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TUBS. CALE, OF ALASKA,
MEMBER OF l).S. CONGRESS.
Well Knoicn on (Ae Pacific Slop <*. Uia
Washington Address is ISIS 9th St n
If. W., Washington, D. C.
CONG E8SMAN TH08. CALE.
Hon. Thos. Cale, who was elected to
Congress from Alaska, is well known on
the Pacific slope, where he has resided.
His Washington address is 1312 9th St.,
N. W., Washington, D. C.
Peruna Drug Washington, 1). C.
Co., Columbus, Ohio.
Gentlemen: 1 can cheerfully rec¬
ommend i'eruna as a very eff icient
~ remedy for coughs and eolds.
Thomas Cale.
Hon. C. Slemp, Congressman from Vir¬
remedy, ginia, writes: Peruna, “I have with used beneficial your valuable results,
and can unhesitatingly recommend your
remedy effective as an invigorating tonic and an
and permanent cure for catarrh.”
Man-a-lin the Ideal Laxative.
When a wise man is too tired to
think his talk is sure to sound foolish.
Many self-made men are hot-air prod¬
ucts.
THIRTY YEARS OF IT.
A Fearfully Long Siege of Daily Pain
nnd Misery.
Charles Von Soehnen, of 201 A St.,
Colfax, says: “For at least
“"3 \ ,§§:§
.,
, g: _'
me, and for fifteen years the frequent
Usages of kidney secretions an
noytid me. But Doan's Kidney Pills
rn37^live5' - me'almost entire freedom
•froth this trouble and I cannot speak
itoo highly in theii praise.”
i Sold by all dealers, 50 cents a box.
Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
Women who own cut glass shouldn’t
throw stones.
Only One “Bromo Quinine”
That is Laxative Bromo Quinine. Look
for tbe signature of E. W’. Grove. Used the
World over to Cure a Cold in Ono Day. 25c.
Some of our distant relations come
under the head of posterity.
ECZEMA SEEMED INCURABLE.
Body was Raw—Discharged from
Hospitals as Hopeless-—Cuticura
Remedies Cured Him.
“From the age of three months until
fifteen years old, my son Owen’s life was
made intolerable by eczema in .-its worst
form. In spite of treatments the disease
gradually spread until nearly every part of
•his body was quite raw. He used to tear
himself dreadfully in his sleep and the
agony he went through is quite beyond
.words. The regimental doctor pronounced
the jpase hopeless. We had him in hos¬
pitals four times and he was pronounced
one fof the worst cases ever admitted.
■From each he..was discharged as incurable.
iWe kep.t, trying remedy after remedy, but
had -gotten almost past hoping for a cure.
Six >months ago we purchased a set of
Cutipura Remedies. The result was truly
marvelous and to-day he is perfectly cured.
Mrs* Lily Hedge, Camblewell Green, Eng¬
land; Jan. 12, 1907.”
Somehow the average hoy lacks a
mania for acquiring good conduct
marks at school.
Jylcr’a and Mullen CHerokee is Nature’s Remedy great of Sweet
n reme
btion, cures Coughs, Colds, Croup and Con
and all throat aud lung troubles,
fcrugglsts. 35o., 50a. and $1.80 per botUe.
Women with natural curls are apt
to have a few kinks in their dispo¬
sitions. '
THIS MAN’S BACK
ACHED FOR TWO YEARS.
Cured by Minard’s Liniment after all
else had failed—we want you
! to send a postal for a
Free Bottle.
Minard’s Liniment Mfg. Co., Dear Sirs:—
I write you these few lines to let you know
that I thank you for your sample of Min¬
ard’s Liniment sent me about a week and a
half ago. I want to tell you that I have
had the back ache nearly two years, and
could not get anything to cure it until I
''-looked in the paper and found your adver¬
tisement. I had spent a good deal of
monev and did not get any satisfaction
out of it. Now I will tell my friends and
neighbors about your great remedy for all
aches and pains, for I am feeling O. K.
now. You can publish my name anywhere
you like and I will recommend Minard’s
Liniment. Yours veaytruly, Joseph Perry,
33 Ingraham St., E. Providence, R. I.,
Jan. 7, 1908.
The above letter is one of many telling of
wonderful cures by Minard s Liniment, and
wc again offer to send a special bottle Free
to all who send a postal to Mipavd’s Lini¬
ment Mfg. Co., So. Framingham, Mass.
Some rnc^go about looking for
tation to yield to.
“j“. :1}; n. w a
- - -
thirty years I suf¬
fered with kidney
troubles, and the at¬
tacks laid me up for
days at a time with
pain in the back and
rheumatism. When
I was up and around
sharp twinges caught
n
Survivals, Not Amerlev.tams.
Tha accepted manner ot defining
Americans, either male or female, in
the London comic papers or in sec¬
ond-rate English novels is to lard
their speech plentifully with “calcu¬
late” and “guess” and with “well” at
the opening of each sentence. This
mode of marking, or any other is In
Itself totally unimportant, hut lin¬
guistically it is not without interest,
for whila it is puraly conventional as
now used and has no relation to any
American hahlts of the present day,
whether good or bad, it is pleasant
to note that the hard-worked Insular
humorists need not have gone as fifr
afield to find the words necessary for
the identification of Americans. They
really had but to turn to the "New
Letters” of Thomas Carlyle (Vol. i,
p. 178), and there read the following
sentence: “He has brought you a
Fox’s book of Martyrs, which I cal¬
culate will go in the parcel today;
you will get right good reading out
of it, I guess.”—From “The Origin of
Certain Americanisms,” by Senator
H. C. Lodge, in the Scribner.
Wants the Recipe.
Pittsburg club women are in some
excitement over the discovery that in
that city many women are mortgag¬
ing their homes to buy automobiles.
This is done to make an appearance
of wealth and social position, which
to many women seem about all there
is of life, even if they are mere
imitations. Pittsburg is not the only
place where this ambition is conspicu¬
ous, and everywhere there are people
who would rather have an automobile
than an unencumbered home. W T hen
the club women have reformed this
sort of thing out of Pittsburg—for,
of course, they are going to do it—
we request that they send on their
recipe.—Philadelphia Press.
AN OLD MISTRESS.
A visitor to one of the stately an¬
cestral homes of Virginia who wa3 be
ing shown about by an old colored en
tainer paused before a painting.
“Exquisite!” he exclaimed, raptur¬
ously. “That must be an old master.”
Uncle Nelse shook his head. “No,
sub,” he replied, “taip’t ole marster.’
Dat’s ole Mistis Al’son.”—Youth’'
Companion.
Piles Cured In 0 to 1-i Days.
Puzo Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
case of Itching, days Blind, Bleediugor refunded. Protruding
Piles in 0 to 14 or money 50c.
It isn’t always easy for a female
detective to catch a husband.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford’s
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
Every dog has his day—with the
exception of the yellow cur.
That Dry Hacking Cough
needs attention. Ask your druggist
for Brown’s Bronchial Troches, which
will quickly relieve the cough.
Army Language.
In the army there are expressions
peculiar to itself. Heard from the
first time by outsiders, they need in¬
terpretation.
Among the most common are “hike,”
for “march;” "striker,” for a soldier
serving as a body servant or house¬
man for an officer; “C. O.,” for “com¬
manding officer,” and “O. D.,“ for
“officer of the day,” “hop” and “hop
j room,” for “dance” and “dancing
room!” “citz clothes,” for “civilian
dress;” “commissaries” for “grocer¬
ies;” “coffee cooler,” for an officer
who is always looking for an easy job
in some staff position; “found,” when
an officer fails to pass his examina¬
tion ; “shavetail,” for a youngster just
out of West Point. Among the sol¬
diers the expressions have multiplied
i until quite a vocabulary of strange
words has been established.
I “Bobtail” is a dishonorable dis¬
! charge. “Orderly buclcer” is a sol¬
dier who when going on guard duty
strives by extra neatness of appear¬
ance to be appointed orderly to one
of the officers. “Dog robber” is the
soldier’s contemptuous expression for
“striker.”
A POOR CLOTHES RACK.
After a long and wasting illness a
North Country man was about to don
his clothes for the first time.
“Jock!” called his wife from an ad¬
joining room, “hes thau getten all thy
elaes?”
The good man, with a lively sense
of his emaciated condition, replied
dryly:
“Aye, Aa’s getten me Claes rest
eneuf, hut there’s nowt to hang ’m
on!”—Tit-Bits.
PRECEDENT.
The -confidence men had be on ar¬
rested for selling two quarts of chest¬
nuts for $750.
“Your honor,” said their lawyer,
“my clients meant no wrong. They
were following the precedent set by
Mark Twain.”
The court pondered deeply, for the
joke in this was subtle.—Philadelphia
Ledger.
’ PANTRY CLEANED
A AVay Some People Have.
A doctor said:—
“Before marriage my wife observed
In summer and country homes, com¬
ing in touch with families of varied
means, culture, tastes and discrimi¬
nating tendencies, that the families
using Postum seemed to average bet¬
ter than those using coffee.
“When we were married two years
ago, Postum was among our first
order of groceries. We also put in
some coffee and tea for guests, but
after both had stood around the pan¬
try about a year untouched, they were
thrown away, and Postum used only.
“Up to the age of 28 I had been
accustomed to drink coffee as a rou¬
tine habit and suffered constantly
from indigestion and all its relative
disorders. Since using Postum all
tha old complaints have completely
left me aud I sometimes wonder if
I ever had them.”
Name given by Postum Co., Battle
Creek, Mtch. Read “The Road to
Wellville,” in pkgs. “There’s a rea¬
son,” ----- -*•
Woman’s ns I f
\ Realm.
Queen Alexandra.
The closest examination of the^fa
reer of Queen Alexandra, from the
day that she took her place. as
Princess of Wales, will triumphantly
demonstrate that she was never
guilty of a single breach of tact and,
good taste, and that her life has
been uniformly that of an exemplary
wife, mother and leader of society.—
Newcastle Daily Chronicle.
Women RJde Astride.
The long riding habit for women
Is now 'a back number despite the
horror openly expressed by persons
of puritanical ideas a few years ago
who derided the then unusual custom
of riding astride. Women who ride
in breeches can be seen in numbers
every morning and evening on the
bridle path in Central Park, and the
custom cf riding astride is more pop
ular than ever before. A leading rid
ing academy which some months ago
refused to teach women to ride
astride and stood out for the side
saddle was forced to shut up shop.
The owners found that by sticking to
their resolve they were simply help¬
ing other riding schools. The wom¬
en have gone a step further than the
man’s saddle. Many have discarded
the divided skirt in favor of riding
breeches almost a fac-simile of those
worn by men, pistol pockets includ¬
ed. The women riders also wear
mannish coats and derby hats. In¬
deed, it’s a difficult matter to tell
who’s who on horseback in Central
Park these days.—New York Corre¬
spondence of the Pittsburg Dispatch.
Cool, Rut Clever!
An Iron hoop bounced through the
area railings of a suburban lady’s
house recently and played havoc with
the kitchen window. The lady wait¬
ed, anger in her heart, and a fighting
light in her eye, for the apearance of
the hoop’s owner. Presently he
came.
“Please, I’ve broken your winder,
ma’am,” he said, “and ’ere’s father to
mend it.”
And^ure enough, he was followed
by a stolid looking workman, who at
once started work, while the small
boy took his hoop and ran off.
“That’ll be two-and-threepence,
ma’am,” announced the glazier when
the window was whole once more,
says Home Chat.
“Two-and-threepence!” gasped the
lady. “But your little hoy broke it.
The little fellow, with the hoop, you
know. Jou're his father, aren’t
you?” «
The stolid man shook his head.
“Don’t know him from Adam,” he
said. “He came around to my place
and told tne his mother wanted her
winder mended. You’re his mother,
ain’t you?”
And the lady shook her head also.'
Street Conversations.
When a man meets a feminine ac¬
quaintance in the street and is de¬
sirous of speaking with her, he lifts
his hat, and, coming to her side,
walks beside her. If he meets a
woman friend walking alone, or ac¬
companied by a woman to whom he is
at once introduced, or whom he al¬
ready knows, he is privileged to ask
permission to accompany the woman
to her destination. Should she en¬
ter a shop or a church, he holds the
: door open for her and lifts his hat
! as she pas^s in, but he may not f.ol
’ low, exce^; at her invitation, or when
• that is his destination also. When a
i man and woman meet in the street,
1 the woman may prefer to stand to
! listen to what her acquaintance has to
! say and may even prolong the con¬
versation; a man, however, should
not assume this privilege, but leave
the woman to take the initiative. A
man has no right to join a feminine
friend on the street if she is accom
panied*by a gentleman whom he does
not know. Friends who meet in the
street and halt for conversation
should not stand in the centre of the
pavement, but should draw well to
one side.—Pittsburg Press.
I fié‘auswsn a; m"- —- ‘ g:
: '11 ‘ '--' 1- u»! r
l ,3: , .
:_ -
‘ g 1“ FASHIONS
Hat pins, like hats, grow larger
and larger.
Jabots are growing larger and
fluffier every day.
Velvet and plush make some of the
most admired wraps of the year.
Pearl gray is always attractive, hut
the pearl shades are not fashionable.
Hand painted gauze embroidered
with tiny gold spangles is a gorgeous
hat trimming.
The mandarin coat—with its no
shape and little trimming—is the
most stunning wrap.
The newest sleeves for frocks are
arranged in deep tucks, and cut in'
one with the coat or bodice.
Fringes, though not yet very abun¬
dant, are a graceful garniture that
grows in favor, even though some¬
what slowly r .
Black chenille embroidery and sil¬
ver spangles upon a gown of gray
chiffon over pink make it indeed.“a
dainty thing.” - , *
“Skirts are more close fitting, oth¬
erwise similar, and so the modes that
prevailed last season are by no means
out of date as yet.
Coque plumes in delicate colors
are more novel than the greens,
blues' and blacks that we have be¬
come so accustomed to.
With the exception of the re-ap¬
pearance of the long sleeve and the
draped clinging skirt, there is not
much change in the fashions.
Black braid for trimming brown or
blue serge gowns is one of the most
serviceable garnitures for these
hardy gowns for every day wear.
The vest does not signify that the
garment is a closely fitting one, for,
on the contrary, it is almost kimona
like in shape, the wide, short sleeves
falling over undersleeves of silk and
lac6.
IXWE’S PRETTY PLANS.
“But can we live on $1,000 a year?”
asked he.
“Let’s ses,” said she. “Theatre tick¬
ets will cost about $250 annually,
flowers as much mors, and bonbons,
say $200. Certainly we can do it,
John, and save money Into the bar¬
gain.”—Kansas City Journal.
A Remedy For Neuralgia or Pain In
the Nerves.
For neuralgia and sciatica Sloan’s
Liniment has no equal. It has a pow¬
erfully sedative effect on the nerves
—penetrates without rubbing and
gives Immediate relief from pain—
quickens the circulation of the blood
.gnd gives a pleasant sensation of
comfort and warmth.
“For three years I suffered with
neuralgia in the head and jaws,”
writes J. P. Hubbard of Marietta, S.
C., “and had almost decided to have
three of my teeth pulled, when a
friend recommended me to buy a
twenty-five cent bottle of Sloan’s Lin¬
iment. I did so and experienced im¬
mediate relief, and I kept on using it
until the neuralgia was entirely
cured. I will never be without a bot¬
tle of Sloan’s Linimeut In my house
again. I use it also for Insect bites
and sore throat, and I can cheerfully
recommend it to any one who suffers
from any of the ills which I have
mentioned.”
One of the London underground
railroads passes 185 feet below the
surface. This is the record for sub¬
terranean transportation.
The very wisest advice: take Garfield Tea
whenever a laxative is indicated! Pleasant
to the taste, simple, pure, mild, potent and
health-giving. Made of Herbs—not drugs.
NO DOUBT.
'Caesar, upon the Lupercal, thrice
refused a kingly crown.
“And,” remarked he to Marc Loeb,
“I guess that will relieve some of
these boom-nursers.” — Louisville
Courier-Journal.
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded dis¬
ease that science has been able to cure in all
its stages, and.that is Catarrh. - Hall’s Catarrh
Cure is tne only positive cure now known to
the medical fraternity. Catarrh, being a con¬
stitutional disease, Hall’s require® constitutional
treatment. Catarrh Cure is taken inter¬
nally,acting surfaces directly df the upon the thereby blood destroy¬ andinu
cous o( system, and giving
ing the the foundation by the building disease, the
stitution patient strength up doing con¬ its
and assisting nature m
work. The proprietors have so much faith
in its curative powers that they oiler One
Hundred Dollars for any case that it fails to
cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address
Sold P. J. CllBJTEY & Co.,Ta)ledo, O.
hv Druggists, 75c. w
Take Hall’s Family Pills for constipation.
NOTHING ELSE.
“You look tired,” remarked a friend
to the pretty cloak model, who was
showing off the glories of the various
garments.
“Yes,” answered the latter, wearily;
“mine is a wearing life.”—-Baltimore
American.
For 12c
and this notice the John A. Salzer Seed
Co., La Crosse, AMs., in order to gain
250.000 new customers during 1908, will
mail you free their great plant and seed
catalog together with
1 pkg. “Quick Quick” Carrot.........$ .10
1 pkg. pkg. Earliest Earliest Emerald Ripe Cabbage;.........10
1 Cucumber.....15
1 pkg. La Crosse Market Lettuce..... .15
1 pkg. pkg. Strawberry Early Dinner Muakmelon.........15 Onion.............10
1
1 1.000 pkg. Thirteen kernels Day gloriously Radish...........10 beautiful
flower seed......................... t .15
Total ......... ....$1.00
Above is sufficient seed to grow 35 bu.
of rarest vegetables and thousands of bril¬
liant flowers and all is mailed to you
POSTPAID FOR 12c,*
or if you send 16c, we will ami a package
of Berliner Earliest Cauliflower. John A.
Salzer Seed Co.; La Crosse, AVis. A. C. L.
British India has the swiftest river
in the world. The Sutlej has a de¬
scent of 12,000 feet in 150 miles.
Mrs. Winslow’s Soothing f®npfor Children
tion, teothing,softensthegums,reducesinflamma- allays pain,
cure* wind colic, 25c a bottla
In Cincinnati a man recently took
seventeen wives in one day. He’s a
CAPUDINE
.|| | I* remove* the cans*. and
H 'w VlltaW SFT F* tooth#* the e nerve* nerve* an
relieve* the e* and
COLDS AND SRiPPE eri*h
ne35.
c u res all
headaches and Neuralgia also. No ... t . '
affects. 10c, 25c and 50o bottle*. (Liauir )
■?yes, If with afflicted weak us* 1 Thompson’sIyeWater
Every woman has to go through the change Liat exerts such an influence on her
future health. Nearly all suffer, at this time, from symptoms which Wine of Cardui
has been found, in thousands of cases, to prevent or relieve. Some symptoms are:
Headache, backache, irregularity, hot and cold flashes, peevishness, numbnesss, etc.
Wine of Cardui
relieves the distress and assists nature in passing the danger point.
“I, had change of life,” writes Mrs. J. F. Haxel, Los Angeles, Cal., "and was very
sick. Three doctors failed to help me, so I took Cardui and got relief at once.” Try.
WRITE US A LETTER Write today for a free copy ot valuable 64-page Illustrated Book for Women. If you need Medical Advice,
B 16 describe your symptoms, stating aaa, and raply wiU be sent In plain sealed envelope. Address; Ladies i
Advisory D<?pt., The Chattanooga Medicine Co., Chattanooga. Term.
NO MORE MUSTARD PLASTERS TO BLISTER
THE SCIENTIFIC AND MODERN EXTERNAL COUNTER-IRRITANT.
}\ ; Capsicum-Vaseline
EXTRACT OF THE CAYENNE
NOT NUBBINS. BUT- , PEPPER PLANT TAKEN
DIRECTLY IN VA.?XINg
two shapely ears and more per DON’T WAIT TILL THE FAIN
stalk. COMES—KEEP A TUBE HANDY
Ears that are solid from tip to butt. A QUICK, SURE. SAFE AND ALWAY3 READY CURE FOR PAIN -PRICE 15c.
Every grain plump and heavy and rich. —IN DEALERS. COLLAFSI3LE BY TUBES ON MADE RECEIPT O? PURE TiN-AT ALL DRUGGISTS AMD
OR HALL Or tic. IN POSTAGE STAMPS.
That is the common record when a soil A substitute for and superior to mustard or any other plaster and will not
is worn blister the most delicate skin. The pain-allaying and curative qualities of, the
properly treated with ache article and are Soi&uca. wonderful. We It recommend will stop the toothache the best and at once, safest and relieve Head¬ .
it as external counter
POTASH we irritant and children. claim all Rbecmarte, known, for Ones It, also and used Neurajri* as it Will no an external family s* feuad esi will Gouty remedy to be be without complaints. luvaloabl* tor pains It. In ta Ugny A the <h# trial chest hsuseheid people wifi and pre ray stomach . and e “ what it for is
Let Tend our-Free the best of ail your preparations.’’ Accept r.o preparation of vaseline unless
sion of ns the you Booklet, “Plant Foe J." It is u scientific discus, the same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine..
will agricultural double problem, and is thoroughly simple and practical. It Send your address and vve will mail our Vaseline Ccoklet describing
show you how to the value of a field. Write for it to-day. Address preparations which will Interest
our you.
GERMAN KALI WORKS, 93 Nassau Street, New York 17 Slat# St. CHESEBROUGH fi/JFG. CO. New York City j
Chicago—Monadiroek Building Atlanta, Qa^l% 24 Candler Building
...... ....... .................. —- »» ■» ! ., !
THE WAY THEY WORK IT, *
When the little Podunk doctor
Finds his repertoire of pills
Proves entirely unavailing
To relieve your aches and ills
He advises consultation
With some big gun in the town,
So the city doctor gets you
When the country man falls down.
When the mighty city doctor
Finds .his potions and his drugs
Do not cure your aching body
Of bacilli and of.bugs
lie advises rural quiet
To upbuild ycur system slumped—
So the country doctor gets you
When the city man Is stumped.
—New York Sun.
Our Farming Population.
Early in the nineteenth century,
about 80 per cent, of the male work¬
ers of the United States were em¬
ployed on farms. During the past cen¬
tury, the efficiency of labor has been
so increased by the farm implements 1
and machines that have come “--- into ---
use, that, at the present time, about
35 per cent, of the male workers of
that nation produce the food and fibre
of the country, and furnish an enor¬
mous surplus, which Is exported to
other countries.—Engineer.
FWS,St. Vitus'Dance :Xervoos Diseases per
mauentlycurc-d Restorer. by Dr. Kline’s Great, Nerve
Z2 trial bottle and treatise freo.
Dr. H. R. Kline. Ld.,931 Ar ch St., P hila., Pa,
WASTED TIME.
Grandma—Have you wasted any
time today, Margaret?
Margaret—Yes, indeed. I played
bridge all the afternoon with only one
pack-of cards.—Life. ----------
More proof tFiat Compound Lydia E.Pink
Iiam’s Vegetable surgical operations. saves
woman from
Maine, Mr3. S. A. Williams, of Gardiner,
writes:
“ I was a great sufferer from female
troubles, and Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege¬
table Compound restored me to health
in three months, operation after my physician
declared that an was abso¬
lutely necessary.”
bourne Mrs. Alvina Ave., Chicago, Sperling, III., of writes: 154 Gey
“I suffered from female troubles, a
tumor and much inflammation. Two
of the best doctors in Chicago decided
that an operation was necessary to save
my Compound life. Lydia entirely E. Pinkham’s cured Vegetable without
me
an operation.”
FACTS For FOR SICK Lydia WOMEN. E. Pink¬
ham’s thirty Vegetable years Compound, made
from roots and herbs, has been the
standard remedy for female ills,
and has positively cured thousands of
women Avho have been troubled with
displacements, inflammation, irregularities, ulcera¬
tion, periodic fibroid pains, tumors, backache, that bear¬
ing-down feeling, flatulency, indiges¬
tion,dizziness,or ner A it r ous prostration.
Why don’t you try ?
Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick
women to write her for advice.
She has guided thousands to
health. Address, Lynn, Mass.
Light SAW «in
LATH AND SHINGLE MACHINES,
SAWS AND SUPPLIES, STEAM AND
GASOLINE ENGINES.
AtlaS H j Side and Centra
Engines
LARGE AT STOCK LOMBARD
Foundry, Mschine and Bailer Works and Supply Store,
AUGUSTA, GA.
SULPHOZONE CATARRH BALM,
Tha Great Antiseptic Catarrh Remedy.
A A healing ret liable i; antiseptic remedy for for the all in* complicatioi mb ranee, arieim
froi chronic hronic nr-S'*.! nr\s’».l one
rom fteliovas catarrh. catarrh,
the congestion of the i sal pa*g*g©f, and
i* i toothing, lOCtumn, be*!in* n nnd effective in its it* result*. reeult
A iiijmM docs Gunrant <■© Bond to refund the prii ice. 51
ceatp. if it nr.? satisfy. Absolutely harmiesi.. i», but
a gem-killing dealer remedy pend ’ for the cure of catarrh. _
yonr Hightower or ns 50cent*. . Mailed poatpah
The Dru? : Co.. - Dalton, Gt
One of -the
Essentials
of the happy homes of to-day is a vast
fund of information as to the best methods
of promoting health and happiness and
right living and knowledge of the world’s
best products.
Products of actual excellence and
reasonable claims truthfully presented
and which have attained to world-wide
acceptance through the approval of the
Well-Informed of the World; not of indi¬
viduals only, but of the many who have
the happy faculty of selecting and obtain¬
ing the best tnc wor!* affords.
One of the products of that class, of
known component parts, an Ethical
remedy, approved by physicians and com¬
mended by the Well-Informed of the
World as a valuable and wholesome family
laxative is the well-known Syrup of Figs
and Elixir of Senna. To get its beneficial
effects always buy the genuine, manu
factured by the California Fig Syrup Co.,
only, and for sale by all leading druggists.
MALSBY COMPANY*,
41 1. rOBSTTH ST., ATLANTA, OAa
U injfwtww sf ud Culm in ill Unit if
MACH1NERY
AND SUPPLIES.
Portable. Stationary and Traction Engine*. Boileni
Saw Mill* and Qtpi Mill*. Wood working and Sbia
fie Mill Machinery. Complete line carried in atooft.
Write for catalog** pripe*. Add! « »U common!***
lion* to Atlanta. G*. W# hava ao connection* la
Jack son villa. Ei*.
Ido -
SPECTACLE
WEARERS
Why pay exorbitant
prices for glasses,
when you have an
opportunity to do bet
ter? Write today for
otir special January
offer on SPECTACLES
and El’E GLASSES.
_
CHAS. A. GREEN OPTICAL CO.
1115 BROAD ST., COLUMBUS, GA,
/ ' (fillets PAIN\ every one, somewhere,
sometime. Its greatest
enemy Is
Johnson's ^snim ent
An
which can ba need both internally and ex¬
ternally, and promptly removes pain.
ESTABLISHED 1810.
2 Sc., throe limes as much 50c. All dealers.
I. 6. JOHNSON & CO., Boston, Maas.
(At6-’03)
Ohl Papa don’t forget to buy a
bottle of CHENEY'S EXPECTO¬
RANT for your little girl.
You can buy it at any Drug
Store and you know it never fails
to cure my Croup and Cough.
PXtANTTa THAT WILL MAKE Ojfk.BS-A.GII3
Ear’y Jersey Charleston Laree Henderson’s Winning _____. Early Early
Wakefield Type Wakefield Succession ‘ tSti Statdt Summer
I am located on one of the Sea Islands of South Carolina, our climate is mild,
just sufficient cold to harden and cause plants to stand severe freezing after
Bcttinar out in the colder cectiona. I guarantee satisfaction or money refunAea. Express rates to all
points very low. /[Gif Prices: Scad 1,000 to 5,000 at $1.50; 5,000 to 9,000 at $1.25; 10,000 and over at $1 00.
Special prices oa large lots. your orders to
P. TOWLES, Pioneer Plan* Grower
Tiliirstfi Qffks, Yoiuj's Island, S. t. Martin's Point, 8. C. Long Distrns Piic.:c, Martin's Pcint, S. C.
^ Cabbage Plants
We nre prepared to fill orders now with nnv of the following varieties of Cabbage
Plants, these being the best known reliable varieties to experienced planters: Early
Jersey Wakefield, Charleston Largo Type Wake fields and Henderson Successions. -
Prices $1.25 per 1,000; in lots of over 5,000 at $1.00
per 1,000, and in lots of 10,000 at 90c per 1,000.
Address all Orders to THE MEGGETT PLANT CO., Meggett, S. C.
m
MEMBER Of THE FAMILY,
MEN, BOYS, V. OMEN, MISSES AND CHILDREN.
sew W. L. Douglas makes sntl sells shoes more “fjj'i
than men’s $S,SO, other $n.OOend manufacturer $ 8 .SO In the
fiST world, any because they they hoTd hold "their their and *0 Fast
shape, ot fit better, value ------- vrear than laager, matter, othor and Fyelett Color
B0?=> are shoes fn greater the world to-day. any Used
W. L. Douglas $4 and $5 ____________ Gilt Edge Shoes Cannot Be Epalled At Any Price Exclusively.
P3* 03- I’A <'A VTIO^. t-XIO V. W. W. I. I,. Domnas Donriaa name name and SotS »n.1 priee price in is stamped clamp.il *n an bottom. bottom. Takf So world, lllus*
&ted ’m e an?aK IWhCni - SSFoiSWBroctoai"'
;imiXeri^~rr '-r- uasa
Charleston EarljJersey SUCCESSION
LARGS TYPE 4 g* WAKEFIELD
WAKEFIELD Flat
The Earliest Head
Second Earliest Cabbaae Grown rJ ~ Variety
CABBAGE PLANTS For Sale
T AM ON MY ANNUAL TOUR around the world with any of the best-known varieties of
1 Open-Air Grown Cabbage Plants at the followint prices, viz: 1,000to4.000. at $1.50 per
l thousand; 5,000 to 9,000, at $1.25; 10,000 or more, at 90c., P. O. B. Mcgcett, S. C. All orders
| promptly filled and satisfaction guaranteed. Ask for prices on 50,000 or IOG.000. Cash accom
panying all orders or they will go C. O. D.
Address B. L. COX, Ethel, S. O., Box 8