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Every cotton planter should
ite for our valuable illustrated
amphlet, “Cotton Culture.”
is sent free.
Send name and address to
MAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau St., N. T
^FEDERATE ' VETERAN SPECIAL
Memphis, Tennessee. Over the* Wes-
ent & Atlantic B. B.—Nashville, Chat
tanooga & St. Uouis Bail way. •
[This train will be composed of Pull-
in sleeping-cars and elegant high-
ick coaches with wash-rooms provi-
with plenty of towels, etc., and
ill leave Atlanta at 4 p. m., May 27,
riving- in Memphis 7:30 following
iorning. General Gordon and staff ;
gneral West and staff; General Evans
id staff, and many other officers, of
|e U. C. V. have engaged accommoda-
ms on this train. The veteran spec-
en route to Memphis, will pass
irough the battlefields of .Marietta,
pennesaw, Resaca, Dalton, Rocky Face
id Chattanooga. Leaving Chattanoo-
), will pass around the base of Look-
it mountain and through the battle-
“lds of Wauhatchie, Murfreesboro,
me River and Nashville. Leaving
Nashville, will pass through the fa
mous Belle Mead farm,* which is con-
Mered -one of the finest stock-farms in
le United States. It is on this farm
rhere General Jackson’s noted deer
irk with half-a-thousand deer can be
jen. This train will cross the Ten-
river at Jacksonville, where the
iring Forrest captured and destroyed
, large fleet of river transports loaded
pith troops* and ammunition. Many
irts of these old vessels can be seen
b the banks of the river from the car
windows.
The rate will be one cent per miie
Irom all points.in this territory for the
pound trip. Tickets will be sold on
lay 25th, 26th and 27th. Final limit
i)f tickets will be June 19th.
All lines out of Memphis have ar-
mged to sell tickets. May 29th and
30th to all points in Texas, Arkansas,
)klahoma and Indian Territory at one
fare for the round trip plus $2. Tick
ets will he good returning 21 days from
late of sale. This will be a fine oppor
[tunity for all those who may desire to
THE GEORGIA CRACKER,
MAY 18, 1901
: - '
'
.
visit friends and refatives in the west.
Mr. J. L. Edmondson, S. E. P. A.,
will have charge of this special train
and look personally after the comfort
and pleasure of all aboard ; see that
cars will be supplied with plenty of ice
and water, and that all arrangements
will be carried out for tlie handling of
this special team.
The Nashville, Chattanooga and St.
Louis Railway will operate special
trains out of Memphis for the return of
the veterans, to suit their convenience.;
in addition to their regular trains.
Mr. Edmond son will remain .in Mem
phis to give his personal attention to
getting these* trains out in good shape.
Parties wishing sleepers had best noti
fy Mr. Edmondson at once, so that he
may reserve same.
For further information, write to
H. F. SMITH. Traffic Manager,
Nashville, Tean.
C. E. HARMAN, G. P. A.,
Atlanta, Ga.
J AS. MALOY, C. P. A., or
J. L. EDMONDSON, S. E. P. A.,
Atlanta, Ga.
The Mouse Brought Discord.
A really tragic incident occurred
in New Haven the other day. The
Connecticut music teachers were
holding a festival in the opera
house. -Mies Kline was in the
midst of an in tensely pathetic love
song. The audience, of several
hundred women, was hanging up*
on her words and notes. The cli
max was about reached, and at
tention was riveted upon the sing
er. * At this critical juncture a
mouse appeared from somewhere,
and begau running around among
the women. Instantaneously the
air, which had been aquiver with
harmony, became tumultuous with
shrieks, as the womeu tumbled
v •
over each other seekipg safety m
flight. Whether Miss Kline ever
finished her song is something that
history will never record. At all
events the festival was broken up,
and not a soul cared anything
more about music that afternoon.
A. Boon to Suffering Humanity.
A Pennsylvania lawyer has in
vented an apparatus which may
prove a boon to suffering humani
ty. It is an automatic speech
blocking device, designed to - cut
off after-dinner speakers, politica
debaters and others, when they
have spoken to the limit of the
time allowed them.’ Thus, if Dr
■ ' , • ...
Chauncey M. Depew ^rere orf the
card for a five-minutes’ talk, the
bell would ring when his time waB
up, and keep ringing until he had
taken his seat. The beneficent pos
sibilities of the invention can
therefore, be appreciated at
glance./ The Savannah Morning
News suggests that between-times,
when there were no dinner speech
gJIf
You know all
about it. The
Tush, the
worry, the
exhaustion.
You go about
with a great
weight testing upon
rau. You can’t throw
this feeling. You
are a slave to your work.
Sleep fails, and you are
on the verge of nervous
exhaustion.
What is to be done?
Take
m
For fifty years it has
been lifting up the dis
couraged, giving rest to
the overworked, and
bringing refreshing sleep
to the depressed. •
No other Sarsaparilla
approaches it. In age
and in cures, “Ayer’s” is
“the leader of them all.”
It whs old before other
sarsaparillas were born.
$1.03 a bottls. All dragglsts.
Ayer’s Pills aid the ac
tion of Ayer’s Sarsapa- .j
rilla. They cure bilious
ness. 25 cfs. a box. • I
, •* I have used Ayer’s medicines for
more than 40 years and have said
from the very start that you made
the best medicines in the world. I
am sure your Sarsaparilla saved my
life when 1 first took it 40 years ago.
1 am now past 70 and am never
without your medicines.”
Fkaxk Thomas,p. M.,
Jan. 24,1809. Enon, Kansas.
If
Mfrffa thm Doctor.
▼on ■
and desire the best medical advice you
have any com;
nplaint whatever
edical advice vou
free!
receive, write the doctor
ply, without cost. Address,
receive a prompt re-
Dr. J. C. AYER, Lowell,
resy MJII'Jfr i< i
5F
Catarrh has become suck a common
thS^t tha 5 a person , iendrely free frpm I es an( j legislative debates for the
complaint as seldom met J, ^ x _ x U : - , A
It is customary to speak of Catarrh j instrument to keep tab - OD, i.
n i° re seri . ous a bad cold > might be employed in timing prize
« simple inflammation of the nose and „ f '
1 mroat - It is, in fact, a complicated and I fights. •
y ei 7 dangerous disease; if not at first, it
«ys° 0 n becomes so.
tli r 6 !' lood ? l s quickly ’contaminated by
i e tout secretions, and the poison through
/ £ CIl eral circulation is carried to all
jP^sof the system.
Eight murder cases are, or have
been on trial in New England this
week. And New England is a sec-
I boast that its people do not resort
°j S i.^cleanses the blood of the poison to knives and pistols to
, e ^nates from the system,all catar- I —~~~~ i
an«i secretlon s, and thus cures thoroughly
permanently the worst cases;
Salves, washes and sprays are unsatis* J-tion of the GOUDtry that love8 tb
settle
their differences, - or indulge in
bloody crimes to any extent. Of
^hantof*/’ Wi iiiamsj a leading dty-goodsnser-1 the eight cases referred to, ' the
** i SSS^.9-I Springfield Republican says only
three can be laid to foreigners.
nasai rM e t re case o{
the di£ at rh - with all
/•.T-^reeable effects
which fci Dle enects
di/2. h l ]on I to *
a^ e ,’. f an( C ^hicli
Une ndurabl? am T ful an I
taedii.;‘ _ le * I used
Sdb i ?2i pr ® s ^ ribedb y
•“Eeefs.d ’v sicia,,s and
ofTri/l h ? numbers
Setting ^’ bu ^ without
Uj en ,L an y better. I
$ ItT? tot akeS.S.
tffert bad the desired
!,": d c ured“‘me
The five others are good; native
murders.
eighteen
S^eiiow in PJP*?* 0 ” s - s - S. the only medi-
Catarrh.” SC tba ^ effect a permanent cur<
Mrs. Nation’s new political par
ty has been launched in Kansas.
It is called the “Home Rule Par
ty.” Mrs. Nation is vice chair
man of the national committee.
Its emblem will no doubt be the
is the only purely veg-, _ ,
etable blood purifiet hatchet, and its motto, femasn
StTalTblo?! medii those who do not agree with you.”
If you h c i ne s and tonics. . The new “national ” party consists
ave ^- a ^ arr h don’t wait until il „ , momhArfl -Savan-
at<m« ee *?~ seated and chronic, but be- °f twenty-five members. &avan
ce the ^ o 0 0 mi lyforning News;
°Ur use S., and send
°° k Blood ailfl ^trin TlicpacM
tn^swiFi specific co.
Blood and Skin Diseases
°ur physicians, about your case.
INTA, GA.
Educate Your Bowels With Cas carets.
Candy Cathartic, cure constipation forever.
10c, 25c. If C. C* C. fail, druggists refund money.
Mrs. Greene-—That was a fine
article your husband wrote about
“ T h[e Smoke Nuisance.” '■ Mr*
Greene says it is the best thing
that has appeared on the subject.
Mrs. Gray—Yes? I suppose it
ougfffc to be. My husband smoked
no less than ten cigars while writ
ing it.—Sunny South.
“A man is known by the'* com
pany he keeps,” says the proverb
Of course he is; no man can as-
sociate^with people very long with
out their gettmg next to him —
Chicago News.
are Nature’s warning notes of
approaching danger from a dis
eased heart. If you wou!4
avoid debilitating diseases^ or
even sudden death from this
hidden trouble pay heed to the
early warnings. Strengthen the
heart’s muscles, quiet its nerv
ous irritation and regulate its
addon vtith that greatest of all
heart: remedies^ Dr.
Heart Cure.
TO MOUNTAIN AND SKA SHORE
Resorts Via Tlie Seaboard Air Line Rail.
- •-' .•> v \ i'■
'* way.
Before completing arrangements for
your summer trips or deciding upon
places at which to spend the summer,
you should call on ticket agents and
passenger representatives of. the Sea
board Air Line railway. They are
specially prepared to furnish informa
tion as to lowest rates, quickest sched
ules and most attractive routes to the
mountain resorts in western North
Carolina and southwest Virginia, also
to the seashore resorts of Oeean View,
Virginia Beaeh, Old Point Comfort, the
great eastern resorts along the Jersey
coast and other popular places reached
via the . Seaboard Air Line railway.
This company is offering lower rates
than ever, with perfect train service
and fast through schedules. It will
interest and benefit you to qp.ll on Sea
board Air Line railway agents.
THE
HARDEST
WORKERS
A Queer Language.
There is a perfect ’whistling
language used by the aborigines ot
the Canary islands, and the peo
ple can communicate with each
other over long distances. A
stranger wandering over the is
lands is frequently surprised to
hear from a hilltop the Sound of
loud whistling, which; .is quickly
repeated on the next hilltop and
Have spells of *‘tired
feeling” now and then.
This. feeling is caused
by some derangement
in the stomach, liver
kidneys or bowels, and
must be removed before
the natural vigor and
buoyancy of spirits can
be restored.
PRICKLY
ASH
so is carried from summit to sum
mit uutil it dies away in the dis
tance.
But perhaps-the most curious
means of communication m the
world is the drum language of an
African tribe, named, as negrly as
the word can be pronounced in
our letters, Tbang-Tu. These
queer people can talk to each other
with large drums made of bamboo
hoops, over which the skin of some
animal is stretched. The drum is
used only on important occasions
—such as a meeting of war, or the
trial'of some members of the tribe
who have broken some, of the com
plex religious rules. Then the
drum is used to question witness
es, and finally «to deliver judg
ment, a sharp bang meaning
death for the prisoner, while one
light tap stands for freedom.—
Shrevefeport* Times.
BITTERS
quickly corrects the dis
turbance, purifies the
bowels, heljps digestion
#rid. sends, the. blood
tingling through the
veins, carrying life and
renewed energy
throughout the system.
SOLD BY DRUOCI8TS
PRICE, $1.00.
George Washington Relics.
Washington, May 16.—About
thirty of the George Washington
relics, which have been in the na
tional museum for years, have
been turned over to Miss Mary
Custis Lee, of Virginia, represent
ing her brother, George William
Custis Lee, the heir to the relics.
These relics consist of blankets,
oets of china, including one given
to Mrs. Washington by General
Lafayette, and other souvenirs.
They do not include the swords,
camp chests and a large amount
of other Washington relics now in
the museum. They will be sent
to an address to be designated by
Miss Lee.
“Quick, darting pains shot
through my heart, left side and
shoulder and at night my limbs
would be numb and cold. One
bottle of Dr. Miles’ Heart Cure
relieved me and six bottles com
pletely cured me.”
W: L. Byers, Whitt, Texas.
Dr. Miles’
Heart Cute
controls the heart adtion, accel
erates the circulation and builds
up the entire system. Sold by
druggists on a guarantee.
‘ >r. Miles Medical Co., Elkhart, Ind.
An Uneven Context. •
“They had a lively boxing match at
Splinter’s the other night.” .
“How was that?”
“Splinter came home late, and as be
passed through the hall his wife’s tall
est palm touched him on the cheek.
Splinter was in an excited condition
and thought it was somebody’s fingers.
So he struck out wildly with both fists
and succeeded in knocking over two
palms and severely bumping his own
head.”
“But why do you call It a boxing
match?”
$ “Because Splinter put up his knuc
kles against his wife’s palms.”—Cleve
land Plain Dealer.
The Eminent Kidney ,
and Bladder Specialist.
Trying It on the Bail ding.
Markleigb—Your office seems badly
mussed up. Have you no janitor?
Barkleigh—We have one, but since
he became a faith curist he has been
giving the office “absent treatment.”—
Baltimore American. . r
A story first heard at a mother’s knee
is seldom forgotten, and the same may
be said of other things received at a
mother's knee, which will readily recur
to the reader.—Chicago News.
The Discoverer of Swamp-Root' at Work in
His Laboratory.
There is a disease prevailing in this
country most dangerous because so deeep-
tive. Many sudden deaths are caused^ b y
it—heart disease, pneumonia, heart failure
■•of apoplexy are often the result of kidney
disease. If kidney trouble is allowed to ad
vance the kidney-poisoned blood will attack
the vital organs, or the kidneys themselves
break down and wa:ite away cell by cell.
Then the richness of the bio'd—the albumen
--leaks out and the sufferer has Bright’s
Disease, the worst form of kidney trouble.
Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root the new dis
covery is the true specific for kidney, bladder
and urinary troubles. It has cured thousands
cf apparently hopeless cases, after all other
efforts have failed. At druggists in fifty-cent
?»nd dollar sizes. A sample bottle sent free
by mail, also a book telling about Swamp-
Root and its wonderful cures. Address
Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. and
nention this paper.
m
li®
SPECIAL AGENTS, E. E. DIXON AND CO.
Many women have been reproaefied
for living for. the sole objeetr of enter
taining. , No one doubts that such an
aim is petty and harrowing, but it is
equally certain that it is a woman’s du
ty to understand The Art of Entertain
ing, and this forms the subject of an
attractive and useful article by Lady
June in the Cosmopolitan for May.
ta