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I Mozley’s B
■ Lemon Elixir B
B The B
Ideal Summer Medicine I
HH Cures Constipation, Indigestion, I
Sour Stomach, Headache, Colic, I
Disordered Hlver and Kidneys, a:;d BB
keeps the system in pc: feet con- EB
dition by regulating the bowels. I
I Tones Up the System
and enables you to enjoy the I
S .mmer. Pleasant to take; gentle jEgjwj
B in action, but thorough in results. I
50c. and SI.OO at drug stores.
B “ONI? DOSE CONVINCES.” KB
"The Old Reliable’’
GEORGIA
RAILROAD
Elegantly Equipped
PASSENGER TRAINS BETWEEN
ALL POINTS.
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tween Atlanta, Augusta and
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all points in
SOUTHEASTERN AND
CAROLINA TERRITORY.
A. G. JACKSON
General Freight and Passenger
Augusta, Ga.
LISTEN:- Do you know of a case of
Grip that has left its victim
with all the life and vitality
sapped out of him?
We will be glad to send, free
of charge, a bottle of John
son’s Chill and Fever Tonic,
which will drive out every
trace and taint of Grip poi
son.
Cured people will talk.
Write to
THE JOHNSON'S CHILL AND FEVER
TONIC COMPANY
Savannah, - Georgia
' Tooth
Paste
Differs from th
■* Vi 7 ordinary dent
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X •Bfejirw? ing the causes of
'UBBRB.’-i /’x) decay. Endorsed
X by thousands of
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adjunct to the dental toilet.
U jfeW-Bgl For sale at best stores.
UoK '
ell BHBPi stitutes- Send for our free
* book “Taking Care of the
Teeth,” which contains
valuable information concisely written.
165 DENTACURA COMPANY*
ALLING ST., NEWARK, N. J., U. S. A.
BOOK REVIEWS
From an Unbiased Viewpoint.
By A. E. RAMS A UR.
“SHADOWING A DRUNKARD.’’
By Rev. C. A. Ridley, Live Oak, Fla.
The Golden Age welcomes with pleasure this contribution to the moral
literature of the day. “Shadowing a Drunkard” is written by Mr. Ridley,
who has furnished some brilliant articles for The Golden Age, and this essay
or treatise is characterized by the same clear, forceful and convincing style
as Mr. Ridley’s other writings.
The book, though short, covers the subject under consideration in the
very amplest manner possible, and there is scarcely a page which does not
present some new idea or some old truth dressed in a new and attractive
garb. The text of the work is “Wine is a Mocker,” and the theme is ably
handeld in every one of its varied forms, while word pictures are drawn of
each separate phase in a drunkard’s life. The blighted home, the ruined ca
reer, the debased moral sense as well as the degraded mind of the habitual
drinker is depicted so clearly that even the lay-reader feels a sense of repulsion
and a deep desire to remedy as far as individual effort can, the curse of our
day—trade in liquor.
Many special cases are cited showing the downfall of brilliant careers
because of drink; many touching stories are told in few words, but with a
force of expression and a wealth of imagination that bring the scene and the
individual clearly before the mind of the reader.
Mr. Ridley must command the attention of the thinking world by his
work, “Shadowing a Drunkard,” for his views are most positive and his
conclusions always sound.
The work is prefaced by a fine introduction by A. Y. Clements of the
Monticello bar, Monticello, Ga., and this introduction, together with the reg
ular preface by Mr. Ridey, which contains some valuable figures as to the
number of persons engaged in liquor traffic in the United States, as well as
the amount of money spent in the liquor interests, add greatly to the value
of the work.
“The True and the False in Southern Life” is the title of an address
delivered by the Rev. John E. White, D.D., at Trinity College, Durham, N. C.,
on the occasion of the civic celebration at that place on, February 22, 1906.
A pamphlet copy of this address is received at the office of The Golden
Age, and so many of Dr. White’s deductions are of real value that we are
pleased to make the following excerpts from this address, believing that in
them Dr. White has sounded the keynote to much in the Southern character
and the Southern attitude, both personal and political, which may have never
yet been fully understood or appreciated. He says:
We need to take the long view, the view that carries us back to origins
and sources of Southern life with special reference to the period in which
Southern character was taking shape under conditions of the new democ
racy it was doing so much to foundGo back to the old South for
ideals. That is what we must do. The purer waters are found as you approach
the sources of the stream. The old stones which supported the South in the
days of her glory are not outwornMy plea to Suotbern young
men is that yon will take a firm stand with those who lead away from the
negro question, to the strengthening concerns of Southern life. And let the
B Dropsy g
Removes all swelling in Btoao
days; effects a permanent cure
in 30 to 60 days. Trial treatment
given free. Nothingcan be fairer
Write Dr. H. H. Green’s Sons,
Specialists, Box 6 Atlanta. Ga.
KUIDINE.
DIRECTIONS: For Kidney and Bladder Trou
bles, two tablets three times a < ay. For Indiges
tion two tablets after meals. For Costiveness,
one teaspoonful of liquid on retiring. For Sleep
lessness take three tablets on retiring.
A Box of ‘Kuidine” Tablets, 50c or sl.
Bottle of “Kuidine” Dissolved 50c. or sl.
MOUNTAIN IRON MINERAL .COMPANY
Spartanburg, S. C.
Your Druggist or direct from Manufacturers.
WasawardedtheHAGANGASENGlNESatthe
j4TzxJlX<\ W Georgia State Fair, Atlanta, Oct. 4-21, 1905,
B * JH. MM* ABIU as the best gas engine for general purposes.
TglSiSl /I It is adapted to all power purposes—cos-on gins, oil mills, yarn and hosiery mills, farm and dairy machinery, grain eleva-
wtrV' J’ / tors, feed mills, water works, electric lighting, irrigation, etc.
Write for catalogue and price list of the btst built engines m the world. Address
THE HAGAN GAS ENGINE AND MFG. CO.,
The Golden Age for April 26, 1906.
100.000 Dolls Free
Bse Successful Agriculture we
to give away one hundred
f these pretty little dolls. They
L both arms and legs, hand
hair, pretty blue eyes, shoes,
ye proud of it, and we will al
-1 3 months trial subscription
ful Agriculture, the prettiest
lof its kind in the U. S. It has
a department for each mem
ber of the family. Send 10c
for postage and expense. Do
it today.
EDITOR SUCCESSFUL AGRICULTURE, COUPON
16 Union Block, St. Paul, Minn.
I accept your offer to test your magazine on your
three months’ free trial offer.
After receiving three months’ sample copies I wiU
do one of two things,-either send you 50 cents for a
full two year’s subscription, or write you to stop
the magazine, when you are to cancel this subscrip
tion and the three months’ sample copies to be free,
as a test.
Name .
P.O. Address
State...
Lost $49.50
“I cannot recommend your Tetterine
enough. 1 had erysipelas on my face and
head so bad 1 could not do any work In
three months, and I tried the doctors, and
the doctor’s bill is fifty dollars. 'A friend
told me to get some of your Tetterine, and
1 did so, and it has entirely cured me. I
recommend it to every one.”
WILLIAM 11. ALDERMAN,
Laston P. O. (Bulloch C 0.,) Ga.
Tetterine costs 50 cents. Your druggist
or from J. T. SHUPTRINE, Mfr., Savan
nah, Ga.
FRFF Just What You Want
1 lILL Dr. Barrett’s Medical Hand Book
”what to do before the Doctor comes”
Worth SI.OO, sent Free upon request.
BARRET CHEMICAL CO., Desk 12, St. Louts.
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New Sweet Peas
McMillan’s New Giant Mixed,
the most gorgeous collection of
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wherever shown during the past
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cents ounce; 75 cents per lb.
McMillan Seed Co., 23 S. Broad St.
The Old Reliable Sead Store.
I
SOOTHING SYRUPY
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All Right in His Case.
The teacher was giving the school
a little lecture on good conduct.
“Let me caution you another point,
children,” she said. “Avoid criti
cising. Don’t make a practice of
finding fault with other people, or
picking flaws in what they say or
do. It is a very bad habit to form,
and will make your own life unhap
py-”
“Why, teacher,” spoke up a little
boy, “that’s the way my father
makes his livin’!”
“You surprise me‘ Georgy. What
is your father’s occupation?”
“He’s a proofreader, ma’am.”
The teacher coughed behind her
fan.
“Well, Georgy,” she said, “I will
make an exception in the case of
your father.”—Youtli’s Companion.
TO THE TRUSTEES OF
THE BAPTIST CHURCHES.
Gentlemen:—
Don’t allow your church to pay 8 cents
per pound for wood.
If they buy 100 pounds of White Lead in
kegs they get 88 pounds of White Lead and
12 pounds of wood; but when they buy L.
& M. Paint they get a full gallon of paint
that won’t wear off for 10 or 15 years,
because L. & M. Zinc hardens L.
M. White Lead and makes L. & M. Paint
wear like iron.
4 gallons L. & M. mixed with .3 gallons
Linseed Oil will paint a moderate sized
house.
L. & M. costs only $1.20 per gallon.
C. S. Andrews, Ex-Mayor, Danbury,
Conn., writes: “Painted my house 19 years
ago with L. fa Looks well to-day.
For sale in every city, town and village
in the United States by some one mer
chant who has exclusive sale therein. Look
him up and use the L. & M. on your
church or on your house, outside and in
side.
13