13,000,000 bushels during
bat time. Some of this last
robably passed through Canada
) European ports. The tropical
Dim tries do not take kindly to
Dis food as is evidenced by a no-
fble falling off in nearly all of
Another product for which
Pere is an increasing demand in
j Q repe is oatmeal. This has in
cased from 4,329, 293 pounds in
^88 to 85,500,270 pounds for the
Bc al year ending June 30, 1898.
Of this quantity Great Britain
alone took more than one-half,
and besides this a considerable
part went to the British West
Indies and British Africa.”
Th ese figures and statements in
dicate better opportunities for the
farmers and offer inducements to
many more to enter that field of
industry. Our Southern farmers
have had disasters during this
year, but other vocations have
their troubles also, and will have
them. The wise farmer, in the
long run, has as many chances for
success as any other man, and his
opportunities for independence
are greater than are to be found
in any other vocation.—Wesleyan
Christian Advocate.
One Merchant’s Experience.
A group of Bloomington bus
iness men were at the Windsor
hotel discussing matters of gen-
nral interes.t. Finally the subject
turned to advertising, and, this is
h .t one of the oldest men in the
:roup said :
• ‘ During my eleven years’ ex
tern mm' arlvertisiig retail bus-
inogw. 1 have leain^i that it does
not pay half as well to advertise
hiiv other wav as it does to put
• ur money in newspaper space,
bine of y»>u have spent your ad
vertising appropriations in pro-
gr.imines, menu cards, schedules,
rime tables, guides, hotel reg
isters, industrial books, wall
Jim g^rs, wall charts and the like.
And I will tell you frankly that
you are next door to throwing
your money away when you are
susceptible to the blandishments
in promoting patronage for such
schemes.
“Cut off these leaks. Put your
foot down firmlythat not another
shall be diverted from the news
paper that goes into the house brist
ling w ith interest and intelligence.
I have spent nearly four thousand
days studying means, methods and
media essential to profitable ad
vertising, and I am convinced the
best way is iu the newspaper. Pm
your faith to it firmly if you have
anything to sell that the people
want. Every bod y who can read
reads the newspaper and you can
not reach so many people so cheap
ly by advertising in any other
w T ay.—Bloomington (Ill) Leader.
Your Danger Now
Is from the overworked conditon of
of the liver ana kidneys which are un
able to expel impurities from the blood.
This causes rheumatism. Hood's Sar
saparilla has been wonderfully success
ful in curing- this disease. It neutral
izes the acid in the blood and per
manently cures the aches and pains
which other medicines fail to relieve.
Hood’s Sarsaparilla is the best winter
medicine because it purifies, enriches
and vitalizes the blood. It gives help
just where help is needed. It tones the
stomach, stimulates the liver, and
arouses and sustains the kidneys. It
wards off pneumonia,fevers, bronchitis,
colds, coughs and the grip.
They Were Gone#
“I was troubled for years with rheu
matism and pain in my back and side.
After taking a few bottles of Hood’s
Sarsaparilla the pains were gone. I
have not had any trouble from rheu
matism since and can do my work with
out suffering as I formerly did.” Mrs.
A. E. J. Hunter, Craigs vi-lle, S. C.
HOOD'S PILLS are prompt and effi
cient, easy to take, easy to operate.
uch in Little
^specially true of Hood’s Pills, for no medi
, contained so great curative power in
space. They are a whole medicine
“WhUst He Was Mourning.”
A clerical delegate from a wes
tern state contributed a cheerful
incident, which had come under
his immediate notice, to the sto
ries told at a recent gathering of
ministers. In his wife’s employ
was an Irish servant who one day
asked leave to attend the wake of
a favorite cousin. The desire per
mission was granted and Norab
graced the melancholy feast, clad
in her Sunday best.—Youth’s
Companion.
A negro blacksmith in Virginia
posted the following:
“Notis—De copartnership here
tofore resistin betwixt *me an
Mose Skinner is hereby resolved.
Dem what owes de firm will set
tle wid me an dem what de firm
owes will settle wid Mose.”
BYs\«* ays rea( b. al-
P efficient, always sat-
E? 5 prevent a cold
i he ’ Cllre all liver ills,
ir 0n ? S 6 ’ Jaundice » constipation, etc. 25c.
j -tills to take with Hood’s Sarsaparilla,
Setting Woods Afire.
The Eatonton Messenger is glad
to see the legislature coming to
the rescue of people who are con
stantly in danger of losing prop
erty because some neighbor’s
recklessness in setting wood on
fire. It says:
“The bill of Representative
Adams amending the law as
setting fire to woods has pasred
both houses. The law as amended
makes it a misdemeanor for any
person to wilfully carelessly or
negligently set fire to or cause to
be set fire to any woods, lauds or
marshes so as to cause loss or in
jury no another. The bill went
through without a single vote
against it; a fact implying its
worth. It will be remembered
that the loss by wild fire in this
and other communities last w inter
was very heavy, but the law be
fore its recent amendment did aot
reach the authors of the trouble.
Pills
Dr. M. A. Simmons Liver Medicine
searches out all Impurities iu the sys
tem, and expels them harmlessly by the
natural channels.
An Enterprising Druggist,
There are few men more wide awake
and enterprising than M. C. Brown &
Co., who spare no pains to secure the
best of everything in their line for
their many customers. They now have
the valuable agency^ for Dr. King’^New
Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and
Colds. This is the wonderful remedy
that is producing such a furor all over
the country by its many startling cures.
It absolutely cures Asthma, Bronchitis.
Hoarseness and all affections of the
Throat, Chest and Lungs. Call at
above drug store and get a trial bottle
free or a regular size for 50 cents and
$1. Guaranteed to cure or price re
funded.
Stilt at The Front.
In Richard Harding Davis’ des
cription of the Rough Riders’
Fight at Guasimas, in Scribner 1 *
Magazine, there is a story of a
cowboy good to read and r <u a.
her. One trooper, Rowland, of
Deming^ was shot through
lower 'ids. He was or<b r-•
Lt. Col. Roosevelt to fah
to th - ere-.-iny stafion 1)UI ill
Surgeon Church told him
'vas nothing he could do for ton
then, and directed him to sit o *v\
anti; 1*' could be taken «<• • n.
hospital at Siboney. Rowland
sat down fora minute and then
remarked restlessly, “I don’t snern
to be doing much good here,”, and,
picking up his carbine, returned
to the front. There Roosevelt
found him.
‘‘^thought I ordered you to the
rear, ”
“Yes sir, you did; but there
didn’tseem to be much doing back
there,” he replied.
He was sent to Siboney with the
rest of the wounded and two days
later he appeared in camp. He
marched from hill all the way car
rying his carbine, Siboney a dis
tance of six miles, upcanteen and
cartridge belt. “I thought you were
in hospital,” Colonel Wood said.
“I was, but I didn’t seem to be
doing any good there.”
They 7 gave him up as hopeless
after that and he continued his
duties and went into the fight at
San Juan Hill with the hole still
through his ribs.
THE TUBN OF LIFE.
Owing to modem methods of living,
not one woman in a thousand ap
proaches this perfectly natural change
without experiencing a train of very
annoying and sometimes painful symp
toms.
Those dreadful hot flashes, sending
the blood surging to the heart nntil it
seems ready to
burst, and the
faint feeling
that follows,
sometimes
with chills, as
if the heart
were going to
stop for
good,are
symptoms
of a dan
gerous
nervous trouble. The nerves are cry
ing out for assistance. The cry should
be heeded in time. Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound was pre
pared to meet the needs of woman’s
system at this trying period of her life*
Mks. Della Watson, 534 West 5th
St., Cincinnati, Ohio, says:
“I have been using LydiaJE. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound for some,
time during the change of life and it
has been a saviour of life unto me.
I can cheerfully recommend it to all wo
men, and I know it will give permanent
relief. I would he glad to relate my ex
perience to any sufferer.”
Before a man is 25 he. spends
most of his time trying to make
* he girls think he 15 a devil of a
fellow. After that he spends most
of it trying to make them think he
isn’t.
Advertise in The Georgia
Cracker. It is read by the people
the business man wants t«* reach.
Headache and Neuralgia cured by D*.
MILES’ PAIN PILLS. “One cent a dose.”
If you contemplate buying
anything in. the fine 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 f
see Atlanta’s Greatest, most Reliable and Progres- f
sive Clothing Store. Our stock is the LARGEST IN I
THE SOUTH. We aim to have our Clothing the best |
that can ba made, and every detail in its manufac- •
ture is carefully looked after. f
I
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i
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4 Our Men’s Suits and Overcoats
^ Range in price from $8 to $18, and Bovs’ and Chil
dren’s from $2 to $6.
| All our goods are made to our special order and a
4 suit from us will FIT BETTER, LOOK BETTER and
| WEAR BETTER than any you have ever had although
7 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.
•£* & it*
itSrA thorough and criti
cal examination of our
stock will pay you.
39-41 WHITEHALL ST.. ATLANTA, QA. j