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The Morb'd Sense of Injury.
By this “sense of injury" is meant
that vague sense which afflicts many
of us at times of being the object of
hostile feelings on the part of others.
No odubt we often are, for, In the
stress of necessary rivalry and conflict
upon which progress depends, we give
i*al take injuries. But there remains
a large excess of this “injured" feel
ing which can not be so explained, or
which is disproportionate to its cause
or entirely gratuitous, and is thus
shifted into the field of morbid psy
chology. This only is here treated—
the morbid sense of injury.
It seems to find an easy entrance to
the mind from a mere feeling of being
ill used or stinted in sympathy to the
entertainment of serious grievances or
persecutory ideas. In certain tempera
ments it is marked. On so-called
“blue” days we are constantly moved
to a “sense of Injury” from fancied
aloofness of our friends. Madam Lofty
slights us. and our jaundiced imagina
tion has it that she has heard some
thing detrimental and dislikes us. But
lo! to-day. when the liver is released,
madam smiles sweetly, and never
heard a thing.
So In suspicious people. They enter
tain a chronic state of mind, by which
the acts of others are given an invidi
ous construction. They anticipate ill
will, carrying the chip on the shoulder*
Os two constructions of a given situa
tion, they leap to the more offending.
An Hnstgn's Narrow Escape.
When Commodore Decatur, in I&LS,
dictated to the dey of Algiers the terms
of a treaty with the United States,
Lieut. John Subrick was dispatched to
Washington with a copy for the ap
proval of our Government. The brig
Epervier was detailed for his transpor
tation, and he was accompanied by
Captain Lewis and Lieutenant Neill
of the navy, who had married sisters
a few days before sailing with Com
modore Decatur for the Mediterranean,
and by Lieutenant Drury and Lieuten
ant Yarnell, who had fought with
Perry in the battle of Lake Erie. Just
before the brig sailed Ensign Josiah
Tattnell, who was a watch officer on
the Epervier, succeeded in Inducing an
officer on one of the other ships to ex
change places with him, as he pre
ferred to remain with the fleet. A few
days later, as the Epervier passed out
of the Straits of Gibraltar, she sig
naled “All well on board.” Since then
she has not been heard from. It is an
Interesting fact that Ensign Tattnell,
who escaped the fate of his comrades,
lived to command the ram Merrimac of
the confederate navy. Since the Eper
vier went down we have lost a num
ber of vessels, but each of them can
be accounted for.—Chicago Record.
Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Ease,
A powder to shake Into your shoes; rests the
feet. Cures Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Sore,
Hot, Callous, Aching, Sweating Feet and In
growing Nails. Allen's Foot-Ease makes new
or tight shoes easy. At all druggists and
shoe stores, 25 cts. Sample mailed FREE.
Address Allen 8. Olmsted, Leßoy, N. Y.
An Aged Subject.
Oyer—Saw you out riding with your girl yes
terday.
Myer—Yes. Did you over meet her?
Gyer—No; but lather says ho was once a pu
pil in her Sunday school class.
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinink Tablets. All
druggists refund the money If it falls to cure.
E. W. Grove s signature is on each box. 25c.
Too Funny For Anything.
Bacon -1 see the Western Undertakers’ as
sociation had a dinner, and one of them gave a
funny toast. Egbert—W'hat wag It? May we
each of us live long enough to bury one an
other.
Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not spot, streak
or give your goods an unevenly dyed ap
pearance. Sold by aU druggists.
In Dangerous Trade.
-‘My son is learning to be an electrician.”
“Well, I suppose ho knows pretty well what
to do by tills time ”
"Oh, no; he isn't hal through yet learning
the things bo mustn't do."
How’s This ?
We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward
any case of < atarrh that cannot be cured by
Hall’s Catarrh Cure.
F. J. Cheney & ( o , Props., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Che
ney for the lapt 15 years, and believe him per
fectly honorable in all business transactions
and financially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
West & I ruax, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Walding. Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale
Druggists, Toledo, Ohio.
nail’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, act
ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials free.
Hall’s Family Pills are the best.
Mot Quite.
Jeremiah—Bryan thinks ho resembles Lin
coln. Joseph—Oh, no. Lincoln's fame went all
over the country—but he didn’t have to carry
It himself.—Puck.
The Best Prescription for Chills
and Fever is a bottle of G nova’s Tasteless
Chill Tonic. It is simply iron and quinine in
a tasteless form. No cure--no pay. Price 50c.
Ask the Milk Man.
“Mamma, do cows make milk out of green
gr ss?”
“Yes. dear.
“Then, why is the milk blue?’’
Carter’s Ink.
Good ink is a necessity for good writing. Car
ter's is the t est. Costs no more than poor ink.
Idterary Ornaments.
“What is a library, pa?’’
“A library. Jimmy, is what a man has when
he gets together an awful lot of books that he
never has time to road.”
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
deetblng, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
rtion. allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
1 am sure Piso’s Cure for Consumption saved
inv life three years ago.— .Vina. Thos. Rob
bins, Maple St., Norwich, N. Y-, Feb. 17, 1900.
The eyes of horses and cattle,
equally with the eyes of man,
are cured by
Mitchell’s Eye Salve
which
was favorably known in this
region as far back as 1849.
You may place great confi
dence in this remedy.
Price 25 cents. All druggists.
HALL St RUCKEL,
New York. 1848. London.
Tk TO crop can
1 grow with- / ST*
out Potash.
Every blade
Grass, every grain
of Corn, all Fruits
and Vegetables Wl
must have it. If -JO!
enough is supplied
you can count on a full crop—
if too little, the growth will be
“ scrubby.”
Send for our books telling all about composition of
fertilizers best adapted for ail crops. They cost you
nothing.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,93 Nassau St., New York.
Preliminary Arrangement.
“These photographs are my souve
nirs of travel.”
“All these? Well, Miss Julia, you’ve
been an extensive traveler."
“No, I haven’t traveled at all.
These are souvenirs of the travels I’m
going to travel when I marty rich.”
Chronic Tetter.
Dr. James C. Lewis, of Tip Top,
Ky., writes: “I have an invalid friend
with me from Florida, who has derived
great benefit from the use of yo»r Tet
terine, in Chronio Tetter. I wish you
to send him a box to the above ad
dress. Money enalosed.” 50c. box at
drug stores, or by mail from J. T.
Shuptrine, Savannah, Ga.
The Difference.
“Did you go to the girls’ college
benefit supper, major?” “Yes, little
gal.” “They say it was a circus, ma
jor?" “No, it wasn’t, little girl. If
it had only been a circus I could have
bought a bag of rancid peanuts for a
nickel, instead of paying 50 cents for
a burnt ball of popcorn.”
Malsby & Company,
39 S. Broad St.. Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and Boilers
Steam Water Heaters, Steam Pumps and
Penberthy Injectors.
/T - f
Manufacturers and Dealers fn
MILLS,
Corn Mills, Feed Mills, Cotton Gin Machin
ery and Grain Separators.
SOLID and INSERTED Saws, Saw Teeth and
l ocks, Knight’s Patent Dors, Birdsall Saw
Mill and Engine Repairs, Governors, Grate
Bars and a full line of Mill Supplies. Price
and quality of goods guaranteed. Catalogue
free by mentioning this paper.
dTamonT
So closely resembles tho genuine as to be be- I
yond detection except by the closest scrutiny of I
an expert. Only cost from $3.00 to $15.00 each. 1
Worn by leaders of society everywhere. Send
4c for illustrated catalogue. Agents wanted. I
The Modder River Diamond Co.,
No. 919 Prudential Building, Atlanta, Ga. J
MiKEboNoVAN,«;sg
llsh a series of twenty illustrated boxing lessons
in Golden Hours. This will offer Its readers the
same privileges as those wealthy enough to be
long to a fashionable club. Ask your newsdealer
for Golden Hours No. 640, or send $1 for special J
subscription covering the lessons to Golden
Hours, 24 and 26 Vaudewater Street, New York.
Bargain Counter Method.
Tess—How’s your club getting
along?
Jess—Oh, we’re getting a big mem
bership now since we reduced the
initiation fee.
Tess—l told you $5 was too much
to expect any woman to pay.
Jess—Yes, we realized that, so we
made it s4.9B.—Philadelphia Press.
La Creole Will Restore Those Gray Hairs
La Creole Hair Restorer is a z Perfect
Dining Out In China.
Chinese customs and comestibles are
so very queer that we never fall to find
a Chinese bill of fare an Interesting
document. Three cyclists in the land
of the Dragon Fly recently attended a
full-dress Chinese dinner, with chop
sticks iu place of forks and spoons,
festive Chinamen clad in purple, blue
and green jackets over their gayest
frocks, aud a menu of which they
have given the benefit to the public in
Travel.
“The meal was of the usual Chinese
topsy-turvy order. It began with
sweets and ended with soup. First,
there was served a liquid like warm
sherry, together with little jam
dumplings and a vermicelli concoction
called almond tea. Then wo sat
down to twelve dishes arranged on
the tables sugar-cane, cherries,
shrimps, dates, cuttlefish, oranges,
slices of preserved duck, preserved
walnuts and so on, every one helping
himself by means of chop sticks.
“Thon we came to the more serious
part of the entertainment—shark’s fins,
jellyfish, sea slugs, wild duck, mush
rooms, lotus nuts, pickled pigeon’s
eggs, duck and pork, rice floating in
candled water and blrds’-nest soup.
When we had rested ten minutes from
our labors a bucket of hot, plain rice
was placed In the center of the table,
and everybody filled himself up ac
cording to individual capacity. It was
a nice evening.”
yhe Nicer Phrase.
“WhAt’sfhe difiStfence between a bet
an<J a wager?” asked the man who
thinks 'there are too many words in
the English language.
said the friend who always
wcArsTir dress coat after 6 o’clock, “Is
something you majre with a man,
which has to be paid, no matter who
loses. A wager Is something more-Te
fined. It’s made with a woman, aijd
is not considered collectible unless she
wins.”—Washington Star.
The Salvation army, for the second
time, has failed to get a foothold in
Mexico. Mexican laws forbid all re
ligious processions in the streets of
cities.
far TALKED INTO IT.
allo* yourself to be talked into buy
gcTy /'Ol ///* ) ing a shoddy job to save a dollar or so when
«i vS’ / // H th® best is on sale in every town in the
KJ I'Y/ Y'' /S- / / South. Did you ever think how easy it is
8 \ T / / 1 for some people to be talked into a thing?
ROCK HILL
B
jS3B^i!Saffi^ NP ADULTS> V n
AS tATA&J lk* S FAT AS
X raw" wpics 4
THE BEST PRESCRIPTION IS
Grove’s Tasteless Chill Tonic.
The formula is plainly printed on every bottle—hence you
know just what you are taking when you take Grove’s. Imitators
do not advertise their formula knowing that you would not buy
their medicine if you knew what it contained. Grove’s contains
Iron and Quinine put up in correct proportions and is in a Tasteless
form. The Iron acts as a tonic while the Quinine drives the
malaria out of the system. Any reliable druggist will tell you that
Grove’s IS the Original and that all other so-called • Tasteless
Chill Tonics are imitations. An analysis of other chill tonics shows
that Grove’s is superior to all others in every respect. You
are not experimenting when you take GrUve’s—its superiority
and excellence having long been established. Grov«’s is the
only Chill Cure sold throughout the entire malarial sections of
the United States. No Cure, No Pay. Price, 50c.
TYPEWRITERS.
Write for our bargain list.
Rebuilt machines good as new
(for work,) cheap. Machines shipped
for examination. Largest, best
and cheapest stock in the country.
We rent typewriters.
THE TYPJCWKITER EXCHANGE,
208 North 9th St.,
St. Louis, Mo.
“Pot of Beans.”
George W. Benn, Sr., and his four
sons of Somerville, Mass., were all
made Master Masons on the same
evening recently in Putnam Lodge.
So far as is known, a similar event has
never occurred in the history of the
masonic fraternity. The five men
have been given the nickname of “the
pot of Beans.”
Ever have “the blues”? Then you H
' Vwfck know how dark everything looks.
W\ You arc completely discouraged f
\ 'X. an(^csnnot off that terri- : y
/ ble depression. A little work
Ql , looks like a big mountain; a r
~"A little noise sounds like the roar
of a cannon; and a little sleep is all jjg|
'Sr y ou can sccufc » night after night.
That’s I
Nerve Exhaustion I
The truth of the matter is, your nerves have been poi
soned and weakened with the impurities in your blood. The |||
■S c thing for you to do is to get rid of these impurities just as
Soon as you can.
You want a blood-purifying medicine,—a perfect Sarsapa
rilla,—that’s what you want. You want a Sarsaparilla that
■S is the strongest and best nerve tonic you can buy, too.
I That’s AYER’S I
Tr The only Sarsaparilla made under the personal supervision of i
three graduates: a graduate in pharmacy, a graduate
? in chemistry, and a graduate in medicine.”
SI.OO a bottle. All druggists.
<< During I was suffering from nervous prostration. For weeks I grew
worse, became thioj could not sleep, had no appetite, and was in a wretched con
dition. After taking several kinds of medicines without result, I took Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla with more than pleasing results. My appetite returned, I slept soundly,
in. strength and weight increased, and now lam well and strong without the ...
slightest trace of my old trouble. Indeed, I would hardly believe it possible for
medicine to bring about such a change in any person.”—Clara Mealey, Winter gHi
HH Hill, Somerville, Mass., Dec. 21, 1899. jjfll
W. L. DOUGLAS
$3 & 3.50 SHOES lo n
Srth $4 to $6 compared \
with other makes, f
Indorsed bv over S
1,000,000 wearers.
he genuine have W. L. f Tj
suglas’ name and price h
unped on bottom. A
> substitute claimed to be \ /
J good. Your dealer • A
hould keen them —if
ot, we will send a pair
1 receipt 01 price and
tra for carnage. State kind of leather,
ie, and width, plain or cap toe. Cat. free,
coion£y;iets L. DOUGLAS SHOE CO., Brockton, Mass.
ta GUHtS WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS. PM
hrs Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
JQ 2° time. Sold by drnggists.
A Z? Booker T. Wash-
A fl ’ I'IKFP ing tun has written
A 3 >l-1 8 story of his
LB QB I J u I life and work. Hs
2. M. XJLJL<JL 1 A. gives his views on
’ the negro problem
and all his best speeches. White and colored
people are giving advanced orders. A bonanza
for agents. Write today. We would llketoengags
a few able white men to superintend agents,
j. iu. rcrcfioxje co oc»
No. 813-024 Austell Building;, Atlanta, Oa.
HO A D e V NEW DISCOVERY; (tree
8% W r O ■ quick relief and cures worst
cases- Book of testimonial a and 10 days’ treatment
Free. Dr. H. K. aIESN’B soils. Boz B, Atlanta. Qfc.
a BSSS STOPPED FREI
B K W" Permanently Cured by
DR. KLINE’S GREAT
B B 8S NERVE RESTORER
■a ■■ ™ Xo ), iu B^ler firßl ÜBe .
ml neraoD&l or bv mail; tie»ti«e <b4
“ tkYal bottle fhf.b
to ril p.ue.t. who p.) exprewM- only on delltw.
Cwa, not only l.mporiry roller, for ell A.r-
Piwriw., BpU.puy. Spume. Si. Vll!>< lienee.
Debility. SebM-uon. nil. R. H.ttl.iXE. Ld.
831 Arch Street. Philadelphia. Fmmaediam
OPIUM MORPHINE
habits cured nt homo. NO CURB,. NO FAY.
Correspondence confidential. GATE CITY
SOCIETY, Lock box 715, Atlanta, Ga.
I.EARN HYPNOTISM ism, and Magnetlo
Healing. Complore Weltm rTR 51 **
mat. for O«
Mention this