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Vo** _Jack. who vras that lady with
father? I didn’t know you had
f. •'
; sister- Jack ' oh that one isn’t a sister.
S father’s ste -wife.
pa
Gross Outrages
tp stomach and bowels are perpetrated
^ l^uixw m degree, incitzate enfeeble their bowels with
which the in
itf* M 1 m .f.br-me to a serious extent, sometimes,
! ";«”toma' inerinduciBg dysentery or piles. Hos
<te k Bitters is the true suwedaneum
o s^Hjnaiariai ^«ie STdTflec<uai complaints, e rheuma.ism and
a iiiiter troubles.
, w cra t> apples planted in the yard are the
.it fragrant bloomers and make delight.ul
^serves. A Froae Poem,
K£-M. Medicated Smoking Tobaoco
And Cigarettes
\re absolute remedies for Catarrh,
Hay Fever. Asthma and Colds;
Besides a delightful smoke.
Ladles as well as men, use these goods.
■ >‘o opium or other harmful drug
Used in their manufacture.
£E-M. is used and recommended
By some of the best citizens
Of this country.
If your dealer does not keep EE-M.
Send 13c. for package of tobacco
And 6c. for package of cigarettes,
Direct to the EE-M. Company,
Atlanta, Ga.,
And you will receive goods by mail.
fbere is more Catarrh in this section of the
rtiintrv than all other diseases put together,
snduntil the last few- years was suimposed to be
incurable. For a groat many years doctors
pronounced it a local disease and prescribed
focal with remedies, local treatment, aud by constantly pronounced failing it in¬ to
,are Scionce has catarrh
curable. proven to tea
constitutional constitutional treatment, disease and Hall’s therefore Catarrh requires Cura,
manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo,
Ohio, is the oalv constitutional cure on the
market. It is taken internally In doses from
JOdrnps to a teaspoonful. It acts directly ou
the Mood and mucous surfaces of the system.
They offer one hundred dollars for any case
it falls to euro. Send for circulars and" testi
swnials. Address F.J. ChenkyA- Co.,Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggists, 75c.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Fits permanently day’s cured, of No Dr. fits Kline’s or nervous- Great
ness after first use
Serve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free.
Db'R. II. Klinb. Ltd.. 931 Arch St., Phila.. Pa.
IT IS TRUE
Tbat Hood’s Sarsaparilla cures when all
other medicines fail to do any good what¬
ever. Being peculiar in combination,
proportion and process, Hood’s Sarsapa¬
rilla possesses peculiar curative power.
It absolutely and permanently cures all
diseases originating in or promoted by
impure blood. Remember
Hood’s Sarsa¬ parilla
h the host—in fact the One True Blood Purifier.
Wi Pills S&WSffiSKSPS:
£ffe. SAMPLES
FREE.
mm 7 Cure All
Stomach, Liver »" d
Bowel Troubles.
LARGE PACKAGE OF 40 PILLS, 25 c.
Don’t hesitate to write for FREE SAMPLE
PACKAGE.
THE H. G. LINDERMAN CO.,
404 Gould Building,
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
CHRONIC DISEASES
of all forms
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED.
Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Palpita¬
tion, Indigestion, etc.
CATARWH
of the Nose. Throat and Lungs.
DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN.
Prolapsus, Ulcerations. Leucorrhea. etc. Write
for pamphlet, testimonials and question blauk.
Dlt. S. T. WHITAKER, Specialist. Ga.
205 Noroross Building, Atlanta,
S25 FULL COURSE $25
The complete Business Course or the complete
Shorthand Course for $25, at
WHITE’S BUSINESS COLLEGE,
15 E. Cain St.. ATLANTA, GA.
Complete Business and Shorthand Courses Com¬
bined. $7.50 Per Month.
Business practice from the start. Trained
Teachers. Course of study unexcelled. No va¬
cation. Address F. B. WHITE, Frincipal.
DRUNK ARDS can b® saved with¬
out their knowledge marvelous by
Anti-Jag the
cure for the drink habit.
Write Renova Chemical
Co., 6fi Broadway. N. X.
Fall Information (in plain wrapper) mailed free.
Oil SORES dc Ulcer* Cured. 1 mo. treatment
ei. A. ROBERTS,NewBerne,N.Q.
j 7 :
“ I can s
f sincerely say that I \
owe my life to Ayer’s l
Sarsaparilla. Fcr seven
I years I suffered, with
/ /that terrible shoulder! scourjrcl
Scrofula, iu my
/ I and my arm. Every means l
of cure was tried without suc-\
I / cess. I had a good physician\
who tried in every way to help I
/ I me. I was told to take Ayer’s! \ i
Sarsaparilla. I immediately be
I gan its use and after taking scrofula) seven \ V
I bottles of this remedy the v
was entirely cured.”— Mrs. J. A.Gen¬
tle, Fort Fairfield, Me., Jan. 2C, 1S96.
■
it \
WEIGHTY WORDS
FOR
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla. -j
By Experience They Succeed.
The Railway World, in speaking of
J ° bn Jacob Astor ’ s reCbat exploit in
acting as engineer of an Illinois Cen
tral train, says:
* » ^ r - Astor has for several years
been a director of the Illinois Central
inspection “*>. trips ™ he the has previous ‘run the official
en
gine.’ He has a natural taste for
mechanics, . and , , his . . love of . railroading .. ,.
is much like that of Dr. W. Seward
Webb. In the Adirondacks, Dr. Webb
and his personal traits are known to
every native, and his passion for driv¬
ing a locomotive at a high rate of speed
is regarded with complacent pride all
along the line of his road. When a
one or two car special dashes through
the mountain region from Old Forge
to Malone, at a fifty-mile gait, the
simple mountaineer will turn placidly
to his summer boarder and remark:
‘Dr. Webb is running that train.’
Occasionally the trackmen, on their
morning rounds, will find the wreck
of a hand car lying at the bottom of
the railroad embankment, or several
yards from the track at the edge of
the woods. Their invariable comment
will be: ‘The doctor must have been
along here last night.’ It is seldom
that anybody is hurt on such occa¬
sions, for the Adirondack railroad men
are experts in jumping from hand
cars. George J. Gould was able to
handle a locomotive long before he be¬
came a railroad president. Like Dr.
Webb, he is a genuine sportsman, and
enjoys the sensation of going fast.
While making his periodical inspec¬
tion of the several lines in tho South¬
western systom, President Gould fre¬
quently relieves the locomotive en¬
gineer for hours at a time. Frank
Thompson, vice president of the Penn¬
sylvania lines, knows how to ‘run the
engine’ almost as well as any veteran.
Two of the sons of James J. Hill, the
president of the Great Northern, are
said to be as much at home in a cab
of a locomotive as they are in the
dining room of their father’s house.
S. H. H. Clark, president of the Union
Pacific, has taken all of the degrees of
railroading, aud he can ‘brake’ a train
as well as handle the engine.”
Do Not be Afraid of Lightning.
Professor G. Stanley Hall, presi¬
dent of Clark University, recently
corresponded with nearly two thou¬
sand persons with a view of ascertain¬
ing what constituted their great fear,
and ascertained that of 298 classes of
objects feared thunder and lightning
led all the rest. The Electrical En¬
gineer, editorially commenting upon
this subject, endeavors to prove the
unreasonableness of this state of af¬
fairs, and says that there is only an
average of 205 deaths from lightning
over the whole of the United States in
a year, while in New York city alone
1,500 people annually meet accidental
deaths. In the Bame city over two
hundred people are drowned each
•year, while 150 are burnt, or scalded
to death and five hundred more meet
death by falls of one kind or another,
so that if statistics prove anything
there is fifty per cent, greater danger
of being kicked by a horse in New
York city than of being killed by
lightning. It is also interesting to
learn that statistics show that there
are five times as many lightning fatali¬
ties in the country as in the cities,
probably on account of the metal roofs
and well-grounded water which systems to
be found in the latter, carry
the discharges and act as lightning
conductors. Another erroneous cur¬
rent belief is that lightning strokes
are necessarily fatal, while statistics
show that of 212 persons struck only
seventy-four resulted fatally.—Boston
Cultivator.
Two brothers, aged respectively 4
and 6 years old, fell in with a stray
kitten, which, suffering by the hands
of some cruel person, had lost its tail,
scarcely half an inch remaining.
“Poor little kitten,” said the young
er one. “Who has cut off its tail? I
wonder is it will grow again?”
To which the elderly one gravely
remarked: “Of course it will! Don’t
you see, the root is there?”
AGRICULTURAL TOPICS,
To Drive Off Flies.
Many mixtures of cotton seed oil,
coal oil, etc., have been tried as a
remedy for the pestiferous flies which
harass cows. Perhaps nothing has
proved more successful than fish oil,
to which is added a little carbolic acid.
It is best applied with a broad, flat
paint brush. It is especially objec¬
tionable to flies, and probably is a
chief remedies.—Atlanta constituent of many of the'pat cut
Journal.
Musty Hay.
Much of the baled hay that conies to
market is musty. Most farmers when
they bale hay think it need not be
very dry, as the bales are small. But
the amount of hay packed in them is
always sufficient to get up a violent
ferment unless the hay is properly
dried before it is put into the bale. If
there were more cave used in baling
hay the price for it would be much
better than it is, as the hay itself
would be better worth it.
Lodged Harley.
It is always best to cut barley while
it is still green, and the grain is in
the milky stage. But if the straw has
been beaten down by rains, early
cutting is especially necessary. The
chief danger with fallen barley is that
rust will attack the straw, after which,
instead of growing heavier, the grain
will rather decrease in weight. So
soon as grain is cut the danger of rust
attacking it has past, because when its
stalk is severed from the root the
leaves and stalks contract, and close
the pores through which the rust en¬
ters the plant. But if the weather is
fine, barley that has fallen down will
often fill well and make a good crop.
It is a grain that ripens more quickly
after it comes into head than any
other.
The New Feed Stuff.
The new corn product being talked
about is obtained by grinding corn¬
stalks. The pith of the stalk is used
for packing between the plates of iron¬
clad warships. The hard shell of the
stalks, after tho pith is taken out, is
ground into a fine powder. It can be
bagged like oats or bran and will keep
as well as any other ground feed.
Analysis proves that it is richer in
musole makers than the whole corn¬
stalk, and experience shows that stock
will eat it up clean. The stations tell
that a balanced ration can be readily
made up by mixing the new feed stuff
with oil meal or cottonseed meal. A
ton of the ground stocks will occupy
little more space than a ton of ensilage.
There is authority for believing that
this new feed stuff' will have some ef¬
fect in reducing the price of hay.—
Connecticut Farmer.
Destroying Burdocks.
It is a comparatively easy matter to
kill the burdock, though it may be
hard enough to exterminate it, be¬
cause it seeds so plentifully and the
seed will remain iu the ground for
years until it has a favorable chance
to grow. As the burdock is biennial
it dies out after it has seeded the
second year, but that is only after it
has provided thousands and tens of
thousands of seed to perpetuate its
kind. All that is needed to kill the
plant is to take a dull axe and chop the
root something below the surface, and
thon throw on a handful of salt. The
burdock root being soft and moist dis¬
solves the salt, which quickly rots it
so that further sprouting of a new
top is impossible. No amount of cut¬
ting will do the work. The burdock,
like most weeds, is a very persistent
seeder. W<* have seen it mown down
with the scythe two or three times
during the summer, and yet in fall
showing sevoral dusters of seed burrs
near the ground, containing enough
seed to start a hundred burdock
plants the very next year, The seed
burrs cling to clothing aud to the fur
of animals brushing against it. Hence
the weed is sure to be always widely
distributed.
Blight In Fear Trees.
This is tho season, especially after
the very hot weather we have lately
had, followed by rains, when blight is
most likely to attack pear trees. It
appears to be a disease which espe¬
cially attacks trees heavily manured
and which have an excess of sap. II
the tree has been manured in the
spring with stable manure, and has
since been cultivated, it will almost
certainly blight. Manuring with pure¬
ly mineral fertilizers, without nitro
gen, is, we know from experience, a j
help to prevent trees from blighting,
The pear tree to be kept productive
and heaKhy should not make a large
yearly wood growth. Six to twelve j
inches yearly growth of wood, with fruit a
proportionate number of new
buds, will give the tree longer life aud
a greater amount of fruit than will
any attempt to force fruit production.
Over-bearing is a fruitful cause of
blight. It comes just at the time
when the pear seeds are forming, aud
when this imperative demand for more ,
potash robs the sap of that mineral
which is so necessary to keep wood
and foliage in healthfal condition, j
Yet pear trees on grassbound land are
in the condition next most likely to
be blighted. In their case probably
the potash in the soil is inert and the
pear tree root3 cannot get it.—Atlanta -
Journal. i
A MOTHER'S EFFORT,
A 3Iotl»er See* Her Daughter in a Pitiful
Condition, hut Manages to Rescue
Her.
From (he New Era, Greensburg, Ind.
The St. Paul correspondent for the .Veto
Era recently had an item regarding the case
of Mabel Stevens, who had just recovered
, from a serious illness ... of . rheumatism and (i
nervous trouble, aud was able to be out for
the tirst time in three months. The letter
stated that it was a very bad case ami her
recovery was considered such a considerable surprise to
the neighbors that it created
gossip. learn the absolute facts
Being anxious to sent to
In the case, with a special reporter was
have a talk the girl and her parents.
They were not at home, however, being
some distance away. A message was sent
to Mr. Stevens, asking him to write up a
full history of the case, and a few days ago
the following letter was received from Mrs.
Stevens:
“St, Tattl, Ind., Jan. 20, 1897.
Editors New Era, Greensburg. Ind.
“D ear Bibs: Your kind letter received
and lam glad to have the and opportunity to
tell you about the sickness recovery of
Mabel. Wo don’t want any newspaper no¬
toriety, but in a ease like this where a few
words of what I have to sav may mean re¬
covery for some child, I feel It my duty to
toll you of her oase.
“Two years ago this winter Mabel began
complaining of pains in her limbs, princi¬
pally iu her lower limbs. She was goiugto
school, and had to walk about three quar¬
ters of a mile each day, going through all
kinds of weather. She was thirteen years
old and doing so well in her studies that I
disliked to take her from school but we had
to do it.
“For several months she was confined to
the house, and she grew pale and dwindled
down to almost nothing. Her legs and
arms were drawn up and her appearance
was pitiful. Several doctors had attended
her, but it seemed that none of them did
her any good. They advised us to take her
to the "springs, afford but times although were so hurd finally wo
could not it, we
managed to get her to the Martinsville
baths. Here sho grew suddenly weaker,
and It seemed that she could not stand it,
but she became better, and it seemed that
she was beiug benefited, but she suddenly
grow worse, aud wo hud to bring her home.
“She lingered along, and last winter be¬
came worse again, and was afflicted witli a
nervous trouble almost like tho St. Vitus’
dance. For some time we thought she
would die, and the physicians gave her up.
When she was at her worst a neighbor came
iu with a box of Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for
Pale People aud wanted us to try them as
they were advortised toby good for such
cases, aud her daughter had used them for
nervousness with such good results that
she thought they might help Mabel.
“We tried them. The first box helped
her some, and after sho had taken throe
boxes she was able to sit up iu bed. When
she hail finished a half dozen boxes she was
able «y be out aud about. Sho has taken
about nine boxes altogether now, and she
Is as well as ever, and going to school
every day, having started in again three
weeks ago. Her euro was undoubtedly
due to these
(Signed) Mas. Amanda Stevens.”
Dr. Williams’ Fink Fills for Fale People
contain, in a condensed form, all the ele¬
ments necessary to give new life and rich
ness to the blood and restore shattered
nervos. They are an unfailing specific for
such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial
paralysis, St. Vitus’ dance, sciatica, neural¬
gia, rheumatism, nervous headache, tho
after effect of la grippe, palpitation of the
heart, pale and sallow complexions, all
forms of weakness either in male or female.
The I’ink Pills are sold by all dealers, or wiil
be sent post paid on receipt of price, 50 cents
a box, or six boxes for $2.50—(they by address¬ ure
never sold in bulk or by the 100)
ing Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Schenec¬
tady, N. Y.
Heat travels faster than cold. Anybody can
catoii cold.
swearing Won’t Help It.
Swearing may make a fire burn, or it may
make a deck hand bustle, but It won’t help
Tetter, or Ringworm. If you use Tetterlne, It
will make you comfortable and save swear
words. 50 cents at drug stores, or by mail for50
cents In stamps from .1. T. Shuptrlne, Savannah,
Ga.
Blackberries and dewberries are at homo In
any part of Texas.
Fiso’s Cure cured m® of a Throat and Lung
trouble of three years’ standing.— E. Cady,
Huntington, Ind., Nov. 12, 1894.
MRS. PETERSON’S STORY.
I have suffered with wotnb trouble
over fifteen years. I had inflammation,
enlargement and displacement of thi
womb.
The doctor wanted me to take treat
ments, but I had just begun takinr
Mrs. Pinkham’s j
Compound, and
said my husband I had m
r
better wait
and see *4
how much r\
good th-t i "dfi S'
would do
me. I was
so sick when I
began with her mvBi
medicine, I could
hardly be on my
feet. I had the
backache con
stantly, also headache, and
was so dizzy. I had heart trouble, it
seemed as though my heart was in ray
throat at times choking me. I could
not walk around and I could not lie
down, for then my heart would beat so
fast I would feel a3 though I was
smothering. I had to sit up in bed
nights in order to breathe. I was so
weak I could not do anything,
I have now taken several bottles of
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com
pound, and used three packages of
Sanative Wash, and can say I am
perfectly cured. * I do not think I
t0 uld have lived long if Mrs. I’ink
ham’s medicine had not helped me.—
Mrs. Joseph Peterson, 513 East St.,
W&rren. I’a.
too SHAMS OF sroc* F0* Ml-.l
A ' paWnted
Mountain On. ha»dr«-1 *«4 iix,y acm.
foid-bearuHr f 1 a»A awl solid mount,)*
OF of *7 OO OI e. SooKr.svi.il .iwitrd A..
mint l * *■ r 5* w -
C 0 L D 1 I Coio V*».■*. oir. Mini- * V^* * Ft hi»n
airtM CURED AT HOME; ««><i »t*»»p iCO,
J. E- HARRIS
$ 1.00 FOB YOUR PHOTOGRAPH.
PROPOSITION 1.
SQUAW VINE WINE CERTIFICATES.
IVrite us 1st Mow long you bare used or
sold l>r. Slnnnons Squaw Vine Wine. 2nd
state lfisoascB it cured. 3d Give names of
between Us Strength umf action an.Pthe
strength and action of McKlree’s Wine of
Cardui. On receipt of letter enclosing ro*
cent i v U j, en Photograph wo will send you ft
$1.00 Bottle Squaw Vine Wine (FREE).
PROPOSITION 3.
fiver medicine certificates.
Write us 1st How long you have
used or sold l)r. M. A. Simmons Live Modi*
Cine. 3nd State Diseases it cured. 3d Uivo
names of those cured. 4th State the differ*
dice between its strength aud actlou and
the strength and action of J. 11. Zellin
& Co 's “Liver Regulator” and the Chatta¬
nooga Medic>ne Co.’* “BlackDraught,' both and
of which contain Woody have Bulbs sold of Roots about f
Stems of Herbs, and at
cents per package, end should not retail at
over 10 cents if consumers are not Liver imposed Medi¬
upon, while Dr. Jl. A. Simmons
cine, mado from the purest and moat caro
fullyselocted Drugs, regardlessof aud Stems cost, of with the
tho Bulbs of the Roots extracted and
Herbs by our secret process
thrown nwav, cannot be sold at less than 25
cents. The reason of the diff'orence is this:
On Juno 30th, 18D3. the Supreme Court
enjoined J. 11. Zeillti A Co. from manufact¬
uring and Belling medicine under the name
of “Dr. Simmons' Liver Medicine.” medi¬
Zeilin s answer to our bill said, tho
cine was designed as “cheap negro medi¬
cine for the negroes of tho MlaslsHlnpl testified in Val¬ the
ley." And Zellin's manager said “that
case, and Ze-iliti's advertisements made
all tho Liver Medicine they make is by
the same formula ” What mow conclusive
evidence could there Iks that all their Liver
Medicine is ‘ cheap negro mediolno 6 ” in
Again, the United Mates Court, the
Zellin ease at Knoxville, Tonn.,enjoined called the
old proprietors of tho article now
“Black Draught” from perpetrating fraud
by using the words constituting our trade
name, and “Black. Draught” was not. known
tl!) it after established 1875; vet they in 1840, falsely.advertise ana filch our trade that
was Untruthfully
by allowing their customers to
represent it ns ihetmnio usour genuine arti¬
cle. they giving color of truth to tho de¬
ception by publishing tho picture of a Dr.
ciating Slinuions on llieir wrapper, thereby asso¬
their article with our Dr. M. A. Sim¬
mons’Liver Medicine, which he established
in 1840, and every pueksco of which has
borne his picture tdtico 18n0.
On receipt of letter enclosing a recently
taken Photograph we will mall you a $1 00
Package Liver Medicine (FREE).
C. F. SIMMONS MED. CO., Mo
Rv. Louts,
food Heating Ms
OUR Two Sticks of
wood will keep
TRILBY _,, afire
24 hours.
For Room*
$4.50.
For School*
and Clturolie*
$ 6.00 $8
to OO.
We have the
most economi¬
cal < lor.L Stove
made. Wo carry
u full li uu
MarUels,
' Tile,
.
... Graces
—AND
irire-Placo
Goods.
HUNNICUTT & BELIIBG3MH CO •1
ATLANTA, GEORGIA.
IWMention tliiti paper when writing to (he above
FRICK COMPANY
ECLIPSE ENGINES
C
w, mm,
v-- v
m
Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, Cotton
Presses, Grain Separators.
Chisel Tooth and Solid Saws, Saw Teeth, In¬
spirators, Injectors, Engine Repairs and
a full line of Brass Goods.
W Send J'ur Catalogue and Prices.
Avery & McMillan
* SOUTHERN MANAGERS.
No*. SI 4 SB S. Forsyth St., ATLANTA, GA.
"Success”
Cotton. • ••••
ml SsoiiHuller
Separator.
;
NgP» Wm Nearly ffoables
the Valaa
of Seed to tie
Fanner,
All np-to-date Gicners oee them beecnae the Grow¬
er* /five their jatronasre to each gins. Hnlicri*
PRACTICAL, RELIABLE and GUARANTEED.
For fell information Adartsi
80ULE STEAM FEED WORKS, Meridian, 10^
Fir-sl-class BOILERS.
<*]GET our prices.d
9SF Cast every day; work ISO han<ls.
LOMBARD I BON WORKS
AND SUPPLY COMPANY,
AUGUSTA, GEORGIA.
OSBORNE’S
udwtedd
\ n«rii«*rt- No O'
book- Short tin**. <Jh***r» hoard S«r» | for
D D• Ol j? C ^YVfki:Torai>va'vtag k^kpixo. f-sf"
book shorthand and
TKLs«KAr«v Doauufui catalogue Fr ■
MENTION THIS PAPER l £E“K5?-3&
uTHriTwHlRE All 1 ELSE Go<x). FAILS, Use
nest Cough Syrup. af-tea
In tiro'*. 8 r>)^ bv ’Ir’ieiO.t*.
CON SJJJYI PJ&CXN