Newspaper Page Text
jofare For Pearls.
tv generally understood by
f’ . bare achieved clear, pure choice water
^ure that while and
li the gem, soap
affect their luster and
•time will cause them to
'bed an outer takes coa place 1 t even This
however, most carefully
J s are
when the tendency is
'ring or brooch or necklace
promptly I taken to a jeweler.
of treatment often pre
fthat authority it aside is in that its box, of
%ed p u t air
from light and
weeks, or possibly a month
. fallow will often
[this lying the original beauty
r p S tore gem.—New York
[t b of the
’rateful For Benefits.
Ikht put there,” who said the writ- ru
t o the editor was
hbituary on the death of the
[wife, “that we’ll never hear
Uomore.” Lt. else?
Anything _ that thanks
D ’ceptin’ we
b for His blessings.”—Ex
Crowded Out.
L 8 n ew commercial trouble. ”
is it?”
h [ction thousand spinsters petition
against matrimonial bu
LChicago Record.
d Appeal for Assistance,
irto is charitable to himself will lis
nate appeal for assistance made by
* „r his li rer. in tbe shape of divers
malms and uneasy sensations in the
tie gland that secretes his bile. Hos
imach Bitters, my dear sir, or madam
'Sfj may be—is what you require.
1S e if you are troubled with heart
[ m the stomach, or note that your
whites of your eyes are taking a sal
L mr you should prepare for the
o-To-Bae for Fifty Cents.
(.000 cured. Why not let No-To-F.ac
tr remove your desire for manhood, tobacco?
her. makes health and
fanteed. 50 cents and $1.00, at all
which leads to wealth is full of blind
Ponder Over It.
poent building owner, with years
pee, gave the following instruc¬
ts architect: “I have had my ex
feith kalsomine and other goods
p be just as good as Alabastine. I
to specify the durable Alabastine
brers' walk: do not put on any other
Alabastine dope, if they furnish and it for I
be is right, when
it I shall cease to have confi
pyself or my own judgment.”
me sixty years of Queen Victoria's
English debt has been reduced noarly
rs.
latarrh Cure fa a liquid and is taken
f. and acts directly upo-n the blood
hi surfaces of the system. Send for
ils. free. Sold by Druggists. 75c.
I.Cbrust & Co., Props., Toledo, O.
p a 10c. box of Cascarets, the finest
[towel regulato? ever made.
ARE YOU SIC K?
la Skilled Specialist of Fifteen
I Years’ Experience.
I removed in ]0 days, without pain,
of the Blood, Skin, Liver, Kidneys and
pachas Dropsy, Fits, Catarrh, Asthma,
pund private Diseases speedily and
p?cured. Female troubles relieved,
pt^mtoyour pUB. 0. Henley home for $5 per month.
Snider. Offices and
K,otoS)X. Boulevard, Atlanta, Ga.
patiently P™ wired. No fits or nervous
day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great
wer. $'d trial bottle and treatise free.
[WiBE, Ltd., 931 Arch St., Phila., Pa.
K 0 *’ 8 toothing Syrup for children
tr "Pain, t,ns l he gums, reduces Mamma
cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
£ on p ?h. Dieter, Pisos 67 Cure Throop is a Ave., suc
i P-*. v f i., 'V- Nov. 14, - ’94.
“ei with sore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp
“WrDruggists sell at 25c'. per bottle.
1 bilious or
c: cure costive, eat a Cascaret,
guaranteed; 10c., 25c.
ful Eruptions
was afflicted witli eruptions
sntil fys they which became kept getting worse and
very painful.. We
l we must do something for
Procured a bottle ot Hood’s Sarea
continued taking it until she was
«red.” Madia Dunking, Concord,
Remember
btte s Blood Sarsaparilla
Purifier. $1, six for $5.
i Pills are cwsy prompt, in eiiect. efficient cent.s. aud
• 55
a —
h»
|J° l tto n ^ion planters more
~ m dollars an
r This is an enormous
•
^
o can be prevented,
r experiments at Ala
L f ; ment Station show
the use of
Kainit”
• Llat dreaded'plant
** > * J by actual ex
vises”' A” S? L'oited States—ia
‘-■v.er J. and will gladly
''LiViv- * r ‘ Ca »iil write fat U.
kau works,
„ S3 St,, New York,
BAXKKPPTtY MADE EASY.
The Nelson Bill Which Passed the Senate
a Simple Measure.
The bankruptcy bill passed by the
senate Thursday was framed by Sena¬
tor Nelson, of Minnesota, and is very
brief and simple, compared -with the
bill reported from the judiciary com
mitte, known as the Torrey bill.
The Nelson bill provides that anv
debtor other than a corporation owing
$200 or more, who is unable to pay
his debts, may file his petition in the
district court of the United States for
the district or division thereof in
which he resides, asking for a dis¬
charge from his debts, and offering to
surrender all his property for the pay¬
ment of his debts, except such as is
exempt by the law of his domicile from
execution and liability for debts.
The provision as to involuntary
bankruptcy is as follows:
“That if any debtor being a banker,
broker, merchant, trader or manu¬
facturer who owes $500 or over and
who is unable to pay his debts shall at
any time within four months of the
time of the filing of the petition here¬
inafter mentioned, assign, transfer or
defraud any of his creditors, he shall
be deemed a bankrupt, and may be
poceeded against in a court of bank¬
ruptcy as hereinafter provided. A
creditor or creditors having debts
against such a bankrupt to the amount
of $500 or more, may, within four
months after the act of bankruptcy
has been committed, file in the court
of bankruptcy in the district in which
the bankrupt resides, petition, under
oath, setting forth, among other
things, the acts of bankruptcy afore¬
said, and praying for an adjudication
of bankruptcy against the bankrupt
and the distribution of his estate
among his creditors.”
Syni«v athy for Greece.
The first reference in congress to
the Turko-Grecian war came soon af¬
ter the senate opened Thursday, when
Mr. Allen, of Nebraska, introduced
the following resolution:
Besolved, That the established policy of
the United States of avoiding entangling
alliance with the European powers is in no
respect violated by our sympathizing with
the Christian people of Greece in their
present heroic struggle against the advance¬
ment of the Ottoman empire: and that, in
the judgment of the senate, it would be a
recognition of the wishes of all, for the
executive to express to the government of
Greece the sympathy of the American peo¬
ple.”
Mr. Allen supported the resolution
by citing precedents in which the
United States had expressed sympathy
for thoss struggling against oppres¬
sion. He also read from manuscript
a detailed statement of the affairs of
Crete from early times.
At the request of Chairman Davis,
of tha foreign relations committee, the
Allen resolution was referred to the
foreign relations committee, Mr. Davis
promising speedy action.
Senator Morgan, of Alabama, made
a sensational speech against the disor¬
ganized condition of the senate and
house committees, aud declared that
the speaker of the house, who was
called “The Great White Czar,” should
be known hereafter as the “Great
White Filibuster.”
CONGRESSMAN HOLMAN DEAD.
For Many Tears a Member of tbe House of
Representatives.
Representative Holman, of Indiana,
who has been ill at his home in Wash¬
ington with spinal meningetis, died
Thursday afternoon. born in
Hon. W. S. Holman was
Dearborn county, Indiana, September
6, 1822. He was judge of the court of
common pleas from 1852 till 1856, was
then elected to congress as a democrat
and has been nominated successively
since, suffering only three defeats, in
1874, 1876 and 1878, and serving with
those exceptions from 1859 to the
present time.
He has been an uncompromising en¬
emy of trickery and won the name of
the “Great Objector” from his fear¬
lessness in opposing doubtful meas¬
ures and the schemes of lobbyists.
Perhaps no man in either branch of
the national congress was better versed
in statutes.
GEORGIA EPWORTH LEAGUERS
Meet In Their Fifth Annual Convention In
Atlanta.
The fifth annual conference of Geor¬
gia Epworth Leagues was called to order
in the Sam Jones tabernacle at Atlanta
Thursday night. Two thousand del¬
egates were in attendance. The big
building was packed by a large and
enthusiastic audience.
The Mexican Treaty Passed.
The treaty between Great Britain
and Mexico settling the boundary line
between this country and the colony
of Belize or British Honduras, has
passed the Mexican senate.
Garibaldi Is Patriotic.
Lieutenant Manlio Garibaldi, of the
Italian navy, has sailed from New Y'ork
on the Teutonic with the purpose of
aiding the Greeks in their present
struggle, as his brother is about to do.
Young SewaU for Hawaii.
President McKinley sent to the sen¬
ate Thursday the name of Harold M.
Sewall, of Maine, to be envoy extra¬
ordinary and minister plenipotentiary
of the United States to Hawaii.
WHY SHE MARRIED JACK.
How a Maiden’s two Suitors Were Put to a
Test.
‘‘Oh, you dear thing!’” cried the girl
in the empire jacket, as she stepped
aboard the cars, “ to think that I’ve
only just heard of your marriage. I
was away at the time, you know, and
I just can’t forgive you for not letting
me know all about it.”
“Well, you see, it was very sudden,”
said the young woman in the .fur col¬
larette, according to a writer in the
Chicago Times-Herald. “I only knew
it myself forty-eight hours before it
happened. You see, I had decided to
be married in the spring, anyhow', but
I liked Jack and Edgar equally well,
and I just couldn’t decide which—”
“Yes,” said the girl in the empire
jacket, breathlessly, “and how did you
decide?”’
“I put them both to a test,” said the
young woman in the fur collarette,
“and Jack stood it.”
“You didn’t make them fight a duel,
did you?”
“Mercy, no. That is away behind the
times. I took each one of them for a
walk and stopped before a milliner’s
window to—”
“You clever, original thing!”
“Yes—to admire the hats. I said to
Edgar, ‘I’m trying to decide which one
of these suits me best. I’ve tried them
all on and I can’t decide. * Give me your
opinion.”
“Yes, yes, don’t stop; I’m dying to
hear—”
“He pointed to one bearing a ticket
which said ‘Marked down to $1.49,’
and said: ‘That one, by all means; it
would just suit the shape of your
head! > >>
“Oh, I see; a husband like that would
tell you that you looked better in a
calico frock than—”
“A silk? Exactly. I rejected him
that day. The following afternoon
Jack and I went for a walk.”
“And stopped before the same win¬
dow?”
VM’hm. Then Jack displayed his
real nobility. He said: ‘If I had any¬
thing to say to it, I’d select that one.’
It was placarded ‘The very latest, $22.’
I knew I’d never find such a noble
creature again, so I married him two
days later.
“And you were right, too. Of course,
the first thing he did after you were
married was to buy you that hat! How
awfully romantic! Of course, you
haven’t worn it out in two months—
you must let me see it when I come to
call to-morrow!”
A queer look flashed over the bride’s
face, and she gasped: “Why, no, he
didn’t. I—never once thought of that.
Conductor, stop the car!”
“Why, where are you going?” asked
the girl in the empire jacket.
“To Jack’s office,” said the bride,
firmly. “I —we have an errand to do
before I go home!”
The Outcome.
Mrs. Kingley (anxiously)—rHow did
you come out last night playing
poker?
Kingley—I won two boxes of cigars
and lost that new gown I was going to
give you.—Philadelphia Press.
That Kverlasting Irritating Itch.
That describes Tetter, Eczema and other skin
diseases. 50 cents will cure them—stop the itch
at once. 50 cents pays for a box of Tetterine at
drug stores or postpaid for 50 cents In stamps
from J. T. Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and
bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe; 10c.
St. Vitus’ Dance. One bottle Dr. Fenner’s
Specific cures. Circular, Fredonia, N. Y.
BUCKINGHAM’S
DYE
For the Whiskers,
Mustache, and Eyebrows.
In one preparation. Easy to
apply at heme. Colors brown
or black. The Gentlemen’s
favorite, because satisfactory.
It. P. IIall St Co., Proprietors, Nashua. X, IX.
Sold by all Druggists.
. .
r i cool
• ,yfy' Hi r QTThfc, j
>• r i n
u r ,f pr;-pa 1 RoniHeer I
i i I ■ c ; dav on a is sweltering highly . ■ essen- not , | j
I y tial to comfort and i I
, health. ,,, T It . cools , the . J
blood, reduces your j |
temperature, tones
10 the stomach.
’
1 HIRES ‘
t "fit" F 1 ”
1
Xn-|t-3C u\ j
! m*Ti r
Rootbeer
TtM 6C should be in
every
home, in every
-4C office, in every work¬ !
■»! Ljc shop, A temperance health¬
-20 drink, more
: ful than ice water,
rfw more satisfying delightful than and
any
other beverage pro-
4' doced.
Madreelrfcr tfw» Cbarlea ft.
Hire* Cm., Philadelphia. A park
a|« makes & fa^ieaa, 0ai4 er
crywhere.
THE “ GROWN-UP ” DAUGHTER'S DUTY TO HER
MOTHER.
You can only have one mother; therefore, when her step is growing 1 slow
and her mind gloomy with forebodings, and you can see that her whole
nervous system is upset, it is your filial
duty and privilege to attend to her in
§ time ! Mother is approaching the most
critical period of her life.
V. y The change of life, that is what mother
is dreading, and no wonder, for it is full
Af V of peril to all but the strongest
\ women.
There are some special and very
\wk wearing symptoms from which
mother suffers, but she will not
? ' if speak of them to any one. Help
(~£Jher out; she doesn't know what to do
'] for herself!
.» j / Shall 1 advise drug store you ? and First, get send bottle to
V, the nearest a
A. of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, and see that mother takes it
regularly, then write to Mrs. Pinkham, at Lynn, Mass., giving all the symp¬
toms aud you will receive a prompt reply telling mother what to do for her¬
self. In the meantime the Vegetable Compound will make life much easier
for her. It tones up the nervous system, invigorates g I
the body, and the ‘‘blues” vanish before it as dark
ness flees from the sunlight. You can get it at any I
reliable druggist’s. I fm
Mrs. LouisSTRONG,Harrisnill,ErieCo.,N.Y.,says: “I 1
have been troubled with falling of the womb for years,
was advised to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Q-i f ;-flP vj
Compound. I took thirteen bottles and received great I a ■i
benefit.'' When the time for change of life came I suf
fered a great deal with faintness and palpitation of *
the heart. I got one bottle of the Vegetable Com¬
pound and one of Blood Purifier and was relieved again. I was. thereby
enabled to pass through that serious period very comfortably.”
■ I, n ------<
ANDY CATHARTIC
11 *
<>
i >
CURE COriSTl PAT 10 H \
1 1 ►
11 11
11
10 * r ALL i j
1>
25* 50* DRUGGISTS |
_
'ABSOLUTELY GDSRAHTEED New York.
pic and booklet Trer. Ad. STERLING REMEDY CO*. Chicago, Mon treal. Can., or an.
» M»» » »»** » , * » > ** * * ,> * * >, M * * **** >
f »wv
REASONS FOR USING
Walter Baker & Co.’s ?
♦ W Breakfast Cocoa. < ►
i i 1. 2 . Because Because it it is chemicals is absolutely not made pure. by used. the so-called Dutch Process in ;; :; !
u which are »
3. Because beans of the finest quality are used.
ii 4. Because it is made by a method which preserves unimpaired t - ►
the exquisite natural flavor and odor of the beans. •
I ■ \ 5. Because it is the most economical, costing Jess than one cent j l >
m a cup. ;
m Be sure that you get the genuine article made by WALTER ; ►
BAKER & CO. Ltd., Dorchester, Mass. Established 1780. j;
3S - - s
ill! MKragiggi
Improvements patented lBflii In the U. S, Canada at E9
FIR E PROOF—Proof against sparks, cinders, burning brands, etc.
STRONG—A heavy canvas foundation.
LIGHT—Weighs but 86 lbs. par 100 sq.ft, when laid complete. leather-like pliability and . to . ./'.ness.
FLEX 1 RLE -Contains no coal tar, and retains indefinitely expensive its apparatus. Can he laid by any luigi
KAMI LY APPLIED -Requires no kettle or other
Ugeut woikuian.^^ FOR HAMPERS AND DESCRIPTIVE PAMPHLET.
FRICK COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
I '/OP '" P 1 V H'S':/'!- ISF
l '-J&ai.
Boilers, Saw 31111s, Cotton Bins, Cotton
Presses, drain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth, In
spirators. Injectors. Engine Repairs and
a full line of Brass Good*.
IW~Send for Catalogue, and Price*.
* ve . r y,JIIii
Haiarfl’s Spific Tablets
^uiet the nerves, equalize the circulation, vital
the secretions, impart vigor and give tone
to all the functions of the system. Over-worked
and run-down men and weak and nervous
women are Speedily restored by their use. 1
?,?» m -r',o *< Wre,w '
HAGGARD SPfcCIHC CO.. 310 Norcroas
Building, Atlanta, Ga. LAMAR & RANKIN
ttiiii; c«., Wholesale Agents,
LADIES ADD GENTLEMEN to WANTED sell the
famous German Skin Cure. Removes Freckles,
Pimples and Tan of the face and cures all Skin
Diseases. Exclusive territory and outfit. UK.
L. BLOCK, 44 Walton St., Atlanta, Ga.
OSBORNE’S
udtneddfQeueae
boofet- A ngnst Hhwt a. t. n. Acta*l Cbeap basin**. board- Send Mo text cataiorne g’
time. for
41 Ib8. Begt Granulated Sugar $
Shipped to anjrbodf. Send no
money, but enclose fftamp to
CrawlMaW4 WS.»«al« S. t s.,414 S. «iat*a Sl„b*pt. i«,CW»a»®
M fa II I We ^ant one agent m thw (>d#ty
C Vf to »eU to f«m*Uea. ring
hrticle on eartb. We pay Wa*hia«t©u, all expense. rega t.
GLYZA CIIK.M. ttL U.
MENTION THIS PAPER in writing to adver¬
tisers. AmF-17
1^ «HUVt H RlfF F 1
3
n
i ICSl #fl
\iiVATA! Ski■ f
**Ss!
Ili
5 JSmhmJ
I*-’"
iaCS; A
TA 5 TELE 55
CHDLL )
4 □NIC
IS JUST AS GOOD FOR ADULT8.
WARRANTED. PRICE 50cts»
GALATIA. I VLB., XOV. 16,1895.
Paris Medicine Co., 8t. Louis, Mo.
Gentlemen: -Wo wild lost year, 600 bottles of
! GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TONIC ami have
bought three gross already this year. In all omr ex*
perlence of 14 years, in the drug business, hav©
never sold an article that gave such universal sati*
faction as yoar Tonic. Yours tmlv.
Ajjnli, Ca tta 4 Co
PURCHASER™
Manufacturer " to wearer. Ilhistraied catalogue treo.
Unde r we a r deptrtB MPt . AddreiMl
CON Mi; M K KM’ SUFPLI EM CO., Troy. «■ y.
MORPHINE, Monarch Homo Cur* to.,N*w Al.SAHT.lMD.
3W3
TiTS fAflS. „
Good© wi
la Bold
:25“ {ITS