Newspaper Page Text
SMOKE. 1
Sub'Cellar Fire
r
« on the Nev j
appearing 'I. Hill hat it j
es :
The Risks of «•
r Broadway.
lance Iig i, too, over surge©©* with thaa, i ill ! a j
“ Aground. had
low s who
ol hose, on|k
\ ? '/i. 1
v iV ,
\ r,<
*
poniih; in th<
mlreif und fifty a
gratii'g, over thali |
>roken tin %
low the mi*. b‘
Ik Ti at
»-»rk Of Gm.
*s the liardf'Hi
or
>V of the thud
avy axes on the
work that tlif
e < inly once in u
men in a largi
before them
1
i
t nuiHoiiH why tho
etui ftncj tho public
liittd’B ft boy tho
ii‘H not. drench and
[insist h rather than
titanic and safe; Ms
fin internal earth
ndrasticimrimtlvH. household
been a
’!
Detroit. Midi . Hays:
larrli Cure is won
It.. Sold by Drus-
a o< a
CURED
d.
Barsaparillrt for
ins given mo relief,
tired feelfug and
when the system
ommend Hood’s.’’
Utica, New York.
DltMMitWNRof all forma
WORK i'ii and ctili-
tod. 1 UhemnatlHtn,
Hat ton, I inligt'HUtm.
til Noun, Throat and
t » women. I’rolai*-
'uvonhou. 'Vwo DymiR'ii
•ilars. cents may
s. T. Whitaker. >1.
BM'tf., Atlanta. Ga.
ay SORE
or Commission.
JVfl if oum
fyi i
N TEA CO,
trojt. Michigan.
IfU IULUK6 | ADC lr IP* 0
to Hake Them ?
s ton few £o«hI mkn
N emmftM..’ Om. 1 ,o'"
,n .lay .It first
n re., uiantn. <!».
Mfl!-: lablrts.
Biiecific M 11
Ga
(n a few mlnut m at
For Gallon, by i\
$1.00 per gallon.
Ga
>w Old are You?
ER’S HAIR VIGOR.
THE '-{ONE OF THE BELL’
Improve 3 bj the Use of Gold or Silve
In the Bell Metal.
Thero is <»f tugcneral silver or belief gold that in the the east- in- j j
g of a held assures for it a superior ;
hut an.expert in founding hell? j
the best tone effect in hell metal :
than HO Sparta copper to 20 parts
iR pio<iuce the best j
iity of b»ne, while that having more j
than 2d, parts in the 100 » much
brittle. ' ihere are bells in Europe
clear 1 tones were for many years
1 to gol, ami m \t.r t at
\ UVr ‘ ] V U tt<Med U
, i *
ago of the metal'in one of these j
and it failed to show any trace of j
or silver. The/ old German hell
used to maixo their bells of 80 i
bent tonod bell is obtained from
, .1 , OI , |mr and 21 parts tin.
After the bell .« ‘drawn,’” rays
1( , centre of an iron ease or fiask, the
layer is coated on n’jd baked,
,'fin on, layer after layer, until the
shape, etc., is secure^. There
twek such iron moulding cases, one
o\ or tho other. The under one
the 1 o, jim coating on itts outer side,
hasytbe inner shape of the pro¬
hell. The upper irion moulding
ho or flask lias the loam on its inner
f a( .„. und forming the otitsido shape
f (|,j H jo Jet down over tho tin-
ffnsk is called ‘core.' 1 Tho upper
,,ne is called ‘ease,’ Tho
to the bell, and it receives a
ringing test, partly to ascertain
tone and resonant qmality, and to
its mechanical excellence and
Then, if it appears to ho
in points, it is shipped to the
The making and shipping
of a hell usually requires smallest from sizes. ten The to
fifteen days in the
larger sizes, i. e., 1,500 pounds and
heavier, require more time. A pea! of
three or more bells requires while from chime forty
to ninety days’ time, a of
nine or more bells requires from three
to six months.
“Any foundry can, of course, readily
make and select nine or ten bells in
tune for u chime, but-the tune is one
thing, tone is another.
ITEMS Ol JNTKJU58T.
Tho hospital of tho Metropolitan
asylum board in London have 3,800
beds sot apart for sou riot fever and
only 700 for diphtheria*.
A hoy who recently died at the age
of 13 in Indiana from excessive smok¬
ing had consumed in tho past live
years 50,000 cigarettes.
Near Fool, Rowan county, North
Carolina, soveral nuggets have* been
found recently and fanners have dis¬
covered they were the possessors of
gold mines.
A Greenwood, Mo., farmer found a
dieep and a lamb in his pasture the
other day with their noses so full of
porcupine quills Unit, they wore unable
to graze.
The incessant fogs this spring have
kept the fog bells of Bpring point,
Portland harbor, ringing so bard that
its vibrations have cracked the lens in
tho lighthouse.
The Roman swords, before Cannae,
IS. 0. 236, were pointless and sharp
on only one side; after Cannae the
shore Spanish sword, for cutting and
thrusting, was adopted.
At the last congress of German viue-
yurilists Professor Wortmann reported
that ho luul found living bacteria m
wine which had boon bottled 25 to 30
years.
Tho phalanx was defeated by the
legion because the former could not
bo maneuvered save on flat, open
ground, while the legion could operate
111 »».v l ' il iil of country.
’pj u , (} a uls,to make handles for their
stone axes, cleft the branch of u tree,
placed the stone m it and left it till
the wound in the wood had been com¬
pletely healed.
The government will furnish Grand
Army committees with marble head¬
stones for the unmarked graves of sol¬
diers of the revolution,tho war of 1812
and of Mexican war veterans.
A Likely Place.
“Where,” said the auctioneer, ad¬
dressing an audience of possible pur¬
chasers, “where else on the face of
the globe will you find in one place
copper, tin, iron, cotton, hemp, grain,
game——" the crowd replied:
And a voice from
“In tho pockets of my youngest
son: Tit-Bits.
I
LABOR LEADERS OF THE COUNTRY
t.l » r. l UKUt A tppmrwii isjrdi.,
__
*
ation Fully Diwnised by Gon%y
per*, Ratciifortl and others*
--
Th« greatest gathering ol . , labor ,
leaders that ever assembled; in this
country during a national strike was
held in Pittsbirrg, p a ., Friday night
their contest for increased wages.
The conference was called suddenly,
but the officials responded represent-
ing nearly every branch of organized
^
S * rnURl I-resnlent of the
^ . .ner.ean F ederntum of Labor,
1( a *
M. M. Garland, president of tho
Amalgamated Association of Iron and
Steel Workers.
Stephen Madden, secretary of the
Amalgamated association.
J. M, Hughes, first vice-president
of the Federation of Metal Trades.
M. J. (Jounahan, national secretary
of the Journeymen Plumbers’ Associ¬
ation.
M. I*. Garrick, president of the
Brotherhood of Painters and Decora-
tors.
D. R. Thomas, president of tho Na¬
tional Pattern Makers’ League.
W. P. Mahon, president of the
Amalgamated Association of Street
Railway Employees.
Frederick Dolan, district president
United Mine Workers.
The session was secret, and it was
almost midnight when it was over.
The press committee, Messrs. Corn-
gave out the following statement in
which was corporated, they said, all
that was done at the conference. The
manifesto follows;
“After an informal fliseussloi), reports
wro. made by Messra. Iiatchford, Dolan
and Warner in regard to tho situation of
tho movement, and it demonstrated that the
Kituation in West Virginia'required atten¬
tion In order that the suspension should
l>o absolutely general and success assured.
With that object in view, action was recom¬
mended by President (tempers, of tho
American Federation of Labor, and it was
determined upon to overcome this feature'
of the contest. It was also determined that
every effort be made on the part of those
present to secure the co-operation and
practical aid of organized labor for tho
struKKltag miners.
“All the circumstances warrant the firm
conviction that the miners will ultimately
achieve victory and to tills end the aid of
1 ho labor and the sympathetic, public is in¬
voked. Conscious of tho great intorost
which tho public Inn in a contest bo wide¬
spread as that of tho minors, it gives us
great satisfaction to. know that tho minora
have not been and are not now opposed to
arbitration. We, therefore, urge, and advise
that a conference he held by the representa¬
tives of the miners and the operators with a.
view of arriving at a settlement of the pres¬
ent suspension.”
To Flop hi West Virginia.
Notwithstanding tho positive an-
liouiicoinont by the committee that tho
statement furnished tho press covered
all the proceedings of the conference,
it is known that an organized effort to
secure a general suspension of mining
in West Virginia was decided upon.
After a thorough canvass of tho sit¬
uation it was unanimously agreed that
tho West Virginia miners held tho key
to the situation and without, their
united support the success of the gen¬
eral movement would bo greatly jeop¬
ardized. In furtherance of this de¬
termination, the officials present
pledged themselves to send into this
field a full quota of the best organizers
in their several associations.
After adjournment in response to the
question whether a 2 per cent assess¬
ment on all organized labor, as con¬
templated, would he made, President
Dolan, of tho Pittsburg district, said
he thought such notion would eventu¬
ally he taken.
Ho would not admit, however, that
the matter of assessment had been
considered at the conference, or that
the question of a general sympathetic
strike had Vio.cn discussed.
TO LAKE CHAMPLAIN
The l’resident Will Go To Spend Him
Summer Vacation.
President McKinley will spend most
of his slimmer vacation on the shores
of Lake Champlain. 1’lattslnirg, N.
Y., will be his nearest town. His
party will consist of the members of
the presidential family, of Vice Presi¬
dent and Mrs. Hobart, Secretary Alger
and family, Secretary and Mrs. Porter
and probably of some other members
of official society.
The president will make quite a
prolonged stay, lasting several weeks
at least. The president’s summer plans
were informally talked over with the
cabinet me mbers Frida y.
OFFICE SEEKERS DISAPPOINTED.
No Ollier Diplomatic Nonomiations to Re
Muile for the Present.
A Washington special says: It can
now he announced on authority that
with presentation to the senate of the
large list of diplomatic and consular
nominations which has been prepared,
the president will positively make no
another appointment to plrees of this
character until after the adjournment
of congress.
This notice is inspired by a desire
to spare usolf'ss importunities by seek¬
ers after diplomatic and consular
places.
A CAMPAIGN ISSUE
To li© Mail© of tli© Lean© of tlie North
Carolina Railway*
A special from Raleigh, N. C.. says:
Governor Russell says the lease of
the North Carolina railway to the
Southern is positively to he made an
issue in the next campaign; that he
does not know whether a plank de¬
claring against it will he in the repub¬
lican platform, but it will be in what
ho terms the voters’ platform.
A GHASTLY FIND.
’.Usmcmbercd Body of a Woman Found
In a Darrel.
A special from Quitman, Ga., cays!
Wooten and some friends, while
fishing Saturday on Mule creek in the
upper part of the county, discovered a
barrel buried upright in the mud and
and placed in the barrel, and mud had
News of the discovery soon spread
throng a the neighborhood and hun-
dreds of people have visited the scene
ami viewed the ghastly remains. The
identity of the body and everything
connected with it are shrouded in
mystery.
The swamp in which the body was
where the barrel was unearthed is a
or more from any house.
neighborhood is thinly settled
and about fifteen miles from Quitman,
No one has been missing and none
of those who have come from the
scene can account for the mystery.
l ollowing so closely upon trie fa-
mous New York mystery of the mur-
der of Giildensuppe and tlie cutting
up of his body, the excitement is in-
i' er,8e *
Wooten and his friends first remov¬
ed the head of the barrel; then the
dirt which had formed into a hard
cake, and to their horror beheld a neat
length, plait of human hair about two feet in
soft and black, and evidently
belonging to the head of a young
white woman.
Next, pieces of flesh and clothing
were taken out, all in a fairly good
state of preservation. The flesh had
dried and the skin had a mummified
appearance. The dress was of checked
homespun, while there was an under¬
skirt of bleached homespun, machine
made.
FUNERAL SERVICES IN SENATE
Conducted Over Remains of Hon, Isham
G. Harris.
Impressive funeral services over the
late Senator Isham G. Harris occurred
in the senate chamber at noon (Saturday
in the presence of President McKinley
and the members of his cabinet, sena¬
tors and members of the house of rep¬
resentatives, members of the diplo¬
matic corps, justices of the supreme
court and officials from all branches of
public life.
The chamber had been elaborately
draped for the occasion. The desk of
the late senator was heavily bound in
crepe.
In the semi-circular area, imme¬
diately in front of the presiding offi¬
cer, stood the casket, resting on heavy
black draped pedestals and literally
buried in floral offerings. On the
plate was inscribed:
“Died July 7, 1897. Isham G.
II arris. Aged seventy-nine years.”
The services were brief and simple,
consisting only of "prayers by Hev.
Mr. Johnston, Rev. Dr. Duffy, of the
Methodist Episcopal church, south,
and Chaplain Couden, of the house of
representatives, tho latter pronouncing
the benediction.
At 12:30 p. m. the ceremony was
over and on motion of Senator Bate,
of Tennessee, the senate adjourned.
AS BAD AS AN EPIDEMIC.
Dentil Huron! from Hunt. Was Three
Tlunriml ami Fifty for Month.
The fierce heat under which the
greater portion of the country has
sweltered since tho 1st of July, mod¬
erated in many localities Saturday,
and predictions from the weather
bureau at Washington indicate that
lower tempeaatures will bring general
relief.
The record of prostrations and deaths
resulting from the long heated term
approaches in magnitude that of a
general epidemic. Reports from all
sections of the country received by
the Associated Press up to Saturday
night showed prostrations numbering
in the neighborhood of 2,000, with fa¬
talities close to 350.
In addition to this, there wore scores
of deaths resulting indirectly from the
intolerable beat, the death rate in
many of the large cities showing a
fearful insrease over previous years.
The central states suffered more se-
verely than other sections, tho heat
being most deadly in Chicago, Cincin¬
nati and St. Louis. In number of fa¬
talities Chicago headed the list, with
87 deaths; Cincinnati and suburban
points reporting 65, and St. Louis 12.
Through the lower south the heat was
intense, but the death rate is much
lower than in the north.
NATIONAL I1AY ASSOCIATION
Will Moot August loin With Many Dele¬
gates Present.
A call for the fourth annual meeting
of the National Hay association at the
Monongahela house, Pittsburg, on
August 10th, is announced in the last
issues of the Hay Trade Journal.
The crop in the state being much
larger, with probable lighter imports
than during the past few years, gives
new impetus to the trade.
Delegates will be in attendance from
all parts of the United States and bus¬
iness pertaining to the hay trade will
ho fully discussed during the three
days’ session.
CHARGED WITH LYNCHING.
Thvo© Whit© Mon Arc Round Over at
Rivmiu^ham Under 81,000 Rond*.
After a three days’ preliminary hear¬
ing before Justice Benners, at Bir¬
mingham, Ala., Joe Williams, Charles
Clark and Zack Hollins were held to
bail in the sum of $1,000 each for the
murder of Jim Thomas, colored, near
Blossburg, a week ago.
It is alleged these men carried
Thomas to the woods and killed him
because he claimed to know the negro
who attempted to assault Mrs. Hollins.
TO RUSH TtRIFF BIEL
Hons© Committe© on Rules Will Allow
Only Short Debate.
The house committee on rules deci¬
ded Thursday to present a special or¬
der sending the tariff hill to confer¬
ence as soon as it was received from
tho senate. This will give but 20
minutes’ debate on a side. The dem¬
ocrats tried to secure ail agreement
for a time to debate the conference re¬
port, but none was made. The repub¬
licans offered a day, and tlio der o-
crats asked f«r three or four day-.
SENATOR HARRIS HEAD.
Well Known Tennesnoean and Prominent
In Nation’s Councils.
Senator Isham G. Harris, of Ten-
nessee, died at his residence in Wash¬
ington a few minutes before 5 o’clock
Thursday afternoon. The senator, who
was suffering with stomach trouble,
mer heat which has prevailed greatly
ing his end.
Isham Green Harris was born near
Tullahoma, Tenn., February 10, 1818,
the son of a poor farmer. He became
clerk in a country store at the age of
14> attended a country school, and at
the age of 19 settled in Tippah county,
Mississippi, where he engaged in bus-
mess on his own account and became
law at night and was admitted to the
bar in 1841.
He was elected to the Tennessee
legislature in 1815 and was a repre-
sentative in congress from 1849 to
1853. He refused a renomination in
the latter year, and removed to Mem-
phis, where he settled as a lawyer. In
’fig he was a presidential elector; was
elected governor of Tennessee one
year later and was re-elected for the
two successive terms.
He was a volunteer in the Confed¬
erate army and served on the staff of
General A. S. Johnston.
At the close of the war he returned
to Memphis and resumed the practice
of law. In 1877 he was elected to the
United States senate and re-elected in
1882 and again in 1888. He was a
man of strong intellect and great power
in debate. Few men have wielded
more influence in the politics of his
native state.
CLEVELAND WRITES A LETTER
To tho Chairman of tlio Gold Central Com¬
mittee of Illinoip.
A special from Rock Island, UL,
says: Paul Kersch, the well-known
German editor and chairman of the
state central committee of the Illinois
national democrats, has a letter from
ex-President Cleveland which was
read at the Iowa state democratic con¬
vention. It is as follows:
“Gray Gables, Buzzard’s Bay, Mass.,
June 29.—Paul Kersch, Esq. Dear Sir My
love of true Democracy is so intense and my
belief in the necessity of its supremacy to
the welfare of the country is so clear that
I cannot fail to sympathize with every effort
to save the principles of my party from
threatened abandonment. I believe the very
existence of true Democracy as an agency
of good to the American people is in the
hands of those who are willing to bo guided
by the declaration of principles announced
by the national Democratic party. It is a
high mission to thus have in keeping the life
and usefulness of the party which has de¬
served so well of our countrymen, and tho
important consideration involved, should
surely stimulate patriotic effort. The work
before us is above partisan triumphs and
its immediate rewards. Tho question is,
are we doing our duty to our country and
to tho principles of our party? No success
worth tho name can be reached except in
the path of principle. I hope tho national
Democrats of Illinois will not wait to oxhib-
it to their followers in every state tho bright
light of true Democracy.
“Yours very truly,
“Grover Cleveland.”
RUIZ EASE READY.
Claim Against Spain Made Out and Will
llo Pushed.
The state department of officials, at
Washington, after weeks of hard work,
have completed the preparation of our
case in the prosecution of the Ruiz
claim. After receiving the approval
of the president, it will he turned
over to Minister Woodford for presen¬
tation to the Madrid foreign office
when he sails from New York on the
28th.
In the preparation of this case Mr.
Calhoun, the United States special
commissioner, has contributed the
principal part, but the law officers of
the state department have done much
to present the facts collected to him in
the strongest light and establish a
good basis for the claim of indemnity
originally fixed at $150,000, which is
to be urged against the Spanish gov¬
ernment.
QUEEN PARDONS CUBANS.
Many Men Will I5e Allowed To Return To
Their Homes.
The queen regent has pardoned 108
Cubans who had been deported to the
Spanish penal settlements at Ceuta,
Ferdinando andChaffrine islands. The
men pardoned will be permitted to
return to Cuba. '
D1SPENSAltY SHORTAGES
Surprise Members of tlie South Carolina
Board of Control.
A shortage amounting to $15,000 of
the moneys due by county dispensers
of the state were brought to light by
the South Carolina dispensary heard
of control at its meeting in Columbia.
For the period between March 28,
1895, and November 30, 1896, the
shortage is $12,702.82. Examination
reveals Hie fact that tho bonds given
by the dispensers who have fallen be¬
hind in their accounts are in each ease
worthless, and that no steps have ever
been taken to punish any of the of¬
fenders. This showing has created a
sensation.
DURllANT RESTS EASY.
IIIh Fate Is Now In the Hands of Unclt?
Sum's Great Court.
A special from Sun Francisco says:
The reprieve granted Theodore Dur-
rant bv Governor Eudd expired Fri-
.lay, but the murderer of Blanche La-
mont and Annie Williams was in no
danger of hanging. It does not mat-
ter whether Governor Budd grants a
further reprieve or not, as the granting
of an appeal by the United States
circuit court to the United States su¬
preme court takes all power out of the
state officials until the highest federal
court renders n decision in the ease.
SEIZED SMUGGLED MEED.
Customs Inspectors at New York Capture
Choice Leaf Valued at S2,000.
Customs inspectors at New York,
Friday, seized two lots of smuggled
tobacco worth about $2,000.
The first seizure was made at a ho¬
tel, corner Dey and West streets, where
several bales of Sumatra tobacco was
found. Later a hundred small pack¬
ages of choice leaf tobacco were dis-
covered hidden aboard the Red Star
liner Southwark,
'
Eyeless Animals.
Many of the lower animals are
known to see without eyes, the skin
having a high degree of sensitiveness
j to light. Thus earthworms', the mag¬
gots of flies and eyeless centipedes
find their way about nearly as rapidly
as similar creatures which have eyes.
In a recent German work on the sen¬
sitiveness to light to eyeless animals,
Dr. Nagel, who made his observations
chiefly on molusks, found that the
eyeless bivalves and snails he experi¬
mented with showed a high degree of
sensitiveness to light. He found that
some species reacted especially to di-
munition, others to increase of light,
| and that this difference was correlated
with other characters.
Wrens, Ga.
IT ‘‘ l H t avI g ff w ? i bt 1 0 J n jr f d i J
ln £- 1 8 P ent * r ’° f T <lifferent kir ! ds of reme -
cent thanks.’ Yours, \\. R. King.
° nsam i ,s y • up nne,
savannah, Ga.
The bald-headed man would like to be a ben¬
eficiary of the “Fresh Hair Fund.”
. , r . „ , ....
teething softons the gums, roduc<» inflamma-
tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 23c. a bottle,
SICK HEADACHE l reabsorbed uv EB .
Poisonous matter, instead of being thrown out, is into
the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue, it
causes congestion and that awful, dull, throbbing:, sickening" pain.
REMOVE THE CAUSE BY
STIMULATING THE LIVER,
Making the poison move on an d out, and purifying the blood.
The effect is ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS.
B LSHJiEa ft HIES whose sensitive organism is especially prone to sick headaches,
NOT SUFFER, for you can, by the use of CASCARETS, be
^aaTeoc 3- Relieved Like SVJagic. *.
8 G SLASH
IN BICYCLE PRICES.
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Efflma .......
A I i
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1
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Our reputation of 60 years is a guarantee that our 1897 model is the best wheel imule.
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reHBE NUKE AM) SEND FOR CATALOGUE.
SPECIAL AM) SECOND HAND LIST MAILED FREE.
JOHftl P. LOVELL ARHaS CO.,
147 Washington St., 131 Broad St., Boston, Mass.
EVERY IVIAM HIS OWN DOCTOR.
A Rook of 600 Pages on all Subjects Needed in (lie
Housolaold and on tlx© P'arm*
Send 60c and get it postage paid. Address,
ATLANTA BOOK PUBLISHING HOUSE,
118 Loyd Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Laugh "
r
at the Sun
HIRES/eft. Drink , .. >
t/OOl-Dtinis m
P oot beery
\ m^ootheey mJIIRES
If
i ^^ H!IKESjQuencheK aolbec thirst]
, yyour
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Similar to that of Asheville.
COLLEGE BUILDING,
172 ft, frontage, 143 ft. deep, 4 stories high,
built of pressed brick, tire proof, with
every modern appliance.
Catalogue sent free on application.
Address,
REV, C. B. KING, President,
Charlotte, N. C.
The Bicycle
Sensation
......
1691 GOLUMBIJISai $75
STANDARD OF THE WORLD.
1898 Columbias . . at $60
1397 Hartfords . . .at 50
Hartford Pattern 2 . at 45
Hartford Pattern I . .at 40
Hartford Patterns 5 &5 at 3D
......
These are the new prices.
They have set tho whole
bicycle world talking—
and buying
......
POPE MFO. CO., Hartford,Conn.
Catalog free from any Columbia dealer;
by mail for a 2-ccnt stamp.
“Success”
Cotton......
Seed Holler
and
A1P ti Separator.
rfv ' Nearly doubles
tbo Valuo
of Seed to tho
Farmer.
All uj)-to-date Ginners nse them because the Grow¬
ers give their patronage to such gins. Haller is
PRACTICAL, RELIABLE and GUARANTEED.
For full information Address
BOPLE ST EAM PEED WO RKS, Meridian, Miss
Bicycles
“ALEXANDER SPKCIAL” ..#30.00
“OV Ell LAND” ... 4640.00
WAVEKLEY. . . - W45.00
ELECTRIC CITY .... 950.00
You have no exctiBo now for not, buy! up a
Hcyclo If It's tlio price you have been waiting
for Agouti? \VHT\t.e«l. Write for Rargain Listo£
aeooiul-tiaud wheels. W. I>. A LEX \N DER,
09-71 N. Pryor Jit., Atlanta. Ga.
w LIFE E MAKE INSURANCE LOANS POLICIES. on
If you have a policy In tho Notv York Life,
Equitable Life or Mutual Life anti would
j-ates. Address
MSP
CURES WHfcHE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best CoukS Syrup. ToslunGood. Use
in tiiTin. Snlrt hv ftriuririMl.i.
CG'NSliJM'PTION
“255:.”1’“; 9 Te
n.;..!-—.- éing'SICTS. I-
‘