p. '
P
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v
; A JUSTICE INDICTED.
If' ;
Is Charged With Conspiracy
in an Extradition Case.
V' I
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|p' I
A COMPLICATED TANGLE
i
For interrerencc in narcicn ?ndir em
I
J&?- Atl^nts J* P.f an Attorney and a
f*. Deputy Sheriff Run Afoul of j
. Your Uncle Sam. :
mr V i
Charged with collusion and with in- J
terference with the service of extradi- !
tion papers in the case of Charles BlaI
zer, alias Leroy C. Harding, alias D.
C. Ray, alias John R. Davis, Justice of j
the Peace Walter Ormond, Attorney j
W. H. Withers and Deputy Sheriff T.
J. Jones were indicted by the United
States grand jury at Atlanta Monday.
Papers were served on the three de- !
fendants and bonds taken. The case j
-will hardly come up for trial before j
next October.
At different times it is said that |
Harding has been known by over :
twenty names. His real name, howev- j
er, is declared. to be Charles Blazer, ;
and it was under this name that he is
said to have committed the offense for j
which he was extradited from Florida. J
He is charged with cheating and j
swindling in Ohio, the particular of- j
fense being that he bonght a quantity j
' of jewels from a jeweler and gave a !
check on a bank which did not exist, j
- Then he left, and it was not until |
: two years iater that his whereabouts j
became known. "He was at that time j
in Tampa, Fla/, and was under arrest j
by the United States authorities at j
that place charged with using the i
v oails for fraudulent purposes. He was j
acquitted.
The governor of Ohio issued a re- ;
quisition on the governor of Florida, j
*.nd the extradition Dapers were grant- j
{( He was at once' taken in custody by j
Detective Dan Callahan, who had been J
sent from Cincinnati, Ohio, for this !
purpose, and the trip home began..
When Atlanta was reached Callahan J
; took the prisoner to the police station j
? and left him there for the night.
During the night, the prisoner, who
' said his name was Harding, claimed
that be was being kidnaped by the
Ohio detective, and enlisted the aid of
several attorneys in the city.
Judge Ormond was appealed to and
issued a warrant for Callahan, charging
him with kidnaping. The next
morning when the detective went to j
the poMce station for the purpose of j
taking Charge of the prisoner he was
arrested on the charge and carried be>
fore Judge Ormond. There he showed
ills requisition papery and the warrant
was at once dismissed.
Before Blazer could be taken from
Atlanta another effort was made to
give him his freedom. His attorneys
swore out habeas corpus proceedings |
' before Judge Calhoun, and Callahan
;Cvas again summoned to protect himself
and preserve his prisoner. Judge
Calhoun refused to entertain the nabeas
corpus.
Just as the trial was over Deputy
Sheriff Jones appeared and placed Blaser
under arrest on the charge of
cheating and swindlihg sworn out by
Attorney Withers. The prisoner was
|p taken to the police station, and there
is was agreed that he should be turned
K; over to Deputy Marshall Rinara. reps'
resenting the United States.
? " *- V?n nr>.
fiiaramg was tucu lancu uuui wv
y. lice station, carried to the United
States building and held there. Later
Judge Newman advised that the pris$
oner belonged to Callahan, and that
neither the state authorities nor the
United States had any right to him.
Therefore Deputy Marshal Rinard
turned over the prisoner to Detective I
m Callahan, who hustled him into a mail
car and left for Cincinnati.
Since that time news comes from
Cincinnati that the prisoner has been
?:.: positively identified by his prosecutors
fte there, and by many others who have
known him for many years.
llfc
postal wires are cut.
Western Union Telegraph People at
Savannah Start a Merry War.
Monday the Western Union started
a crusade against the Postal Telegraph
Company in Savannah. Manager
Peebles, of the Western Union, took a
* T! *? ^ ^ ATT'n t h O I
lorce 01 nueaifu auu tui. uunu
wires from the Western Union poles,
on which they had been strung. This
cut out an important sub-station of che
Postal and destroyed three circuits.
An appeal was made to the city authorities,
but found it was unsupported
by any ordinance.
Jr'
ROOT TO "ROOT" FOR TRUST.
{? . .
Ex-Cafcinet Member Engaged to Reoresent
Northern Securities Company.
Announcement has been marie of the
engagement of Elihu Root to represent
the Northern Securities Ccmy&ny in
its fight to prevent II. II Mnrrimau
from obtaining control i f the Northern
Pacific "railroad ss the result of a disi::uut:cn
of :..e Northern Senuri:las
assets.
m
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A - '-S* * *:< : ' ^
.vs-je,.-. , . ......
ANARCHIST AFTER KING.
Bomb is Thrown at Alfonso While
on a Visit to Barcelona?No Material
Damage Done.
An official telegram received in Madrid,
from Barcelona, states that as
King Alfonso was leaving the exhibition
Thursday a "petard" exploded
injuring two peasants. One arrest was
made.
T7~ A Ifnnoa OrriVD/l 51 f
IViag IlilV/UOU UHHVV4
Wednesday for a fortnight's visit to
Catalonia. He was accompanied by
Premier Maura and Minister Linares
and a numerous suite. #The visit of
the king to Barcelona, the hot bed of
republicanism, caused the greatest disquiet
in Spanish official quarters. :ts
it was feared the republicans and socialists
would vent on the king their
hatred of the premier, whose strong
measures dealing with the strike rioters
had made him very unpopular. As
a preventive measure large numbeis
of anarchists and other suspects were
arrested last week and a cruiser, three
gunboats and a large force of gendarmes
were sent to Barcelona.
The Spanish king was accorded a
respectful reception at Barcelona.
The streets were decorated with flags
and lined by enormous crowds of pe>
pie.
It was estimated that there were
200,000 persons in the streets, and the
pressure was so great that the cordons
of troops were repeatedly broken by
the people who were anxious to see
their monarch, and the king was thus
separated from his attendants.
THE YALU IS CROSSED.
\
Jap Invasion of Manchuria Begins in
Earnest and River is Passed Without
the Ueast Opposition.
An Associated Press cfispatch of
Thursday from Tokio -states that the
Japanese invasion' of Manchuria has
begun. The fighting men of the mikado
are swarming across the Yalu at
many points and are establishng themselves
in strong positions.
The advance of the Japanese into
Manchuria began Wednesday when a
portion of the imperial guard crossed
the river at W:ju.
The passage of the Yalu was unopw/-?
r? (1/^ nltViAnrvk o ^ n fo /-? V* rv* ont />f Pr>C
anuuugu or u^iav/uui^ut ut vv/?3
sacks was on the hills to the north -jL
the river. The Cossacks retired as the
Japanese advanced.
At other points the passage of the
river was effected by the Japanese,
and a strong body of troops is now in
Manchuria.
Although the authorities in Tokio
are reticent, it is believed that they
expect early news of an important
land battle in Manchuria.
Towns Occupied by Russians.
Telegrams have been received in
Seoul, Korea, saying that the Russians
are occuying six large border towns
on the Tumen river in northeastern
Korea.
KANSAS DEMOCRATS ACT.
Majority of Delegates Anti-Hearst, But
no Instructions Given.
A special from Wichita, Kansas,
says: The democratic state convection
Thursday elected twenty unirstructed
delegates to the national convention.
The delegation, according to
the personal preferences, will stand
five for Hearst and "fifteen against him,
it is said.
The platform, which was unanimously
adopted, indorsed the Kansas City
platform of 1900 and the Chicago
platform of 1896, expressed confidence
in William J. Bryan and declared for
the nomination of men for president
and vice president' who supported The
tickets of 1896 and 1900, and who were
in sympathy with the platform on
which they ran. It commended W. A.
Harris for his record in the United
States senate and charged the actions
of United States Senator Burton to
the republicans. It indorsed William
Randolph Hearst and his victory
over the coal trust as an example for
democrats to follow, but did not refer
to him as Jt candidate for president.
Hearst men took it as an indorsement
of their candidate.
FOUR CHILDREN CREMATED.
House Caught Fire and Little Victims*
Were Cut Off from Escape.
Four children of Mr. and Mrs. William
Burke, ranging in age from 6 to
14 years, wore burned to death at Sebastapool,
a suburb of Pittston. Pa.,
at 1 o'clock Sunday morning.
The Burke home caught fire and thr
flames tut off escape of the little ones.
Tho frantic parents made a desperate
attempt to reach the children, but failed
nnd thev were forced to jump from
:be second story window to escape
death.
DEMOCRATIC HEADQUARTERS.
For St. Louis Convention Established
in Hotel Jefferson.
A St. Louis dispatch says: Permanent
headquarters for the national
democratic convention to bo held July
6 were established Thursday at the
hotel Jefferson, which was formally
opened to the public.
Colonet John Martin, sergeant at
arms for the convention, lias arranged
for telegraph and telephone instruments.
so that direct communication
1 can be obtained.
#
;A' k : v.',;.
-:A rJj&i.i-js. J
! MAGNITUDE
:
illiilllil TEe Universa
8 pf Twice as La
Not Bigness,
^0>V. HE magnitude of the
7L __ World's Fair of 1904 may
O O be best expressed by corn^
-* J5 parison. The grounds of
! 'MOW H10 Louisiana Purchase are
| a mile and a quarter wide by nearly
two miles long. An ordinary city of
20.000 population with all its homes
and industries might be set down within
*1.~ nf CnrItvliinli snr
I 111 lilt' MA 11111 vTO L ivuw ?f
j round the Exposition. While the ColJ
umbian Exposition at Chicago had 033
j acres, including its lakes and lagoons,
I the Louisiana Purchase Exposition
has 1240 acres. The exhibit space of
J the principal buildings at Chicago was
but little more than half the area, supplied
at St. Louis. This Exposition
is practically ten times larger than the
Pan American Exposition, and from
twenty to twenty-five times larger
than the other Expositions held in this
country during the last few years.
Exhibit palaces at the coming
i World's Fair are each the equivalent
of six to ten ordinary city blocks, and
there are fifteen of them of enormous
size, magnificent in their proportions,
lofty and imposing; rich in their architectural
detail and sculpture embellishment.
A trip around any one of sevi
eral of the larger buildings means an
| excursion of nearly a mile.
In each big building there are several
miles of aisles, all lined with rare
I J-'.vVvX-x-xV s
EXHIBIT PALACES OF ELECTRI
Copyrighted, 1904, by the Louisiana
exhibits that have a value in the eyes
of every visitor and a far deeper interest
to specialists in the many lines of
human activity. For example, in the
Palace of Transportation there are
four miles of tracks for the exhibition
of locomotives and cars of all kinds,
besides the large spaces reserved for
the marine display, the automobiles,
motor cycles, pleasure vehicles and
the heavy wagons for business use.
The figures of the engineering department
show that there are thirty-five
miles of roadway within the Exposition
grounds. '
These facts and figures convey to the
mind some idea of the character of the
World's Fair, but they should appall
no one, for the arrangement of the
whole is such as to enable the visitor
to get about freely and to find what he
wants to see with little difficulty.
This wonderful Exposition reveals
the growth and development of past
years and foretells greater things to
I come.
Bigness is not, however, the quality
which most appeals. The vast proportions
of the World's Fair come from
necessity in the portrayal of the
world's activity and growth rather
than from effort to outrival former undertakings.
In tLer planning of this
universal exposition consideration was
given to the forward step which the
world has taken in the decade since
SAILINC ON THE PACIFIC.
The Days and Nights All a Wonder and
a Wild Delight.
Oh, the wonder* of the great trade
wind! All day we sailed, and all night
and the next day, and the next, day
after day, the wind always astern and
blowing steadily and strong. The
schooner sailed herself. There was no
pulling and hauling on sheets and
tackles, no shifting of topsails, no
work at all for the sailors to do except
to steer. At night, when the sun
went down, the sheets were slackened;
in the morning, when they yielded up
the damp of the dew and relaxed, they
were pulled tight again?and that was
all.
The days hr.d nights were all "a
wonder and a wild delight," and,
though I had little time from my
dreary work, I ?tole odd moments to
gaze and gaze at the unending glory
of what I never dreamed the world
possessed. Above, the sky was stainless
blue?blue as the sea itself, which
under the forefoot was of the color
and sheen of azure satin. All around
the horizon were pale, fleecy clouds,
silver setting for the tlawlc-ss turquoise
sky.?The Century.
A Bishop's Musing.
"It is what a man might have been
which jars 011 what he is. When ft man
has once stood on the Mount of Vision,
when he has once heard the call of
God to his soul and made answer,
'Here am I,' he can never go back to
dwell in the valley of commonplace.
The miasma there, to which ordinary
men have become immune, is deadly to
him."?From Maud Wilder Goodwin's
"Four Itoads to Paradise" in the Century.
*
OF THE W
1 Exposition of 1904 at St.
rge as Any Predecessoris
Its Quality Which 1
the Columbian Exposition at Chicago
which was the last adequate measurement
of our nations; resources and the
resources of other rations.
TRANSPORTATION AT THE FAIR.
Intramural Cars Penetrate Every Section
of Exposiiion--P?.oller Chairs
Transport, Visitors Through Exhibit*
Palaces--Lagoons Are Navi
gat?cd by Picturescue Gondolas.
Transporta aou facilities at the
World's Fair of 11)04 are as modern
and up-to-date as are other features
of this greatest of all expositions.
Electricity is the prime mover, as
witnessed in the Intramural Railway,
automobiles and electric launches on
the lagoons; yet the picturesque jinrikshas,
the comfortable roller chairs
and the poetic ^ondolas. propelled by
the hand of man. are well in evidence.
For varied picturesquer.ess a ride on
the Intramural has not its equal in the
world. Starting from a point central
amcng palaces that are more ornate
than any ever conjured by Aladdin's
j lamp, the visitor is carried between
other structures of equal magnitude
and grandeur on the one side, and the
bizarre habitations of Pike concessionaires
on the other. From the left
CITY, MANUFACTURES AND ED
Purchase Exposition.
coi^es the low hum of wheels and
shafts, proving the constant activity
in the main palaces that is a feature
of this Exposition; from the right,
weird notes of Oriental music and the
voices of the strong lunged, calling attention
to the fantastic sights that are
within walls. Up a grade speeds the
roomy and gaily decorated motor cars,
around the brown stone buildings,
which were constructed for Washington
Unirersitv and adopted by the
World's Fair, past the Hall x>f Congresses,
past the domain of physical
culture, the great Stadium, then
through fields of blue grass near the
Filipino Village, around the massive
Palace of Agriculture, across trestles,
up other grades and into the woods.
Skirting the domain of State buildings
the train nears the Art Palace, taps a
central point back of the Festival Hall
and Cascades, enters a forest again,
then drops down behind the Government
Building, to the level once more.
In decided contrast with this overhill-and-dale
ride of the cars Is the passage
on launches and gondolas
through the lagoons that thread the
main picture. For these voyages the
panorama on either side is a succession
of emerald banks, studded with medallions
of flower beds, and in the background
majestic facades and columns.
A transformation scene is witnessed
when the craft passes into the Grand
WHAT SINCERITY IS.
The CnnoclonsneM and Analysis of the
Motives of All Life's Actions.
Love contains no complete and lasting
happiness in the transparent atmosphere
of perfect sincerity. To the
point of this sincerity, love is but an
experiment; we live in expectation,
and our words and kisses are only
provisional. But sincerity is not possible
except between lofty and trained
consciences. Moreover, it is not
enough that these consciences should
be such; this is requisite besides, if
sincerity is to become natural and essential?that
the consciences shall be
almost equal, of the same extent, the
same quality, and that the love that
unites them shall be deep laid.
But it is impossible to be sincere
with others before learning to be sincere
toward one's self. Sincerity is
only the consciousness and analysis ot
the motives of all life's actions. It
is the expression of this consciousness
that one is abie later to lay before the
eyes of the being with whom he is
seeking the happiness of sincerity.?
From Maurice Maeterlinck's "Sincerity
and Love,"' in the Century.
Chinese Ink the Best.
In ink?ordinary ink, at least?modern
science has made no improvement.
The ink of our forefathers was worse
than that of their ancestors, and ours
is yet worse. The Chinese still produce
perfect ink, for their so-called
"India ink" has all the virtues an
ink should possess. It flows freely,
writes black, remains black and is
! permanent in all climates.?From Tudor
Jenks' "About Old Inkstands" in
St. Nicholas.
ORLDS FAIR
Louis Nearly ^liUlS
M^ffnific8nc6) ^9
/r(l
Most* Appeals
* 60 060 ouov6oV uo\)?
Basin, for in the distance three cascades
lea ) and tumble from their
source beneath the Terrace of States
and the Hall of Festivals.
Manning the gondolas are mon from
Venice attired in the picturesque cos
tumes of the Italian water city; in
command of the speedy launches are
skilled electricians and careful pilots.
, Meanwhile hundreds of automobiles
reach points not accessible from the
Intramural or the boats on the lagoon,
and so do roller chairs and those fan!
ciful conveyances from Japan. These
comfortable, slow-moving vehicles are
especially liked by persons who wish
r to study the architecture of the great
buildings at their leisure, and who can
take their time in "doing the Fair."
Nor have the little ones been forgotten.
for there are hundreds of baby
push carts for rent by the hour, so
that entire families can bo transported
from place to place without undergoing
fatigue.
ODD THINGS ON "THE PIKE,"
THE WORLD'S FAIR'S
MIDWAY.
Voice of Creation and the man who
utters it.
A flood of fifty thousand gallons of
water every minute.
A ride hundreds of miles in a real
?i%|>- - r:s ' '-v;;
?v^< <. f :' . ' ;
i'S*;.: . v ' : ' V w" '; "; '-: ' 'J- !; > w
wtB^sssg
UCATIOX AT THE WORLD'S FAIR
train of Pullman cars.
Chorus of 100 talking birds at per
feet liberty.
Fire engine and horses dash 500 feet
under roof to fire.
Real waves break on a real beach
one mile from spectators.
Man who carves images on a single
grain of rice.
Submarine boat sinks under real water
with people.
One show with 300 houses, twentytwo
streets, on eleven acres.
Men of war run by electric motors
on large water expanse.
Relics from the Golden Temple of
Rangoon.
Theatre of flowers, conception of a
woman now dead.
Japanese roosters with tails ten to
twenty-five feet long.
Fire engine once pumped by George
Washington.
Zuni Indians dance the mask, the
flute and snake dances.
Eleven sections of. arcaded bazaars
of Stamboul.
Children ride giant tortoises with
bridles and bits.
Devil dancers?the strange medicine
men of Burmah.
Cabaret Braunt, the Parisian haunt
of the Bohemians.
Gallery of famous Irish beauties.
Fashions from period of Roman ColJ
onies to the present.
HREPlACE MOTTOES.
A Few That Decorate the Walls of WellKnown
Men.
Above the fireplace in the home is
usually a motto, and if people have any
feeling of hospitality for those who
enter their home it is one of welcome.
Sometimes the motto has some particular
significance regarding the family
themselves. These are a few that
decorate the walls of well-known
men:
In Mark Twain's drawing-room is
one of hospitality. "The ornaments of
a house are the friends who frequent
it."
"O, ye fire and heat, bless ye the
Lord," was the legend above the fireplace
at Chauncey Depew's country
house at Ardsley.
Andrew Carnegie has an affection
for legends of all kinds and descriptions,
but they figure mainly in his li
Drary?upon tne walls, ceilings, sofa
pillows and backs of chairs.
Upon the back of a queer leather upholstered
chair is painted in gold, "Sit
thee down ajul rest." In his little
daughter's nursery, upon a tiny chair,
are inscribed the liiJes, "Love me little,
love me long."
Psychological.
The cat and the infant sat upon the
hearth-rug and regarded each other
; long and seriously,
i The cat's attitude, was that of pure
contemplation, her look as of one
. whose rule it i^P -either to ask nor
i answer. , \
The infant mind pYainiy struggled
i with a tlio'-ght, of vhicii the outcome
was presently this profound question:
i "Does a cat know she's a ,catV"?Harper's
Magazine. \
- - " wmwmmm
' :
:tm
Thlnk^ of Your Barber,,
A man in ' Philadelphia who had
been proverbially fretful and insultj
lng to the barber who shaved him, and
j whose cnly excuse, was that he was
very nervous, was finally led to re- ?
lieve his uneomfortableness by counting
tbe number of strokes that it took
; to shave him.
; To his great surprise he found that .
j it took 459 strokes to shave him when
he v/as fairly calm, and more when
he was in a more nervous mood.
The barber informed him that he
had frequently shaved men so restless
and nervous that it took nearly *
GOO razor strokes to shave them, and
no thanks at that.
The gentleman has been counting ,
j the strokes ever since, and by this <I
simple device has greatly benefitted
his nervous system to the ereat de
light of his faithful barber. There
Is no single remedy for nervousness
>o effectual as counting.?Ecwton
! \..
It Was Also Salt.
^ burly old skipper and his mate
went into a restaurant at Southampton.
says the Inglenook, and ordered
a "table dott" dinner. The waiter, with
considerable flourish, placed a plate of
j thin. w,atery-looking liquid before each
of them.
"Hi, me lad, wot's this stuff?"
; shouted the captain, gazing in amazeI
ment at the concoction under his
| nose. *
"Soup, sir.,' replied the waiter.
| "Soup!" shouted the old sea-dog.
i "Soup, Bill." turning to his mate, "just
j think of that! 'Ere's you and me
j been sailin' on soup all our lives and *
never knowed it till now."
I
FIT5 nertna^enf'y cured. No fits or nervousness
after first day's use of Dr. Kline's Great
Nerve Restorer.?2 trial bofctleand troatisefree
Dr. B. H. Kline. Ltd.. 931 Arch St.. Phila.,Pa
Occasionally a girl marries because she
wants to marry, but the majority marry \ ,
l because they don't want to remain single.
" " ?? ^ j,
A*fc four Jfoe Allna'* Koot-IC**#
A powder. It rests the feet. Cure3 Corns,
Bunions. Swollen. Sore,Hot. Cal lons^ching
Sweat.irg Feet and Ingrowing Nails. Allen's
Foot-Ease makes new or tight shoes easy. At
;i!i Dru??2ist.s and Shoe stores. 23 cents. Ac
ecnt no substitute. Sample mailed Fans,
Address,#Alle>n S. Olmsted, LeEoy, N. Y.
A married man who owns an automobile
is in a position to acquire a lot of experience.
't AJ
,/
The "Wonderful Cream Separator. ' y't:
Does its work in thirty minutes and
leaves less than 1 per cent, butter fat.
The price is ridiculously low. according to
size. $2.75 to $6.00 each, and when yon >
have one you would not part therewith *
for fifty times its cost.
JCST SEND Tjris NOTICE
with 5c. stamps for postage to the John
A. Saber Seea Co., La Crosse, Wis., and
get their big catalogue, fully describing this
remarkable Cream Separator, and bun- ,
dreda of other tools and farm seeds used
by the farmer. LA.U.b.J v.'
If people were compelled to (five voice to ?
their thoughts few men would have the
nerve to sing in public. * ^.
! WORLD'S PAIR ST. LOUI8.
Louisville and Nashville R. R , Shortest
Line, Best Time and Service.
Round trip season, sixty-day and fifteenday
tickets will be sold daily from all points
beginning April 25th. Yery low rate Coeeb ,
Excursion tickets sold Hay 16th and 31st.
Special rates made for military on appiiea- *
tion. Don't miss the Greatest Fair the world
has ever known. Ask for tickets via the L. A
N. R. R.
For World's Fair literature, with list and *
rates of hotels and boarding houses, schedules,
cost of tici-ets, sleeping car space and
fuh Information, apply to
J. G. HOLLENBECK. ,
Dlst. Pass. Agent, Atlanta, CFa.
After a younr man has called on a girl
at least three tim?* she imagines there is
an odor of orange blossoms in the air. ?
Mrs. Winslow'sSoothingSyrupforchildren
teething, soften the gums, reduces inflammation
allayspain,cureswlnd colic. 25c. abottle
After a man gets to be about so old insurance
solicitors cease to trouble him.
Piso's Cure cannot be too highly spoken of
as a cough cure.?J. w. u dbibx, oz* j/airu
Avenue, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6,1900.
] ' * j ji
A man is never satisfied until he attends
his own funeral.
.
Carpets can be colored on the floor with
Putnam Fadeless Dyes.
?? \
People who come to high words are apt %
to indulge in low ones.
IT COSTS ONE GENT
Write us a postal card for a free sample of 1
STUART'S GIN AND BUCHU.
We cheerfully send it to all sufferers of Kidney,
Liver, Heart, Bladder and Blood diseases
on request. It will do all that we claim for It.
Pull directions with sample sent. Mention
this paper. Address STUART DRUG M'P'G.
CO.. 38 Wall Street. ATLANTA. GA.
Small Potatoes ^
result from a lack of
Potash
i in the soil. Potash produces
size and quality.
j We have
Invaluable _ * a
! Jtew York?98 >'umi Street, or
j Atlaata. So. BroaABC. <
I |3 Bast Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. DmM
B^^tetofctojbrdnaW|^^H^