Newspaper Page Text
Glass Water Pipes.
Various English towns are introduc¬
ing uuter pipes made of glass and
covered with asphalttun with highly
satisfactory results. These pipes are
doubtless the most sanitary, and while
the first cost may be somewhat in ex¬
cess of iron and lead, yet if properly
laid and protected they should last for
centuries and thus be the most eco¬
nomical in the end.
Mere Bundles of Nerve*,
seme peevish, querulous 'Ike leant people sound seem agitate mere
bundles of uerves. No
tbelr aeusoriumsand rallies their tempers. their
doubt they are born so. But may not
uurvousn> ss be ameliorated, If not entirely re
Herfill Unquestionably, and with Hostetler’*
Stomach Bitters. By cultivating their dtges-.
tion, and insuring more complete assimilation
of the food with this admirable corrective, they
will experience a speedy and very perceptible bilious¬
gain In nerve quietude. Dyspepsia, yield to the
ness, constipation and rheumatism
bitters. ____<__
A gloss of hot milk and a few peanuts make a
good luncheon before retiring.
A Chance to Make Money.
A live Southern Insurance company, four
years successful operation, wishes a live agent
In every county to write life Insurance. Six
different forms, combination, life and accident
policies; most attractive Insurance ever writ¬
ten; no trouble to sell; good commissions. For
Information address 707-708-711 Equitable build¬
ing, Atlanta, Ga.
A l’rose Foein.
EE.it. Medicated Smoking Tobacco
And Cigarettes
Are absolute remedies for Catarrh,
Hay Fever, Asthma and Colds;
Besides a delightful smoke.
Ladles as well as men, use these goods.
No opium or other harmful drug
Used In their manufacture.
fi£-M. fs used and recommended
By some of the best citizens
Of this country.
It your dealer doe* not keep EK-M.
Send l*n. for package of tobaooo
AndOc. for package of cigarettes,
Direel to the EE-M. Company,
Atlanta, Ga.,
And you will receive goods by mall.
Deafnsst Cannot Be Cared
by local applications, as they cannot reach ths
diseased portion of the car. There is only cue
way to euro deafness, and that caused is'by constitu¬ by
tional remedies. Deafness is an in¬
flamed condition of When tlu> mucous this tube lining gets of the In¬
Eustachian Tube. rumbling sound imper¬
flamed you have a when entirely or closed
fect hearing, mid it is
Deafness D the result, and unless the inflam¬
mation can be token condition, out and this tube re¬
stored to its normal hearing will be
destroyed forever. Nine cases out often are
caused by catarrh, which U nothing but an In
flamed condition of the mucous surfaces.
We trill give One Hundred Dollars for any
case of Deafnes-i (caused by catarrh) that can¬
not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Bend
for circulars, free.^^ & ^ Q
the best
I use Plso’s practice.—Dr. Cure for Consumption G. VV. l’ATTtKBON, both In my
family and Mich., Nov. 5,1884.
• nkster,
If afflicted with soreeyoauseDr. Isaac TUomp.
son’s Eye water. Druggists sell at 85c. per bottle.
THE CHIEF THING
In Maintaining Rioh, Nourishing Good Health Blood. la Pure,
The blood carries nourishment and furn¬
ishes support lor the organs, nerves and
muscles. It must bo made rich and pure
if you would have strong nerves, good
digestion, sound sloep, or if you would
be rid of that tired feeling, those dis¬
agreeable pimples, eczema, or scrofula.
No medicine is equal to Hood’s Sarsapa¬
rilla for purifying the blood. It is a med¬
icine of genutno merit and will do you
wonderful good. Try it now.
HOOd’S PlllS wUh'l loo d ’a ^li r lapar dli*
Change of Heart.
Sweet Girl—I hope you will call
agaiu, Mr. Coolltead.
Mr. Coolhead (new admirer)—Thank
you, I should be delighted to call very
soon agan if I were sure of finding you
at home.
“Oh, I’m nearly always at home;
but—let me see—it won’t do for you
to call Tuesday evening, for that is
the night of the home mission meet¬
ing; and Wednesday night the Empe¬
ror's Daughters meet; and Thursday
the Blue Ribbons havo a most impor¬
tant session; aud Friday is the month¬
ly meeting of the Dorcas club; and
I Saturday hardly the Browning club—really.
know what day to set; but
II
“Um—do you expect to belong to
those societies always?”
“Ob, yes, indeed; I’m a life member
of them all.”
“Er—Ishould like to call again soon,
but this is our busy seasou aud I shall
be confined very closely to the office
for several months. Good evening.”
—New York Weekly.
Summer Pessimism.
There is no such thing on earth as
retributive justice. ”
“Why do you say so?”
“The person who leaves flypaper on
a chair is never the one who aits down
on it."—Detroit Free Press.
BUCKINGHAM’S
DYE
For the Whiskers,
Mustache, and Eyebrows.
In one preparation. Easy to
apply at home. Colors brown
or black. The Gentlemen's
favorite, because satisfactory.
R. P. Halt, ft Co., Proprietor*. Nashua. N It.
Sold by *11 Druggist*.
DRUNP fj ^
mah«l N. Y.
rail iafeossuoa (la plant wr.pp.ii ms.
&§<M( OSBORNE'S
'n€d4
A want!*'a. Ac-taaJ bu-sin* in***. No text J/
book* Short Um*. Ch**p hoard Send tar c\uU (Vt i«
00 “two YOU SPECULATE ?lt\ZS£ZlV:' a
stock*; invested immediately will make
$*«> pro iftt. Write CttAft. ilt uuEs, 63 Wall St., S. Y.
Jlusitiss. Collage, Louisville. Kv
Book-ks Mil’KKIOK ADVANTAGES.
wise, hhoktiiand asp
Tbiaokaput Beautiful Catalogue Free.
ns mi
AND THE BIG STRIKE TERMINATES
IN FOUR STATES.
OTHER SECTIONS NOT AFFECTED.
Workers Have the Advantage—The Shoot¬
ing of Miners at Hazelton, Fa.,
D«noa need,
The great miners’ strike which was
declared on July 4th was brought to
an end Saturday evening so far at
least, as western Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Indiana and West Virginia are con¬
cerned, by the action of the interstate
conve«tion of miners, which was in
session at Columbus, O., for four
days.
After a day; of voting and wrangling,
the convention adopted a resolution
accepting the proposition of the Pitts¬
burg operators. The vote was 495
for and 317 against accepting the
terms of settlement; 11 votes were not
cast. The delegates from Illinois,
who had 250 votes, were unanimously
against a settlement. Indiana and
West Virginia voted solidly to accept
the operators’ proposition, but there
were scattering votes among the Ohio
and Pittsburg delegates against it.
Tbe proposition accepted provides
for <35 cents in the Pittsburg district,
all other places where a relative price
can be obtained to resumo work and
contribute liberally to the miners who
do not receive the advance, at which
places the fight is to continue to a bit¬
ter finish. While ten days is provided
for the miners to resume work, it is
probable mauy of the Ohio and Pitts¬
burg mines will be reopened at once.
Some of the Illinois delegates are
bitter in their denunciation of the ac¬
tion of the convention; they claim
their interests ,have not been given due
consideration.
A resolution was adopted denouncing
the action of the deputies in firiug into
the crowd of striking miners at Hazel¬
ton, Pa.
A SENSATIONAL CASE..
Georgia Farmer Ite-estal.Ualiee Slavery Ou
a Small Scale.
The grand jury of Morgan county,
Ga., investigated a ease the past week
which promises to become of tbe most
sensational ever known in the state.
The full extent of the shocking
practices charged against one Henry
It. Dickerson, a farmer at Rutledge,
cannot yet be told; but if half are true,
as seems certain, tho eyes of a civilized
state will be opened wide in wonder
and horror.
Riekerson is accused of enslaving
tramps, making them, by force and
punishment, to work upon his farm;
maintaining a small convict camp in
which existed horrors far greater than
any yet reported from those that exist
under the guise of the law.
Riekerson has for some time, it is
shown, made a practice of decoying
tramps, white and black, aud half¬
witted persons to his house, arresting
them aud putting them to work on his
farm. They were locked up at night
and forced to work on Sundays as well
as on other days. He claimed to have
some authority from the government instance
for so doing aud in every he
is said to have succeeded with his vic¬
tims.
THIRTEEN UNLUCKY TRAMPS.
Seven Killed anil Six Badly Hurt In a
Freight Wreck.
A special from Yun Buren, Ark.,
says; freight wreck
A most disastrous oc¬
curred on the Iron Mountain road at
Hanson, I. T., a small town twenty
miles west of Van Buren, at 2 o’clock
Sunday, resulting in the death of
seven men aud the serious injury of
six others, two of whom will die.
None of the trainmeu were hurt.
The wrecked train was a local freight.
While the train was running twenty
miles an hour the forward trucks of
one of the cars near the engine broke,
wrecking fifteen cars. In the middle
of the train was a oar loaded with
heavy machinery, and it was in this
that thirteen men were stealing a ride,
and from which seven dead and six
seriously wounded were taken by the
trainmen shortly afterwards.
JURY PLACES BLAME.
Conductor and Kngineer Responsibls For
Colorado Midland Horror.
A special from Denver, Col., says;
Frank Burbank, conductor, and En¬
gineer Ostrander, deceased, of the
Colorado Midland railway, are charged
by the coroner’s jury with being re¬
sponsible for the frightful wreck which
occurred Thursday night. The in¬
quest was held Saturday morning. The
jury decided from the evidence that
the conductor and engineer attempted
to arrive at Newcastle siding upon the
time ailoted by order of the Lain dis¬
patcher to the Rio Grande westbound
passenger. Conductor Burbank was
r.’leased on bis own recognizance, and
after the verdict he was not rearrested.
FITZ SAYS “NAY!”
E« bfrlines to Fight Ei-Cli»mpion Jiut
Corbett.
In an interview at Newark, N. J.,
Saturday Bob Fitzsimmons, the pugil¬
ist, in reply to the offer of the North¬
ern Tulane Club, of New Orleans, of a
purse of $20,000 for a fight between
himself and Corbett, said:
“I will not fight Corbett again until
he makes a reputation. Let him fight
some one else. He quit like a yeL'ow
-jar on the 17th of last March.”
If ABBA NTS FOR DEPUT1HH.
Additional Neiri of Slaughter of Miners
at Latimer.
Saturday night twenty-one corpses
lay in ramshackle frame shanties scat¬
tered over the town of Hazelton, Pa.
Forty majmed, wounded and broken
figures tossed -on the narrow oots of
the Hazelton hospital.
Of these it was almost a certainty
that five would be added to the death
list.
Such was the execution done by the
one hundred and two deputy sheriffs,
armed to the teeth, upon about one
hundred and fifty ignorant foreigners,
whose total armament consisted of two
little penknives.
All the men killed ranged in age
from eighteen to forty-five years, all
foreigners, Hungarians, Poles, liithn
anians and Slavs, and nearly all had
families.
First and foremost, the purpose
these men had in view when their
march reached its tragic end was con¬
summated.
The 1,500 workers at the Latimer
mines, to whom they were bound in
an effort to induce them to join the
strikers’ ranks, have laid down their
picks and swern to do no more work
until all the demands of the men at all
the mines in the district have been
conceded.
Warrants for Deputies’ Arrest.
Next in importance was the issu¬
ance of warrants for the arrest of
Sheriff Martin and the 102 deputies.
These were issued at the instance of
the United Hungarian Societies.
Sheriff Martin was under the guar¬
dianship of the soldiers and he could
not be reached.
Saturday afternoon constables made
an effort to arreBt A. E. Hess, who
led one company of the deputies, but
he had shelter within the military
lines ef the Ninth regiment and they
refused to permit the constables to
pass the guards.
The warrants charge murder, as¬
sault and battery and threatening to
kill.
GOVERNOR’S WARNING.
Chief Executive of Pennijrlvanla Issue* m
Proclamation.
On account of tho horrible slaugh¬
ter at Latimer, in the coal region, Gov¬
ernor Hastings, of Pennsylvania, is¬
sued a proclamation admonishing all
good citizens against aiding or abetting
unlawful proceedings.
“I do hereby notify them,” it reads,
"that the lives and property of all citi¬
zens of the commonwealth will be pro¬
tected; that the laws will be enforced;
that the humblest citizen will be pro¬
tected in his right to earn a livelihood
ami in the enjoyment of his home and
family, and tha‘. the safety of life and
property will be guaranteed to all at
whatever cost, and I do hereby com¬
mand all persons engaged in riotous
demonstrations aud unlawful oonduct
threatening the peace and dignity of
the commonwealth of Pennsylvania, to
disperse forlitwith to their respective
places of abode, warning them that
the persistence in violence or unlawful
assemblage will compel such use of the
military arm of the commonwealth as
may l>e necessary to enforce obedience
to the laws and the maintenance of
good order.”
CAMPHORTUEES WANTED.
Secretary Wilson Suggests Their Culture
In Florida.
Secretary Wilson, of the agricultural
department at Washington says that
arrangements will be made by the de¬
partment for the thorough introduction
of the camphor tree in Florida.
He said that there was no doubt that
the tree would be a success, as it litfd
already passed the experimental stage.
Tho department will give all posasible
encouragement in the way of supplying
seed and young trees, and Mr, Wilson
predicts that the country will booh be
producing a sufficient supply of cam¬
phor for its own needs.
He also announced his purpose to
adopt a policy for the encouragement
of the growth of the English walnut,
the tree of which will, he thinks, do
well anywhere south of Washington.
DYNAMITE KILLS THIRTY.
MoKftxine in South Africa Explodes With
Frightful Loss of Life.
Advices from Johannesburg, South
Africa, state that an explosion of dy¬
namite took place in the magazine of
the George Gouch deep level mine,
causing terrible loss of life among the
miners. Five white men and twenty
five Kaffirs are known to have been
killed.
CONSUL LEE IN WASHINGTON.
He Will Confer With the President On
Cuban Affairs.
General Lee, United States consul
general at Havana, arrived in Wash¬
ington Saturday night.
He proceeded immediately to the
Shoreham, and declining to register,
retired at once. General Lee was
thoroughly exhausted by the day’s
travel and refused to receive any call¬
ers.
It is his intention to stop in Wash¬
ington for several days, aud he will
probably have an opportunity in the
meautime to confer with the president
as well as with Assistant Secretary
Day before he goes to his home in Vir¬
ginia.
WOODFORD GOES IN.
He Succeeds Haxmis Taylor as Our Min¬
ister to Spain.
Advices from San Sebastian, Spain,
says: The retiring United States min¬
ister to Spain, Hannis O. Taylor, was
received in audience by the queen re¬
gent Monday and presented his letters
of recall.
Soon afterwards, the new United
States minister to Spain, General
Stewart L. Woodford, was received by
her majesty aud presented credentials.
HOUSE HOLD AF FAIRS.
Mr*. Borer’* Tomato Ketchup.
Mrs. S. T, Borer, the famous cook'
ing expert, gives this, her favorite, re¬
ceipt for making tomato ketchup in the
Ladies’ Home Journal: “Use half a
bushel of sound tomatoes. Wash and
cut theip into piece*.- Cook gently for
half an hour, then press through a
sieve. Cook again for one hour; then
add one ounce of ground ginger, half one
ounce of mustard, one gill of salt,
a pound of sugar, and one quart of
vinegar. Cook to the proper consis¬
tency; add five drops of oil of nutmeg,
and the same of celery, or a table
spoonful of celery seed. Bottle, cork
and seal.’’
_
Canning Blackberries and Raspberries.
Select firm raspberries, and put
them into a colander, which sink gradu¬
ally into a pan of cold water, Left and
drain. Arrange neatly in the cold jars,
then fill with cold water, adjust the
rubbers and place the lids carelessly
on lop. Do not fasten them. Place a
little hay, straw or excelsior in the
bottom of an ordinary wash-boiler, on
which stand the jars. Pour into the
boiler sufficient cold water to come
nearly to the neck of the jars, cover
the boiler and bring slowly to boiling
point. As soon as the water reaches
boiling point lift each Stand jar carefully of and the
screw on the top. out
draught to slowly cool. Strawberries
and blackberries may be canned after
this rule.—Mrs. S. T. Borer, in Ladies’
Some Journal.
Excellent Cucumber Flekle.
Make a ten-gallon keg of strong
brine on which an egg will float. Put
the encumbers in a bag made of a
yard of sleezy white cotton, tie up its
mouth with a string and place a clean
stone on it to keep it in place under
the brine, and every cucumber is safe
and sound until you wish to pickle
them. When that time comes, which
should not be for six weeks, soak
them in fresh water for twenty-four
hpurs. Then put them ip a preserv¬
ing ketfte with enough vinegar to
cover them. Set theirf on the stove
aiifl boil gently until a straw can easily
pierce them. Have ready a jar that
will hold them. Bemove from the
kettle and throw the vinegar away.
Pat into the kettle nearly boiled twice as in
mnoh vinegar as they were boil. Now
and set on the stove to
weigh the cucumbers, and allow a
quarter of a pound of sugar In to every ten
pound of cucumbers. every
pounds of pickle allow three onions
and half an ounce of mace, cloves,
alffpice, ginger and two three-inch
sticks of cinnamon, a quarter of an
ounce 6&ch of tumeric, black pepper of
and mixed mustard, one ounce of
white mustard seed and one ounce
onions, •craped crack horse the radish. spices, Slice MHHpl mix the the
mustard and tumeric together into a
smooth paste. Put all of the sugar
and half of the spices into the vinegar
that is in the kettle; sprinkle the rest
of the spiee with the other ingredients
in alternate layers between-the cu¬
cumbers as you put them in the jar.
When the vinegar has been boiling
just ten minutes stir into it the mixed
mustard and. tumeric and remove it
instantly from the fire and pour over
the pickles. Cover it up closely and
set it away. In a few days it will be
ready for use. The traveler was not
far wrong when he pronouuced Record. it
“glorious pickle.”—Chicago
Household Hints,
Vegetables growing above the
ground should be cooked in salted
water, those below, in fresh water.
Colors which have been changed by
the application of acids msy be re¬
stored by the application of chloro¬
form.
When cooking onions, set a tin cup
of vinegar en the stove and let boil,
and no disagreeable odor will be in the
room.
Fruit stains, when fresh, may be
removed by pouring water through
the stained portion until the spot dis¬
appears.
Ink that is freely spilt upon a carpet
should be covered with common or
coarse salt or Indian meal, If all the
stain is not absorbed rub with lemon
juice.
Grass stains should be rubbed with
molasses thoroughly and then washed
out as usual. Another treatment is
to rub with alcohol and then wash
in water.
Our fruit staius may be removed
wita oxalic acid; wash the stained por¬
tion in the acid till clear; rinse at
once in rain waterj as the acid will at¬
tack the fabric if left upon it. Now
wet the spot in ammonia and give a
final rinsing.
When potatoes are thoroughly baked,
burst the skin, and you will have de
licious, mealy potatoes that will be
eatable for an hour or more if kept in
a warm place. If you are not in the
habit of doing this, you do not know
what an excellent thing a baked pota¬
to really is.
Bust and ink stains should be
rubbed with juice of lemon and the
spot then covered with salt and the
cloth placed in the sun. If this treat
ment does not serve to remove the
stain, or if the fabric is colored and
so cannot be treated with lemon
juice, oxalic acid may be used as for
old fruit stains.
Tea, coffee and undoubtedly cocoa
stains, even those which had been pre¬
viously washed, may be rubbed in
javelle water, if the fabric stained be
white, otherwise the color will be
bleached. Take a half-pint of the ja¬
velle water to a quart of clear water
and let the stained portion of the cloth
soak in it for several hours, then rinse
thoroughly in three waters.
Chicago’s rich people returned to
the assessors of last year §2000 worth
of diamonds and §74 worth of silver
tableware,
inaetWKJ. , ,,
'
“But I thought your husband was
«ueh 6Ucn on an active oetive man?” man.
“Active!" If it weren’t for me, I
don't believe he’d get up in time to go
to bed.”
“Ah, well, that’s better than some
husbands, you know, who scarcely go
to bed in time to g«t up.”—Harper’s
Bazar.
WHY SO MANY REGULAR PHYSICIANS FAIL
To Cure Female Ills—Some True Reasons Why
Mrs. Pinkham is More Successful Thau ,
the Family Doctors.
A is sick disease peculiar to her i yr
woman ; some
sex is fast developing in her system. She goes
to her family physician and tells him a .
story, but not the whole story.
She holds someth in g.baek, loses her head, Jgl fffBf
becomes agitated, forgets what she wants
to say, and finally conceals -what she Kj& ig||j
ought to have told, and thus completely
mystifies the doctor.
Is it any wonder, therefore, that
the doctor fails to cure the disease? ' jWiT Oj
Still, we cannot blame the wo
man, detail for it is very of embarrassing the JggjSfJ, tffijSh gingpS i J
to some symp- to^
toms of her suffering, even 1%' Y*
her family physician. * W''r
It was for this reason that a
years ago Mrs. Lydia E. Pink
ham, at Lynn, Mass., determined to step in andhelpher sex. Having had consid¬
erable experience in treating female ills with her Vegetable Compound, she en¬
couraged the women of America to write to her for advice in regard to their
complaints, and, being a woman, it was easy for her ailing sisters to pour into
her ears every detail of their suffering.
In this way she was able to do for them what the physicians were unable
to do, simply because she had the proper information to work upon, and
from the little group of women who sought her advice years ago a great
army of her fellow-beings are to-day constantly applying for advice and re¬
lief, and the fact that more than one hundred thousand of them have been
successfully treated by Mrs. Pinkham during the last year is indicative of
the grand results which are produced by her unequaled experience and
training.
No physician in the world has had such a training, or has such an amount
of information at hand to assist in the treatment of all kinds of female ills,
from the simplest local irritation to the most complicated diseases of the womb.
This, therefore, is the reason why Mrs. Pinkham, in her laboratory at
Lynn, Mass., is able to do more for the ailing women of America than the
family physician. Any woman, therefore, is responsible for her own suffering
who will not take the trouble to write to Mrs. Pinkham for advice.
The testimonials which we are constantly publishing from grateful women
establish beyond a doubt the power of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com¬
pound to conquer female diseases.
______
GET THE GENUINE ARTICLE!
Walter Baker & Co.’s
Breakfast COCOA
Pure, Delicious, Nutritious.
Coatm J.ese than ONE CENT a cap.
Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark.
Walter Baker & Co. Limited,
{Established 1780.) Dorchester, Mass.
ARKANSAS LADIES
DON’T DTK.
used Malvern, Dr. Ark., M. A.Simmon* nays: Dave
Elver Medicine 10 years,
and find U a great deal
■mm Regulator” better than and" ’’Zeilln’s Black
i W &&&££& ter and Niece during their
monthly trouble* for Ob
•tructed Menstruation.
There should be no home
Without it.
The cessation tbe of tbe menses of forty usually and fifty. 00*
ears between ages the periodic
Great irregularity takes place in
discharges for some time before the final
cessation, the female usually experiencing
sudden flashes of heat, fullness in the bead,
headache and other evidences of constitu¬
tional disturbance. The nervous system
sympathetlcallyresponds.and Irritability and melancholy, the there patient is great is
discouraged and baa a sense of fullness or
suffocation. life need
At no time In her does s woman
more constant care and watchful tender*
ness, nor has more need lor a The remedy welt to
invigorate and strengthen her. bo
Should be kept regular with Dr. M. A. Sim¬
mons Elver Medieine.and if Dr. Simmon#
Squaw Vine Wine is used during the whole
of this critical period, it will invigorate and
enrich her blood, soothe and strengthen her
nerves and thus relieve tbe suffering and
ensble her to pass safely through her Strength the dan¬
gers, prolong her life and afford
■Bd Joy In her declining years.
Pine Bluff, Ark, writes:
Dr. M. A. Simmons Elver
__ Medicine ,, , , has , been God _
a
“mS
and Fevers, Bilious Fev¬
ers, Sick Headache. I
think there is no compart,
son between it and “Black
Draught” and “ZeiliB’S
Liver Regulator.”
Fullness of Blood In Head. ~
Where there is great determination Of
blood to the head, tbe blood-vessels of tho
twain become greatly giddiness, congested, especially and there
exists flushed face, throbbing in the head. on
stooping, and pain It be caused
Increased by movement. freely late may rising in too
by living too ; too
morning, combined with an inactive life.
Menstrual derangements in females will
Often occasion it. Dr. Simmons Squaw
Vine Wine is especially made for this, and
it cures. >
CHRONIC DISEASES
ot all forms
SUCCESSFULLY TREATED,
Rheumatism. Neuralgia, Bronchitis,
tion. Indigestion, etc.
CATARRH
of the Nose, Throat and Lungs.
DISEASES PECULIAR TO WOMEN.
Prolapsus, Ulcerations, Leucorrhea. etc. »
for pamphlet, testimonials and question
DK. S. T. WHITAKER, Specialist.
S05 Noreroes Building, Atlanta.
$ 25 FULLCOURSE
The complete Business Course or the
Shorthand Course for »S5. at
WHITE’S BUSINESS
Comvlete J 5 Business E. Cain find St-.ATL. ShorOumd 4 NT A^GA. Courses
bine<t. $7.50 Per Month.
_
Business “ 'J raetiee from the start.
eation.* r arse of study unex<“oiled. No
Address F. B. WHITE.
THE GEORGIA TELEGRAPH
-a. Teaches telegraphy thoroughly in Lhe raiiwa> ,
w5fgL,.- fm starts its eradcat** exclusive Telegraph
service. Only South. Established
Pj S |plLning School in tbe
years. Sixteen hundred suu
{S^PINeiScessful trated catalogue. graduates. Address Send foi
■BB *****
That Everlasting Irritating Itch, ,j
That-dsserlfeea Tetter. Eeseina and ether SkiJt lfwta
diseases. 50 cento trait-are them St«p the
Sdcgutl pars for a 56 t$x of
drugfttoreaor J. T. postpaid Savannah, tor cents Ga. In stamp#
from Situptrlue,
Three of a kind would have scooped the ark
asUhaduc ' lW,lg b,U I'i ,r i_
_
Fits permanently owed. No nts or nervous¬
ness after first day’s use of Dr. Elite’* Great
Nerve Restorer. *2 trial bottle and treatise Ire#.
Dr.. K. H. Hu.SK. Ltd.. 931 Arelt St., Pblla,, Fa.
GROVES
’'j 5
jr
a ( yflll 'w * K <•
g a < hDClr ■Bt'Wtjii
fat jauHijH
y.t < ■ '’tVT.
jjgg a* it.
TASTELESS
.
IS JUST AS COOD FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE SOctS.
Galatia, ills., trT _ __ Nov• 16, a893*
Paris Medicine Co, St. Louis, MoM Mo.
osssiarfisass
bought three gross already this year. -In all oar ex¬
perience of 14 years, in the drug I business, have
never sold an article that gave such universal satis*
faction as your Tonic. Yours truly,
ABNEY, CARS. A COa
“Success”
liotton......
Seel duller
ud
Separator.
fffr'Wy Nearly doubles
-
. j2jg&![/kWW of tho Seed Vtlc* tie
tc
' Farmer.
AU up-to-date {turners use them because the 0row
ere give their patronage to such gins. H aller la
PRACTICAL, RELIABLE mad GUAHA5TEED.
For ftll information Address
80CLF, STEAM FEED WORKS, M eridian,Ml%
ICO Share* of Mock gold for properhet 910.00 la
A' In one of the .surest hundred *i*tf
Co’orado. One aaa acres,
Mountain patented. geld-bearin* croand and
of KgZ i ZX n ?&£ f J*£?M3B:
GOLD!
E# LEE#
The citizen and Christian hero. A great n«
: rcaiiaaiAQ D aaTttain SO - atehmond.UA
* \ > CANCER^ISIS®
— piPHtaSTSEKR
MENTION THiS
1 PlSO’S CURE FOR m
} iSiRfS WHtRt Alt ELS£ fAkS. c;
, Best Cocgfc S;*rup. Tastes Good. Use _
, CONSUMPTION time, by druggists. 719