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THAT DROWSY FEELIiIG
It Prevents Yon From Doing Your
Work rid is Really a Sign
of Disease.
CAUSED BY POISONS
Don’t you ever feel drowsy and sleepy,
unable to think or work?
You have slept pretty well.
You don’t feel sick. Just cLuwsy.
What’s the cause of it?
Your liver.
A lazy liver leaves in your syrtem all
sorts of lingering poisons, the product
•f an over-supply of bile, which a
properly working liver would have fil
tered out.
These poisons act like opiates on your
nerves, making you drowsy, sleepy and
torpid, as if overcome with some strong
drug, when you ought to be feeling
bright, alert and wide-awake.
And that’s not all.
•When you are feeling liver-drowsy like
this, it is a sign that your system is in
condition to “catch” some disease.
That is, it has lost its vitality and
power of resistance to disease germs.
The clogged liver cannot keep off the
intruder as it should.
It is like a sentinel, asleep at its post,
leaving the camp open to the attacks of
the enemy.
What shall you do?
Wake up your drowsy liver with a
good dose of Thedford’s Black-Draught
(liver medicine).
Purify your system of the bile poi
sons that have drugged it.
Put yourself in position to resist the
attacks of disease. Cleanse your blood,
brighten your eyes, purify your complex
ion and become your strong healthy self
again.
The old, reliable, vegetable, liver medi
cine, Thedford’s Black-Draught, success
ful for over 60 years, is what you should
use, because of its direct action upon your
sick liver.
It contains no minerals or other dan
gerous ingredients, but is a gentle,
natural, vegetable remedy, regulating the
liver and relieving or curing such symp
toms as drowsiness, headache, bilious
sick headache, bilious stomach, bitter
taste in the mouth, constipation, bad
blood, pimples, sallow complexion, chills
and fever, malaria, nervous irritability,
etc. * €
Thousands have written to tell of the
wonderful relief afforded by Thedford’s
Black-Draught, in just such cases.
It is for sale by all druggists, in
‘ sth* packngss. Try ft.
Why Your Head Aches
You do not endure headache
because you want to. It is be
cause you haven’t a satisfactory
remedy. You haven’t tried Dr.
Miles’ Anti-Pain Pills. They stop
pain quickly, leave no bad after
effects, do not derange the stom
ach. That ought to be satisfac
tory — if so, try them. Your drug
gist has them.
•• I have used Dr. Miles’ Antl-Paln Pills
for the past three years. They never
failed to give me relief. They never leave
any bad after-effects. Before I began
taking them I had been a great sufferer
from headache for years.”
GEORGE W. SAYLOR,
637 N. 13th Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
If they fail to help, your druggist will
refund the money on first package.
25 doses, 25 cents. Never sold in bulk.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
raising crops of cotton and tobacco,
building innumerable mills, factories,
and furnaces, and towns and villages
have sprung up in all directions.
So striking and extensive has been
Southern material progress that there
has been a tendency to dwell on it to
the exclusion of the great advance
ment that has been made in, other
important directions, and one of these
is education. For a long time it lag
ged and languished, and it seemed as
though a majority of the rising gen
eration would grow up illiterates. In
the last fifteen years, however, there
has been a genuine educational re
vival in the South, and there is every,
evidence now that the situation will
be fully met.
A few figures will show the changes
which have taken place. South Caro
lina, for example, in 1875, had only
$313,000 worth of school property. In
1905 it had increased to about $2,000,-
000. Illiteracy which, in 1880, was 55
per cent, decreased, in 1900, to 35 per
cent. This large amount is due to the
preponderance of the negroes. Taken
by races the illiterate percentages are,
for the whites, in 1880, 22.4 per cent,
and, in 1900, 13.6 per cent; for the
blacks, in 1880, 78.5 per cent; in 1900,
52.8 per cent. In West Virginia the
number of school houses and of teach
ers doubled between 1880 and 1906.
In Virginia the greatest progress has
been within the last two or three
years, and that is chiefly due to the
fact that the people themselves have
taken the matter in hand. In 1905
the State granted $400,000 for the
school fund, and local committees by
local taxation added over half a mil
lion to it. To rural high schools the
State gave $50,000, and the people in
creased the sum to $789,000, making
possible an increase of 149 high
school teachers in the last year in
creased from 395 to 575, an astonish
ing growth. This special progress in
Virginia is said to be due to the for
mation of educational associations
among teachers and people. The cred
it for organizing the great advance
movement is given to ex-Governor
Montague.
It is not alone in the increased num
ber of schools in the South that a
change is noted. The range and qual
ity of the instruction is greatly im
proved. Better teachers are employ
ed, modern methods adopted, manual
training encouraged, and a beginning
made in the establishment of libra
ries. It is a great day for the South.
With prosperity and education in the
lead, she is marching on to noble con
quests.—The Washington Post.
•6
The St. Joseph Lead Company and
the Doe Run Lead Company, of Bon
neterre, Mo., have resumed operations,
and 10,000 men are employed.
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X XV. /^' '(. X nH ■» ■ | 1 Sk ’AB " I *k I I I *1 I I
IV 1i I A IIdfIIII ■■ iw* ]
Earliest Header. About ten days Earliest Flat H| 111 ITB jflH Ii 1 B H
Fine Medium Size. later than E. Jersey Cabbage. A large iiJ |I i IHB ii I ill ■[ i <fc I
Excellent Shipper. A full size larger. yielder and a good
Delicious for Table. A Money Maker. shipper. B|
■ft THREE FAMOUS varieties have made Fortunes for those who have stuck to them. They are ■■
U) the result of life times of study and experiments of the oldest and most reliable Cabbage Seed Growers ■
■ in the World. We have plants and plenty of them Grown From These Seed in the open field, which ■
W will stand Severe Cold without injury, and if you want enough for a square in your garden, or for one, five ■
V or ten acres for market, you can’t do better than to order them from us. We Guarantee full count and ■
■ satisfaction or Money Refunded. All orders filled promptly, weather conditions permitting. It is cheaper for you and better for us to let
■ your money accompany order, otherwise Plants will be shipped C. O. D. and you will have to pay return charges on the money.
f Prices f. o. b. Young’s Island, 500 for SI.OO. Ito 4,000 at $1.50 per 1,000. sto 8,000 at $1.25 per 1,000. 9to 20,000 at SI.OO per 1,000.
■ Special prices on larger quantities. Packed in light, strong, well ventilated boxes. Cheap Express rates. Folder on Cabbage Culture by
C. M. Gibson, mailed free on application. Write your name and shipping address plain, and send your orders to
C. M. GIBSON, Young’s Island, South Carolina-
The Golden Age for January 23, 1908,
I your doctor the medical name for a cold
■ on the chest. He will say, “Bronchitis.” Ask
Cx al him if it is ever serious. Lastly, ask him if
he prescribes Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral for this
rr $ IF disease. Keep in close touch with your family
f /> ■ rl fbO'f' physician, and follow his advice carefully.
B. B B B / ST J We have no secrets! We publish J. C. Ayer Co.,
> eWv/v the formulas of nil our preparations. Lowell, Mass.
nun i winrs.rt—i.uwi ■■ n ■niwwii.iia- w«Macßß»ißsatanaßMimaiwiiw«aNMmaaßSßSiMniMßMMaßSßsa
BIG I ~. ~ V
Klf Capudine
We Say Free Mean CURESCOLDS
We de not ask you to do any work or pay ■ <4—Wk IW’W 14-
us one cent. We want you to try onr B O? CJ) 1} KSITIOVeS
seeds, this year, at our expense. Next ® ■W I 9 I the Cause,
year we know you will send us your v, 1- t’ • 11 . , ■
order without any urging. Relieves Feverishness and Aching.
our great offer | Bwß Soothes the Nerves and Restores
Send us your address today and we will igßMta n j-x-
send you by return mail an assortment of HMwm xieailliy VOIICUIIOnS.
Ca a bblge, ont a ns SU Beeu.
i ß uteiy°Fr r ee^ ig wr?t 8 e today* a p^st l ai e win b do. yS ■/ Contains No Acetanilide
ST. LOUIS SEED COMPANY 10c, 25c and 50c a bottle at Drud Stores
612-614 N. Fourth St., St. Louis, Mo. *
SpWm. C. GERAT Y. 1
117 'Aft
\\ EARLY JERSEY WAKEFIELD.. CHARLESTON LARGE TYPE. SUCCESSION. ~ZuJGUSTA TRUCKER? ISHOKTSTEMMED ~‘ ;S ’/ /
\\ r T KK E “e e ’ t WAKEFIELD, The EarllU A little later " FLAT DUTCH //
Cabbage Grown. 2d Earliest. Flat Head Variety. than Succession. Largest and Latest Cabbage. / /
- TRADE MARK COPYRIGHTED
I 8 6 8 Forty years Experience and Reputation. Fifteen Thousand Satisfied Customers. I A AQ j
IU W V Our stock guaranteed to prove satisfactory or purchase price paid for same re- I w/vO I
funded. Thirty Thousand dollars Paid In Capital and our Reputation behind guarantee. I
Ask your Banker about us. Why purchase plants from unknown or inexperienced growers,, / -
He of losing your crop? when you can buy from the Original Cabbage
ints sure to produce satisfactory results. I
sofl to 5,000 at $1.50 per thousand, sto 9,000 at $1.25 per thousand, 10,000 ( f jk\|
per thousand f. o. b. Young’s Island, S. C. Our special Express Rate on V«Ks If
r. Our Cabbage Plants are Frost Proof. To produce the best results //Ba I
tin the South Atlantic and Gulf States in December and January. In the yIW /
:as early in spring as land thaws sufficiently to get the plant root in the soil.yAV /
Catalogue ; it contains valuable information about fruit and vegetable I
fixing of fertilizers, etc. We grow a full line of Strawberry plants, Fruit / FAft
entals. Special terms to persons who make up club orders. 1/4® \\
sowing this season six thousand pounds of cabbage seed. |
r m. C. Geraty Co. Box 55 Young’s Island, S.
"'Z. Ta- -*• - »'
Do you want Early Cabbage andiplenty of them, too ?
If so buy your plants from us. They are raised from the best seed, and grown on the sea islands of
South Carolina, which on account of being surrounded by salt water, raise plants that are earlier
and hardier than those grown in the interior. They can be set out sooner without danger from
frost. Varieties: Early Jersey Wakefields, Charleston or Large Type Wakefields, Henderson’s
Succession and Flat Dutch. All plants carefully counted and packed ready for shipment, and best
express rates in the South. Prices: $1.50 per thousand up to 5,000 ; 5,000 to 10,000 at $1.25 per thou
sand: 10,000 and upwards at SI.OO per thousand. Other Plants Supplied Celery, Lettuce, Onions
and Beet, ready in December. "Special Garden Fertilizer” $5 per sack of 200 pounds. Everything
f. o. b. Meggetts, S. C. The U. S. Agricultural Department has established an Experimental Station
on our farms to test all kinds of vegetables, especially cabbages. We will be pleased to give results
of these experiments. Write to us.
N. H. BLITCH COMPANY, - - MEGGETTS, S. C.
15