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LFT US WRITE YOUR
p BE, LIFE, ACCIDENT, and I.E/LTF
INSURANCE
Strongest ana Best Companies on Earth
We hive an Attractive and New Proposition on Insurance
HAM & THOMAS
PHONE 302 - 8-9 GRANITE BLDG
I I
I "* I
Ni wg n u I vA'Sft I—— I
Saved Mine Option
AWESTERN Mining Engineer, with
an option on a valuable mine was
about to close the deal, when, at the
' ? < last minute, the Western capitalists with
> drew their support. With a few hours left
* in which to find the money, he got New
York on the Bell Long Distance Tele
phone, talked with a banking house and
outlined the proposition, which they
agreed to finance.
A personal interview by the Bell Long Distance Telephone
often closes a trade or saves a situation.
When you telephone —smile
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE jjjM
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY
Florida Service
j Southern Railway
Hj A n m Pullman sleeping cars, dining car, day coach
.lV u. Hl. es —Arrives Jacksonville 8.20 p. m.
1005 D Hl New Royal Palm; all Steel Train —Pullman,
IViVU p. llii drawing room and compartment sleeping
cars, free reclining chair cars—arrives Jacksonville 7.40 a. m.
Ifl3o D Hl Local sleeping car, Atlanta to Jacksonville,
IViUV p. Illi open at 9.1 bp. m.—breakfast on dining car
before reaching Jacksonville 8.40 a. m.
b H Afj n rn Pullman drawing room sleeping cars, day
11,1 V p. 111. coaches, breakfast on dining car before
reaching Jacksonville 9.20 a. m.
FARMS TIMBER
J. D. COBB,
I Hazlehurst, - Georgia.
f
South Georgia Farms in any size, im
proved or unimproved, on easyferms.
Correspondence Invited
> C. H. MARTIN?/ 1
Livery, Feed and Sale
Stables.
Hauling, Draying, Grading
Done Promptly. j
® Nice line of Carriages, Buggies
and Riding Horses. ■■ If
Carriages for Funerals. 11l I (f
‘ N. Bradford St. Near Square —AL
For Sale
Choice Building Lot
Opposite Brenau College, in a beautifal Oak
Grove fronting 53 feet on Boulevard and be
ing 130 feet deep. This is one of the most de
sirable small lots to be found in the city.
Price $12.50; Terms if desired.
Roper & Washington.
&AJ M 7TTTTT HH '< y tq
C 3 You Need a Tonic fe
There are times in every woman’s life when she
needs a tonic to help her over the hard places.
RS3 When that time comes to you, you know what tonic gSo
fj to take—Cardui, the woman’s tonic. Cardui is com- [1
posed of purely vegetable ingredients, which act KJ3
gently, yet surely, on the weakened womanly organs, F“R
■Ofl and helps build them back to strength and health,
KM It has benefited thousands and thousands of weak, EBi
ailing women in its past half century of wonderful kTj
BUM success, and it will do the same for you. gjg
You can’t make a mistake in taking
| CARDUI g
W The Woman’s Tonic pl
Ifiß Miss Amelia Wilson, R. F..D. No. 4, Alma, Ark., Kg
F says: “I think Cardui is the greatest medicine on earth,
■Ofl f° r w omen. Before I began to take Cardui, I was
so weak and nervous, and had such awful dizzy ißa
spells and a poor appetite. Now I feel as well and LTJ
■gjl as strong as I ever did, and can eat most anything.” Kg
Begin taking Cardui today. Sold by all dealers.
Helped Thousands. K
Cleaning and Dyeing.
The business of C. B. CHEEK, Cleaner|and| Dyer, is under a
new management and in a new, clean building, and offers the
same good service to its old customers, and solicits the pat
ronage of the new ones.
Goods called for and delivered promptly.
ESTEN HOWINGTON.
8. W. Broad St. Phone 628.
Our Southern Friends are Proud of Mexican Mustang Liniment |
because it has saved them from so much suffering. It soothes 9
and relieves pain soon as applied. Is made of oils, without 9
any Alcohol and cannot burn of £ting the flesh. Hundreds ■
of people write us that Mustang H
Liniment cured them when all -
other remedies failed.
MEXICAN
Mustang lOBi
Liniment
The Great Family Remedy for
Sore Throat, Colds,
Mumps, Lameness,
Cuts, Burns, Backache, f j
Rheumatism, Scalds,
Sprains, Bruises
and the ailments of your
Mules, Horses,
Cattle, Sheep.
and Fowl.
Since 7 848 the foremost
‘Pain ‘fyeliever of the South.
Price 25c., 50c. and $1 a bottle. g
Take this to your dealer and say you want ?
Mexican Mustang Liniment. |
I " •' - —2 "
I
1 HL ER. jM
IF BIGGER. PROFITJ
Are assured th" berai use of high-
grade, guarantee- ;.ds of fertilizer. It
costs as much to cultivate an acre, poorly
fertilized, as it does the acre well fertilized.
Your profit depends upon your crop, and
your crop depends upon your liberal use of
fERTIL'ZERS ■
To get the best results from the liberal use
of fertilizer, the brand should be suited to g|IH|H|H
the land. We mix fertilizers, especially g|HKH|M
suited to the different grades of Georgia soil.
If your lands are gray or loamy use our
GRAY LAND FERTILIZER; if your land is ■
stiff clay or red, use our RED LAND FER- ■g|H!|M!K
TILIZER. Our brands are machine-mixed,
which insures uniformity, from the best con
centrates; our fertilizers are dry and driila- S||||!|K||||
ble, all the time; our deliveries prompt; our
prices right and our customers pleased.
Manufactured by
PORTER FERTILIZER CO., Atlanta, Wwll
FOR SALE BY
J. L ELLIS, Gainesville, Ga,
MH J. M. Cochran & Bro., Clermont, Ga. WB
Jackson-Barnett & Co., Cleveland, Ga
WRITING LETTERS !N SYRIA
Not Always an Zasy Task Hero, but
Someth g to Be Oree ?d in
That Country.
I always dreaded writing letters '
when called upon to do it by my fa- ]
ther. It was not the business part '
of the letter which I dreaded, because .
that was dictated to me; but I had :
to write the “preface,” a chapter of I
fulsome salaams and laudatory,
phrases, extolling the recipient, and
without which a letter was little
short of an insult. Again, I had to
ascertain “the day of the month” '
which, in the entire absence of cal
endars, was known only to a few se-' ]
lect minds. When the question, '
“How much of the month is it ?” was ! 1
put to me my face reddened with in-!
credible swiftness. And when I was I
ridiculed by the men present for my j
inexcusable ignorance, being a;
“schoolboy,” my mother would come
to the rescue by telling these men i
that they themselvesc did not know
how much of the month it was, and [ .
they were of much larger dimensions i
than I was. I was often sent to the' '
priest to ask him what day of the
month it was. He usually counted
on his fingers from the last saint’s
day, according to the eastern calen- '
dar, and I ran home with the infor
mation lest I should forget it on the
way.—Abraham Eihbany in the At-'
lantic. ; <
DAY OF THE SWORD ENDING
Poetical References to Soldier's Pro
verbial Weapon May Soon Be
Very Much Out of Date.
The sword, the soldier’s proverbial
weapon since the early days of his- i
tory, seems on the way to disappear
ance in the German army. The six
cavalry regiments provided for by
the army-increase law, passed this
year, will be without sabres, being
armed instead with carbines equipped
with the short infantry bayonet.
The change is made experimen
tally, but causes much head shaking
among old-line cavalrymen, for it is
recognized that the experiment, if
successful, will lead to its general
adoption in the cavalry. With in
fantry officers now dispensing with
the sword in actual warfare, to make
themselves less conspicuous to oppos-1
ing sharpshooters, and cavalry going
into action with rifle and bayonet,
poetical reference to the sword of
battle may have to be revised.
SUICIDE AS LOVE CURE.
Suicide as a case for hopeless love
is a common expedient in Japan.
“There are Japanese lovers,” says a
writer, “who, owing to circumstances,
are unable to marry; but they do
not blame circumstances. They re
gard their misfortune as the result
of an error in previous existence,
such as breaking their promise to
wed or because they were cruel to
each other. Such lovers believe that
if they bind themselves together with
an undergirdle and spring into a
river or lake they will become united
in their next birth. This suicide of
Japanese lovers is called ‘joshi,’
which means ‘love death’ or ‘passion
death.’ ”
HYOMEI RELIEVES
IN FIYE MINUTES
You Breathe It,
♦
If your head|is all stuffed up from
a cold or catarrh, you suffer with
dull headaches and seem lacking in
vitality, or are constantly sniffling
and coughing, you need a remedy
that will give the quickest, most
effective and lasting relief possible
—something that will go right to the
spot, clear the head and throat and
end your misery.
Surely use Home! —all druggists
sell it. It is just such a remedy,
and is entirely harmless and pleas
ant to use —you breathe it —no stom
ach dosing.
The antiseptic oils of Hyomei mix
with the air you breathe —its health
giving medication immediately
reaches the sore and inflamed mu
cous membrane —you feel better in
five minutes. It is practically im
i possible to use Hyomei and not only
I be relieved but permanently bene
fited. Dr. J. B. George will re
fund your money if you are not sat
' isfied. Ask for the complete outfit
i —sl.oo size.
i
This vYi'.l interest Mothers
! Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Chil-
I dren relieve Feverishness, Headache, Bad
I Stomach. Teething I’isorders, move and
regulate the Bowels and destroy worms.
I They breakup Colds in 21 hours. Used by
mothers for 21 years. All Druggists, 25c.
Sample FREE. Address, A. S. Olmsted,
Leßoy, N. Y.
3AU300 A? PAPSR MATERIAL
'.xp • merits / .I. Made With th«
I. oe T a< "his ' ’ '.erial May
Lw Fuuiid . At..iable.
Inventors are seeking a substitute
for the wood pulp in the manufacture
of paper. So far various methods
have been tried to produce the coarser
grades of paper from corn husks,
grass, reeds and other forms of veg
etable life, but print paper has not
yet been successfully produced from
anything except wood pulp.
In the far east they are making ex
periments with bamboo as a possible
basis for the making of pulp. Some
capitalists of the Orient have gone so
far as to establish factories in Siam,
Burma and India, but the undertaking
has not yet been altogether successful.
The great factor against the success
of the enterprise in India seems to be
the question of satisfactory and cheap
transportation.
Pulp so far manufactured has had
the fault of being too dark in color to
bring a satisfactory price. Bamboos
most of the time so far have cost $3.41
gold a ton. Little of the product so
far has been sold, but samples sub
mitted in London indicate that the
company may receive as high as $58.27
gold a ton. The maximum output of
the factory so far has not exceeded
half of the original expectation of 18
tons of pulp a day, but it is now ex
pected that with a small addition to
the plant a normal output of 12 tons
can be maintained and that this rate
may be exceeded in time, with com
paratively little additional expense.
The critical feature of the entire
enterprise seems to be in the matter
of bleaching the pulp. Experts claim
for bamboo pulp certain advantages,
among which is the fact that bamboo
pulp can be had in parts of the world
where other pulp materials are not to
be had; it produces a fine pulp which
felts readily and produces a thick
opaque paper of greater thickness
than usual for its weight, making it
especially suitable for particular va
rieties of paper; the fine flexible fiber
is easily digested by the ordinary bi
sulphide process and the bamboo can
readily be handled mechanically and
chemically.
Engineers Laugh at Obstacles.
Like the mining engineer, the build
ing engineer now finds practically no
problem in his field which he can not
solve, and the question of excavating
for foundations for high buildings is
little more than a routine matter.
Depth is no great hindrance, as has
been demonstrated in New York. For
the greatest office structure in the
world, on the site of the Equitable
building, destroyed by fire, the engi
neers dug and blasted far below the
street, and at a depth of eighty feet
found a rock bed around the entire
site for the more important base of
the foundation. It is on this bedrock
that the mighty cofferdam, which will
form the true middle of a foundation
covering over 49,000 square feet, will
be built. The cofferdam itself, when
complete, will be a solid concrete wall,
six feet broad and eighty feet deep,
strengthened or reinforced by heavy
steel rods.
Dinner Evidently Was a Success.
The Ladies’ Aid of Buffalo gave a
big chicken pie dinner at the sale in
Shiell’s hall last Saturday. There was
a large attendance and the whole af
fair was a success. The ladies know
that advertising pays, and they patron
ized the pages of the Review liberally
with their announcements. The wom
en that made the chicken pies were on
the job with both feet and their hats
on and the fried cake and bean artists
produced an article that tasted more
ish. There was a big bunch of young
sters present and when they got ac
tion on the chicken pie and other
“fixens” the food disappeared like wa
ter down a badger hole. The finan
cial end of the dinner produced the
sum of $165.50 in cash. There is no
disputing the fact that when the La
dies’ Aid of Buffalo squares away to do
things they do them. —Buffalo (Mont.)
Review.
High-Speed Shorthand Machine.
A new shorthand machine, called
the stenotype, has made its appear
ance at a competition in New York. It
takes down 592 words a minute and
weighs eight pounds. The working of
it is based on phonetic spelling. Sev
eral letters can be printed by striking
one key, while it is possible to strike
two keys with one finger. The 23 keys
represent seven consonants and every
combination of sounds used in speech,
together with about 150 standard ab
breviations —the sole code that the op
erator must master. The machine is
not being sold to the general public,
the sale being restricted to students of
business schools qualified as compe
tent operators, in order to keep the de
vice from becoming a drug on the mar
ket
Cynics in Politics.
A new York reformer said at a din
ner:
“We have no use fg£ the cynic—no
use for the man who, having been
asked to define the word ‘reformer,’
said:
“ ‘Reformer? Oh, he’s a chap who
failed to get an office out of either
Party.’ ”
Eve Not a Suffragist.
“A woman ought to stay at home at
tending to the dinner,” said the man
who resents present tendencies.
“No,” replied Mr. Meekton, “that’s
where the human race made its first
great mistake. If Eve had been out
lecturing instead of passing rosmd
the fruit, we’d have been spared an
immense amount of trouble.”— jyg.
change.