Newspaper Page Text
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THE COUNTRY WEEKLY.
I throw the city paper down,
It has not half the news
Of this one from a country town,
And when a rest you’d choose
From “during hold-ups” late occurred
The dallies dish for you,
Turn to that little weekly, blurrod,
Thelluraiville Bazoo.
Igee by It that: ‘‘William Jones
Has got his closer sowed,”
That “Peter Brown with cobhlostoneB
Has fixed the stretch of road
The other side of Kbnpson.’s bridge,”
And: “John Smith brings report
The apple crop on Meadow ltiugo
Tho lato freeze will cut short.”
“There’s rumors of a wedding rife,
We’ll he tho first with news!”
“Lost Sunday Harvey Green and wife
Took dinner at Joe Blue’s!”
And so my oye* the columns roam,
I live with memories sweet,
It’s nowsy nows they print shoot! ut home
In this back-country City
—Boy Farrell Greene, In tho Kansas
Independent.
I Career of a Capitalist. 1
By Edgar T. Field. ^
P=3 HAD long had n
desire to become
a capitalist. Lu¬
cille Beerned t o
think it smart to
laugh at me for
this extremely
laudable and per¬
fectly natural ambition. As for her,
she wasted her substance in riotous
living, spending every cent of her
salary onopera tickets, imported toilet
articles and tortoni biscuit with a
reckless disregard for tho future that
could only mean one thing, namely,
matrimonial hopes.
And to tell the truth, Lucille was
attractive enough to warrant her bav
ing’some hopes in this direction, and
could have had her pick any time
from half a dozen young fellows, each
one of whom got almost as much salary
as she did.
Bnt that has nothing to do with my
own ambitions, which were of a very
different sort. I say wore, for I’m
not so sure about them now, my first
experience as a capitalist having rather
unsettled my views of life for the time
being. indeed
1 was very young when I
first formed my ideas as to the desira¬
bility of wealth. It was way back in
my childhood when old Mr.
used to come to church in Ids
fur-lined overcoat and dirty linen,
and I observed how the minister
tho elders crowded around him
shake his hand, when lie was such
hateful old curmudgeon that I
privately thought the sort Loyd of a public
apology for perpetrating him on tho
community.
“Oh, Iliggiuson lias got a lot of
money out at interest,” my father
would say when I ventured to wonder
why people made sueli a fuss over a
dirty and disagreeable old man.
What a marvelous power “money
out at interest” must be, I thought,
when it^can .transform even Mr. Hig
ginson into an acceptable companion.
And so at that early ago I was made
acquainted with the potency of wealth,
and L resolved that some day I, too,
should have “money out at. interest.”
When 1 was made head stenographer
in a big law office I considered my
ambition as good as realized. It had
seemed so far away before that I’d
never triod to save very much, but
now that it was fairly within my
reach I began to lay up money at a
frantic rate.
“If you get another raiso in your
salary you’ll be so stingy you’ll take
to lunching out of the mucilage bottle
and wearing your bfcyclo suit to
church,” declared Lucille in disgust.
But 1 just lot her jeer and kept on
economizing, and at last thore carno a
day when I had $1500 in the bank.
Mr. Adams, a friend of my father’s,
invested it for me in a first mortgage
on a suburban cottage, nud when the
papers flushed and were signed I went home
triumphant.
“Congratulatepm, Lucille,” I cried,
throwing myself iut o a chair and my
hat ou the couch. - ‘I liaf inveshti
gated mein moneys.”
Lucille was trimming a lint to wear
to the theatre that night, one of those
silly white tulle affairs that a singlo
shower will transform into an imita¬
tion custard pie before your very
eyes. “Huh!’!
she exclaimed, “I believe
you think you've done something
roally flue. Sara Dunning, if you
don’t look out, your face will grow
hard just like Mr. Iligginson’s.”
“What do I dare?” I retorted gayly.
“I’ve got money out at interest, Lu¬
cille. Do you realize what that
means?"
“It mean’s that you’ve worked liko
a slave and denied yourself of pleas¬
ure for a year and a half to get it, and
you’re as thin as a shad and yellow as
a lemon. Come ou nud go to the the
atre to-night and foi get that you’re a
capitalist long enough to enjoy your¬
self, that’s a dear.”
But the fever was in my blood, and
I wouldn’t listen to ber.
So I went on putting money in tbo
bank and looked forward eagerly to
the time when the interest ou my in¬
vestment would begin to come iu.
It was paid promptly enough the
first quarter and the second. Then it
lapsed. Six months went by and no
interest.’T^*
“It seems to me,” remarked Lu-
cille one day, “that you’d beilter ‘in¬
vestigate’ that money in dead ear¬
nest.”
“Oh, don’t worry yourself,” I re¬ cd
torted, snappishly. Mr. I was Higginson nervous
late, and besides, was I
allowed to be as cross us he liked,
remembered.
“Well, it’s a great thing to have
money out at interest,” she responded
airily, tilting her sailor hat over her
nose and shaking out her rustling
skirts preparatory to going out. She
was really outrageously pretty.
At the door she met some one com¬
ing in. A pale, forlorn-looking old
woman, with a pinched face and an
appearance of having cried for six
months.
“Is this Miss Dunning?” she
asked.
I assured her it was, and she pro¬
ceeded timidly: “I called to see you
about that mortgage.” hastening to
“Ab, yes,” I said,
shut the door on Lucille, who was
lingering in the ball in an unprin¬
cipled fashion which I could not ap¬
prove. unable to meet
“We’ve been oui
payments lately,” went on my visitor
in a depressed tone, “and yesterday
your agent sentmeword you intended
to foreclose. Oh, Miss Dunning,
don’t. Please don’t be so bard on
11M. My poor husband has been sick
in bed for a year, and if we lose our
little home it will kill him.”
Here the poor creature burst out
crying, and I reached for my hand¬
kerchief, feeling somehow that being
a capitalist wasn't such fun as I’d
imagined.
“Oh, Miss Dunning," proceeded
my guest, as soon as she was able to
speak, “if you know how hard we
worked fo build that house. We put
the savings of years into it, thinking
that in our old age we’ve have a roof
over our heads, And now we must
lose it all.”
A fresh burst of sobbing interrupted
her, and I swallowed a succession of
tvlant seemed to be cobblestones. I
tried to think what Mr. Higginson
would have done in such an emer¬
gency, and wondered if he ever felt,
as much like a chicken thief as I did
at that moment.
“Why, don’t cry,” I managed to
say at last, “I’ll not deprive you of
a home. I only bought the mort¬
gage as an investment, you know,”
Here I was actually apologizing for
having “money out at interest.” The
poor woman went away a little com¬
forted at last, and I went to bed with
a nervous headache.
I rather lost interest in my mort¬
gage after that. I didn’t sleep well
for some reason, and when I did doze
a little my dreams were haunted by
woeping old ladies. 1 got a had habit
of going into a brown study at incon¬
venient times, and would start guilt¬
ily when spoken to suddenly.
One day I got a note from Mr.
Adams saying he was going to fore¬
close as once, and assuring mo that
I’d get my money all right—I needn’t
worry. Somehow I didn’t find the
assurance comforting, and went home
with a,-* ——j ioi supper,
“May the Lord preserve me fvom
ever becoming a capitalist!,’ cried Lu¬
cille, looking at my face as I sat try¬
ing to read after supper. “You look,
my dear, for all the world like Judas
Iscariot after ho was found out. A
funeral would be cheerful beside you.
Thank goodness Bob is coming to¬
night.”
Bob is Lucille’s cousin, a young
lawyer, and the jolliest boy going.
But alas! when ho came, Bob was in
the blues, too. He sighed like a fur¬
nace every few moments, and finally
announced that he couldn’t stay.
“I want to see a man named Adams
about a mortgage,” he said, and 1
turned cold all over.
“It’s the saddest case I ever heard
of,” ho went on. “An old couple who
are clients of mine had a mortgage on
their home. It was bought a year or
so ago by some shark or other.”
I covered my eyes with my hand
just here, and Lucille couglied iu an
embarrassing way. But Bob noticed
nothing and proceeded iu a troubled
tone:
“Of course, they couldn’t keep up
the interost. Whoever bought the
mortgage knew they couldn’t. Such
people always figure ou that, you
know, and now the poor old chap lias
gone crazy over losing his home—
clean datt'y, you know—and his poor
wife will be turned out unless some¬
thing is done.”
There was a dead silence for a mo¬
ment when bo stopped, and then I
got up without a word, aud, going to
my desk, unlocked the drawer where
I kept the precious mortgage. With
trembling lingers I seized mv pen and
with a few strokes canceled the nfort;
gage, aud as I did so a load rolled off
my heart.
“Here,” I cried eagerly to the mys¬
tified Bob, “take this to that poor
woman, quick, to-night.”
“Oh, Sara,” cried Lucille, “you
worked so hard for that money. ”
“So has she,” I said. “And I am
young and strong, while she is old
aud helpless. Oh, Lucille, if you
knew how I’ve hated myself lately. ”
Lucille took me iu her arms, aud
then explained things to Bob, while I
cried a little, though I couldn’t help
thinking ivhat Mr. HigginBon would
have said at my behavior.
We got Bob off at last, as happy as
a lord, and then Lucille embraced me
agaiu.
“You were never cut out for a capi¬
talist. I knew it all the time,” she
cried, triumphantly.
“Thank you, dear,” I said, meekly.
“Aud say, Lucille, let’s goto hear
Maude Adams to-night. ”
“Why,” she exclaimed, her eyes as
bigas O'.” saucers, “the prices are way up
iu t
“Who cares?” I said. “I’m richei
to-night than I’ve been for years,”
Aud we went.
44 Honor is Purchased
by Deeds We Do ."
Deeds, no! ’words, count in battles of
peace as ’well as in <war. It is not what
’we say, but ivhat Hood’s Sarsaparilla
does, that tells the story of its merit. It has
ioon many remarkable “victories over the
arch enemy of mankind — impure blood.
Be sure to get only Hood’s, because
McccCS Sau u fmil^
Never Disappoints
The Veiled Prophet.
It was in the forenoon that two mid¬
dle-aged women rode out Sixteenth
street in an open herdlc. They had
the indefinable but unmistakable air of
tourists, and one of them carried an
illustrated guide book. Both of them
wore spectacles.
’This must be the staute of General
Scott,” said one. as the herdlc frundled
around Scott Circle. “Yes, it Is Gen¬
era) Scott.”
“But what’s that other statue over
there?” asked the other woman, peer
ing near-sightedly at a pedestal
crowned with a tall figure swatched in
white draperies. “That wasn’t here
when we were in Washington' before,"
“No, I don’t remember it," answered
the first woman. “It must lie new. It
must be—why. of course. How stupid
of me not to recognize it I I t's a statue
of the Veiled Prophet.”
And the other woman said, content¬
edly:
“Why. so it is. isin’t it a lovely
Idea.”—Washington Post.
A Cure for liluer.
“When I get utterly low spirited,”
snid the nervous man, “I lirul a spin
on my wheel does me a world of
good.”
“It is tin* exercise,” said his friend.
“I think not. 1 am so glad to get
homo alive that 1 feel good all the
rest of the day.”—Indianapolis Jour¬
nal.
Are You l T gtn# Allen’s Foot Ease?
It is the only cure for Swollen, Smarting,
Tired, Aching, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's Foot
Sold Ease, a powder to be shaken into the shoes.
by all Sample Druggists, Grocers and Shoe
Stores, 26c*. sent FUFF. Address
A.llen H. Olmsted, Lelloy, N. Y.
The falling of n man’s countenance natu¬
rally lowers his face value.
To Cure Constipation Forever.
Take Cascnretst andy Cathartic. 10c or 26c.
Jf C. (\ fail to cure, druggist*refund money.
reflections. A pretty girl’s mirror indulges in pleasant
lloiv'ii Tliin?
Wo offer One* Hundred Dollars Howard for
any cab« of Catarrh that cannot bo cured by
llall'B Catar rh Cure.
F.«). Chunky & To.. Props-,Toledo, O.
We. the undersigned, have known F. J. Che¬
ney for the lntst 15 years, and believe him per
feetly honorable In all business transactions
and fispncjallv able to carry out any obliga¬
tion made by their firm.
Wkst tt ThuaX. Wholesale Druggists, Toledo,
Ohio.
Waldinw, Kinnan & Marvin, Wholesale Drug
gists, Toledo. Ohio.
Hun directly pi <’cvt<ii • ii * uro the is blood inKen and Internally, act
Ing upon mucous sur¬
faces of the system. Price. 75c. per bottle. Sold
by Hall’s all Druggist*. Testimonials free.
Family Pills are the best..
The man with tho least money often car¬
ries the biggest purse.
Kdiwnie Your Bowels With Ciiftciirct*.
Candy *5t\ If Cathartic, euro constipation forever,
10c, C.C. C. fail, druggists refund money.
No man nan enjoy wealth as long ns ho has
the toothache.
Mr. Henry YVatlersowls Editor
of the Louisville Courier Journal. Mr. W. N.
Holdeniau Is President of the Courier Journal
Co. He says 1 : “For 30 years 1 have us« l u
Wintersmith’8 Chill Cure in my family. I do
not believe It has an equal In curing chills
and fever and every kind of malaria. Address
Arthur Petkr & t o., Louisville, Ky.
G*»d lends his flock through desert. the life that
must often seem like a
I am entire!'’ cured of hemorrhage of lunsfs
hv Piso’s Cure for Consumption.—L ouisa
Linuaman, Bethany, Mo., January 8,1894.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing Syrup for children
teething.softens the gums, reduces infta minn
lion.allays pain,cures wind colic. 25c. a bottle.
It was not till the widow gave to Elijah
that her cruse became inexhaustible.
No-To-hao for Fifty Cents.
Guaranteed tobacco habit cute, make* weak
men Htiong, bleed pure. fOc, $1. All druggists,
h«' IO fnith k in anotiie\”woVid <lone b>
IIAV'T l/v/is i To avoid this. use Tetterino the
miB antidote for eczeimi, tetter.
salt rlieufti, Infants’ sore bond, and all llohliiK
skin dlaeasos. Tottorlno rures when
other remedies only innkn you
SCRATCH!
i>r. m. L. Felder. E.-ieetie, Ala., s ys: “i
oe»ema Druggists, I) and or ?r oiher by mall in ^ln for B 50c. 5rupt|on8," in aumpa e, So!'d by J. T.
shuptriue, Savanuau, Ga.
____
RED SEAL SHOES
In a merchant’s store
JTeans he buys for cash
If nothing more.
He’ff give you the most
For your money, we’ll wage,
fits wares don’t look like
They’ll die of old age.
His shoes will wear well,
Indeed, this is no lie.
Perhaps why they sell,
Is because they’re made by
The J. K. ORR 5H0E CO.,
of ATLANTA, GA.
A Wanted Opportunity.
“I never was so insulted in mv life!”
she exclaimed.
“What did he do?” asked her dear¬
est friend.
"Wo were all aloue and he threat¬
ened to kiss me.”
"Well?”
“Well, we were alone and he didn't
do it.”
“Oh-U-LiI”—Chicago Post.
Plantation Chill Cure is Guaranteed
To cure, or mouey refunded by your merchant, so why not try it? Price 50c.
When the Mam Refuted.
A certain Irish Member of Parlia¬
ment, popular and a bachelor, had
been very polite to the daughter of
the house where be was visiting.
When the time came for him to go,
the too-anxious mamma called him in
for a serious talk. “I’m sure I don’t
know what to say,” she went on: ’tis
reported all around that you are to
marry Letitia.” “Just say that she
refused me,” quietly advised the par¬
liamentarian.
His-“Version.
“Haven’t you and your friend gotten
through that argument yet?”
-It isn’t any.argument,” answered
the opinionated man resentfully. “I
am merely telling him the facts in the
ease and he is so obtuse that lie can’t
understand.”—Washington Slur.
A Good-Luck Cross. *
A cross recently discovered in the grave of
the beautiful Queen X>agmar Is supposed to
keep away all evil Influences. There is no
more evil Influence than 111 health, and there
Is nothing which has so great a power to keep
it away than Hostetter’a Stomach Bitters.
It is worth a hundred good-luck crosses to the
man or woman afflicted with dyspepsia and
Indigestion. A private Revenue 8 tamp
should cover the neck of the bottle.
About the worst thing you can take for an
ailment is the advice of your friends.
Don't Tobacco Spit ar.O Smoke Your Life Away.
To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag.
net;-*, lull Of life, nerve and vigor, take No-Tu¬
lin,-, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men
strong. All druggists, 50<: or $1. Cure guaran¬
teed. Booklet and sample free. Address
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New York.
The deadly cigarette and the little green
apple are now running neck and neck.
I Ayers i
Half .
I r
r What does it do?
It causes the oil glands
in the skin to become more
active, making the hair soft
i and glossy, precisely as
nature intended.
It cleanses the scalp from
dandruff and thus removes
one of the great causes of
baldness.
It makes a better circu¬
lation in the scalp and stops
the hair from coming out.
ll Prevents ann li
Cores Baldness
Ayer’s Hair Vigor will
surely make hair gfow on
fif- bald heads, provided only
_ there is any life remain
■ ing in the hair bulbs.
It restores color to gray
or white hair. It does not
do this in a moment, as
will a hair dye; but in a
short time the gray color
of age gradually disap¬
pears and the darker color
of youth takes its place.
Would you like a copy
1 J of our book ©n the Hair
^ and Scalp? It is free.
It you do not obtain alt the benefits
W 5L. you expected the from the use of the Vigor
1 write Doctor about It.
Address, DR. C. AVER.
Lowell. Ma
Wli, lie Was Stngtug.
What does ft soldier sing?
The auswcr depends very much on
whether he Is a regular or a volun
tecr. The regulars take to the last
ue\y song from the minstrel or vnri
et.\ ... stage .______ and „ - it .. must ..... . be cither teiy
funny or very pathetic. The volunteer
soldier has just come from home iu
fluences, and thinks of his mother and
Norite SOUgS. He is also fond Of
hymns, and they come t<J his lips uti
bidden. In the charge at El Caney,
I | General Chaffee came upon a private,
deadly white, but making his way up¬
ward through the thicket under fife,
singing at the top of ‘Ills vglce that
old Presbyterian hymn, “How Firm a
Foundation.” The General cheeked
him ami asked him why he was sing¬
ing. The answer came quick:
"That’s my mother’s tune. I’m so
scared it's nil I can hold on
verify Magazine.
Died AVI 111 Her Ilrood.
Examples of parental affection are
often seen In the animal world, and
this pathetic one was once read lu a
German paper: “At Neuendorf the
lightning struck the gable-end of a
barn where for years a pair of storks
had built their nest. The flames soon
caught the nest in which the helpless
brood was piteously screaming. The
mother stork now protectiugly spread
out her wings over the young ones,
with whom she was burned alive, al¬
though she might have saved herself
easily enough by flight.”
SAYS WE NEED NEW NAME.
Prtof, Waterhouse Favors Calling
ThI. Cotmtry “ Csoam ” Hereafter,
The St. L » uis Republic publishes
wlth favorable editorial comment, an
article furnished by Professor Water
house of Washington University, on
the subject of a proper name for this
country, the chief points of which are
herewith given:
“At present there is no proper name
that distinctively describes this coun
try. Columbia and America apply to'
the whole western hemisphere. The
people of Canada and Mexico, of Cdh
tral and South America are all Ameri
cans and might justly resent the pre
tension which claims that title exclu
sively for the inhabitants of the United
States of North America.
“ ‘The United States’ is an awkward
expression. It is plural in form and
singular lu sense. It does not afford
personal or adjective derivatives.
United Statesmen and United States
ian are inadmissibly harsh. ‘United
States of North America’ is an exact
designation of this country. The first
letters of these words form the word
‘Usona.’ This term Is agreeable to the
ear, singular in number and precise in
definition. Its introduction would sub¬
stitute for the incompfc.te United
States an address so full and exact
that no foreigner could misunderstand
it.
•‘Formerly the preSs indicated that
its general information was gathered
from the four quarters of the globe by
plaetng at the beads of its columns
‘North, East, West, South.’ From the
initials of these words some assert
that the term ‘news’ was derived.
“It Is facetiously said that United
States stands for ‘Uncle Sant,’ and this
burlesque personification has found a
permanent place in our language. The
baptismal names of Generals Grant
and Jackson lfave been supplanted by
the' universally used names which ac¬
cident or valor gave. Physicists have
invested the utterly Inexpressive watf,
volt, ohm and ampere with, technical
meanings and have introduced them
into the terminology of electrical sci¬
ence.
“In tine, use can create and popu¬
larize new terms. Do not the words
‘Usona’ and ‘Usonian’ so fully sub¬
serve the needs of exact address and
grammatical convenience as to deserve
a place In our language? The press
can, if it will, effect the adoption of
these new words.”
Beuuty Is Blood Deep.
Clot.n blood means a clean skin.
beauty without it. Casearets, Candy
tic clean your blood and keep it clean.,
stirring up the lazy liver and driving ail
purities banish pimples, from the boils,blotches, body, liegiu to-day
and that sickly bilious complexion by
Casearetsbeauty gists, satisfaction guaranteed, tor ten cents. All
10c, 25e, 50c
Matches maybe made In heaven, but
can be made in any old place.
Maisby &
39 S. Broad St., Atlanta, Ga.
Engines and
Steam Water Heaters, Steam l’uinps
Fctlbertliy Injectors,
mJ
grew gg§f3§j§jl
i Ml.
Manufacturers and Dealers in
SAW MILLS,
Corn .11 111m. Feed Mills, Cotton Gin
ery and Grain Separators.,
SOLID and INSERTED Saws. Snw tTeeth
Locks, Kill (flit's Patent Purs, UirdaaJI
Mill and Engine Itopaire. Governors,
liars and a full lino of Mill Supplies.
nud quality of poods guaranteed.
flee by-mentioning this paper.
nDADCV NEW DISCOVERY;
Free. Dr. H. H, GREEN'S SONB. Bex D. Atlanta,
fSi 5 RH OB. MOFFETT’S ■ Aids Digestion,
A? At # J TeethinA Oi TFFTHINR PflWliFRS ■■ Regulates Hakes TEETH1M Bowel Children Teething Troubles of the Any Believes Bowels, Easy. of Age.
_ J* IWLOI ? FETT> W. D.j SX. l*OI7IS, MO,
If not kept by druggi 9 td mail cents to C*
SUCCESSFUL SHOOTERS SHOOT
WINCHESTER
c Rifles, Repeating Shotguns, Ammunition and
Loaded Shotgun Shells. Winchester guns and
ammunition are the standard of the world, but
if they do not cost any more than poorer makes.
— All reliable dealers sell Winchester goods.
FREJE : Send name and address on a postal for 15*
page Illustrated Catalogue describing all the guns and
V ammunition made by the
WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO., CONN.
178 WINCHESTER AVE. t HEW HAVEN,
MMS ITS iSM A STOPPED FREE
i I asm rasRiaw DR. KUNE’S
ft* ■ ■ “ GREAT
NERVE RESTORES'
■ Spa Positive our# for ftll Nt*+oua LHtttuM, Fiu. BfUmgmf*
iffw and St. Vitu* l<*nc*. Votti h or Nf rromufuj
■ »Oer flmday’ause. Treatixe and $8 trial bottle
■ fro© to Fit patient a, fhey paying «>prciB charge* only
RH when recciTcd. K«n<t to I)r. St.WfNUlcl K11 d*. Tt<t. BeHeroa
Institute of Medlafue. »r.l Arch Dbift.P*.
[letti* to eu. tikkhau VO. 93,284]
“ Dear Mbs. Pinkham—F or some
time I have thought of writing to you
to let you know of the great benefit I
have received
____ from the use of
"f™* OOnnSOH Lvdia E Pink .
Saved from ham’s Vegeta
Insaaltv bv ^ hie Compound,
MrSa rlnkham j Soon after the
birth of my first
child, I com
menced to have spells with my spine,
Every month I grew worse and at last
became so bad that I found I was
gradually losing my mind.
“The doctors treated me for female
troubles, but I got no better. One
doctor told me that I would be insane,
I was advised by a friend to give Lydia
E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a
trial, and before I had taken all of the
first bottle my neighbors noticed the
change in me.
“I have now taken five bottles and
cannot find words sufficient to praise it.
I advise every woman who is suffering
from any female weakness to give it a
fair trial. I thank you for your good
medicine.”—M rs. Gertrude M. John¬
son, Jonesboro, ’ r r.xAS.
Mr*. Perkins’ Letter.
“I had female trouble of all kinds,
had three doctors, but only grew worse.
I began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s
Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills
and used the Sanative Wash, and can¬
not praise your remedies enough,’’—
Mbs. Effie Pebkiss, Peakl, La.
Lazy 4 ‘I have been troubled Liver a great deal
with a torpid liver, which produce* const!pi*
lion. I found CASCARET^ to be all you claim
for them, and secured such relief the first trial,
that I purchased another supply and was com¬
pletely cured I shall only be too glad to rec¬
ommend Cascarets whenever the opportunity
is presented. ” J. A. Smith.
29 20 Susq uehanna Ave., Philadelphia, Pa*
touacttUto CATHARTIC .
TRADE MARK REOISTtRfO
Good, , Pleasant. Palatable. Weaken, Potent. Taste Good. Do
Never Sicken. or Gripe. 10c. S6c. 50c
... CURE CONSTIPATION. ...
Sterling lintel, Monlre.t, ti.w York. ISO
K0-T0-BAC SSS&
MNMl
Is what Uncle Sam Uses,
_______
GOLDEN CROWN
LAMP CHIMNEYS
Are the best. Ask for them. Cost uo more
than common chimneys. All dealers*
PITTSBURG GLASS CO.. Allegheny, Pa,
BOTTLE OF MORPHINE.
*1. M. Warren, Ordinary Wilcox Co., AbbevHl©,
quart say6: of *1 whisky used dally 7 years one bottle Dr. Syms morphine ju\d
in 16 days without ago: cureame
1< sing a night's sleep or suf¬
fering a single day. and I have never wanted
any morphine or whisky since. Will answer any
questions " Patients given written guarantee.
a
No suffering or loss of sleep. Habit <rured in 80
days; no pay till absolutely cured. For terms, etc.,
write Dr.B. A. Sj ms, 51 Williams fc?t., Atlanta, (?a.
Mt THE ATLANTA
mmedd m/eae
Offers thorough Shorthand practical courses In Bookkeep¬ Student*
ing, and and Typewriting. Aiarge.
placed In positions without extra Re¬
duced rates to all entering school this month.
Call on or address. THE ATLANTA BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 128, 130 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
nilll M and Whiskey Habit,
mjf |9| SIR " IIhx f H cured out pain. at home Book of with
a I W 111 tlculars FREE. juir
sent
■BHBHBni B.U.WOOLLEY, M.D.
Atlanta, ka. Office 101 N. Pryor SL
1 CTS T)
l
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
25 in time. Sold by druggists.
Is CONSUMPTION
OS
High location gives freedom from Malaria and
Yellow Fever.
Seasion beginM University Seiitembe^lA.
Address Chairman, fa. of YiriiaUu
_Uharlottesviile,
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