Newspaper Page Text
| / VICTORS)
! j\ ALWAYS LEAD. !
< / f
J '?£ My/ THEY EXCEL all others in
j F,NE MECHANICAL CONSTRUC- [
Z TION AND PERFECTION OF DE- ►
j paz \ tail. :
! / The strongest light wheel on '
< i the mar het. '
J VICTORS SPEND THEIR TIME J
< IX■■ I t'V N THE ROAD » NOT IN THE RE- h
' \ r x\ i^ PA,R SHOP - !
// T/V^ I '’ z Overman Wheel Co.
H / wfa Makers of Victor Bicycles and Athletic Goods. t
<ll Boston, New York, Detroit, Denver, , ,
'■*^ an Francisco, Los Angeles, >
4 Portland, Ore. *
■aw. ————— .
PD p
B' K H as
PRICKLY ASH, POKE HOOT
AND POTASSIUM
Makes
Marvelcus Cures
in El?,ad Poison
RtiKiniaiism
and Scrofula
BBMMGVW.,,. CBM ....SWU 111 !■■!!
P 1’ I*. p.i. < t!i*» blood, b’lH'lff up
the v <n‘. ?•>>; itrLHltal <><,. u vr«
•tranut to t.« 'koned m . ves. c a; »*, a
dlMia> j t ’ put ient boaltl: nr. I
happi. •• < v ■•. > MtlHif-a:, glotoi /
fwelinu and Im itnnr hibt pr*vailci.
B’or j- i. i . <• ••■.!.try it-ud tert* •'•/
nyphil; I>r ll .uil poisoning, ir.cn’i'-
rlal pm , tnnlnri.». dysppps l t, . d
iu all bii a I yldn disco-. >' •>
biotchea. • ' nil chronic uh- «,
tetter, n< aid Io- ii. boil i. <*;••
•raernn v.t mi . •<_, , without
aontriidi* ‘ i"ti, 1 Li.t I*. P. I*.is l <
blood p irln r 1 i th world, n i«l •«
petit I v -. • • :y and porniftlient m
Eftll
14dio * . ' ns nro i‘i ’
tadv : ■ In
tit»D. <li .• : > it .r.t-oal irre/yi' ,
are per nil .•• •' i * u.od by t. ••
darful i • ' ‘ clemv i
•riles ; Prickly As-1 , M i •
Brut ,•■•!..
■■MA-'-'Y 1 v/»lMll*»' Vr~ ■»-■.' '»
fn. i , .. ' ng. i.
oi,. ■ '■ ■ i irb'-'t i«n ••
y.ur i.k ,•> i» '. i.iy ■'.n ! • i ■ '
Vnov, 1. ■ > ■ ’ * ; 'Ctc*' Iv i .
■•e:vu ,t.i , .'•licui.r.tiH'.;
Myv .r , ••■'. t.yti. v :• i'
>hy»l J bund’.■ < '
Tars, til' ! ■ :• l b '"n ror •• i •
oel En .i 1 , ,v. onl i
uac bot' ... I'. r. r., u.:.1 • i
eUaertv i."■» dono !.>■• " >
«u<l i • I hava<sv< rt;sSO...
Yanni >d .. nr:nodi.i.,<jtocil
••Ssrolli It ■ ■t»-. , diuoni." ..
. ■ . . m.
Bpriu; ti> d, Grecu Couai/, Ho.
The People’s Friend. In use for fifty years.
Cures Cough, Cold, Croup, Whooping-Cough,
Grippe, Bronchitis, Asthma and Lung Affections.
DR. BULL’S COUGH SYRUP is sold everywhere
for only 25 cents. Refuse cheap substitutes.
Chew 1 ANGE’S PLUGS. The Great Tobacco Antidote,tOc. Dealer* or mall,A.C.Merer * Ce.. Balto..Md.
Local Schedule,
Chattanooga, Rome & Columbus Railroad.
Eugene E. Jones, Receiver.
Passenger Schedule in effect Oct. 30th, 1895.
-
Passenger No. 2. a. m. Accommodation No jO a.m.
I A'., Chattanooga ..7 25 ....5 00
“ Chickamauga ..... 801 625 ”
•• La Payette 8 31 7 30
“ Summerville 9 11 92s
Home.... 10 26 12 25 p.m
“ Cedartown . .1113 314 “ No. 12
Buchanan . ... 1202 p.m. ...510 . '
Atlanta 645 a.m. 5 40
Bremen .... 1220 p.m 6 10
Ar., at Carrollton .....12 50 7 00
“ Newnan .......3 05 #- ’ t
“ Gridin 7 15
NORTHROUND.
Lv. Gridin 6 15am
Newnan 0 40 Accommodation Ao. 11 ,
.carrollton lisp. m., 3 25 a. m
Ar., ai Vtlnnta . 350 850
Lv Bremen .1 45 630 ... ’
Buchanan 2 08 7 00
• ’■'dartown . 252 No. 9 ..950
Rune 3 39 11 20 p. m ’ ’’
Summerville. .4 54 . 2 00
I.il-'ayette 5 34 330
Chickamauga 604 ..5 10 ’’’
Ar. at chatlauuoga,. 640 6 15
X ' I and 2 arrive al anddepart from Central Station at Chattanooga. Nos.
9 and , • arrive at and <lpart from C. R. AC. shops at Chattanooga. Passengers
mav ’ aid ta-ain-. No. 2orlo at Montgomery Aye., Chattanooga.
C, B- WILBVRN. W. A. VRXDIER, 'gent,
'Prattle M’g’r. Summerville, Ga.
VY in ch ester cati "9<»
RIFLES',,
and
Best iin the World,
W1 NCli E REPEAT! NGAR rfsTCOl
k ' l - F ‘ -rRLt ' WiNcatsTtnArt NtwHann.Cawet
PIMPLES, BLOTCHES
AHO OLD SORES
CATARRH, MALARIA,
KIDNEY TROUBLES
and DYSPEPSIA
Are entirely removed by P.P.P.
—Prickly Ash. Poire Root and Potae-
Binm, tho createat blood purifier on
earth.
AnTinDEBN, 0.. July 21,
Mxgeiu* Lippman Bros. . Savannah.
Ca.: Dear Kirs—l bought a bottle of
your P. P P. at Hot Springy.Ark.,aud
It has done mo more good than three
months’ treatment at tho Hot Springe,
tieud three bottles C. O. D.
Respectfully youra,
JAS. M. NEWTON,
Aberdeen, Brown County, O.
Cnpt. J. D. 'Holiniiton.
To aU “them it may concern: I here-
Ly t * dfy t ? tho wonderful properties
oz P. P. P. for eruptions of tho skin. I
1 ears with an un
flisrttlv and cisyprcoable eruption on
D/taoe. 1 tried every known reme
• '.} i.i vnln.untd P. F. P. was used,
i uv.'l a i n entirely cured.
% Bit'uouby ? J. D. JOHNSTON.
Savanaah. Ga.
fTUn Cancer Oared.
Tsr.ftmc /re m fr.t? Jfayor of Scquin y Tex.
Pr- ’’'j, Tev. , January 14, 1893.
.. ii.’i -i\n Bros., Savannah,
, C . • "■ ,en—[ hnve tried your P.
i * .•»• skin, usually
:r* • y s kiu o<>noer,of thirty years’
and .euu i greet relief: It
i t . - s > hhx>d a.. 1 -em ves all lr-
• .ons n.dtho seat of tho diseoso
.. I * r ?r c . any snrrading
: . 1 hr.-< t ik'n r.ve< r six bottle®
, . .v 1 . ic 1 o<u. *b?n.'. t>» p.nol her course
\:i.. T'. i. ha.i uh-o roliovod
!’• • na and stomach
/«r s truly.
<;a; r. \Z. M. RUST,
Attorney at Law.
. R::’; c E!''J Ki2ii Free.
; ALL DItUGGI3Ta SELL IT.
’ BROS.
PKOPRIETOKS,
Eloclk.Savanna.'b, Ga
OENTtC BROWN SNAKU.
Ut. Xb Buam., In Ditch.. m 4 Crwka
and Devour Small Fiah.
It is hard for the average man or
woman to believe that any species
lof the snake family would ever
make attractive and interesting pets.
So strong is our hereditary hatred
of serpents that many sensitive per
j sons even dislike to read of them or
their habits. Yet it is true that the
venomous and ugly kinds are in the
minority and that several species are
absolutely harmless and very gentle.
No better example of the latter
sort need be cited than the brown
snake—“De Kay’s little brown i
snake,’’asit is more strictly known.
While not so common a variety ns
the true garter snakes, which name
is applied by the average individual :
to about five or six separate varie
ties, yet they may be found in theit
favorite haunts all through the
spring, summer and part of tho fall
: in Connecticut, New Jersey and New
York.
The muddy ditches, shallow creeks
and spring brooks are the chosen
abiding places of the brown snakes
in the early months. One of the
first species to leave winter quarters,
they may always be found sunning
on flat stones or dry logs by the
creek side in April. They are grace
ful in every movement and quicker
than thought. When onoe they de
cide to devour a small frog or an
aquatic insect it is the surest and
swiftest sort of death to the victim.
Imitating their larger brethren, the
real water moccasins, these midgets
are fast, fearless swimmers and
spend much of their time in pursu
ing small fish. They catch a mar
velous number of chubs and shiners.
When the crisp nights and dawns
of September come, the little brown
snakes take to the uplands. In sun
ny, cozy corners and hollows carpet
ed with dry leaves they may be
found sleepily basking as late as
the end of October. The cooler
weather seams to drive them from
their damp retreats. While on the
high ground they feed on tree toads,
slugs and insects of many sorts. To
secure one or two of these beautiful
reptiles is not easy, but may be ac
complished with a long handled,
light net, a quick eye and a ready
hand.
Kept in a roomy box with glass
sides, a good sized pool and a bed of
dry leaves, with some growing plants
and moss, and placed where a warm,
generous flood of sunlight can bathe
tho box and its contents nearly all
day, the brown snake will be con
tented. He will learn to know his
keeper, to take his food from the
latter’s fingers and will teach him
many ways and habits of snakes not
to be learned from books.—New
York World.
Social Life of a Church.
We should understand that a
wholesome social life in a church
does not involve an obliteration of
all that divides men and women into
groups outside the church, w’rites
Mrs. Lyman Abbott in Ladies’ Home
; Journal. It does mean the oblitera
: tion of some of those lines. Except
i while under thejiower of an absorb
ing interest, degrees of intellectual
cultivation, tastes, habits make com
panionship agreeable or disagreea
ble. So while men and women of
diverse characteristics may work to
gether happily under the stress of a
pressing need, may sing together the
same hymns, may join in the same
prayers, they may not at all agree in
minor matters of daily living, and
therefore constant intercourse would
not be desirable.
A friendly feeling expressed in
word and deed does not make it nec
essary that Fishin Jimmy, noble
Christian though he be, should in
vite Mr. Gladstone to visit him nor
require that Mr. Gladstone should
ask Queen Victoria to ilivite Fishin
Jimmy to one of her state dinners.
Lady Aberdeen has proved to us that
there is a possible fellowship in the
home which transcends both intel
lectual and social distinctions with
out obliterating them. And the
church should exemplify the same
truth.
A Shrewd Peasant.
A countryman went to a lawyer,
laid before him a case in dispute and
then asked him if he would under
take to win the suit.
Lawyer—Most certainly I will un
dertake the case. We are sure to
win.
Peasant—So you really think it is
a good case?
Lawyer—Undoubtedly. I am pre
pared to guarantee you will get a
I verdict in your favor.
Peasant—Well, then, sir, I don’t
think I’ll go to law this time, for,
you see, I have just given you my
opponent’s case and not my own
Fliegende Blatter.
The Jackal.
In hunter’s lore there is an idea
that the jackal is the lion’s provid
er—that he locates the game and
takes the lion to it. This supersti
tion has no more foundation than is
found in the fact that after a lion
has slain his quarry the jackals al
ways attend and wait the conclusion
of the repast in order to pick r.p the
lea vines.
sc ®bcke, who ;
I^ll 0
■ ■ W. doubt treated and cur- 1
I I iA»w”’S!*£ , E
cured by
Cured
♦»1 GUESS * CAN. 1 '
Bh» washed the dtahee an-*, made the bed
And patiently rot on her kncea to ecmß.
In winter she minted the -ow» in the shed.
In Bummer bent o'er the steaming tub.
Sho made the garden and swept and bsiod
And cooked for boarders and raked the hay
And never complained that her poor head ached
Or John waa almost always sway.
When they asked her if she would like to rota
She said with a sigh end .v look remote,
•‘I have done more work han my old man.
If I have the time, why, I guess I can.”
She rocked the cradle the while she churned;
She kept the children e » clean and neat.
And most of tho living her poor hands earned.
While John talked politics in the street.
When any wero sick, the watch she kept.
She gathered the little ones Sabbath day
And walked two miles to the church alway.
Bhe mended and sewed while her husband
slept;
She taugl ♦. the children each day a spell.
When they asked if she favored the suffrage
plan.
She timidly glanced at her husband, “WeU,
If John is willing, I guess I can.”
And so she drudged, and she baked and brewed,
And toiled from dawn to the midnight hour.
John drank and gossiped and tipat and chewed
And talked and grumbled of “woman's
sphere."
And her children grew into stalwart men,
Brave and helpful and by her side.
She knew efte made them, and once again
When they asked the question she Mid with
pride:
“There's a hundred dollar woman sometimes
Yoked to a small ten d' Uar man.
I'm sure it Isn't eno of the cadineo
To vote against him. I gu<Me I can."
—Mrs. Emma P. Seabury in Woman’s Journal
The Cock «f the Walk.
He baa all the fault# and few of the i
virtues of a jealous husband, and if
he object* forcibly to see any one
dangling about his own wives he is
absolutely unscrupulous in the mat
ter of poaching on other people's pre
serves. In short, in his matrimoni
al relations his motto may be said
to be, “What’s thine is mine, and
■what’s mine is my own.’’ When
he is in good temper he is moderate
ly polite to the fair sex and may at
times be seen standing with his
eyes half closed while a chosen cir
cle of lady friends perform for him
much the same kindly office as Bot
tom exacted of his attendant elves.
When, again, he has eaten and
drunk as much as he oan conven
iently carry, he will be generous
enough to summon his favorite sul
tana for the time being and allow
her to pick up any surplus food.
But even then it is a Damocloan re
past, for if her lord and master, who
is like the school boy— generally
hungry and always greedy—sudden
ly feels that bis crop can contain one
more grain the lady becomes painful
ly aware that her presence—or shall
we say her assistance?—is no longer
required. She becomes the recipieal
of a hearty peck and is sent about
her business, an innocent victim,
like Vashti, of a despot's caprice.
At the morning and evening meal,
when all fowls have a right to feel
hungry and there is a general rush
for the food, we note a painful lack
of dignity about the royal move
ments, for then cooky thinks noth
ing of upsetting the ladies of tha
court in all directions aatd pocking
right and left wil h a hearty good
will which spares neither age nor
sex.—Blackwood’s Magaune.
CatUM of L phUMvl*.
R has been asserted that there is
an observable inortaae in diphtheria
cases among schoc children almost
immediately upon their return to
school after holidays and a gradual
decrease as tho term advances. This I
is accounted for by the fact that
during vacations the drainage is im
perfectly attended to. but with tho
opening of school there is abundant
flushing of pipes by reason of con
stant use. This theory is interest
ing when it is taken into considera
tion that a number of violent out
breaks of this disease have followed
long dryspAls. Under traoh circum
stances an ebundanoe of water be
comes a matter of the utmost im
portance. Indeed many physicians
and scientists are willing to assert
that an ample supply of good water,
with the free use of potash or good
soap, would do much toward keep
ing not only diphtheria but many
other diseases in check.—New York
Ledger.
Vnlacky.
“Look here, young fellow,’’ said
the gentleman wita the waxed mus
tache to the tramp who was stealth
ily approaching the vicinity of the
free lunch counter, “if you’re at all
superstitious, I'd have you know
that you’re the thirteenth man who
has worked that tree lunoh today. ”
“Well, I guess 13 is dead unlucky, ”
replied the itinerant- “No. 12 seems
to have got the last of it.”—Yon
kers Statesman.
Wise men will apply their reme
dies to vices, not to names; to the
causes of evil which are permanent,
not the occasional organs by which
they act and the transitory modes
in which they appear.—Burke.
Bombast onoe signified the ootton
that was employed to stuff garments,
particularly the enormous trunk
hose worn in the fourteenth and fif
teenth centuries.
A writer in an Austrian paper says
that Prince Biismarck’s family is of
Bohemian origin, and that the name
was originally spelled “Duschek.”
What a vast deal of time and ease
that man gains who is not troubled
with the spirit of impertinent curi
osity about others.—Anon.
It will be an agreeable surprise
’to persons subjec* to attacks of
bilious colic to 1 arn that pr mnt
rehe' may - chad by t-ikingCham
: berlain’s Colic Cho era and Dia r
i rhoea Remedy. 11 many instances
: the attack may he prevented by
! taking this as soon as the
> first symptoms of the disease ap
! pear. 25 and 50 cent bottles for
ale by all druggists.
■■■■mß«sa3®s3«s---HHS==SHHSS3a
ON THE STAIRS,
were aitting after waltzing
On tho stairs.
He. before I could forbid it,
Stole a rotw ere y- t I missed it,
And, as tenderly ho k:-..ed It,
Swiftly in his pocket hid it
Unaware*.
We were talking after waltzing
On the stairs.
I bad said that ho sbc ’ rue it.
And a lecture I inion 1,
Which I think he appre.-.ended;
I waa kissed before I knew it.
Unawares,
We were silent after waltzing
On the stairs.
I had stormed with angry feeling,
But he spok* love, never heeding,
And my eye* fell 'ncath his pleading,
i All my depth of love revealing
Unaware*.
—Boston Courier.
Queer Facta About Spider*.
My attention was called by a clerk
in a drug store to a web which had
been superbly decorated with Hakes
and scales of logwood. I thought at
first that this beautiful passemen
terie effect had been produced acci
dentally, but after watching for a
few minutes I saw the spider de
scesd into the box of logwood, affix
a thread of silk to a flake of the dye,
hoist it to the web above and secure
: ly fas ton it to one of the transverse
i etrands. The glittering ao.des mov
. ed at the slightest jar or when they
were strucl by a current of air and
were dazaling to the eye. This little
decorative artist had indeed con
structed a truly palatial residence.
Some spiders unquestionably are
affected by music to a marked de
gree.
On one occasion I noticed a spider
which had swung down from the
ceiling of a church and hung sus
pended just above the organist’s
hands. The organist informed me
that ho bad repeatedly noticed that
spiders were affected by music. Sev
eral days afterward while seated at
the organ I observed the same spi
der. Several times I drove her away
a»d enticed her back by playing al
ternately soft andante and loud
bravura selections. Professor C.
Reclain, during a concert at Leipsic,
jaw a spider descend from one of
the chandeliers while a violin solo
was being played, but as soon as the
orchestra began to sound it quickly
-«r. Hani* a——Boston Herald.
Tariff was the name of the Moor
llsh chieftain, Abou al Tarifa, who
had a fortress near the strait of
Gibraltar and levied toll on ships
Mid merchandise passing through.
Catarrh
LOCAL DISEAS I
and is the result of co >
and sudden clinv'tv
changes.
It can only be cure' SA
‘by a pleasant reme ;
which is a.-plied dir.it
lyin'., he nostrils f' l
ing quickly absorbd
gives relief at once.
Fly’s Cret in Balm.
is acknowledged to bp the most
' thorough cure for N;.sai calm rb, cold in
• the Beau and I icy Fever of all reme
dies. It p.-ns a*.d cleanses lhe nasal
passages, a11..'.s pain and inflamma
tion heals the sores, protects the mem
| Inane from colds. t— tores the sense of
I taste and emeil. Pricesoc, at Druggists
or by mail. ELY b O ~
56 Warren '-treet. New Yoik.
BUY~ U -i lT JU n 7Jr BY
YOUR Wdl! I djlti MAIL
AT WHOLESALE PRICES.
100 ( New designs 3c up| War-
xvv \ xiegant gills 5c up}-ran
ibamp 168 \ Borders same rates) toauit
Froß. ( Send he for postage: deduct
when ordering. F. H.Cady, Bus West-
mer St., Providence, R. I.
Liberal discounts to clubs and agents.
BREAKFAST-SUPPER,
E PPS’S
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING,
COCOA
BOILING WATER OR MILK.
BPARKER’I
_ HAIR BALSAM
oU*bm* and b**ctifi*e th* hair.
Franow* • luxuriant growth.
K*v*r Fall* to B**tor* Oray
Mair to it* YauthTul Color.
Can* scalp di**a*M * hair talUa*.
Th* only «ur* liS* 5 cLK 51 corn. I
tatte UN M.Mak«* valklat MV.UvU. *t SnsHiau. i
I
3flk ChlehMter’a Imll.li Dtaaawid Aran*.
PENNYROYAL PILLS
I —erf«t«al aad O»ljr GenaiK*. A
»AFC, always reliable, ladica aak JT\
J* Drwfffie* fcr Chir.hatter a Znfluh
JfrenW In K«4 and G’oW
whh bl «* ribbon. Take
wl w? , ° 4«nferew ▼
if ~ Jar Hana <m4 Iwvifeftem. Al Dra«iß<a, er Mad
| .y ia ntuope fc< warttealara, leetlaMlaU aul
IW* W “ IteiUT fcr Kflkdle*,” lattar, by retara
Jk Malt 1 TeeUmectaU. Xmne Ft* er.
'CkWt «Har Cat ilea I Sa
to a*. Lena! Drusgtou. PMUada*. Pa.
IFYOd
ARE GOING TO
TEXAS
and will send me a postal card or
letter stating
Where you are going?
When you are going?
Where you will start from?
How many there are in youi
party?
What freight and baggage
you have?
I will write you or call at vour houst
and furnish y< u with the fullest infor
mation regarding Houtt-s Lowest Rates
of all classes, besides Maps, Descriptive
1 and Illustrated Laud Pamphlets. Re
sort Books, 'fuides.ete.
Cheap F imr g '? ds.
(Government and Railroad.)
“Iron Mountain Route” &
Texas and Pacific rj.
A. A. GALLAGHER,
■soutnern Passenger Agt.
103 Read House,
Chattanooga, Tenn*
A COSTLY FAB.
That es Collecting Beautiful Gem*,
graved Stone* and Cameo*.
A passing pretty fad that costs a
passing pretty penny is the collect
ing of gems, engraved stones and
cameos. A great collection once
seen, and it is all up with the hap
less wight who has taken in the
germ of tho fad. Ho will want the
heavenly city of Revelation itself.
Rare and distracting objots d’art of
this order may be seen in the
Louvre, British museum, South
Kensington museum, Uffizi gallery,
in Florence, and the National mu
seum at Naples. The ancient lapi
daries were as clever and artistic
craftsmen as heart could wish. The
more examples i saw of their skill
the more I admired and marveled
at it. Until such an exhibition of
seals and rings as may bo found
among the priceless treasures of the
Louvre is seen you cannot appreci
ate tho skill of tho ancient Egyptians
in this fascinating department of art ;
A favorite medium to display in
beautiful form the craft of the art
ists of earlier centuries was a rock
crystal, a substance that in the
shapes cf vases, cups and various
exquisite devices is one of the typ
ical articles of enrichment in tho
cabinets of European museums. In
more pretentious form you may see
this petrified sunlight constituting
the massive chandeliers that bang
in some of tho gorgeous chambers of
tho palaces of Versailles and Fon
tainebleau. But engraved gems for
me. Amid the great Florentine col
lection begun by Lorenzo de’ Medici
you shall rave with cause. The an
cients knew a thing or two. Supe
rior gem engraving flourished as far
back as Alexander, tho world beat
er, and was a perfected art to tho
time of Hadrian, or tho second
century after Christ. It shared in
the subsequent renaissance of the
arts and received honorable place
again in the skill of Italian, English
and German artists of tho eighteenth
century.
Naples boasts the largest cameo
known, said to have been found in
the tomb of tho Emperor Hadrian.
It is a shallow cup or dish, in diam
eter at least six inches, showing a
superb head of Medusa on one side
and eight figures on the other. Re
membering that these compositions
get their light and shade from tho
stratified colors of the onyx, one bet
ter appreciates tho beauty and rarity
of this curio. If you would study
jade outside of the orient, drop into
the South Kensington museum.
Jade is a precious and passionless
mineral, but infinitely chaste and
elegant when wrought into artistic
: form. —Chicago Inter Ocean.
Medicine Taking.
Medicine taking may become quite
as engrossing a habit as gum and
i tobacco chewing, opium eating and
the like. Just observe the number
of medicine takers that one encoun
ters in railway travel, in the street
cars, the elevated trains, and, in
fact, under any conditions whore the
public eye has an unrestricted op
portunity to gaze upon the private
individual. Medicine takers are
mostly women, though the habit is
by no means confined to them alone.
Many men may also be seen popping
small pills and dumping little pow
ders between their paws at all too
frequent intervals. All medicine
takers do this mechanically, how
ever,almost automatically, as though
they had no particular motive in so
doing beyond tho fact that they were
the victims of a habit. Another sig
nificant thing about the medicine
takers is their apparent good health.
If bright eyes, clear skins and un
troubled countenances are any gauge
of physical welfare, the medicine
taker does not need his medicine.
Os course not all possess these wel
come characteristics, but so many of
them do as to justify the conclusion
that medicine taking must be a
healthful habit.—Chicago Post.
New Word* to Old Tune*.
A musician was speaking the oth
er day of the present custom of
writing parodies on popular songs.
He said he had played in theater
| orchestras and had noticed the fact
; that a parody always pleased an au
i dienoe better than the original song
I ever did. He said he oould hardly
' assign a reason for it, but thought
that perhaps it was the tune, more
than the words, that made the orig
inal song popular, and therefore by
hearing new and perhaps funnier
words to the same old air it gener
ally caught the favor cf audiences.
—Syracuse Post
Escaped by a Word.
When a soldier is confined in the
guardroom for an offense, a written
copy of the crime is invariably hand
ed to the commander of the guard.
The other day a noncommissioned
officer and a party of men were told
off for a certain fatigue. The corpo
ral having given an order, one of
the men seemed disinclined to obey,
when, after having rebuked him
sharply, he shouted in angry tones,
“It’s a good job for you, me lad,
that I can’t spell insubordination,
or I’d shove you in the ‘clink’
(guardroom) sharp.”—London Tele
graph.
Belladonna
j' Piaster jff
Cures K\\ \
Lumbago /an \ ■:
by touching / /\A \ ;
the.SPOT ;
■F » -J.L.L—L!.L I WFP
the food for all such.
How many pale folk
there are! People who
WQk have the will, but no power
to out their vitality;
people who swing like:
a P en H u1 u m between
strength and weakness—
so that one day’s work
causes six days’ sickness 1
People who have no life
for resisting disease—thin people, nerveless, delicate !
The food for all such men, women, or children is Scott’s
Emulsion. The hypophosphites combined with the oil
will tone up the system, give the blood new life, improve
the appetite and help digestion. The sign of new life will
be a fattening and reddening, which brings with it strength,
comfort and good-nature.
Bt mrt yeu get Scott't Emuhion when jon wnnt it and not a cheap suhititute.
Scott & Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and sl.
WE TELL YOU j
OBthinc new when we state that It part to wngagw
in a permanent, ruoit healthy and pieaaant bush
n«Bß, that return* a profit for evary day’s work.
Such is the bindnes> we offer the working cla»s.
ITe teach them how to make money rapidly, and
ruartntee everv one who follows our instruetioua
faithfully the making of 8300.00 a month.
Kvery one who tares hold now aud works will
•urely and speedily increase their earning*: lucre
Mil be no question about it; others now hi work
are doing It. aid you, reader, can du the name.
I'bls is the beet paying btHineaj that you have
ever had the chance to secure. You will make a
fffave mistake if yon fail to give i« a trial a: once.
If von g sip the situation, and act quickly, you
will dirvotb find yourself in u most prosperous
business, at wt.ich you can surclv make and save
large L'uuu ci ruoniry. The results of on v a few
hours’ woik will olieu equal a wages.
VYhetorr you are old or voung, tuun or woman, it
intikus no ditTvi race, do we tei] you, and sue
cess will meet you at the very start. Neither
experience or capital necessary. Those who work
for us are rewarded. Why not write to-day for
full particulars, free ? E. C. ALLEN A CO.,
Box Nu 4520, Augusta, Me
NO MORE
No Weak
Moro '' Eyes!
MITCHELL’S
EYE-SALVE
A Certain Safe and Effective Remedy for
SORE, WEAK and INFLAMED RES,
Proaucinff fjtong-SiffMndneait, and,
Restoring the Sight of the old.
Cures Tear Drops, Granulation, Sty©
Tumors, Red Eyes, Matted Eye Lasbes*
AND PRODUCING QUICK RELIEF
AND PERMANENT CURE. -* I
Also, equally efiicaetons when usert Sts
other maladies, such as Ulcers, Fever
Rores, Tumors, Halt Ithenni, Itnms,
I Piles, or wherever Inflammation exists,
MITCH EEL’S SALVE may be used to
advantage.
SOLD BY AL’ 3RUGQIS7S AT 25 CENTS.
Why not be your
own Middle-man?
Pay but one profit between maker and
user and that a small just one.
Our Big 700 Page Catalogue and Bayers
Ouide proves that it's possible. Weighs
24 pounds, IS,OOO illustrations, describes
and tel Is the one-profit pric<: of over 40,000
articles, everything you use. We send it
for 15cents; that's not for the book, but
to pay part of tho post age or expressage,
and keep off idlers. You can't get it too
quick.
MONTGOMERY WARD & CO.,
The Store of All the People
Ill"ii6 Michigan Ave., Chicago.
RIPANS
IL
cu
- The modern stand
w ard Family Medi
“ cine: Cures the
“ common every-day
“ ills of humanity.
o
MAHII
2 Popular
FOR THE HOME.
jfe:
1 Sil And JrxS
I ~r 1 1
FRANK LESLIE’S f
Popular
MONTHLY
1 Contain* each Month : Original Water Color'
' Frontispiece ; 128 Quarto Pages of Reading '
'Matter; 100 New and High-class Illustra
tions ; More Literary Matter and lllustra- ]
' Wons than any other Magazine in America. .
25 cts.; $3 a Year. ,
Trank Leslie’s Pleasant Hours:
FOR BOYS AND CIRLS.
' A Bright, Wholesome. Juvenile Monthly.'
' Fully Illustrated. Tho best writers for young J
i people contribute to It. 10 cts.; $1 a year. (
BXBI> ALL SUBSCRIPTIONS TO 1
' Undoubtedly theßest Club Offers
' ®T- Send to Frank LeiUe'e FublieMna Route, 2T.Y.,
! for New lUuetrated Premium Litt, Free.
DEAFNESS.
ITS CAUSES and CUR
«l!^l I . flcallj 'i reatc<i b l’“ a “ n ri»t of world vn
De ® fne »a eradicated and entin
-20 to 30 year*’ standing, after ,
, tee *tn>enU have failed. How the dir
.*• reached and the cause removed fn. ,
in circular*, with affidavits and’tett -
itMIM
Western & Atlantic R, R.
(BATTLEFIELDS LINE)
ANO —si*.
Nashville, Chattanooga & St.
Louis Railway
f 7777
CHATTANOOGA,
NASHVILLE,
CINCINNATI,
CHICAGO,
MEMPHIS and
ST. LOUIS.
PULLMAN PALACE BUFFET SLEEPING CARS
JACKSONVILLE and ATLANTA
.. TO ..
NASHVILLE and ST. LOUIS,
THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE.
Local Sleepers belween Allanta and Chat
tanooga.
Cheap Emigrant Rates to Arkansas and
Texas.
Excursion Tickets to California and Col
orado Resorts.
For Maps, Folders. Sleeping Car Reservation and
any information about Rates, Schedules, etc*
write or apply to
C. B. WALKER, J. A. THOMAS,
Ticket Agent, Ticket Agent,
Union Depot, No. 8 Kimball House,
ATLANTA, GA.
C. K. AYER, J. L. EDMONDSON. T.P. A.,
Ticket Agent. Chattanooga,
Rome, Ga. leno.
JOS. M. BROWN, CHAS. E. HARMAN,
Traffic Manager, Gen. Pass.
ATLANTA, GA.
4 profeWnal.
! J,
]' W. M HENRY. SBABORN WRI <kn ”
; HENRY & WRIGHT,
Attorneys-at-Law
ROME, - GA.
Offices:—Masonic Temple Annex
Will practice in the courts of
Chattooga county.
H.J.tAfiNOi’
Dentist,
;La Fayette, - - Ga
Does first class Dental work oi ali
: kinds. Will visit Trion once s momh
iV EBLEV SH KUPSIii KE,
Atto. -ai-Law
1
Summerville, - - Ga.
• ■ r O' .1.1 >
;; Atto neys-at-Law.
masonic temple.
ROME, - - - GA.
W ill practice in all the courts <d
north Georgia.
i T. j. lUmis,
LAWYER,
Summerville, Ga.
T. S. Shown, /
Dentist.
'•fiice over Hollis & Hinton’s store,
Suiamerville, Ga. All Dental opera
tions neatly performed and work guar
anteed. Prices reasonable.
0. L. c EEIL
Attorney at L< w
; SUMMERVILLE GA
Strict attention given to all bu-iness
entrusted to my care.
g- SI n B A j
“cavEATS, TRADE MarkSSf
CAN I OBTAIN A PATENTS For ■ I
a J l ’ w “ r »ad *a hor.e«t opinion, write to I
» CO., who h*v* had nearly fifty year*’ B
experience In the patent bualneia. Communle*. »
I nrietly confldential. A Ilandbeok et In. 1
! P.™Sr ion ooncrnln* Patents and how to ob- W
•up them *ent free. Al*o a catalogue of mechaa- s
o•olontlfle hooka sent free. ■
taken through Munn & Co. receive d
Jpeclal tatice in the Scientiflc American, and
tan* are brought widely before the public with- > fl
pat eost te the inventor. Thia splendid paper. • ■
weekly, elegantly lllastnted. baa by far the m
Imweet circulation es any eeienMe work In th* 1
•or'd. 93 J. year, tamale copte* **nt free.