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THE ELLIJAY TIMES
PUBLISHED WEEKLY.
ELLIJAY. GEORGIA.
Silly mad dog scares are a little
backward this year.
These be the days when the most
uncertain thing in life Is the sure tip
The trouble with Lwther Burbank’s
strawberries is they do not taste like
strawberries.
New Yorw proposes to beautify Its
skyscrapers. Might fry some of the
modern millinery.
Hereafter 'chillren that
3 ns—summer.
istance tel
parrot—
[ds Lin long, will
stand
to
tge of farm la¬
the cities are
lights attract,
ty.
'hens in Ireland
present. Soon the
Kto will begin to be
Fupstart egg.
peem to delight in start
in the back yard just
Ldoor neighbor bas hung
ng on the line.
Jobles, [decides at the last mln
elbow sleeves and
|rnoon gowns. The Amer
livlsion Is peevish.
preacher who told his
that worsen have forgot
blusji is .wrong, but any
men cjught not to make them
otheW (
Professor Arrhenius knows of
3uns 50,000 J.lines larger than our suri.
» We could have used one of them i
. week ago, but our own sun Is doinj
better now.
The mocking bird Is held up for
emulation In modesty. This good point
has been overlooked because of the
number of wbistllifr soloists who
have been Inspired.
A Harvard professor says Gray’s
“Elegy” Wquld be rejected by the edi¬
tor of any modern magazine. Some
editor has probably returned one of
the Harvard professor’s poems.
America’s corn crop would rebuild
every railroad In the land In eight
years, but there Is no ready constitu¬
tional wpy In which the crops of eight
years could be applied in that man¬
ner.
Sixty students working their way
through the Washburn Law school at
Topeka, Kan., earned $25,000 last year,
an average of ipore than $413 each.
A good many lawyers would be glad
to get a chance of that kind.
One of the sculptors explains that It
Is impossible to "show the majesty
of the human form In trousers and
skirts.” We might, without assuming
any risk of being considered ultra-con¬
servative, add, “especially harem
skirts.” » V
A Providence judge has decided that
- ¥ a husband Is justified in slapping his
wife’s fa?e if he catches her going
through hi a pockets. ?vext some dis¬
gruntled court wlllTule that a wom¬
an has'.how/lost Vher time-honored
right tp;change her mind.
*" .....
Twenty thousand (toothbrushes and
as many packages of tooth powder
have been presented to the school chil¬
dren ofPhiladeiphia. We hope the
school children of . Philadelphia are al¬
so receiving Instructions concerning
the Inadvisability -of picking their
teeth in public! ; i
A landlady in -fidm.Jersey, finding
she could hot get ofijectionable ten¬
ants to leave, set the, house on fire..
She was arrested for arson, but she
gained -her point, .and proved again
that wbeif a woman! teally sets her
mind on any given object, mere mas
culine opposition) ia, . und to go as
straws before the wihd.
yearly- A Boston^eJyW-teacher minlmuiff itemizes a
expense account for
a woman add puta^in-two umbrellas.
This either is exffeVagpMce or an ac¬
knowledgement of absent-mindedness.
A German expedition has started
for the south pole. If the latter Is dis¬
covered; It should be tagged in some
way ,so that a world which is now
naturally skeptical on the subject of
pole discovery can-be satisfied as to
who owns the claim.
There are always enough foolish
people hanging around to form a mob
when a woman wlsbe3 to obtain no¬
toriety by wearing a harem skirt
This shows that there should be more
work to do and more people busy
doing it
EM.
A trial package of Munyon’s Paw Paw
Pills will be sent free to anyone on re¬
quest. Address Professor Munyon, 53d &
Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa. If you are
in need of medical advice, do not fail to
write Professor Munyon. Your communi¬
cation will be treated in strict confidence,
and your case will be diagnosed as care¬
fully as though you had a parsonal inter
Lyiew.
^lunyon’s Paw Paw Pills are unlike
gther laxatives or cathartics. They
the liver into activity by gentle
Is. They do not scour, they do
ipe, they do not weaken, but they
Jirt all the secretions of the liver
Stomach in a healthy way that condition soon puts and
, organs in a
__ constipation. In my opinion
constipation is responsible for most ail¬
ments. There are 26 feet of human
bowels, which is really a sewer pipe.
When this pipe becomes clogged the
whole system becomes poisoned, caus¬
ing biliousness, indigestion and impure
blood, which often produce rheumatism
and kidney ailments. No woman who
suffers with constipation or any liver
ailment can expect to have a clear
complexion or enjoy good health. If
I had my way I would prohibit the sale
of nine-tenths of the cathartics that are
now being sold for the reason that they
soon destroy the lining of the gtomach,
setting up serious forms of indigestion,
and so paralyze the bowels that they re¬
fuse to act unless forced by strong
purgatives.
Munyon’s Paw Paw Pills are a tonic
to the stomach, liver and nerves. They
invigorate instead of weaken; they en¬
rich the blood Instead of Impoverish
it; they enable the stomach Yo get all
the nourishment from food that is put
into it.
These pills contain no calomel, no
dope; they are soothing, healing and
stimulating. They school the bowels
to act without physic. *
Regular size bottle, containing 45 pills,
25 cents. Munyon’s Laboratory, 53d &
Jefferson Sts.. Philadelphia.
I
Hotel Cumberland
New York
Broadway at 54th Street
Near 50th St.
Subway and
53rd St.
Elevated
Broadway cart
from Grand
Central Depot
pass the door.
New and
Fireproof
Strictly
First-Class
Rates
Reasonable
$2.50
With Bath
and up
Seed for
Booklet
10 Minutes
Walk to
20 Theatres
H. P. STIMSON
Formerly with Hotel Imperial
Are yon suffering from any cause?
Nino out of every ten causes of ill-health are
ue to a derangement of the Liver or Kidneys.
As As the the health health of ot these these two two organs—ao organs—so is is the the
health Safety of Valves the whole and body. be They kept are in the System’s
must good order.
Dr. Do Witt’s
LIVER, BLOOD and
KIDNEY REMEDY
©us body matter, with vitalizing neutralizing red uric blood aci corpuscles and
producing Health.
. De Witt's Liver, Blood and Kidney
iody has proved invaluable in the relief and
of Liver complaints, Kidney disorders, urin
syphilitic and
' in
oth<
Good Blood Tonic
Price, $1.00 pep Bottle
Hundreds of testimonials of remarkable cures.
Tm V. J. PARKER CO., Baltimore, Md., U. S. A.
Manufacturing Druggists
It your dealer does not sell this Remedy, write vs.
HUNTS CURE
GUARANTEED
For so*
At your
Druggist.
I.B. Richard* MedlcIntCo.f Wi
ryii
DAISY FLY KILLER plaeod treeia anywkero, and kills it* all
Him. Neat, clean.
amenta!, convea
neap. Lasts til
season. n. Can’tspilior Car.’t spill or
tip over, will not soil
or injure anything.
Guaranteed effect¬
ive. Ui i a 1 .1 dealr u*rs oj
[sent i’ prepai! for 20c.
IROLD COMERS
SYNOPSIS.
John Calhoun becomes secretary ot
state in Tyler’s cabinet with the fixed de¬
termination to acquire both Texas and
Oregon. Nicholas Trlst. the his secretary. Is
sent with a message to Baroness von
Rita, British spy and reputed mistress ot the
minister. Pakenham. Trlst en¬
counters the baroness and assists her In
see escaping Calhoun, from and pursuers. pledge She agrees that she to
as a
Will tell him what he wants to know re¬
ading the Intentions ot England toward
exico, she gives Trlst a slipper, the
dered to Montreal on state business, and
arranges to be married to Elizabeth
Churchill betore departing. The baroness
says she will try to prevent the marriage.
A drunken congressman, who Is. assisting
Trlst In his wedding arrangements, blun¬
deringly sends the baroness’ slipper to
Elizabeth instead of the owner, and the
marriage Is declared off. Nicholas finds
the baroness In Montreal, she having suc¬
ceeded, where he tailed. In discovering
England’s intentions regarding Oregon.
She tells him the slipper he had, con¬
tained a note from the Texas attache to
Pakenham. Baying that If the United
States did not annex Texas within 10 days
she would lose both Texas and Oregon.
Calhoun orders Trlst to head a party
bound for Oregon. Calhoun excites the
Jealousy of Senora Ythrrlo, and thereby
secures the signature of the Texas at¬
tache to a treaty of annexation. Nicholas
arrives In Oregon. Later the baroness ar¬
rives on a British warship. She tells
Nicholas slipper that a note breaking she placed off of In her his
caused the
marriage, i 111^0, anu and that tuav she oire intends tuvuuuo to return ic-.u.u
to Nicholas Washington to repair learns the wrong. the
follows her. He on
way that Polk lias been elected and
Texas annexed, and that there Is to be
war with Mexico. The baroness tells
Trlst that In return for a compromise of
the Oregon boundary on the forty-ninth
degree, she has sold “ hei herself “ to ~ Pakenham. '
She tells him the story of her life.
Trist breaks Pakenham’s key to the
baroness’ apartments. Pakenham calls
for his price, and the baroness refuses to
pay. He Insults her. She compels him
to light, apologize, he holds him that up In his true
and declares she is pure as
a lily. The treaty Is signed by Paken
ham. The baroness gives the treaty to
Calhoun and tells him she got It for
Nicholas. Calhoun Invites the baroness to
a diplomatic ball at the White House.
Nicholas and Elizabeth are married.
Nicholas Is chosen a commissioner to ne¬
gotiate peace with Mexico. Owing to en¬
mity on the part of Polk his actions are
repudiated and he Is dismissed from the
service. The senate, however, ratifies the
treaty.
Epilogue—Continued.
With the cessions from Mexico came
the great domain ot California. Now,
look bow strangely history sometimes
works out itself. Had there been any
suspicion of the discovery of gold in
California, neither Mexico nor our re¬
public ever would have owned It!
England surely would have taken it.
The very year that my treaty eventu¬
ally was ratified was that In which
gold was discovered In California!
But it was too late then for England
to interfere; too late then, also, for
Mexico to claim it. We got untold
millions of treasure there. Moat of
' 1
those millions went to ' the ■* northern
ns
states, into manufactures. Into com¬
merce. The north owned that gold;
It wah that which the
“ k“
32:: ’z
x m,
'\
\
The Trail of Democracy, of America, of the World.
north the power to crush that upris¬
ing which was born of the Mexican
war—that same uprising by which
England, too late, would gladly have
seen this union disrupted, so that she
might have yet another chance at
these lands she now had lost for ever.
Fate seemed still to be with us, aft¬
er all, as I have so often had occasion
to believe may be a possible thing.
That war of conquest which Mr. Cal¬
houn opposed, that same war which
grew out of the slavery tenets of his
otherwise splendid public life—found
Its own correction in the civil war.
It was the gold of California which
put down slavery. Thenceforth
slavery has existed legally only north
of the Mason and Dixon line?
We have our problems yet. Perhaps
some other war may come to settle
them. Fortunate for us if there could
be another California, another Texas,
another Oregon, to help os pay for
them!
1, who was intimately connected
with many of these less known mat¬
ters, claim for my master a reputation
wholly different from that given to
him In any garbled "history" of his
life. I lay claim In his name for fore¬
sight beyond that of any man of hla
time. He made mistakes, but be made
Thwarting the Devil
At the banquet at Pittsburg lodge.
No. II, B. F. O. E, recently. R. W.
Irwin, past exalted ruler of Washing¬
ton (Pa.) lodge, told a story In Illus¬
tration oi the necessity for charity
(meaning brotherly love), among even
some ministers of the gospel. He said
that two pastors of rival denomina¬
tions were discussing the merits of
their different methods of preaching.
Brother A always wrote his .sermons
TIGHT «r
aKKrmHt
caevaiOHf COKMinr
them bravely, grandly, and consistent¬
ly. Where his convictions were en¬
listed, he had no reservations, and be
used every means, every available
weapon, a a I have shown. But he was
never eelf-eeeklng, never cheap, never
insincere. A detester of all machine
politicians, he was a statesman worthy
to be called the William Pitt of the
United States. The consistency of
his career was a marvelous thing, be¬
cause, though he changed in hla be¬
liefs, he was first to recognise the
changing conditions of our country.
He failed, and he Is execrated. He
won, and he Is forgot
My chief, Mr. Calhoun, did not die
until some six years after that first
evening when Dr. War£ and 1 had our
talk with him. He was said to have
died of a disease of the lungs, yet
here again history is curiously mis¬
taken. Mr. Calhoun slept himself
away. I sometimes think with a shud¬
der that perhaps this was the revenge
which Nemesis took of him for his
mistakes. His last days were dream¬
like in their passing. His last speech
In the senate was read by one pf his
friends, as Dr. Ward had advised him.
Some said afterwards that his Illness
was that accursed “sleeping sickness”
imported from Africa with these same
slaves. It were a strange thing had
John Calhoun Indeed died of his er¬
ror! At least he slept away.
It was through John Calhoun, a
grave and somber figure of our his¬
tory, that we got the vast land of
Texas. It was through him also—and
not through Clay nor Jackson, nor any
of the northern statesmen, who never
could see a future for the west—that
we got all of our vast northwest
realm. Within a few days after the
Palo Alto ball, a memorandum of
agreement was signed between Min¬
ister Pakenham and Mr. Buchanan,
our secretary of state. This was done
at the instance and by the aid of John
Calhoun. It was he—he and Helena
von Rltz—who brought about that
treaty which, on June 15, of the same
year, was signed, and gladly signed,
by the minister from Great Britain.
The latter had been fully enough im¬
pressed (such was the story) by the
reports of the columns of our west¬
bound farmers, with rifles leaning at
their -wagon seats and plows lashed to
the tail-gates. Calhoun himself never
ceased to regret that we could not
delay a year or two years longer. In
this te was thwarted by the impetu¬
ous war with the republic on the
south, Although, had t«*at liever V« en
fought; we had lost California—lost
also the south, and lost the Union!
Under one form or other, one name
of government or another, the flag of
democracy eventually must float over
all this continent. Not a part, but a!!
of this country must be ours, must be
the people’s. It may cost more blood
and treasure now. Some time we shall
see the wisdom of John Calhoun; but
some time, too, I think, we shall see
come true that prophecy of a strange
and brilliant mentality, which in Cal¬
houn’s presence and In mine, said
that all of these northern lands and
all Mexico as well must one day be
ours—which Is to say, the people’s—
for the sake of human opportunity, of
human hope and happiness. Our bat¬
tles are but partly fought. But at
least they are not, then, lost.
For myself, the close of the Mexi¬
can war found me somewhat worn by
travel and lily equipped in financial
matters. I had been discredited, l
say, by my own government. My pay
was withheld. Elizabeth, by that time
my wife, was a girl reared In all the
luxury that our country then could of¬
fer. Shall I say whether or not I
prized her more when gladly she gave
up all this and joined me for one more
long and final journey out across that
great trail which I had seen—the trail
of democracy, of America, of the
world ?
and read them from his manuscript
Brother B boasted that he always
preached extemporaneously. Each In¬
sisted that his method was the better.
Finally Brother B said; “Don’t you
know that when you write your ser¬
mons the devil looks over your shoul¬
der, reads what you write and then
goes among the congregation and puts
thoughts in their minds that counter¬
act your doctrines? When you read
At laat we reached Oregon. It holds
the grave of one of oars; It Is the
home of others. We were happy; we
asked favor of no man; fear of no one
did we feel. Elizabeth has In her time
slept on a bed of hnska. She has
cooked at a sooty fireplace of her
own; and at her cabin door I myself
have been the guard. We made our
way by ourselves and for ourselves, as
did those who conquered America for
our flag. "The citizen standing In the
doorway of his home shall save the
Republic." So wrote a later pen.
It was not until long after the dis¬
covery of gold in California had set us
all to thinking that I was reminded
of the strange story of the old Ger¬
man, Von Rlttenhofen, of finding some
pieces of gold while on one of his
bunts for butterflies. I followed out
his vague directions os best I might
We found gold enough to make us
rich without our land. That claim is
staked legally. Half of it awaits an
owner who perhaps will never come.
There are those who will accept al¬
ways the solemn asseverations of pol¬
iticians, who by word of mouth or pen
assert that this or that party made
our country, wrote Its history. Such
as they might smile If told that not
even men, much less politicians, have
written all bur story as a nation; yet
any who smile at woman’s influence In
American history do so In ignorance
of the truth. Mr. Webster and Lord
Ashburton have credit for determin¬
ing onr boundary on the northeast—
England called It Ashburton’s capitu¬
lation to the Yankee. Did you never
hear the other gossip? England laid
all that to Ashburton’s American wife!
Look at that poor, hot-tempered devil,
Yrujo, minister from Spain with ns,
who saw his king’s holdings on this
continent Juggled from hand to hand
between us alL His wife was daugh¬
ter of Gov. McKean of Pennsylvania
yonder. If eke had no tnfluenoe with
her husband, so much the worse for
her. In Important times a generation
ago M. Genet, of France, as all know,
was the husband of the daughter of
Gov. Clinton of New York. Did that
hurt our chances with France? My
Lord Oswald of Great Britain, who ne¬
gotiated our treaty of peace in 1782—
was not his worldly fortune made by
virtue of his American wife? All of
us should 'remember that Marbols,
Napoleon’s mlnlstor, who signed the
great treaty for him with us, married
his wife while he was a mere charge
here In Washing,-ton; and she, too, was
an f American. ; Erskiae, of JCngland,
when times weqjs strained In 1808, and
later—and our friend for the most
part—was he not also husband of an
American? It'Was as John Calhoun
said—our history, like that of E ng la nd
and France, like that of Rome and
Troy, was trade In large part by
women.
Of that strange woman, Helena, Bar¬
oness von Rltz, I have never definitely
heard since then. But all ot us have
heard of thaj great uplift ot central
Europe, that ferment of revolution,
most noticeable in Germany, in 1848.
Out of that revolutionary spirit there
came to us thousands and thousands
of our best population, tie sturdiest
and the most liberty-lovin ' citizens
this country ever had. They gave us
scores of generals In our late war, and
gave us at least one cahlt et officer;
But whence came that spirit of revolui
tlon in Europe? Why do«;3 It live,
grow, increase, even now? Why does
It sound now, close to the oldest
thrones? Where originated hat germ
of liberty which did Its worV so well?
I am at least one who believes that
I could guess something of its source.
The revolution In Hungary failed
for the time. Kossuth cane to see
us with pleas that we might aid Hun¬
gary. But republics forget We gave
no aid to Hungary. I was !ar away
and did not meet Kossuth. I should
have been glad to question him. I did
not forget Helena von Rltz, nor doubt
that she worked out In full that
strange destiny for which, Indeed, she
was born and prepared, to which she
devoted herself, made clean by sacri¬
fice. She was not one to !< ave her
work undone. She, I know, passed ca
her torch of principle.
Elizabeth and I speak often of
Helena von Rltz. I remember her
still—brilliant, beautiful, fascinating,
compelling, pathetic, tragic. If it was
asked of her, I know that she still
paid It gladly—all that sacrifice
through which alone there can be I
worked out the progress of humanity, !
under that idea which blindly we at
tempted to express In our Declara¬
tion; that Idea which at times sre may
forget, but which eventually must tri¬
umph for the good of all the world.
She helped us make our map Shall
not that for which she stood help U3
hold It?
At least, let me say, I have thought
this little story might he set dc-wn;
and, though some toAiay may smile at
flags and principles, I should like. If I
may be allowed, to close with the
words of yet another man of those
earlier times; "The old flag of the
Union was my protector In Infancy
and the pride and glory of my iper
years; and, by the grace of God, under
Its shadow I shall die!” N. T.
THE END.
the sermon the devil already has an¬
swers framed In the minds of roar
hearers. The consequence is the seed
falls on stony ground. Now. whan I
get up In the pulpit to speak not even
the devil himself knows what I am
going to say."—Pittsburg Chronicle
Telegraph.
The Art of Sleeping.
Slumber commences at the extremi¬
ties, That beginning Is why It with Is always the feet necesffiry anjd te
keep the feet warm.—Family Doctor.
McPherson
IS RELIEVED
Letter Written From Chadbourn,
N. C., She Makes a Full State*
ment Regarding Her Case.
Chadbourn, N. C.—In a letter from
place, Mrs. M. D. McPherson
says: “I suffered five years with aw¬
pains. They grew worse, till I
often faint. I could not walk
all, for two or three days at a time,
and had an awful hurting in my side,
and headache, and backache. I could
do anything.
I gave up, and thought I would die,
but my husband said, ‘Let’s try Car
dui.’ So I began and the first bottle
helped me, and I could do my cooking,
and by the time the third bottle was
used, I could do all my work.
The Cardui home treatment will do
more than you recommend it to do.
All the people around said I would
die, but thanks to Cardui, I was re¬
lieved.”
Cardui is composed of gentle-acting,
herb ingredients. Its action is mild
and natural, and it has no bad after¬
effects, as have many of the powerful
drugs sometimes recommended.
No other medicine or tonic has ex¬
actly the same results as Cardui.
No other has the record of 50 years
of successful treatment of cases of
womanly weakness and disease.
Suppose you try it.
N. B.—-Write tos I-ndlM* Advisory
Dept., Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chat
tnndoRu, Teitn.. for Special Instructions
end tit- plitre hook. “Home Treatment
for Women,” sent In plain wrapper, on
Bequest.
BUNCHING HIS HARD LUCK
Sufferer From Toothache Summoned
Philosophy to His Aid During
Period of Trouble.
“Philosophers are not all dead yet,"
said the dentist. “J met one this
morning who knocked me out of two
hours’ work on a day when I have
nothing to do anyhow, and will make
me work overtime tomorrow, when I
shall be crowded with engagements.
He was howling with a toothache.
“ ‘Better come around and have it
attended to,’ I said.
“ ’Can’t do it today,’ he said, ‘I’m
too busy.’
“ ‘But you can’t work when you
are crazy with the toothache?’ I
argued.
“ 'Oh, yes I can,’ said he. ‘There
are half a dozen other things I want
done to me that hurt pretty bad, and
if I have them done when my tooth
is on the rampage they won’t seem so
bad, because one hurt will neutralize
the other. I always take advantage
of a toothache to dispatch those dis¬
agreeable jobs.’
“Maybe not many people could
that' kind of philosophy, but ap¬
parently that man is going to get
away with it.”
STONE IN BLADDER REMOVED
IN REMARKABLE WAY ■
A year and a half ago I was taken with
a severe attack of kidney trouble that
pained me to such an extent that mor¬
phine had to be given me. Was attended
by a doctor who pronounced it as stone
in the bladder and prescribed Lithia
Water. I took Lithia Water and tablets
for some time and received no relief from
them. I stopped taking medicines for some
time and having some Dr. Kilmer’s
Swamp-Root in the house, I decided to
try it and felt much relieved; while taking
the second bottle commenced to pass
gravel in urine until I had passed in all
at least a half a dozen or more and have
not suffered the slightest since and in all
have taken one bottle and a half and feel
very grateful to Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root.
Yours very truly,
II. W. SPINKS.
Camp Hill, Ala.
Personally appeared before me this
16th of August, 1909, II. W. Spinks, who
subscribed the above statement and made
oath that same is true in substance and
in fact.
A. B. LEE,
Letter to Notary Public.
Dr. Kilmer ■k k Co. Co
Bingb Binghamton, X. }
Prove What Swamp-Root Will Do For You
Send to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bingham¬
ton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. It will
convince anyone. You will also receive
a booklet of valuable information, telling
all about the kidneys and bladder. When
writing, be sure and mention this paper.
For sale at all drug stores. Price fifty
cents and one-dollar.
His Instinct.
“I see the family dog slinking out
of the room. What's the matter with
him?” ,
Prescience. Presently there will be
a tremenodu.? family row on."
"But now did the dog know that?”
“Well, so to speak, his nose is
something of a storm center.
Important to Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for
infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of i
In Use For Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
First and Second Choice.
Uncle—Johnny, wouldn’t you like
to be an angel?
Johnny—Not as long as there's a
show for me to become a baseball
pitcher or a circus clown.
For HEADACHE—Hicks’ CAPIDINE
Whether from Colds, Heat, Stomach or
Nervous Troubles, Capudine will relieve you.
It’s liquid—pleasant to take—acts immedi¬
ately. Try it. 10c., 25c., and 50 cents at drug
stores.
How can a man expect his wife to
be interested in business when half
the time he doesn’t know the color
of her last new dress?
Constipation diseases. causes and seriously aggra¬
vates many It is thoroughly cured
by Dr. Pierce’s Pellets. Tiny sugar-coated
granules.
Some people seem to make a spe¬
cialty of thinking only near-thoughts.
POOR RETURN FOR CHIVALRY
Incident That Probably Has Forever
Discouraged Kind-Hearted
Mr. Jones.
Chivalrous Mr. Jones purposely
dropped a fifty-cent piece at the foot
of a poorly dressed woman who pass¬
ed through the Subway turnstile loud¬
ly lamenting that the ticket agent
had cheated her out of half a dollar,
then he picked the money up and
gave It to her.
“Excuse me, madame,” said Mr.
Jones, "I think you dropped this.”
“Oh. no,” she said, “It can’t be
mine. Perhaps you dropped it, your¬
self.”
“Oh, no,” said Mr. Jones. “It is
yours, I am sure. I picked It up just
as you passed.”
She took the money, and hurried
after another man who had pas. ed at
the time the money dropped.
“Excuse me, sir,” she said, “I think
you lost this."
"Thanks,” said the other man, and
jumped aboard a train that was ready
to start.
“----!” said chivalrous Mr.
Jones.—New York Times.
USE A PORTABLE
BOSS OVEN
With Patented GL ASS DOOR
on yoar stove or range, either oil,
gasoline, acetylene, alcohol or gas.
No more spoiled bakings or worry—N<
more wasted heat—No more jarring oi
chilling their of oven. Honeew-ve. can see
and baking without opening both door. Econ¬ in
omy convenience guaranteed
the BOSS—a polished blued steel oven
lined with tin and asbestos.
|C) Look
for
Nam*
BOSS
on
Every
Oven
r m
j
j CLASS in DOOR
is guaranteed because it not is secured to break by from patented yield*
heat our
tagpressure and retaining' Glass strips, door which fi permit snugly in expan¬
sion contraction. ts place one
piece beadedfront.and is held tightly in with
two turnbuckles, preventing escape of heat.
Baking qualities and ventilation superior to any
other oven or range. All heat goes right into the
open bottom, andis perfectly distributed to all parts
ot the oven by means of our patented Heat Deflec¬
tor. Flame always visible through small mica
windows. With the BOSS a baking costs less
than a cent. 11 will many times over fay fuel for itself
in saved bakings to say nothing of saved
Ask YOUR Dealer to show you the BOSS
Glass Door Oven. INSIST upon seeing the name
"BOSS" stamped In the front of Oven. Then
you know that it is genuine and guaranteed.
l FRrF'Our av valuable Recipe Jmttk. full containing
esmemmim mqnr ross r<)S cookary 9 Ovani Ovaoa helpa FREE FREE and description
noatal. plainly written, aunt aunt on on rrcaipt receipt and of of
daolor’a and addresses. giving your own your
Mines
THEHUENEFELDCO. 2800 Spri*i Crete At*- Cincinnati, 0
Instead of Liquid
Afttlsepticso Peroxide
100,000 people last year used
Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic
The new toilet germicide powder to be
dissolved in water as needed.
For all toilet and hygienic uses it ia
better and more economical.
To save and beautify the
teeth, remove tartar and
prevent decay. mouth, de¬
To disinfect the
stroy disease germs, and
purify artificial the breath. teeth and
To keep
bridgeworkclean, odorless'
To remove nicotine from the teeth and
purify the breath after smoking.
< To eradicate perspiration and body
| • odors by sponge bathing.
| The best antiseptic wash known.
j Relieves and strengthens tired, weak,
1 inflamed eyes. Heals sore throat, wounds
j and cuts. Sr, and 50 cts. a box. druggists
or by mail postpaid. Sample Free.
i THE PAXTON TOILET CO., Boston .Mask
.
\ NATIONAL SURGICAL
,
INSTITUTE
j 72 South Pryor Street, Atlanta, Ga.
j FOR THE TREATMENT OF DEFORMITIES
ESTABLISHED 1874.
This Institute Treats Club Feet, Di>
eases of the Spine, Hip Joints, Paraly¬
sis, etc. Send for illustrated catalog.
PATENT BAGGING
AND PATENT TIES
iual to new Roods. Bug Satisfaction Cloth Knaranteed. cheap. Write Good
econd-ba: nd Sugar very
for prices today
UNION COTTON BAGGING CORPORATION
Offl'-e and Main Plant. NORFOLK. VA.
Branch Office and Plant. SPARTANBURG, S. C,
DEFIANCE Gold Water Starch
mp’res laundry work a pleasure. 16 oz. pkg. U
Atlanta Directory
KODAK FILMS DEVELOPED frek
Mall roll Regular write for prices trice onargea catalog lor to prints. The
your and camera Atlanta
College “Co-op," Shelley Ivey, Mgr.,
KODAKS and High Grade
Finishing. Mail
orders given Spe¬
cial Attention. All kinds of Photo
Supplies. Send foi Catalogue. GLENN
PHOTO STOCK CO., 117 Puchtrt*. Atlanta. Ga.
Barber's Furniture
and Supplies
Koken’s fixtures and chairs
in stock in Atlanta. Writ!
ffor catalog.
MATTHEWS & LIVELY
21 E. Alabama St. Atlanta, 6a
WANTED
People now engaged in the press¬
ing business to send us their dye¬
ing and dry cleaning to be returned
ready foT pressing. Write us for
prices. WE CLEAN, PRESS and
DYE everything worn by men and
women; also household goods. We
pay express charges one way on
orders over $2.00.
' SANITARY £RY CLEANING CO.
Main Office and Works
j 24-28 Hro'.lierton Street Atlanta, Georgia