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CURES GRIPP
Golds and Aches
By Removing The Cause
—CAPUDINE
Relieves the distress and Feverish
ness and restores healthy conditions.
IT’S LIQU ID-Pleasant to Take.
Contains no Acetanilide
10c, 25c and 50c at Drug Stores
Cabbage Plants—Finest Seed
All varieties, raised in open on islands of South
Carolina, the home of Cabbage. Will stand sever
est cold, Full satisfaction. Full count, and finest
results in headed cabbage. Express rates on
plants are low from Young’s Island, our shipping
point. All orders must have cash or money order
enclosed. Express and Telegraph office, Young’s
Island, S. C. Telephone and t ostoffice, Martin’s
Point, S. C. 1,000 to 4,000 at $1.50 per M. 5,000 to
9,000 at $1.25 per M. 10,000 or more at SI.OO per M.
Special prices on large lots to market gardeners.
E. P. McSwiney, Martin’s Point, S. C.
Cured by Annointing With
Oil.
Cancer and Tumor permanently cur
ed with a Combination of Oils. Write
to the Originator for his free books.
Beware of imitators. Address Dr. Bye,
316 N. llinois St, Indianapolis, Ind.
Happy Voices N 0.2
New Songs. Just out.
R / Sample pages free. 15c
or a d° z * Send for
a copy today.
R «J. L. MOORE
BETHLEHEM, GA.
TELEGRAPHY
Best equipped school south. Expert
management. Main line wires. Great
demand for Operators. Positions guar
anteed. Write for Catalogue.
AMERICAN TELEGRAPH SCHOOL
Box 745. Milledgeville, Ga.
«. <4 GRAPE g" ft
K <£ VINES &U C
IbZshFREE
For 50c, cash with order (stamps
will do) we will ship you all
charges paid, one dozen first-class
grape vines as samples
Concord 3 Niagara 2 Moore’s Early
ve» 2 Catawba 1 Delaware
fwe get your order in the next 3
ys, we will add free as a premium
by Rambler Rose (or your choice
es). Address Dept.s63
r NURSERY CO., Des Moines; lowa
(3 Fragrant as a Rose
Preserves and beautified the itkin
Pimples, freckles, blackheads, wrinkles, red
ness of face, a muddy, sallow complexion,
or any blemish on or under the skin, quick
ly relieved by baths with
TETTERINE SOAP.
Finest remedy for sunburn, tan, rashes, red
and tender hands or feet, and all skin irri
tations, as well as for all purposes of the
toilet, bath and nursery. It contains in a
modified form the medicinal properties of
TETTERINE.
Purest of emollients and greatest of skin
cures; delicately purfumed, medicinal, san
ative and antiseptic. Purest ingredients,
and most refreshing of flower odors.
If your dealer does not keep Tetterine (50c) or Tetterin*
Soap (25c) send direct to the manufacturer—
Shuptrine Company, Savannah, Ga.
VOICES OF YOUTH
THE LITTLE SPOTTED PIG.
My grandpa said the other day,
“I’ve brought a pet for Stella May,”
And when I raised the box-lid up
It wasn’t kittens, nor a pup,
But just the cutest little round,
Spotted pig, that could be found!
I loved him at first sight, and he
Felt just the same, as you’d agree
If you had heard him say, “Wee,
we-e!” —
For that, of course, means him and
me.
And he’s the smartest little pig—
Plays hide-and-seek like he was big.
For when us children start to play
And somebody begins to say,
“Bushel-a-wheat, an’ bushel-a-rye;
All that ain’t hid, holler ‘I!’”
With Spot and me not hid, you see,
For where I am he’s sure to be —•
That little pig calls out, “We, we-e!”
And that, of course, means him and
me.
He is so very honest, though,
It’s really troublesome, you know—
And gets me caught, and laughed at,
too;
For when the one that’s ’it” gets
through—
“ Bushel-a-wheat, an’ bushel-a-c Hover;
All that ain’t hid, can’t hide over!”
And then, “Eyes open! One, two
three!
Who’s peeking ’round the apple tree?”
Why every time Spot says, “We,
we-e!” —
And that, of course, means him and
me.
—Hortense Casper, in Youth’s Com
panion.
Wtb Our Gorrespon&ents
SAM AND 808.
Sam and Bob were great chums,
hardly a day passed that they did noc
manage to spend a part at least of it
together. Both were country boys,
and their homes were not a half mile
apart, and both were little chaps—
Sam six and Bob eight.
Friday was always “bake day” with
Sam’s mamma and today she was al
ready in “the kitchen” deep in the
mysteries of pies and cakes, when
Sam after depositing his last armful
of wood in the big kitchen wood
box, and helping himself to a dough
nut from the dishful of rich brown
rings that sat on the table, asked:
“Mamma, mayn’t I spend the day
with Bob? He’s got another goat and
he has made a tongue to his wagon
and I know he’s going to hitch up a
double team this day.”
“Why, yes, I guess so, Sam, if you
are through with your morning work.”
Now Sam was only a little fellow
but he had always some small jobs to
do in the morning before going to plar.
“Hand me that small market bas
ket in the pantry. I will put in some
doughnuts, a lemon pie, and a piece
of chocolate cake for Bob’s and your
lunch.”
“Oh, Bob’s mamma always gives us
a good lunch when we go to the woods
to play, but I’m glad of the cake, for
Bob does love chocolate so much.”
He kissed mamma good-bye, and
swinging the basket on his arm went
whistling blithely on his way.
The road led through a lovely wood
of hickory, magnolia and oak with
here and there a bushy topped pine
that gave a spicy fragrance to the
cool late October air.
Some of the grand beauty of the
woods may have entered Sam’s soul,
though his thoughts were wholly of
Bob and the goats; at any rate his
The Golden Age for February 27, 1908.
keen blue eyes saw every bird that
flitted among the trees, every brown
lizard that scudded across the road
at his approach, and he flung after
them a good natured challenge or a
merry jest and as he came near the
sandy bottomed branch across which
a tree had been felled for a foot-way,
which he always waded, he did not
fail to see the big gray rabbit wnich
had just started to cross the road, but
which, stopped by his approach,
sat on her haunches watching him
with wide frightened eyes. “Hello,
mother hare, what’s you doing there?"
challenged Sam gaily, and to his con
sternation came back the answer in a
small squeaking voice: “Just waiting
to give a small boy a big scare.” Sam
stopped, looked all about him fear
fully. “Oh,” he whispered, “it is the
rabbit sure! I’m scared, I’m scared,
for sne’s po common rabbit —they don’t
talk; she’s a witch, a witch rabbit.”
He looked at her again, and her big
eyes seemed to have grown a great
deal bigger, and he thought she -was
crouching for a spring. Catching his
breath with a sob, he turned and fled,
followed a second after by a shout of
merry laughter which instantly stop
ped his flight and faced him about
again in time to see Bob peeping at
him from behind a tree.
“oh, Bob, it’s you, it’s you! I’m so
glad. I was scared, Bob.” “I know
you were. I saw you running away
scared of old mother hare. Well, well,
Sam, that’s a good joke on you. But
I won’t tell on you this time; where
are you going, to my house? Yes, and
I’m going to spend the day, too, and
here, Bob, look, here’s a big piece of
chocolate cake mamma sent you.”
“Golly! That’s good of her. I was
just going after you, Sam. I want you
to help me hitch up the goats and go
for a load of chincapins; there’s oodles
of them back of the Stephen field.”
“Oh, Bob, we’re going to have such
a good time, you bet.”
j ULIA.
Beauty is a great gift unless marred
by foolish pride.
Double Daily Service
VIA
Southern Railway
AND
Queen and Crescent
Lv Atlantas:2s am 4:35 pm Ar Cincinnatiß:so pm 8:15 am
Ar Rome7:37 am 6:40 pm Ar Chicago7:4s am 5:30 pm
Ar Daltonß:4B am 8:10 pm Ar Cleveland6:4s am 3:15 pm
Ar Chattanoogalo:2s am 9:55 pm Ar Toledos:ls am 2:20 pm
Ar Louisville9:os pm 9:40 am Ar Detroit 7:15 am 3:50 pm
NO CHANGE TO ANY OF THESE CITIES
JAMES FREEMAN, District Pass. Agent
Conducted by
the Editor.
THE BOYS OF TODAY.
“The boys of today are nowhere near
as fine fellows as those of the good
old days,” says a writer in a weekly
paper, and we hear the same senti
ment every little while, but is it true?
Mr. Milton Smith, president of sev
eral lumber mill companies, says it is
a mistake and he has known and em
ployed many boys. He was never more
impressed, he says, than when he was
traveling over Mr. Flagler’s marvelous
new railroad, built over the sea from
island to island on the way to Key
West. This great roadway consists of
a succession of ferroconcrete bridges,
built from one key (island) to an
other. The engineer work, and the
laying of the foundations, the sinking
of the caissons and the tremendous
mass of material that had to be floated
to the different construction gangs
made the building of this road, which
is completed as far as Knight’s Key,
one of the greatest achievements
known to history. Yet the engineers
were young men, mere boys, says Mr.
Smith, and he declares, “What I most
enjoyed on this wonderful trip from
Miami to Knight’s Key on the new, un
finished road, was talking to some of
the engineers along the line of con
struction. They were all young and a
number of them were just boys, soutn
ern boys, and they were the quietest,
most unassuming lot of youngsters I
ever saw, shy and timid as a girl in
her first long dress. They seemed to
look upon what they had accomplished
as all a part of the day’s work, and
the impression that these young south
ern engineers made upon our party
was quite as great as that of the won
derful railroad itself. I was proud
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain
Mercury,
mercury will surely destroy the sense of smell and
completely derange the whole system when entering
it through the mucous surfaces. Such articles should
never be used except on prescriptions from reputable
physicians, as the damage they will do is ten fold to
the good you can possibly derive from them. Hall's
Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co.,
Toledo, 0., contains no mercury, and is taken inter
nally, acting-directly upon the blood and mucous sur
faces of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be
sure you get the genuine. It is taken internally and
made m Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co, Testi
monials free.
Sold by Druggists. Price. 7fic. per bottle.