The New South. (Douglasville, Georgia) ????-????, March 22, 1906, Page 4, Image 4

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

4 CURE THE HABIT No matter what the death certificate says, the fundamental cause or one-half the deaths recorded is constipation. It robs the com plexion of its clearness, the eye of its brightness. It’s a slow but sure form of suicide. Cure yourself of the habit, not by drugs but by eating daily of foods like DR. PRICE’S WHEAT FLAKE CELERY FOOD made from the whole grain of the wheat, which, if eaten daily, will help to overcome habitual constipation. to Eat Dr. Price, the famous food expert, the creator of Dr. Price’s Cream Baklno Powder and Delicious Flavoring: Extracts. 10 CENTS A PACKAGE AtTHREE loaves OF BREAP Terrible Threat. desperate thrust of hla long his Avon young ®an C^ ronted the “Refuse me," he hissed, “and I shall do something that the whole worid will regret!’’ The beautiful girl shuddered. > “Oh, Archibald,’’ she pleaded, “you —you are not going to write love poetry for the magazines!” “Worse still. I shall start writing dialect poetry!” Thinking of the terrible calamity that could be thwarted by a woman’s “yes,” she accepted him on the spot •—Chicago News. «* r VICES. “I supposejpou prefer a cashier who won't drink ot gamble?” “Yes;' and If possible we also like get one who won’t steal.” HOSPITALSCROWDED MAJORITY OF PATIENTS WOMEN Mrs. Pinkham's Advice Saves Many From this bad and Costly Bxporience. It la a sad but CO I-1 n ’ n fan that e v e r y year ' brings an in- s£* JMF-U crease in the numberofopera >ZWsll tic>ns Performed u P° n women in our hospitals. M ore t han three - JffTTC ll ton r *h w of the qpfy/HLrtffii Adams patients lying ■’CFon those inow- White beds arg women and girls who are awaiting or recovering from opera* tions made necessary by neglect. Every one of these patients had plenty of warning In that bearing down the left or right of the pain in ‘ «tsUrf“«bMLrA 11. i;i■.,. C ■ .jMlptfs mßn»imWßPyjna ke hmid way the penalty has to be paid by a dangerous operation, and a lifetime of impaired usefulness at’best, while in many cases the results are fatal. Miss Luella Adams, of Seattle, Wash., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham : “About two years ago I was a great suf ferer from a severe female trouble, pains and headaches. The doctor presort bed for me and finally told me that I had a tomor and must undergo an operation If I wanted to get well. I felt that this was my death warrant, but I spent hundreds of dollars for medical help. • but the tumor kept growing. Fortunately I corresponded with an aunt intheNew England States, and she advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, as it was said to cure tumors. I did so and immediately liegan to improve in health,and 1 was entirely cured, tho tumor disap|>earing entirely, with- ' «ut an operation. I wish every suffering s* _ woman would try this great preparation." Just as surely as Miss Adams was cured of the troubles enumerated iu her letter, just so surely will Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound euro other women who suffer from fe male troubles, inflammation, kidney troubles, nervous excitability or ner vous prostration. -Mrs. I'inkhaJßNMpnvites all young write her for free <a ngl ller- in law o t for twenty five sick women free of charge. Address, Lynn, Mass. SALESMEN and AGENTS Wiwitod to introduce to automobile owner* sod dealer* iu your< Uv our now tank. Malsby & Co. 41 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, Ga. iT_f? 11 Portable and Stationary Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY t’vnipleta hue Carried in stock for IMMXDIA TJX DXLI VXJI T. Machinery.l.oweat Flees and Beal Tarns* gVthe us for catalogue, prices, bu y in f« HOLD UP! and corvsidTejr B&Zt fish POMMEL AU W \ aoiHiNG. \ sl Uh \1 T<kDdh»ifadi«>dlsw / «&S14»l»n wwatart ■ ; V «» STKKTOTM J V SISN OfTHE FISH Thompson's Ep Water More than 40,000,000 calendars are away ]n this Jan uary. ’ ■ Taylor’s Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum and Mullen is Nature’s great remedy—Cure* Coughs, Colds, Croup and Consumption, and all throat and lung troubles. At drug gists, 25c., 50e. and $ 1.00 per bottle. Abraham Lincoln was nine years old when his mother died. ' Deafness Cannot Be Cured by loea 1 applications as they cannotreach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by consti tutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an inflatned condition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tube. When this tube is in flamed you have* rumbling sound or imper fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam mation can be taken out and this tube re stored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever. Nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing but an iuflamtd condition of the mucous surfaces. Wtf’wtll give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafnessfcaused by catarrh) that can not be cured b/Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars free. F. LCheney & Co., Toledo, O, .Sold by Druggists, 75c. Take Hall’s Family Pills tor constipation. The coldest city in the world i* Yakutsk, Eastern Siberia. L. AM. t L. AM. ! L. AM. I Buy L. & M. Paint and get a full gallon. Wears 10 to 15 years, because L. & M. Zinc hardens 1.. lc M. White Lead, and makes L. A M. Paint wear like iron. 4 gallons of L. A M. mixed with 3 gallons <- il will paint a moderate sized house. C. 8. Andrews, Ex-Mayor, Danbury,Conn., writes: “Painted my house 19 yeans ago with L. AM. Looks well to-day,” PAINT YOUR HOUSE. 15 per cent, commission allowed to any resident where we have no agent, on sale of J.. A M. to property-owners, at our retail 1 rice. Apply to LONGMAN A MARTINEZ, Paint Makers, New York. The Japanese Emperor likes beans. Ban zai, Boston! Sultan's Expensive Dinner. The Sultan of Turkey’s dinner costs him $5,000 a day. The table is of silver, and it is said to be the most exquisite the silversmith’s art that contains. / ~ W? dl .shes are brfflgght in upon the heads of jublakiars, or cooks’ assist ants, and each dish is covered and sealed with the royal seal. There are always fifty or more dishes, and all are set before the Sultan at the same time. He eats, usually, from about six. Though tho Sultan is himself a total abstainer, the finest vintage wines are always offered to such guests as dine at the palace. Every dish the ruler partakes or is first tasted in the kitchen by the Grand Vizier, lest it be poisoned, and it is immediately thereafter that its sealing takes places. Always, before he can fall to on a dish, the Sultan must break Its seal. It Is not because he eats $5,000 worth of food himself that the Sul tan’s dinner bill is so expensive. He rats, as a matter of fact, no more than half a dollar’s worth. But the guests and retainers who dine at his expense number daily several thous and. —New York Press. INCIDENTAL. “The new congressman seems to oe a good, amiable sort of fellow, but I wish ho wouldn’t put on that forced, mechanical smile when he shakes lands with his constituents.” “You mustn’t mind that. It’s mere ly one of the cortortions incident to the struggle he thinks he has to make to hold his job.”—Chicago Tribune. GRAND TO L'VE And the Last Laugh ie AlwAyn the Beet* “Six inontus ago I woifld have laughed at the idea that there could be anything better for a table beverage than coffee,” writes an Ohio woman— ’ now I laugh to know there is. “Since childhood I drank coffee as freely as any other member of the family. The result was a puny, sickly girl, and as I grew into womanhood I did not gain iu health, but was afflicted with heart trouble, a weak and disor dered stomach, wrecked nerves and a general breaking down, till last winter at the age of 38 I seemed to be on the verge of consumption. My friends greeted me with ’How bad you look! What a terrible color? and this was not very comforting. “The doctors and patent medicines did me absolutely no good. I was thoroughly discouraged. “Then I gave up coffee and com menced Postum Food Coffee. At first I didn’t like it. but after a few trials and following the directions exactly, it was grand. It was refreshing and sat isfying. In a couple of weeks I no ticed a great change. I became stronger, my brain grew dearer, I was not troubled with forgetfulness as in toffee times, my power of endurance was more than doubled. The heart trouble and indigestion disappeared and my nerves became steady and SlVVlig. ’’l began to take an interest in things about me. Housework and home-mak ing became a pleasure. My friends have marveled at the change and when they enquire what brought it about, I answer ’Postum Food Coffee, and noth ing else in the world.’” Name given by Pox.” u Co.. Batt> Crek. Mi oh. li.ere’e a reason. Read the little hook. "The Bead to WellvAHk* in pkgs. mm j ssciMKeeeeeeeeeccKieee* Eeef Cattle. In our beef cattle the breeders have developed the most available and choic est portions of meat where it is most desired. The hind quarters and loins are heavily developed, the head is smaller, the bones finer, and the qual ity of the flesh increased. In thus producing large carcasses at small cost the value of the animals is en hanced by being bred to that degree of perfection which enables the farmer or breeder to realize the best prizes obtainable. „ When Vegetables Burn. Have tin plates and lard pall covers of various sizes, the rims of which are perforated to let the water pass through. Put them upside down in the bottom of all kettles when cooking. H the water boils out, warning is given in time to save the fopd. Save basins that have the tin w#rn off to use for the bottom part of a double boiler, putting a perforated tin as above to hold the basin/ in which a cereal is cooked, .or rtfrtk boiled. Real double get used, as,these take up much less room on the stove. Feeding Figg. I have forty fall pigs from thorough bred Poland-China sows, crossed, with a thoroughbred Berkshire boar, weigh ing 100 pounds at three months old. Ibis makes the best cross I ever saw. I let these pigs -run with sows until eight weeks old. then separated them and began feeding to themselves. I give them slop made of ground corn and oats of morning and whole corn at nights. I get the pigs up in a pen regular once a week and sprinkle them with some good disinfectant mixed with warm water. If it is-real cold 1 sprinkle them at noon in a close pen and leave it there until they rub it iu and dry off, as the heat from them will soon do so. This keeps the lice off, always keeping them in a healthy growing condition. I have built good hog houses for them to sleep in, built five by six with a shingle roof, with swinging doors, so whenever a pig goes in or out he always shuts the door after him, therefore keeping the draft and Ltorm out. A pig two weeks old will work these doors. They are some thing every hog raiser should have. The hog beds must be kept dry and clean. 1 always make it a rule to clean out and sprinkle air slacked lime around and fresh bright wheat straw once a week. Keep slacked soft coal salt and ashes in a trough where they can get it whenever they want it.—ll W. D., In Indiana Farmer. Non-Setting HeniJf* The Minorca has dubbed the “middleweigl ; and there is good x-nairon why the name is ap- While they will not lay as Wlffly eggs as some of the smaller breeds, yet in point of weight they easily outclass all others. It is not unusual to .find a dozen Monorca eggs weighing thirty-two ounces, all being uniform in shape and color. ... Minorca* are strictly non-setting hens, though like all others of tills class, one will occasionally become broody. They are large enough for good table fowls, the males weighing nine or ten pounds, and “’<» females weighing from six to sevei.. wbkJLfeX They have beautiful metallic black plumage, with large single combs, and clean slate-colored shanks. They are good foragers, and like to roam over the fields, but they stand confinement well and are very gentle .when kept in small yards. One of the greatest objections to them, and yet one of their most attrac tive features, is the large comb, which gives so much trouble in cold climates. They require houses where the temper ature will not go below freezing, and they must be closely watched during days when there are sudden changes. Frosted combs are not only unsight ly. but hens will not lay for several .weeks after swelling has disappeared. Taking them altogether, the Mlnor cas are excellent and useful fowls, and exceptionally well suited for those cli mates which are only moderately se vere.—Home and Farm. How Some Seed Coro Pay*. The farmers of Clifton township, Bartholomew County, estimate that there is a loss in that township of $lO,- 000 every year, on account of imper fect seed corn. That is to say the crop would be worth that amount more than now if perfect seed corn were planted by al! the farmers. This looks like a wild statement, but it may not be even less than the truth. The seed corn experts show pretty clearly that an average loss of thirty per cent, is sustained by planting corn that is not carefully selected and stored. Each acre then that ought to yield sixty bushels with perfect seed loses eighteen bushels when common seed is used; at thirty-three cents a bushel this is SG, and it takes only IGG6 acres at $6 loss per acre to make a total loss of SIO,OOO. There are certainty more than that number of acres planted in corn in that corn growing township—and there are hundreds more of our to which tbe same estimate would apply equally well. Every farmer who plants inferior seed loses from $5 to $7 on each acre in the yield of corn. If he has twenty-five acres in this he loses over $125; if forty or more.—lndiana Farmer, Ons* of Lord Roseberry’s tbe collection of books. He • thing of a poet when in tbi mobd J THE WAY OF IT. Fido—Does your mistress keep an> pets? Mignon—Yes; a husband and a baby.—New York Sun. BITS pdrmanontiy cured. No fits or nervous ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer,s2 triAlbottleandtreatisefree Dr. R. H. Kline, Ltd.,931 Arehßt.,Phila. J Pa Economy is the roaa to wealth—and it’s n hard road to . avel. Cures Cancer, Blood Poison and Rheu matism. If you have blood poison producing erup tions, pimples, ulcers, swollen glands, bumps and risings, burning, Itching Bkin, copper-colofed spots or rash on the skin, tnucous patches in mouth of throat, falling hair, bone pain?, old rheumatism or foul catarrh, take Botanic Blood Balm (B. B. B.) It kills the poison in the blood; soon all sores, eruptions heal, hard swellings sub Bide, aches and pains stop and a perfect cure is made of the worst cases of Blood Poison. For cancet, tumors, sjy&Uingß, eating sores, ugly ulcers, persistent pimples of all kinds, take B. h. *’ It destroys the cancer poison blood, heals cancer of all Hwh/cures the worst humors or suppur ating swellings. Thousands cured by B. B. B. after all else fails. B. B. B. composed of pure botanic ingredients. Improves the digestion, makes the blood pure and rich, stops the and all sharp, shooting pains. Thoroughly tested sos thirty years- Druggists, $1 per large bot tle, with complete directions for home cure. Sample free and prepaid by writing Blood Balm Co., Atlanta, Ga. Describe trouble and free medical advise also sent in sealed letter. ~‘ T There are no newsboys in Spain. Women sell newspapers on the street. WORST FORMFo F~ECZEMA Black Splotches All Over Face—Affected Parts Now Clear as Ever—Cured by the Cuticura Remedies. “About four years ago I was afflicted with black splotches all over my face and a few covering my body, which produced a severe itching irritation, and which caused me a great deal of annoyance and suffering, to such an extent that I was forced to call in tivo of the leading phy sicians of my town. After .. thorough ex amination of the dreaded complaint they announced it to be skin eczema in its worst form. They treated me for the same for the length of one year, but the treatment did me no good. Finally my purchased a set of the Cuticura Remedies, and after usin o the contents of the first bottle of-Cuticura Resolvent in connection with the Cuticura Soap and Ointment, the breaking out entirely stopped. 1 continued the use of .he Cuti cura Remedies for six mo .ths, and after that every splotch t as entirely gone and the affected parts were left as clear as ever. The Cuticura Remedies not only cured me of that dreadful dise.-se, eczema, but other comp’.eate’ troubles as well. Lizzie E. Sledge, 545 Jofies Ave., Selma, Ala. Oct. 28. 1905.” Korea has a population of 6,000,000. Seoul, the capital, has 22,000. STOPS BELCHING. Cures Bad and Instant Cure Free—No Drug's—Cores by Absorption. " 'in 1 \' stomachand sto^b^Tcnmgg foul gases that arise from undigested food. 'iii ■ iu~nll tFanv.■* ■ ■ . . i They will onion breath 't They stop fermentation in the stomSrh. acute indigestion, crfhnps, colic, gas in the stomach and intestiles, distended abdo men. heartburn, bay com ilexion, dizzr spells or any >ther affliction arising from a diseased stomach.’ We know Mull’s Anti-Belch Wafers will do this, and we want you to know it. This offer may not appear again. I ■—- 3246 GOOD .?OR 25c. 143 Send this coupon with your -name and address and your druggist’s name and 10c. in stamps or silver, and we I I will supply you a sample free if you I have never used Mull’s Anti-Belch I Wafers, and will also send vou acer- I tificate good for 25c. toward the pur- I chase of more Belch Wafers. You will I find them inva' ’able for stomach trou- I b’e; cures by absorption. Address I Mull’s Grape Tonic Co.. 328 3d x Ave., Rock Island, 111. Give FuU Address and IFrite Plainly. All drvggists. 50c. per box, or by mail upon receipt of price. Stamps accepted. Do You Belc'i? At Strohbeck, Prussian Saxony, chess Is a part of the school curriculum. We have clients who wish to purchase, for investment, timber, coal, mineral, phosphate and farm lands and property in growing towns. Send full description, location,price. English-American Loan A Trust Co., Real Estate Dept., Atlanta, Ga. Truly Rural. The seventeen-year-old daughter or a certain Wall street man recently visited for the first time the tine farm In Dutchess Cojinty for the past year owned by her father. The girl immediately became greatly Interest ed in the prize cattle that are the especial pride of her parent, and she asked many questions relative to their breeding, etc. One evening, just at dusk, as the girl was standing on the veranda of the farmhouse, talking to the manager, there came the low, mournful note of a cow. “Just listen to that poor cow,” *aid the girl to the manager, “mewing tor her colt”—Harper’s Weekly. A STOCK EXPRESSION. "We have nothing in common,” said j the steel magnate to his wife. But she was not distressed. She thought it wiser to have it all invested in preferred. ROBBED OF A TREAT. “Goin’ to the bangin', Bill?” “Betcher life lam!” “Betcher life yer ain’t. The Guv*- ner has jest pardoned the cuss.” For I SICK WoneiL w 11 To sweeten, Dispels colds and To refresh, ( headaches when itOL. Jft? To cleanse the \ bilious or con w' Wi®t\ system* w stipated; 111®$ \ Effectually I For men, women i 0 7 / an< * Gently; \ and children; | tk There is only \ Acts best on I B WW& one Gen « in e p ' the kidneys I Symp °f Figs; I and liver, Ifc'WSWIL to get its bene- ] stomach and fpSBIW ficial effects - ' bowels; V' i Always buy the genuine Manufactured by the Ky. Sa * n Fmnciscn,Cal. /<ewYork.A.Y. I The genuine Syrup of Figs is for sale by all first-class J f druggists. The full name of the company— California ~ > % Syrup Co. — is always printed on the front JL. of every package. Price Fifty Cents per bottle. ’I Selfishness of Genius. Same funny stories get mixed in with the pathetic ones in the an nals of the charity workers of the city. Dr. H. S. Oppenheimer, chair man of the Gramercy District Com mittee of the Charity Organization, teljls one of a family which applied for relief in his district. It was an Armenian family, with a father 60 years old, broken in health, unable to find work, or to do much if he got it. The mother was also incapable of earning much. Two boys under work ing age had been practically support ing the family, but the truant officer had sent them back to scnool. An Ar menian boarder was giving up his entire wages to keep the family from starvation when they applied for re lief. fr-/ But in Jis'investigation the com mittee unexpectedly came across an older son, a good, steady boy, earn ing, $lO a week. His wages, with the boarder’s, would have supported the family, but he had a fixed pas sion to become a musician, and was boarding with another family be cause they had a piano and would let him practice on it. He was perfect ly tractable on all other points, but give up his music he would not. What!- resign his ambition and ruin his life? No. The committee cast about and secured from an interest ed person the use of a piano. The boy was told that he could have this in his home free of charge, provided he would turn his wages into the fam ily exchequer. He consented. “And now,” says Dr. Oppenheimer, "■there is nothing the matter with the family except that they don’t get enough sleep, as the boy prac tices at the most unseemly hours.”— New York Press. • - CAUTIOUS. “Yes,” said Miss Passay, “Mr. Shrude has called upon me several times lately, but he always brings wme other young man with him.” “My dear,” replied Miss Pert, “I know all about him. He’s terribly cautious and just hates to be proposed to.” —Philadelphia Press. W A aoeWkfck is the STYLISH WOMAN’S Favorite. W It Must Be Worn to Be Appreciated. » INSIST UPON HAVING IT. Jy IT’S » MOMKV SAVCR. IT’S AH “ALWAYS JUST Wk S CORRECT" CLOVKR BRAND SHOR. ® lUrrthFinirr-Siuartß S’ijor ffin. UARSEST FtNK SHOK eXOMJBIVISTS BT ' uou,s ' ’• *■ -> < l Aj. I JM]XX “After Suffering for Three Years” writes Mary E. Shelton, of Poplar Bluff, Mo., “and trying two doctors for female trouble tn vain, 1 was finally laid up In bed for about five weeks and was near to death, when I began to take Wine of Cardui. In a week I was up, and have mended ever since. I have only taken three bottles and now 1 am in good health and can do my housework without a pain. My custom is now regular. I can truly say that Cardui cured me and I cannot recom- mend it highly erough.” “Forhead- PI S ache, backache, failing feelings, diz- |W ziness, cramps, fitful functions and wWlof*; ?■ * M/O tl! SO f’.B Bg periodical pains take amb ' *-j AT ALL MU6GISTS IN SI.OO BOTTLES || j" HI HH ■ Invest Ic. [ W For Postal Card, and make 822.00 in CASH,by wrlfJ ng for our Cat- atogueNo. 78. A 865.00 beat grade TOP BUOOT for $49.00 GUARANTEED. J Vw®vx? Manufactured by the only Buggy Factory Ln the sei n '-*CL>a direct to consumer at first price. GOLDEN EAGLE BUGGY CO., ..-Atlanta, Ga.* ArlHik iPINF EH GRIP, bad cdld, headache and heuralria. twill villi IHL. p < %U’ 5 J I won’t eell to a dealer who won’t Guarantee It M*SNOBJWLFORH&h*S|E Ca!J Sox ' )- lil IF IT DOESN’T Cta«. W. Springfield, Ito The most elevated river in the world Is the Desaguadero in Bolivia. The the Broken Down, Dike Many Another Wom an, With Exhauetinc Kidney Troubles. Mrs. A. Taylor, of Wharton, N. J., says: “I had kidney trouble in its most painful and severe form, and tbe S torture 1 went through now seems to have been almost unbear able. I had back ache, pains in tbe side and loins, dizzy spells and hot, feverish headaches. There were bearing-down pains, and the kidney secretions yassed too frequently and with a burning sensa tion. They showed sediment. I be came discouraged, weak, languid aud depressed, so sick aud sore that I could not keep up. As doctors did not cure me I decided to try Doan’s Kid ney Pilh, and with such success that my troubles were all gone after using eight boxo.-, and my strength, arnbl . on and general health is fine.” Sold bj’ all dealers. 50 cents a box. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. The natives of the Malay peninsula have in use the smallest current coin in the world. (Atl2-’O6) > Bumm«*a4 ...—vasm tion no hindrance. GA.-ALA. W. L. DoucON *3= &’3== SHOEflwuS W. L. Douglas 84.00 cannot be equalledTgt any price. nT ' n ) ' Zjp: ®*V /> ?’ ' W v* /. w \ RTF \ £STABUSHED~~—• JULY 6. 187®-. [ Capital *a,soaoo<j| • MANUFACTURER IN THE WORLD. C1 n nnn REWARD to anyone who can $ I UjUUU disprove this statement. If I could take you into my three large factorlea at Brockton, Mass., and show you the infinite care with which every pair of shoes is made, you would realize why W. L. Douglas $3.50 shoes cost more to make, why’they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are of greater Intrinsic value than any other $3.50 shoe. MF. L. Douglas Strong Made Shoos for tes»CAUTIONInsist upon having W.L.Doug laa shoes. Take no substitute. None genuine vnfewut his name and price stamped on bottom. fjNt Color Eyelets used; they will not uiear brassy. Write for Illustrated Catalog. » SV. L. DOUGlNS,Brockton, Mass. That Delightful Aid to Health saxtim I Toilet Antiseptic Whitens the teeth-—purifies mouth and breath—cures nasal catarrh, sore throat, sore eyts, and by direct application cures all inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal conditions caused by feminine ills. Paxtine possesses extraordinary cleansing, healing and germi cidal qualities unlike anything else. At all druggists, 50 cents LARGE TRIAL PACKAGE FREE The R. Paxton Co., Boston Mass. 5- for too worth, of leadln* W 5 novelties InObpto’ j,-. G eat Garden Seed*. Ji's worth of Universalrrw Q